{"@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":"2021-11-21","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1931-06-02","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0403887\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \\9\nDetail of Premier Bennett's\nFirst Bud&et\n\u2014Pa_es Ei_\\ht-Nine\n$*l*im iailn\nLiquor Case Is Dismissed in\nNelson Court\n\u2014 Pa_e Twelve\nNATION\/*\n\"     Z^Ovt'tta ''  '\ni'lci'tles?*. . \" DAILY  NEWS, NELSON, B. C. \u2014 TLESDAY  MORNING, JUNE J,  1931\n*t   a\nF1VB CENT- A COPY\nu\nDEFICIT $75,244,937\nMUSSOLINI DECREES DISORGANIZATION OF CATHOLIC YOUTHS Sole. Tax I. Raised\nFrom One to Four\nPontiff May Sever TEXAS GUINAN\nConnections With NOT POPULAR\nItalian Qovernment\nPope May Return to State\n\"Voluntary Prisoner,\"\nVatican\nPAPAL NUNCIO\nIS RECALLED\nAnti-Fascist Editorial\nCampaign Is* Barred\nby II Duce\nSOME, June I c\\P>\u2014 Premier\nMumoIIiiI has dissolved sll .organisation, of telhollc youths\nlo Italy Is; decree.\n. Aanrdinl to good sources to-\nnllht. 1-ope Pin, XI 1> effecting\nto noil tbe P*p\u00abl nuncio to\nRome.\nIt In eald tne pontiff mar eeess\n\u25a0ever diplomatic relation, nil li\nItal).\nSince ttie pop* r*g*rds the concordat with Rome aa violated and\na* ha bold* this concordat and tha\nLateral treaty to be inseparable,\nmany observers believe there might\naria* ttie question of denuncistion\nof ihe Roman settlement. This\nmight' reault ln the pope's returning\nto .tke state of \"voluntary prisoner\"\nin th* Vatican.\nThla new development followed sn\norder from the Vatican that tha\neditor of the aeml-otflclal newspaper\nOgservatore Roimno ahould discontinue It- snli-Faaclai. edRorlal\n-ampalgn, and a . similar order to\neditor* of Fescut papers to stop\npublishing anti-Catr.olto editorials.\n18   DONE   tVIETLY\nMussolini Is laid to hare elined\nhla decree dissolving the organlta-\nUona last nicht and all perfect*\nw*re immediately charted with Its\nenforcement. This was done quietly\nby summoning dub offloers and\nnotlfylni tbem of the action.\nAa thousands cf catholic olubs\nhave h*en close* during the past\nthree daya nothing further wlll be\nrequired to put them out of action\n-Koept to arrange for disposition of\ntbelr poaaasslon*.\nTh* decree, which li known to\n0* ready although government offl-\n_lala profess Jgnoranoe of It, has not\nbeen published. It was announced\nthla evening ln a short communique.\nwhich doe* not mention Catholic\n.lube but announoed dissolution of\nthose organisations not connected\nwith the Fascist party or lta subsidiary  \"Balllla\"   for   boys\nArticle A3 pf the concordat, which\nIM Vstlc.n conUdor* Is violated by\nthe government's order of dissolution,  says:\n\"The Vatican stat* recognises association affiliated with the Italian\nCatholic actlpn, always provided\nthai thsy pursue th* activities ln\nxmformlty with provisions Issued by\nthe Holy See. outside of any political party, and under direct control\nst tb* hierarchy ot th* church with\nth* sol* object of propagating and\nrealising  Catholic   principle*.\"\nASH GIVES UP\nHIS PROPOSED\nOCEAN RIGHT\nPlane  Was  Unable  to  Lift\nGasoline Necessary for\nPacific Flight   '\nCUP WINNER\nWITH  FRENCH\nIs Given Until 1 P. M.,\nWednesday to Make\nHer Exodus\nACQUITTED OF MURDER CHARGE\nSAYS SHE WILL\nGO TO PARIS\nAustriaps   and   German\nAuthorities Not \u2022\nParticular\nAIB SPEED KING DBAi\nright Lieutenant H. it. u. Waghorn, Britlah winner of Scltnelder\nCup race ln 1\u00bb3\u00bb, who died from ln-\nlurle* received when he leapt boa\n,1 aplnning plan* reoently.\nCONSOLIDATED\nBUYS A LARGE\nSIM IN FIRM\nTo Become the Largest Single\nShareholder  in  Pacific\nCoast Terminals Ltd.\nNIW WESTMOfSTHl, B. C.. June\n1-\u2014'The Consolidated Mining &\nSmelting Co.. Ltd,, subsidiary of\ntlie Canadian Pacific railway, wlll\nbecome the largeat Individual shareholder In the Pacific Coast Terminals, Ltd., here. If negotiations now\nproceeding are completed. Valentine aulnn, acting preeident of the\nPacific Coast Tsrmlnala, In announcing this said that James J.\nWarren. Toronto, preeident of the\nConsolidated, will become chairman\nof the board of directors of th*\nTerminals. W. B. Lanlgan, Victoria,\nwill be preeident of the Terminals\nln place of tbe lat* A. C. Flumerfelt. Both Mr. Warren and Mr.\nLanlgan are membera of th* board\nof directors at present. No change\nIn the present personnel of the\ncompany is anticipated, said Mr.\nQulnn. There will bt no change In\nth* relation of the company to any\nother railway. Th* propoeed entrance of the Consolidated company Into the Pacific Co*at Terminals will be placed before a meeting of the ehareholders June IS.\nTb* negotiations when oompleted\nwlll assur* that no demand for\nany financial guarantee ln connection with the Terminals wlll be\nmade on the city or other guarantor!.\nHAVRE. France, Jane I   (AP)\nTexas Oulnan wlll have to leave\n.'ranee   by    l   p.m.   Wednesday,\nshe  was  Informed  today.   There\nwaa    aome    uncertainty    aa    to\nwhere she would go from here.\nshe contends that she will go\nto   Paris   despite   the   order   of\nthe French government that ahe\nshall   not   enter   the   coni_try.\nReports   that   she   might   take\nher    \"gang\"    to    tlermany    *r\nAustria brought from the consulates   or   these    two   nations\nexpressions   of   doubt   that   ahe\nwould  be  admitted  there.\n\"We can accept her  request  for\na  German  visa,'   'aald  the German\nconsul, \"only if h\u00abr psrty can produce   a   working   contract   approved\nhy  tb*  German  minister of  labor.\nUntil   thsn   we   can't  aay   whether\nshe would be admitted or not.\"\n\"Ita aU right with Us lf they go\nto another oountry,\" aald th* director of the French line*, \"but tl\u00bby\nwill have to get out ot Havre by\nWednesday afternoon.\"\nFrances refusal to admit the\nBroadway entertainer and her danc-\n*ra la baaed on (allure of the department of labor to approve her French\nworking contract.\nTARIFF CHANGES\nGO INTO EFFECT\nWITHOUT DELAY\nJUMPS FROM A\nBOATTO DROWN\nNEAR GRANITE\nMax Brabchenko Is Vic\ntim of Rapids at Railway Bridge\nWAS CROSSING\nRIVER TO FISH\nWas Paddling With One\nOar With Other in\nthe Boat\nPer Cent in Budget\nPostal Rates Are Increased on All But \"Drop\" Letters, to Three Cents; Special Excise Duty of\nOne Per Cent on Imported Goods\nSOME 220 TARIFF CHANGES ARE MADE;\nPUBLIC RECEIVES TARIFF PROTECTION\nOTTAWA,   Ont,   June    1.\u2014\nil l-i\u2014Canada's tariff schedule\nprovides three rates, British\npreference, Intermediate and\ngeneral. The British preference\nprimarily to give a preference\nto Oreat Britain applies to the\nnations of the world which\nCanada has special trade agreements and the general applies\nto other foreign nations. The\nrates apply In the case of the\nlulled   states.\nTariff changes go Into effect\nImmediately they are announced\nIn the houae of commons In\nthe budget evcept where otherwise  designated.\nThe letters N. O. P. which\nappear frequently lo the tariff\nschedules mean \"not otherwise\nprovided\" and cover articles not\nIncluded In other times dealing\nwith  similar  classes  *f  goods.\nHOUSES  DESTROYED\nISTANBUL. Turkey. June 1. (AP)\n\u2014Forty houses In Broussa, at th*\nfoot of Mount Olympus, were destroyed in the night wh*n floods\nundermined their foundations. At\nthe town of Havt* IS persona were\ndrownM.\nF. G. OXER OF TRAIL IS KILLED\nWHEN AUTO ROLLS DOWN BANK IN\nTHE VICINITY OF SULLIVAN CREEK\nTOKYO, Jun* 1 (AF)\u2014Thomss\nJH. J*., tonight abandoned hts\nproposed 4400-mile nonstop fllgivt\nfrom Japan to Seattle, because his\nmonoplane couldn't carry enough\ngasoline, said dispatches from Sam\nuehtro beach to th* Rengo newa\nagency.\nSimultaneously,   th* , Tokyo  newa-\naper Hochl Shlmbun sponsoring\nth* flight of 8*1)1 Yoshlhara. 38\nyear-old Japanese, announced be\nwould resums hts Interrupted JO-\natop flight from Tokyo to Ban\nFrancisco  June   as.\nYcahlhare will taka off ln a new\nseaplans from th* Kurlle islands of\nJapan, where he dsmaged his first\nmachine. M* plana to follow th*\n(Mat Circle via th* Kamchatka\npanlnsula and the Aleutian Islands,\na total mileage of \u00ab2M.\nAsh aald'ha was forosd to sbsn-\ndon hla nonktop flight because tbe\nmonoplane \"Pacific\" failed to rise\nfrom th* beach Sunday with 1030\ngallons of gsaollne. th* minimum\nrequired for th* long flight. Before\nannouncing hla abandonment of th*\nproject. Ash took AS gallons of fuel\nfrom the plane, saying If neoessary\nM would land at Dutch harbor ln\nlh* Aleutian islands, 3000 miles.\nLater be said th* motor developed\n_J00 revolutions l*se than ths  lsso\nrequired   to   lift   th*   haavy   plan*\n.-.*  mils-long   beach   runway\n fact and th* opinion of experts\nth* monoplane waa unfit for th*\njourney through th* stormy and\n\u2022Dfgy north Pacific met influenced\nASH to cease to* stttapt.\nFour Trail People in Hospital;\nInquest Will Be Held\nOn Thursday\nDead:\nF.   O.   Onr.\nInjured:\nBlchard   Christian,   (driver).\nMiss   Margaret   Horwell,\nHarry  Ceilings.\nCharles Bowen.\nNot   seriously  Injured:\nMiss  Constance Davis,\nTHAU,, B. C. June I.\u2014F. O.\nOxer'was killed and five passengers In a car driven by Richard Christian were Injured wheu\nthe car went over a bank near\nSullivan creek, at th* and of\nth* Blrchbank lata, lat* last\nnight. The party was returning  ta  Trail.\nThe slory of the accident, a.\ntold by wheel tracks at the\nscene, waa that the oar, swinging around an S curve, drew\nInto a dip on th* side of the\nroad and continued on th* edge\nof the bank nntu It struck a\nbig boulder. It then tamed\nover and rolled about .0 feet\ndown the bank over rough rock.\nThe top of tbe car, a sedan,\nwaa torn off,\nTWO  THEORIES\nAn Inquest wu called tor\nthis afternoon and after viewing  Hr.   Oner's   body   Ua Jury\ndrove to the scene ef the accident. Returning to Trail the\nJurymen were freed until Thursday night next when an Inquest\nwlU   be   held.\nIt waa not known exactly how\nMr. Oxer waa killed. Ona theory\nwas that tb* car rolled over him.\nand another waa that h* waa struck\nby a rolling rock, loosened when\nth* car vrent over.\nIt wa* understood Mr. Oxer was\nan old countryman employed temporarily In Warfield In connection\nwith tha fertilizer development of\nthe Conaolldated Mining Ac Smelting\ncompany, and that he leave* a\nfamily in England.\nTHE   1NJI R_:l>\nOf the others tn the car, Mr.\nChristian waa most seriously injured. He suffered broken rib* and\na broken collar bone, tn addition\nto shock and bruises. He Is ln\nTrall-Tadsnac   hospital.\nMlsa Margaret (Jack) Horwell,\nTraU achool teacher, la In the hoe-\npi tal, Buffering mainly from shock.\nSbs alao bad cuts and bruises.\nHarry Oolllngs and Charles Bowen\nsustained Injuries similar to Mlaa\nHorwell's.\nMlsa Oonatano* Davis, another\nTraU reach*., waa th* only one of\nthe P****-? not confined to th* hospital  today.\nServing on th* Jury are Dr. M. F.\n__elly, W. >. Hunt*r. Jamea Skinner,\nL. F. Tyson. B. Plsaplo and B. W.\nDysart,\nFORMER   BEAl'TY   FREED   OF   CHARGE   SHE    Ml RDt.RMi    111-HASH\nMrs. NUon-Nlrdltnger. former Philadelphia beauty, leaves the court\natJsice, Franoe, recently, where she ws\u00bb acqultt-d of a charge ot .raui-\ndenng her husband, wealthy American theater-owner, she la accompanied by her mother.\nEMPRESS OF BRITAIN SMASHES A\nRECORD CROSSING THE ATLANTIC\nMakes Crowing in Five Days,\n12 Hours and 25 Minutes\nFrom Start\nQUEBEC, June 1 (By Thomaa T.\nChampion, Canadian from atiff\n\u25a0writer)\u2014In truly regal fashion th\u00ab\nCanadian Paclflo liner Empresa of\nBritain swept up the broad -water*\nof her own river today, completing\nher maiden voyage from 6outh-\nkmpton.\nThe Empress had made new records (Or the voyage from Southamp-\nton and Sherbourg to Quebec. When\nthe great white liner swung Into\nher dock at Wolfe Cove It was Just\nfive daya, 12 houra and 26 minutea\nsince   she   had   left   Southampton.\nThe laat day of her voyage waa a\ncrowning finish to this wonderfully\ntriumphant bridal home coming.\nProm Father-point, which waa reached\nat noon with* a new record from\nCherbourg of four days, 10 houra.\n33 minutes, her progress was of the\nstateliest.\nHomely Uttle river craft gave\nher their modest but full throated\ngreetings,'the Ught ships made their\nown hearty acclamations and far\naway above the woods there waa\neven heard tbe  boom of a gun.\nAt Quebec, crowds on the shore\nshouted tbelr welcome; parties In\ntrim little yachting vessels waved\ntheir greetings; tbe quay sides and\nlanding  places  were   thronged.\nThs average apeed of the Empress\nfrom Bishop Rock. Scllly Islands',\nto   Caps   Race   waa   23.7   knots.\nTHI^EPOWEU\nRIVER PEOPLE\nDROWN IN LAKE\nPOWKLL RIVIR. B. O. June 1.\u2014\n(CP) \u2014 thre* residents of PoweU\nRiver were drojmed nesr Csssler\npoint. Povrell lag*. Sunday evening.\nand three others were rescued when\n\u2022 motorboat returning from s picnic\ncspslzed.\nThe dead, are:\nMr. and Mre. Mlllert Johnson, and\nHarold Skorberg. residents of Powell   River.\nBivert Slverston and his mother,\nMrs. 8. eiverston, and Ous Call*-\nberg are In hospital here suffering\nfrom 'shoe* after three hours exposure   ln   the   water.\nINDO-CHINESE\nBANDITS KILL\nPARIS. Jun* 1.\u2014(API-A dispatch from Hanoi. Prench Indochina, to th* Haves News Agency\ntonight aald thai terrorist bands\nwearing red Insignia and acting under orders of native chiefs, hav*\nkilled 4- persona and mutilated and\ntortured scone of others throughout the provinc*.\nChrlatlantaed Annlmltes and\npriest*, the dispatch aald, were tortured with boning pitch and many\nnatlv* Officials who attempted to\nprevent th* raids ware tortured\nand mutilated.\nTHINK EXTENSION\nOF ALBERTA COAL\nSUBSIDIES GOOD\nvwwip.ii. Man., June I.\u2014\n(CP)\u2014Kltrnslon of the subsidy\non Alberta coal -hipped to\nManitoba and as far east as Fart\nFranc** and Nlouv lookout.\nOnt., may mean a big thing ror\nthe coal Industry In Alberts,\nsaid H R. Krll. srrrrlar.. nf lhe\nWestern Camilla I'nel M*~_N__-\ntlon, hi commenting hmlclil on\nPremier R. B. Bennetl's bndget.\nAlberta coal operators h-t >e-ir\ndisplaced about 200,000 tons of\nAmerican bituminous coal In\nManitoba. Mr. Krll said, and\nthe new extension will give\nthe foothills pro.tnre sn opportunity to supply pulp and\npaper plants In northwrstrrn\nOntario.\nJumping from a row boat, a tow\nseconds before lt smashed to pieces\non tha rocks below the Canadian Pacific railway bridge at Oranlte, In\nan effort to reach tho shore attor\nbeing caught in the swift waters\nof th* Oranlte rapids while fishing. Max Brabchenko, a middle-\naged Doukhobor, was drowned Monday afternoon sbout 8:30 Weat\nKootenay Power Ai Light company\nemployees st Oranlte, unable to\naid th* stricken man, watched on\nappalled,\nBrabchenko. who was apparently\nunskilled at handling a boat, took\nthe craft without the consent ot Its\nowner, Pred Chernenkoff, and\nlaunched It Just below Frank Phillip's ranch, with the intention oi\nfishing the waters of the bay serosa\nth*  uver.\nPropblllng the boat with only\none oar. although there WW* two\nln the boat, using It ss If It were\na paddle, he mad* for the opposite\nahore. In mid-stream th* current\ncaught th* boat and hurried it towards  the rapids.\nBrabchenko, realising his effort*\nto propel the boat were useless,\nstarted screaming for help to his\npartner. Fred Barokano. whom he\nhad refused to lake Into Use boat a\nfew minutea before, and who was\nstanding on the shore some 80 fe*t\nfrom   where   thc  boat  floated.\nSeveral workers st the Oranlte\ncsmp heard thc screams snd rushed to the scene in ttm* to see the\nman leap overboard Just before the\nboat reached the rapids. Coming to\nthe top Brabchenko struck out\nfrantically for a few seconds, then\nsank from view.\nMax Brabchenko. who was born ln\nKrevoff. Russis. hss been a resident of Csnsda for 20 years. He\nhas a mother tu Russia and a\nbrother in the Argentine.\nRecently, with four other Russians, he has been employed by contractor* to put in a pipe line for\nOeorge White st Tsghum. He lived\nwith the four in a smsll hut ln\nthat   vicinity.\nConstable R H. Msclntosh and\nConstable C E. Davidson motored\nto Tsghum snd with others sea'ch-\ned for the body, but sll that they\nfound was R piece of the boat.\nPOSTAGE RATES\nON LETTERS UP\nTO THREE CENTS\nBENNETT CHARGES\nLIBERALS WITH\nHAMPERING WORK\nIncome Tax Exemption Is Raised From $3000 to\n$3500; Provision Made to Confiscate Goods Imported From Russia; Magazines Taxed\nOTTAWA, June 1\u2014Tariff changes and increased taxes\nto offset a net deficit of $75,000,000 were features <if\nPremier R. B. Bennett's first budget today.\nTax clia.iges include:\nIncrease from 8'P to 10% in income tax on corporations, and limited companies.\nIncrease in sales tax from 1% to 4%.\nIncrease in postal rates on all but \"drop\" letters to\n8 cents.\nTwo-cent tax on all checks, including those below as\nwell as those above $10 in value.\nSpecial excise duty of Vh over and above tariff and\nsales tax on all imported goods.\nAbout 220 tariff changes are made. They include increased duties on agricultural products, automobiles above\ncertain prices, furniture, veneer, coal, some textiles, iron\nand steel products, canned goods, containers of cheese, dried\nmilk, etcetera and many other articles.\nThe Crows Nest Coal subvention is increased to extend\nit to shipments as far as St. Frances and Sioux Lookout,\ninstead of Winnipeg. Duties are placed on coke and coal\nfrom \"the United States. A subvention is to be paid on coal\nshipped frotn the Pacific coast for expert to other than\nthe United States and for use in steamers.\nThere will be a rive-cent a bushel\nsubvention on wheat shipment* for\nexport.\nItortff on imported maga-lnee Is\nincreased to 15 osnts a pound.\nCanadian    National    railway    loaa\nera*   over   \u202239.000.000,   plus   operations of eastern  lines and  Interns',\nof  8804.000.000.\nII IMINATS Did HI l;  TAXATION\nTo ellmlnst* to som* degree the\ndouble taxation or diridenda new\nprovisions sre msd* ln the income\ntax act under which dividends from\nCsnsdlsn companies to a oertaln ex.\ntent are tre. ol taxation insofar\nss the smaller Incomes are concerned.\nFamily corporations are abolished\nIncome tax exemption for married men and others ln the same\nclass is raised from 13000 to 038C0\nthus  decreasing  their  taxes.\nTo protect the public again*'\nimproper profiting from tariff protection, provision ls made for an\nexcls* tax to be applied on the\ngoods of any manufacturer who\nueae the Urlff to enable him to\nincreas* prices to ;he Canadan con-\naumer.\nProvision enabling th* government to confiscate Imports from\nRuaala, or any other country which\nIs not signatory to the treaty of\nVersailles Is made.\n{For detailed reports of -the\nbudget please turn to Inside pages'\nINDIAN HEIR\nPostage on Letters Within a\nCity, Two Cents; All\nCheques Stamped\nOTTAWA, Ont., inn.- _..\u2014\n(CVl\u2014In order to meet the de-\nlicit of thf post nPee depart-\nment \u2014 nearly W.OOfl.OtW\u2014the\none cent war tax on -\"-.lamp*,\nwhich fin* always applied tn\ndrop letters will now be imposed on all letter*. Hon. R- B.\nBennett announced today. This\nmakfM the rate on the ordinary\nletter three cent*. Instead of two\ncent*. The letters within a city\nwill  remain at two cents-\nThe rate on new\u00abpnpers and\nperiodicals has heen Inrreased\n.. ThU was formerly nne cent per\npound, bnt now It will be one\nrent per pound only on newspapers, etc., baring a circulation of lo.ooo copies and less,\nand on circulation In excess of\nthat, one and one-half cents\nper   pound,   wlll   be   charged.\nReligious, scientific, ediic.it-\ntlonal and agricultural publications   are   exempted.\nTba stamp tax on cheque*\nwhleh was two cents on cheques\nabove \u00bbI0 will apply now to\nall   chaaoe*. .\nIT rORKION FACTORICA IN\nCANADA\nOTTAWA, Ont., June l\u2014 (CPi \u2014\nAlthough lt was Impossible to estimate the total number of foreign\nmanufacturers which havo opened\nbranch fsctorles In Canada since\nlaat August, Premier R. B. Bennett,\nln hla budget speech today, aald\nBT had been registered with ths\nDominion bureau of statistics. It\nwould be aome time before a complete list would be available, be\naald. Of th* total, 75 ware branches\nof United Statea Industries, 10 were\nBritish  md  tw-o wer\u00ab French.\nOTTAWA, Ont., June 1.\u2014(CD\u2014\nCharges that tlie Liberal opposition\nwas attempting to belittle and destroy the coming Imperial economic conference at Ottawa, were\nmade in the houso of commons today by Premier R. B. Bennett.\nWhen discussing export trade and\nEmpire trade relations Mr. Bennett, was questioned by Rt. Hon.\nW. h. Mackenzie Kins, Liberal leader, and retorfcd that the Liberals\nhad tried to hamper the work or\nthe  Imperial  conference.\nCould the prime minister have\nasked for a more free hand than he\nhad at thc last Imperial conference,\napked   Mr. ' Mackenzie   King.\n\"The rt. hon. gentleman has fatted\nto appreciate what I say.\" said\nMr Bennett. \"I sm referring to\ntheir efforts to belittle and tf possible destroy tho Imperial economic conference at Ottawa.\"\nTRADE AGREEMENT\nWITH AUSTRALIA\nLIKELY TO COME\nCOLRT   AWARDS  K-.T_.Tl:\nRanee Chairs Kumarl Devi, onlv\none living of four wlvee of sn Indian rajah, who died childless m\n1912, in whose favor London court*\nhave reversed a previous decision\nsnd Is now awarded \u26666,000,000 estate.\nOTTAWA. Ont.. June I\u2014 (CP)\u2014\nA trade agreement with Australia\nwould likely b* submitted to parliament thla session for ratification\nPremier R. B. Bennett stated during  hla  budget speech  today.\nTh* action of New Zealand In\nIncreasing lta tariffs sgslnst Canada\nwaa because Canada's refusal to allow New Zealand butter to displace\ndomestic butter In thia country.\nMr. Bennett clslmed tb* blame\nfor the present situation r**t*d on\ntl** former government for making\nlt possible for the trsd* in N*w\nZealand butter to start In Canada.\nCONCLKDM  AT  i'M\nOTTAWA, ont., Jun, 1\u2014(CP\u00bb \u2014\nThe prim* minister concluded his\nbudget speech at 10 minutes to\nt o'clock. Ool. J L Ralston, former minister of national defence, immediately moved ad'ounftnen. of\n'_\u00bb  debate  until  Thursday.\nWHEAT SALES ON\nUP GRADE STATES\nPREMIER BENNETT\nOTTAWA, Ont. June 1\u2014(CP)\u2014\nMore wheat haa been aold this\nyear than las1, year, premier R. B-\nBt-nnett atated in the house of\ncommons today. Through tho efforts of the government, France\nwas buying larger quantities of\nCsnadian wheat and up to the end\nof April had bought six times as\nmuch aa In the* same period 'he\nyear before. Altogether one-third\nmore wheat had been sold so far\nthis year than in the corresponding\nmontha of last yaar.\nWhile the price was Juat aa low,\nthc premier said, thc government\nhad at least tried and, in measure,\nsucceeded in securing markets. The\nformer Liberal government, he\ncharged, had admitted lt could\ndo nothing to secure markets fnr\nwheat.\nCOAL SUBSIDIES\nARE WELCOMED IN\nB. C. COAL FIELDS\nVICTORIA. B. C June 1\u2014(CD\u2014\nCoal subsidies announced by Rt.\nHon. r B. Bennett will affect British Columbia coal fields in two\nimportant particulars, lt waa stated\ntoday by Hon. W. A. McKenzle,\nminister of mines. The Vancouver\nIsland mines will benefit from the\n35 centa a ton bonus on bunkered\ncoal for ship uae and exports other\nthan to tbe United States; and lhe\nCrow's Nest field, Including Corbln\nmlnea, will benefit from thc extension ot the 11.28 a ton subsidy\non eastbound shipments to Mnts\ntn   Manitoba,\nCLARK CASE IS\nCLOSED ABRUPTLY\nLOB ANORLRS, Jun* i (API-\nPresentation ot testimony againat\nDavid R. Clark, former deputy\ndlatrlct attorney accused of the\nMaying May 30 of Chariea Crawrord.\nnoltlclan and Herbert Spencer, \"Cru-\nxade\" msgazlna publisher, waa dosed abruptly today at hi. preliminary\nhaaring.\nTomorrow, while voters in the\nmunlrlpsl election are accepting or\nrejecting him aa a municipal judg*.\ndefense attorneys will strive for his\nfreedom before Judge Carl B. Btur-\nnenacker without presenting vrlt.\nnesees.\nCONVICTBD or BIRN.NO\nPRINCB GEOROI, B. C, Jun* 1\nBefore Magistrate Oeorge Milburn\ntoday. Ernest Lavasqu*. ot Pruc*\nOeorge. was convicted of burning\nwithout a permit In contnvtntlon\nof section te of th* Forest act, and\nwaa fined ttt.\nThe Weather\nPorecsst:    Nelson   and   vicinity \u2014\nFresh to strong south and west\nwinds: cloudy but not much change\nIn  temperature.\nNELSON      40 70\nVlotorla     i,            4? \u00abj\nVancouver                 SO 10\nKamloops _____ M IH\n__>'\u00abvan  Point 41 M\nPrlno*   Rupert    43 M\nDawson.  Y. T.    M M\nSeattle      __\u2014 40 \u00ab\u00ab\nPortland              00 M\nSan   Francisco     . 03 SO\nSpokane      . 00 08\nLoa   Angelea     B0 74\nNanalmo    __*__. 00 78\nPentlcton    _.__. 47 00\nVernon       40 83\nOrand  Forks  40 0>\nKaslo      _  40 71\nCranbrook     -   43 70\nCalgary      40 78\nEdmonton           48 70\nSwift   Current      _rs 80\nPrlnoe   Albert    .ftt 78\nQu'Appelle                               -- 80\nWinnipeg    .....               ..    60 78\n Miss Muriel Stanley Is\nBridge Hostess, Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B. C, June 1.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. James Wagstaff entertained on\nWednesday evenfhg when bridge was\nenjoyed. The invited guests included Miss Betty LaRue, Mlu M.\nSteel, Mr*. M. Kerr, Mr. and Mra.\nOeorge Keys, Mlsa F. Dilley. Miss M.\nKirk.\nArthur Davis arrived by motor\ncycle from Revelstoke Tuesday, returning Thuraday,\nK. Duckworth waa a Nakusp visitor\nWednesday trom Arrow Park.\nMlaa Muriel Stanley entertained\nat bridge on Thursday evening,\nthose pr**ent being Misses Mildred\nsnd Marjorle White, Nellie Johnaon\nand Messrs. Berne Pickering, C. V.\nHarrison. Arthur and Delbert Stanley. Mualc was alao enjoyed during\nthe evening.\nBint's opera, -Carmen,' Is being\nmad* into a sound film by British\nInternational Pictures. Th* task of\nadapting the work to the purpoaes\not the screen haa been difficult, as\nit is not the intention- of the company to preaent a photographed\nversion of th* opera.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B.C. Hotels\nNELSON, B. C.\nNelson is now on Daylight\nSavin? Time\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nHUMI\u2014S. Leary, Nakusp; Mr. and W. J. Johnstone. Silverton; A. J\nMrs. G. Constable. Creston; Mr. and Balmlnt, Cranbrook; C. Martyn. G\nMn. O. R. Cocking. R. c. Wright, J. Olum, Medicine Hat; T. Donald-\nJ.  Soker,  Vancouver;   Mr.   and  Mrs. I eon,  Toronto.\nTHB NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.  C. \u2014  TUESDAY  MORNING,  JtNE  2, 1932\nROAD TO FIVE\nMILE INTAKE\nTOBE BUILT\nCity to Employ Men Needing\nWork the Most; Gray\nQuestions Engineer\nA road to tha Intake on Fire Mile\ncreek will be constructed as soon aa\nIs possible by the city, and the work\nwlll he given to those mostly needing lt. This was the unanimous\ndecision of the city council on Mon-\nday night following introduction of\nthc question by Alderman Roaa\nFleming. He pointed out that WOO\nwa\u00ab provided ln tbe estimates and\nthat lt would cost but little more\nto do a satisfactory Job. The road\nwas necessary, he believed, aa the\nengineer or city men had to make\nrepeated trips to the intake to clean\nthe screens, it would be valuable\nfor future need ln caae of additional\nconatruction at tbe Intake*.\nAlderman J. B. dray questioned\nCity Englnetr Boyd C. Affleck closely on this matter. He learned that\nthe Intake wu vlaited every week,\nand that the engineer believed It\nshould be visited every seoond day.\nHe declared that at present lt took\ntoo long for a man to make, tbe\ntrip on foot and that with a road\nhe could make the trip up and back\nin three hours.\nGRAY   OBJECTS\nAlderman Gray objected to the\ncity engineer having to do thla\nwork. He suggested that aome lesser\nemployee of the city be put on this\nwork and the engineer be kept\nwhere he was needed most. Mr.\nAffleck declared he found difficulty\nin finding some one who could be\ntrusted to do the work and read\nthc guage. He believed a man could\nbe trained, but said a road was\nnecessary so Hut he could make a\nquick trip.\nAlderman Firming declared thst\nthe engineer contemplated rebuilding the screens snd tbat a road waa\na convenience the city should supply.\nAlderman H. B. Lindsay waa of\nthe opinion that ready ecotsa to\ntte Intake was a necessity if only\nto insure against water shortage\nand danger of fire.\nTOO EXPENSIVE\nAlderman Gray favored the roid\nIdea but declared It waa too expensive for the city to send the city\nengineer to the intake for Inspections. He wondered what waa the\nmater at the Intake that ao frequent    inspections   were    necessary.\nCity Engineer Affleck stated that\nleave* cause blocking on tha intake\nand that the water overflowed. In\naddition dirt wu causing trouble.\nHe declared that the work done at\nthe intake wu not efficient. Mayor\nMorgan interjected that the screen*\nwere   old   -uhioned.\nMr. Affleck stated it had been\nnecessary to send a man up continually to clean up the screens and\nthat dirt was getting into the system. He had even considered having\na man live at tha intake for two\nmonths of the year.\nTOLMIE STATES\nCONVENTION IS\nNOT NECESSARY\nVICTORIA, a Ct Jim* 1 \u2014\nDeclaring tbe holding of a party\nconvention at this tim* utterly un necessary. Premier 8.\nF. Tolmle te nlgbt returned to\nhit attack on tbe sniper* who\nsought to Injure the sacces* of\nhi* recent negotiation* at Ot-\nt awa by the circulation et\nstories to the effect that he wa*\nto be superseded In the leadership of the Conservative part},\nand aa premier. In straightforward language he challenged\nhi* opponent* to preaent themselves In the light, and predicted that many wonld ne\nfound with Liber*! banners attached to their habiliments.\nThunderous cheers greeted his\ndecUratton-v In the crowded\nauditorium of the Conserralhe\nclub headquarters, where he\n\u25a0poke under the auspices of the\nVictoria Women's Conservative\nassociation.\ncrn TO PAVE\nBAKER-CEDAR\nSTREET SOON\nCouncil    Decides    Complete\nWork; to Erect Wall; Postpone Hill Work\nALDERMEN WILL\nTAKE CENSUS OF\nWORK, WORKERS\nWould Apportion tht Public\nWorks Jobs; Call Meeting\nfor Thursday\nEmployment, will be (Ivan serious\nconsideration by tb* Nelson elty\noouncil st \u2022 speclsl committ** meeting called for Thursday night next\nby Mayor J. P. Morgan. At this\nmeeting, besides the council, will be\nCity Engineer Boyd C. Affleck, Electrical Engineer w D. Fleet and City\nClerk  W.  I.  Wesson:\nAt Monday night's meeting Aldermen Boss Fleming brought th* subject before the sldermen. He believed that all city work ot a \"public worka nature\" should be reviewed\nsnd equally divided, as far as possible, among those needing th* work\nthe most. It was a matter of giving\nss many people as possible something  to do.\nAt Tbursdsy's meeting tbe officials will go over all city payrolls\nand check over the employeea. The\nnames of cltlaens making application for work will alao be checked\never anl classified. Th* aldermen\nImmediately fell ln line with Uw\nsuggeatlon.\nSAVC-T \u2014 R. V. Wilcox. Salmon, Brown. Montreal; __, m. Somers. Na-\nAnn; F. W. Pnskln. corra Linn: kusp; A. s. Whiteley. Victoria: A\nFt Bradley. Bonnlngton: Mr. and s. Parker, Revelstoke: D. R. Rim\nMrs. J. W. Hamilton, creston; Mlas R. O. Hughes. Vsncouver: L. W\nB. Hamilton. New Denver: O. E. Smith. Orand Forks. Mrs. M. Wll-\nMackle. H. Mackie. Boswell; W. Bsr- son, Kemloope.\ncollln,   Burton;    Mr.   and   Mrs.   L.I\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapolnte* Prop.\nHet ond cold water tn every room\nSteam healed.\nQUEEN'S\u2014 R. Robert. Salmo: A.\nBwanson. Procter: A. Carlson. South\nalocsn; M. H. Brownlee. Vernon; P.\np.   Hsrms,   Rensta.\nMadden Hotel\nD. A. MCDONALD\nSteam Heated Rooms by Uw\nDay, Week or Month.\nEvery consideration shown\nto guests.\nCor. Baker and Wart StrMt*\nNeleon\nNew Qrand\nHotel\nr. u KAFAK, Prep.\nWeekly sr monthly rates.\nHot snd rold water In all rooms.\nPhone 103       P. 0. BOX lOtl\nNIW ORAND-Mr. and Mrs. V\nRussell. Nelson; J. c. Berr, o. Shene.\nVsncouver; A. Dietrich. Plunkett.\nE.   Oerher.   creston.\nMADDEN\u2014H. HUglws. Bpoksne; C.\nR.  McKenrle.  Nelson.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n\u202205 Vernon St. rhone\nH. Wesslrk\nFifty Rooms of Solid Comfort.\nHeadquarters   for   Loggers   aad\nMiners.\nTWO CONVICTED\nMEN IN JAIL HERE\nSentenced to eight months ln\nGreenwood for breaking and entering, Oeorge Nerou waa brought in\nto Nelaon by Provincial Police Constable O. A. McDonald of Pentlcton\nand lodged ln the prorlnciai Jail\nhere.\nUnder two charges, one of obstructing a police officer In the\ncourse of his duty, K. McFarlane\nwaa arrested by Constable W. Jr-\nvlne cf the Trail city polloe and\nsentenced for the first offence to\na |&o fine, with an -alternative of\ntwo montha in Jail, and on the\ntrcond charge, that under the\nLiquor act, Mr. McParlsne was sentenced to a 126 fine, or one month.\nQIAKB   IS   FELT\nTEHERAN. Persia, Jun\u00a9 1 lAP.\u2014A\nsevere earthquake snd hear? thunder storms struck tbls section over\ntlie  week  end.\nThe earthquake was most strongly\nfelt at painsvsnd and flhahpoor\nbut little  dsmage was done.\nSeven persona were struck by\nlightning  at Hamadsn.\nIWiVchlN    IS    IMIK.-llli\nTrail, B.C. Hotels\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\ntrail, b. c.\nA. P. LEVESQUI. Prop.\nDOUGLAfi\nHOTEL 9\nRooms and Bath\nE. I_ and A. GROUTAOS\nProp*.\n(Mam Heated\nThroughout\nHot and C*ld\nWater\ngag Pbone ttt\nTRAIL, B. C.\nThe House You\nWant\nU\/HETHKB   you're   a   pros-\n\" peettv*   buyer   or   owner\nof  \u25a0   tious*,   yoo'lt   find   tbe\nClassified columns worth\nwhile.\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nNalson, B.C. Cafes\nTHE ROYAL CAFE\ntLABSlt    IU_\u00bbTALKAM\nReflaenasM   and   unicacy   Prevail\norsN oav anu Mum\n\u25a0 lsU_.Hi\ns IMnoer ***\nr and   NwsSlts\nKOOTENAY CAFE\nVERNON   STREET\nIs  \u00bbw  serving  regular\n3-COl'RSC    MEAL,   304\nFrom   ll.SS  to   I\nQUICK   MRVICR\nkootensy   Hotel ,\nWTNNIW-, June 1 (CD\u2014Ap-\npraised of the outstanding pointa of\nPremier It. B. Bennett's budget,\npresented today, Premier John Bracken ot Manitoba tonight preferred to\ndefer comment at ie\u00bbit until tomorrow, He expressed particular lntereat ln the announced Intention\nof the government to absorb flv*\ncente per bushel of the freight rste\non wheat for export.\nBYLAW GOVERNING\nFIRE LIMITS PUT\nON TABLE, COUNCIL\nSurfacing wlll b* completed, forms\nlaid and patVtg started shortly on\ntwo block* of reoently complete\nroad grading between Hendryx and\nCedar streets and Cedar and Vernon\nstreet*. This was the decision of the\ncity counoll Monday night. This\nportion of the excavating and grading waa recently oompleted by the\ncity under the relief plan.\nAlderman Rom Flaming, chairman\nat the public work committee,\nraised the question ln council. H*\ndeclared that tt had been found\npossible to do thi* paving work\nthis year, aa expected  settling and\nIn addition to completing a 20-foot\ndrying waa not neoeaeary,\npaved roadway, the council authorised construction of a cement retaining wall around the corner of Baker\nand Cedar atreet*. At present a\ncity ere* 1* employed constructing\na cement sidewalk along the west\naid* of Baker street between Hen\ndryx and Cedar.\nIn order to do thi* necessary\nwork the council poetponed, for the\ntime being, some paving work contemplate* up the hill on Kootensy\n\u2022treat.\nCONFERENCE ON\nUNEMPLOYMENT\nMAYOR'S IDEA\nWill Call Council and Service\nOrganizations to Discuss\nWinter Plans\nLocal Improvement bylaw No. 767,\ncovering work on Josephine street\nbetween Baker and Victoria streeta\nwas read for a third time at the city\ncouncil meeting Monday night.\nBylaw No, 766, amending the\nbuildings and tire district bylaw,\nand extending the city fir* limit*,\nwas up for third reading, but waa\ntabled \u00abt the request of Alderman\nR. * W. Dawson. Mr. Dawson declared\nhe wished to know more about the\nrulings concerned certain aectlon*\nof the city before the bylaw' was\nfinally passed.\nBylaw No. 366, having to do with\namendments to the plumbing bylaw\nwas read a third time after tb*\ncouncil took under review certain\ncriticisms. J.' Smith spoke briefly\non suggested recommendations. The\nbylaw wlll be up for possible amendment'snd final reading on Monday\nnight.\nThat he intended to initiate steps\nimmediately toward the unemployment problem of the coming winter,\nwaa the announcement of Mayor J.\nP. Morgsn at th* city council on\nMonday  night.\nHe declared that conditions did\nnot look any too good and that lt\nwould be better for the city to be\nprepared for any emergency.\nHe hoped to call a general meeting of the council and local service\norganisations ahortly to formulate\nsome scheme to handle she Jobless.\nThe matter will be brought before\nthe council at a special committee\nmeeting on Thursday night next.\nEMPLOYEES OF\nC. P. R. HONOR\nMISS P. BLAKE\nACTIVE SUMMER\nPROGRAM   PLANNED\nBY GUILD LADIES\nBALFOUR, B. 0., May 81.\u2014A Joint\nmeeting of the Balfour, Proctor and\nQueen's Bay Anglican guild wa* held\nat th* home of Mrs. a. -Conrad,\nBalfour, on Wednesday, May 37, to\ndiscuss the annual sate of work\nwhich la to be held on the Oulet\nhotel ground* in' August. It wa*\ndecided to have a borne cooking\nstall, loe cream, teas and other\nattraction*. A picnic ls planned in\nJuly. During the strawberry seaaon\ngarden tea 1* planned at the\nhome of Mr*. Major, Procter. Thoee\npresent were Mrs. Kennedy, Mrs.\nMorgan, Mrs. Noakes,' Mrs. Hudson.\nMra. Conrad, Mrs. Fraser and Mlsa\nEdna Fraser (visitors), ell of Balfour, and from Procter were Mrs.\nMajor, Mrs. Bole* and Mrs. McCarthy,\nMrs. Appleton, Mr*. Cahnon, Mrs.\nMerrifield, Mra. Ritchie.\nMiss F. M. Richards has been\nspending th* past 10 -days ln Balfour, the house-guest of Mr. and\nMrs. J. Peachey.\nNEW GOVERNMENT\nOF SPAIN WILL\nASSEMBLE, JULY\nCabinet Decides That the Disposition of Royal Title\nMust Wait\nSPECIAL EXCISE\nIMPOSED ON AU\nIMPORTED GOODS\nImporter or Transferee Must\nPay One Per Cent on\nBonded Goods\nOTTAWA, June 1 (OP)\u2014Effective\ntoday, a special exslse tax of on*\nper cent Is imposed 9n all good*\nImported Into Canada, payable by\nthe importer or transferee who takes\nthe goods out of bond for consumption, at the time when th* good*\nare Imported or taken out of warehouse for consumption. Announcement of the tax was mad* by\nPremier R. B. Bennett in Wa budget\nspeech   today.\nThe resolullon to make the necessary amendment to the special\nWar Revenue act reads: A special\nexcise tax of 1 per cent to be Imposed, levied and collected on th*\nduty paid value of all goods Imported Into Canada, payable by the\nImporter or transfers who takes the\ngoods out of bond fcr consumption,\nat the time when the goods and Imported or taken out of warehouse\nfor consumption.\nIN   FORCE   NOW\nResolved, further, that any enact\nment founded on the foregoing reao.\nlution shall be deemed to have\ncome into force on June 1, 1091;\nand to have applied to all gooda\nmentioned in the foregoing reaolu-\nmmsmssBBm_-\\ 11 ii, i, i Jim   ( i \u25a0 **\nSTORMY WEATHER\nBREAKS MONDAY\nHOT WEEK-END\nAltar \u2022 beautifully bot wee--.-*.\nth, weather on Monday euddenlr\nchanged, though th, tempereture\nbaldly varied.\nAt about 3 p. m. on Monday a\nviolent thunderstorm broke aut with\na. heavy downpour ot rain, whloh,\nhowever, only luted a ahort ttote.\nTh, minimum temperature waa 48\ndegreea and the maximum waa 70\ndegree,. Th, rainfall waa tft inch,\nand th, humidity reading, during\ntha day ware 76, 70 and 73 per oent\nof saturation.\nFAIR TOURIST\nTRAFFIC THIS\nSEASONJEXPECTED\nJ. A. Kerr Suggests Party of\nNelsonites Meet Moscow\nChamber of Commerce\nrURIK OF TRAIL\nFINED FOR SERVINi\nBEER TO A MINOli\nTRAIL. B K.. June 1\u2014Mike Turlk,\nJr., beer parlor waiter, waa fined\nKOO and coata on a charg, of supplying hear to a minor, when he\nappeared before Magistrate Noble\nBinna ln polloe court thla afternoon\nTho youth waa fined a aimilar\namount for purchasing bear. A\nmarge against Mike Turlk of being\nth, proprietor of the bear parlor\nwhich had permitted bear to be\nsold to a minor was withdrawn at\nthe request of Olilef cf Poilce\nBenjamin   Downes.\nCOMMONS TO TAKB HOLIDAV\nOTTAWA. Ont., June l.-The\nhouae of common, will tak, a holiday on June 3. King George's birthday. Premier ft. B. Bennett announced tonight. Thi prime minlater gave notice he would make a\nmotion  to thla effect tomorrow.\nTBAIL. B. C. June 1\u2014Eight cases\nof diphtheria were reported In Trail\nIn May. City Medical Officer Dr.\nP. S. Baton reported to the city\ncouncil tonight. Ther, were no other\nreportable   dlacaaea.\nAINSWORTH\nHOT SPRINGS HOTEL\n.ND   MVIMMIMI   POOL\nNATURE*  HEALTH  AND\nSI . IMRK   RESORT.\nI I KMNHEn   COTTAGES.\nEXCELLENT   FISHING\nPAINS\nNo matter how severe,\nyou oan always hav*\nimmediate relief I\nAapirin always Mom pain quickly. It\ndoea it without on* 111 effect,. Harmlaaa\nto the hurt; harmlaaa to anybody. But\nIt alwaya brings relief.  Why suffer?\nASM III Y\n-fRApl-tt-MUM-g.\nUssto in Canada,\nEIGHT CASES OF\nDIPHTHERIA,    TRAIL\nDURING MONTH MAY\nTli* Canadian Pacific railway employ** of Nelson presented Mlaa\nPatricia Blake with an \u2022Metric Jjon\nand toaster Saturday afternoon In\nCapt. D. Brown's office. In connection with her appro-aching marriage.\nThe presentation wes made by E.\n7. Brake in tht presence of a number of employeea. Speeohee were\nmade by C. H. Sewell. E, T. Brake\nand others preaent. Mias Blake re-\npiled suitably.\nTELEPHONE LINE\nREQUEST WILL BE\nDISCUSSED, TRAIL\nMADRID. June 1. (AP)\u2014The cabinet tonight set July 14 as the\nelate for the meeting of the first\nRepublican national assembly ln\nSpain,\nThe assembly elections will be\nheld ou June 38. it was decided,\nand run-off elections wlll be held\non July 5 In districts where no\ncandidates receive 330 per cent of\nthe total number of votes in tha\ndistrict.\nThe cabinet also decided that\nthe disposition of the titles of the\nroyal family will be postponed until the national assembly can formulate a policy on this question. No\ntitles of nobility will be granted\nhenceforth, however, it was decided,\n\"because Spain hu entered a new\nregime of liberty and democracy.\"\nPBKDICT DEPRESSION\nOVER\nUnder the decree of tonight titled\npersona ln Spain are placed virtually on the same status as French\nnobility. They may use their titles\nprivately but they must sign their\nnames to official document*. After\nestablishing a new all-time low of\n12.60 to the dollar thla morning.\ntht peseta recovered on a sudden\nupward turn, fluctuating around\n11.70. Soma bankers tonight predicted tht bottom of the depression\nhad  been  reached.\nOne of tht chief causes of this\nsudden improvement is believed to\nhave been an announcement of in-\ndaleclo Prleto. minister of finance,\nthat tbt government might veto an\nincrease In bank note circulation\nbeyond  100,000 pesetas.\nA fair amount of tourist traffic\nIs to be expected this aummer, but\nnot as, much aa the last few years,\ndeclares J. A. Kerr, who bas Just\nreturned from a trip south.\nIt la bis opinion  that  it  would\nbt an excellent ldta it a  party of\nsix  or more prominent  Nelson  clt-\n___    liens   who   cater   for   tht   tourist\ntlon imported or taken out of ware- ^        ^   tf ^   \u201e\nh_r_ii___*   *?*_\u2022   nnniiimntliM.   nn   nnrl    \u00bbft_pr    ... , __T     ___ . '\nIdaho, and meet the Moscow chamber of commerce. It would certainly bring more tourists from that\ndistrict,  declared  Mr.  Kerr.\nTRAIL, B. C. June -\u2014Application\nof H. A. Nicholson, dlatrlct manager\nfor Britlah Columbia Telephone\ncompany, for permlaalon for the\n-ompeny's transcanade line to cross\nland which will bt part of Trail's\n,isw osmetefy, was rtftrred by the\ncity   council   tonight   to   committee\nt the whole council.\nFILE FIRST AID\nLETTER AT TRAIL\nTRAIL. \u00ab. O- June 1\u2014Latter\nfrom tha eontDenaatlon board re\nquesting that a flrat aid kit fee\ntaken on location by every \"fang''\nof 10 or mora man. waa ordered\nfiled   by  the   city   council   tonight\nApprove One Water\nApplication, Trail\nhouse for consumption on and after\nthat date and to have applied to\ngoods previously imported for consumption for which no entry for\nconsumption was. made before that\nday.\nProvided, however, that the aaid\nta* shall n?t apply to gooda, the\nduty paid value of whlcb does not\nexceed 136 unless more than one\nentry of auch goods be made by\none Importer at one tlmt from ont\nsource, in which eaat tbt tax ahall\nbt applicable; provided, further.\nthat this tax aball not apply to\nsrtlc.es on which other excise -axes\nare imposed by part XI of tbe said\nact, nor. to British and Canadian\ncoin and foreign gold coin, to donations of clothing for charitable\npurpoaes, nor to gooda enumerate-i\nln customs Urlff Item* 700, 703.\n703, 704. 7M. 708A. 70\u00ab. and 707.\nbut shall apply to all other articles\nof whatsoever nature, whloh are\nimported.\nUNEMPLOYMENT IS\nDISCUSSED, TRAIL\nCouncil   Discuss   Plans   for\nThis Winter; Band Money\nfor Relief\nMANUFACTURERS\nHAVE LITTLE TO\nSAY ON BUDGET\nVICTORIA. B C\u201e June 1. (By\nForbes Rbude, C. P. stuff writer)\u2014\nThe Canadian budget was discussed\nby the convention of the Canadian\nManufacturers' association ln a private aession tonight. Pending study,\nno official comment could be made,\nsnd Individual delegates were reticent ln their observations. However,\ntht budget provisions did not seem\nto cause any surprise.\nTbe aales tax increase from one\nto four per cent was obviously satisfactory to the delegates In general, wbo seemed to regard the increase as the minimum to be expected. Tht association was alresdy\non record as favoring an increased\nsales tax In preference to any turnover   impost.\nTRAIL. B. C. June 1 \u2014Unemployment vU discussed by the TraU\ncity council today from the ariflt\no! preparing for a winter in which\nlt was expected tbat an extremely\nheavy demand would be made for\nrelief. A suggestion thai tbe pro*\nvinclal and Domlnltn governmfj \u25a0 ts\nshould meet the municipalities with\ntbt view of arriving at some measure of relief, waa put forward by\nAid. C. H. Burgees.\nMayor Bruno LeRose and City\nClerk W. K. B. Monypenny deecrlbed conversations with men demanding work. Aid. Chariea A.\nNewman proposed that the matter\nbe taken up at the 0. B. C. M.\nmeeting, but lt was felt that tins\nwould be too lata to be effective.\nAid. B. L. OrouUge declared tim\nthc government work, such aa road\nwork, ahould be started to provide work. Aid. Burgess declared\nthat there wu no uae passing sowing men from one municipality to\nanother. Tbt matter was left over\nto be continued In committee. Later\nIn the evening tht council decided\nnot to make grants to the binds\nthis year, but to reserve the money\nfor unemployment.\nMAY BIND GRAVEL\nON RAILWAY LINE\nSTANLEY STREET\nOn recommendation of Alderman\nft. w. Daw\u00bbn, ttie olty and electrical enflneers, on Monday nunt,\nwere instructed to oonfar and devise plana for packing or binding\nthe travel recently placed over the\natreet railway track, on Stanley\n\u2022tret. It w;a polntyl out tbat autoists were carrying thla gravel onto\ntha harder road aurfacee and oattsing\nlnoonvenlenoe. A preparation of oil.\nor tar waa auggeatad aa a mean, to\nclear up tha trouble.\nNO HEADWAY MADE\nUPON   COTTONWOOD\nFALLS PARK IDEA\nQuestioned by Alderman J. B.\nOray Monday night. Alderman R. W.\nDawson reported that ha had been\nunable as yet to make leadway on\nthe suggested Cottonwood Falls park\nK-itt. Me declared the matter would\nhavt hia attention at once.\nRock Question Will\nBe Taken Up With the\nRailway Head Again\nTRAIL, B. 0., June 1\u2014Weter\napplication of William Thorn, Second avenue, waa approved by the city\ncouncil tonight. Application* o( the\nWest Kootenay Power and Light\ncompany. O. Kutlni and Henry\nEulk were referred to th, city engineer.\nExcelsior Club at\nTrail Haa a Picnic\nTRAIL, I. C Juna J\u2014Over 30\nExcelsior club members motored to\nBear Creek thla evening and held\ntheir flrat, outalde gatnerlng of the\naeason. ncnlo lunch, fireside eongs\nand gimaa ware enjoyed. Mlas Sara\nLogan ww In charge.\nSWIMMERS ARE\nINVOLVED IN A\nSTABBING CASE\nCARMBL, N Y. June I.\u2014(Al-) \u2014\nJoe Parley, M, New York Atniet'c\nclub e'ar swimmer, waa ilabb.d\nseveral times arid atrloualy injured during a fiaa-for-all figh. In\na dance pavilion yeeterday. It was\nmade known today. Two men.\ncharged with attacking Farley, ara\nheld for the grand jury on aaaault\nchargaa.\nRay Ruddy. American swimming\nchampion, alao waa Involved.\nFarley, who Is a boxer a, well aa\na swimmer, felled three of hla assailants berore be dropped to the\nfloor with deep knit, wotnda In -lie\nback.    Ruddy   waa  not Injured.\nTRAIL. B C, Juna 1\u2014City coun\nell felt tbat C. t. R. Superintendent\nJ. Ivan MacKay of Nelson did not\nfully underetand conditions when he\nwrote that the C. F. R. oould not\naoeapt responsibility for rocka rolling down on Railway lane.\nIt wa* suggestad the rocks oould\ncom, from no other place than the\nC. P. R right-of-way though tbe\nsuperintendent was rlgtlt In saying\nthe roadbed acted aa a deterrent.\nIt waa proposed City engineer a. 8.\nMcDiarmld tske up the cprtirtn\nwith Mr. MacKay when b, next\ncsme  to Trail.\nTRf-IL-BLAZINO   TB1P  OOE8  ON\nKBARST, Ont., Juna 1\u2014K. Wharton Shaw of Hamilton, Ont., wbo\nleft Heant early Friday. May It, on\nhla trall-blailng trip by automobile\nacrew Canada, camped that night\nat Mileage M0, on th* Algoma Central railway, ona mile from Cop-\npell The expedition took to the\nbush at coppell, whloh they bad\nreached by road trom Hearst. In\nth, (Int encounter by automobile\ntravel with tha northern Ontario\nbush, Bhaw covered one mil, over\nbad   musket\nAMD   TO   TAP   WATER\nMAW    TEMPORARILY\nTRAIL. B. C, Jun, 1\u2014City oouncil tonight referred to committee of\nwhole requeet of O. L. Marry for\npermission to tap a city water main\nfar tempor.ry supply to bouse at\nAnnable Prevloua requests by other\nindividuals had been refuaed, It\nwaa  aald.\nTOBACCO FOR THE HHKEI-\nLoeaes from unthrlftlness due to\nInternal paraalfaa In sheep may be\nreduced by the feeding of tobaeoo\nto the flock. Tha tobacco ts given\nwtth aalt ln tha proportion of 10\npounda of aalt to oata of crushed\ntobacco leaf. Th, leaf ahould be\ndried ao that It may be broken\nup In a elae equal to wbeat bran.\nThla, what miked with th, salt,\nslightly molataned. form, a cake\nwhich tba aheap wlll lick whan\nplaced before them in tha Held or\nen Thla recommendation la tnad,\nby Pr. Lionel Btevoneon, author of\n-ue federal bulletin, \"Common Animal Pereeltee Injurious to Sheep\nIn  Saatarn  Canada,\"   In   whioh  h,\nTO INVESTIGATE\nFIRE INSURANCE\nPOLICIES, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. c, June 1. \u2014An m-\nvesUgatlon ol all fire Insurance\npolicies by the finance oommittee\nand the city clerk waa endorsed by\nthe city council tonight. This step.\nAid. X. L. Groutage suggested, might\nresult In conalderable aavlng for\ntha city ir a blanket policy waa\nobtained.\nSTIMSON HEADS\nFOUND GUILTY\nVETS' ORCHESTRA\nHONORED AT TRAIL\nOrchestra   Leader   Presents\nLegion President With\nStlmmel Cup\nTRAIL, B. C, Junt 1.\u2014Trail\nbranch of the Oanadlan Legion tonight entertained the Trail Veterans' orcheatra, winners of the\nStlmmel cup of ine Kootenay mu-\nelcal festival. Songs, monologues\nan<| dancea were features on tht\nexcellent  amoker  program.\nThe outstanding event of the\nevening was thB handing over. 07\nPresident T. Meachem. of th\u00ab Veterans' orchestra, of the cup to F.\nW. Steacy, Legion  president.\nHND SKELETON\nOF BRITISH BOY\nIN THE NORTH\nstates  that  for  a   flock   unused   to\ntobacco   a   allghtly   less   ptjrportlun\nof   tobacco   should   be   ueei   for   1   the   investigation   of Ms  affairs   by\nweak   ax   two   at   tht   beflanlng.     the   provinoe.\nTORONTO. Ont., June 1.\u2014OCP)\nP O. Johnston, L. I. Clark and\nH. H. Thomaa, former executives of\nO. A. Stlnuon Co. and subsidiary\norganize Uona. were found guilty tonight by an assise court Jury of\npublishing fa)*, prospectuses, but\nwere acquitted on the charge of\nconspiring to defraud the public\nJohnson, who was president of\ntht oompany, waa sentenced to\nthrse years in Portsmouth penitentiary, and Clark, vice*president, to\ntwo and a half yean. Pasting of\nsentence on Thomas, who is at\npresent a diabetic patient in **M*\npltAl, was deferred until tomorrow.\nIt allow for further consideration\nof hla eaat.\nTht Jury verdict was announced\nafter an hour and a half's deliberation, terminating ths five-day trial\nwhich followed the collapse of the\nbond   and   Investmsnt  houae,   and\nVICTORIA, June 1\u2014The bleached\nskeleton of John Noel (Petch) Bennett, the young Englishman who\ntried to walk from Pouce Coupe to\nVancouver last fall, waa found this\nweek by provincial police officers,\naccording to word received +t police\nheadquarters today.\nThe skeleton waa about ISO mllea\nalong the trail from Pouce Coupe\nto Prince  Oeorge.\nEvidently Bennett died of starvation and exposure, as poilce had\nfeared when trace of htm was lost\nlatt ln the autumn. Llttlt le known\nof him. except that a British batik\nsent anxious Inquiries for him on\nbehalf of relatives In Inglsnd.\nThrough this bank police will -endeavor  to  inform his family.\nLABOR TO PROTEST\nRAISING POSTAGE\nF. L. Irwin Pays\nVisit, New Denver\nNUT DENVER. B. O., June 1.\u2014\nMrs. R Smlllie snd daughter. Margaret, of Nelson, ara visitors In\ntown, the gueate of Mra. T. Avison.\nMr. and Mrs. c. White of Trail\nwar, week-end visitors In town, the\ngueat, of Mr. and Mra. B. Wallbaum.\nMri. H. Onstela ud daughter,\nDona, of Spoksne, are visiting In\ntown, tba guesta of Mr. ond Mrs.\nH. 8. nelaon.\nMn. L. Slat and daughter. Joan,\nwho have been the guesta of Mr.\nad Mra. 1. R. Wood, for tha paat\ntwo months, bave left for thalr\nhome In Coleman, Alta. They ware\naccompanied aa far aa Nelaon by\nMrs. Wood. Mrs. Slst's mother.\nMrs. R. MacPheraon is spending a\nholiday In Nelaon.\nR. McLeod of TraU waa a wa\nend vlaltor ln town,\nW. R. Will haa arrived ln town\nfrom Ontario, and wlll tpend Ul,\nsummer here.\nR. Smlllie, of Neleon, waa a wa\nend visitor ln town.\nMr. and Mn. Hunter Oardner of\nNakuap. were visitora ln town oyer\ntbe holiday. ,\u25a0\nCecil Diwaon, former resident ot\nNew Denver, ls spending a holiday\nln town.\n, Mn. J. Hamilton of Craston la a\nvisitor In town, th, guest of her\ndaughter, Mia, PhyllU Hamilton,\nof the hospital ataff.\nD. Cummins and J. naury of Neleon. wen recent vuiton In town.\nMr. and Mn. r. L. Irwin and\n_on Varna, end daughter. Mn\nHinnlt. and son Pred, and JTed\nJeffe-a. wen Monday vislton In\ntown, th, guest* of Rav. J. and Un.\nHerdman.\nHar. J. Herdman haa received word\nfrom the ooaet that he is to he\nretained here as pastor for the combined ohargea of New Denver aad\nSlocan Olty.\nDr. j-rencls hu lift for hi, annual medical Inspection of tha\nschools In Slocan dty.\nPlan to Form Pythian\nLodge Order, Salmo\nSAUK}. B. c., juna J.-A dona-\nJ,^__c'.*\",f!1 m fr****' 1>M ***\u00ab\nmade to the Women'a Inatltuta\nlibrary   by  Mn.  O.  Mattbewe.\nOn Thursday afternoon a meat-\nlng was held at tba homa of Mn.\nw. Millar to make plan* for tbe\nprg.nlaatlon of a Pythian sisters'\nlodge in salmo. During the afternoon tea waa aerved by Mn. Miller\nwho waa assisted by Mn. Walter\nShelll. Those preaent wen Mrs\nW. B. Mclsaao. Mn. A. Clark, Mrs'\nJ. Clark and Mra M. Patera all of\nTmlr, while thoaa of Salmo Included Mn. A. Bremner, Mn. Henry   John,   Mra.   H.   o.   Bush.   Mn.\ni \u201eH,,ar?_ J!*-* w* c\"i\"- K\nWalter   Shelll   and   Mrs.   w.   Miller\nJohn R. AJhelll is vl.itlng his\nparent, st Needles.\nP. Talbot of Nelaon la a bualneea\nvlaltor to Salmo. -Msineee\nMr. and Mre, w. Shew of Nelway have taken up residence in\nSalmo.\nW.    Miller   left    by    motor\nCreston   on   Saturday.\nMlsa O. Stephenson |, spending\nthe  week-end  In Neleon.\nMlas Jeaale Harrop and I McKnight of Nelson were Prlday vial-\ntore to Salmo.\nt. A. Wheeler of Nelaon spent\nSaturday in Salmo.\nMlaa Vivian Bade, of st Loula\nUo.. Is one of tbe few women who\nhave invaded tha field of the . _\nWer. She Is an exoellent worker\nand an adept in repairing ahoaaT\nWINNIPBO, Man. Juna l.--Labor\nwlU protest tho Dominion in mains the price of porta*;, etamp. tor\niettsra gfeing out of tha city to\nthree eenta, William Ivena, Winnipeg member of the Manitoba legislature, declared tonight. Commenting on Premier R. B. Mennett's\nbudgat. Mr. Ivena termed th, departure from penny postage quit*\n'unjustifiable.\nOr. r. Boa*\nPhrslclan and lar-\ngeon. specialist In\nrectal and Intestinal\ndtaeasee   only.\nPILES\ncared wttheut alteration, caaeiiaa-\n\u25a0lea saiceeafolly treated. Writ, la,\nfree booklet, tth floor Zlegler Bldg,\n\u00bbS6 Blvenld, An., bpokane.  Week.\ni\n lot\nOhtu'n good\nJortheliUle,\nJblks\nWM.OGI.__N\nUC 0-RICE\nONNOMON\nI PEP OMINT\nWOlfT\nCLOVEj\n(\n*   worries\ndix. quickly\nforgotten\nwhen\nLife Savers\nmake their\nappearance\n\u26661ST Life Saver Time\nis anytime...\nTHE NELSON  DAILY NEWS. NELSON, a  C. \u2014 TUESDAY MORNING,  JUNE  2. INI\nPAGE  THU\n\"JIMMY THE GOAT\" WAS TIED\nTO RAFT TO BE SAVED FROM\nDROWNING NEARDEMARS\nHad Taken the \"D-T's\" and Started Trip of 175 Miles\nFrom Robson to Revelstoke; Capt Sanderson\nAids Jimmy\nINSTALMENT   THIRTY-TWO\nThen, thinking \u00abr the prospectors\nwho were going Into the Blocan\ndistrict at that time, lt struck me\nthat on\u00ab of them might have got\nlost. My csnoe was not ready, but\nthe old raft was thsre. I shoved hex\nott, and away I went across to see\nwhat was wanted. On getting near\nthe shore I saw a small man slowly\nstaggering toward me. He .walked\nalong for perhaps 100 yarda Uke a\nman\/ drunk, then fell down. He\nrolled on his face, then got up on\nbis hsnds and knees, and with a\ngnat effort stood up on his feet,\nthen   eame   headlong   from   side   to\n$ Jim was down and out with\nhunger. Ws got on the raft and\nstarted back for camp, but before\nwe were half way across tbe wind\ncame up, and soon the waves were\nrunning over our raft. As the'wind\ngot stronger the waves rolled higher.\nJim was too weak to stand up. I\nwsa afrsid a big wsve would wash\nhim off. Having the rope I used to\ntie on shore wltb, I fastened Jim\nso he could not roll off. By this\ntime nearly every wave went clean\nover him. One csn easily understand that a man In that condition\ncould not stsnd much knocking\nsbout, to say nothing about this\nmass of ice-cold water that tell\non him and tossed him about from\naide.   H.  r\u00abU  again. ,.,\u201e\u201e ^ .,\u201e.   -__, on]y ___u\n1   ran   to   him  and   picked   lilm lng h,m \u201e,.  ____, tovt ttm____  ___,\nup;   lt wsa \"Jimmy the  Oost\/'\nWhst in hell sre you doing here.\nJim?\"\nBe   looked   at   me   and   smiled.\nTake   ms   where   there   la   something   to eat and  I  wlll   tell  you.\"\nHe   had   been   hollering   at   me\nacroas  the  lake so  long  and  hard\nthat   he   could   scarcely   talk.\nm__\\_____m__m________l___S11\nBETTER  WITH  .  ,\nMAYONNAISE\nSALAD DRESSING\nSANDWICH SPREAD\nFrom the dainty morsels that arouse the envy of your\nbridge club members to the man-size combinations that\ndelight the palate and appease the appetite of the head\nof the household\u2014All Salads Taste Better With Dutch\nMaid Mayonnaise Salad Dressing or Sandwich Spread!\nThere's none of the greasy, flat after-taste of ordinary\nsalad dressings in Dutch Maid Products. Delicately\nblended with the finest of eggs, oils and spices, they impart that piquant tang that is the true basis of flavor in\nany salad.\nPour \\_ cup ot oold water on U beat\not gelstln\u2014let stsnd ror hsll hour\nthen add 2 cups canned tomatoes\nand boll. Add 1 tablespoon vinegar\nand salt and pepper and sugar to\ntaete. Puur into molds to oool.\nSarsa on lettuce with DUTCH MAID\nSALAD DRESSING.\nASK FOR\nDITCH MAID PRODUCTS\nAT YOUR\nGROCERS\nP S \"\u25a0_?\"\u2022 r*v tried Dutch\n,.. . ,.H*\"d 5\">dwlch Spread?\nIt's delicious tor luncheons and\nplonlcs.\nbody.\nTl-r water would throw him\naround like a chip. Sometimes he\nwas halt oTf the raTt. then the\nrope around him would cut Into\nhim, snd he would groan with\npain. He was too weak to right\nthla battle, and I oould not help\nhim. This rait, made or or small\ndrirtwood picked up orr the lake-\nshore, fastened together with a tew\nold spikes, pieces or rope, wsa not\nmade lor s storm like this. Had It\nturned broadside to the waves at\nany time It would have been the\nlast  ot  Jim  and  me.\nIt took all my strength and\nknowledge or Wster to keep this\nsalt at the right angle so aa to\nget ashore some time. * Up to than\nJim hsd shown his righting spirit\nhy keeping his head above the mass\nof water, as these big wares rolled\nover him. but now he apparently\ngave up. I saw three big waves\ngo over him and he never moved.\nHe lay with hla rsce down In his\nhands and not a move In him. At\nthla time we were not mora thsn\n300 yards from shore, and a good\nplace to make a landing\nI gave him a kick and shouted\nst him, \"Is that tha kind ar a\nman you are? Have \u00bb tellow take\na chance on his lire to get you\nacross snd then give up a lew\nfeet from shore? I always thought\nthe Irish were gritty fsllows But\nyou are a no-good tramp, a quitter.\"\nHe   turned   his   face   to   me    I\ncould  sea tire  In his  syes.  \"Me s\noultter?  Not   by  a  damned   eight!\nIll   stay  wtth   you.\"\n\"JIMMY   THB   GOAT'S\"\nSTORY\nThe wster picked him up snd\nlet him down sgaln. then his head\nwent up snd he looked st me with\na halt smile, snd I knew Jim was\nsll right. We msde the lending, and\nlay there tor a rest wo needed\nbadly. Then we crawled to ths\ncamp, where there waa bannock\npork and beans, prunes snd rice\nand a-number of bottles or whisky\nJim had a good drink while I wae\nmsklng the tlra to get aomethlng\nto ent. Jim was now feeling good\nand told ms how he got here. As\nnesr ss he could remember, he had\nstayed st Robson drinking as long\nss  hla money lssted.  then  he got\n2_Lw T?' *\"\"' *\u2022*\"*\u25a0\u2022\u2022> ltt \">\u00ab\nstate he got it Into his head to go\nto. Revelstoke. 175 miles up river\nand lakes no roads, not even a\ncran. and thers wee not a living\nsoul in thst stretch of country ij\nthat time. He did not  know how\n\u2122\u201e.X h'd \"-\"\"\"'-\"l hefore he\ncame to his proper senses. Not know-\nng where he wss. he kept on walk-\non   the  lake  h,  wouM  ^  \u201e^_\n_n^S   'n^S  ,h\"d' J\"\"   *'    W\"    \u21221\u00bb\nFt'iJETinT* bM\u00b0 \"\" *\u25a0*\u2022\u25a0> **\u00bb\u00bb\n\u00ab. T L\"*\"' *\"\"1 \u2022'* *\u00bb nad to\neat   was   berrlee.   He   hsd   to  climb\nZIt *. sT* bJU\" m* \"\u2022*' \u00bb\"<! \u00bb1-\nSm l'i TwL \u25a0\"**\" u \"-\u2022*\u2022\u2022 'or\n_____ *?   $\u25a0<*\u00ab   \u00bb\u00bb   \u00ab\u2022   elub   and\nKm \u00bbi, Th4t '\" wh** \u2022*\u25a0> named\nhim   \"Jimmy the Ooat\"\nIn about a week Jimmy waa about\n\"'(XX|,\"\"\"\u25a0\u2022 'ull of humor snd\ne__, sll *%? C,1>t*'n Anderson\ncam* by with his boat and he\ntook Jim up cloae to Revelstoke and\nfhl'iJH? \u00a3-** cmt'n\u00ab- mm* for\nthe boat.  Some time later I went\nrront or the stone hotel. He cams\nCome in wtth me.\" said Jim   \"I'll\npay you ror what you did for me '\n(Continued Tomorrow)\n-orV,lsJlkti\"j\u00a3- bnn,\u00bb   *\u00bb*\nPort wine, and aaa lost on  the\nArrow   Ukas   with    two   vounj\nulverrity men? Re, about the\ncreek in  tomorrow,  instalment.\nConsolidated Solicitor\nSpeaker, Churchmen\nTRAIL, b. 0\u201e June 1\u2014st Andrews Churchmen's club Sunday\nheard . lectur, by R. c. Crowe, so\nllcltor for the Consolldsted MlnUw\n* Smelting Co.. Ltd. in which h\u00ab\nshowed how tha geography of a\ncountry arrected lu blatory and\ndevelopment. He referred Particularly to tola part of the oountry\nPresentations ware made to w A\nDanborough and J. A. Fullerton who\nsre leartnf TraU, by Han, smith.\nAmbassador Pajjs Toronto Visit\n[ON THE AIRS\nTONIGHT\nTUESDAY. JUNB  J\nStandard 'Time\nnational Broadcast\n6:00\u2014 Dance orchestra\u2014KOW, KOO.\nKHQ.  KOMO,  KFI,  KFSO.  KTAR\n7:0O\u2014 KOO, KHQ, KOMO, KOW.\nKICA, KFSD, Amos 'n' Andy.\n1:15\u2014Smllsa\u2014KOO. KHQ. KOMO.\nKOW. KICA. KFSD.\n7:30\u2014 Que rtet\u2014KOO.\n8:00\u2014Romany Echoes\u2014KOO. String\nensemble.\n1:00\u2014Concert\u2014KHQ, KOMO. KOW,\nKPO. KFI\u2014\"The Pink Lady,\" by\nOaryll; Caswell Carollera; Eva De\nVol. soprsno; Dorothy Lewis, contralto; Alan Wilson,' tenor; Marsden Argall. baritone; Instrumental\nensemble direction Cy Trobbe.\n8:15\u2014 Memory Lane\u2014KOO, KHQ,\nKOMO     KOW. KFI, KFSD, KTAR\n8:45\u2014Quintet\u2014KOO,  KOA.\n9:00\u2014Vagabonda\u2014KOO.\n9:30\u2014Song  Land\u2014KOO, KOA.\nLIEUTENANT-GOVERNOR HOST TO NOTED  ENGLISH  GUEST\nSir Ronald Lindsay (left), British ambassador to the United States.\nss he appeared at Oovernment House. Toronto, ss guest ot His Honor W. D.\nRoss (right). Sir Ronald la on a visit to Toronto and addressed a com-\npsnlonats meeting ol the Canadlsn and Empire clubs.\nCANADA'S STAR IN ASCENDANT\nDESPITE ALL HER DIFFICULTIES\nElmer Davis, President of thc Canadian Manufacturers Association in His Annual Review Sounds a Hopeful Note.\nand Outlines Association's Activities\nVICTORIA. B. C. Juns 1.\u2014(CP. \u2014\u00bblon Csnsdlsn. or about a qusrlsr ol\nIn spite of all difficulties, real or\nImsglnary, Canada la ons of ths new\ncountries whoae star ls ln the\nascendant, said Ilmer Davis of Kingston,  Ont.,   president  of  the  Can-\nthe whole population ol Csnsda, ars\nsupported directly by the sslsrlss\nand wsges paid In Canadlsn lactones\nAlluding to the goodwill and trade\nadlan Manufacturers' essoclstlon. In i mlMlon __, utln-Amerlcs. In which\nths course ot the annual review to Mr. Davis and other membera ot\nthe annual meeting or the organlaa- ___, c M, A had participated, he\ntlon here. \"Although we have \u00bb-f- Mid that as a result of the British\nfeerd with the reet ot the world the jmplre exhibition st Buenos Aires\nfsct remslns that Csnsda ls not \\ ,\u201e\u201e th, ,_,{i 0, thB p,rtyi _r,it\none ot the older countries wt,\u00ab_ [between South America snd Csnsda\nfortunes are on the decline.\" the nti heen encouraged and Increased\npresident pointed out It was from business . should be forthcoming\nthis point of view, but with proper getter steamship service* by thr\ngratitude and modesty, that the i Canadian government merchant mar\npresent snd future ot the country ,-, \u201e\u201e Tfry necessary If Csnsds\nshould be surveyed. I wsa   to   stsy   In   the   field,   while\nWhile views differed widely aa to' the number of Canadlsn trsde com\nSWEATERS\nand\nPULLOVERS\nDYED\nFANCY\nCOLORS\nHa Ka FOOT\nHigh Class Dyer and\nCleaner\nFalrvlew Nelson, B. C.\nthe relative importance of the van\nous factors contributing to the contraction of interna tl one 1 trade, Mr.\nDavis found the opinion persisted\nthere might be some underlying\nfor some time easy explanation or\ngeneral conditions which would defy\nquick solution. It wm neoessary\nto deal with conditions as\" tbey\nexisted and make such provision ss\nlay In one's power for tbe future.\n'The spirit of co-operation ln\nevidence throufcfiout Canad* ls most\nencouraging,\" he declared. \"Governments, Dominion, provincial and\nmunicipal, have been dealing with\ntheir particular problems (and these\nhave been most perplexing) with\nreasonable success The farmers have\nbeen confronted with unusual difficulties and trials but they are meeting these with remarkable resolution and efficiency, snd deserve\nevery possible assistance, rt is not\nextravagant in My that Canadian's\nare setting an example of working\ntogether to weather the depreMlon\nand to bring tbe country aafely\nthrough to better times.\"\nGOVERNMENTS   CONOKATt LATED\nReferring to unemployment, which\nwas one of the most serious problems wtth which they had to deal.\nMr. Davis congratulated the various\ngovernments on their leadership and\nwhat they had accomplished. Employers alao. at considerable financial sacrifice, had been doing s\ngreat deal to keep their employees\nat work.\n\"In spite of decreasing \"ales at\nhome and abroad,\" aald Mr. Davis,\n\"manufacturers have been doing\ntheir utmost to keep the maximum\nnumber of employees at work, at\nleast, part of the tlmt. Factories\nhave been kept running to the\ngreatest extent possible, sometime*\nmanufacturing for stock, and extra\nwork has been provided on construction and repairs. Dividends have\nbeen reduced ln many cases in order\nto maintain ln employment the\nlargeat  possible  number  of  people.\"\nCuriously enough the volume of\nbusiness and production in msny\nlines was good but prices hsd been\nreduced to such an extent that\nmany Industries, including thoee\nrepresenting agricultural production.\nwere not receiving sufficient nourishment to enr|ile them to function proptrly and prepare for the\nfuture. Everywhere there haj been\nthe mme problem of meeting responsibilities with diminished Income but on the whole the spllrt\nof Canadians had been courageous\nand cheerful.\nTRIBUTE TO BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nMr. Davis noted that the province\nof Britlah Columbia wss this year\ncelebrating the Diamond Jubilee of\nlta entrance Into the Dominion of\nCanada and he paid tribute to tbe\nloyal cltlsens of the province who\nhad decided to cut ln their lot with\nthe rest of Canada.\nThla led him to refer to the\nDiamond Jubilee of the CM A. and\ntbe changes which had taken place\nIn Canadian Industry in the 00\nyeara. In 1871, he pointed out. nearly all manufactured gooda were\nimported and there wu little opportunity for the investment of\ncapital or for the employment of\nCanadian* ln their own country.\n\"Row we are making most of the\nmanufactured goods consumed at\nhome,\" he uld. \"and also exporting\nmanufactured goods all over tha\nworld. The preaent Canadian Industrial system wll] bear comparison\nwtth those of other countries o!\napproximately the same Industrial\nstandlni.    Two  and  one-half   mill-\nmisaloners should   be   increased  and\ntheir standing improved, ho said.\nC.  M.  ft. ON  PROTF(T|ON\nMr. Davis relter\u00abt\u00abd thc sssocla-\ntlon's stand on protection. \"We believe that it la In the national interest to utiliro the services of our\nown peopl* snd to consume our own\ngoods, thereby giving work to Canadian agriculturists and manufacturers and their employees, snd\nothers who have gooda or services to\nsell.\" He wu convinced Hint, the\naction cf the Dominion government, in providing Increased protection, hsd prevented a gi*at\namount of unemployment^ hardship\nand loss of bus! ness durtng the\nput winter; th*' if this srtion hsd\nnot been taken conditions would\nhave been much worse: snd that\nthese protective mras'ires had already Mim-listed and would m-\ncreue permanently the volume of\nproduction In Canada The Dominion government's campaign to Increase the uie of Canadian products, which had been utrongly\nsupported by provlnclsl end most\nmunicipal governments, had alao\nprevented mirh Idleness snd loss of\nbusiness.\n\u25a0\u2022Whatever honest differences of\nopinion there may be among Canadians in regard to the theoretical\naspects of Ilscsl policy,'* satd Mr.\nDavis, \"they can scarcely be maintained in the face of rising tariffs\nall over the world and the present\neconomic conditions tn Canada.\nWhile we are shut out of other\ncountries by their tariffs, it would\nbe suicide to remove our protection\nand to admit freely good., snd services from other countries at the\nexpense of our people. A policy of\nreasonable protection over \u00bb period\nof years, will result, I believe, in\ngreat snd continued progress in\nagriculture. industry, lumbering,\nfishing, mln\/ng, banking, and aU\nother  forms of  endeavor,\nMr. Davis emphasised Hie need\nfor research, declaring there wu\nnothing more Important In industry\ntodsy. Where there wu no research\nthe're was stagnation, or falling behind the other unit* of indu*try.\nFortunately, resesrch wgs stimulated\nin bad times because manufacturers were driven to save money in\nevery wsy possible In order to In-\ncreue efficiency and make the best\nuae of brains and hands st thetr\ndisposal. He felt that every factory should be a research Institute\nand should co-operate to the fullest\npossible extent with governments,\nuniversities and all others who were\nstudying the problem\nNOCIAL   Hi.hUMiis\nExpenditure on \"acolal legislation\"\nwu discussed by Mr. Davis. The\nmotives behind auch legislation were\nusually commendable. It wu a\nworthy object to try to reduce the\ntotal of human trouble and to provide better housing, clothing, food,\nnore security from death, accident.\nIllness and other evils. That was\nnot In dispute at all. The real\nquestion wu. how much could the\ncountry spend and  remain solvent.\n\"The kernel of the problem Is\nthla,\" Mid Mr. Davis, \"the able-\nbodied people who aro employed ID\na country and who are, royghly\nspeaking, between the ages of 30 and\n00, havc to carry all the others, including the old, the young, the\nunemployed, the alck and the afflicted. It the burden on this\nworking section of the population.\nIncluding farmers, Industrialists, professional people, merchants, and sal\nKHQ\u2014SPOKANT\nR08.3 m: 590 k; looo w.\n7:30-Life  Boys,  KOMO\n8:4fi\u2014Electrical    Transcription,\n0:30\u2014Chronicles.\n10:15\u2014Evening  Highlit-..\n11:15\u2014 Best Steppers.\nRFRC\u2014SAN   FRANCISCO\n491  m; 810 k;  1000 w.\n8:00\u2014Jester.\n8:30\u2014Radio Playhouse\n7:00\u2014Fletcher Henderson's orcheatra\n7:15\u2014Arthur Pryor's Military band\n7:30\u2014Quarter\n7:45\u2014 Dr.   David   P.   Barowa   \"Edit\ntho Newa\"\n8:00\u2014Adventures of Black and Blue\n8:15\u2014O-Lle Nelson's orchestra\n8:30\u2014Orchestra :Ann Olander, contralto, Charles Bulottl, tenor.\n9:00^\u2014The  Bucoaneers.  CDLBS\n9:15\u2014Wonders   of   the   Sky.   Henry\nM. Hyde\n9:45\u2014 Don Lee  Symphony\n10:00\u2014 Tim\u00a9 the Toller\n10:15\u2014Answer Man*\n10:20\u2014Oeorge  Wendt's  orchestra\n13:00\u2014Vagabond of the Air\n9:00\u2014 Musical   Barbers\n9:18\u2014KNX   Players\n9:48\u2014KNX   novelty   string   quartet\n10:00\u2014Arizona   Wranglers   and    the\nSheriff\n10:30\u2014When   Day   Is   Don*\n11:00\u2014New   Parla   Inn\nKEX\u2014PORTLAND\n245.1 m; 1180 k; 5000 ...\n8:00\u2014NJ*.L.  Happy Time\n8:15\u2014Uncle   Jerry\n8:30\u2014Walkathon\n8:45\u2014Studio Concert\n7:00\u2014Silent  period\n8:00\u2014The   Euy   Chair\n8:18\u2014Twilight Trio\n8:80\u2014 Brick and Brlckette\n8:45\u2014 Look   and  Listen\n9:00\u2014Montavllle   Plowera,   lecture\n8:30\u2014Wrestling bout*  from Seattle\n10:30\u2014Walkathon   from   Lotus   Isle\n11:30\u2014Del   Milne's   orcheatra\n13 midnight\u2014Midnight Revellers\nKSL\u2014SALT    LAKE    CITT\n265.1 m; 1130 k; 5000 w.\n7:16\u2014Western   Concert   hour\n7:45\u2014Musical  Varieties\n8:80\u2014The   Jewel   Box\n9:00\u2014S. L, Federation of Labor\n10:00\u2014Pipe   Organ   concert\nKOA\u2014SPOKANE\n204 m; 1470 k; SOOO w.\n6:00\u2014Northwest   conoert   trio\n6:45\u2014Ward   Ireland,   tenor\n7:00\u2014Dream    Melodlu\n8:00\u2014Th* Eaay Chair\n8:15\u2014Knlghta   of   th*   Road\n8:30\u2014Play  hy  Don  Johnaon\n8:48\u2014Look and Listen\n9:00\u2014Montavllle   Flowers,   lectur*\n9:3a\u2014Wrestling   bouts\n10:30\u2014-Moonlight  Melodlea\n11:00\u2014Del   Milne's   orcheatr*\n13   midnight\u2014Request   Recordings\nCFCN\u2014CALOARY\n433.2 m; 690 k; 500 W.\n6:00\u2014Studio program\n6:30\u2014 Boosters\n7:00-\u2014 Studio program\nKOMO\u2014 KEATTl.i;\n325.8 n_i,920 k;  1000 w.\n7:30\u2014New World Life Boys\n9:00^\u2014Novelty program\n0:30\u2014 Recreated  Heavyweight  Boxing\nContest.\n10:15\u2014Cecil  and  Salty.\n11:00\u2014 Seattle    Paramount    Theater\n11:30\u2014 News Fluhea\n13:0O\u2014Organ recital.\nCJCA\u2014EDMONTON\n322.4 m; 830 k; looo w.\n6:00\u2014 Capt.  Jimmies  Adventures\n8:15\u2014Program\n6:30\u2014News Review Edmonton Journal.\n6:35\u2014Musical Interlude\n0:45\u2014\"Financial, Adviser\"\nKOIN\u2014PORTLAND\n323  m:  9(0  kj   1000  w.\nfl.OO\u2014Joe and  Vi\n0:15\u2014 Bells of  Harmony\nfl:30-Publlx Radio Playhouse.\n7:00\u2014Andy and Virginia\u2014Westerner>\n7:15\u2014 Pryor's  Military  Band\n7:30\u2014Rose City  Beavers\n8:00\u2014\"Jest for Fun\"\n8:15\u2014Black and  Blue\n8:30\u2014Orchestra\n9:00\u2014The Slumber Boat\n9:30\u2014 Fights Bro*dcut\n10:30\u2014Jack and Jill's Tavern Music\n11:00\u2014V*l Valente's Music\n1300\u2014Merry Oo Round\nCNRV\u2014V-tN-rntVFR\n!0l   m;   1030  k;   .loo   w.\n6 00\u2014Consolldsted   Industries.   CNR\nfl 30\u2014Dinner   progrsm\n7:30\u2014B.C.    Safety    leagu*    topics\n7:4ft\u2014C.N.    western    network;    lao-\nbelle   Burnsda.   contralto.\nNU   m;  970  k:  5000  *.\n8.00\u2014 Knlghtj.   of   the   Rosd,   Elec,\nTrans.\n8:15\u2014Uncle     Jerry's    fl*fef y    club,\nElec. Trans.\n6 30\u2014Northwest   trio\n8.48\u2014Melodies.   NWBS\n7:00\u2014Olive  Reynolds.  Homer Sweetman,   duet.\n7:15\u2014Sport*  review.  Ken   Stuart\n7:30\u2014Light    Oper\u00bb    hour.    Msrt.hall\nSohl.   tenor.   Agatha.  Turley,   sop.\n8:00\u2014Billy   the  Kid.  dram\u00bb.\n81ft\u2014Orpheus   trio\n8:30\u2014The   Song   Exchange.    J.   I.\nDrain\nfl;00\u2014Elec.   Trans.\n9:15\u2014Vocal   quartet\n10 00\u2014Ken   Stuart's  Sunshine   piog-\n10 31V\u2014Moonlight     Melodies;     Mabel\nMohrmann,  piano;   Marshall   Sohl,\ntenor.\n11:00\u2014Dine*   orchestrs\n13:00\u2014Midnight   Revellers\nKNX\u2014LOM   AMHUl\n28.Y.-I   in;   1050   k;    .oo   w.\n6:15\u2014Tom   and   Wash   club\n630\u2014Publlx   hour\n7:0O\u2014Frank    Watanabe,    Japanese\nhouse boy\n7:30\u2014R^mlnlscencci       of       Victor\nHerbert\n7:4ft\u2014The Ooratpers\n8 00\u2014The   Rounders\n8:30\u2014The    Circus\nMANUFACTURERS\nKEEN IN FIELD\nOF RESEARCH\nEducation Committee Reports\nProgress in Technical\nTeaching\nVICTORIA, B. Oh June I.\u2014(CP)\u2014\nThe necessity for more adequate aid\nfor direct steamship services between\nCanad* and various foreign countries wss strongly emphulzed by\nthe Transportation committee of th*\nCsnadian Manufacturer's association\nat the annual meeting here. For\nsome time, the committee said. It\nhad been felt thst existing sld\nwu not sufficient to tske care\nproperly of the needs of Canada's\nexport trade.\nSome of the services,'' stated the\ncommittee in Its report, \"sre being\noperated with ships which are not\nmodern or fust enough to compete\nwith services fumi other countries.\nThe failure to properly aid the development of direct ocean eervlces\nbetween Canad* and foreign countries adversely affect* our pbrta *nd\ninland transportation facilities, u\nwell as our exporters and importers.\nTh* cloee proximity and the comparative freedom with which traffic\nmay flow through the Atlantic and\nPacific ports of the United States\nat once indicates the seriousness of\nthe situation.\"\nJames B. Smith of\nNew Denver Named\n.Justice of Peace\nMRS. SANDY BELL\nVISITS FRUITVALE\nFRTJITVALl,   B.   C.   June   I.\u2014\u2022&\u00bb.\neandg Bell, and daugh *er Joan at\nPsrk Biding, wbo hss been on- ft\nvisit hers, the gueats of h\u00abr sister.\nMrs. Deo Wick, has returned to htr\nhome.\nW. Fsulker at Put sidln* wm ft\nbusiness viator here on Friday.\nMr. and Mrs, Q. Muon ftnd family of Spokane ar* on ft holiday\nhere, the guests of Mr. M**on* parents,  Mr.  snd  Mrs.  D.  C. Mfcaoo.\nMlu Irene M*c*ul\u00bby. t**ch*r, of\nMeadowe, is * visitor here over th*\nwuk-*nd, th* guul ot Wee Kftth-\nleen  Col*.\nAdam Bell, Revelstoke\nGets Two Appointments\nNotlc* of tbs sppotatmu-t of\nMam Bell of Itsvslstok* w ehsJx-\nmsin of ths board of sdjiisW-issili\nundsr Um \"Hours ot Work \u25a0ct,'* said\nss chslrmsn of tbs Mile Mlntttum\nWage board is contained ta tbe\nBritish Columbia Oauette.\nWedding Gifts\nof Silverware\nWe havs a large selection of SttverwarA.\nTea Sets from $12\nand up.\nCasseroles from $7.50\nand up.\nSugar and Cream Sets,\n$4.50 and up.\nAnd many other articles\nthat make ideal gifts,\nJ. B. GRAY\nJeweler, Optometrist\n407 Baker St.\nNelson, B. C.\nTHERE SHOULD BE\nNO UGLY WOMEN!\nJ\u00bbm#s   B.   Smith of  New   Denver\nhu been appointed a Justice of the\npeace, according to tho British  Co-   more washed-out feeling getting up\nlumbla Gazette. in the mornings.\nThere ar* 3 classes of women.\n(1) The beautiful, healthy *nd\nattractive  creatures.\n(2) Thou .pitiful ones who don't\nknow how to mske themselves b**u-\ntlful\u2014rather thou who don't know\nthe vital importance of Kruschen\nSalts to physical perfection and\nattraction I\nKruschen Salts sre * perfect\nblend of the six vital miner*!*\nwhich Nature ordained. glands,\nblood, nerves and body organ* should\ndally receive from food lf they're\nto function correctly\u2014and whlcb\nare impossible to obtain In this age\nof   modern  cooking.\nGet a bottle of Kruschen\u2014and before the bottle Is half empty your\ncomplexion should b* gloriously\nsmooth and clear. Kruschen cle*r*\nblood of harmful acids and poisonous\nwaste mstter which cause blemlahu,\nbl*ckhesds and pimple*. Tour wonderful new energy will surprise you\n\u2014mind fsels so keen snd alert-*\u2014no\nA clean,\nairy bedroom\nwhere the attic\nused to be\nGYPROC makes\nthe change\nA BIGGER HOUSE inside the same four\nwalls sounds impossible of accomplishment\n\u2014but it only sounds that way.\nGyproe is a Gre-resistant wallboard made from\ngypsum rock. It comes in sheets 4 to 10 feet long,\n4 feet wide and \u2022}$ of an inch thick. It nails and\ncuts just as easily as lumber and with a minimum\nof waste. It is used for making inside walls,\nceilings and partitions.\nIt has structural strength\", insulation value, is\ndraught and vermin-proof and costs very little.\nGyproe that does not barn is exactly the material\nto use for it needs no decoration when panelled\nyet is an excellent base for Alabastine, Gyptex\nor wallpaper.\nGet a Gyproe direction sheet from your dealer\nor write us for the FREE booklet, \"Building and\nRemodelling with Gyproe\". j,6W\nCYP81IM, UME and ALABASTINE, CANADA, UNITED\nVancouver\n%NEW\nIf this condition Is protracted, they\nwill not be nble to bear it. This Is\nthc fundament h| condition which\nmust govern sound policy in dealing with sll questions of Uxstion.\nincluding the so-called \u2022uncontrollable expenditures; as well ss those\ntaxes whtch result from soclsl legislation. Reasonable economy ln governments! expenditures is the most\npractical method to reduce tuxes\nsnd lighten the burdens of taxpayers.\"\nMr. Davis concluded with an sd-\nmohltlon not to sttsch too much\nImportance to temporary depressions,\nquoting statistic to show th*\namazing material progress made hy\nCanada since 1871. He directed\nspecial Attention to the growth of\nmanufacturing in the four western\nprovince* and wound up his addreu\nwith  the  following  sdvlce:\n\"Our best nstlonsl policy Is to\nproceed S?ng the lines which we sre\nfollowing, with steady snd confident\ncourage, solving our problems *s\nthey arise, endeavoring to formulate and maintain high ideal* of\ncltlsenshlp and character, co-operating tolerantly and sympathetically\nwith one another, administering\nprudently our estate, taking r**-\nvsnUgs of msterlsl opportunities,\nsdn  practising  th* virtues of   hon-\n; 'M..m..w..i Trail Mercantile Co., Ltd.\nB.C.\nGYPROC\n^-^I.iepiool   Wall board\nr\u00bbr  Salt  b;\nA. H. Green Co., Ltd.\nT. H. Waters Co., Ltd.\nHunter Bros, Ltd.\n\u25a0\u25a0 a people act on theM and\nprinciple., there will be certain and ' T QVQ%,aff   9.  C*m\nary and wage earners, become, too eatlefactory continuation ot tht pro-   i-idZdlcII  06  vO\ngreat, their efficiency ia lowered, and iresa of Canada.\"\nNelson, B. C.\nNelson, B. C.\nRossland, B. C.\nTrail, B. C.\nTrai^ B. C.\n PAGI   rOTJR\nTHB  NELSON   DAILY  KBWH,   NELSON,  B.   C.  \u2014  TIESDAY  MORNING,  JUNE   8,   -Ml\nCHAPTER   10\n.Continued)\nYorUug tin memory of the only\nle.Wr ehe J.ad ever hud from lilm\nfrom   her   mind.   Corllna   cried,   \"If\nI oould only get into motion pio\ntueaa.''\n\"Huch uncertain work, Corllee.\"\n\"Even so u ahould average aa\nmucii aa clerking in a More and I'd\nUave more Ume with the baby.\"\nLater she aald, \"I believe 111 go\nup to Central Casting \"\nNo more experiences with fake directors. This time she wpuld find\nout for herself.\nShe left, clad ln the most becom\ning costume ol lie. last year's wardrobe.\n\"K looks can do It, You'll come\nhome ;t star,'' commented Charlotte.\nCorllsa ran back to klaa the sleeping baby. Bendistg over him with a\nface far mora alluring than the one\nJerry Newman had once thought ao\n\"Innocently   enticing.\"\n\"parting.\" hegged Corliss with a\nsurge of her old happy assurance.\n'\/pr\u00bby that I'll knock 'em cold. It\nmeans bread and butter for my\nch*.lld.\"\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nShe  rnrered  the casting office at\nII o'clock. Impossible to arrive\ni-ooner op account, of the baby's 10\no'clock feeding, She was thinking\nthat would have to be rhangfd as\n\u00bb*.\u2022 approached the man yt the desk\nTOHN1 VS far-cm following her \u2014\n' aJtiiM farinaferl 1 And Helen knows\ntht u -doing hae bast, for bar skin hu the\nrft, bohbr -inr oi youth \u2014 sht is another\nPoapcbo Gin. You too. can be known u a,\nef men \u2014 iminaang \u2014 durable\nTcxtBpeiao UvL\nFor cWrar wonen the world oitr have come\nto lean thu about Poo-pcsm products \u2014\nthat while it ts possible ro pay more, it is\nlapM-ab-e to boy better Pompeian Beauty [\nRwder never cabs \u2014it lies on the sUnl\nevenly, lastingly. One of ita five shades it a\nAmtaa-Mtch for your coloring. And now\nit can also be obtained in uke form in an\naqus_rtronr Compact,\n-___e\u00b1LWAm_-;&.-rt^aAm(nlltdtfC--i\nOm) et -Dsr Cmm iV.ouhlM't tt\\ -Uuwfs\nOas *-&.\u2014Peawdtf CoM-ct  60c.\u2014Tile   25c \u2014\n~   ilk.\n\u25a0nd 10cfeM)mDspt-19. TW ?*m9+. C\u00bbm lot,\n_W_ l_d_md lc tr, Taonio, Om.. (tx new Art\nVmL, i -off afewtwoi-r*-. \"Your T\u00abe of g-suty\" and\nmtektttfaaawan Dty i*d Nifbt tirnm.\nPOM P\u20ac IAN\nPRODUCTS FOR   BEAUTY\nto glva  her\n\"Corllas Newman.\"\n\"You wish to ask about registration?\" '\n\"Yea.\" *\n\"Take a aeat pleaae. You'll hsve\nto wait your turn to eee Mlsa Mell.\"\nCorllsa took her plaoe between a\ngirt and a white-haired woman. The\ngirl had black hair, parted in Uie\nmiddle and drawn straight back.\nHer eyea ware large and mournful.\nNot n flicker of Intelligence or expression waa on her face. She\nclasped a large sized photograph of\nherself, at which she glanced with\nobvious pride. The older woman on\nihe other side of Corllsa had blue\neyes and n oonaclousely sweet face,\n\"As If she were holding the\nthought.\" reflected Corliss.\nThis woman murmured, \"Trying\nto  register?\"\n* 'Yea, 1< I can.\"\n\"Weil I don't know. They uy the\nonly type that's needed now is the\nwhite   haired   society   matron. . . .\"\nHer eelf-satlafled smile deepened\nto a smirk.\n\"I Photograph beautifully. Mer-\nwln la tho finest commercial photo-\ngraph* in Hollywood and he says\nI'm one of the best subject* he's\never had.\"\nOaatM sitd.  \"How  nice.\"\n-she waa beginning to real.ee thst\nvanity \u00abnd an exaggerated opinion of one'a beauty and ability ara\ntho most common trait* In Holly\nwood. They are the ltfe-aavers with\nout which thoee bulfeted about in\nthe dangerous waters of the cinema\nworld would be utterly loat.\nCorllsa watched the long line of\nwomen and girls take their turns\nwith the slender brilliant eyed Mlas\nVeil. One by one. girls, would-be\nfUrpers, matrons and mothers were\nturned away. When Corliss' turn\ncame she approached shyly.\n\"Not  much   use  Is there?\"\n\"To  try  \u00bbnd   register?\"\n\"Yes |\"\n'We aren't taking registrations\nunless recommended by a studio\nexecutive.\"\n6o Jerry had  been right.\n\"I aee, la there any way I could\npossibly obtain auch a recommendation?\"\nMIm Mell hesitated.\n\"Unless you are personally acquainted with a director. No. Even\nlf you were registered lt would be\nimpossible to promise any work.\"\n\"I can play  the piano and Blng\nremarked Corliss.\n\"Professionally?\"\n\"Well\u2014no! I was soloist for the\ncollege glee club.\" She named her\nschool.\n\"That might help later on. There\nls going to be Vltaphone work for\npeople who can play and sing.\"\n\"There   is   a   chance   then?\"\n\"There may be later, in the\nmeantime I .idvlv you to try to\nfind something else. If you are\nreally in need of work.\"\nGrateful for the kindly frankness\nof the interview, Corliss hurried\nout. bhe was not so dlsscouraged\nas might have been expected. On\nth* contrary the conversation had\ngiven her an idea. And determined\nto wast* no time ahe went lmmed-\nIlMy to Dr. Dutton'a ofllce, where\nsits was compelled to wait.\nWhen at last he arrived she was\nshown  into the inner ofllce.\n\"You're looking like a million\ndollars.\"   he   said.\n\"I didn't come to aee you as a\npatient.\" sh*  admitted, smiling.\nHe leaned  back  in hi* chair and\nregarded her with approving eyes,\n.\"Noi\"\n\"Want the truth, th* whole truth\nand nothing but th* truth?\"\nUnconsciously    she    hads    lipped\nback into bar old flippant manner\nwith the opposite sex. She did not\nrealise that to tbe doctor lt waa a\nrevelation of Corliss h* had never\nknown.\n\"Yea, of course.. Are ytu going\nto  return   to  your  husband?\"\n\"Why bring (hat up?\" aha r\u00bb-\ntortan frownlngly. \"No, my real\nreason for coming to aee you today\nla to ask our assistance.\"\nColor flooded his faoe. Up Into\nthe .roots of his blonde hair.\nHe aald formally, \"X ahall be very\nhappy to aaslat you in any way I can\nThen,\" begged Oorllas, dramatically, 'introduce ma to a movie\ndirector! a nice one and right\naway I\"\nCHAPTER   17\nDr. Dutton seemed surprised.\n\"Ar* you really serloua?\"\n\"Of course. In motion pictures\nI may find the answer to all my\ndlfflculttea.\"\n\"I wonder 1< ysu wlll. Ifs hard\nwork, you knaw. Terribly -monotonous.\"\n\"No more so than sitting at\na desk all day. au don't seem to\nrealize that I'm going to hav* to\nsupport  myself.\"\nShe looked across at him with a\npersuasive   little  smile.\n\"You wont refuse to help mi\nIf you can?\"\n\"I'm not sure that I can.\"\n\"You mean you aren't acquainted\nwith   any   directors?\"\n\"I am acquainted with several\nbut I dislike asking favors from\nthem and I'm not at all certain\nsuch a favor would bo granted if\nI did ask It.\"\n\"It is asking a lot. Isn't lt?\"\nTho discouragement In <i-er vole*\nmust have touched him for he said,\n\"Be here Mrs. Newman, giv* me a\nlittle tim* to think it over. You\nknow I'm n I teres ted ln your welfare. Ill do anything within reason\nthat  I   can. . . .\"\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nIt seemed to Corliss that he was\nretrenching. His manner since she\nwas no longer a patient was different. As if he were deliberately\ntrying to be formal, And It hurt\nbecause she hsd learned to rely\nupon   his Judgment.\nHe said now, \"I wish you could\nsee  your  situation as it really  la.\"\n\"I do.\"\n\"Your bab needs you,\" he In'\nststed. \"You should be protected\nand sheltered during this stsge cf\nhis life.\"\nCorllas became  thoughtful.\n\"ou think that I should try to\naffect a reconciliation with my husband, but you forget that it waa\nbis auggestlon that we part. During\nsll these months he has mnde no\neffort to get in touch wtth me. So\nfar as he is concerned I no longer\nexist. Do you think he would be\npleased to be confronted with the\nnews that he ls a fother and will\nhave  to live with me again?\"\n\"Most any man would, be pleased\nto know tbat he ls the father of a\naon. Even lf he didn't car* to live\nwith you he would undoubtedly be\nwilling to support you for the aake\nof th* ohlld. You say he la from\na wealthy family. There is no reason he shouldn't give you sufficient income ao that you can take\ncare of your baby without going to\nwork.-'\nTo   Be  Continued\nSCOUT HIGH COMMISSIONER ARRIVES\nTO ATTEND 21 ST  NCOl'T CONVENTION\nLord Hampton, the chief high commissioner of the Bay Scouts of\nEngland, arrives lu New York, aboard the Europe, while en route to\nMemphis, Tenn., for thc 31st annual convention of thr Boy Scouts, He\nwas met at the pier by James West, Boy Scout Executive. Left to right\u2014\nBobble West, James E, West snd Lord Hampton.\nFLAME OR FIRE?\nBu BE AT RICK FAIRFAX\nAn Authority on Problem** of Love and  Marriage\nWicker baskets should have a good\nacrubblng   every   few   months,   followed by a coat of white paint.  It\nwill   mean   a  more   sanitary   basket  Vasps?\"\nind a much  better . looking ona. Answer\nA little while ago a happily mar- * She   bas   observed,   though   I   guess\nrleri young woman of my ecqualn\ntance said something of which I\nhave thought many times since, so\nwise was lt. \"It la a lot more\nthrilling,\" she remarked, \"to find\nout new things all the time about\none man than to find the same\nold thing about a succession of\nmen*\nI have been thinking a great\ndeal about that the last day or\ntwo since I received thla letter from\nOladys M.    She wrote to me\nmore in movies and in highly\nseasoned novels than In life, that\nthe attraction men and women\nhave for each other is sometimes\nvery {laming, very exciting. ,Con_'\npared with that, her own affair\nseems tepid, though \"sweet and\ncomfortable and dear.\" Is it worth\nwhile, she wants to know, to wait\nfor thrilling romance or for\nsuccession   of    such    experiences?\nIn other words, what shall a girl\nchoose\u2014the satlafaction of compan\nDear Mlaa Fairfax: I'm a work- lonshlp or those of stirring romance\nlng woman of twenty-two and I've Well, flatly, my advice is to\nbeen going around with a man of choose companionship-companion-\ntwenty-five for tbe past  two years, [ship  plus.\nWe    have\ngood    time,    go    off      Most   certainly,    physical    attrac-\ntramping    Sundays,    read    together. I tlon   without   congenial   tastes   will\n[The Beauty Box j\nBY Helen Follett\nWedding\nInvitations\nWhin you entrust Hut exacting tint nf\nprinting In our Job Department you rrui\ntie mire of lhe mott correct and refined\nforms, and diatinctirr; appearance.\nPHONE 144\nfor  samples and prices.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nJOB DEPARTMENT\nu(_j reat ops of vine JPrinttnA\nlilt        .ie\nThe lacy colon ts responsible for\nsallow complexions\u2014anyhow aome\nut tbem. Th* woman who grieves\nover a yallery-greenery facial surface wlll b* benefitted by taking\nthe juice ot half a lemon and a\ndaah of aalt In a glass of water\nbefore breakfast, whether the water\nls warm or cold doesn't matter.\nPsylla seeds are a harmlaaa stlmu-\nlant to the intestinal tract.\nA slanted parting of the hair In\ninteresting, it beglna on tbe left\nside In front *nd finishes at the\nright aid* at the back. Tbe ends\nof each aide portion are combed\ntoward the ears, and arranged in\na puff. Puffs over the ears are\ntricksy and quaint. Qualntness and\nsophistication\u2014two opposite* \u2014 are\nboth In favor. You takes your\nchoice. , -\nNo nagging woman can hop* to\nhave a front aeat on the beauty\nwagon. Fault finding never cleaied\na clouded atmosphere in th* home;\nall It doea Is to cloud the alabaster\nbrow and put nasty frown lines\non it. Jawing never Improved a\nhusband's character, and It has\nDriven thousands of children on:,\nof and away from the family circle.\nIn Juatlc* to a woman's own appearance, sh* should keep sweet.\nUnpleasant emotions are destructive\nforces. They ruin health, looks,\nappetite,  disposition  snd  happiness.\nFresh young complexions don't\nheed astringents, lotions designed\nfor the purpoae of tightening loose\ntissues and for refining the texture\nof the skin. A simple astringent,\nand one that tlte epidermis likes,\nLi witch haael. It is most effective\nwhen used very cold, so keep the\nbottle in the refrigerator, {loid\nwater hardens tissues because It\nbrings a quick reaction of the\nblood   art reams.\nSuperfluous hair on the legs can\nb\u00bb- removed easily by means of a\n\u2022depilatory. A smooth pumice atone\nis uaed by some who have faith in\nit but will inflame and make\ntender skin tbat la thin and aeiist-\ntlv*. Depilatories are chemicals\nthat dlssolv9 a hair at the point\nwhere it emerges from the skin.\nSome women find that after repeated applications the little furz-\nera lose h\u00abart, flve up the ghost\nand   disappear.\nXf a girl hasn't tha seat and the\nslpp for outdoor recreations sbe ls\nonly haK alive. All exercises ln th*\nopen air help to preserve the sw*et\nqualities of youth, tha svalt anatomy, tha firm contour of the face\nhealthy expansion of tba lungs,\nbrlghtneag of eyea, buoyancy of\nspirit. No* is the time to flirt with\nAl Fresco, to golf, swim, play tennis,\ntramp through thc woods.\ndance, etc. He wants to marry\nme. We could awing It all right\nright, he's doing well. But I am\nwondering If I really want to marry now, or if I really want to\nmarry him. Mightn't I be miaslng\nreal romance with more romantic\nmen? For it's nothing like what\nyou read about or aee in the pictures, when he aud I are together\nIt's sweat and comfortable and\ndear. but\u2014What do you advise-\n\u2014Gladys   M,\"\nOladya Is asking me to do what\nthe learned haven't succeeded In\ndoing to date\u2014to aay something\nauthoritative and final about the\nnature  of  sex   attraction  and   love.\nnever see you through. The higher\nthe flame, the more swiftly gone\nAnd when one flaming experience\ndies down, If there isn't companionship, friendship, affection left\u2014If\npassion, in short, has not kindled\na lasting fire on the hearth\u2014what\nnext? The same old thing over\nagain? And again? It sounds a\nbit revolting to the fastidious mind\n\u2014snd, oh, how boring!\nAs my wise young friend put\nIt: \"It's a lot more thrilling to\nftnd out a lot of new things about\none man than to find out the\nsame old thing about a succession\nof men.\" (Copyright, 1031, International  Feature   Service,   Inc.\nNew Colors Introduced\nfor Evening Dresses\nThey haven't lessened the smartness of white for evening wear, but\nthey have Introduced some new\ncolors that wilt make summer evenings   colorful.\nYellow and green are Patou* newest colors, and they are developed\ninto any number of different types\nof dresses\u2014or are used for aash\ntrimmings on darker shades. Tlie\ndeep tones of blue, brown and black\nare becoming more popular for informal dinner wear developed ln\nchiffon   or   lace.\nOne of the most youthful and\ncharming new evening colors ls pale\npink. In lace that 1b frothy and\nfine, these gowns ere dslnty indeed, and vastly nattering. Another\nyouthful   color  is  blue.\nOne of the most important Idcus\nfor evening is the short jacket of\nvelvet or satin that always contrast*\nwith the dress. It Is worn as an\nevening wrap, and frequently has\nshort sleeves, fur trimmed. Another\nsmart fashion ls the evening ensemble or heavy crepe in a soft\nshade of roaa, blue, chartreuse\nor  yellow.\nLace of thc finer sort, linen lace\nthat may be dyed any color, chiffon, large patterned printed chiffon,\nbold floral designs or printed crepe,\nflat crepe and a little taffeta are\nall  uaed  for  evening  wear.\nThey \u00abr* stressing surplice line.1*,\ndiagonal seamlngs, wrapped effect*,\nlow-placed fullness, gowns with slim\nlines almost to the knees and very\nfull from there down, petticoat sr-\nrangementa that make the hems\nstick out, and necklines that are\nfrequently   higher.\nFOR   FINK   MATERIAL*\nWhen washing cotton goods, the\ncolor may be made fast by using\n\"tad\" instead of the customary\n\"blueing.\" Thla can be made by\nboiling a piece of Turkey red material in water, bottling and using\nlike ordinary blueing, being careful\nto  test   Um  color  first.\nTIME   FOR   SOCKH\nIf baby's stockings are worn out\naround th* knee from nv.ich pinning, cut them off at sock langth\nand crochet a narrow edge Mmind\nthe tope tn a delicate shade They\non be finished up aa socks tbls\nsummer.\nNew Salads\nll 1.Ml It  TOMATO  SALAD\n2 cups tomatoes\n2  bsy leaves.\n4 whole cloves\n1 teaspoon salt\n1 cup water\nI thin sliced.onion\nMix Ingredients. Cover and cook\nslowly 15 minutes- Strsin thoroughly and add to gelatin mixture.\nBOIQITT   Ml Ui\nForm a ring of ahredded lettuoe\non salad plate to represent the frill\non the bouquet. Lay a slice of pineapple in the middle and put a\nmound of two tablespoons cottage\ncheese ln the center, On top of the\ncheese plaoe a perfectly ripe strawberry to form the rose of the\nbouquet. Just around the strawberry make a clrci* of halved and\nseeded muscat grapes. Next mak* a\nring of sliced bananas and put a\nsmall raisin or a bit of dat* in\nthe center of each slice. At the\nouter edge make a ring of perfect\nripe raspberries. Serve with the following dressing:\nSALAD DMSBINQ\nBeat two eggs slightly, add two\ntsblespoons flour and one-half cup\nsugar < mixed together. Add one\ncup pineapple syrup, four tablespoons lemon Juloe, one-half table\nspoon butter, and' cook in doubl*\nboiler until thick. Cool. Fold ln\none-half cup beaten cream.\nAfter Easter, when for a brief\ntime society ls again in full swing,\none often wishes for s new and decorative salad\u2014aomethlng that will\ndreas up tbe table and make this\ncourse a thing of beauty ratter\nthan merely something to eat.\nTO    BRIOHTKN    RRAH4\nThe brightness can be brought\nback to dull brass by soaking It for\nabout a half hour in a \u25a0 pint of\nboiling water to which a little reck\nammonia lm-. been added. After ro-\nmovkl, polish with chamois,\nEfficient\nHqusa-eepi\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nOrange   Juice\nCereal\nOr Iddle cakes\nSirup\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nCodfttb   Balls\nSiloed   Tomatoes\nHut Bread\nJam\nTea\nDinner\nRoast   of   Lamb\nBrown   Oravy\nPotatoes\nBeets\nSliced   Cucumbers\nBread    Pudding\nCoffee\nFUTURIST\nCOOKING\nANSWERS  TO  INQUIRIES\nPARIS, April 30.\u2014The \"futurist\nCooking1' crusade in Italy against\nspaghetti moved to France recently,\nwith a challenge to French gourmets to a culinary duel along any\nlines they may dictate.\nThe challenge wa* issued by F, T.\nMarlnettl, the \"father of futurist\ncooking\" in Italy, in a speech st\nthe Conservatoire de Muslque. Marlnettl recently haa aroused a nationwide controversy ln Italy because of\nhis attack* on spaghetti e*i a popular\ndish.\nMarlnettl owns a tavern at Turin.\nAt a recent dinner there 14 dishes,\neach one entirely new, were served.\nThey were created by a committee of\nfuturist* and prepared under the direction of two professional cooks\nof a very liberal spirit and free\nfrom  all   traditional  prejudice.\nBrlde-to-Be:    \"Please    publish\nrecipe  for Wholewheat  Waffle*.\"\nAnswer: Wholewheat Waffles-MStlr\nthree-quarters of a teapsoon of baking soda Into one and one-half cupa\nof aour milk, then stir this mixture\nInto two cups of wholewheat flour\n(or half white-flour ls desired) and\nadd one teaspoon of salt, two well\nbeaten egg yolks, and four teaspoons of melted butter. Just before\nbaking, fold In two stiffly whipped\negg whites and pour a little onto a\nsmoklng-hot waffle iron. Remember, the mor* butter you uee ln a\nwaffle batter, the leas the waffle\nwlll stick to the Iron\u2014so use even\nmore than this recipe calls for, if\nyou can spare it.\nMrs. I*. H. P.: \"Please reprint\nyour recipe for grapenuts pudding.\nAnswer: Orapenuts Pudding\u2014lntd\nthree cups of cold; sweet milk, stir\none-half cup of graulated sugar.\none-half teaspoon vi Vanilla, ons\nbeaten egg (thla Is not actually\nnecessary) and one-half cup of\ngrapenuts. Slip this Into a moderate\noven ln a medium-sized baking dish,\nand bake 40 minutes, stirring It up\nonce or twice during this baking\nperiod. This ls a very flexible dns-\nsert. and you may reduce the\namount of sugar, or you may add\nanother egg (beside the one egg\ncalled for) to make it richer. Or. as\nI said above, you may uae no eggs\nAlao. If you Uk* it thicker, ua* more\ngrapenuts. and if you prefer It more\nliquid, use one-fourth cup of grape-\nnut*. Every family can have it the\nexact degree of thickness, sweetness\nor richness that they like, by a few\nchanges  of   this sort.\nB. B ; \"How can I rid my attic of\nand on beams or high shelves,\nsauoers of water containing on* teaspoon each of granulated augar and\nformalin (POISON) and the waape\nwlll drink this and dte. Tike care\nnot to let small children or pet\nanimals get at thla poisonous solution.\nPILLS ARE OFTEN\nDANGEROUS\nPlsoe   on   window   mils\nMost laxatives have to be taken\nin ever-increasing doses. Otherwise, they lose their power. The\nbody needs roughage.\nOne of the most natural ways\nto obtain this roughage is by eating a delicious cereal: Kellogg's\nAll-Bran. Read what Mr.\nAlbert K. Parker (address on\nrequest) has to lay:\n\"I am 52 years old and have\nput in years suffering from constipation. Bought all kinds of\nfalls and drugged myself with\nhem and awoke lots of mornings with a headache.\n\"Haven't takfn one pill since\nI began on Kellogg's All-Bran.\nI am now feeling tne best I have\nfelt In 20 years.1-\nTwo tablespoonfuls of Aul-\nBian daily are guaranteed to\ngive relief. At your grocer's,\nin the red-and-green package.\nMade by Kellogg in London, Ont.\nAll-Bran\nModern \"Short-Boil* Method\nfor making Jams and Jellies\nSaves time and money-\u2014Insures perfect jams and jellies\nTHE Certo \"short-boil\" method ia\nnow accepted aa the most efficient,\neconomical way to make all your jams\n\u25a0nd jellies. Millions of women uae itl\nCerto ia a pure fruit product\u2014just\nthe natural jellying substance extracted\nfrom fruit in which it ia abundant.\nWith Certo, anyone can make perfect\njam* and jellies, quickly and easily,\nfrom any fruit or fruit juice, even\nthose delicious fruita that never before\nwould jell.\nThe experiences of Mri. A. and Mn.\nB., as outlined on this page, make\nclear not only the genuine economy,\nbut alao the wonderful simplicity and\nease of the Certo method. Certo ia\nfruit pectin, made in Canada.\n1 Mrs. A. bad two quarts of ripe\nstrawberries to be made into\njam. After bulling ber berries,\n\u2022he was ready to start making\nber jam at nine o'clock.\n_ Tbe dark band on tha kettle\nindicate* the amount of fruit\nand juiee from Mrs. A.*s berrlea\n(4cups). The strawberries oael\n20c. a quart\u20142 quarts 40a.\n5 Mrs. A. added 2 lba. of ragsr\nto her berries. The lug sr cost\n7c. per lb.\u20142 lbs. 14c\n7 Following the old \"pound for\nrnd\" standard recipe, Mrs.\nhad to boil tha trait and\nsngar about SO minutes before\nthe jam thickened to the desired\nconsistency. This long boiling\nevsporsted one-helf of the original weight of the berries snd\ncarried off most of the nstursl\nfresh fruit flavour as fragranl\nKyF  tfj |F\n9 When Mrs. A. poured ber jam\n\u2022he found she hiil 6 8-os. glasses.\nThe coat: Berries We.\nSugar 14c.\n6)S4c\nThe 6 glasses cost an average et\n9c par glass.\neee\neee\nH It look Mrs. A. 4!\nmake ber 6 alasse*.\nfortv-five when she\nforty-five w\n45 minutea tt\nIt was nine\nfinished.\n2 Mrs. B.slsohadtwoqusitsof\nripe strawberries and she waa\nread' to start her j-m-i\nat nine o'clock, too.\n4 Mrs. B., using the same e,\ntn j of strawberries (2 quarts),\ngot the aame amount of fruit\nand juice (4 cops). Her berries\nalso cost 20c, a quart\u2014I quarts\n40c\nfi Mrs. B. sdded S lbs. of sugsr\nto hsr berries. The sugsr cost\n7c per lb.\u2014J lbs. 21c (Tba\n\u25a0eat stap explains this lsrger\nquantity of sugar.)\n8 Mra. B. simply brought her\nfruit snd sugar to a tumbling\nhi 11, and boiled them for a few\nminutea, then added jM bottle\niM oup) of Certo, The fruit\navour and colour were laved\nand the juice didn't boil away.\nThat ia why extra augar waa\nneeded\u2014simply to jell the\njuice thst would hsve boiled\naway by the \"long boil'1\nanethod. The jsm will contain\nsm more sugar per glass than\nby tba old method.\n10 Mre. B. got 10 ll-oa. glaaaaa of\njam from her berries.\nTbe cost: Barries 40c\n*u\u00absr 21*.\nHb\u00abttle Certo ft 35c... 18c\n10)7%-\n79\/lih\n12 Mrs. B.'s 10 >lss_rs of jam\nweremadeln 15 minutes.   She\nwaa all through at ma. fifteen.\n__\\ \"1,w \u00ab\"<nparison holds me with all fruits.   With Csrto, by aavlng th. fruit       i\nMos formerly boiled swsv, you gst half again mor* jam or jelly from a given amount\nof fruit.   You save the delicate colour, the deHofous flavour of tbe f\u2122sS fruit.   You\naave tune, effort, sod fuel, aad gst a periaM jaaa ar jsDy every time at a ssviag ef from       nn\neee to three cents per glsss. '\n ' Short Shoes\nfor\nAll Occasions\nFor all occasions of recreation here are shoes\nthat meet every demand. Our stock is complete in the various colors and combinations.\nCarried in widths\nAtoC\nPRICED\n$3.00 T0 $7.50\nR. Andrew\nA Go.\nLeaders in Footfashipn\nv. McLean-Bell\nHeads Conservative\nBody at Crantfrook\nORANBROOK, B. C, Jun* l.\u2014\nIm cranbrook Conservative aasocls-\non held lta annual meeting at\n16   Maiple   hall   on   May   28.\nNew officers appointed were:\nonorable president, Rt. Hon R. B.\nennett; honorary vice-president, 8.\n'. Tolmle; president, Rev. McLean-\nell- flret vice-president. Mrs. Lunn;\nicond vice-president. W. F. Cam-\nron; secretary, Alan Graham; trea-\njrer,   J.   A.   Arnc^d.\nThe executive; W. F. Attridge. H.\nT. Herohmer. M. Olllis, Dr. Rut-\ntdge, T. M. Stewart, Walker, Shep-\nerd. Mrs. F. Degsll snd Mrs. Nor-\nrovs.\nDelegate* to the district convsn-\non sre Rev. McLean-Bell, W. A.\nLttrldge. H. W. Herchmer and T.\nI. Stewart.\nSociety\nThis column 1* conducted by\nMrs. M. J. Vlgneux. All news\nof * social natvre, including rs-\noeptlons, prlvst* entertelnments,\npersonal Items, msrriage*. etc..\nwlU *ppear m this column. Tslt-\nfhons Mrs. Vlgneux at her bans.\nU  SUIc*  street.\nMr.   and   Mrs.   C,   Vt.   Appl*yard,\nHoover street, hsd a* their weekend guests from Spokane Mrs. Appleyard* brother snd sister-in-l%w,\nMr. snd Mrs. David* Orobe, ftnd\ntheir daughters and son, Edith, Jessie and Uoyd Orobe, snd also Harold Moore and Foster Bollinger of\nSpokane.\nJ. J. Fingland of Trsll psld *\nvisit to town over  the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. H. R. Townsend Is visiting\nin Salmo with her son-ln-lsw snd\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. Archie Orsy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. P. Hardy of Castlegar psld\na   visit   to  town  yesterdsy.\nW. R. B*xend*le of Trsll spent\nthe week-end golfing  ln Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMiss EUeen Bird  of th* staff of\ntbe British Columbia Telephone\ncompany has returned from * few\nweeka   ln   Vanoouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJudge snd Mrs. Thompson snd\ntheir daughter, Miss. Phyllis, of\nCranbrook, are city visitors,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJsmea Coveney and Arthur\nBrown, both of Trail, were visiting\nfriends   in  Nelson   Sunday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n.Mrs. Hugh Ross. Silica street, returns today from Rossland, where\nshe spent the week-end at the\nhome of her son and daughter-in-\nlaw.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  Olover.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDavid Sutcllffe of Rlondel was a\nvisitor to the city during the weekend,\n\u2022 0        *\nMr. snd Mrs. Francis Riley snd\ndaughter Patty, of Spokane, have\nreturned *fter spending the weekend ln the city, guests st the home\nof Mr. snd Mrs. Roy Shsrp, Hoover\nstreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nT. C. Jerome of the British Columbia Telephone company's staff\nst Orand Forks ls visiting In Wei-\nson st the home of his parents.\nMr. and Mrs. T. 6. Jerome, Victoria  street.\n\u2022 * \u2022\nMlsa Marcla Towgood of Ssndon is\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. V.\nGagnon.  SUlca  street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. Gemmel end Verne Reld of\nCorra Unn were week-end guests\nof W. McB. Brown and Monte Mor-\nCuticura Healed Large, Hard\nPimples Scattered Over Face.\n\"I bad plmplM aod __\u00bbckh-ad_ scattered all over my face. Tha pirn-\nplea -fare large, hard aod red, would hurt for a few daya aod then go\naway. My face usually waa rary itchy before a pimple formed. Thla\nwant oo for about one and a half yeara.\n\"I aaw Cuticura Soap and Ointment adrertited ao sent for a free\nsample of each. I uaed them and then purchased a box of the Ointment and a cake of the Soap and in about two or three weeka I\nwaa completely healed,'' (Signed) Miss Kathyrna T. Dobka, Otthon,\nSask, Sept It, 193a\ntorn tie. Otatment 25 .nd 50c. T-Icam Be.  Sold _r. rywhrr..   Sample tads tne.\nS\u2014Srem r_-___-- Depot: J. T. W*k Compftnr Limited, Montr\u00ab\u00abl.\nSummer Furniture\nFOR THE CAMP\nCots and Mattresses .... $9.50 to $12.50\nFOR THE VERANDAH\nOR LAWN\nHammock Couches with Stands $25 to $45\nSeagrass Chairs $6.50 to $8\nFolding Deck Chairs  $3 to $5.50\nJ Grass Mats 75c to $4.50\nStriped Awnings, per yard, 60c to $1.25\nTable Oilcloth, all colors, per yard, 60c\nto 75c.\nSTANDARD\nFURNITURE CO.\nComplete House Furnishers Nelson, B. C.\nThe Store of Service and Satisfaction\nTHE NELSON DAILY  NBWS, NELHON, B.  C.\nAVIATRIX\nLIKELY FLIGHT CANDIDATE\nLaura Ingalls. stunt snd crosscountry flier, whose Intensive flight\nand navigation training activities a.\nRoosevelt field. New York, give rise\nto Um belief that she wlll vis with\nRuth Nlcholls for distinction of being first woman to make sjio transatlantic flight.\nley, who have tsken the Wasson\ncottage on the north shore for the\nmonth of 'June.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. N. Reld had ss her guests\nSundsy the Misses Teresss Gsrsy,\nAnnie Vernuh, Helen Versuh Dtaga\nWolfe, Tom 8sare. Paul Stsrkovltch,\nEnrico TsUngedo, Joseph Woytella,\nMike Buckna and Joseph Buckns,\nsll   of   Trsll.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Jsck Locke, Josephine street, were the complimented\nguest* at a mlscellsneous shower\ngiven Saturday night at the home\nof Mr. snd Mrs. B, E. Chace. Silica\nstreet, when the hostesses ot the\nsffalr were Mrs. F. E. Howell, Mrs.\nOeorge F. Hunter snd Mrs. Chsce.\nMrs. W. C. Mawhinney snd F. E.\nHowell were the winners of the\nprizes for the contests. Those invited were Rev. \u00abnd Mrs. W. C.\nMawhinney, Mr. and Mrs. Norman\nC. Stlbbs, Mr. and Mrs. A. Jsffery.\nMr. snd Mrs. F. E. Howell. Mr. snd\nMrs. Percy Amss. Mr. snd Mrs\nGeorge F. Hunter. Mrs. W. R.\nSmythe. Miss Queenle Germsn. Miss\nMsrjorle Brown, Miss Rita Olton,\nMiss Stella Stewart. Reglnsld Oerman. Norvllle Germsn snd Teddy\nChsce.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. nnd Mrs. W. J. Sulllvsn of\nTrail were visitors to the city yesterdsy.\n\u2022 e   s\nMrs. E. H. Lsthsm. who hss been\nto the coset, was ln the city en\nroute  home.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe home of Mr. snd Mrs. W.\nNord, 414 Oore street, ws* * Jolly\nscene recently when their d\u00bbush-\nters, Annie snd Slgrld, celebrated\nihe anniversary of their ninth and\nsixth birthdays. Their guests Included Oeorgle and Evelyn Breeze.\nHsnnsh, 'Annie snd Ids Busk. Oer-\ntl* snd Bror Johnson. RUth Nelson.\nMsry snd Elmer Nord, and Susie\nDofkenson.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nO. Clsrk or Appledale psld * visit\nto the  city  yesterdsy.\nAmong shoppers to Nelson yesterdsy was Captain Hartrldge of Balfour.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Wllllsm Rutherford\nof the north shore hsd ss their\nguests over the week-end Mr snd\nMrs. Frsnk Willis snd their children,\nof Trsll.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. E. Milne, government engineer\nof Crawford Bay, wss a week-end\nvisitor In  town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nM. Robers of Boswell psld a visit\nto   Nelson   yesterdsy.\n\u2022 *al\nMr. snd Mrs. I. Moseley snd\ndaughter, ot Nskusp, sre visitors\nln   the   city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Phyllis Hamilton, a graduate of the Kootensy Lake General\nhospltsl, wbo ls now on the staff\nof tbe New Denver hospltsl, is a\nvisitor   rn   the   city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. Orsy ot Sslmo spent yesterdsy  in  the city shopping.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong shoppers to Nelson yesterdsy wss Colonel J. 8. Goode of\nBonnlngton.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nB. N. Shsrp of the Bayonne mine\nspent  the   week-end  In   town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMies Sereta Hutton of Grand\nForks ls in the city for s few d*ys.\nthe guest of Mr. and Mra. John\nLundie.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nH. C. Davidson of Trsll spent the\nweek-end golfing in Nelson, having\nseversl rounds of golf st the Nelson  Oolf  snd  Country club  course.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nYesterdsy afternoon Mrs. P. E.\nDoncaster. Csrbonste street, wu\nhostess at sn Informal t\u00abs. when\nshe was Assisted ln serving by Mrs.\nHsrry H. B. Horton, Mrs. Doncss-\nter's Invited guest* Included Mrs.\nW. M. Cunllffe, Miss Louise Cunllffe, Mrs. L. E. Borden, Mrs. Hsrry\nH. B. Horton. Mrs. E. O. Smythe,\nMrs. Peters, Mrs. A. D. McLeod,\nMm. W. M. Walker, snd Mrs. De\nWitt, of Sesttle.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Mary Buckna or Trsll is\nvisiting ln ths city st the homes\nof Mra. N. Reld snd Mrs. John\nOraham.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe oommerclal class of St. Joseph's academy held a most enjoyable dinner party at the Hume hotel\nSsturdsy evening, after which the\npsrty sttended the thester. The\ntsble was charmingly arranged with\nthe colors of ths academy, mauve\nsnd yellow. Those sttendlng the\ndinner were Miss Prtscllls Oellnas.\nMiss Margaret Rslisl, Miss Eileen\nButorsc. Miss Ellen Hughes, Mies\nNorah Flood, Miss Orsc* Buckley\nsnd   MIm   Annabelle   Dunk.\nWILL REDECK ALLEY\nBRIDGE NEAR HUME\nNelson city council on Monday\nnight ordered the redecklng of the\nhrldse over the alley becking the\niume  hotel.\nSocial Events\ngf Trail City\nTRAIL. B. C, Juna 1\u2014Mrs. Paul\nJonas, Daniel straat, entertaln-d Frldsy evening .at a mlsoellsneous\nshower arranged In honor et Mlsa\nMay Page, whose rnarrlag. takes\nplaoe this month. A variety of summer flowers in purple at* yellow\ncolorings wars used In decoration.\nContests were enjoyed. Mm. I. H.\nRowlands snd Miss Clara McGregor\nwinning prises. The gifts wen arranged In a window seat over which\nan alarm clock, set to ring at 10\no'clook was placed. This gsve the\nsignal for tha presentation. Mrs.\nRowlands, Miss clsrs Mlnton, and\nMiss BeUy Eggert assisted tha hostess ln serving. Tbe guests were Mrs.\nJ. 8. Psge, Mrs. M. L. Bsrnes, Mrs.\nI. Minion. Mrs. D. w Forteath.\nMrs J. Bell, Mn. F Versub. Mrs\nW. J. Owen, Mrs. D. J. Minto, Mrs.\nE. H. Rowlsnds. Mrs. P. Coris,\nMiss Ann Chslmers, Mtss Jean\nChalmers, Miss Dora Ellison, Miss\nSsdle Hayes, Miss Doris Johnston,\nMiss Acnes strschsn, Miss Slara\nMcGregor, Miss Rose Severn, Miss\nMlnton. Miss violet Bell, Miss Ethel\nWebb. Miss Isabel Kelr, Miss Eggirt\nAnd Miss Kittle Psge\n...\nMrs. J. T. Martlndale snd Mrs. At-\ntsway left Saturday to spend s\nshort holldsy In spoksne.\n...\nMrs. D. R. McLeod spent Thursdsy\nIn Nelson visiting her daughter\nKathleen, who la a nurae-ln-trslnlng\nst Kootenay Lake Genersl hospltsl\nand who la leaving for two months'\ntraining  at Kamloops.\nMiss Myrtle Pslmer spent the\nweek end visiting frlsnds ln Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. A. M. Allen and son\nct Spoksne were visitors in tha city\nduring the week end.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. Seymour Wilson snd\nJ. D. Andenon motored to Klmberley  for  a  short  visit.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nMr.  snd   Mrs.   R.   D.   Eseke   snd\nMr.  snd Mrs. Carl Muller of Spirit\nLake spent Friday ln the city.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. F. M. Black cf\nKelowna spent a few dsys here last\nweek.\nRev. W. C. and Mrs. Calder, snd\nMrs. Mcintosh of Ravelstoke. were\nvisitora In Trsll during ths week\nend.\n...\nMrs. T. M. Cairns. Mr. and Mrs. C.\nArmstrong snd Edwsrd Cslrns spent\nSundsy  st  Willow  Point.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. 1' Phillips snd sons\nwere visitors in Robson during the\nMM end.\nMrs.  Frsnk  Verruh   Jr.  left  Sundsy   for   Spoksne,   where   she   wtll\nsttend   grsdustlon   exercises   st   the\nLsdy ot  Lourrt's academy.\n.   \u2022   \u2022\nA cable aws received yesterdsy\nfrom Liverpool saying thst Mlsa\nDorothy Watklns snd her brother\nMorris, who leit two weeks uo todsy for Bsrrow-ln-Fumess. Englsnd.\nhsd srrlved ssturdsy. They were\nmet   at   Liverpool.\n\u2022 .\u2022   .\nMr. snd Mrs. f   J. wsgstsH and\nMis Ardyce Reynolds spent yesterdsy\nat  Robson.\n'   \"   \"__.\nC. J. Mlnton. J. Thompson. J.\nLanduccl. T. Tonelll, B. E. Smith.\nJ. Graham. A. Crelghton snd W\nCrelghton enjoyed s picnic st Robson  yastersy.\nMr. and Mrs. S. R. Walley, Oak\nstreet, motored to Spoksne Ssturdsy\nto meet Mfs. Wallsys mother. Mrs.\nA. Lommel. They returned vis Css-\ncade. where Mrs. Lommel Is visiting\nher dsughter, Mrs. 8. Owen, before\ncoming to Trsll. Mr. and Mrs. Wsl-\nley returned  home  lsst evening.\nTrail Newsof the Day\nTRAII, HOUSES tJlD LOTS. JW-\nauranee. Notary. J ->\u25a0 Andjr-\naon, Trail.      \"\u2022'a-1\nUNUSUAL ROBIN\nIS IN FAIRVIEW\nBird Keeps Resident Awake\nat Dawn by Pecking on\nWindow Pane\nAn unusual bird la the robin ln\nFalrvlew that for tha past week hss\nbeen making Itself s nulssncs by\nkeeping the resident of a house\nswake for four hours every morning.\nApparently ths robin Is attracted\nby something In the house for at\ndawn It comes snd throws Itself\nsgslnst the window snd persistently\npecks st the glsss. Different devices\nhsv, been used to ecsre it awsy,\neven poisoned wheat has been put\nout for It, yet the bird seems to\nthrive  on  It.\nOna morning a neighbor got up\nesrly snd frightened It away Into\nthe bruah. but no sooner had she\ngone Indoors thsn ths robin was\nback  again  to  Its old  trick.\nCALDER SPEAKS\nIN KNOX UNITED\n'    CHURCH, TRAIL\nTRAIL. B. C, lJune I\u2014Rev. W.\nC. Calder of Revelstoke Bunday occupied the pulpit of the Knox\nUnited churoh where he announoed\nthat Induction of Rev. Bryce Wallace would be made Friday.\nRev. Mr. Calder in his sermon,\ndrew * parallel between Bodom and\nGomorrah and Reno, Nebraska. The\nfirst two, according to biblical history, w*re steeped In Iniquity. He\nspoke of what he described ss legalised vice snd gambling at Reno\nwhere a six-weeks divorce lsw hss\nbeen put Into effect. While the*\nwft snothlng like this in Csnsds.\nther* wa* government control which\nhe preferred to think of as liquor\ncontrol of the government Effort*\nwere being made to legsll-co sweep-\n\u2022takes. Tn*** conditions. h\u00ab ssld.\nwsre \"putting tbe Chrlstlsn eon-\nselenc* to sleep.\" He urged a firm\nstsnd though it would not be sn\neasy   ont.\nThe Prench weekly newspsper Csn-\ndide hs* Just snnounosd s 'Grand\nPrix du Dlsque' (grand prlss of\nth* phonograph record) of 38,000\n-francs, which wlll bs swsrded\nevery yesr to th* six best records\nIssued In Prance In orchestral,\nr hors I, chamber, song, instruments!\n\u2022nd   light   muilr\nGRANT TO KASLO\nINSTITUTE FIXED\nAT$25PERYEAR\nPer Capita Grant Cancelled;\nArrange Girls' Judging\nContest, Wednesday\nKASLO, B. C, June 1.\u2014Th* member* of the Kaslo snd District Women's Institute held their monthly\nmeeting Frldsy afternoon In tbe city\nhall. The president, Mrs. John\nKeen, wss ln the ohslr. Mrs. A.\nMcGlllivray resd the secretary-\ntreasurer's report, which vns approved. A lengthy report ws* read\nfrom the minister of agriculture,\nth* oustandlng point being that\nthe Institute would receive $36 per\nyesr instead of the former per\ncapita grsnt.\nA report from Dr. Coghlln re tbs\nrecent dental clinic wsa read. There\nwere 46 patients treated, these being from outside points In the district \u00abs well ss from Ksslo. A vote\not thanks was passed to Mrs. Coulter\nand Mlsa Disn* Whellams for thslr\nassistance to Dr. coghlln. The secretary read a report on publio\nhealth In schools.\nArrangements were msde for the\ngirls' Judging contest which Is to be\nIn the morning ot June 3. Mrs.\nThomaa Smith snd Mtss Mildred\nTwins srs to have the msterlsls ln\nreadiness for this contest.\nDRIVE  FOR MEMBERS\nA drive for new members ls to be\nmsde   Immediately.\nThe memben stood ln * minute's\nsllenc* in respect to Mrs. Oeorge\nStott, who died recently. The flower\ncommittee was Instructed to order a\nfloral piece for the funeral and a\nletter of sympathy was to be written to Mr. Stott. Miss Mildred\nTwles gave a sketch of the Illuminated address which was to be presented to Ven. Archdeacon Henry\nBeer, Sunday, on the eve of his departure for Vancouver, bytthe members of St. Mark's church. The address is the work of Miss Twist.\nA hsndsome wool rug, the property of Mrs, M. Elder, a fancy bag\nmade by Mrs. Bennett ,of Nashton,\nwere exhibited.\nFive books hsve been donated as\nprizes tor the forthcoming flower\nshow and a full discussion ot this\nsffslr took plsce, though no definite arrangements were msde except\nto \u00abppolnt Mrs. Ronsld Hewat ss\nconvenor for the sewing snd fancy\nwork  committee.\nThose Attending were Mrs. John\nKeen. Mrs. Angus McOlUlvray, Mrs.\nJohn McLellan, Mrs. J. M. Allen,\nMra, James Spelrs, Mrs. Locksrd,\nMrs. J. Tinkess, Mrs. Robert Hamilton. Miss Mildred Twins, Mrs. Thomss Smith. Mrs. William Whitaker,\nMrs. Ronsld Hewat and Miss Alice\nHodges.\nMr. and Mrs. Willis\nof Grand Forks Pay\nShort Visit to Trail\nORAND PORKS. B C. _une 1\u2014\nUr. snd Mrs. W. Hsrkness. sccom-\npanlfd bjr Mlas Marjorle Kldd, motored   to Nelson on  Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. K Soheer snd K\nReuter motored to Greenwood on\nFriday.\nF. Scott or Trail was a visitor to\nthe  city  on   Saturday.\nR. Campbell, Ken Campbell snd\nClaire Donaldson returned from a\nmotor   trip   to  Nelaon  Saturday.\nMr. and Mm. L Rlsdon snd Miss\nAlice Deporter snd L. O'Connor\nmotored from Spoksne on Ssturdsy\nand ars the week end fuesta st the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. A.  Deporter\nMlaa M. Lyden paid a visit to\nRepublic on Saturdsy.\nMr. snd Mrs. H. Mclnnis of Trail\nare   vlsltlnf   the   former's   mother.\nMrs. N. L. Mclnnis at her summer\nhome. Christina Lake.\nI. Chapman left bunday mornlni\nfor   Vsncouver.\nMr. snd Mra. P. J Lyden left\nSaturday morning for Seattle.\nMr. and Mra J. Willis accompanied by N. Taylor motored to Trail\nthla   week.\nConstable   Vlckers   cf   Oreenwood\nwas  In  the  city  on   Saturday.\nJ.  Lyden snd Jimeo Lyden motored\nto Republic on Ssturdsy.\nD. McPherson. sccompsnled by\nH. L. Flynn motored to Trail Thuraday.   returning   on   Ssturdsy.\nM. Belletontsine of Eholt was a\nvisitor to Orand Forks on Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. I. Moore, sccompsnled by E. Moore. Jr.. end Miss\nAnna Tofelt of Eholt were In the\ncity on Saturday.\nMrs. Thomas Bowen returned Ssturday   from   Aberdeen.   Wash.\nJ. Holiday Smith of Boswell, British Columbls, was a Orand Forks\nvisitor   on   Saturdsy.\nJ. A. Brsdly returned Saturday\nmorning from  Vsncouver.\nA number of American visitors\nware In tbe city on Saturday, it\nbeing Amerlcsn Decorstlon Day. A\nlarge number slso sttended the\ndances at the two pavilions. Chris-\ntins   Lake.\nYmir People Shop\nin Nelson, Saturday\nYMIR. \u25a0 C, June 1\u2014C. Brown\nleft for Nelson    on Friday.\nMlas Orace Rendall spent the\nweek-end In Nelson the guest of\nher parents. Mr. and Mrs. T. Rea>\ndall.\nMrs. T. Price and Thomas Price\nspent the week-end st their summer homa bare.\nF. A. Hubbard of the Wilcox mine\naa a business visitor to Nelson\nrecently.\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Clarke and\nMrs. M. Peter, wera Nelson shoppers\non  Saturdsy.\nMra. Wendell Shrum waa a Nelson   shopper   on   Saturdsy.\nSalmo Student Is\n.        Graduate, Colville\nSAIMO. B. C, June 1 -Herman\nO Undow returned Frldsy from\nColville. Wssh, with his father\nCarl W. Llndow. having graduated\nIn tha INI claas of the Colville\nhigh   sohool.\nPrior to taking up studies In\nwsshlngton, Herman attained an\nenviable record In his school work\nIn tha public schools of this district, having tha distinction of\nwinning the honor roll foe proficiency every year from tha commencement of his studies until he\ngraduated   to   high   school.\nH.rmsn Is a native son and wsa\nborn In Salmo, IT y**fa ago. It is\nunderstood hs hss bev offered a\nposition  with \u25a0 spoksns h,nk.\n<Z?4ed_\\hers^>\n607 Baker St Phone 200\nSTORE NEWS\nSmart Summer Dresses\nOnly $17.75 Each\nAnd these are the smartest dresses we hav*\never shown at thia low price. They come in s\nwonderful quality of pure silk flat crepe. Sleeveless styles, with pleated or flared skirts. Novelty trimming and faggotting. Plain colors or\nnew printed designs. Sizes 14 to 20.\nALL ONEiPRICE, EACH   f 17.75\nNew Hats Bring Color\nNearer the Face\nAlluring millinery fashions with\nthe newer trend of summer modes\nare emphasized in this group.\nBaku and hair braids, Panamas,\nrough shiny straws, combined\nwith flower trims make these\nhats most desirable. Choose your\nnew hats from this wonderful\ncollection, unsurpassed for smartness, variety and value.\nEACH  S6-50 TO $15.00\nAPPLEDALE HALL\nIS DESTROYED IN\nTHE EARLY HOURS\nFlames  Awake  Mr.  Woyna,\nJust Before Collapse;\nPiano Gone\nd-\nA fire of unknown origin, though\nincendHrUpi in BUggMted, dmtroy-Kt\nthc community halt at Appleditr,\nIn th* Blocau vilify, about 3 e. m.\nMonday, Nelaon  tim*.\nAt that hour M. A. Woyna. Ap-\npltdal* merchant, wu awakened by\nthe adjacent blase, the community\nhall being the next building, am\nin a matter of minutes, while he\nwes getting out to the acene, the\nTram*  collapaed\nTh* neighborhood was aroused,\nand, aided by the fact that there\nwas no wind, had no difficulty in\nprotecting thc two-\u00bbtory Woyna store\nand residence, and the school. Just\nbeyond It. Shovels mere tit-ved to\nthrow earth on spot fires lighted\nby dropping embers.\nhi ii i   IN   nt:\nInsurance of fSSTO was carried\non the community hall, which was\nbuilt in 191.1. everybody at that\ntime In the dlatrlct \"chipping in\"\nwith   cash,   materials,   or   labor.\nIn addition to th<* lees of the\nbuilding, a player-piano, that cost\nthe Appledale Progressive association\n1750 a few yeara ago,  was destroyed\nInspector Forbes Cruickshank of\nihe provincial police went out from\nNelson to look Into the circumstances.\nAppledale residents stated Mondtiy\nthat relations with the Doukhobors\nwere  friendly.\nParkinson Sells His\nPraying Business to\nWilbour Bailey, Nakusp\nNAKU8P. B. Oh June I-Mr. and\nMrs. Wilbur Bailey of Glenbank,\nNakusp, hive bought the dairying\nbuslneat of B. Parkinson. Nakusp,\nand ar* now milking 12 cows.\nSilverware Given\nGrand Forks Pair\nUpon Anniversary\nORAND FORKS, B. C. Juiw 1\u2014\nAn Interesting event was held at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. B. L.\nKldd, thc occasion being the twenty-\nfifth anniversary of their welding\ndiy.\nProgressive flv* hundred formed\nthe evening's entertainment snd\nwinners of thc first prizes were Mrs.\nE. Bailey, and W. Eureby. Consolation prizes were won by Mrs. S.\nTodhunter  \u00abnd  II. V. Knowles.\nAfter refreshments were served.\nT. A. Love in behalf of those\npresent, spoke a few well chosen\nwords befitting the occasion and\npresented the bride at 36 years\nwith a silver cake basket and sandwich tray, a token of esteem from\ntheir friends present.\nThc invited guest* were Mr. and\nMrs. T. A. Love. Mr. and Mrs. J C.\nTaylor. Mr. and Mrs. H. V Knowles,\nMr snd Mrs. W Oowans, Mr and\nMrs W. Harkness, Mr. and Mrs. w\nRonald. Mr. and Mr**-. W. Eurebv.\nMr. and Mra. E. Bailey, Mrs. C.\nBukerton.   Mrs.   6.   Todhunter.\nMay 25 Is Popular\nDay, New Denver\nNEW DENVER, B. C, Jun* 1.\u2014\nMonday, May 35, proved to be a\npopular day for th* kiddles. The\njunior baseball gam* was a walk\naway for the Silverton team, the\nscore being 32-3 ln favor of tbe\nvisiting team. The senior gam* was\nmore interesting for onlookers, bow-\never, the home team defeating the\nvisitors by a score of 33-11, Both\nteams played a good game.\nln the evening a. most aucceasful\ndance was held In the Bosun halt,\nby the Legion. There were a great\nmany out of town visitors, especially\nfrom Nakuap, visitors from therr\nnumbering over 90.\nITCHING SKIN\nI Stop irritation now. Soothe, prornoH\nI ht\u00bbt_ni snd prevent Infection with\nDodd's\nOINTMENT\nIn a i.i like she finisi late tn.tne. H_, sa.\nSteaks\nWhat __ more delicious\nthan a thick, juicy steak\nwith French fried potatoes, toast and coffee ?\nWe can serve you your\nfavorite steak just thc\nway you like it. Let us\nsuggest   our   Special\nGolden Gate Steak\nat\n50c\n\"Dint, at the Golden\nGate\"\nGolden Gate\nCafe\nU_-\u00bbMBMW\u00ab.MB----m\nSHEET -*\"\"1\"'\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022   popular\n    Mn-li.\n\u25a0npl-a\nMl V BMC   Toronto\n    Conearvatory\n\u25a0\u2014\u2014*\"\u2014\u25a0**\u2014*\u2014\u25a0\u2122~~ Books.\nW.   offer  a   mmt\nrornplfto .rr.tr*\nSptrlaliilni In Violins\nKootenay Music House\nMt Baker  St.. Nrlnon,   B.  C.\nPhono US\nLOWER PRICES\nin\nGroceries and Meats\nB. C. Fine\nSUGAR\n10 lbs 55*\n\"DYSON PICKLES\"\n(Sweet or Sour)\nQuart Size Jar .. 38*\n~BRAN       ~\nFLAKES\n2 Pkts 25*\nJELLY-\nPOWDERS\n9 Pkts 50*\nTOILET\nPAPER\n8 Rolls  25*\nSIRLOIN or\nT-BONE STEAKS\nLl)\t\n27*\nCOMBINATION\nSPECIAL\nfor\n\u00bb5*\n_\\ I.B.  POT  ROAKT\nItf. s.ts.,.t; g-\n1 lb. sikkii uvea   VOL\n',  I.B. B\\rox\nBONELESS STEW\nBEEF\nLb.\n15*\nFAIRWAY\nCASH AND CARRY\nJOHNSON'S WAX\nProtect your floors with a hard,\nglossy finish.\nJohnson's Wax will lessen your work of\npolishing floors and furniture.\nSPECIAL OFFER\n1 Johnson's Floor Duster, $1.50, and half\na pint of Johnson's Liquid Wax, 60c,\n'\u00ab $1.50\nJohnson's Heavy Duty' Electric Polisher,\nfor rent by the day, $1,50\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\n\"Look for the RED HARDWARE Store\"\nPHONE 487 Box 414\n__:.._...:_\u25a0   \u25a0\n________________________n_M\n PAGE   MX\nTHE !fBL90-f DAttT NUT'S. NELSON. B. C. \u2014 TUESDAY  MOtXtNO, JCNI *, 1M1       tmtm\u2014m\n% Sfotemt Satin Hf*\u00abw\nPublished every moaning except Sunday by News Publishing Company, Limited. Nelson. \u00bb. C.\nMember of Csnsdlan Press leased wire newa service.\nAdvertising rste cards snd A. B. c. statements ot clrculstlon\nnulled on request, or may be seen st tbe otflos ot any advertising\nagency recognlred by the Oanadlan DaUy Newspspers* Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\n\u25a0y mall (country), per month\t\n*er year __.  , ...\n\u2022y mall  (cltyl. per year      ,\u201e\nOutside Canada, per month _\u201e\t\nPer year   _,  \t\nDelivered, per week      _\t\nPer year   _ \t\nPayable ln advance.\nMember Audit Bureau of circulation.\n$   .80\n.. 800\n.. 18.00\n.. .78\n.. 7.80\n.. .38\n.. 13.00\nTUESDAY, JUNE 2, 1931.\nMr. Bennett's First Budget\nFaced with a net deficit of $75,000,000, plus an additional 18,000,000 represented by writing down soldiers'\nfarms loans, Hon. R. B. Bennett faced one of the most\ndifficult budgets in the history of Canada,\nAs usual, Mr. Bennett tackled the situation boldly.\nHe has made increases in the tariff which are designed\nto multiply production from the country's basic industries, he has given assistance to the grain growers and\nthe collieries, and he has raised the tariff on a number\nof manufactured articles which should result in more\nindustries and more employment in the Dominion.\nAdditional revenue had tb be secured, to avoid another\nbig deficit, because it cannot be expected that the worldwide depression which has resulted in decreased revenue\nfor Canada will be overcome in a few months. Customs revenue, for example, was down $48,000,000 in\nthe past year, due chiefly to the reduced prices of\ngoods upon which ad valorem duties were collected.\nThere is no reason for expecting that these goods will\nreturn to normal values for some time to come.\nSo the income on corporations and limited liability\ncompanies is increased from 8 to 10 per cent, a jump\nof 25 per cent. There is no increase in the income\ntax on the incomes of individuals. -\nA special one per cent tax is applied to all imports,\nin addition to duty and sales tax.\nWe return to the old 2-cent tax on checks, below $10.\nThat is to say, a 2-cent revenue stamp must be affixed\nto every check, no matter for how small or for how\nlarge an amount.\nAnd we also return to 3-cent postage, for everything\nexcept \"drop\" letters, that is letters mailed at a local\npostoffice for collection by the addressee at that post\noffice.\nFinally, the sales tax is jumped from one per cent\nto four per cent.\nThe increased duties on agricultural products, on coal\nand on veneer and plywood wil be directly beneficial to\nKootenay, so will the extention of tbe coal subsidy to\nmake it apply as far east as Fort Frances and Sioux\nLookout, instead of only to Winnipeg.\nKootenay will benefit indirectly from the wheat subvention, from increased duties on imported furniture\nand from tariff increases on other articles or products\nwhich will result in a larger market in Canada for the\nproduce of manufactures of this district.\nIt will be noted that an excise duty will be imposed\non the good of any manufacturer who uses the tariff\nto increase his prices to the Canadian consumer. Thus\ndoes the government go further in the protection of the\ninterests of the consumer than has any previous government in Canadian history.\nThe provision for forfeiture of goods from any\ncountry which is not a signator to the Treaty of Versailles is evidently aimed at Russia.\nRadio Census\nOne of the questions to be asked in thje census is:\n\"Do you own a radio?\" It may be suspected that the\npurpose of this is to locate persons who may not have\npaid their licence, or to assist private radio companies\nto make sales by letting them know what families do\nnot own radios. This is wholly unfounded. The answers\nto this question, as to all other census questions, are\nabsolutely confidential\u2014even to government departments. The purpose of the question is to explore and\nanalyze just what the radio audience of Canada is\u2014\nwhere it is located, where it is densest, and how it is\nmade up according to the different elements in the\npopulation. With the growing importance of radio,\nsuch information is indispensable to the formulation\nof satisfactory broadcasting. Radio is a further index\nof the Canadian standard of living, and some interesting studies may be expected as a result of the census\nquestion.\nThe Workmen's Compensation board report for 1930\njiict issued shows that the payrolls of the firms covered by its activities reached their highest point in 1929\nwith approximately $190,000,000 paid out in salaries\nand wages. .... , .   _,\nFor 1980 the payrolls will not be complete for some\nmonths, but available figures indicate the total will\nbe about $180,000,000. In spite of the fall in wages\nthere was an increase in the number of employers\nwhich stood at 8,958 at the end of 1980 as against\n8888 in 1929. During 1930, 1263 new employers commenced operation and 173 firms renewed their\nactivities.\nIt is hard to believe in this age of efficiency, but\nthe Egyptians still use the sakyeh, or irrigation wheel.\nIt is very primitive and includes three wheels with a\ntree trunk supported by two rock columns forming\nthe bearing for the shaft of one of the wheels which\nia horizontal. A camel hitched to this goes round\nand round, making it revolve. Pins from this wheel\ncause a second wheel to revolve, which in turn starts\nthe third, to which water pitchers are fastened, These\ndip into the well beneath the wheel.\nOne hundred bottles of West Ind a rum over 125\nyears old was found 80 feet below the level of Wall\natreet in New York my a workman digging for the\nfoundation of a skyscraper. We are \"\"*\u2022\u00ab\u25a0*\u00ab' '\"\nknowing whether the find waa made in October, 1929.\nSome U. S. dentist* demand that their victims call\non them every 90 days. And all he haa to do between\ntimes is to live in anticipation of the pleasure of the\ncoming visit.\nLatest English noveiist to arrive in Canada is aaid\nattamahip manager.   Bat what does a\nook like\u2014an English novelist?\nSeen and Heard in\nNELSON\n(By 4,\nC)\nTo the editor of The Neleon Dtlly\nMM,\nSir: Olsncing over \"J. B. C.'\" re-\nmarts about the street can in\nThursday's News, the thought oc\ncurred: Too bad that J. B. C. should\nsit, like the Olympian gods, \"Upon\nthe bill, careless of all mankind\"--\notherwise he might have made mention of the horrible shed at tbe\nPalrvlew terminus of the street railway. Might wt venture to suggest\nthat J. B. C. view this unpalnted\nmonstrosity?\n'An early moraine vl8lt (preferably\nt wet one) should prove Instructive,\nHe wlU se commuters huddled for-\nlornly in the middle of the shed,\nbecause no one would dare to sit\non the rough planks serving \u00abi\nseats.\nThe newly-painted cars look fine,\nand ths smart uniforms lend a\ntouch of distinction, while for cour-\nteousness and efficiency the em\npioyees need fear no comparison\nwith other cities.\nToura truly,\nFair vie t\\ Taxpayers\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWell, well, well. I have apparently\nfallen down on the job. Some few\ndays ego someone drew my attention the state of the. \"station\nterminus*1 of the street rallwsy at\nFalrvlew. I must agree with the\nPalrvlew ratepayers lh this respect,\nThe present station ia not in any\nway a beautiful piece of architecture, nor Is lt entirely a' place of\nhealthful and sanitary condition,\ns,  \u2022   \u2022\nIf I can remember back far\nenough. I think I am safe ln say\nlng the old terminus shack haa\nbeen ln existence for about 15 or\nmore years. It was built to replace\none that waa blown down by a\nstorm some years ago. The old sta\ntlon was Just a roof with four posts\nsup-porting lt. On one end wss a\nhuge metallic shoe used to advertise\nsome shoe-stand In town. Behind\nthe shoe the bate used to make\nthflr headquarters. But the wind\ndid a good turn. It blew the old\nshed down, luckily while no one\nwas attempting to seek shelter under  it.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAfter some months the city did\nerect the prrj.cnt, building. I do\nnot know whst csn be done about\nthe matter. But 1 could suggest\nthat the Falrvlew ratepayers invite\nthe mayor and city council out to\nthe station some dark, stormy.\nwindy night, when the rain ls beating down six different ways, lf\nthat is possible. Msybe after a\ngood drenching something might be\ndone.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThen, presuming the council msde\nthe building seaworthy, they could\npreserve its usefulness and make a\nmonument for the 1031 council by\npainting the shed and keeping it\nclean. It would then look as though\nIt really was psrt of the street rait-\nway system, which In new paint\nlooks like a real credit to the etreet\nrailway committee of the city council.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nProbably if the council visited the\nspot aome dsy soon when Lakeside\npark crowds are waiting for the\ncars they could find some possible\nexcuse for building * new and more\npretentious station, and then appoint someone to keep it in apple-\npie order. But those are only suggestions.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAfter that I'll be afraid to go to\nthe next city council meeting.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nNoticed L. W. Oughtred of Fair-\nview giving a neighbor a \"lift\"\nhome in his car . . . R O. Joy\ndiscussing old times and old timers\n. Such as Hoover and John\nHouston . . . A. H. Green discussing road contract-. . .. . Howard\nBush figuring out aecbunt* . . .\nRoss Fleming talking to an automobile body builder . . . H. E Dill\ncarrying a grip slong Baker street\n, Csptalh Seaman playing with\na tiny girl . . . And getting a great\nkick out ot lt all , . . Charles Simpson and Kenneth Rees inspecting a\nshipment of Swedish ivory and Scottish Week granite . . . P. A. Whitfield digging into a back pocket\nfor his keys in order to open his\noffice . . . Charles Sewell having\nan evening's stroll . . . Jack Miller\nriding on the running-board of a\nwrecking car . . . Percy Bates tipping hi\u00bb hat to a lsdy . . . Jlmmle\nNotman getting some tennis practice by beating a rug with a tennis-\nracket.\nAt Sunday's ball game and at\nnumerous other ball games fans\nhave often seen the catcher walk\nout to talk to his pitcher. It happens every once ln a while and\nfires pour curiosity.\n\u2022 a     \u2022\nYou wonder what inside base\nball Is being discussed and what\ndeviltry is on  foot.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nIt will stagier you to know\nthat many times the converst-\ntion Is airy flippant and hss no\nbearing on  the game.\nThat the catcher ls telling the\npitcher, \"I see your wife in the\nstand and she la eating hot dogi\nsnd drinking soda pop,\" and that\nthe pitcher U exploding, \"8o that\nIs the way ahe spends my money\nI'll hsve to take her to task when\nI get her borne, and say, by the way\nisn't that your girl in the box\nseat   talking   to   another   fellow.\"\nThe boys will have their peta\nThe other dsy Cliarlte Pearson's\npet kitty produced twins. And this\nweek not to be outdone a similar\noccurrence occurred at the home of\nA, E. Mann. Chance for a quartette, \"Kittens on the Keys*.\nBeing a newspaperman, I am\nsometimes late getting home. The\nother morning I met a friend who\nwas weaving his way homewards.\n\"Hey\". I said. \"I think you are\ndrunk\u2014splffllcated. In other words\nboiled   and soused''\nHe replied, \"Well, if I sln't I'm\nout   110.\nWho stole  the  wemers?\n1 \"US\" 1\u00bb RICHT\nA colored man tn a small town\nIn Virginia, by thrift unusual for\none of hla race, eeved IftOO, which\nhe canl\u00abd ln a checking account\ntn a negro bank. Moving to Richmond and requiring some money,\nhe went to ft bank, showed hli\ndeposit book and left a check for\ncollection. The check came back\npromptly, marked. \"No funds.\" His\nRichmond banker advised blm to\nwire for an explanation and this\nanswer  was  reoelved:\n\"That don't mesn you ftint got\nao  fundi.    Vs ain't.\"\nCANDY NOT ALTOGETHER*\u00ab**oww*\nTO BLAME FOR BAD\nTEETH\nFather and son.\nGold in the Caribou Might\nLiquidate Our Public Debt\nCfcoldiH, tall  us tbat burled inhered-   produced   woo.ooo.    and   JO\nut      li.ll-l.      _._>      n_.__.__i_       _-._., \u25a0__*__       \u25a0_   ' ___.      __. in \u25a0 \u25a0 --  \u25a0\nthe wilds ot British Columbia Ls\nfnough to pay off the \u00bb300,000,000\nDominion bond flotation now being\nissued by Premier Bennett. But why\nJust $300,000,0007 Perchance enough\nbullion lies there to pay off Canada'a national debt, back every dollar\nnote, and put ua on tbe road to\nprosperity\u2014if gold  alone can do It.\nUnfortunately this particular British Columbia gold ls alluvial deposit so finely distributed that not\neven the modern dredges snd hydraulic can profitably recover It.\nScientists are searching for some\nmethod to solve the problem.\nN   BY   STAKE   COACH\nThis   hoard   of   fine   elusive   gold\nmore were steadily producing from\n20 to 400 ounces per day. Tbe\nButcher which washed out* 360\nouncea in one day. the Aurora which\ntook out from 300 to 400 ounces\ndaily for a time, and Caledonian\nwith a. record of 300 ounces in 34\nhours, are other evidences of the\nhoard of treasure which lay there.\nMoreover, the pioneera did practically all the digging and washing\nwith their own hands.\nNeighboring Antler. Lightning and\nGrouse creeks produced much\nwealth, though claims adjacent to\nthe richest properties, even on William's creek, sometimes barely paid\na miner wages. In 1909 placer min\nis   situated    ln   tbe   wild    Cariboo | lng  In  the  Cariboo  waa  at   a  low\nregion at which Barkervllle ls the\ncenter\u2014Bar kerville. a ghost-village\nnow, which waa a roaring camp of\nthousands when primeval forest yet\ncovered the site at Vancouver, The\nwriter of thia column cherishes\nvivid memories of a trip he took 33\nyears ago this coming June to thst\ndecerted spot whlcb for its area\nwas once the richest gold mining\ncamp in the whole world. I went ln\nfrom Asbcroft, British Columbls,\non the real Deadwood type of stage\ncoacn drawn by relaya of four\npowerful horses, at a time when the\nlste Charlie Millar. K. C , of Toronto\nwas preeident of the Brittsb Columbia Express Co. which operated the\ncoaches. Following a thrilling drive\nof 160 miles over the cariboo trail\nand a 60 mile voyage up the swift\nFraser in a flat-bottomed steamboat, we reached the former goal of\nthe gold hunters.\nMKETING  THE   nl h   MINERS\nEntering Barkervllle was like dropping back into the dim past. Its\n\u25a0>w inhabited houses contained pictures and furniture redolent of\nCivil war days. Greybeards who had\narrived there as young miners walked its single street and told tales of\nthe fabulous times long vanished,\nedge in long rubber boots and slouch\nOne old man standing at tbe creeks'\nhat, shovel In hand, earning a few\ndollars at government rosd work,\nremarked: \"Toung fellow, I remember the time when men were taking 11000 in gold dust and nuggets\nto the cubic foot from a claim not\n50 yards away. Tea, and you will live\nto see the day when thousands of\nminers will once more be washing\nout gold in this country.\" A pal of\nthla veteran, operating a little bar\nroom, told me of the time wben the\nminers, in lieu of flatter ground,\nheld horse races on the main street\nat his door, with the church ss a\nwinning post. They told me of\nCariboo Cameron from Olengarry,\nOntario, who gleaned a million dollars from the creeks, enriched his\nrelatives at home, and wat burled a\npoor man in the little cemetery at\nBarkervllle.\n(\u2022KEEK   PRODI'CRD   $2:>.0W,0M\nWhen i iiw Barkervllle In 1001\nIt wa\u00ab a forsaken camp of empty\nshacks and stores and rotted flumes\nwhere a few chinamen won wages\nby washing and rewashlng the piles\nof old tailings\u2014a lonely old cafop\nsurrounded by high mountains snd\nforests of dark spruce. Hard by\ngurgled William's creek, replete with\ntrout\u2014William's crek which over\nan area of ISO feet wide and two\nmiles long, yielded an estimated\n126.000.000 In alluvial gold, from\n\"dirt\" never equalled ln richness.\nAnd much of the wealth came from\nthe little 100 foot square claims of\nindividual and group miners. Its\nbullion was ln the coarse dust and\nnuggets characterizing thc bonanza\ncamp. Here be lt said thst the creek\ngot Its name from William Deltz,\n\"Dutch Bill\", the miner wbo discovered it in 1\u00bbW.\nSOME  RICH   CLAIMS\nHere are a few examples of Wll\nHam's creek's richness. The Steele\nclaim operated by three brothers of\nlate B C. Steele, the Toronto seed\nmerchant, produoed at one time\n409 ouncea ef gold a day valued at\n\u00bbdM4. More than g 1,000,000 was\ntaken from one digging which measured only 80 by 2fi feet in area.\nIn 1M2 the adjoining Bunninghsm\nclsim produced MOOO a day for\n{be whole , working season. Tbe\nAdams claim netted Its own**** |40,-\nebb. The few large companies had\nmostly given up and few Individuals were working claims. We saw\none outfit of several men playing a\nhydraulic stream from a'big noazle,\nfed by a pipe from a mountain\nlake, against the dirt sides of Mink\nOulch. In the process the stream\nbattered down the bank, unloosing\nthe timbers from old shaft* and\nsending a flood ef muddy water\ndown a sluice box. We aaw the\nclean-up cf black aand and galena\nin whlcb, with mercury the miners\nwere catching particles of gold. The\nseason waa short and the profits\nonly fair, from this ground which\nhad been tunnelled ln the early days\nPAY  DIBT  IS   SCARCE\nBut the writer his always hankered to revisit the Cariboo and to\npan Its creeks for gold. One can\nquite appreciate the mre such\nquests have for the oid sourdough,\nwith their possibility of sudden\nriches. Alas, many a man has -Wasted his life ln such useless efforts.\nVeterans talk of locating \"the old\nb-fds\" of tbe famous streams which\nmust be heavy with gold down at\nbed rock. In fact we knew one man\nwho did locate the ancient channel\nat Antler creek, from which he\nshowed us rich specimens of gold-\nHe ran a shaft to the rock but\nwater seeped in and somehow he was\nnever able to make lt go.\nOne reads about, but seldom sees,\nchinamen washing out gold from\nthe bars of the Fraser river farther\ndown. For years Chinamen have\nbeen able to make better money\nwashing clothes or cooking in Vancouver. Accessible pay dirt Is mostly\ntoo poor nowadays, though one\nfanclea In these hard times that\neven the poorest dirt would attract\nattention. One can get \"colors\"' in\nhundreds of British Columbia rivers\nand creeks, but even a few cents\nworth of gold wlll blearn In the\nbottom of a pan. Ground must be\nfairly rich to warrant profitable\nhand labor or even ' modern placer\nmachinery. If the Canadian geologist* can find a way of saving the\nfine \"flour gold\" of the rivers or\nprofitably extracting the smalt quantities contained in mountain of\n\"dirt\", they wlll surely confer a\nbenefit on Oena'da\u2014Toronto Telegram,\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(Horn the Daily New,, June 2,11111\nOue of tbe flneat launch** on\nKootenay like bu Juat been oompleted tor Jobn - Retalltch of\nKulo br Cunningham and Oliver.\nChariea O. Rodgera. managing dl\nrector of tb* Canyon City Lumber\ncompany, I* In from Creaton.\n* ,   \u2022\nThe Nicola Valley Coal ft Coke\ncompany ture been awarded an\nImportant contract wblch win provide for tbe proper handling of tbe\nneit winter** output from tbe mine.\n* \u2022   *\nlarly ant week tbe rancher* til\nalong th* north ahore of tbe weat\narm \u2022* far u Kokanee point will\nbe given telephonic communication\nwith Nelaon. tbe line hating been\ncompleted u far aa that point.\n* \u2022 e\nD. Ker, preeident of the Brack-\nman-Ker   Milling  company,   hu  *r-\n000.   In    1803   thr**   rf   WllUam'irlved In the city for a few,daya.\nAUNT HET\nIt may be stylish to serve dinner ln counea like Ella does, but I\nalways leave room for sometbln'\nthat don't come or fall to leave\nroom for sometbln' I wasn't ex-\npectin'.\"\nLighter Side\nJudge\u2014'How long Is It since you\nwere ln police court?\"\nPrisoner\u2014\"Twenty yeara, your\nhonor.\"\nJudge\u2014\"And what have you been\ndoing all that time?\"\nPrisoner\u2014\"Twenty yeara.\"\nOld Gentleman: \"You've evidently\nseen better days. Have you no\nfriends?\"\nlYamp\u2014\"No, sir, I used to be a\nfootball referee.*'\nBonks\u2014\"By Jove, you do look,\nsmart! That coat must hare coat\nyou a lot.\"\nJonks\u2014\"Not at all. Only five\nbob down and five bob every time\nthe tailor sees mc first.\"\nVisitor: \"wnat a splendid sunset I\"\nInhabitant:  \"Tes,   not  bad afor   a\nlittle place like this, ls tt?\"\nSentry\u2014\"Halt!    Who goes there?\nPatrick\u2014\"Nobody!    I'm not going.\nI'm coming backr\nHE'D   BITE\nA certain clergyman made a habit\nof repeating his sentences several\ntimes to ensble his congregation to\ngrasp their meaning.\n\"Who wu John the Baptist?\" he\nremarked on one occasion, bringing\nthe words out slowly and distinctly,\nand then repestlng them.\nAfter glancing once more around\nthe church, he repeated the words\nagain.\n\"Who wss John tho  Baptist?\"\nTo his surprise a seedy looking\nindividual at the back of the church\nshuffled to his feet.\n\"Look 'ere. guv'nor,\" he observed,\n\"I know there's a catch somewhere,\nbut come on, 'oo wu *e. anyway?\"\u2014\nAnswers.\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\n(From   the  Nelson   Dally   Miner   of\nJune  I,   liHtii\nR. F. Oreen. M.P.F., ls in the\ncity. He ssys that the prospects\nfor Kulo getting its smelter are\ngood.\n\u25a0   \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nAll the force working on ore at\nthe -Last Cbanee wu laid off on\nWednesdsy. The stopes ere too wet\nto carry on mining and no ore wlll\nbe taken out until the seepage subsides-\n\u2022    *   *   *\nThe Bunday ball gemes wlll be\ncontinued ln gpite of the sctlon\nof tbe Nelson city council to Uie\ncontrary.\ni \u25a0 \u2022 , i\nDespite hesvy burdens the silver\nlead mines of British Columbia still\nhold rank u the richest properties\nln the provinoe. Thus far this year\nthey have managed to pay two-thirds\nof the dividends from all the mlnee\nin the Kootenays,\nThat Body of Yours\nBy  JANK-i  W.   BARTON\nIt la unfortunate that sugar and\ncandy have been blamed to euch\na large extent for th\u00ab deoay of the\nteeth In youngsters. Then is no\nquestion bub tbat If you took a\ngroup of youngsters wbo ate a lot\nof candy and augar, and a group\nwho did not that there would be\ntuoie cases of deoay ot the teeth\nin the augar and candy eaters.\nNow this might be taken u proof\nthat tt wu th\u00ab candy and sugar\nthat caused the decay but the real\ntruth of the matter is that youngsters that eat a lot of candy and\nsugar are not likely to enough of\nother foods, and of course will not\neat enough of the kind of foods\nthat make good teeth and prevent\ndeoay, that Is plenty of milk and\ngreen vegetablea.\nFurther, lt must be admitted that\ncandy and sugar win cling about\nthe teeth more than other foods\nand will thus give more opportunity for aold  formation  there.\nThus tf there le not the lime and\nother mineral salts built into the\nteeth from the eating of green vege\ntables and milk and the deposits\nar going to be left on the enamel\nof    the    teeth    which    favor    the\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(from the DaUy New., June J. 1921)\nAt the regular meeting of the\nC1.W.V.A. laat nlgbt ln the \"Dugout\"\nIt wu decided to open * euhacrlp-\ntion list toward the war memorial\nfund amongst the members of the\nO.W.V.A.\n...\nW Mt. Pow*l_, wboee match block\nfactory here Is in course of construction, brought hi* wife and\nchildren by automobile from Bpokane to reside here latt night. Mr.\nPowell hu rented Mr. A. Kiggln-\nbotham's house on Victoria street\nand wlll reside there for the present.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u00bb\nWell orer 300 guests attended the\nopening of the Blue Diamond pavilion at Falrvlew laet nlgbt. when\nMayor C. F. McHardy formally\nopened the place. Following this\nDr. w. o. Rose, M.P.P., spoke * few\nword* and then a conoert wu stsged\npreceding the dance, which stared\nat 9 p.m.\n...\nJ. w. Mulholland, preeident of the\nProspectors' Protective association,\noccupied the chslr at the monthly\nmeeting of the local branch. A\ndiscussion on tbe Engineers act, ln\nwhich feeling ran high, wu the feature of the evening.\nPeru la trying to keep up with\ntb* world's reoord\u2014on* revolution\neach twenty-lour hour*.\u2014Brentford\nExpositor.\nDespite the effort* to find * substitute, elbow greue is still the\nessential oil of Industry.\u2014The P\u00bbth\nfinder.\nPHONE  181\nWe ipeclsJIie In plumbing tnd\nheating Job* ot all sixes and\nlieecrlptlons. by trained e*>\nperu, and an equipped te\nfulfil all requirement* lor\nplumbing and heating fliturea\nand supplies.\nB.C. Plumbing\n6c Heating Co.\nNelMa.   a    C. FkOM   111\n\u201e of little \u00abcg*nisms, thtn\ntli* teeth *r* going to b* uad*r-\nnourUhed on th* lnsid*. and will\nhave organism* attacking tbe enamel   covering   on   th*   outside.\nHowever youngsters and adult* also should eat an all round diet-\nmeat, potatoea, bread, and fruit* to\nwhich ehould be added milk and\ngreen vegetables. In adult* who do\nnot like milk, or who -Tin* It constipating, th* green vegetables\nehould always be added to the diet\nanyway.\nCandy or tugar ahoud not bi\ncondemned or avoided a* th_r\u00ab li\nho food that give* energy to thi\nbody u quickly u candy or sugar\nA youngster can get out after schoo\nand play for an hour on th<\nstrength and nourishment h* get\nfrom a *tlck  of candy.\nIf th* parent will ae. tbat th\nyountster get* sugar or candy hal\nway between meal* Instead of Jus\nbefore meals, he will hav* the ap\npetit* foe milk and (reen vegetables\nIn fact many youngster* have ae\ntually learned te like spinach be\ncause thsy were kept hungry In\nstead of being allowed to eat cand:\nor pastry before meal*.\nThe thought then l* that youngsters should not b* deprived o\ncandy, u lt gives th* strength ant\npep  for play.\n\u2022ALBERT'\nthe Chef Says\n\"Business and Professional men prefer dining here for three reasons\"\u2014\nHighest quality of food.\nPrompt service.\nPleasant, refined surroundings.\nHave a meal here today and yon\nWill   become  a regular  patran.\nCentral and Convenient.\nTHE GRILL\n\"The Place to Eat\"\nMedical Arts Building.\n\"BUILD a C. PAYROLLS'*\nAt a house party Saturday\nnight Mrs. L. j. p touched\nenthusiastically upon the\nfine fudge she makes, using\nPacific Milk. Bhe took particular pains to repeat twice\nthat no other milk Would\ndo. Mrs. p. said she found\nafter trying other milks\nthat Pacific's rich, creamy\ncontent ls the one secret\nof better fudge. We are Indeed glad for having heard\nof thla conversation.\nPacific Milk\nFACTORY   AT   ABBOTSFORD\n\"100% B. 6. Owned and Controlled'\n[ESSEX\nSUPER\nSIX\nCASTROL\nMotor Oil\nAIR, LAND and WATER Speed\nRecords were established with\nCASTROL for lubrication.\nYou likewise can establish records for\nEconomy and Efficiency by using CASTROL Motor Oil\nWe stock a grade suitable\nfor every motor.\nSmedley Garage Co.\nNext Door to P. 0.     Nelson     Phone 71\nFarm Implements\nNow is the time to bay your\nCLOWS, HARROWS, CULTIVATORS, DISCS\nHARROWS. SPRAYERS and\nPLANET JR. TOOLS\nPRICES RIGHT\nPROMPT SHIPMENT\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholeaale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNELSON, a C. BAKER ST.\n CARDINALS BEAT\nCINCINNATI, 6-5\nMJ3JNNINGS\n*W\u00bb-kins Batting Is Responsible for the St. Louis\nVictory\nBT. LOOTS, Jun* 1\u2014(AP)\u2014Th*\n\u2022t. Loula Cardinals went la Inn-\ntnia today to deleat the Cincinnati\nBade six to rive in the final game\n\" tb* series. Watklns. whose batting was a factor ln th* Cardinal\nvictory, stole home for one of his\ntwo runs.\nCincinnati  \u201e__    6 19   4\nL   Louis        0 11    1\nJohnson, Streleckt, Benton and\nBuke-orth; Kaufmann. Hallshsn and\nWilson.\nMANY ROWERS OUT\nDURING THE WEEK\nInterest Is Fast Reviving in\nthe Once Leading Nelson Sport\nThat interest la rapidly being renewed in th\u00ab sport of rowing at\nIfeleon la the fact shown br the\nturnouts 0\/ the put week. One day\nlast week 30 members rowed, and\nluring the week-end every available\n4 wss out morning and afternoon.\nOn his return from a dally row\nip the lake Saturday afternoon,\n3oech Desbrlsay instructed a aum-\ntr of the beginners.\nTeam work Is progressing favo{-\nibly. crews taking out fours every\nnornlng  and  afternoon,\nINTERNATIONAL\nLEAGUE\nBuffalo   1,   Toronto   7.\nRochester 3. Montreal 5.\nOther    games    postponed\u2014    wet\n[rounds.\nThe A-sbeped cabin ls subject to\ntamage by th\u00ab pressure of tba hogs\ntorn tbe Inside. The upright cabin\nrrlth peaked roof will lsst for yean.\nLarry Gains to Fifcht Phil,Scott\nSIGNING  FOB THE  CHAMPIONSH IP   OF   THE    BRITISH    EMPIRE\nOn June 13 at Leeds, England, ths heavyweight\nboxing championship or the British Empire Wlll be\nsettled when Larry Gains of Toronto, Canadian* heavyweight champion, and Phil Scott of London, generally,\nthough erroneously, recognised as tbe heavyweight\nchampion of the British-Empire, meet. The fight will\nbe a twenty-rounder, and It will be fought In the\nafternoon ln an arena which wlll seat $5,000. The last\ntime Gains fought ln Leeds he knocked out Chsrley\nSmith in the ninth round and did lt In such a master\nful way .thst the fans demsnded that Scott meet him\nand settle the empire championship. Fourteen thousand saw Oalna atop Smith. Ringside seats at that\nright sold for US. Tops at the Osins-Scott fight will\nprobably be even higher than thst. Gains ls expected to sail for Canada around June 20 and wtll\nprobably fight the winner of a Johnny Rlsko-Jark\nRenault fight, ln the pen air here In July for the\nShamrock club.\nWAGERING  DROPS '\nTORONTO, Ont., June 1 .\u2014Decided drop in wagering at the\nspring race meets la shown ln the\nreport of the Ontario treasury department Issued todsy. At Wood -\nbine, which closed Saturdsy, the\namount wagered was about \u20221.750,-\n000 compared with 13.000,000 for\nlast year's spring meet. Thorncllffe figures are sround 11.000.000.\nIt Is rumored Woodbine officials\ncontemplate calling off the fall\nmeeting.\nSMITH   TAXES  LEAP\nCARNOUSTIE, Scotland, June L\n(AP) \u2014 MacDonald Smith, 38-year-\nold native of Carnoustie, carded a\npar-shattering 70 ln the wind and\nrain at Barry today to take the\nlead In the first qualifying round\nof the British open golf championship.\nlaOCVRABLE\nURE\nCOTCH   WHISKY\nRICHEST  IN FINEST\nHIGHLAND MALT\nSettled sad suara_t~d by William\nGreat A Soaa Ll__lta4 ChaMdicb ...\nBalraaW-lenttvet D_H_>larif>, Dlf-\ntom A Glaac-W, Seotlaad.\nEl\nhis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or the Government of British Columbia.\nExcursion\nR&TE3\nON SALB MAY 15 TO SEPT. 80\nVICTORIA   SEATTLE   VANCOUVER\n$37-30     $41.75       $32,90\nVIA   KETTLE   VALLET   ROUTE   IN   EACH   DIRECTION.\nLimit, October 11 Ior return.\nCircular Toura, Pacific Coats Points:\nVancouver, Victoria, Seattle, Portland\n$39.45 via Arrow Lakes, \"Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle,\nSpokane.\n937.85 via Kettle Valley, Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle, Spokane.\nf44.e5 via Kettle Valley, Pentlcton, Okanagan Lake,\nVernon, Vancouver, Victoria, Seattle, Spokane.\nTba abova circular toura csn ba routed via Portland\nks-wssn Statu* and Spokane at about I7.M additional.\nTbssa circular toura can ba routed eolns lournaj via\nVancouver, returning through Spokane, or In reverse\ndlraptlati.\nCircular Tours available from any point on the\nCircle. Sold daily, May 15 to September SO. Return\ntill October 31. Good for stop-over at pleasure within\nlimit Fares \u25a0 quoted through Arrow, Okanagan or\nWindermere Lakes, Calgary, Banff, Lake Louise. Ask\nany agent for details, or write:\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent, Nelson. B.C.\nCanadian Pacific\nWorld'a\niwavwtf system\nMcLARNHfAND\nTOWNSEND HAY\nBATTLE, SOUTH\nPromoters Attempting Bring\nVancouver Boys Together\nin Los Angeles\nVANCOUVER, B. C, June 1. (CP)\n\u2014Jack Allan, Vancouver tight promoter snd manager, today announced thst he hsd received sn otter\nrrom Wad Wadbama, New Tork, who\nrepresents Jsck Doyle, Los Angeles\npromoter, for a 10-round bout between Billy Townsend end Jimmy\nMcUrtln. Allen accepted terms on\nbehalf of TBwnsend while \"Pop\"\nFoster. McLarnln's manager, haa not\nyet replied  ta the  offer.\nThe fight between the two Van-\ncouver welterweights, lf arranged,\nwlll be held early In July at Wrlgley field. Loe Angeles.\nPRESIDENTS WIN\nLAWN BOWLING\nP. Coulter's Team Beats C\nE   Mansfield's in Mixed\nEvent\nArmstrong Head\nLettuce Moving\nHesd lettuce from Armstrong ts\nalready being shipped Us the prairie\nmarkets. A beginning was msde\nlaat yesr with tha result that the\nbuyers declared tha Armstrong lettuce to be the beat received from\nany point. Thus encouraged the\ngrowers have Increased their scresge\nand thla year lt Is expected tbat\n75 cars will be ahlpped. Armstrong\nIs slready celebrated for Its oelery\nand It promises to become equally\nremarkable for Its head lettuce. It\nla claimed that the soil snd cllmste\nof the Okanagan valley are weU\nadapted for the production of a\ncrisp snd tender leaf.\nIn the opening of the Nelson\nLawn Bowling club schedule here,\nthe presidents, skipped by p. Coulter, defeated tha Vlce-Prcaldeuta,\nSkipped by c. B. Mansfield. 11-14.\nIn a mliod contact, at the grounds\ncn the C. P. R. Hats Monday evening.\nTeama were:\nVlce-presldenta\u2014C. E Mansf;eld.\nMrs. P. c. Rowley, A. 0. Wllllsns,\nand Mrs   A. wigg.\nPreelden'e\u2014 P. Coulter. Mrs. p,\nWheeler. J. Argyle and Mra. p.\nBeltner.\nCOMMUNITY HAU\nIS BEING BUILT\nFruitvale    Ladies'    Auiliary\nSees Year's Efforts\nRewarded\nFRUITVALE. B. C. Jun\u00a9 1.\u2014Tha\nPrultvale Women's auxiliary have\nbeen workinc for the, put year or\nmore to raise funds to ereot a\nParish hall which is bidly needed\nfor tea*, meetings and other purposes. Tho building Is now being\nerected by G, Ross and W. I\nOrieve. under the supervision of\nChurch Wardens, j. w. Jones and\nQ.   Cattle.\nThe members of the auxiliary met\nav the home of Mrs. P. U. Barret\nfor the monthly meeting oa Thursday afternoon. Money wu voted\nfor the purchase of a stove and\nother accessories needed for tbt\nfurnishing of the new building.\nThe next meeting will be held In\nthe Parish hall. At the Close at\nVhe meeting. Mrs. P. M. Barrett\nserved tea- These present were sirs.\nO. Ross, Mrs. J. W. Jones, Mrs. p.\nM. Barrett. Mrs. I. Sharp, Mrs. B.\nBrewster snd Mrs H. C. Davis.\nTHREE GO TO JAIL\nFOR BEATING WAY\nON THE FREIGHTS\nThree men arrested by C. P. R.\nConstable C. A. Brown, after boarding freight trains In the Canadian\nPacific yarda here, leaded guilty ln\ncity polloe court Monday to riding\ncn trains without payment of tare,\nand were sentenced by Magistrate\nWilliam Brown each to pay a fine\nof 13, or to apend five daya In Jail\nwith   hard   labor.\nThe three. Eerie Bays. Thomss\nDahlll and Fred Albright, all want\nto Jail.\nGrant Goes to the\nPrairies, Interest\nof the B. C. Growers\nWith the opening of the berry\nmarketing sesson. J. A. Orant. markets commlsaloner. is returning to\nthe prairies, whsrs bs wlll co-operate with the federal officials ln the\nvarloua marketing centers In ths\nIntercuts of the British Columbia\ngrowsrs.'\n29 HORSES TO\nRUNTOE DERBY\nCarmelus and Spanish Main\nAre Scratched;  Causes\nSlight Sensation\nJBPSOM DOWNS, England, June\n1\u2014,AP>\u2014Th* f\u00abld of possible candidates for the uth renewal ot\nthe English derby wedneeday wis\ncut to 29 today with the scrstcNng\nand Sir Charles Hybe's Spanish Main\nandSlr Charles Hybe's Spanish Mam.\nAlthough 2*9 of the original 404\nnominees are still eligible to start\nthe colorful one and one-hair \u00bbnlle\nJourney, late scratches may' reduce\nthe 'laid to an even two doaen or\nlees. If the weatherman's forecast\nof rain holds true the number to\nanswer the bugle call at about\n\u25a0l p.m. (0 a.m. O.a.t > probably will\nbe smaller.\n(-ABMELCS    WITHDRAWN\nThe withdrawal of Carmelus, a\nfairly well regarded contender, by\nTrainer Walter Griggs provided\nsomewhat of a sensation. The horse\nwent l*m* ftft<T a workout Saturday\nand failed to respond to treatment.\nW. M. Q. Singers Link Boa, which\nwill have the veteran Steve D->n-\noghue in the saddle, also was reported to have been found amiss\nafter his week-end gallop, How-\never, he appeared at Epsom tcday\nand   probably  will  start.\nTbe probable starters are being\nguarded closely. Many owners have\n(\u2022pent small fortunes on (-heir\nhorses slnoe they were foaled'tbtee\nyears ago with one objective\u2014the\nderby.\nJ. A- Dtwar's Cameronian, winner\nof the 2000 guineas, remained the\nfavorite. The odds wera four snd\na Quarter to one against the Dewsr\ncolt, while Pomme d'Apl wss quoted at 18 to two against, Mr. Do-\nlittle at   10  to one.\n\"Big League\"\nBASEBALL\nScoring on Sacrifice Fly\n*\nJUDGE THOMPSON\nDOES DAMAGE TO\nCAR ATTAGHUM\nMisses Turn on Main Road;\nProtests at Lack of Sign\nPosts\nThe state of the hlghwaya and the\nsertoua lack of signs and .Ignposts\ntn this district were the csuae for\ncomment by Judge O. H. Thompaon\nof cranbrook who arrived here bai-\nurday from Pentlcton.\nIn hie atatement regarding the\nserious lack of signs snfl sljn poets\nhs declared that when coming Into\nNelson Saturday h\u00bb mlsaed tne new\nroad before Tsghum bridge, and instead of turning right eeroae the\nrailway, judge Thompson seeing no\nsignpost, continued over the old\nroad paat the gaa ststlon snd landed ln a ditch.\nOnly slight dsmsgs wss done to\nthe car. a fracture of the teed pipe.\nFruitvale Church\nWorkers Aid Mission\nSunday School Ladies\nfrottvau:. b. c. june i\u2014The\nSunday school Mission car of tha\nKootensw diocese, visited here on\nTuesdsy snd Wednesdsy. Mm Wslker snd Mlsa Phillips in chsrge. Several calls were made during their\nstay in the neighborhood. The\nmembers of the women's auxiliary\ngave a shower of miscellaneous canned goods, biscuits, etc.. and othsr\nfriends donsted Jelly, plums, soup.\netc, to help the mission on their\ntrsveis  through  the  Kootensys.\nT TEAM WINS\nSOFTBALL GAME\nJean Ferguson's Team Beats\nWinnie Bebbington's at\nJunior High\nJean Ferguson's \"C\" softball team\ndefeated Winnie Bebbington's *'B\"\nteam, 14-8. ln a junior high achool\nsoft ball league game at the school\ngrounds    Monday    afternoon-\nMlas C. Martin wss in chsrge ol\nthe game.\nPlsyers were:\n\"B\" tesm\u2014 Winnie Bebbington.\nBerns Kline. Almeada Graves, Edna\nMcKenzle, Novena Oormley, Lorna\nMoire  said  Jean  Burgess.\n\"C team\u2014Catherine Martin, Jesn\nFerguson. Margaret Thompson. Bon\nnle Bowel 1, Annie will its, Peggy\nUlb-bon, Dorothy Wheeler. Monica\nBeeston,   and    Daphne   Sandercock\nSMITH GOES TO\nLEAD IN SCOTCH\nGOLF TOURNEY\nCARNOUSTIE, Scotlsnd. June 1.\n\u2014 .CP and AP cable)\u2014 MscDonsId\nSmith, a United Ststes citizen but\na native of these blustery North\nate shores, plodded through wind\nftnd rain over the Pan mure club\ncourse today to score a 70, snd take\nthe lead ln the first qualifying\nround of the British open golf\nchampionship. Smith won the Canadian  open   'ttle   in   1926.\nClose on hts heels came P. A.\nWhltcombe, one of the British faTor-\nitea. with a record 73 over the old\nCarnoustie course. Tony Manero.\nNew Jersey professions), slso had\na 73. but over the easier Panmure\nccurse. Tomorrow the groups exchange locations.\nArthur Travere. only Briton to\nwin tn the laat 10 yearn, hsd **\u25a0 73.\nOnly a few headltners were over 80\ntodsy. but among these was Charles\nWhltcombe. British Ryder cup captain.   He hsd an 83.\nIt Is believed a 36-hole total\nof 157 or 158 wlll assure qualification.\nCHAMPIONS SAIL FOR AUSTRALIA\nTO PLAT  TN  EMPIRE   BILLIARD   CHAMPIONSHIPS\nSidney Lee, the young Londoner wbo won the British amateur\nbilliard* championship, and was immediately afterwards Invited to go to\nAustralia as one of the Kngllsh representative* in the British Empire\nchampionship, left London with the famous professionals Walter Llndrum\nand Tom Newman wbo are also bound -for Australia, Photo taken at\nVictoria station, London, England, before they left shows, left to right.\nTom Nea^nsn, Walter Llndrum and Sidney Lee,\n*,   *     **\nmttorw\/bsi?* Wye \/n\nClOMt tiHEN PlAYfNG lb\n'QATVN ftONM\nAT PLATBr\n^^AW^M-r*.\nBy    AL    DEMAfeEF;\n(Former   pitcher,  New  York   Giants)\nWith one or nobody out snd runners on second or third J>ase or\nboth bases, tbe outfielders usually\ncom* In a little closer so as to be\nln better position to mske s play at\nthe   plate.\nIn the case of the runner on second, he has a better chance to\nthrow him out on a baae hit. And\nwith a msn on third he gambles\nthat the batter will not get hold of\nthe ball and hit It over hla head\nThis, of course, only applies to close\ngames with the tying or winning\nruns on base. With a lead of two\nor more runs, the proper thing to do\nla play safe. It is beUer to have a\nrun soore than to play \"in\" and\nhave a long fly ball turn Into an\nextra base hit. that you could have\ncaught in your regular position.\nKiki Cuyler, a great base  runner,\nstands In a soft of sprinting post\ntlon when on third base and a fly\nball   ls   hit.   He   claims   this   gives\nhim  tho  advantage  of   a  full  step.\nAl nemsree hs.i prepared an ll-\nlustraied leariet on \"Base Running\"\nwhich he wlll gladly send to any\nreader requesting It. Addr*** Al\nDemarre in rare ef tbls paper and\nbe sure to enclose a pelf-add re*-*, ed\nstamped  envelope.\nNAKUSP PLANS\nBIG CELEBRATION\nCommittees Named; Number\nof Sports Lined Up; Plan\nMidway\nNAKUSP, B. C, June 1 \u2014The\nRecreation association met in the\nfire hall Thursday night for the\npurpose of selecting committees\nto make arrangement* for whst\nLs expected u\u00bb be. one of the best\nif not the best. July l celebration\never held here. Doubtless, lf good\nweather prevail**-, there will be a\nrecord sttendsnee, in view of having access by good car road to the\nSlocan   districts.\nThe following committees were\nappointed: Children's sports; Messrs.\nMartin    and    Pound.\nLadies' sports, Messrs. Islip and\nButlin.\nMen's   sports,   P.   Toung.\nBaaeball.    D.    Berrard.\nHorse racing. L- Jeatly.\nOolf.     Canon    Thompson.\nRefreshments, Mr. Horry.\nDance, Messrs. Rushton and Abey.\nAdvertising. Messrs. A. B. Thompson snd Rushton.\nTwo ball games wilt be staged\non* in the morning and lhe other\nabout two in the afternoon. The\nsecretary was instructed to get in\ntouch with Rotary club of Nslson.\nto ascertain wbether or not suitable\nequipment could be hired from\ntbem  for  a midway.\nWOl.t. AM   BEATS   FARBER\nHOLYOKl!.   Mae*.,   June   1.\u2014.AIM\nMidget Wolgast of Philadelphia,\nreoognixed in a few ststes as flyweight champion of the world,\nhandily defeated Lew Parber of\nBrooklyn here tonight tn a non-\ntitle bout. Wolgsst scaled 113%.\nrarbftr 118.\t\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nMinneapolis  4,  MUwaukee   11.\nSt. Paul 0, Kansas City 5.\nOne   night   game.\nOnly games scheduled.\nA FRESH\nSTRAWBERRY or\nCANTALOUPE\nSUNDAE\nWhat could be more delicious  on   a   hot\nafternoon?\nG\nELINA-Q\nRECNEATIUN *^\nT\nCENSUS TAKING\nKOOTENAY WEST\nWELL LAUNCHED\nEnumerators  Start   10-Year\nCount; Machine Going\nSmoothly\nSuccessful launching of the census taking throughout Kootenay\nWest was reported Monday afternoon by C. D. Blackwood, census\ncommissioner for this federal constituency.\nIn Nelson, Trail and other centers the enumerators were on the\nJob early, and from Indirect reporta\nlt wu evident that the machine,\ncarefully built up, was ln operation\neverywhere,\nHere and there some exceptional\ncircumstances aroae. In which an\nenumerator got In touch wtth Commissioner Blackwood for specific Instructions, but the small number\nof such applications Mr. Blackwood\ntook as indicating that tbe enumerators were getting action successfully.\nWhile tbe month of June la allotted for the census taking, lt Is\nexpected that the ground will bave\nbeen covered in a much shorter\nspace of time than that, leaving\nthe balance of the month for cleaning up on the cases where there\nhas been difficulty ln locating the\nparties to be enumerated.\nAll the enumerators have attended\nschools\", held by .Commissioner\nBlackwood, and there la believed to\nbe a high standard of competency\nthroughout the enumeration force\nln Kootensy West.\nRooking a id\"U-pound salmon and\nsuccessfully lsndlng lt after an\nhour's battle, with only an 8-ounce\nfly rod with which to play It. wae\nthe feat accomplished by A. D.\nPochin of Nelson at Queen's Bay\non Sundsy. Mr. Pochln's catch now\nleads ln the contest for tbe cup\nwhich I. being offered by a local\ncompany which deals in fishing\naccessories.\nThe second largest catch reported\nfor Sunday was made by Oeorge\nSteele, who landed a 19-pounder at\nthe Outlet of Kootenay lske. J. T.\nAndrews and H. M. Vincent caught\na 6-pound salmon, two char and\nthree   trout.\nPASSENGERS LIE\nON WINGS WHILE\nAIRPLANE BURNS\nCOPALIS. Wash., June 1 (AP(\u2014A\nburning airplane, with two passengers lying out on the wings to escape the flsmes. was landed on the\nbeach today by Pilot Lena Kurtzer,\nBeattie, snd ground looped Into the\nwater  to  put  out  tbe  -fire.\nKurtaer waa badly burned about\nthe legs but his passengers, one of\nthem a man by the name of \"Stew\"\nChrlstenaon, Seattle, and a girl\nwhose name was not learned, escaped injuries. Kurtzer later returned to\nBeattie  In  another plane.\nThe three left Seattle this morn\nlng for a flight to Copalls. Nearlng\nhere, the plane caught fire, but\nKurtrer ordered the two passengers\nto climb onto the wings while he\nmade an emergency landing near\nthe water's edge. The plsne wa*\nbadly   damaged.\nKILLS WIFE AND\nTWO CHILDREN\nPORTLAND, Ore. June 1 (AP)\u2014\nChoosing the blackest hour before\ndawn today as \"the hour of reckoning\". Ira H. Ormond. 38, an ex\nsailor, is alleged to hav? killed hw\ntwo children by asphyxiating tbem\nat the kitchen range and then to\nhave plunged a bayonet into his\nwife as she fled his vengeance for\nsome   mysterious   \"wrong\".\nPolice, summoned by neighbors,\narrested Ormond snd he was held\nIn jail tonight pending filing of\nmurder charges.\nWILL  Sl'PPLY 41 IMif.S\nThe department of agriculture wlll\nprovide one Judge for each of the\nsmaller fairs of the province this\nyear. The local association will\nhave the right to name the exhibits\nwhich they prefer he shall judge.\nSILVERTON BALL\nTEAM TO PLAY IN\nNAKUSP, JUNE 3\nNAKUSP, B. C, Jum It-VtA\nNakusp ball team wUl play Silver-\nton her* oa th\u00ab .vening ct Jun. i.\nThlf event will be followed by \u2022\ndanoe in  Abrlel'i  bill.\nA. D. POCHIN GETS\n19-POUND SALMON\nAT QUEENS BAY\nLargest  Catch  Reported  ta\nDate; George Steele Lands\n15 Pound Fish\nINSTITUTE CANCELS\nSUMMER SESSIONS\nBALFOUR. B C. June 1\u2014The\nBalfour and Queen's Bay directors\nof the Women's institute hate decided to cancel meetings during\nJune.  July  snd   August.\nHeavy Rains Have\nDeveloped Berries;\nShipping Already\nThe strawberry crop in the coast\ndistrict la ripening with phenomenal\nearliness this year, the first carload\nto the prairies harlng been ahlpped\nfrom Haney on May 31. This Is the\nearliest carlot shipment on record\nfrom the provinoe. It Is expected\nthst Vancouver island will start\nshipping about June 8. The earliness is partly due to warm weather,\nand partly to the cultivation of the\nBritish sovereign species which ripens\nabout a week earlier than the Ms-\ngoons. About a third of the\nacreage is now planted with British\nSovereigns and the proportion li\nsteadily increasing. Heavy rains in\nMay hsve helped to develop I he\nberries to fine slae.\nLondon Paper Has\nPraise for B. C\nFinance Minister\nThe London Morning Post m a\nrecent issue speaks In high praise nf\nthe one per cent income tax Initiated by the Hon. J. W. Jones, minister of finance for B. C. The Post\ndescribes It as sn object lesson ln\nsound finance, unique in the British\nempire though long a feature of\nteam fiscal legislation. It adda\nthat Mr. Jones is a man of courage\nwho does not hesitate to seise the\nnettle with both hands, or fllnrb\nfrom applying heroic remedies, and\nsays thst the world at, this Juncture\nneeds more msn of hla calibre.\nTHZ, WHISKY\nQUESTION\ni\nft It generally agreed that the majority of toads on tale today\nhave a Marked sameness of quality and are lacking In character,\n(f you would  know   how  good  a  really  good   IVlsky  can   be\u2014Buy\nFINDLATER'S 12 Years Old   f\nLIQUEUR WHISKY $4.50. Bo\u00abi_ \u2022\nThis advertisement is  not inserted  by  the  liquor  Control  Bca-V ar\nby  the  Oovernment  of   tha   Province  of   British   Columbia.\nAn Easy\nWay\nto Build a SUN PORCH\nFME\nKelpfal booklet!,\ntlUif rating Btsvtr\nBoard'i iway am aad\nThe Certain-teed\nProoBctt Gocpk os\nCanada, Lin-tad.\nThorold, Oot\nADD to the comfort md\nralsse of your hoax by\nbuilding a sun porch. Finish\nthc interior easily and inexpensively with Beaver Board\u2014in\nattractive panel effect*. Beaver\nBoard ia itrong, datable, stayi\npermanently flat, decorates\neffectively. Beaver Board u alao\nan excellent umletor \u2014 keepa\nrooms cool tn ausnaaer, vaam ia\n&EAVEI-U': BEAVER\nboard }n,; ns&r0\n fAGE  EIGHT\n1111. NELSON  DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.  C. -  TUESDAY MO-UMNO. JUNE t, 1931 .\u00ab\nCONVERSION LOAN BREAKS EXPECTATIONS\nCanadians Sign for\nThree Times More\nThan Set Maximum\nSubscriptions  Amount to $639,816,500; Maximum\nWas $250,000,000; Premier Bennett Stresses Sluggish Business Conditions; Brings Deficit\nBUDGET SHOWS A DECREASE IN\nTAX REVENUES IN ALL QUARTERS\nFiscal Year Greeted With Substantial Expenditures\nfor Unemployment Relief; Announces Deficit\nof $75,244,937 for Last Fiscal Year\nOTTAWA, Ont., June l.(By tthe Canadian Preas)\u2014To a\npacked House and crowded galleries, Rt. Hon. R. B. Bennett,\nin his capacity of acting minister of finance, today presented fhe annual budget statement to the Dominion of Canada.\nHe announced a deficit of $75,244,973 for the fiscal year\n1930-31, which ended with the close of March.\nSubscriptions to the new conversion loan totalling $639,-\n816,500; Uhe maximum of the loan was tenatively fixed at\n$250,000,000;) cash balance in the banks at the credit of.\nthe receiver general at the close of the fiscal year totaling\n$44,500,000; total liabilities of the Domfnion on March 31\nlast of $2,610,877,917. \u00ab\t\nToUl    net    debt    of    Can-da    of 673,600,   divided   between   tbe   cities\nMarch 1 lut of 12.261.608.316; total\nexpenditure* for the fiscal year,\u2014\nAmounting   to   6440,060.657.\nToUl revenue* for tbe fiscal year\nOf   \u2022366.316,000.\nThe prime minuter explained\nthat, while deducting total revenue*; -from ejftpenliitures would\ngive a deficit of over 63 million*,\nmore than eight million* of thi*\nwu brought about by the writing\ndown of soldier land settlement\nloana advanced In previous years,\nwhich should not be considered ln\narriving   at   the  deficit.\nMr. Bennett divided his presentation  Into  five  part*.\nPlrst he reviewed the financial\noperations of tfee dominion for the\npaat fiscal year. Me then dealt\nwltb the balance sheet aa on March\n81 last (the end of the fiscal\njeer). He followed this with s\ndiscussion of Canada'a trade and\noommeroe. and then spoke of the\nestimates revenues end expenditure* lor the current fiscal year.\nFinally he announced the methods\n* herby tbe government proposes\nto raise revenues to meet expendl-\n\u25a0 ire* tn tbe present year.\nhU'GGlSH    BUSINESS\nA period of sluggish business was\nrr\u00abpon*lble ln lsrge meuure for\n'n\u00ab deficit which he announced\nMr. Bennett said;   customs revenues\nof Montreal, Saint John, Vancouver,\nThree Rivera and Chlcoutlml.\nBonds guaranteed by tbe Dominion government eo at Maroh 81\nlast totalled 6054,883,778. Mr. Bennett said. Tbese were railway and\nharbor commission bonds.\nSALES   TAX\nNo tax more quickly reflected\nthe declining commodity prloea than\ndid the sales tax. The shrinkage\nln the volume of business transected, coupled with the decresae\nIn values, made lt apparent at the\nbeginning of the calendar yesr 1930\nth\u00abt with business shrinkage and\nssles contracting, the salea tax\ncould not be depended upon to\nproduce revenue to the same degree\nas ln tbe previous year. This loss\nInstead of being compensated by an\nincrease in tba rate when the bud-\nfat waa brought down on May 1,\n1030. waa aggravated by the rate\nbeing reduced from two per cent\nto ona per oent, the result wa* a\ndecline of over 824,000,000 In aales\nter revenue during tbe year under\nrevifw, the collection* being somewhat over 820.000.000 ** compared\nwith 844.000,000 in the previous\nyear.\nIt Is perhaps desirable to point\nout that a change has been made\nln the aocmivi-'g methods this year\nin respect to sales ut. commencing\nPUBLIC SERVICES REVENUE\nPI.HION     OT    U     MILLION.!     OP    DOLLARS     KII1MIS     WITH\nMil rcls DESIGNATED\nA comparison of revenues tar tbe psat five flscsl yesrs li:\n1828-27       1927-28       1928-29       1929-30       1980-31\nReceipts from\nTuition       348.849.000 384.708.000 395921.000 378.581.000 298.278.000\nNon-Tax Bev.   52.048.000   59,012.000   59.S43.00O     8.880.000   53.317.000\nCms. Pund . -\nReceipts    .. 398.895.000 422.718.000 455.484.000 441411.000 349.593.000\nSpecial R'cta       1.9S4.0OO     7.139,000     6.478.000     4.771.000     8.833.000\nGrand Total\nRevenue. .    4-0.839,000 429.(47.000 400.940.000 448.182,000 358.215.000\nPREMIER BEKNETT BRINGS\nDOWN FIRST BUDGET\nThe Canadian premier yeeterday announced that he believed that\nlf revenues ahow any appreciable expansion, hla budget would balance\nat the end of the fiscal year.\n\u2014stt down 848.0O0.00O. The aales\ntax receipts, which totalled (30.-\n7M.0O0 tor tbe paat fiscal year.\nware leas than halt ot the previous\nyear. -No tax more quickly reflected tha declining commodity\nprloes.'- aald tha flnanoe minister.\nFrom eicias the totsl yisld for the\npast year was (67,747,000 aa compared with (65.038,000 In tha preceding 12 months. Tha taxes on\ncheques, transportation, etcetera,\nbrought ln a total revenue of (13.-\n950.000 during tba year whleh ended March (1 last, or nearly flva\nmillions laas than ln the preceding\nflacal  yaar.\nIncome tax receipts show an Increase of more than two million\ndollara. Tba total collections for\nthe past fiscal year were (71.048.-\n000 aa against (49,031,000 ln tba\npreceding   yaar. \t\nTba tra___t\u00abr of tba natural\nroaourcee of the western provm.es,\nsatd Hr. Bennett, materially reduced revenues from Dominion land,\nthere being a decrease ot M. 139,000\nla tba yaar under review.\nUnerraptoyinent expendlturea \u00abf\ntha preaent government ware mentioned briefly by Mr. Bennett. He\nspoke of ths 30 million dollar vote\nmade at tha emergency session\nfor  unemployment  relief.\n-As a result.\" ha said, \"at the\ncloae of tha llaeal yaar, tbe contracta Initiated In coneequence ot\nthis legislation amounted to (69.-\n800.948 and at the end of March\n348.000 persona were unemployed.\nHowever, at tha close of the year\nonly a small proportion of the\ntotal expenditures authorised bad\nbeen presented for payment. In all\n(4.431.000 was actually paid.\"\nREFER*   TO   LOAN\nWhile It did not properly come\nwithin the scope of laat year-a\nfinancial   re-flaw,   Mr.   Bennett   re\nln tha flacal yaar 1934-36 tbe payments made In April by licence*\non sales made In the old year were\ncredited to the fiacsl year then\nlast ended. This practice was not\nln harmony with what followed In\nrespect of other public revenues\nand has been discontinued. Had It\nbeen   followed,   the   revenues   from\nwords,    there   wss   a    decrease    of\n(91.818.000.\nSPECIAL   RECEIPTS\nDuring the year oertaln special\nrecelpta came into the treasury\nwhich must be added before the total revenues for the year are given.\nThe most Important of these were\nthe payments reoelved on reparations, amounting to (9.500.000. Tbls\nwas a larger sum than had been\nreceived ln the preceding year, due\nto tha success of the Oerman International 5',i per cent loan, making\nIt possible for the creditor countries to receive a cash payment on\nfuture reparations account. Canada\nsnare thus acquired waa (2.173,000.\nThe acceptance of tha plan Involved tha establishment by Canada of a smsll credit, amounting to\n(272.000, ln the bsnk for International settlements, this baa been\ndone. The amount received ordinary\nreparation account waa (4.395.000.\nAdding these speclsl receipts to\nthe consolidated fund, revenues for\nthe year made a grand total of\n(366.316,000 as compared with (446.-\n182.000 In the preceding year, a\ndecrease of (90,000,000.\nEXPENDITURES\nThe Vast fiscal year was\nmarked by substantial Increase\nIn the expenditures for the public services of undertaking-,\nothers were a eon\u00abequence of\nstatutory enactments causing\ngreater demands lo be made\nupon the treuury. Apart from\ncertain expenditures In connection with unemployment relief, those Incurred on authority\nof governor general's warrants\nand some Items aproved by\nparliament on lbe closing days\nof the fiscal year, all expenditures were Incurred on the\nauthority of the previous administration.\nOTTAWA. Ont, Juna 1\u2014(CP)\u2014\nIn bringing down the budget, Premier R. B. Bennett said:\nMr. Speaker, ln moving that you\ndo now leave the chair for the\npurpoae of enabling tha houae to\nresolve Iteelt Into a committee of\nways and means to make good the\nsupply to ba granted to hla majesty for the 12 months ending\nMarch   81.   1982,   I   wtll   follow   the\n_  tax credited to  1930-31  would\nbe approximately   (1.700.000  greater. I traditional   practice   ol    making    a\nPUBLIC  SERVICE REVENUES\n'general aurvey of the financial  and\n(63.000,000 was collected by wsy\not revenues from public services\nmaintained by the government. The\nmain contributor was the post office depsrtment. The groes collections for postal services were (37,-\n600.000 snd the net revenue (30.-\n200.000 oompared with the prevloua yesr, there was a decresae of\n(3.100,000 ln the net revenues. On\ntbe expenditure side the posts!\nservloe costs were (36.300,000, sn\nIncrease   of   (1300.000.\nTherefore, the flecsl year ended\nwith tba postoffice department\nshowing a deficiency of (6.100,000.\nTo achieve an absolute calculation\nof the department's operations, a\nsubstantial sum, presenting tbe expendlturea of the public works department for equipment, building\nmaintenance, etcetera, necessary for\ntba handling of malls throughout\nCanada, would hav. to ba added.\nOn tba other hand, the department\nla entitled to a aubstantlal credit\nfor tha handling of government\nmall.\nlntereat on Investments realised\n(10,400.000. Of this (2.000,000 was\non sinking funds snd (1.299.000\non loans to Roumsnla snd Oreece.\nwhich were made during the war\nperiod.\nTha harbor commissions, other\nthan Quebec, psld (3.493.000 In\nInterest   on   the   (88.800,000   loaned\nferrad briefly to tba conversion loan > by tha Dominion to them. The\nlust dosed The offering to tha I major reduction In revenues under\nnubile of (360.000.000 waa assured! this group heading waa In the\nat ibe close of tha flrat day. Tba, interest psld by the chsrtered banks\nsubscription books, however, ware; td sdvsnces under the finance act.\nkant open and tha reeult, as tar although tbe amount collected was\na. could 'be ssoertalned waa that j (18,000 ln excess of the collections\nMan Sto ooo 'n bonds maturing In! In 1938. In 1939-30 tha banks paid\nthe present year or in 19(3. \"S3 (3.384.000, while In 1930-31 the payer -M bad been surrendered. A, ments ware (539.000\nfurther (13i\u00bb0.09o hsd not yet been The tranafer of the natural re-\ndistributed   ea   to   maturity   wblch  sources   \u2022\nbusiness operations of the Dominion\nduring the last fiscal year. I will\nalso Indicate the wsys snd meana\nwhich the government purpose to\nunttllze in providing the necessary\nrevenues to meet the eproprlntlons\nmade by psrllsment. I shell discuss these matters under five heads:\n1. The financial operatlona of\nthe Dominion for the rlscal year,\nApril   1.  1B30. to March  31.  1631.\n2. The balance aheet of the\nDominion on Slat of March last\nshowing assets active and non-\nactive and liabilities direct and Indirect.\n3. Trade  and  commerce.\n4. Tbe estimated revenue and expendlturea for the 12 montha ending\n31st   March.    1933.\n6. Tha waya and means wblch\nwill be adopted for tha purpose\nof providing the necessary revenues\nto meet the proposed expenditures.\nFINANCIAL   OPERATIONS   DL'RINU\nFISCAL   VEAR   1930-31\nThe period of nstlonal financing\nunder review la the 13 montha\nfrom April 1, 1930. to March 31.\n1931. This wsa s period of sluggish commerclel sotlvity, with commodity prlcee stesdlly declining\nthroughout the world. The consequences are ahown in the Dominion's balance aheet. Ior 83 per cent\nof tha oonsolldsted fund recelpte\nin 1930-31 wss derived trom taxation, tha major portion befng obtained by ad valorem sasesments\non tha monetary value of bualneea\ntransacted. Therelore on the revenue collectlone from every tax,\nwith ona exception, were aubstan-\ntlally leas than in the preceding\nyear The exoaptlon waa the income tsx. where the sssesment wss\non eernlngs and profits made In\ntha calendar yaar 1939. To find\ns parallel to tba revenues In the\npsst    flscsl    year,   It    ls    necessary\nr\u2014 r____   ._. ..__   *-   ....  ai.-.i\nand unoontrollable charges constitute so large a proportion of the\nexpenditures. The Interest of the\nnations! debt was over (121.000.000..\nwsr pensions amounted to (46.000,-\nooo, snd other uncontrollable expenditures absorbed an additional\n(36.896.000. To these msy be added\nthe cost of civil government and\nother services where a aomewhst\nlengthy time lag exists before de-\ndinning commodity prices are reflected ln reduced costs. Theee\nservices Involved an expenditure\nof (78.000.000. In other words,\n(282,000.000 were expended during\nthe year without the government\ngaining any offsetting advantages\nfrom the causes which brought\nsbout such substantial decresses\nIn revenues.\nTAXATION   REVENUES\nThe major source of Csnsdlan\nwhich lut yesr produced 131 millions of dollsrs. This wsa (48.000.-\n000 less than ln the preceding\nyesr. A study of ths Imports\nof Csnsda during tne period Indicates that there wss a substantial\ndecline ln tha Importations of\nnearly oil commodities. One of\nthe chief sources of customs revenue Is the duty collected on\nalcoholic beverages, snd ln the yesr\nunder review the revenue thus derived wss (20.000.000 as compsred\nwith (25.000,000 lu the preceding\nyear.\nRecently our customs receipts\nhave shown less fluctustlon snd\nthe dally decresses are not so\nsubstantial as ln the lsst flscsl\nyear, when monthly decreases, as\noompared with the previous year\nwere:\nMonth Decrease\nearnings and profile of a peak year,\nthst of tbe stock market boom.\nOf ths (71,048.000 of lnoome tsx\ncollected, (26.600.000 ma paid by\nIndividuals and (44,400,000 by cor-\nporatlona. In the flacal year 1921-23,\nwhen (78,800.000 wsa reoelved, Individuals psld (39.820,000 and corporations (38,883.000.\nORDINARY   EXPENDITURES\nOrdinary expenditures for the\nyear were (394.000,000 aa compared\nwith (387,780,000, the mora Important Itema which ahow Increases\nbeing:\nSubsidies   to   provinces   (4,900,000\nDepartment ot Indian affairs\n(700,000.\nOld   age   pensions   (4.100.000.\nLighthouse and coastal services,\n(500.000.\nAir services (1,336,000.\nWsr   pensions   (6,(50,000.\nTreatment and after-care of veterans   (1.280,000.\nPoet office  (1,265.000.\nPublic  Works  (5.640,000.\nMaritime freight rates act (2,-\n938.000.\nDepartment ot trade and commerce   (1,890.000.\nUnemplayment   relief   (4,433,000.\nINCREASED  SUBSIDY\nThere was an Increase ln the\nsubsidy (laid to Manitoba, (4.\n970.937.63. ss provided by legisls-\ntlon in connection with the transfer\nof natural resources to the province.\nThe transfer of the natural resources made no change in the\nannual subsidy payments to tha\nprovinces of Alberta and Seakst-\ndhewsn. slthough the datee of pay-\nmanta have been changed from\nMarch 1 and September 1 to\nJanuary  1 and July 1.\nThe increase of expendlturea,\namounting to (700,000, ln connection with the department of Indian affairs, falls under two heada.\nDuring tbe year (3.760.000 wss spent\nln the construction of schools,\nwhich ls (434.000 more than in the\npreceding year. For the relief of\nthe destitute Indians, the providing of hospltsls snd medical services, an additional (330,000 was expended.\nThe major Increase ln expendlturea on account of old age pensions was due to larger payments\nbeing made In the province cf\nOntario. The set, during the fiscal\nyesr, spoiled to five provinces, and,\nIn addition, small expenditures\nwere made In the Northwest Territories, a ststement of the expenditure, by provlnoea Is:\n1939-30       1930-31\nOntario      (  355,839   (3,516.806\nManitoba           437.143        853.804\nSaskatchewsn 383,388        6*5,941\nMay     _\t\n    6,300,000\nJuly      \t\n    4.356.000\nAugust    -\t\n     4,919,00.\nSeptember     \t\n    3.113,000\nNovember   \u201e\t\n    4,117,00.\nDecember    \t\n    3.434.00C\nJsnusry.   1931   \t\n \u201e   3.687.00.\nFebruary    \t\n    8.786.0O0\nMarch   period   \t\nTotal\n    3,653.000\n(48.220.000\nthe   western   prorinoes K_\n^\u2022\u2022\"thT total wpreitimateiy W39.-1 materially    reduced    revenue    from to turn beck 10 yWs to the fiscal\nm\u00bbde tne *w\u00bbi *pp Dominion   land,   there  being   a  de- year    1921-89.    a*-*    in    that    *\u2022*\nThTloooi  of  ths  Dominion  p*. cm*  from   M.139,000  to f 1,850,000 the  -rwnue. were \u2022^\u2022^\u25a0^h\/r^7\na_\u00a3__matte    foreign    governments! In the jeer under review. collections in  the past\nm?i   888100 790   Mr.   Bennett   told      Tbe    consolidated    fund    receipt* fiscal   >e\u00ab-\nSTkMMTot tt\" uw.   *.M0,MO msy   now   be   .ummarHed.   In   tbe .pendlture   \u00bbid.,   conv\n.     tm   nrMM    and   MS 909 720   to, fiscal v*tr Just \u00abnded these amount p ,_mve.>   little advantage  could  oe\ne_*___lan_adominion  loans  to tar-Wo   IMMW.000.   as   compered   with I taken of declining commodity prlcea. were    again   reduced,    but    income\nSaUSm   \u2022\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb*  tV \u25a0SEIjHl^ni-OOO   m   1939-SO.   in   other Thla U due to the fact that fixed tsx isMWMnts were levied on the\nt\nThe decrease during the flrat alx\nmonths of the flaonl year was\n924.10S.000; during the last six\nmonths   of   the   flscsl   year   It   was\nJ24.0M.00fl.\nIt wlll be recalled that the tariff\nchanges made at the special session came Into effect durtng September, slthough ln certain cases,\nwhere uncompleted contracta were\noutstanding the new rates were not\nlevied until several week* later.\nA comparison of the customs revesj\ned for tbe six months' period has\nthis slgnlflcsnce, thst the chsnges\ndid not mske any material reduction In the receipts during the\ntwo alxt-months' (period of 'the\nyear.\nEXCISE   DUTIES\nThe excise duties ere largely as-\nseeements on alcoholic beverages\nand tobaccos manufactured ln Can\nada. The total collected durtng the\nyear was $57,700,000. During the\nyear excise collections on tobacco\nremained stationary st about \u00bb42\n000.000. Of the amount, duties on\nclgsrettes produced  930,500,000.\nThere was a decline of over\n97.000,000 In excise duty collections\non alchollc beverages produced In\nCsnsds. On and sfter the first\nof July, 1930, clearances were de\nnied to vessel* having on board\nany intoxicating liquors destined\nfor delivery ln any country into\nwhich the importstlon of such\nliquor was prohibited. The enforcement of this law to a great extent\nexplains the decline In the excise\nrevenues.\nINCOME  TAX\nThe Income tax ranks first\nIn productivity amongst the\nwar taxea end produced \u00bb\u2022)!.-\n000.000 -In the rear As a matter of fact, this sum has been\nexceeded only once since tu\nImposition ond that was In\nthe fiscal year 1921-22. lt Is o\nrase of history repeating Itself.\nThe fiscal year 1922 was sis*\na dark one In respect to total\nrevenues, bnt Income tax assessment! were on the earnings\nand profits of 1980, the peak\nyear of the post-war boom.\nIn   the   past   year   total   revenues\nAlberta  \t\nKorth Weat\nTerritories ...\n62.656\n..    (57.801\n658\n330.226\n680,(04\n1,563\nTotals (1,537.173   (3.668,142\nLIGHTHOUSE   INCREASE\nThe Increase ot slKhtly over\n(500.000 in the Ujhthousa and\ncoast services wsa mainly due to\nthe purchase ot a lighthouse boat\nto be used ln connection with\nthe St. Lawrence rim channel.\nTbs expenditures on that socount.\ntojether with tha purchase all\nerection ol new ll\u00bbhts. smounted\nto  (480,000.\nThe Increase of over (1,300,000\nIn air services lalla under three\nhesdlngs. In connection with air\nservices lenerslly there was an Increase ot (394.000; (or civil air\nservices (387.000, and Ior air mall\nroutes (494.000. Tha aum ol (1(0,-\n000 wss expended In connection\nwith the sirport at Trenton. Ont.,\nsnd the establlshnJent ot new air\nmall routes made It neoeasary to\nestablish snd maintain naw landing\nfields st various points throughout\nCsnsda. Other expenditures, due to\nIncresaed use being msde of the\nservices of the sir division, Involved (Teeter expenditures for supplies snd equipment snd also msde\nIt necesssry to Incresee tha personnel.\nThere ls a unanimous sentiment\nthst Canada ahall provide adequately for those who served and Buffering during tha war. and annually the amount expended on\naccount of pensions and after-care\nof veterans Increases. In the year\nainder review pension payments increased (6.658.000. snd after-care\naccounts by (1.380.000, thua making\na total expenditure on these two\nacounta of over 65 millions In\nthe new year under review. Since\nthe outbreak of hostilities the\nDominion has psld (480.000.000 on\naccount of European war pensions,\nsnd 163 millions for treatment and\nafter-csre of returned soldiers. In\naddition, sundry expendlturea on\naccount of soldier lend settlement\nsdminlstratton,   battlefield    memorl-\nTAX COLLECTION SUMMARY\nREVENUES  DERIVED  FROM  TAXATION   FOB FAST  FIVE  YEARS\nTaxes represent small amounts, being, not Infrequently, paid\nby the use of exolse stamps, and ara difficult to allocate. A atatement of the revenue received trom taxation for the last flvs yean\nfollows:\n1038-27       1S27-28       1938-33 1(30-30 1030-81\nCustoms           141,(N.0O0 166,086.000 187.308,000 170.430,000 131.300,000\nExcise        49,613,000   67,401,000   63.866.000 65.036,000 67,747,000\nWar Tax Rev.,\nBanks           1,171,000     1,336,000     1,343,000 1.408,000 1,430,000\nTrust and Loan\nCompanies         335.000        348,000           8,000   \t\nIns.    Comp...        948.000        099.000        198.000 74.000 74.000\nBus.   Profits.        710.000        968.000        455,000 173.000 73,000\nIncome    Tax   47,386,000   68.671,000   69.423.000 69.021,000 71.048.000\nSalea   Tax   ..   82.308,000   73,100.000   62,646,000 44,850,000 30,716,000\nTaxonOhequea,\nTtansportatlon\nTax.    etc...   33.307,000   18.133,000   19,3(1,000 18,660,000 13,960,000\nTot. Recelpta from\nTaxation   .. 348,649,000 364,708,000 396,931,000 378,651,000 296,276,000\nsli, ttw imperial war graves commission etcetera, smount to (39,-\n000,000. Theae Itema of expenditures\nresetted a grand total of (671.-\n000.000 to tbe close of tbe flscsl\nyaar.\n\u2022Tba Increase of expenditures\namounting to (1.366.000 on post\noffice account may be divided Into\nthree groups. Approximately (322.-\n000 wss expended In settling overdue acounta with tha printing\nbureau.\nOVERDUE   ACCUMULATIONS ,\nOverdue accumulations over a\nserlea of years, and at the close of\nthe flacal year a supplementary\nestlmste waa authorised by psrllsment to bring, the accounts Into\nbalance. An lncreeae of (670,000\nwu spent in salary Increases, mslnly\nto  those  ln  tha  outside  service.\nThe expenditures on ordinary account by tha public works department were (6.800,000 ln exceea of\nthe expenditures In the previous\nyear. Of this, the sddltlonal expendlturea ln connection wltb the\nerection and Improvement of public bulldlnga amounted to (3,426.-\n000. On harbor and rlvar works\nexpendlturea showed sn increase of\n(3.1O.000 sa compared with the\nprevious yaar.\nThe expenditures In respect to\nthe maritime freight rates act In\n1929-30 ware (7.400,000 and ln the\nyear under review tbey were (10.-\n337,000. The lncreeae divide, ltaelf\nunder two heada:\n(637,000 waa on account carried\nforward from tha previous year,\nhsvlng been reoelved too late to ba\nIncluded in the acounta for thst\nyew, and the balancs. (2,300,000,\nrepresented the additional amount\npayable aa provided by tha fact for\nreductions in tolls - and deficits\non eastern lines.\nTha expenditures In respect to\npenltentlsrlea Increased by (876,000.\nDuring tha yaar the penltentlsry\npapulstlon Increased 827, thereby\nrequiring tha larger staffs snd supplies. (138,000 of tba Increase represents expendlturea in connection\nwith tha erection of a new institution which waa established during\nthe yaar.\nThe department of trade and\ncommerce administers the Csnsda\npain act, and during the yesr\nthere wu an Increase ot (1.085-\n000 in lta expendlturea over thoee\nof tha previous year in connection\nwith tha providing of elevators st\nLeehbrldge, Moose Jsw snd Basks-\ntoon. An additional (100,000 was\nspent on nstlonsl research and\n(136 000 ln connection with the\nCanadian display at the exhibition at Buenos Aires.\nRELIEF   APPROPRIATION\nThe special session of September\nlut provided for tha expenditure\nof (20,000.000 to relieve unemployment. As a result at tbe cloee of\nthe fiscal year, tha contracts initiated ln consequence of this legislation smounted to (80.890.964 and\nat tba end of March, 384.000 persona were employed. However, at\nthe cloae of t*a fiscal year only a\nsmall portion of the total ex-\niPendtturea authorised hsd beea\npresented  for   payment.\nIn all. (4.431,000 sru actually\npsld, the money being disbursed u\nfollows:\nAlberta      \u00bb  IM-600 17\nBritish  Columbia      3_0.040.B3\nMenltobe       S08.6S8.53\nNew  Brunswick       380.338.87\nNova   Sootla         83,06806\nOntario         1J19.433.18\nPrince   Edward    Ialand 31463.67\nSiekatchewan      535,598 96\nHighlights on the\nBudget\nDeficit for fiscal yesr, 1930-81, amounta to (75.344.878. (350 000.000 new\nCanadian converalon loana aubacrlbed to tbe aum of (639 816 500\nTotal net debt on Msrch 81, (3.261.808.(18.\nTotal    liabilities   on   March    SI,   (3,810,7(8.917.\nExpenditures for flscsl year. (440.060.(57.\nRevenue for fiscal year, (356.315.000.\nCub in bank at credit of Receiver Oeneral, (44.600,000.\nOld age pension payments Increased from (1.637,176 to (5 66(143.\nWsr pensions psymsnts Increased by (5,358.000 and after-care accounta\nby (1.380.000, bringing expenditures on both accounta for yaar over\n(55.000.000. ,\nTotal European war penalon payment! by Dominion alnca outbreak of\nhostilities amount to (460.000.000.\nTotal payments to dst\u00ab for treatment and after-oare of returned soldiers\n(182.000.000.\nTotsl sundry expenditures\u2014soldier land settlement sdmlnlstrstlon, battlefield memorials. Imperlsl war graves commission since outbreak of\nhostllltlee\u2014 (29.000.000.\nPost office expenditures Increased by (1.368,000 during the yesr ended,\n\u2022323,000 over-due accounts for series of years with printing bureau:\n(570,000 for extension air mall esrvloea snd (875.000 In salary Increuee\nmainly to outside services.\nLighthouse and coaat service Incressed by (600.-00 during year, largely\ndue to purchsae of lighthouse boat for the St. Lawrenoe rlvar channel.\nIncrease of (1.200.000 In fiscal year ended for air services.\n26.000 additional parsons given employment according to records st\nend of April: u compsred with Msrch 31.\nExpenditure on ordinary account by publio works department, (6,600.000\nin exceea of expenditures, for 1939-30.\nIncrease ln expenditures under maritime freight set from (7,400,000 In\n1939-30 to (10.827.000.\nPenltentlsry expenditures Increased by (876.000. lncreeae In penltentlsry\npopulation, 637.\nIncrease of (1.085.000 ln 1930-31 over 1939-30 by department of trade\nand commerce administer.ng Csnsda grain set In connection with providing elevators at Lethbrldge. Moose Jaw aqd  Saskatoon.\nContracta Initiated In consequence of unemployment relief meuuras\npassed st speclsl session amounted on Maroh (1 to (60.890.948: and at\nend of March. 348.000 persons were employed.\nOf the (30.000.000 unemployment money provided at tha end of March.\n\u20224,431,000 wu actually paid.\nCanadian National Railways failed to earn Its flxsd charges to the\npublio by (39.319.738\u2014sxduslvs of operations of eutern lines and of\naccruing interest on cuh advances of (604.000,000, msde by government\nto company ln previous years.\nTotal capital furnished by the government lo Csnsdlsn fsrm loan\nboard In fiscal yesr 1930-31 wss (3,099.8(9.\nYukon r ....- \t\nTotal\nC.    N.    R.    \t\nO.   P.   R\t\nOrada Crossing Pund\nParka Branch Interior\nAdministration    \t\n30.000.000\n(3,1.9,694 12\n353,961.82\n345.430.00\n600,000.00\n36,966.81\n16,583.32\nTotal (4,431,655.07\nMight I add tha records show that\nat the and of April employment\nhad been (Ivan to 25,000 additional\npersona u oompared wtth those\nemployed on March 31.\nEXPENDITURES   ON   CAPITAL\nACCOUNT\nParliament, for the flacal year\n1930-31, appropriated the aum of\n(33,484.000 for capital expenditures.\nIn tha year (28.232,000 wu actually\nexpended on that aooouht. Theae\nexepndttures for tbe purpose of\nconvenience, msy bs clsssified under\ntha following beads: (1) Rstlwsys,\n(2) Csnsls, (3) public Works, and\n(4)  Marine.\nTaking first the rsllwaya: on this\naccount over (6.000.000 wu disbursed, and of thla amount (3,-\n500.000 wu apent on tha Prlnoe\nEdward island ferry and terminals,\nand (4,137,000 on the Hudson Bay\nrailway and terminals. Tha investment in tha Hudson Bay rsilwsy\nand terminals at tha end of the\nflacal year amounted to (43,660,000\nThe expenditures on canals\namounted to (9,800,000 of whloh\nexpendlturea on the Welland ship\ncanal   represented   (9,600,000.\nThe expenditures ln connection\nwith pubitc works capital account\nware largely those ln connection\nwith shipping slthough at Ottawa\n(1,600.000 waa apent on tba new\nConfederation building and the National Research Council laboratories. Tba expenditure In connection with tbe Burlington channel,\nLsks Ontario, amounted to (1,-\n151.000 while over (3,000.000 wu\ndisbursed ln connection wltb tne\nlower lske terminals at Prescott.\nExpendlturea of sproxlmately (100,-\n000 ln each case were also inada\nIn connection with harbor Improvements at the head of tha\n(Teat  lakes  and  at  Sorel.\nIn connection with the capital\nexpenditures of the marine department. ' lt may be satd thst\npractically all were In connection\nwith tha St Lawrence ahtp channel,\nfor (3,464,000 wu spent on dredging tha channel, etcetera, and\n(400.000 ln the construction of\nregulating and retaining dams ln\ntha St. Lawrence river below Montreal.\nSPECIAL EXPENDITURES\nThe speclsl expenditures smounted to (13,358.000. The most Important Item wu (8,699,000 which\nrepresents 30 per cent reduction\nln soldiers' indebtedness to tbe\nsoldier settlement board u authorized by chapter 43. seta 1930.\nLoana   and   advances   non active:\nThe final group ot expenditures\nare thoea which are treated u\nloana and advance*, but, being\nnon-interest producttng are treated\nu non-active, charged u expend!1\nturea of the year and not treated\nu aaaeta In establishing the net\ndebt of tha Dominion. In tba yesr\nunder review the smount sdvsnced\nwsa (8.800,0-0. Of this (3.491X100\nconsisted of loans to tha Quebec\nharbor commissioners, snd (1.636,-\n000 to the Quebec government merchant marine snd the Canadlsn\nNstlonsl (West Indies) steamships\nthla being the amount required\nto meat their deficits.\nLOANS   ADVANCED\nA comparison of the loans and\nadvances non-sctlva for the put\ntwo yeara Is:\n1929-30    1930-31\nLoans to C. N. R. 2,933.000   \t\nLoans to C. N.\nSteamships .3.4.1.000 1.837.000\nLoana to Quebec\nharbor\ncotnm'rs    2.821.000   3,491,000\nMlscellsnsous  non-ac.\ntin   aocounta        17.000     170.000\nTotal       8   262.000    5.488 0001\nGrouping the 1930-31 expenditures\ntogether. It wlll be observed that\ntotal expendlturea amounted to (440-\n060.657, aa compared with (398,-\n442.247 In the previous year. With\nrespect to these expenditures, lt\nmay be ssld that for none of them\nIs tho present government responsible, with the exception of (4.431.000\nfor unemployment relief, (681.000\nunder governor-general's warrants\n(mslnly for exsoldlers' relief), (2,-\n000,000 for the Welland ship csnsl,\n(288.000 for Port Arthur snd Port\nWilliam harbor Improvements, snd\ns number of smaller items Included\nIn the aupplemeptary estimates\nbrought down at the end of March,\nthese amounting to les, than (100,-\n000.\nIt wlll be noted thst ordinary\nrevenues were (44.398,358 less than\nordinary expenditure that total\nrevenues were \u202283,844.358 less thsn\ntotal expenditures. It ahould perhaps\nbe noted thst (8,599,386 of this\ndeficit la brought sbout by the writing down of soldier land settlement\nloans sdvsnced in previous years,\nso tha balance, namely (76.244.973.\nla really the smount of the deficiency for the fiscal yesr period. Minor\nadjustments hsve yet to be made be-\nfor the account, are officially cloaed.\nbut tbe foregoing is anticipated to\nba within a few thousands of ths\nflnst balances for tha fiscal year\n1980-31.\nCAPITAL   BORROWINGS\nThe fiscal year under review wss\nmarked by a change In circumstances ln respect of the nstlonsl\ndebt. For ssvsrsi years there hid\nbean a surplus of revenues over\nexpendlturea wblch could be applied to maturing obligations. Such\nwss not the eau In tha put yesr.\nln   January,   1939,   tha   Canadian\nNational railways ware In aaa* o\nmoney for capital rcquiremento and\nu wlll be recalled, lntereat charge,\nwera then at abnormal heights. Th\"\nSovernment. therefore, between tha\nate aod May. 1930. advanoed to th<\nrailway, (33,000,000, taking demanc\nnotes u security. In June, 1930, th<\nCanadian National railway carrlec\nout a borrowing operation and repaid the Dominion (11,839,458, leaving a balanoe of (31,160,643 payabK\nto the Dominion. On July 1, wltt\n(5,000,000 thus received,' the government repurchased (6,000.000 at pat\nof tha four per cent treuury note*\nwhich were to mature on Decembei\n1, 1930, This transaction representee\na net aavlng qf (83,000 In lntereat\nLut autumn, the Raw Tork mon]\ney market for railway securities\nwas unreoeptlve, but, with the comj\npany reporting deflelte each montt!\nand with large capital undertaking!\nof the railway proceeding, provision\nhad to be made for the company''\nfinancial requirements. Tbe Dominion decided lt wss ln the public\nInterest to continue the provldlni\nof funds for tha Canadian Nstlonsl\nand In October sold to a syndicate\nheaded by the Coee Securities corporstlon and the Bank America-\nBlair corporation of Naw Tork. ar\nlasue of (100,000.000 four per cant\n30-year bonds, but callable at thi\nend of 30 years. Tha amount realized wu (93,646.000, or a coat d\napproximately 438 per cent. ThU\nrata is the beat which haa baa-\nsecured by the Dominion tor anl\nlong term financing since the outbreak of tha war.\nSUM ADVANCED\nTha aum of (10,000,000 was immediately sdvsnced to the rsllwayt\nsnd before the end ot December \u25a0\nfurther (16,600,000 was loaned U\nthe company.\nDue to tha fact that tha requirements of the railways hsd made II\nnecessary for the government te\nmake a large public offering earlier\nthan had been planned, the Dominion did not require to reflnano\nimmediately all of the (46.000,000 o\nthree-year treuury notea which matured on the first of December.\nIt wu 'found practicable to retire\npermanently, tha (6.000.000 whlcl\nhad been purchased on the prevtou\nfirst of July, and a new loan w\u00bb\narranged with a group of Canadlal\nbanks. An luue ot tout vet oen\ntwo-year treasury notea for (40,\n000,000 waa authorised. (13.3OO.O0I\nwaa sold on Deoember 1, (10,000.001\non January 1, and the balance, (16,-\n700,00 on February 16.\nTha transfer of tha natural resources to tha three prairie provinces during the past fiscal yeai\nveated tha responsibility for thi\nadministration of tha school land\nfunds ln the thru provincial governments. The Dominion lands acl\nprovides'thst sections 11 and 39 la\nevery surveyed township In Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta,\nshall be set sslda u sn endowment\nfor purposes of education ln thoea\nprovinces. Tha act alao provides\nthat alt moneys, from time to time,\nresitted that tha sale of such\nschool lands ahall be invested ln\nsecurities of Csnada and the lntereat arising therefrom, after deducting costs of management, shall\nbe paid to the provlnoea toward\ntne support of schools organlaad\n\u2022nd cerrled on In accordance with\nthe lawa of auch provinces.\nPROVIDE   TRANSFER\nTha agreements with the provlnoea, u ratified at tha lut general\nsession of parliament, provided that\nthe transfer of thes( moneys might\nbe either by cuh or securities. Tha\namount Involved wu over (33.000,000\nWhen the present sdmlnlstrstlon\ntook office provinces were consulted\nto ssoertaln whether they desired\nsettlement ln cub, or tha transfer\nor the fund by aecurittea of Canada.\nIt wu agreed that, until an arrangement could be msde, the Dominion would oontlnua to pay interest at the rate ot 6 per cen*\nearly in April lut, repreuntativee\nof the provinces mat wtth the Dominion and lt wu arranged that a\nnaw debenture Issue would ba crested from the amount of the capital socount of the fund on tha\ndatee of the transfer of tha resources to eech of the provinces,\nThis had been done, and the provinces received certificate- for the\nfolowlng  amounts:\nManitoba     -..-   (\u00ab19,(83.W\nsaskstchewan  _  nfOa,oatAt\nAlberta      -    9.664.5S9J-\n(33.392.470.SI\nThe maturity data is July 1. 19M\n\u2022nd the lntereat Is st the rata of I\nper cent, payable half-yearly on tbt\nflrat ot July and January.\nWhile the actual settling of thi\n(26,000,000 loan which had been obtained In New York In 1916 tort\npiece on the flrat dsy of the preeen\nilscal yesr. might it be pointed ou\nthat the financial operation ot las\nfall provided the money for tha'\npurpoae. The loan wsa a flva pa\ncent Issue, while the cost of the re\nfinancing wu at the rata ot tJA\nper cent. This nuane a uvlng ll\nthe annual lntereat cbargea a\n(155.000.\n19S1  CONVERSION  LOAN\nThe only funded debt to ba refinanced in the preaent flacal yaal\nIs the (61.929.600 fslltngl due oa\nOctober 1, and the success of thi\nConversion Wa* recently completet\nleaves leu than 18 millions to be\nreflnsnied. At the present moment\nlt would sppesr thst this can moat\nprofitably be done by tha use ol\ntreuury   bills.\nTha debt conversion operation,\nwhich commenced on May 11 last\ndoes not properly belong to a review of the financial operations ol\nthe lut fiscal year, but it la a matter of general interest st the present\ntime. Tha buls wu: In exchange\nfor bonds maturing In 1931, 1933\n1933 snd 1934, new securities wan\ngiven, bearing Interest at the rate\nof *\\k per oent, and maturing 31\nyeara alter the due data of thi\nbonds surrendered ror conversion\nthe Dominion have the right to\nredeem after 16 years. The holdal\nwas, naturally, guaranteed all tltf\nbenefits, Including difference In Interest rate, associated, wltb his old\nbond to ths dste of lta maturity\nThe ftrat offer to the publio wai\nfor (250.000,000. The auccew of tha\noperation wu assured st tba closi\nof buslneu on tbe flret day, and II\nbecame necesssry to Increase Shi\namount tha government wu prepared to accept for conversion. The\nsubscription books remained open\nuntil the advertised closing date,\nSaturdsy. May 33. It wu a remark\"\nsble succeu, It being estlmsted sf\nproximately 640 millions were converted. Until all adjustments ali\nmade and the oversew subscription!\nsctuslly delivered to the department\na  flnsl  statement  c-snnot  ba  pre)\n(Continued  on   Psge   Nina)\n mP\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B. C. \u2014 Tl'ESDAT MORNING, JUNE  t. 1SS1    **\nMSI KIM*\nRate on Bituminous Coal Raised From 50 Cents to\n75 Cents a Ton; Duty on Higher Priced Cars\nIs Increased; Duty on Parts Up\nIMPORTATION OF USED CARS IS\nPROHIBITED EXCEPT SETTLERS'\nMany Increases in Tariff in Respect to Farm Produce; Oranges Will Bear New Form of Duty;\nBrake Put on Manufacturer\nOTTAWA, Ont, June 1.\u2014(By the Canadian Press)\u2014\nPerhaDS the most far-reaching tariff change in today's\nbudget WM that of coal. Anthracite which formerly came\ninto Canada free, and of which this country brought in\nlut year a total of $28,000,000, now carries __ duty of 40\ncents a ton, when coming from the United States from\nwhere most of this type of coal has been purchased in\nthe past\nCOMPARISON OF REVENUES\nSPECIAL   RECEIPTS  AND   CONSOLIDATED   REVENUES\nTOTAL |3M,\u00bb16,0O0\n1-38-37 1937-30 1938-3. 1926-30 1930-81\n\u00b0\u2122'n    Act       J.Ml.OOO a,\u00ab18.000 3,883.000 \u00bb,<*7.0O0 3,171,000\nOeeette    _  68,000 11400        SO.0OO        94,000        71.000\nCanals           083,000 I,8M,0OO U30.000 1.044.000 1,037.000\no\u00ab\"\u00abi   - -  s^u.ooo a.oao.ooo 4,041,000 4,301,000 j.bssooo\nChinese   Revenue 13.000 14.000 18,000 14.000 '   33,000\nDominion    Lands 0,337.000 3,880,000 4,070,000 4,189.000 1,889.000\nBee.   Light   lnsp. 888.800 584,000 884,000 647.000 883,000\nFines,    Forfeitures ,804.000 688.000 858,000 748.000 434,000\nFisheries     -     178.000 119,000 109,000 111,000 74,000\nOaa   Inspection   - 77,000 88.000 93.000 101.000 94.000\nInsur.   Inspection. 102.000 134,000 193,000 139,000 149.000\nInt. on  Inv'stm'ts 8.660,000 10,936,000 12,338,000 13,518,000 10,421,000\nMarine        364,000 191,000 183,000 166.000 167.000\nMariners' Fund  _ 196.000 222,000 237,000 \u25a0     209,000 302,000\nMilitary College .. 18.000 20,000 30,000 20.000 20.000\nMU.  Pension  Rev. 139,000 138.000 186.000 159.000 169.000\nOrdinance Lands 30.000 14,000 33,000 30,000 39,000\nPatent Copy-\nwrlghtFees      516.000 406,000 630.000 575.000 660,000\nPenitentiaries     ... 170.000 178X100 179,000 181.000 188.000\nPost   Office     29.060.000 31.563.000 30,612,000 33,848.000 30.312,000\nPrem.,    Disc,   At. 649.000 994,000 989,000 981,000 931,000\nPublic  Works    423,000 395,000 414,000 408,000 735,000\nR.N.W.M.P. Officers*\nPensions  9.000 6.000 6,000 7.000 6.000\nWeights, Measurea 333,000 962.000 399.000 407,000 420,000\nTotal*      62,046.000 68j012.000 69,543,000 62.860,000 93,317,000\n'\nTrade Mission Sent to Canada\nTARIFF WALL IS RAISED AGAINST U. S. COAL\nAnthracite Carries\nDuty of 40 Cents a\nTon on Importation\nThe tt-e on bituminous coal U\nIncreased from 60 cent* to 75 cento\nI. too. The drawback of W per cant\nwhen tho bituminous coal 1* vsed\ntor smeltlnf, however, remains. Thi\nrate on charcoal hu alto been increased to $7.60 a ton. Coke which\nuaed to como In under tha general\ntariff now meeta a rate of $1\nr ton.\nNeat ln Import* nee perhaps are\nUte ohanges In the new auto-\nmobile schedule*. Tha duty on\nunder 91300 remains at 30\nceotj between 41300 and 93100,\nrat* hta beep increased from\n17% por cent to 30 per csnt; *or\n:a\u00bb over $3100 the rate is Incressed\n'rom 37H per oent to 40 psr oent.\nDAB DUTY IP\nIn th* <*\u00ab\u2022 of parts for oars, the\nrate uaeft to be 30 per cent but\n-he manufacturers of au torn ool les\n-slug these puis rot a drawback\n96 per cont. They will now pet\na drawback of 60 per cent, but orer\n100 different types of parts which\nformerly eligible for tbe drew-\nbaok are now excluded from this\nbenefit. Theee apply to parts\nwhich arfl made In Canada and lt\nts believed will greatly increase the\nof Canadian parte ln automobile\nmanufacture.\nImportation   ef   used  ears  It\nprohibited,   except   ln   the  rase\nof bona fide settlers.   Cars can-\nnet b\u00ab broiirht ln tf they were\nmanufactured    previous   to   the\ncalendar   year   in   which   It   .'.\u25a0\u00bb\nsought   to   Import.\nTha duty on magazines ls plaoed\nat  16  oents  per  pound   under  the\n;eneraj   tariff   and   comes   Into  effect on July  1.\nOrange* which previously came In\nfree will bear a duty of free British\npreferential. 30 cents per cubic\nToot both intermediate and general.\nThis ls a new method of placing\nthe duty which has been adopted\nof the wide variety of\nshapes of containers and the size\nof the oranges. Canada Import*\n^proximately $10.000,00o worth per\n-rither schedules have been  in-\n-.ad   all   alone:   the   list.     This\nmark*   one   of   the   few   increases\nunder the British  preference act.\nFARM  PRODUCT*   AFFECTED\nMany increases ore announced m\ntho tariff respecting farm pnduoK\nmt perhaps ihe most Important\n\u25a0as tliat for corn. Formerly corn\nlor distilling was dutiable, but for\nall othsr purposes tt came ln 're*.\nHaw, the only free corn Is that to\nused for cereal food.and starch-\nnaktng. For all other uses it has\n0 pay a duty of 36 oents a\nluahel.   This ls expected to greatly\nfor   feeding   livestock.\nincrease the use of Canadian grains\nMost Important Increase for the\nsteel Industry waa In ateel plates.\nPreviously, sll steel plates up to\n40 inches wide had a duty of 97\nper ton. Over that width the duty\nwas very much lower. Under ths\nnew tariff all plates up to 10\nInches In, width will carry a 97 per\nton Impost. Wire netting and w re\ncloth are increased from 30 to 36\nper cent, and a low rat* is provided   for   Beseember   billets.\nWall-boards, building boarda,\nclothespins, golf clubs and so ft-rrtt\nare all .lucreased from 36 per rw\nto 36 per cent.       .\nChanges In the textile schedule*\nare limited, the significant being\nIncreased un linen fabrics and articles -.excepting damasks) snd fabrics of pure silk, with decreases on\nmohair  yarns.\nBuilding stone, of all kinds, both\nrough and finished, aa well as\nbuilding brick, magneslte and\nground feldspar, will bear higher\nrates than formerly.\nNO    IMPl.-r.Ml_M    CHANGES\nNo changes are made in respect\nto farm Implement.-., although the\nItem covering repair parts is extended In point of time.\nThe tariff on cloaks and waists is\nrevised, the rates being Increased,\nand provision ls made for increases\ncn window glass and laminated\nglass.\nThe tea schedule t* radically re-\nvised, the former free entry of bulk\ntees under the British preferential\ntariff being cancelled and replaced\nby rate* of four cents and 'eight\ncents per pound oo teas Imported\ndirect from place of growth or\nImported from the United Kingdom,\nsnd rates of 10 oents, 10 c?nta\nand 10 cents per pound on Has\notherwise Imported.\nThe rates on the so-called basket\nItems (Item 711; unenumcrated tr-\ntlclss) are raised from 15 per cent,\n17^ per cent and 17% per cent to\nIS per cent, 36 per oent and 25\nper  cent.\nCHANOK9   IN   ADMINISTRATIVE\nSECTIONS\nThere are several amendments to\nadministrative sections of the act,\nIncluding:\nProvision for Imposition of excite duties upon tbe product* of a\nmanufacturer who uses the customs\ntariff rates to increase the prices\nof his product to the consumer.\nprovision fop the forfeiture or\n$oods Imported from a country not\na signatory to the treaty of Ver-\nBallles.\nProvisions enabling the governor\nIn council to reduce customs duties\non   any   goods   imported,   in  return\nChanges From\nthe Budget\nBrit.\nInter-\nden\nPrsf.\nold\nfree\n!'<<*\nse\nnew\nIM\n3c\n7. Meats,   fresh,  n.o.p..  or  \"not\notherwise   provided   for\":\nA. Beef and veal, per lb. ....\n. old\n2c\nV,e\n\u00abc\nnsw\n4c\n6c\nlc\nB. Lamb and mutton, per lb.\nold\n3c\n31_e\n6c\nnew\nM\n(lc\nlc\nC. nop,  or \"not otherwise\nprovided for,\" per lb. \t\n_ old\n3c\n3V.0\nsc\nnew\n|t\nHit\nSe\nS. Canned  meets, poultry\nor  gamo   _.\t\nold\nIS p   .\nil p\n37V4P\nnew\nUp\nM p\n33   P\n10. Moats,   prepared   or  preserved\nother than canned\u2014bacon,\nhom*, shoulder*, etc., per lb, ..\nold\ntree\n1*0\n3'\u00abc\nnew\nIree\nl..c\n5c\n15. Beeswax       -.- ..\t\n. old\ntre.\n7 V. P\n10 p\nnew\n1.11>\n=(lp\n_llp\n13. Egg* In the shell, per dos. ...\nold\nIt\nJV.C\n10 p\nnew'\ntc\nit\n.li\nold\n3c\n3c\nno\nnew\nM\n10\nlc\n30A. Tee,   Imported   direct  from\ncountry  of  growth  and  produc\n-\ntlon or purchased In United\nKingdom,   per   lb -\nold\ntree\n_c\n10c\nnew\n4o\ntr\n8c\n95. Hop*,  per  lb.  \u2014 .\u2014\u2014\n.. old\ntc\n13c\n14c\nnew\nlo\nMr.\nlie\n69. Indian oorn, n.o.p., per bushel\nold\nfree\nfree\nfree\nmanufacturer* of starch or\nnew\n.free\nfree\nfree\n69. Indian corn, n.o.u., per bushe\nold\nfree\nfree\nfree\nnew\nfree\nMis:\n360\n93. Rioe, cleaned,  per   100  lbs.\nold\nMc\nISO\nlte.\n.\nnew\nin.\n\u00bb\u00abC\n11.00\n67. Macaroni   and   vermicelli,   con\ntaming ao egg or other edde.\ningredients, per  100 lbs\t\nold\nfree\n11 00\n\u2022 1.3S\n,\nnew\nfreo\nII \u00bb5\n61.50\nold\nfree\n11.78\n63.00\nnew\ntree\nll.M\nl\u00bb.(KI\n10 p\n71A. Timothy seed, per lb. ..........\n. old\nBp\n10 p\n1\nnew\ntre*\nlo\nlo\n71B. CBover seed,  including\nalfalfa seed,  per  lb.   .\nnsw\ntn*\nlc\nlo\n71D. teed   potato**,   exclusively   for\npropagation,   per   100   lb*.   .....\n.. old\nfree\ntree\n75o\nnew\nfree\nfree\nfm\n73. Field seed*,  n.o.p.., over\n\u00bbP\nop\n10 p\nlop\n10 p\nISp\nnew\n-ISA. Hoot, gsrdsn snd othsr sorts,\nnop.,   Mr   lb.   .\n.. old\nUp\n10 p\nISp\nnew\nfree\nlie\nior\nfor reductions which msy bo grant-\nsd by other countries ln respect\nof  Canadian  products.\nProvision   of   further   safeguards\nagatnat dumping of foreign products\nCONVERSION 10AN\nIS POPULAR WITH\nMANY RADIANS\n(Continued From Page Bight)\naen-ted,   but at   tbe   moment   the\nreport la;\nTear For\nmaturity Loan conversion\n1931    _. 9 62.029.900   9 39.702.500\n1032     \u2122  73.323,160     37,011,400\n1933     -  446*60.900   87*3,900,100\n1034  611.910.950   279.703-600\nTotal     ...91.094,823 360 9027.409,600\nNot yet distributed as to maturity   9939.810,600.\nTh* Dominion sponsored the conversion operation and paid a oom-\nminion of one-half of .one per oent,\nexcept on conversions of bonds maturing on October 1, 1031. No com\nmission wss paid to any ons of the\n939.000,000 of bonds of this luue\nwhich were surrendered for conversion.\nRAILWAYS,   MlAMSRIP*.\nAMD   IIWIHOK  COMM1HSIOMS\nThe financial provision which 1'\nwas necessary to make ln the fiscal\nyear for the Canadian national railway* \u00abnd steamships, and the various harbor commissions, reached important dimensions. So far as capital\nexpenditures are concerned, they\nrepresent the carrying out of the\nextensive programs of construction\napproved by parliament ln previous\nsessions, and where payments hav*\nbeen required for oP-*r*tlng deficits,\nthe amounts naturally reflect th*\nunfavorable   business   situation.\nCANADIAN    NATIONAL\nRAILWAYS\nThe accounts of tb* Canadian\nNational railway for 1930 have been\npresented to the houa*. Tb* company\nrailed to earn its fixed charges to\nthe public by 920,210.739. This figure is exclusive of the operatlona of\nthe eastern lines and of ths aocru\nlog interest on the cuh idvsnces of\n9604,000,000 which the government\n._as made to the company ln previ\nou* years.\nThe deficit on the system, exclusive of eastern lines, was financed\nby the company and is not reflected\nin the government accounts for\nthis year.\nThe general budget of the railways\nfor 1930, w.iich included provision\nfor deficit, general additions and\nbetterment,-, and miscellaneous debt\nretirements, amounted to 963.010,-\n400.85, of which 961,600,000 waa\nauthorized at the 1930 session and\nthe balance, 911,410.400.96 wu passed at the present session so a supplementary provision to cover over-\nexpenditure due to the unanticipated lolling off In receipts. In\nrespect of these requirements, guar\nan teed bonds to the amount of\n951,600.000 were issued snd the sum\nof 911.410.000.96 hs\u00ab been financed\ntemporarily by a bank loan.\nDO NOT IM I.I IM*\nBKANtM   LINES\nThe expenditures Just referred to\ndo not include those incurred on\nbranch lines and terminals authorized hy special statutes. For thee*\npurposes the actual expenditure* In\n1930 amounted to 921.112.073, financed from the proceeds of guaranteed bonds. The total amount of\nbonds Issued in the put fiscal year\nfor tbese purpoeu was 932,677,779, a\nsubstantial amount having been\nprovided for expenditures on theee\naccounts  in   1031.\nFor the purposes mentioned above\nand to refund certain maturing and\ntemporary loans, the company Issued 9120,000.000 of securities In the\nperiod of our fiscal year to which\nthe guarantee of the government,\nin accordance with th* authorisation of parliament, wm given. An\nissue of 9-J0.0O0.000 4tt per cant 38-\nyear bonds wu aold la June, 1930,\nand an Issue or 970,000,000, 4%\n26-year bonds was sold In February.\n1931.\nThe \u25a0 following statement summarises the purposes for which theee\nissued were msde and the total\namount of securities issued in each\ncaae:\n*s in former years the company\nfinanced the purchase of new equipment to the extent of 78 per oent\nof tbe cost thereof, by thc sale of\nequipment trust certificates not\nguarsnteed by the Dominion government. An issue, authorised in June,\n1080. of 916,760.000 4H per oent\ncertificate, wu mode for ibis purpose.\nIt Is a very poor policy to otter\na receiver that 1* giving good service. Ther* la no particular advantage m unusual shspe* for ro-\nostvlnc airtals especially wher* they\nare used on modern sets which do\nnot tune the antenna circuit. Any\ndefect In the radio circuit that\nwould cause sudden change In th*\nregulator tube rselatsnce will affect\nall the other tubes both as t0 filament voltage and thetr other opera-\ntins   voltages.\nATTITUDE OF\nU. S. AWAITED\nWASHINGTON, D. C. Juno 1.\u2014\n(AP)\u2014pendlrtf receipt of s full report from Ron. Hsnford MsicNider,\nUnited ststes minister to Canada,\non th* proposed nsw Csnsdlsn customs duties, state department officials declined tonight to comment.\nThe department will study the\nchanges with a slow to determining\nthe course which the United States\nwlll follow, lt sny. In the wsy ot\ndiplomatic representations.\nThe attitude of tho Unite* ststes\ngorernment always, In cases of tariff\nchanges, la tbat lt la a purely\ndomestic question with ths government   concerned.\nWhen rates ar* considered discriminatory sgslnst the United\nStates producta. representations sre\nmade against such duties.\nProduced-iir-Canada\nIs Showing Results\nVICTORIA, Juns I (CP)\u2014Marked\ndevelopment ot th* produec-ln-\nCanada campaign wu noted in the\nresults of the 1930 efforts, according\nto th* report of the executive commit*** to the annual meeting of\nthe Canadlsn Manufacturers' association here today. Never before hsd\nthe campaign boon so wide-spued\nor effective, the report said. Dominion, provlnclsl and municipal\ngovernments had endorsed the cam\npalgn as never before and many of\nthem had Included produce-ln-Csn\nada clauses In th* contracts of their\npurchsslng department... Th* pro-\nduo*-ln-Oanada appeal had also\nbeen favorably recelv\u00abd by an Ul'\ncreased number ot those engaged ln\nother occupation, and It hsd been\na valuable agent In providing employment. The committee recommended that th* campaign should\nb\u00bb mad* one of the chief sctlvities\nof th* association, as tbe tlms was\nopportune  to  gel   the   but  results.\nAn Important sctlvlty reported by\nthe committ** wss th* complls-\ntlon, at ths request of the Dominion\ngovernment, at a grest deal of Information for uss In connection with\nthe Imperltl Economic conferences\nof the British empire held in London In the fall ot 1030. Tbls Information was being revised and supplemented for the coming Impensl\nEconomic conference in Ottsws.\nClose contract, were being maintained   wltb   such   organizations   ss\nBY FEDERATION OF BRITISH INDUSTRIES\nTit* Federation of Britlah Industries have formed\na trade commission headed by Sir James Llthgow to\ncome to Canada.   They are seen here'Just before sail\ning for this country. Photo shows from Istt to right:\nMr. Locock.. Sir Jamea Llthgow and Mr. M. Mackenale,\nmembers of the commission, before embarking.\n$3500 Salary Free\nFrom Income Tax in\nBudget Resolution\nDouble Taxation of Dividends Remedied to\nSome Degree\nRESOLUTION TO\nAPPLY IN 1930\nArrangement for Paying\nTaxes in Accord With\nFiscal Year\nOTTAWA, Ont.. June 1. \u2014(CD-\nNew income tax rates were\nnounced ln the house of commons\ntodsy by Premier K. B. Bennett lo\nhis  budget  speech.\nThe   amending   resolutions   read\nResolved thst It ls expedient to\namend and consolidate the income\nwsr tax act  and  to  provide:\n1- Thst the consolidated act be\nknown as thc iucoxe tax set (1031)\nconsolidated.\n2. Thst the exemption for persona presently entitled to three\nthoussnd dollars be raised to an\nexemption of three thousand five\nhundred  dollar*.\nthe exemption shall be allocated\nln calculating tbe tax payable,\n\u2022000 to each successive tax rate\nas ln the flrat schedule to the set.\n(commencing with the lowest rate\not income tax of one per oent)\nuntil like successive allocations of\nthe dividend exemption provided\nfor.\n7. That a tax of two per cent\nbe collected at the source on dlvl\ndends payable to non-resident\nshareholders, such deduction to be\neffected by the companies psy lng\nthe dividend or trustees receiving\nthe dividend for snd on behalf\nof non-reeident persons.* The tax\nshall be deducted at the time of\nthe paying of the dividend by the\ncompany or on receipt of the dlvl\ndend by the trustee and within 30\ndsys thereafter paid to tbe -\nceiver general of Canada. Failure\nto remit the tsx deducted shall\nrender the company or trustee personally liable to Interest thereon\nfrom the date when it should have\nbeen paid to the date of payment\nat the rate of 6 par cent per\nannum. Failure to deduct thc tax\nshall render the company or re-\nrelvLng trustee -personally liable\nfcr the tax which ahould have\nbeen deducted, together with intercut thereon at six per cent per\nannum   until   psld.\n8. That when the essets or sharea\nseven, which shall come into force\non   July   1,   1031.\nWINNIPEG TEA\nPRICES TO GO\nUP 5 1-2 CENTS\nWINNIPEG. Man . June 1\u2014(CPI\u2014\nTea prices In Winnipeg will rise\n5ti cants a pound ss result of the\nadvance to four cents In the tnrlff\nannounced in the Bennett budget\nloday, according to dealers here.\nP. O. Walker, sales manager of Cod-\nyule company, considered the tariff\nchanges reasonable.\nJ. Ball of the Blue Ribbon Tei\ncompany doubted lf ther, would be\nany advance In retail prlcea for\nsom, time. Merchants. 1\u201e antlclPa.\n_>A_. of a tariff advance,\nbought ahead, he said.\nnsd\nWHEAT SUBSIDY\nWILL SAVE THB\nFARMER MONEY\nOTTAWA, Ont.. Juna 1.\u2014<t\u00bb>\u2014\nTba flva centa par bushel subsidy\ntm Oanadlan (rain exporta announced today by Premier R. B. Bennett\nln hla budget speech will, on the\nbails at th* year 1080. mean about\ngio.400,000 to Canadian farmers.\nTha prime minister told th, country today tha governmsnt Intended\nto absorb five cants ot the cost of\nfreight on Canadian grain ship-\nmsnte  overseas.\nIn tha calendar year 1630. Canada exported 307.761,000 bushels of\ngrain. It ths subsidy bad been lu\nforce laat year the effect of the\nprovision would have been that the\nCanadian farmer would have reoelved about 110.400.000 for hla crops.\nThe general Interpretation plaoed\non tha premier's speech la the\nsubsidy wtll only affect export grain.\nPENSIONS PLAN\nGREETED WITH\nCHEERS IN EAST\nVIOTORIA, B. C, June 1.\u2014<CF)-\nAnnouncement by Rt. Hon. it B.\nBennett ln tha budget today that\nthe federal government would be\nwilling to assume up to 75 per sent\nof the cost of old age pensions wa_\ngreeted a_ the legislative bulldlnga\nwith enthuslsam. Premier Tolmle\nexpressed hla pleasurs at the news,\nand stated that relief In this form\nwould ba most wslcoms to the province. The Implementing of the\nplsn would mean a saving ot 6307,-\n500 annually to British Columbia.\nThe coat of old ags pensions In\nthe province amounta to 11.380,000\nyearly, of which the province now\npays hslf. or 6615,000.\nIII-EFI'L. BIT EXrENIIIW\nMulching growing vegetsbles wltb\npaper, tested st tan experimental\nstation... proved that moat vegetable crops sre Improved by this\nsystem, which eliminate* the s>*.\nceaslty for cultivation. Such hast-\nloveing plante aa ths cucumber,\nmelon, pepper and tomato showed\ntlie most substanttsl IncTssses In\nyield. According to tbe director ot\nthe experimental farms system cf\ntbe depsrtment o- sgrlcultur, at\nOttawa, tha cost of ths paper i.\nhigh, making IU economical use\nvery doubtful In most cases. It\nls slso pointed out thst It Is dlf-\nflcut to Keep the paper from being blown about by tho \"lno.\nIt\npayment 'of the tax msy be msde\nwithin four month... from the close\not  the  fiscal   period   snd   If  not so\n____   *S.t,__\"mn-,,.    S^rWn ilr.^\"' \\mU\"   \">'1    P8\"1   SSwS   Oh   the   U.\nl_VXri\u00b1S_r_?~m*^ -^,*\"?aleIndA.rr\"ye'.nr    a't \"S\n3. That In respect ot fiscal pe\nriods not confident with the calen- of a company having on hand under year the return of Income and distributed income as at the end of\n1629, are sold indirectly or through\nan Intermediary to a comptny.\nwhich company issues sharea. bondu,\nNational Association of Msnuftc\nturera' of the United States and\nthe internstlonal labor office, Oeneva. Switzerland. Special attention\nwas directed to the visit lut moat..\nto Canada of Sir James Llthgow,\npresident; Sir Arthur Duckhsm,\npresident-elect, and J. Moir Mscken-\ncle of the federation of British\nIndustrie* and the committee reported that valuable discussions had\nbeen carried on wltb them, with a\nview to increasing British empire\ntrade.\nJaecha Helfets. the celebrated\nviolinist, u sn enthusiastic bibliophile. Among rsre volumes in his\ncollection are a first edition ot\nByron, a Kilmarnock Burns, a\nfourth folio Shakespeare, a Kelm-\nscott Chaucer, end first edition of\nall at Oeorge Moore's worke\nrs te of sit per centum per\nmini: or to the time of the filing\nof the return and payment of tsx,\nshould such filing and payment he\nmsde before the said 30th of\nApril but ln any case the return\nmust be made on or before the\n30th dsy of April in the next succeeding   calendar   year.\n5. Th.it income by way of dividend, rentals, interest, royalties or\nother income not disclosed by tbe\ntaxpayer tn his return of income\nshall be added to the other income\nof the taxpayer in double the\namount and the whole taxed under\nthe  provisions  of  the  aet.\n0. Thst net dividends from Csnsdlsn companies liable to corporation\ntax, to the extent of one half\nof the taxable Income of a taxpayer,   shall   be   exempt   from   tsx\nnotes or other like documents as\nfully paid up by capitalising thc\nsaid und is tribute.! income, then on\nthe redemption of such documents\nthe company shall P*y a tax of four\nper centum on the amount ct auch\ndocuments   redeemed.\n9. That in respect of the Income for the year 1831 and each\nyear thereafter the rates of tax et\npresent imposed on individual and\npersons other than corporation, and\njoint stock companies, be repealed\nand the following subfitltuted in\nlieu thereof, the rates spplylng sfter\ndeduction of the statutory exemption:\nOn the first \u00bb1000 or any portion\nthereof 1 per oent on the amount\nIn sxcess of 11000 but not In excess of 92000 2 per centum; or the\namount of 12000 but not in excess\nor 13000, 3 per  cent.\n10,\u2014The\u00abc resolutions ehsll be\napplicable to the Income of the\ntaxation   period   1M1   with  the   ex\nUP to 110.000 thereof, provided thatceptlon    of    resolution    numbered\nSouthern Cross Becomes Commercial Plane\nSERVICE EXPENDITURES\nORDINARY   ACCOUNTS   STATEMENT   FOR   THE\nI-AST FIVE FISCAL YEARS\nimniMRv\nThe tri-motored plana \"Southern Cross,\" famoua as\ntba vehicle of the noted nights of Captain Klngsford-\nBmlth sfad hla flying mstes, pletursd at the Sydney,\nAustralia, airport, where It Is being pressed into service\naa a mall snd psssengsr plsne. Rather a prosaic ending for a plane that flew acroas both ths Atlantic snd\ntha Pacific oceans, snd (rom England to Aiiattalla\nirCOTOTS   STATEMENT   FOB   THE   MUT\nitvk fiscal run\nCO-fSOUOATEO   Fl Ml   KXPCNDITl'H\n103S-37       U27-28        1938-2S       1129-30       1830-31\nIIWSI |_\nInl.  on  debt 129.J73.00O 128.903.000 124,990.000 I21.5W.000 121.290.000\nSubaldlesto\n12.517.000    12,517000    12.55.000    12.497.000    17430.000\nProvinces\nehsrges of\nManagement\nPrem.. Disc.\nand   Ei.\nSuperan. Tfo. 1\nActs of 1870\nSuperan   No. 3\nPrint Bur.\nSuperan. No. 4\nPub. Serv.\nAct. 1920\nSuperan. No. 8\nwid. Annuities* set. 1027\nCivil      Oovt\nAgrlculturs\nFisheries\nImmlgrstlon\nIndian Affairs\nINTERIOR\u2014\nDom. Lands.\nsnd Park.\nR-ten. tnatlt.\nGov. of N.W\nTerrl lories\nGov. of Yukon\nTerm one-\nJl sTirr\u2014\nAdministrate\nPenlt. mlsrle.s\nIAROR\u2014\nTech.    Edur.\nOld   Age   Pen.\nAdministration\nI.EaiNLATION-\nSenste. House\nof Com.\nelections \t\nMARINE\u2014\nOcean and\nRiver ssrv.\nLighthouse and\nCoast   Serv.\nHelen.   In-tlt\nBtesmboat lnsp.\nMlneM\n98.1,000        885,000        923.000     1.016.000\n920.000\n878,000   8J5.000   878.000\n10.8fl_.000\n5.839.000\n1,437.100\n2.S39.0OO\n3,8(9,000\n131,000\n11.578,000\n8.488.000\n1.781.000\n2705.000\n4,200 000\n4.!5_,oon\n717.000\n2210OOO\nl M NO\nI \u00ab9fi ono\n1.844 0O0\n4 0J3 0OII\n734.000\n2.191.000\n1.758,000\nPflfl.OOft\n131.000\n314 000\nl.MS.onn\n45.000\n141.000\n11.830.000\n7.203,000\n1.974,000\n2.(132,000\n4.598.000\n4 -87,000\n794,000\n-'203,000\n1,808,000\n1,152 000\n833.000\n36.r).O0fl\n2,284.000\n82 000\n18.000\n143,000\n12.258.000\n9.287.000\n3,274.000\n3.757.000\n5,135,000\n8,480 000\n817.000\n140.000\nI ' 629.000\n0 144,000\n-2S2.000\n2.2SV0OO\n5 8-6.000\n1 WflOOO\n317,000\n2.587,000  3.749.000  3,683.000\n2,463,000\n?43.0O0\n123.030\n650 000\n2.771.000\n270,000\n131,000\n624,000\n.'0.152,000\n1 702 000\n. .892 000\n118000\n143.000\n11,601.000\nNATIONAL  IllFFNTE\u2014\nMllltla Serv. 9.141.000\nNaval Service 1.597.000\nAir Services 2196000\nOeneral Ser. 103,000\nOov. of N.W.T.\nRadio Ser. 138.000\nNat. Reven. 10.130,ooo\nPen., war, etc. 37,903 000\nPen. Naf Health\nTrest..care of\nR*t. Soldiers 6,977.000\nHealth 795,000\nPoet    Office     31,008.000\nPUBLIC WORKS\u2014\nCharges to\nIncome 11.176.000\nCharges to Col.\nof Revenue 919 000\nRAILTf AYR ANTI f ANALK\nMar. freight rate\nact.  1927   .\nOther charges\nto    Income\nChsrges to Col,\nof revenue 2.153,000\nR. 0. M. P 3.096,000\nSold, and Oen.\nLand Seid'mt\nAmlnlatre.      I.36I.OOO\nTRADE AND COMMEBCE\u2014\nCan. Oram act\nExhibitions       4,168.000     4.016.000\nBounties. Copper\nBars,   ate...       168.009        tsooo\nMali Sub.. Steam-\nshlpsubven.     l.OOO.OOO       848000\nOthsr aTapen.     4.864.000     6365.000\n? 813.000\n288,000\n141.C0O\n679,000\n11.044 000\n1.636.000\n5.041.OOO\n103.000\ni in ooo\n12.677.000\n10.776000    41,487,000\n6.O_O,0O0      7,902,000\n771.0O0 924,000\n31 783.000   83.483.000\n14,037,000    17,003000\n942,000        940,000\n3.471.000     7.178.000\n1.582,000     3,367.000      1.120,000\n3 515.000\n2,300.000\n.405 000\n2,601.000\n3.199.000\n3.661.000\nH2I4.O0O\n9.237,000\n413000\n1 3S7O0O\n416.000\n991.000\n5 656.600\n510.000\n_,3.3 000\n36,000\n1 426.000\n3333 000\n5.136.000\n1,839,000\n2 875 000\n317.000\n140.000\n806.000\n.1,392.000\n366.000\n144.000\n789.000\n11.013.00,1\n3.0I3O0O\nI.Ml.oon\n337.000\n10,980.000\n3 596,000\n7.151.000\n104.000\n140.000\n13,131.000\n40,407 000\n216.000\n13,206.000\n48.963.000\n8,404.000\n1.031.000\n35,037,000\n0.771I.OOO\n943.000\n36 392.000\n16.134.000\n23.763.000\n924.000\n96.000\n7,401.000\n10.137.090\n1.260,000\n1.200.000\n2460.000\n2.9O2.00O\n3 911.000\n2957,000\n1.334000      1.442.000      1.383,000     1.600.000\n4476,000     4894.000     6.566.000\n79.000\n1,026.000\n7104.000\n40,000\n1.083,000\n5055.000\n63,000\n1.314.000\n8,345.000\nTotal Ord.\nBxpen. 319.548,000 338.166.000 350.053,000 357 780.000 39|MJ,000\n THE NELSON DAILT NEWS, NELSON, B.  C. \u2014 TUESDAY MOBNINO, TONE  t,  US1\n^\"gSaWant M aVai-te^A $&.\nOFFICERS ARE\nINSTALLED BY\nCRERAMELSON\nCranbrook Gyro Club Headed\nby C. A. Mittun; Pool\nReports Given\nCRANBROOK. B. O, Jun* I.\u2014\nAt the Oyro meetin* on Thursday.\nat. E. Crerar of Nelson, district\ngovernor ottlclited *t ttie lnstala-\ntlon. and did lt up tn a fitting\nmanner. Tha new o_ttrer_ are:\npresident, c. A. Mittun; vice-president, a. Q. Clarke; treaaurer, J.\nMcLaren; secretary. J. Ellis and\n\u2022e-getnt-at-arms, D.  Orey.\nA report on the swimming pool\nwa* submitted by E. Hogarth. H.\nHawklna won the tint prlae offered by the Oyros for the nearest\nguess to the time the pool would\ntak* ln filling. He guessed 114\nhour*. He also won the aecond\nprlae with his guess of 10ft hours.\nThe club mad* about ago from\nta* contest, which amount wlll go\ntoward   fixing   the   swimming   pool.\nTh* new executive member* spoke\nafter the buslne** had been attended tb. An orcbestr* enter\nt*ln*d.\nCorn Roast Is\nPopular Affair\nat McBain Lake\nMown*. B. c June 1\u2014Alfred\ncummings ls surveying the road\nneed Brlcker's. lit wlll be straightened out, eliminating the blind\ncurve*.\nMl** Albs Sharatta la visiting\nln  town for a couple of dsys.\nThe advanced summer weather la\nmaking parties to McBsIn Lake\nvery popular. Thorns* H. Wilson was\nhost to s number of his Fernie\nfriends on Friday evening when\nbe treated them to a corn roast st\ntb* summer home of J. 8. Irvine.\nMcBain lake. After the oorrt-feed,\nboating and other sports were much\nenjoyed.\nTh* Invited guests Included, the\nMisses Monica and Rita Oufleld.\nEvelyn Austin, Delia Whiteside, Ca\ntberlne Wilson, Mary Currle, Nancy\nHughes, Nessy Maltmsn, Norman\nDouglaa, Mildred Kastner. Isobell\nand Rene* Duncan, Messrs. Al\nbert and Emll Aello, a. Couglan,\nKen and Oeorge Alexander, Doug-\nla* and John Ross. Jack Irvine,\nend   Albert   Asselstln*.\nThorns* Oftakell received * painfull nrula* necessitating hla lay-\nlni-off from work on Friday Willie\n\u2022mployed ln Use rock-crushing g*ng\nof th* provincial public works department. A large rock ahot out\nfrom the Jaw* of the crusher flying over the bins and striking Mr.\nOaskell on the hip. while he wae\nat work loading tbe trucks from\nthe   bin*.\nMrs. R^Haggart of\nTrail Is Visitor,\nBonnington Falls\nBONNINGTON ft\u2014US. B. C. June\n1.\u2014Atrs. Robert Haggart motored\nfnom TraU on Sunday, visiting her\nbrother end slster-ln-l*w, Mr. and\nMr*. Bert McKlm. She was accompanied by Mra. S- C. Brsdshsw.\nwho wlll be the- guest of Mr. and\nMrs. E. J. McGregor for two weeks.\nMil. E .1. McGregor, who hs*\nbeen recuperating at the home of\nher parent*. Mr. and Mrs. A. Stewart, Nelaon. after an operation In\n(he Kootenay Lake Oeneral hoeptisl.\nha*    returned    home.\nMr*, w. C. Motley wss * Nelson\nvisitor on Saturday.\nMr. and Mr*. A. Wllley were motorists  to   Nelson   on   Saturday.\nMrs. R. Greyson was a visitor In\nNelson on Ftldiy.\nMia* Nancy Lee of the Vancouver\nOeneral hospital, who Is spending\na vacation at the home of her\nparent*. Major and Mrs. Turner Lee,\napent laat week visiting In Rossland the guest of Rev. and Mrs.\nD.   S.   Catchpole.\nAl Bervold of Corra Linn was a\nNelson   visitor   on   S*turd*y.\nAfter wsltlng 40 yesrs to receive s\nll-HKoilimi service medal, T Chambers an ex-sergeant major of i\nSurrey company In tne Royal Engineers, wa* presented with lt at\nSouthampton recently. The delay was\ncaused by th* nil* thst the medal\ncan only b* swarded fts vacan-\nles   occur   ln   the   list   of   holders.\nINDEX    TO    CLASSIFIED    ADS\nAOENTS WANTED (11)\nAUTOMOBILES FOB HIRE (411\nAUTOMOBILES   WANTED (421\nAUTOMOBILES  FOB SALE (40)\nBEES (SI)\nBIRTHS (1)\nuu.tis. LAUNCHES FOB BENT (43)\nBOATS, LAUNCHES  FOB BALE (44)\nBOATS, LAUNCHES  WANTED (4S1\nBUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES (30)\nCANARIES  FOB SALE (9)\nCATS AND DOOS FOB SALE (Sll\nCATS   AND   DOGS   WANTED (90)\nDEATHS (8)\nDRESSMAKING (7)\nFARM AND  DAIRY PRODUCE ('<\u00bb>\nFARM PROPERTY FOR SALE (36)\nFOB   SALE   UK   EXCHANGE (311\nFOK SALE  OH RENT (33)\nFiKMMiED KOOMs for rent (i.)\nll'BN MIEIl   KOOMS   WANTED (I e, >\nII KMll RE  KOR SALE (46)\nHELP   WANTED (10)\nHOUSES   FOB   RENT (3D\nHOUSES   WANTED (30)\nIN   MEMORIAM HI\nINSURANCE (S3)\nIME.M.V1ENT8 (481\nLITERARY (\u2022)\nLIVESTOCK   FOR   SALE (33)\nLIVESTOCK  WANTED (34)\nLOST   AND   FOUND (31)\nMACHINERY (SO)\nMARRIAGES (1)\nMINING,   TIMBER.   LUMBER (SS)\nMISCELLANEOUS (291\nMISCELLANEOUS   FOR   SALE (111\nMISCELLANEOUS   WANTED (3\u00abl\nMl SH'AL    INSTRUMENTS (541\nNOTICES (ll\nNURSERY   PRODUCTS <4\u00bb)\nNURSING (141\nPERSONAL (SI\nPLANTS (SSI\nPOULTRY   AND   EGGS (26)\nPROPERTY    FOR    SALE (til)\nPROPERTY    WANTED (35)\nRABBITS   FOK   SALE (IS)\nRANCHES   FOR   RENT (49)\nROOM   AND   BOARD <!*\u2022\nROOMS   TO   BENT (19)\nROOMS WANTED (HI\nSCHOOLS (32)\nSITUATIONS   WANTED (11)\nSTORES   TO   RENT (01)\nTEACHERS   WANTED (13)\nWANT  AND  CLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nOne Insertion  10 centa a line\nSix Insertions 40 cents a line\nOne  month   11.30  a  Una\nMinimum  two lines\nNo extra  charge  If  charged.\nBirth   notice*   fn*   of   ensrg.\nDeaths,    msrrlage*    end    card*    ol\nthanks.   30   oents   per   lln*\nFuneral   flowers   IS   cents   per   Une\nNews  cf  tb*   Dsy   Item*  20  cents\nper   Une.\nNO EXTRA  COST IF CHARGED\nLEGAL NOTICES\nCORPORATION   OF  THB   CITY   OF\nROSSLAND\nTENDERS FOR MOTOR FIRE\nTRUCK\nTenders ar* Invited and wlll be\nreceived bv the undersigned up to\n6 p.m. on Monday. June 8th. 1031.\nfor the supplying of one Bo>.ter\nTsnk Hose Mre Truck as per specifications on fll. In the City Office'\nAll tenders to be enclosed tn a\nsealed envelope and marked \"Tender\ntor   Fire   Apparatus.*'\nThs City council reserve* the\nright  to  reject  \"y^aU^dcrs\nCity  Clerk.\nRosslsnd, B.  C. May 28th, 1031\n(87431\nUNEMPLOYED AT\nCRANBROOK ASK\nMEALS AND BEDS\nDelegation Waits Upon Mayor; Mayor Refuses Meet\nToast  Visitor\nLEGAL NOTICES\n (Continued)\t\nPROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA\n'SECURITY* FBAVDS   PREVENTION\nACT\"\nEUPHRATES     MINING     COMPANY\nLIMITED   (Non-Personal Liability)\nAn Investigation under the provisions of the \"Security Frauds Prevention Act\" ln order to aaoertaln\nwhether any fraudulent act or any\nolfenc- against that Act or the\nregulations has been, la being, or\nls about to be committed by the\nEuphrates Mining Company, Limited, (Non-Personal Liability) wlU\nbe conducted by me at the Court\nHouse In th. City of Nelaon, Province of British Columbia, on Friday, the 5th day of June. A. ll..\n1031, at the hour of nln, o'clock ln\nth* forenoon, standard time, at\nwhich time and place any person\nhaving knowledgs of the mstters\nto  be   Investigated  may  attend.\nDATED at Nelson, B. C, this\n20th  day   of  May,  A.D.,   1931.\nCHARLES BRAID GARLAND.\nRepresentative ln the proceedings\nof the Attorney-General of the\nProvince   of   British   Columbia\n15783)\npEATHS\n(3)\nCHRISTENSON\u2014Hens, eg* 28\nyears. Funeral services this afternoon at 6 o'clock from the Howell\nFuneral   Home. (6812*\nIN   MEMORIAM\n_____\nIn loving memory of our dear\nrelative. Mrs. Gertrude Foe*, who\ndied three years ago today. From\nher mother, father, sister, brother\nand   daughters. ,5813)\n (10)\nHELP    WANTED\nWANTED\u2014PART TIME. OIRL VO\nlook after child and do house\nwork. Room and board provided.\nBox   5733   Nelson   Dally   News.\n15732)\nEARN UPWARDS OF 820 WEEKLY\ngrowing mushrooms for ua -In\nyour cellar or shed. Illustrated\nbooklet free. Canadian Mushroom\nCompany,  Toronto. i6748i\nSHARP  FREEZING  KEEPS\nCORN ON THE COB FRESH\nSharp freezing corn on the cob is\nthe latest addition to the rapidly\nIncreasing list of \"dulck-froeen\"\nfreeh foods. The corn ls frozen\nwithin three or four hours after lt\nIs taken from the field. When It is\nthawed out weeks or months later\nIt possesses the rich flsvor thst ls\nmuch better than the ears of corn\nwhich are sent to the big markets\nfresh.\u2014Cold storage news letter, federal depsrtment of agriculture.\nPERSONAL\n(i)\n\"LUNG   BALSAM\"\nFOB     CATARRHAL     BRONCHITIS,\nChronic pulmonary Disorders. Tuberculosis. Spitting of Blood, also\nnutritious for weak neari and\nother Infection*,   \"\nand\nV.ll.l       Ui._V.IVUO,       .n-lMHU      UM\ndiseases of tb* lung*.   Prlo* 81.60\nMr bottle prepaid.   Also remedies\nfor   every   sickness   and   disease\nMrs. Ann* Penner, 75 Halle'\nWinnipeg. (6700)\nFOR HINT\u2014FURNISHED THREE-\nroomed suite. Apply C. O. Simpson,  218  Baker. (6787)\nONE THRKE-ROOMED APARTMENT.\nPetty Apartment* 210 Fall St.\n(6806)\nHOUSES   WANTED\n(t*)\nESCAPE FROM YOUR LONELY Lul\ncumstsnoe*. Love-hungry ladies\nand gentlemen everywhere sre\nseeking their \"Ideal mate*,\" longing for fitting, congenial compsn.\nlousblp. \"Distinctive Individual -\nlz*d servloe.\" (Sealed) Information free. Plea** writ* today. Box\n1.8-ND. Tiffin. Ohio, U. S. A.\n(5329)\nMADAME    GERTRUDE,    B.I.M.S.\nPALMIST. CLAIRVOYANT. PSYCHIC\nHeader, lltt'. jasper East, Edmonton, Alta. Twenty years e_-\nKrlenci.-, Blackpool, Southport,\ne of Man. Eng. (Four quesflona\nanswered for $1 by mall).    (6781)\nTHE MASTER KEY WILL HELP\nsolve every problem. Mailed to\nany home on receipt of 35c to\nhelp par postage. Address ths\nMatter Key Exchange, P.O. Box\nNo. 377, Lethbrldge. Alt*., Canada. (5793)\nLET MME. FOS8. A8TR0L0G1ST.\nCrystal Clairvoyant, sow* your\nproblems, 6 question* 81. Horoscope Readings 81. fiend birthplace   and   date.     1375   E.   12th,\nVancouver.\n(5782)\nFEMALE DISORDERS AND OBSTET-\nrlcal Specialist. Write to Dr.\nFromm. 6. P.. 6162 Arcad* Bldg.\nSeattle.    Treatment  by  mall\nI      8793)\nWANTED TO ADOPT A BABY BOV.\nApply Box 6774 Nelaon Dally\nNews. (8774)\nSITUATIONS   WANTED\nJill\nHARDWOOD   FLOORINO   FURNISH-\ned, lstd. scraped and finished; old\nfloors reflnlsned.    Estimates given\nfree.  H.   Ronmark.   Phone   186Y1.\n(5802)\nENGLISH WIDOW DESIRES Position as housekeeper, reliable and\ngood cook. Address Box 1456 kelson Dally News. (5741)\nGERMAN. 29, WANTS FARM\nwork, milker end teamster. Box\n6760 Nelson Daily New*.      (5730)\nYOUNG COUPLE, HO CHILDREN,\nwant position aa caretakers of\nApt. Building.    Phon* 47.    (5772)\nFURNISHED ROOMS, for rent    (15)\nFOR RENT\u2014COMFORTABLE FUll-\nnlshed bedroom. Suitable for one\nor two men. Apply 310 Cedsr\nSt. (S748)\nROOM   AND   BOABD\nJill\nROOM AND BOARD FOR RESPECT-\nsble steady men. Box 6738 Neleon Dally New*. (5736)\nBOARD    AND    ROOM\u2014APPLY    411\nCed*r.   Phone 710Y. (6712)\nROOM   AND   BOARD\u2014120   VERNON\nSt. (5738)\nWANTED\u2014SMALL    SUMMER    COT-\ntage for- the summer month* near\nths lake. Apply Box 1031 Trail.\nB. C. (6701)\nHOUSES   FOB  BENT\n_au.\nFOR RENT\u2014JULY AND AUGUST.\n6-room-<j house, fully furnished.\nPhone  664Y. (5761)\nFOB SALE OR RENT;\nFOR SALE OR RENT\u2014SMALL\nhous\u00ab at Sixth and Elwyn St.\nApply Campbell, Fifth and Elwyn St. (5805)\nSEVEN-ROOMED HOUSE FOR\nor sale.   Easy terms    Apply p O.\nBox  316.   Nelson.  B.  C.      (6771)\nMISCELLANEOUS  FOR  SALB      (87)\nMOTORCYCLING, THE SPORT OF\nSPORTS. Any old man with lots\nof dough can drive a car. But,\noh. Boy! A motorcycle\u2014some thrills.\n1-Sth the expense of a car and twice\nas safe to say nothing of speed and\nendurance, we have real good reconditioned motors from 8150 up.\nWrite for Bargain List and Terms.\neasv payment*. Good used Bicycles\nfrom 815.00  up.\nHASKINS   &   ELIOTf\n(Key  makers),   Raleigh   and   Indian\nMotorcycle Service\n1027 W. Pender St.. Vancouver. B. C.\n(5000)\nEASTHOPE   ENGINES =\nMANUFACTURED IN VA:7. =\nCOUVER.   A  model   suitable -\ntor  any   type  of   boat,   both 5\nwork and pleasure,\nEASTHOPE  BROS.\n1747  Weat  Oeorgt*  St.       z\nVANCOUVER\n(6815) =\nINDIAN MOTORCYCLES\nTo whom lt msy concern: Palmer\nRutledge of TraU. B. c, snd Pet-\nmore Broe. of Cranbrook. B. C-, are\nth* only authorised dealer* to eell\nINDIAN MOTORCYCLS8 In th*\nKootenay District. Ir contempist-\nlng buying WRITE only to these\ntwo dealers for literature.      (5704)\n100,000 FEET OOOD USED PIPE,\nall size*, blsck and galvanized,\nlarg* stock of pipe and fittings,\nvalves, etc. Inqulrlee solicited.\nSwarts Pipe Yard. 220 Bast First\nAve., Vancouver, B. C.        (5705)\nWRITE FOR CATALOGUE OF THE\nWorld famous BS.A. Cycles or\nMotorcycles. Cycles trom 655.00.\nMotorcycles from 8275.00. Fred\nDee ey Ltd.. 424 Cordova St.. Van.\ncouver. B. O. (5799)\nFOR SALE\u2014BARRELS. KEGS. BUR.\nlap eacks. white sugsr sacks McDonald  Jam  Co. (8796)\nFCW  SAUt1\u2014TIRE.  TUBE  AND  RTM\n31 X 8.26.    Phone 331R1.      (6814)\nLIVE8TO-T,.    rT   \"T\nHIGH PRODUCINO  LAROE  WHITE\nLeghorn  Breeders  from st,  '\nported directly\nEngland.    81J5\n.   each.\nR. B.  1, Nelaon.\noak  im\nBarro.\nAppleton\n(6619)\nMISCELLANEOUS  WANTED (86)\nWANTED-SET OP SPRING TOOTH\nharrows. For sale, disc harrows.\nMcKlm  Poultry   Farm. (6766)\nWANTED\u2014LAWN    MOWEBS,    ANY\ncondition.    Phons 662Y.     (6763)\nBUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES       (30)\nFOR SALB\u2014FULLY EQUIPPED UP-\nto-dste Cafe on Baker Street as a\ngoing concern. Best Soda Fountain and Ice Cream Parlor Factl-\nItlea ln City with cabaret ln connection. Splendid location. Apply\nM. \u2014 Harper, Court House, Nelson,\nB. O. (6809)\nLOST   AND   FOUND\nLOST\u2014A RED COCKER SPANIEL,\nabout one year old. Return to\nHume   hotel. (6714)\nPROPERTY   FOB   SALB\nJMl\nIHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItlllllllllllllHMIIt\n_E 950  down   and   balance  ss z\nrent,   will   buy  house  with 5\n;     cement      foundation,     fuU z\nj     basement,     open     fireplace. \u2014\nz    Price  83600.\nI 81500. ril\" r00m house. 2 z\nj bedrooms, white plumbing, 5\n:    close   ln.   Easy  terms.\nZ SEVERAL   NICE   HOUSES   AT  Z\n81800 **'lth wmcn' 'oun-  5\nI     dstions.   Very   easy  terms.\nINSURANCE\nZ Let  ue   write  your  Insurance.  =\nS CAR,  FIRE,  LIFE. ACCIDENT.   S\nMortgage Loans arranged.\nI C.W.Appleyard |\nESTABLISHED  16 YEARS\nZ   NEXT NELSON HARDWARE    -\nPHONE 269\n(6807)   3\nI < 1111111M11M111 (11 > I! 118111.111MI _ r 1111 r 111T1\nMODERN 7-ROOMED BUNGALOW,\n3'a acrea, orchard. North Shore\nNelson, or wlll exchange for Victoria, Improved property. Apply\nH. M. Vlnoent, R. R. 1. Kelson\"\n(5725)\nAUTOMOBILES  TOR  SALE\n(4*1\nCHRISTIE TJtUCK AND CAR PARTS\n1630 West 1st Ave.. Vancouver.\nB. C. Largest reliable wrecking\ncompany. Power plants, trailer,\nand part*. (6798)\n114 TON 1027 CHEVROLET TRUCK,\n5-speed transmission, guaranteed\ncondition. Prloe 8225: with steel\ndump body 6325. Kraft's Auto\nWreckage. (67381\nAUTOMOBILES  FOB  SALE\u2014(Ont)\nUSED AUTO PARTS\nFor    Maxwell.    Cher,    Pord.\nBulck,   Overlsnd,    Oldsmoblle.\nStudebaker.   Reo   trucks   ud\noars.    Second-hand   tires,   sll\n\u2022lies.  Writs to\u2014\nWINNIPEO   SCRAP   AUTO\nWRECKING   CO.\n1408   Portsg*   Ave,   Winnipeg\n(S7\u00bb7)\nNKW ENGINES. AXLES, TRANS-\nmissions, frames and all motortruck units, at moderate prices,-\ncan be obtained from the H\u00bbyee-\nAnderson Truck Fi-tory. MS W.\n2nd Ave..  Vsncouver. (67)8)\nPOR BALE\u2014LA SALLE. 8 CTUN-\nder, five-passenger sedan. Run\none season, perfect condition. Por\nsale less thsn half price. A. B.\nGreen Co.. Ltd. ,6758)\nINVESTMENTS\nJO).\nMIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII\nI have soms clients wishing z\n\u00a3 to buy homes. If you wish to S\nz sell\u2014kindly list your property, s\nMORTGAGES\nAlmost   dally   I   hav*   cl- S\nZ qulrles   for   mortgage   loans\u2014 S\nm\\ running   from  8100   and   up- 5\nz wsrds\u2014Interest  6  per  cent.\nS oet your money **fely in- K\nS vested    before    Interest    rates s\nS drop.\nI Chas. F. McHardy 1\nNELSON.   B.   O.\n(8801)  =\niilllllllllMIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlTI\nMUSICAL   INSTRUMENTS (84)\nHIIIIIIIIIUIilllllllllllllllllllllllllMllllt\n2 Conn Trumpet Cornet, gold \\_\\\nZ plsted. In professional plush- z\nS lined   case   (ss   new),   i Price Z\n= 875.\n;    Conn    Symphony   Trumpet, z\n= silver finish, gold bell. In pro- S\n3 feeslonal   plush-lined  cue   (a* s\n= \u00bb\u00bb). 865.\ni    Booaey    Ebonite    Concert e\nFlute. Albert system, ln velvet S\nlined   caae. , Oood   sa   new\u2014 z\n!850.\n;    Boeir\nim  System  Flute,  Ebony,  s\n= Lovely   tone.    In   cue,   com- 3\n:pi-*t\u00ab. 855.\nBoosey   I   Flat   Buss   Horn, 3\n; Class A brass, good as new\u2014  5\n= 875,\n3     Bo\noosey   Valv*   Trombone, 3\n3 :iaas A bra\u00bbs, w new. 8SO. =\nWEBB'S   MUSIC   HOUSE\n= 302-17th   Av*.   w.,   Calgary, :\nAlt*.\n(5755) 3\nTJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiTi\nWILLIS   PIANO,   OOOD   AS   NEW\nPhone   802L. ,5810)\nAUTOMOBILEf  WANTED ISMS\nWANTHJ\u2014USED CAR. AFFIX MX\n28S  Nelson. (fttll\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\t\nAccounting\t\n. PublicA-ooiintant. Nairn\nMunicipal   tnd   Commercial\nAudits\nifitf)\nAssayers\nI. w. Wlddi\n,s\u00bb8su^,Bg\nChiropractors\nDB. GRAY. OIIJEBl nvjr\n-*\u00bb\nDR. 1OTT0N. X-RAT.\nDentlsta\n\u25a0^i^-A^rar^g\nDressmaking and Dedyninw\n~t&mf\u00b0at 5\nNo. 4: alx weeks' summer onus*\nbeginning July 8. wnt* Mssn m\nRogers, Bon _ti Boseland.   ami)\nEngineers\nCHAS. MOORE AltD H. D.\nS^\u00ab!*Blk,'U8l0_^,M8.\nFlorists\nOrtoelle's Orenhouees, Itslsoa.    c\n(BNTi\nnowers and noral\nUn,   cut   flower*   st   eJl   Usm.\nfloral designs.   Phone iff    state.\nJOHNSON'S   GREENHOUSE      \t\n342.    Cut  flowers.    Potted   k___\nsnd   noral   Designs.      \u25a0*'  {ff\ninsurance and Keal ii_g___t_i\nR. W. DAWSON. Beat Mato, nJ\nauranoe. Rentals. Next Htppenfa\nHardware.  Bsksr  St. (55*\nSecond Hand Stores\nThe  Ark.   dealers   in   seoond   ----\nPhone   SM     ^^ mp\ngoods.\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'   TRAN8FKR\nBAOOAGE.pCOAL^NDWOOB\n81.\nATKINSON TRANSFER s-i .-j\nWood.   Long diit.no. b*aia|\n Wood Factory\nLAWSONS WOOD FACTORT .11\nB*ker st W* plesee our\" eve.\ntomer*. (eTn)\nTHE GUMPS-MAYBE IT WAS TWO OTHER FELLOWS\n< rvnbrook. b. c, Jane. 1.\n\u2014The unempin-red of lhe <I1\u00bb-\ntrlrt held a mass meeting Friday afternoon. A commltte**\nHan appointed, and sent to the\nrlty ti.ill tn Interview Mayor\nRoberts. They demanded three\nmealn dally and a place to\nsleep. The mayor tsxe Ilttlo*\nHat lste ctton, but promlwed to\ntake thf matter tip with the\nfltv count*II at the next mefl-\n\\nt\nMr. Robert* refused to meet\nMr. KsK-On, from Vancouver,\n\u25a0flhet had heen wnt to the dls-\nt rict (.oral member?, cf the\ndelrgatton were Fred lohh,\nCharles rhenler and Fll Protak.\nWEINER ROAST IS\nHELD AT TARRY'S\nTwo Real\nBuys\nMEN'S No-Run Rayon\nSilk Combinations.\nPER SUIT\n$1.00\nMEN'S   Rayon   Polo\nShirts. Short sleeves.\nVarious colors\n$1.25\nSEE THESE\nVALUES\nCharles Morrlt\nLimited\nTARRYB. B. C, June 1.\u2014A de-\nllfhtful weiner roast was held recently on the Dodds beach, sponsored by the Young People's club,\nwblch was a wind-up of the a\nson's social affairs, the club having previously put on s very entertaining play. After the weiner\nroast a delicious coffee supper\nwss served. Dancing and games\nwere enjoyed on the beach to\nmusic supplied by Mr. Kellough,\nwho plsyed the accordion, augmented by a gramophone. The lady\nhosteases were Mrs. O. W, Johnson. Mrs. O. Watson, Un. T. W.\nDodd and Mrs.  McLeod.\nThe Invited guests included Miss\nLillian Davidson. Miss Msry Eremenko. Mlse Margaret Sandercock,\nMiss Doris Davidson. Miss Winnie\nMcLeod. Miss Ethel Bhaw, Miss\nKaye Edwards, Miss Chapman, Miss\nMsrlon Johnson. Miss Lillian McLeod, Miss Annie Schwartz, Miss\nEliza Edwards, Mlsa O. Barlee, Miss\nDixie Edwards. Bertrsnd O'Neil, Norman Johnson, Delbert Stanley,\nPrsnk Frisby, Prank McLeod, Oeorge\nWs'.,on. Bob Irving, John Eremenko,\nVernon Johnson, Tim and Bud\nDavidson, Ben Irving, Curly Worely,\nJsck Kellough. Fred Edwards.\nCharles Schlavon. Fred Edward-*,\nTony Schlavon, H. Kellough and\nothers. Tbe Party was kept up\nwith  great  vim until   l  o'clock.\nMrs. M. Irvine and Miss Donnle\nIrving have returned from a weekend   apent   In   Nelaon.\nR. W. Chalmers of Thrums was\na  motorist  to  Nelson  on  Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. M. J. O'Neill of\nMullsn, Idaho, motored through\nfor the we\u00abk-end and were the\nguests   of   Mrs.   M.  B.   Irving.\nHOITH   SLOCAN   BRIEFS\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C. June 1-\"\nMlas    Myrs    Humphry    spent    the\nweek-end st tbe fsmlly home, Summer hill  ranch.\nMr. and Mrs, W. J Tlndsle vere\nmotorlste  to Nelson on Saturday.\nMra. F. Scott, Mtss Monella Scott\nand Miss A. R. Mitchell were among\nUie motorists to Nelson on Saturday.\nUrs. W. A McCabe wss a shopper  tn  Nslson oa Saturday,\n NELSON DAILY M_ttl_.  NLLSO.N,  B.  C. \u2014  ILESDAV  MOBMMj, JIMS\nMarket and Mining News\nFAVORITES GO\nTOPPLING ON\nWAIL STREET\nfet Losses From Two to Six;\nGeneral Motors Hits\nNew Low\nNBW TORK, June 1 (AP)\u2014Tha\nook market gave way to a bad\nof nervea todiy, digging stlU\nleper Into ntw low ground ln the\nnt three million sharea seealon\nnee April 30.\nHat loseaa ranged from 3 to \u00ab\nXnts In moat 0f the favorites.\numerous issues returned coiulder-\nWT larger declines. Th, average\ntea of 48 points wae the largest de-\nU_* ot the year.\nSalea approximated 3,100,000 sharea\nonslderably above noent turnovers.\ntf. S. Steel slumped to 84*\ngainst the previous cloae of 91\nnd cloeed at $814. The net lon waa\nIt-red at four points, lnaamuch aa\nIn atock aold exdtvldend.\nAmerloan Telephone, New Tork\nantral, Baltimore and Ohio, South-\n. .pacific, Illinois Central, Eastman\nkodak, National Biscuit, Oonsolldat-\n1 Oaa, North American and otber\nivorlte, fata up 3 to 3 pointa net.\nuburn waa off IS at th, cloae.\nOeneral Motora and Oeneral Electa both made naw iows. The form-\n' waa heavily aold In the afternoon\nhen one 28,000 share block Chang-\n1 hands at 33. Both Issue, lost more\nan - pointa on tbe day. Kenne-\nitt aaggad with the dividend cut\nom a 13 to gt annu-1 basis. Poods\npeatea w_elr weak performance of\nIday. National Dairy waa con-\nlolously soft, off alz points.\nnoralgn exchanges were strong.'\n\u00abnch and Swlaa currencies rallied\nloronaly, which apparently meant\nat mora fund, wen being reps-\n\u2022tad.\nSterling oablee moved up 1-19 to\nid 8-18. The weak apot waa tha:\nanlih peeeta. which lost about ', j\na cent to establish a record low.\nTha moat important event of the\nmarket today waa tha an-l\nttnoement ot the financing plans\nthe .United Stataa treasury.\nTransactions tn the new bonds cn I\nWhen-issued beala wer, made!\nove par before noon and the price\nvanoed to 100H by the end of\nday.\nMETAL MARKETS\nNKW , TORK. N. T\u201e Juna 1 \u2014\nCopper quiet, electrolytic, apot and\nfutun a'\/,. Iron quiet; No. a P.OB.\neastern Pennsylvania U-11. Buffalo 15-19; Alabama 11-13. Tin\nquiet; apot and nearby 23.40; tu.\nture 23.93. Lead steady; spot New\nTork s.fj; eaat St. Loul, 3.90.\nSine quiet; eaat St. Loula spot and\nfuture 339. Antimony 9.37. Quick\nallver 203. Foreign bar allver tt*,\ncente.\nAT LONDON.\u2014Standard copper-\nspot 135, 17s, 9d; future M9, 10s;\nelectrolytic, spot MO; futur, M0 lOe.\nTin\u2014apot \u00a3100, 15s; future \u00a3103,\n6a. Lead\u2014spot \u00a310, 13a. future \u00a311,\n10s. Zlno\u2014apot \u00a39, 17a, 8d; future\nC10,   10a.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nARE DOWN LOWER\nInternational Nickel and Brazilian Traction Strike\nNew Lows\nMONTREAL, Que., June l.\u2014Tn\nsympathy with the weakness ln\nNew York, prloea on th* Montresl\nstock exchange turned lower with\nle lasues touching new low levels\nfor the yttr or longer, among\nthem International Nickel and Bra-\ntil l an Traction.\nMontreal Power loet two points\nat 40 and Shawlnlgan declined three\nat 35. Nickel and Braslllan were\ncomparatively steady with Nickel,\nafter establishing a new low at 9%,\nadvancing to close unchanged at\n10, and Braslllan recovering from\nthe new low of 12V. to 13, where It\nfinished with a loss of \\k-\nLindsay recorded the largeat lose,\nbeing off six at the new low ot 9.\nwhile power Corporation wae down\nat t% at the new low of BU-\nGoodyear preferred lost 3 at the new\nlow of 1O0.\nNew lows ware establlahed *\u25a0 y\nCanadian Paclflo which aold at 36,\nand then advanced to 264 where\nlt cloeed off %. Maasey-HarrU at\n8%, down \\%, Quebec power at 33*1..\na Ices of Vt. Banque Canadlen no\nNationals at 107^ off H and Mc-\nColl-Prontenao at B-U which closed\nat   f\u00bbV   down   \u2022>*\u00ab.\nTotal sales 41,028 shares; bonds\n\u266687,060.\nWO ISSUES ON\nVRONTO MARKET\nHIT NEW HIGHS\niTORONTO, June 1 (CP)\u2014Two\nWas on tbe standard Stook and\ninlng exchange today mad, new\nths for tha year. OU selections in\nlevy trading touched 10 centa.\nalia B. 0. Pioneer touched $3.35.\nlo, trend on tha whole continued\ntt wtth trading heavier. Salea\ntailed 409.530 aharM.\nDome mines oloaed up- 73c at ,1].\nItier leader, in the (old (roup\nild an edge of aoftneaa. Lakeshore\nD BOO, and Mclntyre 40c.\nNoranda dropped $1.05 to $19.10\ntd Nickel 35c, to a new low of $10.\nspatial and international petrols-\nn each (-fried 33c. Cities Service\ntd   Britlah   American  ware   lower.\nCONTRIBUTION\nTO THE OLD AGE\nPENSIONS IS UP\nOTTAWA, Ont.. June 1.\u2014(OP)\nDominion contributions to the old\nage pension scheme will be Increased to 75 per cent. Premier\nR. B. Bennett announoed In tbe\nhouse of oommons today. At present the Dominion Is paying 60 per\ncent of the cost of old age pensions, the other 60 per oent being\ni provided   by   the   provinces.\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS. Minn. June I \u2014\nPlour unchsnged. In carloads, faml\nly patents 5.15-6.35. A barrel ln oe\npound cotton sacks.\nShipments 49.709 (two daya).\nBran   7.50-11.\nI    Wheat:    no.    1    northern    77Vi\n'rov.:   No.   1  red  durum   99;   Juna\n7(4: July 95H: Sept. 50'<.\nCom\u2014No. 1 yellow 48'.  to 48V4\nOats\u2014No. 3 white 3. .,  to 34.\nPlsi\u2014No.   1   1.3SV>   to   I3t%.\nA Private Income of\n$100 a month for Life\n\u00bb100\nA MONTH\nIf In good\nhealth\nMOO\nA MONTH If\nln Ul health\n\u202210.000\nCASH In caae\nof death\n... from age 55\/\ni Just picture it\u2014At 55, while still well and\nvigprom.tocomeintoa privateincomefovtr\nan?above other revenues), guaranteed for\nthe rest of your life, of $100 a month.\nYou simply make yearly or half-yearly\ndeposit, of an agreed amount for a specified\nperiod, at the end of which you begin to\nreceive a monthly income for life.\nThat'i only part of thc (tory\u2014If, meanwhile, through sickness or accident you\nshould become totally disabled, you cease\npaying premiums and receive $100 a month\nduring such disability. At age 55, the regular income of $100 a month, unimpaired,\ncomes into effect.\nLook how your family is protected -\nShould you die at\u00bbany time before reaching\n55, your faAily receives $10,000.\nFill In and forward this form (which involves\nyou In no obligation) and aiact figures suited\nto your Individual naad wlll ba aant you.\nSUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY\nOF CANADA\nHEAD   OFFICE                               MONTREAL\nWithout obligation on my part, please sand full particulars of\nyour llOO-.-month for life plan aa outlined in your advertise-\n(Nans of Paper)\nTho Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Co. of Canada, Ltd.\nTHAIL\u2014BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nwVwntTATj'-ii Ammonium  Phosphate\nELEPHANT Sulphate of Ammonia\nci\u00abMicAi!'rri:RTiLiM*9 Triple Superphosphate\nSOLO BK NATIONAL FBUIT CO.. NELSON\nrrodncera  and  meflaers of\nTADANAC Le8d-Zinc\nblbcSKS-tic Cadmium-Bismuth\nPREFERENCE OF\nCANADA CUT BY\nNEWBEALAND\nAU Canadian Exports Except\nGum Boots and Paper\nto Suffer\nWEilNGTON. N. Z.. Juna 1 (AP)\nThe New Zealand government today\ndecided that the entire range of\nCanadian export* exoeptinj (um\nboot* and certain claaaea of peper\nand wire ahall be deprived of the\nadvantage of the British preferential Urlff and ahall be placed on\nthe general tariff Hat.\nThe action waa taken on conae\nquence ot failure to reach an agree\nment with Canada regarding reciprocal tarlffa.\nMany United Statea manufacturing concerns bave been maintaining branch factories in Canada to\ntake advantage of the preferential\ntariff rates which had existed. They\nwill now ba deprived of thla ad<\nvantage.\nNo alterations ara propoeed In re\n\u2022pact to Oanadlan motor vehicle*\nand engines, the dutlea on which\nwera Increased laat Auguat, It waa\nstated.\nIn a cablegram to Prime Minlater\nR. B. Bennett laet week Prime Minlater Q. w. l\"orbea, of New Zealand\noutlined the tariff pceltion existing\nbetween tba two dominions, and\npointed out the disadvantages from\nwhich ha aald New Zealand waa\nsuffering. He wu unable to expect\nanything trom further negotlatlona\nat preaent. ha said, although he\nexpressed tha hope the Canadian\nminlater of trade would vlalt New\nZealand to discuss the situation aa\naoon   as  possible.\nNEW YORK S\niock\n4'.\ns\n4%\nAllegheny\t\nei_\nAllied    Chemical 109',\n103%\n104\nAndes   _\nto\n0%\n0%\nAmerican Can _\n05',\n03%\n03%\nAmer   Por   Pow\nt*'s\n23'j\n33%\nAm Smelt tt He\n37-U\n38\n30\nAmer  Telephone 184\\\n150%\n150%\nAmerlc   Tobacco 107H\n103%\n103%\nAnaconda    \u201e\nas\n31%\n31%\nAtchison   \t\n140\n135%\n135%\nBaldwin\t\n10%\n\u2022 %\n0%\nBait   Si   Ohio   ..\n'\u2022.'\u2022\n44%\n40\nBendlg   Aviation\n18\n16\n10\nBeth Steel\n*Bm\n38%\n30%\nCanadian    Paclf\nIt's\n36%\n35%\nCerro   de   Paaco\nl-H\n\u00bb%\n15%\nChee   At   Ohio\n38 li\n37%\n37%\nChryaler  \t\nIS'a\nw%\n14\nCon   Oaa   N   Y\n.MH\n83%\n*\u00bb%\nCorn Product* .\n\u00ab7H\nM*\n50%\nC wrlgbt pld   .\n\u00bb%\nI*',\n71%\n73\nlaatman    Kodak 138\u00bb,\n136%\n136%\nIrle\n15',\n14%\n14%\nFord   Kngllah     .\n10%\nPord   of  Canada\n16%\nPlrst Nat Stores\n44\n41\nPreeport   Texaa..\n35\n34\n34\nOeneral   Motors.\n34 li\n11%\nS1H\nOeneral   Blectrlc\nsss\n16%.\n30%\nOeneral   Foods\n**m\n41%\n43%\nOold   Dust  \t\ntt\nII\n31\nOranby\n11\n10%\n11\nOreat North pfd\n40\n44%\n44%\nOreat   W   Sugar\n7Vi\n7%\n7%\nHowe  Sound   .\n1\u00bbH\n15\n10\nHudaon   Motors.\n13*.\n11\n11\nIns    Copper\n\u00bbH\n6%\nOH\nInter Rap Tran\n30\nInternet    Nickel\n10',\n0%\n10\nInter Tel It Tel\n34 li\n33%\n33%\nKelly Spring\nIH\nIH\nSenn Oopper\nIt',\n15%\n15%\nKress* SB\n28',\n30%\n30%\nKroegg as Toll.\n30',\n10%\n10%\nMack  Hnick\n3-',\n31H\n21%\nMilwaukee pfd ..\n\u00abH\n0%\n\u00ab\u2022*\nHash   Motors\n33%\n33%\n33%\nNat   Dairy   Prod\nSS\n30%\n38%\n!. Power ts Lt\n30%\nHew York Centr\nIt'.\nT\u00bb%\n73%\n\u25a0self oaa &   Kl\n\u202214\n40\n40%\nPackard    Motors\n6%\n8%\n6H\n\u00bbenn    R    R    .\n44 Vi\n43%\n42%\nPhlllipe  Prle\n5%\n6%\n5%\nRadio    Corpora\n14H\nUH\n14\nSadlo   Keith  Or\n13\n11%\n11%\nRem Rand  .... .\n7',\n\u00ab%\n0%\nRock   Island\n35\n33%\n31%\nSafeway   Storea.\n48\n45\n40\n9 Loula  It  8  P\nll**\n10%\n10%\nShell  Union Oil\n9\n4%\n4%\nSinclair   Con\n7Vi\n\u00ab%\n0%\nSouth   Calif  Id\n41'4\n40\n40\nSouth Pacific\n71%\n07%\n00%\nsun Oil of Cal\n34',\n38%\n33',\nStan Oil of Ind\n10%\nSUn Oil of N J\n13%\n31\"%\n33\nSUwart    Warner\n\u2022 %\n\u2022 %\n1%\nStudebaker  \t\n18%\nlt\n16%\nTexaa    Corpora.\n10',\n10\n10\nTexaa Oulf Sul.\nSt\n33%\n34%\nUnion Carbide ..\n45%\n44\n44%\nUnion   Oil   Calif\n17\n10%\n10%\nUnion   Pacific   .\n144%\n141%\n141H\nUnlud   Aircraft..\nS\u00ab%\n33%\n33%\nU S Rubber    .\n10H\n10%\n10%\nU s Pipe __ Pdy\n33%\n30%\n30%\nU S Steel  \t\n88'.\n04%\n03 V,\nWeat Blectrlc\n00%\n07%\n50\nWlllya   Overland\n4\n3%\n1%\nTellow Truck\ntm\n5%\n5%\n:e\nMONTREAL PRODU.\nWHEAT PRICES\nEASE OFF, DULL\nDAY AT WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG, June l (CP)\u2014June\nopened with the dullest trading\nMuloa of many week* on the grain\nexchange today. Wheat prices eaecd\nduring the lethargic marltet, closing\nH to tt osnt tower, July at W\/4\nOctober 00 Ti to tt end December\n82   to   82*.\nCoarse grain aqd cash wheat trading Wae tiso marked by inactivity,\ncaused mostly by tho poor export\ndemand. \"Export shipments over the\nweek   end  wero  light.\nSTRAWBERRIES\nAT COAST SELL\nAT $5 A CRATE\nRichmond, Pitt Meadows and\nHaney Growers Are Ship\nping Fruit\nVICTORIA, B. C, June 1.\u2014Local\nstrawberries are on the market and\nselling at |B per crate wholesale,\nsays the market news letter, department of -agriculture. Victoria,\nIssued from the markets division.\nThese are of the 'British Sovereign\"\nvariety. A number of crates of Magoon berries were sold at a low price\non account of having very little\ncolor and a percentage of rough\nspecimens ln the hallocks. One hundred crates of Imported berries were\nsold at 14.00 per crate.\nHeavy shipments of strawberries\nare arriving In Vancouver from\nRichmond. Pitt Meadows and Ksnoy,\nEstimated half a car wlll be on that\nmarket. Tha quality of the berries\nls good and selling at 20 cents a\nhallock or two hallocks for 3S cents\nretail. All Imported stuff ls cleaned\nup.\nJ. A. Grant, markets represents\ntlve, has left for tbe prairies. He\nwlll be thtre during the berry\nshipping season and will keep ln\nclose touch with the deal.\nWINNIPEO\u2014Car arrivals slnoe\nMonday. May 25: One car of Call\nfornla Blng cherrlea In 26-lb. boxes\nat 1850: two cars of Kennewtck\nstrawberries ln 24-pint crates at\n14.0*0; two Texts bushel cucumbers\nat $3.50 to $4-00: one California\ncelery half crate 14.00 to $0.50: one\nTexas new potatoes, cwt., M.M to\n\u20225.00; five Texas tomatoes, 13.26 to\n13.50 repacked lugs; two Washington apples Wlnesaps, $2.75 to $3-00.\nNewtons. $3.00; three B. C. lettuce,\nsoft leafy heads, comparatively poor\nselling at $4.25 to $5.00. No B. C.\nhothouse cucumbers or tomatoes\nhert, trade consider price too high,\nBusiness ls fair.\nSEATTLE\u2014Berry market firmer.\nreceipts light. Looal berries sold\nmostly at $2.50 to $2-75. Canneries\nsre taking liberal supplies of strawberries and causing light movement\nto market. Eastern Washington\nstopped shipping here early, this due\nto unfavorable market at that time.\nIt ls doubtful if -they will resume\nshipping to Seattle thla season,\nparagus market weaker, demand\npoor, receipts moderate. Best Eastern Washington asparagus selling at\n4 to 0 centa lb., local at 5 to 7\ncent*. First crate of early cherries\nfrom White Bluff received yesterdsy.\nHarvesting of Blng cherries to start\nmiddle of June. Local hothouse to\nmato market weak, best quality at\n22 cente per lb.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nMONTREAL, Que.. June 1.\u2014\nCheese and eggs higher; butter unchanged. Cheese, Ontario, lltt to\nlltt- Cheese, Quebec, 10tt to 11.\nButter. No. 1. finest, fresh, lltt to\nlltt.\nEggs, fresh specials ln cartons,\n28. Fresh extras In cartons, 28.\nFrtsh firsts, carton**, 22.\nCarlot prices of fresh Ontsrlo and\nprairie eggs were fractionally higher,\nextru and first being up \u2022 __ cent\nat 22tt to 29 cents, and l$tt to\nIB cents a doeen respectively. Seconds were unchanged at 15tt to\n18 cents a dozen. British Codumbla\nfrtsh extras and firsts, ln carlots.\nwera also up a tt csnt at 23 tt to\n24 cents and 196 to 20 cents a\ndoaen. Quotations to retailers were\nunchanged and reoelpts wert 1883\ncasts.\nLOGAN & BRYAN\nGtAIN.\n0TOCKS,   BONDS.   COTTON\nMF.MBH9:\nNew   Vark,  Montreal  aa*   Vas-\n.ouver Stork  l._rhanfee, CMcaia\nBoard ot Trade, Wlnniptr. Orala\ntx.hini.,  and  other  trailnt\nexchanges.\nI'BIVATE   KIBE\norncBt:\nVincauvar,  Spokane,   Seattle\nBank   of  Commerce   \t\nDominion Bank  \t\nImperial Bank\t\nBank ol Montreal    \t\nBank  of Nova Sootla \t\nRoyal   Bank \t\nBank   of  Toronto\nAbltlbl Power A Paper \t\nAsbestos  Corporation    _..\nAtlantlo  Sugar    .....\nBall Telephone\nBrazilian TL_ Power \t\nBritish American Oil \t\nCanada Bronx*  \t\nCan. Car tt Hy   \t\nCanadian   Cement\t\nCanadian Cement pfd \t\nCanadian Converters\nCanadian  IndustrU!   Alcohol-\nCanadian  Cottons\nCanadian Steamship Llnea ...\nCons. Mining tt Smelting ...\nDominion   Bridge   \t\nDominion  Olaas   \t\nDoln. steel It Coal \"B\" \t\nDominion Textile  _.\t\nA p Oraln\t\nHlllcrest   Colliers   \t\nLake of the Woods \t\nMassey   Harris   ...\nMontreal  Power      \t\nMontreal   Telegraph   \t\nNational Steel Car   \t\nOgilvie  Milling   ....\nOntario Steel Products \t\nOttawa I. H tt Power  _\nPenman's Ltd\t\nPower   corporation   \t\nPrice Broa ._\t\nQuebec   Power \u2014\t\nShawlnlgan  \t\nSSorwln Wllllamx \t\n8   Canada   Power\t\nBteel of Canada \t\nSt. Lawrence Flour Mills \t\nTuckett  Tobacco\nWabaaso Cotton   \t\nWestern   Grocers   \t\nWinnipeg  Railway  \t\nWinnipeg Railway pfd\n300\nSOS\n301\n3IS\n3S_\n3ST.\n310',\n3*4\nII\n-1',\n13m\n13\u00bbi\n8.18\ntt\n10'1\n\u00bb'_\nSO\n38\nIM\n30\n-\n73\ntm\nS3\n9 Vi\n88\n3\n80\nis,\n\u25a0\u2022>*.\n40\n80\nl\u00bb(i\n130\n13\n' SS\n36\n39\n30\n33 H\n35 >,\n33','.\n33\n38 U\nIS'\/.\n124\n10\n10\nI0V4\n88\n\u2022WINNIPEG (MAIN\nWINNIPEO. Man.. June 1    Quotations:\nWbeat:\nOpen   High   Low Close\nJuly        6\u00bb>4    80',    59       SOU\nOct    tly,   81%   to\", toy,\nDae    63H    S3.,    63       83\nOaU:\nJuly         38*    38H    28'< 38H\nOct    30%    38H    30'.t 38V4\nBarley:\nJuly        31       31       30'i S0H\nOat    33       32',    31\", \u00bb!',\nnax:\nJuly    .....i-_. 104(4  104*4 103V4 10314\nOct  107* 107*  106 108\nRye:\nJuly        36 H    86 H    W. 34*\nOot 37*    38       36* 97\nCash Prices:\nNo.  1 Hard, 69;  No.  1  Nor.. 68*;\nNo. 3 Northern. 68*; No. 3 Nor.,\n60*: No. 4, 48*; No. 6. 46*; No. 8.\n38*; Feed. 88*: Track. SS*: No. 1\nDurum. 7(Jij. Screenings, per ton.\n60 centa.\nPIONEER GOLD\nIS LIFTED 10\nPOINTS, COAST\nDividend Payment Sends the\nPrice Up; Premier Rallies;\nPrices Erratic\nVANCOUVIR. B. c. Juna 1 \u2014\nWith tha exception, of the precious\nmetals group, which waa firm to\nhigher, prlcea were erratic on the\nVancouver stock exchange today.\nSales dropped to approximately 21-\n000 sharea. only 7000 above Saturday's  abbreviated  aeaslon.\nOfficial announcement of a second dividend payment by Pioneer\nOold Mines of B. C created a demand that lifted the stock 10 points\nto \u00bb3J0 bid. Premier .silted from\nsn early setback to close up 1 cent\nat 71 cenu bid. Big Mlasourl, un^er\nselling pressure, dropped to a new\nlow of II oenu, a loss ot 3* cents.\nAside from a 4-cent drop In May-\nland, that touched a new' low at\n26 cenU, prices In the oils ranged\nfrom fractions to 3 cenu In both\ndirections.\nFREIGHT RATES\nON WHEAT DOWN\nNew Adjustment Will Absorb\nFive Cents a Bushel on\nTransportation\nOTTAWA. Ont., June l.-(OP)\u2014\nBy sn adjustment of tbe freight\nrstes on wheat th* Dominion government wlll absorb five cents per\nbushel the oost of transporting sll\nthe wheat produced in western\nCanada, premier R. B- Bennett announced In nil budget speech todsy. Tlie messure is Intended as\na temporary one and will apply to\nthe present  year. ,\nIn some parts of the west, Mr.\nBennett said, there had been a -succession of bad harvests. Indications\nwere that owing to lack of moisture\nthere would be a crop failure In\nmany parts this year. Two things\nhad to be done, those who had a\ncrop had to be assisted and provision had to be made for those\nwho had no crop at all.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAconda   ...\nArno    \t\nAJax    \t\nAmulet   \t\nAssociated\nArea \t\nBalflc Oil\t\nB   A   OU    \u2014'\t\nBldgood    \t\nBarry   Holllnger\nBig Mlasourl \t\nCalmont    \t\nClerlcy     -\t\nDome  ......\u2014\t\nEastcrest     -\nPalconbrldga  \t\nOoodflsh\t\nHome Oil \t\nHarker Oold \t\nHowey\t\nHolllnger   \t\nHudson   Bay\n.01\n.08 V,\n1.30\n.18\n.10\n.03\n.06\nsss\n.04',\n\u2022It*\n.30\n.08\n.08\n13.10\n.25\nSO\n.05\n.40\n.01H\nM%\n8 JO\n360\nInternstlonal   Nickel        10.00\nKeelly\nKlrkland Late ., _\nLake   Shore\t\nMacassa     \u2014\t\nMsndy   \u2014\t\nManitoba Basin\t\nMclntyre\nMining  Corporation  _\nMaylsnd    -\t\nMurphy\t\nNew Imperial Oil  \t\nNipisslng   \t\nNoranda   \t\nPend  Oreille ._..-\t\n.35\n.80\n38.35\nSt\n.10\n.04\n31.00\n3.06\n.34\n.03\n10.00\n1.00\n16.35\n.80\n.70\n.55\nia'i\n.60\n.43\n.03\nEGG MARKETS\nOTTAWA. Ont.. June 1.\u2014(Of)\u2014\nOanadUn egg markeU an again\ndisplaying a firmer tone,\nTORONTO: Brokers ara making\nsales of graded shipments from\nOnUrlo polnU at extraa 30. flrsU\n17-17H; seconds 14-16. wholeaale\nprices to ratal! etorea ara extraa\n33-31,    flrsU    10-30,   seconds    17-18.\nMONTREAL: Oraded shlpmenu on\nspot are selling at extras 38, flrsU\n18, seconds 16. CarloU from the\nPrairie provinces for future arrival\nara being offered at extras 38,\nflrsU   IS,   seconds   18ft:\nWINHIPKJ: Dealers continue to\nquote producers and country shippers for eggs extras 14, flrau 13,\nseconds  S.\nKWONTON: Paying prloes to\nproducers for egga extras 18-17,\nfirsts 14-15.  pullet extraa 13-14.\nCHICAOO: Spot 1814, Juna ttor-\nage pack 17'\/.. Nov. refrigerators\n..V,.\t\nCHICAGO GRAINS\nPUSHED DOWN\nGrains Are Dominated by the\nDownward Trend of the\nStock Markets\nCHICAGO. June 1 (By John P.\nBoughan, Associated Press market\neditor)\u2014Dominated by stock market down turn* all grains swept\nlower today with wheat and corn\noutdoing tha cea\u00abon's low record.\nSetbacks of grain values were in the\nface of continued government sponsored purchasing of cash wheat st\npegged prices much above the current quotations on July wheat contracts representing the new 1931\ncrop.\nWheat cloeed unsteady 1\", to 1%\noentg lower, corn H to 114 down.\noata at M to H decline\/ and provisions 12 to 15 cents up.\nINSURANCE FROM\nFOREIGN COMPANY\nWILL BE TAXED\nInsurance  Not   Licenced  in\nCanada to Pay Tax on\nGroes Premium\nBUSINESS ABOVE\nPROSPERITY LEVEL\nOF THE YEAR 1926\nVolume of business In Canada\nshowed further moderate Improvement ln April over the level of the\npreceding month, according to The\nFinancial Post index. The index, at\n139.1 ln April oompared with 136.8\nIn March, was nearly 3 per cent\nblgher ln the month under review.\nThe up-to-date low point of the\npresent depression was touched ln\nFebruary and since that time two\ngains of moder-ft*-* proportions have\nbeen recorded.\nBusiness operations ln Canada are\nnow about 18.4 per cent below normal. The normal line er Um of\nlong-term trend was determined\nfrom the original index for the\nperiod from January, 1919, to the\nend of 1938. The post-wtr period\nwaa * time of more sapid expansion\nthan ln probably any other period\nof similar duration in the history\nof Canada, spectacular gains were\nmads ln manufacturing capacity,\nhydro-electric power development\nand mining resources. Some re\naction from the superactivity of\nthose years would naturally have\nbeen expected even without the\nintervention of a world-wide depression  of major  proportions,\ntt Is noteworthy that the index ln\nApril was higher than the monthly\naverage for 1926. a year which at\nthe time wsa considered to be a\nperiod of moderate  prosperity.\nPremier  Oold\nSherrlt  Oordon\nSan   Antonio   .\nSudbury Basin\nSlscoe    \t\nStadacona   \t\nTech    Hughes      6.P0\nVlpond 75\nVentures - -.        -40\nWright  Hargreaves  -       3-70\nWaits Ackerman         JO\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nwnrNIPDO. Man. Juna 1.\u2014Re-\ncelpui. Cattle 1970; calves 620;\nhog*  1030: aheep to.\nSteers, up to 1050 lbe; Oood arsi\nchoice \u00ab..7_   to  1539.\nSteer*, over 1050 pounda: Oood\nand choice $6 to $9.78.\nHeifers: Oood and chalce It 60 to\nW.\nFed  Calvea:   \u00bb5   to   15 60.\nCow*: Oood 13.35 to 13.75; canners and cutter* $1 to ai 60.\nBulla: Oood list to *350.\nStockrr and feeder ateera: $3.50 to\n$4.35.\nStock cow* and  heifer*. Oood $3\nto   $4.\nMilker* md (printers: $25 to\n\u2022DO.\nVeal e\u00bblve\u00bb: Oood *nd choice $6\nto $7.\nHot*: Select bacon $1 per head\npremium; bacon $7.38: butchers $1\nper  head   discount.\nLamb*: Oood handyweljht spring:\n$11 to $12 food yearlings $8 50\nto  $$.\nSheep: Oood heavies $3.80: good\nhandyweight $4 to $4.60.\nCANADA BOND.S\nWINNIPEO. Man.. June I-Quotations on victory bands for $1000\nare aa follow*:\nWAR    LOAN:\n1031.  5  per  cent   101.15\n1837. 5 per oent 107,80\nVICTORY   LOAM:\n1033. 5.4 per oent 104.70.\n1034. St.   per  cent   104.70.'\n1037, el*, per oent lll.to.\nWAR  LOAN   RENEWAL:\n1031.   6V_   per   cent   102.30.\nREFUNDING    LOAN:\n1043. 5   per   oent   104.80\n1140.  4'4   per  oent   101.00.\n1044. 4V_   Per   cent   101.00.\n1048. i'A,  per cent  102.\nCONVERSION   LOAN:\n1088. 4ti  per oent 10140 to 103.\n1687, 4',_  per oent 103.36 to 103\n1188   4V.   per  cent 104.35 to 108.\n1*60, 414   per  oent 104.88 to 108.\nFrance   ni ,s   mom;  wheat\nOTTAWA. Ont., June I.\u2014(CF)\u2014\nPremier Bennett stated that, aa a\nresult of errangemeate made with\nFrance, that country haa bought\nthla year six tlmee more wheat\nup to the end of April than ln\nany past year. At least ona third\nmore wheat ha* been aold thi*\nyear   by   Cspada   than   ln   the   past\nThe receipt In Montresl recently\nof four carloads, eighty head, of\nbeef cattle from Macleay ranch at\nHigh River, AlberU. mark* the\nrounding out of the beef grading\npolicy of the dominion department\ncf agriculture. A beautiful lot ef\ncattle, fifty-four head grsded red\nand twenty-lour blue; they proved\na speolal feature ln chain atore merchandizing la which quality la featured, in no place ln Canada I*\n\"branded beef more popular, or\ngrowing more rapidly In popular\nfavor thsn In Montreal.\nOTTAWA, Ont., June I.\u2014(OP)\u2014\nAmong the budget taxation changed\ntoday ara the following.\nInsurance companies other than\nltfe and marine insurance companies and fraternal benefit socle-\nties, ar* taxed one per oent on\nthatr net premiums received by\nthe companies In Canada.\nCanadian property owner* who\nhave Insure, their property with\nBritlah or Foreign companies, etcetera, which are not licensed In\nCanada are taxed 16 per cent of the\nffroae premium* they have paid\nduring the preceding calendar year\non  and   after  October -1,   1931.\nThe terms of the resolution follow:\n1. That every Insurance company\nother than life and marine Insurance companies and fraternal\nbenefit societies, shall pay for consolidated revenue fund a tax of\none per centum upon the net premiums received by the company In\nCanada, on and after the first day\nof October.  1131.\n2. That every person resident In\nCanada who Insures or haa Insured\nhla property situate ln Canad*. or\nany property situate In Canada In\nwhich he ha* on insurable Interest, other than that of an Insurer\nof such property, with any British\nor foreign company, association of\nparson or underwriters not licenced\nunder tba provision* of the Insurance act to transact business ln\nCanada, ahall, on or before the\nflrat day ot March in each year,\nbay for tlie consolidation revenue\nfund a Ui of 16 per oent of the\ngroes premium* payable during the\npreceding calendar year by *uch\npersona for \u00bbuch Iruurance effected\nor in force on or after the flrat\nday  of  October.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW YORK, N. Y., June 1 \u2014\nSterling exchange Irregular at\n$4.84 0-33 tor 00 day bills and al\n$4.88  0-18  for  demand.\nCanadian   dollar*   1-18  cent\ncount.\nMarks 28.74 cent*.\nKronen 28.79*4  cents.\nFrancs  3.01   16-16  ctnU.\nLire 8.23 ft   oents.\nNelson approximate sterling ax-\nchange rate $4.88 0-18.\nTORONTO UST\nFALLS OUT OF\nSYMPATHY, N.Y.\nOnly Moderate Trading; Oil\nGroup Is Generally\nSoft\nMINES\nBid\nBig  Mlsaourl    Jl\nDuthle\t\nOeorgla River  031.\nIndependence     -\nKootenay   King    -\nMorton   Wolleay    -   .01'i\nNational   SUver    -\t\nNoble Five       04\nOregon   Copper   \t\nPremier     ,71\nPorter  Idaho\t\nReeves McDonald ..\u2014_.\nReno   Oold     .11\nRuth Hope \t\nSllvercreet         .Olvl\nSnowflake    \t\nTopley Richfield\t\nOILS\nA p Con_olldated \t\nAssociated     \u2014 -\nc and \u25a0 Landa _  \t\nCalmont    \t\nDalhousl*     ....__\nEaatcreat  _-\t\nFreehold      \t\nKargal\nAak\n.22\n.08\n.03'i\n.01\n.01\n.03\n.02 li\n.08\n.05\n.04\n.25\n.33\n.08\n.0914\n.0114\nIllinois Alto\t\nMcDougsll Segur Ex \t\nMcDougall Segur New\nMercury      \t\nMcLeod \t\nMayland   .... ......\nOkalto Nsw\t\nRoyallte    -.\n.18\n00\nso\nM\n.30\nM\n.0414\nM\n.01\n.04\n.03\n.17*\n.10\n.23\n.08\n6.00\nTORONTO. June 1 (CP)\u2014Lower\nground waa reached on the Toronto\nstock exchange today In moderate\ntrading. The decline was in sympathy with a sharp drop tn New York.\nAggregate turnover amounted to\n33.383 share*.\nGoodyear common broke tili pointa\nto close at a new tow of 7414.\nMontreal Power was off 4 to 40.\nPower Corp slso closed at h new\nlow of 40. Shawlnlgan touched 36.\nclosed at 37'.,. All traction Issue,\nwere slso pronouncedly soft. Bra-\nrlltan was down 1413. C. P. R.\nlost >, to 35',. Base metals were\nlower. Smelters waa off 2 to 73.\nInternational Nickel closed at OH\noff   tk.\n\u25a0 The oil group was aenerally soft.\nBritish American was off ',. Imperial off 14 and Internstlonal Pete\noff T,. Flour milling Issues were\nlower. Page Heraey broke sharply to\nclose at 81 aad other steel Issues\nwere lower.\nFor Sale\nD. C. MOTORS AND\nGENERATORS\nELECTRICAL\nSUPPLIES\nLAMPS\n18 lo $$ watt, per carton\nof  $.  $1.41.\n100   watt.  Inside   frosted,   per\ncarton  of  6,  92.80.\nINSTALLATIONS and\nREPAIRS GUARANTEED\nJ. F. COATES\nELECTRICAL   ENGINEER\nNelson.   &   C.\nBex  Ilii! rhone  ?U\nKENNECOTT   pIVIDEND   DOWN\nNEW TORK. June 1\u2014Kennecott\nCopper Co., director* today reduoed\nth\u00ab annuel dividend b-ul* on the\n\u2022tock to $1, from 92. by declaring i\nquarterly payment of 35 cente a\nshare.\nMystery shrouds the aecret of the\ncontent* of two ireen deed boxee\nbelonging to th* late Oilbert Billot t, London sportsman, who died\nreoently and whose wtll order* that\nthe  boxen be destroyed  unopened.\nCREDIT\nrom* MOXT\nVALUABLE\n= Af\/ET-\nDEAD!\nLAST WEEK has passed away.\nWrapped in the shroud of the past, it is but a memory.\nPeople have no time to bother their heads about LAST\nWEEK.\nThey are interested in the news of the DAY.\nThat's why they buy more newspapers in a day or a\nweek than any other publication. The newspapers tell the\npeople the news of the DAY.\nLAST WEEK is buried. If you have something to sell,\ndon't let it be buried with LAST WEEK.\nSpread it out on a newspaper for TODAY'S eager\neyes to see.\nAnd for TODAY'S itching dollars to buy.\n MOB   TWELVB\nMechanical Boats\n85c to $3^0\nSAIL BOATS\n25ct0 $1.00\nMann,Ruther\u00a3ord\nCompany\nIS YOUR CHILD\nBACKWARD?\nDon't blsme tb* teacher 11 join*\nchildren'* mftrk* ta school sre\nnot cox a par with their clsse-\nmstes'. Often children who *re\nmentslly slert lag ln their stud-\nin owing to their Inability to\nsm  normally.   .\nJ. 0. Patenaude, R. 0.\nOptom*tri*t   ud   OpUclsn\nSxpert Optical  Service\nWATCH FOR OUR\nWEEKEND   SPECIALS\nHORSVVILL BROS.\nPHONE 235\nA. D. PAPAZIAN\nWATCHMAKER\nJEWELER,\nand Graduate Optician\n\u00abU   HALL   STRUT\nPHONE TAXI\n77\nFreight Schedule\nPally te Rossland\nand  Troll, IS am.\nBCD   STEVENS\nProp.\nTrail Fhew 133\nGLASSES\nJ.A.C. Laughton, R.O.\nOTTOMITRIST   sni   OPTICIAN\nlutta IM-tM. Medlcsl Arts Bldg.\nFor\u2014\nSERVICE\nPRICE and\nQUALITY\n.-\u25a0L.GROCERY-&.\n10-PHONE-11\ntn! NELBON VABtY NMTS, NELSON, B. C. \u2014 TUESDAY MORNING, JUNE I, 1M1\nIIS,\nLIQUOR NOT ON\nCAMPBELL PLACE;\nCASE DISMISSED\nMagistrate   Finds   Campbell\nDidn't Control the\nGoal Cellai\nMANY POINTS ARE\nRAISED BY COUNSEL\nOwnership Could Have Been\nConstrued If Liquor \u00bb\non premises\nOn tbe ground thst the crown\nhad not proved that Alex. Campbell,\nproprietor of tbe Hex bar, bad\noccupancy of the basement in which\nthe secret cache of liquor waa\nfound by the provincial police ln\ntha raid of May 8, and thus bad\nfailed to fulfil the onus on it.\nMagistrate William Brown Monday\ndismissed the chsrge against Campbell of having liquor for sal* on\npremises for which ba liad a traders\nlicense from the city.\n_.. Q. Matthew, counsel for the\ndefendant, wbo bad commenced\nFriday afternoon his summing-up\nof the evidence in tbe caaes. and\ncontinued on resumption of tbe case\nMonday, held tbat tbe onus of\nproof was on the crown all along\ntha Una, and that this onus was\nnot satisfied.\nOWNERSHIP   NOT   PBOVTD\nSetting forth tliat ownership of\nthe liquor hod not been proved at\nall, there being nothing to connect\nthe defendant with the cache found,\nand also that tbe cache was not on\ntbe premises connected with the\nRex bar, not even ln tbe ooal cellar\nadjacent, whlcb, though Campbell\nsaw to the buying of cool and paying of a Janitor for tbe owner of\nthe block, Mrs. M. Scally, Mr. Matthew held that the defendant had\nfully shifted the onus of proof,\nwhich would hav* been on his\nshoulders    had    the    liquor    been\nLAMBERT'S\nKr*frut snd  Befreihlnc\nTALCUMS\nOne pound  Speclsl\n-in*     35*\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription   Specialist\nPHONE   1\nSHOP Witk Us  by MsU\nffi\u00ab*fff\"\"\"ff_inr \"'\"\"\u25a0'\u2022'''\u25a0''\nYes-We're\nAlways Susy\nThe reason of course being that our customers\nare satisfied. If you are\none of them you know\nthis. If you aren't, then\n__ job done by us with\nour Goodyear machines\nwill make you one.\nOnr flexible oak-tan-soles\nfor ladies work is undoubtedly the best yet.\nWade's Shoe\nRepair Shop\nWARD ST.\ni_mmmim\\mimmw_mm_ii_\nLUMBER and\nBUILDING MATERIAL\nLEAVE it up to your contractor. Experience\nhas taught him the advantages of building\nwith our materials. We promptly fill all orders\nfor millwork, laths, sashing, shingles, etc., and\nmeet specifications accurately.\nA* H. GREEN ltd.\nrSuccessors to John Bums it Son)\npr A\\'T   -<\"  moNT tt.\nand SALES OFFICE\nA1TPTPPC  \"i\" w*\u00abn *-T.\nWe Have Been Appointed Agents for the\nGENERAL ELECTRIC\nREFRIGERATOR\nQUIET,        EFFICIENT,        ECONOMICAL\nI x-l Us Show You Its Good Points and if You\nPurchase You Will Enjoy Unfailing Service\nDay After Day, Year After Year.\nWood-Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWholesale - NELSON, B.C. - Retail\nfound    on    hla   prem line,   -to   tbe\nshoulders of tba crown.\nHe quoted a decink-n of tbe supreme court of Canada Where it\nwaa held that if ownership was\nnot proved, finding of a small\nquantity of liquor actually on the\npremises was not sufficient to convict. In that ca_e tbe onue Was\nput ou the crown even though the\nliquor   wes   on   the   premises.\nOn the matter of the basement\noff which the cache was found being not under Campbell's control,\nbut open to the public, be quoted\na Chinese case at Trail, ln whlcb he\nhimself had appeared, where on\nappeal tt was found that the plaoe\nof concealment, a wood pile, waa\nnot under the control of the proprietor accused, aa It waa open to\nthe public.\nMUST PROVE IN\nBEODLAR   WAV\nIf the crown did not prove tbat\nthe liquor was found on the prenri-\nlees controlled by Campbell. Mr.\nMatthew argued, then the onus waa\non lt to prove ownership ln the\nregular   way.\nHe submitted that tbe oourt\ncould not go against sworn testimony of the defenoe when tbe onus\nwas not  on the defence,\nTo this last contention, Magistrate\nBrown answered that sworn testimony was overruled in many cases.\nlf there was a special clause ln\nthe act.\nMr. Matthew argued that all. that\nthe crown had proved ln this case\nwaa tbe finding of liquor. If it bad\nbeen found on the defendant's\npremises, the onus would have been\non him unde> the act to prove lt\nwas not hla. but since it was not\nfound on his premises tbe onus\nof proving a connection between\nhim and the liquor was on the\ncrown, and no such connection had\nbeen proved.\nIf   the   court   did   not   acquit   in\nthis   case.   Mr.   Matthews   suggested\nthen    liquor    could   be    put   near\nanyone,   and   hla   arrest   follow.\nGARLAND .ASKS\nCONVICTION\nC. B. Oarland, ln asUng for a\nconviction, quoted the dictum made\nby Mr. Justice Martin that the\npurpose of the Government Liquor\nact wae to suppress the unlawful\ndealings with liquor. Opportunities\nto obtain proof of sale were minimised by the caution exercised by\nthose concerned, and thus the act\npermitted Inferences to be drawn\nfrom circumstances, and in certain\ncases plaoed the onus on the defendant  or  proving  Innocence.\nWhile Mr. Matthew contended\nthere was no overt act proved on\nthe part of Campbell, yet tbs having\nof barrels of empty bottles was\nclearly an overt act. The brewery\nman swore he handled from Campbell up to 10,000 empty bottles a\nmonth, and sometimes the odor of\nliquor from them wu offensive. He\nsubmitted dealing ln empty bottles\nwaa not a business lt was Judicious\nfor CamiA>eU under the circumstances  t<> engage  ln.\nCONTROL   ACCESS\nTO   CACHE\nThe secret pi see where tbe liquor\nwu found was within five Inches\nof ths coal tfOeement over whlcb\nCampbell finally admitted ha had\ncontrol. The defendant had not\nshown it wu under the control of\nanybody elae. Campbell admitted he\ncontrolled the ooal and the furnace.\nand  be  had  the  key   of   ths  bark\nMM\u00abI\nFor Wedding\nGifts\nSILVERWARE\nii always tht\nCorrect   Gift\nWhether it be a Bee-Bon\ndish or a Tu-set, Silverware\nIs correct\u2014especially the\nfamous 1881 ROGERS\nSilverplata.\nfloor, -and   could  keep  out  anyone\nhe desired.\nDeductions were alio drown by\nMr. Garland from the empty bottles\nthat contained some liquor, the\ncrown counsel stating hla worship\nwu entitled to ask whether it wu\nreasonable that empty bottlea dealt\nIn should be ln that oondltlon.\nAlso within flee inches of tbe\nground the defendant controlled\nwu 36 bottles 6f beer, beside other\nliquor, in all a large quantity. Tbe\ndefendant absolutely controlled the\nground over which anyone would\nhave to psss to get to this liquor.\nIn view of all the clrcumstsnoes,\nthc empty bottles, quantity of beer,\naccessibility, he argued hla worship\nwu  entitled  to  convict.\nWhen the defendant claimed to\nhave been In those premises for 17\nyears, wltb tbe exception of a short\nperiod, without knowing of the\nexistence   of   the   secret   compart-\nmt, hla worship wu entitled  to\nquestion   whether  that   plaoe   could\nhave been put in without his knowledge snd consent.\nMA1.INTKATI-:    IU. VIEWS\nIn rendering judgment, Magistrate\nBrown sold lt wu setobllshed that\nthere wu a secret cache of liquor,\nwtth a triA door, a large quantity\nof liquor In lt, and up stairs a\nlarge accumulation of empty beer\nbqttles. These constituted circumstances from which be would have\nno hesitation In construing ownership if the liquor had been found\non the premises.\nBut the lease from Mrs. Scally\ndid not cover ths area where the\nliquor wu found, and according to\ntbe evidence of tbe architect, the\ncache wu five inches away from\ntbe cool cellar.\nEvidence wu given that the defendant want to tbe ooal room from\ntime to time to ses whsn tbe oool\noeeded replenishing, and also that\nhe paid the Janitor. It wu also\nshown that the basement wu open,\nbroken only by partitions. Did these\nfacts prevent the plaoe from being\nunder the defendant's\" control?\nDID    NOT    CONTBOL\nQuoting from tbe dictionary. Magistrate Brown said to control meant\nto direct,.regulate, manage. He did\nnot think that the defendant could\nbe said to have control of the\npremises where the liquor was\nfound.\nAs to tbe word, \"occupy\", he\nfound that Campbell had no legitl\nright to the five Incbea of apace\nmentioned, that Intervened between\nthe coal cellar and the cache. He\nwu therefore satisfied lt wu not\nproven that the defendant occupied\nthat part of tba basement.\n\"I think It must be proved in\ntbls cose that tbat part of the\nbasement wu occupied by the defendant,\" stated the magistrate,\n\"and it ls not sufficient to show he\nmight havs used It surreptitiously\nwithout legal right, or even\nopenly, or that no one else bad a\nright to use lt.\"\nHe then dismissed ths charge.\nCOUNCIL PLANS\nONE BYLAW TO\nCOVERJRAFnC\nCommittee Appointed to Put\nAH Rulings Under One\nHead\nALL NIGHT PARKING\nPROBLEM DISCUSSED\nAldermen Want Action' and\nEnforcement; Report on\nMonday  Next\nGovernment to Aid\nVerterinary Service\nUnorganized Places\nThe provincial government hu decided to give financial aid for the\npurpose of maintaining a veterinary\nservice ln the unorganised districts\nof tbe province, namely -- Bulklry\nnod Nechako valleye. Cariboo-Chll-\nootin country. Peace River block,\nand tha Columbia-Kootenay valleys.\nIt Is hoped that tha amount offered\nwlll Induce veterinary surgeons to\nlocate or remain ln theee districts\nso that in addition to doing inspection work for the government\ntheir services may be available to\ntbe formers. Co-operative assistance la alao to bs glvsn to flvs\nof ths rural municipalities on application to tha department of'agriculture. Tbls assistance wlU be\noffered on a A0-BO basis with the\nmunicipalities.\nArising out of a discussion on the\nproposed bylaw to prohibit all night\nparking in certain sections of the\ncity, Mayor J. P. porgan on Monday\nnight appointed Aldermen R. W.\nDawson. J. B. Oray and S. H.\nSmythe to go over all traffic regulations with the idea of consolidating them Into one bylaw which\ncould be rigidly enforced by the\ncity.\nAlderman Dawson declared that\ntht all night parking prohibition\nwu too big a problem for snap\nJudgment. It -wu hard to define\nterritories. He suggested that the\nhours at which parking would be\nIllegal should be bewteen 8 a. m.\nand 0 a. m. Then, he declared,\npresent traffic bylaws wers net lived\nup to. He suggested action at once,\nu local garages were losing money\nthrough delay. Hs suggested tba\nnaming of a  committee to  act.\nMayor J. P. Morgan's question.\n\"Ars you ln favor of enforcing the\ntrafflo bylaw?\" brought a lengthy\ndiscussion. The aldermen favored\nenforcement.\nAlderman J. B. Oray said tbe bylaw should be forgotten lf the\ncouncil did not Intend enforcing it.\nIt wu ridiculous to have laws and\nnot enforce them. Hs believed if\nths bylaw wu enforced an extra\npolice   officer   would   be   needed.\nDiscussion brought objection from\nths aldermen to long parking on\nBaker street during buslneu hours\nand of trucks loading from Baker\nstreet entrances Instead of alley\nentrances.\nAlderman J. B. Oray\u2014I Suggest\nwe put  on  a  traffic officer.\nMayor J. p. Morgan\u2014The police\ncommission is st preaent recommending the employment of another   poilce   officer.\nAlderman W. R. Campion favored\ntbe parking restrictions. Local gar-\nagemen wltb large Investments were\nsuffering.\nOn motion -of Alderman R. W.\nDawson and Ross Fleming, the\nmayor appointed a committee to\nreport  on  Monday   next.\nMATCH BLOCKS TO\nBE SHIPPED FROM\nCITY TOENGLAND\nEmployees at Local Factory\nPack Blocks for Shipment\nFrancis McOollln of Philadelphia.\nAmerican composer, hu been awarded tbe MOO prise of the National\nFederation of Music clubs in iu\neleventh prise competition for American   oompossrs.\nTAXI\nPhon*\n^\\^^ 1*' Ant et Aenlc,\n^ig_\"\"*B C_re.nl, court roil,\nArnWAAW Drl.en\nNalaon Trtruftr Co., Lid.\nLET US SUPPLY\nYOUR\nPICNIC NEEDS\nKishing Tackle. Film, Cameras, Candies, Boxed Choc-\noates, Pie Plates. Sandwich\nPaper, Bathing Caps, Beach\nBags, Toys, etc., etc.\nLeave yonr Verichrome or\nordinary film with ua for\ndevelopment.   Best results.\n'Always at Your Service\"\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNrifton'* ni.pen.Inr rh___l.-_\ncall and  ret  jour  correct\nweight  tree.\nPHONE   M BOX   1*13\nTha pocklni of two c\u00bbr\u00bb of match\nbloc*i, daetlMd to be mads Into\nmatchd Id London, Em, li now\nUse m\u00bbln occupation of the employee, tt tin w. W. Powell com.\npany'a ratten block ftctory os tho\nwatw front. P_c_*d ncitly in M0\nboiet, etch weighing tat pound-\nwhen full, th\u00ab blockt will be trint-\nported to Vancouver by rail tnd\nthence to .Emi\u00bbnd -It the Panama\ncantl.\nA atetdy movement of match\nblocka hu been maintained by the\nlocal fictory to tho cistern Ctnadt\nmarket lor t considerable period\nlhe weekly shipment belnf four ear.!\nTho entire summer supply of logs\nsome 2.500,0*0 feet, which Is to be\nused In the mtnuftcturlng of\nmatch blocks, u now ln. Shipment*\nof match block lumber are, however\nmoving In from various district\npointa.\nTRAIL ELKS HOLD\nPICNIC, CASTLEGAR\nTRAIL, B. C. June 1\u2014Trail Elks\nstaged their annual picnic at\nCsaUegar Sunday, a baseball game\nand races being the main attractions.\nP. HcCIements. H. J. Jackson. J\nVannatter. R. Laurie and H. V\u00ab*ey\ncomposed tho commute* ln charge\nof   th,   affair.\nNEWS OHHE DAY\nOrUzelle's    for    bedding    plants\nOpen   evenings (M85)\nReliable   plumbing   and    heating.\nJ.  Relsterer,  Phone  6S_1__.      f.iat)\nQueen   Olty   Rebekah   Lodge   No.\n.   I,  O.  o.  P..  meets   tonight  t\nI\nI\nI\nI\nBIRCHWOOD\nTHE IDEAL FUEL FOR YOUR\nFIREPLACE.\nIn 12- and 16-inch lengths.\n12-inch lengths ..: $8.00\n16 inch lengths   9.00\nPut in your orders while it lasts.\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI Nelson Transfer Co., Ltd. |\nPhone 35\no'clock.\n(S_0_>\nOrliieUo'a tm bedding plsnts.\nOpen   evenings. .6760i\nPora Rent\u2014 Single Housekeeping\nrooms, also two-roomed suite. An \u25a0\nnable  Block. (MIS)\nWanted\u2014Strawberries. Raspbon.es.\nGooseberries. Red Currants, Black\nSl^r\u2022\u2022nt\u2022'.. WadiWrlea. Cherries.\nPlums.   McDonald Jam Co.    ,i5_03i\nSt. Paul's Women's MIsslontry society will hold t tet tnd btke suit\nat home of Mrs. Jack Morris, ooracr\nSeoond tnd Cottonwood streets\nThursdsy afternoon. (5011)'\nNOTICE\nPollow \"Joe Vingo snd his orchestra\" to Salmo June 2, for t\nreal   good   time i&T\u00ab3>\nMemben of the Vest Lodge sre\nrequested to attend th. funern;\nservice for our lste brother. Han,\nChiiatenson, at Howell Puner.U\nHome..  8:90  p.m..  June  a.   1981.\n  (Mid)\nAn   Rrtraortllnary   General   Meet\ning of the Nalson Branch Canadlen\nLegion will be held at Legion H.Q.\nTonight at g p.m. sharp All Active\nmembera ln good standing particularly requssted to attend.        (M04>\nWeet Kootenay Central Farrnjre'\nInstitute annual meeting at Robeon,\nThursday. June 4. 10 30 s.m. Hon.\nWilliam Atkinson, minuter of agriculture, and H R. McLarcy of Summerland will sddress the delegates.\nAnnual reports. Ali feigners snd\nIrult   growers   welcome,\nK. Wallace. Boewell.\n19114\nFAIL TO ANSWER\nDOOR-BELL FOR\nENUMERATORS\nNelson census enumerators Monday met with ono' or two caaes\nwhere reeldences gave every outward Indication of having Inmates\nat home, suoh as smoke Issuing\nfrom the chimney, cr other signs,\nyet no response was made to the\ndoor-bell.\nCommissioner c. D. Blaokwood.\nwho Is In chart* of th* census for\nKootenay West, expressed th* hope\nMondsy night that throughout the\ndistrict citizens would be expecting\nte visits of the enumerators and\nwould oooperato wltb them In getting through their work expeditiously\nCONCRETE SLAB\nPLAN FOR FOOT\nSTANLEY STREET\nCity   to   Improve   Approach\nOff Baker Street; Order\nWalk Widening\nMotorists driving up Stanley street\nfrom Baker etreet. trill ln the near\nfutun, make tbe llrst approach on\nStanley street on a oement alab to\nbe constructed by tbe city public\nworka department. Thla wag the decision of the city oouncil Monday\nnight. It was pointed out that cart\nstarting up the hill kept the weat\nside of Stanley street ln constant\nneed of repair.\nIn addition to building this slab\nthe council instructed the department to construct 50 feet of aide-\nwalk four feet wide from Baker\nstreet to Stanley street alley and\njoining the preseat oement sidewalk. This work will do away with\na strip of earth between the present\nsidewalk and the street curbing.\nORDER REMOVAL.\nOLHUILDING\nPropfrty on Water Street Is\nConsidered Menace and a\nFire Hazard\nA building on Water street belonging to the city, and for which\nan offer of |300 was made to the\ncity council on Monday night last,\nwill be dismantled. On motion of\nAlderman R. W. Dawson the council turned the matter over to the\ncity engineer with the recommendation that the building be taken\ndown with as little expense as\npossible.\nAlderman Dawson, a fire warden,\ndeclared that he was absolutely\nagainst repairing the building, and\nthat aa lt stood a was a decided\nfire menace. Straw and refuse Uttered the place, and the building\nwas used as a home for transients.\nBarnett Pays $75\nFine for Offence\nUnder Liquor Act\n?. M. Barnett, proprietor of :he\nKootenay hotel, pleaded guilty In\ncity police court Monday to a\ncharge of having liquor on hts\npremises elsewhere than in a guestroom, and was sentenced by Magistrate William Brown to pay a line\nof 175, or alternatively, to aerre 30\ndays ln jail.   He paid tbe fine.\nTbe Kootenay hotel was one of\ntwo places raided by the city police\nlast week.\nMiss Marguerite Caldwell\nPopular   Bride-Elect\nIs Honored, Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY. B. C. June 1.\u2014Honoring Mlsa Marguerite (Peggy) Caldwell, a popular bride-elect, Mrs.\nFrank Carlson entertained at a delightful bridge and miscellaneous\nshower at her apartment In the\n-Globe hotel Wednesday evening-\nBridge was played the first part of\nthe evening when the honors were\ncaptured \"by Mrs. Fenton Smith and\nMlas Caldwell. A gaily decorated\nbasket containing many beautiful\nand useful gifts was then carried ln\nby the Uttle Misses Mamie Mahaffle\nand Betty McLeod, who were dainty\nln frocks of yellow organdie. Tbe\ncolor scheme being mauve and yellow, a profusion of lilacs decorated\ntbe rooms. The invited guests included Mrs. Fenton Smith, Mrs. C.\nPhillips, Mra. Hitnley, Mrs. C. Foote.\nMrs. O. Mahaffle. Mra. F. Ma Inter.\nMTs. J. Holland, Mrs. Chambers.\nMrs. D. A. McKlnnon, Mrs. c. Crls-\nford, Mrs. Halpln. Mrs. H. McLeod,\nMrs. Clerff, Mra. Caldwell, Mlas Helen\nWorth and Mlu Caldwell.\nMr. and Mrs. Lloyd Crowe returned home Thursday night after\na week's holiday at Calgary, Alta.,\nand other prairie points.\nMiss M. Douglas returned Thursday from a few days' vlalt at her\nhome In Calgary, Alta.\nMiss Kathleen McKlnnon. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. A- McKlnnon.\nwho has spent the past several\nmonths In Boston, Mass., and Nova\nScotia cities, returned home Tuesday,\nMrs. D. Knickerbocker has bad as\nher gueet for a week her mother.\nMra. Berle of Calgary. Alta.. and her\nsister, Mrs. Johnson of Coeur\nd'AIene, Idaho They left Saturday for Coeur d'AIene where Mn.\nBerle wtll visit for a month before\nreturning  borne.\nMr. and Mra. Allan Keer and aon\nJackie left Friday by motor ror a\nfew days holiday  at Banff, Alta.\nATTENDANCE GOOD\nAT BALFOUR SCHOOL\nFOR MONTH OF MAY\nBALFOUR, B C June 1.\u2014Follow-\nIni ar. tbe nun\u00ab of children wbo\nhave had perfect attendance for\nlUy it Baltour echool, percentage\ncf ettendence 98 30 per eent:\nDick Attree. Matthew Aylmer,\nMabel Conrad, Petty Cooper, Geoffrey Hartrldle, Henry Hartrldge, Nora\nHartrldge. -Janet Holt, Audrte Hud-\neon, Ray Hudson. Kthel Ling. Bob\nNoefces. Charlie Hnakea. Connie\nNoumea, RM-I Weaker, David Feacbe)\nW. R. CAMPION\nGROCERIES\nOUR PHONE NO. IS 121\nLet  sss  t\u2014m  yonr  tint et  ttab\nmonth   orders.   We   oan   plow\nyou ant eare yon money.\nTiptop Creamery Batter.\nt lbe.  for  A  M\nsplnarb, 3 lba. for     .If\nRhubarb,   lb M\nOreen Onlona, a noacnee \u2014   -It\nNew Cabbage, t lba. for \u2014   At\nHead   Lettuoe,   Hothouae  Ta-\nmatoea,  Green  Onlona aad\nRadlahea.   BanrtM,  Grapefruit.\nSPECIAL\u2014Oranges, 3 dot 59\nDI.I.IVKRII.N   THICK  DAILY\nI NULL and  FAIRVIEW\nan WILL CITT\nNOXIOUS WEEDS\nTo Clean Up the Recreation\nGrounds' Grass; Engineers\nio Confer\nThe city of Nalaon will employ\none or two men to cut weeds\nthroughout the city. Alderman -._>\nW. Dawson on Monday night pointed out that the Noxious Weeds act\nwaa not being enforoed. The council will Investigate the rights of\nthe city to order cutting of noxious  weeds  on  private property.\nAlderman J, B. Oray brought up\nthe question of long grass In the\nRecreation grounds. City Engineer\nAffleck stated that a power mower\nwas now repaired and would be\nput   to   work   at   once.\nThe matter of weeds on the street\nrailway right-of-way waa referred to\nCity Engineer Affleck and Electrical\nEngineer  Fleet.\nTO LOOK OVER\nLOCAL BUILDINGS\nBELIEVED MENACE\nThat there were numerous buildings throughout the city whtch\nwera menaces aa far aa fire was\nconcerned was the declaration of\nAlderman R. W. Dawson at Monday\nnight's city oouncil meeting. Ra Inquired If there were any laws by\nwhich these buildings could be\nordered   destroyed.\nMayor Morgan declared that it\nwas the duty of tbe fire wardens*\nto report on such matters. An Investigation  will  be made.\nCITY TO REBUILD\nLOW LEVEL WALK,\nLAKE TO VERNON\nSubject to approval by the dty\nsolicitor, the city will rebuild a\nportion of sidewalk between Lake\nstreet and Vernon street. The oouncil proposes a six-foot walk on tlte\nground level, but plaoed four feet\nfrom the street line. Prem the\nwalk, steps would be built to the\nChinese stores aerved by this walk.\nThe approach to Vernon street\nwould be by means of steps This\nwould do away with high trestle\nwork, at present considered in a\ndangerous  condition.\nAuxiliary to Have\nShower for S. S. Van\nSoon, South Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C. June 1.\u2014\nThe Woman's Auxiliary adjourned\nfor the aeaaon at a meeting held\nat the home of Mn. O. w. Humphry\npresided over by Mrs. J. Murray.\nThe financial atatement showed the\nspring sale of work had netted *45.\nThe balance In hand was $69.18.\nIt waa arranged to have a ahjwer\nof canned goods and supplies for\nthe Sunday school van which la expected in the district shortly, The\nmembers were Invited to attend the\nquarterly meeting of the diocesan\nboard to be held in the Bonnlngton\nhall about the middle of June. The\nmeeting adjourned till Septemoer.\nMrs.   Humphry   served   tea.\nPrior to the closing meeting Mrs.\nWheildon entertained the members\nat her home for one of the meetings   during   the  month.\nPage McPhee, Kaslo\nPiloted W. M. Archibald\non Dominion Flight\nKASLO, B. C, June 1.\u2014J, J. Blnns\nhaa returned from a visit to Nelson\nand Fernie.\nAlderman A. L. MacPhee was a\nTrail vlaltor Thursday, visiting his\nson, D. Page MacPhee, C. M. & S.\natr pilot, who piloted C, M. Archibald In hla recent flight from Vancouver to Halifax and return.\nMrs. Jack Paterson was a Nelson\nvisitor Saturday,\nHenry Beck spent Saturday ln\nNelson.\nBruce Orady of Nelson waa a\nPrlday visitor in Kaslo.\nMrs. E. H. Latham was a week-end\nvisitor  In  Nelson.\nR. E. Crerar, Nelson\nIs Visitor at Elk\nSession, Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B. C. June 1.\u2014The\nrcgHlar meeting of the B. P. 0> E.\nwaa held Thursday evening. An\nout-of-town gueet at Miq meeting\nwas  R.  K   Crerar of  Nelson.\nThere was discussion of a wrestling match to b* held undsr >ha\nsponsorship of the Elks about tne\nmiddle of June, but only tentative\nplana   were   made.\nA young swindler, who uses roller\nskates to escape haa been working a ruse on several South London\npost offtcei. The Juvenile crook ls\ndescribed M a chubby-faced bqy\nof not more than 12 years, well\ndressed and of engaging personality.\nEver   Svwidav    the   Rev.   Edmund\nReal Comfort for\nWarm Weather\nFor warm weather\nlounging aa well aa\n\u2022sleeping, feather weight\npajamas have dignity in\naddition to serviceability. We have chosen\nthese carefully so that\nyou may choose carelessly.\nPlain colored Broadcloth or fancy patterns\nmade with elastic waistband.\n$2.25 TO $5,50\nIDEAL TAILORS\nand DRY CLEANERS\nWard Bt. Neit to CM.\nI-lririph   onto*\nButts Mads to M_a.ro.\nDo-cl. anlnt   and   FrtaalBg,\nAll-ratlou   and   Bapalrlut\n44 Taxi and 44|\nTRANSFER\nTHAII.   and   ROH.MND\nFBJ-IUHT   and   EXI'KE.S\nSchedula\nDall;   to   Trail,   leaiea   10   a. a,\nTAXIS   DAV   AND   NlUUt\nOK\n\u25a0*\u25a0\"-_.'\u2022*\nICMiTMRMTTM\nNAME\n'ITTASTIS\nIfOOO\n\u2022\u2022      \u25a0>*-,\n-*ren*e-\nOXY-ACETELYNE\nWELDING\nMachine Work\nBennetts Ltd.\nTWO ..ROW*  NIGHTLY\nI AND a r. M.\nMATINEE r. O'CLOCK\nTODAY\nA THKIll.INd STORY Or\nBRILLIANT I'HINENE DETEC\nTIVE WHO -CARRIER ON.\" EV\nERYTHINtl IN THIS P1CTUH\nTO   MAKE   IT   INTERESTING.\nMYSTERY,\nDRAMA\nSUSPENSE\n(OMEU1\nEarl Deer Bigger'-.\nGreat Novel\n'Charlie Chan\nCarries On1\nWith.\nWARNER 0LAND\nJOHN    (IARRHK\nMARGUERITE   CHURCHILL\nCOMEDY\nLAUREL and HARDY\n\"BE BIG\"\nMUSICAL\nTED    LE-pIS\nIn\n\"THB IIArriNKHK  REMEDY\"\nFOX NEWS\nW\u00abDN\u00ab8D_lY-THUR8DAT\nGreta (Jarbo\nwith\nROBERT   MONTGOMERY\n\"INSPIRATION\"\nINKP\n\u25a0Ji-\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1931_06_02","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0403887","@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":"1931-06-02 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1931-06-02 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\/1.0403887"}