{"@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":"2021-12-05","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1936-04-25","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404857\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" um\nHockey Association Ends the      **hoyincjal ti brai\nSeason With Balance victoria I l\n*-Pa&e Four\nVtf\nDod_ers A\u00a3ain Beat Giants; Cup\nFinal, English, Today\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\nVOtUMI SS\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-SATURDAY MORNINQ. APRIL 26. 19SS\nNUMBER  4\nKING OF ITALY TO RULE ETHIOPIANS!\nBritish Government Gets\nMackay 30-Day Reprieve\nATTORNEY SAYS\nBRITISH JUSTICE\nNOT ILLUSTRATED\nThinks Interference Is\nan Insult to U. S.\nSupreme Court\nBRITISH SUBJECT\nSAVED BY HOUR\nMacKay and Another\nSlated to Hang for\nKidnapping\nSAN   FRANCISCO,   April   24\n(AP)\u2014Crltlclim of \"Brltlih juitice\" wu voiced tonight by in\nofficial after appeals of British\nauthoritiu  won  a  reprieve for\nAlexander MacKay ai hi wilted\nfor the ilgnal to walk to the gallows. Both Joe Kriity and MacKay had  bean  administered  the\nlut ritei of the church when tha\nllfe-uvlng newt cami.\nTonight as new moves were planned tor the two kidnappers, Dlitrict\nAttorney A. E. Bagshaw, ot Marin\ncounty, who prosecuted them, iaid:\n\"Apparently Great Britain appliei\nher  principlei   of   Juitice   only\nwhen her citizenry is jeopardized\nby criminals and not when her subject! commit crimei in the United\nStatei. It ii my personal belief that\nGreat Britain's Interceding wai in\ninsult to the supreme courts ot thil\ncountry.\"\nLess thai* an hour before the two\nwere to drop through the trip In\nCalifornia's tint hanging under the\nnew itate kidnapping law, Governor Frank F. Merrlam ordered a\n30-day delay. It was the lecond reprieve he had granted them.\nDr. Robertson 52,\nNot 62, Years Old\nHALIFAX, April 24 (CP) -\nNow If Dr. D. E. Robirtion had\nbun a woman tha newipipermtn\nwould be In hot water.\nBut u he recovarad In hotpital\ntonight from th* effects ef hll 10\ndayi ef hunger and expeiur* In\nMoou River gold mine, tha doctor wu juit imuied when he\nlearned the acrlbblin htd addtd\n10 yuri to hll age.\nMrt. Robertion, however, told I\nfriend she winted tht papen to\nknow thi doctor wu 52 and not\nS2 aa previously reported.\nSht tddtd that Dr. Robertson\nhad uld he \"couldnt expreu hll\ngratitude\" for ill that hid bttn\ndont fer him.\nWeolth May Go\nto Scadding\nHALIFAX, April 24.-<CP)-Al-\nfred Scadding'! hopei for wealth\nfrom the Mooie River Gold mine\nmiy yet be realized\u2014not trom the\ngold, but trom the fact he lived for\n10 dayi ln an underground civern\nwhere he ind two otheri were entombed by i cave-In.\nRecovering from hunger ind ex-\npoiure ln hospiUl here today, he\nreceived an offer of $500 a week to\nmake penonal appearance! tor a\ntheater chain.\nNewipapen offered him varioui\namounts for ligned artlclei ind\nbroadcasting companiei aiked him\nto name hli price to tell the itory.\nWOULD  CLOSE  SUEZ\nEDINBURGH, AprU M \u2014 (CP\nHavas)\u2014The League of Nations union aiked the government to cloie\nthe Suez canal to halt the Italo-\nEthioplan war, Lord Lytton, former\nBritiih delegate to Geneva, revealed here tonight.\n'The union have come to the concluiion that the lituation ii dei-\nperate and have called for desperate methods,\" Lord Lytton declared. \"They decided the war ln Ethiopia can be itopped and the Leigue\nof Natloni aaved if the government\nwill act up to iti profusions.\"\nKING FUAD SERIOUSLY ILL\nCAIRO, April 24.-(CP)-King\nFuad of Egypt, his physician! disclosed tonight, is seriously Ul and\ngrave tears are held for hli recovery.\nDRILL FOR OIL IN A CITY\nREGINA, April 24 (CP)-An oil\nsyndicate, acting with approval of\ntbe city council ot North Battleford,\nhas been granted permission by the\nSaskatchewan natural resourcei de*\npirtment, to drill for oil within the\nboundariei of that city.     *.\n\"Ring\" of Doctors Perform\nIllegal Operations in South\nHighly Organized Ring Directed by Leader\nin Los Angeles; Doctors Wear Masks;\nOperate in Coast Cities\nSAN FRANCISCO, AprU 24 (AP).\n\u2014Dr. Charlei B. Plnkham, lecretary of the itate medical board, disclosed in amazing detail today the\nactivities of what he uid was \u25a0\nhighly orginized cout-wide ring\nof doctors md laymen in the business of performing criminal operations to prevent childbirth.\nHe declared the ring wu directed\nby a leader In Loi Angelei, through\nwhom offices were rented, soliciting agenti operated, and through\nwhich money wu distributed in \u25a0\nwide circle to organize and protect\nwhat he deicrlbed u a rich lource\nof revenue.\nThe ring hu set up a subsidiary\nsyndicate which finances operations\nfor impoverished women, and collect! their earningi for t long time\nthereafter.\nDoctors wore muks when consulting prospective patient!, the\nmedical official declared, and this\nfact, together with natural reluctance of the women who patronize\nthem to testify, made gathering\nof evidence very ilow work.\nLos Angelei md Hollywood, SeatUe, Portland, Oakland, Ski Joie,\nLong Beach and San Diego were\nfieldi of acUvity, Dr. Plnkham uid.\nTO PROBE AT BEATTLE\nSEATTLE, April 24 (API-Deputy Proiecutor B. Gray Warner uld\ntoday that Seattle angles of a so-\ncalled cout-wide \"chiln itore abortion ring\" disclosed by a high California medical official, wlU \"certainly be investigated.\"\nSEARCH FOR \"CZAR\"\nLOS ANGELES, April 24 (AP).-\nSeirch for i min described u the\n\"czar\" of an illegal operaUon syndicate with i monthly \"take\" of\n$90,000 wu itarted tonight by the\nCalifornia itate boird ot medical\nexaminer!.\nDr. William R. Molony, president\nof the board, uid the mm is i\nwealthy Sin Franciscan, a nonmedical man who has forged a virtual chiln itore lystem upon the\nlurgeoni who perform the operations.\nThe entrepreneur of the racket,\nnld Dr. Molony, operated a finince\ncompany which sometimes charged\nexorbitant rates to the patlenti. The\nuiual price for the operations, he\nnld, wu SSO each.\nDr. Molony declared that occasionally laymen performed the illegal operation! on women.\nLIES HELPLESS AS\nCOAL-KNIFE NEARS\nWELCH, W.Va., April M.-(AP)\n\u2014Clarence Puckett, pinned to \u2022 coal\nmine floor by an avalanche of ilate,\nwitched for two houn todiy whUe\nthe blade of 1 coal-knife machine\ncut lti way toward him.\nBeiide him lay the body of\nThomu G. French, a fellow worker.\nHe had been cruihed under the\nslide.\nPuckett'i icreimi were unheard\nby worker! in other pirti of the\nrnjne.\nDuring the third hour, Louli\nVargo, another miner, found Puckett and turned otf the motor of the\nmachine. A large rock, resisting the\nknife, uved Puckett.\nHe wu taken to \u2022 hospitil ln lerioui condition.\nLout His Lift in\nAlberto Flood\nATHABASKA, Alta., AprU 24-\n(CP)-.niMMy to climb i tree to\nwcepe from the iwirllng flood water! of the Athabaska river at Houie\nriver coit the lift of Joe Dohildion,\nveteran northern tripper, iccording to in eye-wltneu iccount retching thii letUement today.\nWith two companion!, WiUiim\nLet and George Cinntmon, Jr.,\nDonaldion wu ileeping in hll cabin\non tht bank of the river when they\nwere awakened by the sound of\nruining water. The flood hid covered the floor of the cibin to i\ndepth ot two feet \u2022\nThe three ruihed Into the night\nbut found their way to higher\nground cut off. Lee md Cinnamon\nclimbed up treei but Donaldion\nlelzed a upllng which he wu unable to climb.\nWhUe hli companion! watched\nDonaldion wu dragged awiy by\nthe charging current.\nFewer on Relief\nin B.C.\nVICTORIA, April _4.-<CP>-\nWith 1SO0 men leu ln reUef cimpi,\nBriUih Columbia'! total relief roll\nin March wai illghtly leu than in\nFebruary, according to official\nfigurei made public by the reUef\ndepartment The total ln March\nwu W,t83 and in February 100,323.\nWOULD  INCLUDE  IMPERIALS\nOTTAWA, April 24,-(CP)-A\nsuggestion that former memberi of\nthe Imperial army, now reiiding in\nCanidi, who htve come to thil\ncountry since the war, be placed on\nthe ume fooUng with regird to\npenilons ind other mitten u Canadim ex-ieryice men wai made to\nthe parUamentary committee on\npeniiom today by Captiin Eric\nBrowne-Wllklnion of Winnipeg.\nPOST  OFFICE  PROFIT $3,008yOOO\nOTTAWA, AprU 24 (CP)- The\npoit office depirtment hid in operating profit of $9,000,000 In the year\nending In March, Poitmaster-gen-\neral Elliott reported to the houie of\ncommoni todiy. Net revenue totalled $32,507,400.\nNelson Man Wins\nThird Prize for\nHousing Design\nOTTAWA, April 24 (CP) - W.\nRalston, Toronto architect, wu\nawarded the first prize ot $900 in the\nDominion Homing let design competition, Finance Minister Charlei\nDunning innounced today. Two\nthird prizei of $100 etch went to\nArthur W. Davidson, \u2022 Brockville,\nOnt., md W. F. Williams, Nelson,\nB. C.\nW. F. Williams is \u25a0 new Nelwnite,\nhaving come from Montreal, whence\nhe wu sent by the firm of architects\nfor which he worked, to supervise\nthe ConitrucUon of the S. G. Blaylock residence on the north shore.\nMr. Wllilami, who livei on the\nNorth Shore, recenUy opened an\noffice ln Nelion u in architect. A\nfew dayi ago he tent forward houie\nplant he had drawn for the Houiing\nact compeUUon.\nW. M. Myen, whom The Nelion\nDaily Newi enlisted to locite Mr.\nWilliami, wu the tint to congratulate him on hli lucceu. Mr. Williami rang up The Daily Newi to\nuy he hid heird nothing yet from\nOttiwi, but wu deeply gratified it\nturning he wu among the winnen.\nTrans-Canada\nAirmail Soon\nOTTAWA, April 24.-1CP) - A\ntrmi-Canidi airmail service from\nHalifax to Vancouver, li being considered by the gpvernment, Post-\nmuter-Genertl Elliott told the\nhouie of commoni todiy. Plms\nwere not idvineed to tht itage\nwhere it wu poulble to estimate\nwhen lt would itart\nReplying to Howard Green, (Corn.\nVincouver South) the postmuter-\ngeneril uld the trans-Cinida system had been coniidered by the\nprevioui government but nothing\nitirted. The preient administration\nwu liw considering It.\nPANQBORN   AFTER  RECORDS\nLOS ANGELES, April 24.-IAP)\n\u2014Clyde Ptngborn, trmi-AUmtic\naviator, li tuning up two airplanei\nfor ambitioui ilr adventurei\u2014record distance ind globe-circling ittempti which would possibly Include refuelling in mld-iir it\nEdmonton.\nHe want! to break the world's\ndistance record of 5657 miles Kt\nby M. Rossi ind P. Codoi of Frmce\nin 1933.\nThen he wtnti to fly non-itop\niround the world, with two, or poi-\nilbly thrtt refuelling contacts ln\nmid-air, i thing never before ittempted.\nTO   PROBE   CIVIL  IERVICI\nPROBLEMS\nOTTAWA, April 24 (CP)-A par*\nUunentiry committee will be appointed during the preunt parliament to Inquire Into civU wrvlct\nproblemi, Finince Minliter Dunning innounced ln the Houit of\nCommoni todty. He made the promiie writer thli year to a icrvlee\ndelegation.\nOTTAWA FAVORS\nMAIL DELIVERY\nTRAIL, NELSON\nCities Entitled  to  It\nSays McLean, Back\nFrom the Capital\nHON. I. MACKENZIE\nLOSES HOLIDAYS\nEsling Out of Ottawa;\nNotes a Change\nin Business\n\"I believe if Nelion oxerU enough\npreuure at Ottawa there li no\ndoubt in the world the department\nwill place the city on i house-to-\nhouse postal delivery plin\" stated\nD. D. McLein, candidate in the lait\nDominion elecUon, who returned\nThunday from a trip to Ottawa.\nWhile in the capital he Interviewed heidi of vtrioui department!\nmd leirned thit both Tnil md\nNelion were cntlUed to posttl delivery services. Mr. McLean pointed out that money for the plan wu\n(Continued on Pagt Twelve)\nNO SCRIP YET IN\nALBERTA\nCALGARY, April 24 (CP)-Cer-\ntificitei but not icrip had been dii-\ncuiud bjr Uit Alberts cabinet si *\nmethod of payment of wagei in\nconnecUon with the province-\nhighway conitructlon program tor\nthe coming summer, Premier Aberhart nld in an Interview here tonight on hii arrival from Vincouver\nwhere he ipent a ihort holidiy.\nNothing definite wu decided,\nhowever, Mr. Aberhirt idded, u to\nwhether cerUficatu would be uied\nat piyment, how the plm would\noperate or what form the cerUficatu\nwould take. The Social Credit premier uid there wan nothing he could\nadd to that \"We hiven't mide up\nour mlndi definitely.\"\nTwice-Daily Air\nTrips, Vancouver\nto Seattle, May 1\nVANCOUVER, April 24.-1CP)-\nTwice dilly lervice from Vmcouver\nto Seittle, connecUng with California, the midwut and eait, will be\ninaugurated May 1 by United Air\nlines, R. F. Ahreni, dlitrict traffic\nmanager, announced today.\nPlanei will luve Vancouver at\n9:30 a.m. and 6:29 p.m., providing\nan overnight aervice to louthern\nCillfornii and 20Y\u00bb hour aervice\nto. New York.\nWalter Canon, vice-president of\nthe Vincouver botrd of trade, todty opened the compiny's new office In Vmcouver.\n10 Cart of Ties\nRoll, Invermere\nINVERMERE, B.C., April 24\u2014\nShipment of railroad ties It bilng made, tht 'flntl lotdi bilng\nhauled In from tht winter's cutting In tht woodi.\nUp to date then havt bten 10\netrloadi ihlpped out and mort\nwill go eut within the next week.\nHer Husband Safe\nMn, Alfred Scadding of Toronto, atiund thtt htr huibind\nwu uft In thi civtd-ln Moose\nRlvtr mini, left Immidlitily fer\ntht rttcui Kint. Illnui of hir\nbiby diughter had prevented htr\nfrom travelling earlier.\nSCADDING HAS\n\"TRENCH FEET\";\nROBERTSON O.K.\nDoctor Is Moved to\nHalifax Hospital\nBy Plane\nTELLS OF FIRST\nDAYS IN TOMB\nSpecial Equipment to\nRelieve Pain of\nScadding\nBy RALPH MORTON\nCanadian Prtu SUff Wrltir\nHALIFAX^ April 24 (CP)-A le-\nquel to the dramatic reicue of two\nmen from Moose River gold mine\nwas ln progreu here tonight as doctors tried to ease the pain ot Alfred\nScadding, suffering from \"trench\nfeet\" cauied by hli imprisonment\nfor 242 houn underground.\nAmputation was \"not being coniidered at the present time,\" said\nDr. H. K. MacDonald in reporting\nfrom the hospital. He added Scad-\nding's general condition was \"good.\"\nLater tonight Major Stuart Graham, Canada1! impector of civil aviation, reached the hoipital with\nspecial medical equipment for treatment of the patient. Flying through\na sleet itorm after leaving Montreal,\nMajor Graham brought his plane\ndown at Moncton md cime to Halifax by car.\nMeanwhile the condiUon of Dr. D.\nE. Robertion, who, with Scadding\nmd the body ot their dud companion, was taken from the mine\nearly Thursdiy morning, wu Improving npidly.\n'There li no cause for alarm over\nUie condition of Dr. D. E. Robertson.\nNo complications ire evident,\" uld\nDr. Micdonild, physician ittending\nUie distinguished Toronto surgeon.\nThe otftch-1 Bulletin iuued by Dr.\nMicdonald read: \"Dr. Robertson's\ngeneral condition Improved sufficiently during the night to illow\nhis tramfer to Halifax at noon today. He itood the trip well and ls\nnow resting comfortably in hospital.\nNo. complications hive developed.\"\nDr. Robertson confirmed the belief held by his mine manager, F. D,\nHenderson, that wispi of imoke seen\nby reicue worken Eaiter Monday\nwere sent up by the Imprisoned\nmen u signals to the outside world\nthat the three men still lived.\nWALKED UNDERGROUND\nFor five days they walked the\nunderground tunnels of the gold\nmine, hope of reicue diminishing as\ntime paued and no rescuers appeared.\nOn Saturday afternoon the diamond drill broke through and communication with the surface wai\nmade early Sunday morning. Food\nind supplies were sent down the\nnarrow tube. Early Monday morn*\n(Continued on Page Two)\nFour-Legged Chicken\nIs Held to a Draw by\na Web-Toed Pigeon\nCLOVERDALE, B.C., April 24.-\n(CP)-BUl Whiting'i four-legged\nchicken seems to think its extra\nset of leg! entitlei lt to rule the\nbarn-ytrd. The four-legged fowl\npicked \u2022 fight with mother odd\nbird in the Whiting Poultry farm,\na fantall pigeon with webi between\ntwo of iti toei on either foot\nThe fight wu i draw.\nDANCER OF WAR WITH\nCERMANY DOMINATES THE\nFRENCH VOTE CAMPAIGN\nPARIS, April 24 (AP)-Dmger\nof wir with Germiny domimted tonight the campaign between right\nand left wings of French politics\nin the closing hour! before Sundiy'i chamber of deputlei election.\nThe powerful \"Comite des Forgei\"\nrepresenting the iron md iteel industry Injected into the electioneering a denial of Communiit accusation! It wu tiding Germiny to irm.\nSoviet Russia, the comite auerted,\nil supplying the retch with manganese for munitions.\nPENSION  BILL STATIONARY\nOTTAWA, April 24 (CP)-Can-\nada's war pensions bill is now fairly\nstationary In the opinion of Pensions Minister Power. The houie of\ncommoni tonight viewed the European peniiom appropriation of $41.-\n650,000. Lut year the appropriation\nwai 142.000,000 but not ill ot it wu\nexpended.\nROOSEVELT CRITICIZED\nWASHINGTON, April 24.-(AP)\n\u2014 RepteientiUve Widiworth\n(R.-N.Y.) denounced the new tix\nbill before the houu today u pirt\nof \u2022 plm for \u25a0 \"disciplined democracy\" ind crIUclied Preiident\nRoosevelt by name u never using\nthe word \"thrift\"\nHer Husband Died\nSUCH IS REPORT\nIN ROME AS THE\nARMY ADVANCES\nAbove is shewn Mri. Herman Magill, whose huiband died whllt\nentombed with Dr. D. E. Robertion and Alfred Scadding In the\nMooie River Qold mine. The photo wu tiktn before ntwi of\nMiglll'i death wu received, lnd Mra, Magill wai telling a mlntr\nhow wonderful he md hli collogue* were to rlik their livei In\nreicue ittempti.\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nBy THE CANADIAN PRESS\nToronto md Montreil \u2014 Industrial stocks higher.\nToronto Mines\u2014Irregularly lower.\nNew York \u2014 Stocks slightly\nhigher.\nWinnipeg-Wheat up * to Vt\ncent.\nLondon\u2014Bar lilver, copper and\nzinc higher; lead unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Bar illver lower;\nother metali unchanged.\nMontreal\u2014Silver higher.\nNew York\u2014Rubber higher; coffee and lugar unchanged; cotton\nlower.\nNew York\u2014Cmadian dollar unchanged at 90Mi.\nVERIGIN CASE\nIS REMANDED\nWINNIPEG, April 24,-(CP) -\nHeiring on \u2022 chirge of assault\nagiimt Peter Verigin wu reminded until Miy 1 here todiy when\nthe former leidtr of Cinada's\nDoukhboors failed to appear in city\npoMce court.\nVerigin was charged with nsuult-\ning Ruuell E. Popoff of Yorkton,\nSuk., who hai assisted Verigin ln\nvarious fell utate tranuctions.\nPopoff alleged the former Doukhobor chieftyin attacked him following m argument in a Winnipeg\nhotel md ciused ictuil bodily injury to hii face and leg!.\nIt wu understood Verigin left\nfor Yorkton lut night on urgent\nbuiineu. He wai repreiented by\ncouncil in court.\n300 to Share in Fund\nfor Rescuers of Men\nin Moose River Mine\nHALIFAX, (CP)-Three hundred\npeople would share reicue fundi,\ndonated by generoua contributors\nacrou Canada for those who helped\nbring Dr. D. E. Robertson and Alfred\nScadding to the luface.\nThe man who cut timber in the\nwoods for props was entitled to as\nmuch credit as other rescuers, ln\nthe opinion of the mines miniiter.\n\"All played their leparate parts\nin the reicue and all will share the\nfunds,\" Mr. Dwyer uid.\nMORE TO BE CHARCED IN\nWENDEL ABDUCTION\nCar of Ore Ready\nal Chapleau Nine\nRoad  Needs  Repairs\nBefore Hauling Can\nBegin, Slocan\nBattle Under Way on\nSouthern Front on\nWay to Harar\nTRIBESMEN GO\nTO ETHIOPIANS\nGot Arms of Italians\nand Now Aid Haile\nSelassie\nNEW YORK, April 24 (AP) -\nFive or iix more penoni, Including\n\"iome public officiali of New Jersey,\" may be indicted early next\nweek in connection with the abduction of Paul H. Wendel, Diitrict Attorney William F. X. Geoghan uid\nlate today.\nHe refuied to lay who would be\nnamed in the new indictment! he\nuld he would leek or even to indicate whether the officials referred\nto held elective offices.\nTROOPS CONTROL POONA\nPOONA, India, April 24 (API-\nTroops were in control of this city\ntonight ifter all-day rioting between\nMoslems and Htndui ln which neirly\n100 were injured.\nThe loldien itood 'guird it \u25a0\nbridge in the centre of the city md\nat the Kaiharet Moaque. Two Mosques and (our Hindu shrines were\nburned and attempt! were'made to\nbum a number of others.\nOUT  IN TRAIN  FARES\nMONTREAL, April 24 (CP)-Sub-\nstantial reduction in railway passenger fares in Canada will become effective June 1, it was announced today by C. P. Rlddell, chairman of\nthe Cmadian Paasenger association. Basle fares for tint clui coich\ntravel ire being reduced ipproxlmitely 13 per cent, bringing them\nipproxlmitely to pre-wir level.\n$26,206 FOR RESCUE FUND\nTORONTO, April 24 (CP)- By\nmill ind personal delivery, \u25a0 flood\nof new contributions to the Mooie\nRiver rescue fund poured into Canadian Red Crou society headquarters\ntoday and official! announced tonight Uie fund had reached $28,206.\nContributions today totalled $13,000.\nA. G. Ewing ol the Chipleau mine\non Lemon creek ipent Friday in\nNelion on mining buiiness. The\nproperty is situated about nine\nmiles up the creek and Mr. Ewlng\nis enthusiastic about fttture operatloni.\nRecent aiuyi showed high silver\ncontent with \u25a0 good showing in gold\nand he reporti a cir of ore is now\nready at the mine for haulage to\na aiding.\nAt preient Uie road from tne\nproperty is waihed out and thii\nmuit be rectified before haulage by\ntruck can proceed. The ihipment\nwlU go to Kellogg, Idaho.\nALMOST INCH OF\nRAIN FALLS IN  \u2022\nCITY OF NELSON\nNelion for the 24-hour period\nending at S o'clook -FrUay _flt*-\nnoon wn tht wettest ipot in Brltlih Columbii, according to weither reports. In thit ptrlod ilmoit\n\u25a0n tnoh of rainfall wu recorded\nIn Nelion. It miuured .98 Inch.\nGrand Forki with .30 Inch, ind\nVincouvir with 2* wart the next\nwettest pointi. Temperaturei In\nNelion win 4S for minimum ind\n63 for mixlmum.\nToronto Rescuers'\nFund Alone Is Now\nthe Sum of $22,489\nTORONTO, April 24,-(CP) -\nThe Mooie River Mine Retcuers'\nfund reached $22,489 in Toronto\nalone today, it was announced by\nDr. J. L. Biggar, commissioner of\nthe Red Cross society In Canada.\nMore than $1000 hai been collected\nin Montreal, it wai itated. Contribution! were arriving from New\nYork and San Diego and range\nfrom 25-cent piecei to $1000\nchequei. \t\nSilver Bill Is\nRuled Out\nOTTAWA, April 24.-(CP)-The\nReid bill to remonetlze illver was\nruled out of order today by Speaker Cugrain in the houie of com-\nmons. ,. .-1.\nSponsored by Thomai Reld (Lib.,\nNew Westminster) It would empower the Bank of Canada to add\nsilver to it! currency reierve and\niiiue lilver certificates against it.\nThe ipeaker ruled it would affect\npublic revenue, a power beyond\nthit of i privite member.\nNo Union Library\nFor the Kootenay\nVICTORIA, April 24--(CP)\u2014\nPlam to nUbllih \u2022 Union library\ndlitrict In the Koottniy tru\nhive fallen through, Dr. Kaye\nLamb, provlnclil librarian, uld\ntoday. _.\nIn a plebiscite a few monthi\nago moit of the ichool centi\u2122\nvoted for a Union Library district\nbut II hu been found Impossible\nto mike in igreement with thl\ncity of Nelion. Ai \u2022 ruult the\nicheme would not embrace itiffl*\nclent nopulitlon to lupport It\nfinancially.       \t\nKELOWNA MINISTER RECEIVES\nDEGREE\nMONTREAL, April 24.-(CP>-\nAt the annual convocation of United Theological college here yesterday, Rev. Robert Harvey, Winnipeg, and Rev. William Wation McPhenon, Kelowna, B.C., received\nthe degree of doctor of theology.\nCOMMISSIONERS NAMED\nVICTORIA, April 24 (CP)-Sev\nenty-flve iddlUonil election com-\nminlonen were idded to provinciil\nlists thli week, including appointments in Simllkameen, Kamloops.\nKaslo-Slocan. and Rouland-Trail\nelection diitrict!. Byelectlom in\nBurrard and Omlneca are lUU expected, around June 10.\nBy ANDRUE BERDINO\nAuoclited Preu Foreign Stiff\nROME, April 24 (AP)\u2014Premier\nMussolini's Roman Legion! moved\nalong the Imperial highway towird\nAddis Ababa today at the same time\nthe Southern Fascist irmy launched i big offensive againat the important city of Saw Baneh.\nTroopi of the Northern army ll\"\nretdy hold important towns on ths\nDessye-Addis Ababa road.\nAt the ume tlmi in unconfirmed rumor In Roma uld King\nVictor Emminuil would eventu*\nally be named Emperor of Ethiopia.\nA battle ia now underway on .\nthe louthern front between a force-'\nled by Ras Naiibu, estlmited to\nnumber 45,000, md Italian troops\nunder Gen. Rodolfo Grazlani. Sis .\nBmeh block! the way to Hirar.\nThe dilly wir communique innounced an Eritrem column hid\nUken Uorra Ilu, 60 kilometres (38\nmilu) south of Deuye on the road\nto the capital. This was interpreted\nto mean the advance guird is\nmany miles ahead.\nTRIBESMEN\nAID ETHIOPIA\nADDIS ABABA, April 24 (AP)\u2014\nGalla tribesmen, previously reported\naUied with the Italian!, are aiding\nEthiopian warriors in guerilla raids\non Fascist columns, the government\nclaimed tonight.\nAn Ethiopian spokesman auerted\nEmperor Haile Selassie hu regained control ot all territory outside\nthe Italian line! after reassembling\nhis scattered forces south of Dessye.\nThe Italian! were reported to hive\nsent runners with fiked photographs showing the body of the dead\nking of kings. The Galla chieftaim\nto whom the photographs wai displayed later learned the negui wis\nstill ilive, the government auerted,\nand many of them, armed by the\nFaicliti, returned to the tide of\nEthiopia.\nOfficial denial was made a_ report! of muUny in Uie northern lector although it was admitted a chaotic lituition aroso during the heid-\nlong advance of the Italian armies\nwhen the Emperor's troops were\nthrown into a disorderly retreat.\nThen, the governmeni claimed,\nthe Gallas attacked the fleeing defenders but have since rejoined the\nImperial forces.\nThe Ethiopian foreign office icof-\nfed at reporti from Parii that \u00bb,\npeace plan had been advmced.\n'The Ethiopian poiition hai already been defended by the Ethiopian delegates to the League of\nNations,\" a utokeiman iaid. \"We\nhave given no instructions for peace\nat Pari! or eliewhere.\"\nCRUISER GOES TO PORTSMOUTH\nLONDON, April 24 (CP Cable)\u2014\nThe cruller Achillu left Sheern.-\\\nKent, for Portimouth, the idmiralty\nannounced today in its Uit of wir-\nihlp movement!. The destroyer Verity left Milti for Port Slid, while\nthe Veteran irrived it Milti. The\ndestroyer Temput irrived at Dover\n\u2022nd the destroyer Thradan left\nRoiyth, Scotland, for Sheerneu. The\nsubmarine! 123 and 127 irrived it\nGibraltar.\t\nTHE WEATHER\nTemptriturai:\nNELSON   \t\nVictorii   \t\nNanalmo \t\nVancouver \t\nKamloops  -\nPrince George\nEitevin Point\nPrince Rupert.\nAtlin   \t\nDawson, Y.T. ..\nSeattle\nMln.\n 48\n.... 4S\n 43\n.... 48\n 42\n 24\n 48\n.... 38\n.... 24\n 24\n_. 52\nPortlind, Ore 54\nSm Francisco 54\nSpokane - 48\nLos Angeles ~ 54\nPenticton   40\nVernon    ... 42\nGrand Forks  46\nKulo  \u00ab\nCranbrook   30\nCalgary  - 32\nEdmonton    _ 32\nSwift Current 34\nPrince Albert  32\nSaskatoon  32\nQu'Appellc    30\nWinnipeg   - -2\u00ab      48\nMoose Jaw         32      44\nForecast for Nelion and Vicinity.\nPartly cloudy and milder with Mattered ihowcn.\nr\n PAQB TWO \u2014\nHrs, L P. Sullivan\nOff for Europe\n*\u2014 \u2022\u2014\nCranbrook Lady Will\nVisit Switzerland\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-Mrs. L. P.\nSullivan left Wednesday morning\nCause of Bed-Wetting\nNow Known and Corrected\nA noted Bladder Specialist discovered an effective, easy and harmless\nmethod of correcting this weakness\nln both children and adults. Demon-\natratlons in hundreds of more or\nlets aggravated cases have proved\nIt to.be Quick and positive in results.\nFree information regarding cause of\nhtdwettlng and how to correct It\nwill be sent to all who innuire. Just\nItate age and sex of sufferer and\naddress to Dr. Zottmann's Method,\nDept. 113-U, 618 Avenue Bldg.,\nWinninea. Man. \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nnear Lucerne, Switzerland. She will\nsail from Quebec on April 26.\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Brown who\nhave been spending the Easter vacation in Vancouver, have returned to\nlhe city.\nMiss Jean MacDonald entertained\nat a delightful party at the home of\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs, D. E. MacDonald, when the evening wai\nspent ln games and contests. The\nwinners of the contests were Misi\nKatherine Jones, Miss Ida Frances,\nJim Gibbon, Frank Fergie, and Jimmie Baird. A delicious supper was\nserved during the evening. Thc invited guests were Miss Anne Graham, Miss Katherine Hones, Miss\nHelen Scott, Miss Eva Bartholomew,\nMiss Ann Peckenpaugh, Miss Mary\nPhilpot, Miss Ida Frances of Vancouver, Miss Katherine Fergie, Miss\nMargaret MacKinnon, Miss Suzanne\nHarrison', Miss Margery Ella Ryckman, D'arcy and Hugh Ironside,\nJack Scott, Jimmie Bair, Douglas\nMcKay, Jim Gibbon, Frank Fergie,\nStuart Macintosh of Nelson, Jack\nHeise, George Selwyn, George'MacKinnon and Buddy Ryckman.\nMrs. J. S. Dunlop entertained th*\nWe Use Pictures\nINSTEAD OF WORDS\nTo Show You\nWhy \"Aspirin\" Works So Fast\nWHY \"WIRM\" WORM 10 FAIT\nIN 1IIOONM IV ITOP WATCH\nDrop sn \"Aspirin\" tablet Into \u25a0 tin of utter... By tht time It hits tht bottom\ntt tht glus It is disintetrttini. Whit happens in these, {lasses happens in your\nstomach \u2014\"Aspirin\" Ubtrtl start \"ukini hold\" of pain a ftw minutei tlm\ntsUm.\n\u2014a-\u2014. i li t    \t\nQuick Relief for Headaches,\nNeuritis, Rheumatic Paint\ntbt old adage laya, \"what you tea\n\u2022ou believe.\" So the acientist, pic*\nand above, ihows you two acf ua.\nptiotoirtphi to prove the quick\naction of \"ASPIRIN.\"\nLook at them, and you will iee\non* niton why Scientist! rata\n\"ABPIRIN\" among the fastest\n\u2022gents, row Known or tvet\nknown,tor the relief of headaches,\nneuritii, neuralgia and rheumatic\npains.\nYoull iee that an \"Aspirin\"\ntablet, dropped into a glass of\nWater, atartl to disintegrate, or dii-\naolve, before it hiti the bottom of\nthe glass. Hence, ia ready to go to\nwork almoit instantly you take\ntoe. For what happeni in that glau\nhappeni In your itomach when you\ntake an \"ASPIRIN\" tablet. ReUef\ncornea in a few minutei,\nCountless thousandi know that\nabout \"ASPIRIN.\" Know by ex-\npcrience that it bringi the quick\nrelief you want when in distress.\nKeep this in mind the next time\nyour work or play ii handicapped\nby a bad headache, neuritis or\nrheumatic pain. Learn for younelf\nhow fait you can get relief.\n\u2022 \"Aspirin\" Tableti are made in\nCanada, \"Aspirin\" ii the registered\ntrade-mark of the Bayer Company,\nLimited. Be lure to look for the\nname Bayer in the form of a cross\non every tablet\nDemand and Get \"ASPIRIN\"\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest in the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nfrae Bui Service\nGeo. Benwell, Prop.\n.\u201e_,\u00ab_._._. ..       BREAKFAST 30c and UP\nLUNCHION 40o to 60o DINNER 40c to 65\u00ab\nROTARY AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTIL-PHONE 787 NEL80N. B.C. 422 VERNON  8T.\nHUME- Miss I. Martyn, W. A.\nDuncan, Toronto; J. H. Lewis, R.\nCrawford, Medicine Hat; S. Addi-\nJ eon, Penticton; Mrs. G. T. D. Francis,\nI Mrs. J. S. Gooch, Crawford Bsy; W.\nMacdonald, W. G. D. Walker, W\nChatwin, G. C, Naime, J. Y. McCarter, H. Bennett, Vancouver; A, E.\nGraves, Vernon; J. Kcrregan, Cranbrook.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where tho Guest Is King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Baker St.      W. K. Clark, Prop.      Nelson, B. C.\nNew Grand Hotel\nP. L. KAPAK. Prop.\nHot and Cold Water\nSingle 60c up; double SOo up\nMonthly rates $10.00 up\nPH. 214      >1t VERNON ST.\n.Interior of British Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St. Phono 687 L\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL   MONTHLY    RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nFully Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. A. MADDEN. Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot and Cold Wattr\nIn tht HEART of the City\nPHONE 50      505 WARD ST.\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\n(STANFORD Hotel Spokane I\n.t SPRAGUE and MADISON R.\u201eon^ cl?\" ^.rk,.,, |\n,....w., of the G.I.A. of tha B. of\nLE. at thc tea hour recenUy, when\nthe tea tables were tastefully decorated with daffodlla, and a large\nbirthday cake, decarated with two\npink candles, for the'birthdays oi\ntwo of the members. Miss Isobel\nDunlop assisted with the serving,\nMiss May Maltman has returned\nfrom Trail where ihe has been vliltlng.\nMr. and Mrs. C. M. Loasby, who\nhave been the gueita of Mr. and\nMn. G. S, Moore, have returned to\ntheir home in Vancouver.\nMiss Peggy Spreull and Mill\nPhyllii Ward, who have been the\nguests ot Miss Phyllis Ruffle of\nCanal Flat, hava returned.\nMrs. F. Dodson and Miss Betty'\nDodson ot Victoria, hav* returned\nafter spending the week visiting\nMr. and Mrs. L. WilUcome.\nMiss Margaret Farrell of Nelson\nwas the guest ot her parenti.\nThe Home Workeri of Christ\nchurch netted nearly $100 at their\nbaiaar in the K. of P. hall. Mrs.\nH. L. Harrison and Mrs. A. J. ta-\nwards were in charge of tha cookery tbale. Mrs. C. Draper and Mrs.\nDunlop managed the delicatessen\ntable, and Mrs. Wyatt and Mri. L.\nCox were ln charge ot the home\nworkeri table.\nThe candy table wai managed by\nMiss Laura Hall and Misa Muriel\nReade. Mrs. C. Gill and Mrs. H.\nHaslam supervised the table of the\nGirls W.A.\nMrs. T. S. Gill waa convenor of\nthe tea tables, and wu assisted by\nMrs. W. J. Atchison, Miss Phyllis\nThompson, Miss Doris Crowe, Miss\nJoan Robertson and Mln Berta\nJones, Mrs. Offen, Mrs. W. Thompson and Miss Klmpton.\nMisi Marion Gill, who hai been\nvisiting her parents, returned this\nweek to Vancouver to resume her\nduties ai nurse at the Vancouver\nGeneral hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Chisholm have\nreturned to the city after Ipendlng\nsix months In California.\nMrs. O. Gill and daughter Shirley\nhave returned to their hom* at\nGreenwood.\nNEW  ENGINEER\nVICTORIA, April J4. - (CP) -\nAppointment of M. S. Hed.tjr. former geologist at Bralorna min*, tt\nresident B.C. mining engineer for\ndistrict number four with headquarters at Penticton, was announced today by Hon. George S. Pearson, minister of mines. Mr. Hedley\nwill succeed A. M. Richmond who\nresigned and will -take over on\nMay 1.\nADVERTISE THAT PRODUCT\nWS. NELSON   B.C-SATURDAY MORNINQ. APRIL 25. 1936\nMrs. Greenlaw of\nLardo Is a Patient\nin Kaslo Hospita\nGrand Forks Folk\nVisit in Spokane\nGRAND FORKS, B.C.-Mrs. R. K.\nWood li visiting her sister, Mn.\nGlen Cummlnp at TralL\nMrs, Harry Cooper and little ion\nof Greenwood ar* visiting Mrs.\nCooper's parenta, Mr. and Mrs. A.\nWinters.\nMiss D. Flynn returned Tunday\nfrom a brief viiit to Spokane.\nMints Josephln* Ruilcka and\nMay Thompion ar* Visiting In Spokane\nVal McDonald and Alice Clarke\nof Oraanwood, and Geneva DtLiilt\nof Midway, who w*re holidaying at\ntheir home*, returned Monday to\ncontinue their studies at the local\nhigh ichool,\nMrs. Letteh Thompion. Mr. and\nMn. W. Ridley motorta to Soap\nUk* on Tuwday wher* Mr. Ridley\nwill remain. '   '\nC. J. Tonks, principal of the\nGrand Forks high achool, Misa\nWagge, and Bernle* Donaldson returned Sunday by motor from Vancouver, wher* they ipent the Inter\nholidays with friends and relatives.\nMr, and Mn, K. Scheer and eons\nwho have own guesti of Mrs.\nScheer's father, T. Wright, returned\nto their home ln Trail.\nMyrtle Johnion and Albert Malda\nof Christina Lake rtturntd to th*\ncity on Monday morning to resume\nth*lr studies at the local high school.\nCarl Holm, accompanied by Miss\nJ. Mozzocchi and Mlu t. Nyberg\nof Fife, motortd to th* city and\nvisited friendi on Monday.\nGlen Manly waa a Nelion viiltor\nlast week.\nElmer Scott and Vilmtr Holm returned on Sunday from a motor trip\nto Spokane.\nMm. Wllkinion, who hai bttn the\nguest for i*v*.a. dayi of Mn. F.\nHarlenger, rtturntd to htr horn* ln\nFife on Monday.\nMr. and Mn. 1. B. R\u00abynoldi and\nchlldrtn rtturned Monday from a\n10-day holiday at th* cout.\nMn. W. Smith and ions hav* returntd from a ahort visit with\nfrlendi in Salmon Arm.\nRADIUM CONTROL RINQ\nOTTAWA, April 24 (CP)-_nvtitl-\ngation ot radium costs was urged\nln tht houit ot commons tonight by\nThomas Reid (Lib. New Westminster). He btlltvtd radium was controlled by an International ring and\nthe price ktpt at a high level.\nNIW YORK, April _..-<AP)-\nPettr Flnley Dunne, 68, author ot\ntht famoui Mr, Doolty stories, ditd\nhtrt tonight afttr an nines* of\nflv* monthi.\nNews of the Day\nBritish Newspapers tnd Migizlnes\nBISHOP'S NEWS STAND\n(ISO)\nDress-making and alterations. Call\nEva Verge, 506 Gore streeL     (60)\nCareful-Courteoui-Comfortable\nHosted can. B. B. TAXI  Phone 9$\n0756)\nGET YOUR \"KODAK PILM8\"\nFOR WEEK-END PICTURES AT\nVALENTINE'S. (1S1)\nRUPTURED? We guarantee to\nfit you with a suitable truss. MANN.\nRUTHERFORD CO. (77)\nLawn mowers ground and repaired. Will call and deliver. Old mowers bought. Phone MOR. (505)\nANNUAL HIGH SCHOOL DANCE\nHUME   BALL   ROOM.  TROUIA-\nDOURS. May 1st $1.25 A COUPLE,\n(SU)\nPOR AWNINQ8, UPHOLSTERY,\nDRAPERIES AND  SLIP COVERS\nSEE A. TERRILL, 120 HIGH ST.\n(306)\nNelson Garages will bi open all\nevanlng for th* convenience of out\nof town patrons to THE GONDOLIERS next Thunday and Friday.\n(508)\nSAILINGS TO\nEUROPE\nFrom   MONTREAL-QUEBEC\nMay 6 Duchesi ot York\nTo Qlasgow-Belfast-Llverpeol\nMay 15 Duchesi of Richmond\nTo Glssgow-Belfast-Llvsrpool\nMay 15        Montroie\nTo Havel-Southampton\nMay 19          Empress of Britain\nTo Cherbourg-Southampton\nMay 22 Duchess of Bedford\nTo Glasgew-Belfast-Llverpool\nMay 23 Montclare\nTo Havre-8outhimpton\nMiy 29 Duchesi of Atholl\nTo GlMgow-Selfait-Llvirpeol\nMay 30 Empress of Australia\nTo Cherbourg.Southampton\nJune 5 Duchess of York\nTo Glasgow-Belfait-Llverpool\nII V II H    l\\l\\\\\nCHIN* MWIIA\nMay 16  Empress of Russli\nMiy 30 Empreu of Japan\nr\\WM fltl'ail\nTues,  May  12th.  Stl  Saviour's\nMothen Club spring sale ot work.\n(510)\nTypewriter repairs and parta for\n\u2022II midlines. Kitto'i, 620 Bakir.\n(509)\nDANCE-TONIGHT-DANCE\nIn Eagls Hall ai usual\n(904)\nInstallations and repair*\nJARVIS ELECTRIC.    PHONE SM.\n(344)\nEagles' suppor concert and dance.\nTu*., April ISth at 7 p.m. Tlikttt\n79 cents at Boiton Hit Worki, (903)\n(903)\nHAVE YOU TRIED THE NEW\nBUCKINGHAM CIGT. AT VALENTINE'S. (131)\nNtw slacks. All shidsi. In drape\n\u25a0nd pliln medils.\nJACK BOYCE.\n(427)\nANNUAL HIGH SCHOOL DANCE\nHUME   BALL  ROOM. TROUBADOURS. Miy 1st. $125 A COUPLE.\n(513)\nRog*n Btttory Radios and Radio\nBatteries for uie tt McKiy & Stret-\nton. (430)\nDo you know that the Kootenay\nMuiic House are the txcluslvt dealers for the famoui Easy Washing\nMachines? (392)\nNelson Operatic Society will pre-\n\u25a0tnt Tht Gondoliers tnd ot ntxt\nwttk, ntw Operatic Stan ln the\nmusical numbtrs will make history\nln BriUsh Columbia. (608)\nI.O.O.P. 117th ANNIVERSARY\nKootenay Lodge No. 16 request\nOddfellows, Rebekahs and sojourning brothers and sisters to mett\n\u25a0t the I.O.O.F. hall Sunday. April\n26, at 7 p.m., to attend divine itrvlct at Trinity United church. (901)\nGENERAL ELECTRIC\nRIFIGIRATORS\nMaintain thtlr original efficiency\nfer all tlmi. N* radiators to clog up.\nlives yeu from 10 to 60 % In power\nconsumption and your uvlng Increases with time. Let ui explain.\nFLEMING ELECTRIC and STANDARD ELECTRIC. (520)\nMay 20 .\nJune 17 \u2022\nAorangi\n. Niagara\nFor full Information apply\nnureit agint or\nN. J. LOWES, C.T.A.\nOhon* 201 Nelson, i.C.\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nMr. and Mn. A. Andenon and\nMr. and Mn. D. Richardson wish to\nthank th* nunu ot th* K. L, G. hoi*\nlital, alio specials along with Drs.\nuld and McKeniie, and Dn, Dun-\nam and Shaw, for their services\nuring the sickneu ot their ion and\ngrandchild. (614)\nNilion to             O.W. R.T.\nCranbrook - $ 4.46 $ 6.05\nCalgary 11.00 11.60\nRegina \u00bb 11.70 36.45\nWinnipeg  MM UM\nGREYHOUND LINES\nNelion  Depot 205 Baker St\nPhona 800\n(289)\nKASLO, B.C.-Mrs. D. Bruct hu\nreturned to her home afttr iptnding\ntht winter with her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mri and Mrs. Oswald McDougall of Rossland.\nMiu Flora McLeod, who hu been\nthe guut of City Clrtk H. T. Hartin\nand Mn. Hirtln, hu returned to her\nhome in Trill.\nRex Matthews wu - recent viiitor\nIn Nelson.\nThomu Sparrow ot Bowser ll in\ntht city.\nM. L, Greenlaw ot Lardo 1> a\nviiitor in tht city.\nMrs. W. P. Rudkin wu a Tuesday\nvisitor in Nelson.\nMn. H. T. Hartin his returned\ntrom a short visit to Ntlson.\nFrtd Butler hai returned to Trait\nafter spending a few days in town\nwith his fither, P. Butler.\nMrs. Malcolm Greenlaw of Lardo\nls a patient in the Victorian hospital.\nMr. and Mn. \"Bud\" Thompson\nwere city vislton Tuesday en route\nfrom Nelson to their hom* in Garrard.\nThe Misses Peggy and Kathleen\nManahan have returned to their\nhome in Nelson afttr having been\ntht guests ot Mr. and Mrs. H. T.\nHartin.\nMrs. George Abey ot Mirror Lake\nwas a Nelson visitor Tuesday.\nStanley Lakei of Johnson's Landing wu a Tuesday visitor in town.\nBen Downes hu arrived trom\nTrail where ht spent the winter,\nand li now busily engaged in putting his fruit ranch in good condition ofr the season.\nJohn Minden has returned to his\nhorn* ln Meadow Creek after visiting hii brother Chris Marsden who\nIs a patient in the Victorian hospital.\nAfter spending several weeks at\nhis home, Jack Hartin, second son\nof Mr. and Mn. H. T. Hartin, has\nreturned to Nelson where he is attending junior high ichool.\nMiu Margaret McQueen of the\nKaslo public school teaching staff\nhai returned from Vincouvir where\nlh* attended tht B.C. Teachtn convention. Mlu McQueen also visited\nher brothr-In-liw and sister Mr. ind\nMn. A. Glenn Smith of Seittle,\nWash.\nGilbert Hartin, youngest ton ot\nMr. ind Mn. H. T. Hartin hu returned from a visit In Nelton.\nRoss Sour Family\nMoves to Winlaw\nROSS SPUR, B.C.-Mn. Percy\nGraham and ion Harvey, have left\nfor their homt in Cranbrook.\nMiss Edm Swanson ot Trail was\na guest of her parenti, Mr. and Mrs.\nT. R. Swanson.\nLen Woods wm a visitor of J.\nMcColm.\nMrj, Samuel Barkley hai returned to her home in Nelson afttt viiiting relitlvei here.\nMr. ind Mrs. Reynolds Dt Jong\nand family of Fruitvale wert viilton tt Ron Spur.\nMiss Lilian McKenzle hu returned from Vancouver.\nEd Tremblay and Stan Gilmore\nof Trail were vliiton at the home\nof the former's parents. Mr. and\nMrs. T. J. Tremblay.\nS. Smilff and family have left\nfor Wlnlaw whera they will reside.\nBaptismal Service\nHeld at Invermere\nINVERMERE, B.C.\u2014On Easter\nMonday evtnlng, the monthly meeting of the Wilmer Community club\nhlld Ipeclal servicei with appropriate singing and muilc,\nBefore the lervicea itarted Rev.\nC. L. Clerihue, paitor of Trinity\nUnited Church, Invermere held i\nbaptismal service at which six\nchildren were christened. The three\nsmall children of Mr. and Mn. Anton Rauch, two of Mr.- and Mrs.\nFerd Rauch, and one of Mr. and\nMn. Cirlien, were baptlied into\nthe faith of tht United Church ot\nCanidi.\nAfter the two lervices were concluded, dtlightful refreshments\nwert served by tht ladlu ot Wilmer\nCommunity club.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR SALE \u2014 CHERRY: BING,\nLambert, Royal Anne, 50c to a $1.\nApple: Transparent, Mcintosh\nRed, Oravensttin, Delicious, Wagener, 50c each. Lilac, Achillea,\nBleeding Heart, Baby's Breath,\nCarnation, Lily of the Villey,\nPeony, Phlox, Iris and Rock Plant.\nC. Becker, Phone 364R1.        (516)\nWANTED-IMMEDIATELY, young\nman for business office. Experienced accountant, referencei,\npermanent position. Box 317 Dally\nNewi. (917)\nFARM FOR RENT-PARK SIDING\n2 horses, fruh cow. Alex Toth,\nBox 1696 Trail, B. C.   .      (519)\nExperienced hairdresser from Vincouvir wants work. Addresi Miss\nA. Grotto, Castlegar, B. C. (918)\nCOAL\nWOOD\nin All Lengths\nHAULAGE\nPhone 701\nFAIRVIEW\nFUEL Cp.\nMORE ABOUT\nENTOMBED MEN\n(Continued From Page One)\n-r\nlng Magill died from pneumonia ln\nth* armi ot the famoui Toronto\nphysician.\nDr. Robertson'! medical knowledge kept Scadding and himself\nalive until rescue wu tffected. Ht\nwould only permit an hour or so of\nsleep at a time and they clung to\neach other during these brief period! to preserve tht warmth ot their\nbodies.\nMagill wai alive when tht drill\nbroke through but he was too ill\nto rally, Ht did not talk to his wife.\nOn Monday morning he ut up suddenly, spoke incoherently and died\nin two minutes.\nMinister of Mines Michael Dwyer\nreturned from the mine and said of\nthe narrow tunnel made by draegermen from the Reynolds shaft to the\nspot where tht two men were: \"I\nam absolutely satisfied that today\nwe could not have gotten Into lt as\nthe narrow opening to the tomb ot\nthe two men sagged six inches after\nthey were taken out.\"\n\"By the end of the week the whole\nstructure of the mine will be crushed in completely,\" he said, adding\nthere was constant danger 25 or 30\not tht men Would perish while they\nwere searching for the Toronto men\nPREMIER PAY8 TRIBUTE\nOTTAWA, April 24 (CP)-Rescue\nof Dr. D. E. Robertson and Alfred\nScadding of Toronto from the caved-\nin Moose River gold mine \"will remain for all time an epic ot Canadisn history,\" Prime Minister Mackenzie King said ln the house of\ncommons today as he announced the\ngovernment wu considering some\nrecognition of the rescuers.\nConservative Leader Bennett asked Mr. King if parliament could\ntake some steps to mark its approbation of the valiant work of the\nrescuers and Mr. King replied the\ngovernment wai considering the\nmatter.\nBRITAIN APPLAUDS\nLONDON, April 24 (CP Cable)-\nBritish newspapers today paid tri\nbute to the heroic work of those\nwho rescued from living death two\nToronto men entombed ln a Nova\nScotia gold mine.\nThe dramatic struggle at Moose\nRiver, N.S., which ended when Dr.\nD. E. Robertion and Alfred Seeding were brought lately out of the\nmine, evoked widespread editorial\npraise. At tht same time there was\ndeep lympathy exrpeised for the\nwidow ot Herman Magill, ot Toronto, the third entrapped man who\ndied before miners reached the trio,\nARABS AND JEWS QUIET\nJERUSALEM, April 24 (API-Resumption of normal relitioni between Arabs and Jews was apparently ln progreu tonight, the Palcor\nand Jewish telegraphic agencies reported. Arabs celebrated their Hb-\nbith at mosques, then dispersed\nquietly undtr th* watchful eye of\nstrong detachments of police.\nBelgium's national park In Africa\nnow includu Mount Ruwenzori on\nthe equator, where mow can always\nbt ieen.\na\nMiss Ida Martyn\nThe Nemoflex Stylist\nwill be in our Corset Department\nTODAY ONLY\nto help you with your figure problem. Taks this opportunity to consult with an expert.\nnemo\nFoundations for Style and Comfort\nYou may have an average figure. You may be jus. t\nlittle less than'stout\u2014but either weight, this style\nshould suit you to a T! The well-boned front and back\nassure adequate control with gratifying comfort. It will\nendow your silhouette with lovely lines of youthful\ncharm. Miss Martyn will gladly fit you in your model.\nFINK'S LIMITED\nBURNS' BLOCK\nAPPLE BUSINESS\nIS SLOWING UP\nON THE PRAIRIE\nCALGARY, April 24.-The fruit\nand vegetable buiineu for April,\nso far, shows little pep and present indications are that the volume for the month will be much\nbelow April last year, says the\nMarkets bulletin. The apple move-,\nment continues slow. Up to within\nthe last two weeks the general condition of apples was good, from\nthat time until the present Jobbers\nhave been busy reconditioning\nthem. Local stocks of applei are\nheavy for this season of the yur.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Weather unsettled.\nCountry roads are more or leu\nflooded. Business is quiet\u2014particularly the apple business. Only ttn\ncars of B.C. apples have been received ln the past two weeks.\nWashington C. grade Wlnesaps are\nselling at $2.20 to $2.25 box. SuDplies\not southern vegetablei art heavy.\nThis market ls also receiving iteidy\nsupplies of southern strawberries,\nMexican field tomatoes in repacked\nlugi at $3.75 lug. Some local potatoes are starting to move out.\nDETROIT, April 24 (AP).-AH\nBaba, fierce vlsaged Turkish wrestler, became a new claimant to the\nworld heavyweight wrestling cham-\nolonship by pinning Dick Shikat in\n4S minutei and 40 lecondi. Tha\nmatch wu at Olympic iporti arena.\nSlocan City Folk\nVisit in Nelion\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C-Mr. and\nMrs. W. E. Graham, Mn. F. M.\nHufty, Mrs. K. Popoff and Mn. T.\nMcNeish were visitors to Nelson\non Saturday.\nMirion Leveque left for her home\nin Fernie on Saturday and wu accompanied as far as Nelson by her\ngrandmother Mrs. T. McNiesh.\nMr. and Mrs. K. Popoff were busineu visitors to Nelson on Wednesday.\nMrs. L. Hall ot the Lardeau ll\nviiiting with relattvu.\nESTABLI8H CULT OF\n\u2022T. JOHN BOtCO\nVATICAN CITY, April S4 (CP-\nHavas)\u2014Pope Plus XI tonight decided to establish in Roman Catholic churches throughout the world\nthe cult of St. John Bosco, founder\nof 'the Saleslan order comprising\nthe priests of St. Francis Dt Salea.\nThe pontiff's decision followed a\nworldwide appeal from Catholic\nbishops.\nPAIMTUI\nNEURALGIA\nDon't Ut the piln _ri.e*ou mid. TitaT-R- Ce\nami net quick. poatti T B rebel tttm dull, |oa w mi\ntehee- wid ,_irt, aubbi-i ptini. Eren dreadful\nneuraliia usually claus up In Ml t-M Win\nhour nlta ukini T-R-C'. witn food ud \u2022 not\nIfink. Bale, Bptady, Sura. Al ill drussuti,\n'.On and 11. Rtop that tbrobbini pain,no-. M\nT.R-C'a(Tem\u00ablelen'a Rke-metle Casialei)\n$200\nCaih Prixet-Mutt Be Won!\nTHIS WEEK'S\nPOINTS TABLE\nA-12\nB-38\nC-35\nD-48\nK-15\nF-36\nG\u201413\nH- 8\n1-18\nJ-22\nK\u201440\nL-32\nM-3S\nN-17\n0-18\nP--39\nQ-21\nR-45\nS-34\nT-28\nU-24\nV-30\nW-50\nX-23\nY-28\nZ-19\nLetter Valuet Will Bt\nChanged Each Week.\nTotally New!   Better Then Cross-Words!    No Cueiiinf!\nValu-Words JUBILEE Competition\nFirst Prize f50.    Second Priie ?25.    Third Priie ?15.\nFourth Prise ?10.        Ten Prixei $5 Each\nSpecial Loweit Score Priiet, $25, f 15, f 10.\nPUZZLE NO. 4\n\"Km\nE\nG'IGBEIKA\n115\nAllMYiW\"\n72\ntIainBeMe\n1\/7\nll   ll\nBIEIEBIININ\nm\nera l [orr \u25a0 a*\n78\nA\nS\"\nKfl5|A\"G\nW\n123\nV0\nbjrwto\nS\nPointa Acrosi\nPointi Down\nTotal\n. 643\n. 608\n1251\nPointi Acrou\nPoint* Down .\nTotel\nHOW TO WIN!\nENTRY FES  25c\nRULES\nSolving croii-word puzzlei ii a fascinating pastime, but conitructlng them can be even more fascination. In this VALUWORDS Comnetltlon you\nare invited to construct a simple cross-word puzzle\nInstead of solving one. There are no clues to bother\nabout and the diagram Is alreadv provided for you.\nAll you need to do is to complete the cross-word\nusing any word which meets with lhe rules of thli\ncontest.\nNo word may be used twice In one puzzle. \"Across\"\nand \"Down\" wordi must interlock, so as to form\na complete cross word puzzle.\nEach letter has been given a certain number of\npoints, as shown in the above table of letter-values.\nWhen vou have completed .vour nuzzle, add up the\nicore made bv the words across. Then add the score\nmade by the worda down. Ltttira In the squares\nmarked by a small \"x\" count one way only. The\nspecimen shows vou how to do this.\nTht highest totil wins first prize, next higheit\nsecond prize, ond io on. Now it il up to youl\nFill in your wordi lightly in pencil until you have\nselected those which you hive decided upon fimily.\nThen use Ink, In the event that you spoil the printed\nform, vou may send In your own copy on plain\npaper.\nWRITE POR COMPLETE LIST OF WORDS THAT\nMAY BE USED IN THIS COMPETITION.\n1-Firit Prize of $50 cash will be awarded to the\nentrant whose solution has the highest total.\nSecond Prize of 825 Third Prize ot 815, Fourth\nPrize of $10 and Ten Prizes of $5 each will be\npaid to the next highest solutions in order, Also\n$25 prize for the loweit score, $15 for the next\nlowest and $10 for the next. In event ot tiei,\nprize money will be divided.\n2\u2014No entrant will receive more than one prize ln\none week.\n3\u2014Entry fil. 25 emtl for tioh mtry.\n4\u2014Use wordi in evervdav uie, such ai appear in\nthe ordinary school dictionary. Words which\nDO NOT appear in Nelson's \"High Roads\" Dictionary, and prooer names, are disqualified.\nAbbreviations, suffixes, prefixes or my combinations of letters which do not form words\nin themselves CAN NOT BE ACCEPTED (e.g.,\nMrs., pre, Mai, dis, ct cetera).\n5\u2014All souares must be filled in. Use INK or INDELIBLE PENCIL and BLOCK LETTERS.\n6\u2014Entries must be mailed trom your postofflce, not\nlater than midnight. Saturday. May 2, 1836.\n7\u2014Remit by coin, postal note, etc. Stamps not\niccepted.\n8\u2014The prize money has been lodged in trust with\nthe Bink of Montreal, Carrall and Hastings\nBranch, Vancouver, B.C.\n9\u2014The judges' decisions are final and binding on\nall points. Employees of this concern and\nmemberi of their familiei are not allowed to\ncompete.\n10\u2014 All entrants In this competition will bt lent a\nlilt of tht prize-winners and the winning solution. These will be sent also to non-entrants on\nrequest. Winners will be published in this paper\nMlv 16.\nEntries Must Be Mailed by Midnight, SATURDAY, MAY t\nI agree to abide by the rules of this competition and encloje   (gmount)\nNAME \t\nADDRESS    *\t\n(N.N.)\nMill to \"VALU-WORD8,\" P. 0. Box 999, Vincouver, B. C.\n -lid\nICH U RCH ES!\nUrhtitg\nUttttri. tEIturrlf\nJosephine and Silica Streets\nREV. J. A. DONNELL\nMinister\nMR. FRED L. IRWIN\nChoirmaster\nPublic Worshlo at 11 a.m. and\n7:30 p.m.\nChurch School: Seniors at 10:15\najn.; Juniors at 10 a.m.\nSermon Subjects:\nMorning, \"Two Pauline\nSimiles.\"\nEvening, \"Fraternal Societies.\"\nOddfellows   and   Rebekahs   at\n\u2022 Evening Service.\ngt Raul's\nluitfi. (Hljiirrl!\nREV. T. J. S. FERGUSON\nMinister\n10 am\u2014Sunday School.\nSmall   children  are  cared  lor\nduring Morning Worship.\n11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m. \u2014 Public\nWorship.\nMorning Theme: \"The Glory of\nthe Spring.\"\nBoys' Choir.\nEvening Theme: \"Spring Clean-\ning>\nSenior Choir.\nTuesday. 8 p.m.\u2014Young People's\nSociety.\nThe Salvation Army\nCaptain and Mrs. Ross\nSunday Services\n11 ajn. and 7:30 p.m.\nTuesday. Thursday and\nSaturday at 8 p.m.\nLOOK   FOR  BUILDING   BOOM\nWASHINGTON, (CP)-Bulldlng\nof private homes in the United\nStates has increased so rapidly in\nthe past half year that a building\n\"boomlet\" of 250,000 houses ls prophesied for 1936.\nJFirat QUjurrlf of\n%tet fcrfcttttai\n208 BAKER  8TREET\nA Branch of The Mother Church,\nThe   First   Church   of   Christ,\nScientist, in Boston, Mass.\nSunday  School  9:45  a.m.\nSunday Service 11 a.m.\nSub leet   Leuon-Sermon\n\"PROBATION AFTER DEATH\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nFREE   READINQ   ROOM   IN\nCHURCH  BUILDING-\nAll Cordially Welcome\nItrat\nf reabtjtmatt\nQUjurrlj\nCor. Kootenay and Victoria Sts.\nREV. JAMES M. RITCHIE, MA.\nMinister\n10 a.m.\u2014Sunday SchooL\n11 a.m.\u2014Morning Service.\n1:30\u2014Evening  Service.\nAU Are Welcome!\nItat\nSajittat (Eijurrli\nOffers Warm Welcome\nHERBERT  W.  GUSCOTT\nMinister\n10:30. a.m.\u2014Church School\n11:15 ajn.\u2014Church Service\n7:30 n.m.\u2014\n\"THE REAL PRODIGAL\"\nWe Invite You to\nWorship With Vs.\nMany of the lizard skins used ln\nshoes and purses come from the\ncommon monitors of the East Indies.\nMRS. ANDERSON\nYAHK HOSTESS\nNILION DAILY NEWI. NILION. B.C-SATURDAY\n^   ELKO BRIEFS\nELKO, B.C.,-Mr. and Mrs. F.\nSwanson motored to Blairmore for\nthe week-end, visiting the former's\nsister.\nMiss E. Patterson who has been\nvisiting friends here, left Sunday\nfor Cranbrook, to resume her studies as teacher of the public school.\nMrs. Agnes Logan and family who\nhave been spending the Easter vacation at the station, guests of W.\nM. Logan left Sunday for Fernie.\nJoe Sheridon and Vincent Martin\nare patients In the Fernie hospital.\nRev. .T. W. Ruddell of Moyie\nwas in town on Monday, visiting\nhis parishioners and also held a\nservice in thefevening.\nMalcolm Johnson was a visitor to\nCranbrook on Sunday.\nPaddy Sanders Back\nFrom Hospital in\nCranbrook\nYAHK, B.C-Mrs. Albert Anderson was a tea hostess Wednesday. Invited guests Included Mrs.\nAxel Erlckson, Mrs. James Dickson,\nMrs. George Walt, Mrs. John Lorenzo, Mrs. James Wilcox and Mrs.\nPete Jensen.\nEarl Lasher of Goatfell was a\nvisitor here.\nMr. and Mrs. F. A. Lazenby were\nmotorists to Bull River on Saturday,\naccompanied by Miss Donalda\nWalker, teacher o fthe Bull river\nschool, and George Eckenfelder.\nG. Matson of Jaffray is visiting\nat the home of his' son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Johnson.\nJean Rattray returned on Monday to Nelson where she attends\nhigh school.\nFather Hartmann of Cranbrook\nwas a visitor here Wednesday.\nBob and Jim Thompson of the\nPaulson ranch near Kitchener were\nguests at the home ot Mr. and Mrs.\nHugh Mclnnes during the Easter\nvacation.\nMrs. John Lorenzo spent the\nweek-end in Creston. She was accompanied on the return trip by\nher children, Rose and Peter, who\nspent the holidays with their grand\nparents.\nOscar Hagen, who has spent several months at Aldridge, returned\non Thursday.\nAxel Erickson has left for Perry\nCreek where he will be employed.\nBertha and Jean Murdoch spent\nseveral days visiting friends in\nCranbrook.\nMrs. J. Strand and daughter, Betty Lou of Ryan, were overnight\nguests on Thursday at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. John Lorenzo.\nDan McCartney returned Sunday\nto Cranbrook, where he attends\nschool.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Evjen and daughter, Mabel, were guests on Friday\nand Saturday at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. M. Kjenstad, Englishman\ncreek.\nArt Rutledge visited here on Saturday en route from Fernie to Sirdar where he teaches school.\nMrs. John L. Walker visited in\nCranbrook at the week-end.\nMr. and Mrs. Glen Potter have\nreturned from Cranbrook  and\nMORNING. APRIL 25. 19J8    \u2014\u2014\nKaslo Bridge Club\nEnds Its Activities\nWardner where they spent the holidays.\nBobby Carrol has returned from\nCranbrook.\nMiss L. McAllster, primary teacher, has returned from Vancouver\nwhere she visited relatives.\nVic Weatherhead of Ryan visited\nin town at the week-end.\nMr. and 'Mrs. R. Skillicorn of\nCreston were recent guests at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Murdoch.\nCecil Larson motored to Canal\nFlat Sunday. He was accompanied\nby Mrs. J. Wardrope sr., who will\nvisit friends.\nMrs. Reuben Thompson of Kitchener was a visitor Monday.\nJ. Sinclair of Aldridge spent the\nweek-end here.\nLEAVES HOSPITAL\nPaddy Saunders who has been a\npatient in the St. Eugene hospital,\nCranbrook, has returned.\nS. E. Gunn and Harry Hogg of\nKingsgate were visitors here on\nFriday.\nBen Riley left Thursday for Denver, Colorado, where he will receive medical treatment.\nW. A. Weatherhead who has log-\nsing interests at Ryan has left for\nthe B. C. Nickle mines at Choate.\nMrs, E. A. Lythgoe left on Friday's bus for Kimberley to visit at\nthe home of her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Walker. >\nMrs, H. B. Murray was a bridge\nhostess on Thursday afternoon.\nA good crowd was in attendance\nat the dance held in the C.P.R.\nhall Friday under thc auspices of\nthe Anglican W. A.\nA Cranbrook orchestra supplied\nthe music.\nSunday afternoon the first soft-\nball game of the season, involving\nan outside team, was played on the\nlocal diamond between Kitchener\nand the local airport office staff.\nThe score was 17-16 in favor of\nthe office staff.\nI have ever Driven\nSAYS MR, WARREN R. COULTER, TORONTO\nff\n\"Steering is exceptionally\neasy and free from road\nshocks. Brakes are positive\nand easily operated.\"\n\u00abXXY '36 Plymouth la the most com*\n1Y1 fortable car I have ever driven,\nowing to the chair-height seats and soft\naprings. Gas mileage ia between 20 and\n22 milea pet gallon, ateering is exceptionally euy and free from road shock.\nBrakes, as always on Chrysler built can,\n\u25a0re positive and easily operated. I am\nthoroughly satisfied with the car in every\nrespect\"\nFrom all over Canada reports similar to\nthat of Mr. Coulter are pouring in from\nowners whose 1936 Plymouth cars have\nmore than measured up to expectations.\nThe proof of the genius and soundness\nof Chrysler Engineering lies in the service and satisfaction every Chrysler-built\nPlymouth renders its owner.\nStatement after itatement stresses the\nlow operating coit of the new Plymouth.\nOwners report 21 to 27 milea to a gallon\nof gasoline\u2014together with phenomenally\nlow oil consumption.\nComfort, lafety, easy-steering, imooth\neffortless power\u2014all the features you\nexpect in a motor car you will find at their\nbttt in Plymouth.\nFloating-power engine mountings that\nsmother engine vibration, redistribution\nof weight with passengers riding between\nthe axles, safety-steel body mounted on\nnew, twice-as-rigid frame, safety glass in\nall windowi, genuine Chrysler Hydraulic\nbrakes with two pistons at each wheel\u2014\nthese are just a few of many reasons for\nPlymouth owner enthusiasm.\nVisit your nearest Chrysler-Plymouth-\nFargo dealer. He will be happy to have\nyou DRIVE a Plymouth\u2014that's the one\nbeat way to judge ita superlative performance. Why not drop in today?\nImin cm the New\nOfficial Chrysler Motors\nCommercial Credit Corp.\ntlMB PAYMENT\nPLAN\n7%\nYou cin figure it out for yourself. 1. Start\nwith your unpaid balance. 2. *Then add\ninsurance coit 3, Then multiply by 7%\n\u2014for a 12 months* plan. Costs for longer\nor shorter periods in proportion*\n\u2022In some provinces a small legal documentary foe is required.\nNO OTHBR CHARGES.\nPLYMOUTH\nBUILT BY\nCHRYSLER\nCHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH\nFARGO  DISTRIBUTORS\nPEEBLES MOTORS LIMITED\n113 BAKER STREET\nPHONE 119\u2014NELSON, B.C.\nMoynes Transfer and Garage\nTrail, B.C.\nKootenay Motors Ltd.\nCranbrook, B.C.\nDealen   Rossland Coop. Transprtn. Soc'y\nRossland, B.C.\nKimberley Motors\n Klmberley, B^. ^^\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Members of the\nKaslo Ladles Bridge club held their\nlast meeting of the season, Wednesday at the home of Miss Katherine\nStreit when six tables of contract\nwere in play.\nMembers of the club are Mrs. B.\nF. Palmer, Mrs. Brunei Murphy,\nMrs. Frank Wilson, Mrs. Fred Aydon, Mrs. John Paterson, Mrs. C.\nJ. White, Mrs. W. H. Dunn, Mrs.\nJ. R. Tinkess, Miss Margery Spelrs,\nMiss Tina Bourget, Miss Margaret\nMcQueen and Miss Katherine Streit.\nThe Invited guests were those who\nhad substituted, at various timet,\nfor absent members, and included\nMrs, J. N. Murphy, Mrs. W. V. Papworth, Mrs. V. G. Field, Mrs. R. St.\nDenis, Mrs. O. .P. Merrill, Mrs. E.\nM. Sandilands, Mrs. S. A. Hunter,\nMrs. William English, Mrs. R. A.\nChester. Mrs. E. H. Latham, Mrs.\nJ. J. Streit, Miss Eunice Goodenough, Miss Margaret MacDonald,\nMiss Elizabeth Glegerish, Miss Cameron, Miss Johnson, Miss Katherine\nGillis, and Miss Bertha Bourget.\nSpecial prizes were awarded the\nguests the first going to Miss Good-\nenough, tbe consolation to Mrs.\nField and the intermediate to Mrs.\nSandilands. Prizes were also awarded to each member of the club according to their aggregate score\nduring the season the three high\nprizes going to Mrs. Tinkess, first,\nMiss McQueen second and Mrs. B.\nMurphy third. After cards were finished and prizes presented delicious\nfefreshments were served.\nMr. and Mrs. Bowman of Maple\nCreek, were city visitors Sunday,\nthey are visiting their son and\ndaughter-in-law Mr. and Mrs. W.\nBowman at Johnsons Landing and\nmade the trip to Kaslo and return,\nby launch.\nGOLF AT KASLO\nKaslo golfers are enjoying daily\nplay on the local links. Caretaker\nJames Brown, Is rapidly getting the1\nentire course in excellent condition\nand as many improvements were\nmade last year the Kaslo links will\ncompare very favorably with any in\nthe Interior.\nStanley Lakes of Johnsons Landing was a Sunday visitor.\nMiss Mary Surina has returned to\nTrail after a short visit with her\nparents Mr. and Mrs. Joe Surlna\nof Shutty Bench.\nMiss Cameron who has been a\neuest at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam MacDonald, has returned\nto her home in Nelson.\nMiss Clara Johnson, who teaches\nschool at Shoreacres has returned\nto her duties after spending her holidays here with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Eric Johnson.\nJack Boyce and party of friends\nNelson were Sunday visitors ln the\ncity.\nMiss Eunice Goodenough, who\nhas been the holiday truest of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. James Goodenough, bas return Id to her teaching\nduties in the McLean school at Rossland.\nMiss Diana Whellams has returned to her teaching duties at Robson\nafter having been the holiday guest\nof her parents Mr. and Mrs. H. S.\nWhellams.\nMiss Margaret MacDonald has left\nto resume her school teaching duties\nat Brilliant, after having been the\nholiday guest of her parents Mr. and\nMrs. William MacDonald.\nMiss Katherine Gillis of the TraU\nschool teaching staff has returned\nto that point after visiting in town\nwit hher parents Mr. and Mrs. Hugh\nGillis.\n\u2022 PAGE THREE\nWOMAN KILLED, MULE SAVED\nCITRUSDAL, South Africa (CP)\n\u2014One woman passenger was killed\nand several hurt when a motor car\nleft the road and went over an embankment when the driver tried to\navoid striking a mule.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B. C, April 24-\nMrs. Reginald Symons entertained\nthe members of the Women's auxiliary to Rossland branch, Canadian\nLegion, B.E.S.L., at a pleasant social evening Wednesday, at her\nhome on Third avenue. The raffle\nwas won by Mrs. P. McLellan. Those\npresent were Mrs. Lindsay Conroy,\nMrs. H. Conroy, Mrs. Percy E. Taylor, Mrs. Joseph Dupperon, Mrs.\nThomas Wood, Mrs. William Buick,\nMra. John Lloyd, Mrs. John McCullough, Mrs. William Gresly-\nJones, Mrs. William Butorac, Mrt.\nP. McLellan, Mrs. Howard Ferguson, Miss Margaret Symons and the\nhostess.\n...\nMrs. Thomas Wood and Miss Betty\nWood have returned from visiting\nwith Mrs. Wood's mother at Victoria.\n...\nMiss Florence Hartford has returned from a fortnight's holiday\nat Nakusp.\n...\nUnder the auspices of the Canadian club, Mrs. Elizabeth Haynes\ngave a most interesting lecture in\nthe Court House, Wednesday night,\nher subject being \"The place of the\ncommunity theatre in modem life.\"\nits\nThe Young Women's Service club\nof thc United church met Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs.\nWilliam Wardale.\n\u2022' \u2022 ..\nAnnual meeting of the Past Chiefs'\naatociation wat held at the home of\nMrs. Gilbert Kay, Tuesday evening.\nThe following officers were elected:\nMrs .Howard Ferguson, president;\nMrs. Frank G. Bray, vice-president;\nMrs. Milllcent Topliss, secretary;\nMrs. Jack Gendle, treasurer. Mrs.\nAlexander Page ad Mrs. Jack Gendle were appointed to represent the\nassociation at the Grand lodge session in Penticton next month, with\nMrs. Basil Littley and Mrs. Percy G.\nPalmer as alternates. Delicious re-\nUlfttff^tl ^mpV.\\e\nINCORPORATED 2~ MAY 1670.\n*.\n_M'...\\\n\u25a0     M <\n.    **'\u00ab_\u2022\u2022.\n*\u2022>\u00ab     '\u2022-\n,  \u2022 \u00bb    it.ft\n!_*!\u00bb\u2022 {\">r,>\n- t*        .   .     '*\n.i:<v*-\n._.>,*'      m\n>\\ -\u25a0 yt> :\n:.\u00bb.;. r. c;\u25a0\u2022*!.'\n'\u2022     I. a*!\n_\u2022 >*.\u2666*,\n'*)!',. t  t  .   L\nTAILORED SIMPLICITY IN\nJACKET FROCKS\n| Tailored simplicity is stressed in this collection of jacket\nI frocks for smart street wear. Dresses of plain sheers\n! and crepes. Others in gayly colored prints a^m mm\nI and polka dots. Jackets are % length and *^T\u00bb\u21225\nfinger tip. Sizes 14 to 48         \u00a3\nDISTINCTIVE STYLES IN\nNEW MILLINERY\nA new shipment of spring millinery in the new popular\ncellophane straw. Jaunty sailors for sportswear, sophisticated afternoon hats created to stimulate \"\nnew fashion interest\t\nLADIES' TERRY CLOTH PULLOVERS\nIdeal for summer sportswear. Polo collar with button\nfastening. White and canary. Sizes 14 to 20. (M AA\nPRICED AT \u00abPl.UU\nWith Zipper Fastening  $1.29\nEXTRA VALUE IN LINGERIE\nLadies' cotton vest, bloomers and cuff panties. White\nand pink only. OQ<\nEACH OJ\nCHILDREN'S UNDERWEAR\nChildren's cotton underwear, vests, bloomers,\nWhite and pink. Sizes 2 to 14.\nEACH   \t\nbriefs.\n25*\nCORSETS-CORSELETTES* GIRDLES\nBroken assortment of corsets, corselettes and two way stretch elastic\ngirdles. Corsets 24 to 30 waist. Corselettes to size 38 only. Girdles\nsmall, medium and large\t\n98*\nLADY HUDSON\nSHOES \u00bb5-\u00b0\u00b0 pair\nBlue, grey, brown or black In fine kid\nleathers. White in calf or buck, and\nwhite or beige or linen ties. A wide choice\nand   pleasing  patterns.\nPumps, straps, ties. AA\nto D.\nPLAY TIME\nSHOES\nFOR CHILDREN\nWhite or natural Elk In oxfords or T Straps. Unllned\nand finished with cushion\nsoles for warm weather comfort. The best soring and lummer footweir for children.\n5 to 8\n8V2.0 12\n12'\/2 to 3\n$1.95\n$2.25\n$3.45\nFOR MEN AND YOUNG MEN\nHBC STANDARD MASTER FIVES\nQuality fit and comfort and a wide choice of Styles make these shoes ft\nwonderful value. Your choice of black or brown in blucher or balmoral '\nstyles. 5'\/. to 11. A to E. PAIR\t\n5\n.00\nAn Outstanding\nValue in\nHANDBAGS\nFJat envelope and square\npouch styles, in dome fastenings and zipper tops.\nThese purses are in black,\nbrown, navy and white. A\nspecial purchase of a limited quantity. Shop CQ*?\nearly. EACH  .... \u00ab\u2022*'\nPERFECT CHIFFON\nOR SEMISERVICE\nHOSIERY\nAt a price that meets your budget allowances. Warm Spring days herald a season\nof greater hosiery needs. New seasonal\ncolors to tone with spring suits. These\nchiffon and semi-service hose have both\nwearing qualities and style.\n79.\nPAIR\nV\nGLOVES\nOF DISTINCTION\nWear them with suits and dresses with\nlong or short cuffs, these gloves are well\nto the fore this year. Doeskin, beige,\nmorocco and navy. HM\nPAIR\nSHOPPING BAGS\nUpper top\nRubberized washable fabric, these large\nsize, roomy shopping bags will stand any\namount of hard wear. In blue, navy,\nbrown, grey and black. 70^\nEACH    .... 19\nfreshments were served. Those present were Mrs. William T. Trembath,\nMrs. Percy G. Palmer, Mrs. L. C.\nMcintosh, Mrs. Gilbert Kay, Mrs.\nJack Gendle, Mrs. Millicent Topliss\nand Mrs. Howard Ferguson.\n.aaa\nMrs. Alexander R. Pitt left Tuesday for Vancouver, where she and\nMr. Pitt will take up residence, Mr.\nPitt having much improved in health\nsince going to the lower altitude.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. M. F. R. McLennan\nhave taken up residence in the Pitt\nhouse on St Paul street\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. H. A. McMillan of Edmonton\nIs tbe guest of her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Morris.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. John Sherman of\nPort Angeles arc the guests of Mrs.\nSherman's sister, Mrs. A. L. Acorn.\nMrs. Sherman will be remembered\nby old-timers as Min Minnie Mor-\nrish.\n\u2022 t   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. L. H. Griiwold and\nlittle son have gone to Vancouver,\nwhere Mr. Griswold's friends hope\nhe will soon regain his health.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. B. Rose and little daughter of\nVancouver are the guests of Mn. I\nRose's sister, Mrs. Robert Crawford.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMrs. Ernest Glover left Tuesday\nmorning for the home of her mother\nat Bremerton, Wash., where she will\nrecuperate from her recent severe\nillness,\naaa\nAlexander Simpson of Vancouver,\nwho has been thc guest ot Dr. and\nMrs. B. P. Sutherland, returned to\nhis home Tuesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Frank M. Ersklne and Miss\nJean Ersklne have returned from a\nholiday at the coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMisses Isabel and Florence Towner are visiting in Spokane.\naaa\nMiss Edith Churches is visiting in\nthe Pend d'Orellle district.\n\u2022 a   a\nRobert Lee has returned from a\nshort visit to his old home in Greenwood.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMri. Ernest Morrison is visiting\nIn Vancouver.\nA Friend to the Aged\nAs the Years Creep On\nMlLBURwr\n1   HEALTH  J\n^rvepiuV\nIn the Inter years of life we start to lose that\nflnnp and vigor of our younger days. The blood dose\naot circulato as it once did, the vitality ii on tha\nwane, and the nerves not just aa steady as they ustd\nto be.\nLittle sicknesses and ailments seem harder to shake J\noff; and evidences of a breakdown begin to appear.\nThose who wish to maintain their health and vigar J\nand retain their energy should use Milburn 'i II. t\nNerve Pills at this time of lift.\n PA4I FOUR-\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n. PIUS\nFOR...\nSAND\nGRAVEL\nPHONE\n797\nPrompt Service\nRenwicks\ni Transfer Co.\nHOCKEY ASS'N\nENDS SEASON\nWITH BALANCE\nFRENCH PARTY STANDINGS\nDeclares Winners in\nFour Leagues and\nVotes Medals\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nCUPS ACCEPTED\nHorswill Urges Plan\nfor Association\nCoaching\n\u25a0Y THE CANADIAN PREN\nStnading of the parties and political groups In tht lut French\nChamber of Deputies after the elections of May, 1932, gnd at adjournment\nin April, 1936, follow:\nAfter After\nElection    Adjournment\nRIQHT May, 1932    April, M.\nConservatives  \t\nRepublican  Federation  \t\nRepublican and Socialist Group .\n(Total Right)  _ \t\nCENTER\nPopular Democrata .-.,  - ~ \u2014\nRepublicans of the Center (Alsatians)\nCenter Republicans (proper) - __\t\nLeft Republicans  -   \u2014\nLeft Radicala \t\nLeft Independents  \u2014.\u2014-\n(Total Center) _ \t\nLEFT\nRadical-Socialists  - \u2014 -\nRepublican-Socialists \t\nFrench Socialists  \t\nLeft Independente  -_\u2022\nSocialists \t\nNIUON DAILY NIWI. NILION. \u2022.C.-IA,TUr.DAY MORNINO. AMIL tt. 1IM   \u25a0\nW. M. Harris It\nRotarian Head\nfor Cranbrook\n11\n18\n\u00ab\n48\n18\n18\n(74)\n(80)\n17\n18\n7\nT\n8.\nJ.\n38\n48\n48\n47\n29\n27\n(16.)\n(174)\nA Law Every\nMother Should\nKnow and Observe\nJVecer Give Your Child An\nUnknown Remedy nit \/ion t\nAsking Your Doctor First\nAccording  to\nany doctor you\nask, the only\n\u2022afe way is\nnever  to  give\nyour  child   a\nremedy  you  don't  know  all\nabout, without asking him first.\n' When it comes to \"milk of\nmagnesia,\" that you know everywhere, for over 60 years, doctors\nhave said \"PHILLIPS' Milk of\nMagnesia for your child.\"\nSo\u2014always say Phillips' when\nyou buy. And, for your own\npeace of mind, see that your\nchild gets this; Ihe finest men\nknow. Made in Canada.\nSffifaftm-Wyt-tt\nYou can assist others by refusing\nlo accept _ substitute for tlie ^\ngenuine Phillip.  Milk of Mag'\nnesia. Do this in thc    _^\ninterest of yourself _^S3__\nandyourchiUren   ^.n.***7***,'\nPhillips'\n\/Mi\/A. (fA\/aqneiiom\nCleaning up the various execuUve\nmatters requiring to be dealt with\non account of the past hockey season, during which it operated four\nleagues, embracing 16 teams, the\nexecutive of the Nelson Amateur\nHockey association met at the Savoy\nThursday night, preparatory to a\nwind-up meeting of the association,\nwhich it fixed for May 6. Sentiment\nfavored changing the bylaws to\nbring the election of officers at the\nstart of the hockey season Instead\nof at its finish, and it was agreed\nthat a change of bylaws should be\nproposed at thc association meeting,\nby which the elections should be\nheld the first week in October.\nSecretary-Treasurer Rege Taylor\nreported $96.64 in the bank, against\nwhich were some obligations which\nit was decided the association should\nessumc, In connection with the Rossland and Trail Midget and Bantam\ngames played here at the conclusion\nof the season. Disposition of the\nmoney will be left to the association.\nCUPS ACCEPTED\nOffer of R. L. McBride, president\not the Wood, Vallance Hardware\ncompany, communicated through\nAlderman N. C. Stibbs, of two cups\nfor annual competition, one for the\nMidget league, and one for the Bantam, was gratefully accepted. This\nmakes a cup for each league winner\nof the past season.\nTo clear up the cup situation, Alderman Stibbs, H. H. Currie, and\nSecretary Tiylor were appointed a\ncommittee to interview donors of\nthc various cups, or look up records,\nto ascertain the terms on which\nthc trophies were originally put up,\nwhether for perpetual competition,\nor subject to being won outright\nunder certain conditions. Whatever\nthe facts are, they will bc put on\nrecord, to be a future guide.\nThe executive, on the report of\nSecretary Taylor, declared the season's winners in the respective\nleagues, the Wolves being declared\nthe Commercial league champions,\nthe Hume the Juvenile champs, tha\nP miners the Midget champs, and the\nBlues the Bantam champs.\nIt was decided to supplement the\ncups by medals to be bought by association funds, for the members of\nthe winning teams. The cup committee was instructed to report on\ncost of this to the executive.\nAll teams were ordered to report\non their sale of association membership tickets and to turn ln unsold tickets, by May 1.\nVice-president Bert Walton agreed\nDissident Communist!\nCommunlste \t\n(Totel Left) -\t\nIndependent! \t\n160\n21\n19\n131\nI\n10\n(363)\n18\n615\nIU\n10\n23\n17\n9.\n10\nI\n(340)\n12\n115\nWHO'S WHO IN THE FRENCH VOTING\n(COPYRIGHT, 1936, BY THE CANADIAN PRESS)\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-A special\nmeeting of the Cranbrook Rotary\nclub directors wai held to elect\nofficers. W. M, Harris was elected\npresident; Percy Coe, lecretary, J.\nM. Baird, treuurer.\nMr. Harrii wai named ai a delegate to the dlitrict conference to be\nheld ln Vincouver In May, L. P.\nSullivan wu named alternate.\nSeven or eight city memben plan\nto attend the Vancouver conference. \u00bb\nC, Burgeu of Vancouver wu a\nguest of the club.\nMayor T. M. Roberti gava a detailed account of hit visit to Ottawa\nto those business men of the city\nwho sponsored the trip, at an Informal dinner on Tuesday evening,\nHis mission was ln connection with\nhighway Improvement! and other\nmatters for the betterment Of the\ndistrict, and it ii believed hll effort! will be attended with satisfactory remits. ,\nHARRY CASSIDY\nPASSES AWAY\nEDOUARD HERRIOT, The chunky\nblack-haired mayor of Lyons, who\nas leader of the right wing ot tht\npowerful Radical-Socialist party li\nin the thick of the current elecUon\ncampaign, ls said to have one great\nambition, which ls not political.\nTwice former premier of France, lt\nls said Edouard Herriot aspires to\na seat among the \"forty immortals\"\nin the French academy.\nHe is famed as a scholar no leu\nthan as a statesman. Left a penniless orphan at 17, the ex-premier\nhas always made a living by his pen.\nHis book on Madame Recamier,\nbeauty of Napoleonic and post-Napoleonic days, is already considered\na classic. His \"Life of Beethoven\"\nhas won wide appreciation and hll\nreverie on \"The Norman Forest\" hu\ncharmed many readen.\nAfter ministerial experience during the last year of the Great War,\nHarriot rapidly became a power in\nFrench politics. He led the Radical-\nSocialist party in 1024 and after the\nelection formed the famoui Left\nCartel ministry, which governed\nFrance for 12 stormy monthi.\nFinancial problems, together with\nthe bitter religious feeling aroused\nby the cartel's ichool policy in Alsace-Lorraine, brough the cabinet down to defeat Good Friday,\n1925. The following year he formed\nhis second ministry, which luted\nbut 48 houn, and later participated\nin Raymond Poincare'i \"lave-lhe-\nfranc\" government\nThe elections of 1932 again brought\nHSrrlot to the premiership. Again\nhis ministry wai ihort-lived. Insistence on payment of the war debt\ninstalment to the United Steles\nbrought the cabinet's overthrow ln\nDecember of that year. In 1934,\nafter the Stavisky scandal and the\nsubsequent riots, he became minii-\n10 MORE JOIN\n(RESTON BOARD\nCanadlin trade with British Mal-1   Water lilies are apt not to thrive\n.    > _.].___   _\u2022__.______.  w_.___.__.  i.'1.. _____   .   ___!\u00ab__. a __._.\nProtest  the  Personal\nProperty Tax; M.P.P.\nWill Be Speaker\nayi ll Increuing. British Malaya is\nthe name applied to the colony of\nthe Strait! Settlement! (Including\nSingapore, Penang, Malacca, Lu-\nbuan, Christmas island and Cocos\nIilands), the Federated Malay\nStates (Perek, Selangor, Negri Sem*\nbllan, and Pahang), and the Un*\nfederated Malay States (Johore, Ke*\ndah, Trengganu, Kelinten and Perils).\nif grown in metal tubi or tonka.\nto tike charge ot the association's\nhockey equipment, and, in the cue\nof goalie pads, which can also serve\nfor catchen in baseball, to see that\nthey would be Issued only to responsible adults.\nPLEA FOR KIDS\nPresident A. T. Honwill made a\nstrong appeal for the hockey beginners, and pointed out that With\ntlie Allan cup having come to the\nKootenay through Klmberley, there\nwas now a hockey spirit that had\nnever before existed. He urged the\nassociation to consider the possibility\nof engaging a coach who would give\ntime to all the teams trom Bantam\nup to Commercial.\nter ot state in the National Union\ngovernment ot Gaston Doumergue, a\npoit he held ln successive ministries until a few months ago.\nLOUIS MARTIN\u2014One of the most\ncolorful personalities of the French\nelection campaign ls Louii Martin,\nsince 1929 leader of the Republican\nFederation, Rightist group drawing\niti chief support from the upper\nbourgeoisie and big industrial interests. Since the party il opposed\nto anti-clerical legislation, it receives much of the Catholic vote.\nHair alwaya ruffled, \"walrus\"\nmoustache aggressively curled, tie\nalways disarrayed, Marin il an impetuous, outspoken debater, one ot\nthe stormy petrel! of French public life. In the chamber he ii known\nalike for the ability of hia ipeech\nand the fertility ot hli ideu. He ll\nan advocate ot women'i franchise,\na itudent of the constitution, arid\nwanta to make the chamber into a\n\"work-shop.\"\nHe il an uncompromising anti-Socialist. Minliter for the liberated region! ln the Polncare cabinet, he\nitood for security before disarmament throughout thl pre-Hitler\nyean, and since Poincare's death\nhu become the foremost protagonist ot tha \"Lorraine ichool.\"\nALBERT SARRAUT \u2014 Premier\nand head of the preient government which admittedly is a stopgap until after tha elections, Albert Sarraut is a Radical-Socialist.\nAlthough not u prominent u lome\nof his ministers, he hu been In and\nout of governmenti for 30 yean.\nHll long career hu won him the\nreputation of a \"fighter\". While a\nyoung deputy back in 1008, Sarraut\nitruck Deputy Fuiglieii-Contl during debate on the Dreyfus Reiteration bill In the celebrated \"Affair\".\nA duel resulted and Sarraut wai\ndangerously wounded by a iword\nthruit ln the right breast.\nWhile governor-general ot Indochina an attempt Was made on hli\nlife. He wu ihot and seriously\nwounded.\nSarraut wu premier for a ihort\ntime in 1933. While miniiter of the\ninterior In 1934, he resigned after\nthe assassination of King Alexander\nof Yugoslavia at Marseille because\nof criticism of the police protection\ngiven the King.\nHe ls one of the publishers of the\nleading French Llbenl paper, La\nDepeche de Toulouse.\n(THE END)\nFormer Nelson Auto\nMechanic Was in\nTranquille\nEDGEWOOD, B.C.,-The Drama\ntic club hu been buiy with re\nhearsals on Monday, Tuesdiy and\nWedneiday on the itage in the hall\nwith scenery. Those taking part ln\nthe play are Mlu M. Kelso, Miss I.\nKerr, Miss M. Wation, Miss K.\nJowett, Miu Corrle deGans, P.\nDaly, D. Poole and Q. Cooper, the\nlatter acting two parta. Mn. M. Daly\nls stage manager. Jack Eaelmont in\ncharge lighting and curtain. The\nplay lists about two and one half\nhours.\nTwo memben of the committee of\nthe Tennii club itarted rolling the\ncourt! on Saturday, and on Sundiy\nthen were a few memben having\nthe tint game ot tha seison.\nWord hu alio been received of\nthe paulng of Harry Cassidy at\ntht Sanitarium at Tranqullle. Since\nhe wu taken in Mn. Mirtim Cassidy hu been staying at the Fin,\nInonoaklin Valley the home of her\nmother Mn. Jordan Williams,\nPeggy Coatei, Mabel Willson and\nFreddy Forslund all went out by the\n\"Columbia\" on Tuesday to return\nto ichool in Nelson.\nHarry Cusidy is well known in\nNelson and Nakusp. For some yean\nhe wai mechanic at the Nelson\nTransfer before being transferred\nto Nakusp where he worked until\nhe became ill.\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014Attendance at\nthe April meeUng of Creston board\nof trade on Tuesday evening was\nthe biggut io far thii year. Cor-\nrupondence wai unuiually heavy.\nSeveral members spoke on the\nabolition ot the personal property\ntax, which had been taken up by\nthe local member, Frank Putnam,\nwith the deputy minister of finance.\nIt ls recognised aa an unfair tax. A\ncommittee wu appointed to punue\nthe matter further.\nThe condition of the provincial\nhighway between Yahk and Erlckson and the north and louth road\nbetween Creston and Porthlll came\nup tor discuuion. A telegram will\nbe lent the minliter of public works\nuking for action on these two\npiecei of highway.\nA reiolution from Cranbrook\nboard ot trade aiking support for\ntheir effort to keep open the fish\nhatchery at Cranbrook, wu favorably acted upon. Similar support\nwas given this matter by the Rod\nand Gun club.\nFour applications for membership\nwere favorably considered. This\nmakes a totel ot 10 new members\nenrolled to date, which ls the best\nshowing the board has made for a\nnumber of years. President Col.\nMallandaine, welcomed two new\nmembers ln F. C. Rodgen and John\nShean, proprietor of Creston'! new\nhotel now under construction.\nIt wu decided to Inaugurate the\nluncheon system from time to time,\nand the first of these wilt be at\nnoon Wednesday, April 29 at the\nKing George hotel dining room. The\nguest speiker will be Frank Putnam, M.P.P., who will briefly present the high lights of the recent\nlegislative leulon. These dinner\nget-togetheri will be continued\nthroughout the \"year ai gueit speak*\nen are available.\nSWAGGER SUITS and\nSPRING COATS\nON SALE\nHaving had a very satisfactory\ntrade for our Spring Coats, etc.,\nwe can now afford to clean\nthem out at reduced prices.\nLadies' or Misses' Suits\nValues to $15.95\nfor \t\nSuits up to $22.00\nfor\t\nSuits up to $30.00\nfor \t\n$13.95\n$17.95\n$555\nWynndel Social\nAids Hospital\nWYNNDEL, B.C.-The locial afternoon on Saturday wai a greit\nsuccess. Bridge wu played, with\nhigh icore going to Mrs. Dunseath\nand comolation to Mri. R. Ande-\nitad. An enjoyable muilcil interlude wu provided by Miu June\nWigen, piano, and Mrs. Grelg, violin. Ice cream was on sale and\nquickly sold out Tea was served\nby the committee. The proceeds\nwere for the hospital fund.\nPrincipal and Mn. Martello and\nKathleen,  who spent the Euter\ntn i tub \/-i Accicien u\/ay h0*icU*\" ln Tra11 ,nd Ilonl*na' r\u00bb\"\nSELL THE CLASSIFIED WAY  t    ^ on Su-day.\nSpring Coats up to\n$11.95 for\t\nSpring Coats up to  <M 1 QC\n$20.00 for \u00abpil.i7J\nWe h\u00abve received several shipments of Hats lately, ind\nsay what wonderful numbers they  tfl QC to tfO QC\nRAMSDEN'S\nVernon St. Groceteria\nFAMILY GROCERS\nPHONE 122       J. A. Laird fr Som       FREE DELIVERY\nService With Satisfaction Our Aim\nCREAMETTES   3 pkgi. 25<*\nORMOND'S SODAS  Pkg. 20<\nSWANSDOWN TISSUE 4 for 25*\nSAFECUARD CARB. SOAP  Itch   5*\nSHERIFF'S JELLY POWDERS Eich   5e*\nMALKIN'S WHOLE CREEN BEANS Tin 16*\nMENUS\nRECIPES\nand\nHINT8\nGood\nBv\nMn.\nMary\nMorton\nHousekeeping\nTHERE wc times when even the\nhealthiest  baby's system becomes sluggish ... clogged.\nThe problem is whit laxative U\nbest to start the little tot functioning normally again. Is a grownup's laxative safe enough for him ?\nDoctors advise against it. They\nsay a laxative made for a grown-up\ncan be too harsh for a child's delicate system. It can cause griping,\ncramping pain.\nEven the taste o(*CASTORIA is\nmade especially for children. They\nare not afraid to take it. And you\nahould be glad that they aren't.\nThat'i why doctor., recommend\nthe laxative made especially AND\nONLY for children\u2014CASTORIA.\nCASTORIA will not act in a\nstrong, \"adult\" way. There isn't a\nsingle irritating ingredient in it.\nNo harsh, purging drugs. No narcotics.\nmm-.\t\nFor the revulsion a child feels when\nforced to take a nasty-tasting laxative can throw his entire system\nout of order\u2014and do more harm\nthan good.\nSo ttay on the ufe aide and |et\nCASTORJA today. Every drug\nstore sells It. If you're thrifty\nyou'll ask for the Family-Siie. It\nlasts longer\u2014saves you money.\nCASTORIA\nThe Children's Laiative\nfrom babyhood to 11 years\nMENU  HINT\nOld-Fashioned Stew\nCorn Stuffed Dumplings\nCabbage Salad\nOrange Nut Bread      Butter\nTea or Coffee\nApril winds are quite apt to be\nchill, at least occasionally, and stew\ntastes very good at such times. You\ncan add potatoes to this menu tf\nyou wish, but with all the other\nvegetables and the dumplings they\nore not needed. These are the rules\nInez Willson, home economist, gives\nfor making successful stew. You\nwill find the orange nut bread a\ndelicious dessert, and will want to\nsave the recipe and serve it on\nmany occasions.\n1. Have meat cut Into small pieces,\ninto about two-inch cubes, so that\nthe meat will keep Its identity after\ncooking,\n2. Dredge with flour and brown\nin hot lard.\n3. Season with salt and pepper\nand add enough water to cover.\n4. Cover kettle tightly and let\nsimmer slowly until done. Do not\nallow to boil.\nt. Add vegetables just long\nenough before serving that they\nwill be done, not overcooked.\nTODAY'S RECIPE*\nCorn Stuffed Dumplings-Make\nu dumpling dough stiff enough to\nbe rolled. Roll one-fourth-inch thick\nand cut Into three-Inch rounds.\nPlace the seasoned corn pulp on top,\nand pinch the edges of rounds to*\n{ether. Drop these on the meat and\nvegetables, not ln liquid, and allow\nto steam for fifteen minutes until\ndone.\nOld - Fashioned Stew \u2014 Two\npounds shank or neck of beef, four\ntablespoons flour, salt and pepper,\nsix small onions, six small carrots,\nthree turnips, quartered. Have tha\nmeat cut Into two-inch cubes.\nDredge It with flour and brown ln\nhot lwd. Season. Cover with hot\nwater'and allow to cook slowly\nuntil done. Forty-five minutes before serving, add the vegetables and\nseason. Sover tightly and allow\nthem to steam. Fifteen minutes before serving add the dumplings,\ncover and do not uncover until\nthey are done. More water may be\nadded as needed but do not add so\nmuch that the dumplings must rest\non liquid. They are much better lt\nthey rest on meat or vegetables\nand are allowed to steam.\nOrange Nut Bread\u2014Squeeie juice\nfrom one large orange into one cup\nmeasure ahd fill cup with boiling\nwater. Grind orange rind and\nenough raisins or dates to make a\ncupful. Combine orange mixture\nwtth boiling water in a mixing\nbowl. Stir ln one cup of sugar, two\ntablespoons shortening and one\nteaspoon vanilla. Add one beaten\negg, then two cups sifted flour with\none teaspoon baking powder and\none-fourth teaspoon salt Beat\nthoroughly, stirring ln one-half cup\nchopped nut meats. Bake ln greased loaf pan for 90 minutes ln a\nmodertae oven. A very fancy bread\nwhich can be used for sandwiches.\nFOR STICKY DRAWER*\nWhen drawers stick there Is an\neasy remedy. Take the drawers out\nand rub the bottom edges with\nparaffin. A few testa will locate the\nexact trouble spots and if they are\nwell waxed, they will give no further trouble.\nSAVE POLISH\nAdd a small quantity of turpentine to shoe polish that hai become\nhard and It will soften immediately.\nAT YOUR GROCERY STORE THIS WEEK\nNOW is the time to add PEP to your meals. You'll find\nthat your grocer is featuring these delicious better bran\nflakes. Vary your menus with these crisp, golden flakes.\nThey're delicious with milk or cream. Popular with the\nwhole family. Extra good with fruit or honey added.\nKellogg's PEP Bran Flakes are packed with nourishment for active bodies. Plus enough added bran to be\nmildly laxative.\nEnjoy PEP often. Breakfast, lunch or supper. Always\noven-crisp in the patented heat-sealed inner WAXTITE\nbag\u2014exclusive with Kellogg of London, Ontario.\ni&%# PEP BRAN FLAKES\nGenuine Bran Flakes\nPEP Bran Flakes are truly better bran\nflakes. Better for flavor. For crispness.\nFor nourishment and mild laxative effect.\nBuy several packages, while your grocer is featuring PEP Bran Flakes,\n Wl\nNELSON  DAILY NIW*. NSLSON. E\/\\\u2014-..TU*_>AY  MORrilNG. AWL S5   1._3\nWHITE IS RIGHT\nfor the glorious summer season\nWhatever you do, or wherever you go this summer you'll always be correctly attired in white shoes.   Come in and see\nour outstanding collection of fascinating new styles\nfor summer.\n$2'95 ^ sio50\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nSALADA\nTEA\nBROWN LABEL\nFREE Salada  Elephsnt\nwith sach pound.\nIb.59c\nPhone 865-866 Free Delivery\nPRICES EFFECTIVE SAT. snd MON.-APRIL 25\u201427\nThrifty Buys for Thrifty Shoppers\nSafeway Stores\ncoffee\nHighway Freih Ground\nlb. 19c\nBUTTER\nHighway  lit Grade\n3 lbs. 79c\nCOCOA\nV2 lb. tin 22c\nKETCHUP\u2014Heinx 14-ox. . 2 bot.   I.V\nVINEGAR\u2014Heinx 16-ox.    . Bot. 17<.\nPICKLES\u201427-ox Bot. _!!><\u2022\nGHERKINS\u201427-ox Bot. 27c\nPEARS\u20142s, Squat  2 tins 35*\nPORK AND BEANS\u201411-ox.; 4 tins 25*\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Singapore .. 2 tins  19*\nSYRUP\u2014Rogers' 5*s  .......  Tin 39*\nALL-BRAN\u2014Kellogg's   ....   Pkg.  I itr\nCREAM OF WHEAT Pkg. 'i'Zr\nSHREDDED WHEAT  Pkg.  1 Or\nSABLE TOILET TISSUE .. 3 rolls 22*\nCUEST IVORY SOAP .... 5 bars 23*\nCARNATION MILK  TaU 10c; Baby 5c\nSEE \"THE COUNTRY DOCTOR\" AT THE CAPITOL\nPEAS\u2014Aylmer Seive 5 .... 2 tins 25o\nSOUP\u2014Heinx Tomato .... 3 tins 28*\nMINCED CLAMS\u2014Saanieh; 2 tins 29f\nSALMON\u2014Sockeye l's ... Tin 25*\nCHIPSO\nLirge   Pkg.\n19c\nPILCHARDS\u2014 Vt 2 tins 23*\nSWEET ASSORTED BISCUITS\u2014\nZ lbs   49*\nCHEESE\u2014Colden Loaf Vis     Pkg.  15*\nWOODBURY'S SOAP .... 3 bars 25c\nLYE\u2014Royal Crown 2 tins I !\u00bb<\u2022\nMATCHES\u2014Sesqui     Pkg. 18*\nSALT\u2014Windsor 3 '\/js   Sk.    9*\nPLUM JAM\nK.C, 4 Ib. tin\n43c\nCRAHAM WAFERS\u201412-ox.; Pkg.  15c\nRITZ BISCUITS 2 pkgs. 2i\u00bbc\nHEINZ SPAGHETTI\u2014Med.;2 tins 2!>c\nKELLOCG'S PEP FLAKES  . 2 pkgs. 23c\nJEWELL\nSHORTENING\n2 1b. 32c\nSODAS\nWooden   Box\nEach 37c\nQUAKER OATS\nCHINA\nPkg. 25c\nFRESH FRUITS AND VEGETABLES\nLettuce, Large.... 2 heads 23c\nAsparagus 2 lbs. 29c\nSpinach, Fresh local; 2 lbs 25c\nCarrots _____ 3 bunches 25c\nOranges, Med.....  4 dox. 89c\nGrapefruit  2 doz. 89c\nApples __  10 lbs. 29c\nApples  Per box 95c\nRHUBARB\nWhile It InU\n3 lb. 25c\nFRESH TOMATOES, CELERY, CABBAGE, BEETS, TURNIPS, ETC.\nSHtOwr MEAT DEPARTMENT\nFREE DELIVERY\nPHONE 865\nROLLED PRIME RIB ROASTS\nPERLB.19C\nA REAL FAMILY ROAST\nSPECIAL SATURDAY ONLY\t\nTender Beef\nPOT R0A8TS  - -\t\nBeef Roasts\nTENDtR RUMP :  LB,\nLB.\n10c\n16c\nLamb Roasts\nSHOULDER     \t\nLB\n17c\nPork Roasts\nSHOULDER\nLB.\n18c\nPork Roasts\nLEG\nLB.\n22c\nSirloin Steaks\nTENDER\nLB.\n21c\nPork Liver\nFRESH\t\nLB\n10c\nCured Bacon\nFINEST MILD \t\n2 PKTS. FOR\nBoiling Fowl\nFINE8T \t\nLB.\n33c\n21c\nOUR\nOWN\nMAKE\nFRESH BEEF\nSAUSAGE\n2 Lbs. for\n19\"\nWe Reserve Ihe Right to Limit Quantitiei SAFEWAY STORES LIMITED\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\n'1 .lis column In conducted by Mrs M J Vigneux. All newi of a\nsocial nature including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages etc.. will appear in this column. Telephone Mra.\nVigneux at her home. 519 Silica itreet.\nof her mother, Mrs. Kenneth Coates\nin Edgewood, has returned to re-\nI sume her studies at St. Joseph's aca-\ni demy.\n' *   .   .\nI    Mrs. A. D. Gooch of Crawford Bay\n' paid a visit in town yesterday.\n PAQE FIVI\nby, who have been guests of Mrs. j vited guests were Neil Hood, Alan\nKopeckl's lister, Mrs. J. V, Meyer Hood, Jimmy Hood, Margaret Spiers,\nand Mn., Kirby Grenfell for the\npast couple of weeks, has returned\ntn Rossland.\nMrs. M. Beck of Salmo was a visl\n; tor in town yesterday.\nMrs. Wilfred Allan, Rosemont, was ,\nthe honor guest at a surprise blth-\nday party given at hcr home Thursday night when a number of her\nfriends gathered to wish her many\nhappy returns of the day. Tlie evening was spent in dancing, games\nand contests. Among the guests\nwere Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Potter. Mr.\nand Mrs. A. E. Murphy, Dr. R. B,\nShaw, George Dvorjetz* Dr. and\nMrs. John Gansner Mr. and Mis.\nWilliam J. Sturgeon, Dr. and Mi-..\nH. H. McKenzie, Mr. and Mrs. D.\nD. Townsend, Mrs. V. Cr-mpbell.\nMiss Paula Gansner, Mr. and Mrs.\nR. L. McBride, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Baird, Mrs. Nell Haggarty. Mr.\nand Mrs. P. G. Morey,. Miss Helen .\nVance, Leigh and Kenneth McBride',\nJames Grant, Allan, Alex Allan, J.\nB. Stark, Mrs. J. J. Foote, Mr. and\nI Mrs. G. C. Arneson and Bland Mar-'\nla.-.\n...\nMrs. Reginald Howe left yester-1\nday for Vancouver.\n...\nWalter B. Johnstone of Silverton\nspent yesterday in the city.\n....\nMrs. A. D. Clyde of Robson, who\nhas been spending the winter\nmonths in Revelstoke, the guest of\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. P. C. Lindsay, has arrived\non an extended visit at the home of\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. M, Armstrong, Silver\nKing road.\ncollection including a complete layette and many other articles which\nwill be distributed lo needy mothers.\nThose attending were: Mrs. R. Moffatt, Mrs. S. J. Newell, Mrs. W. A.\nTriggs, Miss M. E. Thompson, Mrs.\nW. H. Rixen, Mrs. R. Morgan, Mrs.\nClarence Ward. Miss Ruth Rixen,\nMrs. W. J. Silverwood, Mrs. T. J.\nSmith and Mrs. Hookings and Mrs.\n.1  Lundie.\n...\nE. W. McQuade of tlie Wisconsin\nmine visited Nclsun yesterday.\n...\nMiss Phyllis Mott, pupil of St.\nJosephs academy, has 'eturned alter\nspending her vacation a* the home\nof her parents in Cranbrook.\nMrs.  Turner-Lee of  Bonnington\nvisited Nelson yesterday.\n' ...\nMiss   Margaret   Clarke,   resident\npupil of St. Joseph's academy has\nMri. E. T. D. Francis was in the j returned from Gray Creek where\ncity from Crawford Bay yesterday, j she 5pent the \u00a3\u201e._,. vacaUon at the\nhome of her parents Mr. and Mrs.\nKenneth Spiers, Mary, Irene and\nMargaret Arnot, Alan Foster, Madge\nand John Kennedy, Dawn Virtue,\nJoan McKay, Jackie Burgoyne, Betty Spien, Gordon Spiers, Derrel\nShaw, Gwen Morrii and Patsy Jarvis.\nspent the past two weeks visiting\nspent the past two weeks residing Vancouver,\nat the homes of her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. E. J. Cook of the north shore\nand her brother-in-law and sister,\nMr. and Mrs. Howard Murphy, Latimer street, leaves this morning\nfor her home in Medicine Hat.\nShoppers in Nelson yesterday included Mrs. A. J. Crowe of South\nSlocan.\n...\n. Mrs. E. H. H. Applewhaite was in\ntown from Willow Point yesterday.\n...\nMrs. Mac White and children, of\nAtlin, B.C., who has been visiting\nat the home of Mrs. Oscar White\nin New Denver for a few weeks, was\nin town Thursday on hcr way to\nvisit relatives and friends in Spokane. From there she returns to\nAtlin.\n...\nW. A. Blackbourne of the Relief\nArlington mine leaves today on a\nthree-weeks visit with his family in\n\\ Leonard Clarke.\n...\nMisj Helen Spien celebrated her\nsixth birthday April 16, when she entertained a number of her young\n; friendi at the home of her mother,\n1 Mrs. J. D. Spiers, Fairview, Her in-\nNEARLY   DONE\nJimmie waa going out with hii-\nmother one afternoon and had been .\nsent upstairs to get ready. After\na long wait the mother called up\nthe stain: \"Hurry down, Jimmie,\nwe're late now. Have you got your\nshoes en yet?\"\n\"Yes,\" replied the boy, \"all but\ntwo.\"\nMrs. Walter Clough of Slocan City\npaid a visit in town yesterday.\nJ. H. T. Worsfold ol Willow Point\nspent yesterday in Nelson.\nRev. F. A. Healey, C.S.S.R., of\nVancouver who has been conducting\nretreats in Nelson has left for Portland en route to Vancouver.\nMrs. E. M. Kopecki and son Bob-\nT.  C. Gibbs of the  Reno\nvisited town yesterday.\nmine\nMr. and Mrs. Philip Long, Silica\nstreet, have as their guest Mrs. J. E.\nHughes of Vancouver a former resi-\n...    ___.\u00ab\u2022   v. ,    . \u2022 ,   _ dent of Nelson, who will leave the\nMiss Mollie Kirkpatrick has re-. ,h,t ., \u201e,. w;\u201ek f     F\nturned from Kimberley after spend-   visil _t ,\u201e. home _( hcr sZio-\\_.)\nand Mrs. Her\ning the holidays at thc home of her\naunt to resume her studies at St.\nJoseph's residential school.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. A. R. Mudie of\nGrand Forks visited the city yesterday.\n...\nMrs K. Popoff of Slocan City has\nbeen in the city the guest of her\ndaughter,  Mrs.  Gordon Kitchener.\n...\nMrs. Horsfield was in town from\nLongbeach yesterday.\n...\nShoppers in Nelson yesterday included Mrs. W. E. Mclnnes of Ymir.\n...\nJ. E. Annable returned last night\nfrom a visit in Vancouver.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. George Benwell are\non a short holiday in Spokane.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. F. J. Mclntyre are\nleaving this morning on a vacation\nto Vancouver.    ' ,\n...\nThomas Heise of Balfour visited\nNelson yesterday.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. _. 3. McGregor and\nfamily of Bonnington were city\nvisitors Thursday.\n...\nA. H. Donald was in town from\nLongbeach yesterday.\n...\nThe home pf Mrs. Carl Hooking.,\nNelson avenue, was a busy scene\nTuesday evening when the W. A.\nmembers of the Church of the Redeemer, Fairview, met to arrange\nfor an April shower. During the\nmeeting Lenton sewing was displayed of which there was a nice\nand daughter Mr.\nman Kendrick.\n...\nJ. J. Binns, Hume hotel, left yesterday to spend the week-end at\nMirror Lake.\n...\nMiss Olive Fair of Salmo visited\nthc city yesterday.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. W. A. Robertson,\nSilver King road, have as their\nguests their daughter, Mrs. Llew-\nery Morris of Trail and her young\nson Michael.\nMr. and Mrs. H. B. Hardin\nSouth Slocan spent yesterday\nNelson shopping.\nOf\nMiss   Margaret   (Peggy)   Coates,\n; who spent her vacation at thc home\nHORNER'S\nGROCERY\nSAT. and MON.\nSPECIALS\nQUAKER CORN FLAKES:\nWith 1 sample pack-   or<-\nage Free. 3 pkgs. ... LO\nSee \"The Country Doctor\"\nat the Capitol Theatre\n95'\n231\"\nIS*\n25*\n25*\n38\u00b0\nCARNATION MILK\nTall size; 10 tins ..\nSALADA TEA: Brown Ql\\t\nLabel; Ib OU\nNU|-L JELLY\nPOWDERS: 3 pkgs.\nDE LUXE JELLY\nPOWDERS: 4 pkgs.\nKING OSCAR\nSARDINES: 2 tins\nMAPLE BUDS:\nLb.   .\u2022\t\nMALKIN'S BEST\nCOFFEE: Tins; Ib.\nMALKIN'S BEST COFFEE:\nLb. jar 4\u00abJ\ni_M\" $128\nAYLMER SOUPS: Vegetable\nand Tomato;\n3 tint   \t\nQUAKER OATS:\nPlain pkg\t\nORANCES: Sunkist;\n3 dozen\t\nONTARIO APPLES: E\nlent quality;\n7 lbs '..\n25*\n18*\n74*\nExcel-\n25'\nFresh Asparagus, Spinach,\nLeaf Lettuce, Bunch Beets\nand Carrots, Cauliflower,\netc.\nPHONE 121\nFree Delivery\nLAURITZ\nNeat Market\nPhone 146       We Deliver\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nRolled  Rib  Roast\u2014\nlb\t\nPot Roait\u2014\nIb\t\nRoast\nBeef  Oven\nli.  ..._-\t\n201\n81\u00b0 121\n150\nROLLED POT\nROAST\n10clb\nSide Pork-\nlb.  \t\nBoiling Beef\u2014\n3 lb\t\n170\n25-U\nCREAMERY BUTTER \u2014\nPrairie Rose brand; with\nmeat orders; \\*]t_\n2 lbs\t\n47<\nBrookfield Butter\u2014\n3 Ibi\t\n850\nSPECIALS IN\nCHOICE MEATS\nLeg Roasts of Pork\nlb\t\nLittle Pork Sausage\nlb'. \t\nLittle Pork Sausage\n2 lb. \t\nSausage Meat\n3 lb. for \t\nBaby Beef Liver\n2 lb. for\t\nABOVE SATURDAY ONLY\n220\n200\n200\n250\n250\nRump Roasts\nlb\t\nRolled Prime\nRibs. lb.     .\nSirloin and T. Bone .\nRoasts, lb.\nGood Oven Roasts Beef\nlb\t\nRolled Ribs Roast\nBeef,  lb\t\nPot Roasts\nlb\t\nChuck Boiling Beef\nlb\t\n150' 180\n200\u00b0 220\n200\n120\n150\n100\n80\nBON  TON\nMeat Market\nPhone 292\nFree Delivery\nButcherteria\np\u00a37ne News p5h27\nFREE DELIVERY\nSAT. ond MON.\nBARGAINS\nNo. 1 Alberta Turkeys,    _VD*\nper lb \"\"*'*\nNo. 1 Roasting JfijJ SQjJ\nChicken, lb .... *\u00b0> -\u00bb'\u2022>\nGrade A Large Eggs        JC0\n450\ndoz.\nCreamery Butter\n2 lb\t\nButtercup Brand, with meat\norders.\nSwift's Breakfast Bacon,\nsliced, per lb\t\nGood Oven Veal Roasts\nlb\t\nGood Oven Beef Roasts\nlb *\t\nGood Oven Pork Roasts\nlb. \t\nVeal Steaks\n2 lb\t\nSirloin and T Bone\nSteaks, lb\t\nLean Pork Steaks '\n2 lb\t\n300\n150\n180\n180\n350\n200\n350\nat\nHORSWILLS'\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nBUTTER\u2014Springbrook     2 lbs. 551\nJAM\u20144-lb. tins pure assorted  58<*\nOLD DUTCH CLEANSER 3 for _.5c\nSYRUP\u2014Edwardsburg Crown Brand 5s    \u00bb3o\nTEA\u2014Blue Ribbon Lb. 45*\nSALAD DRESSINC\u2014Best Foods .... 8-oz. bot. _52<l\nSYRUP\u2014Nalley's Breakfast in Decanter .. Bot. 28*\nTOILET TISSUE\u2014Purex  3 for 22*\nRINSO   Large pkg. _...<\u25a0\nPORK AND BEANS\u2014Royal City IVi tins . . 2 for 35*\nJELLY POWDERS\u2014Trujell  3 for 23?\nCOOKIES\u2014Buttermilk  Doz.    !><\nMOVIE STAR\nPHOTO-\nSTATUETTES\nHallyweod'i maw\n\u2022it r_f \u2022 I Child al\nmany fa-ioui itm.\nSatOarWImaamtht\n Batall,\t\n1 pkg. Puffed Rice\n1 pkg. Puffed Wheat\n1 Jumbo Scribbler\nFree! \u00ab)\u00a3*\nAll for .\n26<\nWe Have Everything Seasonable in\nFruit and Vegetables\u2014Priced Right!\nCountry Orders $10.00 or More Prepaid.\nHorswill Bros.\nPHONE 235\nFREE DELIVERY\nLowery's Groceteria\nNew Location\u2014Baker Street\u2014Next Imperial Bank\nnnnvr ai\\__ we deliver anywhere\nPHUNI-i 400       ,N THE cry free\nLIFEBUOY 80AP-\n3 cakei \t\nWITCH HAZEL SOAP\u2014\n4 cakes  -\t\nTOMATO CAT8UP\u2014\nHelm; per bottle \t\nBAKING   POWDER\u2014\nMalkln'i; 12-oz. tin\t\nRECKETT'8  BLUE\u2014\nPar nkt\t\nCOOKING CHOCOLATE\n\u2014Premium; 8-oz. pkt,\nAUNT JEMIMA PANCAKE FLOUR\u2014Per pkt..\nLARGE SELECTION\nJ30\n180\n220\n200\n.50\nJ50\n160\ngrade\n8WEET MUSTARD\nPICKLES\u201427-o_. Jar\t\nCOFFEE\u2014Fresh ground,\nhigh grads; par Ib.\nBUTTER\u2014First\nAlberta; 2 lbs. .\n8UNKIST ORANGES-\nSwtet and juicy; 2 dos..\nLETTUCE\u2014Large;\n2 for \t\nSPINACH\u2014Fresh local;\nptr Ib\t\nNEW CABBAGE\u2014\n4 Ibi. for\t\nOF GARDEN SEEDS\n280\n380\n540\n450\n230\n120\n250\nCOUNTRY ORDERS OVER $10. FREIGHT PAID\u2014BOX 508\nWASHABLE\nCOTTON LACES\nNewest Materials for\nSmart Summer Dresses\nString Lace Effects in\nPastel Colors and White\nYou will like a dress of this material for Hot\nSummer Days.  It will be serviceable\nwashable. Colors are Flesh, Peach, Blue\nWhite. 36 inches wide. YARD\t\nnor\n,-.95'\nWASHABLE\nCHAMOIS\nGLOVES\nSporty gauntlet styles that lend a\nsmart finish to a tailored suit or\nsports outfit. Finest quality. White\nand Chamois shades.\n$p5\n\"Waskable Cotton Knitted\nLACE PULLOVERS.\nJade, gold, blue, peach, red, eggshell and\nwhite. Three different styles to choose * 1   UK\nEACH\t\nSaturday Specials\nFULL FASHIONED SILK HOSIERY\nAll Spring colors. Sizes 8V2 to lOVi. Semi-service\nand chiffon weights. CQ*\nSATURDAY SPECIAL, PAIR \"J\nSATURDAY SPECIAL!\nCelasuede bloomers, panties and vests in\npeach and white. Garments that will give CQp\nsatisfactory wear. Will not ladder. In small, J  J\nmedium and large. PAIR\t\nJerman Hunt's\nDRY GOODS and READY-TO-WEAR\nPhone 200\nBaker St.\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nPHONES\n831\n832\nVASSARS'\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nGood Buying for Saturday and Monday\nChoice Steer Beef\n20*\nRoll Rib Roast, Ib.\nRump *ftoaiti,\nlb 15* and 17*\nBlade Roast, Ib   H*\nPot Roast, Ib    -0* Swift'i Breakfait Bacon,\nSirloin Steak, Ib 20* Freah sliced, Ib.  ... 33*\nCreamery Butter, Thiitla\nBrand, With Meat Order,\n2 Iba 45*\nMushrooms, Freih from\nVancouvtr, Ib 40*\nHamburger, Choice, and\nFresh Made, 2 Ibi.    .  19*\nJuicy Round\n2 lbs\t\nSteak,\n35*\nVtal, Fillet Roait, Ib.\nVeal Oven Roait, Ib.\nMutton Loin Chopi,\nIb\t\nLamb Legi, Choice,\nIb\t\nLamb Chopi, Ib. ...\nPork Oven Roait, lb.\nPork Lean Loin Chops\nIb\t\nBreakfait Sauiage Meat,\nSeaioned, Ib 10*\nPork Sauiage, Small,\n22*lb 20*\ntie -ft*- t-ecal A-large,\nf doi  25*\njellied Veal, Ib 25*\nSwift'i Bologna, Ib. .  18*\nSmoked Cottage Rolli, All\nmeat, Ib 25*\nChedder Loaf Cheeie, Old,\nIb 33*\nDrum Sticks, Seaioned,\n6 for    25*\n\u25a0______\u00bb.-_--_--__--\u2014-----\u25a0\n20*\n27*\n20*\n18*\n25*\n PAQE MX \u2022\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-8ATURDAY MORNINQ. APRIL 28. 1!M\nNEW AUDITORIUM IS OPENING TONIGHT\nCONGRATULATION\nTo the City of Nelson\non the Completion of the\nNELSON CIVIC CENTRE\nSta&e Curtains and\nScenery for the New\nAUDITORIUM\nand Costumes for\ni<cUhe Gondoliers\"\n(Opera to Be Preiented by\nNELSON OPERATIC SOCIETY)\nWere Supplied by Us\nMallabar Cqstumer\nCanada's Greatest Theatrical and Carnival Costumers and Manufacturers\nWINNIPEG TORONTO MONTREAL\nINTERIOR CONSTRUCTION Co., Ltd.\nHEAD OFFICE-NELSON, B.C.\nGENERAL CONTRACTORS\nWE CONGRATULATE THE CITIZENS OF NELSON\nJOHN BURNS G. M. WILLISCROFT\nCongratulations to the City of Nelson\nON THE OPENING OF ITS BEAUTIFUL\nCIVIC AUDITORIUM\nANOTHER INSTALLATION OF\nLUXURIOUS THEATRE SEATING BY\nCanada's Foremost Theatre Equipment Contractors\nLA SALLE RECREATIONS LIMITED\n945 GRANVILLE STREET (Theatre Chair Division) VANCOUVER, B. C\nTHE EYES OF THE KOOTENAY DISTRICT\nAre Again Focussed      *\/_     on NELSON\nAMUSEMENT AND SHOPPING CENTRE OF THE INTERIOR\nWith the opening tonight of the Auditorium\nsection of the Civic Centre, another link is\nadded to the chain that binds the people of\nthe entire Kootenay, British Columbia's Inland Empire, with the City of Nelson.\nDuring the years of Nelson's existence it has\nalways been the aim of the citizens to make\nNelson a delightful place for the residents\nof the district to visit; not only a city of excellent shopping facilities, but a city where\nvisitors may see and partake in sporting and\nrecreational activities.\nWe welcome all those who are able to come\nto Nelson tonight for the grand opening ceremonies of the Nelson Civic Auditorium. A\nvaried program of musical, artistic and dra\nmatical numbers has been arranged and it\nis felt that everyone who attends will enjoy\na most entertaining evening.\nWhile in the City we want you also to visit\nthe store, see the new stocks of spring merchandise that are being shown and let us\nmake good our slogan, that \"Your every need\ncan be filled in Nelson.\"\nCharles Morrii\nMEN'S and\nBOYS' WEAR\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nPatronize the Following Progressive Nelson\nBusiness Firms\nLedingham's\nBaktry\nDon't Say Bread, Say\nLEDINGHAM'S  BREAD\nComplett   Houu   Furnishers\n\"The Store of Service and\nSatisfaction\"\nStandard\nFurniture Co.\nMacdonolds\nConsolidated Ltd.\nWholeule Grecere\nPhone 28\nFRONT ST.              NELSON\nStandard Cafe\n\"Nelson's Popular\nRestaurant\"\nThe Beit for Lest\nSafeway Stores\nLtd.\nDISTRIBUTION   WITHOUT\nWASTE\nDr. Ray Shaw\nQuality Dentiitry at\na Lower Coit\nRamsden's\nQuality Ladies'\nWear\nKootenay Steam\nLaundry and\nNo-O-Dor Dry\nCleaning Co.\nPURITY FLOUR\nBrackman-Ker\nMilling Co., Ltd.\nFront St., Nelion, B. C.\nBlanche's\nSpecialty Shoppe\nStylee for the Smart Woman\nELECTRICAL\nRepain and Supplies\nJ. F. COATES\n611 Vernon Bt.         Phone .6.\nSmythe's\nPharmacy\nPHONE 1\nPrescription Specialists\nA. H. GREEN\nCompany, Limited\nCONTRACTORS\nFront Street         Nelion\nP. E. Poulin\nSTOCKS, BONDS\nand INSURANCE\n44 TAXI\nPrompt, Courteous\nTaxi Service\nJerman Hunt\nReady-to-Wear \u2014 Dry Goods\nHeadquarters for\nLadies' Apparel\nGILKERS'\nMen's Wear\nStandard Electric\nCanadian Genenl  Electric\nDealers\nPHONE US\nCurlew Dairy Producti\nare pure food producti\nCurlew Creamery\nPALM DAIRIES, LTD.\nBurns & Co., Ltd.\nThe Home of\nSHAMROCK BRANDS\nWHEN IN NELSON\nDine at the\nGolden Gate Cafe\nRenwick's\nTransfer\nPhone 797\nCoal - Wood - Hauling\nEmory's Ltd.\nQuality in\nMEN'S WEAR\nR. W. DAWSON\nReal Eitate\u2014Iniurance\nPhone 197       Baker St.\nNelion, 1. C.\nSse us FIRST for your Heating, Plumbing and Ventilation\nRequirements.\nKOOTENAY PLUMBINC\nand HEATINC CO., LTD.\nHendricks,\nWhaley Ltd.\nFord Dealera\n\"Satisfaction Is Our Aim\"\n-\nBUY-\n\"NELSON BRAND\"\nJAMS and JELLIES\nProducts of the\nMcDonald Jam\nCompany, Limited\nSTAR\nGrocery\nQUALITY-SERVICE\nSATISFACTION\nPhonei 10 and 11\nNelson Transfer\nCompany, Limited\nPhone 35\nAUTO PARTS-TIRES\nD. C. Art Shoppe\nNew Styles In Suits\nand Dresses\nMilady's Fashion\nShoppe\nStyles for the Welt-Dressed\nLedy\nPlaza Cafe\nFine Food ...\nFait Service\nR. P. BESTON, Prop.\nPhone 22 fer\nJOB PRINTING\nLetterheads.   Envelopes,  and\n\u2022II kinds of Business Forms.\nH. M. Whimster\nJ. P. MORGAN\nNEW and USED\nFURNITURE\nCall Us First for Coal, Wood.\nCoke. Moving or Transfer\nWork\nWest Transfer Co.\nPhone S3\nSAVOY HOTEL\nWhere the Guest Is King\nYour Home When\nin Nelion\nKootenay Music\nHouse\nNorge and Weetinghouu\nRefrigerators\nNelson Hardware\nCompany\nHardware and Sporting Gooda\nLADIES'\nREADY-TO-WEAR\nJoi. Weir fr Son\n\"Tht Exclusive Store\"\nMother's Bread\nPhone 210 for Delivery\nChoquette Bros.\nBAKERS\nCENTRAL CANADIAN\nCREYHOUND LINES\nTRAVEL THE MODERN\nWAY by\nCREYHOUND\nAgent* for\nMICHEL end IMPERIAL\nCOALS\nMacDONALD\nCartage * Fuel Co.\n \u00a3__>___-__\t\n qq$\nArchitect Vlewt the Finished Product\n-4he Civic Auditorium\n\u2014Staff Photo.\nAt the right Is Mr. Nalrni of the firm of McCarter A Nairne,\narchitects, who will ba In Nelson tonight for the official opening\nof the new Civic Centre auditorium. To the left Is George Wllllscroft,\nwho acted for the architects during construction of Nelson's play\naentre.\nMODERN AUDITORIUM WILL BE\nTHROWN OPEN THIS EVENING\nRowing - Tennis - Soccer - Baseball - Boxing -Wrestling\nfcfi\nLacrosse - Golf - Track - Swimming - Horse Racing - Soft Ball\nf\u00bbAGF  tr-.tr,\t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNINQ. APRIL 25. 1934\n\u25a0PAQE (EVEN\nDODGERS AGAIN\nBEAT GIANTS\nCeremonies Start at\n8 p.m.; Notables\nWill Attend\nkeys to the entire Civic Centre to\nR. D. Barnes, chairman of the commission which operates the monster\nbuilding.\nTonight brings to an end the construction program started less than\ni a year ago which has resulted In\nTonight will see the opening of *he city being able to boast of the\nthe beautiful auditorium in Nelson's i most modern centre of 11a kind on\nCivic Centre building. Yesterday! the continent Less than a year ago\nMayor J. P. Morgan announced thatl Nelsonites had dreams, tonight they\nnumerous notables in various Kootenay centers will be on hand for\nthe opening commencing at 8\no'clock.\nMayor J. P. Morgan will officially\nopen the new auditorium, the most\nmodern In the west, and on behalf\nof tha city council will hand the\nBURGESS\nIGNITION\nBATTERIES,\naU\nt\u00bb\u00abmo$t|      W\n__B_m______u F \u25a0           '\n_\u00a3u*   W\n(JjaiUiiM\nmole\nELECTRICAL\nMTAMAIU\nPOWER\n\u2022\nLONGER UFE\nBUMES5 DRY\nCELLS LTD.\nWINNIPEG\nwill see them fully realized. Expected to attend tonight's ceremonies\nare F. Putnam, M.P.P., Nelson-Creston; R. R. Burns, M.P.P., Trail-Rossland, representatives from cities ln\nthe surrounding district, Mr. McCarter and Mr. Nairne of Vancouver, architects for the structures\nand others.\nThe following program will be\nrendered aiter the official opening.\nChairman, Yen. Archdeacon Fred\nH. Graham.\nSelections by Nelson Symphony\norchestra, Boss Fleming, conductor.\n\"0 Canada.' \u25a0\nOpening ceremonies and short addresses by the mayor and aldermen\nand other guest speakers.\nChoral soclecUons\u2014\"Bells ot St.\nMary's\" and 'The Watchword.\" Nelson Choral society, F. E. Wheeler,\nconductor.\nElocution \u2014 \"Wee MacGregor,\"\nMiss Mae Macfarlane.\nChoral selecUons\u2014\"The Engine\"\nand \"In the Dark\", Central School\nPrimary class, Miss E. Mackemie,\nconductor.\nPiano solo\u2014Selected, Hector Angus.\nVocal solo\u2014\"Winds of the South\"\nand \"One Alone\", Mrs. R. Hagarty.\nString trio\u2014Selected, Mrs. Anne\nAshby, cello; Mrs. Hector Angus,\npiano; Mra. Gladys Webb Foster,\nviolin.\nChoral selections\u2014\"Song of the\nSea\", and \"Dawn\", Nelson Ladies'\nBROOKLYN, AprU 24 (AP)-The\nBrooklyn Dodgers, beaten three ln\na row by the Gianta in tha first\nseries of the season, won their second straight from Bill Terry's crew\nin Flatbush today, 8-2.\nNew York  2  8   1\nBrooklyn    8 10  2\nCastleman, Gabler, Coffman and\nMancuso, Dannlng; Mungo and\nBerres,\nCUBS WIN AQAIN\nCHICAGO, April 24 (AP)\u2014Behind the seven-hit pitching of Lonnie Warneke, the Chicago Cubs took\ntheir second straight victory from\nthe Pittsburgh Pirates here today\n\u00ab to 1.\nPittsburgh    1   7   3\nChicago  8   9   0\nBlanton, Using, Hoyt and Paddcn;\nWarneke and Hartnett.\nBEES WIN 4-1\nBOSTON, AprU 24 (AP)-Danny\nMacFayden held the Phillies to six\nhits while striking out seven of them\ntoday to give the Boston Bees a\n4-1 victory and an even split in the\ntwo game series.\nPhiladelphia  1   8  0\nBoston  4 10   1\nDavis, Jorgens and Grace; Mac-\nrayden 8nd Lopei.\nOnly three games scheduled.\nStars to Hold\nPractice Sunday\nA full turnout of all playen of\nthe Toronto Star Girls' Softball team\nis called for Sunday morning at\n10 o'clock. Any unsigned players\nwho wish to play thia season are\nInvited to attend.\nBerna Kline who has been unable\nto practice so far thia season, will\nattend Sunday's practice.\nOthers who are expected to turn\nout are, Jean Spiers, Alice Dunn,\nBeatrice Mathews, Opal LaBelle,\nHazel Spiers, Jean Bell, Jean Fisher,\nPauline Stangherlin, Francis Jone.-*,\nJanle Wigg, Mary Campbell, Mildred Horrigan, Deannie Wallace, Dot\nPostelthwalte.\nHonve.Riins\n\u25a0\" o > .1,. i\u00bb\nBy The Associated Press\nHome runs yesterday:\nTrosky, Indians, Averill, Indians,\nCook, Red Sox, Bell, Browns, one\neach.\nTha leaders:\nKlein, Cubs 4; Trosky, Indians, 4;\nDickey, Yankees, 8; Ott, Giants, 3;\nFoxx, Red Sox, I; Goodman, Reds, 3.\nLeague totals:\nNaUonal 47, American 88, total 83.\nINDIANS TRIM\nWHITE SOX W\nTHE SCOTCH THAT CIRCLES THE GIOJE\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Covernment of British Columbia\nCubs Will Hove\nWorkout Sunday\nThe New Grand Cubs senior baseball club will hold its second practice of the season on Sunday afternoon at 1:48 o'clock. The Cubs held\na light workout last Sunday, but\ntwo practices scheduled during the\nweek were called off because of\nwet and cold weather.\nLast Sunday the Cubs had a large\nnumber ot newcomers to Nelson out\nfor the practice, and several of than)\nshowed first class ability despite\nthe fact that the workout was only\na Ught one.\nCLEVELAND, April 24 (AP)-A\npair of home runs aad three costly\nChicago errors in one inning presented the Cleveland Indians with\na 8 to 2 victory over the White Sox\ntoday in their concluding game of\nthe series here.\nChicago       2 11  4\nCleveland        6 10   2\nStratton, Evans and Sewell; Harder and Pytlak.\nBOSTON FALLS AQAIN\nPHILADELPHIA, April 24 (API-\nBoston fell before the Athletics, 3\nto 1 again today. The Mackmen scored all their runs in the opening inning, when they chased Johnny\nMarcum to cover.\nBoston   18  0\nPhiladelphia    8   .   0\nMarcum, Welch and R. Ferrell;\nRhodes and Hayes.\n'0-2 FOR YANKEES\nNEW YORK, April 24 (AP) -\nLefty Gomez was wild but effective\ntoday and his mates were ln greet\nform at the plate, so tbe Yankees\nwon their second straight game\nfrom the Senators 10-2.\nWashington     2   7   2\nNew York 10 17   1\nLinke and MUlies; Gomez and\nDickey.\nTRIPLE PLAY AS\nTIGERS WIN\nST. LOUIS, April 24 (AP)\u2014A\ntriple play, the tint ot the lOSf major league season, was executed by\nthe Detroit Tigers in the fourth\nInning of today's game with the\nSt. Louis Browns. Leading 8 to 0,\nTommy Bridges passed Lyn Lary\nand Sam West. Julius Solters singled, scoring Lary. Jim Bottomley\ncracked a line drive for an apparent\nsafe hit, but Charlie Qehrlnger'pull-\ned it down and threw to Billy Rogell, doubling west off second. Rogell, doubling West oft second. Rog-\nberg at first before Solters could\nget back. Detroit won the game >\nto 3.\nDetroit    _ _ \u2022 11   0\nSt. Louia  3 10   1\nBridges and Cochrane; Caldwell,\nWalkup, Vanatta and Hemspey.\nENGLISH CUP\nFINAL TODAY\nLONDON, AprU 24 (CP Cable)-\nThousands of football enthusiasts\narrived in London tonight, the advance guard of huge crowds that\nwill swarm through the streets of\nthe capital tomorrow for the English cup final between Arsenal snd\nSheffield United. Watchful groundsmen applied finishing touches to\nthe playing field at Wembley stadium, the great enclosure that will\nring with the shouts of 100,000 rabid\ntans.\nRailways are expected to run\nmore than 100 special trains from\nall parts of the country. To the\nthousands transported in this manner wUl be added those arriving\nby airplane and motor vehicles.\nWESTERN HOOP\nFINAL TONIGHT\nStai\\$i\\&\nBy The Associated Press\nLow man in basebaU's big six today wu high man at bat yesterday.\nRoy Bell of the Browns got three\nhits In four times up while his team\ntook a beating from the Tigers and\none of these hits was a homer. The\nother homer of the day in thia select group was made by Earl Averill.\nIt was his only hit in four times up.\nBill Terry got two hits in four attempts yesterday but dropped seven pointa nevertheless. Charley\nGehringer got two hits in tive times\nup, and the other members of the\nbig six, Terry Moore of the Cards\nand Ernie Lombard! were not scheduled yesterday\nTerry, Giants\nLombard!, Reds\nGehringer, Tigers\nMoore, Cardinals\nAverill, Indians\nBell, Browns\nWINNIPEG, April 24 (CP)-\nWestern Canada's opponents fer\nWindsor Fords, Eastern titlists, In\nthe battle fer the Canadian Men's\nBasketball championship will be\ndecided here tomorrow night\nEach with a victory tucked\naway, Victoria Dominoes and Winnipeg Tellers will step onto the\nfloor In the third and final game of\nthe best-of-three series. The winners will paok grips and head\neastward for the Dominion tilt\nAyr United Is\nAbout Slated\nfor the Second\nGLASGOW, April 24 (CP Cable)\n\u2014 Ayr United's slim chance of\nstaying in the first division of the\nScottish football league during the\n1938-7 season, reached the vanishing stage today.\nPlaying at Cathkln the last-place\nteam made a gallant bid against\nThird Lanark but failed 8-4. The\nclub will Une up with second division elevens next season.\nchoir, F. E. Wheeler, conductor.\nBass solo\u2014\"Intictus\" and \"Lamp-\nlit Hour\", Nelson Ball. _\nGrand selection from \"II Trova-\ntore,\" Nelson Symphony orchestra,\nRoss Fleming, conductor.\nVocal solo\u2014\"Bid Me Discourse\"\nand \"Lord I Want to Be\", Miss Mary\nJarvis.\nDancing by pupUs of Attree Studios.\nTenor solo\u2014Selected, Archie Phil-\nlips, Trail.\nChoral selections \u2014 'Tour JoUy\nSmiths\" and \"The Lost Chord\", Nelson Glee club, F. E. Wheeler, conductor.\nHumorous song \u2014 Selected, William Coleman.\nNeiaon Little Theatre association\npresents \"Other Times, Other Manners,\" by John Permaln. From plays\nwithout fees. Under production of\nGeorge Horstead.\nCut \u2014 John Applewhaite, Eileen\nDill, R. E. Stratton, Brian Horstead,\nMona Meagher and Merlin Liver-\nsidge.\nFinale \u2014 \"Land of Hope and\nGlory,\" Nelson Choral society, F.\nE. Wheeler, conductor.\n\"GOd Save the King,\"\n$30,000 for Ross\nto Fight at Coast\nVANCOUVER, B.C., April 24\u2014\n(CP)\u2014Barney Rose has been offered $30,000 and transportation\ncosts If he will defend his world\nwelterweight crown against Gordon Wallace, Canadian welter\nruler, here this summer. Jack\nAllen, promoter and manager of\nthe Vancouver fighter, announced\nhe had made the offer today.\nGAb R HPct.\n8 IS 4 10 .526\n7 27 8 13 .481\n8 38 11 17 .472\n7 30 8 14 .467\n8 30 11 13 .433\n\u00bb 37 7 .16 .432\nblip Leads the\nNakusp Golfers\nNAKUSP, B. C. - The annual\nmeeting of the Golf club was held\nMonday evening and the following\nofficers were elected for the coming\nseuon: R. Islip, president; W. Maxwell, vice-president; R, Thrower,\nsecretary-treasurer; B. Parkinson,\nW. Morgan, F. Horrey, grounds\ncommittee; N. Alpsen, J. W. Butlln,\nhandicap committee.\nThe financial statement wu read\nand a discussion on tees followed.\nIt was decided to do some work\non the greens in preparation for the\nseason's play.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nThree years ago today at the United States capital, New York Yankees smothered the Senators 16-0\nin an American Baseball league fixture. Police reserves were called to\nquell a free-for-all started by players and continued among the spectators.\n<a&Stt&S4S&&A*!*S*.&rSSMM\nFor Lunch ...\nA BROILED\nSTEAK...\nYou have no idea\nhow much different a steak will taste\nwhen cooked in our\nnew broiler. It retains that rich, juicy\nflavor.\nTRY ONE TODAY\nTHEY'RE DELICIOUS!\nG.\nOLDEN\nATE CAFE\nWALSH WINS TITLE\nLIVERPOOL, April 24 (CP Cable)\n\u2014 Jimmy Walsh of Chester tonight\nwon the British lightweight boxing\nchampionship, defeating Kid Berg,\nUie tlueholder. The referee stopped\nthe contest in the ninth round.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Covernment of British Columbia\n^Mfi\\f5l,lflfllT\nThe perfect Gin for\nCocktail or Collins\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by\nThe -.overnment of British Columbia.\nSm\ntzt*\nSEVEN YEAR OLD RYE\nwith a 77-Year-Old Reputation!\n16 oz. $1.50 25 oz. $2.25\nHIRAM\nWALKER'S\nWHISKY\nHIRAM WALKER t SONS, LIMITED. ESTABLISHED ISSI\nDISTILLERY AND HEAD OFFICE : WALKERVIILE, CAN.   MONTREAL. 1441 PEU ST.   LONDON, CNCLANO\nThis advertiiemenj Is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the\nCovernment of British Columbia\nN\u00abw Players Try\nOut for Red Sox\nTony \"Chum\" Arcure held the\nfirst full practice of the season for\nthe Red Sox Girls' Softball club on\nFriday evening when 14 players\nwere in attendance, seven of whom\nwere new to the team.\nThe following players were out,\nDot Jarbesu, Irma Arlt, Dora Lapointe, Lillian Hickey.JHelen Breeie,\nLouise CollettI, Marjory Bradley,\nJean Horner, Sybil McLean, Alvina Arlt ,Rosa Stewart, Kay McDougall, Mary McDougall and Agnes\nStewart.\nTHE\nONLY\nCOMPLETE LOW-PRICED        CAR\nMust Register All\nSoftball Teams in\nNelson by Tonight\nTonight ls the last night for registering teams in the Nelson Men's\nand Girls' softball leagues. Indications point to a large entry list.\nEntries should be turned in to Miss\nIsabel Donovan ot the Girls' league,\nor Gilbert Rowling of the men's\nleagde. Should team managers be\nunable to reach these two officials,\nthey can turn their entries in to\nany ot the following, Pauline Stangherlin, president, or Kay McDougall,\nvice-president of the Ladies' league.\nBicknell Much in\nDemand as Player\nAmong Softballers\nAccording to the secreUry of th*\nMen's Softball league, included\namong the registration forma turned in by the B.C. Telephone team,\nis a properly filled form by Len\nBicknell.\nThe Hume hotel team is also\nclaiming the services of Bicknell,\nbut B. C. Telephone officials claim\nhia former signature did not state\nhe would play for the Hume club,\nbut apparently for a proposed puck-\nster's team.\nA full executive meeting Is called\nfor Monday evening and the player's status will no doubt be settled\nthen.\nSHIKAT AT OITROIT\nCOLUMBUS, April U (AP) -\nDick Shikat, German heavyweight\nclaimant of the world's wrestling\ntitle, flew to Detroit late today for\na mat mak-h with All Baba after\ndefeating two attempts in federal\ncpurt to bar hli participation.\nfficVtjcil ifciu>udf\nbelieve that, when it comes io\n1 deciding on lhe beat car {or you in\nthe low price field, you ahould disregard\ntha claims and get at the facts That is\nwhy we urge you to coma to our showrooms\nand drive the new Chevrolet for yourself.\nTen minutes at tha wheel will tell you\nmore than anything we oould aver \u00a7ay.\nSo test for yourself Chevrolet's ilx out*\ntrtanding and exc.us\/ve features (as listed\nbelow). Then sea how much you can\nsave, thanks to low delivered prices and\ngreatly reduced, easy-to-understand 7%\nGMAC Plan time payment terms.\nOIVISYO0 AUIIX...ftirtCTIO NINAHIC lUtn . I . TUMET TOP I0DIES IT rUNEI ill VUVI-IN*\n.KNEE-ACTION (N Ma* Dl UM MH*)... I\u00bb\u00abTT BlAIt THIOMHOUT^\nNELSON TRANSFER CO., LTD.\nGeneral Motors Dealers for Nelson and District\nPHONE 35 323 VERNON STREET NELSON, B.C.\nMICK HOM\n772\n(Standard SiriM 2-faas. 0\u00ab*l)\nMister D1U111 Mid*\nfMtW\n8iSwi.ii Iran, oinmost \u2022*_*\ntetmt. fr_fMt_l ImnMI\nfish*-* FN t\u00ab at.*\nm\n PAQE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY  NEWS   NELSON   B.C.-. ATURDAY  MORNINO.  APRIL 26.  UM\nJMBim Satlij \u00a3J>ros\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n216   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   of the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nSATURDAY, APRIL 25, 1936.\nTHE ENTERPRISING DUTCH\nThe enterprising Dutch are starting on the second\nsection of their great undertaking to drain the Zuider Zee.\nOne section, totaling 50,000 acres, Was drained in 1030\nand is now yielding abimdant crops. Farms and villages of \"colonists\" in the newly-won land have sprung\nup everywhere. The cost of this was roughly fifty million\ndollars. After that a barring dam was built costing ?80,-\n000.000 and now other sections.are to be completed. The\nnext area to be drained will be 120,000 acres.\nDuring the past century Holland has been gradually\nwinning back from the sea vast stretches of land, During\nthe 100 years there has been' reclaimed 1,100,000 acres.\nWhen the present scheme is completed 550,000 more acres\nwill have been added to Holland..This is 10 Rer cent of\nthe arable land of the Netherlands. On top of the dam there\nis room for a concrete highway, a cyclists' path, a path for,\npedestrians and later when the concrete has settled, a\nrailway. It is the biggest reclamation scheme in the world.\nWHAT OUR MINES MEAN\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS\nLOGAN   CLENDENING,   M.D.\nFOOD  LACK   KNOWN  TO .\nCAUSE  ILLS\n!   10 YEARS AGO\nI From Nelson Dally Ntwt Flltt\nApril 25, 1924,\nMrs. A. W. Crossley sang twice,\naccompanied by Mrs. A. W. Berry,\nat a musical program at a meeting\nof the Nelson and District Women's\ninsUtute.\nttt\nThere was less, than an inch of\nIt is only within recent years | rain jn Nei50n in the first three\nUiat it lias been recognized that dis-, weeks of April, J. S. Goulding, gov-\nease can be due to the Jack of some-1 eliiment meteorologist, reports. Tile\nthing in the body. It had always j actual amount was .62 inch.\n; been assumed that disease was due I\nto the presence of some unnatural\nEllen Johnston, daughter of Mr.\nsubstance, such as a germ, or thc ; and Mrs. Richard Johnston of Fair'\ngrowth of tumor, or a poison, etc.\nAbout 40 years ago it was recognized that certain conditions were\nview, and Winnie Jardine, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Jardine,\nwere injured when they fell from\ni due  to  lack of  enough  secretion ; the grocery delivery truck of H. B.\n: from the thyroid gland, and it was  Morris. Thc back wheel of the truck j\nTwo Little Girls\nof Grand Forks\nalso shown that if what is known\nas \"replacement therapy\" was car-\ni ried out\u2014that is to say, if thyroid\nsubstance were introduced into the\nbody artificially\u2014 the result would\n! be cure.\nFollowing thjs, of course, it was\nshown that a great many different\nconditions could bc due to lack of\nsecreUon from the ductless glands.\nAt the same Ume there has devel\npassed over Ellen Johnston's arm\nand her elbow was dislocated.\n[ 20Y__ARSAGO~\ni From Nelion Dally Newi Fil\nApril 25, 1916\nResults   ill   fourth   year   Nelson\nHigh   school   Easter  examinations\n.show Frances Wolverton with 73\noped a conception ot disease due to I alld E(iwar(( Applewhaite, 65.\ndeficiency of certain food factors. .   .   .\nProminent In this field is the ncces-     George  Horstead   returns   today\nsity for the vitamins. from Spokane.\nWe recognize a number of very ^ .   .   .\ndefinite diseases which are due to ,    H Giegerich of Kaslo is a Nelson\nlack of certain factors in the food,, v,s_tor.\nsuch   as  rickets  and   scurvy,   but, 'ite\nthere  are probably  a  number  of '\u2022    Ml. and Mrs_ D j. Ker- leave to.\nvague conditions not yet careful y , morr0w for Spokane, Seattle, and\ncodified, which are also probably  oth-r coast points\ndue to eficlency of food factors.; itt\nMany forms of neuritis and arthritis\nand anemia fall into this group, and\ndoctors are becoming aware of the\nimportance of recognizing these\nconditions.\nAs an illustration of what 1 mean, |\ntake the old subject of alcoholic\nneuritis. It is well known that many\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nStanding Vp for\nthe Cameraman\nBy E V SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nMASTERING BRIDGE (59)\nNo player has  mastered bridge\nunless he can readily determine thc\ni precise capabilities of each hand,\noffensively, defensively and in support of partner.  Yesterday's hand\n1 is repeated below, so that we may\ncontinue the search for a way to go\n; game at spades, against an opening\nlead of the J of spades, and pre-1\nMiming  opponents   offer  the  best I\nsubsequent defense.\na) A Q 10 8 7\nf K\n\u2666 KQ8 it\n+ A6\n(til    ,    \u00abj <\n\u00bbQ 10 9      M ,   VACS\n8 4        \u00a3     dl    \u2666 A10 9 7    I\n\u2666 2 |   S. 5\n*K.53 494.\n\u2014By Staff Photographer.\nHere we have Eva Ronald,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mri. W. Ronald and \"Jackie\" Murray, daughter of Mn. Murray, both of Weit\nGrand Forki. The glrli were\nmapped tt the Colombia itatlon\nWhen teeing iome friendi depart.\nMajor W. H. N. Glossop is to arrive in Nelson today to take command of the Nelson and district\ncompany of the 225th. Kootenay\nbattalion, C.E.F.\nWITH THE\nPSYCHOLOGIST\nGARRY C. MYERS, PH.D.\nHead   of   the   Department   of\nParent Education, Cleveland\nCollege,  Western  Reserve\nUniversity.\nHarris of New Denver,\nStrolling about Halifax's piers before sailing for England, Sir Charles Gordon was impressed with all the metals\nlying about, spoke about what our export trade in metals\nmeant to our prosperity.\nTo elaborate, the Royal Bank of Canada's Monthly letter states that in 1934 the expenditures in Canada of mining\nand metallurgical industries, excluding wages, amounted\nto $76,000,000. They spend eleven millions for freight, nine\nmillions for electric power, eight millions for fuel, five\nmillions for explosives. More than one million was 'spent\nfor drills and parts; a million and a half for pipes and fittings; two and one-half millions for electrical equipment; a\nlike amount for chemicals: four hundred thousand dollars\nfor office supplies; fifty-eight thousand dollars for hospitals.\nAll of this money went into the pockets of Canadian\nworkers and Canadian investors: there was all that additional help for our industries, additional purchasing power\nfor our people. On top of it all. of course, were the tens of\nmillions of dollars the mines paid out in wages.\n\u2666 K.62\nf J 7 6 2\n\u2666 J 4\n*QJ 10 7\nProvided East does not discard a\nheart on the third round of spades,\ntaking three rounds of trumps, to\npull West's last spade, will not yield\ngame, by either of'the two methods yet tried. The first method tried\nwas to establish the diamonds. This\nmethod caused North to lose 1 heart\ntrick and 3 diamond tricks. The second method tried was to establish\ndummy's clubs, to enable North to\ndiscard two diamonds on dummy's\nclubs. This method permitted East\nto three times lead hearts, resulting in either 1 heart trick, t diamond tricks and a club trick going\nto defenders, or giving them 2 heart\ntricks, 1 diamond and 1 club trick.\nWe need not give the defenders\nany club trick. They must win a\n\u2014By Staff Photographer.\nHere li little Dorothy Marklt,\ndaughter of Mr. tnd Mn. D. Markle of Nelion. Thli little lui can\nbe ttrmed the mucot of tht Ntlton Ladiei' Curling club for iht\nseldom mined in afternoon at tht\nrink all winter. She wti mapped\nIn front of one of the lockert In\nthe club roomi.\nvery poorly selected diet, and\npeople who\"iiidiuge excessrvely\" in I <*\u00bb\u00bb\u2022 in the presence of alcoholic\nalcohol acquire degeneration ot neuritis clears up even though alco-\n. ; the nerves, with paralysis. It has t hoi Is not withdrawn. The same\nfrequent contributor to the What Do niways _een assumed that this is 'hing holds good for the prevention\n! You Think column on this page. Mr. \\ ^iec^y ^w to the action of the ' of alcoholic neuritis \u2014 in other\nI Hlrris operates an attractive ranch ; a*-ohol. There is another form of! words, the alcoholic who includes   ^\n.on ihe shores of the .beautiful Slo-1 ,,-,,-iji,  known    as  \"beriberi\"   in : Vitamin B in his daily food intake ,        \u201ets  \u201eannot ai{mi  ,  separate  trumps, game can be scored. Try the  \"\"ft~ in Canada but there is not\nreal pioneer of   wnidl ti,e \u201eerves are affected in j - not the one who develops the  sleeping r00m *nr cach child, most  blowing method of play: win the  ^     _'     justification for-, greater\nTOT SLEEPS BEST ALONE IN\nOWN BED\nIt is desirable that every child  heart trick. If dummy can ruff one ; -\nshould have his own bed and his' 0f the diamond tricks lost to defend-,    ~.he   export   situation   warrants\nown  sleeping  room.  While  many   ers through   taking   3   leads   of  incrcasej  production    of    market\nthe Kootenay and is known a:j an\nadvocate of socialistic prinelplei. He\nhai bean I candidate u\\ t_f S'i,.an\n' riding in past years.\na    \u2022    *\nA Grand forka Story:\nFraser  Hines\u2014Correct this  sentence.  \"Before  any  damage could\nI be done, the fire was put out by thc\nvolunteer   fire   department.\"\nBoy\u2014\"The fire was. put out be*\n' fore any damage could be dime by\nUie volunteer Hro department.\"\n........    _.-   .......   _._   _______    -.- u\u00bbi...j,.,,&   ......  ...   ._...    , ..........a  \u2014 \u2014    \u2014   _---.. ,    Uie  Sdiiie   juaiiitvaiivi,  ... ._   \u201e..\u2014..\nthe same way, and we know that it j multiple neuritis which wc used to . __\u201e a(t__d . scparate bed. There are opening trump lead with the Q of i        production\"   states The Agri-\ni_ due to lack M Vitamin B. - call   alcoholic neuritis. , incxp(.nsive cots, and a home-made   -pades. Take  another spade trick I cu,tu\u201ei situation and Outlook.1936,\nIt has recently been shown that I one  may   be   better  than   having ; with declarer's Ace. Lead a low dia-   whicb has iusl been published.\nthe alcoholics who develop paraly-     Tlie Pinna Nobilis, a shell fish,   children sleep together or with par- , mond   from   declarer's   hand.   It ..\t\nsis are those who live practically on | spins silk. Early Italians used this [ ents. Sleeping alone, lhe child  is: makes no difference in fnial re-\nalcohol alone and eat very little or  sill; in the manufacture of cloth.\nWEEK-END RADIO\nSATURDAY NIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\nAPOLOGIES I    5:00 Cotters Saturday Night. Sld-\nI am rcallv sorry Fire Chief Wii-  ney. not B.C.; 5:30 News, Vancouver\nMoton, ' i B.C.  Net.;  Let. Go lo  the  Music\n. .   *   \u2022        , 'Hall, Tor.  iB.C.  5:45);  6:0.   Sym-\nROOMS FOR RENT I phony orch.; 7:30 Don Bestor's orch-\nHotel Keeper\u2014I have rooms for  estra;  7:45  Canadian  Press  News\nPenn. State Greatest\nof Mineral Regions\nPennsylvania is the greatest mineral industrial Commonwealth In\nthe world, according to a statement\nprepared for Science Service by\nDean Stcidlc, of the School of Mineral Industries, of the Pennsylvania\nState college. Although but thirty-\nsecond in size among the United\nStates, it ranks second in population, wealth and productive industry. This position is due largely to\nits mineral industries, a fact so well\nknown as hardly to warrant repetition. Pennsylvania is \"first\" in the\nproduction of the all-important mineral, coal, and in the manufacture\ncf iron and steel, coke, cement, glass\nand refractories.\nBrick and other clay products\nWCrc manufactured in and about\nPhiladelphia in William Penn's time,\nand pig iron and lead were smelted\nin Pennsylvania as early as the revolutionary war. Coal mining was on\nan organized productive basis in the\nanthracite region in 1820, and in the\nbituminous field in 1830. The first\noil well in the world was drilled at\nTitusville iu western Pennsylvania\nin 1859. The first eanhls and rail\nroads in Pennsylvania were constructed to transport coal.\nSTAMP CORNER\nfifty and seventy-five cents I night.\nGuest\u2014What's the differ! I\ni.veco them.\nHotel Keeper-Not much, only the\nseventy-five   Cent   onet   have   rat\nI traps in them.\nCITY BRIEFS\nHere and there\u2014 W. J. McConnell of Harrop steering his auto\ndown Baker street\u2014Nick Cassios\ndiscussing the coffee habit' \u2014 or\nshould I say business','\u2014Wilfred Allan limping sume after t\"___Qfl down\na ceUarway\u2014\"Slim\" Horswill not\nfeeling very peppy, yet after a battle with old man flu\u2014Eric Sowerby\nworking with a hose\u2014Jerry Muesel\nturning auto mechanic\u2014\nPARDONABLE ERROR\nRobinson had taken his car to a\ngarage for minor repairs.\n\"You wouldn't think it was a secondhand car, would you?\" he remarked to the mechanic.\n\"Great Srott, not\" said the man.\n\"I thought you'd made it yourself.\"\n..00   Time\nMessenger, messages to Outposts in\nCanada, Ottawa; 9:00 Dance Band\nParade\u2014Claude Turner; 9:15 Mart\nKenny; 9:45 John Bowman: 10:00\nDave Mills; 10:15 Leo Smarten,\nWestern Net.; 10:00 News Reporter,\nVancouver. B.C. Net.; 10:15 Dance\nBand Parade, .Continued.\nless disturbed and breathes purer  suits whether East plays his Ace or\nair. : passes thc trick. The intent is to\nPerhaps we make too much ado ' gjve defenders two diamond tricks,\nabout the separate sleeping room, whether those are won by East, or\nIn many a nursery school a dozen \u25a0 whether East's Ace wins one dia-\nC.B.S.-N.Y.; 1:00 To be announced;! or more children take their after- mond trick and West ruffs another\n2:00 Band of H. M. Grenadier : noon nap in a single room not many i trick in that suit, cannot matter to ,\nGuards Montreal; 2:30 Dr. H. L. j times the size of an average bed-! declarer. His object is to see thjit\nStewart-Reviews thc News, Hali- room. A well-ventilated room with dummy ruffs the third diamond\nfax; 2:45 Irene Woodburn, pianist.' two or more sleeping children may trick which yesterday we saw East\nOttawa;   3:00   Crinolines,   mixed i be far better than a poorly venlil-  win.\nquartet, dir. Ernest Dainty, Toronto; i oted room with only one. ^__,    Suppose dummy is allowed to win\n,'1:30 La Ville Maison, Montreal;\n4:00 Garden of Melody. Regina;\n4:30 Conceit   Hour.    Detroit; 5:00\nYellow with coral is a combination that is very fresh looking this\nseason\u2014chamois yellow for wool\nand silk dresses and coral for silks\nand synthetics, trimming the yellow\nmodels with coral and vice versa.\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nSi.nnl-    The    Northern   ,,,lu  \"-oncer,     nuur,     ucuuu,   -.uv\nn   \" '  T\"o,nn V__- Symphony,C. O'Neil. Que..\n(B.C. 5:15); 5:30 Blue Pacific Moonlight, dir. Percy Haney, Vancouver;  6:00  Mirror  of  Melody,  dir.\nWhen two children sleep in the the fir-t j^d of diamonds with the\nsarrie room they tend to keep each i j. At once lead dummy's last dia-\nother awake or to awaken each . m0nd- Declarer does not in the least\nother too early in the morning. This, c.re whether West ruffs or East's\nmay be corrected by proper disci- Ace wins the trick. The defender\npline. by having the older child go , winner the second lead of diamonds\nto bed later than the younger, or I will lead a heart, capturing North's\nGeoffrey \"wadding.on, Toronto; i by putting thc younger child in an. k. East will again lead a heart and\nadult's bedroom to be carried to his: declarer wiU ruff. North then will\nown room, asleep, when this adult, lead , diamond. Dummy will ruff\nretires. I with the K. The Q of clubs will be\nSometimes, however, children j led gjvjng North two club tricks,\nover three or four years of age will | j_m wotx_ will lead the 10 of\nlie awake for half an hour or so. trumpSi picking up West's, 9 if it\nvisiting, when the gain from com-1 aiready has not been used to ruff\npanionable   conversation   may   far j ^_  second   lead  of  diamonds.  If\nNews, Vancouver, (B. C. Network)\n6:30 Chasing Shadows, Calgary;\n6:45 Canadian Press News and\nWeather, Toronto; 7:00 Atlantic\nNocturne, Halifax; 7:30 Sweet and\nLow,' Mart Kenney's orch., Vancouver; B:00 Live, Laugh and Love.\nWinnipeg; 8:30    Driftwood,   Allen\nIts\nHome\nIs B.C.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ   KGW  KFI   KPO   KOMO\n590      620    640     680      920\n500 Your Hit Parade- Carl Hoff's  Caron. organist, Winnipeg; 9.00 To; outweigh   the   loss  from   delayed North picks up West's trump East\nJU \u201e\u00b0\"r J.\" \u2122ra.ac- \u2022\u00a3\" ____\u2022 .    -\u201e_\u201e\u201e*,,   ,n-( rnrvi-  mon, sleen. Often we should try to bal-  _.\u201e. win , hear, trick and 2 dia-\norch.; 6:00 Frank Fay. Comedian\n6:30 Chateau, Vic Young's orchestra; Smith Ballew, m.c; 7:30.\nCelebrity night, . George Olsen,;\nEthel Shutta; 8:00 NaUonal Barn.\nDance, variety; 9:00 Fiesta Soloists '\norch.; 9:30 J. Huntington's orch.;\n10:00 Waltz Time, Meredith Will-\nson's orch., George Nickson, tenor;\n10:30 Carl Ravazza's orch.; 11:00\nGeorge Olsen's orch.; 11:30 Bobbie i\nMeeker's orch.\nbe announced  'not CRCV;\nNews (B.C. Net.).\n10:00\nBy JAMES  MONTAGNE&\n\u25a0\nA SCOTCH STORY\nTwo Scots were mountaineering\nin Switzerland, when one of them\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\ni    5:00 Manhattan Merry Go Round,\nAndy Sanella's orch.; 5:3t) Album of\nFamiliar   Music,   Gustave   Haens-\ni chen's  orch,;  6:00   Concert,  guest\nsoloist and concert orch.. dir. Erno\nRapee;   7:00   Morin   Sisters   and\ni Ranch Boys; 7:30 Jack Benny, Mary\n1 Livingstone, Johnny Green's orch.,\n| Kenhy 'Baker,  vocalist: 8:00 Jack\n| Hylton's Continental    Revue,   Pat\nOMalley,  tenor;  8:30  One Man's\nFamily, Carlton Morse drama; 9:00\nsleep. Often we should try\nence such gains and losses, saying\nto ourselves, \"If this happens there\nwill be certain losses, but there\nalso will be certain gains,\" and then\nchoose that which seems most reasonable.\nGOOD SLEEP AIDS\nmust win 1 heart trick and 2 diamond tricks. If West ruffs a diamond trick North has to lose in\naddition 1 heart trick and the diamond trick going to East's Ace.\nBILLIARDS CHAMP RETIRES\nLONDON (CP). \u2014 Horace Coles,\nEnglish amateur billiards champion.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:15 Boston Symphony orch., dir. I John Nesbltt's Passing Parade; 9:15\nDr. Serge Koussevitzky; 6:15 Arm-! Hastings' Program (KPO); To be\nslipped and fell into a crevasse. The , chai_ quai.tCf 6-30 The Music Box ' announced; 10:00 News Flashes,\nother peering over the edge, saw (KG0 6.45). Education Today dra-! Sam Hayes; 10:15 Bridge to Dream-\nhis companion holding on almost | m_ KqQ. '_.00 South 0, ^^x j land, Paul Carson, organist; 11:00\nby his fingernails. d.' . \u00a3, Jd,crson Day dinner; Jose Ramirez and His Argentines;\n\"Are ye a ncht, Macpherson? |.. 15 'Emjl Coleman.s orchestra, 11:30 Beaux Arts Trio, instrumental,\nshouted the man in safety. \u201e.'_\u201e   Glen  Gray,.   orchestra;  g:ool \t\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\n5:30 Walter Winchell, Broadway\nGossip; 5:45 Paul Whiteman's Musical Varieties; 6:30 Dreams of Long\nAgo, Ethel Parks Richardson; 7:00\nTwin City Foursome, male quartet;\n7:10 News Flashes; 7:15 Ensemble,\nFavorable to good sleep habUs are      _ret. _. ,\u201e.\nproper diet, strict routines, regular, ;_ _. k\u201ew,li\u201e \u201ev\u201e\u201e, amalM\u201e\n,   \u201e._..\/.,\u201e\u00bb i age of 38, holding several amateur\ndaily bowel movement, clear'nose | \"8^^ ,\u25a0_ 10\u201e \u00bb_ ___^_ fha Wl_h.\nand throat passages, calmness be-\nrecords. In 1933 he made the high-\n, a we^nma^ j &\u00bb_* ^t^t JZt\nThe special virtue In Pacific\nMilk due to its place of\norigin. British Columbia\ngives better milk. No water,\nno climat. finer. British\nCoIum__a is our home. And\n\u2014the milk comes from\npedigree herds.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated of Court*\nA'S'S.'SSLttS'Jfltt ! Carefree Carnival; Meredith\n\"but if ye run down to the village\nShown above are six of the stamps issued for Sweden's three hundredth anniversary of thc postal service.\u2014Stamps courtesy Philatelic\nSection, T. Eaton Co., Ltd., Toronto.\nWill-\n: son's orch., Ned   Tollinger.   M.C,\n; an  get a rope, 111 try to hang on 183(( y ,       d Yoianda's orch.; 10:00\n;here till ye come back. Hurry, for m   ,_   b.   announced;   10;30\nheaven s  sake. _,d Courtney.s orch,; i1:0o Slumber\nHis companion disappeared, and 1 \u201e ' ,\nwas gone nearly an hour. Suddenly j nour' 01gan c\u00b0nce\"'\nhis face appeared again over the I\nedge of the cliff\n\"Are  you  still   there,  Macpherson?\" he called down.\n\"Aye,\"   in   a  low,  weary  tone.\n\"Have ye got the r6pe?\"\n\"No,  indeed. The dirty dogs in 1 ,ini| Andre Kostelanetz' or., chorus;\nthe village wanted $10 for it.\" | o:30   Pacific   Coast .music   School,\nD.L.;  7:00  Jefferson  Day  Dinner;\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\nS70     610      940      -1130   1270\n! 363-and in 1929, when he defeated |\nro?m,'._    uiu I..-, ._.i. tbnt co- i Sidney Lee and won the English\nLet the child learn eail   tha, go * ^   tjme h(, had a ,\n\u25a0ng to bed is for sleep Chech on al I of 24 5\nlhe details before leaving the tod-    \u25a0 \u2022\" .\ndler at bedtime with his under- j Although Canada has a relatively\nsUnding that you are not coming non-agricultural   population\nK3Ck \".''I lhli\u201eV'sav    nothing jS tto absorption of surplus pro-\nhorizontal posUion.   Say    notlung | approximately 85 per cent\nSnhnVwLm0  q I*  the  agricultural  production   in\nJ0'^very motr should give faith-1 Canada is consumed in Canada, with I\nfuj  attention  to  bedtime  regime, the remaining 1\nBefore leaving the room see that j markets abroad.\neverything you customarily allow\nI the remaining 15 per cent finding\nthe child is at hand\u2014that he has had\na drink of water, that he was placed upon the toilet . . . Take a last\nlook at his clothes to see that very-\nthing is in order\u2014that he is not too\n-    news   r maii-s,    ,.\u00bb.,   _,,,_.,,,_,,,    -       _\u25a0        .\" ,    , ,      ,        ,      . _, ,\ntrumental; 7:30 El Chico, Span-; warm, that his hands ate placed\n_ '__.     __.< .. .  __.____.    al___    _._->\u2022\u2022__>\u2022     i ,f    Via     ie     mil     :<\nish Revue; 8:00 Rudy Siegel's orch.\n8:30 Carl Ravazza's orch.; 9:00 To\n5:00 Piano Duo; 5:15 The Voice be announced; 9:30 Reader's Guide\n*.. _\u2022 - tit fl.ru-i Mi\u201e t.*-.,. J. H. Jackson 10 00 lom briiwri _\n\u2022I the Evening. D.I,;        Nino Mai-  \u00a3\u00a3, ..^ ^m_ M__k__,_ orch .\n11:00 Midnight Melodies.\nSweden is this year celebrating\nthe 300th anniversary ol its postal\nservices, though stamps were not\nIssued until 1855. An attractive issue\nof 12 values shows how the mails\nwere carried from 1636, when\nfounded by Axel Ovcntierna by\npostal couriers on foot and on horseback, to today by airplane, fast\ntrans-Atlantic steamer, train and\nmotor truck.\nSweden's stamps are often distinguished by the postal horn on\nthe back of many issues. In the 15\nore of the commemorative issue the\npostal courier Is shown blowing\nthis postal horn to warn citizens\nthe mtil had arrived. Thc postal\nhorn is also shown on the face of\nother issues.\nSweden's stamps have not been\ntoo numerous, and portray mainly\nformer kings. The present king.\nGustav V, best known as a tennis\nplayer, has been shown on stamps\nsince 1910, and each new stamp\nthowt the king a little older. In\naddition to these regular issues\nthere have In recent yeari been\ntome pictorials showing main\nbuildings In the country's capital.\nStockholm. Charity stamps have\nbeen few In number, while only\ntwo designs of air mail stamps have\nappeared. Since 1920 the bulk of\nSweden't stamps has been issued\n.perforated only vertically, being\nprinted as coil stamps, making them\ni distinctive from the stamps of most\n| countries which Issue only a lim-\nj ited number of coil stamps.\n...\nLatest news from Washington is\n1 that there will be a commemora-\nI tive issue probably this summer of\nten values honoring   five   heroes\neach of the United States army and\nI navy . . , June 15th is the expected\nj date for  the  Arkansas centennial\n| stamp to go on sale al Little Rock,\nwhen that state will celebrate 100\n1 years of statehood . . . Queen As-\nj trid of Belgium whose posthumous\nI appearance on  a  Belgian  charity\n| issue last year was hailed as the\nI most beautiful woman to appear on\nI a stamp, will bc shown on two values of a new Belgian Congo charity\nstamp. She will be teen wearing\na colonial helmet ... St. Eucia in\nthe West Indies has a new pictorial\nIssue, thc first since 1902. Thc set\nshows scenes from the island with\nthe late King George in medallion.\nFrench Equatorial Africa is a new-\ncountry for your stamp albums. The\nstamps of French Gabon tnd French\nMiddle Congo are to be discontinued when sold out, and a new issue\nunder one postal administration is\nto take its place. The first provisional surcharges appeared March\n15th . , . Peru is to issue in August\n5000 complete sets of 12 values commemorating the 400th anniversary\nof the founding of Callao.\nVery wide hemlines ate sometimes accented by a contrasting\nband of ribbon in evening frocks.\nSometimes the ribbons are Roman\nstriped, sometimes in the same\nmedium as thc dress, as, for instance, organdie bands in one or; _.\nmore colours which create a gay : ' '\ndetail at hemlines.\n8:45 Ozzie Nelson's orchestra, KSL; ] C.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\n9:00 Zlogfeld Follies of the i 5:00 Symphony dir. Victor Kolar;\nAir, Fannie Brice, Patti Chapman, I 6:00 Terror By Night, drama; 6:30\nGoodman's orch.; 10:00 Cole Mc-! Freddie Rich's Penthouse Party;\nI Elroy's orch., D.L.; 10:30 Kenny Al* \\ 7:00 Eddie Cantor, Jimmy Walling-\nI len's orch.; 11:00 Jimmy Dorsey's t ton, Parkyakakas, Louis Gress'\norch., D.L.; 11:30 Emil Baffa's orch., I orch.;   7:30  Voice  of  Experience,\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nSUNDAY NIGHT\nC.R.C. NETWORK\n11:00 New   York   Philharmonic-\nSymphony, dir. Arturo Toscanini,\nLawrence   Gilman,   an not a tor,\nhuman problems; 7:45 Tommy Dorsey's orch.; 8:00 Frank Dailey's\norch.; 8:30 Xavier Cugat and his\norch.; 9:00 To be announced; 9:30\nUniversity Explorer; 10:00 Ellis\nKimball's oreh.; 10:30 Nocturnal\nSerenade; 11:00 Ellis Kimball's\norch.; 11:15 Gaylord Carter, organ.\noutside the cover (if he is not a\nthumb sucker, inside if he is) then a\npat on the head, a quiet good night,\nlights out and door closed. If he \u25a0\nhowls let him howl.\"\nIf you prefer a kiss to a pat, very\nwell. That won't hurt your child\nof any age and may do you a world\nof good. Furthermore, regardless of\nyour child's age, if he asks you to\nhave the door ajar with light on in ,\nthe hall, grant it. The light will not I\ndisturb his sleep nearly so much as |\nthe imaginary creatures prowling   *\naround him. Just be sensible.\nWhile less famous than the skunk,\nthe weasel possesses glands that are\nsimilar and that secrete a fluid of\nstrong odor.\nr0R MINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are suitable for\nall mining and other\ncamp buildings. It is\nstrong, waterproof,\nlieht and very easy to\nhandle.\nDistrict Dlstributori\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nEntrust Us With\nYour Plumbing\nand Heating\nRequirements\nWe Guarantee\nCOOD WORKMANSHIP\nCOOD MERCHANDISE\nCOOD SERVICE\nat Moderate Rates\nPHONE 666\nand Be Convincedl\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBINC b HEATINC\nLIMITED\nTODAY'S\nGARDEN-GRAPH\nBy DEAN HALL1PAY\nCopyright, lilt, Central Trtee AtttmH-tKnt, ltc\n\"I never let Pa hear me say that\nsome other man is handsome. He\nalways thinks I'm thinkin' about his\nbald head.\"\nMoving magnolia, successfully.\nMagnolias should be moved (if they have to be) just as the leaf buds\nare coming to life, but before they are fully open.   .\nMagnolias do not enjoy being moved, and to transplant them successfully each must be dug with a large ball of earth. Thc Magnolia is a\nfleshy rooted shrub and therefore should never be moved when dormant,\nfor the roots often begin to decay if they are disturbed during their\nresting period.\nMagnolias do well in city gardens, particularly the Star.-Yulan and\npink flowered varieties. **   '   .\nMatrimonial Vine\nPERENNIAL\nFor oorch. trellis or arbor. Has\na small purple flower and blooms\nfrom June to November.\nThe beautv of the vine is that\nno bugs, grubs or insects will stay\non it. Another good feature of the\nvine is. it does not spread from\nthe root, does all its spreading\nfrom the ton.\nWhen the ground freezes hard\nin November the leaves and the\nbloom go off. In the Spring it\nleaves out again and blooms in\nJune.\nfl Each 3 (or $2\nMailed Postpaid Anywhere\nIn  Canada\nIf for any reason the vine does\nnot grow in six weeks, the same\nwill be replaced free of charge by\nJ. M. STUART\nTHORNHILL ONTARIO\nFERTILIZER\nCOSTS\narc small compartd to crop increase In yield\nand quality. Production coiti are about thc\naame with good and poor crops. Only food\ncropi produce a profit.\nUSE ELEPHANT\nBRAND FERTILIZERS\nMANUFACTURED BY\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\n l-ftf\nNELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY  MORNINQ. APRIL iS. 113.   \u2022**-*-\nHIGH SCHOOLS\nARE INTENDED\nTO LIBERALIZE\nDon't Judge Only by\nVocations Urges\nProf. Wood\nRgsjults\nINTERNATIONAL\nBuffalo 4, Albany 5.\nMontreal 5, Baltimore 3.\nRochester 3, Newark 13.\nPACIFIC  COAST\nSan Diego 1. Seattle 7.\nSacramento 4, Los Angeles 6;\nOakland 9, San Francisco 3.\nENGINEERS ARE\nGIVEN TALK ON\nESTATE MAKING\nSOME SUBJECTS\nARE CULTURAL\nHospital Gains\nDoctor's Praise\nCrerar Shows Life\nInsurance As\nOne Means\nEXPLAINS CHIEF\nPRINCIPLES USED\nFuture Discussed in\nFinal Lecture of\nAdult Series\nDr. Williamson Makes;\nStandardization\nInspection\nAlso Goes Into the\nMatter of Wills\nand Estates\nDescribing his aim to bc the indicating of a few of the obvious and\nexternal changes that were being\nbrought about or that it was desirable to bring about in the high\nschools of the province, Prof. C. B.\nWood, of the education department\nOf British Columbia university,\nspoke on \"The Future of Secondary\nEducation,\" Friday night at thc junior high school, his lecture bringing\nto a close the adult education course\nof 12 lectures given here during\nthe college year.\nSuggesting that the general belief\nthat education had recently become\nan exact science, and that its principles could be applied offhand to\na given system and obtain exact\nresults, was not strictly true, the\nspeaker remarked that every small\nperiod In history had definite characteristics of its own, and that an\neducational system must adjust itself to these. Thus there was no such\nthing as finalty in educational\nmethod.\nTRAINING FOR LIFE\nA modern conception ot the\nschools, he said, was that they were\na desirable form of employment for\nthe youth of the country, providing\na sound training for the discipline\nand work of occupations to be entered upon later.\nChief among current developments\nln the high school system, he named thc departure of the junior high\nschools, developed in the last 10\nyears, so far as British Columbia\nwas concerned. The merit of this\nexperiment, he said, was that planned work was given, and the junior\nhigh school was based on a definite\nidea. One of its obvious merits was\nthe teaching of cooperation, and the\ndevelopment of the social attitude\nin children ln whom it would otherwise remain only latent, this being\nevoked in part by the numerous\nclubs and other special activities\nwhich the system definitely encouraged. That this social trend was\nwisely stressed was proved by the\nfact that the pupils continued their\nactivities when in due course they\nproceeded to the senior high school.\nGENERAL SUBJECTS VALUABLE\nMentioning contrasting theories\nDf education, Prof. Wood said the\nschools were generally expected to\nteach useful knowledge, and judged by this theory, some of the general subjects ln thc high schools\nwere regarded critically. Thus, while\nvocational courses justified themselves under this conception, because they were teaching pupils to\ndo better thc things they were going to do to earn their living, there\nwas a disposition on the part of\nsome to question the utility of such\ncourses as English and music. Opposing this view, the speaker suggested that thc pupils should be\ntaught to do things which otherwise\nthey might not have learned to do,\nior all great subjects, such as these,\nwidened thc Individuals' intellectual horizon, although in only rare\ncases did these subjects figure essentially In the individual's vocation. Teaching of them raised the\ncultural standard of the group, and\nthey thus had a social value, and\nshould not be judged vocationally,\nA criticism offered by Prof. Wood\nwas directed against the present system of examinations, which, lie said,\nblinded the pupil to the liberalizing\nWork of the high school. The specific knowledge acquired in schools\nwas not of much value in itself, but\npiece by piece, even when forgotten, it contributed to the pupil developing the faculty of Judgment\nand acquiring perspective.\nLINK PARENTS AND SCHOOLS\nRaising of the intellectual level of\nthe community was not a task for\nthc high schools alone, and alone\nthey could not effect much improvement ln a single generation. This\nwas a responsibility that parents\nahould share as well, and to produce\nthe most lasting effect, adults must\ndefinitely take part in these cultural\nactivities.\nGiven this linking up of adult education and the high schools, Prof.\nWood said, a valuable work could\nbc done, and he expressed the view\nthat the high schools themselves\nshould be the center of cultural activities, which the pupils could naturally continue into adulthood.\nPrincipal L. V. Rogers was chairman of the gathering, and expressed\nappreciation both of Prof. Wood's\naddress, and of the entire series given by the various university spcak-\n\"Kootenoy Lake General hospital\nhas made remarkable progress since\nthe Inspection by Dr. F. C. Bell of\nVancouver two years ago,\" was the\ncomment made Friday night by Dr.\nE. W. Williamson ot Chicago, representing the American College of\nSurgeons, after spending practically\nthe entire day making a survey of\nthe Nelson institution from the\nangle of standardization of equipment and operation, and after meeting the board and thc staff in conference ln the evening.\nIn speaking for publication, Dr.\nWilliamson said he told the board\nof directors and the staff heads the\nrequirements of the American College of Surgeons for a hospital wishing standard ranking, commented\non the progress the Institution had\nmade in thc last two years, and\nmade certain recommendations concerning further organization of the\nhospital's medical service.\nLAB  PLANS CREDITABLE\nReferring to the pathological laboratory, Dr. Williamson said for\npublication that the plans for the\nlaboratory service were most creditable in every respect, and would\nprovide a complete service in that\nline for community and district.\n\"I find thc hospital is well equipped for an institution of this size,\nand is now in a position to carry\nout efficient medical and nursing\nservice,\" he said.\nDr. William stated the hospital\nnow hsd a conditional rating, but\nshould soon be in line for full approval as a hospital operating on\nthe lines laid down by the American College of Surgeons as standard.\nBuilding Goes\nAhead at Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., April 24-Construc-\ntion activity and building renovation noticeable throughout the\ncity during the past several weeks is\nreflected in thc sharp increase in\nvalue of permits issued by tlie city\nbuilding department. Amounting to\n$24,903 since April 1, and already\n$6915 over thc March total, it was\nexpected that the $30,000 mark\nwould be reached by the end of the\nnonth. Building and repairs in\nApril,  1935, amounting to $16,140,\n1 and  in  the  corresponding  month\nof the previous year thc value was\n\u2022still lower at $5930.\nOf the 23 permits taken out since\nApril 1, 12 were for alterations,\nvalued at $4700 and thc remaining\n11 for new residences, valued at\n$20,205. Repairs are being carried\nout by;\nMrs. J. G. Murdock, Tamarac\navenue, $250; J. Jankola, Railway\nstreet, $700; A. Nizzero, Spokane\nstreet, $300; Christian Community\nof Universal Brotherhood, Bay avenue, $500; Mrs. W. Leinss, Victoria street, $730; G. Bertolozzi,\nRossland avenue, $400; Fred Ilott,\nSecond avenue, $120; A. J. Anderson, Austad Lane, $150; Alex Slem-\nko, Second avenue, $150; Frank\nVellutini, Columbia avenue, $1000;\nG. W. Eaton, Nelson street. $250;\nA. Toncll', Rossland avenue, $150.\nFollowing were the permits issued for dwellings, with specifications:\nC, Maximenko, Milligan avenue,\n$950. 22 x 20, full basement, stucco\nfinish.\nMrs. W. R. Smith, Daniel street,\n$2000; 24 x 34, full basement, stucco\nfinish.\nK. Adcock, Daniel street, $1280;\n18 x 20, stucco finish.\nMrs. Adcock, Topping street, $2475;\n24 x 26, stucco finish,\ni    J. McNeil, Second avenue, $1000;\n' 22 x 24, stucco finish.\nI. Georgetti, Rossland avenue,\n$1550; 19 x 30, stucco finish.\nD. J. Duffus, Daniel street, $2450;\n22 x 34, stucco finish.\nL. Martinello, Buckna street, $1800;\n24 x 32, stucco finish.\nPietro Pagnan, Rossland avenue,\n$2700; 26 x 34, stucco finish.\nC. Howe, Fourth avenue, $1800;\n24 x 34, stucco finish.\nN. Ccauscscu, Second avenue,\n$2200; 24 x 30, full basement, stucco finish.\nG. Fawcett Leads\nTRAIL, B.C., April 24\u2014Ad News\ndefeated Trail Mercantile in three\nstraight games and Trail Times\ndowned Safeway in similar fashion\nin thc Trail City Tenpin Bowling\nleague in Memorial hall here Friday night.\nHigh scorer of thc night was\nGeorge Fawcett of Ad News, who\nbowled 231 in his second game and\naggregated 604 for three games.\nTeams and total scores were;\nAd News   736 678 694-2008\nTrail   Mercantile 547 481 492-1520\nSafeway   460441 429-1328\nTrail Times 617 \u00ab58 645-1920\nScandinavian Dinner\nAttended by Over 100\nOver 100 persons, including Mayor J. P. Morgan and other members\nof the city council, attended a dinner staged by the ladies' aid to tfle\nScandinavian church Friday night.\n! The proceeds from thc dinner were\nfor the church building fund.\nRev. E. E. Lindgren welcomed\nthe guests, and Mayor Morgan spoke\nbriefly.\nR. MCDONALD DIES, KAMLOOPS\nKAMLOOPS, B. C, (CP)-Roder-\nIck McDonald, pioneer of tlie Canadian Pacific Railway construction\ndays in British Columbia and\nknown as \"Black Rory\", died here\nFriday. McDonald, who was 79\nyears old, had resided for thc past\nfew years at Savona, near here.\nIn an address of approximately\ntwo hours at the monthly luncheon\nof the Kootenay branch of the British Columbia Association of Professional Engineers, at the Golden\nGate Thursday night, R. E. Crerar,\nspeaking by Invitation, discussed\nthe subject, \"Fundamentals of Life\nInsurance Creating and Conserving\nEstimates\", and made liberal use\nof mathematics and graphs, much\nas engineers themselves do.\nNoting that the firat insurance\npre-dated the Christian era, and\nwas carried on Roman ships and\ncaptains against loss by pirates, Mr.\nCrerar said the first mortality tables dated from 1643, being produced by Halley, of Halley's Comet\nfame. In 1893 the British Officers\ntables were worked out, and were\naccepted for many years, and from\ntime to time new tables were drawn\nup based on changing experience\nand the increase ln thc expectancy\nof life.\nHOW COSTS DETERMINED\nShowing how life Insurance costs\nwere worked out, the speaker figured on a blackboard for the ages\n20 to 24, showing how out of 100,770\npersons aged 20 years, the government table showed 657 would die\nduring the year. At $1000 each on\nthe 657, there would be $887,000 to\nbe paid for these claims, which,\nspread over 100,770 persons, would\ncost something under $6.30. With a\nsmaller number each succeeding\nyear, and an annual discount at\ni*Vi per cent Interest operating,\ncomputed the net levy cost over\na lifetime from age 20 to 102 from\nn mortality table, which worked\nout to be $20.39. To this was added\nthe \"loading cost\" of $1.56, making\nthc gross premium $21.95, which\nwas the rate charged tor a non-\nparticipating policy at age 20 on\nthe British Officers mortality table\nof 1893.\nWhile this $1.56 margin over the\ntable cost was small, it was supplemented from other sources. The\ntable was based on the mortality\nexperience of tlie general population, while thc companies insured\nselected risks. Thus a particular\ncompany must in a given year have\na mortality only 40 per cent of the\ntable. This meant two things, that\nthe funds from which the remaining 60 per cent would have been\npaid had the claims matured would\ncontinue to bear interest, and that\nthose 60 per cent would pay another\npremium each. While the interest\nthe government provided for was\n3h per cent minimum, actually tlie\ninterest earned on investments was\nmore, being in the case of one company he had in mind, 5.28 per cent\nlast year. A third source that built\nup the reserve was internal savings\nthrough organization, high officials\nfrequently combining offices that\nthe act made separate allowance\nfor, thus saving their companies\nimportant salary  outlay.\nIt was frmo the reserve built up\nfrom these sources that the companies returned to the insured, policy \"dividends\", which, however,\nwere not dividends in the ordinary\nsense, but the return ot ascertained\novercharges above a justifiable\ncost.\nUSE OF LEGAL RESERVE\nIn connection with the premiums,\nMr. Crerar mentioned that they represented averages, and were higher than cost in the early years and\nlower than cost in the later years.\nThis early overpayment was the insured individual's reserve. Out of\nthe first premium, beside various\nspecial expenses, including part of\nthe agent's commission, a portion\nhad to be placed with the government as a reserve. From this the\nCanadian companies were entitled\nlo be known as legal reserve companies. How this reserve operated,\nMr. Crerar illustrated with the case\nof a company formed just before\nthe war, which confined itself to\nmales between the ages of 18 and\n35, the very best class of risk existing. The war. broke out, snd\nsooner or later all its policy-holders\nwere enlisted, either by volunteering or under the Military Service\noet, and the business lt had written\nin the expectation of being unusually sound became impossible.\nTo save the situation, the government took over the company's assets, distributed the risks among\nthc 46 other companies, and turned\nover to them th^ legal reserve for\nthe various policies. Under this\nsystem, the policy-holders were protected from loss in the event of a\ncompany failing, something that had\nnever yet actually happended,\nCanadian companies operating in\nthe United States were under two\nchecks, that of the state concerned,\nand then of Canada in addition.\nThis double-check was ene reason\nwhy so many Americans insured\nwith thc Canadian life companies,\nthe speaker said.\nORDINARY SAVING\nHA8 \"IF8\"\nComparing life insurance as a\nmeans of building up an estate with\nthc method of direct saving, Mr.\nCrerar showed from a table that a\nman who saved $500 a year, which\nhe invested at 3 per cent compound\ninterest, would require 47 years\nto get an estate of $50,000 by that\nmethod.\nOne who saved $300 a year and\ngot 5 per cent compound interest\nwould take 33 years to build up to\n$25,000. Beside the long periods required, Mr. Crerar said there were\nthree big \"Us\" ln the case\u2014if one\nlived long enough, if he saved consistently and if he invested skilfully.\nFrom a table called the \"march\not life\", the speaker showed that of\na given 100 men 25 years old, when\nthe group* reached the age of $8,\nout of the whole number 20 would\nbe dead, one wealthy, three well-to-\ndo, 46 living on their earnings, and\n30 not self-supporting. At 89 the\nsame group would show 36 dead,\none wealthy, tour well-to-do, five\nliving on earnings, and 54 not self-\nsupporting. The group at death\nwould show one wealthy, two with\ncompetences, 13 leaving from $2000\nto $10,000, and 82 leaving nothing.\nOf a group of widows, 18 he said\nwould live off their income, 47\nwould supplement their incomes by\nworking ,and 39 would be dependent.\nAsked regarding group insurance\nand Insurance operated by local\nclubs, such as 1500 clubs, he said\nthe weakness was that they paid the\nactual cost, which necessarilly increased with the years, not being\nlevelled out over the Insurable period, as was the case with regular\nlife insurance. An epidemic might\nmake the load Impossible to carry.\nHe pointed out that this province\nhad refused to licence any new\nclubs of this nature.\nBy far the greater part of Mr.\nCrerar's address had to do with\nwills, which of course are factors\nIn the handling of estates to the best\npurpose.\nAfter dealing with the various\nimposts that estates left hsd to meet,\nand detailing the exemptions Which\nBritish Columbia law granted, the\nspeaker went on to outline the ideal\nwill.  .\nThe testator must give his full\nname, must revoke all former wills\nin order to make the new one surely\neffective, and should name or appoint the individual or individuals\nwho should execute or administer\nthe will.\nWhere insurance policies would\nconstitute part of the eitate, policies that did not themselves name\nother beneficiaries, the testator\nshould direct how these were to\nbe dlsoosed of.\nMAKE ESTATE\nPLIABLE\nIt was well for a man to give ln\nhis will liberty to his wife to sell\nthe home if deemed necessary, as\na more modest one might suit better\nthe circumstances In which she\nwould find herself.\nSelling of other property and\nchanging of Investments should also\nbe authorized, If expedient; otherwise the estate might be depreciated.\nIf there were' minor children,\ngu-rdians should be arranged for.\nCash legacies or other bequests\nshould be properly described, and\nthe testator should direct the payment of all his just debts, and of\nthe administration expenses.\nAsked regarding the letters \"C. L.\nU.\", which he is entitled to have\nfollow his name, Mr. Crerar explan-\ned it was a degree he earned from\nthe Life Underwriters Association\nof Canada, by successfully passing\nfour annual examinations, covering\na four year course, the last year\nembracing an extension course from\nthe University of Toronto.\nSeveral times Mr. Crerar terminated his address, but found\nhimself continuing it in answer to\nfurther questions. The meeting,\nwhich ordinarily wt-_ld hsve ended\nat 7:45. finally wound up at 9:30.\nCONDOLENCE VOTE\nBefore the program, the branch\non motion of W. L. Affleck and E.\nL. Warburton, extended Its condolences to Secretary Roy Pollard,\nNo Changes in\nTrains Sunday\nBut May 26 Will See\nK.V. Time Earlier\nat Coast\nNo changes ln train service affecting the Kootenay division are incorporated in the new Canadian Pacific time-table that goea Into effect\nSunday.\nIt is provided, however, that May\n26 the Kettle Valley passenger train\nwill have a different running time\nat the coast end, though there will\nbe no change here. The train will\nleave Vancouver at 6:15 p.m. instead\nof 7:45 p.m.. in order to give moro\ntime ln handling agricultural shipments in the Fraaer valley. At the\nsame time the time of arrival in\nVancouver from Nelson will be\nspeeded up 19 minutes, and the Kettle Valley will pull in there at 10\na.m. instead of at 10:15 a.m.\nJames A. Bradley\nSeriously Hurt\nWord has been received in Nelson that James A. Bradley, butcher for P. Burns It Co. at Grand\nForks, and Well known in Kaslo\nand Nelson districts, had been seriously hurt in an automobile accident near Greenwood. Mr. Bradley was found unconscious under\nhis car. He suffered internal injuries about the chest and his condition was reported as serious.\nREELECT TENNIS\nOFFICERS, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C., April 24\u2014The executive of Trail Memorial Hall Tennis club was returned to office by\nacclamation at the general annual\nmeeting here Friday night. Officers were: Ned Rhodes, president;\nEd Haley, vice-president; William\nR'gby, secretary-treasurer. A committee of three is to be added by\nthe selection of the president. The\nclub endorsed the action of the\nTadanac club in uklng that the\nWest Kootenay tuornament of 1930\nbe held on their court.\nHog Owner Fined\n$50 for Cruelty |\nA $90 fine with costs was imposed\nby Stipendiary Magistrate John\nLeask at Cranbrook Monday on\nSam Chow, a Chinese, on a charge\nof cruelty to animals, based oo surgery he had performed on hogs on\na ranch three miles east of Cranbrook, which he operates on a\nlease from the owner, Chow Law.\nThe arrest ln the case, according\nto reports ln the provincial police\ndivisional office here, was made by\nProvincial Constable F. L. Jeeves.\nSam Chow pleaded guilty, and paid\ntha fine.\nWould Visit the\nGraves Kootenay\nDead at Vimy\nMrs. James Kellctt of Oakville,\nOnt., is attending the Vimy Ridge\npilgrimage. Hcr husband was a\nmember of 94th Kootenay battalion,\nand enlisted ln Kasto. She would\nbe glad to visit any graves or place\nwreaths upon them, or whatever\nwas desired. Owing to the shortness\nof the stay there the visits would\nhave to be confined to the Vimy\nRidge district. Please write to her\nat the above address.\nPATRICK WINS IN FIRST\nYONKERS, N.Y., (CP).-Murray\n\"Musi\" Patrick, the \"knockout kid\"\nof hockey and the prize-ring, icored\na technical knockout over Frank\nO'Dessi ot New York in one round\nhere to advance to the heavyweight\nfinals of the Catholic Union amateur\ntourney.\nBOSTON, (AP).-The Post says\ndepartments of justice agents are\nconcentrated ln Massachusetts and\nSouthern New Hampshire sfter discovery that more than $20,000 of\nthe $50,000 Lindbergh ransom money was found ln this section.\non the death of Mrs. Pollard, President H. R. Younger speaking for the\nmembership.\nThose present were H. R. Younger,\nR. A. Pollard, H. D. Dawson, E. W.\nWiddowson, W. Blane, H. Sargent,\nE. L. Warburton, Thomas Brown,\nW. J. Tindale, F. W. Foster, W. L.\nAffleck, G. F. Chapman, Boyd C.\nAffleck, and the branch's guest, R.\nI. Crerar.\nWould Reinstate\nA. P, Employee\nNEW YORK, (AP)-Dean Charles\nS. Clarke of Yale Law school, trial\nexaminer for the National Labor\nRelations board at a hearing on the\nboard's complaint against the Associated Press, made public his intermediate report in which he\ncharged the Associated Press with\nhaving unlawfully discharged Morris WaUon, a reporter, and with\n\"Interfering with, restraining and\ncoercing its employees\" by \"engaging in an unfair labor practice.\"\nThe finding of the examiner was\nmade public by Mrs. Elinore M.\nHerrick, regional director of the\nboard, which held a hearing April\n7\u20148 on charges filed by the American Newspaper Guild that Watson\nwas discharged because of Guild\nactivities.\nDean Clarke recommended \"in\norder to effectuate the policies of\nthe act\" that the Associated Press\nreinstate Watson at bis former salary ot $295 monthly, re-pay him for\nany losses of salary since his dis-\nmissel and \"to bargain collectively\nwith its editorial employees through\nthe American Newspaper Guild and\nIts national executive board, duly\nchosen representatives of the Associated Press ln it of such guild.\"\nLake Continues\nIts Record Rise\n\u25a0PAQE NINI\nIs Now Over Five Feet;\nLower Park Beach\nCovered\nContinuing to break records for\nquick rising in April, the West Arm\nrose tour-fifths of a foot between\nWednesday afternoon and Thursday afternoon, and over half a foot\nin tlie 24 hours after that, standing Friday afternoon at 5.33 feet\nabove the low water mark or zero.\nThis is a gain of 5.33 feet in 12\ndays, and of 4.58 in the last eight\ndays.\nAt Lakeside park, where Thursday of last week the NeISon\"t)ally\nNews Polar Bears stood in less\nthan a yard of water for their\nphotograph, and had to \"swim shallow\", the water is now far over a\nman's head, and the lower beach\nall around the park is covered.\nThe greater volume of snow water has depressed thc temperature\nof the lake to 44 degrees, compared\nwith 49 last Saturday,\nFINED UNDER WAGE ACT\nPleading guilty to a charge under tho Minimum Wage act, Fred\nWilliams, Nelson, wss fined $50, er\nordered to serve three months in\njail when his case was heard by\nMagistrate William Brown Friday\nin city police court. He paid the\nfine. H. V. Irving appeared for Mr.\nWilliams.\nA. MARCONI DIES\nLONDON,   (CP-Havas).-Alfonso\nMarconi, brother of Senator Gugli-\nelmo, the famous Inventor, died here\nFriday following a cardiac attack.\nRossland Ore\nShipments High\nShipping a total of 1,467,910\npounds or 733.9 tons ot ore, lessees\nof company properties adjoining the\ncity of Rossland got out their largest shipments to thc smelter this\nyear, says the Rossland Miner.\nThere were 16 shippers contributing\nto this total ore tonnage.\nAt present the leases are working at the maximum tonnage allowance given by the Consolidated\ncompany.\nTRAIL SPANIARD\nLOSES TOES\nCALGARY (CP)-Nal.re has accomplished what Joe Echevarri, 32,\na native ot Spain, would not let\ndoctors do. The transient worker\nhad his feet badly frozen while\nwalking from High River, Alta.,\nto Aldersyde, a distance of 10 miles,\nduring thc bitterly cold weather\nof early February. He was on his\nway to Calgary from a relief camp\nat Trail, B.C,\nAfter suffering Intense pain while\nlying in a rooming house for a week\nand refusing to accept assistance,\nEchevarri was taken to hospital\nwhere doctors told him his toes and\npart of the feet would have to be\namputated. He would not allow the\noperation and has been in hospital\nsince. It was feared complications\nwould set in.\nBut doctors said the parts they Intended to amputate had fallen off\nand his feet were healing. When\nreleased from hospital, the Spaniard\nwould be able to walk, it was stated.\nBERLIN, April 24 (API\u2014Germany\ncelebrated \"colonial memorial day\"\ntoday with speakers advancing ar*\nguments for return of former possessions, but there were indications\nthe government believes the present is not a propitious time to put\nforth its colonial demands vociferously.\nThe government apparently prefers to let colonial enthusiasts blow\noff steam in local meetings without\nmaking an open national-wide campaign at present.\nCan Negotiate\nCascade Summit\nby Monday Next\nTRAIL, B.C., April 24-The highway from Rossland to Cascade over\nboth summits will bc open on Monday, the earliest in years, according\nto announcement of R. R. Burns,\nM.L.A.\nIn making the announcement lt\nwas pointed out that the highway\nwould be open for those who wanted to use It though travel would\nnot be highly recommended at this\ntime. Persons using it would be advised to take chains In case they\nhad difficulty in negotiating same\nof the slippery spots.\nBy Monday, though the rood will\nbe'open, the graders will not have\ncompleted their work.\nA Settled Pastor\nlor Presbyterians\nRev. James Ritchie Is\nHere; Ordination\nEarly Future\nRev. James Ritchie, M.A., a recent graduate of Knox college, Toronto, hai arrived in Nelson to taka\nover the pastorate ot tbe First Presbyterian church. The new pastor ia\na son of the manse, his father being\nRev. David Ritchie of Point Edward,\nOnt,\nAt an early date the presbytery of\nKootenay will meet to arrange for\nhis ordination here,\nH. K. Caslor, who completed hia\nservice as student pastor here last\nSunday, has been transferred to\nAsslnibois, Sask., and subsequently\nwill resume his theological course\nat Knox college.\n$80,000,000 Passed\nin Estimates\nOTTAWA (CP)-The House ot\nCommons Friday passed estimates\nfor three government departmenta\ntotalling more than $80,000,000 and\ndiscussed numerous subjects, including fruit salts and possible ab*\nolition of the department of health.\nJean Francois Pouliot, Temiscouata\nLiberal, stepped into the health department estimates discussion- with\na suggestion the department buy a\ndozen bottles ot fruit salts and test\nthem. He contended insufficient\ncheck was being maintained on\npatent medicines and that fruit\nsalts were falsely advertised and\nlabelled because they were made ot\ncoal tar extracts. Health Minister\nPower said they were fruit salts\nbecause they contained citric acid.\nTWO BURNED ON FACE\nSAN DIEGO, Cal. (AP)-A crank-\ncase explosion aboard the U. S.\nsubmarine Nautilus caused facial\nburns to two of her engine-room\ncrew. The vlc'ims were O. L. Had-\nen and W. G. Wright, both machinist's mates. Two other men, in the\nnext compartment, received minor\ninjuries when jarred against a bulkhead.\nKINO FUAD IN COMA\nCAIRO (CP-Havas)-King Fuad\nof Egypt passed into a coma Saturday morning following a hemmor-\nrhngo which attending physicians\nfeared foreshadowed the 69-year-\nold monarch's early death.\nOH, HONCY, I NIL UKI\nA MILLION THIS MORNINSf\nI TILL YOU THIM*\nNOTHING UKI A OOOB\nNIOHT'S SLEEP TO PUT\nA MAN ON TOP OF THI\nWORLD AQAIN \/\nWILL, IF TW*\nSAMPII OF THI\novAsrmt makes\nyou .sil, \u25a0luavi mi,\nCOIN- TO II THE\nNow.ee Read These True-Life\nExperiences With Ovaltine\n\"\/ hae Hird Ovtltkt ftr somt time tnd find\nU of immense vtlut tt Mutt sleep. My\nhusband wtt vtry nervous\u2014but met drink-\nkt Ovaltine btlort tomt it btd, he alvtys\ntttittoodntikfsmt\"-writes one of\nour ultra.\nAnother delighted user writes:\u2014\n\"\/ UStd tO bt nrnaiu tltd krittblt tt dl\ntimei. I spent mony sleepless nithti frayint\ntnd kopint mtwnint would come, but thenks\nto Ovtltmr. lor tkt food kttHh tnd tound\nslttp I WW enjoy. Uy nervoutnen kai com-\nfieltly lift mt tnd my whole ktalth it 100%\nbitter.\"\nThe\u00ab letters cover, of course, only\ntwo individual cxpfrlences. Naturally, we do not claim or guarantee\nthat similar results will occur in\ntvry case where Ovaltine is used.\nBut these statement! are so typical\nof thousands we have received, that\nwe believe a thorough trial of Oval-\ntine is justified b;r ever; intelligent\nperson troubled with sleepless nights.\nOvaltine Is a delicious pure food\nconcentrate originally created in\nHwitgerlsnd as a strengthening food\nfor invalids, convalescents, and tbe\naged. Then physicians noted that,\nwhen taken as a hot drink at bedtime, it was also a remarkable aid\nto sound, restful sleep.\nfhone your druggist or grocer for a\ntin of Ovaltine now. Or mail the\ncoupon fer a 3-day trial supply.\nA. Wandii Lmrn\u00bb, Dtp..\u2022*\u2022\"\u2022*\nElmwood Pirk, Peterborough, OnUrlo.\n1 endow 10c to com coit of packing and maflinf, Send\nme your test package of Ovaltine.   (One ptck-te to om\ntenon.)\nAddress-.\nCity...\n(Print mm. tnd addresi tlttrly \/.V PENCIL)\nOVdLTINE\nTonit Food Jnir-ft ^B^^^\nat drui, aaocirr and oipartmnt stoats    ( \u25a0\nI\n NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.\u2014SATURDAY MORNING. APRIL 26. 1938\nIhtAch c_ BARGAIN FOR YOU <Vi \u00abfe CIAfSinEDS;_tSc\u00ab\/\u00abrVem.'figK\nJjplflutt Batly ftfttJB\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE VA\nPrivate Exchange connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription   Ratei\nSingle copy  t  ~^>\nBy carrier, per week      .25\nBy carrier, per year   13.00\nBy mall in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month. 60c;\nthree months. S1.80. six months,\n$3.00. one v-ar. $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months,\n$4.00; one year, $7.30.\nforeign countries, other than\nU.S.. 6arr,e as above plus any\nextra postage.\nAdvertising Rates\nIlea Line\nMinimum 2 Lines\n2 lines, once $ 32\n3 lines, once    J3\n4 lines, once     .44\n2 llne%. 6 times _    .88\n3 lines. 6 times 1.32\n4 Unes. 6 times  -_  1.78\n2 lines. 1 month  2.88\n3 lines. 1 month  4.29\n4 lines. 1 month   6.72\nAll above less 10% for prompt\npayment\nREAD THIS FIRST\nMargalo Younger, an actress, is\nfound mysteriously dead in the\nhome of Dow Van Every, a collector\nof rare jewels, shortly after Van\n\u25a0Every has recounted the gruesome\nhistory of the famous Camden ruby\nto the actress, whom he had just\nmet, and Gary Maughan, an acquaintance. She had been wearing\nthe huge ruby during the historical\naccount against Van Every's wishes,\nscoffing at his description of the\njewel as a \"murder stone.\" The doctor calls the police when he finds\nit a case of murder, and explains\nthe actress died from a sharp\nneedle-like instrument found at the\nbase of the brain. Detective Keyes\nbegins questioning Van Every and\nMaughan, thc only others in the\nroom at the time of Margalo's murder, when Joyce, Van Every's\nyoung niece, who lives with him.\nenters. Laura Randall, elderly companion to Joyce, is brought in for\nquestioning.\n(Now Go On With the Story)\nCHAPTER  10\n\"Miss Randall, will you kindly\ntell us what you were doing this\nevening. His voice softened considerably, for he had addressed Joyce\nrather harshly.\n\"Me?\" she asked, as if he could\nnot possibly mean poor little Laura\nRandall. Certainly she was not important enough to be questioned!\n\"Yes, you, Miss Randall. What\nwere you doing all evening?\"\n\"Why-let me see\" she fluttered,\n\"waiting for Miss Joyce was all\"\n\"How were you occupying your\ntime while you were waiting?\"\n\"Oh\u2014reading.\"\n''When did you go in there?\"\n\"She left at 10\u2014it was then I\nwent in after I had helped hcr\ndress, and she had gone out.\"\n\"You positively did not go into\nthe hall all evening? Go downstairs?''\n\"Yes, I did! I'm very, very sorry, i\nI had forgotten. I enme downstairs\nduring the evening, and came into\nthe library. Here.''\n\"What for?\"\n\"For another book. I thought Miss\nJoyce might be late, and I wanted\nto have another book to read in\ncase 1 had to wait up late. I thought\nI might finish 'Tin; Tale of Two\nCities'. I brought up 'David Cop-\nperfield'.\"\nKeyes asked her where she had\ngotten it from tlie bookcases, and\nwhen she puinted the location, he\nwent and verified her statement\nhimself. I IhousM il was all very\nmilly, insisiing on probing for such\npetty details. Surely they could go\nnowhere to solve the murder of\nMargalo Younger ...\n\"What time did you come downstairs?\"\n\"Sometime after Miss Joyce 1\u00ab'-\nIt wjs around 11. sir. Yes, I'm sure,\nII o'clock Mr. Van Every had gone\nout early\u2014soon after dinner. If he\nhad been in the house. I would not\nhave treapaisod, \"f course.\"\n\"Was there anyone in the\nlibrary.'\"\n\"Yes, Soon\u2014ho was sitting on that\nchair.\" she pointed to the chair Soon\nhad been sitting in when we came\nin. \"holding a gun on his lap. I admit I was rather frightened, for I\nhad forgotten about\u2014the ruby!\"\nHer voice sank to a whisper.\n\"You met no one in the hall going\ntip or coming down?\"\n\"No one.\"\n\"You did not leave Miss Van\nlivery's bedroom again?\"\n\"No\u2014yes, when Mr, Van Every\ncame home, I hea,rd him and\nthought It might be Joyce, so I came\nout to the landing.\"\n\"And saw?\"\n\"Mr, Van Every had guests with\nhim.\"\n\"You went back to your\u2014to the\nbedroom, when you saw it was\nnot Miss Van Every?\"\n\"I did.\"\n\"Miss Van Every returned at\nwhat time?\"\n\"She came into the bedroom at\nexactly 1:10. I glanced at my watch\nto be sure.\"\nYes, Miss Randall would probably\nglance at her watch.\n\"She didn't leave the room after\nshe had once entered it\"\n\"I went to my room, off her bed-\nloom, sir. I don't know what she\nA New Delight\nKREEMED CHOCOLATE\nTry It.'\nOn  Sal*  at  Your Favorite\nCandy Shop\nMADE   IN   B.C.\n-t-\ndid after she dismissed me. but 1\nheard nothing. I fell asleep.\"\n\"That will be all, Miss Randall.\"\nThe little woman was on the verge\nof tears after her questioning. Gray,\nmouse-like, she seemed. Perhaps it\nwas her dull gray dress, with its\nwhite collar and cuffs, hcr gray-\nhair, her gray, frightened face. I\ndon't know. I had a feeling, though,\nand I don't know whether Keyes\nfelt it, too, that she wasn't telling\nthc entire truth. I was sure that\nnone of the goings and comings at\nVan Every's house escaped her. I\nwas equally sure she didn't gossip\nabout what she knew, but only\nfound out what she did for the good\nof the persons concerned.\nA peculiar sort of person. Nothing\nlo live for. No one to do lor. Perhaps Van Every was wise getting\nsuch a companion for Joyce. For\nyouth these days is apt to be careless, and Miss Randall would not let\nJoyce get careless. Yes. Van Every\nwas wise. He had chosen Miss Randall carefully.\n\"Maughan,\" Keyes was saying,\n\"I'm asking you not to leave the\ncity, until I give you permission.\"\nSuspecting me again. Otherwise.\nwhy did he not want me to leave?\n\"I had planned to go back a week\nfrom today. My reservations are\nsecured, but of course, if you wish\nit, I will remain.\" It was the least\nI could say. Keyes expected it\n\"We may have this settled right\naway, and we may not. I can find\nyou at the Warrington hotel?\"\n\"Yes.\" It was a curt dismissal, but\nI had no Intention of leaving yet,\nMcManus brought up Sobn, who\nlooked blankly at Keyes. The captain motioned Joyce and Miss Randall from the room. Joyce protested, saying she wanted to talk\nto hcr uncle, but he ihushed them\nout quickly. Keyes did not seem to\nnotice me at his side.\nI think Soon disconcerted him.\nbecause his blue eyes fell away\nIrom the Chinaman's gaze, and settled on a bookcase near by. Good\nfor 'Soon! I sobered immediately\nwhen I realized how hard it would\nbc to get Soon to talk. Indeed, he\nwas monosyllabic until Keyes called\nVan Every to the rescue. It was\nthe first I had seen of Van Every\nfor some time. He came out of the\nbedroom slowly, the ruby no longer\nin his hand.\n\"I'm sorry,\" he said quietly to me.\nI knew what he meant. Sorry Keyes\nhad thought it necessary to search\nme.\n\"Never mind, Van Every, we've\ngot to get to the bottom of this.\"\nKeyes glanced at me quickly. Thc\n\"we\", I suppose. 1 didn't care. Somehow, some way, Margalo's death\nmust' be avenged.\n\"Soon, you will tell Captain Keyes\nall you know.\" Van Every said this\nto the servant more as a request\nthan a command. Van Every knew\nhow to handle Soon.\n\"1 sit all ebenlng in here. From\ntime master he go, till he come back\nwith Mr. Maughan, with the lady.\nNo one come in. Miss Randall, meb-\nbc, no one other.\"\n\"Sure no one came In but Miss\nRandall?\"\n\"Sure.\"\n'Did the telephone ring while\nyou were here?\"\n\"Three time.\"\n\"Who called?\"\n\"One man for master.. I say no\nhere. He hang down. No leave\nname. I don't know who he Is, but\nI think 1 heard voice before. I can'\ntell* 'Nother man, different, want\nto know when master will be in.\nI tell him mebbe later. He ask whether he be in by midnight. I say\nyes, think yes. He say he come midnight. Important. He Dr. Barrimore. I never hear that name before. 1 tell him come in morning,\nmaster never see anyone at night.\nI write note for master, put It on\ntable, there, Mr. Barrlmore's name.\"\nKeyes went over to the table he\nindicated, near the chair where we\nhod found Soon. He came back with\na note, and grunted shortly. Why\nhe seemed surprised that the note\nwas there, 1 don't know, but he did\nseem surprised.\n\"Third call for Missy Joyce. She\nin then, and I ring hcr bell. When\nI heard her answer I hang down.\nWoman call her.\"\n\"What time did these calls come?\"\n\"Oh, first call short after master\nhe go. Eight, mebbe. Mr. Barrimore\nhe call later, nine, mebbe. Woman\ncall Missy Joyce, few minutes\nafter.\"\n8TYLE WHIMSY\nThe woman who has a well-tailored suit tan go anywhere in it.\nLuxurious furs, a chic hat, gloves of\nline leather and shoes ot a cut and\nfit that set off her feet, are accessories that add an air of elegance.\nIn the time of the Emperor Ku-\njlai Khan, Mongolians had wagons\n\u25a0- that it required 22 oxen\n!o pull than), bud tlie space between\nthe wheeli measured 20 feet.\nBIRTHS\nFELTY\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Earl H.\nFelty, Selwyn street, at the Kootenay Lake General hospital, April 24,\na son.\nPERSONAL\nPERSONAL RUBBER GOODS -\nLatest type highest quality latex,\nguaranteed. Plain wrapper. Send\n$1.00 for 23 assorted samples (5\ndifferent kinds), and Catalogue of\nDrug Sundries; Vitonal and Men-\nna for men, Bladder, Kidney and\nliver tablets and other home remedies. J. W. Davis, Box 226 Calgary, AIU. (313)\nNATURAL FEMININE HYGIENE.,\nEvery married woman should\nhave this Bulletin which explains\nthe famous Dr. K. Oglno's method\nand theory of fertile and sterile\nperiods in women's cycle. Write\nfor Free Bulletin to\nHEALTHWELL\nP. O. Drawer 267.    Vancouver, B.C.\n(95)\nHAY FEUER and ASTHMA\nAny Nelson Druggist will be glad\nto ahow you \"Davis\" Asthma Remedy No. 7895. A wonderfully successful remedy.\nDAVIS,  DRUGGIST\nNew Westminster, B. C.\n(238)\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 latex assortment for $1\nOrder direct and be sure of best\nPacked plain. Free catalogue National Importers, 812-Centre St.\nCalgary, Alta. (151)\nARTICLES, STORIES, verse, poetry\nand novels wanted for eastern\nmarkets. Send 25c for full particulars. McGlll Literary Bureau, 406\nLumberman's Bldg., Vancouver.\n(290)\nMARRY1 RICH. SEND 10c FOR\nphotos and P. O. addresses of rich\nand beautiful women desiring\nmarriage. Jane Fuller Club, Box\n1888. Milwaukee, Wisconsin. (215)\nSANITARY GUARANTEED DRUG\nSundries. Stamp for free catalogue. N. R. Products, P.O. Box\n291 Edmonton, Alta. (492)\nREFINED GENTLEMAN WITH\nmoney wants sweetheart. Martin\nRowan, Box 1797, Milwaukee,\nWisconsin. (216)\nPRIVATE HOME KfNDERGART-\nens nay. We start you The Canadian Kindergarten Institute, Winnipeg. (210)\nHELP WANTED\n275 CLERKS WANTED AT\nOTTAWA\nby Dominion Government for\n1936 Prairie Census. 6 to 18\nmonths employment at $75 per\nmonth with possibility of permanent position in the Civil\nService. Appointment by written examination to be held\nacross Canada. Men and women\nbetween 18 and 35 (Ex-Service\nmen no age limit) wilh three\nyears high-school may obtain\n. full information and advice free\nfrom the M.C.C. Civil Service\nSchool, Winnipeg or Toronto\n(10). Dominion-wide and oldest in Canada. (385)\nPhone 144\nWE SELL\nHotel Registers\nReceipt Books\nCounter\nCheck Books\nManilla\nSecond Sheets\nBound Books\nLedger Sheets\nRuled Foolscap\nAlso.. .\nPRINTING of\nEvery Description!\nNelson Satlg\nCommercial\nPrinting Dept.\nFOR SALE\nfor Service\nPIPE & FITTINGS ETC. -\n30,000 tt. 1\" used Pipe 5c per ft.;\n7000 ft. iy\u00ab\" Pipe, 7c per ft. FuU\nline new and used Galv. & Black\nPipe St Fittings, all sizes at reasonable prices\u2014Extra heavy tlate\nsurface Rooting with nails i Cement (about 80 lbs. per roll) $2.50-\nGuaranteed Paint of good quality\nfor all purposes, white, cream,\ngrey 4 green, $2.25 per gallon-\nNew and used Belting\u2014Plumbing Supplles.-Steel & C. I. Pulleys\u2014Wire Rope\u2014Poultry Netting.\n\u2014Galv. Iron \u2014 Barbed Wire-\nGrain Jt Potato Sacks\u2014Canvas-\nDoors _c Windows\u2014Hose\u2014Merchandise It Equipment of all descriptions\u2014Enquiries solicited.\nB. C. JUNK CO.\n135 Powell St. Vancouver, B. C.\n(212i\nWE STOCK GOVERNMENT\nStandard No. 1 field seeds, etc. Dr.\nRusks' famous Chick Food, Granulated Wheat, and corn, and all\nChick requirements. Chemical,\nalso Organic Fertilizers, Seed Potatoes. Get our prices before buying. Ellison Milling Co., Nelson.\n(480)\nFOR SALE - 74 H-D MOTOR-\ncycle and sidecar, red and silver,\nsplendid condition, complete with\nall accessories. Write P. O. Box\n114. Nelson. (446)\n6 H. P. MARINE ENGINE COM-\nplete with Baldridge reverse gear\nReasonable offer. Phone 499R.\n(451)\nTHRESHING   OUTFIT.   ENGINE\nSeparator. Grinder and Circular\n^aw. Apply P. O. Box 16, Nelson.\n(428)\nCEDAR FENCE POSTS, 15 CENTS\neach delivered. Burns Coal It Cartage Company. Phone 53,      (470)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd\n250 Prior St.       Vancouver, B  C\n(148)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B. C. (149)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSTENOGRAPHER, BOOKKEEPER\nexpert, eleven years experience,\ndesires position. Best references,\nBox 478 Daily News. (478)\nWOMAN WANTS HOUSEWORK\nor sewing by day. Box 476 Daily\nNews, (476)\nACENTS WANTED\nAGENTS WANTED TO SELL SILK\nand leather neckties. We sell you\nat a price that allows you to make\n100% commission. Write today tor\nfree samples and particulars. Ontario Neckwear Company, Dept\n574, Toronto 8, 'Ont. (207)\nWANTED, MEN TO MAKE $40\nweekly growing mushrooms. Dominion patent 331583. Prices guaranteed. Illustrated booklet. Free\nspawn. Columbia Mushrooms\n(Agents), Vancouver, B. C. Box\n507 Daily News. (507)\nA LESSON FROM THE DEPRES-\nsion-Be a civil servant\u2014Postman Customs Examiner Clerk.\nStenographer, etc. Free Booklet\n\"How to get a Government lob\"\nMCC.    Civil    Service    School\nWinnipeg.\n(211)\nWANTED AT ONCE - A GOOD\npaper hinger and painter. Apply\nTim Player, Box 477, Trail, B. C.\n(397)\nWANTED - FIRST CLASS TAIL*\nor at once, Apply Box 1418, Trail\nor phone 506. (515)\nMAN   FOR   DAIRY   MUST   BE\ngood milker. Fruitvale Dairy,\n(499)\nGIRL OR WOMAN WANTED. 524\nLatimer St. (496)\n\"Miss Van Every said she went\nout at nine.\"\n\"Well, mebbe, little sooner. I\ndon' know.\"\n\"Did Mr. Barrimore come?\"\n\"No, he no come. When master\ncame in, he tell me to go sleep. I\ngo. Bell to fron' door is in my room,\nand it no ring all night. I could hear\nif lt did. Near my pillow at night.\nDaytime in kitchen. I sleep.\"\n\"Yet this Mr. Barrimore wanted\nto see your master badly?\"\n\"Seem to, mebbe.\"\n\"You didn't think to tell your\nmaster he had called?\"\n\"I leave note. Master see it.\"\n\"Did you see this note, Van\nEvery?\" Keyes turned to the older\nman.\n\"Yes, I saw it, but paid no atten-\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nHORSE, SUITABLE FOR RANCH;\nwould exchange cow due to freshen June 1st. Box 489, Daily News.\n(489)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nENGLISH PRAM. GOOD CONDI-\ntion. Apply 615 Mill St. or ph. 562L.\n(450)\nGOOD COOK STOVE IN FIRST\nclass shape. 421 Carbonate St.\n(463)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\n#\nGOOD   FRESH   COWS,    GOOD\nbuys. A. E. Jones, Taghum, B. C.\n(432)\nPHOTOCRAPHY\nFILMS DEVELOPED ANY SIZE.\n25c. With 1 print from each negative. Extra prints 8 for 25c. Saskatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon. (123)\nFURNISHED, ONE OF NELSON'S\nmost desirable homes. Apply Box\n485 Daily News. (465)\n7-ROOM AND 6-ROOM HOUSES\nwith garden and fruit. Apply E.\nMaglio. Phone 808L. (500)\nAPARTMENTS, MEDICAL ARTS\nBlock. Two bedrooms. Chas. F.\nMcHardy. (134)\nFURN. SUITES, KERR\nApts.  $30  and up-    (112)\nAPARTMENT, CORNER CHA-\ntham and Pine. Apply Horace Lapointe. (459)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigldaire equipped suitei.  (117)\n2 ROOM FURNISHED SUITE. 718\nSilica St. (433)\nFOR RENT-TWO-_tOOMED FUR-\nnished suite. Stirling Hotel. 1389)\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nIDEAL   SPOT   FOR   HOLIDAYS.\nWrite Mrs. St. Denis, Deer Park.\n(137)\nFOR EXCHANGE\nWILL TRADE HOUSE AND LOTS\nin Nelson for property anywhere\non Kootenay Lake. Apply Box 453\nDaily News. (453)\nMISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE\nFOR SALE\nFULL PAGE\nSTEREO MATS\nExcellent lining material for\nchicken houses, garages, etc.\n75c per 100\nAnnly\nADVERTISING DEPT,\nNelson Daily News\n(5778)\nFUEL\ntion to it. I do not know anyone by\nthat name\u2014wait\u2014unless it could be\none fo the Barrimores who at one\ntime owned my ruby! Lord! I didn't\nthink of it at the time. I've, been in\nthe habit of thinking they were all\ndead\u2014buried long ago. Soon, are\nyou sure no one rang the front\ndoorbell'\"\n\"Sure.\"\n(To Be Continued)\nSLABWOOD\nTHE IDEAL\nSPRING FUEL\nWilliams Transfer\nPHONE 106\n(255)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nFOR SALE\nA Lovely Little\nHome\n200 yards from Ferry on\nthis side of lake. Beach.\nCity Light and Water\n2    bedrooms.    White\nplumbing.  K a n g e  and\nfloor coverings. Built in\nfixtures.\nGarden in Lawn.\n$1100\u2014Term arranged.\nC. W. APPLEYARD\n& CO., LTD.\nAccountants\nIniurance and Real Eitate\nCHAS   F   HUNTER. S F A E.\n213 Medical Arts Building.\nP. O. Box 1091.        Nelson, B  C\n(154)\nAssayers\nE. W WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst. Assayer. Chemist, Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling agents at Trail and Tacoma smelters 301-305 Josephine\nI    St., Nelson, B, C. (155)\nGRENVILLE  H.- GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker street,  Nelson,  B.C. P.O.\nBox No. 276, Representing Shippers' interest at Trail. B.C. (156)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\n(464)\nA REAL\nHOME\nPracticallv new. fully modern\nBungalow: 3 bedrooms, attic,\ndining room, living room, open\nfireplace, oak floors, sun parlor,\nmodern kitchen wired for electric range, full cement basement,\nfurnace. Aprox. 2V4 acres in\nLawn. Garden and Fruit. 2 garages, also 5-room Cottage. Lake\nFrontage, New Boat House.\nClose to city. Must be sold; no\nreasonable offer refused.\nF. A. Whitfield\nReal Estate Insurance\n508 Stanley St.        ^\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nfor   expert   repairs\nPhone 686 004)4 Baker St.\n(3581\nChiropractors\n! j. r. McMillan, d. c palmer\nI   graduate. McCulloch Blk., Nelson\n (157)\nE. M   WARREN, D  C, BOX 872\"\nI For Canaries. Phone 115 or 7551.\n(158)\nSACRIFICE SALE\nWe have had instructions to\noffer for immediate sale at a\nsacrifice a 5-Room Bungalow\nType House with Living Room,\nDining Room, Kitchen, 2 Bedrooms. Bathroom and Garage on\na lot 34x52,\n\u25a0ftiis property is close to school\non car line and rents easily for\n$20 per month. We offer it at\n$1000 with $200 cash and balance monthly.\nWe consider this an opportunity\nto buy instead of paying rent or\nas an investment.\nFor further particulars\nROBERTSON REALTY\nCO. LIMITED\n217 Baker Street\n(512)\nElectrical\nJ. f  COATES The Electric Store\nSupplies and Installations\nPhone 766. P. O. Box 1065\n(159)\nEngineer! and Surveyors\nE. L. WARBURTON. NELSON. BC\nOffice 518 Ward St. Phone 53, P.O\nBox 668 Agent: Oils. Gieaset. Paints\nSpecialties: mining machinery\nCrow's Nest Pass Steam Coalb.\nStructural steel piping, sheet iron\n (160)\nO) DAWSON. Nelson, B C\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(161)\nBOYD C AFFLECK, Fruitvale. B C\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(162)\nA. H GREEN CO., LTD 518 WARD\nSt. Phone 264, Nelson, B. C. (163)\nFlorist!\nNOTICE\nFOR SALE \u2014 Beautiful lake\nshore property. Mrs. J, Fred\nHume is offering her property\non the north shore for sale. Two\nsplendid houses, complete with\nevery convenience. Will sell\nat a very low figure for cash or\non reasonable terms. Further\nparticulars kindly consult Mr.\nJ. J. Binns. Odd Fellows Block,\nBaker Street, or Mr. Fred\nIrvine. (511)\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP.\nPhone 215. All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays St etc. Phone 215\nMrs. Hagarty. Box 29. (171)\nInvestments\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE, BOND\ned representative, F. Armstrong\nStuart. P. O. Box 389, Nelson (172)\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST REASONABLE Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St\n(178)\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD.\nReal estate, insurance, rentals, 217\nBaker .St. (164)\nR. W. DAWSON. Real Estate, In*\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker Street      (165)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99.\n(168)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE 1N-\nsurance Real Estate, 808 Ward St.\n(167)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE,\nrentals, insurance. Annable Block.\n(188)\nUFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulin. Ph. 70.    (169)\nCHAS F. McHARDY. INSURANCE.\nReal Estate, Phone 135.        (170)\nMachinist!\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding.  Motor  Rewinding,  Acetylene\nWelding.\nTelephone 593.    324 Vernon Street.\n(173)\nMaternity Homei\nELIZABETH   PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Conlidenlial Physician in attendance. Ph. Broad. 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wash.\n(174)\nNotaries\nD J ROBERTSON. NOTARY PUB*\nlie. Office 305 Victoria St Nelson.\n(1751\nSanitariums\nDR. ALDRICH SAN1TORIUM INC.\nTreats all chronic diseases including T.B.. cancer, diabetis, liquor\nhabit and the mind 30 years practice. E-4504 Fredrick, Spokane.\n(176)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant. 217 Baker St.\n(177)\nShoe Repairing\nMANUEL'S SHOE HOSPITAL\nALL   REPAIRS   GUARANTEED\nNext to Tremont Hotel, Baker St.\n(328)\nWigi and Toupees\nLADIES AND GENTLEMENS\nwigs and toupees, etc. Free Illustrated Catalogue. Over 20 years\nin B C. We buy cut hair. Hanson\nHair Goods Co. P. O. Box 601,\nVancouver, B. C, (179)\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nUse tha\nDAILY NEWS C1.ASS.FIED ADS.\nPATENTS\nKASLO, 4 ACRES. SIXTY YOUNG\ncherries, variety, fruits. Rich\nsoil. Modern house. Garage. Cheap\nsubstantial cash. Particulars Box\n436, Kaslo.  (289)\n3 ROOM HOUSE, 1 LOT, NEAR\nLakeside Park,  $500. $100  cash.\nbal. as rent. A. Hall, Gordon Road.\n(4031\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted inventions and\nfull information sent free. The\nRamsay Company. World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St. Ottawa.\n(122)\nPOULTRY FOR SALE\nFIVE OF NELSON'S GOOD\nhomes. For particulars apply Chas.\nF. McHardy. (133)\nROOM AND BOARD\nLARGE FRONT ROOM APRIL 30th.\nModerate rates. 904 Stanley St.\n(494)\nBOARD AND ROOM IN PRIVATE\nhome, 924 Edgewood avenue. (506)\nFARM   LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms In Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources. CJ?Jl. Calgary, Alta\n(121)\nMOTORCYCLES\nMOTORCYCLES\nIndians from $385.00 up\nHarlev Davidsons $435.00 up\nB. S. A. from $250.00 up\nFrancis Barncts $198.60 up\nNOTE-We now have H.D.\nWrite for literature on any of\nthese models.\nGood used machines on hand.\nPalmer Rutledge\nTrail. B.C.\n(213)\nCARDENINC AND\nNURSERY PRODUCTS\nBETTER CHICKS\nMean More Profits:\nOur Chicks are BETTER because\nwe continually select our breeding stork and hatch scientifically.\n(Prices quoted per 100)\nPullet\nChicks      Chirks\nLeghorns    -. $10.00 $38.00\nReds and Rocks $12.00 $25.00\nLight Sussex _ $13.00 $26.00\nPullet  Chicks guaranteed\n97% accurate\nGovernment   Approved   and\nBloodtested.\nBe SAFE and order from\nRUMP it SENDALL, LTD.\nMilner, B. C.\n(124)\nWRITE FOR MY 1936 CATALOGUE\ngiving information on feeding poultry and quoting prices. White Leghorns, also Wyandottes and Reds\nOutstanding strains tor vigor and\nproduction.\nLAKEVIEW POULTRY FARM\nL. F. Solly Westholme. B.C\n(5663)\nTHORNLESS BLACKBERRY, EV-\nerbearing raspberry, black, red\nand white currants, kerrias, spires, lilacs, peonies, lily of valley\nand perrennial plants, Ruther-\nfords, R.R. 1, Nelson. (409)\nPERENNIALS, ALPINES Jt ROCK\nplants. A large selection of hardy,\nacclimatized plants. Send for catalogue. McDiarmid St Squires, Robson. (477)\nRASPBERRY CANES. BLACK AND\nred currants. Red Delicious, Mcintosh. Italian Prunes. Cherry and\nother fruits. T. Roynon, Nelson.\n(386)\nVIKING, LATHAM RASPBERRY\ncanes. $15.00 per thousand. $1.75\nhundred. F. O. B, Harrop. L, Andrews. Harrop. (434)\nUSED CARS\n\u202229 OAKLAND SEDAN. RECENT-\nly overhauled. Excellent tires.\nSnap for cash. May be seen any\nevening between 5 and 8 o'clock.\nApply Box 497 Daily News. (497)\nHUSKY LEGHORN CHICKS $10 00\nper 100. Hatching 1000 a week\nfrom pedigree cockerels. T. A.\nRobinson, B. C. Lands Operating\nCo.. Ltd., Grand Forks. (330)\nDODGE SEDAN, 1929. MODEL DA.\nCheap for cash. Good condition.\nPhone 843L or write P. O. Box 895.\n(449)\nFOR SALE - 1934 V-8 TRUCK,\ndual tires, body, 1938 licence\u2014\n$900. Box 734 Nelson. B. C. (483)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nWANTED FOR CASH, LIGHT\nrowboat, A-l shape. Box 468\nDaily News. (468)\nTHE CUMPS\nBy Cua Edioit\nCR-AH-THATIS-THE\nGIANT TREE SPRANG\nFROM THE TINIEST SHOOT-\nA OOURNGY OF A\nTHOUSAND MILES\nBEGAN WITH A SINGLE\nST&P-\n*\u00bb<?-?-_-!\n w\nGOLDS IN RALLY\nVANCOUVER, April 24 (CP) -\nPrices rallied in the gold section ot\nthe Vancouver stock exchange today, Minto taking the lead with a\ngain of 7 at 83. Trading was stronger\nand transactions totalled 420,174\nshares.\nKootenay Belle also advanced 7\nat 02, Bralorne gained 5 at 7.40 and\nSheep Creek 21s at 68. Congress at\n20%, Federal at 9V4, Hedley Amalgamated et 27H and Gold Mountain\nat 18 each gained IV, and Reward\nand Rano each firmed a cant at 7\nand 1.16 respectively. Relief Arlington lost 2 at 18.\nMoney\nBy Tha Canadian Preu\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal\u2014Pound 4.95 13-16;\nU.S. dollar 1.00 15-32; franc 8.61.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.93tt; Canadian dollar .OOH; franc 6.51.4.\nAt Paris-Pound 74.98 fr; U.S. dollar 15.19 fr; Canadian dollar 15.13 fr.\nIn gold\u2014Pound 12s; U.S. dollar\n19.44 cents; Canadian dollar 59.12\ncents.\nNIW YORK, April 24 (CP)-The\npound sterling gained H cent on the\nforeign exchange market today, closing at S4.93H while the Canadian\ndollar held unchanged at 99% The\nFrench gold franc lost .OOVi at 6.68V,\ncents.\nBONDI RESTRICTED\nNEW YORK, April 14 (CP)-The\nbond market held to a restricted\nrange today with a mixed undertone ruling most divisions.\nActivity in the United States\ngovernment list centred on the long\nterm treasury obligations, especially the 214s of 1948 which closed\nl-32nd higher at 102.\nIn the historic corporate division\nrails and low-yield bonds leaned a\ntrifle to the offside.\nCHICAGO GAINS\nCHICAGO, April 24 (API-Persistent dearth of molstun ln United\nStates domeitle winter crop territory southwest and west did much\nto bring about an Irregular upward\ntrend ot whtat prices today,\nWheat closed nervous, %-% cent\nhigher, May 1.01%-W, July 91%-V,,\ncorn % off to % up, May 61V.-%,\noats unchanged to % lower, and provisions unchanged to a rlie of 10\ncents.\nCP.R. EARNINGS UP\nMONTREAL, April 24 (CP)-In*\ncrease ot 828,000 was shown today\nin Canadian Pacific railways gross\nearnings of (2,355,000 for wetk ending April 21, compared with $2,*\n327,000 for the corresponding period\nlast ytar.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-8ATURDAY MORNINO. APRIL 25. 1938\nMarket and Mining News\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, April 24 (CP) .-Silver futures dosed Ittady today,\n8 to 25 points up.   Sales 3 contracts: May 2, December 1.\nOpen       High       Low       Close\nMay       45.45B       45.55       45.55        45.55\nDecember     46.10B 48.15B\n(One exchange\u2014May to December.)\nToronto Stock Quotations\nBankfleld    46\nBarry Hollinger 04\nBase Metals         _      22V,\nBear ExploraUon 41\nBig Missouri       .80\nBobjo  ..... MVi\nBralorne    _     7.50\nBRX Gold 17\nBut Ankerite  _     4.90\nCan Malartic -    1.11\nCariboo Oold  _. ._    1.44\nCastle Trethewey     1,48\nCentral Manitoba  18\nCentral Patricia  _     3.20\nChibougamou  _     1.40\nCoast Copper     2.60\nConiagas _     3.30\nConarlum           2.32\nCons M It S 270 00\nDome  _    4950\nDom Exploration       .06\nEldorado        \u201e     1.08\nFalconbrldge  _ _     8.45\nGod's Lake  __ 89\nGranada  -        i9Vi\nHardrocK         .98\nHollinger    H.50\nHowey   60\nHudson Bay  _ _   -4.87\nInt Nickel    47.50\nJ M Con      _       .49\nKirkland Lake   _ 43\nLake Maron  04%\nlake Shore       \u2014   53.37\nLittle Long Lac      6.75\nMacassa        _\u2014 -    3.68\nMaple Leal 18%\nMalrobic     .., \u2014      .03Vi\nMcLeod Cockshutt 74\nMclntyre  _   43.28\nMcVittie Grahamme      M\nMcWatter Gold      1.83\nMining Corp \u25a0    LU\nNipissing      2.50\nNoranda _    63.00\nParkhill \u2014      30V,\nPaymaster          .87\nPend Oreille - 88\nPickle Crow     6.50\nPioneer        _    10.12\nPremier Oold -     2.26\nReno Gold        1.15\nSan Antonio\nSheep Creek    .\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSiscoe  _-_,\nSmelter Gold\t\nStadacona      _.\nSt Anthony      \t\nSudbury Basin \t\nSylvanite      \t\nTeck Hughes  .....\nToburn        \t\nTowagamac \t\nTreadwell   \t\nVentures    .\nWayiide  \t\nWhite Eagle\nWright Hargreaves....\nOILI\nAJex \t\nB A Oil       \t\nC and E Corp\nChemical Research ...\nDalhousie  \t\nHome Oil\t\nTmf-rcri\u00ab-l  _.,.\u00bb....-_.\nInt Pete  \t\nMerland  \t\nNordon  \t\nRoyalite    \u2014~\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bros  \u2014\nBell Telephon* \t\nBrazilian      \u2014\nBrew It Dirt -\nCan Bread\n__     126\nCan Car it Foundry .\nCan Cement \t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Malting\t\nCPR A\t\nCons Smelters \t\nDom Brldgt    \u2014\nDom Stores  \u2014\nDlst Seagrami \t\nFord Can A      \u2014\nGoodyear Tire  _.\nHiram Walker\t\nLoblaw A\n1.21\n3.43\n.07\nJl\n.22\n1.75\n2.40\n4.60\n1.35\nM\n.48\n1.93\n.13\n\u2022031.\n7.80\nSt\n24.00\n1.15\n1.05\n.48\njj._5\n9875\n47\nh\n30.00\n...    11\n... 143%\n.... llVi\n.... 1\n... 4%\n_ 6\n.... 8%\n-46%\n   11%\n....   11%\n.... 270\n.....   \u00bb\n....    8V4\n_...   21\n    23%\n  m,\n    29\n19%\nMassey Harris _     5%\nSteel of Canada     63V.\nWalker Brew \u2014      2V4\nVancouver  Stock   Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS UP\nTORONTO, April 34 (CP)-Llft-\nIng of selling pressure across the\nline gave the interlisted stocks of\nthe Toronto industrial shari market\na chance to get back some oi Thursday's losses. Liquors were up Vi to\nW at the close.\nInternational Nickel, the outstanding trader closed' % up at 47Vi. Smelters added three points, Ford A and\nC.PJL Vi each. International Petroleum, most active oil, recorded a\nsmall loss.\nNarrow losses predominated in\nIhe food group.\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG, April 24 (CP)-Graln\nfutures quotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWheat:\nMay 81%    82Vi    81Vi    82Vi\nJuly   .       82       83',    83t.     83\nOct. 83%     84Vt    63%    84%\nOats:\nMay   ...     31%    31%    31%    31%\nJuly   ...     31'i     S2Vi    81%     32Vi\nOct. 31%    11%    11%     31%\nBarley:\nMay   ...     38Y,    88%    38'i     38Vi\nJuly 38%    19%    38%     39%\nFlax:\nMay        161%   151%   150      150%\nJuly 148%   148%   147%   148\nOct. 146       -       -      146\nRye:\nMay\nJuly\nOct.\n41\n42%\n44\n41%\n42%\n44%\n40%\n41%\n43Vi\n41%\n42 Vi\n ^___   44%\nCash wheat: No. 1 hard 83H; No.\nI nor. 81%; No. t nor. 79%; No. 3\nnor. 76%; No. nor. 71%; No. 5, 66%:\nNo. 6, 54%; feed 49Vi; No. 1 garnet\n78Vi; No. 1 gimet 76%; No. 1 durum 76%; No. 1 A. H. W. 72%; No. 4\nspecial 64%; No. 6 ipecial 58%; No.\n6 special 51%; track 82%;'screenings\nII ptr ton.\nBright Spots\nof the Week\nBy The Canadian Pren\nBrockville, OnL\u2014Revenue collections at this,port for last fiscal year\nshowed increase of 28 per cant over\ncollections for previous year.\nSwastika, Ont. \u2014Warehouse and\nmodem electric repair shop will bt\nerected htre by Canadian Westing-\nhouse company,\nVancouver\u2014work will be itarted\nwithout delay on the ntw plant to bt\nerected htre by Pacific Coast Packers Limited.\nHamilton, Ont\u2014Local plant of\nProctor 81 Gambit has bten notified that factory hands will get a\nweek's holiday! with pay this year\nNew Westmlniter, B. C\u2014 February lumber exports from British\nColumbis mills Ihow incrtait of 40\nper cent over figurei (or tht same\nmonth in lut year.\nLindiay, Oat-Knitters Limited\nwill expand their operations here\nto Include the manufacture ot fine\nyams.\nApproximately 150,000.000 lbs. of\nhoney is produced annually by 250,-\n000,000,000 honey bees in the United\nStates, These bees live in 4,000,000\nhives or colonies.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, April 24 (CP) -\nMining shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange today:\nListed: Big Miss 2900, Bralorne\n1860, B R Con 700, B R X 8000, Cariboo 200, Dentonia OOO, Gold Belt\n1000, Island Mount 334, Koot Belle\n3200, Mak Siccar 3300, Morning Star\n3500, Pioneer 350, Premier Bord 1005\nPremier Gold 750, Reno 1100, Sally\nMines 500, Sheep Creek 2800, Taylor\nBr 4500, Wayside 11.500.\nCurb: Beaver Sll 1000, B C Nickel\n5500, Can Rand 4800, Congress 4500,\nDictator 1000, Dunwell 5000, Fawn\n4000, Fairview 4800, Federal 22,800,\nGeo Rlv 2000, Goleonda 8700. Orange\n3900, Gold Mount 22,900, Grull\nWihksne 1000, Hedley Amal 4300,\nMinto 68 650, McGill Creek 300. Nicola 2800, Noble Five 17,000, Pilot\n3000, Quesnelle Q 2400, Relief Ari\n500, Reliance 95,100, Reward 11,400\nSilvercrest 17,000, Silversmith 2000,\nVldette 2500, Viking 13200, Waverley 13,500, Ymir Y Girl 100.\nBar Gold Down One\nMONTREAL, April 24 (CP)-Bar\ngold ln London down one cent at\n$34.96 an ounce in Canadian fundi;\n140i, HVid in British funds. The fixed $33 Washington pirce amounted\nto $35.16 in Canadian.\nNew York Better\nNEW YORK, April 24 (API-Revival ot strength in scattered issue\ntoday provided a prop for an otherwise wavering stock market.\nChrysler, backed by a boosted dividend and the best first quarter\nearnings in the history of tht company, met with buying support\nthroughout. Other industrial specialties and a few rails were also heartened by the continued flow of pleasing industrial news,\nThere were many backward\nstocks, however, and the closing\ntont was irregular.\nEastern Sales\nMONTREAL, April 24 (CP) -\nSales ot 100 shares or mqrt on the\nMontreal stock exchangt today\nwere:\n130 Bathurst A; 329 Brazil; 160 Ale\nA; 270 CPR; 270 Dist Beag; 196 D S\n& C B; 135 Hollinger; 1430 Nickel;\n565 Noranda; 347 Shawinigan.\nTORONTO, April 24 (CP)-Salei\nof 100 shares or more on the industrial sectio not the Toronto stock\nexchange today were: 1775 B A Oil;\n725 C In Ale; 210 D C Seag: 4561 Int\nNickel; 195 Mass Har; 100 Pr Metal.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMinneapolis\" April 24 (AP)-\nFlour unchanged. Carload lots, tarn'\nWINNIPEG JUMPS\nWINNIPEG, April 24 (CP)- A\nbuying flurry that lilted wheat\nprices to their best levels of the day\nshortly before the close was the\nonly feature to today's session of\nthe Winnipeg .grain exchange. The\nclose was %-% cent higher. May\nclosed at 82%, July S3 and October\n84\", cents.\nEarlier, values hai' held quietly\nfirm, supported by the export sale\nof 500,000 bushels of Canadian\nwheat. Trading volume, in the aggregate, was light.\nCash and coarse grains prices\nfirmed with wheat in the late dealings.\nMetal Marketi\nNEW YORK, Anrll 24 (AP)\u2014Copper quiet; electrolytic spot and future 9.50; export 9.20-25.\nTin about steady; spot and nearby 46.80*70; future 45.87%-48.\nIron quiet, unchanged.\nLead steady; spot New York 4.60-\n85; East St. Louis 4.45.\nZinc dull; East St. Louis spot and\nfuture 4.90.\nAluminum 19.00-22.00.\nAntimony, spot 11.50.\nBar silver steady, Vi lower at 45.\nAt London closing. Copptr, standard spot \u00a317 10s; tuturt \u00a337 151.\nElectrolytic, ipot \u00a341 10a; future\n\u00a342.\nTin, apot \u00a3206 5s; future \u00a3101\n12a 6d.\nLead unchanged.\nZinc, spot and future \u00a315 5s,\nBar silver firm, 1-16 hlghtr at\n20 7-16d.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, April 24 (CP)-Ster-\nling exchinge, strong at $4.92Vi for\nQuotations on Wall Street\nLISTED Bid\nA P Con  16\nAmal Oil _ 10\nBig Missouri  __.    .60\nBralome         IM\nBridge R Con     .07%\nBRX Gold  17%\nCariboo Gold     140\nC and E Corp    1.19\nCout Brew        18.60\nCoast Brew Rts   5.00\nDentonia      17\nGold Belt  -    it\nHargal OU       -\nHomt Oil     102\nInt Coal  19%\nIsland Mount     133\nKoot Belle 62\nMak Siccar  07%\nMcDougal Segur .06\nMcLeod Oil New      JO\nModel Oil         .20Vi\nMorning SUr     .02%\nNat Silver    02\u00bb.\nPioneer Gold  10.10\nPremier Oold       2.27\nPremier Border .....    .00%\nQuatslno    01%\nReno Gold  -   1.16\nSally Mines     .11%\nSalmon Gold -     \u2014\nSheep Creek  _    .88\nTaylor Bridge    .10%\nVanalta      .07%\nWsviide _ U%\nCURB\nAnaconda  __._.    \u2014\nAssociated    -    \u2014\nBsltK Oil      .03\n1 Bayvlew       .00%\nBluebird      \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0    .01\nB C Nickel 33%\nB C Silver    1.90\nB R Mount 10\nCan Rand      .09 Vi\nCalmont Oil  09%\nCongeis Gold      .20V4\nCork Province      .00%\nCottonbelt\nCrowi Nest     10\nDalhouile Mines ....   .01 Vi\nDalhousie Oill  48\nDicUtor            .04%\nDunwell   ... -    .01V4\nFairview  -   .09%\nFawn      ~i\nFederal Gold      Xw\u00bb.\nAsk\n.60%\n7.50\n.07%\n.18\n1.44\n1.22\n14.00\n5.15\n.18%\n.40\n.07\n1.06\n.20\n1.33\n.84\n.08\n.06%\n.03\n.03\n10.35\n2.30\n.01\n.02\n1.17\n.12\n.10\n.70\n.10%\n.08\n.13 %\n.04%\n.11%\n.03%\n.01%\n.34%\n2.00\n.09\n.10\nJl\n.01%\n.01%\n.50\n.05\n.06\n.52\n.10%\nFreehold .....\n.08%\n.06%\nJl\n2.\n.11%\n\u2014.\nGold Mount      _\n.11\n.13%\nGeo Enterprise .....\n.04   -\n\u2014\n.01%\n.02\n.02%\n\u2014\nGrange      \t\n.03\n.03%\nGrull Wihksne\n.09\n.09%\nHaida Gold     \t\n.02%\n.03 Vi\nHedley Amal\nJ7%\n.28\nHighwood Sarcee ..\n.15\n.16%\nHome Gold      \t\n.03\n\u2014\n.01\n.02%\nIndependence \t\n\u2014\n.01%\nKoot Florence _\n.00%\n.01\nKoot King \t\n.OOH\nH\nLakeview \t\n.00%\n.00%\nLucky Jim\t\n.02Vi\n\t\n.01%\n.01%\nHigh\nAl Chemical      188\nAm Can 125%\nAm For Pow      7%\nAm Ma & Fdy    12%\nAm Smelt St Rt  75%\nAm Telephone  163\nAm Tobacco ... \u2014\nAnaconda \t\nAuburn Mo\nAviation Corp\nBaldwin\nBait & Ohio .\nBendix Av     29%\nBeth Steel     SSVi\nCanada Dry ...     12%\nCan Pacific.    .    11%\nCerro dt Pasco    53%\nChes It Ohio .\nChrysler\nCon Gu N Y\nCom Prod\nC Wright Ptd\nDupont\nEast Kodak\nEl Pow tt Li.\nErie\t\nFord English ..\nFord of Can .\nFirst Na Stores\nFreeport Tex\nGen Elee        38\nGen Foods     40\nGen Motors     68%\nGold Dust     18%\nGoodrich     20%\nGranby  \t\nGrt North Pfd\nGrt West Sugar\nHowe Sound .\nHudion Motors\nInt Nickel\nInt Tel _. Tel....\nJewel Tea \t\nm\n38 Vi\n5%\nIVi\n16%\n56%\n100%\n31 Vi\n75%\n6%\n. 142\n161%\n14%\n.   IS\nLow\n185%\n122%\n7%\n21%\n71\n162 Vi\nm\n87%\n5%\n18%\n28%\n51%\n12\n11%\n52%\n65%\n\u00bb7%\n10%\n74%\n6%\n140\n168\n13%\n12%\n44%\n30 Vi\n35%\n34%\n60%\n16%\n47%\n14%\n42\n29%\n37y.\n37 Vi\n64%\"\n18%\n18%\n34\n33 %\n50\n15%\n46%\n13%\nClose\n187\n124%\n7%\nU Vi\n74%\n162%\n91\n\u00ab\"\"\n17%\n5%\n3%\n18%\n29\n55\n12\n11%\n53\n56\n100\n31\n74%\n6Vi\n14*\n163%\n14%\n12%\n8\n22%\n42%\n29 Vi\n87%\n38%\n68\n18%\n20\n3%\n35\n34%\n50\n16\n47%\n14\n70%\nKenn Copper\nKresge S S\nKroegger It Toll\nMack Truck\nMilwaukee Ptd\nMont Ward\nNash Motors\nNa Dairy Prod\nNY Central\nPac Gas & Elee\nPack Motors\nPenn R R   ....\nPhillips Pete ....\nPure Oil\t\nRadio Corp\nRadio Keith Or\nRem Rand\nSafeway Stores\nShell Union ..\nS Cal Edison\nSouth Pacific\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan Oil of N J\nStewart Warner\nStudebaker    12%\nTtx Corp     35%\nTtx Gulf Sul 35%\nTlmken Roller    61%\nUn Carbide       82%\nUn Oil of Cal      24Vi\nUn Aircraft  23\nUnited Bis     28\nUn Pacific  120%\nUS Pipt    35\nU S Rubber ....   11%\nU S Steel    \u00bb\nVan Steel    20%\nWarner Bros ,., 10%\nWest Electric 113%\nWest Union .   .   81%\nWoolworth    48%\nWrigley\nYellow Truck ..   18%\nSS\n11%\n21%\n81%\n40%\n18%\n22%\n36\n35\n10%\n11%\n44\n10%\nllVi\n6%\n22\n16%\n-tv,\n33\n41%\n36 Vi\n62%\n10%\n66%\n11\n23%\n30%\n39 Vi\n17%\n22\n34%\n34%\n10\n\u00bb%\n41%\n20\n10%\n>%\n10%\n16%\n26\n31%\n40%\n35%\n61%\n20\n11%\n84%\n34%\n60\n80%\n24\n22\n25%\n118\n33%\n30\n63%\n19%\n10\n111%\n7B%\n\u202246%\n37%\n11\n23 Vi\n31%\n2\n39%\n18\n22 Vi\n35%\n34%\n10%\n31%\n41\n20%\n11\n\u00ab\n22\n31\n16%\n-tV,\n32%\n41%\n36%\n62\n20%\n12%\n34%\n35%\n61\n82%\n24%\n22%\n26\n120%\n33\n31%\n64%\n20%\n10%\n113%\n80%\n46%\n74%\n17%\nBell Telephone\nB C Packers\t\nBrasil ^^^^^\nB C Power A  \t\nBuilders   ProducU\t\nCanada Bronze  \t\nCanada Car Fdy \t\nCanada Cement  \u2014\nCanada Cement Ptd\t\nCanada Ind Al A \t\nCan Pacific Railway _\t\nCanada Steamers \t\nCockshutt \t\nCon Min St Smelt\t\nDominion Bridge .._.__-\u2014\nDom Glass\nDominion Textile\t\nFord Canada A \u2014\t\nGen St Wares\t\nChas Gurd\nIly patents 6.80-7.00 a barrel in 981 60-day bills and at 14.93% for de-\npound cotton sacks. Shipments 26,-  mend.\n511: Bran 17.50-18. Canadian dollars: Today % disc.\nWheat cash: No, 1 heavy dark yesterday % disc., week ago % disc,\nnorthern springs 60 lbs., 1.16%-1.31%;     Franc 6.59% cents.\nNo. 1 Red Durum 76%-77%. Lire 7.88% cents.\nMontreal Stock Prices\n143%\n10%\n11%\n30\n38%\n40\n6\n6%\n67\nOil\n11%\n1%\n7%\nHamilton Bridge \u25a0\u2022\u2014\nInternational Nickel\nMassey Harris ~\t\nMontreal Power\n36\n112%\n70\n23%\n3%\n7%\n4%\n47%\n5%\n31%\n14\n43%\nNational Stetl Car ._\nNational Brewing -\nOgilvie   - -\u25a0\u2022 \u00bb\u00bb\nPower Corporation\nPrice Bros\t\nQuebec\nShawinigan  -\nSherwin Williams -\u2022\u2022\u2022\nSouth Can Power \u2014\nSteel of Canada ~\nCURBS\nAssociated Brewers .\nBrewers & Distillers\n13%\n1%\n17*,\n21'.\n17%\n13\nMl\n10\n.95\nss%\nBritish American Oil\nBruck Silk   13\nCanada Celanese  26%\nCanada Dredge    46%\nCanada Malting   31%\nCanada Wineries _ - 2%\nDominion Stores ._  8%\nMcColl Frontenac .\nMitchell Robt -_-_\nPage Hersey\t\nBANKS\nCanada  \t\nCanadien \t\nCommerce . \t\nMontreal    __\n_*.._. \u201e____.._____-\nToronto    -\n.__ 16%\n.-.- 6%\n__   85\n67\n135\n150%\nr_7\u201e\n231\nSEMILTIRS UP A POINT\nMONTREAL, April 24 (CP) -\nPrices sagged in listless trading on\nMontreal stock exchange today as\nvolume decreased to about 12,000\nshares.\nNickel came back In the late dealings to firm % but Noranda was unable to overcome selling that\nbrought a loss of Vi point.\nImprovement of more than a\npoint was shown by Smelters.\nMines Come Back\nPAO\u00bb  ItCVtN\nTORONTO,. April 24 (CP)-The\nmining section of the Toronto exchange staged a half-hearted comeback today outside the gold group\nYellow metal stock weakened further and the exchange index noted a\nloss ot .33 to 128.48.\nSelling was active in a group of\nthe medium-price golds. Conlarum\nclosed at 2.50 off 6 cents. Central\nPatricia slumped 10 cents to 3.20.\nSiscoe 7 to 3.43 and Pamour 10 to\n4.05.\nNEW YORK \"B.ARO.IN\" REDUCED\nNEW YORK, April 24 (AP)-Thc\nNew York stock exchange today\nadopted changes in its rules for the\ncarrying of customers' margin accounts which had the effect of reducing the amount ot margin required On small accounts In a declining market. The exchange also\nrescinded its ruling that a minimum\nmargin of 50 per cent of the debit\nbalance be required in accounts\nhaving dibit balances of $5000 or\nless.\n(. M. _ S. SALES\n\"SATISFACTORY\"\nMONTREAL, April 24 (CP) -\nSales of Consolidated Mining St\nSmelting company have been \"quite\nsatisfactory\" during the first quarter of 1936, President J. J. Warren\nsaid at the annual meeting here today.\nThree bylaws were approved at\nthe meeting; subdivision of $25 par\nvalue shares in tive 15 par; guarantee of a bond issue of West Kootenay Power, a subsidiary; and election of an executive committee.\nThe 1935 financial statement waa\napproved and directors- reelected.\nPresident Warren, Sir Edward\nBeatty and Sir Herbert S. Holt were\nelected to thc newly-formed executive committee.\nU. S. DOLLAR OFP\nMONTREAL, April 24 (CP) -\nSmall losses were registered on\nMontreal foreign exchanges today.\nPound sterling dipped 1-32 cent to\n$4.95 13-16 and the United States\ndollar also was down that much at\n13-32 per cent premium. The French\nfranc at 6.61 cents was off .01 cents.\nMINTO PROFIT $15,333.28\nVANCOUVER, April 24 (CP)-\nMlnto Gold Mines Ltd., made a net\nprofit of $15,_33.28 during March\nafter deducting depreciation, de*\nplction and estimated mineral tax\nfrom gross revenue of $35,477.47,\ncompany officials announced today.\nDow-Jones Averages\n30 industrials -...\n20 rails\t\n20 utilities\t\n40 bonds \t\nHigh\n. 152.51\n..   45.06\n.   30.94\nLow\n149.63\n44.01\n30.38\nClose Change\n151.54\u2014up .48\n44.68-off .11\n30.50-off .10\n101.50\u2014ott ,07\nAT PRESENT\nMARKET PRICES\nWe Recommend thl Purchase of\nRENO WESKO\nBRALORNE GOLD BELT\nWE CONSIDER ANY OF THE ABOVE\nCOLD STOCK EXCELLENT BUYS\nP.E. POULIN\nInvestment Suggestions:\nPrice\n$2000 City ef Trill 5% 1 June, 1948  102.00\n'$3500 City of Kamloops 4% 2 July, 1946     99.50\n$4000 City of Victoria 4'\/i% 1 August, 1944     95.24\n'$.000 Canadian Pacific Rwy. 3% 15 October, 1945 ....    94.44\n*\u2014Available in denominations of $500.\nOrders may be telegraphed at our expense.\nYield\n4.78%\n4.06%\n5.20%\n3.70%\n740 Hastings St. W.\nVancouver, B.C.\nPhone: Sey. 6486\"\nWood, Gundy & Co.\nLimited\nMar Jon  -  JO\nMercury    _ .18\nMeridian    .08 V,\nMerland   .1*\nMrGllllvray    .17\nMill City  \u2014\nMinto Gold  Jtt\nMorton Wolsey _ .00%\nNicole'!\t\nNoble rive ...\nNordon OU ...\nOktlla Olla\nPacalta\nPend Oreille\nPilot Oold\n.11\n.03%\n.18\n.08\n\u25a007\n.85\n.05\nPorter Idaho     .05%\nQuesnelle Q -    .10\nRanchmens    _    .83\nReliance       .08%\nReward      .07\nRelief Arlington _    .18\nRoyalite  30.00\nRufus Argenta     .00%\nRuth Hope  -    .01%\nSilvercrest  01\nSilverado -    .02\nSilversmith       .02\nSnowflake    00%\nTaylor Wind  14\nU D L  60\nUnited Empire 02%\nUnited Oil     .001.\nVidette Oold     .78\nViking Oold     08\nWaterloo      .02\nI Waverley Tang 01\nWhitewater .    .05\nYmir Yankee Girl ..     \u2014\n \u2014\nPAGE TWEtVE-\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.O-SATURDAY MORNINO. APRIL 28. 1938\nGLADIOLI\nBULBS\nChoice Named\nVarieties and\nColon.\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nFURNACES\nSOLD, INSTALLED AND\nREPAIRED\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 688     610 Kootenay St\nMothers' Day\nSunday, May 10th\nOur Cards are now on\ndisplay and you are cor-\nI dially invited to come\n! in and look them over.\nWe think it the finest\nselection we have ever\nshown.\nAllen's Art Shoppe\nP.S. Don't forget films for the\nweek-end.\nBurns Coal <_ Cartage Co.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nSee Page 2\nJ.A.C. Laughton\ndptometrist\nSuite -05 Medical Arti Bldg.\nPHONE  815\nfor better ind promoter lervlce In plumbing repair! end\nIlte rations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\np H o N -\n53\nBAGGAGE and TRANSFER\nTRUCKS\n\/\u2022i-iliNTBV   HAULING   BY   CONTRACT   OR   HOUR\nSIasoKble: rates - courteous drivers\nFOR A REAL SPRING\nTONIC TRY\nASAYA-NEURAL\nat\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nThe Prescription Druggist\nPHONE  1\nAttention Motorists\nLoofe at These Exceptional Buys In\nGuaranteed USED CARS\n1935 Plymouth De Luxe Coupe\u2014\nRumble Seit\u20145 Wheeli\u2014.000 Miles  \t\n$965\n1934 Plymouth De Luxe Sedan\u2014\nWith   Trunk _\t\n$825\n1934 Chevrolet De Luxe S edan\u2014 C fi _y C\n6 Wheels -  V*\"\"._P\n1932 Studebaker Special De Luxe Sedan C^Af)\n\"Wheels  \u25bc #\"\"\n1932 Chevro'et Coach\u2014\nWith Trunk-Tires Like Niw \t\n$500\n1931 Chrysler 70 Sedan\u2014\n4 Speed Tranimlulon \t\n$525\n1930 Chrysler 6 Sedan\u2014\nAt\n$450\nRAraiuiifloned Models\nReconditioned Trucks\n1\u20141928 CHEV. COUPE\n3\u20141929 PLYMOUTH COUPES\n1929 1 'A-Ten Model S. F. 36\nINTERNATIONAL\n1\u20141929 FORD SEDAN\n1\u20141929 FORD ROADSTER\n1931 I'\/i-Ton Model A.L.3          \/\nINTERNATIONAL\n1\u20141930 FORD SEDAN\n1931 l'\/i-TonFORD\n1\u20141930 FORD ROADSTER\n1\u20141930 PLYMOUTH\n1929 2-Ton DODCE with Hydraulic\nHolit and 2-Yard Dump.\n1\u20141929 DE LUXE NASH\nAlio Several DELIVERY TRUCKS\nA CARLOAD OF NEW PLYMOUTHS UNLOADING TODAY\nPEEBLES MOTORS Ltd.\nPHONE 119\nNELSON, B. C.\nMORE ABOUT\nOttawa Favors\n(Continued From Page One)\nvoted five years ago and wu enured ol every cooperation in the matter.\nMr. McLean declared that he was\nsurprised, since his return (rom Ottawa, that Nelson people were talking about accepting sub postoffices\nin the upper and Fairview portions\no_ the city ln place of the delivery\nservice. He had been assured - in\nOttawa that free delivery would be\navailable.\nWhile there he met Hon. Ian Mackenzie of Vancouver, minister of\nnational defence, who had gone to\nBermuda for the Easter recess, but\nwho was forted to return when his\ntravelling companion died suddenly.\n\"Needless to say\", said Mr. McLean,\n\"Ian's holidays Were utterly ruined.\"\nAnyone from B.C. going to Ottawa\nshould get In touch with Norman\nSenior, Mr! Mackenzie's private secretary, or Miss Dickson, said Mr.\nMcLean. They would then be assured of mee'ing anyone they\nsought. Both had showed him the\nfinest courtesy.\nMr. McLean had attempted to\nlocate W. K. Esling M.P.P. for Kootenay west but the member was\nvisiting friends.\nMr. McLean was away two weeks\nand declared he had run Into\nwretched weather. Ottawa was hav\ning a lata spring and lt wai juit a\ncontinuation of snow, wind and rain.\nIndications ln Ottawa were that\nthe budget would come down about\nMay 1.\nHe wu surprised at changes In\nthe Immediate vicinity of Ottawa\nin the past number of yean. Once\nproiperoui towns on the outiide of\ntlie city seemed to be going to the\nwall. Merchants declared that the\nauto resulted in people In these\ncenters driving to the larger city\nfor their needs.\nAUSTRALIA AND\nCANADA RIVALS\nIN WHEAT SALES\nOTTAWA, April 24 (CP)- Competition between Canada and Australia in the uie ot wheat since the\nnew wheat board office on Dtc. 9\nwas examined by the wheat marketing committee of the Home ot Commoni today. Jamei R. Murray of\nWinnipeg, chairman of the board,\nwai the witneu before the committee. Trades Minister Euler presided.\nA Rotterdam market letter on the\nwheat situation, excerpts of which\nwere read by Conservative Leader\nBennett, uid the dissatisfaction of\nthe Canada wheat board at its ules\nwas understandable. The markets\nwere being surfeited with Cinadian\nwheat and Canada could never hope\nto get 100 per cent of the European\npurchases no matter how low the\nprice.\nTonight\u2014Tonight\nOFFICIAL OPENING\nCivic Centre Auditorium\nDoors Open at 7 p.m.\nCurtain at 8 o'Clock\nAdmission 50 Cents. Tickets at door only.\nNo Reserved Seats\nAll Artists taking part In the Musical Programme will pleue\nenter at door at East end of Vernon Street\nImmediately after the official opening by His Worship\nthe Mayor, there will be a 2 hour Musical and Artistic\nProgram, sponsored by the Nelson Glee Club, and assisted by other Nelson Musical organiiatlons.\nNOTICE\nIt is requested that all Nelson business\nfirms cooperate with the Mayor and\nCity Council in arranging to close their\nstores as early as possible tonight to\nenable their employees and families to\nattend the official opening of the Civic\nCentre Auditorium.\nJ. P. MORGAN,\nMayor\u2014City of Nelion\nLAWN ^GARDEN\n__**\u00abt _.\nKeep Garden in Shape with Quality Tools\nA beautiful lawn and garden it ths deiira of every home\nowner. Keep them looking well with equipment from\nWood, Vallanc..\nSPADINC FORKS PRUNING  SHEARS\n$1.45 65<\nLAWN RAKE BAMBOO RAKE\n$120 20'\nGARDEN HOSE\n3-ply High Quality Rubber 'A-inch     Coil of 50 ft. $4.95\nSPRINKLING  CAN CULTIVATORS\n85*\nHOSE NOZZLE GARDEN SHOVEL\n45'\n$1.00\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd\nEast on Daylight\nSaving Time\nClocks will be moved forward an\nhour and daylight saving time will\ngo into effect at midnight tonight\n(Saturdiy) In principal eaitern\ncities. They will be moved back on\nSept. 28.\nMontreal, Ottawa, Toronto and\naeveral other Ontario cities, and\ntowns will lead the way to the annual summer tune schedule, other\npointi following at later datea. Hamilton will fall into line May 2, remaining on daylight laving until\nSept 26.\nOur New and Finer\nRainbow\nChampagne\nin Colour\nChampagne\nIn Quality\nCoiti more to manufacture\nbut sells at the old price.\nKOOTENAY BREWERIES\nLTD.\nThli advertisement b not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nJ. A. trying\ndtCo.\nGROCERIES\nPHONE 161\nEff. SAT, and MON.\nSEE THE 'COUNTRY DOCTOR'\nAT THE CAPITOL THEATRE\nCARNATION MILK:    Q<\nTill tint J\nQUAKER OATS\u2014 IM\nPliln'pkg. \u2014 \u2014 *l*\nCOFFEE  AMBROSIA-   _\\au\nBlue Ribbon; 1-lb. pkg. - \u2022\"tr\nJELLY  POWDERS\u2014        M(l\nEmpren asserted; 8 pkgs. mm*T\nTOMATO 80UP\u2014 _\u00a5**\nRoyil City; 3 tlni m*+\nKELLOGG'S PEP\u2014 __g_A\n2 pkgs m*r\nBAKINQ  POWDER\u2014       CCA\n3-lb. ean   **-*>\nHONEY  GRAHAM IQf!\nWAFERS\u2014Per pkg **H\u00bb\nPICKLE8 \u2014 Sweet  mixed  or\nmustard, large 28-p_. _\\l_\nIan; uch \u25a0\u25a0 -^T\nCOOKING APPLES\u2014       _\\C_t\nOnUrloi; S Ibi m*T\nA8PARAGUS TIPS\u2014        \\_\\A\nPer Ib  Aa\u00bb\n8PINACH-Freih, \u00ab|-_l_\nyoung; 2 lbs. \u2022***\u00bb\u2022\nGREEN ONIONS- Q{*\n2 bunches      rr\nCARR0T8\u2014 Large |Q_\u00ab\nbunchei; 2 for  -. *'r\nPARSNIPS-Clean A A\nwished; per Ib     \u2022W'\nGRAPEFRUIT\u2014 _MA\nLarge; 6 for  *0V\nNiw Bseti \u2014 New Turnips\nNew'Cabbage \u2014 Tomatoes\n______________________________w\nRitchie\nOxfords\n$5.00\nKnOwn everywhere\nfor comfort and\ndurability.\nGODFREYS'\n\"CAMBRIDGE  CLOTHES\"\n318 BAKER      PHONE 270\nEverybody Is\nWaiting\nFor the Bexlll ORIGINAL One\nCent Sale. Two itemi for the\nprice of one. plus only one cent.\n250 bargains to choose from. And\nfour davs in which to Itock up\u2014\nWednesday. Thursday. Friday\nand Saturday. April 29, 30, May\n1 and 2.\nCity Drug Co.\nThl Rexill Store\nPhone 34 P.O. Box WO\nFor\n$22\n.50\nAuction\n8ILVER ROOM-HUME HOTEL\n2P.M. TODAY\nFavored with Instructions from\nthe owner who is leaving Nelson.\nI will offer the following: Table\nGlassware. Cushions. Comforters,\nBaby's Dropside Cot and High\nChair. Occasional Chairs, Smoker's Cabinet, Kitchen Buffet,\nSmall Dining Room Buffet, Dining Table and Chairs, Steel Beds.\nCird Table. Mattresses. Folding\nBuegv. Floor Lamp. Chesterfield\nSuite, Dressing Table. Chest of\nDrawers. Large Rug. Bookstand,\nRadio, Set of Carving Chisels.\nTools. Bench Vyse, etc., etc.\nGoods on View Morning of Sale\nTermi;  CASH\nG. HORSTEAD,\nAuctioneer.\n-The-\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\n\"\" PRICES FOR TODAY\nand MONDAY\n2 pkti. Kellogg's Pep        \u00ab!\u2022___\nfor I \"\u2022**\u2022\n3 pkti. Kellogg's Corn     2W\nFlakei  \u2022\u2022\u00bb\u2022*\n2 Ibi. Fresh Biscuits,        JCM\n(sandwich, etc.)    m*+\n2 lbs. Fresh Stoneless        2*Sf_\nDitei  '****\nt Fruh Grapefruit 25(1\n3 dox. Lirge Sweet Juicy  QC\/J\nOnngei \u2014 - *mr\n2 tint Pineapple Juice      2jS0\n2 pkti. Rlti Biscuits _V_\\t\nRobertson's Fresh Fruit Cakei\u2014\n,,b 30*   ,,_, 55*5\n< rolli Purex Tissue        ABA\n1 jir Dutch Mild Sail.   \u00a3J_J(J\nDreislng. 32 ox WT\u00bb\n2 Headi Lettuce\nfor\t\n1 Ib. Red Roie Tei and 1 Ib. Red\nRom Coffee fiE(*\nfor     \u2022*_*\n\"Mb,*\u2122?\u2122* ...   $1J_5\n3 Ibi. Nu Maid or OCg*\nCurliw Butter  a-fT\n4 um Red Sockeye CCt\\\nSilmon   mt-er\n3 bunchei Niw Cirroti    4M\nJS*\nPHONE 110\nOpen your account Today.   We\n\u2022hall appreclati your buiineu.\nFree Delivery up the Like\nonce a wuk.\nWe Are Showing\nRemarkable Values\nMEN'S\nSUITS\nNew Goods\nNew Models\nLight colors are again very\nstrong for this season.\nBetter drop in today end\nlook them over.\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nBUY OR SELL WITH A WANT AD,\nYour Baby's\nHealth\nThe health of your child dl*\npendi upon the proper Medicil\nattention It receive.. It ll mentis! you follow your Doctor!\nadvlci and 'dliregird the advice\nof othen.\nWhen your Doctor pnierlbei\nfor your child It It to your id-\nvantage md the chlldi thit hll\npreicrlption Is filled accurately\nand promptly.\nWe pride ourielvn on our dii-\npenilng for young or old.\nIn order that you cm carefully\nwitch thi growth of your child,\nwe have a ipeclal Biby Seilii\nfor the convenience of Mother!\nat all tlmei. We keep a record\non our files of Biby's weight for\nyour Doctor's reference. At all\ntimet ws hive a complete itock\nof  biby  requisite!  and  foodi.\nwatoh voua RAflV GROW\nAT FLEURY'SI\nFLEURY'S\nPHARMACY\nHeadquarter,  for  Hit  Mljllty\nThi Biby.\nM\u00abJ>ero\/B-ki^\\MeMAuocietm\nGood Things to Eat...\nINDIVIDUAL\nCHICKEN\nPIE\nOur Chef's Speciil for lunch\ntodav\u2014terved jutt thl wiy\nyou like It. with loti of dill-\nclout white meit.\n\u2666 L. D. CAFE \u2666\nNELSON'S FINEST RE8TAURANT\nHOmtt\nQuimupitisi\nI, Yvonne \u25a0 Cecile \u25a0 Marie \u25a0 Annette \u2022 Emelie ^\/\n\u00a3     It their first full-length feature Plcturt\nihi COUNTRY DOCTOR\nADDED 8HORT FEATURES\nand TOM MIX in\n\"MIRACLE RIDER'* at 1 p.m.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1936_04_25","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0404857","@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":"1936-04-25 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1936-04-25 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\/1.0404857"}