{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-11-24","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1932-05-14","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404970\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Motorists to be Financially\nResponsible, Damage\n\u2014 Pa&e Two\nmi\n5*S\nAustralia ana1 U. S. Advance\nin Davis Cup Play\n\u2014 Page Seven\nTOLCME SI\nTHE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS,   NELSON,   B.   C.   SATURDAY   MORNINO   MAY    14,   193J\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNl Mill R  Vs\nLINDBERGH F\n4   B   Jt'Br.\nC\nm mm sa *_m\nSON, CREMATORY\n*\u25a0*_\n*  *\nPositively\nBaby at M\u00a9\u00bb\u201e \u00bbe Before Body Is Taken and Consigned to Retorts\nRansom Notes QivejREICHERS INJURED AS PLANE FORCED\nCertain Identity of i DOWN OFF IRISH COAST IN ROUGH SEA\nChild   Kidnappers^ jc]^\nStrlchen Suddenly\nColonel Schwarzkopf Reiterates Statement That the|TQF\/lTY\nNotes Held by Lindbergh Reveal I \u25a0 \u25a0\"*\u25a0*\u00bb \u25a0 \u25a0\nPositive Identification\n\"JAFSIE\" COMMUNICATIONS AND ANSWERS\nREVEALED IN HIS EFFORTS TO CONFER\nKidnapping- Case Prepared a Year Ago States Note;\nReassure Often Child Is Safe\nand Keeping Well\nHOPEWELL, N. J., May 13\u2014A reiteration that ran-\nsom notes received by Colonel Charles A. Lindbergh offered positive identification of the kidnappers of his son\nwas made tonight in a formal police statement by Colonel H. Norman Schwarzkopf.\n\"In previous bulletins it has been stated that the ransom notes received offered positive identification,\" said\nColonel Schwarzkopf. \"There is no change in this statement.\"\nThe police head also announced that Morris Rosner,\none of the intermediaries, was at the headquarters established at the Lindbergh home and was being questioned at the instruction of the prosecuting authority.\nColonel Schwarzkopf, who said last night that a gang\nwag under suspicion in the kidnapping, stated that the\nenquiry in that direction was being continued but further information at this time would hinder the progress of\npolice.\nThe inveslgation in regard to John Hughes Curtis,\nanother intermediary, also was described as being continued and \"all information is being checked as developments justify.\"\nfxch.xnoed notes <i .\nPl'BI.ISHED\nNEW YORK, Ma. 13\u2014Tti* nates\nexchanged between Dr. John P.\nCondon and the supposed kidnappers of the Lindbergh. baby were\n)publlshed by the Bronx Home News\ntoday   In   a   copyrighted   artlc'.e.\nIt was In thla newspaper that\nmany ol the \"Jafsle\" communication* addressed t\u00ab the kidnappers\nappeared in the form of classified\nadvertisements.\nTlie signature symbol In the letters to Dr. Condon, according to\nthe copyrighted story, wa* three\ncircles, two overlapping each other\nand a third ln the overlapped pace.\nThe third waa ln red. There were\nholes ln the center of each circle.\nThese signatures corresponded to the\nFour Principals\nin \"Honor Slaying\"\nLand on U. S. Soil\nAre Hoping Future Will Prove\nMore Kind; Arrive at\nSan Francisco\n(CONTIMED   ON   PA11E   TWO)\n31 FOREST FIRES\nINB.OORWEEK\nActual Start of Firra Expect.\ned to Expediate Plans\nfor Fighting Them\n GETS\nROYAL ASSENT\nSubjected to General Attack by Liberals in\nSenate\nVICTORIA. May 13 (CP)\u2014Aided\nhy frequent rains, British Columbia's forest fire season is being\nushered In slowly this week with\n31 (Ires reported to date, according to provincial forestry officials,\ncompared with 280 fires at the\nsame time last year. The season\nts about three weeks later than\nusual in opening-\nAetna 1 start of forest fires Is\nexpected to expediate a settlement\nbetween the federal and provincial jrove\u2014iment of plans for fire\nfighting this year. With use of\nmen drafwn from the list of unemployed.\nThe federal government hu al\nready given Its authority for the\nplacing ot look-mts and patrols\nfrom  the unemployed.\nNq settlement has yet been reached on the question of using cwws\nfrc|i provincial camps for actual\nfire fighting purposes, though discussion of this phase of the situation mine ls largely in the hands cf the\nIs going forward between forestry bureau of navigation. What at want\ncfflcers and the unemployment com-!10 do rnon than anv<-hlui; e.re ls to\nSAN FRANCISCO, May 13 \u2014 With\nbut on-- defiant glance toward the\npast and hoping the future will prove\nmore kind, the four principals of he\nrecently losed \"honor slaying\" ol\nHonolulu arrived here today aboard\nthe steamer Malolo.\nOn the deck was Lieutenant Thomas\nH. Ma .le, n his neh-, an arm\ncrooked lu his was his young wife,\nThalia and on his left was Clarence\nDarrow veteran lawyer who came\nfrom retirement to defend them, \"hey\nhad Ju-*\u00ab bid fare-.veil to Mrs. Gran-\nvl.. Fote_.cue, mother of Mrs. Massle,\nwho left the hip ln a naval launch,\neager to con.iect with an eastbound\nplane and rejoin her h sband In New\nYork.\nJ'aasie, .ra. Fcrtescue and two seamen, E. J. Lord and Albert O. Jones,\nwere convl< ;ed of man* -.ughter in\nconnection with the slaying of Joeeph\nKahahawal, accused of at' cklng Mrs.\nMassle last September. Sentences of\n10 years each at hard labor were cum-\nmuted to an hour by Governor Judd\nof H'.watl. They were confident today,\nback on tbe mainland, that a full\npardon for all would shortly be forthcoming.\nMKS. FORTESCUE\nDEFIANT\nThe gesture of defiance tame from\nMrs. Fortescue aa she prepared to\nleave the boat.\n*'We have been through much offering,\" she Mid, \"but I have no regrets for what happened in Honolulu.\nWe rejoice now that lt ls all over and\nthat we are free.\"\n\"Thalia and X are concentrating on\nthe future now,\" Massle raid, \"and\nOTTAWA, May 13 (CP)\u2014The\nNew Zealand treaty bill was subjected to a general attack ln the\nsenate today, several members oi\nthe opposition criticising It foi\nIts \"Instability,\" lack of preferences for Canadian products, ami\nfailure to protect the wool growers. But there were n0 amendments and the measuae was adopted   and   given   royal   assent.\nItt.   Hon.   Arthur   Melghen,   government    leader,    sponsored      the\nmeasure  which   he  described  as  a\ntimely   document    coining,   as   It\ndoes, on  the eve of tiie  economic\nconference.   He   believed   that   its\nadoption by parliament would have\na   general   beneficial   Influence   on\nthe atmosphere  of the conference.\nSenator Melg..en expressed the belief that under the treaty the export\nof   many   Canadian   products   would\nbe   stimulated,   particularly   automobiles and fish products.\nLESS   ADVANTAGEOUS\nHon. Raoul Dandurand, opposition leader ln the senate, opened\nthe attack on the treaty remarking\nthat while he had heard much of\nthe \"Canadian first policy\" this was\nthe first he had known of a \"New\nZealand first policy in Canada.\"\nT.*e treaty was less advantageous\nthan the one It replaced, he contended. New Zealand had Increased\nthe duties on a number of articles\nand produced them on none.\n\"Why do we pay more to enter\nthe New Zealand market and New\nZealand pay lest* to enter the Canadian market?\" The veteran sen:*..or\ndemanded. \"Canada reduced the\nduties on 25 articles below the old\ntreaty rates and raised them on\nonly two, fresh meat and butter.\"\nSenator Dandurand hai other criticism for the treaty on the grounds\nt.-.at It was too elas'le. Only one\nmonths notice was required in order\nto change the tariff on any Hem or\nItem*'. This was a \"hand-to-mouth\ntreaty,\" he declared, and the short,\nnotice requirement would not make\ntor stability.\nDoukhobor Youths\nWill Undress If\nForced to School\n|& S. Roosevelt Picks Up\nAirman 47 Miles From\nIreland\nNEW iVE3TMINSTER, B.C.,\nMay 13 (CP).\u2014The 30 r-ouk-\nhobor boyti who have taken\nup residence at the boy's industrial school at Coquitlam,\nIntimated to authoi Ules today that if forced to go ta\n3Chool they will undrew.\nAfter breakfast the boys,\n-\u2022\u25a0ho range in age from 7 to\n17, had a bath and a hair\ntrim. IBome objected to the\nhair cut. but none found fault\nwith the compulsory ablutions. They are being outfitted\ntoday with regulation school\nuniforms.\nSome of the boys can apeak\n_,.)gllsh. Som* can't or won't.\nThose who can speak English,\nhowever, msde lt plain that\nthey would not go to school\nand If forced to do so would\nBhow their displeasure by disrobing. Borne of them expressed annoyance at being\n. -parated   from   their  parents.\nAt breakfast, butter was refused, by the boys. Seme\ndrank tea, others contented\nthemselves wit*, water only.\nIt ls understood they will not\neat butter, eggs and meat.\nLunch today consisted of boiled beans and carrots.\nFACE LACERATED\nAND NOSE BROKEN\nDamaged Wing and Fuel\n>Shortage Caused Landing; Plane Lost\n8. 8. president Roosevelt, it Ren.\nMay IS,\u2014Lou Reichers was forced\ndown In his plane, Liberty, 47\nmiles off Fa4.net Light tonight\nand -a a, rescued with several\nInjuries.\nThe President Roosevelt lowered\na lifeboat whir*, went alongslne\nthe plane where [teamen found the\nlone pilot with a broken nose and\na lacerated face. He explained he\nwas forced to alight on account\nof a damaged wing and fuselage\nand  because  of fuel shortage.\nPROCLAMATION   IN   FEW   DATS\nOTTAWA, May 13\u2014ProcHmatiOiiS\nbringing the New Zealand treaty\nInto effect will be promulgated in a\nfew days. The Dominion government\nhas been advised that New Zealand\nhas passed the treaty and the bill\nratifying lt was given royal a-sent\nIn the senate chamber here today.\nAll that now remains ls to agree on\na suitable date for the proclamations which will be very sjon.\nSTRIKING MINERS\nVOTE AT COLEMAN\nFive Committed for Trial on\nCharge of Unlawful\nAssembly\nmittee of the cabinet,\nWaiving of the operation of the\nforest protection fund this year has\nrendered necessary the provision for\nBo:ne other means of taking care of\nthe forest flrci on provlnclally owned land. Private timber holders this\nyear will fight fire on their own\nholdings in return for the waiving\nof Vie charge ol four cents an acre\nformerly made for this purpose.\nslip away and *lslt my mother in Ken*\ncucky.r\"\nPROMINENT WOMAN\nPHV8ICIAN   DIES\nWINNIPEG,    *lay    13.\u2014Dr.   Edith\nRoss,  43,   prominent   woman   physi-\n. clan,   died   here   today   following   a\nlong illness. She is survived by her\nfather, H. P. M. Roes.\nSISTER OF  HASKATCHFWAN\nCHIEF   JUSTICE   DEAD\nMONTREAL, Que., May 13.\u2014Miss\nFlorence Fraser Haultaln. sister of\nSir Frederick Haultaln. chief Justice\nof Saskatchewan, died here today.\nShe will be burled at Peterboro,\nOnt,, her birthplace.\nMAN AND HORSES\nBURNED BADLY AS\nTRAPPED BY FIRE\nMOO E JAW Sask. May 13\u2014Frightfully burner about the head and arms\nwhen he was trapped ln a field of\nburning Russian thistle 15 nines north\nwest of Chaplin yesterday afternoon\nElmer Hallburg was brought *c the\nMoose Jaw general hospital for treatment. Hallberg was working a four-\nhorse outfit ln the field burning thistle when the wind veered suddenly\nand before he could escape he was\nsurrounded by a wall of fire. His\ncries for help were heard by a farm\nlaborer ln a neighboring field, who\nrushed to his assistance and helped\nhim out of the field. He was taken to\nChaplin where his burns w.*rv dressed and later removed to Mo_*se Jaw.\nThc four horses were so badly burned\nthat they had to be dispatched.\nBLAIRMORE, Alta,, May 13 (CP>\u2014\nWhile close to- iooo striking miners\nat Coleman were voting on whether\nthey would return to work, five\npersons charged with unlawful assembly as result of skirmishes with\nRoyal Canadian Mounted police last\nweek were committed for trlaj hgn\nto-lay.\nTie five were Mrs. Polskl, Mrs,\neuelamovltch, Alex Redzko, Nick\nUkiervlch   and   Gaston   Bazlile.\nBazllle was arrested after t.e first\noutbreak between strikers and police May 4 when the West Canadian\nCollieries, limited, attempted to open\nIts mine at Bellevue to end a strike\nof more than two months duration\ndue to dispute over working conditions. Bazllle w&s first charged with\nassault, but on arraignment today\nthe charge was altered to unlawful\nassembly, the same a\/ the other four\nwho were arrested May 5 during the\nsecond altercation  with pollce.\nWOMEN ADMIT\nPARADING  ffl\nNUDE, THRUMS\n52 Are Sent to Penitentia\nry in Final Hearing,\nNelson\nEX-BEO    TBAR   PASSES\nStricken suddenly as he was en-\nRaged ln trimming a flower bed beside the Botany building of the University of Toronto, Dr. James Breb-\nner, former registrar of the university, died before medical aid could\nbe summoned. Dr. Brebner had been\nregistrar of the university from 1892\nuntil 1930. Ti.e death of Dr. Brebner brings to a close a colorful\ncareer In the educational history of\nthe country. Born In London, Ont.\n' he went to Sarnla as a very young\nReichers was brought aboard  the   man and worked until he had earn-\nvessel   ajid   placed   under   the   car**   ed   cnou. h   to   put    him   through\nof   Surgeon   Mulligan.   It   was   irn-   Brantford collegiate,  from which he\npossible  to ealvace the lifeboat or   matriculated in\nplane on account of a high, rough j \u2014\u2014\nsea.  chief  officer  Manning  was  In '\ncharge  of  the   lifeboat  which   took\nReichers off and captain Fried was\nIn command of the President Roosevelt.\nThe  plane  waa  sighted  at  S:10\np. m. Greenwich mean time (4 p. m.\neastern standard time)  ln lattltude\n51.14   north,   ana   longitude   10.50\nwest.   The   weather   waa   hazy,   the\nvisibility   was   poor   and   a   strong\nsouthwest   wind   was   blowing. The\nWtf h-gh and rough.\nQrief'Stricken Anne\nLindbergh Is Placed\nin Physician's Care\nOrdered to Bed When Strength De'\ndines on Learning Details; Is Expectant Late In August\nBELIEF GROWS CRIMINALS KILLED\nCHILD ON NIGHT OF ABDUCTION\nLANG STRIPPED\nOF AUTHORITY\nBY GOVERNOR\nDoukhobors in the Nelson I g   t;     Foreman pu]*   the\nprovincial jail continued their j\nhunger   strike   on   Friday. |\nCook stoves were dead and\nthe men and women and children, when at liberty in the\nyard .milled around showing\nless and less pep.\nFriday morning Magistrate\nJohn Cartmel had paraded\nbefore him ,52 women members of the Sons of Freedom\nsect who admitted nakedness\nat Thrums on Sunday last,\nand all were given three\nyears in the penitentiary.\nThe cases were heard in\nabout 45 minutes time.\nThe women were the last\nof those charged to be heard\nand there are at present 161\nmen and 86 women sentenced\nto three years in the peni-\n(CONTIM'ED   ON   PAOE   THREE)\nAKRON MOORED\nSAFELY AFTER\nCINE ATTEMPT\nTwo Imprisoned on\nKidnapping Charge\nST. PETERSBURG!*, fit.. May ,13.\n\u2014Two men were imprisoned today\nand search 1* being msde for three\nothers who, police aay, shared in a\nplot to kidnap the six-year-old\ndaughter of Rev. David M. 0-.rdi.er\nof St. Petersburg, general chairman\nIn charge of arrangement* for the\nSouthern Baptist convention now\nin   session   here.\nThe authorttl es aay they have\nlearned the conspiracy Involved a\nplan to demand #30,000 ransom\nfrom delegates to the convention\nIn event the kidnapping was accomplished. Names of the prisoners\nwere not revealed.\nSUNNYVALE, Cal., May 13\u2014Escaping the ill luck and tragedy that\nlas dogged her on her air voyage\nacross the tfsntlnent, the dirigible\nAkron was moored to her mast here\ntonight at 7:05 p.m. (PJS.T.) without Incident after one attempt had\nfailed.\nAs the slanting rays of the sun\nshone on her silver sides the Akron\nnosed down to the field shortly\nafter 6 o'clock for the first mooring\nattempt since morning.\nAt about 300  feet elevation, with\nCharred Body of Blind\nMan From Fire\n...O..fcl, . . ('., May _3-_Airred\nlira*; ton, an old and respected\ncitizen of Moyle was burned to\ndeath this morning about nine o'clock when his place caught on\nfire. The blr-iie Is believed to have\nstarted from lhe stove. Mr. Bragln-\nton was ~ <Ht his K'Mii birthday and\nhad lost his eyesight a number of\nyears ago. A passing tourist noticed the little cabin on fire and notified the section foreman of AI-\ndridge. On receiving the news, Mr.\nPlcco rushed to the scene and managed to puh the charred body out\nof the cabin Just before the roof\nfell In.\nHome two years ago Mr. Rrngln-\nton's life vas threatened when a\nforest fire burned his home on the\nmountainside about four miles front\nMoyle. Only for W. E. Andrews and\nH. F. Iterman, who.brought him\ndown just In time to save his life\nhe v.ould have been burned to\ndeath, for 20 minutes later the\nsmall home was a mass of ashes.\nSKULL OF MISSING\nLOUIS LARSEN IS\nFOUND IN A BUSH\nWhite House Cry Is \"Never to Relax\nUntil Criminals Implacably\nBrought to Justice\"\nHOPEWELL, N. J. May 13. (By Francis A.\nJ amieson, Associated Press staff writer,) (Copyright, 1932, by thc Associated Press)\u2014The picture of a father standing alone before the body of\nhis slain son, a mother secluded in grief and a\npresident calling for action inspired the mightiest\nlaw enforcement agencies of the nation tonight\nto catch the murderers of baby Lindbergh.\nMeantime the wide-flung man hunters were\ngripped with the growing belief that the criminals who stole the infant March 1 sought ransom\nafter they had killed him.\nThe focal point of this school of thought was\nthe little white cover-all sleeping suit the child\nwore on the night of the kidnapping. This was\nmissing when thc battered body, wasted to a skeleton, was stumbled upon in a woods by a Negro\ntruckman yesterday less than five miles from the\nLindbergh home.\nAnd\u2014a garment purporting to be this same\nsleeping suit was the \"token\" by which Colonel\nLindbergh and his 72-year-old agent, Dr. John\nF. Condon, were brought to pay $50,000 ransom\nin the murky darkness of a New York city cemetery.\nThat no possible trail to the apprehension of the crim-\"\ninals was being overlooked was seen in a police statement that\ntwo investigators spent the day in southern New Jersey with\nJohn Hughes Curtis going over the ground the Norfolk, Va,,\nintermediary had covered for thc past 40 days.\nln their feverish quest for clues to guide both investigat.\nors and prosecutors, the authorities also summoned Morris\nRosner, mvsterious undercover man, for questioning.\nDEFINITE MEANS OK IDENTIFICATION\nPolice reasserted that definite means of identification\nsupport*-, of th_ Labor >ot\u00bb*_. i of the kidnappers was provided in notes which Col. Lind-\n__, more conservative mindett ot tne j bergh received subsequent to the original note,\npopulation expressed. uii<iiBuis\u00abi Jej i        These were the salient facts scrutinized by New Jersey's\nut   belnj!   rid   of   an   administration \u00b0 __.___._i\" _T_i_i c ..     i rr       \/\nthey biapued for lowering the state's j crack dtectivcs, gathered at a distance lrom the bare Trenton\ncredit and bringing internal strits. I m0rgue where the famous flier looked at his first-bom for\n_ the last time.\nMrs. Lindbergh, who is expecting a child within the\nnext several months, stayed close beside her mother here,\n! preferring to remember her curly haired boy as she knew\nhim alive.\nHaggard and worn, Colonel Lindbergh called upon his\nmost intimate friend, Colonel Henry Breckenbridge, to drive\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 \u2022 him by motor-car to Trenton.\nWhen he entered the riwmi where\nResignation   Demand   of\nGovernor Arose Through\nCircular Letters\nsvnvr.v, Kj_.tr, May m.  tcp\nruble).\u2014J, T. l-upg went bark to\nthe farm tonlFhl, stripped of\npupthnrllv as Premier of New' South\nWales when tlovemor Sir rhlllp\n(lame   dismissed   him.\nThe    former    premier    departepl\nfpwr his  rPPpiPPtry  home outside thl.\nstate   capital   ppnd   left   hi.   IJihor\nsupporters   ii.tpiiupded   at   the   Midden   turn   >>r   events   which   at   *\nslrppke   ' urnrij   them   fropn   a   _\u2022?\u25a0\nernlng   party   Into   an   opposition,\nMeai.v.]il!R B. S. B. Stevens, leader\nof the erstwhile opposition faced the\ntask  of forming a new government\nat  tlie  bidding  of  thc  governor.\nIMllst.tlsKll   JOY\nWhile consernatlon reigned amon\"j\n(coNTist>;i> on r.\\(it; twoi\nTwo More Alleged\nCommunists Taken\nby Guard, Halifax\nOrton Wade Claims Canadian\nCitizenship and Will Be\nReleased\nVICTORIA,    May    13     (CPh\u2014Pro            \t\nrincial   police^ today   received   word ] jddrd   to   the   list   of   aliens\nfrom Prlncs Rupert that th,*, skull\nof I*ouls Larsen, a Norwegian, mlss-\ntng since December 14. had been\nfound ia the bush beyond Hazel-\nton.\nI-Apf-sen waa last seen alive on December 14, when h\u00a9 and two others\nset out from Haaelton. After going some distant^ Largen's two companions decided to make camp, but\nLarsen declared he would proceed\nto  Klaplox   where   he  had  a  cabin.\n- , .    , , On   January   4   his  companions   re-\nthe ground crew ready to grasp her! ^^   ,,*,   diSappeariince   and   pro.\ntrailing   lines,    tH*   \"landing    Ota  ] T*nc*ftl   police   j-aVe   bpen   on   tnc\nwas   pulled   In   and   the   big   ship  io0ltout ever since for traces of him.\ndrifted  away  to the south. No  trace  of   the   t0rflO  hM   D\u201en\nShe returned  again  an j  ,_e_- lines  found  nor  ean  tne   a2 caUbre r!fle\nwere   dropped   at  6:55   p..n.   to   the  wh.cn VM carried 07 th\u00a9 dead man\nwaiting handi of the crews, totalling | \u2022.,,.   ]ncated.   The   skull   had   a   hole\nabout 100 men. . ln ,t made  Dy a small calibro  gun\nThey  \"walked\"  her  ti> a  portable! tnd   tne  tneory   \u00ab,  put  forth   tnat\nmast   and   th*   cable   was   attached.; Larsen commit***!  suicide  and  that\nThe Akron began   rapidly draw ing  wnd animal*! are r eponsible for the\ntn the slack and she was fixed fast ^vcr.nce   of   th-   skull  and   toreo.\nat   7:05   p.m.   and   her   great   bulk\ndrobped gradually and rested on the\n\"riding  out\"   car.\nFIRE   AT   SAWMILL\nDAVIS   APPEAL   IS   ADJOURNED\nLOT-TOON, May 13.\u2014The Judicial\ncommittee of the privy council to-\nIS EXTINGUISHED >day adjourned hearing to May 24\nof tha appeal of Lary Mortimer\nDavis and Mortimer Davis, Jr.,\n\u25a0gainst decision of Quebec courts\nrefusing them tha right to remove,\nas trustees and executors of the\nwill of thc late Sir Mortimer Davis.\nI-onl Shaughnessy and Alexander\nReaper.\nVANCOUVER,    B.    C,    May    13.\u2014\nFiremen answered a call at fl p.m.\nFriday to the Iburne sawmills. Mar-\npole, where firf had broken out beneath the floor of the saw room.\n[The blaze was extinguisher before\nany material damage waa done.\nHALIFAX.   May   13    iCP>.\u2014Guarded by Rayol Canadian Mounted police    plainclothes    men,    two    more\nalleged    deportation   hearings    were\n\"     ' held\nWinnipeg1 Firm to\nShip Huge Amount\nof Wheat, Churchill\nOTTAWA, May 13.\u2014Hon .R. J.\nManlon. minister of railways, tonight confirmed that arrangements\nwere going through by which a\nWicnipcg firm exporting grain was\nto ship 2,000,000 bushels through\nChurchill   th.s   year   .The   elevator\nln th\u00a9 lmmJjfratjon, shed on charges\nof \"conspiring to overthrow thc\ngovernment of  Canada  by  force.\"\nThey were me. at the train from\nMonti-eal by Sergeant John Leopold,\nnoted R.C.M.P. detective, nnd representatives of the department of\nimmigration.\nWhtl\u00a9 official confirmation ls\nInciting, It is stated 12 men, arrested in Canadian cities from Vancouver  to Montreal,   are  imprisoned\nhe_-f_._      *... j *_______._.\u00ab     j .which did an extensive export bus\nOrton Wade, one of three alleged | ,n#^s\nCommunist-i arrested recently ln\nWinnipeg and brought to Halifax\nfor deportation hearings, will be\nreleassed tomorrow morning because\nhe claims to be a Canadian citizen.\naccording to an unofficial report\nhere   tonight.\nWade is said to have produced\nevidence to show that he was born\nin  Quebec.\nthe body lav, tlie corrtner, Walter\n11.   Swayze,  inquired:\n\u2022Tolonel Mn-lberRh, dfi you positively   Identify   this   baby.*\"\nA I'overliig fl..--cured all but the\nfare of the child.\n\"Take that off,\" requested the\ncolonel,   tn   a   low   ten**e   tone.\nAn   attendant   <(implied   and   all\n(coNToruED on nai two\nTHE WEATHER\nitself   holds    2.500.000   bushels,    but ', WATFR   IE. El,   AT   Nf.LSON*\nprecautions   are   being   taken   that |    Thursday\u201410.05    feet    above    lorn\nthis firm's shipments win not shut \u25a0 water.\noff   other   shippers   from  using   the j    Friday\u201410,60 ftct above !\u2022\u00ab water,\nelevator.   The   shipment*   will   start 1 M]\nsoon, it is understopxl. The minister j hwjqh *?'        ^\nwould   not   give   the   nam\u00a9   ot   thc ' ' 4  **\u2022\"\nfirm   which   has   signed   tlie   agreement, but intimated that lt was one\nlnesfi.\nVISITORS MAY SEE\nALASKAN VOLCANO\nKING GEORGE VISITS\nRAMSAY MACDONALD\nLONDON, May 13 (CP Cable).\u2014\nK'ng George today visited Prime\nMinister Ramsay MacDonald at the\nLondon nursing horne whera he Is\nconvalscing after an operation on hla\nright   eye.\nThe prime minister hopes to\nleave for his home in Lossiemouth, I Blunt.   Frank   Dorbant,\nSEWARD, tfaska, May 13\u2014Airplane flight over tha famed valley\nof 10,000 smoke*, and over the\nAniakchak and Katmai volcanoes,\nmay be made by visitors to Alaska\nthis summer through plans announced here today by aviation officials.\nA regular tourist service,* with\nthe planes meeting the ocean lln-\nera at Eeward, will rr e the trip\nto the range In two noun, they\nsaid.\nPilots amon-? the three al\" services which will make the fl sh_s\nInclude M.itt Nlem Inen. Harry\nand   H.   W.\nVictor, a\nVancouver   \u2014\nKamloops    \t\nE_tevan   rolnt  _..\nPrince  Rupert   ...\nAtlin\t\nDawson,   Y.T.   ...\nSeattle   \t\nPortland, Ore \t\nSan   Francisco \t\nSpokane  \t\nprince   Oeorge   ....\nLos  Angeles\n. 44\n. 46\n58\n. 4\u00ab\n, 44\n, 28\n.  3J\n, 52\n. 53\n48\n50\nCO\n58\n64\n02\n70\nScotland, at the end of next w-eek.   Barnt*1'\n.... 52\n  42\nmm  Ot\nPentlcton  52\nVernon    49\nGrand   Forks      42\nKaslo     _,  43\nCranbrook - 42\nCalgary _ \u201e 42\nEdmonton   ...  - SO\nSwift   Current     48\nPrince  Albert   48\nC.u'App.l.e     - - \u201e 46\nWinnipeg       5fl\nNansln.3    \u25a0 _ \u2022U\nFOHF.CAST\nNelson and *r'.cin.ty. Moderate to\nfre*._i westerly winds, generally fair\nr.nd   warmer.\n70\n78\n74\n60\n84\n76\n86\n93\n58\n \u2022m**m\nIHE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS,   NELSON,   B.   C.   SAILRDAY   MORNINO   MAY   14,   193* I\nNerves A Complete Wreck\nSat Up Half Tbe Night\n|V||LBURNS\nMra. John Rose,Bark Lake, Ont., writes:\u2014\"I waa\ntroubled ao much with my nerrw I waa a omnplete\nwreck.\nI could not do my work, and would hare to st\nup half the night on account of not being able to\nweep.\nOne Aay a friend iwomm ended Milburn'i Heart\nand Nerve fill*. I used one box and got relief\nand by the time I had taken lii boxes I wu aa well\naa erer.\"\nM<_ al tJl dr-if \u2022.-.-. g-raer-d itorea, er mailed cUi-set on rteeipt of priae by The T. M*lb*ai_b\n, Ltd., Toronto, Ont,\nPriM 50c i box\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C., Hotels and Cafes\nDT SmVmy. \u25bc\u25bc\u25bc\u25bc\u25bc\u25bc\u25bc\u25bc\u25bc VW.ir.nr mr mr mr ww *\n422 VERNON STREET PHONE 787\nDinner\n75c\nHUME HOTEL\n.NELSON, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nLunch_on\n50c\nMARKET BOARD\nIS PROPOSED,\nIMCTJALES\nPlight of Farmer Is Heard\nFrom All Sides in\nCommons,\nErnie Schaaf Wins\nIndifferent Bout\nMADISON  SQUARE  G \\RDEN   New\nYork, May 13 (By Edward J. Nell.,\nAssociated Press sport, writer. 1 \u2014\nThe referee yawned, aome of the\nfpe*_-tator\u00bb sneaked away, and the\nrest almost fell asleep as Ernie\nSchaaf, Boston heavyweight, abused\nJack Gross moderately tonight, to\nwin a io-round decision In the feature of tho first Garden professional  card   In  Mitral   weeks.\nSchaaf weighed 210\" pounds and\nGross, a gangling, clinging southpaw, scaled 211.2. yet they did\nscarcely enough punching even tt\narouse th*> resentment of the 5000\ndisgusted spectators. There were no\nknockdowns, not even a sign of a\nreal hard blow, and they fought\nmore ln patience  than  It anger.\nBRUHN IS NOW AT\nGRAND FORKS ON\nROAD WORK TOUR\nWill Detour Summits by Spokane Reaching Trail on\nMonday\nOTTAWA,   MV    13.\u2014    (CP)   \u2014\nCreation of a marketing hoard to\ndirect   the  export   uale*  of   Canadian    agricultural    prod nets,    waa\nurged   tn   the   houw   of   commons\ntoday   ;is  an   Immediate   necesi-.i\/.\nfrom all hides of tne house, lion.\nRobert  Weir, minister of aurrlciil-   j\ntnre,   heard   the   plight   of   the   I\nfarmer referred to aa the gravest   '\u25a0\nln  history.\nIt waa time to abandon political\nlines   and   unite   In   one   common I\ncaut^e\u2014rescuing    the    farmer   from;\nthe eiough of depression and de- i Amendment to Be Brought in\nspalr.   said   Hon.   W.   R.   Motherwell, |\nformer   minister   of   agriculture.   \"I\nthink   we  have  reached   a  time   In |\nour    history   when    agriculture    In \u25a0\nMOTORISTS TO BE\nRESPONSIBLE FOR\nANY DAMAGE DONE\nto Operation Shortly\nPooley State:.\nGRAND FORKS, B- C May 18.\u2014\nHon. R. W. Bruhn, minister ot\npublic works, accompanied by Patrick Phillip, deputy minister, ana\nOeorge D. MacKay of Pentlcton,\ndistrict engineer, arrived at Grand\nPorks at 6 o'clock this evening by\nmotor, from the Okanagan, the\nminister and deputy having motored from the coaat.\nThe party wa* driven out to trie\ncity's power plant at Smelter Luke\nthis evening  by  Mayor T. A. Love.\nSaturday the minister will drive\nto Colvllle, Wash., and lpck*UM.\nthua   detouring   the   RopslnncJ-Cr.a-\nthelr hilltop home, strtTlng to\nkeep tfam breaking donn, a radio\noperatir Iftpftl out the tragic\ni.e**.i*.e ww and o.v again.\nIt was late  ln the night before\nIt   was   final).'    picked   up   by   the\nyacht,   which   then   raced   for   a\nlanding   place   near   Atlantic   City.\nAfter a wild drive up the state, the\nroinnr-f  arrived at  the side  of  his\ndetracted  wife.\nUntil   3   a.m.   he  came   and   went\nfrom the garage on his estate where\nthe   police   investigation   had   been\ncentered   and   where   now  plans   for\nthe    Inten&tfied   search   are    being\nformulated.\nHOPEWELL, N. J., May 13\u2014Anne-\nLindbergh, who has maintained ft\ncals* and compose* demeanor\nthroughout the search and finding\nof .cr kidnapped and slain son,\nWM ordered to bed late tonight and\nplaced  under  a physician's  caie.\n'i,e strength of the slim, young\nmother declined appreciably, It wa* |\n._:rned, when a: her own Insistence,\n...a wa._ told of tha detalU of the'\n\u25a0 nditlon of the body of her baby;\nThe change In her outward co.*e-\n\u25a0.osure caxe after her husband returned  from  the TVcnton  un-le\/tan-\nFIFE RESIDENT\nGETS 23 MONTHS\nTHEFT SENTENCE\nGRAND PORKS. fc.C, May 13.\u2014\nH. W. Clarkson of Fife, tried before Judge J. R. Brown, for theft\nallegedly committed at Fife waa\nconvlcted, and sentenced to 23\nmonths' imprlsonme.it. Thla constitutes   a   pentltentiary   eentenoe.\nClarkson pleaded Ignorance of tha\ntheft, saying lt had been executed\nby Junior members of his family\nwithout his knowledge, but Judge\nBrown found that he was the\nguilty directing head In the matter.\nIDENTIFY\nT     ,______, .11 lUli.-iU        J. \u25a0.I'll II1G -..v...\u2122.* .l.l.._:...l.\ncade section of the trani-provincla   , estab:ishmeiu  where  DU  cxamr\nhighway,   and  will  arrive  ln  Trail l._,,J,Jon of th$ chUd tttta,lrf nlm \u00ab\nHUME \u2014 H. Chester, A. Dufour,\nr. DodsOn, G. B. Mcintosh, A. J.\nIronside, Cranbrook; M. J. Sneers,\nH. Hugh Taylor, C. F. Hayes, Mr,\n,nd Mrs. F. Putman, Mr. and Mra,\n!. Cartwrtght, Wallace Hamilton,\nCreston; E, W. Mahler, .Tarvls Ncu-\nboeuf, A. H. Car-ton, W. Bide. W.\nU. Scott, W. T. lr*iy, W.  G. Elliot,\n1 Vancouver;  W. Dingle. P. E. fcpoon-\ni er, E. WttUfc  E.  F.  MarAullay,  aviary;  J.  M   Sutherland,  Winnipeg,\n; C.   Allen,   Toronto;    A.   G.   Potter,\n1 Fretfrrtctou,    N.   B.;    H.   M.   Moore,\nH.    G.    Hp-Mee,    LuniJM-r'on;    O.    J.\nQuln, C. D.  M.i-rtyn, Medicine H*u,\nt Miss Joan  M.  Pugh,  Lillocwt,\ni\nSimply staggering to Its fall and\nwe can afford to ease up little In\nour extreme political alignments\nand work in behalf of the industry.'\nPersonally, the former agricultural\ninlntnter was willing \"to wont with\nBe+Szebub himself for the good\nof agriculture.\nFarm estimates were before thc\nhouse nil day. George apotton, Cons.\nNorth Huron, charged a atock yard\ncom bi ne ex Ittnt in Toronto, \"lt\nrver there mat an octupus\u2014a devil\ntab with elongated arms squeezing\nthe lives out of th\u00ab farmers or\nOntario, lt is the Canada packer,, of\nToronto,\" he said. The farmer ml\nforced to take whatever price wan\noffMtd, soinrtunes as low ns three\nnnd   one-h.ilf  centa  a   pound.\nCREMATION\n!mQii__M!S__iL_^\nyt\nWhere {he Gue&Is King\nf(3he Savo^\n.'-LBON'S NEWEST AND FITTEST HOT__\nMAK\"?  ROOMS  WITH PRIVATE\nBATHS OR SHOWERS\n  J. A. KERR, Prop.\nJm una *rr. phon*. it\n_& _j_ sol __p-*p*?j3?\/^*:*15ga. aa a. SS i[if iftMrtSOT\nPROPOSE GIVING\nEXTRA FERRY A\nTRIAL FOR TIME\nl\nOne extra trip $12.40, Two\n$84.80; Boards to\nAgree on Day\nOAVOT \u2022\u2014 T. B. Llndwiy, ___.  O.\nfcangley, P. R, Wright, W. L .Mc-\njnilTray, H.  W.  Bteele,  Vancouver;\nj. p. Whltten, Montreal;  Mies Don\nThompson.   Miss   Mickey   Reynold*.\nTrail; J. If. Murphy, Kaslo; W. M.\nIllUran, Boswoll; D- Hunter, silver- j\nIon;    O.   T.   Annatrong,   Calgary;\nDon Sutherland, Winlaw; Mr. and\nMrs. D. MacPhee, Creston; H, V.\nDewle, Sllverton; Miss G. H. SplHcr,\nBrilliant; Miss isable Nixon. Oladc;\nD. H. Short, Vancouver; Mra. u.\nB. Hamilton, invermere; Mrs. Archer Smith. Ed*_cwater; MrB, C. C.\nRaven, Kaslo.\nHire of the pieamer Nuncio*In ftt\nan extra trip one afternoon weekly,\nto a''commodnt* Crcat-on cltlzeni\nm\\_____S___$ ton pend \u25a0 major pui*t oi\nthe day shopping In Nelson, will\ncost the* government #._..4n, the\nroads and brldgi-a committee of\nthe Nelson board of trade t*-\nporta, while an extra trip ln the\nmorning as well as at night, an\npropowd by the creaton board of\ntrado,   will   cost   $84.40.\nIt 1b proposed by the public\nworks to idve tho extra round trip\nIn the afternoon a trial, and see\nif there is sufficient traffic to\nJustify   it   cont!nuin_r   permanently.\nBefore it is arranged, Creston mia\nNelson representatives will comer\nas to the dny of the week for the\nextra ferry.\nI      VICTORIA,  May   IT\u2014Amendment.*.\n1 to the  Motor Vehicles  act insuring\nfinancial   responsibility   on  the pan j\nof    the    motorist   for    any   damape '\n, they occasion through accidents will j\nbe brought Into operation shortly by I\nproclamation, Attorney-General Pool- ;\ney   stated   today.   The   new   section\nnf the act was  inserted at thc last\n\u25a0Niton  of   the  legislature   tad   will\nrequire   proof   of   financial   responsibility  after a first accident whore\njust  clalma   remain   unsettled.\nMr.    pooley    explained    that    five\nprovlnrps     In     Canada     now    have\nsimilar   leglslnMon.   Acting   on   this, \u25a0\nInsurance     companies     have     been\n(iraftlnr*  plans  for  uniform  policies ;\nwhich   would   applv   to   nny  of  the |\nI five    province!,    having    the    law. i\nj Bat-Uemrat  on  the form  and  terms |\nI of    the   policy    iR   expertP(t   shortly !\ni and will remove tho la\u00abt barrier to\n< the f.ppHration of th*i ]aw in British\nj Columbia\nThe main object of the plan is\nto insure that all who operate\nmotor vehicles on the road will be\nflnanclnlly mpOftftMo for any dam-\naye they cause to Individuals or\npublic property. This, Is accomplished by provision for revocation\nof a license cftT a first Accident\nwhere just olainig remain unsettled. Adequate proof of flnancttt.\nresponsl billty el t her through insurance or otherwise would be demanded aft**r a first lapse.\nWhile not actually compulsory\nInsurance, the new nectlons in\nthe act would lend to make liability\nand property rianws Insurance well\nnign universal, as Is aald to have\nbeen  the  case  ln  Ontario.\nidentification\nHAGGARD AND WORN\nThe colonel, although haggard and\nworn, followed the body ol his flrat\nborn to a Linden. I'., J., crematory\nwhere lt was cremated.\nHe continued *._\u25a0 _,cat up under\n! the st-aln despite tha- friends said\nj bt had lost several pounds of weight\n1 since hearing the tragic newa and\n' was  fatigued   by  loss of  sleep.\nMrs, Lindbergh, who is expecting\na child late ln August, had her\nmother as her constant companion.\n{(ONTINTF.D   FROM   PAGE ONE.\nhut   lhe   colonel   retired   from   the\nI (Will. 0\n\"This Is pysMlvely the baby,\"\nMid Colonel ...'ndbergh after a\nminute  Inspection.\nHe was Inside the morgue for\nhalf an hour. Just before he left a\nhearse drew up and the body was\nplaced Inside for transportation to\na   crematory.\nWhen the colonel arrived at the\nmcrgue a crowd cf .several hundred\npersons gathered  In  t,\u00ab street, with\na ipt\u00abiai police detail on hand to Mrs. Mary Johnson Given a\nkeep  order,\nTRAIL LADY IS\nLAID TO REST\nLANG\n(rOMIM'FIl   I ROM   PACE   OSF.)\ncNew Grand Hotel\nP. Is. KATAK, Prop.\nWmWt Of Monttlj Rat** Single. CO cent* tnd up\nBot and Cold Water Double. 11.50 and up\n.'HONE 503     \u2022     \u2022     \u2022     P. O. BOX 1001\nWhen a man marries he find*,\nthere are always two sides to ;.\nmntrimppnlni tangle\u2014her side and\nher  mot hep's.\nITEW OEAND\u2014M. Melenken, Trail;\nO. Rlnjtriatrn. Creaton; Mr. and Mrs,\n. Kapu_c_, felaon; S. Ko.ak, orand\nForis; s. Oennuck, Baimoi M. Vlne-\nllklng, Trail.\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapointe,\nProp.\nHot and cr'   uratei* in every room\n6tenm   Heated\nRf*!,   Barter   St. -Mione  fl\"\nQUEENS\u2014K.  8.  Murray,  ShleCtts.\nOccidental\nHotel\n705 Vernon St. rhone 5!IL\nB.  WASSICK\nnit.  Booms of Solid Comlort\nHeadnuartcr.   (or   l.o.sen\nand  Miners,\nMADDEN\nHOTEL\nA Welcome Awaits You\nIII   r, MAPDKN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nHot and Cold Water\nIn tti,  HEART ot tlie Cl'T\nMADDEN\u2014L,. Lawson, Trail; O.\nMagllo. OrovUle: E. Burt, Lethbridge;\nR. Nelson. Klmberley; E. Mt*,\nProcter; D. Bland, Slocan ?lty;\nMr. and Mrs. Paterson, Parron.\nStirling Hotel\n2 Blocks East of Tost Office\nHot and Cold Water\nSteam Heat\nModerate Rates\nI\\ H. Bush, Prop.\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nSTANDARD CAFE\nNelson'a  Popular      strurant,\nipeclal Dinner  11  am. till \u00bb p.m.\nBundsy  Dinner  S  pj_. till  8  pm.\nSODA   FOl'NIAIN\nTb* Plcest  cf Good  B'.ndse.\nThe Royal CaSe\nCLASSIC   RESTAURANT\nRefinement    and    Detlrney    ITerall\noral dav ami man\nspecial Dinner, H:'.o to 8 p.m. '\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\nSpecial Siiiidiiy Chicken Dinner tMR\nSpecializing In CIiod Suey and Noortlei\nraoKi ia\nL. D. CAFE\nin.  rin'.t In tbe <:lty\noetc   _U hoi ns\nPINE   .\"OOI> -PttCM T   FEKVICS\niSODA   FOUNTAIN\ntlfJOMS   TO   ilENT\nS. S. Nasookin\nSpecial Trip\nKASLO and\nRETURN\nTUESDAY, MAY 24\nEMPIRE DAY\nLt. CITY VTUM 8 a.m.\nItt. KAM.O 7   p.m.\nFares: Adults $2.3.*i\nChildren S1.20\nCity Band on Boat\nJ. S. CARTER\nD. P. A., Nelson\nNews    reported    from    KttboWiM\nMM UN iprem.-Ts of South Aiistrahn\nKiist Australia, and THsmanla all\nmtltemat th** opportunity of an\niinltf-d Australian pnrty pnvernment\nto roeto'-e the. rrocllt of New .South\nWales. Premier Lionel Hill of South\nAustralia SttgfMttd \u00bbn \u2022parly con-\nvfntlon of the Australian loan coun-\nell to -\".trail. Men out New South\nWales   finance*-.\nThf trouble which ended In the\ngovernor's demtiid for Mr. Urn*\"'.*!\ni-es:i;natlon arof-c from circular letters thc former premier circulated\namong the heads of Ktate govern-\ni ment departments, urging that they\nrefus*) to turn over to commonwealth officials funds which they\nhad come to collect under term.-, of\nFederal Flnimciaj Agreement Enforcement  act.\nDispatch of the letters was thc\n| last stroke Mr. Lang played ln his\nbitter fight to prevent attachment\nI of state revenues with which the\nCommonwealth sought to repay Itself money expended in meeting ;n\u00ab\nterest on externally floated bonds\nwhich the New South Wales administration   elected   to  default.\nThe climax came after nn exchange of correspondence between\nthe governor and the premier. Tlie\ndeclared circulation of the letters\nwas illegal, and demanded they be\n| calleil In. If they were not, he told\n| Mr. Lang, the administration, would\n' be turned out by executive prerogative. He warned the premier he was\ngiving him a chance, but Mr. Lang\nI turned   lt   dawn.\nTlie Labor louder had only one\nI remark after his audienc* with the\n' governor. \"I am packed.\" he said\ncrvptlcally.\nDlfimlPfial of the premier brought\nI to a Clot*, temporarily at least,\n'a bitter struggle between a Lnbor\n; and state government 0* rather ex-\nj treme socialist tenc|*nc'es and a\nConservative federal administration.\nA general election Is due In New\nj South Wales seine time between now\nt and next- August, and. up till now.\n[ observers had given Mr. Lang and\nI his Lflborites an even chance of\n. winning. It was thought, however,\nI that today'! development* might\nprove   Injurious   to   their   cause.\nTRAIL, B. C, HOTELS\nDOUGLAC\nHOTEL    w\nRooms and Bath\nt. U and A. GROl'lAG..,  Pr-''-*.\nitenm  HMtfA Hot  And  Cold\nThrough-nit Water\nTRAIL, B. C.\nArlington\nHotel\nCentrally\nLocated\nT31AIL, B. C.\nA   P. LEVESOLE, Prop.\nWatch (ordetaili\nin this paper,\nWhen the car swung out of the\nr.Uey, the crowd, now ao large that\nit tied up traffic for a considerable\ndistinct, broke pollce lines and followed.\nThe ear, driven by Colonel H. Norman \u2022efawarskopf, thli police head,\nwas preceded to a crematory In\nLinden by a hearso bearing the\nlittle oak  casket.\nFifty or more outsiders who had\nlatbafM around the place were re-\nCpMttt*-   tn  leave.\nWhen th? grounds had been cleared the ca*ket was taken from the\n,icar.*-e Into the building, followed\nhy Colonel Lindbergh, Colonel\n.Schwarzkopf, and Colonel Breck.cn-\nrklt;e.\nWITNESS CREMATION\nIt was un<lerst.\".od tho ashes of\nhe baby would be left there overnight. A Trenton undertaking establishment was Instructed to cull\nfor the.m tomorrow. Where they will\nbe   taken   was   not   revealed.\nOfficialdom\u2014backed by outraged\npublic opinion and spurred by President Hoover himself to make thl*\ntha most, intensive man hunt the\nn'orld ha* ever known\u2014displayed a\ndesire to write a sequel t\u00a9 the story\nWliTSJ.   Hot SE   CRY\nTha call Irom the White House\nfor a search \"never to be relaxed\nuntil thoiSG criminals are Implacably\nbrought to justice\" was their campaign   Off.\nAs the search spread far and wide,\nsome evidence of a dlabollclal hoax\non the part of the klller-kldnappera\nwas Been ln a statement by Dr.\nCondon.\nHe told officials he was oon-\nYlnced lhe Hlreplng suit turned\nover to him v*as Ihe same one thc\nfiuni>u,s filer's non wore the night\nhe was snatched  from the crib.\nMedical authorities have agreed\nthe kidnappers killed their \\lctlm\nalmost Immediately after making\noff with li I m\u2014probably the same\nnight.\nPolice finally said the suit furnished to Dr. Condon wa* \"the same\nkind'' as the one the' Lindbergh\nchild wore, although they added lt\nstill was uncertain whether the garment the Intermediary received was\nthe one the Lindberghs had purchased for their son. An ugly aspect\nwas cast on the case which would\nnot be quickly dispelled.\nl.lll,l.]> BABE\nIMMEDIATELY?\nThis theory Is that the kidnappers, who many officials believed\nto have been maniacs, killed the\ntiny boy alrmxt Immediately utter\nlift-fat \"*m !\"*\u25a0 \",f rr\"' where\nhe had lain 111; stripped off his\nsleeping suit; cast trie body Into\nthe woods, and then set out to\nobtain the ransom for the child\ntliey knew could never be returned alive.\nDr, Condon, and John Hughes\nCurt le ot Jl!->rf_.lk. Va., who also\nfigured In the case as au Intermediary with ti.e supposed kidnappers, were questioned throughout\nnnst of the night by police on the\nLindbergh estate, ln an attempt to\nget an official picture of their activities   in   the   flier'a   behalf.\nwlftly the New Jersey Investigators were piecing together the\nfull story of the event* that followed the sensational abduction 73\ndays ag-s\u2014much of which Information had been withheld from them\nbecause of private Investigations and\nnegotiations.\nCol. Lindbergh himself aided them\nin mapping their man-hunting campaign.\nIt was hours after the discovery\nof his son's body that the grim\nnew* came to him. He had been on\na yac.n off Cape ay, N. J., seeking\nto establish a contact wtth men he\nhad been led to believe wcre the\nkidnappers.\nA radio code had been arranged\nto that while away from home work*\ning on his own Investigation he\ncould keep in touch with polloe and\nhis   family.\nBut Mimllim went wrong wltl.\nthe   radio  nn   the   yacTrt   at   the\ncrucial   moment.\nWhile the flier's wife waited In\nBeautiful Funeral; Rev.\nL. A. Movant Officiates\nTRAIL, B.C., May 1S.\u2014A beautiful funeral with n timer out floral\nofferings wa* -'ven M a last tribute\nto Mrs. Mary Johnson, wlff of I.\na. Johnson, who died here last\nTuesday at her home. Funeral nervines were held from St. Andrew's\nAngtlc-in church with Rer, h. A.\nMorrant, officiating. Burial waa ln\nthe   Mountalnview   cemetery.\nPallbearers were H, A. MacLarnen,\nH. Hayes, C Watts, W. E. B. Monypenny, c* H. Bur.caa and W. Murray.\nMrs. Johnson was a former resident of Nelson and h^d been a\nresident of Trail for eight years.\nShe waa well known, throughout\nthe   Kootenay.\nBesides her husband she leaves\ntwo daughters, one in Trail and one\nIn  Princeton.\nThose seeding floral offerings\nwere: Daddy and girls, Tommy.\nAda, Princeton; Pattl and family,\nVictoria; Cecil and Edith; Walter.\nMary and Prank; B. C. Telephane\nstaff. Trail; Henry Hayes, NelFon;\nNorman and Ida; Business Girls'\nauxiliary. Mr. and Mrs. Hunter\nWoodburn, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Burton, Chow John, Mr. and Mrs. B.\nO. Treen, Mrs. A. M. Lang and\nfamily, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Shepherd, Mayor and Mrs. J. P. Morgan, Nelson; Mr. and Mrs. W. J.\nSheppard, Victoria; Mr. and Mrs,\nDon Forteath, Mr. and Mrs. G. R.\nBumfrey, Traffic Commericlal and\nStaff Plant of B.C. Telephone Co.,\nNelson; Mr. and Mrs. H. A. McLaren,\nMr. and Mrs. W. E. B. Monypenny\nand Mrs. Campell, Mr, and Mrs. C,\nM. Slmms, Mr. nd Mrs. A. E. MacDonald, Mr. and Mrs, E. W. Hall,\nMr. and Mrs. S. 8. McDiarmid. Mr.\nand Mrs. A. C. Johnson r d Doris,\nMr. and Mrs. W. Langlands, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. J. Chandler, the Liugh\ntons, Nelson; George and Hilda\nBenz.es, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Per-\nrott, T. H. Negus, Mr. and Mn.\nT. H. Davlcs, Mr. snd Mrs. Chas.\nWatts, Nelson; Mr. and Mrs. A. E.\nPittaway, Mr. and Mrs. Alfred E,\nAllen   and   Family.\nQuality and Mildness\nurret\nC I CAKETTES\nImperial Tobacco Company of Canada, Limited\nInjured Kxplosion\nof Air Compressor\nSEATTLE, May 13\u2014An assistant\nengineer en the ferry Crosline was\nfatally Injured by the explosion of\nan air compressor tonight, shortly\nafter the ferry left Alkt Pcint for\nManchester. The disabled, craft drifted helplessly fcr nearly two hours\nbefore  aid   IM  summoned.\nRoy A. McGUton, 35, hurled several\nfeet by the force of the blast, died\nafter he had finally been brought\nashore l^ere and was being rushed to\na hospital.\nThe explosion occurred 15 minutes\nafter   the  ferry  left  the   dock.\nTRAIL BASEBALL\nCLUB HAS DANCE\nTRAIL, B.C.. May 13. \u2014 Trail's\nBaseball club held a dance at the\nKP. hall tonight, the grand prize\nof merchandise valued at $50 going\nto George Clerihew. Miss Helen\nVellutlnl won first prize and Mrs.\nLee Forbes second in the ticket\nfelling   campaign.\nTo Serve a Year\nBAD\nINFECTION!\nTreat infection immediately\nwith \"MECCA\" OINTMENT.\nIt cleanses, purifies and brings\nquick relief and assists in\njarly recovery. Keep a tin of\n\"MECCA\" in the hous'e in case\nof emergency. \"MECCA\" Is\neconomical.\nJAIL   WOMAN   NATIONALIST\nMrs. Bar.->jlni Naidti, a Nation ..Hat\nwae eentenced to serve a year in\nBombay prison for disobey.ng an\norder restraining her from attending\nthe scheduled session of the Nation\nallst   congress   at   New   Delhi.\n(CONTINUED   FROM   PAGE  ONE)\n-'.-.nattice  on  IM ranaom note,  the:\nnewspaper said. !\nAfter Dr. Condon had conferred\nfirst with his man-presenting two\nsafety pins of peculiar design which\nthe man Identified aa safety -pin*\nused to pin the baby's blanket to\nthe crib matress^\u2014he received a note\noutlining  a  program  whtch  in  part\nmitt\nONLY  CONFER  WITH  ONE\n\"Will not allow over man to\nconfer In a way like before, Circumstances will not allow us to make\ntransfers   like   you   wish.\nIt is impossible for us. Why should\nwe move the baby and face danger\nto take ancther person to plaae Is\nentirely  out of  question.\n\"Now we will send you the sleeping suit from the baby besides It\nmean $3 extra expenses because we\nk ave to pay another one. Pleace\nteli MrB\" Lindberg note to worry\nthe baby Is well we only have to\ngive him more faod as the diet says.\n\"You are willing to pay the 7000\nnote $50,000 wlth.ut seeing the\nbaby first or note. Let us kn ;w\nabout that; we don't want another\nway. Becausa we don't like to\ngive up. If you are willing to accept\nthis deal put those In the paper.\n\u2022' 'i accept meney Is ready.' \"\nThe note said tha. within eight\nhours after t.e money was pali\nCondon would be advised where to\nfind the baby.\nThe advertl.ement was placed In\nthe paper with the added notation\n\"They w_n't let me deliver without\nget;;ng the package.\" To thla tho\nwrl.er answered that Condon knew\nthe kidnappers' program. That the\nsleeping suit had been sent and\nthat no further communications\nwould be made.\nPIIEPAUEU A YEAR AGO\nIt  added:\n\"The kidnapping oace was pre-\npavol a year ago already so the pollce will have no look in eearchlng\nfor ua and the baby. The baby is\nwell. Tell Mr. Lindbergh his search\nfor  the  baby  will  do  no  gcod.'*\nThen   another   adver.lsa.nent   wag\nIssued, asking for a 6lmple code.\n\u25a0 To this came  the reply:\n\"There ls no HM to furnish you\nwith a code. You know ouer program. There Is no ul. to delay. If\nyou dont give us the money by 8th\nApril we will add 300CK>\u00bb and Mr.\nLindbergh will have t._ 100000$ note\n70000$. We will keep the baby in\nouer   safe   plase.   \u2022    \u2022   \u2022\n\"Mr.   Lindbergh   does   n_ta   have\nto worry about the baby. The child\nia  safe.\"\nJUIHED  TO  \u00bb.0,000\nThere n\\-:t addl.i-jnal negotiations.\n\u2022f.er which the money\u2014$50,000,\ninstead cf $70,000 wa_ paid. One letter was mailed from Siatlon \"_ID\"\nat Atlantic avenue, in Brooklyn and\nanother from Station \"N,\" at 203\nWest 69th street, ln toew Yor,:.\nEach letter was addressed to \"Mr.\nDr.  John  Condon.\"\nDr. Condon received on March 8 a\nletter bearing the strange symbol\nwhich later served as the signature\nfor further communications with\nthe supposed kidnappers. The letter\nasked Dr Condon to ob.aln authorization to act as lntermeulary and\nto pay over $70,000 as ransom, an\nIncrease cf $20,000 over the sum\nasked in the original note left at\nthe Lindbergh home on the night\nor the kidnapping, according to the\nBronx  Home  News story.\nDr. Condon obtained such au-\nth:rJ-_atlon. Col. Lindbergh was said\nto have been convinced that he\nwas ln communication with the kidnappers. But Dr. Condon proceeded\ncautiously. He obialned from Col.\nand Mrs. Lindbergh two large pin*:\nwith which the baby's blanket had\nbeen fastened to the crib. He also\nlearned from Col. Lindbergh about\nthe child's favorite toys\u2014a lion,\nelephant and a dcuble-huxped camel. Col. Lindbergh said the baby\nwas able to pronounce the names\nof the.ee toys clearly.\nKriUCNOIt   HAS   TOYS\nOn the night of March 12, Dr.\nCondon met the messenger purporting to come from the kidnappers\nln Woodlawn cemetery. He carried\nwith him the three toys and the\ntwo safety pins. He showed the man\nthe pins and asked him If he knew\nwhere they came from. \"Sure I do,\"\nthe messenger said. \"They were *ui*d\nto pin  the blanket  to the crib.\"\nDr.   Condon   pleaded   to   be   taken\nto the child. He wanted to be  sure\nf   identifying   the   baby.  Tho   messenger  refused.\nTake me to the baby.\" Dr. Oon\ndon b:r\\-,d. \"You have an automobile. Take me there. You are armed\nYou could shoot me, or your friends\ncould shoot me. I will go alone with\nyou to any place. Let me see the\nchild and I will see. that you get\nyour money.\"\nThe messenger looked out on Je*\nrome avenue as though trying to\nsee some or.e ln the darkness. j\nFRIENDS   WITH   HIM i\n\"Your friend is with you?\" asked\nDr. Condon. \"Yes. I might have\nknown. Wt>y not call him? I will\ngo with both cf you. Two against\none. The only thing I want is tlie\nbaby.\"\n\"No,\" the messenger Is quoted as\nsaying. \"I must not call my friend.\nHe would kill me, and I must not\nbring you bttck with me.\"\nHe assured Dr. Condon, however,\nthat he would send him the baby's\noverall sleeping  garment.\nOn March 18, according to the\nBronx newspaper, Dr. Condon received the suit and It was Identified\nby Col. Lindbergh as the baby's.\nThen the kidnappers \"program\" was\noutlined ln a, letter and subsequently\nthe $50,000 ransom was paid over\nafter several other com municatlons\nwith, the supposed abductors.\nMRS. LINOBERGH\ntRUES  PAYMENT\nMrs. Lindbergh, lt was \u00bbitd, was\none of the first to urge payment or\nthe money. Col. Lindbergh gave Dr.\nCondon written authorl-catlon to\npay $70,000. This was the sum Dr.\nCondon   carried   with   him   to   the\nVISITORS FROM\nPRAIRIE CRASH\nBLAYLOCK GATE\nDriver Baffled by Dust;\nThree Taken to Hospital;\nOne Discharge\nMistaking the entrance to 9. O.\nBtyylock's   summer   home   as   the\nhighway when the car ahead turned In at the entrance, Ray Chambers,   (Saskatchewan   motorist,   failed  to  make  the  right-angle  turn,\nand    his   cor   plunged    into   the\ncorner   of   the    Btone    wall,    late\nThursday   night,   resulting   ln   his\nwife  and  a friend,   R.   MacDonald.\nbeing   taken   to   hospital   suffering\ncuts   about   the   face   and   limbs,\nwhile   Chambers   himself   suffered.\nbroken   ribs   and   Internal   Injury.\nThe  party were driving  to  Nelson\naft-,- a trip up the lake and Chambers  being  unaccustomed   to  British\nColumbia mountain roads and halt-\nlied by the dust could not see the\nroad asead  and when  he turned he\nwaa too late to clear the  wall. The\ncar,   a   coach,   was   badly   damaged.\nCHAMBERS    SUITERS\nHK'iKJ.N   RIBS\nAfter having her wounds dressed,\nMrs Chambers was discharged from\nthe hospital, MacDonal d who suffered lacerations about the arms,\nbody, face and throat, is recovering\nquickly while Chambers although,\nnot in a serious condition, ls showing    slight    Improvement.\nThe caretaker at Mr. Blaylock'a\nhome, who heard the crash, reporUd\nt,e accident and phoned tor a car\nin which the three were brought\nto   Nelson.\nT.hj* mo.orl.ts who have only t:en\nln \u2022 8 dHtrtt-t for a short while are\nre3lulng ln Fairview,\nin .\"i\nBOIfWY FAFJS\nFirst  Anpear Before Ma\u00abtfs-\ntrate Crowe and Reminded for Eight Days\nGRAND PORKS, B.C., May 13.\u2014\nFirst Judicial proceedings ln the\ncases of the 131 n'de Doukhobors\narrested Thursday arternoon on the\nmarch, and Jailed at Grand Porks\nln the curling rink,\u2014a number that\nwas raised to 135 when. four women who had missed connection\nwitn the arrests later wftlksd into\nthe city nnd disrobed here\u2014were\ntaken today, when all the accused\nwere brought before Stipendiary\nMagistrate A. P. Crowe, and were\nremanded for  eight day.s\nThis afternoon '. the prisoners\nwere placed ln tn- (ks and transported to Boundary Fa'ls. where\nthe road c*,mn ' ill serve as their\nJail  until  they are wanted.\nThe 135 prisoners are, 48 mer*, 48\nwomen, and 39 children, the latter   Including  four   babies.\nVoters Lists Will\nBe Revised Monday\non New Legislation\nMonday will see the usual annual ccuir of revision of the provincial voters list for Nelson riding, whlc-! 'vlll also be the first\nmonthly revision under the new\n!e-!*!l-t.on.\nUnder the rules received by John\nCartmel, regi-itrar of voters, one\nr.lphabetlcal list will be kept for\nth? whole riding, and will not be\nseparated for the two polling dlv*.\n'slon\u2014 the city prober and Pair-\nview\u2014until required for election\npurposes.\nCAPTAIN    DOLLAR    \"NO    WORSE\"\n6AN RAFAEL. Calif., May 13,\u2014Dr.\nRafael G. Dufflcy rep rted late today that Capt. Robert Dollar was\n\"no worse\" in his fight against the\nIllness which has kept him Jn bed\nat hts heme hcre Ior two weeks.\nWrapping apples ln oiled paper\nwill   prevent  their  shrinking.\ncemetery at the next meeting wit*\nthe  supposed  kidnappers.\n\"You know,*' Dr. Condon ls quoted\nas saying to the kidnappers' representative, \"the reason why there\nMM delay Is that we had a hard\ntime scraping- up money. Col. Lindbergh hasn't all the money the\nnewspapers   say   he   has.\"\n\"We will be satisfied with \u202250,000.\"\nthe messenger is said to have blurted   out,   nervously.\n\"That's fine,\" said Dr. Condon.\n\"I'll get the money for you right\naway.  Walt.\"\nHe returned to the automobile in\nwhich Col. Lindbergh was seated,\ntold dim of the developments, removed *:o,000 from the package containing the ransome money and returned with \u00bb50,000, which he pal-f\nt^ the kidnapper, according to thi\ncopyrighted   story   published   today.\nEczema\nHemorrhoids\nIrritations   *\nBecause it does post-\nrelieve tht itching almost as soon as\napplied and effects \u2022*\u00bb\nhealthful healing of tha\nslun, Dr. Chase's Ointment\nis a most satisfactory treat*\nment for Eczema, Hemor-\n^   rhoids or Piles and all\nIn box   Irritations of the skin.  Fifty\njube.  years of success.\nDr. Chase's\nOINTMENT\n >-&>\n\u2022 THE   JfELBON   DAILT   NEWS.   NELSON,   a   C.   BATIRDAT   MORMNO   MAT   11.    1533\nCRESTON RIDING\nLIBERALS WIND\nUP ASSOCIATION\nTributes Paid lo Many Stal\nwarts; Look Forward to\nNew Affiliation\nfhere was a represents tire turnout\not members of Creeton Riding Liber-\n\u25a0l s\u00absoclatlon at the meeting In\n\u2022egion ball on Friday afternoon.\nIth President Frank Putnam of\nBeaton occupying tbe chair. The\nlurpose of the meeting was to\normally wind up the affair ot the\nissoclation ln view of the merging\nif the Creston constituency with tbe\nNelson   riding.\nPresident Putnam In very prae-\nIcal terms sketched association af-\n'alrs since tbe last \"get together\"\nn November, 1030, referring to the\ni-ery oordlal relations that had alwaya existed as between the Creston\nnd of the riding and the districts\nunrounding Nelson,  and   hoped   the\nsame   cordial   feeling   would   prevail\nIn   the   new   electoral   district.\nThese sentiment*, were concurred\nIn by ex-President O. W. Humphry,\nand a number of others, while others\npresent spoke In encouraging terms\nof the splendid run Mr. Putnam\nhad made In the 1928 campaign\nand predicted Liberal successes all\nalortg the line when the next provincial contest was staged.\nPAY   TRIBUTES\nMefore tbe motion to disband was\nput, votes of thanks were tendered\nJobn Norcross and Mr. Putnam, the\nstandard-bearers Ln 1924 and 1928\nrespectively, as well as to the retiring and former officers of the ssso*\nlure! baptist\n(Eliurrl,\nThe Church With a Warm\nWelcome.\n.   Herbert W. Guscott, Minister\n11:15   a.m.\u2014-Church   Service.\nJunior Choir\n7:30   p.m. \u2014-THE   UNDYING\nFIRF..*-\nSenior  Choir\n10:30     a.m.\u2014rilCRCH     SCHOOL\nJesus   ls   Worthy   of   your   beet,\nare   you   giving   It?\nth. iJaitl'a\nUuttf-i) (Eljurrlj\nSUNDAY, MAY 15\nA-M\u2014Service  conducted  by   Session.\np-M.-*-Rev. Mr. Scott will preach.\nW.M.S will meet    n Tuesday at\n2:30 p.m.\n&t. fcauimtra\nJrn-CCalljrbrul\nWHITSUNDAT\n6:30 a.m.\u2014Holy  Communion.\n8:00  a.m.\u2014Holy   Communion\n10:30   a.m.\u2014Matins   and   Choral\nEucharist,\nSermon: \"Thc Spirit of God\nand tho Spirit of thc Age.\"\nPreacher,  the  Rector.\n7:30   p.m.\u2014Festal   Evensong.\nPreacher,  the Lord  Bishop.\nSt. 31oljtt'fl\n-Ctttiferan (Eljurrlj\n8tanley and Silica St.\n-\u2022ECIAL   PENTECOST   SERVICE\nG-ermar,  10:00  a.m.\nSunday School,  11:15 am.\n\u2022ati-llsr.   Service  2:00   p.m.\nNo   Evening   Service.\nCARU C-   JANZOW,   Pastor.\n3itrst (Eljurrlj of\n(Elitist \u00a7rirulti.l\n209 BAKER STREET\nA Branch of tho \" o'hrr Church\nThe    First    Chun'.i    ol    Christ\nScientist In Boston Msssichiisetts\nSunday  School  Op-5 a. m.\nSunday  Service  11  a.  m.\nSubject  Less---.  Sermon:\nMORTALS and IMMORTALS\nWednesday   Testimonial   Mee Ing,\n8 p. m.\nFREE    READINO    ROOM    IN\ntill mil   BUILDING\u2014\nOpen  3  to  5  Dally.\nAll  Cordially Welcome.\n\u00a9nitty\nlltittru (Eljurrlj\nnf GJanaua\nW.   C.   Mawhlnney,   Minister\n10:00   a.m.\u2014Sunday   School.\n\"1:00   a.ir.\u2014Morning   Worship.\nSubject:    'WHEN     PRAYER\nWINS.\"\nSpeaKcr:  ttev.   David   Scott.\n7:30 p.   .: Evening Worship.\nPsgeant:     \"CEREMONY   OF\nMOIIT.\"\nSoloist:  Mr*. W.  J. Waters.\nTuesday   3   p.m.   V.'.M.S.   Meeting\nTuesday   8    p.m.    Service    club.\n(Mrs. A. A. rasdln, 700 Josephine\nstreet.)\nLISTER SETTLERS\nASK REVALUATION\nON THEIR LAND\nCRESTON MASONS\nENTERTAIN WIVES\nAND LADY FRIENDS\nAsk Chan\u00ab:e in Payment of\n$65,000 Domestic Water\nSystem\nelation, which included Past presi- original settlers at Camp Lister at\ndent C- P. Hayes of Creston; O. W.1 * meeting .several months ago\nHumphry    of    South    Slocan,    ani  drafted a  100 per cent signed petl-\nCRESTON. B. C. May 13\u2014The\nmembers of Creston Masonic lodge\nwere st home to their wives and\nlady friends at bridge on Wednesday evening at the Masonic hall.\nThis ls an annual sffalr an! the\n1933 turnout of members and visitors wss ths largest on record, with\n15 tables Ln play. The guests were\nreceived   and   welcomed   ln   practical\n,.        .i    Th*   -**--*,Mon  by the master of the lo_gf.\nMay    i j.\u2014 i ne    uun_m\u00bb   *    11.. \u25a0_. \u00bb_.*..-    \u25a0_....   .*-.__  -..-\u25a0>._.\nCHESTOH,   B.    C,    jt.\u00aby    --U-. .vuilsm  L. Llttlejohn, and  the  prlM\ndinners   were   sn*n.u..ard     a*     Mrs.\nllp.pnpnr,     or    South    Slocan,    ._..   urauen   a   sits  per .,\u201e. siscrn  p.... $*%?\u00ab th,T\u00bbd!e. '.Sd Tr    J\nFrank    Frlshy.   a   (ormer   secretary,  tlon   asking   th.   Land   Settlement JJ*  2\"\"  J** ,\u201e\"  J\"41'\"*  *\u00a3J   *j__\u00a3\nalso  ot South  Slocan.  l*U-_*  tr:'-*-. board   to   send   In  .  l.nd   valuator \"\u201e.,_*; g(?_    \"\u201e_   \u201e.  \u25a0,\u201e,   i__E,   .\nut,   wU   paid   \u00ab   members   ','.   ,*\u201e  wit'    a   vle.  \u00ab<^<\u00a3\u2122>* ^\"dlu.h'.fu'T.nch \u2122\u00abS at\nexecutive  who had  passed  on since the   present   seals   of   assessments. the close of  card  play\nthe    last    \"net    toaether.\"    mention                                               \" \u25a0**\"       \">n\nthe    last    \"get    together,\"    mentloi\nbeing made or the late Dr. N. Wolver-'   another equally well aimed, asking\nton,  Chris  Oa_*isner,.and  M. pjpe,  a   tn:     the plan of repayment on the\nLiberal  stalwart  of   Harrop,\n165.000    domestic 'er    system    be\nchanged to moderate monthly charge\ninstead of the present dual purpose\nplan of t levy t so much per acre\non land and a monthly charge for\ndomestic water. A few days ago a\nM J Boyd E E Ca' - r*P*7 WEs received that consldera-\nF* Hayes. F. Putnam, *S.  u\u00b0n .*** n\u00b0*  -\u00a33   :iven_ the   ap-\nSome of those from outside poln..\nIn attendance were Matt. Hill, Wa\nneta; o. Haglund, Eric; H. Fair\nbank. Harrop: A. F. MacDonald. J.\nPrisby and O. W. Humphry, Sou;:\nSlccan\nwrlght,\nA. Sperm and H. H. Taylor of Crrs-! P\"^ticn and intimation has since\nton, all of whom were pre-wnt at:con\" that the board will Insist\nthe new riding organization meeting on P\u00bb-\u2122\u00abnU In full this year on\nin  the  evening.\nCrows Nest Pass\nFootball League\nI. Pill     wh'-* *-\nDraws Schedule wjv\nKASLO PLANS OLD\nTIME CELEBRATION\nFOR 24th OF MAY\nMASONIC GRAND\nMASTER VISITS\nCRESTON BRANCH\nCRWTON, B. C, Msy 13.\u2014Local\nmembers and visiting brethren were\nout ln large numbers on Monday\nevening for an emergent communication    of    Creston    Masonic    lodge.\nFINAL PLANS FOR\nNEW LEGION HALL\nAT NAKUSP MADE\nrxcr. -runrr.\nwinter   months\nafter   spending\nin   Nakup\nRev.  A. C.  pound  lefi  recently  to\nattend the United church\nat New Westminster.\nA meeting of tlie United ch*irri_\nLadles' aid was held at the home\nof Mre. E. c. .'ohnion Tueaday\nsfternoon. Mr*.. E. W. Bill pri L\nArrangements were marte tm tttm*\nnoon tea ar.d riouehn t salr to ha\n,  .   _ .        i>     j     .        *-\u00bb-t\"u    \u00ab4    wwivn   huuuk     .*\u25a0:.-, held In  the near future.    After  the\nspecial   C*XCUrS10n    UOat   AS-   on   the   occasion  of an   official   visit   Rev*    A   C    Pound LeaVCS  for   bumneis,    tea    was    served    by    the\nsured From Nelson;\nCrown May Queen\nii *\nof pentlcton, grand master, who\nwas accompanies by R. W. Bro. W. J.\nI McRae    of    Oolden,    district   deputy\nNew Westminster Church\nConference\nj gra nd    men ter    for    East    Kooten av,\nKASLO.   B.   Cm   May   13\u2014At   a   re- ' After the formal lodg. features were\ncent   meeting  of   the   24th   cf   May  closed   adjournment   was   taken   for\ncelebration   committees,   it   was   de-|t\nMr. and Mrs. B E. Bruhn had as\ntheir gn#st, over the weeki-nd Th\u00ab*ir\nsunt, MrB. C. Trent of Revelstoke.\nDur.ng her visit they motored to\nNel'\u25a0on.\nHel'ne     N**ubrand     arrived\nNAKl'SP, B   C.  May   IS.\u2014A  *erle<-\nof   meetings   of   the   Naku.sp   branch   Tuesday   from   Trail   where   sh\u00ab   hss\nelded   to   hold   a   real   old-fashioned LitUeJohn,   mutter  of   Creston   lodge,   of   th*   Canadian   legion   are   being   spent  the   past   few  months.\ncelebration, this in view of the  fact acting   as    toantmaster.     The    King.   n*\"ld   bere   this   week   to   make   final \t\nthat   a   special   excursion   boat   from grand lodge snd* visitors were heart-   *n-.\"*..(-.\u00ab\"*mer-*t*    for    the    Legion    hall\nNel-on had been definitely assured, lly honored, the latter bringing re- opening nest week. The poverty of the world Is wl*\nArrangements are being male for a eponses from member visitors from Mr- Holby of Calgary has been dom caused by lack of goods but\nbaseball game to be followed by a Guernsey Island Mississippi Idaho the K'-*\"1 of Mr- and Mrs **\u25a0 E. rmw Ignorance has become respect-\nfootball match, both matches to be Alberta and several points in Brit sh Brllhn f\u00ab the past few days. able.\u2014Dr. C. O. Darwin, university\nbetween Nehnn and Kaslo teams; Coumbia and a splendid Masonic MlM H\"'*'n O'brrg left on Wcdne**. by a \"money stringency.\"\u2014Henry\nthe usual e.-lldrena sports wlH be evening was enjoyed by all. The tiRy l0T h*-r hotne on thc Pr\u00bblr'\" ford in \"My Life anq Work.\"\npulled off In tbe morning at Vlmy gr\u00bb-1 master and the district dep-\npark, there will also be a softball uty will visit lodges at Cranbrook,\nmatch in the morning between the Fort Steele, Fernie and Golden\ncity and high school girls t**a.r.s. while In this area. Accompanying\nWhile st the time time there will Mr. McRae was W. Sadler, who if\nshooting for the men. At master of the lodge st Golden.\nlittle  W\u00a7t  Virginia   Hendricks!             _-__ .\n[will   be   crowned   Kaslo's    1D32   M\"? V\\f TR T>IJPP A OTC\n! Queen.   The   Kaslo   city    Band    will l.tiliv I I\\Jc_l AKJ___5\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nThe following column of social\nlews and happenings In Knssland\nIs conducted by Mrs. Bessie B. Fer-\nttison. Phone Mrs. Fer son at her\nliome tn Rossland and giver her tt-\n^alls of events of Ir \u2022\u25a0eit to thl*\nnliimn\nROSSLAND. B. C, May 13\u2014Mrs.\nArthur E. Trafford was a hostess\nat the tea hour on Wednesday at\nhe- home on Seventh avenue. Spring\nflowers forme 4 h decorations and\nMrs. G. Priest assisted the hostess\nIn caring for her guests, who\nincluded Mrs. Ernest Ingham, Mrs.\nDouglas V. Wood, Mrs. Charles Gib-\nba_ ., Mrs. J. MHUken and Mrs.\nMurdoch: McLeod. Included tn the\ncompany were little Stuart Ingham,\nFred and Olen McLeod and Miss\nPatricia Oibbard.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Hugh Henderson of Vancouver is renewing old acquaintances here \u00aba the guest of Mrs.\nW. A. EHetson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWilliam McCulloch * Park street\nleaves tonight for Victor!* where\nhe will begin hlB training as a candidate for the nrovinclril police.\n,\"Blll\" carries good wishes with\nhim from everybody.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nErie Blnckwell, wh-* underwent an\noperation for appendicitis this week\nat the Mater Mtnercordlae hospital.\nIs reported as makJng favorable progress toward  recovery.\n\u2022 \u25a0   \u2022\nMrs. Oswald \"cDougalt of Sheep\nCreek Is _he guest of Mrs, James\nFinney. Fifth       nue.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nLittle Irene Tipping, sged 5, waa\ntaken to the Mater MlsCrcordlae\nhospital suffering from a number of\nbad bruises as the result of being\ns' uck by a car driven by R. Parker.\nThi little lot bad Just started to\nrun across Wash'-gton street when\nthe accident occurred.  '\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nThe evnlng branch of the Women's auxiliary of St. Andrew's\nchurch met Tuesday evening at the\nhome of Mrs. Roi t Anderson,\nKootenay avenue.\nall charges on both and purchases\nas well as the water system.\nMORE ABOUT\nWOMEN ADIT\n(CONTIMED   fKOM   P.\\OB  ONE)\ntentiary who are awaiting\ntransportation to the coast.\nThis bunch of 247 Doukhobors has been sentenced to\na total of 741 years in the\npenitentiary, and the cases\nwere heard and disposed of\nin about 235 minutes, a record for speed.\nOn Wednesday last 31 boys\nunder 18 years of age, who\nwere in the nude at Thrums\non Sunday last, but who,\nowing to their youthfulness,\nwere not charged as were the\nadults, were shipped to the\njoys' industrial home at Co-\njuitlam. But there is still a\nlarge youthful population in\nthe jail awaiting orders to be\nsent to'some public institution at the coast.\nAt present there are eight\nboys between the ages of\neight and 18 years, 13 boys\nunder seven; 16 girls between seven and 18 years,\nand 21 girls under seven\nrears of age or a total of 58\nchildren. None of these children has been charged as\nthey are wards of the government because their parents are convicts. It is expected that the children will\nbe sent away within the next\nfew days.\n].i7 at sum ronKs\nElect Officers for Year- ___ \u25a0* cn duy '\" ,he mornln\u00bb Kni *'\"'\nTeams Represented at\nMeeting\nPARK FOR MAY\n21 CELEBRATION\nafternoon.  The  Iocs,   branch  of   the\nCanadian   Let-Ian   are   arranging   for\na dance to be held In the drill hall j \t\nln the evelng. The various com-j YMIR, B. C, May 13.\u2014Mr. Sur,\nmfttees are sparing no time or ef-, mining man of Nelson, wse a Ymir\nFERNTE, B. C. May 13 \u2014A meet- fort in the attempt to maV.e the'visitor on Wednesday. Mr. Sur Is\nIng of the Crows Nest Pass foot-! 1932 celebration one long to be re-1 planning cn doing some work on\nbsll league wis held In Fernie at Imembeicd with pleasure by all those, tr- Blackhead mine,\nwhich   delegates   from   Ccal    Creek.; who  participate  In  any  way  In  the      The    celebration    committee    are\nMr. snd Mrs. W. Norby. who have\nbeeu residing in this city for several years left this week to return\nto their former home In Saskatchewan.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMr.   and  Mrs.  Max  Woogman   ar-\nbelng on the Kaslo run.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nTtoy   Ackerman   and   family   haye\nAt Grand Forks the skating rink\n!s housing 1S7 r>[-iii\"-,*->bo-s win\nappeared ln the nude st the Graham\nrarch on Thursday. These will t>e\nup for trial In Orand Forks a*\nt.oon as a fiat arrives from the\npt.orn.**.-general's nffhe at V \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0it..\nIt was the intention of these\nnudists to mnrri. to Wel-on tn cause\na disturbance here In sympathy\nwith those already ln the Jail but\nprovincial officers nipped their\nmarch in the bud.    Local pol'ce re-\nMOTHERS' DAY\nSERVICE HELD\nFOR ELKO FOLK\nin   the   Hume   hotel   on   Thursday\nevening.\nJ. Fred Hume. Noble Blnns, Tnil;\nJ. C. Hansen, P_plar; M. M, Fry.\nNakusp; D. A. MacFarland, J. B\nHuiiter, Dr! W. O. Rose, J E. Annable. Thomas Anderson. J. A. McDonald, D. J. Robert5on. W. T.\nChoate, D. P. Kane. Kaslo; R. M.\nYulll, Boswell, D. H. B. Moirlron.\nR.    A.    Howe,    D.    Darough,    W.    J.\n      Sturgeon.    W.    M.    CuMlffe,    G.    A\nrived    yesterday    from    Calgary    and   ported   Friday   that   there   was   little   Hunter, G A. Larson, Alex   N.   Flcm-\nwill    take    up    their    residence    In    trouble     with     l.e     Orand     Forks   luff.   E.   J.   Boyce.   P.   J.   Rohal,   H.\nthis   city,   where   Mr.   Woogman   will   nudists | Bush,     Nap     Mallette,     Charles     H.\nbr   associated   with   his   brother   in       Tho?0   n(.M   ln   the   0rand   Forks   gewell,   J.   A,   Irving   Glen   J.   Mor-\nthe  cash   and   carry  business  to  be   untj&g   rink   are   made   up   of:   39   rls,  W.  E.  Morris,   D.   E.  C.  Arthur.\nlocated In the new Hend\/rsou build-   aduJt,    men;    48    adult    women;    17   B.   P-   J0J.   Fred   WillUm-s,    J.   Mc*\nIng on  Washington street. j ^^   between   the   ages   of   10   and   Phall.  A.   Wallach.  Mayor J.   P. Mor-\n___________   \u25a0_.  *!        _,     ... I*    seven    girls   between    the    ages   san,   T.   P.   Moran,   J.   T.   Brown.   A.\nMrs. Charles Brett and children ^ 1Q aDd 18; :3 b undcr t[_8 Hunden, T. B. Hall. Ed Ferguson,\nhave left for Kaslo, Mr. Brett now age of j-. *,\u25a0\u201e\u201e lrlg undff th(J w. W. Ferguson, Arthur B Gilker,\nK\"\"1\" \"\"   *1'\"  w\"\"1\" '\"\" a\u00abe of 10 and four babies. I J*   A.   Gilker,   G.   N.   Gilchrist,   John\nWOMEN TALK TO MAGISTRATE       |T. Pierre, John Blomberg, Sid   Leary,\nFridav     mornlnt-'s     cises     uttim   Nakusp;    T.   L.   Bloomer.    Castlegar;\nntful.  Fred  Irvine,  J. O. Patenaude,  L.  K.\nFernie. Michel. Corbin, Coleman | celebration\nand HlUcrest teams were present.\nAfter the financial report wa.\nread and adopted officers were\nelected as follows: Presldent-R.\nJohnstone, Coal Creek; Secretary-\nG. G. Sawyer, Fernie. Referees appointed were F. Bennett. Fernie;\nT.   Caufleld,   coal   Creek;   8.   Weaver,\nMichel; T, Mane-ell. Corbin; Fcter ELK0> B> Ci Mll, ir.,._Mrs. If.\nSmith, Coleman; H. Jepson, BUI- Grady, who has been staying with\ncrMt- I her    d ughter-ln-law,    Mrs.    J.    A.\nA schedule of the football games Grady, lor a few days, returned to\nto be played in the aeas_n 1932 was her homc ln cranbrook on Monday,\ndrawn up as follows; May ti Cole- A special church service for Mo-\nman vs, HlUcrest. May 22 Coal ther's 903 Sunday was held ln tbe\nCreek vs. Fernie; May 22 Michel vs. Flko school house by he Rev. Addy-\nCorbin; May 28 HlUcrest vs. Fernie, mnn. Miss L. Kennedy, Regtns.\nMay 29 Coal Creek vs. Michel; May g^fe, sang a beautiful solo, ac-\n29 Corbin vs. Colcmsn. June 4 companied by Mrs. A. Kennedy at\nCoieman    vs   Coal   Creek;    June    6  tlv organ.\nFernie vs. Corbin; June 6 Michel vs. Teddy Swanson was the guest of tj'\"'''*' \"c\u00ab '\nHlUcrest; June 11 Coleman vs. Cor- his sister, Mrs. J. .*. Grady Tuesday' \u2022.'.--\nbin;   June   12 Fernie   vs.  Coal   Creek,   evening.\nJune  18 HlUcrest rt. Coleman;  June.     Mrs. J. J. Millar, who for the pact\n19   Fernie  vs.  Michel;   June   28   Cor-   two   weeks,   h:is   been   the   guest   of\nbin v$. HlUcrest;   June 23 Michel va.   Mrs.   Fred   Millar,   re'\nCoal   Creek;   June   25   Coleman   vs.   home in Rampart Tuesday morning.\nFernie.   July   2   Coleman   vs.   Michel;   by train.\nJuly 3 Coal Creek vs. HlUcrest;   July |     Mr. and  Mrs. F. Doo'lng  of  Lum-\n3 Corbin vs. Fernie;  July o HlUcrest  berton   motored   to   town   this   week\nIff,  Corbin;   July   10  Michel   vs.  Fcr-  to visit the latter's brother. L. Davis .\nnie;   July   10   Coal   Creek   vs.   Cole-  and   mother,   Mrs.   Davis   of   Canal\nman;    July    16   HlUcrest     vs.     Coal   Flats.\nCreek; July 17 Femle vs. Coleman; Mr. snd Mrs. K. Macken of Aber*\nJuly 17 Corbin vs. Michel; July 24 feldie power plant, motored to town\nCorbin vs. Coal Creek; July ;.4 Tuesday evening. Mr5. Macken\nMichel vs. Coleman; July 24 Fernie stayed In town to visit Mrs. Davis\nvs.   HlUcrest;   July   30   HlUcrest   vs.   whl.e   Mr.   Macken   went   to   Fernie\non  business.\nMario Costanzo, who was confined\nto   the   Fernie   hospital   for   a   few\nday...   was   able   to   return   to   Elko\nTuesday.\nMrs. J. A. Grady and son, Donald.\nmotored   to   Fernie   Tuesday   evening\nto visit Mrs. Grady   In  the  hospital.\nCarl     Ingham,    accompanied    by\nhi.;   children,     Ella,     Tommy     and\nHIT1 H IV \\PTQ()V\",|,-,n-\">    and    MtM    Ju!\"a    Wtnaor,\n  ! Jennie, visited  his parent*, Mr.  and\nFollowing  Is  a  list   of  old   timers I Mrs.   A.   E.   Ingham,   Sheep   Moun-\nand others who attended  the second j tat;,   ranch.   Tuesday   evening.\nannual   banquet  of   the   Nels.n   and      Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Elktngton spent\ndistrict  Old  Timers  association  held j Wednesday afternoon It town motor-\nIbusy getting the park In good eon-\n[dition ro rthe sports on May 24. 1\n\u00bb ' 2 I ' nv PM on ToM-\nd*iy and Wednesday rights. On\nTuesday night a number of perennials  were  frozen.\nJ.  M.  Gill*  has been  doing some ;\nrepair work on his home here.\nRevelstoke May Have\nChange in Policing\nFEVELSTOKE,    D.C.,   May    13.\u2014Tf\nthe'   provincial    police    will    accept\na   proposition  of  \u00bb300  per  year   for\npolicing   this   city   the   change   will\nprobably   become   effective   June   1\nwhen   the   resignation   of   the   pre*.\nent   chief   constable   and   one   con-\ntable   go   Into  effect.  The   resigna-\nout  of   alleged   lack   ot\ncooperation   between   the   chief   and\nconstable.   Tr.e  city  councl   after   going   Into  the   ms'.ter   of   pro*\n\u25a0 \u25a0        \u25a0   - lt\n'   Real\nrelief\nfrom ___\nConstipatIon\n\"WHENEVER  digestive   distress   fol- well, and their food doesn't ferment\n\" lows meal-time, you can suspect   in Um stomach. Every trace of over-\nan acid condition. a-itiity    soon    disappears.    All    sour\nAcidity  affects   the   appetite.   What gas   :s  dispelled.   Stomach,   liver   snd\nfood you do eat sours In the stom- bowels    havo    a    better   chance    to\nach.    The    tongue    becomes    coated, function.\nTlie   breath   la   bad.   Sick   heart.ches If   there   Is   the   W-t   hint  cf   too\nbecome   frequent.   You   are   const.- much   ncid.  Just   take  a spoonful  of\npa ted. Phillip-*'    M.Ik    of    Magnesia    todav,\nTheee    are    danger    signals    which Bnd     for    several    days.     Feel     this\nshould    mOtm    (TO    unheeded.    Your -.weetcn    your    stomach.    Note    how\nsystem   ls   fnlrlv   shouting   Its   nc\"d arpetlte   Improves.   And   eUmlnatlo*v\nof   help;   something   to   help   remove You   will   wonder   how   anything   **o\nthe   acid   waste   and   restore   alkaline pir-issnt-tsstlng  can   be  so  promptly\nbalance.  An  anti-acid   to  offset   the effective.  50c   bottles  at drug  stores\n,.                       _ .   _,   ....    _   .....       .effect  of  too  Tic'    a  diet,   nervous- everywhere   in   the   dominion.\nt- ned   toi   her IvlnrlaI    P\u00b0llclnT    tee \"ed    It    could   ness.  excitement,  etc. Phillips'    Dental    Magnesia   Tooth-\n'**'      \u00b0         ' save    about   1700   a   year   by   the 1    Men   anrt   women   wjio   meet   this paste    guards    n-salnst    ncld-mouth;\nchange,   and   decided   to   make   the need   promptly   with   Phllll\u25a0*\u2022*\u25a0\u2022   Mil', keeps   gums   firm   and   teeth   pearly\nabove   offer.                                             of Magnesia do not suffer. They eat whit*,   (Muta   in   Cam-da.)\nMichel;  July 31 Coal Creek vs. Cor*\nbin.\nAll   games  will   be   played   on   the\nground   first   named.\nMANY PIONEERS\nATTEND BANQUET\nIng from Femle.\nMiss Annie Wallang-r of J:.ffray\n:s the guest cf Mrs. J. A. Orady\nfor a few   lays.\nMrs. T. Duncan. Fernie, spent\nWedncsday In town renew]ng old\na_-.uaint-.nces.\naction   or   FUBMCST-f   for\nCAMPAIGN   CONTKIIllTIONS   LEFA\ntaken   up   their   residence   In   thc   Magistrate Cartmel were\nhnilDA #.,. Ctvtl. _T._tt.il. Ilia* _.*..\nhouse   on   Sixth   avenu^   Just   va\ncat*J   --v   W.  Norl\nEach    and   every   woman    appearing Larson,   I.   G.   Nelson,   G.   H.   Fraser.\n,    , berore him   admitted  she had  taken A.   B.   Shannon.   Willow   Point;    Al-\n__.__. . off   her   clothing.     Tliey   were   more derman   BOM Fleming.   W.   R.   Jarvis.\nJSIS   iHf^SL.   w   S. ^!!_   talkative   than   were   the   men   who Procter;   F.   W.   Jarvis.   E.   W.   Wld-\nwere  sentenced   on   Thursdiy.    &ev- dow-jon,   John   Bell,   E.   C.   Trave1\nspending   the   winter   ln   Edmonton\nwhere> he attended the University .of  crR.   of   thfm  spoKe   ^   ^J' magl_   EclK\u201e.ood;   w.  j.  Richards,   A.  McL,\nAI berta,   ls   at   h ls   home   here   for\nthe summer holidays.\nMlsa Pearl Grieve has returned to\nher home in Frultvale after visiting with friends In this city.\nFletcher, c. I- Archibald. Charles F.\nhe ordered them away. One old McH'-trdy, A. J. Dill, W. B. BrtttfOfd,\nlady greeted the court with \"'good A. L. McCulloch, L. H. Choquette,\nmorning everybody.\" One woman, A. G. Watson, Kootenay Bay; John\nwhen sentenced, said she \"hoped J. O'Donnell, R. E. Allen. George\np tha* God waa In the penitentiary.\" W. S'eele, George Johnstone, 1-ouls\ntii\u00ab    s___i  ~m____mmZ__\\*     -,u      -u     'Another   protested   against   her   sen-   Johnstone,   J.   F.   Thompson.   J.   H.\nJ\"\"..^1'   \u201eUT\"S*>    *hQ  \u201ellM   tence on  the grounds that although   Thompaw,   A.   A.   Pritchford,   J.   C.\n\u00a3      *l.    i\u00ab?Bf   t   .L     vC   hrrC   *\"*  WR*   a\u00ab   S  was   not  guilty.   Carruthers.    Robert    Andrew.    C.    V.\nfnrnert    t_.Pvwo^   tK  L     B   \u00a3   \u00b0--0   ******  *-le   \u2122s   in   her   wed-   Gagnon,    H.   L.    Fife.    Slocan    City;\nl.Mes   \u00ab   I\u00bb in &\u00a3\u00a3\"%   fi7   dl,,f dw\u00ab and *-wth\" -n hPr blrttl-   W\"    r\"    TraTlt'    Vancouver;     Captain\n5223..-IJSf-ln-trtlinln8 ** St- day suit. They tcok their sen- James PttMma-Slli. M. P. P.. Na-\ntence with a sn.lle and several said itusp; George Ferguson, J. M. Rjc,\nthev   \"do   not care.\" Slocan City, Jack Crow, Slocan City.\nMny of the women carried young Hugh W. Robertson, C. B. Garland,\nbabies, or had by the hand, their Alderman W. R. Campion. J. Du-\nyoung daughters, The kiddles looked mont, w. E. Coles, J. Harris, A.\non, wondering, apparently, what it Jeffrys, B. C. Affleck, M. J. Var.^e-\nwis all about but keeping clear veld. J. B. Lawson. W. J. Btppunn,\nof   uniformed   officers. i D.   McGllllvray.   H.   Deschalne,   F.   A.\nKIDDIT\",  BABES  FKC | McCualg,    James    RobertA^n,    R.    W.\nO       Thursday    only    the    babies jHlnton,   Pat   Magulre,   C.   D.   KMfee\nT,.,,,   \u201e\u201e,.,   ,,. ,       .   .v. arjd   younger   children   received   foodw^od,  M   Monaghan,   A.  T.  Stephen-\n22S*.? ruS. . f^T ll    he. ^ounB  9smt  the  case was the same  Fridav.' son.      John   Cartmel.     Gerorg.    H.\n5ES5 rSSSJ7 . .   Andr*w'3( Bread and milk were the only sup-  Keeler.\n222   .2SS   \" *   \u2122*t  \u2022nJo-\u00bbW*   pile,  used   by  the   Doukhobors\nsocial   evening,   Tuesday.   Cm   enter-      ri-^   ...\nJoseph's hospital.\nROSSLAND YOUNG\nPEOPLE HOSTS TO\nEXCELSIOR CLUB\nROSSLAND,   B.   C.   Msy   13\u2014Thc\nExcelsior   Club   of     Kpiox     Churcn\n3uriit\nllrmbytrrtau\n(Eljurrli\nRe*?. J. Toungson, B.D..  Minister\nAnnable  Block Thone  8-MR\nSunday   School   10   a.m.\nMorning Service,  11  o'clock.\nSubject: \"CASTING THE NET.\"\nEvening  Service 7:30,\nSubject;     \"CHRIST    OF    THE\nCOTTAGE.\"\nBake  S\u00able and Afternoon Tea at\nthe   residence   of  Mrs.   Bart.   411\nRichard   St.  Friday,  May   20.\n\u25a0enlng, Tuesday. Cm enter-\nthe church all of t.:e young people\nwere required to register their\nnames, ages, nationality, weight,\nweakness and ambition. If all of\nthe answers did not conform strictly to the truth, it merely added to\nthe merriment of the evenln*-. After\nregistration the company were groped into classes which were supposed to be engaged In studying\ngeography, botany, music, anatomy\nhistory, and art. Various contests\nwere engaged tn, peanut In, peanut\nand coin races, singing, walking a\nchalkllne with field glasses, MM\namong   them,   and   fcfel   winners   a\nSince   thp   advent   of   the   latest  \\\\V\\[ nVV Qp WQ ITT] J\n\u25a0ucle       demonstratons,       M igMt-.ite j \u2022ttlWB1M(* V1    B*V\\\/**a\nAFRICAN HOUSE IS\nnude       demonstrat.oi.f-,      Migsl\nCartmel   1.ns   held   t'*rca coirt   m\ndons.      On   May   5   he   sentenced\ntotal of 118 Doukhobors. 34 m*n nnd 'IMPF ATTIF.I1   RRIREKY\n34 women; on May 12 he sentenced |lUl 9__tt%\\_f9A*Vt9J% hjivi i\u00bba-.jv s\n77  meu. and on Mav  1^,  52  women, \u25a0 '\t\na total of 161 men and 86 women,     i     CAPE   TOWN,   .'out:.    Africa   May\nTPOI'RI.K  SINDAY? 1*1.    'CP   cable)    For   the   first   time\nPredictions in police circles are 1 In the history or the Union of South\nthat there will be renewed trouble ' Africa, a member of the house of\namong the remaining fanatics at I r-presentatlves was Impeached to-\nThrums on Sundav. There are day on a chargB of bribery,\nnbout 200 In that vicinity who have L. Biackweli, prominent member\ndeclared they will strip off. If they cr the opposition, impeached a gov-\ndo thev will be treated as hsve rnment member, J. JI. Munnlk. and\nthe r   brothers   and   s'.'ters   lu   the   e!l\u00abrptd  him with  accepting  a bribe\nOTTAWA. May I3--A recomTend-i-\ntl_n ti^at no action lie taken at the\npresent session of parliament on tlie\nmatter of publicity for Contributions\nto campaign funds, nor on ether\nmatters li connection with the\nElec;lon act, was made to the hous-**\nof emmons today by the comn.Ut.re\non privilege., and electl.:-ns of whl*;i\ntlie chairman Is R. B. Hanson (Con*..\nYork-Sunbury),\nBALANCED\nSmoothness and Economy!\nTlie Egyptian year was divided\nInto three seasons, called the Inundation, the Sowing, and the\nHarvest.\nRheumatism\nla caused by failure of kidneys tfl\nremove uric acid poieoni from the\nblood. Gin Pills relieve by neutralizing this acid and restoTinf th\u00ab\n'.idneyi to normal action \u201460c a\nox at all drSffis.s.\nfound   themselves     pre*ented     with ; jap ' rf  \u00a3300   for  his  rervices  ln   getting\nvarying numbers of Jelly beans. Re-j    Acrommn-lMlnn st the .ail 1s nt * ; fl.      diammd      cutting      agreement\nfresliments   were   served. j premium.    B'-sirles  a regular list of ' '.hrough   parliament.\n __ [\u00ab4   .\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0- \u25a0-,--    -- -   v\u00ab   no**   j>miH.! \t\ntbe total   lat)   ropu-   CPUS f\u00bbF,NTPNCKD FOR BEING\nItRINK;   (HOOSCS   JAIL   TKRM\nSENATK   IH   F.\\VO'!Am,E [ hobors.  mak\nTO   FRAZIER   BILL   Iatt**fB 3   ' men, women and children.\n\u25a0   , I But    If    nec*ssary    sevcrnl    hundred\n\u25a0WASHINGTON, May  13.\u2014The FrB-'can   now   be   accommodated   In   tho\nzl       bill   for   a   bond   and   treasur\" | new lafff harv-e-i wtre enclosure now\nnote  Issue  to  refinance  agricultural   completed  in  the J ill  yard.\nIndebtedness   at   low    Interest   rates,       It    tl    exr-ec'ed      tint      Imbecto,.\nwas reported favorsblv t?dav bv the Porber. crulckPhenl: will be going to when he appeared befor,. Magistrate\nU.K. aenate agrlctiltural committee Brand Ports i** om-e.-tlon Witt, tfoble Blnns In police court. CHUs\nwithout a record vote. , arrasti made tbere cn Tiuirfdny.        ,ciio-e   i\\  JaU  lentgne*.\nRAII., B.C., May 13\u2014J. M. OUlis\n:d:ng (USiy to a charse of be-\ndru.-:., was fined  $27.53  or ord-\nreii to serve CO days   m Nelson Jail\nJ. B. Gray\nJeweller\nWatchmaker\nOptometrist\nWe handle \u2014 Watch\nClock, Jewellry and\nOptical   Repairs\nPromptly and\nEfficiently.\nJ. B. Gray\n. JEWELLER\n407 Baker St.      Nelson, B.C.\nPhon* 333\n. . the reason why\n'It's wise\nto choose this Six\"\n\/*\"\\NCE j-ou really study the Qie-rrolet\n^* Six, you'll know immediately why\nso many motorists are saying \"It's wiser\ntlian ever to choose this Sin\". Study the\nengine, for example. Long ago Chevrolet\npioneered the six-cylinder engine in thc\nlow price field because this type of power\nplant strikes a perfect balance of smooth\nperformance arid maximum economy. It\nis a fact that thc Chevrolet Six costs lev.\nfor gasoline, oil and upkeep than any other\nfull-size car! In addition, the Chevrolet\nSix gives you more actual horsepower in\nthc normal driving range \u2014 balanced\npower, for quick acceleration and effortless\nspeed. And this six-cylinder engine has\nbeen proved reliable by more than\n2,000,000 owners in billions of miles of\ndriving.\nAlong with its famous performance record,\nChevrolet offers you exclusive features.\nSmart Fisher Dodics, with roomy interiors\nthat invite you to stretch your legs and\nreally relax! Silent Syncro-Mcsh gear\nshifting plus Free Wheeling\u2014to mention\nonly two! Ask jour friends about thc\nChevrolet Six; come to our showrooms and\ndrive iu Remember, you can have immediate delivery of any Chevrolet model\u2014\nat new, reduced prices \u2014 and on easy\nmonthly payment terms.\nNEW CHEVROLET SIX\nPRODUCED  IN  CANADA\nNelson Transfer Co*, LtcL\nNelson., B. C*\n *\u00bb.<;\u00bb   mil\n i\t\n\u2022TIT-   NELSON   DAILY   NEK!\",   M!L90M,   D.   C,   SAIl'RDAV   MOBMNO   MAT   14,   1333s\u2014a--\u2022\u25a0\nSecret ^Places\n<_3,y Joan Sutherland\nWOMAN'S PAGE\nINSTALMENT   XX\nSYNOPSIS\nPeodor Stalre. attache of the British tmmmmf in Parii, was accused of\nthe murder of Comp*# Heuri d'Arblaye. and Oreta, wife of Ronald\nHalkett. Feodor's baft friend, had\nbeen under suspicion. Staire, 3<J\n5 ears old, end Tonl Warehun. 21,\n\u25a0daughter of Lady Alice Warei'am\nand Greu's sister, were to marry in\na lew week*. Ronald'i news pa pe.'\nwork demanded lonj hours and\nOreta wis much in the company of\nth wealthy d'Arblay*. Tonl askeJ\nStalre to escort Greta home from\nthe B.il Masque but ulic left with\nd'Arblaye\". apartment house, caught\nIn a sudden storm, when Greta\ncame running out, saying ahe shot\nd'Arblaye when he snatched ter up\nln his arm*) and started t*> carry her\ninto another room. She had forgotten her handbag. Feodor sent n_-r\nhome In a taxi, went back, wiped\nall fingerprint* from the pistol, got\nthe bag, but was hailed by the\nconcierge as he Wrta leaving. Stalre\ngave his name. Before his arrest, he\ncoached Greta by phone aa to what\nshe should say. Greta told the police\nahe did net enter d'Arblaye's apartment but was angered by his dismissing their taxi. Stalre was escorting her home when ahe remembered\nabout her br.**, w'lcli d'Arblaye had\nbeen carrying. Tonl went t0 see\nPeodor at t, e emba*isy, where he\nwaa   dealned.\n\"Nothing, darling. Do not be a,-.\nup*-et. No one could have forese.*..\nthl*.\"\n\"I suppose not.\" sh*- fa'.d drearily\n\"But go on. What happened otter\nthe commlasxlre of police came?\nWhat did   h\u00ab #\"7?\"\n\"He arrived Just before 10 and\nfluestioned rn#. Wa- d'Arblaye all\nright when  I left?  How  long did  I\nMay? Wl_y did I not wait till morning? At what hour did I arrive back\nat my flat?\u2014and half a hundred\nother question-. Then he wanted to\ncury me off to an examining magistrate, but I thought the thing had\ngone far enough, and I made hi n\nwait while I telephoned t.-.e embassy. That fl..t!*hed it. ct course, and\nI was brought here.\"\n\"Vou can claim diplomatic Immunity, of course.\" ToM said. \"Oh,\nthank   God   for   that!\"\n\"I am not a free agent In the\nmatter,\" he said, and lifting her\nhand to his lips, kls=ed it. \"The\nambassador cannot be disobeyed, so\nI have no choice whet.-er or not I\nclaim   the   privilege.\"\n\"I see. And  now?\"\n\"Now I um awaiting hu esort\nfrom England. I shall be taken\nthere and tried iu the EuglLsh courts.\nI have no choice\u2014as a member t.f\nthe diplomatic corps. I mu,.t be\ntried In my own country. It lies lithe ambassador'-* power t0 chang\"\nthis, but It would create a precedent\nthat might make grave complications  for  the future.\"\n'\"Feodor!\" Tr.e word was a cry.\n\"But you're innocent! They can't\ntake you away? You can't mean\nthat? You\"re not to be tiled? Tried\nfor   murder?\"\nHe nodded, hia face drawn but\nhis   nerve   quit\u00a9   steady.\n\"I was In d'Arblaye's flat alone\nwith him\u2014as far as anyone know =\n\u2014the last person tj see him alive. A\nfew hours afterward he wa.*. found\nshot through the heart. What c.ioice\nhave they?\"\n| '\"But they cannot\u2014it ls mad!\nC'raeyi d'Arblaye must have hnci a\ndo7rf-n enemies\u2014he was tint sort of\n\u25a0man. Feodor\u2014you have to fD nway?\nTo England? You will be under\naiTe**t   there?\"\n\"Yea. Will you come over to London, Tonl? It, would bo\u2014easier\u2014if I\nknew you were somewhere near.\"\nThe Beauty Box\nBy HELEN FOLLETT\nCurly eyelashes, ambrosial tresees,\nand lily whit\u00ab hands aren't on\u00ab bit\nmore Important than knowing how\nto cart one's ody around, stepping pretty, moving with grace-. To\nhold up tha hect, put '.he best\nfoot forward, hold the tummy flat,\nla to look better and feel better.\nThe organs of the inner sldea work\nbetter when the old backbone li\nenerg.red, stretched tall. Nerves are\nsteadier. Complenion ls clearer. Vary\ndhscult to make tha candidates for\nbeauty understand that there c\u00abn\nbe no external Improvement without\nhealth and spl' id id vitality.\nHousewives wr \u25a0 have their handi\nin water during the dry's domestic\nactivities find themselves af-Ucted\nwith painful abraslnr.s ;n the flesh\nJust above tho finger ft*Of. These\nwounds are annoying snd stubborn.\nTo treat them, cut away the dea\u201e\nskin at either side with the curved\nmanicure s.'saors and cover the cut\nwith adhesive -ster. Use mild\nsoaps and every night massage the\nhands with lanollne or a massage\ncream.\nWhen ti.e hair ls thick and\nbounces out at the rear there can\nbe a fairly short shingle with\nlonger hair concealing it. At any\nrate, thinning in some form ls\nnecessary because the soft wide wave\nmust conform with 'he outline of\nthe head, look neat  and sassy.\nSimple tincture o*. benzoin ls recommended in treatment of large\npores  unci  oily '.     After   bathing\nthe fnce with soap anu water and\nrinsing with warm water, rinse\nagain with fl bowl'iil of cold water\nto will'.\"', a few drops of simple\ntincture of benzoin have been added.\nWhen Cupid Adopts\nan Economy Budget\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nAn Authority on problems of Love and Marriage\nA hard day at the office, and a headache homeward bound. All for the\nwant of two little tablets of Aspirin!\nDon't be helplesss when you suddenly\nget a headache; carry Aspirin with\nyou. The pocket tin down't take up\nany room, but what a comfort when\nit's needed!\nFatij?ue will frequently brlnfr on a\nheadache. It lowers the vitality and\ninvites a cold. Take Aspirin and\nthrow it oft! Don't wait until you are\nmiserable. There is nothing in Aspirin\nto hurt the heart or upset the stomach\nor harm the system in any way. Your\ndoctor will tell you that! But, get\nAspirin\u2014not a substitute!\nFollow the proven directions to be\nfound inside each package.'ri.ey cover\ncold:*, sore throat, headache, toothache,: neuriti.*-, neuralgia, pciatica,\nlumbago or rheumatism, musralar\npains, and other pains and aches for\nwhich these tablets are a positive\nnntidnte, Keep your pocket tin filled\nfrom thc bottle of 100 tablets. Kvcry\ndrug store has Aspirin in bottles, as\nwell as the familiar little box.\nAspirin il made in Canada.\n\"OL\". my dear!\" her voire broke,\nnut si.e stea-lied it. aware tlm ahe\nmust not weaken him in the fice of\nthis dreadful thing. \"Of course. I\nwill come. At once. We will go to\nmy uncle',*-\u2014 mother's brother, you\nkmw. Lord St.. Maire. When d0 you\nexpect  to go?\"\n\"Perhaps tonight. Certainly tomorrow. A couple of C. I. D. men\nhave   been   telegraphed   for.\"\n\"And you will be treated as nn\nordinary prisoner, once you get to\nEngland?\"\n\"Ye1*. That does not matter!\"\n\"It Is only here you are privilege .'\u25a0\n\"That l.i all. Don't look like that,\nmy dnrling\"\n\u2022Then\"\u2014Toni's voice trembled In\nspite of fl.l her willpower\u2014\"then\ncan we be married, Fcoclor, before\nyou Ml Would they let me marry\nyou here, today? Would the ambassador\u2014?\" She did not finish her\nsen.ence for Feodor ciuifeht her ln\nhla arms, pressed h\\n lips to hers.\nand the tears su'lrtenly ran down\nhis face and mingled wltn his kisses.\n\"Oh. my flear\u2014my darling\u2014my\nlittle   Tonl!\"\nFor the moment her loving loyalty\nhad unmanned him, then as fiercely\na. he had held her he released her,\npressing hts -clenched lniuls against\nnls eyes, and when a minute Liter\nhe locked up lie was abie  to smile,\n\"You darling!\" he fiald ui.stp-_.lUy.\n\"Dp. you think it 20 ambassador.\npcrmlucd such a thing I would\nagree? Do you think I would let\nyou make such a sacrifice?\"\n\"There would br. no sicrlfice, 1\nlove you  ... I want you!\"\n'llicro  was  a  fierce   throb  of p;\nThe department of commerce ln\nWashiest on. ln Ita survey of national affairs, has not overlooked\nromance. The little blind god\nCupid Is feelint the effects of\n.,_    --nn; \u2022-18   Wverc-\nly. He eeerrs to have laid aside\nhi* bow and arrow temporarily, and\nfolded bis wings for th, time being.\nIf on* mutton chop will do for\ntwo, Cupid knowa somethinj about\nlt.\nNot only hu the number of\nmarriaires fallen off steadily since\nthe slock market crash of the\nautumn of 1920, a-ut there are\nfewer babies born since the boom\ntimes, according to Dr. Timothy P\nMurphy, head of the bureau of vita'.\nstatistics, But, ai the cheerful one*\"\nremind us. no cloud Is without it's\nsilver Mnlng. and if there are fewer\nmar gas and fewer bablea, there\nare  also fewer divorces.\nPeople tre ao busy thew days\nmftJclng one dollar do the work of\ntwo that they do not have time\nto look for the crumpled leaves\nof matrimony. Hard times bring\nout sterling virtues. We have become   like   people   making   a   abort\ncut on a railroad trestle: we've got\nto watch our step, and beat the\ntrain to a safe laadlng. The little\nIrritating mannerisms of the man\nor woman trudging along bea.d\u00ab us\ncease to irritate. We've got to get\n' \u25a0 t '1 cd res tt'_ng\nand overwhelms.\nPractically    every    state    ln    th*\ntmlon, except Nevada, experienced a\nslump In divorces laat year as compared  with  1930 and   1929,  the last\n\u25a0\u2022i-' _ .  ..    .e?vs       -ri\nNevada, with Its new six we_ks*\n-esldence law, the divorce mills at\nReno nnd elsewhere **round to\npiece1* 52P0 marriages In 1931, en\ntncrea.<-e of more than 100 per cent\nover 1P30, and nearly 110 per cent\nover   1929.\nStrangey enough, with all this\nsevering of the bonds, marriages\ntncreasecl ln Nevada at the same\ntime d Ivor *\u2022*.*\u25a0. were booming. This\nwbs due primarily to California's\n_lv -day declaratlon-of-lntent law,\nand the utt:nR Into effect of similar legislation In nearby Idaho, Wyoming and Colorado, whtch sent up\nthe precentage of Nevada marriagei\n15 points.\nThere's an Art in Choosing Becoming, Shoes\nWomen, ss a whole, ara very s*n-\nslble  about  the shot}  they  wear.\nI don'fc mean they 9mm flat heels,\nor unbecoming styles that have only\na healthy recommendation. I do\n.mean that lr.oreaslnK numbers of\nwomen know what kinds of shoes\nthey are most comfortable la\u2014and\nbuy those.\nPumps probably are the handsomest shoes ever seen anywhere.\nBut a lot of women should never\neven loot the them. They demand\na fairly well-shaped foot that haa\nnever  been  abused.\nPumps high-light imperfections,\nsuch, aa bunions. They are hard\nsledding on feet that have calluses or aoft corn* between toes. Tliey\nput a real strain on any but well-\nshaped feet. Others have to hold\nthem  ou   by   straining   toes.\nIf you have any trouble with\nyour feet, try some of the strapped\nsandals, or better yet, a one, or two,\nor three-eyelet oxford. They come\nIn suave, dainty styles' and they\nrest the  feet.\nHere are a few beauty rules for\nfoot chic:\n1.  If your foot Is wide, try om\nof   the   T-strap   sandals   Instead\none wi'h Juat an ankle strap.\n3. If your foot Ls fat, don't wear\ntoo-open an evening sandal. If youi\nfoot hangs off and out of your shoe,\nIt  can't  loc:   pretty.\n3. He aure that your heel\nJust the height that give you th\u00ab\nbest balanoe. Borne women\nmore comfortably with a medlim\nhigh heel, others with a low one\nstill others with a very high one\nTry out different heights and g<\nth*, one that gives you the grace \u2022\nproper balanoe.\nMary's Grown-Up Now!\nHOLLYWOOD. May 13. \u2014 Mary\nPlcklord's next picture will be strongly reminiscent o ft he old-time vehicles which made her known as the\n\u2022ereen'i moat popular acrtess\u2014except\nthat Mary will appear as a grownup instead of a child.\n\u25a0 That fact was disclosed to me by\nFrances Marlon, her scenario writer,\njust before she left for New York to\njoin Mlaa Pickford. Miss Marlon haa\nbeen working for some time on this\nnew story for \"America's sweetheart\"\nand now has it developed to such a\npoint that she must confer with\nMary before adding roe final touches.\nMary went to New Ycrk on a\ncombination business and shopping\ntrip Immediately after she gave\nDouglas Fairbanks a big send-off for\nhis South seaa voyage. She will remain there Until final plana for the\nproduction of her film have been\ncompleted, which probably will M\nsometime next month.\n*\u00bb \u2022 \u2022\nWhile we have no title for ths\nstory as yet, lt will be so homely In\nlta itmctre  and   philosophy   C'.iat  it\nea-uld be \"Carrot*\" or something like\nthit.\" Mi's Marlon declared,\n'The b*?st wa yto classify the\nstory Is to .state that lt will be a\nhuman Interest offering of a strong\ndramatic nature. Yet It lends ttatU\nto the Injection of plenty of natural\ne-vredy of the type f'.r which MlM\nPickford is best suited.\"\nTlie forthcoming film will mark\nMary's first appearance on the silver\nscreen ln more than a year. and\nthe star feels that It will surpass\nrer recent \"modernlMd\" pictures\nin that It will nppeal strongly to\nchildren. wh0 have comorised a\nhrge portion of her audiences la the\npast.\nMary herself, however, wlfi appear as an adult\u2014the child roles\nhaving gone by the boards when her\nfa mou s c urla || ve wa y to bobbed\ntresses.\nYet, for MM reason. Mary In recent years has not enjoyed the popularity w.-lch was hers while she\natlll was adroned with those lonj,\n\u25a0\"-olden curls.\nCranbrook Ladies\nLeave for Verno\" [\nAnswers by\nBeatrice\nShe's Paying for a Joy-\nRide Car\nDEAR MISS FAIRFAX:\nCall me an Idiot lf you like, for\nI   am   one.   My   husband   and   I\n'\u25a0-arrle.1   with    the   uriderstindlng\nthat   both   would   keep   our   Jobs\nUH tkiiee got better.   I had some\nmoney   saved,   and   much   against\nmy better Judgment Will persuid-\ncd me to buy a car, on which I'm\natlll   paying.   After   Christmas   t^c\nwas laid off and I, by doing extra\nwork In the evenings for my firm,\nmanage to.keep up  the payments\non  the car.   But Instead of looking for a Job,  my  husband  takes\nout en old sweetheart  almost  every     day.     My  brother     actually\ncaught them lunching together at\na  tea  room  about   18   miles  from\nour city.   I feel pretty bitter working   nights   to   pay   for   a   car   in\nwhich another woman enjoys herself.   I ju&t don't see my way out.\nJOYCE  L.   B.\nI don't wonder  you  feel  bitterly.\nand   don't   delay   Rno-ti.-.er   24   hours\nbefore   yoji   take  stops,   M.iKe   whatever financial arrangements you can\nabout the car.   Get the company to\ntake  It back, or  make  you  any  allowance   they   will,   but   get   rid   of\nthat   \"sweet   chariot.\"   And   give   up\nworking for your firm  of evenings.\nYou're   entitled   to   rest   after   the\ndny'a   work.   And   I'd   have   a   little\nconversation   with   friend   husband.\nKeep  your temper;   don't storm and\nrave;    but   question   his   ef forte   at\nlooking f.r a job by taking an old\nsweea.eart out to lunch, which Impresses  me  as  a  rather  roundabout\nmethod.   I'm afraid you've been too\nea*-y .and that young man of yours\n'..as   taken   advantage   of   It.   Don't\ncall yourself aud \"idiot.\"   Sell yourself   the  Idea  that  you're  sensible,\nand act accordingly.\nMrs. Meade will not make the move\nimmediately.\nThe   Sinclair   Girls'   club   of   the\nPresbyterian church enjoyed an out*\nTo Attend Convention;   Pro*\nvincial Police Secretary\nTransferred\nCnANBHOOK, B. C, Mny 13.\u2014Mrs\nfew   tables   of   bridge   on   Saturday\nevening in honor of Mrs. Chrystnl of   cleared  practically  to the   1600-yard\nhen they hud supper at the MacKinnon summer cottage th**re. Mlsa\nMarlon MacKinnon nnd Miss Nancy\nMcCrlndle   motored   the   group   out.\nA number of *he more enthusiastic\npt**mbers of the newly formed\nCivilian ktt_| asaof .\"-Ion held a bee\nat the site chosen for tho new\nranges when va ous degrees of\nwoodcraft were exhibited and the\ncourse cleared f \u00abulte a bit of the\nbnifih   and   timber,    \"he   range w:is\nCarstnlrs,   who   was   the   truest   of\nMr*. H.  I.  Large.\nMrs. B. O. Hamilton of Invermere and Mrs. Smith of Bdgewater\nwere in the city Tuesday en route\nI for  Vfrnon   where   they  will  attend\nUM.\nMrs. Heartley of Fernie is visiting\nMrs. Mitchell of T nmberton for a\nfew days.\n\" meeting of the tennis club executive wn.s held on the club property   Wednesday   to   decide   on   thc\n, thc AiiBllcan W. A. convention. Mn\n.sinn  in her voice-, but he aBOSk his ! F   v   Hirrlson went n.s the delegate\" exact   site   for   the   nrv    clubhouse\n!:<    I,   ..'i-i   &..c   made  a  great  effort j frnm ttle  cranbrook church. so that building may b-  commenced\nO.   W.   Meade,   secsctary   In   the \"   '* -*'-\\\nprovinc al    police    office   here,   haa Mrs. Manning and Mra.  Coe were\nreceived   word   of   hia   transfer   to tea hostesses nt  the  fortnightly tea\nthe  office  of  tht  I\u00b0rc\u00ab  *  Ashcroft nt.  the   golf   club  Wednesday   afttr-\nand leaves Monday for his new post. noon.\nto Itaa-tif  lirr.-elr.  for  hi.,  take\n\"I'm hurting you,\" she -said, \"mak-\nISf It harder. PorgtTl mc. Dearer,\nI'm alwaya your-, to the lust breath\nOt life, and I want you to be quite\n| sure of that; I will come to Engln.nl\nat ence\u2014tomorrow, lf you go, and I\nshall fltny at my tmcie'a if lie cm\n| have me\u2014Lord .Ht. Maire\u2014you kmw\ni the pftdAlM-h 100 Gro~venor street.\n! You w'.'.l retain Travcrs Slnclalre, al\ni Ciunj-el, won't you? He's thc besi\nj mnn. Will they allow ball?\"\n!    \"I do not ll.lnk  *\u00bb on so grave a\n\" clinr^e.   Bless   y;iu,\nI -yes,   I   Khali   gr;\nASPIRIN\n(TRADE-MARK REQ.\nVassar's Cash Meat Market\nHcioOD BUYING for SATURDAY\nCREAMERY BUTTER ro.\n3 Pounds for   \"OL\nI'URE LARD 1 n(.\n1 Pound Carton?, Per pound   \u25a0\nCHEESE, Real Old Nippy OOn\nPer Pound    ou*-\nHAMBURG STEAK, Fresh .Mado Ol\"-,,\n3 Pounds    ^\u00b0^\nFRESH PORK SPARE RIBS 9\"*.p\n3 Pounds    *\"tM-\nFRESH SLICED BREAKFAST BACON 1 Q0\nPer Pound    \u25a0*-\u00b0*-\nCHOICE STEER\nBEEF\nGood Pot Roast\nPer Pound \t\nBlade Rib Roasi\nPer Pound\t\nBoneless Pot Roast\nPer Pound ...\nChoice T. Bone RoastOK-\nPer Pound ^OVj\n10c\n13c\n16c\nVEAL-PORK\n20c\nVeal Shoulder Roast 1 Cp\nPer Pound  Ll)^\nVeal Steaks\n?er Pound    ..\nTork Loin Roast     1 lt\u00ab\nPer Pound  *\u00b0^\nPork Shoulder Roast 1 Op\n\u00b0er Pound **fc\nSwift's Werners\nPer Pound\n20c\nBreakfast Sausages 1 ftp\nPer Pound LV^ ,\nBoiled Ham, Sliced Q\"*,\u00abl TottaRe Rolls 0\"_\/\u00bb  fift\/.\nP\u00abpT_i__ OJt i __u OOt\u00ab out\n''eamealed Back Bacon\nSliced O^pf*\n\u2022\u00bb._ Pound L0L\nPer Pound\nra.h\nON TXT\u00bb. AIR T-\u00ab\u00bb'*'*-'WT\nTonl, my doling\nTravcrs Sinclair.\n\u25a0re Is one t&_&| 1 want to tt%,\ntht thnt la how GreU le? I'm\nafratf she ha*, been  upset.\"\n\"She was h<iTi..ccl when Blic\n! irnii\/cd wli.it her fn'.ly had ciiised.\ni The pollce qucft.wmcd her very clo^e-\nt ly y.'**'erday before a Juge d'ln*\ni e.nicUon.\"\nUM 9tm Feodor's QUloUy chcckel\n.-tan, but at the moment thought it\nmeant only dl\/*m*y at Greta's pre-\ndlcament, although rtw waa to re-\nir.rmbcr it la-ev. His voice, however,\nw.is calm. Tj play his part properly\nIt vas Moaaaary that he should bo\nf-urpriwd   at   the   new.--.\n\"Bffore a juge d'iustructlon? Greta?   Why?\"\n\"Becau.*>e she bid been seen t.\nleave the ball with d'Arblaye, oe-\n! cnuse they were known to have\nbeen much together. I suppose he\n, heard thc result of your t_ite.->tlon-\n1 li.tr. and s.e V*U dl-*mi.**--cd. .She wis\n1 tatrl&lf di.-stresMtl for you, but very\nplucky! She insists that you went\n1 back only for the bag, .-ml that you\n! w.-uld not dream of Injuring d'Arblaye.\"\nA taMk on the d~or startler!\nthem both, and Tout clung to him\n! m aUraia for a moment, then\ni Feodor called; \"Come ln.\" and trie\nI SUM ycUttg secretary who had\n\u25a0brought   her,   nppcarcd.\n\"I a_B W| priGr: y.\" he si id, \"but\nI have to. Interrupt you. Ills excellency   wi.si.e_i   to see   >*ju,  Mr. Stalre.\n' i .Tn 11 taka you t. I .tn..\"\nj \"1 thai! be kept informed of what\nil* h.^ppcuing'.\" she  asked, and _Na>\ndor  nodded.\n\"Yew. wlihout fall;\" then suddenly\nI itgardlaaa   of    the    younger    mini's\nprose rue. he caught her ln his anin\njand held her cloe-e for a long em-\n: biace, and turning on his heel went\n\u25a0 out of the room, followed by t.ie\nother . . .\n\u25a0 It f=ce.r.e-l to- Tonl that the n?*tt\nInr days were a nightmare of horror, almost unbearable. Lord St.\nM.ilre a tall, Brny-halrerl man, a 'ear\nhis sister's s'-nior, with her da:k\neyes   aii.i   charming   smile,   welcomed\nSATIKOAV, MAY It\nM.C   T-ROGIUMS\nG:00-~Itythm Vendors\u2014orchestra direction Jess Norman.    KPO, KGA,\nK.m.\n6:00\u2014Dance Hour\u2014with Walter\nWine el . P.' a N. Y. 1. KGO\nKHQ.  KOMO,   KGW,  KFI, KSL.\n6:45\u2014Cee*' and Sally\u2014comic strip\nof  the   air.    KPO,   KGA, KJH.\n7:00\u2014Ainne 'n' Andy\u2014Prom UtUoa\u00abU\nto KGO, KHQ, KOI O, KGW, KFI.\nKSL.\n7 -oo\u2014Cheer.. I -eaderr \u2014 vocal trio.\nKPO. KGA. KJH.\n7:15\u2014prnoram\u2014Ouest speakers; Bar-\nhnra Blinchard. sopmno; Eva\nGrunlnfjer. contralto; Br-n Klasp-\nen. Myron Niealeja -tenors; Everett\nFoster, baritone; Harry Stanton,\nbass; orchet>t.ra direction Em 11 Po-\nlak,   KGO, KFI.\nT:1I Jaaij Crawford, offantrt. From\nM. Y. to KPO*. KGA, KJR, KEX.\n7:30\u2014Piano Moods\u2014Lee Sims, pianist- Ilomny Bailey, soprano. Prom\nChlcagf  ta KPO. KGA. KJR.\n7 ;45_xed Cook r*-d Orchestn \u2014\nFrom Chicago to KPO, KGA, KJR.\n\" 5\u2014Alvlno Hey's Rvthmadors.\ndance orcher-trn. KGO. KGW, KFI.\n8:00\u2014Loi '-allitos\u2014The Arjentlne\nTrio.    KGO, KOW.\n8:00\u2014 Ralph Kirbery-The Dream\nBlnuer. From N. Y. to KPO, KGA,\nKJR. KEX.\n8:06\u2014Johnnie Hamp's oKhaatn. \u2014-\nFrom N. Y. to KPO, KGA, KJR,\nKEX\nKGA. KJR, KEX, KSL, KOA.\n11 ;0&\u2014Carol Lofnei's orchestra, KGO\nII :0O^\u2014South   Amerlcn-s\u2014 Dance   or-\nch-ytui.    KPO,  KGA.   KEX.\n11:30--Organ concert-Dollo Sargent,\norganist,  KPO,   KGA,  KEX.\n13:00\u2014Organ  Re-iUl\u2014Dollo  Sargent,\nKGO,   KPI.\nKYI   \u2014   TACOMA\n\".K0   K IftOtt   W Mj   M\n6:00\u2014Music That ratlafles\n6:1s\u2014Public  Affairs\nfl:4.,--The   Street   Singer\n7:00\u2014Don  Redman's orchestra\n7:30\u2014Quarter   Hour\nP :00\u2014Th    Merrymakers\n9:4.*.\u2014Studio program\n10:00\u2014Anson Wrek's orchestra\n11:00\u2014HI-Liner.,   from   Spanish\nCastle\n11:30\u2014 Henry Hahtead and orchestra\nKSL \u2014HALT  U|l   CITY\n113(1   K MM  \\\\ MU  M\n140\u2014The Royal \u00bbV\u00ab- dlers\n8:15\u2014Prircillft  of New England\n8:30\u2014Musical  program\nA:00\u2014Popular  music\nfl :S0\u2014Dance   music\n10:00\u2014cocoanut  Grove  orchestra\nHe Wants Her to Run\nWay\nDEAR MISS FAIRFAX:\nI've  been  a  constant   reader  of\nyour   column   for   quite   a   wh!\"\nmd   now  I'm  coming   to  you        |\nsome   advice   about   a   problem\nmy own.   I am  is years of  a.,\nan-l    have    been    keeping    steady\ncompany   with   a   certain    young\nman for abr.ut six months.   He ls\n15   ye_rs   old.   Now   the   problem\nll thla;\nHe nskfl me to marry him constancy, \u00bbnd Is madly ln love with\nme, but my folks don't approve of\nme going out with him. Mother\nbu even asked me to give him up,\nand Dad doesn't speak to him \u2022\nwhen _.e calls on me. He told me\nhe loves me enough to overlook\nthese things, and promises he'll\n\u00ab3o all In hla p^wer to make me\nhappy. We had planned on getting eecreUy m.trrled May 20. The\n.*4]H will prob.ibly disown me if\nI marry. Do you think I'll be\n\u25a0rippy, or do you think I'm too\nyoung to think abcut getting married?\nMy parerrs were wonderful to\nM before 1 met this man. Shall\nI break up wlta him to satisfy\nthrni? BOOTS.\nEighteen Is too young to marry ln\nthc I.vre of parental objections, my\ndear. And why d0 your pao-cnta object? You didn't tell me. Is he\nJohicsx? is he one mere victim of\nthe prohibition farce? Is it a question of difference in religions? I\ncan't IdTlN you until you tell me a\nlittle more. Meantime, as I've said.\n18 is pretty young to take the bit\nyour teeth and run away.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy  LAU.-i   A.   K1BKMAN\nTOMORROWS   MENU\nBreakfast\nGrapefruit\nCereal\nFrench Toast\nCofrea\nDinner\nSirup\nFruit Cocktail\nFricassc.d Fowl with Dumplings\nPotatoes Beets\nLettuce Salad,\nCocoanut Dainty Coffee\nSupper\nCelery\nCreamed Dried Beef\non Toast\nJelly Doughnuts Berries\nCocoa\nTHE ANT PROBLEM\n\"How csn I rid my house of ants?\"\nasks a letter friend. For Red Ants\nsmear a .late thickly with lard and\nleave Jt overnight where the ante\ncongregate; next day, destroy the\npests which have cecum ulated\n(caught in the sticky lard) by immersing ln boiling water.\nRed or Black Ants are exterminated\nln tha following wa-'s: 1. Sprinkle\ntheir runways with anuff or with\ncedar oil or with red pepper or with\ntansy or pennyroyal leaves, or else\nwith a mixture of one part sugar\nand two parts borax. 3. Inject kerosene oil or a five percent solution\nor carbolic acid (poison) Into all\ncracks. 3. Saturate a coarse sponge\nwith a sugary sirup, equeese it partly dry, then tie it to the end of a\nstring; place it where the ants are\nthickest, ana n\u00ab soon as the sponge\nls filled with the pest, lift sponge by,\ntha atflng and drop it Into bolllm\nwater. 4. Store all foods on table* o\nshelves which have Wielr legs set li\nbasins ef water wltn a film of ker\nosene oil floating on the surface, re\nnewing this water and oil often. 8\nSprinkle cake crumbs or coarse at\non the floor and watch to see wl\nthe ants carry these particles of\nin this way you can tra***e them t<\ntheir nests and then pour kerosen\nor boiling water into these nes*-., thu\nexterminating the aexmrage at lt\nsource. Red ante frequently nest li\nfloors and partitions, but kerosen\nor carbolic acid solution can be pour\ned into such cracks and crannies\nwith the help of a spring-bottom oi\ncan which has a long, curved noral*\nWhite Ants art not true ants, bu\nare the most destructive of all. Th.\nonly way to ml with them success\nfully la to fumigate the premises wltr\nhydrocyanlc r<-'1 gas which, of cours\nhas to be done by an expert at fum'\nlgattng.\nAir-condition in j equipment hai\nbeen installed In quail broodei\nhouses on a game farm ln Virginia\nto safeguard the young quail agains\ncolds  and  pneumonia.\n'ss^iuMhs\niow pnictr A\nHlop thinking that you \"cant\nafford it.\" The cost of a modern\nbathroom Is \"way.\" way down.\nL*'.iccialJy ir the B.C. Plombing\n. Heating Co. does the Job la\nIts   usual   quality   manner.\nREMEMBER!\nI'm your Bathtub twice a week-\nsee your Plumr* r at leant twice\na year. Keep your Plumbing ln\norder.\nB.C. Plumbing &\nHeating Co.\n308   Itaker   St. phone  181\nAuxiliary Exchange\nSuccess at Rossland\nKNX  \u2014  HOLLYWOOD\nK r*non \\\\ ajaM\nROSSLAND,    B.    C,     May     13\u2014A\nmeellng of the Women's Auxiliary to\nthe Canadian Legion was held Monday evening, the president Mrs. O.\nW, Blnks, presiding. The committee\nln charge of the women's exchange\nreported that the first day had\nbeen a success and prospects were\nmost promising. The exchange will\nbe hel-j twice a month after this.\non the Thursday following each\npp.y d-y, the next to be held on\nMay 26. A letter requstlng a con-\ntrltu\u00ab..a to the Rossland Swimming pool fund was laid over until the next meeting. Refreshments\nwere   served.\niiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiitiiiniiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiitiiiiiiiiniMii:\nSee Our Windows\nSPRING   COATS   reduced   prices\nmarked. Just received\u2014ISO Silk Dress-\nyouPrte.ic.a.de.s. $5.95and $4.95\nTHE NEW SUMMER HATS fljl QK\nPanamas. Special Cl.VO\nCELANESE SILK VOILES $1 1Q\n36 inch wide. Yard  \u2022*\u2022*_\u00bb\nMAN FLOOR\nLADIES' VOILE and CAMBIC FAN.\nCY NIGHTGOWNS Specially priced\nfor Saturday.\n99c, $1.19and $1.69\nLADIES' VOILE STEP INS COp\nLarge Sizes Reg to $1.75 Sat. .. OUK'\nNever lnve we displayed such a lovely assortment ot Spring and\nSummer New  Goods.  Luger stock:  than- ever.  Do your shopping\nwhere the new goods are on display.\nRamsden Bros.\nSmart Shoppe for Smart Women\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nPASSMORE NOTES'\nMM\n8:00\u2014Laugh   Parade\n9.00-\u2014Newa  Items\n9:lb~ KNX Ensemble\n0:30\u2014Ethel   Duncan\nin:0O\u2014Jncki^ Taylor and  his orch\n!:30-Tl.-\u00bb   Dlnglebniders - comedy   \u00bb\u2022\u00ab\u2022-\u2022\u00bb\u00bb H\u2122ell, Hocha Muchacho\nserial.    KPO.  KJR, KEX.\nmn\n8:30- Spotlight Revue The Co-\nqueues, vecal trio; Annette Hast-\nIni*-*-, Marjorie Primley, Imelda\nMnnt-iEiie; Cyrol Four, male quartet- Max W.ilzman, Monroe Upton,\nHarold Peary. Bobbe Deatie. rapt.\nWilliam H. Rovl Bennlc Walker,\nCecil Underwood, riister of ceremonies- orchestra direction Walter\nBfban. KOO. KHQ, KOMO, KOW,\nKFT.\n8:4.1\u2014Manhattan Serenaders\u2014 Marsden Argall, baritone; orrhestra. direction Jess Norman, KPO, KGA,\nKJR. KEX.\n0 \u25a0*-.[}\u2014The Tu- rdsmen, male quartet.    KPO,  KGA, \"*TR.\nTonl and Lady Alice  to his home in   10:00\u2014 Piano    Pictures\u2014 Allan   Pealy   12:00\u2014Desert   caravan\nOr*;svenor   street,   t irbode   to   men-     flnd   phyilida   Ashley,   piano   duo.\ntlon   one   word   of   the   tragic 'reason I     KOO. KOW.\nthat    had    brought    them    over    to  io:00--E_ '   \"-Uirtnett's   orchestra.   \u2014\nKHIC ~- SAN IR \\N( |Sf o\nK 1\"<M>   W 4D1.5   M\n8:00\u2014Lomburdo's orchestra\n8:15-Ch(indu\n1:30\u2014Harold   Stern's   orchestra\n8;\u00ab\u2014Adventures of Bart and Mike\n9:00\u2014 Merrymakers\n9:4.*)\u2014studio profram\n10:00\u2014AiiFon   Wrek's   orchestra\n11:00\u2014Henry Hftlstead  and  orchestra\n12:00\u2014Vaga' ^nd cf the Air\nPASSMORE, B. C, May 13.\u2014Mra.\nN. S. H0Usto& nnd son Harding\nwere  weel.-end  visitors   to  Nelson.\nI Mr and Mrs. Ward of valllcan\nw.Te   visitors   here   on   \"u .day.   the\n| tyttn   of   Mr.   and . Mra,   William\nI Young.\nOf thc 3,u00,000 children with 1m-\npaired hearinRs In the United Btites,\nless than 20,000 are in schools and\nclassea for the deaf.\nl-UKE FOOD PRODUCTS\nWeek-End Specials on\nGovernment Inspected Meat\nFine Steer Beef\nChoice .foiling _!eet \"jOp\na pound  AUC\nChoice Pot      1 9p 1 lp\nRoast a lb.    J-*\"v' \u2022L*l\/\nChoice Rib Roast    1 \"7\u00ab\na pound \t\nPrime Rib Rolled\na pound \t\nFresh Minced SteakOKp\n2 pounds for .... **uv'\nFresh Beef Dripping\n8 pounds 2'lf\"\n25c\nfor\nj London, and binaatt took hi* .tlece\nup to the big lfre-llt room on the\ni sec\/nd flonr. He dismissal a maid.\n: who was unpacking, till Tonl should j\ni have had a re.t. \\\n'TO   W   (ONTIMKI), |\nFrom   L.   A.   to   KPO,   KOA,   KJR,\nKEX.\n10:30\u2014Musical    Ec\"       \u2014Mary   Wood,\nsoprano.    KGO,   KOW.\n10 30\u2014Around   the   Netvork. ' Prom\nKGIIl,   Eutte,   Montana   to   KPO.\nKHQ \u2014 IPOKAK1\nBM I moo w 508.\u25a0;  M\n7:15--\"Chandu\"\n8:00\u2014Trio\n1:0o\u2014Fran. Morton's orchestra\ntJOR \u2014 VANCOUVER\n1210   K Ml   W 247.8   M\n6:30\u2014News Flashes\n6:4S\u2014Musical   program\n7 \"\"    Piano   Rambllnfts     .\n.7:48\u2014Two   T,'l   Fellnrs\n8:00\u2014Old Country Football Results\n8:15\u2014Ladd,e WaLkla\nI\njr DODD'S '\n5KIDNEY\n^ PILLS _\n,  y* kionlv \u00b0\n1,\\.   ap.nAr_\u201ecP\"'.L'*'\nGrain Fed Pork\nPrime Shoulder\nRoasts\na pound \t\nPrime Leg Roasts\na pound \t\nPrime Loin Roasts\na pound \t\nFresh Spare Ribs\n1 pound \t\nFresh Pigs Feet\n3 pounds for ....\nFresh Pork Sausage OK\/i\n2 pounds for .... *\"ul\/\n12c\n18c\n16c\n10c\n25c\nEXTRA SPECIALS\nPICNIC HAMS, While They Last\na pound\t\nSWEET PICKLED COTTAGE ROLLS\na pound \t\nNEW LAID EGGS, Pullet Extras\n2 dozen for \t\nFRESH KILLED FOWL\na pound \t\nLOCAL VEAL SHOULDER ROASTS    1gc   IO-\nTIP TOP CREAMERY BUTTER\t\n3 iiounds for \t\n14c\n15c\n25c\n18c\n70c\n<11.\\L1TY        \u2014        (LEANtfSESS \u2014        SERVICE\nBURNS * CO.. LTD.\nTIIONE  50\nWest Kootenay Butcherteria\n iiiMMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiin\nGood Shoes\nat\n\u00a9\nR, Andrew & Co.\nLeaden in Foot Fashion\nIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIinillMMIlllllUI\nACOB B. SPIES,\nFATHER MRS. ALLEN\nMERRY, TRAIL, DIES\nS TRAIL, B.C., May 13.\u2014Mrs. 'Allen\nerry of Annable has received the\nws of the death of her rather\ncob fl. Spies, at Oiliet, Wis., the\nej_n occurring Wednesday.\nMr. Spl \u2022 w 71 years of age.\n\u2022sides his widow he is survived by\n.ree daughters, Mrs. Alex Buther-\nnd of Nilson, Mrs. O. Nelson of\nMt, Wis., and Mrs. Merry of An-\n\u2022ble, and two sens, Jacob Spies\nid   Phillip.\nAt one time Mr.  Spies   vas manner  of  the  mill  at  Annable.\nOHN   MrCAI\/Ur-f    0OB8\nMIL    TM.ll.l_    MONTHS;\nFOl'ND   IIOL'SE    MGHT\nTR\/TL, B.C.. May 13.\u2014Found nl\nhouse at night with Intention\npermit an indictable ofrence,\nohn McCallum waa sentenced to\niireo months In N'-'son Jail when\ne pleaded guilty before f-glstrate\nioble Blnns In pi roe nurt.\nTruth   loses   value   if   people   do\not    understand ; \"lu-o,     Japanese\nrait,\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B.C.. May 13.\u2014Mrs. Donald\nMcLeod has returned from Nelson.\n1 where h- was visiting her daughter\nKathleen, a nurse- in-tra-tung at\nKootenay Lake oener_J hospital.\nWhile In Nelson Mrs. McUod was\nthe hous, fue . cf Mn. Donald\nRitchie.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. David Forrest, Nelson avenue, enteria.n**d members of\nthe pinochle club Wednesday evening. Mrs. Walter Douglas and A.\nR. Hu-.-sn won prizes for high score\nand Mrs, fl. R Walley aud J. 11\nYoung receive consolations. Others\nplaying Included Mrs. O. F. Weir.\nMrs. P. D. Kolmar, Mrs. A, R. Bu-\nchan, Mr. ana Mrs. John Currie,\nWalter Douglas. Mr. and Mis. H. O-\nHlnch, Mr. and Mrs. S. C. E*t*wart,\nMrs. J. H. Young, Mr. snd Mrs.\nAlfred Saunderers, Jack. Ecctt and\nWesley  Wetr.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Violet Morrow was recently\nthe guei of her parents, Mr. and\nMrs.  W. H. Morrow  of  Creston.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and M s. F. Lawson were Ttalt-\nlng  In  Nelson  yeeterdc*.\n\u25a0  m i\nMembers of Ea\u00abt Trail circle of\nthe Cath Mc Ladl .' Social club were\nhostesses at. a meeting of all the\ncircles In the Catholic parish hall\nyesterday arternoon. Mrs. A. Corls\npresided. Tea was served by Mrs. A.\nF*\"*m.m, Mrs. H. Johnson and Mrs,\nS.  Hepworth.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nRoderick McLeod returned Wednesday evening from New Denver,\nwhere he and Mrs. McLeod were called by th, death of Mrs. McLeod's\nmother, Mrs. p.. MacPherson. Mrs.\nMcLeod Is remaining at New Denver\nIor a few days.\nMrs. W. T. Price was hostess st a\nmeeting of the Ladles* Sewing circle\nof th\u00ab First Baptist church at a\nmeeting in the church parlors yesterday  arternoon.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr.   and   Mrs.   Walter   flnell   are\nspending five days' holiday at Blueberry.\nMrs. Klen-nlng  has  retvurned  from\nSPECIALS\nSATURDAY to WEDNESDAY\nMAY 18\nCLAMS, ls, 2 cans  35c\nCOCOANUT, Ceylon, lb  20c\nCOFFEE, Our Special, lb 25c\nGOLD DUST, large pkg., each 25c\nEXTRA SPECIAL!\n1 lb. M.B. Tea, 45c; 1 lb. M.B.\nCoffee, 45c; l M.B. Baking Powder 2Sc-Total $1.15\nThe Deal for\t\nHorswill Bros.\nPHONE 235 PHONE 235\nTIIE   NELSON   DAILY   NEW!*,   NELSON,   B.   C,   SATURDAY   MORNING\nFairway Cash & Carry\nMEAT DEPARTMENT SERVICE\nPhone 125\nS\nP\nE\nC\nFRESH MADE\nBox Breakfast\nSausages 10 C\nnound \t\nCheese 2 pound Wooden\nBox 07,,\nPer Box  \u00b0 \u25a0 c\nFresh Ground\nSteak pound .\n10c\n1\nA\nL\nBrookfield Eggs in Car-\nIon. Extras 1 Qp\nPed Dozen  lv^\nGrain Fed Tork\nSmall Lean Shoul. 11 \/\u00bb\nders, Pound    irv'\nLpoin Roasts\npound \t\nLean Meaty\nRoasts pound\nLeg Whole or Half \"Mp\npound   \"*.*'-\n15c\n12V_c\nFinest Steer Beef\nTender Pot Roast    _(*\u201e\npound  \u2022**\u00bb*\"\nBlade Rib Roast 101\/\u201e\u00ab\n\u25a0wund  M71C\nPlate. Boiling Beef     rj\nlound      ' *\nPrime Rib Roasts   00\u201e\nRolled, pound .... **C\nFINEST CREAMERY BUTTER\nDominion Brand, Per Pound\t\n21c\nValllcan, where ahe was Tialting her\nsod and daughter and law, Mr. and\nMrs. Ray  Kienalng.\n\u2022 \u2022    I\nMrs. Oeorge Shaw, Daniel street,\nentertained members of circle No. 3\nof Knox United Ladles' aid yesterday afternoon. Those attending\nwere .Art. W. H. Morton. Mrs. A.\nA. D' vldson, Mrs. R. M. Wellwood,\nMrs. C. O. coulter. Mrs. M. Carpenter. Mrs. Arthur McMillan, and\nMrs.   John   Currie.\nCircle No. 3 men bars were guests\nat the home of Mrs. E. Tunis. Mrs.\nI. Tyson ssststed the hostess. Among\nthose present wer* Mrs. F. B. Mor-\nsn. Mrs. H. O. Hlnch. Mrs. J. N.\nAnderson, Mra. D. R McLeod, Mrs.\nWalter Douglas. Mrs. O. P. , Weir.\nMrs. W. Rat. Mrs. J. Deans, Mrs.\nJ. R. Anderson. Mrs. Herbert Clark.\nMrs. R. R. Burns, Mrs. David Chalmers, Mrs. a. R. Buchan, Mrs. Angus Johnston, Mrs. C, Clay and Mrs.\nDavid   Forrest.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. James May. who has been\nvisiting her son-in-law and daughter\nRev, and Mrs. Frederic 8t. Denis.\nBay avenue, left yesterday noon for\nfaey *      s  in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nMn. James W. May, Second av\u00ab-\nnue, who has been a patient In\nTrs 11-Tadanac hospital for som\u00ab\nweeks, returned  home yesterday.\n\u2022 \u00bb   *\nMrs. E. Rowling and son Gilbert\nof Nelson were visiting friends ln\nTrail  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nLadles' aid of East TraU United\nchurch met It the church hall yesterday afternoon. Mrs. T. F. Cullen\nsnd Mrs. &, Lennox were hostesses.\nThose attending were Mrs. T. C.\nSpain, Mrs. I. J. Crispin. Mrs. Fred\nEdmunds, Mrs. J. S. Shaver, Mrs.\nS. T. Crowe, Mrs. A. M. Adle, Mrs.\nJ. E. McFarlen tnd Mrs. George\nPalmer.\ns    *    \u2022\nMrs. Ernest J arret t and Mrs. John\nGrieve of Frultvale were visiting\nfriends In Trail, Tuesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nM C. D. Btuart, Portland street,\nentertlined circle No. 1 of Knox\nUnited Ladles' aid yesterday afternoon. Those present included Mrs.\nW. J. WagsUff. J'rs. G. A. Burton,\nMrs. T. A. Temple, Mrs. I. A. Temple.\nMrs. J. R. Gray. Mrs. charts Fran\nsen. Mra, W. W. McKsy and Miss\nMcAulay.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs, J. |a, Doughty and Mrs.\nThomss McColm are guests today\nof Mrs. Leitch of Columbia Gardens.\n\u2022 |   \u2022\nMrs. Murdoch Mclvor, Oalc street,\nentertained last evening In honor uf\nher daughter Madeline's sixth birthday. Mauve and yellow was the color\nscheme used In flowers and tabli\nappointments. A three-tier colored\nbirthday cake with six lighted candles formed the table center and\ngave much pleasure to the little\nBursts. Mr. Mclvor and T. L. Lat-\norla help*, to am us* the children.\nThe guest list Included Barbara\nK*ly. Lorraine Dwyer, Annabel For-\nteath, Josephine perln, Dorothy\nCreech, Wlnnlfred Millar, Audrey\nMoon. Florrie Moon, Patricia Dunn,\nJune Dunn. Margaret Mclvor,\nWanlta Mclvor, Jlmmie Millar,\nPercy Klrker. Jlmmie Kirker, Sid\nney Forteath. Herbert Moon. Tommy\nDunn, Neshitt Dunn. George Dimock. Mrs. Mclvor also had ss her\ntea guests Mrs. George Dimock,\nMrs. Csptaln Dunn. Miss Annie McLeod and her fsther, Charles La-\ntorla.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. G. J. Klnnts, Nelson avenue,\nentertained the Worne*** 's auxiliary\nto St. Anrdew's church . her home\nyesterday afternoon. Mrs. J. B. Twaddle, Mrs. B. O. Mayne and Mrs.\nThomas Jenktn assisted her in serving. Her guests Included Rev. and\nMrs. Leonard A. Morrant, Mrs. B.\nS. Thurber, Mrs. C. E. Crowe, Mrs.\nE. W. Hall, Mrs. Walter Brady, Mrs\nWslter Hudson. Mrs. Norman Major,\nMrs. John Hewlett. Mrs. J. S. Page,\nMrs. Percy Halliwell, Mrs. Mark\nStorle, Mrs, Percy E. Taylor. Mrs. c.\nEvanson. Mra. R. H. Devitt. Mrs.\nHarvey Dilllng. Mrs. A. E. Pennoyer,\nMrs, O. G. Cummlng, Mrs. L. S.\nDoubleday, Mrs. C. A. Mllllgan, Mrs.\nFrank Slndel, Mrs. A. L. McCallum,\nand   Mlas   Selma   Reimann.\nSociety\nThis column is conducted by\nMrs. M J. Vlgneux. All news at \u25a0\nsocial nature. Including receptions, private entertainments, personal Items, marriages, etc., will\nappear In this column. Telephone\nMrs. Vlgneux at lie? home, 819\nSHIct street.\nTrail News of the Day\nj TTIATL HOUSES AND LOTS \u2014 IN-\nsursiiw. Notary. J. D. Anderson,\nTrsu. <l_6_)\nGOOD OVEN VEAL ROASTS\nPound \t\nCHOICE LAMB SHOULDERS\nPound \t\n16c\n17c\nGROCERY DEPARTMENT\n1 POUND FAIRWAY TEA\n1 POUND FAIRWAY COFFEE\n75c\nBlend Vinegar\nQuart Bottles\nKing Oscar SardinesOQ\/*\n2 for ~'VL\nTomatoes\n2 1-2 Tins ....\nFresh Rhubarb\n5 Pounds ....\n14c\n10c\n25c\nB. C. Honey\n1 Pound Jars\"\nWE  DELIVER   OVKK  $..(10\n19c\nFraser Valley SwcetOQp\nPickles qt. Jars .. ov^\nEmpress Gooseberry or\nBlackberry Jam ^Q^\n4 Pound Tins .... **\"*'\nRosedale Toilet Soapl fl\/.\n3 Bars    iUt\nBUTCHFRTERIA\nNEWS\nIV .frh onr window-* ar 1 ynu will\nsre something to Interest, __*nft_l\nbuyers   there   every    day.\nFour  Dig  Mone;   Having   -.pectals\nfor   Haturda .\nSPECIAL No.  1\n3   MIS.    OVEN    ROAST,    GRAIN-\nFEU   STEER   I1EF.F\nv.   in.  nioiri;  cooked  ham\n1   I.ll.   TIRE   un\nM   LB.   SLICEI1   BACON\nOM.v\n$1\nSPECIAL  No.   .\n3    LB.     rllOK'i;     POT     ROAST,\nST.IR   BEEF\nVi   111.   BAKU   PORK\n_     IB.     r 11 O I C r.    CREAMERY\nBITTER\n1    IB.    BEST    BEF,      DRIPPINO\nFOR  Jl ST\n$1\nSPECIAL  No.  3\n-.   LB.   TENDER   JCICV   FRYING\nSTEAK\n1    LB.     FRESH    CREAMERY\nBITTER\n1    IB.    SLICED   B   CON\n1   III.   PIKE   LAUD\n*_   IB.  NIPPY   ONTARIO   CREAM\nCHEESE\nALL   FOR\n$1\nSPECIAL  No.  4\n3   IR.   ROAST   CHOICE   LAMB\n1    IB.    SMALL    Bltr. KFAST\nSAISAOE\n',.   LB.   SLICED   BACON\n1   111.   BEST   BEEF   DRirriNO\nBIO  VALVE  TOR\n$1\nKindly   Order   the   Pp-Msi   >'<-<\u25a0\nwish by Number.\nCome and see the nice hlg piece\nof mild sugar cured baron CCA\nyou ran buy for only   3*\u00bbJr\nmOftl  149 FREE DEI,.   ERY\nC. W. Appleyard left by motor\nyesterday t0 spend the weekend In\nSpokane. He will be accompanied\nhome by Mrs. Appleyard. w^o has\nbeen visiting in Vancouver and Spokane Ior the  past  oouple  of week*.\n\u2022 \u25a0    \u2022\nJames   G.   Gallagher   has   as   bis\nguest   his  son   Charles  Gallagher  of\nBerkeley.  Calif.,  who will spend the\nnext few  weeks  ln  town.\ntea\nT. Toda of Appledale was a city\nshopper   yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    i\nC. F. Hayes of Creston spent yesterday   ln  Nelson.\n\u2022 ft\nE. Haglund of Erie paid a visit to\ntown   yesterday.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. H. I*-, Butchard 05 New Denver ls a otty visitor.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlM Hallday-amlth of Boswell\nspent yesterday ln Nelson.\n\u2022 *    \u2022 j\nMrs. A. Oenest, Vernon street, has\nleft for Seattle.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThursdsy afternoon Mrs. Q. T.\nHunter and Mrs. B. E. Chace, entertained Jointly at a smart tea at\nthe home of the former on Carbonate street. The affair which took\nt*he form of a miscellaneous shower\nwas given in compliment to Mrs.\nP. E. Howell, who leaves the city\nshortly to make her home ln Vancouver. An effective color scheme\nwaa^carrled out in yellow and mauve\ntulips a-nd lilacs, while the tea table,\nVMM Mrs. T. E. Higglnbotham\npresided, was centered with a gl\u00ab\u00ab\nbowl of yellow tulips. The living\nrooms were attractive with theli\narrangement of red tulips. The hostesses assisted by Mrs. T. H. Willis.\nand Miss Doris Howell. A backet\ndaintily decorated in mauve and\nyellow wu filled with useful gifts\nwhich were presented to Mrs. Howell\nby Miss Doris Howell. Those invited were Mrs. Howell, Mrs. B.\nLowery, Mrs. Roy M. Manahsn, Mrs.\nT. E. Higglnbotham. Mrs. W. C\nMawhlnney, Mrs. T. H. Wllllts, Mrs,\nOeorge aimms, Mrs. Percy Amas,\nMra. William Anderson, Mrs. J. C.\narummctt, Mrs. Norman C. Stlbbs.\nMrs. G. E. flparkes, Mrs. J. B. Stall-\nwood, Mrs. E. J. Cook, Mrs J. T.\nAndrews, Mrs W B. Steed. Mrs. F.\nT. Grifflti., Miss DorLs Howell and\nMrs.  O. F,  Hunter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Charles F. Brett of Itosaland\npaid a visit to town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u25a0\nJ. Harris ot Balfour spent yesterday ln Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDr. and Mrs. W. O. Roae are leaving today for Procter where they\nwill spend the weekend with Mr.\nand Mrs. W. R. Jarvis. They will be\naccompanied by Mr. Jarvis. who has\nbeen   ln   thc   city   since   Thursday\nHerbert Fairbanks of Harrop paid\na  visit  to  town   yesterday,\nMartin Fry 1-aft yesterday for his\nhome ln Nakusp after attending the\nOld Timers banquet here Thursday\nnight.\n\u2022 \u2666   #\nA May tea and Ice cream social\nwag held in the Catholic parish\nhall, Wednesday afternoon under\nthe auspices of the St. Agnes Sodal\nlty. The tables presented a novelty\nadorned In Maypoles of varied colors.\nThe young girls very becomingly performed their dutlea a* hostesses.\nThe* effort* were well rewarded and\nthe success was evident from the\nlarge number who attended. The\nconveners wcre -Miss Betty Btner\nand Miss Nora Tralnor. Miss Agnes\nStewart aud Miss Juno King very\nefficiently managed the Ice cream\nbooth. The servers were M'ssea Frances Nicholson, Betty Klrkpatrlck,\nGeorglna Magllo. Louise Colettl, Rosa\nStewart. Jane Vcnables, Mary Mlseta,\nRoele Kuntz, Jeanne Le Page. Florence Bell, ftUrj Relsterer. Donna\nScala, Mary MacDougall, Mary de\nGiralamo, Jeannettc Lerlger, Ida de\nGirolamo,  June   King,  Rose   HUpak\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR. K. Blois of Trail was a city\nvisitor Thursday.\n\u2022 *   9\nMr. and Mrs. D. P* Kane of Kaslo\nspent  Thursday   In   Nelaon.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. T. L. Marquis and Mrs. L. W.\nOug hired were among those woo\nwcre present at the reception and\nbridge Riven recently by Mrs. Herbert Thorpe in honor of her daughter, Mrs. John Marquis, nee Gwen\nThorpe.\nFrank Putnam of Creston paid a\nvisit to the city  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nAlex F. McDonald of South Slocan\nspent   yesterday   ln   Nelson.\n!    Among shoppers to town yesterda.\nI was R. carr of Appledale.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. J. Sewell of Sunshine Bay\nspent yesterday In the city.\nMrs.   J.   II.   Wallace,   Mill   s'reet,\nhns returned from bi. extended visit\nto her sister  In  Ohio.\n\u00bb    \u2022    \u2022\nA. C. Meeker of Midway ls a ctty\nvUitor.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. Bertha M- Slmmt entertained\nher Sunday school class of Trinity\nchurch st her home, 714 Silica\nstreet, Thursday evening, ln honor of\nMiss Dorl-t Howell, who, with her\nparent*, Mr. and Mrs. F. I, Ho'.vell.\nexpects to leave shortly to reMdo In\nVancouver. Oo behalf of the data\nWat Daisy Norrls presented the\nguest of honor with n, toisll %0j9ts_\\\nof remembrance. Mi.-s Ruby Mc-\nNaughtcn wm the winner ot the\nprize for an enjoyable contest, T.ie\nhostess was aM.fitcil in serving by\nMrs. Percy Amas. Those prc-ient Included Miss Howell, Mis. Corrlne\nHainson. Miss Eileen Teague, Mtss\nLlllie Erlckson. Miss Kathleen Manahsn, Miss Cllve Lane, Miss Dalfly\nNorrls and  Miss  Ruby   McNaughton.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. William Fraser and her children of Kootenay Bay ara city\nvisitors.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCaptain J. Fittslmmons, M. P. P.\nof Nakusp,  1\u00ab a Nelson viJltor.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nCaptain Sherman of Boswell paid\na visit to town  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022    t\nMr. and Mrs. Oswald McDoumll.\nwho    have    been    spending    several\nTODAY\nHUNDREDS OF SPECIAL ARTICLES TAKEN FROM OUR REGULAR STOCKS AND OF-\nFERED AT A FRACTION OF THEIR REAL VALUE TO MAKE A BUSY SATURDAY. COME\nEARLY THIS MORNING AS IN MANY CASES QUANTITIES ARE LIMITED.\nNovelty Silks\nOdd lines of silks that formerly sold up to ?3.50 per\nyard.\nTODAY i SI\nPrinted Rayons\nLljrht and dark colors. All new patterns. 3G inches\nwide.\nTODAY 2 YARDS FOR SI\nImported Voiles\nA range of new patterns to select from. Good quality voile. 36 inches wide.\nTODAY 3 YARDS FOR   ?1\nBleached Sheeting\nGood quality Sheeting free from filling. 72 inches\nwide.\n2 YARD3 FOR tl\nPotter's Prints\nBest quality English prints. Assorted patterns. 32\ninches wide.\nTODAY 4 YARDS FOR fl\nBroadcloths\nColored Broadcloth in good quality. 36 inches wide.\n5 YARDS FOR   \u00bb1\nImported Chintz\nGood quality Chintz in new patterns. Good selection.\nTODAY 3 YARDS FOR *1\nNets and Scrims\n36 inches wjdo plain scrim or figured nets. Extra\nvalue todav.\n3 YARDS FOR 9*\nRayon Draperies\n60 inch Drapery in assorted colors. Extra quality.\nTODAY, THE PAIR |1\nWashwell Ginghams\n36 inch Plaid Ginghams in assorted plaids. Fast\ncolors.\nTODAY <1 YARDS FOR  81\nWomen's Gloves\nChamoisettc or Silk Gloves in Pullon or Gauntlet\nstvles. All new.\nTODAY, THE PAIR  \u00bb1\nAustralene Wool\nl-Ounce Halls of Australene Wool in all colors.\nTODAY 7 BALLS FOR   SI\nWomen's Skirts\nFine al! wool French Crepe. Pleated styles. Assorted\ncolors. Vrlnei to $7.\nTODAY, EACH  *p3.50\nPillow Cotton\nCircular Pillow cotton in fine quality. Full width.\nTODAY 3 YARDS FOR 91\nPillow Slips\nHemmed readv for use. Good quality and full width.\nTODAY 5 FOR ?1\nBed Sheets\nFull bleached bed sheets in regular quality. Sizes\n72 x 90.\nTODAY, EACH fl\nTurkish Towels\nGood large towels in half bleach with colored stripes.\nSplendid weight.\nTODAY S FOR *1\nLinen Towelling\niPure linen Roller towelling. Colored borders.\nTODAY R YARDS FOR *1\nTea Towels\nHemmed ready to use. Made of pure linen in good\nsizes.\nTODAY 4 FOR \u00bb*\u25a0\nWomen's Scarfs\nNew scarfs of pure silk Flat crepe. All new patterns.\nTODAY, EACH \u2022*\nPure Silk Hose\nSemi-service hose or Chiffon hose in pure thread silk.\nAll colors. Full fashioned.\nTODAY, TIIE PAIR H\nWomen's Bobettes\nFine quality Rayon Bobettes or Pantecs. Plain colors\nor with fancv trimming. All sizes.\nTODAY, THE PAIR \u00a5*\nWomen's Handbags\nA special purchase of five dozen handbags in all the\nnew shapes. Assorted colors.\nTODAY, EACH  - 9'\nWomen's Corsets\nWraparound Corsets or Corsettcs in assorted styles\nand sizes.\nTODAY, THE PAIR <\u2022 ?!\nGirls' Polo Shirts\nMade with high neck and short sleeves. Assorted\ncolors. All the rage.\nTODAY. EACH *1\nWomen's Hats\nClearing lines of Women's Hats in assorted styles\nand headsizes.\nTODAY, EACH H\n0^4eakhers^>\n607 Baker St.\nfga\u00bb5_!!_W^^\nPhone 200\n_7nrJ^_l,I^l,',?. s i_ \u25a0_ij?*jLiii'i,i:i_'itu^r.\nmonths ln Sheep Creek were in Nelson yesterday en route to their\nKaslo home.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. P_obcrt Bc.I and sons Jack\nand Bob left yesterday for Ainsworth.\n' t   \u2022    \u2022\nMlsa J. Cookscn has left lor Reglna.\n\u2022 .    .\n* Paul Lincoln, Stanley tfrMt. has\ni returned   from   Vmcouver.  where   he\naccompanied Mr.,. Lincoln, who is\nstill a patient In St. Pauls hospital.\nsat\nI    Miss  Ruth  Swunson  of  Kimberley\nmi recently the ju.s. of her brother\nand sister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. E..ri\nE.  Swsn.'on,  Fairview.\njROSSLAND SUNBEAM\nGROUP ENTERTAIN\nRobert McNeill\nPasses in Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., May 13.-\u25a0 Robert McNeill. 30 years of age, died at the\nTrall-Tadamic honpital after sn ill-\nhe**,, of some duration. Mr. McNeill\nMOM trmn V -ouver snd for some\ntime had been stationed at a relief\ncamp   on   the   Owttafftr   road.\nPreviously a nemb-rr of the Masonic order. Trail Mason*, arranged\nfor _-htpm-*n' of the body to Vancouver, where Mr. McNeill had relatives.\n\t\nROaSLAND.   R.    C,    May    IS\u2014TN\n| girls of the Sunbeam Group, C. G.\ni I, T., led by Miss Ruby nosers,\n! Rave an entertainment for their\n\\ mothers In the church hall, which\n\u25a0 was much enjoyed by all \\vr.,> .u-\nJ tended. The foU-iwInu: program W\u00bbl\nigiven\u2014Welcome Kiag by the group;\n| Recitation\u2014by Ml.\"s Helen Turner.\nSolo by Mlsa Helen Turner; Recitation by Neena, McCleT.ent; Piano\nsolo by Olga Mollne; Sketch, by\nRagnhlld Nelson, Neena McC'lem_nt,\nand Therma Glover; Duct by Helen\nTurner and May Sommorvllle; Recitation by Kathleen Toogoo-1; t*>ng\nby tlie group; Dialogue by Jean\nMcLeod and May Soinmervllle; Duet\nby Tl*erma Glover and Ragnhild\nNelson; Piano Solo by Mollne; Contest. After refreshment*, were served\nthe \"Ooodbys song\" was given by\nthc group. The guests present were\nRev. snd Mrs. C. H. Daly, Mrs. Edward Olover. KIM Hughella Glover,\nMrs. Murdoch McLeod. Mrs. T.\nStephens, Mrs. J. McClement, Mrs.\nW. A. Turner, Miss Marilyn turner.\nMrs. F, Mollne, Mrs. Thomas Som-\nniervUle, Mrs. W. H. TDOfOOd. Mr.-.\nT. P. Ro^rs and Miss  Mary Rouen-.\nA Delightful\nPlace to Dine\nIt's the Golden Gate\n. , . the rendezYO'is\nof those who are\nmm. for renlly dell-\naoua food and know\nwhere It is to be hsd\nwith invariable certainty. Tlie fine food\nis a thrill, the clean\nnapery, serene qulet-\nudf. and the freedom\nfrom food odors make\nthe Golden Gate the\nchoice of the elite\nand  thc epicure.\nIndividual Chicken  '\nPies on Sunday\nEvening for Dinner\n50\u00abr>\nGolden Gate\nUNIVERSITY PLAYERS\nPRESENT\ntheir annual spring play\n\"Alicc>Sit'by4he<Firc\"\na thvco-aet musical eomody Monday, May 18, Opera\nhouse. Tickets obtainable from hiph school students or\nMann, Rutherford Drug Co. Tickets 50c, 75<\", 85c\nCafe\nThe Hu\nof Fine t-oodt\n\".lade Its Wat ill \",,: W<\"J t**\u00bb IfsiV\nCurlew\nIs Always\nPopular\nTh* mm* rrlliral Pnlpit* .omftiow nfi.r tlrfs isl the Ml**\nrurlrw ippppt ilfllrlniis Ipt .'num. Yrnr In \u00abnil *'\u00bbr not, dls-\nrrlmlMtlni hP\u00bb<\u00bb<-> nnd Its purity ...nl oflH*tl\u00bb* Bat* \u2022\"\nIK..I rffrfNlinwiit lor firry wrnslotl. Matlr nl only th\u00bb ch..l<r*t\nlpp.rp-.1lp.nl.. rurlrw ritirf Ire rrcom li wldrly rvri*iriil\u00abpl tor Its\n\u25a0\u25a0HTtrtl-r-   f\\c*llenrc.\nOrder o Brick Tonight\nCURLEW CREAMERY\nPALM   DVIIULS,   Llll.\nICE CREAM BUTTER MILK\nALL PERFECTLY PASTEURIZED PRODUCTS\n______\n &e?v- Op*.i\nalie detent Sailij *XTnuB\nPublished every morning except Sunday by News Publishing Cona-\npany. Umited, Nelson, B   C.\nMemoer  of Canadian  i-rcis leased  wire pewa service.\nAdvertlslni rata cards snd A. B. C st\u00abt\u00abmenti of circulation\nnailed on request, or may be seen at the office of any sdvertlsiug\nagency  recognized by ths Canadian Dally Newspapers' Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy  mall   (country>,  per month\nPer year\nBy  mall   (city), per  year  _.\nOutside Canada, per month .\nPer   year \u201e\t\nDelivered,  per   week\t\nPer year ________\nPayable In advance.\nMember Audit Bureau ol circulation.\n._\u00bb   M\n_ \u00ab00\n._ 13.00\n- .IS\n- 7.50\n. 3b\n_ 1S.00\nSATURDAY, MAY 14, 1932\nThe Lindbergh Mystery\nThe discovery of the murdered body of the Lindbergh\nbaby will arouse a feeling of fierce indignation in the\nUnited States which will probably result in doing more\nto bring about a cleaning up of the crime situation in\nthat country than anything that has happened in the\npast.\nThe kidnapping was bad enough. The wanton murder\nis the kind of crime which would arouse anger and the\ndetermination to bring about punishment of the offenders in any civilized nation.\nThe discovery of the murdered infant makes the kidnapping one of the great crime mysteries of the age.\nThe kidnapping in itself was understandable. The kid.\nnappers took the baby and left a note demanding a\nransom of J.'iO.OOO. So far everything was simple. But\napparently within a few minutes of having stolen the\nbaby the kidnappers murdered him and left his body\nwithin five miles of the Lindbergh home.\nA suggestion is made that the kidnappers may have\nbeen frightened and have for this reason killed the\nchild and thrown its body into the bush. This theory\nseems to be discounted by the fact that there is evidence that an attempt had been made to bury the body.\nIf the kidnappers sei.xed the child with the object of\nobtaining a large ransom, it would seem strange for\nthem to have killed him. The various parts of the picture do not fit in.\nTheorizing is easy, but the facts discovered on Thursday suggest the possibility that murder rather than ransom was the original object of the cri\u00bbina!s. It it true\nthat even though the child had been murdered, Lindbergh paid a ransom of SfoO.OOO, but there is no evidence\nthat the actual kidnappers received the money. Another\nband of criminals may simply have taken advantage of\nthe kidnapping and have succeeded in obtaining the money under completely false pretences.\nIt is not at all impossible that if the police find the\nmen who got the money they may still have to hunt in\nother directions for the murderers.\nReparations\nWhile the United States continues its policy of refusing to agree to wiping our reparations payments, it is\nbecoming increasingly more clear (hat Washington realizes that for the present time, and probably for years\nto c,ome, there is not much likelihood that reparations\npayments will be made. On account of public feeling in\nthe United States, Washington would much prefer that\nthe debtor nations should repudiate their obligations insofar as rparations are concerned than that Washington should agree to cancellation.\nIf there is definite repudiation by Germany, and it is\nGermany's inability to pay which is the basis of the\nwhole trouble, then the government at Washington will\nbe in a position to say to the people of the United States\nhat it is helpless, and this would not bring about the unfavorable political reaction that agreement to cancellation might result in.\nGermany's inability to pay at the present time is pretty well admitted, but Berlin is almost adopting the attitude that it will not pay at any time. There is a great\ndeal of difference between cannot and will not, and\nwhether Germany will succeed in escaping further financial penalties under the Treaty of Versailles is extremely doubtful. French policy is not likely to be changed to the extent of agreeing to cancellation of reparations. Probably what will happen will be that the matter will be allowed to drift as it has been drifting since\nthe Hoover moratorium.\nWhether another moratorium for a further period of\none or more years will be declared will not make any\nvery essential difference to the situation. Germany will\nnot pay Fiance or Great Britain. France will not pav\nits debts to Great Britain which are based on the receipt\nof reparations from Germany, and presumably Great Bri.\ntain will not pay the Unied States, and, in adopting\nthat course, will have the tacit approval of statesmen of\nWashington, who understand the Intel-national situation\nmuch more accurately than do the majority of people in\nthe United States. You cannot get blood from a turnip,\nand just now Germany is the turnip.\nFrench Left in Charge\nThe French Left parties will be in majority in the new\nChamber of Deputies the Radical Socialists of Edouard\nHerriot having the largest party representation and having made the greatest gains. With the Republican Socialists and the Radical Republicans, it seems probable\nthat Herriot can muster a majority\u2014they would all be\nLiberals in England, or at the most Right Laborites\u2014\nand take over the government from Andre Tardieu, without the co-operation even of the non-Marxian Socialists\nof Lon Blum.\nIn internal politics, this probably means no very startling change. Herriot, it is indicated, may not be Premier, unless Paul Painleve happens to be elected President to succeed the assassinated Paul Doumer, which\nwould, of course, make Painleve unavailable to head a\nCabinet. In foreign affairs, there will be a relaxing of demands, a tendency to go easy on Germany, less insistence\non security ahead of disarmament, but no startling about-\nface on any of these questions.\nThe new government may, indeed, take up a Communist hunt of considerable proportions, if the evidence concerning Doumer's assassin continues to develop in the\ndire-t-on indicated. If this man was connected with a\nBolshevist on\/F.r,i\u00a3-*.Ucr, the mMi*.** f-*1.' the *t!*i-'rp, and\nfor i;;*p nff'orti'in that he is a I.i.ssiin Kisci.-.., :-p*''ome\u00ab\ncl nr.'T-.H v.:,s intciulcpl to .!:;.\u25a0.* ] n-'i.-i: i.ip-ii !\u25a0 .-...ird\ni White Russians v.ho have tak-*n ivl'n\"e i*> France,\nwhere, as is natural, they plot against Stalin. If this was\nUie intention the plan was clumsily carried out and will\nreact against thc planners.\n\u2014\u2014 IITE   NELSON   DAILY   NET'S,   NELSON,   B.   C   SAIl\"_DAV   MOBMNO   MAT   14,   .9S2s*\n\"Between You\nand Me\"\nBy \"-J.B.C- !\nrrrniTr-rrcn-iu ^.u .uj-n\nOolfers differ as to whether slack*\nor knickers sre the proper ooetume\nfor this season.\u2014Style Item.\nHere's what Stoddard King of\nSpokane  says  about   them:\n\u2022 *    \u25a0\nA golfer and a duffer were proceeding to the tee.\nAnd each was dressed correctly, as\na. sportsman ought to be;\nIn no detail of clothing were they\nnegligent or lax.\nAnd one was wearing knickers, and\none was wearing slacks.\nThe goirers had on  knickers, which\naet off a fellow's calf;\nOn   account   of   the   deflation,   not\nplus   four,   but   minus   half.\nAnd   the   duffer,  somewhat   tougher.\nthough  his  game   was  far  from\n!>*\u25a0\"\u2022\nWas holding forth profusely on how\nsissy   knickers  are,\nOnly slickers play in knickers, said\nthe  duffer  to  his  mate.\nAnd    the   latter   kept   his   temper,\nthough   his   Ire   waa   very   great;\nTill   the   everlasting   patter   proved\ntoo terrible a tax.\nAnd    the   golfer,   crying   \"Slacker I\"\nsmote the duffer  ln  the slacks.\nThen the duffer shouted \"Bllghterr\nand  a  horrid   fray  ensued,\nUntil   bits   of   golfing   costume   all\nabout  the  course  were  strewed;\nIn   the   bicker,   slacks  and   knickers\nleft their owners bare of frame\u2014\nTheir   apparel   was   a   barrel,   their\nopinions still the same.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiser  who  died   In  Hamilton   left\n300 rubber heels. He was well-heeled\nin  otiier  ways,  too.\nI   ii\nAnswer to yesterday's problem:\nThe    youth    should    weigh     120\npounds. Ten per oent of that is   12\npounds,   and    12    from    120    Is    108,\nor whst the youth actually weighed.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nToday's   problem   Is:\nEKETAAAXGGR\nAATIIXNN0EM\nBy properly arranging the letters\nin the top line you can form a 10-\nletter word and, ln the bott.m line,\nan   11-letter word.\nAnswer  tomorrow.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nThe Old Ttmers made whoopee\nthe other nlgnt. There were, with a\nfew exception,*., ab ut 116 old timers\nat the banquet and program which\nfollowed. And when they had their\nphotograp:. taken they all took their\nhats off dispite bald heads, etc.,\nand smiiel. only one fellow did not\ntake his hat off. He wasn't an old\ntl rer either, but \"ce was In the\n:!. He was Staff -Sergeant Steph-\n-i. The \"staff\" ls always re-\nlucaut to appear in the nude, that\nIs. he is reluctant to have his\nhead appear ln the nude, since ne\nhas been chasing the elusive nude\nDouk hob nr. But who can make a\npoliceman take his hat oil lt ..e\ndecides   to keep   It   on?\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nA. B. Shannon of Willow Point,\nthough 86 years of age, can still\nmake the old fiddle talk. Mr. Shannon does not suffer much by rheu-\nmat lam, that is figuring out his\npep at the banquet.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u25a0\nTwo cleverly worded signs ln the\npark of the Buffalo baseball team of\nthe International league have rala-id\nthe question, \"What Is a liquor ad-\nUrtltamilllT\" Prohibition authorities\nare wrinkling their brows In pel-\npi exlty.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nOne sign ffty.s: \"In Canada It tl\nO. &, W. Foyr Rosea,'' Says the\nOi.bc;*: \"In Canada lt Is Cosgrave-\".,\nlhe  Best.\"\nAuction and\nContract Bridge\nB>   th*   WotM*.   uadlni   Author!'*,\nMILTON  C. WORE\nA CHOICE OF METHODS 1.\n\"The Doctor tells me, I'll have to cut down on\nmy sweets!\"\nTHE WEATHER BULLETIN\nMonday, May 16, 1933\u2014Week Is\nexpectd to begin with the dominating low just east of great lakes\nregion carrying storm and general\nrain.-; high pressure with clearing\nweather ln tn mid we*\u00bbt sections.\nThis causes rains from about Missouri to Maine and in all the lakes\nregions, but denting nnd cool to\nthe northwest and middle weat.\nTuesday, Mny 17\u2014Storm vanishes\nIn the northeasst. but secondary disturb, nee comes In from the aouth-\nwest which ought to cause considerable rein ln most, dry sections of\nthe southwest. Expect this to be h\nroiny period In most of middle west\nsnd the Texas regions. Clearing ln\neast.\nWednesday, May 18\u2014Rains ail\nvance from west imo the centra!\nregion*., covering most of Missouri\nand MlsulsRlppl river valleys. In\neast c.ea.inir. This Is rainy weather\nIn most parts of the country and\nbecoming generally much  warmer.\nThursday, May 19\u2014Unsettled conditions dwell in central west and the\nnorthwest, ciu-slng there warm, cloudy, showery weather. Also unsettled\non Atlantic coast line and the south\neast, in south and central regions\nvcrv much warmer.\nFriday, May 20\u2014Storm end mln\ncenter now ln the north and ml-idle\nWta Oeneral'y clpp.rlnt* cast of\nMississippi river. Rather cool In\nnorth weRt   and    mid    Canada,   but\nwarmer In southeastern and gulf\nstates. '\nSuturday, May 21\u2014unsettled conditions dwells ln mid wept and\nnorthwest sectlona of U. S. causing\nrather heavy but scattering rains.\nClearing about the lakes regions\nnnd east, but some showering along\nfttU coast, very much wanner generally.\nSunday. May 22\u2014Cooler day tfl\nmost parts of the country with ruin\nrenters ln northwest, central states\nmd the Ohio river valley, in east\nrearing. Northeast U. S. and middle Canada considerably cooler\nwith scattering rains.\nThe week May 16 to 22 la expected\nto be generally rainy and warmer\nIn central regions. The dry areas\nof the middle west and southwest\nwill pobably receive much more\nthan the normal rain*. 11 for middle\nof May Ahout the great lakes and\nto east much le'-s than normal rainfall, cloud and rain centers appear\nto dwell an unusually Ion*, time In\nregions about the Dakota* end to\n.-out... A ralpy wek 1\u00ab expected.\nMid Canada and the northwest:\nWeek begins clearing weather, but\nsoon changed to light r-tns that\nbecome saturating in spots and\nshowery, thl*, unsettled condition\nccntlnuing until last of the w-eek\nwhen weather t-mds to become clear\nand rather cooler.\nSherwood Eddy Believes\nJanan Is Much at FauH\nBaseball fans point out that Four j\nnoses may be a perfume of the nu- J\ncleus of a feminine corsatte. On the l\nother hand, they admit, that by no !\n.stretch of imag.nation It might be j\na well-known brand of Canadian i\nwhiskey. And too. It Is pointed out, I\nI. one concentrates correctly one I\ncan construe the OoafCavt'l sign H\nan  advertisement  for  beer  and   ale |\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nHowtvtr. neither whiskey nor beer\nls mrntioncd, so prohibition authorities are not quite certain that ..e\nsigns can be construed as liquor advertisements    punishable    by    lines.\nCommenting on the situation one\nBuffalo new-paper suggested that if\nprohibition authorities decide that\nFour Foses ls a perfume and the\nCoB-*r*.V'p* a mysterious Canadian\nfamily, there Is no reason why they\nshould not believe Uiat: \"Sandy\nMcDonald, John Dewar, Old Dougherty, John Labatt. McNlJh and\nGrants are not all neighbors on Weston street, ln Bonnie Scotland. It\nmight even be possible to convince\nthe dry men that Highland Cream Is\na liquid lhat comes from Highland\npistures and that Bl.ick and White\nmeans   contrasting   colors.\n\"Grunted they make the.1* admissions, they probably then would concede Sandy Hook is a Scotsman and\nprohibition   a  success.\"\nI overheard Jim Gilker talklnt*\nabout high water. He and Fred\nHume were at It. Well, they should\nknow something about the hl_;h\nwater of  the  good  old  days.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nAs Magistrate Cartmel sentenced a\nDoukhobor woman t0 three years in\nthe penitentiary Friday she remarked, \"I hope God ls there.\" Someone\nwas heard to murmur. \"Not with a\ncrowd   like  that.\"\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMet ft C. Travea of Edgewood the\nother night. Noticed the sunburn\nand tan he has acquired already,\nHe says Edgewood ls atlll on the\nmap. He had an able supporter ln\ntr.e person of J. N. McLeod.\n\u2022 *      as\nWell, that's that. Friday the nth\nover and nothing exciting has happened\u2014yet. It was unluck for the\nDoukhobors appearing on trial, Creeton and Nelson Liberals meeting\nlast night did not seem to be superstitious. But that will m\\\\ come out\nIn tha next election.\na  a> a\nProbably Bud Blackwood mat unlucky. Sew bla carrying a piece of\nan pftpUtOOHiblftl toward a garage. It\n-.vas   a&Ulflsy   for   those   caught   In\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPit\u25a0 Mil ya an.; mt, g;od people\n\u2014If you got over Friday, May 13 th\nwit; out any trouble you'll be safe\nuntil January, There are no more\n13ths nn Friday until next January,   1913.\n5*n.erwood IMrlv (secret.* rv for\nAsia    for    t.le    T.M.CA.,    made    his\neighth visit to R\"!ali (hi* sl'-th\nunder    the    Rov ft    rtfbtat)     ttai\nsummer, travelled east across the\nTrans-Siberian railway, was In Mukden that September right when t^*-**.\nSttpatumt suddenly captured the\ntAtf and bOgUI their \u2022\u2022v. ..\u2022*\u2022\u25a0'\"\u2022-1 ft\nManchuria, went south through\nChina. TUltina tatwriar cltlea thrt\nind lit\"\"- hern !\u2022\u25a0*. k?VtDr\"m*\u00ab*\nhands, then cros^d lo Japan\nend interviewed Jfinanese le-idprs pi\nthe Shanghai crisis wis dawning,\nBack in _sm*9\"tea, ht h*>\u00ab \u2022--\u2022i-re-*\na book. \"The Wnrl-1's P?n--pr Zore,'*\nsirmmarl?:ln3 his Ifrst-hand 1m-\nprpsslon*'.\n\"In all _.Ia.ic..nr'a,\" V]-'- fpttVt,\n\"I found no one except the Jnpa-\nnesp   them'-e'ves,   who   b-*'.:?vrl   thnt\nthat there had -been  any nt.tack  on\n(Thin    Artlrle   Is   Intended    fo:    the\nContract    Bridge    Beginner)\nWith the t-hove hand at Contract,\nSouth bid one Spade He counted\nfive and a half probable tr.cks:\ntwo and a half In Spades, two ln\nClubs and one in Diamonds. Slno*.\nthreo and a half of these wer\u00ab, hlRh-\ncard tricks, .South had more than\nenough for a bid of one. West,\nwith approximately six cards apt\nto take tricks, doubled lnfornntorlly.\nNorth bid three Spad , since he\nheld the needed four supporting\ntr.cks to Jump South's one-bid (one\nmore trick than the amount of his\nown bid). These supporting tricks\nwere the Ace of Spades 1, five\ntrumps 11|i ll*\u00ab singleton Club 1,\nthe doublton In Hearts >'a. A.^er\nEast's pass South had jur enough\nto Justify a bid of four Spades.\nWest, anticipating a large \"set,\"\ndoubled, It was a business double,\nthe bid being more than three.\nThe Auction b.ddlr.g of this hind\nwould be: South one Spade. West\ndouble,   North  three   Spades.\nWest led the King of Hearts, followed by the Queen. Tills ls the\ncorrect order of leads for a suit\nheided by the four top honors.\nTo trick 3 we_t ad th^ Queen of\nClubs, which Declarer won, false-\ncarding with .South's Ace. South\nled the Queen of Spades, which\nwon the trick vhen West correctly\nrefused to cover as he knew that\nhis only chanc (a slight one) was\nthat Declarer might decline the\nfinesse. Declarer led a second round\nof Spades, nnd then the Queen of\nDiamonds from dummy. Closed\nhand played low, and West won with\nthe King. West let1, the Jack of\nClubs, which Declarer ruffed ln\ndummy. He then led dummy's\nTen of Diamonds, and again finessed. West won with the Jack,\nsetting the cor-tract one trick. West\nwon, In all, two Diamonds and\ntwo Hearts. Do you .see how the\ncontract could, and should, have\nbeen made?\nTHE CORRECT PLAY\nWest's two doubles\u2014one Infor-\nmatory and one business\u2014showed\nthat he had most of toe adverse\nstrength. Declarer, therefore, should\nmark lilm with the King of Diamonds, and play thp hand on that\nbasis. After drawing trumps he\nshould le.id a small Diamond from\ndummy and Win with closed hind's\nAoe. A small Diamond should then\nbe led from closed hand _md lt\nwould be all over. Declarer would\nlose only one Diamond and two\nHearts, and would fulfill his contract. Next Saturday's article will\nshow how this ir* situation should\nbe met when the adverse strength\nla marked with East.\nthr (Bt-m*!.\nline bv the CHimni tre---.\" tThtt.\nit wilt be recalled, was thc Japanaaa\nexcuse for the Initiation of their\nMtffm nf the chief Mancr-urli..\ncities), \"But there was much evidence of a long premeditated p....\nof the Japanese army suddenly to\nseize Mukden and all strategic centres     in     SOi'th     Mnr-'i\"**!-,.       **_\u2022-*\nhad been no more sign of an\nIndependence movement in Manchuria berore the Japanese set up\nttl new st.te than there was in\nMassaehusptt* or New Ynrk state.\"\nIAPAT. I-. .>R!V.Nti CHINA\nTO rONMTNIlM\nOnly two parties *rem to knrvw\nwhat 'hey want in China, Mr. Eddy\nsays\u2014thc Japanese ahd the Communists And he predicts that \"If\nJapan continues her mil tary offensive until tt leads to the overthrow of the central government,\nthe Communists will poon b\u00ab\u00bb able\nto form a solid U.S.\u00a7.R. embnclm\nover a million p?<*-ple, with Klangsl\nas a basis.\" He believes thnt Japan\nhas done much to drive China to*\nmart   Communism,\nAlready close *o a sixth nf China\nIs tn Communist hands. The Communists have in the field, Mr. Eddy\nsays,   three   armies   which   are   busy\nproperty and levying ransoms.\nTheir soldiers go bar-it to the fields\nand work as peas-ints when armies\nare sent against them, and provide\nthemselves with rifles by ambush-\ning small parties of government\narmies. They keep to the interior\nand avoid  the  big cities where  for\neigners congregate. \"After capturing\na city of from 10.000 to 20,000 '\npeople, the Communists often line\nup all the rich men, property\nowners and thp. proprietors of every\nprincipal (-hop or .tore. They have\nlists, carefully prepared in advance,\nof lhe estimated wealth and re-\n\u2022nu-r-es of the chief dtlr\/ms. The\nlist   Is   read   out  and   lhe   men   are\nto the Communist leider.\" In case\nof failure, one or two are dec*rl-\ntated; the others then do their\nbait, Th* comniunlste burn all\ntitle deeds, -redistribute the land\nto the landless peasants, nnd de-\nC'sre in-erest-hearine notes void.\nf HINA'S <|\\|,Y IOR MAY\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0-.I    |\\    r****M\nbut a Shanghai banker said to\nMr. Eddy that lf the Jap'nese\nstayed on, China's only hope lay\nin   lU'tflM   with  Soviet   Russia.\nIn Korea, too, Mr. Eddy found\nCommunist sentiment lnt^reaslng,\nand Japanese officials .endorsed this\nJudgment, Twenty yeara of Japanese rule, he says, has produced a\n\"brilliant material advance,\" but\n\"tha alien, unsympathetic and psychologically blii.d rule has failed to\nwin the people; on the contrary\nIt has driven them into almost\nunanimous sullen  hostility.\"\nNo criticism of Japanese policy\nVat  permitted   to  appear   ln   Jiipan-\nseemed solid behind the army clique\nMr. Eddy reports. Perhaps the\nseries of assassinations engineered\nby the secret \"Cherry Blossom So-\ncl*t \" had something to do with\ntr-'s apparent solidarity. A Japanese general frankly said tha t\nJipan Intended taking care of her\nenemies 8Q| by one. annexing Siberia up to Lake Baikal. Japanese\nmilitary men believed they could\ndefeat So let Russia In a war; Mr.\nEddy doubts lt. He found the\nCommunist movement weak In Japan, but the economic situitlon\nso unstable that the future seemed\nuncertain.\nrAVOttfl   BOYCOTT\nACtlNST   4APAN\n\"Thus far,\" comment* Lewis Gannett. In the New York Herald Tribune, \"the book has almost the\nfreshness and quick clarity of cable\nnews. In a final chapter (What\nWe Can Do About It), Mr. Eddy\ndeclares himself an apoetle of\nGandlv. assures us that the Chinese   boycott   ls   a   product   of   deep\nThat Body of Yours\nBy   JAMLI    W.    BARTON\nX-RAY AS TREATMENT\nWhen Banting discovered Insulin,\nand waa .thus able to save the Jives\nof thousands of diabetics throughout the world. It gave a tremendous\nstart to Investigators everywhere,\nand now Insulin Is used ln many\nother   conditions   besides   diabetes.\nSimilarly when Roentgen quite by\naccident discovered the X-ray. and\nsurgeons were able to see the bones\nInside the body, this was only the\nbeginning of many uses for the\nX-ray In locating other conditions\nln the body.\nAnd now during the past few\nyears they have been finding that\nthe X-ray li not merely ol use In\ndiscovering various conditions In t:e\nbody, but can actually be used ln\ncuring   many   ailments.\nFor instance from Berlin Dr. R.\nGan.er.berg states that the X-ray\ntreatment of patients with severe\ngoitre, affected a curs or considerable improvement In about one\nhrdf of the cases In which lt waa\nused. Even in patients with true\nexopthalmlc goitre-heart rapid, eyes\nbulging, extreme nervousness and\nloss of weight\u2014cure was affected\nIn  20  per   cent   of  cases.\nThus he concludes that this\nmethod can be used ln those ca-*ves\nwhere t. e symptoms are not\naevere enough to require Immediate surgical operation. The treatment should be triei for at least\nthree to six months and if there\nbe no Improvement then the operation may be d.ne.\nDr. H. O. Rohr used the X-ray\ntreatment on a number of cases\nof arthritis-inflammation of the\nJoints\u2014and had good results after\nthe other metl_--.3 had failed. He\nreports t..nt the pains and swellings\nare reduced, the creaking and grating sounds are lessened, and there\nls   Improvement   In   the  movements.\nDrs. F. E. Hang and H. Schrens\ntreated slx'cen hay fever cases by\nX-rays. Insevci cases the treatment\nwas successful, In eight cases it\nfailed, and one case could not be\nfollowed. They found that the X-ray\nmethod was more successful In those\ncases In which the treatment was\ngiven same time before, the usual\nattack occured, than In those w.'O\nwere treated during the attack-\nThus in future they exp?ct to glvo\nthe treatment before the s'.tack In\nall   cases.\nIt is. certainly gratifying to see\nhow this ac' 'ental discovery of the\nX-ray, has .ecu mado use o\" by\nthe rcssarch men In discovering and\ncuring   these   various  ailments.\n25 Years Ago\n(From  The  Daily   Nam   of  May   11.\n1907)\nNelson lacrosse artists defeated\nr.rand Forks fere yesterday 15-3.\nHenderson. Kirk and Splaks scored\nfor the Forks and Bell, Jamleson\nand the two Bishop boys scored for\nNelson.\nA new drugstore has hcen opened\n\\t the Canada Drug & Book con-\n.any's former branch store at the\nQSrBK of Baker and Josephine\nv.c.t. It will be known as the\n.'ool-Langhurst company.\n\u2022   \u2022    i\nBorn In Nelson May 14, tr> Mr.\n..nd Mrs. Thomas. Brown, Robson\nItraat.  a  daughter.\nTen Years Ago\n(From   The  Dally   News  o_   May  11,\n1922)\n' The   temperatures   here   yesterday\nranged   between   32   and   74   degrees.\n. \u2666    \u2022    \u25a0\nEddie and Arthur O'Nell, two sons\nof A. C. O'Nell of Mill street, left\nyesterday    for   Alaska   to   prospect,.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u25a0\nThe Jamleson ft Sin wood pipe\nmanufacturers of Passmore are well\nlaunched on a successful business\nenterprise. The plant will be enlarged  considerable  thin summer.\nBorn on Sunday, May 14, to Mr.\nand Mrs. C. A.  Larson, a son.\n* \u2022    e\nErlward Kerr, pioneer bote] keeper\nand councilman, died here yesterday.\nThirty Yeara Ago!\n(From   The  Dally  News of  May   it*\nlftl2.\nImprovements   to   the  Creel   lodgf\nat   the   pool   below   Slocan   Junctlo*\nwhlch  the  C.  P.  R.  plans  to  mak.\none of the foremost fishing resort!\nln British- Columbia, will probablf\nbe carried out this summer accord|\ning   *q  F.  L.  Hutchinson,  C.  P.\nhotels superintendent.\nT. D. Stark and Jt. H. Johnson\nthe   Nelson   Y.   M.   C.   A.   have   b*e|\nchosen to attend the Dominion\nto be held In Winnipeg this summel\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022 i\nJ. C. Buchanan of Spokane, artarj\nager   of   the   Yankee   Girl   mine\nYmir,    haa    purchased    from    Ale|\nGrant   the   El   Paso   mineral   clalnf\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nForest fires, starting at two point]\nswept    through    10.000,000   feet\ntimber in the Dominion railway bel\nbetween   Arrowhead   and   RevelatokJ\nlast   weekend.\nPlumbing]\nRepairs\nPromptly and Neatly Done]\nSatisfaction   Guaranteed\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING &\nHEATING CO.,\nLtd.\n1.  A.  SMI   .. f).  JTMSON\n313 Baker et. Phone 666\nI'llll'l-'illllllllllllllll'I'mil-IIMIIIIIII\n\"BUILD  B. C. PA-BOLLS'\"\nPatrons\nTell It\nBest\nWhen patrons writ* about th\nextra richness, natural flavo\nand economy of Pacific Milk-\nhow children and grown-up\nlike It, what It has done fc\ntho he.ilth of infs-ts and how\nat smaller cost, lt Improve\nfood either as dressing or\ncooking \u2014 what these value-\npatrons have really done\nto tell most convincingly hov\nhigh the quality ot thla fln<\nmilk  actually Is,\nPacific Mill\nBorn at the  Kootenay Lake Gen-     J00'\u00b0  n'^\\ \u00b0*J<\nM   hospital,   May   14,   to   Mr.   and rmm   at\nMrs. H.  A.  Masters,  a son. lIllllllllllllllllMMIlllllllllltlMIIIIMIIII\nOwned and Controlled\nAbbotsforfl\nTARIFF   lNC'ONfiRUITIES\nIt is one of the Inevitable conse-\n-luences of the enforcement of tariffs that the process provides the\npublic from time to time with a\ncertain amount of diversion as well\nas a considerable volume of Irritation. For ^.stance, when the remain.\nof the late Edgar Wallace arrived In\na coffin covered with flowers\u2014tributes from his American friends\u2014\n'.he British customs officials Biol Idly\n-.slated upon assessing tt* floral\n-.tbutes for duty\u2014a procedure which\n-roused considerable Indignation, wc\n\"re told, and which at the same\ntime must have struck many as a\ndramatic deque, to Mr. Wallace'.-.\nplucky but unsuccessful fight for\nfree tride In the Blackp*>ol division\nduring the last generr-1 election. The\ncomic side ts more vividly Illustrated.\nhowever, In the quandary ln which\nsome customs officials found themselves when face to face wit;, four\nImported live monkeys. Under the\ntariff, four-fooled animals are ex-\ncr.npt. But the officials, after Inspecting the simians, came to the\nconclusion that they looked mors\n.ike bipeds thin quadrupeds, and so\n.hey   were   assessed.\u2014Montreal   Star.!\npopular Indignation, suggests International control of Manchuria by\nthe League of Nations, op-pose*, war.\nbut recommends that the United\nStates and the refit of the world\nsever trade relations with Japan\nduring the 'war.' He docs not\nseem to realize how dangerous\ntight-rope walking Is for amateurs.\"\nGarden Supplies\nThis is tho time to purchase supplies for your garden\nSpades, Shovels, Hoes, Rakes, Cultivators,\nPlows, Harrows, Seeds, also Seed Potatoes.\nMson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNelson, B. C. Phone 21\n\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0 - -     \u25a0^.\\?.\"Jf!'\nT\/*fc\\SjgC>   '\nWife  fafter coll.ipse of plate rack): \"Don't stand there like a stupid\nIdiot!    Oct   the   tube   ot  'stickif   and   make   a start!\"\u2014The   Humorist.\nAUNT HET\n\"She's made Bill a good wife. She\nw-a old  enouf\u00bbh   to be  desperate   an'\nfrateful.\"\nSummer Tourist Fares\nLOWEST IN YEARS\nEffective May 22 to Oct. 15\nReturn Limit, October 31,1932 .\neO East via the world's greatest travel\nsystem . . . special summer fares to all\npoints in Canada and the United Statea.\nA daylight ride through the -wonderful\n4'anadian Roekles. with stop-ovcra at all\npoints of interest. Perfect service throughout.\nROUND TRIP FARES\nITInnlparg p>| .\n7r,.so\nOmnlm   - - -\nfll.15\nTnronto- - \u2022\nioa.3*\nHt.   Loiila - -\naiw\nMo!\u00bbtr\u00ab.\u00bbI - \u2022\nfl2*\u00bb.BO\nnilm\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0>- - -\n10..to\nOllt-bt-r-  -  -  -\nIIS.30\nIMrolt  - - -\n101.70\nf-r-.li-.. John  -\n147.90\nPhiUdrlphU\n1.1.1.14\nlUllfai\t\nISS .45\nVuhlndoD\n110.45\n7S.M\nN*-** York - -\nii.--.ta\nSt. r*ui - -\n75.60\n142.20\nFARES TO OTIIER POINTS ON REQUEST\nSleeping, compartment, and comparlmeol-\n(dteer-vation cars of tho most modern and\nluxurious Type; through service*: dining car\nProviding thc cuisine for which the Canadian\nacific ia famous.\nAsk   about   One-way   Coach   Fare?.\nSleeper reservation'', details from any Can. mc,\nRy.   Acent,   or   write:\nJ.    8.    CARTER,    D.P.A.,   Nelson.\nCanadian Pacific\n THI   KTLfOX   BATIT   *TtT_,   WWOtf,   B.   e,   fATTTOlAT   MOSNTKO   MAT   11,   JSSt*Hss\u00bb=-\n6%t\nTAOE SEVEN\"\nHHJBLEHEADER\nj BALL GAME IS\nSUNDAY'S FUN\nelson and Trail Seniors Clash\nin Main Event; Junior\nLeague Game\nKelson baseball faun Till be em-\n.rtAinM by a double-header bail\n*.me here Sunday afternoon, tt was\nraxned her* Friday night. The\nrail Sraokeaters will Invade Nelson\n1 the main event and wil. try to\nIsh out another licking to thu\nrlson   senior;.,   but   while   this   is\n\u2022ir attitude, the Nelson squad have\nade up their mlnde to era*-* thu\n-0 defeat they received tn TraU\nm  week.\nIn th secondary .event, Maulers\nIU clash with the Huma squad\ni a city Junior league game fol-\n*w.ng tho senior name.\nNational\nBaseball\n.NATIONAL    LEAGIE\nW L   Pet\nhloago                 , , 16 7    .696\nostou    i -|*        iiii        14 S\n.nclruit.fi    ..,_-\u00ab 16 14\n. Lotus  ,\u201e.\u201e .... 13 14\n.JlrvtelpMt     ..                 12 13    .480\nooklyn     \u2014..\u201e 10 13   .435\nw York ...\u201e ...-       9 13    .400\ntUbiirgh          7 15    .318\n.608\n411\n.481\nEOOKLYN   5,   CINCINNATI   3\nCINCINNATI. May 13\u2014The first\niple piny of the major league\naaou furnished the high fcpot o.\na game today as Brooklyn Do-lger-\nirned back tho _9t6t S to 3.\nIn .the third lnnli.tr a lilt bau-\nan aud a single put the Cincinnati\nittery. as B. Jon_w*n and Knlp, on\n\u25a0st and necond Douthlt lined to\nright. 'The Brooklyn s.iortelop\nrow to Cuccinello and caught\n\u2022by -aft, the  bHg fid  tho relsy to\nlly  caught  Kolp  oft  first.\nBabe   Hem-in   hit   a   homer   for\nnoinnatt  tn the elxth.\nooklyn   '*__\u25a0\u25a0_. __.        ,,   8   II   0\nndBnnatl    _.. ,    8     \u2022   2\nVance #nd  Lopez;   Benton,  Kolp,\nIdea and Asbjornsou,\nmmsi\nTCrCjRNER BROTHERS\n73. Miller.* 189 301 301\u2014391\nl\/ockner..-..* 162 304- 320\u2014 WW\nDay....*. 187 210 183\u2014 1-fStf\nNeetor.*.. \u00abS\u00ab 17\u00bb 101\u2014803\nCllffe..... 335   213    214\u201464a\n1009 1009 1009 3087\ntm \"fiAMg Serifs Bowud ij\nMM\u2014\n\u25a0SGkN CtaEkB\/\njam,'5Pc\u00a3& Et.i7ctT_y^\n^\u25a0WA \u00a9SieR-VER. V--P\u00a3>T<.ft__t___\nIICAOO  3\nMTON   8\nCHICAOO, May 18\u2014-Guy Bush\nortuoed on* of bla mystery hits\n\u2022 ninth-in mns rt>ly today to\n\u25a0e the Cuba a a to a victory over\n\u25a0Mrton Braves and run their lead -t\u00a3\nree games ln the National league\nnnant race.\nThe score: wu tied at two-ail. two\nr* out and runners rested on\n;rd and first whan Bush strode\ntRe plate. Although he hits about\nir safe blows a year, Manager\n\u25a0>g_Ts Hornsby took a chance and\nt him bat. He responded with a\nie drive that rolled against the\nft centerflsld bleachers for a\nmble, driving in the winning run\nally.\n'Ston   m^mmm i    3     0   3\nilcago \u201e 8U3\nZa*_iiary,   Cantwell   and   Hargrave;\nuih  and  Har tne tt.\nLons a\nHILADELPHU   1\nST. LO0IS, May 13\u2014St. l*ouL\u00bb\nrdlnals slugged out an \u2022 to 7\ntory ovtr Philadelphia Nationals\na 10-lnning game today to go\nick Into first division.\nTha \"ardlnala found Holluy and\nrabowakl for a total of 17 hits,\n\u25a0>iiig their heavy work In the sev-\nth Inning when Hendricks' homer\nIped produce five runs to tie the\nore. Plva 5t, Louis pitchers allowed\nI aafetlef. Collins scored the wining run on Todd's muff of Gon-\nilas* fly.\nhUadelphit    _\u201e.*....\u201e-\u00ab-.   7   18   8\nt.  LouU      8   17   0\nHolley, Orabowekl and Todd; John-\n>n, Llndsey, Stout. Carleton, Der-\niifrw and Mancimo, Gonzales.\ntaseball's\nBig Six\n(ft? the Associated Pr.,!-\u00bb)\nJlinjnle Foxx and Chick Hafey\nsntlnued to aet the slugging pace\nthe big leagues ln startling\n.anion yesterday. Foxx. leader of\n>e big six, walloped four singles In\nve times at bat, and nhot his\n\u25a0erage up to ths surprising height\nAm, a gain of 23 points. Hafey\nt two \u25a0**\u25a0\u25a0** \u00b0t four and Increased\na margin in the National league\n| five point*, going up to .418.\nAU the other members of the big\nx except Orl Reynolds were idle\nad Reynolds hit only once In five\n<*\u2022**. He slipped off 13 .\u2022\"in*'1. going\nrto   third   place   in   tlie   American\nsue list.\nR\u00a3    STANDlNrt\nOABRH Pet.\nyxx. Athletic* \u201e...,., 33 83 35 38   .4*8\nsfey,   _9mat    ..... 18 67 18 28 .418\ntckev.   Yankees   .... 18 66 18 27 .40!)\nvnolds,   Senators    30 86 13 38 .407\nIt.*,.    OteBfc    -      \u25a0\u2022 20 03  U  34  .366\nsrry.   Giant*    30 86 30 31 J80\nAmerican\nBaseball\n\/V\/cF nrnfrStoxToTM rtr\\ir-t_s e*--***--^\n-.   Sittpra biwca &m.f cowse (was) M*. hi*. FitsT\n\u25a0SAME OF GOLF HIS *-|P*J CftWE iM \\t.T6Jc\\Br\n<__? for a vdjs-a&aj :\u25a0r*\nm__\\_Ma.\nWINNIPEG BOXER\nGETS FIRST CLEAN\nKNOCKOUT, TRIALS\nFinal  Program  of  Amateur\nChampionships for Olympic\nTrials on\nTOROKTO, ay 13 (CP)\u2014Final program of the Canad 1 an am a tetir\nboxing championship and Olympic\ntrials op*ned here tonight with kf\u00abn\ncompetition in the early bouts. BUI\nPuchnlak, Winnipeg middleweight,\n\u2022cored tht first clean knockout of\nthe two-session tourney when he\nfloored R -sarin Balllarg-mn, Montreal, for the jO-count in the aecond\nround.\nAll bouts are scheduled for three\nrounds.\nPaul Prederickson, Winnipeg, light\nlight title-holder, and Billy Hum*\nphrey, Toronto, started a peppy\nscrap. Prtderiekton took  the verdict\nJackie Callura, Hamilton flyweight,\ngot down in front of Tommy Ibali,\nWinnipeg, through reason of a\nstrong finish. It was even-Stephen\nfor the first tw0 stans_as, but Callura looked beat In the last sear-ion.\nHarble Weatherhead, Winnipeg\nand \"81!m\" Han-y Matthews of Hamilton, 113-pounders clashed in a\nhard go wtth Weatherhead taking\nthe  honors.\nWADS.VOHTH   C0NTIHVES\nWINNING\nLen Wsdsworth, Hamilton 147-\npo\\md*r. continued his winning ways\nwhen ht o(_tj>oint*d Joe Draper of\nprtH current, flask. Wadsworth out*\nhox\u00ab( hla oppement to gain the\nverdict.\n\"Lefty\" Gwynne, of Toronto, got\nthe flrat technical knockout of the\nnight wh\u00abn his fight with Arnold\nDawklns. Victoria, British Columbia,\nbantam waa stopped in the initial\nround. The British Columbia boy\nwaa   literally   outclassed.\n\"Curlar\" Runcan, Toronto, waa\ntoo rugged for Robert Jackson,\ncolored   Reglna   middleweight.   Jack-\nHooks and Slides\nBy WiUUm Brouchcr\nUIU DOWN, FELLERS\nTo many followers of golf, Jerry\nTYavtra haa been for years a dusty\nlegend. Now he la returning to activity aa a profeanlonel, cashing In you\nmight aay on the heroism of his storied, though financially unrewarded,\nbari-ground. I\u00abnt ol-j Jerry Travers,\nbattling with onr modern fairway\nmachines, stirring enough for at l*ast\nthe price of a look?\nEarl Sande. a wrinkled gnome from\nan older world, crouched low over the\nsweating neck of a thoroughbred,\nchanting some Impromptu melody into the horse's ear as the pack comes\nsteaming down the stretch\u2014are ynu\ngoing up to the man and say. \"Sec\nhere, Sande cut all this out. You're\nreally too o'ld for thla sort of stuff\n\u2022    \u2022    *\nHOW DOFpI HE DO ITT\nBuddy Ensor waa a great jockey\na few years back. But he loved thr\nlight**, of -Sroadwmy when they were\nflaring, and ti.e lights of Broadway,\nwhen they flare, are hard on the eyes,\nIt came to the point where Ensor.\nlifted into the saddle of the hors**\nhe wu supposed to ride, often would\nfall off ou the sic. Ho wa* barred\nand for years hoverrd on the frayed\nborder of the turf laud where, aober,\nhe M0ht have dwelt in honor.\nThey (ft*? Buddy \"mm mor**\nch\".noe.\" And why not? If he can\nitlck on the back of one of those\nhlde*and-hair juggernauts, guiding\nhla galloper \u25a0uiRwervlri.ily through\nslippery mud or choking dust, plunging up to the wire first with a last-\nminute r\u00bbprtnt that bla unerring Judgment of pace had aaved for the\ni-tretch\u2014if he can do all that after\nthe flushed night, and blurred days\nof his incredible career, isn't he\na pretty fair sort of country ri'icr,\nafter ail?\nThese men ere aw,_re every minute that the odd* they are fighting\nare tremendous. But If there* ls\nenough of the old punch, skill an*.\ncolor left\u2014and enough of the old\nfight\u2014well   they can still go for ne!\nJUNIOR BASEBALL\nLEAGUE SCHEDULE\nGETS UNDER WAY\nMaulers and Fairview Tic in\nFirst  Came;  Falcon*\nWin Second Game\nson had difficulty remaining on his\nfeet   near  the   finish.\nK. W, Robinson, Camp Borden,\nOnt., who laat night dethroned J:x*\nBlhlslck. middleweight king from\nPort William, met his nemesli in\nL. A. Lavoie, of Edmout.n. The westerner wu too swift for the airman.\nPOSTPONEMENTS\nIN BASEBALL\nNATIONAL   LEAr.l'E\nrtew  York  at  Pn'_,bp_.y*i,  ptpIp..\nAMEBICAN   IXAUll'B\nChicago st  New York, r\u00bbin.\nCleveland   at   Bost\/in,   rstn.\nINTERpNATIONAL   LEAOIT\nNone.\nINTCRNATIONAL\nvf.xavt   scouts\nBig League\nBASEBALL\nPITCHING\nWASHINGTON   7.\nDCTBOIT   0\nWASHINGTON, May 13\u2014 Alvin\nCrowder pitched sterling two-hit ball\ntoday to enable Wwhlngtvin Senators\nto turn back tbe rejuvenated Detroit Tigers  7  to 0.\nIn addition to hts pitching, Crowder drovo out a slnglo and a triple\nto help along the scoring. In only\nthree, innings were the Dctrolters!\nable to place a man on first and\nnone of these reached second. Crowder struck out five of Bucky HurrLs'\nvisitors.\nWyatt, who started for Detroit,\nallowed seven hits which wore converted Into four run* during his\nseven Innings on the mound. Her-\nring, who relieved him ittK thl\nfutile efforts of White, and Alexander ss pinch hitter**- allowed lour\nhits,  two  of  them   triple**-.\nDetroit    \u201e    0     2   0\nWashington     7   11   1\nWyatt, Heirring and Ilijwurth,\nSuace;  Crowder and Berg.\nPHILADFLPHU,   9\nST.    LOLIS    4\nPHHaADELPHIA. May 13\u2014 The\nAthletics, and Jimmy Foxx In particular, fattened iheir batting average* at the expend of two St.\nLouis pitchers today as they pounded out a 9 to 4 victory over the\nBrowns.\nThe A's nicked 0-w.ri.e Blaeholder\nand Dick Coffman \"for 17 hits,\nFoxx getting (our singles in five\ntunes up. Mule Hhhs got three hits\nand Mickey Cochrane hla sixth\nhomer of the year. Big George Earnshaw went the full nine taatnp,\nH\u00ab gave six hits and two of thf\nBrowns' runs were due ,to hla\nwlldnes*..\nSt.   Louts     \u2122    4     \u00ab   0\nPhiladelphia    9   17   1\nBlaeholder, Coffman, antl PtrnU,\nBengough;   Earnshaw   and   Cochrane.\nJUNIOR BASEBALL\nTEAM TO INVADE\nKASLO ON MAY 21\nAfter corpslnfTprpK an Invl'sllotl\nfrom the sport,, committee of the\nKa*lo celebration on May on lay\n24, the Junior biisebaU team p1p>\nelded to enter a team from Nelson.\nThe team that will invade the lake\ncity will be chosen from the foup*\njunior leaRiie teams here and tha\nboy* are working hard tn make thc\nteam.\n0\/t7?\/OP<\u00bb(.\n~\/>osinoH r>\nHMDS MiW\nMSN OH\nizro\/r\n9ASC\nDAVIS CUP\nPLAY\nNEW ORLEANS. U. M\u00aby lie\u2014Tlie\nUnited atatea Davit oup tennla team\nwon the llrst two singles matoh\nfrom the Mexicans today at tht\nNew OrleanB couury club to take\nthe lead In the semi-final aerlee\nof  th\u00ab  North   American zone.\nEllsworth Vlnea, united States\nchampion, defeated Alfonso tJliOa.\n8-1, 0-3, 8-4. after Wllmer Allison\nwon from Ricardo Tapia, Mexico's\ntop  ranking  player,   9-1,  6*3,   8-4.\nIn both matche* the Mexlcana\nbattled doggedly arm at times\nbroke through the Americana with\nflashes of brilliant tednla, but the\nvariety of strokes displayed by the\nUnited states players waa too much\nfor them.\nBoth Vlnea and Allison played\ncareful tennis to outntroke their\nopponents but both had period) of\nragged play, netting easy ahotj\nand   overdriving   the   baae   line.\nThe aecond tomorrow will mateh\nAllison and John Van Ryn with unda\nand Eduardo Mestre in doubled,\nBalUmore  3,   Montreal   1\nJersey   City   J,  Toronto 8,\nReading   7,   Buffalo   4.\nNewark 2, Rochester 3.\nFERNIE SCHOOL\nFOOTBALL TEAM\nTAKES TROPHY\nThe schedule Tor til- first haU ot\nthe City JualOT Baseball league M\ndrawn   up   at   *   recent   mee'lnf*   of\nI the league   ts   as   follows:\nI    M*iv 6\u2014Mauler* vs rairvlew.\n\\    May   13\u2014Hume   vs   Falcon**.\n1     M'ly   14\u2014Fiilcons  Vg Tslrvlr*.\n|     Mny   15- Maulers   v* Hume.\nj    Mny   20\u2014 Fairview   \"_.   Mau'ers.\nj     Mny   21 -Mauler*   vs   Falcons    no\n[be |iUytd as double Jieader U ftm\n;slhle)\ni    Mny 22\u2014Hume* ve Fairview.\n[ .Ifj.y 27\u2014Falrons vs Hume.\nMay .IS\u2014Fairview va Falcons.\nI Mny 2D\u2014Hume vt Maulers,\ni Juno ;.\u2014Fairview ts Hume.\nJuno 5\u2014Falcons vs Maulers.\nI 11 p first two gsmes scheduled\nIhtVf been played off. Maulers and\n. Fnir-'te*-\/ tied In t'.e. first game, 7-7,\nand  .he  Falcons  woi. Friday's game\ntOOt  the  Hume   9-3.\nVictory Over Coal Creek 8 0\nPlaces Them Far Ahead\nin Points\nFERNIE. B. C, Hav 13\u2014 The\nFernie School Junior football t.jpam\nmade sure of thc Llpl.t-i-lt Cup Sa*-\nurday 1n their .e_u*j* asms with the.\nCoal  Creek  scli-col   tca.m.\nThe Crows fjett Pa-*ss school\nleatue this year is composed of\nteams from Femle, Coal Creek and\nMichel. Fernie haa one more ga.ne\nto piay with Michel, but is so .ruin  the lead  that the results cf  the\npraut will not affect their wlnnlns*\njtiie rup. The Fernie boys have won\nthe four games tliey played. Michel\nwon the cup  last  year.\n-.aturdnys game with Coal Creek\nIre.-tite-i in a score of 8-0 in favour\nlef F'ernie. The \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0core, indicated tr***\nj play, At the end of the first hall\nIt iu yO. Wnartock got the firnt\nipoal by heading the ball strait., r\nI In between tho goal posts, an*!\nI Unit, followed 4a*\u00abr with the\ni aecond. In the las*, half Lynch gc.\nin arutther goal from the center of\nt'.e twenty-five yard line, Doughert,'\nMOD added a fourth, and later the\nFernte forward line broke through\nThe defenso and added a fifth goal.\nFernie team: Burtnick-goalic,\nMftl and Wocheuch- backs, r.em-\nInf, t_mch and Bc*T\u00ablli-V,slfbicks\nE. iTIMimn. J Huiil.ee. Wanock, T.\nAn\u00ab(*l*ro   and   I3.*>u'.;icrty-forv.*ards.\nAgti is What Counts\"\nDEMERARA RUM\non im K.nu ITINC\nThis adveilieement ie not published or displayed by thc\nLiquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.\nBy ALL DLHAREE\nWith a runner on first base or with\n.'imners on bot h flmt and second\nbase, the pitcher must dl-tpen**\u00a9 with\nBll tha leverage gained from \u00bb full\nwind-up, nnd must watch not only\nthe batter, but the runners aa well.\nMost pt'ehers under these oondi-\ntlona, hold the bii'l about lf.vel with\nthe ch*\"st and close to the body,\nhut no Im * Wtmttt than tli* great\nChristy HfcttlMMB hlm.->elf, held the\nbaJj with Ma arms almost extended\ndownward, and his hands well below -Tils belt,\nIy*ai-n t-> throw to-the plate with\nthe -w-me motion that you throw to\nQui bMt*. Try to eliminate all little\nEfunanrtflBg that will betray to the\nrunner your Intentions. leaning\n\u2022lightly toward tiM plate- with the\nbr\u00bbdy and legs and then throwing to\nfirst, will fool most runners. Then\ntry leaning toward first. _jid throwing to plat\u00ab. Bo careful to always\n\u25a0.tep t-iward first baae when throwing tin* biijl t.iiere, Ot-henvtaa it I*\n... beikp   Mix up bhmt dellreriea.\nWatch the rumier from the> corner of your eye and do not lot htm\ngrt too big a lead.\nAI Demaree rms prepered an II-\nlii**'ratpd lraflet on \"B\u00ab.\u00ab Bun-\ntiing\" which he *fl uladly send\nIf> any rea-lcr re'juesling It. Ad-\ndrcs-. lil Deniaree In oare of this\npaper and Ite sure to enclo**** a\nMl f-addressed   (.tamped   envelope.\nHOME RUN KINGS\nfBv lhe   A-.soclfll#d   Prefcst\nHOME   ittNS   TBiTBRDAY\nCochrane.   Athletics,   1.\nHerman. Ret!,*., t.\nHendriPk, Cardinals, t.\nTMi:   LCABBM\nCollins.  Cardinal.''  P,\nTerry,   Gianta.   7,\nFoxx.  Athletics,  7. .\nRuth,   Yankees,  fl.\nGehringer, Tigers, fl.\nAverill,   Indians,   fl.\nCochrane. Athletics, 0,\nLBAGDE   SIANDINfi\nAmerican 08.\nNational   76.\nGrand tota. 17n,\nHAVANA,   May   18.\u2014(AP) \u2014 Au\"-\ntralla's tennia aoes. Jack Crawford\nj and Harj*y o. Hopman, sailed through\nCuba's representatives with a loss\nof only on* set in two matches\ntoday tp gain an apparently unbeatable leao In the semi-final\nround of the Davie cup oompetftlon\ntn  the   North   American  aone.\nAfter Crawford had trounced. Rle-\nardo Moralea tn the opening singles\nmatoh of the aeries, e-3. fl-I, 7-8,\nHt**pmaa put Australia two up by\nbeating the Cuban champion, Gustavo Vollumer. 8-2, 6-i, 4-6, 6-1.\nNHED ONE \\1CT011Y\nAll tho players from tho Antipodes\nnow need is a vlrtory either in\ntho doubles tomorrow or In erne oi\nthe final two single matches pun-\nday. Cuba, to escape elimination,\nmust win all threo remaining\nmatches, a j-eemlngly impopaible\ntask In view of the excellent play\nof both Crawford and Hopman today.\nTho winnrr of the aeries irtll go\nto the North American rone finals. !\nngainst  the Burvivor of the  united i\nStates -Mexico   scries,   now   in   progress In New Orleans.\nPOLAND WINS   TWO GAMBK\nFROM   HOLLAND\nWARSAW, Mny 18 Uf) .\u2014Poland I\nwon the first two atnglea matches J\nof its second round Davis cup tennis   series   with   Holland   today,\nToloczynskl      defeated      veterans!\nHane  Tlmmer,   7-5.fl-8.6-4.  snd   Max [\nStolarow defeatf-d  Hughsn, 6-8, 6-1\n5-7,   fl-O.fl-0.\n12 THOROUGHBREDS !\nARE ENTERED FOR j\nPREAKNESS EVENT\nBAI.TTM09.E, Md., Mar W\u2014An\neven dozen thoroughbred three-\nyear-oldj were entered today for the\n41st renewal of tha historic preak-\nneai ntsked #50,000, mile and thre?\nsixteenths feature tomorrow at Plra-\nllco.\nThs list was headed by Colonel\nE. R. Bradley's Burgoo King, gallsnt\nson of Bubbling Over, which last\nSaturday won the eighth runnlnj ]\nof the Kentucky derby, emulating,\nhis famous father's performance io i\n1926-\nSecond ln line waa Mrs. U (I.\nKaufma.ni-'a Tick On, favorite for\nthe derby, but outrun by Burgoo\nKing and four others.\nSILVERTON    BALL     TEAM     BEATS\nBLBTON\nSILVERTON, B. C, May 13\u2014The I\nSllverton baseball team motored to\nBurton on Sunday to play their\nsecond game of the Season, winning]\nby the scoro of  14-6.\nThe Three Things\nThat Made It Happen\nWinchester Cigarettes are growing\nmore rapidly in favour with Canadian\nsmokers than any other cigarette ,. .\nand there are three reasons for it:\nThe Blend\u2014originated by experts and\nbrought to its high degree of perfection\nthrough years of experimentation.\nKnowledge\u2014the result of long years of\nexperience in making cigarettes by\nCanada's largest tobacco manufacturers.\nQuality\u2014combination of the most up-to-\ndate methods of manufacture and the\nuse of none but choice tobaccos.\ninchester\nCIGARETTES\nBlended Right!\nImperial Toh*o_* Company of Csmaclt, Limited\n.%..-p*M_n_anba\n\t\n \u2022AOB  -TOUT\nIHE   ?!TI*0!I   DAILY   NWTS.   NELHOW.   B.   0,   MTCTOAY   MOKfB*_   MAT   M,   lltl-i\nBi\njitWHApOU WANT.^^\n(\u2014\n\u25a0if \u2014*\n1\n\\j.A.bcctaj|\nr.E**r |\nWw*uctEcE\n^6**tui*\"iv[\nWANT AND CLASSIFIED\nADYEBTISLNG\nOns lnaertloD io cents a line\nSix Insertions iO centa a Una\nOne month 11-30 a Una\nMinimum  two lines\nBirth notices tree of charge\nDeatns     marriages    mid    oardt   of\nthank*.  30  cents  per  Una\nFuneral flowera 15 ctuts per Una\nNewa   of   the   Day   Items   70   cents\npar Una.\nNO EX1BA COiT IF CHABGED\nBIRTHS\n(1)\nrJTOHITT \u2014 At tht Kootenay\nL*ke GeueraJ hospital to Mr. snd\nMr_. B. Ftuhett of Harrop, May\n4,   a   daughter.\nMoCARGRA \u2014 At the Kootenay\nLake General honpital to Mr. and\nMrs. J. Moo-u-gr-i, Vernon street.\nMay  e, a daughter.\nSTEVENSON \u2014 To Mr. and Mis.\nFrank, Stevenson, at the Mater\nMl_ercordlae Hospital, RofHslaud, oil\nMay 12, a daughter.\nAIKEN \u2014 To MS\". *\u00abid Mrs. J. W.\nAiken, at the Mater MisercordlB-.\nhoepital, Itosbland, on May 13. a\nson.\nROWLANDS \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. L.\nH. Rowlands at Trail-rad.*u*ac hospital. May  li, a son.\nFORD \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nFord, At Trail -Tadanac hospital,\nMay  ll, a son.\nPERSONAL\n*5)\nnOULUH    FOB    BENT\nOil)\nrOR   RENT   \u2014   NEW   FULLY   FUR-\nnli-hed liou-**, July snd August.\nPhone inorninnK 314R, or writ*.\nP. O. Box 670, Nelson. (3100)\nFOR RENT\u2014S-ROOM. ALSO THREE\nroom houae. Apply D. Magho.\nPhone  H08L   or   4&3R. t20_9.\nPOULTHY    AND    EOOB\n(t6)\nPOR  RENT SIX  ROOM  COMPLETE*\nly furnished  house, Phone 409R2.\nmutt\nFURNIIBHED       COTTAOE8       NEAR\nbeach  for  rent,  J.  J. Campbell.\n(1618)\nSEVEN-ROOM   HOUSE   NEAR   HOS-\npital. The Ark. Phone 534.   (1090)\nLIVESTOCK   FOB   \u00a7ALE\n(23)\nYOUNO REOISTERED AYRSHIRE.\nHeavy milker. Gentle. Will sell\nor exchange for Jersey. Box 3114,\nDally   News. (3114,\nPOR SALE \u2014 FOUR YEAR OLD\nregistered Ayrshire bull. Alao\nsome young cows to freshen anc_\nfresh.   Box   2078,   Dally   News.\n(2078)\nFOR SALE \u2014 FINE YOUNO MARE\nin foal, about 1300. Very gentle,\ngood worker \u00bb100. Also few unbroken mares up to 1400. John\nOraham,   Perrv   Siding. v20fl7)\nYORK HIRE   PIGS   FOR SALE  $3.60\neach. Boothby, Edrewood, B. C.\n(1684)\nFOUR YOUNG HORdES. IBOo TO\n2000 lbs. oeo. Mclnnea, Wynndel.\nB. c- 12136)\nPOR SALE \u2014 A FRESHET-TED COW.\nApply J. P. Bell, Pari. Siding,\nB  C BaWl\nWOMEN\nNO NEED TO HUFKER\nDR- COOKE'b COMPOUND\nhse been used by women ol Great\nBritain and Canada ior over ft quarter of a century for the mpatt9 roliT\nof delayed (tiid painluj pafloda,\nbackache, nervousnobs and -'il kin-\ndied troubles, a lady writes; \"i\nthought that I liad tried everything\npOgBwtl and still no reliel unu*\nfriends told ma about Dr. Oatimtt\nCompound. It acted at onoe; now l\ndon't worry, aa l alw*iys keep a\nbox on hand. 1 would not oe\nwithout lt as It is really wonderful.\" Dr. Cooke'a Compound is tl\na box, post paid. The extra strength\nfor    obpt 1 nate    c*_.se_,    lb    <2.00    per\nbox.  post  paid,  m   plum   wrapper\nand insured.\nWEST MBMBDT CO.\nP. O. Box 2253, Winnipeg, Km.\n.2147,\nAFTER YOUR DEATH WILL YOUR\nwife, mother or children have to\nface want or hard .ships? Tiir 3000\nBenefit A-.soctat.ion ilncorpowtad\nuiitler the societies Art ot B. C\n1H2I- Di'ovidfa protection |10 entrance ite. II un death ol a memo*..'\nand s.2 annua] dues. A_.e limit 18 to]\n60. (jreuteat number of deaths ui'\nany tula y\u00ab*t during thc past 10\nyears wus 12. Over 7:1,600 bus been\npaid in ciiiuns. Only a limited nuni-\nbrr cn .ioin, Send for full part.r-\n.liar**. J. Lades Ward, Me.-retary, 334\nw. Pander it*. Vancouver, B.C. i80W.\nMAIMtY\u2014Join   the   CinwIaWl   Cor*\nrespondenoa club. Established io24.1\nReliable; Successful. Many marriages)\nprove this. Ifembtn an om Oaoa*\nda, Rundradi in prWrla provtnoea\nv* ml Brltlah Columbia. Many lady\nmember b,   introduction   by   print*\nletter*-. Write for particulars whhh '\nwill be seat you in plain, sealed en- *\nvelope, Adnreas P. o &o* via, Cal-|\ngary,  Alwrta. (WH1 \u25a0\nlinillMtllltlllllllllllMMIIItlllllUIIIIIIII\nAuto Insurance\nLet its place your  insurance for\nyou.     We   h ave   the   best   and\n\u25a0tronseat   eoanpaitlas.\nFire Insurance\nGet our rate*, when we write\na policy you will know you are\ngelt I ng the proper cover. Our\ncon.pui.lt.- ate .sonic of iat\noldest   nnd    best,\nPLATE GLASS\nInsurance\nOur rate.** for this business are\nnow, we believe, the lowest\never    offered    In    Nelson.\u2014You\nMioukl      not     be      frftbOUt     tli Ls\ncover.\nOur S5.00\nAccident Policy\nWe can .civ.-* you a $1600.00\ncover and *2.,.00 per week, on\na n -cldeni, po! Icy for death\nor Injury while drlvint. a car or\nInjured by or In an A\"to. .See us\nand get full particular!-. This\nIf one of the beet, policies we\nhave   offered.\nnonvraoM dbaityroi\n421   Baker   St.\nlllfinilllMHMIIItlllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n= MAV PRICES ON BOLIVAR z\n= CHICKS I\n3 Lenhorn\u00bb loc each: Rock., Z\nZZ Reds, Wyaduottea 12c. Write Z\nZ tor prices on pullets. We raise ^\nZ only tne b<*t. ~\n= BOLIVAR HA1CH^.R1B_ LTD. -\nZ Cloverdate, B. C. or S\n\u2014 Oalfary, Alta. z\n_Z '21361   =\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIiniMIMIMIMMIIMIIM\nPullet, will be scarce and egg prices\nhlRh ntxt fall. Get some of our B.\n0. White Leghorn or R. I. Red\nchicks tor good results. Bred from\nhealthy, vigorous stock for high pro-'\nduction and large eggs.\nRUMP &  SENDALL\nMllner,  b. C\n,19741\nFOR BA1J3 \u2014 WHITE LEGHORN\ncockerels, five weeks old. 80t\neach.   Phone   S84L1, .309U1\nMl\u00bbCELLA.M_Uts   KOR   S4I.E      (271\nBETTER   VALUES\n1938 CHEVROLET  &EDAN\u2014$346\n1937 CHEVROLET  SEDAN\u2014 $276\n1928 CHEVROLET COUPE-$206\n1930 PORD    COurE    \u2014    $385\n1927 DODGE    COUPE   \u2014   $375\nNELSON  TRANSFER  CO.\n(21521\nGALVANIZED IRON PIPE AND FlT-\ntingi., Belting, etc.\u2014Full line ai\nnew and used Galv. and Black\npipe and Fittings: >*_ Galv. new\n\u2022jZ c; ]\" Black 5c; |' BlacK. cuK-\nBblc for Irrigation H.nd water line\n12c, other slues low prices; New\nCorniRated Galv. Iron M P\u00ab 100\n\u25a0Qiian feet; ne-* nnd U8M flat\nGnlv. {.heets. Full stock of Steel\nSplit Pulleys; Potato md Gram\nSacks. Barbed Wire; Wire Rope;\nCanvas Door*s, Windows-. Roofing\nFelt Garden and Air Hofc*\\ Boom\nChains; Merchandise n-nd Equipment of ail descriptions. Encjutr-\n__-.\u25a0  counted.\nB. r. -II NK CO.\n118   Powell   Jft\u201e   VVM'.t.VFH.  B.   C\n(2032|\nExtra Vacation Money\nIt's in Your Attic, Garage,\nBasement, Etc.! Cash It\nin the Classified Way \\\nHundreds of others are raising their vacation money\nthis way . . . you can do the same. There is always a\nready market among people who wish to buy for\nCASH that which you no longer need. Used ice boxes,\ntents, baby carriages, guns, pianos, radios, phonographs, furniture, stoves, bicycles, lamps and even\nused radiators and typewriters are daily sold in that\nway. These items are dust-covered dollars\u2014uncover\nthem, sell them, \"cash in\" on them! Turn them into\nvacation money. Phone 141 now'and just say \"Classified Ads.\"\nMIBCELLANFOUi\nmiMi.1m.Mm11.11m111n1.11111111.11.il.\n| Kaslo Freight   |\nI S Trl-Weekly  Fright  Service   to   =\n; =       Kaslo    and    way-points.        _\\\\\ni z. Leave    Nelson    Tuesday    and   Z\n* ~ Fridays. =\n; = Losding    days    Mondays    and   S\n~ Thursdays.      \u2022 \u2122\n| Williur.i_\u00bb'Trarofcr =\n, s 800 Ward &t. Nelson, B.C.  S\nIIIIIIIMIIIMIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIMIMIIIII.\nBttflNEM OPPOHTtNITIES\n(50) [ AUTOMOBILE*    fOB   SAT.B\nPKOr-fR'l'f   FOB   **Vt_\n(S4)\n\u2022JIMUnilllllMMIIIMIIIlMIIMMMIUimil |\nE C-9AAA   Fairview \u20148   bed- I\n1: 9*wvw rooms,  dlnlns: room, S\n'\u25a0' living   room,   bathroom;    new \u00a3\nS plumbing.  Good   garden,   fruit I\n:~ trees,  Oarage.  Terms. 2\nmiMMHMiMMiiiiiiiuiiiii!iiimiiiiiiiiiit\n- 8AWMILL    FOR    SALE _Z\nX Comp,rtsir.\u00ab:   30   HP,   Locomo- -J\n= live    Firebox    Boiler;    30   HP. =\n= 9\"xl2\"   Centre   Crank   Engine; S\n2 Buckeye ' Sawmill   with   three \u2014\n= Headblocks.   Headblocks,  Head- S\nS blocka   upon   eeparate   trucks. \\z\nWl tor  cutting  long timbers;   one J2\n_\u2022 Hand   \u00a3d*.er,   one  Cutolf   Saw; S\nE one   McGregor   Gourlay   planer _z\nmi and     Matcher.    24\"x6\"     with 1\nH Moulding     Attachment;     Log _z\n_Z and  Lumber  Trucks,  Shafting 3\n5 snd  Sawdust Conveyor. E\n= Apply -\n= BURDEN & WATSON =\nI Port Crawford, B.C. -\n= (2130, \u25a0\nMMmMIMIMIMMIMMimtllMMMIIIIIIII.il\nINVESTMENTS    ' (48)\nniiu':,:i >;\u25a0 \" \u2022 HiniinHHiiniiMiiini\n= J'lLES I\nE (.uyooo   'Hju-rinf*  from   film z:\nE cas obtain tpmtty relief lrom   B\nE imw-uiI.   rrolnidinj*   or   bleed-    \"C\nr ill**  I'lict*   ny   uMdc   niunbow  z\nS  I'llr    Hcniccl>.    SemJ     10c    for   -5\n\u2014 sampit   ajid   full   particular.   E\nE ittna. Lalonde, Bos loti, Wind-\n\u2014 ;*ur ,Out. (1731)\nllMiMilllhlMIMMIHMIIIMHnhimillllll\nW22*uIPC\u00ab***ft\"BT  Tr M,I,TKI'?iMMMr,mMll|Mll|l|IIIIMMIIHMMMMMMI\nPm   Itat,   ladlaa   and   \u25a0anUmeti j\nwi.lilup martlafa.\" Many >ir-* weal-I '\nthy   Writ*-  for list  torlHv!  Evil   \\u      IIMIIMI llll|l Mill 1111111 111 II\nam\u00ab,   B\"\\   30,   Sprtogfield,   Ohio,\nU.  I   A. U81J-\nC. (V. M. CROWN BICYCLE. ONLY\n|33.I0. Choice of Blue or Marnon\nwith White trlm-rnlnKs In *<l7*es\n20-18 or 22-M. TeniL*., $10 down.\nBulance $6 month. On nil cash\norders we M freight lo tlestinn-\ntlon.   Write   today   for   catalogue,\nHASKIN5 & ELLIOTT\n1027    W.   Pender   St.,   Vancouver,\nB. C- (2141)\n111MI IT 11 rt Mtl 11MI Ml) M111M M IE 11MI\n- C+ENUINE CANADIAN TIPE _Z\nS TOBACCOS S\nZ l-ent 28'*. BOO, .ir.r; cut 70C 7.,C I\n\u20225 lb., mall ChaffM rx'rn. High- \u25a0*\u00ab\nS tut quality oniy. Price list, on I\nE rrcjuest. Try .ample 6 lbs. Per- 5\n5 (um* of Italy ui* 8 lbs. Petit \u2122\nS Bouge. \u00bb2.15 postpaid, j 8ala \u2022\n1 S Co., 62B Bsnnatyne Ave., Win- S\n2   nlpcft. (2091.   I\nMIlllllMfHIIIllllHUIIllllUllllllllllltllTl\nlllllllimiUlllllllllliMIHIIlUlllUIMlllll\n\u2014 SHIP ANYWHFHE -\n~ 10 lbs. GOOD LEAF TOBACCO, \u25a0*\u2022*\u25a0\nE MILD OR STRONG,   \u00bb2.30 E\n\u2014 20 lbs. fnr $4 5\nr Qt.T-SNEl, 2 lbs. for C? ZZ\nE Addrean S\nE G. Dubois E\nHenderson, Ottawa, Ont.    S\ni -= (2I4C)   \u25a0=\nIIIIIMMimiMMMIIIIIIIIIlMIIIMMillllllll\nI MSCJXLANEOUB   FOR   SALE\u2014Con.\nSTOVES   ANB   TARTS\nWe carry nil parts for aaiy make or\nn.mge. Write it-** and we will giacUy\ntry and llll your orders, if we \u25a0\u2022\u2022*n-\nnot supply tha repair pan required,\nIt cannot be har] Hisewhere, x.\nFranks, 9U bejmour Street, Vancouver, B. C. (201.3.\nSTRAW FOR MULCHING BEKBJEB.\nTltermogen Mulch paper In 12\"\nand 18\" widths, Adco (or compo**t,\nAt.la.cide lor m\/ftt nnd . couch\ngrass, The Bracknian-Ker Milling\nCo.  Ltd. 12139)\nTEN CENTS POPULAR SHEET\nMusic. 3 for 35o. Na-me Bong^ yuu\nmmtm. Send coin with orriT to\nSheet music, .-service. Suit* 3,\n709   Dunsmulr.  Vancouver.   i21*it'\nSECOND HAfN* PIPES, FlTl'INGb,\nValves, etc. We carry a full stock\nof reconditioned pipes suitable lot\nall purposes, write to Swsrtz Pip*-\nYard, 2*)0 1st Ave., East, Vancouver, B. C, 1191)(;'\nFOR HALE\u2014TWO FORDSON TRAC-\ntOM in good Bhape. prices riglit.\nTermQ to responsible party. Cha**.\nMurrell,   Creston. (200fl;\nCHRISTIE WRECKING CO,. 163C\nWest let. Ave., Vancouver\u2014Baft\nfiO tu 75 per cent, on (,i. radiators,\ncylinder heads and blocks.   (1W6-\nFOR SALE\u2014POOL TABLE. .*> by \\>\nwith pqulpmeut, HO, APDly 70S\nVernon, (1913)\nSPECIAL HANDMADE HEAVY OAR-\nb-nte cans I2.7S.  reg.   $3,**S0, R.  H.\nMaber, phone 635, 310 Koot. (1P(.4\u00bb\n21)\nFARM   PROPERTY   FOR   SALE   (36*    =\n3 ^9Knn N*w Bungalow 5\nE V-*\"**vv Stucco finish. Two S\nI berooma, bathroom, large, I\nE bright living room, kitchen, S\n_Z lull basement. Oarage in base- E\nment.   Excellent   view.   Terms, _z\nMISCKLLANEOVB WAKTBU\nIJIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIHlllllllllMIIMMMIi;'!,\nI   25 Acre Farm for Sale I\nZ 6   acres   cultivated,   5   partly j*\nE cleared,   balance   timber.   Near i1\nZ to   School,   store,   poet   office. *\nE Railway  Station,  etc' 50  fruit, \u2122\n\u2014 trees, etc. Water flumed  from V\nE Creek.     5-rooni     house^\u2014good E\nI outbuildings.     Revenue   from :*-\nE poultry,  vegetables  and  Dairy. S\nE Low   price   $1500,   easy   terms. I\n1          H. E. DILL I\n\u2022>\u25a0 Fire and Auto Insurance E\nE 508 WARD ST. PHONE 180 I\nE (2109i H\n IHIIM M111111 MMM111M HI 11 IM\nI  -t3AAA New Bun('a^ow- Tw\u00b0 I\nS 93VVW bedrooms,   large Z\nE bright living rooms, open fire- z\nS place, pannfled walls, kitchen. B\nE Basement,   cement   floor,    Vh Z\nE lots, good value st this price. ~\nZ Term?.                                                E\nE We   have   several   blocks   of E\nS good   land   for   sale,   close   to E\n1 city limits. Suitable for garden =\n\u00ab or   chicken   ranch,   price   J175 I\nE UP*                                                 E\nI Whitfield & Sturgeon I\n~     Real   Estate   and   Insurance   I\nS 414  Ward St. E\n\u00ab (21561   I\niimn iH.HiinnninimiiiH.Mnui T\nWILL SACRIFICE ALL OR ANY\npart of mv Went Arm property.\nWlist offers? Rowland Bourkr.\n1253 Lyall st., Esqulmalt.      (2158i\nIIIMMIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIflMlllllllllll\nMORTGAGES WANTED\n1800.00 required on Residential\nproperty valued at $1600.00,\ninterest  8 per  cent three years.\n$1000.00   required    on    property\nvalued *\u00bb! \u25a0\"'\" '\"*\" m.^r: _ 6\nper cent, three years.\n$3000.00 required on Nelson\nbusiness property, $7000,00 valuation. Net revenue 7% times\nInterest requirements. 8 per\ncent   iBtaratt,  3   to  6  yc:..s.\nWe will guarantee these loans\nas to both principal and Interest.\n\u00bbCBEBT8(^* OEALTY g\u00bb0. J.TD.\n421  Boker St. Phohe C8\n13-161)\nIIIMMIillMIMIMIIIIIIIItllllllllllMIIMIIII\nFORD CX)LTE \u2014 L.ATB I9S0 MOD\n\u2014 Haa   5   excepilunally   g-od    t;i\nand   ts   in   first   d'\u25a0**\u25a0*.   cn-ndJtl'B\n$385,  \u2014  NLLbON  THANS\u00bbH_R  1\n (aia\n1930 DODGE-6 COUPE. RUMBl\nseat; fine performance; 2 spaB\nwith carrier. 3. R. T^cnnaa. R f\n1,   NeUon, (2l|\nFOR   SALE  \u2014   1927  FORD  OOAQ\nOverhauled,    excellent    condnil\n$75. Box 2093, Daily News.  ,301\nNUHRERY   PRODUCTS\nDAHLIAS   35c TO  3fic   EACH;   $2L\nto  $3 50  per dozen.   J. T. Beali\nBox i397, Nelfion, B. C. (2lf\nNIKIIMMIIMIMMMIiMMIIUmiMHIIIll\nLoose Leaf Equipment f\nBINDERS  FOR ANY  BREFTS !\nLOOSE LEAF SHEETS\nFOR ANY  BINDEB\nNelson Daily News\nJOB DEPARTMENT\nPhone 144\nlllttllllllllllllMUMIIItllllllllHIIIIIfltj\nIIMIIIHMIMIMIIIIMIMI!ltnMMMIilMll|\n-LODGE-\nCOURT   ROTnl\nNl'L-JON. Nn. _'l\na. o. r.\nMeet*  1st and 2\nThurs, B p.m.\nEAGLE    HALLj\nJuv. Foresters, f\nOB. Abbott.\nBox TM    (1931\nBUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAssayers\nTOR SALE \u2014 TOLLT EQUIPPED\ndpjlry, stock an_ Irult ranch, on\nmain highway. Kootenay Lake.\nPtice will easily nin 50 heppcl ol'\nstock.   Box   206S.   Dally   News.\n(MM)\nFOR SALE \u2014 riVE ACRE RANCH,\ntwo miles out on Granite Roaa.\nAll lplncls of fruit. live room\nhoPL'pp, larRC chicken house and\noilier opitbulldlriRs. All cleared.\nWntcr. Writ* Box 1184. M\u00abfM,\n.   t2QB9)\nRANCH KOr. SALE. 20 ACRES. WIL- | CLASSIFIED ADS SERVm CONTIN-\nirsw Point. B. C. Box 2086, Dally ouously\u2014Why not start one serv\nNews. (20861      InR vou tods..\nE. W. W*ddowson. Box Alio*. B***\u00bba,\nB. C. standard western charges.\n119 JO)\nCECIL I. CROHSLEY. BOX 568. NEL-\nson. Leave samples at Whitfield\nis fjpturgeon. (2110)\nChiropractors\nPROPERTY WANTED\n\u2022M* I\nWANTED   TO   RENT   RANCH   N__\\R\nschool.  Box  2148,  Dally  News.\n(2148)\n.MOTORCYCLE* KOR SALE\n(60     .MOTORCYCLE* FOR SALE\nDR. GRAY, OILKER BLK,, NELSON.\n(19811\nMITTIIN AND OEDDES, X-RAY nnd\nMCM, Crunhrook nnd Trill. (1082)\nDR,   MACM1LLAN.   C.RAD.   PALMER\nSchool, Abcr Blk., Nelson. Ph. 212.\n(His:))\nEngineers\nINDIAN MOTOCYCLES\nWANTED   \u2014   GRAZING   POR   SIX\nyearlings   In    vicinity   of   Nelson.\nPhone    188L2   or   P.   O.   Box   415,\n(2069)\nWANTED   \u2014   A  BOAT,   ALSO  PIOH\nUM   OUlBN   lifn*-.   H.   Ellis.* Rlon-\ndel, B, C. OA2b)\n1 INDIAN   TWIN     1150.00\n1 INDIAN   TWIN     ftlfliVOO\n1 INDIAN   TWIN    -  \u00bb335.00\n1 INDIAN   TWIN     #365.00\n1 HARLEY   TWIN     *l9f..00\n1 NEW   CHIEF    -  Ml9*00\nENGLISH  B.  S.  A.   AND\nFRANCIS    BARNETTS $1.95 nnd Up\n1   NEW OUTBOARD  $175,00\nH. D   DAWSON, B.C.L.8. ROOM ISA\nK.  W.   C.  Blorlt,   Noldon.       1193*1)\nCHAS. MOOHE. Griffin Blk., Nelson,\nB. C. Land Surveyor, Box 6.*,4.\n(11)86)\nTransfer\nATKINSON TRANSFER, ROSEMONT.\nCoal and  Wood. (ttft)\nBtortft\nSTORAGE.   MOVING,  COAL,   WOOD,\nPhone 53. Burn's Coal & Cart.-.*****.\nulPPl)\nAccountants\nCHAS.  F-  HUNTER.  B. F. INT.  A,'\nMunicipal and Commercial Aud-'\nP.   O. Box   1191,  _-.cl.i0i_, B.  C.\nFlorists\nOrtntHte'l Green hoi ises, Nelson. C\nflowers and floral designa.   (198\nNELSON PIjOWER SHOPPE. >U1\nline cut flowers \u00abt nil times. P\u00ab\nal de-lgi.5. Phone 333. U98\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUREfiZpho\n342. t.h\\t flowers, potted plir\nand Qml de'-igns. (198\nSecond Hand Stores\nThe   Ark\u2014Dealers  fn  Second  Hail\ngoods. Plionts 83.$. (190#\nBROOKS   BUYS  EVERYT^NG.\nBaker streot. (181)1\nInsurance and Real EslatJ\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014Real \u25a0\u25a0!\u25a0$\u25a0, Ill\nBurance, Rentals. Next Hlppewq\nHardware, Baker Street-, (*g\nWood Factory\nLAWSON'S WOOD FACTORY HARll\nwood merchant. 217 Baker Kt.re-I\n<199f\nQUICK   CAbH.   SEL1,   PKOVt.N   OLL\nriiiiip** ntma imumty. MUitons\nui-ing it. Not. \u25a0Maona>blt BxeliuAv\u00ab\nrlKlits. George Y, l_M, ri8.ri ?mn_-\nmulr nt reel,  VancoUTtT, B   0.\n(2073.\nMADAME      '\/.ARA   .    CTJVIPVOYANT.\naru-*ers  two   qilPhtlDii.,   w*itl,   lii.V!\nhoroscope.   Bind   l..rt .iibite,  25c   u\u00bb\nCentral Qumbffl! ^a.*ik;itoon. Sask,\n(a 045\nLOOK AHEAD\u2014GET INTO THE CIV- ,\nll Bmrloa m Pottman Ork Cuitoms\nExtmlnffr Itnmlg, tnwector, #tt Full\ntlruils free the MC.C. Wttmlpetr.       i\n12(137) |\n\u25a0 I\nHUP   WAMED\n (lot !\n50o HOUR PAID MEN PAUT TOO '\nTrainlni lor traratte work, pBoiUiMr-*\nlag, Eitvii'tat*.   WeWinj, Aviation,]\nBrH'kluy:iit, BarberlJ c, Literature'\nfxec. Write liounni-*-*t. Trade iChOoU i\n808 Ccnt-er at., Calgary. (2144)\nLADIES \"ANTED - EARN WHILE1\nlearn in- huirdrct^lnK. Sttttf?. re-;\nfined. Big pay positions. Boov-lef\nV'te. Wr to Marvel Halrdrcosiii'.\nAftadtm;*, 224A\u20148th Ave, West Oal*\nnary. (2145)\nTWl car mmmmi Into a :*'^el\ntelepaiaph pole and \u00abM *><'.\nbadly wrecked tr. it there wM\nlittle   to  salvage.\nWOMEN WANTED - TO CONDUCT\n\"-.Indersrartri. ClUW i*l hrmie. Ad-\nrlrer-s C-antdlan Klnderj-int^n in-:\n\u25a0Utute, BraaltiRtot* Blog.. Wlnnl*\nptf, (BM) I\nMil 11 |o>S   WANT*\nri.FCTlUCTAN   30   TBAM   EXTEP- |\n(MUM wants work.  Box 1962. (ItWi,\n__m\\\nVOUTH GOOD ON RANCH DEBIREB\nvorfi of nny kind. Bnx -072. DaJll\n\\Wmas. <207'i)\nDREtaMAKER AND TAlLORESt-\ndeilrt-fi aewlnf. Rn\\  1363, Wftmw\n(1HB) |\nA. I,MS  H \\MI*U\nRSSPONSIBLE AOENT CAN MAKE\n18 io **!(' I t\\M. E itrer IllUNm\nwalUnf, write 506 RanDall\nBulMlng,   Vancouver <2134i\nI I KM-tii P BOQ.M1 FOlt RI \\ r    (15)\nIiAftOI     FRONT     f'FDnOPM      ONE\nblock   Ifooi   \\9t\\tar   rtmi    Apply I\ntn** Victoria itrttt, i.lOn j\n_ __. .     j_.      _   _. [\nlir-tTSCKXBPINO   ROOM8.   MRS    D  !\nlieLcaa. Oppotite fj-a*. Worki, |f\u00bbl- ,\nfoil, (SUM)\nFOI? RENT \u2014 NICELY r-TRNISHED i\n[riur-rootn flat over .'.12 nnker j\nSt. Apply within. (nUM j\nTwo   ROOM    SurTF.    MPS    COVE\n507    Cnrbonate.    rhone    3\u00bb0P.\n(2077)\nTWO    BOOM    FT-M-NIPHED    SUITE\nwith b-.tb. Phone 572L. \u00ab2066i\nBUITIW\u2014ASHMAN 8      APARTMENTS\n71(1   Baitrr  atreet. (lfl-iS)\nAcrideuts    will     happen,    You I\nmay be Invohed in a roIliAion I\nor may Injure hon-e one   Carry I\n\u2022ndoqu.ite    lutMJSM Z\nB\nI -DAWSON  j\nI I'i'al Estutf      Insurance s\n= Hipperson Blnck        I\n| I'lione 197 Uox 733 |\n- (215.)   _\\\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nIHIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMlllllllllllllllllllllllC\n5 IMPORTANT =\n1 RKMINDEB |\nZ  AUtoniObil*.     polleyliolijcrit    who ;\n^ cancelled   p-irl...   of   their poll- I \\\nZ ciea   during   the   winter t.ea**on S '\n~ ar     rot   fully    covered   until z !\nZ th**   canfelled   oechtona  are   re- Z j\nS imtta*' .i nr new policy lwued. z\nZ HAVT YOU CHECKED UP ON S j\n= YOUR   POLICIES? = I\nI  CHAS. F. McHARDY   |;\nI     AUTOMOBILE   INSURANCE      5\nZ <1946>     ~\nmiiiifiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiitiiiiiiMiMiiifTii\ntn   C    W.   APPLEYARD  FOR   CAR |\nInsurance    lo    rellab^   comi\u00bbnies.\nilttmt\n 5^\n-THI   ffElSON   BAfLT   NEWS.   MXfJON,   B.   C,   \"ATIRDAY   MOBMNO   MAY   14,   mlrs-as\nMarket and Mining News\nUL WAY SHARES\niAD WAY INTO\nLOWER GROUND\nonto Stock Price Has Mod-\nrale Trend With Fractional Losses\n>RONTO,   May   13    (CP)\u2014Prices\nhe Toronto stock exchange were\ntoday led into new low ground\nrailway   shares.   Although    both\nutility and oil shares also\ned   to   lower   levels   the   tret.-I\nmoderate with most losses of\ni fractional nature on a email\nover. Total sales aggregated 4753\nes with eight Issues showing\ni, 19 lossea and 12 unchanged,\nnadlan Pacific fell to a new\nof 111,4 and closed at lift with\nloss  of   %\nDOW JONES AVERAGES\n30 Industrials  53.46 off 2.16\n20 Rails  18.17 off 1.10\n20 Utilities *  22.92 off 0.86\nLOSSES SPREAD\nOYER MONTREAL\nSTOCK MARKET\nShawinigan V'ater and Common Power Drop Heavily\non Return to Free List\nMONTREAL, MtJ M\u2014L:sse_ were\nspread generally over tho Montreal\nstock exchange list today, the Irac-\nler utility la.ues showed clos-Itlonal ilrlbbllng away of values con-\nrecords as follows; B. C. power tlnulng unabated.\nup % to 19%, Bell unchanged The feature of the day's trading\n0, Brazilian off % and Shawlni-' was Shi win Ism Water and Power\noff 21^4 to a new low of 11%. Icommon which was restored to the\n-Hersey loat one to 45. Ford;free list for the ..r.-t time since laat\nwas off % to 1% ani Goodyear .Sepiember, and pronptly declined\nrred was off H to another new over   20  pclnts.  At  the   opening  lt\nor   78.\nthe oil and metals group Ca-\nan Oils was off % t-o 9, British\nrlcan lost %, Imperial % aud\noll-Fronten&c   \u25a0\/_. Smeters at 37\nup a point and International\nel waa off  %  to close at 5%.\nsol_ at 12% compared with l.s \"peg\nged\" level cf 33, and on heavy sell\nMONTREAL CURB\nPRICES DOWN IN\nSYMP_.I;{_.TIC MOVE\nMONTREAL. M;y 13\u2014In sympathy\nwith other exrtnngea, prices turned\nlower on the Montreal curb market\ntodajr a\u00ab trading incr.ased. Imperial\nOil, active leader, lost % while\nHiram Walker wc.* off the same\n\u25a0moiiLt at 3%. Beauharnois Power\neased five ceils at CO ce-U. Distil-\nlers-3cagr_m at %%, Home Oil at 20\ncenti and Walker preferred at 9%\nwere  al;  unchanged.\nIn the mining section, Mo*w at 80\ncenta and Slscoe at 63 cent3 Noranda\ncame   out   In   broken   lota   only.\nInterest Lacking\non Vwnverf.ist\nIK LIST\nIN\nGRAND FORKS AND\nKOOTENAY POWER\nCONTEND RIGHTS \u00a3\nMarket Seems Thin Rather Than Weak; Average New Low Basis\nNEW TORK May 13\u2014The relapse\nln stocka continued today, but volume was smaller than yesterday and\nthe market seemed t.An rather than\nweak.\nTrade quickened moderately in the\nlaat hour when roughly a third of\nthe day's business, which totalled\n885.500   shares,   waa done.\n!%\u2022 standard statistic*\u2014Aa-wcl a ted\nPrc\u00bb.. average for 90 stocks made a\nnew low on the basis of final prices.;\nSilverton Institute\nto Sponsor Health\nExhibit of Students\nCRESTON AUXILIARY\nHOLDS A BENEFIT\nWHIST AND BUDGE\nSILVERTON.   B.   O.,   May   13.\u2014The       CRESTON,   B.    C,    May    13.\u2014The\nSllverton  Women'a institute  met  for   newly-organ.zed  Lad!       auxiliary   to\ntheir  regular  meeting   on   Thursd\"   i Creston Valley public hospital which\n\u201e | evenlrg.     Owlns*   to   a   number    *   j came   into   being   at    Canyon    City\n_**\u2022 i a     *   j pi t    r\\ iu   lth*   m*9m\\mrt   *-e,-~    -   \"\"*\u25a0\" 'earlier   ln   the   month,   had   their\nLelenralea Mruggle UVer me  attend  the musical festival, tht at-   first   at   home   on   Monday   at   the\nAPRIL REPORT,\n. KASLO SnfWL\nAttendance for April Rated at\n95.7 Per Cent; Many Have\nPerfect Attendance\nElectrical Pawer to\nBegin Again\nKASLO, B. C, Msy 13\u2014Kaslo\nschool report for the month ol April\nla   fi*   follows:\nRankin*, Division On*.\nOrade VII\u2014Kenneth smith, Ouasl*\ntenflspice was not as lam* as ppspp-' p community hall when a whist ant-\nIt wa* decided to sponsor a health bridge drive was given Ior hospital\nexhibit   bv   I',,   a-*1':-'       \"' benefit.    The prize,   at   whist  went\nb\u00ab held sometime In May, with the to Mrs. O. M. Samuelson \u00bbnd George\nteichers' co-operation.    At the same   Rrfrlt , \u00bb*\"\u2022 \u2022I'.e  bon--pp  'e.r\nVICTORIA,  May   13-Ths  celebrat-  time,   the   numbers   given   by   the   to   Mlsa   Allc,   Embree   of   Creston ,,,,.\u201e.   , \u201e., ,,_,,      ,\u201e-,._,\ned struggle over electrical power ChoV nnd solo,', at th. recent ___, w. O. Uttlejohn of Erlckson. Jf\u2122\"* -.^l p.\u2122 \u201e ' Do^ISI\nbetween lhe West Kootenay Power \u25a0 festival will be repeated. It wa. Th. affair waa largely attended and \u00b0'f\u201e\"' \u201e *_}\u00b0'. ?_**\"* *i\u00b0* \u00b00\u00a3?I\n_ Light company an- the city of _\u201e_ decided to donate hot cocoa for the aupoer and card play was much \"'\"\"i?n*_M,b\"' BeCk* Tommy B ClC\"\nGrand Porks, w. Ich agitated the the children attending the track enjoyed by all. In connection with *\u201e\u201e?*\u00ab,. o0,\u201e,_\u201e .\u201e.,,. rA __,\nlegislature for two years, and result- m\u00abpt, Mrs. A. Walton being con- .miliary activities lt la announced \"i*\u00b0*__?!*.\u201e ,\"!?'. \\?_.,,\u201e p.7\u201e*\ned ln the present regulatory powers  \u00ab_      ' t   i*.  <\u25a0 \u2022        \u2022  .. .  ,\u201e\u201e. th. canvon .\u201e\u201e.\u201e wm !peciai.  \u2122Sr,5.  h_-n w\u201en.  Sr\\ilZ'r^\nof  the  provincial  water   b.ard,   will  wer. discussed and the meeting ad-   __,   ln   raislr \u25a0   frnfl   to     sio   pav  \u00b0\"r _.*.\",?. \"\"f'-,\"^.. *\nbe  resumed   here  shortly. ijourned,  after  which   a  social   tlm.  for th. new hospital  It Is expected      *.\"\u201e.   -\u25a0\u2014 .\"-_?__. ***-*\nTti city having started to bull. \u201eas enjoyed and refreshment* served will b. built at Creston when the \u00b0_,\u201e' VT_,, \u201e.., ,*^' n^w?\nIti om hydroelectric plant, so th*t by the hostess for the evening. Mrs. lease 7n th. prMent hoepltal build- S\u201e ',,;'_\u201e Zl\u201e.';\nlt may cease buying power from tlie  M.  Emerson  and  Mrs. R. Hambly.      in* expire, lxireen und. Bessie McuibDon. t_ ara\nWest  Kootenay   company.   1*   asking \\    Mlsa Mary McAulay who ha* been,  '  Horner. Ronald Matthew.. lien. Llnd.\nfor the  transference  cf  a  water  11-1 visiting  friends'   at  Erie  and  Nelson   \u201e ,,      \u201e     ,    , .,       , ; Murdock    MacPherson,    B ly    Hen-\ncence on  Kettle  river from  an  old  for  the   past   10  .ays,  returned   to I K\u20acV. Mr. Best AttCtldS        \\ictc_s.   David   Hartln.     All   ln   th*\nholding company to th. corporation,  her home on Wednesday. I _-,      , . r,        ,   order  nam*'('-\nThl.   application   will   be   opposed         ! Conference at Coast      Division Two:\n_._-_.._  a  a      \u2022     ii     \u2022 _ Grade   One\u2014(In   order   named) \u2014\nDistrict Agriculturist   Jimmy   Tlnkess.   David   Abey,   Edna\nt \u00bb        .   r*       * KASIO,  B.  C,  May   13.\u2014Mr.   and   Robson.     Raymond   Lockhard     and\ninspects  at l_TeStOn  Mra.   Slayton   Adams   of   Vancouver  Lous Furlak. tied. Joyce Austin and\n. 1 were visitors ln town for a tew days  Jock   May\/.es.   tied.   Thclma   John-\nCRESTON.   B.   C..   May   13\u2014C.   B.  aurlng  the  past  week. son  and  Joyce  Palmer,  tied.\nTwigpj.     district     agriculturist     for |    Tony Han*en, former Kaslolt*. but      Grade II\u2014Myrtle    Leet    and    Joe\nEast Kootenay, was here from Cran-  now resident ln Poplar,  Is spending   Purlppk.    tied,    Maldle    Palmer    and\nby the West Kootenay company, lt\nwas learned today. The company\ncontends that the project Infringes\non It* rights ln t.e Grand Fjrks\narea, as defined by law. Th. matter\nwill have to be settled by the lleu-\ntenant-governor-ln-councll ln tho end\nIt  Is expected.\nThe above dispatch, read over the\nthus the market ha* m:r. than lost'i;rlg distance wire Frl.ay night to\nwhat It gained on last Friday's. Mayor T. A. Love ot Grand Forks,\nrally. Net declines ranged from a proved t> *e news to his worship.\nfra. Ion to a dozen points, with Mayor Love slated the city when tt\nlos_es of one to t ree fairly numer- Undertook Its project gave the West\n,.  ,. ...... ....  \u201e,....?  ...,.-   _ ous.    TJ    8.    Steel.    American    Can, [Kootenay   Power   &   Light   company\nIng decl:-.d a further IU  points to  DUlk   Or   Activity   Center*   On  Weatlnghouse,       National       Biscuit, i (ormal   notice  of   Its  intention,   but\nPrecioi's Metal Group;\nOne Advance\nSPITE STOCK\nPMWJFvr\nclose at  11,  ex-dlvld?n3.  It  led  the\nactivity  with   1495 B^a:._ told.\nElsewhere ln ..e li t losses were\nnalnly small, being fractional in\nthe   cas;s   of   International   Nlcl::!.\nBr*izi:i-n Trrt:-*., Ciaitfisa ftaiti      \"ArcouvEn,   May   ia   (CP)\u2014 ai-\nrallrar,  B.  C.  ?o-ver  and  II* ional. \u25a0hou*-h   trading   in   gsveral   of   the\nttt.   ta'. C :tiatcd ^\u2022n::.c j szg- popu>.r lssuei r;aj Increased illgh.'y\n?:d  V.'a  to 36. y    ovcr   ye-iterday's   activity   the   Van-\nTho a:!!.*\"..' ..ck to score sn tl-\nva. M was rf-*llin_e G:Id Mini;-.\nwhich climbc.i Mve centa to |_ 7o.\n3'c_l or Canada OHBtDOfl rt [tdS reg-\nli ercd a new low, olf one at 13.\nped by Chart-^r'nir of Yes\nsels to Carry NvTtfc\nAmerican Wheat\nWHEAT\nuii.'.U'..'. \u25a0\"..\u00bb  Hit F-I\\\nStandard Ol. of New Jersey, Wool-\nworth, N:rth American, Illinois Central and A'.lled Che.rical yielded\none t*> 1% net. American Telephone,\nDupont, Oneral Foods, American\nTobacco \"B,\" Eianta re. Western\nUnion and Union Pacific two to\nthree; Peoples Gas, Unl'ed AlrcraU\npreferred and New Haven preferred\nfive; and Norfolk & Western four.\nMany stocks ma_le new lows on\n-\"Motion*! recessions.\nThe bond market l_st its grip today and, wit'! support licking except\nIn a few of the highest-grade corporate lsmes, the average staggered\ninto new low territory for the year.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nM:m.s Qnnniity; -nt?r-\nest f-rtrfhHil\nIICAOO,   May   13   (By   John   P\nhan,   A   P   marke'   OdHor)*-\ncrumbllns    of   stock    market\n-a.ions     grain     values     av.raTffd\ner today, helper] by actl*\"> c^ar-\nig   ot   vessels   to   c.rry    N*-Tth\nrlcan   export   wheat.\nnthern hemlsnhe-e wheat offer-\nto Europe were leas p-tihlng,\nsurplus   supn'les   bot -   ln\nlna and Australia were reported\n'ow normal. Advices intiet'.Ot\nthe   acreage   of   Unite 1   Btatm\nlg   wheat   would   be   tomovlut\nler than  In   1931, with  a lar-r-\nBge  of  ferd   grains.\nheat cloed firm at the \u2022situ as\nerday's finish to quarter up;\nH to H advance.; oit*. un-\n,ed to % higher; and P^'-Hon-jT^ markst wll   fc     ;\njhanged to a nthftck of 15 cents. I ,.,nrr:w ar(J Monday,\nccuver st:ck errchan-e cold little of\nInttnot to traders t\"day. The hulk\nof activity centered In the precious\nm? al8 grcup with Crow's Nest\nfairly ac;ive In the oils dlvl.lon.\nOnly four price changes were receded, three issues declining and one\nadvancing.\nPremier, one of the leaders of the\nday. opened lower at 38 cents, to\nclose at 37 cents bid, a net decline\nof  2   cents  from  the  previous  day's\nCore.  Reno, one of the mo3t active ' Allegheny IU\n_\u25a0    ..   ,. B*!.*   fU\"*12** J***\u2122-1   uc\"  AlliecT   Chemical   63'^\nn- Mediocre Trnde: Kr^ort Is a i?*!d  *' 42,\"ntl but ln 1(lt? American can _ 38\ncausing   the   stock   broke   to   40U   Amer For Power Itt\ncen_s,   down   |\u00ab   e^nts.   Lorne   Otii   Am   Ma   \u00abSt   Fdy Ufl\nhit a new low for the preaent tovc-   Am 8melt & j^ |\nxent,   slipping  off   l  cent  to   loft   \u25a0\u25a0\u00ab    Vt\\ -tTt<\n\"*S*t  ,   \u201e . Americ   Tobacco Ntt\nTrws Nest continued to show its  Anaconda 5\nfirm   -eidency cf yesterday, openln-.  Atchison     33\na half -igher at 2*\\ cents until late Ba'dwln 3\u00ab4\nradlng   m%to   lt   advance-*   another  Balt   &   Ohio   1 Ml\n9Vs\nV\/:NNIPrO. M \u25a0\u25a0 13\u2014A MM-tteins\n*>f buyinj '0\" c ntl cntal UMUBt\nMd flrmr.r_j cf whe?.' qu UtloM at\nLlv::pooi held v.-:-e*t pr'-rs hcra 'o\nlightly   higher   leve-'-   In   mediocre I cuirter  to  3  c^nts,  a total  gain  of  Bendlz\" Avlat'on\ntrade.   Closing   quotations   were    H I thimifUirlMj  for the day. I->\nto  Va  higher. |    The   remainder   of   the   list   was  canadi  TTv        Vh\nThe NtMoB was unmar!:e3 by anyii1\"1*  UP  of  999)31  ttltt,  mostly  of  Canadian   Paclf    10%\npattti actlvi:y. Expirt was a minus tlle   od1   lot   variety   in   some   half  Cerro   de   Pasco\nquantr.y   and   :he   a.r.all   gains   ap-  dozen mines and oi's Issues.\npearcd   to   be   hell   maln.y   by   t e\nlack    of    cUaxtatB.    Liverp:ol    h:ld\nt:ady  due to  v\/hl-Suntlrto h:li'ays.\ned tl-ere to-\nVANCOUVER LIST\nipp*^-***,'a-rir.f*) cTOrTr!*>\nlet   \t\nOn--olid a ted _..\n-iated    ....\u201e _\u201e..\nPetals _ mm\noort     _.,.\ny Hollin-rer _....-\nMissouri   \t\nnont    \u201e\t\nnd E Lflnds \t\nmi-al   Refe-rch   -\nInterest   d'.playc;.   ln   ci-.h   wheat\nand   co:-r:e   grains   waa   ol   a   .nino.'  R'i*\"   Missouri\t\n'character   and   prices   ahowod   little  Georgia  River   -\n01U    fhMfaS jOolcondi    _....\n'7*,,\/.   Orandview   \u201e\nLome Go'd   _\nNational flllver \t\nj Nob',*.   Five   \t\npenH Offine \t\nChes   &   Ohio\nChrysler    \t\nCom   A;   South .\n61*,\n15\nan\n. 34\nEXCHANGES\n.30 MONTREAL,   May    13    (CP)\u2014Brlt-\n,tn%   lsh and fcrel^n exchange ln relation\nto the Canadian dollar, as c^nplle\nPioneer  Gold\nSorter   Idaho\nby the r.oyal Bank of Canada, close:!  ^reiT1 **\"\n.67\nIP 11\ntoday   as   follows;\nAr_entlna, psso \t\ni Australia,  pound    -\n| B;l<jlun,    belgi    \t\n1 3razll,    ml rela     \t\nCzechosl.vakia, crown .\n.2913\n3.3033\n.1581\n.08 JO\n.03.1\n\u00b0eeve*i Mf\"*\u00bbnflld\nReno   Oold    _\nA p Consolidated \t\nC and E l-ands  _\nOil   *. \u201e..\ninger    \u201e\t\n*-on   Bav   \t\n\"\u25a0nat'ona.  Nickel\nland Like \t\n\u25a0   Shore   \t\n;-ssa    \t\n\u25a0dy     \t\nartlc     :\t\nntvre    \t\ning  corporation\nland \t\ntslng  _...._\nanda    \t\nd   Oreille   \t\ntier  Gold   \t\nrrlt   Gordon  \u2014._..\n1n'1     I Denmark,   krone    \u201e    .228\nJJ      \u2122:>>n.   fin-nar-     *JW rommonw\u201e_tn    _\n**      JW2JJ, franc          .041, r,_]h_mi_    _.\nI lOrrmany, reichsmari.  .691 F;lhvBn\nHpprRRl\n\u25a0oc      _\nHushes   \t\nonfl   \t\nitures  \t\nIsht   HarBT\u00ab3V\u20ac*\nIte  Ackerman  .\nM\n4.7*5\n1.13\nBBS\n.'.7'i\n28 Wl\n.28\n,_\u00bbH\n.fin\n1510\n,\u00abo\n.on\n.70\n14.S0\n.4*.\n.3.1\n.21\nMil\n3.47\n.26*',\nHome   Oil\nMercury \t\nj Great Britain, pound\nj Greece,    drachma\n> Holland, florin \t\nIndia,    rupee    \t\nta'.y,   lire \t\nJapan,    yen    \t\nJugoslavia,    dinar    ..\nNew Zealand, pound\nNorway,  krone  \t\nPoland,   Klotl    \t\nRoumania,    leu    \t\nSouth Africa,  pound\nSpain,    pep-eta     0019 p\nS.vcden,   krene    2114      l\"heat\nSwiizerla.d,   franc       .2.03  May    ....\nUnited States, dollar,  121',   per cent July\nI    premium.\nCorn   Product*..\n\"\"x,:s C  WrlPtht pfd .\nrhipont \t\n 08   .07      n   power At  Lt\n.    .02*.    .03       EH*     \t\n\u2022 -10 Ford  English ....\n\u2022 -02       .03      Ford   of  Canada\n.   .10'.    .11._,   Fir-t  Nat  Stores   43%\n.   .01%    .02      Freeport   Texas.    14',i\n.   .0?'*,   .03      Oeneral  Motors..   lO'.i\n.   .35       .40      Oeneral   Electric   14\n. 3.00     3.05       ^.\u00ab--_.  i?o0cig _   2!>1._\n\u25a0OS      Oold   Dust       12\n\u2022 \u2022*'7       \"S      Ooodrich    \t\n\u25a015       Oranby \t\n.   .40*4    .40'\/,   orest North pfd\n\u25a0    -01 I Oreat   W   Sugar\n| Hudson   Motors..\nTns  Conper  \t\n        .04'*   Tnternat    Nickel\n\u2014 I*      MS Tel  & Tel\n  Kelly   Spring   ....\n        ,08'4   Kress* 8 S   \t\n\u2014        \u2022on'\u00ab   Kroeirg   &   Toll\n\u2014 \u00b0_      Mack   Truck   ,..\n\"\"llwaipVee   pfd..\nNs\u00abh   Motors   ....\nNat   Dairy   Prod    22':,\nN   Power   A'.   I.t\nNew York Centr   13\nPaclf  Oas  tc  ti   MD\nPackard   Motors.     3',\nPenn    R\n4.1 IM\n.0076\n.4572\n.3100\n\u2022.j31   Rovallte\n.02J4\n3.7451\n.2080\n.1274\n.0039     WINNIPEO, Man., May  13\u2014Oraln  Phillip* ^Pfte\n5.417(1 quotations:\nSterling   Paclllc   _\t\n'\"-EG GRAIN\n.07!',\n4 30\n.04\n29'*,\nM\n3U\n3'i\nt%\n9\n1\n7'i\n10\n!i\n13\nl'i\n10'i\n1\n52\n36 H\n3\n12%\n\u25a0J*4\n641.\n4%\n31 >i\n3'.\n6*4\n0\ntv,\nor.\n8\n14\n8\nm\n.7',\n\u25a0a\n41\n14S',\n10'4\n13'.\n28\nll'i\n8\u00bb4\n4\nhad net been advised to date of the\nunfavorable attitude now attributed\nat Victoria  to  t.e  oompany.\nTORONTO PRICES\nARE REACTIONARY\nON MINING LIST\nutmost optimism so far ss blossoms i\ngoes. I _\nMrs. Crowe Returns\nFrom Butte Visit\nTORONTO.   May   13    (CP)\u2014Reactionary   prices   with   light   trading\nfeatured   the   movement   of   leaders\non  the Standard Stock  and  Mining\nexchange    today.    The    lower-priced\nlist  also  made a  pocr  showing  on\nthe   beard   and   the   general   price\ntrend shows 23 Issues unchanged, 23\ndeclines   and   15   gains.   The   penny\nIssues   were   largely   responsible   for\n1      the   sustained   sales   volume   which\n82V.    otalied    150,000   shares.   Arno   was\n36'.   the trading feature with a turnover\n\u2022      of   41,000   shares   but   sold   off   a\nWH   .uarter  to close  at  1  cent.\nlit Leaders in the base metal section *n*\"- \"*\u25a0*\u2022 \"n<l ***\"\u2022 T- Anderson\nnri' continued to move downward. No-\n64'.i anda dropped 5 cents to $14.25;\n8 nternatlonal Nickel fell 40 cents to\n*ll's 3.60; Hudson Bay declined 15 cent!\n3'i Lo a new low of 11.05; while Coast\n1*4 Copper recovered 15 cents t0 close\nat 85  cent*.\nbrook cn Monday, making his semi-:\u00bb  few  days  In   town   renewing   ac- Betty  Dykstra.  tied,  Winnie  chand-\nmonthly   Inspection   and   report   on  qualntaneea. ler. Jimmy Mayzcs, Jimmy Strachan.\norchard   conditions.   Pink   spray   has!    Mr.  and Mrs.  M.  Adams  have  as Bobby   Hendricks   and   Clifford   Mc-\nheen  in  full swing at all  points  ln   their   guest   Mrs.   Adams'   mother, Hardy, tied.\nthe district since the weekend and Mrs. I. Herron of Nelson. Grade Ill-Annette Hacking. Verna\nwill be pretty well completed by Th. board of directors of the Best, Teddy Horner, Arthur Ben-\nSaturday, probably ln no recent Mt__o and District Flfteecn Hundred net*. Jack Hartln.\nseason ha* both the dormant andielub held their regular monthly '\u2022\"le IV--Joan Cadden, Billy\npink sprays gone on under such business session Wednesday In the C|la\"<\"rr- ..\u2122n*-\u201eJ\u00b0h__son* \u25a0ob.*\nfav.rable     climatic    conditions     as office of the secretary,  D.  P. Kane. Strachan.   Molly   McO.bbon,   Connl-\nhave  prevailed  this  y;ar.  and  right j Only routine business was before the   ch**rp-\nnow   the   prospect   would   be   for   a (meeting. ..,,.,;'   .J.\"\nce  for April, 95.7.    Thos*\nWalter Newton left Wednesday for   tttta    rertcct    attendance    for    th*\ncrop that will run high to fancy and i     \u25a0\u2022-   \u2014.  \u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022   __    , ,,    , ,   A ,        ,.   ,\nextra fancy varieties, as well aa ex-      l\"\"   '   \"        *   \"   \"   - tzr  S-M-'IM *Tont\u201e,w\"'(e: \u00b0\",'^Ab<-'l*,,-'0:i\" Cll\u201e\ncellent size, U the molstur. supply!*  few   days   her.   with   his   invalid   <Ien, Vvlnpile chamller. Billy  Chand-\nwas  never better.  If  bloom  1*  Z- \\ \u00bb\u00ab_*\u00ab.   ' -.   *\u25a0 \u00bb  \u00abn*l '*- S_,,'5___'Tr'Z ss rTe'r'^l]'\nthing   to   go   by   the   1932   crop   ofi    Mrs.  Jack   Paterson   has   returned nctte  llackitpg.Tcpldy Horner, Thel-\nchrrr.es.    ptamY   and    prunes^.nd  \u00ab\u00ab\u25a0 *\u2022 I*' \u2022\u00bb \"\"nd* in Nelson. \u25a0\u00bb\u00bb *hnson   A   In.  Johnao,^  Ray-\napple,   will   be  very  large,   but   the1    Col.   and   Mrs.   Cowan   of   Shutty '\u2122nd   UKkhaul.    Molly    McOlbbcpn\npear  crop,  following a bumper   1931   Bench   hav,   left   by   motor   tor   a \u00bb*_*_ Pdl_r*_J\u00b0_.J!._?f,_n\"r',,_?-'*\nyield,   will   not   be   abnormal.   Mr. I visit to various coast points.\nTwlgg   will  make his  first  crop  es-l    Mr*.  J.   R.   Tlnkess   hss   returned\ntimate  on  his early June  visit  but  fr<>m   N*'\"\"1   wh**r\"   \u25a0\u2022>\u00ab   w\u00ab   thB\nstates   that   ther,  1.   room   for   \u00bb_.|j-J  <\u25a0*  \u00ab\"\u2022   \"\u2022  \u25a0*\u00ab   *\"   \u00bb   \u2014 ^  w|nn|. a_n^ B|||y  ^^\nRalph  E.  Read,  who  ha*  been   a   'IV,\u2022 ri''VnH.nd Tockhard, Joyce Palm\nstudent at the U. B. C, has returned   er  and  Bobby  Strachan,\nto   town  to  spend   a   holiday   with1\nh'*\u201em\u00b0th''v.\"\"1 -lstt'  ._*___*   PORTHILL HANDS\nMr   and Mra. Raymond of Procter ,\nare spending a few daya in town,    j\n\u2022  !     Rev.    E.   Leslie    B*st    is    In    New j\nSILVTRTON. B. C May  It.   MT   Westminster   gWltH   the   tTnited |\nE.   JohnBon   of  Trail   wm   t   week-   ch''rcl1 t_Ummm_^m |\nend   valtor,   the  gueat  ot  her   par-   , Mn    Allc\u00bb   f'rttna   haa   returned i\nfrcm a vi it o   \u25a0'tvtriu  wttkr *-\nF..ob.oii,     Bobhy   Btriwhan,     Jimmy\nStrachan    and    ConBl*    Ctmtrrf.\nThose   having   r-ertect   atUndanr***\nmark.*,  for the yenr ending  April   30\nCANYON CITY 19-0\nBALL SHUTOUT\nIV,\n10\ne\n14\nEGG MARKKTS\nOTTAWA,   May   13\u2014Eggs:\n*-''\u00ab      Tcronto:    Market   continues   easy\n-\"'.a   Brokers report sales of graded shipments  packed  for  storage  at  extras\n\u2022J ,   18 to 16'4;  firsts 14 to 14'.. Wp.ole-\n1*4   ..a'.e   prices  are   unchanged.\n27'\u00ab      Montreal:    The    market    Is    very\nCREfrTON.   B.   C,   May   11\u2014Biter.\ni.w    u,,.,i\u201e   \u201er    n\u00ab,,i\u201en,i    w.\u00ab \u00abn.   Edgar   of   Rossland.   and' her InaUo'\"*1   Intermedia.*   baseball   wa*\nvlsmn. S 7,\u201e\u00b0Lro? Sunday. \u2022>.\u25a0\u00bb!}\"\u00ab-. Mrs-C. Vance  and Mrs. 11 kp*    at two^poinu^.r> **-JgJI\nMr.!.nd   Mr.    O.   Crawford   and J*   \u00ab-*_.<**, \u00ab-***\u00bb   end   Mrs. , - ^\"^J*,^OB*\u2122^SJS1)SS**.\nfd nd,tnher, on Sundae\"               B <*\u2022   \u00b0>*-tn   \u00ab   \"*\u2022   \u2022\u00ab*>   *\"\u2022*\u25a0''\u25a0\" \",n* ha,K\"'t,  C*ny011 Clt\"  ** 10-\nE    a   -Turner   of   irall   was   the \u00b0*  Montreal  staff  la   holidaying   at  0 shutout^ andthe C<*peIan-,_ Idah-*\nguest    of    Mrs.    M.    Emerson    on\nhis   home   in   Pentlcton.     During  ***\"\"\u25a0 visited at Hueoroft and trim,\n_.__._ his  absence  Mr.  Ouernsey   ls   being   tr*d    the    combination    tUter-Rui*.\nMrs.'M.   nmeraon   and   daughter \"\"\"el   \"7   \u25a0*\u2022   \u00bb.   Thlbed.au   3 ,\u00ab*\u00ab .*\u00bb\u2022***, j\u00bb *\u2022_*** \u00ab___*\u2022*\n,, \u201e _-\u201e_\u201e\u2022_,,_      k.,      *.\u00bb,\u00bb\u25a0\u00ab. Nelson                                                      i creston   tnere   wu     ul     lnwir-cliT\nh\u201euS,,.t M\u2122 E O Turner Z MrsM. Clark, ha. left for . vlalt' \u00ab\u00bb\"n. between *_rlck\u00abn and Creeton\nTrail wore week-end visitors to to her son-in-law and daughter, Mr., Intermediates in Which Creeton came\nNelson ***\u2022 M\u2122- D- B- Jones ot Rdtland. I through with a ninth Inning rally\nMrs ' R. White entertained a few Mrs. Gordon Bowker of Mirror to win 13-15. At Canyon, baseball\nfriends Informally on Wednesday L,,,*\u00ab na* returned from a visit to is going stronger than ever o_id a\nmm___m friends In Crawford Bay. | lease has been taken on the Mr-\nMrs. Mldgely who ha* been the Mrs- *\u2022 Bruce ha. returned from a, Kowan field ln the Sweden sector,\nguest    of    Hrs\".    Hancock    for    the visit to friend, and relative. In Ross- j and   a  fast   diamond   1*   being   laid\n       ,--       .     _.   i ,.   ijp_p.   ipppjppppp,   np\nts   qulet  and  weak.  We. em  egga  sold  home ,n mson\n*m   on a basis of extras  17, firsts  HVa,      um    0    gte.\npast   month,   has  returned   to   her  \u2022nftd-\n| and\n:ut for the season's games.\n\u201ev -\u25a0 i    mn,   vj    Stewart   le   sp\u00abndlnj   11\n\u25a0~   seconds   121\/.. ,    few days In  Nelson. I\nWinnipeg:    The   market    here    Is      Mr    and   Mr8    A>   McTntyre   art\nweak and Jobbing prices are down to ] spBnding a few d(_y-- ^ Nelson, the\n11 \u00bb   extras  14,_ firsts  la^ and  some  aales , guP5t8 of mj.   RIld Mra   j_ Turner.\nMrs.    T.   Orowe,   who   has    been\n41\nWjj   ..ave    been   reported   at   firsts    11.\n\\tn   -r\u00abconds 9.\n28\nin*\n31s\nVancouver: There has been no\nj.iange on the market here ainca\n^he first of the week. Wholesale\n:' 9\\ dealers are quoting producers for\nWl e^gs at th\u00a9 farm pxtras 10 to 11.\n4 I firsts 9, pullet extras 8. or one cent\nJ      higher if delivered at Vancouver.\nIf*\ntit\n10'i\n20 \u25a0;.\n11\n25',.\n;%     CALGARY   LIVESTOCK\nvisiting relatives at Butte, Montana\nfor the past Blk months, has returned to Bllverton where .he la the\nguest of her daughter, Mrs. B.\nWhite.\nCIBKENCIES   VAK-*   IN   TREND\n1\n101.\n3'i\n\u00ab    O\"\nOpen   High   Low Close   fadlo    Corpora.\nLONDON    CLOSE\nLONDON, May  13   (AP)\u2014Braz Trac\nJ.7       (-ll?.;    C   P    114!.;    Hydro   Electric\n25     i*7!i 1   Int   Hold   is   Inv   J13-16;   Int\nMM  \u00bbT,i;   Brit  Am  Tob  \u00a33   12s  (3d;\n[Distillers   \u00a32   3s;   Dunlop   Rbr   10s;\nVANCOUVER GRAIN EXCHANGE Ford   \u00a31   ed;   llul   Bay    16s;    (OS\nANCOUVER,   May   11    (CP1\u2014To-   C'hem   13s   7!.d;   Imp   Tob   \u00a33   18.->\nthero  wss  renewea   activity  on   lO'.d;   Miell   T   !_   1   \u00a31    12s   6d;\nOct\t\nOats:\nMay    \t\n.luly    \t\nOct\t\nBarley:\nMay     \t\n8. 62'. 61V, 62\u00bbi\n63 63 >. 62 V, 63'i\n641,    65*4    64 H    65 V,\n34 V,\n32\",\n29 V,\n35'4\nMH\nao\nVEWEI)   ACTIVITY   AN\n40>i 4(W.\nan *AH\n34 H   34\"i\nil:V\nOTt'.\nVancouver grain exchange, and\n100 tons of liner and semi-liner\npat   .pace   was   announced   fixed\nJune-July. The rate was low.\nVlckers 6s l'.d; Brit five pet war\nloan 1947 \u00a3101 12s 6x1; Brit 4\",\nper cent war lxpn \u00a3101 15s; Brit four\npet  1960-90 \u00a399   l_s 61.\nlist on \"GRANTS BtST PR0CURABLE\"-The Original\nFor Sale al Vendors or diroct from \u2022'Mail Order\nDept.\"  Liquor Control  Board, Victoria,  B.C.\nBEST PROCURABLE\nPURE\nSCOTCH WHISKY\nRICHEST IN FINEST\nHIGHLAND MALT\nBottlefl snd fuarantW by v7iHp,m\nGrant * Sp.pp. Limit-d Olralldpllch .nd\nBalvenie-Gl.nlivet DJ.tllleriM, Dufftown A Glasgow. Scotland.\nOct.\nFlax\nMiv\n'u'v\nOct     87'.    88'i    87'i    88!\nMay   '    40'. 41 _ 40'. 41!\nJuly         41V. 42Vi 41V, 42\nOct     43 434 42^ 43\np<h Prices:\nRock    Island    . . 2'i\nPafew-flv   stores. 44'.\nShell   Union   Oil S\nSouth    Calif   Ed 24\nSouth   Pacific   .. 10\",\nStan Oil of Cal lgi,\nStan   Oil  of   Ind\nStan Oil of N J 24%\nStewart   Warner V.\n''cha'-\"- 4i.\n33\".   33\".   Texas    Corpora.. 11\nTexas   C.ulf   Sul 17%\n34'_\n35\n32'(p\n32 f.\n*\u00bb**\n39!.\n40'.\n40''.\n-pp.'.\n-T-\n2*i\n2\n43%\n43\n2%\n2\n23%\n23\n10\n10\n19\nID\n17\n23%\n23\n2\nC ADO ART. Alta,, May 13 \u2022\ncelpte; Cattle 33, calves '2,\n40O.   hog*.   1544.\nSteers:   Good  and  die tee  $4.30   to\nnil   _.-i.25;  medium, $4 to H*W;  co .xenon,\nM  to *3.7j.\nWtttarti Good and cliolee, 44.35\nto H-\"5; medium, $4 to 44,25; common,  83 to 43.75.\nFed calves: Gcod and choice, fJ5\nto   45.40;   medium,   $4.50   to   44.75.\nCows: Goo*!, 43 to 43,75; medium,\n42,50 to 42.75; common, 41.50 M\n.*J2.25; canners and cuttrrs, 4.50 to 41\nSl.ccp: Good handyi-'pight, 43 to\nJ3.50;  common, 41 to 42 50.\nLambs: Good Handy-weight, 45.25\ntg 46;   common, |3.73.\nHogs: Select baron, 43 85; bacon\n43.35;   butchers,   42.85.\nNEW YORK, May 19 (OP)\u2014-The\nCanadian dollar closed fractionally\nhigher on local foreign exchanges\ntotmf at 88% centa, H cent higher\nthan yesterday's close. The pound\nsheep is'.erllng ended tne day 1% oents\nj lower at 43.65'\/,  for cable  transfer...\nHeat rays can ve ahot through\nglass without warming it, experiment,*- show.\nGRAIN\nSTOCKS\nBONDS\nA eompleit itnrlct In Stock, ind\nGrain Fulurtf.\nM.fgln iceaunti Kc.pt.d en \u25a0\neonicrv<.ivt bitli.\nPrivate wlm to ill Lidlnf *Mrltt_i.\nJames Richardson & Sons\nSOS Lincitttr Building, Gl.ery\nwinniks, mooce jaw, \u00bb.gina, sask aioon, edmoniom. HNaiTOM\nUnion  Carbide  .\n| \u00bb\u2022.,,__     -pp     ~.p;f\nTlnlnn   P?p-lflc   ..\n, Un'ted     Alrrrsft\n-T   si   ppi\u2122.   \/.   W:p...\n.17 R Rpibher \t\nin  S  steel   \t\n:Wps. Electrlr, ..\nWhest: No. 1 Hard, SS\"'.: No. 1 Willys Overland\nNor.. 621,: No. 2 Nor., 89\u00bbi: No. 3\nNor.. .'8; No. 4. 54!,,: No. s, 49**,;\nNo. 6, 45'i: Feed, 43'i; Traclt, 6V.',:\nNo. 1 Dur., 843b.\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW YORK, May 13\u2014Copper dull;\nelectrolytic  spot and  future 5',..\nTin, barely steady, spot and nearby\n20.50;   futures  .0.76.\nIron    quiet,   unchanged.\nLead quiet; spot New Yort 3.00;\nEa.t  8t.  UpuIs 390.\nZlno easier; East Bt. Loul. spot\n\u00bbnd  future 3.37.\nAntimony 5.30.\nForeign   bar   silver   27',.\nAT LONDON: Standard copper,\nspot \u00a329; future 129 2s 8d. Electrolytic, spot \u00a333 6s; future \u00a334\n5s. Tin. Spot \u00a3130 15s; future \u00a3122\n10s; Lead. spot. \u00a31\" 15s; future\n\u00a311 2s 6d. Z'.nc spot \u00a312 7s 8d;\nfuture \u00a312  12. 6d.\nTORONTO INDUSTRIAL!\n18\n47%\n7?pi\n3'i\n26'.,\n24%\n1\".\n11H\n17\n\"!'\n45%\n7\",\n23\",\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\n45%\n7%\n3%\n37%\n23%\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nMONTREAL, May 13\u2014With supplier, on hand remaining light and\nrwetpts on the amall side the butter\n'-itarket here today st.lfcned  ln  tone\n| with very little No. 1 quality avail-\n'itble   below   16%   centa   per   lb.   Eggs\n\\ttbt  cheese  remained  \u25a0-.tead**.\nj    ('heew, current  receipt*.  9  to 9%.\nj     Butter,  N*>.   1  ftnr.it,   16%   to   16%.\ni    -feB,  fresn  epeclals in  cartoas  23\nto  24.\nI    Ei-gs.  Srcsh  extras,  in cartons,  22\nto 23.\nERgn, Ireah firsts in carivons, 19\nH 20.\nAbitibi  power & Paper ....\nAsbestos    Corporation    ....\nm\n15\nEXCHANGE RATES\nBell     Telephone           fl9% I     NEW YORK, May   13\u2014Sterling M-\nRra-'llifln T L &\u25a0 Power ,\nBritish    American   Oil    _\t\nCnnnda   Brnn7'\u00ab    \u201e.\nCan,  Car tz  Foundry \t\nCaiia*-!!*.!.   Cement   \t\nCanidlsn   Cement   pfd   \t\nCan.  Industrial  Alcohol \t\nCanadlin Power \t\nCan.    Steamship    Lln<*_    ,..\nCons.   MinlnK  fie  (.melting\nDominion    Bridge     _\nDominion Glass     _.\t\nDominion   Textile    \u201e\t\nA   P   Ovaln \u25a0\nchange  irregular at |SJ4   IW  60-day\n8.75   bills, antf at *3.635i  for demand.\n9%      cmadlan dollars 11% per cent dls.\n4 Francs   3.94%   cent\",\n\u2022 4       Life  515  rents.\n35 Uniffuay  47.23  centg.\nkm       Marks   23.88   cents.\n.sn | ,       _\u201e^_\t\n2%   IDEA!   ERRONEOUS   ON\n35     I                  i;,\\SE   OP   FINDING   COLD\n11     |    .  ,\n2% I\nBell  Telephone..   90\nBrazlllnn   \t\nJ? A  Oil    ---     9\nCanada Dredg\u00ab \"\nCanada Oypsum\nCanada Malting 11\nCona. Mining _\nDtafl. Seagrams\nFord of Can 'A'\nImperial Oil -\nInternat    Nickel\n3%      90\nliis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor  internat Pet\u00ab\n.Control Board or the Government of British Columbia.,        _^r8amHwSer\"\n9\n\u00ab\".\nn\n8\n\u00bb*_\n2_\n11\nion\n11\n37\n39\n37\nMi\n\u25a0*4\n7H\n7H\n8%\n8%\nli\nIf\nM\n\u00bb\"*,\nll'i\nU*.\n111,\n45\n45\n45\n1\nTm.perl.ll Tobacco . \u2014 _..-\nMassey   Kanis     _..\u2014\t\nMontreal   Power   \u201e_,..._\t\nQuebec   Power    \u201e, -.\t\nShawlnlyan       31\nWtmH   r'   tr^+'At          ,-i\nSt. Lnwi^nce Flour Mills \u201e .55\nWinnipeg Railway       2.\nMINNEAPOLIS   GRAIN\nVICTORIA,  Ma;-   13   'CP) \u2014 P**?ports\nI have   been   received   from   Edgar   C.\nj Lunn, government agent at Quesne..\n.u i to thc effect that mea are reaching\n\u2022J* . the   Cariboo   from   the   coavt   with\n,J   erroneous  Idea* as to the ease with\n\"?Z\u00ab!   which gold may be found In paying\nIri*   c-uantltlea lu that district,\nI V.VNCOUVKR   RtUDBNT   GETS\nMOTHER   MEMORIAL   MEDAL\nM7IO3AP0LIS. Minn., Mty 13-\nr,'Ltr -mrhansed. Shipments 25,148.\nvan   12.00  to   12.50.\nWhea:: No. 1 nor 63% to 67%;\n\"o. l red durum 47% to 49'i; MM\n\u25a0:\u25a0%\u2022   July   60%;   Sept.   68%.\nCorn;   No. 3  yellow 34 to 36.\nOats:   No.   8   whit*   22%   to   23%.\nFlax:   No.   1,   1.20%   to   1.22%.\nEDMONTON, May 13 \u2014 John\nWclghtmun Bridge of Vancouver was\ntod-y awarded the Moshler Memorial\nmedal la medicine, a scho.arship\nin the faculty of medicine offered\nby the Oa-U-tft cf Physicians and\nSurgeons of tlie province of Alherta\nand a further awnr.i for his aixt .\nyear in medicine, aa 90 s.udcnta cl\nthe University of Alberta receive.!\ntheir award.*, at convocation here\nthis afternoon.\n~7 \/\nPERMANENT\nCONCRETE\nHIGHWAYS\nfor Safety,\nComfort,\nEconomy\nGreater visibility at night: low\ncrown: clearly defined edges: a\ngritty skid-checking surface:\nthese are concrete's contributions to driving safety.\nConcrete roads are even and\nfree from glare ... giving comfort to the man at tho wheel\nand to his passengers.\nConcrete Is economical to the\nmotorist in fuel consumption\nand tire wear: economical to\nthe taxpayer because of reasonable iirst cost and low\nmaintenance. It carries the\nheaviest traffic without breaking down. Advocate this all-\nCanadian paving , . . using\nlocal materials and labor.\nCmttntl paving, Weil KUttensm,\nMan. M. A. Lyons, Chief Engimtr.\nG. E. Collins, Paring Engiuttr.\nCarttr, Haiti, Aldingtt Company\nLltt,, Contra, tors.\nCa nuclei Cement Company Limited\nCanada Cement Compuuv liuildiug\nPhillip. Square MotttJreal\nSales Office, all\nMONTREAL\nTORONTO\nWINNIPEG\nCALGARY\n -s,    THE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS,   NELSON,   B.   C,   fATURDAY   MOBMNO   MAY   14,   1932=\nMOIR'S\nDollar Boxes of Chocolates\nreduced to 75tp\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nNELSON TENNIS\nCLUB TO HAVE\nFIRST TOURNEY\nPlay Begins in \"B\" Class Mix.\ned Doubles Saturday 9\na. m. Lower Courts\nCLASSES -\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nOFTOM-TRI-T AMD OPTICIAN\nSUIT. IHHI MIDICAl ANT, .UILOPN*\n\"A\" CLASS STARTS\nIN AFTERNOON\nSingles, Men's Doubles and Ladies' Doubles to Continue\nNext Week\nWOOD\nat lowest prices\nFIR and BIRCH\nin all lengths\nPIIONE 53\nBurns\nCoal 6c Cartage\nWith a tournament In th\u00ab \"B\"\ncla%-i, and one in the \"A\" cia*\u00bb, the\nNelaon Oolf and Country Tennis\nclub will get away to Its flrat club\npl\u00bby ol the- aeaaon, during tho weekend. Play in the \"B\" class will com-\nI mence Saturday morning at 0 a.m,\n[at the lower courta, with the \"A\"\n: aeries beginning at the upper courts\nI Sa turday afternoon at 1 o'clocit.\nj Mixed doubles In either class will\nbegin the tournament. Singles, men's\nI doubles and ladles' doubles will\n! start next weekend. Each player\nls requested to choose his own part-\n1 ner In these events and Jiand in\nthe names.\nA number of \"B\" men players have\nas yet no partners, but will be pro-\n1 vlded with one lf present at the\nlower courts on Sunday morning.\nPLAZA\nSaturday\nNight Dance\nGood Music for a splendid\ntime.\nREMEMBER\nSix-Piece Orchestra\nCover Charge Only\n25r* Come in as you arc\nSPECIAL\nSUNDAY\nDINNER\nOur patrons will be pleased\nwith our\nFIVE COURSE\nCHICKEN DINNER\nSummer\nFROCKS\nPUSSY   WILLOW   SILKS   in\nlai-pe and small floral designs\u2014\nwith smart lifctle jackets or cape\ncollars\u2014dainty puffed sleeves\nCOATS\nOur entire line of Spring Coats\nranging in value from $16 to $i\">0\nare being offered at half-price\u2014\nthis season's garments\u2014perfect\nfitting\u2014perfect styled\u2014\nrue \u00a3xciusiv\u00a3 srait\u00a3\nPlay commences at 9 o'clock Sunday morning on upper and lower\ncourts. Match..*, for Sunday morning\nwill be drawn Saturday nljht snd\nplayers notified.\nSCHEDULE\n\"B\"   class   mixed   doubles   to   be\nplayed   at   tho  lower  courts,\nSATl'BDAY   AT   9   A.   M.\nMiss Grace Haydon and N  Beattte\nva  Miss  M.  Dolphin  and   M.  LWIoe;\nMiss E.  Fleet   and  A.  Doyle ts Miss\nR. King  and P. Smith.\nSATIRHAY   AT  10  A.M.\nMiss D. Olbbons and W. Wheeler\nvs Mi-ss O, Stephenson and D.\nRitchie.\n|    Miss  M. Olbbons  and  E. Ritchie\n; vs Mlas F. Hanna and B. Buchanan.\nISATl'KPAY   AT   11   A.M.\nj    K. McBride and partner vi J. Al-\n| len and partner.\n'    L.   Emerson   and   partner   vs   B.\nI Horste'id   and  partner.\n(HATIRDAV   AT   1   P.M.\nKM B. Norrls and B. Allen ts\n[ Mlsa E. Scott-Lauder \u2022 and L. Mc-\nI Bride.\n.    Miss   D.   Coles   and   W.   Ramsay\n\u25a0 vs Miss H. Vanco and J. Mateer.\nSAU'RDAY   AT   2   P.M.\nQ, Steed and partner vs J. Sxythe\n: and  partner,\nj    H.  Gray  and  partner  vs Miss  N.\n'Perrler and  Q. Munro.\nSATIRDAY   AT   3   P.M.\nj    B.  Kirby  and  partner  v$ A.  Hart\n! and partner.\nI    Miss L. Sheffield and O. 3haw ts\nMlas   L.   Smlti.   and   F.. Morris.\nThe following men are requested\nto be at the lower courts, Sunday\nmorning, when they will le given\npartners:\nR, Sampson, D. McNab, F. Fawcett,\nAlan Smyths, J. Dolphin, JEJ Strom-\nstead. W. Kltto, H. Coates, Gee Soot,\nD. McLeod, E. Cartmell, E. Del-\npuppo. W. McEwan, Ronald Beattie,\nW. Walt.\n\"A\"   class  mixed   doubles at   ths\nGolf club:\nSATl'RDAY AT 1 P.M.\nMiss Carol Wright and P. Clark\nvs Miss M- Deejardlns and li. Simpson.\nMiss F. Fleet and Tom Bird vs\nMiss  M.  Rahal   and   T. Mal&hoff.\nMrs. R. Maurer and A. R tchla vs\nOwen Haydon and George Simpson,\nSATl'RDAY  AT   2   P.M.\nMiss A. Johnstone and J. A.\nStuart va Miss Jean Waldie and\nL.   Stewart.\nMIpSs Doreen Dunnett and L. Bradley vs Miss E. Hamson and A\nNisbet.\nMiss   K.   Simpson   and   Ted   Romano   vs   Miss   E.   Wright   and   P,\nDe**ydney.\nSATl KDAY   AT   3   P.M.\nMiss Jean Burns and P. D. Campbell vs Miss K. Dill and C. Mc-\nDougall.\nMlii K.  Nisbet and F. Phillips vs\nMlfs M. Sandercoclt and W. Bunyan.\nMiss   M.   Noxon   and   R.   Maurer\nvs  H-   Hlllam   and   J.  Star It,\nSATIRD.W   AT   4   P.M.\nr. D.  Hobson and Miss M. Lutes\nvs Miss Jane  Nisbet and  V. Owens.\nMrs.   G.  Simpson   and   G.  Warner\nvs Miss D. Blackwood and I. Fielding.\nWinner    of    Burns-Campbell    and\nDUl-McDougali  vs  winner  of Nlsbet-\nphllllps  and   8andercoclc-Bur.yan.\nSATIUDAY    AT    |   P.M.\nWinner at Wright-Clark and Dee-\nJardlns-Slmpson vs winner Fleet-\nBird  and  Malahoff-Rahal.\nWinner of Maurer-Rltctle and\ni Haydon-Slmpson vs winner of Johnson-Stewart   and   Walcile-Ste-vart.\nWinner of Dunne tt-Brad.ey and\n'Hamflon-Nlsbet vg winner of Simpson-Romano and Wrlght-Dewdney,\nSATl RDAY   AT   6   P.M.\nWinner of Noxon Maurer and Hlllam  Stark  vg  winner of Lutea-Hcb-\naon   and   Nlsbet-Owens.\nSINDAY   AT   10   A.M.\nMUs I. Robertson and R Knight\nvs Miss L. Cunllffe and E. Plckard.\nMrs. Sjwerby and E. E. fTCMOl\nvs Mrs. C. Larson and T, :Romano.\nMiM P. Geilnas and W. Vance va\nMiss M. Hodges and R. R. Horner.\nSI NPAY   AT    11   A.M.\nMiss A. Mansfield  and N. German\nvs  Mrs.   G.   Wright   and   J.  Aurello.\nWinner   of \" Sowerby-Swanton   and\nLarsi%n-Romano vs winner ot Geilnas-Vance   and   Homer-Hodge,\nNELSON-CRESTON\nLIBERALS FORM\nORGANIZATION\nGulmont  Heads  New  Body;\nWide Executives Picked;\nRural Side Gets More\n25-Year Moratorium\non the Payments to\nDebtors Ig Proposed\nFIGHTING SPEECHES\nBY VARIOUS SPEAKERS\nNomination May Be Discussed\nWhen Organizer Comes\nThrough Soon\nThe Time to Save\nFigure present prices for building materials and lumber with\nwhat they were three years ago,\n(and what they are likely to be\nagain in the near future) and\nyou will appreciate why we\nwarn against procrastination,\nwhy we recommend that you\nbuild . . . remodel . . . repair\n. . . NOW.\nSee Vs for\nLUMBER \u2014 LIME \u2014 BRICK \u2014 CEMENT \u2014\nDOORS - WINDOWS - SHINGLES -\nLATH \u2014 WALLBOARD \u2014 PLASTER -\nSTUCCO - ETC. -\nA. H. GREEN &\n(Successors to John Burns it Son)\nBUILDING   CONTRACTORS,   ENGINEERS   AND   SURVEYORS\nNELSON and ROSSLAND\nFACTORY  AND  LUMBER.  YARD-701   FRONT ST.    PHONE   178\nOFFICES   -618  WARD ST.    PHONE 384\nTHREE SPANS OF\nBRIDGE WILL BE\nDONE THIS YEAR\nOne Will Have Lift for Navigation, Hinton Reports\nto Board\nWoodyatt\nLAWN\nMOWERS\nThe most satisfactory Canadian\nmade lawn mower.\n14 inch Sf.13.50    16 inch S 14.00   18 Inch 814.50\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWHOLESALE - NELSON B. C. - RETAIL\nWhile the steel span Just completed, ot the Canadian Pacific bridge\nover the flats at Kootenay Landing,\nis a fixed t-pan, and ha* no provision   for   opening   If   navigation   re-\n\u25a0 quires, two other fipans will follow\n' before the end of the year, and one\n'of  them  will   be  80  feet   lu  lengMi\nand have a vertical life, -which will\nmake possible the passage of cralt\n|of any size probable, R. W. Hinton,\nI chairman of the roads and bridges\n[ committee of tr.e Nelaon .ward of\nI trade, reported to the boarC, Thurs-\n|day.\nj Thla marks the \u2022uoceul.ul conclu-\n. slon ot a campaign of over a year\nj by the board, to assure complete\n:safe_fuards tor possible navlgition on\n; the Kootenay river, a campaign that\n! Included representations botii to tbe\nminister of marine at Ottawa and\nto the Canadian Pacific, W. K.\nEsllng, M. P., also being enlisted.\nPreviously there had been no Intimation that more than the first\nI span would be completed tils year,\nj The original plans filed by the\nI company with the marine depart*\nI ment were not approved 1he gov\niemment giving the board of trade\n'assurance that lt would Insist on\ni the interests of navigation being\n! protected. In the meantime the\nj company went ahead with the span\nI assuring the board of trade that at\n24 hours notice lt would lilt a sec-\n\u25a0 tlon of trestle If occasion required\nI to let river traffic through.\nI jt la expected that as tht. revised\n| plana take full care of navigation,\ni Ottawa approval will be given In\nl due course.\nThe beat attended and moat enthusiastic meeting Nelaon Liberals\nhave had for aome years waa ]n\nevidence at the Canadian Legion\nhall on Friday evening, when *\nrepresentative jot of workers from\nvarious point* m the old Creston\nriding, met with the Nelson Liberal-\nto formally constitute an association for the newly-created Nelson-\nCreston   riding.\nPresident J. r. Gulmont of the\nNelson Liberal association formall1'\nopened the session with a chav-\nacterlstlc Address of welcome lo\nthe visitors and an equally cordis,\ngreeting to the fine turnout ri\ncity party workers. Mi'. Gulmci'\nwas the unanimous -ho'.ce to pn*\nside over the gathering, with B.\nNorman o_ Nelson, acting as fMR-\ntary. \u2022\nAfter the formal resolution had\nbeen carried to organize cn association for the r.e*.v riding Mr,\nGulmont reviewed the pmtni*>tli*.\npolitical situation and expressed tht\nopinion that if the Liberals at nil\npoints ln the riding w*tre fhowlng\nthe same \u00abal as these gathered on\nthla occasion, the aucceas of the\nparty at the next election could\nhardly be doubted. The chairman\nwaa of the polnlon that an appeal\nto the people was a whole lot closer than the premier of the province would lead the people to believe.\n\u25a0*\u25a0 the election of officers thc\nfollowing *,v*-re named by acclama\ntlon:\nOFFICERS   BY\nACCLAMATION\nHonorary presidents\u2014T. D. Pattullo; honorary vice-president\u2014Frank\nPutnam, Creston; D. D. McLean.\nNelson. President\u2014J. F. Gulmont,\nNelson; 1st vice-president^\u2014C. F.\nHayes, Creston; 2nd vlce-prseldent\u2014\nA P. McDonald. Bonnlngton; secretary- treasurer\u2014W. J. Sturgeon, Nelaon. Executive ln part\u2014O. W. Humphry, Bouth Slocan; R. J. Cunningham, Crescent Valley; A. T.\nNichols, Slocan Park; Matt Hill,\nWaneta; S. A. Speers, Creston; F.\nDavis, Frultvcle; O. Haglund. Erie;\nJohn I'orcross, Shirley; a. S. Ritchie,\nProcter; H, perry Leake, Balfour;\nH. Palrbank. Harrop; E. Url, Wynndel; E. E. CartwTlght, Erlcksor; O.\nM. Samuelson. Canyon; John Huscroft, Llster-H user oft; W. Rutherford, Willow point; O. Mathews,\nBalmo; A. Mackle, Boswell; 8. A.\nMcDonald,   Ymir.\nThese members are all from the\nold Creston riding, and a number\nof other polling places In the old\nriding will have their representatives\nnamed   later.\nThe meeting agreed that Nelson\nand F-trvlew should have 10 members on the executive and these\nwere named as follows: Mrs. Nelson\nMurphy, John R. Hunter. William\nStubbs, Mr. O'Donnell, Dr, H. H.\nMacKenzle, Alderman Ross Fleming.\nJ. A. MacDonald, E. P. Dawson, and\nJ.  St.Denls.\nFor the purpose of an executive\nmeeting it was agreed that an attendance of eight \u25a0 ould be auf-\nficlent, and In addition to those\nnimed previously, all the other officers of the association w.ll be executive members, as well as the\npresidents of local Liberal associations.\nFighting speechev were made by\nthree former Liberal candidates, J,\nA. MacDonald, Frank Putnam, and\nD. D. McLean, all of whom made\na strong plea for care ln the selection of a candidate, laying special\nemphasis on the necessity of securing a standard bearer of outstanding ability, and then getting wholeheartedly behind 1 lm to assure his\nelection. All three sp-Miters stressed\nthe necessity of abolishing the pat*\nronage evil, thla being accountable\nfor the aorry plight In which the\nprovince   fin       Itself   today.\nDuring the meeting a resolution\nof confidence ln the leadership of\nT. D, Pattullo was carried with\nenthusiastic applause, and announcement was made that a jneef.ng of\nthe provincial Liberal executive la\nto be held at New Westminster at\nthe end of May.\nThe matter of nominating a candidate waa not discussed, but lt\nls understood the Liberal organizer will b* mak.ng a visit in the\nInterior before the end of the\nmonth, when the executive will go\nfull*' Into the matter.\nCRESTON VALLEY\nLIBERALS REPORT\nA HEAVY BLOOM\nTRAIL DEFEATS\nROSSLAND, 7 TO 1,\nIN BALL CAME\nTRAIL, B. C, May U.\u2014With\nJlmmie Morria ln the pitchers box\nand Decembrlnl catching, Trail at*-\nleated Rossland 7-1 ln an exhibition\nsenior  game  here  today.\nRoasland used two batteilea, Bid\nJohnson and Ernie Johnson starting. They were replaced by Acker-\nman Bnd Couture,\nWASHINGTON, May 13\u2014A 25-\nyear moratorium of payments fro-n.\ndebtor nations under the Vour.i\nplan with partial cancellation for\n.--.ports ir.tu those countries frorn\nIhe L'nlted Statea was proposed\nto President Hoover Lite today fo>\nthe president of t-evenU n.aj\u00abr\nrailway   labor   organization*..\nAUXILIARY NETS\n$24.50 ON TEA,\nHOSPITAL DAY\nFALCONS TAKE\nJUNIOR LEAGUE\nBALLJAME, 9-3\nTake Six-Run Lead on Hume\nIn First Three Innings;\nGillette Stars\nline Falcons swamped the litime\nIn the (.eeonti jame of the City\nJunior   Baseball   League,   U-3,   at\nthe Freer-ration ground*. FruM)\nnight. The lalron, tr-ok a six-run\nlead lu the aecond and third\nin n In \u25a0**\u25a0\u25a0, and Hume failed to\nerase thla figure In the remaining\nthree Innings,\nJoe Hunden on the Falcon mound\npitched a steady game and waa well\nsupported by P. Kuntas at ahort-\natop and Harold Moore on the receiving end. Walter GUette, Falcon\nthird baseman, waa the hitting\nace of Friday* game, getting a\nhomer, a double and a alngle.\nAlstrom of the Hume squad hit\na triple bagger but waa called out\nby the umpire lor falling to touch\nthe flrat aack.\nRomano and Bird dlaplayed wonderful teamwork in fielding for the\nHume    aggregation.\nSIMMAKY\nStrikeouts \u2014 Hunden 6; Bell 8;\nGustafson  3,\nBasea on Balls\u2014Hunden 4, \"3eU 5.\nBalks\u2014Hunden  l.\nFalcons     - 0 3 8 0 1 0\u20149\nHume     0 110 1 0\u20143\nLINKUPS\nFalcons.\u2014Harold Moore, c; J. Hutj-\nden, p; T. Crack, If; W. Gillette, 3b;\nV. Koskl, rf; H. Elliott, lb; P. Kuntz,\naa; A. Mclnnla, cf; J. Kuntz, 3b.\nHume\u2014J. Realya, cf; Bird, 2b;\nStlrzarker, lb; Romano, aa; Gustafson. 3b; MacDougall, c; Almatrom.\nlf;-3b; Bell, p-If; Pearce, rf; Bill\nKlrby. rf.\nThe Falcons will meet Fairview\non the Recreation grounds Saturday\nnight.\nAuxiliary Is Strongfy Against\nClosing of laundry; More\nLinen Needed\nR. R. Horner\n524 Vernon St.      Phone 121\n..... -__>.' -\u2022 \u2022\u25a0_\nAfter mnrh discussion, a feaolQ-\ntlon waa passed strongly oppo-s-\nIrf tha suggrs.lop ot closing the\nKootenay Lake General hospital\n\u25a0 -.undry at the regular meeting of\nth. Women's llonpital auxiliary\nheld In the nurses' home Friday\nafternoon.\nThe knitting committee reported\n\u2022rood progress, while a report from\nlhe treasurer, Mra. L. S. Bradley.\n-.tited that the Hospital Day tea\nhad netted 134.30, giving the aux-\nilary  a  bank   balance  of  1172.\nUpon the application of the ma*\nVon. Miss K. Ethel Gray, for more\nUnena, the purchasing committee\nwas instructed to cooperate with\nthe hospital ln supplying the needed\n\u25a0.rtlc.es.\nIt waa decided that after the June\nmeeting, further meetings would be\nlostponed until September when\nhe holiday aeason ends.\nMrs. L. M. Varner, president, pre-\n?:ded at the fairly well attended\nmeeting.\nMRS. TRICKETT AND\nCHILDREN VISIT\nAT SLOCAN PARK\nSLOCAN PARK, B. C, May 13\u2014\nMra. Donald Tuckett and children\nof New Denver visited the former's\nmother, Mrs. William Newell, for\na  few   days  last   week.\nH. Thomllnscn ia the guest of\nMrs.   A.   Crebbln.\nMra. N. S. Houston, teacher of\nthe aenlor grades, ani her aon Harding, spent the week end in Nelson\nwith the former's brother H. H.\nCurrie, Baker Street.\nEdward Nichols who attenda Hl_*h\nschool in Nelson spent the week-end\nwith his parents Mr. and Mrs. A.\nlllchols.\nMrs\nfoQP\n<.v--_y..y\nBlue Ribbon Tea, lh 42\u00a3\ntajlERIIBty\n' coffee\nliiue Ribbon Coffee\npound   45\u00ab*i\nFLOUR\nFIRST PATENT\n24's  _ | .73\n49's _... 1.40\n98's   2.65\nFOUR BOWLING\nRINKS TO GO\nTRAIL TODAY\nTrailTadanac Green Will Be\nOpen; Nelson Enters\nFriendly Play\nCONFAB ELICITS\nNO RESOLUTIONS\nFOR CONVENTION\nGroup Called Together to Go\nInto Some of the\nPossibilities\nAt a meeting made powlble by\nthe holding of the Old Timers annual banquet here Thursday, Nelson\nand TraU citizens interested themselves In malting the coming convention of tho Associated Boards of\nTrade of Eastern British Columbia\na conspicuous success discussed at\nthe Hume Thursday afternoon the\nsilver question and other questions\nof  district  and  national  importance.\nNoble Blnns of Trail, president of\nthe Associated Boards, and T. W.\nBlngay, vice-president in charge of\nfinances of the Consolidated Mining\n<_c Smelting Company of Canada,\nwere present from Trail, while President c. B. Garland, C. D. Blackwood,\nB. W. Hinton, and J. A. McDonald\nsat in for the Nelson board and Its\nresolutions committee. J. R. Hunter,\nacting secretary of the Associated\nBoariis, had with him the resolutions ao far conceived, and J, a.\nCarter, C P. R. district passenger\nagent, was linked with the meeting\nthrough the proposal for a special\nrailway coach for delegates from\nthis   district.\nThe silver question, the one of\nmost immediate Interest at the Informal conference, was already covered by two chamber of mines resolutions frcm the Nelson board of\ntrade, one of them In the terms\nadopted by the provincial legislature\nas to stabilization, and no further\nresolution    was   framed.\nOther matters, sucii as those of\nnational and provincial finance.\nDoukhobor lawlessness, and others\nof district interest, were mentioned,\nbut no actual steps were taken regarding any cf them.\nThe honey industry la weathering\nthe agricultural depression better\nthan most lines of farm produces,\neays a marketing specialist of the\ngovernment.\nNEWS Ot IHE DAY\nSuita \u00bb24. Rex Tailoring Co., Ltd.\nMacDonald  agent,   315 Vi   Baker  St.\n(1935)\nFor Rent\u2014Single or double housekeeping rooms. Annable block.\n(1969)\nIor rent \u2014 rooms most reasonable\nby day or month. Strathcona hotel.\n(2078)\nWatch our wlndow8 for cash\nepedals. J. A. Irving  & Co.   (2143)\nOld I*awn mowers bought, any\ncondition.  Phone  260L. (3149;\nCall 838 for your hauling and\ntransfer work. Jack Hoogerwer..\n(2120)\nThe regular monthly meeting ot\nthe Hospital auxiliary this afternoon\nat  3   o'clock. (2132)\nToday the Trail-Tadanac Lawn\n' Bowling club la opening Its greens\n\u25a0 for the Reason's play. On the occasion the Trail club has Invited the\nNelson Lawn Bowlers to play an\ninter-clty friendly competition. Nelson will send four rinks to corpete.\nThe local players leave at 1 p.m.\ntoday.\nFollowing are the Nelson rink1*\nIn the MM of skip, second, third\nand  lead.\nNo. 1\u2014B. V. Brake, J. Armstrong,\nS. Bate and O. A. Meerea.\nNo 3\u2014W. C. Chapman, E. Pen-\nwell, R A. Alder=:mlth, W. Brown Jr.\nNo. 3\u2014J. Draper, A. Elliott, F.\nGeder,  D. Eccles.\nNo. 4\u2014Percy Bates, Fred Waters,\nS.   Brown   and   W.   Brown.\nPULFORIVS CRIAM\nOF OLIVES\nFor   Niinburn   and   Wlndnurn\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrrscrhil Inn   \"medalist\nPHONE*  1\nshop with   it by M*.r.\nHoleproof\nHosiery\nwith\nthe\nEX-TOE\nCome in'and see the new\nSpring styles in Holeproof\u2014patterns in colors\n;hat harmonize with your\nnew Spring suits \u2014 de-,\nsigns that appeal to your\ntaste^\u2014in qualities that\ngive you the utmost in\nwear \u2014 silks, silk and\nwools and lisles. Try\nfew pairs today.\n50c\n75c\n$1.00\nat\nUnfurnished 3-room suite, Hardwood floors. Electric KTldg., also one\nlurnlshecl  aulte,  Kerr  Apts.   (11)451\nTulip Tea at the home of Mrs.\nA. T. Parks, Richard St.. Frta-i,\nMay  20- Wl*35)\nBaptist A. C. Club will hold a\ntea and bake sale ln the Institute\nrooma   Saturday,   June   4th.   \\2137)\nj Tulip special 35c dozen. Today at\n| Orlzzelle's, Kandyland and Horsvptll\nI Bips. (21571\nBASEBALL    SUNDAY    \u2014   TRAIL\nI VS. NELSON. RECREATION\nI GROtNDS   2:30   P.   M. (2106)\nUniversity     spring     play,   Opera\nhouse,   May   16.   \u25a0\"**\u25a0**\u25a0  at  Mann,\nRutherford, or high school students.\n(20531\nFor Modern Plumbing\nat Moderate Prices\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTKK   PLLMBI.R\nOpp.  City  Hall Phone 815\nIn aome countries people have\nquickly   announced   that   Uebta\nreparations   should   be    cancelled\nEx-Premier Laval ot Franc*.\n-nio:\n44\n7..XI   and\nTRANSFER\nDally Freight fcl.ednle to Tra,\nand Hos-sland. Leaves Nelaon r\n10 a.m. Trail Der Dominlo\nOarage; Rosflo ' Depot, L. I\nCafe. C *\\  CUMMIN\nMay festival Wednesday, May 18th\nMrs. Gilchrist's lawn, 3 to 8. Admission Including tea 25c. Ausplce*.\nChurch of Redeem-r-r. (2140)\nLit   Ufl  IIEVELOP VOIR FILM\nWe  get   the   but   lesrlfs   ami   lv;v.\nthem  roi.-iy in 8 linuf''.\nFishing   Tackle,   camly,   Book*-,   et \u25a0\nC5TY DEI.G CO.\nNelson's  DI\"Pn**in.*r  Chemists\nThis   f-'turp   O.,:;,   Sunday\nHARRISON LAKE TO\nHAVE NORTHWEST\nOUTBOARD RACING\nCELEBRATION    AT    YMIR    MAY\n24. niC. ROCK DRILLINO CONTEST.\nBaseball,  log   *.-awlng  and  all  other\n\u2022sports. Dance In the evening. Music\nby   Trail   Troubadours,   five   pieces,\n(2162)\nVisitors to Nelson on lYlday for\nthe Liberal gatherings In the afternoon and evening at the CanadUn\nlegion. Included Mr. and Mra. _E. E.\nCartwrlght, Erlckson, Mr. and Mri.\nFrank Putnam, Erlckson; and M.\nJ. B\">yd. C. F. Hayes, c. A. Bpeera\nand Hugh Taylor of Creston.\nThey report that the bloesom pe-\nttOrl tn the Creston valley will be\nat Its best at the weekend, and that\nprospects at present are for an\nunusually heavy yield of all tree\nfruits with the possible exception\nof  pears.\nRailway Committee\nHas Still \"Closed\nDoor\" Discussions\nOTTAWA, May 13 (CP).\u2014Maintaining to the laat its well-established character a.-* the most combative, the committee on raJlwaya\nand shipping today concluded Its\npublic healings. Tliere remained\nseveral aesslons \"In camera\" when\nthe battlea Initiated ln the open\nfield will continue behind closed\ndoors. Of these the most bitter\nIs likely to be waged on the expense\n-\u25a0ocounts of higher officials of the\nCanadian National railways, full details of which were tabled yeeterday\nwithout being made public.\nProsperity and good weather aecin\nhave all the time and get eore\nwhe'i we don't.\nVANCOUVER, May 13\u2014The Pacific northwest outboard racing\nchampionships have definitely been\nawarded to Harrison Lake. British\nColiynbla, for Augruat 20 to 21, It\nwaa announced following a trip to\nSeattle by Commodore G. K. Wilson\nand Vice-com mod ore H. C. Jackson\nof the British Columbia Power\nBoat association to attend a P. N.\nO. A. meeting. Originally the northwest racing classic waa alated for\nLalte Sammamlsh aa In previous\nyears, but ln view of the handsome\npropoaala aubmitted by the Vancouver delegate*, the awltch In venue\nwas   sanctioned.\nENJOY    OCR      WEEK-END      ICE\nCREAM SPECIALS \u2014 FKt IT TEMPTATION,   BOSTON   FREEZE,  PECAN\nj SURPRISE \u2014  THE   OOLDEN  (1ATB\nCAFE. (2155)\nI    Don't mlsa valedictory Dance, Falr-\nI Tiew pariah  Hall,  Friday, May 20th\nat 0 p. m. Bigger and better than\never.  The  orcheatra,   Mickey  M.   C.\nGents   floe.- Ladiea   25s. (2133)\nWe are in the n.arr_et for atraw-\nberriea. raspberries, gooseberries,\nblackberries, cherries, plums, greengages, currant,, and crabapples. McDonald Jam Co., Ltd. (2082.\nCOLUMBIAN COLLEGE\nFACES FINANCIAL\nDIFFICULTIES\nNEW WESTMINSTER, May 13._\nThe problem of Columbian college\npioneer educational institution of\nNew Westminster, now faced with\nfinancial difficulties that may necessitate its closing, came before\nthla afternoon's sesalon of the Unit-\ned church conference' lu Queens\navenue  United chur.h.\nThe annual report of the col-\nleg outlining It. present financial\nstraits ws.* presented by Rev. E. D\nBraden, Vancouver, chairman of the\nboard   of   directors.\nPhone\n35\nTAXI\nIII.   Best   of   Sfrrlrt\nCareful,   Courteous\nDrlTers\nHolloa Trad-dor Co., Ltd.\nYour\nWatch-Clock\nand\nJEWELRY REPAIRS\nwill receive prompt\nattention here.\nOur work is satisfactory\n- charges moderate\nE. Collinson\nJEWLLER\nC. P. R. Time Inspector\nThe\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nl7F.Er.-ESn   srECI.ILS\nAPRICOTS, :s, 3 tins (or ....*.\nPINEAPI'I.E, Wired, 3s, % tins\notursnuiii hearts, tins,\nEach  15c and\nCREAMERY   BUTTER,   Our\nSpecial, :i lbs. for \u2014 -\nFRESH   CUT   SIDE BACO.N\nPer   pice,   11).   ._._ ___.\nSliced,    lb.     - -\nSALMON.  Tall cone, fancy\npack.   ,    for   \t\nSALMON,   Sockeje   halres,\n4   fnr   -.\nCATSUP, larue bottle, each\nGRAHAM   WAFERS,   lar.e\nbox     \u2014 \u2014   ,\nSODA BISCUITS, per PWt. ...\nPEKO TEA. Our Special\n3 lbs.   for -    1.\nLV.CI*   -VIC.   ORANGES,\n4 doz.   for    n 1.\nPEANUT   BUTTER,  W.  lb.\nSlass   Jar    _ _._\nBI UK   P'llHON   TEA  or\nCOFFEE,    per   lb \u201e\nBF.'iKlST   HONEY,   fl-lb.   tin\n9   enns   CHOICE   KTKINO\nBEANS or PEAS fdr  _ 1.\n8 can CHOICE TOMATOES\nor CORN fnr _   .\n- -_., ... ,,,.\u2022- shrimps for   .\nLOOANBERR1ES,  fancy,\n3  cans  for   -..   .\n4   cans   fancy   PEACHES   for   .\n2 lbs.  Fill  BISCUITS  for \t\n3 cans TOMATO SOUP for __   .\nPIIONE  110\nDeliveries 9 a.m. to S p.m.\nSPEND YOUR SUNDAY AT AINSWORTH HOT SPRINGS. THE NATURAE HOT MINERAL WATER IN\nTIIE SWIMMING POOL AND CAVES\nWILL DO YOU GOOD. OOOD MEALS\nAT ALL HOURS HIRING THE\nDAV. 60c. .fie, AND fl. ALSO\nAFTERNOON TEA SERVED. UNDER\nTHE NEW MANAGEMENT OF A. A.\nVASSAR. (JIM)\nCARD OF THANKS\nI. O. Johnson nnd daughters,\nDoris of Trail, and Mrs. K. Gray of\nPrlnoeton, B. C, wish to thank\ntheir many friends for kindness\nand sympathy extended to them ln\ntheir recent bereavement, the loss\nof a loving wife and mother. They\nalso wish to thank their friends for\nthe many beautiful floral tributes.\n(2163)\niiiiiiiiminfinuiiiiiiniitiiiiiiiiniitiuii\nI   REDUCED   PRICES   AT   THE\nI   TROUBADOUR    DANCE    TO-\n_\u2022  HIOHT IN TIIE EAOLE HALL.    \u25a0-\n5   LADIES 25c AND GENTS 80c.    _i\n| , (2I\u00ab)    |\n.TJiiiiiiiiiiiiMlliiillllllllllllillillliiiiiiTi\nFor\u2014\nSERVICE\nPRICE and\nQUALITY\nSTAR\nA   GROCERY\n.oi.es 10 and ll\n*\nMatinee 2 p. m.\nNight 7 and 9 p. m.\nLAST SHOWING\nWallace Beery\nand\nJackie Cooper\nIn\n'The Champ\nA    PICTURE    THAT    WILL\nLIVE IN YOUR HEART\nFOREVER.\n;      -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-\u2014\u2014- -    - -- -  \u25a0\t\nCOMING,   MONDAY,  TUESDAY\nand   WEDNESDAY\nMARLENE DEITR1CH\nand\nCLIVE  BROOK\nIn .\n\"Shanghai Express\"\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1932_05_14","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0404970","@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":"1932-05-14 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1932-05-14 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\/1.0404970"}