{"@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":"2021-11-30","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1934-06-04","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0405300\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \t\nNelson Seniors Win From\nRossland 7-3\n\u2014Qa&e Seven\nl'-A\u00bbj|\nrttUltlMCIAl   LIIM\nvictouiA | c\n011 i\nst\nCavalcade Sets New Mark\nKentucky Derby\n\u2014Pa&e Six\nVOMJMB 33\nNELWN, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-MONDAY MORNINO. JUNK 4. 1M4\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNUMBER  31\nTWO CANADIANS ARE CREATED KNIGHTS\nANTHONY EDEN\nIS REMEMBERED\nIN HONOR LIST\nBaron Wakefield Is\nMade Viscount for\nAir Work\nFIVE BARONETS\nIN OLD COUNTRY\nSir John Reitb of the\nBroadcast Fame\non the List\nLONDON, June 8 (CP)\u2014The United\nKingdom1! lltt of King's blrthdty\nhonon was headed by Baron Wakefield who waa mtde t viscount for\npubllo eernces especially ln the retlm\nof aviation. Vlacount Wakefield It t\nformer lord mtyor of London with t\nlengthy lltt of benefaction to tht\nBrnplre to bit credit.\nPour new barons art Lord Alnett,\nformer lord chief clerk of Scotland;\n> Blr Hugo Hint, chtlrmtn of tht\nOenenl Electric company; Gerald\nWtlter Loder, preildent of the Nitlonil Union of Conservatives, end\nErVj.-Oen. Bert Luctn, Conservitlve\nwhip of tbe house of lords, whose\nexisting peerige wit tn Irish ont.\nTonlghtl honor nlsed blm to a full\npeerage.\nAnthony Eden, lord privy eetl,\nwhoae temcee ln thi loTelgn office\nhire distinguished blm wu mtdt t\n. privy councillor.\nTht five wbo wen nimed baronets\n(Continued on Pigt tight)\nMORE BIRTHS AND\nLESS DEATHS, B.C\nVICTORIA, Junt 3 (CP)\u2014Birth\nreflitrttlont ln Brltlih Oolumblt\nduring April wen 734 it compared\nwith TM In tbe ctmt month a\nyetr in, according to tht vlttl\natatlttlot bnneh..ot tbt provincitl\n.department er hulth.\nThm   wen   418   deatht   Igtlntt.\n431    in   the   corresponding   period\nl .st peer. Marriages soleipnlred num-\n. bend 887 tttlnst 333 ln tht pn.\nvlout 13 montht.\nBlrthi. deaths tnd marriage in\ntht larger centres throughout tbt\nprovlnoe were: Vtncouver 3\u00ab3 births.\n' 188 deatbt tnd m mtrrligee; Vlctorlt St, 41 tnd 38; New Weet-\nmlniter 38, 33 tnd 17; Nelton 18,\n1, t; Rceslmd 8, 3, 3; Tnll 30. 7.\ntnd 41 Mult 8, 4, 3; Revelstoke 3,\n3. l; Onnd Forks i, 3, 1; Kelowna\nIB, 3, 3; Pentlcton 8, 3, 3; tod\nVernon 18, 7, 8.\nB.C. PROSPECTS\nFOR OIL VALUES\nVICTORIA, June 8 (CP) .\u2014Brltlib\nColumbia bu already made t itart\non protptctlng for oU tnd natural\ngtt, lt wu lntlmtted Btturdty by\nPremier T. D. Pittullo. Tbe pnmler\ndeclined to say In what tret, but\nlntlmtted thit ictlon htd bun In-\nltltted tlreidy to Investigate the\npossibility of natural gu on B. C.\nttwit-w.\nHon.   A.   W.   Ony,   minister   ot\n* lands, tbe premier tttttd. went to\ni Bellingham recently to itudy tt flnt\n: htnd   developments  then   ln   connection with niturtl gu.\nFollowing thtt, It  wu nported,\n' tbt  province  entered Into  in   arrangement with oil engineers, for I\not t definite  utt  on  tbe\nlower mainland.\nWhlit tht result of theee nporte\ntn it-11 twalted. the premier .lntlmtted tbtt t vigorous policy would\n1 bt followed to uncover new resources\nV. S. Organizes to Provide Relief for 10 others are\nSufferers in Worst Drought in Years\nNo Trip to Chicago for the \u00bb&& STEEL STRIKE ^T^^oBaiEVELONG\nQuintuplets; Have Jaundice\nBessborough Has Doctor Orders Babies\nSeven Chill    Not to Be Moved\nThis Summer\nFAIR CONTRACT\nIS CANCELLED\nTwo Are Excellent;\nTwo Fair, Fifth\nIs Serious\nOTTAWA. June 8 (OP) \u2014 Wtd\nBesaborough, governor-general, hu\nbeen confined to bed wltb \u2022 severe\nchill. On bll doctor's advice hi hu\nMen reluctantly obliged to cancel\nall engagements fer the next few\ndiyi. Lord Bessborough wu to have\nbeen preeent tt tbt trooping of\ncolon on Parliament bill tonight\ntsd had in engagement tt Montreal on Tuesday.\nCANCER TAKES\n49INAM0NTH\nVICTORIA, June I (CP).-Ctn-\ncer wu responsible for 49 detthi tn\nBritlth Columbli ln April tocordlng\nto the vlttl statittict branch ol the\ndeptrtment of hetlth. Tuberculosis\naccounted for 37 mortalities, teven\npeople were killed lh motor accidents: 37 btbiet under one yetr of\ntie died; lnfluena took t toll of\nnine lives tnd pneumonia (til typet)\ncaused 16 detthi.\nNotifiable ditettet reported to the\ndeptrtment of hetlth during May\nwere: Cincer 54 cases; chlckenpox\n137; Germtn meulet fr, influenza\n57; meules 6; mumpe 141; pneumonia (ill typet) 24;: tctrlet fever\n271; tuberculoilt 83; whooping cough\n105; typhoid fever 3; trachomt 7;\nseptic ton throat 4; erysipelas 4.\nREFUSE TAX\nIMPROVEMENTS\nColdstream Taxpayers Vote\nDown Proposal at Genera] Meeting\nVEBNON, B.C., JUnt 3 (OP).\u2014\nTaxpayers of the municipality ot\nColdstream bare turned down by t\ndecisive vote it t general meeting\na proepoetl thlt approximately 830,-\n000 arrears of tutt led Interest\nowing by tbe Coldstream ranch\nshould   bt  waived.\nThe suggestion wu mtdt by W.\n0. Rlcardo, prominent resident ot\nthe district, who declired Improvement! ehould be taxed tnd that\ntbt preeent system, by wblcb the\nland been the tottl cott of munlciptl service. It unjust to tht ltrgt\nltnd ownen. Hie suggestion regarding ttx relief Included ill tn tr-\nrean.\nTht property In quutlon, tint\ndeveloped by the Utt Lord Aberdeen tnd now owned by Lord\nWooltvlngton, recently drew widespread tttentlon by the tult brought\nby Lord Woltvlngton'i daughter, the\nHon. Katharine MicDontld-Buchan*\ntn, la Brltlib Oolumblt supreme\ncourt. She uked tbtt improvements\nshould be taxed ln tbe mUVclpallty\nbut the suit wu loet md tn appeal\nwu disallowed.\nMARKET HOLIDAY TODAY\nTORONTO, June 3 (CP).\u2014Ctnt-\ndian itock ind commodity markets.\nincluding the Winnipeg grain mar-\n.ket, wiu remiln closed tomorrow\nIn tbt province. If they are to be   in observance ot the Klng'i birth*\nfound. I dty.\nGovernor Rolph of California Loses His\nCampaign Against Death; Was 64 Years\nFrank F. Herriam Faces\nProblems as New\nGovernor\nBAH PRANCISCO, Junt 8 (AP).\u2014\nFrank P. Merrlam. Long Beach Republican who became governor of\nCalifornia Btturdty on the death of\nJames Rolph. Jr., ficed t variety\nof problems today\u2014among tbem tbe\nstate'e flntncitl difficulties tnd tn\nalmott certain renewal of pleu for\nclemency In the Tom Mooney Preparedness day bombing out.\nHt irranged to retch Btn Fran-\nclaco tomorrow, wben publlo funeral\n| eervlce* for Rolph will be held.\nRolph, 64, died yesterday tt tht\nSanta Clara county nnch homt ot\nt friend, Wtlter Unforth. Re tuc-\nclimbed to t combination of dls-\ncues which ovsrcime him seven!\nmonthi tgo tnd recently caused blm\nto abandon plana for t re-election\netmptlgn.\nRolph's duth ended 33 yetn \u00abt\npublic Ufe. During tbe wtr hie\nfortune lncreued muy fold u ht\nturned out ships for tbe Fnnch\nj government. Hi wu usually outspoken tnd his stand on the lynching of Thomu Thurmond tnd John\nHolmu lut Nov. 38, wben be liud-\nI id tht lynchers, brought widespread\ncondemnation md acclaim.\ncorbeil, Ont., Junt 8 (OP)\u2014Tht\nflvt little daughters of Mr- OUvt\nDlonne ot Corbell will not Journey\nto Chicago world'! fair. Tbt quintuples, their doctor hu ordered,\nmust not letve Onttrlo thli tummer.\nDr. A. B. Difoe, the Dlonne pbysl-\nclsn. todty declared the quintuplets\nlitre developed Jaundice tnd htvt\nturned yellowish. He tdded, however,\nthll wu not unusual with babies.\nDr. Dtloe hu given strict orders\nthe babies muat not be moved thle\nsummer. The fither bed signed t\ncontract wltb two Chicago promoters\nto ttkt hli tiny diughtera to the\nChicago ftlr but \u2022 clause ln the contract signed itated tbe doctor'! permission would htve to be obtained\nbefon tbe children could be mewed.\nDr. Defoe's Instructions, therefore,\nprevent the Chlcigo trip.\nONB NOT WELL\nDr. Dtfoe nld speclil tttentlon\nwu being given one ef tbe children.\nHe wld thll child, the smallest of\n(Continued on Ptge Bight)\nTWO SLAIN IN\nTOUCETRAP\nOne Ib Innocent; Other Is\nExtortionist\nPHOINIX, Arte., June 8 (AP).\u2014\nTwo men were slain today by department of Juitlce sgents tnd\nPhoenix polloe tfter offlcen htd\nsprung t tnp itt for tn extortionist who demanded 83800 from 8.\nDltmond, wealthy deptrtment store\nowner.\nThe suspected extortionist, ldentl-\nfl-d M Louie Walsh, 80, ion of t\nwomtn cltrk in the store, wu ihot\ndown u bt attempted to flee after\nbe wu alleged to hive taken Uie\nmoney from Dltmond tt t etreet\ncomer.\nRobert Perkins. 38, later wu found\nmortally wounded ln hli bed on the\nscreened porch of his borne netr tbt\nIntersection where the shooting took\nplice. Ht wu tn Innocent victim of\ntht shotgun tnd pistol fin.\nFrench Minister\nProds the Germans\nPARIS. Junt 8 (AP)\u2014 Nationalistic\nPrenchmen todey applauded tbe fiery\nipeech ln whleb Minister of Public\nHealS, Loult Marin Btturdty told\nmembers of the Republican federation, \"It It neceuary to make Oermtny understand that tha dty the\nwants war,* tbt will find tn opponent\nready for her.\"\nSpeaking u \"a profeuor of anthropology rather than t cabinet minister.\" M. Marin shouted: \"Intimidation li tht only means of avoiding\nthli curse. Oermtny li wildly devoted to Hitler, delirious, enthusiastic tnd dangerous, not because lbi\nil timed or mUlttrleed but because\nber unemployed will launch ber perilous adventures.\"\nOOVEBNOB BOLPB\nANABCHISTS ABBIBTED\nBARCELONA, Spiln. Junt 3 (AP)\n\u2014Pollot todty raided a wont muting of youths described u Anir-\nchtsta. Fifty wen irrested tnd of*\nflelsle seised documents whleh they\nuld revelled pltnt for ttt Anarchistic uprising throughout Spain.\nModern Pilgrims\nto Aid Jobless\nLONDON.   Junt   8   (AP)\u2014A   vast\nnational pilgrimage to the ctthe*\ndrale of orut Britain to aid tbt\nunemployed Is plinned for tbe flnt\ntwo weeks of July.\nA ticket coating htlf t orown\nmormiily 83 cente) will qualify tbe\nmodern pilgrim to mtkt thl Journey. Tbe money is to be distributed\nln thow treu which hive been\nwrlouily tffected by the Industrial\ndepression.\nThe gntt west door of Center-\nbury cathedral hts bwn Nt wide\nu the pilgrim portal.\nKING GEORGE V\nLONDON, Junt 3 (AP).-Klng\nOeorge observed the Mth anniversary of hit birthdty in the quiet of\nhit fimlly circle it Buckingham\npalace.\nHe passed the dty raiding congratulatory messages trom til ptrt!\nof the world end visiting with a ftw\nintimate friends.\nCtllert included the Klng'i uncle,\nthe Duke of Connaught, former governor general of Ctnada. hit sitter,\nPrinceit Victorit tnd King Oeorge\nof Greece. ,\nIn the morning the King ittended\nchurch lervlcei. He htd lunch and\ndinner with hit family.\nHe hid requested there bt no\n\u2014Jl _\not the anniversary will be plentiful\nwill ride at the\nKtmet\ncelebrating todty. But obeervtnees\ntry wi' \"\nKing v\nhetd of troops In the hlttorlc ceremony of trooping thl colon on the\nsptcloui parade grounds of the\ntomorrow. The\nony of trooping tht colon on the\n.jtcloui parade grounds of the\nhoraegnaro. Royal ulutei will bt\nfired at park* of London and Wind-\nsor, and throughout tht Empirt\nthere will be celebrations.\nSMUGGLERS ARE\nFINED AI COAST\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C, June\n3 (CP).\u2014Joeeph ind Lawtence Fox,\nhive been found guilty by Magistrate H. G. Johntton ln dlttrlct police court ot possessing goods un*\nlawfully imported Into Ctntdi ind\nfined $60 etch.   George Schmii'\ncharged Jointly with the brothe\nhit been acquitted, tht magistri\nstating he wtt in innocent party,\nThe evidence Indicated four large\nbiles of blacktmlth, plumbing, tin-\ntmlth tnd ctrpenter tools were\nsmuggled across the border Mty I\nconsigned to Calgary via Vancouver. They were telied by Royal\nCanadian Mounted police, who uid\nthey might poulbly htve been uted\nfor the construction of illegal stills.\nAuto-Lite Strike\nIs Brought to End\nTOLEDO. June 3 (AP).-Official!\nof the Electric Auto-Lite company\ntoday ratified an agreement ending\nthe bitter strike thit wu climaxed\nby savage rioting 10 dtyt tgo.\nThe agreement provides for i 9\nper cent wtge increue end recognition of i union committee in btr-\neainlng. Approval by director! of\nthe Bingham Stamping and Tool\ncompany and the Logan Gear comptny, the other two flrmi effected\nby the itrlke, which begin April 13,\nit expected to be announced toon.\n'\"BUSINESS AS USUAL\"\nIN PARLIAMENT\nSTEa STRIKE\nTHREATENS IN\nTODAY\nGovernment Renews\nEffort to Ward off\nWalkout\nUNION TO STAND\nON ITS DEMANDS\nCotton-Textile   Strike\nfor Today Called\nOff\nWASHINGTON. June 3 (AP). -\nT.e United States government tonight brought ln tomt of Itt mott\n\u2022killed peace-maken ln preparations\nfor nnewed effort tomorrow to ward\noff t paralysing strike la tbe iteel\nInduitry.\nTht prtptratlont, however, wtrt\nsurrounded by eome confusion.\nTbe government wu looking to\nfurther cdnferenou with labor leaders, but tht chief spokesman for\nthe amalgamated Association of\nIron, steel tnd Tbi Workera\u2014Mike\nT. Tight\u2014ttld ln Pittsburgh bt pro*\npond no further discussions.\nTlgbe tdded the nnlon ttood en\nttt   Semtnd   for   t   reopening   of\n(Contlnned tn Ptge Bight)\nNO ONE TO STARVE\nIN TfflSPROVINCE\nPattullo Expects Many Will\nBe Off Relief by\nAugust 1\n\"Trooping of the\nColon\", Ottawa\nOTTAWA, June 3 (CP)\u2014In honor of thi king's birthday tbe\ngovernor generals foot guards tonight performed the colorful ei-\nerelses auocltted wtth the trooping of the colon. lllneu pnvent-\ned Lord Bessborough, governor\ngeneral, from attending, but Udy\nBesaborough wu present, while\nprime Minuter B. B. Bennett\ntook the ulute.\nThe ceremony wu enacted en\nparliament iquare, tbe \"BIU\" being thronged with people.\nINDIANS HEAR\nCHARGES!.!\n3 Formally Charged;\nFourth Is Still in\nHospital\nKAMLOOPS, B.C, June I (CP).\n\u2014Richardson, Knot tnd Alex.\nGeorge, Indiin brothers of the Cm-\nford reserve, were formally charged\nwith murder Saturday before Stipendiary Magistrate D. W. Rowland! in connection with the dtathi\nof Indian Department Conttable\nFrank Gltborne tnd Provincitl Conttable Percy Carr, although the\nnames of the victim! were not mentioned ln the chirgei.\nThe three men were Informed\nthrough an interpreter that the\nfourth brother, Joseph, lying injuria in the Merritt hotplttl. would\nilto be charged with murder. They\nVICTOBIA, June 3 (CP>\u2014\"It\nIs not the Intention of thlt government te permit eny of Itt\npeople to starve,\" Pnmler T. D.\npattullo of Brltlih ColumbU declired Stturdiy, referring to the\nDominion government's decision to\ndiscontinue unemployment 11 d\nafter Jane IS.\nTbe premier reiterated bll statement of t few dtyt tgo tbtt,\nafter August 1. til those on unemployment nllef In this province\nmust re-reglster. He said ba expected mtny of those now receiving tld would find employment\nbetween now and Ang. 1.\nMr. Pittullo htd no comment\nto mike when uked If the Dominion government's decision\nwould result tn tbt province tnd\nmunicipalities sharing the nllef\nburden equally.\nwere remanded to June 7, when\nthey will appear it Merritt\nfile Indian brothers maintained\na stolid demeanor throughput the\nproceeding!.\nCANADA HONORS\nHIS MAJESTY\nOTTAWA. June 3 (OP).\u2014A mutate bearing tbt congratulations of\ntht Canadian people to King Oeorge\nwas.cabled by tht governor-general\ntodty. Bit Majettry replied expressing hie sincere thinks.\nThe governor-general't message\nread1 \"with my humble duty I beg\nto offer the loyal and devoted congratulations of' til your Majesty's\nCanadian subjects on tbe occasion\nof your Majesty's birthday.\n(Signed)   Bessborough.\"\nTbe reply from King Oeorge wu\n\"Please convey to tbe people of Ctntdi my sincere thinks for thtlr\nkind tnd loyal message of congratulation on my birthday. (Signed)\nOeorge  B.  I.\"\nDRY SPELL IS\nNOW BROKEN\nWill Provide a Works\nProgram for Dry\nArea\nCHURCHGOERS\nPRAY FOR RAIN\nEmbargo on Livestock\nGrazing in State\nof Minnesota\nCHICAGO, June 3 (AP)\u2014A mighty\nconcentration ot agencies wu under\nway today to illevlite thi nvagee of\ntbe moet devutatlng spring drought\nIn recent United States history. Tht\nfederal government, authorities of varloua itttee afflicted and private\negtnctu were bending their effort\nto assuage the effects of the land-\nparching drought.\nEven tht weathermen Joined In the\nwork. They ttld apparently the long\ndry apell wu broken ln the Rocky\nmountain region tnd wittered ralna\nwere nported elsewhere In the stricken territory. Weather observen give\npredictions of mon nln to come.\nPBAV FOB BAIN\nWhile  tbe  faithful    prayed  In\nchurch for rain, the following mom\nFarmers Joyful\nVancouverite ll\nWreck Victim\nNORTH BAT, Ont., June 8 (CP).\u2014\nErnest Kirison of Vanoouver wu\nkilled when I) ctn of a Cintdltn\nNitlonil Btllwiyi train wen derailed it Fossmlll, 33 mUu tut of here.\nBtturdty. Bt wu pinned beneath\none of tbe freight otn of tbt wwt-\nbound mtnlftet freight train tnd\nhit body wu btdly mingled.\nMlw of coal wtn lift on tht\ntracks tnd there It I powlblllty\nother bodies mty bt found.       ,\nOnt ot tht damaged ctn contained dyntmltt but tben wu no\nexplosion.\nOTTAWA. Junt 3 (OP)\u2014Ptrtli-\nment meete Monday u usual although lt li i holiday In the civil\nservice on account of tht klng'i\nbirthday  falling  on  Sunday.\nTht bank act will thi major\ntopic of dltcuulon in tbt bouu of\ncommoni during the coming week.\nIt hu bun reported from tbe buklng commlttu tnd i few of the\nnon-contentious clauses hare already\nbeen approved by the whole houu\nIn committee.\nB.C. PIONEER  DIAD\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C-_Juni\n3 (CP).-Mra. Mttildi Jessie talker, bom in Ytle, B.C., 71 yetrs tgo,\nthe diughter of Kenneth Morrlion.\nt well-known Hudson'! Bty comptny employee, it detd it her home\nsouth of Aldergrode. Mn. Wtlker\nwit i granddtughter ot Ovid Al-\nlard, chief factor ot the Hudson'i\nBty compiny at Yale, Hope and\nLangley.\nWINNIPEG, June 3 (CP)\u2014Cooling\nwinds tbtt followed ln the wake of\ngeneral rains brought relief and hope\ntodty to ftrmen tcrou tht west's\nbroad pralriu\u2014relief from t prolonged drought tnd hope for germination of plant life withered In sunbaked ued beds.\nOeneral ralna ovtr tbt week-end\nbroke i 13-day hut and drought\nwave. Tbe fill extended cletr tcrow\nsouthern Albertt tnd Saskatchewan\ntnd Into Minltobt. Only wittered\n\u2022bowen fell In parts of southern\ntltnltobt, however, where the wil\nstill remains parched and dry.\nConvicts to Get\nLife for Murder\nWALLA WALLA, Wuh., June 3\n(AP).-rFive prison inmttes who\nwert convicted tar a jury of tint\ndegree murder for the detth of\nGuard Herbert L. Briggs, in the ill-\nfated break for freedom on Lincoln'! birthday, wera formally ten-\ntenced to life term! ln the state\nKnltentlary   yeiterdiy   by   Judge\nitt L. Diraeoll.\nJohn Beckwith\nDies in Victoria\nVICTORIA, June 3 (CP).-John\nL. Beckwith, former mtyor of Vlctorli, ind retldent ot Britlth Columbia alnce IBM, died todty. He\nhid engaged In the ttlmon canning\nbuilneu for 31 rein\nin Cornwall!!, N.S.\nR.C. WOMAN IS\nOFFFORJAPAN\nVANCOUVER, June 3 (CP). -\nMln M. L. Bollert, dean ot women\nat the Unievrslty of British Columbli, tailed Saturday on the Empreu\nof Canda for Japan, where the will\nJoin deant of women of 12 other\nuniversities at guests of the Jep-\ntnete Y.W.CA.\nOther pauengera tboard the liner\nincluded Sir Robert Cllve, British\ntmbaatador to Japan, succeeding Sir\nFrandt Lindley, and the Abbot Chao\nKung, formerly Trebitch Lincoln,\nand lilt nine companion Buddhislt.\nThe abbot pttsed through here en\nroute to Europe two montht tgo\nbut wu refuted admission to England and forced to return.\nPROSPECTOR SUES\nFOR MINE SHARE\nTANCOOVBt, June 3 (OP)\u2014Trial\nit proceeding befon Mr. juitlce A.\nI. Fisher ln supreme court hen In\nthe cut of Oeorge Haycock, proa-\npector of Olbaons Ltndlng, who\nclaims a half Interett ln uvertl\nmineral claims from Mn. Lily Cur-\nley ot Lynn Creek, North Van.\noounr.\nHaycock allegea thtt Mn. Curler\nagreed to pay htm 1600 u a grub-\nstske tut tbtt lbt actually only\nptld blm tome 3333. Haycock itttee\nthlt bt located end staked vsrloui\nclaims which were recorded In Mrs.\nOurlty't ntmt.\n$1,825,000 Advance to Meet Relief\nArrtvet In B.C. From the Dominion\nVICTORIA. Junt 3 (CP)--Flrst frultt of nigotlitlons bttween\nPremier T. D. Pattullo ind Prlmi Minister R. B, Btnnttt for \u25a0 fedtrtl\nloin to British Columbli hive irrlved here In the form tf t 31,250,-\n000 idvtnct tt mut unemployment relief coits, It wtl tnnounced by\nthe government Btturdty.\nPremier Pittullo recently announced Mr. Btnnttt hid tgried tt\nidvtnct mora thin (10,000.000 ts Brltlih Columbia,\nBLAZE THREATENS\nTOWN IN ONTARIO\nFOUTYTT, Ont. junt 3 (OP)\u2014\nFin early today destroyed 8,000.000\nfut of white pme lumber In the\nPourpore Lumber oompany ytrdi tt\nGogama. per a while tht town of\nOogama wu threatened. Two houses\nand t\ntd.\ni ltrgt bunkbouae were destroy-\nTbt Mlle-Scjuui Lumber ytrd wu,\nruined tnd only tbe efforts of fire\ntighten wved the large lumber mills\nln tbe toutbettt tectlon of tbe\ntown.\nABBE8T   IMt  BBQOABS\nMEXICO CITY, June 3 (CP) Al\nt flnt step ln tht tupprtielon of\nstrut begging ln Mexico, the pollct\ntoday united ltta betters.\nHONORED-FIVE\nWN NAMED\nCharles Saunders of\nWheat Fame Is\nKnighted\nDR. BANTING, IS\nALSO A KNIGHT\nMiss Winnifred Kydd\nIs Honored for\nServices\n(By TH0S.T. CHAMPION\n(Ctntdlin Prtu Staff Writer)\nLONDON, Junt 3 (CP ctblt)*-\nTwo knighthoods tnd 10 othtr\nhonon wtnt to Cinidt tonight\nwith publication of tht Klng'i\nblrthdty honon lltt which aon-\ntaint four ntw peerages, flvt btr-\nonetlclet tnd 54 knighthoods.\nSeven of tht knighthoods wtnt\nto tht dominions, two to Cinidt,\ntwo to Ntw Zttlind, thrtt to\nAuitrtllt.\nHeading the lilt of Cintdltn honor! wu t knighthood for Chtrlet\nEdward Saunders, former Dominion\ncereallet, who developed four new\nvarieties of wheat, Mirauil, Ruby,\nReward and the ftmoui Gurnet. Dr.\nFrederick Orant Banting, ditcoverer\nof the insulin remedy for diabeteL\nwu made a knight commander et*\nthe civil division of the order of the\nBritish Empire. Sir Charlea Saun-\n(Contlnued on Fage Eight)\n(Continued on Fage Bight)\nITALIANS FIGdT\nFOR to ONLY\nBOMB, June 3 (AP)\u2014Legions ot\nFuclitl todty dlicussed the fighting\nspeech ln which their letder, Benito\nMussolini, Btturdty promised the next\ntime Italy gou to wu lt will bt tn\nher own interett, not ln tupport ot\nalllu.\nSpeaking before 10,000 volunteers,\nU duce evoked a rou of assent when\nhe aaked whether tbey were ready to\nflgbt, should lt become necessary.\nThtn he pledged: \"Italy, volunteers\nlt wu It necessary, wlU shed their\nblood for Italy alone. Experience bu\nshown thtm thtt It does not pty to\nhelp by land ua tbe people wbo pretend to be our allies.\"\nFrance, he declared, did not give to\nItaly tbe colonial territory promised\nIn the treaty of London In 1015 which\nopened the wty for Italy to enter\nthe great wu.\nHie reference to lilies tlio wu\ntaken to include Serbia, now t ptrt\not Yugoslavia.\nSTEWART AGAIN\nHAS NEWSPAPER\nSTEWART, B.O. June 3 (CP).-\nThis northern mining ctmp, furthest\nnorth port on the Britiih ColumbU\ncout, tgaln hu a newspaper. The\ntint edition ot the Northern Argo*\nmut, \"Voice ot Ctntdt'i great northwett,\" it off tht preu.\nStewirt htd been without i news-\nptper since the Stewart Newt plant\nwu destroyed by fire about two\nyean ago. W. H. Smith, recently ot\nVancouver, it editor of the new\nP\u00bbP\u00abr. \t\nMarkets at\na Glance\nBy  IBB CANADIAN PUSt\nToronto tnd Montreal: InduttritI\nstocks aloud .lower.\nToronto mlnu:  Irregululy  Jowtf.\nNew Tork: Stooke narrowly lower.\nWinnipeg:. Whett   cloud   ahtrply\nlowtr.\nLondon: Bu sliver lower; tttm\nmettle unchtnged,\nNew Tcrk: Bu silver lowu; other\nmetals  unchtnged.\nNew Tork: Cotton higher; rubbtc\nlowu.\nNew Tork: Cmadlin dollu down\n1-10 to LOOK-\nHELD FOR CRIME\nIN ALASKA IN \"15\nBROOKLYN, N.T., Junt S <AP)-\nThom|s P. Jensen, 40, wu arrested\ntoday for Investigation ln connection\nwith the slaying of three penont at\nFairbanks, Alaska. In 1013 during a\nI00O0 gold dutt robbery.\nPolice uld Jensen wu held u a\nfugitive on Instructions trom the' hi-\nnil ot Investlgstlon, department of\njuitlce, Uter tbey bid wnt hit fingerprints to Wuhlngton.\nThe federal tuthorttlec uld to hold\nJenien tnd notify tht Falrbanki police hi wu under arrest tn connection\nwith the slaying ot Mule Schmidt,\nFrtnk Adams tnd John Holenberg.\nTbe prisoner denied ever having\nbeen In Alaska.\nPMNCB ALBERT, June 8 <CP>-\nFrmce Albert city Rede, lut ;\nfinalists with Toronto Unlttd\nttsh for Dominion Soccer hon\ntodty were a step nesrer the ume\nobjective. Tbey won the northern\nSukatchewan title and tbe right\nto mut louthern sectional wlnnen\nby defeating saskatoon Thlstlea 7-1\nhere Stturdty night.\nSEVEN ARE KILLED; WHEAT FIELDS AND\nORCHARDS RUINED BY STORM, FRANCE\nMist E. Patterson\nAsked to Resign\nVANCOUVER, June 3 (CP). -\nMlu Edith Pttenon, judge on the\njuvenile court here for the put'five\nyetn, Stturdty tnnounctd the hid\nbeen uked tor hu resignation.\nMiss Paterson uid she would lend\nin her resignation next week.\nMra. Helen Gregory McGlll, former, Juvenile judge, hu been mentioned ti successor to Miss Paterson.\nTHE WEATHER\nSUNDAY'S WEATHER\nMln. Mut.\nVictoria  46 61\nVancouver  48 74\nKamloops   46 78\nEstevanlPolnt   44 86\nPrince Rupert 41 60\nDawson, V.T.  .40 72\nSetttle  50 66\nPortland. Ore  48 72\nSin Francisco   82 68\nSpokine  43 70\nPrince George 46 78\nLot Angelu   88 Tt)\nPenticton 83\nVernon 43\nCranbrook    30 66\nCilgtry   30 64\nEdmonton   40 70\nSwift Current  40 66\nPrince Albert   38 68\nQu'Appelle   34 66\nWinnipeg     80 70\nMoose Jaw 44 66\ni Whole Section of Sooth of.\nFrance Cat Off by\nCyclone\nPARIS, June 3 (AP).\u2014Seven persona were killed u violent rain,\nhail tnd wind itorms swept acroit\nFrance over the week-end.\nDtmtge to whett fields, vineyard! md orchard! will total tev-\neral hundred! of thousands ot dollars, meteorologists estimated.\nA woman and two men wcre killed by lightning. Near Meti, three\nmen were burled under an avalanche of tand ln a flooded mine,\nand a child wu drowned.\nThe itormi caused extentlvi\ndtmige to whut field! and vineyard! of eastern and toutheattern\nFrance, many of the apple orchard!\nof Brittany were itrift>ed by hall.\nThere wu wrious damage to crop*\nin Brittany and along the Spanlth ,\nfrontier.\nMARSEILLES, France, Junt 1\n(CJP-Havu).\u2014A whole lection of\ntht touth of France wu cut off todty following t devutatlng cyclone\nwhich twept through the VtucluM\nand Garde region yesterday, doing\ndamage amounting to milliont of\nfrancs.\nBridges which had withstood thl\nfloods tnd storm ot 1886. 18(3 tnd ,\n1314 were swept away, ind railway communication between Gril-\nlon and Valreat wai disrupted whan\nmore than 800 yards of track wen\nwashed out.\n \u2014\n\t\n __\n-   \u00ab* -\n'AOITWO\nRlood\nBitters\nI   Tnxtaattlnttnttma-l*\nIWted, Tcnato. Oat\nDon't Suffer From\nRheumatism\nRheumitiem ll a blood ditorttr\nwith a itrong tendency to laiim-\nRhcumati\u00abn it dm to Um prtunw\nof urio acid in tht blood, ind Mon\nyou can get rid o- thit gainful, Joint\n\u25a0jjitortitig diseaae tbe btad>wt bt\npuri Jed and enriched.\n^Wby not let Burdock Blood Bitten\nthow wttt it will do lor you. It not\nonly btingt relied but oontotioo oc\ntbt trouble it WtU.\npat eg to the pot 18 yeeit to Tin T. MUbara On!\nCar Breaks Off\nLight Standard\nDriving wett on Biker itrtet\nibout > o'clock Sundiy morning, 3.\nt Grthtm collided with t itreet\nVltlton to tht Cout will find\nHOTEL HUDSON\n778 Seymour St, Vtnoouver, B.C.\nVtry comfortable md convtni-\nent to tht Shopping ind\nTheatrical Diitrict.\nMOST   REASONABLE   RATES\nUght itandard it the corner of Hall\nstreet ln front of tht Beacon garage.\nand broke lt oft thort hit ctr tlso\nsuffering tome damage.\nGraham told tht police thtt in-\nother driver, who wu coming eut,\ntnd itartad to mike I \"U\" turn,\nforced him to turn thtrply to the\nright After obierving the iccidtnt,\nthe other driver tbandoned hit intention to make the turn, and\nstraightened out tod proceeded tut\nShort-win ndlo tttt in being\ntried on one American railway line\nto permit the engineer at the front\nof a train ti talk with the brake-\nman ln the caboose.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B.Cn Hotels\n-Finest in tht Interior\"\nTHE HUME HOTEL\nPHONE 787\nBreakfast 25c to 60c\nLunchton 35c to 50e-Dinntr 35c ahd 65c\nRotary and Gyro Headquarters\nPree But Benin Hilton, B.C.    '       Otorgt Benwtll, Prop.\nHUMB\u2014B. M. whyte, Vernon: 0.\nA Fowler, A* H. Petteraon, c. Has-\nten, Reno; R. T. Power, O. K. Landing; g. O. Amero, London, Ont;\n6 Hawklnt. Salmo; 0. B. W1UU.\nnbrook; Mr. and Mn. W. A. Bill, 10. and Mn. I. W. Camp-\nRoeeland* Mrs J. B. Reid,\nnd; H. I. Mlard. Pernle; J. N.\n_ jd. K. J. Mcleod, Idgewood;\ni M. Manning; T. 8. Mackay, pre-\nA, S. Maynard. Victoria; P. I.\n, Orand Porki; R. C. Con-\nrod, Trail; 0. S. McOUllviry, L. S.\nMculne, B. Crawford, H. H* Cour-\naey, A. Andenon, Medicine Hat; T.\nSwing, J. wtteon Webb. Mr, end\nlttt. Botlt. T. J. Wtllltmt. D. Bur-\narts, w. R. McPtrHW, Dr. and Mn.\nA. S. Lamb, Calgary: H. L. OUt, 3.\nr. Bentham, T. a. Beatham, I. W.\nBuntter, J. B. peten, O. Buddora,\nA. Bloom, J. Pearman, T. jenktm,\nD. H. Lougheed, Mr. tnd Mn. H. U\nCarter, F. O. Praaer, A. K. Bggy, S.\nMickay, Vancounr.\ntfh.e Savoy Hotel\n\"Where the Guest Is Kind\"\nNelson's Newest and Finest Hotel.\nMany Rooms With Private\nBaths or Showers.\na\u2014masam^..\n__.\n134 BAD* ST.\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nPHOWt 19\nHBLSOB. B.0.\n,   SAVOY: 0. K. Detmond, J* Trt-\nntt, C. Whlta, Kulo; Mrt. Wtttmin,\nd Teal, Lethbridge; Peter E.\nF. Jordan, Cilgtry; imm\nJlir, Nikutp; X. 3. Vtnder-\nNtw Denver; Tom Hinton,\no; B. H. Mdvin, Mr. and Mrt.\ntm CWllnt. Reno mine; W. E.\nar, Tall; Johnny Donylko, Mid-\n| New Grand Hotel\nP. u  *IAPA\u00bb. Prop.\nWeekly end Mtnthly BMW\n\u25a0ot and  Cold  mttt   ,\n80* up     Donble si*** up\n$io \u2022 tomb \u2022\u00ab--\u2022 op\nwty: A. Jtrvlt, SUverton; Wllltam\nH. iWr, Itetitand Batjbill club,\nHouland; C. M. rirlw, B. P. Johnson, Vtncouver: H. C. Robtrti, tt\nCassldy, Erie; Thomu Flttchtr, Fernie; Mri. B. Duitin, Sudbury, Ont;\nMlu M. K. Rutt**, Min V. 1. Fin-\nlay, Kelowni; Mn. C. McGregor\nPort Crawford.\nOccidental Hotel\nIH Vernon St Phone S87L\nM. wtMica\nSPIC1AL MOHTHLT BATES\nflood Comfortable Rooma\nMiners'   Hndquarten\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAB. B. MADDEN\nCompletely   RemodeUed\nBot ud Cold wtttr\nIn tht heart ot tht Ctty\nQUEEN'S HOTEL\nA. LAPOINTE, Prop.\nRooms from SOt to 81-80\nMonthly 818 and up\nSteam heated and hot tnd oold\nwater ln every room\n80S Baker It Phone SO\nTRANSPORTATION-Freight & Passenger.\nNEW LOW FARES\nFROM TRAIL TO\nO.W.            R.T. wx ex.\nNAKUSP  S3.00      f 5.40 8 3.7R\nVERNON      8.00        14.40 10.00\nBut letvei Trill for Nakuip dtlly tt 7:00 a.m.\nDirect connection at Nikutp dilly except Sundiy tor Vernon.\nFOR FURTHER PARTICULARS FHONE 841, TRAIL\nCentral Canadian Greyhound Lines, Ud.\nNELSON - TRAU. - ROSSLAND\noail\u00bb ntueit\n\u2022ciiviei\nFREIGHT UNE    \"Wf\nPhone    j. c. -scotty\" muir. nor.      Phone\nNelson Prompt   undent   Strilee Trail\n77 it su num 13 or 181\nNeeromacy Is\nSermon Subject\n\"Ancient ind Modem Necroman-\ncy, alias Metmeritm ind Hypnotism,\nDenounced\" wis the mbject of thc\nLeuon-Strnwn which wu rnd ln\nFlnt Church of Chriit, Scientilt, on\nSundiy, June 3.\nTht Golden Text wu: \"Oh let\ntht wicktdnm ot tbt wicked come\nto tn tnd: but utabliih tbt jutt:\nfor tht righteous Ooo trltth thc\nhearti ind nlnt\" (Ptalmi 7: 8).\nAmong the citation! which com-\nprlnd tht Lttson-Sermon wu the\nfollowing from tht Bible: \"And\nJttut tntwertd tnd Hid unto him,\nOct the* behind mt, Satan: for it It\nwritten, Thou ihtlt wonhlp the\nLord they Ood, tnd him only ihalt\nthou terve\" (Luke 4: 8).\nThe Leuon-Sermon ilto Included\nthe following ptiiigt from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science\nand Health with Key to tht Scrip-\nturn\" by Miry Baker Eddy: \"Jttut\ndefined thit ojTposite ot God and Hli\ncreation better than we can when\nhe uld, 'He it i liar, md the fither\nof if\" (p. 554).\nMIDGETS LOSE\nTOMAMMOTHS\nMaple Leafs Tie With\nHawks in Trail's\nSchool Soccer\nTBAIL. June 8\u2014Rain did not h\nthe star soccer playen Of the Central\nand Tadanac schools from baring\ntheir weekly games Saturday morning\nfor they wen out ln u great strength\naa wben the eun It betting down on\ntht football field.\nOf tbe eecond dlrlslon playen two\nteama wen picked, and the Mammoths handed a 4-1 defeat to the\nMidgets. Por true enough then wai\na team ot the biggest bunch of fellows playing against the little fellows. However, the diminutive Players started off strong and stored ths\nflnt goal, Kendall doing the trick.\nBollsky of the big fellows evened the\nscoore when be put a hot shot through\nthe foil.\nIn tbe eecond half the giants hid\nthe rule ot play, Charlie Wyatt getting one and Ted Ramsden two goals.\nHAWKS   CANT   TALLY\nHawks preyed on the Maple Leafs\nthroughout the entire game of \u2022 third\ndlvttloa encounter, but wen unsuccessful, the battle resulting ln a\neeonlett dnw. The Maple Leafs wen\npntty well sapped by the end of the\ngame, but had they had a full team\nmight have turned the Hawki back to\nprotect their nnt.\nMaple Leafs and Hawks in now\ntied for tint place ln the ltague, and\nthe wlnnen will be decided In a\nthort tlmt.\n-*\u2014THE NELSON  DAILY  NEWS.  NILION, B.C.-M0NDAY  MORNINO,  JUNS 4.  18*4\nMURPHY, BOURQUE TAKE OUT\nSHAWANDKERR IN SEMI-FINALS\nKOOTENAY GOLF TOURNAMENT\nNELSON TAKES\nTENNIS LEAD\nthe Helton \"A\" tennli tetm took\na commanding lead ln West Kootenay tournament play Sunday when\ntte memben defeated the visiting\nRoulind team t-1 at the upper\ncourts. The Rosslandera wen handicapped When several of tbelr playen could not get.away at the latt\nminute tnd they had to substitute.\nOamtt on tht whole wen Interesting and tht two teams spent a\npleasant afternoon at the golf club\ncourts.\nThe West Kootenay leigue match\ntcheduled between the TraU Memorial and Nelaon \"B\" team wu cancelled owing to tht difficulty of\nobtaining transportation tot the\nTraU team, but will be played on\nthe flnt Sundiy open to both\nteams.\nTht mttch played In Tadanac on\nMay 31, between the Tadanac tnd\nRoasland teams, resulted ln I win\nfor the former teim by the eoon\nof eeven matches to four. This leaves\ntht Leigue itandlng at the preunt\ntlmt u followi:\nNelson \"A\" 17 points; Tadanac 7\npointi: Rossland 8 pointi; Nelson\n\"B\" 8 polntt, and Trail'Memorial\n0 polnte. Nelwn \"A\" and Rouland\nban played two matchu, Neleon\n\"B\" and Tadanac, ont match and\nTrail Memorial hu yet to play.\nResults of Sunday's aames with\nNelson players mentioned flrat:\nMen'i singles\u2014T. Malahoff but 0.\nW. Harrison 8-8, 7-5; T. Romano\nbut B. C. A. Leu 8-8, \u00ab-4: C.\nSharpe but L. Preeman t-1, 8-1.\nLadles' singles\u2014Mlu D. Dunnett\nbeat Mlu L. MacDonnell 8-8, 8-3.\nMen'i doublet\u2014T. Malahoff and\nT. Romano but L. Preeman and T.\nTolland 7-8, 8-4;   0.  Slmpeon  and\nC. Sharpe belt C. W. Harmon and\nB. 0. A. Lut 8-1, 8-8.\nLadles' doubles\u2014Mn. 0. Slmpeon\nand Mlu I. Hamson beet Mlu B.\nWright and Mlu N. Jackson 8-1,\n8-8; Mlu B. Dunnett and Mlu K.\nNisbet lost to Mlu B. Buchlu and\nMlu N. Jackson 7-t. t-t, 8-8.\nMixed doublet\u2014O. Simpson ind\nMn. O. Slmpeon but T. Tolland\nand Mlu B. Wright 8-8, 8-11, 8-8:\nB. Clark and Mlu K. Nisbet loet ta\nD. K. McAllister ud Mlu L. MacDonnell 4.8, 4-8.\nTownshend Is Medal\nWinner; Visitors\nin Consolation\nVUltlng golfen, with \u25a0 itrtnge\ncourse u I handicap, fell by the\nwtyilde Sundiy u Nelion golfers\nmide the Kooteniy Oolf association\nfinal a home affair. A. t. Murphy\nand R. I. Bourque advanced Into\nthe final bracket and tee ott at\n8:81 am. this morning on a SB-\nhole battle fer the James Andenon\ncup.\nMurphy, playing unbeatable golf,\nadvanced to the setal.flnal bracket\nover Oeorge Shaw, the game adding\non the 15th bole. Shaw wu illghtly\noff color. R. 3. Bourque bett J. D.\nKerr of Longbeach three and two\nto advance ln the other bracket.\nGoiters, some 40 In number, started\nthe grind at 8 am. Saturday morning\nand until later ln tbe morning when\nwind and sun dried up the coune,\nsloshed over wet fairways and greens.\nB. Townshend, who lut Sundiy carried otf the Wilson cup, played steady\ngolt ln the qualifying round to turn\nln a 18 and to add the low ecore\nmedal to hit list of trophies. Sunday\nafternoon, with the wuther bright\nand warm, a big crowd of spectators\nfollowed the semi-nnellsts on their\nit-hole Jaunt, tha championship flight\nsemis drawing the greatest interest.\nAs the tournament narrowed down,\nthe local golfen got Into action, tbe\nitrangeneu of the oouru proved a\nstumbling blook and one by one the\nvlslton dropped out ot the championship play. W. R. Baxendale wu the\nlut te go ln the ucond round. In\nthe consolation flights two visitors\nare represented. Olen Boueyan, Stave-\nly, Alta., entrant, who ran up against\nOeorge Shaw, former Nelson champion, In the cup flight, advanced to\nthe final of the flnt flight and A. W.\nServold, Corra Unn, found a berth\nIn the final play ot the fourth flight.\nR. I. Horton carried oft the fifth\nflight cup. taking Wilfrid Allan in\nthe only game of the flight, The\ngreens wen ln perfect condition Sun-\nAdvancing to the final bricket, A,\nI. Murphy helped himself to the\nscalps of Jamu Pruer ot Kaalo, C.\nW. Appleyard and Qeorge Shaw of\nNeleon. Defeating Shaw, Murphy provided the only real uput Sunday\nafternoon. He wu shooting ln great\nstyle, and sunk long puts for blrdlu\non mora than one occasion. Murphy\ntook the uoond, fourth, fifth, sixth,\nuventh, eighth, 13th, 18th, and 14th\nholu, sinking his second shot on the\nllth. Shaw took tbe nlnetb, 10th and\nllth and halved the flnt, third and\n15th,\nR. J, Bourque eliminated R, Nublt\ndt TraU, B. Townshend ot WlUow\nPoint and J. D. Kerr of Longbeach.\nKerr had trouble with hla driving\non the eecond round, sinking one\nshot In a cntk on out occasion to\nlou tha hole. Bourque on the othsr\nhand wu putting nicely. Re sunk a\n45-foot mashle shot on ths sixth and\na 18-foot putt on the eighth holes\nof the flnt round. They started out\nthe second round all square. The\ngolfers halved uvea of the It holu\nplaytV.\nThe ruin commlttu for the tour*\nnament ls Dr. T. B. Bourque, W. R.\nBaxendale aad T. R. Wllaon.\nResults wen:\nChampionship  flight tint round,\nB. Townihen,   Willow   Point,   bett\nC. J. Whltt, Kulo.\nR.   J.' Bourque,   Nelson,   Mat   R.\nNesbit,  Trail.\nA. Balrd, Nelton but T* R* Wilson,\nMelton.\nJ. D. Kerr, Longbeach, beat P. P,\nMclntjie, Trial.\nA. I. Murphy, Nelson, but Jtmu\nFraser, Kulo.\nC. W. APpleyud, Ntlton won by\ndefault from L. S. Bradley, Nelton.\nW. R. Baxendale, TraU, but _L\nJandrell. Tnll.\nOeorge Shaw. Neleon, beat Olen\nBouayan,   Stanly,   Alta.\nSeoond round\u2014R. p, Bourque peat\nB.  Townthend.\nJ. D. Kerr but A* Balrd.\nA. I. Murphy but C. W. Apple-\nyard.\nOeorge Shaw but W. R. Bax-\nenadle.\nSemi-finals\u2014RJ. Bourque beat J.\nD. Kerr; A. S. Murphy but Oeorge\nShaw.\nPint flight\u2014tint round\u2014p. p.\nMclntyre but J. Pruer.\nL. g. Bradley won by default\ntrom T. R. Wilson.\nC. J. Whltt beat I. Jandrell,\nOlen Bouayan beat r. Nesbit.\nSeml-flnals-P. F. Melatyn beat\nL. S. Bradley.\nOlen Bouayan beu 0. J. White.\nSeoond flight\u2014Pint round, J. a,\nBunyan beat O- K. Deemond.\nW. J. Metgber but R. L. McBride.\nD. N. Mclean beat R. Pollard.\nA. 1. waiters but j. V. Oordon.\nH. M. Whlmster but A. L. McCulloch.\nJohn Praur but Paul Lincoln.\nP. 0. Bchroeder beat Dr. T. H.\nBourque.\nA. A. Lambert but L. A. McPhall\nSecond round \u2014 W. J. Meagher\nbeat J. O. Bunyan. A. I- Walton\nbeat  D. N.  Mclean.\nJ. Praur but a. M. Whlmiter.\nHENDRICKS' KASLO-HEL80N\nMOTOR FREIGHT SBRVICR\nLEAVING KASLO AND  RETURN-MONDAY,  WIDNISDAT.  PRtDAT\nUAVIS KASLO 8:48 AM. LEAVES NELSON 11  A.M.\nNelton  Depot\u2014City  Service  Station, Phone I    .    Kulo,  Phone SI\nFROMPT.  EFFICISHT  IBKVICI\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\nS s.m. and 10:80 s.m. Except Sunday\nTraU\nPhone\n135\nTRAIL LIVERY CO.\nM. H. MclVOR. Prop.\nNelion\nPhone\n35\nBALFOUR BEACH\nON BEAUTIFUL KOOTENAY LAKE\nNew Optn for tht Summer Season\nUnder the new management of MR. F. P. BURDEN*,\nformerly of Nelson, B.C.\nEvery Facility for Vacationists\nBoating - Fishing - Bathing - Ttnnii\nCOTTAGES FOR RENT BY DAY, WEEK\nOR MONTH\nFully Furnished, Electric Lights, Fireplaces and\nRunning Water.\nREASONABLE RATES\nALSO MODERN ACCOMMODATION AT THE INN\nBalfour Btach\u2014The Beauty Spot of the Kootenays\nTwo Games Remain\nA. A. Lambert beat p. O. Sehrot-\nd\u00abr.\n8eml-(ln|la-W.  J.  Meagher  beat\nA. E, Wilten.\nJohn Pruer belt A A. Lambert.\nThird night\u2014Pint round-L. A.\nMcPhall won by default tram R. I\u00bb\nMoBrlde.\nR. Pollard beat T. Lincoln.\nDr. T. H. Bourque put A. L. Mc\nCulloeh.\nJ. M. Oordon but C. I. Detmond.\nSeml-'lnala-L. a* McPhall beat\nR. Pollard.\nDr. T. H. Bourque beat J. M. Oordon.\nFourth flight\u2014Pint round\u2014A. W.\nServold. won by default from R. I.\nHorton.\nW. Rutherford beat W. Allan.\nSeml-flnala- AW. Servold beat W.\nH. oray.\nO. w. Davli belt w. Rutherford.\nmth night\u2014one tame only, a.\nI. Horton belt W. Allan.\nScores turned In tor the qualifying round:\na. v. shaw, Nelwn, 78: R* J.\nBourque, NeUon, 83; L. S, Bradley,\nNelwn, 88; L. A. McPhall, Nelwn,\n88; J. D, K\u00ab\u00ab, Longbeach, 81; R* L.\nMcBride, Nelwn, 88; T* R> Wllwn,\nNelaon, 84; O. w. Davla; Nelwn,\n101; P. O. Sehroeder, Nelwn, tti\nA. R. Murphy, Nelwn T8; R. Pollard, Nelwn 108; J.praur, Nelwn 81; A.\nL. McCulloch, Nelwn, 98; B. Townthend, Willow Point, 73; A. A* *-\">-\nbert, NeUon. 100; D. N. Mclean, Nelwn, 88; a. Balrd, Nelwn, 84; Dr. T.\nH- Bourque, Nelwn, 88: W. J,\nMeagher, Nelwn 88; J. O. Bunyan,\nNeUon, >8; J. M. Oordon, Nelwn,\n88; A. B, Walter., Kulo, 83; C. W.\nAppleyard* NlUon, 88: Paul Lincoln,\nNelwn. 88; Wilfrid Allan, NeUon,\n133; W. R* Baxendale, Trill. 84;\nOlen Bouayan, Stavely, 84: A- W.\nServold, Corra Unn 108; C. J. While,\nKulo, 88; O. E, Detmond, Kulo, 100;\nJamu praur, Kulo, 81; P. F. Mclntyre, Trill. 84; R. Nublt, Trail,\n84; B. jandrell, Trall, 88: R. E- Horton, NeUon. 106; W. H. oray, Trail,\n133; H. M. Whlmeter, Nelwn, 88;\nW. Rutherford, NeUon, 104.\nLtdlu' Softball ItSIUi itanding:\nW. U Pet.\nRed Sox   8   1   .089\nAcu S  i   S00\nBluebirdi   S  4  .JM\nGreyhound!  4   S   .444\nRacketaert IIM\nBlack Hawkt     0 10   MO\nOnly two more (imu remiln to\nbe pliyed ln the locil ladlu' league.\nTht |tme lilted for Friday evening\nbetween the Greyhound! tnd Racketeer! hu been moved up to take\nSlice on Wedneedty evening. The\niltck Hiwki, who htve mide t\nrit itand ill teuon, wtrt forced\ndeftult their remilning gimei.\nAlthough they hive not won a\ngame all teuon, tht Buck Hawks\nhtvt received the idmirition of\nthe lent tor continuing ln ipite of\nnumeroui obttaclu.\nThe Red Sox tnd Blueblrdi tre\nscheduled to play the final game\nbefore the playoffs on Saturday evening, but due to I likelihood of a\nnumber of playeri from both clubi\nbeing out of town the game mty be\npoitponed until the tint ot tbt\nfollowing week.\nST. CLAIRE AND\nGRAHAM FINAUSTS\nWeather Hampers Play in\nTrail High Tennis Play\nTRAIL BALLTEAM\nBEATS C0LV1LLE 7-6\nTRAIL, B. C, Junt S-Wlnnlng\n\u2022treak of the ColvlUe ball turn wu\nbroken Sunday when the Trail unlor nine equeeeed them out 7-8,\nThe louthern team hive won eight\nitralght games thU uawn but loat\nthtlr.ninth htrt,\n, Silver* Decembrlni who came Into\nthe gam* ln the fifth Inning clouted the only thru-bagger of the\ntime but unfortunately fcr Trail\nthen were no men on beau.\nThe only double pUy of the game\nwu made by Trail ln the flret ot\nthe tteond Inning whtn Rothery,\nthortatttp, pleked up t hot ost\nwhleh he towed to Mllburn at\nuoond, putting out Hunt, Mllburn\nthrowing to MorrU at tint to put\ntha runner, R. Strieker. The play\nretired colvllle In that inning. H.\ngrtlckira having gone out, Rothery\nto  Morris.\nAdama wtnt the full nine Innings\nfor tht vlalton, struck out tour\nmen, allowed nine hlti asd walked\nthree and Ml five bsttere, Falrburn\nreceiving three pitched belli on the\nbtck.\nMaaelow appesnd on th* mound\nfor Trill for the tint time and\nwent five Innings. He itruck out\none, walked three and aUowed five\nhlti,\nTht score wu 8*5 at the end ot\nfifth and Bogstle took over the\nmound duty to itrlke out eight men\nIn tbe four Innings. He walked one\ntnd tllowed four hit*.\nBogstle seemed to hav* th* opposing batten gueulng for almoet\non the oceuton of every strike-out,\nthe men at the plate ewung with\nauch vehemence that they tell ott\nbalance.\n\u25a0xley played a wonderful garni\nat untie field fcr Colvllle being\nreiponalbto for ilx put-oute.\nRuna:\nPor Trall\u2014Palrburn 3. Decembrlni\n1, Rothery 1, Demore 1, Mllburn 1\nand Miulow 1.\nTot Oolvlllo-H\u00bbtchklU 1, Mefjam.\nmon 1. Ixley I, Hunt 1, R. Strieker\n1, and Walbeeer 1.\nScore by Inning; R  H\nTnll     Oil   801   10X   7   I\nColvUle   10018100089\nColvllle \u2014 Adtmi p. Walbeter c,\nHunt lb, Clair tb, R. Strieker lb,\nCANADA'S LADY ATHLETES WILL HAVE\nSTRONG TEAM FOR THE EMPIRE GAMES\nExperts Declare Team Will\nBe Strongest Yet; West\nHaa Oood Material\nTRAIL, June J.-Tht Trill high\nschool tennia tournament got away\nto a fine itart Saturday morning\nbut advert* weather conditions intervened and many of the matches\nhad to be called off.\nThe Junior boyt dlvUlon wu played right down to the finals but\nonly two mttchu of the junior glrli'\ndivision wert pltyed. Tht tenior\ngirls were tbli to got In t few plays,\nthe tenior boyt' division not getting\nstarted.\nThe tourniment will continue on\nMonday and if fair weather pre-\nvtili, will be completed next Stturdiy.\nResults ot the metches, ind\nmatches ytt to be pliyed, with the\nhtndicap of ttch entrant given in\nbrackttt following their ntme, followi:\nJUNIOR BOYS\ntint bncket\u2014Cltrk Grthtm <*H\nofW) defuted Gordon Wellwood,\n<*V4 of 15), 4-8, t-4, 6-3. Douglu\nMicArthur (tcratch) detuttd Cltrk\nGraham (-H of 15) S-4, S-3. Bob\nHermtn (icrttch) won from Harry\nWalbaum (scratch) by default. St.\nCltlre Lewis (-15) defeated Harry\nAdtmi (icrttch) 8-0, \u00ab-3. Gordon\nEllison (-15) won trom Lull* Ley*\nland (scratch) by default\nSecond bricket\u2014C. Grihim defeated D. MicArthur, 4-6, J-0, 8-1\nSt. Cltire Lewis defuted Bob Her*\nmtn, 0*1, 5-1. Gordon EUiwn drtw\n\u25a0 bye.\nThird bricket\u2014C. Graham drew t\nbye. St. Claire Lewli defeated Gor*\ndon Elltaon, 6-0, 6*1.\nGrthtm md St. Cllirt Ltwlt will\nmeet in the limit.\nJUNIOR GIRLS\nFirst brackeWetn Clirk (-15)\ndefetted Mibffl MicKty (-H) 4-S,\n6-5, 6*1. Connie Hepworth (*15) defeated Sheila Brow* (tcrttch) ff-6,\n6*4.\nMttchet of tint bracket ytt to\nbe pltyed: Mary Grtvu (-15) vt.\nEdythe Woodbura (-15). Gttty Leyltnd (scratch) vi. Joyce Monypenny\n(scratch). Margaret Melrose\n(tcrttch) vt. Mtry Biagioni.\n(icrttch). Rote Newton (wretch) vt.\nLaurt Young (scratch).\nSENIOR QIRLS\nTint bracktt \u2014 Ctrl Rlngwood\n(\u202215) defuted Mirgiret Burton\n(tcrtteh) 6-3, 6*3. Mirgiret Weir\n(-14 ot 15) defeated Enid Cooper\n(scratch) 6-S, 6-3. Joan Hudwn (-Vi\not 15) defetted Mtrlon Somerville\n(scratch) 6-4, 1-6, 6*5. Loult* Cuiick\n(tcratch! defeated Ardyce Reynold!\n(tcrttch) 6-4, 8*4. Betty McLtnnm\n(-H of 15) defuted Connie Cltrk\n(-V4 of 15) 6*3, 6*4. One mttch in\nthe first bricket yet to bt pliyed;\nJean Davidson (-Vi ot SO) vi. Beverley rtlkner (-15).\nSecond bracket\u2014Cira Rlngwood\ndefuted Mirgiret Weir e-i, 6-0.\nJoin Hudion will meet Loult* Cu\u00ab\nlick tnd Betty McLtnntn ll to pity\nthe winner of the Divldwn-rilkner\nmatch. \t\nIt will be a daehlog and confident\narray of feminine talent that aalU for\nLondon with Canada'! BrltUh Empire\nOamu team thla tummer. If It Us't\nthe strongest group ot girl eprloten,\nJumpen and hurdlers that the Dominion hu unt Into competition, then\nthe expert obeenen are about to be\nfooled badly.\nThli turn will have i proud reoord\nto uphold. Canadian glrlt led all nations ls ecorlsg polnu In th* 1838\nOlympic Oamu at Amsterdam. They\nmade a fine ihowlng at LM Angelu\nfour yetn liter. In major mutt In\nCanada and the United Statu they\nhave utabllahed world record! and\nequalled othen.\nThen U every prospect that tbe\n1884 collection will turpau ln ptr-\nlormasoe anything done before. To ae-\ncompllth what hu bees mapped out\nfor them they will have to win the\n100 and 330 yarda duties, the 80-\nmetres hurdles, high Jump and 440-\nyard relay. Theft all.\nEQUAL ITELLA'S RECORD\nIt it not beyond the realm of poeel-\nthey do Juat that Two Canadlani\nhave equalled Stella Walib'i world\nrecord tor the century and both Hilda\nStrike of Montreal asd Mary Prlt-\niell ot Vincouver, ihould be euktng\nplaces on the team. It they fall to gain\nplacet, the tprlnt itnngth of the\nequad will be even higher than ls\nipected.\nWaa Frliull asd Lllllin Palmer, a\ncreek 330-yard racer, will be BrltUh\nColumbia'! oontesden, Edmonton may\ntend the promltlng Beatrice Oilletple\nto the trlaU u well u Margaret Plti-\npatrlck. Eleanor Honeymas asd Genevieve Johni. the llttle Univenlty of\nManitoba flyer, may attend from Winnipeg*\nThe eut hu more talent than\never. Ontafto't fevorttu are Betty\nWhite and Audrey Dearnley of Hamilton and Mildred PlUtU of Toronto.\nThe Whlte-Dearnley team, thty uy,\nwill be hardut to but. Mlu White\nwu unbeaten lut atar -i, trouncing\nuvertl of the but United Statu tprln-\ntera and Mitt Dearnley hu developed\nw rapidly that ahe may over ttkt her\nepeedy runslng.mate thli Uuon.\nSOME EASTERNERS\nIn addition to Mlu Strike, Montrul\nday lend Owes Pherrlll, Canadian\nJunior 80-metre record holder, and\nPhylUi Pord, IS.year-old co-holder\not tbe Quebec unlor 100-metre reoord.\nMlu Pherrlll alw ls a fine high and\nbroad Jumper. Marjorie Orlnrod of\nMontreal it a proquet at 830 yarda.\nOne of the beet ot them all It Eileen Meagher of Halifax. The Maritime\ndaah U regarded u unbeatable ln\nCanada at the furlong. She wu placed\non tbe 1933 Olympic team but an In-\nJury to her leg kept her out ot the\nH. Strieker u, Hotchklu lf, Btley\nef, and Mccammon rf.\nTrill\u2014Miulow p. Bogitlt p, Me.\nTier c, MorrU lb, Mllburn lb. Rou\n3b, Rothery u, Palrburn It, Laurlente. ef, Demore ct md rf, Decembrlni rf.\nDtPisQutle. Trill, umpired th*\ngam*.\nGood\t\nHousekeeping\nBy  Circle  No.  4  of\nSt Psul't Ladies' Aid\nHone but tatted reclpu\nwill bt inurttd.    .\nRHUBARB PUDDING\n1 cup rhubarb eut In 1 Inch plecu\nl-t cup tugtr\n1 teupoon butter\n\" eup chopped dates\ncup bread crumbi\ncup water\n.. rmmallowt\nSimmer elowly rhubarb, datu and\nwater until rhubarb U tender, about\nfive mlnutei. Add tugtr, bread crumbi\nind butter and turn Into a buttered\nbaking dlih. Cover top with manh-\nmallowi eut ls quartan. Bake In a\nmoderate oven until brown.\nJELUED ITBAWBERBIES\nH tablupoon powdered gelttine\n8 tabletpoone oold water\nVi eup tugar\nI tablupoon lemon Juice\nVi cup mashed itnwberrtes\nSoak geUttne ln cold water about\nfive mlnutu and dluolve ln boiling water. Add tugar lemon Juice,\nberrlet asd cool itlrrlng occasionally\nto kup berrtu impended In gelatine.\nWhen lt beglni to thicken turn Into\ngluui and chill until firm. Serve\nplain or with cream.\nCANTALOUPS SUNDAE\nV.   tablupoon  powdered   gelatine\n9 tabtupoonp cold water\n3 tableepooni finely canlted ginger\nVi cup boiling water\nVi cup whipped cream\n8 cantaloupe halves\nSoak' gelatine In oold water about\nfive mlnutu. Dluolve Is b.:Usg water\nand cblU until It beglni to thicken.\nThen fold ln whipped cream asd\ncandled ginger. Prepate bantaloupu,\ntill centra with mixture chill until\nfirm and serve.\nGRANDMOTHER'S APPLS CROW'S\nNEST\n4 medium ilaed tart apples\n1 cup flour\n3 teupoon baking powder\n1V4 teupoon cinnamon\nVi eup eugar\nVi teaspoon wit\n8 tableepooni ihortenlng\nV4 cup milk, about\nSUee epplu Into greeted pit duh\nand dot with bttt of ihortenlng.\nSprinkle wltb augar and clnnamop.\nMix flour. Baking powder, talt and\ntugar, and tltt twice. Out ta ihortenlng with a kslfe. Add enough milk\nto make a wtt dough. Spread over\nepplu. Bake ls hot oven (400 PI 38\nmlnutu or until applu are tender.\nTurn out on plate upelde down. Mix\nVi hup eugar and 1 teaipoon els*\nnat-.oo and ttlr Into tpplu with a\nfork. Serve hot with whipped cream\nIf desired dust over cream with a\nllttle cinnamon and a few finely\nchopped nute.\nWATER DROPS BACK AOAIN\nSunday, titer maintaining i ntw\nadvme* tor uvertl dipt, th* Wwt\nArm level it Ntlton tgiin dropped\nbeck, but only tllghtly. Stturdiy\ntht level wu recorded it 16.(0 ttet\nabove zero, ind on Sundiy 16.85\nibove.         -\noibsMiT\" \u25a0\noyer maulers\nThe New Orand Cube, Junior blu-*\nball playen. defeated th* Mauler**\nIntermediate equad 8-7 Sunday afternoon. Tbe Cubi came to life la\nthe fourth and fifth lnnlngi, after\nbeing blanked ln tbe tint three, to\ntake a 7*8 Hid. TUiy mad* teven\nelus hlta Including two-baggen by\nBrubaker, DelPuppo and Brennan.\nBud Cooper of the Palrvlew Junior and Intermedins team caught\nfor the Cuba and played a gnat\ngame ill tb* way. DU* to the ib-\ntsnoe of uveral regular playen,\nDenis Ball, Tom crack and Roy\nAndenon filled ln for the Maulen.\nPete Lutkwlch pitched good ball\nfor the Cuba after a huky etart.\nHe ttruckout tit asd walked ilx.\nOlllett ttruckout ilx tnd walked\nont. The Cube pulled ott two fut\ndouble playt. Tlie flnt came IB th*\nfifth Inning, Sid Ball ta B.annan. In\nto* itvesth Inning Sid Ball pulled\noft an usaatUted double-play.\nTha. Maulen alw figured Is I\ndouble-play ln the eighth Inning,\nAndenon to Duffy to Soott. Ray\nRowe mada two fine catches In\ncenter field for the New Onnd\nclub, oordon Roynon umpired tht\ngam*.\nA UTTLE PUMP\nCONTROLS YOUR\nLIFE STREAM\nEva Daww of Toronto, who placed\nthird In the Olympics, and Margaret\nBeU of Vancouver are considered the\noutstanding high Jumpen. Mlu Dawes\ncleared five feet three lnchu It the\nLm Angelu genua and lut uuon\nMlu Ban Ut a new Canadian Intermediate mark ot five tut ont Inch.\nNEW FACES ON\n*..' BALL LINEUPS\nGames tcheduled thii wtek:\nTonight\u2014Sivoy Hotel M, Maulen.\nJune 6\u2014Mtultrt vt. Ftlrview A.C.\nBoth the Maulers end Stvoy Hotel\ntetmt will htve \u25a0 number of new\nfacet in their lineup thlt evening.\nPete Lutkwlch, Emerson Brubiker\ntnd Sid Bill will be out with the\nStvoy Hotel nine, tnd Sun Put-\ncreta ind Bill Klrby will pliy tor\ntht Miulera. Auitln Brenntn will\nb* out with on* of th* clubs, but\nwhich one wu not decided lttt lttt\nnight.\nTh* world's mott wonderful pump\nU th* human hurt. It pumpe blood\ntutor than a itront man can pump\nwater from \u2022 wtll\u2014and thla deeptto\nth* fact tliat blood li eeven tlmu ae\nsticky u water and. tn conwquenc*.\nli ever w much harder to pump,\nThll marvelloui piece ot human\nmachinery kwpe your blood itream\nln constant motion. It pumpi the\nred blood corpueelu loaded with\nvital   OXygen   from   the   lunga\u2014to\nyour\none of body eelta Attar\nower to tbiorb tht oxygen and\nnuoBoui stopW\u00bb\u00ab rtm -it*\nibln   la  below   sternal,   your\nunloading the Oxytin, the red oor-\nfiuaclei load up with the tttt polwn\norever being generated In th* humtn tyettm. Tht hurt pump* thu\npolwn to th* lungi. to be breathed\nout of tlw system If your heart wer*\nto etop pumping, you would die ln\na few ucondt for lick of oxygen.\nNow In order tp do tbelr work\neffectively, your red blood corpulciu\nmutt be rich Is whtt U knows u\nhiemoglobln \u2014 \u2022 lubettnee having\nthe pow<\nthe pot*\nmoglobln U belcw noemal. your\nblood itream It weak, and yoa tut\n\"tired-out,\" run down tnd nervoui-\nlr-*xhiutted. Rettore the bumogio.\nbin to normal, and you an one*\nmore itrong, energetic md vlgoroui.\nDr. Wlllltmi' Bisk Pint wlU do\nthit vtry thing. Thu U sot jutt t\nclaim; It U au utlblUhld ftct. n-\ncestly proven at a hoepital wbtn\n40 people, treated with Dr. Wllllami'\nPink Pill*, etch recorded ipltndtd.\nblood Improvement end, with It\nrenewed health and vigor.*\nTou wUl be benefitted tn the\nume way. Try \u2022 month't tnatment.\n80 centa a package at your Drug-\ngiit't.\n\u2022Individual reporta on thue 40\npatients certified by the hospttal\npathologist, an on file.\nMUTUAL IIFE\nIT ftHHHOF CANADA lHM\nESTABLISHED   tat*\nMutuMllty mttt*\nAll the Earnings of this Company\nfor PMrtlclpMting Policyholdert\nMutuality u applied to Ufe insurance hw proved\nitt word by tctutl results. An example it the\nfollowing teiult under Policy No. 11,513:\nIn i88t_ at age its, tbl assured tie. tut * $}00O\nLift polity reauirinr to payments tf $jt.6o\n(Known at a \"jo Pay Life\" Policy).\nTotal Pnmluin*      .......  $1812.00\nDMdtndi during premium\npiyiogp\u00abriod . $ 237.7S\nptid lioce hit policy\nbecime ptld np S10SS.70\nItlMill\nNet Mymeete by Policyholder  .   S21B.5S\nTHIS POLICY, which to atlll In lore*, to worth la\n\u2022etuil c.eh at the prewnt tlm* $2400.00\nMail this\nMU b to YOURid-\nrutagc to ianut with\nthit company. Mail the\ncoupes foe falther information regtrdisg the\nMutaal Life tsd io\npolicies.\nCoup!\non\nMUTUAL UFl\nAtlantic*\nOP&58&A\nWitet loo, Ontario\nPImm md nt yew book mi\n\"MUTUAl ACHnVSWWTS\"\nted PutkeUnef u latowmt r*Ucy\nlet aw.\niU-a-\n*4\u00bb-\nJ. D. Bracket!, District Manager, Cranbrook, B.C.\nH. A. Powell, Representative, Creston, B.C.\nJames Skinner, Representative, Trail, B. C.\nEarl H. Felty, Representative, Nelson, B.C.\n \u2014*_*\u25a0\n-m*\u2014\t\nm\nSENATE URGES EVERY EFFORT TO RESTORE THE\nTOURIST BI>S!NESS, WOULD SPEND $150,000 ON\nCAMPAIGN, MANY WAYS PICKED BOOST TRAFFIC\n\u2022 THI NILION  DAILY  NIWI, NILION. I.C--MONDAY  MORNINO.  JUNI 4.  1JS4\nUrge Central Bureau\nof Travel Under\nGovernment\nSo that the Dominion government\nmight take part In promoting the\ntourist traffic ln the Dominion a\nsenate oommlttee hu recommended\nthe expenditure of 1150,000 for tbe\ncurrent yeu. The recommendations\nmade by that committee are aa follows:\nEstablishment ot the Canadian\ntravel bureau aa a branch of tbe\nDominion government.\nTbi bureau to have a director at\nlta head and an advisory council\nrepresenting the provinces and various Interacted bodies.\nThla bureau to carry on an aggressive tourist trade promotion campaign\nln co-operation wltb existing agencies.\nA standing committee ln tbe senate\nNELSON\nSAT.    IC\nJUNE  10\nRICMATION GROUND!\n3AM ES\nvemmt\u00abNNsmi*..u\nReeerved and Admission\nTickets Oh Sale Circus Day\nat the\nMANN,   RUTHERFORD  CO.\nBaker and Ward ltl.\nNelson, B.C.\nCampaign to Bring\nTourists With\nProvincial Aid\nby whleb parliament would be kept\nIn touch with tbe situation.\nEvtenston and development of the\nnational parka system as an attraction fu tourists.\nWhat la purposed, lf pullament\nglvu lta sanction, la an Intensive drive\nto secure tourists. Tbe Impetus toward tble end baa come from tbe\nfact tbat there waa a blgfalllng off\nln tlils traffic last yeu, and Senator\nW. H. Dennis and bis colleagues ere\nanxious that Oanada ahould regain\nwhat she haa loat It la estimated\nthat the tourist trade can be built up\nto a value of g*SO0,0O0,000 annually to\nthe country.\nPoUowlng le a copy of the final\nreport and recommendations of tbe\ncommittee which wu composed if\nSenators W. A. Buchanan, W. H. Dannie, W. I. Poster. P. O, R. P. Oreen.\nH. O. Hocken, R. B. Hornu, C. Mac-\nArthur and O. Parent:\nAa a reeult of lta survey and Investigation, and tbe unanimity of the\nevidence and submissions received,\nyour oommlttee haa come definitely to\nthese conclusions:\u2014\n1. That the tourist trade of Canada\nla capable of great expansion.\n2. That thla le a matter of national\nconcern, ln the intereete of the Dominion u a whole.\n8. That there la need fu the establishment, at as euly - date u possible, of a central organisation 'at\nOttawa to co-ordinate the activities\nof the multitude of tourist agencies.\npublic and private, throughout the\nprovinces, aa well aa the wuk of those\nfederal departments and services\nInterested ln the promotion of tourist\ntravel within and to Canada.\nSuch an organisation, your committee suggests, might be named \"The\nCanadian Travel Bureau\"\u2014to be a\nbranch of the appropriate department\nof government, with a Director et ltl\nhead: together with an advisory\ncouncil to tbe bureau made up u\nfollows:\u2014\nThe directors of Information of all\nthe provincial governments;\nRepresentatives of federal depart-\nmen i and services Interested ln the\npromotion of the tourist trade, and\nthe memben of the executive committee of tbe Canadian association\nof tourist and publicity bureaus.\nVALUABLE AID\nAlso, to supplement tbe wuk of\nthe propoeed bureau and advisory\ncouncil, a standing committee of thll\nhouse (representative of alt the provinces) could rendu valuable aid,\nmeeting from time to Ume during\neach yeu, ln considering ways and\nmeans fu expansion of the Canadian\ntourist trade. Such a committee would\nkeep pullament ln direct contact\nwith thle work, and the membera of\nthe committee could render useful\nservice In their respective provinces,\nnot through an Interest In tourist\ntravel publicity alone, but tn move*\nExtension of National\nParks and Better\nRoads Suggested\nmente to make the oountry and It*\nequipment mon attractive to vlaltora.\nTour oommlttee heard evidence to\nIndicate a considerable over-lapping\nand duplication ln the act.vtt.ee of\nthe varloua departments of the Dominion eervlce, aa well aa of provincial\nud private agencies, In tbe dissemination of publicity, and bu tsmt to the\nconclusion that through a co-ordination of efforts, such eo ls proposed, a\nsubstantial saving In time, money\nand energy could be *eff_cted\u2014thus\nproducing preeent results wltb great-\nu economy, and enlarged results ln\nproportion to tbe additional expenditure of funds and endeavor. But, In\nwhatever action tha Dominion government and pullament may take, In\nline wtth thla report, It should be\nclearly undentood that lt la of a\nnational character, In addition to .e\nexpenditures being made and proposed by the exlitlng agencies, and\nIntended to supplement and not to\nsupplant what already la being dor-e.\nFIGURES  SHRINK\nEstimates prepared by the Dominion bureau of statistics show tbat in\nthe \"peak\" yeu (IMS) Canada's\ntourist trade had a value of I300.8 .\u00bb-\n000. By 1033 thla figure had shrunk\nto IU74M.000.\nIt baa been urged before the committee (and here tbe unanimity of\nexpert witnesses has been striking)\ntbat 1500,000.000 In revenue from\ntourists mlgbt well be set as the\nobjective of a progressive permanent\nprogram of Canadian tourist trade\npromotion \u2014 provided an immediate\nstart le made.\nThere la aleo expert testimony that\nresults have been ln direct proportion\nto the amount and chare--r of\ntourist publicity employed.\n, A careful weighing of the evidence\nplaced before It hea convinced your\noommlttee of the need for euly action\nat the preeent cession of pullament\nto launch a program of tourist trade\npromotion trom a* broad national\nstandpoint.\nMindful, as It is. of tha condition\nof tbe public finances, the oommlttee\nnevertheless, believes that a reasonable\nappropriation a* the prewnt session\nwould be an excellent Investment\napplied to what might be termed an\n\"emergency\" campaign to publicise\nthe tourist attractions of Canada\nwithin and outelde the Dominion. It\nla the conclusion of tbe committee's\ndeliberations tbat 1160,000 ls to be\nregarded as the minimum amount\nrequired for thle wwk during the\ncalender yeu 1834 and the first three\nmonths of IMS which will elapee\nbefore the cloae of the present fiscal\nyeu. The \"emergency\" campaign of\npublicity, to ' effective, should begin\nnot later than June 15, and ahould\nbe conducted with unusual vigor. It\nIs apparent that tbe heavy falling off\ntn the Canadian tourist trade hu\ncreated a condition of emergency, and\nthat aggressive efforta to regain what\nbia been* lost, and ln time to Increase\ntourist revenues above tbe IMS figure,\nehould now be organised as suggested.\nAIB THC FARMERS\nAe but one example of the important*. of tbe tourist trade to tbe entire\npopulation, your committee baa before\ntt evidence showing tbat approximately St pu oent of eipendlturee by\ntourists are fu producte of tbe farm.\nThan thla, nothing could serve more\nemphatically tbe national character\nof thle trade, and the vital need fu\nprompt and effective action ln Ite\ndevelopment.\nEvidence submitted to your committee shows tbat a total of M_, .03-\n734 haa beu expended by the Dominion government on the establishment\nand maintenance of national parks\nwithin Canada. While your committee\nla of tbe opinion that thla expenditure hae been desirable and la to be\ncommended, it feels called upon to\nnote theee facts:\u2014\n(a) The establishment of these\nnational parka bu been concentrated\nalmoet exclusively ln one part of the\nDominion\u2014Quebec and the Maritime\nProvlncu having no slmllu natldbal\npuke undu Dominion authority, and\n(b) Having, established theee national parks, we have failed adequately\ntd advertise their attractions to tbe\npeople of Oanada and the outelde\nworld.\nTour oommlttee agrees with the\nstrong representations of witnesses\ntbat the establishment of national\npuke by tbe Dominion authority\nshould now ba extended, aa a truly\nnational policy, to embrace all tbe\nprovinces; and that these Ideal Ht*\ntings for the scenic and historic at*\ntractions ot Canada Justify greater\nand more effective effort* to Induce\nvlaltora to aee and enjoy them.\nAnd hen. It le felt, emphasis ahould\nbe laid en t**e need fu the but possible highways facilities. It an expend!\nture of 123.000,000 on thew parks Is\nto be Justified by adequate returns,\ntbe roads leading to the puk approaches ahould be duetleu: and hue\ntbe Dominion mlgbt reasonably be\nexpected to co-operate with the provincial authorities n removing what\namounts to a heavy handicap to\ntourist travel.\n. Tour committee la unable to agree\nwith a suggestion that \"some suit.\nable Island ln the Wut Indies be secured by the Dominion and be administered aa a national puk of\nCanada.\" Rather, to the Judgment of\nyour committee, tbe desirable and\nnecessary courw le an extension within\nCanada ol our national puka system\naa an aewt ot lmmenw value tn the\nstimulation of tourist travel.\nDuring the summer and autumn of\nthe paat four yeara an average ot more\nthan 70,000 tourists vlalted then\nPullament buildings annually. Tbe\nfigure* an u follows:\n1M0  .  mm\nMtl     SUTt\n1982      S4,l\u00bb\n1833    88,147\nIt would be difficult to exaggerate\nihe significance of thew figures or to\navoid the obvious suggestion tbey\nconvey.\nTour oommlttee hu to propow that\nduring tha tourist waaon there be\nmaintained within thla- building a\nroom to whleh vlaltora mlgbt be in*\nvlted, there to receive Information regarding Canada and literature wttlng\nforth the attractions of all the pro*\nvlnces.*\nMotion picture sound apparatut li\nnow being Installed aa a federal de*\npertinent wrvlce, and visitors might\nsis \/ be Invited to witness here screen\nlogs of pictures depleting Oanadlan\nscenes and activities.\nAnd from this central point thew\nvlalton could be directed to tbow\n'   \u25a0\nGIFTS for\nGRADUATION\nGRADUATION! You have i son or daughter who is going to pus on\nimportant milestone in this business of getting on in the world. You\nare a bit puffed up with pride. You feel a glow of satisfaction that is\ngoing to express itself in a gift. What shsll it be?\nTradition has nominated certain things for graduation gifts\u2014\na watch for the son\u2014a ring for the daughter. Fine! But the younger\ngeneration has outfhoded a number of venerable traditions. Maybe, in\nthe case of your boy or girl, something less usual would be more\nwelcome. How to find out?\nOne modern parent we know used this gift-giving plan at\nChristmas. He casually introduced a discussion of advertisements with\nhis son and daughter. They looked through the newspapers together.\nThe conversation was directed toward advertising. It developed into a\ndiscussion of products.\nThis parent discovered his young folks knew a lot more about\nmerchandise than he dreamed. They knew modes, styles, fashions,\ntrends, trade names, the value of advertised responsibility. They had\npreferences and judgments formed on facts. He said it was the most\nsuccessful Christmas their family ever had.\nTry this little scheme on your graduates this year. It will make\nyour gift-giving more successful all around.\nparte of the country wlected by them\nw the objecttvw of their visits.\nSDUCATUN CAMPAIGN\nImpressed aa tbey ere with the pee*\nslbUltles of motion and sound pic-\ntune m a medium of travel publicity,\nmembers of your committee urge the\nfrequent shoeing ot official Canadian\npictures ln the tbwtres of the Dominion ar other public places ln all\nthe provinces. Thlt might be conducted u an educational campaign, for\nchildren and adults alike, and u a\nnational contribution to the encouragement of travel by Canadians within their own country. Such a feature\ncould be called \"Canada on Parade\"\nand be conducted In r.a appropriate\npatriotic atmoaphe o.       ,\nWith so many people of Canadian\nbirth and origin residents ln the\nUnited States, lt ahould not be difficult to lnluce theatre ownen to\ngive frequent screenings of thew .plc-\nturae ln that country u well, and, ln\naddition, thew official Canadian pleturu might be shown In the British\nIsle* and the Brltlah Wut Indl:a. Hera\nyour oommlttee feels, la an opportunity * fu extensive and valuable\ntourist publicity at a minimum of\ncoet.\nYour committee hu alto U suggest\nthe utilisation ot official pictures for\nthe Information of pullament itself.\nWhile thla suggestion hu no more\nthan an Indirect bearing upon tbe\nsubject matter of this inquiry, It la,\nnevertheless, related to an Important\nextent.\nIf, at Intervale during the sessions,\nsound and motion pictures ot Canadian Industrial activities were shown\nin this building, all auoelated with\nPullament oould receive Impressions\nand Information of gnat value, pu*\ntlcululy at tlmu when pullament\nneeds such guidance ln lti consideration of measures to deal with definite\nconditions of ah emergent character.\nRAILS DO GOOD WOBK\nIt la, ln the opinion of tbe committee, aln desirable tbat facility ln regulations be afforded the taking of\nmotion pictures within Canada < by\nagencies located outside Canada, and\ntbat auch activities ihould be encouraged u Important media of publicity.\nTour committee hel had trom representatives of transportation companlu considerable evidence regarding special excursion and tourist ra' 3e\non railway! and steamships and details of apeclal tours and services.\nThew undoubtedly, have had a pronounced effect ln cumulating tourist\ntravel, and might well be enlarged\nand extended. The hotels and transportation companlu have been doing\na very large and effective work In\ntourist trade promotion; tbey are to\nbe commended for their efforta, and\nurged to increase them wherever possible.\nToo much attention, the committee\nfeels, cannot be paid to the possibilities ot a greatly enlarged tourist trade\nooeitwl.* and through our Inland\nwaterways, to be promoted ln con-\nJunction with rail and othu forma ot\nland transportation. This la of particular Importance ln view of the\ngrowing popularity of short aea voyages on both tbe Atlantic and Pacific\nooeate.\nThere ara alio extenilve opportunl-\ntles fu an expansion of Canada's\ntourist trade from overuse; and the\ncommittee bet received Information\nregarding a new tourist movement\nfrom European polnta to thla continent, encouraged oy low steamship\nfane. Thle movement is bound, tbe\ncommittee la assured, to assume luge\nproportions. *   *\nConsideration also muat be given\ntp tne poeelbllltlm of an Increase of\nvisitors from Bermuda and the Weat\nIndies during the Summer and Autumn months. Already several citizens of thow Islands have pirchased\nsummer homes In Canada, and your\ncommittee believes there ue opportunities fu a considerable enlargement of thle movement.\nIt ll unnecessary nere to rocognlse\nthe vital Importance of good roads u\ni dominating factor ln tourist travel;\nbut your oommlttee feels bound to\nemphasise two Impressions left upon\nit u a reeult of Ite enquiry.\u2014\n1. The detrimental effects of dust\nae a highway nuisance and menace;\nand\n9. The menace ot dangerous railway level crossings.\nUrging upon all authorities the removal ot thew handicaps whereever\npossible, -Ihe committee feels tbat\nPederal co-operation In the mr.'.ter\nof highways might usefully be extended In thew directions.\nELIMINATE DUST\nThe construction ot a trans-Canada\nhighway ls, ln the committee's opinion, of the utmost value tn relation\nto tba tourist trade; and some Pederal\nco-operation with the provlncu In\nthe elimination of the duet nuisance\nand menace, during the tou-lst waaon,\nIn localities whue hard-surfacing ot\nroads cannot Immediately be undertaken .would be a good national tor\nvestment. \u00a3\nTour committee Is Impressed ultn\ntbe Immediate poeelblllty of an expansion of the Canadian tourist trade\nwithin Canada, and the results which\nmight be expected to f 'low a more\nIntensive promotion of lnterprovln-\ncial travel. There ti evidence, from\ntbe secretary ot a provincial hotel association, to show tbat while tbe\nnumbu ot visitors from outelde Canada hu fallen off heavily In the put\ntew yean, vlalton from othu provlncu of the Dominion have Increased\nIn numben.\nAnd of equal Importance ll tbe consideration of aviation ln tourist travel.\nBefore the buslneu recession a few\nyears ago, thla form of travel, both\nInternationally and within Canada.\nwu growing remarkably ln volume\nand popularity; and tbe euly future\nWill witness a resumption of thle\ngrowth. Therefore, the possibility of\naerial transport should be explored\nto tte relation to the tourist trade,\nand wherever possible, advantage\n\u25a0hould be taken of Ite utility and Inducements.\nI'SE THE RADIO\nSimilarly, emphasis must be laid\nupon the growing Importance ot radio\nbroadcasting ln relation to the tour' t\ntrade. There should, the committee\nurges, be the closest co-operation betwwn tbe Oanadlan Radio Broadcasting commission and agencies engaged\nIn the encouragement of tourist\ntravel. The broadcasting of descriptions of Canadian scenes and events\nwithin and outside tbe Dominion\nshould receive clow and constant attention.\nAs one of the most Important ot all\nconsiderations, your committee urges\nthe imperative nwd for conservation\nand campaigns to impress this need\nupon tbe public mind\u2014conservation\nof Canada's fish and game resources\n\u2014conservation of Canada's set-le attractions, and consuvation of Canada's forest growth, than which nothing oould be more priceless u a national aewt.\nIt It, the committee (wit. desirable\ntbat tourist travel ln and to Canada\nahould be encouraged In all ways consistent wltb a fair and reasonable enforcement of regulations and the welfare and dignity of the country generally. It Is fundamentally Important\nthat vlaltora receive good Impressions\nof Canada; that tbey have a right to\nexpect courtesy and helpfulness from\nall with whom they come In contact.\nwhether lb an official or private capacity; and that Information and directions be given them readily and \u2022\na  friendly  spirit.    Moreover,  every\nTO GET FACTS\nON WATER ACT\nFarm Body Head to\nName Committee\nto Seek Revision\nWhen Preeldent O. B. Ballard of\nRobaon appoints a oommlttee to adduce fact on whleh to aak for revision\not tbe Water aot, the business of the\nWut Kootenay Parmere Institute.\nwhich wound up Ite annual session\neuly Thursday even'-'g, will be concluded.\nAt the forenoon sitting Major H.\nTurner Lw of Bonnlngton and Lieut.-\nCol. John Murray of South Slocan,\nboth ot whom have sponsored thts\ntight ln tbe put, particularly Ln tbe\nInterest of thow who have gone Into\nranching Ignorant ot the regulations,\nottly to find the water on their propertlu allotted to others to their complete exclusion, were appointed a\ncommittee to Interview water officials at the court houw and get Information, the provincial water rights\ncomptroller, Major J. c. MacDonald,\nhaving replied at laat fall's reprewn-\ntatlons that In practice he endeavored\nto protect euch owners.\nIn the afternoon discussion Major\nLee aald notwithstanding any amelioration Comptroller MacDonald'e administrative interpretations ga-e the\nharsh act, tbe riparian owners had\nno righta undu It at all, and If he\nwu uting on the rlghte principle ln\nthew decisions, then It should be\nIncorporated ln tbe act.\nMANY  TRAGIC  CASE8\nColonel Murray aald that until\n1814, when the new act wu brought\nln, the riparian ownu wu protected.\nAfter that, all right! were cancelled,\nand the licence system was brought\nIn. In tble district. Colonel Murray\nsaid, he knew of many tragic Instances of a rancher who had procured land and made an Investment\nIn developing his property, losing his\none essential factor, his water supply,\nln hla abeenoe, hie neighbors being\ngiven permission to divert lt.\nHe declared thle to be a question\nof prime Importance, and urged the\nappointment of a committee to produce the facte to the government. He\nsaid he would be pleawd to place\nmany Instances of hardship from the\nact ln the handa of tbe committee.\nThere wen many discrepancies ln the\nact as lt stood, apart trom this major\nphase, and he argued It ought t, be\nentirely redrafted.\nColonel Murray's motion proposing\nthe appointment of a water oommlttee wu seconded by W. Bootbby of\nEdgewood, and paaaed.\nOne Spring collection futures\ngowns which show the Oriental '.-\nfluence. skirts long, slinky and draped\nso u to give the appearance of a\nwrapped kimono.\nPAGE THREE\nEAGLES HAVE\nFINAL WHIST\nMn. R. Morrison and Mrs. B.\nSharpe won first prizes and Mm.\nOakes and N. Duffy the consolation\nprlws at the Eaglu wind-up wblet\nsnd social evening jrrldey night,\nwhen wme it tablet wen ln play.\nThe oommlttee tn charge wu A.\nSmith. R. A. England. R. B*rtol, (.'\nStangherlln  and W. Scott.     ,\nAccording to estimates, there ara,\nat least 5,000,000 lepers In tbe.\nworld today.\ncitizen of Canada ihould be a self-\nappointed guardian of Canada's good\nreputation, and ahould strive to make\nCanada even more Inviting ln appearance and hospitality.\nCUT FERRY BATES\nSerious ln lta effects on tourist\ntravel li the incidence of ferry ratee.\nparticularly thow on motor can. Thla\nwu Impressed upon the committee;\nand the caw of the Prince Edward Island car-ferry rates on motor vehicles\nwu urged u an example. Smallesi\nof all the provlncu, Prince Edward\nIsland ls tbe one province of Canada\nthat muat be reached acrou water,\nand It la not difficult to appreciate\nthe Importance of this matter as affecting that put ot tbe Dominion.\nMoreover, as wu pointed out, It is\nIn the essence of tbe Canadian partnership that ferry rates and services\nto and from tbat province should be\nsuch u to relieve lt, Insofar u possible, ot the disadvantages of Ite Island position: and anything shut ot\nthll makes fu Insularity.\nSimilarly, and viewing the Canadian situation u a whole, It is axiomatic\ntbat the greatest possible facility\nshould be afforded tbe movement of\nmotor cars by ferry and otherwise,\nsince the motor cu. plays auch an\nenormous put ln tourist travel today.\ntn line with the foregoing, the chief\nfindings and recommendations of your\ncommittee ue summarized u under:\n1. That the tourist trade of Canada\nIs a matter of national, u well u provincial, municipal and private concern.\n3. That the tourist trade of Canada\nls capable ot gnat expansion.\n9. That an aggressive campaign ot\ntourist trade promotion should be\nlaunched at once u a national effort\nand In co-operation with tourlet\ntravel and publicity agencies, public\nand private, throughout the Dominion.\n4. Tbat a \"Oanadlan travel bureau''\nbs established u a branch ot the ap*\nfiroprlate department of the Domln-\non government; iuch bureau to have\na director at lta head, and be assisted\nby an advisory council consisting of\nthe directors ot Information of the\nvarious provincial governments, representatives of the Federal departments and services Interested ln tourist travel promotion, and the members\nof the executive committee of the\nCanadian association of tourist and\npublicity bureaus.\n\u00bb1M,000 FOK CAMPAIGN\n4. 5. That a sum of not leu than\n\u2666160,000 be voted at the prewnt weldon of parlament to finance tbli\ncampaign during the current fiscal\nyear.\nI. Tbat a permanent progressive\nprogram of Canadian tourist travel\npromotion be launched, with the closest co-operation between all agencies\nengaged ln thle work, the Dominion's\nshare ln effort and expenditure to\nco-ordinate and supplement the work\nalready undertaken and propoeed by\nall other agencies, and ln no manner\nto supplant thll wuk u the organizations engaged therein.\n7. Tbat a standing committee of\nthis House (representative ot all the\nprovlncu) be wt up, to bring pullament Into direct and permanent contract with tl la Important national\nmatter, to conduct an annual study\not the tourist trade, and to consider\nmeans through which lt may best be\nfostered and encouraged.\n8. Tbat tbe Canadian system of national parks be extended, u a truly\nnational policy, to embrace all the\nprovlncu; and that grester efforta\nbe put forth to attract visitors to\nthew fine scenic and recreational\ncentres.\n0, The committee further recommends that tlOOO coplu of the proceedings of the committee be printed\nln blue book form fu genual distribution, and tbat rule Mo. 100 be suspended ln eo fu u lt relates to the\nuld printings.\nPRESS 18 AN AID\nThe committee hu recorded herln\nmany of tbe sugestlons lt hu received\nu the raev.lt ot a Canada-wide survey,\nand hu advanced a numbu of findings and recommendations. Thue ls\ntn the hands of the committee a very\nlarge volume of Information, containing much advice ot an expert and\nvaluable character, which will be forwarded ta whatever organlaatlon le\ncreated u a ruult of tble report.\nYour committee desires to reoord its\nappreciation of tbe unanimous support ot the preu of tbe Dominion; ct\ntbe valuable co-operation and assistance of repreeentatlvu of all interested government apartments and eu*\nvtcu. Dominion and provincial; of\ntbe valuable expert advice given by\nmany travel, botel and publicity associations and agencies; and of the\nsincere and helpful Interut ot the Canadian people, manifest ln euch a\nluge volume of communications.\nAll which Is respectfully submitted.\nW. H. DENNIS, Chairman.\n\"WORN OUT\" and\n\\kl ADDIEn Not Just Sura\nWUKKIEU ytYhtt Wtt Wrong\nMany women drag around each day, unable tn de their\nhotnewerk\u2014cranky with tbelr children\u2014not wanting\nto *n frlende\u2014feeling miwrable\u2014yet not sick enough\nto go to bed. Some blame lt on \"nerves\"\u2014more likely\ntheir kidneys are out ef order. When kidneys fall the\nsystem becomu clogged with impurltiee\u2014headaches-\nbackache, frequently follow. If you don't feel right,\nteke Dodd's Kidney Pills, es thousand! of others have\ndone for thrw generations. Clur your system and give\nnatun a chance to rebuild your health and energy* 43\nNew Feeling WeH-THeuls to\nDodd's   Kidney   Pills\nTHE BAY'S\nCLEARANCE\nSECTIONS\nOpen Today\n.A special section hss been established in each department for the disposal of the odds and ends of merchandise left over from a busy season's selling.\nIn them will be bargains all day and everyday, both\nadvertised and not advertised. Many of our best\nvalues will not be advertised owing to too limited\nquantities.\nEvery item in these Clearance Sections will be reduced in price 20% or more snd will be shown under\nRed Sale Tickets.\nOur advice is shop each and every section daily and\nbe the winner in these oddments clearances.\nClearance Section\nSPECIALS\nShop Early\nON SALE TODAY\nQuantities Limited\nSTRIPED FLANNELETTE\nRegular 19c Yard\n125 yards  only, 32-inch  flannelette  of f    \u00bb{\ngood quality.\nTo Clear, Yard \t\n15\nstaples   Dept.\u2014Ind   Floor\n23-PIECE TEA SETS\nRegular $6.50\nFine bone China sets. Some have tea- g M,_t9\npots\u2014others cake plates in the set.\nTo Clear \t\nBouse Furnishing! nept.\u20142nd rioor\n\u00bb4-\nLADIES'UMBRELLAS\nRegular $1.49\n6 only, ladies' .umbrellas, good quality H V ,19\ncovering on strong frame. ~ \u00a3\nEach   \t\nSmall Marcs\u2014Main  Fleor\nLADIES'HANDBAGS\nRegular Values to $1.25\nAn assortment of handbags in envelope\nand pouch style. Some in light shades.\nEach\t\n75\u00ab\nSmall Wares\u2014Main Floor\n53 BLOUSES and PULLOVERS\nRegular 95c -_^\nHurry down for these wash blouses aml^L4Jg\npullover sweaters. Many shades and sizes. ^B^\nTo Clear        ***\nLadles' Wear\u20142nd Floor\nINFANTS' GOWNS and SUPS\nRegular 39c ____\nMade of white flannelette. Stock up now.^F^TC\nTo Clear **** m\nBabies' Wear\u20142nd Floor\nPLUS FOURS\n10 pair only  tweed plus  fours with\nbuckle   knee   band.   Sizes   28   to   30. &*%.^Q\nRegular $2.95. ***\u2022\u2022**\nTo dear\t\nMen's Wear\u2014Main Floor\nBOYS'TWEED SUITS\n8 wool tweed suits with knee pants. ^      _\nSizes 3 to 6 years. Regular $3.00.       9^-\u00bb49\nTo Clear\nBoys' Wear\u2014Main Flrw\n)$f TfatotftT&\u00abt\u00bb $0mjmng.&\nmcoiwosMigjB aa-r ie_a\t\n\t\n______\n_________\n ^\"-\u2122\u2014\n1\n'\nAS!  POUR\nNriamt Sally Mew*\nEtttblUhed April 88, 1809\n\"Interior of British Columbia's Family Newspaper\"\nALL THX NEWS WHILI IT IS NSW8\nPublltbtd every morning except Sundiy by\nthl MIWS PUBLISHING COMPANT, LUtlTID,\nSit   Baktr   Strut.   Helws,   Brltlah   Columbia\nPHONE 144, Private Xtehasge Connecting all Departments\nMember ot the Audit Burwu of OlroulaUone\nand The cantdlin Pnu Luud Win Newi Bervlce\nMONDAY, JUNE 4, 1934.  '\nTHE MOTORIST A HEAVY TAX PAYER\nThe Dominion joverament will shortly map out\nits road program for the year and motorists In all\nsections of Canada will be eagerly watching and waiting for the prospects'of better highways made possible\nthrough works programs. But why should the\nmotorist bs interested? Because he pays his way over\nthe roads he uses. It ls interesting to note the amounts\npaid into provincial coffers by motorists ln the various\nprovinces of this great Dominion, through gasoline\ntax and licence fees.\nIn Alberta in 1933, motorists paid a total of\n$3,069,707 or 19.8 per cent of -the total ordinary\nrevenue. The number of persons owning cars was less\nthan 12 per cent of the total population of the Province.\nIn British Columbia less than 13 per cent of the\npeople own cars but in 1933, they paid $3,980,177 in\ngasoline taxes and license fees which was 19.3 per cent\nof the total ordinary revenue.\nIn Manitoba the motorists number less than 12\nper cent of the .provincial population but in 1983, they\ncontributed $2,264,497 or 18 per cent of the total\nordinary revenue, in gasoline tax and licence fees.\nThe last available figures for Nova Scotia are for\nthe year 1932, and show that motorists, who constitute\nless than eight per cent of the population, paid 27.2\nper cent of the total ordinary revenue. The aggregate\nOf gasoline tax and licence fees was $2,193,982.\nFewer than six out of a hundred residents of\nQuebec Province own cars or trucks but they paid\n$9,946,877 or 32 per cent of the total ordinary revenue\nin 1983.\nIn Saskatchewan less than ten per cent of the\npeople own cars but their contribution of $2,980,678\nin gasoline tax and licence fees was 19.6 per cent of\nthe total ordinary revenue.\nNew Brunswick has approximately 28,000 registered motor vehicles or about seven to the hundred bf\npopulation but the owners of-these vehicles paid 27.3\nper cent of the total provincial revenue in 1932, the\nbill being $1,607,089.\nOntario it the most motorized of the Canadian\nprovinces. Allowing ownership of only one car or truck\nto an individual, 15.4 per cent of the population are\nowners of motor vehicles. In 1988, they paid! in gasoline taxes and licence fees, $19,848,868 or 38.7 per\ncent of the total ordinary revenue.\nPrince Edward Island's 7.9 per cent of the population who own cars or trucks who paid $278,986 or 22.7\npsr ctnt of the provincial revenue in 1932.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN   IUIIW\nCOMMISSION  NETWORK\n8:00 Melody Like. dlr. Percy Palth\n7:00 Soliloquy. Llla Valient Raid\n7:80 Newi and Weither Poreeut\n738-8:08 Jack Denny'l Oech (NBC)\nS  \u2022-.\u25a0_). Moonlight On the River\nNBC.KGO   NETWORK\nSH<|  KOW  KFI   KOO  KOMO   KJR\nttt     ttt     841      110     Itt      -.0\nlttt) Oene Arnold. Lullaby Ltdy\n6:80 Tlnle Llth, A ihelm'1 Oroh.\n7:00 Amu 'n' Andy\n7:16 Oene and Glenn, comedy tketch\nIt   To bt announced\n6:00 Ruth Hughes, mc: guut art*\ntUU;   Yihbut.  Cheerily;   Harmony Aeet, male trio\n6:00 In Old Brarll, dtr. Ned Tolllnger\n6:18 Wlllltmi-Walih Orehettn\n1:80 Walte Time: Ben Klesscn\n10:0O News Flashed. 88m Hayes\n10:16 Tor Coakley-t Orcheitra\n10:88 Preu-R\u00abdlo Newi Service\nII KM Paul canon, ottenlit IKOO)\n11 -.tttl Gun Arnhetm'l Orchestra\n11:80 Hal Onywti'i Orcheitra\nKVI\n671\n8:00\n6:80\n6:\u00abt\n7:00\n7:16\n7*>\n7:30\n7:46\n6:00\n6:00\nItt\n6:00\n6:80\n8:48\n10:00\n10:3'\nIt :no\n'1130\nCB4-IK1N l.gF, N'TWORK\nKFRC     KOIN     KM.     Kill.\n616       MO       Hit     i.j!\nla-1   father B-renade\nTo be announoed\nMutleal Album\nFate WaUer, songs\nMinute Melodies in.u\nReggie Child's Orcheitra\nMilitary Band, dlr P. Stark (DL)\nCarl Hoffmayr's Orchutra\nSlue Mondiy Jamboree (D.L.)\nLeo,*, Beluco'i Orchestra\nClouds Hopktn'i Orchutra\nJack Rustell't Orcheatra\nOene and Charlie\nEarl Hlnu and Orchestra\nHarry Jackson's Orcheitra (DL)\nThe Mummers, drama (D.L.)\nAaronton'a Commandtn (D.L.)\nTo be announced\nton k cjor\nVancouver\n6:40 Stock Quotatloni\nt:\u00ab6 Newi Varieties\n7:00 Melodlu of Yuterday\n7:16 Voice Of Progress\n7:90 Studio Program\n640 Charlu Hovey. tongs\n6:18 Studio\ntoo m\n500 w\n8:80 Bueball Broadcut\n10:15 Orchutra\nutt k CRCV jtj.t ra\nVancouver MO w\n8:00 Kaare Knudssn. baritone\n8:16 Newe\n8:30 See CRC Network\n8:00 The PAur Porters\n9:30 Henrietta O'Nell, loprano\n9:48 piano Mutlnga. Bill Ladner\n10:00 Canada Reconstructed\n10:3O Late Neil Pluhet\n668 k KPO ttt m\nHan Francisco 50,000 w\n8:00 Robert Nurok'i Ensemble\n8:30 Safety Pint\n6:45 Nanette La Salle, ballads\n7:0. Clyde Doerr's Orchestra\n7:30 ComMy Stan, ST.\n7:4t Stanford Onlv. Program\n8:00 Orchestra Pit Schou\n6:30 NBC! Drama Hour\n\u00bb:O0 Jin* Pronten, Don Rou, S.T.\n9:15 Clyde Lucu' Orchutra\n9:J0 Frankle Muten' Orchestra\n10-0O The Night Oourt\n11:00 Oui Amhelm's Orchestra\n11:30 Paul Carson, organist\n016 k KJR\nButtle\n6:00 Song Big\n6:30 Flretlde Phsn'ulet\n7:00 Melody Race\n7:15 Lite of Paul Bunyan\n7:30 Muted Strlngi\n7:46 Mutlctl Auction\n8:00 Highlight Hour\n8:30 Dollan and Centa\n6:4'* Frank and Archil. E.T.\n9:00-0:16 Chamber ef Commerce\n10:00-10:30 Woodwind Insemble\n309.1 m\n5000  w\n1050 k KNX 885.3 m\nHollywood 60,000 w\n6:00 Newi Service\n6:15 Concert Snumble\n6:10 Sport Newt on Parade\n6:45 Rublnoff't Concert Ensemble\n7:0O Watanabe and Hon. Archie\n7:16 Charlotte Woodruff\n7:30 Drury Lane, tenor: orehettn\n7:46 King Cowboy\n8:00 The In*Lawt\n8:18 Tht Voice ?arade\n8:46 Ambassador!\n6:00 Newi Service\n9:15 The Crbekette\n20 YEARS AGO\n(Prem The Dally Mwt et\nJnne 4, llll)\nAccording to J, S. Anntblt, pruldent of the Chahko MIka, the Koot\nenay-Boundary eld-ttmers ef Victoria\nan showing a whole-hearted lntereet\nIn the coming reunion.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong the offlcen elected lut\nevening by .the Knlghte of Pythlu\nwen I. Manden, C. H. Joy and A. I.\nHamilton.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMellon won the lacroeu game\nagalnit tht Trail \u2022 Rouland team,\nWaldo Perguion opened the tcorlng\nwith one of his ricked ihoU.\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(Prem Thi ftllly Newi of June 4.\n1884).\nlln. C. A. t*nen, accompanied\nby her young diughter and ton\nMarie an. Arthur, left for Vtncou-\nA   big   program   U   planned   by\nthl Nelton Rotary club at the Intercity meet tcheduled for thu city\non   July   17,   11,   16.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nDr. W. O. Rou ind Dr. H. H.\nMacsentle motored to Tmlr Sunday.\n\u25a0THI  NELSON  DAILY  NEWS. NELSON.  \u2022.(.--MONDAY  MORNINO. JUNE 4,  19J4-\nBetween\nYou and\nMe\nByJ.B,C>\nTwo old cronlet wen talking over\ntbelr domestic troubles.\nSaid one to tbe other, \"It'i terrible\nthe way my wife worrlu me for\nmoney.\"\nSecond old crony\u2014Why, what don\nthe do with It?\n\"I don't know, I never give her\nany.\"\nest\n\"If we keep our eyu open,\" uyi a\nloul preacher, \"it's not hard to find\nmany a diamond ln the rough.\" But\nyou can't ny the same for golf ba-'-i.\n.   .   .\nHere and there\u2014\"Scotty\" Notman\ndeclaring he U playing baubaU to\nget the exereUe\u2014Sayi he'e getting\ntoo fat\u2014Oeorge Floury recalling a\nmotor trip to Vernon with Dode Dill\n\u2014Jack Boothby of Idgewood In Nelson on hie annual fair day trip\u2014Jack\nuyi the valley will have another\ntine fair\u2014and It adding iporti to\nthe program \u2014Including aporta on\nhonebeek\u2014And he did well with hU\nprlu lUt\u2014Jack Thompeon of Bonnlngton planning a holiday vlut to\nChrlitlna Lake on July 1\u2014Mre. Mel-\nderman of Edgewood In Nelion\u2014and\nluvlng by bus to vlilt her eon In\nTrail or Rossland\u2014She sp.ys Smll\nU fine and dandy\u2014Douglu Hinton\nlooking for a 10 ball\u2014Someone else\ngetting lt\u2014Rd Orlndrod wearing a\nnew necktie\u2014at leut hla wife uld\nIt wm new\u2014Howard Thurman demonstrating an automobile\u2014or I should\nuy the Initde of an automobile\u2014Sid\nMatheson declaring he launched a\nnew rowboat\u2014and ihe U light u a\nfuther\u2014Jack Kerr all het up over\nsoftball. ,\na   *   \u2022\nAnother theory U that rumble setts\nwtn Invented to eolve the overproduction problem ln the umbrella '.-\u25a0\nduttry.\n\u00bb, \u2022   \u2022\nNew York scientist uyi men in\nilowly becoming toeleu. How will our\ndescendants tut the condition of the\nwater before plunging In?\n35 YEARS AGO\n(Prom The Nelson Dally Miner\nof June 4, 1888)\nWorkmen an engaged on the Salvation  Army  property  on  Victoria\natrut.\n\u25a0 .  .  .\nThe itarting up of the Wllla property meant another mint working ln\nthe vicinity.\n\u2022   \u2022   t\nTravel through Kulo continues to\ngrow apace and buslneu generally\ncontlnuu to grow.\nMost Firemen Hurt\nRunning Fake Calls\nIf any argument ahould be itrong\nenough to .invent the wanton turning tn Of HUl fin Harms, It is the\nstatement of Pin Chief and Commissioner McEUott, of New Tork,\nto the Nttlontl Pin Protection mo*\nelation thlt 80 per cent of accident!\nln whldh New York flnmtn wen Injured occurred when they Wen n-\n\u25a0pondlng to tain alarm!.\nBut the number of falu alarm*\nhe idded, wu increasing, and there\nwu wme reason to believe that eome\nwen turned ln to draw tinmen and\npolloe to one corner, while an Insured\nbuilding wu ut afln at a dUtance\nof a few block!. In 1883, he eaid,\nthen wu 40-174 alarms, of which\n11,867 wen faUe, while ft ,031 of the\n41,788 tlarmi lut yur wen faUe.\nHair Cutting Test\nNot Fair to Razor\nThe time-honored morning rite of\nplucking out a hair and testing a\nrazor blade on It hu bwn Investigated by science, and found wanting.\nHtlr U too irregular to be good\ntest material.   So T. 8. Puller and\nDr. W. R. Whitney, ot the Oeneral\nElectric   company's   research   laboratory, discovered. In seeking a thread\nor fibre for raaor blade tute.   An\neight-Inch htlr varlU u much u 340;\nper unt ln ltl cross-sectlonsl  area.\nWhile even poets rarely  wear hair,\nthis long, the figure glvu an ldu ot,,\nhow lneuct the hair tut It.   The,'\nlaboratory investigators made a stan*\"*\ndard tlbn of nw itlk itnndi twisted\nIn a certain way for their test!.\nGirl in the Family\nBy BEATRICE BURTON\nHe bolted out of the door, and\nSuun foUowed him. Bhe waited ln the\nhall while he ran upttaln to change\nfrom hla aUppert Into hla thou. The\nhouu wu very etIU u ihe itood then\ntrying to make up her mind what to\ndo. She wanted to go with John, even\nIf it meant defying the family. Connie\nSayn wu a friend of hen, too. And\nthen would be brightness \u00bbend geyety\nat tha Culleni'I\nB ahe would have to pay for tt\ntomorrow. Bhe knew that Uncle Worthy would be exceedingly gloomy. Her\nfether would look worried and unhappy. Aunt Bdna would not tpeak to\nher all day. And Lutle would not dan\nspeak to her either.\nShe wu still stindlng In front ot\nthe long mirror In the hall, twlat-\nlng her llttle eealekln np uncertainly ln her htndi, whtn John came\nrunning down the ttaln. AUen Sholu\nwu not far behind him,\n\"Ready, SUian?\" John aaked.\n\"Oh, John!\" ihe uld. \"I do eo\nwant to go with you. But you know\nhow hurt they wUl be lt I do\u2014with\ndinner all ready and everything. I\nreally think I'd better itay hen.\nAllen Sholu had itopped Jutt behind John, waiting to pau. Bhe could\nful hU eyu upon her. \"You\u2014you're\nin Mr. Sholes' way, John,\" she uld.\nJohn wheeled suddenly, \"doing out\ntor eomethlng to eat, Sholu? he\nuked. \"Come along with me. I'U take\nyou to a place when there'i real\nfood. And real people I\"\nThey went down the hall together.\nSuun knew John would take him\nto the Culleni'. Would Introduce him\nto Mary Cullen. And to Sarah.\n\"I'U go,\" the uld aloud.\nJutt then Lutle opened the parlor\ndoor and came Into the han. She\nlooke,. relieved* when ihe uw Suun. \"Oh, to you didn't, go after all! I\n\u2014I'm glad, Suaan. Of coune, you remembered that Wallace U coming tonight.\"\nSusan had forgotten aU about lt.\nt  e* i\nThat night when Wallace arrived\nhe wu carrying a very handsome\nplgtkln bag which he nt down ln tbe\nvestibule.\n\"I'm going down to Hot Springs\ntonight with my did tnd mother,\"\nhe told Suun, getting out of hli\novercoat tnd patting hli ten which\nwen alwaye pale and became dead\nwhite when they wen eeld. \"He'i\nhad a cold for a couple of dayi and\nthe doctor wants him to get away\nfrom the office for a while. The train\nleave! at nine, eo I won't ban mon\nthan a few mlnutu wltn you, sweetheart.\"\nIn the Uttle reception room, swept\nand gamlehed for hli entertainment,\nhe put hU arms around her and kissed\nher.\nI'm going to mlu you a lot,\" he\nuld. \"fm going to mlu\"\u2014he kissed\nher again\u2014\"this.\"\nHe leated hlmulf on an .arm ot\ntbe old green wta and pulled her\ndown on hli kneei. when Susan remained feeling extremely awkward\nand amy.\n\"Klu me, Suun,\" he wbUpered urgently, and with an effort the leaned\ndown and klued htm on hit mouth.\n\"That isn't a klu.\" He laughed u\nehe got up from hit kneei and ut\ndown betide blm. \"Cold Uttle woman,\nyour don't know anything about love\nmaking, do you?\" '\n\"I haven't done very much of lt,\"\nahe defended herulf.\n\"I brought your Ch.litmu pru*\nent Hong, but you mustn't open lt\nuntil Chrlstmu morning.\" He brought\ni flat oblong package from his coat\npocket and handed Tt to her. lt wu\nwrapped ln stiff gold paper and e\naprlg of artificial holly thrust through\ntht bow pricked her finger. \"I'll call\nyod up Chrlatmu night and find\nout how you liked It \u2014Next year we'll\nbe together, mnt we,. In our own\nhouu?\" \\\n\"Any houu but the Country club\nhouu,\" uld Suun. *   .\nOn Sunday they had driven out to\ngo through it. but the young couple\nwho wen still Uvlng ln it were not\nat home and they had had to satisfy\nthemselves with looking at It from the\netreet. Suaan, declaring ihe would\nnever Uve In It, and had to admit that\nlt wu everything that.wu attractive.\n\"You think about the houu while\nI'm gone,\" Wallace uld now, hli eye\non the clock. \"Well never find iuch\na bargain again, and aU I'm afraid ot\nU that It may be mapped up befon\nwe take It. One of the other fellowi\nat the bank bu hU eye on lt.\"\nHe rou, a han'wme and Impressive\nfigure In hi! well pressed clothes.\n\"Soft-hutted Uttle goof,\" he murmured, hit band under her chin, \"I'm\ngoing now, or I'll mlu my train \"\nWhen he wu gone Suun ttood for\na moment In the vestibule wondering\nlf she really wen emotionally colder\nthan most women. She loved Wallace,\nbut the certainly did not thrill to\nhit love making at all. The longer and\nharder hU kisses were\u2014and they wen\ngetting longer and harder all the time\n\u2014the less ihe Uked them.\nAnd ihe undoubtedly ihowed that\nshe did. Thlt wu what he meant\nVhen he uld ehe wu cold. . ... Welt,\nehe must ihow her affection to him\nfrom now on by becoming a bit mon\ndemonstrative. He wu giving her\neverything that any girl could want,\nwasn't he? All hie conversation, when\nthey wen together, wu about their\nfutun, their life together.\n... Their married life ln the Country Club house. Suun stood shaking her head ln the darkness of the\nvestibule u ehe thought about the\nhouu. She simply w uld not lire ln\nthat houu. When Wallace came back\ntrom Hot Springs ihe would tell him\nthat ahe did not want to be bothered\nwith the can of a houu for the flnt\nyear or two of their married life, and\nauggeit that they ut up housekeeping\nIn a convenient llttle apartment somewhere, ihe would point out the economy M living when there would be\nno coal bill ln tbe winter, no yard\nman to pay In the tummer.\nThat wu the way to manage thlngt,\nthe decided.\nTHAT BODY OF YOURS\nBy JAMES W. BARTON, M.D.\nFOCAL INFECTION\u2014INFLAMMATION\nIN ONE     ORGAN     CAUSING\nTROUBLE   IN  ANOTHER\nYou may coniult your physician\nabout a pain ln one of your Joints, a\npain ln the eye, or wme tkb. ailment.\nAlter a thorough examination he tells\nyou that the condition muat be due\nto focal Infection and that ha win\nendeavor to locate that infection.\nWhat li meant by focal Infection?\nProfessors Luuna and Chlnl of\nRom. at a oongnu of internal medicine pointed out that the examination\nof patient* and experiments ln the\nlaboratory have led to the conclusion*\nthat chronic Inflammatory conditions\nln any part of the body (often In the\nmouth) may cause ailment* In other\norgans of the body at considerable\ndUtance from then inflammations.\nThus the place when the Inflammation starts la called the \"focus\"\nof Infection, and the trouble ln the\ndletant pert U spoken ot u being\ncaused by focal Infection. The little\norganisms or the polwni theu organism! make are carried by the blood\nto a particular organ and cauw an\nInflammation ln thU organ. Por Instance the Uttle organism! trom inflamed tonsils havo bun proved to\ncause Inflammation ln tht Joints\u2014\nrheumatism.\nThe relation betwun tonilllltli and\ninflammation of thl kidneyi hu Itke-\nwlic been proven.\nThe focal Infection theory, u It la\ncalled, tt believed to have bun amply\ndemonstrated ln allmenti such u\nappendicitis,  ulcer of  the  itomach\nand imell Inteitine, and Inflammation\nof the gall bladder.\nResearch worken an agreed that\ntht moat frequent \"focut\" or itarting\nplace of trouble li the tonsils due to\ntonilllltli.\nMany of the condition! ln aad\nabout tbe eyu, which tbe patient\nmay think ls due to eyestrain, an\nreally due to Infected teeth or to Inflammation tn the Uttle sinuses or\ncaverns adjoining the nose\u2014stnuittls.\nIn addition to the tonsils, teeth,\nand ilnuses. the gall bladder and the\nlarge intestine, which holds the\nwutes from the foods, may alw cause\ninflammation tn other parte ot the\nbody.\nThe point then li that while the\npart that is Inflamed must be treated,\nthe cauu of that Inflammation must\noften be looked for ln other parte of\nthe body.\nAnd In medlolne, as the commonest\ncauses ot an ailment are alwayi looked\nfor flnt. It U only natural that physicians should Investigate the condition of the teeth and tonsils flnt, ln\ntrying to locate the organ causing the\nfocal Infection.\nPOWER DEMAND INCREASES\nNow that we are nadlng again about\nrecord! ln induitry and commerce,\nwe think of old man Depression u\ngone, dead and ' lrled. Among others.\na new high record for power output\nwu utabllihed In February wben the\nprevious high, ln January, wu exceeded by 36 per cent. Industry In the\ntecond month of thlt year wu urved\nby over 1800 minion kilowatt houn.\u2014\nCanadian Bualneu.\nAUCTION AND\nCONTRACT BRIDGE\nBy tbe  WorW't luting  Authority.\nMILIUM C. WORK\nGENEROSITY   MAY  BE  THE   BEST\nPOLICY\nOnt of tb* flnt thlngt tint the\nchild learns when he enten tchool\nU thtt generoelty It in admirable\nquality. The expert Bridge pUyer\nat tlmu followi the achool precept,\nbut dou w with tbe hope that the\ntrick he cute upon the a verse waten\nwlU return to him bringing one or\ntwo 'mpanlons A hand which U-\nluatratu the above wu played recently ln the duplicate of a prominent club. \u2022\n\u2022*w\n\u00bbIH\n\u2666H\n\u2666If-M-H\n\u2666 J-.-5-3\ni-MHH\nHJ-m\nfc   :\ntw\n\u2666M-l\ni \u2014 i\nUtl-M\n\u2666j\nItOtfUl\ntm\n\u2666H-J-l\n]H-\n\u25bc MM*\n[_a\nAt every table South reached a\ncontract of thru No Trumps, generally via the South two No Trumpt,\nNorth thne Clubt, South thru No\nTrumpa route.\nWut'i opening lead wu thl Quun\nof Hearta (note the advantage ot\nleading the Queen from Queen-Jack-\nNine). South won the flnt trick and\nled the Ace of Clubt. When both\nadversaries followed, the Ten of Clubt\nwu led by South, and at mut tablu\ndummy's King took Zut's Quun.\nTwo more Clube were run and after\nthat, an effort wu made to put dummy ln with tho Quun of Spades to\ncash, the two remaining Clube. This\neffort would have tuoceeded lf the\nKing of Spadu had bun held by Wett\nhut, unfortunately for the Declarer,\nBut won North's Queen with the\nKing and led a Heart. Consequently.\nthe Deelanr wu held to one Spade,\ntwo Hearts, one Diamond, and four\nClubi, and wu down one.\nIt wu only at a few tablu that the\nDeclarer! realized that In thll hand\ngeneroelty would be tbe but policy.\nOn the tecond Club trick, they noted\nthat South'! Clube would block two\ntrlcki which North otherwlw could\nwin, and knowing that the location\nof the King of Spadu wu an even\nchance, displayed a magnificent gere-\nroslty by holding up dummy's King\nof Clubi end permitting East's lone\nQueen, to take the trick. After that,\nthey had no difficulty ln fulfilling\ntheir contracts becauu they wen\nable to take five Club trlcki tnatead\not thi tour eecured when liberality\nwu not called Into pUy. Of coune,\nafter winning with the An of Hearti,\nthey led the Nine of Clubi, permitting It to win and tben overtook the\nSight with North's King.\nTOMORROW'S HAND\n4*\n\u2022MH\n\u26661-W-.\n\u2666l+i\n\u25a0H-M-2\n1 SUM itW\ntm\nk   afm\n\u2666 W-5\nP\u2014rH'\n\u266611*3\nUaoLkliW\n\u2666l-HHI\nar\nMM          ou\nWith \u2022 Club ied, ihould Bouth I .ke\nnine trlcki it No Trumps?\nAUNT HET\nWhen people vote w unanimous\nto give the preacher a vactlon, I\ncan't help wonderln' which It U thit\nwanti a rut.\"\nINFANTRY'S SWAN SONG-NEAR\nOreat ilgnlfleance atttchei to n-\ncent announcement* In the military\nsphens In Canada and Oreat Britain\nfee they mean nothing more or Uu\nthan the complete extinction of\ncavslry u lt It today tnd the ro-\norganlutlon and partial elimination\nof Infantry from the armed forces ot\nthue eountrlu It will not be many\nyeara, lt U eafe to predict, untU light\ntank brigades will replace both Infantry and cavalry unite.\nAnnouncement wu made from Ottawa the other day that plant en being considered foe th* ebmplete re*\norganization of the non-permanent\naltlve mllltta, It being augguted cavalry will be mounted In armored cars\nInstead of on honu and that Infantry\nbtttalloni will be made rver Into\ntank formation*. In Onet Britain\na speed in! up of the mechanisation of\ntbe army U foreshadowed by the recent appointment of Sir Hugh KUet\nu Muter-Oeneral of Ordnance. Hla\npromotion wu not by untorlty but\novtr the hudt of a good many other\nofficer* Army opinion U tbat Sir\nHugh U destined to be the futun\nCommander-in-Chief. He U of the\nRoyal Eniineen and If an old tank\nofficer, tbe tanks being under hie\ndirection In tb* famous attack on\nCambral In 1117. Comment In Informed circles In Onet Britain Is\nthat hU new potltlon li a sure sign\nthlt th* army's mechanization will\nbe speedily developed. Finally, af*\nfectlng another branch of Britain's\nforces, U the government'! determination to double the number of fighting\naeroplanes.\nThe Initial aucceu of the tank,\ncumbersome and heavy u It wu In\n1917 and 1918, gan a deer Indication\nof tta futun rale in warfare. It lore-\nshadowed a nturn to tbe war of\nmanoeuvre. With the development\nof light two-m**a tanks capable of a\nsustained tpeed of 40 mllu acrou\ncountry and ibu to awlm acrou rlvtn,\nthe prophecy ot 1918 hu been ful*\nfilled. The modern tank haa bun\ntested ln everything except actual\nwar and hu come through with colon\nflying.\nThe positive qualities of the light\ntank u a weapon of offence are itrong\nargument* for \"nvtehintutlen\" ef\nwar. But even theu ere not u powerful u the negative weiknmu of Infantry and civilry. Theu cannot face\nmodern fin weapon* with any hope\nof economy ln lite. They an vulnerable to maohlne guns, aeropUnn and\nmuatard gu, and now to the mobile\n'baby\" tank. The appalling execution that may be caused by a tingle\nmachine gun U too well-known to\nmen who fought In the lut wtr to\nnud tny elaboration. Ah craft\nun successfully attack, wetter or\nat lesit. urlouily hamper Infantry\ncolumns on the march, u wu demonstrated ln 1818 when air attack* dispersed the ratnattnt columns ot Austrian!. Bulgan and Turk* Into fugitive mobs. The effecttreneu of muttard gu In causing non-fatal cuutl-\ntlu meant that a ttretch ot oountry\n\u2022prayed with thii will be u compute\na barrier to cloth-clad infantry u\nwen buvy barbed wire entitlement!.\nOnly ln twlft tanks wltb tbe protection they afford will man be able\nto move through luch gu tonu.\nPor theu reasons alone, it must be\npatent, to all that gnat muses of\nfoot-slogging Infantry would provide\nnothing mon than good target! ln\nfutun wan. In spite of thU, European\nnatlona still count thilr Infantry ln\nthe hundred! of thousands. The\ncountry that flnt completely mechanics its fighting forces will han a\ntremendous advantage over old-\nfuhloned armlu. Britain, and Canada too, an evidently determined to\nconserve human llvu by making full\nuu of the machine. Not only that,\nbut cost li reduced also, for a small\nmechanized force dou not coet nurly\nu much u tti \"fin power\" equlvilent\nln infantry. It U itated ln authoritative military texts, for Inttance,\nthat by dismissing four out of alx Infantrymen enough money can be saved\nIn a year tb equip the two remilnlng\nmen with a light \"baby\" tank.\nPeace ls not yet enthroned in all\nthe world's capitals. UntU lt Is, It\nli neoeuary to maintain wme form\nof armament. Mechanized forces provide the most economical, both In human life and money. \u2014 Edmonton\nJournal.\n\"Snoot Sandwich\"\nSouthern Delicacy\nEver beard of a Snoot undwich?\nIt'i not likely to be urved it bridge\npartlu.\nWutbrook PegUr hu bun vUltlng\nIn Memphis Tenn., and In hU lyn*\ndlcatad column uyt:\n\"We headed down between e dingy,\nevil double row of old building!\ncrowded to the curbs with city negroes\nand country types, men and women,\nswaggering wphUticatu with wadded\n\u2022houlden and tight blpe and shambling bltck rubet ln overalls.\nMuilc and the nek of burning\ngnaw drifted out through the open\ndoen of tuch rutaunnti u the Ony\nMule, the Halt-Minute, the Minute\nand tbe Swut Mamma.\n\"'Gimme a moot undwich.' a\noountry boy ordered at the Half-\nMinute.\n\"What did he uy?\"\n\"He want* a plg-anoot undwich,'\nthe detective urgeant uld.\n'\"Very delicious eating, they uy.\nA slice of plg-anoot fried In grease,\nfor a nickel. Or an order of pigtails, three on a plate, for a nickel\nor a dime. A fried hog's eu for t\nnickel.'\"\nLee Angelu Is experimenting with\npocket-radio sets with whtch pollc*-\nmen can get report! from headquarters while walking on their\nbests.\nFRUIT GROWERS\nShip your 8triwb*rriet, RiipberrlN, tnd Cherrlu direct tnd receive the benefit for yourtelf of the Highest Prairie Mirket Prices.\nAUo Cir Loids of the later frulti tccepted when retdy for shipping.\nBtturnt ire mide every Saturdiy for iU thipmentt receiv-al\nduring the wttk.\nROYAL FRUIT COMPANY\nTht Independent Fruit Hpuu\nCtr. Brosd St. A 10th Avi. Regim, Siikttchtwin\nMOWERS and RAKES\nPrices Right\nPleased to Quote Prices\nNelion Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNELSON, B.C.\nBRINGING, UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\nv *omFIRE^s\n\\  \u00ab3*0KE GET* w *\n~ '      VOU* EYB5\n1\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nTHAiT'S VajSUl-*\nyo. C\/tkM si-jb\nHma fuu. vtwavi\n-*vv\\\u00ab*b weft, thk\nAT-*\u2022e-N'TiC.   City-.\nBy Westover\n\t\n.____.\n \u2014-\n________________\u2014\u2014\u2014_\n\t\n\t\nmti\nmmm\nINCREASE IN\nCHERRY CROP\n, Kootenay to Ship 6000\nCases More Than\nLast Year\nSTRAWS TO START\nMOVING AT ONCE\nKelowna Apple Yield\nto Be Down Is\nEstimate\nVICTORIA, June 1.\u2014The field rhtf*\nbub shipping uuon on the lowu\nmainland ls the longest on record, according to the horticultural newa lettu of tbe department of agriculture.\nIt began thll yur on March 34 and\nshipments were being mtdt up to tht\nend of lut wuk, when the lettu\nwu luued. strawberry picking is\ngenual, raspberries and loganberries\nart ihowlng up to advantage, lndl*\ncttl:.g thty will crowd thl strawberry\nuuon to t muked degree tnd goose -\nbtrrles ut t hetvy crop with tome\ngrowers experiencing difficulty ln ulllng. Black tnd red currants trt tiling up tnd developing rapidly.\nThe tree fruit crop le variable\nthroughout tht dlttrlct with Indications for in average medium yield.\nVegetable   crops   ue   coming   on\npldly. Inly put and cauliflowers\nwere coming on the mtrket tt tht\nnek-end tnd beets tnd carrota wue\nue to go on the mtrket ln quantity\nllll week. Potatou trt developing\n\u2022tpldly tnd hop plsntlngs tre thow-\nng up favorably with growen 1 king\nerwud to t satisfactory dlsopul of\nit crop.\nIn tht Btlmon Arm, Sorrento tnd\nUtln Line points, tpplu tre reported\n\u2022ttlng patchlly. The crop will be light\nn the Kamloops district and not eo\nnavy u anticipated ln the Salmon\n_rm and Sorrento areas, Stone fruits\nippeu to be setting fairly well and\npan heavily. Strawberry shipping\nrlU probably start tbout Junt 10.\ntups tnd logins look promising. To*\nnttoes tnd all vegetable crops ln\nbe Thompeon Vtlley tre com *ig tlong\nllcely tnd htylng will itart In ume\nlections of the Kamloops dlttrlct thll\nnek.\n\"Armstrong. Vernon, Oytmt, Okan-\nigan Centre and Wlnfleld report\njrowth conditions excellent with fruit\nud ground crops developing rapidly.\nUl buah fruits and strawberrlu ue\nooklng well, also tomatoes and cab-\nMge. Euly, cuttings of alfalft Ul\nMing mtde'.\nApplu tnd othu fruits In tht Kll-\niwna area ara siting well, but the ap-\nale yield will not be u heavy u antl-\nST. ANTHONY'S\nCOLLEGE\nSummer Ctmp for Olrl*\nThe Beach House, Seehelt\nFor termi tnd particulars write\n849 W. 27th Ave, Vinoouvtr, B.C.\nTHE MILK THAT gVIRVONC LIKES'\nwe offer you   .\nyour choice\nIt you with to hive Pss-\ntturiud Milk, so be It\u2014\nwt will deliver Faeteur-\nlnd\u2014or lt you dutra\nRaw Milk, we etn alao\ndeliver tbtt.\nOur Motto Is\nSERVICE\nPHONE 116\nKootenay Volley\nCooperative Milk Assn.\nclpsted. Tomatou tra miking gold\ngrowth.\nTOMS CROP IAKOE\nIn the Pentlcton. Ktleden. Kereme-\not, Oliver tnd Osoyoos districts good\ngrowth conditions tre reported, orch\nudi tn la good thtpt, tnd u the\nOllver-Otoyoot dlttrlct tround crops\nsuch u eucumben, cantaloupes, tomatou, tuly cabbage and euly potatou have never looked more promts\nIng. Some hey It being cut.\nOktntgtn Oeneral district reporta\ntbe fruit crop in practically tvtry section, from Lytton on tbe mtln lint,\nsouth to the boundary, It considerably\nllghtar thtn wu genera y upected.\nThe nt ln ill fruits, with the exception of apricots, li generally light.\nVegetable crope Took promising.\nField eropa on the whole, look very\nwell. Alfalfa and fall grains are pu*\ntleululy good. Pastures and range\nconditions were nevu bettu, and the\nwhole oountry looks exceedingly well\nfrom t forage standpoint.\nBEBBIE8 OOOD IN KOOTENAY\nIn the Koounay and Arrow Laku\nregion strawberrlu trt expected to go\non the muket the flret wuk In June.\nRups htve t very healthy appearance\nand the cherry crop bu nt fair to\ngood . Applu ua making good growth\nand vegetablu are showing up well.\nOrtnd Forks report! til crops coming tlong exceptionally well, the apple and pew yield will be consider-\nabl* lighter than lut yur, probtbly\nthirty pu ont lut. Then wu eome\ndtmtge by frost to euly potatou and\nbuns on May 83. Field and garden\norope are making good growth and\nyields of alfalfa, potatou, onions, etc.,\nwill likely be good. Small fruits have\ncome through the winter In fine shape\nwith practically no frost damage. Tbe\nyield wlU total that of laat yeu.\nSlight frosts In the Cruton area\nlilt wuk tffected the advanced growth\nof potatou tnd beans. Strawberrlu\nue expected on tbe muket thle wuk.\nRaspberries ue ln excellent condition\nand cherries art iWng wtll. Tnt\nfruits ue progressing favorably: stone\nfruits show a heavy lncreau ovu\nlut yur, aln bush fruits. Oooee-\nberrlu ue ready to pick, asparagus\nll coming tlong regularly, tin radishes ind spinach. Euly transplants\not head lettuce will be ready In two\nweeks and tomatoes and peppen ue\nbeing planted truly. The tint out-\nting oi ilftttt will commence euiy\nnext month.\nBERRY .CROP IT\nBtrtwberry crpt on Vancouver Island tnd Oulf Islands his ytu ut\nutlmated by the horticultural branch\nof the department of tgftoulturi\nibout ten pu cent higher thin the\n1839 production iccordlng to t compilation released by tht branch today\nrh thl tnnutl fruit crop estimates.\nThi estimate on then berrlet for\nthe Islands uet Is 36,000 boxu tnd\ncratu. against 33.300 In tht 1683 crop.\nAt tht same time tn Increue from\n476,783 to 600,000 pounds 11 expected\nIb tbe production fu manufacturing purposes.\nOn thl lowu malnla-d the strawberry production ls expected to Jump\nfrom 166*841 cratu to 116,000 cratu\ntlthough the Jam stuff 11 estimated\n34.000 pounds down from lut yeu tt\n1,860,000 poundt.\nttaspoei.'iu ue estimated tt 3000\nont against 3304 lttt yeu but tbt\nJims an expected to hit 14,000 pounds\nagainst 7808. On the mainland a\nbig Jump le seen In tbli fruit, the\nestimate being 70,000 crates tnd .20.-\n000 poundt against 83,188 cratu and\n373.966 pound!.\nLOGANS ABOUT  SAME\nLoganberries, ue figured ibout the\nume u lut yetr on the island with\n1600 crates fu tht fruh muket and\n1,300,000 poundt tor canning. An In*\nerean la anticipated on the mainland\nfrom 7000 to 8008 cratu and trom\n464,000 to 740,000 pounds. Other\nsmall fruits fu tbe freeh muket, are\nealc.Usted ibout the umt on the II-\nItnd tt the following flguru; blackberries 1600 cntu; gooseberries 600\ncratu, black currants 600 cratu. red\ncurrant* 800 cratu and cherrlu 3000\ncratu. Increases ranging trom fifteen\nto twenty pu cent are Intimated on\ntht production tor manufacturing\npurposes.\nOn the lowu mtlnltnd bltckber-\nrlei ire estimated tt 33,000 crates\ntgllnit 16,000 lut yur, logins it\n9u00 igtinst 7000. gooseberries tt 1000\nagainst 700, cherrlu tt 6000 igtinst\n6600 crttu, bltck currants tt 800\natalnst 400 and nd currants tt 600\ntgllnit 40C lut yeu. A general increase\na the manufactured quantity It expected, especially In blaekberrlee and\nChtrrlu.\nMore cherries in k-b\nRenorts from tht Kootenay tnd Arrow ltku etn tndlct'e tn Increue\nof tbout 6000 \\ crates of chtrrlu to\nt tottl of 86306 with produ 'len In\nothu fruits tbout the ume u the\n1883 crop. Onnd Forks expects 1000\ncrates of strawberries for a ten per\ncent Increue wltb othen unchtnged.\nCieeton utlmttu double the imount\nof cherrlu tnd ItrtwberrlM u lut\nyeu,. the tntlclpited crops being cherrlu 13,000 cratu Igtinst 6313 strawberries 30.000 agalnit 18487, raspberries 10,000 against 8138 and plums\nand prunu 8000 agtlntt 3*13.\nThe cherry crop ln the Okanagan\nwill be below thtt ot 1883. iccordlng\nEnergy loi\nAFTERNOON\nFOR \u25a0 light, critp lunch, eatj to prepare nnd extra\ndelicious-try Kellogg'i Cora Flakes. They're rich in\nenergy. And to easy to digest! They help yon feel\nrefreshed and fit for the rest of the day.\nOnly Kellogg's have that marveloui flavor and crisp-\nnet!. They're kept oven-fresh hy the heat-tealeH inner\nVAXim bag. Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario.\n-THI NILION DAILY  NEWS.  NfLroN.  B.C-MONOAY  MORNINO. JUNE 4, 1934-\nNEWROADWORK\nIS UNDERWAY\nAT KIMBERLEY\nHigh'y to Cranbrook\nIs To Be\nWider\nMISS DAWSON\nWEDS CHISHOLM\nFrosts Are Menace to\nGardens at Camp\nChapman\nKIMBERLEY, Junt 8.\u2014Work hu\nstarted on the Klmberley-Cranbrook\nroad. They are widening lt to 30 fut\ntnd preparing lt for surfacing. The\ntown Is pleeaed to ue thla -work\nitarted.\nTh re ue cross-streets up town nc_r\nIte centre that are a fog of dust\nfrom morning until night. Mr. Hatpin\nla out several tlmn a day trying to\nkup tbe dust down on the corner\nneu hit office.\nChapman Ctmp bu Juit completed\nt fine big howling green, neirly nut\nin ten in extent. It Is seeded tnd\nenclosed and tbe camp Is looking forward to out-door bowling.\nThe chilly weather ls cutting down\ntbe swimming In the camp pool. Oar-\ndens tn ln danger. The camp had\nseveral nights of frost lut week.\nIf the number of students interested Is sufficient a unlor matriculation course mty be offend ln Klmberley In 1884*38. The numbu must\nbe determined before the end of tbe\npreunt term.\nA quiet home wedding wu solemn-\nlied Thundty May 31 It 6 p.m. tt\nthe home of the bride's mother Mn.\nT. S. Dtwson, when Mlu Rent Dew-\nson become the wife of Archibald\nChlsholm. The room wis beiutlfully\ndecorated with flowera end the young\ncouple stood undu tn uch of blossoms. Mr. ptwson give the bride away.\nMn. Chlsholm, the mother of the\ngroom and hie only brother Colin\nwen present. There were no guests\napart from the families of tho ptlr.\nTht bride wu beautifully dressed in\nt swagger suit of lrory crepe with t\nwide white silk hit to mttch, white\nglovu end shoes tnd wore t corsage\nbouquet of pink rout. Rtv. A. N. McMillan wu the officiating minister,\nthis being his flnt wedding.\nAfter t wedding eupper the hippy\ncouple started on t motor trip to\nBanff, Like Louise tnd Edmonton.\nOn thtlr return they will make their\nhome at Upper Bluchmont.\nMr. and Mrs. 3. D. B. Burnyeat returned te town Sunday after spending\ntbelr vacation In the eut.\n3. 3. O'Nell returned Wednesdsy\nfrom Calgary.\nMn. D. York nturned to Chapman\nCamp from a motor trip to Edmonton,\nWednetdty.\nMrs. Alex McDonald lift for \u2022 trip\nto Vincouver.\nMr. tnd Mn. H. C. Pearson htd\nu gunte Mr. tnd Mrs. Patterson Of\nLethbridge for the wuk-end.\nMn. Miller had a slight opentlon\nat the hospital Thursdsy. She U\ndoing will tnd will be home In t tew\ndtyi.\nBorn to Mr. tnd Mrs. L. Sullen of\nChapman Ctmp it thi McDougal\nhospital on Thursdsy, May 31 a daughter.\nMn. Louis Deuulnler ls t patient\nIn the McDougal hospital.\nMlu Esther Deuulnler of Moyle,\nwho kel bun visiting her brethu\nfor the put two weeks, left tor home\nWednetdty.\nMelvln Wooley wu opertted on\nfor appendicitis at the hospitalThundty morning. He te doing u well u\nctn be expected.\nMlU Jean Jamleson has been Ul\nthll week tnd hu pltct ln tchool is\ntiken by Mlto'E. Colthorpt.\nMn Charles Balden Is visiting her\nmother ss Dunstable. Bedfordshire.\nShe spent some time wtth bu husband's people at Bournemouth. His\nfather Is very 111 and not expected to\nlive.\nMn. E. Blddu accompanied her\nbrother, Mr. and Mn. Pred Ryckman\not Cranbrook to Kellogg, Ida., to the\nfuneral ot Mn. E. Ryckman, wbo wu\nkilled suddenly in a motor accident.\nMlu Mildred Taylor will start next-\nweek on t two thouund mile motor\ntrip. She will accompany Mr. and Mrs.\nMartin to Vancouver by way of Spokane and Seattle. Here they will mut\nMiss Muriel Martin, trom the Victoria\nNormal School. Tbey will return by\ntray of Portland.\n^xTjlFy\nKASLO GOLFERS\nPLAN TOURNEY\n|\nWill Invite Nakusp and New\nDenver Plsyers\nTble  column  Is  conducted   by\nol a\nI netpi\nprints    enlertilnmtuts.    personal\nwill eppeu\ntin. M. I. Vlgneux. All newe\n\u2022win nttun. Including receptions,\nHems   mirrugn, tte,\n\u25a0n   thlt   column.   Telephone   Mn.\nvujneux  at bu hoot, tit Billet\n.Honoring hu houu gun. Mrt. J.\nA. Young of Pentlcton, Mn. 3. T. Andrews entertained the latter part of\nthe wuk at a smart tu at her home\n\"Lome Lada\" on tbe north shore.\nMn. John Oansner did tbe honors at\nthe tea Uble while Mrs. Chulu Kel-\nman, Mrs. W. J. Oerbracbt and Mrs.\nT. I. Higglnbotham assisted by serving. Mrs. Andrews' Invited gunte were\nMrs. Reginald Haggarty, Mrs. A. Clyde\nEmory, Mn. O. C. Arneeon, Mrs. Prank\nBaker, Mra. A. E. Murphy, Mn. Wlllltm Brown, Mn. D. D. Townsend,\nMn. Austin Cuter, Mlu Hasel Keeler,\nMlu Gladys Ewlng, Mra. L. M. Varnu,\nMn. Eric T. Sowerby, Mn. Oeorge\nFleury, Mrs. Douglu Cummins, Mrs.\nJ. Morris, Mrs. N. J. Lowu, Mrs. Dtvld\nKerr, Mn. Wilfrid Lalshley, Mrs. Russell McEwan, Mri. O. Douglu Nagle,\nMre. W. R. Olbbon, Mra. Meble Roc-\nllffe. Mn. J. D. Notman, Mn. T. B.\nShorthouu. Mlu Vera Eldt, Mlu Pier*\nson, Mrt. H. M. Whlmster, Mn. S.\nHayden and Mn, R. D. Barnes.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nR. C. Crowe, Consolidated Mining\nti Smelting company's barrister with\noffice In Trail, ptld t visit In Nelwn\nSaturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nC. D. Jarvis of Procter wu t wuk-\nend vliltor ln Nelson.\n.   .   .\n3. O*. Patenaude left Monday morning via the C.P.R. tor Toronto and\nMontreal where he will spend the\nnext six weeks. In Montreal he will\nvisit at the borne of his sister, Mn.\nLangevln.\nI'll\nMr. and Mrt. Clarence Hermann\nof Ainsworth wen visitors In town\nrecently.\n\u2022 *   *\nWnk-end visitors ln Nelson Included Mlu May Grayling of Kaalo, who\nteaches lu Salmo.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Frederick Niven of\nWillow Point left yesterday morning\nto epend the summer In the Windermere district.\nt   .   .\nRobert Hsll of the Consolidated\nMining & Smelting company's telegraph suff ln Trall spent the weekend at the home of his parentt, Mr.\nand Mrs. S. D. Hall, Josephine street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. Jarvis and\ndaughter Muy ot Procter spent Saturday shopping ln town.\n.   .   .\nAlex Cheyne wu lu town from Erie\nSaturday.\nIte\nMlu N. Ortnger of Ntkuip wu a\nweek-end visitor In Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. James Johnstone snd daughter, Mlu Alia Johnstone, left yesterday morning for a vlalt to Mn. J-'in-\nstone's married daughter in London,\nEngland. They wllliull from Montrul June 8 on the Montcalm.\neee\nMlu Dome Irving ot Thrums spent\nSaturday In tbe city,\ntie\nD. F. Chlsholm of tbe Dominion\ngovernment survey neu Nelway wu a\nNelaon shopper Saturday. -\na \u00bbe   \u25a0\nDr. Tyerman of Nakusp spent the\nweek-end ln town. .\n.   .   .\nMlu Josephine Vanlvelt, wbo\nteaches at Winlaw, wu thc week-end\nvisitor of her parents, Mr. and Mre.\nM. J. Varsevelt, Kootenay street.\neee\nMrs. Fox of Crawford Bay paid a\nvisit ln town Saturday.\ntee\nMlu C. Stewart of Castlegu paid a\nvltlt ln the city during tbe week-end.\n.   .   .\nAmong shoppers ln Nelson Saturday\nwu P. McOulre ot the Monitor mine\nat Thru Forks.\nA. Ling of Fruers Landing paid a\nvlilt to town Saturday.\n.   .   .\nShoppen in the city Saturday Included Mn. Arthur Scott-Lauder of\nQueens Bay.\nttt\nMlu Ktthleen Porter, who teaches\nit Christina Like, spent the week-end\nln town, the guut of her parents, Mr.\nand Mn. w. J. Porter, Kootenay avenue, Fairview.\nCOAST ENGINEER\nVISITS THE UTICA\n000\nPOR FLAVOR\nKASLO. June 8\u2014J. C. Ryan, mining\nman, hu left fu bis home tn Spokane\nafter spending some time looking ovu\nhis mining Interests ln the Jackson\nbuln district.\nMn. A. Forrest and the Misses Janet\nand Jean Forrest ot Trail are holidaying ln town. They htvt leased the\nRoberts cottage.\nThe Kulo Boud of Trade hu decided that If trrangemente could be\nutlsfactorily made, Kaslo will be advertised over the air onu uch wuk,\nprobably from KHQ In Spokane.\nJoe Dilley and John Shupke of Spokane arrived In the city Wednesdsy\nand left Thursday fu Sandon.\nMlu Nell Alexander visited hn\nparents st'Cooper unk Wednesday.\n% Mrs. Dr. Oreen of Crtnbrook hu\nopenel her summer home tt Mirror\nLike tnd hu htd ti her guest Mrs.\nBetle of Crtnbrook -who left tor her\nhomo the end ot the week.\nMr. tnd Mn. E. M. Sandllands wen\nNelson visitors Thundty.\nO. H. Orlmwood hu nvtred hit\nconnections with the Lucky Jim mine\ntnd hu bun npltced by Leonud\n-J i\u2014\u00ab\nMl\nto the rati mates. The grand total li\nfigured it 110,800 cratu, compired\nwith 131,383 lut yur. Fetehu tre\nfigured to drop from 318,641 crttu to\n306,360 cntu. The Pentlcton ent 11\ntbe centra when tbe btggut drop In\nproduction It expected the cherry u-\ntlmate being 13.000 crates lower tnd\npeachu 48.000 cratu lowu.\nThe Okanagan hu gone In itrong\nfor tpricots this yetr howtver and tht\nestimated crop is 331.300 cratu against\n100.76* lut yeu. In tbe othu small\nfruits, on whleh production Is not\nvery luge, tmall gains ira anticipated\nKASLO. June 3\u2014B. W. W. McDougall, M. E., of Vancouver arrived\nin tne city Wednesday and left for the\nUtlca mine Thursday.\nDave Andenon and William Mc*\nLanders of Sandon were Wednesday\nvisitors ln the city.\nW. F. MacNIcol and son Jim of\nJohnsons Landing paid Kaalo a visit\nTuesday.\nMr. and Mn. B. F. Palmer have returned from a honeymoon epent\ncruising on Kootenay lake and visiting relatives ln Creston.\nHoward Dawson of Nelton wu a\nKulo visitor Thursday.\nLeonard Oarland hu left for Retalleck after visiting his parents, Mr.\ntnd Mrt. A. T. Otrltnd.\nDan Orant df Ainsworth wu a visitor ln town Thundty.\nE. Steele of Nelson wu t Thundiy visitor ln the city.\nMr and Mre. S. J. Mayns returned\nWednudiy from Spokane.\nOtrltnd.   - \u25a0\nD. H. Proudfoot, Jr., of Nelton wu\na Kulo vliltor Thundty.\nF. F. Wllion of Kun wu t city\nvltltor Thundty.\nH. L. Staines hu left for Burns Lake\nwhere he will spend the summer.\nErllng Johnson hu returned from\ncout points.\nThe Kulo Oolf and Country club\nheld a well attended meeting Thunday evening, preeldent H. Olegerlch\npresided. Tbe main topic for discussion wu the teaalbllty of purchulng\na much needed mower. The matter\nwu left In the bands of the president\nand tbe finance oommlttee, R. Hewat\ntnd A. L. MacPbu. The matter of\nentertaining the memben of the Nakusp and New Denved Oolf clubi wu\ndiscussed and lt wu decided thet\nJune 17 would be the date It agreeable to the sister clubs.\nThe Kulo snd DUtrlct Women'i\nInstitute hu decided to bold a betcb\nputy it Vlmy puk tome time during\nJune with the following u chairmen\nof the committees tn charge of tbe\naffair: refreshments, Mn. Lockhsrd;\nOtitic. Mn. Kun; Mrs. Coetello to\ntrrtnge tor the uie ot tbe pavilion.\nRecelpte from the wt ' ild In aid of\nthe Crippled Children's hospital May\n18 amounted to 811.60. Votes of\nthanka were extended to Mn. Hutln\nfor tbt uu ot t room In whloh the\ntet wu held, tnd to Mr. Robson tnd\ntht students who mtdt posters advertising the affair. Mrs. Keen read\nan Interesting article on \"Peace\".\nMrs. D. P. Kane entertained friends\nit a dcllghtfu) tea Wednudey.\nSCHOOLS MORE\nEFFICIENT NOW\nTHAN IN PAST\nUniversities 25 Years\nAhead of Average\n* Citizen\nPRINCIPAL AT\nFERNIE SPEAKS\nDr. Gee on Four-Fold\nValues of\nLearning\nFERNIE, June 3 \u2014 Fernie high\nschool's ncond * tnnutl graduation\nconcert Friday attracted an audience\nthat overtaxed the capacity ot the\nauditorium ln Holy Family school and\noverflowed Into the lobby, The audience ihowed enthusiastic appreciation of the program presented by\npupils of tbe high school assisted ln\n\u2022ome numben by membera of tbe\nstaff.\nDr. J. E. Ou, chairman, spoke ot\nthe fourfold value of true education\nln developing the Intellectual, social,\nmoral and physical phases of life and\nIllustrated each from modern nhool\nactivities. He also sketched the.place\nof the school ln preparing citizens.\nfor a new age. He stated that whatever\nchanges may take place ln the social\norder the onu first ln demand will\nbe thon of highest training. The\nfuture, he said, will be moulded by a\ncombination of tbe enthusiasm and\nvitality of youth with the experience\nand Judgment of maturity. On behalf\not the school board, of which he ls a\nmember, Dr. On welcomed tbe different groups prennt. the parents,\npupils, teachers and guutt: He took\noccasion tt the ume time to express\nthe gratification of tbe school board\nat the high standards attained by\nthe local nhool.\nPrincipal W. R. Pepper presented\nthe Idea of education u a progressive\nmovement, advancing yeu by yeu to\nmeet the constantly changing condition! of life. The schools, he declared,\nhtve adapted their courses to new\ndemands to iuch an extent that graduates coming back can budly recognize the schools u the ume places\nthey attended a few yurs before. He\nadded that thou who uy tbat the\nschools of today ue no more efficient than thon of the put ara\nthon Whom the world hu passed by,\nand that the universities are 36 yeara\nln advance of the average citizen. IS,\npepper thanked Father DeLutre and\ntbe Holy Family ichool committee\nfor tbe un of the auditorium for the\nevening.\nA very interesting feature of the\nevening wu the Installation ot the\nstudent council executive for nest\nyeu. Eleanor Buchanan, retiring president, presented to Tom MacDonald,\npresident-elect, the school ensign\nsymbolical of the pauing on of tbe\nresponsibilities of office. Following\nthis the new president prennted clau\npins to the members of tbe graduating clan and block lettu crests t>\n10 members of the clan wbo have\ngained distinction ln extra-curricular\ntetm tiu,\nThon who received the creite were\nEleanor Buchanan, Oordon Mulrhead,\nJohn Verkuk, Ian Dufour, Erman\nFlorillo, Laurence Coles. Agnu Peterson. Robert Crluflo, Eleanor Alello\nand Oeorge Lancutu. Ian Dufour responded for the class ln appreciation\nof the high school, IU Instruction, ltl\nfriendships. Its influence and finally\nof tbe mementos given the graduating pupils.\nT e high nhool symphony orchutra of 10 violins, all boys, wltb Shirley\nBebb at the piano, opened and cloaed\nthe program. Other numbers were\nTen Little Nigger Boys, in character;\nvocal trio by Mlu M. E. Cotttngham.\nMln M. Shaw and C. O. Duncan; song\nNancy Lee by the boyi' gin club;\nLittle Orphan Annie, by thc girls'\nglu club; Instrumental trio by Mlu\nCottlngham, K. A. Alexander and Dan\nButala; Song of the Birch Buk Moon\nby Mona Asnlstlne and Frank Corrl-\ngan, and the Enter Parade with Violet Rltzuto tnd Oordon Perry supported by the boys gin club. Mlu\nNorma   Douglu   accompanied.\nAfter the concert a dance sponsored\nby the Junior clau wu held tn Victoria hall to which wue Invited the\nhigh school and ex-high puplla with\nltdy friends and escorts. This dance,\nIt Is hoped will alao become an annual future u the Junior prom.\nI.O.D.E. Receipts\n$52,870 in Year\nTORONTO, June 1 (CP)--The\nfinancial and other reports came\nbefore the annual muting of the\nImperial Order, Daughters ot the\nEmpire today. Mn. F. P. McCurdy.\ntreasurer, reported receipts of 862,-\n870 tnd disbursements included 631.-\n18.\nThe receipt*, she Uld, did not include money taken ln by chapters\nfor their activities.\nMlu W. Oordon, educational ncntary, uld nven provlncu had unt\nlibraries to schools. 83 libraries hiving   been  ordered.\nNational life membership for Mrs.\nR. H. Htrt ot Winnipeg, wu ratified.\nFcstivol Music\nin Curriculum of\nSchools Is Urged\nSASKATOON, June 1 (CP)\u2014The\nInclusion of festlvil mutlc m tbt\nuhool curriculum to facilitate tbe\nteaching of the tut plecu. md\ntlso instill interest ln the pupils\nend teachers who htve not yet en-\ntered festivals, was recommended\nat the snnusl meeting of tbe Saskatchewan Musical association here\ntoday.\nOILY HEAD\nIt la not hirmful to ihimpoo in\noily btid of hair tvery ten dtyt.\nCleanliness Is absolutely neceuary\nto tbe hetlth tnd beeuty of the htlr.\nTOU can't htvt buutltul htlr lt\nyour seilp Is clogged wltb ImpmMUeil\nThe but procedure Is to shampoo\nyour hair whenever It be mu dirty.\nOily hair grows dirty more quickly\nthan dry hair, and can endure shampooing more frequently. If you chooee\na pure, bland soap for your shampoo,\nand rlnn your hair thoroughly afterward, the shampoo will prove beneficial rathu than detrimental, to\nyour hair health.\nPAOI FIVE\nUMMMM_nm_aM_m_mnm_umnmmmmnvM_^^\nCaMeagher'sSt)\n607 Baker St.\nPhone 200\nSTORE NEWS\nBETTER QUALITY MERCHANDISE AT SPECIAL PRICES\nFOR TUESDAY SHOPPERS\nVOILE DRESSES\nm\n*fo\nCool frocks for\nsummer in the\nseason's latest\nstyles. Made ot\nimported voiles\nin a range of\nnew designs.\nSizes 14 to 20\nand 181\/a to 24V_.\nALL ONE\nPRICE,\nEACH .. f3.95\nOr&andy\nBlouses\nFlowered or plaid\norgandy blouses\nin a good quality\norgandy.'Short\nsleeves and novelty collars. All\nwanted colors.\nSizes 82 to 36.\nEACH ,. 11.65\nWhite Gloves\nPullon styles of good quality chamoisette  or silk.  Plsin  or organdy\ncuffs. Sizes 6*Vj to 7.\nTHE PAIR   75-f to 91.25\nNew Tennis Coats\nWhite or colored tennis coats of\npure wool flannel. Tailored to fit.\nSingle  or double  breasted  styles.\nSizes 14 to 18.\nEACH  |5.00\nWhite Handbags\n-w\nWhite \u00bb3\nB\nSilk Skirts\nMade of the\nnew rough crepe\nin sizes 14 to 20.\nThey come per-\nfectly tailored\nand will fit well.\nPlain or pleated\nstyles.\nEACH .. $4.50\n*Z*\nNew  white handbags  in envelope\nor underarm styles. Mostly fitted\nwith zipper fasteners. All nicely fin*\\\nished.\nEACH fl.25 to ?1.65\nKOOTENAY EGG\nMEN LOOK TO\nFEDERAL BILL\nAssociation Names a\nCommittee to Lay\nOut Scheme\nCENTRAL AGENCIES\nNELSON AND TRAIL\nBowell Talks on Grade\nProblem; Green Is\nPresident\nOne of the Kootenay Industries\nthat is expecting to take advantage\nof the Dominion marketing legislation when It comes Into fores la\ntbe organised poultry Industry, the\nannual convention of the Kootenay\nPoultry association, held at the city\nhall  here  Friday  made  cleu.\nAfter hearing an address by S. R.\nBowell. Dominion egg Inspector,\nmainly devoted to the market question, the association held a lengthy\ndiscussion, and then appolned P. W.\nOreen, W. ll. Smith and A. 4\nThompson a committee to act wltb\nInspector Bowell In drawing up plans\nfor action after the Dominion measure becomes lsw.\nIn hts address, which waa given\nat the afternoon nsslon, Mr. Bowell\nfirst spoke of the new grading\nregulations, which came into effect\nlast yeu. He Intimated producer\ngrading was not proving very aatls-\ntactory, as many producers were not\ngrading out tha bloodspots accurately enough, and stated the department of agriculture waa Insisting thet improvement be shown ln\ngrading grade \"A\" and grade \"B\"\neggs, so as to establish greater confidence on the part of the consumer.\nBOWELL   ON  MARKETING\nTurning to the muket question,\nMr. Bowell expressed the opinion\nthat the only war eggs could be\nsatisfactorily marketed in Nelson and\nTrail at present was through a central grading 'agency at each place,\nthrough wblch all eggs could be\ncandled and graded before going to\nthe retail trade, cafes, and other\nprincipal consumers. The eggs could\nbe graded at the central agencies,\nend pasaed on to the trade at necessary intervals. Besides gaining ef*\nflclency, Mr. Bowell figured tbat this\nwould afford fu cheaper handling\nthan the preaent system, and might\nUlng the costs from producer to\nretailer. Including transportation.\ngrading, down to an average of 5\ncente per doaen. This plen la being\nbled out In different parte of Canada, and If tried here and found\nsuccessful, could be extended to\ncover the whole Kootenay district.\noiticsbs elects.-.\nThe morning session wee devoted\nto the election of officers, and to\nthe reception and discussion of reporta.\nP. W. Oreen of Winlaw succeeds\nW. 3. McKlm of Nelton In the presidents cbalr, and A. O. Thompeon\nof Nelaon follows Oscar Pennoyer\nof orand Porks es vice-president, a\nis. Landon of Orand Forks waa re\nelected secretary-treasurer, and William Buchanan of Robson wu reelected auditor.\nSixteen directors wue elected as\nfollows: W. J. McKlm. Neleon; William Buchanan, Robson; O. B. Appleton, Sunshine Bay; A. L. Levy,\nNew Denver; Thomu O'Neill, Oray\nCreek; D. Bradley, Creeton: p. W.\nOreen, Winlaw; w. T. Wynne, Apple-\ndale; F. 3. Powell. Ferry Siding;\nOscar Pennoyer and A. D. Morrison.\nOrand Forka: W. 3, Clarldge. Burton; William Rogers, Arro*# Puk;\nOus Henke, Nakusp; R. W. Chalmers,\nThrums; w. M, Smith, Frultvale.\nDelegates ln attendance were O. L.\nLandon, Grand Forks; 3. B. Dolman,\nKarl Jensen, Que Henke, and H.\nKershaw, Nakuap John Kglotf and\nW. Boothby, Idgewooft wuilam\nBuchanan, Robson: I. Jarrett and\nW. M. Smith. Frultvale; P. W.\nOreen, Winlaw; W. S. McAlplne.\nCreeton; H. M. Oreenwood and J.\nD. Macdonell, Willow Point; and 8.\nR. Bowell, A. O. Thompson and O.\nF. Wood, Nelson.\nBOSWELL WIU\nSHIP VIA CRESTON\nBOSWILL, June J\u2014Monday afternoon five members of the Crawford\nBay C. C. T. club were the gueete of\nthe Boewell C. C. Fen ln a get-\ntogether effort. The alma and platform of the C. O. F. were discussed at\nlength, after which the party adjourned for refreshments. The guests\nof the club were W. Jacobeon, D. Bros-\nter. W. Bay Hss, A. Nelson, I. Palmer.\nThere waa a big crowd ln tbe Memorial hall on Monday evening to beu\nan address by H, I. Winch, ML A. Mr.\nwinch's speech was followed with\ngreat lnerest, and he wu loudly applauded, but only a few questions\nwere aaked by members of the audience.\nThe Boswell Fruit Orowen held\ntheir annual meeting Tuesday evening. President 8. S. Frank waa ln\nthe chair, and there was a record attendance. This year the Boewell\nOrowera will ship through the Ores-\nton Orowen' union, and tt simplify\nshipping arrangements, they Intend\nto adopt Creston time tot the summer\nmonths. Creeton ls normally one\nhour In advance ot Boewell.\nSe'.vral new memben were signed\nup, and now practically aU growers\nara ln the organization. Directors\nelected were A. Hepher, A. Mackle, A.\nH. Ascott, S. Frank, C. holden, B. H.\nSmith. K. Wallace. 8.8. Frank and A.\nMackle wen re-elected u preeldent\nand vice-president respectively. P. H.\nRichardson baa been appointed secretary-manager.\nOn Wednesday afternoon J. X. Britton. of the Summerland Bxperlmental\nfarm, gave a most interesting address\nen the work of tbe farm. The address\nwu keenly appreciated, and a great\nmany questions were aeked.\nDuring the summer, specimens of\nBoswell fruit ue to be sent to the experimental farm where they win be\ntested In various ways for quality and\nparticularly for keeping qualities. F.\nCummings, president of the Farmer's\ninstitute waa ln the chair.\nAt the meeting ot tbe Boewe.. and\nDistrict Farmers' Institute Wednesday, tt was decided to try to arrange\na Joint picnic with Oray Creek and\nCrawford Bay at the Lockhart camp\nmiddle of July.   '\nVolunteers are to be called fu to\nact on the Regatta committee. It ls\nhoped this yeu, probably abovt the\nmiddle of July, q\nH. S. Winch, M.L.A., was the guest\nof Mr. and Mra. F. Kunst on Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. D. Oraham Brown\nhare returned from e motor trip to\nBanff.\nE. NORD GOES\nTO BRIDGE RIVER\nSALMO, June 8\u2014Mr. and Mrs. E.\n\u2022Nord and son Henry spent Thursday\nnight ln town with Mrs. Nord 'a par-*\nents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Payant. They\nwere motoring from Klmberley to\nBridge Rivet where Mrs. Nord ts going\nto work.\nMn. F. Llndstrom and Infant\ndaughter returned Thursday from tbe\nKootenay Lake Oeneral hospital. ,\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Oollgbtly and\nllttle daughter of the Keystone mine\nneu Erie ue visiting Mrs. Oollghtly's\npuents here.\nArthur Lakes of Vancouver wu a\nvisitor to the Queen mine last week.\nW. B. DeWctt of Spokane wae a\nvisiter ln town last week and visited\naome of the mines ln tbe district.\nSOl'TH JERSEY\nBeat yolk of one egg until thick.\nAdd one and one-half tablespoons\nsugar and beat again. Beat white of\nan egg to a stiff froth, mix with\nyolk and sugsr. add six tablespoons\nmilk or cream, and five of strong\ncoffee.\n| CHANS ,,4 POLISHES\nI WINDOWS. MIMOM. IAIH\n| fllll \u2022\u2022* WASH IAHNI\nCANNOf\nSCIAKH\nSAFETY - SERVICE\nSATISFACTION\nStorage \u2014 Cartogt\nForwarding and Distributing\nPiano and Safo Moving a Specialty\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\n723 Baker St. Phont 33\n \u25a0\u25a0\"\n\t\n .\t\n1-T-.\nPAGE tlX  -\u2014I '  THI NEtSON DAILY NIWI, NILION, B.C*\u2014IMONDAY MORNINO, JUKI 4, 1H4 \u25a0\nCavalcade Breaks Record to Take Derby\nCLIPS QUARTER\nSECOND OFF IN\nBRILLIANT TIME\nKentucky   Winner\nShatters Tradition\nof 45 Years\nSURGES AHEAD IN\nTHE LAST STAGES\nTwo Lengths Ahead of\nDiscovery; Singing\nWood Third\nBy CHARLES IIUNKLEY\nAuoelated Frees Sports Writer\nCHICAGO, June 8 (AP)\u2014Bred ol\nthe tlneet English stock. Cavalcade,\nout ol Lance Gaye-Haetlly by Hurry-\non, tonight atood the unchallenged\nchampion ot the united states turf.\nCharging through the stretch like\na hurricane, the pride ot Mri. Dodge\nBloane'e stable galloped to an impressive victory ln the 326,000 added\nAmerican Derby Saturday to thrill\n80,000 spectators with hla dramatic\nflnlih and leave little doubt as to\nthe greatest thoroughbred south ot\nthe border.\nThe Kentucky Derby winner,by hla\nvictory equalled the achievement ol\nSpokane of winning both tbe Kentucky classic and the American\nDerby ln the same year, shattering\ntradition that epannea 48 yean.\nSpokane won both races ln 1880.\nNOSES  AHEAD\nlanlcidr, with the 84-year-old\nMack earner on his back, smothered  the  field   of   nine  with  a\nground-eetlnj charge in the last\nquarter   mile   to   overcome   discovery tnd Singing Wood, which\nfinished second end third, respectively.\n,    cavalcade boundea to victory by\na margin of two lengths over Discovery, the entry of Alfred O. Van-\nderbllt ot New York, while Blnglng\nWood, winner of the withers mile\nat Belmont, waa six lengths back ot\nDiscovery.\nThen came Plight, winner ot the\nTexae Derby, with Patch pocket\nfifth, Blen Fait sl.th. and Mata\nHari, t|\u00bb gams llttle lllly which wt\nthe blistering pace for nearly a\nmile, pulling up seventh. Anarchy,\ncoupled with cavalcade wu eighth,\nana Technocracy, laat.\nCavalcade ran the mile and a\nquarter ln 2:04 which clipped a fifth\nof a eecond off the Derby record.\nHe' pud 8414 to win, 13.0. to place\nand 43.10 to show. The. place and\nahow prlcee on Discovery were exactly tbe same\u201412.68. while Singing\nWood returned tSSO to ihow.\nBy hli victory Cavalcade earned\n818,810 tor Mrs. Sloane.\nBaseball's\nBlgjlx\nBy tht Associated Press\nFloyd (Arky) Vaughan of Pitta*\nbiush joined the big six yestc.-jiy by\nputting on a bitting spurt Just when\nJoe Medwlck at St. Louis struck a\nslump. Medwlck loat nine polnte trom\nhis average when* he failed to hit\nwhile Vaughan gained eeven by connecting twice ln three tlmei. at bat\nThli gave him a .884 mark and last\nplace ln the sextette. The leaders of\nthe two leagues, Bam Leille and Rollle\nHemsley loet one point each but\nHeinle Manush equalled Vaughan'e\nhitting atunt and gained four polnte.\nthe standing\nHemsley, Browns ..\nManush, Senators\nVosmlk, Indians\nLeslie, Dodgers\t\nHendrlck, Phillies\nVaughan, Pirates .\nO AB R H Pet.\n. 81 111 14 48 .414\n44 186 88 13 .387\n. 31 141 28 66 .381\n43 161 20 80 .376\n34 18 10 31 .375\n40 143 45 63 .364\nM'CABE AGAIN\nLEADS AUSSIES\nVisitors Off to Good\nStart Against\nLancashire\nSULLIVAN BOYS\nWIN TWO GAMES\n...KIMBKRI.EV, Jnne 3\u2014Tbe soliivan\nmine football team Invaded Coleman\nand Michel during lut week-end,\nplaying three games In four days, with\nno reserves, and driving their own\ncars. They deteater Coleman, 3*1 and\nMichel 3*0. There were big crowds\nat both places and much enthusiasm\nshown. At Michel the game wu enlivened by whirlwinds of coal dust\nthat made darkles ot the playen and\n> played havoc with the secretary's\ndean flannel suit. The Klmberley\nteam played both games well, keeping command from the start. Tnere\nwes a surprising amount of head-work\nIn these soccer games. Some of the\nboya are experts at Jumping and directing a falling ball with their heads.\nLEAGUE STANDING\nP W LDPet\nKlmberley  8  6   1   0 10\nCoal Creek  6   4  2   0  8\nCorbin 8   8   2   0   6\nFernie   8   3   0   0   6\nColeman - - - 8   8  2  0  6\nMichel  - 8   2   2   18\nBellevue 8   18   18\nBlalrmore - 6   14  0  3\nHllcrost   8   0   8   0  0\nHome Runs In\nBig time\n(By the Associated Pratt)\nHomt runt yeaterday: Foxx, Athletics; Jeffries, Phillies, two each;\nRuth, Yankeei; Gehrig, Ytnkeei;\nMcNilr, Athletics; Bonura, White\nSox; Goilin, Tigers: Greenberg,\nTlgera; Gehrlnger, Tlgen; Cochrane, Tigers; West, Browns; Burnett,\nIndians; Allen, Phillies; J. Moore.\nPhillies; Jackson, Giants; Martin,\nCardinals; Hartnett. Cubs, one each.\nThe leaden: Klein, Cuba 14;\nGehrig, Yankees, 13; Bonura, White\nSox, 13; Foxx, Athletlci, 13; John-\nton, Athletics, 11; Hartnett, Cubt,\n11.\nLeague totals: American 229; Na-\ntiontl 207; total 432.\nMANCHESTER, England, June 8\n(CP cable)\u2014Opening their lut match\nbefore starting the test serlee against\nEngland next week, the touring Australians today got off to a great start\nagainst tbe Lancashire County aide,\nrunning up 836 for eight wlckete.\nThe visiting cricketers were again\nled by Stanley McCabe. their beet all-\narounder. McCabe, who earlier thll\nweek compiled 340 rune agalnit Surrey, rolled up 143 before losing his\nwicket this afternoon. His drives and\ncute were magnificent and hli run*\ngetting wu steady, his Innings luting four hours. He had 15 fours. W.\nBarnett aided the campaign with 63,\nnot out.'\nPROTESTS ARISE\nIN SOFTBALL\nOeorge Benwell, manager of the\nHume Hotel Men'e Softball club.\nhu protested Thursday night's league\ngame ln which the Savoy Hotel\nnine cinched the tint half honors\nby taking a 28-23 verdict over the\neecond place Hume Hotel No. 1\nteam.\nThe manager ot the Hume Hotel\nclub bases his protut on the ruling of the B.C. Softball association\nrules which state that all spectators\nshall be 10 feet trom the line of\nplay, and states that Interference\nwith the play ls caused by epee-\ntatora getting on the baae line,\nand therefore, the game cannot\nbe classed u a regular game.  *\nLate Friday afternoon the Savoy\nteam entered a counter protest,\nclaiming that T. Paucreta and Sam\nPaaacrtta were regularly registered\nplayen with the Hume Hotel No. e\nelub and flnlihed the regular tin-\nhalf schedule with' that club, and\nalthough tha Hume Hotel Athletic\nassociation ls reported to be fielding only one team ln the second\nhalf, theee playera were not eligible\nto play with any other club during\nthe balance ot the flnt halt schedule.\nPred OIU, pruldent of the Mens\nleague hu called a meeting bf the\nfull executive tor hla place on Monday evening, when a representative\not all the eight teama ln the league\nand Ed Boyes and A. Mclnnls who\numpired the game are asked to at*\ntend.\n2QQ0TH GAME\nFOR FRISCH\nBut His Cards Beaten;\nCubs Win; Giants\nBeaten\nSt.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW     L\nLoula  36   16\nHew york\nChicago     _......_........\nPittsburgh    \t\nBoston    \u2014.-.\nBrooklyn   .\t\nPhiladelphia    \t\nCincinnati  .. ..\n. 31 IT\n. 21 11\n. 23 11\n. 23 11\n. 11 24\n12 26\n8 20\nPITTSBURGH, June 3 (AP) \u2014\nFrankle Frlach, hard-working manager of the Cardinals, played hts\n2000th National league bastkall\ngame today, but the pirates best\nbia team 4-3 miking lt three 'dut\nof tour for the serlee. In the seventh. Pepper Martin lined the ball\nover the left wall tor a two-run\nhomer. Thevenow drove ln the final\nPirate tally in the eighth.\nSt.   Louie       3    10\nPittsburgh     4   II   0\nCarleton and Delancey; Meine,\nHoyt and Grace.\nCUBS NICKED FOB 11\nHITS   BUT   STILL   WIN\nCINCINNATI, June 8 (AP) \u2014\nGranting hits liberally, Pat Malone nevertheless held Cincinnati\nReds In check today while hia teammates, led by Woody English, hammered out, a 1-1 victory for Chicago.\nA double by English, bunched\nwith three singles and a walk helped score three runs ln the third.\nHis triple In the fourth, along with\ndouble and a tingle, added two\nmore. Gabby Hartnett't llth home\nrun of * the season brought another\nln the sixth.\nChicago      7   16  0\nCincinnati     1   11   0\nMalone and Hartnett; Johnion,\nFrletu, Kolp, Derringer and O'Farrell.\nPHILLIES   BBEAK   LOSINO\nSTBEAK AT GIANTS' EXPENSE\nNEW YORK, June 8 (AP)\u2014Irvine\njeffrlea led the phUUes to a victory over the olanta today, winning the series final 6-2 and breaking Philadelphia's seven game losing streak.\nJeffries it two more home runt\nto make It four for the aeries and\nfour for the seaaon.\nPhiladelphia   *.    S   0   0\nNew York    2   11\nDavit, Hansen and Wilson; Clark,\nBowman and Richards.\nSaturday Ball\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\nCleveland 3, St. Louie t.\nNew York 8, Philadelphia S.\nDetroit 13, Chicago 0.\nWaahlngton 3-1, Boiton 1*10.\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nNew York 6, Philadelphia 4.\nBoeton 16, Brooklyn 6.\nCincinnati 8, Chicago 1.\nPlttaburgh 4-6, St. Louis 13-8.\nPACIFIC COAST LEAGUE\nMissions S, Sen Francisco 6.\nHollywood 1, Los Angela 4.\nOakland 0-3, Portland 3-10.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nBaltimore 1, Newark 3.\nRochester 3, Buffalo 3.\nMontreal 6-5, Toronto 8-6.\nAMERICAN ASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis 3, Toledo 10.\nMinneapolis 3, Milwaukee '..\nBt. Paul 3, Kansas City 11.\nNORTHERN LEAGUE\nEast Orand Porks 11-10, Winnipeg\n6-4.\nDuluth 8, Bralnerd Little Palla 3.\nEau Claire 6, Superior 16.\nPargo-Moorhead 6, Crookston 1.\nINTERNATIONAL\nLEAGUE\nSUNDAY\nBaltimore 8-1; Newark 5-11.\nBuffalo 8; Rochester 7.\nToronto 8-2: Montreal 4-6.\nSyrtcuit 7-0; Albany 21*11.\nBOSTON'S   STRING  OF WINS\nIS FINALLY HALTED\nBOSTON. June, 8 (AP)\u2014effective\npitching o< kundkleball Leonard of\nBrooklyn halted Boston's winning\nstreak which had reached eeven In\na row, si the Dodgen took the but\ngame of their series today 6-1.\nBrooklyn            .... ,8   7   1\nBoeton        ...  -    1  8   1\nLeonard and Lopez; Elliott, Smith,\nBetts and Spohrer.\nUi WINS IN\nFINALS, MEXICO\nBALTIMORE, June 3 (AP).\u2014R.\nNorrlt Willitmt, tecond non-playing captain ot the United States\nDavit cup tennis team, believes the\nteam hta a 50*50 chance to defeat\nthe winner ot the European zone\nplay.\n\"Our men are showing much improvement,\" he taid after watching\nthe concluding matches igalntt\nMexico here Saturday.\nOn Saturday the Americana swept\nthe series with Mexico by winning\nthe final two singles matches.\nShields took the inexperienced\nAngel Roldan into camp In easy\nfashion by 6*2, 6-1, 6-2,T>ut Wood\nwat extended in the final fray.\nPlaying tgainst Dr. Ricardo Tapia.\nthe Mexican team ciptiln, Wood\nhid to use ill his tennli tricks to\nwin 6*4, 0-7, 6-0.\nHorse-Races But\nNo Betting\u2014Aww!\nCHILLIWACK, B.C., Junt 8 (CP)\n\u2014Although hone-racing will be a\nfeature of the ChllUwack cherry\ncarnival on July 2, the carnival\noommlttee hu announced that parl-\nmutuel machines will not be permitted to operate and betting will be\nprohibited.\nAt leut 80 per cent of tbe racei\nwill be for locally owned and bred\nhorses but a good showing of\nhorses from other districts are expected tor the other races.\n\"Big League\"\nBASEBALL\nIn 1933\nWUlePooi.\nilAcWO IN HW FAct WTides\nIND CHUCK KLEIN WAS DECORATED\nvm. THfHWBeoouAR*wni.e3*\nI\n' CiYDe-\nSuKEfWTH,'\nIDODGER\nCATOHeR,\nMNTHl\nANY (MAKE\nOfToBMCO\nIN TWO\nDRTURK\nPUfFS.\nL\n7tt^#<t*_i-yV*\nBy AL DEMAREE\nAmerican Association\nw Sunday\nSL Paul 4; Kansas City 5.   \u2022\nMinneapolis 2*11; Milwaukee 0-5.\nLouisville S-3; Columbus 14-0.\nIndianapolit 4-3; Toledo 5*4.\n'Chuck\" Klein wu stopped cold ln\n34 ball games In 1033 and Jimmy Foxx\nonly 37 times. Csrl Hubbell and Hal\nSchumacher ot the Olanta couldn't\natop Klein but their bull-pen pal,\nHerman Bell did. Dizzy Dean couldn't\n\"slam the door ln Us face*, but Jim\nMooney did ln two games, although\nreleased before the season wu over.\nChuck's worst \"hone col \" m nth\nwu tn September when he went hit-\nlew ln nine games. His beet month\nwu July when he wu only ahut o-t\ntour times. Jimmy ft*-__ found the\npitching-of the Yankees his easiest\ndish, and wu shut out by thejn twice;\nWhite Sox and Browne three times;\nSenators and Cleveland four times;\n.trolt five and the Red Sox six\ntlmw.        .,\nTODAY'S  QUESTION '\nWhat club In the American league\nhu five southpaws on lta pitching\nstaff! Answer tomorrow.\nAnswer to Saturday's quutlon: BUI\nKlem Is umpiring his thirtieth year ln\nthe National lugue.\nCRAWFORD IS\nBEATEN, FINAL\nPARIS, June 8 (AP).-Helen Ja-\ncobi and Sarah Palfrey, America's\nNo. 1 Wlghtman cup doublet com\nbination, were beaten in the final\nround of women't doublet by Elix.\nabeth Ryan, former Calif ornlan, and\nMme. Rene Mathleu of France, 3*6,\n6-4, 8-2, at the French hard court\ntennis championships closed ln Ro*\nltnd Garros stadium today.\nA. crowd Of 7000 ttw Miss Ryan,\nwho hat lived in England for many\nyeara, tnd her French ptrtner retain the title they won a1 year ago\nafter a stiff fight.\nThe mtn't doublet champlonahlp\nwent to the French veterans, Jean\nBorotra and Jacques Brugnon, who\noutlasted Jack Crawford and Viviln\nMcGrath of Australia, 11-9, S-3, 2-6,\n4-6, 0-7.\nBorotra also became co-holder of\nthe mixed doubles crown u he and\nColletto Rotambert defeated Miss\nRyan and Adrian Quist of Australia in the final round, 6-2, 6-4.\nIn two surprising reversals of\nform Saturdiy. Helen Jacobs, United States titleholder, failed in her\nfifth bid tor the French hard court\ntennia championship tnd Crawford\nwent down to defeat in the defence\nof hit singles crown.\nMargaret (Peggy) Scrlven, left-\nhanded English star defending the\ntitle the won lttt yetr, picked too\nmuch power In her ttroket for the\nAmerican champion, defeating Mln\nJacob! 7-5,4-6,6-1. Crawford bowed\nto Baron Gottfried von Cramm of\nGermany, in a long drawn out five-\nset match, The scores were 6-4, 7*9,\n3-6, 7-5, 8-3.\nCRICKET SCORES\nLONDON, June 3 (CP cable) \u2014\nScone at the clou of play ln first-\nclass county cricket matches opening\nSaturday were:\nSurrey US (Read eeven for 86):\nEssex 418 for five (Cutmore 60,\nO'Connor 108 not out, Asbton 118)\nat Brentwood.\nMiddlesex 147 (Hart 86. Cadogan\nseven for 62); Hampshire 181 for all\n(Mead 51 not out) at Srth t\nDerby 387 for eight, againat Nottinghamshire at Nottingham.\nNorthamptonshire 378 for eight\n(Timms 310 not out) against Worcester at Stourbridge.\nYorkshire 334 (Barber 78, Davidson\n60, Watt flvt tor 47); Kent 108 for\nthree (Wooley 106, Todd 61 not oyt)\nat Leeds.\nGlamorgan 318 (Levis 66, Geary\nfour tor 88); Leicestershire 88 for\none, at Hinckley.\nWarwickshire 310 Kuitall 60, Collin 61); Buatex 67 for two at Birmingham.\nYANKSWIKIN\nHOMERUNFIGHT\nFoxx Grabs Two as the\nA's Lose; Ruth,\nGehrig, One\nW t_ Pet\nNew York   24 17 .885\nDetroit     24 18 .571\nCleveland     21 16 .568\nSt Loult   20 19 -513\nWuhlngton   22 22 .500\nBoiton   20 22 .476\nPhiladelphia   17 24 .415\nChicago  15 25 J75\nPHILADELPHIA, June 8 (AP)\nLeft** Gomez pitched New York Yanks\nto a 8-3 victory over the Athletics\ntoday. The decision gave gave the\nYanks the three-game series by a\ncount of two to one. It wu alao\nGomez's eighth win of the year againat\none defeat.\nThe contest wu a battle of home\nruns. Jimmy Foxx ran up hla total\nfor the season to 13 by hitting two\nfor tbe Athletics, and McNair bit one.\nLou Oehrlg and Babe Ruth bad circuit clouts for the Yanks, Gehrig's\nbeing bla 13th of the season and\nRuth's his ninth.\nNew York -  8    8  0\nPhiladelphia    3    7   0\nGomez and Dickey; Cain, Caaearclla\nand Berry.\nTIOEBS  8COBE  FODB\nHOMERS TO BEAT CHI\nCHICAGO, June 3 (AP)\u2014A quar*\ntette ot Detroit home runs taahtoned\nby Ooose Goslln, Manager Mickey\nCochrane, Hank Greenberg and Charley Gehrlnger, made Tom Bridges'\nwork easy today and the Tigers\ntr*_unoed Chlugo White Sox 11-3.\nDetroit  11   15   0\n0  0\nChi. go .\t\nBridges and Cochrane; Earnshaw.\nHaving, Wyatt and Madjeekl.\nCLEVELAND TOPPLED FBOM\nTOP BY ST. LOUIS\nST. LOOTS, June 8 (AP)*\u2014Clinching\na substantial lead with uven rune\nln the elxth Inning, St Louis Browns\ntoday knocked Cleveland off their\nperc! atop the American league stand\nIng with a 13-8 victory.\nWhile the Browns were beating out\ntheir win, the Yankees, aided by the\nCleveland defeat here, moved Into\ntint place by downing Philadelphia\nCleveland    S   11   8\nSt. Louis  1\"   IS   1\nHUdebrand, Hudlin and Pytlak;\nHadley, Andrews and Hemsley.\nBOITON WINS BY\n7-2 OVER SENATORS\nWASHINGTON, June 3 (AP).-\nTimely and frequent hitting by the\nRed Sox, coupled with Early White-\nhill's erratic pitching, gave Boston a\n7-2 victory today over the Stnatort.\nBoston     7  9   1\nWathington     1   8   1\nOttermueUer and R. Ftrrell;\nWhltehlll and Berg.\nSAVOY BEATS\nTHE NEW GRAND\nTaking a 7*1 lead ln the first four\nInnings, the Savoy Hotel men'a soft*\nball nine nosed out tbe New Orand\nHotel club 8*6 on Friday evening to\nkeep their record dun ln the lint\nhalf of the league, the Savoy team's\nrecord itandlng at \u25a0aeven ttralght\nwins.\n. Tht New Grand club made a etrong\ncomeback ln the latter part after\nbeing on the short end of a 7-1\nscore at the end ot the fourth In\nntng, scoring thru runs ln the fifth\nand two more ln the seventh, while\nSavoy team could only scon one run\nIn the sixth. The game wu called by\nmutual consent at the end of the\nseventh inning due to heavy rain. V.\nAhrens, Phil Kuntz and E. Arit scored\ntwo runs eech for the Savoy team,\nBill Klrby wu tha only New Orand\nplayer to score more than one run.\nFletcher and Joe Hunden formed\nthe battery for the wlnnen with BIU\nBrown pitching for the New Orand\nclub and B. Llmacher catching.\nThe trams were:\nSavoy Totel\u2014D. Ball, F. Hamman,\nV. Ahrens, W. Arit P. Kuntz, I. Arit.\nG. Ltpsack, N. Fletcher, and Joe\nHunden.\nNew Orand Hotel\u2014B. Llmacher,\nBill Brown, 8. Ball, BIU Klrby, J.\nStout, Spud Mclvor, Bob Klrby, B.\nLlmacher and S. Brown.\nToo Much Tonic\nDefeats Crawford\nPARIS, Junt I (AP). \u2014 Too\nmuch whiskey In I glass of wtttr\nltd to the dethronement of Crawford It tht singles chimplon, In\ntht opinion ef tourniment official*.\nseeking t \"shot In tht arm\"\nduring the rest interval after tht\nthird ut of hit mttch with Vtn\nCramm, tht Australian asked for\nwhiskey and water, a restorative\ncommonly 'used. Hit ttimmitei,\nhowever, pound to much liquor\ninto tht gists thlt Crawford's legs\nwtrt \"eut In two\" tnd tht chtmpion stumbled ind filtered hit\nwty through tht lttt two ittt,\nboth of which Von Crimm won.\nUniform Ball\nAdopted by League\n\u2022While The\nNational\nleague is.\nmors u8siml-  _,\n J_____t_____-___\nBy AL DEMAREE\nNow that tht two major leagues\nhave adopted a uniform ball and\nbatting and pitching performances\ncan be more accurately compared,\ntbe two circuits' attitude on the handling of tbe hall ls Interesting.\nIr the American league, the umpires mult tou out new balls directly\nto tb t pitcher, who ls not aUowed to\nthrow the ball to any lnfielder except\nln an attempt to retire a bau runner.\nIn the Rational league, tbe umpire\nat his own discretion, either handa\nthe ball to the catcher or rolls the\nball to an lnfielder, wbo promptly\nap: ..es a coating of tobacco and dust\nand * relay* lt to another lnfielder\nwho dou the aame. Tble taku a certain amount ot gloss oft the ball and\npresumably glvu the pitchers an ad*\nvantage In the National league.\nThis Idea la largely imaginative, u\nTy Cobb, Joe Jackson and >-ther slug-\ngen of tbe old days hit over .400\nagalnit a ball u black u Con-tie\nMack's derby.\nTODAY'S  QUESTION\nWhat umpire Is umpiring hit 30th\nyear ln the National league? Answer\nMonday.\nAnswer to yuterday'e question\u2014Oscar Mellllo of tbe St. Louis Browns\naccepted 820 chances without an\nerror.\nGREYHOUNDS WIN\nIN THE NINTH\nPushing the tlelng tnd winning\nruns across the plate with two down\nin the laat ot the ninth Inning, the\nGityhoundt, ladlee' softball olub, took\na close game trom the Bluebirds by a\n34-23 score os Friday evening to remain ln running tor third place ln\nthe league and a right to enter the\nleague playoffs. Both teams have another tame to play ln the regular\nschedule, and ahould the Greyhounds\nwin trom the Racketeers and the\nBlueblrdi lou to tbe Red Sox, tha\ntwo teams wlU be tied with five wins\nsnd five losses.\nThe conditions under which the\nteams were forced to play were far\nfrom Ideal tor either turn, aa the\ngame should have bun itopped at\nthe end of the eecond lnnlnj wben It\nstarted to rain, ud by the time the\nthird Inning got under way both\nplayera and fans were soaked to the\nskin. The teams decided to play lt\nout.\nHani Spiers started the Bluebirds\noff with a home run and Jean Spiers\nfollowed wtth another. But the Greyhounds came back .with five runt\nwben they went to bat In the flnt\not the aecond inning the Bluebirds\ntied up the ecore at 6-5, and then\n\u2022hut out the Greyhound!. The Blueblrdi scored five runa In the first of\nthe third, Haul Splera and Gladness\nHorstead poling out thrae-baggers.\nGreyhounds came back with four runa,\nNellie Leslie getting a home run.\nIn the fourth Inning the Bluebirds\nscored two runa, but due to wlldness\non the part of the Bluebird chuckert\nand wveral wild throws the Greyhounds crossed the plate for uven\nruns In the lut ot the fourth Inning\nto take a 16-12 lead. Tbe Bluebirds\nln the fifth ecored five runa, and\nshut out the Greyhounds to lead\n17-16.\nBoth teama went out In tucora-'on\nln tbe elxth and the Bluebirds were\nagain blanked In the seventh, while\ntbe Greyhounds added two runa. At\nthe end ot the eighth Inning the\nscore stood at 21-21, the Bluebirds\nscoring four tlmu againat three* for\nthe Oieyhoundi. In the first of the\nninth tbe Bluebirds took a 23-21 lead\nbut with the ball covered with mud,\ntwo walks and a couple of wild\npitches sent thru Onyhound runner.\nacross tht plate with the necessary\nrun margin to take the honon for\nthe day. Barbara Klngsett, Bluebird\nsecond baseman, wu out of the game\nwith a cut finger.\nMartha Drapaka, making her first\nappearance on a local diamond, obtained five clean hits. H el Spiers\nscored four runa for tbe Bluebirds,\nbut lt wu tbe lower end of the batting\norder that proved tbe moet effective,\nGladness Horstead getting five runs\nand Brownie Schupe four. Dorothy\nTHE GUMPS\nTHE LAST STRAW\nClassified Advertising\nPersonal\nRupture  Appliances\nRupture, abdominal weikneu.\nspinal deformity, vsrioocela.\nWrite J O Smith, British Appliance specialist. 16 Downle St,\n.Stratford.  Ont. (2764)\n\"PROSLSSflS\/'-WHATS TOURS?\nOct edvTrafroni \"Douglu,\" utrol*\noger. send birth date and 16c tor\ntrial reading. One questioned answered. 410 4th Bt, So., Lethbridge\nAlto. (2737)\nItch piles Irian. Try Geo Mf \u2022\n' at Hudson's Bay Co\n(2761)\nChina Remedy at Hudson's Bay Co\nHelp Wanted\nWANTBD-UAN AND WIPE POR\nfarm work. Must understand bow\nto farm and take care ol stock\nand willing to do lt and expee*\nto work. No other need apply\nEverything furnished. Tear round\nb U satisfactory. ADDlV Box 2736.\na\nson pally News.\n(2786)\nWANTED-CAPABLB OIRL POR\nhousework. Apply Mrs. William\nRutherford, ft. R. I Nelson.\nPhone  2881*2.    (2771}\nWANTED - WOMAN POR HOUSB-\nwork. nine to twelve daily. Ten\ndollar! per month. Apply with ref-\nerencei to Box 688. NeUon. .12764)\nEXPERIENCED WOMAN POR OEN-\neral housework In summer home\nfor July end Auguit Apply Mn, W.\nA. Nlibet 803 Coder St.        (3723)\nWANTED-MAID,  APPLY  SUPBBM-\ntendent   hoepital. (HMO)\n.Situations Wanted\nBOT. 16. GOOD ON RANCH, WANTS\nwork Box 2668~Dally News. (3663)\nFor Rent\nCOSY CABINS, KASLO, LAKE\nfrontage off main road. A beauty\nspot Rowboite. telephone. Beit\ntUhlng. APPly R* W. Dawson. Hlp-\nperson  Blk.,  Nelion. (2728)\nHOUSEKEEPING\nrent   Annable   Block\nPURNISHED\nnoma  tor   ..\n ' (8786)\npBrn    OR   ONTORN    AffS    Bt\nwuk or month  Medical Arts Bldg\n(2784)\nHBATED\nTOR   ROOMS\nshower\nSTEAM\ntermi moo   cm\nUglon\n<_____)\nTHREE ROOM.POHNISHTO'SprrB\ntot sent. Stirling Hotel.       (2781\")\nTORNISHED AND UNFURNISHED\nSuites for rent\u2014Kerr Apti. (2782)\n\u25a0TERRACE A-T8.   Buutltul   Modem\nFrlgidalre eaulpped suitei.  i2783)\npor rknt purnisUbd snn'B 607\nSilica street. >2701)\nHouses for Rent\nFOR      RENT \u2014 SEVEN-ROOMED\n,  house  with  all  modern  conveniences. Phone 677Y. i2776>\nSMALL HOUSE POR RENT, SILICA\n8t.T\u00bbhone>479L. t2761)\nFor Sale or Rent\n8   ROOM   HOUSE   POR   BALE   OR\nrent close In. Phone 672L.  (2>46>\nLive Stock for Sale\nPURE BRED^ AYRSHM BULL. IS\nmonths old. 126 cash or tike\nchickens   or   pigs   or   all.   Chris\nThorsteloton,   .Woodberiy    Creek,\nAinsworth, B\n(3762)\nFOR  SALl\u2014ONE  TEAM   MIX)   LBS.\n6 and 6 years, also smaller honu,\none 3 In. wagon, wanted 6 pack\nsaddles complete ln. good repair.\n(2810)\nProperty, for Sale\nTHREE HTODREDCHOICB BOIUJ*\nIng lots ln ths Townsite of Ainsworth. B. C For price and termi\nepptv John Burna. box 306, Nelion. B. O. (2476)\nACRES. SHALL HOUSE CI\/OBB IN,\nCheap for cuh    '\nDally News.\nApplv  BOX  2777.\n (2777)\nProperty Wanted\nWANTED TO PURCHASE PBUTT\nfarm, cherries, apples, etc. Must\nbe good varieties and ln good locality. Olve flguru ot production\nfor put two yeara or more. Apply giving price and terms to M.\nVerdonkTBoowel), B\/C.        (2780)\nLost and Found\nTO FINDERS\nIt you find t cat or a dog. a\npookitbcok. jewelry ot fur, or\nanything else of value,' telephone\nThe DaUy Newt A \"Pound\" Ad.\nwill be Inserted without cost to\nyou We will oollect from the\nowner.\nLOST\u2014BLACK CLUB BAO ON SAT-\nurday between Cutlegar and Nelson. Finder please leave at Dall:\nNew! office\u2014Reward, ,2831\nLive Stock Wanted\nWANTED-YOUNO PIOS. H. BOOR-\ngooli, Orcscemr Vtlley,        (2T03)\nPlants, Bulbs, Seeds\nBEDDINO PLANTS OP ALL\n~ doe. Double\n200\nand\ncelery\nPhone\nslvla 60c doe. tomatou 260\ndot..\u2014Cabbige   76c   per_ 100,\n-64R1,'\nBecker,\n(2727)\nTrappers' Supplies\nNEW TRAP GUARANTEED TO\ncatch wild animals alive, unhurt,\nConstructed ot iheet iron and\nwire, price |8 tor unell elu de.\nUvered. Alao Killing Trips ot mn\nconstruction and price chu. QMB\nman Court. Suk.  (26t\u00bbf.\nPumps for Sale\nLIMITED QUANTITY OP BELT\ndriven power pumps, 1988 modeli\nfor quick Uie. Special jubilee offer. Greatly reduced prloe. Real\nbargains.  WIU  Save   You  Money.*\nOlve   depth   of   well.   writt__*M\n. . to Beatty Bit\nnon. B. C. BOX 237-VE3.      (2781)\nonce to Beatty Broa. Limited, ver*\nI. Ver.\n(2781)\nAutomotive\nPOR SALE-UGHT\nPord truck. Oood\n2823, Pally News.\nDBLIV1RT\ncondition. Box\n (2828)\nMiscellaneous\nMINE SUPPLIES-RAILS, STOVES,\ntoola of sll kinds, bind and max\nchine drill steel. Immediate delivery. For prlcu write Box 3730..\nDally News. 37__9\nBusiness, Professional!\nDirectory\nAccountants\nCHAS.   F.   HUNTER,\nMunicipal\nP. O. Box 1181. Nelion, B. C\n-.   8.   F.   A* ,\nand Commercial Audltj\n(2787)\nAssayed\nE. W. W1DDOWBON established IMt\n808 joi-phlne St., Nelaon, B. C.\n__^ . tttm\nGRXNV1LLE  TT\nBaker St, Nelson, Box 736\nGRIMWOOO,   M\n\"  :\u00a3!\u00ab\n\"Boat Livery\nBEST pmsttBOROOGH OUTBOAM\nmotor st row ooats tor hln by da;\n\u2014Frank Seal, Balfour, B, 0. (27801\n Chiropodists\nDr. Mildred Slmonda Foot SpeelaM\n406 Pernwell, Spokane, Main (3081\n (I'm\nChiropractors\nR. E. Gray, D.C Ph.C. Ollker ;\nHock\n17821\nC.   HULTOREN   D.C.,   Ph.C..   Palme\nGraduate McCulloch Blk. PhTHl\n (27M1\nCleaning and Pressing\nSPRING COATb CLEANED C\nlined at tha Wardrobe, 417 ,\nHU st\n(2704)\nElectrical\nJ.   p_ Coatee\u2014The   Eltctrio   Ston\nSupplies and Ipatallstlona   >\nPhone itw.                   P.O. Box m\n (3701\nFlorists\nWith Every purchase of thru dot\nen   plante   ior   bedding   out,   w\nwUl   give   you   one   ooaen   fr*\nYour   own   choice.\u2014\nNBLSON   -FLOWER   BHOPPX\n(27041\nJOHNSONS OUESNHOUSE8, Phon\n\u00a342 Cut (loweri, potted Pluo*\nand tloral detlgni. (2787\nFuneral Directors\nNELSON FUNERAL SERVICE. SS\nVictoria St.\u2014phone gs Lady al\nteydtnt\u2014F. C. Davis. (37H\nHide Dealers\nDEALER IN HIDES. J. P. MORUAI\n301 Baker St., Neleon, B.C. (3T0S\nInsurance and Real Estate\nEACH YEAR MILLIONS GO UP B\nsmoke, insure with T. D. Rosllni\n3 Royal Bant Bldg. tfjjjj\nHOBKKTSON HEALTH CO.. LTI\nReal utate, Insurance, rental!\nAberdeen block. Baker st (2801\na w DAWSON. Real Eitate, m\neurance. Rentala Next Hippereoi\nHardware, Baker street.       OH\na  D*  BLACKWOOD,  miurance\ntvery deecripuon. Reel Eit; Ph M\n(2808\nH-  B.  DILL  AUTO  AND  FIRB  ltl\nnuance. Ritl Estate. (08 ward Bi\n(3804\n-refSSSWd3SWS89tSW9.-WW-W--i-.-3-.-S\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nRATES\n11c o line\nMinimum 8 Una\nI llnu. onn  ......8 tt\nI Unn. once     tl\n4 llnu once    -44\n3 tlne\u00bb   6   tlmu   .........   ~\u00bb\nI Una  t tlmei   1*83\n4 lines  6 tiinei  ..*,  1.76\nt llnea 1 month  1.86\n8 llnea I month  4.29\n4 una, I month   8,18\nAll ibon leu 10% \"ftt prompt\npayment.\n_______\n&&Z.Xn\\\ntiO0O-DAYMYFRl8N*>-\n.   NICE V4EATHER WE*E\nV HAVINtit, .WT.IT?\nV A, WOK WW SAFE\nY?D6P0\u00bbnr box,\nTltaworth, Gladys Jarrett and Flor*\nence Maundrel starred tor the Greyhounds, both at bat and In tbe field,\nwith Alice Dunn and Jean Patterson\nplaying well for the lours. Slim Ei-\ns*M. pej-dum epiea is qoa put no\\\\\nmme.\n'   The teama were:\nGreyhounds\u2014Lena Toung, Florence\nMsundrell, Oladyl Jarrett, Dorothy\nTltaworth, Lena Llmacher, Marlon\nBurnett, Ins Johanson, Nellie Leslie,\nEileen Fletcher, and Beatrice Mathews.\nBluebirds\u2014Martha Drapaka, Hawl\nSpiers, Jean Patterson, Jeen Spiers,\nAlice Dunn, Dorothy Wheeler, Oladneu Horstead, Brownie Schupe, and\nMary Long.\nPRINCE RUPERT, B. O, June 3\n(CP)-Sportamen of thle district are\nInterested In stocking the Dundee\nlslsndi, Chatham sound, with deer\nln an attempt to establish hunting\ngrounds there.\nA buck captured tome time ago\nwill be raaleued with a couple ot\ndoei it they can be procured. It la\nbelieved the deer ihould thrive on\nthe island! tor there are no wolves\nthere and tew files.\nJ.    B.   ANNABLE,    REAL   E8TATS\nrental!, insurance. Anusble block\n(2806\nUFE, FIRE _, AUTOMOBILE INSUB\nance, p. ___. Poulln, Ph, 70, (2606\nCHAS   F. McHARDK   1NSURAN0\u00bb>\nRul Estate\u2014Phone 185.\n(2807\nPatent Attorneys\nROWLAND BRITTAIN\nPATENTS AND TRADE MARKS\nOldest Established Pit Offlct in B. C\n446 GnnvlUt St.      Vincouver, B. C\n__m\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S   LIMITED\nFor tu clutu ot MetalWork, Uth\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Ortndlnj\nMotor Rewinding Acetylene weldlni\n. Phone 693\n334 Vernon street.\n (3800\nEngineers and Surveyors\nA. H. GREEN CO., LTD. 616 WARI\nSt. Phone 264. Nelion, B.C. (2801\nP.  B   PETERS\nMining Engineer\nExamlniUon. operation and minii\nsunt of mlnu md roineral\npropertlea Roulind. ta.\n .3811\n IL b. CaV.60N-iO1.S6n\nENGINEER  AND SURVEYOR\n (26111\nK.C. Land Surveyors\nCHARLES MOORE,\nK. W. O. Block.\nB. C. L. S*\nNelson  B. C\n(2813:\nPlumbing and Heating\nPLUMBING   AND   MATING   WOl\n\"ates reaaonablt  J\nPhone 660L3. <26t\nguaranteed   Ratea nasoneb\ntua Releteter, ~\nMusical Tuition\nVIOLIN     AND\nMary   Heddle.\nTHEORY     FUPIU\nPh.   311R3.   (381*\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S SASH  FACTORY   HARD\nwood merchant   317 Bekei itltf\n(3816\nSecond Hand Stores\nSECOND HAND STOVES FOR SALl\nMrs. Radcltfle, 817 Vernon Bt _\n(3611\nWE   BUT    BKlsU\nmost a.?th_Bt.\nAND SXCHAM\nihe  Ark.  1881\n 5V\n\u25a0 qui       .     |   '   -TBI',     IJ I, ip'iff-P\nVEGETABLES OF\nOLD CROP GONE\nSeveral Off Market;\nEggs Will Rise\nThis Week\nBaturdsy's local market, marking\nbe advent ot June, wound up tbe\nMon for a number of local vegetate, Including cabbage, parsnips, cerate and dry onions, saw lttt crop\nmt wiped off the list with tbe dls-\nppearance ot the apples, practically\nbushed tha season for young tomato\nad cabbage plants, and nw the\nl\u00bbwer ruah largely over.\nThere wu a heavy day's trading ln\n9 departments, but practically no\n(lee changes. It waa Indicated, how.\nmt, lis* week would see a price ap-\niraclatlon In eggs, with grade A large\nWing to to centi, and grade A me-\nItum to 25 cente.\nPrlcee were ta foUowi:\n.soeiabi.es\ntto*, 13 lba. t M\nNatl. 8 lbt.\ntadlahes, t bunches \t\ntnan onions, 8 bunches .....\n-sifts, bunch \u2014\nIrtlchokes, 4 pound!\t\nParsley,   bunch    \u2014\u2014\njettuce, bunch _........\u2014....-\u2014.\nOnt, bunch .. ...................\nJarllc, lb.\nItabarb, S lbt. \u2022\u2022\u25a0\u2022- \u2014\nIDliCE\nI grade A large, doaen .....\n, grade A medium, doaen ...\nitter, lb.\ni oheeae, lb.\nlb. \t\n\u2022t cheese, lb.\n.25\n.10\n.10\n.05\n.25\n.05\n.10\n.05\n-JO\n.its\n.25\nJO\nJt\n.35 and   .86\n  as\n js\ncheese, lb. .\nj   4-lb.   tin\nt-lb. tin ...\n.   .It\n. its\n .12 to M\nt. lb. \u00bb -06 to .17\nIt lb .08 to .18\n(ring lamb, lb 08 to\n\u25a0.tall\n,'baby beef, lb..\n,  calf,  lb.   \t\ncheese, lb. ....\u2014\nlb.\nHbo, home cured, lb. ,\nErned beef, > lbs\t\nt lbs. ...\n\u25a0toUo sausage, Ib\t\n' dripping, lb.:\t\nwl, 16.\nfcOWERlNG PUNTS\nKraplums, each \t\n^^^ each\n\u25a0tonla.\n\u25a0rdran.\nrangeaa, up from\t\n\u25a0natlona. up from\t\nprysantheraums, bunch\n18\n \u25a0\n '__   JS\n    .10\n    .18\n    JS\n M\n :   .35\n JS\n    JO\n   tn\n.It to   .It\nEASTERN SALES\n|_\u00a3 '. AT TORONTO\n\u25a0TORONTO, June 3 (CP).-Sales\n\u25a0 100 or more shares on the Toronto\nlock exchange, Industrial section,\nItturday were: 1980 Brazilian; 185\n\u25a0raw di D.: 239 Can Ind Ale; 870\nlord A; 3300 Int Nickel; 230 Musey-\nr, 130 H Wtlkera.\nAT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Junt 3 (CP) .-Sales\n100 or more thtrtt on the Mon-\n_ al itock exchange were: 2345\nkaillian; 190 Bruck Silk; 110 Can\nfcr Pow; 285 Ctn IndAlc; 2931 Int\n\u25a0okel; 225 Mont Pow; 124 Nat Brew;\n|0 St L Corp.\nfeeweeiiiilmieieenies\nPOUND IS UP AT\nMONTREAL\nMONTRIAL, June t (CPI\u2014Reversing its tread ot the lut few dan. the\npound moved upward on the Uontr-at\ncurrency exchangee Saturday. Sterling advanced 14 cent to 15.08 1-32.\nTbe French franc at ott oents and\nthe Doited States dollar at 5*18 of 1\nper cent dltcount both remained unchanged.\niiiiirr\"1T\"m\"\nCHICAGO DROP\n0VER4CENTS\nCHICAOO,  Junt  I   (AP).  -\nPitching headlong downward,\nwheat crathed Saturday to 9tt\ncente a buihtl under Friday's\nhigh point, tha apex ef more than\n26 centi almott perpendicular\nclimb.    \u2022\nIndications were thtt perhapi\nthe drought wai ended whleh fer\novtr t month hid afflicted millions of icres tnd with abnormal\nwldetpretd hut had forced prices\nShift\nWheat closed flurried, t ttntt\nto 4id unto btlow Friday's finish, corn tti to __ down, otto\n1% to 2H off, tnd provisions unchtnged to t setback af 15 cents.\nSMELTERS DROPS,\nMONTREAL LIST\nRally Falls Wipe Out Losses\nof Early Selling in\nthe East\nMONTREAL, June 8 (CP)\u2014Forced\nlower by early celling, securities on\nthe Montreal stock exchange tought\nback truculently during Saturday's\nabbreviated session but were unable\nto overcome the handicap of burdening losses.\nBraatUtn Traction dropped to SU\nonly to swing back to l\\ where lt\nfinished with a gain of <\/,. International Nickel dipped to 24.60 and then\nrecovered to close at 26.00, up SO\ncente. Dominion Coal preferred which\nduring the week rou 18 polnta In two\ndayi spurted five polnte to a new top\nat 88.\nConsolidated BmelVrs dropped two\npointi at 146 although traders were\nbidding ltd at the cloee. Bank of\nCommerce declined IH polnte and\nRoyal Bank, Bt. Lawrence Paper preferred, Canada Cement preferred and\nDominion Textile were off a point.\nCPU. and Canadian Induttrlal Alcohol were down fractions.\nAmong the Issues to remain unchanged were Bruck Silk, Quebec Power, Howard Smith, Canada Northern\nPower, St. Lawrence corporation. B.C.\nPacken aad Dryden Paper.\nBelee 10.488 shares; bonde 10,800.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Junt 3 (AP).-Btr\ntllver ttetdy, 14 lows* at 4414.\n'THI NILION DAILY NIWI, NILION, I.C-MONDAY MORNINO, JUNt 4, 1M4-\nMarket and Mining News\nSTOCKS RALLY\nATNEWYORK\nTouches  Up Slowest\nWeek in Eleveh\nYears\nBy FREDERICK GARDNER\n(Associated Prate Flntncitl Writer)\nNEW YORK, Junt i (AP). -\nRallying tendencies Saturday closed\nthe slowest five-day week on the\nstock exchange tince August, 1223.\nLeading shtres itlffened tnd recovered ptrt or ill ot thtlr eirly\nloiiet befort the finish.\ngales totalled 410.110 ihares.\n\u25a0yratloni ot the train mirket\ncontinued to exert little influence\non itockt. The average price of 90\nstocks doted off two-tenths ot t\npoint at 74.2, a new low tor tht\nyetr.\nFlntl changtt were mixed tnd\nntrrow. U.S. Steel common and\nBethlehem Steel recoved fraction!\nof their previous louet tfttr telling\ntt new ISM lowt.  American Tele-\n8hone, Electric Autollte tnd Nt-\nontl Biscuit rallied to ihow fractional gtlni at tht finish.\nOn the other hand, net losses of\nfrictions to 2 points wert recorded\nin Allied Chemlctl, American Can,\nSanta Fe, Genertl Moton. Chryiler,\nOentrtl Electric, Westinghouse,\nNew York Central tnd Internitlonil\nTelephone, J. I. Cue tdvanced more\nthan t point ln ftce of the bretk in\ngrains.\nLONG LAC GAINS\n30 ATT0R0NT0\nTORONTO, June 3 (CP), - In*\ncreaied trading ln the tenlor gold\nshares and another sharp idvtnct\nfor Little Long Lac on heavy turnover featured the doling session\nof the week In the mining deptrtment of the Toronto ttock exchange.\nLong Lac advanced 30 centt at 16.\nLike Shore tnd Mclntyre registered gains of SO cento etch, Bralorne 40. Dome 13 while Pioneer\nlagged IS tnd Teck Hughes S. Sii-\ncoe gtlned 3 and B.B.X. 4.\nWeak ipoto in tht base mettl\ngroup included Falconbridge, Sherritt Gordon ind Mining Corporation, down S to 8 cents etch tnd\nBate Metals Corporation lott 2. Eldorado tt 2.36 wai off S. Calgary\nand Edmonton alto lott S.\nOold Belt\nOrandvlew\noo\niKTcoal\nMak Blecar \t\nMcLeod Oil ...\nMercury Oil \t\nMeridian   \t\nOkalta OUi \t\nPioneer  Qold\nPnmler Oold  ..\nPremier  Border\n\"   itslno   .\nild\nSterling Paclf lo\nTaylor Bridge .\nVanalta   \t\nWellington\"\".!^\nct\u00abB\nAlexandria   .....\nlaconda    -\n-Jltac Oil\t\nBayview\nBONDS ARE WEAK\nNEW YORK, June I (API-Trading in bondt wu extremely tlow ln\nthe week't closing. session Siturday. Rail bondt were firm, utilities\n\u2022teady, and industritlt wert lrrcgu*\nlar.\nForeign bondt we* t irregular and\nquiet p.    . |\nDow Jones Averages\n80 industrials  , 91.41 off .88\n20 rails ;. 41.68 off .09\n20 utilities   22.48 unchgd.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nB c Nickel .._\nB ft Mountain\n-        ~*\\_\n\"'*  i\n\u20220SH\nButte  .\nCalmont\nContra\"\nCrows Nw. v*-*\nDalhousle  OUi\nDevenlsh Oils \"..\nBanchmena    \t\npacalts   \t\nRlgbwood Ssrcee\n*1t\u00ab\n1j07\n= .\nl-M\n.It\nUBS\u2014 i  *\n .\u00ab\nMV,\nCottonbelt   \t\nCanadian Band\n_ 'Ortiii ....\nDunwell   \t\nRSSelW pold[\"\".;.\nfabyan  OUt  ....\nFreehold   \t\nOolconda    ............\nQold  Mountain\noeo mint \t\nOrange   Mines   .\nprulT Wihkine\nfey^rlln,\n\u2014   - ~-*d\n.dependence   ...\nfloe fjlto..\u2014\nloot  Mo   \u2014\nt King ..\u2014\nirtow    \t\nJim \t\ntoff & Z\n1   City\t\n__ato   Oold   \t\nMorton   Wol   ....\nNative  Son \u2014\nNoble Five \t\nNordon OU \t\nPavilion     \t\nPorter Idaho ....\nftod Hawk\t\nReward     ...\nRufui Arginia\u2122\nSalmon Oold \t\nSllvercrest   \t\nSilverado   \t\nSilversmith    \t\nSnowflake    .........\nStandard ajid\nTaylor Wind\nunited wiplre .\nUnited OU ,\t\nVldette   Oold   ...\nViking oold \t\nWatHIoo\t\nWaverley Tang\nWelllntton   \t\nWhite Bagla \t\nWhitewater \t\nwn\n- .10\n- st\"\n.$14       16\nOIK\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAlexandria . __,\n&$&__=_\nten  Bxploration  \t\nIt  MSnun\t\noblo    \t\nrslornt \t\nridge It Bxploration\ntownlee   \t\n8m Klrkittd   _\nin   MelerBo   ...........\nCariboo Oold Quart* ,\nIt-taM\"\"\nfft>\nCentral Manitoba ...\nOsntrE Patricia ._\nCnlbougimou   ........\ncobalt OoiSteot ZZZ\ncolumario    \t\nConarlum     ......\nCone MAS ...,.._\u2014\nDom*    _____\n\u25a0dorado    ....._._\nInternational Nickel .\nKrlklend  Lake   \t\nLake Meron \t\nShore\t\nMcvitOe  Orahamme\n\"lcWitters   Oold   \u2014\nblc\npSft S8 .::\nNlptoslni   ........\nBorande   \u2014\nsymuter   ..._....\npend  OwUle   \t\nPioneer   oold   ...\nPremier  oold   ...\nBan Antonio*\"...__.\nSherritt oordon ...\nglseoe  -\nsouth Tlbiein'orit\"\"\nStsdacona\nSt Antbo:\niony\nludbury Basin\n5.ayalde    - -.\nWhite Bagla\t\nWrlgluHargrea*\nA f Cbnaolidatei PI\nSS \"~\nCalmont oil  *~~*\nC and I Corp ...____\u25a0\nOhemlcil  Beoecrch  <\u25a0\nDalhousle     ...\nHome  OU  \t\ntorci?.\"40...\nInternational   Pet*   ..\nlowtry .........\nMerland Oil  _\nOil SeleetibniTPIZ\nBojtllte'\":\".\":P.\"\"\"\u2122J\nBANK CHECKS\nSHOW A JUMP\nCollections Up 32 Per\nCent Against Last ,\nYear in B. C.\nVICTORIA, Junt I  (CP). -\n\u25a0ink chick collections In British\nColumbli during April showed an\nIncrease cf It per ctnt tl compared    with   thl   corresponding\nmonth latt yttr ind wtrt 23 per\ncent higher thin tht month cf\nMtrch iccordlng to statistics secured by the provlnclil bureau cf\nlnformitlon tnd publicity.\nThe flguret, regarded as in Indication of increased business activity,\nthow tht tottl imount ot checkt\nchtrged to individual account! by\nbtnkt in B.C. during tht month ts\n$131,000,000. In April, 1033, the\nimount wu $105,200,000.\nIncreases ranging from IS to SB\nper cent wert recorded ln the maritime.. Ontario tnd Quebec, but the\nprairies ihowed a falling off by IS\npar ctnt.\nFIRST THOUGHT\nHEAVY SHIPPER\nLed by the Yankee Olrl mine at\nTmlr, which shipped 700 toni, 18\ncustom mines shipped a total of 2324\ntone of ore to the Trail smelter during\nUie period of Msy 22 to May tl, according to official oompany report.\nTint Thought mint at Orient,\nWash., a shipper new ln recent weeks,\nwaa aecond with MO tone, while\nOoodenough at Vmlr contributed 243\ntorn.\nTwo othtr cuttom mines were over\nthe loo-ton mark for the period. Knob\nHill at Republic with 1\u00ab2, and the\nVelvet, Rouland, with 104.\nTotal cuttom receipts for the year\nSow aro 31,031 tone.\nCompany mines shipped 11,380 tent\nduring the period to boost their total\nto date to 1SS.S4S tona.\nOther custom mines shipping during the period May 22 to May 31, Inclusive and their tonnage, were\nArlington, lm  .\nBeU, Beaverdell  \t\nBoeun, New Denver  ...............\nDentonla. Oreenwood\nDibble, Pott Steele, ..\nEuphrates, Nelson\n24.60\n.KSftg.\nTgnlnw\nPiittiSPZIZ\nwrlght     _\u2122\nINUtSTBULS\nBeatty Broa A \t\nBeaunamola\t\nBell   Tiltrtione   \u25a0__\t\nBraaUlan T L * Power\nBrewers apd  Dlstlllera\nan Breed -\nn   Cemtnt\t\nCan par * Foundry .\ncan Indue Alcohol A .\nCona  BeSrlee '.'.....'...._.\nSin Pac Railway\t\nKit seagrami  \t\nDominion Storea .........\nFord of Oanada \u2014-\u00bb\nOoodyear Tire\nHiram Walker\nOdd Drip, Rouland ...\nOood Hope, Nilion \t\nGranite, Taghum \t\nBally, BeaverdeU\t\nTiger, BeaverdeU \t\nWaterloo, Idgewood ....\nWellington,  BeaverdeU\ntr\u2014ttw\u2014ewwwwwwawmtptffwi\nBAR GOLD DOWN\nAT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, June 3 (AP).-Btr\ngold ln London down 2 centi it\n$34.85 an ounce in Canadian fundi,\n137t 2d ln Britlth funds. The fixed\nWuhlngton prict tmounted to\n$34.80 ln Canadian.\n............-sie\u00abaieas-M\nWHEAT SLIDES\nm 'PEG PIT\nHeavy Unloading and\nEnd of Drought Has\nAdverse Effect\nWINNIPBO, June 8 (OP)\u2014Heavy\nunloading of wheat, coincident with\na break In the long drought over\nwestern Oanada, slashed large portions from wheat prlcee on the Wlnnl-\na grain exchange Saturday. The\nday ln tbe market Monday, June 4,\nalso brought considerable \"evening\nup\" liquidation, and at the finish\nvalues were off 3H centt.\nMay option ended at 78H and July\nat tov, cento. Trading generally wu\nactive and the volume ot wheat\nthrough tbe pit wu quite large for\nan abbreviated market.\nPinal figures were about V, oent\nover the day's low. Export Interests\nwere noticeable buyers on tbe sale\ndown, taking about 800,000 bushels\nof Canadian wheat. Southern Interests were the best eeUera.\nChicago wheat showed sharp losses\nu profit-taking pared valuee. The\nbreak ln the weather wu felt alao at\nLiverpool, where wheat ended iu_ to\nlSd lower.\nSpread! on better grades of cash\ngrains Improved under export demand, but coerce grains declined under profit-taking and prehoUday telling.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, June 8 (OP)\u2014Mining shares sold on the Vanoouver\nitock exchange Saturday:\nListed\u2014Bradlan HOO, Bralorne 275,\nB R Con 8800. B R X 4000, Cariboo\n4026, Meridian BOO, Mak Slccar 1000,\nMorning Star 1200, Nicola 7500, Premier 1500, Reno 1100, Taylor Bridge\n2500, Wayside 5800.\nunlisted\u2014B 0 Nickel 8800, Bit Mln\n1700, Bluebird 1600, Oanadlan R 800,\nCongress 2300, Dalhousle 4000, Dentonla 2400. Palrvlew 000, Oolconda\nExt 1500, Orull Wlhk 700. Halda 6000,\nHedley Amg 8800, Hlghwood Sarcee\n2000, Home Oold 2200, Independence\n8000, Koot BeUe 300, Koot fla 28,000,\nMlnto 47,000, Morton Wol 1000. Netlve\nSon 1000, Noble Five 6800, Nor-gnld\n2400. Reward 7000, Rufus Arg 100,\nSnowflake 1600. United Imp 1000,.\nPAGI SIVIN\nMINTO IS AGAIN\nFEATURE COAST\nReaches H i g h of 39,\nBut Slips to Close\nat 37 3-4\nVANCOUVER, Junt S (C\u00bb)\u2014Again\nfeaturing the golds on the Vancouver\nstock exchange Saturday, Mlnto\nreached a high of 89 but slipped tn\nlite trading to cloee at n\\, up i%.\nCariboo and Nicola vied tor eecond\nplace, the former falling off 8 to cloee\nat 1.42 and tbe latter gaining 2 at 52.\nMertdlan, Congress and Oolconda extract were each up 2, closing at IS,\n32 and 20 respectively. Bralorne wu\nup 25 at 13.35. BJLX. up 3 it 1.08.\nReno up 1 at 80, and Wayside gained\nH at si;.,. Native Son at 3 and Reward at s\\_, were both up Vi- Bradlan at 2.80, BR. Con at 31, Oanadlan Rand at 10, and Hilda at\nits'\/, were aU unchanged.\nin the base metala B.O. Nickel\nclosed at 1.07 unchanged. Big Missouri\nat 27 wu also unchanged and Noble\nlive at 914 wu 70V4.\nIn the oils O. and I. loat 8 to\ndose at 1.15. Home Oil wu up 6 at\n1.20 and Facalta up 2 at S. Royillte\ndropped 60 cento at 14.60, and Mak\nSlccar wu unchanged it 28.\nNICKEL IS UP ON   -\nTORONTO MARKET\nTOBONTO, June 3 (CP)-Volume\nexpanded in Saturday'i thort tet-\nlion of the Toronto exchange Industrial tectlon but the mirket\nclosed with lossei well ln the letd\nover glint.\nNickel at 23.29 gained 45 cento.\nFord of Canadi advanced fractionally to 2014 and C.P-R. to 14K. Brazilian at 8% was down 'A.\nDistillery stocks ctmt out tpir-\ningly. Walkers common advanced 14\nto 3414.\nFood tnd bank thtrtt moved\nslowly it fitrly iteady prlcei.\nSTANDARD\nSECURITIES\nLIMITED\nMaafctas\nVflNCOUVES STOCE ZXCKSJKIE\nCorrwpontlmeo Inttlad\n425 HOWE STREET\nTkksr I24T   vncoomM.\nImperlil Tob Can\nRuiey  Birrit\"P\"\nService   Station   -\nMoK\u00a3f..\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBeU Ttlephone\njcrukln,\n1   C   power   A   \u25a0\nB C power >   ...\nlulld  Prod  ...._\nCar  Pdy   _..\nan    \t\nOypi\n:an  ind  Al   A  *\nCan   ind   Al   B\nCan Seamen\nC W Is c A\nC W * 0 {,\nOockahutt   Plow\nDominion  BitdttPT-\u2014Z.Z\"  tt\nOen Steel _WJ-\"--\u00bb       4\namllton Bridge\njternatwr -\nUkt of \u00ab_\nMttaey Htrrlt\ninternational Tflekel\n\"     of the Woode\nMontreal Power \t\nRational Brewing ...\n^ttonal Steel Car\n,     corporation\nSliawlnlpan\nSteel of <>,-____.\nWinnipeg Electrlo\nCURBS\nSlt'jtoer'gif\nCan Vlcken\nVinegars   \t\nWineries   -\nare Brewing \u2014\ninlonwr ZZZ\n__     Dalrlet  \t\nHomt OU\t\nimperlil Tob Can...\nInternational Petrol\nMcColl   FTontensc   ..\nt\n1\nGRAIN SHIPMENTS\nLOWIR AT COAST\nVANCOUVIB, June S (CP). -\nGrain ihipments through the port\nof Vancouver in May toteUed 2,-\n326,280 bushell to bring tht tet-\nson'i export to 41,630.787 bushels.\nIn May lttt yetr, shipments totalled\n3,730, 488 bushell to bring tht set-\nson'i tottl tt thtt time To 88,475,-\n371 buthtlt.\nIncrease Shown in\nFree Certificates\nVANCOUVER, June S (OP)\u2014POT\ntbe put 12 months, records it tht\nVancouvtr mining recorder's office\n\u25a0how thit \u2022 total of 4000 fne cerUfl-\ncatee were Issued compared with 2788\ntor the same period lut year. Eighteen\n\u25a0peclal certificates and 2220 ordinary\ncertificates wtrt alao recorded thli\nyear u compared with a total of 15\nspecials and 2491 ordinary certificates\nfor the year ending May 31,1083.\nWinnipeg Groin\nWDOUPBO, June 3 (CP)-Cloelng\nfutures  quotations:\nOpen   High    Low.   Close\nWhttt:\nJuly       79        80        77*     78H\nOct.        80*4    82        70H    8014\n\u00ab~.n u si sa\nB*rley *\nJuly       44       4414    4144    4244\n<___.    46        46\u00ab     44-3     44\u00ab\nMUCELUNSOOS*\nCanada   Bread   ....\n. on Storaa\n Can A  -\nOoodytar\nLaura  _\u2014\nLoblaw\n\"\u2014     Lea\nPhoto Engravi\nService   Button\nweet Ctn plour\nWalker Brewing .\nZlmmerknlt   \t\n._   88\n; fa\nif\n!*\nAllegheny ,\t\nAll   Chemical\nAmerican   Csn\nAm   Por   low\nAm JS.it fl.\nAm Telephone\nAm   Tobacco\nAnaconda    \t\nAtchison    \t\nuburn  Moton\naldlwn      \t\nisit  tt   Ohio\nlendlx  Avla\nlaaada\nQuotations on Wall Street\nI\nCtn   pacific   . .\nCerro De Peaco\nChes  &   Oblo\nChrysler   \t\nCom   *  South\n8on Ou N T\n_brn   Pwd.\n0 Wright \"Pfd\nDupont   ... _\t\nElec Pow * U\nBto   \u201e\t\npord    English\nPord of CtaMe\nSet Na Storea\nneral Elec ...\nOeneral  Foods\ngeneral Moton\nOold   Dust   \t\nGoodrich    \t\nOranpr\nart North Ptd\nOrt west Sugar\nHowe Sound\nHudson   Moton\nInter, Nickel\ninter Tel ts Tel\nJewel   Tm   .....\nBS.W..,-:\nsarWck\u2122\nMllwaukte Pfd\nNash    Motora\nHtt Dairy prod\nN   Pow  tr  Ll     \u2014-\nN T Central    26J4\nPac Ou a. pn   UK\nPackard   Moton   J\nPerm   R  R   \t\nPhillips pete ....\nPura OU \t\nRadio Corp\nRadio Keith or\nRem   Rand   ...\nBock  Itlapd\n\u2122     M4\u00bb\n_ oil of N J\nidebaker\nOorp  \t\nOulf \u00abul\n.in   nolle\u2122\nUn   Carbide    ...\nNn Oil ot Csl\nUnited  Aircraft\nOnion pacific\nUS Ppe A Pdy\nu VWf z\nVanadium   Steel\nWtt    Electric\nwrlgley   ....\nWoolporth\nYeUow   Truck\nMil w * 1\nlly*'.-  82       8S       11 61H\nSt. .... 8414 33V4 5814 6414\nCaah prlcee*\nWheat:  No,  1 bard 78%: No.  1\nJr. 77%; No. 3 nor. *7414', No. 8\n>r 71%; No. 4 nor. 6844: No. 5,\n44: N0.T. 8744: feed 6144; track\n14; Ro. 1 durum 80H*\nnor.\nnor\nw\nExchanges\nMONTRIAL, June I (OP)-BrltUh and foreign exchange in relttlon to the Canadian dollar, u com*\npU^^y\"*the\"Rwar Bank oT Can*\nada. closed Saturday\nArgentina,   ,\u2014\nAustralia, pound\nBelgium,  bilge\nDenmark,   krone\nprance,   frano\t\nGermany, relehemsrk\nOreat Britain, pound\nHolland, florin -.\n* U follows:\nK\"d*e, \"rupee\nUy. lira .\nJapan, yen \u201e,\nNew Sealsnd, poun\nSouth Africa,\nSpain, peseta\nSweden,   krone\nBwooon.*. ii-..-   ...\t\nSwlt\u00aberlan-l. franc. \u2014.\nunited Statoe, woUar, t-lt per cent\ndiscount.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Junt 3 <AP)*-\nWheet, No. 1 northern 1.0414 to\n1.0714: No. 1 red durum Wt* to MH;\nold July 1.0114; new July 1.0114 to\n1.0144; old Sept SS44 to Mtt; new\nSept 0814.\nCom, No. t yellow 53 to 54.\nOils, Na 3 white 4214 to 4814.\nFltx, o. 1 1.03 to 1.17.\nFlour unchinged. Shipmtnto 20,*\n043. Pure bran 10*60 to 20.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YOBK, Junt 2 (AP).--S.ei-\nllni exchinge ttetdy it 33.0514 for\n80-3|y bllfirind tt $5.0614 for de-\nmind: Canadian dollars 14 ptr cent\nSremlum: frtnci 6J814 cento; lire\n92 cento.\nB. R. X. GOLD NINES\nWe recommend the purchase ot the B*. R. X. at\nthe present time. Write us for full particulars.\nA. E. JUKES & CO. LTD.\nSTOCKS Membera: Vancouver Stock Exchange,   BONDS\nVancouver Bond Dealers' Association.\n810 HASTINGS STRUT WEST VANCOUVER, B.C.\nCtrrttptndtnt! P. C. Poulln, Oreen Blk., Phont 70, Ntlton.\nDaily Market Report Over CJOR It 0:45 t.m.\nNATURAL GAS\nNATURAL GAS DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION\nLIMITED (N.P.L.)\nAuthorljed Capital, 600,000 Shtrtt-Ptr Vtlut $1.00 Each\nDrilling machinery it now on the ground tnd being put ln place tor\nthe spudding*in of Well No. 1, which it located tdjacent to tht lite\nof the well drilled for oU in 1021 tnd In which I heavy gu flow\nwu encountered.\nThe Compiny owns 4000 acres of leases in the Bounday Bay Dlttrlct Thtrt it atlll a few ihares to be htd it 60 cento i ihtre\ntrom tbt\nDELTA FINANCE LTD.\nOut of Town Orderi Invited\n520-30 MARINE BtDG. VANCOUVER, B.0.\nMINING\nCOMPANIES\nWith our modern printing establishment\nwe are able to give immediate service in\nany kind of printed matter.\nIn addition to being equipped with all the\nlatest machinery, we also have the only\nruling department in the Interior of British\nColombia, which enables us to give yon\nexceptional service in any special ruled\nforms for office and special use.\nYOU MAY BE NEEDING:\nSTOCK CERTIFICATES, LETTERHEADS, EN-\nVELOPES, SHIPPING TAGS, PAYROLL FORMS,\nTIME CARDS, ASSAY FORMS, SPECIAL RULED\nFORMS, SYNOPTICS, LEDGER LEAVES OF ALL\nSIZES. BINDERS, INVOICE FORMS, REGISTRATION FORMS, ETC.\nWrite Vs\u2014We wil! be pleased to give\nyou quotations on any particular\npiece of printing.\nNelson Daily News\nJob Department\nBaker Street\nPHONE 144\nNelson, B.C.\nA\n \t\nl  111  uumiij.tiiia !\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0<\u25a0   ju...***\nPAQI EIQHT\nNaSON NINE\nWINS 7-3 FROM\nROSSLANDERS\nt\nIsaacson Pitches a\nGood Game;\nFans 11\nRICHARDSON\nHITTING WELL\nRossland Chucker in\nToo Late for\nGame\nsscton's offerings ovu tbt lttt Htld\nfenoe for i home run, tne bell\nlute dealing tht fence, with tbe\n\u2022core standing 8-3 ln Nelson's favor\nwben tbey went to net ln tht laat\nof tbt fourth inning, tbt tint\nstarted the clamour for more runs.\nOlUett ittrttd the Inning wltb t\ntwo bagger. Teal wu uft on Shannon's error and HonwlU poled one\nout to tnt center field tence for t\ndouble to toon two runt. In the\nseventh Inning Rlchsrdaon poled\none over tbe fenoe with Horiwlll\non bue to give the loctli a 7-3\nlead Which thty btld until tbt\nninth Inning, wben W. Purcello of\nRosalind hit safely through ucond\nbau, Johnson filed out to BeU in\nright field. W. Puroello going to tecond after the catch M. Purcello\naent t scratch bit between short\nsnd tteond to acore W. Puroello\nfor the lut run ot the gtmt.\nSummtry: 4\nRouland AB R H PO A t\nRanton, 3b\nMarshall, cf\nBurke, lb .\nBltlr, rf .....\nShannon, u\nDamt, Sb\n-THE NILION  DAILY NIWI. NILION,  I.C--MONDAY  MORNINO. JUNE 4, 1334-\nWest Kooteniy senior nuebtll\nleague   standing:\nW   L  Pot.\nTttU    8   0   1.000\nNeUon    1   1    MO\nRossland        0   3     .000\nWith Al Iuacion again giving A\nfirst class display on the mound\nthe loctl unlor baseball club bunched their hlta In tht third, fifth ind\nteventh Innings to ttkt t 7-8 victory over tbt visiting Bonltnd club\ntn in Interesting gtmt pltytd before t huge turnout of ftni on\nBunday afternoon. Isaacson unt 11\nbatten btck to the bench by tbe\n\u25a0trlkeout route, tnd did not Issue\nt walk, the vltlton collected uven\nscattered hlta off tht local chucker,\ntnd only one ot them wu ot tbe\neitra but vulety.\nThe locale touched two Rculud pitchers for 10 hits, Including\nt homt run tnd t thne bue hit by\nRlchirdson. two baggers by Glllett,\nHonwlU. Iittceon and Bell. Bobby\nMtnhall poled out i home run for\nRosalind with t runner on but in\nthe fifth Inning.\nTommy Htrrlion tnd Slim Horswill robbed the vltltlng bitten ot\nwhtt appeued clean hits on a numbu* ot occMlona. both pulling down\nt number of bud hit bills. Howtrd\nTeil, wbo went ln tt ihort stop tor\ntbe locals without the benefit of\nany practice, displayed tbe best\nform of any player wbo hu held\ndown that position this season, and\nwith eome practice with tht balance\not tbt turn, thould prove a valuable   addition.\nJackie Hinton, ont of tbt most\npopular hockey players ln these\nputt, starred tt ncond bue for the\nRossland elub. In addition to htnd*\nling uven fielding chances cleanly.\nHauton wal thi only Rossland player\nto get more than one bit.\nBemle Nell irrlved In Nelton Utt\nIn the afternoon too lite to ippeu\non the mound tor the Rossland club,\nbut u Nels pitched the Blackle\nclub to the Albertt championship\nlaat season, the Rouland club will\nbc tough to but In future games.\nBauson, flnt up tor the Rouland\ntetm, wu ufe tt tint wbtn Jett.\njuggled the bill, but the side wu\nretired without tny score. Harrlton. flnt batter for tht loctli\nwalked oo four pitched belli ind\nstole second. Ackermin threw Glllett out it flnt but. Harrison went\nto third on a paeeed baU. Teal tent\none down tbt third but line tnd\nDime, tht Roasland third btwmu, thinking the bill would roll\nfoul let lt go, but tht ball rolled\nfair just before retching the uck\ntnd Harrlton icored with Teal ufe\ntt flnt. Tht locali took t thru-\nrun lead in tht third Inning. Glllett hit ufely, tnd Schumaker wu\nuft tt tint on t fielders choiee.\nwhen tn tttempt wu mtde to\nnth Olllett tdvsnclng. Both scored\nwben Rlchsrdson Hammed t three-\nbaiger to center field.\nItt tbe tint of tbe fifth Inning\nHanson hit safely through ucond\nbase, Manball slammed ont of It.\nSEE\nVIC\nGRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor Modern Plumbing\n>    AT MODERATE PRICES\nOpp. City HaU        FHONB 813\nDU.ICATE SKIN NEEDS CABEFl'L\nTBBATMENT THESE HOT DAYS!\nOt Creams and Powders of Highest\nQuality our itock It complete.\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nFHONB 1\nPreeniptloni oor SpecttHy\nCouture, lf .\nJohnion, c .\nAckennu, P  3\nM. Purcello, f  3\n'W. Puroello, It _.. 1\nTotal!\n3   3 3\n1    1 0\n0 13 0\n1 0 0\n3 1\n3 3\n010\n3 0\n0 3\n0 1   1\n0 0   0\n...87   3   7 34 11   4\nNelaon:\nHarrison, rf, 3b ... 4\nOlUett, lb  8\nTeal, n \u2014 4\nSchumaker, cf -._.._. 4\nHonwlU, If 4\nRlchsrdaon, 0 3\nJeffs, 3b -_  8\nDrew, Sb 4\nIsaacson, p \u2014~\u2014 4\n\u2022\u2022Bell, rf -. 1\n1   3   1\n3   8   0\n1   3  8\n0 0   0\n1 9 0\n3 13 0\n0 1\/ 1\n111\n113,0\n110   0\nTottll  tt   7 10 37   S   4\n\u2022   Replaced.   Couture  In   uventh\nInning.\n\u2022'Batted for Jefft ln seventh Inning.\nScore by lnnlngi:\nRossland   000 030 001\u20143    7   4\nNelson     103 030 30t\u20147   10   4\nStruck out by Isaacson, 11; Acker-\nman 1, M. Purcello 8.\nBarn on balls off Ackerman 1.\nHome runt, Richardson tnd Marshall.\nThru base hits, Richardson.\nTwo  bue   hits,   Olllett,   HonwlU,\nIsaacson ud BtU.\nSacrifice hlta, Teal tnd Richardson.\nStolen bases. Htrrlion ud Burke.\nLeft on bum. Nilion 8, Rossland \u00bb.\nUmpires. \"Slim\" Kraft, Neleon; Jim\nHanson  .Roseland.\nUNITY COUNSEL\nIS TENDERED TO\nTHE FORESTERS\nRev. Fred Graham in\nCentenary Sermon\nExpounds It\nTELLS ORIGINS\nANCIENT ORDER\nBrotherhood,   Burden-\nBearing Savor of\nChrist\nMORE ABOUT\nFive Women\n(Continued From Ptge One)\nden and Sir Frederick Banting\nwere the only Canadlani to receive\ntitles.\nFOUR CANADIANS\nHONORED\nFour Canadlani were made companion! of the Order of St. Michael\nand St George. They are: Alexander\nJohnston, former deputy mlniiter\nof marine; Erneit Joseph Lemtire,\nclerk of the privy council; Williim\nJamet Roche, chairman of the civil\nservice commission, and Dr. Duncan\nCampbell Scott, noted poet ud former deputy tuperintendent of Indian affairs. He wai granted thii\nhonor in the civil division of the\norder.\nFIVE WOMEN NAMED\nFive women wue named commander! of the onto, They are:\nMils Margaret Eleanor Theodora\nAddition, former dean of women\nat Victoria college, University ot\nToronto: Mra. Mary Elizabeth\nWaagen Allan, honored for service\nto crippled children.\nIn connection wtth the Canadian\nwelfare service: Mlw Winnifrtd\nKydd ot Montreal, president ot the\nnational council of women; Kev.\nMother Marie Anna Plche, superior\ngeneral of the Grey Nunns, listen\nof chirity Montreal and Miss Margaret Marshall Saunders of Toronto,\nhonored for tervlcei to the Canadian\nHumue society.\nEdwin Lister Brittaln was nimed\nin officer of the civil dlvliion of\nthe Order of the Britlth Empire.\nHe wu honored for hit honorary\nservices to thl patriotic fund.\nAttempt Refloat\nGrain Boat Today\nQUEBEC, June 3 (CP),-Effort\nwill be made tomorrow to refloat\nthi Pennyworth, the grain boat\nstuck fast on rocks off the Island ot\nOrleans last November. What ii left\nof the vessel's grain cargo will be\ntransferred to btrges and It It expected it high tide the Pennyworth\nwill be tble to float If the attempt\nts nicceuful the vetiel will be towed to Sorel. Que. to be dismtntled.\nGood Building Needs\nQuality Lumber\nPhone 176\nW.W.Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Good Lumber\"\n\"Know Our Staff\u2014They Want to Know You\"\nCharlie Says ...\nCHARLIE SWAN\nGas and Oil\n\"Whtn It comes to gtt ind oil\nthtrt It no service thlt ctn sur*\nptn thlt whloh wt offer it thl\nNtlwn Transfer-Wt in open\ndty tnd night 24 hours to itttnd\nyour needs In thl finest Shell\ntnd Imptrlil Gtsollnss ind Olli.\nCall it thl Transfer, tf It'i ttrvlot\nyou desire.\"\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nA counsel ot unity, the unity of\nspirit thtt meant brotherly feeling,\nbearing of othen' burden! while\ncarrying one'a own \"cargo\" of duty,\nand unfailing loyalty to the principles Christ exemplified, was given\nto the Ancient Order of Foresters,\nat St, Saviour'! pro-cathedral Sunday night, by Ven. Archdeacon Fred\nH. Graham ln connection with the\norder'! celebration of ltl centenary.\nEvery day was Important to tome*\nbody, remarked Archdeacon Graham, and this day wai important.\nto all Christiana as the Lord's day.\nto the British Empire as the birthday of the King, and to the Ancient\nOrder of Foremen as marking completion of a century, of organized\nlife.\nTodajr_the order, to the best of\nhis information, embraced a membership of between 600,000 and 700.-\n000, apart from itt juvenile branches\nHARDY FOREtEARERS\nWhile the order had 100 yeara behind it of continuous organized existence, jutt when it wai really\nfounded no one knew. It! forerunners had their beginnings ln the\nNew Foreit, tnd were \u25a0 factor in\nYorkthlrt, tnd later ln the sister\ncounty of Lancuhlre. They were\nnot tlwtyi looked on with fivor.\nIn thote dtyi of misery tnd suffering tnd difficulty, the litter pert\nof the eighteenth century, the government was suspicious of all organizations, and particularly those that\nmet in secret ind even those with\nthe moit innocent objects had difficulty in carrying on. But out of\nthese origins arose 100 yean ago this\nyear tht definitely organized order\nthat since, with up md downs, period! of increase and period! ot decrease, timet ot good ntme tnd\ntimet of ill tame among the people,\nhad curled on itt special work,\nuntil government! became wiser\nand realized tbe service theee organizations were giving, tnd this\nparticular order became tht recipient of royal honon, especially\nat tbe hand! of King Edward. While\nit wu now feeling, with other or*\nSanizatlons, including the churches,\nie burden of prevailing conditions,\nhe believed the pendulum had now\nswung as far m m God's providence\nIt waa intended to swing, and that\nnow conditions were improving.\nAn under-current of disloyalty\nwas at the bottom of the present\ndissatisfaction!, the archeadcon said.\nA renewal of loytlty wu ln order.\nIn thii connection he took t\nvene trom the writings of St. Ptul.\nthe ipecltl exempltr of loyalty, the\nman who, whether he wu against\nChrist or for Christ, wu always a\nfirebrand of zeal. \"I beseech you to\nwtlk worthy of the vocation to\nwhich ye are called,\" Paul wrote\nto the Gelations, \"... . endeavoring\nto keep unity of the tplrit In the\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nSons of Ingltnd meet tonl.bt In\ntht Memorlil Hill tt S o'clock.\nI.T7J)\nHive the Nelson Dally News delivered to your home before breik*\ntut. we pu wttk: ami\nAnnutl banquet Nelton tnd Dlttrlct Old Timers sssoclstlon, Hume\nHotel, wtlneediy. June 6th, 1934.\ntt  \u00ab  pjn.  Tickets   tlOO. (2834)\nSttrt tbe diy right with tbe Nelson Duly, Ntwi. Delivered euly ln\ntbe morning. 350 per week,     lint)\nbond ot pace.'*\nMEANS OF\nUPBUILDING\nThe archdeacon mtde unity the\ntheme of hit diKourse, often raiding loyalty with it With tbt world\nin a turmoil, and the gntt repre-\nttnUUvi f orcet tbtt wen to change\nit apparently finding themtelves\nunable to overcome the obetadu in\nthl wiy. the Kriptural quettion,\n\"If the foundttiom be overthrown,\nwhat can tbe righteous do?\" became\nin point One wty to help answer\nthat question wu by the word of\nGod found in the prophets, where\nconfidence and God-fearing strength\nwere alwaya to be gained by wilting on the Lord\u2014not neceuarily\nin feu and trembling, though thtt\nhtd itt grett uses\u2014but tarrying on\nHi! labon, io that one would tee\nand believe that God wu working\nout Hit purpote.\nNO NARROW BOUNDS\nActivity in wilting tor God'i purpote to be milled wu idvoctted\nby thl speiker, instead of panlv-\nity, one could tlways be endetvor-\ning to keep the unity of the tplrit\nin the bond ot petce\u2014in one'i family life, in one'i organization, in\none'i church tnd community life.\nExplaining hit reference to tbe\nchurch, the archdeacon said. \"While\nI un an udent and loyal minister\nof the Church of England, I know\nI have many able and loyal broth-\nen in the other Christian faiths.\"\nBut one could not work for the\nchurch by name and form alone\u2014\ncertainly not adequately. How much\nlew could one work for the principles ot Christ lf he dissociated\nhimself entirely trom the church.\nLoyalty was a matter of tplrit. Loyalty to Christ and to the King wu\none loyalty. All loyalty wu one,\nall peace wu one, and the unity\nthat wai international wu the tame\nunity that wu interdenominational.\nThese loyalties that were essential\nto one'i stedtast faith in the future\nwu not founded ln name or creed\nor government decree, but the loyalty and unity that were the peace\nof the world came from God.\nPRICE OF UNITY\nUnity wu a wonderful thing, said\nthe speaker, but like every other\nwonderful thing, one mutt pty the\ncoit to get it\u2014cost in effort, in unselfishness. It wu purchasable for\nhim who would pay the price.\nThe tint element in that coat\nwu to bear one's own burden, or,\nto translate Piul't Greek text literally, ot'l own \"cargo,\" that wu\nto say, one's own duties and responsibilities. Thli included bearing the\ncrow\u2014the loneliness, the desperate\nagony of mind, the complete crushing of the spirit\nThe second element in the cost\nwu to do what Ptul next tet forth,\nbeu othen' burdens\u2014the ill chance,\nsickness, lack of opportunity, of\nwork, pt meant. Part of one'i pct-\ntontl cugo wu to bear these burden! of otben, but the ltbor would\nbe lightened when one remembered\nthtt Christ wu marching beside\nhim, giving assurance of fill, pretence and His support.\nOne way to keep unity of thc\nspirit, the speaker uid, wu to tor-\nget oneself in worship to God, in\nservice for Christ or in giving oneself in service to bit country. It\nshould be the aim of every followu\nof Christ to get in hit own life tome\nof Christ's unity of spirit, the ipirit\nthat endued Pentecost\n\"Love the brotherhood, honor the\nKing, and leek the strength that\nwill enable you to carry out God's\nwill,\" wu the archdeacon'! parting injunction.\nMORE ABOUT\nSTEa STRIKE\n(Continued From Pagt One)\nthe revlted iteel code, promslgtt*\ned by Preildent Boosevelt tut\nweek.\nMeanwhile, Hugh 8. Johnson,\nrecover, administrator, bolstered\nbis staff tonight with Ed-ward F.\nMcQrady, anlstant tdmlnlitntar\nfor ltbor. n\nTlgbt tald be expected Johnaon\nto present the union's demtnd for\nreopening ot tbe steel code to\nPresident Roosevelt.\nOn the otbu side, the Amerlcin\nIron tnd Steel Institute chuged In\nformal itttement Issued ln New\nYork tonight tbtt tbe itrlke threats\nwere due to workers' leaden wbo\nsought government Intervention \"to\nmanoeuvre themselves Into positions\nof powu tnd dominance over the\nsteel worken of the nttlon.\"\nLite yeeterday, Johnson succeeded\nln bringing the cotton-textile worker! tnd manufacturers Into tn agreement tnd t strike called for tomorrow wae called off pending a study\nby tbe government of the whole\nsituation.\nSAM PASACRETA, DOREEN LONG\nAND EVA SMITH TAKE HONORS\nHigh and Junior High\nSchools Have\nFine Meet\nJune 13th\u2014Scenes from Shske-\ntpeirt by Shakespeare Readlnp\nclub, St. Paul's church, 830 p.m.\nSilver collection. (3828)\nlladsra Oltdyi Attree's dancing\nclasses commence tomorrow, Tuesdty, Junt I. Silver Bill room Hume\nHotel. Bibles 3:30, Juniors 3 30.\nseniors  4.30     *    - (3833)\nIn rink's Limited tdvertltement\nwhich ippeired lut Stturdiy, Junt\n2nd. through \u2022 typographical errlor\nlt reid \"lltll Orders promptly Dispatched.\" Tbli thould have been\nshown ai \"lull Orders Promptly\nDlspttched   C.O.D.\" (3778)\nA NEW STAR\nIS BORN!\n'NANA1\nZOLA'S VOLUPTUOUS\nLADY OF THE\nBOULEVARDS\nStarts at the\nCAPITOL\nWEDNESDAY\nPRODUCE PRICES\nMER IN EAST\nMONTREAL, June > (CP)\u2014Prloee\nwcre higher on the Montretl produce\nand dairy muket lut week while there\nwu a larger volume ot recelpte.\nFreeh No. 1 butter wsa up % cents\nto 31K to at'.j centa per pound ln\ncarlots or less. Exports trom Montreal\nfor tbe week totalled -437 boxes compared wltb 168 botes In tbe corresponding week ot lut yeu. Recelpti\nwere 30,388 boxes for tbt wtek.\nCheese cloeed tt 10 cents pu pound\nfor Onttrlo colored compared wltb\n\u00bb>_ to 8% cente a week ago. Exports\nfor the week were 4811 boxu agalnit\n11.584 boxes tor tht corresponding\nweek lut yeu. Weekly arrivals were\n11*48 boxes.\nEgg prices were generally ateady\nwltb graded shipments In carlots or\nless quoted 30'4 to 31 centa per dozen.\nReceipts for lut week amounted to\n38.180 esses.\nThe potato muket was steady with\nN.B. Mountains quoted 80 to 85 cente\nper 80-pound beg, Quebec! it 75 to 80\ncenta pu 80-pound bag and Prince\nEdward Iiltnd Mountains 88 cent!\nto 81 pu 80-pound big.\nLots of Shooting,\nBut It's All Noise\nHAVANA, Junt 8 (API\u2014Thous-\ntndt of machine-gun and rifle shots\nkept the fubionable vededo section of Htvini ln a state of nervous tension today u tne nitlonil\ngovernment seemed to be moving\ntoward another crisis.\nTerrorists were firing Into tb*\nair, apparently to cause excitement\nand to call attention to a growing\nbreech between civil tnd military\ntutborttlee. Nont wu injured tnd\napparently tbt unidentified disturbers wire firing it no onl ln par-\ntlculu.\nNorthern League\nEau Claire 10, Superior 11.\nPargo-Moorheed 3-8. Crookiton 6-t.\nDuluth 4, Brilnerd-Llttle Falls 18.\nAlthough nln threatened to\nterminate the program and the\nold shower did mtkt It nnpleutnt\nat timet, eenlor tnd Junior high\nschool athletes, under tbe supervision of the teachers, carried ent a\nsuccessful field and track day Saturday at the Becrettlen grounds.\nSam Paucreta, running off with\nthree firsts, two seconds tnd a third,\nfor a tottl of K polnta, captured the\nlndlvldutl honon In the boys'\neventi. Verdln Cooper with three\nflnta and a third for 16 polnta, wu\nsecond high. The girls' events were\nexceedingly close and only one point\ndivided flnt and second places. Doreen Long wltb three firsts, a second\nand a third wu high with 18\npoints. Eva Smith wu one point\nbehind hu. She took three firsts\ntnd a second.\nThe relay races proved Interesting\ntnd were keenly contested. Relays\nwue held tor the Individual grades In\nboth the boys' and girls' classes tnd\nmrt climaxed by lntergride eventi.\nIn each cue the high grade, grade\nnine with the older pupils, competing,\ncarried off the honon. In the eau ot\nthe girls' lntergrade race, grade eeven\nbeat out grade eight.\nThe program wu well managed and\nalthough oondltloni wen tgtlntt tut\ntimes practically evuy event brought\nout fceen competition.\nThe teachers wbo officiated were:\nRaces, R. McArthur, W. Cameron.\nP. C.  Richards. D. N. McLean,  D.\nChembulUn*. broad Jump, O. Culson;\nhigh Jump, Miss C. Martin*, clerk of\ncourse, Mlu E. Etter and Miss Town-\nsend.\nResults wue:\nSenior boys' track eventi:\n100 yardi\u2014Verdun Coopu. 11 seconds, tint, Paul Brooks ncond, Leslie\nQUy third.\n330 yudt\u2014Verdun Coopu, 38 8-6\nseconds, tint, Leslie Ouy tecond, Sid\nHorswill third.\n440 yudt, Ptul Brooks. 1 minute\n1 4-6 seconds, flnt, Dtve MacDonald\nsecond, no third.\n880 yarda\u2014Verdun Cooper, 3 mlnutu 31 3*5 seconds, flnt. Paul Brooks\naecond, Jack Whitfield third.\nMile, open\u2014Paul Brooks 6 minutes,\n64 seconds; flnt, Sam Paucreta second, Dave MacDonald third.\nSenior boys' field evente:\nHigh Jump-Jack Whitfield, 4 feet\nt inches, tint, Leslie Ouy second, Sid\nHorswill third.\nBroad Jump\u201481d Horswill, 17 fut\n8 lnchu flnt, Leslie Ouy eecond,\nVerdun Coopu third.\nShot put\u2014Sid Horswill, 80 fwt 1\ninch first, Cyril Blanty aecond, Sam\nPaaacreta third.\nIntermediate boys' track eventi:\n100 yards\u2014Sam Pasacnta, 11 1-6\nseconds tint, Bob Walkley ncond,\nStanley Doyle third.\n330 yarda\u2014Sam Paucreta. 38 seconds flnt, Stanley Doyle tecond, Ouy\nWlllltmi third. '\n880 yudt\u2014Sam Paucreta, 3 mlnutu,   36   4-6   seconds,   flnt:    Don\nWilson, noond: Dick Wallace, third.\nINTERMEDIATE BOYS\nFIELD EVENTS\nHigh Jump\u2014Don. Wllaon, four\nfeet, four Inches, that: Stanley Doyle,\nncond: Bill Tonwund, third.\nBroad Jump\u2014Stanley Doyle, 18\nfut, nine lnchu, tint;'Sam Put-\ncreta, eecond; Albert Maxwell, third.\nHop, step and Jump\u2014Bob Walk-\nley, 83 tnt, 10 lnchu. flnt; Stanley\nDoyle, ncond: Dick Wallace, third.\nJUNIOR BOYS TRACK\nEVENTS\n75 yards\u2014Ian Dlngwill. 8 4*8\nnconds. tint; Albert Booker, ncond;\nBert Ramsden. third. ,\n100 yards\u2014Ian Dingwall. 13 3-5\nseconds, flnt: Albert Hooker, ncond;   Bert   Ramsden.  third.\n830 yarda\u2014Ian Dingwall, 83 UC*\nonds. flnt; Albert Hooker, tecond;\nOswald Salo, third.\nJunior boyt' field eventi:\nHigh Jump\u2014Jtck Brown, four feet\nfour lnchu, tint; Itn Dlngwill, eecond; Albert Hooker, third.\nBroad   Jump\u2014Albert   Hooker,    18\nfeet, 3 Inches, flnt; Bert Ramsden,\naecond;  Bob MorrU, third.\nQIRLS'  EVENTS\nSenior glrlt track events:\n76 yards\u2014Clarice Shannon, 10\nseconds, flnt; Eva Smith, ncond;\nEvelyn Wood, third.\n100 yards\u2014Eva Smith. 18 seconds.\ntint; Clarice Shtnnon, wcond: Him\nDelPuppo, third.\nBenton glrlt' field events:\nHigh Jump\u2014Eva Smith, four feet,\nflnt; Arit Saare. ncond. No third.\nBroad Jump\u2014Eva Smith, 14 fut,\nont Inch, flnt; Evelyn Wood, ncond.\nNo third.\nSoftbUl throw\u2014Arit Btan, 144\nfeet, flret; Elaine Beeston, tecond;\nMtry Feeney. third.\nIntermediate girls' track eventi: '\n75 yards\u2014Jean Ramuy, t 1-6\nseconds, first: Bertha Mob, ncond;\nHelen Wig*, third.\n100 ytrdi*\u2014Jun Ramsay, 13 ueondi, flnt: Bertbt Moir, eecond;\nHelen Wlgg, third.\nIntermediate girls' track events:\nHigh Jump\u2014Mtry Feeney, four\nfeet, one Inch; Attle Lahalae, second;\nHelen Wlgg. third.\nBroad Jump\u2014Helen Wlgg. 13 feet,\nnven lnchu, flnt; Mary Fmney,\nsecond; Muy Homenhim, third.\nJunior girls' track events:\n80 yards\u2014 Diana Williams, flnt;\nDoreen Long, ncond; Margaret Matthews,  third.\n75 yudt\u2014Olana Wlllltmi, tint:\nPhyllis Ouy, ncond; Doreen Long,\nthird.\n100 yudt\u2014Doreen Long, tint: Diana Williams, tecond; Phyllia Ouy,\nthird.\nJunior girls' field evente:\nHigh Jump\u2014Doreen Long, first;\nRuth Chrlstensen, noond; Dorli\nHabetard. third.\nBroad  Jump\u2014Doreen Long,  tint:\nPhyllis Ouy, ncond; Ruth Chrlstensen. third.\nRELAY  RACES\nBoyi:\nOrade 7\u20140 tetm, Paaacreta, Jack\nBrown, Albert Hooker end BUI Twist,\nflnt: B tttm, BIU Ttylor, Jtck\nCorner, Oswald Salo ind Olen Price,\nsecond.\nOnde 8\u20140 tetm. Btan Doyle, Mlkt\nMalahoff, Albert Meirwu and Frank\nKorolek, flrat; B team, Verdon\nCoopu. Ian Dlngwill, Albert Perclval tnd Arthur Bush, second.\nOrade 8\u2014B team, Cyril Blaney.\nJtck Whitfield, Ouy Williams tnd\nBob Walkley. first. No aecond.\nIhtu-grede nlay\u2014Orade 8B, flnt;\nOrtdt 8C, noond tnd Onde 7C\nthird.\nOlrls:\nOrade 7\u20140 tetm. Helen Wlgg,\nMargaret Matthews, Nina DelPuppo.\ntnd Bertht Mob*, first; B tetm.\nBarbara   Carlyle,  Ruth   Chrletenton,\nThomasle. Brodle tnd Doreen Long,\nncond.\nOrade 8\u2014B team, Ednt Oormley.\nAudrey Wllion. Mugery Bradley and\nMtry Feeney, flnt; C team, Sybil\nMcLwn, Hawl Stout, Betty Byres,\nRuby Olbbon, eecond.\nOrade 8\u2014A team, Jean Ramuy,\nMary Homenham, Junette Wlnliw,\nand Elaine Beeston, tint; C team,\nClarice Shannon, Evelyn Wood,\nPhyllis Shannon, second.\nInter-grade relay-Grade SA. tint;\nOradt 7C, ncond; tnd Onde SB,\nthird.\nMORE ABOUT\nHONORLIST\n(Continued From Page One)\nare Sir Julian Cahn, for eervlce to\nBrltlih agriculture; Herbert B. Orot-\nrlan, for publlo services; Mtjor John\nO. Harford, for public services ln\nCardiganshire Sir Dtvld McCowan,\npruldent of Glasgow Unionist association, and Sir John Prlestman, for\nsocial services In Durham.\nTHE KNIGHTS\nKnighthoods Included thott of\nSamuel Brlghouse, octogenarian coroner of southwest Lancashire; Capt.\nIan Fraser, noted worked among\nblinded soldiers; Col. John Roxburgh,\npresident of the boys brigade; Wal-\ndron Bmlthers, Conservative member\nof tbe bouu of commoni for Cblste-\nhurst and son of a former chairman\nof tbe old Orand Trunk railway in\nCanada; Commander Chules Craven,\ndirector of Vlckere-Armstrong Iron\nWorks; Major A. J. Edmondson, Conservative member of tbe houn of\ncommons for Exford-Banbury; Ronald\nMatthews, former muter cutler of\nSheffield.\nSir John Loader Miffey, commander of the order of tbe Batb.\nAmong companions of the order\nof St. Michael and St. Oeorge were\nProfessor Robert Troup, noted tutborlty on forestry; Commissioner\nDavid Lamb of tbe Salvation Army\nfor bla services ln the cauu of\nBritish emigration.\nAmong knights grand cross of the\norder of the British Empire were Sir\nAim Andenon, former president of\ntbe chamber of shipping, and Blr\nJohn Ralth,. director-general of the\nBrltlih Broadcasting Corporation.\nDames commanders of the ume\norder included Mra. Mary Cadbury,\ndistinguished for education and social services and Miss Alicia BUU,\npresident of the International Council of Nurses.\nOtfloen of the civil division of\ntht British Empire Included Capt.\nDonald Slmpeon, honorary ncntary\nof tbe British Empire Service League,\nand Sydney Oeorge Barker, honored\nfor wrvlce! to tbt Empire marketing board.\nHOLEPROOF\nHOSIERY\nYou probably buy mors\nsocks than any other\nsingle item of apparel.\nAnd every pair must fit\nright, look right and wear\nright. That's why we're so\ncarefu.1 to have the right\nkinds in the right colors.\nSILK OR SILK AND\n.   WOOL\nB0*, 75*, fl.00\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nPACIFIC COAST\nLEAGUE\nSundty\nSacramento t-4: Seattle 6-8.\nOakland 4-8; Portland 0-4.    -'\nHollywood 8-1; Lot Angelu 6-3.\nMissions 10-2; San Francisco 8*8.\nMORE ABOUT\nDRY SPELL\nContinued From Page One)\nThirty yun igo tbe world'i nip\nply ot Msrquis whett could be\u2014\nand waa\u2014deposited In a small envelope, to.be sown ln the following\nspring, ln the hope the \"harvest\"\nfcr thtt yeu would be' more tbun*\ndint. This years the tarmen of wutern Canada have sown millions of\nacres ot Marquis whut, a vulety\nwhich for lut 18, yun hu been\nthe mainstay of the Canadian\nwheatgrowtr tnd which, ln tht yean\nof prosperity, added many millions\nof dollars to the natural wealth\not thlt country.\nThe discoverer of Muqult whett\nwu Dr. Chules E. Saunders, upon\nwhom hit malestry, ln this year's\nlist of birthday honon, conferred\nthat of knighthood.\nSir Cbarlu Saunders, eon of Or.\nWilliam Saunders of London, Ont.,\nfoundu of tbe Dominion experimental farms, wu born ln that\nwutern Ontario city In confederation yeu, 1887.\nRETIRED   NINE   YEARS   AOO\nNine yean ago he retired from\ngovernment service, after having\nbrought Into being a variety ot\nwhut which earned for him the\ndistinction whleb this exclusively\nnational product hu won for the\nfarmers of Canada.\nCuriously enough, ln hli early\nyean Sir Chulei devoted himself\nmore to the study of music than\ntbe study of whest. He etudled\nIn Boeton and New Tork, and for\nsome time wu chief musical Instructor tt Htvergtl tnd St. Margarets Lsdles Collegu, Toronto.\nIn 1903 Sir Charlu wu appointed\ncereallst ln Ottawa, vested with tbe\nduty of conducting reseuchu under\nthe supervision end direction of his\nfather. It wu In thit yeu thue\nwu fertilised from t single pltnt\nthat ned which wu destined to\nrevolutionize wheat-growing ln Canada. It reprennted yean of research,\noross-breedlnt and experimentation.\nFROM ONE TO TWELVE\nThe first yield wu small, obtained from a single hud picked by\nDr. Saunders. Then few grains were\nplanted out In 1804, and 19 planta\nwen garnered. Thla wu tbe flnt\nharvest of Marquis whut ln Canada, enough only to be kept throughout the winter In a small envelope. By 1916 the yield cf Marquis\nwheat wu tulng the most capacious\nelevators of the country.\nIte chief characteristics were Its\neuly ripening qualities, Its heavy\nyield, and lta milling qualities.\nTbe advent of Marquis revolu\ntlonleed the wheat trade of the\nworld. It soon became recognized\nu one of the greatest of all hard\nwheats and the Manitoba!\u2014number\none bard and number one northern\ntook over supremacy ln the grain\npita tverywhere.\nDaring the food shortage ot 1517\nMarquis whut wu credited with\nhaving contributed to t tremend\nous degree towsrds uvlng the it\nUed caueed.\nRETIRED IN  1886\nSir Charles retired from the civil\nurvice In 1938 on t modest superannuation, but eventually the Dominion gonrnment, In appreciation\nof hie urvleu to Canada, granted\nblm a life pension of |6000.\nSir Charles received hit euly education et London Collegltte. From\ntben he proceeded to Toronto\nWhere be wu graduated bachelor\nof trts. with honon ln science,\nHe then studied for thru yeen\ntt John Hopkins university. Baltimore, where he recelytd the degree\nof doctor of philosophy.\nHe came to Otttwt ln 1803, tnd\nthin begin his life-work.\nAstronomen wen dlnppolnted to\nfind that tbe only ltnd where they\ncould place their telescopes to view\nthe 1937 eclipse wu the Island\nSanb Ann, wblcb hss not been men\nabove the iei In over ten yun.\nwue mide to aid farmen who\nwatched their crops wither and\ntheir live itock thin:\nFederal Administrator Harry Hopkins tnnounced t worki relief program fu the drought tret.\nGovernor Floyd Olson of Minnesota mobilised the national guard\nto embrace an embargo on shipments of live itock Into the itate\nfor grating.\nGovernor William B. Lander of\nNorth Dakota declared t similar\nembargo and Wlnontln planned to\nfollow snlt tomorrow.\nWestern railroads announced\nemergency reductions on rates for\nshipping starving cattle and much\nneeded forage.\nBAIN HEAVY, NEBRASKA\nHeaviest nln reported wu ln Nebraska where two Inches fell tt Scott\nBluff lut night. Otbu portion! of\ntbe state uw rain ln varying amounts.\nHigh winds damaged communications\nand hall battered tbe drought-blighted crops but tbe storm still wu a\nboon to farmers.\nThere were light rains ln northern\nand central Wisconsin, thunder showers ln Indiana, Missouri and Illinois\nand most ot the midwest veered from\na stabbing sun to unuttled or cloudy\nweather.\n0. A. Donnel, chief of tbe weather\nbureau here, said June ln this region\nwu the month to expect more rains\nnormally than ln May.\nGenerally cooler wutbu prevailed\nover tbe midwest where for dayi a\nflaming sun beat down without mercy,\nsho ting temperatures to all time high\nrecordt.\nWIDOW OF JOHN\nOLIVER AT MEET\nCLOVXRDALE, B. O, June 8 (OP)\n\u2014Seven hundred old-timers ittended tbe lOtb annual hall of tbe Surrey, Langley and Delta pioneers' sssoclstlon here Friday night. Tbe\nnamu of 66 pioneers who had died\nsince the lut re-unlon were read\nand an impressive two-minutes silence wu observed.\nAmong tbe old-timers preunt\nwue Mrs. John Oliver, widow of the\nlttt Premier John Oliver, wlllltm\nJohnston, 83, who built tbe Johnstone road In Surrey, tnd oeorge\nShorty\" Wait. 86. wbo drove tbe\nLadner-Boundary Bay stage ln 1886.\nForeign Exchange\nDown\nNEW YORK, June 3 (CP).\u2014Fractional declines ruled in Saturday's\nforeign exchange market!, The premium on the Canadian dollar waa\nreduced from 8*16 to i4 per cent\nThe final sterling rate waa $9.06t_,\notf Vt, while the French frtnc, closing tt 6.58 cent!, showed a loat of\n.0014 of a cent,\nHELD FOR ATTEMPTED MURDER\nPHDJCE BUPKRT, B.C, June S\n(CP).\u2014Ross Edward Jeffrey of Fort\nSL John, B.C., alleged to nave attacked his father recently with an\naxe, wu held tonight on t chuge\nof attempted murder, divisional\nheadquarters of provincial police\nhere hive been tdvlied. Jeffrey will\nbe given .preliminary hearing at\nFort SL John, they nld.\nFINAL WEEK OF\nMAY 32 FIRES\nAll But Six In West\nDivision; Total\nfor May 62\nMore then htlf thi tottl numbu\not forest fires for tbe tint month ot\ntht fire season ln' the Kootenty-\nBoundtry territory occurred In the\nlut nven dtyi of Mty, according to\nthe weekly compilation of the forut\nbranch hen, 83 new tint being rat\nported ter tbe week. Of tben, tbt\nEut Kootenay dlvlelon had only W\nwhlit tbe west Koottnty-BoundU]\nbid 38.\nWben tbe report! wen milled t(\nhudquuten, five fine were ttu\nburning, of wblch four wtrt hi tbl\neutern dlvliion, tnd ont ln tht an*\nern dlvliion, but til wue expected tc\nsuccumb quickly, tnd pruumil-y ui\nnow deed.\nThe week't flguru bring tht total\nfor Mty to 81, of whleb 16 wue Ir\nthe Eut Kootenty tnd 48 In tlu\nWnt Kootenty-Bounduy. The tott\nls approximately double tbe figure tot\nMav. 1883, wblch wu tround 80.\nTil the fine so fu htvt been anil\ntnd quickly controlled.\nMORE ABOUT\"\nQuintuplets\n(Contlnned from Pige One)\nthe quintuplets, had ceased some\nanxiety all wttk.\n\"Two ue ln excellent health, two\ntra dolag  ftlrly  well  while  the\nother It In a somewhat prectrtoot\ncondition,'' he old.\nDr. Defoe txpltlned then tlwtyi\nwu tht need at grett ctn of IntUM\nof tbt tunt tit. A mon commodloui\nhot weather Incubator, supplied bj\nthe Ontario branch of the Bed Crou\narrived today. It win be und for th<\ntour Infanta ln good health. Tbe om\nchild ctutlng utility will bt OT\ndaily trotted ln the Incubator n*\nwived from Chlctgo.\nMn. Dlonne ht add would bt tbli\nto luvt bu bed by the end of thll\nweek.\nNEED CONSTANT ATTENTION\nIn explaining tbl Jaundice tttack\nDr. Defoe uld while lt wu quite com*\nmon wltb ntw bornt tbtrt wu ret*\neon for constant tttentlon.\nMadame Loult De Kerllne, Ret\nCrou nunc formerly ln chuge of thl\nBonfleld hospital, arrived from Tb*\nronto latt night to Join thru regis*\ntered nurse* tnd uturt constant at*\ntentlon to each babe.\nOlive A. Dlonne, the father, tald\nha had repudiated the contract hi\nhad signed with the two Chlcagt\npromoten. He eaid Mra. Dlonne mini\nbe a signatory to tbe oontract to make\nIt binding but tbe mother protected\nagainst any move to place the babltt\non exhibition until ehe It tble to dltcuu tbt matter with hu husband.\nGAELIC FOOTBALLERS ARE\nBEATEN BY ALL-NEW YORKERI\nNEW YORK, June S (AP).-Ar\nall-New York tetm defeated Ctvtn\nIreland's Gtellc football chtmploni\nhere todiy Wl.\nJ.A.C. Laughton. R.O\nOPTOMETRIST-OPTICIAN\nSnltt 108, Medial Arts BnUdlng\nCAPITOL\nTODAY\nand TUESDAY\nThe Cavakode of Lifel\nAn epic of (juman emotion, picturing\nthe mighty clash of woman's lore\nagainst man's forgetfulness.\nBy the director of \"Seed\"\nand \"Back Street\".\nNLY\nYESTERDAY\nWITH CAST OF 93 FEATURE PLAYERS\nFeature Starts:\n2s30, 7, 9:15\nADDED\u2014Our Dang Baseals\n\"FOR PETE'S SAKE\"\nAND NEWS\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1934_06_04","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0405300","@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":"1934-06-04 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1934-06-04 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\/1.0405300"}