{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-12-05","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1936-03-31","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0406046\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" &JI\n_ _ _ . s  jyi\nPROVINCIAL\nKIMBERLEY IS I&rAJiAN CUP FINALS\nWALLOP FT. WILLIAM 7-2; KEMP SCORES FOUR\nNearly 90 but Wins Ladies'Prize\nfor Waltz at Moyie\n-Pa&e Three\nG    Al   a NAB   36\nf\u00bb0\u00bb I MC I AL   111114\nVICTORIA   I   e\nVOLUMI 64\nFIVE C6NTS A COPY\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANAOA-TUISOAY MORNINO. MARCH Jl. 1966\nNUMBER 266\nHAUPTMANN'S DEATH DAY DAWNS\nBENNETT RAPS\nWHEAT BILL AS\nPARTY POLITICS\nDeclares It Is Invalid\nBecause Preamble\nIs Inaccurate\nWARNS DANGER\nOF PRECEDENT\nAttacks Bill on Its\nSubject Matter,\nPropaganda\nOTTAWA, March 30 (CP).-Grou\nimccurtcie* md \"pirty politici of\nthe wont type\" are written in the\nlong preamble of the bill which provides for payment! to weitern wheat\npool members in final settlement for\ntheir 1930 deliveries, Conservative\nLeader Bennett told the house of\ncommoni tonight.\nChallenging the validity of the\nbill beciuse of what he termed mli-\nstitementi of fict in the preamble,\nMr. Bennett also warned the government it wu creating i danger-\noui precedent when it sought to\nwrite politicil propaganda into an\nact of parliament\n(Continued en Pagt Twe)\nLIFE TERMS FOR\nMANSLAUGHTER\nHULL, Que., Mtrch SO (CP)-\nSentencet ranging from life Imprisonment down to 10 yeari imprisonment were Imposed today by Mr.\nJuitice Luclen Cannon on ilx men\nconvicted of manslaughter ln connection with the holdup slaying lut\nDecember of Armand Nadeau, 18-\nyeir-old bmk clerk.\nSentence* were:\nJoieph Rochon, 36, Ottawa, Uie\nimprisonment.\nEdmond LaJole, 43, Montreal, life\nimpriionment\nChirley Donnelly, 27, The Cedin,\nQue, 25 yeirs.\nPaul Lafleur, 29, Hull, 20 yetrs\nGeorgei Chenier, 21, Hull, 15\nyttn.\nJem 0. Beiuioleil, 23, 10 years.\nThe prisoners were removed to\ntheir cells md then returned to Bordeaux Jail at Montreal in a police\nvm under heavy guird. From Bor-\ndeaux they will be transferred to\nthe penitentiary.\nSentences came u a climax of a\ntrial which luted iix weeks.\nNadeau wu killed when ht wu\nenroute with Lafleur, bmk accountant, from the HuU Banque Provinciate due Canada to the clearing\nhouse ln Ottewa with $16,610. Nathan Boverman, aliu Ted Martin,\nformer Springfield, Mau., butcher,\nwu killed in Montretl by police\nwhen he illegedly resisted irreit.\nRogers Warns on\nLow Wages\nOTTAWA, Mtrch 30 <CP> .-Employer* who pty low wtgei in order\nthrow i part ot the burden of\nmaintaining their employee! on relief agencies were charged with\n\"treaion tgilntt the itate\" in \u2022\ntime of nitlonil emergency by Hon.\nNorman Rogers, miniiter of labor,\nu he moved second reading of hii\nbill to establlih a national employment commiuion In the houie of\ncommoni todiy.\nThe government, he deelired,\nwould ute to the full the wetpon\nof publicity againit employee of\nthat type. The miniiter menUoned\nno names but indicated Information\nhad come to him that some employer* were guilty of the practice he\ncondemned.\nURGES PORTABLE MILLS\nVICTORIA. Mirch 30 (CP)-W.\nJ. Aueltlne, Liberal, Atlin, in the\nmining committee todiy urged thit\nportable mills be provided by tht\ndepirtment of mlnu for uie in virloui pirts of the province. He uid\nhe hid eximlned tome portable\nmllli in operation ln California and\nthey were a pronounced succeis.\nAmong changei In bill* decided\ntodty wti one extending the provision! of the Barber*' ict to unorganized diitrlcta u well li organ\nlied districts It wu iccepted on motion of R. R. Burnt, Liberal, Ron*\nland-Trail.\nSuggests Eden Get\nHitler to Marry\nLONDON, Mirch SO (AP) \u2014\nThe tuggtitlon thit Anthony\nEdtn, frotlgn uerttery, try to\nInduct Relehituehrer Hitltr te\nmirry wu mtdt In thl houie of\n.ommont todty.\nWhllt Edtn wu explaining hit\nconvention with Jo-chlm von\nRlbbtntrop, Germin ipeclal tm-\noiiiidor W. Thomt, Ltbor pirty\nmtmbtr, Interrupted with:\n\"Mty I uk, whtthtr hi think*\nhi will bt able to pertuidt Herr\nHitler to gtt married te ktep him\nwtll balanced?\"\nEdtn did not reply.\nDIONNES SIGN\nUP FOR MOVIES\nTo Appear With Five\nOlder Children in\nFull Picture\nCALLANDER, Ont., March SO -\n(CP)\u2014Contract* for appearance of\nOUva md Elzire Dionne md their\nfive elder children in a future-\nlength motion picture to be baaed\nlargely on their livei were ligned\ntoday by the quintuplets' pirenti\nand a representative of Univeritl\nPictures corporation.\nPart of the film, itory of which\nhu yet to be written, probibly will\nbe \"thot\" in thia dlitrict with thl\nDionne parenti and their five elder\nchildren travelling to Hollywood to\ncomplete it. Production ii expected\nto itart in the late iprlng or early\nsummer.\nMlu Lillian Barker, member of\nthe New York Dally Newi editorial\nitaff, wu here today conferring\nwith Mr. md Mn. Dionne u to detail! of the itory the will write.\nShe conteraplited the itory lince\nthe quintuplets were born.\nMiu Barker uid Mn. Dionne'i\nIgnorance of tlie Engliih language\nwill be overcome by schooling In\nthe few wordi of thit language her\nrole will call for. Mn. Dionne will\nipeak a few wordi ot French In\nthe film.\nBritain, France and Belgium to\nStart Military Conversations\nSUBZERO (OLD\nGRIPS PRAIRIES,\nHEAVY SNOWFALL\nWinnipeg's Two Below\nIs One oF the\nWarmest\nCOAST MURDER\nTRIAL STARTS\nVANCOUVER, March SO (CP>.-\nThe trill ot Charlu Ruuell, 26, md\nEarl Dunbar, 32, charged with the\nmurder of William K. Hobbi, bank\nteller, which opened in tssize court\ntodty, wu adjourned until tomorrow after the Jury hid viiited the\nscene of the crime md witched \u2022\nre-enactment ot the fatal shooting.\nChief Juitice Aulay Morriion refused to grant a defence application for tepirate trills for the accused at the morning session of the\ncourt, but later arranged to hear\nthe application at 10 a.m. tomorrow.\nHEARST AGAIN IS\nCRITICIZED\nWASHINGTON, March SO (AP)\n-Completion of the United Statu\nsenate lobby committee's field investigation, was disclosed todty,\nsimultaneously with a new out-\nbunt trom the senate floor igalnst\nWiUiam Randolph Hearst, the publisher for hit criticism of the committee's conduct\nSenitor Minton (D., Ind), I lobby\ncommittee member, aroused by edi*\ntoritl reference to the committee\nin Hearst'i pipers, told the lenttt\nthit \"we are a better breed of swine\nthm Hurst and the puiillinimous\npen-pmher, the writer of thli edi-\ntorli.\"\nVeteran Publisher\nDial in U.S.\nMONTCLAIR, N. J., Mtrch 30-\n(CP)-Chirlei G. Phillip*, 76, who\nleft grimmir ichool to iccept i job\ntt $100 t yetr md become hetd of\ntrade publication propertiei he vilued it more thm $10,000,000, died of\n\u2022 heirt lilment todty. In 1925 he retired u pruldent of the United Pub-\nliihers Corporation, then controlling\n24 publication!, after 44 yttn of\nlervlce thit begin u a correspondent.\nFIND  BODY\nPRINCETON, BC, March 80-\n(CP)\u2014A flv* monthi Mirch for\n73-year-old James Alexander Bombard wu ended here todiy The\nbody of the iged mm wu found\nStturdty on the btnk of tht Tult-\nmeen river ibove the tlte ot the\nPrinceton waterworki pumping itatlon. Bombard dluppeired November 3.\nFOUR DEGREES OF\nFROST AT COAST\nSnowdrifts Halt Bus\nTraffic on Roads\nof Alberta\nWINNIPEG, Mirch SO (CP)-A\nsudden return of king winter, seizing the wut ln hli chilling grip md\npiling mmy highways with mow,\ndispelled spring optimism in the\nweitern provincei today.\nWinnipeg i low ot 2 below made\nIt one ol the warmest ipoti on tbe\nprairies. Lethbridge led with a chilling 17 below. It wu 9 below tt\nRegina. On tht Pacific cout 4 de-\ngreet *f trut wu recorded at Vin\ncouver and Vlctorlt.\nIn Alberta, but traffic wu Inter'\nrupted by mow drift* between Edmonton md Calgary. Bui traffic\nbetween Winnipeg and th* International boundary in Manitoba wu\nUed up. Highway officials hoped to\nhive the main highway wut opened\nin 24 houn.\nThe storm cauied little trouble to\nrallwayi, md trains kept clot* to\nichedule.\nConsider B.N.A.\nChanges al Once\nOTTAWA, March SO (CP)-It wu\nthe Intention of the government to\nproceed at the preunt leulon ot\nparliament with a propoied petition to the crown for specific intendments to the British North America\nact, Justice Miniiter jLapointe tt-\nlured the houie of commoni today.\nC. H. Cahan, former teeretary of\nitete, uked the miniiter it he would\ntable copiet of correspondence between the government ind the provlncu on the specific imendmenti\npropoied ln the resolution on the\norder paper In the name of the\nminliter.\nMr. Lapointe agreed to produce\nth* correipondence before the petition wu dimmed but explained\nthat communication! were itill being exchanged.\nWould Have Alberta\nlime Currency\nCALGARY, March SO (CD-Social Credit sponsors believe the\nsovereign right of monetintlon of\nAlberte'i credit ihould be ln the\nhinds ot the province md thit\nmeans the right to issue currency,\n\u2022ptrt from coin, iccording to three\nmemberi of the provlnclil legislature Interviewed here during the\nweek-end.\nThe three memben\u2014H. E. Wight,\nLethbridge, Rev. Peter Diwion of\nLitUe Bow md Jamei Hartley,\nMtcleod\u2014believed the right could be\nobtained to luue paper from * provincial bank or itate credit house.\nThli would give to the people, they\nuld, ill the advantage! now en-\nJoyed by th* btnki, including the\nright to lorn credit.\nTalk About Close\nColli! .\nGeneral Staffs Wi\nConfer, Possibly\nat Brussels\nTO UY PLANS\nFOR DEFENCE\nBut Arrangements Are\nSubject to Approval\nof the Cabinet\nBy CHARLES P. NUTTER\nAuoclited Prtu Staff Writer\nLONDON, Mirch 30 (AP)-Aulh-\norltetive sourcei said tonight tht\ncabinet had tentatively decided to\nbegin military converutiom with\nFrmce and Belgium next week.\nBoth the French md Belgian, are\nto be comulled immediatey by diplomatic reprerentatlvei u to the\ndate when the preliminary discussions, ageed upon In the Locarno\nproposal! ln tho event ot Germany's\nrejection! of thi peace plan, are to\n\u25a0tert\nThe location of tht conference\nmay be Brussels, informed tourcei\nindlcited, titer the cabinet had decided and Prim\/* Miniiter Stanley\nBaldwin had mured tb* houie ot\ncommoni Uie Britiih general stiff\nwould not be aUowed to involve the\ngovtrnment ln commn_nents.\nWORLD AWAITS\nHITLER'S TALK\nONPEACETODAY\nPARDONS(OURT\nREJECTS PLEA;\nTODIETONIGHT\nProposals May Shock\nNations; Only He\nKnows Plan\nFEAR HE MIGHT\nGIVE ULTIMATUM\n(Centlnutd on Pag* Tan)\nitalyIsihF\npoison gas\nSHELBY, N.C, M\u00abrch SO (CF>-\nLightning itruck Juit u Yttet Haw\nkina md hll negro helper, Marvin\nByen, wtre delivering furniture tt\nthe home of Mn. M. B. Kennedy.\nThe hood of the truck itemed to\ntake tire. The top of tht cab wu\nburned awty. Tbt underpinning of\nMn. Kennedy'! houie wu tetttered.\nWindowi were imuhed md t radio\nwu dtmoliihed\nSut no one wu hurt.\nLONDON, Mtrch 30 (CP-Hivu)-\nItely U mmuficturlng poison gu\nfor the \"deliberate purpoie\" ot\nbombing defenceless Ethlopim non-\ncombatants. Lord Cecil Chelwood\nchirged tonight ln the houie ot\nlordi.\nAfter raiding \u2022 telegram trom\nEmperor Haile Selaatie'i daughter\ndecrying the devuteUon cauied by\npoiaon gu imong the Ethioplin population, Lord Cecil declared \"gai it\nnot \u2022 product we are likely to find\non the cout of Eut Atrici.\"   . '\n\"It muit hive _>*en manufactured\ntor the deliberate purpose ot being\nused for bombing enprotected bodies\nof the Ethlopim population,\" he\ncharged.\nRecalling the many internaUonal\nconventions outliving gu warfare\nItaly hu ligned, Lord Cecil uked\nthe government to stile lti inten*\ntiom ln the face of repeated viola-\ntioni of thue obi'gallons.\nCatholics, Teachen\nCloth in Mexico; 16\nDead and 25 Wounded\nMEXICO CITY, March 30 (AP).-\nDispatches to the newspaper El-\ngrifico tonight reported 16 penoni\nwere killed md 25 wounded it the\ntown of Sm Felipe Torres Mochas,\nin the state ot Guanajuato, when\nCatholici and ichool teachen clashed yuterday.\nThe Catholici, coming out of\nchurch after mau, the dispatches\nuid, attacked the teachers who\nwere demonstrating in the town\npla-a.\nMarilyn Miller Is\nSeriously III\nNEW YORK, March 30 (CP) \u2014\nMarilyn Miller, the dancer, who wu\ntaken to a hospital two weeki igo\nsuffering from \u2022 nervoui breakdown, developed toxic poisoning md\ntodiy wu reported seriously ill.\nBig Vote of Germans\nMay Give Him\nCourage\nBy LOUIS P. I.OCHNER\n(Auoclited Preu Foreign Staff)\nBERLIN, March 30 (AP).-No-\nbody but Chancellor Hitler hlmielf\nknew tonight what hit detailed reply to Grut Britain in the Locarno\ncrisis tomorrow would be\u2014t reply\nhe promiied would have \"positive\"\npropouli for peace.\nPolitical tourcei intimated the\nHitler, propouli would 'Wound\nthe world,\" but whether he would\naid Great Britain's efforti for a\npeaceful solution ot the European\ntangle by a conciliatory gesture\nonly der fuehrer hirmelf knew.'\n(Contlnuid en Ptgt Ttn)\nMarkets at\na Glance\n\u25a0y tht Cinidlin Preu\nToronto md Montretl\u2014Induitriil\nstocki unchmged to tlighUy lower.\nToronto mlnet\u2014Higher.\nNew York\u2014Stocki cloied unchmged.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheit up Vt to *ri cent.\nToronto\u2014Bicon hop ott truck\nunchmged at 8.50.\nLondon\u2014Bar illver, copper and\nlead higher; zinc lower.\nNew York\u2014Bar illver md other\nmetali unchmged.\nMontreal\u2014Silver iteady.\nNew York\u2014Cotton md coffee\nlower; rubber and tugar higher.\nNew York\u2014Canadim dollar up\n1-32 to ttVi.\nM.P.P.'s Will Get\nTransportation to\nand From Sessions\nVICTORIA, March 30 (CP) -\nMembers of the British Columbia\nleglslature'will in future receive m\nallowance of 25 centi per mile when\ntravelling to Victoria for the session\nmd thf return trip home. An amendment to the Constitution act introduced in the legislature today provides tor the increued mileage allowance.\nGpv. Hoffman States\nThere Will Be\nNo Reprieve\nDynamiters' Change in Style\nCatches Forts Fiat-Footed;\nFirst B. C. Team in Finals\nForsey Gets Assists on Three of Puffy Kemp's\nGoals; Moore, Redding and Brown\nEach Sink the Puck Once\nHAUPTMANN MAY\nMAKE STATEMENT\nWife Says He \"Might\nTell More\"; But\nGov. Denies\nAIR BILL PASSES\nSECOND  READING\nLONDON, March 31 (Tueiday)\u2014\n(CP Cablel\u2014The house of commoni,\nsitting until one o'clock thil morning, pissed by \u2022 vote of 140 to 35\nthe tecond raiding of the tir ntvigi*\nUon bill, providing among other\nthlngi increaied subsidies for civil\nair transport.\nThe subsidies ire to be Increued\nfrom the preient figure of \u00a31,000,-\n000 mnuilly to \u00a31,900,000 from Dec.\n31, 1040, to Dec. 31, 1093.\nSECTION 13 OF HEALTH INSURANCE\nBILL IS DEFEATED IN B. C. HOUSE\nVICTORIA, Mareh SO (CP)\u2014\nSection 13 ef the government.\nHeilth Imuran.* bill wu defeated In committee In th* Brltlih'\nColumblt legiilature 18-17 htr*\nttnlght\nTh* tection eentelnt provlilon\nfer a S80,ooo appropriation by the\ngovernment te lid In letting up\nerginluUen for eperttlen ef th*\nbill tnd liw limit! tht government'! liability undtr tht um*\n\u2022itadlng for iny ixptndltur* ovtr\nand tbovt thtt imount\nAfttr tht veto had bun taktn\nPrtmltr Pattullo ihouted terou\nthl flier ef tht home: The crown\nIt now rtlltvtd frem tht rttpon-\nliblllty of putting up any monty.\"\nIt wu not dltelottd whit effect\ndtfut of itctlon 13 would htvt\non the futurt of tht bill but tomt\ngovtrnment mtmbtr* minimized\nIt by. itating tht IMAM hid tl-\nrudy bun etrmirktd In tht eiti-\nmltu.\nTRENTON, N.|.. Mareh\n30 iAPI\u2014Governor Htrold\nC. Hoffman a few minutei\nafter the court of pardons\n'today rejected Bruno Richard H-uptmann't i e c o n d\nplea for clemency, uld he\nwould grant \"no reprieve.\"\nThe governor, through hii preu\ntide, William S. Conklin, issued the\nfollowing statement:\n\"The action of the court of pardon! wai the final legal action in\nthe Hauptmann cue.\n'There will be no reprieve.\"\nWith every avenue ot escape apparently cloied to him Hauptmann\nll to die in the electric chair at the\nNew Jersey state priion tomorrow\nnight soon after S o'clock for the\nLindbergh baby murder.\n\"MIGHT TELL MORE'*\nTRENTON, N.J., Mtrch 30 (AP)-\nMrs. Anna Hiuptminn mide t request ot the state priion warden late\ntoday to iee her huiband again tomorrow\u2014the day iet for hii execu\nUon\u2014md wu reported to hive sent\nword to Governor Hoffman thit\nBruno Richard Hauptmann \"might\ntell more.\"\n(Continued en Pagt Twe)\nTO PROBE SMALL\nSALARIES IN\nHOSPITALS\nVICTORIA, March SO (CP)-The\nboard of Induitriil relitioni will\ninvestigate allegation! that hoipital\nemployeu in the province ire working excessive hours it low ritei\nof piy.\nThe chirges were mide in the\nBritiih Columbia legislature by Harold Winch, CCF. (Vincouver Eait),\nwho moved to bring hospital staffs\nwithin the scope of Minimum Wage\nmd Houn of Works acts.\nOn an explanation by Hon. George\nS. Pearson, miniiter of labor, the\nhouie accepted hit amendment to\nhave the induitriil relitioni boaf-\nlook into the matter.\nSWEET REVENGE FOR KIMBERLEY ON\nTEAM THAT ELIMINATED THEM, 1934\nDynamiters Now Meet Winner of Sudbury,\nBrockville Series for Allan Cup and\nthe Canadian'Championship\nCALGARY, March 30 (CP)\u2014Klmberley Dynamiters\nwill represent western Canada in the Allan cup finals, emblematic of the Dominion senior hockey championihip.\nWith a complete change in play-style, the Dynamiten battled ahead tonight to defeat the Fort William\nWanderers 7-2.\nIt marked the fint time a team for British Columbia\nhad advanced to the Dominion finals.\nKimberley will meet either Brockville Magedomas or Slid\nbury Falcons in the Allan cupft\nfinals.\nDynamiters gained revenge\nwith the smashing victory for\ntheir elimination by Fort William in the 1934 western Canada finals. The surprising Kimberley squad sprang a mild upset in defeating Wanderers\nwho won the second game of\nthe best-of-three series Saturday 4-2. The British Columbia\nchampions took the first game\n6-5 in overtime.\n\"Puffy\" Kemp, .lender Dynimlter\nforward, emerged is the hero by\nicoring tour gotlr. He got the only\ngoal of the tint period, added two\nmore in the second md finished hii\nnight'i work with \u2022 counter S3 seconds before tho game ended. Ken\nMoore, Ralph Redding md Harry\nBrown each tallied one,\nGordie Houiton got both Wanderen' gotls in the middle frame,\nonce on a lone effort ind the other\non I past trom Oiile Hicquoll.\nFort Wllliim hid as much of the\nplay it Dynamiten but the Manitoba-Thunder Bay titlists mined\nminy open nets by poor ihooting.\nKimberley wai not so daring in iti\nforechecking tactics as in previous\ngamei ind the Dynimlter forwardi\nbackchccked steadily.\n(Running account on Ptgt Flvt)\nFOUR INDICTED\nFOR MURDER\nCHICAGO, Mtrch 30 (AP)-The\nCook county grand jury itirted\ntour confessed 'teen ige slayers of\nDr. Sllber C. Peacock along tlie roid\nof swift retribution demanded by\nProiecutor Thomas Courtney today\nby voting a murder indictment\nagainst them.\nThe grand Jury returned true\nbills naming Robert Goethe, Dur-\nland Nash, Emil Beach\u2014all IS\u2014md\nMichael Livingston, 17, as perpetrator! of the \"mercy call'' .laying\nlast January 2.\nMARKETING  ACT AMENDED\nVICTORIA, March 30 (CPl -\nAmendment to the Natural Product!\nMarketing (B.C.) .ict Introduced in\nthe BriUih Columblt legiilature today provide! that if the lupreme\ncourt of Cantdt deelired the Dominion Mirketlng act ultra virei,\nthe provincial meuure li proclaimed and validated. It cirriei tbe tame\nonui of proof of origin the accuied\nts in the Dominion leglilitlon, when\n\u2022 penon ii chirged with \"bootlegging\" commoditiei.\nROUTINE EXAMINATION\nTHREE RIVERS, Que., Mirch 30\n(CP)\u2014Routine extminttloh of the\nfinancial set-up ot the Wabasso Cotton company, Ltd, occupied the attenUon of Mr. Justice Turgeon'i\nroyil commiiiion here IMay, with\nboth momlng md ifternoon lei-\nliom taken up with an analyili\nby J. C. McRuer. commiuion counsel, nf Wabasso financing. Preildent\nCharlei R. Whitehead wu the prin-\nciptl witneaa.\nBROCKVILLE\nBEATS  SUDBURY\nOTTAWA, March SO (CP) -\nBrockville Mig.domii won \u2022 6-4\ndeclilon ovtr Sudbury Filceni\ntonight In tht flrtt gtmt of tht\neutern Canadi ttnlor hockty\nfinale. Tht ttami will play In Toronto on Wtdnudty In tht itcond\ngtmt of tht btit-of-thrtt ttrlti to\ndecide which will reprtiint tht\ntut In tht Allan cup flml it\nWinnipeg.\nWith the icore Ued 4-4 late In the\nfinal period, Yip Cclemnn icored \u2022\ndiiputed goal for Brockville which\ndecided, the iuue. Joe Ironstone, the\nold professional goilie who guardi\nthe net! tor the northern OnUrlo\nKootenoy   Hockey\nHistory in the\nMaking\nSUMMARY\nFIRST PERIOD\n1\u2014Klmberley, Kemp, 4:28.\nPenalty\u2014Keane.\nSECOND PERIOD\n2\u2014 Klmbtrlty,   Kemp   (Foney),\n7:3\u00bb.\n3\u2014Klmbtrlty,   Kemp   (Fortly),\n10:23.\n4\u2014Fort Willlim, Houiton, 11:07.\n8\u2014 Klmbtrlty, Moort, 16*02.\n6\u2014Fort Willlim, Houiton (Hae*\nquolll, 17:30.\nPenalty\u2014Moon,\nTHIRD PERIOD\n7\u2014Klmbtrlty, Ridding, .:!-.\n8\u2014 Klmbtrlty, Brown, 17:00.\n9\u2014Klmbtrlty,   Ktmp   (Fonty),\n10:38.\nPemltlei\u2014Keine (2), Fonty.\nchampions, led the protests, claiming the puck did not go past him.\nThe goal umpire insisted the puck\nhit the inside of a post and caromed\nout to the opposite tide, a clean\ngoal. The referees upheld him.\n\u25a0FALCONS SPEEDY\nThe Falcons hid speed to burs\nmd went into the lead eirly in tha\nlecond period with Wulbur Hlller\ndoing the snapshooting. Ryin got\nthat one back for Brockville, then\nManhaU posted a second tor tha\nFalconi.\nThe third period aaw the heavy\nartillery booming with Jo-Jo Grt*\nbilko posting two goals for Mage-\ndomas that really turned the tide\nin their fivor. Alio icoring tor\nBrockville were Mike McMahon and\nColeman with Cooper and Marshall\nreplying for Falcons.\nFalconi htd more ipeed than\nMagedomu and their tut-passing\nattack had BrockvlUe baffled at\nUmes. The heavy BrockvlUe defence and close checking by tht\nforwards kept them from running\nwild md Lea Tice backed up the\nteam by a great game in goal.\nDrugs Daughter and\nLets Ants Eat Her\nAlive in Warsaw\nWARSAW, I-_rch 30 (CP-Havu)\n\u2014Zofja Stetanik murdered her 12-\nyetr-old diughter by drugging her\nmd burying the child alive in \u2022\ngimt ant heap outside the viUage\nof Kurnik, Fomerania, authorities\nreported today. The child's halt-\ndevoured body wtt diicovered by\nviUtgen ind the mother confessed\nthit she hid been \"afraid to do it\nwith my own hands.\"\nLife in Jail for\nMurder Attempt\nMONTREAL, March 30 (CP>-\nConvicted of attempting to murder\na constable, Alexander Paul, 47,\nwas lentenced today by Chief Justice R. A. E. Greenihieldt to life\nimpriionment. Piul wu convicted\nof trying to ihoot i comtable whu\narretted him in the act of robbing\npoor boxei in a north end church.\nTIMMINS  NORANDA  DIRECTOR\nTORONTO, Mirch 30 (CP)-Leo\nTimmini ot Montreal wai elected to\nthe board ot director! of Noranda\nMines, Ltd, at the innutl meeUng\not lhareholden today to tiU the\nvacmcy created by the death of\nhii fither, Noah Timmini. Other\ndirector! were reelected.\nP8YCHOLOQI8T DIES\nLONDON, March 30 (CP-Pilcor\nagency)-Dr. Montague Dtvli Ede!,\n71, ont of Britain, foremost piy-\nchologlsti md i noted Jewlih leider, died today\nFREIGHT TRAIN IN\nPLUNGE TO ROAD\nKITCHENER, Ont, Mirch 31\u2014\n(Tueidiy I\u2014|CP)\u2014Several cm of\na Canadian National rallwayi\nfreight tnln Jumptd tht track\nwhllt tht train wu crouing a tub*\nwty ovtr tht Kltchtntr-Qutlph\nhlghwiy lnd plunged 60 fttt\ndown on to tht rotd, it om o'clock\nthli morning. No ont wu injurtd.\nTHE WEATHER\nMln. Max.\nNELSON      19 3.\nVictorle -    27 38\nNanaimo     28 41\nVancouver  .'     28 48\nKamloopi      12 38\nPrince George     4\" 24 (\nEitevan Point   26 40\nPrince Ruper\/-    32 38\nAUln  \\. _     0 22\nDawion     8 22\nSeattle      _   S3 42\nPortland  -    32 42\nSan rnnclico _  48 54\nSpokme   _.....  22 32\nLoi Angelei _  82 60\nPenticton   13 \u2014\nVernon     8 \u2014\nGrmd Forks ,   18 32\nKulo       2 \u2014\nCrmbrook  \u2122- _   8 24\nCalgary     4\u00bb 2 ,\nEdmnoton            0 10\nSwltt Current     4* 4\nPrince Albert     0 12\nSukatoon        4* 10\nQu'AppeUe         6\" 4 '\nWinnipeg .........    2' 10 \u2022\nMooie Jaw -' 8\n\u2022\u2014Below ier-,\nTorecut:   Nelion  and vicinity\u2014\nLight variable wlndi continued tine\nmd decidedly cold.\n at two\nNILSON DAILY NEWI. NILION. B.C-TUIIOAY MORNINO. MARCH II. INI\nLD TIMER OF\nLARDO PASSES\nHe Ulvin Worked at\nNelson Smelter\n1897\nin\n% Ulvin, Nelson and Lardeau\njtrlet old timer, died in Spokane,\nlib.., about 4 pjn. Monday accord-\n| to advice received in Nelson\ntoday night.\nMr. Ulvin wll ln hii 84th year\nd Wai born ln Thrrnejien, Nor-\n_y. He went to Wisconiln when\nyean of age and rwned a hotel\n[Lacrosse, Wise. In '897 Mr. Ulvin\nme to Nelson to wcrk In the Hall\nIne imelter and tvo yean, later\nUit to Lardo wher\u00bb he built the\n\u2022hip or\nbring yeur\nHAW  FUR\nto\nJ. H.M. Greenwood\n410 Biker St. Nelton B.C\nHlqheit Pricei\u2014Honeit Grtdlne\nPOSITIVELY\nTht flnttt cosl thtt wt\nhtvt ever htd tht privilege to offtr\nDRUMHELLER\nREGAL\nLUMP, ton .... $10.50\nNUT, ton    $9.00\nFairview\nFuel Supply Co.\nPHONE 701\nI    I   ''\"I    01\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u2022:\u25a0     Ul.    cm-\nitiuctlon of the Lai*eau railway.\nMr. Ulvin took an active interest\nin mining md owned several claims\nin the Lardeau on liaVll creek. Al\none time he operated cliiml owned\nby Ben Liwion and now held by\nH. G. Joy of Nelior.\nMr. Ulvin first instituted placer\nwork on Cooper crnek but was not\nsuccessful financially, although it\nwas reported later operators took\nout considerable gold.\nHe is lurvived by ohe ton, Moni,\nof Spokane md i brother, John.\nat Goldhill, Lardeau. About eight\nyears ago he retired and went to\nSpokane.\nROGERS QUOTES\n(ARIYLE\nDistress Period of\nRecalled\n1843\nOTTAWA, March 30 (CP)-The\nworld had passed through lerioui\ndepression ln years gone by, Hon\nNorman Rogers, minister of labor,\ntold the house of commoni today.\ndiscussing the employment commission bill. In former crifis, as in the\npresent, no easy solution had been\nfound.\n\"Sometimes for moral discipline\nind mental exercise I turn to the\npaget of Carlyle,\" the miniiter slid\nHe referred to the opening chapter\nof \"Past and Present\" by that author which was published in 1843 during a period of acute rtlitms, not\nonly ln Great Britain but in other\nparti of the world.\n\"England,\" Thomas Carlyle wrote\non that occasion, \"li full ot wealth,\nof multlfarloui produce, tupply for\nhuman want in every kind; yet England li dying of inanition. With unabated bounty the land of England blooms and grows; waving with\nyellow harvests; thick-studded with\nworkihopi, Induitrlal implements,\nwith 15,000,000 wrkera, undentood\nto be the strongest, tht cunningesl\nmd the wllllngest our earth ever\nhad; these men ire here; the work\nthey have done, the fruit they have\nrealized il here, abundance, exuberance on every hmd of us; md behold tome baleful fist, as of enchantment, hai gone forth laying\n'touch It not ye worken, ye muter\nworken, ye master idien: none of\nyou can touch It, no mm of you\nshall be better for lt; this enchanted\nfruit.'\"\nTO THE PRAIRIES\nReturn Limit 21 Dsys from Ditt of Stlt\nRETURN FARES FROM NELSON\nTO                      Coach tTourlit  JSt'nd'rd\nCalgary $ 8.30 $           $12.45\nEdmonton   12.20 18.30\nRegini      15.00 22.50\nSaskatoon    17.90 26.85\nWinniptg   22.10 27.65     33.15\nPort Arthur ....  30.60 38.25     45.90\nfGood in tourlit lletpen on ptymint of rigulir\nberth rate.\nffQood In Itindird tlttper on payment ef regulir\nberth ntt.\nChildrtn 5 ytirt tnd undtr 12, half fart\nCORRESPONDINGLY LOW FARES TO\nOTHER POINTS NOT SHOWN ABOVE\nFull particular! from your nttreit ticktt igent or\nN. J. LOWES, City Ticktt Agent, Nllnn\u2014Ph. 203\nCANADIAN PACIFIC\nGuide for Travellers\nThese Boys Can Throw Their Weight Around\nRENO  GOLD-DIGGERS\nWho ifter defeating tht Dally Newt Scoopi en MothtNedt lei fer three wlnttn running, wtre en the\ntoeing end if a 10-1 icore oh the full-ilzi iheet it tht Nilien clvlo centre rink whtn they met their\nindent rlvalt Btturdiy night In a return game. In the three year itrltt at tht Mothtrlodt, It hat bun *\nthl uiuil thing for eich teim to icore iround 20 goali, the ihort rink, on tht floor of tht early-day taw-\nmill, permitting tha dtfenct men to ihoot on tht oppoilng gotl whllt hardly moving frtm thtlr tricki.\nTht Scoopi got tweet revenge when they got tht Gold Digger! eut ef their element\nGold Diggen ind Sctopt havt a itandlng tngtgtmeht far hotkey In winter and eoftball In lummir,\nahd tht ntxt rentwtl ef their feud will be on the diimond.\nLift to right the picture ihowi R. C. Buih of Salmo, Olli Carrington, \"Biicult\" McCormick, \"Grand.\nmt\" Pittenon, \"Boxcir\" Moyer, Tommy Lennon, \"Red Horner\" Donighy, Jick Suttllfft, Pet Pewltr,\nand Howard Moore. \"Colonel\" C. P. Perry, mtntger of the Oeld Diggers, wu itlll In Kooteniy Lake\nGeneral hospital, to Pit Fowler tubbtd for him.\nMORE ABOUT\nBENNETT\n(Contlnutd From Page Ont)\nThe preamble ot the bill to which\nlie took such strong objection states\nthe wheat md contracts to purchase\nwheat held by Canadian Cooperative Wheat Producer!, Ltd., under\na guarantee of bank credit from the\nDominion government was transferred to the wheat board December 2, 1035. Mr. Bennett read telegrams and letters exchange between\nOttawa and Winnipeg stating the\ntransfer took place December 14.\nAnother count on which Mr. Bennett attacked the bill was that the\nsubject matter, so far as payments\nfor wheat were concerned, had already been rettled, according to the\ndocumenti furniihed him by the\ngovernment. It wai settled December XI when the Canadian Cooperative Wheat Producers, Ltd, turned\nover their wheat to the wheat board\non the basis of an order-in-council\npaued on October 10, ihortly before\nthe Bennett government left office.\nIt waa ratified by the present government December 17.\nAccording to documents read by\nMr. Bennett, Hon. W. D. Euler, minister of trade and commerce, and\nchairman of the cabinet wheat\ncommittee, demanded the transfer\not the wheat and contracts and\nwarned the Cooperative that it it\nwere not done the government\nwould withdraw its guarantee and\norder the sale of the wheat\nThe bill involves payments to\nproducen of |8,B5O,000.\nMr. Bennett was itill iptaking\nwhen the houst rose.\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest in tin Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\ntree Bui Service Geo. Benwell. Prop.\nBREAKFAST SOe and UP\nLUNCHEON Mc te Mo DINNER 40c to S6c\nROTARV AND OYBO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE '87 NELSON. BC. 422 VERNON 8T\nHUME\u2014J. A. Johmton, A. Simp-\nIfOh, P. H. Gow, T. Blakley, D. S.\n\u25a0Altken, D. Mitch, Vancouver; V.\nI Fink, Cranbrook; Mr. and Mrs. C.\nIG. Smith, Calgary; E. H. Harvey,\nIToronto; J. H. Lewis, J. Sexton,\n\u25a0Medicine Hat; Mr. and Mrs. R. Skilll\ncorn, Crtiton; Mr. md Mn. C. Doctor, Nelson; Mrs. A. E. Wood, Spokane; Mrs. C. P. Perry, Reno mill;\nM. Martin, New Denver; Mn. J. 8.\nGooch, Crawford Bty; C. A. Yule,\nR. S. Fraser, W. R. Lawrence, Penticton.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest It King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Biktr St.       W. K. Clirk, Prop.       Nelson, B. C.\nMew Grand Hotel\nP U KAPAK I'rop.\nHot md Cold Wtter\nSlnait (Oe ue; doublt Mc ud\nMonthly ratei S'0.00 ut\nPH  234      lit VERNON ST\nAccidental Hotel\n'05 Vtrnon ti Phone M7l\nH  WASSICK  Prop,\n8PECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Roomi\nFullv Llctnifd\nprlami Dailij NrniB\nI Interior ol British Columbus\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nMad-len Hotel\nA II fltntni Avnits Yon\nItt A MAODIN Proa\nComoittelv Remediiiet\nHot tne Cold Witer\nIn the HEART ot tht City\nPHONE 68     606 W-RO ST\nJoint Concert\nSet for April 1\nTlie Nelson Glee club\u2014Symphony\norchestra combined concert will be\nhoard Wednesday evening, April 1\nin St. Paul's church. Fifty voices\nand instruments will be featured\nunder the able leadership ot F. E.\nWheeler and Ross Fleming.\nThe clubs have been tortunato ln\nsecuring services ot two good artists,\nMn. Thompson, violinist of the Calgary Symphony orchestra and Mrs.\nW. M. Campbell, soprano, of Saskatoon.\n\u25a0 IG RUSH FOR FLOOD RELIEF\nWASHINGTON, March 30 (AP).\n\u2014A concerted rush by senators and\nrepresentatives to include their own\nprojects in the $300,000,000 flood\ncontrol bill being drafted by the\nsenate commerce committee today\nbrought a prediction from lis chairman, Senator Copeland (D.-N.Y.),\nthat lt would be swollen Into a\n$500,000,000 to $1,000,000,000 measure.\nCOOK STOVE AND CAR SOLD TO OET\nTICKETS TO KIMBERLEY GAME; ONE\nKIMBERLEY FAN PAWNS OVERCOAT\nKIMBERLEY, B. C-More than\n226 Kimberley hickey fans were at\nthe lecond Kimbnley-Fort William\ngame at Calgaiy Saturday night\nwhen the Dynamiters went down to\na 2-4 defeat. Son e 229 fins lett here\non a special tnln Saturday morn-\nnig, and the train picked up more\nin the pass\u2014mo'oristi who had left\nKimberley Thunday but got caught\nin the storm. Tl ey abandoned their\ncars and board* d the train.\nJack O'Neill, who left Thursday,\nmanaged to get through ahead Ot the\nstorm.\nThere are a couple of good itoriei\nef the extent to which Klmberley\ntans went in their determination to\nget to the game.\nOne baehilor, ihort ef money,\n\u25a0old hit eeek itove to get hit\nticket. Antthtr, wht had bought a\noott, pawned It fer a ticket tnd\nont mm iold hli ear and wtnt\nhappily off tt the time.\nMORE ABOUT\nHAUPTMANN\n(Continued From Pigt Oni)\nWilliam Conklin, presi aide to\nGovernor Hoffman, iaid, however,\nhe knew of no communlcetion from,\nMrs. Hauptmann to the governor,\nalthough the Information wtt reported from a reliable lource.\nQUESTION WENDEL\nTRENTON, N.J., March 30 (API-\nState police and representatives of\nthe Mercer county (Trenton) prosecutor's office tonight questioned\nrclatlvei of Paul H. Wendel, held\nin Jail on a charge of murder ta a\nresult of a \"confession\" to the Lindbergh kidnapping which he later\nrepudiated.\nThe question was conducted In\nthe office of Attorney General David T. WilenUt in tht slttehouse.\nOfficials did not divulge lhe trend\not the questioning or itt purpose.\nThose questioned were Paul H.\nWendel Jr. and Mn. Dorothy Phillips, son md diughter of the man,\nboth of whom live in Trenton.\nCol. H. Normin Schwankopt,\nhead ot tht state police, taid one of\nhis officers had questioned Paul\nWnndel, the prisoner, it length today about a reported \"accomplice.\"\nWendel, according to Schwarzkopf\ntold the officer;\n\"Well, I didn't commit the crime\nso I wouldn't have any accomplice*.\nIt I had committed the crime it\nwould be different.\"\nITALIAN ARMIES\nNEAR GONDAR\nTO TALK PEACE\nWITH ITALIANS\ny$t the Want Ads for Results1\nGENEVA, March 30 (CP-Havas)\u2014\nThe Leigue of Na'ions tonight was\nexpected to dispat:h an immediate\ninvitation to Rome and AdrMi Ababa\nto send representatives here for\npeace negotiation!.\nSalvador Madar'agi, chairman of\nthe league council's committee of\n13, and the league secretary-general,\nJoseph Avenol, w'io were delegated\nby the council to seek a peace formula, were reporto 1 ready lo submit\ntheir proposals to the two belligerents.\nIT IS EASY TO BUY\nALABASTINE\n3000 Htrdw_\u00ab, Paint and Depart-\nmental storea Ln Canada have it\nAlabastine is a houtehold word for\nlow coat, and lanitaty wall decoration.\nAsk your dealer.\n*yp\nsum. Lime _w Alabasline.\nCuntda, \u00a3\/mlM\nPA1U. ONTAMO, CANADA\nALABASTINE SOLD BY\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHARDWARE COMPANY LIMITED\n521 Baker St.\nNelien, B.C.\nROME, Mtrch 30 (CP-Hivai)-\nManhall Pietro Si dogllo'r northern\nrmlei are within striking distance\nnt Gondar, northei n gttevay to the\nLake Tana region, and closer to\nAddis Ababa thm at any tune tince\nthe war began, thi war (Mice announced tonight\nCapture of Debt recti by the lecond corps placet In Italian column\nonly 43 mllet norti ot Gondar, the\nwar office laid, while the occupation of Socota by the third army\ncorps gives the Italia forces a strategic caravan centre 247 miles north\nof the Ethiopian capital.\nMAIL STAGE FOR\nFERN IE-NEWGATE\nCALGARY, March SO (CP)-The\nmodem gives way to the ancient\nin the lower Columblt valley in\nBrltlih Columbia this week when\nthe Great Northern railway impends Its Femle Newga'e line and\nthe Cinadian postal service Institutes a \"stage'' service to carry the\nmalls along the lhe.\nThe \"itage\" seivice will most ct\ntho time have a modem aspect as\nautomobiles will be used 'vheti highway conditioni are good but when\nroads are bad and drifted with winter snows teams and cutters will be\nused.\nCalgary postal officials wire id-\nvised of the hew service today.\nBoundary Placers\nCo. Incorporates\nWith a paid vp capital of $-4!,-\n248.54 the \"Boundary Gold Placers\nInc.,\" was Incorporated In Washington and registered as an extra-\nprovincial company in B.C., according to a notice in the British\nColumbia Gazette. The head office\nof the company is ln the Divii\nblock, Grand Forks, and Arthur f.\nCrowe of Grind Forks has been\nnamed attorney.\nIranian Consult\nCalled From U.S.\nWASHINGTON, March SO (AP).\n\u2014The Iranian (Penlan) government\nhas ordered IU legation ln Washington ind lti contulttei in the United\nStates closed because ot articles appearing In the American press which\nit considers a discourtesy to Shaah,\nPresumtbly ln connecUon with\nthe arrest tor a traffic violation, in\nElkton, Maryland, last October ef\ntho former Iranian miniiter to\nWishington, the near eaitern monarchy ordered all ita diplomatic and\nconsular personnel In the United\nStates to return to Iran Immediately.\nThis rttulted In the closing not only\not the legation ln Wuhington but\nalio ot the Iranian comulates In New\nYork and Chicago.\nVOTING  SUPPLIES  ALL NIGHT\nTORONTO, March SO (CP)--On*\nttrio Itgiilatori plodded dretrlly\n\u25a0'nd sleepily tonight through thl\nladloui proceu of voting luppllei\nto enable the government to operate\nduring the coming year. It promised\nto be virtually an all-night sitting.\nIhe tint since the present session\nopened.   ' -\nEACLE\nBLOCK\nMONTH-END\nVALUES\nSTUDIO\nLOUNGES\n$29.50\n$42.50\n$55.50\nRAYON DRAPE     Q[V\n48 inchtt wide      OJ\nRAYON NET Q\u00a3t\n41 inchei wide .. <W\n\u25a0\u2014ni\u2014  !\u2014\u25a0\u25a0 i \u00ab\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0    an    i-i   -    ne-i    \u25a0\nPhone 553 for\nUpholstery\nEstimates\nWHITE WOOL\nBLANKETS\nPlaidi in Hue, Creen\nand Sand\n64x84\n$8.50 pair\nBEDROOM\nCHAIRS\nAll Colon\n$7.95 each\nA LARCE SHIPMENT\nof\nFLOOR\nCOVERINGS\nARRIVES TODAT\nRugi, Careen, Linoleums,\nttt., tt Special Values!\nBREAKFAST\nSUITES\n$34.50\n$54.50\n$59 50\nCRIB\nMATTRESSES\nGood Vtlut\n$2.75\nCRIB\nBLANKETS\n36x45\n$2.35 each\nFINK'S ^FURNITURE\n.PICKWICK\nRIDES AGAIN\nCentenary of Dickens'\nPickwick Papers\nCelebrated\nBy THOMAS T. CHAMPION\nCanadian Prist Stiff Wrlttr\nLONDON, March 80 (CP cable)-\nMr. Pickwick of \"the Pickwick\npapen\" rode through London ln a\ncoach again today to the surprise and\nwonderment ef the populace.\nThe rotund, genial hero ot Charlei\nDickeni' immortal work, tccompanied by hie well-known companions, reenacted tha ride trom the\nGolden Croat to Rochester with e\nfanfare ot trumpets md lh tht ac'ual\ncoach which bore the Pickwickian!\non their hlttoric Journey 100 yean\nago.'\nIt wai part of the celebration arranged by the Dickeni Fellowihlp\nahd othtr devotee! marking the\ncentemry of the publication ln London ot the flnt part of \"The Pickwick Papen.\"\nTomorrow the centenary will be\ncelebrated further by a Dickens\nmatinee at the Palladium In aid of\nCharing Cross hospital. Among the\nprominent penotis who will appear\nwill be Sir Johh and Lady Martin*\nHtrvey, Sir Philip Ben Greet, Dame\nSybil Thorndike, Sir Seymour and\nLady Hicki and Bransby Williams.\nSir Stephen Kllllck, former lord,\nmtyor ot London, will preside at a\ncentenary dinner in the evening.\nSpeaken will include Viscountess\nSnowdeh, file John Martin-Harvey\nand Philip Ouedaiia.\nPAIL TO CATCH\nPUBLIC ENEMY\nHOT SPRINGS, Ark., March 30\n(AP).\u2014G-men descended swiftly on\na remote farm house here todiy and\nreputedly whisked awty a mtn and\ntwo women, but the Justice agenti\nrefused t* confirm or deny the capture!.\nTossing tear bombi Into the houie\nafter barring accent to the rotdi\nnearby, the government agenti\nmilked theu* movement! in itcrecy\ntnd sped away.\nTOPEKA, Kit., Mtrch 80 <AP).-\nAnnouncement that a raid of federal offleen at Hot Springe, Ark.,\nIn an attempt to capture Alvln Kar-\npis, public enemy No. 1, had failed\nto apprehend the accused Bremer\nkidnapper, wn mtde tonight to the\nKansas highway patrol.\nLleut-CoL Wlnt Smith, director\nof the Kansas highway patrol, telephoned the information to hit as-\nliitaht, Frank Stone. \"Smith said\nhe believed Karpis had been there\nbut had left,\" Stone announced.\nNOT TO CANC-L TAX SALES\nVANCOUVER, March 80 (CP)-\nVincouver't tu nil will not be\ncancelled thit yeir, it wai indicated\ntoday at a meeting ot the city\ncouncil. Replying to a quettlon by\nAldermm H, D. Wilson, a member\not the council whe went to Victoria ln connection with the city's\ncharter imendmenti, made lt clear\nthat the provincial government is\nopposed to cancelation ot the tile.\nTax itlet in Vancouver had been\nCancelled for the put two yin.\nNO MOVIM IF PLAY \"HOOKBY\"\nWINNIPEG, March 80 (CP) -\nSchool children who play \"hookey\"\nhere won't oe able to go to movies\nfrom now on. The Mtnltobt Motion\nPicture Exhlbitort woctatlon hat\ndecided children, unleu accompanied by adulti, will not be admitted during ichool hours.\nCOULD   SAVE  M-,000\nOTTAWA, March SO (CP)-The\nCanadian National md Canadian\nPacific railways will save SS-,000 a\nyear through unlficttion of roundhouse facilities ln OtUwa, Railway\nMinister Howe told the house of\ncommoni today,  *-\nBURNS'\nBLOCK\nVALUES THAT SPEAK\nFOR THEMSELVES\nCHOOSE YOUR EASTER COSTUME\nFROM OUR STOCK OF LEADING\nEASTER FASHIONS\n(A Deposit Holds Any Garment).\nCOATS\nSwagger or fitted. Imported or dom.stic tweeds. Sires\nE\u2122 $9,95t0 $19.50\nSUITS\nTailored, Strollers or Swaggers. Plaids, checks, tweeds.\nSI4.10.44 $9.95t0 $2250\nSLIPS\nSatin lace trimme J or tailored. White and Nu-rase.\nSa32. $1.59\nHOSIERY\nCrepe full fashioned. An\nopportunity to stoci; up.\nSires ., 9V_. 10.\nPair\t\n\u00ab\nNew lingerie hu I rainbow tendency using iuch colon u pile lavender, Ice blues, iiffron yellow,\nhytclnth blue, ni well u the old\nitandby favorltei of pink, fleah,\npeach bloom Md Ivory white.\nSPEEDING IN HIOH PLACIS\nLONDON (CP).-The eollc'or-\njeneral, Sir Donald Somervell, whe\nwrote expressing regret, Wll fined\n$2.50 at Bow itreet police court tor\nipeeding ln St. Jamu' perk.   \t\nThe Danger of Couth\nAmong the Children\nla young children a eold or eongh ti aet a tbltg\nte he disregarded, at It ti oftia a (nee mitttr,\naad nnlcli atttndld to Immediitely lt may\neventually eauia nrlcei trouble.\nOn the flnt ilgn of \u25a0 eold or rough the mother\nwill And le Dr. Wood'i Norway Pint B\/rap 'oil\nthe remedy required.\nIti promptneii and tffeetivtntu li looming tbe\nphlegm it inch that the trouble may be c_M_td\nbefore anything of a lerioui nitnrt leti in.\nChildren like it; Uke it without uy fun.\n \u25a03*a\nFEDERATION TO CONVENE\n\"Education for Living\" is to be\nthe keynote ot speaken and activities at the council meeting of the\nGeneral Federation of Women's\nClubs at Miami, Fla., AprU 27-May 1.\nYAHK PIONEER\nIS UID TO REST\nSomething Saved\non\nEvery Purchase\nat SAFEWAY\nPHONES 865-866\n--AFEWAY   STORES   LIMITED\nMrs. Hattie Larson\ni     Dies at Spokane\ni    YAHK, B.C.,-Mn. Hattie C. Lar-\n' son of Yahk died at Deaconess hos-\nnit.il, Spokane, March 23.\nMn. Larson was 70 years of age\nand wa* a pioneer of this district\nin which she has made her home\nsince 1902. She first lived at Mpyie\nand in ,1910 moved to Yahk, where\nshe entered the hotel businss in\npartnership with Ben Riley, now in\nbusiness in Canal Flat\nMrs. Larson was born in Sweden\nNELSON  DAILY NEWS   NELSON   B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING. MARCH 31   1938\nmtde\nand twice In recent yean\ntrips back to ner old home.\nShe Is survived by a daughter,\nMn. Alex Rattray and a son, Cecil,\nof Yahk and grand-daughter Miss\nJean Rattray who attendi high-\nschool in Nelion. Other relatives reside in Sweden. ,\nThe funeral wai at Cranbrook,\nFriday, from the United church,\nwith Rev. R. W. Hardy, pastor officiating.\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS NEARLY90BUT\n- PAQE THREE\nRevelstoke Man\nat Fort Steele\nQuick Relief       J^\nFOR STUFf*\nIN NELSON CITY\nThli column li conducted by Mn M J Vlgneux. All newi of a\nsocial nature Including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages etc.. will appear in thtt column. Telephone Mra\nVigneux at her home. 519 Silica street, *\u25a0\nFORT STEELE, B.C. - Bridge\nand whist were played In the Community hall Friday. Supper was\nserved by Mr. and Mrs. Jolliffe.\nJames Vlccicelli of Revelstoke li\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Cobb\nA number of young folks motored\nto Ta-Ta creek Saturday to*iIttend j vl\u00abe-pr_-ident 0-U\u00bb f 6._>. tTwho\nE. H. Hanley of Toronto, a former\nresident uf Nelson, is spending \u2022\ncouple of dayi in town.\n.    .    a\nOscar Andenon of Ymir visited\nthe city yesterday.\n.   .   .\nShoppers tn Nelson yesterday included Mrs. T. A. Mills of Willow\nPoint.\ni   t. t\nMrs. R. J. Spott of Vancouver,\nVicks\nVatronoi\nJuit a few dropi...\nend you breathe easily\nageinl Va-tro-nol\nclean clogging mucus,\nreduces swollen membranes-brings wei* ^Mjjj IjjjjW Hid in Time, Helps\ncome relief. ^S^ ^^      Prevent Miny Coldt\nM. W. Locke shoes\nbring the perfect\ncombination  to\nyou, graceful styles\nto complement\nyour Spring ensemble \u2014comfort\nand corrective features in the only\n\u25a0hoes designed  and approved by\nDr. M. W. Locke of Williamsburg.\n\u25a0OR  MIN  WOMIN   ANO CNILDRIN\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nNEEDED by Every\nGROWING\nCHILD\n\"Bottled Health\"\nMeans a Sound Body!\nMost parents recognize the place of milk in HEALTH,\nbut few realize how much it means in HAPPINESS!\nThe brightest hours in any child's life are the active\nhours, those spent with other children. And it takes a\nhealthy body, and sturdy bones to hold a place in any\n\"gang\"! The lonely, unhappy child is usually the child\nwho isn't well, whose diet lacks some of the essentials\nto good health. That's why the energy and resistance\nbuilding elements in Curlew Milk make it so popular\nwith parents who understand the needs of thpir children!\nPhone 290 to Start n_li.-rii_*.t\nCURLEW CREAMERY\n*      PALM DAIRIES LIMITED\nICE CREAM \u2014 BUTTER \u2014 MILK\ndance. They included Mr. and\nMrs. Jolliffe, Marion Kershaw, Veronica Werden, Leonard Cretney\nand L. Werden.\nAlan Moore Jr., and Arthur Howard went by the special train to the\nKimberley-Prince Albert hockey\ngame at the civic centre in Nelson.\nOn St. Patrick's day. Mr. and\nMrs. Henry Kershaw, and Mr. Leigh\nmotored to Mo\"ie to attend a birthday celebration in honor of Joe Kershaw.\nMiss Vera Dawson was a visitor\nto Cranbrook.\nGeorge Lumn of Fort Steele is a\npatient ln St. Eugene hospital, Cranbrook.\nThe last of a series of mining lectures was given by R. J. MacDougal,\nTuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. V. Kershaw were\nvisitors here'from Moyie Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Miller had as a\nweek-end guest their son, Maldwyn,\nwho is attending high school in\nCranbrook.\nMrs. E. C. Cretney is visiting the\nSheep creek ranch.\nJ. H. Norman was a visitor to\nCalgary.\nwas in Trail, Is a Nelson visitor.'\n\u00ab   *   \u2666\nWilfrid Patrick of Boswell was a\nweek-end visitor in town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nF. F. Finckelson was in the city\nfrom Ymir yesterday.\n.   *   .\n3. S. Robertson of Rossland spent\nthe week-end in Nelson.\nFrank Scott was among visitors in\ntown from South Slocan yesterday.\ntit\nMn. Charles F. McHardy recently\nvisited her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Kay McLean in\nTrail.\n\u2022 -t \u25a0 \u2022\nG. R. Frampton uf Salmo visited\nNelson during the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDr. A. F. Wilson of Longbeach\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 *   *\nJ. L. Irwin of New Denver was\na week-end shopper in the city.\n\u2022 it\nMrs. D. StDenis, Kerr apartments\nleft yesterday via the Great Northern for Seattle where she will visit\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\n5:00 From the Green Room, back\nstage, Montreal Inot B.C.I; 5:30\nNews, BC. Net.; Music for Today.\nB.C. 5:45; 6:00 No Mournful numbers, Winnipeg; 0:30 Program from\nVan.; 6:45 Les Caveliers de la Salle,\nMont.; 7:00 Program trom Van.;\n7:30 The Young ken's Canadian\nclub, Montreal; 7:45 C. P. News;\n8:00 Time Signal; Across the Border, C.B.S.-NY.; 8:30 On the Riviera, Calangis Family, dir. Jack\nAvison, Gerhardt Oily, Vancouver;\n3:00 Just S'posin', drama, dir., W.\nMcQuillan, Winnipeg (West Net.);\n3:30 Melody Moods, dir. Ina McCartney, Vancouver (West. Net.); 10:00\nNews (B.C. Net.); 10:15 Jack Williamson's orch., Vancouver.\nnounced; 6:00 D.L. Workshop. D.L.;\n6:30 Country Church of Hollywood.\nDi.; Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians.\nKSL; 7:00 Parties at Pickfair, Mary\nI'ickford; 7:30 March of Time; 8:00\nMyrt and Marge, serial, 8:15 Male\nChorus Parade, D.L.; 8:30 Caravan,\nWalter O'Keefe, Deane Janls, Glen\nGray's orch.; 0:00 Fred Waring's\n; Pennsylvanians; 10:00 Jimmy Bit-\n! tick's orch., D.L.; 10:30 Sterling\nYoung's orch., D.L.-KVI; 11:00 Jimmy Dorsey's orch., D.L.; 11:30 Emil\nJBaffa's oich., D.L.; 11:45 Ted Dawson's orch., D.L.-KVI.\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. Bug-\ngins, pioneer residents of Willow\nPoint.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. O. A. Gray, Fairview, leaves\nthis morning for Lumberton to visit.\nIt'i\nNormanMacLeod of Procter spent\nthe week-end in Nelson.\n.   .   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Charles F. McHardy,\nMedical Arts apartments, have as\ntheir guest their grandchild Louise\nMacLean ot Trail.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nJohn C. Craig of Ymlr spent the\nweok-end with his family in Nelson.    -\na e .i\nMiss Margaret Tyson of Trail was\na week-end visitor In town.\ntit\nAlex Flnlayson of Procter was a\nvKek-end visitor in Nelson.\n\u00bb   \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. H. Leggatt nf Longbeach spent ycslerday ln the city.\nMrs. U. LePage of Trail Is visiting\nher daughters in Nelton. ,|\na    *   .\nG. Noel Brown was a shopper in\ntown from Corra Linn.\nGuy Morey of Trail spent the\nweek-end at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mn. P. G. Morey,\nHoover street.\ni ' t   t\nV. A. Foly was in the city from\nTrail during the week-end.\n.   *   *\nVisiton in Nelson Sunday included J. McDonald of Balfour.\n* t   *\nMn. J. W. Templeton of Calgary\nis visiting .her mother, Mrs. A. Lai-\nson, Carbonate street, her sisters.\nMrs. W. McCandlish and Mrs. E. H.\nSimpson and her brother C. A. Larson.\nCarly Nystrom\ntown yesterday.\nof Ymir visited\nMrs. Jack Marsden of Meadows,\nwho had been in Nelson for some\ntime, left yesterday for Meadows\nwhere she was called through the\nserious illness of her brother-in-law\nChris Marsden.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nMiss A. Smith of Trail was a\ni week-end visitor in the city.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO\n590 620 640 680 920\n5:00 Beaux Arts Trio, instrumental; 6:00 Ben Bernie and the Lads;\n6:30 Donald Novis, Gloria Grafton,\nsoprano, Eddie Duchin's orch., and\nAdolph Deutsche's orch.; 7:00 Eddie\nDowling's Revue, Goodman's orch.;\n7:30 Jimmy Fidler, Hollywood gossip; 7:45 The Night Editor, Burdick, KPO; The Twin City Foursome; 8:00 Amos 'n' Andy; 8:15\nLum and Abner; 8:30 Leo Rels-\nman's orchestra, with Phil Duey and\nJon. .iy, Eton Boys, Sully Singer;\n9:00 Death Valley Days, Old Ranger,\nnarrator; 9:30 Crime Clues, mystery\ndrama;   10:00  News  Flashes,\nj    C. G. Fenwick was in Nelson from\n', South Slocan yesterday.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouvtr 500 .v\n5:15 Cariboo Cowboys; 8:15 News\nFl-shu; 6:.   -id Mulictl; 7:00 Self-\nHelp; 7:30 Women's Point of View;.    Mrs. A. D. Gooch of Crawford\n7:45 Investment Talk; 8:00 Laddie ! Bay was in town last evening and\nWatkis; 8:15 Fnnkie McPhelan; 8:80 \u2022 |eaves this morning for Victoria.\nGeorge White; 8:45 June Day; 9:00\nI Len Chamberlain's orch.; 9.30 Jim-\nj my Morris, singer; 9:45 The Home-\nIsteaders; 10:15 Eric Gee's Collegians;\n110:45 Slumber Hour; 11:00 News.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgiry 10,000 w\n5:00 Cecil and Silly, E.T.; 5:15\nBlack and Blue; 6:00 Adventure\nBound; 6:15 The Rangers; 6:30 Hi-\nHilarities; 6:45 Slices of Life; 7:00\nThe Grain Forum; 7:30 Song Souvenirs; 7:45 Watanabe and Archie;\nE.T.; 8:00 Tomorrow, Dr. Kellaway;\nj 8:30 Variety Show; 8:45 True Concessions; 9:00 News Flashes; 9:15!\nSam I The Serenader.\nClarence Holden of Boswell was\na week-end visitor in town.\n\u2022 t. t\nL. Exton was in the city from\nProcter during the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mn. Charles Doctor and\nfamily leave this morning for Vancouver where Mr. Doctor has been\ntransferred.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nGordon Irving returns today to\nTrail after a couple of days at the\nhome of his father, J. A. Irving.\nHoover street.\nHayes; 10:15 Tom Coakley's orch; i\n10:30 Jimmy Grier's orch.; 11:001\nEddie Fit-patrick Jr., and orch.; I\n11:30 Griff Williami' orch.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Fairy plays, direction of\nMaude Wilson, juvenile; 6:00 Crosscuts From the Log o' the Day, Dr\nLaurence L. Cross, Southern Harmony Four; 6:15 Popeye the Sailor\nMan, KGO; 6:30 Old World Music,\nvocalist; S. F. Municipal Government, interview (KGO); 6:45 Air\nAdventures of Jimmy Allen (KGO);\n7:00 Western Women, from KGO;\n7:15 Chester Rowell, KGO; Argentine Trio; 7:30 Meredith Willson'i\norch.; 8:00 California State Chamber\nof Commerce, KGO; John Teel, baritone; 8:15 Ella Schallert, reviews;\n8:30 Henry King's orch.; 9:00 Reflections, vocal, instrum.; 9:30 Vel-\n02 and Yolanda's orch.; 10:00 Paul\nPendarvis' orch.,' 11:30 Del Courtney's orch.; 11:00 Paul Carson, organist.\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI   KFRC   KOIN   KSL  KOL\n570     610      940      1130   1270\n5:00 The Harmonettes; 5:15 Eddie\nDunstedter, organist; 5:30 To be an-\nCHOICE MEATS\nCood Buys\u2014Caih Pricei\nMinced Beef, Sausage Meat,\nBreakfast Sauiage:     1A<*\nLb   IU\nSirloin and T.-Bone Roasts,\nSirloin and T.-Bone Steaks,\nChoice Rolled Roasti: Ofto\nPure Homt Rendered lit.\nLtrd\u2014Perlb. *-\u2666>\nGood Pot Routi CM and lAii\nGood Ovtn If A to ICl*\nRouti\u2014Per lb. **\"V       *-\u00bb>\nBrliket tnd Short Ribs\u2014   OCt-\n4 lbs.   \u2022_\u00bb>\nVttl Stetk\u2014\nPer lb.\n15<\nBON TON\nNeat Market\nWe Deliver Free\nPHONE 292\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTrinimlulon 6\nGSC, 9.58 me. (31.32 m.i\n7:00 p.m.\u2014Big Ben. \"Your Programs from Daventry\". A talk by\nthe Empire Program Director; 7:15\nChamber Music. The Nelson Trio.\nIda Nelson, Canadian violinist; Zara\nNelson, Canadian violoncellist; Tessa Bloom, pianoforte; 7:45 News;\n8:00 Close down.\nMauve to violet shades are approved for the new tailored cocktail\nsuits.\nWIN. PRE FOR\nWALTZ AT MOYIE\nMrs. Annie Smith Is\nWinner of Ladies'\nFirst Prize\nMOYIE, B.C.-Mrs. Annie Smith\nof Moyle, nearly 90 yean of age,\nshowed the younger generation the\nproper way to waltz and carried off\nladies' first prize in one of the contest dances at a large community\ngathering here on the \"seventeenth,''\nhonoring, Jointly, St. Patrick's day\nand the birthday of Joe Kershaw.\nMrs. Smith came here in 1898 and\nis the mother of R. A. Smith, postmaster here for the last 30 years.\nA. J. Smith won the men's first\nwaltz prize.\nNearly everybody in Moyie turned\nout for the big celebration. A program of an hour and a half preceded\nthe contest dances, which were followed by a \"lap\" supper and then a\ndance that held sway till 3 a.m.\nA 'broom' dance was won by Master Phillip Conrad and a tag spot\ndance was won by Mr. and Mrs.\nTommy Willis.\nThe program follows:\nVocal - \"I'll Take You Home\nAgain Kathleen,\" V. H. Sanders.\nBagpipes\u2014 Mr. Strachan.\nSong \u2014 \"Tumbled Down Shack,\"\nMr. Laurie.\nReading\u2014\"Everyone Is Irish on\nSt. Patrick's Day,\" Mn. Doherty.\nComic song\u2014\"Wee Wee Marie,\"\nTaffy Palmer.\nStep dance\u2014Bill Neilson.\nComic song\u2014\"Bit of Seaweed,\" A.\nJ. Smith.\nVocal \u2014\"Mickey,\" Miss Frances\nWhitehead.\nDialogue \u2014\"Winning a Widow,\"\nJessie Jane Whitehead and Philip\nConrad.      ,\nComic song\u2014\"Simply Wild Over\nMe,\" Taffy Palmer.\nStep dance\u2014Al Danlelson.\nAccordion selection\u2014Ernest Dan-\nielson.\nSong \u2014'\"When Irish Eyes Are\nSmiling,\"  Ronald  Hyde.\nMale chorus\u2014\"Can't Yo' Hear Me\nCalling, Caroline.\"\nAlex Stewart was chairman and\nmade known the key note of such\namusement and gayety on this particular date: \"We celebrated St.\nPatrick's day, also the birthday of\nJoe  Kershaw.\"\nMrs. Joe Kershaw was convener\nof all prizes. The camp boys lent\nsupport in arranging all details,\nhelping excellent support on the\nprogram, and gave financial help in\nregards to lights, etc.\nMrs. Whitehead presided at the\npiano and was given a special presented by Mn. Kershaw.\nA feature was the arrival of the\nKershaw relatives to help swell the\ngathering.\nMr. and Mrs. Oughtred and wns,\nond Mils Mary Andrews were in\nby car Friday from Chapman camp.\nThe Burnett brothen left Thursday for prairie points.\nMiss Thora Andrews went by car\nto Cranbrook Friday returning\nhome \u00bbith Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Fitch\nand Ron Hyde.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Kershaw, Miss [\nMarion Kershaw, Alfred Kershaw\nand Tom Lee, all of Fort Steele,\nwith Mrs. Doris Ryckman of Cranbrook, were St. Patrick's day visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nJoe Kershaw here.\nMENUS\nRECIPES\n\u2022nd\nHINTS\nGood\nHousekeeping\nBv\nMrs.\nMary\nMorton\n)$f Ifateaift \"Bail -IdmpangHj\nNovelty\ntable cloths\nReal Irish damask cloths in new designs. White with\nborders of blue, gold or green\nSize 52x52:         <M *)C      Size 52x70: <P 1 or\nEACH    \u00abpl.OJ\nEACH\n$135\nNEW DUTCH CLOTHS\nDelightfully different and- new. Come in\nsize 52x52. Plaids and checks in rayon\nmixtures. Very easy to wash.\ntACH   \t\n\u00bb149\nTOWEL SNAP\nCome early for these English striped towels.\nManufacturers' oddments. Size 20x40\nEACH   \t\n1*\nHBC Pure Food Specials\n193-Phones-194 Free Delivery\nON SALE TUES., WED. and THURS.\nFIG BAR BISCUITS\u2014                           1 17^\nOrmond's  lb. 11\nTUNA FLAKES\u2014                                 1 JM\nVis, tin  tin 13\nSALMON\u2014                                         2 oo^\nFancy Sockeye, Fraser Cold '\/_$ tins JJ\nSPINACH\u2014                                        l iTi\nSunbeam 2s Hn ID\nPRUNES\u2014                                          2 OO*\nCalifornia Large Size 40-50s lbt. Lt)\nPORK AND BEANS\u2014                           1 ~~\\U\nClark's Size 2  Hit 11\nMARMALADE\u2014                                    1 \u20147n^\nNelson 4-lb. tin tin f_Q\nCHIPSO\u2014                                           1 0<V\nLarge pkg pfcg, LL\nCOFFEE\u2014                                         l nrv\n3-lb. carton containing cup and saucer , -carton     OJ\nSTRAWBERRY |AM\u2014                            1 roc\nNelson 4-lb. tin tin OJ\ndates=                ;        2 r_v\nFresh Stock, Unpitted . \u25a0 Iba. 13\nPEANUT BUTTER\u2014                             1 ~nft^\nMcColl's 2s  tin LO\nWALNUT PECAN DESERT BISCUIT\u2014   1 07e\nSomething new  lb. Lt\nCAKE FLOUR\u2014                                   1 ~T-W\nAnna Lee Scott's, large carton carton     itL\nFLOUR\u2014                                        1 *1 ntt\nMaple Leaf 49s tack \u00abpl.l J\nORANCES\u2014                                        2 ret\nCalifornia, Sweet and Juicy doi. 33\nINTERNATIONAL\nWashington, 8:00 a.m. \u2014 Shut-in\nHour: U.S. Marine Band, Capt.\nTaylor Branson, leader. W8XK,\nPittsburgh, 19.7 m\u201e 15.21 meg. Also\nW3XAL, New York, 16.8 m\u201e 17.78\nmeg.\nCaracas, 5:00 p.m.\u2014'The Green\nVase Vanishes,\" mystery serial.\nYV2RC, 51.7 m\u201e 5.8 meg.\nParis, 5:15 p.m\u2014Modern French\nmusic. FYA, 25.6 m\u201e 11.72 meg.\nBerlin, 5:30 p.m.\u2014\"Love Letters\nand Love Songs\u2014Always Changing,\nEver New.\" DJC, 49.8 m., 6.02 meg.\nWinnipeg, 6:00 pan.\u2014\"No Mournful Numbers,\" comedy program.\nCRCX, Toronto, 493 ni., 6.09 meg.;\nCJRO, 48^ m., 6.1 meg., and CJRX,\n25.6 m., 11.7 meg., Winnipeg.\nEindhoven, The Netherlands, 12:00\nmidnight-Holland Music. PHI, 25.5\nm., 11.73 meg.\nMenu Hint\nVeal Loaf      Creamed Potatoes\nGreen Bean Salad      Pickled Beets\nChocolate Nut Loaf    Tea or Coffee\nThe meat loaf is always worth\nconsidering in the menu, if you have\nnot served it recently. It is appetizing served hot, and delicious served\ncold.\nToday'i Reclpei\nVeal Loaf \u2014 One  and  one-half\n; pounds round iteak. one-half pound\nI veal, one-half pound salt pork, one-\nhalf cup bread crumbs, one small\nonion, salt and  pepper. Mix and\nbake in loaf pan with a little water\nadded. Slices of bacon laid across\nthe top of the loaf give it additional\nflavor. Bake in moderate hot oven,\n375 degrees, for about one and one-\nhalf houn.\nFINGERPRINTING  BABIES\nThere now are approximately\n7000 aeti of fingerprints of babies\nand children on file at the depart\nment of justice. This is regarded ts\nan Important weapon against kidnappers.\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n*. PILLS -\nh,   ****.TMtr-T   v\nChocolate Nut Loaf\u2014Two and one-\nhalf cups pastry flour, one-fourth\nteaspoon salt one teaspoon soda,\none cup butter or other shortening,\ntwo cups sugar, five eggs, well beaten; one cup nutmeats, coarsely broken; three squares unsweetened chocolate, melted; one cup sour milk,\ntwo teaspoons vanilla. Sift flour\nonce, measure, add salt and soda and\nlift together three times. Cream\nbutter thoroughly, add sugar gradually and cream together until light'\nand fluffy. Add eggs and beat well.\nAdd nuti tnd chocolate and blend.\nAdd flour alternately with milk,\na small amount it a time, betting\nafter each addition until smooth.\nAdd vanilla. Bake ln greased loaf,\n12 by eight by three Inches, in\nslow oven, 325 degrees, one hour,\nor until done.\nout the sting and pain of burns, the\npotato scrappings placed over the\nburn very obligingly absorbs the\nheat. As the scrapings become hot,\nuse a new application.\nFor Stains\nFor fingen stained from preparing vegetables, a solution of exceedingly strong tea should be made.\nDip your fingers into this for a short\ntime and then wash with soap and\nwater.\nTo Clean Faucets\nTo clean brass faucets dip a piece\nof flannel in vinegar and rub well.\nIn case they are greasy, wash them\nwith soap suds fleet. For nickel faucets merely wash and dry carefully.\nSandwiches\nChopped dates mixed with chopped candied ginger and pecan make\na good filling tor white or Boston\nbrown bread tea sandwiches.\nFACTS  AND  FANCIES\nPaprlki Crieken\nColorful, criip teammates for ioup\nor salad go by the name ot paprika\ncracken. They are made by spreading small crackers thinly with butter, sprinkling them with a gay\nsplotch of paprika, and crisping\nthem for a few minutes ln the oven.\nPotatoet for Burnt\nA rtw potato, icraped fine, takei\nPrune Bretd\nOne-half cup sugar, one-half teaspoon salt, one egg, beaten; two tablespoons melted fat, one cup chopped nut meats, one cup drained\nprunes (cut fine) stewed without\nsugar, one cup unsifted graham\nflour, one teaspoon soda, one cup\nthick sour milk or buttermilk, one-\nhalf cup prune Juice, one-fourth\nteaspoon baking powder, one and\none-half cups all-purpose floitr.\nCombine sugar, salt and beaten egg\nand mix well. Add the melted fat,\nnut meat! and prunes.\nRemoves Scorch\nA mixture ot Hit and lemon will\nremove icorch ipott from a white\ngarment Rub the mixture Into the\nmaterial and. hold over steam while\nthe mixture is still on. Wash in clear\nwater tnd repeat, if necessary.\nSouth Slocan W.A.\nPlans Spring Tea\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C-The Women's auxiliary met i' t'-t home\nof Mrs. W. P. Rogers i.. nei*tajr.\nMn. M. Downie, vice president,\nwas in the chair.\nIt was decided to have new book\nrests fixed on the pews at St. Matthews church.\nA recent bridge party was reported to have been successful.\nA blanket and auto rug made\nfrom old woolens was on hand and\nwas to be sold for W.A. funds. The\nchurch decorations for Easter are\nto be taken in hand.\nIt was decided to have spring\ndaffodil   tea ln May.\nTea was served by Mrs, Rogers.\nMrs. T. H. Sturgess of Bralorne\nis visiting her parents, Mr, and Mrs.\nG. F. Chapman, for a few weeks.\nF. B. Hardin who wai a patient\nin Kootenay Lake General hospital, Nelson, for a month, returned home Friday.\nMr. and Mrs. L. A. Perry of\nWinlaw have come to make their\nhome here.\nMrs. Norman Richardson ot Fair-\nview, Nelson, was a guest of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Jewitt Friday.\nMr. and Mn. P. Horlick were\nweek-end visitors ln Nelion.\nThe Junior W.A. met at the home\nof Mn. J. D. Yeatman. The afternoon was spent in designing and\npainting posten for their Easter tea.\nTwenty-one members are now on\nth rolls.\nJulian Yeatman was tendered a\nsurprise party on the evening of\nMarch 23 In celebration of his 18th\nbirthday. Guest! were entertained\nat three tables of bridge when prizes\nwere won by Bob Walkley, tint;\nTom Hunt, consolation, and .ton-\naid Edwards, a special prize. Refreshments were served and a largo\nbirthday cake cut with Mr. and\nMrs. Yeatman as hosts.\nGuests wre Leonard Purdy, Jess*\nRidge, Bob Walkley, Bill Muir, Gui\nKruger, Jim Thompson, Jack Tin-\ndale, David McDonald and Tom\nHunt.\nMrs. W, A. MacCabe, Mrs. John\nMurray, Mrs. W. C. Motley, Miss\nElsa Gansner and Miss Phylis Motley of the Girl Guide movement\nwere motorists to Nelson, front\nMonday till Thursday, attending\nclasses on guiding conducted by\nMiss Williams, red cord guider, who\nis shortly returning to England.\nMn. J. D. Yeatman spent Friday in Nelson a guest of Mn. O. W.\nHumphrey at the Strathcona hotel.\nPUSH WORK ON\nCRESTON HOTEL\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014Work il being\npushed on Creston's new hotel at\nthe corner of Canyon street and\nCreston avenue, the exterior work\nnow being up to the second floor.\nA full crew is employed with the\nobject of having the place open for\nbusiness at the earliest possible date.\nAND KEEP FIT\n \u2022AGE FOUR -\nNflBini Satly NfiiiH\nEttobllshed April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Mott Meretting Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n216   Baker  Street,   Nelion,   Brltlrh   Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   of the   Audit   Bureau   ot   Circulation!   and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   Newi   Service.\nTUESDAY, MARCH 31, 1936.\nCOSTUME GLORY\nAlthough the Coronation celebrations of King Edward VIII will not take place for many months, numerous\nplans for thst event and some preparations already are\nunder way.\nA note from the \"Dondon Letter,\" to The Manchester Guardian Weekly, gives the folloging interesting\ndescription and information:\n\"The famoui firm in Tooley itreet which makei tbe bulk\nof military uniforms today is getting ready for the Coronation\ncelebrations. Although orders have not yet been delivered, it\nil expected thit tor one thing a complete new turn-out will be\nordered for the Yeomen of the Guard at St. Jamei' and the Tower\nof London. The cost of theie uniform!, which are normally\nrenewed every two years, Is -SO tor the scarlet and <-0 for\nthe blue. Tbe design for the uniform datei back to 1485, and\neverything even gold lace, hu to be made by hand.\n\"In the meantime, the tailors are waiting for an order from\nthe College of Arms, which will decide whether on the blue\nuniforms the letters, which are embossed by a iteel die, wlU\nbe \"E.R.\" or \"ER.VIII.\" In the litter event the cost will naturally\nbe conaiderably more. It takei over three weeki to prepare a\nyeoman's uniform, the pattern for which ls sealed and delivered\nby the Lord Chamberlain's office.\"\nAs the colorful costumes of the Yeoman of the\nGuard form but a very minor part of the immense\ngathering that will assist at the Coronation, so one in\nimagination can picture what the glory of the complete\npageant will be on the day when the King is officially\nenthroned.\nTOURIST BUSINESS GROWS\nCanada's tourist business last year, according to\na statement issued by the Dominion Buear of Statistics,\nwas worth $201,000,000, or an increase over 1984 or\n$71,000,000. Expenditures of tourists by automobile from\nthe United States is estimated at 131,806,000 compared\nwith the previous year's total of $86,259,000, and by rail\nand steamer, $59,109,000 compared with $84,260,000,\nwhile tourists from overseas countries are estimated\nto have spent $10,117,000 against $9,455,000 in 1934.\nOn the other side of the ledger it is shown that Canadian tourists in other countries are estimated to have\nspent $91,000,000 last year compared with $61,000,000\nin 1934. Canadian tourists to the United States by\nautomobile are estimated to have expended $50,206,000\ncompared with $32,645,000 the previous year, and by rail\nana* steamer, $24,592,000 against $13,988,000. Expenditures by Canadians in overseas countries were $16,-\n486,000 compared with $14,272,000.\nAlthough last year's revenue from the tourist business was approximately $100,000,000 less than in the\npeak of 1980, the very substantial gain over the previous\ntwelve months is an encouraging sign and would appear,\nto indicate that if the returns for 1936 do not reach the*\n$300,000,000 mark they will not be far from it.\nHITLER\u2014RACKETEER?\nMr. John L. Spivak, writing in \"New Masses,\" hu\nsomething ,to say about what he calls \"Hitler's Racketeers.\" A few lines of his article throw a light on what\nis going on in Germany. He says that \"the fear that hangs\nlike a pill over the country is incredible, a fear that is\nnot confined to Germans. In embassies, legations, consulates\u2014-territories of sovereign states flying the flag\nof thsir own country, I found that same fear of being\nspied upon.\"\nAnd then Mr. Spivak tells us: \"Suppose you are\nrunning a business or a store. It does not matter whether\nyou are a native German or an American, Englishman-\nFrenchman\u2014a pure Aryan or a Jew. One day a. Nasi\nofficial drops in on you. He tells you frankly that he\nwants a small percentage of your receipts in return for\nwhich you will be given protection against Nazis and\ntheir sympathizers forming the idea that you are not a\ngood house to do business with.\"\nAU of this suggests that the powers that be at Berlin\nwho are running the government have their own peculiar\nstyle of Capone racketeering. If the Scarface one could\nonly escape from Alcatraz Island he would not need to\nreturn to Chicago.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nByt V SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nIT SOUNDS IMPOSSIBLE\nIt sounds impoisible to stall that\nSouth went game from a love score\nat diamonds. Even the declarer was\nsomewhat dazed at result., as he expected to go down on the call, and\ncould not explain how the feat was\naccomplished. Both bidding and\nplay will be found Interesting and\ninitructive. Mr. R. 1. Pardy, of Boston, Mass., was the fortunate South\npltyer.\n\u2666.KS_\nfj.651\n\u2666 7\n\u2666 QJM\n\u2666 AQ8S\nf KQ10\n8\n\u2666 K8S\n\u2666 \u00ab\u00ab\n7T\nvi\n\u2666 J 10 9 4\n1\n9 None\ne)A64_\n\u2666 10 7 6 5\n\u2666 7\nfAIil\n\u2666 QJ 1091\n4AK2\nNeither tide wai vulnerable. Bidding went: South, 1-Ditmond; Wett,\n1-Heart, when 1 Spade would have\nbeen preferable, if he intended ever\nshowing both tulti; Eait 1-Spade;\nSouth, 2-Diamonds; Wett 2-Spades;\nSouth, 3-Diamondi: Weit doubled,\nwhen the safer call would have been\n3-Spades, doubling only ln case of\nmore diamonds being bid.\nThe opening lead wai the K of\nhearta. Ai the K ii led to ihow the\nAce, the Q, or both. Eait made no\nmistake when he discarded his lowest spade, initead of ruffing South's\nAce and won the trick. Declarer'i Q\nof diamonds went to West's K. Weit\nmade his second defensive trick, by\nleading his Q of hearts. East let go\na low club. Then the 10 of hearts\nforced dummy's J and Eait ruffed\nfor the third defensive trick.\nWest bad supported' spades, but\nEast saw the K in dummy and hated\nto establish that card by leading\nback the suit it once, provided West\ncould win a club trick that would be\nthe better return, the spade could\nbe led next lime, when East won\na trump trick with the Ace. Accordingly West led the 10 ot clubs. It\nwat obligatory to false-card with\nthe Ace, and South won with that\ncard. Wett played the 3.\nDeclarer led the J of trumpi, loi-\ning the fourth defensive trick to\nEast'! Ace. Now came the crucial\nplay. The only clubs not accounted\nfor were the K, 8 and 2. Eatt perhapi tuspected ol false-carding but\nthere was a chance that partner\nitiU held the K and 2. and had\nstarted an echo with the 3, because\nSouth held the 8 only. Had West\nshown spades before hearta there\nwould have been no doubt that\nWest held tbe missing Ace of that\nsuit but the false carding in clubs\nhad completely deceived last He\nwavered a while, then led the fatal\nclub, just handing the trick and\ngame to declarer. South'i K won\nthe trick. He pulled both of defender's trumps. A heart led\nthrough Weit give dummy two\ntricks. On the lecond hetrt trick\ndeclarer let go hii only spade. Dummy's Q of clubs won the next trick,\nleaving South with two good trumps\nonly.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. MARCH 81.\nTlve\nHUMAN SIDE\nVNEWS\/\nBY   EDWIN CHILL\nC.fyriikt, ItM, *f Cntiil ft** Ci-**1n\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS\nLOOAN  CLENDENING,  M.D.\nWHAT CAUSES THE  NERVOUS\nDJ8EASES?\nWe may well aik. \"What tre the\n(actors in life which are conductive\nto tlie development ot functional or\nnervoui  diseases?\"\nGenerally ipeaking, diseases cith\ner are hereditary or acquired. We\nInherit blue eyes, brown hair, body\ntype and weight, bald headi, big\nnoses, and all the other physical\ncharacteristics which make people\ninteresting. Our tralti of character,\nhowever, and the stability of our\nnervous system, are largely a matter ot contact and experience with\nothen.\nGranting thli to be true, how fortunate is the child born and reared\nby sensible parenti possessing good\ncontrol ot thtlr nervoui lyitems,\ntnd bow unfortunite it the child\nof neurotic, hyiterlcal, or highly\nemotional parenti.\nMany children emulate their parents because knowledge is largely\nacquired in the early impressionable years by mimicking others.\nSuch chidren are figuratively battered about between excess lovt and\nunreasonable anger; between tear\nand bravado; between over-solicitous attention ind neglect. Even\niuch natural functions ai citing,\nsleeping and ellmlmtion receive in\nunnitural and unwarranted attention, tnd the child Is tremendously\nImpressed with the Importance of\nOne finds him everywhere, the\n.utogrtph fiend, for he knows no\nparticular age, no particular lex, no\nparticular race. No celebrity may\nescape him until he has ligned hli\nname on the baseball, the tablecloth, the golf ball, the plain piece\nof paper, the silk handkerchief, the\nphotograph or the living room door.\nThe autograph hunter it in his\nglory on Broadway on an opening\nnight. He crowds you from the\nsidewtlk, tnd woe betide you it\nyou should happen to be anywhere\nclose to Tillie Tush of tbe screen or\nReginald Rudolph ot the stage. Vou\nwill be cruihed and trampled upon\nand will owe your Ufe only to the\nalertness of a squad of police. Even\nthe signer i> not immune in London,\nfor there it t story on record that\nSophie Tucker suffered a blackened\neye whan she tried to act tbe role\nof peacemaker between two English ladies who were quarreling\nabout precedence ln getting Sophie's\nJohn Haycock in their autograph\nbooks\nFAMOUS OLD LETTER\nAutograph hunting is an pld game\nand is followed by rich man, poor\nman, beggar man and thief. In\nthe library which housei the treasures \u25a0 collected by hit father, J. P.\nMorgan has some autographed letters in which he takes a keen delight and which he never fails to\nshow to friends who visit the library\nfor the first time. One is a lengthy\nletter, at yeUow as more 'than 250\nyears can make it It is the letter\nof a gentleman to his wife. He is at\nthe wars and he tells her how they\nare going. Evidently, she hai written him and hat been a* bit querulous in her note. At any rate, he\ncloses in thil vein:\nI love thee more than anything\nin the world. Let that suffice!\"\nAnd the signature is \"OUver\nCromwell.\"\nThe other night Dr. A. S. W. Ros-\nenbach, the coUector, paid $2900 for\na book published in London in 1786,\nwhich bean the lignature of George\nWashington on the title page. The\nbook was by a Dr. Jeffries and told\nof two balloon trip! he had made.\nWashington'! lignature alone rates\nnowhere near that figure. The book\nand the circumstances of the autograph had most to do with the\n$2900.\nAGE ANO RARITY\nPLAY PART\nAge, rarity and Uie historic importance ot the writer all play their\npart in the value of an autographed\nletter or document. As ImporUnt,\nif not more important, however,\nare the contents of the letter. For\nexample, there is an abundance of\nLincoln autographs but his price\nremains very high. He waa given to\ndashing off notes on notepaper and\non the backs of envelopes.\nFour words by Lincoln have re-\nali-ed as high as 8725. They were\nwritten on April 14, 1865, the day\nof Lincoln's assassination, and they\nread: \"Let it be done. (Signed) A.\nLincoln.\" The thing that was to be\ndone was the granting of a pardon\nto one Benjamin P. F. Twilley. and\n(he pardon had been asked by\nSenator Creswell of Maryland.\n$10,000 FOR AN\nAUTOGRAPH\nMr. Morgan has a Lincoln letter\nwhich gives him a chuckle. It is\naddressed to General Meade and, as\nI remember it, it goes:\n\"Dear General: Don't you think\nthat Lieut \u2014 of \u2014 New York I\nregiment should be a captain? His\nwife thlnki he ihould. (Signed)\nAbraham Lincoln.\"\nPermission to print this letter Is\ngiven by Mr. Morgan only on condition that the lieutenant's nime\nand the number of his regiment ls\nomitted. The reason is that Mr.\nMorgan would spare tny relaUves\not. the family any embarrassment\nthat might result\nThere are scores, perhaps hundreds of Lincoln notei itopping Uie\nexecution of soldiers, The classic of\n\"^\u25a0r.JjLJl\nWITH THE\nPSYCHOLOGIST\nGARRY C. MYER*, PH.D.\nHead   of   the 'Department   of\nParent EducaUon, Cleveland\nCollege,  Weitern Reierve\nUnivenity.\nJ, P. Morgan\nHe collects autographs\ntheie, however, is in the form of\na telegram which says:\n\"Colonel Mulligan\u2014If you haven't\nshot Barney Davis yet\u2014don't\"\nA prize signature is that of Button\nGwinnett ot Georgia, a signer ol\nthe Declaration of Independence.\nGwinnett was killed in a duel the\nfollowing year. Recently $10,000 was\npaid tor the original ot the will of\nJoseph Stanley, dated May 28, 1770.\nsolely for the reason that Gwinnett's\nname was signed as a witness to it.\nOtherwise the document might have\nbrought ten centi. In 1926 Dr. Roien-\nbach plid $22,500. for a Gwinett\nautograph which had been sold before 1912 for $4000.\nSHAKESPEARE\nPOOR WRITER\nThe next highest priced of the\nsigners of the Declaration is Thomai\nLynch Jr.. of South Carolina. He\ndied in 1779 and $4000 was paid for\na portion ot the document of the\noath of allegiance to the Constitution\nof South Carolina because it bore\nLynch's lignature. Strange It il that\nonly iix signatures of Shakespeare\nare known and these show him a\nvery poor writer. This is the chief\nreason that many people believe\nBacon wrote those plays and poems.\nTo you modern collectors i word\nof advice: Don't write to Windsor\nfor the autograph of King Edward\nVlll. You won't get it. Take the\nofficial word of the King'i household the King never gives it and\nyou will save him time and money\nby not asking.\nHOW BEST TO TEACH SPELLING\nA number of yean ago two eminent educators ran a aeries of experiment! on the learning of .pel-\nling. Although their experiments\nwere \"full of boles\", which some of\nus frequently pointed out, they announced that their itudlet had\nproved conclusively the mperlority\nof the pretest method of teaching\nspelling. These Pied Pipers, with\nthe assistance of leveral publishers\not ipeUen based on their conclusions, soon had nearly aU tbe teachen of this country teaching by this\nmethod. My readers muit know it.\nA lilt of wordi is pronounced, say,\non Monday. Tbe children are to try\nto speU as many as tbey can. Those\nthey ipell wrong, they are to itudy\nduring Uie week, to be tested again\non Friday. You iee, they itudy no\nword unUl they have lint ipelled It\nwrong.\nHere is what Prof. Frederick S\nBreed, of Chicago univenity, writes\nabout it in Uie January issue of\nChildhood EducaUon:\n\"The present method is being discarded in the primary grades because experiments do not attest its\nsuperiority. In grades two and three\nthis method, otherwise known as the\ntest-study method, has been found\ninferior to the older study-test procedure. .Thli finding it not altogether surprising when one reflects\nthat tbe test-study method presupposes ability on the part ot pupils\nto do effective independent study.\"\nAnd he might have added, \"ilnce\nalso tbe test-method practices the\nlearned in making mistakes.\" In the\nlong run, educaUonal InvesUgations\nseem to square with common sense;\nwhen they don't we had better assume that the conclusions had been\ndrawn before all the evidence was\nin.\nBASIC RULE\nOn the basic of common sense, refined by what teems to be the bett\nknown psychologies principle! of\nlearning, this one basic rule Ihould\nbe our belt guide in helping a child\nlearn to spell: \"Try to keep tbe child\nfrom ever ipeUlng a word wrong.\nDo aU you can to help him always\nipell it right, and get titiitacUon\ntrom doing so.\" Accordingly, wt\nshill lead him, as he studies, tint\nto look calmly at the word written\nIn bold clear print or script, which\nhe is learning to ipell, to lay the\nletten over ilowly in right sequence\nwhile looking at the word carefully,\nrepeating the proceu often enough\nto guarantee thtt he can ipell the\nword without looking tt it; making sure, of course, to connect the\nletter-sequence in hia mind with\nthe pronunciation and meaning ot\nIhe word.\nFor example, ai he looki at the\nword ready, he wUl say to himself,\n\"Ready, r-e-a-d-y; ready, r-e-a-d-y;\nready, r*e-a-d-y,\" over and over, not\nventuring to look away from the\nword or to try himself out before\nhe feels ture he can ipell it accurately ilone, and feeling wholly free\nto look back at the original word\nwhenever he fceli tbe tlightest\ndoubt ibout its spelling. As he discovers that he has succeeded with\nthis word, he can, with confidence,\nattack the next word.\n|   10 YEARS AGO\n1 Prom Nelton Dilly Ntwi Files\nt \u2014 1\nMarch 81, 19.8\nGrots revenue of Weit Kootenay\nPower & Light Company, Ltd., for\n1925 amounted to $1,041,125.88, according to tbe annual report Profit\nfor the yeer wai $135219.22.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nJohn Waldie ot the Edgewood\nLumber company, Ceitlegar, wu a\nNelion visitor yeiterday.\nWat\nMn. I. Bourke, Vernon itreet his\ntoken up reildence it 507 Silica\nttreet.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. M. 3. Vlgneux hu returned\ntrom Rowland where ihe wu \u2022\nguett of Dr. and Mn. J. W. Coffin.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiu Dawn M. Hume, regiitered\nnune, leavei today for Fernie to\narrange for a passport to the United\nStatei.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n|   20 YEARS AGO  |\nI Frem Nelion Dilly Ntwi Flltt I\n$  \u00bb\nMirch 31, 1916\nR. G. Jpy, aetistant-secretary ot\nthe Nelson Improvement usoclation\nhad word trom J. E. Griffith,\ndeputy minister of public works at\nVictoria, to the effect that no definite usurance can be given that\nthe compleUon ot the Ymir road can\nbe undertaken at once. A petiUon\nhad been lent to Premier W. J.\nBowier, W. R. Maclean, M.PJ. for\nthis riding, Hon. Thomas Taylor,\nminister of public works and James\nH. Schofield, M.P.P.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Ross Tait has left tor Rossland to reside.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nLieut. Kenneth S. Wilkenson of\nGrand Forks and hll bride, the\nformer Mlu E. G. Schofield of Cilgary, are visiting Lieut Wilkenson's\nparents in Nelson on their trip from\nCalgary where they were married.\n-S\n|   30 YEARS AGO\nI From Nelion Duly Ntwt Fllu I\na lost meal, a coated tongue, a\nscratch on the hand, a failure to respond to a call of nature when lhe\nclock strikes nine.\nADULTS DEVELOP\nNERVES\nThen there are other people, who,\neven though their adolescent years\nwere passed under favorable circumstances, develop nervoui or\nemotional tendencies in adult lite.\nMany factora enter Into thii, but\nthey will usually fall into certain\nbroad classifications\u2014economic; domestic; thwarted ambiUon; organic\ndisease.    .\nThe present economic disaster has\nbrought to physiciani thousands of\nmen and women who previously had\nalwayi been considered physically\nable and emotionally sound.\nIncompatible domestic relations\nprobably still head! the list, particularly with women. Books could be\nwritten about this subject and still\nnot cover all the causes that are\nadvanced as reasons why men and\nwomen fall to live together in peace\nand harmony. Back of lt til is a\nfundamental reason\u2014ignorance of\nthe laws of physiology. Add to this\nselfishness, bBd temper, Jealousy,\nidleness, illness, perversions md\nother ilmilar human frailties, and\nthe picture il practically complete.\nDiet for Second Week\u2014Wtdntidty\nBreakfast\u2014Fruit: choice of hall\ngrapefruit, half canteloupc, three\nprunes (with milk, not cream), glass\nof orange Juice; toast, one-hall slice,\nthinly buttered; one wp tea or coffee iwith not more than one lump\nsugar, one teaspoon milk).\nLuncheon\u2014One-half grapefruit;\none egg; toast; one-half head let-\nluce, dressing; six slices of cucumber; coffee. .\nDinner\u2014One-half grapefruit; two\nolives, one lamb chop, broiled; one-\nhalf head lettuce, dressing; whole tomato; toast; coffee.\nWhat it your weight todiy?\nCORNISH TUNNY FISH\nLONDON (CP)-The fint tunny\nfilh ever seen ln Comlih witen\njumped out ot the iei at a Peril*\nleven fisherman wai walking on\nthe sands. He promptly captured the\n56-pound prize.\nA arhougM\nfor jaTobay\nMarch 31, 1908\nThomas Deaiy hu telegraphed\nMayor GUlett Uiat be wiU arrive in\nNelson tonight to assume the position of fire chief.\n\u2022   \u2022  \u2022\nJ. I. Procter of Uie C.P.R. passenger traffic department leavei today\nfor Winnipeg to receive instructions\nto hit new dutiet u travelling\npassenger agent with headquarters\nat Calgary.\naaa\nIndicating an abundance of work\nand a dearth ot man, in this diitrict,\nit leut, is a half-column of \"help\nwanted\" adverUsementi tn this Issue\nof the Daily Newa Men wanted included camp cook by J. B. Winlaw,\nWinlaw, B.C.; carpenters, men for\nsmelter, buah, sawmill and railroad\nwork; a first din millwright, \u2022 pant\nand vest maker by C A. Foote,\nMoyie. There are a number ol opening! for women iuch ai nurse girl\nwanted by Mrs. R. S. Lennie; girl\nfor office, and woman as hotel\nhouiekeeper.\n\"I wouldn't uy that ahe always\ninterrupt!, but I've been talkin' to\nher for twenty yean end I haven't\ngot to finish e lentence yet\"\nGEMS FROM LIFE'S\n.SCRAP BOOK\nFREEDOM PROM CARI\n\"What ihould a man do but be\nmerry?\"\u2014Shakespeare,\ntee\n\"Woe to the philosopher! who\ncannot laugh away their learned\nwrinkles.\"\u2014Voltaire.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\n\"Mind's Ideu run and diiport\nthemselvei. In humility they climb\nthe heights of holiness.\" \u2014 Miry\nBaker Eddy.\n\u00bb   \u2022  \u00bb\n\"A kind heart la a found of gladness, making everything in its vicinity to blossom into smiles.\"\u2014Washington Irving.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\n\"Wealth I ask not hope nor love.\nNor a friend.to know me;\nAll I uk, the heaven! above,\nAnd the road below me.\"\n\u2014 Stevenson.\nTHE WANDERING\nKNIGHT'S SONG\nMy ornaments are arms,\nMy pastime is in war,\nMy bed is cold uoon the world,\nMy lamp yon itir.\nMy Journeying! are long,\nMy slumbers short and broken;\nFrom hill to hill 1 wander itill,\nKissing thy token.\nI rdle trom lind to lmd,\nI sail trom itt to tet:\nSome dav more kind I fite may\nfind,\nSome night, kiss thee.\n-JOHN GIBSON LOCKHART.\n\"And whosoever shall exalt himself shall be\nabased; and he that shsll\nhumble himself shall be\nexalted.\"\nSt Matthew }|:!|\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nTOP DRESS LAWN NOW\nFor mmy months now one of our\nhousehold concern! hai been to\nkeep the floor carpet! from becoming moth-eaten, but now It ia time\nto think about our moth-eaten carpets out-of-doon.\nFrom the middle of March on,\nduring favorable weather, it the\ntime to top dreu and reieed the\nbare ipoti in old lawni. Ai loon as\nthe ground dries out enough lawns\nshould be raked clean of aU Utter\nn order that one may iee what winter damage they have luffered.\nOften thoie placei in the lawn\nwhere the gnu hu trouble growing will be found to be covered with\nhard, packed toll, ln which not even\nweedi will grow, tnd it ii foolish to\nwute good grau wed on iuch bare\nipota. It U beit, In iuch cases, to remove the hard-packed earth entirely md replace with a tine topioil.\nAll grau teed ihould be town u\nearly ai poulble in order to give\nthe grau a chance to make a itrong,\nhealthy growth before it li called\nupon to endure tbe drouth and heat\nof lummer.\nBone meil Ii a good food for\nlawni and li euy to tpply. Jutt\nscatter it about by hand md let the\nrtini carry lt Into the ground.\nTO MAKE an extra\n1 room In tht attic or\nbuement. To lay un*\nder linoleum. For\nitorm doon, etc., wt\nrecommend 'i-lnch C.\na r t d t Cottonwood\nPanel*.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nDlitrlet Dlitrlbuton\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nCLIMATE\nGOOD.\nFOR\nMILK\nEven if our season ll backward\nthii year, our natural climate ta\none of the chief facton ln the\nextra quality md natural flavor\nof Pacific Milk.\nOf course Uie pedigree cowi\nare moit Important toe-\nNatural flivor-richneu\u2014purity\n\u2014 vacuum packing\u2014Irradiation\n... all are a part of Pacific\nMilk.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated of Court*\nHOTKAPS\nPROTECT youna planti frem\nfroit, Inieeti, wind ind htivy\nnlm.\nEmure healthy, hirdy\nplanti.  quicker crops.\nFer Pull\nDetail!\nWrite to\nTIL'. II THI TOILER\nly Rust Weitover\nTU*5T LOOK\nAT THIS NAlHERB\nMV ftOMAKJTC\nttOMBO \\AllHT_f5.\n-.uzz-buxx p\"1\nSmith, Davidson\n8 Wright Ltd.\nlltt HOMER ST., VANCOUVIR\nMmmAIT   NS   \u2022   \u2022   C\n... need fertili.er NOW to look thtlr bttt\nsll tttun. Broedcut early\nE'ephant Brand\nCOMPLETE FERTILIZER\n5-10-5 or 6-10-10 at bsslc -reiiing dim\npound ptr 50 iquare fttt. Follow thit onct\na month with\nE'enhant Brand\nAMMONIUM SULPHATE\nont pound ptr 250 iquare fttt for a velvety\ngreen turf frtt from wttdl.\nMtnuftcturtd by\nTHE CONSOLIDATED MINING & SMELTING\nCOMPANY OP CANADA, LIMITED\ntrail, ae.\n #3\n\"SHARP EYE\"\nRugby - Skiing - Indoor Swimming - Curling - Bowling\nNltk Altrock, right, who ctn da tricki with a bill, pity*\n\"ihtrp tyt\" with Jimmy Dt Shins, at Orlando, Fla.\nlim&\nHockey - Badminton - Soccer - Basketball - Boxing - Wrestling\nMOE FIVE-\nNELSON DAItY NEWS   NELSON   B.C\u2014TUE8DAY MORNINO. MARCH 11. 18*8\n\u2022 PAQI FIVC\nHow Kimberley Dynamite\nBlew Wanderers Sky-high\nRunning Account of Deciding Tilt in Allan\nCup Semi-Finals at Calgary\nFIRST PERIOD\nHtrry Brown carried tht puck\nto tht Wanderen defence whin\nhe lut it whtn ht wu checked.\nKemp grabbed a loon puck and\ntook but a ftw ttapt btfort drilling a hard thot put Goalie Hacquoil. Tht timt wu 4 mln, 28 mc-\ntndt,\nRalph Redding broke away with\nonly McCranor lo beat but the defence man steered him into the\ncorner. Bob Keane wu penalized\nwhen Mackie fell after breaking\nthrough the Wanderen defence\nKlmberley tent five men up\nbut only had one ihot on goil before\nKeane got back.\nThe Dynamiten hid chinged their\nityle of play completely. Two men\nplayed defence and the forward line\nback-checked cloiely.\nSECOND PERIOD\nHacquoil tell on a loose puck juit\nin time to prevent Redding from\nscoring. McCranor worked In on\nHornquist but wu unable to get hli\nshot away. Redding and Mackie had\nquick shots trom cine range on\nHacquoil but the little net minder\nmade grand laves.\nJack Foney made \u2022 flnt pity\nte bring  the  Dynimltin  thtlr\nitcond gotl. Frtd  BotteriU thot\nfrom tht blut line and Fonty\nruihed In to but MoCrtnor to\ntho rtbound.  Ht pitied  out to\nKemp In front of the mt Hacquoil itepped the flnt ihot but\nKemp ihoved In tht rtbound at\n7 mln. 39 teeondi. Kemp mtdt It\n3-9 thrtt mlnutu later. Foney\npaued thetd u he hit the deftnee\nand  Kemp caught tht piu. Hi\ndrovt t high thot put Hacquoil.\nGordie Houiton counted for the\nWanderen a minute later, when he\nshot from the left boardi after a\nscramble, Hornqulit failed to iee the\npuck.\nKen Moore added another at 15:02\nand Goalie Hacquoil didn't have a\nchance. Moore ahot from 20-feet put\nu three playen ruihed past Hacquoil. Moore wu sent otf for tripping Keane and the Forti tent five\nmen up.\nThe Wanderers icored toon after\nMoore returned. Osiie Hacquoil\nputhed up a loose puck beck of tht\nKlmberley net and passed out to\nHouston who shot back on Hornquist\nTHIRD PERIOD\nHouston had an open net but he\nOld Country footbaU Standings\nIncluding   garnet   of   Saturday,\nMarch 28.\nENGtISH LEAGUE\nFlnt Dlvlilon\n\u2014Goals\u2014\nP W L D F A P\nSunderland ... 35 21   8  6 90 59 48\nDerby   Co 35 18   0 10 52 38 42\nHudderafield T 35 18 10 9 52 49 41\nStoke City .... 35 17 13  5 51 48 39\nAnenal _ 33 13 10 10 65 38 36\nPreston N. E. 34 15 13 6 53 48 36\nBirmingham . 34 13 11 10 49 45 36\nManchester C. 35 15 15   5 50 49 35\nBrentford 35 13 13  9 63 55 35\nPortimouth _. 34 14 14 6 45 54 34\nMiddlesborough 35 14 15 6 75 61 34\nWolver'ton W. 34 13 14  7 60 60 33\nEverton  35 10 12 13 71 72 33\nSheffield W. . 34 12 14 8 57 65 32\nBolton Wan..... 34 11 13 10 54 65 32\nLiverpool _ 33 12 15   8 50 64 32\nChelsea  33 11 13   9 48 83 31\nW. Brom. Al. 34 14 17 3 76 69 31\nLeeds United 34 11 14 9 51 52 31\nGrimsby Town 35 13 17 5 49 63 31\nAlton Villa 35 11 17 7 67 95 29\nBlackburn  R.  35 10 18  7 44 79 27\nSecond Dlvlilon\nWeit Ham U. 35 20  t  6 79 53 46\nCharlton A 35 18   8   9 70 49 45\nMancheiter U. 33 18 8 7 66 34 43\nSheffield U..... 36 17 10 9 (7 46 43\nTottenham Hot 34 16 9 I 61 47 41\nLelceiter City 35 17 11 7 67 47 41\nPlymouth Ar. 35 17 11   7 59 48 41\nFulham 33 13   9 11 65 45 37\nBlackpool 35 14 14   7 77 64 35\nNewcuUe U. 33 14 13 6 71 64 34\nDoncaiter R.   36 14 16   6 48 64 34\nBury _  35 11 13 II 56 71 33\nNorwich City 34 13 15 6 56 54 32\nNottingham F. 36 12 16  9 65 63 32\nBradford  - 34 12 15   7 63 67 31\nSwaniea T. ... 35 11 15 9 54 67 31\nSouthampton . 85 11 15 9 39 58 31\nBradford City 33 10 13 10 43 57 30\nBurnley ..     .. 34 10 15  9 88 47 29\nBarnsley  35 10 18   7 48 72 27\nPort Vale 34 10 18  6 49 86 26\nHull City _ 35   5 22   8 89 90 18\nThird Dlvlilon (Southern Section)\nLuton   Town    34 20   7 7 63 40 47\nReading    35 22 12 1 78 57 45\nCoventry City 34 19   9 6 90 41 44\nQueeni P. R.   34 19   9 6 71 46 44\nCrystal Palace 35 19 12 4 84 63 42\nWatford  _ 33 16 11 6 62 45 38\nBright, H. A. 35 16 13 6 62 53 38\nBournemouth   34 13 12 9 51 47 35\nTorquay  U.     35 14 14 7 56 53 35\nMillwall - 34 12 13 9 49 63 33\nNotts  County  35 11 IJ 11 49 40 33\nAldershot   .... 34 12 14 8 40 48 32\nCardiff City . 35 12 15 8 54 60 32\nSouthend U.      33 11 13 9 53 46 31\nClapton Orient 33 1.1 15 I 47 47 31\nGillingham ..... 34 12 15 7 54 61 31\nBristol City ... 33 11 14 8 35 40 30\nBristol Roven 34 11 16 7 53 70 29\nI Northampton TJ5 11 17 7 51 84 29\nSwindon Town 34 10 16 8 51 63 28\nNewport Co.    IS   9 15 7 49 96 26\nExeter City .... 36   7 21 8 51 81 22\nI Third Dlvlilon (Northtrn Section)\n, Chesterfield     33 10   4  8 80 34 49,\nTrinmere Rov. 33 20   5  I 88 45 48\nCheiter .\nLincoln City\nStockport C.\nCrewe Alex.\nAccrington St.\nHartlepooli U.\nOldham Atb.\nDarlington .\nGiteshead ..\nWalsall\nRotherham U.\nCarlisle U.\nHalifax Town\nWrexham \t\nYork City\t\nBarrow\nRochdale\nSouthport\nMansfield T.\nNew Brighton\nS5 17 7\n32 17 7\n33 16 10\n36 16 13\n35 16 13\n35 13 12\n36 14 14\n33 15 16\n35 11 12\n32 13 12\n34 13 14\n34 12 14\n34 12 15\n36 13 18\n34 11 15\n33 10 IS\n34 8 16\n36 8 19\n34 9 18\n35 823\n11 84 35 45\n8 72 38 42\n7 54 38 39\n7 67 88 39\n6 58 61 38\n10 49 32 36\n8 73 70 36\n4 65 66 34\n12 49 62 34\n7 64 44 33\n7 56 46 33\n844 49 32\n7 48 48 31\n5 54 65 31\n853 87 30\n7 47 55 27\n10 49 78 28\n8 40 77 26\n7 59 82 25\n4 40 93 20\nSeottiih League\nFlnt Dlvlilon\n34 28   4   2\n 32 24\n34 22\n34 19\nS3 16\n32 13 12\n33 14 14\n2 6\n3 9\n9 6\n7 10\nT\n5\nCeltic\nRangen \t\nAberdeen ....\nHearti\nMotherwell\nKilmarnock\nSt Johnstone\nPartick Thistle 34 12 13 9\nHamilton Ac. 35 13 16 6\nArboarth 85 11 14 10\nQueens'Park 84 10 14 10\nThird Lanark 83 12 16 5\nDundee 35 10 16  I\nQueen of South 34 10 16 8\nDunfermline A. 94 10 16 8\nAlbion Roven 34 11 30 3\nAyr United 35 11 21 I\nClyde 32   8 17   7\nHibernian! 84 8 20 6\nAirdrieonitnt   33  7 19  7\nSecond\nFtlkirk\nSt Mirren ..\nAlloa\nMorton\nSt Bernard!\nEait Fif\u00bb_B__\nE. Stirlingshire SO\nDundee United 31\nCowdenbeath    32\nLeith Athletic   31\nStenhouiemulr 31\nMontroie 81\nFqrfar Athletic 32\nEdinburgh City 32\nKing! Park 31\nBrechin City 33\nRaith Rovera 31\nDumbarton       30\nDlvlilon\n24 3 3\n24 S\n18 9\n17 17\n17 10\n16 12\n12 11\n13 13\n13 19\n11 15\n13 16\n12 16\n10 15\n8 16\n10 18\n8 19\n8 20\n4 20\n10131 58\n99 36 54\n84 46 53\n82 49 44\n67 SI 42\n63 52 33\n61 70 33\n'61 61 S3\n69 72 32\n45 63 32\n56 68 30\n49 53 29\n63 76 29\n48 66 28\n48 66 28\n59 79 25\n48 84 25\n51 7123\n50 8122\n57 81 21\n119 33 51\n110 34 49\n62 50 41\n86 53 40\n102 70 36\n86 79 38\n62 56 31\n84 75 31\n73 73 30\n56 66 29\n55 64 28\n53 73 27\n56 73 27\n56 80 24\n6110623\n57 92 22\n53 SO 19\n4510914\nIRISH\nBelfait\nLinfield\nDerry City\nPortadown\nNewry Town\nGlenavon\nBelfast Celtic\nGlentoran\nCliftonville\nDlitillery\nColeraine\nBallymena U.\nArdi\nBangor \t\nLame \t\nLEAGUE\nCity Cup\n1 1\n1 3\n3 1\n2 2\n2\n4\n5\n4\n4\n1\n1 6 A\n1 7 0\n27 6 14\n84 11 13\n26 12 13\n17 15 11\n15 14 9\n21 10\n24 19\n18 24\n15 12\n12 18\n10 20\n12 29\n3 28\n8 26\nmissed by a toot trom ieven teat\nout, Keane wu baniihed for tripling Ridding u tbe latter went\nround the Wanderen defence. Red-\nxlnf wai taken from the ica with an\nn.ured leg but he wu back in a\n.ew minutes.\nDynamiten lent five mm up,\nwith  Keim off,  Redding   Intercepted  Knowlei' pau to Tetplt\n\u2022nd raced In alont on Hicquoll.\nHi gave the goalit no chance.\nHornquist made a great save on\nJatzy\" Manahan'i shot from a few\nieet out Fort William sent five met\nup again midway through the period. Foney wu away alone but lott\ncontrol of the puck. Oule Hacquoil,\nO'Leary and Manahan all had shots\nat Hornquist at close range but tbe\ngoalie laved. Forsey wu p.nalizeo\n(or tripping Hacquoil.\nBrown broke away from a Fort\nWilliam attack, faked a pau to\nFoney and thtn bttt  Hicquoll\nfrem ten fett out\nHornqiuit booted \u25a0 loose puck out\nj ust u McArthur wti about to push\nit into an open net Keane was tent\noff for tripping Mackie, when the\nlittle centre wu in alone on Hacquoil.\nKemp tcored whllt Keane wu\noff. Foney batted the puck from\nbehind tht ntt and Kemp ttcurad\ntt and hooked It iround tht gotl\npoit fir the final aeon of tht\nnight\ntINEUPS -_-_-_t-_--\\\nKlmberley\nNELSON'S PLAYING HOCKEY TEAMS\nNo. 3\u2014M.R.K. Slues\nHornqulit\nBurnett\nBrown\nMackie\nRedding\nMoore\nPoiition\nGoal\nDefence\nDefence\nCenter\nWing\nWing\nFort Willlim\nG. Hacquoil\nKnowlei\nMcCranor\nO. Hacquoil\nHouiton\n--KoXeary\nKimberley tube\u2014Foney, BotteriU, Kemp, Kozak.\nFort WiUiam wbt - McArthur,\nManahan, Teeple, Keane.\nReferees\u2014Clarence Campbell, Edmonton; Earl Overland, Okotoks,\nAlta.\nPACE SETTER8 IN THE BANTAM LEAGUE\nCalled fer three yeara the M. R. K. Midgeti, tht\nRedi ind the Bluu thli seuon took thtlr C. A. H. A.\nclaillf Itatlon uhantcmi, and compote betwttn them\nhtlf of Nelion'i flrtt Bantam league. The M. R. K.\ndeilgnttion referi to thtlr founder!, McNIeol-Rlt-\ncllffe-Klnthtn.\nThli picture ihowi tht Bluu at they playtd thtlr\nflnt eight gamu of the 12-otmt league ichedule,\ntaking the flrtt ttrlu of ilx gamei without lou of I\n\u2014Photo by Staff Photographer.\npoint Nine of the 10 are In thtlr fourth yttr ef\nhockey, leveral having tttrted baton thay wtrt\nnlnt yetn old, and ont before he wat tight\nLeft to right tht boyi are, Wilfred Wood, Erneit Defeo, Walter Wood, Jonathan Wadt, Hirold\nTapanila, David Slider, ltn Currie, John Whltt-\nrretd, Jerrold Jtrram, and Btrntrd McNicol. Tip-\nanlla with league content flnlihed tha itctnd itrltt\nwith the Redi.\nPICKS UP FISHERMAN\nST. JOHN'S, Nfld., March 80 (CP\ncable)\u2014The Banker Eidale tailed\ninto Port Aux Bttques today reporting the had picked up two fishermen, Blagdon and Scott mining\n\u25a0ince March 21 when they becime\nparted from their mother ship.\nHALIFAX LOSES\nLONDON, March 30 (CP Cable)-\nStreatham and Mitcham defeated\nHalifax 18-10 ln an Engliih rugby\nleague game played on the latter's\nground! today.\nIn the Engllih union Redruth\niwamped St Bart'i Hospital 23-0\nand Neeth and Pontypool tied 3-3.\nJunior High\nBeats Central\nJunior high ichool, grade VIII\nboyi defeated Central school ln a\nclote buketball game Monday afternoon 19-17. Tbe loten, although\na smaller and younger team, put\non a great display before going\ndown. 3. Doyle and Albert Vulcano\nwith lix points each were leaden\nfor Central. Mac McPherson icored\nfive tor junior high.\nTeami and tcores were:\nCentral - 3. Doyle (6), Albert\nVulcano (6), Ernie Defoe (5), Wilfred Woods, Gordon Richardion,\nJehn Bradley, Bobbie Brindle.\nJunior high\u2014Roy Mann (4), Jim\nDodding, Roy Hickey, Benny McCreight (4), Mac NcNicol, Ken\nForket, Jack Rothery, Bob Riddock\n(2), Mac McPhenon (5), Nick Ap-\npostilic (4).\nM. Morley refereed.\nSOFTBALL OUTLAWED IN B. C; ANY\nWHO PUY UNDER B. C. ASSOCIATION\nWILL BE SUSPENDED BY A. A. U. OF C.\nVANCOUVER, Mirch SO (CP).\u2014Softball hu bten outlawtd In\nBrltlih Columbia and all regiitered amateun playing eoftball In any\nlugut undtr tht jurltdlctlon af tht Brltlih Columblt Softball auoclation will bt automatically impended from tht Amitaur Athletlo\nUnion of Cinida, Norm Porttr, pruldent of tht B.C. tection of the\nlitter organization, uld here todiy.\nPortar't mnouncement followed the announcement of the toft-\nbill auoclation at their annual meeting In Victoria that they would\nnot affiliate with the A. A. U. of C.\nHockey\nC'H.A<T.T-E.R\nby W.W.W.\nI This advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquoi\nControl Board or'by the Covernment of British Columbia\nMott people Monday would balk\nat tilling you how the outcome of\nthe Klmbtrley-Fort Willlim gime\nweuld be Mondiy night but neirly all would add \"I hope Klmberley taku It\" Thtre wti lott of\nbetting and ont could gtt pltnty\nof monty whichever tide ht fiv*\nered.\ntea\nKM. of Rouland bu Written in\nto lubmit an all-star hockey team\nof the West Kootenay league, and it\nii: Hornqulit of Kimberley, goal;\nBurnett of Klmberley, Bicknell of\nNelion, and Haight of Trail, defence; Cronie and Carr ot TraU,\nFoney of Klmberley, flnt itring;\nVicken of Rouland, Goble and\nPatenon of Neiaon, second itrlng.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nOnce agatn we uk: Are pro\nhockey game* llxed? If they ire,\nsomeone il going to catch jip over\ntbe irremediable error of letting the\nMontreal Maroom fade from the picture in three straight garnet when\nfive could have been played. The\ngreat Marooni, heroes of the 1934-\n35 playoffs, and\nworld champions,\npassed from the\npicture Sunday\nnight, only able\nto put one goal\npait Normie\nSmith in the Detroit Red Wing\ngoal in 206 mlnutei of hockey.\nThink of thit:\nOvtr four and a\nhalf regular\ngamu. And Detroit'! lupporters\nNormie Smith were wondering\nIf Smith would\nitand up In the playoffs. Of oourse\nhe itlll hu plenty ot diltance to go\nyet, but ht hu covered a little\nground already. It ii true he wu\ngiven wonderful lupport by hia\nback-checking forwird linu, md\nhii bruising defeneemen, but he\ncontributed hli own Utln the tint gime with Marooni,\ntbe new marathon, he stopped 90\npucki without error. Chabot itopped\n06. Both goal tender! had plenty\nof luck In the gime too. Lewlj and\nGoodfellow had full neti to ihoot\nJoe Lamb\nand md both hit posts. Norm Smith\nfell teveral times in clearing and\nwu hit by low shots that he never\nsaw.\n\u2022  \u2022  \u2022\nIn checking up on the new marathon game it is revealed that Joe\nLamb, Bob Gracie, Marty Barry and\nLome Chabot were in the Boston-\nToronto whirlwind. Gracie and Chabot were with the\nLeafs then . . . .\n1 Nearly three tons\not snow were\nswept off the Ice\nbetween periods.\nThe ice remained\nhird but towards\nthe end it wis so\nbadly cut by the\nskates that the\npuck appeared to\nhave the hiccoughs. ... \"Nothing like it for\nshedding beef,\"\nsaid Bucko Mc-\n^^^^^^ Donald. \"I left\neight poundi out there lomewhere.\"\n... An even dozen patrons were at\nthe wicket at 4 p.m. They were\nlucky to get home 12 hours later.\n... One of the heroes of tha game\nwu the man at the \"mike.\" lie didn't\nitop talking for almost six houn,\nwhich ihould be a record even if it\nim't . . . \"They're stealing my\nstuff,\" wu whit Smiling Bill Spencer, the six-day bike baron uid\nwhen midnight came and went...\nBucko McDonald was probably the\nmott tired of the Red Wings and\nthere wai a reaion for il. He gave\nall the Marooni a free ride who went\nnear him. Not lince Eddie Gerard\nwaa in hii prime hai iuch a toppler\nbeen let loose. He took my of them\non and even levelled Lionel Conacher with \u2022 shoulder to ihoulder exchange. . . . The goal Judge was so\nlurpriied when the gotl did come\nthat be wu aeveral seconds ln remembering to put on the red light.\nSad-faced Chabot wu already leaving the net by that time... \u25a0 Among\nthe debrli thrown on the ice wai a\n\u2022lack of cards. Conacher pushed\nthem about with his itick\u2014perhipi\nhe wai looking for the Joker. . . .\nThe Red t^Ving playen hugged Bur-\nneteau md one went io fir u to\nklu him (what price glory!).\nHousing Ad Coin Available\nto Build Apartment Houses\nLocal Authorities Can Borrow, the Literature\nSent to D. D. McLean States; No Clue\nto Why Confined to Vancouver\nFOUR STRAIGHT\nOne of Um bett of thli year'i two-ytar-oldi It Qoldty F,\npictured winning her fourth ttrtlght victory at Width.\nBIG LEAGUE\nBOWLING\nHER6 18 THt\nftsm\u00a9N-4-T*_\nHAND IN*TH(-\nftu-wTfmot)6H\nWH.N r-OLliNS\nA STRAI6HT\nBALL-\nAUOW BallTo\nRottOfTTrlUMB\nFIRST, BEING SUR.\nTrlATThElHOMBISl\nPOtMTJNtj ALON6\nLINE WU PeSIRE\nBAUT6B>t_OW-\nONT BAU SHOULD\nPE Rtt_.BO ANO\nNOT PITCHED.\"\n^J-Ktutftr-_     \/\u00a3_.\nBy AL DtMARSI\nFormtr Pitcher New York Gltnti\nQuution\u2014How far out over the\nfoul line ihould I deliver the ball?\nCX.\nAniwer-li it better not to Mt\nthe ball. Just roll It onto the alley\na few inches beyond the foul line.\nWhen you loft a ball it ii harder to\ncontrol than whan you roll it\nQueition\u2014How tut ahould I go\nup to the foul line on the delivery?\nMra P.\nAnswer*\u2014At tint, if you are beginning, you should not try to nu,\nbut walk. You will get to going to\n.he foul line a little faster with continued practice. Never, however,\n\u2022et tbe habit of approaching the foul\nhoe *o tut thit you an not able\nto end there in perfect balance.\nApartment homes, as well u individual dwellings, may be built\nunder the Dominion Housing act,\nwith assistance from the $10,000,000\nfederal appropriation made available to lending institutions approved by the minis'er of finance, literature received, from Ottawa by\nD. D. McLean, who wrote asking\nfor full information, to he could\nanswer constant inquiries he is receiving, discloses.\nNO CLUE ON\nDISCRIMINATION\nThe literature, which includes the\nact an explanation of it, a statement on the standards of construction, and a blank memorandum of\nspecifications such as an applicant is\nrequired to fill out, throwi no\nlight on the main point, Mr. McLean had in mind, the restriction of\nits benefits in this province to Vancouver, and it ia not clear whether\nlt is \"the lending institutions'' concerned which have circumscribed its\napplicability, or whether they have\ngained the consent of the minister\nof finance to limit the loaning field\nin this mi nner. The act and the appropriation date from the Bennett\nregime, and it was announced by Mr.\nBennett while premier that certain\nlarge insurance companies had\nagreed to act under the act. Nature\nof the agreement between the government and the \"lending institutions\" io fir approved docs not\nappear in the literature, nor indeed\nthe names ot the institutions.\nIn tbe actual transaction between\nan applicant desiring to build, and\nthe lending institutions, the government dou not appear, and the application is made solely to the lending\ninstitution.\nIf the full (10,000,000 is eventually\nuied there will be nearly $50,000,-\n000 expended in providing sites\nand erecting housing structures.\nu the individual who is building\nmust find 20 per cent of the total\ncost or ot the apprised value\u2014\nwhichever ls the lesser\u2014and the\nlending institution draws on the\ngovernment for 20 per cent, and\nfinds the balance of 60 per cent itself. The minister of finance ii empowered to let the rate of interest,\nand the life of the loan, and the\nrate hu been let at 8 per cent, repayment to be made within 20 years.\nNEW ACT BROAD\nWhile the Housing act of the\nMeighen government soon after tbe\nwar, which allotted federal money\nto the provincei, to lend ln turn to\nmunicipality, which lent in turn to\nindividuals, set a maximum for a\nloan, which had the effect of limiting the structure erected to an\nindividual dwelling, the present act\nis much broader, setting no maxi\nmum, and accordingly apartment\nhouses can qualify for thete homing loan benefits, and there ia no\nrestriction requiring tbe beneficiary to occupy the house himself.\nEligible loam are described in\nthe literature as followi:\n\"A Joan will be made only in the\ncaae of a home, the erection of\nwhich hu been commenced after\nthe date of the passing of the act.\nnamely, July 9,1939. It will be made\nonly to assist in the conitructlon ot\nnew houses, and not for the repair\nor rehabilitation of old buildings.\nA house is defined to include any\nbuilding intended exclusively for\nhuman, habitation, comprising one\nor more self-contained dwelling\nplaces. In other words, a loan may\nbe secured to building either a\nsingle dwelling or a duplex or a\nbuilding containing severil apartments.\"\nThe building itandardi set ara\nhigh, and to assure their being carried out it is required that the applicant mmt furnish full specifications when applying for the loan.\nLoans may be made to individuals\nwho are building houses for tale.\nIt is provided in thii case that 29\nper cent shall be held back until\nan approved contract for sale ii\nsecured.\nWhere the loan is for an apartment house, 25 per cent is to be held\nback until the structure is 90 per\ncent rented.\nLOCAL SCHEMES\nPOSSIBLE\nOne of the featurei of tbe act II\nthat it provide! for the federal government making thete loan contracts with \"local authoritie.\" u\nwell as with lending institutions.\nThis maku houiing schemes possible \"in any rural or urban locality\". Housing schemes submitted by\n\"local authorities\" are to be passed\nupon first by the Dominion economic council.\nIt looki ai if this part of tha act\noffers a means* ot obtaining homing\nloans in parti of the country the\napproved lending institution! do not\ncare to terve. \"Local authority\" as\ndefined in the act \"means any province, municipality, society, auoclation or corporation having authority\nto undertake a houiing icheme.\"\nThm the province of Britiih Columbia, or the city ot Nelion, or perhaps tome loctl building society that\nmight be organized, might develop\na scheme under which the tedenl\ngovernment would Join it \"In the\nmaking of loam to aulit in tbe\nbuilding ot new houses under stipulated con'Mtlons.\"\n.It It provided that anv iuch\nicheme by a local authority .s to be\ndealt with as an individual, application.\nBirthday Greetings\n\u2022y The Canadian Pren\nTo Bev Plen, one at Nova Sootit'i\nleading tennii and badminton players, bom in Halifax 29 yean ago\ntomorrow. Partnered with. Mn.\nWoodbury, be won the mixed\ndoubles titles of Nova Scotia and\nPrince Edward bland in 1934 and\nthe Ontario mixed doubles at Ottawa ln 1935. Juit lut month he\nwon the Maritime! singles championship ln badminton.\nOPEN SWIM SEASON, ONT.\nWASAGA BEACH. Ont, March\n30 (CP)\u2014Splashing gaily Into ice-\nfringed Georgian bay* lix mermaids\ntrom the Toronto Dolphlnets Swimming club braved the freezing water\nto open the 1936 iwimming leuon\nhere. ^_^\nIN SOCCER DRAW\nBELFAST, March 30 (CP)\u2014Celtic\nand Glentoran played a scorelesi\ndnw today in the competition tor\nthe Belfait aoccer cup.\nSilverton Loses\nShuttle Tourney\nat New Denver\nHome Club Takes 12\nOut of 18 Games\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-Memben\nat Silverton Badminton club motored to New Denver Wednetday to\nparticipate in a friendly tournament\nNew Denver won with 12 gamea\nand a acore ot 2-t pointi, to six\ngames and 189 pointi tor Silverton.\nThe garnet, members ot the viiiting team being menUoned tint la\neach case, were:\nLadiei doublet-Mrs. J. Ruuell\nand Mrs. G. Waterman lost to Mra,\nR. Hamilton and Miu G. Coombe,\n4-15; Miu N. Simpion and Mill 3.\nJohmtone won from Miu H. Wii-\nliam-on and Mln M. Sinclair, 15-1;\nMra. W. B. Johmtone and Mn. 3.\nFleury loit to Mn. C. R. Kennett\nand Mui A. Clever. 4-19; Mn. A.\nHam and Mn. 3. Ruuel won from\nMiss O. Olson and Miss R. Zadri,\n15-6. ___\nMixed doublet-Mui N. Simpion\nand F. Patchy lott to Miu M. Sinclair and C. Harriion, 9-15; Mrs. G.\nWaterman and J. Ruuel won from\nMn. R. Hamilton and L. Tnucott;\nMn. J. Russel and J. Fleury loit\nto Miu R. Zadra and S. Hamilton\n14-15; Mra. J. Fleury and C. Roblnion loit to Mlu G. Coombe and\nF. Mean, 10-19; Mra. W. Johmton*\nand R. Workman won from Min\nO. Olion and C. Vandergrift 4-15;\nMiu J. Johnstone and f. Peachy\nwon from Miu A. Clever and T.\nAngrignon 19-10; Mn. A. Ham and\nJ. Russel won from Mrs. C. R. Kennett ud F. Angrignon 15-3; Mn,\nJ. Fleury and W. B. Johnstone loat\nto Mlu H. Williamson ind H. Hamilton, 14-19.\nMen'i doublet\u2014J. Fleury and R.\nWorkman loit to C. Vindergrlft and\nF. Meen 9*15; C. Robinson and F.\nPeachy lost to R. Hamilton and F.\nAngrignon 8-15; W. B. Johmtone and\nJ. Fleury lott to C. Vandergrift tnd\nL. Truteott U-19; F. Peachy and J.\nRuuel loat to L. Truscott and C,\nHarrlsson, 6-18.\nMen'i singles\u2014J. Russel lost to\nC. Harrlsson 9-19; F. Peachy woo\nfrom F. Meen, 19-11.\nPORT VUE WINS\nLONDON, March 30 (CP Cable)\u2014\nPort Vale vaulted over Barnsley ta\nget out of a relegation position in\nthe English soccer league, second\ndivision today. Pitying it home the\n20th placen .queued out a 1-0 win\nover Southampton, tending Barm-\nley back a notch.\nChesterfield drew into a two-point\nlead over Tranmere Roven for leadenhip of the northern taction, third\ndiviiion. after I hard-fought icore-\nleu dnw with Stockport County.\nAmericans Battered Up but Hope\nto Beat Toronto Leafs Tonight\nNEW YORK, March 30 (AP) -\nRed Dutton'i New York Americani\nnursed their wound! today u they\nawaited resumption of the Stanley\ncup semi-fintl series with the hard-\ndriving Toronto Maple Leati.\nTbe two-of-three games series wu\nlaunched In Toronto Saturday night\nwith the Leafi, displaying a stout\npunch, winning 3-1. The second\ngame, which miy find the Toronto\nentry emerging aa the opponent of\nDetroit Red Wingi ln the cup finals,\nwill be played tomorrow night in\nMadison  Square Garden.\nExcept tor Manager Dutton, one\nof the iport'i mott rugged defence-\nmen, the entire American iquad will\nbe in uniform, It wu uid, but at\nleut three playera will be counting\non sheer nerve to overcome physical handicaps.\nChecked hard into the boards,\nhusky Neli Stew-art, the veteran\nsecond itring forward, ls nunlng a\nbadly iwollen leg, but likely will let\ntome action.\nThe teim's ablest defence combination of Joe Jerwa hu averaged almost 50 minutei of heavy duty in\neach of the lut five gamea, while\nMurray still is suffering from a\ncharley hone. Genenlly, too, the\ntetm is in the throes of a physical\nrelapse after five gamu in tha\npart eight dayi and about 3500 milea\nof travelling.\nDeipite all that dicounginf\nsigni, Dutton wu hopeful the ttar-\nsptngled ikaten will \"take\" tha\nLeaf! and lend the teami back to\nToronto for the third and final\ngame Thunday night\nDutton pinned bii hopes on tha\nfict that Americani won all four\ngamu with the Leaf! here during\nthe regular National Hockey league\nleason. In the other four, played at\nToronto, they lott three and gained\na 5-9 Ue.\n\"WHAT? YOU 'X-RAY'\nRAZOR BLADE STEEL\nTO DETECT\nHIDDEN FLAWS?\"\nGillette!\n81U1\nBLADES\nYES! Gillette blade lttd il \"X-riyed\"\nby a tci_-t__c device that \"ices\" deep\nbeneath the lurface of the metal to detect\nhidden dawa. That'i one reaion why Blue\nGillette bladei live iuch clean, eaiy\nihtves. Buy \u2022 package at your dealer's.\nblue GILLETTE blades\nNOW S FOR 2S'-I0 FOP 50C\t\n PAQI SIX -\nNELSON  DAILY  NEWS. NELSON.  B.C.\u2014TUE30AY  MORNING.  MARCH 31. 1936\nBEATTY URGES\n(ANAL TOLLS\nWould Also Regulate\nHighway Traffic\nfor Own Good\nTORONTO, March .80 <CP). -\nRettontion of canal tollt ln Cane-\nda'i Inland waterways wa! suggested\ntonight by Sir Edward Beatty who\nexpressed confidence \"many shipowner! would welcome imposition\nOf fair canal tolls, accompanied by\nreasonable regulation of rates such\nu is applied to the railways,\"\nthe   Canadian   Pacific   railway\nSresident, addressing the Toronto\noard of trade and allied organizt-\ntlons. also discussed highway competition and declared a previoui\natatement of his had been misinterpreted to mean that commercial\ntraffic was to be legislated oft the\nhighways f\u00b0r the sake of the railways.\n\"It should be entirely unnecessary\nlet me to tfoint out that nothing was\nlarther from my thought\" laid Sir\n.toward in saying an Ontario cabinet minister had misinterpreted\nhis remark!. He did not want to de-\nplHve enterprising men of the right\nto engage in businesi.\n\"The enterprising young men engaged in common carrier highway\neperttions are, many ot them, far\n|rom content Only by lack ot ream-able care of the interests of their\nworkers ire they able to meet expeniei in ume cases. The lick of\n\u2022regulation of ntei, iuch as hts been\napplied to the railways, makei the\nwhole buiineii one ot meet dertruc-\ntive competition,\" he said.\n\"Nor did I suggest it the minliter\nputt it, 'We would do well to require the freight and passenger\nbusiness on our highways to develop\nalong parallel Unei with thl railwiy.' Indeed K il the conttant complaint of railway men that highway\ntransportation services hive developed tlong llnet parallel with\nthe railway!. The normal type of development for highway iervlc-s\nshould be to makt them auxiliary\nto rallwayi....\n\"Nor yet again can I accept tne\nmlnliter'i remirk thtt hli *u_-ler-\nstandlng of the railwiy luggeition\nwould mean that we adopt the\ncourse which hai brought the railway! to their preient condition.\nThat it to My that we lmpote tolls\nupon the public to the limit ot the\npublic's capacity to pay.'\n\"No one, ipeaking for the nil-\nways, has made any suggeitlon of\nthis nature as far as I know.\"\nSir Edward declared solution of\nCanada's transportation problema\ncan no longer be postponed.\n\"Our (the railwiy's) prosperity\ndepends on the general prosperity\nof the nation and that cannot exlit\nwithout cheap and efficient train*\nportatlon.\n\"The fint requltite to cheap trtni-\nportatlon ii that It be on an economically tound footing, plying itt\nown way.... Subiidized undertakings running it a low are cheap and\nleldom, if ever, efficient\" All transportation syitemt ihould be ftirly\ntreated.\nTRAIL LOSES TO   SOCIAL AND PERSONAL m\\-.-Ml   .\u00ab-\"\u00a3*\u2022-1.! RYLEY DIES\nVICTORIA 29-16\nSecond Game of B. C.\nHoop Title Series\non Tonight\nDIAMONDS  IN  DEMAND\nKIMBERLEY, South Africa (CP)\n\u2014A 45-carat diamond wai sold bere\nrecently for $15,000 ind the high\nprice wti taken as a sure indication the diimond market hat recovered to a remarkable degree.\nNelson City Council Briefs\nAldtrman Roy Sharp, chairman ot\nJne finance committee, give notice\naf a motion to Introduce the rate\nby-law for the preient year at the\ndty council meeting Monday night.\nThe otter ot Smith and Notman\nSe do repair work at the city incinerator for (ISO, the brlcki and\naatistants tor the work to be supplied by the city, wai accepted. Part\nof the aupply of bricki will have\nto be bought\nA letter was received from George\nC Nairne, Vancouver architect aa-\nm eociated with the company that\ndrew up the plani for the Nelion\ncivic center, informed the company\nthat a painter had been selected\nat the coait to do the preliminary\ncolor scheme and decoration wrok\nat the civic centre, auditorium and\nlayer, the work to start Monday,\nMarch 30. It waa undentood that\nthe city was to supply the scaffolding, and also that local labor was\nto be employed. The auditorium\ncommittee's recommendation for the\nabove, was adopted.\nPermission to trade in the old\ndelivery truck and purchase a new\none for the city electrical department was given by the council. The\ncost will be $680. Alderman H. B.\nLindsay pointed out that the old\ntruck was in bad condition, and\nwould require $300 worth of repain\nto put it into shape.\nA letter trom the Workman's\nCompensation board on how to prevent accidents, wai handed to City\nEngineer R. E. Potter.\nThe city engineer Informed the\ncouncil that the bridge and alley\nat the rear of the Hume hotel was\ntn poor condition. The matter was\nreferred to the public work! committee to take up with Mr. Potter\nand bring in a report\nThe question ot uniform! for 3.\nRyan, new member of the street\nridiway itaff, and A. V. Rowley,\nwu referred to the street railway\ncommittee with power to act\nAn application tor tewirage connection for a property at the top\nof Selwyn itreet was referred to\nthe public works committee to get\nan estimate. The city engineer stated that about 300 feet of rock would\nhive to be gone through.\nA letter was received from Fred\n1. Irwin, lecretary ot the Nelson\nechool board, uklng thtt the estimates of the board be cut $1200. lt\n\u2022ens ordered received and filed.\nMn. G. F. Whittingitall ottered\n$7.50 each for two lott on Slocan\nttreet. The oifer wu referred to\nthe finance committee to bring in\na report.\nCity Engineer K. E. Potter drew\nthe attention of the council to the\ndamage that was being done to the\ncity roads by heavy trucks operated\nby the provincial government and\neevenl ltrge companies, and recommended that parties operating iuch\nvehicles be asked to lotd them on\ntrucks when taking them through\nthe city. Considerable dtmtge was\ndone on Oak and Ward streets last\nyear, it waa pointed out. A letter\nwill be forwarded to the diitrict engineer and other partlei concerned.\nReceipts for the street nilwty\nduring the month of Februiry were\n$1393.90 I! comptred with $1256.60\na yetr tgo, the street rillwty committee reported. The report wts ordered received and filed.\nH. Farenholti, writing for the rair-\nvlew Athletic club, asked the council whit ictlon it intended taking\nwith regard to the Fairview playground thii year. He pointed out\nthat the Fairview club wis planning\nto sponsor a number of ball teams,\nbut it wu essential that the grounds\nbe fixed if they were to carry out\ntheir plan. The letter was referred\nto the parks committee.\nswimming lmtructrese tt Ltkeiide\npark wu received from Mln Georgina Reld and wu also referred to\nthe park! committee.\nPermission wu given Kokanee\nchapter. I.O.D.E. to hold a tag day\non June 6, Alexandra Rose day.\nbut the request of the Mother'! auxiliary to the Boya bind for \u2022 tag day\non June 6 was turned down. They\nwill be advlied accordingly with\nthe luggeition they take another\nday.\nRobert Leonard ln a letter to the\ncouncil pointed out that the termination of Richard! itreet, where it\nmeeti Creek itreet wu In a moit\ndangerous condition besides being\nexceedingly steep, and uked 11\nsomething could be done about fixing it Mr. Potti r Informed the\ncouncil that work had been done\non it, enough to make it passable,\nbut thtt it was not In good shape\nyet. The question was referred to\nthe public works committee and the\nengineer to bring in a report.\nAn application tor a Job on tht\ncity street car service wu -ought\nin a letter to the council from J. E.\nBedford. It wat filed.\nA letter from the Wood, Vallance\nHardware company asked the council to take itepe to improve the\ngrade in front of thoir property on\nFront street, as plans were being\nmade to ettect a number of Improvement!. A concrete sidewalk\nfrom Hall to Hendryx was luggested\nand lt wai pointed out that tbe A.\nH. Green company woild alio be\nIntereited. The board ot worki and\nengineer will bring ln a report on\nconditions.\nAn* application lor the job  of\nW. W. Ferguion drew the councll'i attention through a letter to a\ndrainage problem at hii property\non Carbonate street He stated thtt\nwater from higher level! wai flooding hit property, carrying down\nwute material. Hll iff >rts to cloie\nthe flow of wtter on pievloui occasion! had failed, and he uked the\ncouncil to take steps to eliminate\nthe trouble. The matter was referred to the board of public worki.\nFoUowing presentation of a list\nof charges made tor thawing out\nwater eervlcet thil winter, the council decided to charge a tee of $2 in\nthe future, and that reiident! paying $5 this year, be refunded the\ndifference. Thii will apply to reiident! inilde the city. Servicei outiide the city will be chirged in accordance with time and cott of\nwork.\nT. Johniton -ought permission of\nthe council to uie i ipace under the\nlidewalk of hli properly in the 500\nblock on Baker itreet for I vault\nHe will be advlied that ipace will\nbe available at the rate of five\ncenti per iquare foot annually, the\nututl rite for iuch concessioni.\nA report on the conditioni of the\ncafes md reitauranti in Nelion wis\nreceived from Dr. F. M. Auld, tct-\ning medical off eer of health, itating\nthtt the premises of the varioui\nestablishment* had been viiited and\nrecommendation i made in leveril\ncuei. The proprietors hid ihown t\nwilllngneu to comply with regulation!, the report sal-, and another\nvisit would lie made in the near future to note improvements. No\nwarning hed been given of the vltlt.\nA total of 101 cuei ol measles\noccurred during the month, one\nesse of eiyslpelas and one ol tuberculosis.\nThe report wu received ind tiled.\nThe tire, wtter and light committee, in reporting on the finding regarding the broken hydnnt it the\ncorner cf Hendryx tnd Silica streets,\nitated thtt they did not believe the\ncondition of the rotd had anything\nto do with the accident tnd thtt\nFred Williams be required to pty\nfor the damage. They recommended,\nhowever, that the valut of salvag-\ntble materitl be deducted from the\nprevioui chtrge.\nThe compltint of E. W. Somen,\nregtrding light rites, htd bten\nwithdrawn by Mr. Somen when the\nregulations had been explained to\nhim.\nVICTORIA, March 30 (CP) -\nJumping Into the lead 15 seconds\nafter the opening whistle and then\nincreuing lt at Intervals throughout\nthe 40 mlnutu, Victoria Dominoes,\nlait year'i Dominion senior basketball champions, won the lint of a\ntwo-game total-point teriei from\nTreil, ienlor \"B\" provincial winner!, 29*16, here tonight\nThe ucond game wtll be played\nhere tomorrow night.\nTrail wu trying at all Umei but\ntheir teamwork was far from good.\nMoit ot their pointi ctme trom long\nihoti tired trom well out on the\ncourt tome trom near center.\nThe lormer varsity itan, Bardsley, Willoughby and Nicholson played the same brand ol ball ai they\ndid against the Dominoes In that\ngreat series a Uttle over a year ago.\nWilton turned ln a imart game\nlor Trail and canned aome three\nfield gotla from well out u well u\nplaying a heady game on the rear\nflank. The hall time icore wu\nDomlnoei 17, Tnil 9.\nLlneupi;\nDomlnoei\u2014A. Chapman (7), Andrewi (7), Martin (3), Peden (8),\nC. Chapman (4), Goldsmith, Kin-\nnear, McKeachle, Mottlihaw. Total\n29.\nTrail-Willoughby (2), Bardsley\n(4), Nicholson (4), Walmsley, Bail-\nlie, MUler, Wilson (6), Ahgerelli.\nTotal 16.\nPlan Heavy Tax\nfor Police Dogs\nTrail Council Orders\nthe Purchase of\nSewer Pipe\nNEWS OF TRAIL\nThis column is in charge of Mrs. Glenn Quayle of Trail. All\nevents of a social nature of interest in Trail and Tadanac will appear\nin this column. Mrs. Quayle will be glad to have any such newi\ntelephoned to her tt her home in Trail.\nHOCKEY GAME\nTRAIL, B. C, March 30\u2014 Memben\nand delegates, arriving in Trail today to attend the annual Kootenay\nPresbytery meeting of the Women's\nMissionary Society of the Presbyterian church, which opens tomorrow\nmorning ln the hall of Fint Presbyterian church, include Mrs. H. H.\nI'aylor and Mrs. J. W. bow of Creston; Mn. J. Sneddon of Cranbrook;\nMrs. M. Gibbs and Mn. A. Peters of\nNelion.\n* \u2022   *\nMlu Constance Marlatt left today\nfor the coait when at Victoria and\nVancouver ihe will spend a lengthy\nvacation.\nt  t '\u2022\nMn. D. Wilson was hoitess this\nevening to members of the Ladies'\nService club of Fint Presbyterian\nchurch. Final arrangements tor a\nfashion show, to be held thli week,\nwere completed. Refreshments were\nserved at the conclusion of business,\nt  t ,'t\nD. B. McRae, who hu been employed in the Trail brinch of the\nBank of Montreal, has left for Vancouver where he will take up his\nnew dutiet.\n\u2022 \u00bb  \u2022\nC. W. GuiUaume, accompanied by\nMiss Yvonne Gulllaume, Miss Joan\nGuiUaume, Billy Gulllaume, and\nMiss M. Willis, spent the week-end\nat Robson.\nMrs. J. Gaw, who hai been the\nguest of her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. a.id Mrs. T, C. Jerome, Columbia apartments, has returned to\nher home at Grand Forks.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nMn. W. Cole ot Frlutvale was a\nrecent visitor to Trail.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMisi Margaret Tyion visited during the week-end at Nelson.\n,   .   .\nTwelve boyi, memberi of the Canadian Legion Bantam hockey team,\nwere guest! Saturday at an evening\nof entertainmnet tendered them by\nthe Trail branch ot the Canadian Legion. Ben Simpson had charge of the\narrangements and James Melvin\nplanned the entertainment Following attending a theater performance the party retired to the Legion\nrooms where supper was enjoyed\nAmong the artists appearing on an\nimpromptu program were Mrs.\nGrace Mill! and Sam Powell, vocal\nselections; Miss Iona Langridge and\nMiss Christobel Powell, dancing.\nMrs. Robert Watson accompanied at\nthe piano. Short speeches were given by Fred Edmunds, preiident of\nthe bantam hockey league and by\n\"Red\" Carr, coach of the Legion\nteam.\n\u2022 .     9\nG. G. Cumming left today for\nGrand Fork! where he is visiting hia\nfather and sister.\nTRAIL, B.C., March 30-FoUow-\ning receipt from the city legal department that dogs ol the police\ntype could hot be prohibited Irom\nwithin the city limits, Trail council\ndefinitely decided to charge a fee\nol $15 lor any police dog, Alsatian\ndog, German shepherd dog, German\npolice dog, Belgian shepherd dog,\nBelgian police dog or huskie, or any\ndog which whoUy or partly it one\nol such breeds, in regular session\nMonday night. Theie dogi will have\nto be on leaah while travelling\nabout the city and under direct\ncuitody and control ot some competent penon.\nAn amendment to the existing\ndog tax bylaw, embodying the\nabove, wiU come beiore the councU\nat the next meeting.\nFoUowing receipt ol a letter from\nDr. J. B. Thorn ot the Rossland-\nTratl clinic regarding fees paid by\nthe city to outiide hospitals for\npatients, that the matter would be\ntaken up at the clinic's next meeting, ana asking lor a list of patients\nadmitted to outtide hospitals and\nthe amount of lees tor the year,\nCity Clerk W. E. B. Monypenny\nstated that the amount wu $51.80\nand that 99 per cent ol the patients\nhad treated as a result ot automobile accidents.\nAIRPORT IMPROVEMENT\nA letter trom the department ot\ndefence, aviation branch, announced\nextension of temporary licence for\nTrail's airport from March 31, 1936,\nto September 30, 1936, and asked\nthat the department be informed of\nany grading done during the summer. Mayor Lerose intimated that\nsome improvements would be made\nto the airport during the year.\nOn itrength of a report he had\nheard, that Armable would be included in the city of Trail In the\nnear future, James Whitly asked\nthe council for crushed rock to improve roads to his property in Annable, stating that he had already\nlaid several loada, and that he would\ndo the hauling of the crushed rock.\nMayor Bruno Lerose replied, that\nu the place mentioned had not yet\nbeen taken in he could not see the\ncity'i way clear to grant such a\nrequest.\nHe stated, however, that a meeting would be held ln the near future regarding the possible inclusion of Annable.\nAlderman Hugh Belli authorizing\ncity engineer S. S. McDiarmid to\npurchase cribbing lor Glover road\nwai endoned. The engineer wu\nauthorized to purchase 600 feet of\nsix-inch sewer pipe.\nAlderman J. H. Woodburn asked\nfor another week to decide on the\nTrail Volunteer Fireman'i atiocia-\nUon grant. It had been undecided\nwhether to give the aisociition a\nlump sum per yeer or to pay bill!\nfor clothing damaged or deitroyed\ntrom time to time.\nPurchue of two lix-volt, 100-\nwatt batteries tor a fire truck and\nsix corn broomi wai referred to the\nfire, water and light committee with\npower to act\nCouncil Against\nMore Beer Parlors\nApproached by a delegation at\niti meeting Monday night regarding t letter tent to the council early\nIn March, asking lhat no further\nlicence! for beer parlon be granted\nIn Nelion, the city council went on\nrecord u oppoied to further -nuance of licence! and letten to thtt\neffect wlU be lent the proper au-\nthorltiet. The council wu unanimous ln lti declilon.\nThe requeit came from the Nelson and Dlitrict Hotelmen's atio-\ncialioA.\nAsk (ily to Fix\nSchool Grounds\nBoard Willing to\nHand Over\n$200\nW. E. Colet, ipokesman for a delegation from the Nelion ichool board,\nwaited on the city council Monday\nnight aaking the council for cooperation in fixing ichool ground! this\nlummer.\nMr. Colei explained that the\nschool board in its estimates had\nput aside $200 for fixing grounds,\non the expectation that financial\nassistance would be forthcoming\nfrom the provincial government to\nadd to this sum. The board had\nilnce learned that the government\nhelp would not be given and io\nwould uk the council to take the\n$200 and do what it could in the\nway of work. The board would like\nthe city engineer to look over the\nground.\u2014Centnl school \u2014 and see\nwhat could be done.\nThe board, said Mr. Coles, realized that $200 would not go far, but\n11 the city would cooperate and use\nits men and machinery, the money\nwould go much further.\nThe matter was referred to the\nboard of works to cooperate with\nthe school board. The question of\nwater on the Central school grounds\nwu also raised and wlU be looked\nInto.\nScout Drive Gets\nFine Start, Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., March 30\u2014Annual\nmembership and financial campaign\nof Trail -toy Scouta association is\naway to a splendid start To date\nonly mailed contributions have\nbeen received. After the end of the\nmonth the actual canvass ot old\nand prospective new memben will\nitart when it is expected the year's\nobjective will loon be attained.\nBridge Crew at Sirdar\nSIRDAR, B.C.-A C.P.R. bridge\ncrew under Mr. McPherson arrived\nhere Tuesday, bringing considerable equipment. This crew will drive\npiles and renew the supentnicture\nof the west approach to the Slough\nbridge at Atbara. The work will entail considerable labor. The east\napproach tp the bridge was done\nlast year.\nThe crew has Its headquarters at\nthe Atbara siding.\nPile driving commenced Friday.\nIt was found expedient to remove\nthe many telephone and telegraph\nwires which cross the bridge to a\ntemporary position so as not encumber the work of swinging piles\ninto position for driving.\nBroadcast Audible on\nStreet From All\nDirections\nNo one in Nelson needed to be\nin ignorance of the exact state of\nthe icore ln the Klmberley-Fort\nWilliam hockey match at Calgary\nlut evening, for he could hardly\nhave proceeded along any itreet\nwithout hearing the broadcast from\nsome radio.   '\nLeslie Craufurd ln walking down\nStanley itreet heard the icore announced three times from radios In\nhomes. On Baker street there wu\na continuous chain of broadcut\nfrom end to end, audible in the\nstreet, from restaurants and stores,\nwhile hotel radios also told the\nstory.\nNot long ago The Daily News\ntelephones would have been ringing continuously during luch a\ngame, but this time there waa practically not an inquiry- Many hundreds af families must have been\n\"Uatening in,\" in city and country,\nand enjoying the thrill! of Kimberley'! great scoring exhibition.\nThe tint period wai available\nonly from the Calgary itation,\nCFCN, but Uie Canadian Radio\nCommisiion network hooked up\nwith the itart of the lecond period,\ncarrying the broadcut acrou Canada.\nThe ntwtit \"eim-fut quttn\" tf\n1936 ii pretty France! Nugent.\nStudents It Arkaniti Polytechnic\ncollege fleeted her to thtt honor.\nMlu Nugtnt'i fither It mtyor of\nRuuellvllle,  Ark.\nCouncil Favors\nFlooring Rink\nMust Consider Cost,\nBoxla Delegates\nAre Told\nEvery dandelion has hundreds of\nflowers; The large blossom-like\nhead is made up of many small\nflowers, each of which produces one\nseed.\nAsking the city council at its\nmeeting Monday night what it intended doing with regard to putting\na wooden floor in the civic centre\nskating rink, A. A. Perrler with\nseverel othen waited on the city\ncouncil from the Nelson Amateur\nLacrosse association. Mr. Perrier\nstated there were a number of teams\nready to play and he believed it\nwu a good thing to keep the boyi\nactive in a iport way. Lacrosse\nwould alio be a source of revenue\nto the city. The iport wu \"taking\"\nin other parts of the province and\nthere wai no reason why it would\nnot go over \"big\" here.\nAlderman T. H. Waters stated the\nI queition of a floor had been gone\ninto and that it would take from\n$1600 to $1800.\nj Mayor J. P. Morgan informed the\n1 delegation that it wai the wish of\ni the council to use the floor in the\n(summer time and it would be put\n'in if it could be financed. As the\n' lacrosse- association teams could\nj practice on the Recreation ground!\nj in the meantime, there wai no rush\nfor a.deciiion.\n' The matter wai referred to the\n; auditorium committee to report\nback.\nCouncil In Favor\nof Union Library\nWill Find Out Steps\nNecessary; Dawson\nExplains Move\nATQUEEN'SBAY\nResident of District for\n28 Years; Died\nSuddenly\nBertram Hint Ryley, a reiident of\nQueeni Bay for approximately 28\nyean with the exception of leveral\nyean ipent in the United Statea, died\nsuddenly at his home Monday afternoon.\nBorn ln England in 1887, Mr. Ryley came to Queeni Bay 28 yean\nago and has operated a farm there\nsince. He was also a machinist and\nengineer, and for some time was\nemployed at the Mammoth mine in\nthe Slocan.\nHe is survived by hii widow, Elisabeth, and two sons, Jamei ind\nBryan.\nLEGION STAGES\nSMOKER, TRAIL\nBUNGALOW HAS APPEAL\n^AY AND WlNDOW* StAT\nin Living Room\nli \\%r^_^mimsi\nAbove, exttrlor of bungtlow; below, left, living room window utt tnd biy; right, Interior pltn.\nA bungtlow hu tn tppcal to\nhome loven. It li cosy and comfortable, suggests that the work may\nbe eailly done, becauie the rooms\nare all on one floor.\nThe one pictured haa an unusual\nnumber ot ileeplng roomi lor a\nimall houie. The living room hai a\nfireplace and an lntereitlng end attractive bay window and ieat, which\nis iketched and inset.\nA small stoop welcomes the visitor, who ls then ushered into a\nvestibule in which Is a closet, lor\nwraps. To the right of the vestibule\nii the living room, a room-18 leet\nby 13 feet 6 inches; a pleasant porch\nopens Irom this living room. Back\nof the vestibule and opening Irom\nthe living room, ii a dinette, 11 feet\nby 7 feet 6 inches; and btck of the\ndinette is Uie kitchen, which is weU\nplanned for convenience in cooking\nand doing all the neceuary work.\n' Back of the porch and living room\nla a passage, out of which open the\nthree bedroomi, each with a closet\nfor clothei. The bathroom ii on the\nback, at the end of the passage.\nThe houie contains 23,700 cubic\nfeet of ipace, exclusive ol porch,\nwhich addt SOO cubic leet to the\ntotal\nfollowing a recommendation\nfrom tht Ntlion municipil libriry\nbotrd Mondiy night with regard\nte affiliation with tht Kooteniy\nunltn libriry icheme, the city\ncouncil expreued Itielf In fivor\nof tht recommendttlon ind will\nrefer tht mttttr to the elty solicitor to Itirn whit itepi ire neeeiury If ictlon It Uken. The council wti not lure whether a motion\nby it would luffice, or whether the\npeoplt would bt required to vott\non It\nE P. Dawson, Who acted as\nspokesman, C. W. Tyler and Percy\nCraven, were the members of the\nboard waiting on the council.\nMr. Dawson pointed out that the\nboard did not think the present time\nwas opportune for the board to pool\nits resources with a Kootenay\nunion, library. Legislation was not\nready for such a scheme and if the\ncity found it was disillusioned in\nony way and wished to withdraw, it\nmight not get its resources back.\nThe board, therefore, suggested\nthat it affiliate with the Kootenay\nunion library for three yean, during\nthat time retaining hold on its assets\nand books. Then, at the expiration\not three years, If the plan were\nfound to be unsuccessful, the city\ncould withdraw.\nKootenay Landing\nMan at Creston\nS1RAR, B.C.\u2014Frank Hamilton of\nKootenay Landing was a viiitor to\nCreiton. ...\nClarence and Lome Botteril, both\nof whom are employed at the Bayonne Mine at 'lye, were at their\nhome In Creiton for the week-end.\nTwo trucki are employed by the\ngovernment tn hauling Uie old lumber taken from the buildings removed from the road lite at Sirdar.\nThe lumber is being takea to the\nnew camp at Weasel Creek near\nGray Creek where it will be used\nfor outbuildings.\nThe water as indicated by guage\nat Slough bridge reads .04 below\nzero, a fall ot .1 for the week.\nComparaUvely little water is getting put the silt barrier.\nAlbert and Percy fti-cltie of Boiwell were here on their way to\nCreston Monday by car.\nMr. and Mrs. Joe KoUman's child\nis in Cranbrook hospital.\nThe Bayonne Mining company\nare expecting the arrival- ot a\nstraight plow to be used in clearing\nthe road to the mine at Summit\ncreek. Good progreu hu been made\nduring the past week and the headquarten of the crew hai been moved to the camp at Six-Mile.\nConsiderable numbers of both\ngeese and duck along with some\nswans, are to be ieen in Duck lake\nat the Atbara end.\nMr. and Mrs. Jamei Passcuzzo\nwere Sunday visiton at the home\nof Mr. and Mn. J. S. Wilson at\nAtbara.\nTRAIL, B.C., March 30 \u2014 The\nscheduled program of the Canadian\nLegion, Trail branch No. 11, smoker\nwas held in abeyance here Monday\npight during the radio broadcast of\nthe third and final Kimberlcy-Fort\nWilliam hockey game, and at tha\nconclusion of the game a congratulatory telegram was sent to tho\nwestern Canada champion.. The\nsmoker program follows;\n\"O C-nada\"; march, \"Our Fallen\nHeroes,\" by Round, overture, \"Raymond,\" by Thomai, selection, \"Songa\nof England,\" by Round, chorus,\n\"Comrades in Arms,\" by Adams,\ngalop, \"A Motor Ride,\" by Bidgood,\n(by special request), medley, \"Me- '\nlodlous Review,\" by Rimmer, inarch,\n\"Colonel Bogey,\" by Alford, all by\nthe band, vocal solos, Alex Smith;\nvocal solos wilh band accompaniment, WiUiam Ramsey. Chic Rogers'\nparty gave several stringed instrumental selections and vocal choruses.\nPresident Tommy Austin presided\nand the committee in charge consisted of J. Melvin, chairman, H. P.\nKingwell, H. Simpson, G. Watson,\nT. Nixon and J. Morin.\nGyros Bid Adieu\nCharles Docloi\nChief Stewart Tells of\nDiamond Theft in\nRossland\nGyro memben Monday night bid\nfarewell to Charlei Doctor, who has\nbeen traniferred to Vancouver, at\na luncheon In the Hume illver room.\nGeorge Fleury  on  behalf of tha\nclub preiented Mr. Doctor with a\nmemento from the club for himielf\n! and hia wife, and in so doing de-\nj clared that the club wai losing one\nI ol  its  most active  and valuable\nI members.\n. \"We have reaped the benefit ol\n'. his useful ideas and we are loelng\na hard worker,\" Mr. Fleury itated.\nMr. Doctor in reply deicrlbed the\nfriendship which had been extended\nto him by the members and in closing iaid \"friends we meet, friendi\nwe part, Mend! I hope we ihall\nalways be.\"\nThe program wai iponsored by\nChief of Police Alex Stewart who\ni told yarns of his early day police\n; activities in Rossland, which had to\ndo with the nabbing ot a diamond\nthief.\nNed Hanlan, Toronto Gyro, Dick\nFowler, Trail Gyro, and Carl Larson were club guests.\nThe meeUng wat closed with the\nsinging of \"Auld Lang Syne,\" for\nMr. Doctor.\nUm the Want Adl for Result!!\nTrail Fire Starts\nFrom Sparks\nTRAIL, B.C., March 30.-Flre\nstarted by sparks from the chimney\ncaused slight damage to the roof\nof the residence of R. J. G. Richards,\nTopping itreet, at 4:30 Sunday afternoon. Called to the icene firemen extinguished the blaze immediately.\nMAKING  IT  EASY\nA ipeclal court for women hai\nbeen opined in New York to remove the neceisity of transporting\nfeminine offenders from borough to\nborough ln patrol wagons.\nFlashes From the Wires\nBANDIT MAKES VICTIM\nREMOVE TROUSERS\nVANCOUVER \u2014 A lone armed\nbandit held up Morley Godkin, clerk\nin an Owl drug store here tnd eicaped with $60 from the cash register, after forcing the clerk to remove\nhit trouieri to prevent immediate\npursuit\nIT. PAUL WINS\nST. PAUL, Minn.\u2014St Paul Saint!\ndefeated St Loult Flyen 2-1 here\nMonday to win the opening game of\na belt of five series lor the Americin uioclaUon hockey championship.\n120,000 ILL WITH FLU\nMILWAUKEE\u2014An officially estimated 120,000 penoni, one-fifth of\nthe city'i populaUon, tre ill ind one\nmm U dead trom an abdominal\nmtlidy deicrlbed by tome health\ntuthoritiei II intestinal influenza.\nHOLD AGRICULTURAL'\nSTATISTICS CONFAB\nOTTAWA\u2014A   Dominion-provin\ncial conference on agricultural ita-\ntistics, tint of lti kind in 12 yean,\nwai opened Monday at the Dominion bureau ot statistics by Jamei G.\nParmelee, deputy minliter of trade\nand commerce. The meeting elected\nDr. R. H. Coatei, Dominion itatliti-\ncian, chairman of the conference\nwhich will end Wedneiday.\nALBERTA REFUNDING\nEDMONTON-Refundlng of Alberts'! 8160,000,000 dtbt \"ln whole\nor in part\" at a minimum Interest\nrate of 2.50 per cent is provided for\nby introduction of an enabling bill\nin the provincial legislature. Terms;\not the bill were not made know.\nMANGLED BODY ON TRACKS\nKAMLOOPS, B. C\u2014The mangled\nbody of T. Winten, retired Canadian Pacific railway section man ot\nNotchhfll, B. C, near Salmon Arm,\nwas found on the C. P. R. track!1\nthere, according to reports reaching\nhere. Surviving ls one son, John\not Notchhill who ii i locomotive\nfireman.\n ' in\nNILSON DAILY NIWS. NILSON. K*--TUUDAY MORNING. MARCH SI. !\u00bb-\u00bb\n\u25a0 MO.  SIVfN\nJJplanu Dathi Nrtoa\nMember of the Ciptdlin Daily\nNewipapen Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrlvitt Exchtnqt conntctlno to\ntil Deptrtmenti\nSubscription   Ratti\nS   .09\n2,\n1300\nSingle copy    \t\nBy cirrier. per week\nBy carrier, per year\nBy mall In Canada, to lub-\ntcrlberi living outside regular\ncirrier areas, pel month 60c;\nthree monthi Sl 80. six months,\n\u20223.00. one year. $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 15c; ilx monthi,\nHOO. one year. $7.50.\nForeign countries other than\nUS., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nBIRTHS\nKRAFT\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Elvin\nKraft, Behnsen street, at the Kootenay Lake General hospital, March\n28, a son.\nLESLIE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Richsrd\nLeslie, Rosemont, at the Kootenay\nLake General hospital, March 30, a\ndaughter.\nPERSONAL\nNATURAL FEMININE HYGIENE.\nEvery married woman should\nhave thli Bulletin which explains\nthe famous Dr. K. Oglno's method\nand theory of fertile and sterile\nperiods in women's cycle. Write\nfor Free Bulletin to\nHEALTH WELL\nP. 0. Drawer 267.     Vancouver, B.C.\n  (95)\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBF.R\ngoods 25 latex assortment for $1\nOrder direct and be sure of best\nPacked plain Free catalogue Ns\ntional Importers, 812-Centrt St\nCalgary, Alta. (5711)\nLEARN BASKtSRY, INTEREST-\ning, educational, complete instructions 25c Free catalogue and reed\nwork imtructlons. Dominion Reed\nSupplies. Dept. N. Toronto. (57161\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nMILL SAWYER OF 16 YEARS fcX-\nperience .requires position immediately. Apply Box 89 Daily\nNews. (Bt)\nBUYERS ARE READING THESE\ncolumns- -and selecting what\nthey require each day -Will they\nfind YOUR Classified Ad here'\nTelephone your ad\u2014We'll do the\nrest\nLEGAL NOTICES\nDepartment ef Public Worki\nLOAD RESTRICTIONS\nPunuant to Section 33 of the\nHighway Act, statute! of Britiih\nColumbia, the operation by any\npenon, over Nelson-Nelway highway in tht electoral district pf Nel-\nlon-Cretton, ot any vehicle the\ngross load of which exceeds two\ntons on pneumatic tires is hereby\nprohibited unUl further notice. Hard\ntires are prohibited entirely. In no\ncase may any truck carry a load\nin excess of tht manufacturer's\nminimum  rated  capacity.\nReslrictioni have been taken off\nall other highways in the Nelson-\nCreston District.\n(Signed) F. M. MacPHERSON,\nMinister of Public Works\nMarch 5th, 1936. (5785)\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nGOOD JERSEY COW AND BULL\ncalf. Box 28 Daily News.      (25)\nPOULTRY FOR SALE\nH\nCHAPTER 38\nSherman Gordon and Thora Dahl\nwere sitting ln hll mtchine at his\nfarm.\n\"No,\" Sherman wu telling Thora\nin a somewhat hesitating manner.\n\"I didn't bring you out here to tell\nyou that you are a wonder . . .\nexactly. But there was something.\nI fancy I'm going to be rather dumb\nabout it. I know I am. I hope you'll\ntry and . . . you know . . . understand.\"\n\"I'll try,\" .bora promiied. Amuie-\nment lighted her blue eyes. This\nwts not like the suave Sherman\nOordon. \"Especially,\" the added, \"If\nyou'd tell me what It ll.\"\n\"Sure. I'm worried. Thit's whtt'i\nthe matter .., on two counts. I felt\nI could tell you about lt That I\nmuit.\"\nThora wondered instinctively It\nhe were going to lay tomething\nabout Wilma. Perhapi he had noticed that the had changed of late,\nsuspected that the wu unhippy\never her forthcoming marriage. But\nGordon! next words took her by\nsurprise.\n\"It's Selwyn.\"\n\"Mr. Mersh?\" She repeated viguely. \"You mean that you are worried\nabout him?\"\n\"Yes, I am. It'i none of my affair,\nbut I am. I think he'i on a spot\"\n\"I don't understand.\"\n\"Of course not. I'll come clean ...\nif It doei htvo a gossip-raongering\ntound. I'm talking about tht neighbor widow. You've been iround\nhere long enough to see whit's\nbrewing there. She's been miking a\nplay for him ever since I wu old\nenough to notice. Well, I think she's\nhooked him.\"\nThora made no reply, only looked\ntt the narrator steadily.\n\"I'm pretty sure of tt,\" he hurried\nen, as if anxious to get it over with.\n\"I was talking to her yuterday\nmorning a few minutei and ihe\neither tried to let the cat out of\nthe bag, or she opened it and hoped it would Jump. She wu coy ibout\nlt all... fluttered, you know. Talking about Wilma's wedding . . .\nslid the neighborhood was due tor\nmother surprise. Very mysterious.\nIt ihe had been within reach ot her\nrouge, she would have blushed ...\nthat sort of thing.\"\nGordon grinned feebly whtn ht\nuid thtt, but there wu ne answering smile. Instead, Thora slid\ncalmly:\n\"I would Imagine there ii little\ndanger of anyonejaking advintage\nof Mr. Marsh. HeThould be able to\ntike care of him; elf.\"\n\"You would think so. He'i had\nyeari of practice. But you know\nabout the drops of wtter, how they\nwear away the stone in time. Maybe\nthe -Did boy'i losing his resistance.\"\n\"And you are worried?\"\n\"Still... even If It U the tecond\ntime you have told me in a nice\nway that lt is none of my business.\nI'm fond of the old grouch. He deserve! a better fate. You know that\njrounelf.' *\n\"I am not ln a position to Judge\n, . . anyone.\"\n\"Cagey. I expected that Will\nwe'll tkip it. If Selwyn wanti to be\nFOR YOUR\nOFFICE\nEQUIPMENT\nLEDGERS, All sizes\nSYNOPTICS\nDISC RULED SHEETS\nSTENO LEAVES\nSECOND SHEETS\nRULED FOOLSCAP\nLEDGER SHEETS\nPHONE 143\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING\nDEPT.\nled to the slaughter, we'll lend him\n\u2022 bon voytge baiket. But . . . Juit\nsupposing I hippen to be right. . .\nwhat about you?\"\n\"Me! What Irt the world would\nMr. Marsh's marriage have to do\nwith me?\"\n\"A lot. I'm thinking,\" Gordon inswered darkly. \"It would mean, for\none thing, that Mrs. Dorothy would\nmove over to Fair Acres. Just for\nsome reason, I can't see you there\nunder those conditions. That'i none\nof my business, too.\" he added, so\nearnestly that It did not occur to\nThora to feel any resentment \"I\ntold you that I wai worried on two\ncount!. You're the second.\"\n\"But you ihouldn't worry about\nme. I could look for another place.\nI would,\" Thora admitted candidly.\n\"That'i exactly what Tm afraid\nof. You'd go iway from here . . \u2022\ndrop out of light again.\"\n\"Probably.\"\n\"And I don't want you to do that\nIf anything like that ihould happen\n... I know where you could get a\nbetter job.\"\nSomethnig  in hli tone   ceuted\nThon to look it him leirchlngly,\nit ihe uked:\n\"Are you Joking?\"\n\"I am not\"\n\"Do you mean thtt you know ol\nt position like the one I hive now?\nA housekeeper?\"\n\"Precisely.\"\n\"Where? For whom?\"\nHe jerked his head in tlie direction of the empty firm house.\n\"There. For me.\" As Sherman\nuttered those three words, his dark\neyes met Thora's in a level gaze.\n\"Go ahead,\" he remarked grimly.\n\"I can take it\"\nHer voice wu very calm and even.\n\"If you are trying to be clever,\nMr. Gordon, I don't think I like it.\"\n\"But I'm not. It's the first time\nI ever said it to a woman. You see\n... I love you, Thora Dahl.\"\n\"You expect me to believe that?\"\n\"Of course not. But it'i true.\"\nThe blue eyes darkened.\n\"No. It is . . . Impossible.\"\n\"It's true, I tell you! Ever since\nthat first time I saw you . . . that\nday in the hospital. And I hadn't\nthe slightest notion who you were.\nI knew you then, somehow. The\nsame ts I knew I would find you\nagain. Then . . . Uiat afternoon at\nFair Acres. It wu all I could do to\nkeep trom telling you about it then.\nIt wu meant to be thtt way. I knew\nit then ... I know lt better, now.\"\n\"No.\"\n\"Yesl Thingi like lhat can happen ... to people, Thora.\" He spoke\nher name almost reverently. \"I think\nyou muit feel lt a little, too. Try to\nbelieve me.\"\n\"Oh... please. You are mistaken.\"\nShe turned her eyes away from his\nentreating gaze. \"1 would be glad\nif you would take me home.\"\n\"Not yet\" he returned doggedly-\nIt means too much to me. I don't\nwant to hurt you. I wouldn't hurt\nyou for the world! But you'll have\nto try to understand how terribly\nin earnest I am. It's come to be such\na part of me ... I couldn't keep\nfrom telling you. Even if you tell\nme you never could care. And then\nI wouldn't believe it. Thon, look\nat me!'*\nShe met his eyes unflinchingly.\n\"Don't you believe me, dear?\"\n\"I believe that... you believe it,\"\nshe said slowly.\nThank you for that much,\" Gordon commented soberly. \"Perhipi I\ncan help you. You're thinking, of\ncoune, thit I don't know you well\nenough to be making such rash\nstatements. Is that It?\"\n\"Perhaps.\"\n\"Well, I've known you as long aa\nI can remember . . . just waiting\nuntil the day you would come to me.\nHow you put in tbe time before\nthat, I don't know. I don't care. That\nall belongs to you. But everything i\nchanged lait April 10th . . . that'i j\nwhen l fint law you. Life changed\nfor me that day. It did for you, too |\n... even If you didn't know it. You\nmight just aa well accept lt, dear. ]\nYou're going to iome day.\"\n' Tm sorry ...\"\n\"Bui you muitn't be. It's too wonderful for that. You're probably\nthinking that you don't know anything about me. Well, that won't\ntake long to remedy. As t matter\nof fact, my life wai more or lesa of\na blank until 1 found you.\"\nFor the first time, a suggeition of\nt smile touched her lips.\n(To Se Continued)\nTENDERS will be received by the\nundersigned up to and including\nApril 8th, 1936, for approximately\n4000 feet of used Ferry Cable. Tenderers muit quote on the basis of\nprice per 100 feet.\nFor further information apply to\nthe District Engineer, Court House,\nNelson, B. C.\nThe highest or any tender not\nnecessarily accepted.\nA. V. HAMILTON,\nPurchasing Agent\nParliament Buildings,\nVictoria, B. C,\nMarch 26th, 1936. (103)\nHELP WANTED\nMAN, PROTESTANT, FOR FARH\nwork and milker. Box 2t Daily\nNews.      (24)\nEXPERIENCED  CAPABLE  GIRL\nfor general housework. Ph. 237Y1.\n(12)\nMAID FOR HOME WITH NO CHIL-\ndren. Sleep out. P. O. Box 484.\n(40)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES.\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nDESIRABLE IMPROVED RANCH\nproperty located at Queens Bay,\nwith one two roomed and ona\nfour roomed cottage. Close to\nwharf with lake frontage. Owner\nwill accept small rental and give\noption to purchase, rentals to apply on purchMe price. For further\ndetails apply R. W. Dawson, Hipperson Blk., P.O. Box 733, Nelson.\n (74)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms tor rent Annable Block.\n(5709)\nBETTER CHICKS\nMean More Profits!\nOur Chicks are BETTER because\nwe' coutniuallv select oui breeding itock lnd natch scientifically\n(Pricei quoted per 100)\nPullet\nChlcki     Chirk!\nLeghorn! $11-00 82-.O0\nReai Hid Rocka SUM        $27.00\nLight Sussex     $15.00        $30.00\nPulltt Chlcki guaranteed\n$7% accurate\nGovernment  Approved   and\nBloodtested.\nBe SAFE and order  from\nRUMP tt BENDALL, LTD.\nMilner, B. C.\n(5704)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nGOOD ROW BOAT. ENQUIRE AF-\nter 5 p.m. at 715 Victoria Alley.\n(57)\nLOST AND FOUND\nLOST-BROWN    SPANIEL   DOG\non North Shore. Phone 703X. (96)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANCE\n10 ACRES LAND IN SLOCAN\nValley. Large bouse, barn etc.\nPlenty wafer, wood. Clear title\u2014\nor trade for smaller place near\nNelson preferred. Box 67 Dally\nNews. (67)\nUSED CARS\n1934    FORD    COUPE.    RUMBLE\nett. A-l condition. Box 39 Newi.\n(39)\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVEN-\ntor, Uil of wanted Inventions and\nfull informitlon tent free The\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St Ottawa\n(5708)\nFARM   LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms In Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 908 Dept of Natura\nResources, CP__. Calgary. Alia\n(57071\nPHOTOCRAPHY\nFILMS DEVELOPED ANY Sltt\n25c. With 1 print from each nee\nativc. Extra prints. 8 for 25c Su\nkatchtwtn Photo Supply. Saska\ntoon. (5706)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\n#\nSOWS BRED TO FARROW THIS\nSpring. $30.00. Anderson, Kokanee\n       (30)\nTWO FRESHENED COWS. J. P\nBell, Park Siding, B.J*._      (88)\nTEAM OF HORSES. T. W. CHERN-\nenkoff, Taghum, B. C. (106)\nTRANSFER WORK\nHAULING\nOF ALL\nDESCRIPTIONS\nCourteous Service\nWilliams Transfer\nPHONE 106\n(58.-\nBusiness ond Professional Directory\nWRiTf FMW1I-. CATALOGUE\ngiving Information on feeding poultry tnd quoting pricei. White Leghorns, alio Wyandottes and Reds.\nOutstanding strains for vigor and\nproduction.\nLAKEVIEW POULTRY FARM\nL. I*. Solly            Westholme. B.C\n (56631\n8 ROLL*. FROST150\"\"WOVlN fe\nfencing, $ rolls 2 ft. poultry netting. Inciibeton, feeders, etc\nSmtll brooder. Whit often? E. H.\nHird, Stoetn City. <28)\nBi<_ WiS-V leSghorn chicks.\n$11.00 per 100. Order early supply\nlimited. T. A. Roblnion, R. R 1.\nGnnd Forks. (-858)\nAccountants\nCHAS   F   HUNTER   S F A E.\n213  Medical  Art!  Building\nP. 0. Box 1091,\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP.\nPhone 215. All kinds of cut flowers.\nNelson. B C   wreaths, sprays tt etc. Phone 215\n(57261   Mrs. Hagarty, Box 29. (5688)\nAssayers\nE W WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAI\nAnalyst Asstyer. Chemist Chemical ind Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling agenti tl Trail and Tacoma smellers 301 305 Josephine\nSt.. Nelson, B. C. (5727)\nNURSERY PRODUCTS\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrlgldalre equipped suites. (8710)\n\" UooiS\nLIGHT   HOUSEKEEPING\nTurn. 918 Kootenay street\n(5768)\nFOR SALE\nWe.carry largest stock reconditioned\npipe ind fittings suitable for all\npurposes Write Swartz Pipe Yard\n220 1st E. Vancouver, BC, (5712)\ntMEE^TONTINENTAL ti HORSE\npower, power unite. Fair running\ncondition. Price $350. F.O.B. Cranbrook Auto-Wreckere.        (5422)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd\n\u2022_50 Prior St      Vancouver, B C\n(5714)\n1 CARLOAD ALFALFA, also WORK\nhone, 1400 lb. E. Nouguler, Canyon.\n(27)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\nsugar sacki. linen. McDonald Jim\nCo., Ltd.. Nelion, B. C.        (5713)\nNELSON DAItT !\u00bb_\"WS CT-AWllPlID\nadi l'ht letdtnt itletmen mo\nburets tor Ntlton tnd turrouadlna\ndltirM\nEVERYTttlNG FOR THE ORCH-\nard or garden. Send for catalogue\nIntroduce., of the world'i best\nstrawberry \"Empire All \u2022 Red.\"\nEmpire Garden Nurseries R.R3.\nNew Westminster. (5951)\nH. KrrCHEta, MbUNTAlfo STA-\ntlon Gtrdens, Nelson. ,New and\nChoice varieties of roses, carnations, gladioli'and dahlias. Cata-\nlogues on request, (59061\nFRUfT ANlJ ORNAMENTAL\ntrees, evergreens, black currants\nand raspberries. T. Roynon. agent.\nLayrltx Nurseries. (5860)\nBLA(X CUR-tArJT BUSHiS. ONl\nand two years, $10 per 100. freight\npaid. Buzzard, Newton, B. C,\n(-SST)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\n26 ACRES. 5 CULTIVATED, 90\nfruit trees, imall fruiti, irrigated.\n6 room house, outbuildings, priced\nlow, $1200. Terms. H. E. Dill 508\nWard St.  (58)\n$2200 WILL BUY FOU*_ LOTS\nwith fruit trees, and seven room\nhouse, with bith tnd cement basement on Nelson avenue. Enquire\nP. O. Box 822. 163)\nGRENVILLE  H   GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 61S\nBaker street Nelson. B C P O\nBox No 276  Representing Ship-\npen' intereit at Trail. B.C. (5728)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d c palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk, Nelson\n(57291\nE. M   WARREN, D   C, BOX 872\nFor Canaries. Phene 115 or 735L\n(5730)\nElectrical\nJ. F COATES The Electric Store\nSupplies and Installations\nPhont 766. P. O. Box 1065\n(5731)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nE. L WARBURTON. NELSON. B C\nOffice 518 Ward St Phont 53, P.O\nBox 668. Agent Oils. Greues. Paints\nSpecialties: mining machinery\nCrow's Nest Pass Steam Coals.\nStructural steel piping, sheet iron\n(5732)\nH. D DAWSON. Nelion. B C\nMine Surveys and Reports\n 15733)\nBOYD C AFFLECK, Fruitvale. BC\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n15734)\nA. H GREEN CO., LTD 516 WARD\nSt. Phone 264, Nelson, B.C. (5735)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nSCHOOLS\nCANADIAN DIESEL ENGINEER\nING SCHOOLS. Travellers Building. Cslgary. are now giving complete DAY md HOME STUDY\nCOURSES In DIESEL ENGINEERING under authorized Instructor!. Write for particulars. (5705)\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD\nReal eitate. Insurance, rentals, 217\nBaker St (5736)\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate. Insurance. Rentals Next Hlppenon\nHardware. Baker Street      157371\nC. D. BLACKWOOD  Insurance ol\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99\n15738)\nInvestments\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE, BOND-\ned representative, F. Armitrong\nStuirt, P. O. Box 389. Nelson. (12)\nMachiniiti\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor ill classes ot Metal Work. Lathe\nWork, Drilling. Boring and Grinding.   Motor   Rewinding,  Acetylene\nWelding\nPhont 593. 324 Vernon Street\n(5743)\nMaternity Homes\nELIZABETH   PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Confidential Physician in attendance Ph Broad 3078\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wuh\n(5744)\nNotaries\nD. J ROBERTSON. NOTARY PUB-\nHe. Office 305 Victoria St Nelson\n(5745)\nPainting and Decorating\nPAINTrNG. DECORATING, KAL*\nsominlng. Work guinnteed. Reasonable prices. Miller. Ph. 790L.\n.    (5888)\n1876 \u2014 60th Anniversary \u2014 1936\nUSE THE\nTelephones, invented by a Canadian, were\nfint used in March, 1876.\nUSE THE PHONES BELOW AND CIT THI BEST SERVICE\nSanitariumi\nDR. ALDRICH SANITORIUM INC\nTreat! all chronic disease! including T.B., cancer, diabetls. liquor\nhabit and the mind. 30 years practice. E-4504 Fredrick, Spokane.\n(574$)\nSash Factor*\/\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker St\n(5747)\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST REASONABLE Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle. Vernon St\n(5748)\nWigs and Toupees\nH. E DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nlurance Real Estate, 508 Ward St\n (5739)\nJ. E. ANNABLE   REAL ESTATE\nrental!, iniurance. Annable Block\n(5740)\nLIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E Poulin, l'h. 70. (5741)\nCHAS P. McHARD-r, INSURANCE.\nReal Estate, Phone 135.        (5742)\nLADIES AND GENTLEMEN?\nwlgt and toupees, etc Free Illustrated Catalogue Over 20 years\nIn B C We buy cut hair Hansot\nHair Goodi Co. P. O. Box 601\nVancouver, B. C. (3749)\nOut-of-town subscribers .ho\nwish to answer advertisements\nIn which only tht telephone\nnumber of the advertiser is\ngiven, may mail their repliei to\nthe Nc'son Dally Newa and they\nwll. be communicated to the\nadvertise-:.\nMcCRECOR      phoni\nBROS.\nAn ideal gift\noccasions  \u2014\nPhotograob.\nyour   appointment\nnowl\nfor tn Qn J\nMike \/.\/_\u2022_\nElectrlcil   Service    PHONI\nand Supplies\nJ. F. COATES\nVernon St\n7C6\nB. C. Plumbing fir   PH0NE\n1   Heating Co.\nGuaranteed work*\nmanthin. merchandise and tervice.\nEstimates furnished.\n181\nPHONE\nFlowers for all occa*\n'\"cWzELLES\nKANDYLAND    mm*\nAlwavs as  nesr  as 2119\nvour phone.\nKootenay Music   phoni\nHouse\nTrouble with your\nradio? Phone our\nRadio    Department\n585\nCapitol Beauty\nShoppe\nSpruce  up  for  the\nSmini and Summer.\nPermanents etc. Fic-\nialt a specialty.\nPHONI\n18\nGeorge A. Meerei   PH0Nl!\nWhat for?\nPHOTOGRAPHS!\n46\n187\nPerminenti. Marcels,\nFineerwaves. etc.\nHaigh Tru-Art\nBeauty Salon\nFullv modern, up-to-\ndate methodi.\nPHONE\n327\nSAFETY\nTAXI\nLaleit new cara i\nvour lervice.\nCareful Driven\nPHONI\n77\nMACDONALD\nCART*C\u00bb- AND\nFUEL CO.\nWOOD - COAL\nAirents   for   Michel\nand   Imperial  Coal.\nPHONE\n258\nMiladv'i Beauty\nParlors\n- PERMANENTS -\nThe best preparations and care insures the best results.\nPHONE\n244\nDrv Cleaning. Pressing and Repairing.\nH. |. WILTON\nWe call and deliver\nPHONE\n107\nBRINGING UF FATHER\nBy G\u00abo. McManm\nTHE GUMPS\n fees* tow\nNELSON DAILV NEWS NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINQ. MLAJrl St. 1938\nfAQE   EIGHT\nMANITOU MINING COMPANY, LIMITED\n(NON-PERSONAL LIABILITY)\n919 STOCK EXCHANGE BUILDING VANCOUVER, B. C.\nAUTHORIZED CAPITAL\u20143,000,000 SHARES OF 50c PAR VALUE EACH\nISSUED\u20145 Sharti\nIN TRIASURY\u20142,999,995 Sharei\nDIRECTORS AND OFFICERS\nBRIG-GEN. J. bUFF-STUART-Pretldtnt tnd Dirt-tor.\nMerchant.\nDirector of Pioneer Gold Minei Limited.\nJOHN O. GALtOWAV\u2014Vlce-Prtildent\u2014Director.\nConsultln. Mining Engineer.\nFormerly Assistant to Dr. Charles Camsell on Dominion Government Geological\nSurvey and tor eight years Provincial Government Mineralogist.\nCLIFTON P. RIEL\u2014Mintgtr and Dlnetor.\nMining Operator.\nManaging Director of Fedenl Gold Mines Limited.\nManaging Director of Reward Mining Company Limited.\nSTANLEY W. TAYLOR\u2014Secretary and Director.\nSolicitor.\nMember of the firm of Williams. Minion It Tiylor.\nREGISTRARS AND TRANSFER AGENTS\nPRUDENTIAL TRUST COMPANY LIMITED   .. 014 Pender Street Weit. Vancouver, B.C.\nBANK OF MONTREAL\nBANKERS\n. . 500 Granville Street Vancouver. B.C.\nSOLICITORS\nWILUAMS. MANSON It TAYLOR 718 HaU Building. Vincouver. B.C.\nPROPERTIES\nTHE COMPANY HAS TWO PROPERTIES\nOne in Nelson District\nOne in Bridge River District\nSUMMARY OF REPORT\non the\nPORTO RICO MINE\n\u201eBy C. W. DRYSDALE\nDOMINION GEOLOGICAL SURVEY\nMEMOIR 94, 1917.\nHistory\nsnd Production\nThe Porto Rico property was But discovered md located bv two nrosDectors named Maxwell and Day, in the\nautumn of 1896.\nAssays of some of the ore samples, obtained by them\nfrom surface oiitcro.plngs. are said to have run as high\nts $2600 to the ton.\nWithin two months of stakinc Uie two prospectors hid\nleased the property upon very favorable terms lo the Canadian Pacific Exploration Company Limited, an English\ncompany capitalized at \u00a3500,000 in \u00a31 shares. Having acquired the property. Mr. W. H. Corbould, managing director\nfor the company, at once commenced to thoroughly exploit\nthe around.\nMr. J. J McMullen was engaged as superintendent and\nunder his management, operations were commenced and\ndevelopment work actively carried on by means of adit\ntunnels driven on the Porto Rico vein. Forty minen were\nemoloved ...\nA good, wagon road. 7 miles Ions, was built from the\nKelson and* Fort Sheppard railway and 700 feet of adit\ntunnelling was driven in 1897.\nIn the same year. 41 tons of ore. sent to the Tru!\nimelter. was reported to have yielded $76.25 per ton in gold.\nIn 1899. a trial shipment of ore was sent to San Francisco which resulted in 90 oer cent of the gold valuei being\nlaved on the amalgamating platee.\nA ten-stamp mill and 2500-foot wire rope kramway\nconnecting it with the mint were completed in December.\n1SSS The aerial tramway was Installed by Mr. B. C. Riblet,\nthen of Sandon. Slocan district B.C.\nThe following is an extract from a report of the\ndirecton for the year ending September 30, 1898:\n\"Crushing commenced on the 8th of December and\non the 20th ot that month the reiult ot the flrtt cleanup\nwai ai follows: Crushings. 142 tons, which gave a return of\n295 ouncei of retorted gold, also 20 tont of concentntes.\nThe approximate value of the clean-up wai $5,500.00; in\niverage sample of the tailings assayed 8 dwta. per ton.'\nIn the company's report for the year ending September\n10, 1889. appeared tbe following:\n\"Crushing! during the year ending September 80th\nwere, as near ai could be estimated. 8280 tona of ore. yielding\nin bullion 3178.06 ouncei, vtlue as per bullion cerflncates,\nS58J27.S1 and 140.69 tons of concentratei value $3283.59,\nmaking a total of $56,511.40. or an average of $1721 per ton\nof ore crushed.\n\"Ot the tbove. 1817 toni of ore, yielding $20,757.86, were\ntaken altogether from the itopei above No. 2 level and the\nbalance. 1963 tons, yielding $35,754.14, from the stones between No. 2 tnd No 3 levels, io that the grade of thtt ore\nhaa improved with depth. On September 30th there exiited\nore in light in the itopei sufficient for five monthi' mill\nrun.\"\nThe Canadian Pacific Explontion Co. expended over\n$130,000 in tlie development of the Porto Rico property tnd\nof that amount $8000 wai uied tor the construction ot the\nwagon road.\nIn April. 1899, the mine closed down, owing to the difficulty of getting wood cut for fuel. Seven cords of wood\nwere required per day at the mill and mine and the woodcutters demanded $8 _er cord for Cutting and deliveringit\nThe Porto Rico mine was opened up again ln 1903,\nafter three yean idleness, under lease to Mr. G. H. Bernhardt, formerly superintendent of the Ymir mine.\n' During the first mill run 600 tont were crushed, having\na grots value of over $16,000. the returns from which yielded\nconsiderable prolit to the lessee alter paying a heavy royalty.\nIn July. 1904. Mr. Barnhardt signed another lease tor \u2022\nperiod of three years on a lower royalty basis. The mine\nwas closed down the following spring.\nDuring the summer of 1914, Mr. W. B. DeWitt formerly\nof the Queen Mill in Sheep Creek Camp, took a two yean'\nlease on the Porto Rico mine and, along with three partnen,\ndid a lew months' work making a trial run ot ore through\nthe mill.   '\nIn the ipring of 1815. Mr. Smith Curtii bought out Mr.\nDeWitt's three partnen and did some work on the property\nGold bullion to the value of $670 and concentrate worth\nabout $.50 are reported to have been recovered.\nTne mine is developed by means of four adit tunnels\ndriver, ln on the vein, as well as by open-cuts. The tunnels\nare numbered trom above downward!,\nNo. 1 tunnel Is 250 feet long: No. 2.90 feet lower, ls about\n380 feet long; No. 3, 87 feet lower than No. 2, about 600 feet\nlong, and No. 4,85 feet lower than No. 3, about 300 feet long.\nTwo hundred feet below No. 4 tunnel, but off the vein,\nil No. 6 tunnel, onlv 90 feet long.\nIn No. 3 tunnel ii an upraise, 7 feet wide, extending up\nto No. - tunnel, a distance of 130 feet, the working! being\nall in ore. Much ot the sloping and development work wu\ndone by five michine drills run by air compressed at the mill.\nGEOLOGICAL   STRUCTURE\nThe vein, which belong! to the true fissure-vein type, hai\na filling ol quartz scattered through with iron pyrites. The\nvaluei in the ore are gold and lilver. the former chiefly in\nthe free itate.\nNative gold may be ieen in hand specimen! from the\nvein. The values vary from $3 up to $146 per ton. Tbe ore\nthat Mr. Barnhardt put through the mill in 1803 ran about\n$17 to $18 per ton. The width of the vein ranges from 2 to J\nfeet with an average width of 3 feet. It wideni. however.\nIn a few placet to 8 feet, but the values in iuch placei are\nnot io high.\nThe vein ls very regular and continuous, itrlklng north\n49 degreei east and dipping to the weit at an angle ot 45\ndegreea The ore-shoots are tubular In shape and in the\nvein appear to have a vertical pitch. The largeit snoot hu\n\u2022 itope length of 450 feet at No. 3 tunnel level.\nThe vein hai been opened uo at intervals for about\nhalf a mile along its out-crop from No. 4 tunnel up to its\napex on the divide and is found invariably in contact with\na narrow, fine-grained, chertv lamprophvre (altered augite\nkersantite) about _ teet in width and having the tame\nttrike ind dls as the vein.\nThe dyke genenlly formi the hanging'wall; but In tome\nplaces ore occun on both sides of the dyke and both vein\nmatter and dyke have been stoped out ind put through\nthe mill.\nMINING ANO MILLING\nThe recovery in the mill amounted to 84 per cent ot\nusay valuei and the concentratei averaged between $40 and\n$90 per ton.\nFUTURE WORK\nSince the apex of the vein is well exposed on the divide\nand hu the ume structural relations there at below ln the\nmine, with the same nenlstent lamprophvre dyke n hanging-wall it would seem advisable to explore the vein more\nextensively tnd lystemitically. both laterally and ln depth.\nTne vein to the southwest could readily be explored for\nore-shooti by continuing the tdit tunneli beyond the teh_rt>\note tone, which, In No. 3 tunnel, deflected the working to\nthe foot-will. No. 2 tunnel tlio left the main vein and\ndyke md Is In the foot-wtll country.\nThe dyke ought to provt i good indicttor of the position\nHere Are the Features:\nManitou Mining Co. Ltd. itands ALONE in sll Csnsds, pioneering tho introduction of sn tntirely now method of mining promotion snd financing of umt.\n1. The artlclei of thli company forbid piyment of commiuion to tnyont on tht ult\nof lti ihirei to tht public.\n2. Tha oompiny ean ntvtr ptrt with iny of Itt ihirei In payment for propertiei.\n1 There are no vendor iharu.\n4. Then ara ne ttcrow iharei. .    ,\n5. Application for lilting en the Toronto ind Vineeuvtr itoek txehangtt will be midt\nti toon u thli flnt offtrlng of ttock hu been tubtcrlbed.\n6. The company hu entered Into t contract with tht mmiglng director, who It ilte\ntht promoter of thli oompiny, whereby he will receive for hli lervlcet while holding the offlct\not mtntging director t uliry of $150 per month, ind after tha compiny hit developed t mint\ntnd built a mill for 50-ton minimum capacity, and hat had tht umt In duration fer it luit\nfour monthi, ht will receive 100,000 frtt iharei.\nIN OTHER WOROS THIS COMPANY PAYS ONLY FOR SUCCESS ANO NOT FOR\nFAILURE.\nTHE  PUBLIC  SHAREHOLDER  MUST   WIN FIRST.\nNe other director! of thli compiny participate In tny wty In tht 100,000 thtru thtt\n.mty bt earned by tht promoter.\n1. All tubtcrlptloni muit be payable to the Prudential Truit Co. Ltd. which will icknowl-\nedgt rtoelpt tnd luut MANITOU ihtrtt direct to lubtcrlbtn, turning tht monty evtr to\nMtnltou Mining Compiny and chirgt tht company tha nomlnil ftt for thl truit work. '\n8. Thi method of financing ii io trrtnged thtt the grett mtiorlty ef people In Canadi\nef medtrtte mum tre given in opportunity NOT ONLY TO GET IN on tht rail ground floor\nof tht compiny, but to itay In It protected by a futurt right to purchue in toutl number of ihirei\nit tht umt price tnd ire further protected by rlghti btlng transferable to their nomlntu,\nIn tht tvtnt that they are not able, or do not w Ith, to exerclie thtlr rlghti.\n9. At thli dite of offering, only flvt shtret of itock htvt been Iuued by tht oompiny\ntnd public ihtreholden ire thereby tuured thtt thty will it ill times rttl In the voting control tnd bt muten of the compiny, which thty lupport, tnd miy. If thty io deilre, at any\ntime, remove all of the prtunt directon.\nRich Bridge River Qold Area\nPROPERTIES\n1. The Porto Rico Mint, near Nelton, Brltith Columbia.\nit situated between the second Relief mine, controlled and\noperated by Premier Gold Mine Co.. a subsidiary of the\nAmerican Smelting It Refining Co.. the largeit operating\nconcern on the American continent, and the Yankee Gui\nMine, another important producer in the Neiaon diitrict\nBoth of thete mines are equipped with milling planta and\nare at thil time producing steadily.\nThe company has acquired in option to purchase the\nPorto Rico Mine and full title will be received u toon is\nDtymentt have been completed.\nIt it the company's desire to bring thii property Into\nproduction in the fall ot 1936. ,\nA lummarv of the Dominion Government report ot\nC. W. Dryidale io Memoir 94. 1917. la published herewith.\nOther equally favorable reports have been made upon tlie\nproperty, but space will only permit reproduction here of\nextracts of the report of B. T. O'Grady.\nWest Kootenay Power St Light Co.'! Una to tb- Second\nRelief Mine pasies over the Porto Rico property at the mill\nlite. Tbe road up Barrett Creek to the mine from tlie\nmain Nelson-Spokane Highway ii alio In tint-claw shape.\nThete two itemi will not only effect \u2022 \/-reat saving ln\ntime tnd Initial expenditure, but the immediate availibim-\nof electric power is i most important economical advantage.\nt. Bridge Rlvtr Dlitrlet\nTwenty-six surveyed mineral claimi situate between\nthe Wiyiide and Congress Mines, as ihown on the Bridge\nRiver mtp on this oage. The option to purchase this property involved a $1500 cuh payment and a _S% intereit to\nthe vendon in a subsidiary compiny if brought to production, and 75% Intereit to the Manitou Mining Co. upon\ncompletion of a mill.\nThe merit ot thit large property Ilea principally in tht\nfict that the claims cover an tret of greenttone and other\nrocks intruded by feldspar porphyry dykea. with mineral\nshowings already known and exposed.\nThli North Bridge River lecUon, lying between Wiyiide\nand Minto Minei, ii fast becoming recognized as a major\ngold area.\nAt can be ieen on the mip, four propertiei art con-\nttguoui In t itraight row\u2014Minto, Federal Congreu. Manitou\nand Wiyiide.\nThree of thete propertiei hive developed commercial\nore. to it it reasonable to expect the Manitou property will\nilso develop into a mine.\nof the vein. Should the vein leave it however, and the\nvaluei in the vein ceue. other dyke intersections with the\nsame or parallel veins should be sought.\nBefore doing this underground development work in\nsearch for lateral extensions of ore, the vein and dykes\nihould be carefully traced on the lurface and, it possible,\nthe width ot the schistose zone measured.\nNeither the vein nor dyke have as yet been proved to\nextend to the northeast into the augite porphyrite sill.\nAlthough the augite porphyrite of the lower workings is\nnot the ore-bearing country rock ot the Porto Rico mine, yet\nit is the country rock to high-grade ore from prospects below\nthe mine near the wagon road, as well as from the Fern\nmine. In the case of the Fern mine, however, the ore-shoots\nare found in contact with a granite porphyry dyke.\nDyke intersections, both lamprophyres and porphyries.\nwith veins, particularly where at acute angles, should be\ncarefully prospected for. As several lamprophyre dykes\nhave already been disclosed in the mine workings and found\nto strike at acute angles to the main fissure, the chances\nare fair for finding not onlv extensions of old ore-shoots.\nbut also new shoots on the Porto Rico and adjoining\noropertiet.\nTHE PORTO RICO MINE\u2014Summary of Report by B. T.\nO'Grady in Bulletin No. 1. 1032. British Columbia\nDepartment of Mlnet.\nPORTO RICO: Situated at tbe head of Barrett Creek. 4 or 5\nmilea southwesterly from the FERN, and in the aame general formation, thii property, ihut down for many yetn.\nwas described at great length In Geological Survey of\nCanada Memoir 94.\nThe following figures repretent the total production made\nbetween 1897 and 1905, when the old 10-itamp mill wu ln\noperation: Tons. 5561; gold. 5690 oz.; lilver. 1316 oz.; copper.\n709 lbs. Of thii. all the ore wu milled with the exception\nof 41 torn ihipped u sorted ore ln 1897.\nThe vein, of the true fissure type, averaged 3 feet in width,\nthe mineralization consisting of free gold and pyrlte ln a\nQuartz gangue. The largest ore-ihoot had a ttope-lengtli\nof 450 feet on the No. 3 tunnel-level Space doei not permit\nof further detail!, but that thli at preient intctive property\nmerits close investigation ia indicated by C. W. Drysdale\nunder \"Future Work.\" on page 136 of the ibove-mentloned\npublication   ,\n__\u25a0!\nFinancing\nHere ll tho Plsn:\nMANTTOU MINING CO. LTD.. NJM*,\nhereby often 1.000,000 iharei of itock for\nsale at 10 cents (10c) per ihare upon the\nfollowing termi and conditioni:\n1. Onlv 500 blockt (of 2000 iharei each)\nwill be told and these orders will be filled\nby the Prudential Trust Co. Ltd. in the order\nreceived.\n2. Application! will be accepted only for\nminimum amount! of $200.00 for 2000 aharea.\n3. An applicant may purchase u many\nblock! u desired.\n4. The termi of purchue are either all\ncash, or. if desired, one-quarter caih may be\npaid and the balance tn three equal monthly\ninstallments. Upop completion of payment\nthe ihares will be issued. Failure to pay on\nthe due dates will automatically cancel the\napplicant's rights for further ahirea.\n5. Every iccepted applicant who hu paid\nIn full for hit unit or unitt will be Isiued t\nreceipt entitling him or his nominee to t\nright to purchue a further equal number\nof iharei it 10 cents (10c) eich. ptyible on\nor before September lit 1938.\nNo liability li tttaehtd to tht right\nll frtt to tht applicant\nIt\nSummary Report on Msrtin Croup, Bridge River\nLett tall the writer ipent five dayi making an examination of the Martin\nGroup of mineral claims, Bridge River District B.C   This group is located on the\nnorth tide of the Bridge River-Pioneer highway, between the Wayside and Congress\ngroups, and comprises sixteen claims and ten fractional claims.\nGENERAL GEOLOGY\nAll of the clilmt have been surveyed and mapped to a scale of 1 Inch to 300\nfeet Thli map was used as a base in the geological survey. Briefly the geology of\ntbe group may be lummarized a: follows:\n1. The southwesterly portion (adjacent to Wayside) is underlain by sediments\nof the Cadwaliader seriei consisting of quartzites. grit or tuft, and basal conglomerate.\nJ. North-east of this seriei is a band of calcareous greenstone about 3,000 teet\nwide, ooverihg the Bullion No. 2, Pine, Pine Fraction and Hill Fraction. In this\ngreenstone are interbedi of chert up to 100 feet wide.\n3. The central part covering the Meadow and Viking claimi is drift covered.\n4. The easterly part (Viking No. 1, June Fraction, Tod Fraction.'T. X. Fraction)\nIt underlain by andesltic greenstone, showing pillow structures in most places.\nI. Intrusive rocks.   On the T. X. Fraction a dyke of grey-green feldspar\nporphyry cuts the greenstone.   This dyke strike: north 10 degrees east and dips\niteeply eatt   It ii about 100 feet thick.\nMINERALIZATION\n1. About 100 feet west of the felipar porphyry dyke mentioned above is a ruity\nshear tram one foot to eight inches wide. An aalt has been driven on It for 50 feet.\nThis their ii comformable with the dyke, that ii, it itriket North 10 degrees East and\ndipt iteeply Eut In the tdit the their ii unoxidized. Pyrite and sphalerite with\nletter amount! of itlbnlte are present in a gangue of calclte and chlorite. Seventy-\nfive teet further up the hill the shear is In contact with an outlier ot feldspar\nporphyry. It is exposed about 20 feet by an open cut Here it averages about one\nfoot ln width.\n2. In a cherty lnterbed in greenstone (teen above (2) ). on the Bullion No. 2,\nabout 700 feet north-west of a tmall pond it t quartz vein tix teet wide.   Only\ntwenty feet of thii vein It expoted, but both ends tre covered by drift\nCONCLUSIONS\nThe calcereoui greenitone band ihould be carefully prospected u it lt the\nfavorable host rock ln the dlitrict Congress tnd Minto ore-bodies are In similar\ngreenitone. The quartz vein mentioned above could be exposed by open-cutt and\ncarefully channel umpled.\nThe contact ot the feldspar porphyry dyke and tbe greenttone adjacent to it\nteam the mott favorable ipott tor intensive prospecting.   The their in edit tnd\nopen-cut needi mon work done on it to determine its continuity and value.\nMinto City. B.C 17th Mareh. Xttt. JOHN Y. SMITH. B-VSc.\nAPPLICATION FORM\nDite \t\nMANITOU MINING CO. LTD., N.P.L.\nIH Week Exchingt Bldg, Vineeuvtr, B.C.\nI hereby tpply for   blocks eich coniliting ot 2000 ihirei In Manitou Mining Co. Ltd.,\nN.P.L.. at 10 centa per ahare.\nTbe encloeed remittance t  li in full payment (or) conitltutei 25% of tht amount of\nmy lubacription. and I hereby agree to remit the remaining 75% is followi:\n28% thirty dayt trom tbe dite of thia application.\n25% aixty dayi trom the date of thit application.\n28% ninety dayi tram the date of thil tppli cation\nPleue luut the iharea and the beirtr rlghti for i like number of aharw in the name ot\n(RID Name) ,     (Addren) (Occupation)\nI hereby authoriie Prudential Truit Co. Ltd. to par over to rou aU monlet paid thtm by t.-.\nMakc aU remittance! payable to Prudential Truit Co.' Ltd.. S14 W. Pender St.. Vancouver. B.C.\n \t\nSheep (reek Properties Once\n(ailed \"Wildcat\" by the Gov't\n\u2022   Engineers-look at Them Now\"\n_    . . ma______._.\t\nBruhn Makes Slam at Department's Work In\nB. C. Mining Fields; Says That Reports,\nSix Months Old, Are Misleading\nNILSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. I.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. MARCH 11. 19S8\n\u25a0VICTORIA, March 30 (CP)-The\nklherel Survey act and mining en*\nglneert in general were given I\nKugh time in the British Columbii\n\u25a0'stature today when the bill came\ntp In committee.\nAfter Hon. G. 8. Peanon, minister\nif mines, had explained the purpose\ntf the act was to make broken,\ntalesmen and mining companies re*\nMonsible for statementr made in\nMgird to propertiei, Rolf W. Bruhn\n(tnd., Stlmon Arm) deelired mln*\n^1 meil Were of the opinion the\npartment could not keep abreast\nlit development in Industry.\nThe deportment's reports, said 0.\nIL Murray (Liberal, Llllooet) Were\nnlileadlng, at they were tix motiths\n>ld. The report on Minto ilmost\nendemned that property. As a\nutter of fact every producing mine\nli the Bridge River district had\nieen condemned by engineen of\nbe department ov.r a period of\nears and Bill Davidson, discoverer\nf Minto, knew ts little of geology\ns did the minister of mines him*\ntlf. Dividson, said Murray, wai a\nlUleskinner and kept plugging\nway at hli prospect as mining en*\nlaeert laughed.\nMn Bruhn idded thit many ef\ntht but Sheep Cnek propertiei\nlikewise hid been turned down\nby mining inglmtn. \"Theie mlnei\nwire tilled wlldeiti ky Ihi engineen,\" Hid Mr. Bruhn. \"New Holt them and leik at the nptrti if\ntht experts.\n\u25a0'Thii kind of legislation will hurt\nthe industry and destroy the people's confidence,\" weht en the Salmon Arm member. \"People thought\nthe Securities act would give them\nprotection against fraudulent promotions, but that aet gave them no\nmore protection now than before It\nwas on the statute booki. The department il going ue ter and is\nkeeping capital out ot the province.\nIf men were prosecuted for misrepresentation it would be better\nthen all the red tape the lnduitry\nli now up agalnit.\"\nProgress Was reported and the bill\nwill come tip again with alterations\nMarket and Mining News\nCreston lo Have\nFair In 1*87\nCANADIAN   DOLLAR   UP\nNEW YORK, March 80 (CD-\nMajor currencies strengthened en\nthe foreign exchinge mtrkc' todty,\nthe pound sterling geinlng % cent\nat (4.95*. In terms ot United Statei\nfunds.\nThe Canadian dollar advanced\n1-16 cent to Wtt centi while the\nFrench gold franc added .OOH, doling at IM.\nMontreal Silver QuotaUons\nenniili \u25a0\u25a0_.!     ii .\nk MONTREAL. Mirch SO (CP).-Sltver futures cloeed iteadv today,\noolnti up to B off. Closing bids: April 44.78; Mty 44,80; July 44.68;\nptamber 44.80; December 44.75.\nDow-Jones Averages\nft Industrials\nralla\nutilities    ..\n\u25a0 bondi    \t\nHl\u00bbh\n15\".7J\n47.35\n92.20\nLow Close Cb-nee\n155.7S 155.57-oft .17\n4..T7 46.81\u2014off _\u00ab\nSI.7S SUl-off At\n  Jl.1.74\u2014t\u00bb_f  .07\nQuotations on Wall Street\nlIIM Chem\nJm Cen\nlm Fo Pow\nlm Ma ft Fdy\n\\m Smelt\nim Telephone\n,m Tobacco\n.naconda\nAtchison\nLUburn Motor\n.viation Cbrp\nkldwln\nUlt tc Ohio\ntendix A vial..\neth Steel \t\nanada Dry ....\nan Pacific\nerro de Pisco\nhei ft Ohio\nhryiler\non On N If\n'orn Producti\nWright Ptd\n\u2022upont\nlaitKodik\nPow ft Lig\ntrie\n(ord Engliih ..\nord ot Can\nfirtt Nat Store\n[report Te*\nBen Electric\ntin Food!\nttn Moton ...\n;old Duit\t\nioodrich\t\n\u25a0fanby\n\u25a0feat Nor Pfd\nBrett W Sue\n\u25a0bwe Sound\n\u25a0udion Moton\n\u25a0tternet Nick\ntei ft Tel\nHigh Low\n201 19914\n111* 1164\n9*.      8%\n34H    -4\nB5**i 84H\n163 .162%\nt-H MVi\n34T4j 14V.\n71       72%\nMVi     48'i\n7V4     7Vi\n4V4      4't\nxt_   m,\nm, 274k\nMVi MH\n14 13%\n12'i    124\nM MV.\n57V4 57'*\nMVi 94%\n331.    33V\u00bb\n71H    71\n7H     7W\n1464 143\n1684 IM\n13H    144.\n144    lift\n44 434\nM 114\nMH 38\nMft 35\nMft Mft\nltft 184\n19ft ltft\n864 Mft\nMft 84ft\nIS 174\n48 47ft\n16ft 164\nClose\n1994\n1184\n8ft\n24\n844\n1624\n92V'\nMVi\n72%\n484\n74\n4%\n194\n274\n554\n134\n124\n534\n574\n944\n834\n71\n74\n145\n164\n15\n134\n8\n24\n434\n314\n384\nM\nMft\nltft\n19ft\n34\n364\n34ft\n514\n174\n47ft\n184\nKenn Copper\nKresge 8 S\nKrOegRer ft T\nMack Truck\nMllwtukee Pfd\nMont Ward\nNaih Moton\nVat Dairy Pro\nt Pow ft Llgh\nJt Y Central\nPacific O ft E\nPackard Motor\nPennRR\nPhillips Pete\nPure Oil\nRadio Corp\nRadio Keith O\nRem Rand\nSafeway Stor\nShell Union\nS Ctl Edison\nSouth Pacific\nStan Oil of Cal\nSUn Oil of tnd\nStan Oil of NJ\nStewart Warn\nStudebaker\nTexu Corp\nTotal Gulf Su\nTlmken Roller\nUnion Carbide\nUnion Oil 6f C\nUnion Air\nUnion Pacific\nU S Pipe\nU S Rubber\nU S Steel\nVanad Steel\nWarner Bros\nWest Electric\nWest Union\nWoolworth\nWrlgley\nYellow Truck\n87ft\n124\n34ft\n32ft\n414\n19ft\n234\n174\n35*\n364\n114\n134\n484\n234\n13V.\n7ft\nMft\nlift\n174\n274\n334\nM4\n374\nWt\n134\nM\n344\nMft\n814\nMft\nMft\n86\n29\n84ft\n224\n124\n11(4\n854\n49ft\n784\nltft\n174 174\n224 224\n284 H4\n324 324\n- 2ft\n40H Mft\n19 19\n234 234\n- lift t'14\nMft 34%\nMft \u00ab\"\u2022\n114 114,\nMft 124!\n47ft 48\nMft 224\n12ft 124\n7ft 74\nMft M4\n314 314\nCRESTON, B.C.-Creston will\nhave ne tall fair in UM, but a Hart\nwill be made to secure fundi tor the\nexhibition lh 1937 with a dance to\nbe staged later this year et which\nmembenhlp tlckeU WiU also be\nsold.\nThis was the decision of the annual meeting of Creston Valley\nAgricultural association Wedneidiy.\nThe retiring pretident, Chirlei\nSutcliffe, was in the chair, and E.\nW. Piyne took the minutes.\nAfter fully dlisutting the exhibition matter the old officen were\nreelected as followi: Preildent,\nChirlei Sutcliffe; vice-pretident,\nPercy Boffey; secreUry-treasurer,\nI. W. Payne; executive, Don. Bradley, A. F. Rudd, Wynndel; trie\nCrtlgie, Erlckson.\nAlthough no fair hat betn held\n(or the put tour ytan the auoclation li being kept well eilve with\nthe expecUtlon et returning tht\nont time succesiful annual exhibition.\nN.Y.ISDULL\nN\u00abW YORK, March M (AP)-\nThe stock market pinned IU buying\nhopes on a few specialties today and\nneglected moat Of the recent leaden.\nThere wai plenty of cheerful do\nmettle news, and the European lituition appeared to have lost iome ot\nill threatening aipecti, but broken\nsaid traders, oh the whole, apparently found Uttle stimulus either\nat home or abroad.\nTranifen totalled 986,700 shares\nthe smallest volume for a full aes\nslon ilnce Oct 9, 1935. II wti the\ntint 3-hour dty thl! year In which\nthe aggregate had dropped below\n1,000,000 iharei.\n._\n27\n17\n274\nlift MH\nS'4 344\n37 37\nMft M\n214 214\n13 13\n174 374\nMft 144\nMft M'i\n814 814\n284 264\nH M\n- 1114\nMH 354\n284 284\nM4 64\ntt 214\nlift lift\n114 114ft\n85ft 884\nMft 414\n78ft 7tft\nMft ltft\nMetal Moi-fects\nmm YORK, Man* M (API-\nCopper quiet; electrolytic ipot ahd\nfuture 0.25 to 9.50; export 8.00 to\n9M.\nTin iteady; ipot and neerby 47M;\nMure 40.624;\nIron quiet. No, I fob. eastern\nPenmylvanit MM; Buffalo 19.50;\nAlabama 15.80.\nLead steady; spot New York 4.M\nto 4.85; East BL Louii 4.45.\nZinc dull; Bast St Louis spot ahd\nfuture 4.M.\nAluminum 19.00 to 12.00.\nAntimony, spot 13.50.\nquicksilver  78.00 to 71.00.\nWolframite 16.00.\nBar silver quiet and unchanged\nfrom rriday, at 44ft.\nAt London\u2014Copper, sUndard spot\nCM 7s M; future \u00a336 lie; electrolytic ipot \u00a340 Its 6d; future \u00a340\n17s td.\nTin, Ipot \u00a3211 Its; future \u00a3104\nUs M.\nLead, spot \u00a316 18s; future \u00a311\nlis Sd.\nZinc, spot and future \u00a318.\nBtr silver firm, 1*16 higher at\n19 15-1M.\nLondon Ciostj\nLONDON, March M (API-Closing: Brazilian Traction \u00a3124, Canidlan Piclfic $114, Internitlonal\nNickel M84, Hudson Biy IH 74d,\nMining Truit Ltd 4s 8d, Rhodellin\nAnglo Am 14s 8d, Crown Minei\n\u00a3144, Springi 43s lftd, Rio Tintos\n\u00a319, Vicken 25s 6d.\nBon-is\u2014Britiih 24 per cent con-\nsoli \u00a3M\u00bbl, British 34 per cent\nwar loan \u00a31064, British funding 4s\n1960-90 \u00a31164.\nCN.R.  REVENUES  UP\nToronto Stock Quotations\n\u25a0tnkfltld \t\n\u25a0arry Hollinger\n\u25a0tie Metali .  ..\n\u25a0ear Exploration\n\"ig Mluourl .\n_b|o \t\nInlornt ....-__.\nJut Ankerite\nJan Malartic\n\u25a0arlboo Gold\nKiltie Treth\n\u25a0antral Man .\n\u25a0entr.1 Pat.,\nnoait Copper\n\u25a0onlsgas\n\u25a0onirlum\nens M ft S\n^^^^\nem Explor\nlldondo ...\nllconbrldge\n Bey\nlet Nickel\nM Con ....\nrklmd L\nke Mtron\nke Shore\nIttle Long Lae\naple Leaf .\nalroblc -\nntyre\nCockihutt\nJiVittle Or .  _\niWitter Gold -\nning Corp\npilling \u2014\nirande\nirkhlll\n|rymaster   ___\nnd Oreille ___,\ndl Crow\t\nItneer _ \t\nWer Gold\t\n\u2022no  - -\n14.M\n.M\nMOO\nMOO\n.41\n,M\n.044\n53.50\n6**5\n8.75\n.12\n.034\n.12\nM.37\n.24\n1.32\n1.21\n2.62\n81.15\n.23\n.74\nSX\n610\n10.00\n2.30\n1.12\nSan Antonio ..\nSheep Creek\nSher Gordon .__\nSlscoe    ........\nSmelter O _._..__.\nSUdacona  _\nSt. Anthony _.__.\n3ud Basin   -\nSylvanito    __\nTeek Hughea ...\nTobum   __\nToWagimae ____\nTreadwell \t\nVenturei I\nWelte Amulet.  \u2014\nWayside _  -\nWhite Eagle    ..\nWright Hargreaves\nOILS\nAJrx\t\nB A OU\t\nC ft E Corp\t\nChem Research\t\nDilhousie .        \u25a0\nHome _ \t\nImperial .,._.,\u201e\nInter Pete \u201e\nMerland\t\nNordon \t\nRoyalite   \t\nINDUSTRIAL!\nBeatty Bros    ____\nBeU Telephone \t\nBnslllin\nBrtw ft Dlst\nCanida Bread\nCan Car ft Fdy\nCanada Cement\nCanada Dredge .\nCtntdt Mtltlng .-\nCan Pac Rail . ...\nCom Smelten _.\nDominion Bridge\nDominion Stone .\nDilt Setgrnmi _\t\nFord Cm A __\nQoodye\u00bbr Tire _\nHlnm Wtlker\t\nLobltw A  \t\nMassey Harris -....\nSteel ot Can .......\n2.60\n.70\n1.11\n3.06\n.054\nm\n.21\n4.00\n2.43\n4.50\n1.45\n21\nM\n2.12\n1,07\n.174\n.04\n7M\n.52\n24.00\n1.25\n1.06\n.  .61\nI.M\nr.\u00bb7\nM.37\n.IS\n.lift\n14.00\n12\n_ 144\n12ft\ntt\n4ft\n14\nSH\n444\nlift\n,171\n,   374\ni    t\nMft\n24ft\n,   70\n28\n.   194\n.. Vk\n63\nMONTREAL, March SO (CD-\nOperating revenues Ot Canadian\nNitlonil railways for Februsry,\n1936, weM $13,086,507, an Increase ot\n1644,701 over the (12,411,805 for the\ncorresponding month lut year, statistics showed today.\nOperating expenses were (13,354,-\n987, an lncreaie of (1,088,718 over\nthe months Isst year. Net revenue\ndeficit ot (28-.460 comoared with\nnet revenue Income of .132.587 for\nthe corresponding month the preceding year.\nO. I. BOARD REELECTED\nU. S. DOLLAR OFF\nTORONTO, March 10 (CP)-The\nretiring board was reelected at the\ninnual meeting of the Canadian\nGeneral Electric Company, Ltd.,\nhere today, The innutl report wu\nidopted. A. _. Dyment, chilrmin of\nthe botrd, preiided.\nMONTREAL, March M (CP) -\nPrice movement! were confined to\nnamw limits on Montreal foreign\nexchanges today. Sterling advaneei*\n3-32 cent to (4.97 19-32 and thf\nFrench franc was up a sm-11 amouni\nat 6.62 9-32 cents. The United States\ndollar eued 1-32 ot one per cent tr\n4 premium.\nWINNIPEG QUIET\nWINNIPEG, March 3\" (CP) -\nFurther sales Ot Canadim wheat to\nChina coincided With fractional ad*\nvances In futures prices on the\nWinnipeg grain exchange today but\ntailed to stlmulrte trading acUvity.\nValues at the dote ot the quietest\nsession in some time were 4 to 4\ncent higher with May at 824, July\n834 and October 844 cents.\nThe Week-end's export sales were\npieced at 400,000 bushel', wh'O Included the sale of a cargo of low-\ngrade wheat to Cana-a. A ilmilir\nsale was reported lut week.\nMINES HIGHER\nTORONTO, March M (CP) -\nSpotty strength in the gold group\ngave the price level a substantial\nadvance today on the Toronto mining market\nNoranda advanced lft to 514 md\nVentures gained 8 centa. Hudson Bay\nadded 4 while Sudbury Basin\ngained 15 cents, tnd Walte-Amulet\nmd Sherritt 2 centa eech.\nInterest in the golds centered ln\nPickle Crow and Central Patricia.\nThe Utter added a nel 8\"in of 18\ncenta and Pickle closed 20 cenU\nhigher at 6.10. Among penny shares,\nMinto OOld sold down 10 cents\nto 77.\n(oast Is Steady\nVANCOUVER, March tt (CP>-\nThe trend WU barely steady ln the\ngold group on the Vmcouver ttock\nexchtnge today while thi base metalt Were illghtly itronger. Trading\nwat quiet md only 638,099 lhares\nChanged htndi.\nMinto, one of the acUve leaden\nlast week, loat 7 at 77. Hedley Amalgam-ted cloted with a 2 cent gain\nat It after trading nearly 70,000\nihares. Sheep Creek at 88 ud Reno\nat 1.11 each advmced 2, Federal\nGold lost 14 at 114, Kootenay Belle\nwu otf 3 at 85 and Reward ean i 4\nat 94. Cariboo Gold wu up a cent\nat 1.32. Bralorne dropped 20 It 7.25\nand Dentonia at 19, Oold Belt at 34\nand Premier Oold at 2.30 each loit\na cent\nDominion Livestock\nWtNNIPEG, Mirch M (CP) -\nCatUe M75,\nSteen (5.08.\nHeifers (4.75.\nFed calves (7.\nCowi (3.50.\nBulb \u00ab.\nStock cows and heifen (3.\nMilkers M0.\nCalves 470.\nChoice vetlen (7.M.\nHogs 1170.\nSelect bacon (1 per heid premium, bacon (8.80, butch-rs (1 per\nhead discount, heavlei (8, lights\nahd feed\u00bbn (8.66, aowi (8.75,\nSheep M.\nHihdyweight lambs M.\nSheep (2.\nEostarn So lei\nNEW ISSUE OF\nC.P.R. BONDS\nMONTREAL, March 30 (CP)-\nFollowing subscription of tbe (It,*\n000,000 Canadian Ptclfl- railway\nbond Issue Ust week, m addiUonal\nissue ot (8,000,000 24 per- cent, non*\nconvertible collateral trust bonds,\ndue April 1, 1939, and (15,000.000\n24 per cent, non-Convertible collateral trust bonds, due AprU 1,\n1941, U being ottered publicly by\nthe syndicate of banks md bond\nhouses that handled the lut issue,\nit wss announced today.\nOffering price for the 1919 issue\nis 100 and Interest, and for the 1941\nissue, 96.58 and interest, yielding\n3.25 per cent\nMONTREAL, March M <CP)-\nStlei of lOu or mort ihares on Montreal itock exchange today.\n485 Bmlli-n, 185 C In Al B, 615\nCPR, 806 Con Smelt, 684 Nickel\n150 Mais Har 156 McC Front, 477\nNit Brew, 817 Shawinigan.\nTORONTO, March M (CP)-Sales\nof 100 or more iharei on tht Toronto\nItock exchange, induitriil section,\ntoday:\n459 Braiillan, 725 Brew ft Dis, 1040\nCan In Al, 1014 CPR, IM Con Smelt,\n186 Ford A, 700 Mass Har, 130 Steel\nof C, 827 H Wtlker.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, March M (AP)\n-Flour Unchanged. Carload lots,\nfamily patents 6M tn 6.M a barrel\nin 98-pound cotton sacks. Shipmenta\n23.404. Bran 15.50 to 16.00.\nWheat, cash: No. 1 heavy dark\nnorthern spring, 60 pounds 1144 to\n1284, No. 1 red durum 784.\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBeU Telephone  .  1414\na L* Packing    10\nBraiillan -  134\nB C Power A       _  MH\nBuilding ProducU -  M4\nCm Bronte  M\nCan Cat ft Foundry  (ft\nCan Cement  8ft\nCan Cement Pfd  _..__.._..... 87\nCan Ind Al A     _  10\nCan Ind Al B  8ft\nCPR           , ... lift\nCan Steamers ..     14\nCockshutt         S\nCon M ft S    280\nDom Bridge ______ __..._.,_.. 17\nDom Olail    111\nDom TexUle - _._.  71\nFord Can A    244\nGen Steel Wares _.__  44\nCharles Gurd  7\nHaml'ton Bridge   4ft\nint Nickel           _  47ft\nMassey Harrli     8ft\nMontreal Power  Mft\nNat Steel Car _,  154\nNat Brewing _ _ 42ft\nOgilvie   240\nPower CorporaUon   15ft\nQuebec  _    17\nShawinigan  214\nSherwin Williami  _.    17ft\nSouth Ctn Power    134\nSteel ot Cmada   \u00abH\nCURBS\nAti'd Breweries   104\nBrew ft Dilt     M\nB A Oil           24\nBrack Silk  ____.    134\nCan CeUneie     M4\nCm Dredge __..-_.-._   454\nCm MalUng   Mft\nCm Wineries \u2014_.___.     S\nDryden Piper     84\nImperial Tob Ctn    234\nMcColl Frontenac      184\nBANKI\nCanada     57\nCanadlenna     157\nCommerce    _...__,.,.. 210\nMontreal          189\nNova Scotia   275\nRoyal     _. 175\nToronto 230\nCHICAGO GAINS\nCHICAGO, March 30 (AP)-Tac-\nlng prospecti of a severe freeze in\nthe United States southwest tonight,\nahd wlhtry conditions northwest,\nwheat futures prices listed upward\nhere todey.\nDespite spreading operaUons ln\nwhich July wheat wu sold against\npurchases of May, the market u a\nwhole showed strength.\nWheat closed firm, unchanged to\nH cent higher, May 97 to 974, July\n87ft to 874; corn 4 to 4 up, May\n604 to 604; oata 4 advmced, and\nprovisions varying trom 2 cents\ndecline to m equal gain.\nINDUSTRIALS OFF\nTORONTO, March 30 (CP)-The\nToronto industrial ihare market declined slightly on smsll volume\ntoday. The exchange Index Wu otf\n.14 to 134.08. Volume wu down to\n17,000 shares.\nInternaUonal Petroleum md Imperial, recorded losses of the minimum fracUon and McColl preferred,\nselling ex-dividend, dropped 14.\nIndustrial Alcohol A was up ft and\nDistillers-Seagrams 4. Walken\ncommon md Brewen ft Dlstlllen\nwere lower.\nConsolidated Smelten pulled\naway from Nickel to chalk up t\ntain of 6 points, Nickel finishing\nunchanged. C.P.R. md ford A declined 4 each. Bank of Commerce\nand Royal Bank added 3 to 4 pointa\neach.\nMore Conitructlon\nTORONTO, March M (CP) -\nConstruction contracti awarded tn\nCanada in March totalled (10,289,-\n100 which was an Increase of about\n(2,000,000 over February and ain\nover March of lut year. The total\nfor the tint quarter ot this year\nwas (32,197,300 compared with (29,-\n391,300 ln the same period of 1935\naccording to MacLean Building Reports, Ltd.\nContemplated new work for\nwhich contracts hsd not been\nawarded amounted to (64,653,700 for\nthe first three months of 1938. The\ncontemplated total for Manh ot\n(17,100.380 wu the largest since\nApril, 1935.\nMarch contract awards by provinces included British Columbia\n(456,300.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Ma'rch 30 (CP)-\nMinlng shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange today:\nListed\u2014Big Miss HOO, Bralorne\n1815, British Dom 200, BRX 6300,\nB R Con 2700, Cariboo 700, Dentonla 8800, Gold Belt 1800, Islind\nMount 100, Koot Belle 1100, Mak\nSiccar 5000, Morning Star 25,000,\nNational Sil 3000, Pioneer 130, Premier Bord 8000, Premier Gold 11025,\nQuatsino 500, Reno 2700, S?lly 8000,\nSheep Creek 800, Taylor Br 1700,\nWayside 29,350,\nCurb\u2014Beaver Sil 2700, B C Nickel\n35,350, Can Rmd 38,684, Congress\n11,000, Dictator 2000, Fairview 1**,000,\nFederal 37,300, Geo Riv 6000, Gold\nMount 33,950, Goleonda 4000, Grange\n16,700, Grull Wihk 1200, Hilda 2000,\nHedley Amal 69,700, Home 5900,\nIndian 2000, Meridian 1400, Minto\n58,000, Nicola 8520, Noble Five 1500,\nPend Oreille 1100, Pilot 6600, Quesnelle Q 16,300, Reward 82,700, Relief Ari 1200, Silvercrest 27,500,\nSilversmith 3500, Viking 24,100,\nWhitewater 500, Waterloo 2000.\nWaverley 13,150.\nNORANDA RECOVERIES\nINCREASE\nTORONTO, March M (CP) -\nValue of metal recoveries of Noranda Mines, Ltd., In 19M increased\n(1,855,000 over 1934 but miscellaneous Income was decreased nearly\n(200,000 largely as a result ot reduction In Investment portfolio tnd\nlower return on securities held,\nPresident James S. Murdoch told\nlhareholden at the annual meeUng*\ntoday.\nBrother-in-law\nHurl af Ottawa\nj. j. Boyd Startled os\nHe Picks Up Paper\nFrom Capital\nPicking up ah OtUwa newipaper\nat the Daily Newi office Saturday\nJ. J. Boyd, an old Ott.wan, wu\nstartled to read on the front page\nthat hit brother-ln-liw, WilUtm\nTurgeon, aged 39, while engaged In\nmoving a sate from the premises ot\nBambrick ft Co., was caught under\nthe safe when it broke away and\nshot down the sUtrwey, and hit\nright leg and knee so badly crushed\nthat lt wai thought probable amputation would be necessary.\nMr. Turgeon, who is ln the moving business, md mother of the\ncrew, WiUiam Guy, Were below\nthe sate whUe a rope Wu being\nadjusted, When lt suddenly Upped\nforward on the skids, and shot down\nout of control, breaking every one\nof the 25 steps It traversed, ahd\ncatching at the bottom the two men\nleaping ahead ot lt. Ouy escaped\nwith a fractured mkle, end was\neasily extricated, but Mr. Turgeon\nwas only released by levering ub\nthe sate from the hole lt had broken\nIn the tlooS\nMrs. Turgeon wu formerly Miss\nGladys Boyd, who, coming hen\nfrom OtUwa, wu employed at the\nDaily News tor about a year, be'\ntore her rasrrUge 14 yetn ago et\nOttawa.\nNoranda Feature\nPRODUCE UNCHANGED\nMONTREAL, March M (CP) -\nPrices held unetrnged In an inactive\nsession on Canadian commodity exchange produce tection todoy.\nButter spot\u2014*\"*ue. gr-\u00ab 224.\nCheeie ipot\u2014Ont. col (Novmake)\n114.\nEggs spot\u2014A-ltrge 12, A-medium\nM4, A-pulleU 19.\nButter futuret-Anrll 224, May\n20H; June 30; Nnv. 214.\nELIMINATES SQUEAK\nSot--timet a squeak In a floor\nboard can be e*'mlnate<f bv Inserting a screw In the cut which separates the two crea'in\" boards. It\n\u2022nay be th-t both endi ot the boards\ndo not rest on a solid f\"\"n-l<itlon,\nand the screw will help to steady\nthem.\nMONTREAL, Mareh M <CP)-\nBrlsk demand tor Noranda faUed\nto excite much buying enthuiiaam\ntor the remainder of Montreel stock\nekchmge Ust today.\nNoranda advmced a point to 51.\nStnelters moved up 5 points. Nickel\nweakened sUghUy at the clote. Hollinger gained 4.\nLiquors drew attenUon with tne.\ntional improvement\nMinea drew thl bulk et tnding\non the curb market md finished\ngenerally firm. Other divisions eued slighUy.\nSpotlight centered on Pickle Cfew\nWhich finished up 10 cents at 8.10.\nGains of a tew cenU eech wen\nshown by Bruil Gold, Perron Gold,\nVentures md J.M. Consolidated.\nA Uttle demmd came in tor oils.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Mareh M <CP> -\nGrain futurei quoutlons;\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWheet:\nMay     Mft    MH    UH    Mft\nJuly      MH    Mft    MH    Mft\nOct   M      Mft    MH    Mft\nOaU:\nMay     lift    11H    S7H    31H\nJuly ....   314    32       314    314\nOcL   .      -       -       \u2014       31\nBarley;\nMay     Mft    Mft    Mft    Mft\nJUly      MH   .Mft    MH    Mft\nFlax:\nMay      -      -       \u2014     1554\nJuly    152H    -       -     152ft\nRye:\nMay      Mft    43H    MH    MH\nJuly       444    444    444    444\nOct    \u2014-       -       -       Mft\nCaih whtat: No. 1 hird 83ft; No.\n1 nor. 814; No. 2 not. 79ft; No 3\nnor. 74H; No. 4 nor. 714; No. 8,6\u00bb4|\nNo. 6, 534; feed 464; No. 1 garnet\n774; No. 1 gamet 744! Ne. 1 thit*\num 744; No. 1 A. R. W. 704: No. 4\nspecial 634; No. 5 special 574; No.\n6 special 514; track (2; screening.\n75 cenU per ton.\nMoney\nBy the Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montretl-Pound 4.97 19-32,\nU S dollar 1.004, franc 6,63 9*31.\nAt New York-Pound 4.964, Cl*\nnadbn dollar .994, franc 8.99.\nAt Paris-Pound 78.14 francs, U S\ndollar 16.184 francs, Canadian dollar 15.10 francs.\nIn gold\u2014Pound Its, U 8 dollar\n59.37 cents, Canadian dollar M.M\ncents.\nBONDS LOSE\nNEW YORK, Mareh M (AP)-\nWith the excepUon of firming tendencies in tha United States government Utt bond mirket pricei limed a trifle backward today ln a\nquiet seulon.\nAdvaneei in the United SUtei\ngovernment list ranged trom 2-32nd*\nIn treuury 14s of 1149 to 4-32ndi In\ntedenl farm mortgage 3s oi 1949\nCorporate Issues closing unchanged to fractionally higher Included\nLehigh Valley 4s at 45, and American Water Works 8s it 1094.\nPtttt NINg\nCxcti\nanoes\nMONTREAL, Mtrch M <CP)~\nBrIUsh md foreign exchange closed\nsteeay.\nBra.il, mllreli, .0573.\nChina,  Hongkong  dolUn,  .3284.\nJapan, yen, .2905.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0118,\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.9499.\n(Compiled by the Royal Benk ot\nCanada)\n98 Cars of Apples\nShipped From (Ily\nNinety-eight can of applei have\nbeen ihlpped from the packing\nhouw of the Auoclited Growen,\nthli year according to W. M. Vance,\nNelson manager, and there are \u25a0till\ntwo can to go. ThU It an Increase\nover the numbei of can Uit year.\nOt the 98 cars, haU were tor\noverseai destinations, and the remainder wen domestic tales.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, March M (CP)-\nSterllng exchange firm at (4.944\nfor 80-day bills and at (4954 for\ndemmd.\nCanadian dollan today 4 discount, Saturdsy 9*16 discount, week\nago 9-32 discount\nFrahc 6.59 centi.\nLire 794 eenU.\nVancouver   Stock   Exchange\nLISTEO\nBid\nAik\nthinweU   \t\n.054\nA P Con   \t\n.18\n.154\nEslrview      \t\n.054\nAmal  OU     \t\n.114\n.11\nrederal Gold\t\n.11H\nBig Missouri\t\nM\n.64\nGeo Copper \t\n22\nSralome  _.\t\n7M\n7.M\nGoleonda      \t\n.184\nSrlt Dom    \t\n__\n.12\nGold Mount    \t\n.134\nBridge R Con\t\n.084\n.084\nGeo Enterprise _\t\n.02\nBRX Oeld    \t\n.164\n.17\nGrandview    _\n\u2014\nCariboo Gold \t\n1.32\nIM\nGrmge        \t\n.054\n. and E Corp \t\n1.23\nLM\nGrull Wihksne\t\n.10\n.but Brew \t\n13.00\n\u2014\nHedley Amal    \t\n.29\nCout Br AU   \t\n4.00\n4M\nHedley Sterling    ...\n.04\nCommonwealth\t\n.084\n.08\nHighwood Sarcee ..\n.164\nDentonla     \t\n.IS\n.34\nI\n47\n.05\nGold Belt \t\ntndian Minei\t\n.024\nHargal OU _.__...\u201e.,.\nXfl\n.08\nIndependence \t\n.004\nSome Oil _\u2014\n1.07\n1.11\nKoot Florence\t\nJOOH\nInt Co\u00bbl    _\n.IS\n20\nKoot King  _\n.004\nisland Mount \u2014\n1.23\n1.27\nLucky Jim \t\n.02\nKoot Stilt  \t\n.65\nStl\nMidhron  _.__.\t\n.014\n-tak Slcctt \t\n.OS\n.10\nMtr J6n ._\u2014.\n22\nMcDougal Segur ....\nj07\n\u2014\nMercury \t\n.15\nModel Oil       -\n.22\n_-\n.124\nMorning Star\t\n.034\n.034\nMerUnd _\nNat 3Uv*j.     _.\njMH\nMft\nMinto Oold  \t\n.77 .\nPleneetOold \t\n10.00\n10.25\nMorton Wolsey ....\n.004\nPremier Gold \t\n2.20\n2.21\nNicola Mines _\n.11\nPremier Border -....\n.004\njoiH\n1.11\nM\nNoble Five   \u2014\n.044\nquaUlne\t\n.02\n1.11\n.It\nPend Oreille -_\n.94\nSally Mlhet ....__.._.\n.11\n.1)\nPilot Oold    \t\n.064\nSalmon Gold\t\n.104\n.12\nPorter Idaho .....\n.044\nSheep Creek \t\n.85\n.67\nQuesnelle Q \t\n.124\nSpooner OU    \t\n22\n.26\nRewsrd         \t\n.094\nTaylor Bridge\t\n.12\n.14\nRelief Arlington \u2014\n.35\nVanalta  \u2014\n.074\n.09\nRoyalite         \t\n33.80\nWayiide \t\n.17\nJ74\nRufus ArgenU\t\n.004\nCURB\nRuth Hope\t\n.014\nAnaconda \t\ni*\n.054\nSllvercrest \t\n.01\nBalUc OU  \t\n.014\n.044\njO-4\nBeaver SUver\t\n.034\nJOIH\nSnowflake  \u2014\n.004\nBluebird      ...\n.014\n.02\nSUndard Silver .....\nM\nB C Nickel\t\nM\nJll\nTayler Wind _.\n.10\nCen Rand     ...\n.-\u00bb4\n.09\nUnited Oil ,\nJ074\nCalmont Oil \t\n.094\n\u2014\nVidette Oold -\n__\nCongteaa Oold\t\n.20\n.22\nViking Geld \u2014\nWaterloo      _\nMft\nCfows Heat   \t\n.UH\n.11\n.024\nDalhousie Mines\t\nXII\nWaverley Tang \u2014\nJOOH\nDalhousie Oils\t\nat\n.60\nWellington  -\nAX\nDevenlsh\n.04\n.044\nWhitewater\njot\nDictator Gold \t\n.MH\nJOS\nYmlr Yankee Girl\n.45\n.064\n.084\n.12\n.20\n.20\n.18\n.024\n.024\n.034\n.104\nJO\n.17\n.054\n.03\n.01\n.014\nM\n.IS\n.13\n.20\n.79\n.124\n.044\n.17\n1.00\n.MH\n.03\nJl\n.MH\nM\n.014\n.034\nA)\n.09\n.75\n.07\n.01\n.01\nXH4\n.054\nCalgarv Livestock\nCALGARY, March M (CP)-ReeeipU over the week-end, cittle\n856, calvei 18, hogs 27, iheep (20.\nMonday, to noon, cattle 39, calvei 2,\nhots 118.\nCattle market,moderately active;\ngood to choice butcher steen M to\n(5.25; good to choice helfen M-M\nto (4; good cowi MM to M.75.\nNo hog sales; selecU (8.25, baconi\n(7.75, butchen (7.25.\nNO STAND YET\nON LOAN COUNCIL\nVICTORIA, March 30 <CP>-The\nposition of the BrIU-h Columbia\ngovernment on tht federal government's loat* council plan had not\nbeen announced and therefore could\nnot properly be the subject of newspaper comment, Premier Pattullo\naaid ln the legislature today, referring to newipaper comments oh\nhis loan council stand.\n\"We have had correspondence on\nthe subject with the OtUwa authorities which it would not be wise\nto divulge tt this stage,\" the premier said.\nBAR QOLD UP SEVEN\nMONTREAL, March SO (CP)-\nB r gold In London t- 7 cenU a) SM\nan ounce ln Canadian funds; 14\"\u00bb\n94d in British funds. The fix-d\n(33 Washington price amountedJo'\n(35.16 in Cmadian. \u25a0 \u25a0\u2022\"*\u2022\nWe Offer\nThs Unsold Fortiori of\n200,000 Shares\nPerrier Gold\nNINES Limited\n(Non-Pinontl Liability)\nCapitol Structure\nAuthorised Capital   $250,000.00\n(Divided Into 600,000 ihirei with a par value of 50c etch.)\nIssued   245,000 thtm\nThli iiiue   200,000 thirst\nOfficers and Directors\nPruldent C. E. CROSSLEY, Nelion, B.C.; Vict \u2022 Pritldtnt,\nNORMAN JISSIMAN, B.C. Mim.tr. Qypium, Ume * Alt-\nbutlnt Ctntdt, Ltd.; -Secretary, W. M. CUNLIFFE, M.E,\npreildent Nelion Iron Worki, Ltd. Directon. O. S. -LDRIDQE,\npruldent G. S. Eldrldge t\\ Co.; JAMES WITCOMB. Importer\nand Exporter; R. W. HINTON, Director, Nelton Iron Worki,\nLtd.; E. L. GROUTAGE, Trill; T. H. TURNER. Nelion, B.C.\nConsulting Engineer: A. J. Qtut, M.E.\nPROPERTY: Conslsto of lix claims located on the Great\nNorthern Railway and Nelson-Spokane Highway, four miles\nsouth ot Nelson, md coven 4h area of approximately 300 acres.\nDEVELOPMENT! Property hu been developed by an incline\nIhift to a depth of 241 ftet tnd bv three levels which have\nfollowed the vein north and south from the shaft. Total underground work amounu to over 1200 feet. This work, together\nwith oast production indicates average values of between .4 and\n.5 ounces gold per ton acrou widths of from 2 to 3 feet. Recent\nwork shows an average of (17 tier ton with available ore down\nto tht third ltvel estimated at 16,000 tons.\nPast production resulted ' , shipment of some 8000 tons of\ncrude ore to the smelter. A Jill mill wu erected some vears\nago oroduclne several tons tf concentratei. Smelter returni on\ncrude ere ihlpmenti ihowed avenge values ot .5 oil. gold per ton.\nRehabilitation of the old mill and Installation of additional\nnew equipment ll now under wav. When thli hu been completed\nin the next few Weeks, millfeed will be dnwn from the developed\npre While addition,-*! development eonslitln. of extending the\nNo. 2 level drift and ilnklne a new snd modemly equipped shaft\ntt a llllhtlv hlrther elevation. Will be undertaken. Proceed! of\nthe nreient iitue will be utilized to erect a modern 50-60 ton mill\nWhile production from development Will be set aside as a reserve\nin the treasury. It is estimated that ore alrerdy developed will\niun.lv millfeed for the present 30-ton pUnt for a year. At the\nend of that period, wtth Urge reserves opened up, a modern mill\nInstalled and a cash reserve ln the treasury, the comninv will\nbe In a potltlon to enter profitable orodu-tlon. It should be noted\nthat het broflU ot $45,000 tnnutllv wou'd be sufficient to ensure\nannutl dividend! of 20% on the par value of the itock,\nPRICE 35c PER SHARE\nWa reierve tht right to withdraw thli efflrlng without prior\nnttltt and to accept tubicrlptloni lubject to illotmmt.\nSharei May Bt Purchaied From\nP. E. POULIN\nPhore 70\nP.O. Box 752\nNelson, B. C.\nOR THE FISCAL AO-NTS\nJOHNSTON 0 Mcf*W\n828 STANDARD BANK BLDG.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\n paot tin\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C\/-TUESDAY MORNINQ. MARCH 81. 1SS8\nYOUR\nPRESCRIPTION\nis safe in eur handi. Only\nqualified dispensers employed in our dispensary.\nMann,Ruther\u00a3ord\nDrug Go.\nATHOYIEFROH\nKIMBERLEY\nMrs. F. Allierlon\nol Nakusp Dies\nNAKUSP, B.C.,-Mary Abigail\nAtherton, age 31 yean, died during\nthe early houn ot Friday morning\nat Arrow Lake! hoipital here.\nMn. Atherton wu born in Regina,\nSuk., Feb, 17 1008. She came with\nher parenti to Nikusp 29 yean ago.\nShe married Frank Atherton three\nyeart ago and besides her huiband,\nis lurvived by t son Billie, age 18\nmonths; her father, W. Rogers, two\nbrothen William and Roy, and three\nsisten Mrs. C. Collier of Minesta,\nMisses Rose and Edith ot Nakusp.\nMiu Rogers and Mrs. W. H. White\nboth ot Nakuip, are aunts.\nWant Ads Get Results\nFURNACES\nSOLD, INSTALLED AND\nREPAIRED\nR. H. Maber\nPhont 686      610 Koottnty 8t\nMOYIE, B.C.,-Oicar Birch md\nPhilip Conrad were home during a\nthree days shut down at Chapman\nCamp. Oscar went by the Klmberley ipeciil to Nelicn swelling the\nnumber of hockey tans from Eut\nKootenay wltnening the Kimberley-Prince Albert Allan cup playdown hockey game at Nelion civic\ncenter rink.\nGunner Swanson of Canal Flat\nand W. Wlckner'of Cranbrook spent\nSL Patrick's dty with the Kenhaw\nfamily.\nMr. and Mn. Algot Johnson md\nEarl Anne ot Sunnyslde ranch,\nipent a day at Moyie.\n0. J. Knight, returning from Spokane to Cranbrook. was a guest of\nMr. md Mn. Joe Kenhaw.\nJoe Kenhaw was a hospital patient at Cranbrook for two days.\nRobert Braiden Sr. was taken to\nhit doctor tt Cranbrook Tuesday,\nHis son, Robert, and Mr. and Mrs.\nFitch, accompanied him.\nWindsor in I.H.L.\nSemi-Finals\nLONDON, Ont, March 30 (CP).-\nWindsor Bulldogs tonight won the\nright to meet Bulfalo Bisons in the\nsemi-finals of the International\nHockey league playoffi with a 1-0\nwin over London Tecumsehs in i\nbattling game before 4000 spectators.\nTonight's overtime win gave Bull\ndogs the 4-3. They meet Bisons at\nWlndtor Wednesday night.\nThe brain ls not menUoned In the\nBible. Only In modern times has\nthli organ's function been known.\nAristotle, learned Greek, believed\niti purpose waa to cool the blood.\nVisiting Family\nat Queen's Bay\nQUEEN'S BAY, B.C.-B. H. Ryley\not Silverton ii spending a tew weeki\nhere with hll family.\nMn. Kenneth Attree ipent \u2022 few\ndays at Balfour, a guett of Mr. md\nMrs. Chirles HolL\nJamei Hughei il expecting to\nleive ihortly for Canal Flat, where\nhe hai obtained work.\nMr. and Mn. Alec Attree left here\nThunday to ipend leveral dayi In\nSpokane.\nMn. Sofonoff of Blueberry creek\nit itaying with her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mn. N. Rapin.\nN. Denver Pythian\nSisters Celebrate\nLADY HONORED\nAT NEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER, B.C.- Tueiday\nfollowing a meeting, the Sisten of\nLucerne Temple No. 17, celebrated\nthe 15th birthday ot the lodge. The\nKnighti ol Pythias of Lodge No. 22\nwere guests.\nProgressive whiit wti played.\nMisi O. Clever wu winner ot ladiei'\nflnt prize, while comolation went\nto Mrs. D. Shmnon. Men'i high\nicore wu held by E. Tingle and low\nscore by A. Coombs.\nSupper was served on a long\ntable decorated with tulips and hyacinths, centered by a birthday cake,\ndecorated in colon ot the temple.\nMiss A. Clever lit the candles md\nMn. T. Avison spoke. The candles\nwere extinguished by Miss E. Shmnon and Mlu G. Coombes, tnd the\ncske wu cut by Mrs. T. Avison.\nMany of the Knights congratulated the Sisters for the manner ln\nwhich Lucerne Temple had been\nconducted during the past 15 years.\nOn behalf of the Sisters, Miu A.\nClever thanked the Knighti\nTODAY-THE WIND.UP-\nCLEARANCE SALE\nOF\nOUR\nValues in Bedroom Suites\n25 to Choose From.\nCOLONIAL SUITE, Mahogany. Vanity, 4-PIECE SET, Walnut. Bed, ffCQ 7C\n7-Drawer High Boy, Bed     (11QCA Vanity, Chiffonier and Bench efdVaIJ\nPoster and Bench  %?! 10.JU MATTRESS.         ft? CA * 111 Cft\n2-PIECE SUITE. Dresser and Poster Bed, Cotton filled   .    \u00abp0-OU tPlJ.DU\ndamaged    W K^ $14.95 * $42.50\n5-PIECE MAHOGANY SUITE. Dresser. MAI '^-> \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 1>\"\u2022*\"\u2022'    \u2022V\u2122\"\"'\nChiffonier, Vanity, Bed           d\u00bbQ7 CA By Simmons, World's Largest\nand Bench      \u00abP*\u00bb' eOU Manufacturers.\nALSO MANY CHOICE BARCAINS IN LAMPS, CHESTERFIELDS, DINING ROOM\nSUITES, BEDDING, DRAPERIES, OCCASIONAL CHAIRS, FLOOR COVERINGS, etc.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-Mri. H. E\nNelion wu honored gueit at *. lurpriie party given by the Women'i\nAuxiliary to the Canadian Legion,\nB.E.S.L. Progreuive whiit wai\nplayed.\nHigh tcore wu held by Miis B.\nFonberg and low by Mra J. R.\nThompson.\nThose pretent were Mn. H. E.\nNelson, Mn. R. Crellln, Mrs. T.\nPearson, Mrs. C. Vandergrift, Mra\nA. Schnaeble, Mn. Chriitotferson.\nMn. B. Meers, Miss M. Meers, Mrs.\nH. Gunn, Mn. J. Geeer, Mn. G.\nBurkltt, Mn. C. Thrlng, Mrs. D.\nShannon, Mrs. J. Burkltt and Mrs.\nJ. Draper.\nHA8 BIRTHDAY\nMn. M C. Vandergrift entertained Thuradty in honor ot her daughter, Joyce'! leventh birthdiy. Gamei\nwen played.\nSupper wu served from 1 long\ndecorated table, decorated in yellow, green and pink. A vise ot pink\ncimatloni centered the ttble. Other\nattraction! were favort for etch\ngueit and a large blthday cake.'\nGueiti were Joyce Thrlng, Dawn\nShannon, Dorothy Gunn, Barbara\nand Norma Thomlinson, Alice md\nRuth Powell, Merle Tattrie. Patty\nGreer, Louise Kennett Marjorie\nMeen, Francis Schnaeble, Hilda\nCrellln, Hazel Flint, Ruth and Marjorie Vandergrift, Mils O. Olson ind\nMisi G. Reynolds\nMn. R. Crellin assisted Mn. M.\nC. Vmdergrilt In catering- to the\nguests.\nMn. H. H. Pendry md Miss D.\nPendry left Thundiy for Milner,\nB.C., to visit relatives alter a ihort\nvacation Miu Pendry will return\nhome and Mn. Pendry will travel to\nSeattle to visit for a few months.\nMisi B. Forsberg returned Monday after viiiting her parents ih\nNelson.\nMORE ABOUT\nHITLER'STALK\n(Continued From Past Onti\nBacking Hitler wu m overwhelming endonement by the German\npeople. An official mnouncement\nof the reiult of yesterday, reichitig election\u2014ln reality 1 plebiscite\nupon approval of der fuehrer's policy\u2014laid he won M per eent of the\nvotes. Ot the 44.964,937 ballots, 44,-\n411,911 were for Hitler while 543,026\nwere either \"no\" or invalid.\nOne diplomat in the Locarno\ngroup \u2014 now composed ot Gieat\nBritain, France, Italy and Belgium\n\u2014volunteered thii analysis ot the\nlituition:\n\"Alter yeiterday'! vote Hitler has\nIt in hll hand! to uy. 'I will withdraw my troopt (rom the Rhineland\nbut ain my peace offer,' or he may\nlay: 'I am willing to withdraw\ntroopi from the Belgian frontier because Belgium has not formed a\npact with Soviet Russia (ai hu\nFrmce)'\n'Or he may lay: 'I will fortify\n.. I pleue along the French fronUer, but not along either the Dutch\nor the Belgian.'\n\"Again, he may lay: 'I Interpreted\nthe peoples' vote to mean they do\nnot want me to yield an Inch anywhere, to I will continue to throw\ntroopi Into the Rhine area md I\nwill itart forthwith to fortify u I\npleue'.\"\nTeams Picked ior\nInter. Soccer\nVISIT SIRDAR\nSIRDAR, B.C. - Mr. and Mn.\nMartello of Wynndel were Sirdar\nvliiton by car Wednesday.\nMike Haynes, who wu on tbe\nsick lilt, ll reported better.\nMri. Tony Kopec left on Thun-\nday'i train for Nelion.\nMr. Haynei, ir., ot Kuskanook\nwas a visitor to Sirdar Thursday.\nHans Hage ot Kuikanook wu a\nviiitor to town.\nSydney Rogen of Glenlll\" ichool\nwu tt nil home here fro the weekend.\nDominic Passcuzzo ls hauling alfalfa from the Wilson place to his\nranch.\nArt Rutledge, school principal\nhere, wu a visitor to Creston Saturday.\nCharles Lombardo hu returned\ntrom Trail.\nBert' Ingram wu 1 Creiton visitor\nSaturdiy by car.\nReturns to Rou\nSpur From Nelson\nROSS SPUR, RC.-Abe Doerkien\nhu returned from vliltlng relatlvu\nin Nelion.\nMlu Louise Swtnion wai a gueit\nof Mrs. Jacob Heinutra.\nMike Toronow wu a visitor to\nPark Siding.\nMiu Edna Swanson hu returned\nto Trail after vliltlng her parent!,\nMr. and Mn. T. R, Swanton.\nS. N. Gritchen md W. LaVnnow\nhave returned from a visit to Win-\nZ. Le Page waa a Trail viiitor.\nCRESTON LADIES\nCONSIDER (LINK\nCLUBMEETSAT\nNEWDENVER\nG. S. Campbell\nTells ol Trip\nPhon* 85\nCOMPLETE HOUSE FURNISHERS\nNelton, B. C.\nThe Manufacturer1! Annual Sale of\nA BAI*CO WfODUCT\nGlo\nCONTINUES ALL THIS WEEK\n$1.00\nOFF HALF\nGALLONS\nYOU CAN SAVE\nM#OFF\nQUARTS\nLONDON, March 30 (CP ctble)-\nGlasgow Rangers and Arsenal, finalists ln the Scottish and English\nfootball cup competition respectively, will play a big part in the final\ninternaUonal soccer match between\nScotland and England at Wembley\nApril 4.\nThe famoui Ibrox Park team contribute! five memben to the ScotUsh side and Arsenal has a similar\nnumber on the English team.\nScotland will line up as follows:\nGoal, Dawson  (Rangen); backs,\nAnderson (Hearti), Cumming! (Alton Villa); halfbacks, Massie (Aston\nVilla), Simpson, Brown (Rangers);\nforwardi,  Cram   (Celtic),  Walker\n(Hearts),    McClouch   (Grentford),\nMcPhail (Rangen), Duncan (Derby).\nHere's the Engllih lineup:\nGoal, Hlbbi (Birmingham); backs,\nMale, Hapgood (Anenal); halfbacks, \u25a0\nCnyitone (Arsenal), Barker (Der- i\nby County), Bray (Mancheiter City) I\nforwird!, Crooks (Derby County), I\nBowden tAnenal), Camsell (Middlesbrough),     Baitin     (Anenal)\nBrook (Mancheiter City).\nVISIT NAKUSP\nA talk on hli recent trip to England, when he acted as a delegate\nln vliltlng itveral clubi there, wai\ngiven by G. S. Campbell at the\nRotary club luncheon in the Hume\nhotel lilver room Monday.\nAt tlie next meeting of the club\nnomination! for the board of directors will be received.\nA letter from Rotarian J. T. Andrews and Mrs. Andrews was received from California, where they\nare visiting, thanking the club for\nthe expression of sympathy extended to them In their recent\nsorrow.\nThe request from Spokane Rotary\nclub that the Nelson club support\none of itt members for district governor at the coming con'erence in\nVancouver wai ordered tiled. It\nwai thought that the delegates from\nNe'ion should go to the conference\nwith nn onen mind.\nR. E, Potter, on-to-Vancouver\nchrirman, is busy lining up members to attend the 52nd pn-ual conference ot district No. 1. It will be\nheld May 10 to 13.   .\nIn going to England, nld Mr.\nCampbell, he had gone via Bonnen\nFerry, to Chicago md New York,\nand then had taken the boat from\nthere. He travelled on the M->1estic\nand the voyage took ilx days, landing them on British soil, Friday,\nDecember 13.\nVISITED THREE CtUBB\nThe first Rotary club he v!slted\nwas the Southampton club and he\nfound them tn the midst of their\nChristmas cheer fund activities. The\nclub raised $9700 In its drive. It\nboasted 120 members. He r>\" 1 'nt \/\nthe cluh with the autowaph'l booklet of \"Kootenay and the City of\nNelson'' from the Nelson Rotary.\nLater he visited the Eltham club of\nLondon, a smaller one with a membership ot about 40, and then the\nLondon club which boasted a membenhlp of 250. He also had an auto-\ngraohed booklet for each of these\nclubi, tnd ill hid thanked him\nwarmly for the oftefrlng.\nHe found quite a difference between the Rotary clubi over there\nand here, laid Mr. Campbell. They\ndid not have community tinging,\nand they did not fraternize 10 freely\n1 as in Canada. The London club,\nbeing io large, lunched at tables\naccommodating seven or eight memben, Instead ot having them at\nlar-je tables ts ii the custom here.\nWhen visiting the London club he\nheard a fine address on prison systems and the care of delinquent\nboyi. The clubi in Englmd, too, laid\ngreater itress on vocational addresses by their memben.\nBusiness conditions appeared to\nbe improving greatly in England.\nAround Christmas time there was\nlota ot money changing hands, and\neveryone aeemed to be happy. One\nof the biggest Items of activity was\nthe building of roads. In the vicinity\nof London they were doing away\nwith the small roads and putting in\nnice highways.\nWhile on the trip he hid met\nseveral people from British Columbia. The voyage back wu rough and\nthe boat wai a day late ln arriving.\nHe ipent a short time tt Chicago\nand viiited the natural history mu-\nieum, md also went on a mountain\nengineering expedition party. While\ncrossing the continent he ias un-\nfortunarte enough to have chosen\nthe time when the temperature was\nhovering low, lt being 44 below ln\nNorth Dakota. And he had found\nthe weather little better on reaching Nelson.\nPresident H. W. Dawson thanked\nMr. Campbell for acting as delegate\nfor the Nelson club,\nPresident R       ~\nCRESTON, B.C.-Women's auxiliary to Creston Valley poit Cana-\ndian Legion, met Thuradty evening\nwith the president, Mrs. W. V. Jackson, in Ihe chair. The new form of\nopening was adopted and the flag\nbrought to table, the flag bearers\nbeing Mrs. C W.. Lowther and Mn.\nGodfrey Vigne.\nThe date ot the annual meeUng\nwas set for June when new officen\nwill be elected.\nMn. John Hall was accorded a\nvote of thanks for her work in renovating the Legion standard. The\nauxiliary felt itself too young as\nyet to sponsor a dental clinic but\nin the meantime full information in\nthii work will be obtained by writing the auxiliary at Kailo.\nMrs. Hall, Mrs. Cowling and Mrs.\nJ. E. Johnston wre tea hosteisei.\nNSW DENVER, B.C.,-The Qut-\ndrille club met at the home ot Walter George Thunday.\nThose preient were, Helm Wtl-\n'.itmson, Evelyn Thompion, Helena\nTarron. Mary Surina, Walter Thring,\nGordon Cory, Arthur Young, Frank\nMeen, Robert Butchart md Walter\nGeorge.\nJ. Vallance Is 1 pttlent ln Slocm\nCommunity hoipital here.\nP. Aylwin, who wu a pttlent ln\nthe local hotpital, hu returned to\nhii home.\nH. E. Nelion md J. Landerville\nhave left for Smdon where they\nhtve secured employment.\nMn. 3. Cory, who was a hoipital\npatient, hu left tor her home.\nMn. F. Broughton left Tueiday\ntor Nelson to visit.\nCol. Mallandaine\nat Victoria\n(reslonites Back\nFrom Honeymoon\nCRESTON, B. C- Mr. and Mrs\nHenry B. Johnson have returned\nfrom their wedding trip to Spokane.\nThe marriage took place last week,\nthe bride being Miu Ada Lewis,\nand the officiating clergyman, Rev.\nJ. A. T. McLagan, with the event\nsolemnized at the Presbyterian\nmanse.\nDue to illness in the family, only\nclose friends attended the reception\nat the bride's home following the\nceremony. The bridesmaid wu Mlu\nLily Lewis, sister of the bride, while\nthe groom wai supported by Bert\nBoffey.\nMr. and Mrs. Johnson will reside\nin Creston, the groom having recently purchased the intereit of hit\npartner, A. Walde, in a local bakery\nand confectionery.\nMiss E. Cooke, registered nune,\nmatron ot the Creiton hoipital, is\non three weeks' vacation, visiting\nrelative! at Pendleton, Ore.\nEd. Pendry and Bill Yervury an\nback from Canal Flat where they\nhad been employed in a tie mill\nfor a few months.\nMr. and Mrs. R. M. Chandler, Mr.\nand Mra, John F. Murrell, Miis Mar-\njorie Hamilton, C. H. Hare md\nDon. Archibald, made a goodwill\nvisit to Boswell Tuesday repreient-\ning Creiton badminton club at a\ntournament at the lakeside centre,\nBoswell is expected to reciprocate\nwith quite a large entry for the district shuttle tournament at Creston\non April 1,\nJ. Alton wai on a few dayi' visit\nat hii old home at Fernie.\nJ. Podnekoff is ipendlng a few\ndays at his home at Brilliant\nH. Armstrong of Cranbrook wu\nhere a tew days, a guest ot Mn\nFred Speaker.\nMrs. SpeJding md ion, Normin,\nhave lett for Edmonton, to visit\nfriends.\nGeorge Bush has left for Kitchener to take charge of a truck on airport construction work.\nMORE ABOUT\nMILITARY TALK\n(Continued From Ptgt Ont)\nAny arrangement formulated by\nthe military stiff must be approved\nby the cabinet the prime minister\nemphasized.\n(The plm for general itaff conversations was attiched to the Locarno peace proposals in letten\nfrom Anthony Eden. British foreign lecretary, to Pierre-Etienne\nFlandin, French foreign minister,\nand Paul Vm Zeeland, Belgian pre*\nCRESTON, B.C.-C0I. E- Mallm\ndalne li a viiitor at cout points. He\nrepreiented Creston Valley post\nCanadim Legion at the Dominion\nconvention it Vancouver md ii\nnow viiiting hll old home at Victoria.\nF. V. Staple! returned Thunday\ntrom a trip to Beaverdell md Kelowna.\nMn. McGlocklin md young ion\nof Bonnen Ferry, Idaho, are guuti\nof the former'! parenti, Mr. and\nMrs. W. Wightrnann, here.\nMn. Charlei Murrell, Mn. R.\nSteveni and Mrs. G. Ai M. Young\nwere Kitchener visitors, guuti ot\nthe latter's sister, Mn. E. Driffil.\nThe two former hive returned, but\nMn. Young ii remaining a few dayi\nlonger.\nOtto Johnson, wbo wu employed\nall winter in a C.P.R. tie mill near\nYahk, hu returned md hu gone to\nwork at tbe portable mill tie cut\nat Arrow creek.\nMn. D. V. Wat ot Boiwell wu\na guett ot Cruton frlendi.\nMiu Jem McCreath, principal of\nthe public tchool at Kitchener, wu\na week-end gueit of her parenti,\nMr. and Mn. H. S. McCreath.\nMn. L. Hodion ot Choate, B.C.,\nit visiting her nephew and niece,\nWilfrid Courtney and Mn. Calkin.\nH. F. Robion wu ln town Tuu-\ndiy, returning to Wynndel after a\ntew dayi with Mr. and Mn. W. Ridd\nat Canyon.      ^^^^^^^^^\u2122\nEASTER\nNECKWEAR\nCOLORFUL or SUBDUED\nFor general wear you'll\nprobably like the colorful\nties in plaids, stripes, figured. For certain occasions you'll want something more subdued. Our\nb I g collection includes\nties as quiet or as lively\nas you may wish .All good\nquality.\nfl.OO \u2014 f 1*50\n\u00a3MORY*S\nLimited\nPlaces Trout Eggs\nNear Creston\nCRESTON, B.C.-C. H. Kobll\nof Nelion, fiihery impector to\nKooteniy-Boundary, hu placed IS,\n000 eaitern brook trout eyed eg|\nin Corn creek tt Weit Cruton, mi\n\u25a0bout 30,000 of the aame speclei il\nMeadow creek eut ot Kitchenei\nThe lupply tor the litter stream '\non a pir with 1935, but more li\nexpected for Com creek, as wed\n11 a aupply for Goit river. '\nMore blick lingerie, or pastel chlfj\nton models trimmed wilh biter\nlace, are to be ieen this season thai\nfor yean put They.are of exceUen\nquality and very practical buys foi\nwear with gowns ot iheer blacr\nfabric. ^^^^\u2122\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nENGLISH-MADE   PRAM,   GOOD\ncondition, $18. Box 273. Ph. 708Y.\n(Ul)\nJ.A.C. Laughtoi\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuite 205    Medical Arts Bldg\nNEWS Of THE DAY\nBUY  CRYSTAL  BUTTER  AND\nYOU GET  FIRST GRADE. ((718)\nlnitillitl-ni md repaln\nJARVIS ELECTRIC.    PHONE 844.\n(87)\nBl tun, not lorry\u2014Gel tht belt\nIn Permanent Wavu at THELMA'S.\n(104)\nAfter the ihow\u2014Eat at tht\nWHITE SPOT LUNCH\n(5715)\nBrushed Wool\nSPORTS\nJACKETS\nFOR CHILLY\nSPRINC DAYS\nFull Zipper\nPleated Bock\nIn Shades of\nGrey, Blue, Canary\nGODFREYS'\nWf '     i LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE  CLOTHES\"\n318 BAKER      PHONE 370\n\u25a0\nYou'll regret lt if you miu the\nGlee-Symphony Concert on April\nlit Get your tlcketi now, 35c. (105)\nPlaid Tooke shirts with the new\nbutton-down Marvel collar.\nJACK  BOYCE\n(91)\ninicr. _____________\n..   - (These letters provided: It Ger-\nclub' _    ___  many refuses the proposals, which\nPresident R. W. Dawson thanked   Re,jchsfu(,hrer  Hitler  subsequently\nMr. Cam-bell for acting as delegate ^ Brltaln wll! j0|n Belgium and\nfor the Nelion club. J France  In  consultation!  \"for  the\nJ. Girvan of Vincouver, Capt. I.,   u_pose \u201e\u25a0 insuring the security of\nFit-slmmons of Nakusp and W. P \u2022   \u25a0   \u2022\u2014*\n25'\nOFF\nPINTS\nWood, Vallanc* Hardware Co., Ltd.\n521 Baker St.\nP .ona 27\nr llZMlllluvus   \u25a0..   \t\nDickson ot Willow Point were visitors.\nPLAY CONTRACT\nAT SILVERTON\nSILVERTON, B.C.-The Silver-\nton Contract club met Thursday\nwhen the hostesses were Mrs. G.\nLockhart and Mrs. J. Sella. Those\nDitying were Mr. and Mrs. J. Millar.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Mathews, Mr. and\nMrs. G. Lockhart, Mrs. A. Wallace,\nMn. A. Walton, Mrs. J. Johnson.\nMn. J. Scala, Mri. H. Lancaster.\nMrs. W. Hunter, Mri. J. Fleury, Mill\nMarjorie Gorringe, Miu Mae Kelly,\nMlu Dorothy Hunter, A. Jirvii, L.\nHal\"!*. A. Balne and J. Maclnnes.\nW. Nixon is 1 pttlent in Slocan\nCommunity hospital, New Denver,\nMiss Margtret Liebscher has \u2014\nNAKUSP, B.C-B. Svulrom ind\nW. Miller ot Burton were motor\nvisiton here Friday.\nKeith Cresswell returned Wedneiday from Fostall where he ipent\nthe winter.\nConitable and Mn. R. McKay motored to New Denver, Wedneiday.\nF. Fowler hai returned to Salmo\nafter ipending tome weeks in Nikuip.\nMr. ind Mn. N. Wetherstrom who\n\u25a0pent the winter it Fostall returned to their home here Wednesdiy.\nR. Buerge wat 1 vltitor in Trill. 1    aua. -r\u2014 1\u2014 _--_-\u2014.\t\nJ. Hopkini of the Reno mine ii' turned from \u2022 ilx monthi' visit at\n\u2022pending a tew dayi at hli home cout cltiei. She was a gueit of\nhere. ! friends in Seattle, Vancouver and\nMn. W. H. Stonei ot Burton wu Victoria.\na viiitor in Nakuip *Tueiday. I   Mri. L. R. Burgess ipent the weke\n_.\u2014. ......\nA. Ruzlckt wu a buiineu viiitor\nfrom New Denver Wedneiday.\nW. Bain of Beaton wai a viiitor 1\ntn Nakuip.\nMlu   Kathleen   Fowler   wu   \u2022\nvltitor to Ntw Denver Wedneidiy. I\nThomu H. Burton of Trail wai \u2022 I\nviiitor in town.\ninia. _,. ... _>..._v_ ___...\t\nend In New Denver, 1 guut ol Mn.\nM. E. Shinnon.\nMn. M. Emenon, Mlu Margery\n-menon, Mlu Marjorie Gorringe\nnd Mlu Hughena Matheion Were\ndinner guests ot Mn. J. Johnion.\nA. R. Fingland wu \u25a0 buiineu\nviiitor to New Denver Frldty.\nyour country againat unprovoked\n;;\u00abrtresiion;\" and further, will instruct the general itaff! \"to enter\n'nto contact with 1 view to arrang-\nir;* technical conditioni\" during\nsu'h consultations.)\nAs the arrangements were pend-\nlog, Britain awaited announcement\nIrom Chancellor-Hitler of hi! new\npeace suggestions to establish a new\nEuropean security pact. Officials\nsaid there has been no indication the\nfuehrer's reply will be delayed\nlonger than tomorrow, the date the\nGerman plan is expected.\nAfter receipt ot the German pro-\npoials, Britain will tdviie Italy,\nFrance and Belgium of their content\nand t new four-power conference\u2014\nconsisting of the remaining Locarno\nmemben\u2014mty be celled.\nTheie sources pointed out, however, thtt the general staff conferences must be held regardleu of\nthe German luggeitlom becauie of\nthe four-power Locarno agreement\nNelson-Koslo Mail\nRun Sold to Abey\nH. S. Whellami, who tor aome\nyean hai carried on the Nelson-\nKulo mail run, has iold out to G.\nR. Abey, who will take over the\nrun April 1.\nI. O. O. F. MiliUry whist and\nOld Time dance ln Oddfellow's hall.\nTonight, March 31, 8 p.m. 25c. (69)\nTake advantage of thl PAINT\nSALE tt HIPPERSON HARDWARE. ONE THIRD OFF.      (107)\nWe repair rtdlot, waihers, moton\nand other electrical appliances. McKiy _ Stretton. (5984)\nNothing nicer thin \u2022 sl Ict of CHOQUETTE BROS.' Rlliln bretd with\nyour ttt. Phont -58. (5717)\nWomen'i Canadian club will heat\nMri, Elijabeth Htynet, director ot\ndramatic trt, Univenity of AlberU,\non or about April 21. (109)\nTonight. Eaglei military whiit and\ndance in Eagle Hall, cardi at t p.m.,\ndancing 10:30. Refreihmenti. Ad*\nmillion 25 cents. (101)\nGet your tlcketi trom any member\not the Kinsmen club or at Buih'i\ncigar itore for tho grand opening\ndance, Nelion civic centre tmute*\nment hill, Enter Monday, April 13.\nCapitoliant orcheitra. (110)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nRyley \u2014 Bertram Hint, pined\naway ' Monday at hll home in\nQueeni Biy. Body rests at Somen\nFuneral Home, until Wednesdiy.\nwhere service will be held at 2 p.m.,\nRev. Clyde Harvey of Procter officiating. (108)\nWeek-end ExcurtUra\nNelson-Nikuip, return        $375\nNelion-Kaslo, return $J-W\nCREYHOUND LINES\nNelton Depot 205 Baker St\nPhon* 800\n(31)\n '    I   '    \t\nAlso\nGINGER ROGERS\nMIN PERSON\"\nwith GEORGE BRENT\nTomorrow\n\"Transatlantic\nTunnel\"\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1936_03_31","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0406046","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1936-03-31 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1936-03-31 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\/1.0406046"}