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N. Train and Threaten Homes of 6000\nIan to Extend Boundaries\nif B.C. to Take in the Yukon\nINgreement Is Reached'\"\nIWith Ottawa; Needs\nHouses' Assent\nf*OULD NEARLY\nDOUBLE AREA\nOnly\nJut Would Add\nAbout 4000 in\nPopulation\nVICTORIA, April 26 (CP).\u2014\nBritish Columbia today faced the\nprospect of pushing its frontiers\nto the Arctic ocean with the an-\nnouncement by Premier Pattullo\nthat the coast province had reached an agreement with the Dominion to take the Yukon territory\nwithin Its boundaries.\nThe agreement Is contingent\nupon assent of the Dominion parliament and the new provincial\nlegislature which will be elected\nJune 1.\nWith the addition of the Yukon's\n207,000 square miles the province\nwould have a total area of 573,331\nsquare miles, second only to Quebec's 594,534.  But only a few more\nthan 4000 people would be added\nto   British  Columbia's  estimated\npopulation of 750,000.\nThe colorful thousands who\nswarmed into the famous territory\nin the gold rush days of 1898 have\ndwindled Us  the  present handful,\nbut its creeks and hills are still the\nhaunt of prospectors who seek the\n( golden itream  which has poured\nput {200,000,000 in the years since\n897.\nBut the pick and cradle of Klon-\nIdyke days are giving way to mod-\nfern machinery, and great hydraulic\n[dredges comb the streams where\n(sourdoughs once held rugged reign.\nThe British Columbia government\nLin making the agreement counts on\nfthe territory's wealth to offset tlie\n[expenditures which its acquisition\nLwill require. Premier Pattullo him-\n\u25a0self is an old Yukoncr who went\nJthere from Gait, Ont., in 1896 to\njserve for three years as assistant\nfgold commissioner and who incidentally introduced \"ice-cream\npants\" to Dawson.\nCanada's land of the midnight\nsun where \"the lady who was known\nas Lou,\" Cigarette Liz, Diamond\nTooth Gertie and the Oatmeal Sisters reigned as thc night-club queens\nof the 90's, is the pathway, too, of\na proposed highway which would\nextend from the tip of South America to Alaska, and which some\nday might lead to Europe across\nSiberia with ferries plying the\nBering sea.\nI Premier Pattullo stated today he\nbelieved acquisition of the territory\nwould find .1 response from youth\n(Of the province seeking adventure\nI and fortune in a land of romance.\n| The Yukon would come to the\nprovince without debt and for the\nfirst five years tlie federal government would pay Britisii Columbia\n$125,000 a year as a special grant.\nOTTAWA, April 26 (CP). - An-\nBaby Bonus\nAdvocate\nA bill providing a cash bonus of\n$75 to all mothers and fathers, regardless of their needs, has been\npassed by the New York state assembly. The money awarded to\nihe parents is for the care of every\nchild born in the state, and unless\nrejected by the parents, is to be used\nfor pre-natal, hospital and general\nmedical expenses. Assemblyman\nEmerson D. Fite, Vassar college pro-\nfessor (above), is the author of the\nbill. He is pictured, smiling, after\nhearing of his victory.\nTWO TRAINMEN\nDIE; DOCTOR IS\nKILLED ON WAY\nM.H.O. Is Swept Off a\nBridge en Route to\nAid in Wreck\nRIVER GOES OVER\nWALL AT LONDON\nScore Rescued From\nHomes on Street\nof City\nFLOODS IN BRIEF\nWOODSTOCK\u2014Fireman killed\n\u2022nd engineer later dies of Injuries\naa Canadian National railways\npassenger train derailed by washout Doctor answering call to aid\nInjured Is drowned when automobile Is swept from Inundated\nbridge,\nSTRATFORD\u2014Drinking water\ncontaminated as Avon river overflows into artesian wells supplying water. Business and residential districts flooded. Four feet of\nwater in Collegiate institute basement. Avondale cemetery flooded.\nCanadian National railways tracks\ncovered with water.\nnouncement of Premier Pattullo of\nBritish Columbia that iagreement\nhad been reached with the federal\ngovernment for acquisition by his\nprovince of the Yukon territory\nwas heard with surprise tonight by\nofficials who could be reached here\nbut absence of responsible ministers\nmade it impossible to obtain confirmation or details.\nIt is known that correspondence\nand discussion of this move have\nbeen, under way for some time and\nit is assumed conditions laid down\nby the federal authorities for such\nan amalgamation have been ac\ncepied by the British Columbia\ngovernment.\nConclusion of the agreement\nwould probably be reached by legislative action.\nHon. Eaoul\" Dandurand, Mting\nprime minister in the absence of\nMr. MacKenzie King, was questioned by long distance telephone at\nhis home in Montreal, but would\nnot comment on the report. Any\nstatement from the federal government, he said, would be made on\nhis return to Ottawa Wednesday.\nKLONDIKE VETERAN DIES\nVANCOUVER, April 26 (CP).-\nFuneral services will be held here\nTuesday morning for John McCon-\nville, British Columbia miner who\njoined the Klondike gold rush in\n1898. McConville died Saturday,\nfour days after he collapsed on a\ndowntown street.\nBRITISH CRUISER PROTECTS COM\nSHIP FROM ATTACK BY INSURGENTS\nGIBRALTAR, April 26 (AP).\u2014\nA fresh case of Spanish insurgent\ninterference with British shipping\non the high seas was alleged here\ntonight with the sudden return to\nport of the freighter Greathope.\nThe captain of the 2297-ton vessel reported to naval authorities\nhii ship was stopped In the strait\n, of Gibraltar by Insurgent armed\ntrawlers and ordered to return to\nGibraltar,\nLONDON,   April   26   fAP)\u2014The\nBritish cruiser Shropshire refused\nloday tn permit the insurgent cruiser Almirante Cervera to interfere\nwith a Glasgow steamer entering\nSanlander, Spain.\nThe steamer, the Oak Grove, was\ncarrying a cargo of. coal.\nThe insurgent vessel wirelessed\nIhe Shropshire she intended to halt\nIhe Oak Grove inside the \"six-mile\nlimit\". The British ship replied she\nwould give the Oak Grove protection, so the Almirante Cervera pulled away.\nREBEL8 OCCUPY TWO CITIES\nHENDAYE, Franco-Spanish border, April 26 (AF)--Iiisurgent vanguards were reported wilhout official confirmation today to have occupied the abandoned cities of Eibar\nand Durango, last important barriers\nlo a great push down the mountains\non the teeming Basque capital of\nBilbao.\nThey moved against a wall of\nflame. Both towns were evacuated\nand columns of black smoke bore\nwitness to the reported buring of\nby retreating government troops.\nEibar, an important munition centre,\nInsurgents said Eibar was a \"vast\nfurnace\".\nThc roads from Durango to Bilbao 16 miles away, were choked\nwith fleeing government soldiers,\nwomen and children.\nTHREE VICTORIES\nFOR  LOYALISTS\nVALENCIA, Spain, April 26 (AP)\n\u2014The Spanish government tonight\nlisted three decisive victories in its\nfirst major offensive at sea against\nthe insurgent navy.\nThe government:\nCaused heavy damage to insurgent\nstrongholds along the southern coast\nin a raiding cruise from Friday to\nMonday.\nShot down one insurgent plane\nand routed two torpedo boaU in a\nclash outside Malaga harbor.\nForced the cruisers Caniarias and\nBaleares to retire under fire from\nthe government cruiser Sanchez\nBarcaiztegui in a clash near Cartagena, despite the presence of a German warship which allegedly signalled details of the government's\ncruiser's movements to the enemy.\nLONDON\u2014Mayor advliei 3000\nWeit Londoners to avacuate thtlr\nhomes at river overflows breakwater. Red Cross sett up refugee\nstations, providing bedding and\naccommodation In armorial.\nTrucks and rowboata und to rescue flood-trapped families, Nine-\nteen saved on one street    -~    -\nNew British Penny\nThe 1937 penny, u issued by the\nBritiih mint recently, and bearing\non the obverse side, a profile of His\nMajesty, King Qeorge VI, note that\nHis Majesty ia looking toward the\nright, just as did coins bearing his\nfather's picture. With each reign\nthe monarch is pictured aa looking\nin a different direction from the\npreceding one. Edward VIII was\nteen looking to the left.\nST. THOMAS \u2014 Pere Marquette\nfreight trains tillable to leave\nyards in south end of city. Cement\nbridge washed, out at nearby New\nSarum by flood-swollen Thames\nriver.\nINGERSOLL \u2014 Smith's pond\ndam reinforced by und bags In\neffort to keep dam from breaking.\nRiverside houses flooded by\nThame*.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nVeneer Works lo\nStart This Week\nSeason's operation of the British\nColumbia Veneer Works, limited,\nwill be begun this week, some time\nin the latter half, Manager George\nDvorjetz stated Monday. An early\nstart is necessary to cope with\norders.\nBoom-sticks were put in place\nMonday to the west of the city\nwharf, to boom the hundreds of\nCottonwood logs that came by rail\nand were dumped off the wharf\nduring the winter, as soon as the\nrising water enables them to float\nThe logs will later be towed\naround to the permanent boom adjacent to the factory.\nNo Plans Yet for\nWindsor-Simpson\nWedding Ceremony\nMONTS, France, April 26 (AP).-\nMrs. Wallis Simpson's spokesman\nsaid today it was \"not Impossible\"\nthe Duke of Windsor would visit\nher soon at the Chateau de Cande.\nThe spokesman, Herman L. Rogers, insisted, however, \"It is literally\ntrue there are no plans for the\nwedding.\" He said Mrs. Simpson's\nfinal divorce decree was expected\nno sooner than May 5. It has been\nreported the duke and Mrs. Simpson will be married at the chateau\nchapel in June.\nLIBERAL CANDIDATE\nSALMON ARM, B.C., April 26\n(CPl\u2014W. H. Birch tonight was chosen by the Salmon Arm Liberal association at a nominating meeting to\nrepresent Salmon Arm riding for the\nparty in the forthcoming provincial\ngeneral election.\nWWwSV*r5**s*9*S*W*Wfi*T*SS**S*^r*\nPOLICE CALLED\nAS C-O-W SITS\nON THE SIDEWALK\nVANCOUVER, April 26 (CP)\n\u2014Today's strangest police radio\ncall sent officers scurrying to\nan east-end street corner. The\nradio operator said: \"Go to the\ncorner of Nanaimo road and\nEast Georgia street. There is a\nc-o-w sitting on the sidewalk.\"\nWindsor Forces\nBook Withdrawn\nThreat of Suit Brings\nApology ond Ban on\nVolume\nNEW YORK, April 26 (AP).-\nDltregardlng threats by legal representatives of the Duke of Windsor to sue for libel, Dodd, Mead\nA Co., publishers, decided today\nto release the American edition cf\n\"Coronation Commentary.\"\nLONDON, April 26 (AP). \u2014 The\nDuke of Windsor today won a fight\nto have a book referring to him\ntaken out of circulation.\nThe publishers of \"Coronation\nCommentary,\" it was disclosed, not\nonly took the fast-jelling volume\nfrom English bookshops but wrote\nthe duke a note of apology. The\nduke's solicitors had threatened\nlegal- action unless amends were\nmade by today.\nIt was learned the duke read passages of the book only recently at\nSt. Wolfgang, Austria. Some of its\nphrases accused him of \"muddling\"\nand \"meddling\" while he was on\nthe throne.\nHe instructed his London solicitor,\nA. G. Allen, to take action. Allen\nissued a 48-hour ultimatum to the\npublishers, William Heinnemann,\nLtd., threatening an injunction by\ntoday unless the book were withdrawn and an apology issued.\nToday the duke's legal representatives and the publishers conferred\nprior to issuing a formal statement.\nThe publishers meantime said\nmerely: \"The book is out of print.\"\nU.S. PRESIDENT\nHALTS STRIKE\nNEW YORK, April 26 (API-\nPresidential intervention today deferred threatened strike action of\n25,000 railway workers in the New\nYork metropolitan area for a maximum of 60 days.\nPresident Roosevelt named an\nemergency mediation board composed of Frank M. Swacker and W.\nH. Davis of New York City, and J.\nI. Shareman, Washington, to try\nto reach a settlement of a dispute\nbetween railroads and shipping interests and brotherhood employees.\nHe granted the board 30 days in\nwhich to reach a settlement.\nUnder the Railway Labor act, a\nstrike cannot be declared until 30\ndays after the board reaches a decision.\nFIRST CHINESE CATHOLIC\nPRIEST\nNANKING, China, April 26 (AP)\n-The first Chinese Catholic priest,\nFather Liang Shihchi, waa ordained\ntoday\u2014300 years after the advent ol\norganized Catholicism in this ancient city.\nTORY PLATFORM\nTO PROVIDE FOR\nDEBT REDUCTION\nDr. Patterson Pledges\nCut in Legislature\nMembership\nREADY TO STOP\nALL BORROWING\nBalanced Budget and\nRefunding at Low\nInterest\nVANCOUVER, April 26 (CP).\u2014\nA program of retrenchment with\ndue regard to aid in developing\nbasic Industries was given to\nBritish Columbia electors tonight\nby Dr. Frank Patterson, leader of\nthe provincial Conservative party.\nDr. Patterson announced the\nprogram In enumerating the\nparty's 16-plank pratform for the\ngeneral provincial election cam*\npalgn climaxed by voting June 1.\nThe public debt of the province\nhad Increased from $10,790,000 in\n1911 to around $200\/300,000 today,\nthe Conservative chieftain declared, .Such pyramiding of debt\nmust be stopped, he said, If the\nprovince was to maintain Its solvency,\nTo effect this Dr. Patterson offered his program of drastically reduced government expenditures,\nparing of the legislature membership\nand reduction of the debt during\nperiods of buoyant income.\nBALANCE BUDGET  , ...\nAs a first step the Conservative\nIWrty was prepared to stop further\nborrowing; balance the budget; refund at lower interest rates wherever possible, and put the municipalities in the same position.\nHe also proposed the renew the\nprovince's claims for better terms\nfrom the Dominion government under Confederation, Dr. Patterson\ncontinued.\nAs for government services the\nConservatives proposed an independent highway -.commission which\nwould supervise extension of the\npresent, highway system throughout\nthe province; encourage prospectors\nand reorganize the mines department with a view to promoting\nrapid and sound development of\nmineral resources; effect a policy\nof conservation and reforestation in\nthe lumber industry and assistance\nto agriculture.\nIn conclusion the Conservative\nleader promised a sound, honest,\ncommon sense government, its keynote an immediate halt with subsequent reduction of the public debt.\nMERCURY SKIPS TO\n69 DEGREES, HIGH\nOF YEAR TO DATE\nAnother brilliant day, proclaimed that spring had Nelson and\ndistrict well In hand Monday and\nskipped the mercury up to a\n69 degree maximum, the high of\nthe year to date. Billowing white\nclouds scudded across the sky but\ndid little to block the sun from\nview. The, minimum temperature\nfor the 24:houn ending at 5 p.m.\nMonday was 36 degrees.\nTHREE PLAYS AT DRAMA\nFESTIVAL\nOTTAWA, April 26 (CP).-Per-\nromance of three plays, two of them\noriginal Canadian works, failed to\ndraw enthusiasm from Adjudicator\nMichel St. Denis as finals of the\nfifth Dominion drama festival were\nlaunched tonight in the Ottawa\nDrama league's little theatre. Mr.\nSt. Denis spoke at the end of a program performed before a capacity\naudience, including Lady Tweedsmuir and Sir Robert and Lady Borden. The adjudicator, director of the\nLondon Theatre Studio, was critical\nof the Montreal Repertory Theatre\ngroup's work in \"Eleventh Hour\"\nand of the play itself, written by\nJoseph Schull, flour milling company advertising manager.\nBRIG. DR. A. MIGNAULT DIES\nMONTREAL, April 28 (CP). -\nBrigadier Dr, Arthur Mlgnault, 71,\norganizer of the 22nd Canadian battalion during the Great War, died\nsuddenly here today. He had been\nraised to the rank of brigadier by\nthe department of national defence\nonly a month ago.\n. LLOYD GEORGE SLAM8\nGOVERNMENT\nSTALYBRIDGE, Cheshire, April\n26 (CP Cable).\u2014David Lloyd George\ntonight said Great Britain held the\nkey position in the present condition of world affairs but he termed\nthe government's foreign policy \"ineffective, irresolute, hesitating and\nwobbling.\" The wartime prime minister entered the Stalybridge by-\nelection fight on behalf of Rev.\nGordon Lang, Labor, opposing H. D.\nTrevor Cox, Conservative. Polling\nwill be April 28.\nDR. FRANK PATTERSON\nLeader of the B.C. Conservatives,\nDr. Frank Patterson yesterday announced lS-point program for thc\nprovincial election campaign. (Story\nin adjoining column.)\nSIX ARE KILLED IN\nR. R. CROSSING\n(RASH\nSUDBURY, Ont, April 26 (CP)\n\u2014Six persons were killed Instantly tonight when their automobile\nwas struck by a westbound Canadian Pacific railway freight train\nat the Copper Cliff depot level\ncrossing. The car burst Into flames\nand was carreld 290 feet before\nthe train came to a atop. The bodies were burned,\nThe dead:\nAlex. Steece, driver of the car;\nMr. and Mrs. W. J, Steaco; Patrick\nStesco, two, and Robert Steaco,\nseven months, children of Mr. and\n.. Mra..Stesc\u00abl MlseOUdyt Laverne\nMcDonald, 23.\nAll were residents of Sudbury.\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nBy the Canadian Press\nToronto and Montreal \u2014 Stocks\nsharply lower.\nNew York\u2014Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat dropped the 5-\ncent limit.\nToronto \u2014 Bacon hogs off truck\nsteady at 8.60 to 8.75.\nLondon \u2014 Bar silver and other\nmetals lower.\nNew Yorlt\u2014Sliver higher; copper\nlower; lead and zinc unchanged.\nMontreal\u2014Silver steady.\nNew York\u2014Rubber, cotton, sugar\nand coffee lower.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar up\n1-32 to 1.00 3-16.\nMILITARY MEN\nSAIL TOMORROW\nOTTAWA, April 26 (CP). - \"A\nvery fine lot,\" was the approving\ncomment of Lord Tweedsmuir at\nthe inspection today of the military\ncontingent proceeding to the coronation. The governor-general reviewed 205 all ranks on the plaza in\nfront of the parliament buildings.\nThe military detachment leaves\nOttawa tomorrow night, boarding\nthe S.S. Montcalm early Wednesday\nin Montreal. On arrival in London\nthey will proceed to Pirbright, near\nBisley. On May 10 they go to London, into quarters at the Olympia\nin south Kensington.\nMin.\nNelion   36\nVictoria  45\nNanaimo   43\nVancouver 44\nKamloops  40\nPrince George   28\nEstevan Point  38\nPrince Rupert  38\nLangara    40\nAtlin  28\nDawson, Y.T  18\nSeattle   48\nPortland, Ore 46\nSan  Francisco   48\nSpokane    50\nLos Angeles  54\nPenticton     42\nGrand Forks \t\nKaslo   38\nCranbrook   31\nCalgary  32\nEdmonton   30\nSwift Current  40\nMoose Jaw  28\nPrince Albert  36\nSaskatoon   36\nQu'Appelle  27\nWinnipeg   30\nKelowna .,  40\nForecast for Nelson and vicinity-\nFresh shifting winds, possibly \u2022\nthunder storm. Somewhat cooler a!\nnight.\nMax.\n69\n51\n55\n5(1\n64\n58\n52\n52\n46\n,12\n.16\n52\n54\n54\n70\n38  72\n70\nPoison; Doukhobors Are\nCut From Relief, Road Work\nGovernment Orders Received in Nelson Say\n\"Discontinue All Unemployment Relief to\nDoukhobors\" Not Obeying Laws of B. C.\nSOME 200 PERSONS IN 52 FAMILIES IN\nNELSON DISTRICT AFFECTED BY ORDER\nOnly One Doukhobor Family in Nelson Section\nComplies With Statistics Registration; a\nDoukhobor Contractor Draws $50 Fine\nMike Slekoff, Doukhobor of Krestova, died In Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital Monday morning, victim of a mysterious poison which\nhas caused the death of four persons and the serious Illness of two others,\nMrs. Berikoff Sr. of Kreitova and Mn. Popoff of Slocan Park, who\nare now under treatment In hospital. Their condition Monday night\nwai reported ai \"not much changed.\"\nAn autopsy wat under way upon Slekoff Monday night After \u25a0\ncoroner'i jury had view the body an Inquest wai adjourned tc May 3.\nThe Jury consists cf G. McLean, W. J. Heffernan, L. Glbney, A. B.\nGllker, Jack Boyce and G. J, Nelion.\nAWAIT REPORT\nReport was still awaited from Inspector Vance, Vancouver, of the\nanalysis of the stomach contents of\nMrs. Alex Berikoff, first of the four\nvictims to die in the hospital here.\nThe other two. Alex Foffinoff and\nAnne Chernenkoff, died at Krestova and their deaths were not reported until the other four victims\nwere brought to hospital at Nelson\nfor treatment. Dr. H. H. MacKenzie,\ncoroner, will reopen the inquest inquiry into the death of Mrs. Berikoff\nFriday.\nDoukhobors took the body of Mrs.\nBerikoff   out  of  the  undertaking\nparlors Saturday, it was believed to\nbury her at Krestova.\nNO MORE RELIEF\nAuthorities are awaiting the\nreaction of Doukhobon on relief\nwhen they liarn that most of them\nwill be cut off the rolls shortly.\nInstructions have been received\nfrom Victoria tc \"discontinue all\nunemployment relief to Doukhobon who are not conforming to\nthe lawi of the province.\"\nAbout 52 families, comprising\nprobably 200 penens, In the district served by the Nelion relief\noffice will be affected. This dcel\nnot Include the Slocan Valley\nnorth cf Slocan Park, which li not\nadmlnlitered by the Nelson office,\nbut It li presumed the iame Instructions will apply to that district.\nONE CONFORMING\nOf the famlllei within the Jurisdiction of the Nelion office, only\none li complying with provincial\nlaw In reipect to marriage and of\nbirth of children, It ii laid. One\nor two additional families are\nconcurring In regliterlng the children, but It li not known whether\nthe parenti are legally married.\nThe Doukhobors affected have\nfor the molt part, ai fir ai li\nknown, completed their April\nwork on district roads and will\nreceive April relief checks. They\nwill be unable to sign up for May\nrelief, however.\nRumors were heard Monday that\nVictoria had given instructions for\nno more timber licences to be issued to Doukhobors. While several\nrequests to this effect have been\nreceived at the forest branch district\nheadquarters at Nelson, no instructions have been issued from Victoria.\nA number of Doukhobors have\nalso entered applications to work\nout arrears of taxes in road work.\nVictoria has given instructions that\npersons in arrears for taxes may\nwork out the sum owing, but no\nspecific instructions have been issued with respect to Doukhobor applications and on that basis their\napplications must be treated on a\npar with all others, it is explained.\nProvision for tax arrears to be\nworked out has been in effect for\nsome time. It is understood those\ntaking advantage of this provision\nin this district have been mostly\nDoukhobors.\nMINIMUM WAGE TRIAL\nFred Chernenkoff, Doukhobor\nwho contracted to build a bunk-\nhouse at the Euphrates mine, was\nfined $50 by Stipendiary Magistrate\nJohn Cartmel Monday for failure\nto pay James Legebokoff the mini\nmum wage, and was ordered to\nmake up the difference between\nwhat he paid and what the man\nshould have received, this amount\nbeing $21.90.\nChernenkoff at first pleaded not\nguilty to the charge brought by\nInspector B. W. Bysart under the\nprovincial minimum wage law, and\nafter some of the evidence had been\nheard asked for an adjournment to\nobtain a lawyer. At the resumption\nof the hearing later he pleaded\nguilty.\nHis worship, insentencing Chernenkoff, ruled that in default of\npayment of the fine he was to\nserve two months in jail with hard\nlabor, and if the sum owing Legebokoff was not paid, to serve an\nadditional month.\nThe rase was prosecuted by Inspector Dysart.\nFEAR CODLING MOTH\nAuthorities are watching, as ln\nother years, for outbreaks of orchard pests at Brilliant, headquarters\nin this province ot the Christian\nCommunity of Universal Brotherhood, Limited, Doukhobor organization. Doukhobors, averse to taking\nlife, refuse to spray, authorities declare.\nTrees which become afflicted with\nfire blight, a fast-spreading orchard\ndisease, are destroyed. Another vicious pest, codling moth, is said to\nbe enforcing its own regulations in\nBrilliant area, where it spread to\nthe exent that apples at Brilliant\nlast season were 75 per cent infected and were'turned back by\nfruit inspectors.\nThe Doukhobors endeavored to\nregain some ot the loss by drying\nthe apples, and sold a small quantity\nin Nelson, but, it is said, these were\ninfected also and it is unlikely\nmore will be accepted.\nFruit growers are of the opinion\nthe codling moth will soon become serious in Nelson as a result\nof Doukhobors selling apples in the\ncity market. The codling moth worm\nin the apples escapes into the boxes\nand lies dormant there, it is understood, until spring. It may escape\nfrom the boxes or apples in which it\nis carried and remain the winter\nin other boxes or even in furniture\nuntil spring, when it again emerges.\nThe moths emerge about the time\nof the calyx spray.\nMULTIPLY FAST\nIn one instance a grower who\ncontributed boxes of apples to Kool\ntenay Lake General hospital asked\nlhat his boxes be returned. With\nthem he received two or three boxes\nfrom areas infected with codling\nmoth, and examination of them\nshowed one worm in one box and\ntwo in another. While this number\nof worms was not regarded as serious, it was pointed out each female\nmoth would lay 60 eggs, and that\nthey would multiply rapidly.\nThere is but one spraying zone ln\nthe district where spraying for codling moth may be enforced. This is\nat Robson. Growers in that area are\nlargely responsible for the creation\nof that area. Under spraying zone\nregulations growers who fail to ob-\nesrve the regulations may have their\ntrees sprayed whether they wish\nthis to be done or not, the cost being chageable against their property.\nWORST APRIL SNOWSTORMS IN\nYEARSHITMIDWESTOFTHEU.S.\nCHICAGO, April 26 (AP)-One\nof the worst April snowstorms in recent years proved both a boon and\na bane to the midwest today.\nThe snowfall, drifted up to eight\nfeet in northwestern Iowa, provided\nwelcome moisture for important agricultural areas in the 1936 drought\nbelt but delayed spring planting,\nhampered traffic and crippled communication in several states.\nThe northwestern Bell Telephone\nCo. reported 1000 wires were broken\nand 100 poles were toppled ln Iowa's\nweek-end storm. High winds damaged barns and killed livestock.\nMotorists were stranded at Prim-\nghar.\nHundreds of poles were down and\nmany trucks and cars were stalled\nin eastern South Dakota.\nSnowplow crews and power linemen labored to restore normalcy to\nwestern Minnesota.\nRoads were blocked and communl- \\,\ncations   disrupted   in   northeastern\nNebraska.\nA\n\u25a0    -\n 1\n\t\n\u2014\n(\"AGS  TWO \u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C\u2014TUESDAY MOT\nCANADIAN-U.S. WIRE FLASHES\nBATTAQLIA TO FIGHT\nSTEELE\nSEATTLE, April 26 (AP).-Frankie Battaglia, Winnipeg middleweight champion, arrives here tomorrow morning to begin training\nfor hia world title bout here M\u00bby 11\nagalnat Freddie Steele, Tacoma.\nBattaglia replaces Ken Overlin,\nRichmond, Va., No. 1 contender,\nwhose illness prevented him from\ngoing through with a scheduled\nfight here May 4 against Steele.\nLIBERAL CANDIDATE\nPOWELL RIVER, B.C, April 26\n(CP).\u2014J. M. Bryan, publisher of the\nNorth Shore Review, member of the\nBritish Columbia legislature from\n1924-28 Jot Mackenzie riding, was\nchosen Liberal candidate for that\nriding in the forthcoming general\nelection at a meeting of Liberals\nhere.\nG.M. TO MAKE DIESEL\nENGINES\nDETROIT, April 26 (AP) .-Alfred\nP. Sloan Jr., president of General\nMotors corporation, announced today that the corporation soon will\nHay Fever Asthma\nMin Gammle, Calgary, says:\n\"I ut up burning powders and\ngetting hypoi, night after night.\nI have had no levere attack*\n\u25a0Ince third day on 'DAVIS\nA8THMA REMEDY No, 7895',\nand have slept peacefully for a\nmonth.\"   $3.60 at your Druggist.\nFINEST\nSAND\nAND\nGRAVEL\nFOR\nBUILDING\nPURPOSES\nFairview Fuel\nSupply & Teaming Co.\nPHONE 701\nbegin the manufacture of diesel en\ngines. Sloan said the manufacture\nof diesel engines would be confined\nto single cylinder units of from 20\nto 160 horsepower for stationary use.\nPEACHLAND TAXES CUT\nPEACHLAND, B.C., April 26 (CP)\n\u2014Ratepayers in thii Okanagan valley town were all smiles today. The\nmunicipal council has announced\ndecrease in taxation from 37 to 32\nmills.\nBRIDGE WORK RESUMED\nffEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., April\n26 (CP.\u2014Dominion Bridge company\nsteel gangs resumed work on the\nnew Pattullo bridge across the\nFraser river here today. No steel\nwork had been done since early in\nthe year.\nNANAIMO MAY QUEEN\nNANAIMO, B.C., April 26 (CP).-\nJoyce Morley, 13, daughter of Mr\nand Mrs. J. G. Morley, has been\nchosen Nanaimo's 1937 May Queen.\nQueen-elect Joyce is a pupil at John\nShaw junior high school, and succeeded last year's queen, Joyce\nShaw.\nVICTORIA   BELLS  TO   BE\nHEARD IN ENGLAND\nVICTORIA, April 26 (CP). - The\nbells of Christ Church cathedral\nhere will be heard in England May\n12. The peal will be broadcast on\ncoronation day over an empire net'\nwork from 6;20 to 6:30 a.m. (P.S.T.)\nVictoria's bell-ringers have been rehearsing for some days. A peal of\n5,040 changes will be executed.\nQUEBEC POLICE BU8Y\nMONTREAL, April 26 (CP).-\nProvincial police had a busy weekend. They raided 10 disorderly\nhouses, a cabaret, two \"bookies\" and\na gambling house, arresting 325 and\nfilling the jail to overflowing. The\nprovincials had to ask for 10 municipal officers to help guard the prisoners.\nTORONTO (CP). \u2014 Two householders here complained when a\nmissle tore through the roof of one\nhouse and ended up in the other\nhouse. A circular saw had hurst,\nhurtling a 20-pound piece of steel\n300 yards.\nTORONTO (CP).\u2014China today is\nparting with the sedan chair and\nwheelbarrow age and attempting to\nmount into the airplane era in one\nleap, Eugene Barnett, Y.M.C.A. official in China for 26 years, said here.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest In the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nGeo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 30o and UP\nLunches 40o to 50c Dinner 40c to 66o\nROTARY AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787        NELSON, B.C.        422 VERNON ST.\nJ. D. Bacon, Gray Creek; Bishop\nW. R. Adams, Vernon; E. J. Ripley,\nRev. C. R. H. Wilkinson, Toronto;\nW. C. Dalgish Patterson, N.J.; Mr.\naatnd Mrs. Att, J. F-itzsimmons, Nakusp; A. J. Balmont, J. Kerrigan,\nG. W. Pym, Cranbrook; D. C. Kirk,\nQuang, A. G. Bennet, J. L. Webb, A.\nSalmo; D. W. McDerby, M. M.\nJ. Cleat, T. Gibson, H. M. Fowell,\nJ. Johnson, W, S. Ferguson, C. W.\nHodgson, M. K. Neville. T. Thompson, H. Fox, Vancouver; R. Crawford, Medicine Hat; A. W. Davis,\nGreenwood; R. A. Barton, Penticton,. Frances Watson. Edgewood;\nD. R. IJardman, Trail; W. C. Jackson,\nStrathroy, Ont.; Mr. and Mrs. J. H.\nMorgan, New Westminster; J. Stewart, Shiela Stewart, Nelson.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN  SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Baker St.       W. K, Clark, Prop.        Nelson, B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited.\nFree Parking NELSON, B.C. Phone 234\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon St. Phone 697\nH. WA6SICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nFully Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. E. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled.\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART of the City\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL CITY\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 news\ntelephoned to her at her home ln TralL\nTRAIL, B.C., April 26.-A quiet\nwedding ceremony was solemnized\nMonday morning when Aileen,\ndaughter of Mrs. John McKee and\nthe late Mr. Mcke\u2014e, was married\nto Clifford Shea, son of Mr. and\nMrs. A. Shea of Kimberley. The\nceremony was performed by Rev.\nT. P. Freney at St. Francis Xavier\nchurch. Miss Madge McKee, jitter\nof the bride, and Ellsworth Ryan\nwere attendants. The bride wore a\ncharming wool ensemble in grey\nwool with accessories entone and a\nshoulder corsage of pink carnationi.\nWorn by the bridesmaid waa a\nblack suit, blending accessories and\na corsage to correspond to that worn\nby the bride. Residence will be\ntaken up on Rossland avenue by\nMr. and Mrs. Shea.\n\u2022 \u2022    aa\nMiss May Bird of Calgary, who\narrives in Trail this week from\nCalgary and who will be married\nto George Summers of this city, was\nguest of honor recently at Calgary\nat a number of social events. Thursday evening members of Star of\nthe West lodge, L.O.B.A., paid an\nunexpected visit and on behalf of\nthe guests D. J. Naylor presented\nher with a silver basket. Music and\ngames provided the evening's entertainment. Wednesday afternoon\nMiss Bird was honored at a trousseau tea, Mrs. George Bird entertaining at her home. Miss Beaulah\nSpicer and Miss Elsie Frost ushered\nthe many friends of the bride-elect\ninto the rooms where the wedding\ngifts and trousseau were displayed.\nPink predominated in the decoration of the rooms while pink rosebuds in a silver basket firmed the\ncentrepiece of the tea table where\nMrs. O. Prince presided at the urns.\nIn the evening this honor was performed by Mrs. W. H. Morgan. Those\nassisting were Mrs. W. Gilbert, Mrs.\nT. W. Brown, Miss Doris Fellows\nand Miss Annie Robson.\nBernar McPherson of Grand Forks\nvisited during the festival at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Brothers, Bay avenue.\nMrs. G. W. Eaton was guest of\nhonor at a surprise party Friday\nevening at her home, music and\ngames providing a program of entertainment. During the event Mrs.\nW. R. Cass on behalf of the assembled guests presented a necklace\nto Mrs. Eaton. Refreshments were\nserved by Miss Donna Spence and\nTilly Eaton. The guests were Mrs.\nW. Cass, Mrs. A. Munroe, Mrs. A.\nPearson, Mrs. J. M. Ward, Mrs. J. C.\nHall. Mrs. J. Babcock and Mrs.\nEaton.\n\u2022 \u2022t\nMrs. W. Bolt, who is visiting ln\nTrail from Cranbrook, was guest of\nhonor at an informal tea given Monday by Mrs. W. F. Truswell.\n.      .     9\nPeter Hudson has returned to the\ncity from Edmonton, where he is a\nstudent at the University of Alberta.\n\u00bb Mn. 0. P. Weithaver, Columbia\navenue, was hostess Monday evening to memberi of the Ladies'\nService Auxiliary to Knox United\nchurch.\nIf Syd Horswill does not remember his send-off till the end of his\ndays, it will not be the fault of the\nNelson high school and the students,\nwho awakened at least two dead\npeople, as well as all the living people in town. It is well known that\nless than a third of the population\nof Kaslo was able to get to sleep\nthat night again, and those at Castlegar were wondering what the\nDoukhobors were blowing up.\nThe ball opened with a dance in\nthe gym which was a howling success. The high school orchestra was\nused, with Naida Perrier at the\npiano, Bill Kapak with his sax and\nviolin, Alan Barton with his nice\nnew silver-plated trumpet, and\nGeorge Russell at the drums. Kapak\nhad a habit of marching around with\nhis violin at his shoulder playing\nin his girl's ear. His music was so\ngood, however, that this is easily excusable. George Beattie obliged by\ncrooning into some girl's ear. He\ndidn't do it openly because of the\nfact that there were a lot of quite\nhusky fellows there. Nobody likes\ncrooners but then Mr. Beattie has\nquite a winning personality and that\nmakes up for it.\nNO BARN DANCE\nThe break to give a chance for\nthose with speeches on their consciences to get them off was welcome to some but unwelcome to\n r\t\n~\nI iipi  [mm\nothen.lMth*. it**:\ntractive   to  be  ov<\nanything else.\nThere weren't\nwhich wai a pity, as thit would\nhave addedii bit to the noise. There\nwere, howOer, a couple of circle\none-stejw, with Jim Ryley aj announcer, the lad having an opportunity to get sore tonsils earlier than\nanybody else.\nThere was a full moon that night\ntoo, which had its advantages. It\nwas Just sinking behind the mountains when Syd was leaving.\nLADY IN  RED\nJoan Waters was wearing a brilliant scarlet dress. It was hardly necessary as she is always conspicuous\nby reason of her good looks.\nPaul \"per Moxie\" Brook was in\nattendance, wide shoulders and all.\nIt's a pleasure to see you there,\nMaxie.\nThe orchestra was provided by\nJ. B. Gray Jr., and Allen with derby hats. Peggy Gibbon stole Ka-\npak's and ran around the hall with it\nresting on her fluffy coiffure.\nDespite the Douks, Mr. Bradshaw,\nour former fellow student of two\nyears ago. was present. I forgot his\nfirst name, but will tell you when I\nremember. Steve Smith was there,\nalong with Leo Atwell, Ernie and\nSanto Del Puppo, Allan Bennett,\nMorley Burnett, Merline Liversidge.\nFreda MacKay was pretty much in\nevidence. There were only two\nformal evening dresses present. One\nwas blue-green and the other pink.\nGary Bowell soon took off his\ncoat, exposing a check shirt and a\nscarlet-striped tie, complete with\ngold tiepin.\nThere were a few from the junior\nhigh . . . George Gill, Don Bliss,\nJanie Wigg.\nSeveral home waltzes were played\nas the orchestra couldn't seem to be\nable to make up its mind.\nTHE PIPERS\nMarshalling of the parade wasn't\nvery efficiently handled, but there\nwas no rowdiness, so the lack of\norganization did no harm. Hugh\nMiddleton, John Stout and Peter\nLeslie led the parade with the pipes,\nfollowed by the Pep band, consisting of two Strudwickes, Ralph Myers, Bob Morris, and Joe Galllcano,\nAllan Barton was the owner of the\nshiniest instrument. Syd followed on\ntop of his dad's truck, which was\ndriven by SUn. Bob was also there,\nas were Horswill mere and pare.\nThey all looked proud. The crowd\nseemed hard to get started into a\nschool yell or a song, half of them\nstarting at one time and the other\nhalf at another. A third half, of\ncourse, didn't start at all. Doug Gallaher packed a torch.\nWEIGHT AND HEIGHT\nOnce down at the station, Al Euerby, who was there with his pleasant smile and willingness to help,\nalong with Fred Graves, shouldered\nSyd and held him aloft. Then they\nput him on a baggage wagon, and\nPAGES REHEAR8E FOR\nCORONATION\nLONDON, April 26 (CP-Havas)-\nIn Westminster Abbey today 20\npages rehearsed their coronation\nduties under the watchful eyes of\nEarl Marshal the Duke of Norfolk\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN  BROADCA8TING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\n5.00 Ici Paris, second anniversary\nbroadcast, Montreal; 6:00 Crown\nJewels and Coronation, Toronto;\n6:30 Horace Lapp's orch,, Toronto;\n6:45 News and weather, Toronto;\n7:00 National Sing Song. dir. George\nYoung, Brandon; 7:30 Piccadilly\nmusic, N.B.C.-N.Y.; 8:0C Old Time\nFrolic, Saskatoon; 8:30 Fish and\nFishermen, Spent Spinner, Vancouver; 8:45 Good Evening, Vancouver;\n9:00 Just Supposin', drama, Winnipeg (not CRCV); 9:30 As Embers\nGlow, Winnipeg (not CRCV); 10:00\nJessie McLeod, organist Vancouver;\n10:30 News, Vancouver (B.C. Network).\nKELOWNA-McCULLOCH STAGE\nOperated by Bob Stniingileet\nA Shortcut Between Okanagan, Kootenay and\nPrairie Points.\nDaily Service Connecting With East and Westbound\nKettle Valley Trains\nCOMFORTABLE HEATED STAGE\nPASSENGER\u2014FREIGHT\u2014EXPRESS SERVICE\nCRESTON Freight Truck\n2 ROUND TRIPS WEEKLY\nLEAVE NEL80N 10:30 A.M. TUESDAY AND FRIDAY\nLEAVE CRESTON 11 A.M. WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY\nPhone 342 Nelson or 16 Creston\nA8K THE RED TRUCK FOR SERVICE\nGLEN'S TRANSFER\nP. O. Box 539\nNelson, B. C.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ  KGW  KFI   KPO  KOMO\n590 620 640 680 920\n5:00 Beaux Arts trio; 5:30 Fred\nAstaire. Johnny Green's orch., 6:30\nJimmie Fidler, Hollywood gossip;\n6:45 Vic and Sade, comedy; 7:00\nAmos 'n' Andy, blackface comedians; 7:15 \"Who Am I?\" game,\nArchie Presby, m.c; 7:30 Johnny\npresents Russ Morgan's orchestra.\nCharles Martin's Thrill, Phil Duey,\nand others; 8:00 Death Valley Days,\ndrama; 8:30 Good Morning Tonight,\nvocal, Gyula Ormay's orch.; 9:00\nThrills, drama, Gayne Whitman,\nnarrator, David Broekman'j orch.;\n9:30 Griff Williams' orch.; 10:00\nNews flashes, Sam Hayes; 10:15\nVoice of Hawaii, music; 11:00 Bob\nYoung's orch.; 11:30 Ran Wilde's\norch.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 500 w\n5:10 News flashes; 5:15 Cariboo\nCktsm^\n30-DAY LIMITS\non one-way ond round-trip\nCOACH FARES\nStopovers Anywhere Within Limits\nFrom SOUTH NELSON\nTo                       One Round\nWay Trip\nSpokane    $3.98 $7.17\n8eattl\u00ab    9.98 17.97\nTacoma     9.98 17.97\nVancouver    11.42 20.56\nMlnneapolli  28.67 48.0O\u00bb\nSt. Paul -.28.89 48.00*\nChicago   34.50 67.36\u00bb\n* Return limit 6 monthi.\nTRAVEL BY TRAIN\nSAFETY - COMFORT - ECONOMY\nIt'i Cheaper Thon Driving!\nGREAT nORTHERn\ncowboys; 6:15 News Flashes; 7:00\nStock quotations; 7:30 Stuart Hamb-\nlin's program; 7:45 Bernard Braden;\n8:C0 Tales of Twilight; 9:00\" Symphony dir. Allard de Ridder; 10:00\nEric Gee's Kolle-Jeans; 10:30 Len\nChamberlain's orch.; 11:00 News\nflashes; 11:15 Slumber hour.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Ben Bernie and all the Lads;\n6:00 Chamber Music Society; 6:30\nManuel and Williamson, harpsichord ensemble; 7:00 Back Seat\nDriver; 7:15 Lum and Abner, comedy; 7:30 Piccadilly Music Hall,\nvariety; Professor Peter Puzzlewit\n(KGO); 8:00 Phil Harris' orch;\nChamber of Commerce (KGO);\n8:15 Concert Hall, E.T. (KGO);\nB 30 Jack Dempsuy fights, ET\n(KGO); Frank Dailey's orch.; 7:00\nRussian Rhapsody, ens., soloists;\n9:30 Johnny O'Brien, harmonica;\n9:45 The University Explorer; 11:00\nPaul Carson, organist.\nCOLUMBIA   NETWORK\nKVI    KOIN    KNX    KSL   KOL\n570      940      1060     1130    1270\n5:00 Paul Lammereaux, sweet music\n(KOL): 5:15 Maurice' orch.; 5:30\nJack Oakie's college, Benny Goodman's Swing band, guests.; 6:30\nDantl Barsi and his Swingtet (KVI);\n6:45 Male Chorus parade; 7:00\nScattergood Baines, drama; 7:13\nTommy Dorsey's orch. (KVI); 7:30\nAl Jolson and company; 8:00 Al\nPearce and his Gang; 8:30 Alexander Woollcott, Town Crier 8:45 Leon\nBelasco's orch.; 10:00 White Fires,\ndrama; 10:30 Orchestras: Harry\nOwens; Ted Fio-Rito; Tommy Tucker; Eddie Oliver; Joe Reiehman.\n910 k CJAT 319.6 m\nTrail 1000 w\n7:00 Morning Vespers; 7:15 Musical Clock; 8:00 Request program;\n8:00 Organ Fantasy; 9:30 Old Timer;\n10:00 What's New? 10:15 Harmony\nIsles; 10:30 The Radio Chef; 10:45\nMelodic Pipes; 11:00 Music Masters;\n11:15 Kootenay Echoes; 11:20 Monitor views the news; 11:45 House of\nPeter McGregor; 12:00 Remember\nWhen?; 12:30 Italian Skies; 12:15\nStuart Hamblin's Hill Billies; 1:30\nThe concert hour; 2:30 Viennese\nStrings; 3:00 In the Crimelight; .1:15\nHits and Encores; 4:45 Cecil and\nSally; 5:00 See C.B.C. Network\nexcept: 5:45 Growin' Up; 10:45 Sunshine special.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n5:30 Limousine Lady; 6:00 Honor\nthe Law; 6:30 The Music Box; 7:30\nThe Cub reporter; 7:45 Salon orch;\n9:00 News flashes; 9:45 Garden of\nmelody\nand Dr. Foxley Norrii, Dean of\nWestminster. The pages will carry\nthe cornets of those peers who will\nbear the royal insionia in the coronation processions.\nRECORD SEEKER AT KHARTUM\nKHARTUM, Sudan, April 26 (CP\nCable)\u2014H. L. Brook, British aviator\nattempting to set a London-Cape\nTown record, landed here today after\na flight from Cairo. He left half an\nhour later for Cuba, 1180 miles away\nat the southern end of the Anglo-\nEgyptian Sudan. Tlie record is\nheld by Mrs. Amy Johnson Mollison.\nNO  VERIFICATION\nOF QUINTS\nPEIPING. China, April 26 (AP)\u2014\nA report that quintuplet sons had\nbeen born to a peasant woman at\nLuanhsien, 100 miles north-east of\nTientsin, created a senation today,\nbut 24 hours of investigation failed\nto confirm the story. The report,\ncarried by an obscure Chinese news\nagency, said all were boys and all\nwere living.\nSUICIDE VERDICT\nLONDON, April 26 (CP)-A coroner's jury today found Miss Rosamund Sopwith, 66, sister of the\nAmerica's cup yachtsman, T. 0. M.\nSopwith, committed suicide while\noul of her mind,\nBRITAIN TO BORROW\n\u00a3100,000,000 FOR DEFENCE\nLONDON, April 26 (CP Cable) \u2014\nBritain is to borrow \u00a3 100,000,000 for\ndefnee. The loan is to be advertised\nWednesday. The issue price is to be\n99V2 and interest 2H per cent.\nHITLER PRAISES FRANCO\nSALAMANCA, Spain, April 26\n(AP) \u2014 Generalissimo Francisco\nFranco, virtual dictator of insurgent-\nheld Spain, received a message from\nReichsfuehrer Adolf Hitler today\ncongratulating him upon the creation of a one-party system similar\nto Germany's National Socialist\n(Nazi) party.\nTHEIR MAJESTIES\nWED 14 YEARS\nWINDSOR, Berkshire, April 26\n(CP Havas)\u2014The King and Queen\ntoday celebrated their 14th wedding aniversary with an informal\nfamily luncheon at Windsor castle.\nGovernment offices and other public buildings unfurled flags In honor\nof the occasion.\nGOERING AT ROME\nROME. April 26 (CP-Havas)-\nGeneral Hermann Goering arrived\nhere today from Naples on what was\nsaid to be a \"special mission\". Goering was greeted by German Ambassador Ulrich von Hassel and went to\nthe foreign office to confer with\nForeign Minister Galeazio Ciano.\nGoering's Visit is expected ,to last\nthree days.\nJEWISH PAPERS SEIZED\nWARSAW. April 26 (AP)-AH\nJewish newspapers in Warsaw were\nconfiscated today because they printed Jewiih Telegraph agency' descriptions of B'Nai Brith arrests and\nconfiscations in Germany. Police\nacted because the publication wa?\n\"an offence to a neighboring slate.\"\nCLOSING OUT\nWATSON SHOE CO. STOCK\nBuy Now! Styles Galour!\nMEN'S WOMEN'S BOYS' CHILDREN'S\nEVERY PAIR AT SALE PRICES\n300 PAIR\nMEN'S SHOES\nBlack Oxfords and Sport Shoes.\n$2.89   $3.89\nBOYS' SHOES\nBlack Calf Boots. Panco Sola. Sal* Prlca.\n$1.99\n700 PAIR\nWOMEN'S PUMPS\nStraps, Tiei, for Street, Dreu er Sport\nWear. Sal* Pric*.\n$1.49   $1.99\nCHILDREN'S SHOE!\nStraps and Oxfords. Hack, Brown, ate.\nSix*t 10 to 2.\n$149\nHEALTH SPOT SHOES Men's and Women's\nBlack Kid Only. Every paid reduced. Regular $11.00,\nSALE PRICE \t\nWATSON SHOE CO.\n20 pulled it. while 20 more stole\nrides. AI Euerby would have packed\nSyd around some more, if Syd did\nnot weigh 190. That's the disadvantage of being 73Va inches tall.\nThere was a rush to the lunch\ncounter to get soft drinks to cool\nthe red hot tonsils as soon as the\nnoise became really opened up. Gub-\nby Gore lost his voice altogether.\nThis nearly killed him. Unfortunately the C.P.R. wouldn't cooperate by blowing a whistle, the rata!\nHowever, all good  things must\ncome to an end, and the train tin-\nally had to leave. The engineer was\nMac Kenrot. the fireman was Lee\nGammon. Rube Tiffin wa\u00bb the\nbrains. At last the big Pacific type,\nNo. 2S21, bit into the rails and the\nfirst exhaust whoofed through the\nstack. As the train clicked out of\nsight Syd could see a forest of waving arms and handkerchiefs and\nhats bidding him Godspeed. Then\neveryone went home to pour cough\nmedicine down his throat to ward\noff hoarseness.\nC.N.R. REVENUES Ut*\nMONTREAL, April 2\u00ab (CP).-In-\ncrease of $2,240,755 In net revenue\nfor the first quarter of 1937 over\nthe came period last year was reported today by Canadian National\nrailways. Operating revenue was up\n$4,697,418 and operating expenses\nup $2,456,663. Tor March the railway reports increaw of $3,181,271 tn\noperating revenues and increase ot\n$820,847 in net revenue.\ni\nTelephone\nDirectory\nClosing\nApril 30\nAll Changes for the June Issue of the West\nKootenay Telephone Directory must be\nmade by this date\nThe Telephone Directory it a paying\nadvertising medium. Make your\nname conspicuous\nB. C. TELEPHONE CO.\n 1\nTip     4v.qMiJ.vifPnii. .1 1.1..1 ,''ww>\u00bb^\u00ab-:- \u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C.-TUESDAY MORNtNQ. APRIL 27. 1937.\n\u2022 PAOE THRU\nJames Deans, Early\nMember of 54th, to\nBe Buried at Coast\nJames Deans, one of the original\nmembers ot the 54th Kootenay battalion who became a sergeant in\nit, died at Vancouver and was buried there Monday morning in the\nreturned soldiers' plot of Mountain\nView cemetery.\nMr Deans was originally from\nBelfast. He was wounded while\noverseas.\nThe Morning AfterTaking\nCarter's Little Liver Pills I bargains in the classified\n\u00a7to\nCOPCNMION;\n,-A-iiPr,,,a>WSia\nMutuality\n%     i$\ns Strength\nLike tlie many  strands  that  pive\nstrength to a cable, 70.0110 policyholders\nhave banded together for one common\npurpose\u2014the fulfillment of  their financial\nplans through profitable life assurance.\nThe advantage of mutuality for the Company's\nprofit-sharing policyholders lies in the fait thai they\nreceive in dividends the entire profits arising from\nthe operation of their business.\nAssure Mutually in North American Life and share\nin the prosperity that you make possible.\nSetiil eis the\nContinent\nAMERICAN\nR. E. CRERAR, C.L.U.\nDistrict  Manager,\nNelson, B.C.\nLIFE\nA   MUTUAL    COM PAN Y\nThe Queen, a charming mother, and Princess Elizabeth.\nIn the years that she was known\nto England and the empire as the\nDuchess of York and not as the\nfuture Queen, her majesty made the\nfirst and foremost interest of her\nlife the welfare of her family and\nthe upbringing of her two daughters. Queen of England now. with\nPrincess Elizabeth her elder daughter the heir presumptive to the\nthrone, and slated perhaps some day\nto follow in the footsteps of her\nnamesake of centuries ago, the task\nof rearing her growing children has\nbecome an even more vital problem\nto Queen Elizabeth.\n-4\n'NO WONDER YOU LOVE ENO!\nIT'S SO PLEASANT-TASTING-DOES\nVOU THE WORLD OF GOOD-AND NOT\nA SINGLE THING IN ENO CAN UPSET\nYOU.   DADDY TAKES ENO EVERY\nMORNING.\"\nCAS\/S7\nENO'S 'FRUIT SALT\n*) the pleasant\nalkalizing corrective\n1M GLAD WE GOT OUT OF\nV IHE AILIHREE CLASS\n\"NOW WE'VE GOT A GREAT BIG NA8H-AND\nIT COST ME ONLY A FEW DOLLARS SWORE*\nTHAN ONE OF THOSE SMALLER CARS!\"\nA royal mother faces many difficult problems that do not come to\nthe average mother, but if throughout the empire Queen Elizabeth is\nknown for one outstanding characteristic, it is for her success as a\nhomemaker. Reared in a Scottish\nfamily, she was taught early the\nmany duties of a housewife and all\nthat is implied in the job of building a home. When she became the\nwife of a king's son, her entry to\nthe royal circle did not take from\nher the deep respect a,id love sae\nhad acquired for home life, and\nfrom then until the day she became\nthe Queen she has been an example\nto the world. As Queen her duties\nincrease manifold, with the spotlight more than ever upon this\nsimple charming Scottish girl and\nthe household under her guidance.\nThe little Princess was only a few\nmonths old when her parents left\nEngland for their first extended\nempire tour and the young mother\nwas separated from her child for\nsix busy months.\nQueen Mary took the supervision\nof the royal infant, who was already the brightest jewel in Britain's royal treasures to loyal thousands under the British flag, and\nthe Queen Mother has had much\nto do with Elizabeth's training.\n'Tis said that the Queen is a\nstrict, if kindly, mother; there is\nno spoiling of the two Princesses.\nHer majesty appreciates deeply the\nplace they must fill in later life and\ngoverns her household accordingly.\nShe herself taught Princess Elizabeth and later Princess Margaret\nRose their alphabets and the first\nelementary lessons, as well as the\nnursery ballads and stories that\nevery child loves, and joined in\ntheir'little problems and their pastimes as they grew older.\nWith a multitude of duties making calls uoon her time, the duchess\nand now the Queen, made time for\nthe greatest job of all\u2014building a\nfamily that has become an example\nin home life to the empire.\nMartin of Rossland\nVote Commissioner\nJohn Martin of Rossland has been\nappointed a provincial election commissioner in Rossland-Trail electoral\ndistrict, according to the B.C Gazette\nActual photopaph\n... Read why J. Harry\nScblanser stepped out\nof the \"all three\" class!\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nYes, people are\namazed when they\ncheck DELIVERED\nprices. The Nash La-\nFayette-'400'\u2014much\nbigfter than any of\nthe \"all three\" small\ncars\u2014 DELIVERS for\njust a FEW dollars\nmore.\nYou get a more\npowerf u 1 motor,\nmuch larger hydraulic brakes, wider\nseats, more headroom and leftroom.\nA car anybody can\nbe PROUD of. And\nthe difference in\nprice? Just tt few\ndollars\u2014that's all.\nACES AND MAPLE LEAFS\nCIRLS TO PRACTICE\n1     With   the  Red   Sox  having held\nI the:r first workout on Sunday, pby-\n! ers cf the Maple L^nfs and  Aces\nI clubs   hope   to   have   their   initial\np-i-t.ce on Wednesday  if the use\n! of the grounds can be secured and\nj weather is permitting   The Maple\nLeafs officials have invited the Aces\nj players to work out with them as\nthe Aces have not yet secured their\nequipment\nPresent indications are that the\nNelson girls' league will be made\nup of three teams this season, but\nthere is some talk about getting\nsome of the younger players interested in league play, and an effort\nwill bc- mads to hold practices for\nthe younger players.\n* FOR AS LITTLE AS 53 or $4 A MONTH 4-door  iodo.ni   ol tho  \"All  Throe\" imall\nEXTRA vou eon get out of the \"All Thr\u00bbe\" CQr,_ ln mony p|0CM( ,ho SLIGHT difftionce\nclan. The Naih LaFayette-'MOO\" 4-Dooi , ..,.-,\n-  i        ..l .     i nn ,,,,-nc i    i   \u25a0 *. crui In price amounti lo  u:l 53 oi J4 a month\nSedan with trunk DEUVLRS lor |uit a rtw *\ndollcm more than Ihe timiiarly equipped extra on your lime payment!.\n810\nriTir] up.\n, NASH LAPAY-\nETTE*\"40o\" $H]0 and up;\nNASH AMBASSADOR SIX $10.10\nand up: NASH AMBASSADOR\nEIGHT $117(1 and up. All prices Canadian list nnd subject lo change without\nnotice. Special equipment extra.\nKOOTENAY MOTORS (NELSON) LTD.\nRED SOX WORKOUT\nSUNDAY AFTERNOON\nWith Chum ' Tony\" Arcure in\ncharge, the Red Sox girls' softball\nclub was the first Nelson team to\nhold an organized practice a*, the\nrecreation grounds on Sunday afternoon Mel Whittels assisted Tony\nArcure Only seven players were in\nattendance\nPlayers out with last year's title-\nholders were Mary MeDnugall,\nSybil McLean, Kay McDougall. Joan\nHornett. Agnes Stewart, Louise Col-\nletti and Alvina Arlt.\nVRYHEID. South Africa (CV) -\nFrightened at the prospect of an\noperation, a 20-year-old girl escaped\nfrom hospital clad in a nightgown,\nrunning several miles before she\nwas caught and returned to the institution.\nTUESDAY and WEDNESDAY\n^1\nNOTIONS\nBOBBIE COMBS\u2014In Case   90\nSNAP FASTENERS\u2014Black   9c\nSAFETY PINS\u2014Assorted    90\nBOBBIE PINS\u20142 Cards   90\nBUTTONS\u2014Assorted Cards    90\nCURTAIN TIE BACKS\u2014Colored oilcloth, Each . . .  90\nELASTIC\u2014'A-inch, white, 6 yards    90\nPENCILS\u201412 for      90\nNEEDLE BOOKS\u20143 doi. assorted, 2 Cards   Or\nCOMPACTS\u2014White Pearlite     90\nSTATIONERY\nWRITING PADS\u2014Note, Empress, Letter, each .. . 9e\nENVELOPES TO MATCH\u20142 packages  90\nTYPING SECOND SHEETS\u2014125 sheets  9r\nBRIDCE SCORE PADS  90\nPENCIL BOXES    90\nCRAYONS\u201424 assorted colors   9c*\nTOILETRIES\nSEIDLITZ POWDERS\u2014Package of 6   90\nCARBOLIC TOOTH PASTE   90\nSTERILIZED GAUZE BANDAGE\u20141 'A-inch    90\nCAPPI TALCUM POWDER   90\nLAVENDER BRILLIANTINE     90\nPEPSODENT TOOTH PASTE   90\nVANISHING and COLD CREAM\u2014|ar   90\nPAL RAZOR BLADES\u2014Package of 6  90\nLEMON HAND LOTION    90\nSANITARY PADS\u20146 for   90\nSMOKERS' SUPPLIES\nCIGARETTE HOLDERS      90\nCHERRY CICARETTE HOLDERS\u20144 for   9<?\nFLINTS\u20142 for   90\nPIPE CLEANERS\u20143 for   90\nSTAPLE DEPARTMENT\nFACE CLOTHS \u2014 Each 90\nDISH CLOTHS\u2014Each  9o\nCOTTON NAPKINS   9.?\nTURKISH HAND TOWELS\u2014Eaeh    90\nSHOE DEPARTMENT\nSILK SHOE TIES\u2014Black,  brown,  blue,   grey   18-inch\nand 24-inch      90\nMERCERIZED LACES\u2014Fibre tips, oxford or boot\nlength, black or brown   90\nSHAWL TONGUES\u2014To lace on, in brown or black .  90\nCORK INSOLES\u2014Men's and Women's   9c\nLACES\u2014Black,  27-inch,   36-inch,  40-inch   lengths,\nbundle of 6 pairs   90\nAt the tfcBAY\"\nCHINA DEPARTMENT\nPLATES\u2014Each    90\nJARDINIERES\u2014Each     90\nFLOWER VASES\u2014Each   90\nBON BON BOXES\u2014Each   90\nSUCAR and CREAMS\u2014set 90\nCUPS and SAUCERS  90\nMILK |UGS\u2014Each   9c\nTEA POTS\u2014Each   90\nSCOTTY DOGS\u2014Each    90\nPEPPERS and SALTS\u2014Set  90\nBEER MUGS\u20142 for  Q**\nPLATES\u20142 for    90\nEGG CUPS\u20143 for   9^\nMEASURINC CUPS\u2014Each  9,5\nHOMEWARE DEPARTMENT\nCLOTHES BRUSHES\u2014Each    9^\nSCRUBBING BRUSHES\u2014Each  9^\nSHOE BRUSHES\u2014Each     9^\nSPOKE BRUSHES\u2014Each  \"9^\nFIREPLACE BRUSHES\u2014Each   9*\nBOWL BRUSHES\u2014Each  90\nSINK BRUSHES\u2014Each   90\nVARNISH BRUSHES\u2014Each   90\nDAUBERS\u2014Each         9c\nFLASHLICHT BULBS\u2014Each    90\nFLASHLIGHT BATTERIES\u2014Each    i,t*.\nSPOONS\u2014Each     90\nFORKS\u2014Each     90\nSTRAINERS\u2014Each     90\nSCISSORS\u2014Each     90\nMUFFIN TINS\u2014Each    90\nCLOTHES PINS\u201436 for    90\n)ELLY MOULDS\u20143 for  90\nLEATHER BELTS\u2014Each     90\nHOUSEHOLD NEEDS\nDISH CLOTHS   90\nWAX PAPER\u2014Roll    90\nBAKINC CUPS\u20143 sites, pkg  90\nSHELF PAPER\u2014Roll  90\nWIRE POT CLEANERS  90\nSERVIETTES\u2014Package of 50  9c\nLE PAGE GLUE\u2014Rubber Top  90\nSODA STRAWS\u2014Pkg. of 100  9^\n100 MEN'S AND BOYS' TIES 9c\nRUNNING\nSHOES\nBoys' Lace to Toe Style\nBrown  duck  uppers,   ru-\ngatex. Crepe\nSoles.   11   to I\n13 to 5.\n99'\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nLIQUID\nPOLISHES\nBrown or black suede.\nBrown or Black Cabardine\nBlue or grey Gabardine\nSuede \u2014 White Bottles\nWhite tubes \u2014 Neutral\ntubes   and   Liquid   Spot\nRemover.\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nBAMBOO RAKES\n100 ONLY 32 tooth Bamboo rakes.\nTO CLEAR. EACH   \t\n13c\nSLIPS\nHere's a real buy in women's suede taffeta and silk\ncrepe slips. Bias and straight cut. White and tea rose.\nSizes 34 to 44. Limited quantity\nRegularly sold at $1.00 and $1.69 fi ' i 1   'l\nWHILE THEY LAST\t\n\u2014Second  Floor  HBC\n79'\nNOTICE\nCharge Account Customers.\nNew accounts open today\u2014Payable |une 10th.\n55c\nEGGS:   Grade   A    large,\nfresh,\n2 dozen\nHEALTH MEAL\u2014Melograin 4-lb. pkg. 290\nDATES\u2014 Pitted, fresh stock 2 Ibs. 250\nSANDWICH SPREAD\u2014Best Foods 8-ot. jar 22c\nHBC Pure Food Values\nON SALE TODAY, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\nRAYON\nTAFFETAS\nPlain or brocaded in 27-\ninch width, 15 beautiful\nshades.\nSpecial I g%C\nPrice '\nYARD   ..\n19\n\u2014Second  Floor HBC\nBROADCLOTH\nSHORTS\nPlain and fancy stripe\nbroadcloth shorts with\nelastic waist band. Full\ncut in pre-shrunk materials. Sizes , ,\nIDC\nPAIR ...\n39\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nCOCOA:\nVi-Lb\n14c\nCOFFEE\u2014HBC Luxurious, per Ib. 39c\nTUNA FISH\u2014Solid meat, '\/Vs .\nORANGE MARMALADE\u2014Nelson\nWATERGLASS\n2 tins 250\n)6-oi. jars 190\nPer tin 180\n0VALTINE\u2014Large tins, 16-os.      .\nBABY FOODS\u2014Heinz\t\nHONEY\u2014Linden, 15-oi. bricks Each 150\nCowan's,\ntins, each\n. Per tin 980\n.... Z tins 230\nTEA\u2014Fort Garry ..... Per Ib. 60c\n\t\nRICE\u2014Best quality            ....      3 Ibs. 230\nMALT-O-MILK LUNCH BISCUITS\u20141-lb. carton 230\nPEROXO BLEACH\u2014A Nelson product, large bottle 140\nFREE\nCITY\nDELIVERY\nl)^0!t>T^ doming.\nIN CORPORATEn   **\u2022 WV IB7Q\t\n193\nPHONES\n194\nVALLEY AUXILIARIES\nBEING ASKED ASSIST\nWITH HOSPITAL DAY\nCRESTON, B. C. - The April\nmooting of Creston Hospital Women's auxiliary was held Thursday.\nMrs. F. V. Staples, president, was\nin charge.\nMrs. K. Stevens reported the hospital   board   treasurer's   statement\nfor March Mrs. G. Sinclair reported\non district executive activities. Mrs.\nG. R. John reported work of the\nbuying committee, and Mrs. Frank\nNadon reported for the visiting committee. This l,iIter rominittce for\nApril will be Mrs. R. Stevens and\nMrs. C. Murrell.\nDue to National hospital day. coinciding this year with Coronation\nday, Miss E. Cooke's proposal that\nhospital day be observed May 22\nmet with favor. Auxiliaries at other\npoints in the valley will be asked\nto assist in providing tea that afternoon al the nurses' home. Mrs. C\nH. Hire and Mrs. George .lacks\nvolunteered to head the kitchen\ncommittee. Mrs. G. Sinclair, Mrs\nNadon and Mrs. John will form the\ntea committee.\nLetters uf thanks  will  go  to S.\nG. Parker. Miss Hanson and others\nwho helped to make the Easter ball\na success\nTea was served by Mrs. R. Stevens. Mrs. W. H. Crawford. Mrs. J.\nF. Murrell and Miss M. Hamilton.\nTea collection was $2.05.\nGourds can be made to take fantastic s lapes by bandages tied oil\nthcm when they are growing.\n \u25a0\n\t\nPASS FOUR-\nNE\n26 FOREST MEN ATTEND THE\nRANGER CONFERENCE NELSON\nAssistant   Chief   Forester   Here   and\nFour American Officials; Program\nIncludes Talks, Demonstration\nAlso\nTen forest experts, headed by C.\nD. Orchard, assistant chief forester\nof the province, and including four\nforest officials of the Colville na-\ntionai forest in Washington, with\nsix rangers and 10 assistant rangers\nfrom the Kootenay-Boundary division of the Nelson forest district,\nopened a three-day ranger clinic\nhere Monday, similar to one held\nlast week at Cranbrook for the East\nKootenay division.\nIt was originally intended that\nthe conference should be a field\naffair, held on some timber operation in the Salmo valley, but that\nplan was dropped.\nDISCUSSIONS\nThe day's sessions were held in\nthe jury room at tlie court house,\nwith H. E. Allen, district forester,\nin the chair.\nMr. Orchard explained the new\nimendmentas to the Forest act, and\nthe recent circular on forest branch\npolicy, a discussion following.\nAfter that, Mr. Allen gave a talk\non forest protection and fire policy\nin general, including the plan of\nputting superior officers in charge\nof large fires, eliminating ranger\nboundaries during periods of local\nhazard, the advantages of prevention\nover suppression, and also internal\nmatters such as the use of fire\nreserve maps for final fire reports.\nAll these points were threshed out\nilso in general discussion.\nIn the afternoon S. E. Marling,\nassistant district forester, discussed\nradio and its possibilities in relation\nto forest protection, and later Mr.\nOrchard introduced a novelty in\nthe shape of a psychology test.\nThe final event of the day was a\ndemonstration   of   a   pump   newly\nbrought out, at the city wharf.\nTHOSE PRESENT\nGuests from the United States forest service are Rolland Huff, forest\nsupervisor; L. L. Hougland, associate forester; Chester Bennett, assistant forester; and E. L. Peltier, junior forester, all of Republic, headquarters of Colville national forest.\nExecutive officials of the forest\nbranch in attendance are C. D. Orchard, Victoria, assistant chief forester; R. E. Allen, district forester;\nS. E. Marling, assistant district forester; William Holmgren, fire inspector; T. W. Brewer and F. H.\nPym. supervisors. Supervisor Pym\nis from Cranbrook.\nThe field officers embrace the six\nrangers\u2014G. C. Palethorpe, Kaslo;\nGeorge Schupe, Nelson; J. E. Mathieson, New Denver; Percy Young,\nNakusp; H. C. Nichols, Robson; and\nG. McParlon, Grand Forks; and the\nfollowing 10 assistant rangers: T.\nLaughton, Nelson; W. Colegrave,\nEdgewood; C. J. C. Slade; W. Hale.\nRenata; F. V. Webber, Kaslo; L. S.\nOtt, Nakusp; H. Holmberg, Grand\nForks; J. F. Killough, Rossland; A.\nJeffery. New Denver; and E. H.\nHird, Slocan City.\nMain Lake Ferry\nSummer Schedule\nFrom Saturday on\nBeginning Saturday, the Kootenay\nlake ferry will operate on three\nruns daily\u2014its summer schedule-\ninstead of twice daily. The schedule\nwill be:\nLeave Fraser's landing\u20148 a.m., 12\nnoon, 3 p.m.\nLeave Gray Creek\u201410:30 a.m.\n1:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m.\nLSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C-TUESDAY MORNING. APRIL 27,\nHei* Home Is in\nAppledale\nHEAD ROSSLAND\nSnag\nBOXERS READY\nBATTERY SHOW\nFans Get Bigger Dish\nin Main Event and\nSemi-Windup\nGetting the final word from Kaslo\nand Trail boxers slated to appear\non the 111th Battery program at the\narmory Weclnesday night, Walter\nFisher, promoter, stated they all\nreported themselves in top condition and all of them were out for\nvictories and return engagements.\nFans will be given a bigger dish\nln the main event a:ac: semi-windup\nbouts as Don Inkster and Ernie\nSwartz, both of Trail, are slated for\nsix rounds in the headline event\nand Art Morton of Kaslo is booked\nfor five rounds with Vic Muir of\nNelson in the semi go.\nKaslo boxers, new to Nelson fans.\nhave been given a good part of the\ncard, being named in three of the\nsix bouts scheduled. A seventh\nbout, the opener, will be \"extra\nadded\" and will bring together in\nthe curtain-raiser \"Dynamite\"\nSwayne and \"Tarzan\" Milburn.\nA great deal of the interest in\nthe coming card centres in the rematch  of \"Ace\"  Bailey  and  Tim\nLook!\nBore's the Latest\nCod Liver Oil Vitamins Now In\nTasteless Tablets. Greatest\nFlesh Builder.\nNo more will weak, thin, unfortunate\nchildren cry in protest when the nasty-\nfiBhy-taBtine, horrible-smelling Cod\nLiver Oil is brought out.\nMedical science progresses rapidly\nand now you can get from your drug-\n\u25a0gist real, genuine Cod Liver Oil Vitamins in sugar-coated tablets that young\nand old can take with ease and pleasure. Even the run-down and skinny\n.grown-ups who ought to take Cod Liver\nOil .because it is a great vitamin food\na-wl builder of healthy flesh will feci\nextremely joyful when they read this\nwelcome news.\nThin, run-down, anaemic men,\nwomen and children, who need to grow\nstrong and put on flesh, should get a\nbox of McCOY'S COD LIVER EXTRACT TABLETS and, if they don't\nput on 5 lbs. in 30 days, their money\nwill be refunded.\nOne woman gained 15 lbs. in 5 weeks,\naccording to her own Doctor\u2014another\n10 lbs. in 3 weeks\u2014a very sickly child,\naged 9, put on 12 lbs. in 7 montks, now\nplays with other children and has a\nleal thy appetite.\nJust ask for McCOY'S COD LIVER\nEXTRACT TABLETS at any good\ndruggist. Only 60c. a box. n7\n(Advt.)\nParis.   They are to occupy the ring\nfor four rounds\u2014or less.\nPeter Barton of Kaslo meets\n\"Lucky\" Laughlin, late of Vancouver, in another four-round affair.\nArchie Reuter of Kaslo will match\npunches with Stan Castle and Gordon Nelson will trade gloves with\nStan Kahlstrom in two three-round\nevents.\nSpring Nursery\nSlocks Planted\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014Spring delivery\nof nursery stock is about completed\nat Wynndel, Canyon, Erickson and\ni Creston.   Purchases  of  fruit  trees\nj for this year's planting are heavier\nI than usual. It took last teason to\n! definitely decide much of the dam-\n; age done by the end of October in\ni 1935. The quantity of trees, partic-\n| ularly cherries and the later vari-\nI eties of apples, especially Wagners,\ni that have failed to survive is quite\nheavy.    In    the    new    plantings,\ncherries  are  not being  put  in  in\nthe usual large quantities, but replaced by pears. The favored vari-\nI cties of apples for replacement are\nMcintosh   red,   delicious   and   the\nI stayman winesap.\nI    May 7 is set for the annual valley\nschools track meet to be held at\nexhibition   park.  It  is anticipated\nthe entry list will be as large as last\nyear, but due to inclement weather,\ntraining of the pupils is not so far\nadvanced.\nMrs. D. Ruttan and young son, of\nVancouver, are visiting Mrs. Rut-\ntan's mother, Mrs. R. Hopwood,\nThe finance committee of the\nCoronation day celebration central\nexecutive made almost $50 at a tag\nday in Creston Saturday. Boy Scouts\nwcre prominent in the tagging.\nMr. and Mrs. George Sinclair returned from Spokane.\nT. J. Crawford is back from Vancouver.\nArthur Nichols left for Tadanac,\nwhere he will relieve as assistant\nC.P.R. agent,\nMrs. H. H, Taylor returned from\nvisiting her son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Moore, at\nFernie.\nLandowners in the Croston Dyking district will meet Tuesday night\nto elect three trustees for the newly\ncreated district. L. T. Leveque is\nreturning officer.\nThe band under the leadership of\nG. Hamilton, inaugurated Sunday\nevening popular concerts in the\nUnited church hall Sunday, after\nthe evening service, The attendance\nwas gratifying and a pleasing variety program presented. Alfred\nMoore contributed an impressive\nviolin solo, \"The Old Refrain,\"\nMiss Iris Taylor of Dorr visited\nhcr parents, Mr. and Mrs, H. H. Taylor.\nMiss Leah Abbott of Wynndel was\nguest of Miss Nell Payne.\n(enlraliles Hit\nin House 'A'\nTeam, Hoop Final\nHouse \"A\" Gets Sharp\nCup After Central's\nSensational Play\nProving a bombshell in the knock-\nout contest of school basketball\nclubs of players under 16 years for\nthe C. M. Sharp cup and making a\nsensational cleanup of all opposing\nteams, the Central school aggregation came up against a stone wall\nthat they could not pass when they\nmet thc Nelson junior high school\nhouse \"A\" hoop squad in the final\ngame of the series in the junior high\nschool gym Monday afternoon. The\ngame ended 12-9 for the house \"A\"\nhoopsters, and the cup will rest in\ntheir hands for the year.\nThe junior high team's hard\nfought victory was wrenched from\nihe Centralites in the last minutes of\nthe last half, after being down 7-6 at\nthe end of the first, when Ernie\nDefoe ran wild to add four points\nto the eight already scored by Don\nP!ia*W\nA. Vulcano, outstanding forward\nof the Central team, practically ran\nthe opposing heavier team off its\nfeet with his wild dashes and fast\nplay. His work brought all nine\npoints to the Centralites.\nThe game was clean and exceptionally fast, but still George Wallach, referee, had to pass out several\npenalties, and the junior high was\nseverely handicapped and nearly\nlost their game when the second half\nopened with Howard Breeze having three personal penalties. A. Vulcano and W. Vulcano of the Central,\nhad single penalties, along with Don\nBlight and Ernie Defoe of the\nhouse \"A.\"\nThroughout the game the Centralites showed the benefit of Monty\nMorley's coach work.\nTeams were:\nCentral\u2014A. Vulcano, W. Vulcano,\nJoe Dycke, B. Brindle.W. Uchacz\nand R. Morrow.\nHouse \"A\"\u2014Elmer Tattrie, Don\nBlight, Howard Breeze, Jim Blaine,\nMalcolm McPherson and Ernie\nDefoe.\nDuring the series the St. Joseph's\nteam and the junior high house \"C\"\nteams fell before the Centralites.\nwith respective scores of 28-4 and\n20-12, while house \"A\" eliminated\nhouse \"D\" 10-7.\nSUGGESTS PARK\nEAD ROSSLAN!\nAVENUE, TRAIL\nParks Board Turns It\nDown as Too Near\nthe Railway\nTRAIL, B.C., April 26\u2014Charles\nCatalano suggested to the city council Monday night that it should not\nsell a piece of property at the head\nof Rossland avenue and that it be\nturned into a children's playground,\nespecially in view of the menace to\nchildren playing on Rossland avenue during hours of heavy traffic,\nAlderman J. R. Anderson, member\nof the parks board, stated that body\nhad decided against making it a\nplayground, particularly because it\nwas near a railway track. He said\nthat at the existing park off Rossland avenue it was a task to keep\nfences in repair and prevent children getting outside on the track.\nMayor Bruno LeRo.se explained\nthat as lots would be too small if\nthe property should be\" subdivided,\nthe city had decided to sell it in one\npiece for commercial purposes,\nTrail Hospital\nBoard Fearful of\nNoise of Dances\nTRAIL, B.C., April 26. \u2014 Trail-\nTadanac hospital board urged the\nTrail city council tonight to take\ncaution in the granting of a licence\nto hold dances in thc new proposed\nbuilding which is to replace the existing Union hotel block, situated on\nthe opposite side of Cedar avenue\nfrom the hospital, in a letter read\ntonight,\nThe board claimed running of a\ndance hall so close to the hospital\nwould be detrimental to patients.\nW. E. B. Monypenny, city clerk,\nsaid the city had no authority over\ndance halls as there were no licences\nrequired for holding dances.\nMayor Bruno LcRose told thc\ncouncil the owners proposed to erect\na $40,000 building on the Union\nhotel site, which he considered a\ngood revenue producer for the city\nand also a credit to it. He said the\nhall to be contained in the building\nwas not primarily for dances, according to thc builders, but for staging of private banquets and other\nprivate affairs. The matter was left\nin the mayor's hands.\nCfamvL\nMANY ARTISTIC TINTS\nAlabastine provides a ricb, beautiful,\nlasting finish at low cost. Will not rub\noff, or show brush-marks. Simple, easy-\nto-follow directions oq every package.\n5,000 dealers to serve you.\nGypsum. Lime and Alabdstine.\nCanada \u00a3imtted\nHead Office i PARIS, Ontario, Canada\nAlabastine Distributor and Dealer\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHARDWARE COMPANY LIMITED\n521 Baker St Nekon, B.C.\nGYROS ASKED\nBACK BOXLA\nAsking the support of the Nelson\nGyro club as a whole, and of every\nmember singularly as a citizen, for i\nthe Nelson Lacrosse association during the coming season, Murray\nClark, manager and coach of the\nNelson boxla team, addressed a\nmeeting of the Nelson Gyro club in\nthe Hume hotel Monday. He spoke\nbriefly on the dirth of players for\nthe game this season ond on the future of boxla as a major sport in the\nWest Kootenays. The game was\nrapidly assuming the same proportions as hockey in fans' minds.\nGordon ^nnett, who was chairman for the program committee entertained with a talk on a Jew of\nthe more adventurous details of his\nlife and his trip from the coast to\nthis district. In this he told of his\nadventures in breaking horses, and\nof his varied past employments in\nthe electrical business, mechanical\nfield, in banking, lumbering and\nmany others.\nA suggestion was heard from T. H.\nGlover concerning the holding of\na pet show, which had been tried\nwitli success in other cities. The\nmatter will be held for later consideration.\nArising from a discussion pertaining to the Gyro park and thc\nwork that was being done there\nand had been done by the city as\nwell as themselves the Gyros\nthrough a motion by George Lambert voted a grant of $125 to the\ncity council lo lie used at the discretion of the council for improvements to the park.\nThe appreciation of the club and\nvarious members individually was\nvoiced for the cooperation received from tlie city in past matters\npertaining to the park.\nCharles Morris, past president,\noccupied the chair in the absence of\nDr. H. H, MacKenzie, president.\nA guest nf the club was Mr.\nGeorge of Toronto.\nEven the young people of the\nSlocan valley are interested in the\nrecent burnings of schools and halls\nin that vicinity. Last week-end the\nyoung people turned out to the\nindignation meeting conducted by\nEnglish-speaking settlers who are\nblaming Doukhobors for the incendiarism. Above is Miss Vivian\nYoung, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A.\nC. Young, snapped beside the Apple-\ndale community hall, which was recently fired but saved from destruction.\nSlides of India\nIllustrate Talk\nMissionary   Tells   of\nWork in India; Goes\nTrail, Rossland\nSlides illustrating the work of the\nmissionaries and the church in India\nthe various buildings in the Kangra\ndistrict such as schools and hospitals, the advances in medicines and\nthe life of the natives featured the\naddress of Rev. C. R. H. Wilkinson,\nfrom the Church of England mission\nin the Kangra district. India, before\na large gathering in St. Saviour's\npro-cathedral Monday evening.\nEspecially interesting were pictures of the building of canals and\nconstruction of some power project\nin India, which is being built under\nsupervision of H. P. Thomas, onetime city engineer for Nelson.\nMr. Wilkinson, who has spent 10\nyears in India, is visiting in this\ndistrict and will be in Canada several montiis before returning to\nIndia. He spoke at the Rotary club\nmeeting Monday afternoon, Leaving\nNelson this morning he will journey\nfirst to Trail and then to Rossland.\nNew Bylaws lo\nBe Drawn Trail\nOne to Govern Stock\nin City, Another\nfor Building\nTRAIL, B. C, April 26 \u2014 That a\nbylaw governing the keeping of\ncows, pigs, goats, horses and poultry in the city would be drafted in\nthe near future was stated in a letter from J. R. Clegg, city solicitor,\nto the city council tonight.\nApplication of Charles Catalano\nto write a liability insurance policy\ncovering Coronation day was referred to the city solicitor and to the\ncoronation committee.\nTrail Boy Scouts and Girl Guides\nassociations' annual drive was recognized by a grant of $50.\nWater service application of B.,\nDePaolis, 886 Rossland avenue, and \\ honor recently conferred on him by\nInveslilule Is\nPublic Function\nTow Bishops and Many\nPriests; Reception\nto Follow\nInvestiture of Rt, Rev. Monsignor\nJ. C. McKenzie as a domestic prelate  of  the  papal   household,  the\nF. W. Bartle, Columbia avenue,\nwere approved and one from W. 0.\nSpence, Second avenue, was referred to the fire, water and light committee with power to act.\nCapt. J. Mdley of tho Salvation\nArmy, who sought a grant for\nGrace hospital at Vancouver, was\ntold that an amount would be\nforthcoming.\nAlderman J. A. Anderson was\ngiven permission to introduce the\nnew building regulation bylaw, Aldermen Hugh Bell and J. L. Kitehin being a commiitce appointed to\nreview it.\nAlderman John Young was granted permission to introduce a bylaw\nnaming a street in the sawmill subdivision Groutage avenue.\nTlie John W. Baillie land purchase bylaw was given three readings.\nhe pope, will take place this eve\nning at 7:30 o'clock in the Cathedral\nof Mary Immaculate. His excellency, Most Rev. Martin M. Johnson, D.D. bishop of Nelson, will\nmake tiie investiture, and the sermon wiU be preached by Most Rev.\nFrancis P. Carroll, D.D., bishop of\nCalgary.\nMany priests both from British\nColumbia and the state of Washington will be in attendance.\nThe function is open to the public,\nas will be the reception that will\nfollow in the parish hall, when an\naddress will be read to Monsignor\nMcKenzie, and a presentation made\nto him from the parish.\nApril   26\u2014Results\nof the Trail Bowl-\nTRAIL,   B.C.,\ntonight in games\nI ing league were:\nCanada  Billiards. 611 603 733\nBank of Montreal 623 617 633\n-1947\n-187a\nTrail  Hotel  .\nUnion  IIolol\n\"C,\\\\ 637 675-2040\n647 773 735-2153\nCranbrook Priest\nGoes to Okanagan\nRev. George Burns, O.M.I., of\nCranbrook will leave the East Kootenay city in May for Penticton to\nact as supervisor for the Okanagan\ndistrict, replacing Rev. J. Michael.\n\"Father Burns ... has been in\ncharge of St. Mary's parish for the\nnast two and a half years, and has\nbeen very popular with his parishioners,\" comments the Cranbrook\nCourier.\nThe Cranbrook priest will be suc-\n*ee-c!ed hy Rt. Rev. Monsgr. J. C.\nMcKenzae, at present of Nelson.\nTWO CARD PARTIES\nBY CRESTON WOMEN\nCRESTON, B.C. - The Catholic\nWomen's league entertained at contract bridge at tlie home of Mrs.\nCharles Davis, Rykerts, Wednesday\nPrizes were won as follows: Ladies'\nhigh, Mr.s. J. F. McN.imara, porthill; second, Mrs. R. J. Forbes; consolation, Mrs. C. W. Allan. Men's\nhigh, W. L. Bell; second, J. Ca. Connell and consolation, A. L. Palmer.\nThe same evening the Legion\nWomen's auxiliary held a military\nwhist. High score was won by table\nU.S.A.. at which were Mrs. Lowther,\nMrs. S. M. Watson, and Charles\nMoore. Consolation prize went to\ntable Ireland, with Mrs. Anderson,\nC. W. Lowther and J. Andrews\nplaying\nAPPLEDALE VISITOR\nMrs. J. V. Meyers of Nelson was\na business visitor to Appledale.\nTrail Coronation\nDay Fund Is $1831\nTRAIL, B.C., April 26.\u2014Subscriptions from the Loyal Orange\nlodge and Joe Boodry of $10 and\n$2, respectively .boosted the Trail\nCoronation Day fund to $1831 tonight.\nAttend Kootenay\nMusical Festival\nGRAND FORKS, B.C. - Among\nthose attending the Kootenay Musical festival arc Misses Marjorie, Elva\nand Glcndine Kidd, Nellie and Betsy\nGowans, Roma Donaldson, Catherine M.Therson, Betty Reynolds,\nPeggy Sutherland, Joan Pearson,\nJean Dondale, Joan Petersen, Mabel\nEureby, Gladys Meakes, Louise McPherson. Elr>;e and Doi thy Liddi-\nciat, Dorothy and Florence Landon;\nBernard Mcpherson, Bim Reynolds,\nTommy Walker, Toots and Allan\nHarrison, Ralph and Walter Meakes,\nMaui ice McKay, Sandy Gray, Mi',\nand Mrs, K. L. Landon, Mr, and\nMrs. E. Harrison, Mrs. Carl Hansen, Mrs. Tony Petersen, Mrs. H.\nEureby, Mrs. Bill Pearson, Mrs. Tom\nWalker, Mrs. D. McPherson, Mrs.\nAlex Sutherland, Mrs. E. S. Reynold?, Mrs. W. M. Gowans, and\nMrs, E. G Ommancy.\nErnest Hawkes returned to Midway after spending tlie weekend\nwith his sisler, Evelyn Hawkes.\nMiss Corine Wright returned to\n'Greenwood aft, r spending the\nweekend with Mr. and Mrs. Jack\nKcnyon.\nBIG AUDIENCE\nIS THRILLED,\nMYSTERY PLAY\nLittle Theatre's 1937\nOffering Scores\nHeavily\nSETTING AIDS\nPRESENTATION\nExcellent  Cast  Wins\nApproval for Its\nFine Work\nExcellently developed by a cast\nwhich made the most of the unusual\nsetting and novel plot, \"A Murder Has Been Arranged\", Emlyn\nWilliams' noted mystery play which\nwas presented at the Civic Theatre\nMonday night by the Nelson Little\nTheatre was thoroughly enjoyed\nby one of the largest audiences to\ngreet an amateur offering in Nelson\nthis season.\nMrs. Leslie Craufurd, directing,\nhad excellent material in the cast\nto carry the story and to forcibly\nbring its enjoyment to the audience.\nEmbracing 'ghosts of history\", a\nwiered prophecy, a murder, a dumb\ngirl ghost, a huge fortune to be inherited at the ghostly hour of 11, a\nnext-of-kin who stood to inherit if\nthe terms of the strange will should\nnot be observed\u2014all this centred\nabout a dinner party given on the\nstage of St. James theatre by Sir\nCharles Jasper, the heir, on his fortieth birthday. This all contributed\nto the strikingly different play.\nSETTING  SPLENDID\nThe interpretation of the stage\nsetting was in no small measure an\nimportant contribution to the atmosphere of the presentation. Lighted candles on a dinner table, a black\n\"drop\" and deep shadows out of\nwhich players emerged aided in the\ncreation of that atmosphere. The\ncostumes too, emphasizing the\n\"ghosts of history\" idea, aided in it.\nWith the setting so arranged and\nan appreciative audience out in\nfront, the players excelled themselves. Mrs. Frank Meagher was\ncast as \"Miss Croze\", Calvin Winter\nas \"Cavendish\", Mrs. H. D. Dawson\na? \"Mrs. Wragg\", George Greenwood as \"Jimmy North\", Mrs. Fred\nWeir as \"Beatrice Jasper\", Miss\nEileen Dill as \"Mrs. Arthur\", mother\nof Beatrice, G. S. Godfrey as \"Sir\nCharles Jasper\", Fred Weir as \"Maurice Mullins\" and Mrs. Clarence Wilson as \"a woman\".\nMiss Jean Gilker had charge of\nproperties.\nThe orchestra attending consisted\nof Ted Svenson, Clarence Wilson,\nJohn Learmonth and Miss Margaret\nGraham.\nTIMMINS, Ont. (CP) \u2014When an\noverloaded sewer backed up, it\nflooded the jail in the town hall\nbasement and 15 prisoners had to\nbe taken to Porcupine, six miles\naway.\nThree Measles'\nCases at Traill\nTRAIL, B.C., April 20 -Report I\nof Dr. J. L. Gayton, city medical J\nhealth officer, to the city council I\nMonday night showed three cases I\nof measles and one of chickenpox |\nfor the past week. He reported iivt |\nsanitary inspections and nine in*\nspections in connection with infec-\ntious disease.\nHe also made two examinations of 1\nprisoners and one inspection of the\nwatershed. At the Saturday clinic |\neight persons were treated.\nIn the evolution of the automoblli\nto its present state, over 1(10,000 original ideas have been patented ia\nthe United States.\nONGOLEUM\nGOLD\nSEAL\nSPECIAL OFFER!\nIf you purchase a genuine Congoleum\nGold Seal Rug during the period of\nthis contest and then prove to be the\nwinner of the Prize Rug, you have the\noption of taking the Prize Rug or of\nhaving the full purchase price of the\nrug you have already bought refunded.\nThis is your opportunity of getting a\nrug of larger size absolutely FREE.\nTHE GOLD SEAL\nThe Gold Seal is affixed to ali genuine\nGold Seal Gotigoleum whether in Rug\nform or By-the-yard. It is your guarantee of \"Satisfaction ... or Your\nMoney Back\". Beware of substitutes.\nTbe rug illustrated Is \"CORONATION'- Congoln\nCold Seal Hug No, 426\nStep down the street to the dealer displaying this gorgeous rug in his window.\nBeneath the Cold Seal which identifies it\nas a genuine Congoleum Gold Seal Rug, a\nsecret number has been hidden. If you\nguess the correct number, or if your guess\ncoiaie\u00ab nearest to the correct number, the\n6x9 foot rug on display \u2014 or your choica\nof any pattern in this same size\u2014is yours.\nCet an entry blank from your dealer to\u00ab\nday. Examine his showing of Congoleum\nCold Seal Rugs and see what winning the\ncontest will mean to you. Contest closes\nnoon Saturday. Winning number will be\nposted in his window the same afternoon.\nCONGOLEUaM CANADA LIMITED\nMONTREAL\nCONGOLEUM GOLD SEAL RUGS SOLD IN NELSON BY\nFOR FINE IBgiHL  - FOR FINE\nFURNITURE     ^^^^^M      FURNITURE\n409 BAKER ST. &&$& NELSON, B.C.\nCOMPLETE RANGE OF CONGOLEUM RUGS\nFreeman & Leew Furniture Co.\nEAGLE BLOCK\nTHE HOUSE OF FURNITURE STYLES\nPHONE 115\nCONGOLEUM GOLD SEAL RUGS SOLD IN NELSON BY\n**nt> s**\\. >v,j <J>. to*\nFURNITURE DEPT.\n<$ttfr*!f;<B*Q Qtampatt^\nINCORPORATED   S*\u00b0 MAY 1970.\nNELSON, B. C.\n ***************\n*-*-\u2014\n\t\n~  ' .   \u00bb. Hi \u25a0   .1 IPHanpawai\nVater Level\nU Stationary\nA lull in tht extremely slow rise\n(tlie lake occurred during the 24\npun ending Monday alternoon at\no'clock, when the West Arm stood\nt 1.35 (eet above the low water\nl\u00bbrk by the old Launch club gauge,\nIt reading being unchanged from\nnt of 24 hour? earlier.\num own sow\nDODDS\nkiDNEY\nPILLS   z\n*91 \/\nLEASK WRITES  \u25a0\nMILITIA GROUP\nTRAINING HARD\nRoute Marches Taking\nGood Deal Time;\nSail Shortly\nMembers of the Canadian militia who are going to the coronation\nol the new King and Queen in London next month are undergoing a\nstiff course of training.\nIn a letter to Major A. E. Dalgas,\nM.C, officer commanding the Ulth\nBattery R.C.A. at Nelson, Lionel\nLeask, D.C.M., battery sergeant-\nmajor, states route marches comprise\na large part of the training, Distance\nwas being emphasized, and the ser-\nj geant-major expected that a day\nor two after the date of his letter\nto make a 14-mile route march.\nMr. Leask wrote that the group\nwas receiving excellent training under splendid sergeant-majors, some\nof whom he said were as \"tough\" as\nany he had ever known.\nThe men are quartered in an exhibition building in Ottawa, and\nare obtaining fine food and lodging,\nthe letter added. Radios have been\nsupplied and a number of the men\nhave made trips to points of interest.\nTraining will conclude shortly,\nand the militia party will sail at the\nend of the week for England.\n1\nIn Hie\nMidit of\nAlterations\nBut buiineii li\ncarrying on ai\nusual with |\nbright new\nitoek of spring\nFootwear.\nR. ANDREW\n& COMPANY\nLeaders In Fooffashlon\nNew Polls Serve\nMining Sections\nOf Five New Ones in\nRiding Four Are\nThis Class\nFive new polling centrei will figure in the coming election in Nelson-\nCreston riding, the voters' list for\nwhich Is now being printed, the\ntotal number of such centres being\nbrought up to 38. The five new ones\nare Arrow Creek, Bayonne Mine,\nSanca, Sheep Creek and Second\nRelief. All of these but the first\nserve mining areas.\nThe 25 other centres to have polls\nare Balfour, Benton Spur, Boswell,\nCamp Lister, Canyon City, Crawford Bay, Crescent Valley, Creston,\nErickson, Erie, Fruitvale, Granite\nMill, Gray Creek, Harrop, Kitchener, Kokanee, Kootenay Bay, Nelson, Procter, Queen's Bay, Reclamation Farm, Riondel, Robson,\nSalmo, Shirley, Sirdar, Slocan Perk,\nSouth Slocan, Syringa Creek.\nThrums, Willow Point, Wynndel\nand Ymir.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C\u2014TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 27. 19S7.\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nThis column is conducted by Mrs. M. J. Vigneux. All news of a\nsocial nature, including receptions, private entertainment, personal\nitems, marriages, etc., will appear in this column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux at her home, 519 Silica street.\n**mr*^*-^-^-*fm**j-m\nALPINE BRAND\nEVAPORATED MILK\nA Western Product\nfor Western People\nCreamy Freshness!\nCreamy Consistency!\nyet Evaporated and Sterilized\nwith all the Vitamins retained.\nWa Knew: It's really good\nfor you and youril\nBuy with confldenea at your\nlocal grocer.\nPEARS\nCarefully Ripenedjor Flavor\nNo other fruit offers the \"turn-out\"\nappeal and flavor of Royal City\nPeeir^perlectly canned in the right\nsyrup to make your dessert the\ncrowning course of your meal.\nMr. and Mrs, A. G. Gelinas, Victoria street, entertained at dinner\nSunday night in honor of Rt. Rev\nMonsignor J. C. McKenzie, who will\nleave for his new post at Cranbrook.\n\u2022 *   .\nLeigh McBride, son of Mr. and\nMrs. R- L. McBride, Hoover sireel,\nreturned yesterday morning from\nEdmonton where ho attends University of Alberta.\nM. C. Donaldson of Salmo visited\ntown yesterday.\n\u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. Morrison of Beaverdell\nwas a week-end visitor in town. She\nwas en route to Kslevan, Sask..\nwhere her mother is seriously ill.\nMrs. M. Heddle of Cedar Point\nspent yesterday in Nelson.\nA quiet wedding was solemnized\nMonday in tiie Cathedral of Mary\nImmaculale at 0 o'clock when Mrs.\nLidai Cacian of Trail became the\nbride of Tranquile I.isr.ato o[ Nelson.\nThey were attended by Mr. and Mrs.\nE. Stangherlin as witnesses. They\nwill make their home at 620 Falls\nstreet.\nRt. Rev. Monsignor A. K. Mclntyre of Rossland will be in the\ncity today to attend the investure\nof Rt. Rev. Monsignor J. C. McKenzie ill the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate tonight at 7:30 o'clock.\nR. B. McKay ot New Denver visited town at the week' :nd.\n.      9      9\nMr. end Mrs. John 0. Dolphin,\nwho were guests at the homes of\ntheir parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. Dolphin and Mr. and Mrs. Charles F.\nMcHardy for a few days, returned to\nTrail yesterday.\n...\nBlake Allan, who attends University of Alberta at Edmonton, returned home yesterday to visit his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilfrid Allan,\nRosemont, over the holidays.\nA. K. Murray and son of Yahk\nvisited town at the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nMrs. Jack Schofield returned to\nTrail yesterday after visiting Mr.\nand Mrs. Howard Carlin, Carbonate\nstreet, for several days.\na \u00ab      \u2022      \u2022\nMrs. I. Sterling of Salmo was a\nvisitor in town at the week-end.\nMrs. E. J. Burgess of Kaslo was a\nvisitor to the city at the week-end.\nA. Dufour. Carbonate street, is a\npatient at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nJack Kerr of Trail is a city visitor.\nMr. and Mrs. Paul Lincoln and\nMr. and Mrs. J. T. Andrews entertained St. Saviour's church chon\nmembers at an evening pa,rty in the\nLincoln residence on Stanley street,\nhonoring R. Sydney Horswill, who\nleft Saturday morning as Wesl\nKootenay's student representative to\nthe coronation. Presentation of a\nGladstone travelling bag was made\nby Rev. J. G. Holmes to \"Syd.\" Invited guests included Rev. and Mrs.\nJ G. Holmes, Mr. and Mrs. A. T.\nHorswill, Ven. Archdeacon and Mrs\nFred H. Graham, Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Wady, Mr and Mrs. Leslie\nCraufurd, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur\nStringer, Mr. and Mrs J. 0. Carmichael, Mr. and Mrs. D. Smith. Mr.\nand Mrs. Townshend, Mrs. Marsden, Miss Mary Long. Miss Joan\nWaters. Miss Jill Wigg, Miss Kay\nGallaher, Miss Ruth Allan, Mis-;\nFrances Lincoln. Miss Doroth1'\nWheeler, Miss Mary Walker, Miss\nHalworth, Miss Maybelle Stephenson, Miss Margaret Graham,  Miss\nRene Edmondson, Miss Sybil Bradshaw, Miss Maude Dolphin, Miss\nI.oleta Horstead, Harold Long, Dave\nGibbon, Stanley Horswill, John\nMorey, John Harding, James Bell.\nFred Irvine, Jack Whitfield, Bennv\nMonteleone, Vincent Fink and Syd\nHorswill.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. J. M. Gordon, Josephine street, have returned from\nVancouver where they spent a few-\ndays.\ni   \u2022   \u2022\nT. L. Bloomer was in Nelson from\nCastlegar yesterday.\nRev. J. J. Cheevers of the Slocan\nmissions is a guest at the home oi\nGregoire Choquette. Latimer strcel,\nwhile in lown to attend the investure of Rt. Rev. Monsignor J. C.\nMcKenzie this evening.\nRev. J. A. Donnell left yesterday\nfor Vancouver.\n* \u2022   *\nMiss Jane Diamond, who attend.-\nUniversity of Alberla at Edmonton,\nwas in town yesterday en route to\nspend her vacation with her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. R. W. Diamond, at\nTrail.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. P. Stanley Bostock,\nLatimer street, and their son Bobby,\nwere visitors to Boswell Sunday\nwhere Mr. Bostock gave a talk at\nthe Ypres celebration.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss Helen Scully, Victoria street,\nvisited Spokane at the week-end.\n* *   .\nGordon Berry of Trail was a\nweek-end visitor in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. H. Carlin left yesterday to\nvisit Mr. and Mrs. Jack Schofield\nat Trail.\n\u2666 \u2022   \u2022\nAlfred Lucas of the Reno mine\nvisited town at the week-end.\n...\nMrs. J. Innis of Vallican, who is\na patient in Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, is improving. Her mother-\nin-law, Mrs. Innis, also of Vallican,\nis the guest of Mr. and Mrs.'j. H.\nLemmon, Fairview.\n* .   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. Smythe, Carbonate street, have as their guest\ntheir son Harold, who returned yesterday from Edmonton where at attends University of Alberta.\n...\nMiss J. StDenis of Deer Park is\nin the city a guest of Mrs. Margaret\nMadden, Baker street.\nG. Stuart Macintosh returned yesterday from a week in Saskatchewan. Mrs. Macintosh, who visited\nDr. and Mrs. W, A. Fergie at Cranbrook, returned yesterday morning.\nMrs. G. C. Arneson and her daughter and son, Molly and Bruce, were\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Allison\nat Trail while attending the musical\nfestival.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nW. Barber of Trail spent the weekend with friends in Nelson.\n* \u2666   *\nMr. and Mrs. William J. Sturgeon.\nThird street, had as their guest Mrs.\nSturgeon's brother. Jerry Towgood\nof Ihe Queen mine.\nMrs. B. Watson of Erie visited\nNelson at the week-end.\nJ. P. Fore of Victoria, formerly of\nNelson, visited town at the weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. Carncross of Moose\nJaw were in town to attend the\nfuneral of the latter's father, A. T.\nPark.\n...\nMr.  and  Mrs.   L.  H.  Choquette,\nMENUS\nRECIPES\nand\nHINTS\nGood\nBy\nMrs.\nMary\nMorton\nHousekeeping,   b\nMENU   HINT\nBaked Fish Potato Chips\nSpinach en Casserole\nGreen Onions\nStuffed Date and Pineapple Salad\nCheese Wafers     Tea or Coffee\nNow that the warmer days arc\nhere, how about letting the heavy\npastries, etc.. for a dessert lapse, a:\nit were, and having a fruit salad in\ntheir place?\nTODAY'S RECIPES\nSPINACH   EN   CASSEROLE   -\nOne and one-half pounds spinach,\ntwo tablespoons vegetable oil 01\nbutler, two tablespoons flour, one-\nhalf teaspoon salt, one-sixteenth\nteaspoon pepper, one cup milk, two\nhard cooked cgfis, three tablespoons\nbuttered crumbs. Remove roots of\n.'\u2022pinach and wash in several water.s.\nCook slowly in ils own juices, uncovered, 10 minutes. Season, Mell\nbutter, add flour and seasoning?\nand stir until well blended. Drain\njuices from spinach and add milk.\nAdd to the butter and flour mixture\nand cook until thickened. In a buttered casserole place a layer of\nspinach; add half of the egf! and\nsauce. Repeat layers. Sprinkle witn\nbuttered crumbs. Bake in 375-dc-\ngree F. oven for 15 minutes.\nSTUFFED DATE AND PINEAPPLE  SALAD -  Twelve  slice?\ncanned pineapple, 12 pasteurized\ndates, 12 nut meats, salad dressing,\none-half package cream cheese, two\ntablespoons cream, lettuce. Stuff\ndates with cheese which has been\nrubbed to a paste with the cream.\nPress a nut meat into the centre of\neach date. Arrange two slices of\npineapple on a bed of lettuce so\nthat cdyes overlap. Place a stuffed\ndate in centre of each slice. Top\nwith salad dressing.\nPURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES BETTER BREAD\nFACTS   AND   FANCIES\nBuy for Tomorrow\nThis advice is good for brides\nand grooms and also for those who\nhave been married for years and\nare purchasing ncw furniture for\ntheir home.\nBuy furniture so that afler it is\nno longer new you can still be\nproud of it.\nFurniture stores which are interested in service as well as sales try\nto sell furniture that will stand the\ntest of years.\nYears from now you should view\nthe pretentious set or a simple chair,\nbought today, with pride.\nStart Pussywillow!\nCut long branches of willow\nwhen buds begin to appear and\nplace them in receptacle holding\nplenty of waler, in a warm room.\n3uds will soon burat and add a\ndecorative touch. As small roots\nform, add garden soil to water, a\nlittle each day, until container is\nfilled. By that time the roots will\nbe well established and leaves will\nappear. The branches will then be\nready for outside planting. Remove\nfrom container, but do not disturb\nroots. Plant in a sunny location\nand keep well watered the first\nsummer. Bushes grow quickly if\nstarted this way.\nMANY ATTEND\nTHE FUNERAL OF\nANDREWPARK\nOld Timer of Nelson Is\nCarried to His\nFinal Rest\nFuneral of Andrew T. Park, 411\nRichards street, who died suddenly\nat the home of a neighbor Friday\nafternoon, was held in Nelson Monday, services being held at the first\nPresbyterian church and at the\ngraveside in the city cemetery. The\nservices were conducted by Rev.\nJames Ritchie, assisted by Rev. Frederic St. Denis of Trail.\nThe hymns sung were: \"Unto the\nHills Around Do I Lift Up My\nLonging Eyes\" and \"Sunset and\nEvening Star.\" Many beautiful floral\ntributes were received and a large\nnumber of residents attended to pay\ntheir last respects to an old timer of\nthe cily.\nTwo of his sons, Melvin of Spokane and Norman of Butte, Mont,\nwere among the pallbearers, the\nothers being J. B. Gray, George\nSteele, James May and Nelson Winlaw.\nMr. Park, aged 81, came to Nelson\nover 45 years ago from Fullerton,\nOnt., with Mrs. Park. He and Mrs.\nPark had been married 53 years,\nand celebrated their golden wedding\nthree years ago.\nHe worked for a number of years\nat the old Hall Mines smelter at\nNelson, and then in the Canadian\nPacific railway shipyards here.\nSurviving besides Mrs. Park are\na daughter, Mrs. L. D. Carncross of\nMoose Jaw, Sask.; three sons, Norman of Butte, Melvin ot Spokane\nand Fergus of Vancouver; five\ngrandchildren; and a brother and\ntwo sisters in Ontario.\n5\u00a30\n- PAGc mt\nBrother Trail\nHan Dies\nRotarians Elect\nEight Directors\nDaily News Trophy Is\nDisplayed; Irwin\nIs Thanked\nDirectors of the Nelson Rot&ry\nclub to hold office for the year beginning July 1 were elected at Mont\nday's meeting, from among the nominations made a few weeks ago.\nThe  eight, men  elected were  Dr.\nD. W. McKay, Wilfrid Allan, J. P.\nFink, W. B. Bamford, H. M. Whim-\nster. Dr. John Gansner, President\nR. E. Potter, and Vice-President A-\nT. Horswill. The new directors will\nprobably name the officers for the\nye3r in a few days.\nR. E. Potter, president and A.\nT. Horswill. vice-president, were\nelected delegates to the conference\nof Rotary district No. 1, to be held\nat Spokane May 2-5.\nThe Nelson Daily News trophy\nfor service club and lodge choirs,\nwon by the Nelson Rotary choir\nat the Kootenay Music festival at\nTrail last week, was on display, and\nJohn Smith reported on the event.\nThe Nelson Rotarians have made 8\nclean sweep of this event, for the\nfour years it has beeh on the festival agenda, defeating the Trail Rotarians the second and third years,\nbut having no competition the first\nand fourth. The report of the adjudicator as read by Secretary A. A. Perrier credited the choir with \"good\ntime and excellent rhythm\", among\nother laudatory notes.\nA vote of thanks to Fred L. Irwin, for training and conducting the\nchoir, was recorded, on motion of\nE. E. L. Dewdney and W. E. Wasson.\nCalvin   Winter,  recently   elected\na member, was initiated with the\n\u2022Welcome Song\", and designated for\nclub purposes as \"Cal\".\nCaptain H. C. Fry, D.S.C, R.N.R,\nof the Anchor Steamship Line, pic-\nlured above, died at his home at\nRutherglen, Soctland, aged 49, according to word received by his\nbrother, R. C. Fry of Trail. Captain\nFry was decorated during the war\nby the King of Italy and promoted\nhy the British admiralty for valor in\nsaving the lives of a number aboard\na torpedoed Italian hospital ship and\nfor saving others immediately after\nfrom a sinking Italian mine layer.\nHe was decorated also by the King\nof Serbia tor his work in taking off\nrefugees during the evacuation of\nDuranzo under heavy iheUfin. During the Zeebrugge attack he. wa? in\ncharge of a freighter and fad instructions to sink; (t at the entrance\nto Dunkirk harbor in the evwt oi\nfailure p{ the attack, but tbJ| WW\nnot necessary. For his services during the war ho was awarded the\nDistinguished Service Cross of Great\nBritain, King George V decorating\nhim.\nLatimer street, entertained last evening at dinner in compliment to Rt.\nRev. Monsignor J- C. McKenzie, who\nwill be leaving the end of the week\nfor his new home at Cranbrook.\nJames Kinahan, Pat Haszard and\nAlex Stephenson, all of Trail, were\nwek-end guests at the Kinahan\nhome on Silica street.\nMr. and Mrs. Henri Gagnon, Carbonate street, have as their guest\nRev. W. D. McKenzie of Kelowna,\nwho arrived last night lo attend the\ninvestiture service of Rt. Rev. Monsignor J. C. McKenzie, at the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate this evening.\na    t    I\nMrs. James H. Doyle, who spent\na few days in lown left Sunday for\nhcr home at Vernon.\nft. C. Fry of Trail, above, who has\nreceived word of the death of his\nbrother in Scotland, saw his brother\nlast year when he went to the old\ncountry Immediately following the\nVimy Pilgrimage. Captain Fry was\nin ill health then.\nCatherin Argyle\nGets High Marks\nMusical Festival\nWinning the violin solo for competitors under 12 years of age\nCatherin M. Argyle of Nelson, received 88 marks, the highest given\nto any one competitor in the recent\nKootenay Musical festival held in\nTrail.\nDog-Tooth Violets\nand Triliums Out\nDog-tooth violets are in bloom on\nthe hill east of Anderson creek, and\ntriliums are out in Gyro park, according to W. K. Gunn, who was oul\ndoing a little botanizing Sunday.\nDURHAM, England (CP) .-Sybil,\nLady Eden, present when her son,\nAnthony Eden, foreign secretary,\nwas given an honorary degreaj at\nDurham university, said \"we winked at each other as he passed.\"\nAll salt eaten in Chile must contain 4 per cent of sodium acid phosphate, according to a new health\nruling, following the discovery that\nChileans need more phosphorus in\ntheir diet.\nOrange Pekoe Blend\n-SA1AM\nTEA\nTWO HOLIDAYS\nSLATED IN MAY\nCoronation, Empire\nDays; June9 to Be\nLegal Holiday\nTwo public holidays and a legal\nholiday will feature May and June\noj thil year.\nMay 1?, the day of the coronation\nof King George and Queen Elizabeth, will be a ful! public holiday,\nas will May 24, Empire day.\nThe birthday of the King ls to be\ncelebrated June 9 by proclamation.\nTliis will be a legal .holiday only,\naffecting schools, banks, government\noffices and so on, but not business\nhouses.\nBLACKHEADS\nBlackheads go quickly by a simple\nmethod that just dissolves them. Get\ntwo ounces of peroiine powder from\nyour druggist, rub this with a hot. wel\ndoth gently over the blackhead?\u2014aind\nyou will wonder where they have\ngone. Have a Hollywood complexion.\n(Advt.)\nNelson Yiolinist\nWins Compet.thn\nThird Year in R \u2022'\nWhen Miss Daisy Norris of KJs >\nwon the violin solo class Ior cr.r\npetitors under 19 years at the Kootenay Musical festival at Trail it w:s\nher third successive victory in this\nclass. It was repoated as her second.\nTalking About\nVARNISH\n\u2014You'll want a product\ndeveloped by experts specially for floors and woodwork. C-l-L chemical laboratories produce C-l-L Varnish, highly resistant to wear,\nand Quick Drying.\nJ. R. BAILEY\nPainter\u2014rDecorator\n506 Stanley St.\nThere's a Swing\nto the\nNew Slips\nSatins.'   Crepes!\nTailored  or  Lace\nTrimmed    Styles.\n$]_.00to\n$2-95\nPerfect for wear 'neath\nyour new frocks are the\nnew spring slips. They fit\nand mold your figure\nbeautifully. Strong seams\nand adjustable shoulder\nstraps.\nRayons, Satins and Crepes.\nSizes 32 to 44.\nTaffeta Petticoats for wear 'neath your tailored suit. Red\nGreen, Black and White. (1 QC\nEACH tpl.jD\nJerman Hunt's\nPhone 200     Dry Goods and Ready-to-Wear      Baker St.\nTHIS WHOLE WHEAT\nBREAKFAST CEREAL\n[A 100% WHOLE WHEAT CEREAL\nALL THE ENERGY!\n..ALL THE PROTEIN!\n..AU THE MINERALS I\n..ALL THE VITAMINS I\n...ALL THE BRAN!\nWaVaaaaaajMajgfaw\u2014\u2014 la\u2014aaftwaaaffaaaa*\nAS DELICIOUS A| THEY ABE  NUTRITIOUS\nMUFFETS\nHAND\nWHOLE WHEAT BISCUIT!* ,.. MADE BY THE QUAKER OATS COMPANY\n \u2014\u2014\"\t\n1\u2014\u2014-\n\u25a0     \u25a0 \"\u2022mi'm*:*.!'*...(..\nPAGE SIX-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.\u2014TUESDAY MORNING. APRIL 27, 1937.\nJMumt Batlg Hitm\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished   every   morning   except   Sunday   by\n' the NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n216   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   of   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe   Canadian   Press    Leased    Wire   News    Service.\nTUESDAY, APRIL 27, 1937.\nNO REWARD IN SIGHT FOR FORMER\nKING ALFONSO\nSpanish royal family is reported by one of its members to have put up its last cent in financing General\nFranco's revolution, even selling the family's jewels to\nraise funds. The contribution of former King Alfonso is\nplaced at $10,000,000.\nIf this is true the only conclusion that can be reached\nis that Alfonso has no more of a gift for picking winners\nthan he had for rulership of a nation. He lost his crown\nand throne because he made a mess of his job. Now it\nlooks as if he needs a guardian.\nThat is not to say that Franco may not win the civil\nwar. He looks to have an even chance. But even a\nFranco victory would be most unlikely to mean that Alfonso\nwould also win. If the general is enough of a dictator to\ncontrol Spain he will not be at all disposed to vacate the\ndriver's seat in favor of the former king. That is not the\nway of dictators. Hitler (lid not send out any hurry up\ncalls for the former kaiser when he got Germany under\nhis thumb, nor did Mussolini adopt a by-your-leave attitude toward the King of Italy when he took charge of\naffairs in that country.\nSo that Alfonso is in the unhappy position of being an\nalmost certain loser no matter which side is victorious in\nthe Spanish struggle, unless he is content with a \"moral\"\nvictory. It is most improbable, however, that his objective\nwas of an altruistic nature when he handed the Bourbon\nbankroll over to Franco.\nJAPANESE POLITICS\nPolitics in Japan presents striking contrasts with\npolitics on this continent. But there are certain similarities, as the election campaign which is now in full swing\nin the Flowery Kingdom reveals. The contending parties\ndelight in hurling evasive slogans at one another.\nThe government, which is largely dominated by the\narmy, finds its chief opposition in the old political parties.\nThe premier, Senjuro Hayashi, proposed to appeal to the\npeople on a platform which called for clarification of the\nnational structure, replenishment of national defence, and\nexpansion of national industrial power. His ministers\nfelt that these principles were a little too vague to mean\nanything to the people, so after a terrific struggle it was\ndecided to elaborate them. Finally an eight-plank platform\nwas constructed in which.details were set forth to elaborate\nthe abstract principles.\nClarification of the national structure and unification\nof the national spirit were explained as meeting the extension of compulsory education and unspecified educational reforms. Political and administrative reform means\nthe reform of the election machinery, and establishment of\nan arr ministry to combat Russian superiority in aviation.\nForeign policy with unified national support is a face-\nsaving manner of implying that the army will no longer\ncarry things with a high hand in China.- No details are\ngiven on the principle of replenishment of national defence\nand preparation of a national mobilization, but it indicates that the army heads would like to take a leaf out of\nMussolini's book. Stabilization of the people's livelihood\nand social reforms are elaborated as meaning health improvement, social insurance and workers' welfare. Expansion of national industrial power may mask another\nadvance toward Fascism, for it i.s explained as meaning\ndevelopment of supplies of iron and liquid fuel, and coordinated control of business, support of small businesses\nnnd better control of electric power. In rehabilitation of\nfishing and agricultural communities, a bid is made for\nthe depressed masses of rural Japan. It is explained as\nmeaning agricultural insurance, promotion of rural industries, and inculcation of solidarity among rural communities, which again sounds like II Duce. The final principle taxation reform and control of rising prices, sounds\nfamiliar to western ears. In detail it means adjustment\nof tax systems lo equalize the burdens, control of speculation in commodities, improvement in the trade balance,\ndevelopment of foreign trade, and aid to emigration.\nAgainst these planks the parties raise slogans like\n\"Clean Politics,\" \"Honest Elections\" and others which\nsound like our old war-cry \"Turn the Rascals Out.\"\nThe election result will be of great importance to the\nWHAT DO YOU THINK ?\nAll letters to tht editor must be signed .with the name of the\nwriter. A nom de plume may be used for publication if desired.\nLines In typewritten copy should be double spaced.\nSIGN OF THE TIMES\nSummer must be coming.\nI was attacked by my first mosquito on Sunday.\nHe had been doing a good drilling\njob- when I clipped him.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nWITH THE CORONATION\nCROWD\nThe boys have heard from Lionel\nLeask, who is with the Canadian\nmilitia contingent slated for the\ncoronation trip to London.\nCanada's coronation contingent\nnow assembled at Ottawa is not a\nregiment of six-footers like the\nGrenadier Guards or the Australian\ntroops, who are to march in London's \"big parade.\" The Canadians\nwere selected for their military experience and service rather than\ntheir physique.\nMore than half of them fought in\nthe great war, and it is considered\na tribute to Canadian veterans that\nso large a proportion of the coronation contingent now mobilized and\ntraining in Ottawa are men who\nwent over the top or served the\nguns in France.\nCol. J. E. L. Streight, M.C, M.P.,\nwho commands the contingent,\nspeaks in the highest terms of thc\nmen as they go through their exercises at Lansdowne park. \"It is\nan army without crime,\" said the j\nbronzed leader. \"Not one black\nmark thus far has been made against\na single member of the contingent.\nThe men have been put on their\nhonor, given their freedom to come\nand go after the day's duties are\ndone and they have played the game\nlike gentlemen.\"\nThe men are delighted with the\naccommodation provided for them\nin Ottawa. They have excellent\nsleeping quarters in the exhibition\ngrandstand building. Each man has\nhis own cot and there are adequate\nsanitary arrangements, shower baths\nand a recreation room.\nOn the ground floor is the men's\ndining hall, and their menus are\nwidely different from the bully and\nhard-tack of war days. The lunch\ntable groaned under the following\nmenu: Cream of tomato soup, fish,\nroast sirloin of beef, creamed pars-\nnips and potatoes, bread and butter, j\ncottage pudding, custard sauce and\ntea or coffee. For breakfast today\nthey had rolled oats or other cereal,\nsausages and eggs or bacon and eggs,\nsteamed apples, tea or coffee. Tonight for dinner there were assorted\ncold meats, hashed brown potatoes\nand baked beans, pickled beets, ice\ncream and cake, tea or coffee.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMORE AND MORE\nAnd speaking of the coronation\ncrowd\u2014I was at the station to bid\nSyd Horswill adieu. He is the Kootenay representative. Syd carried\naway a monster orange I tucked into\nhis pocket. It had been given me\nprior to that by Vic Foltz. Hugh\nMiddleton and Jack Stout and Peter\nLeslie were having a grand time\nplaying the pipes. Al Horswill,\nSyd's father, was all excitement.\nRobert Smillie, acting principal of\nthe high school, was as proud ,as\npunch and took time to compare\nthe scholars of today with the scholars of years past at the high school,\nBert Whimster and Russel Potter\nwere at the sendoff\u2014and they were\ndressed in their tuxedo suits\u2014having just returned from Trail\u2014Various members of the board of trade\nwere present \u2014 Albet Eucby was\nstrong man and boosted Syd atop\nhis shoulder\u2014The three bandsmen\nfrom the school did well\u2014in spite\nof some bad notes\u2014which seemed to\nfit into the occasion anyway\u2014I met\nWm. Crawford who was in from\nErie and there was J. G. Mclnnis,\nthe mining man from Salmo\u2014who\nwas being paged by Bill Bunyan\u2014\nand they were pulling some gag on\nspelling of trick words\u2014my average\nwas very low\u2014Talked a little soft-\nball with Bob Patterson\u2014and discussed the Doukhobor situation with\nLeo Connor \u2014 Ben Whiteside was\nlamenting the fact he was growing\nolder every day\u2014and 1 .said a chap\nLs as old as he feels\u2014Noticed Freddie Fawcett enjoying a ride on his\nbicycle\u2014and it brought to mind the\nlarge number of bicycles now in use\nin Nelson\u2014\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOLD STUFF\nAfter reading some of the strike\nlenders' statements, Old Timer said\nhe could remember the time when\nthe only hand who could talk that\n\u25a0way to li is boss was the ventriloquist's dummy.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHERE AND THERE\nHere and there \u2014 Fred Hamar\nsmiling between strokes of a brush\nas he painted a sign\u2014Dr. H. B.\nMorrison talking mining on a street\nTRAILJUNIORBAND\nMEMBERS OVER\nAGE?\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014In your Issue of Monday\nmorning was published the last of\nthe winners in the musical festival\nheld at Trail. One of these honors\nhas been won in such a grossly dishonest way that it should be brought\nto the notice of the public, namely\n\u2014\"Junior Bands\". The so-called\n\"junior\" band of Trail had among\nits members \"men\" with full\ngrown moustaches and admitting\ntheir age as over 26 years. The official syllabus states junior bands\nare to be under 18 years of age,\nand that no contestant shall have\nreached that age either before or\neven during the festival. I ask you,\nis this fair to the other band who\nwere in this competition who\nrange from just under 13 years to\nunder 17 years? And what is to\nprevent other contestants from\nfollowing this example if they know\nthey can get away with it? The\ncup which was given fo: this competition should be taken over by\nthe trustees of same to be held for\nfuture use as this band has no\nright to it having taken it under\na false entry.\nTrusting this will be taken up\nby the right parties, the executive\nof the festival.\n-JULIA M. BLACKWELL\nNelson, B. C.   -\nNATURALIZE DOUKHOBORS\nAND ISOLATE UNWILLING\nMEMBERS,    HE    SUGGESTS\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014I have been following this\ncolumn of letters and have taken\nnote of what the English speaking\npeople think of our present Douk-\nfiobor troubles and what the Doukhobors think themselves. I would\ntherefore appreciate to be allowed\nspace to express my opinions on the\nsubject.\nWe cannot blame all Doukhobors\nfor the fire outrages, especially we\ncannot blame the majority of our\nfriends and neighbors, the Independent Doukhobors. To the largest extent they have abided to our Canadian laws.\nHowever, I shall not say the same\nfor the Community Doukhobors as\nthere are certain laws that they do\nnot abide by, such as marriage,\nbirth and death laws. Being a Canadian citizen and abiding to these\nlaws, I cannot see the reason ,these\npeople are allowed such privileges.\nWhat would happen if an English\nspeaking Canadian should break\none of such laws? The sect of Sons\nof Freedom are far more extreme\nthan are the Community of Doukhobors.\nBoycotts, curfews or making an\nopen season on all Doukhobors\nwould only make known to the\nworld at large that We Canadians\nand British subjects in British Columbia are nothing but a bunch of\nhotheads, ready for violence whether we have evidence as to who are\nthe guilty persons or not. If this\nIr, to be a sample of British justice,\nI'll turn and ji>eeome a Doukhobor\nmyself.\nWe elect responsible persons into\npowr* to govern our country for\nus and this is a job for such parties\nand the government at large to do\nduty in according with British justice. If such parties, and .such government is willing to sit tight and\ndo nothing to remedy the situation,\nit is then high time that a govern\nment was elected In British Columbia that would do so.\nBritish Columbia police are steadily losing the respect of we Cana- j\ndians as this is not the first time\nthat these burnings have occurred\nand convictions of the guilty persons did not come about. This case\nis entirely out of the hands of tlie\npolice and their ordinary routine.\nThe only solution to the problem\nthat I would suggest, is that our government take measures and find out\nwhich of the Doukhobors in B, C\nreally want to be Canadian citizens\nand become British subjects and in\ntime give such Doukhobors citizen\npapers, the remaining Doukhobors\nwho want to make a country within\nour country by living under the\ncommunity system and who do not\nlike our laws to be removed and\nplaced under isolation in some\nnorthern territories where there are\nno Inidans to interfere with. If\nthey do not like the arrangement,\nthey can be given the option of\nleaving the Canadian soil.\nTo the benefit of British Columbia and to Canada, tillers of the soil\nare a necessity, and Doukhobors are\nknown to be such, and as long as\nhe or she is willing to live as the\nrest of us, he or she is perfectly\nwelcome to live amongst us, in my\nopinion.\nA. S. WOYNA.\nAppledale, B. C.\nGives Line Up of\nKing's Broadcast\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014May it be suggested that\nwhen the Coronation day committee is making a final lineup of the\nprogram events, consideration be\ngiven to the matter of the time of\nHis Majesty's broadcast to the Empire peoples so that loyal citizens\nmay have the opportunity of listening in and at the same time not be\ndeprived of participating in the\ncommunal festivities.\nAccording to English press despatches, the King's broadcast will\nbe the culmination of the Coronation night broadcast entitled \"The\nEmpire's homage\", and on this historic occasion, he will speak into a\nspecial microphone at Buckingham\npalace. As his father talked to \"My\nbeloved people\" on the memorable\nChristmas day broadcasts of the\npast, so will the newly crowned\nmonarch speak to his Empire. Stan-\nIcy Baldwin, the viceroy of India,\nthe prime ministers of the dominions and representatives of other\nunits of the Empire will also take\npart in the broadcast.\nIt is understood that for forty\nminutees from 7:20 p.m. Greenwich\ntime\u2014(Nelson time is eight hours\nbehind of this! listeners not only\nin Britain, but throughout the Empire and in other parts of the world,\nwill be taken, by radio westward\naround the globe till the prime\nminister of Great Britain, in his\nclosing address, leads up to the message from King George to his\npeople.\nG. S. R.\nNelson, B. C.\nj    10 YEARS AGO\n1 From Nelson  Dally News Files\n$\t\n(April 27, 1927)\nSheriff J. H. Doyle left for Calgary.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Connie Martin of the Central'\nschool teaching staff, has returned '\nafter spending the Easter holidays j\nin Armstrong.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPresentation of the Daily News\ninter-city bowling cup marked the\nbanquet of the inter-city bowlers in\nthe Elk's hall. Winning players of\nthe top Trail team were: Alderman\nA. A. Milligan, C. A. Cawley, George\nPasquale, Jim Hanson and Joe Vannatter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBorn to Mr. and Mrs. J. K. Cool-\nidge, Gore street, April 24, a daughter.\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u00bb   \u2022   t\nMrs. Bryce Wallace of Cranbrook\nwas elected president of the Kootenay presbyterial of the United\nChurches\" of Canada during the convention in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMEMPHIS\u2014As  additional levees\nare forced out by the flood waters at\nleast six more cities in Arkansas and\nMississippi have been overrun and\nadditional thousands of acres of\nlands inundated. The death toll from\nthe largest flood in history has\nreached 500 persons.\nMrs. R. Stevenson and Mrs. R.\nHenderson of Salmo are guests ai\nthe Madden.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Roy Pollard left for Cranbrook.\n\u2022 *   \u00ab\nR. L. McBride, Dr. E. G. Smyth\nand B. Townshend returned from\na motor trip to Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCharles Brett and his bride returned from their honeymoon spent\nin the south.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Olive V. Abbey of the Hume\nteaching staff returned from vacationing in Kaslo.\nSonnysayings\nThere the is, Baby\u2014like a prin.\ncess in a tower! We pot t' let her\nknow us is standin' by t' resker hcr j\n| if they is a chance I\n\u25a04\ncorner\u2014Billy Mack out for an afternoon stroll \u2014 Louis Choquetle declaring \"it certainly is a grand day\"\n\u2014A. Stanley Horswill walking toward the post office with his pipe\nin his hand\u2014and I noticed he always carries it the same way-\nfingers around the bowl with the\nstem standing straight up pointing\ntoward his head \u2014 Bob Burgess\nstanding on a street in his working\nuniform \u2014 Thomas McKechnie out\nfor a stroll\u2014Beautiful flower beds\nat the Mawer property on cemetery\nroad\u2014principally yellows and purples \u2014 David Bain manipulating a\ncamera on Sunday\u2014Howard Murphy waving a greeting with a varnish brush\u2014\n\u2022    aa    \u2022\nTRAINED FLEAS\n\"Trained fleas that just arrived in\nBoston from England can walk a\nwire.\" In fact they were probabiy\nreared on a wire-haired terrier.\nGUARANTEED\n\"Are you quite sure this is a gen-\nuine antique?\"\n\"Absolutely. What's more it's the\nlatest thing in antiques.\"\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nFOR   HIGH  THINKING\nTne people of the world can be\nclassified as those who put their\nfeet on their desks and those who\nhave no desks. Obviously, because\nthey have the facilities for putting\ntheir feet higher than their heads,\nthe heavy thinking is done by those\nsupplied wilh office equipment.\nThus, since the white collar has\nnothing to do with the situation,\ngeneral recognition of this fact\nshould make our social problem a\nlot easier. What we need is a roll\ntop desk in every home.\n\u2014Chronicle, Crape, Mo.\nAUNTHET\nBy .ROBERT QUILLEN\n!   20 YEARS AGO\nFrom  Nelson  Dally Newt Fllei \\\n(April 27, 1917)\nW. Sprague of the Bank of Montreal in Rossland has been transferred to the company's bank in\nMontreal.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nGeorge Amas of Nelson has been\nappointed manager of the B.C. Telephone company's branch in Rossland.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nGeorge Harris, son of W. G. Harris,\nmanager of the Hudson Bay mine,\nwas killed last night when struck\nby an ore train near Salmo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nPte. William George Savage,\nbrother of Mrs. R. Brown, Robson,\nstreet, died while overseas as a\nresult of wounds.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. .Hansen of\nErie are guests at the Hume.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nT. W. Caldwell of Kaslo is visiting\nin Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. George Boyes and son, Bert,\nleft for Spokane.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nSteady progress has been made by\nallied troops against the Germans in\nalmost every region. The French in\na new offensive have penetrated the\nsecond German lines in the Argonne\nforest. All counter-attacks of the\nGermans have been repulsed.\nI   30 YEARS AGO    I\n| From Nelson  Dally News Flics\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy SHEPARD BARCLAY\nI    \"Tlie Authority of Authorities\"\nBUILDING A VIENNA COUP\nWhenever you can run H solid\nbunch of tricks to within one of\nthe number you need to make\nyour contract, it is well tn think\nof the possiblity of building a\nsqueeze by means of a Vienna coup.\nWhen the last card of your suit\nis offered, you are on an ideal situation if th.1 left hand opponent\nmust guard against, a single card\nin the dummy and the right hand\nopponent must defend against a\nsingle card in your own hand\nTheir task in this renders it impossible for either to retain also a\nguard in a third suit in which Ihe\ndummy has the high card plus a\nlittle one.\n'\u25a0<\n,Kt4\n\u00bbAK5\n\u2666 A K 7 IS\nRVitm*JaM\n\u2666 Q 10 6*\nS      **    *QS2\n\u2666 54\n5.      *\u25a0<-\u25a0-\n+ 10 7\n4 A 9\nf J64\n\u2666 98\n\u2666 AKQ882\n(Dealer; South. North-South vul-\n| nerable.)\nAfter an opening bid of l?Club\n1 by South, North bid 2-Diamonds,\nI South,    3-Clubs;    North,    4-No j\n\u25a0 Trumps; South, 4-No Trumps and \u25a0\nI North. 7-Clubs.\nMillard P. Kaiser of St. Louis!\nsat in the South position and, !\nwhen tlie heart 10 was led against\nthis contract, he could see 12 tricks,\n6 in clubs and 2 each in the other!\nsuits.\nWhen the heart 10 was led, he\nI placed the heart Q in the East!\n1 hand, so was obliged to go up with\nj the heart K, He now ran his 6\n' clubs and tlie heart Ace was played,\nretaining the heart J in his own \u25a0\nI hand, so that East was obliged to\nI hold on to the queen. When thc\nI diamond Ace r.nd diamond K were\nj played, East was forced to unguard\n\\ his spade holding, and West wns\n! placed in a similar position because\n; he had to retain  his  diamond  Q.\n\u25a0 The forced discards of his opponents\nenabled Mr. Kaiser tn get 3 spade\n[ tricks   and   successfully   make   his'\nj contract of 7-Clubs.\nTomorrow's Problem\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS...\nLOGAN   CLENDENING,   M.D. '\nVACCINE   PREVENTS   DISEASE\nI pointed out yesterday that thl\nregular annual 300,000 outbreal\nof whooping cough in thc Unite!\nStates reaches its peak in April, an!\nleaves a mortality of 6,000 in it[\nwakes. That is enough to make onj\nregard it as a serious disease.\nAll the more have public healtl\nofficials been watching the progra\nin preventive vaccination againsl\nwhooping cough. Dr. Louis SaueJ\nof Evanston, 111,, began enthusiastic\u2122\nally lo throve, about 192fi, that hi\ncould wipe whooping cough ofl\ntho face of tlie earth. He has beerl\nat it ever .since. At first his worlf\nwas regarded with skepticism. Pub.4\nlie health workers were not all cOn-f\nvinced that the germ he was work-]\ning with was the real cause ofl\nwhooping cough.\nDr. Sauer continued, however, tol\ngather facts. He started a scriesl\nof experiments to prove his pointX\nHe began giving vaccine against!\nwhooping rough to only one child!\nin a family. But all the children!\nwent lo school. In the course ofl\ntime, whooping cough would hill\nthe school. Finally Dr. Sauer had!\nthis kind of record to show; In 251\nfamilies, 32 children had becn vaccinated, had gone through an epidemic of whooping cough in their |\nschools, and had not contracted it,\nwhile .11 of their brothers and sis- \\\nters, similarly exposed, all came]\nilown with it,\nSEEMS TO CLINCH CASE\nThe final, and what seems to be I\nthe clinching case, was of four\nbrothers near the same age. Tlie\ntwo youngest Were vaccinated\nagainst whooping cough, the two\noldest were not. When the' epi- '\ndemic of whooping cough rarnp\nalong, the two unvaceinated boys\nrame down with it right away. The\ntwo vaccinated ones lived in the\nsame house with the infected brothers all through the attack, and had\nabsolutely no symtoms or discomfort whatever. This observation is\nso convincing because all of them\nwere living under the same conditions of hygiene, eating the same\nfood. etc.\nIt takes some time to make the\nobservations on such things. You\nrannot just say that if a child is\nvaccinated and doesn't take the disease in a year, it is immunized. It\nmay not, have been exposed. But\nnow Dr. Sauer has careful records,\neleven years in duration, which\nseem to me to prove conclusively\nlhat he has actually found a way\nto prevent this dreadful scourge.\nInasmuch as it affects young infants, it is best to give the immunization before the second half-\nyear. Dr. Sauer, recognizing that\nit is not advisable to attempt to\nimmunize against several diseases\nsimultaneously, suggests the following plan: immunize against\nwhooping cough during\" the second\nhalf-year, against diphtheria four\nmonths later, against smallpox four\nmonths later still.\nTlie immunization requires three\ndoses of vaccine at intervals of one\nweek. No bad symptoms have\never followed an injection.\nThe vaccine is of no value ir\ntreatment of established whooping\ncough\u2014only prevention.\nfuture not only of Japan and Asia, but of the world. A\ndecisive defeat to Fascism in Japan would remove one of\nthe most dangerous menaces to world peace.\n\"I feel sorry for John's little\ngirl. He married again to give\nher a mother and now the poor\nyoungun don't even get a chance\nto set on his lap any more.\"\n(April 27, 1907)\nj    Charles Brett left for Atlanta, Ga., \\\n| as a representative  of the Nelson |\nj Kootenay lodge to the eighth annual\nI convention.\n\u2022 '   \u2022\n! William Irvine of Nelson, grand j\nI chancellor of the Knights of Pythias \\\nfor British Columbia, left on an j\n! official visit to Cranbrook.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nA new street crossing is being j\nput in opposite the new site of thc i\ncourt house.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nI Latest settler in Nelson Is D. j\nj Mackenzie of Winnipeg, who has j\nj bought a ranch near town.\nShackleton & Simpson, stone |\nworkers, have received the contract !\nfor the cut stone work of the new\nFernie post office,\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nL. Laing Stocks reported that\nstrawberries were blooming at his '\nranch across the lake. \\\nR. L. Douglas, jeweller, has opened\na shop in the Carney block near the\nl Bank of Montreal. For a time he was\n| the partner of J. J. Walker.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\ni J. McDonald of Moyie is a guest\nI at the Lakeview.\n\u2666 10 4.\nf A7\n\u2666 AQIO\n\u2666 QJ109S7\n33\n\u00abK86\n\u2666 832\n\u2666 \u00bb\n<\ni\n4\ni Dealer:   .Na\nnerablcj\n\u2022V.\nH   **\nVQ542\n\u2666 97654\n\u2666 A3 2\n87\u00ab5\nJ10 9\nKJ\n,K64\nrlli.   &\nst-West   vu\nAgainst South's 8-No Trumps contract, West led the spade K. which\nEa\u201est won with tho spado K. which\nEast won with the spade Ace. What\nreturn by Fast will set the contract?\nCUTHEROE, England fCP).-Refusing to sit at a table set for 13,\nMrs. Neville Coleman dined alone\nMidway through her meal she suffered a heart attack, dying a few\nhours later.\nHome\nImprovement\nCover   your   cracked   pla.'er\nwith Cottonwood Panel*. You\nwill    beautify   and   insulate\nyour home.\nDistrict   Distributor!!\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n\"BUILD   B.   C.   PAYROLLS'\nBRINCINC UP FATHER\nBy C\u00abo. McMinut\n(h\\ TAKIU' MAGGIE'S ADVICE-\nI'LLNOTGIT ACQUAINTED\nWITH A LOT OF STRANGERS\nOH THIS BOAT-,\nLOOK-THERE <SOES\nSIR TAINLYNOT-\nOEAR-IF YOU CAN\nOWLV GET TO MEET\nAS RWE A GEMTLE-\ntAAW AS HE IS\u2014\nGEMS FROM LIFE'S\nSCRAPBOOK\nCHILDREN\n\"God  hath  his  small   interpreters.\nTlie  child   must   teach   the   man.\"\n- John   Greenleaf   Whittier.\n\"And I know now how Jesus\ncould liken the Kingdom of God tn\na child.\" -Charles Dickinson.\n\"Children not mistaught naturally\nlove God; for they are pure-minded.\naffectionate,  and  generally  grave.\"\n\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\ni \"Children. eye, forsooth,\nj They   bring  their   own   love   with j\nthem when they come.\"\n-Ingelow. ;\n\"1 love these little people, and it '\nis not a slight4 thing when they, '\nfresh from God, love us.\"\n\u2014Charles   Dickens, j\nTHE\nWORDS\nOF ONE\nUSER\n\"I have used Pacific Milk in making     custard.-,    milk    puddings,\npumkin,     cream     and     custard\npies,  whipped cream, ice cream,\nI could use milk if I wished but\nour families and friends like the\nfood, and I get many a compliment on dishes in which I have\nused   a   great  deal   of   Pacific\nMilk.\"\u2014Extract trom a letter by\nMrs.  R.M.A.\nWe have many letters from\nuser' who have found similar\nsatisfaction\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, of Course\nField and Garden Seeds\nNew Complete Stocks\nFor better and cleaner crops treat your iced grain\nwith Leytosan.\nMail Your Orden Direct to:\nGeo. W. Green & Co. Ltd.;\nLethbridge, Alberta\n \u00a9I\nWEMBLEY LIONS\nTAKE ALLAN (UP\nTEAM BY 2 TO 1\nWin Third Game to Tie\nSeries but Lose Out\nin Overtime\nTORONTO, April 26 (CP)-Sud-\nbury Tigers won the special postseason international hockey series\nhere tonight by playing to a two-\ngoal tie with Wembley Lions after\n14:25 of overtime play.\nWembley won the regular three\nperiod contest 2-1, thus tieing thc\nseries at one win and one tie for\neach team, and forcing a sudden\ndeath overtime period to decide the\n1 series.\nThe goal which settled the series\nwas scored by George Hastie, centreman of the Canadian champions.\nSudden death overtime was called\nInstead of an additional game because Wembley players sail for England from New York tomorrow\nnight. They leave hers tomorrow\nmorning.\nCaptain Lou Bates of the English\nchampions led his team to victory\nin regulation time. His late second\nperiod rush paced the way for\nBobby Walton to beat Charlie Tc-no,\nSudbury goalie, for the game's first\ngoal. Early in the third period Bates\nmade it 2-0 for Wembley on a solo\ndash.\nSudbury's lone goal in regulation\ntime came 22 seconds after Bates'\nhad scored, Don Grosso picking up\na loose puck at tho Wembley defence and driving it past Roy Musgrove.\nNELSON DAILY NEW8. NEL80N. B.C.\n-TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 27, 1937.\nOLD COUNTRY\nSOCCER\nLONDON, April 26 (CP).-English soccer and rugby giimes played\ntoday resulted as follows:\nEnglish League, Second Division\nWest Ham U. 2, Aston Villa 1.\nSouthern 8ectlon, Third Division\nWalsall 1, Newport County 2.\nNorthern Section, Third Division\nHalifax Town 0, Oldham A. 1.\nTranmere Rovers 6, Gateshead 1.\nRugby League\nBrantley 4, Keighley 9.\nRugby Union\nCross Keys 18, Heath 18\nDOYLE-LEVINSKY\nFIGHT TONIGHT\nLONDON, April 28 <API-Jack\nDoyle, the Irish thrush, created a\nsensation in pugilistic circles today\nby announcing brains will win tomorrow night's 12-round fight with\nKing Levinsky at Wembley.\nAs the former guardsman has, like\nLevinsky, established a reputation\nas a non-thinker, the experts werc\nat a loss as to picking the winner\non the basis of Doyle's statement.\nMaple Leaf Girls\nInvited to Play at\nNew Denver May 24\nInvitation from the New Denver\ngirls' softball team to the Maple\nLeaf girl.softballers for a game in\nNow Denver on Victoria day. May\n24, was received by Pauline Stangherlin, president of the Nelson club,\nshe announced Sunday. If transportation facilities can be lined up\nthe Maple Leafs will make the trip.\nFirst practice of the club is to be\nh?ld this week.\nAmong the new and younger\nplayers lined up are Iris Johannson,\nDoreen Long, Annie Busk and Mary\nPayne, the latter a former Ontario\ngirl who is expected to add a lot of\npunch to the playing of the club.\n\/IgrsA \u2022t^-fljCWP\/loSaVYffcu^\ntflto 61OKA BALL TERRlfic WlSllMStlT\n\u2014Af cWMA crryte t,,r a.\nIScs-toof *mi RiW\n:omiGHr, 1*37. kinc features syndicate, trat,\nUpv iUs riA-fep itt-etusas Mfiticts\nBof rie is ffiAU-1 A FIRST WSE*W aa\u00a9\nCoCAR\/WE REGARDS f>K\\ As Flrtt\n\/\u2022JsuRJAlce A6MST POSSIBLE FAIUJRS\nOF \/WIK <SR6M8\u00a3R*Tb <aHF8AX\nTIME IHH YEARS, TO DEHAT \"AT\nDODGERS LOSE,\n9-5, TO BOSTON\nBROOKLYN, April 26 (AP). -\nThough they outhit Boston, 15 to 13,\nthe Brooklyn Dodgers dropped a\n9-1) decision to the Bees today while\nDodger Manager Burleigh Grimes\nwas ruled off the field for the second\nday in succession.\nNelson Tennis\nClub Starts a\nPromising Year\nOpen Day Sunday; to\nEncourage Juniors,\nMany Attend\nTennis season got away to a flying start at the lower courts of the\nNelson Tennis club when the use of\nthe courts were thrown open to all\ntennis players and aspirants Sunday afternoon.\nThe purpose of the open day was\npartly to encourage younger and\nnew players as well as to let the older players get the feel of the game.\nIn this purpose they succeeded for\nno less than 50 players and spectators could be seen at any period.\nProminent in the crowd were the\njunior members who are expected to\nmake an active addition to the club\nthis term.\nS\u00a3lrHoV4%V,i  Va^s%  V^^k  V^\npitchers with 15 victories last season, bore the brunt  of the champions' attack.  They hit him for four\nruns in  ihe six  innings,  then got\nIhree more on four hits off Lee Ross\nin the seventh.\nLou   Gehrig   and   Tony   Lazzeri\nsin-\ntwo i\nNEW YORK, April 21 (AP).\u2014The\nYankees pounded oul 13 hits today\nto gain a 7-1 victory over thc Philadelphia Athletics uiid thereby accomplished a handsome handful of\nspectacular feats.\nFirst and foremost they displaced] placed the winners with three\nthe A's as American league leaders\nwith a record of three triumphs and\none defeat. Johnny Broaca, who\nlimited the losers to six hits though\nhe gave seven bases on balls, became\nthe first Yankee pitcher to go the\nroute this season.\nThe world champrons also pulled\noff the year's first triple play, the\nclub's first three-ply killing since\nYankee   stadium  wss  opened   14\nyears ago,\nIn addition, Broaca, the bespectacled Yale alumnus, extended the\ncontrol he held over the Athletics\nlast year when he turned them back\nfour times.\nHarry  Kelley,  who led  the A'?\ngles  apiece,  each  driving\nruns.\nPhiladelphia    000 100 000- 1   6   2\nNew York       000 211 30x- 7 13   1\nKellfcy, ROS.S and  Hayes; Broaca\nand Dickey, Glenn.\n12-5 FOR RED SOX\nBOSTON, April 26 (AP). - Tlie\nRed Sox chased Jimmy Deshong\nearly and pounded Ed Linke, his\nsuccessor, without mercy today\nwhile overwhelming the Washington Senators, 12 to 5.\nWashington 010 020 020- 5 10 3\nBoston .        . 030 621 00x-12 15   4\nDeshong,     Linke     and     Hogan,\nCrompton; Mar cum and R. Ferrell.\nthe National league rivals staged\nbefore a chilled gathering of 2500\nfans. Grimes was banished in the\nsecond inning by Umpire Larry\nGoets, who took issue with burly\nBurleigh's remarks after Goets ruled\nthat Gene Moore, the Bees' right-\nfielder, had not swung at a bad\npitch.\nBoston 430 100 001\u2014 9 13   0\nBrooklyn   .  .. 000 012 200- 5 15   4\nFette, R. Smith and Lopez; Hamlin, Birkofcr, Jeffcoat and Phelps.\nBatting\nLeaders\n(By Associated Press)\nGerald Walker, fleet outfielder of\nDetroit Tigers, has taken an early\nlead in the race for the American\nleague batting championship. Witn\nthe first week of the season gone\nby. Walker tops both circuits with\na .714 average. Paul Waner, of the\nNational league's Pirates, and Rick\nFerrell. of Boston Red Sox, are lied\nfor second at .600.\nLeaders:\nHigh School Net\nArtists (omemnce\nSeason Activity\nInitial piny of the season for the\nHigh School Tennis club was hold\nnn the lower courts of the Nelson\nTennis club Monday afternoon, with\na good aggregation of the young\nenthusiasts out.\nFrank Phillips of the Nelson club\nwas coaching the juniors in some\nof the finer points, while Miss Patricia Campbell, organizer of the\nHigh School club, and Norvelle German, an executive of the Nelson\nclub, assisted, The majority of the\ncoaching, however, was done by Mr.\nPhillips.\nMembers of the Nelson Tennis\nclub have contributed several good\nballs to the junior organization for\ntheir practice play.\nAmong the players to turn up\nthe first day were Miss Joy Ferguson, Miss Jean Gibson, Miss Edna\nBush, Miss Janet Grimes, Miss\nPeggy Dunnett, Gordon Lindskog,\nMonty Strudwicke. Elmer Gelinas,\nBud Emery, Bob Morris and Bill\nAffleck.\n-PAOE 8EVGN\nBattling Burleigh\/     |\nKgsults\nINTERNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nRochester 7, Newark 9.\nToronto 6, Syracuse 3.\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nLouisville 3, Toledo 0.\nIndianapolis 6, Columbus 4.\nMilwaukee 3, Minneapolis 2.\nKansas City at St. Paul postponed\n(cold weather).\nPostponement's\nNational, New York, at Philadelphia, rain; Cincinnati at Chicago,\nrain. Pittsburgh at St. Louis, rain\nFour scheduled.\nAmerican, Chicago at Cleveland,\nrain; St. Louis at Detroit, rain. Four\nscheduled.\nInternational. Buffalo at Baltimore, rain; Montreal at Jersey City,\nrain.   Four scheduled.\nAmerican association, Kansas City\nat St. Paul, cold weather. Four\nscheduled.\nG\nAB\nR\nH Pet.\nG. Walker, Det\n3\n14\n6\n10 .714\nP. Waner, Pittsbg\n4\n15\n6\n9 .601)\nR. Ferrell, Bstn A\n4\n15\n2\n9 .600\nBonura, Chi A   .\n4\n18\n4\n10 .5511\nBrack. Brooklyn.\n4\nin\n4\n8 .500\nBartell, N.Y. N  .\n4\n15\n5\n7 .467\nListen on Sunday to\n\"CANADA   1937\"\nImperial Tobacco's\nBroadcast\n1:45   P.S.T.\u2014C J AT\nau naturel'\u2014\"\nWtio doem'tl  Thai's why everybody smokei Sweet Capi I'\nSWEET CAPORAL CIGARETTES\n\"The purest form in which tobacco can be smoked.\"\u2014f ant\nTrail Parrots Wallop\nGrosbeaks, Softball\nTRAIL, B.C., April 26. \u2014 Three\nbattery changes by Grosbeaks\nfailcri to quell Parrots heavy hitting\nin a Central school senior boys' soft-\nball gamc this afternoon which they\nwon 1R-9.\nBorsato hurled to Wood for th\"\nvictor?, and had the situation in\nhand all the way.\nLazzarotto hurled to Brown for\nGrosbeaks in the opening inning;:,\nLazzarotto being replaced by Forte\nonly to give way to the former in\nthe final innings, Johnson and Smart\ncaught as well as Brown.\nLineups and individual runs\n:core9 follow:\nGrosbeaks\u2014Brown c, 1; Smart c,\n3b, 1; Lazzarotto, p. 1; Armstrong\nrf, 1; Forte, lb, p, 1; Pagnan 2b, 1;\nB Hohnson If, 2; M. Johnston cf;\nMcKee ss, l.\nParrots\u2014Wood c, 4; Borsato p, 4;\nZuk lb, 2; Hodge 2b, 1; Edmunds\n3b, 1; Pittao ss, 1; Monaldi If, 1,\nLangille cf, 2.\nGino LcRose umpired.\nA new fruit and vegetable spray,\nfor use against insect pests, is being\ntried in California, and is considered\na promising substitute for lead arsenate.\nTrail Softballers\nAsk Early Opening\nof Intercity Play\nWhile only;one of the Nelson soft-\nball clubs has held any organized\npractices, and with Trail clubs not\nexpecting to start their leagues until\nabout the middle of May, local officials announced on Sunday that\nthey had received a letter from T.\nH. Negus, secretary of both the Trail\nladies' and men's softball associations, asking about an early start\nbeing made to line up the season's\nintercity games so that players can\narrange their holidays accordingly,\nand schedules drawn up to make\nway for such games.\nNelson officials are in favor of\nthe idea of setting all dates early,\nand also of an early start in the\nseries. Attempts will be made to\nhave the opening game of the series\nplayed in Nelson as a part of the\nNelson Bugle band Dominion day\ncelebration, but such plans are not\nsettled as yet, although the matter\nhas been taken up w::n Bugle band\nofficials.\nAll players who were in the Nelson ladies' rep team last year are\nagain available, but they will have\nto fight for their prices with several\nstrong younger players of last year\nwho are expected to star on the\nsmall diamond.\nNelson officials have hopes of a\nseries for the West Kootenay men's\nSoftball championship being played\nthis year between Ncison, Trail and\nRossland teams.\nThis advertisement\nnot published or displayed by the Liquor' Control  Board or by the\nGovernment of British Columbia\n6 Baseball Stars\nHave Left Nelson\nWhen the Nelson senior baseball\nclub takes the field for its initial\ngame this season it will be minus\nthe services of at least six well-\nknown players who appeared on the\ndiamond last year.\nRoy Anderson, one of the most\npopular baseballeis last year, is at\npresent working in Kimberley and\nno doubt will play ball in those\nparts this season. At present cm-\nployed in Trail, Don Grice is expected to appear with the smelter\ncity aggregation. Two other players have headed e&st. Ike Isbell.\none favorite of the Nelson fans, left\nlast week for Saskatchewan where\nhe is expected to spend the summei\nmonths at least, and Bill Brlndley\nis in London, Ont., attending medical school and expects to play ball\nthere, according to a letter received\nfrom Pete Kapak.\nHarper and Carlson are two other?\nnot expected to be here this summer,\nFORAY FAVORED\nLONDON, April 26 (CP Cable)-\nMarshall Field's Foray was ruled\nfavorite for Wednesday's two thousand guineas, first of the season's\nclassic races for three year olds, in\na callover at the Victoria club tonight.\nThe odds were 3 to 1. Second\nchoice was Fairford, W. Murray's\nfavorite for the derby and quoted\nat 75-20 for the two thousand. Other\nodds were Fair Copy 11-2, Le Grand\nDue 17-2, Goya 10-1, Diplomat 100-7,\nThe Hour 100-6, Sunbather 22-1 and\nMid Day Sun 33-1.\nFairford was held derby favorite\nat 7-1 in tonight's callover. Foray\nwas at 15-1, The Son of Tetratema\nnot being as highly regarded over\nthe derby distance of more than l'i\nmiles as he is over the two thousand\ndistance of a mile. Fairford is regarded as a stayer.\nFund for Addition\nto Gray Creek's\nHall Grows\nGRAY CREF.K, B. C.-The first\nspring meeting of the Porcupine\nclub was held at the home of Mrs\nE. J. Oliver. A report was read by\nMrs, Benthien. secretary-president\nThe fund for the hall addition was\nrepilrted increased and further\nmethods ot raising money were discussed. Work was given out for a\nsmall spring sale.\nMrs. Drew brought up the question of adequate music and the\npracticability of an electric amplifier was discussed.\nProposals for the Coronation celebration wer put forward but nothing was decided on as the school\nteacher, Miss MacLaren, was not\npresent and the wishes of the school\ntrustees not known.\nTea was served by Mrs. E. Oliver,\nassisted by Mrs. George Oliver,\nThose present Included Mrs. Benthien, Mrs. E. Oliver, Mrs. George\nOliver, Mrs. Lymbery, Mrs. Norman\nAnderson, Mrs. Adams, Mrs. Drew,\nMrs. Wells, Mrs. Leonard Clark, Mrs\nFred Dann, Mrs. Oliver Nanee and\nMiss Joyce Smith.\nThe auto camp at MacFarlane\ncreek has becn bought by H. F. Wilmot and D'Arcy Bacon\nJohn Karisoi has left for Nelson.\nThe marriage of John Wolfhart\nand Mrs. Howell took place recently In Spokane. The couple have\nreturned and are established at an\nauto camp here.\nA whist drive and dance took\nplace Saturday in aid of the hall\naddition fund. Prizes wcre won by\nJohn Oliver and Fred Benthien.\nSupper was served by Mrs. Benthlen\nand Mrs. Oliver. Mrs. E. Oliver\npresided at the piano.\nLeonard Clark and T. Wells were\nvisitors to Creston Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. Stretton of Nelson\nwere Gray Creek visitors Sunday.\nCALGARY  GIRL  ADVANCES\nBOURNEMOUTH. Eng., April 26\n(CP cable).\u2014Jean Saunders of Calvary advanced but Joan Burritt of\nToronto was defeated today in the\nfirst round of the British hard court\ntennis championships. Miss Saunders defeated Miss M. Joyce. England, 6-3, 6-3; while Misi Burritt losl\nlo Miss A. E. Middleton, England,\n1-6, 6-1, 6-0, Miss Saunders teamed\nwith R. A. S. Hayes to win a second-round mixed- doubles match\n\u25a0Yer N. Taylor and Nancy Lyle, 6-0,\n2-6, 6-3.\nGolfers Visit\nGreens Sunday\nQuite a wide response was accorded the invitation of the Nelson Golf\nand Country club to potential players, who might possibly become\nmembers, to try out club greens\nSunday.\nA few young folk and a few older\nplayers managed the route to the\nclub and tried out a few holes\nCharles Blunt, protessional of the\nclub, was on hand ready and willing\nlo give a few pointers and advice\nwhere it was needed.\nThe   preens   wcre   in   far  better\nshape after the last few days ol\nbrighter weather and are gradually\nrounding into suitable condition for\nactive playing.\nVANCOUVER BASEBALL\nOPENER CANCELLED\nVANCOUVER. April 26 (CP)-\nOpening game of tiie Senior City\nBaseball league, between U.D.L.'s\nand Athletics scheduled for tonight\nhas been cancelled, league officials\nannounced today,\nFairview Tennis\nClub Courts Will\nOpen on Sunday\nCourts   in   Splendid\nCondition, juniors\nEspecially Active\nEvery detail points to a more\nwidespread interest and enthusiasm\nand a better season in Nelson tennis\nthan ever before and next Sunday\nwill see the official opening of\nanother set of courts for the season's play when the Fairview Tennis\nclub opens its gates.\nA meeting of the club's executive\nwill be held this week to make ad\narrangements for the official opening. The refreshment committee and\nothers will be lined up at the meeting.\nMany have held their initial play\non the courts already, Especially\nnoticeable among the players and so\nfar in the majority, are the juniors,\nwho are being allowed the use of\nthe courts until the official opening.\nIt is hoped that a junior department\nwill branch out in the club and enthusiasm amongst the youngsters\npoint to the advisability of this\nmove. To date everything is being\ndone to encourage them.\nVillage weaver-thirds in West Africa build their hanging nests in\ncommunities of as many as 100 nests.\nTrail Trap-Skeel\nClub Shoot Marks\nTRAIL, B.C.. April 26.-Resu.ti\nof Trail Trap and Skeet club \u00bbhoet\nSunday follow:\nTrap Skeet Dbl\u00ab\nA Moore   23      16      15\nDi. W. Leonard  22      22      19\nS. R. Walley   21      13\nHurry Wade  21      15\nRoy Stevens 20      10      M\nR. G. Boyle   18       15\nJ. Robertson   18      20      17\nW. B. Hunter  15      12      15\nCanadian scientists are trying to\nmanufacture brick to match Indiana\nlimestone, from clays found near\nToronto.\nAW GEE DAD\/\nDONT WANTTHAT\nKliMD\/P-L-E-A-S-E\nGET ME A COM-THEY\nARE SO SMART AND\nEASY TO RIDE AND ALL\nMY\u00a3* PALS HAVE\n, ih&'r'S!?   ,\nYOU can't fool a boy! They know from experience and from the \"talk\" of\ntheir pa's exactly \"The Best\" things in every sphere of their boys' world.\nWhen it comes to bicycles, boys are unanimous in their choice of the CC.M.\nThey know that a CC.M. is the smartest looking bicycle. They know it is the\neasiest to ride\u2014most flexible to handle and capable of the gteatest speed.\nThey know that a CC.M. does not go \"on the blink\" and keep eating up a\n\"boy's allowance\" for repairs. They know that a CC.M. will give long years\nof trouble-free service.\nSPECIAL FEATURES OF OC-M-S\nIn addition to other good features the CC.M.\nhas the powerful sure-acting CC.M. Hercules\nCoaster Brake, the CC.M. Frictionless Triplex\nHanger, CC.M. extra-strength brazed frame,\nand chromium-plating over CC.M.'s 20-year\nnickel on all bright parts.\nWhen you buy a bicycle buy a CCM.\nand be proud of your mount and be sure of a\nhigher turn-in value.\nCCM. \u00bbG\/rf, \u201e\nCC'M.\"Cre!   \u00b0r\"BoyV\nC-C.M. \u2022\u25a0\u00a3\u00a3'\u00ab.',. \"Mi    <\u00bb.50\nC'CM -uf .R*\u00ab\" ..       38.30\nCCM \u2022.\u00a3\u00a3'\u00ab \u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\"..   39.00\nCCM BICYCLES\nFOR    EASY -RUN N ING,   TRUE -VALUE\nCC.M. BICYCLES\nSOLD IN NELSON BY THE\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd,\n521   Baker St. Phone 27\nCC.M. BICYCLES\nSOLD IN NELSON BY THE\nHipperson\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n323 Baker St.\nPhone 497\n PAOE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C\u2014TUESDAY MOKNING, APRIL TT, 1937.\nOpportunity Uses Classified Ads\u00ab You Can't Afford to Miss Them\n.Nflsmt Baily 5Cruta\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE   144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\n\u00bbingle copy  $   .05\nBy carrier per week  25\nBy carrier per year \u201e  13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\nearner areas, per month 60c;\nthree months v1.80; six months\n$3.00; one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great En-\ntain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nAdvertising  Rates\nlie a Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per insertion  $ .22\n2 lines,  6  consecutive\ninsertions 88\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion  33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions   132\n2 lines. 1 month   2.86\n3 lines. 1 month     4.29\nFor   advertisements    of    more\nthan three lines, calculait on\nthe above Dasis\nBox   numbers   lie   extra.   This\n. covers any number of insertion;.,\nALL ABOVE RATES LES? -0%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nMAIL   ORDERS   from   out-of-\ntown residents River, prompt\nattention.\nJHPIECE\nAo EDGAR WALLACE\nand ROBERT CUJS T\/S\n$21\nCHAPTER !4\nAfter leaving her mother Jacqueline found Jim Asson smoking a\ncigaret in the lounge, and seated\nherself beside him on the settee.\n\"Well, Jim, do you really want\nme to marry you?\n\u25a0'Of course I do, Jacqueline.   I've\n\"Listen, Jim, before you start\ngetting rapturous,\" interrupted the\ngirl. \"I don't love you, and if I\nmarry you it will be because I'm\nsick of never having a shilling to\nspend, sick of the sort of life I've\nbeen leading. It'll be because you've\ngot enough money to give me a\nhome of my own and a good time\nand nice clothes and all that sort\nof thing, and because you've promised to make mother a generous\nallowance    Is that clear11\"\n\"You don't give me much chance\nto misunderstand. Jacqueline.\"\n\"It's best to be frank. That's\n\u25a0why I should be marrying you, and\nfor no other reason at all. I don't\nwant to marry you under false pretenses. I like you, but I don't love\nyou and I don't believe I ever shall\nlove you.\"\n\"It sounds a bit cold-blooded,\nJacqueline \"\nShe smiled. \"Your proposal\nwasn't exactly ardent. Jim,\" she\nreminded him. 'That's the position, anyway. Of course. I'll be\na sport and play the game and behave as a good wife is expected to\nbehave, but it will only be for the\nreasons I've given you Do you\nstill want to marry me1\"\n\"Of course,\"\n\"Righto, Jim, I'm willing. So\nwe call it a be!, do we?\"\n\"Absolutely, And as soon as\npossible, eh. Jacqueline'.' I'll see\nold Lutman and get things fixed up\nand we'll be married straightaway,\nshall we?'\nShe nodded and got up\n!!See you later, then, Jim.\" she\nsaid, and went up to her bedroom.\nThere, for a long time, she set\nstaring out of the window 'But\nwhy''\" she kept asking herself.\n\"Why does Jim want to marry mc\"1\nAnd why does Colonel Lutman want\nhim toi'\"\nCharles Stuckey on the sunlit\nterrace of the Hotel Walderstein\nwas a very different person from\nCharles Stuckey in thc- dingy office\nOf Messrs. Stuckey & Stuckey in\nLondon\nHe was dressed, for instance, in\nt suit of plus-fours of vivid pattern, which, though it caused no\ncommotion in the valley nf the\nDanube, long since mured to the\nBritish tourist's conception of suitable attire for foreign travel,\nwould probably have cau.-ed a not\nin Rotherhithe From the pocket\nof his jacket protruded the inevitable folding pocket kodak, and on\nthe back of his head he wore a\ngreen Austria!1, hat corr.cle'e with\nits bunch of feathers He was\nsmoking    a    lar^e-   German    pipe.\npuffing at it furiously as he studied\nthe little German phrase-book in\nhis hand. Moreover, there was a\nlook on. his face which was never\nthere when Charles Stuckey was\nin his Rotherhithe office. He never\nenjoyed himself there as he was\nenjoying himself now\nHe had not been there many\nminutes before he had decided that\nhe liked Cobenzil. He liked the\nsunlit terrace of the hotel; he liked\nthe view across the river; he liked\nhis hat and the appearance, if not\nthe taste, of his pipe; and he liked\nparticularly the look of the girl\nwho wns seated a little farther\nalong the terrace beneath the\nshade of the big umbrella.\nThe only thing which so f3r he\nhad found did not quite meet with\nhis approval was the Uct that the\nwaiter, though no doubt he had\nbeen born and bred in the country,\nseemed quite unable to understand\nhis own language \u2014 at least, as it\nwas explained in Charles' little\nbook\n\"Beer!\" said Charles, raising his\nvoice as if mere volume of sound\nwould convey his meaning. \"I\nwant some beer and a newspaper\u2014\nanything but a Sunday newspaper.\"\n\"Bier, ja,\" said the waiter.\n'Sunday\"\" He raised his eyebrows, spread out his hands, and\nshook his head.\n\"You don't understand Sunday''\"\nsaid Charles, and hastily consulted\nthe index of his little book, found\n\"Days of the week\", and began\nhurriedly thumbing the pages.\nAnd then, before the book could\nthrow any light on the subject, he\nheard the blessed sound of a very\npleasant voice saying in English,\n'Can I help voir\" and glanced up\nto see Jacqueline, looking even\n| more attractive at close quarters\nthan she had looked beneath the\numbrella, smiling at him in a\nfriendly way\nCharles replied with his broadest smile\nThank heaven'\" he said fervently 'You speak English. It's\nthe most marvelous thing that has\nhappened to me since I entered the\nvalley of the Danube\"\n'Marvelous'' It's 'the language\nI was born into.\"\nCharles nodded\n'That    explains    it\"    he    said.\n\"Why you speak it so well, I mean.\nYou do, vou  know.  You speak  it\nj much better than I speak German.\n' and   much   better   than   this   chap\nunderstands   German.    He   doesn'i\neven know the days of the week.\nI asked him for any newspaper but\ni a Sunday one, and he looked as if\nI'd asked him to lend me a fiver.\"\nJacqueline turned to the waiter\nand rattled off a sentence m German which brought to Charles'\neyes a look of rapt admiration;\nand the waiter, evidently understanding quite easily what she had\nsaid, turned and hurried away\n'Thanks   awfully.\"   said   Charles.\nlanin Is Lined\nBIRTHS\nBIRTHS      M       H       H       V.\nERICKSON-To Mr. and Mrs. E\nErickson of Silverton, at Slocan\nCommunity hospital, New Denver,\nApril 19, a son. ______\n~IRWIN-fo~Mr. and Mrs. L. D\nIrwin, at Slocan Community hospital, New D3nver. April 22, a son\n(Mrs. Irwin was formerly Miss Esther Jansrude.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS.\nETC., FOR SALE\nFOR SALE-BUNGALOW, REDEC-\norated throughout, centrally located, five rooms, bath and pantry,\nFull concrete foundation, pipeless\nfurnace. Three corner lots, eight\nfruit trees, large lawn and garden\nplot Exceptional buy. Box 65.\nDaily News. (65)\nGOOD \"FARM LANDS FOR\" SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources, C.P.R., Calgary, Alta.\n(5530)\ngood'farm\" land; EAST CRES:\nton district, with water provided\nfor irrigation. Priced for quick\nsale.   P.O. Box 198, Nelson.   (35)\nFRUITVALE. Wt ACREPOUL-\ntry ranch. All cleared. Good house\nBuildings. Also building sites.\nCastle,  Fruitvale.  B.C.        '5850)\n3 COR.\" LOTS SUITABLE\" FOR\nbuilding. Snap price. Terms. P O.\nBox 713. (44)\nCHOICE LEVEL LOT ON_NELSON\nAve. Cheap for cash. P.O. Box 203\n(5924)\nCOMPLETE FURNISHED APAHT-\nment house. Box 687. Nelson  B.C\n<5531>\nA WANT-AD\nBright little workers\nthese Want-Ads1 They\nbuv for less, sell for more\nget results faster .\nand they're consistently\ngood as well as inexpen\nsive and easy to use'\nPhone 144\nNELSON DAILY\nNEWS\nCLASSIFIED\nLargest in the Interior\nHELP WANTED\nAN EDGERMAN. AT ONCE. NO\nuse applying unless you are an\nEdgerman, and understand grades\nand can handle 4000 feet an hour\nthrough an Edger. Good handy\nrig to work on. Apply to Charles\nO Rodgers Limited, Creston, B C.\nil7i\nCAPABLE GIRL,\"OVER 18. GOOD\nwith children. Used to country\nlife $15 a month. Mrs. A. B, H>11\nLongbeaeh, (97)\nWILLING    BOY \" :OR~~ RANCH\nGood home for suitable boy. $10\nper month. Box 46, Daily News.\n(46)\nEXPERIENCED   TIE \"MAKERS\nApply G Samuelson, Canyon, BC\n(951\nEXPERIENCED WAITRESS Apply at Box 697, Cranbrook.     (941\nAUTOMOTIVE\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nETC.\nAPTS.\nFOR SALE\n_.:._ iKH'd.'ome sf\\cn-ei.uhts length\nswari<cr com nr nutria-dyed lapm\nis lined with th\" sime green wool\nthai faslvons the skirt worn by Ihe\nmod\"! A soft wool sweater with\nhigh neckline, completes the costume.\nBilly Borrow,\nNakusp,  Hqs a\nBirthday Party\nNAKUSF. BC -- Billie Barrow\nwas host at a children s p^rty when\nhe celebrated his seventh birthday\nMauve 2nd white was the color\nscheme used m decorating the tea\ntable A b'rthd^y cake with seven\ncandle; w:s in the centre and crocus decorat.ons \"\"ere used\nNovelty cracker? were Piveii the\ntittle Fuel's\nThose nreF^r' \"'^e Mr\/is B:r!o'\"\nSvdnev \"!_-.-! y Rcy and Linden\nA-l\"-, Arthur Bcrnrd, Charlie\nM3\"sha!!, Billie M:Qu_:r -.nd Arthur\nMrs D. i,ratson snd two children\narrived from Ktv-l_toke Wednesday\nand visited Nak'.r-p p\":rr to continuing their journey to Nelson.\nReg While left Saturday for Salmo\nwhere he has obtained a position\nMrs C Horrey visited her mother\nMrs. G Mauchline at Arrow Park.\nC Beaton ot Burton was a N'a-\nkusp visitor\nM'SS Florence Horigan spen* the\nweekend a* her home at Nelson\nw, H Stones was ?. visitor here\nfrom Burton\nF Durkvn of Trail spen! several\ndays visiting in town\nH Thimiood is spending a few\ndays at. his home here\nMrs Marsland and Mrs. A Kny of\nArrow Park were among the shoppers in town Friday\nL F, Ptaley of Ymir ipent several\ndays visiting his family hcie. 1\n\"And now, will you\u2014if that sort\nof thing is allowed in this country\n\u2014will you allow me to offer you a\ndrink? You can order it yourself,\nyou know, because the only drink I\nknow in German is beer'\nJacqueline nodded toward her\ntable beneath the umbrella.\n\"I have one there,\" she said.\n\"Come and join me. won't you?\"\nThey seated themselves under\nthe umbrella and Jacqueline, accepting a cigaret, studied Charles\nkeenly for some moments; and\nthen, satisfied, apparently, with the\nresult, of her scrutiny, leaned back\nin her chair.\n''Are you staying here?\" she inquired.\n\"Well, no, as a matter of fact\nI am not,\" said Charles. \"A bird\nof passage, you know I move\nabout a good deal,\" he added airily.\n\"The fact is, I have just run over\nto settle a small affair for one of\nmy clients. You don't mind my\npipe, do you''\"\nJacqueline shook her head, smiling.\n\"It fits the landscape.\" she told\nhim. \"It looks like Austria even\nif it smells like London.\"\nCharles grinned.\n\"Hand painted.\" he said. \"Eight\nmarks. Not dear, was it?\"\n\"You get a lot of smoke for your\nmoney, anyway,\" laughed Jacqueline     \"Do  you often come over''\"\n\"Now and then,1' said Charles.\n\"I have several clients who reside\nin Austria, but, of course, unless it\nis something very important, I\nusually send a clerk \"\n\"Clients,\" said Jacqueline. \"Oh.\nare you a lawyer\"1\"\nCharles glanced at her with unconcealed admiration.\n\"I say, that's very clever of you\nClients \u2014 lawyer Yes. I see your\ntrain of thought As a matter of\nfact, I am a lawyer. Do you\nmmd'\"\n\"Oh, no,\" smiled Jacqueline \"It's\nthe way things happen, ycu know.\nIf you see a blue-eyed cow in thc\nmorning you're certain to see one\nin the afternoon I suppose he'll\nturn up todsy too\u2014the other lawyer, I mean.\"\nCharles frowned slightly.\n\"A friend of yours''\" he asked\n''I wonder if I know him I mean\n\u2014er\u2014most of we alwyers \u2014 or\nshould it be 'us lawyers' ' \u2014 anyway, the best-class lawyers, you\nknow\u2014er\u2014meet each other pretty\nfrequently, and quite possibly your\nfriend is a friend of mine\" And\nthen, seeing that Jacqueline was\nstaring at. him intently, with a little pucker showing between her\neyebrows, he adjusted the set of\nhis Austrian hat and straightened\nhis tie \"Don't you thing I'm likely to know him''\"\nShe shook her head.\n\"No, I wasn't thinking that but\nI was wondering--Do you go into\npokce  courts  and defend people1\"\nCharles looked shocked\n\"I? My dear child, dent be absurd Police courts! Chancery,\nadministrating estates, trustees,\nall the' sort of thing. One seldom\nsees a court, that, is a rather vulgar side of one's practice, which\no\"p leaves to one's managing\nclerk \"\n'Oh, T see\" raid Jacqueline.\n1 Sorry'\n(To   Be  Contlnuedi\nWILLIAMS\nTransfer\nSAND and\nGRAVEL\nFOR RENT - 5 ROOMED FURN,\nhouse on Railway St. Apply Suite\n46. Annable Blk , or Phone 657R\nmornings and evenings. (39)\nTOR \"SUMMER MONTHS,~ FURN-\nished house, close in. H. Harding\n617 Latimer St. Phone 110,     <57i\nDOUBLE  AND   SINGLE \"BED-\nrooms   119 Baker St,   Phone 940\n(53i\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent    Annable Block\n(55321\nFURNISHED  HOUSE.   SUITABLE\nfor couple   Apply 712 Jasephine,\n(72i\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nroom Close in 303 Ward St (1011\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites i r.5331\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS\n918 Kootenay Street (88)\nSINGLE HOUSEKEEPING' ROOM\nK.WC.  Block, (121\nSEVEN ROOMED HOUSE. FHONE\n_562R.   (77)\nPOULTRY, ECCS, ETC.\n609 Ward St.\nPhone 106\n158661\nPIPE, TUBES.   FITTINGS\nNEW  AND  USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, B.C.\n15536)\nFOR SALE-CHOICE 2 YEAR OLD\nGravensteins. Mcintosh Red. Cox\nOrange, Yellow Newtons, Wagners\nand Red Delicious. 85c eaeh, delivered. Bartlett pears 85c. T. Rov-\nnon, Nelson. (83)\nLARGE OFFICE \"tABLeTwaRD-\nrobe good size. Corner china cupboard. Bargains at Lawson'sWood\nFactory, Baker St. (27)\nJUST UNLOADED A~ CARLOAD\nof Beatty Washers. Ironers. Storm\nCleaners    and    Floor    Polishers\n^Beatty Washer Store (102)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\"\nCANADIAN JUNK Company   Ltd\n250 Prior St. Vancouver. B C\ni.5.i34'\n[EI.ECTROLUX  CLEANER IN\nfirst class shape  Only used short\ntime. $45 cash. Phone 91        (90)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. \"KEGS.\nsugar sacks, liners McDonald Jan.\nCo.. Ltd., Nelson. B.C. (5535)\nBEATTY ELECTRIC FLOOR POL-\nishers $17.50 3 only at this price\nBeatty Washer Store. (102)\nPORTABLE BLACKSMITH FORGE\ntongs, sets. $20. Ph. 326L3. Box\n898. Nelson (51\nWOOD YATT 16'\" LAWN MOWER\nAl shape, $5. 524 Gore St. Ph 6f9R\n(74)\nSTEEL ICE-BOX. WHITE ENAMEL\nand chromium  Phone 502.      (56i\nSMALL 2-HOLE \"CAMP\" STOVE\nwith oven $10. Phone 314L.     (11)\nOURR. &G.\nSPECIALS\nHave   Met With   100%\nResponse\nANOTHER COOD BUY\n1936K     $725\nLicence\u2014Guaranteed low mileage\nINTERNATIONAL QCrfl\nTRUCK ........ <500U\n1G9K Deluxe FORD q>Hrrr\nLVOO FORDOR eDllO\nLicence, Radio, Etc.\n\"CHICKS\nWHICH\nGIVE\nRESULTS\"\nMav Frizes\nLEGHORNS\nUnsexed pullet Chicks\n$ I0 per   100 $ 22 per 100\n$ 90 per 1000 $105 per 500\nROCKS AND REDS\n5 12 per   100 $ 25 per 100\n$110 per 1000 $115 per 530\nLIGHT SUSSEX\n$ 13 per   190 $ 25 a.... inn\nGovernment approved Blood-tested\nstock. It will pay you to see our\nillustrated booklet. Write now. It's\nfree.\nRUMP h SENDALL LTD.\nLangley Prairie, B.C.\n(55151\nLEGHORN \"CHICKS    $10,    NEW\nHampshires $12 per 100. Satisfaction guaranteed. T. A. Robinson,\nB C. Lands Co.. Grand Forks, B.C.\n(79)\nWANTED\nPERSONAL\nCONTRACT FOR MINING OR\nhauling, 4-ton truck. Available\nMay 1. Box 5921. Daily News.\n(5921)\nLAND AT ftOBSON SUITABLE\nfor summer camp. Apply PO. Box\n1383, Trail, B.C.   _ _   (23)\nPINT BOTTLES. 15c A DOZ. W L\nManufacturing Co.. 907 Water St\n(5913)\nELECTRICAL,  MACHINERY\nFOR SALE\nHOIST  MOTORS\nWound   rotor  motors  in stock\nfrom 10 h.p. to 250 h.p a' van-\nous speeds    Enquire\u2014\nCROSSMAN MACHINERY\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\n59 Alexander St., Vancouver. B.C.\n(5521)\nHIGHEST CLASS RUBBERl\ngoods. Our quality and service!\nwill amaze you. 27 latex for $100.|\nGoods shipped same day as ordered. Packed plain. Free cata-l\nlogue for men or women on re-1\nquest Imperial Distributors. 132 J\nBurrows Ave.. Winnipeg, Man\n(15)1\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE! NEW j\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw I\noyster invigorators and other j\nstimulants One dose peps up or-1\ngans, glands. If not delighted, 1\nmaker refunds few cents paid. )\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co.\n(5555)\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARD AND ROOM OR BOARD-\ners  Apply 912 Edgewood Ave.\n(25)\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer. Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Aeents at\nTrail Smelter 301-305 Josephine\nSt. Nelson, B.C. (5594)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker Street, Nelson, B.C. P.O\nBox No. 726. Representing shipper's interest at Trail, B.C.   (5595)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nNELSON   RADIATOR  WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(55961\nChiropractors\nj   r  McMillan, dc. neuho-\ncalnnnter   and   X-ray    16  years\nexperience. McCulloch B'k (S597>\nW J BROCK. DC X-ray 15 Years'\nExperience. Gllker Blk.. Nelson\n(5598)\nACT QUICK THESE BUYS\nGO  LIKE WILD FIRE!\nQueen City\nMotors Ltd.\nFord Dealers, Nelson, B. C.\nPHONE 43\nFOR SALE - 1930 CHEVROLET\nlight delivery. Al shape. BC\nPlumbing Co. (54)\nFOR SALE\u20141929\"Hi TON FORD\ntruck. Cheap for cash Box 93\nDaily News (93)\nFOR SALE\u2014CHEV SEDAN $45 R.\nA. Aldersmith, Nelson, B.C.   (99)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nGARDENING AND NURSERY\nPRODUCTS\nOUR STOCK IS COMPLETE FOR\nGovernment tested field seeds\netc. Dr. Rusk's famous CHICK\nFOOD. GRANULATED WHEAT,\nand CORN, and all CHICK requirements. Organic also Chemical FERTILIZERS, SEED POTATOES. Get our prices before\nbuying PHONE 238. Ellison Milling Co. Ltd.. Nelson, B.C.        ill\nFOR SALE-CHOICE 2 YEAR OLD\nGravensteins, Mcintosh Red, Cox\nOrange, Yellow Newtons, Wagners\nand Red Delicious. 85c each, delivered. Bartlett pears 85c. T. Roynon. Nelson. (83)\nROCK\" PLANTS & \"PERENNIALS\nA large selection of hardy acclimatized plants Send for rntalogue\nMcDiarmid & Squires, Robson,\n(55501\nEngineers and Surveyors\nH D DAWSON Nelson. B.C\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(55991\nBOYD C.AFFLECK.\" Fruitvale, B.C\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor,\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n(56001\nFlorists\nARTISTIC   FLORAL MAKE-UP  A\nspecialty.   Mrs. Hagarty.   Ph. 215,\n(5601)\nFuneral Directors\nMAN, WIFE BOTH EXPERIENCED\ncamp cooks want job cook and\nflunky small camD anywhere. 436\nE 24th Ave , Vancouver. (87)\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY\" \"position as housekeeper Some knowledge of nursing Box 91, Newi\n(911\nMAN FAMILIAR WITH~~PAY-\nrolls open for engagement. Mines\npreferred. Box 28. Daily News.\n(28)\nPAI!?nNG.~DECOTAfa.NG.\" F J\nNorris. 711 Silica St. (5713)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog, pocket-\nbook, jewelry or fur, or anything else of value, telephone\nthe Daily News, A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou We will collect from the\nowner\nLOST   ON   SATURDAY - GRAY\ncloth belt   Return Daily News\n(89\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert. Mortician        Lady Attendant\nModern  Ambulance Service\n(56021\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\n6 WEEK OLD PIGS AT $4.50 EACH\nApplv F. G. Shiell, Needles, BC\n(221\nInsurance and Real Estate\nMutual Benefit Health _ Ace   Assoc\nWorld's largest. Al. W. Foote, Dist\nMgr.,  Hume  Hotel, Nelson, B.C\n(5603)\nROBERTSON\" REALTY \"CO . LTD\nP\"al Estate,   Insurance,   Rentals\n311 Baker St Phone 63.        (5604)\nR.  W   DAWSON.  Real Estaie.  Insurance. Rentals   .Next Hipperson\nHardware,  Baker St. Phone 197\ni5U05I\nC D  BLACKWOOD    Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est. Ph 99\n(5606)\nH   E   DILL.AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance Real Estate. 508 Ward St\n(5607)\nJ   E\" ANNABLE   REA~L~~\"ES'I A TE\nRentals. Insurance. Annable Blk\n(56081\nCHAS F McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.        (5609)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work. Lathe\nWork. Drilling. Boring and Grinding. Motor Rewinding, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n (5610)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L, WARBURTON, AGENT: C. C.\nSnowdon Oils, Greases, etc. Richardson Road Machinery Co. Culverts. Graders, Scrapers. Plows,\nScreens. Gravel Equipment, etc.\nMine Machinery. Steam Coals.\nOffice 518 Ward. Ph. 53; Res. 239.\n(5611)\nNotaries\nD. J   ROBERTSON. NOTARY\nrublic.   305 Victoria St., Nelson.\n(5612)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted inventions and\nfull information sent free. The\nRamsay Company. World Patent\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\n(5613)\nPhotography\nOUR BUSINESS FOR 1936 AL-\nmost doubled that of 1935. There\nmust be a reason. A trial order\nwill convince YOU of the superior\nPhoto Fin'shing done in our plant.\nYour film developed and printed\n25e. Renrints. right for 25c. KRYS-\nTAL PHOTOS, WILKIE, SASK.\n(5614)\nSanitariums\nDR ALDRICH. SPOKANE, WASH.\nHeart. Stomach, Kidney, Bladder\nDiseases treated.   X-ray work\n(5615)\nSash Factory\nLAWSONS   SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant, 217 Baker St.\n(5616)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE   BUY,   SELL   Sc   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc.   The Ark Store\n(5617)\nNICE  RANGE,   DRESSER,  HEAT-\ners, etc., at MRS. RADCLIFFE S\n(5618)\nWatch Repairing\nH.  H. SUTHERLAND\nWat.'hmaker and Jeweller\nRutledge Bloek. Baker St. Nelson.\n\"When    Sutherland    repairs    your\nwatch it is on time all tbe time.\"\n(5619)\nWALK A BLOCK AND SAVE A\nDollar. Boyle the Jeweller. (5602)\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Gus Edson\nTILLEE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westover\nAVJ,C'MOW,'\nTILLIE -LETS\nSET THE DATE\n1=0(2  OUR\n\\v)EDD(N\u00ab\nDON'T  ItUSH ME, MAC-\nRUM ALOM6-l'M BUSy-\n,'M SOIN6 TO t_OCK THE\nDOOE^-\nT^ZZet\n ****^**uM***mmm\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B. C^-TUE8DAY MORNING. APRIL 17. 1987.\n\"    \u25a0 *'     .< '\t\n\u00a93\n\u2014 p\u00abr,p  NlUg\nHEAT AND STOCK PRICES SUFFER SEVERE SET BACK\nriNNIPEG OFF\nFULL LIMIT OF\n5 CENTS IN DAY\n.iverpool and Chicago\nFollow Downward\nSweep\n; WINNIPEG.   April   26   (CP).-\n\u2022\/heat prices dropped the full five\nlimit,  taking  the  final  nose\ni in the late trading after open-\nng almost three cents lower on the\nWinnipeg grain exchange today.\nRye and flax futures eccompanied\nHay and July wheat by hitting the\n(limit allowed In one days trading\nUs export business was at a standstill and other world markets em-\nphuized an easier trend.   At the\nwheat prices were 5H to 4Vt\n\u25a0cents lower with May at $l.J7Vi,\n|July J1.24 and October J1.1JH.\nThe unexpected report of a big\nIcrop in India snd a drajtic break\n\u25a0in security markets left the grain\nItrade without any support. Selling\n\u25a0was not particularly heavy at any\n[time.\nLiverpool closed 3H to 3 V* lower\nICoarse grains dropped sharply in\nI sympathy with wheat. At the close\n\u2022 July and October flax, May and\nI July rye were all five cents below\nI Saturday's close. Oat futures were\nI down one cent and barley slipped\nI off more than three cents.\nCHICAGO OFF FIVE\nCHICAGO, April 26 (AP)-Preceded by sensational collapsing of\nLiverpool and Winnipeg prices, the\nChicago wheat market fell five cents\n* bushel today, the extreme immediate permissible limit\nReiteration of often denied rumors\nof prospective changes in the United\nStates gold policy accompanied the\ndownward sweep. Other reasons\nthat were given included virtual\ncomplete temporary stoppage of export busineai in Canadian wheat.\nAt the close, wheat here was 3(4-5\ncent* lower, corn 1-3% down, oats\n\u2022ai-lVi off, and rye showing lVi-5\ncents loss.\nWhirling rapidly lower at the lajt,\nwheat prices ended at about the\nday's bottom level.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, April 26 (AP)-Copper steady; electrolytic spot and future  1450;  export  14-14.20.\nTin weak; spot and nearby\n5S.37H-02Vi; future 55.S0-&5 2S.\nLead steady; spot New York 6-\n605; 5ast St. '-.outs 585.\nZinc steady; No. 2 F. 0 B. Eastern\nPennsylvania 25.00; Buffaol 24.00;\nAlabama 2000,\nAluminum 20.00-21.00.\nAntimony, spot 17.00.\nQuicksilver 92 00-95X0.\nPlatinum  58 CO.\nWolframite 22.65.\nBar silver firmer, up ty at 44%.\nLondon closing: Copper standard\nspot \u00a357 5s; future \u00a354 5s; electrolytic spot bid \u00a362 10s; asked \u00a364 10s.\nTin spot \u00a3231 10s; future \u00a3248.\nLead spot \u00a323 13s 9d; future \u00a323 10s-\nZinc spot \u00a322 18s 9d; future \u00a323.\nBar silver 1-16 lower at 20 5-16d.\nToronto Jumbles\nTORONTO. April 26 (CP)-The\nold rumor about s cut in the price\nof gold was trotted out again today\nend, cooperating with other depressing influences, brought about another sharp decline in stock prices.\nEldorado lost 25 cents and Castle\n17 cents. Mining Corporation weak-\nened 35 cents.\nNickel showed a loss of 4 point!.\nNoranda 3. Hudson Bay l'i and\nSmelters 2 points.\nWright-Hargreaves changed hands\nto the extent of 8000 shares and the\nclose was down 30 cents to 6.50.\nO'Brien lost 60 cents, closing a!\n915 and net recessions of 15 to 30\ncents were boarded for Centra! Patricia. Pamour, Read-Authier, Siscoe\nand Teck-Hughes.\nNANAIMO, B.C., April 26 (CP).-\nThe John L. Lewis committee for\nindustrial organization reached another arm from the United States\ninto British Columbia today, and\n500 Nanaimo coal miners were enrolled as members of local No. 7355\nof the United Mine Workers ot\nAmerica. Officers of the new local\nwere installed Sunday night, only a\nweek after members of the Fernie-\nMiche) locals of the U.M.W.A. in\nsoutheastern British Columbia won\nIncreased pay and union recognition after threatening to strike and\ntie up coal mining operations of\nCrow's Nest Pass Coal company.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nAlton  05ty\nAlderrnac      117\nAlexandria  02%\nArgosy   75\nAshley 09\nAzetc  09\nBagamao 30\nBankfield      110\nBase Metals\n1.35\n.87\n.50\n16\n...      9.90\n.15%\n1.40\n1 65\n1.08\n.07 IJ\n..    325\n1.20\n.75\n5 50\n1.25\nConsMeVS          79.50\nBeattie Gold \t\nBidgood Kirk   \t\nBig Missouri   \t\nBobjo    \t\nBuffalo Ankerite\nBunker Hill X\nCan Malartic\nCariboo Gold Q\nCastle Trethewey\nCentral Manitoba\nCentral Patricia\nChibougamau\nChrom M Se S\nCoast Copper\nConiaurum\nDarkwater\nDome \t\nDorval Siscoe\nE Malartic\nEldorado   \t\nFalconbridge\nFed Kirkland .\nFrancoeur   \t\nGod's Lake\nGold Belt\t\nGranada \t\nGrandora \t\nGunnar Gold\nHardrock\nHarker Gold\nHollinger .\nHowey\n110\n42.50\n.69\n122\n258\n8 25\n18\n100\n.55\n.33\n.26\n.07%\n.85\n175\n.18\n12 00\n40\nHudson Bay     29.00\nInt Nickel       58.65\nJack  Waite               112\nJ M Com    38\nKirkland Lake        1.44\nLake Shore     50 25\nLamaque Co HH\nLeach Gold     '2\nLebel Oro      17\nLittle Long Lac     6.00\nMay Spiers   13\nMacassa         5.75\nMclntyre     35.50\nMCL  Cock      2.20\nMk Red Lake      1.40\nNormetal      145\nMcWatteri  77\nMining Corp     325\nMinto 32\nMonet*      140\nMorris Kirkland  40\nNipissing        261\nNoranda        63.75\nO'Brien          9.25\n.70\n20\n2 50\n65\n3 10\n130\n6.35\n4 85\nOmega   \t\nParkhill  \t\npamour p \t\nPaymaster \t\nPend Oreille    \t\nPerron\nPickle Crow\nPioneer \t\nPremier Gold      2.80\nporcupine Crown    04%\nPreiton   E          105\nQuebec Gold  56\nRead Authier       435\n 62\n 99\n.07\n23\n      1.60\n.68\n 80\n. 2.40\n420\n132\n163\n\u25a0 17H\n445\n145\n3.30\n.12\n5.10\nRed L Gold\nReno Gold\n\u00abitchle\nRoche L L\nSsn Antonio\nShawkey\nSheep Creek\nSherritt Gordon\nSiscoe\nSladen Malartic .\nStadacona\nSt Anthony\nSudbury Basin\nSullivan . ...\nSylvanite\nTaihota   . .\nTeck Hughes\nVentures \t\nWaite Amulet.\t\nWayside \t\nWhite Eagle     \t\nWhitewater \t\nWright Hargreaves \t\nY Yankee Gold   \t\nPowell Rouyn   \t\nAst Rouyn  \t\nOILS\nB A Oil\t\nC Sc E Corp \t\nRoyalite\nDalhousie    \t\nHome Oil \t\nImperial Oil \t\nInter Pete       \t\nMcColl Front   \t\nMerland\nNordon        \t\nTexas Can      \t\nPacalta      \t\nCalmont\nEast Crest      \t\nFoundation\nOkalta  \t\nS W Pete \t\nHighwood  \t\nUnited\nFoothills   \t\nMercury \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power    \t\nBeatty Bros  \t\nBell Telephone\t\nBrazilian      \t\nBrew Si Dist   \t\nBAOil      \t\nBrewing Corp    \t\nBrew Corp pfd \t\nB C Power A\nB C Power B \t\nBuilding Prod\t\nBurt F N \t\nCan Bakeries A\t\nCan Bakeries B\nCan Bread       \t\nCan Bud Malting    .\nCan Car Fdy\nCanada Cement      \t\nCan Cement pfd\nCan Dredge        \t\nCan Malting       \t\nCan Pac Rly\nCan Indus Ale        \t\nCan Wineries\t\nCons Bakeries\t\nCons Smelters new\t\nCosmos\nDom Stores    \t\nDom Tar Sc Chem\nDom Tar St Chem Pfd\nDist Seagrams\t\nFanny Farmer    \t\nFord A     ...\nGypsum L Se A   \t\nHarding Carpet .\nHamilton Bridge\nHamilton Bridge pfd\nHinde Dauche\nGoodyear Tire\nGoodyear Tire pfd\nInt Metals\nInt Metals pfd\nInt Milling pfd\nImperial Oil\nImperail Tob    \t\nInt Nickel      \t\nInt Pete      \t\nLoblaw A\nLoblaw B\nKelvmator  \t\nMaple Leaf mfg\nMassey Harris      \t\nMcColl Front     \t\nMcColl Front ptd\nMont Power \t\nMoore Corp       \t\nNat Steel Car\nOnt Silk Net\nOnt Steel Pr\nPage Hersey\nPower Corp\nPressed Metals\nSteel of Can\nShawinigan\nStand Paving  . .\nHiram Walker\n190\n2.85\n04\n.0214\n.17\n6 51)\n30\n1 28\n14\n23.25\n3 50\n4100\n100\n2 00\n2150\n35 25\n9 10\n.17\n.22\n165\n.19\n68\n.214\n.33\n150\n81)\n28\n.25\n120\n.34\n9%\n13\n.   159\n22H\n8\n23\n.     2'i\n18\n.     36\"i\n4Vi\n.   64\n41\n4\nSMELTERS LOSES\n2 AT MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, April 26 (CP).-The\nstock market found little support\ntoday and prices dwindled. Only one\nissue made a gain while 49 declined.\nSmelters closed at 79, off two\npoints. Nickel slid to 58H. a loss 01\n3H points while Noranda posted 1\n1% loss at 64.\nReduced by 14 points a.ich, Dominion Steel li Coal closed at 19\nand Cement at 16%. Sole gainer on\nthe board, Dominion Bridge picked\nup % at 54%. Steel of Canada lost\nmore than a point.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, April 26 (CD-British and foreign exchange closed\nhigher today. Nominal rales for large\namounts:\nArgentina, peso. .3031.\nAustralia, pound. 3.9359\nBrazil, milreis, .0634.\nDenmark, krone, .2203.\nIndia, rupee, .3723.\nNew Zealand, pound, 3.9677.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4,9051.\n(Complied by the Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nONLY TWO CLAIMS ARE\nRECORDED PAST WEEK\nStaking of only two mineral\nclaims in the Nelson mining division was recorded at the mining\nrecorder's office. Nelson, during the\npast week. They were the Three\nCubs on the Pend d'Oreiile rivei\nabout five miles east of Waneta,\nrecorded by Matthew Hill, and the\nHighway, on the south fork of the\nSalmon river, recorded by B. Feeney\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, April 26 (CP)-Re-\nceipts during the week-end, cattle,\n256; calves. 40; hogs. 694; sheep. 100.\nCattle steady; good to choice butcher steers, 7.50-9; common to medium, 4.50-6; good cows, 4.75-5; good\nvealers, 6.50. No hog sales; selects,\n8.40-8.50; bacons, 7.90-8; bujehers,\n7.40-7.50,\nDividends\nVulcan oils. 5 cents, payable June\n15 to shareholders of record June 1.\nPOUND QAINS\nMONTREAL, April 26 (CP). -\nPound sterling advanced V4 cent on\nMontreal foreign exchanges today\nto $4 92 31-32. The French franc was\nunchanged at 4.43 cents. The United\nStates dollar went down 1-32 to 3-16\ndiscount.\nU. S. DOLLAR OFF IN LONDON\nLONDON. April 26 (AP) - The\nUnited States dollar closed at a loss\nof V\u00bb cent in the foreign exchange\nmarket today. Final quotation was\n$4.93V\u00ab to the pound, compared with\nSaturday's closing New York rate of\n$4.93 3-16. French francs slipped off\nto 111.16 to the pound. Saturday's\nclose was 111.06.\n.Oils Up at (oasl\nVANCOUVER, April 26 (CP)-\nOils closed a few cants higher on\nthe Vancouver stock exchange to-\ndcy while gold and base metal prices\nwere mixed. Trading was fairly active and sales totalled 316,038 shares.\nCalgary Sc Edmonton Oil gained\n30 at 3.65, Dalhousie 11 at 1.08 and\nRanchmen's 10 at 70. Vulcan advanced 5 at 135. A. P. Consolidated\nat 37 Vi and Model at 49, each 3\nand Highwood Sarcee 2Vj at 28\nOkalta eased 1 at 1.53. Mercury .\nfraction at 32 and other oils were\nmostly unchanged.\nMinto led activity in the golds.\ntransacting over 53,000 shares, but\nclosed down 1 at 31. Bralonre lost 15\nat 7.20, while Pioneer at 4.8S and\nUemier at 2,85 held unchanged.\nSheep Creek advanced 5 at 81 in\nfair trading, Big Missouri IH at 61 Vi\nReno a cent at 97 and Gold Mountain iy( at 8%,\nPend Oreille was off 13 at 3.13,\nReeves MacDonald 6 at 1.12, and\nNoble Five 1 at 7V4. Lucky Jim and\nGrandview eased fractions and B.C.\nNicke! was firm at 18\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL. April 26 (CP)-But-\nter spot\u2014Que. fresh (92 score) 24H,\ntraded. Eggs spot \u2014 Ont. A-large\n22V4A; wheat. No. 1 nor., 1.47Vi;\nbarley. No. 3 c.w., .84VJ; oats, No. 3\nc.w., .65; bran, ton, 36.25.\nC. at E. FEATURES CALOARY\nCALGARY, April 26 (CP).-Calgary at Edmonton and Graystone\nfeatured trading on the Calgary\nstock exchange this morning. At the\nnoon close C. Sc %. was 15 higher at\n3.60 and Graystone. after reaching\na high ot 21, dropped back to 18. up\n4, Weymarn was up 4 to 24. Dalhousie gained 8 at 105 and Home 5\nat 2.05. Ranchmen's was up 4 at 69.\nOkalta was 4 down \u00bbt 1.50 while\nA. P. Con and Calmont held unchanged.\nQuotations on Wall Street\n7V4\n8%\n15%\n16H\n106\n30 \"s\n38\n12%\n5%\n102\n21\n77'i\n23 V,\n10V,\n13\n109\n21V,\n20\n2!\n15VJ\n5\n151\/J\n82\n20\n64\n54\n11\n98\n101\n21%\n14%\n58%\n35Vi\n23%\n21\n31\n9\n12%\n9\n91\n.   SO\n43 Vi\n42 V,\n7\n11\n101\n22%\n32\n82 Vi\n26 Vi\n6%\n42>4\nHigh\nAllied Chem      237\nAmer Can 99\nAm For Power 9%\nAm Ma Sc Fdy 22%\nAm Smelt Sc Re\nAm Telephone\nAm Tobacco\nAnaconda\nAtchison\nAuburn Motors\nAviation Corp\nBaldwin\nBait Se Ohio\n85 Vi\n165%\n81%\nMV,\n82%\n30%\n8%\n7%\n34%\nBendix Aviation 22%\nBeth Steel\nBorden\nCanada Dry     .\nCan Pacific\nCerro de Pasco\nChes Sc Ohio\nChrysler   .\nCon Gasr N Y\nCorn Prod\nC Wright Pfd\nDupont\n86%\n25%\n30\n13%\n72\n59%\n114%\n38%\n60%\n6%\n154%\nEastman Kodak 156%\nEl Pow Se Li\nErie  \t\nFord English   .\nFord of Canada\nFreeport   Texas\nGeneral Electric\nGeneral  Motors\nGeneral Foods\nGoodrich\nGranby\nGrt Nor Pfd\nGrt Wst Sugar\nHecker Prods\nHowe Sound\nHudson   Motors\nInter Nickel\nInter Tel Sc Tel\nKenn Copper\n20 V,\n19%\n7%\n23%\n27%\n52%\n57%\n40%\n45%\n8%\n50%\n35%\n13%\n81\n20%\n60%\n11%\n55%\nLow\n229\n97%\n8%\n22\n62%\n164%\n80%\n52%\n80%\n28%\n7%\n7%\n33\n21%\n84%\n25\n28%\n12%\n89\n58%\n111%\n37\n59%\n6%\n152%\n155\n19%\n18\n7%\n23%\n26%\n50%\n55%\n40\n43\n8%\n40%\n35%\n15%\n78\n19%\n58%\n11%\n54\nClose\n232%\n98%\n8%\n22%\n82%\n165\n80%\n52%\n80%\n28%\n7%\n7%\n33\n21%\n84%\n25\n20%\n13\n69\n58%\n111%\n37\n59%\n6%\n152%\n155\n19%\n18\n7%\n23 V(\n26%\n51%\n55%\n40%\n43%\n8%\n49%\n35%\n13%\n78\n19%\n59\n11%\n54%\nKresge S S\nKroegger Sc Toll\nMack Truck\nMilwaukee  Pfd\nMont Ward   ...\nNash Motors\nNat Dairy Prods\nN Pow te Ll\nN Y Central\nPac Gas Sc El\nPackard Motors\nPenn R R\nPhillips Pete\nPure Oil . .\nRadio  Corp\nRadio Keith Or\nRem Rand\nSafeway  Stores\nShell Union\nS Cal Edison\nSouth Pacific\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan Oil of N J\nStewirt Warner\nStudebaker\nTexas Corp\nTexas Gulf Sul\nTimken Roller\nUnder Type\nUnion   Carbide\nUn Oil of Cal\nUnion   Aircraft\nUnited   Biscuit\nUnion Pacific\nU S Rubber\nU S Steel\nVanadium  Steel\nWarner Bros .\nWest Electric\nWestern   Union\nWoolworth\nWrigley     .  .\nYellow Truck\nHigh   Low   Close\n24%    24%\n22% 22%\n52 50%\n2% 2%\n54% 52%\n20% 19%\n23% 22%\n10% 10%\n46% 45%\n30% 30%\n10% 9%\n43% 42\n55 53\n20% 19%\n9%\n8%\n22%\n38%\n10\n8\u00bb,\n24\n39\n28% 27%\n26 25%\n56% 53%\n44% 43\n45 43%\n65*4 \u00ab4%\n19% 18%\n16% 15%\n65% 64%\n38% 36%\n61 60%\n85% \u00ab4%\n97% 96\n25 34%\n27 26%\n26% 25%\n143% 139\n60% 55\n108% 104%\n30% 29%\n14 13%\n135% 133%\n63% 61%\n31% 49%\n63% 68%\n30 27%\n24%\n22%\n51\n2%\n52%\n19%\n22%\n10%\n43%\n30%\n9%\n42%\n53\n19%\n9%\n8%\n23\n38%\n27%\n25%\n53%\n43%\n44%\n64%\n19\n15%\n64%\n36%\n60%\n84%\n96\n24%\n26%\n25%\n142%\n58\n105%\n29%\n13%\n134%\n61%\n49%\n68%\n27%\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nAlta Pac Grain A\nAssoc Brew of Can \t\nBathurst P Sc P A\nBell Telephone      \t\nBrazilian T L at P \t\nBrit Co Pow A\t\nBuild Prod A       \t\nCanada  Cement   \t\nCan  Steamship   \t\nCan Steam pfd\t\nCan Bronze Co  \t\nCan Oar Se Fdy   \t\nCan Car Fdy pfd\nCan Celanese\nCen Hydro Elec pfd .\nCan Ind Alco\nCan Ind Alco B       \t\nCan Pac Rly\nCockshutt Plow\nCon Min tc Smelt\nDistillers C Seagrams\nDominion Bridge\nDom Coil ptd\nDom Steel Se Coal B\nDom Textile\t\nDryden Paper Co\nFamous Players Corp\nFoundation Co of Can\nGen Steel Wares\nGurd Charles\nGypsum L Sc A\nHamilton Bridge Co   .\nHam Bridge ptd\nHolt Renfrew\nHoward Smith paper   .\nHoward Smith Pr 6j pfd\nImp Tob of Can\nInt Nickel ot Can\nLake of the Woods\nMassey Harris\nMeColl Front\nMontLH&P     .\nNat Brew Ltd\nNat Brew Ltd pfd\nNat Steel Car Corp\n5%\n15\n18%\n180\n22%\n36%\n64\n16%\n3\n7%\n49\n15%\n25\n26%\n75\n5%\n41s\n12%\n16\n78\n21%\n34%\n20%\n18%\n78\n15%\n30\n26\n15%\n10%\n13%\n15%\n82\n14\n27%\n100\n14\n58%\n33\n12%\n9\n30\n38\n40\n43\nOgilvie Flour\nPower Cor pf Can\t\nQuebec Power .    \t\nSt Law Corp\nSt Law A ptd .\nSt Law Paper Mills pfd  ...\nShawinigan W4P\nSouthern Can Power\nSteel of Can\nSteel of Can pfd \t\nWestern Grocers\t\nBANKS\nBank of Canada     \t\nCanadienne     \t\nMontreal \t\nNova Scotn  \t\nRoyal\nCURB\nAbitibi P t P Co\nAbiUbi pfd\nBathurst P4PB     \t\nBrew at Distillers Van\nBrew Corp of Can\nBrev; Corp Can pfd\nCan Malting oC  \t\nCan Vickers Ltd    \t\nCan Wineries Ltd\nCons Paper Corporation\t\nDom Stores Ltd\nDonnacona Paper\nDennacone Paper B\nFord Motor Co A   \t\nFraser Co's \t\nImperial Oil Co     \t\nInt Pete Co     \t\nInt Utilities A\nInt Utilities B\nMacLaren Pow (1 Paper\nMitchell Se Co Robt\nPage Hersey Tubes\nPrice Bros Sc Co new\nThrift Stores Ltd\nUnited Dist of Can\nWalker Good Se Worts pfd\n255\n22%\n19%\n12%\n31%\n80%\n26%\n13%\nS3\n77\n70\n58\n1.58\n229\n833\n211%\n9%\n64%\n9%\n8%\n2%\n78%\n38%\n.    10%\n180\n17%\n10%\n1%\n14%\n23\n. 37%\n. 21%\n35\n78%\n2%\n29\n23\n101\n4SVJ\n1\n65\n19%\nBOTTOM FALLS\nOUT OF MARKET\nIN WALL STREET\nHoldings Dumped for\nLosses of One to\nFive Points\nNEW YORK, April 26 (AP)-The\nbottom tell 0 . of the stock market\ntoday as speculative forces dumped\nholdings it losses of 1 to 5 points\ngenerally. There were a few much\nwider downswings.\nA large assortment of leaders,\ntouched new lows for the year or\nlonger and heivy selling wives |\nfrequently put the ticket tape sev. j\neral minules behind.\nDepressing was another break in\nrubber, grain and cotton futures.\nis well as a drop in export copper.\nWhile United States government\nbonds just ibout held their own.\nsecondary corporite loans weakened. At Chicago, wheat was off\n3% to the limit of 3 cents 1 bushel\npermitted In a day's trading. Corn\nlost 2 to 3%. Cotton yieldel 90 cents\nto $135 a bale. Rubber was \u00b0ff\nmore than 1 cent a pound.\nThe decline was the most severe\nfor any session since Aug. 21. last\nyear. Transfers of 2,020.810 shares\ncompared with 1.202.559 Friday and\nwas the largest aggregate since\nApril 7.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG,   April\n28   (CP)   -\nGrain futures quotations:\nOpen   High\nLow\nClose\nWheit-\nMay\n129%    130%\n127%\n127%\nJulv\n126      126%\n124\n124\nOct.\n114       115%\n112%\n112%\nOlta:\nMay\n54%     55%\n54%\n54%\nJuly\n50%     51\n50%\n50%\nOct.\n43%     43%\n42%\n42%\nBarley\nMav\n68%     69%\n66%\n67\nJulv\n62%     63\n61\n61\nOct.\n53        43%\n51\n51\nFlax:\nMey\n172%    173\n172\n173\nJuly\n173%    173%\n172\n172\nOct.\n171       171\n170\n170\nRye:\nMay\n110%    111\n107%\n107%\nJulv\n105%   105%\n102%\n102%\nOct.\n83%     87\n81\n84\nCash Wheat:\nNo. 1\nlard 128; No.\n1 Nor.\n127%;\nCAMPBELL SEES NECESSITY OF\nGREATER POWER DEVELOPMENT\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER. April 36 (CP) -\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStraight    Tough\nNo. 1 hard    ..\n..   122%\n120%\nNo.   1   nor.\n. 122%\n120%\nNo.  2 nor.\n... 120\n118\nNo. 3 nor. ...'\t\n  114\n111%\nNo. 4 nor.\n. 111%\n108%\nNo. 5 wheat\n.     106\n103%\nNo. 6 wheat\n..      96\n93%\nFeed \t\n77%\n74%\nVANCOUXER GRAIN EXCHANGE\nOPENS EARLIER\nVANCOUVER. April 26 (CP)-\nTridlng hours on the Vancouver\ngrain exchange this morning opened\none hour earlier, falling in line with\neastern markets which began daylight saving time today. The exchange opened at 6:30 a.m. (PST.)\nInstead ot 7:30. and will close at\n10:15, except the Saturday session.\nwhich will cloie at 9 a.m. The usual\nclosing time was 11:15 and 10 im\nCANADIAN DOLLAR GAINS\nNEW YORK, April 26 (AP). -\nLeading foreign currencies showed\nrallying tendencies in terms of the\nUnited States dollar today. The\npound sterling advanced 11-16 cent\nto $4.93 13-16; French francs were\nunchanged at 443%. The Canadian\ndollar advanced 1-32 cent to 100 5-32.\nA really \"sweet\" clover has been\nbrought from Europe and China,\nsince it proves lacking in the bitter\nsubstance coumarin found in American varieties.\nNo. 2 Nor. 125; No. 3 Nor. 118%:\nNo, 5 112%; No 6 104%; feed 82%;\nNo. 1 Garnet 123; No. 2 Garnet 122;\nNo. 1 Durum 129%; No. 1 A.R.W\n114%: No. 4 special 110%; No. 5\nspecial 100%; No. 6 special 96%;\ntrack 127%; screenings $16 per ton\nMoney\n(By the Canadian Press)\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal - Pound, 9.92 31-32;\nfranc. 4 43; U. S. dollar, .99 13-16.\nAt New York\u2014Pound. 493 13-16;\nfranc. 4.43 %: Canadian dollar.\n100 3-16.\nAt Paris\u2014Pound, 111.15 francs: U.\nS. Dollar, 22.54 francs; Canadian\ndollar, 22.57 31-32 francs.\nIn gold\u2014Pound. 12s; U. S. dollar,\n59.54 cents; Canadian dollar, 59 63\ncents.\nFARM PRODUCTION SOARS\nOTTAWA, April 26 (CP).\u2014Value\nof Canadian agriculture products\ntonred the billion dollar mark in\n1936 for the first time since depression hit the country's basic Industry\nIn 1930. it was shown today by th'\nDominion bureau of statistics. The\ngross value of firm products was\nplaced st $1,061,624,000, an increase\nof $112,084,000 over 1935. It wis $294,-\n830.000 higher than the depression\nlow yeir of 1932, representing 1\ngain of 38.4 per cent. Every province wai represented in the 1936\ngain over 1935 and practically every\nfarm product.\nLONDON MARKET WEAK\nLONDON. April 26 (AP). \u2014 The\nstock market closed weak as liquidation in the oil. mining and industrial groups continued. Gilt-edged\nsecurities and foreign bonds remained quiet but steady while the\ntransatlantic section closed weak\nwith prices 2 to 6 points lower.\nSteel, rubber, distilling and electrical shires were in supply and\nKaffirs declined on selling orders\nfrom Cape Town.\nBAR GOLD UNCHANGED\nMONTREAL, April 26 (CP)-Bar\ngold in London unchanged today at\n$34.66 an ounce in Canadian funds;\n140s 9%d in British. The fixed $33\nWashington price amounted to\n$3494 in Canadian.\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh Low Close   Change\n30 industnili   175 34 171.20 17197\u2014off 501\n20   rails       58.63 5685 57.26\u2014oft 2.28\n20  utilities       29.65 29.92 29.02\u2014off   .92\n40 bonds       \u2014 100.98\u2014off   46\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL. April 26 (CP) -Silver futures closed iteady today, 10\npoint? higher to 13 points lower.   Sales: '2 May contracts.\nOpen       High       Low Close\nMay     44 46B        44.89       44 85 44 85B\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nListed\nBid\nAsk\nBid\nAsk\nA P Con\n37%\n.40\nFoundation\n.33\n.34\nAmal Oil   \t\n09\n\u2014\nFreehold 0\n.09%\n.10\nAzlec   \t\n.09\n.09%\nGeo Copper\n.35\n\u2014\nBig Missouri\n.51%\n.52\nGeo  Enterprise\n03%\n\u2014\nBralorne    \t\n7.20\n\u2014\nGeo  River\n.02'i\n\u2014\nBrew & Dist\n8 58\n\u2014\nGolconda      \t\n.09%\n.10\nBridge R Con\n04\n.04%\nGold  Mount\n.08%\n03\nC Sc E Corp\n3 65\n3.75\nGrandview \t\n.17\n.18\nCariboo G\n1.55\n1 65\nGrange M\n.02%\n\u2014\nCoast Brew\n12 50\n\u2014\nHaida\n.01%\n02%\nCommonweilth 0\n33\n.35\nHigh  Sarcee\n,28\n.30\nDentonia ..\n\u2014\n16\nHome G\n.02%\n03\nGold Belt M\n.37\n\u2014\nIndian M\n.02%\n.03\nHome O    \t\n200\n2.05\nInter Gold\n\u2014\n05%\nInter Coil\n.21\n\u2014\nKoot Flo\n.02%\n.03\nIsland Mount\n.77\n80\nKoot King\n01%\n01%\nKoot  Belle\n86\n90\nLlkeview M \t\n.01%\n(12%\nMak Siccar\n04\n\u2014\nLowery Pete\n.25\n30\nMcD Segur Ex\n.22\n23\nLucky Jim\n.10\n10%\nMcLeod O\n40\n\u2014\nMadison 0\n10%\n.11\nMinto      \t\n31\n32\nMar Jon 0\n.21%\n23\nModel 0    \t\n4!)\n.50\nMercury\n.32\n33\nPioneer G\n4 85\n4 95\nMeridian New\n\u2014\n03\nPremier G\n285\n2.90\nMerland 0\n15\n\u2014\nPrem Border\n03%\n.03%\nMcGillivny\n19\n\u2014\nQuatsino     \t\n05\n.05%\nMid West Pete\n10\n\u2014\nRelief Arl\n20\n.28\nMill City 0\n.18\n\u2014\nReno G      \t\nflfi\n98\nMonarch\n.25%\n:a \u25a0\nReevas Mc\n112\n1.20\nMorton Wool\n\u2014\n01%\nSally      \t\n.05\n\u2014\nMarmot M\n.01\n01%\nSalmon G\n00:,\n.10\nNicola\n03%\n05%\nSheep Creek\n.81\n.82\nNoble Five\n07%\n08\nSilbak Prem\n2.90\n2.95\nNordon 0\n23\n\u2014\nTaylor B River\n07\n.03\nOkalta  Com\n153\n1 55\nVanalta Ltd\n.09%\n\u2014\nPacaltj\n18%\n.19\nVidette\n35\n.40\nPend Oreille\n315\n3 20\nWavside\n.03%\n\u2014\nPorter Idaho\n03%\n06\nWesko\n22\n24\nPilot G\n05\n05%\nYankee Girl\n.30\n.33\nQuesnelle  Q\n\u2014\n.12\nCURB\nRanchmen's\n70\n.72\nAnaconda\n.18%\n.20\nReliance\n04\n.01%\nBaltac O\n.06\n.07\nReward M\n.12\n.13%\nBayview\n01%\n01%\nRoyalite O\n42 00\n45 00\nBeaver Stl\n\u2014\n02\nRufus Arg     ..\n04%\n\u2014\nBluebird\n03%\n04\nRuth  Hope\n,03%\n\u2014\nB C Nickel\n18\n.20\nSilver Crest \t\n.06%\n07\nCalmont O\n67\n70\nSilversmith   .\n02%\n.03\nCapital Est\n815\n8.25\nSouthweit P  ....\n.70\n60\nCongress\n07%\n.08\nStandard S L\n47\n51\nCork Prov\n\u2014\n.01%\nSunloch M \u25a0   \t\n25\n\u2022**\nCrows N New\n07%\n\u2014\nTaylor  Wind\n.11\n12%\nDictator     \t\n02%\n03\nU D L-. ,\t\n\u2014\n90\nDalhousie O\n109\nno\nUnited. O.\t\n25\n26\nDevenish\n.06\n08\nviking 3.-.\t\n02%\n02%\nDunwell M\n03%\n\u2014\nVulcan 0 .\n1.33\n1.40\nFist  Cres'  O\n,24\n.25\nWaverly T New\n01%\n01%\nFairview Amal\n09%\n\u2014\nWellington   M\n\u2014\n.06\nFederal G\n.05\n.05%\nWhitewater\n16\n.17\nVANCOUVER, April 26 (CP> -\nLome A Campbell, vice-president\nind general maniger of the West\nKootenay Power Sc Light company,\ncomments on the necessity for additional hydro-electric development\nin 1 review of last year's operations\nThe general manager pointed out\nthat operations of plants Nos 1.2 3\nind 4 was greatly interfered with\nWORK CERTIFICATES ARE\nISSUED TO E. HAUKEDAHL\nA. SOSTAD, W. LAVIGNE\nThree work certificates apiece for\nclaims in the Nelson mining division were issued to E. P, Haukedahl\nand Andrew Sostad, respectively,\nand one to William Lavigne from\nthe mining recorder's office, Nelson,\nduring the past week.\nCertificates to Mr. Haukedahl were\nfor the Amador, Easter and Sunr.ss\nFraction on Porcupine creek, while\nthose to Mr. Sostad were for th1.\"\nRoa], Opal and Fritz of Nansen or\nRest creek and the one to Mr. Lavigne for the Keno No. 3 on Wil.\nHorse creek.\nby \u25a0 drought condition throughout\nthe drainage area of the Kootenay\nriver where precipitation wai only\n50 per cent of normal.\nIncreased power consumption of\nConsoIidat\u00abd Mining & Smelting\ncompany and increased lighting in\nTrail, Rowland and the Okanagan\ndistrict was chiefly responsible (or\nan increase in revenue of $319,326\nto $3,251,704, Mr. Campbell said.\nHUDSON'S\n(P\\ocJuAabi\u00a3.A\nSCOTCH\nWHI\nGOLD OUTPUT UP\nOTTAWA, April 26 (CP)-Production nf gold was considerably\nhigher during Jihuary it 328,545\nounces compared with 277,554 in\nJanuary last year, the Dominion\nbureau of statistics reported today\nHBC\nMONTREAL  METALS\nMONTREAL,  April  26   (CP)  -\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic, 15.80; tin; ^uveitisement is nol publisned\n58.00; lead 6.40; antimony 16 00; zinc \u25a0 or displayed by the Liquor Contrc\/\n6.10; per 100 pounds fob. Montreal, Board or by the Government of\nfive-ton lota. ' British Columbia.\nAN INVESTMENT PLAN\nWITH SAFETY, FLEXIBILITY\nA proven plan of investment which minimizes\nthe confusion, perplexity and risk in the\nproblem of investing your earnings. You\nahare in the direct ownership of securities of\nbasic industry with outstanding record* of\nsoundness and profit-earning ability.\nSuch a plan is represented hy Independence\nFounders Trust Shares,, whereby underlying\nsecurities are held in truat hy the Roval Trust\nCompany. Your funds are secure, convenient\n\u2014with maximum opportunity for profit and\ncapital increment.\nWrite or telephone for a copy of interesting\nbooklet \"HOW MONEY MAKES MONEY\".\nDirectors:\nDr. W. A. Carrothers      Norman Sanfliter\nProf. H. Angus A. 8. Barker\nINDEPENDENCE FOUNDERS\nLIMITED\n914 Royal Bank Bldg., Vancouver, B.C.    Trln. 6518\n^\nm\nREAD THE\nWANT ADS?\nnrp A IT 1CJT   you'll save money, first of all\nJBltlj.-^USaCa   fajactically every day you car\nfind the   -\nting\nWillie?\ncan\ny  things' you'va\nfor.   at   real   price\n7 PUTT T'T IT    save time, ton, by reading the\n. \\J\\J  JU.1L;   want-ads    No matter what it\nis you're alter,  you  can put\nvour finger cn it  in a Jiffy\n. . . in the News.\nJAVF,   now through the Daily News\n\"1,lu   want-ad!     If   yaiu've   something   to   s=l!    fir   cash    or\nth?i'e';. Fornethini; you want In\nbuy. phone 144 today\nNelson Daily News\na\nm\n-4J\n \u2014\u2014^\u2014\u2014\u2014\n\t\nPAOE TEN-\nFLAGS\nFor Coronation Day\nWe have a moat complete stock.\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, 1NEL8ON, B.C^-TUESDAY MORNING, APRIL 27, 1937.\nEaglet' regular Whiit and Dance\npostponed. (108)\nReserve   April   30  for  Red   Sox\nSoftball Dance. (105)\nJockey shorti in thli season's new\nstyle.   JACK  BOYCE. (5516)\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nTWO-YEAR-OLD SOFT SHELL\nwalnut trees, $1 each. Lilacs, black\ncurrants, 15c each. Niagara grapes.\n25c to 50c. Viking raspberry and\nblackberry canes. 40c doz., $3 hundred. Perennials and rock plants\nC. Becker. Phone 364R1. 1106)\nRose bushes, the best In town. 16\nvarieties. Grlzzelle'i. Phone 187. (96)\nFRIGIDAIRE built and backed by\n, General   Motors. Hipperson  Hdwre.\n(92)\nGet behind the Coronation Celc\nbration. Enter a float. You may win\na prize.    ' (5843)\nLOST - BROWN PURSE WITH\npink apron and other articles. Return to Grenfell's Cafe. Reward.\n(104)\nUse BURNS' PRESTO Fertilizer\nand watch your flowers grow. For\nsale at all stores. (41)\nINDIAN CONSTITUTION WORKING\nMISSIONARY TELLS ROTARIANS\nWhile Congress Party Obstructs, Others Are\nActing Under It; Great Development\nMaterially; Army for Protection\nA picture of India under a constitution that some elements rejected but others accepted, of an\neconomic progress that made deserts\nproductive and provided an. entire\nprovince with commercial power,\nand of modern science that imparted\nagricultural tips to the native peas\nschool sons, who were steeped  in\nradio  knowledge,  came   to   realize\nthat they were actually hearing experts who were talking at Delhi for\ntheir benefit.\nMUNICIPAL TRAINING\nGROUND\nDealing next with the municipal\nCLIPSHAVE  Electric Shaver\nnever gets dull. $12.50. Hipperson's.\n(92)\nMinister Gives\nReason Transfer\nof Road Upkeep\nTRAIL, B.C., April 26.\u2014Transfer\nof the Fruitvale-Erie road from\nNelson-Creston riding to Rossland-\nTrail constituency jurisdiction was\nmade wholely in the interest of\nefficiency and economy, stated Hon.\nF. M. MacPherson, minister of public works, following an inspection\nover district roads with Frank Putnam and R. R. Burns.\nThe minister said that equipment\nand staff of the Rossland-Trail district were more strategically situated to handle the work.\nSee our new selection of net and\nlace evening gowns.\nMILADY'S FASHION SHOPPE\nUOO)\nLet   our   wide   experience   solve\nyour Beauty Problems.\nROSE BEAUTY PARLOR\n(3770)\nDon't miss \"Look Who's Here\" at\nTrinity Church Thursday and Friday, 8 p.m. Admission 35c and 15c.\n(103)\nFOR MOTHER'S DAY\u2014MAY 9th.\nA gift your Mother will cherish\u2014\nyour photo. THE VOGUE. Phone 46.\n(5519)\nPanel of 24\njurors Drawn\nSheriff M. E. Harper Monday\nafternoon drew a petit jury panel\nof 24 electors for duty at the criminal assizes opening here May 10.\nWhile the panel is drawn in public\nin his office at a,i advertised time,\nas posted on the bulletin boards,\ncomposition of the panel is an official secret until the names arc called\nin court.\nDANCE\nto the SOPHISTICATED RHYTHM\nof Cyril Roach and his Ambassadors\nof BROADCASTING FAME In the\nEAGLES' HALL TONIGHT, April\n27. Gents 50c; Ladies 25c. (85)\nGladys Webb\nFoster L.R.A.M.\nAnnounces the Festival Successes\nand  Marks of  Her Pupils\nVIOLIN JUNIOR CHAMPIONSHIP\u2014Daisy   Norris.\nUnder 10: Gnrdnn Firming, firsf\n80. 81;   Glenna   Lowes,   third,\n78. 80.\nUnder 12: Catherine Argyle, first,\n88; Shirley Herron, second, 85.\nUnder 14: Avonia Stewart and\nWallace Fleming lie, firs!\nplace, 80; Arthur Fleming, second, 76.\nUnder 16: Rosemary Fleming,\nfirst, 80; Gordon Allan, second,\n75.\nUnder 19: Daisy Norris, first, 84;\nMargaret Gerrish, second, 82.\nPIANO\u2014Under 12: Shirley Herron, first, 85.\nUnder 16: Rosemary Fleming,\nsecond. 81, 81.\nUnder  19:  Billie  Wallace,  first,\n81, 82; Margaret Gerrish, third,\n78, 78.\nPIANO DUET \u2014 Open: Ruhy\nYoung and Maude Dolphin\nfirsl, 82.\nDUET for VIOLIN and PIANO,\nopen: Maude Dolphin, first, 83;\nRuby Young, 82,\nPIANO DUET\u2014Under 17: Billie\nWallace and Daisy Norris, second, 81,\nDUET for VIOLIN and PIANO\u2014\nUnder   18:   Daisy   Norris   and\nBillie Wallace, first, 85,\nVIOLIN ENSEMBLE\u2014Under 18:\nMargaret Gerrish, Daisy Norris,\nJean Gibson, Gordon Allan,\nBillie Wallace, Annie Busk,\nRosemary Fleming, first, 80,\nELEMENTARY    ORCHESTRA-\nNelson Siring Orchestra, first,\n84.\nTwelve years of business has given\nus the choice of best manufacturers'\nproducts, Westinghouse Refrigerators, Easy Washing Machines, R.C.A,\nVictor and Stromberg Carlson Radios. KOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE.\n159)\nDon't be fooled! Wait for the\nRexall ORIGINAL One Cent Sale.\nFour big days of \"two for the price\nof one, plus only One Cent\" bargains. Only Rexall Drug Stores\ngive you such quality at such marvelous savings. City Drug Co., the\nRexall Drug Store. (50)\nA meeting of the NELSON LIBERAL ASSOCIATION will be held\non Wednesday, April 28th, in GELINAS HALL at 8:30 p.m. for the\npurpose of appointing delegates to\nthe Nelson-Creston Liberal Association nominating convention to be\nheld May 5th. All members request\ned to attend.\n(76)\nCommencing May 1st the Kootenay Lake Ferry will resume its\nsummer schedule of three trips per\nday\nIV.\nDept. Provincial Public Works.\n>78)\nCARD OF THANKS\nMrs. A. T, Park and family wish\nto thank all friends for kindness and\nexpressions of sympathy extended\nto them during their sad bereavement in the loss of a loving husband\nand son. (107)\nwas given to the Rotary club Monday  by  Rev.  C.  H.  Wilkinson,  of\nKangra, in the Punjab.\nVAST DIVERSITY\nIntroduced by Rev. W. J, Silver-\nwood, who referred to his 12 years\nin India, and to his being in charge\nof the Anglican missions, Mr. Wilkinson proceeded to give a great\nmany vital facts in a short space of\ntime, which made up a particularly\nvivid and understanding picture of\nIndia.\nOne could not visualize the Indian\nproblem unless he grasped that India had 350,000,000 inhabitants, 222\ndifferent languages, besides dialects,\nand many religions, involving a vast\nvariety of creeds.\nThe problem of giving self-government to India was further complicated by the fact that 90 per cent\nof the population was illiterate, and\n90 per cent practised agriculture.\nOne could not know India, Mr. Wilkinson said, unless he knew the villager.\nCONGRESS PARTY\nNOT INDIA\nReferring to the new constitution\nand the dispatches reporting that tht\nCongress party had been successful\nin six of the 11 provinces, and then\nrefused to take office, the speaker\nexplained that the Congress party\nwas predominantly Hindu, and\ntherefore not representative of India. While 30,000.000 to 35,000,000\nvoters exercised their franchise in\nthe recent election, as there were\nso many illiterates, the verdict of\nthe polls could not really mean\nmuch. Many villagers, for instance,\nput in the ballot-boxes prayers to\nthe gods, and others, petitions to the\ngovernment to remit the real estate\ntax. While the Congress party was\nnot sympathetic to the agricultural\npopulation, realizing Gandhi's popularity it used him, and induced\nhim to speak, and as the villagers\nhad a belief that if they voted for\nGandhi, all their troubles would be\nI over, the party thus benefitted by a\n! great vote obtained by that method.\n[ While the Congress party wanted\nj to nullify the constitution, Mr.\ni Wilkinson said, there were other\nj parties that were anxious to use it.\nThe Mohammedans, for instance,\n[ were not in the Congress fold, and\n1 many of the moderate-minded of\nI that faith wanted it accepted. Fur-\n; ther, some Indian public men who\ni were in favor of the constitution\nj were left out of the elections. Others\nnominally approved the position of\nthe Congress party so that they\ncould get elected.\nNoting that the London Times was\nregarded   as   an   extremely   sound\nauthority  upon  India, the speakei\nquoted the Times as declaring that\nthe refusal of the Congress party to\naccept office was tantamount lo a\nconfession   of   incapacity.    It  was\ni somewhat similar, the speaker suggested, to the case of an individual\nI who wanted a certain responsibility\nI until it was in his hands, and then\n; hc was afraid of it.\nFIVE  PROVINCES\nORGANIZED\n.    But the congress party did not entirely   control   the   situation,   Mr.\n1 Wilkinson pointedoul, In five provinces minority groups had formed\nMRS. DUPPERON\nLAID AT REST\nAT ROSSLAND\nROSSLAND, B. C.-The funeral\nof Mrs. Joseph Dupperson took\nplace from St. Andrew's United\nchurch, Saturday afternoon, Rev.\nT. W. Reed conducting the service.\nInterment was in Sunnyside cemetery, the service at the graveside\nbeing conducted by the officers of\nRossland Hteview, W. B. A. Pall\nbearers were P. Drake, John Newman, Robert McNab, Robert Donaldson, James Hansen and J. Milligan.\nentry by the medium of radio vans, | self-government schemes, the\nspeaker admitted their record was\nnot very happy to date, though\nprogress was being made. His hearers were interested to learn he was\na mayor, with two Hindu and two\nMohammedan colleagues, between\nwhom he acted as referee. He said\nhe had become unpopular with bib\ncouncil, but popular with the people, because of his insistence that\nthe revenue be spent for thc public\nbenefit. He said the government's\nobject was to make the municipalities training grounds for government.\nAnother activity was the improvement of  live stock,  in  which  the\nviceroy took a direct interest.\nARMY PROTECTS DOOR\nRespecting the Indian army, Mr.\nWilkinson stated it was vital that\nit. should hold thc front door, across\nthe northwest frontier. If it ever\nshould be removed, he said India\nwould instantly be invaded by savage tribes from Afghanistan, who\nwould rush down and loot. Perhaps\nsome Mohammedan race might follow, and then perhaps some European power. So there was a line of\nforts in front of the border. If the\nBritish army, only 60,000 strong,\nshould be withdrawn, there would\nbe an untold confusion in a few\ndays.\nIt was because this matter was\nso misrepresented by unsympathetic\nwriters, particularly those in the\nAmerican magazines, that he referred to this point, Mr. Wilkinson\nsaid.\nR. E. Potter, president, and Mr,\nSilverwood joined in thanking the\nvisiting speaker for his splendid\naddress.\nA fellow guest was Rev. J. G.\nHolmes, rector of St. Saviour's.\nTEN PER (ENT OF MINERS SO FAR\nEXAMINED HAVE SILICOSIS SIGNS\nMORE ABOUT\nONTARIO FLOODS\n(Continued From Page One)\nFloods lapped at Ontario thresh'\nolda early today as the Thames\nriver beleaguered London\u2014hardest hit In a score of centres harassed by the Rush Lot Lakes of\nrain-swelled freshets.\nThe city saw 6000 of Its 80,000\npeople evacuated from their homes\nlast night at the call of Mayor\nThomas Kingsmill. Most of the\nabandoned houses In the western\narea, endangered by floods from\nthe north branch of the Thames,\nwhich poured over a concrete\nbreakwater set to guard the city\nwhere the north branch meets\nthe south.\nRed cross stations were set up\nthroughout London, and the main\nfloor of the armories In mld-clty\nwas turned over for relief purposes by the department of national defence.\n\u2022Sprawling rivers and burgeoning\ncreeks scrawled a new flood story\nacross the face nf western Ontario\ntoday   (Tuesday)  in  epilogue  to  a\nchapter of destruction and tragedy.\nThree men died near Woodstock\nyesterday   as   that  Oxford   county\ncitv centred a ragged wheel of flood\ngovernments and wore carrying on. | J     ,.ncs strctchi\nIt was quite possible,.he jested. | 18 mjles nor(hpaft )o stratford   30\n| that the\"Congress parly might find j ;\"e;ilhro7grinlmin\"to London.\n! itself    on  the outside looking in.   j M ^ )o Brant,or(i and southwcsl\nPolling Places\nSouth Interior\nAre Announced\nEach Includes Vicinity\nFrom Standpoint of\nAccessibility\nPolling divisions in southern interior ridings fqr the forthcoming\nprovincial election have been announced as follows:\nCOLUMBIA- Athalmer, Beaver-\nmouth, Brisco, Canal Flats, Castle-\ndale, Donald, Edgewater, Field,\nForde, Galena, Golden, Invermere,\nMcMurdo, Moberly, Parson, Radium\nHot Springs, White River, Wilmcr\nand Windermere.\nCRANBROOK\u2014 Chapman Camp,\nCranbrook, Kimberley, Kingsgate,\nLumberton, Marysville, Mayook, Moyie, Skookumchuck, Ta Ta Creek,\nWardner, West Newgate, Westport,\nWest Waldo, Wycliffe and Yahk.\nFERNIE\u2014Bull River, Coal Creek,\nCorbin, Crow's Nest, Elko, Fernie,\nFort Steele, Galloway, Grasmere,\nHarmer's Ranch, Hosmer, Jaffray,\nMichel, Natal, Springbrook, Waldo,\nWasa and West Fernie.\nGRAND FORKS-GREENWOOD\u2014\nBeaverdell, Boundary Falls, Brides-\nville. Brown Creek. Carmi, Cascade,\nChristian Valley, Eholt, Fife, Grand\nForks, Greenwood, Midway, Riverside, Siuley and Westbridge,\nKASLO-SLOCAN - Ainsworth,\nAppledale, Argenta, Arrowhead, Arrow Park, Beaton, Brouse, Burton,\nCamborne, Deer Park, East Arrow\nPark, Edgewood, Fauquier. Ferguson, Galena Bay, Gerrard, Glcndev-\non, Graham's Landing, Halcyon\nHall's Landing, Howser, Johnson's\nLanding Kaslo, Lardeau, Marble-\nhead, Mirror Lake, Nakusp, Needles, New Denver, Passmore, Perry\nSiding, Poplar, Renata, Retallack,\nRosebery, Sandon, Shutty Bench,\nSilverton. Slocan, Three Forks, Trout\nLake and Winlaw.\nNELSON-CRESTON - Arrow\nCreek, Balfour, Bayonne mine, Benton Spur, Boswell, Camp Lister,\nCanyon City. Crawford Bay, Crescent Valley, Creston, Erickson. Erie,\nFruitvale, Granite mill, Gray Creek,\nHarrop, Kitchener, Kokanee, Kootenay Bay. Nelson, Procter, Queen's\nBay, Reclamation Farm, Riondel,\nRobson, Salmo, Second Relief mine,\nSheep Creek, Shirley, Sirdar, Slocan Park, South Slocan, Syringa\nCreek, Thrums, Willow Point, Wynndel and Ymir.\nROSSLAND-TRAIL - Annable,\nCastlegar, Columbia Gardens, Pend\nd'Oreiile, Rossland, Sheep Creek,\nTrail and Waneta.\nIn each case the polling division\ncomprises the point named \"and\nthe surrounding territory tributary\nthereto from the standpoint of accessibility.\"\nSpecialist   Is  Making\nTests\u2014T. B. Work\nMakes Progress\nExamination of underground\nworkers in the mines for silicosis,\nbegun since amendment of the compensation act to include disability\narising out of silicosis, is carried on\nby Dr. Gordon F. Kincade from\nTranquille at the various mines out\nof Nelson in conjunction with tuberculosis clinic.\n\"As was expected,\" states Dr. Kin-\ncade, \"numerous cases of silicosis arc\nbeing discovered, about 10 per cent\nof those miners examined to date\nbeing affected. Considering the large\nnumber of old time miners who are\nstill employed, this is not unusual\nwh'en it is well known that in those\nworking in quartz dust where silica\nis present, the disease often develops\nafter seven years' exposure. On the\nother hand, a great many men with\n25 and more years in quartz dust\nhave perfectly normal lungs. This,\nof course, depends on the conditions\nunder which the men work and\nupon their physical well-being while\nworking.\"\nSteps are being taken, as everywhere else, to clear the mines of\ntuberculosis. Silicosis is known to\nhave a ready susceptibility to this\ndisease.\nThat there are 4500 known cases\nof tuberculosis in the province with\n700 in the interior and 160 known\ncases in West Kootenay, that 93\nnew cases were reported in the\nprovince for February and that the\nhighest mortality rate is between\nthe ages of 18 and 29 are statistical\nfigures and observations obtained\nfrom Dr. Kincade. He conducted a\ntravelling clinic from Tranquille\nagainst tuberculosis during the past\nyear over about 1500 miles of the\ninterior, his territory taking in all\nof the interior as far north as Hazel-\nton, east to Crow's Nest and including the Peace River, during which\ntime he examined about 4500 cases.\nMeasures against tuberculosis are\nadvancing, he states. The extension\nof this work into the mining areas\nhas necessitated placing a second\nclinic in operation in the interior\nand it is hoped the clinic will be\npermanently established. If so, prevention of tuberculosis clinics will\nhave quadrupled within the last\ntwo years. In 1935 one clinic served\nthe entire province and last year two\nmore were added. He further states\nthat an effort is being made to inform the public about the disease.\nTo this end a booklet, \"Lessons in\nTuberculosis,\" is being published for\ndistribution in the schools for children to take home and be brought\nto the attention of parents.\nTuberculosis tests in school children in grades 1 and 2, such as Dr.\nF. M. Auld, acting medical health\nofficer in Nelson, is conducting, he\nsays, are influential in narrowing\ndown the source of the infection.\nChildren of that age have very few\noutside contacts. If infection is present, it can usually be traced to the\nhome, when an early case is often\nfound. After that age a child is more\nliable to have been infected outside j\nthe home. At a recent clinic when\nseven children showed positive tu- j\nberculin reactions in school, it re-\nsuited in two adults from the |\nhomes reporting for tests and 10 of\nthese had positive reactions.\nThe test is also useful in finding\nearly cases in children. Children\nfrom five years to 15, says Dr. Kincade, usually recover quickly when\nremoved from contact. They are,\nhowever, more susceptible to thc\ndisease in later life when the strain\nbecmes heavier.\nThose interested in fighting the\ndisease who realize the sapping of\nstrength   which   halts   the   careers\nstress the urgent need of stopping\nthe disease in its early stages when\ncure is faster and surer, without the\nheavy loss of years, and expense,\nwhich occurs when the disease has\nbeen allowed to develop,\nWith only 6,t0 beds in British\nColumbia sanatoria, says Dr. Kincade, and about 500 new cases of\ntuberculosis discovered each year,\ntaking in every patient would minimize the period for each patient j\nto seven months. For that reason I\nthe institution of centres for pneu- '\nmothorax treatment, as is that conducted by Dr. Auld in Kootenay\nLake General hospital, affords relief to a great need for quicker turnover of beds. It also gives the patent\nwho learned from sanatorium routine how to protect himself and others\nfrom infection the privilege of continuing treatment at home and\nmakes room in the sanatorium for a\nnew patient to benefit from gaining\nthat knowledge.\nDr. Kincade states surgical advancement recently introduced the\nuse of intra pleural pneumolysis at\nthe sanatoria in B.C., minimizing the\nnecessity of the major thoracoplasty\noperations. It is an operation by\nwhich adhesions are cut to enable\npneumothorax treatment. About\nthree or four operations a week are\nbeing performed at the sanatoria.\nIn Vancouver, he says the Florence\nNightingale Nursing home was recently established for chronic ambulatory tuberculosis patients who\nhave no other place to go for thc\nrest and care necessary to their condition.\nThe latest pneumothorax equipment furnished in the Kootenay\nLake General hospital has been a\nreal aid and Dr. Kincade expressed\nthe clinic's appreciation of the cooperation and interest which made\nit possible.\nReal Comfort\nIN THESE\nPYJAMAS\nThe full roomy cut of\nthese carefully made pyjamas assure the comfort\nso essential to restful\nsleep. They are good looking and long wearing.\nFlannelette or Broadcloth\n$2.00 $2.50\n$3.00\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 655     510 Kootenay St\nered.  Two  schools  closed.\nReports of rising water and flooded roads from points along thc\ngrand river below Brantford. Several settlements werc isolated and\nobservers though the flood crest\nhad not yet been reached.\nDredge cuts in the marshland behind the village of Erieau werc filled.   Fishermen   of^the^viHage.^ 15 j ve'ry'often of people just starting out\nGreyhound Leaves TRAIL\n7 a.m., 11 a.m.. 2 p.m. and 7:30\np.m. daily for Nelson. The 7 a.m.\ntrip makes connections for\nNakusp and Eastern points. J. M.\nDoughtv. Trail agent, Greyhound\nLines.    Phone 642 Trail.\nCREYHOUND LINES\nPhone 800\nKelson  Depot \u2014 205 Baker St.\n< 5,;29)\nFor the\nCoronation\nMAKE SURE THAT YOUR\n\"A\" \"B\" and \"C\" RADIO BATTERIES\nAre in good condition so that you will be privileged\nto sit in on a word-by-word description of this\ngrand traditional ceremony.\nWHEN ORDERINC BE SURE AND SAY\nEVERFADY\nRADIO BATTERIES\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nIn cases where governments were\nnot formed, the governors had wide-\npowers and could carry on alone if\nthe need arose. The native parties\nasked why the governors should\ni nave the power of veto of financial\n' measures, and control of the police,\nI but these- were wise provisions, and\n' extreme powers would be used only\nj if necessary.\n; In the meantime, the Congress\nparty had the fullest opportunity\nIn carry on and govern, It. might be\n; very noisy now, but it was possible\nj that in the end it would decide to\naccept responsibility as the best\nI moans of exercising power,\ni Next Mr. Wilkinson pictured the\n| great things the government had\nj clone for the advancement of India,\ni particularly in the Punjab, where\nhe   was   stationed.   A   tremendous\n30 cast\nto St. Thomas, 40 miles away,\nThe three were Malcolm Isbister,\nInnerkip, Ont., and Norman Aiken,\nof Sarnia, engineer and fireman on\na Canadian National railways passenger train, derailed just west of\nWoodstock; and Dr. J, H. MacDonald, Ingersoll's medical officer of\nhealth, swept off a bridge as he\nsped by motor toward the wreck.\nPassengers were not injured and\ncontinued by way nf Stratford.\nValleys of the Thames river, running southwest from central western Ontario to Lake St. Clair, and\nthe Grand, which rmpties in Lake\nErie after a south-easterly course,\nwere the thoroughfares nf rising\nwater, fed by rain-swollen tributaries.\nIt was the Thames that washed\ncanal system had been built up in I out  the C   N. R.  embankment at\n,, , C(, ..\u201e\u201e.\u201e\u201e ,,\u201e ,,\u201ei\u201ej t\u201e \u201e,._,(,,,. | Bcachville four miles west of Wood-\nllie past 50 years, he stated, to water\nwhat had been desert, and now\nthose sections were most productive\nareas, covered with crops of cotton\nand wheat.\nTHOMAS POWER HEAD\nA great hydro-electric scheme had\nbeen  canned  out  in  recent years,,   . \u201e   ,\nlargely done under II. P. Thomas, j !ie^7A^.<iC\u21228_\"nllhe^V^! r'VPr\nstock, where the engine, baggage\ncar and first coach of the Chicago-\nof the Chicago-Montreal train simply dropped 10 feet and remained upright. Water creeping higher made\nj the work of rescuers difficult.\nI    Stone ballast, was rushed to bol-\nformerly city electrician of Nelson,\nwho first was second in command,\nand then became chief when his\ni superior was killed in a motor acci-\nI dent. Well acquainted with Mr.\ni Thomas, he said he was told by him\nj of his Nelson connections, and given\n1 old friends to contact if he should\n, ever come here. This development,\n! Mr. Wilkinson said, brought a\nI stream from the top of a mountain\nat Stratford, and at St. Thomas\nheavy Pore Marquette freights were\nheld up by collapse of a ravine fill.\nCanadian Pacific tracks were washed out. a mile east nf Woodstock.\nBranch lines north to St. Mary's and\nsouth to Port Burwell on Lake Erie\nwere blocked.\nA soe're of persons were rescued\nyesterday as two rescue boats went\nfrom house to house on London's\nflooded     Evergreen     avenue.     At\n(,000 feet high   three miles by giant L     t  fm)r  ^^  jn   London   dJS\npipes, to the plant, at an elevation   trict were cInsefi ,n traf(jc\nf 4000, and eventually cheap power\nj would he delivered lo the whole oi\n! the Punjab.\ni    Recently a village uplift scheme\n; had been put in effect, with F. L.\n| Brain, an  expert   famous  in more\n.than  one  country,  in  charge, and\ni better methods of agriculture were\ntaught, and  information on health\ngiven .travelling radio VBM broadcasting as they pasted through th\"\nvillages, At first, said the.speakei.\nvillagers    considered    the'   radios\nmerely   exaggerated   gramophones,\nbut later, on hearing from their hlgn\nMany acres of low-lying farmland north of Woodstock were submerged and highway communication with the Ontario hospital there\nwas cut off, though it. was possible\nto reach the institution by way of\nrailway  tracks.\nNorth at. New Hamburg near Kitchener, three families deserted their\nhomes at the Nith river swept into\ntheir cellars.\nStratford's drinking water was\nblack. The Avon overflowed into\nartesian    wells   serving   the   city.\nmiles south of Chatham, feared\nstormy Lake Erie would break\ndown the dike connecting them with\nthe mainland.\n6000 EVACUATE\nLONDON, Ont., April 26 fCP)\n\u2014Police at nine o'clock E.S.T, tonight estimated 6000 persom had\nbeen evacuated from their homes\nIn different parts of London, as\nthe worst flood In 40 years overran the city.\nto take their place in the community\nFIREMAN  KILLED  INSTANTLY\nWOODSTOCK, Ont., April 26-\n(CP)\u2014Three men were dead tonight as the result of a washout on\nth? Canadian National railways'\nmain line near Bcachville, four\nmiles near Beachville, four miles\nwest of here.\nA railway fireman was instantly\nkilled and an engineer fatally injured when the C. N. R.'s crack intercity limited, Chicago-to-Montreal\nflyer, derailed where an embankment was washed away by flood.\nA doctor on his way to the accident was drowned when he and\nhis automobile were swept off a\nbridge by the flood.\nThe dead:\nNorman Aiken, Sarnia, fireman.\nMalcolm \"Max\" Isbister, Innerkip, engineer.\nDr. J. H- MacDonald, M.O.H., In-\ngersoll.\nThe official statement on the\nwreck issued later tonight by W. A.\nKingsland, vice-president of the\ncentral region, disclosed the possibility of a fourth death might have\nresulted from the accident. After\nnoting the injuries received by a\ntransient, the statement said:\n\"It is presumed there was a seeond vagrant, name unknown, on\nthe baggage car. No trace of him\nhas been found.\"\nDr. J. H. MacDonald, for many\nyears medical health officer of the\ntown of Ingersoll, got a telephone\ncall telling of the accident. He\njumped in his car, speeded east.\nwas driving across the bridge near\nlhe cyanamid plant near Beachdale\nwhen the surging flood swept him\noff the bridge.\nCar and driver both disappeared\ninstantly in the flood, so great was\n:Boil before drinking,\" doctors ord- the flow, according to eye-witnesses.\nIs Organized in\nCreston Vicinity\nObjects Reclamation\nand Development\nof Land\nNotice is given in the current issue of the B, C, Gazette of the creation under provisions of the Water\nact of an improvement district, to\nbe known as the Creston Dyking\ndistrict, in the vicinity of Creston,\nThe objects are \"the acquisition\nand operation of works for the reclamation and development of the\nlands in the district by dyking and\nincidental means and for the improvement of the said lands by\ndrainage and incidental means.\"\nThree trustees are to be elected,\n'\u25a0lie one receiving most votes to hold\noffice until 1040, thc second until\n1939, and the third until 1938. Voters qualified are those who are British subjects, of the full age of 21 j\nyears, and owners of land within\nlimits of tlie district or the \"duly\nqualified agents of such owners, and\nwho are not Chinese. Japanese, or\nother Asiatic nr Indian race.\" Leonard T. Leveque, Erickson farmer,\nhas been appointed returning officer for the first election.\nThe trustees are charged with\nlevying taxes and managing the district. Until the district has accumulated a reserve fund of $10,000 they\nare required to raise by taxation\nsufficient to meet the current expenses of the district and in addition a levy of 50 cents an acre on all\narable land. Money not required for\ncurrent expenses must be placed in\nthe reserve fund, and the fund must\nbe invested in Dominion of Canada\nor Province of British Columbia\nbonds, It may not then be used\nwithout writterf consent of the Creston Reclamation Co., Ltd.\nFairview\nTennis\nClub\nAnnounces three double\ncourts in splendid condition ready for play. Free\ncoaching will be given on\nrequest.\nFEES\nLadies   $6.00\nMen      $8:00\nHusband and wife $12.50\nStudents  .. $5.00\nJuniors      $3.00\nOut of town   $2.50\nWatch the Daily News for\nofficial opening. Weather\npermitting next Sunday,\nMay 2nd. Refreshments\nwill be served. Everybody\nwelcome.\nArt Hodson,\nSecretary-Treasurer\nPHONE 269\nJ. A. C. Laughton I\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg '\nNIAGARA-ON-THE-LAKE, Ont.\n(CP)\u2014This town has two churches )\nthat have served under eight rulers.\nSt. Mark's Anglican was founded\nin 1792 and St. Andrew'i Presbyterian in 1794.\nAUCTION\nWednesday, April 28,2 p.m.\n514 Mill St.\nFavored with instructions from\nMrs. L. Wallace, I will offer the\nfollowing:\u2014 Garden Tools, Garden Hose, Lawn Mower, Kitchen\nTable, Utensils, Dishes, Inlaid\nLino., Dining Room Suite, Tables,\nChairs, English Gramophone,\nCentre and Card Tables, Brick-\nlined Heater, Sectional Book\nCase. Books, Floor Lamps, Ferns\nand Geraniums, Fern Stand, Mirror, Walnut Single Bed, Coil\nSprings, Mattresses, Vanity\nDresser, Carpets. Bureau, Curtains, Chest of Drawers, Winnipeg Couch, Clothes Basket, Electric Heater, etc., etc.\nG. HORSTEAD,\nTerms: CASH Auctioneer.\nGoods on View Morning of Sale\nShoes\nfor\nLADIES\nNew high cuts, straps or\nties. Gabardine with patent trims or suede with\nkid.\nSuede   oxfords   in   navy,\nwine, grey or\nbrown. Onepricei\nGODFREYS'\n^*    LIMITED\n31B BAKER       PHONE 270\nYOUR  OWN\nCIVIC\nShowing Tonight and Wednesday Matinee and Evening\nComplete Shows\n7 and 9 p.m.\nThe surging story of a love that\nchanged the hard, careless heart\nof Carrie, and made her a great\nand glowing woman who dared\neverything for two kids who\nplaced their trust In her.\nAdded Attractions\n\"DOUBLE OR NOTHING\"\nA  Sparkling  Two-Reel  Musical\n\"Nature's Handiwork\"\nA Gorgeous Scenic\nANY SEAT 25e\nChildren  10c Anytime\nAdded Feature\nFun,    Mystery,    Romance\n|EAN ARTHUR\nJOEL McCREA\nin\n\"ADVENTURE  IN\nMANHATTAN\"\nWednesday and Thursday\nCrace Moore  \u2022   Cary Cr.int\nin\n\"When You're in\nLove\"\n-ALSO \u2014\n\"THEY MET IN A TAXI\"\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1937_04_27","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0412412","@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":"1937-04-27 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1937-04-27 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\/1.0412412"}