{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2022-03-10","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1936-05-12","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412544\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" }\nStock Exchanges and Chicago\nGrain Pit Are Lower\n\u2014Page Nine\n|| (.4     aiHARlT\niH-oviNCiAl US\"*\nilCTORIA  B   C\n\u00aen i\n5511\nMr. Justice Robertson Welcomed\nby Bar at Assizes Here\n\u2014Page Seven\nOLUME 35\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA. TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 12. 1938\nNUMBER  16\nTALY WALKS OUT OF LEAGUE SESSION\nOH OF CABINET\nMINISTER UP IN\nIUDGET SCANDAL\n'Old Friend\" of J. H.\nThomas Took Out\nInsurance\n.ESLIE THOMAS\n\"KNEW NOTHING\"\nBut Justice Thinks He\nDid an \"Unwise\"\nThing\nLONDON, May 11 (CP Cable).-\nEvidence that Alfred Bates, an \"old\nfriend\" of Colonial Secretary J. H.\nThomas, and of his son, Leslie\nThomas, had taken out considerable\nInsurance against budget tax in.-\ncreases was given today by Attorn-\ney-'Ueneral Sir Donald Somervel at\nthe opening session of a judicial inquiry into the alleged leakage ot\ninformation on the budget.\nLeslie Thomas himself took the\nstand later and said he had not received the slightest advance information from his father concerning\npossible budget changes.\nThe younger Thomas, partner In\na stock-broking; firm, said on\nApril 14\u2014seven days before the\nbudget was Introduced In the\nhouse of commons\u2014he wai Instructed by Bates to sell \u00a350,000\n(about $280,000), worth of gilt-\nedged stocki and that later he\nhad effected Insurances for E4000\n(about $20,000) on Bates' behalf.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nCommons Heeds\nCommon Sense\nSo States Mrs. George\nBlack Before House\nOTTAWA, May 11 (CP)-A little\nmore common sense and a little less\npartizanship is what the house of\ncommons needs, in the opinion of\nMrs. George Black, Conservative\nmember for Yukon.\nMrs. Black made one of her usual\nbrief speeches in the budget debate\ntoday and mingled an appeal for\ncommon sense with an expression\nof a few grievances on the part ol\nher sourdough constituents.\nCivil servants in the Yukon were\nvictims of a \"most unjust and absolutely dishonest ruling,\" said Mrs.\nBlack as she got down to grievances.\nFor years they had paid into tho\nsuperannuation fund on the basis\nof both their salaries and living allowances. Then came a sudden order\nto the effect they could only be\npaid superannuation on retirement\non the basis of their salaries. She\nwanted this situation adjusted.\nA minimum wage law for the Yukon and improved conditions for\nmine-workers were also needed.\nFloating Cabaret\nfor English Bay\nVANCOUVER, May 11 (CP)-The\nLaurel Whalen, a five - masted\nschooner built at Victoria in 1917\nand later converted to a floating\nfish cannery, has been purchased\nhere and is being fitted out as a\nfloating cabaret. Permission has\nbeen granted by port authorities\nto anchor the boat in English bay.\nMANOEURER8 START\nVALETTA, Malta, May 11 (AP)\n\u2014Combined army, navy and air\nforces manoeuvers will start here\ntomorrow and continue through\nWednesday night.\nRobert Cromie, Publisher\nthe Vancouver Sun,\nR. J. Cromie\nDead\nRobert J. Cromie, above, publisher of the Vancouver Sun, died\nsuddenly at Victoria yesterday following a cerebral hemorrhage.\nBY-ELECTIONS IN\nJUNE AND SEPT.\nOmineca Next Month;\nProbably Set the\nDate Today\nVICTORIA, May 11 (CP)-In flatly denying the suggestion that a\ngeneral provincial election would be\ncalled this year and byelections in\nOmineca and Burrard ridings postponed, Premier Pattullo said this\nmorning the government would\nprobably act tomorrow to fix the\ndate for the poll in Omineca.\nIt was proposed, he said, to hold\nthe Omineca election in the latter\npart of June. The Burrard contest\nlikely will be held in September.\nExplaining why the two votes\nwould be held at different times\nthe premier said:\n\"The two constituencies are a long\nway apart and members of the 'government cannot be in both at the\nsame time. It is intended to give the\nvoters a full explanation of government policies so it is proposed\nto have the Burrard vote in the\nfall.\"\nMost likely date for the Omineca\nbyclection is June 22, according to\npolitical observers.\nBARRISTER SENT\nUP FOR TRIAL\nVANCOUVER, May 11 (CP)-\nJohn Sutherland, barrister, and Gus\nThodos, cafe proprietor, today were\nformally committed for trial by\nMagistrate H. S. Wood in police\ncourt on charges of conspiring to\ndissuade a crown witness from giving evidence.\nSutherland and Thodos, along\nwith A. C. Armour, also known as\nBurbank and Brisbane, are alleged\nto have attempted to dissuade James\nCampbell, Stratford, Ont., from\nidentifying a person or persons who\ndefrauded him of $7000.\nArmour was previously committed for trial on the same charge\nand was senten-ed to four years in\npenitentiary on another charge of\ndefrauding Campbell.\nWilliam Murdock, barrister,\ncharged in connection with another\nconspiracy case, was remanded to\nMay 19 when he appeared today for\npreliminary hearing.\nPUBLIC, SOCIAL AND NEWSPAPER\nWORLD MOURNS CROMIE DEATH\nPremier Pattullo Says Loss to B. C. Great;\nHon. John Hart Says Province Can\nIll-Afford to Lose Him\nBy the Canadah Press\n\\\nThe public, social and newspaper\nworld ol British Columbia today\nmourned the sudden death in Victoria Monday of Robert i. Cromie,\npublisher ol the Vancouver Sun.\nThe Victoria Colonist, in a leading editorial, said:\n\"Mr. Cromie was a glutton lor\ninformation. He was never happy\nunless he was gathering up facts and\nadding to his store of knowledge.\nHe believed in making life a school\nof graduation.\n\"He felt, Indeed, that  In the\nmatter of education he had been\nhandicapped In his early years,\nand he let himself to the purpose\nof making up for lost time. He\nwas successful to a degree not\nreached by many. He never believed in following the course of\nbeing indifferent to any new\nproblem that arose. He Immediately took sides, even If It was\nsome new 'Ism' which had not\npatted the theoretical ataae.\"\nStuart Henderson, Veteran\nLawyer, Is Barred by Court\nB. C. Appeal Court Orders Him to Apologize\nfor Charges Made Against Chief Justice\nAulay Morrison of Supreme Court\n\"I WITHDRAW NOTHING\" 72-YEAR-OLD\nBARRISTER SHOUTS; MARTIN DISSENTS\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nVICTORIA, Hay 11 (CP)\u2014A 72-year-old veteran of British Columbia criminal courts, Stuart Henderson, today wat forbidden to\nappear again before the province's appeal tribunal until he apologized\n-^> for terming conduct of Chief Justice Aulay Morrison of the supreme court \"disgraceful\".\nIn a turbulent, tense few minutes\nbefore the appeal court reserved\ndecision in the appeal ol Defence\nCounsel Henderson against conviction ol three Indian brothers for\nthe murder of Indian Constable F.\nH. Gisbourne, Mr. Henderson was\ntold he could not again be heard by\nthe court until he had apologised\nfor his reference to the trial Judge,\nJudgment on  the  grey-haired\ndefence attorney, wat given after\nthe bench split widely on the legality of Itt procedure.\nMr. Justice Archer Martin intervened swiftly as Chief Justice Mr.\nJ. A. Macdonald prepared to pronounce the penally on Mr. Henderson and termed the tribunal's action \"unprecedented in the annals\nof British Columbia justice.\"\nFERNIE TAX RATE\nTO REMAIN AT 50\nMILLS THIS YEAR\nVICTORIA, May 11 (CP)-The\n1936 tax rate for the city of Fernie\nwhich is under provincial commis-\nsionership, has been lixed at 60\nmills, unchanged from last year,\nThe by-law was approved today by\nthe government.\nThe levy is on 100 per cent of land\nassessments and 55 per cent ol improvements and is spilt 12 mills lor\nscnools and 38 for general purposes.\nThe municipality will not levy lor\nsinking funds but will be able to\nprovide out ot its own treasury the\nmoney for unempoyment relief instead of borrowing from the.provincial government. Commissioner\nJ. V. Fisher explained.\nMay Save Some of\nScadding's Toes\nHALIFAX, May 11 (CP)-There\nis still hope ol saving a lew of Alfred Scadding's toes his physician,\nDr. H. L. MacDonald, said tonight.\nFor this reason the doctor said\nhe had not decided when the toes\nthe Toronto man must lose as result\nof his 10-day imprisonment in Moose\nRiver Gold mine, would be amputated.\nTwo weeks of treatment tailed to\nrestore circulation in some of the\nToronto man's toes and they turned\nblack, though his general condition\nshows steady day-to-day \"Improvement.\n103 HOURS FOR\nNORMANDIE TRIP\nNEW YORK, May 11 (AP)-With\n1700 extra tons of steel bracing in\nher stern to reduce vibration, the\nFrench liner Normandie docked to-\nda'y with 623 passengers after her\nfirst Atlantic crossing of the season.\nShe averaged 28.57 knots for a 103-\nhour run.\nSister Made Her\nLive in Basement\nVANCOUVER, May 11 CCP)-\nComplalning that she had been con-\nlined to a basement room, had her\nlight cut off and was compelled to\nobtain water from a neighbor, Miss\nAnnie L. Folsetter, aged 63, took\nthe witness stand in supreme court\ntoday against her sister, Mrs. Margaret F. Giske, widow ,aged 40.\nMr. Justice Fisher is hearing evidence on Mrs. Folsetter's claim to\nrecover damages from her sister for\nfailing to carry out an agreement\nwhich entitled the plaintiff to the\nenjoyment and use ol a house on\nLangara avenue.\nDamages, by ruling of his lordship, are limited to the period, commencing February 4, when a writ,\nwas issued.\nLAWSON CONVICTED\nVANCOUVER, May 11 (CP)-\nRoderick Lawson, 23, today was\nconvicted by Magistrate H. S. Wood\nin police court of a charge ot participating in a holdup on May 2 in\nwhich T. Soga, store proprietor,\nwas robbed of $40. He was remanded\nto tomorrow for sentence.\nVICE-PRESIDENT  OF  BANKER8\nLONDON, May 11 (CP Cable)\u2014\nE. C. Macleoil, manager of the London branch ot the Bank ot Nova\nScotia, was elected a vice-president\nof the British Bankers association\nat the organization's annual meeting,\ntoday.\n(Continued on Page Nine)\nHINDENBERG Of F\nON RETURN TRIP\nLAKEHURST, N.J., May 11-\n(AP>\u2014The dirigible Hlndenbarg\nsailed away from the naval air\nstation, homeward bound for Germany, at 11:27 p.m. SDT (7:27 p.m.\nMST) tonight.\nLAKEHUR8T, N.J., May 11 -\n(CP)\u2014One Canadian wat listed\ntoday among the 5S pertont who\nhave booked passage en the Zeppelin Hlndenburg, which left tonight for Itt return trip to Germany. He was W. B. Burehell of\nWinnipeg, publicity manager tor\nCanadian Alrwayt, Ltd, Ten of\nthe passengers are women.\nFAY SUES RUDY\nFOR DIVORCE\nLOS ANGELES, May 11 (API-\nFay Webb Vallee filed suit for divorce today against Rudy Vallee,\norchestra leader, charging cruelty.\nMrs. Vallee alleged that shortly\nafter she became the wife of Vallee\nhe insisted she accompany him on\ntrips with his orchestra. Her physical resistance was lowered, she\nsaid, and her health impaired because of this sort of life.\nWould Dismiss 38\nof Relief Staff\nVANCOUVER, May 11 (CP)-\nWalter Wardhaugh, comptroller of\nrelief accounts, in a report to the\ncity council today recommended a\nreduction in the staff of the city\nrelief department by dismissal of\n38 employees.\nAdoption of Wardhaugh's proposal would reduce the staff from\n123 to 85 and save the department\n$35,000 annually.\nThe chief factor in the proposals\nis the substituting of scrip allowances, to be issued monthly to recipients instead of fortnightly as\nat present.\nCardiac Trouble\nBelieved Cause\noi Sudden Death\nFound Critically III in\nHis Hotel, Dies on\nWay to Hospital\nWAS IN VICTORIA\nTO GIVE ADDRESS\nOne of Most Forceful\nPersonalities in the\nDominion\nVICTORIA, May 11 \u2014\n(CP). \u2014 Robert |. Cromie,\nnewspaper publisher, traveller and commentator on\nworld events, died suddenly\nhere today. Cardiac trouble\nwas given by Coroner E. C.\nHart at the probable cause\nof rjeath.\nMr. Cromie, owner of the\nVancouver Sun, wai scheduled to address the Victoria\nchamber' of commerce at\nluncheon but notified the\ncommittee he did not feel\nwell and asked to be excused.\nHe retired to bed inJbia hotel\nroom.and w^_. attendants.'wenttto\nhls^ roomaome time afterwards he\nseemed to be asleep. When he did\nnot appear later in the afternoon\nInvestigation was made and he was\nfound to be critically ill. He was\nrushed to hospital but died en route.\nMr. Cromie was born in Scotts-\ntown, Que., and was 48 years of\nage.\n(Continued on Page Seven)\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nBy The Canadian Preu\nToronto and Montreal: Industrial\nstocks lower.\nToronto mines: Lower.\nNew York: Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg: Wheat market closed\n(holiday).\nToronto: Bacon hogs off truck 29\nto 30 cents lower at 8.10.\nLondon: Bar silver and copper\nhigher; lead and zinc lower.\nNew York: Bar silver and other\nmetals unchanged.\nMontreal: Silver higher.\nNew York: Cotton and rubber\nlower; coffee and sugar higher.\nNew York: Canadian dollar down\n1-16 to 99 29-32.\nKootenay Waters\nHearing Will Be\nHeld in Nelson\nWASHINGTON, May 11 (AP)-\nAmerlcan msmbers of an International Joint commlttlon named to\nadjust differences between British Columbia and Idaho over the\nute of boundary waten on the\nKootenay river left today for the\nPacific northwett.\nThey will meet with the Canadian members at Nelton, B.C.,\nand Bonners Ferry, Idaho, the\ndlffereneet aroie from extensive\ndyking of land for reclamation\npurpotet by wheat farmer!.\nAmerloan membert are A. O.\nStanley, J. H. Bartlett and Eugene Lorton.\nPART OF RIB AND SOME SKIN FROM\nNECK ARE USED TO BUILD NEW EAR\nFete of Plastic Surgery Described Before Medical Association;\nSkin From Thigh Replaces Skin Lost From Neck\nBy HOWARD W. BLAKE8LEE\nAssociated Preu Scltnce Editor\nKANSAS CITY, May 11 (API-\nTaking part of a human rib to build\na new and shapely ear by plastic\nsurgery waa demonstrated to tha\nAmerican Medical association here\ntoday by Earl C. Padge, M. D.\nThe piece ot rib, taken from the\ncartilage at the base of a rib, forms\nthe shell-shaped framework for the\nsynthetic ear. The akin to cover this\ncartilage, and to form the soft fleshy\n\"Ure\" constituting the ear's outer\nborder, is taken from the neck,\nAfterward the skin thus lost, to\n'\nthe neck is replaced by skin taken\nfrom the thigh so that no neck scar\nis apparent.\nThe skin from the neck upon\nwhich depends the final sightliness\nof the new ear is moved by delour-\nIng it first to the temple by the plastic method known as the pedicle\nflap, which resembles the handle of\na suitcase. After this flap ha8 been\nattached by one end to the temple\narea so that It gets its blood supply\nfrom that point of contact, it is\nready to be dropped down over the\nnew ear structure and be moulded\nInto place.\nQUADRUPLETS IH\nTHE U.S. SURVIVE\nA SINKING SPELL\nThree-Day Old Tots\nAre Put on a\nMilk Diet\nSUDDEN FAMILY\nINCREASE A JOLT\n$22-a-Week  Railroad\nMan Worried About\nTheir Support\nPASSAIC, N.J., May 11 (AP).-\nThe three-day-old Kasper quadruplets went on a milk diet today alter\nrallying quickly from a sinking\nspell which had St. Mary's hospital\nworried.\nExcept for the brief setback, the\ntiny babies\u2014Frances, Frank, Ferdinand, and Felix\u2014managed to hold\ntheir own so well that Dr. Frank\nF. Jani regarded their condition as\n\"encouraging.\" Jani delivered them\nSaturday.\nThrough Mayor Benjamin F.\nTurner, Governor Harold G. Hoffman wired congratulations to the\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Emil Kasper,\nbut said there was no existing state\nlaw which vfOu\\d authorize stale\nguardianship for the children.\n(Continued on Page Tin;\nDR. RUXTON IS\nTO HANG TODAY\nSir John Simoa Will\nIslotGeant Reprieve\nBy ROGER D. GREENE\nAuoclated Preu Staff Writer\nMANCHESTER, May 11  (AP)\n\u2014Dr. Buck Ruxton, Indian-blooded   physician   convicted   of   the\n\"Devil's Beeftub\" murder of hit\nwife   and   housemaid,  muttered\nancient Parti prayen In hit narrow cell tonight before hit scheduled death by hanging tomorrow.\nOutside   the   Strangeways   jail,\nBritain's wealthy opponent ot capital  punishment,  Mrr.  Violet Van\nDer Elst, marshalled airplanes and\nsandwich men tor what she predicted will be the \"biggest demonstration yet\" in her campaign against\nthe legal demand of \"a life for a\nlife.\"\nSir John Simon, home secretary,\ndashed Ruxton's last hope of clemency when he denied a reprieve petition signed by 5500 persons. The\nexecution Is set for 9 a.m. tomorrow.\nDisposal of Buxton's body after\nhis death will constitute a grim\nparody on the Parsi custom of exposing their dead on lofty structures known as \"towers of silence.\"\nThe physician, found guilty of\nbilling his wife and servant girl,\ndismembering their bodies and\nthrowng the mutilated parts in the\n\"Devil's Beeftub\" ravine, is to be\nburied in a shallow quicklime grave\nin the prison yard. British law does\nnot allow relatives to claim the\nbodies of executed criminals.\nA. M. Palmer, Once\nU. S. Attorney-Gen.\nDies at Washington\nWASHINGTON, May 11 (AP)-\nA. Mitchell Palmer, former attorney-general, died at Emergency hospital today after an appendectomy.\nPalmer, who was 64, underwent\nan operation April 29 and had been\nprogressing favorably until yesterday morning when his condition\nbecame critical.\nA former representative from\nPennsylvania, Palmer served as\nattorney-general during the last two\nyears of the Wilson administration.\nLikens Court to\n\/'Hell\" in Regina\nREGINA, May 11 (CP)-\"Your\nmethods of trial are reminiscent of\nhell. I refuse to plead,\" loudly blurted Stanley McKinnon, 26, Regina,\nin King's beanch court today to Mr.\nJustice J. F. L. Embury before whom\nhe is being tried for rioting and\nassault during the camp strikers'\nriot here last Dominion day.\nMcKinnon, who was not connected with the on-to-Ottawa trek, was\nalleged to have joined in the rioting and to have assaulted a constable of Regina city police lorco\nhitting him with a piece of wood.\nUpshot of the extraordinary incident was the withdrawal of P. G.\nMakaroff, K.C., trekker defence\ncounsel, from the case and an adjournment to allow the accused an\nopportunity to retain other counsel.\nGeneral Sir Cyril\nGeneral Sir Cyril Deverlll It\nshown arriving at the war office\nIn Uondon to take up hit new du-\ntlet as new chief of the Imperial\ngeneral staff. Ho succeeds Field\nMarshall Sir Archibald Montgom-\nery-Masilngberd\u00bb\n\"G-Men\" Capture\nWASHINGTON, May 11 (AP)-\nJ. Edgar Hoover announced tonight arrest of Thomat H. Robinson It. tought for the kidnapping\nof Mrs. Alice Speed Stoll of Louisville, Ky. He was captured at\nGlendalc, Cal.\nHoover said Robinson admitted\nhis identity when captured at about\n10:30 p.m. (E.S.T.) tonight and was\nimmediately started lor Louisville.\nRobinson had on his person when\narrested $4560 ol which $4200 was\nkidnap ransom money, Hoover said.\nNo shots were fired in taking the\nkidnapper, Hoover said, although\nRobinson was carrying a .38 calibre pistol.\nRobinson, known as a \"lone wolf\"\ncriminal, had b\/n hunted by the\n''G-men\", nearly two years since\nthe $50,000 kidnapping of Mrs. Stoll,\nwile of Berry V. Stoll, Louisville,\nKy., oil man, and niece ol Frederic\nM. Sackctt, former United States\nsenator and former ambassador to\nGermany.\nMay 25 and June\n23 Are Holidays\nOTTAWA, May 1! (CP)-Vle-\ntorla day will fall on Sunday this\nyear and consequently will be\ncelebrated Monday, Mav Vs. it \"vat\nstated ot the secretary of state's\ndepartment today, Victoria day it\na statutory holiday.\nAs the birthday o' the .-elnninj\nsovereign is also a statutory holiday, June 23, the birthday of King\nEdward VIII will in future bo\ncelebrated. The birthday of King\nGeorge V, June 3, v\/ill no lonjer\nbe a ttatutory holiday.\nLEAGUE NOT TO\nRECOGNIZE THE\nITALIAN CLAIM\nSelassie Government\nStill Exists, Is\nthe Opinion\nSTATES SEEM TO\nFAVOR SANCTIONS\nItaly Avers There Is\nNo Ethiopian State\nin Existence\nGENEVA, May 11 (AP).\n\u2014Tho League of Nations\ncouncil, deadlocked with\nPremier Mussolini on Ethiopia, wai summoned for a\naecret, unofficial session tonight to the home of |osoph\nAvenol, league secretary-\ngeneral.\nThe purpose of the meeting, it was understood, was\nto discuss what action the\ncouncil will take on the\nItalo-Ethiopian war tomorrow.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nESLING SEEKS\nHOUSINGLOAN\nAlso Asks Aid for the\nTrail Airport\nOTTAWA, May 11-W. K. Etlinf\n(Cons. Kootenay West) asked the\ngovernment in the budget debate\ntoday to enlarge the Housing act,\nit was useless outside the big cities\nand even in Vancouver there was\nno institution that would lend a dol-.\nlar under the scheme, he declared.\nHe also believed the government\nshould locus its attention on the\nteaching of trades to young men. Industry could play a part in this\nwork in a cooperative way.\nAssistance in enlarging the air- ,\nport at Trail was asked by Mr. Esling. He said tho city had developed a fine airport at its own expense and was prepared to do more\nbut needed a little help to make its\nlandiag Held one ol the best between\nRegina and the coast.\nDROUGHT HITS\nBRAZIL\nFORTALEZA, Brazil, May 11\u2014\n(AP) \u2014 Uncounted families were\nmigrating from their homes today\nas one ot northwestern Brazil's recurrent droughts parched grazing\nand farming lands in Ceara and\nthree neighboring states.\nUrgent appeals have been dispatched by various civil bodies to\nRio De Janeiro lor federal relief.\nAGAIN HEADS\nN, Y. EXCHANGE\nNEW YORK, May 11 (AP) \u2014\nCharles P.. Gay, president of tha\nNew York stock exchange, ssid today \"the tax or. capital gains is continuing to create artificial scarcity\nof securities.\" Interviewed as he\nswept unopposed into the presidency\nof the stock exchange for a second\nj term, the 61-year-old broker whose\nbusiness career started _ as a $3-a-\nwcek carrier of dry goods samples,\nexpressed concern over the effects'.\nI ot capital gains tax on stock trading.\nMembers Read Newspapers as Ihe\nSocial Credit Theory Is Expoundec\nAlberta Members Challenge Administration\nOTTAWA, May 11 (CP)-Tho Social Credit group moved out in the\nopen today in the house ol commons\nsolidly against the government's\nbudget proposals. It was the tirst\ntime since the group of 17 Alberta-\nSaskatchewan members entered the\nhouse it openly challenged the administration with its financial theories.\nErnest G. llansell <SC, Macleod)\nmoved a subamendment to the government motion adopting Ihe budget, deploring lack of action by Ihe\nadministration to regulate the issue\nand recall ol money to the requirements of the economic system.\nThe Social Credilers, however,\ndid not have It all their own way\nin the budget debate today. Robert\nDeachman (Lib., North Huron) said\nsome of their theories were \"pure\nwill-o'-the-wisp.\" He accused them\nof \"steering northeast by southwest and not knowing their port ot\ndestination.\" Many of their theories\nwere unworkable and, instead oi\nending distress, would compound it\nEarlier Mr. Hansell diagnosed the\neconomic ills of the country at\nlack ol purchasing power. He out\nlined the Social Credit plan of I\nnational credit account and nationa'\ndividends to equate production ant\nconsumption.\nOther countries were trying\nsomething new, why not Canada!\nasked the Social Crcdlter who, at\non\u00ab time faced 28 Liberals and\nConservatives In tho vast chsmber,\nmost of them reading newspapers,\n______\n\u2014__\n-\u2014\u2014-_____\n________\n\t\n\t\n\t\n-\t\n ymim T^\"\u25a0\u2022'\u2122*'\u25a0\"\u25a0     ' ,\\< r<4l\"ff\"\"M\"\u2022\u2022  \u2022ll\nppp~Wiw\nI       fAM TWO-\nHORSWILL FREE\n\"BETWEENAOS\"\nOF HIS TRIAL\nSeven Witnesses for\nCrown Complete\nTestimony\nMANSLAUGHTER\nTRIAL PROCEEDS\nTruck Swaying Said to\nHave Occurred on\nRough Bed\nHis bail still holding good, Robert\nA. Horswlll, charged with manslaughter in consequence of the\ndeaths of Roy Bradshaw and Miss\nJean Smith on January 26 last when\nthey and other ski devotees were\nthrown from his truck when it overturned on the icy and rutty road\nthis side of Salmo, was free between\ncourt sessions Monday,- when his\ntrial opened the spring assizes here.\nAfter seven crown witnesses had\ngiven their full testimony, the\ncrown's case ' was still unfinished\nat the afternoon adjournment, and\nthe young Nelson grocery clerk\nand truck driver was again at liberty, and will surrender to the authorities once more this morning at\n10, when his trial will Continue.\nMr. Justice Robertson, presiding\njudge, had few rulings to make during the first day's testimony. He\npermitted snapshots taken by Provincial Constable C. W. House of\nSalmo to be used to Illustrate the\nposition of the overturned truck\nbut not to be accepted as evidence\nof exact distances. When E. P.\nDawson, counsel for the accused,\nobjected to questions by Crown\nCounsel W. W. Ferguson as of a\nnature to lead witnesses, he usually\ndirected Mr. Ferguson to bring out\nhis points by other means. On the\nother hand, at later stages, he Instructed counsel to lead the wit-;\nnesses on matters not In issue or not,  ... .. . \u201e \u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e,\nmaterial, for the purpose of speed- j someone signalled that he was head-\nwere Dr. Nell E. Morrison of Salmo\nand Dr. Clare M. Bennett of Nelaon,\nwho gave the medical testimony)\nDr. Raymond C. Shaw of Nelson\nand his partner, David Wilkinson,\nwho were members of the truck\nparty; Ludwig Lange and bis wife.\nMrs. Dorothy Lange, who were the\npedestrians passed by the truck a\nfew moments before the fatalities;\nand Constable House, who made\nthe police investigation.\nTwo more witnesses are to be\ncalled by the crown this morning.\nThe feature of the day's proceedings, which were watched by a\npacked court room, was the searching cross-examination to which the\ncrown witnesses were subjected,\nproducing a number of admissions\nsought by the defence.\nDOCTORS TILL\nDEATH CAUSES\nDr. Morrison's period on the stand\nwas brief. He described being called\nto the scene of the accident, told of\nfinding Bradshaw dead, of treating\ntwo badly shaken up ladles who\nwere driven up by Dr. Shaw, and\nof subsequently going to treat Miss\nJean Smith at tbe Salmo hotel, but\nfinding her dead. Bradshaw, he\nsaid, obviously died from a fracture\nat the base of the skull, and Miss\nSmith bore a mark on her left side\nfrom chest to abdomen apparently\nmade by a heavy object crushing\nher.\nHe was dismissed without cross-\nexamination,\nDr. Bennett was even briefer in\nhis testimony, which related exclusively to the autopsies. He ascribed\nBradshaw's death, which he said\nmust have been instantaneous, to\nthe skull fracture. Miss Smith's\ndeath, he said, was from a fractured\nneck, with injury to tbe spine, and\nwas not instantaneous, but must\nhave been within a couple of hours\nof her injuries. He put Bradshaw's\nweight at 200 pounds.\nUnder cross-examination he said\nBradshaw's stomach contained no\ntrace of alcohol. The skull fracture,\nhe said, offered no clue to bow far\nBradshaw had been thrown, for a\nman might get such a fracture In\nmerely falling bis own height\nROAD HAZARDOUS\nSAYS SHAW\nDr. Shaw gave a full account of\nthe events preceding the accident,\nincluding the foregathering at tbe\nSalmo hotel, and the boarding of\nHorswill's truck by a large party,\nto go to the ski Jump, of which\nnone knew the location. After the\ntruck got a mile north of Salmo,\ning up the trial\nThe seven crown witnesses heard\nCOAL\nWOOD\nin All Lengths\nHAULAGE\nPhone 701\nFAIRVIEW\nFUEL CO.\ning in the wrong direction, and it\nturned about and started back for\nSalmo, Silting .with his legs over\nthe tailboard, talking with Bradshaw, who was near him, he got a\nflash of the two pedestrians, and\nthen the truck swayed a couple of\ntimes, this being all he remembered\nexcept what happened after he regained consciousness. He described\nextrication of himself and others.\nTo Mr. Dawson Dr. Shaw said be\ndid not see Horswill take any drink\nduring the day. He said the road\nwas icy and channelled, and driving\nwas hazardous, his drive from Nelson taking two hours. He had to be\ncareful or his wheels would Jump\nout ol the ruts and the car dive into\nthe snow. The latter did not actually |\nhappen, but he had some close calls\nbetween Nelson and Ymir. He told\nhis lordship he did not notice any\ndifference in speed in the truck\nafter starting back for Salmo, and\ndid not feel that the speed was\nexcessive.\nFirst alternoon witness was Mr,\nWilkinson, who was in Dr. Shaw's\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest in the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nFree Bus Service\nGeo. Benwell. Prop.\nBREAKFAST 30o and UP\nLUNCHEON 40e to Mo DINNER 40o to Me\nROTARY AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787 NELSON. B.C. 422 VERNON ST.\nHUME\u2014Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Chambers, Miss R. Chambers, Mrs. A.\nRoadhouse, Vernon; T. S. Harrison,\nA. 3. O'Reilly, H. D. Fried, Victoria;\nP. Williams, J. McMillen, Trail; H.\nH. McBain, A. Anderson, Medicine\nBat; D. Bloomfleld, G. G. Lyam, J.\nJ, Malone, Princeton; R. Brown, E.\nJ, Conway, T. M. Stephen, Vancouver; N. Johnson, Spokane; J. Hunt,\nKelowna; G. M. Thorn, Penticton;\nD. Wingworth, H, S. Hannah, Edinburgh.\n124 Baker St,\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest Is King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE ROOMS\nFully Licenced\nW. K. Clark, Prop.      Nelson, B. C.\n[New Grand Hotel\nP. L KAPAK. Prop.\nHot and Cold Water\nMonthly rates 110X10 up\nrt. 234      616 VERNON ST,\nIVlfltm Satltj NfWB\nttterlor of British Columbia's\nrlOit Interesting Newspaper\nOccidental Hotel\nM5 Vernon St Phone M7 L\nH. WASSICK. Prop.\nSPECIAL   MONTHLY   RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nFully Licenced\nparty from Nelson, but Jumped\naboard the truck with the other*\nat Salmo. He rode on the driver's\nseat with Horswill. He estimated the\nspeed of the truck tbe same as of\nthe ear from Nelson In the morning, placing the latter at 30 miles\nan hour.\nThis estimate lost Its punch under cross-examination, however,\nwhen the witness admitted to Mr,\nDawson that if the Nelson-Salmo\ntrip took over two hours, with a\nfew minutes' atop at Ymir, the speed\nmust have been only IS miles an\nhour He also stated he was with\nHorswill practically all the time\nat Salmo, and in that time saw him\ntake only a small drink of gin and\nwater, and a \"mouthful\" ot beer\nfrom a froien bottle. He saw nothing to indicate that the drink had\nany effect, and expressed the opinion that Horewill was entirely sober\nwhen they left Salmo seme time\nlater. Mr. Wilkinson said he himself had a bottle of gin in bis lunch\nbox In tbe truck.\nHe described a considerable hole\nin the roadway 10 to 20 feet on the\nNelson side of the overturned truck.\nHis version of the swaying corroborated Dr. Shaw's.\nSAW TRUCK BOUNCE\nAND SWAY\nMr. Lange, who was out with his\nwife and child, the latter In a sleigh,\nsaw the truck heading for Salmo,\nthe horn being sounded about a\nquarter of a mile away. After it had\npassed them 250 feet, it started to\njump up and down, and then swayed from side to side twice, the second time overturning in a cloud of\nsnow, which obscured it. From\nwhere it started to swerve to where\nit came to rest was 381 feet. He\nsaid he smelt gasoline and liquor\nwhen he got to the truck.\nWhen cross-examined, Mr. Lange\nadmitted the speed of the truck did\nnot alarm him In any way, and the\ntruck ran smoothly for !M feet after\nit passed him before it started to\njump up and down. Scattered over\nthe 250 feet of road where the Jumping took place were numerous\"\nchuck-holes, five or six inches deep,\ntransverse of the road. He said the\nruts In the road were not ordinary\nruts, but slippery depressions.\nMrs. Lange gave the same testimony as her husband about observing the truck jumping and swaying,\non both direct examination and\ncross-examination. While her husband was helping the rescuers, she\nwent to a house to get help.\nOFFICER QIVE8 \\\nMEASUREMENTS\nConstable House was one of the\ncase, giving maps and measure-\nimportant witnesses for the crown's\nments in detail, ot the position of\nthe overturned truck, distances\nfrom point to point, depths of road\nimpressions, which he termed \"shallows\", and widths and heights of\nsnow banks. The word rut he had\nused on his original map for the\npreliminary hearing did not correctly express the facts, he told\nMr. Dawson, when his change of\nwording was brought 'out.\nThe officer told Mr. Ferguson he\nhad not observed the dips in the\nroad until Lange drew his attention\nlo them. He then noticed that they\nwere numerous In the area where\nother witnesses had described the\ntruck as bouncing.\nIn the sway area, he detailed how\nthe car left the road to the right and\nto the left, in the latter case going\nclear to the fence and knocking over\nthree fence posts.\nHe was unable to tell Mr. Dawson\nwhether the truck mounted the\nfrozen crust and broke through, or\nwhether It cut right through the\ncrust as it went\nOFFICER'S OWN\nEXPERIENCE\nThe day before the accident, the\nofficer said, he had driven his car\nover this road at 30 to 35 miles an\nhour and hadn't noticed the shallows.\nHe admitted to Mr. Dawson that\nhe had at times, In winter driving,\nhad his car Jump out of the ruts\nand dive toward the bank, when not\ngoing at an excessive rate of speed.\nAccording to the tracks made by\nthe truck, he said the swerving\ndid not start until the area of potholes was reached.\nConstable House testified he had\nsmelt liquor on Horswill's breath.\nHe also told of finding two bottles, one of gin and one of rum, in\nside the fence. To his lordship he\nsaid he was not suggesting they\nhad been hidden there. There were\nno tracks leading to them.\nThe trial jury consists of Foreman W. E. Coles, and Cecil Grlz-\nzelle, J. A. Ferguson, F. W. Hartwig, E, H. Evans, C. J. Currier, W.\nM. Walker, Adam Cruickshank, T.\nH. Johnstone, E. H. Woolls, P. G.\nMorey, and J. H. Byres, all of Nelson.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING. MAY 12. 1SM\nPeeress In 'Frisco\nMISS McDOUGALL\nGOES TO COAST\nVisitors Golf Over the\nKaslo Course; Mrs.\nMurphy Hostess\nKASLO, B.C\u201e-Mrs. Minnie McDougall has returned to her home\nIn Vancouver after spending 'the\npast few weeks in town as the guest\nof her brother and sister-in-law,\nMr. and Mrs. William English.\nPeter Anderson of Trail is in town.\nI. Cameron, D. McKay, L. McBride and party of friends were city\nvisitors Wednesday and enjoyed a\nround of golf on the lovely Kaslo\nlinks.\nA number of friends arranged a\nsurprise complimenting Mrs. Dorothy Hlslop, Tuesday, which took\nthe form of a musical evening. Delicious refreshments were served.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Dumas ot\nAinsworth were recent vity visitors.\nEric Bacchus of Birchdale spent\nThursday in town.\nMiss Dinney of Johnsons Landing was a city visitor Tuesday.\nDave McLellan of Princeton is the\nguest of his parents Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn McLellan.\nMessers Piper and Gordon of Trail\nwere giving the Kaslo golf links\na try-out Thursday.\nStanley Lakes of Johnsons Landing was a city visitor Thursday.\nMrs. J. N. Murphy has as her guest\nMrs. J. Ruffle of Canal Flat.\nMrs. W. P. Rudkin was among\nthe many Kasloites to attend the\nKootenay Musical feslival in Nelson.\nRex Matthews was a Nelson visitor Wednesday.\nMrs. S. A. Hunter is in Nelson the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hendricks.\nThe Kaslo school sewing class recently held an exhibit of their work\nand entertained at tea. Mrs. C. F.\nArcher is the class instructress.\nNORMAN LINK\nTRANSFERRED\nWord has reached the city of the\nremoval of Norman Link from Nipa-\nwln to Wllkle, Sask. Mr. Link, a former Mirror Lake boy, has been\nroad master for the C.P.R., at Nipa-\nwin for several years and will fill\na similar position in Wilkie. Mr.\nLink will be joined by hs family\nin the near future. Mrs. Link is the\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. P.\nKane of this city.\nMiss Virginia Hendricks has returned to her home in Nelson after\nspending a few days in town visiting\nfriends.\nMrs. Ben Hicks of Gerrard was a\nvisitor in town.\nMiss Moscrop, of the p\"blic school\nteaching staff, is calling for the registration of all girls wishing to\nJoin the life-saving class which will\nbe conducted by Miss Moscrop.\nGeorge Mclnnis of Howser has\npurchased the launch and boat house\nrecently owned by the late J. J.\nBrochier. Mr. Mclnnis has taken\nhis newly acquired property to\nArgenta.\nMrs. Brunei Murphy was the hostess of a small but most enjoyable\nbridge party at her home Thursday\nevening when her guests were Mrs.\nFred Aydon, Mrs. Frank Wilson,\nMrs. J. R. Tinkess, Mrs. R. StDenis,\nMiss Bertha Bourget, Misa Kather-\nine Streit and Miss Tina Bourget.\nThe prize for high score was won\nby Miss Streit the consolation being  awarded  Mrs.  StDenis.\nMr. and Mrs. C. W. Webster were\nNelson visitors Wednesday, going\ndown to meet their son Charles who\nwas returning from Vancouver to\nspend the summer with his parents.\nCharlie is a student at the University of British Columbia.\nMrs. O. Austin and daughter Peggy, have returned from Cranbrook\nwhere they attended the nurses\ngraduating exercises of the St Eugene hospital. Mrs. Austin's daugh-\nLADY MOUNTBATTEN\nSaid to be one of the wealthiest\nwomen in England, and distant\nrelation of King Edward, Lady\nMountbatten (above) Is shown as\nshe arrived In San Francisco en\nroute to London. She comes from\na world tour that has carried her\ndeep Into Siberia and other oriental  countries\nter, Miss Winnie Austin, being a\nmember of the graduating class.\nC.O.I.T. MEET8\nThe weekly meeting of the Ko-\nkanee group of the C.G.I.T. was held\nTuesday afternoon at the home ol\nMrs. H. Beck. A long discussion\ntook place on life-saving work. Miss\nMoscrop, the group leader, expressed a wish to have others, outside the\nC.G.I.T. group, join the life-saving\nclasses. Hymns for the church service to be taken by this group,\nSunday, May 17 were practiced. At\nthe close of the meeting delicious\nrefreshments were served by Miss\nMabel Beck who was assisted by\nMiss Eleanor Horner. A vote of\nthanks was extended to Mrs. Beck\nfor the use of her home and refreshments. Those attending the meeting\nwere the leader Miss Moscrop, Miss\nMabel Beck, Miss Peggy Dryden,\nMiss Lorna Speirs, Miss Grace Tonkin, Miss Bernice Driver, Miss Dor-\nene Lind, Miss Bessie McGlbbon,\nMiss Connie Cherry, Miss Hedvig\nTornblad, Miss Mollie McGibbon,\nEileen Lind.\nMiss   Eleanor   Horner,   and   Miss\ni, MAY 12, 1936        \u00bb     ..   as iff\"\nPOSTAL SERVICE\nDISCUSSED, TRAIL\nRequirements Given\nby Esling\nTRAIL, B.C, May 11\u2014Requirements preliminary to any action on\nthe installation of a door-to-door\ndelivery service were received by\ntbe city council Monday night trom\nW. K. Esling, M.P. for Kootenay\nWest at Ottawa. Mr. Esling stated\nIt was necessary that blue prints\nof the city of Trail and Tadanac\nshowing the area within the municipalities as they are, indicating\nthat district which may. come\nwithin the city boundary should it\nbe extended, the radius covered\nfrom a given point and, if possible,\nthe height of various benches to be\nserved, be sent to G. J. Murray,\nsuperintendent of postal service,\nVancouver, and E. J. Underwood,\nchief superintendent of postal service, Ottawa. A letter was also received from Ian Mackenzie, minister of national defence, offering\nassistance in the matter. It was decided that Mayor Bruno Lerose\nand City Engineer S. S. McDiarmid\ntake up the proposal with Reeve\nE. M. Stiles of Tadanac regarding\na map of the two municipalities.\nConfirmation of an arrangement\npreviously made by the mayor\nwith L. A. Campbell of the West\nKootenay Power Light company\nregarding street lighting was received.\nThe council ordered a donation of\n$25 to the Boy Scout association\ntoward their present drive for funds.\nNotice that the union of Kootenay\nmunicipalities would meet in Trail\nJune IV was received and the council ordered membership fee of 110\nbe paid.\nA water application of J. M. Paulson, Helena street, was approved\nand water applications of John Murray, Lookout street, F. Popoff, Bay\navenue, A. McLuckie, Third avenue,\nand J. L. Woods, Second avenue,\nwere referred to the fire, water and\nlight committee and the city engineer with power to act.\nDr. F, S. Eaton reported three\ncases of whooping cough for the j\npast week.\nIt was announced that truck own-1\ners falling to purchase city licences\nby Tuesday would be prosecuted.\nCity Engineer S. S. McDiarmid\nsaid he would take a crew of men to\nthe airport Wednesday to remove\nsmall trees at the side of the present\nrunway as a result of a visit to\nthe airport of the council and W.\nM. Archibald, C. M. k S. company,\nmines  department  superintendent.\nThe matter of busses parking on\nBay avenue was again discussed\nand a letter was ordered sent to\nthe bus companies suggesting that\nthey provide their own locality for\na station.\nV*\nild\nNew Summer Home\non Robson Lond\nROBSON, B.C., -Mr. and Mrs.\nMargeson were Robson visitors on\nWednesday.\nMr. and Mn. Humphries and Mr,\nand Mrs. Ballard were Nelson visitors on Thursday.\nMrs. Carter and Miss Rush McDiarmid were in Nelson to attend\nthe musical festival. Among others\nwho attended the festival were\nMrs. Gopp and Gladys, Mr. and Mrs.\nQuance and Viola, Mrs. Campbell,\nMisa Gladys Gopp aid Miss Viola\nQuance took part iat the musical\nfestival.\nRay Berry and family has moved\nto the Berry ranch where they\nintend to make their home.\nMr. and Mrs. Margeson of Trail\nare building a summer home at\nthe west end of Robson.\nMr. Wadds of Rossland has had\nan addition put on to his summer\nhome, and is spending the summer\nmonths here.\nJean Ballard is spending a few\ndays with Mr. and Mrs. Bloomer at\nCastlegar.\nGyros Vote for\nHoedown in June\nAs a means of building up its\ncommunity service funds, the Nelson Gyro club Monday night authorized Its entertainment commit\ntee, under Ado Dlebolt, to hold a\nGyro \"hoedown\" at the civic centre\nJune 1. The club voted unanimously\nto proceed with this periodical\nevent\nBeautifying of Gyro park has\nbeen proceeding apace, and the latest work will soon be ready for Inspection, Doug Cummins reported.\nIt is proposed to assemble the club\nmembership some afternoon, for a\nthorough-going inspection.\nHerbert Harrop was In charge of\ntho program, which, owing to tbe\nabsence of the main speaker planned, boiled down to a number of\nwitty stories told by different members.\nPresident Charles Morris waa in\nthe chair.\nIn England there are said to be\n250,000 professional women hairdressers.\nimprove Clauses\nfrail Wafer Rales\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJA6. A. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot and Cold Water\nIn the HEART of the City\nPHONE 58      605 WARD ST.\nSPOKANE, WASH., HOTELS\nSTANFORD Hotel, Spokane\nit SPRACUE and MADISON\nNiee Clean Rooms\nReasonable    \u25a0:\u2022    Free  Parking\nWhen in SPOKANE You Will Enjoy Staying at the\nlt.ver.1_\" Ave   HOtOl  VOllM?\nOpposite the Psulten Building\nEVERY COURTE8Y SHOWN OUR CANADIAN GUESTS\nSpokane.\nWashington\n\"*>\nSouth Slocgnires\nVisit Grand Forks\nSOUTH SLOCAN. B.C., - Mrs.\nBert Davies and little son have left\nfor Grand Forks on a visit to Mrs.\nDavies parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wilkinson.\nMrs. E.. J. Edle of Winlaw Is\nspending a week the guest of her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. II. Strand.\nHarold Long of Nelson was the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. R. Elliott.\nMi(S Mabel Baker daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. Bert Baker who has been\nspending several months at Fruitvale has returned home.       \u00ab\nW. M. Marr of Nelson was among\nthose out fishing at the pool.\nMr. and Mrs, George Kennedy of\nTrail are the guests of Mrs. Kelsey\nMrs. Kennedy's mother.\nMrs. H. Exter of Kaslo Is visiting\nat the home ot her soh-ln-law and\ndaughter Mr. and Mrs. W. Wadeson.\nFlashes From the Wires\nPOPE 18 CRITICIZED\nH1TCH1N, Hertfordshire, Eng-\n(AP).\u2014The Bishop of St. Albans\nhas criticized Pope Pius for his\nfailure to attack Premier Mussolini's \"grab\" of Ethiopia. The Church\nof England bishop, addressing a\ndiocesan conference, said the world\n\"looked in vain for any outspoken\ndenunciations ol Italy's criminal\nconduct from the head of the largest christian communion in the\nworld, whose seat of government is\nat Rome and who is claimed to be\nthe vicar of Christ on earth.\"\nB.C.\nNOT TO CONSENT TO\nLOAN COUNCIL\nVICTORIA, (CP)-Premier Pattullo has announced British Columbia will not consent Immediately\nto establishment by the Dominion\ngovernment of a national finance\ncouncil of all provinces and loan\ncouncils.\nFrance's prospective Socialist premier, has created a precedent in\nFrench political liis..ry by inviting the Gsneral Federation of Labor and the Communist par.y to\ntake posts in the new popular front\ncabinet wiicih is expected to take\noffice after June 1.\nOTTAWA CONFIRMS PROBE\nOTTAWA, (CP). \u2014 As soon as\nmore pressing matters have been\ndisposed of the government will\nproceed to set up a royal commission to investigate claims by British Columbia of unequal treatment\nunder the terms of the confederation pact, it is learned here.\nMiss Nancy Lee\nWill Be Matron,\nQuesnel Hospital\nBONNINGTON FALLS, B.C., -\nMiss Nancy Lee who has been on\nthe staff of the Kootenay Lake General hospital, Nelson until recently\nwhen she visited her parents Major\nand Mrs. Turner Lee for a Week\nprior to leaving for Quesnel, B.C.,\nwhere she has accepted the appointment as matron of the hospital there.\nGOLDBOLD CONVICTED\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, (CP)\n\u2014John Roy Goldbold was convicted by Chief Justice Aulay Morrison\nat the spring assize here on two\ncharges, one of attempting to hold\nup Philip Spurgeop's jewelry store\non Dec. 18 and one of.shooting at\nConstable Dan Gunn. He will be\nsentenced at the end of the assize.\n\"FLU\" HITS FORT YUKON\nFAIRBANKS, Alaska, (AP).-A\nradio dispatch to the News-Miner\nsaid Influenza, claiming six lives,\nravaged white and native populations at Fort Yukon, while \u00ab flood\nswept the town, 160 milef porth-\neast of here at the junction of the\nYukon and Porcupine rivers. The\nNews-Miner's correspondent at Fort\nYukon, Mrs. Emily Randall, wife of\ndeputy United States marshall,\nsaid no one drowned in the flood\nwhich spread over the town when\nIce broke In a slough.\nBLUM   SET8   PRECEDENT'\nPARIS, (CP-Havas)\u2014Leon Blum,\nONTARIO GOLFER QUALIFIES\nNEW YOiUv, (CP).\u2014Ksbert T.\nGray, jr., of Windsor, Ont., earned\nthe right to try for the UniteJ states\nopen golf crown next month by\nshooting two steady rounos at Detroit that were gocd enough for a\nqualifying berth. Gr..y, pr..,esslonal\nat Essex County club, had the shots\nlor a 36-hole record that read 71\u2014\n75-146.\nProvince Chief\nAdmired Cromie\nWINNIPEG, ,. 1. E.Nichols,\nmanaging director of The Vancouver Province, who is visiting here,\npaid high tribute to R. J. Cromie,\npublisher of > The Vancouver Sun,\nwho died Monday.\n\"I keenly rgeret the death of Mr.\nCromie,\" Mr. Nichols said. \"He was'\na friend of mine. We hai worked\ntogether; we had many of those intimate conversations which pass between men of the newspaper fraternity.\n\"I had learned to admire him. H.\nJ. Cromie was one ol the ablest\npublishers of iuy tlrne.;He was Indeed a competitor to command high\nrespect and I make no qualifica-\nUons. I respected him as a competitor eminently gifted in the art of\npublishing a daily newspaper.\n\"The newspaper fraternuy of\nCanada is the poorer from the passing of R. J. Cromie. In ail earnestness I pay him my tribute of admiration and I ex.end to hij be\nreaved ones my sympathy and condolences.\"\nTRAIL, B. C, May 11 - Three\nclauses regarding proposed amendment to the present water rates bylaw were approved at city council\nmeeting here Monday night.\nUnder clause No. 1 Alderman J\nH. Woodburn, chairman of the fire,\nwater and light committee recommended that when there are more\nthan one suite of rooms In a dwelling house containing an additional\nfull set of plumbing, that $2.50 be\nthe nominal fee for the first suite.\n52 for the second and $1.50 for thr\nthird. The second clause stated\nthat houses with one set of plumbing accommodating more than one\nfamily be charged according to existing domestic rates. The third approved clause was that a water\nschedule presented go into effect\nwith the other recommendations.\nCity Clerk W. E. B. Monypenny\n.'stated that these approvals would\nhave to be embodied in the bylaw\namendments and would not come\ninto effect until passed.\nDECK CHAIRS\n$1.95 $2.50 $4.50\nSee Our Window\nFor Fins Furniture\nEAQLEBLK. PHONE Ht\nSUN NEWS ROOM!\nIS HUSHED\nVANCOUVER. (CP).\u2014The news\nroom of The Vancouver Sun waa\nhushed from newspaper turbulence\nMonday night as word waa received\nthat Robert Cromie, owner and publisher, was dead.\n\"The chief\" was  gone  but the|\npaper must come out Tuesday,\nEditors and reporters talked In I\nundertones, some with tears hardly\nrestrained. They had to plan the I\nissue which would tell that the driv- |\ning personality which had expressed itself through The Sun, would i\ndirect it no more.\nThey went about it quietly but !\nin workmanlike fashion.\nTrail Ball Nine\nBeats Deer Park\nHit by Rothery in the\nEighth Effects\nWinning Run\nTRAIL BOWLING\nTrail Times 1    2    3    Tot.\nM. Cummings 154 169 184- 507\nJ. Thorndale  _ 144 157 181- 482\nL.  Eustis    138 148 124\u2014 410\nD. Balfour  152 122 143- 417\nTrailites Visit\nAppledale People\nAPPLEDALE, B.C.\u2014J. Cameron\nof Trail, was a guest over Friday\nof his wife's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Fordyce of Appledale.\nMrs. C. Fordyce has returned to\nher home after visiting relatives in\nTrail.\nC. Stainton and son of Trail are\n.guesta of Mr. and Mrs. T. Wynne.\nMrs. J. V. Meyers of Nelson was a\nvisitor to Appledale on Monday.\nR. Andereta of Trail is guest ot\nMr. and Mrs. J. Fordyce.\nThose from Appledale attending\nthe Passmore dance on Friday were\nMiss I. Honeysett, J. Brown, and\nMiss Amelia Trozzo.\nTotal  \t\nElks\nS. Blagioni\nD. Ventura\nF. Vellutini\n 588 596 632\u20141816\n1    2    3    Tot.\n 131 112 101- 344\n 176 148 127- 451\n.... 131 178 149- 458\nJ- Lllley  _ 151 154 154- 462\nSpot  \u201e     4    4    4\u2014   12\nTotal\n. 596 596 535-1721\nTRAIL, B.C., May 11 \u2014 Indication that Trail is bound to provide\nstiff competition in the newly formed Eastern Washington Baseball\nleague which is said to be a farm\nfor the Pacific Coast league, is revealed in their 4-3 victory over\nDeer Park on the latter's diamond\nSunday when Rube Demore, who\nmade a splendid comeback In hurling last season, held the line of\nbatters that faced him to only five\nhits. Trail fans are anxious to cast\ntheir ogles on these Washington\nlads and will be granted that opportunity next Sunday, May 17,\nwhen Deer Park plays a return\ngame In the smelter city.\nCliff Bogstie, relieved Demore In\nthe ninth inning of Sunday's fixture.\nHe allowed an additional hit but\nno runs were collected.\nReturning here from Deer Park\nTrail boys spoke highly of Babe\nAdams, who they faced from 'the'\nplate and said he had the best of\nthe argument for five Innings.\nIt was not until the eighth inning\nthat Trail boys took the upper hand\nwhen Hall crossed the plate on\nRothery's ML\nRothery, Decembrlnl and Bill\nFisher each snagged a single and\na double ; \\ :ze from Adams.\nTeams were:\nTrail\u2014Rothery 3b, Demore p, cf,.\nHorswill rf, Decemberini lb. Fair-\nbairn If, Fisher c, Morris 2b, HaU,\nss, and Bogstie cf, p.\nDeer Park\u2014Hickey If, Thurber\n3b, Perkins 2b, Corbon rf, Arver-\nson ss, Shaw c, Adams p, Davidson\ncf, LaFrance lb.\nYmir Lays Plans\nfor 24th of May\nAt a meeting at Ymir Sunday, a\ncommunity meeting was held for\nthe organizatlon'of the \"24th of May\"\narrangements, and S. Boll was named as general chairman, with power\nto appoint all necessary committees.\nPlans will be developed In the\nnext few days, it is expected, for\nthe usual Ymir celebration of this\nholiday, which will center about a\nbig sports program to be held May\n25th.\nSARRAN WIN8 TITLE\nGRIMTiYl STADIUM, Washington, D.C., (AP). \u2014 Pctey Sarron,\nflailing Syrian buzzsaw, swarmed\nall over Champion Freddie Miller\nhere to win the world's leather-\nweight boxing crown by decision\nafter 15 furious rounds. Miller\nweighed 126 and Sarron 125',-4.\n8ARCASTIC SYMBOL OF\nITALY'S VICTORY\nGENEVA, (AP)-Practical jokers\nlaunched a sarcastic symbol of\nItaly's victory over Ethiopia m the\nwaters of Lake Geneva as the\nLeague ol Nations council was about\nto meet. It w;s an inflated figure\nresembling cartoons of Joh.i Bull\nwith a large, round abdomen representing the world, on top of which\nan Italian flag was perched. In the\nmouth of the effigy was a Swiss\nflag and, trailing behind ;it In the\nwater, was a box like a coffin.\nLake Over 10 Feet\nAfter Fluctuating\nAfter a suddenly accelerated rise\nlate Sunday, the lake apparently exhausted its new impulse, reached a\ntemporary peak Sunday night, and\nreceded a little Monday morning,\nonly to pick up again in the afternoon, and make a net gain on the 24\nhours. Monday at 6 p.m. the level\nwas 10.06 feet above the low water\nmark, compared with 9.95 some 24\nhours earlier.\nCUFF-LINKS,   8TUDS   COME\nBACK\nCuff-links and studs, such as\nmother or grandmother wore, are\nagain fashionable. They were of\ngold and enamel, of diamonds or\nof semi-precious stones, of filigree\ngold. With the tailored suit-will be\nused cuff-links In the French cults\nof the tailored blouse. For the evening Uilleur, smart little sets of\nstuds, just like father's, are being\nworn, with waist-coat and sleeve\nbuttons to match.\n__n__\nWATSON'S\nSHOE SALE\nWill Continue for 3 Weefes More\nWe Have Plenty of Shoe Bargains\nto Offer During This Time\nWE HAVE ONLY SCRATCHED THE SURFACE\nOF OUR STOCK AS YET\nSport Oxfords, Tennis Shoes on sale. Work Boots,\nBedroom Slippers on sale. All on sale\u2014Growing Girls'\nShoes\u2014Boys' Shoes, at Real Honest Reductions,\nWomen's Shoes\u2014$1.00, $2.29, $3.19\nMen's Shoes $245, $345\nChildren's Shoes, 5 to 7172 $1.18\n8 to l0\u00bb\/2 .. $1.20 11 to 2 .... $1.23\nEverything in the Store Greatly Reduced\nWATSON SHOE\nCompany, Limited\n ___J\n-r-\u2014m~o\n~~~\n\u2014m-e-\n~\u2014\n6W\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING. MAY 12. 1930\nB. C. Girls to Help\nCaravan Mission\nMONTREAL, May U-On their!\nway to the Canadian west where\nannually a group of English girls\ncarry on Sunday school work by\nmeans of caravans, 23 British women arrived here Saturday morning\nin the Canadian Pacific liner Duchess of Richmond. The party, headed,\nas usual by Miss F. H. E. Hasell\nof Penrith, England, will be joined\nin the east by 10 Canadian workers,\nthree from Montreal, two from Toronto, one from Ottawa and one\nfrom New Brunswick.\nThree British Columbia girls will\ncomplete the complement for this\nyear's \"work.\" The Caravan Mission association, Miss Hasell said to\nreporters who met the Ruchess of\nRichmond, will have 10 Sunday\nschool caravans in the Held this\nyear. This is an addition of three\nnew caravans.\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nThis column is conducted by Mrs. M. J Vigneux. .AH news of a\nsocial nature including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, etc., will appear in this column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux at her home, 510 Silica streeL '\nBanff-Windermere\nHighway Open Soon\nINVERMERE, B.C.-The office of\nthe park superintendent at Radium\nHot Springs, announces the Banff-\nWindermere motor highway will be\nopen to the general public May 24.\nThe road is now in fairly good\ncondition, but with several soft\nspots between Marble and Storm\nMountain where there is still snow\non the road.\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\no, PIUS\n>,B*c*^Vf.\ncpWAYSIOBIC\nU nM[>iiu.iio-*HHOi,mv,[[ \\J\nHEADQUARTERS\nFOR QUALITY\nFOODS \u2014 FRUITS\nMEATS \u2014 VEGETABLES\nPHONES 865-866\nSAFEWAY   STORES   LIMITED\nMrs. W. M. Cunlitle entertained\nat three tables of bridge when her\ninvited guests were Mrs. F. Peters,\nMrs. R. L. McBride, Mrs. W. A.\nNisbet, Mrs. R. W. Hinton, Mrs. E.\nC. Wragge, Mrs. A. P. MacKay, Miss\nM. Cameron, Mrs. P. G. Morey, Mrs.\nGordon Hallett, Mrs. R. Rosling,\nMrs. A. L. McCulloch and Mrs.\nJames O'Shea.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nF. G. Perry ol Fernie is here\nassisting in the assizes as court\nstenographer.\nA. Marapodi spent the week-end\nat the home ol his mother on Front\nstreet.\n\u00ab   *   *\nMrs. Hong of Harrop spent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Irene Rowley. Stanley street,\nhas returned from visiting in Grand\nForks at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nDonald McKinnon.\nMr. and Mrs. Walter C. Kettlewell\nand young son Donald leave this\nmorning to spend a few days in\nKimberley and district.\nArne Fors of the Reno mine and\nEthel Rosena Gillett of Nelson were\nmarried at Trinity United church\nSaturday by Rev. J. A. Donnell,\nthe pastor.\nGeorge Joy of Kelowna visited\ntown during the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nJ. C. Potter and G. Potter of Vancouver have returned to the coast\nafter a holiday at the Ainsworth\nHot Springs hotel.\n\u2022 *   '\nA. E. Tw\u00abdale of the staff of the\nTrail Central school visited Nelson\nSaturday.\nRev. and Mrs. T. W. Reed of Kaslo\nwere in the city during the weekend en route to attend the United\nchurch conference in Vancouver.\nThey were accompanied by Mrs.\nReed's mother,' Mrs. Harrison, also\nof Kaslo.\nSamuel Ball of Ymir visited Nelson yesterday.\nrace apartments, had as their guest\nMrs. B. F. Thurber of Trail.\nMrs. Robert Quin of Harrop spent\nSaturday in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Henry Johns of\nNelway   visited  Nelson  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Betty Strachan of Trail visited friends in town over the weekend.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. George Johnstone\nhave had as their guests their son\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nLewis Johnstone of the Emerald\nmine,\n\u2022 \u00bb      0\nMrs. C. B. Sharp of Bonnington\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 o    *\nCarl Baillie of Trail visited Nelson\nduring the week-end.\n\u2022 *   *\nStanley Bebbington of Sheep\nCreek was in town shopping yesterday.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\n'C. King of Salmo is spending a\nfew days in Nelson.\n\u2022 *      0\nThe Misses Peggy and Shirley\nDonaldson, who attend school in\nNelson, spent the week-end in Spokane, accompanied by their parents,\nMr. and Mrs. M. C. Donaldson of\nSalmo.\nW. S. (Duke) Harris leaves this\nmorning for Penticton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. F, Attaway of Trail\nvisited the city yesterday.\nMrs. H. Saare, Carbonate street,\nhad as her week-end guests her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Donald L. Hings, ot Rossland,\nand their children.\nRev. J. A. Donnell lett yaeterday\nfor Vancouver to attend the United\nchurch conference.\nS. Llmacher ot Trail was in the\ncity visiting his parents, Mr. and\n( Mrs. Adolphe Limacher, 1024 Carbonate street.\n!    Leo McAstocker ot Grand Forks,\nj formerly of Nelson, was a week-\nMrs. Frank Denison, Hoover street I end visitor in Nelson.\nreturned from a couple of weeks\nin Vancouver.\nR. Schofield of Trail visited the\ncity the latter part of the week.\n\u00bb   \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Reeve Harper, Ter-\nSPECIAL SALE OF\nELECTRIC\nHOT PLATES\nSINGLE BURNER HOT PLATE WITH        (O QA\nBUNSEN BURNER   $L.dU\nDOUBLE BURNER HOT PLATE WITH      (Q 4Q\nSIX-INCH DISCS at  4>D.'KJ\nDOUBLE BURNER HOT PLATES WITH\nONE 6-INCH ANO ON*. S-INCH DISC at\nHIPPERSON\nHARDWARE CO., LIMITED\nPHONE 497 The Friendly Store BOX 414\nIN EVERY ACTIVITY THEY ALWAYS CO TOGETHER!\nHealth\nsa\nPHONE\n290\nSuccessful business men, students,\nathletes, home-makers ... all share\na single secret . . . GOOD HEALTH.\nA simple diet principle brings it to\nmost of them\nwith every meal!\nMilk\nCream\nlet Cream\nButter\nplenty of milk\nAll\nPerfectly\nPasreurixed\nProducts\nC. Howarth was in tbe city from\nNakusp during the week-end.\nCapt. C. S. Price was in town from\nProcter Saturday.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Loraine Waters of Trail was\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. George Dill,\n' Vernon street, Saturday.\nMrs. F. W. Hewis, Terrace apartments, has returned from several\nweeks in the cast.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nCharles Gill ot Silverton visited\nI town-yesterday.\n\u00ab   *   \u2022\nI    Visitors tn Nelson yesterday included Hugh McLaren ol Trail.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nj Recent visitors at the Ainsworth\nI Hot Springs hotel included Mr. and\nMrs. Thomas Crevcn ot Carson City,\ni Nev., Mr. and Mrs. Murray Clark,\nMr. and Mrs. A. Fleming, Mr. and\n1 Mrs. C. A. Larson, Miss Connie\n! Smith, Miss Moira McLeod, George\nWallach, John A. Ferguson and SW.\nj and Mrs. Charles Madden of Long-\n. beach.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nAfter spending a few months in\nNelson and the past three weeks a\nguest at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\ni W. E. Wasson, Mrs. Jack Dewar of\nVancouver left yesterday morning\nvia the Great Northern for Watford,\nOnt., on an extended visit to her\nsister.\n\u2022 \u00ab   *\nMiss J. C. McLean has returned\nfrom visiting friends in Procter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. H. E. Stuart, 221\nRobson street, had as their weekend guest their son, R. D. Stuart\nS and Mr. Hunden, principal of the\n' Canyon City school, where the former is also a teacher.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Harold Clark and\nson Bobby of Nakusp spent the\nweek-end at the home ot Mr. and\nMrs. George Clark, Cedar street.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nW. F. Broderick was in from Slocan City at the week-end.\nA miscellaneous shower was given Saturday at the home of Mrs.\nJames Milne, Jr., in honor of Miss i\nMyrtle Gourley whose marriage, to\nAlan Shaw ot Cranbrook is planned\nto take place May 24. Prior to tbe\ntea the honored guest was the recipient of a May basket tilled with\nmany usetul gifts. Invited guests\nwere Miss Gourley, Mrs. J. Milne,\nand daughter, Wilma, Miss Edna\nSwanland, Mrs. H. Swan, Mrs. W.\nKirk, Miss Annie Stevens, Mrs. J.\nDawson, Mrs. Glen Scribner, Mrs.\nJoseph Habegard, Mrs. Gordon\nSpeirs, Mrs. Thendara Morris and\nMrs. Gordon Shaw.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nG. Stanley Campbell left Sunday\nmorning for New York, to sail May\n16 in the Georgic for England, where\nhe will make his home.\n\u00ab   \u00bb -\u2022\nMiss Marguerite Sandercock of\nTrail was among week-end visitors\nin town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas German,\nHover street, have as their guest tor.\nthe summer months, their daughter-\nin-law Mrs. Reginald German and\nyoung daughter, Lois Anne of Trail.\n. \u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nB. Watson of the Relief Arlington\nmine visited town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *'\nMrs. Kenneth Attree of Queens\nBay and her son, Dick, were visitors\nin Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. J. N. Cran of Rossland visited town during the festival.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. R. V. Venables have\nas their guest, their son, Bert Venables, of Trail.\n\u00bb   *   \u2022\nMrs. J. M. Harris of Sandon visited town at the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nVisitors in Nelson Saturday Included Mrs. John Tawse and daughter of Willow Point.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nW. J, Truscott and his sons, Don-\nold and Lewis, of Creston were\nweek-end guests at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. George Truscott, Fourth i\nstreet, Fairview.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nColin Baker of Trail spent the\nweek-end in town, a guest of his\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. F. Baker,\nFairview.\n\u2022 o   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. D. F. Stewart oi\nTrail were visitors in town Saturday.\n\u2022 *   *\nWeek-end visitors in Nelson included Mrs. J. Pinchbeck ol Slocan\nCity.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nFarran C. Archibald of Trail is\nvisiting members of his family, who\nare summering here.\nWeek-end visitors in town included Mr. and Mrs. Manning of the Relict Arlington mine at Erie.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nRev. T. J. S. Ferguson left yesterday tor Vancouver to attend a\nUnited church conference.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nLyman and Tony StDenis of Trail\nwere week-end visitors in the city.\nA. Finlayson of Procter spent the\nweek-end in Nelson.\nMrs. G. Kinnis was in the city\nfrom Trail over the week-end.\nMr. and Mrs. John McPhail and\ndaughter, Alice, have left on a motor\ntrip to Allenby to visit their son,\nWallace. They will also visit in\nSpokane.\n-.PAGE THREE\ntftjfotf*!^ fflnttqmttg.\nINCORPORATED  2?? MAY 1670,\nYOU ARE INVITED\nTo visit our newly arranged \u2022\nclothing section where you can\nreceive individual service in\nprivately arranged showrooms\nwith private fitting rooms in\nconnection. You are bound to\nlike this added service at \"The\nBay\".\nTINY TOTS'\nDRESSES\nDainty organdy dresses for tiny toddlers.\nDotted Swiss organdy and plain shades.\nBlue, pink, yellow and green, djl AA\n1,2 and 3 yr JH.UU\nBetter Towels\nHeavy absorbent towels in pastel tones\nof peach, gold, orchid, green, blue. Small\ndice checks. A real towel value. Size\n' 24x48. CM\nEACH     \\JN\nFEATHER PILLOWS\nReal chicken feather pillows\n17x25. Covered with feather\nproof ticking. EACH \t\nChoice feather pillows in size 18x28 covered with floral linen ticking, kjl OC\ntALH        $loLO\nSUMMER GLOVES\nAny suit or dress will be enhanced by a\npair of these gloves. Tailored and trim\nin chamoisette, or distinctly feminine in\nBar-silk and mesh. Navy, brown, beige,\ngrey and white, 7A\u00a3\nPAIR       \u00ab*>\nNOTICE\nMri. Ida L. Clark representing the Cot-\nsard Line of Beauty will be in our store,\nThursday, May 14th. Mrs. Clark will\ntake charge of all special fittings.\n89'\nMEN'S SMART\nSUITS\n$27.50\nWith One and Two Pants\nThese suits demonstrate our leadship in\nstyle, in quality and most certainly in\nvalue. You'll see the newest and the very\nsmartest in the way of colors, patterns\nand models. You'll find solids, checks,\nplaids and stripes in blues, greys, browns,\nand fawns. All sizes in regulars, shorts,\ntails and scouts.\nInvestigate Our Budget Payment Plan\nHBC PURE FOOD SPECIALS\n193\u2014PHONES\u2014194\nFREE DELIVERY\nCOFFEE\u2014 1\nHBC Luxurious . . ,1b.\nPRUNES\u2014 2\nLarge size 40-50s . .lbs.\nCOLDEN SYRUP\u2014   1\nRogers' 2-lb. tin .. .tin\nTEA\u2014 1\nFort Carry lb.\nPORK and BEANS\u2014 1\nClark's Jumbo 2s .. .tin\nBISCUITS\u2014 1\nRichmond Sandwich .lb.\n39*\n19*\n19*\n60'\n12*\n22*\nROMAN MEAL        1\nCOOKIES doz.\nRINSO\u2014 1\nRegular size pkg.\nSOAP\u2014 7\nPearl White , bvs\nPUREX 3\nTISSUE    rolls\nFLOOR WAX or CLO-1\nCOAT\u2014Johnston's   .tin\nTUNA FLAKES\u2014     2\nWs  tins\n__\u00bb\t\n9*\n22*\n25*\n21*\n69*\n17*\nthe Reno mine were visitors in town\nat the week-end.\n*   \u2022   \u2022\nJoseph   Speakman   of   Castlegar\nvisited the city Saturday.\nMrs. E. Merrifield of Procter visited town Saturday.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nMrs. S. N. McDougall, 1111 Front\nI street has returned from a visit to\nMr. and Mrs. G. A, Williams of! friends in Kimberley.\nSalmo visited the city during the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. M. Cunliffe, Observatory\nstreet, has returned from a few\ndays in Vancouver.\n\u00bb   \u2022   #\nDr. W. B. Steed, Latimer street,\nleft yesterday for 10-day visit to\nVancouver.\n\u2022 *   *\nW. R. Green of Slocan City was a\nweek-end visitor in town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. R. McLennan of Trail,\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Dawson, Stanley street, was visiting\nfriends in Nelson during the weekend.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. E. J. Shardelow, who had\nbeen a patient in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital, has left for her\nhome at 1204 Water street.\nMr. and Mrs. Stanley P. Bostock,\nLatimer street, had as their weekend guest, Mrs. James Draper of\nNew Denver.\n\"Adam and Fallen\nMan\" Subject for\nLesson-sermon\nAlbert  LePage\nNelson Sunday.\nof  Trail  visited\nMiss M. McDonell of Rossland was\namong outsiders in the city at the\nweek-end.\n\u00bb   *   *\nD. McQuaig of Slocan City visited\nNelson Saturday.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Ramsay of\nMENUS\nRECIPES\nand\nHINTS\nBv\nMrs.\nMarv\nMorton\nGood\nHousekeeping,\n\"Adam and Fallen Man\" was ths\nsubject of the Lesson-Sermon on\nSunday in First Church of Christ,\nScientist.\nThe Golden Text was: \"Cease yc\nfrom man. whose breath is in his\nnostrils: for wherein is he to be\naccounted of?\" (Isaiah 2: 22).\nAmong the citations which comprised the Lesson-Sermon was the\nfollowing from the Bible: \"And He\nrenewed in the spirit of your mind;\nAnd that ye put on the new man,\nwhich after God is created in\nrighteousness and true holiness\"\u2014\n(Ephesians 4: 23, 24).\nThe Lesson-Sermon also included\nthe following passage from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science and Health with Key to the\nScriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy:\n\"The real man is spiritual and immortal, but the mortal and imper-\nlect so-called 'children of men' are\ncounterfeits from the beginning, to\nbe laid aside for the pure reality.\nThis mortal is put off, and the new\nman or real man is put on, in proportion as mortal's realize the science of man and seek the true\nmodel.'1\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION  NETWORK\n5:00 Mystery House, Montreal;\n5:30 Soloists, male trio, Toronto\n(B.C. 5:45); 6:00 No mournful numbers, Winnipeg; 6:00 Lady Twceds-\nmuir, address, Ottawa; 6:45 Canadian Press News and Weather report, Toronto; 7:00 Luigi Romanelli's\norch., Toronto; 7:30 Lullaby Lagoon,\nMontreal; 8:00 Old Time Frolic, Saskatoon; 8:30 Melody Moods, Vancouver; 9:00 Just Supposin', W'peg.;\n9:30 To an Evening Star, Edmonton;\n10:00 News Reporter, Vancouver\n(B*C. Net.); 10:15 Mandarin orch.,\nVancouver, (B.C. Net.).\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKPO.\nKOMO\n920\nKHQ  KGW  KFI\n590      620     640\n5:00 Ben Bernie and All the Lads;\n5:30 Ed Wynn as Gulliver the Traveller, Lennie Hayton's orchestra;\n6:00 Eddie Dowling's Revue, Benny\nGoodman's orch.; 6:30 Roy Campbell's Royalists; 6:45 Twin City\nFoursome; 7:00 Amos 'n' Andy; 7:15\nLum and Abner; 7:30 Leo Reis-\nman's orchestra, Phil Duey, Johnny Eton Boys, Sally Singer; 6:00\nDeath Valley Days, Old Ranger,\nnarrator; 8:30 Crime Clues, mis-\ntery drama; 9:00 Phil Levant's orch.;\n9:30 Carl Schreiber's orch.; 10:00\nNews Flashes, Sam Hayes; 10:15 Carl\nRavazza's orch.; 10:30 Henry King's\norch.; 11:00 George Olsen's orch.;\n11:30 Tom Brown's orch.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nJimmy Grier's orch.;  11:00 Songs\nby  Candle Light, Tommy  Harris.\nC.B.S.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\n670 610 940 1130 1270\n5:00 Don Lee Workship (KVI);\n6:00 Parties at Pickfair, Mary Pick-\nford; 6:30 March of Tjme, dramatized news; 7:00 Willard Robinson's\norch.; 7:15 Renfrew of the Mounted,\ndrama; 7:30 Caravan, Walter\nO'Keefe, Deane Janis, Glen Gray's\norch.; 8:00 Fred Waring's Pcnnsyl-\nvanians; 8:30 Lazy Dan, the Minstrel Man; 9:00 Phillip Crane, organist; 10:00 To be announced; 10:30\nSterling Young's orch.; 11:00 Dick\nJergen's orch.; 11:30 Emil Baffa's\norch.; 11:45 Ellis Kimball's orch.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 in\nVancouver 500 w\n5:15 Cariboo Cowboys; 5:45 Little\nOrphan Annie, E. T.; 6:15 News\nFlashes; 6:30 Frank and Archie,\nE. T.; 6:45 Sid Mullctt; 7:00 Self-\nHelp; 7:30 Women's Point ol View;\n7:45 Sonny Hudson; 8:00 Laddie\nWatkis, song; 8:15 Muriel McKin-\nnell, songs; 8:30 Sport broadcast;\n10:30 Len Chamberlain's orch.: 11:00\nEric Gee's Kollegians; 11:30 Slumber\nHour; 11:45 News Flashes; Other\nPeriods: Records.\nKGO  KJR\n790   970\nKEX  KECA  KGA\n1180     1430     1470\nMenu Hint\nCreamed  Finnan   Haddie  in   Rice\nRing\nGrapefruit Salad\nWashington Cream Pie\nTea or Coflee\nSections ol grapclruit served on\nlettuce or cabbage and topped with\nmayonnaise   or   French   dressing\nmake a simple but refreshing salad.\nEither fresh or canned grapefruit\nmay be used.\nToday's Recipes\nCreamed Finnan Haddie \u2014 Three\nhard-cooked   eggs,   sliced;    three-\nfourths pound finnan haddie, three\nDURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES   BETTER   BREAD\ncups milk, four tablespoons butter,\nfour tablespoons flour, salt, pepper.\nSimmer fisli 20 minutes in water to\njust cover. Cool and Hake. Make\nwhite sauce of milk, butter and\nHour. Instead ol fresh milk, two\ncups of canned milk and one cup\nof the broth in which the fish simmered may be used, if the smoked\nflavor is liked, Add fish and sliced\neggs, season to taste and pour Into\nrice ring, For the rice ring, steam\none cup rice and add two tablespoons butter and some chopped\nparsley or green pepper. Pack into\noiled ring mold, cover with oiled\npaper and bake 30 to 40 minutes.\nWashington Cream Pie\u2014One cup\nsugar, five eggs, one and one-half\ncups water, one cup flour, one teaspoon baking powder. This makes\nenough for two thin layers. Put together with vanilla custard. Put\nwhite frosting on top, and when it\nhas cooled, cover top with melted\nbitter chocolate.\nMILL OPERATOR FINED\nHANEY. B.C., May 11 (CP)-Pc-\nter Bain, lumber operator ot Whon-\nnock, B.C., today was convicted by\nMagistrate W. J. Sparling in police\ncourt on a charge ot failing to post\nposters, notifying employees of the\nlegal hours of labor, in a conspicuous place in his mill. He was fined\n$30 and costs.\n5:00 Crosscuts fr. Log o' the Day;\n6:15 S. F. Municipal Government,\ninterview (KGO); 6:30 Eliza Schal-\nlert reviews; 6:45 Air Adventures\nof Jimmy Allen KGO; 7:00 Western\nWomen (KGO); Phil Levant's orchestra; 7:30 Ruby Newman's orch.;\n8:00 Shandor, violinist; Calif. State\nChamber of Commerce (KGO); 8:08\nCornelius Codolban's orch.; 8:15\nFrank Watanabe, sketch; 8:30 Jesse\nHawkin's orch.; 9:00 Russian Rhapsody, Ralina Zorova; 9:30 Yesterday's music, Robert Stevens, tenor;\n10:00' Bobbie Meeker's orch.; 10:30\nTry Salada Orange Pekoe\nBlend.  You'll prefer it.\n'SALADA\nTEA\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n5:00 Cecil and Sally, E.T.; 5:15\nBlack and Blue; 6:00 Adventure\nBound; 6:15 The Rangers; 6:30 Hi-\nHilarities; 6:45 Slices of Life; 7:00\nGrain Forum; 7:30 Song Souvenirs;\n8:00 Tomorrov, Dr. Kellaway;\n8:30 Variety Show; 0:45 True Confessions; 9:00 News Flashes; 9:15\nThe Serenader.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTransmission 6\nThe following frequencies will be\nused:   GSD   11.75   Mm.   (25.53m.);\nGSC  9.58   Mcs.   (31.32  m.).    .\n6:00 p.m.-Big Ben. A Folk-Song\nrecital by Eve Maxwell-Lyte, soprano, and Basil Parsons, baritone;\n6:30 \"Grab Them by the Ears\". A\nradio play: 7:00 Chamber Music. The\nDorothy Hogben Trio; Addash Fryd-\nman. violin; John Gabalta, .violin-\ncello; Dorothy Hogben, pianoforte;'\n7:40 News and announcements.\nINTERNATIONAL\nParis\u20143:15 p.m.\u2014Concert: Relais\nde Radio-Paris. TPA4, 25.6 m., 11.72\nmc.\nLondon\u20144:25 p.m.\u2014Talk: \"Imperial Affairs\", by H. V. Hodson. GSD.\n25.5 m., 11.75 mc, GSC, 31.3 m., 9.58\nmc, or GSA, 49.5 m., 11.77 mc.\nSchenectady\u20144:30 p.m.\u2014Spanish\nprogram. W2XAF, 31.4 m., 9.55' mc.\nEindhoven, Netherlands \u2014 12:00\nmidnight\u2014Experimental transmission from the Philips' Laboratory at\nEindhoven. PCJ, 19.71 m., 9.59 mc.\nThe tiny baby ol a blue whale ia\nabout 23 \"feet long, but It grows up\nto be 75 feet long or even 100.\nSNAP\nClean* Dirty Hands\nSlice a banana into a bowl\nof Kellogg's Rice Krispies,'\nPour on milk or cream.\nYou've never tasted\ncereal that combines so well\nwith the flavor of ripe fruit!\nRice Krispies are nourishing and easy to digest.\nAl grocers everywhere in\nthe Mother Goose story\npackage. Made by Kellogg\nin London, Ontario.\nSO CRISP\nthey actually\ncrackle in\nmilk or\ncream\n  _^^^_^___\n\t\n\t\n______\n_\n.\n PAGE FOUR \u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINQ. MAV 12, 1936\nTODAY IS HOSPITAL DAY\nWW******************************\nKootenay Lake General Hospital Open to Visitors \u2014 Camera Shows Some Staff Members and Sections of Buildings\n-Photo bv George A. Metres\nMIS8 VERA  B.  EIDT\nSuperintendent\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meer\nMISS BEATRICE  MATTHEWS\nSupervisor,  First  Floor\n\u00a9\n*#y^\n-Photo by George A. Meeres ]\nMISS JEAN MILLER\nDietitian\nObsictric.il I \u2022 ' mi msternlty floor, Kootensy Like General Hospital.\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meerei\nMISS JENNIE DOWN\nSupervisor, Operating Room\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meeres\nMISS SYBIL KEELER\nSupervisor, Maternity Floor\nKootenay Lake General Hospital, Nelson, with Its spacious lawns\nIs open to the public today for Inspection. Today Is Hospital Day and\ntht hospital staff has made preparations to greet visitors and show\nthem the various departments and facilities of the Institution. Tea\nwill be served. Accompanying photos on this pane and the following\npage in of staff members, officials ind tome of the departments of\n4%\n\u2014Photo Courtesy George E. Lester\nthe Nelson Institution. Several members of the staff were not available for photographing. Including Miss Helen Holmes, night supervisor\nof tht hospital, Miss Carol Purnty, Miss M. Gwyer, Miss Nina Pass-\nmore and Miss R. Bond. The hospital Is open to visitors between hours\nof 2:30 and 5:30 today.\nTo All Mankind She Left a i?\/c\/z Inheritance\nIn the year 1854, Florence Nightingale, profoundly stirred by reports of the suffering and misery of the sick and\nwounded soldiers in the Crimean War, packed her things and set sail for the war area.\nThere, this brave woman brought mercy to more than 1 U.UQO suffering men. To these stricken soldiers, she was\nan angel. To the officials who had permitted their misery, she was a fury. She worked, she fought, she administered, she commanded. And In a few short months, she had miraculously brought order out of chaos, substituted comfort for horror.\nWhen peace brought quiet again to the Crimea, Florence Nightingale fought on. She established nursing homes,\nand became the mother of modern nursing. She crusaded not only for better military hospital conditions, but for\nbetter hospitals everywhere. Her name and her work have become a legend to those who devote their lives to\nhealing the sick.\nThat's why, each year, hospitals set aside her birthday, May 12, as Hospital Day.\nThey've set aside this day to help you learn exactly what goes on inside a hospital, and the part the hospital plays\nin the welfare of your community.\nAnd what an important part that is! For the hospital is, of course, the place in which are concentrated the equipment and facilities that modern science has evolved for the treatment and cure of illness. In the hospital your\nphysician's efforts are supplemented by the competent assistance of staff doctors, internes, pharmacists, nurses,\nlaboratory workers and dietitians. Every member of the hospital staff is trained to care sympathetically and intelligently for the sick. And the hospital is so organized that this service continues for 24 hours a day.\nVisit your hospital, the Kootenay Lake General hospital, today between 2:30 and 5:30 p.m. then if the time comes\nwhen your physician advises you or one of your family to go to a hospital, you will know, from having seen with\nyour own eyes, what an efficient, friendly, peaceful place a hospital is.\n-Photo bv George A. Meerei\nGEORGE E. LESTER\nX-Riy Technician\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meeres\nMISS  BETTY  JOHNSON\nLaboratory Technician\n<s\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meerea\nMISS AUDREY RICHARD80N\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meeres\nMIS8 JEAN ROBIN80N\n\u2014Photo by McGregor\nA general view of the modern X-ray equipment IrfrKootiniy Laka Gantral Hospital. At the left Is the X-ray equipment. In the'etnter, showing white, are the vltw\nof tho apparatus. At the right Is tho X-ray table and above It the ray tube.\n_\nm\n ~~*~\u2022\"\u25a0!\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0\"RP~\n\u00a78\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-TUE8DAY MORNING. MAY 11 MM\n\u25a0Mai FIVE\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meeres\nMISS MURIEL AHIER\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meeres\nMISS GLADYS CARTHEW\nALL VISITORS ARE\nWELCOME TODAY\nAT HOSPITAL\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meeres\nMIS8 ALICE  OePORTER\nmm\nMembers of the staff and\nofficials have spared no efforts in making arrangements for visitors today at\nKootenay Lake General hospital. Today is Hospital day.\nThe institution, its various\ndepartments and equipment\nwill be open for inspection\nbetween the hours of 2:30\nand 5:30 o'clock this afternoon. Tea will be served\nvisitors. Nelson has a first\nclass hospital institution and\nofficials declare that all Nel-\nsonites and district people\nwho can should visit the institution today.\nhoto by George A. Meeres\nMISS AILENE BEAMISH\nPhoto by George A. Meerei A photo ot thoX^ayroomln Kootenay Lake General Hospital.      In foreground Is th\u00ab X-ray table with thTr \u00aby tube above It. At the -Photo by George A. Meeres -Kwto by George A. Meeres\nMISS DOROTHY CORBLE right In the cabinet Is the electrical equipment, motors, etc. \u2014Photo by McGregor MISS JEAN   RYAN MISS EVELYN  HIGGINBOTHAM\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meeres\nMISS   MARJORIE  WELLINGTON\nA group photo of some ef the stiff at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital In Nelson, BACK ROW, left to right: Miss B. Johnson, J. C.\nForbss, Miss J. Miller, Mrs. L. Helton, Miss M. Patterson, Miss B.\nLaldlaw, Miss A. Burnish, Miss D. Corbie. SECOND ROW: Miss M.\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meeres\nMadden, Miss V. Hayden, George E. Lester, Miss 8. Keoler, Dr. W. 0.\nGreen, Miss M. Abler, Miss K. Scott. FRONT ROW: Miss V. Eldt, superintendent, and Miss Beatrice Matthews. Several members of the\nstaff were absent when this photo was taken.\nThe fracture table on the second floor of the\nKootenay Lake General hospital, Nelson. This is\nthe minor operating room ef the Institution. The\nmain table Is the Hawley fracture table. On the\ntable In the background Is the Roger Anderson\nfracture apparatus.\nPhoto by George A. Meeres\nJ. C. FORBES\nSecretary\n'   Cosy accommodation for the doctors Is provided In the doctors' consulting room off the msjor\n\u2014Staff Photo\noperating room on the second floor of the Kootenay\nLake General hospital, Nelson.\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meeres\nMISS IRENE M. EDMONDSON\nStenographer\n\u2014Photo by George A. Meeres\nMI8S  MARGARET   ARTHUR\nSwitchboard  Operator\nMajor operating room In the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital, with Its excellent equipment. At\nthe left Is the anasthetlc table. Beside It Is tho Instrument table. Immediately behind with the cur.\n\u2014Staff Phots\ntains Is the oxygen tent. At the extreme right Is\nthe basal metabolism  machine for treatment of\ngoitre.\n'     <   '\n..._   __  . . _\t\n .\t\n .\t\n'\u25a0iiiiirtilTii\n______________\n^--H.t\u2014\u2014\u25a0\n mi!i i imii i. mt\\\\eWe^^tmmm\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.\u2014TUESDAY MORNING. MAY 12. 1936\nMztm laily Jfarofi\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nALL THE MEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED,\n216   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbia\nPhone 14t Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   of the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nTUESDAY, MAY 12, 1936\nPREVENT APPLE SCAB IN KOOTENAY\nORCHARDS\nBlossom time has come in the Kootenays. Cherry\ntrees are in full bloom and apple trees are bursting into\nbloom. Kootenay farmers are interested in clean fruit. With\nthe arrival of the \"pink\" stage comes time for spraying to\nprevent apple scab. District Horticulturist E. C. Hunt\nhas issued warning for control of apple scab. He declares\napplication of sprays now will mean cleaner crops in the\nfall and naturally more money for the farmers. Do your\nspraying now at the \"pink\" stage.\nTHE GOLF SEASON STARTS\nNelson golfers officially opened the golfing season\non the Nelson Golf and Country club course over the weekend. The Dubs and Duffers led the parade and W. R. Dunwoody soared into the heights of fame by sinking the first\nhole-in-one of the season. Indications point to more interest\nin golf in Nelson this season than ever before. As in Nelson\n,'io throughout the district. Trail and Rossland golfers are\nalready active. The Slocan is boasting a fine course near\nNew Denver and in the boundary country Grand Forks,\n'Rock Creek, Greenwood and Beaverdell all have courses of\nwhich they are justly proud. Same conditions exist in Kaslo\nwhere the opening Kootenay tournament will be held\n'shortly, and at various points in East Kootenay.\nThere is no game which has grown so rapidly, or\n.become so popular all over this continent in the past couple\nof decades as golf. It has become almost as universal as\n-tennis. It was only about 40 years ago that the game was\n' introduced to this country. Now millions are invested in\nErolf courses and clubhouses and the number of players in\n\u2022Canada and the United States must run into the millions.\nI      A few years ago golf was looked upon as an old man's\n- game and a pastime of the wealthy. But, today the youth\n?of the land are turning to golf, while the growth of munic-\nJ ipal and semi-public courses has put the game within the\nI* reach of anyone of moderate means at least. Then another\nchange in the game has been its invasion by the women. Not\nso many years ago only an old woman played golf. Now.\n| there must be as many women as men playing.\nTHE NEW INDIA\nLord Linlithgow, who succeeds Lord Willingdon as\nviceroy of India, is doubtless finding his position to be\ndifferent in many respects from that of his predecessor.\nFor Lord Linlithgow is the first representative of the\n, King-Emperor in India since enactment of the India bill,\ntwhich provides three hundred million persons with quali-\nffied independence.\nIn India more than in any other part of the British\nEmpire, outside of a crown colony, the representative of\n; the King performs a political as well as purely representative function. Even before the India bill the responsibilities of the viceroy were heavy, but for some years to\ncome they will be heavier and at the same time more\ndelicate.\nThe measure of political liberty which has been\ngranted to the natives, through creation of the federal\nlegislature, has been balanced to some extent by an increase\n| in the authority of the viceroy. His command of the army,\nhis right of veto, his power to override the legislature in\n| times of crisis may seem to be the negation of the democ-\nI racy which Britain has aimed at bringing into being.\nIt has been deemed essential, however, to move slowly.\nDemocracy is a dangerous thing in the hapds of an inex-\nI perienced people. It is characteristic of the British to\nmove slowly towards any desired goal, testing each step as\nthey go.   It is good that the Indian native population will\n1 have some years of experience with the democratic system\nbefore they attain the substance, as well as the shadow, of\nI power.\nADVANCE WEATHER BULLETIN\nBETWEEN\nJ.B.C\n'ROUND ABOUT\nUp early Monday morning. To\nthe office to clean up week-end\nstuff. Went to Rotary where a lot\nof prominent persons were grouped\nabout the banquet table. Heard an\ninteresting program, Gossiped with\nHector Angus about the musical\nfestival and the adjudicator. Sat\nbetween Art Gilker and Al Gelinas\nand smoked one of Al's cigarettes.\nCorked tipped one, too. Exchanged\nwinks with Dr. D. W. McKay and\nDavid Kerr. Discussed the milk\nbusiness with \"Scotty\" Leslie and\nlearned the boys were making progress in learning the pipes and we\ncan expect a pipe band for the fall.\nWatched a couple tennis players in\naction and tried a few swings myself. Looked over Cottonwood falls\nand saw a couple city workers preparing macadam material for street\npatching. Meandered to the hospital where I gossiped with the\nnurses and J. C. Forbes. Today is\nhospital day, you know, and they\nexpect you to visit the institution\nand sip tea. Watched Jack Smith\nplacing bricks on a new verandah\nat the Motion home. Saw the men\nmaking improvements to the Recreation grounds prior to erecting a\nfence. Met Max DesBrisay who was\nworrying about r missing dance\norchestra. Took a verbal barrage\nfrom Jack Hoogerwerf, Watched\nRoss Fleming hoisting refrigerators.\nEarl Hunt was discussing crops\nwith someone on the street corner.\nPete Kapak is all fussed up nbout\nhis ball club. Ace Rash still likes to\ngrab a mil and do some fielding.\nCon Cummins still can't see anything in the game of cricket. And\nso to work.\n*   \u2022   *\nNICETY  OF  SPEECH\nWith the assizes on the following\nstory is appropriate:\nA clever lawyer, addressing a\nclass ot aspirants for legal honors,\nsought to impress them with the\nnecessity tor carefully weighing the\nexact meaning of words or phrases\nused by a witness.\n\"For example,\" he said, \"supposing I told you that three frogs were\nsitting together on a log, and one\nderided to jump off; how many\nfrogs do you think would be left\non the logV\n\"Two!\" cried the class.\n\"Wrong!\" corrected the lawyer.\n\"The frog I specially referred to\nonly decided to jump off. He didn't\njump.\"\n...\nIN THE AGED CLASS\nWith the festival over this story\nsort of fits in.\nA. musical comedy star, no longer\nyouthful, joined a touring company,\nBusiness was not particularly good\nand the tempers of the company suffered accordingly. Relations became somewhat strained between\nthe star and certain members of\nthe chorus. There came a knock at\nthe star's door.\n\"Who is it, and what do you\nwant?\" she demanded sharply.\n\"There's a woman in front who'd\nvery much like to see you. She said\nshe was a chum of yours at school.\nShall I show her in?\"\nFrom the corridor came the voice\nof a chorus girl: \"Wheel her in!\"\nTHE DOCTOR\nThe\nHUMAN SIDE\nVnews\/\nBY   EDWIN C.HILL\nCopjrlMOt, ttlt.Oj Coattet from Ctootl.o\nThe Mayas Founded \u2022 Powerful Empire Centuries Before the Sphinx and\nPyramids of Ancient Egypt\u2014Now Degraded and Almost\nSlaves, They Have Practically Disappeared\nYears ago, in Guatemala, following a trail on muleback, this writer,\nin the heart of a hot, still jungle,\nrode into a clearing. In the clearing\nwas the crumbling ruin of a Maya\ntemple, built only the gods know\nwhen\u2014probably 1600 years before\nChrist. It was a temple whose harsh\ngods bore the heads of frogs- and\nvultures and strange monsters,\nwhose broken altars once flowed\nwith streams of human blood.\nAnd standing in the enclosure, as\ninsensitive as an ox, with no comprehension, apparently of what that\ntemple had meant to his very race,\nto the mighty people from whom he\nhad descended, was a modern Maya,\na dull, dumb, half-stupid creature\nof the jungle, whose forefathers\nhad been crushed by the Spanish\nconquistadores and made into beasts\nof burden, who had lost tune and\ntouch with time and tradition, these\npeople who once were wiser than\nthe ancients of Egypt.\n1 thought ot this curious experience as 1 read the other day of new\ndiscoveries made in Guatemala, in\nthe accurate minute, eclipses and\ncelestial conjunctures that were to\noccur thousands of years after the\nwhole race had vanished and their\ncities had fallen in ruin.\nA CULTURED RACE\nThey possessed engineering secrets lost to the modern world.\nWithout any machinery whatever, i slam\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nAN  UNEXPLAINED  CONTRACT\nIn sending me this hand, Mr. G.\nN. Peters, Montreal, Canada, neglected to state how South ever\nreached so high a contract as 7-\nHearts, doubled by East. I presume\nthat North showed both his black\nsuits. Perhaps he then bid and rebid\nno trumps, so as to have the opening lead come up to him, instead of\ngoing through him. East's continual\nhearts rebids probably ended by inducing North to believe partner\nmuch stronger than he was, but it is\npossible that North became annoyed\nby the repeated returns of partner\nto hearts, and jumped to a grand\nTODAY'S\nGARDEN-GRAPH\nBy DEAN HALLEDAY\nCopyrleM, MM, Centra! Prest issocTeHoa, tne.\nFlowering shrubs are classed in\ntwo separate groups as to pruning:\nThose to be trimmed immediately\nafter blooming, the spring-flowering\nvarieties, and those to be trimmed\nwhen dormant, those blooming in\nlate summer and autumn.\nFig. 1 shows the Incorrect method\nof pruning, which leaves the old\nwood, which flowers only sparingly\nand has second grade foliage, and\ncutting away the younger growth\nwhich will produce the best bloom\nnext year.\nThe correct way is to prune at the\nbottom of the shrub, as shown in\nFig. 2, taking out the old growth\nfrom  pique.   I  have  known\nwithout   even   knowledge   of   the ; such things to happen. In any event\nwheel, they moved huge masses of j the final contract was the 7-Hearts,' and leaving the new. This produces\nstone and granite, pieces weighing ' and the opening lead was the 6 of!ncw vigorous growth which gives an\nas much as 500 tons, over distances | hearts. How many tricks is it poss- ' \"'      '\t\nible for South to win against sub\nsequent perfect defence?\nup to 200 miles. They sculptured [\nbeautifully in granite, yet no tool\nhas ever been found. Of all their\nwomen, we have knowledge of only\none, and she a queen.\nAt Palenque, there is a beautiful\nmosaic picturing a royal lady hav-\ning her hair dressed by maids. She\nreposes on a couch whose four feet\nare the claws of a jaguar. Her hair I\nis being done in distinctly Grecian\nstyle. At Quirigua there was found\na Mayan poem which might well\nhave come from Solomon or Ec-1\nclesiastes:\n\"Oh, sons of kings, sons of our\n\u2666 J2\n?68\n\u2666 10 9 C 4\n8\n+ 10 8 7 5\n4AKQ8\n\u00bbAQ5\n\u2666 K7\n*A J 9 fi\n\/V.\n:\u25a0\u25a0 w\n*> 10 9 B B\n\u2666 AQ85\n*0,482\nabundance of flowers.\nShrubs which may be trimmed\nafter flowering this spring are Wei-\ngela, Lilac, Snowball, Viburnum,\nMock Orange, Flowering Crab, For-\nsythia, Magnolia, Flowering Currant, Barberry, Honeysuckle and\nSpirea.\nPeten, in Yucatan and in other re-  Sreat lords, come hither and give\ngions where the Mayan empire once\nspread.  And  the eternal  mystery\nof the origin of that people and ot\ntheir fate recurred to plague my\nimagination.\nMY8TERY 8TILL\nUNSOLVED\nWhence came they, indeed? From\nlost Atlantis? From Egypt, as their\nvery temples and monuments might\nindicate? From the other side of\nthe world? No man knows. Nor\nwhere nor why they went. We think\nof Rome or Greece as ancient. But\nthe rise of the Mayan empire came\nlong before Nebuchadnezzar fed\nupon grass in his madness.\nThere are Mayan ruins in Guatemala 8000 years older than the pyramids or the sphinx. They are the\noldest structures yet found built\nby men. Over the lintel of the great\ndoorway of a palace in the jungle-\nstrangled, ruined Mayan city of\nTikal there is a date which gives\nthe year of the coming of the Mayans to America as 12,042 before\nChrist.\nThey have crossed over from the\nlost continent of Atlantis on a land\nbridge which probably existed thousands of years ago in the south Atlantic. Their dim and distant forefathers may bave been kin to the\nvery ancient Egyptians. In some\nrespects their culture exceeded our\nown. Their cities were larger than\nours\u2014five million dwelt in Tikai.\nTheir knowledge of astronomy was\nheed to my sad and lamenting song,\nas I relate how passes the flowery\nspringtime and the end of the\npowerful King Tezozomoc. Who,\nlistening, can withhold his fears.\nFor all these vanished pleasures,\nthese flowers sweet, wither and end\nwith this passing life. To-day we\npossess the feauty of the sunrise\nand the springtime. We have the\nodors of flowers and watch the butterflies as they sip the nectar from\nihe petals, but all is like these plucked flowers that are passed from\nhand to hand, and at the end are\ncast forth, stripped and withered.\"\nPERISHED 1200\nYEARS AGO\nThe whole race perished twelve\nhundred years ago. We do not\nknow why. The secret is buried in\nthe jungles. Back in those hot savage jungles, of Guatemala you come\nupon slow, dumb creatures who\nclaim some kinship with this vanished race. Shy, fearful, stupid creatures crushed centuries ago under\nthe iron heel of the white man\nand slinking now from shadow to\nshadow where their great ancestors\nbuilt temples to bearded kings and\ncommuned with the stars.\nYou come upon the ruins of a\nlost and forgotten civilization steeped in the hot stillness of centuries.\n<)764\nf J1098742\n\u2666 J2\n+ K\nEvidently South believed the best\nchance of capturing the missing K\nof hearts was to play dummy's Ace,\nfor it captured the lone K. The 6\nof clubs enabled declarer to win\nwith his singleton K. Dummy regained the lead by means of its Q of\nhearts, putting the last adversely\nheld trump. The Ace and K of\nspades were taken. Evidently declarer did not like the looks of\nWest's J dropping on the second\nround of spades, for his sixth trick\nwas taken with the Ace of clubs,\nallowing declarer to discard his\nlowest diamond. The seventh trick\nwas a lead of dummy's 9 of clubs,\nruffed by declarer.\nUnless West had false-carded his\nJ of spades, East held a stop to that\nsuit, while his double marked him\nwith the Ace of diamonds, quite\nprobably the Q also. The rare Vienna coup seemed the only possible\nmethod of fulfilling the grand slam\ncontract, and then only in case Easts\ndouble marked him with the Q of\nclub's, as seemed probable, as he\nhad doubled, after listening to\nNorth's bids. South led off two\nrounds of trumps. Dummy followed\nsuit to the first trump lead, then\nSpring finds its most perfect expression in the beauty of the daffodil, tulip, narcissus and hyacinth\u2014\nand each of these flowers has its\nown particular story. The daffodil\nwas chosen by the goddesses for\nwreaths and chaplets, and the ancients used them to decorate their\naltars. All through England this\npretty posy is woven about with\nquaint ideas. It is sometimes called\na lent-lily, and dedicated to \"Our\nLady.\"\n|   10 YEARS AGO   i\nI From Nelson Dally News Files I\n\u00ab *\nMay 12, 1926\nBorn at Royal Victoria hospital,\nKaslo, May 6, to Mr. and Mrs. A. E.\n(Bert) Blackwell, a daughter.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. W. R. Jarvis and daughters,\nthe Misses Margaret and Mary, spent\nthe week-end at their summer home\nat Procter,\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. Margaret Madden, who was\nholidaying at Queens Bay, has returned to Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. J. B. Gray and Mr.\nand Mrs. Charles Kelman motored\nto Trail Sunday.\nGEMS FROM LIFE'S\nSCRAP BOOK\nFREEDOM\nThe unhappy children of a race hid-! that hand let go the useless 7 of dia-'    \"In giving freedom to the slave,\ning away in the heart of the jungle I monds. The four cards held by each i we assume freedom to the free.\"\u2014\n>o profound that they predicted to ' man\namong their ruined and desecrated I player were as shown below,\ntemples, peering with dead, hope-1\nless eyes  at  Ihe  intruding  white J\nSAYS\n!    LOGAN   CLENDENING,   M.D.\nJ For western and central Canada,\nImbracing British Columbia, Al-\nlerta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and\nOntario.\n[ Tuesday, May 12\u2014Unsettled about\naciflc slope and southwest central\nfeglons,'with light, showery rains,\nut most of country east of moun-\nlins clear and slightly cooler.\n(Wednesday,   May   13 \u2014 Cloudy,\nny conditions drift along south-\nsections to great lakes regions\nI east; temperatures slightly low-\nLin most of the central provinces.\n^Thursday,   May   14\u2014In   general\nBring weather, though about west\nnd  northwest  of  central  regions\nne clouds, strong winds and a\nJ showery rains may be expected.\nBWday, May 15\u2014Disturbance with\npt few light showers passes through\nward the great lakes country of\nnitoba and southeast;  tempera's* rising.\n| Saturday, May 16-Except some-\nJit  uncettled  with   light  rains\nput Pacific slope and in south-\ngenerally   fair   and   slightly\nHog temperatures,\nghlhday, May 17\u2014Generally turn-\nwarmer; about southwest and\noni: southern sections ot central\nbyinces probably showery rains,\nAugH very light in many parts.\nIWeck of May 11 to 17 in central\n(Winces begins with mild or warm\nweather in the west and middle sections, but in southeast cool for the\nseason. Near mid-week probably\nsome raining in most parts of the\ncountry, though some sections may\nreceive but little moisture until\naround last of week, when the scattering showers should be somewhat\nmore generally distributed and\nslightly heavier, especially about\nsouthwest sections. But indications\nare for rather less than normal\namount of rain in general for this\nweek.\nThe middle of May in these regions usually bring on warm, sunshiny days, the sun now remaining\nabove Ihe horizon nearly 16 hours.\nThe summer rains also definitely\nbegin to increase in frequency and\namount, though they become more\nshowery and scattered, which means\nthat there may be fairly heavy rainfall in some sections while nearby\nthe precipitation Is very much lighter. The normal for the middle week\nof May in most of the central provinces is not far from half an inch\nof railfall, but this is very often\nunevenly distributed, certain sections, like the Empress district, the\nBattle river and lower Saskatchewan river valleys often having but\nvery few light showers at times\nwhen the country in general is\ncovered with heavy rain clouds.\nDIABETESE CAN\nAFFECT CHARACTER\nWe spoke yesterday of personality changes which come on so insidiously that they often go unrecognized, yi the condition of diminished Ihyroid secretion called\n\"myxedema\". In another endocrine\ndisease, diabetes, something like the\nsame thing may occur.\nIt has even been suggested that\nthere are psychological factors\nwhich produce diabetes. For instance, that emotional stress will\ndo so. One physician says, \"Diabetes\nwill sometimes follow intense emotional crises. It is more otten the\nresult of long continued worry.\" I\nI cannot follow this line of reasoning, and would be much more inclined to believe that the symptoms\nof emotional stress were the first\nsymptoms of the diabetic state and\nso masked it that it went unrecognized.\nCarefully carried out psychological studies on those patients showed\nthat they have a diminished alert\nness or perception. In the field of\nintellectuation, their memory becomes deficient; they express an\ninability to concentrate, have a sluggish .response to questioning and\nother mental reflexes.\nIn the emotional field, depression\nis the commonest symptom, although irritability, apathy, indifference and anxiety also are often\npredominant. The disease itself naturally tends to fatigue, and this is\noften put down by less sympathetic\nrelatives to laziness.\nIn many mental and nervous conditions the carbohydrate metabolism\nmay be disturbed. One laboratory\nreports 19 cases of melancholia in\nwhich the blood sugar was definitely\nraised. \"The work of an Impressive\ncompany of physicians warrants the\nconclusion that disordered sugar digestion and assimilation appear\nmore frequently in split personalities than in normal individuals.\"\nThe nervous disorders and mental\ndepression may be a reflex of the\nbodily changes that are occurring\nand the result of the mental realization that a state of chronic invalid-\nIsm occurs, but the outlook of these\npatients is so hopeful that nne part\nof the treatment which should be\ndefinitely undertaken is to change\nthe mental attitude.\n\u2666 K\n+ J\n\u2666 10 9 0 4\n5.\n410 9\n\u2666 A\nA scene from one of the Maya pageants amid ruins of the old-\ntime sacred city, Chlchen Itza. Tht Mayas aro wearing traditional\ncostumes of the old empire.\nSTORM FEAR\nl*-\nWhcn tho wind works against us\nin the dark,\nAnd pelts with snow\nThe lower chamber window on the\neast,\nAnd whispers with a sort of stifled\nbark,\nThe beast,\n\"Come out! Come outfit costs no inward struggle nol to go,\nAh, no!\nI count our strength,\nTwo and a child,\nThose of us not asleep subdued to\nmark        '\nHow the cold creeps as the fire dies\nat length,\nHow drifts are piled,\nDooryard and road ungraded,\nTill even the comforting barn grown\nfar away\nAnd my heart owns a doubt\nWhether 'tis in us to arise with day\nAnd save ourselves unaided.\nRobert Frost.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n47\n\u2022 98\n\u2666 J\nAs East had discarded the Q of\ndiamonds, dummy's K of that suit\nwas discarded on the 9 of hearts. If\nEast let go his Ace of diamonds he\nwould establish declarer's J, then\nthe Q of spades would win the\nsingle trick needed from dummy. If\nEast held the Ace of diamonds, he\nl.ad to give dummy two black suit\ntricks. South made his grand slam.\nWITH THE\nPSYCHOLOGIST\nGARRY C. MYERS, PH.D.\nHead   of   the   Department   of\nParent  Education,  Cleveland\nCollege,   Western   Reserve\nUniversity.\nLincoln.\n\"The enslavement of man is not\nlegitimate. It will cease when man\nenters into his heritage of freedom,\nhis God-given dominion over the\nmaterial senses.\" \u2014 Mary Baker\nEddy.\n\u2022 *       \u2022\n\"Eternal vigilance is the price of\nliberty\"\u2014John Philpot Curran.\n\u2022 *   *\n\"Free people can escape being\nmastered by others only by being\nable to master themselves\" \u2014 T.\nRoosevelt.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\n\"So every bondman in his own hand\nbears\nThe power to cancel his captivity\"\u2014\nShakespeare,\n|   20 YEARS AGO\nI From Nelson Dally News Files\n<\u00a3_ \u00ab,\nMay 12, 1916\nMajor Glossop of the 225th. Kootenay battalion leaves shortly for ,\nGrand Forks. Lieut. C. E. Richardson and Lieut. John Cartmel, both\nof the same battalion, have returned from Victoria where they took\ntheir officers' musketry course.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCharles Percival Grizzelle and\nMiss Nellie Muriel Etter were married yesterday at St Saviour's\nchurch by the rector, Rev. Fred H.\nGraham. The bride was attended by\nher sister, Mrs. Boomer, while the\ngroom's brother, H. C. Grizzelle, was\nbest man. A reception was held at\nthe home of the bride's sister, Mrs.\nA. A. Perrier.\n* *   \u2022\nRecent local enlistments for service at the front include: William E.\nStrachan, 17 years old; James V. P.\nRoe, just out of high school; John\nO'Malley, messenger; John R. Buchan; E. W. Hall and John A. McMillan.\n\"I can always tell when limes are\ngettin' better. The people that used\nto be friendly and accommodntin'\nstart actin' independent and hateful again. a\nNOTED MAN A FAILURE\nAT TALKING\nYouth who worry so much because they don't know what to say\nwhen in a group, including the\nscores who have written me about\nsuch suffering, might be consoled to\nlearn that Oliver Goldsmith, author\nof \"Traveler\", Vicar of Wakefield\",\n\"Deserted Village\", endured all his\nlife, such troubles, loo.\nMcCaulay wrote of him: \"He was\npowerfully sensible of his inferiority\nin conversation; he felt every failure keenly\". What McCaulay next\nsaid, my timid friends might well\nweigh carefully: \"Yet he had not\nsufficient judgement and self-command to hold his tongue. His animal\nspirits and vanity (aren't some timid\npersons very vain?) were always\nimpelling him to try to do the one\nthing which he could not do . . .\nbut when he talked he talked nonsense, and made himself the laughing stock of his hearers.\" It should\nbe noted that Goldsmith always was\ntrying to talk and shine in conversation, even when he had nothing\nworth saying.\nGoldsmith hobnobbed frequently\nwith the great Samuel Johnson,\nJoshua Reynolds and David Garrick,\nall of whom conversed fluently, particularly Johnson. What inferiority\nfeelings poor Goldsmith must have\nfelt! And his desperate efforts to\nvie with Johnson in speech, and to\nappear to be comfortable when he\nwas most ill at ease, were no doubt\nthe chief source of his discomfiture.\nWHAT JOHNSON SAID\nTo Boswell, Johnson said of Goldsmith: \"Sir, he is so much afraid\nof being unnoticed, that he often\ntalks lest you should forget that he\nis in the company. . . . Goldsmith\nshould not be forever attempting to\nshine in conversation; he has not\ntemper for it, he is so much mortified when he fails. . . .What Goldsmith comically says of himself is\nvery true\u2014he always gets the better\nwhen he argues alone; meaning that\nhe is master of a subject in his\nstudy, and can write well upon it:\nbut when he comes into company,\ngrows confused, and unable to talk.\"\nAnd of Goldsmith, Bosweli said,\n\"During this argument Goldsmith\nsat in restless agitation, from a wish\nto get in and shine. Finding himself excluded, he had taken his hat\nto go away, but remained some time\nwith it in his hand. . . .Once when\nhe was beginning lo speak, he found\nhimself overpowered, by the loud\nvoice of Johnson, who was at the\nopposite end of the table, and did not\nperceive Goldsmith's attempt. Thus\ndisappointed of his wish to obtain\nthe attention of the company, Goldsmith in a passion, threw down his\nhat, looking angrily at Johnson, and\nexclaiming in a bitter lone, \"Take\nit'.\"\nIn every informal gathering will\nbe Johnsons and Goldsmiths. The\nGoldsmiths could be a great deal\nhappier and more lovable if they\nwere content to rest upon their\nlaurels gained in some other field,\nand not to try to shine in conversation, but to listen comfortably.\nFor\nSUMMER\nHOMES\nAt a small cost you can\nmake your summer\nhome comfortable and\nattractive with Cottonwood Panels.\nDistrict  Distributors\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLLS\"\nMrs. L. McK. of Victoria has\nwritten a letter in which she says\nher family has used Pacific Milk\nfor 15 years. That Is a long time\nand only great satisfaction could\nhave kept a patron that many\nyears. This fine compliment is\nalso praise indirectly to us for it\nis by care and canning of the\nright sort that Pacific Milk is kept\nin prime condition.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, Of  Course\nPotatoes\nWith this crop fertilizer pays many timet ever itt\ncost. Apply well distributed in the drill 2 te 3\nounces per square yard (600 to 800 lbs. per acre)\nELEPHANT BRAND Complete fertilizer 3-10-8\nor 4-10-10. If well manured 5-10-5 can be used.\nUse ELEPHANT BRAND\nFERTILIZERS\nManufactured by\nThe Consolidated Mining and Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTrail,  B.C.\nSUM\n &\nmm HANDED\nPRAISES BY THE\nFESTIVAL  HEAD\nCraufurd Lauds Club\nfor Starting Music\nFestivals Here\nYOUNG WINNERS\nARE ON PROGRAM\nF. L. Irwin Receives\nGift for Work\nWith Choir\nNelson Rotarlons at Monday's\nluncheon Were entertained by some\nof the class winners In the seventh\nannual Kootenay musical festival.\nLeslie Craufurd, chairman of the\nNelson Festival association, was\nspeaker and the program was in\ncharge of C. W. Tyler.\n\"What you Rotarlans have heard\ntoday, said Mr. Craufurd, referring\nto the program staged by champion\ncontestants, \"Is the result ot something you people as Rotorlons started. The first musical festival In\nNelson, seven years ago, was under\nthe direction of Rotary.\"\nMr. Craulurd declared that the\nthing started by the club was of\ngreat value to a great number of\npeople. Musical festivals were developing a taste for music and elocution which were of cultural advantage to the contestants in the future as well as a pleasure to others\nin the future. Rotarlans must have\na pleasant memory of having started\nthe first festival. This year's event,\nsaid Mr. Craufurd, has been a great\nsuccess. There were over 1500 contestants and over 225 Individual\nentries. Finally it had been a success with \u25a0 large increase In adult\nsingle admission and In adult and\nchildren'! season ticket admissions.\nThe public waa becoming selied\nwith the pleasures of the festival\nand with the idea ot supporting\nthe movement which was operated\nfor the good ot the public in general.\nPRAISE FOR HORSTEAD\n\"Success of the past festival was\ndue to the work of the executive,\"\nstated Mr. Craufurd. \"Their labors\ncaused smooth running of the festival. Whole success was largely due\nto George Horstead, general secretary. When the festival closed on\nSaturday night not one certificate\nor adjudication had not been de-\nKllvered to contestants. Only two\npieces of music used by contestants\nremained to be returned to the\nowners. Mr. Horstead had accomplished a fine piece of work.\nFriday had been a wo. Icrful day\nclimaxed by the massed choir of\n800 children. It was a sight to see.\nShepherding of the children from\nout of town had been a big problem.\nCredit for this success, in having\nthem on time, etc., was due to C,\nW. Tyler and E. A. Mann. The executive appreciated the efforts of the\nschool teachers and the music teachers who do a lot for the future\nhappiness of contestants and public\nalike. There was one problem still\nunsolved but which the executive\nwas attempting to right That was\nto do away with the lapse of time\nbetween school age and adult age\nwhen competitors lost interest in\nthe festivals. There should be no\nlaxity at this period and music,\nsong and elocution should be carried\non after pupils leave the care of\ntheir teachers. Teachers were largely responsible for the training ot\nthe youngsters and It was desirable\nthat the students be enhanced with\nthe  desirability  and pleasure of\nthe work so that they would carry\non after leaving school. There was\nanother situation that should not\nexist That was the \"cramming\" by\ncontestants  before festivals.  Continuity of effort was necessary as\ncramming a tew weeks before a\nfestival was not desirable.\nTo Nelson came the Hume hotel\ncup for intercity competition. Creston was beaten by only a few decimal points declared Mr. Craufurd.\nOutsiders supported the festival\nwonderfully and he praised the\nwonderful spirit that prompted\nGrand Forks to come to Nelson In\nsuch large numbers. The support\nfrom all over the district had been\nfine and his hope was that the\nfestivals would grow for the fc:tlval\nwas a feature of the cultural life\nof the city.\nAnother pleasing feature of the\nprogram was the presentation by\nIt. W. Dawson, to F. L. Irwin, Rotary choir conductor, ot a leather\ntobacco pouch. Mr. Irwin expressed\nthe wishes that a younger successor\nbe provided for the future. This was\ngreeted by \"No, no!\" from Rotary\nmembers. Mr. Irwin alio received\nthe adjudicator's certificate. The\nshield won by the choir was on display and A. A. Perrier, secretary,\nread the adjudicator's remarks.\nFestival winners In championship\nclasses taking part in ihe program\nwere: i\nMisses Betty Ferguson and Betty\nEmory, pianoforte duet winners\nunder 14 years.\nBetty Curran, elocution winner In\nclass under 11 years.\nWallace Fleming, winner in violin\nclass under 14 years.\nEdward Baker winner In young\nvocalist class and in baritone solo\nopen.\nMrs. Gladys Webb Foster and\nHector Angus were accompanists.\nC. W. Tyler expressed thanks to\nthe artlsta and paid compliment to\nRoss Fleming for his untiring efforts on behalf ot the musical festival. \"No. one has done more for\nthe musical festivals than Ross\nFleming,\" laid Mr. Tyler. Entertainers were presented with small\ntokens by Mr. Dawson, club president.\nAn invitation was read from Spokane Rotary club for an intercity\nmeet with Trail club In Spokane at\ndate to be named. The matter\nKOOTENAY BAR\nWELCOMES HIS\nNEW LORDSHIP\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING. MAY 12. 1MB \t\nTfYoo^r I Murray Patrick\n\u2014 PAGE SEVEN\nMr. Justice Robertson\nHopes to Follow\nTraditions\nCOURT ASSIGNS A\nCOUNSEL TO SING\nTheft Case Traverse\nRefused; Trial\nFriday\nFAUST, Alta., May 11 (CP)-\nResidents of Klnuso, 10 miles east\not here, on the south shore of Lesser\nSlave lake today were repairing\nand salvaging property damaged to\nthe extent of several thousand dollar! caused by the worst flood in\nsix yean when the Swan river overflowed inundating the whole town.\nThe water flowed into several\nhouses, forcing townspeople to abandon their homes and flee to higher\nground.\nA train passing through Klnuso\nchurned through water reaching to\nthe floor of the cart.    .\nPOPEASSAILS\nCOMMUNISM\nwas referred to the director!.\nDr. John Gansner and Dr. D. W.\nMcKay reported on crippled children's cases. One case at the solarium Is about ready to be returned\nto the Kootenay. The last case underwent an operation in Vancouver\nMonday.\nGuests were Donald McDonald,\nTrail, and T. Craven.\nROSSLAND SEES\nBUILDINGRUSH\nROSSLAND, B. C, May 11-Kosi-\nland seems to be on the verge ot a\nbuilding boom and desirable lots\nthroughout the city are being\nsnatched up. At the city council\nmeeting here Monday night C. I .off,\noffered $10 each for lots 16 and 17,\nblock eight, Columbia avenue on\nwhich he wishes to erect a six-room\nhouse to cost between $1200 and\n$1500, construction to be done right\nawiy. C. W. Glddard offered $25 for\nlot four and the west half of lot\nfive, block 24, on which he wishes\nto build a house for Leslie Trever-\nton at a cost of $2400. Both these offers were accepted, title to be withheld until the buidings are completed.\nThe request ot the Salvation Army\nto hold a tag day May 22 was grant-\nWelcome of Mr. Justice H. B.\nRobertson of Victoria to his first\nKootenay assize since his elevation\nto the supreme court bench marked\nthe opening of the Nelson spring assises here Monday forenoon,\nA. G. Cameron of Trail, rising at\nthe counsel table, addressed his\nlordship, stating he had been asked\nby the members ot the bar of the\nKootenay to congratulate hla lordship on his elevation to the bench.\n\"At the same time,\" remarked the\nspokesman ot the bar, \"I feel it Is\nfitting also to congratulate the members ot the bar on your lordship's\nelevation.\"\nReplying to Mr. Cameron, Mr.\nJustice Robertson said it was very\npleasant to receive the congratulations of the Kootenay bar. Admitting it was a difficult task to tread\nIn the footsteps of those who had\ngone before, he said he could only\nhope to do his best. It wai pleasant\nhe said, for a Judge to am the\ngood will ot the bar, of which,\nthough on the bench, he wai still\na member, for in the performance\not his duties a judge must rely to a\nlarge degree on the cooperation and\nsupport of the bar,\nSHORT PANEL ACCEPTED\nHis lordship's first task in presid\ning at the assize was to rule_on\n\"No dumping\" signs will be placed on the Third avenue fill and anyone disregarding these will be prosecuted.\nA request from resident! of Sixth\navenue for repairs to a ditch was\nreferred to the board of works.\nAn Invitation from W. E. B. Mony-\npenny, secretary of the Union of\nKootenay Municipalities for the\nmeeting in Trill, June 17 wai tabled\nfor further consideration.\nJ. W. Burden wai granted permission to build a garage on a city-\nowned lot adjoining his residence\non LeRoy avenue.\nThe request of J. R. Culllnane for\nrepairs to Cliff street and Kootenay\navenue was referred to the board of\nworkt.\nMiss Olive Deine of Trail asked\npermission to put on a concert in\nthe local theatre Sunday, May 31,\nthe amount realited over expenses\nto be donated to the local hospital.\nThe program will be given by some\nof her pupils from Rossland and\n25 from Trail.\nMayor Arrowsmith will consult\nthe city solicitor as to whether the\ncouncil has power to grant permission.\nThe fire water and light committee was instructed to bring in suggestions as to water restrictions with\na view to having the upper and lower portion! of the city do their\nsprinkling it different hours. It li\nthe wish of the council not to restrict sprinkling unduly as long\nas there Is a good amount of water\nIn the reservoir.\nHis lordship'\ning at the asa^c m-_ ,. ._._\nthe adequacy of the jury panel,\nwhich, due to a variety of causes,\nwas seven jurors short. On the various counsel concerned in the criminal assize waiving the objections\nwhich they could have taken, his\nlordship accepted the panel of 41\njurors.. The alternative would have\nbeen to direct Sheriff M, E. Harper\nto summon seven more Kootenay\nelectors for jury duty.\nTrial of Flng Sing, Trail Chlneie,\naccused of the murder of his partner in the Canadian cafe, Louie\nSing, will open Wednesday morning at 10.\nW. W. Ferguson, crown prose-\ndrew to his lordship's at-\nVATICAN CITY, May 11 (CP-\nHavas)\u2014Pope Pius XI sharply assailed communism and Its dangers\nin a speech delivered here tonight\nbelore a group ot Hungarian Roman\nCatholic pilgrims.\nJustinian Cardinal Seredl, primate of Hungary and head of the\ndelegation, greeted the pope in an\naddress paying homage to Pope\nInnocent XI, who 290 years ago\nhelped to free the Hungarian city\nOf Buda from the threat of Turkish\ninvasion.\n\"there is a certain resemblance\nbetween that time and the present,\"\nPope Plus said. \"It is only too true\nthat today, as then, there exists a\ncommon enemy which threatens all\nof us always, even to the very sanctuary of the family, the state and\nsociety.\n\"This enemy is communism, which\nattempts to penetrate by every possible means and which unfortunately already has been able to penetrate Into many places. It li by\nviolence, by ruse and by trickery\nthat It continually presents itself\nIn increasingly reassuring guises.\"\nMORE ABOUT\nCROMIE DIES\nWins Title\nMADISON SQUARE GARDEN,\nNew York, May 11 (CP)-Mont-\nreal's belting Patrick, 20-year-old\nMurray ot the great hockey elan, |\ntonight won the Catholic Youth association's heavyweight boxing\nchampionship by easily outpointing\nBill Gould of the Bronx In the tournament finals.\nThe Dominion's famous all-around\nathlete failed to kayo hi! man, after\nwinning his way to the finals by\nknocking out two opponents In the\npreliminaries. However, the Canadian heavyweight amateur champ\nmade a Human punching bag out of\nthe clever and game Gould.\nBees Win by 2-1;\nGiants by 13-12\nGOLF\nby\nALEX MORRISON\nExperts!\nKEEP\nWEIGHT\nbU\n.HEELS\nKgSJLlltS\nINTERNATIONAL\nSyracuse 7, Buffalo 9.\nAlbany 7, Toronto 3.\nASSOCIATION\nColumbus 10, Kansas City 3.\nToledo 11; Minneapolis 10.\nLouisville 2; SL Paul 3.\nIndianapolis 9; Milwaukee 10,\n2MT0TRYF0R\nAMATEUR GOLF\nPlay in British Test\nStarts May 25\nBOSTON, May 11 (API-After\ntyin gthe score on Babe Phelps' single in the first half of the ninth, the\nBrooklyn Dodgers threw away a\nrun in tin: last half of the inning\nand lost a pitchers' battle to the\nBoston Bees, 2-1.\nBrooklyn   1 7 2\n\u00bb\"-\">\"  2 6\n1\nand   Berres;\n(Continued From Page One)\ncutor,\nCuior,    UIGn\t\ntention that Sing wai not represented by counsel, and through a\nChinese Interpreter his lordship\nquestioned the accused on the matter, telling him \u00ab\"\u25a0*  the  chargi\nUrges Joining of\nMiners' Unions\nCALGARY, May -11 (CP)-Fore-\nseeing opposition to any miners'\nunity movement, Tom Ewen, former secretary of the Workers Unity\nLeague ot Toronto, deeclared here\ntoday there was even a move to set\nup Social Credit trade unions.\nSpeaking it a conference of 70\ndelegates representing 39 miners'\nlocal unions in Alberta and eastern\nBritish Columbia, Mr. Swing made\na plea for amalgamation of all\ngroup! under the banner of the\nUnited Mine Workers ot America.\nThere were too many unorganized\nworkers, he asserted and division\namong miners had resulted In a\nsteady driving down of their standard! of living.\nAMAZING  FACTS\nIn Africa...witch doctors\nHAVE TATOOED ON THEIR BACKS\nA MAGIC EYE TO WARD OFF\nEVIL SPIRITS.\nIN CANADA\na magic photoelectric eye\nmeasures the\nsharpness op\nthe Blue Gillette Blape and\n'wards off* shaving discomfort\n\u00ab... _.. charge\nagainst him was almost the most\nserious there was, and that it he\nshould be found guilty, the only\nlentence that could be imposed was\nhanging. On being also told that\nthe court would assign him counsel,\nif he wanted one, and that this arrangement would not cost him anything, as the government would\npay, Sing told the court he wanted\ncounsel, and his lordship assigned\nhim Parker Williams of Trail, who\nhad acted for him at his preliminary\nhearing. Mr. Williams expressed\nthe belief that he could prepare the\ndefence in two days, and the trial\nwas set to open Wednesday morning.\nTRAVERSE REFUSED\nAt the opening of the afternoon\nsession Mr. Williams asked tor a\ntraverse of the theft charge against\nJerome E. Miller ot Kaslo to the tall\nassizes, stating he had been retained\nfor the defence only at 8:30 that\nmorning, that witnesses would be\nrequired from Penticton and Kaslo,\nand that the Penticton witness\nwould not be available.\nOn behalf ot the crown Mr, Ferguson, quoting from the Code notes,\npointed out that where the defence\nasked a traverse, the court was entitled to be satisfied that a genuine\nattempt had been made to get the\nmissing witness or witnesses, and\nhad tailed, that the witnesses were\nmaterial ones, and that the purpose\not the application was not merely\nto secure delay. He added that the\naccused had been given his preliminary hearing at Kaslo October 24\nlast, and had then been represented\nby counsel.\nHis lordship, after figuring out\nthat a subpoena leaving Nelson by\nTuesday's train would be in time to\nget the Penticton witness here by\nThursday night, denied the application for a traverse, and set the\ntrial for Friday morning.\nDIVORCE CASES\nTHURSDAY\nThe seven divorce petitions are\nset for hearing Thursday, though\nsome ot them may-have to go over\nto later in the week.\nThe Jury panel, which will have\nto provide three trial Juries, consists ol W. T. Bradbury, Baynes\nLake; J. A. Sheridan, Elko; Thomas\nI*cey, Creston; W. C. Brooks, Kaslo; Allred Hale, Ballour; C. E. GUI,\nSilverton; Gordon S. Strong, Pass-\nmore; John Balfour, H. A. McLaren, J. A. Kinahan and H. S. Gamble,\nTrail; John Burns, J. H. Byres, W.\nE. Coles, A. J. Crack, Adam Crulck-\nshank, C. J. Currier, E. H. Evans, E.\nJ. A. Ferguson, Ernest\n\"      H. C. Grlz-\nStartling but true-so sharp are the sharing\nedges of Blue Gillette blades that no human eye\nhas ever seen them. The scientific photo-electric tester,\nmeasuring tbe blades' almost incredible keennen, enables technicians to keep the precision sharpening machines In perfect adjustment. For clem, cool shaves,\nask your dealer for a package of Blue Gillette tJ-J\"\nblue GILLETTE blade\nnow 5 fob ?5t -in Fnn sn<\nH.  Felty,\nFrost, G. i. ^^ \u201e, \u2014\n?,elle, D. W. Guy, F, W. Hartwig, Q\nLeRoy Hood, E. F. Johnston, T. H.\nJohnstone, A. J. Lapointe, G. C.\nMassey, Robert Mills, H. A. Nicholson, P. G. Morey, Peter Paragon,\nII. A. Parker, Robert Qua, F. G.\nSlmms, W. H. Smedley, D. StDenis,\nW. M. Walker and E. H. Woolls,\nNelson.\n$7367 FOR NEW HOSPITAL\nTORONTO, May U (CP)-Rt.\nRev. A. L. Fleming, bishop ot the\nArctic, said today that $7667 had\nbeen received to dite toward building a new hospital to replace All\nSaints Anglican hospital, Aklavlk,\nN.W.T., which was destroyed by fire\nApril 6.\nTOURED ORIENT\nOne of the most forceful personalities in Canada who knew most of\nthe leading men of affairs in the\nworld, Mr. Cromie's last trip was\nmade in pursuit of one of his leading interests, to place before the\npublic of Canada their interests in\nthe Pacific world and especially\nthe industrializing orient. His visit\nto Victoria was to make one of a\nseries of addresses which his followed his recent return from a\ntour of the pacific basin, Australia,\nChina and Japan.\n\"The historic event of our time\nwill not be the great war or the\ngreat depression\u2014It will be the\nmodernization ot Asia,\" he declared after talking to leaders In the\ngovernment of China and Japan.\nHis recent Pacific tour was but\nthe latest ot a series ot travels which\ntook him over practically the entire\nworld, tours made that he might\ntell his reading and lecture-platform\npublic his first-hand observations\nof the world scene.\nA vigorous man who looked even\nmore youthful than his 46 years,\nthere was no Indication to the casual\nobserver that he enjoyed anything\nbut the best of health.\nYEARS OF STUDY\nThe travel portion of his life,\nyears which he devoted to study\nof world events In poltlcal, economic, social and cultural aspects,\nand to a multitude of Interests\nImpossible to a man of less energy,\ncams after he had consolidattd his\nposition as a publisher.\nThe spn of Henry James Cromie,\na native of Ireland, and Sarah Ann\nCromie, a native of Australia, he\nreceived his early education in the\npublic schools and a business College In the eastern townships ot\nQueebec. He came west in  1906,\nworked In many capacities for three\nyears, all the time going to night\nschool and business college, until\nhe joined the staff of Foley, Welch\nk Stewart, contractors, with whom\nhe was connected for 10 years.\nAcquiring private means he entered the publishing field and reorganised and consolidated the Vancouver Sun, the News Advertiser\nand the Vancouver World into the\nVancouver Sun, an evening newspaper.\nHe married Bernadette Grace\nMcFeely, daughter of E. J. McFeely,\nVancouver, in 1912. Four sons and\none daughter survive.\nMr, Cromie's office was not only\nthe place trom which he actively\ndirected his publishing and business Interests, but a picture gallery\not world-famed persons whom he\nhad met In his travels or entertained\nat his home. They came from every\ncontinent and land. His broad reading interests were reflected in his\nlibrary. He loved to work and live\nin surroundings ol beauty and cheer\nand his desk ond walls always had\non them Ircsh cut flowers.\nA HARD FIGHTER\nHis restless temperament naturally brought him into battles on\nmany issues and he was a hard\nfighter for the causes he espoused.\nThough hi5-,newspaper was generally regarded as a supporter of\nthe Liberal party, Mr. Cromie was\nof independent political thought\nand frequently was outspoken critic\nof all parties.\nHe waged many civic and national\ncampaigns through his newspaper,\nwith Vancouver and the Pacific\nworld always closest to his heart.\nOne ot hi! campaigns for many\nyears was for the* purpose of getting a .riil outlet for the Peace\nRiver country through Vancouver\nand genei \/\"y to make Vancouver\nthe grain export point of the west.\nExpressing the purpose of his\ntravels to a newspaper man recently, he said ot his Asiatic study:\n\"By seeing It, I can get some of\nthe picture through my eyes which\ncan'l be hid by reading. I will tell\nBoston ..\nEarnshaw,   Baker\nChaplin and Lopez.\nPHILADELPHIA, May 11 (AP)-\nThe Phillies hit five home runs to\nthe Giants' one here today, but New\nYork's came from the bat ot Mel\nOtt in the ninth with two on and\ngave the Giants a 13-12 victory.\nThe lead changed five times. The\nGiants used five pitchers, the Phillies three, and there were 31 hits,\nthe home club outfitting the winners 16-15.\nOtt also got a walk, single and a\ndouble and drove in eight runs.\nThe five Philadelphia homers\nwere made by Dolph. Camilli, who\nhit two, Art Whitney, Leo Norris\nend Johnny Moore.\nHarry Gumbert was the winning\npitcher and Claude Passeau was\ncharged with the defeat.\nNew York  13 15  0\nPhiladelphia  12 16   2\nSmith, Coffman, Hubbell, Gumbert, Gabler and Mancuso; Walter,\n'    *-' \u00ab Passeau and Wilson,\nWe are quick to note when a\ndancer is off balance. We don't\nhave to be educated about the\ntechnique of dancing to know good\nbalance. The proper balance and\nrhythm ire things which we all\nsense.\nWhy this sense, which helps us to\nmeasure a dancer's balance doesn't\nfunction for us when watching a\ngolfer is more than I know. I have\nmy own idea as to why most observers fall to make the proper\ncheck on a golfer's balance, but few\npeople seem to have any notion;\nin fact, they're not even interested\nIt would benefit them greatly If\nthey were.\nFor example, the heel and toe\nbalance, that balance which you'd\nnote if you looked at the player's\nright or left side, Is a vital part\nof every swing. The average player\napparently gives it no consideration,\nwith the result that he Invariably\nfalls toward his toes during his\nswing,\nThe expert does just the opposite.\nWhen he moves away from a steady\nbalance it is to lean back toward\nhis heels. You'll find that It pays\nto keep more weight on your heels.\n8-i for Tigers\n19-6 for Chicago\nBy Th\u00ab Associated Press\nYesterday's homers:\nCamilli, Phillies, 2; Norris, J.\nMoore, and Whitney, Phillies, Ott,\nGiants, Burns, Tigers, one each.\nThe leaden:\nFoxx, Red Sox, 8, Dickey, Yinks,\n7, Trosky Indians, 3, Klein, Cubs, 5,\nOtt, Giants, 5.\nLeague totals:\nAmerican 111, National 94. Total\n205.      \u00bb\nST. ANDREWS, Scotland, Hay 11\n(CP)-An entry lilt Of MS players\nwas announced today for tht British amateur golf championship, to\nbe played here starting May 28.\nLawson Little, the California giant\nwho captured the crown In 1934 and\nretained It last year, is not eligible to defend it this year, having\nrecently turned proesiloml.\nRemoval of Little left British golf-\nera hopeful of bringing the title\nback across the Atlantic. Sue Americans will seek to keep It In the\nUnited States, however. They are:\nDick Chapman of Greenwich,\nConn., Jack Lirocque, Ellis Knowlei\nand Theodore Bassett of Rye, N. Y, ,\nT. Dennle Boardman of South Hamilton, Mass., and John Arthur Brown\nof Philadelphia.\nCanada has no entries this year.\nBy The Associated Press\nOnly two members of the big six\nwere active yesterday, Bill Terry of\nthe Giants and Billy Sullivan of the\nIndians. Both had a perfect score.\nTerry hit a double and two singles\nin three times up to boost his average from .500 to .538, and Sullivan\nwent In as a plnch-hltter in the\nninth and got one of the five hits off\nTommy Bridges.\nThe standings:\nIn trapping Insects by electric\nlight lures, it is found that efficiency ot the light increases up to\nabout 2000 watts, but beyond that\nthe glare keeps Insects off.\nTerry, Giants\nSullivan, Indians\nBrubaker, Pirates\nDemaree, Cubs\nG. Ferrell, Red Sox\nChapman, Yinkees\nJohnson, Passeau and vmson.\nr.i\u00ab two games scheduled).\n(Only two games\nSINGING WOOD\nWINS TOBOGGAN\nNEW YORK, May 11 (AP)-Back\non the Belmont track where he first\nraced to tame and riches three years\nago, John Hay Whitney's Singing\nWood, winner of the 1933 $100,000\nFuturity, today stepped down the\nWldener straightaway in front of\nnine other high class sprinters in\nthe 43rd running of the toboggan\nhandicap.\nThe 15,000 spectators who crowded\nthe fashionable course for the opening of its spring meeting, made\nGeorge D. Widener's weight-carrying Satlon the 3 to 5 choice. At the\nfinish of the six furlong dash, however, the six-year-old gelded son\not Galetian was a length back of\nSinging Wood, held at 6 to 1. Hal\nP. Headley's Whopper was defeated\nonly by a nose tor runner-up honors.\nLongworth Gets\nin U. S. Open\nPORTLAND, May 11 (AP)-Ted\nLongworth, Portland professional\nand former Pacific Northwest open\nchampion, qualified today for the\nsecond consecutive year for the U. S.\nopen golf tournament, shooting 147\ntor 36 holes, three over par.\nHis only opponent was Dick Haskell, Seattle amateur, who carded\n157.\nScotty Campbell, Seattle, the third\nentrant, failed to appear. Campbell,\nCanadian amateur champion, was\nexpected to give Longworth a close\nrun. ^\nDr. 0. F. Willing of Portland, in\ncharge of the qualifying tournament, said Campbell's failure to appear automatically eliminated him\nWenstob to Fight\nin St. Paul\nEDMONTON, May 11 (CP)-Fol-\nlowing a bout here May 22, Eddie\nWenstob, 22-year-old Viking, Alta.,\nlight heavyweight, will leave tor\nSt. Paul, Minn., to start a campaign\nunder E. L. Shave, sports editor of\nthe St Paul Daily News, it was announced here today. Wenstob, who\ndefeated the Canadian champion,\nCharley Bclanger of Winnipeg, in a\nnon-title bout last month, will fight\nregularly under the tutelage ot\nShave and Mike Gibbons.\nBirthday Greetings\nBy Ths Canadian Press\nTo Bob McLernon, former star\nMcGill university halfback, born in\nMontreal 22 years ago today, McLernon was at his best in the 1334 season, his last in the intercollegiate\nfootball competition. He is also a\nwell-known basketball player.\nit to you and you will get something of it; and through newspaper\narticles wc may make the public\nsee it.\"\nTo sea and to make plain to\nothers was an  obsession  which\ndrove him to fulfill hundreds of\nplatform engagements not only In\nBritish Columbia but throughout\nCanada and the United States.\nHe was a keen student of Russia\nand travelled to that country a few\nyears ago to,study the Soviet regime for interpretation to his public.\nThough he was a student of the\npast too, it was the present moving\nworld  that   engaged   his  greatest\ntime, and no new movement was\nallowed to pass without his attention.\nG Ab R H Pet.\n15 39 8 21 .536\n13 39 5 17 .436\n10 37 5 16 .432\n22 93 13 38 .409\n25 86 21 35 .407\n12 41 5 16 .390\nCricket Scores\n8-3 FOR TIGERS\nDETROIT, May 11 (AP)-The De\ntroit Tigers climbed back Into the\nfirst division in the American league\nby defeating the Cleveland Ind-\nans 8-3 here today.\nThe champions scored six runs\non nine hits oft Johnny Allen in\nthe fou rlnnlngs he worked, cinching the game in the four with five\nruns on six hits.\nCleveland 3   5   2\nDetroit 8 13   2\nAllen, Winegarner, Galehouse and\nPytlak, Becker; Bridges and Cochrane.\nWHITE 80X WIN AGAIN\nST. LOUIS, May 11 (AP)-A barrage of 22 hits, eight tor extra bases,\nenabled the Chicago White Sox to\nsweep their series with St. Louis\ntoday, 19-6, and hand the Browns\ntheir 13th straight defeat.\nThe game was played in a drizzling rain.\nChicago  19 22   1\nSt. Louis   6   5   0\nWhitehead and Sewell; Mahaffey,\nAndrews, Caldwell, Vnnatta, Meola\nond Hemsley.\n(Only two games scheduled).\nFRAhicTDEIKiATS\nNETHERLANDS\nLONDON, May 11 (CP Csble)-\nDerbyshlre proved much too strong\nfor Oxford university cricket teim\ntoday, the .match ending one day\nahead of schedule with the midland\ncounty victor by an innings and\n130 runs. Against Derbyshire's total\not 456 the varsity players obtained\nonly 153 and 173.\nWorthlngton was top-icorer for\nthe'County with 174. Barton made\n70 and Mltchell-Innes 67 tor Oxford.\nClosing score! In other first-class\ngames started Saturday were:\nMiddlesex 150 and 280 (Wyatt five\nwickets for 89 runs); Warwickshire\n213 and 3 for no wickets,\nSurrey 229 and 338 for eight (Fish-\nlo 133 not out); Gloucestershire 171\nYorkshire 445 (Leyland 263); Essex 219 (Verity five tor 48) and 31\ntor one wicket.\nNottinghamshire 408 for eight, declared (Keeton 103, Knowles 74 not\nout); Sussex 250 for seven (James\nLangridge 103 not out).\nHampshire 365; Worcestershire 290\n(Mnr tin 103).\nNorthamptonshire 244 and 28 for\none; Lancashire 371 for seven, declared (Paynter 132 not out).\nSomerset 496; Indian 228 and 126\nfor two (Nayudu 55 not out, Merchant 53 not out).\nTHE HAGUE, May 11 (API-\nFrance eliminated the Netherlands\nfrom further Davis ny play today\nwhen Christian Boussus and Bernard Brestremeau captured the two\nfinal singles matches. France won\nthe series, four to one.\nBoussus clinched the contest by\ndefeating T. Hughan, 3-6, 10-8, 6-2,\n6-0. Brestremeau conquered Hans\nTimmer in the final match, 0-6,\n6-1, 6-3, 6-2.\nIn the next round France will\nmeet the winner of the Czechoslovakia-Yugoslavia series.\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquc\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbi\n\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"-\" -\u2022*\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0--\n*-*----\u25a0\t\n\u2022m-m-mim-^e.^   -^\n\t\n ~T~--\nmmmm\nPAGE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEW8. NELSON. B.C\u2014TUE8DAY MORNING. MAY It 1938\n'M\nI.ET THE CLASSIFIEDS WORK FOR YOU\/\nSfotamt Saily Jforoi,\nMember of the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription   Rates\nSingle copy  $   AS\nBy carrier, per week     23\nBy carrier, per year  13.00\nBy mall ta Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month. 60c;\nthree months $180; six months,\n83.00; one rear. 8800.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months,\n$4.06; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nUS., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nBUYERS ARE READING THESE\ncolumns\u2014and selecting what\nthey require each day\u2014Will they\nfind YOUR Classified Ad here?\nTelephone your ad\u2014We'll do the\nrest\nBIRTHS\nREAY-To Mr. and Mrs. Wslter\nReay, at the Trail-Tadanac hospital,\nMay 5, a daughter.\nWALDIE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. William Waldie, Robson, May 10, a son.\nPERSONAL\nH D CLEANING PASTE for\n*\u2022*\u2022-'\u2022 hands and household\ncleaning. Better than cake or\npowder. Your grocer sells the\nnew green, black or       if].\n(797)\nwhite tin .\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 latex assortment for $1\nOrder direct and be sure of best\nPacked plain. Free catalogue. National Importers, 812-Centre SL.\nCalgary, Alta. (613)\nED. CAMERON, FORMERLY OF\nB. R. Mountain, Bridge River,\ncommunicate at once with company, 800 Hall Buildujg, Vancouver, B, C. (814)\n3\u00bb\u00absa3S\u00bbSttS<^\u00abm\u00bb?\u00bb\u00bb\u00bbWSM5\u00bb\u00abS\u00abS3SaStt\u00bbWi\n555^rass.'.sss\u00ab^\ngSBgUMffli\"SM\u00abBgg     \" \u2014 XS5'\n\u00bbS\u00bb\u00bbS\u00bbW3$SWSS3$35S3*asg8$W\u00abttSS35\u00ab$tS^^\nCHAPTER  24\n\"Can you remember what Miss\nYounger did other days than Monday?\" Keyes asked Mrs. Peoples.\nThere was a hint of sarcasm in his\nvoice, and Mrs. Peoples felt It\n\"I'm only telling you what she did\nMonday week because I thought you\nwould like lo know. In the ta^i\ncoming over I thought back, and remembered as much as I could. I\nthought you would want to know\u2014\"\n\"I do, and thank you.\"\n\"It's kind of easy remembering\nMondays\u2014on account of the beauty\nshop. I had to be careful that she\ndoesn't forget that. so I always reminded her Monday when she waked up.\"\n\"Would you remember if anyone\n.arrange had called that day?\"\n\"Well, I don't think that I would.\nThere's always a lot of people visiting her. If it's anyone out of the\nordinary I might, but as a remember no one came Monday afternoon\nHer friends knew where she was, so\nusually didn't call. Oh, I don't mean\nto say there weren't calls\u2014there\nwere, but nothing suspicious.\"\n\"What time was she due at this\nbeauty shop?\"\nI  \"One-thirty?\"\n-, \"And what time did she usually\nleave?\"\n\"Near five.\"\nKeyes coughed. \"Hardly time to\nrun (o the bank and draw out her\nleash before she went to the shop,\nand certainly no time to get it after-\nj wards, as the banks would be clos-\n|ed.\"\n\"I never thought of thai!\" Mrs.\n[Peoples exclaimed.\n\"What time did she leave to meet\n| Gonzales?\"\n\"About 12.\"\n\"Where were they eating?\"\n\"I'm not sure. She didn't say. She\nliked breakfast out, though, and sel-\nlom had it home. Said it woke her\nUp to get out. She liked to sleep\n'ate.\"\n\"What time did you awaken her In\nhe morning?\"\n\"Eleven.\"\nKeyes thanked her again, and she\n|eft, looking rather longingly at the\nUby as she went I accompanied\nher to the elevator, and tried to\nake up for Keyes' brusque manner\ni dismissing her. Her find was in-\nValuable, I thought, and she certain-\nshould be given credit for it.\n'.When I returned to the captain,\nfie was looking dully at the ruby,\nivhich he had put on the white\nad of the bed. Perhaps It was\nJerves, perhaps imagination, but the\nuby didn't seem to sparkle as Van\n\"very's had. To me. It only glowed\nicbly. I handled it again, but could\nam nothing from it. It looked like\n|t< other, yet there was a subtle dtf-\nnce.\ni \"We've got to go to Van Every,\njteyes. Hell know.\"\nJ He nodded and reached for his\nlyercoat. \"Damn ruby again, but\nfm beginning to see why Margalo\n[ounger made the appointment with\n|oyce Van Every for tea; why ahe\nas so Interested In the Camden\njlby; why she was so eager to talk\nVan Every. She evidently had\nught the Camden ruby, too, and\nanxious to see whether hers\na forgery.\"\n[\"Van Every paid $70,000, Keyes.\npargalo, $8000. No doubt  in  my\nnd but that hers is a fake.\"\n'Women and their bargains!\" he\nflghed, and stepped into the taxi.\nfan   Every's   house   was   lighted\nghtly, and when we entered the\n[out door, McMannus met us.\n\"Everything O.K., chief,\" He led\nI into the living room where Van\nkrery was reading. He greeted us\nbdly and ordered Soon to get some\nes for us. Pulling a silver flask\ni his pocket, he filled the glasses\nnerously.\nChase you out of your library?\"\nyes asked.\nfNo, but I've no heart to stay\nsre. I'm renting the house as soon\n[ can find a tenant\"\nyes finished his drink before he\nBtloned our errand. \"Get me your\nwill you, Van  Every?   I've\nnothing here, rather interesting\nI show you, but I must see your\n\u2022 first\"\nsty friend seemed surprised as he\npad Soon. The Chinese was close\n[ and his master addressed him In\nnguage I could not understand.\nbn vanished and reappeared in\nrhaps 10 minutes with the box\nflch I knew contained the ruby.\n1 Every opened It, took the chain\nthis hand and held it up to the\nfit,\nteyes dug In his pocket and\n| light out Margalo's ruby. 1 heard\nEvery gasp as lie leaned for-\nJrd, then he swallowed and sat\n|k weakly.\n\"Heavens, what a start you gave\nme! Where'd you get It?\"\nThe officer explained as briefly as\nhe could. When he had finished, Van\nEvery arose. \"Come up to my laboratory. I'll examine the stone. I don't\nthink it's genuine, but we'll see.\"\nI had not particularly noticed the\ndoor leading into the laboratory\nwhen Van Every and I sat in his\nbedroom the night Margalo was\nmurdered. I Imagined the door led\nto a clothes closet Now he opened\n| it, and we found ourselves in a small\nroom, no more than six by eight.\n| Possibly at one time it had been a\ncloset. The one window looked out\non the garden. A long narrow table,\nholding three powerful microscopes,\nfaced this. On the velvet cover\nnear one of the Instruments was a\nsmall box containing other paraphernalia for examining jewels.\n\"My workshop,\" Van Every said\nsimply. \"Rather my playshop. Now\nlet mc have the ruby.\"\nHe went about examining the\nstone methodically. I had watched\nhim before with the Khonivar diamond at the Villa Maurin, with a\npowerful enlarging lens and some\ninstruments which were unknown\nto me then. He had no laboratory\nthere. \u00bb\nKeyes and I waited silently for\nsome 15 minutes, while Van Every\nwent over every inch of the stone,\nmeasuring il, then tabulating the\nmeasurments.\nAt his request when he had finished, we both looked through a\nlens at the stone. It was clear except\nfor a tiny bubble at the center. Examining his stone immediately afterwards, we saw the difference readily. The ruby, Van Every's ruby\nwas absolutely clear, and there was\na shade of variation in the color.\n\"A fake, of course. I knew that\nwhen I looked at it downstairs. But\nI wanted to see how it was made.\"\nVan Every was saying, in his quiet\nwell-modulated voice. \"But it's a\nclever fake. You had me guessing\nfor a second downstairs. Me paying\n$70,000 for a ruby, only to find there\nwas another one in existence. Yes,\nCaptain Keyes, Miss Younger's ruby\nis a fake, but a good one. A good\njeweler could have told her that\nafter a brief examination. She evidently did not take it to a jeweler.\nThe way women buy things!\" he\nsmiled. \"But, here's the point. Captain Keyes. The man who made the\ncopy did It from the ruby itself.\nThe measurements are almost exact\nexcept that the cutting is far superior on the copy than on the\noriginal. Far better, which leads me\nto believe the copy is new\u2014that is,\nwithin the last 50 years. Perhaps\nolder than that. The chain is almost\nan exact copy, except for the gold\nused. If you wish, you can take both\nof them to a competent jeweler, who\nwill corroborate my statement.\"\n\"No need of that, Van Every. I\nhave already found out that you're\nan expert in your field.\"\nSmiling slightly, Van Every told\nus as simply as he could how the\nImitation ruby had been made, of\nwhat elements it was composed.\n\"Is a copy like this valuable?\"\nKeyes asked.\n\"I should say it would be worth\naround $500. Perhaps more. I don't\ndeal in synthetic jewels, so can't\ngive you the exact value, if Miss\nYounger paid any more than $500\nfor it, I personally would say she\nhad been robbed. You understand\nthat the copy is a fine one; no one\nbut an expert could tell the difference. The ruby-Miss Younger bought\nlook some time to make\u2014it was not\nan easy job. But there is no sale for\na copy of a ruby as large as the\nCamden, so I can sec no objeel in\ndoing all the work.\n\"The copy, then was made by an\nexpert?\"\n\"Undoubtedly. And the person\nwho did it compared it facet by facet\nwith the real thing. His tools,\nthough, were not so crude as the\nones which, cut the Camden. Gentlemen, if 1 were going to copy a\nstone, at least a stone cut as long\nago as the Camden, I would first\nstudy the tools of the period, make\nthem, and then go to work. The person who copied the Camden ruby\nevidently did not think of that, or\ndid not have the time.\"\n\"Do you think it was made abroad\nor here?\"\n\"I can't tell.\" Van Every was\nstudying the two jewels again, comparing them closely.\n\"Has it occurred to you, Keyes.\"\nI asked, \"that the person who sold\nMargalo Younger this jewel might\nwant it hack\u2014in view of what has\nhappened?\"\n\"It had not, until you mentioned\nit.\"\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED-CAPABLE GIRL FOR\nhousework. Apply with reference\nto Mrs. W. Rutherford, R.R.1,\nNelson. (772)\nWANTED. AT ONCE - FIRST\nclass painter. Apply Tim Flayer,\nBox 477, Trail. (773)\nWANTED-EXPERIENCED WAIT-\ners st the Kootenay Cafe.     (793)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS. ETC.\n5 ROOM BUNGALOW FOR RENT.\nFruit trees. 2 blocks from C.P.R.\nDepot. Apply 129 Silica. (802)\n7-ROOM AND 6-ROOM HOUSES\nwith garden and! fruit. Apply E.\nMaglio. Phone 808L. (500)\nAPARTMENTS, MEDICAL ARTS\nBlock. Two bedrooms. Chas. F.\nMcHardy. (654)\nFURN. SUITES, KERR\nApts. $30 and up.        (608)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent. Annable Block.\n (610)\nLIGHT  HOUSEKEEPING   ROOM,\nfurnished, 918 Kootenay Street.\n(775)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidalre equipped suits.      (609)\nROOMS  FOR   RENT.  BUSINESS\nmen preferred. Phone 412.  (758)\n3    BED\n(681)\nFURNISHED    HOUSE,\nrooms. 618 Silica St.\nFIVE   ROOM    HOUSE,    NEWLY\nrenovated. Phone 855R.        (625)\nFOR SALE\nFor Sale\u2014Household Effects\n9-piece Restmore walnut dining\nroom suite; 5-piece walnut Bedroom suite; living room chairs;\nfloor lamps; 10-tube Westing-\nhouse radio: porcelain top kitchen table with buffet and chairs\nto match; roll top desk; West-\ninghouse Flavor Zone automatic\nelectric range; Woodland circulator healer; electric heater;\ndishes and miscellaneous household effects. All in new condition, used only 5 months. Also\nBeatty electric washer, copper\ntub; carpenter's tools and case.\nTelephone 477R2, or call\nG. J. Truax, Vi mile east\nof   ferry,    North   shore.\n(723)\n9 PIECE DINING ROOM SET.\nhard oak. 3 piece chesterfield set,\npartly new. Cooking stove. Double\nbed, spring, mattress. Linoleum\n7X9 ft. Everything good as new.\nS. Bouma, 410 Nelson Ave. (725)\nPOULTRY FOR SALE\nBETTER CHICKS\nMean More Profits I\nOur Chicks are BETTER because\nwe continually select our breeding stock and hatch scientifically.\n(Prices quoted per 100)\nChicks   Pullets\nLeghorns     . . $ 6.06   $18.00\nRocks, Reds k Sussex 10.00    23.00\nPullet Chicks guaranteed 97 \"i\naccurate\n. Selected Leghorn pullets.\n8 weeks, 65c, 10 weeks, 75c,  12\nweeks 85c, 16 weeks, $1.00.\nBe safe and order from\nRUMP k SENDALL, LTD.\nMilner,  B. C.\n(604)\nWRITERS\nWRITERS! SEND THREE CENT\nstamp for free information regarding our service for the marketing of: Articles, Plays, Verse,\nPoetry, Novels, Short stories and\ncartoons. We have direct contact\nwith Eastern Publishers. McGill\nLiterary Bureau, 406 Lumberman's Bdlg., Vancouver.       (754)\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nSUMMER HOLIDAYS, KOOTENAY\nLake. Very comfortable. Six-room\ncottage. Post Office, Queens Bay.\n(806)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nFARM  LANDS\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nFOR SALE - CANOE. FIRST\nclass condition. Phone 754R evenings. (761)\nUSED CARS\n1931 CHEV TRUCK, HEAVY DUTY\n2 ton. Licence, $135. Peebles Motors Ltd. (801)\nFUEL\nWRITE FOR MY 1936 CATALOGUE '\ngiving information on feeding poultry and quoting prices. White Leghorns, also Wyandottes and Reds.\nOutstanding strains lor vigor and ,\nproduction.\nLAKEVIEW POULTRY FARM\nL. F. Solly Westholme, B.C\n(5663i\nDRY TAMARAC\nAND FIR\nAll lengths\n'illjams Transfer\nCARDENINC AND\nNURSERY PRODUCTS\n<AS\naV\nIW^^at^l\niw        MAV        i9t.\n.11\n3 4 5(789\n10 II 12 I) 14 15 ItS\nIt 18 19 M 21 22 23\nW 15 16 Z7 28 19 SO\n31    \u2022    .    .\"\u2022.    .    .\nPHONE 106\n609 Ward St.\nHUSKY LEGHORN CHICKS $10 00\nper 100. Hatching 1000 a week\ntrom pedigree cockerels. T. A.\nRobinson, B. C. Lands Operating\nCo.. Ltd., Grand Forks. (330)\n1811)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nATTRACTIVE HOME, SITUATED\nat New Denver, containing large\nliving room. 3 bedrooms, complete\nbathroom and kitchen. Price $1200.\nTerms can be arranged. Apply to\nMrs. J. R. Thompson, New Denver, B. C. (743)\n6 ROOM. ONE STORY DWELLING,\nLot 100X120 feet, concrete basement. 12 bearing fruit trees, good\ngarden, $1500.00, terms. H. E. Dill\n508 Ward St. 1745)\nRED DELICIOUS 60c EACH.\nPlums 75c each and other tree\nfruits and small fruits. T. Roy\nnon, Nelson, B. C. (747)\nSEND FOR CATALOGUJTlARGE\nselection hardy acclimatized Rock\nplants and perennials. McDlar-\nmld k Squires, Robson.       (774)\nSTRAWBERRY PLANTS $4.50 PER\"\n1000. Peter Reibin, Taghum. (722)\nKASLO, 4 ACRES. SIXTY YOUNG\ncherries, variety, fruits. Rich\nsoil. Modern house. Garage. Cheap\nsubstantial cash. Particulars Box\n430, Kaslo. (289)\nSIX ROOMED HOUSE ON SILICA\nstreet Full size concrete basement. Good furnace. Two level\nlots. Good value, price, $3300. C. F.\nMcHardy. (819)\n26 ACRES, 5 CULTIVATED, 30\nfruit trees, small fruits, irrigated.\n6 room house outbuildings price\nlow $1200.00. Terms. H. E. Dill, 508\nWard St. 1746)\nSPECIAL THIS WEEK-1 DROP\nhead Singer $20.00. 1 drop head\nSinger $15.00. 2 drop head White's\nat $15. each. 2 drop head Raymond\nat $15 each. Singer Sewing Machine Co., Nelson, B, C.       (736)\nCOMPLETE HOUSEHOLD FURNI-\nture. Antique 4-post beds. View\nbetween 10 and 4 daily, Harold\nPenny, 701 Hoover St. (741)\nFOR SALE, CHEAP, 1300' OF 10\"\nmine ventilating pipe. A-l condition. Apply R. Campbell, Grand\nForks, (561)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd\n250 Prior St       Vancouver. B  C\n(611)\nGREEN MOUNTAIN POTATOES,\ncooking or seed, $1.30 per 100 lbs\nE. W. Slater, Harrop. (721)\n2 CLEARED LOTS, 8 BEARING\ntrees. Snap for cash or terms. Good\nBldg. site. 2 blocks from car line.\nBox 812 Daily News. (812)\n20d~ACRE DAIRY AND :FRUIT\nranch, 3 miles from Nelson. Going\nconcern. Box 810 Daily News.\n(810)\nSMALL HOUSE FOR SALE. 405 6th\nSt. near Cottonwood St.     (813)\nDOCS\nSPRINGER SPANIEL PUPPIES.\nBred from winners and workers.\nR. S. Sears. Kamloops, B. C. (676)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B. C. (612)\nFOR SALE \u2014  3-ROOM HOUSE,\ncity, bargain. Box 740 Daily News.\n(740)\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nUse the\nDAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS.\nFOR SALE OR RENT\nFURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED\ndouble house on Baker street. Six\nrooms each side. Phone 427R.\n(762)\nBUNGALOW, LATIMER ST. FIVE\nrooms and bath. Phone 820L. (759)\nROOM AND BOARD\nBOARDERS WANTED. 2 TO\nshare a room $25 a month. Single\n$35. Phone 522R or write P. O.\nBox 086, Nelson. (778)\nBOARD AND. ROOM IN PRIVATE\nhome, 924 Edgewood avenue. (506)\nPAINT UP!\nCLEAN UP!\nTHE FOLLOWINC NELSON TRADESMEN\nARE AT YOUR SERVICE\nj. R. Bailey\nSee our selection of wallpapers\nin new colors and designs. Estimates gladly given on your\npainting   and   papering   jobs\n506 Stanley Street\n'7351\nLambert Lumber\nLimited\nYou'll need lumber fixing up\nyour home. For good material\nand real value phone us.\nPhone 82 219 Baker St.\n(731)\nB. C. Plumbing &\nHeating Co.\nModernize your Plumbing\non  our Budget Plan.\n323 Victoria St.\nPhone 181\n(730i\nA. Terrill\n120 High St.\ncan make your old upholstered couch or chair like\nnew.  Phone him!\nUpholstery. Awnings, Draperies,   Slip  Covers,  etc,'\n'(728)\nNELSON GUN, LOCK\nAND CYCLE WORKS\nH. R. Kitto\nWe   grind   lawnmowers,\nrepair locks, make keys.\nBicycles, Typewriters, Etc.\n620 Baker St.\n(733)\nKootenay Steam\nLaundry\nCurtains look like new\nwhen   cleaned   by   us.\nPhone 128 711 Baker St.\n(732)\nAre you renovating your\nhome? Have real floors-\nInlaid   Hardwood.   Phone\nH. A. Ronmark\nNelson's Hardwood Floor Expel.\nGranite Road\n(728)\nLawson's Wood\nWorking Factory\nImprove your home by having\nmore   cupboard   spaee,   doors\nand windows, etc.\nCall on our Factory.\nOpposite the Dally News.\n(734)\n#\nSHETLAND PONY. SADDLE\npony, suitable for child. Apply\nPostmaster, Crawford Bay. 1799)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALB\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources. C.P.R. Calgary, Alta.\n(607)\nDRESSMAKING\nDRESSMAKING, FIT AND STYLE\nguaranteed. Will sew in own homo\nif required. Terms moderate. Mrs.\nRobinson. R.R.1, Nelson.       (798)\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER. S. F. A. E.\n213  Medical  Arts  Building.\nP. O. Box 1091,        Nelson, B. C.\n(683)\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Chemist. Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling agents at Trail and Ta-\ncoma smelters 301-305 Josephine\nSt.. Nelson, B. C. (684)\nInvestments\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE, BOND-\ned representative, F. Armstrong\nStuart, P.O. Box 389, Nelson. (895)\nMachinists\nGRENVILLE  H.  GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker street, Nelson,  B.C. P.O.\nBox No. 276, Representing Ship-\npers' Interest at Trail, B. C. (685)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nfor   expert   repairs\nPhone 686 604% Baker St.\n4358)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, D. c. palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk., Nelson\n(687)\nE. M. WARREN, D, C, BOX 872.\nFor Canaries. Phone 115 or 755L\n(688)\nElectrical\nJ. F. COATES. The Electric Store.\nSupplies and Installations.\nPhone 766. P. O. Box 1065.\n(689)\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work, Lath*\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding.   Motor  Rewinding,  Acetylene\nWelding.\nTelephone 593.     324 Vernon Street.\n(703)\nMaternity Homes\nELIZABETH   PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME     .\nStrictly Private. Confidential Physician in attendance. Ph. Broad. 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wash.\n(704)\nNotariei\nD. J. ROBERTSON, NOTARY PUB-\nUc. Office 305 Victoria St Nelson.\n(705)\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted inventions and\nfull information sent free. Tha\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St Ottawa.\n(605)\nPHOTOCRAPHY\nEngineers and Surveyors\nE. L. WARBURTON, NELSON, B.C.\nOffice 518 Ward St Phone 53, P.O.\nBox 668. Agent: Oils, Greases, Paints\nSpecialties: mining machinery,\nCrow's Nest Pass Steam Coals,\nStructural steel piping, sheet iron.\n(690)\nH D. DAWSON. Nelson, B. C.\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(691)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B.C\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n(692)\nA. H GREEN CO, LTD, 516 WARD\nSt. Phone 264, Nelson, B. C. (693)\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP.\nPhone 215. All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays k etc. Phone 215.\nMrs. Hagarty, Box 29. (694)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD\nReal estate, Insurance, rentals, 217\nBaker St. (696)\nR. % DAWSON, Real Estate, In-\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hlpperson\nHardware, Baker Street.     (697)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD Insurance ol\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99\n(698)\nH. E. DILL. AUTO AND FIRE IN-\n. surance. Real Estate, 508 Ward St.\n(C99)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE.\nrentals, insurance. Annable Block\n(700)\nLIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulin. Ph. 70.     (701)\nCHAS. F. MtHARDY, INSURANCE.\nReal Estate, Phone 133.       (702)\nPREMIUM CERTIFICATES ON\nvaluable merchandise given with\nfilms developed, including one\nprint from each negative, 25c.\nExtra prints, eight for 25c. Saskatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon.\nSanitariums\nDR. ALDRICH SAN1TORIUM INC.\nTreats all chronic diseases including T.B., cancer, dlabetls, liquor\nhabit and the mind. 30 years practice. E-4504 .Fredrick, Spokane.\n\u2022,706)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker St.\n(707)\nSecond Hand Storei\nWe give the best prices on trade Ins.\nTHE ARK STORE. (583)\nShoe Repairing\nMANUEL'S SHOE HOSPITAL\nALL   REPAIRS   GUARANTEED\nNext to Tremont Hotel, Baker St.\n(328)\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St.\n(708)\nWigs and Toupees\nLADIES AND GENTLEME.NS\nwigs and toupees, etc. Free Illustrated Catalogue. Over 20 years\nin B. C. We buy cut hair. Hanson\nHair Goods Co. P. O. Box 601.\nVancouver, B. C. (709)\nHave tne Nelson Dally News delivered daily. Read the news first\nthing in the morning. Phone 143.\u2014\nCirculation Department\nTILUE THE TOILER\nBy Rum Wetlover\nvmellj wasted\nsome time\nTAKtrj'  You TO\nTHE  STATION        k\nto Meet thormtou\n15(2ake,the movie\nstar- nova) let's\n(SO TO \"THE Mov\/lES\n\\OV   VJIN,\nMAC\nvmhat You\n\u25a0Seeto'kave\nABOUT |'m THAT\nc3UY, THORNTON\n\u00ab1W,S><>l\u00bbw>T\u00bb\u00bbWl\u00bb,W\u00abHi,hlt\u00abn,5rj|      }\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Cut Edson\nTO BE CONTINUED)\nI\nWhat to \/pvramiding her. profits,1\ndo now\/  she'd have a billion\n\\ dollars in less than\nthe widow\/ a year\/ i've got to\n.^'NSct,\" 7 DO SOMETHING\n\u2022REALIZED' (   RK3HT NOW\/'\n#1000- ON   X ~\"a\t\nHER #150\nINVESTMENT,\nSNDS IT\niCKTO BIM\nTO RE-INVEST\n\"\/\\\nm\nMZl\nDELIVER THIS CHECK\nTO MRS HENRIETTA ZANDER\nV - TELL HER 1'LL PHONE-\n f\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-TUE8DAY MORNING. MAY 12, 1936\nPAGE NINI\nfiROWERS SHOULD SPRAY NOW TO\nKEEP APPLES FREE FROM SUB\n1 Spray Should Be Put\non During \"Pink\"\nPeriod\nIf Kootenay growers wish to have\nClean fruit they must take precautions now against apple scab, declared E. C. Hunt, district agriculturist, Sunday night.\n) The secret of success ta the control of apple scab Is having a protective spray on the trees before\nany preliminary infections take\nplace, he said. The spores of apple\nscab are now mature and although\nthe; have not developed in all case*\nat quickly aa in other years, nevertheless there is at this time considerable danger of infections taking place.\nIn some sections growers were\nadvised to make an earlier application to some varieties, but at this\ntime all growers should make an\neffort to put on what is known as\nthe \"pink\" spray for the control ot\nthis disease. \"Mcintosh Red and a\nnumber of other varieties have\nnow reached the \"pink\" stage and it\nIs very important that all varieties\nshould be sprayed in this stage,\"\nsaid Mr. Hunt\nLIME-SULPMUR\nLime-sulphur is still being used\nto a large extent in the control of\napple scab, either alone with water\n' or in combination with other materials. Where used alone It should be\ndiluted at the rate of one gallon to\n40 gallons ot water for most all\nvarieties and tor all the sprays applied. For Cox's Orange weaker\ndilutions will give good control of\nscab and with much less chances of\nfoliage injury to this variety. However, Mr. Hunt would not advise a\ndilution much weaker than one\ngallon to 50 of water unless the applications are made closer together\nthan the usual two week period.\nThe iron sulphate mixture spray is\nbeing used by many growers in\nsections ot the district where apple\nscab Is hard to control and where\nconsiderable foliage injury is likely\nto take place trom the use of lime-\nsulphur under certain weather conditions.\nThis spray has proven effective\nin the control of apple scab and at\n.the same time little it any foliage\nInjury has occurred to the trees\nfrom its use.\nGrowers, on the whole also do a\nmuch better Job ot spraying with\nthis material than with lime-sulphur. This Is due to the fact that\nthe iron sulphate mixture when\nbeing applied as a spray is Just as\nblack as ink and the operator of\nspray gun or rod can see at\nhas missed. The Iron sulphate mixture is made up of tbe following\nmaterials and mutt be added to the\nspray tank in the order given below:\nIran sulphate ( pounds, lime-\nsulphur 1i\/a gallons, and calcium\narsenate S te 4 pounds to 100\ngallons ef water.\nOn commencing to fill the spray\ntank sift In or pour In the Iron\nsulphate, when the tank Is nearly\nfull add the lime-sulphur, and\nthen add the calcium arsenate.\nNicotine can also be added to this\nspray If needed for the control of\naphis. In this mixture as outlined\nabove the four pounds of calcium\narsenate should be used for the\npre-blossom and calyx sprays, and\nthe three pounds for all sprays\nafter the calyx per 100 gallons.\nMarket and Mining News\nNEW YORK UP,\nltd RETREATS\nthe\nany part of the tree that h\u201e\nMcMillan to Sell\nOut at West River\nSUDBURY, Ont, May 11 (CP).-\nMcMillan Gold Mines Limited will\nnot resume operations at its West\nRiver property and assets ol the\ncompany will be disposed of and\nproceeds distributed among the\nshareholders, It was decided at the\nannual general meeting here Saturday.\nAdoption of the resolution to wind\nup the company was unanimous,\nand was made after the meeting\nhad heard reports from President\nO. M. Miller, and an Independent\nreport from W. E. Segsworth of Toronto indicating little further hope\nsubst-itlal ore bodies could be disclosed.\nDominion Livestock\nWINNIPEG,~May\"\" 11 (CP). -I\nCattle, 2050; s.eers, 5.25; heifers, 4.75;\nfed calves, 3M; cows, 3.50; bulls,\n3.00; stock cows and heifers, 3.00;\nmilkers, 40.00.\nCalves, 9.50; choice vealers, S.0O.\nHogs, 1850; select bacon, $1 per\nhead premium; bacon, 58.50; butchers, 81 per head discount; heavies,\n8.00; lights and feeders, 8.75; sows,\n6.00.\nSheep, 25; tvndywelght lambs,\n8.75; sheep, 2.00.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOUsTMay 11 (API-\nFlour unchanged. Carload lots family patents 6.35-8.55 a barrel,in 98-\npound cotton sacks. Shipments 23,-\n407. Bran 16-16.50.\nWheat cash: No. 1 heavy dark\nnorthern spring 60 pounds, 1D5%-\n1.16%; no. 1 red durum 74%.\nNEW YORK, May It (CP)-Tbi\nstock market tired a few recovery\nvolleys today, then executed a more\nor less orderly retreat.\nSelective buying in the morning\npushed up prices fractions to arouno\n2 points. The upturn was on such\nlight volume, however, that many\ntraders refusal to participate. The\nresult was that early gains were\ncancelled or transformed into losses\nof 2 or more points in many issues\nThe listlessness of the board rooms\nwas exemplified by the day's turnover which totalled only 677.750\nshares, the smallest since June 10.\n1935, when the aggregate amounted\nto 631,080. The total last Friday was\n779.830 shares.\nThe Associated Press average of\nI stocks was off .5 of a point on the\nday at 58.6.\nDIVIDENDS\nNational Grocers company, Ltd.,\npreferred $3.50, payable June 1 to\nshareholders of record May 23.\nLondon Close\nLONDON. May 11 (AP).-Closin':\nBrazilian Traction 81014; C. P. R.\n$12%; International Nickel $45%:\nBritish Celanese Us; Central Mining (25: Hudson Bay 22s 6d; Imperial Airways 53s 3d; Rio Tintos\n\u00ab3%; Rolls Royce 161s 3d.\nBonds: British 2V, p.r. Consols\n\u00a385%; British 3V, p.c. War Loan\n\u2022-106%; British Funding 4s 1960-90\nsin*.\nMoney\nBy the Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal-Pound 4.98 31-32,\nU S dollar 1.00 3-32, franc 6.80.\nAt New York-Pound 4.96%, Canadian dollar .90 29-32, franc 6.60%.\nAt Paris-Pound 7539 franes, U S\ndollar 15.18 francs, Canadian dollar\n15.17 francs.\nIn gold\u2014Pound 12\u00bb Id, U S dollar\n59.17 cents, Canadian dollar 59.21\ncents.\nSTEEL PRICES TO\nBE ADVANCED\nNEW YORK, May 11 (API-Seeking a better margin ot earnings to\ncover the cost of tbe Social Security\nact and other benefits for employees,\nleading steel producing companies.\nit waa reliably reported today, win\nmake a general advance In prices\nfor third quarter delivery.\nIn steel manufacturing circles It\nwas said that advances averaging\nfrom 82 to $3 a ton would likely\nbe adopted and announced by the\nindividual producers within the\nnext few weeks.\nCanada's Trade\nin Securities Is\nNearly Doubled\nOTTAWA, May 11 (CP)-The Dominion bureau ot statistics today\nreported Canada's trade In securities with other countries In tbe three\nmonths ended March 31 amounted to\n$217,765335 an Increase of 891,481.511\nover the corresponding period ta\n1935. Total sales In the three months\nwere $128,229,803 against $05,923,630\nlast year, and purchases amounted\nto $89,536,032 compared with $60,-\n360,694.\nThe United States was the best\ncustomer taking $105,918,310 at the\nsame time Canada bought securities\nworth $77,340,904, while the United\nKingdom wes next with purchases\nof $21,242,909 while Canada bought\n$11,187,210.\nEastern Soles\nMONTREAL, May U (CP)-Sales\nof 100 shares or more on Montreal\nstock exchange today: 731 Brazil:\n155 B C Pow; 213 B C Pow B; 135\nCan Car; 231 Alcohol A; 274 CPR:\n865 Smelters: 240 Dist Reag; 895\nNickel: 408 Mtt Pow: 233 Nat Brew;\n331 Noranda; 100 Shawinlgan; 120\nSteel.\nC.N.R. REVENUES UP\nMONTREAL, May 11 (CP) -\nGross revenues ot the Canadian National railways for the week ending\nMay 7 showed an Increase ot $457,-\n269 at $3,407,235 as compared with\n$3,010,016 for the corresponding period a year ago.\nMORE ABOUT\nHENDERSON\n(Continued From Pate One)\nMONTREAL LOSES\nVancouver   Stock   Exchange\nLISTED\nBid\nAsk\nA p Con       J5^\nAmal Oil.        \u25a0jj\u00bb\u2122\nBig Missouri    \u201e\u25a0\u00bb\nBralorne \t\nBrit Dom  -\nBRXGold ...\nCariboo Gold .\nC and E Corp\nCoast Brew\nCoast Brew Rts\n7.25\n.05Vi\n.15\n1.37\n1.09\n13.00\n4.75\n.06\nS\u00bb\n.22\n.02%\n.02Vt\n9.80\n2.35\n.01%\n51%\n.10\nDentonia      ^\nGold Belt  - -    \u25a0*\nHargal Oil  -\u2022-\u2022    *>\nInt Coal           \u2022\"\nIsland Mount    \u00bb\u2022\u00ab\nKoot Belle  -\nMak Siccar \u2014\nMoDougal Segur\nMcLeod OU New\nModel Oil\nMorning Star \t\nNat Silver   \t\nPioneer Gold\t\nPremier Gold \t\nPremier Border\nQuatsino         *\u00bb*\nReno Gold     \u00ab*\nSally Mines      -\nSalmon Gold -    J\u00bb*\nSheep Creek _..\nSpooner Oil -\nTaylor Bridge\nVanalta      f\nWayside  _ - 14%\nCURB\nAnaconda \u2014\nAssociated ....\nBaltac OU \u2014\nBayvlew \t\nBeaver SUver\nBluebird\nB C Nickel\t\nB R Mount\t\nCan Rand      -    ~\nCalmont OU      .09\nCongress      \u2022*\nCork Province  -    -00%\nCottonbelt    \"2\nCrows Nest        -09V4\nDalhousie M'nes 02\nDalhousie Oils - 43\nDictator Gold - ~    SXVi\nPunwcll   M\nFairview      \u2022\u00ab\n(LTederal Gold\"...    D7%\nJ0%\n.68\n7.35\n.00\n.16\n1.40\n1.10\n13.50\n5.00\n.21\n.42\n58\n.20\n1.50\n.6'.\n.08\n.0314\n32\n.22%\n.02%\n.02%\n10.00\n2.56\n.01 Vi\n.02\n1.28\n.11%\n.11\n.68\n.22\nFreehold       J>5%\nGlacier Crek -    .01%\nGeo Copper       22\nGolconda       \u2014    .13%\nGold Mount     .10%\nGeo River    _    .01%\nGrandview : \u2014    .02V*\nGrange         -    .02%\nGrull Wihksne  10\nHaida Gold          J>4\nHedley Amal       28\nHlghwood Sarcee\nHome Gold\nIndian Mines\nKoot Florence .\nKoot King  \t\nLakeview  \t\nLucky Jim ......\nMadison . \t\nMar Jon\n.14\n.03%\n.02\n.00%\n.00%\n.00%\n.02\n.01%\n.17%\n.13\n.02\n.25\n.14\n.11\n.02\n.03\n.03\n.11\n.05\n.27\n.15\n.03V.\n.02%\n.01\nExchanqe Rates\nNEW YORK, May 11 <CP)-Ster-\nling exchange weaker at $4.95% for\n60-day bills and at $4.96% for demand.\nCanadian dollars today 99 29-32,\nSaturday 99 31-32, week , ago 99\n15-16.\nFranc 6.60% cents.\nLire 7.87 cents.\nTORONTO, May 11 (CP)-Sales\not 100 shares or more on the industrial section of the Toronto stock\nexchange today: 822 Brazilian; 580\nBr k D; 471 B A Oil; 375 C tad Al;\n387 Gyp k Al; 670 Nickel; 465 Mass\nllarr; 463 Mass Harr pfd; 325 Walkers; 1107 Walker pfd.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, May 11 (CP) - Receipts over week-end: 221 cattle; 7\ncalves; 43 hogs. Today up to noon:\n24 cattle; 13 hogs.\nCattle market slow. Good butcher\nsteers 4.00-4.25; common to medium\n3.00-3.75. Choice fed calves 3.00; medium 3.50. Good veal calves 5.00;\nmedium 4.00.\nNo hogs sold up to noon. Last\nprices: selects 8.45; bacons 7.95;\nbutchers 7.45, off trucks.\nToronto Stock Quotations\n.07%\n.15\n.03%\n.0*%\n\u2014\n.11\n_\n.03%\n.00%\n\u2014\n.03\n.03%\n.01\n.02\n.32%\n.33\n.16\n.V%\nMercury OU .....\nMeridian -  S\u00bb\nMerland      ..\"  20\nMcGlllivray Coal... .17\nMill City        J09\nMinto Gold  .76\nMorton Wolsey   .00%\nMarmot Metals .... J00%\nNicola    '       .10\nNoble Five   52%\nNordon Oil  18%\nOkalta  Oils   _ .07\nPacalta          \u2014 .06\nPend Oreille  .81\nPilot Gold      .07\nPorter Idaho  _ SS3\nQuesneUe Q    .08\nRanchmen's      \u2014\nReliance Gold  07%\nReward             SSIVt\nRellaf ArUngton ... -30\nRoyalite              30.00\nRufus Argenta  - SsOV,\n.10\n!oo%\n.0?.%\n.10\n.0\"%\n.50\n.04%\n.05\n.50\nRuth Hope\nS'lvercrest .\nSilverado\nBilversmith\nSnowflske\n.01%\n.00%\n.02\n.01%\n.00%\n.01%\n.18\n.14\n.10\n.22\n.78\n.01\n.10%\n.03%\n.20\n.07\n.33\n.07%\n.05%\n.54\n.08\n.07%\n.34\n31.110\n.02\n.00%\nBankfleld   \t\nBarry Holllnger.\nBase Metals \t\nBear Explora\t\nBig Miss\t\nBobjo\t\nBralorne   \t\nBRX\t\nBuf Ankerite ....\nCan Malartlc __\nCariboo Gold\t\nCastle Treth\t\nCentral Man .\n       \u00ab6%\n 19\n  .37\n  .65\n 16\n  7.30\n  .16\n  5.55\n  1.06\n  1.40\n  1.50\n..       27\nCentral Pat  3'8\nSan Antonio     2.30\nSheep Creek _ 68\nSher Gordon     1.10\nTHE CHARGES\nThe chief justice of the appeal\ncourt said Mr. Henderson had refused to withdraw charges:\n1. That Chief Justice Morrison's\nconduct at the trial of Alex, Rich-\nardsoi and Eneas George was \"nothing short of disgraceful.\n2. That Crown Counsel Gordon\nSloan, J. R. Nicholson, associate\ncrown counsel, and Chief Justice\nMorrison had conspired to alter the\nJudge's charge to the Jury that convicted the Indians.\n3. That \"Chief Justice Morrison\nwas not telling the truth In his report to the appeal court of changes\nmade in the transcript of his jury\ncharge.\"\nMr. Justice Martin said Mr. Henderson had not been asked to withdraw or apologize tor all charges\nand contended he should be aUowed\nto question the man before judgment was passed upon him.\nThe appeal chief, saying \"It appears   Impossible  to   make   my\nlearned brother (Mr. Justice Martin) shut up,\" asked Mr. Henderson If he desired now to withdrew\nhis remarks.\nWaving his arms vehemently, the\nveteran counsel shouted: \"I withdraw nothing.\"\nHe said later, after judgment had\nbeen passed, \"If (his prohibition\ntrom the court lasts forever, there\nwlU be no withdrawal\"\nThe tribunal agreed Mr. Henderson would not be prohibited trom\nappearing when judgment was\npassed in the George appeal and\nthat he would be allowed to make\nsubmissions at that time.\nTHINKS IT UNFAIR\nMr. Justice Martin thought it\nunfair that counsel should have\nbeen asked to withdraw one statement and then have that order later\nextended to take ta others. He\nthought denial ot the right to another member of the bench to ask\ncounsel questions \"improvident\"\nBarely had Attorney-General\nSloan finished his argument against\nallowing the appeal when the chief\njustice began his charge against\nHenderson.\nMr. Justice Martin came abruptly\nto the support of the counsel: \"You\nare about to pronounce sentence\nupon a man who has not been heard.\nMr. Henderson has not been given\nan opportunity to answer the request to withdraw his remarks.\"\nHe then made a direct motion\nthat he be allowed to ask Mr. Henderson certain questions. The motion was denied by the other jurists.\nMr. Martin\u2014The usual practice\nIs not to condemn a man before\nMONTREAL, May 11 (OrV-A\nfew half-hearted attempts to bring\nhigher prices failed on Montreal\nstock exchange today and losses of\nss much as 2 points predominated\nat the close.\nNickel closed at 44%, off a point\nSmelters yielded % at 55.\nMontreal Power and Shawinlgan.\nworked a little higher. Losses ot as\nmuch as 2 points were shown, however, by International Power and\nBrazilian.\nDeclines of % to % point each\nwere registered by St Lawrence\nPaper preferred, Bathurst, Canadian\nIndustrial Alcohol and National\nBreweries.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR STEADY\nNEW YORK. May 11 (CP)-The\nfranc moved forward en New York\nforeign exchange market today,\ngaining 1% points against the United States dollar as the tension over\nthe French unit eased. Tha close\nat 6.60% compared with Saturday's\nfinal ot 638%. Founds sterling on\nthe other hand turned easier to end\nst $4,96%, down 2 cents. Canadian\nfunds barely fluctuated,\nVANCOUVERFIRM\nINDUSTRIALS AT\nTORONTO LOSE\nCHICAGO LOSES\nSiscoe      \t\nSmelter G\t\nStadacona \t\nSt. Anthony ...\nSud Basin\t\nSylvanite\nTeck Hughes\nToburn  _\nTowsgamac   _\nTrc.ldwe.ll   \t\nVentures  \t\nChibougamou   ....\nEldorado\nFalconbrldge  -\nGod's Lake .-\nGold Belt  \t\nGranada  \t\nHardrock  \u2014\t\nHoUinger  \t\nHowey      -\t\nHudson Bay\t\nInter Nickel \t\nJ M Con    \t\nKirkland L  -.\nLake Maron\t\nLake Shore   \t\nLittle Long Lac \t\nMacassa         -\nMaole Leaf\t\nMalroblc\nTavlor Wind ..., 14\nU D L           \t\n.60\nUnited Empire \u2014\n.02%\nUnited Oil\t\n.06%\nVidette Gold \t\n1.20\nViking Gold \t\n.05\nWaterloo     \t\n.03%\nWaverley Tang -\t\n.00%\nWhitewater  \t\n.03\nYmir Yankee Girl.\n.60\n1.32\nCoast Copper     2.10\nConlagas .'.     a'0\nConarium            *M\nCons M k S    55.50\nDome     M*j\nDominion Explora 05%\nSSI\n7.80\n.97\n.39\n.21\n1.74\n15.00\n.70\n26.00\n44.50\n.56\n.46\n.06\n56ri0\n7.00\n3.90\n.22%\n.04\n4.65\n42.50\n.27\n1.35\n1.27\n2.50\n.07\n1.21\n,  .05%\n.05\n.01\n.04\nMcLeod Cockshutt\t\nMclntyre \t\nMcVlttle Gr      \t\nMcWatter Gold\t\nMining Corp ....\nNiplsslng\t\nNoranda    58.30\nParkhill            -M\nPaymaster     \u2014     S-2S\nPend Oreille       \u25a0\"\nPickle Crow      8.30\nPioneer  -     9-95\nPremier Gold      '\u25a0\"\nReno      13*\nWaite Amulet\t\nWayside\nWhite Eagle \t\nWright Hargreaves ...\nOILS\nAjax    _\t\nB  A  Oil  \t\nC k E Corp\t\nChem Research\t\nDalhousie   \t\nDome       \t\nImperial  \t\ninter Pete \t\nMerland\t\nNordon   \t\nRoyalite \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bros    10\nBell Telephone  143\nBrazilian          10%\nBrew & Dlst    95\nCanada Bread          4%\nCanada Car k Fdy      6\nCanada Cement -    6%\nCanada Dredge    44%\nCanada Malting    30%\nCan Pac Railway     12\nCons Smelters     85%\nDominion Bridge    36%\nDominion   Stores        8%\n3.31\n.07\n.36\n.21\n3.66\n2.60\n4.70\n1.30\n.24\n.40\n1.80\n1.14\n.15\n.03\n8.15\n.50\n23.00\n1.09\n1.05\n.45\n.95\n21.30\n37.12\n.17\n.18\n29.00\nCHICAGO, May 11 (AP)-Large\nprospective shipments to Chicago\nfrom Kansas City, with bearish unofficial estimates of Kansas yield\nthis season did much today to pull\nwheat prices down.\nThe close waa unchanged to 1%\ncenta lower, May 93%-93%, July\n85%-85%; corn HiH down, May\n62%-62%; oats unchanged to % off\nand provisions unchanged to a decline of 22 cents.\nhis trial; what we are doing Is\nunprecedented  In the annals of\nBritish Columbia courts.\"\nChief Justice MacDonald said Mr.\nHenderson   could  have   obtained\ncopies ot the origlal charge to the\njury by applying to the court clerk.\nThe defence counsel said he had\nasked and bad been refused. \"He\nwould have lost bis job if he had\ngiven it to me,\" he charged, because he was under the attorney-\ngeneral.\nSloan jumped, to bis feet to deny\nthis.\n\"Why in the interests ot justice\nwaa I not given permission to call\nthe court stenographer!\" asked Mr.\nHenderson. \"If I have committed\nsuch a grave crime, give ~\" \u2122\nchance to defend myself.\" ,\n-1 know you would like to make '\na speech,\" interrupted the chief\njustice.\nMr. Henderson waving his arms\nanswered sharply-\n\"Mr. Justice M. A. MacDonald\nsaid this court could not hear n :\nuntil I did withdraw. When things\nget that bad you ore not proper\njudges tor me.\"\nThe chief justice\u2014\"I now order\nyou to withdraw the charges and\napologise to this court or you wont\nbe allowed audience ta this court\nagain.\nCANNOT SUSPEND\nMr. JusUce Martin\u2014The members\nof this court have denied me p\u00ab'\nmission to ask questions of Mr.\nHenderson. I must dissent on the\ngrounds that such action is premature and improvident Counsel cannot be suspended from practice by\nthis court That is done only by the\nBenchers of the Law society.\nVACOUVBR, May 11 (CP) - A\nfirm tone prevailed on a fairly active session of the Vancouver stock\nexchange today. Sales totalled 282,-\n733 shares.\nVidette up 14 at 1.20 regtsted the\ngreatest rise. Pioneer gained 8 at\ncent advances were chalked up in\nIsland Mountain at 1.47, Premier at\n9.80 and Wayside 2% at 14%. Four-\n2.33 and Gold Belt at 40. Big Missouri was up one cent at 68. Bra-\nlornevdropped 15 at 7.28, 8heep\nCreek 3 at 65 and Dentonia 2% at\n20. Kootenay Belle eased 2 at 60,\nReno 1 at 1.24 and Minto a traction\nat 76. Other gold Issues closed unchanged to fractionally higher.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, May 11 <CP>-\nMlning shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange today:\nListed\u2014Big Miss 225, Bralorne\n452, B R Con 1500, BRX 1100. Carl-\nboo 500, Dentonia 23,700, Gold Belt\n16,950, Island Mount 2073, Koot\nBelle 2100, Morning Star 2500, National SU 1000, Pioneer 100, Premier Bord 5000, Premier Gold 3825,\nReno 1700, Salmon 800, Sheep Crk\n3100, Taylor Br 8200, Wayside 17,200.\nCurb\u2014B C Silver 200, B C Nickel\n2800, Bluebird 10,000, Cotton Belt\n2000, Cork Ptov 1000, Dictator 4000,\nFawn 400, Fairview 1000, Federal\n5000, Grange 16.000, Golconda 1000,\nGold Mount 500, Grandoro 1000,\nHaida 2000, Hedley Amal 300, Home\n10,000, Lucky Jim 3000, Meridian\n3000, Marmot Metals 2000, Minto\n8850, Nicola 9600, Pilot 18,7(0, Quesnelle Q 1000. Reliance 13,000, Reward 7800, Relief All 5600, Ruth\nHope 800, Silvercrest 7000, United\n1000, Viking 1000, Vidette 99S0, Waterloo 13,500. Waverley 500.\nTORONTO,  May   11  <CP)-The\nToronto industrial share market\ndrifted into a sizeable decline today\non a light business turnover. Prices\nwere heavy at the close. Less than\n19,000 shares changed hands.\nInternational Petroleum recorded\na decline of % and Imperial dropped\n% while McColI and British American held recessions down to the\nminimum fraction. Nickel declined\na full point, Smelters recorded a\nminor setback and Brazilian and\nFord A dropped back % to % each.\nMINES SLIP OFF\nExchanges\nMONTREAl, May 11   (CP). -\nBritish and foreign exchange closed easier.\nChina, Hong Kong dollar -\u2014   .3285\nIndia, rupee     \u2014 \u2014   .3764\nJapan, yen\nJugoslavia, dinar\nSpain, peseta\nQuotations on Wall Street\nDist Seagrams\nFord Canada A\nGoodyear Tire  .\nHiram Walker  .\nLoblaw A\nMassey Harris ...\nSteel of Canada\n21%\n21%\n67\n27%\n19%\n4%\n62%\nWalker Brew      2%\nHigh\nAl Chemical       \u2014\nAm Can    128%\nAm For Pow .. 6%\nAm Ma k Fdy.. 21%\nAm Smelt &Re 76%\nAm Telephone 156%\nAm Tobacco ....   83\nAnaconda     34%\nAtchison    71%\nAuburn Mo     32%\nAv Corp      5%\nBaldwin     3Vt\nBait & Ohio    17%\nBendix Av    27%\nBeth Steel     50%\nCanada Dry    H\nCan Pacific     12%\nCerro de Pasco 54%\nChes k Ohio ....   55%\nChrysler      95%\nCon Gas NY...   29\nCorn Products..  74%\nC Wright Pfd .    6%\nDupont        1*1\nEast Kodak  162%\nEl Pow k Li....   14\nErie    -\nFord English ...  \u2014\nFord of Can ....\nFirst Na Stores\nFreeport Tex ...\nGen Electric .\nGen Foods     38%\nGen Motors    64%\nGold Dust    16%\nGoodrich 20\nGrt North Pfd  35%\nGrt West Sugar\nHowe Sound ...\nHudson Mo\nInt Nickel\nInt Tel k Tel....\nJewel eTa \t\nLow\n127%\n8%\n21%\n74\n155%\n92%\n32%\n69%\n30%\n5%\n3\n16%\n26%\n48%\n10%\n12V,\n33V,\n55%\n92 %\n28%\n74\n6%\n138\n162%\n13%\n43%\n30\n38%\n35%\n15\n45%\n13%\n70%\n43\n29%\n35%\n38%\n62%\n15%\n19\n34%\n35\n14%\n44%\n13\n70\nClose\n185%\n128%\n6%\n21%\n74\n155%\n93\n32%\n69%\n30%\n5%\n3\n17\n26%\n48%\n11\n12%\n83%\n55%\n92%\n28%\n74\n8%\n138\n162%\n13%\n11%\n7%\n21%\n43%\n29%\n35%\n38%\n63%\n15%\n19\n34%\n35\n51%\n14%\n44%\n13\nKenn Copper ..\nKresge S S\nKroegger k Toll\nMack Truck   ..\nMilwaukee Pfd\nMont Ward \t\nNash Motors ...\nNa Dairy Prod\nN Pow k LI\n36%\n21%\n35%\n31%\n29%    29\n40%\n17%\n23%\n9%\nNY Central    34%\n33%\n10\n30%\n42%\n19\n10\n31%\n38%\n35%\n59%\n18%\nPac Gas k Elec\nPack Motors .\nPenn R R\t\nPhillips Pete-\nPure OU\t\nRadio Corp ..\nRadio Keith Or    6%\nRem Rand   -   21%\nShell Union .... 17%\nS Cal Edison ....\nSouth Pacific ..\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan Oil of N J\nStewart Warner\nStudebaker      11%\nTex Corp  -   38%\nTex Gulf Sul ...   35%\nTimken Roller    61%\nUnder Type   \u2014\nUn Carbide    80%\nUn Oil of Cal....   22%\nUn Aircraft    22%\nUnited Bis     26%\nUn  Pacific      \u2014\nUS Pipe    33%\nU S Rubber    29%\nU S Steel     57%\nVan Steel     18%\nWarner Bros ....   10\nWest Electric .... 108%\nWest Union     77%\nIWoolworth       48%\n70% ' YeUow Truck ...   18%\n39%\n17\n22%\n9%\n32%\n33\n9%\n29%\n41%\n18%\n9%\n6\n20%\n17%\n29%\n38%\n35\n58%\n17%\n11%\n32%\n34%\n60%\n78%\n22%\n21%\n26%\n33%\n28%\n54%\n17%\n9%\n106\n75\n48%\n17%\n35%\n31%\n22%\n29\n1%\n39%\n17\n22%\n9%\n32%\n33\n9%\n29%\n41%\n18%\n9%\n6\n21%\n17%\n25%\n29%\n38%\n33\n58%\n17%\n11%\n32%\n35%\n60%\n87%\n79\n22%\n22\n26%\n125\n33%\n28%\n55\n17%\n9%\n166%\n75\n48%\n17%\n .2908\n .0230\n \u201e   .1369\n(Compiled by the Roysl Bank of\nCanada).\nBONDS STEADY\nNEW YORK, May 11 (AP)-A\nsteady undertone ruled most groups\nin today's quiet bond market, featured by a sharp rally in some, of\nthe recently depressed French issues. French government stamped\n7%s of 1941 gained 7 points at 182.\nUnstamped 7%s, however, broke\n19 points to 151 and failed to rally.\nUnited States domestic and government bonds strengthened.\nVANCOUVER, May 11 (CD-Major James It. Lowery today was reelected president of Pacific Eastern\nGold Ltd., with Glen C. Hyatt vice-\npresident and G. F. V. Hudson secre-\ntaryrtreasurer. Directors, all reelected, are: M. W. Doherty, A. L. Hager,\nW. McAdams, Col. E. Gerald Hanson, F. R. Macdonald, A. F. Noel,\nGen. Victor W. Odium\nNelson Spencer.\nTORONTO, May 11 (CP)-SeU-\nIng became a little too persistent\nfor market bulls today and mining\nshare prices Were allowed to slip in\nthe closing stage. Volume was heavy\nat 2,534,000 shares.\nThe day's sensation was O'Brien\nas it climbed 59 cents to 1.69. Hard- .\nrock, crowded out of the spotlight\nby O'Brien, was on the down grade\nunder active profit-taking and closed '\nat 1.74, off 20 cents net\nBuffalo Ankerite firmed and Premier added 6 cents. Gains of 2 to 4\ncents were posted for Greene Sta-\nbell, Gunnar and Big Missouri while\nWayside and Murphy improved substantially.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, May 11 (AP).-Cop-\nper quiet; electrolytic spot and future 9.50; export 9.17%.\nTin irregular, spot and nearby\n46.70\u201480; future 49.15\u201429.\nIron quiet, No. 2, f.o.b. Eastern\nPennsylvania 20.50; Buffalo 19.80;'\nAlabama 15.50.\nLead steady; spot New York 4.80\n-65; East St Louis 4-48.\nZmc dull; East St. Louis spot and\nfuture 4.90.\nAluminum 19.00\u201422.00.\nAntimony, spot 13.80.\nQuicksilver 76J0.\nWolframite 16.00.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nfrom Friday, at 44%.\nAt London closing: Copper, standard spot \u00a336 15s; future \u00a337 2s 6d.\nElectrolytic, spot *4l; futon *tl '\n10a.\nTin, spot <2M 6s; future $187\n12s 3d.\nLead, spot \u00abl\u00bb 7s Sd; future US\nIDs.\nZinc, spot \u00a314 10s; future lit lit.\nC.P.R.  TRAFFIC   EARNINGS  UP\nMONTREAL, May 11 (CP)-lty\ncrease of 8404,000 was shown today\nIn traffic earnings of $2,557,000 by\nCanadian Pacific RaUway company\ntor week ended May 7 compared\nwith $2,153,000 tor the corresponding period last year.\nU.S.   DOLLAR   GAIN*\nMONTREAL, May 11 (CP). -\nPound sterling slipped 1 8-16 cent*\nto $4.96 31-32 on Montreal foreign\nexchanges today. The United States\ndollar waa up MS cent at 3-82\npremium while the French franc\ngained .01 cent at 6.80 cents.\nFIVE-CENT   DROP  IN  COLD\nMONTREAL, May 11 (CP).-rBar\ngold iq London dawn five centa at\n$34.91 In Canadian funds; 140s 6d\n*. ..\u00bb-.>  British  funds.  The fixed  838\nand CoL I Washington price amounted ot $39.01\nin Canadian.\nMontreal Silver Quotations\ni     .     ,\nMONTREAL, Msy 11 (CP)\u2014Silver futures closed firmer today, un\u00ab '\nchanged to 47 points up. Sales eight contracts: May 3, July 5.\nOpen      High      Low      Close\nMay  - \u2014 .- 45.32B      45.40     45.32      45.45B\nJuly    43.60B      48.70      45.65      49.80B\nDow-Jones Averages\n30 industrids\t\n20 rails  _\t\n20 utilities\t\n40 bonds\t\nHigh\n148.85\n,  43.96\n.   29.38\nLow\n146.44\n43.32\n28.91\nClose\n148.88\n43.38\n\u2014      101.44\nChange\noff 1.00\noff 0.37\noff 0.28 :\noff 0.02 I\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBRINCINC Uf FATHER\nBy Cte. McManm\nBell  Telephone   _ 143%\nB C Packing ...\nBrazilian   -...\nB C Power A .\nBuild Prod \t\nCanada Bronze\nCan Car Fdy\nCanada Cement\nCanada Cement Pfd\nCan Ind Al A \u2014\nCan Ind Al B _\nCan Pac Rail \u2014\nCan  Steamers  \t\nCockshutt  \t\nCon M k S\n10%\n28%\n32%\n36\n5%\n6%\n65%\n7%\n7\n12%\n1.40\n6%\n35\n37\nDominion Bridge\t\nDominion Glass \u201e .- 111%\nDominion Textiles      \"\"\nFord Canada A \t\nGn St Wa-es _\t\nChat   Gurd   \t\nHamilton Br \t\nInt Nickel\n87\nImperisl  Oil\t\nImperial Tob Can .\nInU Petrol\t\nMcColI Front-    18%\nMitchell Robt \u201e      6ft\nPage Hersey  HVi\nBANKS\nCanada    87\nCanadien   137V\nCommerce  121V\nMontreal  187\nNova Scotia 283\nRoyal  167\nMassey Harris\t\nMontreal Power.\nNat Steel Car ....\nNat Brewing\t\nOgllvie\t\nPower Corp\t\nPrice Bros \t\nQuebec  . \t\nShawinlgan\n21%\n3%\n7%\n4%\n44%\n5\n31%\n12%\n42\n222%\n13\n2%\n17\n20%\n18%\n12%\nLEGAL NOTICES\nSherwln Wms\t\nSouth Can Pow _\t\nSteel of Canada    62%\nCURBS\nAssd Breweries \t\nBrew 8s Dlst  ...\nB A Oil       \t\nBruck Silk \t\nCanada Celanese \t\nCanada Dredge        44\nCanada Malting     30%\nCanada  Wineries       2%\nDominion  Stores      8%\nDryden Paper     4%\n.90\n23\n12%\n25%\nFOR SALE BY TENDER\nEQUIPMENT OF HOWLAND &\nWALTZ CO., LIMITED AT KASLO,\nB. C, Including tractor, tractor and\nother sleighs, machinery. CAMP and\nother equipment suitable for log-'\ngers.\" miners' and general contractors' use.\nTenders are Invited for tht put*'\nchase of the whole, or.of any pari\nnot less than $100.00 in value, of'\nthis equipment as it stands stored in\nthe Lsngham Block or in shads at\nKaslo, B. C. Neither the lowest or\nany tender will necessarily be ac-\ncepted. Copy of Inventory may b\u00abV\nobtained from H. S. Whellams, CP.Ot,\nBox 472), Kaslo, B. C, with Whom\narrangements to inspect can bo\nmade, or from the undersigned. AD)\ntenders must be delivered to the un*\nderslgned on or before May 30th,\n1936.\nW. R. CARMICHAEL,\nReceiver for the Bondholder*\n1422 Standard Bank Building,    .\nVancouver, B. C. t\n  ^\u25a0.\u25a0^-'\u25a0\u25a0-^\u25a0^\u25a0-\u25a0''\u25a0^\u25a0-\u2022'\u25a0*'^Y-lhgiiiiiirirr'i''--^---^^*\n-\n PACE TEN-\nONION\nSETS\n20c pound\n2 pounds 35c\nSpecial Prices on Larger\nQuantities\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nTrail Will Play\nJ Home Games\nFirst E. Washington\nBall League Game\nat Trail May 17\nTRAIL, B.C, May ll.-Schedule\nof gemes of the Eastern Washington\nleague in which Trail figures follow:\nMay 17\u2014Deer Park vs. Trail.\nMay 24\u2014Trail vs. Ritzville.\nMay 31\u2014Sons of Italy vs. Trail.\nJune 7\u2014Trail vs. Deer Park.\nJune 14\u2014Eastern State Hospital\n\u00ab. TraiL\nJune 21\u2014Trail vs. Stiver Loaf.\nJune 28\u2014Ritzville vs. Trail.\nJuly 4\u2014Trail vs. Deer Park.\nJuly 5\u2014Trail vs. Eastern State\nHospital.\nJuly 12\u2014Silver Loaf vs. Trail.\nJuly 19\u2014Trail vs. Eastern State\nHospital.\nJuly 28\u2014Deer Park vs. Trail.\nAug. 2\u2014Trail vs. Sons of Italy.\nAug. 9\u2014Silver Loaf vs. Trail.\nAug. 22 and 23\u2014All league tournament, Spokane,\nIn each case of Trail being mentioned last the game will be played\nat Trail. Other games are away from\nhome.\nCARIBOO WOMAN  DIE3\nQUESNEL, B.C., May 11 <CP)-\nA marriage partnership of more than\n83 years ended here with the death\nOf Auguste Anna Zschiedrich, 84-\nyear-old resident of the Cariboo.\nMrs. Zschiedrich and her husband\ncame to this district from Germany\nIn' 1914 and settled at Kersley, 14\nmiles south of Quesnel, where their\nthree sons had previously taken\nhomesteads.\nWASHINGTON, May 11 (AP)-\nA decision was reached at a White\nHouse conference today to consolidate provisions in various Columbia river power bills and report a\ncomposite measure. It would be\nflexible enough to adopt as the\nBasis for a national power policy\ntor federal dams constructed in the\nfuture.\nFURNACES\nSOLD, INSTALLED AND\nREPAIRED\nR. H.Maber\nPhone 856     610 Kootenay St.\nAUCTION\nThursday, May 14th.\n2 p.m,\n701 Hoover St.\nActing under Instructions from\nthe owner I will offer the following: Garden hose, tools, meat\nisle, tubs, dishes, kitchen chairs,\nKitchen Treasure, stepladder,\nwall cabinet, screen doors, mirror, tables, single bed, carpets,\nrugs, child's desk, curtains, blinds,\nstair carpet, books and shelves,\nfloor lamp, valuable viola, portable gramophone, center table,\ncard table, leather chair, Airway\nvacuum, Majestic radio, single\nfour-poster bed, 1700 period, etc.\nTerms:  Cash,  Goods  on   View\nMorning of Sale\nO. HORSTEAD, Auctioneer.\nSPOKANE MAN\nROTARY CHIEF\nMowry Is Nominated\nGovernor of the\nDistrict No. 1\nVANCOUVER, May 11 (CP)-\nCharles A. Mowry of Spokane,\nWash., today was unanimously nom-\ninted as the new district governor\nat the 22nd annual conference of\ndistrict No. 1, Rotary International,\nwhich opened last night; He will\nbe confirmed in office at the approaching Rotary International convention.\nApproximately 1500 delegates\nfrom all parts ot the Pacific northwest attended business sessions here\nduring the morning before leaving\nfor Newcastle island where they\nwere entertained with a program\narranged by the Nanalmo Rotary\nclub.\nW. M. Mainwaring, Vancouver,\nconference chairman, presided at\nthe opening session last night and\nE. Roy Wilson, president of the\nVancouver Rotary club, and Acting\nMayor W. W. Smith welcomed the\ndelegates. District Governor Stanley Long of Seattle responded, emphasizing the good-fellowship which\nexists between Canadians and citizens of the United States in the\nnorthwest district.\nSix new clubs organized this year\ngives the district a total of 73 clubs,\nLong said.\nTrail Softball\nleague Standing\nTRAIL, B.C, May 11.\u2014Trail District Amateur Softball league standing as at the completion of games\nplayed May 10 follows:\nP W L Pts.\nCurly's Cubs 2   2   0   4\nAllan Hotel (Rossland) 2   2   0   4\nLaurlente's Giants  2   112\nGreen Ave, Dodgers .... 3   12   2\nSuperiors   3   12   2\nWoodbutchers    2   0   2   0\nMORE ABOUT\nMOURN DEATH\nOF CROMIE\n(Continued From Page One)\nB. C. Nicholas, editor of the Victoria Times, said:\n\"The Canadian publishing world\nhas lost an outstanding figure and\nBritish Columbia an important factor in her progress in the death of\nRobert J. Cromie.\n\"Mr. Cromie recently returned\nfrom a trip across the Pacific and,\nas usual, was revealing his impressions of what he saw abroad, particularly in relation to the promotion of trade and Canadian interests. In doing so he may have exhausted too much of his energy in\nthat direction.\"\nIn the death of Robert J. Cromie the city of Vancouver has lost\na dynamic personality, a man with\ntremendous energy and tin unswerving determination to build up\nthe city in which he had such unbounded faith. Premier Pattullo of\nBritish Columbia commented at\nVictoria.\n\"British Columbia's loss also Is\ngreat,\" said the premier, \"for Mr.\nCromie was an ardent advocate\nfor greater oriental trade, pointing out the vast potentialities In\nthe far east for products of this\nprovince.\"\nHon. John Hart, minister of finance, said: \"British- Columbia can\nill afford to lose.such an energetic,\npublic-spirited citizen as 'Bob' Cromie. My acquaintanceship with him,\ndating back some 20 years, gave me\nmany opportunities to admire his\nsterling qualities. His family have\nmy heartfelt sympathy.\"\nThe Famous Romantic Swedish National Play\nVARMLANNIN GERNA\nAS A DIALOGUE, SONC and MUSIC FILM\nCAPITOL THEATRE\nTHURSDAY, May 14th\u20145 P.M.\nADMISSION 351\nThe first Scandinavian Talking Picture ever shown In Canada.\nPresented by CONTINENTAL TOURING FILM\nPilsudski's Heort\nto Bo Buried Today\nWILNO, Poland, May 11 <AP)-\nIn reverent response to the last\nwish ot Poland's beloved dictator,\na crystal urn containing the heart\nof Marshal Joseph PUsudskl Is to\nbe burled tomorrow st tbe foot ot\nhis mother's coffin.\nThe urn will be transported In\nstate to the military cemetery together with the coffin containing\nbis mother's body, which has been\ntemporarily interred at the Salnte\nTherese church here.\nIn the presence of President Ig-\nancy Mosclckl, the entire cabinet,\nGen. Rydz Smigly, inspector general\nOf the Polish army, and other officials, the final burial service Is to\nbe read.\nMORE ABOUT\nITALY WALKS OUT\n(Continued From Page One)\nBaron Pompco Alois), Italian delegate who earlier\nhad abruptly left a secret\ncouncil meeting, did not attend tonight's gathering.\nBy WADE WIRNER\nAssociated Press Foreign Staff\nGENEVA, May 11 (AP)-Pre-\nm|er Mussolini and the League of\nNations were deadlocked tonight\non the conquest of Ethiopia.\nBritish delegates said the league\nwould resist Italy's claim of sovereignty. Baron Pompco Alolil,\nII Duct's representative, finding\nthe council opposed to him, walk-\nad out of an opening council session with hit colleagues.\nThe Italian baron refused to sit\nat the table with Wolde Marlam,\nwhose country\u2014Ethiopia\u2014he said,\nno longer exists.\nResistance by the league, said the\nBritish delegates, means:\n1. The league does not recognize\nItaly's claim to sovereignty over\nEthiopia.\n2. The league does recognize the\ncontinued existence of Emperor\nHaile Selassie's Ethiopian government.\nThrough Alois), II Duce demanded the outright removal of tbe\nItalo-Ethloptan dispute from the\ncouncil's agenda on the grounds\n\"There is no Ethiopian state. The\nonly sovereignty is Italian.\"\nBut with quiet stubborness the\ncouncil voted to keep the Ethiopian problem on the agenda.\nAn Italian spokesman said the\nwalkout of the Italian delegation\ndid not mean Italy is leaving the\nleague.\nThe immediate effect of Mussolini's peremptory demand that the\nleague take its hand off the Ethiopian question, appeared to be a\nstiffening of determination among\nthose states advocating the maintenance of sanctions. .\nSeveral council members said the\nlogical next move would be to\ncondemn Italy's action and then\nadjourn until June, when a new\nleftist French government will have\nbeen formed.\nBRITISH CABINET    \"\nSTANDS PAT\nLONDON, May 11 (CP-Havas)-\nThe cabinet met tonight after a\nhouse of commons session during\nwhich Prime Minister Baldwin replied to questions regarding Ethiopia's status indicating Britain still\nconsiders Haile Selassie emperor ol\nEthiopia.\nThe cabinet met to study last-\nminute reports from Foreign Secretary Eden at Geneva.\nAuthoritative sources declared\nDino Grand!, Italian ambassador,\nwould give the foreign office a detailed account of his government's\nposition in the East Africa dispute\nalter his return from the fascist\ngrand council meeting in Rome.\nOfficial circles said the cabinet\nwas in favor of maintaining existing sanctions against Rome until\nthe league has reached a definite\ndecision on the Ethiopian question.\nIn numerous references to the\nfugitive ruler of Ethiopia in the\nhouse today Prime Minister Baldwin alluded to the negus as \"His\nMajesty\" He insisted that only the\nLeague of Nations was qualified\nto settle the fate of Ethiopia.\n4 PER CENT ON\nPERSONAL LOAN8\nNEW YORK, May 11 (AP) -\nMoney\u2014long available to the large\ncorporate borrower on easy terms-\nhas finally become' easy to the man\nIn the street. The National City\nbank ol New York today announced\ninterest rates on personal loans\nwould be reduced to 4 per cent per\nannum, the iowest rate for this\ntype of borrowing that can be had\nanywhere in the world. It had been\n8 per cent\nUSED RADIOS\ntooft over these used radio bargains, any of wb'zh\nwe will gladly demonstrate for you:\nRogers 8-Tube Consol Electric  $46.00\nPhilco 7-Tube Loxyboy Eltctric    , $42.00\nAtwater-Kent 6-Tube Table Electric  $15.00\nPhilco 7-Tube Table Electric    $23.50\nGeneral Electric 8-Tube Consol 2-Volt Battery $37.50\nPhilco 7-Tube Table 2-Volt Battery  $30.00\nSPECIAX\nOne 1936 Philco 5-Tube Tab!e Model, Long and Short Wave,\nBrand New                $5500\nTwo 1936 Philco 4-Tube Table Models      $35.00\nPEEBLES MOTORS LIMITED\n'HONE 119 NELSON, B.C. 113 BAKER STREET\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNING. MAY 12. 1199\nTHE WEATHER\nNELSON II\nVictoria 49\nNansumo  '\u25a0 62\nVancouver   48\nKamloops 48\nPrince George 26\nEstevan Point 40\nPrince Rupert 34\nT2\n68\n70\n66\n72\n65\n68\nAtlin .\nDawson, Y.T. -\nSeattle ._\t\nPortland, Ore. .\nSan Francisco\nSpokane \t\nLos Angeles\t\nPenticton, \t\nVernon   \t\nGrand Porks ...\nKaslo \t\nCranbrook \t\nCalgary _\t\nEdmonton \t\nSwift Current ..\nSaskatoon\n.32     SO\n 54\n. 54\n.47\n. 51\n. 47\n. 41\n. 38\n.41)\n. 40\n. 40\n74\n82\n64\n82\n76\n72\n42\n52\n54\n48\n64\n70\n62\nQu'Appelle 42\nWinnipeg  48\nMoose Jaw    44\nForecast fop Nelson and Vicinity:\nLight winds, partly cloudy, not\nmuch change in temperature.\nCanal Flat Couple\nHonored Guests\nReception Given Mr.\nand Mrs. Desrochers\non Anniversary\nCANAL FLAT, B.C\u201e-A reception was held at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. S. J. Desrochers who commemorated their 25th wedding anniversary May 2. The evening was\nspent in games, old-time dance,\nsongs, and stories. Mrs. Desrochers\nlooked becoming in her beautiful\nsilk lace wedding gown of 25 years\nago. They were te recipients of\nmany lovely gifts of silverware.\nTheir family, Sam, Bill, Jeannette,\nErnest, Josephine and Walter presented them with a three-piece silver tea service, coffee pot and tray,\nand a silver casserole.\nAbout midnight lunch was served, while Mrs. Desrochers cut a\nbeautiful three-tier wedding cake\nwhich graced the centre of the table.\nAmong those present were: Mrs.\nand Mrs. H. Cockshott, Mr. and Mrs.\nL. Renwick, Mr. and Mrs. Don Pat-\nenall, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Roberts,\nMr. and Mrs. Rossi and Mike of\nBull River; J. Stanhope. J. Ruffle\nand Norman. Miss Beulah Lennie, H.\nErskine, and H. Derwinkn.\nThe Athletic club held a \"bean\"\nfeast at the gymnasium May 2.\nAbout 30 members were present.\nTho remainder of the evening was\nspent in songs and stories, and plans\nfor the summer season were discussed. Archie McLeod occupied the\nchair.\nMrs. J. L. Roberts motored to\nCranbrook May 2 and returned next\nday, accompanied by her sister, Mrs.\nE. Banks, and daughter, May, ol\nWinipeg. Mrs. Banks is taking up\nresidence in the Nordquist house,\nrecently renovated.\nAlex Sinclair, game warden, received word M^y 2 of his father's\nsudden death. He left via Golden\nnext day for his father's home at\nAldergrove, B.C., to attend the funeral,\nSunday's fine weather beckoned\nmany to take a dip in Sinclair's\nrefreshing hot springs. Among those\nfrom town mailing the trip were:\nMr. and Mrs. Pearson and family,\nMiss Ellen Naestrum, Miss Rose McCallum, O. Halverson, J. Y. Halcrow,\nMiss Jeannette Desrochers, Alex\nCnirns. Fred Luck and N. Ruflle.\nW. Galliford, chief C.P.R. tie inspector of the western division\nwas a guest Tuesday ot E. Home.\nHe lett early Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. W. B. Smyth were\nErickson visitors May 3 at the ranch\nof Mrs. J. Harrison.\nMrs. G, Larson spent several days\nin Cranbrook due to the critical illness of her sister-in-law, Mrs. E.\nJohnson of Jaffray, whose condition necessitated her removal to\nthe St. Eu\u00bbene hosoitnl.\nMr. and Mrs. B. Luck were Cranbrook visitors. They were accompanied by their son Billy.\n\"Shorty\" Murdock, C.P.R. sawyer,\nleft for the new operations near\nKamloops.\nMrs. j. A. Ruflle left for an extended visit to Kaslo, where she\nwill visit with friends. She later expects to visit coast points.\nMr. and Mrs. Nels Sondell and\ndaughter, Runa, were visitors to\nCranbrook.\nGeorge Cockshott jr., local high\nschool boy, has been forced through\nsickness to give up his studies, per-\nhaos for a month.\nAlex Cairns, Joe Renwick, and\nMiss Lillian Sparman visited Cranbrook.\nJohn Basso of Canal Flat and his\nrecent bride, nee Miss Angelina\nCiprlan of Kingsgate, were extended\nheartv congratulations at a charivari May 4 in which about 100 participated. They have taken uo residence at the Arbuckle ranch just\nwest of the town. Mr. Bf-sso Is employed in the C.P.R. mill.\nMrs. Beck of Kimberley Is a visitor at the home of her son and\ndaughter-in-law, Constable and Mrs.\nR. S. Beck.\nOscar Frederlcson, who lost his\nnew coupe while at Yahk, has recovered It. A member of the Yahk\ncamp for unemployed was the culprit, who as well as stealing the\ncar broke Into a gasoline pump at\nYahk. He was finally caught on a\nroad In the vicinity of Baker mountain near Cranbrook.\nMrs. Harford of Colorado, U.S.A.,\nIs a visitor at the ranch ol tier\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. Joe Bellamy.\nMr. and Mrs. D. Patenall and son.\nTommy, were Cranbrook visitors.\nMr. and Mrs. H. B. Murray visited\nin Canal Flat.\nMrs. Hollmann and daughter. Mrs.\nClarence Barr were joint hostcssses\nat a smart bridge. Four tables were\nin play. Mrs. Vlgers won first prize.\nMrs. Doollng second, and Mrs. B.\nLuck consolation.\nQUADS VISIT\nTHE QUINTS\nBy A. I. FULFORD\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nCALLANDER, Ont, May 11 (CP)\n\u2014Marie had a black eye and. it\nrained here today but neither spoiled the visit of the Keys quadruplets\nfrom Waco, Texas, to the Dionne\nquintuplets of Callander, Ont.\nThe black eye was the result ot\na disagreement the smallest of the\nquints had with a door a few days\nago. It had cleared up so well today\nthe Keys sisters thought Marie just\nas beautiful as her four sisters.\nThe rain had no effect on the\nenthusiasm of the 20-year-old quads\nfor quintuplets and northern Ontario scenery. They spent the morning watching the youngsters at play\nand the afternoon fishing at Lake\nChamplaln near here.\nLeota, Mona, Mary and Roberta\nKeys brought the quints dolls, poke\nbonnets, dresses of the same shade\nof blue as the blue bonnets, Texas\nstate flower, sombreros and scrapes\u2014Mexican blankets from San\nAntonio.\nThey watched the quints through\na plate glass window for an hour\nand saw them dance and throw\nkisses back. Nurse Yvonne Leroux\nsang to the quints \"Savez-vous\nPlanter le Choux,\" and the babies\nwho will be two years old May 28,\nIndicated they did know how to\nplant cabbages by patting their\nhands on the nursery floor.\nMORE ABOUT\nQUADRUPLETS\n(Continued From Page One)\nKasper, a $22-a-week  railroad\nroundhouse worker who Is worrying how to support the quadruplets and two other children on hli\nsalary, visited his wile at the hospital during-the day. He and the\ntwo other children found her well\non the way to recovery.\nThe quadruplets took a turn for\nthe worse In the forenoon, running\nsub-normal  temperatures and  losing their  healthy color. Dr.  Jani\nwas notified and Immediately  ordered human milk for his small\npatient. Previously they had  been\nted a diet ol water, whisky and glucose   from   an   eye   dropper.   The\nbabies recovered and regained their\nprevious condition.\nMayor Turner has been hopeful\nof arranging some sort of financial\naid for the quadruplets and the\n.Casper family.\nMeanwhile, local hopes that the\nKasper babies might lay claim to\nfame as Jersey's lirst quadruplets\nvanished when state library records\nat Trenton disclosed such a multiple\nbirth had occurred in 1929. The\nrecords merely noted the birth and\ngave no names or details.\nFISHING\n.    TACKLE\nRods, Reels, Lines, Leaders,\nFlies, Wat and Dry and all\ntha bait makes of Spoons.\nCITY DRUG CO.\nYour Rexall Store\nPhone 14 ' Box \u00ab0\n1,000,000 Italians\nfor Ethiopia\nROME, May 11 (AP)\u2014King Victor\nEmmanuel of Italy may be crowned\nemperor of Ethiopia in the holy\nEthiopian city of Aksum, an official\nsource disclosed tonight.\n(Defence of the holy Ethiopian\nlcty, reported hiding place of the\nsacred ark of the convent, led Emperor Haile Selassie to declare the\nstruggle against the Italian invaders\na \"holy war\" last fall. The city fell\nOct. 13).\nPlans for industrial development\nof the newy-proclalmed Italian territory were placed In the hands of\nCount Giuseppe Volpl, president of\nthe Fascist confederation of Industrialists. Count Volpl was instructed\nto organise technical groups to develop Ethiopia.\nA list of 200,000 families who are\nto be sent as colonists to Ethiopia\nhas been prepared by the commissariat for internal immigration, It'\nwas disclosed.\nThe commissariat Is a govern\nmental body which controls the\nmovements of workers and farmers\nfrom one section of Italy to another.\nThe 200,000 families include ap-\nproxlxmately 1,000,000 persons. Part\not them are families of soldiers and\nworkmen who are now in East\nAlrlca.\nTWO BOY8 HIT BY LIGHTNING\nQUEBEC, May 11 (CP)-Two\nbrothers named Fecteau, 16 and 17\nyears ol age; were recovering today\nfrom burns about the legs, sulfered\nSaturday when a bolt of lightning\nentered their home at St. Lambert,\nLevis county. The lightning started\na lire in the house but it was ex\ntinguished without trouble. Other\nmembers of the family were uninjured.\nDREAM  COME8 TRUE\nWINCHESTER, England <CP)-\nTwenty-four hours after Mrs. San-\nkey of Alresford Road, near here,\ndreamed her 6-year-old daughter,\nGrace, had been injured, the child\nwas knocked down and killed by a\nmotor car.\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL\nThis column Is In charge ot 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\nteleDhoncd to her at her home In TraiL\nTRAIL, B. C, May 11 \u2014 Miss\nLouise Cusick and Fred Cusick were\nguests of honor Saturday evening al\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Ollis when Miss Edith Ollis entertained\nat a delightful birthday party.\nDancing provided the entertainment, delicious refreshments being\nserved. Included among the guests\nwere Mr. and Mrs. Charles Thorndale, Miss Margaret Johnson, Miss\nAthlyn Lowes, Miss Joan Hudson,\nMonty Graham, Lome Davis, Donald Williamson, and Miss D. Irvin.\nMiss D. McDonell, Miss M. Irvin\nand J. McDonell of Rossland.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Oscar Robinson, Columbia avenue, have as their guests\nlor three weeks, Mrs. Robinson's\nsister, Mrs. Walter Hudson of Vancouver and her daughter, Hannah.\nMrs. Hudson resided in Trail foi\nseveral years, leaving here for Nelson about five years ago.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nW. R. Thomson, Cedar avenue,\nwho attended a convention of insurance men, held at Bermuda, returned during the week-end to Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThurlow Cumming motored Sunday to Grand Forks where he visited his sister, Mrs. Joe Willis, and\nhis father, A. E. Cumming,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. C. Bishop and daughter\nJoyce were visitors Sunday to Spokane.\n\u2022 O     0\nMrs. A. Coombs ol New Denver\nis visiting her sons-in-law and\ndaughters. Mr. and Mrs. T. Y. Ew-\ning and Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Kavic.\nand her son, Norman Coombs here.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. Otto Qulnstrom has left for\nRochester where she will receive\nmedical attention.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWilliam Kemp ol the Velvet mine\nvisited during the week-end in\nTrail, the guest of his mother and\nof his brother-in-law and sister,\nMr. and Mrs. William Ferguson.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u25a0\nColin Baker has returned to Trail\nfrom Nelson where during the\nweek-end he was the guest of his\nparents.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Nicholson, accompanied by his\ndaughter, has returned to Trail\ntrom Nakusp where he spent a short\nholiday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nBert Donnan motored Sunday to\n\"Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nRev. Charles E. Molte, of East\nTrail United church ties left\nlor Vancouver where he will attend\nthe annual conference of the United\nChurch   of   Canada,   provincial\nbranch.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. J. T. Wilkinson, who spent a\nfew days at Nelson, returned Sunday evening to her home In Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. George Hamson vis\nited Nelson during the week-end,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs M. L. Brothers was a visitor\nduring the week-end to Grand\ni'orks.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTherza Kavic, daughter of Mr\nand Mrs. Valentine Kavic of Trail,\nwas a lovely bride when at 9 oclock\nMonday morning at nuptial mass\nat St. Francis Xavier church, Rev.\nFather Patrick Freney united her\nin ntarriage to Joe Sopolich of Trail\nMiss Fanny Bunn was bride's attendant and Paul Starevich supported the groom. The bride, who\nwas given in marriage by her lather,\nwore a modish gown of white satin,\nfashioned on form fitting lines and\nof floor length. Silk lace was used\nin the bodice which boasted the\nnew ornamental sleeves. A beauti-\ntul silk net veil cascaded to the\nhemline of the dress in left folds,\nthe fullness at the top being held\nclose to the head by clusters of orange blossoms. White accessories\nwere worn and a bouquet of pink\nroses was carried. Miss Bunn was\nattired in a smart dress of pink\nchiffon voile and wore a large pink\npicture hat and pink accessories. A\ncontrasting note was introduced by\nher bouquet of white carnations.\nImmediately following the ceremony, a reception to which relatives and close friends were Invited,\nwas held at the home of the bride's\nparents. The spacious rooms were\ndecorated with streamers, wedding bells and a profusion of spring\nflowers. A three-tiered ornamented\nwedding cake centered the bride's\ntable. Assisting the young couple in\nreceiving, the bride's mother wore\na black grown with accessories to\nmatch and a shoulder corsage of\ncarnations. In the evening over 100\nguests were entertained at a reception and dance. Mr, and Mrs. Sopolich will take up Immediate residence In the city.\n\u2022 \u2022* \u2022\nMrs. Laura Waters returned Sunday evening lo Trail from a weekend holiday spent in Nelson.\n\u2022 *   \u00bb\nMr. and Mrs. J. Wolfe have returned to Trail from Nelson where\nthey visited during the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nRonald Eccles returned to Rossland after spending; a short holiday\nIn Nelson.\nForfused Shirts\n1_NO WILT\n2\u2014NO STARCH\n3\u2014NO CURL\n4\u2014 NO STAYS\nOld man Sun hasn't a\nchance against this shirt\nfor the collar is processed\nby Forsyth so that it can't,\nwilt and become sticky\non the hottest days! Plain\ncolors and patterns.\nKMORY'C\nLimited\nCOMMISSION  TO\nHEAR B.C. CLAIMS\nVICTORIA, May 11 (CP)-Pre-\nmler Pattullo announced upon his\nreturn from Ottawa today that a\ncommission would be appointed to\nhear British Columbia's claims for\nequality of treatment in confederation. \"The terms of the commission\nhave not yet been arranged but\nwill be when the pressure of the\nOttawa session is through,\" the premier said.\nANTI-STRIKE VOTE8\nVICTORIA, May 11 (CP).\u2014Two\nanti-strike votes in' B.C, logging\ncamps were reported here today.\nNo more camps or shingle mills\nhad gone out to join the 2000 odd\nmen said to be now on strike.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nFirst Presbyterian church W.M.S.\ntea and bake sale Friday, 22nd.\n(815)\nInstallations and repairs\nJARVIS ELECTRIC.     PHONE 844.\n(344)\nTODAY\u2014Extra pants free with\nevery made-to-meaiure suit. JACK\nBOYCE. (783)\nKing Portable radios $5950, just\nIhe thing for the summer camp or\nboat. McKay k Stretton. (818)\nHave CHOQUETTE BROS. \"Little\nRed Wagon\" deliver you the bread\nwith a delicious flavor. Ph. 258.\n(582)\nExclusive dealers for Westing-\nhouse and Kelvinator Electric Refrigerators In this territory. Kootenay Music House. (756)\nHave tea and visit your hospital\nthis afternoon \u2014 FLORENCE\nNIGHTINGALE DAY and annual\nopen house to visitors. (817)\nKokanee Chapter 1. O. D. E. will\nmeet today at 3 p.m. at the Nurses\nHome. Adjournment will be at 4:15\nto allow members to visit the hospital where tea will be served. (816)\nANNUAL MEETING NELSON\nAND DISTRICT OLD TIMERS ASSOCIATION, COUNCIL CHAMBER, CITY HALL TONIGHT,\nMAY 12th, 8 O'CLOCK, ALL\nOLD TIMERS INVITED TO AT-\nTEND. (621)\nGET YOUR TICKETS AT BURNS\nCOAL & CARTAGE FOR THE\nMONSTER SHRINE DANCE SATURDAY, MAY 16th. ADMISSION\n$1 PER PERSON, INCLUDING REFRESHMENTS. MAKE UP YOUR\nPARTY EARLY. ALL YOUR\nFRIENDS WILL BE THERE. (820)\nBUY THE BEST\nYou get all the worthwhile features In GENERAL ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS. Storador shelves\ngreatly Increase the capacity. Foot\npedal door opener, automatic Interior light and sliding shelves are\nvery convenient, but above all the\nscaled-ln-iteel mechanism with a 5-\nyear guarantee Is unequalled and\nhas proven to be the most economical unit on the market. Let ut explain and you will buy no other.\nFLEMING'8 8TORE OR STANDARD   ELECTRIC. (822)\nMR8. LAWRENCE McPHAIL announces the following awards to her\nPianoforte pupils, In the recent Musical festival:\nPiano under 11 years\u2014Jocelyn\nDyke 1st; Catherine Argyle 2nd;\nLawrence Wilson 3rd.\nUnder 12 years\u2014Pamela Dewd-\nney, 2nd.\nUnder 13 years\u2014Donald Kay 2nd.\nUnder 14 years\u2014Elizabeth Ferguson 2nd.\nUnder 15 years\u2014Margaret Smillle 2nd. ,\nUnder 17 years\u2014Norman Boss 3rd.\nPiano Duet under 14 yeara\u2014Betty\nEmory and Elizabeth Ferguson 1st.\nPiano Duet open\u2014Norman Boss\nand Jol\u00bbi Harding 2nd.\n(823)\nFUNERAL   NOTICE\nThe body of Mrs. R. A. Aider-\nsmith will rest at the Davis FunerrJ\npallors until 2 p.m. Wednesday, 13st\ninst., thence to St. Saviour's church\nwhere service will be conducted,\nRev. W. J. Silverwood officiating.\n(821)\nTAKE A HOLIDAY TRIPI\nWeek-end circle tour of Koote-\nnays   and   Okanagan.   Nelson,\nNakifsp, Vernon, Kelowna, Penticton, Grand Forks, Trail $10.00.\nCREYHOUND LINES\nPhone 800\nNelson   Depot 205  Baker  SL\n(602)\nMORE ABOUT\nBUDGET SUNDAL\n(Continued From Page One)\n\"UNWISE\" ACTION\nMr, Justice Porter, presiding at\nthe inquiry in the court of King's\nbench, suggested to Leslie Thomas\nthat it was unwise for the son of a'\ncabinet minister to deal with insurance on the budget. The witness\nreplied that it had not occurred\nto him at the time but that he had:\nrealized it since.\nTomorrow Sir Maurice Hankey,\nsecretary of the cabinet, will give\nevidence. Neville Chamberlain,\nchancellor of the exchequer, and\nNeville Dixey, chairman of Lloyds,\nthe prominent insurance corporation, are expected to take the stand\nduring the inquiry,\nLeslie Thomas said he, his father\nand Alfred Bates hda met during\nEaster week but he said he had no\nrecollection of discussing the budget with his father at any time prior\nto April il, budget day.\nPrior to adjournment, evidence\nwas given that insurance amounting\nto \u00a33000 (about $15,000) had been\nplaced elsewhere on behalf of Bates.\nGREEK  8TRIKE 8ETTLED\nATHENS, May II (AP)-Premler\nJohn Metaxas succeeded tonight in\nsettling a strike of tobacco workers\nat Salonika which spread Into a\ngeneral strike and threatened a\nfood shortage. An ottlcial source\nannounced the workers and their\nemployers had reached an agreement providing for salary increases\nof between 20 and 30 per cent\nii\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg.\nFlannel\nTROUSERS\nA really good selection to\nchoose from, either plain\nor fancies, in Men's or\nYoung Men's styles.\n$3.00 to $5.25\nGODFREYS'\n LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHES\"\n318 BAKER       PHONE 270\nLast Times Today\nHIS MERRIEST ROLE!\nFunnier than\nhe was In\n\"Naughty Marietta\" and In\n\"T h a Affairs\nof Cellini\"! It's\na comedy howll\nThe Season's Gayest Comedy J\n\u2022tenwg\nFRANK MORGAN \u00ab\u00ab   '\nCICELY COURTNEIDGE) I\nOur Second Ace Hit\nALICE FAYE\nBEBE DANIELS\nin a rollicking,\nmerry adventure\n'MUSIC IS MAGIC\nHere Wednesday\nMAE WEST\nin \"Klondike Annie\"\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1936_05_12","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0412544","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1936-05-12 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1936-05-12 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\/1.0412544"}