{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0404063":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2021-11-10","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1928-05-12","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404063\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" Hagen Wins Golf\nSee Page 7\n15* MIi; Ifrtaw\nVOL. 27.\nNELSON, B. C, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY~12, 1928\nNo.  18\nSee Paje 5\nAPANESE RUSH MORE TROOPS TO CHINA\n'ogs Defeat the First Arctic'Flight by Nobile in Italia\nWEED AS II\nk\nFog      Over      Heavy\nlee Fields Halts\nFlight\nI FLOWN AS FAR\nAS FRANZ JOSEF LAND\nBucked   Snow   Storms;\n.-Tries CUmb Civer Fog,\nbut Unsuccessful\nCanadian Fruit\nTrade Commissioner\nto Tour Dominion\nOTTAWA,   May   11 J.   Forsythe\nSmith, Canadian fruit trade co-m-\ninlssUmer In Liverpool, sails on\nJune 1 for Canada, with the object\nnf making a tour ot the Dominion\nln the interest ot fruit growers and\nexporters.\nMNffH HAV, S|iil\/.berlen. May\n-The dirigible Italia was bui'k\nUs base here tonight after an\n\u2022mnl to riy to the little known\nIn Land, which wax balked by\nthick fog encountered over the\nfields. On landing here, the\ndmost mot'M* struck and dragged\nUt thc ground and will require\nilrn before another flight ls\nroptal.\n,eucral Nubile said that the dlr-\nle had reached Iran\/ Josef\nid, one of the few  bits fir  laud\nKlklng the mountunou-** stretches\nce and water, when the fog bell so Impenetrable that iti.tItinu\nId lie seen. The dirigible hail\nJady encountered adverse con-\ntons In the form of snow-storms,\nsaid that lie tried to find a\nthrough the fog nt heights\nglng from 1*00 to 11)00 metres\nI  all to no  purpose.\nTARIO FLOOD\nIENACE ABATES;\nOTTAWA WORRIES\n 1\n'woke Merchants May Suf-\n*; Heavy Snow Is About\nMelted\nONTO. May l.\u2014The northern On-\nlood menace Is abating, according\njrt\u00bb received here by Hon. WllltHm\nrson. minister ot lands (or On-\n\"The worst in over,\" stated Mr.\nison. \"according to the reports\nVe received.\"\n;>rmnl flood conditions in Algoma.\nearning and tho Nipissing districts\n\u00bbcn due, said the minister, to the\nlit  snowstorms   In  a  good   many\na snow ls now going off rapidly\n;tle further trouble is anticipated.\"\nof the damage -so fiu reported\n\u25a0en done at Field, above sturgeon\nAt Field a good many people\nelr homes and the Roman Catholic\n\\ was threatened for a time. At\nplace the greatest distress wae\nced and the Ontario government,\natliig with the Red Craw, sent\n. there to relieve thc difficulties\nich as possible.\n-Ottawa the flood situation is one\n;lous waiting for residents of low\nlands along the Ottawa and\n\u00abu rivers, Thc Ottawa has tem\ny at least ceased lo rise, although\nnbrokc store owners have made\natlons to have their stocks re*\nshould the water go much\nThe wharves In the vicinity of\noke are still under water,\nsr plunU near Ottawa located at\nhaudlere falls were forced \u25a0 lo lay\ndltlonal men todky. a* high water\nnterfered    with    certain    depart-\nDANGER OF B. C.\nPEOPLE GROWING\nUIVASMGANS\nSo States Clergyman in England; Another Says Whole\nB. C. Not Pagan\n, r!i\".N,U\u00a3N.-uMw' .\"*\u2014A Prominent\nofficial of the society for the propagation of the gospel this morning\nadded his comment tu thnt of\n('anon Joselyn Perkins, Kncrlst ol\nJlesmlnster Abbey, on the declaration  reported! to  have been  made\n',r\u201e??v*. J \"\u2022 \"\"\u2022\u25a0*\u2022 \"Wop i*\nJluildford at a missionary gathering at linking that In llrltlsli\nColumbia \"where the British pnr-\nllon of the iMipulallon Is Increasing,\nI here Is a danger of the people\ngrowing  up absolute!,   iwgans.\"\nThe official sahl that, there cer-\nlalnlj* was some Justlflcutlon for the\ni.lisenatlon of (he Ulshou of tlulfd-\n\u2022\u00a3 \u2014\",' h\u00ab \u2122uM not Wm that\n. ,m \"u}' \"' \"'.\" \"\"\u00bb\"\"\u00ab of British\nfolumbla was In danger of hecom-\n,','f.i F\";'in\u201e . Tl'\"   <*i\"a<\"an   elerg.\nmight possibly be encouraged to gii\nwest In greater numbers.    Distance\nhowever. mM a great obslacle.\nii.S5'*i *\"\u00ab\u00ab\u00bbil\u00bb!hool\u00bb had been established   In  some  districts  while   in   the\n^,8t*i,r.e\"lons \">e missionaries covered\n!!_, llstances  Sty  motor  boat,  but a\ngreat many more motor boats and motor\nraVclX!'* \"i?\"\"*! b,,orc \u00bb\u2022\u00bb\"\u2022 \u2022*\u00ab\u2022\u2022* could\nbecome really wide-spread.\nPUBLIC TO OWN\"\nP. BURNS STOCK,\nNOTJNDIVIDUALS\nSueh Is Statement From Calgary Concerning Purchase\nby Toronto Firm\ntne  p.   Burns  it Co.,   Ltd.,  in  future\nre he?\",:\"? \"?.* hcli \"\u00bb \">\" Piw\u00a3\nrather than with adivlduals Announcement of the securities luus\nbringing this about is the oily  \"ft!\nSfth0?!? yet t0.be mad\"! ln \u2122niect on\nwith the recent from company to the\nDominion Securities Corporation of -f*o-\nronto. It was stated by A\n,L -2\u00b0 wdel.1l representaUve of\nthe     corporation     in     Calgary     Prl-\nthe reported statement of W. J. Blake\nWilson,  vice-president of thc  company\nidentity of the Interests behind the\nP\u2122hllw\u201e\"\"11 \u2022*-* \"lKlo\u00abea shortly.\"\n... * .0\"<M.< statement. Mr. WUson\nrelers to has already been made, Mr\nBowden, stated. He denied, the suggestion that some packing Tiouse was\nbehind the Dominion Securities In the\ndeal Announcement of the securities\nIssue will be made In about ono week,\nhe said.\nvery Will Make\nGood Claim Arrears\nRevenue Department\n'AWA. May 11\u2014Hon. W. D. Euler,\ner of national revenue, stated\nit that Oooderham it Worts, dls-\nare making settlement in full\ne department of national reven-\nialms for arrears of sales amount\nmount Is sonic $675,000 and there\nbe no appeal from the Judg-\n\u25a0ecured by the department some\nago.\nonslderablc number ol the brew*\nive already made settlement and\nliber of others arc pending. Writs\nbeen Issued* for nearly $6,000,000\ns* brewery tax cases.\n\/ Steward on\nCanadian Vessel\nIs Jailed, Duncan\nroniA.   May   11\u2014Fronds   Henry\nn, chief steward on the U.O.M.M.\nIan Coaster, la in Jail at Duncan,\na charge of attempted  murder,\nIng' the   alleged   slashing   of   a\ni's   throat    In    tho   Commercial\nDuncan, yesterday afternoon, ac-\ng to Information given out this\n3**. by the  provincial police.\niy   after   noon   yesterday.   Miss\nDoherty,   chambermaid   fn    the\nwas found  with  her  throat  cut\nth sides.   The wounds had been\ned with a knife.\nBORS AND RIVERS\nPPROPRIATIONS PASS\nMan Held at\nBlaine Suspect\nSeattle Murder\nAWA. May II\u2014The last sitting\nthe present week sawAhe house\nunlttee of supply put through a\nlumber of Items under the head-\n\"hsrbors and rivers.'* with the\non of but a few items, the ap-\ntlons under thla heading for the\n:e of Prince Idward Island and\nIcotla. were approved Total ap-\ntlons for harbors and rivers in\nlootla are 1402.100; in Prince Cd-\n(ilanfl, I23B.ROO.\nSEATTLE. Wash., May 11\u2014Pollce\ntonight announced that a man who\nattempted to cross the International\nboundry line at Blaine, Wash., with\n\u00ab companion, was being held there\nas the suspected bandit slayer of\nPatrolman Fred fvey here last night\nThc suspect, who gave the name of\nJock Brighton, to the Canadian Immigration authorities, was turned over\nwith his companion to Blaine pollce\nby the Canadian officials, who were\ndissatisfied   with   their  story.\nWaterways and Power\nBiU Hoist Motion Is\nLost on Close Vote\nOTTAWA, May 11\u2014A six months*\nhoist moved by T. L. Church, conservative, Toronto North West, wu defeated when the bill respecting the Oreat\nLakes and Atlantic Canal and Power\ncompany sponsored by J. J. Denis, Liberal. Joilette, came before the commons tonight.    The vote was 68 to S3.\nMr. Church repeated his refharks\nearlier In the week lo the effect that\nsince the whole matter of Jurisdiction,\nas between provlnoes with respect to\nwaterways and power matters had been\nreferred to the supreme court, parliament had no right to proceed with the\nbill.\nGovernor-General and Viscountess  Are  Welcomed  by\nMayor Roberts\nINSPECT HOSPITAL\nAND NURSES' HOME\nScouts and Cubs Inspected; See\nSullivan Mine at\nKimberley\nCHANBBOOK, B.C.. May 11.-Their\nFS 'mA OOTernor-Oeneral and\nLadyt   Willingdon,    arrived    ln    Cran-\nnH\u2122hv \u00b01 FrWa!' \"' noon* So be greeted Dy a huge crowd of townspeople and\nthose from neighboring towns. The\n^^emL,%rty was \u2122<*l\u00bb\u00abl on the\n?\u00a3.\u00a3?. \"'\"\"on\". \u00bby Mayor Roberts.\ntne City council, the school board and\nK5lp5Ii1<!\"'i ot the board of tri\"'o\nLady Willingdon was presented with a\nhuge bouquet of roses by Miss Hsael\nBawlcy.  Queen of the Miy.\nHis lordship Inspected the cubs and\nboy scouts. The party was then driven\nto the legion building, where His\nExcellency signed his name, ft was the\n\u00bb\"t entry in a new register.\nThe    party   was   conducted   to   the\nir\\ of **lw 'overnment building\nwhich was dscorted with wild flowers\nand bunting: The official address of\nthe city was read by Mayor Roberts\nand  to which Lord Willingdon replied\nThe school children, drawn up In\nfront of the building and around the\nsoldiers monument, sang \"God Save\nthe King\" and \"O Canada,\" accom-\npan ed by the City band and the\nbugle band of the legion. Lody Wll-\nllngdonv won the hearts of the children by declaring a holiday for them\non  Monday.\nAfter Inspecting the new nurses'\nhome and the St. Eugene hospital\nthe party returned to the train and\nweto taken tp Kimberley. where they\nspent the afternoon looking over the\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting company property at that point.\nHON. NR. BENNETT\nDENOUNCES LIBS\nConservative Leader Speaks to\nGathering of Western\nOntario Followers\nLONDON. Ont,, May 11\u2014The Conserv-\natlve forces of western Ontario\nuembled here lu annual meeting this\nafternoon and tonight received a message from the new leader of the party.\nHon. R. B. Bennett, to \"organize, educate\nand agitate,\" and also heard Premier G\nH. Ferguson of Ontario present his government's attitude toward the 6t. Lawrence development project and, at the\nnight meeting, take exception to the\nfederal government's decision to discontinue federal grants for technical education. \\\n\"We do not seek place or power for\nselfish ends,\" Mr. Bennett said, \"but\nso that those who come after us may\nlive better, wo have served our day and\nveneration Whither are we sailing?\nTo what port are we bound? Whatt\nare out chart and compass? Ladles and\ngentlemen, you cannot play with the\nlire of the nation. During the past six\nnr seven years the Liberals at Ottawa\nhave followed experiment and*^com-\nnromlse to cling to power.\nMI'KT   KM)\n\"I heard the minister of finance himself admit in the house that one of his\nprovisos would mean the destruction of\na particular industry. The destruction\nof that industry was a matter of grave\nconcern to the people or Canada. You\ncannot play with a free people all the\ntime. The day when this hypocrisy and\ncompromising for power must end is\nclose at hand.\n\"The reductions of taxation of which\nthey boajst simply means that they imposed fresh taxes upon you then reduced them and asked you to rejoice\nbecause they did It. I could not help\nbut smile when Mr, Robb reduced the\nsales tax from 4 to 3 per cent. They\nfound lt at 3 per cent when they went\nInto power, raised It to six and then\nfound that would not do and cut it\nback to 4 and finally to 3 again.\"\nmm*\nMembers of Canadian\nCorps Express Their\nConfidence in Carrie\nPeter Gavuzzi the\nMarathon Leader\nForced From Race\n1HI.MO.NT, Ohio, ,M\u00bby ll.-witli\nFeter Gavuzzl. leader hi the transcontinental foot race, ieflnltely out\nof the contest, Andy Pavne of\n(laremon-. Okla.. was in Ihe lead of\nthe bunion derby flock tonight,\nWilli elapsed lime of lirinin\nGavuzzl was brought in i,ere' \u00bbt\n\u2022i I'm. The Britisher wa. picked\nup by a race patrol car U miles\nwest of here.\nII\nEYE-OPENER FOR\nVice-Regal Pair Marvel at the\nGreat Underground\nWorkings\nFlying Boat Is\nForced Down hut\nNo Damage Done\nOTTAWA-. May 11\u2014 Forced down after\nits engine cut out when the gas feed\nline became blocked, a Vickers Vedette\nflying boat of the royal air force piloted\nby Flight Lieutenant T. W. Hewson\nand carrying Lieutenant A. Johnson\na passenger, landed safely on the Ottawa\nriver this afternoon, after narrowly\nmissing the tops of trees\nLieutenants Hewson and Johnston\nwere   not   Injured.     The   Plane   itself\nMONTREAL, May 11.\u2014Confidence of\nthe Canadian corps ln Sir Arthur Our\nrle was expressed tonight when overseas\nofficers gathered at dinner to express\ntheir gratification at the Issue nf\nrecent trial at Cobourg. Pour hundred\nmen who*1 served ln Prance under Sir\nArthur sat about him at dinner.\nTo Major the Rev O D. KUpatrtek,\nformer senior chaplain of the third Canadian division, was given th i task of\nexpressing the feelings of 8 A.Lhur's\nofficers.\nSir Richard Turner, V.C.. K.C.D , read\na telegram of congratulat n o Sir\nArthur from the Canadian Lc (lor. league,\nrepresenting 600 branches li. Car.ida.\nONTARIO FARMER\nIS MURDER VICTIM\nWALLACIBURO. Ont. May 11. \u2014\nVictor Platjouw. farmer, wu murdered\nby unknown persons at his home ln\nSombra township on the night of April\n7  laat,   according  to  the   verdict  of\ncoroner's Jury investigating his death\nhere today. No arrests have been\nmade.\nPlatjouw lost his life In a fire whlcn\ndestroyed   his  house.     It   was   thought! ouv u8 service  to t'1\" country  in the\n..   that   he   had   disappeared   Just   before! matter of parcels, which, trom one to\nsuffered  no damage and  was flown  to the fire, but on the Monday  following! ld  pounds  weight,   have   been   oarrled\nIts   base   some   hours   later,   alter   the the  blase   his  remains  were  found   in' ftl   exceptionally   low   rates since  Jan-\nCOMPANIES ASK\nAN INCREASE IN\nEXPRESS RATES\nStarkey Advised by Kai! Board\nThat Emergency Relief\nNow Sought\npanies of CanMiu art asking the board\nof railway commissioner^\\\u2122 rSS\nlM?n!h?n, t^'r \u2022WMwuSi. made in\ninM_ ^r\/^Justment of express rates\non a basis to enable them to meet ex-\ny^'J\u21228 receivcd ^terday by p\"d\nnt\u201e, i\"^ey' commissioner of the Am\u00bb-\nSt S?IUInblfl- J*10 b0*rd- whlch had\nio1mtAa\/lpllCfltio11 ln *t\u00bby*nce on ac-\nSl0fih8 very extenttod freiKht rate\nhvq l\\?t ihM wt. JH\"e W Bs the date\nrLW.vSl *\"* further Amissions on\ntrifriJ\"f c1urat*i m\u00bbtter, by boards of\nM oti25?r in\u00bb\"**i Pities, must-\npe m Ottawa, and apparently Droooses\nl\u00ab WWMd to a declslSiT    V Propoees\nraTSS-   ^i1?*?! ,Tra\"lc   Association   of\nican nLiu?1*?\"-0' Its nwmber*-Amer-\n&\u00a3 5!Hway. fctpreas company, Cana-\n\u00ab2\u00bb, National railways express department,   and   Canadian   Pacific   Exnre-w\n\u00a3m w?d cIasa rRt*\"- *nd \u00bb W P*r\n*em increase on commodity rates and\nwitues that even thesTflfc^SJ* $\u00bb\nUon\"       com\u00bb\u00bbhles in a doubtful posi-\nanriVi?rert\u00abe i *?th Jrom the companies\nana rrom Interests opposed was ulven\nexhaustively from end to end of Can\"\nada befo\/e the freight rato matter became acute, but the personnel of the\nS^? .!\"* 2\u00b0 cllal*ed since, and so\nmuch time has elapsed, that the board\nna8 been reluctant to act. In view\nof this p. h. Phlppen. counsel for the\nassociation, asks \"for partial conald-\neratlon of the relief requested, as an\nemergency measure to offset the out of\nPocket losses which the companies con-\nlnue to suffer,\" Mr. Phlppen potntiiiK\nout tiat since the original application\nthe position of the companies has been\ngrowing steadily worse \"until it has\nreached a point necessitating immediate relief.\"\nMILLIONS   OCT  Of   POCKll\n\"By reference to thc evidence before\nthe board.\" points out Mr. Phlppen, \"it\nwill be seen that the entire receipts\nof the express companies during the\nyears under review fell far short of the\ncost to tbe express companies of furnishing the service, apd that, in addition to such loss, the revenues of the\ncompanies had not for years been\nsufficient to provide any return whatever upon the millions of dollars necessarily invested In the properties used\nby them ln furnishing the service, or\nany compensation for the service rendered.\"\n'Out ot pocket,\" losses sustained by\nthe Dominion Express company, now\nthe Canadian Pacific Express company,\nup to 1923. as filed in the Inquiry,\nwere: Por 1910, \u00bb1.20^.684.20; 1920.\n#1.267,107.49; 1921. 1159.210417; 1022,\nMO.070.43. To these are now added:\nFor 1923, \u00bb553,432.06; 1924, 9616.003.99:\n1926, 9652.218.63; 1026. $436,724.37; 1927.\n9392,03653,\nThese losses are net, sifter swallowing up all sources of revenue In addition to operating revenue, such as\nfrom capital Investments and from\nthe   money   order   business.\nLosses of the Canadian National Express department in four years have\noeen still larger, as follows: 1923, 93.-\n286.398; 1024, 93.445.422; 1025, 92355,-\n114; 1926. 92.157.325.\nNOT  INTENDED  BY   PARLIAMENT\n\"The position of the companies being\ncompelled to pay gut of pocket several\nmillions of dollars each year to carry\non a public service, besides contributing to the cost of such service revenue\nirom the companies' investments, and\nwithout receiving any compensation\nfor services renaered or the use oi\nthe companies' property, was never\ncontemplated oy parliament,' observes\nMr. fmppen. \"It is contrary to the\nintention oi the statute ana to tne\ndecisions ot this uoarU. 1 submit\ntnat some reasonable reuef must un-\nmoulateiy  be   provided.\"\nue suggest, mat ior thc purpose of\npresent lenui. \"no chunne ue aiiempteu\nin lirst ciaas rates.\"\nm tne secona- ciass rates\nin uie second ciass are such products as non-aicohouc beverages, bread,\njiuos in bus.es or cartons, Duns, ouittr,\n.*w butteruuik, teiery, cneeee curu,\ncueese in wood or nore containers,\nciams in ouiit, pastetuueea cream,\nliaictiing eggs ui standard cases, mar-\nam eggs, nail oi an descriptions ex-\nixpt uuimeu or in _m&s. irtisn or dried\niruit, animal gianus ior taole loou,\nseed giain, canucu honey, lard mu\ncompounds anu suosiuutes, meats ui\nail lonns except in cans ur glass, raw\nmilk, musseib, oleomargarine, bum\noysters, ueau poultry, dead hares or\nmoons, rons. sausase, ount soauops,\nseeos, buia shrimps, fresn or unea\nvegetables,   winmes.\na ne Kootenai is not a heavy shipper\nof  many oi  tnese  liems.\nComrnoaity rates, anown as producers rates, applying to fruit, nsn,\ncream, anu sucn products, are unuer-\nstoou to oe oi mure interest to tne\nKootenay. in the case oi cream. Mr.\nfnippeu states mat no change wul\n\u2022ue asaed.\nkiMMh.vii   ^;^J^^^>  ikiit  MTB\nTne Canadian t-acllic hxpress company, it is understood, gives British\nooiumbia aa a iruit snipper a special\niruit rate in summer mat is aoout\nnail oi the reguiar fruit rate, tnat\ncovers east aa lar as Winnipeg, in\nwinter the regular tarlfi is in force.\nWhile losing money, tht Canadian\nPacuic Sxpress company haa broadened\nHAVE TWO-MILE TRIP\nON A MINING TRAIN\nSee Huge  Concentrator; Visit\nHospital; Inspect Scouts\nand Cubs\nLiberals WiU Not\nOppose Jones in\nSouth Okanagan\nKELOWNA, B.C., May 11.\u2014After\na lengthy debate the Liberal convention here on Thursday by unanimous vote decided to place no\nLiberal condldute In the field for\nSouth Okanagan, during the provincial general election. The candidature of M. O. WUson of Sum-\nmerland was withdrawn. This\nleaves J. W. Jones, M.L.A., and\nMayor Sutherland, Independent candidate, In the running.\nARMY FLYERS\nWIUSALVAGE\nBREMEN PLANE\nTwo U. S. Army Planes Will\nFly to Greenely Island\nat Once\nWILL REENFDRCE\nIf\nIN\n20,000 Men and 5000  Horses\nWill Be at Tsinan by\nSunday\nSOUTHERN SOLDIERS\nADVANCING IN CHINA\nLeague of Nations Powerless at\nPresent; Seek Settle\nGrievance\nKIMBERLEY. B. C. May 11.\u2014Expressing themselves as astounded at the vast-\nness of the operations of the two great\nplants of the Consolidated Mining &\nSmelting Co.. following their trip of inspection through the great Sullivan\nmine and the wonderful concentrator,\nTheir Excellencies, Lord and Lady Willingdon. left here today at 6 o'clock following a three hour visit, to Kimberley.\nDuring their t\u00a3l\u00a3 through the huge\nworkings of the bullivan ln company\nwith General Superintendent E. O.\nMontgomery, the vice regal party displaying an Interest Inconceivably Intense, repeatedly nave expression to\ntheir amazement as step by step the\nprocess of Retting from mother earth\nthe valuable lead zinc ore was explained\nto them.\nThey were forced to admit the necessity of having to readjust their conceptions of mines and mining1 after having\nmade the two mile trip by motor train\nfrom the ornamental tunnel mouth.\nThey Journeyed by foot along the various cuttings or up snd over the great\nslopes, all the time breathing air Just\nas fresh as that outside. Electrical substations, telephone depots, equipment\nsupply rooms, and the enormous oxca-\nvatlon at one point which gave them\nthe Impression of being again tn some\ngrand cathedral, maue them think that\nthey were ln a great subterranean ctty.\nThe Immaculateness of everything, both\nln and outside the mine, was remarked\nupon. Souvenirs of the ore were given\nthem on leaving the mine. The uniforms worn in Uie mines were taken\nalso as souvenirs.\nVISIT   HOSPITAL\nFollowing the mine trip, u visit was\nmade to the new McDougall hospital\nhere as Well as the reception at the\ndepot and the farewell at the concentrator, the heart-winning genuiness\nof the vice-regal pair was maniiestcd\nas they went from ward to ward conversing with the patients there in or\nwith a pleasing lack of formality\npartaking of thc hospitality of Matron\nMiss M. Milburn when tea was served\nto the party. Autographed photos of\ntheir excellencies were Bent to Mlsa\nMilburn from the vice-regal train before it left for Cranbrook.\nBEE  CONCKNTKATOR\nThe' great concentrator where the\nSullivan ore Is treated before shipment to Trail, was next visited. Mere\nsuperintendent C. T. Oughtred and Assistant H. R. Banks took thc party In\ncharge. The operation of reducing the\nore' from good sized- lumps to the\nfinest powder was shown. So keen\nwas the fntcrest shown that those\nwhose duty it was to show the party\naround stated that lt was indeed a\nreal pleasure.\nOn their arrival at thc depot from\nCranbrook, their excellencies inspected\nthc cubs, boy scouts and girl guides\nfollowing which he asked that a holiday be given for all the school children, who, under principal Poley had\nassembled to greet him. Among those\npresented to Lord and Lady Willingdon, were Miss Kler of the high school\nstaff Superintendent E. C. Montgomery, N W. Burdett, Rev. W. Crick,\nMiss Clarence, Matron' Miss Milburn,\nMine Superintendent w. Lindsay, Scout\nJimmie Bonner. Cub Leader H. Abbott,\nScout Master O. C. Bennett, Concentrator Superintendent C. T. Oughtred.\nAssistant Superintendent H H. Banks,\nH. W. Poole, N- P. McKenzie, Scout\nMaster Ed Taylor.\nF0RTY-EIGHT BILLS\nOF DIVORCE READ\nWASHINGTON. May II.\u2014An army air\ntoday for Mlchell Field. NY first\n\"\u2022?\u00bb   \u00bb\u00bb   '\u25a0 \u201e'\"8ht   to   Oreenely   lslaS!\nSetS\u201etr.',tif1^e^remen' UMd \"*\nt^MSS'SSfc\"\"ordMKl\"' \u00ab\u00ab\">-\n..S'e,_iScl,ao\u00a3 \u2122  \u00abwh\u00abl  by Bocre-\nJSS nWLrM ,of.,he C\u00bbn\u00bb<\"\u00bbn legation\nHt,.ot ttle f1*\"* department If army\nalrplanca would be used. Sanction \u2122\u00ab\nJ&,by ,hc war department af\u2122r tSe\nproject     government had approved thc\ni\u00ab>Tb r\u201e*|Je<i'tl\u00b0n eipecta to reach the\nisland   on   Monday   and   If   it   landlnB\n'.\u201elr3\u00b1 w\"l drop from 'OOO feet with\ntwo parachutes.    UnleM the Bremen !\u00bb\n?.\u00b0\u201eW.n .1\"\"\u00b0- '.h^ Wantl \"\"hi\" \u00bb\"ew\nl.yif \"\u00ab rapidly softonlng mud will\nmake a flight Impowlble.\nVANCOUVER DRY\nSQUAD OPERATOR\nISHEIDONBAIL\nCharged   Conspiring   to   Give\nFalse  Testimony  at\nInquiry\nLONDON. Mav 11\u2014While the Japan*\n\u2022se were consolidating their position ln\nTslnan today further preparations were\nbeing made In Tokyo to aend reinforcements to the war-torn province of\nShantung.\nFor the moment thc League of Nations at Oeneva appears without power\nto act ln thc matter. Dispatches indicate the possibility of direct negotiation between China and Japan instead\nof action by the league.\nOrders have been Issued to the Japanese railway utiUjflrltles to prepare for\nne transportation of 30.000 men and\nmore than 6000 horses to Shantung between next Sunday and the end of the\nmonth. This would bring the total\nJapanese troops in Shuntung to about\n1,000.\ngas feed line had been adjusted.\nthe ruins\nOTTAWA, May 11.\u2014Forty-eight divorce bills received third reading ln\nthe commons  tonight.\ni i >m \u00bb\nBAKKISTDR  DIM\nWINNIPEO, May 11.\u2014Joseph P. Foley,\nK. C, 50, prominent barrister and\nformer member of the Manitoba legislature for North Winnipeg, died in a\nhospital here last night. He had been\nUl ln the hospital wince Monday when\nhe was stricken with a heart attack.\nBorn In Halifax. N. 8., Mr. Foley come\nto Winnipeg 30 years ,ago.\n\u2022m\nOO80I   ('KITH AI.I.Y   ill\nLONDON, May II,\u2014A bulletin issued\nthis evening by the physicians in attendance upon Sir Edmund Oosse. 79,\nnoted, English literary critic and poet,\ncritically 111 here, stated that he had\npassed a quiet day and that his condition was as well as could be expected.\n\u25a0BAD   I (tilth timi;\nOTTAWA. May 11.\u2014The third'reading\nwas given ln the house tonight to a\nbill amending the Live Stock and Live\nStock Products act.\nuary 1.    This policy has Increased the\nvolumn   at   Nelson   so   much,   as   one\nInstance, that revenue has been maintained ln spite of the slashed rates.\nSTATEMENTS   MADE AT  NKLSON\nWhen the application of 1033 was\nbefore thc board of railway commissioners when sitting at Nelaon, representatives from this district as a\nwhole were made, ln opposition to any\nIncreases that would reduce tho margin of the producer. Mr. Starkey\nrecalls that Mr. Phlppen at the Nelson\nsession suggested It was not the intention of the express companies to\nactually apply these increases In this\nprovince. Whether this ls still the\nView of the companies, or of the\nCanadian Pacific Express company,\nwhich handle*- the chief part of the\nexpress business arising in the Kootenay territory, ie not yet known.\nOilllvray, city dry squad operative, was\narrested Thursday morning by pollce\ncnarged with conspiring to give false\ntestimony In a Judicial proceeding. He\nik   held  on bail  bonds  of  W000. \u2022\nThe charge arrises out of the case\nof R. J. Errlngton, charged wtth selling\nIquor. Errington will appear for hearing In police court on May 17, and H\nw ,?!c,#,cted ,hat t,ie charge against\nWcGlllivray will also be heard on that\ndate.\nIt is alleged in the information\nagainst McOlIllvray that, being a witness in a Judicial proceeding, he, for\na money consideration, agreed to give\nfalse   testimony.\n\u2666 1\nALL PUBLIC WORKS\nESTIMATES PASSED\nOTTAWA. May U.\u2014After a couple ol\nhours discussion, the houee today ln\ncommittee of supply passed all public\nworks estimates for public bulldlnos\nVoting opened with a rush, but later\ndiscussion slowed the pace somewhat\nIn the afternoon talk turned to llu\nquality of air In the commons chamber\namounts spent for private telephones\nand on expenditures at Rideau Hall.\nFascisti League\nat Trail Is Now\nDisbanded There\nMinor   Disorders   Among   Italians Cause; Order Promotes Canadianism\nniAIL. BC. May 11\u2014Following\nminor disorders among people of Italian\nbirth on Saturday last tho newly\nformed branch of the niclsti League\nof Canada, has been disbanded by the\ntriumvirate, c. Lauriente. president; D\nDelolse, treasurer and F. Dardle, secretary.\nInterviewed today, Mr. Lauriente, who\nis a Canadian of 37 years standing\nund honorary Italian counsel here.\nstated that the Faclsti league in Canada has no objectives incombatlble\nwith   true   Canadian   citizenship.\nIts objects are to serve with loyalty\nand discipline the ideas of the eoclety\nba.sed upon religion, the nation, and\nthe family, and to promote respect\nfor laws, order, helrarchy and traditions of the race.\nTo love, serve, obey and exalt the\nDominion of Canada and to teach\nobedience to. and respect for its constitution  and  laws.\nTo vlg*ously oppose all theories and\nideas that tend to submerge or disintegrate the nation, religion for the\nfamlly\nOthers are to educate people of Italian birth toward good Canadian citl-\nzenship generally, to assist Italian lm-\nlgranta, to promate a better understanding of Italio-Canadlan politics,\neconomics and culture and to promote\nathletics.\nFormation of the Trail branch had\nno other significance than to enable\nItalians visiting relative* in Ital*. to\nshow their sympathy with Premier\nMussolini's administration and efforts\nto unify Italy politically, states Mr.\nLauriente.\n,y     13.~TM\nNotoro   hat\nIM INK   CAKBIKK\nTSINOTAO. China, M\nJapanese aircraft tender\narrived here.\n(HlMiNi;   ADVANCE\nTOKYO. May 13.\u2014Dispatches from\nTientsin to the Jnpaneee news agency\nreport great unrest among the Chinese\nowing to the rumor that soxtthern soldiers who have Joined Feng Yu Hsung\nare advancing northward. The northern forces are said to have evacuated\nTechchow   rather   than   fight.\nSEATTLE ROCKED\nBY TIME BOMB\nPlaced in Alley Between Theaters;  Little  Damage is\nDone\nSEATTLE, May 11\u2014Downtown Seattle\nwas rocked when a homb. believed to\nhave been placed in the alley between\nthe Colonial and Capltol theaters and\nset for H o'clock, exploded, shattering\nnearby windows u.v. flliuuj thc Colonial\ntheater with  nmoke.\nAfter a hurried investigation by po--\nlice, who ruslu-d to the scene, they announced that tn an probability lt was\na time bomb, as no one was seen to\nenter or leave the alley for some time\nprior to the explosion.\nAlthough panics were nearly caused\nln tbe audiences of both theaters, no\none was Injured and there was no dls-\norder.   One woman fainted.\nPolice were without tangible clues.\nAccidental Death\nIs Verdict Jury\nin Coast Tragedy\nVANCOUVER, May 11\u2014Accidental\ndeath was the verdict of the coroner's Jury here this afternoon in tho\ncase of Robert Robertson. Britannia\nBeach, and Mrs. Robin* Rat*. Vancouver, who plunged to their deaths from\nthe third floor window of a downtown hotel Wednesday afternoon.\nPolice offers stated there was no evidence of a struggle in the room. The\nwindow from which they fell wu large,\nthey said, and the sill of the window\nwas near the floor-\nTOBACCO INDUSTRY\nREPORT IS TABLED\nThe lumber Industry haa placed more\ntowns on the map of British Columbia\nthan   any   other   single   agency.\nOTTAWA, May U.\u2014with many recommendations aimed at ameliorating the\ncondition of the Dominion tobacco industry, the report of the commission\nunder the chairmanship of E. B. Archibald ot Ottawa, which investigated the\nsituation In southwestern Ontario and\nQuebec, was tabled in the house today.\nThe Weather\nFrom the Dominion Meteorolodoal\nOffice,   Victoria.\nNELSON\nVictoria\nVancouver\nKamloops\nBarkcrville\nEstevan\nPrince Rupert\t\nAtlln\nDamon\n\u25a0Seattle\nPortland\nSan  Francisco\nSpokane\nPenticton\nVernon\nOrand Porks\nCranbrook\nCalgary\nEdmonton   .\nSwift  Current\nPrince Albert\nQu'Appelle\nWinnipeg  ,  ,\nForecast: Nelaon and\ncloudy and warm, with\nnormal,\nMm.\nMM.\n.   41\n14\nII\n63\n48\n60\n.   SO\n76\nft\n3\ny\n4\n.   42\n4\n.    30\nSO\n.   36\nS4\n.    Sll\n60\n.  sa\nTO\n69\n66\n.    SO\n76\n.    44\n77\n.   4S\n75\n.    43\nS3\n.   S3\n78\n36\n66\nm\n66\n30\n66\n34\nSS\n34\nse\n36\n56\nvicinity\u2014Partly\nhuuiWlty below\n Page Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 12, 1928\nI Leading Hotels of the West\nWlm teeesim Atcsmwsodetiom May B, Oh\u00bbdud\n: Merchants and Camels\nWiU Fight for Cellar\nPlace tn Trail Sunday\n'EAST TRAIL ASKS\nNEW POST OFFICE\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS ILN UP\nRooms with Running Water.   Private Baths en Suite\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men, Lumber\nMen and Tourists.\nSpecial Sunday Dinner $1.00.        Rotarian Headquarters\nThe Most Comfortable Rotuuda in the City.\nTRAIL. B.C., May 11\u2014With botb\ntreims holding the cellar position of the\ncity baseball league, the Merchant* and\nOamels are .scheduled to clash in the\nfourth game of the serlea at the Recreation park Sunday afternoon. The\ngame Is called for 4:30 o'clock. Fred\nMorrlsh  will call the balls and strikes.\nThey will line up as follows:\nCamels\u2014Mollskl, De More. Pasquall.\ntt. Lauriente, McDonald, Crowe, Oav-\nrllk.   and   Hamson.\nMerchants\u2014Kemp, Gustaeon. Ljron.\nScanlan, St.Denim, Hmibrlgge, Knlffle.\n\u25a0lisa^ oarland, Brennan and Ivans.\nHUME\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Smith, H. L.\nHall, Toronto; B. Silver, Montreal: J.\nW. Peck, Ymir- C. Ford, Kimberley; Mrs.\nKennedy, H. P. Leake. Balfour; K. R.\nMactoun, Calgary; L. S. Lewis. H. N.\nSmith. O. A. Bill, A. W. Glvln.\u00ab PUlowe.\nVancouver; Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Robert\nson, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. Dunn, Sllverton,\nD. McDonald, F. H. Stranger, N. X,\nShepherd, H. White. M. K. Landrie, F.\nFrances, M. Agoeslnelli. Q. H. Nickels,\nTrail; R. F. Burke, B. F Westby. trie;\nB. C. Forbes, A. G. Smith, Regina; E.\nF. Laws. Grand Forks.\nLetter From  Esling Explains;\nWipe Again to Ottawa\nOfficials\nTRAIL. B.Q., May 11.\u2014-tettara were\nreceived by* jEast Trail Improvement\nassociation tonight, from W. J. Ss-\nling. M.P., tot Trail electoral district,\nnnd from government ministers, stating that the building of a new post\noffice ln Trail was aot ln the ex*\npense estimate of the government this\nyear.     Association,   officers   wired   ex-\n' plaining the situation, and asked again\njior  *   new  po,**   otfica.\nThe action ot the city council regarding tne tax on crushed rock lh\nthis locality was indorsed by the association.    'Jt  expressed  gratification.\nIt waa decided not to hold meetings\nof the association during the months\nof June, July and August, aa ln former yaaia. The executive committee\nwaa authorised to call meetings during these .months if deemed neces-ury.\nFRUITVALE NOTES\n'Mystic Mirror'Is\na Gresi Success\nBefore Trailites\nTrail, b. p.. M\u00bby n.\u2014Playing before\n'a full house, St. Andrews' Soys' and\nOlrls' chorus scored vjfth a talented and\nattlstle roles In the \"Mystic Mirror.\" in\na first performance here. The 404 Mate\nVere filled and mfcny people were forced\nto stand. The fanciful operetta, in\nthree act* was composed and written\nby King l-roctor, and was enhanced by\ndancing. The operetta waa a complete\nsuccess. It was admirably produced.\nstaged antL.managed. The whole company waa remarkably well cast. Principals who could sing and who could\nact, big support Ing choruses of singers\nsoul well-trained dancers, scenic, lighting and musical support of fine order.\nall contributed to moke this show the\ncolorful and spirited^success that it was.\nROSEBERY NOTES\nSAVOY =\nNELSONS FINEST HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\nA   KERR,\n'\n4   B. C\nSAVOY\u2014Mr. and Mra. Brown. A. M.\nParker. Vancouver; T. C. Clark. Trail; R,\nW. HermlrHon; Valllcan: M. OIU, Sacra\nmento; M. Orth. p. Bord, Nelson: J. c.\nU Boozier, Bt. Paul: T, T. Olds, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Hewitt. Mlas D. McLeod, Mr. and\nMrs. M.  Forbes, Passmore.\nSummer Resorts\nWHERE THE FISHING IS GOOD\nOUTLET HOTEL\nPROCTER, B.C.\nFishing.  Boating,  Bathing,  Ooir,\nTennlj  Courts, Tourist  rark.\nFishing   Tackle   Supplied.     Orocery\nStore In Connection.\nW. K. WARD. Proprietor.\nOn  Kootenay   Lake,  20  Mile*.  From\nNelson.    $3 a Bay. $1? and $19\na Week.\nFfttHTVAM, B.C.. May 11.\u2014Rosie\nStarpp entertained her little friends ou\nher fifth birthday. Quests were Edna\nMoon, Roberta Smith, Florence Young.\nMadge Young, Katherlne Smith. Bertha\nMaaon, Bessie Mason, Margaret Smith,\nRosie Startup and Laura Startup.\nAn enjoyable danca was given by the\nBoys' Baseball club In tbe hall. A\nlarge crowd attended. Miss Wood. J\nBell, U Bell, T. Orleve and J. Grieve\nassieted wtth music.\nMrs. W. Smith gave a delightful after\nhoon tea for the Women's auxiliary on\nThursday at her home. Those oresent\nwere Mrs. Brewster, Mrs. Lowdell, Mrs\nMoon, Mrs. Young, Mrs. Castle, Mrs\nWatson, Mrs. Ross. Mrs. Knowler. Mrs\nMorrison, Mn. Rushton. Mrs. Finch\nMrs. Jones, Rev. W. S. Beams and\nMrs. Thaln. Mrs. Moon won tbe guessing contest and Mrs. Watson the consolation. Mrs. Moou and Mrs. Young\nassisted Mra. Smith at the tea hour.\nMr. Murdlng of Nelson was a Frultvale viaitor Thursday.\nQueen's Hotel\nIHE  CENTER OP CONVENIENCE\nSot rand cold water ln every room.\nSteam  Heated.\nM. E. BARNETT, Prop.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nA Modem Brick Building.\n616 Vernon Street, Nelson, B.C.\nHot and Cold Water and Telephone\nIn An Rooms.  Bteam Heated.\nThroughout.\nI. BLOMBERO, Prop. European Plan.\n\u2022aUBEM-B\u2014B. Wllbe. P. W Poss, J. O.\nQoblty. J. Oollthly. A. O. McDougall.\nFalkland; Mrs. tS. Jones. Ymlr; M. Mc-\nCulns. H. Mlzans, Perry Sidings; K. Mur- i\nray, Rosebery.\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nUNDER   THE   MANAGEMENT   OF\nWILLIAM   JONES\nHMD, CLEAN  ROOMS.    REASONABLE\nRATES.\n\u2022WOVE   75. 516  VERNON   ST.\nNEW GRAND\u2014A. Pearaon, H. Pearson,\nSouth Slocan: w. O. Bailey, Fernie: C\nWalters, Kimberley.\nOCCIDENTAL DOTE\nThe Home of Plenty\nA. O. TOWNER, Proprietor.\nFifty Rooms of *Solld Comlort.\nHeadquarters for Loggers and Miners\nMADDEN HOTEL\nT. MADDEN, Prop.\nSteam Heated Rooma by the  Day,\nWeek  or Month.\nEvery consideration shown to\nguesta.\nCor. Baker and Ward Sts., Nelson\nNELSON'S BEST CAFES\nROYAL    CAFE\nClassic   Restaurant\nRefinement and Delicacy Prevail\nOPEN  DAY  AND  NIGHT\nLuncheon 11:80 to a  35c\nSpecial Dinners 6:30 to 8 .-.Sflc\nWe Specialize ln Chop Suey and\nNoodles.\nPHONE. 18%\nR08WBRY, B. C.. May 11.\u2014W. Yoates\nreturned to town recently after a two\nweeks' visit in Vancouver.\nJ. A. Stobo of Nelson Is a visitor ln\ntown this week.\nF. Woodrow and G. Perclval were visitors in New Denver last Wednesday.\nA. H. Sutherland, fonducter on the\nlocal Canadian Pacific railway freight\nduring the absence of W. Yoates, returned to hla home in Kaslo last Monday.\nW. Clough of Slocan City waa in town\nlast  Monday   en  route  to Kaslo.\nMIbs M. Jeness of New Denver was\nthe guest of Mra. G. Perolval last Sunday.\nL. Cadden of Kaslo was a business\nvisitor In town las^weck.\nWillow Point Institute\nWill Not Exhibit\nin Nelson Fair\nThe Uni* ijartment l\n100,000   fli\nOf 250 lukes In\nof  the continental divide  had  flu\nPhlladelphiH\nIs   believed\nthe lead:\nty ot AmerU\nof the world\ntennis  clubs   li\nwith 20,000 players ar\ntire over 150 grass oot\nSome of tbe beet stake horses li\nUnited states have been nam\npete   in   the 15000 one-ran^^^\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\n.   jnentag   ______________\niractc.  nilar Chicago,  III.,  June 4,\n.tlonu\nthe\noriental  of the ArUhgwb\"\nMISS  KVfiLYN  NKATK\nA pupil of the Sprott-Shaw schools.\nVictoria, B.C., who won the International championship of Canada ln this\nyear's   Dominion  typewriting  contest,\nace ia-for 3-year <\u00bbt<te and  upwjn\nThe forest Industries of British Columbia contribute more to the, upkeep\nof the nrovlhce than all the other\nIndustrial   groups   put   together.\nSafe Speedy Relief\n\\f^ RHEUMATISM\nPain itope. Relief cornea\nquickly m rheumatic poteen\nli removed by Ttl\nT-R-C'*\n50. and (1 stall\natton at\nLebadho at the\nDoubled Taxes\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n820 Baker Street, Nelson, B.C.\nOPEN DAY AND NIOBT\n11:30 to 2:30. Sp-eclal Lunch   ate\n630 to 8:00 *pjn. Supper  880\nPHONE   IM\nMADDEN\u2014T. Hill. Trail; J. H. Dunn.\nYmlr; W. R. Benesch. Spokane; T. Paris,\nNelson.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\niVs Blocks Bast of Post Office\nBteam Heated. Bot and Cold Watar\nRooms by day or week.\nAlso Purnlshed Suites.\nP. a BUSH, Prop.\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B. C\nTHE L D. CAFE\nJfinest Equipped Restaurant ln the City\nOPEN DAY AND NIOHT\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice   Cream,   Soda  Water\nand Hot Drinks.  Nice clean furnished\nrooms, hot and cold water.\nWe  Cater  to  Private  Parties.\nTrail Hotels\nSteam Heated\nThroughout\nHot and Cold\nWater\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\n8. L. AND A. GROUTAGE, Props.\nBox 606        Phone 263        Trail, B.C.\nA. P. UEVESaiE, Prop.\nCOMPLETELY RENOVATED AND REFURNISHED\nHot and Cold Running Water European Plan\nCentrally Located\nSteam Heated\nRotary\nHeadquarters\nSample Rooms in\nConnection\n[\nJLEAD THE ADVERTISEMENTS\nKnow What Is Best\nMORE\nor BETTER\nFor what you pay is our\nendeavor in supplying\nPopular Priced\nMEN'S AND BOYS'\nWEAR\nThink what this means\nto yon, then call on us.\nBreaks the\nGrip of\nAft,\/*\nMinsrd'i\n, lootenitha\n\u25a0\/ s rfradiy grip of\neoldi In the thrott snd chest.\nThe following letters mre the best\nproof of Rs effectiveness:\u2014\n\"We consider jour Minard's Liniment s very superior article, and\nwi use It as a sure relief for son\nthrost \u00bbnd chest.\u2014Chas. F. Tilton,\nFalrville\".\n\"We can recommend Minard's highly for sprains, bruises, pains or\ntightness of tbe chest, soreness of\ntbe throat, headache or anything\npf that sort.\u2014John Wakefield, La\nBave Islands, Lunenburg Co., N.S.\"\n\"Have used Minard's Liniment foe\nCroup; found nothing equal to it,\u2014\nttw. fi. Sharp, Hawkshaw, N.B.\"\nYARMOUTH, NS.\nWILLOW POINT, B.C., Hay 11.\u2014The\nregular monthly meeting of the Willow Point women's institute waa held\nin Mrs. White's home on Thursday,\nMay 10. President Mrs. T. H. Applewhaite In the chair.\nSecretary reported 139.70 clear from\nfancy dress dance. Mrs. K. Metcalfe\nagreed to see If any girls tn district\nwished to take part in the judging\ncompetition. It was decided not to\nexhibit   at   the   Nelaon   fall   fair.\nA very interesting queatlonalre on\n\"Home Comforts\" vas conducted by\nMrs. Metcalfe, convener of Home Economics. Investigation showed that\nthe settlement has a large proportion\nof labor saving devices as well as\nneeded  comforts.\nThe greatest need ln district was\nthe telephone. Pew homes, it was\nstated, can afford the high rates and\nlt is to be hoped that these will be\nreduced. Following this waa a debate\non \"Buying Things on the Installment\nPlan\", opened by Mrs. H. Applewhaite\nnegative and Mrs. C. Shannon, affirmative. Mrs. Applewhaite explained\nand eiv.arged so thoroughly on the\ndangers of this plan that most of the\nmembra agreed with her. Mrs. W. J\nMohr and Mrs. H. Mlddleton agreed to\ntag the district in aid of the Crippled\nChildren  fund.\nMrs. K. Met-c&lfewas tea hoBtess.\nConsider Injustice  Pay  School\nTaxes Provide for Douk\nChildren\nINDIGESTIOl\nTroubled Him I\nFdr Two Yi\nMr. H. 0. Harray, Novar, \u00ab\nwritea:\u2014\"I have been troubled I\nindigestion lor the laat two yeai\n\"I ha\u2122 taken everything\naeen advertised, bat haw nff\nany of them do me n much\nNEW MEMBERS JOIN\nWYNNDEL INSTITUTE\nBitters\n'I have taken six bottles and ha]\nhad an attack since.   It ia   '\nmedicine you%can take for thf 1\nManufactured only by Tbe T.'\nCe*, Limited, Toronto, Ont\nWYNNDEL, B. C, May 11.\u2014The regular meeting of the womens institute was\nheld in the school house on Thursday\nafternoon.\nAll arrangement* were made and com-\nSleted tor the basebr.il picnic on May\nI. Sports for the children are prominent on the program for the day.\nMre. L. Mclnnes gave the proposition\nthat she should make an institute qullt\nwith the names of the members on\nbloc'\"*, combined with blocks of the\nInstitute colors. The qullt when Unshed\nwould be raffled and the proceeds contributed to the Institute. The proposition was gratefully accepted.\nFour new members were added which\nbrings the membership to 06.\nInteresting special recipes were given\nfor the rollcall answers ln place of a\ndemonstn^tjon.\nMrs. L. fllclnnes and Mrs. L. Davis\nwere tea hostesses.\nLBftAHtfc), B. C, May 11.\u2014A meeting\nof the Lebahdo Farmers' guild was held\nat the home of P. fltenson.\nThe guild ls to be a center of social\nintercourse and a means to promote Interest in all that affects the well-befng\nof the district.\nOne discussion was on the construction of a road from Winlaw to Valllcan,\nbu as to complete this link of the htgn-\nwav to Nelson. Residents of Lebahdo\nhave to go five miles round to get a\nstart *2 Nelson. The rood would be a\nboon w every person traveling through\nthe Slocan valley.\nNext was considered the education bf\nDoukhobor children In relation to\ntaxation. While ln sympathy with the\neducation of all children, members were\nunable to see the Justice of having\ntaxes almost doubled in this district ln\norder that educational facilities might\nbe provided for Doukhobors. It was\n\u25a0lard to see that the onus of providing\nan extra room and teacher should rest\nupon residents. This Injustice, as It appeared, was further accentuated by the\ninflux recently of many more Doukhobors.\nIt was redded to tako up these matters with *_e authorities.\n -^\t\nFruitvale Committee\nIs flamed hr Sports\non May Twenty-four\nFRUITVALE, B.C., May 11.\u2014A* meeting to form a sports committee for\nMay 24 was held, in the hall Tuesday. A\nlarge number attended. Those elected\nto act on the committee were Mrs.\nHepburn, J. Benton, J. Jones, G. Orleve.\nK. Knowler, W. Orleve, T. Orleve, E.\nOrleve and H. C. Davis, secretary.\nSoft wood lumber ta one of the\nworld's greatest necessities. Of all the\n\/ standing timber on earth, only one-\n' third is soft wood, hut the demand\n\\ for soft wood is four times as that\nr for hard wood.\nTroubled With\nPainful Eruptioi\nCuticura Healed\n\"I waa troubled with Itchy,\neruptions on my head for ov\nyear. They were very embartaaail\nin company aa I wanted to '\nscratching all the time, and if I -J\nacratch them a watery fluid oan\nfrom them. They were very pah*\nand my hair came out in patch's\n\"I tried many remedies dnrir\nthat time but without success.'\nread an advertisement for Cutler\nSoap and Ointment so purthi *\nsome. The irritation etopped l\none week'a treatment, and after v\ning three cakea of Cutioira\nand three boaes of Cuticura I\nment I waa completely nealedj\n(Signed) Mlas B. Rendall, 3\nKensington St., St. Jamaa, Ma\nSept. 7, 1927.\nCuticura Soap, Ointment and T\u00bbl\ncum are all you need for all t\u00abUT\nuses, Soap to cleanse, Ointment I\nsoothe, Talcum to powder.\nmtF Cuticura Sha*tn\u00ab SuckJ\nWEAR\t\nJUSTOiJlStieTHEHICHREHrDISTBCT\nWhen Food\nSours\nSweeten the stomach\u2014instantly\nAbout two hours after eating many\npeople suffer from sour stomachs. They\nrail lt indigestion. It means that the\nstomach nerves have been over-stimulated. There is excess* acid. The way\nto correct it ls with an alkali, which\nneutralizes many times lta volume in\nutd.\nThe right way le Phillips' Milk of\nMagnesia\u2014Just a tasteless dose In\nwater.     It   ln   pleasant,   efficient   and\nharmless. It has remained the standard with physicians ln the SO years\nsince   lta   Invention.\nIt ls the quick method. Results come\nalmost instantly. It Is the approved\nmethod. You will never use another\nwhen you know. ^^^^^_\nBe sure to get the genuine  Phillips'\nMUk of Magnesia prescribed  by physl\nclans for 60 years in correcting excess\nacids.  Ea<Tn  bottle contains full dlrec\ntlons~-any drugstore.\nMISS BROWN IS\nHONORED, NAKUSP;\nNAKUSP, B.C., , May 12.\u2014A large\nnumber of the members Nakusp Women's Institute made a surprise visit\nat the residence of Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge\nBrown, Crescent Bay, honoring Miss\nBay Browiv, the clever classical dancer,\nwho has been delighting the many\nNakusp audiences ln recent times on\noccasions for the benefit of various\nobjects for the town's ^elf&re. The\nmembers were driven down in motor\ncars by F. Rushton and O. H. Oardner, who made several trips. A most\npleasant evening was spent with games,\nrefreshments and song and the visit\nwas a complete surprise to Miss\nBrown. During the evening, Mrs. O. H.\nOardner, on behalf of the Institute\npresented Miss Brown with a check and\nin few appropriate words expressed the\nheartfelt thanks of not only the institute, but of the whole town to\nMiss Brown for help at all times by\nher wonderful dances and those of\nher pupils, and asked her to accept\nthe check -as a small mark of their\nappreciation. Mtss Brown expressed\nher appreciation of the surprise given\nher ln accepting the unexpected present. At Intervals Mrs. F. Rushton,\nMrs. O. H. Oardner, Mrs. J. Kershaw\nand Mrs. A. E. Fowler rendered several songB to the delight of those .\npresent and the party dispersed short- '\nly  before midnight^ ^^^^\nColonel Goode Is\nHead of Growers\nat Bonnington Falls\nBONNINOTON,    B.C..    May    11.\u2014The\nannual general meeting of the Bonnlngton Fruit Growers association was\nheld at Corra Linn ranch. The accounts\nshowed a small profit for the year.\nOfficers elected were: Colonel Goode.\npresident; Major Lee, Colllngwood Gray\nand O. W. Humhry. dlrectods; and O\nNoel Brown, secretary. J. J. Campbell\nof Willow Point. Kootenay director of\nthe Associated Growers of B.C.. and W\nA. Vance, manager of the Nelson sub-\ncentral, were present, and gave thr\nI members much interesting information\nto the policy of the Cooperative.\nFOR\nTIRED\nSLEEPLESS\nNERVES   :\nDrChase!\nNerveFooi\n\u25a0\nTHE  GUMPS-MYSTERY STILL UNSOLVED\n3\n*>\\0 SOU StC \"fWAT HEW\n.\\V>V(   IKS* **)\u00ab\u00ab  MWl HOSBMIb\nfcOUCWr   VK& \\ BRfcCEWVr  Yuat\n\u00a36Vv\u00bb 10.000-   SUE UN*  \"WO\nl-AMD*   NNO WtR OWN\ntWNWFFEUR.-   NHO XOU\n\u2022NE-JE*. SEE W1TR\n\\N\\TU TWT SNME\n*\u00ab     ^ 6\u00abW \u2014\n&.\u00ab..*\u25a0\u00bb\nAVWNVS   V.00KS V.WE N FA.SW\\0H\"\\\nV>\\-KTE -    TWE   .BEST  BRESSETi\nWOMNW   \\W TOWN -    ^ONV-g\n\u25a0WO^-EN   SlfAPUT  WNME  THAT   KNNCK\nOF-  *MNK>Wt   TUE1R UUSeNNbS\nV>EW> HOWEX  OW \"tUEIA - BUT 00\n\"totl  ^UP1>0%E   WE  CAN  NPFORD\nVT   ?\n.<3\n, WT    fcjfcNN&PVrWER  V.WE1J  TO 66\nNINETY-EVfaWT TEMtS 0V.& - NNO UE ^PENT\nTHE \\JNST NtWETT-SEVEN TEARS MtWbiN-j\nWIS OWN &<0VHSS%- Vf-A CaOVNU To F0U.0W\nWiS EUNWPl-E NS UJNfci NS VWv NBVC\nTO KNOW WWERE \"VWE V-.0N6T <iOtAES\n\u2022f-SOfA TWNT PNTS FOR. TOUR OUITWES-\nOTWER. MEN'S WNES CNN bRESS '\n\\N SNW*. OR. &V1RV.NP \u2014\n, W(TW0UT CNOSVWti V-.E TO\nJ1RV  WVTSEVF TO SVEEP-\nJ\n,ABSORB!N\n\/   * TBAD[MABM\u00ab0U5P41\nReducei Strained, Puffy Ai\nLymphangitis, Poll Evil, Fl\nBoils, Swellings; Stops Un\nand allays pain. Heals Sores,\nBruises,   Boot   Chafes.   It\nSAFE ANTISEPTIC UD 6ERI\nDoes not blister or remov\nHfrand horse can be worked. Pleasant t<\n$2.30.i bottle, delivered. Describe youi\nfor special instructions and Book 5 RI\nABSORBINE. JR., tmliepiie liniment tot yule\nducet Strain**, Painful. Knotted. Swollen Velnt. \"\ntrut-4\u2014onlf \u25a0 le* drop! requited it in tpf licadoi\nSi.2$ per bottle u dwkn w dellrercd.\nW F. YOUNG lac.   45 Ltmm Bid,., Mil.*!'\nIbsorbioe tad Absorbioc. Jr.. vc aide tt Cuu\n\u2022t\n4\n\u2022s*  Hi\u00ab ih\u00ab:\u00ab(o\nWS\n\t\n\t\n L_J\n'^^^TTTTT\n\"Build\nB,\nc.\u00bb\nSS*1*\"?\nA\nESS\nCase\ni*r^S\nAt a\nUJTJ?'\nTime\nMrs.   Jesse\nCarwln\nwho live\nSouth\nVancouver,\nwritea\nwhen the family lived up \u25a0\nthey bought Pacific Milk by\ncase and tt gave such satli\ntlon that since coming to\ncouver they have contln*\nused lt. \"I found It lnvalt\nwhen I weaned my baby, be\nfine strong, healthy boy t\nshe    writes.\nThanks   Mrs.   C.   We   are   I\nglad to get this letter.\nPACIFIC MILK\nFactories i\nAbbots-ford* and Ladner\n\u25a0lini.Ii 1). C.\"\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING. MAY 12, 1928\nAIMS OF IOC H.\nTOLD AT TRAIL\nBranch of Fellowship and Service Club Being Formed\nThere\nTRAIL, B.C. May 11\u2014Sacrifice, serv\n'\" in\nBAPTIST CHURCH\nPaator,    Rev.    6.    Q.   Turner.\nSunfliy jchool at. 8:48.\nMother's Day Service at 11.\n3UbJect: \"The Wages of Motherhood.'* Soloist. Mrs. A. H. W.\npfmlay.\nEvening service at 7:30. Commemorating the anniversary of\nthe Ancient Order of Foresters.\nSubject: \"The Man of Compassion.\" Soloists, Mrs W. W.\nWaters,  Mrs.   S.   O.  Turner.\nA Very Cordial, invitation to All.\n\u2022fa\nFIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST,\nSCIENTIST\n2(19 Baker Street\nA Branch of The Mother Church\nThe First Church of Christ. Scientist.\nIn Boston, MassachuM-tt.,\nSunday Services, 11 a.m. nnd 7:30 p.m.\nSubject    Lesson    Sermon.    May    13.\nMORT.U.S   AND   IMMORTALS\nSunday School. S:45 a in.\nWednesday Testimony Meeting, 8 nm\nHIEK KK,\\I>1V(. 'IOOM\nIn Cliiirrli Building\u20143 ta G p.m.\nAll <**>rc1toii> Welcome\nFIRST PRRSBYTERIAN\nCHURCH\nCorner of  victoria and Kootenay.\nMltilhMT\nRev.   .1     Voiiqawm.   MA.,   IV D\nAnnable Hlock.   phone 679L\nMother's Day Service-11 o'clock.\n(Instead of Sunday School, children will  attend   above  service.)\nEvening Servlce-^7:80.\nPrayer meeting at residence of\nMra. McCallum. 610 Hall, Thurs-\nday,  0  p.m.*-\nWomen's Missionary Society\nmeeting at residence of Mrj. Oil-\nver, 814 Hall, this afternoon ut 3\no'clock.\nSt Paul's Church\nREV. F. K. O. DREDGE. M.A\nMinister\nPhone  784     Manse,  815  Silica\nMr.    V.   E.    Wheclor.    OreaiiK'\nand Choir  Master\nSUNDAY,   MAY  ISth\n10:00 am.\u2014Sunday school.\n11:00 am.\u2014Morning Worship.\n7:80 pjn.\u2014Evening Worship.\nYou   are   cordially   welcome   at\nthese servlcee.\n. .Mr. D, Scott will preach.\nMONDAY\na;00 pm.-iadiee'  Aid   meeting.\n8j00 p.m.\u2014Board   of   Managers.\n8(00 pjn.\u2014Excelsior  club,   meets\nat    tyloses    Mackenzie,    416\nCarbonate   street.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014W.MJ3.  Meeting.\nTMR8DAY\n7:30 pm.\u2014Choir practice.\nFRIDAY\n7:00 p.m.\u2014c. a. I. T.\n1-6 p.m.\u2014W.M.S.   tea   at   Mrs.\nR, Armstrong's. ______\nice, friendship and fellowship were\nuume uaeu as the ~yiHa ot Toe H. a\nsetvice movement organized duntig the\nuiuer figuting near iprea in tne worm\nwar, wnen ttev. Ouben Williams, Toe m.\npaare of London, England, addressed a\nuumoer of Trail men at a public meeting on tne movement at Memorial nail\ntonlgnt. Rev. Wnuams is maaing a\ntour of Canada, addressing crowds interested in tne movement in all parts\nor tile Dominion, and \"mopping up'\ninterest  in setvice  work.\nAitnougn loo H. was partially organized in TraU about a'month ago,\nalready lt haa a lair memoeramp, m\\\noi wmch will be initiated here tomorrow night. With the initiation of these\nmembers, the branch here win mutt be\ntermed a Toe H. group.\nHORN AT YI'RKM\nHe stated Toe H. was \"bun\" ln a\nlittle town called Yooa in uu- ipres\nscenes of battle during tne war, wltn\nHev. P. B. Clayton, curiam oi tne 6th\ndivision, as tne ong.nai founder. Rev.\nClayton was itaiiuuea at tne chapel\nwhich was calleti 'iaioot house, one\nyoung lad came to lain and said \"there\nwas no sense in war, because ln a\ncouple of hours he would be ordered\nto go over the top and If he returned\nwould only bo credited with killing human beings.\" All they thought of was\nwar, stated .the spcatcer. anu ceased to\npray to Ood lor life after they had\nseen their pals dropped before the\nheavy fir\u00a3. These were thc difficulties\nof war, he said, and Rev. Clayton decided to use 'lalbot house n6t as a\nclub, but a\u00ab a home. A sign was hung\noutside the door, \"Every Man's club.\"\nToe H. was the vision which Rev. Clayton had at that time, stated Rev. Williams, a place to cheer them and to\ntake their minds off war.\nA fine carpet was laid on the floor,\ntables and chairs, curtains and pictures\ndecorated the house, and a sign on the\nwall. \"If mother let you spit on the\nfloor at home, do It here.\" to let the\nboys know they were to feel at home.\nHAD*\nIIKApl ARTKRSi\nHe declared that soon thousands of\nofficers and doughboys made Talbot\n'\"nae their home and mingled together\nwith i l,o spirit of fellowship, friendship\nand service to each other. Ranks of\nUip officer! were forgotten while there,\nnnd (Ue thousands of men became as\non*> family, tv.pv would Play the piano\nand sing together and discuss subjects\nHWity from tne buttle. There were men\nnt ;ill nationalities, religions, hlgh-\nolnfis people and even criminals, pe\nsaid.\n9c? three tuid a half years Tajbot\nhouse w:u a home fur everyone who\nvisited it. An old rarpcntei's bench was\nput in the nttie of ihe building, from\nwhich the men (mutually all received\ncommunion and oecame members of the\nclub later called Too T ' They were\nglVon badges as a mark of recognition\nend the coat of arms of the. city of\nYores was handed them as a token of\nappreciation for thn che^r and service\nTec H. gave to the many soldiers.\nTalbot house stood for the fellowship i\nof the club stated Rev. Williams.\nH.UMiK RETAINED\nEven to this day the badge with the\ncoat of arms wan used by Toe H.'\nwhich, after the war. was started by\nRev. Clayton and a few other members\nIn London.-England. Soon threegroupB\nwere formod in Canada, at Toronto,\nWinnipeg snd Vancouver, and now\nf1**-.*-*. ore 34 grbups ln Canada, he declared. .\n\"Toe HT ls not rn exscrvlcemen's organization, not political, nor belonging\ntn one denomination, but is open to\n\"II bovs over lfi years of age who are\nIntimated in fellowship. frlendshJo and\n\"-vice to everyone.\" said Rev, Williams.\n\"It tries to give service and supplv the j\nneeds of everyone and is even deeper I\nin friendship than moat clubs here ln\n\u2022\"\u25a0finsda. The Prince of Wales is keen\nI on Toe H.. not only because he ib :\nnatron of Toe H., but because of its\nwonderful birth, born in agony on the\nbn*M\u00bbfteirt\u00ab.\nF#v. Williams gave details of service\nI wn*-k   done   bv    Canadian   groups    in\nvieitMitu* the blind,  the needy  and  the\nr-tnnied   w^'ch Interred his audience.\n. An*, he stated. Toe H. was making its\n[ nnrwnl  all   over  the  Empire  and   even\n| through   other parte of  the world  because of service given.\nTRAIL SOCCER IS\nTO START AGAIN\nON MONDAY NEXT\nJ.   Ferguson   Is  Still  Hearts'\nPlayer;   Consider   Maple\nLeaves* Application\nTRAIL, B.C., May 11.\u2014City league\nsoccer to resume here with the Rangers meeting the Uniteds on Monday\nand the Hearts meeting Rossland on\nWednesday.\nThis was settled tonight when the\nfootball club executive ordered the remainder of the series to be played on\nthe scheduled dates. It postponed\nomitted games and one replay to the\nend of the scheduled series.\nIn the transfer dispute case, lt was\nruled that J. Ferguson ls yet a Heart\nplayer. He may play for that club\non Wednesday. He may transfer to\nanother club only after being absent\nfrom the Hearts' lineup on the field\nfor  two  successive  fixtures.\nConsideration was given to Including the Maple Leafs, last year's representative Junior team ln the senior\nleague on the application of J. Leckle.\nIt will be further considered when Roe-\nland team plays here on Wednesday.\nThe Dally News invites letters\nfrom readers upon matters of public\ninterest. A nom-de-plume may. if\ndesired, be employed, but every letter must be signed by the writer as\na guarantee of good faith, though\nnot necessarily for publication. Letters should be brief, and must avoid\npersonalities.\nTrad Sunday School\nTeachers Han to Do\nWork on Coast of B.C.\nTRAIL, B.C, May I.^Members of\nKnox United church Sunday school are\nnow preparing to teach Sunday school\nlessons to children located ln the\nisolated districts aiong the Pacific coast,\nstated Miss I. Kler, when the teachers of\nthe Junior department of Knox United\nchurch Sunday school entertained thu\nmothers of the Junior department at\ntea this afternoon. Rev. B. L. Oaten,\npresident, presided, there being about\n\u25a020 ladles attending.\nThe children of the Sunday school\nare now coitaaponding wtth ohlldreh in\nother districts and will soon start sending Sunday school lessons to them* dls-\n.cuafi5P J^f l\u00abaons la each letttfe; It\nls expected the names of the ladbted\nchildren will be received by the secretary   within   a   short   time, '\nMiss I. Kler also gave a talk to Uie\nparents which was greatly enjoyed.\nA musical program followed In which\nthe following rendered songs: Miss'\nEva Horwell, Miss I Kler, Mrs. a Rv\nMcLeod   and    Miss   R.   W.   Wellwood\nLadles assisting ln serving tea were\nMrs. H. Clark, Miss F. Moran, Mrs. R.\nHawkes, Mrs. J. Calder. Mrs. J. Docksteader, Mrs J. Burton, and Miss K.\nchalmer, Miss j. Chalmer and Miss P.\nRutledge.\nWADING POOL FOR\nEASTJRAIL NEXT\nCity Engineer McDairmid Plans\nBuild Pool for the\nKiddies\nTRINITY\nUNITED CHURCH\nIUt. W. C. Mawhlnney, Minister.\nBm. 701 Josephine St., TeL 105.\nMr.  F.  L.  Irwin,   Choir  Leader.\nMiss  lu  Steed,  organist.\nSUNDAY,   MAY  13th\n10:00 am\u2014Sunday  school-\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Morning  Worship.\n7:10 p.m.\u2014Evening Worahip.\nSubject:  \"Mothers of  Men.\"\nAppropriate music.\nAs a tribute of respect to Mother,\ncome to church,\nMONDAY\n8:00 p.m.\u2014Service   olub   at   the\nhome  of  Mrs.  D.  D.  Town-\nsend, 103 Behnsen street.\nTUESDAY\n3:00 p.m.\u2014W.MA\nN.\u00bb^-Service club Bake Sale, thi*\nmorning    ln    the    Annnble\nblock.\nsass\nMay Twenty-Four\ntbe Big Day at\nTrail This Year\nChildren's Sports Will Be Feature; Committee to Draw\nUp Program\nAden Only Useful\nto Britain in a\nNegative Sense\nTo the Editor of The Daily News:\nSir\u2014I notice ln recent issues a reference to Aden' as one of the great\n\"Gates\" of the Empire; if this has\nany connection with the words \u25a0 of\nProphecy as ardently intended. \"Ye\nshall possess the gates of your enemies,\" one is inclined to think it now\nrather far fetched, for aa has been\npointed out recently, Aden Is only\nuseful to Britain in a negative sense;\nto prevent any other power getting\nhold of It. The navy no longer wants\nlt as a coaling station, having more\ncall nowadays for oil-tankers. Aden\ncannot be considered as the Key to the\nRed sea. There Is no naval power within 8000 miles of the southern entrance\nwithout going through the Suez Canal,\nwhich ls the real key. Secondly, Perim\nisland occupies a much more dominant\nposition, astride the Strait of Bab-el-\nMandeb. (One remembers following this\ndelectable name amid the tongue in\nfar off schooldays).\nIt ls here or hereabouts that one be'\ngins to sense Asia, a blend of smoke\nfaintly perfumed with a suggestion of\npleasantness yet withal a tang of offence to the nostrils. Once sensed,\nnever forgotten. Ever after one hears\nthe east a' callln', from Khiva to Mysore, down through the highlands of\ngrey Tibet to the straits of Singapore,\nMet with at Sues, It ls parted with\nat Toklo, and its potent spell ls something more than fancy spelled in\nrhyme. Perim Island: one remembers\nit for Its brown dried earth calcined\nwith the dusty drear colors of extreme heat; No blade of grass, no\nshade of green, but a few sparse palms\nInclined their feathery tops toward the\nwater's edge, and appear in fretted\nsilhouette 'gainst a sky that brooks no\nclouds. The wandering languid echo\nof a bell buoy on nearby bubbling sand\nshoal, warning away the Clyde built\nmailers, dingy tramps and high walst-\ned sailing dhows, Mecca bound, reaches\none across the years. No Gate of\nParadise is Perim island. Parboiled\nThomas Atkins called tt 'The Gate of\n'Ell,\"   as  evidenced   In  his  statement:\n\"Colombo's   'Eaven.   H'Aden's   'Bll\n\"Peshawar ls dear at any price\n\"I'd   swop  the   lot   for  twenty   bob\n\"An'  troopship  over to Clerkewell\"\nGERALD   S.   RIES.\nNelson.  B.C.   May 6.  1928.\nTRAIL, B. C. May II.\u2014This year May\n24 wiU again be the big day for children in Trail-\nMeeting for consideration tonight, the\ncommittee of representatives of Smelter\nemployees, and the more or leas permanent officials. J. A. MacKinnon,\nchairman, C. J. Minton, secretary, and\nAlex. Balfour, treasurer, foresaw there\nwill be money, enthusiasm and youngsters ln plenty to make the day as conspicuous a holiday as ever in Trail.\nThe smelter workers' representatives\nannounced that the finance committee\nis already securing good returns from\nemployees of the Consolidated for the\nchildren's part of the program. Thev\nstated that by Thursday next they will\nbe ln a position to announce approxt-\ni cately what strength will be available.\nFIN   FOR  KIDDIES\nIn the meantime the sports committee will draft tbe program whloh will\n! include relay racea for all the grades\nj at the public schools, distance races for\nboys and girls, nubile school baseball\nand lacrosse games and other events ln\nthe morning, and races for the tiny tots\nln the early afternoon.\nOf course, there Mil be appropriate\nprizes and plenty of good things to eat,\nnuts, pandies and fruit and so on for\nthe youngsters to be distributed as gifts.\nAlex. Balfour Oftna to raid the banks\nfor all the nickels and dimes ln Trail\nwith which to tickle thc smaller athletes and contestants.\nFULL GOSPEL MISSION\n411 Hall It\nPaator, JOHN E. BABNM\nSuitday School   10 ajn.\nSunday Devotional  11 un.\nSunday evangellatlc  .   .7:30 p.m.\n\"HOW OLD ARE WE?\"\nA    most    Interesting    \u2022ubject\nwill enllgUten many who are unci* the Impression Ui\u00bbl m \u00ab\u00ab\nv*y young.\nTuesday's meaaage ....'. 8 p.m.\n'.   \"BURIED ALIVE\"\n.This subject  deals with  water\nbaptism and should be beard by\nall christians.\nThursday (May 17th)   8 p.m.\nWATER BAPTISMAL\nSERVICE\nCandidates will be lmnicrwd at\ntuts service. Come early II you\n-n-Sfit to secure a seat. Extra accommodation Ih being made.\n8t*tfurU\u00bbv Young Peoplr's Meeting\n8   p.m.\n*'   EVERYBODY  WE1.I\ntt=x=\nMeagher Named\nNelson Rotary\nK. Andrew Is  Vice-President;\nWill Take Office on\nJuly!\nOfficers named by the directors of\nUie Nelson Rotary clup are: J. W.\nMeagher, president; R. Andrew, vice-\npresident; George Horstead, secretary;\nW. I. Wesson, treasurer; C. P. Hunter,\nauditor, and J. T. Andrews, sergeant-\nat-arms.\nThese officers will not take office until   July   1.\nST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN\nCHURCH\nHtanley and  silica  Street!\nConfessional and Holy Communion service, 7:30 p.m.\nSunday school, 10:90 a a.\nService   In   Oerman,   S :00   a.m.\nCARL C. JANZOW,  Pastor.\nCranbrook Hatchery\nTreats Four Hundred\nThousand Eggs Date\nCRANBROOK, B.C., May 11.\u2014The local fish hatchery, operated by the\nCranbrook district Rod and Gun club,\nhad treated 400.000 \/ish eggs up to\nMay 0, 210,000 were Cranbrook trout\nand the remainder cutthroat. This will\nCrobably complete the run of Cran-\nrook trout, as the traps have been\nifted from Munro creek, from which\nthe, supply was obtained. The hatch\nof Kamloops trout has not yet started,\nnousands of cutthroat will be handled\nbefore the season closes,\nAlex. Hurry presented W. F. Cameron\nwith a fine specimen of Kamloops\ntrout, caught tn Premier lake, on Prlday. It waa the first big one of the\nseaaon, weighing about 22 pounds.\nBELGIAN CHAMP\nFIGHTS DRAW\nNEW YORK. May ll.*-Pierre Charles\nheavyweight champion of Belgium,\nfought a draw with Arthur De'Kutiy\nItalian giant ln the opening 10-round\nbout of Tex Rlckard's camlviil tonight.\nThe show was composed entirely of\nheavyweights with Phil Scott and\nRoberto Roberti meeting ln the main\nbout.\nGeorge Larocco of New York defeated\nJohnny Groeso, a local rival in a\n10-round preliminary. Larocco scaled\n18416, Grosso,   196ft.\nBig Boy Peterson, of New Orleans,\nand Rudl Wagner, latest foreign heavyweight importation from Germany,\nstumbled through 10 tame rounds of\na semi-final with Petewon finally a-\nwarded   the   decision.\t\nSchool Baseball and\nLacrosse Games Are\non Tap1 Today in Trad\nTRAIL, B.C., May  11.\u2014Three baseball\ngames and a lacrosse game are scheduled\nin the school boys' and girls' sports for\n9-30 o'clock tomorrow morning. It will\nbe the third games oi a four-league\nseries.\nThe schedules are as follows:\nSenior boys' baseball\u2014Canucks vs\nRed Sox. _.\nJunior boys' baseball\u2014CubB vs. Pal-\ncons.\nGirls' baseball\u2014Stars vs. Rustlers.\nLacrosse\u2014Mohawks vs. Blackfeet.\nAn International sports salon, the\nfirst of Its kind, will be inaugurated\nat the Grand Palais, ln Paris. The salon\nwill include billiards, rifle shooting,\nfootball, skating, tennis, golf and baseball, while the sporting \u25a0 clubs' federations will present during their programs\nthe records obtained by Prenchmen,\nPractical Training\nOur advanced teaching methods\ngive you practical training ln all\nbranches of business. Classes\nstart any time.\nNelson Business College\nBaker Street Phone \u00abo.1\nPage Threi\nTRAIL, B.C.. MaMy 11.\u2014An ornamentally dealgned wading pool will\nbe conatructed at the south end of\nthe Recreation park as soon as city\nengineer 6. S. McOlarmid, haa completed work on the retaining walls,\nit was reported by W. H. Taylor, president of East Trail Improvement association at a regular meeting held\nhere tonight. The wading pool, which\nwill be for use of children under 14\nyears of age, will be one of the two\npools planned to be constructed by\nthe ctty laat year, the other to be\nbuilt in the Oulch.\nLast Sunday the association committee met with membera of the city\ncouncil, who plan to have an East\nTrail wading pool constructed In the\nrecreation grounds. It is', planned to\nbuild a pool 300 feet long by 100 feet\nwide, with the deepest depth, 18 inches.\nOff inch end of the pool it ls planned\nto build diamond-shaped cenotracks\nand plant shade trees in the center of\nthem. There will be benches for\nparents and children, and next to the\nfence will be planted a number of\nother shade trees. Tracks will also\nbe constructed a t each side of the\npool leading to the entrance gates\nof  the park.\n, . i   \u2666\nVINIT   CRANBROOJE\nCRANBROOK. B.C.. May .11.\u2014The\nMisses Armstrong, formerly, of Nelson\narrived in Cranbrook Thursday by motor, on their way to Sinclair* Hot\nSprings. While ln Cranbrook they\nwere the guests of their cousin Mrs.\nM. A. Beale. Departing Friday morning they were accompanied by Master\nMells Beale, who will remain with\nthem  over the  week-end.\nBritish    Columbia    forests    are    the\ngreatest sourse of soft wood ln the\nrltlsh Empire. The Pacific northwest\nof this continent represents the last\ngreat stand of timber tn the world.\nEighty-seven per cent of the foreat\nfires ln British Columbia are started\nby human agency. By harnessing the\nhuman element to prevent forest fires,\nthis province is enriched many thousands of dollars.\nNews of the Day\nTbls column la conducted by Mlsa\nL. U. Anthony ol Tadanac. All\nnans or a social nature, including\nreceptions, entertainments, personal\nItems, marriages, etc., occurring In\nTrail and Tadanac, will appear In\nthla column. Just 'phons Mlsa\nAnthony at her realdenc-j. She\nwill also handle any advertisements\nappearing under Trail Newa ot th.\nDay. \t\nCralgend Oarden, Longbeach, opens\ntoday. *  (3898)\nKASLO NOTES\nKASLG, B. C May 11.\u20146, Cronin of\nProcter was a visitor to Kaslo Tuesday.\nC. P. McKechnle of Nelson was a Kaslo visitor Tuesday.\nCap. J. Pitzslmmons-of Nakusp spent\nThursday ln the city.\nA. P. Roberts and H. Dallas of Rlondel\nwere Tuesday visitors to town.\nJ. J. Binns is spending a few days at\nhis home here.\nW. Anderson spent Wednesday ln the\ncity.\nMiss A. Campbell of Procter was a\nvisitor to town Tuesday, leaving\nWednesday for Sandon.\nD. McBurney and P. J. Gallagher of\nNelson were Tuesday visitors to Kaslo.\nL. W. Sells of New Denver arrived in\nthe city Wednesday evening.\nW. G. Smith is down from Retallack\nfor a few days. Elmer D -Mall and W.\nH. Eygrett Qf Trail were visitors to town\nWednesday leaving Thursday by motor\nfor their homes.\nA. M. McPherson, superintendent of\nthe Cork-Province mine, arrived in the\ncity Thursday.\nA. J. Harris of Retallack arrived In\nthe city Wednesday and left Thursday\nmorning for a short business trip to\nSpokane.\nDr. David Hartin of Spokane and hts\nmother, Mrs. Gilbert Hartin of Nelson,\nmotored in from Nelson and return\nWednesday.\nVen. ArchdeRCon H\". Beer has arrived\nhome for the summer after having spem\nthe winter in Trail with Rev. N. D. B.\nLarmonth.\nDr. and Mrs. D. J. Barclay were. Nelson, visitors Tuesday.\nJames Foy of Procter was a visitor\nin   town   Thursday. \u25a0\nMr. and Mrs. A. h. McPhee have returned from a trip to St. Joseph, Mo\n\"Phey wore accomnanted on their return\ntrip, which was made by motor, by their\nson, Page, who has finished his aviation course.\nP. McGregor fs confined to his home\nby  UlWM,\nT. P. Lane, superintendent at the\nLucky Jim mine, spent the week-end\nkere with his family.\nMr. and Mrs. K, J. Hacking were weekend   visitors  to Bonnington.\nMr. and Mrs. Leslie Trolnor and chil-\n\"Good Goods at Gray's\"\nMOTHERS'\nDAY\nWe have a large assortment of\nsuitable gifts for mother.\nPor adornment\u2014Brooches, Rings,\nPendants, etc..\nPor the home\u2014Silverware, Glass,\nChina, Clocks, etc.\nJ. B. GRAY\nWatchmaker     Jeweler     Optician\n407  Baker St        Phon* 333\ndree of Rqssland motored to town to\nspend the week-end with Mrs. Tralnor s\nparents, Ui. and Mrs  If- Murphy.\nMr. and Mrs. AT 8. Exter and Miss\nRuth McWilllams were Saturday visitors\nto Rlondel, being thi guests of Mr. and\nMrs. S. 8. Powler\n^Cecil Moore ites down from Whitewater to \u00ab\u00bbnd the week-end with his\nMrs.\" J. M Cadden and daughter, Joan,\nwere Nelson visitors fearly iff the week.\nMiss Elizabeth Murphy and her brother, W. J. Murnhy, (Wrlved JiQtne\nWednesday evening after having spent\ntbe winter In Honolulu. They had a\nfine vacation but express themselves as\nglad to be home again.\t\nLee Barnes, University ot Southern\nCalifornia pole vaulter. cleared the bar\nat 14 feet 2 inches at the Raisin Day\nWest Coast relays, recently held at\nFresno. If the mark Ls allowed, lt will\nbetter the record of Sabin Carr. of Yale,\nby one inch. Can's mark was made\nindoors,\nDuring a high school baseball game\nplayed recently ln Atlantic, la., Atlantic\nbeat Groswold 109 to 0. Players on the\nAtlantic team scored in every inning,\ngetting 30 in the second and 27 ln the\nseventh. One of them made five home\nruns and another scored 14 times in 14\ntimes at bat.\nUpward ot 1000 undergraduates at\nPrinceton university are engaged in\nsome form of organized athletics ln\nconnection with varsity, Junior varsity,\nfreshman and club teams. Nearly 200\nstudent* are enlisted In the club baseball league. Crew squads total more\nthan 100 candidates.\nTRAILS LOT\nId t. D.  ANDF.KSON\n\u25a0sal Estate. Insuranc*.\n_\\_*_\\*-\n\u00abABU \u00bb'\n1\nToda\/i Specials\nNew stock of Dishes, Furniture,\nChairs, Clothes, and other things\ntoo numerous to mention-.\nCome and get a bargain at the\nBUSY   BEE\n3rd Avenue, East TraU\nExpert Cleaning\n1'OR LADIES' COATS, Xl ITS,\nMIX DRESSES, ETC.\nH. K. FOOT\nHigh-Class  Dyer and Clean\nFalrrlew,  Nelson,  B.C.\nmmm\nTrail-Nelson\nTaxi Service\nJ. A. Sutton's Taxi has commenced regular service. Leaves\nBunt Broa. Store. Trail, at 8:46\najn. Return leaves Golden Gate\nCafe, Nelson, 3:15 pjn. On Sundays Leave Trail 8 a.m.; return\nleave Nelson 6:15 p.m. Phone\nTrail   17.\nComplete Business\na: v\nCommercial Course\nWe fit our students by expert\ntraining In bookVeplng and\nREGG shorthand\u2014the easiest to\nlearn\u2014for good jobs directly they\nleave the college with our diploma. We have accommodation\nfor a few more DAY STUDENTS.\nTrail-Rossland  Business\nCollege\nVernon   Cple,  Principal\nMother's\nDay\nWhat would Mother like?\nSilk Underwear\nSilk Hose\nGloves\nArtificial Flowers\nEtc.\nAN EXTRA 2-DAY\nSPECIAL\n36 Dresses in Printed\nCrepes, Flat Crepes, etc.\nSizes 16-42. Special price\n$10.95.\nJAMES WEIR & SON\n\"The   Exclusive   store\"\nHARD  STREET\nOpposite New Capltol Theater\nFiREPROGF\nFASTER\nCONSTRUCTION\nCOLD PROOF\n\/\/\nCANNOT WARP\nOR SHRINK\nreasons for\n\"EMPIRE\"\nCANADA GYPSUM AMD ALABASTtWt UMITID, VANCOUVW. B.C.\nSuit, ituri I. llriiisn. CulnmtrU, C-ttsum Ciunfann. LiuUunt\nJohn Bums & Son\nFor Sale By\nalTboard\nANCOUV1W. B.C.\nLimited\nNelson, B.C.\n\"throat easy\"\nSays LEO KID ROY\n\"Buckingham is my\nchoice. It is tasty and\nvery throat-easy.\"\nO^.\/f^^t\nCanada's Featherweight Champion for the past five years and\nLightweight Champion of Canada for the past year ia that\nfavorite Canadian, Leo Kid\nRoy, of Montreal, who successfully defended his title as\nFeatherweight Champion at\nthe Arena, Toronto, April 13th,\ndefeating the challenger, Jack\nJohnaton, of Toronto, Dominion Bantam Champion.\nBui kinilhrim\nCIGAR   E^l\"  T   E   5\nNO   COUPONS    \u2014    ALL   QUALITY       ,  tl-|\nA Large Shipment Just Arrived -\nCedar Chests\nAND\nKitchen Cabinets\nDon't let the moths\ndamage or destroy your\nvaluable furs, wool,\ncoats and other articles\nwhen you put them\naway. Protect them in\na cedar chest. See in\nour windows the display\nof beautiful New Cedar\nChests. In addition to protecting your clothing against\nmoths, attractiveness will add to the appearance of your\nhome.  Made from genuine Tennessee cedar.\nWALNUT CEDAR-LINED CHEST\n\u2014Price  \u00a347.54)\nBIRCH WALNUT CEDAR-LINED\nCHEST    $32.50\nBEAUTIFUL   FIGURED   CEDAK\nCHEST-36 in f 15.00\nBEAUTIFUL   FIGURED   CEDAR\nCHEST\u201442 in\t\nBEAUTIFUL FIGURED CEDAR CHEST\u201448 in. $32.00\nKITCHEN CABINET\u2014\nWhite Enamel, Porcelain Top, fully equipped with Flour Bin,\nadjustable, to hold 50\npounds flour, Glass\nSugar . Container,\nBread Bin and Container for all kinds ol\nspices. These cabinets\nstamped with the approval of the Household Engineering Bureau of Good Housekeeping.       Complete\nfor  970.00\nComplete in Oak for ..Z        962.50\nKITCHEN CUPBOARD\u2014White Enamel, Porcelain Top,\n42-in. Table, Porcelain Top, with Four Chairs all to\nmatch.   A beautiful set.   Complete for 987.50\nSTANDARD FURNTTURTCO.\nCOMPLETE HOUSE FURNISHERS .- - NELSON, B.C.\n Poar\nTHE NEISON WHEY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING. MAY 12, im\nIE   DAILY   NEWS\n^Published every morning except Sun-\nlay by The News Publishing company.\nUnited, Nelaon, B. O.\nBusiness lettera should be addressed\nnd   checks  and  money  orders  made\nayable to Tbe Newa Publishing company, limited, and ln no case to Individual membera of tbe ataff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A.B.C.\ndatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be aeen at tbe office of\nany   advertising   agency   recognized   by\nbe Canadian Presa aasoclatlon.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\n-*B>\u00bb1I (country), per month $   .80\nBy mail <city)7^F'y'ear\"I!!Z;ZZ 13.00\nTutslde Canada, per month .78\nPer year   7j>o\nlellvered. per week      as\nPer year \u2014    13.00\nPayable In Advance\nI Member Andlt Bureau of Clrenlatlon\nSATURDAY, MAY 12, 1928\nGreat Business Romance\nAnnouncement ot tbe sale of P. Burns\nny to Toronto capitalists brings\na period but not to an end to one\nthe great business romances of\nirn Canada.\n0 have built, aa Pat Burns, a\nworth 815,000,000,000 alnce 1888\na an accomplishment no leas romantic\nban the empire-winning achievements\nf some of the heroes of other days,\nnd, actually, the huge present day\n(business of Pat Burns baa been built\nln far less than 43 years since\n. It would be within the bounds\ncall lt 36 yean.\nTbe career ot Pat Bursa la one of\nwestern Canada la proud.\nIt la said that tbe deal la not ao\nh a aale u an amalgamation of the\nBums concerns with tbat of eastern\nhomes.\nIf thla It ao, It is In tune with the\nmodern   trend   of   consolidation.     By\nconsolidations economise ln oper-\nitlon, economies ln purchasing through\nTeased buying power, and ln aome\nini***nK\u2014\u2014\u25a0i\nThe\nLighter Side\nAUNTHET\n\"Sallie needn't put on airs\naround me. I knowed her when\nehe made her children's underclothes out of flour sacks.\"\nAlways two sides. Maybe modern\nkids get licked less because they need\nless.\nThese times are hard on a small\nboy. To be a Babe Ruth or a\nLindbergh,  that's  the  problem.\nThings merely seem original. New\ntongues repeat old stuff, but lt all\nseems new to a new set of ears.\nThere's nothing against tba Inferiority complex, except tbat lt doesn't\naffect tbe right people.\n If the boss has his feet on the..\ndesk lt lsnt a sign of spring fever.\nA man with spring fever wouldn't\nlift his feet.\ntlon are attained.\nMedicated   cigarettes   are   being   lm-\nar^tftr  ftffieiMirv   in   ,\u2122\u2122_   proved all the time,  and lt may yet\njreater efficiency  in  opera-   & possible to Bet your daily spinach\nthat way.\nWhy the Delay in Building\nTrail's New Postoffice?\nIt Is, Indeed, an extraordinary thing\nthat the Dominion government should\n! Every community has at least one\nman who Is an atheist because be can\nattract notice that way.\n; A CRANK IS A MAN WHO THINKS\nHIS SILLY STUFF WOULD BE PRINTED IF THE EDITOR WASNT AFRAID.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nMy  LAURA A.  KIRKMAN\nEXTEBM1NATINO   ANTS\nTOMORROW'S MENU\nBreakfast\nCereal\nOmelet Toast Coffee\nDinner\nVegetable Soup\nCold Roast of Lamb\nPickles\nCreamed Noodles\nEscalloped Tomatoes\nLettuce Russian Dressing\nIce Cream Coffee\nSupper .\nWelsh Rarebit\nRolla Celery\nNut Cake Cocoa\nModernism:     Thinking   lt   smart   to\nscorn   religion;   trying   to   think   up 1\njR***iay  so long  the  construction  of  a  some scheme to keep the people decent.\npoet office at TraU. !    p),,.,  noata \"it^lnWrvala  and  we'll\nYear   aftj,r   van.    ,h.   w......   ....  have  regular  plane  traffic  to  Europe. I\n. Year   after   year,   the   matter   baa  pm>,    |ut wjJy not pl>M th, noat,\nbeen brought to the attention of the  end to end and use fllvere?\ngovernment at Ottawa.   Tear after year\npromises have been made.\nThe site waa purchased aome years\nago, thus settling tbe only point which\nshould have caused delay. Yet still\nnothing ls being done.\n, There are scores of public works undertakings ln various parts of Canada\nwhile, no doubt necessary, are far\nleas necessary than a new post office\ntt Trail, the biggest Industrial center\nln the Interior of British Columbia\nand one of the fastest growing per-\na\u00bbpent established cities ln tbe Do-\nlaJOtiaStm.\n-s***********'^-..\"..\u2014\u25a0\nCooperation and Control Ate\nWorking Out to Advtyi-J\ntage ot Industry\nIf the public thinks him great, and\nyou scorn him, and years later you\ndecide he is a great artist, you are\na noted critic.\nIn some vicinities summertime brings\nthe nuisance bf ants ln kitchen and\npantry. Here are a few ways in which\nthis pest can be exterminated.\nLysol Method\u2014Make a strong solution\nof lysol, and, using a paint brush to\nsave burning the hands, apply this liquid\nco window sills, door sills and other\nplaces where ants enter. Let dry on\n&e wood and repeat the treatment each\nweek. (Aa I mentioned last week, ln the\ncolumn, this lysol method ls also good\nfor getting rid of cockroaches).\nSugar Trap\u2014Soak a sponge ln a sugar\nand water mixture, then put the wet\nsponge in that put of the kitchen where\nants seem to enter. The ants will become entangled ln the sponge and can\nthen be easily killed by pouring boiling\nwatar over tbe sponge. Ofter the num\nber killed In this way ls so large that\nother ants forsake the dwelling.\nSyrup Method\u2014Keep on the floor\nsmall metal pitcher containing one-haf\ninch of syrup. Where there ts syrup\naround, the ants will not bother over\nany other kind of food. When you bave\ncollected a great number of these pests\nln tbe Uttle pitcher, pick up the pitcher\nand plunge lt Into a pall of boiling\nwatar. Repeat this method. Although\nyou may have ante all summer, even\nwhen using this method, still you will\nnot have tne ants crawling over every\nthing else I\nOther Methods\u20141. Store all foods on\ntables or shelves with legs set ln basins\nof water with a film of kerosene oil\nfloating on the surface of the waten\ntaking care to renew both water and\noil as needed.\n3. Sprinkle cake crumbs or coarse\nsugar on the floor or table and watch\nto see where the ants carry lt; ln this\nway tha pasta can be traced to their\nnests and destroyed with boiling water\nat the source.\n3. Inject kerosene or a S per cent\nsolution ot carbolic acid (this ls poison,\nso should not be used where there are\nchildren or pets) ln all cracks. As red\nants often nest ln floors or partitions,\nthe kerosene or the carbolic acid must\nbe Injected by means of a spring bottom\noil can which has a long curved nozzle.\nIf the nest IS\" out of doors and out of\nreach, bore a small hole ln the earth\naa close as possible to tt and pour In\ntwo ounces of carbon blsulphld. then\nfill the hole quickly wtth earth and\ntramp down. __\n-\u2666\nRESTORE POWER\nSYSTEM OF THE\nPERKIER MINE\nShaft Will Now Be Unwatered,\nand Widened and Retintbered,\nand Reetyuipped\nPRODUCTION   STAGE   DUE\nFOUR TO SIX WEEKS' TIME\nTo Sink and Drift Under Principal Ore, Returns From\nWhich Mean New Mill\nRepairs to the eight-Inch wood stave\npipeline of the Perrler gold mine near\nApex, south of Nelson, have been\ncompleted, making power available to\nthe three-drill compressor, hoist and\npump.\nUnwatering of the shaft, which ls a\nsloping\" one, following the dip of the\nvein, should be, accomplished ln less\nthan a week, permitting the work of\nwidening the shaft and retlmbering it\nto be completed. At the same time\na new hoist, direct water-driven, with a\ntftlng capacity of 3000 pounds, will\nbe Installed.\nThe stage of production will be\nreached by this Nelaon-owned property\nln four to six weeks, when the shaft,\nalready over 100 feet deep, will be\nsunk another 40 feet, and a drift carried easterly from i Its foot \"to come\nunder the big showing, alt work hitherto having been ln ore.\n\"O   PROVIDE   MILL\nOre from the sinking and drifting,\nsupplemented by some to be stoped\nwhen the objective ts reached, ls expected to provide tbe funds for a modern mill of about 36 tons capacity,\nwhich will be required for steady production. Pending tbat stage, the ore\nnow to be taken out may either he\nput through the present mill, or\nnped to TraU for treatment. If the\n'Vrrler pays for its own equipping, lt\nwill be only continuing past history,\nfor the ore taken out in originally\nsinking the shaft left a surplus after\npaying for the sinking.\n*    Perrler has never had other than\nlaylns\nThe\nThat Bodv\nof Yourj>\nBy  JAMES   W    BARTON    M.L.\nTEN YEARS AGO\nFruitgrowers have every reason for\nencouragement and optimism ln the\nreports presented at the meeting of\nmembers of the Associated Growers ln\nKelson   on   Thursday.\nOf course, perfection has not yet\nbeen attained, and the sensible man\ndoes not bet much money that It\nfever will. We humans do not often\nAttain perfection. Nevertheless, mar\nketlng conditions have been enormous-\n'lfr improved as a result of the opera*\ntlons of Associated Growers under\nmarketing control.\nThe best test aa to whether cooperation and control are working to the\nadvantage of the growers ls to stop\nfor a few minutes and think out what\nwould have happened If we had had\nno cooperation and no control.    *\nPoise Ib the quaUty that enables a\nman to carry seven packages without\nthinking everybody he passes looks\namused.\nWomen are never satisfied. Those\nwho worked for the vote are now\nout   getting   votes.\nOne of the new razors copies a\nlawn mover, but the ultimate achievement will be something ln the nature\nof a stump puller.\nCorrect this sentence: \"The fight\nwith the neighbor's darling child,\" said\nshe,  \"was  started  by  our  brat.\"\nBERRY HALLOCKS\nMADE IN CRESTON\nRogers Mill Operating;  Apple\nBoxes Shipped; Crop Prospects Good\nFoster's Weekly\nWeather Bulletin\nWashington, May 12.\u2014After the five\nday period of below normal temperatures that was expected to center on\n7, averagedaUy temperatures of May\nare expected to trend upward during\nbalance of month. A storm wave of\nsevere Intensity, expected to be the\nmost severe of the month and to cause\nheaviest precipitation of month, wUl\ncross continent during week centering\non 15; this storm wave will occur during a period of above normal temperatures, a general warm wave, and will\nnpt be followed by an unusually cool\nperiod; northern areas, where cold\nwaves are usual at this time, may expect a seasonal oold wave centering\nop 19, but this drop ln temperatures\nwill  not go far below normal  In any\nftlon     During   period   centering   on\nthe dry area of southwest will have\nbest chance for moderate preclpita-\nn, but It is probable that precipitation of this period  win be badly distributed and occur mostly within small\nareas of southwest and elsewhere.    As\nmeridian   90   ls   neared    and   east   of\nmeridian   90,   precipitation   of   period\n^_U_mitiS on 15 will be too heavy for\n\" iat   results;    very   few   localities   in\nhalf   of   continent   would   de-\nany   precipitation   during   last\nof May.    Period  centering  on  10\nbe one of tbe danger periods on\nth  Pacific   n'utpe;   low  temperatures\n'   probably   damage   some   blooming\ntat during  16 to 30, but I do not\n____\\__^_^_m this damage to be extensive;\nprecipitation  on  central and   northern\n^^\u25a0lii will remain a little above\nnormal   during   thla   period,   probably\n^^B|   serious   frost   damage.     As\nforcasted   months   ago.   Pacific   slope\nwinter   grains   are   expected   to   make\ntne   best  yields of  North   America  as\n(From The Dally News of May 12, 1918.)\nThe ranch  belonging  to  Mra. Harris\nat  Honeymoon  Place  was sold  to Mr.\nAvery of Regina recently.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA barn  and shed was  destroyed  by\nfire yesterday which was owned by A.\nD. Curtis.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nChief T. H. Long has received Lie new\nfood regulations, which he states #.11 be\nstrictly enforced.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR. B. Morris wUl leave this morning\nfor Victoria to report for military service.\nD. A. MINE COMES\nINTO ORE AGAIN\nPASTTHE FAULT\n\"J. R.\" Mining Company Repeats at Depth Its Feat on\nthe Surface\nSHOOT LOST BY GOLD BUG\nPEOPLE HAS HIGH VALUES\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nProm The Dally News of May 12. 1908 >\nBorn, tn this city on May 7, to Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Jennings, Victoria street,\na son.\n#   \u2022   *\nThe city wharf was badly damaged\nyesterday when a wagon broke through\nthe planking.\ns   \u2022   a\nThe water ln the Weat Arm ls well\nover 10 feet above low water mark.\ne   e   e\nA carload of ore concentrates was\nshipped from the Granite mine yesterday.\nThe forests serve many other purposes besides a storehouse for lumber.\nThey Influence climate, are a sanctuary\nfor game, conserve water for hydroelectric power and city water supply,\nprevent floods, attract tourists, and, - -\nserve mankind in many  other ways.    I harmful   organisms\nMedicines Often Unnecessary\nNo one can question the wisdom of\nkeeping the Intestine active. It Is\nadmitted that Sir Arbuthnot Lane and\nhts followers heve ' taught the world\nln general that constipation ls a menace to health.\nNow like everything else that is\ngood, this keeping the Intestine active\ncan be overdone.\nInstead of keeping lt active by tbe\nuse of fruits and vegetables, and a\nlittle daily exercise, some Individuals\nfeel that real drastic pills or medicines\nshould be used constantly so as '\nget all the \"poison\" out of the system.\nNow lt is hardly fair to that body\nof yours to think of it as \"full of\npoison\" which must be removed or\neven life Itself, may be lost.\nBecause as a matter of fact, nature\nherself ls looking after this for you\nln her own way.\nA lot of material and organisms also, that are taken Into the body as\na part of your food, could harm the\nbody were It not that the natural\njuices of the small Intestine renders\nthem harmless.\nIn this connection. Dr. Lowcnberry\nof Berlin has been able to show that\nthe natural Juice of the first part\nof the small intestine has the power\nto destroy the organisms of typhoid\nfever and dysentry. Just think of that\nfor a moment. If the stomach and\nintestine are ln good shape, and doing\ntheir work properly, this intestinal\nJuice has the power to destroy these\norganisms.\nNow what is my point?\nIf you are taking medicines or pills\nall the time you interfere with the\nnatural Juices, and materials and organisms go past this part of the intestine too rapidly and are thus not\nacted upon by this beneficial Juice.\nAlso food material Itself gets sent\nalong too rapidly and loses some of\nthe effects of this Juice and the dl-\njestive   juices   also.\nOvereating or underaatlng can affect movement of material here also.\nThe Idea then ls to eat a varied diet\nwith fruit and vegetables to give bulk.\nHowever, too much fruit, too much\nof \"grassy\" vegetables, can upset the\nIntestine and Interfere with this Juice\nCompany Plans'lnstal Qil Engine, Larger Compressor,\nand An Aerial Tram\nStriking    success    ln    dealing    with\nfaults has been enjoyed by the \"J.R.\"\nfining   company,   operating   tba   DA.\nmine at Greenwood, according to word\njust   received   from   there.    The   com-\nCy, whose manager Is J. R. Skelton,\nJust driven through the fault on\nthe 70-foot level, and- has come into\ntbe ore shoot, which bas values assaying $100 in gold and 100 ounoes In\nsilver, or a total of roughly $167 a ton.\nThis was the shoot lost many years\nago by the Gold Bug Mining company when it failed to pick up the\nvein beyond the fault, after having\npacked out and shipped rleh ore to\nSan Francisco, that being in prerail-\nway days ln the Boundary.\nMAY  BE PROV'OENCE VEIN\nThe present operators, who have had\nthe property fof a year or a year and\na half, preceded their most recent discovery by driving through this same\nfault on the surface, and opening the\nshoot for 130 feat, which ls as far as\nthe surface trenching haa gone. At\nthis point ore greatly resembles that\nof the Provldenoe, which is adjacent,\nand In fact it la the opinion of some\nthat this vein la an extension of the\nProvidence   vein.\nDevelopment under ths present company has been with the aid of a gasoline  drilling  outfit.\nIt is understood the company now\ntlans to tnstal an oil engine, put ln a\nlarger compressor, and erect a two-\n\u00bbucket tram which wUl deliver the\nore  at  the  railway   1000  feet   distant.\nWill Shortly Announce\nInterests Behind the\nPurchase of P. Bams\nVANCOUVER, May 11.\u2014Identity of\nhe interests behind the purchase of\nP. Burns is Co.. Ltd., will be dls-\nloaed In an official from Calgary\n\u25a0\u25a0hortly, W. J. Blake Wilson, vice-president of the company, announced on\ntla return to Vancouver from the east l\ntoday.\n net.\nSELLS HOUSE\nCRESTON, May 10\u2014 Walter Plsher,\nwho recently moved to Nelson to reside.\nhas Just disposed of his residential prop-]\nerty on Park road to Mrs. Da\u00bby. M~>.\nTom Ross haa the cellar excavation\nwork complete for her new realdence on\nBarton avenue.\nGeneral Motors'\nLowest Priced\n4\nWHEEL\nBRAKES\nNEW FISHER\nBODIES\nNEW STEERING\nGEAR\nNEW\nTHERMOSTAT\nNBW FUEL PUMP\nNEW GASOLINE\nGAUGE\nNBW STOP LIGHT\nLOVEJOT\nSHOCK\nABSORBERS\nIN ALL the great General Motors,'\nfamily of automobiles there if no\nother six so low-priced as Pontiac.\n\u25a0Yet no car more fully typifies the\"\nfamous General Motors' \"policy of\nProgress.\" For the New Series Pon-\ntiac Six is as advanced in quality as\nit is low in price.\nLook at this imposing array of fine-\ncar features j;\u2014Rugged, powerful six-\ncylinder engine: New GMR high-\ncompression cylhtder-head: Crank-\ncase Ventilation: Oil Filter and Air\nCleaner: Safe, sure Four-Wheel\nBrakes: Lovejoy Hydraulic Shock-\nAbsorbers:\nAnd . . . big, roomy, luxurious\nbodies by Fisher (famous for fine\ncraftsmanship)\nAll these are yours ... in General\nMotors' lowest priced six ... the\nNew Series Pontiac. mii'iii\nAsk your dteler about the C.M.A.C. Deferred\nFeyment Plan wkitk makes buyingetasj.\nsmall-Bcale  operation,  the  early  opera- I\ntlon coming to a termination when the\nwar shut down most of the gold mines !\nof   the  district.     While   the   air   drills}\nwill   soon   twain   be   biting   Into   this i\nore,  and before  long  a mill equipped\nfor  fine  grinding  will  be  turning   out\ngold  bricks and  a high grade concentrate,   the  plana   of   the  Perrler   Oold -\ntines, limited, are on a mOdest basis,\nand contemplate little If any resort\nto sale of stock to provide development funds.\nthat nature haajso generously provided\nto protect us ffom  harmful food and\nCRESTON, May 17,\u2014The C. O. Rodgers\nbox factory commenced 1038 operations\nwith a full staff of employees ln all\ndepartments this week. Another cup\nmaking machine has been added and\nsix girls are employed making tba pint\nberry hallocks, while five others are at\nwork sorting the Creston made veneer\nused ln the make of the cupa. Pour\nmen are at work making up the crates\nand another assembling the pint hallocks Into the containers. Mr. Rodgers\nstates that orders are already coming ln\nfor apple boxes and already 30,000 of\nthem have been delivered to Creston\nOrowers, limited, alone. Prom present\nappearances the Creston district will\nhave a record apple crop. The Wealthy\nand Mcintosh Reds, which account for\nhalf the orchard planting, are due for\nheavy yields, and the winter varieties\nlook very promising as weU.\nWHEAT   PRICES   TURN   UP\nCHICAGO, May 11.\u2014Enlarged export\ndemand, together with dry weather\nnorthwest, unfavorable for spring wheat\ncrop, did a good deal today to turn\nwheat prices up grade.\nClosing quotations on wheat were\nunsettled V4 to iv4c net higher; with\ncorn varying from \\k decline to He\nadvance, oats He to lttc up, and provisions unchanged to a rise of 7 to\n10c.\nVancouver Island, for its size, contains the densest and moat valuable\nstand of mature solft wood timber\non the earth's surface. It contained\none-thlrtleth of the world's available\nsupply   ln   1034.\ncondition of Pacific slope it the highest\nof any of the continent.\nDuring recent years, a marked decrease has been noted In the number\nof agriculturists going into Canada\nfrom the United States, present repents state that thia aeason will hsve\na greater number of new farmers ln\nCanada from the United States than\nduring many years past. Trying to\ncompete with lower land values of\nother countries ls becoming more discouraging eacb seaaon to United States\nfarmers: bountiful yields and a chance\nto cooperate with Canadian pool are\nalso chief causes for drifting Canada-\nward. Like every other country ot\ntbe globe, there are spots In Canada\nwhere a paying crop ls the exception\nrather than the rule, but there are\nmillions of acres of the prairie provinces where crop failure rarely occurs,\nDuring some years the toll taken by\nhaU and unseasonable frosts amount\nalmost to a plague, but taking the\naverage of 30 years will show the\nprairie province farms as among the\nbest paying In tbe world. South-\nCentral Canada, situated on tha northern transcontinental storm path, could\nnot   have   a  aeries  of   drouth   years;\nIf you doubt the merit of \"SALADA\" Tea\u2014Let ut\nprove It Write \"SALADA\". Toronto\u2014get free\n19-cup packet-test for yourself. \"SALADA\" Is\nsold In four grades\u2014Black, Green or Mixed varieties  80c to $1.05 per pound.\n\"SALADA\"\nm Msmmm\nNelson Pontiac Mot  <\nNelson, B. C.\nThe Jsfcw Series\nPONTI^g SIX\nPRODUCT   OF   GENERAL   MOTORS   OF   CANADA,   UMITBD\nBUILDING\nMATERIAL\nLet us figure your bills Of\nBuilding Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nJOHN BURNS \u00a3 SON\n=\u00bb-A-l\nDutch Onion Setts\nJust arrived another large shipment of Dutch Onion\nSetts and Multiplier onions.\nPRICE 25* A POUND\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale ond Retail \"Quality Hardwars\"\nNELSON, B.C. BOX 1050\nSTUDEBAKER\nThe Great Independent\nA New Record\nfor stock cars in its price class\nBetter than\na mile a minute\nfor 5000 miles\n\u2022',&.\u25a0\nSta\nThe Dictator '1555 to '1875\nF.  O.  B.   FACTO HV\nrU\nBY traveling 5,000 miles in 4,751 con-\nI secutive minutei, the Studebaker\nDictator has established a record un-\nequaled by any stock car io the same price\nclass \u2014 comparable to the existing world\nrecord of 5,000 miles in 4,559minutes made\nby the Studebaker Commander last fall.\nAnd not one, but two Dictator Roadsters, fully equipped, each traveled 5,000\nmiles in less than that number bf minutes,\nThe run was made at the Atlantic City\nSpeedway, April 20-23, under the supervision of the Contest Board of the American Automobile Association. Before and\nafter the run, the cars were checked by\nthe Technical Committee and were pronounced strictly stock models.\nCLAIMS vt. FACTS\nAutomobile advertising is full 'of extravagant claims of performance. But Studebaker offers you definite FACTS supported\nby the certificate of the highest motoring\nauthority.   Under A. A. A. supervision\nThe Commander has made a record never\napproached by any other car on earth\n(25,000 miles in less than 23,000 minutes).\nThe Erskine and The Dictator have made\nrecords unequaled by any other stock cars\nat or near their prices.\nThe high quality of materials, the precision workmanship, the rigid inspections\nand the engineering genius in the Studebaker Dictator are proved not only by its\nability to travel 5,000 miles in less than\n4,800 consecutive minutes, but also by the\nfact that any Dictator can be driven 40\nmiles per hour as soon as it leaves the\nassembly line at the factory.\nBacked by Studebaker's 76-year reputation for quality and value, The Dictator\noffers champion performance at a low\nOne-Profit price.\nValues in Four Price Fields\nPresident Eight, $3336 to $3886; tbe commander,\n$2470 to SM70; the Dictator S3036 to 13170;\nthe Ersklne Six. S1350 to 11675. All prion\nf.o.b.  Nelson fully  equipped.\nKootenay Garage\nNELSON,   B.C.\nMade In Canada\nA\n THB NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDA^ftORNING, MAY 12, 1928\nPage fh\n1\n3\nNew Ones\nWe have just placed in\nstock three new Spike Heel\nstrap slippers\u2014They are\nvery snappy in design and\nreasonably priced.\nThe materials are\nHoney Biege Kid and the\nnew Amanap upper stock.\nf6.75 and f7.50\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaden in Footfashion\nMen's   Trust   association,   limited,   for\nweek  ending May 12, reads:\nHalifax\u2014A normal volume Is reported by wholesale trade. Retail Improving.   Collections normal.\nSaint John\u2014Wholesale trade improving. Retail trade fairly good. Collections improving.\nQuebec City\u2014Wholesale groceries report satisfactory volume; other lines\nnormal.    Retail  trade  fair.\nMontreal\u2014A very fair volume is reported by wholesale dealers. Ladles'\nwear sales have been decided better\nthan formerly, dealers In hardware\nand machinery continue busy. Retail\ntrading ln the city la busy, country\nvery fair.\n,  Toronto\u2014An improvement is reported\n^by wholesale dealers generally.    Retail\ntrade also good,   Collections Improving.\nWinnipeg\u2014A normal volume of bualness ls being transacted by wholesalers\ngenerally. Ratal! trade quiet. Collections improving,\nRegina\u2014Dealers ln wholesale fro*\ncerlea, *y goods, report business rather\nslow. Boots and shoes very good; hardware good. Retail trade somewhat\nslow.    Collections rather quiet.\nSaskatoon\u2014A fair volume of trad*\nls reported by wholesale grocers and\ndry goods; retail trade good. Collec*\ntlons wholesale fair to slow, retail\ncity, fair to good; retail country, slow\nCalgary\u2014Retail business showing\nslight reaction in some lines. Wholesale and manufacturing steady,\nEdmonton\u2014Wholesalers generally  re-\nf>ort country business very good, show*\nng considerable increase over corresponding period last year. City business\nfair.    Collections steadily  Improving.\nVaucouver\u2014Manufacturing fairly good\nwholesale hardware and -groceries good,\nall balance of trade report conditions\nJust fair, but an Improvement over\nlast week. Retail trade both country\nand city fairly good.\nTRADE REPORTS\nWINNIPEG,   May    Jl.\u2014Tie   weekly\ntrade  report ot  ths  Canadian  Credit\nWILLIS   PIANOS\n\"Canada's  Beat\"\nSol* dlaWbutora, from factory, for tba\nKootenay DUtrlct:\nKOOTBNAT MUSIC BOUSE,\nNelaon, B.C. \"Tht Piano Store\"\nT. H. Waters & Co., Ltd.\nBuilders & Contractors\nPhone IM P.O. Box 835\nNELSON, B.C.\nPricea Submitted on Any Kind of\nCONSTRUCTION WORK\nAALTEN  OF NAKIIHP  IS\nQIVflN  IIIVOKI i:  HERE\nRoy Henry Aalten of Nakusp was\nyesterday grunted a divorce from Jennie Aalten, by Mr. Justice Murphy, in\nassizee here. Archie Donaghy acted for\nMr. Aalten.\nOLD NELSONITE\nGETS IMPORTANT\nP0ST0NC.P.R.\nJ. Ivan MacKay Is Appointed\nAssistant to General Supt.\nof J3. C. District\nATTENDED PUBLIC SCHOOL\nNELSON; WENT TO COAST\nFather Was Conductor in Nelson; Has Been Chief Clerk\nat Vancouver\nWAS VERY WEAK\n1EII0ISAIIMELAICI0LY\nUn. Oao. IfaTaitiU, Oampb-aDf o*-**L\nOat, writoa:\u2014\"A. ahort time ap I\nwai troubled rary laij with nr\nui aat-raa, Ska aaxm at IS, I\nwaa say fotag tkimfh tho oka\nBft,\nay istait\n. I tklbifc\nchango or\n\"I wu my Waal* ul melanchol*f,\ntad M asiaa-uo I Mild kardly bear\nto hear a al*ak UaUif, aai I did not\naiaaf jrA\n\u00abt am tatted to try\n________________   m I Not at com\ntsa ft box; took\nthem ud fat u-\nud before\nSXaay wore til jooe\nI felt food, my\nnsiH tn it.., I\ndo not mind any\nncdao, ud I ou\naSatf wail I (Sanaa  to*\nmi ad.'\nTaUaooa. a bos at aU dnigjista ud\nMm, *r taaHal fflraot on receipt of\n\u2022pto* if TU T. Unburn Oa, Liailad,\nMllB!iRNc\n.1   AIM     J\nw\nu\nu\u00abhi*r to\n-\n'CATERPILLAR'\nTractors\nFOR THE\nFARMER, LOGGER, ROAD BUILDER,\nMINER, FREIGHTER, AND MUNICIPALITY\u2014wherever  rugged   power  and\nperformance are demanded.\nLiterature and Prices on Request.\nSOLE DISTRIBUTORS FOR B. C:\nMorrison Tractor & Equipment Co., Ltd\n1323  STANDARD   BANK   III II.DIM!\nVANCOUVER,  B.  C.\nHOLT BEST\nVANCOUVER. May 11.\u2014The appointment of J. Ivan MacKay to the position of assistant to the general superintendent of the British Columbia district, Canadian Pacific railway, effective May 15. waa announced by C. A.\nCotterell, general superintendent today.\nMr. MacKay haa been chief cleric ln\nthe general offices ln Vancouver for\nthe paat nine years.\nJ. Ivan MacKay, an old N>i*on\nhoy, the son of Dave MacKay, one\nof the bent-known C.P.R. conductors\nof the early days In the KootenajM.\nHe commenced his education In the\npublic* school at Nelson about 30\nyears a*o, later moving with hla\nfamily to Vancouver, where he has\nresided for the greater part of the\nensuing time. Mr. MaoKay la a\nyoung man for so Important poat,\nbeing In his thirty-seventh year at\npresent.\n\"It glvea me a great deal of pleasure to make this announcement, said\nMr. Cotterell. \"as Mr. MacKay haa,\nby perserverpnee. close application and\nstudy, fitted himself in every way for\nthe recognition of services that he Is\nnow receiving.\"\nrt'iriK   FXPKKIKSCKS\nMr. MacKay's railway experience haa\nbeen wide. Entering the service of the\nCanadian Pacific originally as a railroad telegrapher, following a brief term\ntn the wharf freight office in Vancouver more titan 39 years ago. he has\nfilled increasingly important posts\nwhich Included those of chief clerk in\nthe car service and fuel department,\nher* In 1009. chief clerk to the general\nsuperintendent ln Winnipeg, and as\ntrainmaster, assistant superintendent\nand   car  service   agent.\nMr. MacKay returned to Vancouver\nas chief clerk to the general superintendent in 1919 and haa served ln that\ncapacity since that date. The position\nnow created by Mr. MacKay's appointment Is an entirely new one so far as\nVancouver Is concerned and ls taken\nas evidence of the requirements of the\ncompany's Increasing interests and activities on the Pacific coast.\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\nSLOCAN CITY. B. C, May 11\u2014Mr.\nand Mra. J. McKay, Mr. and Mrs. W B.\nJohnstone and Mr. Blackburg were recent visitors to Trail.\nMr. and Mrs. T. McNelsh and their\ndaughter. Mrs. E. J. Levecque. and baby\nwere visitors to Nelson on Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. McKay and Mr. and\nMrs. E. Brown were visitors to Nelson\nduring the week.\nCute in aBaby-\n*Awful at Three\n-and it's Dangerous-\nbyRuthBrittatn\nSOCIETY\nWHY THEY ACT THAT WAY?      _ by George\nKootenay Steam Laundry\nC. A. LARSON, Manager\nPhone 128 and Our Driver Will Call\nWatch for Next Installment on Saturday\n\u25a0 ra\nThumb sucking does look sweet in a\nbaby, but It ls disgusting ln the three-\nyear-old and sometimes it hangs on\nuntil fifteen or sixteen! The habit may\ncause an Ill-formed mouth or induce\nadenoids; and It always Interferes with\ndigestion. Pinning the sleeve over the\nhand; attaching mittens, or putting on\ncardbourd cuffs, which prevent bending thc arms at the elbows, are eome\nof tHe ways to stop the habit.\nAnother bad habit\u2014irregularity In\nbowel action\u2014is responsible for weak\nbowels and constipation ln babies. Oive\nthe tiny bowels an opportunity to act\nat regular periods each day. If they\ndon't act at first, a little Fletcher's\nCastoria will soon regulate them. Every\nmother should keep a bottle of It\nhandy to use in case of colic, cholera,\ndiarrhea, gas on stomach and bowels,\nconstipation, loss of sleep, or when\nbaby ls cross and feverish. Its gentle\nInfluence over baby's system enables\nhim to get full nourishment from his\nfood, helps him gain, strengthens his\nbowels.\nCastoria is iHirely vegetable and\nharmless\u2014the recipe la on the wrapper.\nPhysicians have prescribed it for over\n80 years. With each package, you get a\nvaluable book on-Motherhood. Look for\nChas. H. Fletcher's .signature on the\nwrapper so you'U get the genuine.\n' Thla column is conducted by Mrs.\nM. J. Vlgneux. All news of a social\nnature, Including receptions, private\nentertainments, personal Items,\nmarriages, etc.. will appear In this\ncolumn. Telephone Mrs. Vlgneux at\nher home on Silica street.\nMr. and Mra. W J. Hlpperson, 308\nCarbonate street, announce the engagement of their eldest daughter, Dorothy\nClaire, to Richard Douglas Welch,\nvoungest son of Mr. and Mrs. A. J.\nWelch ef 1108 Nicola street. Vancouver.\nthe marriage to take place In Nelson\nthe latter part of July- On May 10\nMiss HlOperson was successful In obtaining her B: A, decree from the University of British Columbia.\nMrs. D. H. Ferguson of Longbeach\n\u25a0pent yesterday ln town. Bhe waa accompanied by her young daughter and\nson.\nCaptain Rowland Ellis, formerly of\nBoswell, who has been spending th-1\nwinter On the Riviera. Is spending a\nfortnight In Nelson before leaving for\nJsoan.\nMrs. W. Elsdon of Bonnlngton was a\nvisitor to towrj yesterday.\nYesterday afternoon Mrs. Alex. Lelth,\nMilt street, wu at home to the ladles\nof the congregation of the Presbyterian\nchurch. She was assisted ln receiving\nthe guests by Mrs. W. G. Mills. Durinf\nthe afternoon Mrs. J. Carrlck tn a moet\ncapable manner rendered delightful\npiano solos, while Mrs. A. D. McLeod\nnave the guests much pleasure witti her\nvocal soloe. Mrs. L. L. Boomer and Mra.\nR. L. Oliver presided at the daintily\nRpoolnted tea table, which was centered\nwith spring flowers and ferns. Those\nacting as servtteurs Included Mrs. William Waldle. Mrs. A. D. McLeod, Mrs. W\nT. Choate, Mrs. C. R. Hanna. Mrs. J.\nB. Curran. Mrs. A. N. Winlaw, Mrs. Ben-\n<amln McGregor, Mrs. J. B. Oray. and\nMrs. Colin McKim, The guests included\nMrs. N. Q. McCalljim. Miss K. McNeil,\nMrs. D. M. Miller. Mrs. R. L. Oliver,\nMi-s. Andre Elliott, Mrs. W. G. Mills, Mrs.\nA. D. McLeod. Mrs. J. Carrlck, Mrs. Will-\n(\u00bbm Waldie. Mrs A. Dingwall, Mrs, Mary\nRitchie. Mrs. Thomas McDonald. Mrs.\nH. H. Currie Mrs. Benjamin McGregor,\nMrs. J. B, Gray. Mrs. A. N Winlaw,\nMrs. J. B. Curran, Mrs. C. R- Hanna.\nMrs. M. Glbbs. Mrs. L. L. Boomer, Mrs.\nW. T. Choate, Mrs. Colin McKIr* Mrs.\nJ. Smith, Mb? Smith. Mrs. Jarrtes May.\nmiss Henrietta May. Mrs. D. W. McVicar.\nMrs. George Steel. Mrs. H. B. Morrison,\nMrs. J. Bailey, Mrs. R. D. Wallace, Mrs.\nAndre W. Spiers, Mrs. James Stout. Miss\nAnn MacArthur. Miss Roes, Miss Florence Hanna. Miss Alice Perkins, Mtss\nMargaret Robson. Miss Mhora McDonald\nMrs. T. F. Griffith, Miss Mary Anderson.\nMrs. N. McCnllum, Mrs. Ashton, Mrs. D.\nT. Heddle. Miss Mav Heddle. Mrs. C. R.\nNMrn, Mrs. James Webster. Mrs. W. H.\nHoare, Mrs, Malcom McLeod, Mrs.\nGeorge Alleii. Mrs. C Shannon, Mrs. J.\nWaldle. Mra. E. Burns, Mrs. H. Middle-\nton. Mrs. J. Kay. Mtss Annie Fawcett,\nMiss Rodgers snd Mrs. W. A, Dow.\nMayor and Mrs. T, A. Love passed\nthrough Nelspn yesterday, having been\ncalled to Mprden. Man., through the\ndeath  of the latter's parents.\nMrs. J. A. Gibson. Vernon street, entertained at four tables of bridge yesterday afternoon honoring Mrs. Murphy\nof Vancouver and Mrs. Douglas Thomp\nson of Kimberley.\nMr. and Mrs. George Slmms. Latimer\nstreet, have as their house guest Mrs\nCarl Hudson of Yakima. Wash., who will\nbe here for a few weeks.\nDr. David Hartin of Spokane, who has\nbeen in town for the past few days,\nhas returned to his home. While In\nthe city he was the guest of hlff mother,\nMrs-  Gilbert  Hartin.   Vernon street.\nMrs. O. B. Peers. Vernon street, entertained at the tea hour yesterday honoring Mrs. P. E. Regan of Baynes Lake.\nOscar Burden of Crawford Bay spent\nThursday ln the ctty.\nS. E. Masters left last night for Nakusp.\nAmong recent arrivals in Nelson is\nColonel C. C. Nlcolle of London. Eng.,\nwho will probnblv remain for some time.\nMr. and Mrs. Nelson E 11. 416 Houston\nstreet, leave 'his morning for Windermere, wherei thpr will visit for a few\nweeks with Mr. Ball's brother and sNter-\nIn-law. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Ball. They\nare accompanied by their 'small son,\nRav*-\nMrs. P. E. Regan of Baynes Lake Is\nthe guest of her daughter. Miss K. Regan, Baker street.\nO. McGregor df Crawford Bay was a\nvisitor   to  Nelson  Thursday.\nT. Klrkpatrick of Victoria, who has\nbeen In the city on business, left last\nnight for Revelstoke.\nMr. snd Mrs. Oeorge Clark. Cedar\nstreet, have as their guest Mrs. William\nClark of Ymlr.\nE C. Francis of Sunshine Bay spent\nThursday in town shopolng.\nMiss Vera Knauff of Harrop was s\nshopper ln tbe city yesterday.\nDr. W J. Peck of the Howard mine\nat Ymlr spent yesterday ln Nelson.\nMrs. A. J. Watson of Kootenay Bay\nwas among visitors to town yesterday.\nMr. nnd Mrs. j. R. Bailey of Kaslo\nspent Thursday in the city.\nW. L. Hepher of Boswell was a visitor\nln the city vesterdav.\nClarence Cunningham of Alamo spent\nye\"terdav in town.\nMrs. Edward Daly of Ymlr was among\nshoopers to Nelson vesterdav.\nW. J. McConnell of Harrop spent\nThursday ln the city.\nMr. and Mrs. Dan A. Boyd. 806 Silica\nstreet, have taken up residence ait 518\nMm. street.\nHarry Noxon and his two sisters, the\nMisses Isobel nnd Mollie Noxon of Perry\nSiding, are citv visitors.\nThe home of Mrs. J. J. Foote.. Baker\nstreet, was the meeting place of Cirle\nNo. 4 of Trinity United church yesterday afternoon, when the hostess was\nAssisted bv Mrs. R. L. McBrlde and Mrs.\nW. B. Steed, who served, and Mrs.\nCharles Miller, who poured tea. Mrs\nWilliam Rutherford was verv interesting\nin her little talk on Lord and Lady\nWllllngdon's visit to Nelson Thursday\nafternoon. Mrs. J. A. Irving was the\nwinner of a contest. Those present\nwere Mrs. J. B Stalwood, Mrs. Hillman.\nMrs. George Rlmms, Mrs. John Lundle\nMrs. Arthur Oerrlll. Mrs. Thomes Oerman. Mrs. J. A. Irving. Mrs. w. E. Wasson of Yakima, Mrs. W. E. Coles. Mrs\nMiller, Mrs, F D. Wright. Mrs. Carl Hudson of Yaklmo. Mrs. W. Tl. Coles. Mrs\nW, C. Mawhinney. Mra. Norman O\nStlhbs. Mrs. W. B. Steed and Mrs. R. L\nMcBrlde.\nD. McBurney has returned from Edge-\nwood.\n\u00bbiwiniifflffmmt''~T^r7m,^\u2122'MMmmM1^\n611 faker Street, Phone 200\nSale of Silk Underwear Continues Today\nTODAY SPECIAL OFFERING OF WOM-\nEN'S COATS AT\n$33.50 EACH\nCoats of the better kind,\nfor Dress or Sports wear.\nFinely tailored of Pure\nWool Poiret Twills and\nNovelty Tweeds and registered Brands, representing the best makers only.\nRichly lined with heavy\nweight Crepe De Chine in\nsolid colors or two-tone\neffect. All wanted colors\nas Navy, Black, Sand,\nFrench. Blue, Nile Green,\netc. Sizes 16 to 44. Regular values $45 to $47.50.\nON   SALE   TODAY   AT f 35.00.\nNEW   DRESSES  OF\nPRINTED CREPE\nDE CHINE AT $27.75\nTO $40.00\nSmart Dresses for summer wear of Printed Crepe\nde Chine in all the new\ndesigns. Solid colors or\ncombination. Sizes 16 to\n40 EACH S27.75,\n$32.50 TO ?40.00.\nNEW PRINTED CREPES\n$2.95 THE YARD\nMostly in Dress I,ength8. These show\noff the season's smartest patterns\nThey come in a splendid quality of\nSilk. Full 38 inches wide. PER YARD\nS3.95.\nFUGI SILK DRESSES\n$5.00 TO $15.00 EACH\nA splendid range of single or double\nFugi Silk Dresses in long sleeve, of\nsleeveless styles, and in White or light\ncolors. They come splendidly tailored,\nand are perfect fitting. Sizes 13, 15,\n16 to 42. EACH S5.O0, 87.75, $8.75\nTO $15.00.\n\u25a0\u25a0^\u2022-miwwimwg^^\nASKS SPECIFIC\nPERFORMANCE OF\nOPTION TO SELL\n*\nTons Ore Week\nTrail Smelter\nOre received at the reduction plant\nof the Consolidated Mining & Smelting company at Trail for this year to\nMay 7 totalled 316,800 tons. The total\nwas comprised of 37.361 tons shipped\nby custom mines, and 188,506 tons\nshipped by company mines.\nFor the seven days ending on May\n7. company mines shipped 8171 tons\nand custom mines 3134 tons, making a\ntotal   of   10,396   tons.\nTwo  new   shippers  are   on   the   list\nthis   week,   the  Midnight  at   Rossland\nand   the   Banker   at   Ainsworth,   each\nsending tn about a carload.\n' Weekly   orr   receipts   are   as   follows:\nCopper\u2014Allenby,   Allenby,   1008.\nLead\u2014Duthle, Smithers, 33; Lucky\nJim, Zincton, 39; Midnight. Rowland.\n19:   Whitewater, RetAllaok. 36.\nMilling\u2014Banker. Ainsworth. 46: Silver Cup, New Hazelton, 38; Van Roi,\nSllverton,  36.\nDry\u2014Insurgent. Republic, 113; Insurgent Fraction, Republic, 4\u00ab Qullp,\nRepublic. 403; Surprise Republic. Republic, 109.\nZinc\u2014Lucky Jim. Zincton. 134;\nWhitewater,  Retallack. 94.\nHell   of   Kamloops  Sues  Cunningham Mines and Clarence\nCunningham\nJudgment was reserved by Mr. Justice Murphy In assise court here yesterday, when William L. Belt of Kamloops sued Clarence Cunningham of\nAlamo, and the Cunningham Mines,\nlimited, for specific performance of an\noption held by him on the Queen Bess\nGroup of claims at Alamo, and a\ntramway and mijl in connection with\nthe property,\nC. F. R. Plncott of Grand Porks\nacted for Mr. Bell. C. H. Hamilton,\nK.C, and E. C. Wragge, of Hamilton.\nWragge  &  Hamilton,  defended.\nMr. Bell was the only plaintiff witness. E. C. Wragge, Clarence Cunningham, Dr. j. T. Cunningham of Spokane, Russell Corrle of Alamo, and\nAlex Lelth of Nelson, the latter four\ndirectors of the Cunningham Mines,\nwere defence witnesses.     *\nIt was claimed that Clarence Cunningham gave Mr. Bell the option on\nthe group, and that the directors of\nthe company refused to ratify the deal.\nNO   AUTHORITY\nDirectors of the company testified\nMr. Cunningham had no authority to\nmake the deal unless it received the\nindorsation of the directors, and this\nhad been refused on the ground that\nthe conditions of the option would\nnot permit the company to retire immediately any or all of Its 6300,000\nindebtedness. It was alao stated\nMr. Bell knew this Indorsation wae\nnecessary.\nThe plaintiff claimed the option\nshould be exercised because Mr. Cunningham, though no resolution of the\ndirectors gave him the power, acted\nas managing director and generally\nhad the powers of a managing director.\nHe was also president of the company. The option was sinned by him\nand by the acting secretary, and the\ncompany seal waa affixed. Mr. Plncott\nclaimed the plaintiff was not concerned with the Inner workings of\nthe company, having the option signed\nln  this  manner.\nMr. Hamilton and Mr. Plncott made\nexhaustive arguments, quoting Innumerable authorities and cases, and exploring the points at issue very thoroughly.\nWolves to Play\nPirate Hoopers\nat Trail Today\nLeave From Stanley and Victoria at 5:30; Have Beaten\nPirates Three Times\nEleven Men Signed\nOn by High Schod\nCadets' Ball Nine\nWolves' hoop artists travel to Trail\ntoday to play a challenge game with\nTrail Pirates. Wolves have defeated\nthe Pirates three times this season,\ntwice in Trail and once in Nelson.\nThe team, accompanied by A. Wallach,\nmanager Is to be conveyed by cars\ndriven by Frank Slmms and W- Jeffs.\nThey leave from the corner of Stanley\nand Victoria streets promptly at  6:30.\nThe Wolves' team will be: W. Jeffs. C.\nJeffs. G. Wallach. R. McLeod. J. Wallace.\nH. Gillette and G. Campion,\nHigh School Cadets' baseball nine,\nwho clash with the Live Wires in the\nopening game of the Trafalgar Independent Baseball association schedule\non Tuesday night at Trafalgar grounds\nhave signed on 11 players- Following\nare the boys, the first nine of which\nhave been registered with the association:\naeorse Campion, manager; Bob Horswlll. J. Cherrlngton. Ben Cmwford,\nSandy Martin, Lome Stewart. H. Farenholtz, A. Kirby. Bob Bell. W. Vance\nand Ted McVicar.\nVance and  McVicar  are  to be registered  tonight so  that they may play\non Tuesday.\nTO   I'FNAII\/K\nSo far the Cadets' Is the only team\nthat has registered, although the date\nset for registration of players was May\n10, All players not registered with\nsecretary Cy Jackman tonight, are to\nbe penalized by pot being allowed to\nplay in the first league game their\nteam is scheduled  to play.\nSurvey reveals that only 3  per cent\nI of crime ls punished ln Chicago.\nC&r\\&d&\nA Special Extra Dividend of $700,000.00\nwill be distributed by the Company during this year.\nJ. D. BRACKETT, District Manager, Cranbrook, B.C.\nJAMES SKINNER, Representative, TraU, B.C.\nFresh Tobacco\nOur bobby la to in that everything\nyou buy from ua la Juat right. Our\n\u25a0peclal la doing -stronger tban aver,\nTry It.\nBUSH'S\nGame Problems\nAre Discussed\nby Fernie Club\nPERNIE. B C, May II.\u2014A special\nmeeting of the Fernie district Rod and\nGun club was held this week wtth Dr.\nKelman in the chair. It was for the\npurpose of passing resolutions ln regard\nto closed seasons on upland game birds\nand fur bearing animals. Owing to\nnumerous reports to the club that game\nbirds were scarce in this district It was\nrecommended to the game conservation board that the season be ctosed\nfor a period of two years.\nGame Warden .Ira Brown reported\nthat most of the trappers in his district\nhave been using good judgment ln trapping their Unas by not depleting them\nof fur bearing animals. In view of his\nrecommendations and other reports received the olub recommended that the\nseason be left open next year. Corporal\nMcKenzle of Nelron. who is in charge\nof the entire district was present and\ngave Interesting information to the olub\nln regard to conservation of game.\nWholesale Meat, Eggs,\nButter Fat and Fowl\nPrices Are Unchanged\nPrices   paid   by   local   wholesale!*   t-o\nproducers for butter fat. eggs, pork and\nfowl, unchanged thla week, are ae follows:\nButter fat: Special I .43\nNo.   1     .      41\nNo.  3 .39\nEggs:   Firsts   .... if\nPullets .     .31\nPork, per pound .13\nFowls; Live .30\nDiesaed\nCOAL WOOD COAL\nLet us fill your Orders today for Dry Wood\u2014any length.\nor Gait Lump Coal\nCO.,\nNELSON  TRANSFER\n, Cor. Vernon n% Stanley Sta.\nPHONE 35\nLTD.\nNelaon, B. a\nPure\nTasty\nThere's no better dish than\na heaping portion of Curlew\nIce Cream. All delectable\nflavors.    By brick or bulk.\nEAT MORE ICE CREAM.\nCURLEW CREAMERY CO., LTD.\nICE CREAM BUTTER MILK\nAU Perfectly Pasteurized Products.\n*\nmm\n\t\n Vag* SU\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 12, 1928\nemmttees to\nHandk Creston\nFait Ate tiamed\n, B<S   May 11 At a meft-\ndlrectors \u00abf Creaton Valley\nMTU aeeoclatlon. nn W-Mlaeadav.\nPresident c. W Allan was\nthe   co*nmm\u00abe\u00ab  to  handle\n1636   tali   fair   were   struck\nMoon, P. H. Jackson,\n\u2014I.  Mra.  George  Cart-\nMrs. James Maxwell.\nGrounds\u2014Major Mallandalne, Oeorge\nCartwrlght.\nFinance\u2014R.   J.   Forbes.  C.  W.   Allan.\nSports\u2014S Charles Murrell. W. 8.\nMcAlplne, R. J.  Forbes.\nMidway\u2014c W. Allan, H O. Oreenwood.\nThe secretary announced thst the department had fixed a stated date for\nthis year's exhibition which must be\nheld on September 36 If the usual\nstaff of government Judges are to be\nutilised. The association Is expecting\nthe village commissioners to ln June\nsubmit the necessary plebiscite to get\nthe required authority to buy the\nfive-acre fair grounds and buildings\nat a price of 62SOO.\n=:\nCut aunnt\neau-k,n   ef  a\nF Ir.ata.a\nCum.Dt.aaat\nThe etnMtns\na einete eer.\nt~eiltime,ni-\nf.a  anal un-\nlialit.t tnta\nfifteen irauUrr eeeee armaaaaj\nef.sreatnmnututleHbra.. Ba\naaaana attna tathnaraa Ftreetana\nCum.Dl.ptne  praeeee, east.\nHan le teuutatui ... naaar\nmull mutant, tnaernalfr telle.\nWhjj Firestone Tires Give You\nMost Miies Per Dollar\nThe greatest enemy to tire life ii not the harsh (rind\nof city streets or rough roads but heal which is created\ninside the tire by internal friction. Heat not only\nweakens the fabric, but also softens the rubber causing\nblowouts and tire failures.'\nThe exclusive Firestone Gum-Dipping process\n\u2022prevents internal heat. Every fibre of every cord is\ninsulated and impregnated with rubber, which prevents\ninternal friction and at the same time binds the cords\ntogether by a stronger' union of rubber, thus giving\ngreater strength and flexibility to the tire.\nTake advantage of the Gum-Dipping process to\ntawer your tire costs this year. Your local Firestone\nDealer not only supplies you with these better tires that\ncoat no more, but also gives the better service that\nenables you to benefit from every ettra mile built in at\nthe factory.\nTIWWrONE TIRK - RUB3-R COMPANY OT CANADA. Limited\nHAMILTON, CANADA\nM08T MILES PER DOLLAR\nFIRESTONE BUILD8 THE ONLY  GUM-DIPPED  TIRES\nDcclers for District and Nelson\nSmedlpy Garage Co.\nVERNON STREET\nNEXT POST OFFICE\n(^tJhE CAPABILITY of the\nV^C\/ WiUyi-Knight Great Six\nfor sustained brilliant perform,\nance year after year, is possible\nonly through the use of the\npatented Willys-Knight sleeve*\nvalve motor\u2014the engine that\ngrows smoother with use\u2014that\nhas no valves to grind\u2014no car.\nbon troubles\u2014no tappets, or\nrocker-arms to grow noisy.\n*\nWith its grace of body design,\nits rich color harmonies, its\nbeautiful and luxurious interiors, and a new degree of lively\npick-up and smooth, surging\npower, the Willys-Knight Great\nSix anticipates the higher automobile standards for 1928\nand '29.\nUntil you take the wheel of\nthis finer car. you have yet to\nlearn the fullest pleasure in\nyour motoring experience.\ni\nHlllj.-Kulslil  lirrul  Six prlie\u00bb\nfrom \u00bb\u25a0!\u00bb!(> Hi tU*M| standard\nSix price* frnul SI TIKI to SI8IU.\nP.OB. NSLSON\n>\nCAPITOL MOTORS\nVtrnon St.      Opp. \u00a3.0. and Hume Hotel      Nelaon, EC,\nThey Call It Love'\nBy LOUIS JOSEPH VANCE\nA quick tempo atory of the modem girl's quest for\nromance in a big city.\n(CHAPTBR IX)\nFay lascelles, a girl of the south,\nattends a studio party given by her\nemployer Manny Reseda. On the\nway. while Reseda is awaiting Hattie Neale, under whom she works\nin the art department of Reseda's\nmagazine, she becomes acquainted\nwith Don Oerould, a young man-\nabout-town, who attaches himself\nto the party In a spirit of fun.\nAt the party she meets Carl Lander, for whom her brother, Beau,\nworks. Alao she meets, and particularly admires, Lona Schell, a\nbeautiful girl who was formerly\nlender's necretarv. though Pay\ndoes not know that. On leaving\nLander's employ, Lona retains Lander as a friend and he Induces her\nto give up living with her roommate and to move to a hotel until\nshe can find a suitable apartment.\nAt the party, Don Oerould, half\nbanterlngly, tells Fay he Is ln love\nwtth her. Reseda pays Fay\nmarked attention and she leaves\nIn hla car after declining Don's\ninvitation to take her home because she learns he la engaged to\nbe married. On the way home\nReseda attempts to kiss Fay and\nwhen she protests, the car's door\nis opened and Don, wearing the\nuniform of a chauffeur, orders\nManny to leave. Next morning\nBeau tells hla sister that she should\nnot know LonA, but then decides lt\nmust be some other Lona who telephones to Ladder frequently. At\nhis home. Don Oerould learns that\nhip mother has discharged hla sister's governess because his brother\nDuke,  was  paying  her attention.\nTilt    FAMILY   CONCLJtVB\nEdda    with    a    flashing    Hitmen    anl '\ncurling    lips    reared    htf    head    back\nas   though    to    speed    her    husbaucT-s 1\ngoing     with    a     barbed  * -shaft     but f\nthought better of it, and watched the\ndoor   close   with   no   rrrtre   comment\nthan  a   shrug   and   a   rolUiiK   of   fine\neyes, >\nAnd Don. with a sympathetic cluck,\nwent to perch on the arm of her\nch\"'r and hug his mother to him.\n\"Don't be so tragic, dear. It'll alt\ncome out in the wash, you'll see.\"\n\"But It's so hard,\" Edda protested\nbetween sniffles, \"to sec your children\nfollowing In your father's footsteps.\nIf it had been Jethro, I Wouldn't\nhave been surprised \u2014naturally\u2014Dut\nDuke\u2014f*\n\"I know We're a rotten lot. anct\nthat's a fact. All the same, Duke sets\ntoo much store by his comfort tg\nmarry trouble, unless he's hounded\nInto It, simply A> assert his manhood\"\n\"He'll do anything that scheming\nwoman tells him to,\" Edda protested\nwith a conviction which, privately,\nDon shared\u2014\"he'll rparry her tomorrow   unluss \"you  stop  him.\"\n\"I?\" Don explostulatad \"Oh, come\nnow;'\n\"You can do more than you Imagine\ndear. Yotf're the only one of ub all\nDuke's Rot the least respect for. He\nadmires you a nit values your good\nopinion----\"\n\"Duke.1\"\n\"But he does.\" Oral rf ul for h'.s\nsoothing. Edda nraetftai guipcri back:\nthe last sob, And earnrsUy broachod\nher argument. * \"He's told me so himself. Because you hnvun't got , hts\nweaknef-s; \u00bbl k&et you d.m'i let th\u00abn\nget you. into hot wler ao*\u2022fatten.'.. .K\nDuke thought he was doing anything\nthat would hurt you\u2014well, he wouldn't,\"\n\"I can't make out, Mother, which of\nus  you   think  you're  kidding.\"\n\"It's the truth. If Duke thought\nhis marrying this common piece would\ndisgust the Del vans so Letty would\nbreak your engagement\u2014even to pay\nme out-, he wouldn't do anything so\nInsane, at least until you and Letty\nwere   safely   married.''\n\"But he doesh't think any such\nnonsense,\" Don patiently pointed out.\n\"So I must say, Mother, I don't quite\naee what   you're getting at.\"\n\"You can make him think so. Yiu\nand Letty aren't in any desperate\nhurry are you?\"\n\"X dort't know \u2022 * \u2022 daresay.\" Don\nif* free -to admit, \"wc could both of\nus do wltb a small reprieve. We feel\npretty keenly we're young to be trusted\nwith all tlie liberty a modern marriage\ngrants.\n\"Then get Letty to consent to put\nyour wedding off. and give Duke to\nunderstand she's heard about this\ncheap intrigue of his and threatens to\nbreak with you altogether If he marries\nMaria. Another six months and he'll\nbe running after some other \u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nYou know he -will, Don! Duke's his\nfather  all  over again.\"   \u25a0\n\"It ian't that I'm laughing at.\" Don\nrhtukletl. tightening his arms and\nrocking Edda with him. \"I always\nkMt you were a wise woman, dear.\nbut never that you eould give\nMachlavclll so many .strokes per hole.\nAH the same,\" he more soberly reconsidered. \"I'm afraid you're forgetting\nont thing\"\n\"What's  that?\"\n\"Marie's got all the earmarks of\nii natural born litigant, to say nothing\nof the best grounds a girl could ask\nfor a Raudjf br\u00abach-of-promlne action\"\n\"Your  father Would   buy   her   off.\"\n\"I'm  not  sure  he  could  before the\nMOST people know this absolute\nantidote for pain, but arc you careful\nto say Bayer when you buy it? And\ndo you always give a glance to see\nBayer on the box\u2014and the word\ngenuine printed in red? It isn't the\ngenuine Aspirin without it I A drugstore always has Barer, with the\nproven directions tucked in every box:\nSW4S\nnewspapers got wind of it. Maria's\nwise enough to know how a gentle\ndraft of publicity would fan our desire\nto settle at any coat. It would be\nheaps cheaper ln the long run to let\nDuke marry her and take his medicine.\nHe'd be shelling out alimony Inside\na year, or I miss my gums; but he'd\nhave learned a lesson * * *\"\n\"I do think you're mad, Don!\" His\nmother broke testily from his hold\nand the chair as well. \"Can't you\nunderstand she ask* nothing better\nthan to become a suffering angel\nwife? She'd never divorce Duke, never\nin this world, for any provocation!\nWhat she wants is to be Mrs. Duke\nGerould.\u2014\" *\n\"Duchess of Gerould,\" Don frlvo'\nlously interpolated, \"would sound more\nlifelike.\"\n\"That's precisely lt. She's a hope-\nleas commoner now, as Duke's wife\nshe'd be as good as a duchess. That's\nwhat makes it all ao Impossible; we\nQeroulds can't afford to marry beneath our station.\"\n\"Whatever that'to \u2022 \u2022 \"\"\n\"You know perfectly tfeW\u2014\"\n\"Well,\" pon quizzically Insisted:\n\"wb\u00ab\u00bb  is o\u00bbir jttiUon, Mother?\"\n\"What all the world knows It ts\nWe, uhe former Edda Duquesne\nturned on her son dellantlv to proclaim\u2014if ever In her hlstronic career.\nat that moment every Inch a queen\u2014\n\"We Oeroulds are tbe royalty of\nAmerica!\"\nEdda was by no means ready to\nleave off reliving those big moments\nof genre drama which her golden age\nhas been rife wtth: Don's comment\nimpinged on her understanding with\nno force other than that of a cue;\nand without the least lose of face, but\nlather refreshed by her brief rest In\nthe cradle of hia sympathy, she proceeded in the argot of her first love,\nto emote all over the stage.\nTh La being a tolerably cramped\narena for one whose technique was so\nfrcc-bknded, her audience, whom old\nexperience had taught a thing to two,\nresigned all the elbow-room to her\nand, modestly retreating to tbe window which had been bis father's\nrefuge, yielded even as the old boy\nhad to the tug of those selfish concerns which, though they shouldn't\nhave been, were more consequential\nIn his sight than this crUH in the\nfamily history.\nAs to that, it waa, if you ask*\u00b0d Din,\nas lt might be. . Crlw-Ni, he reckoned,\nwere pretty much what a iellow made\nthem; tbe less you meddled with one\nthe teas seismic tt was apt to prove.\nIn this immediate Instance, for example, Duke waa too good a Oerould\nto be a marrying man, only leave him\nalone, and his lymphatic big blonde\ncf a Viennese friend would wait a\nlong time to call herself Duke's Mrs.\nThjs Lnc scheme of mother's was\ntlicrelore extravagant tf not inexpedient. The real trouble was, Us promise chimed too agreeably with inclination \u2022 \u2022 *\nDoii making from time to time\nnoises which Edda was free to construe as applause lighted a cigarette\nand gave a frown to the bright invitation ol thc avenue.\nFunny, how impossible it was today\nto think of that little southern giri\nbut In association with a certain teasing Btrain of music. u.        __\nEven now, with Edda beNnd him\nranting away in her bast , form, thc\nhit  of lt leasing  his heart..,\nWhat the deuce Was  the  thing?\n\"\u2022 * \u2022 no depending unon your\nfather, he'd never so muclr as walk\nround the corner to save tl son of\nhis. All he was looking for Just now\nwas a good excuse to sneak away and\ngo on one of ffl* little bltst\"\nNo use disputing anything so self-\napparent. The old boy had Just turned\nup on tho doorstep below, to wait\nfor his car to pull over, Poured into\na nut-brown surtout so craftily tailored that It endued with a deal of\nplausible dignity his tolerably overstuffed person! the bowler on hts\nround head set at precisely the most\nkilling angle; a museum piece of mal-\nacca clipped beneath an arm; Jethro\nwas drawing on. with patni, a pair\nof lemon-colored thih leather gloves.\nBy the eock of one blue eye and the\ncomplacence that lurkBd in the shade\nof that anachronistic mustache, nothing was more distant from his mind\nthan any thought of putting himself\nout on Duke's account.\nWise old bird! He knew better than\nto waste time preaching to Duke the\nprtncjnloB his father had never pretended to practice      \u2022   *   \u2022\nThe town car touched at the curb,\nand Jethro ambled down to It with a\nport which lent fair color to that priceless line hts consort had a* moment\nago pronounced: the effect was Irrefutable\u2014there went the American Edward  tlfe Seventh.\nIlls coach ot mat* rolled away\u2014lo\nbe dismissed for the day. ten to one.\nas soon as it had set him down at his\nnearest club\u2014and the Prince of Wales\nof Eddn's metaphor, otherwise Duquesne\nOerould, gentleman, with considerably\nless appetite for the public eye, let\nhimself out. His morose, miatrustiui\nstare searched the sky ln vain for a\nshred of cloud; he concluded Just thc\nsame not to separate from his faithful\numbrella. A canny soul, Duke never\nhad to throw his money about tn taxi\nfares when It treacherously came on to\nrain. For all his high place in Edda's\nhierarchy, it might havc been a retired\nliautsman who, lu that plain dark\nChesterfield overcoat, from under which\ntrousers of sober stripe ran down to\nblue-toed black boots, mous-wd utt afoot.\nNot that it became Don Oerould to\nbe putting on atj-a when masculine virtue was ln question. Were not hts\nthoughts, who thus cynically watched\nlather and brother go their problematical ways, plighted to another than her\nwho tor two days now had haunted\nmem like a strain of gracious music'\n\"A  rotten  lot!\"\nThat scrap ol soliloquy plumped into\none of Edda's pauses lor breath and\ninspiration; and. hard up for another\ncut. his mother harsluy demanded:\n\"What?''\n\"Oh nothing; I Just happened to bit\non the name of a tune that's been\nDuszing in my skull all morning\u2014\nRose lu the Btid. that's It.\"\nThat was it, sure enough, thr very\nair, ualnty. seductive, haunted by pure\nbeauty, which, better than words\ncould, phrased one's memory of Fay\nLascelles.       ,\nQueer contraption, the human mind.\n\"That's a Oerould for you! I can\ntear my heart, to utters ior all you\nuue\u2014you wont even listen, you stand\nthere mooning about a stupid piece\nof music, What on earth's the matter\nwith  you,  Don?    Are  you In love?\n\"I don't know.\" the scamp grinned.\n\"Supposed to be, ain't 17 And anyway.\nI   was   listening,   I   heard   every   word\n\"Ob you did! Then suppose you\nsay something to prove it.\"\n\"I don't mind.' Don moved back\nto fold his mother ln bis arms again.\nMutinous tor thc first moment, nh.\nstrained away; but hunger tor affection was too sharp, and moist warm\ncheeks directly  yielded  to his lips.\n\"There! Now quit fretting, dear.\nDuke's lust blown down the avenue,\nbut I know pretty well where he'll\nlight; trust me to round tbe lad up\nand ride herd on him till he simmers\ndown to iiormi 0 He won't make any\nmad marriage 1,  I can help lt.\"\n\"Oh Dont\" the mother whimpered,\nclinging\u2014\"you are such a comfort, th?\nonly one I've ever had, I don't knqw\nwhat Id do without you.\"\n\"Won't have to tor some months to\ncome if 1 can wangle Letty Into your\nmauohcal young plot, old lady. Now\nturn me loose before Dttke's spoor goes\ncold.\"\nOn the way to bis own apartment\nthat confounded tune tf a sudden\ncapped  up again*  audible  ibli Umo\notherwise than to the reminiscent ear,\nln the hall on which the ballroom\nopened. True that the melodv waa being ground through the mill of Ja*2: Its\nvital thread of tndlvdualltv survived\neven that mutilation: and the Wistful\nsouvenir It eon.lured up made his pulses\nskip a beat, as though he had c6me face\nto face with a phantamn of the living.\nOn one of the spindling gilt chairs\nwhich stood in an endless rank round\nthe walls, his sister Florence, a child\n, In skirts so scant that, set aside the\nImmaturity of her piquant small face,\nshe might have passed anywhere for\n40. waa watting her turn without any\nimpatience\u2014ao honestly enraptured, indeed, that she was making no real effort\nto contain her giggles.\nDon with a stern mien marched ln,\nwithout ceremony caught the girl up\nfrom her chair, and swung her Into the\ntime of that Fav lascelles tune.\n\"See here, young woman!\" he severely admonished\u2014\"that's no way to be\nbehaving. How can you expect Doug\n\u2014to learn his steps with you sitting\nthere like that, making the poor kid\nfoot-conscious?\"\n\"But I can't help it, they do look so\nfunny. Oh, Don!\" Florence blissfully\nsighed\u2014\"you dance divinely, I wish\nyou'd teach us Instead.\"\n\"Well, If mother would only take the\ntrouble to find some nice girl to teach\nDoug, lt would make all the difference\nwith his dancing.\"\n\"You're not half bad yourself, Florry.\nWhv don't you V\n*You know perfectly well there's no\nthrill ln dan>lng with your own sister.\"\n\"I didn't know giving Doug a thrill\nwas the object. However, there may be\nsomething ln what you say. I'll think\nit over.\n\"And you won't forget to speak to\nMother \"\n\"Perhaps\u2014when  the time's rtpo.\"\n\"Oh. I don't mean right now. when\nshe's all upset about Frauleln Valeria,\nDon.\" a mystlfed voice pursued: \"What\ndid Maria Valeria do all of a sudden to\nmake Mother fire her?\"\n\"Ypu ought to know.\" Don fenced\nwith a false face of surprise. \"Thought\nyou told me not bo long ago you and\nthe frauleln weren't hitting It off any\ntoo well.\"\n\"But tt wasn't ar\u201evthlng to do wltti\nme. Goodness knows I never liked\nFrauleln Valeria, and I don't care If I\nnever learn to speak Oerman\u2014I'm ever\nso glad she's gone! But we never had\nb regular row, and whatever she could\nhave done to make Mother so furious\nI haven't the faintest Idea.\"\n\"Oh. well!\" Don considerately replied,\n\"seeing she was your governess, you've\ngot a right to the horrid truth tf anybody has. Oolng on whit Mother said,\nI do believe the sin of F-aulein Valeria\nwas'nothing less than* lese majeste.\"\n(Continued tomorrow!\nBULB SHOW AT\nCRESTON TODAY\npart-men t engineer, from Calgary, and\nE O. Webb ot Victoria, the Indian\ndepartment engineer in British Columbia. Their work had to do^wlth the\nIndian lands whlth are situated tn\nthe company's first dyking unit. A. L.\nMcCulloch of Nelson was also on tbe\nwork, ln the interests of the Reclamation Company.\nCRESTON NOTES\nCRESTON. B.C., May 10.\u2014Mr. aad\nMrs. Arthur Burge of Kalispel, Mont.,\nwho have been here on a visit with\nMr. and Mrs. John Ryckman. have left\nfor home via Cranbrook.\nR. 8. Sevan, who recently leased his\ngarage business at Creaton, has Just returned from a. business visit at Kimberley, Cranbrook and other East Kootenay points.\nQ. J. Bavle, who ts at present employed at Northport. Wash., was home\nfor a tew days' visit this week.\nMrs. Santon and young daughter of\nKellogg, Idaho, are Creston visltiws at\npresent,  guests of  Mrs. Bayle\nJ, F. Rose returned on Wednrfcday\nfrom a combined business and plea.\\ire\nvisit at Cranbrook.\nAccording to provincial police offre\nrecords sale of auto licence plates ait\nCreston for April totaled a - Ht; \\s\nover $1400.\n\u2014,     .....ss_*m.        1    \u25a0   \t\nNew myser has brokeij, through in\nYellowstone park.\nCRESTON, B.C.. May li.\u2014Creston\nand district women's Institute bave\nall arrangements complete for the\n1928 bulb show which will be held\nIn Trinity united church hall on\nSaturday afternoon. Mrs. Welters will\nhave charge of the flowers; Mrs. W H.\nCrawford supervises the sale of home\ncooking, and Mrs. Cherrlngton will\nlook after the hall decoration effort.\nA big show of tulips ls looked for\nbut the display of daffodils Is bound\nto be below par aa the season for\nthem ls about over.\nEngineering Survey\nin Connection With\nReclamation Is Made\nCRESTON. B.C., May II\u2014 What is\nexpected will be the final engineering\nsurvey by Canadian officials ln connection with Creaton Reclamation com-\nn\u00bbny, limited, dyking operations on\n.'.ootenay flats, was completed yesterday by J. 8. Tempest, an interior de-\nHer Boy Suffered with Weak Kidneys\nEdmonton Lady ti Pleased with Dodd's Kidney Pillj\n\"My bay, who it four jr-Mri old, had my weak kldatjn, which\ncaused involuntary urination every night,\" Mys Mn.\nD. Peteti, 8541-7?th Ave., Edmonton, Ala. \"We\ntried 'aaany things that people told us about,\nwithout success. Someone told us about Dodd's\nKidney Pills.  I bought a box and used soma\nof them and my boy is now relieved of his\ntrouble.   I shall always praise your Dodd's\nKidney Pills.\"\nKidney Trouble it very common among all\nclasses of people\u2014both young and old.   A lat\nof valuable time is usually wasted by using\nunsuitable treatments.   Dodd's Kidney Pill*\nstimulate and strengthen Weak Kidney,.\nCA. At All Dealers, er by Mail frees Tbe\nJVC Deees M.Jim. Ce. V.I., Torealc 2, Oat.\nDODl)^\nKIDNEY\nPIUS\nmm*'**\n:,..-   J\u2014*    \u25a0\u2022=\u00ab\nCAPITOL   MOTORS\nOlMlltMtr  rust omit &   Hume  llutrl\nVERNON     ST..    NELSON\nDOMINION GARAGE\n& SALES CO.\nTEAIL.   ac\n\"Establishing a New Standard in  Automobiles*\nGreaterSpeedrPowerrBeauty-\nDURANT\"*\n66\nJ\nrAsst.NurtJt cuts\nFours and SkM\ni\"\u00bbn $895 '\" S2485\nf.o.l). Nelson, fully equipped\n\u00a3|)UILT to maintiin the high Kputatwa\nD gained by all Durant products . . . tht\nDurant \"\u00bb\" is large . . . its appearance it\nenhanced by its exclusively Durant radiator ,,.\n\u25a0ta Red Seal Continental Motor it more powerful ... and it hat Bendix 4-wheel brakes.\nWhen you drive a Durant \"55\" you will notice\nthe comfortable teatt ... the additional leg-\nroom ... the great riding case ... the two-\ntone upholstery ... and many other Durant\nbuilt, Hayes-Hunt body features , . .\nThe smooth, quick get-away of the motor will\nthrill you . . . in fact, you will hardly believe\nthat so much \"automobile\" can be had for so\nlittle money.\nDrive the Durant \"55\" today ... or tomorrow|\n,., anytime ... from your 'ocal Durant dealer's.\nDw,li hr\nDURAhn* MOIORS OF CANADA, UMTCD\nTORONTO      .      CANADA\nDitrant \"55\" Six Cylinder Special Coupe\na*~J? t*i' \"\"X1*. Spectul Grn*** (IUi_ral\u00abl). S*\u00abcinl Four\nDoor Sedan, Special F<mr Door Short Brouiham and\nStmciul Two-Door Sedan.\nDURANT\nRugby Trucks, Four and Six Cylinders) Capacity 1 ton and 1 '4 iota\nBills\nKOOTENAY GARAGE\nPhone 43 Nelson, B.C. Josephine Street\nsum\n\" -- 1-n- ''\n TOE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY IKtoNINd, &JAY 12, 1\u00a728\n\u2014\nfage Sev\u00abP\n\"TRY A NIP TONIGHT\"\nBEST PROCURABLE\ne~ SOTTUD \u2022 auSRAHTttOJY\nraoouct   or   scotlabo   -^\nTka Original Label \u2014 look for It at tKe Vendor'a aad inelet aa\nGRANT'S \"BEST PROCURABLE\"\nITiis advertisement is not published or displayed by the\nlUOR CONTROL BOARD or the Government of B. C.\nrinthians Trim\nMcLearies Three\nto One in Soccer\nvaries Go to Pieces in Sec-\nad Half After Carrying\nGame in First\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nfgaiVPORTiVwaa\nNEHF OPPOSING\nVANCE SHUTS OUT\nBROOKLYNITES\nSixth  Straight  Chicago Win;\nWilson Hits Homer; Cincinnati Beats Boston\nking the game ln hand ln the sec-\nhalf after a slack first half, Jake\ntery's Corinthians scored a 3-1 vlo-\nover A. Wallach'i McLearles In the\n3d game of the Senior Soccer league\ntbe Recreation grounds yesterday\n\u25a0noon. The McLearles had Uie\n\u00bbr hand ln the. first half. The\nxJ ended with the score 1-1. In\nsecond half tbe McLearles went to\n\u00bbth teams were playing poor ball,\nstreaks of good footwork and\n\u25a0\u2022en. Blnks, center half for the\nnthlans. was perhaps the best man\nthe field.\nN  SCORING\nIthin  10  minutes of the  *****  t*\u00bb\ni boosted their supporters' hopes by\nting   the   scoring.     Whitfield   shot\nI   a   scrimmage    tn   front   of    the\nnthlans' goal.   Dawson got the ball\nlis hands above hla head and held\njut lt had passed under the bar.\nwinthlans staged A rush from center\nFreno  Just   barely  saved.'    David-\nevened  for  tne Corinthians a  few\n\u25a0utes later.    For the balance of the\nthe Macs carried the game.   Preno\ncalled   on   to   save   several   times.\nStringer,  right  wing man  for   the\nnthlans,   made   several   spectacular\nvldual rushes, but was pulled up bo-\nhe could do any damage,\nlortly after the aecond-half opened.\nlo,   who  played   a   stellar  game  iif\nthought he was playlfe rugby and\nDavidson   a   straight    arm    Jab\ntdson was awarded a penalty, but he\nt high and wide.\navldson   put   hts   team   one   to   the\ni a little later when he kicked the\n\u00a9ut of Pr^nofc h&nds,  between Ms\nInto  the goff.    Near  the  end  Art\noger    cinched    t**e    ne^e    'ir    the\nnthlans  when  *\u2022*\u2022   -\"wed   (\u25a0'*-\u00ab\u25a0   t*\u00bb\nhad bounced off Freno.    McLearies\n; pres^ng when the game ended.\n;   TFAMS\nwl nth lane\u2014Dawson, goal; Barwood\nRoynon backs: Benrile. Binks and\nsop. halves; Tvler. \u00a3Tringer. Dnvld-\n\u25a0\u25a0 Learning and Spiers, forwards.\ncLeariee\u2014Freno. goal: Pitts and\nHev, backs: Praser, N. Ms 'or and\nmil, halves: Sterling. Oood\"Mn.\n\u00abh, Whitfield and C. Major, for-\nIs.\nrferee. Jack Draper.\nNew York-Pittsburgh, postponed, rain\nR.   H.   E.\nBrooklyn     0     5     1\nChicago    ,  3     9     0\nBatteries\u2014Vance .and Deberry; Jfetaf\nend Gonzales.\nR.    H.   E.\nBoston     0     7     2\nCincinnati  3     8     1\nBatteries\u2014R. Smith, WlrU and Taylor;  Lucas and Hargrave.\nPhiladelphia   '.  2     9     1\nSt.   Louis     3     6     3\nBatteries\u2014aweetland, Benge and Wll-\neon, Schalk; Alexander and Mancuso.\nJack Reddick Is\nin Training for\nComeback Attempt\nWINNIPEG, May 11.\u2014Another Ught-\nheavywelght who gained fame as a\nDominion champion. Jack Reddick, 25-\nyear-old westerner, ls about to stage\na comeback to the fistic arena after\nan absenae of more than a year.\nUnder the guidance of Bill Black,\nwho ts manager of several other Canadian battlers, Reddick has started intense training doing road work dally\nnear hts home at Wolseley, Sask., and\n[ states he soon will be ready to meet\nany of the strong contenders ln his\ndWslon. First, however, he Intends to\ntake part ln several minor bouts before taklng-on any of the top-notchers,\nHis first opponent probably will be\nLou Kesler, of Lethbridge, Alta., and\nnegotiations for the bout are now\nunder way. _\nTERRIFIC SCORING\nBRITISH CRICKET\nNEW YORK, May II\u2014The Phillies\noutbatted the Cardinals at St, Louis\ntoday but Alexander had control when\ncontrol was necessary and the Cardinals\nmade a clean sweep of their four-game\nseries by winning 3-t. Alexander had\nnine strtke-outs.\nArtie Nehf, who won fame as a southpaw for the Giants, pitched air-tight\nbail against Dazzy vance at Chicago today and the Cubs won the last game of\nthe series from Brooklyn 3-0. It was\nthe sixth straight Chicago victory and\nthe third over the Robins. Nehl never\nwas ln danger.\nHack Wilson, who shared National\nleague hotne run honors with Cy Will-\nlams last season when each hit 30, made\nnls fourth of the current campaign\nwith none on ln the sixth.\nRed Lucofi held Boston to seven\nscattered hits at Cincinnati, beat them\n3-0 for hla sixth win ln aeyen games\nand banged out a triple in the fourth\nscoring the final run shortly afterward\nBRITISH CHAMPION\nDEFEATS ITALIAN\nWALTER HAGEN\nWINS BRITISH\nOPEN CROWN\nThird Such Victory for American Golfer; Great\nComeback\nSARAZEN, COMPSTON\nSECOND AND THIRD\nBad Putting Puts Jurado, the\nArgentinian, Out of the\nRunning\nPhil] Scott Hammers Roberti\nWho Is About Out at\nEnd\nPACIFIC OUST\nLEAGUE GAMES\nin Francisco, 4: Oakland  3.\nirtland. 8-5:   Missions. 7-3.\nis  Angeles.  0:   Sacramento,   1.\n\u00bbttto.   l;   Hollywood,  6.\nMERICAN ASSOCIATION\n'.inneapolta, 3;  St. Paul, 6.\nullanapoUs. 2; Kansas City, 4.\nLONDON, May 11\u2014Terrific scoring\nagain marked first class oricket matches\nin England today. Big individual scores\nwere: Leylnnd, Yorkshire. 247; Ham-\nmend. Glouchester. 206; Not out: Constantino, West Indians. 130; Hobbs,\nSurrey, 124; Hlggings. Worcester, 101;\nIngle, Somerset. 100; Rhodes, Yorkshire, 100; not out.\nHearne of Middlesex is credited with\na noteworthy performance. In the first\ninnings of his club against Somerset\nhe scored 223 not out and today got\n97. also not out.\nLancashire defeated Glamorgan by 10\nwickets and Kent beat Oxford university by the same margin. All other\ngames were left drawn. Final scores\nwere; m\nSurrey, 418 and 304 for six wickets;\nGloucester. 644.\nWest Indians. 377; Essex, 360 and 259\nfor three wickets.\nWorcester, 403 and 203 for three\nwlcketa; Yorkshire, 560 for sixwlckets\ndeclared.\nMiddlesex. 471 for six wickets declared;\n198 for six wickets declared; Somerset,\n276 and  145 for five wickets.\nCambridge. 402 for eight wickets declared', 215 forfour wickets declared;\nSussex, 352 and 192 for four wickets.\nEngland has a women's hockey team\nthat has never been beaten or tied ln\nthe last 20 years of competition.\naLJ\nSold the World Over\nWorld-wide recognition is positive\nproof of Superior Quality.\nHIRAM WALKER & SONS Limited\nansmujarr and hiu certct, wauccrvilli. csmsm.\nESTABLISHED   MSI\nWrits  ta antr Montreal Office, Sll Phillipe St}., tew on.\nof our FREE PATENT WALL BOTTLE-OPENERS\nYanadian Qm\"\n\\ This Advertisement is not published or displayed by the\njjCJUOR CONTROL BOARD or the Government of B. C.\nNEW   YORK,   May    11.\u2014Phil   Scott,\nGreat Britain, hammered out a clean-\ncut victory over Roberto Roberti, mammoth Italian ln tbe main 10-round\nbout on the Bronx hospital charity\nshow tonight. Scott scaled 197, Roberti,  217',2.\nScott, who was knocked down seven\ntimes and finally out by Hansen ln\nhis first fight here, fought a masterly\nbattle, outboxtng the Italian in every\nround and clipping him neatly, with\nsolid punches every time the giant\nRoberti  lumbered into him.\nRobert!, who they claim was so\ntough, they had to name htm twice,\nhever was able to hit Scott solidly\nwith hts ponderous swings and heavy\nsmashes aimed in the general direction\nof the body.\nRobertl's eye and mouth were cut\nand his nose bleeding as Scott hammered him ln the final round. The\nItalian was on the verge of a knockout when the final bell sounded. About\n11.000 saw the heavyweight show which\nnetted over $60,000, half of which was\nturned over to the hospital.\nThe Preakness\nMay Fortell\nDerby Winner\nni. al piMxitFi:\n(Former Pitcher N'ew York Giants)\nThe Preakness which ls run today,\nfrequently pays as large a winning\npurse as the Kentucky derby and gives\nthe race followers a last chance to\nsee the form of their derby favorites,\nmany of whom have been heavily\nplayed in the winter books and will\nstart that week at Louisville. Many\nof the betters will put a bet on the\nnose of the Preakness winner If he\nstarts at Louisville on the nineteenth.\nHowever, I remember one historic\nupset ln form in the Preakness. The\ngreat Zev, with Sande up, finished\ndown near the end in the 1923 race\nat Plmllco and a week later won the\nKentucky derby paying better than\n20  to   1.\nWHITNEY HORSE IS\nPREAKNESS WINNER\nPIMLICO. Md\u201e May 11.\u2014Victorian,\nowned by Harry Payne Whitney, today\nwon the 150.000 Preakness stakes. Toro\nwas Becond and Solace third. The win\nner's time was 2:00 1-6. There were 18\nstarters. Victorian, ridden by Jockey\nR. Workman, paid $20.70 for a two dollar mutuel ticket to win, 110.20 to\nplace, and $7.80 to sho-r. Toro paid $22\nto place and $14.20 to show, and Solace\n$19.60 to show- Harry F. Sinclair's\nNassak, the favorite, was among the\nalso-rans. The distance was one mile\nand  three-sixteenths.\nThe Doctor\nit is essential that my car\nshould always operate properly and accordingly I use\nChampion Spark Plugs.\nChampion if the better\nipark plug because It\nbias an exclusive still*\nmanite Insulator specially treated to withstand the much higher\ntemperatures of thc\nmodern high-compret \u2022\nilon engine. Also anew!\npatented solid copper\n|Sfket-seal that remains\nabsolutely gai-tight\nunder high compression. Special analysis\nelectrodes which assure\na fixed spark-gap under\nall driving conditions.\nChampion\nSpariCPlu&i\nWinder, Ontario\nA CANADIAN-MADE PRODUCT\nBabe\"  Ruth   ls  now  a  full-fledged ,    Twenty-two   contests   for   the   Davis,    King Oeorge of England ta knasm\nmember of Boy Scout Troon No.  1, of [Tennis Cu\" have been held, the United  one of tba bsst shots ln Wa *\"*'\nFh\"Mll ill! 1' \u25a0 sii..  .L!?-^.*!11\"!\"* in . ' with a iportlM ^\u00bb|| \t\nSANDWICH, England, May 11.\u2014Walter Hagen. today won his third British\nopen golf championship with a 72-hole\nscore of 292, coming through with\nwhat the British call a Hagen finish\".\nThe United States pro\" scores were\ntwo 72's on his last two rounds, taking the lead ln the morning and holding   It  to  the   end.\nHe was followed home by Gene Sarazen, another pro from the United States\nwho needed only 294 for his 72 holes.\n73 .in the morning and the same In\nthe afternoon. Archie Compston,\nBritish leader, also finished with *a\npair of 73's for a score of 295 to take\nthird place.\nPRINCE PRESENTS CVP\nTh\u00a9 Prince of Wales put the seal\nof royalty on Hagen'B artistry as be\nhanded him the famous trophy which\nwas won by Bobby Jones last year\nand tbe year before and with Uagen's\nVictory today has been ln the hand*\nof golfers from the United States In\nseven  of   the  last  eight  years.\nWinning today aa \u2022 dramatically as\nhe lost a special match to Archie\nCompston two weeks ago by the onesided score of 18 up and 17 to play.\nHagen effectively silenced stories that\nhis defeat by tbe great Compston\nmarked the beginning of his decline\nas a player in important competition.\nHagen's victory gives him the sensa-,\nMortal record of three victories, one\nsecond and one third in the British\nclassic since 1922 when he won for\nthe first time over this royal St.\nGeorge's course.\n41'RADO   FAILS\nThree strokes behind Jose Jurado,\nthe Argentine, this morning. Hagen\nwent out steadily and confident to\nplay himself Into the lead by a stroke\nat the end of the third round aad a\ntwo stroke lead when all the return*\nwere in.\nSarazen was the last threat. Jurado.\na featherweight with a lot of nerve.\nslipped from his leading position of the\nmorning to a tie with Long Jin) Barnes\nand Aubrey Beamer for sixth plac*.\nBad putting put Jurado out of the\nrunning earlv in the afternoon and the\nfight narrowed to Hagen, Sarazen and\nComoston, the last two challenging the\n292 Hagen hud set for them to shoot at.\nSARAZEN   TRIKM   HARI>\nRounding the turn ' and emerging\nfrom the hills, valleys, and gigantic Band\ndunes featuring the ternUne of the outward jour^fy, Sarazen knew as he started the stretch leading to.the long homeward holes, that he had to do 70 to\nbeet  Hnson.\nSarazen was the last player t-o, leave\nthe iirst tee for the last time In the\nchampionship and Just lh front of htm\nwas Compston carrvinst the hopes of\nBritain to save the nation's frolflne\nhonor. He, too, knew what he had to\ndo\u201469 to win\u2014and difficult oa tbat\ntask was, he struggled heroically and\nnever gave up. A birdie two at the\nlflth hole aroused cheers carrying all\nthe way to the club house but Compston needed two birdie threes to tie\nHagen ond thev were riot in his bag.\nHe finished <^ith a four and a five. Not\na single six got on Hn-fen's card In anv\nof the four rounds. This explains some\nof the genius of the bronzed champion,\nthrice crowned he^e and twice ln his\nown country.\nAMERICAN LEAGUE\n\u00ab -4>\nCleveland     \u00ab   13     1\nNew York 7   11     1\nBatteries\u2014Shautc. Uhle and L. Sewell,\nHoyt, Pennoch, Sheuly and Collins,\nQrabowskl.\nR.   M.   I.\nChicago     3     8     1\nBoston   4    0     1\nBatteries\u2014Adklns and Crouse: Buffing and Hoffman.\nR    H.   I.\nSt.  Louis   5    112\nPhiladelphia    u 13     1\nBatteries\u2014Oray. Crowder and Schang;\nWalberg and Cochrane\nR H.   I.\nDetroit     6 9      1\nWaahlngton     0 15     1\nBatteries\u2014Billings.   Holloway, Sort-til\nand Shea; Jones and Tate.\nYANKS WIN IN\nTEN INNINGS\nFROM INDIANS\n(jtehrig   Hits   Fourth   Homer;\nSenators Defeat Detroiters;\nBoston Wins\nNEW VORK. May 11.\u2014The New York\nYankees took the deciding game of\ntheir series against Cleveland, a dramatic 10 Inning engamement here\ntoday, 7-6. Lou Gehrig apparently\ngave the Yankees n copper-rlvitted\nlead ln the sixth when be hit his\nfourth home run of the season wtth\nthree on bases.\nDuke Sewell also hit for the circuit\nin  the   seventh.\nThe Athletics battered their old\nteam-mate, Sam Gray out of the box\nIn less than three Innings at Philadelphia and swept the series from St.\nLouis 11 to 6. Gray was clouted for\nsix runs ln the second and waa re-*\nmoved in the third when Cochrane\nhit a homer behind a pass to Sauser.\nHitting Billings and Holloway freely,\nthe Senators won the odd game of tbe\nWashington series with Detroit today\n0  to 5.\nBoston pushed Chicago back Into\nlast place ln the American league standing today by taking the final game\nof the Boston series, 4*8. Tout's\nhome run off Adklns in the sixth\nwhich scored Ruffling was the deciding factor in the Red Sox Victory.\nINTERNATIONAL LEAGUE\nNewark,   17:  Montreal, a.\nJersey  City,  4;   Toronto,   1.\nBaltimore.   8;   Rochester    li.\nReading,   7;   Buffalo.   10.\nEvery one of the 1300 cadets at tli<*\nUnited States Military Academy at\nWest Point, N. Y. Is engaged in some\nform of athletics nearly every day. The\nsports are football, baseball, basketball,\nlacrosse, track, soccer, modern pent\ntathlon, boxing, wrestling, swimming.\nfencing, booker, skiing, golf, tennis and\npoto.\nYOU FIND YOU HAVE TO LET\nTOM A HAW* OrO AT A IO POINT\nLOSS\n-ANO THEN VOU TAKE A LOOK\nAT THE EVENING PAPER.AND-\nFlND THAT YOUR  IROQ.UOIS\nHAS JUMPED 15 POINTS\n-AND ON THE   WAY HOME VOU\nTHINK YOU'RE SO DUMB YOU'D\nBETTER OET OUT OF BUSINESS\nALTOGETHER *\u2022\nTHEN  FOR FRIEND PIPE-ITS\nTHE TIME, THE *?LACE,AND OGDeNJ\n-AND ALUS RIOHT WITH THE\nWORLD SO FAR AS YOu'RE CON\nCERNEO '\nC* *i D\nV*\nSAVE\nTHB\nHANWT\nSoothing\u2014\nyet a man's smoke\nCOOL AND FRACRANT\nOGDEN'S\nCUT PLUG\n\/.HS\nt\nTHE\nDodge\nStandard\nGREATE\/T  PERECRMER  IN\nIT\/  PRICE  CIA\/\/\nDon't miss the experience of driving this remarkable\nnew Six by Dodge Brothers!\nAnd set your hopes HIGH\u2014for here is the fastest and\nfinest performer in its price class. With the fastest acceleration AT ALL SPEEDS! And the most astounding power on hills you've ever experienced.\n1 horsepower to every 47 pounds\u2014an engine that in\nall moderation can be called SENSATIONAL. With\nthe ruggedest Dodge chassis ever built; and Midland\nSteeldraulic four-wheel brakes to control the car's\nflashing action.\nA long, smart, extra-roomy Six available in three fashionable body types: the Coupe, the 4-door Sedan and\nthe DeLuxe Sedan.\nDrive it a day and you'll drive nothing else!\nTune In for Dodge Mothers Badlo Program even* Thursday night at 5\nMai through lfl fir   FT Network.\nCAPITOL MOTORS\nVERNON ST.        0PP. P.O. AND HUME HOTEL        NELSON, B.C.\nCOUPE $1365\n4-DOOR SEDAN $1385 DELUXE SEDAN #1510\nDelivered\u2014Spare Tire Included\nJALSO    THE    VICTORY    SIX   AND    THE   SENIOR   gi:\n^\n-*\nm\n PsgeEigEl\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 12, 1928\nFINANCIAL BRIEFS\nChrysler earnings 1st Qr. $1.57 per\nshafe, against |1.46 year earlier Quarter's earnings larger but for bearing\ncost new models to be placed In production   shortly\nWrlgley   net   earnings   1st   qr.   $1.85.\nnu  year  earlier,   stock  advancing\ni. in the 12 months.\nRoyallte No. 8 well, Qf imperial Otis.\nLtd., haa struck production 17.000,000\nfeet wet gas per day. third big well\nto be struck In Turner Valley field.\nRoyallte No. 4 has flow 18,000.000 feet\ndally, carrying more than 6000 bbls.\nof 73 gravity naptha, and Dalhousie\nNo. 1 producing 260 bbls. daily on one\nSeparator, with est. flow of 17,000,000\nto   10,000,000  feet   wet  gas.\nAmerican Steel Poundry earnings 1st\nQr. Mc per share, against 81.26 year\nearlier.\n>     Ont, Steel Products qr. div. 31\\_c on\nno par common- 9\"d. shareholder* have\noption to JUn^'SO to oonrert pfd\nshare Into four share* no par common. End of 1027 pfd. T p. c. 8100\nshares outstanding $750,000. wtth 30.-\n000 shares no par common, annual dlr\u00bb\nlatter being $160. By converting pld\nshareholders gain chance to participate ln company's possibly larger future profits, but lose pari ot present\nyield, as dlvs. on four pharos would\nb* $6 a year, agalnat 87 a $100 pfd\nshare now earns, without probably\nearly Increase.\nFRENCHY BELANGER\nWINS IN BOUT\nTORONTO, May 11\u2014 Frenchy Belanger, former Natlonal boxing association flyweight champion, ground out\na hair-line decision over Frisco Grande,\nPhilippine of New York, In the main\n10-round bout of a Shamrock Athletic\nclub boxing show here tonight. Seven\nthousand fans witnessed the bout.\n     m\t\nSix beacons on terminal tower, Cleve\nland, (Kilo, throw 60-mlle beams\nSummer\nExcursion\nON SALE MAY 15 TO SEPT. 30\nVancouver Victoria Seattle\n$33^05 ^$3135    $41.75\nVia Kettle Valley Route in each direction.\nLimit, Octolier 31 for return.\nCIRCULAR TOURS\n$39.20\n$37.60\nNelson\n$44.40\nNelson\nNelson\nArrow Lakes\nKootenay  Landing\nK. V. By. to Penticton\nVancouver\nVictoria\nSpokane\nSeattle\nOkanagan Lake\nSeattle\nVictoria or Vnnrnuvcr\nVernon,   \\uncouver\nSpokane\nKettle Valley By.    .\nSpokane,  Nelson\nNelson\nTo Nelson '\nMa Kootenay Lake\nOood      going       via\nOood      going      via\n. Good      going      via\nVancouver,     returning\nVancouver,     returning\nVancouver,      returning\nthrough    Spokane,    or\nthrough    Spokane,    or\nthrough    Spokane,    or\nthe reverse.\nthe  reverse.\nthe reverse.\nAs above, except\nvia Portland, Ore,\nbetween Seattle, Spokane.\n$46.20\nAs above, except\nvia Portland, Ore,\nbetween Beattie, Spokane.\n$44.60\nAs above, except\nvia Portland, Ore.,\nbetween Seattle, Spokane.\n$51.40\nCircular Tours available from any point on the Circle.\nSold Daily May 15 to September 30. Return till October 81.\nGood for stop-over at pleasure within limit. Fares quoted\nthrough Arrow, Okanagan or Windermere Lakes, Calgary,\nBanff, Lake Louise.   Ask any agent for details, or write\nJ. S. CARTKR, District Passenger Agent. Nelson. IM.\nCanadian Pacific\nWorld's Greatest Travel System\nTttere Is enough lumber produced\nla British Columbia every minute to\nbuild a well-appointed four or five-\n\u2022m_w* house\nSLOCAN LAKE\nMOTOR FERRY\nSERVICE\nIt Ib now arranged that S. 8-\nSlocan will continue to operate\nSlocan lake service till about June\n1, and provide motor ferry services as usual till Blocan road ls\nopened for travel. \u25a0\nJ. S. CARTER, D.P.A.\nCANADIAN SERVICE\nFROM   MONTREAL\nTO   nElFAST-LIVHIfroOL-ULADOOW\nAthenia, May 18, June 15, July IS\nAntonia. May 25, June 22. July 30\nLctitla, June 1, 29. July 27\nAndanta, June 8, July 6\nTO PLVMOI TH-IIWRE-LOMKIN\nAusonla, May 18, June 22, July 30\nAuranla, June l, June 20, July 27\nAscania, June 8. July 7. Aug. 3\nAlnurUa, June 15, July 13, Aug. 10\nFROM  NEW  YORK\nTO QtJERNSTOWN AND IIVIKPOOL\nSamaria,   May   19;   Scythla,  May  26\nTO   ( HKKIUM IK.   AMI   SOITHAMI'TON\n\u2022Mauretania, May 26. Jun. 13, 30, Jul. 26\nAqultania, May 30. Jun. 20, Jul. 9, Aug. 1\nBerengftrla, June 6, 27. July 1G, Aug. 8\nTO   LON DON BERK V   AND   (1LASOOW\nTransylvania. May 26: California, June 2\nTO PLYMOUTH-HAVRE-LONDON\njTuscania, May IB;  Carmania. May 2,r>\nFROM   11OST0N\nTO QI'RENNTOWN  AND LIVERPOOL\nScythla,  May  27;   Laconia. June   10\nAROI \\l> THE WORLD I Kl INK\nFranconta, January 15, 1928,\n\u2022Calls at Plymouth. Eastbound.\nMoney orders, drafts and Travellers\nCheques at lowest rates. Full Information from local agents or Company's\nOffices, 622 Hastings St. W., Vancouver,\nB.C.\nAgents Wanted\n\u2022225 PAID Christian men or women to\ndistribute literature in promotion of\nlrlwious education in the home. Mny\nwork spare or full time. Statu age\nand church connection. Mr. Conrad.\nSpadina Bldg . Toronto. (3723 >\nPORTRAIT AGENTS\"\u2014Write for Catalogue and Prices. United Art. Limited,\n4 Brunswick. Toronto. 43512)\nTEN DOLLARS a day selling ties, shirts,\nand pajamas direct to wearer. Pre?\nsample outfit. Dept. C, Public Service Mills of Canada, Limited. London.\nOntario (3925)\nAGENTS-AT LAST A DISCOVERY.\nWonderful preparation really seals\npunctures without removing tl: e from\nrim\u2014Different to others. Does not\ndecompose. Guaranteed harmless to\nrubber. Lasts life nf tire. Money\nmaker for agents. Miller made J8T5\nIn five weeks Write for proal ana\nFree trial offer. PALCOSF'.L MFO.\nCO.  LTD,   Alexandria. Ont. (3923I\nSummer\nVacation 'Trips\nON SALE  DAILY.  MAV  21  TO  SEPT.  80\u2014 IIF.TUBN   LIMIT   OCT.  31\nWinnipeg    I 75.60\nToronto    118.05\nHamilton     118.0S\nLondon    -  118.05\nQuebeo     148.10\nSt. John  1*52.30\nSt. Ptul  75.80\nMinneapolis    75.80\nDuluth ,  75.60\nPort William  \u2022 MOO\nNiagara  Palls.  NT  124.92\nOttawa  IM.25\nMontreal   - 137.05\nMoncton     153.20\nHalifax  157.78\nChicago -   9030\nNew York  -  151.70\nBoaton   137.76\nMany Additional Destinations\nASK FOR RATES FROM AND TO ANY POINT\nRoute via Main Line or via Soo Line, through Winnipeg or Portal\nto St. Paul, thence via Chicago or Sault Ste Marie, via Great Lakes;\nor via California at additional fare* or good to go via one ot the\nabove routes, return another.\nJ. 8. CARTER, DISTRICT PASSENGER ACENT, NELSON,  II c\nCanadian Pacific I\n| World'* Cr-wtert Travel Syrtem ____!\nSALESMAN-\n-Make bis\nmoney\nmis\nyea \u25a0\nSell   \"Sepoy\"   spark\nand   s\nMiiis   at\n114.95.     For   worl\nor\nDl\" ;\nJEvervbody\na propped\nExperience im-\nnecessary.\nAddress\nSepoy,\n4 in\nPed-\nera! BlciK\nToronto.\n5924 i\nLEGAL NOTICES\nNOTKi:\n\"PROVINCIAL  I.I.MTIONS ACT.\"\nNELSON ELECTORAL  DtflTft-KT,\nNOTICE Is hereby given that I shall,\non Mondnv, the 21st day of May. 1928,\nat the hour of 10 o'clock ln the forenoon, at the Court Homfc Nelson, hold n\nsitting of the Court of Revision for the\npurpose of rfvlEliiH the list of voters for\nthe enld clec'oral district, nnd of hearing\nand determining BOT and all objections\nto the retention of any name on the\nsaid list, or to tiie registration as a\nvoter of any applicant for registration;\nand for the other purposes set forth\nin the Provincial Elections Act.\"\nDated at Nelson. 8. C. thia 5th dnv\nof   April,   1928.\nJ   CARTMEL.\nRegistrar   of   Voters.   NelHon   Ek.tnral\nDistrict 13850)\nCANADIAN j,, PACIFIC\nRA1LINOS  FROM\nMONTREAL-QUEBEC\nTO EUROPE\n\u2022\u2022\u2022May 30\u2014Southampton...  \"E.France\"\n\u2022June   1\u2014Liverpool  \"Mellta\"\n\u2022\u2022\u2022June   6\u2014Antwerp \"Montnairn\"\nJune   6\u2014Southampton \"I.\/Scotland\"\nJune   8\u2014Liverpool   \"Montcalm\"\nJune ia\u20148. Ampton ....\"E..'Australia\"\n\u2022\u2022June X*\u2014Glasgow    \"Minnedosa\"\nJune   )5\u2014Liverpool \"Duch.  Bedford\"\n\u2022June 20\u2014Antwerp \"Metagama\"\n^\u2022June   20\u2014-Southampton   **E.\/Trance\"\nJune 2a\u2014Liverpool \"Montclare\"\n\u2022\u2022\u2022June 23\u2014Hamburg \"MonLroyal\"\n\u2022\u2022\u2022June   27\u2014Southampton \"K 'Scotl'd\"\n\u2022\u2022\u2022June 28\u2014Antwerp 'Montrose\"\nJune 29\u2014Liverpool \"MeUta\"\nJuly   4\u2014Bouthamp'oii  \"E.,* Australia\"\n\u2022\u2022\u2022July 4\u2014Hamburg \"Montnairn'\n\u2022July fi\u2014Liverpool \"Moutcslm\"\nPor week commencing May 14, and regularly thereafter\n\u2022\u2014Calls at Olaagow (Greenock*.\n\u2022\u2022\u2014Calls at Belfast.\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2014Calls st Cherboui*g. Southampfn.\nCs* Canadian Pacific Express Travellers'\nCheques- Pavable Everywhere\nBerth reservations can now be made.\nAsk about Uie New Tourist Third Cabin.\nFull details with rates from any Agent,\nOf writs\nj. ft. Carter\nMMA Tmnut Agent. Natoa. B.C,\n[\nBUY ADVERTISED GOODS\nThtty Mutt Make Good\nRAISE CONTRACT\nTenders will be received by the F.uter-\nprlw Consolidated Mining Company.\nLM.. not later than May 15th, 1(K!8, for\nI he t' rivIug of a three compartmen t\ntimbered yiise at tho Yankee Olrl\nMni\u00a3-\nDimentions and other details may be\nobtained by application ln person at the\nMine at Ymlr. B   C.\nO. L. THOMESON.  Superintendent.\n(3838)\ni ITY   OF   NKLSON\nTenders   hulled\nSealed   Tenders   will   be   received   by\nthe undersigned up until 6 o'clock p. m.\nnf Prldny, thc  inth  Inst, for the con-\nf a pavilion in Lake-tdc Park.\nPlans and Rnec if lent tons of thi) proposed building may be obtained from\nthe City Engineer.\nTin lowest or any tender not necessarily  acet'pud\nW. 1. WASSON, City Clerk.\nClassified Advertising\nHelp Wanted\nDRUG APPWnrnCE WANTED\u2014Rutherford Drug Co. (3908)\nCHAMBERMAID wanted at once.   Hume\nHotel.     ' (3932)\nFIFTY CENTS HOUR allowed Inexperl-\nenced men learning following greatest\npaying trade*\u2014garage mechanic*, engineering, electricity, ctmuffeurtng.\nburberlng, halrdressing, bricklaying,\nplastering. Jobs sure. Write Hemphill Trade Schools, 808 Centre street.\nCalgary. , (3112)\nHAIRDRES8ING APPRENTICES WANT-\nEI>\u2014Earn while learning halrdressing\nunder famous Marvel plan. Pleaaant,\nsteady position. Write for free catalogue. Marvel Halrdressing Academy,\n808 Centre street. Calgary.        (3711)\nLADIES WANTED\u2014To do plain and light\nsewing at home, whole or spare time.\nGood pay. Work sent any distance,\ncharges paid. Send stamp for particulars. National Manufacturing Co-\nMontreal, (3516)\nWANTED\u2014Girl or woman for housework; must be experienced. Guy's\nElectric Store. (3890)\nFarm and Dairy Products\nFOR 8AIX\u2014Cauliflower, Tomatoes, cabbage, celery, pepper, red and savoy\ncabbage, carnation and aster plants.\nN. Maglio, Box 388, Nelaon.       (3809)\nSTRAWBERRY PLANTS\u2014Gibson, Kellogg strain, 87 per thousand. Hamilton, Perry's. (3794)\nSTRAWBERRIES \u2014 Improved Dunlop,\nbeet, moet profitable early, 98 thousand. Magoon, best mid-season, 85\nthousand. All plants from carefully\nselected stock. Tomllnson, Willow\nPoint. (3732)\nPARSON'S BEAUTY MAGOON VAN-\nSan Strawberry Plants from Imported\nstock. ' $5 per. thousand. Oansner,\nTaghum. (3772)\nMAGOON and  Parson's Beauty  Strawberry plants.    Five dollars per thousand.   Monrad Wlgen. Wynndel, B. C.\n(3831)\nASSAYER \u2014 Experienced . assayer required. State experience, salary required, references. Widdowson, assayer. Neison. (3888)\nJANITOR\u2014Ordsrly wanted for Kootenay\nLake General hospital. A young,\nhusky man willing to make himself\nuseful around the wards. Salary 170\nper month, room and board. Apply,\nstating Qualifications, to Jas. C\nForbes, Secretary. (3850)\nCAPABLE WOMAN for help ln home.\nSerres. Harrop. (3847)\nSituations Wanted\nSWISS    GIRL   wiiiits   position.      Good\ncook: speaks English and French. Apply Miss Olga Schlndrlg, Nelson, B.C.\n(3891)\nWE SUPPLY\u2014Engineers. Sawyers. Fliers\nand Mill Mechanic!*, on short notice.\n36.183 Hastings St., W., Vnncouver,\nB. C. (3787)\nWANTED\u2014Public   stenography.     Typewriter at home.   Phone 390R.    (3872)\nMiscellaneous\nPoultry and Egjjrs\nI'URE-BRED-TO-I.AY CHICKS, from\ntc-sled.\" trapnested and official Inspected flocks: ,100 per cent live. Delivery\nuuar.-uiteed. 8. C. White Leghorns,\nMottled Anconas. Barred Plymouth\nRocks. RhrVe Island Reds. Mlnorcas,\nWhile Bocks. Bulf Orpingtons. White\nWyandottes; 31:' egK official registered\nmales, ln our pens. Individual hen\nrecords of 290 -engs ln one year. Write\nfor free catalogue. Hatching eggs,\ncustom hatching. Incubators and\nbrooders. Alex Taylor's Hatchery.\nWinnipiw, Man  (3768)\nProperty Wanted\nWANTED\u2014Hear from owner good farm\nfor sole. Cash price, particulars. D.\nP. Bush, Minneapolis, Minn.       (3927)\nLost and Pound\nLOST\u2014Roll containing three II bills\nand e20 money order. Finder please\nPhone 743R1 or leave at postoffic;\\\nReward. (3920))\nn'.I.I,  your  wants  through  The  Dally\nNews clns^Kkd columns\nMiseellan-pous for Sale\nSET OF LADIES GOLF CLUBS\u2014Complete, almost new, will sell cheap.\nApnlv J. c. Forbes. Kootenay Lake\nGeneral Hospital, (3919)\nIF TOU* REQUlllR sanitary rubber\nery>ds, write for catalogue anii price\nlist to Bare and Sanitary Rubber\nworks. Dept. 69, 4906 Wellington St.,\nMontreal. (2533)\nr.AKERS* OVENS\u2014Write for catalogue\nand list _pf Used ovens. We pay\nfreight to Winnipeg and Vancouver.\nHubbard Oven Company, 1100 Queen\nWest, Toronto. (2532)\nFOR SALE\u2014Good Cheer Heater, nearly\nnew. also some furniture. 710 Stanley  street.    Phone  430X. (3867)\nFOR SALE\u2014-Stockholm Cream Separator.\ngood condition, 935.    Box 880, Trail.\n(3848)\nFOU SALE\u2014One mower, one horse rake.\nM. Dumont, Klnnalrd. (3790)\nFOR   BAl.E-Snfe   and   safe   letter  file.\nApply Box 3R58, Dally News.      (3888)\nFOR SALE\u2014Oood canoe snd new 12-\nT-iot counter. Phone 730R after 5.\nBargain. (3751)\nPOR SALE\u2014Cash Register and adding\n-\"\u2022aniline. Apply Box 3859, Dally\nNews. (3869)\nFOR 8AI.F-C. C, M. bicvele, good as\nnew. 827 \"ash. Apply Cecil Stenson,\nWinlaw, B. c. (3740)\nBARRELS   KFICW  UND EMPTY SACK8-\nMcDonald Jam Company. Nelaon  ,\n(3873)\n2. 3 4, 6 AND 8-INCH BORED WOOD\nPIPE. Write for prices and particulars, Thc A P Harms Wood. Pipe Co..\nDeer Park. BC. (3445)\nFOR BALE\u2014One new boiler, return flue\n72 Inches by 16 feet. One new horizontal str.n,, engine. 175 horse power.\nOne new vertical steam engine, 15\nhorse pow,*r. Ono vertical steam engine, 5 horse power. One 10x16 horizontal steam engine. 2 shingle machines, knee bolter, conveyor chains,\ngears, shafting. Saw carriage, heavy\nbull chain 150 ft. complete with drums.\npulleys, sa,ws. and other sawmill nia-\nchlnery,    S. N. Ross. Ross Spur.\n(8540)\nFOR    BALE   Typewriter.\n3800. Dally News.\nApply    Box\n(3860)\nia\n(CLASail-'lEI) a.ls hrmg results quickly\n.1    and noonoitmsilly.    Ityc a word.\n> ,*ri-m   \u25a0  i   \u25a0 _\t\nSTRAWBERRY PLANTS\u2014Parsons Beauty, choice plants, 91 per hundred, 96\nthousand,  deliveted.    T.  Roynon.\n     (3854)\nFor Sale or Exchange\nFOR SALE\u2014Oldsmoblle six, ln good\nshape; or will exchange for radio set.\nBox 3846, Dally News- (3846)\nWILL SELL OR TRADE two ton of good\nclean white potatoes. Groojn, Slocan\nPark.  (3933)\nFor Sale or Rent\nFOR SALE OR RENT^-Seyeral Improved\nranches.   John Graham, Perry Siding.\nPOR RENT OR SA1B\u2014Semi-furnished\nlake shore cottage, close to Nelson.\nBox 314, Nelaon. (8801)\n-\u00bb.\nProperty for Sale\nPOUR LOTS on Gore Street between\nStanley and Ward, 8175. Cost 9300;\nassessed at 8880. Apply Box 3916,\n\"-Ily News. (j\u00bb16)\nPain\nPOR SALE\u2014Eighty acres iruit land on\nArrow Lakes, near Burton. Easy\nterms.    George Ellis, Marysvllle, B. C.\n  (3826*,\n3-ACRE RANCH with 5 roomed house,\noutbuildings and water; 7 miles from\nferry; splendid summer cottage, must\nsacrifice. Owner leaving town. Phone\n437R1. (3822)\nNINI EIGHTEEN CARBONATE\u2014Six\nrooms. Just repainted. Nine hundred\ncash, one thousand easy terms. (8824)\nFRUIT RANCH 4 miles from Nelson for\nsale or will exchange for city property. Seventeen acree of land. 7\nacres ln orchard, has been well kept\nand trees are practically all old bearing trees, principally Northern Spy,\nJonathan and Ontario; Implements\nand tools together with horse, cow\nand Chevrolet car Included with land;\n60 Lambert and Blng cherries Just\nBtarted bearing good. Por further Information apply to Box 1081, Nelson.\n(3813)\nARROW LAKES PROPERTY\u201440 acres\nrich land, about 14 under cultivation,\nabout 5 acres bearing orchard, balance\ncan be cleared; good buildings, etc.;\ntrunk road, school, churches, etc.\nPrice, 93750. easy terms. Joseph Gray,\nRenata, B. C. (3792)\nPOR SALE OR RENT\u20143 room house.\n4 lots; fruit trees. Apply 1024 Hoover\n\u2022street. (3733)\nYELLOW TAXI CO.\nWill  operate   a   -stage   between\nNelson   and   the   International\nBoundary line.\nLeave Nelson at 6 a.m.\nHave     all     parcels     left     nt\nWilliams' Transfer.\nPHONE 106\nFor    Seating    Accommodation.\n(3647)\nTELL your wants  through  The Dally\nNews classified colamn%\t\nAutomobiles\n1927 MODEL BDICK SEDAN, good as\nnew;  will sell for (550 cash, balance\n. payable by month. Car ls ln first\nclass condition and Ib a bargain at\nthis price.   E. L. Buchanan.       (3763)\nCHEVROLET SPECIALS\n1919 Chevrolet 'Touring. newly\npainted top, good paint and upholstery, good tires, two new.\nOood condition. Special -ti-50.\n1921 Chevrolet Touring, good condl-\n, tlon throughout, top, upholstery,\npaint, tires and engine. $175.\n1923 Chevrolet Touring, newly overhauled, ln fine condition, tires,\nupholstery, etc. Just for short\ntime. $190.\nKRAFT   AUTO   WRECKAGE   CO.\n413 Hall Street Phone 568Y\n(3893)\nFOR SALE\u2014Ford Sedan in good condition.    Phone 698L2. (3796)\nFOR   SALE\u2014Car,   first-class   condition.\nMrs. Enfield. (3808)\nFOR BALE\u2014Studehaker 4-door sedan,\n5 passenger automobile, 5 brand new\ntires, original paint, Uke new; grand\ncondition. $900 takes lt\u2014forced to\nsell. A great buy for some one. P. O.\nBox 618. Cranbrook, B, C. (3777)\nPARTY HAS SEVEN FIVE-TON all Bteel-\nbody dump trucks. Whites and\nP;icj.ards. Wishes ore hauling contracts or other hauling. Write Mrs.\nC. U. Payne. E. 724 Mission Ave..\nSpokane, Wash. (3741)\nFor Rent\nCOMPLETELY  FURNISHED  HOUBE  for\nrent, May; 6 rooms with bath, sleeping porch, electric range.   Box 625.\n(3810)\nWELL FURNISHED SUMMER COTTAGE\nfor rent at Willow Point: water and\nelectric light connected; good safe\nbeach.    A. D. Emory (8811)\nFOR rent\u2014Two large furnished rooms.\nApply 009 Mill street or Phone 736R,\n(3810)\nFOR RENT\u2014Fruit and Dairy Ranch. 14\nmilts from Trail. Box 3791. Dally\nNews. (3791)\nFURNISHED HOUSE FOR RENT\u2014July\nand August:- central location. Apply\nP. O. Box 388, Nelson. (3673)\nFULLY FURNISHED RESIDENCE\u2014\nHigh Street as long as required possession on or before June 1st. Phone\n662 during office hours. (3862)\nFOR SALE\u2014About six acres at Apple-\ndale, Slocan Valley. Well settled community. Half cleared:. sandy loam:\nwater; no Hillside Shack; fenced: on\ngood road. Suitable fruit or chickens.\nOno mile store, school and railway.\nPrice 9800 cash, or 9860 with 9160\ncash, balance eaasy. John W. White,\n663 15th Ave. E, Vancouver, B. C.\n(3780)\nFOR SALE \u201413% acres land near\nKaslo. 8600. C. H. Vallance, Kaslo,\nB. C. (3398)\nFor Sale\nModern cottage. 1115 Ward street,\n8 rooms, cement basement, fur-\nnace. Lot 60x100. $5000. $1500 cash.\nBalance on easy terms.\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nReal   Estate   Insurance\nPHONE   18S. NELSON,   B.C.\n(3697)\nYour Choice of\n100 HOMES\nPRICES AND TERMS TO\nSUIT ALL POCKETS\n$1000.00\u20146-Room House, bungalow\nstyle, 3 lots, fruit trees. >250 cash,\nbalance as rent.\n$1400.00\u2014Bungalow, 5 rtooms and\nbath, 2 lots, garden, .fruit trees.\n$250 cash, balance to suit purchaser.\n$2000.00\u2014Fine Home, close ln, stone\nfoundation, 3 bedroon&s. bathroom,\nliving room, dining * room. $350\ncash, balance easy terms.\n$2250.00\u2014Bungalow, \\ftctoria Street,\ncement basement, 3 bedrooms, living\nroom, dining rooo\\ kitchen, new\nfurnace, 50-foot lot\u00ab   Easy terms.\n$2800.00\u2014Residence, close in, large\nbright living rooms, casement windows, sleeping pcaxh, dining room,\nfireplace, bright living rooms, 3\nbedrooms, bathroom, modern white\nplumbing, separate toilet upstairs,\nkitchen, pantrf, rurnace. cement\nbasement, gut-den, fruit trees,\ncement walk. All tn first-class\nshape. Propeijty well worth $3600,\nOwner will se0I for $2800 on terms.\nSTOCKS\nAJX MARKETS\nTELEQRfePHIC  QUOTATIONS\nC. W. Appleyard\nINSURANCE        STOCKS        BONDS\n\u00ab1TI PROPBRTT\nC W. Apif leyard H. B. Appleyard\nF.   A.   Whitfield\nBaker   Btreet 'Office^\u2014Phone  289\n18   TEARS IN BUSINESS\n(38291\nCOSY COTTAGE\n815 Hendryx Street\u20148 rooms,\nstone foundation, nice grounds.\nPrlfe 82100. Cash payment 9500.00.\nH. E DILL\n408  Ward St.\n60S Ward St.\nBusiness Opportunity\nPOR SALS\u2014Hotel, partly tarn!\nalao building suitable for atom\ndwelling rooms on second: floor. \u00ab\u25a0\nto Box 96. Slhrerton, B. C.\nLive Stock for SaU\nYOUNO FRESH TOOOBMBURO O\nfor sale, prices reasonable.    Ker\nGranite Road.\nRELIABLB   CHESTER   BROOD   _\nDue with 2nd utter July 1. 940.\nchllla Rabbits. 93 pair, weaning\nP. O. B. Kaslo.    Tom Taylor,\nB. C.\nFOR ' SALE\u2014One   cow,   Just\nApply Mrs. S. Newman, Sliver\nRoad.\nFOR SALE\n5 head good, quiet, wett broken hora\nweighing 1400 to 1500 pounds.   IP\nbe  seen  at   Nelson   Transfer   co\npany.\nFOR SALR-fl Ayrshire MUch Cowfc.\nfreshening;   Gov.   T.   B.   tested.\nKoaloff, Crescent Valley, B. C.    (3\nNursery Products\nHARDY Perennial Plants, Rock Pla\nShrubs. Rhubarb and Asparagus tu\netc.   w. H. Mawer, Plant Grower,\nson, B.C.\nTELL  your wants  through  The\nNews classified columns.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR!\nCabinetmaker\n1.   U.   CHAPMAN\u2014Baiter   St.    Cab\nMaker &. Upholsterer.   Phone 320.\nAccounting\nCHARLES F. HI'NTER\u2014\nAuditor,    McDonald    Sam    Bntld\nBox 1191. Nelson, B. C. (81\nAssayers\n:   IV. WIDDOWSON. Box A1108. Kel\nB.C. Standard western charges. (8T\nBicycles\nH. R. KITTO\u2014C.C.M. and B.8.A. blcy<\nWe carry a full line of accessories,\ndo Oxy-Weldlng.\t\nPhonographs\nH. R. Kltto.\npairing.\t\nExpert Phonograph\n(37\nTaxidermist\nTAXIDERMIST     *      FIRRIEK \u2014Pi\nHlalceman, EdBcwood, B. C.        (38\nTennis Rackets\nH.   R.   Kltto.     Tennis   Raqueta\nstrung   and  repaired.\t\n2\n-31\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'   TRANSFER\u2014 Baggage.   I\nand  Wood.    Phone   108. (31\nWood Working Factor;\nLAWSON   \u2014   Baker  St.   Carpenter\nJoiner. Screens and Hardwood. (8\nInsurance and Real Est\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014\nReal Estate. Insurance, Rentals, A\nable Blk   P.O. Box 733   Phone 197\n(31\nH. E. DILL\u2014INSURANCE\nFARM AND CITV PROPERTY\nSOB Ward Street (31\nChiropractors\nDR.  ORAY,  (1ILKEK BLK..  NELSON\nFlorists\nGRIZZELLE'S    OREENIIOI'SES.   NeU\nCut flowers and floral designs,   tm\nWM. 8. JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone 342.  Cut Flowers,  Potted I\nand  Floral  Emblems.\nWholesale\nA. MACDONALD * CO.\u2014\nWholesale Grocers and Provision M\nchants. Importers of Teua, Coffi\nBplces. Dried Fruits. Staple and Fa:\nGroceries, Nelson. B. C. (38\nEngineers\nCHAS. MOORE. B.C.I.S., A.I.B.C.\niP. COATES. CE. AMKIC. MP.E,\n. W. HINTON, Mech. Eng.. M.P.E,\nCivil.   Mining.   Mechanical   EnBlneerl\nD.C. Land Surveying. Architecture,\nDrafting and  Blue  Printing.\nP. O. Box 671, Phone 285. Nelson. B\n(38\nA. H. OREEN CO.\u2014CONTRACTORS\nFormerly Oreen Bros., Burden, Nela\nCivil and Mlntlig Engineers\nB.C., Alberta and Dominion Land\nSiirvveyorx (38\narreyor,\nMining and Civil Engineer\nKiisln. II.  ('. (38\nFuneral Directors\nPhone  180,\nPhone 180\nStandard Fiirnlt\nCo. \u2014 Undertak\nAuto Hearse, update chapel* 1\nservice a. Pr\nreasonable.     (31\nwhat'6 thS.J     ( OH! IVE JU*bT\nNEWS- JOE^J\nJ\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 11, 1928\nPage Nine\nMarket and Mining News\nADVANCES MANY\nNEWYORK LIST\nSpeculation in Airplane Stocks\nHeavy; Bride Bidding in\nMotors\nNEW YOBK, May Jl\u2014Violent advances of 5 to 15 points In a number\nof high priced specialties featured the\nresumption of the upward price movement ln  today's stock  market.\nSpeculation tn the airplane stocks\nwas heavy. Wright soared 31 points\ntp a new high record at 196, which\ncontrasts with the year's low of 69,\nHut fell back to 190 on realizing. Curtis soared nearly 10 points to 145H\nand then yielded to 148, which compares with the year's low of 53ft.\nBrisk bidding developed for a few\nmotor stocks. Chrysler advanced nearly 6 points to a new 1928 peak at\n7T%- General Motors ran up to 205%\nbut closed S points below that level\nfbr a net gain of 2%  points.\nArmour  issues  also broke   Into   new\nINVESTIGATE\nBEFORE YOU\nINVEST\n\"Northwest Mining\nService\"\nla publlahed by NORTHWEST\nMINES INVESTMENT COMPANY\nSpokane, and upon requeat cornea\nto you reiularly with tbe latest\nnewa regarding Northwest mines\nand   mi\"i*\"g   developments.\nFILL OUT AND MAIL ATTACHED rorroN and receive THREE MONTHS'\nSUBSCRIPTION  FREE.\nTO NORTHWEST MINES INVESTMENT   CO,\nSpokane  Savings  tt   Loan  Bldg.,\nSpokane,  Washington\nWithout obligation on my part,\nfilaoe my name on your mailing\n1st to receive \"Northwest Mining Service\" for three months\nFREE.\nName      \u2014 ~\nSt. Address   \u2014\u2122\nP.O. or City\t\nProvince   _ ~.- _ \t\nhigh ground and other packing shares\nrallied ln sympathy.\nRadio soared 8v3 polnta to within\nthree polnta ol lu record top and\nmaintained all but a point ol lts-ealn-\nU. S. Steel waa rather erratic, crossing\n160 ln volume and then slipping back\nto 148% lor a fractional net loas.\nAdams Express broke 13 points on a\nlew sales, in tbe railroad group, establishment ol new peaks by Missouri\nPacific common and preferred Northern Pacific. Nickel Plate and Wabash,\nwas offset by heaviness of Rock Island\nJersey Central, New York Central and\nDelaware & Hudson.\nTotal sales 4.137.600 shares.\nNEW VORK STOCK\n(IMITATIONS\nHigh Low Close\nAllied  Chem  107ft 168'\/, ' 166%\nAmer.  Can    85*4 93 'i 95\nAmer. Loco  64% 6*2*\/, 64\nAmer. 8. it. R  1(1% 191% 191'\/,\nAmer. Tele  196% 195% 196ft\nAmer. Tobacco   163% 163% 163%\nAnaconda       71%     70% 71%\nAtchison   194% 194ft 194%\nBaltl. & Ohio   117% 116% 117\nBethlehem Steel ....     63 63 63%\nBunker Hill Is Sul  140\nCan. Pac  331 330 330\nCerro de Pasco ....     66%      68 68\nChile Copper    43ft 43 43%\nChrysler        77%     74 77%\nCorn Products       80%     79% 79%\nDodge         18%      18 18\nDupont    396 394 394\nPlelschman Co      74%      78% 73%\nPreeport-Texas       73%     73 73%\nOen. Motors   305% 903% 303%\nOen. Electric    171% 169 169%\nOranby       54%     83% 63\nHowe Sound       60%\nHudson  Motors  ...     91\nInsplra. Copper ....     33%\nInt.  Nickel         94%\nMack   Truck         68%\nMarland Oil      41\nMiami Copper       19%\nKen.  Copper       89%\nKreage  8.   8      74%\nNat. Pow. & Light     36%\nTORONTO MINES\nNaah   Motors\nN. Y. Centrnl\nNor. Pac.\nPackard Motors\n91%\n190\n108%\n71\nPhillips  Pete     41%\nRadio Corp  306%\nRock Island 133%\nSchulte   63%\nShell Union Oil .... 39%\nSin. Con  39%\nSou. Pac  128%\nStan. Oil Cal  61%\nStewart Warner ... 98%\nStudebaker 67%\nTexas Corp  63%\nTexas Oulf Sul. . 72%\nUnion Oil Cal.   ... 53%\nUnion Pac  304%\nU. 8. Rub  42%\nU. 8. Steel    150%\nWestlnghouse Elec. 108%\nWillys Overland .... 24%\nYellow Truck   39\n52%\nB\u00bb%\n89%\n22%\n91%\n87%\n40%\n19%\n88%\n73%\n34%\n91',\n188\n104\n70%\n41%\n201\n119\n62%\n29%\n28%\n127%\n61%\n97%\n66%\n62%\n72%\n53%\n203%\n42\n148%\n107\n33%\n38%\n22 \u25a0'\n93\n87%\n40%\n19%\n88%\n73%\n35%\n91%\n186\n104\n.70%\n41%\n3041;\n119%\n63%\n29%\nM\u00ab\n127%\n61%\n97%\n66%\n63%\n72%\n53%\n204\n43%\n148%\n107%\n24%\n38%\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW YORK, May 11.\u2014Sterling exchange steady at $4.84 ^ for 60-day\nbills and  at  $4.87   13-16  for  demand\nForeign bar silver\u201469 _\u25a0\nCanadian dollars\u20141-16 discount.\nFrancs\u20143.93%.\nLire\u20145.28*4.\nMarks\u201423.90c.\nKronen\u201426.82c.\nVANCOIVKR  EGGS\nj      Fresh extras, 29c;  firsts, 26c; pullets,\n25c. (Price to producers 5c to 6c under),\nNEVER HAD FAITH IN BANKS,\nNOW MOURNS LOST FOR'\n_\\__m\n_*&\u25a0*\nsbSS\n__*\nJIM HOME\nMOSnYCASHlTAKSN\nltbom Farmer'Hild Up |\nk fa Hia Own Hon*\n-lifer nt\nUFETIME'S SAVINGS\nMNFIMT\nWhere do  \u2014\nyou keep   y\nyourmoney. e\nBid\n$    .30\n..    3.20\n..      .08 V_\n.21\nBarry   Holly   \t\n.82\nBeaver \t\n:: 'S\nBidgood   \t\n\u25a1gn. Lorraine \t\n.       18%\nCent. Man. Mines ...\n.    1.36\nConlagas  -\t\n...   6.10\nCrown Reserve \t\n...      .56\nCapital   \t\n..      .14\n...      30V.\nOold   Hill\n..     .16%\nGranada  _\t\n...      .36\n...      .10\n16.10\nHudson   Bay   \t\n18.80\n...      ,06%\nJackson  Manion \t\n...     .72\nKirklake \t\n...    1.79\nKirk  Hunton  \t\n. .      .16%\nKeely \t\n...      .60\n...      .03%\nKootenay Florence ..\n...      .31\nLake Shore \t\n2360\nlaval \t\n...      .17%\nMacassa   \t\n...      .38\nMcDougall   \t\n...      .40\nMclntyre   .\n... 28.75\nMcKlnley  .   .\n\u2022      #*\nMoneta. \t\n348\n...     M\nNipissing   \t\n...   4.00\nNoranda \t\n... 20.15\npend   Oreille   \t\n17.10\nPioneer \t\n...      .57\nPremier \t\n3.29\nPreston \t\n.02%\nRtbago \t\n.      .09%\nSan  Antonio   \t\n...      .37%\n...    6,10\nStadacona   \t\n...      ,11\nSylvanlte   \t\n...    3.16\nTeck  Hughes  \t\n..    9.30\nTough Oakes\n..     .33%\nTowanamac\n.\u00bb   2,5*8\nTemiskaming\n...      .05\nVipond   \t\n...      .80\nWright HargraVes\n...    4.40\nAsked\n\u2666   31\n3.25\n.09\nOS\n1.37\n.96\n.27\n18.25\n18.90\n.08%\n.74\n1.82\n.16\n.61\n.08%\n.32\n22.96\n.17%\na'.U\n20.25\n17.20\n.58\n2.35\n.10\n.36\n615\n.11%\n3.20\n61\n4.50\nNORANDA ONE OF\nMINING FEATURES\nHollinger  and   Mclntyre  Also\nStronger at Toronto; Teck\nIs Lower\nTORONTO, May 11\u2014 Noranda, Hollinger and Mclntyre were strong features of the mining market today in\na session where gains and losses were\nabout evenly divided. Hollinger soared\nto $16.H) a gain of 80c, Mclntyre\nscored a further gain of 56c to $26.80.\non buying Inspired by the reports of\nthe new ore on the  3876-foot  level.\nNoranda soared to $20.25 and finished\nat $20.20, an advance of 65c. Malartlc\nwas the leader ln activity for the\nday. sales amounting to 163.070 shares,\nfinal  sales were bt $1.38.  up 3c.\nPend OrelUe sold off to $16, during\nthe first hour but subsequently rallied\nto $17.2M   a net loss  of $1.26.\nTeck Hughes was 6c lower at $9.20,\nLake Shore 40c lower at $22.60. Nlpisslng advanced 20c to $4.30 on a small\nturnover and Mining Corporation was\nup 2c to $3.42.\nSherrltt-Oordon recovered to $6.12,\na gain of 7c. Hudson Bay Mining\nwas 20c easier at $18.80. Mandy was\n2c higher at $2.13, while Central Manitoba   declined   a   cent   to   ft .26,   and\nSan Antonio   \\.c to 37.\nInternational Nickel was much strong\ner. closing with a gain of $3 to $93.62.\nThc Standard mining exchange will\nbe closed on Saturday.\nHEAVY TRADING\nIN NICKEL ISSUES\nTRADE EXPANDS ON\nMONTREALMARKET\nBrazilian   Leads   in   Activity;\nLyall Records Widest Gain;\nAsbestos Goes Up\nMONTREAL, May 11.\u2014Trading showed\na substantial expansion In today's session of the Montreal exchange: Brazilian\nled ln activity with a turnover of\n24,916 sharsa and closed unchanged at\n68. Shawlnlgan closed at 103 Vi for\na net gain of 2%\u00a3. International Nickel\nclosed at 82%. for a net agin; of 1%.\nLyall recorded the widest gain, closing\nat 146, for a net advance of 14 points\nand having sold up to the new high of\nIBS. Ogllvle suffered the greatest loe*\nclosing at 400, for a net decline of 10\npoints.\nNew hlghs established were Asbestos\nwhich closed at 96v_, a gain of jA, and\nHoward Smith up to 149*4. an increase\nof %,\nOutstanding strong features included\nSteel of Canada, which closed at 227, a\ngain of 2Vt\\ Steel of Canada pfd., up\nto 217, an Increase of 2; Quebec Power\nadvanced to 100. up 2H; and Abitlbl\nclosed   up   H   to 80'4.\nTotal sales 82,153 shares bonde\n$115,060.\nClose\nBhnk of Commerce s 10\nBank of Montreal 390\nBank of Nova Scotia .   409\nRoyal Bank 410\nAbitibi Power & Paper 70%\nAsbestos  Corporation 37\nAtlantic  Sinter \"*o\nBell Telephone 172\nBritish Columbia ^IshlnsE 18\nBrazilian T. L. & Power 63 Vt\nBrompton  Paner 62\nCan. Car A Fbiindry 60\nCan. Cement 35\nCan. Convertem 12S\nCan. nldustrlal Alcohol 4(1'-.\nCanada Power 49\nCan. Steamsblo Lines 46\nDominion Bridae 93\nDominion fHas<*   , 136\nDominion Textile pfd. 125\nA, P.  Grain 69%\nHoward Smith  Paper 149\nLaurentlde . 61\nMassey  Harris 46\nMontreal  Power \u00ab     i2?Va\nNatlonal   Breweries 138\nOgilvie Milling 410\nOttawa L. H. & Power , 130\nPenmans,   Ltd. Ul_\nPrice. Bros. . 115\nQuebec Power 103%\nSteel of Canada 9HB\\.\nwayagamack 120\nWestern   Grocers 31\nWinnipeg   Rallwav 123\nCloses Up Over Two Points at\nToronto; Bank Issues\nActive\nThe Royal Bank\nof Canada\nNelson Branch\u2014A. D. McLeod, Manager\nWE RECOMMEND FOR INVESTMENT\u2014\nRuth Hope    Cork Province\nMiller, Court & Co., Ltd.\nI'hone 06\nW. M. WALKER, LOCAL MANAGES\nNelson, B.C. 522 Baker  street\nTORONTO. May 11.\u2014Heavy trading ln\nTntcrnatfonal Nickel was a feature of\nthe local market today. It advanced\nfrom 91 to 94*4 and closed up 2% at\n9314.\nStandard, Toronto and Commerce\nwere the most active among the banks.\nStandard closing up 1 at 260; Com-\nmerce_up 1 to 309: and Toronto making\na jump of 10 to 310. Steel of Canada\nwas strong and made a 5 point gain to\n229.\nOn active trading B. A. Oil closed up\n% at 40% Imperial Oil up % at 70%.\nand Canadian Oil un 1 at 59. Foothills\nOil made a Jump of 90c to 6.15. Home\nOH   \u00ab\u00a3s also  up 5c  to $3.25.\nHiram Walker led the beverage storks\nwith a gain of I Vi to 66',^. Canada Dry\nclosed up\"^  at 80.\nKOOTENAY BOND & INVESTMENT CO., LIMITED\nINVESTMENT    SECURITIES\nOOVERNMENT\nMUNICIPAL AND\nINDUSTRIAL\n\u25a0ONDS\nBRITISH COLUMBIA,\nONTARIO, MANITOBA\nAND QUEBEC MINING\nSTOCKS\nHOME OFFICE, TRAIL, B.C\nU\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOftlM Snultlni and Reflnlw Department\nTRAIL.  BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\niVdiuAc^a ui Gold, Silver, Cupper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nP\u00bbd\u201e..<,i:  of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC,  TRAIL\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nB, C. Silver \t\nBig  Missouri  \t\nCork Province \t\nDunwell   \t\nOladstone   \t\nIndependence   \t\nIndian Mines \t\nInternational Coal\nLucky  Jim  \t\nLeadsmlth   \t\nMarmot Metals  \t\nPremier \t\nPorter Idaho\nRuth Hope \t\nSilver  Crest  \t\nSilversmith   \t\nRichmond\nNat. Sll. O. S\t\nSunloch    \t\nWhitewater\nKootenay Florence\nOeorge  Copper  \t\nOolconda   \t\nL. & L\t\nPend   Oreille\nRufus  Argenta   .\nSlocan   King\nSilverado   ..,\t\nWellington   ..,...'.\nBid\nAsked\n1.40\n(  1.70\n.57*,',\n.591,',\n.32 V,\n.33 '\n08\n.14\n.15\n.07\n0B\n.37\n.3D\n.34\n.35\n.05\n.10\n.11\na.3o\n2.33\n.65\n\u25a0\u2022as',4\n.\u20223714\n.58\n.0814\n.10\n.20\n.21\n.10\n\u25a0If*\n.17\n.18\n2.80\n3.00\n2.35\n3.40\n.2912\n.30\n3.70\n3.95\n.85\n.89\n.11(4\n17.90\n17.76\n.20\n.31\n.11\n.15\n.to\n.95\nVANCOUVER WHEAT\nEXPORT IS GROWING\nVANCOUVER, May 11.\u2014With the\ncontinuously heavy volume of westward grain shipments and the lan*e\nquantity of wheat still In sight, the total export this year through the port\nof Vancouver will exceed all expectations, said W. M. Neal, general-manager\nC.P.R. western lines, who left this\nmorning for the eastf after spending\nseveral days In Vancouver ln the course\nof hlj\\ spring Inspection tour. \"The\nbusiness atmosphere here ts very very\ngood,\" Mr. Neal continued, \"in common with the whole Dominion, this\ncondition Is especially evident In the\nwest.\nHe referred briefly to the excellent\nprogress of new work on the company's\nsystem In British Columbia this.spring\nall of which, he pointed out, ls la\nrecognition of the growing needs of\nthe   coast   district.\nEGG MARKETS\nOTTAWA. May 11.\u2014Toronto\u2014Dealers\nbuying from country shippers at extras,\n32c;   firsts.  29c.\nVancouver \u2014 Firm and tendency\nhigher.\nChicago\u2014Spot, ttfto.\nCALGARY OIL\nAdvance\nA.  P.  Cbtuolldat\u00abl\narltlah   Dom\nDalhouale\nMcDougall Seijar <\nMcLeod\nUllnola,   Alta\nBorallte\nVulcan   \t\nDevenBh\nMidwest\nSpooner *\nMayland\nOalmont\nOkalta\nSignal  HIU\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW YORK, May 11.\u2014Copper steady;\nelectrolytic, spot and futures,  14ft.\nIron\u2014Quiet;   unchanged.\nTin\u2014Easy, spot, $51.75; futures. 151.25\nLead\u2014Steady. Bpot, New York, W.10;\nEast St. Louis. t6.\nZinc\u2014Firm; East St. Louis, Spot,\n96;   futures,  W.02  to  16.05.\nAntimony\u2014$11.37.\nQuicksilver\u2014 $123.\nAt London: Stondard copper\u2014Spot,\n\u00a381   10s;  futures, \u00a362  9s 6d.\nElectrolytic\u2014Spot, \u00a366 10a; futures,\n\u00a307.\nTin\u2014Spot,  \u00a3832;   futures,  \u00a3331   7s \u00abd.\nLead\u2014Spot, \u00a320 7s 6d; futures, \u00a320\n12a 6d.\nZinc\u2014Spot. \u00a326 7s;  futures, \u00a326  10s.   ,\n \u00ab\u2022\u00bb\t\nEvery citizen of British Columbia,\nthough he may not realize the fact, ls\na partner in the timber holding business of this province.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWheat\u2014\nMky\nJuly  ...\nOct.   ...\nOata\u2014\nMai  \u2022\u2022\u25a0\nJuly   ...\nOct\t\nBarley-\nMay   ...\nJuly   ...\nOct\nFlax\u2014\nMay   ..\n.   July   ...\nOot.  ...\n\u25a0n\u2014\nMay  ...\nJuly\nif Oct.\n92>i     93*4      92H\n7\u00bbh   nsi   \u00bb\n304\n306(4\n210V,\n138 V4\n132 ti\n118\nIBS'.\n110H\n198\n131%\n117-4,\n137 V,\n13514\n119'4\n'Cash wheat\u2014No. 1 northern. \"180: Nd.\nH;nor., 158W; No. 3 nor.. l\"3ft: Wo. 4.\nNo. 1, 122\".; No\ntrack, lr\nLOGAN * BRYAN\nPrivate Wire*\nSTOCKS, BONDS, COTTON.\nCHAIN\nHMBH\nNew Tort, Montreal and Tancon-\nnr Stock exchangee. Chines\nBoard ot Trade, Wlnnlpat Oram\nexchange and other leading a-*\n'ilian#tia\nOFFICIS:\nIMONDS SAV\nCross-cut, Crescent Ground, will saw 10% more\ntimber, time and labor being equal, than any other\njnade.\/This guarantee ha* never been challenged,\nSIMONOS CANADA SAW CO., LIMITED,\nar. airel eraur and acorn avinui. MONTREAL. Qui-\nVANCOUV**. \u25a0C, TORONTO. ONT. ST. JOHN. N.B. MM*\nMARKET FIRMS\nIN UK TRADE\nDuthie Mines Is Feature; Pend\nOreille Continues to Ease\nOff; Whitewater Better\nVANCOUVER, May 11.\u2014Early weakness on the Vancouver stock exchanse\ngave way to stien\u00abth during the late\ntrading. Duthle.. Mines was a strong\nfeature, on a rfhde of 11.800 shares\nscoring a net, gsln of dc to S1.31. On\na turnover of 4800 sharei. Home Oil\nimproved 9c to 93.20. Premier came\nback as a favorite, gaining 2c to \u00bb2.30.\nafter selling at $2.33. and Lucky Jim.\non   a  light  trade,  firmed  2c  to  36.\nPend OrelUe continued to ease off,\nclosing at $1775. down 26c Dalhousie\nand A. P. Consolidated oils were in\ndemand and closed unchanged. Whitewater common Improved 10c to $a.35,\nwhile  Big  Missouri  lost   IV  to  57',\nThe balance of the hat moved within narrow ranges.\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nOALOARY. Mav U.\u2014Receipts Cattle\n15D:  calves.  10;   hogs. 320.\nSteers\u2014Choice $9,25 to $9,50, fair to\ngood $8.50 to $9.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice $8.50 to $9\nfair to good  $7 to $8.\n^utehef cow-j\u2014Tboice $7.50 to $8.25\nfair  to  good   $6.50  to  *7\nBulls\u2014Good $5  to $5.50.\nStocker \u00abtecr\u00ab<\u2014Oho'***e $7,50 to $8\nfair to good  $6.50 to $7.\nFeeder steer* -*Cholc\u00ab\u00bb $8 to $8 50\nfair  to  good  $7.26  to  $7.75.\n^alv*\u00bb\u2014choice $11 to aio.\nT\u00abmbe\u2014Fair to good *'l to $13.\nSheep\u2014Pair to good $7 to $10.50.\nKotfg\u2014selects $10.25, thick smooths\n$9.75.\nCANADA BONDS\nWINNtPIO. Mny 11\u2014Dominion wor\nIcKilea  prices:\nWar lo\u00bbn\u00bb\u2014 10H1, \u00ab103; 1937, $105.66B,\ntinea.\nVictory loans \u2014 1933. \u00bb104.75h,\n\u2022\u00bb114.80a;   1984   \u00bb104.25;   1937.  1109.50.\nRenewals\u20141932. $103.10.\nRefundlm* lOBl!*****\u20141938, 1100.10; 1943.\n4105.30: 1944. *102.25b. tl0235a: 1940.\n\u2666 101.60.\t\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, May II.\u2014-Butter steady\neggs and  cheese unchanged.\nCheese\u2014Westerns,  \\8%c  to  ID'^c.\nButter\u2014No. l pasteurized. 33'dC t<\n33 \",c.\nEggs\u2014Fresh extras, 37c:  firsts, 34c.\nSnappy\nStyles\nthat will give\nExcellent]\n{j Weari\nPrided at\n$5 and f6\nWation Shoe Co., LtA\nTEH***.!*-)  STMCTI.T  C*.\u00abB\nm\nOther Branches at Winnipeg, Yorkton, Saskatoon, Edmonton, Calgary, Lethbridge,\nVancouver, Kamloope, Vernon and Victoria.\nSpecial Bargains for Last\nDay of Sale\nDry Goods\nThe greatest 5c values ever offered.   Many articles regular values up\nto 50c each are thrown out at clearing prices.\n2 ROSEMARY HAIR NETS for .'   5<\nScarf Pins,  Brooches,  Neck Charms,   Bath Salts, Clark's Crochet Cotton in\nassorted colors, Hair Shampoos, Ribbon Threaders, 3 in set, and assorted colors in\nfabric dye.-, and many other useful articles at throw-away prices.\nLOOK FOR REAL VALUES AT THE 5c BARGAIN COUNTER.\n6 CROCHET DOYLEYS for  25\u00ab*\nEMBROIDERED CENTERS\u2014Showing colored scalloped edges.    For 39<\nLACE TRAY CLOTHS\u2014Oval and oblong shaped.   Por, each $1.75\nLARGE SIZE BATH TOWELS\u2014White only.   For, each     30s?\nEMBROIDERED AND ITALIAN HAND CUT WORK GUEST TOWELS\u2014\nEach    ' .'..., 7S*i, $1.25\n.MADEIRA CENTERS\u2014For. each $1.25, $1.05\n11-PIECE EMBROIDERED LINEN LUNCHEON SET for  $8.05\nSET OF 6 EMBROIDERED MADEIRA TEA NAPKINS for  $6.25\nODD ENDS OF LINEN TOWELLING for, yard    &        20^ UP\nUSEFUL ENDS ENGLISH SHEETING\u2014From t-% to 6 yards.   72 inches wide.\nGreatly reduced prices.   Yard 45*, 50*, 65*, 69*\nMain Floor\u2014H.B.C.\nLadies' Wear\nLADIES' WHITE AND SAND SLEEVELESS FUGI SILK OVERBLOUSES with\npointed waistcoat front, narrow belt at back. Very neat. Good washing quality.\nSizes assorted.   Prices  $3.25, $3.50\nWHITE CREPE DE CHINE SKIRTS\u2014Fine pleating on Jersey Silk tops.   Sizes\nassorted.   Price   $8.05\nWHITE SILK AND WOOL PULLOVER SWEATERS-Neat collar, long sleeves.\nSizes 36, 38, 40.   Price   $4.05\n\u25a0WHITE JUMBO KNIT SWEATERS\u2014Suitable for tennis wear.   Two good patch\npockets.   Sizes assorted.   Prices $6.05, $7.95, $8.50\nWHITE RAYON SILK VEST AND BLOOMERS\u2014Sizes assorted.\nVests 05<J    Bloomers   $1.25\nWHITE RAYON SILK SLIPS-In assorted sizes, shadow proof skirt.\nPrices   $2.50, $2.75, $2.05\nWHITE COTTON VESTS AND BLOOMERS\u2014Plain or with silk stripe, cumfy cut\nor short sleeves.   Sizes assorted.   Vests  45*, 50*, 65c\nBloomers 50*. 60*. 75*\nSecond Floor\u2014H.B.C.\nBoys' Wear\nBOYS' TWEED BLOOMERS\u2014Good\nstrong Tweed Bloomers in a full range\nof sizes with governor fasteners.   2\n\u25a0 lots.   Sale price $1.40\nSale pric; $1.70\nBOYS' SHIRTS AND WAISTS\u2014Boys'\nStriped Waists in good washing patterns.  Regular $1.25.   Sale price 05*\nBOYS'   WINDBREAKERS*\u2014In   fanlcy\nCheck Flannelette.   Good for summer\nwear.   Regular $2.50.\nSale price $1.95\nBOYS' JERSEYS\u2014A large range of\nBoys' All-Wool Knit Jerseys in fancy\nshades with striped collars and cuffs.\nSizes 26 to 32. Regular $1.95 and\n$2.50. Sale prices $1.60 AND $1.25\nMain Floor\u2014H.RC.\nShoe Specials\nSHOES FOR ALL\nWOMEN'S SHOES\u2014\nSelling at $1.05, $2.05, $3.50, $4.45, $6.05\nSPLENDID VALUES IN MANY LINES OF MEN'S\nHEAVY AND FINE FOOTWEAR\u2014\nSpecial Sale prices $3.45, $4.45 AND $5.45\nMain Floor\u2014H.RC\nGrocery Department\nLOCAL FRESH EGGS\u2014Firsts, 3 doz. for   $1.00\nFANCY CREAMERY BUTTER\u2014Golden Meadow, 1-lb. carton 50*\nCHOICE CREAMERY BUTTER\u2014Ruby Creek, 2 lbs. for 05*\nLOCAL SPINACH\u20142 lbs. for  25<\nLOCAL GREEN ONIONS\u2014Bunch     5*\nLOCAL RADISHES\u2014Bunch    5*\nLOCAL ASPARAGUS\u20141-lb. bundle  25**\nH. R CO.'S LUXURIOUS FRESH ROASTED COFFEE\u20141-lb. special 60*\nMARSHMALLOW WH'P\u201418-oz. tin     25*\nMain Floor\u2014H.B.C.\n \u00ab Pap Tea\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS* SATURDAY MORNING, MAY 12, 1928\nTHE ARK\n\u2022M VERNON STREET\nAUCTION SALE\nOf COMPLETE STOCK\nvrrrooi'T reserve\nSATURDAY, MAY 12\nt p.m. and 7:B p.m.\nQ.  HORSTEAD,  AUCTIONEER\nElks Taxi-Transfer\nPHONE  77\nTour oar for a drive Is S or  7-Pass.\nRide In comfort.\nCareful drivers.\nttl  BAKER\nBID STEVENS\nASTER SEED\n~na tten. vhiow A.tar, m 10c packets.\nHeart of France, the best red aster,\nU..U. ostrlcn **eather aster, Blue, Lav-\nendar. Pink, White, Purple. Crimson and\nallied Oolors. 10c; 2 for lie.\nMall Orders Pilled Promptly.\nBl'THERFORn DRl'fl nt.\n'WeKHowaihTCweuu\nhovu to 00 our part-\n[ .For vie have sTudiid\n?*Trt\u20ac POJMBIN&ART.\nj NELSON   PLUMBING   &\nHEATING CO.\nf.O.  BOX  1J4 PHONE   I(!9\nWe are dealers for the\nfollowing cars and trucks\nfor Nelson, Trail, Rossland\nand district:\nDODGE\nNASH\nWHIPPET\nWillys-Knight\nGraham\nTrucks\nCAPITOL MOTORS\nLEORGE W. PEASE, MtM-jar\nDot 713. Phone 85. Nelson, B.C.\nOpposite Pott Office\nSUITE FOR RENT\nKerr Apartments\nattractive      J. A. C. Langhton, R.0\n.AUCTION\n319 OBSERVATORY ST.\nWednesday, May 16th\n\u2022i   I'M.\nFavored with instruction* from Mrs.\nW. V. Vellacott. I will offer for sale thc\nfollowing: Ladder, Step Ladders, Garden\nTools, Sprinklers, Pruners. Sealers, Refrigerator. Waah Tubs, Kitchen Treasure,\nfl*Holp McCIary Range, Utensils, -Dishes,\nGlassware, Lino Rugs, E. E. Oak Din-\nl\u00abg Room Table. 6 D. R. Spanish\nLeather Upholstered Chairs. Buffet.\nDrop-Leaf Singer Sewing Machine, Mn-\nhogany Record Cabinet. Pedestal Tabic,\nWilton Rug, Plants, Pictures, Hall Mir-j\nror. Wicker Chairs and Table. Solid\nLeather Couch, Table Lamp, Open Heat- j\ner. Oriental Rug, Pern Stand. Large'\nFern and Stand, Encyclopaedia Brit-!\ntanica, Set 14 Volumes Stoddart'a\nLectures. Real Rest Mattress. Simmons\nfeeds, Spiral Springs. 3-Piece Circassian1\nWalnut Bedroom Set. Cane Chairs.\nSmall Rugs, Handsomo Bureau, Single\nBrass Bed. Curtains, etc., etc.\nGoods on view morning of sale,\nTerns rasli. u. HOKSTKAl).\n* Auctioneer-\nspecializing    In    Correcting    Defect! rr\nSight  by  Proper  Glasses.\nQuick Repair Service.\nURIFHN  BLOCK. PHONE  ltt\nElectrical\nAppliances\n\u25a0J-Bl RNER HOTPLATES\nl-lll RNER HOTPLATE*-!\nTOASTERS\nIRONS\n< I ULINIi  IRONS\nEti*.\nGuy's Electric Store\nPhone 327\n)\n'Her Husband's Wife\nkg a. k. THOMAS\nA comedy ln three acts, presented hy\nTHE WILLOW POINT PLAYERS\nCrystal Hall on TIiumUj. May II, mil  Saturday, May  111.    Seals 30c.\nCurtain  8:30.\nHIGH TEMPERATURE\nWEATHER FEATURE\nBright   sunshine   was   the   order   of\nyesterday's weather, except for a short\nNelson News of the Day\nHarvey and his red tux boys. 6-plece\ndance orchestra at the Eagle Hall Saturday night. (3869)\nOwing to the poor attendance of\nladles and gentlemen of Nelson city at\nthe meeting called for last Wednesday\nafternoon by the organizer of the Canadian Red Cross Society for the purpose\not reviving the dormant branch, it was\nresolved by those who were present to\nadjourn the meeting till after Sunday\nevening services in the different\nChurches are over, when at 9 o'clock\np. m. the meeting will be reconvened\nand proceed to organize after the Peace\nTime alms and objects of the Canadian\n'bed Cross Society are fully explained.\nThis will give those ladles and gentlemen who promised to attend last\nWednesday's meeting and did not, a\nchance to fulfill the promise they made\nwhen they received a personal call from\nthe organizer during the early part of\nlaat week, that they would be on hand\nand assist in starting a Nelson Branch.\n(3926)\nMr. Louis Rose, the Violinist of the\nCapitol Theatre, ls considering teaching\nln a Fairview location. Would those interested kindly write to Box 466 or\nPhone 277L3. Reservations may now be\nmade for Fall Term. (391S)\nHospi ta 1 Day\u2014Come and v isl t your\nhospital this afternoon between two and\nseven p. m. Visitors will be shown\nthrough the hospital, isolation hospital,\nlaundry, and new nurses home, etc\nTea will be served from 3:30.       (3917)\nGolden Gate Cafe \u2014 Week-end Ice\nCream Specials, Fancy Drinks. Jazz\nHigh Ball, Don't care ice cream sodas.\nKootenay Maid, High school, College\nGirl, Charlie Chaplin. (3918)\nLadles who loaned quilts for exhibition at Vancouver can get them on\nMonday, 14th, at Womens Institute\nRooms. (3920)\nOn Monday afternoon ln the Memorial\nHall, Daughters and Maids of England\nsale ot work, home cooking and candy,\nalso afternoon tea. Military Whist\nDrive In the evening at 8:15.       (3921)\nBasketball Girls Rossland City versus\nNelson All-Stars tonight In Central\nSchool at 8 p. m. (3922)\nLadles and Gentlemen wishing to attend the Womens Institute Bridge Tuesday evening. May 15th please reserve\ntables at once.   Phone 277L3.       (3913)\nCralgend Garden, Longbeach, opens\ntoday. (3812)\nHospital Day\u2014Have you had your\ntonsils out? Some day you may have to.\nCome and see Iiqw comfortable we can\nmake you at the hospital. Visitors will\nbe shown around this afternoon from\n2 to 7 P- m.    Refreshments served.\n(3911)\nSpecial Saturday Shopping Luncheons,\nDainty salads. Northumbrian Girdle\nCakes. Ice Cream and coffee, 40c at the\nPatricia. (3910)\nAuction sale\u2014Saturday, today, afternoon and evening. The Ark, tioi; Vernon 8t. (3909)\nToday\u2014-Mother's Day Sale and Ten\u2014\n3 to 6 In Institute Rooms by A.-C. Club,\nBaptist Church. (3865)\nFam-yHork, Home Haklmc. Canto and\nTea this afternoon at Institule Rrmim,\n(3965)\nHarvey and his red tux boys, 5-plece\ndance orchestra at the Eagle Hall Saturday  night. (386)\nGet your food safes and screens at\nLawsons Factory. (3616)\nYellow Tuxl Co. .stage leaves Williams\nTransfer every morning nt \u00bb o'clock for\n\\ inlr,  Hulmo and  Boundary Line.\n(3855)\nANCIENT ORDER OF FORESTERS\nAll members of Court Royal, Court\nEllen and Court Star of Kootenay are\nrequested to meet at K P. Hall Sunday.\nMay 13, at 6:45 p.m. to attend Divine\nServices at the Baptist church. Visiting members welcome. G. B. Abbott,\nSecretary. (3889)\ntime early ln the afternoon, when dark <\/?\nclouds  overcast  the  sky\nThe maximum waa 74, and the mln*\nImum 41.\nFairview Lots\nFour double corner building\nsites. Price reasonable and terms\neasy. A house will sell for more\nmoney tf you get a good site.\nBuy a home site In Fairview.\nNo hills to climb.\nJ.  E.   ANNABLE,  Owner.\nWe handle a complete line of\n\"~ WIRING ~*\nMATERIAL\nFor both lighting and power installations.\nBENNETTS' LIMITED\n\"The House of Electrlml <iood*\"\n\"MOTHER'S EYES\"\nWhat gift could be nicer and\nneeded more than a pair of\nGlasses to restore the sight which\ntime has dimmed.\nExpert Service.\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST   AND   OPTICIAN\nW. R. CAMPION\nCor. Josephine and Vernon Sts.\nLook!       Look!\nSpecial Deals,\n#\n10 Nabob Jellies, 1 Nabob\nBaking Powder, 1 Nabob Extract 95*\n2 tins Peas, 2 tins Com,. 1\nbottle Nabob Ketchup or\nAsparagus Tips  95<\n2 tins Nabob Peaches, 2\ntins Nabob Sliced Pines,\n1 jar Nabob Marmalade\nfor \u00bb5<\n6 tins Tomatoes  05<\nEarly Rose. Early Ohio Seed\nPotatoes. Bananas. Oranges,\nGrapefruit, Green Vegetables of\nall kinds.\nDELIVERIES   TWICE   DAILY,\nI'PHILL   AND  FAIRVIEW\nOur Phone No. Is 121\nFruit Crates\nMade from dry white pine.   Get\nour prices before ordering.\na*e\nKootenay Wire Works\nMfg. Co.\n802  FRONT ST, NELSON\nSound teeth Influence your\ngeneral health and enhance your\nbeauty.\nNeglected teeth usually result\nIn some serious ailment ln some\nother part of the body. Let us\ngive you an examination. A little\nInexpensive work may do wonders.\nDR. KEELEY\nDENTI8T\n405*\/**  Baker  St.,  Nelson,  B.  C\nAND   AT   TRAIL\nFor Toiing Men\u2014\nOutstanding Values\nin Suits at\nThey Are\nStyled to the Dot\nWe've just received a new shipment of Young Men's\nSuits in fine Tweeds, medium weight Worsteds and\nTwists. Come in and see them. They carry the newest\nstyle points for young men and are also excellent values.\nOTHERS AT ?30.00 AND $40.00\nlathing   I**   Too   (inn-i   for   the  Sick! \/-\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION SPECIALIST\nIn business for your health.   Let ua fill\nyour prescriptions.  Mall orders promptly executed.   Call and wait for your car\nPhone 1.\nSunday hour.:    1 tn 4 and 7 to 9 p.m\nNew H80.000 Eagles' building was\nriPd'caterl In Anderson. Ind.. with some\n3000 members of the order present.\n44 Taxi and Transfer\nANNOUNCES\nTho   acquisition   of   ft\n2-TON   COMMERCIAL   TRUCK\nFor  Express,  Baggage,  Furniture,\nLong and Short Hauling.\nLos Angeles dedicated Its new $9,000,-\n000  city  hall.\nCut    flowers    and    Bedding    plants.\nBealby's stall, Saturday market.     (38931\nDaughters\nlatloi\nof   Scotia   meet   tonight.\nInitiation flower drill.    Social evening.\n(3906)\nBeautify your homes.   Consult Moore,\narchitect.   Bring me your building problems.    Consultations  free     Phone 285\n(38231\nFor service and  Satisfaction\n\u25a0deal Shoe Repair Shop\nC. BoiMitp Stanley St\n(3T70)\nWE UNDERSTAND KOW\nyou want your goods handled, and M\nnerve yon as you should -jc served when\nyou call on us for transfer and removing work. We respond to your call\npromptly, handle your goods carefully,\nand charge you reasonably, Call us and\nbe sure of satisfaction.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nI-IIOM.   33\nSPECIAL SALE\nFor\nOne Week\nOnly\n! III  TO  I*:III MAY\n$4.00\n'VICTORY\" ELECTRIC IRONS\n111.11 WHICH WE WILL\nM.I.I. FOR\n$2.95\nOnly a fortunate purchase of 200 of these real quality\nirons makes this possible.\nThe \".Victory\" is complete with cord and is fully guaranteed.\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE        NELSON, B.C.        RETAIL\nCome snd oee the May-Queen crowned\nat the old-time festival of May. May*\nDole dance and musical Items. To be\nheld at J. P. Morgan's residence on May\n18. Adults 36 cents, Including afternoon\ntea. Children frte. Refreshments extra\n  (3931)\nliOOl) EATS FOR SALE THIS MORS-\nIN<1. TRINITY SERVICE CLUB, ANN-\nABLE BLOCK. (3930)\nAUCTION SALE\nOF COMPLETE STOCK\nTODAY, 2 p.m. and 7 p.m.\nMOTHER'S DAY\nMAY   HTI I\nSend her one of our cards or\nmottoes. They say ln fitting\nwords tho sentiments you feel,\nout find very difficult to express.\nJ. H, ALLEN\nPicture Framing\nAmateur Finishing\nKeep May  17th open for Loyal True\nBlue Lodge Whist Drive In K. P. Hall.\n\u25a0i  *        (3936)\nTODAY\nIS THE DAY OF OUR\nSPECIAL SALE\nReal Bargains\nHome Bake Sale\nCarnation Milk Sale\nHot hou.se   Tomutoes\nCelery\nl,\u00abaf I.Hture\nHead Lettuce\nRadishes\nCucumbers\nSpinach\nHliuli'irh\nCstmti\nTurnip*.\nCaHlinoner\nCabbage\nAfter 18 years in Business in Nelson Mr. J. W. Holmes\ning out, prior to leaving for Victoria.\nDO NOT MISS THIS GREAT OPPORTUNITY\nFURNITURE\nsell-\nSome   new,   but   chiefly   second*\nhand\u2014Many different articles.\nchairs \u2014 \\\ndifferent\nFruit Basket Sale\nFancy Rubber Apron\nSale\n\u2022 GROCERY*\nPhones 10 & 11 j\nCURTAINS\nThis lii the MttHin lov-\niy new r ii Mil in-, are\nmost needed. Buy several pairs at this auction and brighten up\nVour rooms.\nI Rt MASK     A     ItllltH.IKA-\nroR AT THIS  UK;  CLOSING\nOl'T   SALE.\nMEN'S AND  CHILDREN'S\nWEAR\nOveralls,   Caps,   shirts,   Sucks,   Etc.,   Etc.\nHERE'S  YOUR\nCHANCE   TO\nSTOCK. LP AT\nA   LOW   COST.\n'1 I\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's Dispensing Chemiati\nFilms,  Kodaks,   Drugs,  stationery\nMall   orders   promptly   despatched.\nBOX   10*3  NELSON, B.C.      PROM  M\nCome In and Oet Vour Weight I'rea\nL\nDODGE\n1934 Special Touring, now bat-\n*t -fsoo.oo.\nESSEX COACH\n}[\u2022-:>,    thoroughly     overhauled,\n?550.00.\nWe can guarantee that both\nthfse ram arc in very good condition In every respect and arc each\nwell worth at leant (60.00 more\ntt-'iiH the price asked. Both have\n1928 licences.\nSmedley Garage\nCompany\nKitrlienwurc   \u2014   a   good   selection nf all new articles.\nWALL   PAPERS,   TOO\nA beautiful selection of\nIHillerks. Hid lur several rolls.\nIt  will  pay you.\nSCORES OF OTHER\nARTICLES\ntalp  iiuinrrmiM In  mention, Including two fine organs.\nCHOCKEHV\u2014NW ware  wlilcll\nwill give you real service.\n\u25a0M   MJCTIOII   SAL!\nTOMORROW. 2 P.M. AND * I'M.\nNO   RESERVE\nMARK\nGEORGE HORSTEAD, Auctioneer\n111(1   Al (HON   SALE\nTOMORROW,   2   P.M.  ANII   7   P.M.\nno um \u25a0\nTERMS CASH\nt\/az.\u00bbv,vi\u201e.tsm.m H at urn-nil\n'I\nryttTtainrnfMAt\nTwo  Matinees\nNight 7 and 9\nCOMING MONDAY\n'The 7th Heaven'\nThe Perfect Picture\nOn the Stage\nWheeler's\nCAPITOLIANS\n\u25a0MM*   \"atam-t\n~*\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1928_05_12","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0404063","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}