{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0404927":{"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":"2021-11-24","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1932-05-26","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404927\/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":" -**-\nCrop Prospects in Okanagan\nAre Looking Excellent\n\u2014 Page Ten\ntitan. Uaila\n* > i   .. van.*?.\nb3\nBritish Golfers Eliminate\nLast of U. S. Entries\n\u2014 Page Seven\nTOLCMB 81\nfcfj?* \"*C J tl'' SEW*.   NELSON,   B.   C,   TIIIRSDAY   MOBMNO   M-Y   36.   183S\nrive cents * corr\nMMDER   M\nCOLEMAN  \"-.TRIKE is over\nWHITE DECRIES\nLOGAN ON CASE,\nGYPSUM QUEEN\nLogan \"Used Paper He\nKnew to Be Spurious,\"\nStates White\nAFFAIR CONDUCTED\nIN IRREGULAR WAY\nDescribes Logan Evidence\nas Unsatisfactory, Contradictory\nSCIENTISTS CAN\nSTORE STARLIGHT\nRace Driver Wins Lap Race\nCHICAGO, May 25.\u2014A research\nhas found a way to keep starlight\nin cold storage and thereby relieved officials f the 1933 Century\nof Progress exposition of a lot of\nworry.\nAnnouncement that the light of\nthe star Arct -us, millions of light\nthe star Ar<-turus> millions of light\nbe captured and s'tored to open the\nexposition __. the opening night Is\ncloudy was made last night by Dr.\nHarvey C. RenU:hler, research director for a large manufacturer of\nelectrical equipment.\nThe light, after coming through\nthe big telescope of the University\nof Chicago Verkea observator. can\nbe trapped b absorption In a phosphorescent substance and frozen In\nliquid air, then released at will. Dr.\nKentschler said.\nOTTAWA, May 25 (CP).\u2014\"From\nthe 31st day of July, 1915, until\nthe time my learned friend came\nupon the scene, this affair has\nbeen conducted ln a way that has\nbeen ont of the ordinary and Irregular,*' declared Peter White,\nK.C., counsel ior the royal commission Investigating the (.ypsum\nQueen claim, concluding his summing .ap  of   evidence   today.\n\"One cannot characters lt as\nmere carelessness,\" he continued. \"It\nIs so like what people would do to\ncover up wrong doing. It smacks of\nsomething wrong trout start to finish. That, coupled . ith the quite\nunsatisfactory manner in which Senator Logan gave hla evidence, and\nthe serious contradiction* he gave\nto living witnesses and circumstances,\nlead me to think that it is only\nreasonable to conclude that he used\na document he knew to be spurious\nto secure money In a fraudulent\nmanner from the government of\nCanada.\"\nREVIEWS   EVIDENCE\nMr. Wtolt\u00ab spent the entire day\nin reviewing the evidence adduced\nat sittings of the commission which\nbegan early ln February last at Ottawa, and which were held at various points In eastern Canada and\nthe United Statea. Senator Hance J.\nLogan, veteran Nova Bcotla oarrlater\n\u00bbnd for many years a member of\nthe house ot commons, -.onuueted a\nreparations claim for Captain Freeman Hatfield, who claimed that his\nschooner, the Gypsum Queen, was\ntorpedoed on July 3_, 1_.15, by a\nGerman submarine off the coast of\nIreland. Captain HetLeld was awarded \u00bb7J,000 ln March, 1931. Subsequent Information to the department\nof state led to susplcl is that the\nvessel had been lost in storm, and\nan affidavit to that effect, allegedly\nsigned by Captain Hatfield on his\narrival ln Liverpool with his shipwrecked   crew,   was   Unearthed.\nPOSSE HUNTS\nMOnSFOR\nBURNED PLANE\nTruck  Driver  Describes\nAirplane Crash and\nBurning\nDE VALERA ASKS\nSENATE CONSIDER\nBILL ON MERITS\nSEATTLE,   Mny   2-\u2014A   posse   of\nNorth Bend citizens tonight w.arch-\ned   the   timbered   sides   of  Rattlesnake    mountain,    between    North\nBend   and   Snoqualmle   pass,   for\nthe  wreckage of a  plane  reported\nby several persons 'to have crashed\nand   burned   there   about  2   a.m.\nthis morning.\nWith    apparently   all   planes   accounted   for   here   at   Boeing   field\nand at fields east of the mountains,\nattempts were  made tonight  to locate   a   seaplane   being   flown   here\nfrom Detroit by Pilot Ed Smith and\nit   was   reported   at   two   Montana\npoin-s   during   the   day   today,   definitely excluding lt from the search.\nTlie crash  occurred  about a  a.m.\nand  the  plane burned, two Spokane\ntruck  drivers  reported   on   their  arrival ln Ellensburg early ln the day\nafter  driving  over Snoqualmle  pass.\nSeveral   other   residents   at   NorO.i\nBend,   and   a   cheep   rancher   at   an\nIsolated farm near the mountain, reports received here said, all claimed\nto have seen the plane falling.\nCURTIS ALMOST!\nCERTAIN TO\nBE INDICTED\nNegative     Developments\nImpede Progress in\nLindbergh Hunt\nCONDON MAKES\nERROR IN CHOICE\nNELSON TO HAVE\nMUNICIPAL MEET\nNEAR END, JUNE\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C.\nMay 25.\u2014The Union of British Columbia Municipalities\nwill hold a convention in\nNelson during the latter part\nof June, according to a letter to the city council Wednesday from Mayor A. Wells\nGray, secretary of the union.\nThe decision to hold the contention was made owing O\nthe many major problems now\nbefore municipalities. Including unemployment, social service costs, and other matters.\nIt was stated that this meeting would probably be the\nmost Important since the formation  of the organization.\nBLAST FROM WHISTLES\nOF MINES ANNOUNCES\n500 TO RESUME WORK\nMine Workers* Union Calls Off Their Pickets But\nReturn to Work Is Not Entirely\nUnanimous\nMan Picked Has No Possible Connection; Continues Inspection\nBROWNE AWAITS\nSOUTH WIND TO\nSTART TO TOKYO\nWeather   Observers   Predict\n\u2022 Favorable Breeze for\nOcean Flier\nMean Severance He\nExplains\nDUBLIN, Irish Free State, May 25\n(C P cable)\u2014President Eamon de\nValera today told the Iri.h Free\nState senate the object of his government's bill abolishing the parliamentary oath of allegiance to vr.e\nBritish \"crown was not severance of\nthis country from the British commonwealth   of  nations.\nWr. de Valera, pleading that the\nsenate give the bill consideration on\nIts merits, declared Its purpose was\nto prevent the Anglo-Irish treaty\nof 1931 from being a fundamental\ndomestic law and to put it ln Its\nproper place as an International instrument.\nFrom a vehement beginning in\nwhich he told the upper hous* oniy\na threat of war wHtfli Great Britain\ninduced the Free State people to accept terms of the treaty, the president got to an earnest and detailed\nexposition of what the bill was ln-\n, -tended to bring about.\nNot a seat ln the senate was vacant aa he began to defend the\nmeasure which has already been subject to verbal attacks by senators\nwhose political attitudes are more\nconservative than, those of -the Republican   administration.\nSEATTLE    May  25.  \u2014 Assured  of\n  clearing  weather  In the North  Pac-\n~       ' 11.1c by repo- ts late today, Nathan C.\nAbolition Of Oath Did Not;Browne- *ormer Chicago-Detroit mal\npilot, announced he would take ofi\nfor Tokyo,between 6:30 and 8:30 a.m.\ntomorrow providing a south wind was\nblowing.\nWeather observers here predicted a\nsouth . \u2022(\u2022. was practically assured o.\nsome time d** *lng those two hours.\nWtth only seven days left to qualify for Seattle's 830.000 prize for thc\nfirst -ligh- between this city and\n.Tokyo, the elements conspired to\n:eep Browne aground today.\nBrowne's plane, the \"Lone Star\" is\nstanding . \u00ab a hangar at tho field\nuse to get additional speed ior the\nready to be pulled to the top of the\nlncllneu ramp which the pilot will\ntakeoff.\nThe motor and entire plane have\nbeen checked and approved by mechanics. Nine hundred gallons of gasoline are In his tanks. If a strong eouth\nwind Is blowing when he Is ready to\nfly. Br ,vne said he would adtf 50\ngallons of fuel for a capacity load,\nbut If the wind Is light h0 will start\nhis nearly 5000-mile flight with the\npresent load.\nGRANT LIST TO\nVETS INCLUDES\nS. E. COULTER\n(Special to The Nelson Dally News)\nOTTAWA, May 25.\u2014Another veteran of the Northwest Mounted\n1 police, S. E. Coulter of Kaslo, B. C,\nwho participated ln the rebellion of\n'85, haa been Included in the list\nfor a government grant of \u00bb300. Mr\nCoulter's ls a late application from\nWest Kootenay to W. K. Ealing.\nPayment to all veterans will be\nmade  after  the  session  closes.\nHOPEWELL, N. J., May 2.1 (Br\nFrancis A. Jamleson, A P staff\nwriter)\u2014Speedy grand Jury action\nIn the \"enormous deception\" perpetrated by John Hughes Curl If,\nhoax nejroLiator, wan near tonljht\nas negathe developments Impeded\nthe progrej*-, of the main hunt for\nthe kidnappers and killers of the\nMndbrrgh    habr.\nProsecutor Anthony M. Hack was\nready to lay the Curtis e*_ft before\nthe Hunterdon county gran.1 Jury\nfcom-orr-jw morning and W. C. Pender,\nattorney for Curtis, conceded ln\nNorfolk. Va., there wai little doubt\nhis client would be Indicted. Any\nIndictment, however, would not be\nreported formally until Saturday.\nMeantime, Dr. John F. Condon, the\nransom payer, remained in New\nEngland while one of the clues he\nsupplied police collapsed. \"Jafsle\"\nhad picked out a picture as the\nlikeness of \"John\" to whom he\npaid 150,000 April 2. Investigation\nof the subject disclosed authorities\nrelated, \"no possible connection with\nCup!d did some fast flying to overtake Billy Arnold, youthful Chicago j this case.\"\nautomobile racer, who won the 1P30 600-mlle Memorial Day race at Dr. Condon will continue his ln-\nIndianapolii and was in a fair way of repeating his victory in 1931 when spectlon of yoguea gallery photo-\ndisaster cheated htm. Here you see BUly and his bride, formerly Dorothy j graphs later.\nCanfleld of Detroit, who will spend their honeymoon at Indianapolis\nwhere Arnold will prepare for this year*\u00ab race. He ls confident of a\ncomeback.\nAIRMEN ARE\nKILLED WHEN\nWINGS SNAP'\nCOMPANIES REFUSE TO RE-ENGAGE\n50 MEN AFFILIATED WITH UNION\nAgreement for Rehiring Believed (o Be That in\nEffect Last March; Blairmore', Bellevue,\nStrikes Continue\nMany Injured in Chambers\nPrussian Diet as Members\nHave Hand-to-Hand Fight\nCOMMANDER OF\nJAPANESE ARMY    i\nDIES, SHANGHAI!\n'Legislative Hall Is Wreck- vl8ltors at ****-\n|   ed; Three Communists   i\nSeriously Hurt\nI-WETJANG  OF  CONDON'S *\nTHREATENED  BY   EIRE\nNEW YORK, May 25\u2014A myWerl\nous fire threatened late tonlftt to\ndestroy a vacant frame dwelling ir\nthe Bronx owned by Dr. Jchn T\nCondon, the \"Jafsie\" of the Llnd\nbergh   kidnapping   murder   oase.\nQuickly comrolled by firemen, the\nblaze did but little damage. It set\nquickly In motion, however, an Investigation by detectives of lu\ncause and the nocturnal activities\nof persons who neighbors reported\nhaving seen   there  recently,\nDr. Condon and his family occupied the dwelling up to two years\nago. It has had no tenants -since\nlast June.\nNearby residents said Dr. Condon\nhad used t^e house lately a_ some\nsor;  of   rendezvous  with   mysterious\nThird Narrowly Escapes Death\nCOLEMAN, Alta., May 25 (CP).\u2014Marking* the end of\na strike of coal miners in effect since the end of February,\nannouncement was made here tonight that about 500 miners\nin the employ of the International Coal and Coke Company,\n  I Limited, and the McGillivray Coal company would start\nPlunges Machine Into Sea, | work tomorrow morning\nh Since the break from the Mine \\\\ orkers Union of Canada\nand the formation of an independent union a week ago, negotiations between the striking miners and the coal operators\nhave been in progress and the signal for resumption of work\n_. \u2022aun\u00a7 suddenly tonight  with\nthe whistles atthemines\nsounding a long blast \u2014 the\nsignal the mines would open\nthe following day.\nWhile the Mine Workers Union of\nCanada, had called off Its pickets\nfrom duty, lt ls understood the return to work will not be entirely\ni unanimous at either the International   or   McGllllvray   properties.\nMN DIEGO, Cal.. Mar J.V\u2014Two\nnaval   aviators   were   killed   and\nthird tatmmt death by a fortunate\narc I dent   (oday   when   one   of   the\nwings of their torpedo land plane\nsnapped, plunging  It   into   the   \u00ab*   j\nthree   miles   off   roronado.\nAviation   pilot,   flrat   class,   A.   T. j\nMeade   of   Coronado,    and    aviation\npilot,   first   class,   D.    ...   Berber,   of\nSpokane,   Wash-,   were   trapped   in\nthe cockpit without time to extricate,\nthemselves   be:0re  the   diving  P^\"* I I>amaK\u00ab of   About   $500 Cor-I It\" was  wilted\" the \"compan.e\u00bb\u2122 had\n\"*h ,n\" \"'*np I refused to re-engag* around W mm\nFIRE DESTROYS\nINTERIOR, SILICA\nSTREET RESIDENCE\nstruck the water. Although the scene\nwss dragged all afternoon the bodies\nwer\u00ab   not  recovered.\nChief Aviation Pilot B. W. Hun-\nderle, the third member of the\nplane's crew, was thrown out of\nthe plane by its violent contortion\nwhen it_j wings broke. He managed\nto open bis parachutp about four\nseconds before* he reached the water\nsnd was rescued by the crew of a\n__.|nnm   f,shlng  smack.\nSeveral dozen bathers on the Coronado be-acn witnessed the nc. I lev*.\nThey ea.M the plane was j [flttf\nwhen at sn elevat -n of abouJ 1030\nfeet  a   wing  broke   away.\nered by Insurance; Fire\nSquad Subdues Flames\nsaid to be affiliated with tho Mm*\nWorkers union.\nStrl ke\u00bb are still ln progress at\nBlairmore and Bellevue but are expected   to  end   In  the  near  futu.e.\nNo announcement wai made by\nthe   operators   nor   the   newly   crga-\n'\u25a0 building.\n.SHANGHAI, May 28 (Thursday)\n(AI1)\u2014 General Yoshlnlro Shlra-\nkawa, commander-in-chief of the\nJapanese Imperial forces here, who\nwas wounded by a bomb on April\n29. died today, Japanese military\nheadquarters announced.\nThe end came at 7:3ft a.m. (8:30\np.m. eastern standard time) after\nthe commander had suffered a relapse from wounds Inflicted during\nexercises  In   llongkew   park.\nDEMOCRATS PUSH\nRELIEF BILL\nGreat\nIs\nto Formally Sign\nHoover Moratorium\nContention of War Debts and\nReparations Remain\nUnaffected\nBERLIN, May 25 (AP) .\u2014Smouldering political pactions In the new\nPrussian diet broke out in hand-\nto-hand fighting between National\nSocialists and communists today\nwith a violence unprecedented ln\nth,. parliamentary history of Germany.\nTlie legislative hall was wrecked\nand at least half a cl07.en members,\nincluding neutrals, were Injured.\nDeputy Juergensen, a leader of the\nSocial Democrats, who took no part\nIn the fray, was carried unconscious\nto a hospital with one side of his i\nface  ripped open.\nWith f.sts, inkwells, chair legs\nand water bottles, the legislators\nfought their batt!e to the bitter end\nwithout police interference, General\nKarl Lltzmfmn, senior member of\nAdolf Hitler's National Socialist\nparty, having decl.ned the services\nof   the   police  several   days   ago.\nThe trouble started after Hans\nKerrl, a National Socialist, had bee:,\nelected president of the diet, and\nErnst Wlttmaack, a Social Democrat, had been elected first vice-\npresident. \u2022\nNEW YORK MAYOR\nADMITS MAKING\nMONEY, ACCOUNTS\nAVIATORS DENY\nSENDING S 0 S        \t\nCALLS_AT SEA M0NTHLY REPORT\nOF EMPLOYMENT\nSHOWS ACTIVITY\nTaking hold )n tbe rear of a\nblllca slreet residence owned by\nyds.  E. Monteleone. flame*  totally\ndestroyed the Interior of tlie house Jnl_wd independent union officials as\nwhich was occupied hy Tony Rod- '. to the grounds for their return to\nselle, sliorfly after ft o'clock this 'work. It ts believed, however, that\nmorning. Arrhlng nlmost Immedi- J the men are returning, on the same-\n1 schetfme and working agreement as\nin effect March 31 lost and which\nwill be continued for another two\nyears. Chief cause of the strike wai\n<INaf.reen.ent over working condition-, and the companies' policies of\nlaying off men entirely Instead of\nrotating the work equally between\nmarried   men   and   single  men.   Tha\nately after the rail un*- sent In,\nthe Nelson fire department subdued the flame* after a short fifth*.\nbut not before the fire had\nwrought havoc with the Interior\nof the hjilldlng. The cause of the\nfire la unknown.\nDamage done by the fire, e-itj-\nmawd   to   be   about   9500,   was   fully\ncovered by  insurance. There was no I companies    contented    the    married\ndamage    done   to   the   neighboring  men  should   be  given  most of  the\n! wort available.\nCoastguard  Vessels  Race  to\nAssistance From Distant\nPoints\nSILVER EXPECTED\nI   TO ENTER PICTURE\nAT ECONOMIC MEET\nBOSTON,   Miy   25.\u2014A   mail   plane t \t\ncatapulted   from   the   decic   of   the   _. _,        _     ,\n! North   German   Lloyd   liner   furopa. j \u00ab. I.,     ViueOCC      and\n,500  miles   at  sea.   ard   which   later; ProvinrM  llnv\u00a9 f-_._w.ur\nsent   out   SOS   signals,   landed   ftt 1 TO* inCCS   Iia\\ e I.ai per\n[the   Boston   airport   at   5:40   p.   m. i Knrolmcnts\n. _     .       eastern   standard   Uaft   today.\nMade No investment; Denies    The tltat, piloted by Lieutenant\n\u25a0    _.. ._-..-_, I .Innrhlm      H\nLONDON, May 25 (By Oeorge\nHambleton, Canadian Press staff\nwriter\u2014Cp cable).\u2014 BiUan intends\nto approach currency discussions at\nthe Ottawa Imperl-' economic con-\nPrairie fpi'ence Wttt 9 thoroughly open\nmind.\nSir E. Hilton Young, minister of\nhealth,    speaking    for    the   govern-\nWASHING _>N, May 25. \u2014 United\nStates senate Democrats pushed their\n$2,300 000.000 unemployment relief\nbill forward today despite President\nHoover's emphatic opposition to its\nprovision for a $500,000,000 public\nworks bond Issue.\nThe bill was formally Introduced\nafter receiving the unanimous approval of the combined Democratic\nsteering and policy committees. It waa\nreferred  to  the   banking  committee.\nSENATE GIVES THIRD REAPING TO\nTARIFF   AMENDMENTS   ON   WOOL\nOTTAWA, May 35.\u2014Third reading\nwaa given by the senate today to\nthe bill amending the customs tariff. Its provisions Imposed duties\non wool, \u201e.des and skins, to Implement the New Zealand treaty, and\nalso extended the period for Importation free of dut\/ on parts for\nagricultural   implements.\nAMENDMENT    REM TES    TAX    ON\nFOREIGN   INSIBANCE   COMPANIES\nOTTAWA May 25.\u2014The proposed\ntax of 15 per cent on foreign mutual Insurance companies, who do\nnot maintain offices in Canada, was\nreduced in the Special War Revenue\nact to 10 per cent by an amendment in the senate today. This\namendment was later concurred ln\nby  the  house  ot  commons.\nMUSSOLINI   SIGNS   RENEWAL\nOF   TUHKO-ITALIAN   TREATY\nROME, May 25.\u2014Prerhler Benito\nMussolini and premier Ismet Pasha\nof Turkey today signed a five years\nrenewal of the Turko*Italian treaty\nof friendship, which a few years\nago settled existing differences between  the  two  nations.\nLONDON, May 25 (.AP)\u2014Blr John\nItaau, re-retary* of slate for foreign\naffairs, told the house of commons\nt:diy that a formal agreement to\nrepay ln 10 equal annuities tho\nBritish war debts of $100,000,000\nwhich were sttspenJed by the Hoover\nmcratoriur. would be clgned soon a;\nWashington.\nHe described it as a \"purely\nformal st\u00abep\" to give legal effect to\nthe \u25a0moratorium, involving no decision on any question of principle.\nThus the Brinish recognition of Vr.e\nUnited States' contention that war\ndebts end reparations are separate\nproblems  remained   unaffected.\nGreat Britain had arranged last\nsummer to repay the suspended\nportlcn of the war debt in 10 annual Instalments, Sir John explained.\nHe revealed that the United States\ngovernment had requested the British government to sign a formal\nagreement regarding this portion of\nher   obligations.\nA. W. MA1NVILL IS\nNEW POSTMASTER\nAT CRAWFORD BAY\n(Special to The Nelson Dally News)\nOTTAWA, May 25.\u2014A. W. Man-\nvlll, an ex-soldier resident of Crawford Bay, B. C-, has been appointed\npostmaster at that point to succeed\nMrs. Jean O. S. Fox, who haa re-\nuigned.\nInfluencing Grant Bus\nFranchise\nNEW TORK, May 15   WfW James\nJ. Walker, in a fiery, spectacular\nappearance as a witness tOtmf before\nSamuel Seabury, acknowledged realizing $2 ii,692.7. wlthou; investment from a brokcra?e account\nwi.h Paul Block, the publisher, and\ndenied he Influenced improperly the\ngranting  of  a  bus franchlf*.\nThe tracing of the brokerage transaction came a. the nviyor completed\na full day on the stand of thc\nHofstadter legislative committee,\nwvlch has been engaged tu a sweeping 14 months Investigation of the\nmunicipal government, with Sea-\nbury as counsel.\nThousands milled around  In  front\nWilhelm Pieck, a Communist dep- !0f the county courtbou,<-e ns Walker\nuty, rose to a point of order and at\nthe top of his voice shouted there\nwere murderers on the Nazi benches.\nThe Nazis Jumped up and made a\nmass attack on the Communist\nmembers, whom t.iey outnumbered\n162  to 57.\nThe Communists were forced out\nof the hall during the battle, at\nthe conclusion of which numerous\ndeputies on each side were lying on\nthe floor, bleeding  profusely.\nThree Communist deputies, Krae-\nmcr, Kuntz and Gohlke, were seriously   hurt.\nHindu Bride Faces\nFuneral Pyre to\nEscape Marriage\nMADRIS, Inula, May 25 (AP) \u2014\nA yoting Hindu bride who preferred death to marriage threw herself on a blazing funeral pyre on\nher wedding night, It was learned\ntoday.\nThe tragedy occurred at Masult-\npatam, and caused a profound\nsensation throughout southern India.\nMEMBER OF J   TIER  PAHTY\nPRESIDENT   OF   DIET\nBERLIN, May 25 (AP).\u2014Hans Kerrl,\na member of Adolf Hitlers National\nSocialist party, was elected president\nof the Prussian diet today.\nsat on the itftM.  When   the  may\narrived In the mcvnlng the whole\nneighborhood echoed with  the cheer\nat  went up.\nWilkcr said the Joint account was\nopened, without any initial Investment, \"on Mr. Brock's splendid\ncredit and reputation.\"\n\"Did jou stand ready to stand\nany loss that might be Incurred?\"\nSeabury  asked.  >\n\"I mttt ready to,\" the mayor\nreplied.\nRAILWAY   PROTECTION\nRLMORS   ARK   \"MOONSHINE\"\nOTTAWA, May 25 (CP).\u2014Unfounded rumors circulated ln the London\nand New York financial centers today that action Would be necessary\nto protect Canadian financial, Insurance and railway corporations.\nwere branded tonight by Premier R.\nB. Bennett aa being \"All nonsense.\"\nThey were characterized by Hon. E\nN. Rhodes, minister of finance, as\n\"moonshine,\"\nJoachim B-ftnktnburg. with Karl\nKlrrhoff as co-p.lot, arrived at the\nairport while tho Europ:. searched\nthp \u25a0Bras 'or 19, and while three\ncoast guard vessels were l-t__Af to\nIts   assistance   front   distant   points.\nAttaches    of   tne    Bcfton\nwho  reported   the  landing snlri  the\ntwo   flyers   were   uninjured   and   the\nplane   likewise   appeared   to   b\u00ab   In\ngood   condition.\nThe plane, <*..-ry!>.g malt to Boston\nnnd New York, first sent out tha\nSOS signals at 11:10 a. m. (Eastern   standard   time..\nBoston airport attache* said the\nflyers denied they had sent nn SOS.\nand conjectures. traa$ t-_-_-3-K_lftt--|\nas to the possibility another plane\nmight   be   in   trouble.\nThe flyers were quoted by members of the airport ftatt as saying\nthe.j radio went dead 150 miles\naway from tlie Kviropa. thus CUtt-Of\noff  their  BommU-Ueatlon   Titii   ti.e\nliner. After bucking head winds.\nthey shifted their course and came\nto Boston instead of New York, their\noriginal destination, the airport reported.\nPremiers of All\nProvinces Asked\nOTTAWA, Mlv 25 fCP).-A better-!\nment   in   employment   in  Canada   on !\nMav   1   mi   reported   in   a   monthly ;\nreview  Issued   by  the  Dominion  bu-\nItfttl   cf   statistics   today,\nAt   the   beginning   of   the   month;\n'alVport I 78a2  KW'-  reporting  to the  bureau,\n'had   a   total  of   7fl9,944  persons  em-'\nployed.   This   compared   with   739,544\non   April   1.\nConstruction, transportation and !\ntrade recorded the grftatHt Improve- j\nment, while there were also gains\nin   logging   and   services.   Tliere   was i\nseasonal    curtailment   In   coal   mln-   BOOT  OT Will,MM\nIng;  manufacturing was quieter, and) MIT. Hi;.   ,   is   FOLSD\nhighway  construction   was   curtailed, j    PRINCE RUPERT. B. C.   May 25 \u2014\nHeightened activity, pays the re_|Boc!y of William Mitchell, drowned\nport, wis FftpOt *d In QuttWC, the j ftt Lake Sl.awatlsns Saturday night,\npralr|f provinces and British Coltim- IH-W recovered early this afcernoon,\nbla,   while   the   level   of  employment i  -\u25a0\t\nin  the  Maritime  provinces  and  Ontario  was  lower  than  o->  April  1.\nment In ihe hO-Ue of commons to-\nttf, was frank in his statement thnt\nthe Ottawa discussions were expected to cover thc proposal of\nbringing .-liver into the currency\npicture. Tlie problem of bl-attftlUm\nmust be thrashed out before Britain\nbeean conj-ldrratlon of a fresh ba.<3\nfor   her   currency.\nMajor w. E. s.ll.ott, flnardal secretary of tlv treasur., assured the\nhou-y Brltan had no intention of\nreturning to the gnld i.t..ndard as\nlong as gold prices \"behavrd\" as ftt\npresent,\nTHE WEATHER\nfor Suggestion\nITALV ACCEPTS  HOOVER'S\nREPAYMENT   FROPOSAL\nROME, May 25.\u2014The Itftl'an government today Instructed Ambassador De Martlno at Washington to\naccept the proposal of President\nHoover allowing repayment to the\nUnited Statea within 10 jam of\ndebt payments deferred by the\nmoratorium ending June 30.\nOTTAWA. Miy 25.- Premier R. B.\nBennett announced in the |MM of\ncommons tonight that notice has\nbeen sent to all the premiers of\nthe provinces ask.ng them for any\nsuggestions they might desire to\nmake to the government with refect to tho Imperial conference. All\nthe agricultural organizations, ss\nwell as the manufacturers' associations, have also been asked for\nBug-r.stions.\nTlie prime minister made this\nstatement during consideration of a\nvote for expenses in connection with\nthe conference, amounting to .250.-\n000. The Appropriation was approved\nby   the  coirmlttce.\nNUDISTS ORDERLY\nHERE WEDNESDAY\nWith the excitement of lift Sun-\nS day's demonstrat on on the Thrums\nfront over, provincial police report\nI that all is quiet both in the JaU\nyard here and ln the surrounding\ncolonies.\nNudist,, nrrested In the recent\ndemonstration at Thrums, 65 in\nnumber, are being held In separate\nquarters ss far as passible pending\nthe arr.val of a flat from Victoria.\nThe local branch ls awaiting word\nfrom Victoria before moving any\nmore of the offen*-'e*rs on to Industrial  schools   and   penitentiaries.\nWATER   LEVEL   AT   NELSON\nTjesJay\u201413.05     fl\nwater.\nWednesday\u201413.30\nwater.\nVICTORIA.    May\nweather   condlilous:\ntemi'i;k.-TI ris\nfeet   above    \\om\n15\u2014Synopsis    cf\nNELSON   \t\nVictoria   \t\nVancouver\nEstevan   Point\nKamloop*.\nPrince   Rupert\nAtlin     \t\nDawson    \t\nSeattle\t\nBRIBERY   CHARGES   HAVE\nNO  FOIMUTION\nCAPE TOWN. S. A., May 35 (CP\ncable).---A select commi j-e of the\nhouse ot assembly appointed to investigate Impeachments of J. H. Un-\nnlk, government member, on a\ncharge of bribery, today reported t ^\nwas no foundation to th- charge.\n 49 S\u00ab\n 38 58\n  38 00\n 34 6.\n  44 58\nsan Trwmstma  - 53 ga\nPortland      _.._ 42 58*\nSpokane ^  34 58\nPrince George  ~    3*6 63\nUs   Angeles       60 80\nPentlcton \u201e 33 \u2014\nVernon        40\nOrand    Ml      30\nKaslo _ 33\nNEXT CONGRESS OP TRANS-\nOCEAN FLYERS IN NEW YORK\t\n!  I  .'UlfH  ELIZAHET |\nROME.   May   25    (AP).\u2014The   Con- STUART   IS   PE.\\r\ngress of Trans-ocean   Flyers  tonight      VANCOUVER. B. C, May L5 (CPj-\ndeclded  to  hold  their  next  meeting ] Edith    Elizabeth    Stuart,    aged    62,\nln New York. Tlie date w._a not de-  prominent   i-   Vancouver   music  cir-\ncided upon, cles, ls dead.\n. 30\n. 30\n. 30\n. SO\n. 44\n. 42\n65\n50\n60\n48\n68\n68\nCranbrook   _.\t\nCalgary\nEdmonton   \t\nSwill   Current   \t\nPrince    Alterl     _.\nQu'Appei.e  \t\nWinnipeg    \t\nNinalmo\t\nFORECAST\nNrlson and vicinity\u2014Generally fair\nstationary or  bight,  temperature.\n\u2022.0\n64\n65\nL\n \"\n'\n r-\n\u2022 THE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS,   NELSON,   B.   C,   THURSDAY   JKTBNINa   MAY   tt,   \u00bbtts\nMim Marie L. O. Plackwe!!, Gunn,\nAlia., write*:\u2014\"For two yean I\nsuffered from twvere lit-ulachea, and\npimple* on mt far*.\nMy heau-wheftsermed incurable, and\nI thought tbe pimples would nerd\ndisappear.\nA, friend iworaroended Burdock\nW\u00bb>od Bitler*. and on trying a bottle\nI found the headache* disappear, and\nI am not bothered ftuy more with tbe\npimples.\"\nU \u00bbt all -mi-nd [-r.-T-l iter*   wi-\u00bb._-Mtw.-. tut lb* _>ul U y-W-, -\u00ab>lj by TW\nT. JH_.b_.ii_ Co., Ltd .Toronto, Oat-\nSrd:\u00abrj!HE WARMS UP FOR. OLYMPICS\nDE BRUYN,  MARATHON  CHAMP, FIRES  HOTEL BOILER\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B. C, Hotels and Cafes\n\u25a01?2 VERNON STREET\nDinner\n75c\nPHONE 787\nLuncheon\n50c\nKOOTENAYWATERS\nSave All Coarse Fish for Biological Station to\nExamine\nLEAVE THEM WITH\nNELSON HATCHERY\nKeep Record of Stomach Contents of All Game Fish\nCaught\nHUME HOTEL\nNELSON, B.C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nlwvvvvmrjtlji + jLjL + nrnrwnrnrnr \u25b2 *\u25b2*._*-*.\nHUMS: Mrs. C. C. Raven, A. M.\nMyers, Frajwr Jamleson, W. H. Davis.\nM. A. Uweeney. Vancouver: Mr. end\nMrs. P. Perry, Reno Mine; J. O. Connors, V. Carmichael. Calgary; F. D.\nHoliiday, O   awa; F. C. Potter, Tor.\nonto; A. Anderson R. Brough, Medicine Hat; R. T. Tiffin, F. Doodson, G.\n8. Mcintosh, A. J. Ironside, Cran-\nbrook: J. D. Pnxton, Grand Forks;\nJ. A. DeWolfc, Winnipeg: W. A. Curran, Trail.\nfrVhere {he Guesl Is Kbig [\n<T5he Savoy\"\nl-pJin-l KEWTST AND FIN7ST HOTEL\nMAJSY   ROOMS  WITH  PIUVATE\nBATHfi OR 6H0WEKS\n  J. A. KERR, Prop.\ntli BARB* 8T. TBGHB  19\ni msWjgjftut^m ^^_\\^_mf_mwsn^_^^^^^w\nBhVOX- Mr. ftnd Mrs. ) \u2022 BQef. Mr. [Destiny Bay; h. Exton, Procter; |fr.\nsnd Mr-.L. C Nabon R. A- Store, Van- and Mrs Max Barkan, B Bsrkan, flpo-\ncouv.r- B reterson.\" Nakusp; Mr. and kane; Mrs. Flarence Kllpatriefc, Pro-\nMrs H J. Wltehell. Cranbrook: rs. vast; T, Mely Nelson; B. J. Park-\n\u25a0 M. Raymond Mrs. Row Wnns, ham. Vernon; J. A. W. Herbert, Koss-\nWenatchee; Miss N. O'Neill. Mrs. w. land; Mrs. E. Walker, Femle.\n__.   Dean,   Seattle;   W.   M.   Miliigai-.l \t\nA survey of tne food habits of\nboO. game fish and coarse fish in\nKootenay lake ls to be carried out\nby the biological board of Csnada.\nand for this purpose the cooperation\nof all angleru regularly fishing on\nthe main lake or the West \/jbi Is\nrequested.\nSAVE   COARSE  Fl, II\nInstead of killing and throwing\nbarfc tA| coarse fish taken, anglers\nere requested to retain them, and\nbring or send them to P. B. S-rat-\nton, assistant hatchery superintendent, at the Dominion fish 'hatchery\nat Nelson, Mr. Stratton will put\nthem on Ice. and send them in\nsuitable lots from time to time to\nthe biological station at Nanaimo.\nTliere th* stomach of every fish will\nbe examined, snd the exact contents noted\u2014whether fry, eggs, insects, or other food items. The fish,\nwhether suckers, squawllsh, or other\nspecies, should be as llttl* damaged as possible, to be of the greatest  service.\nThe object of the coarse fish\nstudy will be to ascertain whether\nor not the coarse fish, particularly\nthose of the West Arm, particularly\nin the vicinity of tht spawn! i-i*\nbeds, are a detriment to the game\nfish.\nkeep tab OT\n0-UfV   FISH\nIn tlie case of all species of game\nfish taken in the lake or the WCBt\nArm, anglers are urged to keep as\ncomplete a record as possible of\neach nit., as to the contents of Its\nstomach, date, species, locality, and\nluro. At the end of the sea\/ion Fish-\nerics Inspector c. H. Robinson will\ncollect these records and send th'-m\ndown to the biological station for\ntabulation   and   analyslv\nOne of the points that may br\nIlluminated   If   a  eu.'iclent   number!    __,__ '   '  '  -\nof main lake anglers report on Jt. . JKAU\" \u00bb. C, May 26\u2014 Home's\nwill be th, etent to whtch thc gllver \"\u2022*\u25a0\" lll\u00b0 atm Trail team 4-1 In the\ntrout, redfish, or Kokanee is food \u00b0P*nll\u00bb\u00bb P**\"*e of tho Sefc.field cup\nfor the Kamloops trout or \"sslmon.\" jSlJCfCr 9trl99 here today.\nFor the purpose of providing food\nfor the big fellows the department\nof flsherlei. for some year.-* lias prohibited the netting of rcdfLsii, and\nhas propagated them nt'thc Nelson\ni hatchery, for liberating in this ws-\nter. A few weeks ao someone set, up\nthe contention  that tfcf reflflsh  in\nthese   waters   were   competing   with\nthe  salmon  for  food,   and  he   udvo-\nBfttftd   opening the season   for  thejn.\nFrom   now   on   the  equipment   of\nthe   \"well-dressed\"   angler    In   this\ndistrict should Include a good msg-\nnifyirui    claw,    to   enable    him    to\nIdentify If possible what he find* in\nthe stomachs of his game  fish.\nNTW YORK, May 25\u2014Down In\nft dusty boiler rocm, two stories below the street level, toll a tow-\nheaded young German. Ho ls fireman and assistant engineer In one\nof Manhattan's sky-scraper hotels.\nIn the ruddy glow from the firebox he looks like a muscular\nwrestler,\nBut hs isn't. Hs Is Paul De\nBruyn, winner of the Boston marathon, sure to be a prominent competitor in the coming Olympics\nwhere he hopes to overcome the\ngreat Finn, Paavo Nurmi.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nSince he packed up hla other\nshirt and came to America from the\nlittle province of Oldenburg, on i.ie\nNorth sea, only two years ngo, he\nhas worked and trained because he\nlikes athletics, Laboring ln ft basement hasn't stopped him.\nHe use dto live In the Bronx and\nrun to work. But there weren't\nenough hills on that route, so he\nmoved to 94-j, street near First\navenue.\nNow every morning at 6 a.m.\u2014\nwhen the Broadwiy night life crowd\nia coming home\u2014he pulls on an old\npair of pants and\" a shirt, runs up\nthe \"biggest hill t% N*w Yo k to\nFifth avenue, pounds through Central park and arrives at the hotel\nready to work. He travels the five\nmiles in less than 25 minutes.\nTo get more exercise during the\nday he runs up and down the 27\nflights of stairs to th\u20ac roof, practices gymnastics and. ot course,\nworks. One* in a while lie wrestles\nfor fun and ).\u00ab would -.ke to piny\nAmerican  b.iSfball,\nHe's a strong fellow, this 24-year-\nPREVENTION IS\nTEST OF LEAGUE\nNATION'S WORK\nPAH, Of BRL'YN\nold German. H\u00ab has bean -running\nonly two yeraj. In fact, he didn't\nknow b\" c\u00abul<l run long distances\nuntil he entered for fun ft Van\n____rt___-.J park race stageu by the\nGerman-Am-rlcao A. C- He MMM\nsixth.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nUnlike many distance runners, De\nEruyn has powerful, muscular arms\nend cheat.\n\"Bo soon as your arms get tired\nyou lose the race,\" says Paul.\nHis don't get tired. He goes to\n}>ed at 0 o'clock twice ft week end\n\u25a0 sn other nights he sometimes stays\n\u2022ip to the \"late\" hour of 10 o'clock.\nht UkM and drinks beer, but he\nsmokes little\u2014\"Just one cigar after\nI win *he race.\"\nHe was eighth in tne Boston\nmarathon last year. But he holds\nfive national records for various\nlong races.\n\"I am young,\" he says. \"I figure on the Olympics In 1936 in\nBerlin, for then I'll be at my prime.\nBut pow I must go io Los Angeles\nln June to train on a flat course\nand get used to the climate.\"\nBecause De Bruyn has only his\nfirst citizenship papers In this country, he must run for Germany In\nthe ecmlng Olympics, though he\nwar*\u00bb to run for the United Btate*.\nJames Knott, his employer, lata him\ntake time off, but traveling Is expensive.\n\"I have spent every nickel for the\nsport since I came to America,\" De\nBruyn declares.\nBut ha Un't sorry. It haa been\nworth lt. for he's ft healthy, lusty\nyoung man who enjoys life to the\nutmost.\nBtnnett Opposes Woodsworth\nView of Stand on Far East\nQuestion\nOTTAWA, May 25 (CP).\u2014Regretting that opportunity for dlscuns-\nforelgn affairs should have been\nheld up until tha eve of proroga*\ntlon, J, B. Woodaworth (Labor, Winnipeg North Centre) tonight st '_*\nat length ln the house of common*\non Uie League of Nation* and tha\nrecent disturbance in the Par 0a_t.\nWith regard to Japan's attack on\nChina, Mr. Woodsworth felt that in\nthis dispute Canada had not taken\nft strong enough stand.\n\"So you think that Canada should\nhave enforced the sanctions Involved V\"   asked   the   prime   minister,\nMr. Woodsworth'- answer was tha.\nthis country should have combined,\nwith the other nations of the world\nto enforce the economic sanction*\nagainst Japan. Had this been done,\nhe did not think that another con-\nRl'SSIAN\nA.Till HE   ADMIRABLE\nRussia's attitude In the face ot,\nflict would have been precipitated.\nJapan's aggression ln Manchuria had\nbeen admirable, Mr. Woodiworth\nsaid. The Soviets had refused to b*\ndrawn into a war. That probably wa*\ndue to the fact, he added, that\nRussia was not ready but was merely\nbiding   her   time.\nThe prime minister declared himself conscious of the conviction of\nmany people that the league had\nfailed; but that was a viewpoint\nhe did not share. He could not see\nwhere, ln the V&r East crisis, the\nleague could have done more. It\nhad prevented another great conflict, and for that the league was\nentitled to the thanks of all men.\nHe himself tested the league's\nwork, not by what it had done,\nbut by what It had prevented from\nbeing   dons,   said   Mr.   Bennett.\nCanada's dele tcs had attended\ntha leBgue assembly when that body\nmet last March, he continued. That\ndelegation was headed by Sir George\nPerley.\nHornets Win Opener,\nTrail Soccer Scries\n[COMMONS READY\nTO PROROGUE ON\n! FRIDAYjIORNlNG\nClears All BaStMM in Las!\n!   Hour Spur!; Convene*, for\nFew Moments\nSENATE PASSES\nRADIO BILL IN\nTHIRDREADING\nDiseiission Is Not I'rotraeted;\nIlolh Languages to Be\nUsed\n1_f-).f-Af-\u00a3l1 IQuebec Workmen's\n-N&MVUCRll        Commission Is\nBaseball\nDeclared Illegal\nFrederick Howell\nJordon Appointed\nNakusp Postmaster\ncNew Grand Hotel\nt. L. RAPAK, rrop.\n\u2022JOe-dy or Moot-Jy B\u00bbt_* Sint's. .0 cents snd up\nHot md Cold W.ttr\nniovE MS\nEoubls. HM snd up\nP. O. BOX lOGl\nTRUCK PURCHASE\nIS TURNED DOWN\nOTTAWA, May '\u00ab ((Pi.\u2014Win, a\nAlderman   Fleming  Fails  to\nWin Council Over; Truck\nto Be Repaired\nN_W GRAND* J. Wing. Tmlr;  W.\nBtood'ey, Orsce Bay;  O. Ph\"re. B :-\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapointe,\nProp.\nHot and r\"'    \u00ab-!\u2022\"\u2022 b| tn*t} room\n5trnm   Heated\nfiftr.  Baiter  st.  .'hone tn\nQUEEN'S\u2014W.    Barclay,    Frultvale;\nX.  H. Prampton,  Sanca; F. Grignon,\nSeattle.\nOccidental\nHotel\n.Ofl Vernon St.\nI'lione Wh\n.   II.   HA&MCK\nFifty Rooms of Solid comfort\nJieadijuorleri'   for   I.oijeri\nsnd  Miners.\nAlderman ROM Fleming, chairman\nof the public works committee of\nthe city council, believes that the\ncity ehould trade in its blp truck,\nwhich has already required mm]\nhundred ftolltfi wnrtli of repairs\nthis yar, and Ret \u25a0_ new truck, but\nlaM _\\____panm mart, Nu \\ttnm of\nI   r.iinm..f.s |:iif. (nnieiit cleared Mp nl!\nMi remaining   lM__kM_H  mt  ^lani*.\nready    for    proroc'itlon    ((.morrow\nmorning  by   rhlef  Jir-iiee   AukIIii\nof lhe supreme court, iwinrr rmwd-\ned   raJlerlei   and   with   an   air   of\nMjbdupct excrement, the la-t  iiem\n]   on   th*-   order   piper   KU   Jammed\nI   through  a  few  miiuttei   affer  IHg\nI   lien i u i he peace tower boomed out\n1   lt  o'rloeli.\nThe  homt will convene tomorrow\ntiming   for   a   few   nrnutrs   while i He\nHon. C. H. CaJ.nn secretary of elate,\nmakes a statement on war reparation gut) .ion. Alfred Dnranleau.\nmlnlater of marine, wlti-draws a bill\nAmending the Canada Shipping net.\nThc hum will meet at JO t'elock to\n_**\u00a3 !..?.._ bT.n. ,lbl*\u201et0 tmjf tbe I oonalder the  Itflalat-o  pawed   to-\nOTTAWA. Miiv Sfi <CP,.~The rot-\nernnient bill In respect to radio\nriroirtriMtlei piMM ita third read-\ntii\u00a7 tn the senate today. While _ome\nCTltielnn mat forthcoming, the din--\nfiiseion wm not protracted. In answer to queetions, Rt, Hon. Arthur\nMelghen, governmer> leader, (.tat.ed\nthat one member of ihe commission\nof three, which will b* in charge\nof administering the act, would be\nI a Frcnch-Cnna\/UAH,\nj (Seuitor Rami] Dandurand. Liberal\n; leader, commended the form of thc\n] bill which net )n motion a radio\norgan t to tlon, but with tentative\npowers. Thc eommlealon would work\nout fi acherne in conformity with\nconditions.\nMEANI  OF  i:m rATION\nHon. podolphe l\/\u00bbmleux supported\nthe proposal as a menns of ediica-\nt\/on. Ut did not think it would entail iny heavy financial obligation.\n\"-   asked   for   an   a*surancc   that\n(Special to Tlie Nelson     altv yews)\nOTTAWA, May 25.\u2014The civil aery\nice commission today issued- a certificate    for    the    appointment    oj\nMONTREAL,    May   J5    fCF)\u2014The  Frederic*   Howell   Jordon   aa   post-\nQuebec     workmen'*     compensation master at Nakusp. B. C. Mr. Jordon,\ncommission, \u00ab*  well  as part  of  the  who   ls   a   returned   soldier,   1*   tiie\nvATiov.i    ii iriF I Workmen's  Compensation  act,  itself, BOn  ot  th*  l\u00abte  F*  W. Jordon, and\n\u2022_.w_-\u00bb   **llv*AlJ ,\".,    \u201e..  were  declared   Illegal   and   unconstl-  was born at Nakusp. On hla return\np2t\u201e\u201e  ii     \u00bb    flJfl tat-MUl   toOiy   by   Mr.   Juatlce   de-   from overseas he. assisted hla father,\nrimEKiiH \"  21     o    wfiiLormier of  the superior court  Jn \u2022  thfn  Postmaster, and carried on for\nSfTEff    *\"\"  17   Ifl    473 'Judgment  In   which  he  scored   the U time as acting postmaster irter Jils\nnim1^ Zl4   11   Im 1 Provincial  legislature for appointing Usher's death.\nPittsburgh. \" 14    18    438 P*\"\"1* wno ',usun>ed the functions\nBrooklyn       ' 15   _m    417  cf J'Jdges of the superior court\" and      Person*   walking   on   rural   Wgh-\nPhiladelphia \" 15   *   '*05 declared that bjr so doing tite lagJs- ways  at  night should  carry  lights,\n'lnture  nt tacked  the  \"consclcnca and   urges      an      insurance      com.pany.\nIndependence of Ills majesty's puislue  pointing    out    that    2.800    walkers\nBOSTON J. BROOKLYN 3 ,\nBOSTON, May 25\u2014Bobby Brwn, Judges\nthe Braves' 30*year-old hurler from]\nNij.t-%B1.et Beach who started hli\nmajor league career a month ago bi\nbeating X>wi-\/y Vance and the Brooklyn Dockers, turned the trick again\ntoday tnd Boston held first place\nin the Nti\/lonal  leatru* with a 4 to\nMADDEN\nHOTEL\nA Welcome Await) You\nli '    r\u201e MAI'MTN\nCompletely   Remodelled\nHot  nnd  Col.  Water\nIn th. hi.\u00bbiii  ol the City\nStirling Hotel\n2 1-locks East of Post Office\nHot and Cold Water\nSteam Heat\nModerate Rates\nP. Us Hush, Prop.\ncouncil   with   him  on  this   mutter,\nThe truck, which wss extenstvelv I\nrepaired last year, Including reeii- j\nforcement to its dump body, was I\nsent to one of tbe commercial ga- |\nrages between two and three week1' '\nago for a survey as to further re-\n1 pairs rey.iT.red. by instruction of\nMayor J. P. Morgan, find at the\n.council session early in May it was\n! decided to take no action until tho\n; result of the survey was known. At\n1 that time Alderman Fleming said\nhe lielleved it to be bad business to\ni make further investment in repair.^\nI When thP public works committee\n{had Its fortnightly meeting, a tna-\npority, Inclusive of the major, rec-\n* ommended having the repairs made,\nAlderman Fleming n the other\nhand recommending a new truck.\nAction of tne city council has\nsupported the majority of the committee, but Alderman Fleming has\n1 had liia vote recorded ln the minutes as dissenting.\nProrogation is\nMADDEN: Mr. and Mrs. J. Young,\nTadanac; T. J. Heathcote, Yahk: F.\nChernoff, Perry Siding; F. F. Sage,\nBilverton.\nL. D. CAFE\nThe Finest in the City\nOpen All Hours\nFresh Food\u2014Delicious\nChop Suey\nPrompt Service\nSoda Fountain\nROOMS TO KENT\nThe Royal Cafe\nCLASSIC   KEPTAIRANT\nBeflneiwut and Oellcary Prevail\nOI-KN DAY AM\u00bb NKiHT\nspecial Dinner, |I:W to 8 p.m. ai*\nSpecial Sunday Chicken Dinner 50c\nSpedallElnj In * hop suey and .Noodles\nPHONE  US\nToronto Fire-Fighting\nEquipment Is Rushed\nto White Pine Reserve\nboth languages would l_\u00bb used in\nprograms in accordance with thc\nright given to ths minority under\nthp constitution. If this wer\u00a9 done,\nFrenrh-Cenadians would support the\nscheme.\nHe had no hesitation in giving\nsu^h an assurance, said Mr. Melghen.\nThe minister in charge was a\nFrench-Canadian, and there would\nbe a French-Canadian repre_.cn ta-tlve\non  thc  commission.\n\u25a0Senator A. D. MrRae said the\nVICTORIA, May 25 (OP)\u2014Barring rnd,\u00b0 broatleastlng KbMR was start-\nunforseen contingencle*. the pro*\/- ; *f *n a email way, except ln sal-\nlnce will not hs forced to borrow ar,M* Tt had ^en rumored that a\nany more money for another year mpmbe'\" Of the commission would be\nIt was learned at thc parliament 15S3P_. __?_2 E_lgIand- * opposed\nbuildings today. Tlie n.500.000 loan\nnight by the commons\nmrt   for   11-30   o'clork.\nB. r. E1PICT0 CAN K4NAGB\n1VITHOIT   llin 1(1 It  BOBSOWINU\nfloated In London a few days ago\nwill take care of P. g. E. expenditure.-. University endowment funds,\nroads and bridges and also retire\ntreasury  bills.\nSTANDARD CAFE\nNelson's   popular       \u00abtrurant\nSpecial  Dinner   li  am, till  6 p.m.\nSundiy  Dinner   6  pm.  tUl  a  p.m\n60DA   IOLNTAIN\nThe  Finest of Good  Bundaes\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e HOTELS\nDOUGLAC\nHOTEL   w\nRoo-*is and Balh\nI. L. \u00abn_ A. CHOI T I'll7., Piom.\n\u2022I.flm   li.al,.\nTlirnU^ll.mt\nUot  \u00bb\u00ab.  -.Id\nMnl.r\nTRAIL, B. C.\niogton\nHotel\nCentrally\nLocated\nT3-HAXL, B. C.\nA    P.  LtYEtQI .;,  Prop.\nTORONTO. May 25\u2014Emergency\nfire fighting equipment Is belnu\nrushed to McNush township from\nNorth Bay in an effort to check\nflli-.il which are eating their way\ntoward   $50,000,000   wotth   of   white j consumption   of    cheese\n-KHTOM   BflMI   not si;\nOF RtrKKSKVIATIVF. TAXES\nWASHINGTON, May 25,-After a\nperiod of v.a Ting and conluslon,\ntlie United Slnl.es arnatc refpoijtted\ntonight to appeals for balancing the\nbudget to end world runs on United\nS.ates gold with a move to restore\nsome house of representatives taxes\nto   the   \u00abi,GOO,000.000   revenue   bill.\nth,f.* as he ...ought It was time for\nCansdlang to run their own affairs.\nThere were a number of Canadians\nquite capable of doing this, and\nwithout the big salaries that were\nproposed.\n'were  killed  on  highways  last  year.\n2 victory In tlw final ff.me of the:\nseries.\nBrown gave only four ir.lts, one\nles3 than he allowed the first time\nht faced tlie Dodgers, and struck\nout five. Vance allowed seven Jn\nseven innings before he wss taken\nout for a pinch hitter, and three of\nthem were bunched with a Brooklyn\nerror in the se-*-ond Inning for three\nruns  and <h\u00ab ball  game.\nBrooklyn       3     4   8\nBoston      -    4     7   0\nVance, Qulnn and hopez; Brown\nand  Spohrer,\nCR1-ME,   A   BOHY   Bl'ILULK\nHew; U an interesting item prepared by the Milk Utilisation Sar-\nlce of the Dominion Dairy and\nCold Storage Branch: \"I* chee-.e\neaten for its flavor, or for its\nfood value?\" The low per cipit*\nin   Canada\nTrail Bowlers to\nHave Banquet in\nthe Near Future\nPrize  Committee  Authorized\nto Spend Up to $105;\nAppoint Committee\nnew TOM 1-\n.'1III..-DK.   lIMr.       8\nPHIL-ADELPHIA, Miy 38\u2014The New\nYork Giants defeated the- p.lllies\n12 to 8 In the odd game of thc\nseries today, pounding out 17 hits\nfor a total of 30 bases Jn the slug-\nfest.\nFred Fltzsimmons started badly\nbut tightened, up after the second\nInning when Chuck Klein belted\nhis ninth homer in the season and\ndid not allow another run until the\nninth. Roy Hansen checked the\nGiants after Acs Elliott and Ora-\nbowskl   ifcad   failed.\nBill Terry, Len Koenecke and Don\nHursp als;> hit homers, Terry's being\nhis tenth of tbe season\nNew yorfc; ,  12    17   1\nPhiladelphia  _   8   13   0\nFitzalmmon.} and Hogan; H. Elliott, Qrabowskl, Hansen and McCurdy.\nB0VRIL\n^^F ^^      PUTS\n^BEEF STRENGTH\nINTO SOUPS AND GRAVIES\nDR. COWEN\nft*\n'__vA_L B. C. May 25.-At a meeting of the Trail Bowling club here\ntonight, the prize committee was\nauthorized to spend up to \u00bb105 for\npftMf for the last city bowling sea-\nblaze\n(ia   1NJIRED   IN\n<'OMMCNAL RIOTING\npine  in   the Temagaml  reserve,  for-1clearly   indicates   that   the   majority\nMTV   officials   here   announced   to-'of   people   do   not   rto__fp*0   1|   mitOs.\nX' HI. \u00ab. .ported to k. mal.. lisJSS^rT^if ___S_al*^SS__\\ JflW.WIH ?.spP0,nt\u00ab_\n: *a o, a a Bfsu _. r^L:, sy :^gw_r\u00bb\"a\ngallon   of   milk    and,   In   addition. M\"miHn\nhas a high calcium, phosphorous\nand vitamtne content. Tiie muscle building foods are limited in\nnumber, and, since it is necessary that the diet contain a percentage -pf this type of food,\ncheese should be mors extensively\nj imat, particularly at a tlr_ie wiien\nhealth and strength must be\nmaintained on a lowered food\nbudget.\nPITTSBURGH   !1\nCINCINNATI 4\nCINCINNATI, May 25\u2014 Advancing\nagain under a first inning barrage\nthe Pltt.burgh Pirates took a seconj\ngame from the Cincinnati Reds today, 0 to 4-\nThis time It was f five-run rampage, held by fumbles by Iloa'-h\nand Hafey that put the Waner boya\nbase, to go home as Vaughan\nwaJkej, Traynor singled, and Barbee\nand  Sut. r doubled.\nPittsburgh   -   0   13   1\nCincinnati      4     9    2 j\nKremer. Chagnon, Swift and Grace: \\\nCarroll, Benton, Rlxey, Ogien and |\nLombardi.\nADEN. -V.abla, May 25 (AP). \u2014\nBlxty-nlne persons were injured to-\ndsy In communal rioting after Arabs\nfltw' cf Jevlsh Inhabltanats of the\nCrater district of Aden whom they\naccused of defiling a moscjue.\nJewish ' ops were looted, the at.\nlackers hurling stones and bot lies\nat the occupants. More than 70 arrests were made.\nAfiRICI LTIRK MARKET PROBLEM\nTO BE .MEriTIGATED\nAPPLE MAION CtOSBS\nDisposition of cups was discussed\nand it was left to tlie executive to\nbring in a report at tlie banquet.\nA vote of thanks was parsed to the\ndirectors of the Memorial Hall Build\nJug society for provision of another\n(Uley and improvements made.\nNEW  ROI TH   WALES\nGENERAL EEECTIf'V, JIKB 11\nSYDNEY. N.S.W., Msy 25 (CP cable)\n\u2014No'miuati.r.3 for ths New Bouth\nWales general elections which will\ntake place on June Jl today brought\n902 candidates to battls in a brief\ncampoipn   'or 87 ssats  ln the state\nThe  current  issue  of   tthe  Fadcrsl\nOTTAWA   May 25.  \u2014 Agricultural ] Pr\"H    Market    Report    shows    that I house of assembly.\nmarketing  problems  will   be invest!-I Poetically   all   of   last   pott   ap-\nwren by a federal commission. This   Pl\u00ab  crop  has  moved   Into  consump-\n-nnonncemer.t wu _pad\u00ab ln the house  tlon.   The   amount   in   cold   thorw*\nf  romwoat   today   by   Hon.   Rol>ert   at   the    principal    centres    Is    now\nonly     18.475    barrel    and     227.844\nboxes;   with   a   further   lfl,<KX)   barrels nnd IMM boxes In common\nitorid   and   at   the   principal   mar-\nSave\nmoney\nNAl UI-.AI.-\nEXPRESSION\nCHICAGO   3 \u2022\nST- LOL1K 0 |\nST.  LOUIS,  May  25\u2014After  receiving   a   ring   today   for   his   part   in\nhelping the St. Louis Cardinals win\ncagQ Cube to a 3 to 0 victory over:\nthe  world's championship   last  year, .\nBurleigh   Crimes   pitched   the   Chi-;\nhis   lormer   teammates.   The   victory j\nallowed  the Cubs  to split  the  two- :\ngame  series  with   t,be  Cards.\nChicago  - -    8      7   0!\nSt.   Louis \u2014-,., -    0     7    2 j\nGrimes   and   Hartnett;    Derringer, 1\nCar-cton and Wilson.\nKaye Don to Try\nSpeedboat Record\nWeir, a lew minutes before the col-\ni lapse of  nn    i'ack   l^d  hv  the only\n1 worn _n   In   the   house,    Miss   Agnes\nMacphall, 'igalnst   the  agrarian   rec\nora of  th\u00ab government.\nCABINET INCUDES  flADAO ARAKI\nTOKYO, May 2fi (AP>.\u2014The combined cabinet lined up by Admiral\nMakato Salto for presentslion to\nthe emperor today, underwent an\neleventh hour shakeup to. lnrlude\nthe   strong   Nationalist   leader,   Gen- no    attempt    at\nDONE, Italy. May 23\u2014-Kaye pon,\nBrltUh speedboat driver, said today\nhe would make an attempt tomorrow\nIn his Miss England III, on the\nspe_?*dboat record of 111-712 miles\nan hour, held by Gar Wood.\nDon put his boat in the water today snd tuned the motor, but made\nspeed   because   of\nketing    centres.\neral   Sadao   Araki,\nihe roug__, water.\nurfUBAL HATrc\nUf*     PRODUCE BEAUTY        ^^\nI*        ANO TRUE EXPRESSION ^\nDr. Cowr-'s t t'MLVKE EXPRESSION\nPLATE. Made to reliu! and mnlti-\ntain NnTI'BAL CO? OIK. Fallh-\nfully duplicates *ur own teeth. Will\nnot drop, rock or tht. Amnzlng value.\nGuaranteed 15 years. At one-third\nour regular price.\nDr Cowen'i I'nbreukahle EXVBES-\n\u00bbION t'ORHIM 1 i'lbre Porcle;.\\i\nplate. Defies detection and restores\nyouthful exp e on. No rubber or\nmelaj\u2014tnoteless and o< nrless. Lifelike pink color throughout. Light,\nsani.arj-, unbreakable. Compare with\nothers at $5\" io $75. Guaranteed J5\njeers. At one- bird our regular price.\nFRrlE PAINLESS EXTRACTIONS\nWith  rlatc  or  Brldgework,\n15 Years Guarantee.\nWrite   us  for   our\nnew low Dental\nPrices.\nINLAND   EMPIBF\/S   LARGEST\nDENTAL   OFFICE\noenTist\nDB.  \u00ab.   -*.  COWEN,  MsnsjiT\nOVER OWL IIHl'O UTOHF,\n_scond   rtisat.   .\u25a0\u2022itnif.ftii   Bulldlui\nWall an.  Klvsrslile\nBI'OKANE,   WASH.\nCanadian money accepted at 100\ncents on the dollar for all\nDental Work\n PLAYTHINGS AT\nPARK IMPROVED;\nREINSTALLED\nWheel of First Hydro Electric\nriant in B.C. at Park\nEntrance\nNEW PERFORATED\nSPRAYER IN USE\nLower   Branches of   Trees\nTrimmed Off to Afford\nBetter Vista\nKeeping pace with the major development* st the Nelson park, the\n\u00abea wall promenade and the spacious\nlawn, are the imp rove ments In the\nplay apparatus and the features of\nhistoric   note.\nThough retaining their former\nstand In most cases, the playthings\n.lave been fitted to ensure a maximum of fun with a minimum of\ndanger to the children. The \"go-\ndevtl,\" a contrivance wholly unique\nwltfo Nelson, and so constructed that [ Royal Air Force, wh\n-THE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS.   NELSON,   B.   C.    THIKSDAY   MOBMNO    MAY    26,   1132'\nKilling of Fiance Is Newest Working of Sinister\nJinx That Dogged Australian Aviatrix's Trail\nthe kiddles are unable to get near\nny moving parts, has been given\nminor repairs and a large quantity\nof sand placed below it reduce any\nchance of Injury in event of a fall.\nThe added height of sand will also\nserve to enable the children t0 get\non and off more easily.\nThe rolling radius, while affording\ngreat fun In the past was a trifle\nhard to propel. It has been equipped\nwtth a levelled wooden track. The\nboat swings have been moved to a\nnew place and now hang from one\niron bar safely wedged between two\nlarge trees. Substantial amounts of\nsand have also been placed beneath.\nRELIC   OF    HYDRO   PLANT\nNear the malu entrance t0 the\npark* erected on & cement base Is a\nrelic of the first hydro electric plant\nin British Columbia. It Is the hugh\nmain drive wheel, and I3 the only\nremaining part of the electric plant\nformerly situated at the foot of\nCottonwood falls and wv.ich wrved\nNelson for approximately 10 years.\nThe wheel has yet to be painted.\nThroughout   the   park   the   lower\nbranches   of   the   trees   hive   been\ntrimmed off to enable more light to\niwnetrate and giving better vista,\nPERFORATED   SI-HAYEK\nOne of the most interesting new\nfeatures of* the park is the perforated sprayer for the la-crn. It ia 100\nfeet long and works from two main\noutlets, with the probability of a\nthird when occasion warrants It.\nThe sprayer Is the closest Imitation\nto rain\/* possible to get. Set up on\n_Ix tripods the full length moves\nttemately right add left, throwing\npray about 30 feet on either side\nAbout eooo square feet may be\nefficiently watered at one time, and\niwlth the quick action couplings used\nm It, the entire device ls quickly\n>laced in a new position.\nThe  sea  wall  promenade  leads to\nsecond niulu entrance to the park\nnd   opens   directly   outo   the   road days  In  Nelson\nt the ferry. At the end of the walk\n* placed a concrete block bearing\nthe date of tthe walk erection, 193-.\nLife has been Just one unhappy\nlanding after another for Mrs. Jess.e\nM. Ke.th-Mlller. The Jinx that has\npunnied her ever since sho took\nup aviation Is clinging to her like\na stowaway to a wheel strut.* Recently you've been reading how her\nflnace was found slain in her home\nIn Miami, Fla.: how she first was\nsuspected, finally to be cleared, of\nbeing Involved in a sinister love triangle; how her flying partner and\nmanager, Captain W. N. Lancaster,\nwas held In connection with the\ncrime.\nBut trouble Is an old story to the\nlittle Australian woman. And here\nis what has happened since the day\nln 1B26 when she decided to become\nan aviatrix:\nMarriage   Crashes   L'p\nIn the f.rst place, she thought\nthat her husband, a Melbourne\nnewspaperman, would be proud of\nher as a pilot Instead of \"a prosaic housewife.\" Instead, their marriage was wrecked. \" er flying took\nher to far-away pi. ces for long\nperiods of time. Finally, less than a'\nyear   ago,   he  divorced  her.\nIt was Lancaster, formerly  of the\ntaught .her to\nfly, and from that time ou the\ntwo were firm friends. Early ln 1028,\nafter she had become skilled at the\ncontrols, they planned a 13,000-mile\nhop from London to Australia.   With\ntooth-brush, comb and a single\nchange of clothing he set out gaily\non an adventure that was planned\nto req.lre  but six weeks.\nOn the very first day they were\nforced down by fog. Shortly afterward they encountered a ~nd-\nstorm between Palestine and Bagdad\nand had to seek refuge at a desert\npost. Magneto trouble halted them\nat Bagdad, and a piston Jammed in\nInCla, and again ln Burma. Taking\noff from Rangoon they discovered\nand battled a huge snake that\nhad crawled Into the ship. Mrs.\nKeith-Miller wis In thc cockpit\nwhen they left Batavia and the\nmotor stalled. Her nose wjs broken\nand the plane had to be rebuilt at\nSingapore. They got to Australia\nbut the trip took five months.\nThe   Jinx   Continue-.\nThst   pair   came   to   America   ,_\u25a0...\nMrs.   Kelth-MUler   was  forced   down   p;ane-\nby  water in   the  c^llnc  when  sho\nattempted a hop to Bermuda. Later Roads, Va. In 1329 she won the months later, while participating In\nIn 1923, she failed ln several st- 50-mile flying *vent or women at the national tour, she deliberately\ntempts    to    start    from    Hampton   the  Cleveland   air   races.    But   two  ground-looped her ship and smashed\nher excellent chai.Ce of winning\nwhen a small boy ran in front of\nher piane as she was makirg a\nlanding.\nFor a time in 1930. her Jinx seemed to have been shaken off, ft* she\nslipped two transcontinental speed\nrecords for women. In Nc-vein ber,\nflying solo, she wsa acclaimed for\nher 12-hour hop from Pittsburgh\nto Havana.\nBut her Jinx caught up with her\nthere. She determined to fty back\nto Pittsburgh In the plant, which\nshe previously had described as an\n\"unairworthy crate.\" It had k.lled\ntwo test pilots a yeir before, and\nhad  been rebuilt  for  her  use.\nA heavy gale blew Mrs. Kelth-\nMlller off her course. Her compass\nfailed; her gasolne ran low. Sighting onB of the barren Bahaman\n-islands, she landed five miles back\nin the bush, flnaPy made her w_y\nto a hut, and for three days, until\nshe was discovered, had nothing\nto eat but pawpaws.\nPlans   route-Hack\nFinally, however, her sh;p was\ntransported to Miami, and she\ngamely took off again for Pittsburgh. She crashed at Jacksonville,\npenniless and 111, she dropped out of\n.the  (picture   for   a   time.\nMrs. Kelth-Mlller was planning a\ncome-back in the flying game when\nthe recent tragedy robbed her of\nher fiance, Haden Clarke, an author\nwho was writing th\u00ab a.ory of her\nlife. But the vivacious, 90-pound\naviatrix soys she'll carry on. She'll\nfinish the, book, she'll aid ln the\ndefense of Captain Lancaster, and\nshell fly again. Also, she says,\nshe'll lick that Jinx.\nTlie Jinx which has beset her private life and flying career hadn't\nerased the smile from the lips of Mrs. Jessie M. Kelth-Mlller when these\ncharacteristic, pictures were taken of her. Upper r.ght you pee thc Australian aviatrix1 in a close-up view as she po_sed for cameramen in Washington, at left ss she appeared after setting a new transcontinental flight\nd   record for women pilots, and below as she looked In tho cockpit of her\nMEDICAL MEN ON\nTOUR PUT VIEWS\nBEFORE DOCTORS\nBASKIN8 VISIT\nSLOCAN PARK\nIllustrated Lecture at Nurses\nHome Veil Attended by\nMedicos\nSLOCAN PARK. B. C. Msy 25-\nMr. snd Mrs. Mix Baskm snd tO-H\nPenroJ six* Harold mot..:-.| {sen*\nNslson cn Sunday snd sp.nt the\nday  wrh  Mr. and  Mrs.  Alex  BxiUi.\nS. Boon rr Trail, acroxpanled by\nMr.  and  M\n(o3-\\\n'-\u25a0 !_ r .t,E    Utntr,\n_fB.ANDMRS.WR__-.\nLEAVE TO SPEND\nSUMMER, ALASKA\nNEW   DENVER,   B.   C.   MM   W -\nMr. and  Mra. C.  B.  White  have  lcfl\nIor   Nome,   Alaska,   where   thef   nh_\\\nWilliam   Win.*--anlry ofj spend   the   summer.\nCresocnt     Valley     were     the     PtNBt\nguests cf Mr. and  Mrs. A. SmU.i.\nA meeting of the physicians of\nthe West Kootenay took place List\nnight in ths If IB Ml home In Nelson\nfor the purpose of hearing sn Illustrated lecture by authorities In the\nmedical   profession  wo  are  now on\na postgraduate tour of the province  the   interests   of   the   Ymir  ce.ebra-\nof British Oolu_et__t|, tlon.\nYMIR   B-SIEf*\nYMIR, B. C, May 26\u2014Severs! mining men were In town .n Saturday\nlooking over the Bla-ckc :k and the\nWllleox mines preparatory to opening them.\nSamuel Ball and Andrew Burgess\nwere   Nelson   visitors   < n   Monday\nCITY MAY RAISE\nBANK LICENCES\nBY 50 PER CENT\nGeneral Licence Revision  Is\nComing lip; the Express\nLicence\nJUDGE MURPHY IS\nIN EASTKOOTENAY\nCranbrook and Fernie Assizes\nSessions Limited lo\nApplications\nthere  being  an  application  for  ball\nupon which re must pass.\nThe absence of any criminal cases\nanywhere in the Judicial area, of\nSouth Kootenay, and the limitation\nof civil actions to six, all heard at\nNelson, pretty nearly constitutes a\nrecord for this section of the circuit.\nA word to the wise ts sufficient\ni word t.   the unwise Is impo:;lble. the\nMr.   Justice   Murphy,   after   nine\nin connection with\ntho  assizes   that  concluded  Monday,\nleft Wednesday for Cranbrook, where\nthe business awaiting him li limited\nto a number of applications.\nHe will nit Trlday at Fernie, where\nbusiness    Is   similarly   11 ml Led,\nGAIN HEALTH\nTHE ENO WAY\nkc ENO'S \"Fruit Salt\" once or twice\nh day, and you can count on a\niean inner system\u2014bodily vigor\u2014\nmental alertness. But remember,\nonly   ENO   can   give   ENO\nresults.    Buy a bottle today. Refuse substitutes.\nENDS\nFRUIT SALT\nLow!\nSummer Tourist Fares\nLOWEST IN YEARS\nEffective May 22 to Oct. 15\nReturn limit. October 31,1932\nGO East via the world's greatest travel\nsystem . . . special summer fares to all\npoints In Canada nnd tho United SLitr*.\nA daylight ride through the wonderful\nCanadian Roekirs, with stop-overs at all\npoints of interest. Perfect service throughout.\nKASLO BRANCH OF\nLEGION ATTENDS\nNAKUSP OPENING\nKASLO. B. C . May .S-The Kaslo\nbranch. No. 74, of the Canadian\nlegion was well represented at the\ncelebration in Nakusp Friday when\nthe new lesion community ..-.all recently erected here was forma'iy\nopened, and were loud In their\npraises of the splendid hospitality\nof the Nakusp people and of the\nspirit of the community which had\nmade the fine gulldlng a possibility,\nPresident G. D. Bowker of tlio K*slo\nbran4.i headed the contingent, and\nwas *tne of the speakers of the evc-\nnlng's program. Um K?slo legion\nsent a beautiful wreath to be p.accd\ncn the Nakusp cenotaph. During the\ntime since He last annual meeting\nthe local legion has increased Us\nnci-ljcrshlp nearly 50 per cent and\nnow have about 80 per cent of local\nveterans on its membership _l.it. At\nthe last general meeting it was decided to hold a dance in tho drill\nhall on the evening of May '__., and\nJ10 was voted to the celebration\nc.mnittiee, to aid In meeting i.ece_-\nsary   expenses.\nG. M. GUERNSEY\nRETURNS, KASLO\nKASLO, B. Ci May 2.*\u2014O. M.\nGuernsey, who has been holidaying\nat his former horn., ln Feu tic-ton,\nhas returned to town and resumed\nhla duties at the Bank ot Montreal.\nMr. and Mrs. C. V. Galilean*, and\nson arrived In the city Saturday from\nLardo, Mr. Galllcano visited Nelson\nSunday and on Monday the entire\nfamily returned to their botbt in\nLardo.\nF. Johnson has returned from\nVancouver wocre he went, recently\nfor   IMfllWl   treatment.\nMrs. McKay of Balfour\nWins Institute Raffle\nROUND TRir FARES\nWlittilp-H - -\n7S.SO\nOmaha - - -\nsi..-.-.\n1M.20\nRt.    I--..U -   m\na-\u00ab\u00ab\n1129 an\nChfrafftt- - -\n\u25a0W..W\nOlI*>bM-   -  -   -\nf-Ulnt John -\nEM .w\nP-lrnU   ...\n1(11.70\n147.90\nPhil\u201e*.\u00ablphla\n131.14\nll.ltf.t - - .\n1 VS.4.1\nWMh-mttOl-\n1.10.\u00ab\nMlnrifi-p-JU\nTS.SO\nNaw York - -\nMS. 12\nSt.  Paul  - -\n75.60\nBoaton ...\n142.20\nBALFOUR, B. C, Miy 25\u2014A miscellaneous shower, held In Woodland\nhall, was recently given by several\nof the ladies of Balfour for Mrs.\nCarl Olson of Ainsworth, the former\nMlsa Elisabeth Ling, recently married. Upon the arrival of the guests,\nlittle Ruth Conrad and Katnleen\nCooper wheeled In a buggy laden\nwith presents for tho bride. Dainty\nrefreshments were sewed on a table\ndecorated with apple blossoms and\nyellow  dalsys.\nYoung and old alike patronized a\ndance held at tho Doodl.md hall by\nthe Balfour , Young People's club\nrecently.\nThe qu!lt> recently nffltd by the\nWomen's Lns'ltute was wen by Mrs.\nWilliam McKay of Balfour, who held\nthe lucky ticket.\nDr. and Mrs. Barclay of Kaslo\nvisited Balfour school on Thursday.\nSeveral parents had t.-elr children\nvaccinated by Dr. Barcl.y, who Is\nmedical health officer for Balfour\nschool.\nFARES TO OTHER POINTS ON REQUEST\nS1e*|fir_g, compartment, and compartment-\n. <nbw>.r.aijon cars of the most modern and\nj luxurious typei through service; dining car\nI providing the cuisine for which the Canadian\n'. racific it famous.\n5\nAsk   about   One-way   Coach    Tares.\nBleep, r reservations, details from any  Can, Fie\nBy.   AEent,  or   write:\nJ.    P.   CARTER,   D.P.A.,   NeUon.\nCanadian Pacific\nCOLEMAN GLEE\nCLUB PRESENTS\nPROGRAJ^CORBIN\nCrowded  Hall Gives Hearty\nApplause to Varied\nNumbers\nCORBIN, B. C\u201e May 25\u2014Corbin\nwas given a real trf.it on Tuesday,\nMay 17, when the Coleman Glee club\ncame to town under the sponsorship\nof the Corbin Community club. This\nconcert Is t.-.e first of Its kind to be\nheld tn this district, and was deeply\nappreciated^ I. all music lovers. When\nthe curtain\" rose, the B. and B. hall\nwr crowded. After O Canada, thc\nglee party_ consisting entirely of men.\nsang s Rants. Madam Thomas, gold\nmedallist. Alberta Musi ] Festival,\nnext rendered a sporano solo. Her\nsweet voice ard pftOOSaf manner took\nso well that she was not alliwcd to\nleave thc since before giving an encore, A. .1. Ph. lips, double medallist.\nCrow'a UM. Pass Musical Festival.\nfollowed with a baritone solo entitled, \"The Bugler.\" As a pleasant\nbreak in tl-- singing, with I. Hill\nplaying a sclectio on thc violin,\ncame next. The glee party then favored the audience with a chorus.\nGeorge. Hibhart in his soft tenor voice\nfollowed with a selecti-n. \"Enrhant-\nress.\" M-tg by .Irs. E. A. Davles in\na throaty contraJto was followed with\nan encore. The male QtMltfttt which\nenmr. next, proved very popular. The\nglee party with \"Bcleapucrcd\" finished\nthe first half of the prorrnm.\nThe glee party opened  the second\nhalf of   the   program by rendering  a\nchorus. A violin solo by T. Hill and\ncontralto   solo   hy  Mrs. A.   Davies\nwere followed by the glee party blending their voices In pleasant harmony\nin another wlertjon. By nixrlal request, Msidnm Thomas then Bang r-i\nencore song in Welsh. The male quartette next sang a selection that proved\npopular. George, Hlbbert, with a tenor\nsolo was followed by A. J. Phillips\nsinging a baritone solo. The glee party\nthen fittingly wound up the concert\nby rendering \"Bablon's Slave.\"\nMr. Boot.i, president of the Community club acted as chairman, aid\nan Appropriate minnrr than lied\nthe visiting artists on behalf of the\ncitizens of Corbin. He also expressed\nthe wish or all. when he beptd that\nwe should have the pleasure of listening to the Coleman Glee club again\nin tlie near future.\nJ. Emmerson acted as tl>e conductor\nand Mr. J. Cousins, and Mr. T, Ben-\nyon were the accompanying  pianists.\nThis meeting wss In ad 11 tlon to\nthe postgraduate meeting and the\nanhual meeting of the West Ko.te-\nnay Medical society ln September.\nThe speakers were Dr. E. L. Pope\nof Edmonton, medicine; Dr. A. Gibson of Winnipeg, orthopaedics, and\nbr. A. W. Hunter cf Vancouver,\nurologist.\nLANTERN   SLIDES\nThe speakers arrive! fro.n Cranbrook eirly Tuesday evening And\nproceeded t(j the Nurse* home immediately. The different speakers\nwere assisted in their separate addresses by lantern slides, which\nillustrated the subjects cn which\nthey give their views. Dr. W. O.\nMN of NePon acted as chairman\nto the meeting, he being the Nelson\nmember of the executive cf the\nBritish Columbia Medical association.\nThe doct :ts wh 3 attended the\nmeeting were Dr. E. L. Pope, Edmonton; Dr. A. Gibson, Winnipeg;\nDr. W .A. Hunter. Vancouver; E.\nCairns. Dr J. B. Thorn, Dr. Crawford, Dr Leonard, Trail; Dr. Tyrs-\nman, Nakusp, Dr, D. W. McKay.\nDr. J. P. Gussin. Dr. J. H. Bennett.\nDr F M Auld. Dr W^. Lalshley, Dr.\nH. H MacKenzle. Dr E. C. Arthur,\nnnd Dr. B. B. Shaw, Nelson. AU\nlhe BUDM who were not on du'y\nwcre   ln   attendance.\nThis tour \"surrour.ds\" tt e annual\nmeeting cf the British Columbia\nMedical association to be held st\nKel_-wn.i. May 26. 27. and 2\u00ab. and.\nas the speakers will clKOse different\nsubjects for Kelowna than were\ngiven at other points, they expre-srd\n:he hope that the local nM-.ll.l-\nwUl n.:t psevent as many men as\nposslb'e from this district going to\nKelowna, where sn elaborate scientific business and social program\nhni   been   arranged.\nThe Eist K.ot-nay meeting was\nheld at  Cranbrook  Monday.\nThe government road cr?w nre busy\nthis week tearing down an old barn\non First street. This barn was one\nof Ymir's old  landmarks.\nl_*r. and Mrs. N. Peterson their\nson Elmer and Mrs. J. H. Clark-, were\nNelson visitors on Saturday evening.\nMrs. Clark going In to visit her husband, who is a patient In the Kootenay Lake Gene   1  hospital.\nAn Idle tongue has to \u00bbork overtime to be effective.\nJ. R. Wood, ot Coleman, a '.\u25a0\u2022 ,\n\u00bb'h_* has been the guest of Mr, and\nMrs. R. B. Kirk, lor the pasi few\ndays, has left by motor for Vancouver.\nThe league baseball gmie tl \/'.\nwas played here on Sunday between\nSlocan City and New J>n,cr resulted in a score of 7-3 lor the visiting   team.\nPev. and Mrs. J. Herman sit!\nsons Frank and Jarkle hav* returned from a motor trip to the\nco.st, where they at'ended the conference of the United church at\nNew   Westminster.\nMiss Else 0*Chflero has returned\nfrom  a   holiday __pent   tn   Vancouver.\nA lar\u00abe crowd motored from here\non Thursday to attend thf opening\nof  the   Ise-iion   hall   at  Nakusp.\nMrs. Roddle McLeod of Trail litis\nreturned alter vlslMng at her home,\nand will spend the iummfr the\nguest of her sister, fuss Gladys\nItcFhenoQ.\nCALGARY FAMILY\nHOLIDAY, CRKSTON\nIntimation waa Riven at the city\ncouncil session Monday night that\nrevision of the licence bylaw\nwould be undertaken immediately,\nand Alderman J B. Gray, chairman\nof the flnanc^ rdmmlttee. gave notice of the Introduction of sn\namending   bylaw.\nAlderman Grav propo-es Talslnn CRESTON, B. C. Miy 11 MTl\nof the annual licence fee of thc , Eer'-tln-shaw and son. Jeffrey, of\nbanks from $^00, the present fig-I Crawford Bay were weekend visitors\nure.  to  PM. here,   guests   of   Mr.   and   Mrs,   F\nThere   Is   a   possibility   also   that i Rno't.\nthe egress LiWaei will   be  extended       Mr.   and   Mn.   Blnney   and   family\n.3._!f\u201eP.y1.!\u00b0-1!n.0t0r vchlclw\u00bb d0*n8 9Q   of   Calgary,   are   holidaying   here   at\npresent,   guests   of   Mr.   and   Mrs.   O.\nM.   Samnc^on.\nMrs. Bateman has arrive! from\nCalg-ry on her usual extended spring\nand summer visit with her sou,\nJames.\nJame*    Wilson    of   Slrdnr    was\nSimply adorable\n... her figure\nlr       By Julia roster*\nWhat a marvtlouft figure!\nBut her skin \u2014what m\n\u2022ham*! To think\u2014a few\nwords from ma could hav*\ndona so much for har.\nexpress   business.\nEXPKESs COUCftPONDBNCI\nA letter from J. H. Burfield. agent\nof the Canadian Pacific Express\ncemp-ny. asked for the reasons the\ncouncil had for refus.ng hi* request\nfor reduction of the Uetftc* chanted\nhi* compsny in Nelson, jo that *-.\u00ab\ncould pass them along to his superiors.\nIt was derided to reply that the\ncouncil had seen no reason why\nhis company should be s ngled put\nto receive a reduction, and that If\nthe com cany wished its ch-.lm of\nreduced -Unlit\u2014 to be considered, it\nshould furnish the city with a\ncomparative statement covering different years.\nAlderman S. It. Smyth* expressed\nthe belief that the txprsai company\nwas In fact doing an \u00abXC8llSQ, business, more me.-rhants shipping in\ngoods in small -.unntlties than formerly, and hence using express rather\nthan freight.\nBE thankful your own skin ncctl never\nbe \"tragic\". The fight care is so\neasy! Beauty experts will tell you any\nskin can be kept soft, youthful, exquisite.\nMore than that, they gladly, freely,\ntell you how: Morning and evening,\napply to face and throat a cenerous\n\u25a0--\u25a0i     i-viu-'.'ii    -ui    mmjmmw    w\u00bb*    \u25a0*,'_ _-n_        .\u25a0        r* i\ntor to creston on Mondsv. Ns\" mWtt of Palmohve So.ip and w.irm\nu.itcr. Work well into the pores with\n\u2022\u2022ourhands. Thcnrinscthorou^hlywifli\nwarm water, and lini'sh with a cold\nrinse. Hot water should nerer touch your\nface. After this, in thc morning, your\nmike-up. At night, if your skin is dry,\nfollow with oil or tissue cream.\nFor years, more than 20,000 of the\nworld's leading beauty specialists have\nadvised Palmoli vc above all othct soaps\nfor this foundation cleansing.\nEdgewood Liberals\nElect Delegates\nBAD\nINFECTION!\nTreat infection immediately\nwith \"MECCA\" OINTMENT.\nIt cleanses, purifies and brings\nquick relief and assists in\njarly recovery. Krep a tin of\n\"MECCA\" in the house in case\nof emergency. \"MECCA\" is\neconomical.\nEDGEWOOD, B. C. Mny 25\u2014The\nEdgewood Liberal nf*-oclatlon held &\nmeeting ln the Edgewood hall on\nSaturday evenin.-, when delegates\nwere elected to attend the forth*\ncoming Liberal convention in Nakusp.\nBetween .10 nnd 40 MfMroO-U-M\nJourneyed to Mlkusp on Prlday to\nattend the turning of thc Legion\nhall.\nMr. nnd Mra. Perry Bates, Nelson,\nwere the guests of Mr. and Mrg.\nKenneth Coates over the.  week-end,\nMra. W. Shlpmakpr, who has been\nvisiting In Nakusp for the past few\ndaya,  returned home on  Sunday.\nConfirmation Service\nHeld at Queens Bay\nQUEENS BAY. B.' C. May 25\u2014\nThe Rt. Rev. A. J. Doull. bishop of\nKootenay, ..\"Id a cmflrmatlon #er-\nVlM In the church Inst , Simday.\nThe vicar of the parish. Rev. Clyde \u25a0\nHarvey, presented four candidate; !\nthree from Queen's Bay aud one I\nfrom Balfour.\nMr1*. J. Kennedy of Balfour visited\nthe Bay, attending the confirmation'\nservice   _____    meeting    friends.\nG. C. Pare thorp, called on several\nresidents and  Issued  fire  permits.\nSeveral fish i!-ave been caught this I\nspring hy local fishermen, tht \\m\\\\-\\\ne_-t being a salmon, n\\_. pound*,1\nwhich fell to the lure of Matthew;\nAlymer, j\nMr. and  Mrs.  A. Attre*  have returned    home   from    Nel,*,n.   where ]\n*. Attree had  undergone an opera-1\ntlon at the hospital.\nR. J. Bashford, a former resident;\nof the Bay, has arrived from Vic- .\ntoria on an ex'ended visit to his i\nsister, Mrs. A. Attree.\nColonel an-1 Mr*. J. Murray and;\nparty of \u00a7ct__th Sloc*in, spent a day i\nfft&c  Captain and  Mrs. H. N. Way.     ]\nMrs. H. N. Way vlsife-d Nelson to]\nmeet frlendg from the coast pacing i\nthrough   cn   their   way   t0   Englanl.j\nDr. Barclay of Kaslo paid a visit\nto the Bay on his regular medical\nInspection of the school, lunching\nwith   Mr.  and   Mrs.   K.   Attree.\nA large and handsome chestnut\ntree on the property of the postmaster. Hon. K. A. Aylmer. was\nblown over by the violent wind of\nlast   week.\nVi.\nptstefl that both t:'e Canadian and\nV. S. water rights officials Wbo are\nkeeping a clov watch on lhe rl\u00bbe\nof fcwittCHT lake at tiie water gtiage\nat Kootenay Landlnir, are of the\nopinion that vrry high water will\nhe encountered  this season.\nH. E. Oetendorf of Rosthern, Sa'k..\na former resident here, is a visitor\n10 the dls.rlct, looking after hts\norchard property Just north of town.\nHe Is M-rtpiHty considering moving\nhack  to reside permanently. ;\nMrs. Attwoo-,. ot Cranbrook was a\nvisitor at (-W ranch this week, and\nduring her stay VM a guest of\nMrs.   Fransen.\nand Mrs. E. OcoJwIn were\nvisiting with Spokane friends a\ncouple of days at the end of the\nweek,   returning   on    Saturday.\n*Julin Foifrr's\ninformation\non beauty sub-\njrrtsi.sauthfn-\nttr. IttUmrmi\ny-\"ir (artful\nPALMOLIVE\nKEEP THAT SCHOOLGIRL COMPLEXION\nMiss Volpattic and\nErnest Caslelano\nArc Wed at Michel\nEEI-NIE. B C, May 2.5\u2014*Bmt marriage of Miss Annie Valpattl. daughter\nof Mr. nnd . r_. Velpattl of KH Prairie to Ernest Caatelano of N.tal took\nplace, nt 11 30 a.m. Monday In the\nCitholJc   chuich_   Michel.\nTlie wedding party and nrwy friend-\nreturned ti the home of the brlde'n\nparents afterwards, -where thev en-\nJoyed r f imptuou* wedding repast.\nMr. anrl tt. CtitalftM will reside\nwith   the   In'ter's   parents.\nWo do not do things in this\ncountry by revolutions in the\nhere, ns elsewhere, the people are\nrestive and resentful because they\nrpcognl?^ that g.ivernment-s are not\nmeeting the purpose rot whld.i\nthey were established.\nWilliam   E.   Borah   of   Idaho.\nTelephone\nDirectory\nClosing\nMay 31st\nAll  changes   for  the  July  issue\nof  the  West  Kootenay  Telephone  Directory  must  be\nmade  by that  date.\nB. C. TELEPHONE CO.\nJ\n rTB-   .*.TL**0N   DAILY   NEWS,   NHJOK,   B.   C.   IIUR*!DAT   MORMNO ' MAT   M,   1331-=\nSecret ^Places\n^By Joan Sutherland\nput ten and Oreta laid aside her\nbig enveloping cloak, '\u25a0'on. gave a\ngasp of admiration, for the ceremonial Spanish seventeenth century\nJo-eliness, when they arrived at Ha- j dress enhanced Greta's fair beauty\nvc'.'s apartment on Thursday at half I till  she was  an   amazing  thing,   and\nINSTALMENT XXIV\n^CONTINUED;\nAware   aa  she   was  of  her  sister's\nCARNATION is milk from\nCanada's finest herds, first\nevaporated, then shipped to\nall parts of the Dominion.\nFor Carnation keeps good\nand wholesome under any\nclimatic condition. Heat\ntreatment and homogeniza-\ntion make Carnation super-\nsmooth, improving the texture of all milk dishes. Use it\nwith coffee, fruit and cereals.\nMedical authorities recommend Carnation as an excellent milk for bahies\u2014that's\nhow good it is!\nCarnstion Co., Limited, 134     vc*~*\\s\nAbbott St,Vsacouver1B.C\nWrite for free Coot\nBook and Baby Bo.k\n__-__.\nCarnation\nMilk\n\"from\nContented Cows\"\nRILE FROM CANADIAN COWS. PACKED IN CANADA IN CANADIAN \u2022 MADE\nCANS AND CASE3\nNO question mark hovers over\nKotex. No incessant doubt as\nto how it was made, where, under\nwhat conditions.\nWith Kotex one is secure. Secure\nln its comfort and thorough pro-\n\u2022 tection. Secure, too, knowing it was\nmade in a spotless, air-washed\nfactory. By uniformed workers. Of\ntested materials. Inspected 76 times\nduring the course of manufacture.\nCut, folded, packed by machinery\nin hygienically sealed dust-proof\npackages. It is sanitary _nd it protects\njn every sense.\nSafe\u2014Kotex\u2014Soft\nMillions of Kote:: pads are used\nIn Canada's leading hospitals every\nyear!\nKo'.cx may be worn on cither side\nwith equal safety. It protects either\nway. lt Harp soft... even the gauze-\nis treated to make it amazingly soft.\nIs adjustable. And, of course, disposable. Ask for Kotex. And make\nsure\u2014when buying it wrapped\u2014\nthat you do get genuine Kotex.\nIN HOSPITALS ...\n1 The  Kotex  abrorbent   In   the\nIdentical material used hysu.RTons\nin Canada's I caditK} bc_fi-___.\n2 Kote. Is irtft . . . Ever. Um HH\nin  spi-mlly treated  lu  _______ it\n.im-uiiigly coil.\nJ Can b-> worn on ellhT \"ill* wii >i\nfrjii-lrnmfon.Noeniban'.isjnifnt.\nl-icunspic'ious.\n4   Deposable, (M-tttbjr- com-\n*\u25a0 pietely.\nK 0 T e X\nMADE IN CANADA\nmm_rr<_.\nVassar'sCashMeatMarket\nGOOD BUYING FOR THURSDAY\nAND FRIDAY\nDairy Butter, choice 1 0 \u201e I Smoked Hams, small, limited supply,     i2V_c\nfresh, lb.\nCreamery Butter,    A^,o\n(Dominion), 2 Ibt HUV\/\nPer Ih.\nBOB, Fresh Kirsts, 1f;p! Breakfast Sausage, JQC\n]>ci. ,ioz   J-\"*\/     fresh made, lb. . .\nBed Salmon, email fresh,\nJ* 55c1\" 65c\nLing Cod, small,      1 7n\nPer lb    X ' C\nKippered Herrings, 0(\\i.\nPer lb ^^\nLabrador Salt 1 rjr.\nHerrings, lb. .. . X ' ^\nSmoked Sable Cod    QO\u201e\nPer lb  0Ut\nI'cof Boiling     Q0   QP\nPer lb    Ot, _\u00bbt\nBeef Blade Mb        1 Of.\nRoast, lb   \"\u00bb*\nPork Steaks, 95c\n2 lbs\t\n?ork Chops, loin,    1 Cr\nPer lb    1Dt\n*e.*.l Steaks 9*0f\u00bb\nPerlb  L3C\n'eal Roast 1 (tn\nPer lb   XUC\nan th\u00aby entered the room Ton! felt\nproud, w ehe had never felt proud\n-Wore, of her slater's loveliness.\nEven Ravel, used as be waa to feminine beauty, stood \u00bbtlll a \u2022econd.\nhalted on bis way to welcome them\nhy the astounding vision, and lt\nHashed through hi* mind with\nhorror that It was thla woman, with\nher exquisite face and eye* of a\nMadonna, that h* desired to trap\nInto &  terrible  confession.\nThe big room wa* not more than\nhalf full when they arrived, but\nseveral more guests came. There was\ndancing, and a certain amount of\nrather good and unusual music, but\nbeyond that very little entertainment, except the interminable talk\nof the younger people, until Ravel\nannounced that Olgl had rehearsed\nand partly written t play of the\nperiod of Louie XIV., which would\nnow b\u00bb given.\nThere wa* much clapping and\nshouting at the announcement, and\nRavel wa* besieged with questions\nto all of which he turned & deaf\near.\n\"I <lo not know, X tell you!\" he\nsaid. \"It is but the sequel to a bet.\nOlgl said she oould write a play\u2014a\nsketch\u2014I said she could not. We\nmade a bet. Fifty francs. You will\n;,\u00b0* see the result and Judge lf she\n:\u25a0 to win her fifty franca or not\n.-fadame Halkett, will you alt here?\"\nHe had a seat ready for Oreta, a\nchair high on a divan, next to and\nat right angles from his own, and\nunsuspecting, rather bored, she seated herself. Ravel excused himself\nfor a minute or two while be settled the noisy audience, and she\nturned to her neighbor\u2014ft young\nItalian violinist clad in a Roman\ntunic\u2014with  a  low-voiced   protest.\n\"A playl And by that chlldl Must\nwe even  keep silent?\"\n\"You need do nothing you do not\nwish to,\" the young man said, his\ndark eyes smouldering. \"It is suf-\nIiclent that you exist and that wa\nmay look at you\u2014\"\nThe French language la adapted\nfor the delicate phrase* of poetic\nlove*\u2014the handsome young Italian\nadored beauty and believed in himself m a lover ... he drew a little\nnearer to Oret. and began to pay\nher extravagant yet exquisite compliments. Greta, watching him from\nunder heavy lids, interrupted one of\nthe  most  ardent.\n\"I have seen yoU before,\" ehe\nsaid. \"Tell me\u2014wt danced together.\nWhere wss  it?\"\n\"You forget, but I have not forgotten for one momentl\" be said.\nhis glance travelling carreafingly over\nher lovely face and figure. \"It *\u25a0\u00bb.\u2022\nat the Bal Masque at the Opera\n.a*t October, and you were with r.n\nintimate friend of mine\u2014the Comte\nD'Arblaye\u2014le pauvre Henri! It was\ntoo s._d, was  lt  not?\"\n\"D'Arblaye?\" For a second Oreta\nhardly realized what he had tald.\nthen she started back and her \u00abJM\ncontracted. \"You speak of Count\nD'Arblaye?\" ahe said. \"Why do you\nmention  him   now?\"\n\"He was a friend of mlue\u2014also,\nhe, too, adored  beauty!\"\nAt the words, all Oreta'a prlrle\narose; ahe waa not only angry, but\nshe was frightened, and the senae of\nsecurity which for these last months\nhad been complete was instantly to\nbe assailed, b shivered. Just then\nOlgi leaped upon the Impromptu\nplatform.\n\"The first scene, mes amis, will\nnow be commenced. You are asked\nno*\" to talk\u2014If you can ever remain silent!\" And, amidst mocking\napplause, attired ln a Louis XIV.\ndress far too big for her, she strolled\nacross the unsteady boards, followed\nby a .try large man In an ex-\ntrememely sKetchy and scanty costume, vaguely reminiscent of the\nsame period who was gre\u00bbte<-i by the\naudience with rapturous shout*.\nRavel strolled acroea to Greta and\nstood  a  moment  by   her  side.\n\"Who wrote the play?\" Toni asked\nfrom her perch on the top of a low\nbookcase, for she } d forgotten what\nRavel had Just told her. \"Is it\nyours?\"\n\"Mine! Mon Dleu, no! Olgl wrote\nit. Bhe has been ysterlous over It\nfor the last two or three weeks.\nRays she has prepared a great surprise,\"\n\"Gigl has brains,\" a Russian composer, leaning as eh -e to Tonl as\nhe could get, remarked to no one\nin particular. \"She usually tells me\nof these children of hers, bit this!\nNot a word! My only knowledge is\nthat she came to my studio a fortnight ago and demanded to see a\ncopy ot Shaker-peare.\"\nWOMAN'S PAGE s\"dTt^OTF*?\nHoovers Attend First Services\nIn Magnificent Washington Cathedral\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nAn Authority on Problems of Love and Marriage\nWashington      Cathedral,      shown right li built of stained glass made\nabove, wa* opened for publlo wor- ftt the church. Dozen* of wlndowa\nship on May 6   when Prealdent and ^ combine-  to make tha\nMrs.  Hoover attended  the morning\nservice, edifice a  fit  American  counterpart*\n.  The cathedral, properly termed the of   Notre   Dame   and   Weatmlnster\nCathedral of Bt. peter and St. Paul,\nsit* ln the midst of a C7-acre tract\non  Mount  St.  Albans,  the  highest     Length  of the huge  structure  la\napot in tr^ clty of .\/aahlngton. 534   fefit>   and   the   height   of  the\nIt* cost was well ove- $10,000,000 nave 95.   The are* la 71,000 square\nand   lt  la one  of  the  largest  and fMt.\nTinest churches of the world. _*_.\"______!*\nThe cathedral la already the final\nit*   present   c_- pMtln.f   nlnr((   nf     fQQdTQV\nresting\nStill   incomplete,\npaclty   will   be  slightly   more   than\n2000    persons.     It*   giant   Interior   Admiral   Dewey   and   other   famous\nrepresents   the   work   of   the   finest   men.\nartisans ln the world.\nTlie  window shown on the lower\nAnswers by\nBeatrice\nA Steamer Present\nDEAR  MISS   FAIRFAX:\nI have been gom    with a boy\nfor   nearly   a   year.   Thi*   spring\nhe expects to go to Europe for five\nmonths, and what would you sug\u00bb\ngust   I   give  for   a   steamer  present?    His   grandfather    is   going,\ntoo,  and  I  know  him   quite  well\nalso.   Should I give the older gentle man anything, and If ao, what\nwould   you   suggest?   I   am   going\nover to the boat to aee them off.\nWhat  would  you suggest  I wear?\nB. F.\nA basket of fruit alwaya make* an\nacceptable steamer  prc-ent,  so does\none of those leather ca-.es in which\nto  keep a passport,  letter of credit\nand  other valuables.   So 1* one of\nthose  tiny  first-aid   kit*  for  tilings\nnot   purchasable  on  the  other side.\nGood   reading   matter   for   a   voyage\nnever goes amiss.   A snull light traveling bag or brief case might answer\nvery  well,  and  a  muffler  would  be\na nice present for the older man. I\nshould   suggest   you   wear   a  smart\nsports suit when you go to see them\noff.\n(TO BE  CONTINUED)\nIn Love With Both\nDEAR. MISS \"',     \"AX:\nI   sm   19    ssrs  of   br*   snd\nON T'\"S AIR TONIGHT\nTRTBIBAYi  MAY   28\nN. B. t. ntOO|UMI\nCOO\u2014Master of Music-Agatha Tuf-\nlev* orchestra direction cy Trobb.\nKPO, KGA. KJR. KEX.\nG.00\u2014 Dance Hour \u2014 With Walter\nWiiiclvl], From N- T. and other\ncities to KGO, KHQ* KOMO, KGW,\nKFI. KSL.\n0:45--Cecil    and    Sally -comic   atrip\nof the air. KPO, KGA. %Ja\\\n7;0C\u2014 Amos  'n'   Andy. From  Chicago\nto KOO, KHQ. KOMO, KOW, KFI.\nKPI,.\nT.Oe\u2014Tom   Mlt'-lieli,   Mrltonr.   KPO.\nKOA.   KJR.   KEX. i\n7;13~ Harry   Berber   and   His   Eskl-\nmOt.  From   N.   Y.  to   KPO,   KGA.\nKJR.   KEX.\n7:15\u2014Concert,    mixed    quartet,    or-\nrbefltrft direction Cy Trobbe. KOO\nKHQ.   KOMO,   KOW,   KFT.\n7:30--TIM OpT.i Hour -AHc*. Gentle,\nsoprano;   MOOtft   orebntn   direction Cy Trnbbc. KPO. KOA. KJR.\n7:30-HM  Kemp and   His Orchestrp.\nFrom Pittsburgh, Pa., o KGO network.\nT -I   tlMla*   ICllTnil   Stewart,  baritone- Lee S. Robert?, platnst- Pnul\nCarson, nrn-nlst KGO KHQ KOMO\nKGW,   KFI,   KSL.\n, 8:03\u2014 Iinelria    Montagne,    contralto,\ni      KGD.   KGW.\n8:00\u2014Orchestra,    KPO.   KOA.   KJR.\nKEX.\n3.11\u2014 Standard   Symphony  Hour-65\nplrce   Symphony   Orchestra   direr-\ntton    Alf'pf]    Hcrt*'.    KGO,    KHQ,\nKOMO,   KOW.   KFI.\n8:30\u2014John and Ned. vocnl and Instr.\nI tluo.  KPO.  KGA. KJR. KEX.\nliiS\u2014Mona Low,   blues singer. KPO\ni      KOA.   KJR,   KEX.\n0:00\u2014Nathan   Mto.   violinist\u2014ponu-\nInr    program.    KPO,    KGA,    KJM.\ni      KEX.\nti:iI\u2014Earl   Hints'   Dnnee   Orchestra.\nFrom  Chicago to KGO.\n1:30\u2014rhlrago   Orchestra.  KOO.\n9:30\u2014Ear.    Burt net fs   Orchestra   \u2014\nFrom   L.   A.   to  KPO,   KGA,   KJR,\nKEX.\n10:00\u2014News  Flashe* \u2014  Sam Hayes,\nFrom L. A- to KQO, KHQ, KOMO,\nKOW. KFI.\n'0:00\u2014Oreat  Momentfl  of History-\ndramatic sketches by H-^nrv Flske\nCarlton. KPO, KOA. KEX, KJR-\nI 10:15\u2014Rainbow   Harmonies,   orche*.\ntra direction Jowph Hornlk. KOO,\nKGW.\nA, 10:30\u2014Around the Network\u2014Inland\nEmpire Sketchc* music and drama\nFrom KGA Spokane to KPO, KOA,\nKJR.   KEX.   KSL.\nj 1:00\u2014Nomads\u2014Lucille Kertlry, soprano; orch. dlr. Joseph Hornik,\nKPO,  KGA,  KEX.\n11:00\u2014Ted Flo Rita and His Orchestra. From 8. F . to KOW,\nKGO.\n11:30\u2014Witching Hour\u2014organ conceit, Paul Carson, organist. KPO.\nKGA.   KEX.\n12:00\u2014d-gen   Concert\ngent.   KGO,\n\u25a0 Dolly   &ar-\nUH K     \u2014     \u00ab\u00a9\u00bb     \u2014     MM M\nVANCOrVfU .VM)   WATTS\n6:30\u2014News Flashe* ,\n7:00\u2014Ted   WllUoms\n7:15-Studio\n7:45\u2014United   Farmers or   Canada\nB:O0\u2014 British Columbians\" Orchestra\nfl:30\u2014Studio\n0:00\u2014Wrestling  Match\n10:30\u2014Moods  and   Meditation,\nIft.-iO K      \u2014      KNX      \u2014      2M.J M\nHOLLYWOOD 6000  W-TTn\n8:00\u2014 Memories\nR:30\u2014 Violin Choir\nfi;00\u2014News   Item*\n6:15\u2014Cra7,y  Water  Crystals\n0:30\u2014Arizona   Wranglers\n10:00\u2014Jackie   Ta\/ior   and   Hia   Orchestra\n13:00\u2014Ray Howell, Hocha Muchacho\nN| x     _     cwm     \u2014     MJ M\nCKUtMMt 10.000   WATTS\nCOO\u2014Party Chain  Program\n6:30\u2014Happy family\n7:00\u2014Warren  and  Ruth  In person\n7:15\u2014\"Ham 'n' Bugs\"\nlc3 with two glrla. On* t* IB\nand one ls 19. I can't make up\nmy mind T'hich on\u00ab I love best.\nMiss Eighteen la very nice to me\nwhen she aees ,.e, but that's not\noften, aa her parents are very\nmuch opposed to her friendship\nwith me. Miss Nineteen'* parents\nseem to like m\u00a9 very much, bo I\ngo to their house quite often.\nStill I find myself thinking of\nMiss Eighteen. What would you\nsuggest? FARM   BOY.\nDon't worry, my dear Farm Boy.\nYou're not seriously in love with\neither of these girl* If you can't\ndecide which is the right one. Just\nkeep on being happy. Nothing In\nthe world equal being 19 and In\nlove. Oo to see the girl vhose parents approve of you. Prudence suggest* thit you confine tp chance\nmeetings your attention* to the girl\nwhose parents disapprove. It's a\npretty courageous young man who\nha* the hardihood to vlalt a home\nwhere the parent* frown him down.\nWants More Salary\nDEAR MISS FAIRFAX:\nThis la not about love, though\nlf I get a step up in salary I\nknow Just the girl. I'm a boy of\n20, and do odd Job* .or a certain\nsubstantial firm. Often they get\nme to write easy business letters,\nand sometimes I'm stumped by\nquestions In English. My girl\nfriend told me that you recommended some helpful little books\non that subject some weeks ago.\nWould you be good enough to publish the name* of them for\nAMBITIOUS DAN.\nSo sorry I can't publish the names\nof those handy little books on\nEnglish, but this column never\nprints anything in the way of advertising\u2014even the names of helpful llttie handbook**. But lf you'll\nsend me a self-ad dressed and stamped envelope I'll be very glad Indeed\nto mall you the names of the books.\nThey were recommended, by the U.\nI S. government to help soldiers who\nVM ambitious to get better Jobs\nand to bi- a little more ready m\nI speaking and writing. I have Bent\nout more than 500 1-sts of these\nI books, and a good many boys and\ngirls have written in to me to say\nthnt they have found them extremely helpful for Just the purpose you\nrequire.\nThe Beauty Box\nBy Helen Follett\nTo straighten rounded shoulders\nus\u00a9 your head madamo butterfly\u2014\nquester. Use it aa if it were the tip\ntop end of a flag pole, stretched\nhigh. To be told to stand up\nBtralght is th\u00a9 supreme beauty insult; everybody hates lt but a bent\ncarriage 1* the worst of all figure\ndefect*. A shirtless backbone and\nlack of will power are at the root\nof the trouble. Bad posture causes\nthe chest to do a cave-In. builds a\nsmall mound on the top of tho back\nand ln time makes a woman\nlike an old witch. Get* worse with\nthe years. It should, never get a\nstart.\nWhat won't these cosrftetlc tricksters be up to next? They are now\nproducing combinations. Siamese\ntwin cosmetics at la were, two in,\nsometimes three in one. Because the\nsisterhood has been ptcky about\ntoiletries\u2014counting p nles and dollars\u2014you can buy a preparation\nthat ia both a cleanser and an astringent, or a preparation that ia\nboth a cleanser and an astringent.\nor a preparation that serves as\ncream and skin food, another that\nls cleanser and powder base. Tills\nmeans that the beauty kit won't\ntake up all the space In the medicine cabinet; there will be loft\nlittle corner for pap'* shaving outfit.\nvm K      \u2014     KOMO     \u2014      MLS M\nSEATTLE 1000 WATTS\n7*30\u2014Vocal Ensemble\nR:0O\u2014Rajput,  E. T.\n0:15\u2014Flrflde Melodies\n10:5h_oiobe Trottera\n11:00\u2014Dance orcheera\n12:00\u2014Organ Reci-\u00abi\nGive Him a Ring\nDEAR MISS FAIRFAX:\nSome  time   aco  I  met  a  boy\nwith   whom   I   had   a   couple   of\ndates,   but  I   have   not  seen  him\nfor a long time.   He  live* out of\ntown,  so  that  I  never  meet  him\nanywhere.   I have  discovered  that\nI  care more  for  him  than  I had\nth night.   What can I do to giln\nhis friendship again?   Would It, be\nproper for me to write a letter to\nhim, or to call him when I drive\nthrough hi* home t-wn? M. E. S.\nYes, as you've gone out with th.s\nboy it would be all right, when ycu\ndrive through his ho:  . town, to give\nhim a ring.    _r you  might write a\nline or two on a card and tell him\nwhen he's In your town to look you\n\"P.\nAre jou \u00aboln* to ret married?\nHave you aj-d he decide*,- that\nyou've waited Icng enough, that you\ncouldn't possibly be more In love\nthan you already are, and that marriage is after oil a sort of economy,\nwith butter and egg* and millinery\nat their present delightful *ut\u00ab of\ncheapnees?\nMy blessings on you. If you are\nboth young and strong, and sure of\neach other* Jove, tt ot course you\nare, you are quite right in taking the\ndecisive step.\nBut lf It's *n experimental marriage man you have In mind, I will\nconfess t^, less enthusiasm. If you're\nmarrying apparently ln good faith,\nbut really because you're bored and\nrestless, and If th* secret possibility\nof divorce 1* well lodged In your\nbrain even previous to the sounding\nof the marriage bells, my sympathy,\n.with you ls pretty much reduced.\nDivorce when neces-ary. y\u00ab. It\nhas been a. life-saving device for\nmany a suffering woman\u2014and  man\n3iid will, of course, continue to be.\nBut dircrce as a pastime leaves me\nrather cold.\nAnd theM are beginning to be\nsigns that the country as a whole\n1* swinging around to my old-\nfashioned point of view and that\ndivorce by wholesale is dlmtnl.f.iing.\n. Do you ree-ia\u00a9 that the state o(|\nthings waa only three year* ag\nDivorces in this oountry were grant-1\ned at the rat\u00a9 of one every t\nminute*. One marriage ln every\nended ln divorce. And this d_\u00bbbU\u00bb\naffected more than half a mUiionJ\nmen, women and children everj\nyear.\nBut according to Dr. Alfred CahenJ\nof Columbia, who hag been makina\nthese dreary and disturbing dlscovJ\nerks, the corner ln divorce* at lesatj\nha* been turned. Ten thousand fewJ\ner couple* were divorced In 19301\n-bw In the previous year, and l_j\ngoe* without eaylng that by thl^\ntbn the divorce rate la atlll mon\nstrikingly reduced-\nYoung couples are beginning\nthink It over, you see, before ruah-j\nIng to the courts. They are begin-*]\nnlng to suspect that <th\u00a9 fault\noften on both aides, rather than 1\njne alone. Or perhaps, they are be-]\ning even wiser than thts. Perha;\nbefore marrying uhcy are making 1\nsure as they can that the marriage!\nhas a solid basis of love and under-]\nstanding.\nIt Isn't anything to be proud\nthat the United State* ha* the ^*<n-j\nest divorce rate in the world,\none 'thing to be proud of If ft happ.J\nmarriage that last*.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBf LAl'RA   A.  KIRK MAN\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\nGrapefruit\nCereal\nCodfish Balls Coffee Roll*\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nJelly   Omelet\nRoll* Peach Sauce\nC.ok.e* Cocoa\nDinner\nRadishes\nPan   Fish\nPotatoes Buasel*  Sprouts\nGelatine  Molds   Whipped   Cream\nCoffee\nMAKING   TABLE   LINENS\nI know of several girls who are\nsteadily filling their hope chests\nwith pretty, hand - embroidered\nlinen*. Altho- _.h some people argue\nthat It Is foolish to make table\nlinens perhaps year* in advanco of\nusing them, because styles in table\nrunners, dollies and (Mttt change\noften, still our handiwork always can b\u00a9 used for home wear\u2014\neven If linen fashions have changed\nsince we made them. I know of\none engaged girl who Is making\ntwo luncheon or breakfast sets as\nfollows:\nSet Number One: Buy unbleached\nmuslin. Make square table cover\nand napkins of size you think you\nwill need. Fold edges under nnd\nblanket-stitch around In blue. Then\ncut four large butterflies from blue\nmaterial and applique all but the\ntop of the wings, ont0 the cloth.\nThis open part of each butterfly\nforma a small pocket into WMch\nthe napkins are slipped, bo the\napplique In black thread. Outline\nthe body of each butterfly In gold\nand also use this gold to embroider\nirregular spots  on  their wings.  Do\nnot decorate the napkins\u2014__mply|\nblanket -stitch them around in I\neither blue or black, or th* two!\ncolor* combined. Surely thl* praotl-l\ncal set could be used In any yeartl\nSet Number Two: Buy orange|\ncrepe. Make table cover and uap-\nklns iquare, In measurement desired I\nWork a straight line of feather I\nstitching ln black thread from top|\nto bottom of th- table cover In r\nexact center; then work a irlmllar|\nline from aide to \"ide ln center ofi\nthe table cover. This divides the!\ncloth into four eqxuil section. In|\nthe oorner of each section 6t*_n_>\nsilhouette of any pretty design euehl\nas teapot. Work with black thread.r\nDo same for napkins. Fold edgeil\ntwice a* for hemming, but hem|\nwith feather-stitching.\nTomorrow\u2014More   Canning   Recipes\nTRADE BOARD TOLD OF TNTER-I\nNATIONAL TRADE ISOLATION!\nVANCOUVER, May 28\u2014People otl\nall countries should unite In resls-l\ntance to undue isolation and the]\nrestriction of International trade. [\nJames A. Farrefll, former president I\nof the United States Steel corpora* ]\ntlon and now a member of Its directorate said in an adclresj, to the I\nVancouver board of trade today. He I\nhas Just returned from the Orient. \\\nThe intensely hot eimoon wind I\nof Asia and Africa get* It* narael\nfrom the  Arable and mean* poison.f\nTry lydla E. Ph*tnm'i Vtgttable Compound I\nv\\;\nToo \"Worn-Out\" to go\nAnother date broken ,.. Coddn t Kay\non her feet a minute lonpert Lydia E.\nPinkham's Vegetable Componod always\nrelieve! cramps. Try it next month.\nLayers of fat on neck and shoulders can be thumped to nothingness\nPersuade eome amiable member of\nthe family to double her flsta and\nhammer lightly. Movem-nts must be\nquick. Spread on a layer of heavy\nmawiage cream first; afterwards\nwash it away with tepid water, and\nlay on towels which have been\nwrung out of cold water.\nNew lipstick Is a magnetic color.\nWith it comes a cheek rouge of a\nlighter shade that tones ln beautifully\nwith an olive or iv-y complexion\nNice with the black frock that has\na dash of vivid coloring for trimming, but terrible with a robe of\nany tint suggestive of rose or red.\nThe discerning eye i* trained to see\nthese  matters  clearly.\nKaslo Liberals to\nik Represented at\nComing Convention\nKASLO, B. C, May 28\u2014Members\nof the Kaslo Liberal association held\na meeting Saturday evenln;. There\nwas a good attendance. The main\nbusiness of the meeting was a discussion regarding sending delegates\nto the forthcoming convention to\nbe held in Nakusp. however\ndefinite action was taken at this\ntime, a further meeting will be\ncalled to make final arrangements,\nbut lt Is an assured fact that K,islo\nwill be well repreiented at the district convention.\nKYI      \u2014\nSM.5  M\n1000 WATTS\nTfin K\nT A COM A\n6:00\u2014 Music  Satisfies\nft:IB\u2014Don Lee PUT.\n6:4.1\u2014Myrt and Marge\n7:00\u2014Joe  Palooka\n0:10\u2014Oraw Quartette\n0:30\u2014Today and Yeeterfleld\n\u25a0 10:00\u2014Anson Week's Orchestra\n11:00\u2014 Henry  Haistead   and  Orchestra\nRi\nLowest Price in 15 Years\nSALADA\nTEA\n\"Fresh from the Gardens\"\nI HE crisp deliciousness of\nA Quaker Corn Flakes arouses\nearly morning appetites in warm\nweather. Rich, nourishing flakes\nof sun-ripened corn ; . . they\nnever fail to win enthusiasm.\nYou will like Quaker Corn\nMakes best of all because their\nflavour is tbe highest quality\never put into a corn flake.\nSpecial malt and pure CANE\nsugar and salt of crystal purityi\nCrackling crisp because toasted\nin electric ovens. Then their\ncrispness and supreme flavour\nare preserved for you by our\ntriple seal and wax wrapper.\nServe Quaker Corn Flakes at least\nonce each day. With this delicious dish, children take^ more\nmilk and cream than any other\nway.\nQuaker\nCorn Flakes\n WOVEN\nSANDALS\nOur stock of Sandals is\ncomplete\u2014Tan, White,\nand Combination of colors. Pumps and Straps.\n$4.50anfJ$5\nR. ANDREW\n& CO.\nLeaders in Foot Fashion\nSociety\nThli column ts conducted by\nMrs, m. J. Vteneux. All news ol a\nsocial nature. Including recep-\nttom, private entertainments, personal Items, marriages, etc., will\nappear In thla column. Telephone\nMra. Vlgneux \u25a0( her home, SIB\nBlllca atreet.\ni-TlIE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS,   NELSON,   B.   C,   THtR-TDAY   MORNING    MAY    2S,    1932-\nbiS\nTtl.t   III.\nBaby on 3400-Mile Box Car Trip\n\"Then thousand American moth-\nera could be aaved each year if\nAmerica would adopt the European\npractice ol properly supervising maternity,\" according to Dr. Loula I.\nDublin noted atatlstlclan.\nKlnety per cent of the women attending the races at Deauville,\nFrance, wore their blue or green.\nThe majority wore blue.\nMr. and Mri- Walter Tattrle have\nas their gueat Mlas Emily Dimock. of\nSllverton.\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022   a\nTh* home. 323 Nelson avenue,\nFairview of Mr. etnd Mre. Charles\nM. Young wa* the scene of a very\npretty wedding Tuesday morning at\nfl:30 o'clock when their aecond daubster, Grace Kathleen, became the\nbride of Leonard Philip, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. C. W. Walton, Second street\nFairview. The ceremony wae preformed by Rev. T. J. B. Ferguson. While\nMrs. Ferguson played the wedding\nmarch from Lohengrin, the bride entered the room on the arm of her\nfather. II-: gown was of white lace\nand crepe-de-chene. She wore a\nveil held ln place by a coronet of\norange bloaaoma and carried a shower\nof plnit rosea, lily of the valley and\nmaiden hair fern. Her only ornament\nbeing a pendant, the gift of the groom\nMls3 Ruby Young the bride's sister\nwore a frock of green flowered crepe\nsilk, a white hat and carried pink\ncarnations, for-get-me-noU, and ar-\nabus. The best man was Aobert Walton, the groom's brother. The bride's\ngift to the bridegroom wae a signet\nring, to the brldemald a necklace,\nto the best man a pencil, and to Mrs.\nFerguson a pin.\nAfter the wedding breakfast was\nserved, wheri covers were laid for 14.\nthe happy couple left via the Great\nSome Real\nValues in\nRUGS\nSEAMLESS AXMINSTER RUGS, 7'6\"x9' ..?10.05\nAXMINSTER RUGS, 6'9\"x9'    16.95\nBRUSSELS RUGS, 6'9\"xT6''    17.50\nBRUSSELS RUGS, 9'x9'       7.50\nTAPESTRY RUGS, 7'6\"x9'    14.95\nTAPESTRY RUGS, 6'9\"x9'    12.95\nORIENTAL RUGS, 6'4\"xlO' 13.95\nAXMINSTER MATS, 24\"x48\"       1.95\nAXMINSTER MATS, 27\"x54\"      3.45\nSTANDARD\nFURNITURE CO.\nThe Store of Service and Satisfaction\nComplete House Furnishers NELSON, B. C.\nWhen hla Job fizzled out In San Pranciaco and he couldn't find\nanother, Cbarlea Hyatt decided he'd go back to the paternal roof at\nUntontown, Pa., wltn hia girl wife, Reva, and their baby, Charles, jr.,\n8 months old. Broke they started acroea country ln box cars when they\noould get 'em. Here they are at Concii.-U.tl on the laat lap of their\n3400-ml.e Journey after 37 daya on the road in freight cars and piking.\nNorthern for Spokane and Seattle, after which they Till make tbelr home\nat 324 Nelaon, avenue.\nDr. and Mra. R. E. Gray, Fairview.\nhave had as -..elr gueft, Henry McCall\nof Vernon, who returned yesterday\nby motor.\n\u2022 *   0       -\nMra. W. R. Jarvla and daughter\nMary were motored in from Procter\nyesterday. They were accompanied hy\nC. D. Jarvis, who also resides at\nProcter,\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Alice McDougall Front street,\nhas returned from a motor trip to\nKlmberley, where she was the guest\nof her brother-in-law and alster, Mr.\nand   Mrs.   Joseph   Hawes,\nMrs. Scott, Thornberg who has been\nspending the past three months in\nNelson has returned to her home In\nKaalo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMlaa Norma Granger of Nakusp was\na  visitor to town over the  holiday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nJ. B. DeLong, achool inspector, wae\na   vlsltor  in   Nelson   yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAlex Poealer has returned from\nSaskatoon. Sask., where he spent the\npast few month with hts parents.\n\u2022 *   I\nGeorge Allen, _ ..r street, has returned from a six weeks' visit to\nVancouver, where he was the gueat of\nMSpB\n\u2022WOU-i Holiday Expenses\nUP TO\n*500\nOR \u25a0'\u2022-OO CASHAf\nOPTION OF WINNFR\nJusl\nWRITE A\nSLOGAN\nABOUT\n\"\u25a0\"WO fortunate people are going to take the trip of\n** their Iifctime'this summer, without spending one\ndollar of their own money. It may be you, with your\nwife or husband, or your best friend (any two people\nmay take the trip). Imagine yourself starting off on\nsuch a -acution\u2014the holiday you have dreamed about\n\u2014with the knowledge that all your expenses will bo\npaid (up to $500)... And all you have to do to become\neligible is to write a slogan about either Nabob Coffee,\nNabob Baking Powder or Nabob Tea. Besides thc\nFirst Prize, valued at $500, there will be eight prizes of\nweek-end trips for two people (all expenses paid up to\n$75 for each trip)*, these will be allotted two each to\nManitoba (including Port Arthur and Fort William),\nSaskatchewan, Alberta and British Columbia.\nENTER THE CONTEST NOW\nYou may aend in as many slogans aa you wish, as long aa you\ncomply with the easy conditions ael out on the OFFICIAL\nENTRY FOI.M.\nHOW TO'GET FREE OFFICIAL ENTRY FORMS\nAsk your grocer today.    Jf he cannot supply yon\nWRITE TO\nKELLY, DOUGLAS & CO. LTD.\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nhis sister, Mrs. D. J. McLacliUn, who\nformerly resided here.\naea\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Bowerby, Kelson avenue, Fatr'l   **, ' ave taken up\nresidence  in the  Petty  apartments.\n\u00bb   \u2022    \u2022\nMlsa C. M. Fawcett of Kaelo_ waa\na city  visitor  yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nT. Player. Baker street, has left\nthe Kootenay Lake General hospital\nwhere he waa IU with pneumonia\nfor some time.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Percy Amss and little d*\"Sn-\nter Mae, ave left for Trail, where\nthey are spending a week at the home\nof Mrs. Amas brother and sister-in-\nlaw, Mr. am.   Mrs. Charles Slmma.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. George Benwell and\nBetty and Billy, motored to Spokane\nand return   Tuesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nC. J. Curtain. M.E., of Vancouver\nwaa in town Tuesday en rout* to\nSanca.\ns \u25a0 t   t\nDr. and Mrs. David Hartln and\nda tighter Barbara Jean are here from\nSopkan\", guests at tl-\" home of the\ndoctor's mother, Mrs. Gilbert Hartln,\nVernon street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nErnest   Bremner   of   Park    Siding\nwas a vtr'tor to town Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Skead and family\nspent the holiday at Gibbon's Landing, guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. Farmer. They are accomp-nicd by Marsh\nHawes of Klmberley.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. P. Caiblck and family h,ave I *t for Erie to take up resl-\nderfce on J. O- Patenaude's ranch,\nMr. and Mrs. Dixon, Silica street\nand family spent the week-end at the\nhome of Mr. Dixon, at perry Siding.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u25a0\nDr. W. O. Rose and Dr, F. M. Auld\nleft yesterday by motor _.*\u00abt Kelowna\nwhere they wont to attend a medical convention.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. Mary Kerr, who has been in\nthe Kootenay Lake General hospital\nfor a., me time with a broken limb,\nreturned to her home in the Kerr ap-\npartments, yesterday.\na \u25a0 t  t\nHarry Steves of Salmo paid a visit\nto  town  yesterday.\nLittle Betty Benwell entertained recently on the occasion cf her ninth\nanniversary of her birthday at her\nhome In the Hume hotel, when h*r\ninvited guests were Miss Margaret\nGulmont, IClsi Frances Madden, the\nMisers Paddy Frances and Dorothy\nNicholson. Mlaa Ri'* Collettl, Miss\nMollis Kirtcpatrlck, Mlsa Dorothy\nTrainor, Miss Iris Johannson, Miss\nDorothy Pai'; and  BUly  Benwell.\nMr. snd Mrs. John A. Irving and\nchildren 6-ewart and Margery r>\ntored to Roasland Tuesday, where\nthey visited Mrs. Irvings brother-in-\nlaw and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Ouy\nCooper.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. S. B. Binning who haa been\nths guest of her brother-in-law H\nR. Younger, Mill street left yesterday\nmorning for her home in Detroit.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nP. E. Coleman, the Deanahaven\nrancher, spent yesterday ln town\nshopping.\n\u2022 i    \u2022\nTlie Mm Mary and Julia Potoaky,\nKerr apartments, were th eguesta of\ntheir parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Pot-\noaky at Boutn Slocan over the hoU-\nday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nAmong visitors to t:>wn yesterday\nwas Captain Malcolm MeKinnon of\nProcter.\n\u2022 a)       \u2022\nMrs. D. Fraser, Victoria street, returned last night from Kaslo, where\nshe went to attend the funeral of\nthe  late  Bcott  Thornberg.\n\u2022 t    *\nDr. H. F. Tyeman. wes among those\nfrom Nakusp to visit ln Nelson during the week-end.\nt   t   t\nMrs. Gilbert Hartln. Dr. and Mrs.\nDavid Hartln and daughter of Spokane spent Tuesday in Kaslo at the\nhome of Mrs. Hartln's son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. T. Hartln.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. W. Rash and son\nrecent arrivals from Wenatchee, have\ntaken up residence ln the Kerr apart-'\nments.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nDr. J. B. Thorn of Trail was in Nelson Tuesday,\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs. Henry Johns, who has been\na patient in the Koot*nay Lake Oeneral hospital, has rev -ied to her\nhome In Salmo.\n\u2022 \u2022   e\nJ. Lynden spent Tuesday In Grand\nForks at the home of his parents,\nMr. and Mrs. P. J. Lynden.\n\u2022 \u2022       \u2022\nMiss Marguerite Gagnon and her\nbrother Louis, recently visited their\nrelatives In Cresoent  V'Vey.\nMr. and Mrs. E. W. Wlddowson,\nhaving spent the dsy In Spokane,\nreturned last nt\u00bbht.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nReg. Laird, vls.ied in Nelson on '-is\nway to Pentlcton, from Queen's university, Kingston, where he passed\nfirst year medicine examinations.\nNABOB\nTEA, COFFEE.OR\nBAKING POWDER\nKELLY,    DOUGLAS   E CO. LTD\nBUTCHERTERIA\nNEWS\nBetter Meats for Less\nTHURSDAY SPECIALS\n201\n100\nCHOICE YOUNO VEAL\nCHOPS,   per   lb\t\nCHOICE YOUNO VEAL\n8TEW.  per  lb\t\nFRESH MINCED\nSTEAK,   r\u00abr   lb.\n100\nLOCAL   FRESH   EXTRA        __Ct*\nEGGS,   3   1)07, i3y\nNIFP   ONTARIO  CHEESE,\nper   lb\t\n250\nCHOICE CREAMERY   BUTTER\n\u2014With  meat  orders,\nper  lb.  ...\n*..\"_\u2022 200\nCHOICE  LOIN   PORK \u25a0____*\nCHOPS,  per lb. ... *_>V\nCHOICE PORK  STEAKS.\n2   lbs\t\n250\nFRESH SMOKED COTTAGE ROLLS, each\n650\n220\n200\nFRESH   RED   SPRINO\nSALMON,   per   lb.\nFRESH   LINO   COD, 1 to J,\nper   lb  *\/V\nFREPH    HALIBUT,\nper   n>\t\nTry   our   Pork   and   Tomato\nPausafe.    The  finest\n,      on the market.\nA limited Hipplv of\nKootenay Lake Trout\nPHONE 149\nFREE     DELIVERY\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nThe following column of social\nnews and happenings tn Rossland\nla conducted by Mrs. Bessie \u00bb. Ferguson. Phone Mrs. Fer; aon at her\nIiume In Rossland and gher her details of events of In rest to thla\ncolumn.\n_______\nQsMea&her'sSD\n607 Baker St.\nPhone 200\nSTORE NEWS\nAs Illustrated\nin\nMayfair\nA new three-piece suit with hat and scarf to\nmatch. Made of light weight Botany Wool and\nSilk mixture. All popular colors. Sizes 34, 36\nand 38. Obtainable at this store, the suit.... $25\nOther suits by Knit-TQ-Fit Co. of Bramble yarns\nor Tricot Frimas, assorted styles and colors\nat $25, $29.50 and $33.50\nstfr^___fr\u00ab*mf^^\nHOSSLAND, B. C, May 25-Roberl\nAnderson ths receive J word from\nUM University of Alberta, Edmomon,\nthat he haa passed his second year\n<medicine*   with   honora.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMine. H. DeL. Heaney has left\nTor an extended visit to England and\npointi on tho continent, expecting\nto   be  gone   for  several   months.\nMr. and Mrs. N. Mtchaeley and\nMiss Maude Mlcha-cley mot-red here\nfrom  Kimberley   thla   week.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. W. A. EletAon and\nMifw Patricia Ellelson motorci to\nSpokane for the holiday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Edward Glover and dmigh-\ntera, Thermft and Iluphella, have returned from Nelson where they were\nthc  guests or  Mre.  Olorer'a  par?nt_.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nTlie evening branch of tlie Women's auxiliary of the Church of St.\nGeorge the Martyr, met Monday eve- j\nning at the hMU ot Mrs. Thomas'\nCraven, Parle  atreet.\nCreston Snowfall-\nIs 71 Inches for\nthc Past Winter\nCRESTON, B. C, May 26\u2014According to th\u00bb official record* kept by\nDr. Henderson, district, me;eorolcglst,\nthe winter of 1032-31 provided a\ntotal snowfall of 71 Inches, which Is\nthe second heaviest winter's snowfall ever recorded since records have\nbeen kept. About 1927 & elmilarly\nheavy snowfall was registered, but ln\n1915-Ifl an all time record was\nestablished with a snow supply of\n108 inches. In that latter year flood\nconditions Jn tiie Kootenay valley\nwere also fel worst ever known\nsince the big flood in 1863. Allowing 10 Inrttl of snow for one ino;i\nof moisture the winter has given\nthe soil the equivalent ot neven\ninches of rain.\nMRS. EWING GIVES\nKIDDIES PARTY\nSALMO\nSALMO. B- C. May 25\u2014Mrs. D. C.\nM. Ewlng entertained at a Jolly\nbird day party Thursday afternoon\nwhen she entertained In honor at\nher granddaughter Miude's ninth\nbirthday   anniversary.\nThe little invited gueaUi were\nMaxlne Lindow. Mona Miller, Joyce\nBremner, Eva Maude and N.ttle\nLfahy Mary Miller. Doreen Fair,\nnoff. Mabel Bradley, Kathleen Hcarne\nHazel and Steila Dorey. Anne Berek-\nnoff, Mabel Bradley, Krrhleen Haarne\nNalmo and Shirley Lindstrum, Nick\nBerekoff, Keith, Allui and Lalry\nMcLeod, Carl Lindow, Merlin, David\nJohns, Joe Bush, Percy and Donald\nWlnde, Bill Kalamoff. Billy Steward,\nEddi\u00bb He ani. Harry Smith, and\nGerald   B>W1\nMr. and Mrs. W. S..iell and John\nS.'lell were busing*** visitors to\nNelson  Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. Mateer accompanied\nby O. C. Thompson of the MEM\nmine are spending a few daya ln\nNelson.\nMr. and Mrs. U Johnson of Nelson have taken up residence in\nSalmo.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Kraft have taken\nup residence in Salmo for the summer months.\nMiss Juanita Gibbons naa returned\nto Nelson after spending the past\nweek tlie truest of her brother and\nsistcr-ln-law.\nMiss Mildred Bridges\nReceives B.A. Degree\nat Brandon College\nCRANBROOK, B. C\u201e May 25\u2014\nVincent Fink, Gordon Hanna and\nTommy Moore motored to Spokane\non Monday, returning Wednesday.\nWhile in the city they tcok: la Earl\nCarrot'a Vanities.\nMrs. P. W. Green and Mrs. Reid\nmotored to Kaslo on Monday. Mrs,\nGreen will open her summer home\nat Mirror Lake. They* wen. accompanied by Miss Nancy N.*bet, who\nhas been the guest of Miss Nora\nMl Ira for a fortnight,\nMrs. L. M. Varner of Nelson is j\nvisiting over the (holiday with Mrs,!\nW. J. Barber.\nH. Oeigprlch or Kaslo a-.d his\"\ndaughter, Mrs. gwanson, of Call-\nfornla, arrived on Sunday from]\nRochester, Minnesota, and ara thc *\nguests of Dr. and Mrs. O. E. L.,\nMacKinnon. Mr. and Mrs. J a j\nGeneric], of Klmberley were llaol\nSunday visitors of Dr and Mrs. tfltl !\nKlnnon.\nMM Ivy Dezali arrived here Sunday from Vancouver where she nas |\ncomp'etc.i the combined untver.iiv\nand hospital course. KraduaMng at\nthe recent exercises. She will re.naiii\nUi   Cranbrook   for   the  summer.\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. Schell, Miss\nJudy Drummond and Mac ScneM\nmotored to Nelson for t. e weekend\nand holiday. They were the guests\nof Mrs. Schcll'a sist-er, Mrs. Den-\nnlson.\nH. C. Collier. E. A. Kill, C. Buc!.lcw!\nUtt P. W. WHUs motored to Spokane;\nMor.aay. They were attending a K. i\nof P ceremony there.\nDr. and Mrs. Lar?e entertained tt!\ndinner on Monday evening in honor!\nof Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Teck ef\nH Mill III.\nMr. and Mra. H. P. Cam oi Ca.-1\ngary were weekend guest. In the)\ncity Mrs. F. J. Harrison motored ;\nover with them and Mr. and Mr.*. J.I\nLogin accompanied them on their!\nreturn.\nMr. an_ Mrs. f, V. Staples, whoj\nwere Cranbrook visitors over the i\nweekend, returned to their home in ''\u25a0\nInvfrmere  on   Monday. I\nUfl Delia Baxter spent thc ffMfe- ;\nend In U:_mberton, the guest of Mr.!\nand   Mrs.   Norman   Moore.\nMr. and M\". \u00a3. S. Peck and MM j\nof Calgary, wf-.o have been Iptadlng\nthe last few days In Cranbrook and i\nCreston, left on Tuesday for their\nhome. They would visit at Invermere en route.\nMlsa Mildred Bridges, daughter of\nMr. end Mrs. A. D. Bridges of Cranbrook, waa one of those to graduate\nat the exercises at Brandon cM-ege\non Monday,  receiving  her B. A. de\ngree. She and her alster. win also.\nattends Brandon college, will return\nat the end of the wceU. I\nStafr Sergeant Fish of the R. C.\nM. P. haa arrived .from Tor an to to\nreplace Inspector \"Sandys-Wunpli,\nwho ;.... been transferred to Torino.\nWeather Is Slightly\nMilder on Wednesday\nSow to yourselves In righteousness,\nreap in mercy; break up your fallow ground: for lt 1$ time to seek\nthe Lord, til] He come and rain\nrighteousness upon you.\u2014 BMM,\n10:12.\nWeather conditions were almost\nthe same Wednesday as those of thc\nprevious day with light winds, but\nlacking thu rain threats of Tuesday,\nWednesday's minimum temperature\nwas the same as th-it of Tuesday at\n31 degrees, while the maximum tem-\nperatur\u00a7 was one point higher than\nthat of the previous dsy with a\nreading   of  65   degrees.\ni    For\nlunch\nM*s*s*.*rr!...\n>.....; \u00ab.\u00bb!_>,..\n.  W nmpu, i\u2014.\nWHEN noon-time comet, why not fix\nyourself a delieiou*) lunch \u2014 and one\nthat's no trouble at all to prepare? A\nhowl of crisp Kellogg's Corn Hakes,\nand milk with a bit of fruit. Refreshing. Healthful. Convenient. Save time\nand money at any meal with Kellogg's.\nQuality guaranteed.\nSnjinfa \\%i^c\u00a3$d^jfr\nAFEWAY STORE\nilDUTION   WITMOI\nGRAND   OPENING\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY, MAY 27 and 28\nWatch This Paper for\nOPENING ANNOUNCEMENT\nTOMORROW\nSafeway Stores Limited\n Tin.   NELSON   DAILY   KXWS,   NELSON.   B.   C.   TnTBSDAY   MOENINO   WAY   IS,\nUty JMamt Satlij $ms\nPublished every morning except Bunday by News Publishing Company   Limited   Nelson, B   C.\nMemoer of Canadian iron leased wire news service.\nAdvertising rat* cards and A. B. C. statement* of circulation\nmailed on request, or may b* seen at the office of any advertising\nagency recognized by the Canadian Dally Newspapers' Association.\nBr  mail   (country)\nPer year  _,\u25a0_,__ -\t\nBy  mall   (city), per  year  _\nOutside Canada, per month\nPer   year   ._...-._,_.~._,\t\nDelivered,   per  week   _. ..,,\nPer year __.___.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nper month  \u25a0__.\u2014-  \t\nPayable tn advance.\nMember Audit  Bureau of Circulation.\nm4 tt\n_ fl.00\n_ 1J.0O\n_ .76\n-. 7-flO\n__ 29\n._. IJ.00\nTHURSDAY, MAY 26, 1932\nPublicity In Lindbergh Case\nUp to the hour when the news was heard that the\nLindbergh baby was found dead, and when all the evidence pointed to the fact that the baby was killed within an hour or two after the kidnapping took place, the\nnewspapers were criticized in many quarters for having\ngiven ro much publicity to the kidnapping. It was argued\nthat the huge volume of publicity, giving so many details\nof the case, hampered the efforts of the police to capture\nthe criminals. This was in spite of the fact that Col. Lindbergh himself had frequently asked for emphasis to be\nlaid on certain features of the case, and that the newspapers had cheerfully carried out all of his requests, and\nit waa also in spite of the fact that Col. Lindbergh had\npublicly expressed his thanks for the manner in which\nthe newspapers had dealt with case as a whole.\nThe only word of criticism that Co. Lindbergh has had\nfor the press referred to two New York tabloids which\npublished some information which was incorrect, but\nwhich might have embarassed the authorities. In this\nconnection, Editor and Publisher, which is published in\nNew York, prints the following editorial:\n\u2022\u25a0Where, at present, are the persons who aald In print and\notherwise ln public that th* newspaper press of this country\nhad made It well-nigh impossible for the kidnappers to return\nth*   Lindbergh   baby   to   his   mother's   arms?\n\"Will they please stand up and be counted? They were sure\nof their statements. They did not equivocate They knew, by\n\u2022ome occult process not available to ordinary reportorlal mortals, that lf newspapers had remained silent and aloof little\nCharles would promptly have been returned. Bllaa Bent\ncharged ln The Outlook that tbe baby was being exploited\nby newspapers for circulation gains. Walter Llppmann begged\nthe reporters to have a heart and argued at length for a law\nto prevent newspaper men from lntejferlng with criminal investigations. A writer in The New Yorker also charged that\npress activities bad seriously Impeded the search. Governor\nMoore of New Jersey aald that If newspapers would only leave\nthe police and family alone, aome headway might be made\ntoward a solution of the crime. Prom such sources the public\nwas given the notion, whtch swept the country, that the prew\nwas really an accessory arter the fact. Great was the Indignation.\n\"But what are the facts, at present revealed for anyone to\n\u25a0ee? Nothing the newspaper* did, or could have done, interfered wtth the negotiations, for the child was dead. The body,\naccording to the official autopsy, lay under the leaves ln a\nwood ln the very shadow of the Lindbergh estate for two\nmonths, and In all probability the kidnappers committed the\nfearful crime within an hour of the abduction, knowing that\nthe child would cause trouble for them and that they could\ntrade as well without it. Detectives do not MlfT. that the\nkidnappers returned to bury the body n-nr the scene of th*\ncrime, weeks lat'-, when every road was watched, day Bnd\nnight.\n\"So the circumstances dramatically disprove the charge that\nthe press showed callous indifference to Col. Lindbergh's interests or were reckless of the fat* of thc child. But bo such\nproof ls neccasary. Editor and publisher bBs explained the\ncircumstances. In previous cases, end upon no less cuthority\nthan Col. Lindbergh. The press went to lengths to aid the\nsearch without parallel in the history of newapaperdom. Col.\nLindbergh knows this and has expressed his appreciation to\nmore than one newsp-per man of his acquaintance. The attack\nupon the newspapers was wholly without Justification and was\ntimed   to  do  serious  injury.\n\"Newspaper men generally appreciate bOMH and intelligent\ncriticism of real faults and weaknesses of the press system,\nbut In this Instance the critics mere reckless and played upon\npublic   hysteria.\n\"As matters turn out. it ls a fine question whether newspaper\nmen were wise in making the Lindb^rph case an exception.\nIt is eacy now to arjue that public pcT-y would have been\nbest served hy a full exposure of the news, with the object\nof capturing  and  punishing  the  unspeakable  criminals,  how-\neditors c:*uld  not have accepted  thla course when  there\nBFi-uitd  to be a chance of recovering the baby  alive   wo nre\nsure   no  newspaper  regrets  any  suppress on   lt  mad'\nc.ise. It is a shame, however, that the public at large\n-.   .   ....   __________   .-T.r.pdrri   e\never, editors c:*uia  mn .._.._. -*\u25a0_\u2022*\u25a0\u00bb\u25a0-      \t\nseemed  to be a chance of recovering the baby  alive. We arc\n\"'    \" \u2014-\u2014ion   lt  made  in   this\nahe at\nupon the false opinion that the press imped\nTlie contrary la true and ought generally to be known\nhas fixed\nimpeded   the  s.arch.\n\"Between You\nand Me\"\nBy \"4.B.C.-\nTTXT-\u2014*.-_-__,rrjT__J_______i:!_!.! '\nAfter all tb* poor weather on\nth* early part of the 34th, lt had to\nstay nice all day yesterday, when\nno   on*   was   able   to   enoy   It.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nSaw   Doc  Morrison  setting   up  his\ndental apparatus In the Jail office\nand preparing to bore into some\nDoukhobor molars.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nSaw   Stan   Horswiu   coming   from\nhaving his \"picture took\" with thc\nother Toe H members before Rev.\nW. J. Crick leaves for thfl Old\nCountry.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nBaw  William  Heasell  going  somewhere all dressed  up about fi p. m\nHla  day   with  the  city   starts   at  4\na. m , so he was within  his rights.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHeard at least 100 Individuals say\nin   varying   terms,   \"Wouldn't   this\nweather   freeze  you?\"\na    \u2022    a\nHere's a true one on a popular\nNelson minister. After hearing Be v.\nJame* Youngson, minister of the\nFirst Presbyterian churc' of Nelson,\ndeliver an Empire day address st\nCentral school last week, a little\ngirl in one of the primary divisions\nconfided to her mother: \"Mummy.\nI don't believe that minister Is a\nCanadian.\"\na    *    \u2022\nOne dentbt at least has hit on a\nmethod of ridding his waiting-room\nof its anticipatory horrora for the\npatient. He shows moving pictures\nln   Itt\nThis hippy spot ls ln Stockport,\nLancashire. The patient enters a\nroom In total darkness and ts met\nby an attendant with an electric\ntorch, who indicates a vacant chair.\nA beam of light flashes across the\nroom on to a screen, and soon he\u2014\nor she\u2014Is watching a film. The dentist has made a hobhy of cinepho-\ntography and has fitted the room up\nin professional style. Radio music\nprovides   the   accompaniment.\nOne problem has yet to be overcome. Many patients have been seen\nto creep back to the waittng-room\nafter treatment. That makes for congestion.\nThen there are others, like the\nmother who brought her small boy\nto  have  a  tooth  extracted.\n\"Are the pictures showing tonight?'' she asked. \"No,\" wae the\nreply,   \"tomorrow.\"\nWell, he can come again tomorrow,\" she said. \"It |sn\"t aching very\nbadly.*'\u2014Toronto Evening Telegram.\nAuction and\nContract Bridge\nB7   tht   trnrld's   leidlnr   Authority,\nMILTON C. WORK\nTHE RD1J5 0F ELEVEN\nAND LOGIC\n\u2666 K-IO-3\n\u2022M_\n\u2022ft-M\n\u2666A-l-2\n\u2666J-l-M-i\nwar\n\u2666\n\u25a0M\n*ll)-5'\n____.\n\u00bb!\n\u2022J-7-4\n\u2666 10-9-7-3\n\u26661\n\u2022J\nAd-Ill\nSOUTH\nA.\n-3-6-5\nSM\neifH\n\u2666 n-t-2\n\u2666K-7-4-!\n_S4\nin cases such as these, newspapers are always between\ntwo fires. By some they are accused of publishing too\nmuch, and by others they are charged with not covering\nthe news thoroughly. A newspaper's business is to give\nthe news, fairly and impartially, and always truthfully.\nNevertheless, in those rare cases where the criminal\nmight be assisted by the publication of some fact in connection with the ease, it is seldom that the authorities\nfind a newspaper unwilling to cooperate. Usually, the\ncourse of justice is best served by a full and frank exposure of any crime which may be committed. The public\nis entitled to know what has occurred within its own\ncommunity, and in the world at large, and everyone\nknows that publicity is not only a deterrent to those who\nmight be tempted to commit a crime, but it also gives\nwarning to the public of the dangers with which it is\nthreatened by criminals.\nTo take a case very near at home, it is quite obvious\nthat if the Vancouver papers did not publish the news\nof hold-ups when they occur, the hold-up business would\nbe made much easier for the foot-pad class.\nRevenue From Smohers\nThe extent to which smokers are taxed in Canada is\nnot generally realized. That no longer are any serious\ncomplaints being voice- against the high rate of taxation is probably due to the fact that the public appreciates the necessity for maintaining Federal revenues, and\nbecause it is the practice of nearly all countries to secure\na large proportion of their revenues from the consumers\nof tobacco, though the rates taxation in Canada are\nhigher than those imposed by the majority of other\ncountries.\nExcise duty collected on cigarettes during the 1931\nfiscal year amounted to $30,499,222. Import duties collected on manufactured tobacco during the same period\namounted to $631,237. The total of excise taxes and excise duty was $ .2,189,989. This total of more than $12,-\n000,000 does not include sales tax.\nFor the fiscal year ending March 1932, the amount of\ntaxation was very much larger than for the preceding\nyear, the total excise duty on cigarettes alone having\nrisen to $49,322,471.\nExports of Canadian tobacco reached during the 1931\nperiod a total of 6,322,067 pounds. Great Britain was the\nlargest importer of Canadian tobacco, using 4,820,608\n'      ids- The Becond largest importer of Canadian tohacco\nS_S2' with 999*886 vomds-   China c\u00b0\u2122 third\n19 pounds, and Holland in fourth place with\n\"Four-thirty; time for Madam's reducing tablet\nand tonic!\"\nNew York's \"Cordial Shops*\nIt might be a 'eak for some of\nNelson's dentlst-ttoers if some nf\nour dentists would institute this ln\ntheir places of business.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nFrank Bittersby. whose trilbrs\nhave won fime, and who probably\nkno^s hs much about H_tM-__l_H\nheadRcar as anyone, pnys: \"Show me\nthe way a man wears his hat and\nI will tell you at once the sort of\nman he ls.\" The man to trust, he\nthinks, Is the happv--;o-lurkv fellow\nwho goes about with his trilby on\nthe back of his head.\nOne of the things that Mr. Bit-\ntfrsby has 4lMOt*f_-_ In th* course\nof his career Is that there ls a h'z\ndlfferecpe bp^wfpn a ficot_-rnan's bead\nnnd an Englishman\"*, whlrh fOM to\nprove that physically M well fj by\nreputation th*> Scotsman In lnn_r\u00bbr-\niieaded. Hats sold In Ehghnd are\npp'-prallv made one and oh*-hair\nInches longer than they are bro.id,\nhut for the Scottish market *ht\"\nhav* to be oiv and >vven-eiehM's\ninrhcji longer t !_<_..  tiiey are  broad.\nW>11. I fT'iess that (roes to prove\nthat   the   Scot*-)-,   are   bro.d-n-lnc.ee],\nAnd    we    w*    by    an     Edmonton j\nnewspaper   that.   Dan-y   McKI\"lev   is\nromptnp in UM limelight in Edmonton   amateur   baseball   circle?.   Hc'fi\nworking  behind  the  bat  wily,  ft hi? I\nrarrot-tnoppri rlKht-hnnder from Po- \u25a0\nnoka\u2014\"Red\" Tullock\u2014on the n.oun.1. I\nmd    It   appea~s,    according    to    1 he\nhend'-lnes.  that thev  nre  stealing nil\ntlie    fclory    from    Edmonton    locals.\nHeKlatff   j-liyed   defence   for   the\nWolves here last winter and li well-\nknown  in  Nelson  sporting  circles.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nBetween you and .Li\u2014We wonder\nwhere our wandering editor Is tonight.\nThirsty inhabitants of Greenwich\nVillage were alarmed one day recently to see a large new padlock on\nlhe door of a popular Sixth avenue\nshop. Gone from the window were\nthe innocent groe-.i ginger ale bat*\nties which had identified lt as one\nof Manhattan's legion of \"cordial\nand beverage\" shops. On the sldew.ilk\n\u25a0este-1 several battered milk enns.\nPasted on the d=or was a notice that\nread: \"Closed lor violation of the\nprohibition law.\"\nBut before the day was over villagers were reassured. The sign had\nnot been up 24 touts before above\nthe padlock notic. appeared a rew,\nlarger sign: \"We arc avtr doing\nbusiness at our new shop just\nround   the  corner.\"\nThef-e two signs, says Time, told\nthe wh'ie story of federal efforts to\nhalt the rapid, spread of Nsw York's\nMMr-ttll find beverage shops where\nalmo-st anybody can buy a bottle of\ngin for |t, Tw0 years ago one of the\nfirst ta open was the shop at 201\nEast, Forty-fourth street. Gin, whiskey, brandy and liqueurs WW. open'\nly dlsplajed and openly sold.\nWhile   the   proprietor,   one   Mlk?,\nopenly scoffed and a Columbia university   student   wrote   to   President! owners\nH:.ovrr   about   lt.   thc   United   S\ndtvrlc.t,    ptt-rney's    office    Ml i\nnew all that remain In that original cordial shop, btit some 4000\nsimilar shops are d.ing a thriving\nbusiness  throughout   the   city.\nA cordial shop tl easily Identified.\nft is a small, neat _\u00bb;ore ln the window of which are acme finder ale\nor non-alcoho'ic liqueur bottles,\na pot of flower-. No longer is liquor\n>_n display inside; cautious vendors\nnow keep it under the counter, behind a partition, or ln au Ice box\nout back. In some stores a prospective purchaser must bring an in*\ntroductton or answer qtuestlons, but\nin most of t'.:em aU comers are\nserved  with  cheerful   uniformity,\nSince January 1 the United States\nhad raided 831 cordial shops, but because of the light overhead expense\na raided operator can open a new\nshop \"Just around the corner'* within\n34 hours. Most of them do. No\nlicence  is needed.\nThough only  37 are listed  in the\nbusiness    telephone    directory,    the\noperators   D emselves   are   authority\ntCI    the   estimate    th.it    New    York\nnow has more than 4000. New ones\nare   being   opened   at   the   rate   of\nabout    50    per    week.    Like    grocery\nfttrm  some   nre   run   by   individual\nothers  belong  to  chain.,   of\nnn 120 or 40. S.nsll  s'.ocks  are  kept,  in\nbe 1 the    shop.'\u2014enough    for    one    day's\nmatter would be taken up in \"regu- trade. Chata operator* go from shop\nlar\" order. Indictments would be | bo shop in the mornings, leaving\nKMffct.   Three  \"For   Rent\"'   nl-\u00bbn_.   are  supplies.\nInvention Is Snore Cure\nThat Body of Yours\nBj   J.MKS   W.   BAKION\nEPSOM SALTS FOR SLUG-*CM \"\u2022 K% up *n tnnsmmstion t-n I\nGISH LIVER\n1 apeak about the lh more frequently than about any oth'_ part\nof the body. Your doctor will tell you\nthat the liver ls truly called 'the\nking of the organs' owing to lhe\nnumber and Importance of the Joba\nthat lt has .o d_> ln -hat body of\nyours.\nAs one quarter of all the blood of\nthe body ls always in the liver you\ncan see how nnesF-a- it is that the\nliver be kept . Alve and that f.\ndrainage of bile away iro* t the liver\nand gall bladder should not be interfered with in any way. A slow\nacting liver and Rail bladder, or where\nthere la some slight infection irritating the lining of vessels and tubes\nThe above hand was played in a\neame of Contract Bridge. South,\nwith no biddable suit, a No Trump\ncount of 15 and one stopper ln\nevery suit, bid one No Trump.\nWest passed and North's three No\nTrumps became the final contract.\nNorth's count of 13 wai 2 more than\nhe required for his bid, but 4 short\nof the count needed to suggest a\nslam. If this ' and were being\nplayed at Auction bridge. South\nwould call one No Trump and obtain  an   uncontested   contract.\nWest led the Six cf Spades, dummy played the Trey, East the Queen,\nand South the Ace. Declarer's\nHearts were a shade stronger than\nhis Diamonds or Clubs, so he led\nthat suit and instead of ducking\n(which would have been sounder\nplay) won the trick with dummy\nHeart to South's Ace at trick 3. A\nthird round of Hearts put East ln\nthe lead av trick 4, West discarded\nSpade, snd East cashed his remaining high Heart cn which West\ngo another Spade. East then\nled the Queen of Diamonds which\nSouth w\u00b0n with the Ace, and South\nled the Spade Deuce which dummy's\nTen won. (East's play of the Queen\nat trick 1 marked West with the\nJack). Declarer thus made game,\ntaking three Spades, two Hearts,\ntwo Diamonds and two Clubs. Could\ngame   have   been  saved?\nTHE CORRECT PLAY\nThe, 4-2 distribution Declarer\nfound against him in Diamonds,\nClubs and Hearts should have per-\nm.tted East-West to save game.\nThe rule of eleven and a bit of\nlogic would do the trick. When\nWest led the Six of Spades. East\ncould figure that South held but\none Spade higher than the Six (11\nminus 6 equals 8 and East wes\nfour of thp five). If South's high\nSpade was the Seven or Eight, lt\nwas Immaterial whether East played\nthe Nine or Queen; but jf South's\nhigh Spade waa thc Jack, East's play\ncf the Nlne would lose a trick. If\nSouth held the Ace, East's play of\nthe Nine would gain a trick. With\nat least four Spades ln West's\nhand South cannot i Md more than\nthree; yet, having bid No Trump,\nhe probably has Spades stopped.\nTherefore. East she\" ( ..ave concluded that South's high Spade was\nthp Ace. East's play of the Spade\nNine at trick 1, combined with perfect defense throughout, would limit\nDeclarer to two tricks in each suit\nand set his  contract cne.\nTwenty Years Ago\n(From  The Dally  News of  May  29,\n1912)\nEvidence of the rapidity . with\nwhich the lands of tte Slocan river\nU being developed Is given by the\nsale* reported last night by D. St.\nDenis, Popoff & Crofts and T. A.\nItcbley of the B. C. Agencies, aggregating 1336 acres.\n\u2022 i    \u2022\nTurner Lee was struck In the\nhead by a newly shod horse yesterday and Vk'as seriously hurt. He waa\nattend-fed  by  Dr.  L. E. Borden,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAnother Slocan property, the Meteor, near the Slocan city, will\nen.\u00abr the shipping ranks shortly.\n\u2022 a    \u2022\nNelson lacrosse players defeated\nCranbrook 4-2 at Cranbrook May 24.\nNute, Ferguson and Cummins scored\nfor Nelson and Russci for Cranbrook.\ntrouble,   even   formation   of   atones f\nmay result. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nFor a great many years the treat-1\nment for this condition was __. dosej\nor doses of calomel, followed by ep-,\nsom salts a few hours later. Thi*l\ntreatment ls still  gerwraJly followed |\nA short time ago lt was felt that!\nInstead of   putting   oaiomel end  ep-f\nsom   salta   all   through   the   system,!\nthat the liver and gall bladder shouidl\nbe drained  or 'cleaned out'  by  put \u25a0\nting  t \u25a0>   epsom  salts  down  a thinF\ntube which went through the stomachW\nright  Into   the  small   Intestine andH\nthus  rlgi     where   the   gall   bladdenj\nand liver pour the bile Into the small]\nIntestine.\nAfter the epsom salts had beenl\ndown a short time tbe patient Ilea]\ndown with h ad lower tluo the rest)\nof the body, and the thick dark bllel\ncomes Tip the tube and so out of thq\nbody. This method of <\" 'Jnage ha*\nbeen very effective, and It certain! ]\ngives the patient real satisfaction 1\nsee that 'black Btu.f* come out >\nthe tube.\nSome expense la likewise saved 1\nthose cases where the patient see-in\nunable to Insert the tube himself an^\nrequires the doctor's assistance. Dr\nJohn Tllden Howard, who advocate-\nthe use of the epsom salts by mouth |\nInstead of by the tube, suggest* that\nabout two level tablespoonfule of ep- |\nsom salts be given tn one quarter ot\na glass of cold -vater. This may be\nonce a week or more often lf neces-J\nsary.\nIt Is Interesting to know that tucS\nan old remedy la atlll considered the!\nbest medical treatment for ftlugglah|\nliver and gall bladder.\n25 Years Ago\ndemocracy\nIs Defended\nI     British invention leads the world,\nsays   the   London   -jnnies,   and   no\nM-ouer   mtt   thr.   medical   profession,\ncome out strongly  in f.ivor of deep\nI sleep   than   th*   Br III.***   pit-Tit   of-\ntlcc   has   t.he   Joy   cf   registering   an I\ninvention which cures _BO-___f. It ls\na simple invention, w irked by fX^r-\ntriclty m the ordinary way and the j\nprtneiplc Is that aU sounds above a\ncertain low pl-ch of Intensity affect\na   special   microphone   which  close.\nan electric circuit-\nThen the lun bcglna, for a needle\nruns   in   and   out   ard   an   elec-.io\nshock is admlnstered and the snor-\ner   wakes   with   a   atari,   to   rcall\/e .\nFlowlv rind with gathering thankful- j\nMM  that  iic  Is not in  the  loctrlc\nchoir.   Bom   much   superior   to   thc\nold method of stopping snoring, the p\nIll-aimed shoes and hh.'sUerlng boi- ,\nster  that destroyed  r ha fiver  m.ftht\nhe standing on  the bedside tables!\nT.ie  worlds bedroom.-, will  be happier   plT'es,   and,   niw   the.t   qui***\nhumble   homes  are-being  wired   Ior\nelectric power as a r,.atter of course\nno rent will be too low to lncludi\nthis   essential   gadget,\nA  COMMON   BISK\nBut the worst snoring in that\ndone in public places, in clubs, and\nrailway carriages, and above all, in\ncabins at sea. Instead of affecting\nthe members of his own famJ v, who\naf'er all expect to have to bear him\n(or her, of course.) in all sorts of\nwavs tbe public -.norer offends perfect stranger8 who have paid for\ntheir seats. It la a very dangerous,\nthough strangely common risk to\nrun, placing of oneself at the mercy\nof   strangers   by   becoming   at   once.\nof the problem how  to make the   {from  \u25a0*.\nfirst class .vorth the rxtrr? money,\nby fitting Anti-Snore to first-class\ncarriages, just inside thc head rests\nDally  News of  May  2(1,\niw;>\nA.   R.   Fingland   will   return   from\nVancc>uver    next    week    t0    resume\nCIKACAO\nWe wish to commend with all\nthe sincerity of which we are capable the magnanimity of Senor\nGeneral Leon Jurado, who already\ndistinguished for innumerable acts\nof public and private generosity.\nand whose sympathetic and charitable nature is wen known through\nout the island now amplifies the\nscore of his beneficences by offering\nmeat without charge to those whose\ncircumstances are such a\u00ab to make\nthis gratuity acceptable. At present\nthis kindness will be limited to one\nday in ea^ch month ior each customer.\nGen. Jurado'e establishments in\nCuracao, as the public Is generally\naware, are supplied from hl\u00ab stock-\nraising haciendas In Venemicla,\nwhere only the choicest cattle are\nexploited. We respectfully solicit the\nattention of all our readers to this\nannouncement, in order that they\nmay not fall to profit by thig unusual opportunity. The days, and\nlocations designated nelpful distributions will be anounced shortly.\u2014\nLa rrensa, Willemstad.\n11U11M1111II1111111111II111111111111111 Ml M111\n\"BC1LD B.   C.' PAYROLLS\"\nPacific\nMilk\nNow\nTry\nBorne years ago Pacific Milk tn-l\nnounced It had discovered how tol\nretain ALL the natural cream freeh-I\nness in canned milk. Demand leaped!\nup and up. i\nNOW I Pacific Milk has found thel\nmethod o. packing liquids ln vacu-r\num  cans. This  was thought Impossible. , I\nTry this good milk ln vacuum!\ncans. The flavor of new milk, thel\nrichness of new cream\u2014and HQJif\nBritish   Columbia.\nPacific Milk!\nPlant   at   Abbotsford\n\"100% B. C. Ow-ifd and Controlled\"\nIllllllfllllllllllllMlllllIllMMIllMMIlTllll 1\nAlas!   taken   as   a   whole   first   class   operation*  on  the  L   II   2-_____~__i___\npassengers are drawn from the snor- ' \u2014\nIng wa.:k of life, wealthy nnd elderly men who move with difficulty\nand doze with ease. But, it may oe\np.\\-pecte.*_ that the readiest wrmand\nwill be from the private bMfct, be-\nciusc snoring ls not thc only nolae\nthat brines this invention into play,\nnnd many a harassed man will reflect th.it Mrs. Caudle could never\nbnve delivered her sustained curtain lcetures lf in her day electricity had been so usrfully harnp*\u00bbr-e;l\nfor the repression of discordant and\nui.wri.come sound.\nPolitical corruption has been made\ntho basis for a sweeping condemnation of de-nocracy, notes Gustavus\nMyers In Current History. Bands of\nforeign and American critics have\nseized _\u25a0>\u25a0 the prevalence of gra.'t\nproving anew the* impotence of\npopular government. Their anrumevt.\nthat demoency Is thoughtless,\nreckless an. Indifferent to corruption  ln  public affairs.\n\"Experience, however, has amply\ndemonstrated _:at no kind of government has been immune from cor\nruptlon,\" Mr. Myers malntaini. \"Few\nerrors  have  so firm   a   hold  as  the    _w]v]fS6 flnd   nlghIy offensive. In\nfalfa-KOd of crediting fine and noble; ra__\u201ers_\u201e  _____Z__tmZ \u201e\u00ab  \u201e _-_\u2022\nqualities t^, the class government\nwhich democracy supplan.ed. During\ncenturies of aristocratic govern,ncnt\ngross,   corruption   W_ I   rampant.\n\"But aristocracy waa -usually able\nto suppress any disclosure of Irs malfeasance; it shlelde-d it.-eir with\ndrastic penal statutes, exclirllng inquirers from its councils snd legislative bodies and prohibiting reports\nof Its proceeding*, in the public\npress. It fortified itself with severe\nlibel laws whose real purpose was\nt0 prevent publication of tho truth.\nIt purloined or destroyed public\nrecords. Througn distribution of\nsinecures or other rewards, subservient auihors were Induced to\ncreate fictitious reputations for their\npatrons.\"\nrailway carriage on a long Journ\u2014\nmurder can come very near, and\nyet a snore-r op_toslte ls not, recog-\nBlBtt by the railway companies\na valid reason for pulling\nchain.   It   ts   hard   to   imagine\nTen Years Ago\n(Trim   The   Dailv   Mens   of   May  ft,!\n1.122)\nTwo   more   mines   wop*,   added   t->\nf.e Lift of the fhlpners to the Trail,\nrtnclter this week, the Silver Hoard\nof Ainsworth and the C'.irpnsc of.\nI.ppublie,  Wash.\n\u2022 .    \u2022\nIn the final of the ladles' single!\nevent 0_ the Rolf tournament taster- j\nany Miss Ruth Armstrong be... Mrs,\ntUma 0'S..ea and In the men's,\nrlnubles j, g. Bunvan beat R. L.\nMcBride.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr,   and   Mrs.   F.   V.   Webber   who\nwere married ln New Denver _-n the\nholiday arrived ln the city yesterday\nen roire for flpokare.\nSejen miles of the Y.nlr r;-ad\nundrr construction has been sub-let\nand   work   is   progressing   r.ipUly.\nSilver^n.\n\u2022 a    \u2022\nAl Perkins of the Strat-hcona bar.\nsent two fine salmon to the hotel\nyiiterday    whlc-li   ts    caught    off\nKCRlO.\n\u2022 a    t\nM.   R.   McQuarrle   banqueted   the\n,rembers of the Nelson and Medicine\nHat iacrotse  trams  here  last  ni-jht,\nRevised figures of the mineral\noutput of thc province for r\u00bb)fl is,\n$23,000,000. !\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nC. Oansner yesterday purchased\n20-acre subdivision of the Sunshine\nranch   from   Toy   and   company.\nPROPOSES   THREE-CENT   COIN\nThe St. Thomas Times-Journal\nadvocates a return or the three-cent\ncoin, and we are incfltned to endorse the Idea. Many of our readers\nmay not remember when three-cent\ncoins were familiar currency, but\nthey came tn mighty handy at\nlimes, and would now, particularly\nas we have to pay that amount for\na postage stamp.\u2014Tlie Aylmcr Impress.\nThe Coeur d'AIene\nHotel\nIn the Heart\nof\nSPOKANE\nSTILL ACCEPTS CANADIAN MONEY AT\nPAR IN PAYMENT OF ACCOUNTS\nOccasionally we are asked whether we have\nmaintained our well-I.nown policy in this matter, in the face of current exchange charges.\nThis advertisement is to reassure you\u2014\nTbe HOTEL COEUR\nd'ALENE continues cs\npolicy of accepting\nCanadian money at\npar tn payment * of\nhotel   accounts.\nThe Coeur d'AIene li\nthe only hotel In\nSpokane that has\nfor years consistently\nmaintained this policy In regard to Canadian money-.\nSPOKANE, Wash.\nBuild     ships     for     rational     tie- \\\nhnm to put  . icney   In   the  p_*ckets ]\nthe'of   the  American   working  man   and!\nthe   out    Into    the    channels    of    trade.,\nrailways    equipping    ..very    carriage, j \u2014Mrs,   Frederick   WlHlaxs,   N .tlon&l .\neven    if   they   were   Joined   by   the , President,    American     Legion     Aux- j\nbookstall people, who must hat\u00ab the ! llisry.\namount of sleeping that ls done  In j\ntrains.\nBut   Is\nthere not hrrc a solution\nTh,. meek  will   inherit  what  part\n\"of   the   earth   greed   1-avcs,   if   any.\nAUNT HET\nTht _4rmy.\nTht Navy.\nTht Church.\n\\__.\n\"The gossips talk about her, but\nthere ain't nothln' wrong with a\nwoman that kisses a baby on the\nback  of  the  neck.\"\na\n'\u2022J-****'    ' A^U_.U_<\nc Scoot. Tht novelist playwright\u2014       and ths ladij-otssner.\nIIOW DRIVING   SIGNALS  BETRAY  THF,   DRIVER\n\u00b0assing Show. London.\nFREE JAP-A-LAC FREE\nENDURANCE HOUSE PAINT\nWITH EVERY PURCHASE of JAP-A-LAC House Paint, Floor\nEnamel or Porch and Deck Paint wc will give you Free, another\ncan 1-4 as large.\nNO STRINGS OR RED TAPE\nJAP-A-LAC PRODUCTS arc sold\nunder a Money Hack Guarantee.\nAbsolutely pure lead and oil, and\n\u25a0 tt ill cover 400 to 450 square feet to\nthe gallon, 2 coats.\nBuy  4  gallons  at  the  rrfular  price   and  recetra\n. 1 gallon free,\nliny   2  gallons  at  tho  regular  price  and   receive\n*.   gallon   free.\nBay  I   gallon  at   the   regular   price  and   receive\nI  quart free.\nBuy   \u00bb,.   gallon  at  the  regular  price;  and  receive\n1 pint free.\nTHIS MEANS A 25**- SAVING\nTO YOU\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWhblesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nNELSON, B. C. PHONE 21\n \u00a3&\nstrTl   MXPOK   DAILY   MEWS.   HEWON,   B,   C,   TRrBrTUY   MOVMXO   HAT   It.   1MJ\nfAOI   BtMJJI\nYMIR TEAM TAKES\nBALL GAME AT BIG\n24th CELEBRATION\n'Foot  Races   and   Obstacle\nRaces Find Entrants of\nAH Ages\nWILLIAM JONES\nWINS LOG SAWING\nRock  Drilling Contest  Goes\nto Edward Emilson and\nFrank Fatulla\nWILL U.S. WIN THE WALKER CUP?\nMm. \u00bb\u25a0 C May 25.\u2014Thl 34th of\nMay celebration bad a bad forenoon\nof snow, rain and hail, but at noontime It commenced to clear and the\nafternoon wae ideal for the rock\ndrilling contest and the ball game.\nThere were many visitors from Neleon, Trail. Salmo and thi surrounding district.\nThe ball game waa the last item\non the program for the afternoon.\nAfter a closely contested game, Ymir\nwon with t score ctf 12-11.\nThe dance ln the evening wa* well\nattended,   It  wm the largest crowd\nfor aotnetlme.\nRACE KBHt r.TH WERB AS FOLLOWS\nBoya\u2014Four to six years\u2014to yards;\nRoy FYaav. first; Bill Clarke, second,\nBoys\u2014Sir to eight\u2014BO yards;\nThomna Wltt-ny, first; W. Clarke,\nsecond.\nBoy*\u2014.Tight to 10\u201400 yards; Mike\nPoznikoff. flra.; R. Buah, second.\nBova\u2014Ten tfl 12\u201478 yards; (Jus\nriagel, first;  W. iUtnlkoff, second.\nBoy*\u2014 Twelve tfl 14\u2014100 yards,\n0. Morey, first; G. Cawly, second.\nBovs\u2014Sixteen or under\u2014 nrven start\n100 yards:' W. Dorey, mat; r. Gibbons, (second.\nMen's Open\u2014100 yards; M. Buck- I\nna, Trail first; H. Payant. Salmo, |\n;.\u00abcomi. ,\nGUIs\u2014Pour to six\u2014Handicap. M|\nyards; Jane Fair, Salmo, first; Slur-.\nley Llndntron, Salmo, second.\nOirla\u2014Six to eitrht\u2014oO lards: Shirley Undstron, first; Polly Verigin,\nii\u00abecond.\nGirls\u2014tight to 10\u2014Olive pair,\n.first; Shirley Undstron, second.\nGirls\u2014Ten to 12\u201475 yard;;; Lottie\nAnderson, first.\nGirls\u2014Twelve to li\u2014100 yards;\nAnnie Kaleenlboff, first; Annie poznikoff, second.\nLadles\u2014Eighteen and over\u2014Mrs.\nJ Pair, Salmo. flrat; Mrs. Villi Wilde,\nJ salmo, second.\nBoys relay under 14\u2014Salmo and\nYmir\u2014Ymir, first; Jim Grant, Elmer\nPetertou, Cui I.j.g.1 and Woodrow\n.Anderson,  ,\nBoys- broad jumt>->-13 and under:\n,, Kal-imikoff. flrat; C. Cawley,\n^second.\nMen's broad _unr>\u2014-M. Buckna,\njTrall, first; H. Payant, Salmo, second.\n[Ladles egg and _poon, -ace\u201418 and\nlover; Mrs. W. Miller.* Salmo, first;\njMra. L. Johnaton, Salmo, second-\nMen's wheel-marrow race; m.\n'Buckna. Trail, first; H. payant, Sal-\n|mo. second.\nLog   sawing   contest\u2014Men's?  Wll-\niliam JbnSs and Richard Jones; time\n32 seconds, first; Edwards P-nllson\nand John Rankin, time 39 seconds,\nsecond. Other teams competing were\n(Raymond Gllle ind Clifford Ander-\n\u25a0son; Tony Campo and Henry Payant,\n^Salmo; Fred iJarson and Jack ftap-\nJpler of Salmo; Alfred Cawley and\n|rred Undstrom both of Salmo.\nOne of the best features of the\nday was tha rock drilling contest:\nEdward Emilson and Prank Patrllla\nwith 27-ti Inches, first; Tommy\nWilkinson and . ack Sappier of Sal\nmo, second; Charles Anderson and\nClarenc\u00a9 Anderson with 17 inches.\nThis team had bad luck with their\nsteel ss moet every piece broke.\nEver tine* th* flrat International\nWalker cup m* tehee were played it\nSouthampton. N. Y., lo years ago\nFrancis Oairau his b-en a member\nof thl U. S. A. team.\nOuimet li Mptain of the teim\nthat will meet thi British this year\nat the Brooklyn Country club and\ntry to keep clean the record of\nnever having lost to the English.\nBut your guess Is u good as the\ngroceryman's w to ths men who\nwill hold down the -ther seven positions  on  the  American  team  this\nyear.\ntr   \u2022   \u00ab\nBobby Jones, oaptaln of the 193')\nteam, has retired, George Von Elm\nhas turned \"business-man golfer.\"\nRoland Mackenzie and Doc WJlfng,\nwho were '\"hot\" lit other yearc. hare\ncooled off- Jess Sweetste:, also a\nmember of last year's team, is out\nof It for business reasons.\nIt ls Impossible that Harrison\nJolinston, former amateur champion,\nwill make the team. He failed to\nqualify fof the amateur since winning it at Pebble Beach In 1929.\nDon Moe also failed to qualify for\nthe amateur laat year, but he probably will be reserved a position due\nto his fine showing m 1030.\nIt appears that, with the exception\nof George Votgt, whose choice seems\nto be a foregone conclusion, youngsters will make up  the rest of the\nLEHMAN      MCCARTHY      Dl\/NLAP      V0IGHT\nMOE      VEST\/LAND    H0MA.NS       OUIMET\nthe North and South Amateur for\nthe second time.\nA sure bet will be Johnny Lehman. He has done well ln amateur\nchampionships,, winning th# western in 1930 and tylnf for the\nmedal last year.\nJack West.ami ip ready for Walk\u00abr\ncup play. He was runner-up to\nOuimet in the amateur laat year and\nIfl former French amateur champion, If he Plays as well this summer, he surely will mako the team.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nIf 19-year-old BUly Howell had a\nllt.li more sxperience, lie would be\nthc eighth member. Golfers still\ntalk alwut hla match with Outmet\nui the semi-final* last year when\nhe  lost 2-1.\nBut pirking the eighth member\nls a hard assignment. There still\nmuat be considered such leading\nplayers as Lawson Little, L-Vter Bol-\nBtad, Maurice McCarthy, Ducky\nYates, Charley Reaver and Johnny\nGoodman.\nMcCarthy seems to rank. Hi was\nalternate on ths 1928 team, Intercollegiate champ the same year and\nmetropolitan champion In 1930. He\nwent to the semi-finals in the\namateur, lonlng to Jack Westland.\n3-2. He ia ths chap, by t_v way,\nwho made the 215-yard liols-ln-onc\non the 17th at Merlon In the <juali-\nfylng round.\nHere ti the team that probably\nwilt start against the Britishers:\nFrancis Oulmet fcaptain., DonBiri\nMoe, Georg,, Voight, OtM Horn an s,\nGeorge    Dun 1 up,    Johnny    Lehman,\nwaa an alternate on the 1928 t.am out in the first round.   He waa the     George   Dunlap,   holder   of   the Jack West-Iand an    Maurice McCar-\nAmon? these Gene Humana is  and   tied   Jones   for   the   medal   at  runner-up    when    Jonea    completed   intercollegiate   for   two   years,   can-   thy,   and   alternates   Lester   Bolstad\nthe outstanding candidate.    Homans   Pebbly  Beach,  but  like  Jonea  went   the cycle at Merlon. not  bcoverlooked.    Ha  recently   won   snd Laweon Little.\nTRINITY GIRLS\nHAND DOWN 25-8\nDEFEAT TO HIGH\nWhip   Senior   High   School\nGirls In Second Game of\nGirls' Softball League\nTrinity defeated th. Senior High\nteam 29-8 In the second game of\nthe girls' softball league at the\nJunior High last night. The Senior\nHigh girls were outclassed from the\nstart  of the  seven   innings of  play.\nThree pitcher* were used by the\nSenior High in an unsucessful attempt to subdu\u00ab the heavy hitting\nof thl Trinity girls. The Trinity\nteam got 28 hite off the offerings of\nthe three pitchers, 10 of whtch were\nconverted into runs. The Senior\nHigh team got 13 hits, eight of\nwhich were turned Into runs. Seventeen walks were handed out by\nthe High School pitchers, while only\nthre\u00ab were given by th\u00a9 Trinity\ntwtrler.\nJackie Wlnahtp, pitcher for the\nTrinity team, was the outstanding\nplayer of the game, both at the bat\nand in the box. In five times to\nbat she got five hits, three of them\nbeing home mns. In the box she\nstruck out lo of the Co-eds and\nwalked three.\nDelphlne Denlson was the first\npitcher for the High School, She\nstruck out ttiree and walked two.\nEvelyn Johnson went to the box ln\nthe third inning. Bhe struck out\ntwo and gave passes to 10 Trinity\nplayers. Margaret Beltncr replaced\nher in the fifth. She was responsible\nfor three strikeouts and five free\npasses  to  first.\nThe lineups, with individual scores,\nwere:\nTrinity\u20148. Boomer, o, 3; J. Win-\nship, p, 3; A. Brown, lb. 2; J. Mar-\nipodl, 2b, 3;  I. Oughtred,  3b, 5;  E.\nStewart,\n88,\n,  8;   B,  Johnson.\nrt;\nI\nWalker,\nIf.\n_;  T. rarker, et,\n3;\nH.\nMarapodi,   c\n_\nSenior\nHigh\u2014O. Head, c; D\n. Den.\nlson, p.\nss;\nM. Thompson, lb.\n1;\nM\nBeltner,\nit.\np. 3; P. Gamble.\n3b;\na\nHanson.\n11;\nK.  McNaufthton,\ncf;\nK\nJohnson,\n. p.\n2b; J. Fisher, ss.\n1;\nM.\nPhillips,\nrf.\n2; P. Gibbon. A. Willets.\nO. Goucher umpired the jame.\nSEMI-FINALS ARE\nREACHED\/WOMEN'S\nTENNIS DOUBLES\nQuarter   Finals   Reached\nMen's in  French\nChampionships\nin\nAOTEUIL, prance, May 25 (AP) \u2014\nPlay in tM French tennis championships today advanced to the semifinal round of women'* doubles and\ntho quarter finals of the men's and\nmixed doubles.\nMlas Kitty McKane Godfree snd\nMrs. Fred James, British pair, were\ndefeated ln the women's doubles by\nSenorlta Alvarez of Spain and Jo-\nsane Sigart of France, 6-4. 6-4.\nMrs. Helen Wills Moody and, Elizabeth Ryan, the United States champion's   partner   who   now   lives   in\nHome Run Kings\n(By the Associated press)\nHome   runs   yesterday   \u2014   Terry.\nGiants;    Klein,    Phillies;    Koenecke,\nGlines;  Hurst, Phillies;  Hafey, Reds,\none each.\nThe leaders\u2014Fog, Athletics, ' 14;\nRuth, Yankees, II, Collins, Cardinals, 11; Terry, Glante. 10; Klein,\nPhillies 9.\nLeague totals\u2014American, 151; National   123;   grand   total,   273.\nMcKINLEY STARS\nIN BALL OPENER,\nEDMONTON LEAGUE\nRepresentatives\nof Fernie Break\nTwo Records, Meet\nFERNIE, B. C, May 3-*\u2014Fernie\nse nt a number of athletes to the\nKootenay District School Athletic\nmeeting at Klm-barley on Saturday.\nTwo of the nine records of the\nassociation which were broken on\nthe olnder track at this meet were\nto the credit of the Fernie district.\nFern ie schools mad 16 poln ta to\ntheir credit. Of the Pernio representatives who attended the meet\nNat Lynch of tho public ach-ol won\ntlie Junior boys' half mile race nnd\nlowered the record time for the -as-\nsoclatloti by two seconds. Ho alao\ncame third In the boys broad Jump.\nMamie Atkinson of the high school\nwon the 75 yards Junior champion-\nskip hop and came third ln the\nacnlor (.iris championship race. Grant\nHamilton of  Fernie high  won third\nIlarcy and Another Newcomer Form Brilliant Battery\nto Take Honors\nEngland, scared a shaky victory over ______ \t\nthe   Swiss-French   team   of   Colette I place tn the senior lbb yards.\nPa.vot    and    mXmtmmf   Barbier, ,7-6,      m    this    meet    Battler,    Newgate\n5-7,  6-0. I schools star athlete broke the J-tf-tOr\nMrs.   Godfree  and   Q.   P.  Hughes; ptff vault reccrd and won the event\nHooks and Slides\nBy William Broucher\nlost in the mixed doubles to Ida\nAdamoff and Christian Doussus,\nFrench  team, 3-6,  6-4, 6-3.\nMrs. Moody, paired with Sidney B.\nWood, Jr., defeated Cecil Durand\nMerc ler \"-nd Francois Terrier, 6-3,\n6-1, to gain the quarter final round\nln the mixed  play.\nBe not forgetful to entertain\nstrangers; for thereby some have\nentertained angels unawares. \u2014 Hebrews,   13:3.\nby a Jump of 8 feet 6 Inches.\nPOSTPONEMENTS\nIN BASEBALL\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nNone.\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE\nSt. Louis at Detroit, ram,\nCleveland at Chicago, rain.\nINTERNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nBuffalo it Toronto, rain.\n<Froni  thp   Edmonton   Bulletin)\nEDMONTON, Alta . May 25\u2014While\nhe was carving a masterpiece of\npitching perfection. \"Red\"' Tullork,\na sturdy, carrot-hrippcd mound-inum\nfrom Ponoka. took time out to\npair with his battery-mate, Darcy\nMcKInley, to steal all the batting\nhonors in eight and give Young\nLiberals a spectacular 8-6 triumph\nover South Side Arctics at Diamond\npark Sunday night in the opcm\ngame of the 19..2 Senior Amateur\nBaseball   league  schedule.\nThe*.- two newcomers to Edmon*\nton baseball ranks\u2014McKInley halls\nfrom Drumhelier\u2014stole tho entire\nshow in a game th.it ended in a\n_ensatloi.nl victory for the Politicians when the caching ii.If of the\nbrilliant battery poled a home run\nover the right field fence In the\nninth Inning to |fl0fl three rtUH ifl\nadd to the five which were belted\nln by the big bat or TUllOflk. who\nincluded a homer over the left field\nwall and a triple ln his great, exhibition.\nDftrcy played hockey for the\nWolves In the intermediate league\nhere list winter, and is well-known\nin Nelson sport circles. He left Nelson early this spring vlth his family when tliey returned to their\nhome   town,   Drumhcller,\nMICHEL FOOTBALLER*\nWEAT   CORBIN\nCORBIN. B. C, May 25\u2014The Corbin footballers went down to defeat before the |f_fl_M- tenm on\nMichel ground to tho tune of-4-0\non Sunday, May 23.\nPROCTER SPORTS\nARE SUCCESSFUL\nColor Not Lacking\nin \"Great Shireg\"\nIfiAlfAHViua. orv\n\\P&mo*rVM GlltS?\naw\ns4~\/tmist,Hfm t\\n      \u00bb\"'\nBRITISH GOLFERS\nTURN BACK LAST\nENTRANTS OF U.S.\n(Br   Al   MMNt)\nThe  Boston   Braves  aud\nYork Yankee* have the\ncolorful teams in the two league*\nThe Braves with the \"great Aft\nflhtres\" and the Inimitable \"Rabbit''\nMarai-vUie have probably tho only\ntwo ball players lh ciptlvtiy who\ncan anywhere near* match Babe\n| Ruth and Leu tS-te-f tn color and\nbox office  appeal.\nShires haa had enough sdverMaing\nt-Q make even an ordinary b.ili player j\nia gate attraction and Marnnville had]\nI plenty of color as  \\ai back as  1914]\nUncertain Weather Does Not!fllul ha* b*fn tmmt adding to it\nas the years pane.\nRuth of course li in. a clflJw by\nhimself in the \"color league\" both.\naa an Individual and aa a slugger '\nGehrig belongs because of his gre_*.\nall-around ability both it the bit\nand on the field.\n_3_MM Is such i dearth of colorful\nplayers of the old achool of Rube\nWaddell, Bugs Raymond, Mike Don-\ntln, Johnny Ever* and dorens of\nothers that the fans ought to welcome the \"Oreat Shires\" back Into\nthe majors with open arms,\nRemaining   Three    Defeated\nin Third Round for\nAmateur Title\nMUIIirtELD, Scotland, May 2j\u2014\n(AP)\u2014 Orest Britain turned back\nthe Im*. threat, of invading united\nfltates golfers to capture the BrtUs-t\nama'cur title today when the three\nsurvivors of an original de_c_j*t.ot-\ncf 11 went d-own to defeat in tha\nthird   round.\nDavid Martin, outstanding of tn\nrt-m.itnlng trio, wa* the first to fall.\nHe VMfl followed #h ortly by the\nSweeney brothers, Charle*. and Robert.  flttMlMs-fl of Oxford.\nUtrtla played _W0 rounds to,lay,\ndrfpaitng Bernard Darwin, British\ngolf writer, two and one Ui the\nmorning, but in thl aiterno,:n fell\nbcf.ro 1.. Shaw, an unheralded player from Manchester, two lip.\nOnly one golfer selected lor tlw\nBritish Walker cup team survived\nthe third round. He ta Eric Mc-\nRuvie,   BcoUl-h   international!At.\nT A. Bourn, well known British\nplayer, defeated Charlca Sweeney,\ncaptain of t>.,e Oxford team, one\nup. Robert -Sweeney waa eliminated\nby A. J. Peer'h, flBkt bufl up.\nT.   A    Torrance   wan   surprisingly\noverwhelmed     by - the    01-year-old\n. Jftflk   Maclean   of   Bankhead,   and\nihe  NewF]>M,r HMttmnJ, another of ths Br.t-\ntwo  H-OK.jjfl fltsndbys. wsa cllmln*t\u00abii by \u00bbaai\nMcKintay,   a   youngster.\nHamper   Crowds\nAttendance\n|N0T ENOUGH FISH a\nJack Sharkey begins hla training]\n'campaign leading up to the Schmel-'\nMf encounter by going fishing. He\nwould have to fish a long while,\nhowever, to find enougfh to fill that\nstadium.\n*   \u2022   *\nFRANKIE; PLEASE WRITE\n-Rankle Friach hasn't broken Into\nprint lately. He is i-_fl second ba__e-\nman of thi world champion (19311\nCardinals and predicted in March\nthat. Dlmy IMin would make the\nfans  forget  Burleigh  Grimea.\nPA fl TNG  ME.   GRIMES\nMe-anwtilli Mr. Grimes, m%Q has\nbeen down with flu, has been of\nno help to the Cube, but they have\nbeen winning without hltn. When\nMr. Grimes gets going, Mr. McGraw\nmlgfrit have something else to t*ay\nabout the pennant race, but It\nwouldn^t be anything to print.\ni.AND   LOUDLY,   TOOI\nFloyd \"Babe\" Herman Is not a\nradio broadcaster, but every time\nhe makes a base hit in Cincinnati,\nit echoes all over Brooklyn.\nGBVPPLERS  (1F,T  IT\nM. Jacques Curley, whose wrestlers\nare swarming all over the country,\nhas been forced to move his little\noffice into a suite in the Times\nbuilding. Maybe the wrestlers will\nbring back prosperity. At least they\nhave brought it __. certain quarters.\nBCD  GOES  TO  WOKK\nBud   Teachout's   vacation   Is   over.\nBud ls the pitcher f-ent from the\nCuba to ..!\u25a0\u00a3 Cardinals in the Orimee-\nWllaon deal. The Cards didn't have\nenough un lfor-iis to go a round, so\nBud had to alt, in the stands moat\nof the time. Now, Bud has been\nsent to Kocheeter, Car.linal farm.\nMaybe the Cardinal*' front office\nfigured that would be-cheaper than\nacquiring another uniform.\nB.C. l2Yf.lROI.il\n\"This advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British\n| Columbia.\"\nPFX^CTT-R B. C., May 35.\u2014In spite\nof the uncertain weat'-er a laj-ge\ncrowd was in attendance at the annual school sports of the Procter Superior school which were held at Bun-\nshine Bay on Msy 24. The results\nof the eventa were aa follows:\nGlrla' HO yard daah, 6 and 1 years\u2014\nHnrel Croaby( first; Betty Kinney,\nsecond.\nBoys' 60 yard d\u00bbsh, fl l 1 t years-\nWalter Macl_enn-n, first; Don Kinney, aecond.\nBoys and girl* under 9\u2014Waiter\nToy ior first; Ian MacLeod second; Peggy MacLeod. 1   rd.\nBoys' SO yard dash, under 7 years\u2014\nCleand Taylor first; Bertie Lorna!. second.\nGirls' 50 yard Iflflfc, 8 and P yeara\u2014\nRose Forbes first; Edith Johnson second; Frances McMuilm. third,\nBoys' 50 yard dash 8 and 9 year*--\nIan Cairn, first; Bliss Kinney, second,   Miko   bclowskl,   third.\nGlrla race, 10 and 11 years\u2014Alice\nCrosby, first; Mary (.wnrtz, second.\nBoy.s' race, 10 and ll years\u2014Walter Fitchett. first; Hoy Homes second; Henry Johnson, third.\nGirls' 75 yards 10 and 14 yeara\u2014\nEva Smith Nelson, first; Emmie Cms-.\nby, second; Ian MacKinnon,  third.\nBoys' 75 yards, 10 and 14 years-\nGilbert McMilllin, first; James Heigh- '\nton. secord;   Nick Apostolluk,   third.\nGirl's 75 yard dash over 14 years\u2014\nStella Crosby first; 'Hilda Helght-on,\nsecond.\nBoy'H race. 13 years and over\u2014-Gilbert McMuIlln first; Robert Helghton\nbecond;   Hnilum MacKinnon,  third,\n100 _'\u00bbrd   dash, open\u2014Angus  MacKinnon, first; David Kenneway, sec- j battle,\nond; J. Lewis, third.\n75 yard dash, ladles open\u2014MflUfl\nCrosby, first; Hilda Heigh ton, second,\nEva Smith Nelson, third.\nSchool boys' high _ump--Halia.ni\nMacKinnon, first; Gilbert McMulltn.\nsecond; Robert Heighton, third.\nMean's open high Jump \u2014 Angus\nMacKinnon, first; Bill Ling, Balfour,\naecond;  J. Irvine, third.\nGirls'     open    ________     Jump\u2014Hilda\nBottled\nScotland\nKIMBERLEY FIGHT\nFINISHES IN TIE\nMorrison, Kimberley, Mullen,\nVancouver, Scrap; Edwards\nWins His\nKIMBmLEY. B. C, May _J5\u2014Patsy Mullen of Vancouver, cousin of\nthe famous Tommy Gibbons, and\nMurdo Morrison erf Kimbcr.ey.\nfought six determined rounds to a\ndraw In a boxing \u00abnow held hero j\nlast Saturday night. Both boys took\nplenty of punishment, the lift I _\nround bringing the fans to their\nfeet time and time again, A return\nbout Is planned for the two, to be\nheld  in  two weeks.\nThe special event between Kid\nHughes. Michel, and Fred Edwards\nof South Slocan. welterweight-*?, went\nthe full six rounds, with Edwn.ds\nhaving  tlie   best   of   the   n run ment. .\nAngus Morrison, Kimberlev defeated Mickey Stewart of Marysville In\nthe  hemi-windup   in   a   Ufbtwllfht\nINTERNATIONAL   BASEBALL\nLEAGIE     IIFHLTK\nHeading 4-4.  Jersey City   .-5.\nRochester   6.   Montreal   7.\nBaltimore 7, Newark 6,\nCOAHT LEAGIE BALL BCOBES\nThe ftntn of\ngenuine So>f\nwhinkiei,   di*\ntilled,   \u00absed\nin-tlic-wuod.\nblended    and\nBOTTLED   in\nEdinburgh,   Suit\nland and ihippci1\nto (.'an._d._ in tapoi\nand sealed W \\ o-.\nnd  '10 vi.  buttta\n(DXb_Uu_T_s\n(fafudmion,\nScotsimisky\nHeigh ton, Procter, third;   Helen Ling, I Seals\nAt San Francisco:\nfissions    8\nBalfour, first; Eva Smith, Nelson.\nthird.\nGirls-, potato race\u2014Eva Smith first;\nEthel Ling, second; Annfo Miu-Rln-\nnou, third.\nSlow bicycle race, open \u2014 Hallmn\nMacKinnon, first; George Frances,\nsecond.\nE.g and .spoon race. r--*n's open-\nBill Ling, B-iJf ur, flrat; j. Irvine,\nsecond; J, Inttb, Nelson   third.\nSehool bova' pole vault\u2014Gilbert.\nMcMullen; first; Hill am MacKinnon.\n\u25a0flOOOdi Mathew Alymer, third\nSchool bovs' running bron<i jump\u2014\nGilbert McMuIlln, first; HiUifji Mac\nKinnon, aecond. Nick ApOfi'-oiiv.k.\nthird.\nGirls' open broad .lump\u2014Si ells\nCrr*by, first; Eva Smith. ROOM.\nMyrtle Johnson, third.\nMen's open broad jmnp \u2014- Angr.i.\nMacKinnon< first; Dflrid Kenneway,\nsecond.\nD. Maclntoah, prtncipaj ot tat\nProcter school waa in charge of the\nprog-vim.\nBaseball's\nBowcrl  and  Hofmann;   IfecOoUSll,\nHenderson and Ward, Peneb*ky.\nThis  nilvertlfPtnent  Is  not   pnUtsftflfl\nor ..ispla.ed  by  the LIhihm-  CflfltnH\nRoartt    or    by       ie    Um'-rnment    flf\nBritish   (tilntiiblii.\nMEDAL OF   HONOR\nGRAND PRIX\nI32D, LIMOGES\nFRANCI\nFOR HOT DAY FATIGUE\nBig Six\n\u25a0^\u25a0C\nTlVE LCUdEST PWCB OK. REu*0 rbft. ATrt0RCL**JH!?Rt.>\n^WkS*p\u00bbabBNJ6* AwTte Price sixeencG \u2022\u00bb\u2022\n(By the Assortsteil **Vr***\\\nPaul Waner climbed into the 400 I\nclaaa yest-erday ss all three Nn-'lonsl J\nleague members of the big eix im-i\nproved tJieir batting ;i.verages. Ths\nAmerican   leaguers   were   Idle. i\nWaner smacked four hit* ln five.\ntlmea it l?at, lifting Bll mark Ifl*\npoints to ,408. Chick Hafey and;\nHughey Crltz each made two hite in |\nfour time* up and Improved their I\naverages by four point* apiece.\nTha  I'apdlng;\nOABRH Tct I\n. 34 127 37 _i_ .441 |\n. 20 fl8 Ifl 3fl .400 j\n, 33 130 23 53 401 [\n, 29 110 22 43 ..191 I\n. 31 142 21 52 3M\n31   116 23 42 .353\nAccept Only\nthe Genuine\nB^FFAIO\nBRAVT>\nFoxx, Athletics ....\n| Lazzerl. Ysnkees\n' P. waner. Firatea\nHafey, Reds ....\nj Crltz aunts\t\nj Dickey. Yankee* __..\n1    When In doubt, lean io the side\nof  mercy.\u2014Cervantes. *.,\nP.LCARY\n\\t** d*v C\/NCER ALE\nHANCTACTV-ED BT\nCALGARY BREWING AND MALTING CO. LTD.\n face tmm\n\"\u2022THE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS,   >_X\u00bbOX.   B.   C,   IH-WD-Y   M0BNT5Q   MAY   2\u00ab,   1981*;\ni gV_A.F_.-l.\ni i v_\nll  EUV    I'\nB WH.ATYOUyik_m\u00aeassifiedFOR'EXSY\nMr. and Mrs. Kirk\nVisit, Johnstone\nHome, Crescent Bay\nSILVERTON, B. C, May 25\u2014Mr.\n__nd Mrs. <-\u00bb. Kirk and family of\nCreacent Valley, were the gueata of\nMr, and Mre. J. Johnson for a few\ndaya recently. They expect to leave\nby car for Nova Sco..a shortly,\nwhere   they   will   tn   future   reside.\nMrs. C. Norrie of Nelaon waa the\nfuest of Mra. O. _r_-nalde during\nthe  peet  week.\nR. A. Qrimei waa a week-end visitor  to  Nelson.\nMr. and Mra. O. Christiansen and\nbaby were visitors to Sllverton and\nSandon   on   Sunday   from   Castlegar.\nMra. E. Falrhurst and aon Jlmmie\nare  vlaiting  in  Nelson.\nMl_*\u00bb G. Teachey has returned\nfrom a couiffe of weeks* visit with\nfriends   at  Nakusp.\n8. Hunt of Trail motored ln on\nMonday. He waa accompanied on\nhis return trip by '\u25a0-Is daughter.\nMra. R. G. Turner, who has been\nthe guest of Mra. and Miss M. Emerson  for  the  past  month.\nMre. A. Mclntyre Is visiting in\nKaslo, the truest of Mrs, E. Hacking.\nMr*. W. Marshall entertained re-\nrontly in honor of he: daujhter\nEthel's birthday. Brid-jrf wa* enjoyed during, the early evening, the\nhonors being awarded to Miss H.\nCooper, Mrs. H. De? is, C. Richardson and E. Erickson. A dainty lunch\nwas aerved. ar.tl a musical hour followed. Those Invited Included Mrs,\nH. Dewls, Mrs. M. Emerson. Mrs. R.\nWhite, Mrs. M. Crowe, Mrs. P, Falrhurst, Mips D. ' \"hite, Miss M. Emerson, Miss fl. Cooper, Miss O. Peaehey, Mrs. E. G. -ner, of Trail,\nMiss E. Marshall, B. Marshall. R.\nBrickson, A. Hedburg, A. Erlckson.\nSr., C, Rlrhardson, K. *'cKlnnon. It,\nFalrhurst, A. Eri'-kson. p Peaehey,\nand   the  h net ess,  Mrs.   W,   Marsha II.\nGeneral Community\nBanquet Plans Are\nPostponed Castlegar\nCASTLEGAR, B. C, May   2S\u2014The\nO -C. G. owing to the state of general   business   conditions   have   d\u00ab'- j\neided fcg postpone thc idea of a gen- i\nrral   community  brnniin  untlll   ill\ncurrent accounts me jwld off   These '\nwhll*  n-ot  ]nxge  are  necs-varlly   Im- I\nport-ant at, the present, tlm**. a gen- !\nrral banquet nnd irood time will bt \\\nhe-Id  aa s\u00b0on   nn  conditions  warrant\nthe expense.\nThe library whh-h is open on the\nfirst and third Tuesdays of each\nmonth i;. growing in favor, a larK*\nnumber of books being taken out.\nThe Sattirday night dance of last\n**e*k. was -_n pnjoyahle affair\n\u2022 lthov\u00abrh owing to wet wrath*-* and\nother attractions In nearby towns,\nthere was not a large attcnds,noe.\nTlie drawing for the nt of table\nsilver and Pyrex dish resulted Ifl\nMr. Schswchuk of OMtmmmM nnd W.\nJ. Hardin* of Trail being the winners.\nAmple mln hu resulted In good\nhay prospoct* for t,hig district,\" although it, may result In poor setting of some of the fruits owing\nto the bees not. working pood.\nLNDLX   IO   .L.-t>-iir_\u00a3D   AV9\nAGtM!.   W.Mtp (II.\nU  MAti.mi.l-.   (MR   HIKK UH\nAL lUMOUILtS   IUK   bALt <4\"l\nHhfcS (56\u00bb\nItlKillS tU\nliUils, LALNCHF.S FOR   EtM (441\nbOAls,  UlMllU  IOB   SALE (44)\nbOAIS. LALN(llt>    HAM'LU \u00ab\u00abf\nULM.SE&H   UPI'OBttMTILb .3-0)\ntANAKIIS    IOK   BALE (9)\nCA.&   ANU   OOl.S  IOK  RALE {Ml\nCAIS    AND   HOU-*    ..AMU. (50)\nOKI MVM..hLMi (7)\n-AKM   AMI   IMIHY   rHUULCR (-IS)\nFA KM    PKOPFKTV    FOR   _\u00abALE (36'\nFOK   BALL   OK   E*< HV.NOL (37)\ntOK    ^AI.E   OB   KtM Hi)\ni I KM.-HI 0 KOOMS I-OK RENT US)\nFl KMMIFH   BOOMS   WAMED (1-)\nII llMllhi.   IOB   SALE (\u2022**.)\nHELP   WAMED (10)\nHOLSES   IOK   KENT (21 >\nHOLMS   WAMtD \u00bb2l>i\nIN   MLMOK1AM <*)\nINSLKA.NCt U**)\n1NU.M.MIMS (4\u00ab,\nLIVEMOCK   FOB  MLE (2(.\nL1VFMOCK   WAMED (-4)\nLIIERAKV <\u00ab>\nLOhl   AND   t'OIND ml\n.MACH1M.HY (*>\u00ab>\nMAKK1AULS '3\u00bb\nMINING, TIMRIK. UMBER l.Wl\nmislllLanlols <2-J>\nMlSCLLLANHMt.   FOB   RALE <-\u25a0)\nNISCLLLANEOlft    WAMtD (2\u00ab>\nMLMLAi    INalBL'MEM'S (51)\nNOTICES <?)\nMI1MIIV   PBODtCTS <4..\nmrsinu *\u25a0\u2022*>\npersonal <\u25a0\u00bb\nPLANTS *5,j\nPUt'LlKV   AND   BGU* <M\nI'KOPFKTY   IOK  hALE Ml\nPKOPEK1Y   WANTED J*>[\nKAHHn-i   FOB   bAI F. -;>\nRANCHES    FOK   BFNT HH\nROOM    AM)   BOARD Ofi\nKOOMS    IOK   REM W\nBOO-ib   WAMLD (1\u00bb)\nSCHOOLS -  JfM\nS1TCA1IONS   WANTED I\nBTOBES TO BENT (>>\u00bb'\nHELP   WANTED\n(10)\nWANT AND CLASSIFIED\nADVEBlIsINU\nOne Insertion  10 centa a line\nSix tnsertiona 40 cents a Una\nOne  month  fl-30 a Una\nMinimum  two Hoea\nmith   notices free of charge\nDeaths     marrlegea    and    earda    ol\nthanka   30  cents  per  line\nFuneral  flowers  i5 ctnti per line\nNews   ot   the   Dey   items   ?0   ceut*.\nper   llDs.\nNO EXTRA COST IF CHARUED\nLEGAL NOTICES\nHARDWOOD FLOORINO FURNISH- '\ned, laid, scraped ajid finished.\nEstimates giveu iree. H. Rdihuhi t., |\nPiione   18.Y1. (\\91t9l\nS1TLAJIONS   WANTED\n(UI\nCHINESE WANTS ANY KIND\nwork or cooking, go anywhere.\nDally News Box .3276. 9919)\nFIKST    CLASS     PAINTFR     WANTS\nwork. 40c per hour, phone 508X1.\n  C22U)\nDR ESSMAKER _\\N D TMLOREdft\ndet-lrts be wing. Box 1063. News.\n.1983)\nr.fi)\nHOLSI.S   W'AMEll\nWANTED TO RENT FOR JULY AND\nAugn&t small furnished coUhk-\nnear Nejson. wltn lake frontage.\nBox   2112,   Daily   News. (2US)\nMi>cH.i,.._>Mj. b roH sale    c;i\nMACHINERY   AND   REPAIB*\nELECTRIC   LlOHTiNO   PlsANTS.      j\nEN(HNEB.   MOTORS,   ETC\n10   K.   W.   HO-volt   electric\nplant with Decil engine, direct drive all complete, suitable   tmr  mine,  small  town,\nma .2.600.00\nlittQ   watt 32-volt  Lalley   . 13S.O0\nla.-VO     \u00abi.tt     32-volt     Lallcy\nvilli   hntlerles  IM_Q0\n1000   wait  32-volt  Lai ley Oo U0\nHeavy duly air coinpreshor 4S.O0\n\u25a0I  K-  W.   110-volt generator 7S 00\n10  H   P. motor,  a. C. 1-tft.Oe\nS H. P. motor, A. C  95.00\n1250   watt  32-voU   itttmtor\nand   switchboard   ..       05.00\nf>00  watt 32-volt  generator 32.00\nUsed  switchboards,  each   .. 10.00\n1-6 to i4 h. P., A. C. molors\neach  15.00\n10 K. W. 110-volt D. C. generator      325.00\n1000    watt    110-volt    A.    C.\ngenerator              130.00\nLEEDERS LIMITED\n1375   Portage   Ave,   Winnipeg,   Ma,.\nPhone  39   077 122.131\nCreston Dwelling\nand Contents Are\nDestroyed hy Fire\nr_?EPTON. B 0. May M a\\m st\na late hnur Sunday nlirht completely\ndestroyed ttt frame dwelling nn lower Fifth street, occupied by Edward\nGardiner. Both building and content*\nare a tptg] loss. Just he\u00ab the fire\norlElns^rl '\"an not h* aerert.slned as\nMr. and Mrs. Gardiner and children\nman Hpand.Bg the nlKht wltn Mrs,\nGsrdlnT's mnth\u00bbr. and Mr. OU-Uner\nMTtvad on the si~enp -f the hla?* tno\nlate to save anything, the ftrc beinc\naway a gond  start   before   lt was\nnoticed The house wn<\\ of fnme 00O*\nV-TuetUq) and belonged tn w. Spcm-er.\nwho came to Creston about hnVWi\na^o. So far as can be learned there\nwas no Insurance on elt'ier the bouse\nor contents, and the low is Htlmated\n;it \u00bb2300.\nMichel United Church\nChildren Entertain\nCORBIN, B C. May 25\u2014At the\npresent time three dwellings are being erected In town, and an up-to-\ndttt garage U being erected n*af\nth- I and I hnll bv W. Rothell.\nA -rvcrc thund'T showt-r dcUn-fd\nthe town on Saturnay right. The\nweather continued unsettled Md\nstiowery on Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. C. R. W. Shaw and\nsmall daughter Joan spent the ween\nenn   tt  Caltrary  nnd   Banff\nMlH Terence Co\\ of the pincher\nCT'eV; teaching stuff, s.-wnt the week\nend as the guest of Mr. and Mrs\nt    M.   Burnes.\nThe Miche1, united churrh held n\nconcert in the B and B hull on\nFrldwy May 20. Talented children\nwere t.he principal entrUlncrs for\nKM   evening.\nHi-rhop Doull Holds\nSor\\icc at llo^wcll\nLAM) ACT\nNotic*   ol   Inl^ntion   to   apv'lv   to\n)^_..s Land\nin t,hR Nfisnn isnd rtxtardu. district ol Klorenay, and situate net.\n..clM.>n, V. C.\nTtM notic* that ths leht-Isr\nHitchcock company. *'f Nel^'n. P. C..\noccupation producers ol mow pons\nand logs luMnds to apply lor a\nkasf ol the tollowllnj described\nlands\u2014- ,     ______\nODm_MB_-_ st a pott planted:\non the Intersection ol thc North and\nWest Botuularlca ot lot 97. .f-\u00bb_ _\u2022\nKootenay District: thence North Ten\nchain-: thence Easterly and Northerly parallel to the westerly and\nNorth-westerly boundary of said l_^t\nto intersect a line drawn due West\nIrom the N- B- corner o( said lot.\n1.7: thence due last to the North-\nraat corner ol said lot \u00bb7. thence\nSoutherly nnd westerly slonK the\nWcatcrlv boundary of said lot 97 us\nths point of commencement, containing Un acres B__- 9 f*%mw\nNBnte of spphesnt In full\nAgent,  for;  MMM Hitchcock com-\nP.ted?May 3. \\nt ____\\\nWATER tVOTICK\nDIVERSION AND USB\nTske notice that Department of\nFlBherlea whose address Is 406 Winch\nBuilding Vancouver B C, will s.p \u25a0\nplv for a licence to Mi \"nd \"Be\n1 cubic loot per second of water\nout of DsvlB Creek which floua\nKMt_ \"nd drains Into Kootena.\nlAke t.hrraigh the town of Lardeau.\nB c. The water will he diverted\nfrom thr at ream st a point sbout\none tiuarter of a mils from the\nmouth ift-om the four Incb supply\npipe whloh feeds the C. P. P t\u00bbnv\nat Lsrdeau station) and will lie used\nfor fish cultural .rnrpoM1 upon tho\nland described an portion of the\ntownsite of I-rdcatl. B. r.:.. between\nthe water lank and lake fronl. This\nnolle* wa. posted on the ground on\nthe 12th dav of May. 1932. A <*opy\nof this notice snd sn application\npursuant thereto and to the \"Water\nAct\" will he Ksm, in the ope-1\nol the water recorder at Nelson,\nR c Ohlectlons to the applications i\nmav be filed with the said watei\nrterordrr or with the comp'rolle.\nof water BlRhtB. Parliament Build-\nlugs. Victoria. B. C. within thirty\ndava after tbe first appearance nf\nthis notice in s local newspaper.\nJ, A MOTHEBWF.I.L.\nsupervisor ot Fisheries. Applicant\n1 J.   MellUOll,\nAgent.\nThe   date   of   the   first,   publication\n| of this notice is May 12. 1032.\n', I I MHO BOOMS FOB RUN*    IUI\nPAIITI.V   rOVls-B-IO SUITE WITH\ni   or 2  bedrooms. 1)20 Victoria st.\nRECONDITIONED AND USED Bicycles |10, \u00bbI6. 117.80, \u00ablo. ,22.iu. i\n139. Write for bargain list l\/xlav. :\nI'-eo mutoreycles. nil makes. 160,\n#78. 6100, Sl.sn. *'_m) and up. Bai- I\ngain lisl mailed Iree on rrqucsi |\nMASKINS At  CLLXOTT\n10_7 W. l'ntdcr st. Vah'-outcr   R   c *\nmm j\nSECOND HANW PIPES, (ITTUIUS,\nV.lres, etc, we carry a lull stork\nof reconditioned pipes suitable tui\nall purpo.es. write to SwHrtr. ripe\nYard. __0 1st Ave.. E:tst. Vancouver, B. C. il.odj\nTEN CENTS POPULAR SHTEr\nMusic, 3 for 'ihe. Name songs yui,\nprefer. Seno coin wllh order to\n\u25a0Mai Music service, Suite 3,\n7011   Dnnsnmlr,   Vancouver.   r_V_,i\nCimiSTIE WRECKINO CO, lOT\nWest 1st . Ave.. Vancouver\u2014Sav.\n,10 to 75 per rent on all radiators,\ncylinder heads an<i blocks.   iU'55,\nSPECIAL HANDMADE HEAVY OAF-\nhage cans $2.7.',. reg. S3.10. R. II.\nMaber, Phone _%%, 310 Koot, (I0841\nWICKFR    BABY    CARRIAOF    LIKE\nnew cheap for  _%__,,  rhone  608R\n122231\nFOR SALP, OAK LIBRARY TABU\nRev, W. J, Crick. Nelson.       l_280i\nSIDEPOARri, OAK EOOKrASF AND\nchairs. Phone 677Y i22.17i\nLAWN MOWER Al CONDITION \u00bb5\n82:1   Josephine. 1222.1.\nCLASSIFIED ADS SERVE CON'IIN.\nouously\u2014W'hy not start olie serving vou today.\nMONEY\n-5__5\nThere arc several ways in which The Nelson\nDaily News Want-Ads can assist you in satisfying that need. First \u2014you can easily sell\nsome of those odds and ends you have stored\nin attic and basement.\nSecond:\u2014There are countless opportunities\nfor money making in the sales propositions\noffered in the help wanted columns ... A\ncareful study' will reaveal thc answer to\nYOUR money needs\nIN\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nWANT-ADS\nLIVESTOCK   _0\u00ab   SALE\nCM)\nGRADE HOLSTEIN COW PRESH-\nened May 4 giving flvs gallons\ndally, good quality milk. Hamilton, Perrys, B  C i22_3l\n128)\nMISCEI.L-NEOC!.   WAN-TEH\nWANTED TO BUY EQUIPMENT\nfor 2 bucket tram 600 ft. long.\nMust be reasonabls. Phone 207*.\nP. O.  Box  1190. 1227.1\n(291\nMISCELLANEOUS\nBflAT\",  MlMHrJ.r'H  *\"'\":-_i_'    *l'TO,'OHIIP*\u00ab    POR    \u00abAT\n21 FOOT 1 \"tOHCH HULL. WITH\nShalt propa|krr. tank and miscellaneous H';nK* recently overhauled f'^salc cheap. Phone\n3U80, sfter 6 p. m. or inquire at\nDally  News olllce. t2277l\nFOn SALE CHEAP\u201417 FT. LAUNCH\nIn good conoltlon. Win. Parmer,\nKokanee. (2261)\nSL'BSUBV   PKOIILTTS\nMtllltlllll tlllllll Illllt IIIM\n~ MOVINO ' I\nS STORAOE -\n= PACKING   CASES _.\nJ \u00a7 OENERAL   TRUCKING _\\\n\\\\     COAL   \u2014   WOOD   \u2014   ICE      I |\n1 das \u2014 on, = \u25a0\n5    LONO   DISTANCE HAULING     = I\n= HONE ~\nl 106 I\nI Williains'Transfer |\n5 (2285)   I\nnilllllllllllMIIIIIMIIinillllMIMIIMMIlTl\nLOST   ANO   FOUND\nLOST ROW BOAT BELOW RAPIDfa\nlast Saturday. Reward. A. Wallach,   Box   257,   Nelson. (2296)\nINSI RANCH\n(331\nI\nIMMMIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIMIIIIMIIIIMIIII\n= IMPORTANT =\n= REMINDER\n1 s Automobile  policyholders who I\n[ I caticellfd   part*   of   tholr poll-\n; S eles during  the  winter eea_son _\n( \\\\z \u00bbr     rot   fully   covered   until z\n\u2014 the cancelled  \/sections  ere  re- I\nS tnt-ta'\/. -i or new policy lseucd. 5\nS HAVE VOU CHECKED Up ON   =\nS YOUP.   POLICIES? r\nI  CHAS. F. McHARDY   =\nE     AUTOMOBILE   INSURANCE     =\n= (1946)     =\nrTl IJIM1111111MIM11111 \u25a0 M111M (11111111M11H i\nSEE  C   W.   APPLETARD FOR CAR\nInsurance   ln   reilab:#  companies.\ntlBrnti\nBEDDING   PLANTS\nAclMBi Stocks. Dwarf l^etich\n.Marigolds, African Tall Marigold*.\nCalendulas. Arctotis, Cosmos,\nPhlox Drummondl, Nemesla, Schi-\nMtithus, Chinese Forget-Me-Nots,\nBmtat Posjs, Ageratum. Tall and\nDwarf Nasturtium6, Ciarkja. Oo-\n.letla. Kochla, Afrlcau Daisies,\nNight RcentM Stocks, 6cablu6H_,\nPortulaca,  25c  per dozen.\nDwarf and Tralliii^ Blue ht*\n:>e:ia, Wriite Lobelia, Tali and\nDwarf Zinnia., Verbenas, Snapdragons, Salvia, Nicotina, _xi1Vj_-\ngloala,   35c  per  dozen.\nCalifornia oiant. Rosy Morn\na-id Elks' Pride Petunias, 50c per\ndozen.\nSwiss Glan\u00a3 pansiCB. 50c, 75c,\n$100  per  dozen.\nGeraniums, 15c, 26c and 35c\neach. i\nDracenas, Nepeta, Vlnea, Gaz-\nzinafl, ruchslas, Heliotrope Hlid\nBegonias,   15c and 25c \u00ab.scb.\nHardy  'Mums,  _5c each.\nGRIZZEI-LE'S GREENHOUSES\nNelson,   B.   c.       (3255)\n(4\"\n1930 DODTiE-6 COtrTE RUMBL\nw*it; tine pertormanee; 2 spare\nwith earner. BHr^ain ior csi'i. \u00a3\nR. Thome\/.. R. R. 1, Nelaun.   .2273\nFOR SALE-CHEVROLET SEDA:\n193!. Excellent _iup\u00ab. Apply Rr*\nW.  J.  Crick,  or \/ipplcyaid.   <22'<i)\n(SI\nSTORKS   TO    RENT\nTO   LEASE  TROM   JU1NE   I.   8TOR\nat   corra   Linn   now   occupied   b\nCharles    Morris,    Apply    Q.    Not\nBrown, Corru Linn, Bonnlngton.\n.223.\nSSJ JSSSi'_\u25a0_?-?_*''-*UE8S PALE <52\nFOR SALE WHITE SPITZ MAL\ndog fond of children. Applv i\nA. Ac   A. E.   Barnes,  Willow Poln\n (2271\nPRINTING m\nillMIIMIMIMIillMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIMIIIIII\nLoose Leaf Kquipmpnt\nBINDERS   POR   ANY  SHT-ETS\nLOOSE  LEAF SHEETS\nPOR ANY  BINDEI-\nNelson Daily, News\nJOB  DEPARTMENT\nPiionu i44\nimMunimMmiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiHiiii\nCKOPER'iY   IOR   MIX\niH)\n101SES    rOl    RENT\nCZI)\nPUUNl SHED HOUSE SIX ROOMS\nrip\/ir b\u00bb*8r.)i nt Balfour. AH cob-\nvenlenccs for t-ummcr monthp. Al*\n__9 laiinrh wil] sell or tratie. Con*\ntit,  Ba lour. (S-USl\nSUMMER OOTtAOll T-OR RENT A_\nWillow Pointi fu.tiifihed evcry'lung\nnew. Bv the season or by the\nnmntli. A. & A. E. Barnw. Wii-\n1m.  Point. rSSTUi\nPUHNISITED COTTAGE--:* ROOMS\nmat porth; ttUtf bpf-rb; wood\nand phonp inrUtde*.. ,75 per *=*>a-\nson   Phon* 471P-1. <2399)\nSMALL  HOUSE  CLOSE   IN.   FRESH-\nu*   decorate_i   wooffbout   Phone\nfilR. <227St\nRnunittntD    OOtTAOp     NEAR\nbench for rent,  J. J,  Campbell.\nU818.\nPOULTRY    AND    EGAS\n(26)\nPuijet, will be scarce and ejtg prices\nhlt,'h nfxt fall. Get some of our 8.\nr. Whltp lyghorn or p.. I, Red\nrhlekl for rood rttults, Br\u00ab\u00b0d from\nhealthy, vigorous stock for high production uifl lar^e eRgr*.\nRUMP & SENDALL\nMUner,   B.  C\ni1974>\nFOR SALE  IdO LEGHORN FUlXETS\nII   inontha   75c   wt   Or   will   exchange   ah   piirt   pfivment   on   two\ngood dairy cow-.. Box 950, Nelson.\n12237!\nFOR  SALE   TN   TRAIL  TWO   BOOM\nshack   and   W   In   trarden.   Any\nreasonable* offer tveepted for\nQUIA tt&t. Apply Box 5702, Trail\nTimes,   Trnil. i'229B)\nI ARM   PROPKRCV   FOR   SALE   (30)\nSPECIAL IN BABY CHICKS HATCH-\nInK May 30. June 6 and 13. *!0\nppr 100 Den Russell. 1306 Gray\navr\u201e   New   Westminster,   B.   C.\n(2^00.\nFOR SALE-LEGHORN (0< KERELS\nfnur matnt old. io centa each.\nO'Neill, Gray creek. t228ei\nMIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIMIIIMIIHIMIIIIIIIllllllll\n5 25-Acre Farm for Sale =\nS Five acres cultivated, 5 partly S\n2 cleared,  balance   timber.    Near ZZ\nI to   school,   store,   post,   office, 2\n5 railway   station,   etc.   50   fruit Z\nI trees, etc.  Water flumed  from I\n_Z creek.   Five-room   house--food **\"\u25a0\nS outbuildings.      Revenue    from S\nfl poultry,  vegetables  and   dairy. S\nI Low   price,   $1600.   easy   term-?. ~\n1      H. B. DILL 1\nI        Eire t.nd Auto Tnnnrance \u2014\n-T 503  WARD ST.         PHONE   130 1\nI                                                 t-214) I\nIMM!i|||tll|||IIMIMlllllll!lll!llllllll|||iT\nFOR BALE\u2014F-ARLY, MEDIUM LATE\nand red oabbHKe. Brussels BprouUi\nand Winter Kale, 50 for 50c single or mixed lots. Cauliflower 35c\nper doz. delivered price*. All\nplant, out-door grown. E. Harriv,\nBUrtOU,   B.   C. (2291)\nMeets 1st and 3l.\n'Thurs., 8 p.m. al\nEAGLE HALL.-\nJuv. Forestera, *m\nG. B. Abbott. Sec\nBox   72fl     (1937.\nBUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAuaytn\nE, W. W'ddowson, Box A1I06. N(->:n,\nB. C. Standard western chart.es.\n(1930)\nCECIL E CROSSLEY, BOX 568. NEL-\nson. Leave aampleg at Whitfield\nA;  Sturgeon. (211U1\nChiropractors\nDR. GRAY. GILKER BLK., NELSON.\n(1981)\nMITTtm  AND GHIDDES,  X-RAY and\nMCM. Cmnbrook and Trail. G982)1\nDR.   MACT.I.LLAN.   GRAD.   PALMER\nSchool, Aber Blk., Neleon. Ph. 212.\n(1983\/\nEngineers\nH. D   DAWSON, B.CLS. ROOM 12A\nK.   W.   C.  Block.  Neleon.       0984)\nCHAS. MOORE. Griffin Blk., Nelson,\nB.  C. Land Surveyor, Box 654.\n(IS85)\nTransfer\nATKINSON TRANSFER, HOSEMONT.\nCoal  and   Wood. (1P92)\nStorage\nSTORAGE,   MOVING, COAL,  WOOD\nPhona 53. Bum's Coal & carta**.\n\u2022.K.91)\nAccountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, 8, P. INT. A. C\nMunicipal and Commercial Audita\nP.  O.  Box   1191,  Nelson,  B. C.\n(1979,\nFlorists\nGriM.elle'a Greenhouses, Nelaon. Cu^\nflowers and floral design*.  (1987.\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. FULT\nllne cut flowers at all times. Flor.\nai designs. Phone 233. (19881\nJOHNSON'S OREENHolrSES-^phdr*,\n342. Cut flowers, potted plant.\nand floral designs. (1989.\nSecond Hand Stores\nThe   Ark\u2014Dealers   In   Second   Hem\ngoods. Phone 634. (1990\nBROOKS   BUYS   EVERYTHING.   21'\nBaker street. (18921\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Estate, m-\npiirance. Rentals. Next, Hippersin\nHardware, Baker Street.        il988i\nWood Factory\nLAWSON'S WOOD FACTORY HARD\nwood merchajit. 217 Baker street\n09fl3'\nFURNISHED    SUITE     MRS     GOVT,\n507 Curb-mat* ft. Phone 30nR\n(22411\nSUITER-ASHMAN'S     APARTMENTS\nVlo  BaKer street. tWmK\nMiss Florence Mclnnes\nEntertains Her Little\nFriends on Birthday\nnoSWKI.I . B. C. Mnv 2.3- Mrs.\nWalter skinner of Ndson la visidn?\nMr, md |(rs Kirkpatrtck at DM*\nEAj   Da;,.\nBl.-hop Doull Vialttd BobrtII on\nTiiursday and IifUl * service in the\nMamortftl hall in the #T\u00ab0_DI. there\n\u25a0va.s  \u25a0   vpry   Inrgr   rongrrfljatlnn    Fnl-\ni-^vini; tht wervtOt, a aoelal hour mi\n;!rrnni{e<i   \\w   thr rljurrlt  (tulld.\nDnnnz im* itoy in WmmtM, Um\nbtalMfi u\u00ab^ th* fuMt of H_r,  ________\nMrs.   C'rinrleH   A)l**n   tt   ''As-Orr*.;'.\"\nnitAMATir Hocirrv\nH.S  PMCTICE\nPA_WW\u00a3-R_- B. C May 3ft-Th*\n'lr-.rnat,lc snd Chora] wipfy had\nl.oelr iifidal prvM'v on Sn'urdnv\nunci bOTr* t_r. soon have a mood \u00bbiidl-\n\u2022naa to Ukr* In ihPtr irlPas of what\n\u25a0good .w-tf-vr.* and H^t,r*ss*\u00bb5 should do .\n*o   h**'-   \u00bb   reputation. |\nnmati   i\u00ab   ont>   who   let*\nr 1   think   he   \\s   the   boss.\nYAHK. B. C-. May 25\u2014 M.ss Florence Mtinnis was a hostess at her\nhome on Monday afternoon!., en-\nttrt--_n___f ei^ht of her Utile frl*nds\nUM ooimlnn being her ninth birthday. The invitrd iuaata -mm Alice\nAtuicrsoii, RBKinll Bmadbo., Mary\nCross, Marlon Rirbards, Harold Mae-\nrarhuie, Jean Anderson, Evelyn\nBmwn   and   Laura   Dlefcninn.\nMis* Grace Wardrope who \u00abpenf-\nthe past mOTit-h visiting frtend3 and\nrp|atlvf.< at Cnlgary returned hom.\n.saturday.\nMrs. ivl B'Kintsier and baby wn\nOf Canal Flats, are the |U__ftl of\nMrs Banniotrr's aunt., Mrs. ErsKme.\nMisp Una (fadttte of Nelson li\napMldlac mmt holiday at the homfl\nof b\u00bbr parent*. Mr. aPd Mrs. P'rank\nN\"d^lic\nMrs. A\\\u00ab\u00bbl Erirt.son md son. Glen,\n*,vpre ws-\u00bbk*>nd v.sl'ors to Crnnh-rooJr\nOlen POeattM-1 n.ediral atf\u00bbnloD f-o\nhu   shouMsr.\nOn Friday ev*ti!ns a surprise par-\nty was held In the C P. R. hull\nin honor of Mls^ Hfl^n M'Tnnls wno\nla 1-Pftving for Vanrnuver Thursday.\nVictor Sknlko and Kanute SHht.su\nsupplied a\/*\/-ordlon music snd Misses\nrt**i\u00ab\"n MrOrath and Vera setba acted   se   plan'sts.\n bii\nJTHE   KELSO**-   DilLI   NEWS.   KELSO-.   B.   C,   THrRSIMY   MOBMNO   HIV\nriUJl.UHM. ,\nMOB    MNS\nMarket and Mining News\nin m ust\nond and Stock Trading\nIs More Active; Share\nWeakness Selective\nNEW YORK, May 25\u2014Securities\nre again twroi dowa by llqulda-\nm today, and trading became a bit\nore active in both stocks and\nnds.\nShare weakness continued to be\nI i rather selective nature la that\n111 ties, tobaccos and foods were\nrtlcularly depressed.\nAlthough net losses were small ln\nch equities aa U. S. Steel, Bethle-\nm, Westinghouse, Standard Oil of\n!W Jersey and Arisrlcan Can, done* ot two points or more were\nimerous elsewhere. In this group\nme American Tobacco \"B.\" Llg-\ntt & Myers \"B,\" B.rden, Drug,\n>rf-lk & Western, Wrigley, Union\ntClsfle, Hershey and Pacific Liehtlng.\nI lion Pacific preferred lost 4, Am-\nlean Sugar preferred 8. Brooklyn.*-\nanhattan Transit preferred and\nlbljc Service of New Jersey 7 per\nnt preferred 5V__.\nGsneral roods wa\u00bb down I M one\n\u25a0nl, later halving this decline.\n\u25a0nnsylvanU Railroad closed .1 9.\nf   a   point.   American   Tel\u00b0onone\n. oke through Its old low, ee'Ilnt. at\nVt and waa down 1^4 net. Con-\nlldated Gas, people's Gas and\n\u25a0rth A-tserlcan were somewhat heav.\n\\   Silts   totalled   1,307,933   .hares.\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW TORK, Msy 96 \u2014 Copper\nfirmer; electrolytic apot and future  6%.\nTin steady; spot and neaj-by 31.15;\nfuture   _ii._o.\nIron   qui it,   unchanged.\nLead dull; apot New York ?00;\nBast 6t.   Louis  200.\nZinc firm; East ftt. Loul* spot\nand  future   3B7.\nAntiniony 5.13.\nForeign bar stiver 37%.\nAt London:\nStandard c-pper, spot til Ts fld;\nfuture \u00a337 10.; electrolytic, spot\n\u00a331   15s;   future   \u00a333   15e.\nTin, spot \u00a3123 7s fld; future\n\u00a3125   15s.\nLead, spot \u00a30 17s 8d; future UO 6s.\nZinc, spot \u00a313 future m\\2 5s.\nLIQUIDATION ON\nTORONTO STOCK\nUSIBORDERIY\nGeneral Decline in Prices Noted Throughout the\nSession\nVANCOUVER STOCK\nEXCHANGESOFTENS\nFollows   Trend   of   Eastern\nMarkets; Pioneer Leads\nDownturn\nTORONTO STOCKS\nnulet    I _,\u2014_-,\u2122w,_\u2122.\nP   Consolidated   -__\u201e\u201e..,__,\nsocjsted      m,., .\u201e\u25a0_.__\nat  Metals   ..,.-.-., ,__\n41\n.70\n.07\n.05\n.05\n.30\nrry  Holllnger   _.\u201e ,\n.04 U\n_emical \"esearch \u25a0\u25a0 -r.m\u201e.,,..\u201e\n,30\n.00:4\nsterest  \u201e\u00ab\u00ab.,\u201e..-,.,\u201e\u201e..\u201e\nlorado um  \u25a0\u25a0ijnui.p .j ...__.\noth ills -  .\t\nMt\n.98\n.68\n\u202231'.\n1.15\nternaflonal Nickel .,\u201e.,\u201e\u201e..\u201e\n4.95\n.33\n.21 tt\n.03 tt\nJtH\n18.00\n.85\n.08\nindy  ..j,..,^.\u2014\u201e..,\u201e...,\t\nilartio   mm ._,.\u201e.\u201e_.,,_...,. .\npis si n |  -_,,_,\u201e...\u201e...t, \u201e\n.IS\n.33\nierrlt   Gordon   \u201e..\u00ab_,_..-.\t\nidbury   Basin   _. _....\nJStt\n.10\nek H ighea \u201e ____. \u201e..\u201e\npond    _._........, \u201e,.\nS.31\n.28\n.30\nLONDON   CLOSE\nVANCOUVER, B. C, May 35 (CP)\n\u2014Following the trend of eastern\nmarkets active Issue* on tht Vancouver stock exchange softene* In\nmixed trading t.day. Losses at the\nclose  ranged  from   1   to   15   points.\npioneer Jed the downturn. Opening\n10 cents lower at 3.30, tho issue\nsaid steadily at that price until t.e\nelese when It ea;ed to 3,25, a net\nloss of 15 cents from the previous\nclose, pend Oreille squalled its all-\ntime low made last week, declining\nfive cants to 30 cents. Reno, a light\ntrader, eased 3 cents to J5 centa.\nLorne God at 10'a cent* and premier at 38 were each Off I cent.\nCmadlan Pacific marked up * new\nall time low, dlpolng sharply at\n8.75, a decline of 2.50.\nCrow's Nest, the most active durr\nIng the day, opened at 3 cents, easing to 2', oe...a at the close, d.wn\na  quarter.\n0thtr active issues in both dlvt-\nsfcn# held at unchanged pricei in\nlight   trading.\nTORONTO, May 35 (CP)----The Toronto stock exchange today showed a\njgensral decline In prices throughout\n; a session of orderly liquidation.\nI Interlisted Issues appeared In\n(greatest volume and suffered the\nI mo.t severe kisses. Canadian Pacific\n[railway lost 3'i point* t. close at\nj87_ after having touched a new low\nI of __%, Total sales In the issue\nj amounted to 2778 shares. Ford of\nCanada \"A\" lost % to class at TU.\nsnd International Nickel, with a\n[turnover of .441 share?, was off %\n\u25a0to close at a new low of 4f_. The\nheaviest jurcp In turnover wm ex-\n| perlenced by Walker common of\nw.ieh 8430 shares were sold. It\nclosed at t% with a net loss of v..\nThe preferred gained yf to 9%,\nI Distillers lost   ft.\nj The flrme-t group display was\n(marie by steel Issues In which trad-\n1 Ing was light, however. Pressed\nmetals gained y\u00ab to 7, steel of Csn-\n|ada common was unchanged, the pre-\ni .erred gaining 1 to 23. Dominion\n[Brldg* was up .4 to 10.'i and Ham-\ntttpn prHge was eff \u00bb,4 to |ft',\nEstimates Show\nB.C. to Fiont in\nSilver Production\nVANCOUVF.K, May 2ft\u2014 An ln\u00bb\ntfre.-dng slltiatJon In the silver\nmarket today is the official word\nfrom ntlawa that Canada produced In lu.il jtif.1 j\u00bb.,i per cent\nuf (he world's computed produc*\ntlen ot I.Hi.UOO.OOO uiime. tor tbe\nwhite met a| .Mtklco contributed\n42 per cent of the toul and Liiitad.\nm.iiph   Ti   per   cent.\nBritish Columbia Inn. definitely\nstepped to the front u* the (eai-\nIiir Canadian silver province, ion*\ntrlbutlng about 39 per rent of (lis\ntotal Canadian output. Hrlil.it Co-\nlunibia biher U obtained mainly\nfrom the Hulilvan mine at Klffiher-\nli-j, with Iteaverdt-ll mines, |Jr|-\ntaniiiu, Premier mid Prusperlly and\n(irunby also playing import mi t\nparts.\nCHICAGO WHEAT\nCLOSES HIGHER\nConfident Buying and Presence of Speculative Leaders\nGive Upturn\nEXCHANGES\nVANCOUVER LIST\nLONDON, May 38\u2014(Closing quota\n>i-s)\u2014BraElllan   Traction,   41;   Ca-\ndian   Paclfio   $11:   Hydro   e vurlo\n%\\   Int  H>ld  ts  Inv  Co $1   \\-\\9\\\nternatlonai  Nickel   $5%;   Brit Aran\ntbacco \u00a33  10s;  Distillers \u00a32 3s \u00bb_;\ninlop Rubber 9e 9d;  Fold Ltd 19s\nHudson   Bay   13s   fld;   Imperial\nlemloal   12s   3d;   Imperial  Tobacco\n15s  7tid;   Vlckers  6s   7%d;   Brit-\nfive   per   cent   war   loan   1943\n01   3s   Od;   British   tmi   P^   cent\n\\r loan cioj  15s;   British four per\nmt  1900*00 \u00a3100 3s at.\nMINES\nBU Ask\nBi   Missouri       ,0ft ,06 \u25a0\u00a3\nGeorgia   River    03 MVm\nGolconda   .r,.,...^_,\u201e., \u201e,.   ,10 ,13\nGrandvlew   ,,,..,.   .0314 ,09\nInt   C   &   C nm .11\nLorne   Dold    \u201e 10'^    .11U\nNational   Silver  .., ...._   ,01'4    .01%\nNoble   five   ....\u201e.\u201e\u201e.\u201e..,-   \u00a32%\nPen1 Oreille  \u201e.,    .30\nPioneei*   Gold     3.3ft     3.30\nporter Idaho  , \u201e .oft\nReeves   McDonald   \u201e  .15\nReno   Gold    _,_. 3ft        j80\nRuth   Hope    ,\u201e.......,., .03\nSllvercrest    ,._, oi\nOIL8\nA P consolidated  ,        .04\nC and E Lands _. ia\nCalmont    .\u201e,. ,.._.       _o(j\nCommor wealth   _,....\u201e...^.       ,07\nEastcrfst  _ _ 05\nFabyan    _ _.\u201e..._. o..*\nHome   Oil         ^20\nMercury \u201e. M.,\u201e.      xnii\nMcLeod    , ., ....        20\nMill   C ty    jo\nMayland , Qg\nRoyalite     , \u201e      4 25\nSterling pacific 08\nCALGARY   LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY, May 25 \u2014 Receipts:\nCattle 133, ca'ves 4, hogs 078.\nSteers: Good and .choice, M.ftO to\n$5.35; medium, $4 to .435; comm^a\n33  to 13.7ft.\nHeifers; Oood and choice, 34.35 to\nM-75; medium, (4 to (4.25; c-mmon\n33   to   W.76.\nFed calves: Good and choice, 35\nto 35.40;   medium, $4.50  Io $4.75.\nCows; Good. $3 to $3.75; medium,\n$2.50 to $2.75; common, $1-50 to\n$2.28; canners and cutters, $.50 to $1\nBulls: Good $3 to $3-58; OOmman,\n\u2022 1.80   to   $1.75.\nSheep: Good handywelght, 33 to\n$3.50;  common, $1  to $350.\nHogs: Select bacon, $3.70 to $3.75;\nbacon, $3.30 to $3.25; butch-p^, \u00bb2.70\nto  $2.75.\nMONTREAL, M_y 26 (CP)-British and foreign exchange in relation\nto the Canadian d:ltar. as compi'cd\nby the Rny&I Bank of Canada, close _\ntoday   a.   follows:\nArgentina,    peso     \u201e  2907\nAustralia,     pound       8 3798\nBelgium,   belga         .1801\nBraeil,     mllrels      _ 0862\nOata osiovskia,   crown    .gs.o\nrinmark,   krone        .3.99\nFinland,    flnmark     \u201e     .02\"5\nPrance, franc      \u00abo.0l\nGermany, reiehsmark  .,..-.-..    .3705\nGreat Britain, pound    4,3140\nHolland,    florin    ,-....-     .48-9\nIndia,    rupee     \u201e..  _   ..161\nItaly,    lires      -     .0587\nJapan     yen     ,  \u201e     3650\nJugoslavia, dinar   _ _   .0207\nNew    Zealand,    pound    .._  3.8309\nNorway,   krone    - 3106\nPoland,    zlotl     ....,      1200\nRoumaijia,   leu    ,.,...\u201e 0070\nSouth Africa, rK>uui   8 6179\nSpain,    peseta     _,     \/)943\nSweden,   krone    \u201e 3157\nSwitzerland,   franc        .2236\nUnited States, dollar,  14.fc  per cent\npremium.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nCHICAGO, May _)Q (By John P.\nBoughan, Aaa-claUd Pre^s market\neditor)\u2014Confident buying, coupled\nwith the presence of two widely\nknown speculative leaders, gave a\nfresh upturn to wheat prices today\nmore   than  off__*tting  early  declines.\nEvldencs accumulated that tbe\ntrade was skeptical any great Improvement of the winter wheat crop\nprospect would result from rains.\nInstead, belief -apparently grew firmer that the bulk of damage to winter  w..eat  waa   permanent.\nWheat closed f|rm at the day's\ntop, i\/j tj % above yesterday's finish, corn varying from 3,\u00ab decline\nto % advance, ca.\u00ab ,fe to % oil to\nU up, and provisions at 10 cente\n-*tba_k to a  ri.se of 2  cent*.\nAbltlbi Power & paper  ,  1\nAsbe-t.s Corporation  15\nBell Telephone    .85\nBrazilian T L & Power \u201e  BJ,i\nBrit American OH   -.-, 8.i\nCan Car ii Foundry   |f|\nCan    Cement ..,.-,  $.B\nCan  Cement  \u201e  3\nCan Ce.nent pfi    32\nCan    Indus trial    Alcohol     80\nCor.s Mining    Smelting   27\nDominion   Bridge ,  JOi**\nA P Grain  , \u201e 4\nMa.isey   Harris    mm |||\nLake of the.Woods   4\nl-cperisi  OU   _-,  IH\nMassey   Harrli    ,  a *^\nMen .real   Pcwer    ,...\u201e  26'\u00bb\nMont  Te'egraph   ., _......  44    ;\nMontreal   Trsmwaya     J01    (\nSteel of  Canada  ...r __, \u201e 13=!i\n\\Vabaa90   Co.ton  7    1\nWinnipeg  Railway - _, %\nTORONTO INI)USTRr:LS\nBennett Expresses\nDoubt as to Tariffs\nPassing U.S. Senate\nOTTAWA,  May  x_   (CP)\u2014Proposed\nI United   States    duUes   against    Ca-\niiadian  lumber and copper have not\n{yet   pa.*wed   Uie   Uiijted   SU.es   coij-\ngrese and It is problematical if they\nI will piJig. premier R. B. Bennett in**\n[formed the house of camiunis today.\n.The  prime  minister was relying  to\nC   B.   Howard    (Lib.,   Sherbrooke),\nwho asked tha.. United State* duties\nagainst   Canadian   milk   und   cream\nand  copper  and  lumber,  u,s well  as\nthc Chicago diversion of water from\nLake  Michig-n,  should   be  adjusted\nbetwean    Canada   and    ti e    United\nStates    bef.ro    any    treaty    dealing\n%dth    the   St,   Lawrence   waterway.\ndevelopment   Is  signed.\nFARLY RALLY IN\nWHEAT FAILS AND\nPRICE OKE OFF\nDemand for Canadian Whe* t\n\u00bbnd French New* G(vi*\u00bb\nEarly Impetui\nwi.ra.PB_, u.y jj (cp)\u2014Un-\noourd\u00abeu hy tstttot demand (_r C\u00ab-\nnadtan wh.st snd s nrmer tons st\nUverpu-I coupled with cheery nsws\nfn>ni Paris that the protection est\nforeign wheat p.rmltt-4 to pr.neh\nmr.ler, had been Increased .lv, por\ncent, wheat rallied lrom an opening\ndepression and cloied V, to 14 lower\non   the market  here  today.\nMay close. 1 lower at 69*4; July\nfi lower at 64V. and October ',_\nlower  at  6834.\nPair export trade worked over the\nholiday f,tarte_ trading at considerably lower prices than Monday's\nclose snd rep.rt, of m-lsture over\nU.s Un:t. \\ States sout-west .rovsd\nalso sllglitly bearish, but unfavorable\nweekly weftthey reports from Washington helped the main Influences\n*ta\u00abe a recovery.\nTrading in cash wheat wss flow\nand spreads remained generslly unchanged, cosrse grains transactions\nwere dull with the eieeptln, ol\nsome buying In barley against export sales.\n1\nSO'.\nSOI\/,\nI*.\n10\nT\n931.\n55!,\n4U\n?6\n3'i\n5!,\n5\nUH\n\u25a0\",\nt'..\n\u25a0\nlis*\nlit\nVi\n4IH\nN\u00ab\n1\".\nSB*.\nIf\".\nV,\n2\",\n3',\n\u2022 ',\n3S1,\n13\nM\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nAllegheny    \u201e\n%\n-\nAllied Chemleal..\nII U\n801\nAmerican   Can...\nat\".\nW.I,\nAmer For Power\nIN\nIH\nAm   Ma   _,   Fdy\n\u2022oi-\n10\nAm  Bmelt _e Re\nM\n7\nAmer   Telephone\n\u00ab4'i\nM'.\nAmerlc   Tobacco\nM\n55's\nAnaconda   \t\n20 ,\n4*4\nAtchison   \u201e\t\n35 V.\nii\nBaldwin   \t\nHi\nBait   ie   Ohio  ..\nHi\nIt\nEendix   Aviation\ns\nBeth   Steel   \t\nUNI\n11%\nCanada  Dry \t\n1-it\nCanadian   Paeif.\nI\nra\nCerro   de    Pasco\nli\".\n>\nChes  &   Ohio  ..\nIV,\nJ3T.\nChrysler   \t\n1\ni'_\nCom e_ Bourn ..\n'H\n|H\nCon  Gas NY..\n44\n43'4\nCorn Products ..\n30 H\n39'i\nC    Wright   Pfd.\nDupont \t\n37\nM\nFsstman    Kodak\n41'i\n40'i\n3\u00ab{\nEl   Power  ie   Lt\nn\nErie    \t\n3\",\n3'i\nPord   English   *\nFord   of   Canada\nF.rst  Nat Stores\n3914\n!\\V,\nFreeport   Texss.\n13'i\n13\nOeneral   Motors..\n10\n\u00bbS\nBell   Telephone..\n88'\/,\n85'.\n85 j,;\nBra-lllan   \t\nItt\n9\n\u00bb'.\nB   A   Oil   \t\nIII\nDl\nB'..\nCons   Bakeries\n6'\/,\nu\n5'.4\nCons  Mining   ....\n38'*\nT.i\n27\n37\nFord of Csn 'A*\nn\nnt\n7\nInternat   Nickel..\nItt\n4%\n9\nInternat   Pete   ..\nUH\n11'\/.\nll'i\nMasse;- Harris .\n3\"i\nNoranda\t\n14!..\n14.03\n1405\nPhoto   Engravers\n10\nVegetable Shipment\nto Prairies Expected\nto Double From B.C.\nVICTORIA,   May   25\u2014 (CD\u2014 British\nColumbia, sales of vegetables to the\nprairies will be double.1 this year, Jt\nwas anticipated ln advices to the\ndepartment of agrlcylturc hero to*\nday.\nAt Armstrong feur packing _k_wc_.\nhave installed the mo.t modern machinery for picking and washing\ntheir vegetables tor prairie ehipmejit.\nAll cars will bo government-inspected and an all-round general lm-\nprcvoxent In production, pacHini\nan.i fhlpEilng facilities as well fts\nsales organl_ution It no tod.\nWEEKLY   TRAFFIC   EAU.NJNGS\nOF   T.   F.   B.   UOWN\nMONTREAL, May 35   (CD\u2014Trarri-\nearnings of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway for tha week ending May 21\nwere $2,218,000, a\u00bb compared wit.'.\n92,716,000 in the corresponding period of last year, a decrefwo of\n\u2666498,000.\nGeneral   Electric    \\2va\nOeneral  Poods\nOold   Dust   \t\nGoodrich   \t\nGranby\t\nOre.it North pfd\nGroat W Sugar.\nHowe Bound ....\nHudson   Motors..\nIns Copper  \t\nInter Nickel\nInter Tel & T-tl\nKpUy Bprlnn ....\nKenn Copr._r ....\nKrtfBt 8 8.. ..\nKroogg & Toil\nI^hil At Pmk ..\nMack Trucli ....\nMilwaukee pfd..\nNash Motors ...\nNat Dairy prod 16\nN Power & Lt\nNew York Centr\nPaclf Ch* & EI 21\nPackard  Motors.,     J\nPrim   R   R    ,     9\nRadio Corpora _,\nPure    Oil    \t\nRadio Keith Or..\nRom   Rand   ........      l*i\nRoeit   Island    ...     tS\nSafeway    Storts..    91%\n8  Louis ie  8  P     1\nVeil   Union  Oil     2\\\nmnn ptttf Ed ac*.\nSouth Pacif.c . VJL\nStan OJ1 of Cfll UH\nStan Oil of Ind\nBtan Oik of If J 2414\nStewart    Warner     2,_i\nlutdebaker         3%\nTexas Corpora .. 30*i\nTexas Qulf Sul 18\nUnlon Carbide _,\nUnion Oil calif\nUnion Pacific ..\nUnited Aircraft.\nU S Pipe it My\nU  S Rubber ....\nU  8  8teel  \t\nWest Electric . .\nWillys Overland\nYellow Truck ....\n10%\n8*\n8%\n7%\n8'4\ne\nM\nl\n*\".\na^\nft\nIU\nM\n'\/,\nw\/,\n13*.\n!\u2022.\n0'i\n10>4\nMt\n2\n1)2\n10',.\nI\n1\nitt\nH\nll\n8-\n1C*.\nQit\nIV.\nIM\n15'.\nMM\njo\nHI\nm\nl'.\nSB\",\nll\n.3\n10'..\n3\nt'k\n1\nIK\na\n\u00bb'..\nl\n* it\na .\n%\nifl\nM\n10'-\nM\nv.\nH\n13'i\nie\n10'i\n301,\na\nK\n3\/\na %\n.\nIfl\nSD':.\nPOW JONES AVERAGES\nSO Industrial!  49.10 off 1.75\n20 rails  , ,  15.63 off   .66\n20 utilities   20.03 off   .58\nSECURITY VALUES\nCRUMPLE UNDER\nffiAVYSELLING\nC\\P.R. Selli Off to New Low\non Montreal Stock\nMarket\nMONTRJ-AL, May 25 (CP)\u2014Se-\ncurdy velues crumpled under heavy\nselling pn the Mbntrca. \u00bbUxk exchange today. The action cf Canadian PMRl TMlway In eelllng off\nto ft new low level et B%. down 2%\npointi, proved an upeettlng factoi\nend  the list generally was weak.\nMatlonal Breweries and Power corporation were released Irony price\nrestrictions. National Breweries sold\nat 12 points which compared with\nIte pegged price of 24, while Power\ncorporation appeared. In odd Jots of\nle-a than hoard lot quantities at 8,\nagainst ths minimum of 38',-i hitherto prevailing,\nTha active leaders all worked\ndownward, 11 new lows for 1931,\nand In some casea for all time, being  recorded.\nInternational Nickel eatablljihed a\nnew low at 8, off 'A; Brazilian Traction went to 8, off >*; Hamilton\nBridge lost l>,fc at 31.. a new low;\nBritish Columbia power dropod \\%\n*t 17; Bell Telephone slipped 11 .* to\nM, and fractional losaee were sue-\ntalned \\fl Abltlbi, Dominion Bridge,\nCanada Gypeum, Holllnger Oold\nMinee, McOoll-Prontenao *n4 Bhaw-\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nImported Tomatoes\nand Strawberries\nFace Tariff Duty\nTORONTO, \u2022 M*J   25    (CP)-Reae-\ntlonary prices on other exchanges\nbrought a genera) decline tn leiders\non D..\u00ab Siandard SU)_k and Utulng\nexchange today. AU group* weie affected by the slump, but wltn thc\nexception of the base meUl section,\nthere was no Indication of heavy\nliquidation. Noranda and International Nickel were tht tie_,vy losers\nthe former dropping 70 cents *o\n\u2666 14.10 and the lat-er 78 cents to\n1480, * new low, under heavy veiling   pressure.\nOTTAWA, May 35 (CP)\u2014Two important tariff bulletins h*v\u00ab gone\nforward to customs af-praUer* effective today on the Importation of tomatoes and strawberries. In the case\nof tonuUies when entered from the\nUnited States or other countries\noutside the empire, the duty shall\nbe three cerjts a pound above the\ninvoice price and the flxe,d value for\nduty purposee, the effect will be\nthat the dumping duty will bo Shree\ncents t pound regardLaw of the Invoice price, in regard \"to strawberrlee\nlt will be two cents ft pound.\nTh* now Regulations stay tn effect\nIn the cm* pf tomatoes until October 8), and in the com of straw*\nberries until July 81. The regular\nrate toy tomatoes from Juno 1\nOctober 81 under the general terttf\nIs 2 wnts a pound m \u00bb minimum\nand Uie rate on strawberries from\nJune 1 to July 31 pot less than\nthree cents ft puund. The dumping\nduty will be In addition to these\nrates.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\n_>',\nio M\nU'\/i\nv..\n7Vi\n18\nIB'.\nmt\n9'i,\n_M\na.\n28\n23\n2-1*1,\n\u00bb'_\nHi\nwu\nH\u00bb,i\nIS'i\n8\n88'_\n\u2022ti\n8%\nJli\n2*7\",\n22\".\nIR\nITK\n2S\",\nMi\n8*.\nMH\n14 H\nIT\n>'.',\n3D'.\n\u00bb\n2'-\u00bb\n\u2022TM\n22\",\n3LIND, PARALYZED-BUT HE STILL COULD THINK!\nlow, After li Years of Helplessness,\nBean Van Ciute Is a Successful\nAnd Self'Educated Author\nNEW YORK, May 24.\u2014There's nothing the matter with\n>een Van Clute.\nNothing, except th^t he has lain flat on his back, para-\n*zed, for 13 years. And, yes, he is blind too, has been\nIind all that time.\nBut there is really nothing the matter with him.   For he\na happy man. He smiles, chuckles, tells jokes, contentedly\nnokes his pipe and thinks pleasant thoughts. Thus, if the\noal of human life is happiness, as many philosophers be-\neve, then he has reached it,\nThat sounds little less than impossible when you realize\nlat at 20 he was professional ball-player, a laughing, lusty\nx-footer, a pitcher whi could go out on the mound and\nurn them over the plate. The next day, almost, he was\nke a dead man, except that he could move his lips.\nJoy In *rii!nk'n\u00bb *      \"\"\"     \"          \"      _\\       '*~r~\nAn   Mtort-hlni   thing   hs.   -sp- it n\" *l\u00abn  \u25a0\"\u00ab  .\u00ab\u00ab' s-tlsfartlon.\n_  _    t.        \u201e       r.  ..     r_._,._ I hsvs  found the Joy est expressing\nt><- to Desn Van Clutt.    During my    thoughu    and ' hllvln\/  tl)Cm\ne lot. years h\u00ab has spent In hos- \u00bbTitten   down   so  that   others   can\ntals, he has become an educated, read   them.     That   ts   reconipenso\ntelllgent man.   .Jl type, at books \u00abor mV l0\u00ab <* PWUM activity.\"\nv.   been   read    to    him.    Irom M\" \u2122 \u00bb \"\u00b0'\u00bb \"-,h*\u00ab \"tU* apart-\n._._.,,_    , ment In   Waverly  place,  (n  Orsen-\netach. to Sinclair Lewis. vlcb   villa_e.   Van   Clute  smltas  as\nH. I_ Mencken  has published ar- hs   talks.    His  head  \u00bb-\u00ab  slightly\nis. h. has dlct.ted  and he has \u00bb amntiulza a Point.   But m. body\n,-   \u201e               ,                  .\u201e   _ remsins   prsctlcslly   rnotlonle-i   be-\nTltten \u2022 a   nov.l   which   will   be Muw  ^  .,\u201e  only ,_\u201e,\u201e hlt  fmt\nleased this fall.   Hs ls a thinker. _nd shoulders slightly and raise his\ne  whoe\u00bb  mental   life   Is  glowing left leg  sn Inch or two. The rest\nel tun th.. i. -.,\u201e ,,. i. .,.\u00bb-\u201e ot his body ls paralyzed\u2014his finger.\n,d Mil.   That la why h. It hsppy.    .__ ^  .\u201e\u201e ,jme ^^ .\u201e,, llfy_\n'I have reasoned  lt all out,\" be been In for 13 years.\n\"That hu been easy  because \/, \\_._\ncould do nothing  but  think.    I j^ tells the moving story of his\nve found the Joy of thinking and life, laughing  now snd  then, Indi\ncating nothing of despair at hla\npiedli'ament:\nBorn in Morr-tofl-n, N .Y.. near\nthe Bt. Lawrence ll\u00bber, the fourth\nchild In a family of seven, he was\na mischievous. T*y boy who enjoyed\nlife  to the ulmost.\nAfter going to high school and\nClarkson Instltut. of Technology,\nhe then left to see tlio world. H2\nshipped on a light-house tender plying the Clreat La':es. H\u00ab had a\nfrw laboring Jobs. A husky young\nfellow, he finally etarte<t playing\nbawball with semi-professional\nteams around Buffalo. In Watertown\nand in Rochester. He achieved such\na repuLtU-u John Oanzel signed\nhim up for th. Rochester International  League  club.\nBefore the season opened he was\nstricken with arthritis. He wasted\naway to a shell of s man. He was\nIn a hoeplt-l tn Rochester but he\ndidn't Improve. Boon he loet his\nsight. lie thought\u2014because that\nwas all he could do.\nAnd  He fan  Joke\nSoon he was thinking of many\nthings. Books read t > him Inspired\nhim. He commenced to laugh aud\nJoke.    He  wanted   to  live.\nIn the City hosplt-I In Hew York,\nhe heard msny funny Incidents.\nTliey went Into in article, full of\nsatire  snd wit.\nThere Ii atlll hono h, will Improve. That buoys him up. That\nis why he can Joke like this:\n\"Last summer when I was up\nhome, Just across the river from\nCanada, the doctor was always kidding me about getting drunk. Bald\na little beer wouldn't hurt me.\nWell. I tried to mako it. but I\ncouldn't get across the river. But I\nmay tool hlra yet.\"\nThen he chuckles and goes on;\nBlindness snd paralysis hrven'v erased the smile from the lips of \"Tho. .ay m Cerh-Ds a year 111\nDean Van Clute, former ball Player, shown upper right In a close-up view, be sblc\" to move one leg fully Then\nBelow you see him as fvleude brought hu\u00bb th, news that a publisher's there's a possibility of getting my\ncheck for royalties had saved him from eviction from his New York s.ght back. s. what's the use of\nbook-shop. worrylnrj?   It's all in a life-time.\"\nMONTREAL, May 25\u2014Higher prices\nthan anticipated were paid today at\nthe first auction of the season, at\nthe Montresl board of trade, when\n638 bcie\u00bb of butler and \u00bb7S boxes\nof cheese were offered. Number\nbutter wu sold \u00bbt, ITIi cent* per\npound.\nEggs were unchanged with receipts liberal at 47M cases. Potatoes\nheld und.ianged, the uwirket being\nfeatureless.\nCheese,  Ontario,  9.\nCheese,   Quebec,   BV..\nButter,  No.   1   finest,   IT.\nEggs, fresh speclalA la cartons.\n2]   to 34.\nEggs, fresh extras In cartons, 22\nto 2-K*\nEggs,  fresh  firs\u2014j,   19   to  20.\nWINNIPTO, Man., May S5.\u2014Oraln\nquota t. oiss:\nOpen   High fcow Close\nWheat:\nMsy    (13*.    08% 63>i    83%\nJuly         44'.     641, 64        64\u00bb.\nOct.    __, _   86'^    *Wri 68       68*\nOaHi\nMay     _._   36*J   861. 26.   36*_\nJuly    _ _    851-    BB>. 81'.    35',\nOct ,_ 31*i\nBarley:\nMay     _._    41%    41*4 40>i    <1\nJuly    _..._   40\",    tftt 40',   41(4\nOct    85%    18 8o\",    86\nrlaxt\nMay    __ _ 84*.\nJuly   _    \u25a0(       M 88       86\nOct    89        BD'.i 87 \u00abi    89 U\nRys:\nMay    _    41%   41% 41%   41*.\nJuly       42       42'. 41%   42'..\nOct    43%   48% 43       43',,\nCuh close:\nWh.at: No. 1 Hard. 86'.; No. 1\nNor., 44'i; No. 2 Nor., _Cs-,: No. 3\nNor., _7'i; No. 4, 66_: No. 8. 61%;\nNo. I. 4414; \u00bb*eed, 44%; Track, 63%;\nNo. 1 Dur., 88%.\nGENERAL DECLINE\nHOLDS ON TORONTO\nMINING MARKET\nRichfield Petroleums\nTemporarily Withdraws\nCourt Action on Board\nCALGARY.   Alta,.   May  25   (CF)-*-\nRichfleI<J petroleums company, llmit-\ned., tc-Uy wirtidrew temporarily from\ncourt actions aimed at proving the\nAlberta faf comervatLon regulations,\nbeing enfc-Tced by tbe Turned Valley\ngae conservation board, ultra vires\nof  thi Alberta legislature.\nRecen-tly a teaiporBry injunction\n.\u25a0entraining tii.e board front), enforcing\nthe regulation\/, on tlie Richfield\ncompany and tha Apooner Oils, limited, was granted by Mr. Justice A. P.\nEwing. Iii announcing temporary\nwithdrawal today, Richfield official* (raid thry would await the outcome of the trial of thc Spooner\naatlon June 0, If the E.po->ner claims\nthat the regulations aro ultra vires\n\u25a0we upheld, no further action will\nbe taken by the Richfield -smnpsny,\nbut If the Spooner action falls, Wen\ncounsel  will  proceed   with  the ault.\nMONTREALCURB\nIS LOWER\nCLARKE ESTIMATES\n8.C APPLE CROP AT\n4.000,000 BOXES\nChief  of  Federal   Fruit  Inspection Visits Creston\nArea\nCRHSTO-f,     B.     C,    May    \u00ab\u2014An\napple crop of well over 4,000.000\nboxes Is in prospect for British Columbia this year, according to R.\nQ. U Clarke, chief ot the federal\nfruit Inspection staff, of VancouTer,\nwho was here on an Inspection trip\nat the sad of the week, and during\nhis stay conferred wltn the heads\nof local fruit selling agencies, more\nparticularly concerning this year's\nexport  trade.\nAccording to lit. Clarke, whose\nfigures h_.e also been concurred In\nby E. J. Chambers of the Associated\nGrowers, British Columbia this year\nshould -hip out of the country at\nleast S-TJOO-OOO bones in order to\nhave satisfactory sale of tlie balance\nof the crop in western Canada and\nthe eastern Ca-.ac.__ and New York\nmarket, the latter of which Uk.s\nsome quantity of Mcintosh Bed and\n_>liclous.\nLast year the British Columbia\nexport wa\u00ab little more than half a\nmillion boxes. Mr. Clarke stated,\nand In ill too many ca\u00a3-es the fruit\nfl.iippeJ wa* not of the desired\nvar le. i es or pack. Tha visitor li\nstrongly of the opinion that It u\ntime the shipping companies were\nputting the cream of tha crop on\nthe old oountry market instead of\nthe prairie. AlberU. and S-skatche-\nwan have always Incited tliey wanted\na cheap apple, and Mr. Clarke favora\nshipping them the unwrapped and\ny   grades.\nAs to sizes and varieties ht Indicated that Vba old country would\ntake the right vsneties 1b elae* up\nto 125. In the past nothing largrr\nthan ]85's had been exported. He\nalso stated emphatically that ._\u25a0\u2022\nold country was no place for the\nearlier varieties. ConuTtfiicing with\nthe   Mcintosh   was   pltnty   early.\nHe was thoroughly optimistic that\nthe present preference accorded Canadian fruit on ti.it British mark-t\nwould be extended and is appealing\nto selling agencies for the fullest\npossible cooperation to make sure\nthe overseas trad* gets Just what lt\nwants rather than what Canada miy\nthink Is best for export.\nDOLLAR CLOSES UP\nNEW YORK. May 2o~~Brltlsn currencies rallied on the local foreign\nexchange today. The Canadian dollar\nclosed % cent ihlgher at B7\u00bbi cents\nand the pound sterling ended ihe\nday l cent higher at |l-t% for\ncable  transfers.\nC,  E. BOTHWELL MOVES\nAMENDMENT   TQ   BEFORT\nOTTAWA. May 25 (CP)\u2014In the\nreooit carried by the Canadian Press\nyesterday relatlre to the gasoline Inquiry, it was stated that In the\ncommittee J. L. Bowman (Cons.,\nDauphin) had moved an amendment\nto the report. This was in error.\nThe amendment was moved by C. E.\nBothwell (Lib., Swift Current). The\namendment oppose i fre conclusions\nreached by the csmmltitee that ths\nprice cf gasoline tn Canada were\nnot   unfair,\nC.  N.  B.  WEEKLY\n\u2022fiKOSli EARNINGS DOW>\nMONTREAL, May ?5\u2014Activity In\nBesuhsrnols Power featured a lower\nMontresl curb market today, .\".eau\nharnols closed unchanged at 60\ncents. Fractional losses were shown\nby imperial OH, International petroleum and Canadian Vlckers, on\ncomparatively light sales. British\nAmerican OU held unchanged,\nOnly two ml nee were trade* In.\nSlscoe closed a cent lower at fifi\ncents and Noraijd* eased W oents\nat (1425.\nMINNEAPOLIS   GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS. May 38\u2014Flour unchanged. Shipments J ft,304. Bran\n9-60 to 1000.\nWneat: No. I jior M% to 68*i;\nNo. 1 red durum 52H to 53si_ May\ntitki   July  9V.:   Sept.   ft,.\nCorn: Ml 3  yellow  33  to St.\nFlax:   No,    1,    I.IB    t^    1.18.\nOats:   No.   8   White   22',_    to   2V_.\nBANK   OK   MONTREAL\nEARNINGS  DOWN  SLIOHTLY\nMONTEEAL, May 28 - A si x-\nmonth*' earnings report of the\nBank of Montreal. Issued today,\nshowed profits during the period\namounted  to  $2.58A.29_   as  conipared\nRains in Creston\nDistrict Postpones\nStrawberry Period\nCRESTON, B. C, May _*6\u2014\u00abfcow,ry\nweather has prevailed here sii.-n\nearly Friday morning, *nd up till\nnoon today h\u00bbd accounted for a\nmoisture supply of et least one aiKl\na half Inches, The wet epeli has\ncaused tlie berry power* to reviso\ntheir predictions aa t0 when strawberries would eonMnene* movln...\nT^o enrly varieties are well tbrougto\nblooming and with average warm\nweather would have been supplying\nsmall quantitlea for shipment bv\nthe mlddlt of June, btit tlie presei*;.\nspell of wet and cool weatner Js\nliable to make the date shout Juno\n20, the flan ts are showing s ri\naverage lot of bloom, but only an\naveraa-e crop Is looired for despite\nthe excellent weather that hu prc-\nva.Ied this year. The Bummer and\nearly fall cf 1681 wae si little too\ndry to promote the growth and\n\"crowns\" on Which the berry e.-op\nof the following year Is procured.\nRaspbenle*. ate aleo likely to h-.'\u00ab\nonly a normal yield due to thee\ndry condition* ot  la\u00abt year.\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nwrmfin-O, May as \u2014 leceip-*.\nCattls 9tib, calves CO, bega .<>;.*,\nshrcp  2D.\nStcere, up to low Iba.: Good aJid\nchoice   $4.78   to   $5.73.\nsteers, over 10&o lhe.: Oood and\nholce,  $4.75  to  I&.7B.\nHeifers: Good and chxMoe $4.80 lo\n$5.65,\nFed   calves:   \u00a7nm%   an<J   Choice   $fi,\nCn-A's: O-ood, $3 to M50.\nBulls:  Good, $2.\nStocker and iccder etcere: 0>xl,\n13.75.\nSfocfe   cows   and    heifers:   Ctod\n$3.25.\nMilkers and springers: $35 to $!\u2022*.\nVeal calves; Good and ch'..ce f.j\nto 96.\nHo^s: Select baron, $1 per Lead\npremium;   bacon   $3 60;   butcher*  $1\nwith $2,771,753 for the corresponding  m   hea,f   \u00abIM\u00abll    heRTy  \u00abs:   m\nperiod  of last  year,\nTlie bank showed total Rise's at\n9740,812,481 compared with $78\u00ab,-\n704 a year ago. Of this amount\nquickly available assets were $.85,-\n483,335,\nheavy   $2 75;   light*   and   feeders,  PS\nSO Wei     *..  ,''\".\nLatt.bs: -Spring) ^cod haidywai^it\n$8   tx> $9.\nSheep: Oood ..eavtee $9 M; gocd\nhandywelght $3 50; common $150.\nMONTREAL, May 25\u2014Cross reve\nnues of tho Canadian National railway* for the week ending May 21\n1932, wers $2,570,838, as compared\nwith $3,504,333 for the cone*ponding\nperiod in 1931, a deorcase of $924,204.\nSENATE   RGFU8FR\nSIDSTITLTE   TAX  ON   BEER\nWASHINGTON, May 25\u2014The Unit\ned Stat** senate tonight rsfused to\nsubstitute a tax on 2.7$ beer for\nthe excise levies In tlie revenue bill\nCapt. Fitzsimmons\nSpeaks at Kaslo\nConservative Meet\nKAflLO, B. C, May 25\u2014Tlie local\nConservative association held a meeting ln their room* Saturday evening. Tbe meeting w*t called for Bhe\npurpose of \u00bbJttlng tho mtmhera m\u00abet\nCapt. James Fl'1 Simmons, M. L. A-\nwho <*\u00bb* *b fro\u00bbn Nskusp during\ntlw 4*y. Capt. Pltzslmmoiio gavs a\nvery lucid and satisfactory account\nof his activities during tlie last session of the provincial house, pe\ntouched on many subject* vitel to\nthe district, especially the redistribution ef th* electoral districts, of\nwhich h* did not feel In accord\nwith In some InsUnce*. Captain\nFlt__.in.mons was accompanied by\nHorace Davis of Arrowhead, bot a\ngentlemen were made heartily welcome and given votes of thinks lor\ntheir attendance and addressei.\nNEW  YOBK  STOCK   KXCHANOL\nTO    Bll    OPEN    DATLKOiYj\nNEW YORK. May 25\u2014The New\nYork stock exchange will remain\njpen cn Saturday th* board of governors decided today. A petition,\nsigned by nearly 600 member,, requested the closing of the exchange\non that day t0 extend the twlttaf\non Monday, Memorial Day In the\nUnited  States.\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNTW YORK, May 25\u2014Sterling ex-\nchange firm at $3.68 for 80-day bil'i\nand  at $3.09V_  for demand.\nCanadian dollars HY14 P*r \"nt\ndiscount.\nFrancs 3-M   15-16 ccjj-5.\nLire   5.13'<j   cent*.\nUruguay  47-25  cents.\nMarks 23.71  cent*.\nColorado's Jobless Taught\nTo Pan for Precious Metal\nWest Virginia Man Makes Btch Strike\nColorado'* unemployed are being\ntaught how to pan nold and nearly\n2000 ar* at work on streams all\nover the state.\nIn Wast Virginia th* richest strike\never made ln the east ha* been reported, ylth or* assayaig *t $156.60.\nTher* ar* two developments of\ntoday in Anu lea's record of the\nyellow metal, which ha* been baund\nup in devious way* 1th tho history  of   the   United   States.\nThe Colorado plau for relief of\nth* unemployed is unique among\ntli* many schemes b.lng developed\nthrc-'hout th* country on behalf\nof  jobless  workers.\nMayor George Begole of Denver\nannounced formation of the first\nclass  in  gold   panning   methods.\nThe scheme was developed under\nth* direction of Professor E. I.\nWatson of Fort Collins, state superintendent of Industrial educat.on.\nUnder his tut2lage Jooless men\nwer* taught how to \"pan\" tha\nbanks of streams where gold w.s to\nbe found. Scores of Ct ado rivers\nare fairly rich with fine gold wash\nings. Hardly worth working ln commercial quantities, the deposits e.Ul\noffer a fair income to industrious\nand  d. .ermincd   unenployeo.\nNearly all the larper cities In\nColorado formed classea running\nfrom 200 to 400 men each. Within\na shor time 1300 amateur gold\npanners were reporteo at work aud\nthe number ts Increasing constantly.\nTlie tiick Is to wash away the\nlighter gravel and cand in the pen\nwithout  letting   th\"?  gold  escape.\nMeanwhile West Virginia ls stirred\nby the discovery of gold not far\nfrom   Parson.*,   in   Tucker   county,\nThe first strike w:j niftde by Coy.\nton Phillips of parsons within ths\nboundaries of the Monongahela forest. The tin, a ledge, is being traced to areas outMde the forest and it\nis expected that a deposit or con*\nsldeiabi* magnitude has been dis*\ncovered.\nAt $156.80 a ton. the ore lo uearly\na t'ii u mor*. valuable than any\nhitherto discovered in the east, according to mining engineers at th*\nseen? of the strike.\nCommercial opera.ion has sUrted.\n A fine grade\nABSORBENT\nCOTTON\nCArt per pound pkg.\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nSim   NEISOX   DAM   NEWS.   NK,SOX.   B.   C,   THraSD-T   MOB-TOO   MAT  M   IM-!-\nMAY TRY TO HALT\nANDERSON CREEK\nGOING BERSERK\nWhen Inventors Are Left to Their Own Devices Social Events REV. W. J. CRICK\nCity Engineer Affleck to Surrey Stream as to Possi-\nbilities and Cost\nYOUNG LIBERALS\nSTAGE DANCE IN\nTHE LEGION HALL\nCLAIM WOULD MAKE\nTHE CITY LIABLE\nMembera of the Junior Liberal association, assisted by the lades of\nthe senior organization, staged a\ndance in the Canadian Legion hall\nWednesday night. In a novelty dance\ncontest prizes were s ...rded to Mia*.\nLeona BolsJoU and Arthur Bouchard.\nOordon Burna was master of ceremonies  for  the  evening.\nBOY   SCOITS POSTPONE\nROX1NG EXHIBITION\nTRAIL, B. C, May 25.\u2014The Trail\nBoy Scouts' boxing show, scheduled\nlor tonight was postponed for two\nweeks until June 8.\nProperty - Owners     Affected\nWould Have to Grant\nEasements\nPhone\n55\nTAXI\nThe .Best   of   Berries\nCareful,   Courteous\nDrt.en\nNalson Trtnstar Co.. Ltd.\nGLASSES -\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST AND   OPTICIAN\nSUITS -OS M-  MIOICAL AKTS SUILBINS\nM 0 I) E S S\nr.CKAOE  til* 1.1.  ______  VAI.IE.\nma      en*     rata\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNebon's IH.p<\"n*li!R  Chemists\nC\\U.   AND   HT   YOI B\ncoKui.tr hui.iit me\nMERCURY COAL\nThe coal with the\ngreatest heat value.\nCORD WOOD\nIn all lengths.\nTRANSFER\nPrpmpt, efficient service.\nPhone 797\nRENWICK'S\nTRANSFER\nA survey of the portion of Anderson creek tint traverses Fairview Is\nto be made by City Engineer Boyd\nC. Affleck, so aa lo determine what\nit would eoft to provide protection\nagainst overflow in case of unusual\nfloods, for the information of the\ncity council.\nEvery few years the creek treats\nItself to a rampage and spreads Itself over adjacent scenery, perhaps\nas a consequence of abnormal heat\nln the early spring, of abnormal\nrains, or of some obstruction damming up in its ut-per course, and\nin such cases there are usually\nlawns or gardens burled under sand,\ncellars flooded, and streets washed\nout.\nSTRAICHTEN   ANCLES\nBy a policy of straightening the\ncreek where lt is croo'ed and liable\nto be obstructed, and deepening lt\nwhere it is shallow, Mr. Affleck\nconsiders the liability of damage\nfrom future sudden freshet* will\nbe   greatTy   lessened.\nIf lt is discovered that the cost\nof this work would be reasonable.\nthe question of easements might be\ngone into, for lt would be necessary\nfor the city to be protected before\nearning out of the improvement\nscherrv   could   be   considered.\nAnother factor is the contention\nthat if the city alters the creek in\nany way it will become 1 able for\nnny damage that the creek mny do\nin future, no matter how extreme\nth,, conditions might be. It ts certain the city at nn e.rly stage will\nobtain the advice of its solicitor on\nIhln   qurRtlon.\nEvery time in the past that Anderson creek has suddenly flooded,\nlarge boulders have been brought\ndown, nnd often have blocked the\nch-innel, earning the water tu cut a\nnew  channel.\nof Trail City\nTRAIL. B. C. Msy .-\u2014Mrs. Osorgs\nShaw, Miss ITcna S1W.W and Oeor_e\nBIDS FAREWELL,\nCONGREGATION\nSr* ,__ __-. -X\\\u00a3 -SS Reverend C. C. Scott Assists\nHim in South Slocan\nlor a lew -ays dmlne tha\nSen-ice\nUla.   ttsObrstU  ot   Kaslo   has   been ]\nthe *n_-t o' h<* brother-in-law and |\nsister. Mrs. Paul. *-hlr_ avenue, lor; \t\nthe psst lew <lsys. ( I    g,-,--,, gLOCAN, B a   j^j V\/_\n_.    _,_,,_. _~a   .__.\u00bb  -V.le I Tlis Rev. Father Monsshsn ofllclstsd\nmt rrs*<-s Wy'l. and :[_dy *\u00a3\u00a3:\u201e . Mr,;c, 0, m___ ln th\u201e ,*_\u201e,,\nwho are la Canada .''T.-J.d.Y   lor1 Heart church oa Sunday which was\nland,   lelt   Vancouver   >Mf\u2122\"   \"J' largely  attended.\nKeattls   and   points   ou   Vancouver      >  '\n,    a     it-Mr-*. 1    thev    will    visit i    Alternoon service was held at St.\nS3   whl.S^\" will bs'.ue.- Matthew,   church   on   Trinity   Bun-\n\u00a3\u2022_,\u00ab-__.,  Arthur O. Cameron, dsy.   when   the   Rev.   w.   J.   Crick.\n..' \"^ ^_.J? belnir   a   member  ol. vicar   ol   the   Church   ol   th.   Re-\n_\u00a3_  SsTs^fl  o    the   C^lldated.dcemer,   Nelson,   and   also   ol   this\nMinin? *   8m,,0ungh<,company.   Sir. PsrUh.   preached   hi,   (until   Mr-\nFranc., and Z*JJWJ*\u00a3*\u00a3  \u2122\u00a3.  crtck spoke veT_  ftellngly  \u201e,\n\u00abH*\u00abT.il  RhS Kar. \"nd  \u00bb*.. connection  with  Z, par..-  snd\n, .heir \"smllles. Sir Francis wajsecre-\nI tary ol the Rhodes trust at OJiord.\n...\nMr.  and Mrs.  Frank Clarsy were\nhum's  ol   Mrs.  Clsrey's   sister.   Mrs.\nIW.   8.   McPherson   ot   Orand   Forks.\nI durlnj   the   VWt-M.\n\u2022   s    *\nMrs. John Hall ol  Creston  ls the\ntruest ol her son-in-law snd daughter, Mr. and Mrs.  W.  WoMall.\n\u00a9-_-*\u2022:_.\nJamca    H.    Gagnon\nschool teaming staff spent the we.k-\nend at the home of his parent* ln\nNelson.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nMr.   and   Mr-   W.   Hayccck. their\ndaughters   and  son   of   Chase, have\nbeen here during the past few days.\n\u2022   *   *\nMrs. H. Polvik and daughter Beth\nof the friendly cooperation in his\nministry, and gave his text as a\nvalediction and a benediction which\nwould eventually become a conviction.\nThe Rev. C. C. Btott of Kaslo\nofficiated at the first part of the\nservice, the lessons being reaTI by\nMajor Turner Lee. Special music\nwas rendered by O. Noel Brown, as\norganist, A large congregation attended.\n, Miss A* R. Mitchell has returned\n?\\. _--_,: i from a visit to her sister, Mrs. R.\nBillson  Merry  of  Annable.\nJohn Laurie was a week-end visitor  in  Trail.\nHarold Lang haa returned to Nelson after spend.ng a few days the\nguest of Mr. anu Mrs. R, Q. Elliott.\nT. D. DesBrlsay has returned to\nNelson   after spending  a  few  weeks\nare   visiting   in   Grand   forks   and \\ at  Summerhili  ranch\nIt's patent that patents will take the tricks again\nthis year, and the necessity for making money is the\nmother of new inventions. Here are some of the\nunusual devices that will be exhibited at the international Patent Exposition ln N-rJv York soon. No\ngolfer minds stealing away from his work on nice\nafternoons, but he doesn't l.kc his sticks to bo stolen;\na plate locked over a golf-big (upper left) prevents\ntheft  of  the  clubs.    Just  as  a  few  people  here  and\nthere are learning how to uss tl__ present dial telephones, another inventor rings the bell with a new\ntype of straight-slide dial (upper center). Another\n\"knobby\" gadget, which proves that one good turn\ndeserves another, tj a combination lock (upper right)\nfor door-knobs. Though Bheer hosiery makes most\ngirls afraid of \"runners,\" the smiling m;ss seen below\napparently enjoys the runners on a new combination\nsled-and-scootcr, designed for year-round play.\nMIGRATORY BIRDS\nOFFICER TO GIVE\nA LECTURE HERF\nSharpen Steel With\nStolen Equipment;\n10 Days Each Man\nIdea of Commission\nto Study Six-Hour\nDay Is Not Harbored\nBennett Makes Reply in House\nto Question of Humphrey\nMitchell\nCROPS PROSPECTS\nIN OKANAGAN ARE\nALMOST PERFECT\nGreenwood fftt* relatives for a  lew\nweeks.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Arthur  Cherry and\ndaughter Dorothy May, who fcavo\nbeen on a m-cUV tour to Callfcrnla\nand through the United States east,\nsail from Montreal June 3 to visit\nrelatives in England.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMembers cf the Ladles' Service\nauxiliary to Knox United church\nwcre guests at the home of Mrs,\nCharles Fenton. Annable, Monday\nevening. Mrs. Fenton was assisted m\nserving   by   her   sister-in-law,   Mrs.\nJim McFadden and Bert Davis\nmotored to Grand Forks to spend\nEmpire day.\nA. Dearlove left recently by motor\nfor  Toronto.\nMr. and Mrs. Buster Harling, who\nhave been residing here for the past\nsix months, left on Monday for\neastern points. Mrs. Hsrllng is going to visit at her home in port\nArthur, and Mr, Hari ng, who was\nconnected with the General Electric company, goes to Join them at\nAbltlbi.   Que.\nMisses M..ry and Julia Potosky\nspent   the   Empire   day   holiday   at\nCollar-Attached\nShirts\nFor BUSINESS and\nPLAY\nFor Summer comfort\nForsyth Prince Eric\nCollar-attached Shirts\nmeet the present day\nrequirements of the\nwell-dressed man.\nt\nIn White and all the\nnew plain shades and\na variety of stripes.\n$1.95 \u00ab\u00bbd $2.50\nBaker   of   Vancouver,   who   Is   her j the   family  hctne.\nThe   Badminton   club,   which   has\nOfficer Munro Accepts Invita\ntion of Nelson Rod and\nGun Club\nFor   the   theft   of   a   blacksmith's\nbtUon-f    and    duck-neat    for    forge.\nfrom   the   vicinity  of   the  mountain\nstation, Adam Pudas and Nllo B____l_g\nre now serving io days each in the. Field and  Root  Crops  Have\nprovincial  Ji-.11.\nComplalnt    of   the    loss    of    the\nproperty   was   made   by   R.   G.   Joy,\nand   foilowlng   a   clue   that   lei   to\nthe  C.   P.   R.   flat.   Provincial   Coa-\nReapondtng   to   an   invitation   ex* stable  C.  E.  Davidson and  M.  Lock\n44\nTAXI    and\nTRANSFER\nnail\" Freight Hrtiftliile to Trail\nanil Rosslunn. Leaves Nelson at\n1(1 a.m. Trail Depot Dominion\nfiarage; Ri-s-aud D.Tpot, I.. D.\n\u2022 ale. ION   CUMMINS\nPULFORDS CREAM\nOF OLIVES\nPot  Sunburn   ami   Wind-turn\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nprescription   imperialist\n1MIONF.   1\nshop win. vg hy mail\nOTTAWA, May 25 <CP..\u2014The government of Canada has no intention\nof appointing any commission to\nstudy the ad visibility of fix-hour\nday legislation, Premier R. B. Bennett made this clear in the house\nof commons tonight hen the labor\ndepartment estimates were under\nconsidcrat'on. *Tumphrcy Mitchell\n(Labor. Hamilton East, had urged\nthat the question of a commls- j\nsion be considered by the government during the recess.\nThe advice of men informed in\nLabor matters will be available to\nthe government should labor questions be discussed at the Imperial\nconference, Mr. Bennett replied In\nanswer to another question. Special\nadvisers would be available for whatever   subject   was   discussed\nHon. Peter Heenan, former minister of labor, wanted to knew\nwhen the government was going to\nfulfil its promise to pay 100 per\ncent of old ag pensions and make\nit a national  undertaking.\nThe present government had Increased its proportion of the payment from 50 per' cent to 75 per\ncent. Hon. W. A. Gordon, minister\nof labor, replied. The government\nhad  not   decided  on  any   increase.\ntended to him to visit Nelson and\n\u2022\u2022peak before the Nelson Rod and\nGun club on the subject of his\nwork, J, A. Munro, of Okanagan\nLanding, Dominion migratory birds\nofficer for thts portion of the west,\nhis replied to Secretary F. E. Denl-\naon that he will visit Nelson early\nin June, and will bring slides Wtth\nl-.lm ao that he can give an illustrated   lecture   on  \"Mlirratory   Birds.\"\nWhen the club la informed of the\nexact date of Mr. Munros visit, it\nwill arrange for a special session,\nopen to all interested, as the club's\nobjeot in the matter is both to enlarge its Information, and to further\ntho education of the public cn Uie\nsubject   of   game   bird   conservation.\nSturdy Start to Combat\nDrought\nguest,\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMri. J. M. Doughty has left to\nfitU her son-in-law and daugi ter,\nMr. and Mrs. Donald Martin aad\nlamlly of Lcthbrldne.\n\u25a0   \u25a0    \u2022\nI Alex Annandale, dlstriot Boy Scout\nI e-mmis-loner, accompanied by Ernest Masjn and Jack Murray, viUtcd\ni the Rossland Scouts Monday eve-\n! nlng.  Several  Cub badges were pre-\nfound   these   men  In  the  possession\nof   V__a   stolen   articles,   which   they\nwcre  using  for sharpening  drills  In ,,rate-y\nconnection   with  a  drilling   contract,;^ ancI wet       lng wSth frult trce3\nthat  they  had  there. I ,lhow*n    a  vlgf r  ftnd  b:oom  wWom\nOn   appearing   before   Stipendiary celled   and   field   and   root   crops\nMagistrate    John    Ortmel    in    pro-   ,naMng ftUai   grovth   thU  hwt   and\nnclai  police court Monday tho  **\u2022 \u00a3ti|ght   wheU thcy   \u201e,,-*   vlll   tint\nhad an extended season of eight\nmonths' play, wound up with a\nJolly dance ln the hall on Prlday\nevening.\nThe badm'nton committee\u2014J. D.\nTeatmsn. Mrs. P. rrlsby, W. Hutchinson, Mrs. J. Murray, Mrs. H. Lon?-\nworth. Miss O. Laurie and Miss M.\nBradshaw\u2014were In charge of arrangements.\nA splendid supper was served at\nmidnight.\nGrant Tlndale and Jack Tlndale,\nhigh    school    students    at    Nelson.\nHOOVER ASSURED\nSTRENGTH   FOR\nRENOMINATE\nmen  pleaded  guilty.\nWater Level of the\nWest Arm Moves Up\nAnother Quarter Fool\nWith   conditions   generally   milder\nthe  Kootenays  Wednesday,  tlie\nTIME UNSUITABLE\nFOR NEGOTIATIONS,\nDEEP WATERWAYS\nVERNON,   B.    C,    May    25\u2014Crop  M_t\u00ab|\nprospects   In   the   Okanagm   valley j\ncould scarcely be Improved   A mod-      Mr5> A. Turow an_ Baby daughter  Jgj \u00ab_,   ______r___ _____?\"\u2022.\ncrately cold .'Inter gave placo to _,*\u201e  rwsslam. were recent visitors in  .\u201e, h-ra. \u201e thelr parcntS| Mr'rad\nthe city. Mrs. W. J. Tinrtale.\n'    '   '     _ ..,     _.,       MlM   MsTa   Humph'\"? 'and   Miss\nMiss Miry Ca'..1leot,t and Mtss Bar-1 Jean McKenzie were visitors 4n Nel-\nbara    C'aldlcott,    Riverside    avenue, \u25a0 _m yesterday.\nwere hostesses to the Business Olrls*,    Mlsa   Mary   njward,   of   n0!a]anrt\nbranch   ot   the   Women's   auslllary | \u00ab,\u201e,  a  ._Cen(  visitor   at  the  family\nFirst cutting ol sltilta hay  ls done ,_ Bt> Andrew's church Monday eve-  home.\nIn a tew places and  Is nearly ready  nlnK   Mra_ __. _,. Barnes read  a re- ]  \t\nport of the diocesan auxiliary meet,\ning held recently at Grand Forks.\nRalston Slates Canada Should\n.    Secure Better Fiscal\nPolicy\nOTTAWA,   May   25   (OP).\u2014Urging\nwater 1CW ot th. West Arm moved j *\u00bbJ t'll! Present tlm, vas not suit\nup another quarter foot during the\n24-hour period ended st noon Wednesday for a high mark of 13.90\nfeet above low water.\nThine own mouth condemnetn\nthee, and not I: yea, thlne_ own\nlips   testify   against   tnce.\u2014Job,   15:\nPlaza\nLet us aD   go  to   TIIE  PLAZA\nand hate our fortunes told\nbefore It, ft loo late. Mrs.\nHarm st on U Imvtnj; .Ms week.\ni Certificates of\nI      Free Miners Must\nBe Renewed, May 3.\n\u2022      VICTORIA, May 25 tt,'P.\u2014 All tree\n| miners'    certificates   must   be   renewed   by   May   31,   it   was  pointed\nj out  by  the  mines department here\nj today.\nFailure;    to    renew    renders    ail\n| claims   subject  to  reversion  to  tin-\n' government. Fee,, range from $8 to\n$100,  according  to capltallzntlort of\n\u25a0 companies   or   -ft-hetiier   placer   or\ni   lode  claims.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nOriz7#ne's for bedding plant*, see\nadvt. on page eight. (221.4)\nFor Rent\u2014Single or double housekeeping rooms. Annable block.\n(I960)\nSuits $24. Rex Tailoring Co., Ltd.\nMacDonald   agent,   315.i   Baker  St.\n(1935)\nTreat yourself to 'THE TITTLE\nntntC-U-T in St. Paul's hall, tomorrow   night. (,-ti:t)\nLUMBER\nFOR EVERY PURPOSE\nNo matter what building you may be planning, from\na new cupboard to a home, we are prepared, and will\nbe pleased to handle your needs.\nCall or write for our price lists.\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Good Lumber\"\nPhone 176 Foot of Stanley Street\nUnfurnished 3-rooin suite, Hardwood floors. Electric MMf* also on\u00a9\nfurnished   suite,   Kerr   Apts.   (3045)\nN.  U. W. A.  dance,  Gelinas hall,\nFriday    '21th.    50    cents    fi    couple.\nGood   music.   Everybody   \u25a0welcom*-.\n(2294)\nable to  enter  Into any  treaty  with\nthe United  Statea on  the  St.  Lawrence   deep   waterways  scheme,   Hon.\nJ.   L.   Ralston.   liberal,   Shelbume-\nYarmouth. brought up the question\nof  this   international   project   in   the\nhouse   tonight,   and   declared   that\nbofore    any   treaty   w&t   negotiated\nCanada   should   at  ______   enter   into\ndiscussions with that country with\na view of securing a more Mitt*\nfnctory fiscal policy as it affects\nCanadian   primary   products.\nPremier Bennett replied that no\nquestions of concessions could enter\ninto th* treaty negotiations. The\naim of those negotiations would be\nlo reach a satisfactory agreement\nunder which the waterway from\nLake Superior to the sea could be\ndeveloped for the mutual benefit of\nboth countries. He cou.rt UW| the\nhouse also, Mr. Bennett said, that\nany treaty negotiated would not involve any great expenditures or obligations not commensurate with the\nbenefits   to  be  secured.\nEarlier today Mr. Bennett said\nseveral questions between Ontario\niind the Dominion had to be set\ntM befor*. negotiations with the\nUnited States could go forward. It\nmight be 10 days or two months\nbefore the matters would be ironed\nout,  he  added.\nthem    sturdy    and    well    advanced.\nln all. Winter barley is well headed\nand now of average length of straw\nBf harvest time. Excellent fodder\ncrops are awured lf curing reasons\nare  propitious.\nAll apples showed heavies than\naverage bloiin with the exception\nof Wealthier. A million more than\nthe number of boxes ln 1931 is the\nexpectation. Pears are good and\npeaches excellent, cots only being\nll_F.it, a condition which may be\noffset by new trees coming Into\nbearing. Set fruit Is good with June\ndrop to come. Cherry crops show\nrich promise, as also do prunes.\nIn vegetables, onion acreage ls\nheavier than a year ago, potatoes\nlighter, tomatoes, although away\nbelow average, higher than' 1931.\nCrops which will show large gains\nare cabbage, head lettuce and celery.\nCorn and bean3 slightly heavier. AU\nvegetables crops making wonderful\ngrowi_.i \u00abnd the canteloupes should\nbe a bigger crop. Water storage is\nso large should be no shortage this\nseason as one of the needs of the\nvalley has always been plenty of\nwaiter, assurance of a splendid supply\nmeans heavily increased tonnage bar-1 parting\" to  be' progressing.\nring    untoward    events.    No    frost -    -\ndamage ha. so far been reported.\nF. e Dockerill has been spending\nthc p*_t few days in Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. P. Lennon and daughter have\nreturned from Kaslo, where Mf\nspent a lew days visiting friends.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. J. Willis of Grand Porks was\ncalled to Trail last night by the Illness of her mother, Mrs, A. E.\nCumming.\n$   \u2022   |\nMrs. J. W. Dougan and Mr. and\nMrs. Leslie Hughes have been spending a few days in Nakusp, guests\nof Mr. and Mrs. O. H. Gardner, They\nattended the opening of the new\nlegion hall Friday. Others attending\nfrom Trail were James Vipon4, Edward Vlpond, Hubert Oardncr, Bert\nFowler and Thomas Reid.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Percy Hogben of Moose Jaw\nls tbe guest of Mrs. Joseph Andrews\nof Trail. Mrs. Andrews, who has\nbeen a patient M Trail-Tad a nac los.\npital for the past two weeks, Is re-\nSALMON FISHING\nPOPULARJROCTER\nL. S. Bradley Bags 12-Poundcr\nat   Procter   on\nMonday\nDOMINION TO BE\nASKED RETALIATE,\nAGAINST TARIFFS\nB.C.   Representation   to   Be\nThrough Premier\nTolmie\nTitflft.   aid   aaJe,   Procter   United\n; church, Saturday, May 28. at 3 p.m.\n1 Sewing homo cooking and ice cream.\n(2301) |\nOpening of Baseball league Sun-\n' day. Grand Forks vs. Nelson at 2:30.\nI Mayor J. P. Morgan will pitch the\n: first ball. Catcher Alderman R. \\v.\n! Dawson. Boost your local boys.\n(2295)\nB.C. TO RECEIVE\n$2,400,000 ON\nVICTORIA. May 25 (CP)\u2014B. C.\nwill make direct representations to\nOttawa immediately through Dr,\nTolmie Inviting the federal government to consider what steps ot\na retaliatory nature can be taken\nRELIEF ACCOUNTS lf the Un|te(> States proceeds with\nthe Intention of erectln? prohibitory\n' tariffs against Canadian lumber and\nVICTORIA,   May   25   fCP>\u2014Direct   copper it wag RT1nounced  today  by\nlth the Ottawa gov-    acting premier Pooley.\nadju-tod   satis-       The cabinet considered today the\nWomen's auxiliary to East Trail\nmission .ret In the church hall Monday afteraoon with Mrs. Thomas\nCorls as hostess. Those attending included Mrs. Thomas Hinton, Mrs. Alex\nYa.es, M\"s. A. E. Allen, Mrs. James\nMcLean, Mrs. H. Selby, Mrs. Thomas\nDawson, Mrs. J. G Garnett, Mrs A.\nBrown, Mrs. C. T. Conry, Mrs. H.\nJohnson, Mrs. Frank Verzuh, Mrs\nThomas Page, Miss Evelyn Allen and\nRev. C. W. Klrksey.\nTrail News of the Day\nTRATL HODSE8 AND LOTS - W-\nsuranw. Notary. J. D. Arids-so.,\nTraU. \"853'\niRmSH PARTY\nINTERESTED  IN\nB.C. RESOURCES\nWASHINGTON, May 33.\u2014In d\nInltely pledged votes to be\nthree week- hence at the Republic\nnational convention, President H<\nver held today the strength nee<\nfor his renominatlon.\nThe mark\u2014578\u2014was passed wo\nTexas yesterday Instructed Its d\negation of 49 to vote for him, brli\ning the assured Hoover votes\n621, and the total claimed for h\nbut disputed by Joseph I. Fran\nrival candidate, to 1044. There\nonly 1154 votes in the convention\nThe nomination total was reach\nas the president and party officl\nconferred on tht platturm wh\nthe convention Is to adopt. Pro\nbitlnm was one of the mibje\ntouched on, the conferees said,\nno  decisions  were   gl-\"n.\nrelief accounts\neminent    for    ]fl31\nPROCTER, B.C., May 25.\u2014Mrs. E\nT. Coleman and children spent the\nweek-end ln 'alllcan, returning home\nMonday.\nMrs. H. Johnson went to Nakusp\nto attend the celebration there.\nMrs. Baxendale of Trail, who has\nbeen visiting with Mrs. J. Robinson,\nleft fur her home on Tuesday night\nHarry Stranger of Tra\" has taken\none of the Baxendale cottages for the\nsummer,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Brasch spent the\nweek-end ln Nelson, returning on\nMonday.\nFred Curtis of Nelson ls spending\na few days at his summer home.\nD. Mcintosh, J. Bichan, and H\nMerrlfleld spent Saturday shopping\nin Nelson.\nMr. md Mrs. D. Ball and son Ernest of NelsDn were out on Saturday to\nsr-\"U the day fishing.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Jennings from\nDasey. War i. motored here to spend\ntwo weeks at tho Outlet hotel tourist\npark.\nA. MacDonald of Nelson caught a\n10-pound salmon over the week-end.\nSid Cockman of Procter caught a\nnine-pound salm:n on Monday, and\nRoss Bradley a 12-pound salmon.\nW, S. King and George Ferguson of\nNelson were out fishing on Sunday.\nMra. Stewart Galtr- . of Vancouver is visiting her ststcr, Mrs. J.\nHurst.\nMrs. O. Burtness of Nelson visited\nwith Mr. and Mrs. H. Johnson over\nthe week-end.\nDr. A. Major caught a 10-pound\nsalmon on Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. T. Andrews of Nelson motored  to Proctsr on Tuesday,\nMr. and Mrs. H. Axelson of Troupe\nVANCOUVER, May 25\u2014Interest ln   wt.rP tho guests of  Mr. and   Mrs. O-\nthe  resources  and   opportunities  of   .ohnsoa on Srnday.\nBritish  Columbia  ls  responsible for '\nf.toril.   It M, MN a. th. parlia-   \u201e.,\u201e\u201e. %.t\u00abt- l^tlsV l_r\u00a3l*_-n    f \" Z__Z_.   ___   profe\". on.    me\n-iu receive \u00bb_,4.00.000 from the do-    have  on  two of  B.  C.    ead n?  In-    .__  \u201e_ .h. ,.,-.\u201e,,_, 0r Bed'ord  Tin\nminion in full settlement of expend-   \u00ab,\u201e_\u201e,\u201e snd wa, unanimous ,n  It.    \u00a3\u00a3 \u00bb \u00a3$*\u00a3Zrec\u2122 T**!a\na large Bnd diversified party of Brit- \\ prosnef tnr*S   Sniin.nr\nish   business   and   professional   men   ' lUSptltOrS   npOIlSOr\nProtection Resolution\nCOLEMAN\nINSTANT-LITE\nGASOLINE\nCAMP STOVE\n-\u25a0-TH   OB  vrmioiT  OVEN\n*m_ \u00bb .Miniature Kllr-hrn -lanse**\nJust thc thintr for Your Summer Camp or Auto Trip\nISO SMOKE       NO DIRT       NO ASHES\n(lean quick cooking, anytime, anywhere\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nC.mpany, Limited 'e\nWHOLESALE - NELSON B. C. - RETAIL   |\nThe annual meeting of the Ne'.srm\nConservative association will ba\nheld on Friday evening, May 27. at\nthe Canadian Legion. All Conservative, are invited to atumd 8 o'clock.\n(2250)\n.          r   lef   .Z.n\u2122 22   ?.    \"\"   \"\"\"?\u201e'   S   f-fj! McA..-..   MOTtl\"'   \"   the   LM,d0\" KASLO* B' C* Ma* 2S~K m\u00abtlnS\nIndlrat ons   M.ntto   lltt*.   __\u00bb \u00b0 ,.      '.      *  c(Vlskl,<*r,*ltlon ,**   \u2022*\u2022 office of the British Columbia gov- _t  the  Kas'.o Prospector. ..-.elation\nwork   being   und'rt.ken     ,1,   \u2022_\u00a3 ___*             '  \"****  ^  \"- ernment. It I. a government exper- was   held   Saturday   evening,   there\nT_____mVS! i_\\?_T   ,,i         .     ____?' pe   ' lment to make tho province better being   about   40   present.   The   main\n_.*   th\u2122 Tovmce \u00a3*\u00a3____*____ ,\u00a3_.T___   2   __?   POl\",ed. \u00b0Ut* kno\u00bb_, and member, of the group business of  \u2022*_, evening  was .  dls-\nn.   ins   prOTlnre   1,  expected   from citrous fruits to the extent of se.- ...   comlnr  ,rom  al.   p,rts  of  the cusslcn  as  to  the  wiys  and   means\n\u00ab*\u00bb eral   millions  of  dollars  yearly   aro Br|t|B\u201e laie,, wim one Irom South of   financing   the   organization   tor\nOttawa   ln   the   course\n(lays.\nof\nCome and henr Mrs. Lawrence Mc- ~\t\nPhall'a  pupils  recital  tn  the  W.  I.   T C*. T) J_   CPFrVHC!\nrooms.   Friday   even-.ng   27   Inst,   nt     ' 'tafmam at ____.__tg\n$25,642 ON CHILD\nAfrica.\nImported into Canada from the U. S.\nWhile empire markets for the supply of these commodities go unserved. Federsl or even provincial\nInspection of Imported citrous fruit.\nmight be considered lf copper and\nlumber are ahut out by the suggested senate duties ln tariff against\nthis  country.\n  ,     t      ( Tlie B- C. representations, the full        , \u201e..,.,,\u201e,\u201e \u201e,..., _.\u201e  .-. .       -- -.,.,>,,..%    ,,..\nMidway pavilion, Castlegar, on Snt.   u- JJ  Pender,  Vancouver,  convener   tfXt of which were kept sec\/et will    Feriously considering the request nt   protection of prospectors from losing\nMay    28.    and    Trail    Commander...    of   the   chlI<i   welfare   committee   of    be made to Ottawa directly by Pre-    the berry growers' stated Hon. R. H.   their mining properties W.-.en unable\n..__ _h_.  !..*       .\u00bb..\u2022-._>. i fa 1      \/>rH_\u00bb^      r.,.!,..*-.*_.-\u25a0       _.f        . _      ___..___.. I__ _. ._._____,___.'.. ...\n8 o'clock.  Admission 25  cents. Proceeds   for   Women'*  Institute  work.\n(2202.\nLET'S   ALL   fiO   ACAIN\nDaoice   to   Al's   Red   Aces   at   the\nWELFARE IN 193*\nTORONTO. Mny 25   (CP)\u2014Mrs. A.\nCredit Requests\nj      of Berry Growers\nj Being Considered\nVICTORIA. May 25 (CYt\u2014\"We are\nFiremen's Uniforms\nWill Be Made Here\nCouncil Decid\nUniforms for Nelson* fire depa\nment of six paid men. lncludl\nFire Chief M. H. Maloney, will\nbe made in Nelson. It ls two ye\nsince the city gave the firemen to\nlast outfit of uniform\nThe contract is being divided\ntween   J.   A.   Gilker   and   the   Id\nTaylors,    the   former   tendering\n(49.50  per  suit,  and  the latter\n$50, on the  grades preferred, whl\nwere   the   middle  ones.  Pour  fir\nsubmitted   between  them   nine  te\nders. A Montreal house had a flgi\nthat was the  best offer by quite\nmargin, and acceptance of this\nurged   by   Alderm.n   S.   H.   Smyt\nand  W.  R. Campion, but their\ntion   waa   defeated   on  Mayor  J.\nMorgan's    casting   vote.\nthe coming year, ln view of the\nfact that the usual government\ngrant had not as yet been received.\nCapt. James Fltzsimmons, M. L. A.,\naddressed the meeting on this subject and also gave a resume of his\nefforts on the question of the stabilization of sliver, and Its relation to\nlocal conditions. Tlie president sponsored    a    resolution    regarding    the\nJune 4- Regular dances every Saturday  night. (2302)\nCARD OF THANKS\nMr. Gillette and family and Mrs.\nCam wish to extend their thanks for\nsymoathy and kinr-nes,, shown them\nln their recent sad bereavement, al-       Sctcn.l\nso for csst loaned and beautitui ;.ic_: ft-Hilqg process of preserv-1 are causing concern in governmental I A St. L-uis hospital has an op\nfloral tributes. Mr. Gillette and , iBI fruit* and vegetables find that circles and an official statement eraMng room, for childern, dec\nfamily, Mrs.  Cam and family. different  varieties behave  quite  tilf-   may   be   Issued   dealing   with   the'orrated    with    bright    pictures    of\n12297)   ferently. matter,  It was learned  here today,   fairy   talea.\n! Pooley, acting premier today in re- through adversity, or illness, to do\ni ferrlng to the request for a credit \u25a0 their assessment mat% within the\n1 of   \u00bb50,000   by   berry   men   of   the   required   period   of   time,   this   was\nihe   Imperial   order   Daughters   of   mter Tolmie,\ntbf  Empire, today told the annual j\t\nconvention   of   that   body   B7   chap- ' REPORTS OF FARCLOCS\ntrrs   in   Ontario   spent   \u00bb25.6_3   on WEALTH CAl'SINO CONCERN   province to enable them to process   unanimously  endorsed   and   ihe  sec\nchild  welfare worit during the pest __  and   8hip  g^q   (ruit   prepared   by   retary  was   Instructed   to  fcrwarl  a\nl'ear* VICTORIA, May 25  (CP.\u2014Reports    the    sulphur    dioxide    method    to   copy  to  the  minister  of mines  and\nof fabulous values in certain mining    Great Britain. i   dup.icate   to   our   local   memoer,\nwho   are   studying   the   districts emanating from Vancouver .\nprocess   of    preserv- j are causing concern in governmental\nwith a view to enlisting their early\nassistance, to have this put into\neffect. A vote of thanks was _H.MT\nt0 Capt. Fltzsiirimons. after whicn\ntlie meeting adjourned.\nMat-nee 2 p.m.\nNight 7 and 9 p.m.\nIf   you   want   something\ndifferent from the ordinary\nrun of pictures\nSEE\nRONALD COLEMAN\nIn\n\"UNHOLY\nGARDEN\"\nLast Time Today\n<\u25ba tyi   9\nCOMING TOMORROW\nWhat is perhaps his best\npicture.\nWilliam Powell\nand\nEvelyn Brent\n\"High\nPressure\"\ni\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_1932_05_26","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0404927","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"}]}}