{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0405074":{"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":"2021-12-05","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1936-04-08","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0405074\/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":" ^^_^_^\nDetroit Wallops Leafs by 9-4\nin Second Game at Home\n\u2014Pake Seven\n_________________________\nvicn t'i\n4(3\nKimberley Dynamiters Work\nOut at Winnipeg\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\nVOLUMI M\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\n__________________________________________________________________________\nNUMBER 2-3\nCHINA PROTESTS THE MONGOLIAN PACT\nA. P. Reporter Helps Bomb the\nEthiopians; Flies the Plane Back\nEVIDENCE OF POISON J\u2122\"\u00ab\nGAS GOES TO LEAGUE S\nHEARING ON THE\nRECLAMATION AT\nNELSON APRIL 15\nWASHINGTON, April 7 (AP).-\nTht Intermtlonil joint commii-\nilon decldtd todty to hold public\nhttrlngt lttt next tummtr on t\nproposed deep seaway from Mon*\ntrttl to New York, linking tht\nSt. Lawrence rlvtr, Llkt Cham-\nplain tnd tht Hudson rlvtr.\nTht purpoit of the projected\nwaterway would be to thorten tht\nroute for dtep ut veutli from\ntht St. Lawrence to New York,\nother Atlantic cout port*, the\nPanama canal and South America.\nThe commiuion alio tgrted todty to conduct t public heiring\nApril 16 it Neiaon, B.C., on I\nproposed 4000-aert reclamation\nproject tlong the Kootenty river.\nITALIAN DRIVE\nCONTINUES\nCommittee of 13 Will\nConsider British\nSubmission\nITALY STARTED TO\nUSE GAS MARCH 1\nFrance Orders 175,000\nArmy Men Held\nin Service\nITALIAN GENERAL HEADQUARTERS, Northern Ethioplt,-\n(CP-Havis)\u2014The drive towird\nDessye tnd Addis Absbt is well\nunderway, Cobbo ts Marshal Pietro\nBtdoglio's next imporUnt objective,\nthe high commind mnounced here\nTuesdiy.\nCobbo ii 40 miles touth ot Altm-\nidi ind ibout 89 miles north of\nDessye. It lies st the junction of the\n\"imperial hlghwiy\" to Addis Ababa\n\u2022nd in Importint caravan route\nbnnching eastward.\nItaly's white md nitive troopi are\n1 in  punuit  of  disorganised  rear*\nI guard forcei from Emperor Haile\nSelassie's  irmy  following  yester-\ni diys victory tt Altmadt, Marshal\nI Badoglio itited.\n\"HANGING JUDGE\"\nDROPS DEAD\nMONTREAL, April 7 (CP)-Mr.\nJuitice Chirlei Avili Wilson, presiding judge ot the court of King's\nbench tor the last 10 yeara, dropped\ndead thli ifternoon while walking\ntlong SL James street on his wty\nto the court house.\nKnown it tn unusually stern\nenemy ot criminals, Judge Wilson\nctme to be known is Montreal's\n\"hanging judge\" by virtue of his\nsentencing at least 28 persons to be\nhinged, He luffered \u25a0 hetrt leisure\nwhile walking tlong the street tnd\ndied in i neighboring office building. He wii in hit 67th yetr.\nBuildings Bombed\nin Barcelona\nBARCELONA, April 7 (API-\nTwo business establishments were\nbombed todsy tnd an attempt mide\nto assassinate former Director of\nPrisons Jose Rojas.\nRojas, fired upon from \u2022 passing\n\u2022utomobile In front of hit home,\nflung himself to the ground snd\nescaped Injury.\nBombs wrecked one American\nbusiness office and the establishment ot in Italian motor cir compiny.\nLONDON, AprU 7 (AP)-Evi-\ndence which convinced the British\ngovernment thit Italy wai using\npoison gu in her war with Ethiopia has been turned over to the\nLeague of Nations for consideration\nby the committee of 13.\nThis wss learned tonight from s\nhigh source shortly after Anthony\nEden, foreign secretary, deptrted\nfor Geneva to ittend the committee session.\nEvidence, which Sir Sidney Barton, minister to Ethiopia, cibled to\nhis government list week, ctme\nfrom vtrious InterniUonil sources\nwhose neutral observations the British claimed to be unimpeachable.\nAccording to these reports, the\nKalian planet began using gas bombs\nabout March 1 and hive conUnued\ntheir use since then during their\n\u25a0erial attacks. Although the poison\nKm mty be etsentitlly meant to\ndisperse the Ethioplin troops, It\nwas claimed that thousandi of civilians, Including women and children, have also suffered.\nMine Passengers and\nTwo Pilots Perish\nin Disaster\nPLANE HITS RIDGE\nIN A DENSE FOG\nHostess-Nurse Gives\nFirst Aid; Four\nCadets Die\nUNIONTOWN, Pi., April 7 (AP).\n\u2014Eleven persons\u2014nine passengers\n-nd two pilots\u2014were killed todty\nas the Transcontinental It Western's\nair liner, \"Sun Racer,\" crashed into\nfog-shrouded Chestnut ridge, seven\nmiles from nere, and burned.\nOnly the plane's hostesi, who\nstruggled valiantly to 1 farmhouse\ntelephone to report the disaster, md\niwo.passengers survived.\nThe plme, flying from New York\nto Pittsburgh, struck neir the highest summit of the Pennsylvtnii\nAlleghenles, when the veiling of\nvisibility wis absolute sero.\nThe hostess-nurse, Miss Nellie H.\nGranger, gave flnt lid to the survivors before she mtde her wty to\nthe farmhouse, there to report thtt\nonly Mra. Meytr C. Ellenstein, wife\nof the mtyor of Newark, N. J., md\nCharles G. Challinor ot Cleveland,\nwere alive.\nPope Pius XI\n(Continued on Ptgt Seven)\nMarkets at\na Glance\nBy tht Cinidlin Prill\nToronto md Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstocks lower.\nToronto mines\u2014Lower.\nNew York\u2014Slocks cloted down.\nWinnipeg-Wheat up Vi to Vt\ncent.\nToronto\u2014Bacon hogi off truck\nunchmged it 8.50.\nLondon\u2014Btr lilver higher; copper unchmged; letd md zinc lower.\nNew York\u2014Btr lilver, letd md\nZinc unchmged; export copper\nlower.\nMontretl\u2014Silver higher.\nNew York\u2014Rubber tnd coffee\nlower; cotton higher; sugar unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Cinidlin dollir down\n1-32 to M 17-32.\nNOT PLEASED\nMONtREAL, April 7 (CP) -\nComment that Montreal wu following England's own example in\nleeking conversion of high Interest\nrates md thtt the city hid no lesson to learn from Britain on the\nsanctity of contracts unUl Britain\npaid her war debts instead of spending billions on armaments wu mtde\nby tldermen todiy upon word the\ncity's proposal to convert her $272,-\n760,000 funded debt had been discussed in the parliament at Westminister.\nINDIAN INKY KOOTENAY FOR TWO\nHOURS; PARTNER RUNS HIU ANDA\nHALF IN THE NUDE TO BRING HELP\nScanlan and White Rescue Philip Carrier;\nWas on Raft With Joe Skookum When\nIt Upset Below Wardner\nPhilip Ctmer, Creston Indim,\nwho wu initched from the icy\nwtten of the Kooteniy river 12\nmilei below Wirdner Siturdiy, md\nJoe Skookum, hit pirtner, who\ntwin) ishore snd walked \u2022 mile\nmd t htlf in tht nude to summon\nlid, ire recovering from their htr-\nrowing experience, in the St. Eugene hospital at Cranbrook. An account ot their mishtp tnd subsequent thrilling rescue wis told In\nNelson Tuesdiy by Constable W.\nR. Poweri of the provinclsl police\nforce, who greitly commended the\nIndim's rescuers, John Scanlin ind\nmother ltd, t Mr. White.\nThe two Indians from the St.\nMary's reierve were starting out\non \u2022 trapping expedition. They were\nln the ict ot rafUng their food supplies, traps, guns md other effects\nacross the Kootenay river when the\nraft wu caught by the current.\nThe transport was iwept Into in\nIce iheet ind u It tlld pirtly under\nthe ice the suppllei tnd effects were\nshoved over the btck end of the\nrift.\n(Contlnutd on Ptgt Seven)\n(Contlnutd on Page Three)\nFRENCH POLITICS\nONTHEAIR\nPARIS, April 7 (CP-Hivu) -\nFrench politicil parties tonight Inaugurated 1 series ot nation-wide\nbrotdcutt\u2014the firtt in Fnnch pol-\nitical hiitory. The elections will be\nheld April 26.\nTonight the sir wu thrown open\nto Deputy H_nry Frtnklln-Boullon,\nI Conservitive of the right pledged\nto the republican nitional fronL\nHe urged t niUontl union of politicians ind leiden \u2022\u25a0 the only salvation of France, much ti the nitlonil union saved it in 1914.\nThe tpeiker* listed three erron\nto which, he slid, Frmce his been\ncommitted since the wtr:\n1\u2014Belief the wtr transformed\nGerminy md thit there li now \"\u2022\ngood Germany\" with whom Franct\ncan deal.\n2\u2014That the Leigue of NtUont\ncm inure peice.\n3\u2014Ignoring the fact thit partisan\nstrife cm threaten the nitlon u it\ndid prior to the wir.\nKing Gives $10 for\nKiddies' Shoes\nLONDON, April 7 (CP ctble)-\nThe King his sent t gift ot \u00a32\n(tbout $10) to t mm who once icted u caddy for him.\nJ. H. Whitethretd of Mitchim,\nwho served u caddy for King Edwird when, u prince of Wales, he\npliyed golf it the Wimbledon links,\nwrote hli mijesty md told him thtt\nhe htd been struggling against unemployment for tive yean. Hit children needed shoes to go to school,\nWhitethretd tdded.\nThereupon the King tent him $10\nfor shoes for the children.\nTo Consider Question\nof Food Storage\nLONDON, April 7 (CP) - Sir\nThomts Inskip, newly-appointed\nminister for coordination of defence,\ntold the Coniervitive parliamentary\nagricultural committee tonight the\nqueition of storage of food in Great\nBritain would be very carefully\nconsidered in relation to other aspects of the food supply.\nSir Thomu added that ilthough\nthere wu only ibout 10 diyi' reserve supply of whett ln granaries\nin the country, there wat tbout three\nmonthi' lupply tvtilible it preient\nit stocks of whett tnd flour ln\nthe htndi ot millers md bsken\nwere included.\nThe Times in in editoriil thil\nweek suggested it might be feasible\nfor the Cinidlin wheit botrd to\nitore tome ot Iti turplui itocki of\ngrain in the United Kingdom in\ncue of \u25a0 naUonal emergency in\nBriUin. -\nThen rtmarkiblt camera itudlet of hli holiness, Popt Plus XI\nwin midt rtcently whllt tht pontiff delivered in iddrttt it thl\nVltlein.\nHEALEY GUILTY\nVANCOUVER, April 7 (CP)-It\ntook 112-mtn assize court jury only\n19 minutes today to find thit Fred\nH. Heiley, 41-yetr-old tixi driver,\nwis an accessory to the murder of\nWilliam Hobbi, young btnk clerk.\nHeiley will wiit until the end of\nthc assize before learning the punishment for hli pirt in the crime\nfox which Chirlei Russell tnd Etrl\nDunbar ire under lentence of death.\nHealey was chirged with assisting Dunbar, Russell, George Lawson\nand Jack Hytlop to esctpe after\nthe four men held up Hobbs at t\nBmk of Commerce branch last\nJanuary. Hobbs wss shot to death\nmd Hyslop ind Lawson suicided\nrather thm fice trial.\nProsecutor A. M. Macdonald withdrew a charge agilnst Walter Davies\nof being in accessory to the crime,\nMicdonild taid there was not sufficient evidence to connect Davies\nwith the holdup.\nBoth Davies tnd Heiley uid they\nctme from Winnipeg.\nCanada Not Taking\nItalian Olive Oil\nor Other Products\nTORONTO, April 7 (CP)-Leigue\nof Nationt economic unctioni\nagainst Italy have been effective as\nfir is Canadt's business with Italy\nIs concerned, \u25a0 report ot the committee on import md export tnde\nof the Ontario Retail Grocer's tssocistion said today.\nThe report uid there has been i\ncesution of Cinadiin imports from\nItaly of olive oil, anchovies, shelled\npistachio nuts, shelled almonds, filberts in the shell, Sorrento wtlnuts,\nlemons, Umes md maraschino cherries.\nCONSTABLE DIES\nST. ANTHONY. Nfld., April 7 (CP\nCtble)\u2014Constable Corcoran of the\nNewfoundland Rangers died in Sir\nWilfred Grenfelli moit northerly\nhospital today, a vlcUm of cold md\nexposure. He hid been missing 10\ndiyi in northern peninsula wutet\nwhen seirch ptrty found him March\n27 md brought him to hospital here.\nITALIANS SCARED\nWHEN LEARN HE\nWAS NOT A PILOT\nNeil Takes Controls\nfor First Time\nin Life\nREPORTER SEES\nBODIES FLYING\n1000 Ethiopians Die\nUnder a Deluge\nof Bombs\nBy EDWARD J. NEIL\nAuoclited Prtu fortlgn Stiff\nQURA, Erltrain Aviation Heid-\nquirttrt of tht Northtrn Italian\nArmy, April 7 (AP)\u2014Prom tht\nglut enclosed bombing pit ef t\nhugt trl-motortd pltnt In a\ntcretmlng dlvt towird tht urth\nI uw today thl irnulng destruction Italian avlitlon It Inflicting\non tht demoralized rtmntnti of\nEmperor Halle Selatsle't Imptrltl\narmy.\nI flew for four and a half houn\nwith an Itiliin bombing squadron.\nWe uiled over Lakei Tint md\nAshangi, the city of Gondtr, ind\ntbe outikirtt of Dessye md saw\nhow deeply the Italians htve reilly\npenetrated into Ethiopia, In addiUon to whit thty do when they find\nfrom the ilr columni of Ethiopians\nand animals huddled despairingly\nalong the caravan trails.\n(Continued on Ptgt Thret)\nTeachers' Confab\nto Start Monday\nVANCOUVER, April 7 (CP)-\nRetolutions dealing with better educational facilitiei, ichool mtnige-\nment and teachen' salaries in\nscheduled tor consideration it the\nconvention ot the British Columbii\ntetchers' federation which will open\nin Vincouver Mondiy. Neirly 1500\nteachers tre expected to ittend.\nThe resolutions committee reporti\nthtt several moUom dealing with\nsalarlet htve been lent in for presentation to the convenUon. One\nresolution asks thtt the federation\ntake t definite stand to \"mitigate\nthe unfair treitment meted out to\ntetchers in most districts by school\nboards which refuse to grant tde-\nqutte restoration of ieven uliry\ncuti.\"\nAnother suggesti uking the depirtment of educttioa to hive thl\npreient minimum uliry altered\nfrom |780 to (850 md to hive extra\ngrants mide towird the lalaries ot\ntuch tetchen ti htve hid two or\nmore yetrs' experience.\nDuelists Both Miss\nand Angry Looks Are\nSum Total, Budapest\nBUDAPEST, Hungary, April 7\n'AP).\u2014What wordi failed to accomplish lut Thunday in \u2022 heated committee meeUng, a bloodless gun duel\ntoday between Premier Julius\nGoemboes and Tibor Eckhirdt,\nleader of the Peasant pirty, tlso\nfailed to settle.\nToday's meeting wu in thc best\ntradition of the long Hungiritn\ndueling history\u2014in which i number\nof previous premiers distinguished\nthemselves\u2014even to the cllmiUc\nending when shots of both went\nwild ind the ittteimen ttilked angrily tway, unreconciled.\nEach fired \u2022 single ihot it 29 paces\nwhile glaring it the other on the\ntanbirk floor of the Francli Joseph\ncavalry barracks, on the outskirts ot\nthe city.\nEckhirdt hid quetUoned the premier's tbility ln foreign policy lut\nweek.\nAn officitl communique subsequently Issued wu i mitter of fict,\ndeclaring Eckhirdt lought \"knighUy\nsttisfaction\" but did not menUon\nthe illegality ot Uie duel or the possibility of an trrest. A smtll tine\nusually li Imposed tor violation of\nthe anti-dueling law.\nJ. H. DOLLAR  DIES\nSTORM TOLL IN\nSOUTH ISOVER\n(00; FLOODS DUE\nStreams Rise Before\nCities Recover From\nTornadoes\n211 ARE DEAD IN\nMISSISSIPPI ALONE\n183 Bodies Are Found\nin Gainesville,\n'Georgia\nSy RICHARD  McMURRAV\nAnoclittd Pntt SUff Wrlttr\nGAINESVILLE, Gi., April 7 (AP)\n\u2014The itorm-luhed touth compiled\nt list ot mon thm 400 known deid\ntoday from sporadic ipring tor*\nnidoet u flooded riven threatened\nnew diiuter over a\"widespread\n\u2022ru.\nTorrentiil rains tent mijor\nstreams oo the rise even before the\ntask ot finding ind identifying Uie\ndetd left by torntdic thrusts hid\nbeen completed.\nThe known fitaliUei from the lateit itormi which ripped through\niix ititei yeiterdiy included Mississippi 211, Georgli 183, Tennessee\n12, Alabimi 11, Arkansas 1, md\nSouth Carolint 1.\n(Centlnutd on Pigt Thru)\nPRESIDENT OF\nSPAIN OUSTED\nSAN FRANCISCO, AprU 7 (AP)-\nJ. Harold Dollir, 40, vice-preildent\not \u25a0 world-girdling iteimship compiny founded by hit fither, died\nhere today ifter i hurt ittack.\nMADRID, April 7 (AP).-Almoit\nfive yean to the diy tftfr he drove\nformtr King Alfonso from the\nthrone, Niceto Alctla Zamora wu\nousted by a vote of the cottes tonight from the presidency of the\nrepublic which he helped to create.\nIn i tense, five-hour session, the\nparliament of depuUes voted 238 to\nfive that Uie .president htd not properly exercised hll function ln dissolving the lut parliament md thtt\nautomatically under article 81 of\nthe constitution he ihould be deprived of office. Hit term sUU htd\none yeir tnd eight monthi to run.\nMott rightists-refrained from voting. It wit i triumph tor the leftists who won a smashing victory in\nthe February 18 electioni ifter Al-\ncala Zamora htd dissolved parlit-\nmenL\nDiego Mirtinez Birrio, president\nof the cortes md chief of the Republican union, wu inducted u interim president.\nVancouver Island\nPeak to Be Named\nAfter Tweedsmuir\nVICTORIA, April 7 (CP)-The\nMOO squsre mile provlnclil reserve\nsouth of Ootu md north ot Belli\nCools will be nimed Tweedtmuir\npirk in honor of the governor-\ngenenl it wu innounced todiy it\nUie office of Hon. A. Weill Gny,\nminiiter ot linds.\n\"I need not tell you how honored\nmd deUghted I im to hive your\nnew pirk nimed after me,\" his\nexcellency uys in replying to \u25a0\nlitter trom Premier Pattullo making known the plm. \"I think I\nihould prefer it to be cilled Tweedsmuir pirk it thit ii the name by\nwhich I am formally tssociated\nwith Ctntdt.\"\nLord Tweedtmuir tddt thit tfter\nttudying the country on the mip\nhe is greitly looking forwird to\nexploring it.\nTHE WEATHER\nMin. Mix.\nNELSON  38 47\nVictorii    _ 44 52\nNimimo    44 58\nVincouver    _ 42 58\nKimloopi   44 58\nPrince Oeorge  40 46\nEttevm Point  44 50\nPrince Rupert SC 44\nAtlin _  28 36\nDiwion  ._....   4* 22\nSeittle   ....... 48 54\nPortlind   42 54\nSm Frtnclico _ 60 68\nSpokme  _ 44 58\nLos Angeles 66 82\nPenUcton 36 \u2014\nVernon      _ -..- 41 \u2014\nGrind Forki  30 54\nKulo 34 -\nCnnbrook  _.  40 50\nCilgtry  _ \u201e a_... 28 50\nEdmonton  18 48\nSwift  Currtnt    _  14 46\nPrince Albert    6 40\nSatkttoon     6 44\nQu'Appelle  10* 40\nWinnipeg  16' 16\nMoose Jiw     4 42\n\u2022\u2014Below sero.\nForecut for Nelton tnd vicinity-\nWesterly winds, fair md mild.\nMarilyn Miller\nIs Dead\nAbovt It i portrait reproduction of Marilyn Miller, itage and\nfilm .tar, who died it New York\nyesterdiy.\nMARILYN MILLER\nOF FILMS DIES\nNEW YORK, April 7 (AP). -\nMirilyn Miller, 37. vivacious blonde\nmuiicsl comedy star whom the late\nFlo Ziegfeld once called the greatest box office attraction in the country, died today after an illness ot\nmore thm three weeks.\nMiu Miller, best known for her\ndancing tnd tinging in \"Silly,\"\n\"Sunny,\" tnd \"As Thousands Cheer,\"\ndied as a reiult of an acute toxic\ncondiUon thit followed a longstanding sinus infection.\nWith her at the end were her\nthird husband, Chester O'Brien, an\nactor, and two sisters, Mri. Ruth\nSweeney and Mrs. Claire Montgomery.\nMiss Miller, formerly the wife of\nthe late Jack Plckford, brother of\nMtry Plckford, Toronto-born act-\nress, wts born to the stage, Her ptr-\ntnts were vaudeville performers\nand the Joined the family song md\ndmce team at the age of 5.\nPrior ot her marriage to Jick\nPlckford, which luted from 1922\nuntil 1927, Miss Miller was the wife\nof Frank Cirter, who was killed in\ntn tutomobile Iccident in 1920.\nArmy to Participate\nin Spokane Show\nWASHINGTON, April 7 (AP).-\nGov. Clarence D. Martin of Wuhington state ended today a four-day\nvisit in the capital.\nOn the eve of his departure for\nOlympia, he conferred with Chief\nof Staff Malm Craig, U.S. army, tnd\nwon tssunnces thtt the regulir\nI army would participite in the Washington nitional guard's military defence demonstration it Felts field,\nSpokme, May 29 to 31 inclusive.\nSAY MONGOLIA\nPART OF CHINA;\nJAPAN ANSWERS\nNanking Refuses to\nRecognize Pact\nWith Russia\nTEXT PUBLISHED,\nSOVIET CAPITAL\nSoviet Has Right to\nPrevent Attack on\nMongolia\nNANKING. Chim, April 7 (AP)\n\u2014China, protesting to Moscow, innounced tonight she would under\nno circumstances recognize the pict\nof mutuil assistance between Soviet Russia ind Outer Mongolia\nsigned Mtrch 12.\nThe Chinese national government,\nwhich claims Outer Mongolia as a\nportion of China, disclosed it is\nforwarding i formal protest to Russia.\nFollowing the foreign office's announcement the Japanese consulate\ndisclosed it hid informed the nitional government today that Japan\nis giving \"close attention\" lo tha\nSoviet-Mongolian   pact.\nBy   JOHN   LLOYD\nAnoclittd Prtu Foreign Stiff\nTEXT PUBLISHED\nMOSCOW, April 8 (Wednesdiy)\n(AP)\u2014The text of the Soviel-Mon-\ngolitn mutual assistance pact\u2014a\ndocument considered of great importance in the far eastern situation,\nwas published here today.\n(Contlnutd on Pige Thrtt)\nALBERTA SESSION\nAT ANEND\nEDMONTON, April 7 (CP) .-Alberta's eighth legislature ended iti\nfirst session todty.\nPrior to prorogation legislator!\nvoted unanimously to give Premier\nAberhart't Sociil Credit government, the first of its kind in the\nworld, power to set up a provincial\nbank.\nThe resolution, enabling the cabinet to proceed \"ss soon as may ba\nconvenient\" to establish such tn Institution, climaxed a nine-weeks'\nsession during which 102 bills were\npassed.\nFLOTILLA LEADER\nHARDY LAUNCHED\nLONDON, April 7 (CP-Havu)\u2014\nThe new flotilla luder Hirdy, lit-\neit iddiUon to Britain's fleet of\ndestroyers, wts ltunched today it\nBirkenhead shipyard.\nThe Hardy is 334 feet long at tha\nwiterline. It diaplaces 1455 toni and\nctrrlei five 4.7-inch guns.\nVICE ADMIRAL BUCHANAN DIES\nLYMINGTON, Hampthire, April\n7 (AP)\u2014Vice-Admiral Anselm John\nBuchtntn Stirling, 60, who com*'\nminded thc Britiih destroyer flotilla during the bittle of Jutland,\ndied it hit home tonight.\nVice-Admiral Stirling hid retired\nfive yetn igo tfter more thin 45\nyears service in the roytl nivy. He\nserved during the Boxer uprising\nin Chins, wu severely wounded\nand Invalided home.\nEntry for Kootenay Badminton\nTourney at Nelson on Easier\nWeek-End Breaks All Records\nSearch for Trail\nTot Is Fruitless\nTRAIL, B. C, April 7- Seirch\ncontinued yesterday and today for\nJulltn Burtnick, four-year-old son\nof Mr. md Mrs. Nick Burtnick, who\nhu been lost since Stturdty evening.\nNo further trice of the lid his\nbeen tound although Boy Scouts\nand other volunteer searchers have\nscoured the hillsides snd riverbank\nthoroughly.\nCHINA, U.S. IN CONFAB\nWASHINGTON, April 7 (API-\nDiscussing \"mutual monetary problems,\" Chinese government officials and Secretary Morgenthau of\nthe United States treasury today\nbegan i series of conferencei which\nwtre deicrlbed by the tretsury hetd\ntl looking to t \"closer working arrangement\" between the two nitloni. ,\n4-Day Program to Get\nUnder Way Friday;\n335 Entries\nWith 355 entriei on hind Tuesday night whtn thty took time\nout to mtkt tht drtwi, executive\nmemberi of thi Ntlion Bidmlnton uioclttion htvt bttn mured\nof t record tnnutl Koottnty thut-\ntlt  tourniment  for  the  official\nopining of tht Ntlion civic centrt eourtt ovtr thl Enter weekend. Thi entry Hit li larger by\nmon thin 25 thin tny prtvlout\nont on record for tht innutl Indoor court event, which promliet\nto bt ont of tht Itrgttt htid In\ntht dlitrict to ditt. Tht four-dty\nprogram gttt under wty Frldiy.\nThe 355 entries have been turned\nin by 133 Nelson and outside playen, the outside entry being \u00abxcep-\ntlonally heavy.\n(Continued on Page Sevin)\n \t\n\t\nPAOE TWO \u25a0\nMORTGAGE LIFE\n10 YEARS UNDER\nHOUSING PIAN\nRenewals  Negotiated\nWon't Enjoy the\n5 Per Cent\nADMINISTRATOR\nEXPLAINS ACT\nLoans May Be Given\non Houses Already\nStarted\nMortgages on houiei or apartment\n.blocks built under the Dominion\nHousing act, securing loans made by\ntthe lending Institutions, will have a\ntlite of 10 years, lt was divulged in\n\u2022tfbronto a few days ago by the ad-\nSmlnistrator of the act, W. W, Nich-\n_olli, of the department ot finance,\nWho was addressing a meeting of\nthe construction Industry. If the borrowers desire, they.may retire the\nInortgagei ln three years, but in such\nlease must pay the lending institution a bonus equal to three months\nInterest.\nAfter the 10 yean, renewal ot the\nMortgage for a further 10 years is\nlo be a matter of negotiation, and\nShe tame wtll apply to the interest\n*ate, the 5 per cent being guaranteed\n-only for the first 10-year period.\n(COMMERCIAL BUILDING\n!  Answering questions u to the\nreason tor holding back the final 25\nr cent of the money to be lenL in\nhe cue of houses built lor sale or\nt apartment houses built tor rental,\nntil the builder hu secured an approved contract with a buyer or unUl the apartment house hos been\n\") per cant rented, Mr. Nicholls told\nhe construction men that the idea\nwas to prevent the market being\nASTHMA\n\u25a0*\u00bb _~\u00bbU\u00bbt   Anta, funii loc kmli\nTtbiak-U *rT-_M^ra3__|f tarm-\n! broMakd eombT T-ouu-i _\u2022-. lound\n.\u25a0ilUli RA_-MAH.   Mik*. bi-Hh-\n\u25a0 \u2022_\u25a0;  Chan bronoli-l laba, ol pUwrn.\n\u2022 to UU N. Uraf-1 mctioas.   mat\n! jam Bona t-vaiat.     At dmniill\n\u2022 ndll. let Cbrodo BtooohitU, lo.   m\nTmrnatatam; RAZ-MAH Capamlee\nPURS FURS FURS\nWe art at oresent In need of\nmuikrata and beiver. Wi guar-\nanttt thi following prion:\nMuiknts.    tvengi    collection,\nJ1J0 to $1.50.  (If cleined will\nptv mora.!\nBuver. extra  largi and large.\n$15.00  to   $20.00.   Medium   ind\n\u2022mail $7.50 to $9.00.\nLynx 40% higher.\nOn any shipment you give us we\nwill submit an offer by wire\nImmediately. Ask for shlpoing\ntan If necessary.\nArctic Fur Trading Co., Ltd.\n902 Water Strict, Vincouvir, B.C.\nover-built. U.tf< Ilr I'ncl i'...:-\nment was made contingent on the\nsale or the renting as stated, he\npointed out, ambitious builders\nmight go right along, their, profit\nalready assured, and put up accommodation beyond the local demand.\nHis answer to the criticisms that\nloans were not being made in the\nsmaller cities of the east, nor ln the\nwest, was that this business wu a\nmatter of supply and demand, and\nthat there wu no substantial demand in the imall centeri for new\nbuilding. If houiing loam were made\nin auch center!, he suggested, in the\ncue ot default the mortgagees would\nbe unable to sell without loss.\nHe Insisted that loans were not\nbeing confined to Toronto and Montreal, or to Ontario and Quebec, and\nasserted that Halifax, Winnipeg,\nVancouver and Victoria were all in\nthe enjoyment ot housing loans from\nlending Institutions under the act.\nSo lar u this province goes, this\ninformation contradicts that trom\nother sources, though some eutern\ncompaniei repreiented in the province are now advising that they will\nreceive application! for loam tor\nhome construction ln Vancouver.\nWhile no loan under the Housing\nact can be made on a house that wu\nunder construction prior to lut July\n1, or on any houie completed before\nthe application Is filed, loam may\nbe made on houses started since thil\ndate and actually under construction at the time of application.\nAll the element! normally entering into the cost of a home\u2014cost of\nland, fencing, landscaping, architect's fees, fair builder'! profit, and\nall permanent installations, in addition to the actual coit of construction\u2014are til considered in working\nout the loan justified, Mr. Nicholls\nstated. As for the standards of construction prescribed, be said they\nwere tuch aa moit municipil building bylaws required, and were really\nintended to cover cues where there\nwere no such bylaws.\nIn the account given of this conference ln the Vancouver Journal\nof Commerce, Mr. Nlcholli makes no\nmention of the provincial or municipal housing schemes provided\nfor under the act, regarding which\nthe city of Nelson il making inquiries of W. K. Esling, M.F.\nNEWDENVER MEN\nHOLD ROLL (AU\nHall Addresses\nClub on Orient\nTRAIL, B.C., AprU 7\u2014John P.\nHall, Rossland, who spent 25 yean\nin the orient, addressed Trail Rotary dub on China at their luncheon\nmeeting in the Crown Point Tueiday. He spoke of the foreigner! relations to the Chlneie and told of\nthe orientals' peculiar habits and\noutlined conditions in China generally.\nIt wu announced that members\nwho had had perfect attendance for\nthe put monthi, up to April 1, were\nH. C. Caldlcott, D. Dalolse, Fred\nF\/lmunds, Harry Gamble, A. P.\nLevesque, Rev. L. H. Morrant and\nDr. P. J. Muir.\nNominations of directon wai propoied. Delegate! to Vancouver convention will be Fred Edmunds and\nA. Lauriente, elected by acclamation.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finett in the Interior''\nHUME HOTEL\nFree Bui Service Geo. Benwell. Prop.\nBREAKFAST 10c and UP\nLUNCHEON 40c to 60c DINNER 40c to 65c\nROTARY AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 717 NELtON, B.C. 422 VERNON ST.\nNEW DENVER, B. C. - The\nKnights Qf Pythiu No. 22 held a\nroll call evening recently which\nproved very enjoyable.\nTha evening wu enjoyed with\nsongs, recitations and itoriei of lntereitlng adventurei.\nThii wai followed by refreshments.\nW. E. George li a patient ln the\nhoipital.\nWedneiday evening a number of\nPythian Sisten and Knights of Pythias motored to Nakuip to attend\na ipeclal meeting.\nThose- making the trip Included:\nMr. tnd Mrs. J, Dnper, the Misses\nA. and D. Clever, E. Shannon and\nG. Coombs, T. R. Plint, A. Jacob-\nson, A. Ruzlcka, H. Thomlinson, N,\nThomlinson, P. Kennett, J. Nyman,\nM. Kennedy, E. ManhaU, A. Erickson, H. V. Dewis, C. F. Nelson, C.\nIsakson, W. Jeffrey, H. Wooley and\nJ. Depretto,\nIN HOSPITAL\nMrs. Hebble of Winlaw ls a patient in the Slocan Cotnmounity\nHospital.\nB. Marshall and J. Harding left\nSaturday for the Pend OrelUe district.\nMrs. D. PoweU ls a patient in the\nhospital.\nMr.  and  Mrs.  A.   Cooper   and\ndaughter of Silverton were weekend visitors In town.      '\nLEAVE8 HOSPITAL\nMr. Freeborn who was a patient\nin the hoipital hu returned to hii\nhome in Sandon.\nMri. W. Cropp wai hoitess to the\nUnited Church Ladiei' aid Thunday.\nIn the abience ot the president,\nMrs. A Francli occupied the chair.\nIt wu decided to postpone the\nsale until June. Those present were\nMn. A. Francis, Miss O. Olson, Mn,\nR. Hamilton, Mrs. J. H. Young, Mn.\nE. Kirkwood, Mn. J. R. Thompion,\nMn. O. V. White, Mn. A. D. Trlckett, Mn. F. Brady, Mrs. E. Angrignon and Mn. W. Cropp.\nMiu T. Trainor ot Perry'i is the\nguest ot Mn. D. Powell\n(reslon Bird\nYahk Badminton Reps\nAlso Do Well-\nHUME\u2014K. G. Fletcher, C. R. Mc-\n[ MUlan, A. C. Vackshaw, V. L. Trail,\n(H. Fox, H. Thompson, B. W. Cun-\nE liffe, N. G. Miller, Vancouver; T. A.\nI Bums, Medicine Hat; G. S. Moore,\nJ Cranbrook; Mr. and Mn. W. B\nI Johnstone, Miai E. Johnstone, T.\nI Andenon,  F.   Sekeres,   Silverton;\nA. J. Johnson, Erie; Mr. and Mn. J.\nWhite, Wallace, Idaho; C. L. Meigs,\nSpokane, Waih.; W. A. Mohr, Pres-\ncott, Aril.; C. M. Mohr, Toronto,\nOnt.; A. S. H. Deverson, Cnwford\nBay; Miss M. Tumor, Invermere; C.\nA. Yule, R. S. Fraser, W. R. Lawrence, Penticton.\nNew Grand Hotel\nP. L. KAPAK. Prop.\nHot and Cold Water\n\u2022Ingli 60c up: doubli 60c up\nMonthly ratti $10,00 ue\nPH. 234      61$ VERNON ST.\n2-Ir.Hint Satlij ftctm.\n| Interior of British Columbia's\nMost Interesting Newspaper\nCRESTON, B. C\u2014There wu a\ngood turnout of memben of the\nclub at Yahk, and a representative\nlot of playen from BoeweU for the\ndiitrict badminton tournament at\nPark pavilion on Thunday night,\nsponsored by the Creiton dub. Creston pliyen annexed moit of the\nhonon, but Yahk carried otf the\nladiei' doublet u well u tha ladiei'\nsingles, and wert ln the ieml-1 inals\nin two ot tbt comolation eventi.\nBoiwell'i beit effort wu ln the\nmen'i doublu where Lloyd tnd\nRay Cummings got into the finals.\nWhile mott of tbe contests were\nquite close lt wu the temi-fintli\nthtt packed tht mott thrills. Three\ngames were required to give the\nright to enter the fintls in the\nsinglet, ladies' doublet and tha men'i\ndoublet. The winnen:\nLadies' doubles\u2014Mn. Dickson,\nand Mn. Brogan Yihk bett Mrs. A.\nWeir tnd Mn. R. M. Chandler, Creiton.\nLadiei* linglei \u2014 Mri. Brogan,\nYahk, beat Misi Jean Hendenon,\nCreston.\nMen's doublet\u2014 F. V. Staples and\nT. H. Wilson, Creston, bett Lloyd\nand Ray Cumming!, Boswell.\nMen's singlet\u2014J. P. MacDonald,\nCreston, beat R. H. Dickson Yahk.\nMixed doublet\u2014 Min Jean hendenon tnd G. Sinclair beat Mill\nOUve Norgrove and A. W. Millin.\nCONSOLATION\nMixed doublei\u2014 Mlu Non Ptyne\nand R. M. Telford, Creiton, beat\nMrs. H. Dickson and J. Hamilton,\nYthk.\nMen's doublet \u2014 G. Sinclair and\nR. M. Telford beat A. R. Lynn and\nA. W. Millin.\nLadiei' doublet\u2014 Mln Huel Hobden and Mlu O. Norgrove, Creiton,\nbeat Mri. White and Mn. Lazenby,\nYahk.\nThe tournament commenced Mon-\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS. NEL80N. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. APRIL 8. 19M\nFlashes From the Wires\nBASIC INDUSTRIES STEADY\nVICTORIA (CP).-British Columbia's butc induitriei, Including\nlumber, minu, fisheriei and agriculture, htid steidy during the flnt\nquarter of this year with iome definite gains in production, notably in\nthe lumber industry, a survey in\nprovincial circlet disclosed. Not including March, flguru for which are\nnot ytt available, the provinciil log\nscale for the tint two months totalled 453,326,000 board feet, compared with 220,3(11,000 board feet in\na Uke period at the start ot 1939.\nMANITOBA LEGISLATURE\nPROROGUES\nWINNIPEG (CP) .-Shortest ies-\nsion in the past 23 years, the Manitoba legislature was prorogued\nTuesday by Lieutenant-Governor\nTupper. The session opened February 1$. Debate on Winnipeg city\ncharter imendmenti featured the\nclosing session with the legislature\nrejecting an amendment which\nwould have permitted the city to\ngo into the gasoline business.\nTRAIN  BOMBED\nVERA CRUZ, Mexico (AP).-A\ndesperate criminal ittempt to kill\nstate of Vera Cms poliUcal leaders\nwu blamed by authorities for the\nbombing of a railway bridge and\nwrecking of the Vera Cruz-Mexico\nCity train which resulted in thc\ndeath ot at least 12 persons and injury to 16 othen. The politicians\nthemselves were unharmed. Soldiers\nsearched a wide area for the bombers.\nPAYS FINE, GETS LOOT\nHIGH RIVER, Alta. - Charles\nBearaway lett police court here\nwith a roasted fowl and a dead\nunplucked htn after he had pleaded\nguilty of theft of chickens trom Albert Ducommon. After Bearaway\nhad been fined $20 and costs, Ducommon uked the magistrate that\naccused be aUowed to keep the fowl\nused u evidence against him.\nWOULD BAN ALL DRUGS\nVANCOUVER (CP).\u2014Chargei of\na plot to smuggle narcotics into Pacific cout cltiei trom the orient\nind a suggested ban on importation\nof aU drugs trdtn Japan wera made\nin police court it the preliminary\nhearing ot three Japaneae and a\nwhite man and woman who are\ncharged with conspiracy to import\ndrugs into Canada. Gordon Wismer,\nprosecution couniel, said Royal Canadian Mounted police investigations had revealed a plot with wide\nramifications to import narcotics on\nthe Pacific cout and that a number\nof drug seizures and arrests had\nbeen made in United Statei cities,\nDE VALERA'S PROGRES8 SLOW\nZURICH\u2014Convalescence of Earn*\non De Valera, preiident ot the execuUve councU of Uie Irish Free State,\nfrom a recent operation for a cataract of the eye, is not progressing u\nrapidly as had been originally expected, it is learned, It wu announced he would have to remain\nhere for a few more dayi under\nmedical observation.\nPREMIER DIRECTORS\nREELECTED\nVANCOUVER - The entire board\nof directon of the Premier Gold\nMining Co. Ltd., wu reelected at\nthe annual meeUng of the company\nheld here. The directon are: H. A.\nGuess, president, of New York; W,\nR. Wilson, A. B. Trites and W. H.\nMowatt, Vancouver; James Moore,\nH. B. Price, E. D. Untermyer and\nW. E. Bennett of New York.\nONE DEAD IN ACCIDENT\nCHATHAM, OnL\u2014Ope man wu\nkiUed and three othen injured in\na traffic accident during a blinding\nsnowstorm, on No. 2 highway, iome\n12 miles from here. Dead: J. E.\nFinch, London, the injured, J. H.\nVamtone, London, C. C. Carrothen,\nLondon barrister, Roy Jeoman, Toronto.\nHAUPTMANN PROBE\nTRENTON, N. J.\u2014New demands\nfor an investigation into Bruno\nRichard Hauptmann case were made\nfollowing the quick defeat by tbe\nlegislature of two similar proposals Monday. Assemblyman Basil B.\nBruno, Monmouth Republican, an*\nnounced he would aeek approval\nnext Monday night of a resolution\ncalling for an Investigation into the\nconduct of aU officials In the case,\nincluding Governor Harold G. Hoffman, the state police, and Attorney\nGeneral David T. WUente.\nday night when tbe Creiton club\nstaged its elimination and Thundiy\nplay wai ln evidence morning, afternoon and evening. Suitable trophies\nwere presented the wlnnen in each\nevent\nL. Whiteford ot Cranbrook assist*\ned with the refereeing and at thr\nconclusion ot play preiented the\nsUver cupi which had been donated\nby Creiton businesi houses. Mr.\nWhiteford, who hai had experience\nIn this sport, remarked on the keen\nnen ot the play in practically all the\neventi, tht feature ot which wik\nthe ippearance ot a number ot the\njunion ot tbe Creiton club who\nmade a creditable ihowing againit\naU comers.\nThose from out ot town taking\npart in the tournament were: Miss\nE. Daviei, Mn. Lusk, Jim Johnstone,\nD. Ascott, Percy Mtcklt, Riy and\nLloyd Cummlngi of Boiwell, and\nMrs. White, Mrs. Lazenby, Mn. Joe\nBogan, Mrs. H. Dickson, Mn. A.\nLythgoe, and Joe Brogan, H. Dickson, J. Hamilton, A. Anderson and\nA. Lythgoe, Yahk.\nFor the convenience of those\nplaying, a lunch counter in charge\nof H. Beninger was operated at the\npavUion and thia feature wu much\nappreciated by thon tiking part,\nand quite a gallery of ipectaton\nwhich wu in evidence at the evening play.\nGIVEN 30 DAYS,\nCOMMON ASSAULT\nTRAIL, ac, AprU 7.-Arrtsted\nMonday night and lodged ln the\ncity gaol Jack Mclsaac, no fixed\naddresi, wu lentenced to 30 dayi\nIn Ntlion gaol with hard labor,\nwhtn he pleaded guilty to a charge\nof aiuultlng a woman in a public\nplace.\nA. BROADMAN IS\nLAID TO REST\nYoung\nEntomologist\nELIZABETH MATTESON\nSeventeen \u2022 year \u25a0 old Elizabeth\nMitteton ef Miami, Fla, itudtnt\n\u2022t the Unlvenity af Miami, li believed to bl tht world'i youngest\nentomologist With her brother\nthli young Itpldopterlit collect!\nbutterflies, tnd hu midt a map\nof Florida from 6000 butterfly\nwings, ttch of the 17 counties btlng of t different species tnd color.\nNEW DENVER. B.C-The funeral\nof Andreas Brotdmtn of Lemon\nCrtek took pilot in the Denver\ncemetery Thundiy, \u25a0 Rev. J. H.\nYoung officiating.\nOccidental Hotel\n706 Vernon tt        Phom 687 L\nH. WASSICK, Prep.\nSPECIAL   MONTHLY   RATES\nGood Comfortable Roomi\nFully Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. A. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot ind Cold Witer\nIn the HEART of the City\nPHONE 66      606 WARO 8T.\nTRANSPORTATION - Motor Freiqht Lints\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\n\u2122 TRAIL IIVERY CO.\"'-\"\n135\nr\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\n35\n( ANAIH \\N\nI'U II l(\nA Complete\nTransportation\nSystem\nRAILWAYS - HOTELS - STEAMSHIPS\nEXPRESS - CABLE AND TELEGRAPH\nSERVICES - RECREATION CAMPS\nTICKETS TO ALL PARTS OF THE WORLD\nThe Comfortable Route to the Old Country--\nAlaska. China, Japan, Australasia\nThrough Tranicon.lnen.al Tralnt Daily to Canadian\nand United Statei Dettinatfone\nSteamship Service Between B. C. Coast\nPorts and to United States\nACENTS FOR TRANS-ATLANTIC STEAMSHIP LINES\nFor full Information apply to Local Agent or\nN. J. LOWES, CITY TICKET AGENT, NELSON, B.C.\nPhont IM\nCanadian Pacific\nWilfred Richards\nGiven Three Months\nTRAIL, B.C, April 5. \u2014 Pound\nguilty by Acting Police Magiitrate\nDonald MacDonald in city police\ncourt thia afternoon on charge! ot\ntheft and fraudulently obtaining\nfood and lodging in local boarding\nhouw to the amount ot JM.25, Wilfred Richardi, 22, waa sentenced to\nthree monthi in Nelson gaol on the\nfirst charge and one month or a\nfine of 12. on the second, sentences\nto run concurrently. He wai unable\nto pay the fine.\nCP.R. ConsUble Singlalr of Nelion arrested Richards in Nelion\nind turned him over to Sergeant\nRobert Harshaw of the Neiaon city\npolice force.\nCITY DADS WOULD ENCOURAGE\nSCOUTS   IF   REALIZED\nCITY CONDITIONS\n\"When I wu mayor ot thii city I\nbid occasion from time to time to\ngive voice to the debt of gratitude\nthat the citizens of Toronto owed to\nthe Boy Scouts association. Tonight,\nai the father of a Scout, I repeat\nmy tribute... It tome ot the fathers\nwho do not support their sons in\nthis movement knew one half ot the\nthings that art going on in this city\nimong the young people they would\nquickly chinge their attitude.\"\u2014\nFormer Mayor W. 3. Stewart, C3JS.,\nat tht father and ion banquet of the\n10th Toronto troop.\nPIRATE  OOLD  IN  THE  NORTH\nAbandoning dreams of iome day\nteeking pirate gold in the South\nSeas, adventurous Boy Scouti of\nQuebec and Ontario apparently are\nturning to gold seeking nearer\nhomt, Lut year, annual reporti\nIhow, 70 Quebec Scouti and 33 In\nOntario puied examinational qualifying thtm u \"prospectys.\" Well\nwager the first Scout mife will be\ncalled \"Pieces of Eight\"\nDIVER SEARCHES\nFOR LOST BOY\nTRAIL, B.C., April 7\u2014Fourth day\nilnce the mysterloui disappearance\nof Julian Burtnick, 4-year-old boy\npined Tuetdiy night without any\ntrace ot him btlng reported. Chief\not PoUce John L'atlrle stated Tuesday night, bt wu confident every\npossible place in the surrounding\ndistrict to which tht boy could htve\nwandered had bten scoured at least\nfour timet but again Iuued the plea\nfor reildenti to thoroughly learch\ntheir premisei. Another crew of\nvolunteers will mtke t further attempt to locate the missing youngster Wtdneiday morning.\nAlthough fruitlau ln iti reiulta,\nMtrch tt the lite ot many previous\ndisuten wu madt when James\nTalbot donned a diver's suit and\nexplored the Columbia river floor\nat Swartz's eddy. Murky water conduced to extremely poor visibility\nand after several trips ibout the\neddy came to the surface and stated\nhis search revealed nothing. The\ndiving operations attracted much interest, hundreds of ipectaton gathering on the bank above the eddy.\nThe raft which served is a platform\nfor the diver and also carried the\noxygen pump and otber gear wu\nmanoeuvered by two rowboats.\nLeave New Denver\nfor Nome, Alaska\nNBW DINVKR, B.C.\u2014SL Stephen'! Women's auxiliary held their\nApril meeting at the home of Mrs.\nW. Cliff*. Mrs. L W. Sella presided\nin the absence of the president\nFinal arrangementa were made\nlor the whiit drive and program to\nbe held thli month.\nThose present were Mrs. L. W.\nSells, Mrs. H. Aylwin, Mrs. C. Vandergrift, Mn. R. Crellin, Mn, H.\nThomlinson, Mr\u00bb. S. Thomlinion,\nMias D. Lowe, Miss W. Aylwin,\nMiis F. Reynold!, Mn. W. Clitfe\nand Mn. D. McAiklll.\nFollowing tha busineu session,\nrelresnmenta were lerved by the\nhostess.\nO. Thompson left lut week tor\nAtlin, Alaaka.\nJ. Landerville, J. Seeming, H, E.\nNeison, S. Christotferton and L.\nCarter have returned from Sandon,\nwhere they were working.\nMn. Clyde White lett Thursday\ntor Trail wnere ahe will visit prior\nto her return to Nome, Aluka.\nLEAVE* PAR NOME\nClyde White lett Saturday to\njoin Mn. C. White on their return\nmeir Journey to Nome, Alas-a. They\nnave been visiting ln town for tha\nput few monthi, gueiti of Mn. O.\nV. White and Robert White.\nMiss G. Smith, who wu called\nhome owing to tht illness of ber\ntatner, J. ri. Smith, returned to\nVancouver to resume her auties tt\ntht Unlvenity ol British Columbia\nSaturday.\nMiss R. Zadra is viiiting relatives in Trail.\n\u00a3. Munn wu a viiitor In town\nfrom Nakusp.\nMrs. W. lattrle and son of Erie\nare guests of Mrs. Croft\nMn. F. Brady ltft Saturday for\nVancouver.\nDr. A. Francli wu a Nelion viiitor Saturday.\nWIN AT WHIST\nA most successful hotpital whist\ndrive was held in the K.P. hall\nSaturday evening. There were 11\ntables of progreuive whist in play.\nHigh honon were woo by Mlu A.\nClever and A. Jicobson. Low scores\nwent to Mn. T. Hint and H. Gunn.\nMra. T. Flint wu the winner ot a\nlucky number prlie. During the\nevening musical selections were\nglvtn by FL Hamilton, F. Angrignon and L. Truscott\nRefreshments wtre terved by the\ncommittee in charge, Mn. F. L\nBeggi and Mils R. Und.\nTrail Ski Cabin\nRazed lo Ground\nNEW DENVER AID\nHOLDS MEETING\nNIW DENVER, B.C.-Knox Pre.*\nbyterlan Ladies' aid met at the home\nof Mn. G. Williamson. Mrs. O.\nEnocRson wu welcomed u a new\nmember. Tet was lerved by the\nhosteu assisted by her daughters,\nMn. A. Ruilcka and Miss H. Williamson. Memben preient were Mn.\nE. George, Mn. H. Nelson, Mn. J.\nNyman, Mn. C. Iiakton, Mn. F.\nBroughton, Mn. O. Enockson, Mrs.\nR. Butchart, Mn. J. Greer, Mn. A.\nRuzlcka, Mn. O. WllllamioiL and\nMisses A. and D. Clever.\nCranbrook Beats\nFernie in Net Play\nTake 17 Matches\nAgainst 13 for\nFernie\nTRAIL B.C.. April 7 - Cabin\nbuilt by Trail Ski club two years\nago at the site ot a lumping hill\noutside the city limits on the weit\nilde ot Columbii river wu razed\nto the ground by fire Tuesday night\nTrail fire department answered a\ncall to the conflagration but were\nunable to do anything to save the\nbuilding. It wu reported that two\ntransients occupied the structure\nwhich wis vilued it between gJOO\nand $400. One ot the inhabitant!\nstated the fire wu caused by defective chimney where lt pasted\nthrough the root. He endeevored to\nextinguish the blue after fint noticing it by shovelling earth, but\ngave up when he aaw hit effort!\nwere useless.\nOne ol tbe ski club memben had\nvisited the cabin Sunday and ordered the dwellers to vacate the premise! by Wednesdiy as he bad planned to board it up on that day.\nThe (ire rendered a bright red\nglow in tbe iky noticeable from the\ncity.\nSINGER JAILED\nAT TRAIL\nTRAIL B.C., April 7,-Unable\nto pay a ttt line when he pleaded\nguilty to creating a dliturbtnce on\nBty ivenue by tinging, \"thereby\nbeing a loote and disorderly perron and a vagrant\" David Extrom.\nrelief camp worker, wu forced to\ntccept the ilternitlvt ln tht lentence impend by Acting Police\nMagiitrate Donald MacDonald in\ncity police court thli morning and\nwill ipend the next 30 dayi in Nelion gaol.\nExtrom'i offence occurred on the\nnight of April 5.\nCRANBROOK, B.C-An intercity badminton tournament wu\nheld in the city auditorium Satur\nday evening when the memben of\nthe Fernie club played the city\nSelkirk club. The Fernie players\nmotored to Cranbrook Saturday af\nternoon and returned Sunday, dur\ning the evening a supper was served by the city club. The final score\nIn matches was Fernie 13 and Cran\nbrook 17.\nThe results were as foUows: Fernie mentioned first ln each case.\ntADIES' DOUBLES\nMiu Wuhburn and Mils Hughet\nlost to Mn. Williams and Miss Jessie\nHunter 18-18; Miss Klauer and Mrs.\nElklngton lost to Mn. Argue and\nMrs. Gill 13-4; Misi Atkinson and\nMiss E. Gates lost to Mils Berta\nJones and Mn. Argue 15-2; Miss\nMegale and Miss Polanko lost to\nMrs. Prust and Mils Robertson 15-7;\nMiss Hughes and Miis Washburn\ndefeated Mrs. Spence and Mrs. Gilroy 6-15; Mn. Elkinton and Mils\nKlauer defeated Mn. MacDonald\nand Miu Spence 15-6; Mlu Atkinson and Miss Klauer defeated Mlu\nElizabeth Miller and Miu J. Hunter\n15-11.\nMEN'S DOUBLES\nRou and Colu loat to Bridgu\nand Dingley 16-17; Irvine and Man-\ngan loit to Spence and Burgeu\n16-17; Cameron and Candy defeated\nTaylor and Atchison 18-5; Irvine\nand Mangan defeated Gilroy and\nMajoa Print 15-10; Cameron and\nCandy defeated Laurie and Spence\n15-U; Elklngton and Klauer loit to\nReid and Haynei 6-15; Rou and\nMangan defeated A. Bridgu and\nDingley 18-16; Rosi ind Coles de\nfeated Gilroy ant\" Prust 15-1:; Cam\neron and Candy defeated MacDonald and Reid 15-3.\nMIXED DOUBLEI\nG. Rou tnd Miss Klauer defeated\nE. Dingley and Mrs. Gull 15-5; Elklngton and Miu Atkinson lost to\nJ. Sims and Mn. MicDonild 7-15;\nL. Coles and Mill Hughei lost to\nMajor Prust and Mrs. Pruit 11-15;\nCandy and Miu Washburn defeated\nJ. Atchiion ind Miu Louise Robertson 15-\u00bb; L Colu and Min Hughu\ndefeatde A. Bridgei and Mrs. Gill\n18*15; Irvine and __iu Polak loit to\nH. Nelly and Miu Jeule Hunter\n11-15; M. Knight and Mn. Elkington lost to R. Laurie and Mrs.\nBridges 12-15; Candy and Miss\nWashburn defeated C. Haynu and\nMlu Hunter 15-3; Klauer and Miu\nE. Gates lost to C Spence and Mrs.\nSpence 1-15; Mangan and Mlu Megale tost to W. Taylor and Miu B.\nJonu 2-15; R. Haynu and Miu E.\nGates lost to N. Reld and Mn. Argue 8-15; Cameron and Mn. Elkington defeated Mr. and Mn. Gilroy 15-9; Elklngton and Miu Atkinson loit to F. W. Burgeu and Mn.\nWilliami 0-15; R. Haynu and Min\nE. Gatei lost to R. Laurie and Miu\nC. Spence 11-15.\nCranbrook Folk\nVisit Spokane\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\u2014Miu Nancy\nMiles, Miss Muriel Baxter, and Miss\nMty Maltman art ipendlng the\nweek-end viiiting in Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. A. MacKenzie, of\nKlmberley, were week-end vliiton\nin the city.\nMiu Phyllii Barchard, of Trail,\nii the guut of her aunt Miu M\nWilion, here.\nMlu Winnifred and Miu Mildred\nBurdett of Kimberley were weekend vilttors in Cnnbrook.\nMr. ind Mn A. Graham art\nspending a few days visiting in\nSpokane.\nMn. T. A. Moore woi tea hoiteu\nat the Ladies' Badminton club at\ntheir doling meeting on Friday afternoon.\nA. McGrath ot Canal Flat ll a\nbusiness visitor in the city.\nJUST ARRIVED!\nRUFFLED\nCURTAINS\nPar Yard\n29c and 35c Yd.\npjrjKS\nDyking Official,\n(onfer, (reslon\nCRESTON, B.C.,-The past week\nhu aeen some activity in circlet\nclosely associated with the dyked\nlandi at Cruton. At the week-end\nthoie operating on tbe Reclamation farm were in conference with\nG. P. Salter of Vancouver, trustee\nin bankruptcy, who arranged for\nthe financing of the redyking ot\nboth the north and south ends ot\nthe Reclamation farm, all ot which\nwork ia now all but completed. At\nthe meeting with the farmen and\nall othen directly lnteruted with\nthe project Mr. Salter submitted a\ndetailed itatement covering all features of the farm development both\nai to dyking and operating, which\nwu moit wtisfactory to the landowners. The Dale dragline will this\nweek complete the erection of the\ndyke at the south end along Boundary creek, but will be buiy for\na few weeks at finish-up work along\nthe levee.\nHere during the weak, toe, wu\nDr, Bruner of Calgary, who hai completed plana for the dyking ot about\n4000 acru on Nick's islind, acrou\nthe Kootenay river, and whose application to get on with the work\nwill be heard by the Joint Waterways commission at a sitting to be\nheld in Nelson on May 15. With Dr.\nBruner wai hii solicitor, Mr. Mc-\nArdlt, alao ot Calgary and W. M.\nMyen, engineer for the A. H. Green\ncompiny, of Nelion, who lut fall\nmade the plani for the Nick'a island\ndevelopment. Dr. Bruner'i chief concern ls to ascertain the feeling ot\nthe Reclamation farm ownen u\nwell u Cruton Reclamation Company, Limited, to ny nothing of\nthe land ownen on the Idaho aide,\ntoward his project, which will itlll\nfurther limit the outgo of tbe flood\nwaters ot the Kooteniy river.\nAlong with thue vliiton were t\nnumber ot land buyen who were\nlooking tor acreage on the unsold\npart of Creston Reclamation Company, Limited, on the wut ilde of\nGoat River. With so cold a spring\noperatloni on the dyked landi la\nilow getting under wty, but til\nownen tre ln readiness tor prompt\nstart u soon u the weather turni\nfavorable.\nMill E. Wightman\nBack at Harrop\nHARROP, B.C-The ucond la a\nseriei of bridge drives tponiored\nby Harrop Anglican church wu\nheld Saturday evenl' \u2022 Mn. W. S.\nAihby giving the uie of her bome\nfor the drive. Honon were won by\nMn. W. D. Ogilvie, Mn. H. Ftir-\nbank tnd Mn. L C. Piper, H.\nHolmes and C. D. OgUvit. Special\nprlzu for aggregate scoru will be\nawarded at the clote ot the aerie*.\nMiu Evelyn Wightman arrived\nSundiy morning from Medicine\nHat on a viiit with Mr. and Mra. 3.\nF. Stevenson, Braeside ranch.\nJ. Mackereth wu a Nelson shopper Saturday.\nC. D. Ogilvie, foreman In charge\not Shoreacres camp, spent the weekend here with hia family.\nMiu Annie Koimi, wbo recently\nunderwent tn operation for tpptn-\ndlcltii it Kootenay Lake General\nhotpital, will arrive home Thursday.\nMiu Ruby Whitfield ipent the\nweek-end with her parenti la Nelion.\nVancouver Men\nSing for Gyros\nTRAIL, B.C, April 1 -\"Slim\"\nHunter and Leo Holden of Vancouver entertained Trail Gyro club at\ntheir supper meeting ln Crown\nPoint Tuesdiy. They sang a number ot cowboy longs to guitar and\nbanjo accompaniment. Routine busineu in connection with the May\nday celebration wu carried out\nREMOVE NASTY PIMM-IS\nEach niaht rub Mecca gently Into the\n\u25a0fleeted otrte\u2014The dual ittion of\nMecca will drtw eut thi polion tnd\nit thi mm time the ikin tlnuu will\n\u2022bwrb thi healing, nutrient or.o-\nertlei of Mecct.  25c. 35c, 50c, \u00bb1.00.\nMECCA   OINTMENT\nPHONE\n797\nfor all your\nFUEL\nNEEDS\nRENWICK'S\nTRANSFER CO.\nRo Happiness In the Home\nWhen the Mother Is Sick\n4ll*Bl%\nHEALTH   J\nTin tired, won out mother enroot make a Xttmf\nhomo if iha ii ilck ud worried by the never eadUg\nhone-hold dntiet She geti ran down ud beeomM\nnervoui ud irritable, downhearted ud dlacouraged,\nout rut tt tight, ud geti ap hi the awning u\ntired u when ahe wut to bed.\nWomen mlferiag tn thii way wtU Hid ia Mllbora'i\n_\u25a0\u2022\"\u25a0 PiUs t remedy with which to recuperate\n(Mr ktthfc, build op tht run down lyitira, atd\nbring back their bodily \u00bbigor.\n MEMBERSTELLROGERS FOR SIX\nHOURS HOW TO HELP UNEMPLOYED\nNELSON DAILY NEWS  l\u00bb\"!L80\". \u00bb.**.\u2014'\u00ab.'fDN_\u00bbOA\" MORNING. A\"\"\u00bbtl- P. WM\nEASTER BRIDE WEARS  LILAC\nOTTAWA, April 7 (CP).\u2014Labor\nMinister Rogen, who disgardcd the\ncap and gown of a univenity professor for the frenzied, harrassed\nlife of a cabinet minister, sat in thc\nhouse of commoni today tor six long\nhoun while members fired at him\nsuggestions on how lo deal with his\nparticular national problem, unemployment.\nThe government bill to establish a\n' national   employment   commission\nwas   progressing   slowly    through\ncommittee stage while the minister\nheard these suggestions:\nThe British North America act\nshould be amended.\nWealth should be taxed.\nThe unemployed not on relief\nshould be registered and catalogued.\nConfidence should be restored in |\nCanada.\nRelief allowances In the provinces\nshould be standardized.\nSomething should be done for\nyouth.\nExploitation of labor should be\n' stopped.\nProper working conditions should\nbe established for relief recipients\non municipal jobs.\nBalanced diets should be defined\nfor the unemployed.\nFish should be served on the tables\nof relief camps.\nHard-boiled businessmen should\nnot be appointed to the employment\ncommission.\nFarmers should be allowed to\nnegotiate small loans ot $300 and\n$400 to recondition houses.\nThe building of expensive police\nand military barracks should be\n-topped.\nThe commission should cooperate\nwith employment services.\nThe tourist traffic should be fostered, including thc building of\nroads into national parks, connecting points on tlie international border.\nSomething should be done for\neliost-towns in the coal mining areas\nof Vancouver Island.\nThe Alberta-Saskatchewan boundary should be resurveyed.\nMore trees should be planted.\nRaise the tariff.\nLower the tariff.\nInvestigate bank clerks' salaries.\nPave a highway across Canada.\nEliminate level crossings.\nIn the midst of all these suggestions, the members could not find\nUme to give the bill third reading\nalter putting it through committee\nstage. A companion bill, the Omnibus Relief act, however, was given\nsecond reading just before the 11\no'clock adjournment hour.\nBACKACHE\nIF you have backache, dizzy spells,\nheadaches, do not\nneglect your kidneys.\nTake Gin Pills for\nprompt relief at the\nfirst sign of these\nsymptoms. You will\nfeel better, look better\n\u2014 be betttr, if your\nkidneys are functioning properly.        j\u00ab\nGIN PILLS\nFOI THI MMiri\nMORE ABOUT\nCHINESE PROTEST\n(Continued From Page One)\nENROLL NOW!\nSPRING TERM\nPITMANS\nDAY AND NIGHT\nSCHOOL\nEnroll Now\nStudents may enter at any\ntime.\nComplete Secretarial and\nBookkeeping Coursei,\nPublic ind  High  School\nSubject!.\nIndividual Attention\nNICHT SCHOOL\n$3.50 MONTH\nEveline A. C. Richards\nPrincipal\nCorner Granville and\nBroadway\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nPITMAN\nBUSINESS\nCOLLEGE\nThe pact puti into writing an\nagreement existing tor more than a\nyear, and approved by the Outer\nMongoUan republic on March 28.\nIt givei the Soviet Union the\nright to adopt, in accord with Mongolia, \"all measures necessary\" in\ncase of even a \"menace\" of an attack on Mongolian territory. The\nstated purpoie of the pact is not\njuit to resist attacks but to \"prevent\"\nthem.\nAt the ume time, Japan remained\nsilent on the Soviet itatement, of\nmore than a week ago, that drastic\nmeasures might be required to settle disputes along the MongoUan'\nManchoukuan fronUer.\nLclong's pall lilac colored wedding drtn for Enter bride.\nMORE ABOUT\nA.P. REPORTER\n(Continued From Page Om i\nWe hid been flying half an hour\nfrom Gura with CapL Giovanni\nDauria and Major Piero FerretU\nat the dual'control of an eight-ton\nSavoia bomber, holding two tons\nof explosives and a ton and a halt\nof gasoUne, through perfect skies\nand over Aduwa and Aksum when\nthe radio crackled.\nSergt. Gentile Cesare brought a\nmessage from the scouting plane:\n\"Bomb a column of Ethiopian quadruped! in the river bed of Addi\nUaffet, near Axio.\"\nPink-cheeked Lieut Francesco\nPossenisto, only 24 but the finest\nbombshot in the whole army, slipped down into the glass pit ln the\nundercarriage and I went with him.\nWe passed over the huge iquare of\nAmba Aradam and the spike ot\nMount Amba Alagi, sticking into\nthe sky over the tortuoui terrain of\nthe northern mountalni, that from\ntbe air looked like the aerried brown\nback! of huge oyster shells.\nThree-quarters of the way to\nDessye with two other of our squadron and three additional bombers\nfoUowing behind we found the valley ot Uaffet and Axio.\nSuddenly in the brown vaUey,\nluxuriant with vegetation* we law\nstrung out groupi ot perhapi SOO\nEthiopians in dirty ihammai and\nabout 2000 mules, horses and camels.\nTRY TO HIDE\nThe sound of the swooping planes\nmade the huddled groups try to\nhide their bulky animals behind the\nprotection of trees. Our plane\nwheeled, dove and thundered at\nthem less than 800 leet from the\nground, so close we could see the\nblack men swaying desperately at\nthe reins of their mules. Camels\nstuck their long necks skyward,\nlooking for the noise.\nThen Framesco started puUing\nlevers.\nWe dropped 24 of the 80-pound\nbombs, several pairs of M-pounders\nin clusters and I saw at least 10\nstrike squarely in the middle of\nfrantic groups.\nThe exploilons were io terrific\nind wi were* io neir thit the\nplant rocked tnd through the\nclouds of imoke shattered bodiei\nwere easily vlilble flying throi(gh\nthe air.\nPiero   wirelessed   headquarters:\nBy LUCIEN  LELONG\nSpecial Cable to Central Pren\nPARIS\u2014Although I am a staunch\nadvocate ot tradition, and all the\ndignity and accumulated, imposing\nbeauty that it implies, I am one of\nthe first to acknowledge that ln\nmany fields it hampers the ipirit\nof creation. Following tradition lavishly li apt to lead to stagnation and\nproduce nothing but mere duplication \u2014 and duplication obviously\nlacks the ipirit of an original. I have\nobserved that reUgiouily following\ntradition! cm be particularly disastrous to a designer of clothes. I was\nstrongly impressed by this tact a\nfew seasons ago when contemplating the traditional bridal gown\nof white,\nWhUe many women can wear\nwhite and find that it enhances\ntheir natural charms, I am willing\nto wager that there are equally as\nmany women who cannot. On the\noccasion, above all otheri, when\nthis latter type wishes to look most\nbeautiful, she is handicapped by the\nbugbear of the \"white bride\". So\nthen and there I decided to create\nthe bridal gown ln color.\nCHANGE CRITICISED\nAt tint, iuch a departure was\nhailed aa being \"frivolous\", \"undignified\", etc\u2014the usual criticisms\nthat foUow in tht wake of any innovation. But gradually people began to realize that the bridal gown\nin a soft pastel shade is equally as\nbeautiful, it not more so, than a\ncold glaring white. The prospective\nbride who finds white so unflattering can now realize the dream of\nher girlhood\u2014that on her bridal\nday ihe wlU be her most exquisite\nself.\nFor this season's Easter bridal\ngown I bave chosen a very pale\nlilac\u2014a delicate shade that ia inconspicuous,    yet    subtly    warm;\nqualities that can never be attributed to dead white. I do not wish\nto give the impression that I am\ndenouncing white as a bridal color.\nFor the young woman who finds it\nappropriate, I heartily recommend\nit, I would suggest-only that It be\na subdued white, rather than a blatant one.\nMy lilac bridal gown for Easter,\n1930, is is simple and as subtle as\nthe color itself. It has long, Ught\nsleeves, a high, round neckline,\nwith interest concentrated on the\nskirt Finely pleated panels, starting at either hipline, float gracefully to the hem of the gown. The\ntulle veU, also in lilac, is held on\nthe head by a discreet band ot\nlilac-colored flowers. I would suggest that no floral bouquet be carried with the bridal gown in Ulac,\nor only white HUes. Blending the\ncolorings would be difficult, and orchids are of course too sophisticated.\nMORE ABOUT\nSTORM TOLL\n(Continued From Page One)\nContributing the heavieit toll\nwere this textile manufacturing\ncenter in the foothiUi ot the Blue\nRidge mountain! where 183 bodies\nhave been found; and Tupelo, Miss.,\nanother cotton manufacturing center, where 109 died.\n$25,000,000 DAMAGE\nA composite estimate of property\nlosses was placed at $23,000,000 with\nuncounted thousands homeless and\nthousands Injured. ReUef officials\nexpressed belief many more bodies\not the dead would be uncovered before all the wreckage ls removed.\nThe threatening floods, foUowing\nthe south's most disastrous winter\nand spring in a decade, brought a\nserious threat to numerous communities which escaped the storms.\nSeventeen highway! were closed\nby high water in North Carolina,\nand sbt in South Carolina, where\ntwo railroad lines were Inundated.\nAlabama's larger rivers were\nflooded but little damage was indicated thui far.\nThousands of lowland residents\non the Tennessee side of the river,\nhowever, were routed from their\nhomes ind thousandi more were\nready to evtcuate.\nAt Granville 2300 were homeless,\nWest Transfer Co.\nEstablished in 1899\nFor 36 Years\nNelson's Fuel\nHeadquarters\nCOAL\nfor Evtry Ute\nPHONE 33\nWOOD\nIn All Lengths\nLocal\nAgents\nlor Hi*\nFamous\nCROWS\nNEST\nCOALS\n\"Found thousand quadrupeds at\nzone indicated. They received our\ncares.es. Estimate 200 Ethiopians\nkilled, 100 animals. Rest fled demoralized.\"\nThen wc flew along the Dessye\ntrail am! saw natlvd troops beyond\nCorbo. On the way back I thought\nIt only fair to repay the thrills they\n.i-d given me. Between the mixup\nif my jumbled Italian and their\nx-anty English they understood I\nwas an American pilot Politely,\nover Makale, Piero invited me to\nthe co-pilot's seat.\nAs soon as I was seated Giovanni\nmotioned and smiled\u2014\"It's yours,\ntake it.\"\nNot knowing what else to do,\n\"I took If and  In the next 10\nmlnutei   piloted   eight   toni   of\nbomber In uniting figurei, tightening the llpi of the Italian crew.\nGiovanni tapped my shoulder and\nwith a strained look, asked, \"Arc\nyou really a pilot?\"\nI answered happily: \"I never\npiloted a plane before before in\nmy life,\"\nThe four of them jumped on the\ncontroli together but now that we\nare back home we are itlll friends.\nupward of 1000 homei were In mini\nand more than 1200 injured. Four\ntrainloads of the injured were hospitalized in AUante, TO miles away.\nMerry Makers\nGive Program\nCRESTON, B.C.-The Merry Maker! C.G.I.T. group of Trinity United\nchurch had a successful tea on Saturday afternoon at the church hall\nfor the purpose of raising funds to\nhelp finance the annual summer\ncamp at Lockhart beach, and the\naffair was a great success socially\nas well as financially. Mri. A. H.\nWalker preiided it the tet tables\nwhere lighted cindles were ptrt of\nthe decorative scheme and the girls\nwere attired in colored aprons and\ncaps. Some items of entertainment\nwere provided by the girli, Including a five-piece orchestra. There\nwas the chorui, 'Treaiure Island,\"\nby the girls. Reading, \"Aunty Dole-\nful's Visit\" by Hazel Beam, chorus,\n\"Frogs at School,\" by the C.G.I.T.\nmembers in frog costume. There\nwas a recitation and piano solo by\nGlenna Fowlie, and a recitation,\n\"The Pirate Don Dirk of Wow Dee\"\nwas given by Anna Dickinson in\ncostume. Milda and Alva Sirge\nfavored with a vocal duet. The afternoon was rounded off with a\nmusical contest at which first prize\nwas won hy Mrs. W. B. Martin, and\nconsolations honors taken by Mrs.\nMacLaren.\nMORE ABOUT\nPLANE (RASH\n(Continued Fram Page One)\nFour of the passengen were cadets at Valley Forge military academy\u2014August, Evans, Smith and\nKelly. They had started gaily homeward for Easter vacations. Their\nmothen waited for them at the\nAllegheny county airport near Pittsburgh.\nThe crew of the Sun Racer had\nbeen aware of the \"flying difficulties. Chief Pilot Ferguson had reported by radio at 10:09 a.m, that\nhe was flying by instruments and\nwould not attempt to land at Pittsburgh. Then came the crash.\nIn New York officials of the line\nsaid late today that reports from\nthe plane indicated \"the radio beam\nwas no longer tunctioning accurately.\"\nThe company promised an immediate investigation.\nAirline officials said Miss Granger\nprobably escaped because she rode\nin the rear of the plane.\nS. A. WOODLAND DIES\nPRINCE RUPERT, B.C., April 7\n(CP)\u2014George A. Woodland, well-\nknown in busineu and fraternal cli-\nclei here for mony years, died In\nhospital today after a brief illness.\nHe was a native of Nova Scotia and\na veteran of the South African war.\nYouth is Over!\nRIDDLE age\ndawns\u2014and\nwith it perhaps\nlack of energy,\npoor appetite, indigestion, gassy,\nsour stomach,\nand belching.\nThis should not\nbe overlooked.\nDr. Pierce's\nGolden   Medical\nDiscovery stimulates thc appetite, improve*\nthc action of the stom.it li, makes the food digest better, and that tired feeling disappears.\nThi. Mrength-tniilder is made from i\nformula which the late Dr. R. V. Pierce\nfound most effective when in active practice\nyears ago. Other men and women in your\ncommunity have found it helpful. It will\nhelp you, too. Buy now of your druggist.\nNew ute tablets 50 cents, liquid $1 & fl.35.\nKeepYour FEET Fr*\nW****^^    wd Prevent fl\nllittori, Corni and Chafing\nhy Staabin, h leery \u00ab_U\n7. A M ' B Ll K OINTMENT\nMl t\u00bb -\u2022--\u2022\ntern el ill\ntttt\n<\u25a0.\/*-.\n\u25a0MSI THRU\nnhn\\tf$$% dnmydttg.\nINCORPORATtO  ttl* MAY 1670.\nWEDNESDAY-STORE\nOPEN ALL DAY!\nSHOP TODAY FOR YOUR EASTER\nREQUIREMENTS\nLADIES!\nASSEMBLE YOUR OWN\nENSEMBLE\nAssemble your own mannish suit\u2014a jacket and a tailored skirt and a tailored blouse. Fashion says you can carefully match the skirt and coat or choose the top in\nchecks. The skirts may be worn with other jackets and\nvice versa, They are chic right from the hem of the skirt\nto thp tip of the peaked or notched lapel.\nJACKETS\nIn wool  faille and shepherd's checks.\nBlack and brown only.\nEACH   \t\n*r.9s\n5\nTAILORED SKIRTS\n\u00bb29S\nIn wool failles and novelty tweed effects.\nButton trims, others neat pockets. Pleated and plain styles.\nEACH   \t\nBLOUSES\nLong sleeved tailored blouses in silk crepe\nand celanese satins. Stitched collars. High &*%   QC\nnecklines. Colors white and eggshell. \u2122 Mf**\nEACH     _____*\nLADY HUDSON\nSTOCKINGS\nFor Wearers of Fine Hosiery\nA sheer chiffon hose, specially woven to ensure durability and maintain elasticity after repeated wearings. Silk-\nto-top they fit perfectly. This is the hose\nmost becoming  to you and comes   in  ft *tf    AA\nshades to blend with any spring en-       M *\nsemble. PAIR         ***\"\nBAGGAGE\nfor Those Who Travel at Eastertime\nSelect your baggage for that trip frorn our large assortment.\nLadies' Aeropacks ._- $11.95      Suit Cases\nDressing Cases   $5.95      Gladstones\nFitted Cases $12.95      Club Bags\n$2.25 to $4.95\n$13.50 to $22.50\n$4.75 to $15.00\nMEN! SAVE DOLLARS AT THE BAY'S\nEASTER SUIT SALE\nRegular $22.50\nand $25.00\nINVESTIGATE\nOUR BUDGET\nPAYMENT\nPLAN\nJJHJP*\nYour fit and style Is here in just the fabric you have been\nwanting. Planned ahead, this suit sale will please the most discriminating dresser and even hard-to-fits will find satisfaction here. Plan to shop today for your Easter suit.\nMEN'S NEW\nSPRING SHIRTS\nTime now to buy that new shirt. See our new stock of English broadcloth shirts in both plain shades and fancy stripes\nand checks in collar attached and separate collar style. The\ncolors are new, the patterns smart and your\nfit is assured by choosing one now, from our *>*_) ,QO\ncomplete selection.\nEACH   \t\n\u00bb2\nChildren's \"Specified\" Cushion Health Shoes\nStraps and Oxfords __ Patent Straps and Oxfords\nChrome Soles $|35      \u00a3 5\u201eJ \u00bb nf-:.::. SS\nSizes 2 to 6 -       ~ Sixei UVi \u00bbo 3  12.50\nSpecially designed shoes that are a great aid to growing feet.\nCushion insoles and flexible soles.\n \u2022AGE FOUR-\ntoad Crew Is\nBusy al Sirdar\nSIRDAR, B.C.,-Mr. and Mrs.\nThamu and family, who have been\nresident! for some time have moved\nte Cruton, where they have taken a\nplace.\nAnother car ol luppllei hu arrived here to be uied on the bridge\napproach renewal at Atbara.\nC. J. Wilson waa a buiineu visitor to Nelson for several days this\nWeek, travelling by stage.\nThe water aa Indicated by gauge\nat Slough bridge reads 0.00 a rise\n\u00abt 0.02 for the week. The water is\nbeginning to come over the silt bar\nat the outlet of Duck lake. The\ndifference between this gauge and\nthe one at Kootenay Landing at\nthe end ot the week was 0.04.\nGus Foreiter of AUce Siding, employed ln the road camp kitchen\nhere, wai at hii home tor the weekend.\nA comlderable road crew wai engaged here thil pait week finishing\nUp previoui to the camp being\nmoved to near Gray Creek.\nJim McDonald, of the forutry department, Creiton, wu here on official buiineu on Monday morning.\nMn. John Talarico and Min Sylvia and wn Joe arrived back here\nfrom Cranbrook by. Monday mornings train.\nGeorge Lacey, of Creston, was a\nvisitor to Atbara on Monday.\nAl Hendren, of Creston, wu ln\n(huge of removing and raiting the\nRogen teed store and had same\nCompleted by the end ot the week.\nThe work of driving piles at the\n{Rough bridges li progressing very\nfait A large piledrlver is employed on tbe work.\nTbe air compressor here is being\noverhauled and painted after which\nIt will be moved up the lake to be\nused on road work at Gray Creek.\nThis week has seen a great increase in the number of cars passing\nover the roads here.\nThe Sirdar Badminton team Journeyed to Boiwell it the end of .\nweek to engage the Boswell team.\nA very keenly contested game resulted in the latter team beating\nthe Sirdar one by 7-3. Sirdar players\nwere Margaret Rogen, Anne and\nCamelia Pasacuzzo, Arthur Rutledge,\nDominic Passcuzzo, J. Andlno,\nCharles Lombardo, V. Cherbo, G.\nBugara and Alfred Bysouth of Kuskanook.\nMiss Rose and Anne Passcuzzo\nwere shopping visitors to Creston\non Monday.\nLan Anderson and E. K. Haynes\nof Kuskanook were Creston visitors\non Friday.\nJ. Mannarino, Mr. and Mrs. M.\nTalarico, J. S. and C. J. Wilson were\nCreiton visitors on Friday.\nJoe Saltus, who had the misfortune to injure his hand a tew days\nago waa at Creiton on Friday to\nhave the Injured hand dressed.\nMlu Alice May Harlow, of Nelson,\nhas arrived here to visit her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Wilson at\nAtbara.\nHerman Oftner, who with Art\nBrett, are trapping in the neighborhood ot Kooteniy Landing wu in\nSirdar for supplies on Wednuday.\nTheir activities have met with fairly\ngood result! so far.\nMn. M. Colombo wu a week-end\nvisitor with friends at Creston by\ntrain.\nMiu Row, Anne and Camelia\nPasscuzzo were Sunday visitors with\nMr. and Mrs. Samuel Bysouth of\nKuskanook.\nNelson-Cruton transfer resumed\nNEISON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ. APRIL 8. 1038\nrunning on Tuesday and wu at Atbara for material that day.\nWilfred Marquis of Nelson arrived\nhere on Wednesday morning to be\nconductor while the bridge work il\ngoing on.\nThe C.P.R. have a work train\nworking between Tye and Kootenay\nLanding, and are making their headquarters at Sirdar.\nFrank Naden of the Universal Moton, Creston, was a business visitor\nto Sirdar and Atbara on Thursday.\nGino Bugara and Charles were\nbusiness visitors at Tye on Thunday and Friday.\nThe road crew were all engaged\non Saturday removing the equipment and commissary to the new\ncamp near Gray Creek, and operations will be commenced there at the\nfirst of the week. Considerable\nwork yet remains to be done here\nwest of the quarry.\nA. L. Palmer, road superintend'\nent, was here on Saturday morning\nsupervising thc removal of the camp\nto the new, site.\nMr. Smith B and B muter of\nNelson was here on Saturday morn\ning looking over the progress of\nthe pile driving at the Slough\nbridge.\nThe tall of snow recorded here\nat the week-end was 6 inches.\nAt Civic Centre\nSoon?\nSurprise Parly\nat Crawford Bay\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\n1:00 To an Evening Star, orch.,\nwith Ruth Morgan, Edmonton; 8:10\nHugo Marianl and his Cosmopolitans, M.B.S. (B.C., 5:45); News, Vancouver; 6:00 This Is Paris, Montreal;\n1:30 Alfred Wallensteln Sinfonietta.\nU.B.S.-N.V.; 7:00 Club Thirteen.\n\u00ablr. Jascha Galperin, Calgary; 7:30\nMart Kenney'a Seven Western Gentlemen, Vancouver; 7:45 CP Newi;\n1:00 Time Signal; Don Butor'i orch.,\nMontreil; 8:30 I Cover the Waterfront, Van.; 8:45 Woodhouse and\nHawkins In Nitwit Court, Calgary.\n$:00 Maids and Middies, vocalists,\nSaskatoon: 8:30 Night Wind. Cyril\nHampshire, organist, Regina, Mtn\nMet; 10:00 News reporter, Vancouver; 1 15 Mr. and Mri. comedy,\nVancouver; 10:30 Jack Williamson's\nerch., Vancouver.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO\n680      (20    840    680      920\n. 5:00 One Man'i Family, by Carlton Mont; 5:30 Musical., Beaux\nArts Trio; 6:00 Com Cob Pipe Club;\n1:30 Warden Lewia E. Lawei, 20,000\nYears ln Sing Sing, drama; 7:00 John\nCharles Thomas, Frank Tours' orch.;\n7:30 Winning tha West, Samuel\nDixon, drama; 8:00 Amos 'n' Andy;\n1:13 Lum and Abner; 8:30 Death\nRides the Highway, drama; 9:00\nTown HaU Tonight, Fred AUen,\nPortland Hotfa, Peter van Steed-\nen's orcb;. 10:00 Newi Fluhes.\nSam Hayes; 10:18 Tom Coakley's\norch.; 11:30 Eddie Fitzpatrick, Jr.,\nand orch.; 11:00 Veloz and Yolanda's\nerch.; 11:30 Paul Pendarvis' orch.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKQO KJR KEX KECA KQA\n790   970     1180     1430    1470\n5:15 To be innounced; 6:00 Crois-\ntuta From the Log o' the Day; 6:15\nPopeye the Sailor Man, KGO; 6:30\nAgriculture Today, Jennings Pierce,\nKOO; 6:45 Air Adventurei of Jim*\nI my Allan, drama, KGO; Williams\nSisten, trio; 7:00 Your Hit Parade,\nI orch.,   soloists;   8:00   Callfornians\nI on Parade, narrative, KGO; Henry\nI Busses orch.;  8:30 Enoch Light's\norch.; 9:00 Shandor, violinist; 9:08\nJot Rines' orch.; 9:30 Luigl Roman-\nI elli'l orch., Toronto; 10:00 Griff Williami* orch.;  10:30 Del Courtney's\norch,; 11:00 Paul Canon, organist\nsung by Jan Van der Gucht tenor,\naccompanied by the composer; 7:28\nMuilcal Interlude; 7:30 Talk, \"Foreign Affain\", by Sir Frederick\nWhyte, K.C.S.I, UD.; 7:45 Newi;\n8:00 Close down.\nINTERNATIONAL\nMoscow, 1:00 p.m.\u2014Talk on Soviet\nsocial lervices, \"Glimpses of Future\"; News; Soviet opinion and\nworld affain. RNE, 50 m., 6 mc.\nRome, 3:00 p.m\u2014Newi bulletin!\nin Engliih. Symphonic concert from\nthe Rome studios. Talk by Prof. A.\nde Masl on \"Present Events\" Songi\nby Dina Fiumana. 2RO, 31.1 m.,\n9.63 mc.\nLondon, 4:15 p.m. \u2014 \"Pariah\", a\nplay by August Strindberg. GSD,\n25.5 m\u201e 11.75 mc, GSC, 31.3 m., 9.58\nmc, or GSA, 49.5 m., 6.05 mc.\nBerlin, 4:30 pm. \u2014 Classical and\nContemporary Wind Chamber Music. DJC, 49.8 m\u201e 6.02 mc.\nMadrid, 4:35 p.m. \u2014 Norwegian\nDances. EAQ, 30.5 nv, 9.87 mc.\nCaracas, 6:30 p.m.\u2014Musical Comedies. YV2RC, 51.7 m., 5.8 mc.\nCincinnati, 9:30 p_n.\u2014Moon River.\nWXAL 49.6 m., 6.06 mc.\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C.-Mr. and\nMn. W. Jacobson were given a lurpriie party Saturday at their home.\nGamu were played. The viiiting\nparty consisted of Miss M. King,\nMiss J. McGregor, Miss E, Liversedge, Miss F. McLauchlan, D.'McLauchlan, D. Brundrict D. Deverson, B. Vanstelnburg, G. Richardson, J. Boume, J. King, B. King and\nM Hagen.\nA. G. M. Watson, government\nR.O.P. inspector, ipent a few daya\nin the bay..\nMn. Gooch ii ipending a few\nweeki at Victoria.\nMrs. McDonald il viiiting her hue-\nband at Canal Flat\nRobert Francis is spending hii\nEuter holiday with his parents, Mr.\nand Mn. Francis.\nThe Women's institute Enter sale\nwas held Saturday and in spite\nof bad roads realized $20.35.\nMrs. Watson and Miu Jacques\nwere in charge of the fancy stall.\nMiu F. McLauchlan and Miss M.\nKing lerved tea.\nD. Fisher was a Nelion visitor\nFriday.\nMr. and Mn. W. Fraser motored\nto Nelson Friday to meet their son,\nRobert, who is home to ipend the\nEuter holiday.\nColonel Cholmley wai a visitor\nto Nelion.\nMisi Jean McGregor li visiting\nher sliter, Mn, D. McLeod of Trail.\nTlie new camp which is being\nerected between Gray Creek and\nCrawford Bay is nearly completed.\nAlready there are several men there\nfrom Creston with Mr. Hagan as\nforeman.\nKimberley Girls\nDown (reslonltes\n\u2014the outfit, we mean, not the\nlady, for Jean Parker, film heartthrob, who so daintily displays,\nabove, the very lateit in badminton\ntogs for the fair sex, wu not expected, at lut reporti, to be a contestant when the Nelson civic centre\nbadminton hall is officially opened\nwith a monster Kootenay tournament during Easter week-end. Fair\nKootenay badmlntoneen, however,\nare noted for being right up to the\nminute ln their choice of attire and\nit ii quite probable thue flare-legged shorts and half-sleeve tunics\nwill be in evidence. Their designer\npoints out that, if a lassie is as\nhandy with the shuttle as with the\nshuttlecock, ihe could make this\noutfit for henelf in a couple ot\nafternoon!. It amount! to simply a\npair of shorts with exaggerated legs,\npleated at the side near the back,\nand a snug fitting tunic with a hint\nof a putt at the shoulders.\nDID THE TEST INCLUDE EARS?\nLut yeir 566 Ontario Boy Scouts\ndemonstrated their versttility by\nproperly washing clothes, and to\nqualifying for the Scout laundry\nman's proficiency badge.\nCRESTON, B.C.,\u2014Playen on Cruton Moton Commercial Buketball\nleague wound up the season with\na trip to Kimberley on Thursday\nevening when they played in exhibition game with a ladlu' team ln\nthai town, coming out at the low end\n| of the acore, but otherwise having\nan enjoyable visit. The party was\nmotored down by Manager A, W.\nDickinson of Cruton Moton, and\nDon. Archibald, and playen making the trip were Misses Dot Wlght-\nmtnn, Dot MacDonald, Helen La-\nBelle, Ethel VanAckeren, Elizabeth\nArmltage, Kate Payne, Dot Palmer\nud June Browell.\nMn. Howard Corrle ot Michel\nwai a visitor tha put week at the\nhome ot her parenta, Mr. and Mn.\nW. G. Hendy.\nMn. L. Osborne-Smith of Victoria haa arrived for a two monthi'\nvisit with her son-in-law and daughter, Rtv. R. E. M. tnd Mn. Yer-\nburgh it Chriit church rectory.\nMr. and Mn. R. L. Skilllcorn were\nvisiting with Nelion frlendi a few\ndays lut week.\nH. S. MlUer It opening out in the\nphotography line in premiies that\nhave been fitted up in the King\nGeorge hotel building.\nP. M. Wiltse of the Arrow Creek\nfox tarm, is at preient on t buiineu\nvisit at Lethbridge.\nA C.PJL steam ahovei ud extra\ngang wu here lut week, and extended the tiding past the Midland\n& Pacific elevator through to Third\nstreet The rumor penlsti another,\nelevator is to be built here thil'\nyetr tnd will occupy t site alongside the new piece of trick that hu\njuit been put in.\nMn. John McKay of Fernie ii at\npruent on a 'visit with her parents, Mr. and Mn. Victor Carr.\nMn. Matthews ot Nelwn waa a\nviiitor for a few dayi with Mn.\nJ. C. Martin, the latter accompanying her on her return to Nelion at\nthe end of the week.\nINSPECTOR VISITS\nPublic school inspector J. E.\nBrown of Cranbrook bu been on\nofficial visits to ichooli in the dlitrict the put week. On the occuion\nof hii call ln Cruton Principal\nMarriott of the public school wis on\nthe sick list and the Inspector took\ncharge ot the division for the day.\nMn. J. T. Vance was here for a\ncouple of days' stay en route from\nSalmo to visit her son, Clifford, at\nKimberley.\nAllan Smythe, wbo hu been reUef clerk at Grand Forkl, ii now\ndoing similar duty for Ledgerkeep-\ner F. Hurford, on vacation, at the\nBank of Commerce.\nMn. Fritz Nolander and eon Barry, who apent the winter with her\nparenti, Mr. and Mn C. Taplln,\nhas returned to Kitchener to resume\nresidence.\nMlu Norma ManhaU lett on Sunday for Cranbrook on a viiit with\nher lliter, Mn. Wilter Barrett.\nSlocan Park Man\nVisits Nelson\nSLOCAN PARK, B.C.-Charles\nDicky was a visitor to Nelion.\nRichard Storbo who had been a\npatient in Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, Nelion, hat returned to\nhis home here.\nLloyd Cursons left for Nelson to\nbe employed by Rou Fleming tor\na short Ume.\nMn. Stanley Reld attended a\nWomen'i Inititute meeting at Pass-\nmore.\nMr. and Mn. M. H. Baskln, Terrace apartments, Nelion, have\nmoved to their home here.\nMlu Norma Cursons spent Sunday\nwith her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred\nCursons.\nWest Heads W.P.\nTennis Club\nPhoto by McGregor\nVary wistful for ena io young.\nAbove it a picture of Hiathar Al*\nliyni Clirke, four-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mn. T. A. Clarke\nof Hoover street\nLondon's lut Boy Scout census\nshowed 1084 Cub packs, 1184 Scout\ntroopi tnd 669 Rover crewi. and a\ntotel membenhlp, aU ranks, ot 57,-\nA SCOUT CAMP WHERE\nB.P. LEARNED SCOUTING\nThe Southern Rhodeilan government haa preiented a 75-acre camp\naite in the famous Matoppo hills to\nthe Boy Scouts of that colony. It\nls a unique coincidence that experience u a scout ln thli country\nduring the Matabele war later gave\nBaden-PoweU many itoriei which\nhelped him to show Boy Scouts the\ninterest and character training value\nof observation, tracking and deduction that enters Into many Boy\nScout games today.\nAn open boat made ot italnleu\niteel hu been built for Fither Bernard Hubbard, S.J., to carry bim\nover the rapids ud dangerous rocks\nof the Taku River, Aluka, on hit\njourney to explore the great Taku\nIce-cap.\nWILLOW POINT, B.C.-The WUlow Point Tennii elub held iti 22nd\ninnual meeUng April S at the WUlow Point Initltute houie.\nThe secretary's report ihowed t\ngood year with a balance ln hud.\nIt wu hoped to be able to' play\nearly in May.\nOfficen tor 1938 ire: T. Wut,\npresident; Mn. A. N. Taylor, vice\npreildent; Mn. C. S. Honfleld, lecretary; Mln J. Green, Miu Gukell,\nT. Weit, committee.\nPERMANENT WAVES\nBY HAIL\nN. Ile-lrkll- NhIH\nFull O-Ull lor 3       II .50\nCompLU rcrm_-\u00abnt_   _-\nEMV   IlKl'U.tltUl\nBe-ullfnl W--H Thil\nUil Irom I I. | M.ntln!\nFwlp\u00bbl_.    11.90 w,1*?,v_f*; **V1\n..__ m.... _.   (*1*\u00b0 \u2666-* tea. lut\nTHERE IS NO\nSUBSTITUTE FOR\nNATURAL \"BULK\"\nNeeded to Correct\nConstipation*\nMoit people recognlte the uri-\nousness of conitipation. But too\noften they dose themielvu wtth\nitrong cathartics Uiat often actu-\naUy lead to chronic conitipation.\nTha natural way to chtek common constipation li to correct the\ncondition which causes it\u2014usually,\ninsufficient \"bulk\" in meals.\nHow can you get \"bulk\"? Fruiti\nand vegetables have aome. Bran hat\nmore. The most popular prodact of\nthia Und It Kellogg'a All-Bran.\nThe \"hulk\" in Au>Bun ta gentle\nin action. All-Bran alio luppliea\nvitamin B and iron.\nThis delicloui cereal ia a whole-\ntome food. Serve All-Bran regularly for regularity, with milk or\ncream\u2014or uae in cooking.\nTwo Ubleipoonfuli of All-Bran\ndaily will usually correct conitipation due to iniulficient \"butt.\"\nIf not relieved, aee your doctor.\nAll-Bun glvea you gentle in-\nrental exercise. Sold by ill grocers.\nMade by Kellogg la London, Ont.\nKeiutltntlm tm tt latafetetS -Wlf\nCM-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI  KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\n570     810       940      1130   1270\n8:00 The Cavalcade of America,\nI drama; 6:30 The Salvation Army\nBand,   DL.;   6:00   Lily   Pons,  soprano;   Andre   Kostelaneti'   orch.\nand chorui; 6:30 Ray Noble'i orch.,\nConnie  Boiwell,  Al BowUy;  7:00\nGang Busters, Phillips Lord, drama.;\n1:30 March of Time; 7:45 Strange ai it\nSeems, D.L.; 8:00 Myrt and Marge,\ndramatic;   8:15   Pari!  Night  Life,\nXOL, 8:30 Burnt and Allen; 9:15\nGeorge Olien'i orch.;   10:00 Jimmy Bittick's orch.; 10:30 Eddie Oli-\nj ver's orch.;  11:00 Jimmy Doney's\norch.; 11:30 Emil Baffa's orch.; 11:45\nI Ted Dawson's orch.\n800 k\nCJOR\n499.7 m\n500 w\nVancouver\n8:13 Big Brother BiU; 6:15 News\nFlashes; 7:15 Immediate lssuei; 7:30\nDr. Telford, talk; 8:00 Cirroll Bennett; 8:15 Ozzie Rou, songs; 8:45\nSong Stylu, Shannon; 9:30 Cariboo\nCowboyi; 10:00 Boy Lyon'i orch.;\n10:30 Mauna Lea orch.; 11:00 Pete\nCowans Old Timen; 11:30 Slumber\nHour; 11:45 News Fluhes; Other\nperiods, records.\n1030 k CPCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n6:15 Borowiky and His Gypsies;\n| 6:00 Brown Family; 8:45 Hold Preu:\n7:00 Man About Town: 7:15 Evelyn\nJeffrey; 8:00 Elmer Redden, tenor:\n8:30 Variety Show; 8:48 Black Magic; 9:00 News; 9:13 Seremder.\n^oloae$m.e. OtS\nSWIFT'S PREMIUM HAM\nOf coune you are serving Ham this Euter! Then to make yj\nyour dinner a complete succeat, insist on getting genuine m**?    St.\nSwift's Premium Ham. It'a worth the few centt difference _^    __,\nmany timee over! For two reasons: First, only Swift's Premium \u00a7K\nHam gets the Premium sugar-cure for mildness. And second, ______\\W\\h___.\nonly Swift's Premium is \"Ovenized\" ... and so only Swift's ^k        ^tefc^1^\nPremium Ham needs NO PARBOILING! To make him <st____   \u00ab*w\nsmile his broadest . .. place your order for a real Swift's\nPremium Ham, EARLY! Swift Canadian Co., Limited.\n^ NO PARBOILING -\n_______ IT'S \"OVENIZED\"\nORDER GENUINE SWIFTS PREMIUM HAM FROM ANY OF THESE DEALERS\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nPacific Standard Tm.e\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTrammlMlon 8\nGSC, 9.66 mc. (31.32 m.)\n7:00 p.m. Big Ben, The Composer\nI at the Pianoforte, (9) Frank Bridge;\nI a recital ot Frank Bridge'! songs,\nNELSON\n\u2022ON TON MEAT MARKET\nFAIRVIEW MEAT MARKET\nFAIRWAY CASH A CARRY\nFLEMING'S 8TORE\nHORNER'S GROCERY\nHORSWILL   BROS.\nHUDSON'S BAY CO.\nIRVING. J. A. A CO.\nLAURITZ MEAT MARKET\nLOWERY'S  GROCERY\nMAPLE  LEAF GROCERY\nPIAKE'S STORE\nSAFEWAY STORES LTD.\nSHORTHOUSE'S BUTCHERTERIA\nSTAR GROCERY\nSUGAR BOWL GROCERY\nVASSAR'S MEAT MARKET\nVENETO GROCERY\nVERNON ST. GROCERTERIA\nAINSWORTH\nFLETCHER. J. B.\nARROW PARK\nREDLAND'B TRADING ASSOC.\nBALFOUR\nHOLT. Chu.\nBEAVERDELL\nCLARKE. T. W.\nBLUEBERRY CREEK\nBERESFORO, Mn. E.\nBURTON\nBURTON TRADING CO.\nCASTLEGAR\nEREMENKO. Mn. F.\nSHEA. D. A.\nWEST. R. A. D.\nCRAWFORD BAY\nCRAWFORD BAY COOP. ASSOC.\nCRESCENT VALLEY\nCUNNINGHAM, R. J.\nDEER PARK\nCOLEMAN, H. C.\nEDGEWOOD\nMcLEOD, J. N.\nFIFE\nMAZZOCHI, O.\nFRUITVALE\nDAVIS. H. C.\nSOUTH   KOOTENAY   FARMER'S\nCOOP. ASSOC.\nCRAND FORKS\nCITY GROCERY\nMcLEOD A HODGSON\nMcKINNON. D. A. A CO.\nVALLEY MARKET\nVATKIN. M.\nGRAY CREEK\nLYMBERY, A. W.\nGREENWOOD\nBROWN.  R. A.\nGREENWOOD GROCERY\nKASLO\ngiegerich, h.\nMcGregor, p.\nwhiter. c. w.\nHARROP\n\u25a0 ERRY. J.\nMIDWAY\nMcMYNN. C. G.\nNAKUSP\nFrink\nHORREY,\nISLIP. R.\nNAKUSP CASH A CARRY\nSUPERIOR MARKET-Wm. Oliver\nNEW DENVER\nHOIEN, T. H.\nNEW DENVER MEAT MARKET\nPENDRY, H. H.\nTATTRIE A GREER\nTHOMLINSON. H. C.\nPAULSON\nWIEBE. Mn. P. E.\nPOPLAR\nROBB. Alia\nPORT CRAWFORD\nJOH80N, Mn. L.\nPROCTER\nRITCHIE, A. 8.\nRENATA\nFRIEIEN, G. D.\nROBSON\nWICKHAM, W. T.\nROCK CREEK\nMcMYNN, C. G.\nROCK CREEK TRADING CO.\nROSSLAND\nAGNEW, A CO.\nHUNTER BROS. LTD.\nLIE, R.\nROGERS. T. P.\nROSSLAND MIAT MARKET\nWOOGMAN, Mm\nWRIQHT'I MARKET\nSALMO\n8ALM0-YMIR  MEAT  MARKET\nSILVERTON\nMARSHALL, W.'E.\nWILSON'S LTD.\nSLOCAN CITY,\nCLOUGH. W.\nMcNEISH. T. * CO.\nSOUTH SLOCAN\nBOWKETT, E. J.\nTAGHUM\nMARSDEN. J. F.\nTRAIL\nB.C. MEAT MARKET\nBAY AVE. MARKET\nC. M. A S. CO'S. STORE\nDALOI8E. D. A CO.\nLAURIENTE, C.\nMicLAREN, H. A.\nMOLINA, C.\nROSSLAND AVE. MARKET\nPIPKIN, J.\nSAFEWAY ITORES LTD.\nTRAIL MEAT MARKET\nTRAIL  MERCANTILE CO. LTD\nTYSON BR08.\nVENETIAN GROCERY  .\nWILLOW POINT\nWILLOW POINT COOP. ASSOC.\nWINjAW\nCHASE. E. H.\nYMIR\nIALMO-YMIR MEAT MARKET\nASK BY NAME FOR SWIFT'S PREMIUM HAM ... THE ONLY KIND THAT'S OVENIZED\n h6\nNELSON DAILY N.EWS  NILSON. B.G.-W.ONIIDAY MORNINO. APRIL 1 11\nPHONE\n244\nEaster Beauty\nit's yours for the asking\nAll beauty services are offered you at Milady's. Visit us\nbefore Easter.\nMILADY'S BEAUTY\nSHOPPE\n517 Vi Baker St.\nPhone 244\nKIDDIIS BUY GOLDEN SWORD\nHSUCHOW, China ,CP)-School\n\u25a0hlldren throughout this province\nre contributing their coppers (one-\nInth ot t Canadlm cent) towird i\nund for the purchue ot a golden\nrard tor the niUon't generallislmo,\n:hiang Kai-Shek.\nButcherteria\nNewt\nWednesday and Thursday\n30*\nQood Round Steak\u2014\nPer lb.\nGood Vtal \u2022teak\u2014\nPer lb.\nQood Pork itttk-\nPtr lb.\nVt LB. BABY BEEF LIVER\nand Vi LB. BREAK- ___\nFAST BACON mmY\nOnamery Buter\u2014\nlike.\nFruh Halibut\u2014\nPet lb -..\nFreth Ulmon\u2014\nPerlb.\nFmh Cod\u2014\nPer lb.       \t\n4tt\nHADDII FILLETS-   ___\nPer Ib. *\"*\"\u00bb'\nFrtih Hindered Dripping   _tC_\n-i  lbS. M-*>\nLOIN LAMI CHOPS- Jfi__\nPer Ib. ... *****\u00bb\"\nPHONES-K7 ind Stl\nFree Dillvtry\nPhones 865-866\nFret Delivery\nPrices Effective\nWED. end THURS.\nApril 8 and 9\n$AfEWAY$TORES\nBANANAS.... Dox. 25c\nFIRM, RIPE, GUARANTEED\nMiiiiiiiiiiinir\nZ     Salada Tea     Z\nm BROWN UBELi We give yoii a m\nm Lucky Salada Elephant CQ* \u25a0\n\u00ab\u25a0    with each pound ..  . LB. \u00ab*'*'      m\nriiiiiiiniiiiiii\"\nJELLY POWDERS\nMaximum\n6 pkgs.  25c\nHOT CROSS BUNS\nLedingham's\nDoi  25c\nPALM OLIVE SOAP 5 ban 23*\nSPRATT'S BIRD SEED   Pkg. 18*\nSWANS DOWN CAKE FLOUR Pk|. 29*\nSHREDDED WHEAT  Pkg. 10*\nALL BRAN\u2014Large    Pkg. 19*\nKIPPERED SNACKS  4 tin* 23*\nJAM\u2014Aylmer Pectin 2-lb. jar 35*\nCORN\u2014Aylmer Bantam .... 2 tins 28*\nPEAS\u2014Royal City, Seive 2 2 tins 29*\nBISCUITS\u2014Marshmallow Tops  2 lbs. 45*\nCHEESE\u2014Golden Loaf '\/is  Pkg. 15*\nMARMALADE\u2014McDonald's  4-lb. tin 45f\nPOTATOCHIPS-NalUys 3 pkgs. 25*\nCOFFEE\u2014Excello, Fresh Cround Lb. 35*\nOLD DUTCH CLEANSER I tins 25*\nEASTER ECCS AND NOVELTIES\nORANGES\nSUNKIST\n3 Dog.   89C\nGRAPEFRUIT\n6 ior 2&\nAPPLES\nBPYS\nPer Box      951\nRADISHES\nLOCAL HOTHOUSE\n4 Bunches .. 194\nCAULIFLOWER,\nCELERY, LETTUCE,\nCARROTS, ETC.\nStore Optn All Doy Wednesday - Closed All Day Friday\nFREIGHT PAID ON COUNTRY ORDERS $ 10.00 OR OVER\nEaster Specials in Quality Meats\nFINEST MOD CURED and SMOKED.\n\"HOT PICNICS\" per lb. 17c\nFINE YOUNO\nBOILING FOWL\t\nLb. 21c\nYOUNG\nTURKEY? \t\nLb. 28c\nHAMS\nYOUNO\nGEESE \t\nLb. 21C\nHAMS\nYOUNO\nDUCKS\t\nLb. 23c\nHAMS\nFINE8T\nLAMB SHOULDERS ..\nLb. 15c\ntIndir\nBEEF POT ROASTS ..\nLb. 10c\nSwift's Premium, Burns'\nShamrock and Union\nThistle. Vt or Whole.\nTENDER\nBEEF RUMP ROASTS\nLb. 15c\nFINEST\nSIRLOIN TIP ROASTS\nLb. 19c\nSPECIAL EASTER SALE\nFINEST SHOULDER\nVEAL ROASTS\t\nLb. 14c\nLb. 29c\nMILD CURIO, SLICED\nSIDE BACON\t\nLb. 29c\nT-BONE, SIRLOIN and ROUND STEAKS .1 Lbt. 35<\nSWEET BRIAR SMOKED FILLETS   ... Per Lb. 170\n A COOD COOD FRIDAY SUGGESTION\t\nTHESE GOODS ON SALE WED., THURS. AND SAT.\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nThis column Is conducted by Mrs M J Vlgneux. AU news ol a\nsocial nature including receptions, private entertainment*, personal\nItems, marriages etc. will appeal In Una column. Telephone Mrs\nVlgneux at her bona lit Silica street\nWe Reserve tho Right te Limit Quantities\nSAFEWAY STORES LIMITED\nMr. and Mra Peter M. Ruaell ol\n.he North Shore have returned from\n_ visit to Spokane where they wert\n.net by tbe former's father, Robert\n.tussell of New York city. Mr. Russell made the trip to Spokane from\nNew York by plane.\nSae\nMrs. H R. Townshend, Kerr apartments, recently visited her son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mn\nArchie Gray, tn Salmo.\n...\nArthur TerrUl, High street, returned Monday night from Trail.\n...\nJ. E. Annable left yesterday for\nthe Okanagan district\n...\nMri. Arthur Ronmark and baby\ndiughter left the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital Monday for their\nnome on Selwyn street\n...\nGeorge Hainei wai a recent visitor in Nelson from Ymir.\n\u2022 \u2022  .\nMr. end Mrs. Robert Quln were ln\nthe city from Harrop yeiterday.\n...\nShoppen In town yeiterday included Mn. E. H. H. Applewhaite\nof WiUow Point\n...\nH. H. Perkins ot the ReUef Arlington mine who has been in town\nfor several dayi, returned to Salmo\nyesterday.\na a e\nMrs. Thomai Halsey and ber Infant son have left the Kootenay\nLake General hoipital tor their\nbome on the Granite roed.\n...\nRobert SmiUie, Strathcona hotel,\nrecently visited Trail and Rouland.\n...\nMrs. A. E. Haynes ot TraU leavei\nthis morning on a visit to Winnipeg.\nSee\nRecent visiton In town Included\n3. MUler ot Ymir.\n...\nD. Young ot Harrop visited ln Nelson yeiterday.\n...\nArnold Abrlel of Halifax returned yeiterday to Nakusp after a week\n.pent ln Nelson. Mr. Abriel is en\n.oute to his home in Nova Scotia.\n...\nMrs. Turner Lee of Bonnington\nvisited the city yesterday.\n...\nMr. Kennedy ot the Feme mine\nspent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\u2022\nE. Anderson waa in the city from\nSilverton yesterday,\n...\nF. C. Chrlstopheraon ot Bonnen\nFerry viiited town yesterday.\n...\nMn. W. G. C. Lanskail, Ward\n\u2022treet, entertained the memben ot\nMrs. A. T. Stephenson's circle of\nSt. Saviour's Church Helpen Monday afternoon.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMn. H. Raper of Johnsons Landing is a dty viiitor. She was accom*\npanied here by her daughter, Misa\nDorothy wbo leaves this morning to\nmake hv home at Pouce Coupe\n\u2022 \u2022  .\nMn. Frank PblUips Carbonate\nstreet, entertained the memberi of\nthe   Womena   Benefit   auoclation\nwhen those present were Mrs. 0. B.\nMatthew, Mrs. W. E. Coles, Mra. J.\nJ. Foote, Mrs. R. Heddle, Miss Grace\nLaughton, Mrs. T. Middleton end\nMra. W. a Walker.\n...\nJerman Hunt returned Monday\nnight trom Kelowna where he has\nspent the past couple ot weeks.\nMn. W. J Mohr, wbo has been a\npaUent in the Kootensy Lake General hospital, left that institution\nMonday evening for her home at\nWiUow Point\naaa\nMiss Isabel Mckay ot Balfour visited town yesterday.\naaa'\nShoppen in Nelson yesterday included Mrs. G. Noel Brown of Cora\nLinn and her daughter, Mn. Hvldt\n...\nG. G. Fair of Salmo ipent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Claude Smith of\nCalgary hsve taken up residence ln\nthc Terrace apartments.\n...\nC. C. Chrysler of Ymlr wu among\ncity visitors yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nCaptain Carruthen, who has been\na patient In the Kootensy Lake General hospital for some time, returned yesterday to his home at tbe\nStrathcona hotel.\n...\nClifford Heems of Salmo wea a\nrecent visitor in town.\n.  \u2022  *\nMr. and Mrs. Arthur Mills, Carbonate street, have taken up residence on the Granite road.\n\u2022 .  \u2022\nShoppen in Nelson from Salmo\nyesterday included Mn. C. A. Cawley.\n\u00ab   \u00bb   \u2022\nMn. Walton ot Procter visited In\nthe city yesterday.\n\u2022 \u00bb  \u2022\nMr. and Mn. 1. E. Lang ot HaU\nSiding spent yesterday ln Nelion.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. Fred H. Graham'i circle St.\nSavour's Church Helpen met tt the\nhome of Mn. H. R. Townshend,\nKerr apartments, when those present were Mrs. George Horstead,\nMn. Harry Gore, Mrs. Ernest W.\nSteel, Mn. Mabel Rocliffe, Mn.\nGraham and Mn. Towshend.\n.  \u2022  \u2022\nPercy F. Horton of Salmo was a\ncity visitor yesterday.\n...\nMn. Kahle, Granite roed, lepves\nthis morning on a visit to Regina.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u00ab\nBasil Linton of the National Fruit\nleft Friday tor Edmonton where be\nhas been transferred.\n\u2022 *  .\nMiss Peggy Davis, Edgewood\navenue, has had as her guests her\nmother and aunt, Mrs. 0. Davis and\nMrs. Fred Watts both of Riondel\n\u2022 \u2022  #*\nMr. and Mrs. Thomas Balsey of\nthe North Shore have taken up residence on the Granite road.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nMiss Wlnnifred Bush ot Salmo\nwas a recent visitor in town.\nFLU SERIOUS\nAT KIMBERLEY\nKIMBERLEY, B.C-The cold\nspell has broken. A Chinook blew\nSunday, making ihort work of the\nsnow. The paved roads are bare and\ndry again.\nThe flu is still serious. One ot\nthe fifth grade ichool rooms htd\nonly tive pupils on Monday morning. The hospital is full and the\ndocton sre being kept busy.\nUtUe June Honeyman was taken\nto the hospital on Sunday, ill with\nflu.\nMrs. Owen and Miss PaUence are\nboth absent trom their duUes owing\nto illness.\nEdna May Lord Wins\nPrist at Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.,-WilUes compeUUon prises were awarded as\ntoUowi recently: Edna May Lord,\ntint prise of $0; Mabel Hyitead,\nlecond of $3 and Ruth Stone third of\nft\nMn Baragon, formerly of Kimberley but now of the coast, visited\nKimberley last week.\nG. Dunkerley is Ul in the local\nhospital with flu.\nMln Mary Andrewi motored to\nMoyle on Sunday.\nProvincial Polict\nOfficial Returns\nT. W. S. Parsons, assistant commiuioner of the B. C. poUce, returned to Victoria Tuesday after an Inspection tour of the district He visited B division headquarten tt Nelson.\n\"Rusty\" Davidson\nAgain in Law Toils\n\"Rusty\" Davidson, who has a\nlengthy crime record, included sate\ncracking and robbery of the Vernon\nliquor store, wtt found in possession\not stolen property, arrested and\noemmitted for trial at Greenwood\nTuesday.\nGiven Two Months\nfor Theft, Radio\nSentenced to twe months ln the\nprovincial Jail for theft, Brian Cook-\nYarborough was brought In from\nKimberley Tuetdiy by Provlnclil\nConstable W. R. Powers. The article\ntaken by Yarborough was a radio.\nProvincial Jail\nPopulation Is 39\nNelson's provincial Jail populaUon was 39 Tuesday when one prisoner was admitted to custody and\nanother released. The number Is\nslightly below that of a week ago.\n\u25a0PAQI FIVE\n*kU8rf\nTEA   *\naot\nis delicious\nAn Easter Portrait\nof a Well Dressed Woman\nA colorful bonnet... a Tailored suit . . , \u2022 mannish\ntopcoat ... and SMART\nSHOES. Our stylish footwear fits into the picture\nperfectly. You may prefer a\npump, a broadatrap, a sandal, or a t-strap . , . each\nis correct to wear with your\ncostume. The color may be\nmatching or contrasting, according to your choice. ANDREW'S live up to your\nfashion requirements.\n$3.35 to $10.00\nIn widths from AAAA to C\nSTORE OPEN ALL DAY\nWEDNESDAY\nR. ANDREW\n&CO.\nLeaden in Footfaihion\nTHf frWOUMJl^Auti\/JoaTfOOf CAWAPrVS IQVHHST DEBUIAMTIf\nWont Adl Get Remits\nMINUS\nRECIPES\nend\nHINTS\nGood\n\u25a0v\nMrt.\nMary\nMorton\nHousekeeping\nMENU  HINT\nLuncheon\nBaked Potatoes     Apple Pancakes\nMilk\nOlnner\nSalmon en Casserole\nButtered Carrots\nCole Slaw\nDeep-Dish Apple-Pineapple Pie\nTea or Coffee\nYou may not Uke this salmon\ncasserole dish, but it is worth trying. You can take the salmon from\nthe can whole, if you prefer, and\nheat it through either by steaming\nor baking, then pour cooked and\nseasoned green peas over lt and\nserve with lemon slices. Or you can\nmake a salmon loaf, season weU and\nbake. Scalloped potatoes, potato\nchips or French friend potatoes are\nnice to serve with it, In that case.\nTODAY'S RECIPES\nApple Pancakes-One egg, one\ncup milk, three tablespoons melted\nshortening, one snd one-fourth cups\nflour, one and one-half teaspoons\nbaking powder, one-fourth teaspoon\nsalt, one and one-halt tablespoons\nsugar, two-thirds cup finely diced\napples. Beet the egg and milk, add\nthe sifted dry ingredients and-short-\nenlng, sUr ln the spples and bake on\na hot griddle. Makes 20 cakes.\nSalmon en Casserole \u2014 One can\nred salmon and Juice, one-half pint\nsour cream, eight tiny round potatoes or three large potatoes in one-\nhslf-lnch slices, salt and pepper.\nRemove skin from salmon. Season\nto taste. Surround with potatoes, ln\ncasserole, tnd cover with tour\ncream. Bake covered ln 980-degree\noven unUl potatoes are done.\nDeep-Dish Apple-Pineapple Pie-\nThree cups sliced apples, one cup\ngrated pineapple, one-half cup sugar, two tablespoons flour, One-half\nteaspoon ginger, two tablespoons\nbutter. In a shallow buttered baking dish place layers ot the apples\nand pineapple. Mix the sugar, flour,\nginger andls dash of salt together\nand sprinkle over. Dot with butter\nand cover with pie crust, slashed to\nlet out the steam. Bake at 425 degrees for 40 to 45 minutes. Serve\nhot with hard seuce.\nFACTS AND FANCIES\nWashing Tin\nIf the males ot the household have\nUes that can be washed there Is\nnothing that can do tbe Ues so much\ngood and they urill look far better\nthan Uiough they were cleaned. But\nbefore washing Ues baste the linings very carefuUy so that the paddings wiU not become lumpy. Take\nout tbe basting before ironing.\nCtft\nC\/altnollve keefii my akin\ndelujliljullt\/ etnooth and jresk\nstjs JANE WH VTE, ttlrtctn. Winnipeg dthulenit\nLovely, ttet't ther, 6mm young debt. Smart too\n... far ther ksuw the value of a akia that'i freak\naad yoetM-1. Aad they know how to keep It so.\nPalmo-ve's -Ample beauty treatment is their method.\nThey net It, oot only Ior lace, throat and shoulders\n... but (or Ae bath, as welL PalmoUve keeps\n_____ lovely, all over. Why aot kt Palmolive keep\nyour skin toft nd imooth.\nSoothes and Beautifies\nTht careful Meat-tag of olive aad palm oils la\nP-lmoBve b tbi nana more thu 20,000 beauty\n' It Only these costly oriental\noili &vt Pslmolivt  Us rich, gentle\na   lather   that   cleanses   the\npores.., soothes vow skin... leaves\nN test-ally refreshed aad radiant.\nSo make PalmoUve your soap. Uk\nD-but__te dinshter of Ml. toil Mrt. VIIUui .*_**_.\nKins*-\u2122? Attn*, Wlat-Mt,mm.\nIt always, from today ea, for ad year akia.\nYou'll have a coopUiioe that'a really youthful .. . lovely all over.\nCty iltie cJalmolive tyjeaub} ^Creatmenl\nUae It aot only tor bee, throat and\nshoulders, but for the bath as well.\nGently massage Into your side a\nwarm, rich P-baollve lather. Cleanse\nthe pores thoroughly. Rinse with\nwarm water, then with cold. That'a\naU there h to this simple beauty treatment Yet there la to ewer way So\nreaj, all-over akin beauty. And here's\nanother beauty hiat. Palmolive, aaed\naa a shampoo, keeps yew scalp\nhealthy, hair aoft aad lustrous.\nYour Easter Bonnet will not show\nto advantage if\nyour hair does not\nharmonize.\nLet us advise and assist you In your\nbeauty needs. . .\nPERMANENTS,\nHOT OILS.\nFACIALS, ETC.\nTHE HAIGH TRU-ART\nBEAUTY SALON\n405 Vl BAKER ST.\nPHONE .Hi,\nSuspended Sentence\nGiven in Theft Case\nCharlei Fuco, wbo pleaded guilty\nin city poUce court Monday morn\ning to a charge oi breaking tnd entering the home of Elmo Palmer,\nand was remanded untU Tuesday\nmorning for sentence, wai let go on\nsuspended sentence by Magistrate\nWilliam Brown, Fuco stole property\nto the value ot tm\nVASSARS'\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nWI\nDELIVER\nFRII\nPHONES\n811\n832\nGood Buying for Wednesday-All Day\nChoice Steer Beef\nRound Steak, 2 lbs, . 35*\nttt Roasts, Ib. 8* and 10*\nBrisket Roll, 4 lbs. .. 25*\nHamburg Steak, 3 lbs. 25*\nSausage Meat, Ib. .. 10*\nVeal Stew, Ib  10*\nLamb Chops, Ib  20*\nBreasts Fresh Lamb,\n2 lbs  25**\nFork Steaks, Laan,\n2 Iba  35*\nEggs, Fresh B's, 2 dos. 45*\nReal Calf Liver, Ib. . 35*\nFork Tenderloins, Ib. 35*\nFresh Side Pork, Sliced or\nin the piece, Ib 18*\nSpare Ribs, 2 lbs. ,. 28*\nSwift's Breakfast Bacon,\nFreah sliced, Ib 30*\nFresh Halibut, Sliced,\nIb  26*\nFresh Cod Fillets, Ib. 22*\nBeef Dripping, Fresh\nRendered, 4 lbs 25*\nStore Open All Day Wednesday\u2014Closed Friday\n \"\u2014\n\u25a0\"\nPAGE BIX -\nMbi-xx lath; %mx\nEstablished AprU 22, 1902.\nBritiih Columbia'! Mott Interetting Newipaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n318  Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbit.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember  of the  Audit * Burttu  of  Circulations   tnd\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   Ntwi   Service.\nNELSON DAILY \u00bb*\"\u00ab8   NELSON. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNINO. APRIL 8. 19M\nWEDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 1936.\nTURKEY AND THE DARDANELLES\nThe formal manifestation by Turkey of her intention\nto request the League of Nations to revise the Lausanne\nTreaty in order that she may re-fortify the Dardanelles\ncannot have come aa a surprise to any of the'powers\ninterested.\nThe present year had hardly dawned before cables\nfrom Europe stated more or less definitely that Turkey\nwould soon seek a revision of the Lausanne pact. The\nrecent action of Hitler in denouncing the Locarno agreement has now been seized upon by Turkey as a strategic\nbasis for the advancement of her own claims. Her disavowal of any intention of a unilateral denunciation\nof the treaty, or of any intent to fortify the Dardanelles\nwithout the approval of the powers, leaves the matter\nopen for discussion.\nTurkey has never forgotten the humiliation forced\nupon her by the terms of the Lausanne Treaty in 1923.\nPrior to the Great War she possessed the right, guaranteed under a treaty with Great Britain, to prevent the\npassage of any non-Turkish ships if she desired to do so.\nThis enabled her to close the Dardanelles and the Black\nsea at will to the warships of any foreign power.\nConditions have completely changed since then, of\ncourse. Russia, formerly Turkey's enemy, has been consistently helping Kemal Ataturk to build up a modern\nTurkey in Asia. The recently concluded Franco-Russian\ntreaty naturally brings France into line, and it i$ not to\nbe supposed that she will oppose the Turkish demand for\nsecurity, more particularly since this would also mean\nsecurity for Russia's submarine fleet from the warships\nof other nations in case of necessity.\nIt is not likely that action in regard to the matter\nwill be hasty.but it is altogether probable that when it\ndoes come before the League, there Will be a liberal interpretation of Turkey's representations, in view of the\nfact it has been understood in Paris for some time that\nTurkey's price for complete cooperaiton with the other\npowers in regard to Ethiopia includes her right to re-\nfortify the Dardanelles, and the return of the Island of\nRhodes to Turkey, or a special international administration for that island. The likelihood of any prolonged opposition seems remote, although it is more than probable\nthat Turkey will be required to gi\\. adequate guarantees\nagainst interference with legitimate trade between Black\nsea ports and the outside.\nBritain is well disposed towards Turkey at the present time, and with both Russia and France in accord,\nthe only other Mediterranean power able to bring any\ninfluence to bear is Italy, and no action by Italy in this\nconnection is expected to hinder a friendly adjustment of\nthe Dardanelles situation, though naturally she will hang\non to Rhodes with all her strength. The formal declaration of Turkey's intention to proceed within the framework of the League of Nations may be said to render any\n'likelihood of conflict remote.\nALBERTA'S DEFAULT\nAlberta, says the Edmonton Journal* \"is in a position of unenviable distinction. It is the first Canadian\nprovince to default oh its bonds.\n\"The government has had pointed out to it repeatedly how serious the consequences were bound to be of\nits failure to meet the maturity. It was strongly advised\nto accept the terms on which the federal authorities\nwould come to its asistance, thus enabling it to preserve\nits credit. But it has declined to do so and there must be\nthe deepest concern over the results of its decision, accompanied as this has been by the compulsory refunding\nlegislation.\n\"The Dominion cabinet is not at all open to criticism for its refusal to furnish the funds with which to\npay off the $3,200,000 bond issue. It could not go on advancing money for such purposes to the provinces in\nneed of help unless they indicated their willingness to\nenter into the arrangements which received the approval of the Dominion-provincial conference at Ottawa in\nJanuary. These were of a wholly reasonable character.\nNo province was under any compulsion to become a\nparty to the loan council plan. But the federal ministers\ntook the position that those which did not would have to\nsolve their own financial problems. The men charged\nwith the responsibility of protecting the interests of the\ncountry at large had to adopt that attitude.\n#     #     #\n\"Mr. Aberhart and his cabinet associates were told\nby their financial advisor, Mr. Magor, that the function\nof the loan council would be 'soley to the advantage\nof the province.' He urged them to make a 'statesmanlike\ndecision' by accepting it and to remember that 'in their\nspecial spheres the Dominion and provincial governments are representing the same people.' It was a time,\nhe held, for 'strong leadership.'\n\"That leadership has not been given in the handling\nof the emergency that reached its climax in default.\nAfter all that Mr. Aberhart has said since he came into\noffice about there being no danger that anything of\nthe kind would happen, he will have much explaining\nflto do now that 'the thing that couldn't has occurred.'\"\nWITH THE\nPSYCHOLOGIST\nGARRY C. MYERS, PH.D.\nHead   of   the   Department   of\nParent Education, Cleveland\nCollege, Western  Reserve\nUniversity.\n1   4-\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nGIRL DOES NOT CARE FOR\nPARTIES\nEver so many persons write me\nabout some remote member of the\nfamily or some neighbor's child.\n\"Dear Sir: Mri. , who ll un-\n\u2022ble to write in Engliih, requested I\nwrite you in behalf of her 17-year-\nold daughter, in regard to her posture. Her diughter site and stands\nin a stooped position, and continues\nto do it to much that ihe is becoming hollow chested. Regardless of\nher mother's reminding her of her\nposture, she doesn't care or seem to\nshow tny Interest in it\n\"Sht is an A-student. She studies\nand reads aU the time; even during\nthe summer vacation ahe reads continually, never taking part in any\noutdoor sports. She doesn't care for\ndances and parties, and usually retire! it 9:30 p.m. '\ni \"Her appetite ts poor. She is becoming thin and complaining ot fatigue at the least exercise or exertion . . . Her mother wishes to\nknow if there are any special exercises she could follow that would\nhelp her posture.\"\nTALK WITH TEACHERS\nMy answer was about like this:\nAdvise that you go and have a talk\nwtth her teachers, especially her\nphysical education teacher. Since\nyou have good schools in your city,\nyou might expect to get considerable\nhelp from them. Perhaps the homeroom teacher might be induced to\ntake a personal interest in thii child.\nShe in turn might be able to elicit\nthe interest of a few classmates of\nthe girl who could win her to take\npart ii} Some of the school activities\nand have more social enjolment.\nHundreds'of youth are lik. her.\nThey are good students, don't bother\nanybody and nobody bothers about\nthem.\nBeing socially timid, she escapes\nthe embarrassment of poor competition with the usual fun of those her\nage by burying herself in books. Not\nhaving won success at mixing, personal appearance does not have\ngreat value to her. If she can be\nmade to want to be attracUve, she\nwill set out to find ways to gain better posture.\nBut the more the mother talks\nabout that girl's posture, the less\nshe wiU want to improve it. I wish\nwe parents might get this principle\nthrough our heads, as applied to\nhundreds of like problems.\nDo prevail upon that mother to\nhave this child examined by a competent doctor, at any personal sa*ri*\n\"I notice that old folks ain't never\nin the way if they've got a bunch s'\nproperty to leave.\"\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nByE.V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nGETTING AWAY WITH IT\nSometimes the only chance to\nfulfil too high a contract ts that tn\nopponent will err, ai was the cue\nwith the following deal, that I made\nsitting South two night ago.\n\u2666 AQ10\n\u2666 Nona\n\u2666 AQ10I\n\u2666 AKQ10M\nWHAT DO YOU THINK ?\nAU letter! to the editor must be signed with the name ot tht\nwriter.   A nom de plume may be used for publication if dealred.\nLinei in typewritten copy ijiould be double ipaced.\nREPLY TO JOSEPH GRAY\n\u2666 \u00bbT1\nt AK10\n\u00ab_\n\u2666 9\n\u2666 J 64 2\n3.\n?QJ\u00bb4\n\u2666 KJ7\u00ab.\n*7\u00bb\n\u2666KJl.t\n987IS\n4)548\n41\nBidding went: North, 2 Cluba,\nthird hand: East, 2 Diamonds: West,\n2 Hearts; North, 3 Clubs; East, 3\nHearts; North, 4 Clubs; East, 4\nHearts; South, 4 Spadei, as adverse\nbidding had shown my partner either void ot hearts or having a\nsingleton, probably the A in that\ncase, also North must hold strength\nin spades, provided the hand was as\nstrong as advertised; North, 6\nSpades, which certainly was a very\nhigh contract, considering the fact\nthat I had passed my opportunity to\nbid three times. Before I saw the\nhand I felt almost certain that the\ncontract could not be fulfilled, unless a defender made some mistake I things\" move \"on\"altogether differ-\nThe Editor, Nelion Daily News:\nSir\u2014Ot the various forcei which\nin these modern times influence\nsocial activities, one of the most\npowerful is public opinion. I aik,\ncan you have public opinion apart\nfrom the individuals who make up\nand constitute your public itself?\nIt not, and the idea that you can\nii of course absurd, then how ia\nyour public opinion, every new\nphase ot it, generated? How and\nwhere does each of its new departures itart? What givei it its primary impulse? Surely individual\npersonal thought, Individual personal conviction, individual personal will. You cannot have social\naction or even social belief, which\ndoes not originate in and start from\nthose inner sources of personal\nenergy which make tht individual to\nbe precisely the person he actually\nis. That is the fount and foundation\nof aU law and aU responsibility.\nWithout that principle society\nwould be in a state of absolute\nchaos. Differences in personal individuality are determined by the\nspontaneous activities of thoie elements of the bl-sexual germ cell\nout ot which the individual Is constructed. These activities do give\nan explanation, a sufficiently satisfactory explanation, of the results\nobserved, in terms of cause and effect. They account for the fact, well\nknown to the simplest observation,\nthat certain individuals do possess\noriginal faculties and energies in\ngreater degrees of force and efficiency than other individuals, and\nthis fact puts those same individuals\nthe position ot pioneers, and\nleaders, of the average run of their\nfellow-men. It is these pioneers and\nleaders who create, who initiate,\nwho lead the way in the formation\nof public opinion, and so ot human\nprogress.\nMr. Joseph Gray's conception, that\nsocial progress is a reaction or response to forces external to the\nindividuals who constitute the society affected is at best nothing more\nthan a historical record or tabulation of results, divorced from explanation in terms of creative or\nefficient cause. Consequently tht\nviews which he set forth in his\nletter to the Daily News of February\n6 cannot be regarded as in any\nway an alternative to what he\nterms Mr. Bealby's theory of social\nprogress. A tabulation of sequences\nin time is an entirely different\nthing from an inquiry into efficient\nand determinative causes. The two\nI ent planes.\nIn the course of expounding his\nof tuberculosis.\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS\nLOGAN CLENDENING.  M.D.\nthe Roman coloni, except that It\nwas not they who occupied the\nstatus of setts. The coloni, being\noriginally free men, became generally the vassals or tenants of wme\nbarbarian conqueror who had settled in the region they cultivated,\ngiving military aervice and payments In kind for the right to cultivate the toil. Thli was only on\nthe lands, principally in Haly,\nFrance and Spain, that had been\nin Roman handi. In other regions,\ne.g. Germany and central Europe,\nthe barbarian tribes, once they became settled (6th to 9th centuries),\nestablished their traditional and\nage-old social organization of the\nvillage commune, with its mark or\ncommon rights of grazing. The mode\nof life of these peoples hardly\nchanged at all: the mass of the\npeople were free-men, owning each\nhii odal homesteid and spending\nhis time in warfare and the chase.\nAfter the death of the Emperor\nCharlemagne, these two systems began gradually to fuse or blend together. It was the latter of these two\nsystems of land-ownership which\nwas established in Britain by the\nFrisian! and their subject allies the\nAngles of Holstein, the Saxons of\nthe Elbe and the Weser regions,\nassisted ln the conquest by the\nJutes and the Danes, both Gothic\npeoples. This conquest was almost\ncontemporary with the overthrow\nof Rome. Five hundred years later\nWilliam the Norman, a man of\nNone or Viking descent, imposed\nupon the \"mark\" system of England\na special form of the feudal system,\nwhich was the direct product of his\nown astute itetecrafL Thui there\ncame to be three distinct and different forms of the feudal system.\nThe erudite Von Raumer in his History of the Hohenstaufen Emperors\n(German), tells us that serfdom\nwas nothing like so widespread is\nil commonly supposed. He gives\nseveral instances of emancipation of\nserfs in Italy and France, and mention! the general freeing ot them on\nall the far-reaching imperial do-\nmiim in 1220 by the Emperor Frederick n, though I do not remember\nthat he alludes to the similar act of\nthe French king, Louis, the Tall,\nabout the aame time. He makes it\nplain that mahy feudal vassals became so by voluntarily attaching\nthemselves to this or the other\nfeudal lord, and the relationship\nbetween them assumed many different forms, though all involved\nthe rendering of military service\nand payment of the producti of the\nearth in kind.\nThus between the serfs and the\nsupreme feudal head, there was\na great variety ot daises, vassals,\nsub-vassals, dependents, household\nservants and free laborers. Mr.\nGray omits also to call attention to\nthe fact that during the later cen-\nturies of the Middle Ages the prin\ncipal producers of food and cloth'\nwhere\nTODAY'S\nGARDEN-GRAPH\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nCopvrtphl, ISM, Centre!  Prist AucHotirnt, Ite.\nSOUP PLATE\nMPgUM      \/SEEDS     \u00abf^|\nBLOTTING\nPAPER\nFWJ.B      MEED.\nHfl.1\nypj.\n,\u00abEW\nBlPT:':N6\nPAPER.\nF19.I\nSEED TESTING\nIf you have had seeds on hand for I Fig. 2. Cover the seeds with an-1\na year or more, it ls best to test j \u00b0*her Pi\u00abe of moist blotting paper. |\nthem for germination before plant\ning outdoors, in order to see if they\nhave enough vitality to grow.\nFig. 1. Place a piece of clean white\nblotting paper in the bottom of a\nsoup plate. Moisten blotting paper\nand place about 29 seeds on it.\nFig. 3. Cover the first soup plate]\nwith another, as shown above, mdj\nplace in a room where the temperature is between 70 and 80 degreei.!\nKeep blotting paper moist but not\nwet. After several days watch for\nsprouting seeds. Most seeds sprout\nin from 3 t_ 21 days.\nin picking the best defence.\nThe opening lead was the 9 of\ndiamonds, almost certainly a single- j views Mr. Gray gives utterance to\nfice. The mother should know that ton, as East would have been most | various generalizations that are un-\nher daughter, without proper medi- unlikely to have bid two on a four-1 fortunately in serious conflict with\ncal care, might be un easy victim cardtuit headed by K-J. East's five I the facts of history as I will now\ndianlbnds and two assists of hearts ! proceed to indicate. The first of\n, made it nearly sure that he held no j these that I note reads: \"The Dark\nmore than four black cards total. If, Ages\u2014it is necessary to ascertain\nclubs were to break evenly East j why society organized itself as it\nmust have  a  lone  trump,  which j did, and what effect this had on the 1ul* were tDe monasteries,\nwould bother in the play ot the ] Intellectual life of the period.\" In ' Production certainly was not organ\nhand. In case spades were to break I the first place this stetement In- \"*<\u2022 on a mUitery basis. I know of\n3-2, then clubs would not break. I volves the logical fallacy  known ?*-\u2022 \u00bbhort river in England where\nhad to play dummy's 10 of dia- i as begging the question.   What Mr.\nmonds, making it clear that I did ; Gray sets out to prove is the con-\nnot hold a singleton card of that! elusion   that  intellectual   develop-\nsuiL East's J won. Knowing that 1 ment is a consequence and result\nEast would play the higher of two I of material conditions external to\ncards or the highest of three cards mankind, but in order to establish\nin my place, I played the 4, as if I; 'hat thesis he builds on the very\nheld Just the two diamonds which j foundation he wants to establish.\nEast would expect it most probable  In the next place, he assumes that\nI held. A return lead of a diamond ! society,    deliberately    and    cons-\nwould have defeated us. Evidently \\ eiously, set about organizing itself\nEast read me for holding two dia-'in \"\u00bb collective capacity, notwlth-\nmonds, and perhaps the K Of hearts, \u25a0 standing that a little, lower down\nfor he led back hia Q of that suit!!he aketchea the chaos,  confusion,\nDummy ruffed. iand  anarchy  which  ensued upon\nAs probably my only way to ful-!the destructi\u00b0n \u00b0f *\"\u2022* Ron,an Em-\ntilmy high contract   tilt I toil  pire by the Go^hs and other \"bar\"\n,k  barians.\" Is it reasonable to suppose\nthat amid such an upheaval and\nENGINEERS ON  RAILWAY\nTAKE TESTS\nThere is one noticeable feature\nj ibout the accident situation In gen-\nI aral in the United States, which is\nlhat numerically more drivers ot\nI private vehicles thtn drivers of pub-\n! lie conveyances have accidents. Of\ncourse, when the engineer or the\npilot of a public carrier has an\naccident, the damage is greater because there are more people in\nthe public carrier. But If as many\npublic carriers had accidents as individual automobilists it would\nnearly decimate the population.\nI believe it is fair to say that a\nlarge part of the difference is due\nto the careful medical inspection of\nthe drivers of public conveyances.\nOne can say that the automobile\nOccidents are due to slippery streets,\nlack of tracks, lack of signals at\ncorners, but the comparative statistics of .taxlcab drivers and public\nbus drivers as against private drivers does not bear this out. And\nagain one must remember the statistics of the Royal Air Force which\nwere that 90 per cent ot their accidents In the wat were due not to\ndeficiencies of the machine nor to\nenemy hits, but to physical Impair'\nment of the flyers.\nI am told that in 1932 only one\npassenger was killed on all the railroads in the United States, and in\n1935 no passenger was killed on any\nof the railways of this country.\nPUBLIC SAFEGUARDED\nSo tar as railroads are concerned,\nI am greatly impressed with the\ncire with which the public ii safeguarded to far as their employees\nore concerned. The main Idea, of\ncoune, of a physical examination of\nan applicant for railway aervice is\nto establish hii physical and intellectual fitness. The clasi trom which\nengineers, brakemen, switchmen\nmd linemen ire made comei, u a\nrule, trom smaller towns along the\nLine of the railway. The applicant's\nexperience with railroading, at\nl*tit tn the old days, began from\nyouth. Just u a boy in a seaport\ntown walks down to the harbor,\nwatches ihipi and dreams of spending his days as a sea rover, so does\nthe young farmer ln a small town\nwatch the incoming trains on arrival, envies the majestic figure of\nthe engineer in his dungarees, leather gloves and gauntlets. When he\nreaches adolescence, he makes an\nattempt to apply for aome form of\nrailway service; tometlmei he\nstarts working on the track as a\ncommon laborer.\nMAY BE DISAPPOINTED\nHis experience ii, to a comlderable extent, laid dowp before he\napplies for service. Here it may be\ngreat disappointment to him to\nlearn that he is color blind or that\nhis rheumatism in youth may prevent his acceptance by the railway\ncompany. A careful history of all\nthetdlseaees he has ever had is rc-\ntwo trump tricks, then I led the\nup the'last missing trump with my  purpose OIs-oncocting , theorrtical\nK before I felt really happy.\nHaving won six ot the first seven\ntricks the rest was easy, but it was\nquicker to play it out than to explain to a green player how the rest\nof the tricks would be mine. At the\neighth trick dummy was put in the\nlead with the A of diamonds. I\ncould hear East sigh as his partner\ndiscarded a lpw heart. He for the\nfirst time realized what had happened. The next four tricks went\nto dummy's remaining clubs, while\nI discarded a lojing diamond and\nthree losers in hearts. The thirteenth trick was won by ruffing\ndummy's last diamond with my last\ntrump. It wu a close shave for us.\nALBERTA FARM LAND\nFifteen thousand acres of farm\nland in Southern Alberta hu just\nbeen sold tor $185,000. As the despatch trom Lethbrldge stated this\nwould indicate an agricultural\ncomeback in the province. One wonders how long it will be before big\nreal eitate deals are announced in\nthe cities.\u2014The Edmonton Journal.\ncorded. The sense of hearing ls\nexamined; his heart and blood pressure repeatedly tested; special attention is paid to the Joints and the\nexistence of an arthritis. The color\nperception is made both with worsteds and with lanterns, and especially with the test of Prof. Dr. S.\nIshihara. In most railway! a periodical examination Is made on an\naverage of once a year: especially\nafter the age of 50 a more thorough\nvigil is kept of employees in transportation service.\nDIET FOR THIRD WEEK-\nTHURSDAY\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nBREAKFAST: Frulta- any of the\nfollowing: one baked apple, om\npear, one slice ot pineapple; one\nsmall lerving cereil with milk; one\ncup of coffee (with not more than\none lump of sugar and one teaspoon\nof mUk).\nLUNCHEON: One-half grapefruit;\none egg, boiled or poached; tout;\ncoffee.\nDINNER: Broiled T-bone steak;\none-half head lettuce, celery, dressing; toast; coffee.\nWhat il your weight todlj?\nor abstract framework for social and\neconomic organization? Then he\ncontinues, \"There was hunger and\ninsecurity, and the problem facing\nsoci-Vy was how to organize production on a military basis, and the\nfeudal system was the solution to\nthe problem.\" In the actual circumstances of the case there was\nno problem at all. The very idea of\na \"problem\" is essentially modern:\nit is a concept which Implies the\nperception of a maladjustment of\nmeans to end, together with the\nconscious desire for a remedy or\nsolution. Production was never a\nmatter of conscious deliberation\namongst the conquerors of Rome.\nThose people had for ages been\nnomads, who depended upon their\nherds and upon the chase for til\nthe production they needed for\nliving. The fact that they gradually,\nover a long period, changed their\nmode of life from that of free warriors, leading a nomad existence,\nto free warriors settled in a fixed\nlocality did not mtke an atom of\ndifference to their productive powers. Their prisoners taken in warfare, that is their unfree dependents, continued to scratch the soil\nand reap the harvests which Nature\ngave, while the free men continued\nto lead the one worthy manner of\nlife, u they conceived IL fighting\nand the chase. If Nature failed to\ngive a good or sufficient harvest,\nthere was hunger as to the fruits\nof the earth; but they had, u time\nout ot mind they always had had,\ntheir herds to tall back upon. In\nfact, the adoption of a settled mode\nof life enhanced their security in\nthat they tot rid of the pressure\nof other nomad tribes pushing them\non to wander as the Huns pushed on\nthe Goths. The fruits of the earth\nwere an extra, additional source of\nplenty which not infrequently had\nfailed them in their previous wanderings. These had ln the case of\nmost of them been going on for\ncertainly 500 to 600 years before the\ndestruction of Rome. Where then\nwas the problem? Where then wu\nthe need for self-organization?\nTHE FEUDAL SYSTEM\nThe Feudal system was nothing\nlike 10 ilmple tnd uniform an institution as Mr. Gray evidently believes It to hive been,, He ii sufficiently accurate ln hii sketch of\nin a reach of 30 miles there were\nno less than nine abbeys of thc\nCistercians, all engaged in breeding\nand grazing sheep and selling the\nwool to the Flemings for spinning\nand weaving. The same monastic\norder did excellent work in draining and irrigating the fertile lands\nof Lombardy in northern Italy.\nFurthermore for 470 years the pact\not the Peace of God (1027-1495)\ngave a considerable measure ot\nsecurity to the cultivators of the\nsoil in France, Italy, Spain, Germany, the Netherlands (including\nFlanders), and England, the feuds\nof the turbulent feudal lords being\nthereby held greatly in check.\nFREEDOM AND PRODUCTION\nMr. Gray tells us, \"It is an economic law, that the freer thc association in which society is organized\nIhe greater the production. No\npeople have enjoyed a freer social\norganization than the Teutonic\nconquerors of Rome, u I have\nalready indicated. Probably\npeoples in any age ever were freer\nor more independent than the an\ncient Scandinavians, where every\nfree man (lord or peasant) wu the\nabsolute owner of the land (odal)\nhe dwelt upon; yet their production\nexcept on the Danish islands and in\nsouthern Sweden (Scania) was\ninconsiderable. In tact, it was thc\nshortage of food at home which\nstarted the summer raiding overseas of the Viking bands.\nAnother, though more modern,\nrace of people who enjoyed 1 remarkable degree of freedom politically were the Cossacks of Russia:\nbut they also were a people who\ndespised agriculture and ot industrial production they had none. If\nthis proposition be true, then the\nconverse must be equally true,\nnamely the len of freedom a people\nenjoy, the smaller will be their production. Consequently any organized society which proposes to practice planned and controlled Industry\nsuch as socialism has in mind, will\nproduce less than a free community\nwhich manages iti affairs on a\nbuls of Individual initiative. Russia\nat thil present time is a striking\nInstance of this. No workman there\nenjoys either political or social freedom; but is obliged to work just\nwhere be is ordered to work, and at\njust the kind of work that is prescribed, and to take whatever wage\nthe ruling class choose to give him.\nand we have been told again and\nagain, that It takes three or more\nRussian factory workers to produce\nas much as one American workman\nin the lame ipace of time.\nFrom the 9th century down to\nthe end of the medieval period (at\nthe Reformation) both Flanders\nand the Netherlands enjoyed a very\nconsiderable degree of democratic\nfreedom. But while Flanders became famoui tor her production ot\ncloth and fine linen (cambric), the\nNetherlands,, who remained pastoral, produced comparatively little.\nWhy thii difference? Again, Switzerland, after successfully defying\nthe Emperor (end of ISth century)\nbecame one of tht freest and most\ndemocratic countries in Europe;\nbut down to modern times her eco-\nnomic production was of little account. On the other hand, the\npeople ot EgypL which in ancient j\ntimes was described as the granary |\nof Rome, have never at any period\nof their hiitory (until the present\ncentury) been a free people; yet\\\ntheir country has always been re-.\nmarkably productive. Thus, there\nappear to be more exceptions to\nMr. Gray's generalization than i\nthere are examples of iL\nHe tells us further, that \"Feudalism was well adapted to Northern\nEurope, where the infertile lands\nwere  brought  under  production.\".\nSurely Mr. Gray must know that\nnowhere in the world are there more\nnaturally fertile soils than tlie coast-\nlands (England, Scotland, Flanders\nNetherlands, Holstein) all round the\nNorth sea (Jutland and Norway excepted); and along with them the\nDanish islands, the southern province ot Sweden (Scania) Mecklenburg, the valleys of the Elbe and\nthe Saale, Westphalia and the valleys of the Rhine and the Weser. j\nDuring the middle ages the middle!\nand north ot Germany, as well as\nthe  Scandinavian peninsula  were'\ndensely  wooded,  so that agrlcul-1\ntural production had necessarily to >\nbe restricted. Indeed it wu during |\nthe 13th century that there was a 1\nnotable movement   ot   emigration {\nfrom the Netherlands and north-1\nwestern Germany to the east of the\nEmpire (Silesia and Poland). Except'\nln Flanders agriculture in all these j\ncountries continued to be carried |\non without much real improvement\n\u2014in England until the end of the\n16th century, when a change came,\nchiefly through the efforts of Bake-\nwell and Arthur Young, and in Germany iome forty years later in consequence of the labours   ot   the\nchemist Lieblg,\nMr. Gray generalizes also with\nregard to the Renaissance, but I\nmust reserve my remarks on that\nfor another letter.\nJ. T. BEALBY.\nNelson, B.C., March 10, 1936.\nA ^Thought\nfot 3bi.au\n\"And when they had\nplatted a crown of\nthorns, they put it upon\nhis head, and a reed in\nhis right hand: and they\nbowed the knee before\nhim, and mocked him,\nsaying, Hail, King of\nthe Jews!\"._\n-SL Matthew. ll:!!.\nTHE MAN OF LIFE\nUPRIGHT\n\u2022.-\n_--..\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom Nelion Dally News Fllu I\n(April (, 1926)\nMr. and Mri. W. B. Bamford, Vernon street, returned last night from\na holiday at the coasL\n\u25a0   \u2022   1\nMayor and Mrs. J. A. McDonald\nMill street, have as their guest their\ndaughter, Miss Lillian McDonald,\nregistered nurse, ot St. Luke's hospital, Spokane.\n\u2022   \u2022  *\nWarden and Mrs. W. R. Jarvis\nhave returned from week-ending at\ntheir summer place at Procter.\n\u00bb   .   *\nMiss Greta Curwen of the Central\nschool teaching staff, is visiting her\nsister, Mrs. Cawley, at Salmo, and\nwill visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nS. A. Curwen, at Ymir.\n|   20 YEARS AGO   |\nI From Nelson Dally Niwi Fllu I\n1 *\n(April I, 1916)\nR. L. Douglu of Sandon it visiting Nelson.\nThe man of life upright,\nWhose guiltless heart li free\nFrom all dishonest deeds,\nOr thought of vanity;\nTht man whose silent dayi,\nIn harmless joys are spent,\nWhom hopes cannot delude\nNor sorrow discontent:\nThit man needs neither towen\nNor armor for defence.\nNor secret vaults to fly\nFrom thunder's violence:\nHe only can behold\nWith unaffrlghted eyea\nThe horrors of the deep\nAnd terrors of the skiei.\nThurs scorning ill the cirei\nThat fate or fortune bringi,\nHe makei the heiven his book.\nHis wisdom heavenly things;\nGood noughts his only friendi,\nHis wealth a well-spent age,\nThe earth hii sober inn\nAnd quiet pilgrimage.\n- THOMAS CAMPION\nWomen who like taffeta for sprini\nwill be glad to hear that thii crli]\nfabric is very popular.\nC.   W.   Appleyard\nCrawford Bay.\nhas left  for\nLightweight   Champion   Freddie\nWalsh had a slight shade on points\nin a 10-round no-decision bout at\nMilwaukee with Ritchie Mitchell.\n\u2022  t  1\nHigh icore wu made hy Lieut.\nLeilie Craufurd, with 60 out of a\npossible 70 points, ln \u2022 rifle competition between officeri, non-commissioned officers and men ot G\nCompany. 107th. regiment. Thl private! won by a acore of ilx pointi.\nThe new reservoir created by\nBoulder Dam will hold 1.453,915,000.-\n000 gallon! ot water, according to\nthe commissioner of reclamation.\nModernize-\nYOUR KITCHEN\nYOUR BATHROOM\nYOUR LAUNDRY\nYOUR HEATINC\nDo It Now!\nEstimates Furniihed\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBINC Or HEATINC\nCOMPANY,  LIMITED\nPHONE 666\nSeeds\u2014Seeds\u2014Seeds\nNow Is the time to buy seeds, Crimm Alfalfa, Timothy,\nYellow snd Whltt Sweet Clover, Bronte, etc. Alberta\ngrown. All kinds of Com, Garden nedi.\nWRITE FOR PRICE LIST\nSouthern Alta. Coop Assn., Ltd.\n11 Wut\"\nLethbridge, Altf.\n\"Lirgeit Seed Distributors In thi Wut\n1221 Second Ave., S.\n -\nmif\nDOWN THI STRETCH\nStruggling down the stretch, then horsei are closely\nbunched In a ract at Santa Anita track.\nRED WINGS WALLOP IHE LEAFS\n9 GOALS TO (IN SECOND GAME\nBirthday Greetings\nBy Ths Canadisn Press\nTo Gordlie Melklejohn, McGill\nuniversity hockey star who captained the teem for the past three\nyeari. Born ln Providence, R.I.,\nApril 8,1911, he wai former captain\nof McGill senior track team. Gordie\nwas intercollegiate shot and discus\nchampion in 1933 and 1939.\n(OAST LEAGUE\nGAMES\nSan Francisco     1   11   1\nSan Diego    2    7  0\nSeattle\t\nSacramento ...\n...  i    7  J\n...   2    S   3\nPorUand ;  -..  3    8   2\nOakland _. _.....   4    7  2\nCUBA OUT OF THE\nDAVIS (UP PLAY\nNEW YORK, April 7 (AP)-In-\nternational complications over the\nvenue of a series between Cuba\nind Australia resulted todsy ln the\nWithdrawal of Cuba from 1938 Davis\ncup tennis competition.\nDrawn against each other in a\nfirst round North Americin rone\ntie, the winner of the Cuba-Australia series was scheduled to meet\nthe winner of the American-Mexico\nJoust, to be played at Houston, Texas,\nApril 10-12, with the ultimate victor\ngoing into the interzone final at\nWimbledon ln July.\nThus Australia automatically qualifies for the North American zone\nfinal, which will be staged at the\nGermantown Cricket club, near\nPhiladelphia. May 30,31 and June 1.\nThe matches will be played oh grass\n\u2014another point Australia held out\nfor and won.\nThe Australian team of Jack\nCrawford, Vivian McGrath and Adrian Qulst, in charge of non-playing\nCaptain Clifford Sproule, sailed\nfrom Sydney March 28 and ls due\nto arrive at Vancouver next week.\nKinsmen Talk\nDance Problems\nJack Annable Gives\nXylophone Solos\nat Meeting\nProblems which will arise ln staging their monster dance in connection with the official opening of the\nNelson civic centre auditorium were\ndiscussed by the members of thi\nXlnsmen club at their luncheon in\nthe Golden Gate cafe Tueiday\nnight.\nEntertainment was provided by\nJack Annable who gave a number\nof xylophoen solos, all of which\nwere heartily applauded.\n| Ai many of the memberi ot the\nclub have not been ln the auditorium, it wai'decided to have ai many\nas possible go down Wednesdsy\nnight to see just how things were\nlaid out, to they would have a better knowledge ot the manner ln\nWhich the crowd could be cared for.\nTickets were going rapidly for the\ndance, lt was reported, and it ii expected there will be a large sale\nbefore next Monday when the event\nwill be held.\nTORONTO JUNIORS\nIN FINALS\nTORONTO, April 7 (CP).-West\nToronto Nationals advanced Into the\nMemorial cup final with a stirring\n4-3 win over Pembroke Little Lumber Kings in the second game of\ntheir best-of-three series for the\neastern Canada junior hockey title\nhere Tuesday. Nationals now meet\nSsskstoon Wesleys for the Dominion\ntitle here with the first game Frl'\nday.\nSet Modern Play-Off\nRecord on Their\nOwn Ice\nDETROIT, April 7 (CP).-Detrolt\nRed Wings, soaring with unerring\nprecision towards heights that\nwould establish them as one of\nthe great hockey teams of all time,\nconquered Toronto Maple Leafs 9-4\nhere tonight ln the second game of\nthe Stanley cup series. The aggregate score established a modern\nplayoff record. The Wings can complete a non-stop title flight by winning at Toronto Thursday night.\nThey won the first game here Sunday night 3-1.\nIn full flight, able to score almost\nat will against the Leafs, the Red\nWings will be heavily favored\" to\ntnd the series Thursday night. They\nhave convinced even the most skeptical that Jack Adams' champions\ncan scarcely be beaten this season.\nThe Red Wings ran in three goals\nin the first period tonight\u2014and it\nwas all over except the unnecessary\nscoring. They did the same thing in\nthe first game, bagging three without delay. There was no part ot the\nToronto defence able to halt these\nearly charges.\nThe Wings went on to establish a\nmodern scoring record tor playoffs\nwith the help ot the beaten Leafs.\nNo other playoff contest since the\nN. H. L. expanded in 1926-27 yielded\n13 goals.\nBut it wasn't ln building up a big\ngoal total that the Wings demonstrated extraordinary power. It was\nthe wsy they took on the speed-\nmad Leafs at the start and raped in\nfor the early and Important tallies.\nWally Kilrea, Marty Barry and\nHerbie Lewis sank these early goals\nthat tumbled the fighting Leaf machine. Each time the Wings flicked\nthe puck from stick to stick while\nskating at top speed. The shooting\npart was easy. George Hainsworth,\nveteran Toronto goaler, wu alone\nand no net man could have blocked\nthe drives from just outside his goal\ncrease.\nWhen Toronto came back with a\ngoal at 13:38 in the first period, indicating they would have further to\nsay about the outcome, the Wings\nslashed back, Bucko McDonald,\nbroad-shouldered idol of the second balconies and hero of Detroit's\nfirst victory over the Leafs, broke\naway after serving a penalty and\nscored to put Detroit ahead 4-1.\nThat was merely a sign that the\nWings could rally after each setback. Out there with a club that\nhas never conceded defeat, the\nWings yielded three goals in the last\ntwo periods and tbey punched in\nfive on their own account While\ntheir own defence wobbled seldom\nunder the barrage from Leaf attackers there was hardly a semblance\nof defence at the other end to protect Hainsworth.\n8UMMARY\nFirst period: 1-Detroit, W. Kilrea (Sorrell), 1:30; 2\u2014Detroit, Barry\niBowman), 4:25; 3\u2014Detroit, Lewis\n(Sorrell, Barry, Aurle), 10:05; 4-\nToronto, Boll (Thorns), 12:38; t\u2014\nDetroit, McDonald (H. Kilrea), 16:55.\nPenalties\u2014Clancy, Homer, Barry,\nMcDonald.\nSecond period: 6\u2014Detroit, Sorrell\n(Barry, Howe), 7:15: 7\u2014Detroit,\nPettlnger (Howe, Young), 9:10; 8\u2014\nToronto, Primeau (Shill), 14:00. Penalties\u2014Homer, Shlll, Davidson.\nThird period: t\u2014Detroit, Sorrell\n(W. Kilrea, Bruneteau), 7:30; 10-\nToronto, Thorns (Boll, Davidson,\nHorner), 9:40; 11\u2014Detroit, Pettinger\n(H. Kilrea), 12:05; 12\u2014Toronto, Davidson (Finnigan, H. Jackson), 16:10;\n13\u2014Detroit, McDonald, 17:13. Penalties\u2014None.\nRugby - Skiing - Indoor Swimming - Curling - Bowling\ntan\nHockey - Badminton - Soccer - Basketball - Boxing - Wrestling\nPAQE SEVEN-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS  NELSON^.C^--WEDNESDAY\u00bbS^RNIN(_. APRIL 8. 1938\n\u25a0PAQE SEVEN\nSpectators from Norway an happy ai Birger Rund Mom\na victory In skiing event in winter Olympic games.\nTennis Clubs\nReody to Ploy\nTennis clubs ln the city are ready\nto start the season's play as soon\nas the weather becomes agreeable.\nFour courts are in excellent shape\nat thc Fairview club, and the three\ncourts at the Nelson club's lower\nproperty are ready for play.\nBoth clubs anticipate a larger\nmembership this year.\nNICHOL8 TIES  LEWIS\nBUFFALO, N.Y., April 7 (AP).-\nGeorge Nichols, former N. B. A.\nchampion, punched his way to a\n10-round draw with John Henry\nLewis, world's light heavyweight\nchampions, here tonight in a non-\ntitle bout\nHockey\nC-H.A.T\/T-E.R\nby VV.W.W.\n(This advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Llquoi\nControl Board or by the Covernment of British Columbia\nTomorrow night the Kimberley\nDynamiters meet the Sudbury Falcons ln the opening game ot the\nAllan cup finals. Dynamiten left\non Sunday morning for Winnipeg as\nthey first propoied to do, Coach\nJohnny Achtiener undoubtedly\nwanting to get his men accustomed\nto the climate, sea level, rink and\nlandscape, and also get them accustomed to being accustomed.\nThis teim is a much better one\nthan the team that went up against\nFort William two years ago and the\nForts didn't do so badly with the\neventual winners of the east, Moncton Hawks.\n...\nCharlie McVeigh, veteran pivot\nplayer of the London Tecs, and who\nformerly played with New  York\nAmericans, claims that his greatest\nthrill  ot  hockey\ncame back in 1931\nThe Amerks were]\nplaying    Boston.\nNormie   Hime\nand Dlt Clappei\nstarted   a   fight]\nCharlie  went  in'\nto part the bat\ntiers.   Clappe\nlanded a left jal\nwhich was origin\nally   directed\nHimes'  jaw,  but]\nMcVeigh   walkedi\ninto the feud stl\nthat time. The JBbch,r||, MeV\u201e h\nlanded    on   McVeigh's jaw.  Charlie went down\nwith a thud, his ankle fractured\n(Heaven'sl What a sock that must\nhave been) and the referee gave\nMcVeigh a major penalty for fighting. \"Was that a thrill? Now I keep\nout of other people's battles,\" commented McVeigh.\n\u2022  .  \u2022\nOne of the saddest young mtn of\nthe N.H.L. at present is Nick Metz,\nthe lad who went up to the Toronto\nLeafs last season and shook Toronto with his remarkable playing\nand accurate scoring. He wu the\nfirst of the younger N.H.L. players\nto run Up a dozen goals during the\nearly part of the 1935-1936 league\ncampaign. About a month tgo he\nbroke away in a rush during a game\nand pulled up with what was first\nthought to be a charley-horse, a\nleg-muscle strain.\nThe groin injury was discovered\nand special treatments were ordered. For nearly 10 days Metz lay\non a hospital cot with both his legs\nbound together. Finally he started\nskating again but found he wai\nunable to put any weight on his\nstrides. After two workouts he aggravated the Injury with t burst\nof skating snd hai been ordered out\nof all iports for six months. Smythe\nrefuses to take any chances of permanent injury.\nDYNAMITERS GO\nTHROUGH BRISK\nPACE, WINNIPEG\nThe dear old trade winds are with\nus, this Ume before we have had\nany spring zephyrs. There is not a\nclub in the N.H.L. that is not mentioned in some kind of trade and if;\none can believe all that ls whispered, there will be some managerial\nchanges as well as player awaps during the summer. Boiton, Toronto,\nCanadieni, Chicago tnd Rangers\nare the clubs that will undergo the\nmost changes, tt would seem, and\nnow that Marooni have loat out\n(and in three itraight) Thomas\nGormin miy find that some changes\nare necessary too.\nOf course every one of the rumors\nof player trades cannot be taken to\nseriously, but the reports are that\nWiU Cude snd several others, including Joliat and Goldsworthy, will\nnot be with the Canadiens (Can you\nimagine the Canadiens without\nJoliat?); that George Hainsworth\nis playing his last;\nseason with Tor'\nonto; thit Bal\nSeibert will\ntraded by Boston'\nto Canadiens and\nthat Morenz and!\nKerr will not bel\nwith the Rangers.\nHainsworth may\nretire. He has\nmoney enough to\ndo that and could\nhave done it a\n\u25a0couple of years!\nago. Leafs will'\nneed a good oneQM H,|n,worth\nfor they often go\nup the ice and forget they have a\n,goal to defend. Many timet Georgie\nnas been left as much alone as Robinson Crusoe.\nCanadiens plan the most sweeping house cleaning of all and Cude\nwill be traded only for players. The\nFlying Frenchmen will have to\nsacrifice their young netminder to\nget the new material they must\nnave before the opening of next season. As a mitter of fact they haven't an abundance ot good trading\nmaterial. JoUat, Goldsworthy and\nBuswell, along with Cude make\nabout their only trading material.\nThey would hardly want to trade\nboth Cude and Buswell and hope\nto have anything resembling a defense when next season starts,\n.  .   \u2022\nTbe eight imateur.hockey playoff gamu it Cilgary recently attracted 30,694 patrons. The two Cole-\nman-Luscar gamea that gave Luicar\nthe championship of Alberta In the\nsenior class, drew 2988 and 3515;\nthe Kimberley-Prince Albert series\ndid better and drew 4249 and 4012;\nthc first game of the Kimberley-\nFort WilUam series drew 3405, the\nsecond a record crowd of 4591 and\nUie third 4157. In aU but one ot the\neight games aU reserved seats were\ndisposed ot.\nKimberley Boys Get\nSet for Allan Cup\nGame Tomorrow\nOffer to Extend\nNews Broadcast\nOTTAWA, April 7 (CP)\u2014Officers of the Canadian Press today\nlaid before the radio committee of\nthe house of commons proposals to\nextend the news on the air avaUable\nto the Canadian public. At present\nthe Canadian Press providea one\nnews broadcast daily to the Canadian radio commission, put on the\nair at 10:45 pjn., with earlier bulletins tor Uie commission's maritime\nand French networks.\nThe Canadian Press ottered to extend this service, which is given\nfree, to Include bulleUns available\nto all Canadian stations for broadcut during the day time.\nThe delegaUon was headed by\nW. B. Preston, preiident of the\nCanadian Press and publisher of\nthe Brentford Expositor. Other\nmembers were Senator W. A. Buchanan, Lethbrldge Herald; E. J.\nArchibald, Montreal Star; W. Rupert Davies, Kingiton Whltf-Stan-\ndard; Oswald Mayrand, la Presse,\nMontreal; J. A. MacNeil, Gazette,\nMontreal; E. Norman Smith, the\nOttawa Journal; R. K. Carnegie,\nOttawa superintendent, and J. F. B.\nLivesay, Toronto, general manager\nof the Canadian Press.\nThe delegation presented a memorial to the committee which offered alternative suggestions for\ntransmission of news bulletins from\nthe' Canadian Press head office\nwhere they sre prepared, to radio\nstations.\nRAMBLERS WIN TITLE\nPROVIDENCE, R.I., April 7 (CP).\n\u2014Philadelphia Ramblers won their\nfirst championship In Uie Canadian-\nAmerican Hockey league tonight by\ndefeating Rhode Island Reds 1*0 in\na thrilling fourth gsme ot a sternly-\nfought final series which they won\nthree games to one.\nIn the past five years over 350\nboys have received Scout training\nin the 2nd Edmonton (St. Faith's\nAnglican Church) Boy Scout troop.\n\"BOB\" PATERSON\nTO COACH STARS\n\"Bob\" Paterson, wbo coached the\nToronto Star basketball team to the\ncity ladies' championship has been\nasked, and has accepted the office\noi coach ot the Toronto Stan softball\nteam. PracUces are expected to start\nln about a week if weather permits,\nand sny new comers to the city are\nasked by the coach to turn out if\nthey are desirous of catching a\nplace.\nBesides the names of players\nformerly mentioned as being with\nthe Stars, Opal LaBelle has been\nsigned, and Clara Talberg, who\nplayed with Uie Aces last year, may\nalso align.\nCROSETTI HURT\nKNOXVILLE, Tenn., April 7-\n(AP)-Frank Croiettl, first-string\nshortstop of New York Yankeea,\nsuffered t sUght fracture of the\nnose tnd severe abrasions ot the\nface today when he wai itruck by\na foul Up.\nCrosetU was \"floored\" by the\nfoul Up, oft Tony Lazzeri's bat\nduring batting pracUce. He wiU\nbe out of the lineup for four or\nfive dayi.\nSTANBURY LEADS\nLONDON, April 7 (CP Cable)-\nConrad Stanbury, Winnipeg snook\ner wizard, led Alec Mann of Birm\nIngham nine frames to six at the\ninterval todty In their match ln\nthe first heat of the world's snooker\nchampionship.\nToday's scores, wtth Stanbury'.\nfirst: 88-16; 59*16; 96-46; 24-52; 74-37.\n\"PITCH FIP.ST,\nTALK AFTERWARD\"\nDALLAS, Tex., April 7\u2014There\nwUl be no pitching goal for the\nDean brothers this season.\n\"Me and Paul\" have gone modest. The St. Louis Cardinal aces\napparently are going to pitch first\nand talk afterwards thia year. It's\nnew strategy for them\u2014particularly\nfor big brother \"Dizzy.\"\nWINNIPEO, April 17 (CP) \u2014\nFirst hockey team from British\nColumbia to reach the finale of tbi\nAllan cup, Klmberley Dynimlteri\nwent through a brisk workout\nhere todiy In preparation for the\nopening gams of their series\nagilnst Sudbury Fllooni Thursday\nnight\nThs big husky cout squid practiced With Sllkltoon Weileyi,\nweitern Canada's Junior champions who art waiting the eall to\nToronto for the final! of the Memorial cup.\nKen Moore, formerly with Regina Pats and on Ctnadt'i 1932\nOlympic hockey turn, (the Win-\nnlpegi), received in ovation from\ntht nllblrdi that watched Dynamiters work out. Tha team will\npractice dally until thi seriei\nopens.\n >.\nWINNIPEG TUNED UP\nWINNIPEG, April 7 (CD-Winnipeg hockey fani itarted today to\nget aU tuned up for the Allan cup\nseries.\nWith the contender.\u2014Klmberley\nDynimlteri and Sudbury Falcons\neach leeklng their first Dominion\nsenior crown, the teries opens\nThursday night. The second in the\nbest-of-three seriei wiU be played\nSaturdiy night and the third game,\nif neceuary, ii icheduled for Monday night\nShowing pltnty of speed, Dynimlteri iwung Into their first bit\nof action on Winnipeg Ice todiy.\nSeviral ef thi Brltlih Columblt\nchampions ire getting ever bid\ncolds contracted afttr winning the\nweitern crown for the flnt time\nat Calgary by dtfettlng Fort Willlim Windirtrt.\nCoach Johnny Achtzener put the\nDynamiters through their drilli to\nwork out the travel-kinks and they\nwiU take the ice again tomorrow.\nThey will reat aU day Thunday ln\npreparation for Uie opening game ot\nthe series.\nFalcons, eastern UUlsts, will reach\nhere tomorrow and will have their\ntint workout ln the afternoon. The\nFalcone, coached by Sammy Rothschild, may work out again Thunday\nmorning if the travel kinks are not\nall eliminated ln the trial pracUce.\nDecorators Busy\non\nModernistic Design\nand Color\nScheme\nNelion and dlitrict citizens who\nwill see the InteMor of Nelson's\ncivic centre auditorium for the flnt\ntime during the Kootenay MUiical\nfestival in May are in for a pleasant\nsurprise. In keeping with the building policy, interior decoration is of\nUie lateit Uie art provides.\nDuring the past week J. Glrvan\nof the Glrvan studios, Vincouvir,\nwho received the contract, has started work on the interior decoration\nof the theatre proper and Uie foyer\nor entrance.\nThe color icheme li black and\nsilver on a base to correspond with\nthe red upholstery of the tests, snd\not a modernistic design.\nBlack and silver bands will circle\nthe walls. The main decoration ii\nto be a frieze decorated with re-\nceeding arches and silevr panels,\nto give a built-in effect On the\ncelling three flats wUl be in harmonizing tones of coral pink, green\nand heliotrope. A relief of silver\nfacial bands provides a pleasing\ncontrast.\nLight niches are to be painted\nantique silver and the proscenium,\nor stage front, is to be ln solid silver.\nGlass for special celling lighting\nhaa been Installed and all is in readiness for the Installation of leati\nwhich were due in Vancouver Tueiday.\nRubber meih foyer carpet, and\nlisle and vestibule carpets have been\nordered.\nMr. Glrvan, who tl supervising inferior decorations, brought one man\nfrom tbe cosst with him and Is in\ncharge of a local crew of palnten.\nLocal men are proving quite satisfactory, he states.\nWESLEYS OFF TO TORONTO\nWINNIPEG. April 7 (CP)-Saska*\ntoon Wesleys, western Cansdi's junior hockey champloni, left here tonight for Toronto in uarch of Dominion honon.\nWesleys won the western Utle\nhere by defeating Elmwood Maple\nLeafs, Manitoba champions, ln two\nstraight games of a scheduled best-\nof-three series.\nMow Paul Derringer Wins Baseball\nGames\n**&\u00bb\u00bb\n_.-__\ni\nluL\n1\ny_S]>*~\n_w\nV       l*fa\nI\ni    * Ve.\n'nt-m.\nW_-\\\\_\\\\wt^m\\^m^m\\\\\\\\vm9\nI\nMORE ABOUT\nBADMINTON\nENTRIES\n(Contlnuid From Page Oni)\nOutside pointi will be represented\nin number of players aa foUows;\nSalmo liz, Harrop seven, Bop*\nnington-South Slocan eight, TraU*\nRossland 14, Cranbrook-Klmberley\nseven, Creiton three, and WUlow\nPoint ieven. Kelowna la lending\none entry.\nWlnnen ot 1935 wiU be on hand\nto defend their UUe.\nThey were declared u followi:\nMen's singles\u2014Ned Rhodes of\nTrail\nMen'i doublet\u2014B. J. Monteleone\nof Nelion and R. McFadden eg\nBonnington.\nLidies' singles\u2014Miss Doreen Dan*\nnett of Nelson.\nLadles' doubles\u2014Miss X. Hamion\nand Min P. Gelinas ot Nelson.\nMixed doubles\u2014Mr. tnd Mrs. A.\nT. Godfrey of Nelson.\nThli yetr a veteran's tournament\nwill bo held for playen over 48\nyetn ot tge on January 1, MM, an*\nIn place at consolation eventi handicap competitions will bt staged.\nThe entry liat hai been elon*\nand Tuesday night memben of th*\nNelson execuUve worked on tho\ndraws for piibUcatlon Thursday.\nWednesday Uie civic centre courts\nwiU be open tor club memben and\nprospective tournament entrant*\nThe hall, one ot Uie finest ot ill\nkind ln the Dominion ot Canada, ls\ncompleted and ready tor pity on\nalx courts. AccommodaUon hu also\nbeen provided tor spectators.\nOfficial referees include J. S. W.\nClowes, Wilfred Bush, James Allen,\nKen McBride, and Benny Monteleone.\nMORE ABOUT\nINDIAN IN ICY\nKOOTENAY\n(Continued From Page Ons)\nThe fast-moving Magic-Eye camera here witched tht pitching\ntechnique of Paul Derringer, aee of the Clclnnatl Reds' hurling corpa,\nand one of the National league veteran twlrlers. Lut year hi won 22\nwhile losing 13, ind wu nominated for duty In the ill-iUr game. It la\nlntereitlng to note thit separate motioni of t pitcher ire not always\ngraceful, though the collective action gives the Impression of grice.\nRiad LEFT to RIQHT on each itrlp.\nMORE ABOUT\nLEAGUE SESSIOH\n(Continued From Page Om)\nThe government has as yet not\ndisclosed how persistent Eden will\nbe ln demanding either the cessation of hostUIUes or the imposition\nof heavier sancUons against Italy\nat the committee meeting.\nECUADOR  OPPOSES\nGENEVA, April 7 (AP)-Reports\nthat breaches may be made in the\nLesgue of Nations' sancUoni wall\naround Italy stirred Geneva tonight\non the eve of a session of the committee of 13 to consider negoUations\nfor peace in Africa.\nThe league announced it hu no\nconfirmation of a Rome report that\nEcuador would break the ice by\ndropping sancUons.\nThe Ecuadorean delegate to the\nleague aald he had no official ln-\nformaUon on Such a step but added:\n\"I have, however, received instruc-\nUons to oppose any move to extend the present sanctions against\nItaly, including an oil sanction.\"\nThe committee of 13 only has a\nmandate to try to bring about peace\nbetween Italy and Ethiopia and has\nno authority to discuss sancUons,\nwhich belongs to the committee of\n18. Italy weeks ago accepted a peace\nplu from the committee with reservation! and Ethiopia without qualifications.\nSome members of the committee\not 13 are in favor ot asking Salvador de Madariaga, ita peace negotiator, to go to Home to confer with\nPremier Mussolini on terms.\nThe situation wu dramatized by\nan Ethiopian warning today that if\nthe league fails to protect her, all\nsmall countries wlU lose faith ln\nthe league and Its widely heralded\n\"collecUve security.\"\nFRENCH   DEMAND\nPARIS, April 7 (AP)-France,\npreliminary to delicate diplomatic\nnegotiations at Geneva, today ordered 175,000 army conscripts whose\nmilitary service waa due to expire\nApril 15 held in acUve service unUl\nfurther orden.\nAt the same time Foreign Minister\nFlandln and Foreign Secretary Eden\nof Great Britain sought to reconcile\nFranco-British differences over the\ntreatment of Germany and Italy.\nFlandin, with a French plan to \"punish\" Germany in his pocket, met\nEden at the Geneva train and la\nsaid to have insisted that sancUons\nagainst Italy must be abolished or\nimposed upon Germany.\nOfficials here, however, expressed\nbelief Eden would seek to increase\npressure against Italy. He continued\non to Geneva, where the league\ncommittee of 13 is to resume consideration of the Italy-Ethiopian\nwar.\nI   Flandin it taking to Geneva a\n\\ plan in the Rhineland crisis which\n'\u25a0. embodies three principal points: A\nI request to the other Locarno pow-\n] en to seek punishment of Germany\n' under the league covenant; a re-\n' fusal to accept German fortification of the Rhineland; firm rejection of Hitler's counter peace pro-\n1 posals,  based on  bl-lateral  pacts.\nI and the substitution ot a collective\nsecurity system.\nJoe Skookum wu thrown Into\nUie river and before swimming to\nshore managed to dlveit himself of\nall ot his clothing. Drifting tee cut\nhim sbout the srms and chest n tit\n\u25a0warn but he managed to icramble\nfree.\nCUT BY ICE\nWet, and with Uie mercury at \u25a0\nlow point during Uie week-end's\ncold speU, he ran a mile and a halt\nto Uie home of Jsck Scanlan to\nobtain belp for. hii partner still\nclinging to the raft\nPhilip Camer, when the ntt\nstruck, feU a-straddle a protruding\npole and, with bis handi over the\nice sheet managed to keep his heal\nabove water. He wu In tbe water\nfor over two houn before removed\nand coUapsed u his rescuen brought\nhim to shallow water.\nA piece of rope which the tw\u00bb\nboys brought was too short to retch\nthe marooned man. Re_cuen lb*\nfailed to reach him with a pole they\nihoved out into the water, but finally by using both they barelar\nmanaged to put the line within hli\nreach. During the maneuvers, Scanlan and White also hsd tn ley ducking, hav to wade neck-deep out\nin the w.   r.\nSkookum, who could not swim \u2022\nstroke, was rescued just ln umt at\nhe coUspsed when the men towed\nhim In.\nThe two men were brought Into\nWardner from the Scanlan home on\nalelgh driven by Peter Oberg and\nwere later removed to the St Eugene hospital by R.OM-P. O-floen.\nOne of the two men, according to\nConstable Powen, had Just recovered from pneumonia.\nARCHDUKE HEADS SCIENTISTS\nBUDAPEST (CP). - Arehdute\nJoseph von Hapsburg, nephew O-\nthe late Emperor Franz Joseph, hag\nbeen elected president of the Hungarian Academy of Science.\t\nWis the Want Ads for Results!\n PAGE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS  NELSON. B.C.-WEDNESOAY MORNINQ  APRIL 8. 1938\nIhvuh t- BARGAIN IOR YOU ** <*\u00a3 ClAtSIFIEDS; TttudtitunlYmk\nKf laon Sally $fonu\nMember of Uit CtnidJaii DaUy\nNewspipers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrlvitt Exchanqt connecting to\nall Depirtmentt\nSubscription   Ratei\nKngle copy -..._\u2022'\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0$  *W\nBy carrier, per week      _*5\nBy carrier, ner war Xtht\nBy mall lo Canida, to sub-\nicribera living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month. 80c;\nthree months 11.80. six months,\n13.00. one vear. 56.00.\nUnited States md Great Britain, one month 75c; six months,\nHM. one veur $7.50.\nForeign countries other than\nVS.. tame as above plus my\nextrt postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates,\n11c a Uns\nMinimum 2 Llntt\n2 Unes. once  $ 33\n3 Unei once     31\n4 Unes. once    _.__\u2014    .44\n2 Unes 6 Umes    &l\n2 Unta 6 times   X32\n4 Unes. 6 timet     1.76\n2 Unes. 1 mouUi  .'_.. 2.88\n3 lines. 1 mouUi   *_\u00bb\n4 Unes 1 month   5-72\nAll tbovt leu 10% for prompt\npayment\n-. .\n..  \u25a0\u25a0    -      v.n   ,    ' \u25a0 \u25a0   iv I *' \"\nCHAPTER 45\n' Selwyn Marsh ittempted io frown\nwhen he became aware of Thora's\nspeechless gaze at hit changed ap-\nbrought i sudden memory. How the\nhud stood by thit very window,\nlooking into Selwyn Marsh's fice\nis be removed that cinder from her\neye. Thit was the flnt time she had\nseen him,  and how  long ago it\noearance in dinner clothes. Instead,\nhe smiled a trifle sheepishly. 1 \"*<_*-\u25a0 **\u00ab\u2022 his hands had been so\n\"Well? Do I look as silly as t steady; Her lingers were trembling\nfc.tr* ... 1 little,\n\"You ... you look .. . nice.\" It \"There\" She stepped bick and\nwasaitupidwordtouse,but'niora:'<P.\u2122'\u00bb\u00abl(i \u25a0>\u00ab *\u2022\u00ab\u2022*\u2022 'That looks\neeuld find noUiing better at the ' much better. I must go now. I wUl\nmoment. \"I hardly knew you,\" she i bc>,''le; . ...\n\u25a0rided hastilv \"You're   not   punching   a   Ume\n\u2022\u2022I don\" wonder,\" he agreed ami-; clock\/ he .napped. \"Betides Pat to\nably. \"I hardlv knew myself. Wilma | -<>m to tun you over in the. car.\n\u25a0 insisted on my getting into barnett' \u00b0\\\u2122 \u2022 ; \u2022 ,Plca\u00bbe- \u2022<\u25a0 1'\u00bbther\ntonight. Said the other fools were ! walk- \u00bb J-\"\u25a0 \u2022\u00ab\u2022\ngoing to dress Uke head waiters and. i *>''<- \u2022 P\"**-; not, *\u00b0 *\u00bb*\u2022 J0,1*\nL long u I wis to be on th. pro- cutting acrtw lots und in anybody's\ngram . . Does everything look all bjck door You 11 drive arouhd to\nright?\" the front. Go out on Uie porch md\nSince it would have been unthink- wall for Pat. I'll call him.\"\nible to tell Selwyn Marsh that hei \" *\u25a0\" more thm an hour later\nhid transformed himself Into \u201e very Uiat Wilms entered the library to\ndiiUnguislied-looking.    and    hand-  find her other relaxed in Ills chair,\naome, gentleman, Thora Dulil cou-\nteutet herself by lipping her head\nCritically to one side and remarking:\n\"AU except your t> e. If t crooked.\"\n\"I thought so. Cunt do ono of\nthose bows to save my .uul. WiU\nyou fix it?\"\nHe itood with his chin raised\nwhile Thon patted and pulled the\nblack bow Into \u2022 perfect knot. It\nNow Is 75 tears\nHEYWOOD PATTER80N\nDefence tttorn-yi In the Seottt-\nboro cuei. btcked by world-wide\nllbenl orgtnlutiom, plin an appeal of tht 75-year sentence 10-\neordtd Htywood Pittenon, nigra,\n\u2022t Decttur. Alt. Meinwhlli, thl\ndefence mapped their fight to\nuvt tht tight othtr deftndintt\nIn tht five-yttr-old em. All had\nbetn lentenced to death for illeged iwiult. Meanwhile, em of\nthtlr number, Or.lt Powtll, hit\nbetn thot by t guard while illegedly trying to etotpe.\nPletti, pleats and won\n\u25a0ayi one exclusive modiste.\npletti,\ntrisxttXixxmsixixisxaxKox,\nFOR YOUR\nOFFICE\nEQUIPMENT\nLEDGERS. All sizes\nSYNOPTICS\nDISC RULED SHEETS\nSTEIMO LEAVES\nSECOND' SHEETS\nRULED FOOLSCAP\nLEXER SHEETS\nPHONE 143\nJfrlaui. Bailg Nrtua\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING\nDEPT.\npuffing throuhUully ou his plpt.\n\"Dad!\" she exclaimed, reproachfully. \"You'll get your shirt crushed,\nsitting thai way. And you have ashes\non yourself. Stand up and let me\ndust you off.\"\nHe compUed v, ith a muttered protest\n\"You're the handsomest thing I've\nseen in a long time,\" Wilma told\nhim in a Uttle burst of admiration,\nu she flicked his shirt bosom with\nher handkerchief. \"You almost take\nmy breath. Do you know that you\ndon't look a day older thm Sherm?\"\n\"What do you wmt for that?\"\n\"My bracelet, if you'U bt good\nenough to dig lt out. And the largest\nring.\"\n\"Look here, Wilma. You're not\ngoing to wear that thing tonight,\nare you?\"\n\"Of course I am. That's why I\nbrought it ouL I wmt to give your\nrelaUves sn eyeful. Go on and get\nit, Uke a good boy.\"\n\"It's yours,\" Marsh admitted, \"but\nI don't Uke the ldei of your weiring it tonight. It'i not thtt tort of\nan occuion md we don't have cops\non every corner out here, either.\"\n\"How siUyl If you md Alec md\nPat can't guard me over there md\nback, you're not much good. Let\nme have lt.\"\n\"AU right Just head snybody off\ntrom coming in here for i minute.\nThere's no use idverttsing where\nwe keep it.\" He crossed to the fire-\nplace md begain fingering the\nmolding ot one of the wooden wiU\nptnels. In a moment, there wu i\ndull clang md Mirth cime bick to\nthe ttble with i smiU box in hii\nhand.\n\"There you are,\" he remarked.\n\"Isn't It gotgeous?\" Wilma asked,\nwhen she had ttipj_S8 tbe bluing\ncirclet over her slim hmd md held\nit up tor her father's admiration.\n\"You don't know how I value it,\"\nshe began impulsively, then paused\nwhen the uw the grim expression\non Selwyn's face.\n\"You ihould,\" he aniwered ihortly. \"After all, it'i... HeUo.\"\nAlec Btbbas itroUed nito the\nroom. He wu dreued for dinner\nmd imoking a cigarette thruit in\nm imber holder. Manh looked at\nhim critically. The bruise on the\nyounger mtn'i tice wu scarcely\nnoUceable in the tiding light And\nhe wu not weiring the monocle, to\nhis host's secret uUtftcUon.\n\"You look very fit,\" he observed.\n\"I'm aU right\" Btbbas admitted.,\n\"Look, Alec,\" Wilmi interrupted,\n\"how do you Uke it, when I'm dressed to mitch?\"\n\"It's quite becoming.\"\n\"Did wu trying to mtke beUeve\ntt wun't ufe for me to be going\ntbout with to much richness. 1 told\nhim Uiat you would protect me.\"\n\"Ill do my belt But I'm not sure\nUiat Mr. Manh isn't right.\"\n\"You're both of you itlly!\" Wilma\nexclaimed with a pout\nMeanwhile, Thora wu acquainting henelf with ber duUes for the\nevening md foUowing the fluttering Mn. Steele about from the\nkitchen to the dining room. Back\n\u2022giln.\n\"1 do hope everything Is iU rlghti\"\nthe hostesi sighed, making one more\nImpecUon of the faultless table. \"It\nis a smiU party,\" ibe confided to\nThora, \"but It'i one of thoie tfftlrs\nwhen everything his to be Juit so.\"\n\"Yes,\" her tsslstmt murmured\npolitely.\n\"I'U say so. The Gordon! you\nknow, are rich. They're accuitom-\ned to the bett And they're very critical. Between you and me, my dur,\nFrancei Gordon ll tweet ... ind\ni cit\"\nThora railed ber brows \u25a0 trifle it\nthli intimate revelation. It didn't\nsound much Uke Mr. Gordon'i description ot bit mother. But Mn\nSteele wu hurrying on.\n\"Mr. md Mn Pryor ire ibout u\nbid, Min Pryor ... ihe'i hit lister\nls wone. They're couiini of Selwyn. George Pryor isn't neirly as\nweU off u Selwyn tnd lt hurts\nBIRTHS\nDOUGAL-To Mr. md Mn If.\nDougal at McDougaU hospital, Klmberley, March 28, a ton.\nHU___AN_>-To Mr, and Mn. P.\nHulland it Kimberley hospital,\nMtrch 28, i diughter.\nPERSONAL\nNATURAL FEMININE HYGIENE\nEvery mirried womm ihould\nhive thit Bulletin which explains\ntbe famoui Dr, K. Ogind's method\nmd theory of fertile tnd tterile\nperiods ln women's cycle. Write\nfor Free Bulletin to\nHEALTHWELL\nP. 0. Drawer 267.    Vmcouver, B.C.\n(95)\nHAY FEVER md ASTHMA\nAny Nelson Druggist wiU be glid\nto ihow you \"Divis\" Astiimi Rtm-\nedy No. 7895. A wonderfully luccessful remedy.\nDAVIS, DRUGGIST\nNew Westminster, B. C.\n(238)\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 lttex auortment (or $1\nOrder direct md be sure of bett\nPacked plain. Free catalogue NaUonal Importers, 812-Centre St\nCalgary, Alta.    \u2022   % (111)\nPHOTOGRAPHY\nFILMS DEVELOPED ANY SIZE,\n25c. With 1 print trom each negative. Extra prints 8 for 25c. Saskatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon. \u2022      (128)\nthem. They're very quick to find\nfault. That it one reason I had Sherm\ncome along. He's a petcemaker\nwhen that bunch get together. I do\nhope I haven't made my mistake in\nsetting.\"\nAi neirly as Thon could tell the\narrangements were perfect. Thanks\nto Mn Steele's painstaking preparation there would be very Uttle\nlor her to do, save keeping a check\nupon Jim's movements. That young\nman had been subjected to count-\nleu rehearsals md wu standing by,\nclad in a stiffly starched linen jacket md owl-eyed with importance.\nThora gave him a reassuring smile,\nHusky Jim wu aU that stood between her and appearing before the\ndlnne guesti. If he ahould faU her!\nThe lituation somehow appealed\nto her tense of humor. Her experience with lormal dinners wu very\nslight md here she wu now acting\nIn \u25a0 professional capacity. She wu\nconscious ot a sudden desire to see\nthese people together, hear what\nthey talked about It wis very evi'\ndent thtt Selwyn Marsh was to have\nhis seat at the held of the board She\nwould Uke to see him when he stood\nin hit plice md solemnly told these\npeople that Wilma was engaged to\nmarry Ali Babba. As if everyone in\nthe vicinity of Brookville didn't\nknow it. A queer custom.\n(To Be Continued)\nPROPERTY POR SALE\nGOOD GARDEN PLOT NEAR\nGrohman Creek, consisting of over\nm acre level ground, tree from\nrocki, fenced, bearing fruit trees.\nJ.H.WUkiMon,615Cedar it. (214)\n4 ROOM HOUSE (2 BEDROOMS)\ncentral lociUon, no hiUi, Including furniture, etc., only $1200 tor\nquick tale, cuh piyment $400,\nbalance monthly Uke rent H E.\nD1U, Ward St (-23)\nRANCH FOR SALE AT CRAW-\nford Bay,' 18 acrei, dwelling. E.\nLawrtnce, P.O. Box 385, Nelson.\n(242)\nFIVE OF NELSON'S GOOD\nhornet. For partlculan apply Chas.\nF. McHardy.    \u25a0 (133)\nFOR SALE\nSMALL COTTACE\nCement foundation. Garden.\n$1250\nSMALL HOUSE\n3 bedrooms. Furnace, Fireplace,\nPart Cement foundition.\nGarden Lots.\n$1100\nSMALL COTTAGE\nClem u t new pin.\n2 Girden Lots.\n$650\nALSO\nSeveral Girden md Building\nLots.  $10.00  down  tnd  smsll\nmonthly payments.\nONE OF NICEST HOMES\nIN NELSON\nMutt be teen to be ippreclited.\nStone foundition. Furnice. Fire-\nnlice. White nlumbing. Comer\nGarden Lots.\n$3500\nC. W. Appleyard\n& Co. Ltd.\n(288)\nUSED CARS\nMclaughlin  sport  coupe.\nnew battery. Licence-Rumble seat,\n8 tires, $275. Johnson, Bonnington.\n(144)\n1928   CHEVROLET   COACH,   $100\nApply 523 Vernon St., upstairs.\n(254)\nHELP WANTED\nSCHOOL GIRL TO HELP WltH\nhoutework in return for room and\nbotrd. Box 218 Dtily News. (218)\nWANTED TO RENT\nWANTED, TO RENT, MAY 1st\nsmaU store or part of \u2022 store. Box\n202 Dtily News. \u2022   (202)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE\n4 L6TS BETWEEN HIGH AND\nChathim. Splendid location. Box\n239 Dally Newt. (239)\nFOR RENT. HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS. ETC.\nAPARTMENTS, MEDICAL ARTS\nBlock, Two bedrooms. Chu. F\nMcHardy. (134)\nFR SUITES, KERR AP'S\n(112)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nroomi for rent. Annible Block.\n(118)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrlgldaire equipped suites.  (117)\nROOM AND BOARD\nROOM AND BOARD, PRIVATE\nhome close in. tor genUemin.\nBox 262 Dilly News. (282)\nFOR SALE\nCATERPILLAR TRACTOR, ORCH-\nird Ten, with set of cover crop\ndiscs. Almost is good u new. At\nreasonable price tor cash. Apply\nBox 266 Daily News. (266)\nDINING TABLE, 4 CHAIRS.\nLtrge brick-lined hetter, Ftwcett\nrange, bureiu, Slmmoni cot, Winnipeg couch. Mrs. Beeston, Phone\n405Y. (253)\nPIANO,   OAK   CASE,   PERFECT\ncondiUon. Violin, good tone. Chetp\nfor cash. Mrs. Martin, Delbruck St\n(240)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd\n250 Prior St      .Vancouver. B C\n(148)\nCOMPLETE   FINE   MACHINE\nshingle mill md dry Kiln. Retdy\nto operate. P. O. Box 32, Nelton.\n(237)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\ntugar ucki, linen. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelton, B. C. (149)\nWICKER-WORK BABY BUGGY\nfor sale. In good condition.\nPhone 383R2. (248)\nCOW  MANURE, $3  PER  LOAD.\nPhone 106, WilUams Transfer.\n (256)\n4 ROOM HOUSE AND LOT. AP-\nply Box 194 DaUy News.      (1941\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor. Ust of wanted inventions md\nfull Information sent free. The\nRamsay Compmy, World Patent\nAttorney!, 273 Bank St Ottawa.\n(122)\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nIDEAL   SPOT   FOR   HOLIDAYS.\nWrite Mn. St. Denis, Deer Pirk.\n(137)\nFARM  LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non euy termi in Alberta md\nSukttchewin. Write for fuU informitlon to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources. CPU. Calgary, Altt\n(121)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\n#\nFOR SALE - ONE TEAM OF\nblack geldings. Age 5 md 6 yeart\nold. Weight 1900 and 1600 lbt. For\ninformation write A. Benedetti.\nWynndel, B. C. (190)\nGARDENING AND\nNURSERY PRODUCTS\nH. KITCHENER, MOUNTAIN STA-\ntion Gardens, Nelson. New and\nChoice varieties of rosei, carnations, gladioli md dahUas. Catalogue! on requeit. (5906)\n.'RUIT AND ORNAMENTAL\ntreet, evergreens, black currants\nmd raspberries. T. Roynon, agent.\nLayrlts Nurseries, (5860)\nBLACK CURRANT BUSHES, ONE\nmd two years, $10 per 100, freight\npaid. Buzzard, Newton, B. C\n(5867)\n50 LOADS DAIRY COW MANURE.\n$3 per load. Fhone 53. (195)\nPOULTRY FOR SALE\nBusineu and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nCHAS  F   HUNTER. S F A E.\n213 Medical  Arti Building.\nP..O. Box 1091,        Nelion. B C\n(154)\nAsiayert\nE W WIDDOWSON, PROV1NC1A1\nAntlytt. Asuyer. Chemlit Chemictl md Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling agenti at Trail md Tacoma imelters 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelion, B. C. (155)\nGRENVILIJ.   H   GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Autyer md Chemlit 618\nBaker itreet Nelun. B C P O\nBox No 276  Representing Shippers' interest tt Trail, B. C. (156)\nChiropractors\nj. a McMillan, d c palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk, Nelson\n(157)\nE. M  WARREN. D  C, BOX 872\nFor Canaries. Phone-115 or 755L\n(158)\nElectrical\nJ. r. COATES The Electric Store\nSuppllei md Installitloni\nPhone 766. P. O. Box 1065\n(159)\n=\nEngineen and Surveyors\nE. L. WARBURTON. NELSON. B.C\nOffice 518 Wsrd St Phono 53, P.O\nBoa 668. Agent; Oill. Greases, Paints\nSpecialties: mining machinery.\nCrow's Nett Pau Steam Coals,\nStructural steel piping, sheet iron\n(160)\nft D. DAWSON.        Nelson, B. C\nMine Surveyi md Reports\n(161)\nBETTER CHICKS\nMetn More Proflti i\nOur Chlcki an BETTER beciuie\nwe continually telect our breeding ttock tnd hitch tclentitically.\n(Pricei quoted per 100)\nPullet\nChlcki     Chicki\nLeghorni    ...     $11.00 $26.00\nReds md Rocki $1100        $27.00\nUght Sussex      $15.00 $30.00\nPullet Chicks guaranteed\n97% accurate.\nGovernment  Approved   md\nBlood tested.\nBe SAFE md order from\nRUMP 8c SENDALL. LTD.\nMilner, B. C.\n(124)\nBIG HUSKY LEGHORN CHICKS\n$1100 per 100. Order early supply\nlimited. T. A. Robinson, R. R. 1,\nGrmd Forki. (5858)\nRHODE ISLAND RED EGGS FOR\nhitching. Best laying strain. Ruth*\nerfordt, R.RJ, Nelton. (78)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Frultvile. B C\nBritish Columbia Lind Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(162)\nA. H GREEN CO.. LTD 516 WARD\nSt Phone 284, Nelson, B. C. (163)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD\nReal estate. Insurance, rentali, 217\nBaker St (164)\nR. W. DAWSON, Real EttitcTn-\nlurance. Rentals Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker Street.      (165)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD  Insurance oi\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99\n      (166)\nH. E..DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance Real Estate, 508 Ward St\n(187)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE\nrentals, insurance. Annable Block\n(168)\nLIFE, FIRE. AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nmee. P. E. Poulin. Ph. 70.    (169)\nCHAS F. McHARDY, INSURANCE.\nRetl Estate\u201ePhone 135,        (170)\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP.\nPhone 215..All klndi ot cut flowen,\nwreaths, tprayi & etc. Phone 215.\nMn. Htgarty. Box 39. (171)\nInvestments\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE, BOND-\ned representative, F. Armstrong\nStuirt, P. O. Box 389, Nelson. (172)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor iU claues of Metal Work. Uth*\nWork, Drilling. Boring md Grinding.  Motor  Rewinding, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593.     324 Vernon Street.\n(173)\nMaternity Homes\nELIZABETH   PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrlcUy Private. Confidential Phyii-\ncian ln attendance Ph Brotd. 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane, Wuh.\n(174)\nNotaries\nD. J ROBERTSON. NOTARY PUB-\nlic. Office 305 Victoria St Nelton.\n(173)\nPainting and Decorating\nPAINTING. DECORATING, KAL-\nsomining. Work guaranteed. Real-\nunable pricea Miller. Pk 790L.\n(5888)\nSanitariums\nDR. ALDRICH SAN1TOR1UM INC.\nTreats nil chronic diseases including T.B.. cincer, dlabetis. Uquor\nbabit md lhe mind. 30 yeirs practice. E-4304 Fredrick, Spokane.\n(176)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker St\n(177)\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST REASONABLE Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Virnon St\n(178)\nWigs and Toupees\nLADIES AND GENTLEMENS\nwigs and toupees, etc Fret Ulus-\ntrated Catalogue. Over 20 yeara\nin B. C We buy cut hair. Hanion\nHair Goodi Co. P. a Box (01,\nVmcouver, B. C. (179)\nOut-of-town tubscrtben 'bo\nwish to answer adverUsementi\nln which only the telephone\n' number of the advertiser it\ngiven, may mail their replies to\nthe Nelson Daily News, md they\nwlL be communicated to tbe\nadverUter.\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nSONNY HAD SOME OP HIS COLLEGE^\nCHUMS HERS TOCV-W. THEV V.ERE\nHCXJ-MNS A. DEB*VTE-TOO BAD NOU\nWEBE NOT HERS-THEV JUST LEFT\na pew m*jree> ago-  tmm\nBy Ceo. McManui\nTILLIE THI TOILER\n| THEta__ HE IS MOVaJ* mv\nROMAMTtC ROMEO VMHO\nly Russ Westover\nBEEW VMS.ITI U6 HE\nLETTER^ J-\n\u25a0H\u2014\nALL THOSE\nOSE)\nOH, HE'S   6ETTIU\u00ae  AWAV\nANt_> \u00bb HAV-EM'T SEEN HIS FACE-\n.'MB  SOT TO fOLLOVAl HIM\nHe CAM'T\nESCAPE! -1\nCOULD SPOT\nTHAT PLAID\n\u2022surr amv-\nVJHETte-\nTHE CUMPS\nGut Edson\n \u2014\u2014\u25a0\u2014\nun\nGOVERNMENT IS\nUR6INGH0U.EJ\nLEND INTERIOR\n| Three Companies to\nMake Loans in\nVancouver\n[ARE CONSIDERING\nVICTORIA FIELD\nRepresentations by\nGovernment for\nInterior\nOTTAWA, April 7-Fallure of Interior centeri of Britiih Columbia\nto obtain the benefits of the Housing act ll due to the unwillingness\nof British Columbia lending companies to Issue loans at the rate\nstipulated tor by the Dominion\ngovernment.\nInquiry aa to the working of the\nlet in the Pacific coait province\nslicited tbe following information\nrom a responsible tource:\nTbe Confederation Life issocla-\nlon, of Toronto, the Mutual Lite\nluurance company of Waterloo and\nhe Mutual Mortgage corporation ot\nToronto are all prepared to conilder applications for loans from\n\u25a0Vancouver. They are alio considering the advisability of extending\nNELSON DAILY NEWI. NILION. I.C-WIDNEIDAY MORNING. APRIL I. 1988\ntheir operatloni to Victoria.\nRepresentations have been made\nby the government to these and\nother companies urging that they\naccept application! also from Nelton, Trail, Rossland and ilmilir\nInterior communities where the department is Informed that a demand for housing loam exist.. It\nis the view of the departmental officers that, is tbe companlei gain\nexperience in thii clan of business\ntt the coast, they will be willing\nto extend their operatloni further\n\u2022field.\nEfforts have alio betn made by j\nthe department to persuade local j\nBritish Columbia companies to cooperate with the government ln'\nmaking the act available to resl-.\ndents of that province.\nSo far, no British Columbia institution has executed the contract\nwith the miniiter ot finince necessary to enable it to make loans under the act\nThe primary objection appears\nto be unwilllngnen to accept the\nrate of interest which ii allowed\nIn Housing act loans. The act provides that the rate of interest to be |\npaid by the borrower ii 5 per cent.\nAl the government's advance of\n30 per cent Is made on a 3 per cent\nbasis, it followi thit the loaning\ncompany is tble to make 5.88 per\ncent on itt 80 per cent ihare.\nBritish Columbia loan companiei\ntppetr, however, to have a policy\nof requiring 6 to 8V, per cent, tnd\nit this end it appean that they\nare reluctant to have thli broken\ndown.\nThe Houiing act U aimed at\ncheapening the rate of Intereit for\nprospective home builders, and the\ngovernment feels that it would be\nunjust and contrary to the principle\nof the legislation to accede to higher\nrates in Brltlih Columbia than prevail ln other provinces.\nMarket and Mining News\nMINES HIGHER\nTORONTO, April 7 (CP)-Shori\nraderi were crowded in a tew of\nEhe cheaper gold ttocki today and\nin the scramble to cover pricei were\nrun up lubstantlally.\nGod'i Like turned over a quintlty\n'or a gain of 7 centi to 97 and other\nictive liiuei telling higher by fraction! to 2 centa were Manitoba-\nEaitem, Bobjo, Algoma and Mapli\nLeaf.\nBuffalo-Ankerite advanced 35\ncenti to 5.30. Pickle Crow idvanced\n5, Premier 3 and Siicoe 6. Reeeuioni\nof > to 7 centi were chalked up foi\nReno, Red Lake, Pamour, McKenzie and Central Patricia. Perron tell\nback 13 eenti.\nTexai-Cinidlan declined 10 eenti\nto 4.75. Dalhouile firmed 2 cents.\nMontreal Sliver Quotations\nMONTREAL, April 7 (CP) .-Silver futurei closed iteady today, 10\nio 30 pointi up.  Salei ieven contracts: May 5; September 2.\n1 Open      High      Low      Cloie\nMay  _    44J5B       45.10       49.10       45.05B\npeptember     44.80B       45.00       45.00       44.85B\nDow-Jones Averages\n|0 industrials\n\u25a00 rails\nBO utilities ....\n10 bonds   \t\nHigh\n162.33\n48.40\n33.53\nLow\n180.43\n48.88\n32.81\nClose Change\n100.94-off 1.05\n4835-otf 30\n33.15\u2014up .09\n10232-off  m\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh Low Cloie\nUUed Chem . 207 208*4 307\nMnerCan 121Vi 121 121\nAm For Pow       9%     8Vi 9%\n\u25a0\u2022un Mat. Fdy 29% 25V. 25*\nIta Smelt &R MVi 84% 8414\nIn Telephone 188 187V. 189\nIn Tobtceo.... 84% 93% 94\n|AnicoDd\u00ab   MVi 37Vi 37*4\nAtchiion       78 77.4 77*4\ntolburn Motor 48% 49Vi 49%\n-.viitlon  Corp     7V4     8*4 8%\nBaldwin            4Vj      4V4' 4*4\nMt & Ohio   21% 20% 20%\nSendix Avlat.. 29% 28% 29\nSeth Steel  63% 81% 62%\nCanada Dry... 14 13% 14\nKan Pacific  13% 13 13\nKerro de Paaoo 86% 85% 55%\nEhes s- Ohio .. 57 .f 57% 57%\nEhrysler 102% 101% 101%\nton Gas NY 35% 34% 34%\ntorn Products 73% 73 71\nF Wright Pfd     6%     6% 6%\nDupont.        .. 182% 181% 161%\nTaitman Rod \u2022\u2022 188% 167 168%\ntl Pow A. Lig    15 14% 15\ntrie              ..    15% 15 15\nford Engliah _ \u2014 \u2014 8%\nford ot Can ... \u2014 - 24%\nlint Nat Store 45% 45% 45%\nrreeport Texas 11% 31% 31%\nSen Electric.... 40% 40 40\nSen Foods    ... 36% 36% 36%\nBen Motors _.. \u2022 70% 89% 69%\nJ old Duit -    W% 19% 19%\nDodrich     19% 19% 19%\nranby       3%     3 3\nreat Nor Pfd    39% 38% 38%\nrest W Sugir    35% 38 35\ntme Sound       54% 53% 54\n[udson Moton    19       18% 18%\n\u25a0nteroat   Nick   49% 48% 49\nnt Tel * Til   16%    16% 16%\newel Tee          \u2014 \u2014 73\nKenn Copper\nKresge S S\nKroegger tt T\nMack Truck\nMilwaukee Pfd\nMont Ward\nNash Motor\nNat Dairy Pro\nN Pow tt light\nNY Central\nPacific G.I\nPackard Motor\nPenn R R\nPhillips Pete\nPure Ott\nRadio Corp\nRadio Keith O\nRem Rand\nSafeway Store\nShell Union\nSCal Edison\nSouth Pacific\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil ot Ind\nStan OU of N J\nStewart Warn\nStudebaker.\nTexai Corp\nTexas Gulf Sul\nTimken Roller\nUnderwood Tj\nUnion Carbide\nUnion Oil Cal\nUnion Aircraft\nUnited Biscuit\nUnion Pacific\nU S Pope     ....\nU S Rubber\nU S Steel    \t\nVanad Steel\nWest Electric\nWest Union\nWoolworth \t\nWrigley\nYellow TVuck\n40% 39%\n23 22%\n24% 24%\n36% M%\n2% 2%\n44% 43%\n20% 20%\n33% 23%\n11% 11%\n39% M%\n39% 38%\n13 11%\n35% 34%\n48% 48%\n23% 23%\n13% 13%\n7% 7%\n31% 31%\n33% 32%\n17% 17%\n27% 38%\n36%\n48\nM\n45%\n39% 38%\n<7% 86%\n23% 23\n14% 14\n39% 38%\n35% 39%\n69% 88%\n87% 86%\n27% 26%\n28% 25%\n132\n38\n30\n71\n24\n130%\n37%\n28\n69%\n23%\n133% 130%\n90% 88%\n80% SO\n19 16%\n39%\n22%\n24%\nM%\n2%\n44%\n20%\n23%\n11%\n38%\n39\n11%\n34%\n48%\n23%\n13%\n7%\n21%\n\u00bb%\n17%\n27\nM\n45%\n31\n66%\n23\n14%\n39\n35%\n69%\n95\n86%\n26%\n25%\n25%\n182\nit\n30\n70\n23%\n120 Vi\n89\n50%\n75%\n18%\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMetals\t\near Explore _\nig MiM \u2014\nK*Jo\n\u25a0iralorne .\nR X\t\nBut Ankerite ....\n\u25a0Canada Malartic .\n\u25a0Cariboo Gold \u2014\ntie Treth\t\n\u25a0Central Men _   -\n\u25a0Central Pat\t\nit Copper _\n\u25a0Coclagai .\n\u25a0Sooartum\nEociM-6.\n\u25a0knkfleld .40\nirry  Hollinger        .08\n^^^^^^^^     _M\n.40\nM\n.15%\n7.50\n.15%\n5.10\n1.12\n1.40\n1.35\n.19\n320\n2.90\n3J00\n2.40\nMUl\n4.87\n\/OM\nIM\n830\nm\nAl\n.19%\ntt\n14.87\n.80\n27.50\n48X10\n.47\nMV,\n.04%\n83.71\n6.85\n3.71\n.11\nJ03%\n.25\n42.00\nM\n128\n121\nUt\n54.80\nJl%\n.7'%\nM\ntat\n10.25\n2.29\n1.15\nIttle Long Lac\t\nBiacawa\t\nIt Leaf :\t\nBftirobi>\nle \u2014\nHgcLeod Cockihutt \u2014 -\n\u25a0telntyre   \t\nteVitt-t Or\t\n[(Watte! Gold \t\n  Corp ______\u2014\nMlptulug , ...\n^^\u2022idt\n\u25a0khlll\nijrmaiter\nid Orelllt.\n\u25a0kklt Crow\noneer _ \t\nremier Gold\t\nio \t\nSan Antonio ...\nSheep Creek .\nSher Gordon ,\nSisooe \u2014 _\nSmelten O _\nStadacona -\nSt Anthony .\nSud Basin\t\nSylvanite _...\nTeck Hughet .\nToburn    .\nTowigimac .\nTreedwtll \u2014\nVenturei\nSMELTERS UP 4\nMONTREAL, April 7 (CP)-Late\nliquidation, occasioned by heavy\ntelling on liquor ihares, depressed\na narrow list on Montreal itock exchange today.\nDiitlllen Seagrams cloied it 23%.\noff % net. Canadian Induitriil Alcohol issues \"A\" and \"B\" closed\nfractionally easier.\nSteel ot Canada preferred at 99%\nand common at 66 both touched\ntheir best level in leveral yean\nwith fractional gaini. The common,\nhowever, eased illghtly from the\nday'i high to cloie up %.\nSmelter featured with a four-point\nlain at 284, fint boardlot Hie in a\nweek. Nickel listlessly moved Vt\nlower and Noranda eased %.\nSEAMAN GETS A\nMEDAL\nVANCOUVER, April 7 \u00ab_P>-\nGeorge Harry Matheion, young Vancouver seaman and former apprentice aboard the ill-fated Silverhazel,\ntoday wai the proud posseiaor ot\ntbe coveted Lloyd's silver medal for\nsaving life at tea during the Silver*\nhaiel disaster.\nThe presentation was made yesterday by Commander B. L. Johnson, D.S.O., Lloyd'i igent, aboard\ntht 811ver Unes ship Sllverwlllow.\nWhen the Silverhawl foundered\non the rocks in San Bernadino\nstraits last tall, Matheion, at risk\nof his life usisted ln the reicue of\na woman panenger.\nKing's Exhibits\nGtt Most Prizes\nEDMONTON, AprU 7 (CP) -\nwinning tbe grand championship\nIn stellions, three first prlzei tnd\ntwo leconds, hones trom His Majesty the King'i E. P. ranch, High\nRiver, carried otf the lion'i ihire of\nhonon ln the Clydud-le clawtt st\nthe Edmonton spring horse ihow\ntoday.\nPrince Benefactor, eight year old\nbay, shown by Prof. W. L. Carlyle.\nmanager of the ranch, walked off\nwith the one tint prize, the champion prize and the grand cham*\npiomhip in the stallion daises.\nWalte Amulet\t\nWayiide\t\nWhite Eagle       '\nWright Hargreavei\nOILS\nAJax  \t\nB A OU\nC It I Corp\t\nChem Research\nDalhousie\nHome\t\nImperial   .  \t\nInter Pete\t\nMerland   .  \u2014\nNordon   _  \t\nRoyalite\t\nINDUSTRIAL!\nbeatty Bros ....\nBell Telephone\nBrazUian   \t\nBrew & Dist ...\nCanada Bread\nCan Car Fdy\nCanada Cement\t\nCan  Dredge  \t\nCan Malting..\nCan Pae Rail ....._..-.\nCons Smelten    \t\nDominion Bridge\t\nDominion Stores \u2014\nDist Seagr. rm\t\nFord Ctn A\t\nGoodyeir Tire _  _\nHiram Wiiker\t\nLoblaw A\t\nMauey Hails \t\nSteel of Canada .....\nWalker Brew \t\n333\nA3\n1.18\n138\n.06\n34\n33\nvn\n2.40\n431\n133\n3-\n.40\n2.19\n112\n.16%\n33%\n730\nM\n26.00\n131\n131\nAl\n1.10\n1437\n39.12\n.17\n.18%\n33.50\n._ 13\n131%\n.- 12%\n... 1.06\n....    8\n....    1%\n_    7%\n_ 48\n- 32\n_ 11\n.... Ml\n.- M%\n_-    9%\n_ 23%\n_ M\n_ 69%\n... M .\n- 11%\n... 8%\n-_ 85%\n  1\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, April 7 (CP)-But*\nter ipot clote, Que. Or 22%.\nCheeie ipot\u2014Ont. col. 11%.\nEggi spot A-large 30, A-medium\n19, A-pullets 18.\nOpen mirket quotations:\nWheat, No. 2 nor. .87%; barley.\nNo. 3 C. W. .48; flour, iprlng whert\npatents, firsts 830; seconds 8.10;\nbaken 6.00; bran, ton 2025; shorts\nton 2125, middlings, ton 2635.\nLIQUORS WEAK\nTORONTO, April 7 (CP)-De_*\nInlte weakness in tbe liquor group\nuniettled the Induitriil lection of\nthi Toronto exchange today and 37\nitocki cloied lower agalnit 23 cloilng higher.\nDiitlllen-Seigrami cloied at 23%,\na decline of a point. Induitrlal Al'\ncohol A declined % to 0 ind Walkers commoni wai off % to M. Brewers tt Distiller! loit 8 centi.\nOil itock! weakened slightly on\nheavy volume. International Nickel\nloit % and Consolidated Smelters 2\npoints. Ford A took a loss of % and\nBrazilian Traction and C. P. R were\ntown smaller fractions.\nWinnipeg Higher\nWINNIPEG, April 7 (CP)-Im-\n.orterj found Canadian wheet to\ntheir liking today as futures orices\nfluctuated nervously on the Winnipeg grain exchange. At the close of\nan Irregular session, net gains of\n%\u2022% cent were scored.\nExport sales of Canada's chief\ncommodity totaUed 1,290,000 bushels, but this proved barely sufficient to take care of heavy selling.\nThe May option flnlihed at 79%,\nJuly 80% and October 81% cents.\nCoane pricei wert fractionally\nhigher in quiet trading, while operations were featureless in the caeh\ngrain section.\n$716,258 Profit\nfor Hudson's Bay\nLONDON, April 7 (CP eable>.*>-\nThe Hudson's Bay company announced today that reiulta for Ilie\nyear ended January 31 ihowed net\norofits of H44.717 (approximately\n8716258), u compered with -40.980\n(approximately $202,813) last year.\nWith the amount brought forward,\nthe balance on the profit and lots\naccount is now (314,419 (approximately $1,061,532).\nThe governor and committee will\npropose at the forthcoming annual\ngeneral court the repayment to preference shareholdera on July 1 ot\n80 shillings on each of the 5 per cent\ncumulative preference shares (-3\neach) with full arrean of dividends\non thii repair capital for six yean\nto June 30 next\nRelief Mill Is Up\nto Expectations\nVANCOUVER, April 7 (CP>-\nThe  new  70-ton   mUl  which   re-\nS laced the old 38-ton plant at the\nellef Arlington mine, near Erie,\ncontrolled by Premier Gold mines,\nLtd., ii working latisfactorily and\nmint development Is up to expectations, shareholden were advised\n-t tbe annual meeting Monday.\nThe ntw mill wu placed in operation December 19.\nDuring last year 2673 feet of development work wis completed at\nthe Second Relief mine.\nDirectors were reelected.\nCHICAGO HIGHER\nCHICAGO, April 7 (AP)--Wheat\nfuturei averted higher today, ei-\npeclilly the nearby delivery, May,\nai distingu i i il from wheat yet to\nbe harvested, a reversal ot recent\ntrend.\nGreater firmness than of late In\ntht Liverpool and Winnipeg markets turned trade attention to questions of immediate rather than distant supply and demand, notably an\nincrease of export call for Canadian\nwheat, overseas purchaiei today\ntotalling 1,000,000 buiheli.\nAfter fluctuating within narrow\nlimits, wheat cloied firm, unchanged\nto Vt cent higher, May 94%, July\n84% to 83, corn also unchanged to %\nup, May 59%, oats unchanged to %\nadvance, and proviiioni at 2 centi\nto 10 centa decline.\nR.A.C. PLAN IS\nAPPROVED\nNEW YORK. AprU 7 (AP) -\nStockholders ot Radio Corp. ot America today approved the plan ol\nrecapitalization for the company.\nThe management announced 57.7\n\u2022nr cent of the 768,897 shares of class\n\"B\" preferred had been voted for\nthe plan and deposited in accordance\nwith its provisions. It was stated\nassurances had been given by holden of an additional 100,000 shares\nthat the stock would be deposited\nor was In transit.\nDirecton fixed May 1 as the date\nup to which preferred stock not deposited might be exchanged for the\nnew 13.50 cumulative convertible\ntint preferred stock and common\nstock under the plan,\nB.A. Oil Officers\nReelected\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG, April 7 (CP)-Graln\nfuturei quotations:\nOpen  High  Low  Close\n\\n?___AT\u2014\u2022\u2022\u00bb\nMay  __  71%    80%    79%    79%\nJuly  _   80%    81       80% ** 8t%\nOcL       81%    11%    80%     81%\nOATS-\nMay   _._   11%    31%    31%    11%\nJuly ._  31%    11%    11%    11%\nOct. 11%    11%    11%    31..\nBARLEY-\nMay  ....   M%    M%    M       38%\nJuly MVi    M%    H%    M%\nFLAX-\nMiy   _ 149      149%   149      149%\nJuly   147      147%   147      147\n_Y_\u2014\nMay  .....   41%    43%    41%    41\nJuly  -     43%    43%    42%    41\nOcL   ...._  44%    44%    44%    44%\nCASH WHEAT-\nNo. 1 hard 80'.-; No. 1 Nor. 79; No.\n2 Nor. 76%; No. 3 Nor. 72%; No. 4\nNor. 89%; No. 5, 82; No. 6, 90%;\nfeed 43%; No. 1 Garnet 74%; No.\nI Garnet 71%; No. 1 Durum Tit; No\n1 ARW. 68%; No. 4 special 61; No.\n5 special 54%; No. 6 special 49; track\n79%; screenings 75 cents per ton.\nMoney\niy the Cinadian Prat*\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal-Pound 437 1-32, U S\ndollir 1*0 7-16, frtne 631.\nAt New York-Pound 4.99, Canadian dollar 39 17*32. franc 8.80%.\nAt Paris-Pound 76.02 franct, U 8\ndollar 19.19% franct, Canadian dollar 19.10 franci.\nIn gold-Pound 12a, U 8 dollir\n9932 centi, Canadian dollar 99.09\ncents.\nMetol Markets\nNEW YORK, April 7 (AP)-Cop-\nper quiet, electrolytic spot tnd future 925 to 930; export 9.06 to 9.10.\nTin barely iteady; spot and nearby 47.12%; tuturt 4625.\nIron quiet, unchanged.\nLead iteady; ipot New York 4.30\nfar 4.65; East St Louis 4.45.\nZinc dull; Eait SL Loult spot and\nfuture 4.90.\nAluminum 19.00 to 22.00.\nAntimony, ipot 1330.\nBar lUver steady and unchanged\nat 44%.\nAt London\u2014Copper, standard spot\nCM 12s 6d; futurt \u00a338 17s 6d; electrolytic, spot \u00a340 15s; future \u00a341\nll.\nTin, spot \u00a3212 15s; future \u00a3206\n-i 6d.\nLead, ipot \u00a3 15; future \u00a3 16 7s 6d.\nZinc, spot \u00a315 7s 6d; future \u00a315\n12i6d.\nBar silver firm, 1-16 higher at\n19 15-16d.\nLondon Cioso\nLOHDOK, AprU 7 (AP)-Clos_i_|:\nBrazilian Traction |12%, CPR 113%,\nInternational Nickel 149%, Britiih\nAmericin Tobtcoo 123i l%d, Central Mining \u00a338%. Dt Bten \u00a38%.\nCrown Mlnei \u00a314%, Spring! 43s\n9d, East Geduld \u00a39%, Rio Tintos\n\u00a315%, Vicken Mt l%d.\nBond*-BriUih 3% per eent con-\n\u2022oli \u00a386%. Britiih 1% per eent\nwar loan \u00a3107%, Britiih funding\n4i 1960-90 \u00a3117%.\nEXCHANOE OPEN SATURDAY\nMONTREAL* April 7 (CM-Ca-\n.adlan commodity exchange, Montreal itock exchinge, will clow\nGood Frldiy and Easter Monday,\nbut will remain open Saturday,\nofficials announced today.\nDominion Livestock\nW_NNIPEG,\"AprU7 (CP)-CatUe\n238.\nSteen 1525.\nHeifers $4.75.\nFed calves 17.\nCows 1325.\nStock cowi and heifers 13-\nMilken 140.\nCalves 15.\nChoice vealeri $7.\nHogi 40.\nSelect bacon $1 per head premium, bacon $8.25, butchers 11 per\nbead discount, heavies 17.75, lights\nand feeden M-50. sows $8.75.\nIheep nil.\nHandywelght lambs $825.\nSheep $2.\nExe'\"** nr.es\nSCHOFIELD PEN\nCLIMBS AGAIN\nRapidly Overhauling\nScheibler After\nBeing Ousted\n\u2022 Mai nini\nCOST OF LIVING\nIS HIGHER\nOTTAWA, April 7 (CP)-The gen\neral Index ot the cott of Uvlng, oi\nthe base 19M equali 100, wu trie-\n'.tonally higher for March at 803\ncompared with M.4 the previoui\nmonth, the Dominion bureau of statistics reported today.\nThe Index tor foods rose trom 733\nto 73.4 advances for eggs snd potatoes more than offsetting declines\nfor butter and pork.\nThe fuel Index moved up from\n37.8 to 87.3, mainly ai a reiult of\nhigher pricei for coke.\nCOASiTSEASY\nPROFITS TAKEN\nTORONTO, April 7 (CP) - Annual general meeting ot British American Oil Company, Limited, was\nheld today under the presidency of\nA. L. Ellsworth, when the following\nofficers were reelected:\nPresident, A. L. Ellsworth; vice-\npresidents, C. L. Suhr and F. A.\nOaby; secretary, P. W. Binm; treaiurer, J. C. Millar; directors, G. W.\nAllan, K. C, Hon. C. P, Beaubien,\nP. W. Binns, A. L. Ellsworth, 8. A.\nGaby, H. McSweeney, J. C. Millar.\nJ. Y. Murdock, K.C, A. B. Purvis\nand C. L. Suhr.\nThe annual report, published\nMarch 16, last, was adopted as read.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, April 7 (CP)-Re-\nceipti yesterday: 380 cattle, 302 hogs,\nM calves, 39 sheep. Today to noon:\n367 cattle, 11 calves, 44 hggs.\nCattle market moderately active\nduring morning with prices iteady.\nGood to choice butcher iteers\n$4.25 to $3; common to medium $3\nto $4.\nGood to choice heifers $3.50 to $4;\ncommon to medium $2.50 to $3.25.\nGood to choice fed calves $4 to $5.\ncommon to medium $2.50 to $3.25.\nGood to choice fed calves (4 to $6;\nmedium $330 to $375.\nGood cowi $2.50 to $3.\nGood bulls $2.50.\nGood calves $4.75 to $5; common\nto medium $2.75 to $4.25.\nGood itocker and feeder steers\n$3 to MM.\nHogi steady. Selects $8.35, bacons\n$7.85, butchers $735, off trucks.\nGood heavy and handywelght\nlambs $630 to $7.\nEastern Soles\nMONTREAL, April 7 (CP)-British and foreign exchange closed\nsteady:\nBrazil, mllrels .   .. .0568\nChina, Hong Kong dollars       .3287\n'ndla, rupee .3761\nJapan, yen .2909\nNew Zeal, nd, pound \u00ab.009fl\nSouth Africa, pound 4.9471\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nMONTREAL, April 7 (CP)-Salei\nof 100 or more shares in trading on\nthe Montreal stock exchange today\nwere:\n397 Bruilian, 1670 Can Ind Al,\n450 Can lnd Al B, 253 CPR, 111 Con\nSmelt, 2195 Dist Seag, 1880 Foundation, 580 Int Nickel, 155 Lk Woods.\n364 Nat Brew, 825 Noranda, 415\nSU of Can.\nBONDS IN NARROW COURSE\nNE WYORK, April 7 (API-Lacking stimulation from outside sources,\n.nd absorbed in distributing one of\nthe largeit foreign luuu marketed\nhare In several years, tbe bond market held to a narrow course today\nwtlh the und-rlyiiw tone stefdy.\nA banking iyndlc\"te re*\u00bb-rti>-<\nearlv oversubscription to the S31-\n900,000 kinrdom of Norw.v 4%s.\nwhich were offered at 97% and\nInterest.\nAdvance* of minor amounts were\nshown by U. S. Rubber 9s tt 107,\nand Chile Copper 9i it 102.\nTORONTO, April 7 (CP)-Sales\not 100 or more share! on the Toronto itock exchange, induitrlal\nsection, today were:\n211 Brazilian, 895 Brew 8c Dist,\n9038 B A Oil, 2745 Can lnl Al, 338\nCPR, 185 Dom Stores, 870 Ford A,\n475 Gyp It Ala, 1587 Int Nickel,\n300 Massey Harris, 290 SU of Can,\n1770 Walker H.\nAccumulating 70.2 points In thl\nlait week, from 59 valid eggs, the\nA. W. Schofield pen ln the Brltith\nColumbia laying contest at the Agassiz Dominion experimental farm,\nwhich was passed and then distanced\nby the W. J. Scheibler pen, it now\nrapidly overhauling the new leader,\nand hai reduced a lead of nearly 40\npointi to 17.1 at the end ot the 22nd\nweek. The Schofield pen gained\n15.8 points on the Scheibler birds\nthli lut week. Other pens in the\nleader class are spread out 8C to\n150 points behind the Schelbler entry.\nPoint leaders are Scheibler, 1105.8;\nSchofield, 1088.7; M. H. Ruttledge,\n1016.6; W. Whiting, 1002.8; Robert\nB. Sangster, 997.4; H. K. A. Arnould,\n958.7; B. C. Lands OperaUng company 952.7; and Appleby Poultry\nFarm, 947.1. Tbe Arnould blrdr are\nS.C. Rhode Island Reds, all the othen being White Leghoms,\nProduction for the week wu 72.66\nper cent of full, and the egg total\nnow stands at 32,931, and the point\ntotal at 33,877.8.\nfollowing are thi records ot thl\n64 pens for the 2! weeks omitting\nthe daily and week's egg performance:\nBreed and Wki. ToL ToL\nOwner Pts. Eggi Pts.\nBirneveldirs\nFltz-Herbert, H. G. 64.8 704 8313\nWhite Wyindottei\nSidney Ex, Sta 51.4  765  857.7\nBarred Plymouth\nRocki\nCram, Jack  50.5  822  818.4\nDarbey, P. and Son  46.8   666   6793\nLamble, Jas. _ 60.4   890   6673\nRoberts, C. tt Son 56.6   793   764.9\nUnivenity of B.C.,   94.7   893   9373\n8.C. Rhode\nIsland Reds\nArnould, H. K. A. _ 60.1  123  958.7\nBrown, Jack _ 98.6   673   715.1\nGame, Geo. W 48.9   721   8373\nGoodman, John  42.0   Ml   403.6\nMaynard, W 46.0   7E9   7933\nMcCurrach & Hall 443 620 598.8\nPenzer's Red Fm. _ 47.8   689   6483\nRussell, D. 473   790   7413\nSwastika Pty. Fm. _ 54.0 683 703.6\nS.C. White Leghorns\nAppleby Pity. Fm. 823 976 747.1\nBolivar Hatcheries 87.0 757 7664\nChalmen, John __ 54.6 831 899.1\nDarbey, P. It Son 45.7   686   689.5\nEvans, F. C    _ 66.7   602   693.7\nEvans, F. C     61.4   734   8373\nFairweather, W. M. 63.1   871   8973\nHeadey, C. _    64_*   811   8733\nKennedy Bros. ._... 49.5   567   5583\nKennedy, J. H 62.9   785   8383\nLawson, Mrs. M 62.6   7M   7283\nMetcalfe, C. P 50.5   529   5583\nMiller, D  67.8   823  9181\nMcCurrach & HaU 80.0   721   7433\nOliver, D. L. - _. 62.3   852   859.6\nPollok, G. L. a 66.1   710   7763\nB.C. Lands Op. Co. 68.1 932 952.7\nRutUedge, M. H. _ 59.7   997 10163\nSangster, R. B - 62.4   881   997.4\nScheibler, W. J 54.6* 1022' 11053\nSchofield, A. W. _*70.2   976 10817\nSmith, T. J _   _ 59.4   622   691.4\nSwensson, P     593   610   6392\nVe.chere, F. G. _    50.1   693   6763\nWatson, A. G... 54.0   963   M73\nWhiUng, W _ 523   992 10023\nWindermere Ex. Sta. 43.0   751   7703\nVoncouver Soles\nVANCOUVER, April 1 (CP>-\nMining shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange today:\nListed\u2014Big Miss 3150, Bralome\n1795, BRX 2800, B R Con 500, Dentonia 4400, Gold Belt 1300, Island\nMount 500, Inter C tc C 300, Koot\nBelle 4400, Morning Star 11.500,\nNational Sil 3000, Pioneer 825, Premier 1605, Reeves Mac 760, Reno\n1300, Sally 1100, Salmon 2000, Sheep\nCreek 1000, Wayside 1800.\nCurb-Beaver Sil 2000, B C Nickel\n16,850, Can Rand 8100, Congreu\n5250, Dalhousie 56.600, Dictator 3500,\nDunwell 1000, Fairview 2000, Federal 25,100, Gold Mount 11300, Glacier Creek 1000, Grandview 7790,\nGrange 10,200, Hedley Amal 6000,\nHome 3600, Hedley Sterling 2000,\nHecla 20, Lucky Jim 5000, Minto\n28,950, Nicola 1000. Noble Five 13,-\n000, Pilot 7700, Porter Idaho 5000,\nQuesnelle Q 16,050, Reward 16,300,\nReUef Ari 4400, Sllvercrest 12,000,\nStandard S L 1000, Vidette 4M,\nViking 12,500, WeUlngton 1000,\nWhitewater 1500, Waverley 3000.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOU_C\"April 7 (AP)-\nWheat cash: No. 1 heavy dark\nnorthern spring 60 lbs, 111% to\n125%, No. 1 red durum 74 to 73.\nFlour unchanged. Carload lots,\nfamily patents $6.50 to M.70 a barrel\nin 98-p.und cotton sacks. Shipments\n27,158. Bran 16.50 to 17.00.\nVANCOUVER, April 7 (CP)-An\neuy tone prevailed on tht light\ntrading session of the Vsncouver\nstock exchange today. Transactions\ntotalled 344,850 shares.   \u25a0\nBralorne topped the gold Hit up\n15 it 7.60 and Cariboo Gold Quartz\nadded 3 at IM. Relief Arlington\ngained 1% at 33% tnd Gold Btlt 1\nat 42. Island Mountain dropped 4\nit 137. Reno 2 at 1.15 and Sheep\nCreek eaied 1% at 65%. Decline!\not X cent were regiitered In Prtmltr at 2.29, Minto at 74, Vidette\nat 15 and Gold Mountain at 12%.\nOther gold isiuei were fricUonilly\nlower.\nNEW YORK, April 7 (AP)-The\nitilltlei tnd a few iptclilUit burked profit taking trends In todty'i\nstock market which were centered\nnrincipally in the recent iteel and\nnotor stalwarts.\nWhile 927 Issues registered loutt\non the day against 177 tdvtncet,\nbullish forcei were conioled by the\nfict that trading volume dwindled\nappreciable on Uie ittbick.\nBroken were Inclined to attribute\nthe reversal largely to technical\nfacton Involved in the steady advance which hu witneued but one\nsmall average decline since Mareh\n27,\nThe AssocUted Preu iverage ot\n60 itocki fell bank J of a point to\n843. Tranifen totaUed only 1,671560\nsham compared with 2,115,048 yuterday. The rail and Industrial oo*\nopoiitei were each down .4 while\nlhat of the utilities emerged .1\nhigher.\nFRANC UP FRACTION\nNEW YORK, April 7 (CP) -\nThe pound sterling lost % cent on\nthe foreign exchange market today,\ndosing at $4.98 in terms of United\nStetes fundi. The Cinidlin dollir\ndeclined 1*12 cent st 99 17-12 while\nthe French gold franc gilned 30%\ncent it 6.60%.\nMontreal Stock Prices\nBeU Telephone\nB C Packing .\u2014\nBrazilian .\nB C Pow A _ .\nBuild Prod _   -\nCanada Bronze\nCan Car Fdy ..\nCanada Cement \u2014\nCan Cement Pfd _\nCan Ind Al A .  -\nCan Ind Al B _-\nCan Pac Rail \u2014\nCan Steamin ,\u2014\nCockihutt _   \t\nCon M 8c 8 .\nDominion Bridge\nDominion Glui -\nDominion Text ___..._\nFord Canada A \t\nOn St Wares\t\nChai Gurd i\t\nHamilton Br\t\nInt Nickel\t\nMassey Harrii \t\nMontretl Power __\u2014\u2014\nNat Steel Car __.\t\nNat Brewing\t\nOgilvie\nPower Corp\nPrice Broi -\n,..' 143\n    10%\n12%\n31\n34%\nM\n6%\n7%\n.   67\n,    9\n.    7%\n.   13\n.    1%\n.    1%\nMl\nM%\n111\n71\n25\n4\n8\nm\n49\n. 6%\n. \u00bb%\n15\n43%\n.230\n13%\n4%\nQuebec  _...-_:..\u201e._\u2014,\nShawinigan \t\nSherwin Wmi -_ \u2014\nSouth Can Power \u2014\nSteel ot Can  . _, .\nCURB!\nAssd Brew .\nBrew tt Dlit ,\nB A Oil _\t\nBruck Silk    \t\nCan Celaneae ....\nCanada Dredge .\nCanada MalUng ...\nCan Wineries \u2014\nDominion Storu\nDryden Peper _~\nImp OU \t\nImp Tob Can \u2014\nIntl Petrol _-,_\nMcColl Front _.\nMitchell Robt .\nPage Hersey \u2014\nBANKI\nCanada ___-.\u2014-\nCanadien\nCommerce  _\n| Montreal \t\nNova ScoUa\nRoyal \t\n17*\n11%\n17%\n13%\n\u00ab\u25a0*\n10%\n1.10\n17\n13\n27%\n48\n32\n31\n9%\n8%\n24%\n13%\n39\n16%\n6%\nW\nIM\n. IM\n. 190\n.277\n, 174\nVancouver  Stock   Exchange\nLISTED Ud\nX P Con  41\nAmal OU      42%\nBig Missouri   .61\nBralorne       -  7.60\nBridge R Con  .07\nBRX Gold ..._ -. .15%\nCariboo Oold   IM\nC and E Corp _  1.30\nCoast Brew      1329\nCoast Brew Rts  4.60\nCommonwealth  .06%\nDentonla      41%\nHargal OU   .06%\nGold Belt   .42\nHome Oil  - 1.11\nInt Coal\n.19\nWind Mount    1.27\nKoot Belle  68\nMak Siccar  _.    .08\nMcDougal Segur ...    37\nMcLeod Oil New ....    JO\nModel Oil     -W\nMorning Star     .01%\nNat Silver         .02%\nPioneer Gold JO.IO\nPremier Gold    2.29\nPremier Border     .00%\nQuatsino Copper     .01%\nBeno Gold     1.16\nSally Mines  12\nSalmon Gold _.    41%\nSheep Creek     .69%\nSpooner Oil     .22%\nTaylor Bridge     43\nVanalta    ,    M\nWayside    15%\nCURB\nAnaconda     _    .05%\nAuoclited OU \u2014      \u2014\nBaltac OU  \u2014    .01%\nBayview             .00%\nBeaver Silver     fl3%\nBluebini     31%\nB C Nickel..-.     .43\nCan Rand      40\nCalmont Oil      40\nCongreu Gold _    Jl\nCork Province ..\u2014..    JDOVi\nCottonbelt   -    \u2014\nCrows Ntst  -...    41%\nDalhousie Mines ....    .02%\nDalhousie Oils  60\nDevenish Oill     .84\nDictator Gold      .06\nDunwell    06\nEistcrest      .08\nFairview        .07\nPOUND STERLING OFF\nMONTREAL, AprU 7 (CP)-A\nloss of % cent was registered by\npound sterling at $4.97 1-32 on Montreal foreign exchanges today, but\nother leading currencies were little\nchanged The United States dollar\nwu even at 7-16 premium and the\nFrench franc gained .01 cent at 6.63\ncents.\nBAR QOLD GAINS\n(\"\u201e,*._-,_.\u00a3   R*-'of\nNEW YORK, April 7 (CP)-Sterling exchange steady at $4.94 for 60-\nday bills and at $495 for demand.\nCanadian dollars today 15-3? dlicount,   yesterday   7-16    discount,\n( week ago 9*16 discount.\nj   Franc 6.80% cents.\nLire 7.91 cents.\nAIR SERVICE SOON\nMONTREAL, April 7 (CP)-Bar\ngold in London up 1 cent at $34.94\nan ounce in Cinadian funds; 140s\n8%d in British funds. The fixed\n$35 Washington price amounted to\n$3545 ln Canadian.\nMONTREAL, April 7 (CP)-A 20*\n'our transeontlne-'t'l air service be*\nwoen H5)if--x and V.in^ouvr coul.\n\u2022 ; co*>f'. e-t'v ex\u2014*\u2022\" 1 In the rear\nfuture, the Youn*! Me-'s C^-ad'^n\n-'ub w.-s told last n'-'ht by Geor\"*\nG. Wakeman. The district Insoectm\nof the civil aviat'on branch, deoart*\nment of national defence, spoke at\nthe club's annual meeting.\nAsk\nJO\n44\n.89\n7.70\n.08\n.16\n1.40\n1.32\n14.00\n4.79\n.08\n49\nStl\n.45\n1.16\n30\n131\n.70\n.10\nJ07%\n.\u00bb I\n26\n.01%\n.01\n1025\n2.30\n.00%\n32\n1.11\n.11\n.12\n.17\n24\n\u25a0 44\n_\u00bb\n.16\n.03%\n41\nM\nsa\n.44\n40%\n.22%\n30%\n.04\n41%\n.01\n.63\n.04%\nat\n.06%\n.10\n.07%\nFswn    \u2014\u2014\nFederal Gold _____\nFreehold      \u2014.-\nGeo Copper -\nGlacier Creek\t\nGoleonda Lead _..._\nGold Mount     -\nGeo Enterprise \u2014-\nGeo River\t\nGrandview  \u2014.\nGrange       \t\nGruU Wihksne .\u2014\nHaida Gold \t\nHedley Amal \t\nHighwood Sarcee ....\nHome Gold  -\nIndian Minu\t\nIndependence \u2014m\nKoot King     \t\nKoot Florence -\nLucky Jim \u2014.\u2014_\nMadison \u2014_~\nMar Jon \t\nMercury\t\nMeridian ,.._,..__,._\nMerland    ~._\nMinto Gold  \t\nMorton Wolsey _.._\nNicola Mines _\nNoble Five  ,\nNordon Oil .....\nPacalta       ..\u2014-^\nPend Oreille \t\nPilot Gold \t\nPorter Idaho\t\nQuesntlle <_ \t\nRanchmen'i  _\nReward     -\nRelief ArUngton\t\nRoyalite\nRufui Argenta \u2014\nRuth Hope -\t\nSllvercrut _\nSilverado    _.\nSilversmith\t\nSnowflake      \u2014\nStandard S It h .....\nTaylor Wind -_.\nU D t \t\nUnited Empire __\nUnited OU\t\nVldette       \u2014-\nViking Gold m.\nWaterloo      \u2014\nWiverley Tan| \u2014\nWellington   \t\nWhitewater\t\nYmir Yankee Girl\n.10%\n.09%\n22\n.02\n47\n.12%\n.04\n.01%\nJJ-%\n.04%\n.10\n.02%\n35%\n46%\nM\nJ02%\n.01\n.00%\n.00%\n.02%\n.01%\n33\n45%\n.10%\n.43\n.11\n.10\n35\n.02%\n.19\n.11\n.05\n.02\n.03%\n.04%\n42\n.03%\nJ7\n.17\n.04%\n.03\n.01%\n33\n.02\nJ9\n45%\n47%\n48%\n.74\n.75\n.00%\n.00%\n.11\n.12\n.04\n.04%\nUl\n.18%\n.07%\n.07%\n.95\n.97\n.05\n.05K\n.05%\n.05%\n41\n.13\n.61%\n.65\n.08\n.08%\n.33%\n.34\n11.71\nHM\n.00%\n\u2014\n_)!%\n\u2014\nJ00%\n31\n6.\nam\n.01%\nM\n.00%\n.01 vt\n.46\n.50\n\u2014\nJl\naa\n.70\n-.02\n-03%\n\u00a36%\n\u2014.\n.75\n.71\n.05%\njM\n_\u00bb%\n~\u00bb*\n30%\n31\n.01%\n01%\n.09\n.05%\n.45\n\u2014\nWe Recommend Perrier\nWe believe shares ln Perrler Gold Minu Ltd. represent an. excellent opportunity for profit, and bate our\nrecommendation upon the following facts:\n1 Perrler ll located ln a fold mining district noted for\n\u2022 the number of ita successful operations. The mine Is\neasily acceuible and ih a poiition to obtain ample power\nat low ratei.\n2 Ore valuu (between .4 and 3 ots. fold per ton) are\n- consistent: the Perrier main vein hu been traced for\n3300 teet on the surface, developed to t depth ot 241 feet\nand opened laterally for several hundred feet, ihowing an\naverage width of at least two feet.\n3 The property Is held by the eompeny free of til en*\ni eumbrance. and 188,260 shtru of the stock iuued prior\nto the preient offering it held in escrow Hibiect to the\norder ot the Superintendent of Broken..\n4 Capitalization of Perrier, $250,000, is exceptionally low.\n\u2022 Upon completion of present financing there will be\n465.000 shares outstanding. Thus it will require a net profit\nof only $46,500 a year to provide a dividend of 10 cents per\nshare, equivalent to 20 ner cent return on the par value of\nthe stock.\nWe offer and recommend Treaiury tharti of\nT. ,\"- MER GOLD MW8S L'mited\nI V I (N.P.L.)\n| it 35 ee-its psr share\n\u00a3 Full Psrtloulart From\nP. E. POULIN \u2014 Investments*\nPHONE 70 GREEN BLOCK P.O. BOX Ttt\n PAQE TEN -\nHOLLYWOOD\nMOONGLOW\nThe Nail\nBeautlfler\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nPAINTER'S GRANDSON IN JAIL\nI VALENCIENNES, France, April\nT (CP-Havu)-Jean Charlei Millet,\ngrandson of Jean Francois Millet.\n\u2022 famous painter of \"The Reapers\"\n\u2022nd \"The Angelus,\" sat behind prison ban here today after a flight\nto Belgium in an attempt to escape\nI six-month jail sentence for forgery\nof hli grandfather's name on bogus\ncanvases.\nJ. A. Irving & Co.\nHIGH   QUALITY   FOOD\nPURVEYORS\nPHONE 161\nFREE DEUVERY\nCreston Firm to\nBuild Warehouse\nWANTED\nCLEAN COTTON\nRACS\nApply\nJfelsDtt latljj\nmatt\nCRESTON, B.C.-R. J. Long and\nC. W. Allan, president and managing director, respectively, of the\nfruit shipping houie of Long, Allan\nIt Long. Ltd., are on a viiit at\nOkanagan points this week, making\non InspecUon of warehouses and\npacking house equipment prior to\ncommencing the erection of their\nnew warehouse at Erlckson, to re\nplace the one destroyed by tire early\nlast November. The firm has secured George Currie to supervise\nconstruction, and work is expected\nto start after their return from the\nOkanagan inspection trip. Along\nwith the big new plant at Erlckson\nthe firm will also maintain their\nCreston warehouse and offices.\nMn. A. Corrle of Michel is \u00ab\nvisitor this week with ber son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nDouglas Cqrrie. The former had\nbeen on the sick list earlier in the\nweek.\nA. Gilroy and party were weekend auto visitors ot, Spokane, returning Sunday evening.\nMrs. J. W. Dow and Mn. H. H.\nTaylor got back the latter part of\nthe week from Trail, at which point\nthey had represented St. Stephen's\nchurch at a meeting of branches of\nPresbyterian Women's Missionary\nsocieties in the Kootenays. Mn.\nDow was named president ot the\nKootenay branch for 1936, and the\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg.\nAnnouncing tho Opening of\nMANUELS SHOE\nHOSPITAL\nFinest quality workmanship on\nall Shoe Repairing.\nAll Repairs Guaranteed\n\u2022NEXT TO TREMONT HOTEL\nBAKER ST.\nAnnouncement...\nLast January we engaged Mr. John Erb,\nbrewing expert of Victoria. He is a graduate\nof the Wahl Henius Brewing School of Chicago, was one of the outstanding students\nof his year, has held his Master Brewer\nCertificate for four years, is fully versed in\nthe modern methods of Brewing and is a\nnative son of B. C.\nHe has made material changes in our\nbrews, COLUMBIA LAGER and KOOTENAY RAINBOW, which have been thoroughly matured and will be on the market\nthe week of April 20th.\nDuring the past month we have installed\nat considerable expense new equipment\nwhich collects and compresses the gas created in the fermenting process of the Beer,\nthe use of which instead of artificial gas\nfor carbonating purposes gives increased\nflavor and a better foam holding quality\nIn the finished product.\nThe Week of April 20th Holds a\nGreat Treat for You\nKootenay Breweries\nLimited\nThta tdTertlaement u not published or displayed Or tbe Liquor contra\nBoard or by the Oo-ernment ot British Columbia.\nIt will odd greater pleasure to your gardening if you have good tools to work\nwith.\nCall and\nSelect the\nOnes Ton\nNeed Today\nCood Tools\nMean a Good\nGarden\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\n1937 conference will be hlld it Cm-\nton it wit irrtnged.\nMn. Joe Ktrpowlch of Sanca\nCreek visited with Mr. tnd Mn. W.\nHureck at the week-end, tnd hu\nentered Creiton hoipittl for treitment\nFrank Hurford, ledgerkeeper tt\nthe Btnk of Commerce ll Uking t\nthree weeki' vicaUon, ptrt of which\nwill be spent it his home tt Court*\nenay, on Vancouver Island. He travelled via Spokane.\nMiss Rachel Morrow ls at preient on a visit with her lister, Mn.\nOlson, it Lumberton.\nW. Marchbank of Creiton, prin-\nclpil of the local high ichool, wu\nat Cranbrook it the Week-end, for\nn meeting of the executive of the\nEast Kootenay High School Teachers association, at which matten\nwere discussed preceding tht meeting of the B.C. Teachen federation\nat the coast during the Euter holidays.\nMrs. R. C. Phllllpi of Fernie, hu\narrived on a visit wtth friendi tt\nCreiton, ind is tt present t gueit\nof Mn. Fred Klingensmith.\nMrs. R. H. Hassard was renewing\nacquaintances In Nelson during the\npast week.\nJ. Sheen of Cranbrook, owner of\nthe new hotel now under comtruc-\ntion tt Canyon itreet tnd Cruton\navenue, wu here during the week,\ninvestigating erection developments.\nGood time Is being made on all\nbranches of the work, with stuccoing\ndue to get under way u qoon as\nweather will permit. The root work\nwill start ihortly, after which electrical Installation, plumbing and\ninterior finiih will be puihed at top\nspeed.\nCanada hu been importing a million dolltn worth ot carbon black\na year for use ln such Industries u\ntire manufacture; now a way of obtaining lt from natural gu ln AlberU hai been developed.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ. APRIL 1 1936\nPension Appeal Court\na \"Complete Frost\" in\nOpinion of B. C. Man\nOTTAWA, April 7 (CP)-In the\nopinion of weitern Canada veterans\nthe pension appeal court was \"a\ncomplete frost,\" Robert McNichol,\nprovincial lecreUry, Britiih Columbia command of the Canadian\nLegion, told the ptrliamenUry committee on veterani affairs here today. While legally many ot Its decisions might be unassailable, nevertheless most of the considerations\nentering into ex-service men'i attain were outside matters of law.\nHe strongly deprecated amalgamating this court with the Canadian\npension commission.\nLegion officials trom the west\ncontinued today to pruent evidence\nto the committee. CipUin Percy J.\nPhilpott ot Saskatoon followed General Alex Rou, Dominion president\not the organisation.\nR.C.M.P. Officers\nArc Promoted\nOTTAWA, April 7 (CP)-Sub-tn-\nspector Oeorge Curleigh, commanding tht western arctic sub-division\not tht Royal Canadian Mounted police with headquarten at Aklavik,\nN.W.T., hu been promoted to the\nrank of inspector it wu announced\nhere today at headquarten of the\nR. C. M. P. Impector Curleigh Joined the force in 1920 ind hu seen\nservice in the eastern ind weitern\ntrctlc.\nImpector Percy Forde, uiliUnt\nlupply officer here, hu been ippointed superintendent tnd lub-ln-\nipertor Alexander Goodman, ste-\ntioned it OtUwa, hu been promoted to the rank of inspector.\nCANT MAKE INCOME TAX\nLAW PLAIN TO LAYMAN\nLONDON. AprU 7 (CP cable)-\nAfter more thin eight years' work,\na committee appointed by Winston\nChurchill when he waa chancellor\not the exchequer confesses in t report published today that It is \"a\nvain hope to codify the income\nUx law ao the layman can euily\nunderstand it.\"\nThe report runs 826 pages, including a draft bill nearly ta long\nas the India act, the biggest enactment parliament ever made. Churchill was chancellor ot the exchequer\nin the Baldwin cabinet of 1924-29.\nOne of the discoveries of the committee is that the word assessment\nis used in eight difference senses\nin existing legislition.\nJapanese Quoting\nToo Low\nMONTREAL, April 7 (CP).\u2014Jtp-\nanese textile interests were quoting\npricei much below those of Canadian mills with the result that Dominion Textile company wu receiving less orden and its Valley-\nfield, Que., plant was no longer producing cerUln fabrics because it\ncould not liquidate its present stock,\nG. Blair Gordon, managing director,\ntoday told the Turgeon royal commiuion investigating the textile industry.\n\"1 think we all know that up to\nnow (trom January 1, 1930) Japanese imports have not been very\nlarge,\" Gordon said. \"Nevertheless\nwe htve lost our production entirely\non what Japanese lines have come\ninto Canada.\" A previous witness\nstated 233,000 yards of Japanese\nsilks had bein imported lince the\ntint of thli yeir.\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nFINK'S EASTER SPECIALS\nOPEN ALL DAY WEDNESDAY \u00a3$   0$\nSUITS...\nMannish or Swggger will bt right up in front\non Easter Morn.\u2014Wearing the smartest costume\nfor Easter means wearing a suit.\u2014In fact it\nmeans wearing these very suits. In blue, brown,\ngrey or beige. Siies 14 to 44.\nTAILORED\n$9\n\u266695\nSWAGGERS\n$1\/1.95\n14\nCOATS FOR EASTER\nCoats like theu are as Easter-ish as the Lily.\nTweeds, plaids and checks.  In\nthis selection you will find just _C\\ OK\nthe coat in color and size. Sizes ''W'\n14 to 46. PRICED AS LOW AS\nAll two season linings.\nYOUR EASTER BONNET\n$1\nUndoubtedly you have decided to splurge on your Easter hat. No\nmatter what price you intend to pay see these new fur felts, straws\nand crepes. Never have we shown such a stock of flattering models.\nPRICED AS LOW AS \t\n.95\nLINGERIE\nSPECIAL \u2014 Satin Slips, lace\ntrimmed or tailored. White\nand Tea Rose. Sizes tfl CQ\n32 to 42. SPECIAL .. sfUll\nSILK KNIT PANTIES, BLOOMERS OR VESTS. White CM\nor Tea Rose mttJ\nHOSIERY\nADD LURE TO YOUR ANKLES\nLady Nelson Silk Crepe\u2014Full fashioned. All the new and\nattractive shades for Easter. Sizes 8V_ to 10'\/*. PAIR ...\nKayser Mir-O-Kleer \u2014 Knee length. Complete stock of spring\nshades. Sizes -Vi to 10.\nChiffon  75^\nCrepe    fl.OO\n.00\nCREPE STOCKINGS\nFull fashioned, pure thread silk. New spring shades. Sizes\n9, 9 Vi and 10 only. OM\nPAIR  UJ\nSHOES\nDesigned to wear with tailored suits and popular mannish clothes. An assortment of styles and colors to go\nwith every costume. A complete stock of colors and sizes.\n$2-95    $^.95    $A.95\nFINK'S LTD. SJ\nf-4\nIndian Frontier Is\nVital Says Chetwodc\nLONDON, April 7 (CP ctble) .\u2014\nIn considering the defence of India\nIt would be madness to take risks,\ndeclared Field Manhal Sir Philip\nChetwode in addressing the East\nIndia association today. Sir Philip\nhas just completed a five-year term\nat commander-in-chief ot the irmy\nin India.\n\"The Indian frontier,\" the field\nmarshal said, \"is vital, for it ls\nwithin touch of the Russian menace\nwhich advances tnd recedes according to the state of the rest of the\nworld and Russian politics.\"\nNephew Kimberley\nWoman Is Killed\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-Mrs. S. Wormington received word lut week\nof the death of her nephew, Piul\nSwasey, a prominent young business\nman of Phoenix, Arizona, who with\nthree other young men of Phoenix\nwere killed instantly when their\nairplane crashed in a canyon at\nOracle on March 23. An extensive\nsearch was made before finding\nthe plane and Its occupants on\nMarch 28.\nMr. tnd Mrs. Stone of Chapman\nCamp announce the engagement of\ntheir eldest daughter, Marjorie to\nBob Willis, elder son of Mr. and\nMn. G. B. Willis of Cranbrook, the\nwedding to take place on May 6.\nSix Drown in East\nHALIFAX, April 7 (CP).\u2014Bleak\ncrags of outer Halifax harbor and\nshores of the Bras d'Or lakes' East\nbay were combed for bodies today\nafter lives of six Nova Scotlans had\nbeen lost in storm-battered open\nboats.\nThirteen children were orphaned\nby tht apparent drownings ot two\nIndian couples missing since last\nTuesday after setting out on a five-\nmile trip across East bay in a row-\nboat from their Cape Breton reserve. Their overturned boat drifted\nashore Sunday. Bodies of Mr. tnd\nMrs. Joseph Michael and Mr. and\nMrs. Noel Manhall have not been\nfound.\nSEATTLE, April 7 (AP)-One\nman lost hli life todty when t\n|3S,000 fire swept through the floating salmon cannery Santa Flavia\non Lake Union.\nHerbert M. Watt, 23, a workman,\nwas trapped in the ship's hold when\na ladder gave way cutting off his\nescape. He burned to death. Several\nother workmen escaped.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nUNITED SERVICE CHURCH OF\nREDEEMER TONIGHT I.       (270)\nCall 93 for anappy tervlce. Comfortable heated can. B. 8. TAXIS.\n(113)\nBaby clinic at the Nursei Home\ntoday at 3 o'clock. (233)\nNewspapen, Magazines and Smokes\nBISHOP'S  NEWS  STAND\n(130)\nKEEP IN MIND-ROWING. CLUB\nDANCE, JUNE 5. (273)\nMonthly meeting Boud ot Trade\ntomorrow, 12 noon. Hume Hotel.\n(233)\nEAGLES MEET TONIGHT AT 8\nO'CLOCK.   INITIATION. (271)\nWiring repain ind lervice. F. H.\nSmith, 313 Baker SL Phone 680.\n(114)\n\"KINGSWAY\"   FINE   CUT   25c\nPER TIN AT VALENTINE'S. (131)\nEaster flowers and plants. Grlz-\nzelfc's* and Kandyland, your florists. Open evenings. (233)\nEASTER TIES\u2014Shades and pattern! men liki at\u2014\n-JACK  BOYCE'S-\n(132)\nGet Under\nA New Hat for Easter\nYou can be wearing a new suit,\na new topcoat, new shirt and\ntie, but if your hat is old your\nentire appearance will be completely spoiled. Your hat is the\nfirst thing people notice! Get\nunder a new one today. These\nare new\u2014new in style\u2014new\nin color!\n$3.50 to $8.50\n\u00a3MORY'\u00a7\nLimited\nOPEN ALL DAY TODAY\nDEATH RACE FAILS\nQUEBEC, April 7 (CP).-Story of\nan unsuccessful race against desth\nby thc government icebreaker N. B.\nMcLean while taking a sick woman\nfrom her isolated Island home to\nhospital was unfolded today by the\ndepartment of marine. The woman,\nMn. J. H. Deslisle, was taken aboard\nwhen the icebreaker put into port\nat South Point, a village on Anticoiti\nisland, to be taken to hoipital at one\nof the places touched by the McLean. She died shortly after.\nSHIP FIRE QUENCHED\nSAN FRANCISCO, April 7 (AP)\n\u2014Uncheaslng labor of the Tricolor's\ncrew has at last quenched the fire\nwhich has raged for three days in\ntht ship's hold, and the Norwegian\nvessel now may head for San Francisco, Glove wireless reported late\ntoday.\nThe message wai received here\nvia the President Wilson, Dollar liner which has been standing by, together with the steamship Tacoma,\nin mid-Pacific between Japan and\nHawaii.\nT0WNSENDER8 REVOLT\nLOS ANGELES. April 7 (API-\nOpen revolt within the ranks of\nthe Townsend old tge pension flared today when George H. Highley,\npresident of Towmend Club 93,\nlargest in the nation, led approximately 1800 memben in a clean bolt\nfrom the parent organization.\nHighley predicted the entire\nmembership of 28,000 would follow\nhim in the revolution against Dr.\nFrancis E. Towsend, founder of the\nmovement.\nCASH   GIVEN   JUDGE\nWASHINGTON, April 7 (API-\nNew testimony regarding cash payments to Federal Judge Halsted L.\nRitter of Florida, split receivership\nfees, and only partial Income tax\nreporting ot iuch fees by a witness\nwas received by the senate today\nin its impeachment trial of the\nsouthern jurist. The evidence came\nin further examination of A. L.\nRankin, West Palm Beach attorney\nand former law partner of the defendant.\nTHIRD READING  IN SENATE\nOTTAWA, April 7 (CP)-Legls-\nlation to authorize equalization of\npayments to western wheat and\ncoarse grain producen who sold to\nthe pools in 1930 was given third\nreading in the senate today in\namended form.\nThe bill was then rushed over to\nthe house of commons asking concurrences In the change.\nElectrical equipment has been devised, so that florists can get \"clean\ndirt\" for plants by sterilizing the\nsoil to kill weed seed, Insects and\nfungi.\nK. P. whist drive and dance tonight, 8 p.m. Refreshments, admis-\nlson 23 cents. Special prizes. (272)\nEASTER FLOWERS \u2014 ORDER\nEARLY, PHONE 215, MRS. HAP-\nARTY. (237)\nConnor leads again with monel\nmetal thermo tub, streamlined\nwringer and jumbo rollen.      (115)\n'SEE\"\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all vour needi In plumb-\nInn repaln, alterations, and\nPh. 815     301 VICTORIA, ST.\nInstallations.\nCoronation Date to\nBe Proclaimed Next\nMonth in Britain\nLONDON, April 7 (CP cable)\u2014\nThe date in May, 1937, upon which\nthe coronation of King Edward will\ntake place will be proclaimed next\nmonth with much the same cere-\nmony as attended the proclamation\nof hii majesty upon his accession ]\nto the throne last January.\nHeralds and pursuivants will at-1\ntend the great officen of the College |\not Arms, who will make the announcement at the same historle j\nfour points in London from which J\nthe accession proclamation was delivered. These are St. James' palace, 1\nCharing Cross, Temple Bar and the-]\nroyal exchange.\nThe actual date will probably be\nannounced in the house ot commons by Prime Minister Baldwin\non the same day as the Duke of\nNorfolk, in his capacity of Earl\nMarshal,  issues  the proclamation.\nUs\u00ab the Want Ads\u2014It Pays!\nnp.VB   The greatest of all\nmar skin cre,m,_\nMakei   you   look   ten   yeari\nyounger and feel younger, tt\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nThl Prescription Drugglit\nPHONE 1\nPicture Framing\nA house without pictures\nI ii like \u2022 room without\nwindowi. a cheerless thing\nIndeed. Perhaps vou have\nprints stored away that\nwould look better hanging\non the walls. Bring them\nin todav and hive them\nframed. Our pricei ire\nvery reasonable and the\nworkmanship unsurpassed.\nAllen's Art Shoppe\nHeadqyartert for\nEASTER CARDS\n-mimSVS^ilm^S-^im^iS^S-iV,\nDRESS\nSHIRTS\nby Toofee\nwith the\n\"MARVEL\" COLLAR\nAll New Patterns\ner Plain Colors\n$1.50, $2.00,\n$2.50\nGODFREYS'\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE  CLOTHES\"\n318 BAKER     PHONE 270\nWe do not guarantee delivery of\nHot Cross Buns ordered after today.\nCHOQUETTE BR08. Phona 258.\n(191) :\nGrizzclle's ahd Kandyland tor i\nNelson grown pot Easter lilies, roses,.\ncinerarias, hydranges, primulas, hy* I\nacinths, azaleas, etc. Order youn I\ntoday. (258)\nCURLERS ANNUAL MEETING\n7:30   tonight.   Canadian   Legion\nhall. Election ot officen tnd organization for next season. Full attendance requested. (252)\nCIVIC CENTRE BADMINTON\nHALL open tonight at 7:30 to ill\nmemben of bidmlnton clubi Including pliyen In tournament. Ad*\nminion fee 25c. Nelson Badminton\nusociitlon. (289)\nTeachers and Studinti\nEaster excursion rates, fart tnd\none-tenth  return, from  3 days\nbefore school closes  to 3 days\nsfter it openi.\nCREYHOUND LINES\nNelson  Depot 205  Baker SL\nPhone 800\n(142)\nTODAY\n-ONLY\u2014\nTHE FASTEST FUN SHOW\nIN MONTHSI\nWhen Hard-as-Nails\nRaft teaches Soft-as-\nSilk Bennett how he\nholds his women . . .\nRAFT   BENNETT\nOUR SECOND BIG FEATURE\nPauline Lord - Basil Rathbone\nBring You a Supreme Emotional Thrill in\n\"A FEATHER IN HER HAT*\n-COMING-\nTHURSDAY\nXttifeeM\nEDDIE\nCANTOR\n__3nlT\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. 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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"}]}}