{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0412536":{"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":"2022-04-08","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1937-03-24","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412536\/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":" y#.\nReeves MacDonald fie&ains 13\non Vancouver Market\n\u2014Pa&e Eleven\nDetroit, Maroons and Ran&er;\nWin Openers in Playoffs\n\u2014Pa&e Nine\nVOLUME 35\nFIVE CENT8 PER COPY\nBIA CANADA\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING. MARCH 24, 1937.\nNUMBER   200\nITALIANS WILL \u00bbTAY IN WAR TILL END\nCHRYSLER AND\nLEWIS MEET\nMURPHYTODAY\nAuto Magnate Firm in\nStand Against\nStrikers\nNOACTSONON\nj EVICTION YET\nHope to End Sit-down\nStrike of 6000\nSoon\nDETROIT, March 23 (API-Michigan's automotive peacemaker, Governor Frank Murphy, drew lhe pattern tonight for a new \"Lansing\nAgreement\", by which he hoped tn\ninduce 6000 sitdown strikers peacefully to end their 16-day occupancy\nof eight Chrysler corporation automobile plants here.\nWalter P. Chrysler and John L\nLewis, of the committee for industrial organization, accepted invitations to meet with the governor in\nLansing tomorrow but Chrysler\nadded:\n'We will not enter any trade or\ncomplete agreement to get the men\nout of the plants.\"\nLewis earlier had informed the\ngovernor he would be present, but\nsaid the invitation suggested \"that 1\nconfer under duress.\"\nAn injunction calling for the eviction of the sitdown strikers was issued in circuit court last week, but\nno steps have been taken thus far\nto enforce it.\nA crowd, estimated at upward of\n60,000 by Police Supt. Fred W.\nFrahm and at 250,000 by union headquarters, swarmed into downtown\nDetroit at the dinner hour to hear a\nspeaking program headed by Homer\nMartin, president of the United\nAutomobile Workers of America.\nDuchess Missing\nNo Blame Laid\nin Boy's Death\nDeath of Emmanuel\nSuckent Accident\nJury Decides\nThat the death of Emmanuel Suck-\n>nt, 12-year-old bicyclist fatally inured when hit by a car near Oliver\nJunday evening, was an accident,\nind that no blame could be attached\no anyone, was the verd'ct returned\n>y a coroner's jury which investi-\n;ated the death Tuesday, according\n0 radioed information to divisional\nleadquarters of the provincial po-\nice at Nelson.\nThe lad, riding his bicycle about\nhree miles south of Oliver, was\ntruck by a car driven by Anthony\nleopel of Oliver, allegedly when he\nwerved in front of the car. He died\nif his injuries about 3 a. m. Sunday.\nFIRE IN DRYDOCK\nDAMAGES SHIP\nBOSTON, March 23 (AP)-Flames\namaged a dry dock, a ship cradled\nn it, and threatened another vessel\noday before firemen brought it\nnder control.\nFire Chief Samuel Pope estimat-\nd damage to the Simpson dry dock\nf the Bethlehem shipbuilding com-\nany and to the San Gil, a United\n'ruit steamer undergoing rsnairs,\nt $30,000.\nOil, believed to have leaked onto\nhe dock from the recently ground-\nd tanker Halo,, also under repair\nere, fed the flames.\nDUCHESS OF BEDFORD\nLONDON, March 23 (AP)-Alarm\nfor the safety of Englands aged flying Duchess of Bedford mounted tonight when no trace of her had been\nfound more than 24 hours after her\ndisappearance on a routine flight.\nLand and aerial searchers combed\na 20-mile-square area in the Bod-\nford fenlands without result, A royal air force plane joined in the\nsearch.\nAll available policemen and scores\nof estate workers were concentrated\nin the countryside between Bedford\nand Cambridge while the duke\nawaited news at home.\nThe duchess took off yesterday for\na two-hour trip over flooded meadows.\nThe duchess, now 71,. began flying at 62. She has one son, the Marquess of Tavistock.\nUNION OFFICIAL\nWARNS FORD\n\"Might as Well Get\nReady to Do\nBusiness\"\nDETROIT, Mar-b. 23 (APJ.-JleV\ndressing a gathering of union workers who packed the concourse Of\nCadillac square here tonight, Homer Martin, president of the United\nAutomobile Workers of America\nsaid \"Henry Ford might as well\nget ready to do business with his\norganized workers.\" More than 100,-\n000 persons filled the square.\nAddressing himself to Ford. Mar\ntin said: \"You can't stop the union.\nYou can't keep your workmen from\njoining the union. The automobile\nworkers of this city and nation\nare going to organize, and we are\ntelling you that is going to Happen.\nYou might as well get ready to do\nbusiness with your organized\nworkers.\"\nCharge Manager of\nBurns Refused to\nRecognize Union\nVANCOUVER, March 23 (CP).\u2014\nRobert Cranston, former employee\nin ihe casing room of Burns &\nCompany's Vancouver packing\nplant, told an inquiry into the\nthree months' old Burns strike that\nPlant Manager Walter Williamson\ntold an employees' delegation he\nwould refuse to recognize an \"outside\" union.\nCranston, testifying before Judge\nJ. C. Mcintosh at resumed hearings\nof the inquiry here today, quoted\nWilliamson as saying he \"would\nwork the plant with only two men\nrather than recognize a union with\nI outside affiliations.\"\nN PERCENT INCREASE IN FARM\nPRODUCTION PLANNED BY NAZIS\nVast Agricultural Adjustment Program Is\nAnnounced by Goering; to Replace\nLaggards With Producers\nBERLIN\", March 23 (AP)-Farm-\nra were warned tonight those who\nail to pull their weight in German's\ntruggle for self-sufficiency will\nave to make room tor those who\nan.\nGeneral Herman Goering, guiding\n>rce of Germany's four-year plan\n>r self-sufficiency, Issued the warn-\nig to farm leaders assembled in\nerlin and backed it up with a de-\nree.\nHe made known a vast agricul-\nural adjustment program to re-\ntore denuded farm land, extend\nredit to farmers, record individual\nirm production and provide bet-\nhomes for agricultural workers.\nThe governmental decree, pub-\nshed after his warning to farmers,\n\u25a0powered agricultural authorities\nreplace an unwilling or ineffici-\nt farmer  wilh one who  knows\nw to produce\nIt also  authorized authorities  to\nimpel owners of idle agricultural\nind to choose between utilizing it\n*\u25a0 good production or turning it\nover io someone who will.\nThe decree did not mention church\nlands specifically but it was recalled churches are among Germany's most important large landholders.\n(The German government last\nmonth called on the churches to\nshare part of their lands with the\nlandless and spoke of the \"necwsity\nof compulsory measures\" if they\nfailed to do so voluntarily).\nFive million acres of land would\nbe improved, Goering told the farm\nleaders. A 30-per cent increase in\nfarm production is the goal\nA grant of 200,000,000 marks ($80,-\n000,000) was announced for advancing agricultural readjustment\nin 1937. By 1940, a total of 1,000,000,-\n000 marks ($400,000,000) would have\nbeen made available, Goering Mid.\nThe price of rye was increased to\nspur production, and Goering announced economic advisory counsels would have power to force a\nlaggard farmer to lease his farm if\nnecessary.\nCANNOTPREVENT\nCOMPANY AID TO\nPOLITICAL PARTY\nOnly Candidates Must\nFile Return on\nFunds\nBUT EVEN THAT\nNOT ENFORCED\nChanges Suggested in\nDiscussions by\nCommittee\nOTTAWA, March 23 (CP). \u2014\nNothing can be done under the\nElections act to prevent corporations from 'contributing to the\ncampaign funds of politics; parties, according to views submitted\ntoday to the commons committee\nstudying changes In tha act.\nElection machinery takes no\ncognizance of parties but only of\nIndividual candidate!, The act\nrequires candidates whether successful or unsuccessful to file a\nreturn giving their expenses and\npersonal contributions received.\nHowever, corporations usually\nmake their contribution! to the\ncentral party fund and would not\nbe shown In these returns.\nThe question came up when Hon.\nGrOte Stirling (Cons., Yale) asked\nif the act required unsuccessful\ncandidates to file returns as well\nas the successful ones. Jules Cas-\ntonguay, chief electoral officer, said\nall the candidates were required\nto file returns within two months\nof the election.\nThe returns should be handed to\nthe returning officers and published\nat the candidates' expense, he said.\nThe returning officer was not required to make a report on these\nreturns to Ottawa and therefore\nMr. Castonguay was not In a position to know how completely candidates obeyed tbe law, but many\nreturning officers had told him of\ncandidates failing to make returns.\nLAW NOT ENFORCED\nNo steps bad been taken to enforce the law, Mr. Castonguay said.\nThe act provided for heavy penalties where a member of parliament took his seat without making\nthe expense return, but it was not\nenforced. No action was taken in\nthe matter by the committee.\nG. A. McLean (Lib., Simcoe East)\nsaid there was general agreement\ncorporations should keep out of\nelections. If a law were passed\nforbidding them to make party\ncontributions it would be difficult\nfor them to evade the law without\nthe contributions being shown in\ntheir books. He appreciated it\ncould not be taken care of in the\nElection act, however.\n\"It would have to be put in the\nCompanies act,\"^ C. E. BotKwell\n(Lib., Swift Current), chairman,\nsuggested.\nMembers of the committee said\neven then it would be impossible\nto regulate companies which operated under provincial charters.\nRobert Fair (S.C. Battle River)\nprotested the committee should at\nleast make a recommendation asking parliament to take such steps\nas might be necessary to prevent\ncorporation contributions.\nThe committee voted down his\nmotion on the ground it could not\ngive parliament a lead as to how\nthe curbing should be effected,\nCanada's New\nStamp\nLumberman Dies\nVANCOUVER, March 23 (CP).-\nAlbert Eugene Beaulieu, prominent\nBritish Columbia lumberman and\nformer chief lumber inspe.-tor for\nthe B.C. Lumber and Shingle Manufacturers' association, died in hospital here today. He was 63 years\nold.\nNO BLAME FOR BLAST\nNEW LONDON, Tex., March 23\n(AP)\u2014Convinced there Is no evidence upon which to base prosecutions for the London ichool blast\nwith Its 455 deaths, public officials\nmarshalled technical and legal\npreventives tonight against any\nsuch future disaster. \"There was\nno evidence at all on which te\nbase a prosecution,\" Secretary of\nState Edward Clark reported to\nGov. Jame* V. Allred at Austin\nupon his return from Nasw London. As a national guard captain,\nClark sat In the military court\nthat investigated the disaster, and\ndecided It. resulted from an accumulation of escaped natural gas.\nSTEAMER SINKS\nBOSTON, March 23 (AP)-Coast\nguard headquarters tonight reported\na message from the cutter Chelan,\nsaid the Norwegian steamer BJerkli\nsank at 10:50 p.m. E.S.T. Commander Lyndon Spenner said in his message the Chelan immediately headed for Boston with the 17 rescued\nmembers of the crew of the Norwegian vessel. They were expected to\nreach their dock at the navy yard\nhere late Thursday.\nA new, non-commemorative regular issue of Canadian postage stamps,\nbearing the portrait of'His Majesty\nKing George VI, will be issued for\nsale by the post office department\nof Canada April 1. The stamps issued will be in the following denominations: One cent, green; two\ncent, brown, and three cent. red.\nThe three cent stamp is pictured\nabove, and according to the department officials, the stamps will be\nidentical with the exception of denominational values. It is expected\nfurther issues of this series will be\nissued about the time of the coronation. These are the first stamps issued in the British Empire showing\nHia Majesty King George VI.\nNAZIS DECLARE A\nTRUCE WITH THE\nPROTESTANTS\nBERLIN, March 23 (AP)-Tha\nNazi government declared a truce\ntonight In Iti quarrel with rebellious protestiants rather than en-\ngag* In simultaneous conflict with\nboth Catholic and protaatant\nchurches.\nHans Kerr!, relchminlster fcr\nchurch affairs, issued a decree reconstituting evangelical \u25a0 church\ngovernments as they existed before\nFeb. 15, whan Adolf Hitler ordered\ngeneral synod leal aleetlons, and\nordered maintenance cf th* atatui\nque until the church elections, for\nwhich no date, has been set.\nThe truce wai declared, a spokesman for Kerrl'i office explained\nfor the purpose of \"ensuring freedom of faith and conscience aa well\nas freedom of the election\"\u2014opportunity for protettanta to choose\nthe kind of government thay want\nMany New Taxes\nin Saskatchewan\nREGINA, Sask., March 23 (CP)-\nThe levying ot corporation taxes on\nchain stores, and grain elevators,\nestijnated to net the province increased revenues of $300,000 annually was forecast in the budget\nbrought down in the Saskatchewan\nlegislature today by Premier W. J.\nPatterson, provincial treasurer.\nIn addition increases in taxation\nwill be levied on telegraph companies on the basis of offices in operation, and the present taxes on express companies will be increased.\nNo increase is in prospect, for insurance companies.\nSHORTAGE  OF  SHEET   IRON\nFEARED   BY   BENNETT\nOTTAWA. March 23 (CP)\u2014Canada is faced with a possible shortage\nof galvanized sheet iron as a result\nof the rearmament program in the\nUnited Kingdom, the house of commons learned today as Conservative\nLeader R. B. Bennett urged a temporary lowering of the tariff on\nblack sheets from the United States\nfor galvanizing. Thus the house witnessed the leader of the protectionist Conservative party pressing a\nliberal government to lower tariffs.\nHon. C. A. Dunning, finance minister, said he was not sure of all the\nfacts but if the facts were as Mr.\nBennett put them he would not\nhesitate to act.\nSOCIAL CREDITER\nDEMANDS ACTION\nON ALTA. PUNS\nR. E. Ansley Asks That\nSocial Credit Be\nStarted at Once\nSEVERAL VOTE\nAGAINST GOV'T.\nHon. J. C. Bowen Is\nSworn in as New\nLieut.-Gov.\nBy GEORGE FINLAY\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON, March 23 (CP)\u2014Immediate introduction of a definite\nplan of Social Credit waa demanded\nin the Alberta legislature today by\nR. E. Ansley (S.C, Leduc).\n\"We want to know where we are\ngoing.\" said Mr. Ansley, in continuing the budget debate when the\nhouse resumed after. the adjournment following the death last week\nof Hon. P. C. H. Primrose, lieutenant-governor.\n\"The time has come when we must\nhave definite plans,\" he added, as\nhe attacked the present budget as\nan \"orthodox budget with little or\nnothing as regards the introduction\nof Social Credit\"\nHe advocated the bringing of a\nSocial Credit advisory expert to aid\nthe government.\nWANTS MAJOR\nDOUGLAS\n\"I would like to see Major C. H.\nDouglas, British economist and 'father of Social Credit', or a person\nequally experienced, come to Alberta,\" he said.\nTwice during the \u25a0 afternoon session, Social Credit members voted\nagainst the government on a division to sustain the speaker's rulings\nagainst resolutions ot D. M. Duggan.\nConservative leader. . First, the\nspeaker was sustained 42 to 14, and\non the second. 46 to 10,   ,\nJames Hansen, Taber, and S. A. G.\nBarn\u00ab,^n>*n^,'*eOTW\"of the\n.Social. Credit party caucus lait year,\nvoted with- the Conservative and\nLiberal opposition as well as six\nfollowers of.Premier Aberhart Other Social Crediters voting against\nwere Fred Anderson, Calgary; C,\nCockroft, Stettler; C. R. Ross, Atha-\nbaska; A. L. Blue, Ribstone; H. E.\nIngrey, Drumheller; G. L. MacLachlan, Coronation.\nWith a brief but colorful ceremony, Hon. John C. Bowen of Edmonton was sworn in as lieutenant-\ngovernor shortly before the house\nopened this aiternoon. The oath of\noffice was aadministered by Chief\nJustice Horace Harvey.\nIt was the first time in the history\nof Alberta a lieutenant-governor has\nbeen sworn in while the legislature\nis in session.\nTonight, a party caucus was In\nsession, considering future legislation plans.\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nBy The Canadian Press\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Industrial\nstocks closed higher.\nToronto mines\u2014Base metals and\ngolds higher; oils lower.\nNew York\u2014Stocks closed higher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat *, cents higher\nto unchanged.\nLondon \u2014Bar silver lower; other\nmetals higher,\nNew York\u2014Bar silver, lead and\nzinc unchanged; copper higher.\nMontreal\u2014Silver lower.\nAt New York\u2014Cotton and coffee\nlower; sugar and rubber higher.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar advanced 1-64 to 1.00 7-\u00ab4.\nClaims River of Gold In East Kootenay\nALBERTA TpWN\nWITHOUT A MAYOR\nHANNA, Alta., March 23 <CP)-\nThis town 150 miles onrtheast of\nCalgary was without a mayor tonight because of dispute in council\nover taxation of the Canadian Legion Memorial hall. The former\nchief magistrate I, F. Shacker, theater operator and heavy tax payer,\nresigned after the council had adopted a motion calling for the rebate\nof 1935 taxes to the Memorial hall.\nOTTAWA, March 23 (CP)-Ef-\nforts will be made to close parliament April 10, It was learned from\ngovernment sources tonight. This\nwill entail forenoon sittings early\nnext week, possibly starting next\nTuesday.\nBLUM WINS ON VOTE\nPARIS, March 24 (Wednesday)\u2014\n(AP)\u2014The popular front government of Premier Leon Blum fought\nway through a bitter all night debate\non the Clichy riots today to win a\n362-to-?15 vote of confidence from\nthe chamber of deputies.\nINTENSIVE SEARCH\nFOR SLAYER OF\nCHILD\nWINNIPEG, March 23 (CP). -\nSearch for the slayer of six-year-old\nJulia Johnson, who mysteriously\ndisappeared from the yard at her\nhome nine years ago, was on tonight.\nOld fyles, long lying on police\nshelves, were scanned closely for\nclues that might lead to identity\nof the old man with the brownish\nbeard and moustache seen with\nJulia the day she disappeared.\nLikewise were efforts being made\nto determine if the old man with\nthe brownish beard was the same\nman whom Julia a few days before\nshe disappeared had called the\n\"boogey man.\" She had run home\nbreathlessly that day.\nAn underground river.of gold in Eaat Kootenay! That is what\nWilliam A. Drayton, socially prominent in New York, and nephew of\nthe late John Jacob Astor, believes he has found. A mining engineer,\nDrayton is en route to British Columbia, where he will begin placer mining operations on an old underground river bed which he discovered\n40 feet below Wild Horse creek, near Fort Steele, where already he\ncarries on extensive mining operations. Drayton is accompanied by Mrs.\nDrayton, the former Joan Bergere, daughter of one of Australia's foremost wool king and breeder of thoroughbred horses. Photo shows the\ncouple as they arrived in Los Angeles.\nCoronation Day\nChairmen Are\nSENTENCED  FOR\nDEMONSTRATION\nCALGARY, March 23 (CP)-Con-\nvicted on charges of unlawful assembly arising out of i protest\nparade on a downtown Calgary\nstreet, eight unemployed were sentenced to terms varying from 30\ndays to one year by Mr Justici\nT. M. Tweedie in Alberta supreme\ncourt here today.\nComplete Committees\nand Plans to Be\nOrganization for coronation day\nexercises at Nelson' was lined up at\na meeting at the city hall Tuesday\nnight of the general committee\nformed a week ago. Committee\nchairmen were named and were instructed to report next week to a\ngeneral ma*eting their complete committees and their plans for the day.\nAlderman H. B. Lindsay presided,\nand R. W. Dawson served as secretary.\nSteps toward obtaining a fireworks display for a climax to the\nday marked the meeting, but definite arrangements remained to be\ncompleted. Tentative plans indicated included a morning parade and\nceremony, probably at the cenotaph,\nVernon street; an afternoon parade\nto the Civic Centre and a Pageant\nof Empire by Nelson schools; a pageant of the coronation ceremony\nby Kokanee chapter, I.O.D.E.;\" a\nfireworks display in the evening;\nand possibly a dance.\nCommittee chairmen were named\nas   follows:\nParade\u2014Major A. E.  Dalgas.\nSchools\u2014G. E. Sparkes.\nDecorations\u2014James Spencer.\nBuilding\u2014R. E. Potter, city engineer.\nRecreation and sports\u2014Bland Marley.\nFloats\u2014F. R. Pritchard.\nSpeaker\u2014R. W. Dawson.\nFinance\u2014Alderman H. B. Lindsay, chairman; with chairmen of\nall other committees.\nPublicity and advertising\u2014F. F.\nPayne.\nSOVIET AIR BASE\nAT NORTH   POLE\nIN OFFING?\nMOSCOW, March 23 (AP) -Ful\nfilament of a long-cherished Russian\nplan for a north pole air base to\nspeed transarctic flights to America\nappeared a step nearer tonight.\nO. J. Schmidt, director of the\nSoviet northern sea route, departed\nfor Archangel, on the White sea and\nnear the Arctic circle, presumably\nto supervise preliminary surveys.\nHis departure yesterday was secret, and official comment was\nlacking on reports plan for the\nnorth pole base were nearing completion.\nCHARGE PLOT IN FRANCE\nPARIS. March 24 (Wednesday)\n(CP)\u2014Communist charges of a carefully planned plot whereby Colonel\nFrancois de la Rocque's fascist-Inclined Social party intended to overthrow the Popular Front government by force provoked a near riot\nearly today in the chamber of deputies. Jacques Duclos, communist\nvice-president of the chamber, made\nthe accusation and further accused\ncertain \"fascist groups\" of acting In\nliaison with Reichschancellor Hitler. Nerves frayed as the heated debate on last week's Clichy rioting\nwent into early morning hours and\nthe allegation brought members to\ntheir feet in stormy comment.\nLAST NIGHT'S\nPLAYOFF SCORES\nIN MAJOR HOCKEY\nDetroit 4, Canadiens 0.\nRangers 3, Toronto 0.\nM-roons 4, Boston 1.\n(S\u00abe Page 7 for stories)\nVOTE SOON ON\nR.R. STRIKE\nMONTREAL, March 23 (CP)-Se\ncrecy clamped down an even tighter\nlid tonight on all developments ln\nCanada's railway wage fight.\nLips were sealed all aloi^g the line\nas rail union leaders debated all day\non their general strike issue and\nhigh officers of the two major railways got together to consider the\nmen's demands for collective pa,*\nraises.\nBut though no one on either side\nwould talk, every outward sign sug.\ngested the spokesmen for 117.000\nworkers were on the verge of voting,\none way or the other, on the question of a coast-to-coast strike.\nClipper Reaches\nKingman Reef\nKINGMAN REEF, March 23 (AP)\n\u2014(Via Pan American Airways Radio)\u2014The Pan American clipper\nlanded in Kingman Reef's Coral lagoon today to complete the first\nmid-pacific phase ot its pioneering\nflight through the south seas to New\nZealand.\nThe big plane required only seven\nhours, 53 minutes to negotiate the\n1067 miles from Honolulu, landing\nat 4:45 p.m. P.ST.\nEULER ON WAY\nTO OTTAWA\nLOS ANGELES, March 23 (CP).\u2014\nHon. W. D. Euler, Canad'an minister of trade and commerce, left\nhere by train today en route to\nOttawa. He is expected to arrive\nin Chicago Thursday afternoon. Mr.\nEuler arrived here last Saturday\non his return from Australia.\nAMBASSADOR IN\nLOWN MAKES\nTHE STATEMENT\nDeclaration Termed\n\"Unofficial\", But\nCauses Furore\nFRANCE. BRITAIN\nGO INTO CONFAB\n\"Hands Off\" Group to\nAsk U. S. to Join\nin Pact\nBy PAUL LOUIS BRET\n(Copyright, 1937. by the Havas\nNews Agency)\nLONDON, March 23 (CP-Havas)\n\u2014Count Grandi, Italian ambassador,\ncreated a sensation at a European\nnon - intervention sub - committee\nmeeting today by expressing, it was\nlearned, (he personal opinion not a\nsingle Italian \"volunteer\" would\nleave'Spain until the civil war was\nover. He asked to have this assertion, which he represented as strictly unofficial, kept out of the communique on the day's developments.\nA furore followed. The Russian\ndelegate warned such a stand would\nendanger European peace. French\nand Swedish representatives saw in\nit at least a threat to the neutrality\ncommittee's continued existence. All\ndelegates, including German Ambassador Joachim von Ribbentrop,\nrushed io -get in touch with their\nhome governments.\nHURRIED  CONFERENCE\nThe Earl of Plymouth, commlttM\nchairman and British foreign undersecretary, hurriedly called Foreign\nSecretary Eden and French Ambassador Corbin to a Whitehall conference.\nEarlier today the Havas news\nagency reported Count Galeazzo\nCiano, Italian foreign minister, protested formally to British Ambassador Sir Eric Prummond against\nBritish new^aper references to the\ndefeat suffered by Italian troops in\nSpain. He took particular exception\nto allusions to Caporetto, scene of\nan Italian retreat in the Great War.\n\u2022In. some quarters the Spanish setback had been referred to as a\n\"Little Caporetto\".\nMAY ASK U.S. TO JOIN\nLONDON, March 23 (CP)-Europe's long and stormy efforts to\nisolate the Spanish civil war took\nan unexpected turn tonight with a\nmove to poll the 27 nations adhering\nto the \"hands off Spain\" pact on\nthe question of inviting the United\nStates and other non-European\nstates to join.\nThe subcommittee of the 27-na-\ntion group announced it would-ask\nthe full membership to state their\nviews about extending the roster\noutside Europe, with the idea of\nobtaining action, perhaps worldwide, to smother the inherent danger of the Spanish conflict spreading.\nWhile Britain accepted tonight an\nItalian explanation that only medical aid had gone to Spanish insurgents since the ban on volunteer enlistments, official circles here expressed fear Premier Mussolini stiil\nmight scrap the Spanish non-intervention agreement.\nThe Italian explanation, following\nan official British government inquiry into movements of troops\nsince the non-intervention deadline,\nwas that a medical unit landed at\nCadiz, Spain. March 5, two weeks\nafter the neutrality committee ban\non volunteer?. No Italian troops have\nlanded in Spain, Italy informed\nBritain. Doctors and nurses do not\ncome under the volunteer ban,\nwhich is against fighting forces.\nBritish officialdom expressed satisfaction with the Italian stand on\nthat point.\nIL   DUCE SLAM8\nENGLISH   CHURCHMEN\nROME, March 23 (AP)\u2014Premier\nMussolini, on the 18th anniversary\nof the fascist, party's founding, to-\n(Contlnued on Paie Twelvel\nPolice Operatives Charged With\nBreaking Law by Buying Liquor\nAlleged to Have Made Purchases to' Obtain\nEvidence in Two Vancouver Cases\nVANCOUVER, March 23 (CP)-\nSummonses were issued here today against two Vancouver police\noperatives charging they unlawfully\npurchased liquor to obtain police\nevidence in alleged bootlegging\ncases. It marked the first step in an\naction.which will decide the future\ncourse of police in enforcing the\nLiquor act.\nActing on informations laid by\nThomas S. Hurley, Vancouver barrister, Police Court Clerk W. W.\nCompton issued the summonses\nagainst Charles F. Weldon and Oscar\nGerwin who are alleged to have\npurchesed liquor to obtain evidence\nin  two  Vancouver  cases  last De\ncember.\nMr. Hurley bases his prosecution\nof the police operatives on a recent decision of the Alberta court\nof appeal which held it was unlawful for police operatives to break\nthe law in obtaining evidence unless they had been authorized to do\nso by the attorney-general of the\nprovince or the officer commanding\nthe Royal Canadian Mounted Fo-\nllce in the district.\nThe barrister swore the information against Weldon several days\nago but a summons was not issued\nby Police Court Clerk Crompion until today when Hurley laid tiie\ncharge against Gerwin.\n*****\n '\"\"\n**arl*T*>M*pST\"\nll.*Ma-Ml'W^.lfl..sa.a\nP\u00bbOB TWO\nHF\u00bb<0M CURIFPS TOAST THE\n\"ROARING GAME\" AT BANQUET\nHume Silver Room Scene of Foregathering;\nWinter's Prizes Presented; Best Wishes\nExtended to Adolph Browne\nFor nearly four hours, Nelson devotees of \"the roaring game\" foregathered about the festive board in\nthe Silver Room of the Hume hotel\nat the annual banquet of the Nelson\nCurling club Tuesday evening.\ndrank toasts, told stories, heard\ntalks on the game, and applauded\nthe winners of the season's prizes\nAdolph Browne, president of the\nclub, was toastmaster, and in addition to the toasts, there was a considerable mu.sieal program.\nRev. J. A. Donell said grace and\nE. Gould, substituting for L. R. Butler, gave a piano-accordian solo.\nAfter the toast to the King was\nhonored, Mayor J. P. Morgan, on\nbehelf of the city, congratulated the\nclub on the successful season just\nconcluded, expressed the desire of\nthe council to cooperate with the\ncurlers, and urged that all organizations in the field of sport get behind\nthe civic centre in order to make it\na success.\nMr. Browne assured the mayor\nthe council had the support of thc\ncurlers on that matter.\nSCOTS' CLAIM   DISPUTED\nJ. B. Gray in toasting \"The Roaring Game,\" explained that it was\ncalled \"roaring\" because the Scots,\nwho invented it, had to roar to be\nheard, as they scooted 100-pound\nboulders along their frozen lochs\nand dodged avalanches. He said\nthere were real skips in those days,\nand he learned the game there.\nResponding, R. E. Horton took issue as to the alleged Scottish origin\nof curling, and called on Ikey Asbel]\nto give the facts, Asbell promptly\ncrediting it to the Jews. After pay\ning his respects to the \"taking ways\"\nof the Scots, who took the game and\nedopted it, Mr. Horton paid a tribute\nto the young curlers, one of whom\nAlan Dill, curled 147 games this sea-\nron\u2014and urged the club to keen\nthe membership fee down to $13.5\")\nso all the young fellows could curl.\nHe also urged the young fellows not\nto wait to be asked.\nIt was announced that W. M. Myers was getting along well, though\nnot equal to being present, and the\nchair directed P. T. Andrews, secretary, to write him, giving him the\nclub's greetings,\nDUD HOPES NO ONE CHOKES\nA wire of regret from C. D.\nBlackwood, at Vancouver, read:\n\"Regret cannot be with you tonight, but as one of the unwilling\nhosts I think I hope that our guests\ndo not choke. Trust Bill Myers li\nwith you. Wire me collect any\ncasualties among our guests. You\nshould bo able to bag a few of\nthem  anyway.\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 24, 1937.\nSHE WAS AFRAID\nTO SHAKE HANDS\nRheumatism in Joints\nCaused Her Intense\nPain\nRead this letter from a woman\ndescribing the manner in which she\nwas affected by rheumatism.\n\"For several years,\" she writes,\n\"1 suffered with rheumatism of Ae\nJoints, especially in my hands, and\nthis caused me intense pain. I was\neven afraid to shake hands witn\nanyone, for it made me suffer terribly. I began.taking Krutchen Salts\nregularly, and after a little while\nmy pains disappeared completely.\nI am naturally delighted with\nKnischen.\"-(Miss) K.\nThe pains and stiffness of rheumatism are frequently caused by deposits of uric acid in the muscles\nand joints. The numerous salts in\nKruschen assist in stimulating your\nliver and kidneys to healthy, regular\naction, and so help them to get rid\nof this excess uric acid.       (Advt.)\nBIKER REVIEW8 HI8TORY\nThe feature address of <he eve\nning was by W. J. E. Biker in proposing the toast to the B.C. Curling\nassociation. He compiled a history\nOf curling in the Kootenay and\ngave all the salient dates of the\nearly years, from the formation of\nthe Golden club in 1894, the first\ncurling in West Kootenay at Kaslo\nin 1896, the formation of the Nelson\nclub in 1898, and the organization\nof the district association, which\nlater became the provincial. He\nalso gave appreciations of many\nveteran curlers who had been pillars of the game.\nS. P. Bostock, responding to the\ntoast as a young curler, paid tribute\nto the men mentioned by Mr Biker,\nwho had made the Kootenay famous for its curlers, and, remarking\nthat most of the bonspiel cups had\nmigrated lately, urged the younget\ngeneration to work to bring them\nback.\nMr. Browne expressed the indebtedness of the club to \"Bike\" for\ndigging up the historical material,\ntor the information of the present\nmembership.\nAt the suggestion of the chair,\nthe company paid a silent toast to\n\"that  good  curler,\"  the late  Dr.\nJ. H. Bennett.\nPRESENTATION TO J. B. GRAY\nJ. B. Gray was then called to the\nfront and presented with ?2 from\nAlderman Roy Sharp, having paid\nback a loan of that amount twice.\nMr. Gray, who had earlier claimed\nto have appropriated $135 from\nthe saucer passed to him for his\ncontribution for the waitresses, declared it was a lucky night for him,\nand he wished there could be a\nbanquet every week. Later he\nclaimed the $2 was \"three cents\nshort.\"\nJ. H. McLennan, a \"humble and\nmiserable third,\" happily proposed\nSPARKES WILL\nBE DELEGATE\nOF TEACHERS\nEleven From Nelson\nto Attend Coast\nConvention\nAt least 11, and possibly more\nmembers of the Nelson teaching\nstaffs will attend the annual convention of the B.C. Teachers' Federation at Vancouver next week. The\nconvention opens Monday and will\ncontinue for four days.\nG. E. Sparkes. principal of Central school, is the only delegate so\nfar named, but two more are to be\nselected. Mr. Sparkes will also represent the district teachers' council.\nOthers who have indicated they\nwill attend the convention include\nMiss Winnifred Borthwick and\nFrank Pearce, Central school; Miss\nGertrude Hudson, Miss Patricia\nCampbell and H. W. Laffere, High\nschool; Miss Greta Curwen, Hume\nschool; Miss Bertha Rogers, Roy\nTemple, Miss Belle McGauley and\nFloyd Irwin, principal, Junior high\nschool.\nMinus Arms, This Lad Writes\nWith His Teeth\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest In the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nGeo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 30c and UP\nLunches 40c to SOc Dinner 40c to 65c\nROTARV AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787 NELSON, B.C. 422 VERNON ST.\nHUME-A. J. Bergul, L. Lubett.\nV. Smith, Vancouver; F. A. Durstan,\nR. J. Kennedy, A. McKerihen, W. A.\nSlanker, Toronto, A. B. Whiting, E.\nW. Butler, B. Levi, Winnipeg; C. H.\nLemarchand, Calgary; G. H Wads\nworth, Montreal; Mr. and Mrs. L. J.\nRutledge, Bayonne; 0. Sibley, R\nBrough. Medicine Hat; A. W. Lymbery, Gray Creek; R. B. McKay,\nNew Denver.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN   SAMPLE   ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Baker St.       W K. Clark, Prop.        Nelson, B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited\nFr\u00ab- Parking NELSON. B.C. Phone 234\nthe toast to the winners, reciting a\npoem to the effect that \"we lost\nthe game but kept our gr-at\na better way than to lose our goat\nand win the game,\" the losers, who\nwere paying for the dinner de.\ndaring in song that the winners\nwere \"Jolly good fellows\"\nIn a happy reply for the winners.\nC. H. Hamilton was glad J B. Gray\ndid not claim the Scotch nad perfected the game as well as developed it, for he did not believe that\na curler in Scotland would do as\nwell in a game as J.B had done in\na single night.\nWINNERS GET PRIZE8\nThe 12 winning rinks of the winter's competitions, embracing the\nsix winners of silverware and the\nsix runners-up, were then presented\nin turn with their trophies and\nprizes, one member of each rink\nbeing elected to return thanks. The\nJ. J. McEwan and L. S. McKinnon\nrinks each stood up twice, once as\nwinner and once as runner-up. This\nfunction was carried out by the\npresident.\nArt Wallace was picked to hold\nthe \"Dogan and Protestant\" cup,\nwhich was given at Carman. Man.,\nin 1894 by John White, went through\na fire and wat lately put up here\nfor this special event.\nA wooden \"Brewery Cup\" with\nbottles of beer as supporting prizes,\nwas awarded to a rink composed of\nC. F. McHardy, T. W. Ledingham,\nGeorge Clerihew and J. G. Bunyan.\nDATE 8ET FOR ANNUAL\nAt this point the meeting reverted\nto club business, and the annual\nmelting was set for next Tuesday\nnight, March 30.\nA. Browne, president, who ls\nmoving to Vernon, referred to the\nsplendid support given him by the\nexecutive, and particularly by the\nsuccessive secretaries, J. H. Long and\nP. T. Andrews. He also credited H.\nM. Whimster, vice-president with\nsplendid work, particularly ln connection with bringing in visitors for\nSaturday night games, a feature that\nought to be continued.\nA. L. Creech as a \"young curler\"\nmade a plea for greater frankness\nfrom the skips, in handling beginners, so that the latter would know\n\"what it was all about.\"\nThe winners had their turn ln\ntoasting the losers, H. M. Whimster\nperforming this function, and commenting on the pride of the president's side that went before a fall,\na surplus of 28 points becoming a deficit of eight points the last night.\nThis time the losers were declared\nto be \"jolly good fellows.\"\nTRIBUTE TO BROWNE\nIn proposing this tcast. Mr. Whimster also paid a tribute to Adolph\nBrowne, saying the Curling club was\nlosing a fine curler, and Nelson a\ngood citizen, and that Mr. Browne\nwould take with him to Vernon\nthe good wishes of all 219 members\nof the club.\n\u25a0 The response from the losers was\nby Dr. G. A. C Walley, \"only a lead\"\nwho portrayed a skip as a superior\nbeing, and expressed the hope that\nthe winners had enjoyed the banquet.\nA toast to the Press was proposed\nby C. F. McHardy and responded to\nby H. H. Currie.\nIn the course of the evening, beside the dinner number given by\nMr. Gould. Arthur Stringer rendered vibrant baritone solos, W. J. Coleman and W. H. Sharp appeared on\ntwo occasions with string and vocal\nduets, and Murray Clark gave an\nimitation of a bashful schoolboy retting \"Maud Muller.\" Alderman\nP. G. Morey was accompanist.\nArmless since he touched a 6000-volt high tension wire seven years\nigo, 14-year-old Bert Rouse, of Wiarton, Ont, has triumphed over the\nhandicap to such an extent that he can do as well as any normal boy of\nhis age in sports and games. Bert is showing how he writes holding\nthe pen in his teeth. He can drive an automobile, play baseball, football,\nmarbles and make change. He also uses the lawn-mower at home.\nFOWLES'TEAM\nTAKES WIN IN\nMIXED BOWLS\nSpilling the maples for a total\nscore of 1061 points against 1049\npoints, W. Fowles' team defeated\nthat of R. J. Glazebrook's in a game\nof the mixed tournament on the\nLegion alleys Tuesday night.\nR. J. Glazebrook was high aggregate scorer with 303 points while\nindividual scoring honors went to\nJ. Drummond, also of the losing\nteam, with a single of 183 points.\nTeams and scores were:\nR. J. GLAZEBROOK\nMrs. V. Graves  100 100\u2014 200\nJ. Drummond   133 163- 296\nJ. Dee      125 125\u2014 250\nR. J. Glazebrook   145 158- 303\nTOTAL  1049\nW. FOWLE8\nMrs. J. Annable  137 150\u2014 287\nJ. Whiteside   107 147- 254\nJ. Hunden  125 125\u2014 250\nW. Fowles   135 135\u2014 270\nTOTAL  1061\nVOSPER'8   BODY   FOUND\nLONDON, March 23 (AP) - Dr.\nPercy Vosper today definitely identified the nude body of a man washed up from the English channel near\nBeach Head as that of his actor son\nwho had been missing since he dis.\nappeared from a gay champagne\nparty at sea March 6.\nMAY THINK IT OVER\nOSHAWA, Ont. (CP) \u2014 John\nO'Brien, 60, Sault Ste. Marie, told the\nmagistrate he would \"marry a woman with money\" and never appear\nin court again if freed of an intoxication charge. But the magistrate\nmeted out 30 days.\nRETURNED WITH GA8\nFORT ERIE, Ont. (CP)\u2014There is\nsomething about Albert Nevinger's\nautomobile that thieves admire, but\nthe last thief was a thoughtful person. Stolen twice within two weeks,\n(he machine was this time left with\nthe gasoline tank filled.\nOccidental\nHotel\n'05 Vernon St.\nH   WaSSlCK\nSPECIAL  MUN1H1\nGood   Comfortable\nPhone 897\nProp\n'    RATES'\nRooms\nFully   Licenced\nMadden Hotel\n1   Welcome Awaits You\nJAS    E    MAOOEN    Prop.\nComoietelv   Remodelled\nHot   and   Cold   Water\nIn the  HEART  ot the City\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\nS a.m. and 13:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail-Phone 1)5        Nelson-Phone 35\nTrail Livery Ca.\nM. H. MclVOR. Prop.\nFORMER  KING TO\nLEAVE ENZESFELD\nVIENNA, March S3 (CP-Havas)-\nThe Duke of Windsor paid a farewell visit today to president Miklas\nof Austria prior to his departure\ntrom Enzcsfeld for upper Austria.\nIt is und.-rstnod he will spend Easter\nit lhe villa Appcsbaeh in the Salz-\nnmmergut region of upper Austria\nand remain there aahout a month.\nThen it is understood he will go tn\nFrance to j Tin Mrs. Wallis Simp-\ninn whose finnl divorce decree is expected April 27.\nMAY BEAT 8LOT8\nSUDBURY, Ont (CP)\u2014It looks\nas though the city has found a system of beating the slot machines.\nFrom its new licencing bylaw, Sudbury has collected $2000 from one\ncompany covering 40 machines. Fees\nare $1500 for one machine; $20 for\neach additional.\n\"Heaven\" Subject\nal Ihe Opening of\nChurch Assembly\nSpring convention of the Pentecostal tabernacles of the Kootenay\ndistrict opened ln the Bethel tabernacle in Nelson Tuesday afternoon\nwith Rev. Clifford P. Nelson of\nPenticton taking the leading part\nRev. C. A. C. Story, pastor, conducted the opening and welcomed\nthe visitors, while Evangelist Elwln\nArgue conducted the song service\nand rendered a baritone solo.\n\"Stopping Short of the Goal\" was\nthe theme of Mr. Nelson's afternoon\nmessage, while in the evening he\nspoke on \"Heaven.\" Both were related to this latter topic in which\nhe described heaven as a land of\neternal peace. In heaven he declared, there was no disappointment, sorrow, regrets or weariness,\nbut continual joy, well-being and\never-lasting life. With the assertion that there were over 100,000\npersons passing into this promised\nland nearly every day, it was well\nto be prepared, he said, and went\non to describe Some of the physical\ndimensions, beauties and the life\nin heaven, as the Bible led him to\nbelieve.\nAppropriate to the subject was a\nsong by Thomas Bishop entitled\n\"Heaven,\" and one by Mr. Argue,\n\"No Disappointments in Heaven.\"\nDiscussions on various subjects\nwill begin today.\nThe U S. federal office of education has a collection of 25,000 American school-books, included an\narithmetic of 1694 and other early\ntexts as well as the latest editions.\nL. D.\n2 1\n2 1\n4 \u2014\nF. A.\n139 10'.\n110 10\n105 14\nOLD COUNTRY SOCCER\nGLASGOW. March 23 (CP cable)\n-Playing   before  a   home   crowd,\nlyde today defeated Heart of Mid-\nVhian 2-1 in a first division Scottish Football league match.\nBELFAST. March 23 (CP)-Port-\n\"down took a 2-1 verdict from Lama;\nn a Belfast Cup match played on\nthe former's ground today.\nA new color film made in Germany is in three layers\u2014one sensitive to blue, the second to green,\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0* *-\nGRAVES LEADING SCORER IN HOOP RACE\nFred Graves, forward of the B.C. Telephone men's hoop squad, was\nthe leading scorer in the Nelson Men's Basketball league with 38 scoring\npoints in five games. Foster Mills of the same team was second with 30\npoints in six games, two more points than Roy Temple of the Fairview\nclub obtained In four games.\nAl Smith, Grocers, converted eight out of 15 free throws, George\nWallach, F.A.S., six out of 12 and Foster Mills, B.C. Telephones, five out\nof eight attempts.\nFinal standing Men's Basketball league:\nW.\n\u2022B.C. Telephones     3\n\u2666Grocers     3\nFairview A. C    2\n\u2022\u2014Grocers drew bye position in playoff on a toss of the coin with\nthe B.C. Telephone club.\nINDIVIDUAL SCORING\nGa.\nF. Graves, BC.T -    5\nF. Mills, B.C.T    6\nR. Temple, F.A.C    4\nJ.  Cherrington, B.C.T    4\nB. Greenwood, Grocers     4\nAl  Smith, Grocers     6\nG. Wallach, F.A.C    6\nS. Smith, F.A.C    5\nG. Bishop, F.A.C    6\nJ. Stark, Grocers     6\nW. Townsend, B.C.T    6\nD. McQuaig, Grocers   6\nr'-m Horswill, Grocers   6\nJ. Buchanan, Grocers  6\nR. Paterson, BC.T  5\nJ. Galllcano, B.C.T  4\nB. Cooper, F.A.C  1\nF. Hurford, F.A.C  4\nS. Martin, Grocers  8\nF. Jones, F.A.C  5\nI. Dingwall. B.C.T  4\nJ. Dingwall, B.C.T  3\nA. Bush, Grocers   6\nE. Murraro, B.C.T.  5\nJ. Wallace, F.A.C  6\nM. DesBris-y, B.C.T  1\nJ. Lindsay, F.A.C  1\nA. Langill, F.A.C  3\nR. Horswill, Grocers   1\nT. Carlisle, F.A.C    3\n(Legend: Ga.\u2014Game*; F.T.\u2014Free throws; C\u2014Converts; F.B.\u2014Field\nam-ttii *\"\u2022\u2014TntiLpDln:\nFT,\nc.\nF.B.\nPis\n9\n2\n18\n38\n8\n5\n13\n31\n10\n3\n13\n29\n8\n2\n12\n2(\n4\n3\n11\n23\n15\n8\n8\n24\n12\n6\n9\n2'!\n3\n2\n9\n211\n2\n0\n7\n14\n4\n2\n6\nII\n4\n1\n6\n13\n7\n.1\n5\n1.1\n11\n2\n4\n10\n4\n2\n4\n10\n15\n4\n2\n1)\n4\n2\n3\n8\n0\n0\n4\n8\n3\n2\n3\n8\n2\n1\n3\n7\n2\n0\n3\n6\n2\n1\n2\n5\n0\n0\n2\n4\n0\n0\n2\n4\n4\n2\n1\n4\n0\n0\n1\n2\n1\n1\n1\n3\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\n0\nBride-lo-be Is\nHonored Guest\nal Sunshine Bay\nMiss Cherry Sewell\nto Wed A. Fletcher\nof Nelson\nSUNSHINE BAY, B. C.-Sunshine\nBay packing shed was decorated in\nred and white streamers and evergreens Saturday evening to honor\nMiss Cherry Sewell, who is to marry\nAlbert Fletcher ot Nelson, next\nSaturday.\nThe building was filled to capacity with friends.\nThe introductory speech was\nmade by Oscar B. Appleton.\nThe two children of Mrs. Hans\nJohnson of Nelson, Flora and Gilbert, drew a loaded wagon, decorated in rose and white.\nMr. Fletcher, on behalf of his\nfiancee, thanked the guests.\nCards and dancing followed.\nMusic was supplied by Henry\nJohnson. Ike Jensen, Kenneth Soles,\nAngus MacKinnon and Max Carne.\nFour tables of presents were on\ndisplay.\nAmong the guests were Mr. and\nMrs. Fletcher, Sr., Mr. and Mrs. J.\nFletcher, Mr. and Mrs. Blake, all of\nNelson; Wallace Lester, Mirror\nLake; Mr. and Mrs. Jack James,\nFresno, Cal.\nEvery family in the vicinity was\nwell represented.\nMiss Catherine Ferguson was a\nvisitor over the week-end to attend the shower for Miss Sewell.\nMrs. Thomas and daughter, Mary,\nof Medicine Hat, are expected at\ntheir ranch in the near future.\nMr. and Mrs. O. Muirhead are\nmoving Into the house of Maurice\nMajor.\nMANY FROM PROCTER\nPROCTER, B. C.-Many local and\nNelson friends of Miss Cherrle\nSewell and Albert Fletcher, whose\nwedding takes place next Saturday, gathered in Sunshine bay hall\nSaturday evening to honor them at\na miscellaneous shower.\nThose present were Mrs. J. Sewell, Mr. and Mrs. A. Fletcher. Mrs.\nD. Haigh, Mr. and Mrs. H. Carne,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Dosenberger, Mr.\nand Mrs. O. P. Appleton, Mr. and\nMrs. O. B. Appleton, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Donaldson, Mr. and Mrs. A. R.\nHeighton, Mr. and Mrs. A. Ogden,\nMr. and Mrs. A. R. Johnston, Mr.\nand Mrs. O. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. James, Mr. and Mrs. T. Mair, Mr,\nand Mrs, F. Bonacci, Mr. and Mrs.\nI. Jansen, Mr. and Mrs. W. Merrifield, Mr. and Mrs. W. Soles, Mrs.\nD. S. Taylor, Mrs. N. Schwarok,\nMrs. J. McLeod, Mrs. J. Ferguson,\nMrs. W. Farmer, Mrs. L. Bullock,\nMrs. N. Johnson, Mrs. E. Miller, Mrs.\nW. Haig-Smellie, Mrs. Fitchett and\nMrs. L. Hosma;\nMisses Alma and Frances McMullin, Mary and Rose Schwarok,\nAlice and Hazel Crosby, Elsie and\nEdna Johnston, Anne Kennett, Kate\nMcCullough, Isa MacKinnon. Catherine Ferguson. Mable Robinson,\nAlice Sweet, Luella Hong, Edna\nHeighton, Ethel Farmer, Selma\nSmith and Annie Voykln;\nRobert Stevenson, Ben Creasy,\nArthur Knauf, Nick and Abe Dosenberger, Fred Neale, Tom and Dick\nHolmes. Robert and James Heighton, Raymond Hong, V. C. Blake,\nAngus and Hallam MacKinnon, Bud\nMclver, Gilbert McMullin, Wallace\nLeslie, Henry Johnson, Colin Major,\nJohn Bowes, Cyril Fitchett, Max\nand Ian Carne, Kenneth Soles, Gordon and Allan Donaldson, Bill and\nMike Sokowloski, Bert Crosby.\nClarence Johnston, Allan Batchelor,\nDavid Hale, George Gill, Bill Grice,\nRene Des Forges, Dick Sewell,\nVivian Rowley. Tommy Sewell,\nCharlie Clayton, Bill Mitchel and\nFred and Sam Podmoroff.\nERMINE FOR CROWNING\nSUDBURY, Ont. (CP)-Fur prices\nare highest this year since 1929, according to Jack Leve, fur dealer,\nwho estimated district trappers\nwould average $1000 for their winter's work. In ihe season just concluded $250,000 in pelts was collected. Demand for ermine for coronation robes helped the trapper.\nW. L Curran Tells\nRotarians Benefits\nof Club Magazine\nTRAIL, B.C., March 23\u2014Trail Rotary club observed International Rotarian Magazine week at their luncheon-meeting Tuesday, W. A. Curran giving an address on \"What ls\nthe Rotarian\".\nMr. Curran pointed out the benefits of the brochure and its worth\nin spreading International goodwill\nand fellowship throughout the\nworld.\nHe reviewed recent excellent articles and strongly advised every\nRotarian to read it every month.\nThe Rotarian, now enjoying its\n26th year of publication, stands\nalone as an unique international\npublication.\nThe \"On to Spokane\" conference\ncommittee was announced as follows: G. J. Kinnis, chairman; W. C.\nTrail Bowling\nTRAIL, B.C., March 23 \u2014 Trail\nTen-pin Bowling league games tonight resulted as follows:\nTrail Hotel   580 617 629-1828\nTrail Meat Market 624 657 680\u20141981\nCompany Store .... 651 628 736\u20142015\nCherry Pickers .... 616 685 678\u20141979\nMackenzie, vice-chairman; J. A. Millar, H. R. Lauriente and Fred Mathews.\nGuests were J. Murray Robertson,\nToronto; George Clarke and J. H.\nHolgate, Vancouver.\nLEAPS OUT OF\nBED EACH DAY\nLearns how to get primitive health.\nNow bounds with energy. No more\nsluggish, tired mornings.\nBanish penalties of modern living. Get rid\nof tired, sluggish, bad-taste, headachy\nmorning*. Wake up peppy and full of\nenergy.   It's easy, you'll think lt mlracu\nlousl Follow tbe eiample of thousands\nwho have regained full health and energy\nwith Fruit-a-lives. The prescription ofa\nFamous Canadian doctor, Frult-a-tlvee\ncontain eitractaof fruits and herbs and act\nto bring normal, healthy liver action,\nstimulating the flow of bile, helping four\nother vital organs ... cleanse the elimination tract of wastes and poisons ... tend to\npurify the blood of poisons and acids.\nFruit-a-tlvea' unique tonic effects bring\nnew energy, new health. So try Frult-a-\ntlves today. For sals everywhere. Cost ls\nlow, 25c Mc. For your own protection re-\nf use substitutes. Insist on \"Frult-a-tlTes\".\n(Advt.)\nThe Royal Road\nto the\nCORONATION\nTrodden aside from the glare of publicity that usually surrounds the pathway to the throne, the roads that\nKing George VI and Queen Elizabeth\nhave followed throughout their lives\nhave been none the less busy and interesting ones.\nAn intimate glimpse of this charming\ncouple will be given by this new series\nof pictures to be published as a prelude to the Coronation ceremonies.\nKING GEORGE VI\nhas been sailor, soldier, traveller, empire salesman and Royal ambassador\nin turn\nQUEEN ELIZABETH\nfirst non-Royal wife of a prince of tha\nblood, became as Duchess of York,\none of the most popular members of\nthe Royal Family.\nTogether they make an intensely human and interesting couple whom the\nEmpire will be glad to honor as the\nKing and Queen. Watch for this pictorial review of their lives.\nAppearing Daily and Starting Tomorrow in the\nNelson flatly Jfema\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\naSstrnwi-ftSK\n..vinq cumf\nCall   first   bij -J\nlonc-DismncE\/tj\nTELEPHONE   '-\nTELL them by telephone, if you are panning an out of-town visit for the Easter\nweek-end.\nImportant advance information can be\nobtained in this way. In one telephone\nconversation, you can ask questions, receive\nreplies, and, if you wish, make reservations.\nIf you intend to visit friends or relatives, a\npleasant telephone chat in advance will add\nto the joys of the reunion to follow.\nEH-H\nB.C. TELEPHONE COMPANY\n GUEST OF HONOR\nAT KASLO PARTY\nK^LO, B.C.-The home of Mr.\nand Mrs. John Tonkin presented a\ngay scene Friday evening when a\nSt. Patrick's day birthday party was\ngiven in honor of Frank Tonkin.\nGames and contests were features.\nMiss Clara Horner. Miss Ileen Lind,\nJack Dryden and Frank Morton\nwere winners of prizes.\nMrs. Tonkin .served refreshments,\nassisted by Miss Virginia Hendricks,\nMiss Ruth Heath and Miss Lorna\nSpeirs. Dancing followed.\nInvited guests were Miss Virginia\n\t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NEL80N, B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 24, 1937.\n\u2014 ~\nmmmmzmm*m*mK\\   vjq^P-WWP*'^1--\nHendricks of Nelson, Misa Ruth\nHeath, Miss Clara Horner, Miss\nIlene Lind, Miss Peggy Dryden,'Miss\nFreda Burton, Miss Grace Tonkin,\nMiss Eleanor Horner, Miss Jessie\nHeath, Miss Doreen Lind, Miss\nLorna Speirs, Miss \"Pat'1 Andrews,\nJack Dryden, Archie Reuter, Frank\nMorton, Jack McKinley, Gus Carney, David Hartin, Ronald Matthews, Peter Burton, Arthur Mor\nton, William Tonkin and the honor\nguest, Frank Tonkin.\nMiss Ileen Lind has left to spend\na few days at Ainsworth, a guest of\nhcr brother and sister-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. Charles Lind Jr.\nFrank Tonkin was a Saturday\nvisitor to Nelson.\nAmong Kasloites at a dance at\nAinsworth Saturday were Miss\nBetty Fox, Miss Ruth Heath, Miss\nTHE SAFETY OF STEEL...\nFBOM PEDAL TO WHEEL !\nNew Easy-Action  Safety Brakes\nDependability- and 6oft pedal\naction\u2014they're what you get in\nthe Ford V- 8 brakes. They are cable\nand conduit control type, positive\nand direct, with \"the safety of sleel\nfrom pedal to wheel.\" These brakes\nare self-energizing. The momentum\nof the car is used to help apply\nthem. You exert only feather-light\npressure on the braking pedal. Thc\nall-steel body is another factor of\nFord V- 8 safety. Steel top, sides and\nfloor are welded into a single unit\nof great protective strength. All\nFord body types have Safety Glass\nthroughout at no extra charge. Thc\ncar's low centre of gravity ... instant response of the V-8 engine\n... easier steering, and big tires on\nrugged steel wheels ... all contribute to tbe safety you feel when\nbehind the wheel of thc Ford V- 8.\nYour Ford dealer will hc glad to\nshow you this beautiful, roomy car.\nAsk him about its greater economy.\nThen drive thc Ford V-8 \u2014discover how safety i6 built into the\nquality car in the low-price field.\nTune in FoRn Sunday Evedinc Houh, 9 P. M.,\nE. S. T., Columbia Broadcasting System.\nPORTJ VB\nEVERYTHING THAT MAKES\nA QUALITY CAR\nEASY-ACTION SAFETY BRAKES \u2014 Entirely\nnew system gives quicker straight-line stops\nwith feather-light pressure on brake pedal,\n\"The safely of sleel from pedal lo wheel.\"-\nALL-STEEl BODY\u2014 Nn[ au ounce of wood in\nall-steel body structure. Sleel top, floor, side\npanels and frame welded into i\\ single unit\nof great protective strength, Safety Class\nthroughout al no extra charge.\nGREATER OPERATING ECONOMY \u2014 Improved\nV8 engine gives its outstanding performance with very low gasoline consumption.\nCOMPORT AND QUIET\u2014Smoother and quieter\nCen I re-Poise Ride. Easier steering because\nof new worm and roller type steering gear.\nStarter button and emergency brake lever on\ninstrument panel.\nMODERN APPEARANCE\u2014Completely new\nstreamline design from grille to tail light.\nSlanting V-type windshield opens. Lid-type\nhood li(is from the front.\nBEAUTIFUL INTERIORS \u2014Luxurious nphol-\nslery and trim. New instrument panel has all\ngauges grouped for rapid reading. Adjustable driver's seat rises as it slides forward.\nChoice of colours and upholstery.\n$30\nA MONTH, -.ith r-i-n.blr ,|\u201e\u201e ,,.,,:,, ,\u201e.,\u201e,\nbtiJI mny  new   lord  V-8 tir muter T. F. t.\n.Viti..ii,.I   h\u201e.    1'Ibii.\nQUEEN CITY MOTORS LTD.\n519 Josephine St.\n\"SATISFACTION IS OUR AIM\"\nNelson and District Ford Dealers\nNelson, B.C.\nCOLUMBIA MOTORS LTD.\nPine Ave. Trail, Rossland and District Ford Dealers Trail, B.C.\nBUERGFS GARAGE\nBroadway St. Nakusp and District Ford Dealers Nakusp, B.C.\nUNIVERSAL MOTORS\nF. Nadon, Prop. Creston and District Ford Dealers Creston, B.C.\nHANSON GARAGE CO., LTD.\nPhone 126      Cranbrook, Kimberley and District Ford Dealers      Cranbrook, B.C.\nFERNIE GARAGE\n216 Victoria St. Fernie and District Ford Dealers Fernie, B.C.\nKatherine Streit, Miss Margaret\nHamilton, Miss Alice Augustine,\nMiss Mary Shutty, Miss Ilene Lind,\nMiss Dorothy Fox, Miss Elizabeth\nSurina, Mr. and Mrs. B. N. Murphy,\nGeorge Lind. S. McLellan, George\nMorton. Fred Aydon. Gussie Carney, E. Burrows, Walter Tozer,\nTommy Beck and William Tonkin.\nJohn Galas Jr. of Argenta was a\nSaturday visitor in town, en route\nto Nelson.\nEric Bacchus of Birchdale was a\nMonday visitor to Kaslo.\nWIN IN BRIDGE\nAT BALFOUR\nBALFOUR, B. C.-Miss K. Noakes\nwho has becn a nurse in training\nat the coast is at the home of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Noakes\nuntil the middle of April.\nThe Anglican Church guild held\na bridge evening at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. Noakes Wednesday.\nj Ladies' first prize wa.s won by Mrs.\nMacKinnon; men's first by Mr.\nHudson. Miss Houston took ladies'\nconsolation. Mr. Romcr, men's,\ni Those present wcre Miss Frcder-\n. ickson, Mr. Irwin, Mr. McHardy,\nMr. Romer, Misses Kitty, Connie\nand Hazel Noakes, Mr. and Mrs.\nNoakes, Mrs, Heuston. Mr, and Mrs.\nMacKinnon and Mr. and Mrs. Hudson.\nMiss Connie Noakes served refreshments.\nMrs. McKay and daughter, Selma,\nof Procter visited Mrs. Heuston\nSaturday.\nMr. and Mrs. Sherman, Hcrby and\nDolores, visited Ainsworth Saturday.\nMrs. T. Dodman and daughters\nfrom Boswell have joined Mr. Dodman here.,\nW. Blcwer was a Saturday visitor\nto Nelson,\nMr. and Mrs. V. Hoskin had as\ntheir Saturday evening guests, Mr.\nand Mrs. Hudson, Mrs. Brenilson\nand Misa Frederickson.\nThe boys and girls have been enjoying early morning skating on\nthe bay. Mr. Heuston, who has been\nbusy with the spring work, still\nfinds time to join them.\nCharlie Shrieves went to Ainsworth Saturday.\nG. Conrad has returned from\nLardo.\nCaptain and Mrs. Hartridge were\nNelson shoppers Thursday.\nBaby Bonacci of Procter is at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. Campbell\nduring tlie illness of her mother.\nA. Ling of Rossland, who was\nvisiting old friends here lias returned home.\nMrs. J, MacDonald and daughter,\nMargaret, werc to Nelson Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Heise have returned from Sacrcmento, Cal.\nMr. and Mr.s, B. Hoskin wcre visitors at the J. Hoskin ranch Sunday.\n-PAGE THREE\nNEWLYWEDS ARE\nHONORED AT\nNAKUSP\nDoris Harlow Bride\nof Bud Lang\nNAKUSP. B. C.-Mr. and Mrs.\nBud Lang (nee Miss Doris Harlow)\nwere complimente3 Friday evening\nwhen a .shower was given in their\nhonor at Brouse Community hall.\nMusic and dancing featured. During the supper hour, the newly weds\nwere presented with a large basket\nof gifts and received the well wishes\nof the crowd.\nA. Welherslrom returned Saturday from Pincston.\nCaptain J. Fttzsimmons arrived in\ntown Saturday after spending several months al Vancouver and Revelstoke.\nMrs. A. Middlcmass and infant\ndaughter have left the Arrow Lakes\nhospital here for their home at\nRock Island.\nMrs. P. Talbot was a visitor to\nArrowhead Saturday.\nMrs, L. J. Edwards returned Saturday from Calgary where she visited her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. McCamon. She also\nvisited her sister, Mrs. Lewis at\nCrossficlds, Alta.\nMiss Joan Markwick has left to\nspend Easter at the home of her j\nparents at Graham's Landing.\nMiss M. Adams of Nelson is on the j\nstaff of Arrow Lakes hospital here.\nMiss Gladys Talbot from Arrow- i\nhead is visiting at her home here.\nMrs. Percy Young is visiting Nel- j\nson.\nMr. and Mrs. A. D, Tricket of |\nNew Denver wcre visitors lo \\\nNakusp Friday.\nMr, and Mrs, Walter Maxwell j\nhave returned from Nelson and\nSpokane.\n'Mr. and Mrs. F. Rushton returned\nFriday from Ncison.\nMr. and Mrs. C. S. Leary spent\nseveral days at Nelson.\nMr. Johnstone has arrived from\nOkanagan Landing to work on thc\nsteamer Minto.\nF. Broughton of New Denver was\na visitor here Thursday.\nMrs. L. Carpenter and baby\ndaughter have left Arrow Lakes\nhospital here for their home at Arrow Park.\n! NEW DELHI, India (CP).-Ser-\n1 geant F. L. Stowe. artilleryman, has\nI been cited for a gallant act in hang-\n! ing on to the reins of the lead horse\n! of a boiling team and bringing il\n'to a stop after being dragged 200\n! yards.\nCHINESE MASONS\nATTEND KASLO\nFUNERAL\nKASLO, B. C \u2014 W. H. Paing, Gee\nLee and Chow Hay of Trail and\nWong Moon and Chen Toy of Nelson were among the Masons in town\nto attend funeral services for Chow\nWone who died at his home here\nWednesday.\nServices were held from the family home Saturday afternoon, Rev,\nJ. Fielding Shaw officiating.\nFalcons have becn known to live\nto the age of 180 year?.\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION NETWORK\nj 5:30 News, Vancouver; 5:45 Band\nBox revue, MRN, Detroit; 6:00 Canadian Concert Hall of tlie air, Montreal; 6:30 Spotlight Parade, soloists,\norch.. Montreal; 7:00 Chamber Musicale, New World orchestra, Toronto;\n7:30 March of Scientific medicine,\ntalk, Edmonton; 7:45 Canadian\nPress news, weather, Tor.; 8:00\nC. B. C. timc signal, Ottawa;\nMarl Kenney's orchestra, Vancouver; 8:30 Woodwind duo, Winnipeg;\n8:45 Woodhouse and Hawkins, comedy, Calgary; 9:00 Music for music's\nsake, Winnipeg; 9:30 Maids and\nMiddies; Saskatoon;. 1C:00 Jessie McLeod, organist, Vancouver; 10:30\nNews, Vancouver,\nNBC\u2014KPO RtD NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO\n590      620      640     680        920\n5:00 One Man's Family, drama;\n5:30 Junior varieties; 5:45 Armand\nGirard, baritone; 6:00 Dinner concert, inst.; 6:30 Thrill., dr., orch.; 7:00\nYour Hit Parade and Sweepstakes,\norchestra and soloists; 7:30 Gladys\nSwarthout, m.-sop., Frank Chapman,\nbari., Robt. Armburster's orch 8:00\nAmos 'n' Andy; 8:15 Uncle Ezra's\nradio st'n; 8:30 Winning the West;\n9:00 Town Hall Tonighl, Peter van\nSteeden's orch.; 10:00 News flashes,\nSam Hayes; 10:30 Griff Williams'\norch.: 11:00 Joe Reichman's orch.;\n11:30 Ran Wilde's orch.\nNBC-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Beaux Arts trio, instrum.;\n6:00 Professional parade, Fred Niblo.\nm.c; 7:00 Bennie Walker's amateur\nhour. KGO; String lime, dir. Louis\nFord: 7:15 Ink Spots quartet; 7:30\nTales nf Opera; 8:00 Emil Coleman's\norch.; 8:15 Lum and Abner; 8:30\nViennese echoes, dir. Josef Hornik;\n9:00 Paob Crosby's orch.; 9:30 Waltz\nTime with George Nickson, tenor;\n10:00 Paul Pendarvis' orch.; 10:30\nJimmy Gricr's orch.; 11:00 Paul\nCarson, organist.\ntasy; 9:15 Barn dance; 9:30 Old\nTimer; 9:45 Keepsakes; 10:00 Recipes; 10:15 The right thai nailed;\n10:30 Thc Radio Chef; 10:45 Melodic Pipes; 11:00 Backstage wife,\nET; 11:15 Kootenay Echoes; 11:30\nThc Monitor Views thc News; 11:45\nMexican troubadours; 12:00 The\nHughesreel; 12:15 Dreams of Vienna;\n1:00 Melodies of Today; 2:30 Deacon\nBrown: 2:45 Lavender and Lace;\n3:00 Slices of Life; 3:30 Cecil and\nSally; 3:45 Romance of modem\nmusic; 4:45 Frank and Archie. E.T.;\n5:00 Theatre news; 5:15 Eb and Zcb.\nE.T.; 5:30 See C.B.C. Network except: 5:45 Growin' up, E.T.; 6:30\nRhythm and romance.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 5:00 w\n5:10 News flashes; 6:15 News\nflashes; 7:00 Stock quotations; 7:15\nCountry Church of Hollywood; 7:30\nDick Stanton, songs; 8:15 Market\nHighlights; 8:30 Laddie Watkis;\n8:45 Fred Higginbottom; 9:00 Stan\nPatton's orchestra; 9:30 Pete Cowan's\nold-timers; 10:00 Rhythm Wranglers: 10:30 Bob Lyon's orchestra;\n11:00 Pete Cowan's old limers;\n11:30 Winifred Renworth, organ;\n12:00 Rhythm on record,\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10.000 w\n5:30 Limousine lady; 6:00 Tlie\nEditor; 6:30 Spotlight parade. Montreal; 7:00 CKUA program; 7:30\nCub reporter; 8:15 Harlem minstrels:\n9:30 News flashes; 9:45 Cy Hopkins\nold limers.\nCOLUMBIA NETWORK\nKVI KOIN KNX KSL KOL\n570 940 1050 1130 1270\n6:00 Nino Martini, tenor, Kostcl-\nanctz' orchestra and chorus; 6:30\nJessica Dragonctte, Al Goodman's\norch.; 7.00 Gang Busters, drama by\nPhillips Lord; 8:00 Dramatic\nsketch; Poetic melodies, KSL; 8:15\nPretty Kitty Kelly, sketch; 8:30\nGeorge Burns and Gracie Allen; 9:00\nCalling All Cars, drama, KNX; 10:00\nWhite Fires, drama. KNX; 10:30\nOrchestras: Eddie Oliver; Ted FioRito; Tommy Tucker; Larry Lee;\nCole McElroy; Kenny Allen,\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\nBRITISH   EMPIRE\nTransmission 6\nThe  following  frequencies will  be\nused: GSD 11.75 mcs. (25.53m)\nGSC 9.58 mcs. (31.\u00bb2 m.)\nGSF 15.14 mcs. (19.82 m.)\n6:00 p.m.\u2014Big Ben. Pianoforte\nrecital bv York Bowen; 6:2(1\u2014Three\nshort talks on matters of topical\ninterest; 6:40\u2014Goodnight. Vienna.\nA romantic operetta written for\nbroadcasting: 7:40\u2014News and announcements.\n^ 'fytfrai&'&fty \u20acitmj\u00ab!H!.}\u00a7{\n\u2022acow-MATU an m*< '.ra.\n- WEDNESDAY -\nStore Open All Day\nTODAY\nGINGHAMS and\nCHAMBRAYS\nAt Wholesale\nPrices\n600 yards fine quality\nsmall checks and plain\nchambrays, 31 inches\nwide. Come down early\nand make your choice.\nAll\nYard\n15\nReal Feather\nPILLOWS\nAN OUTSTANDING VALUE\nPurified chicken feathers, covered with J\nsturdy  floral  ticking.\nSize; 17x25.\nEACH\t\n79\nDuke of Connaught Will Attend the\nCoronation il His Health Permits\nFormer Gov.-General\nDominion Nearing\nHis 87th Year\nBy THOMAS T. CHAMPION\n(Canadian  Press  Staff  Writer)\nLONDON, March 23 (CP!.-Popu-j\nlar governor-general of Canada\nfrom 1911 to 1916, thc Duke of\nConnaught, only surviving son of |\nQueen Victoria, will, if his health\npermits, attend thc coronation of\nhis grand-nephew. George VI, on\nMay 12.\nNearing his 87th birthday, the.\nduke has already taken pait in two\ncrownings of British Kings those\nof his brother, Edward VIII in 1902\nand his nephew, George V in 1911.\nAt tbe latter ceremony he made his\nhomage immediately after another j\ngrand-nephew, the then Prince of|\nWales, afterwards Edward VIII and j\nnow Duke of Windsor.\nThe duke's sister, Princess Louise. I\nDuchess of Argyle, also a former\nresident of Rideau hall at Ottawa.|\nwas 89 on March 18.    As thc wife |\nof  thc  Marquess  of  Lome   (later\nDuke of Argyle)   she enjoyed   influential  association   with   Canada\nwhen hcr husband  was governor-\ngeneral from 1878 to 1883.   Another\ndaughter of Queen Victoria, Princess Beatrice, who married Prince\nHenry ot Ballenburg, will be 80 ir.\nApril.   These widowed grand-aunts\nof the King arc rarely seen in public\nnowadays.\nAN ARM* MAN\nThc Duke of Connaughl, like Ills\nmolJicr before him. has ir. his later\nyears become tu thc people of England and lhe empire at large something more of a legend than a niera\npersonality. From his earliest years\nhe devoted himself to service in lhc\narmy, serving in practically every\npart of the world. Hc was taught\nlo play the kettledrum by a man\nwho fought at Waterloo, and rose\nto command the force which cap-\nlured the Malakahoof in thc Crimea.\nThe duke's only son, Prince Ar-1\nthur of Connaught, has performed I\ngreat service in many capacities, i\nnotably as governor-general of\nSouth Africa. For some lime during the war he was attached to thc\nCanadian headquarters staff in\nFrance.\nPrincess Reatrice. one of the\nduke's surviving sisters. was held\nin high regard over a long period\nof years by reason of her gracious\nmanner in fulfilling Hie smaller\nI functions which fall I\" Mir lot of\nmembers of lhc royal family. Her\nhusband, lhc Duke of Bal'enburg,\ndied in 1890 on active service wilh\ni the  Britisii forces in  Africa     Hcr\nly   daughter,   Victoria   Eugenic.\nwas married to Alphonso, now tlie\nex-King of Spain, in 1906\nMADE  FRIENDS\nDuring his term us representative\nof his nephew, George V, in Canada, the Duke of Connaught, with\nhis affable and democratic manner,\ncarric in close personal touch with\nlhc people. His Royal Highness, together with the duchess and their\ndaughter Princess Patricia, entered\nenthusiastically into the life of thc\nDominion and in thc warm greeting:.\nextended to them wherever they appeared in public, religious differences, party factions and racial divisions were forgotten.\nThc Duke was in his 6itil yes,'\nwhen hc returned to England in\n1916, when the nation wns midway\nin thc war, Thc duchess died thc\nfollowing year. Princess Patricia.-,\nwho had given her name to a regiment of Canadian infantry which\ngained a glorious record, married\nCommander lhc Hun. Alexander\nRamsey in  1919.\nSome years previous to his appointment to Canada, the duke wrs\nhigh commissioner of the Mediterranean with headquarters at Malt;'.\nII was during lhc reign of Ills brother Edward VII. Thc duke resigned\nthis post\u2014much to the annoyance\nof the King\u2014because he considered\nthe duties of the office did not justify cither tlie salary or the status\nattached to the position.\nHis eldest daughter, Princess Margaret, was married in Juno. 1905. to\nPrince Gustavus Adolphus. crown\nprince of Sweden, and died on her\nfather's 70th birthday in 1920.\nEven Ihe smallest scraps of bread\nshould be raved. Place them in a hot\noven until tliey are crisp chough to\ncrumble, crush finely, place in a\nsuitable tin and keep in a cool place.\nHHEUMrXTIC PAINS,\n^topture!\nw\n910 k\nTrail\nCJAT\n319.8 m\n1000 w\n7:00 Devotional program; 7:15 Musical Clock; 8:00 All requests; 8:30\nMorning matinee; 9:00 Organ Fan-\nINTERNATIONAL\nBoston, 2:00 p.m.\u2014Rcbroadcasts of\nselected subjects. WLXAL, 25.4rn.,\n11.79 meg,\nRome, 3:00\u2014News In English.\nRoyal Carabinicri band. \"Review of\nSports\". Folk songs, 2HO, 31.1 m\u201e\n9.63 meg.\nI London. 6:30\u2014\"Boat Races\". GSD,\n25.5 m., 11.75 meg.; GSC, 31.3 m.,\n9.58 meg.; GSB, 31.5 m., 9.51 ma*\u00a3.\nHuizen, Netherlands, 4:00\u2014Happy\nprograms  PCJ, 31.2 m, 9.59 meg.\nMoscow. 4:00\u2014 Three generations\nat one factory. Soviet opinion and\ni world affairs. RAN, 31.2m.. 9.6 meg.\nCaracas. 6:15 \u2014 The Tziganos\nYV2RC, 51.7 m., 5.8 meg.\nBerlin, 7:00 Ballads and songs by\nEdvard Grieg. DJD, 25.4 m\u201e 11,77\nmeg.\n7Z\u00ab***\"'\u00ab\u00b0''Zk*>\u00a3\"\nDo\" a.1.   P\u00bbl\u00bb\u00bbou\"'       k-kly\n,,, m|\u201er.bl\u00ab. \" \u201e-.M\u00bb'\u00bb\n\u2022\u00bb'*\u00bb\"\"\"?!\u00bbwiT\u00ab T\".\nthrouj\" \u25a0\"*\"\n(71\nFOR    THE   KIDNE.VS\nBuy the Best'\nCROW'S NEST\nPASS COAL\nIt\nGives\nMfflfll\nPer\nTon\nMINED IN B. C. AT MICHEL AND COAL CREEK\nWest Transfer Co.\nPROMPT SERVICE\nAgents\nTELEPHONE 33\ni\nMM^\n \u25a0'\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\t\n\u25a0UP.! ||l \u201e.H. J<*f:*--t- \u00bb!\"*\nPAOE FOUR-\nSunday Program\nPleases New\nDenver\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-A Sunday\nprogram at K. P. hall was again a\ngreat success.\nJ. Greer was chairman,\nA selection by the New Denver\nband conducted by A. Trickett entitled the \"Maine Festival,1' by R,\nE. Hall, was well received.\nA hymn was sung, \"Oh Worship\nthe King\". Miss M. Croft was at\nthe piano. Mrs. H. A. Rose recited\na Kipling poem. A selection from the\nGavest, Lord, Is Ended. \"Simplicity\"\nby Dorothy Lee was given by the\nNew Denver Band.\nC. Cunningham of Alamo has returned from Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. C. B. White have\nreturned from a visit to Spokane,\nMr. and Mrs. E. Bettali and E.\nAlywin of the Queen Bess mine,\nAlamo, were visiting in town.\nMrs. James Burkitt has received\nword of the death of hcr sisler,\nMrs. C. W. Cornish of Winnipeg.\nMrs. D. Powell has returned after\na six week4: visit to her sister's in\nRossland.\nMRS NELSON HOSTESS\nMrs. H. E. Nelson was hostess to\nmembers of the Pythian Sisters.\nJn whist, Miss Dora Clever won\nfirst prize and Mrs. J. Depretto consolation. Invited guests were Mrs.\nJ, Deprettor, Mrs, J. Draper, Mrs.\nband entitled \"My Pretty One,\" by\nW. H. Kiefel followed. *Mr. Greer ID. Shannon, Miss B. Bell, Miss Edna\nannounced that the collection at last Shannon, Miss Dora Clever, Mrs. H.\nmonth's program amounted to $18. j Clever, Mrs. F. L. Beggs and Mrs.\nCollection  for  the  evening wasjH' E\" Nelson-\n$14.90. |    Miss Pat  Madden left Saturday\n\"Tell Me thc Old Old Story\", a i for hc rhome at Slocan City.\nhymn, sung by all, was followed by j Miss Ruth Russel left for her home\nA. L. Levy, who gave an address |at Slocan City Saturday after be-\non \"Flowers.\" Tlie hand played i ing a patient at Slocan Community\n\"Serenade the Queen,\" by G. South- .hospital here. She was accompanied\nall. Mrs. C. Thring sang a solo, \"Tiie j by Miss Glady's Reynolds, R. N.\nStranger From GallaHe.\" This was i Mrs. W. S. Ellis and young daugh\nfollowed by a hymn,\nPLIES HIGH  AT 89\nEAGLE LAKE, Onl. (CP)-Mrs.\nM. Birchell, 89, made hcr second airplane flight and said she enjoyed\nit \"immensely\". She liked lookin,\ndown on Haliburton district in which\nThe Day Thou ter, Kathleen Anne, left Saturday she pioneered.\nfor their home at Sh$ep Creek, near\nSalmo, after a few days in town.\nMr. and Mrs. Christopherson and\nson, Bobby, were visitors to Slocan\nCity Sunday.\nThe Legion Women's auxiliary\nand the Canadian Legion held a\nwhist drive in the Legion rooms\nMarch 20. There were nine tables\nin play. Prize winners were Ladies'\nfirst, Miss R. Dumont; consolation,\nMrs. L. Campbell; men's first, C.\nThring; consolation, K. G. Gunn.\nSupper was served by the hostesses,\nMrs. G. Burkitt cyid Miss May Meers.\nH. H. Pendry celebrated his birthday Sunday.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 24, 1937,\nAIRY NEW SHOES\nTELLS TALE OF TAIL8\nPETERBOROUGH, Ont. (CP) -\nInvitations to the April 12 dinner\nto Senator Iva C. Fallis will be\nmarked \"dress informal\". This was\ndecided alter one alderman protested \"informal means tuxedoes; it\nshould read optional.\" But, another\npointed out, \"optional means some\nwould come in tails, some in tux and\nothers in business suits.\"\nh*    \/     J\nyj\/bOVOlMG\n^ Lfu\nTne Dionne Quins use only\nPALMOLIVE\ntm mop moA mth Ume &w\/\nDR. DAFOE TELLS WHY HC CHOSE PALMOLIVE\n\"Al the time of the birth of the Dionne Quintuplets, ind for tome time\nafterward, they were bathed with Olive Oil... When the time arrived for\nsoap and water baths, we selected Palmolive Soap exclusively for daily use\nin bathing these famous babies\"\n(Signtd)\nBecause the Quins were born prematurely, they have always had unusually\naensitive skin. That is why, for some time after their birth, they were bathed\nonly with Olive Oil. Because there is nothing so soothing for delicate skin\nas gentle Olive Oil.\nThen, when the time came for soap and water baths, how important it\nwas to choose a soap made from tbe gentlest, most soothing ingredients!\nThat is why Dr. Dafoe chose Palmolive, nude with Olive Oil.\nAnd now... if you could only sec the smooth, satiny skin of those lovely\nDionne Quins . . . then you would realize how wise Dr, Dafoe was when\nhe decided that gentle Palmolive Soap, should bc used exclusively for\nbathing theo.\nIt THE SOAP YOU ARE USING AS GENTLE AS PALMOUVET\nAre you sure the soap you're now using is as pure, gende and safe as\nPalmolive ? You know Palmolive is made only from real beauty aids... s\nsecret and unique blend of Olive and Palm oils\u2014thc finest known to beauty\nscience 1 That is why Palmolive gives your skin such matchless beauty care.\nTO KEEP YOUR OWN COMPLEXION ALWAYS LOVELY.\nUSE THIS BEAUTY SOAP CHOSEN FOR THE QUINS\nShe It weiring toeleu, heeleit shots\nSpring is just around the corner,\nand it's going to be a very gay nd\ncolorful spring, too. Frocks of vivid\nhues and prints gay with bright\nflowers are the design for spring living. And as for fotweer\u2014well, the\nstylists have practically outdone\nthemselves In the novelty of their\ncreations. The new shoe styles combine smartness with good sense. The\nshoe stylists, it seems, finally have\nbecome conscious of the fact that a\nlittle air is grand for the tootsies, for\nthe latest footwear is plentifully\nventilated. Some are toeless. some\nare heelless and some are both, with\nthe tips of the toes cut out, and\n*\u2014 there are jaunty little oxfords with\nboth toes and heels cut out.\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nTills column ls conducted by Mrs. M. A. Vlgneux. All news of a\nsocial nature including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, etc., will appear in this* column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux at her home, 519 Silica street.\nMrs. E. C. Wragge, Observatory\nstreet, recently entertained at a\nsupper bridge when invited guests\nwere Mrs. Guy W. Davis, Mrs. C\nD. Blackwood, Mrs. F. F. Payne,\nMrs. John Cartmel, Mrs. J G. Bunyan, Mrs. P. G. Morey, Mrs. E. E. L.\nDewdney, Mrs. R. W. Hinton, Mrs\nL. V. Rogers, Mrs. Leslie Craufurd,\nMrs. Grctcben Gibson, Mrs, W. M\nWalker, Mrs. James O'Saaea, Mrs.\nR. L. McBride, Miss M. H. Cameron,\nMrs. Arthur Baird, Mrs. Hugh W.\nRobertson, Mrs. W. T. Fotheringham, Mrs. Harold Lakes, Mrs. C.\nW. Appleyard and Mrs. Paul Lincoln.\nNelson Seniors\nLikely Be Few\nMusic Festival\nInterest Low; School\nCompetitors Hard\nat Work ,\nFears that Nelson will have but\nmeagre senior representation at the\nKootenay Musical festival at Trail\nnext month arc being expressed in\nmusical circles in this city. .School\nrepresentation is, however, expeoted\nlo be heavy. School choirs, elocutionists, instrumentalists and singers\nare hard at work on their test selections.\nAdults complain that the late date\nat which they received the syllabus,\nand difficulty in some eases in obtaining music, is the chief cause of\nlack of senior interest here.\nBoth Nelson and Trail officials\nhave been late in getting the syllabus into the hands of prospective\ncompetitors for the last several\nyears, they assert, arguing that in\nboth cases officials could do more\nto bring out senior competition by\nissuing the syllabus early than by\nany other effort.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Gould, Sterling\nhotel, have taken up resilience in\nthe S. C. Couch home on Ncison\navenue.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nW. Dickson of Nakusp was In\ntown yesterday en route to spend\nhis vacation at the coast.\n* *   *\nRev. J. C. McKenzie has as his\nguest his brother, Rev. W. B. McKenzie of Kelowna, who is here\nattending the diocesan conference\nand the Holy Week services at the\nCathedral of Mary Immaculate.\nClifford Burns, Silica street, left\nyesterday for Vancouver to spend\na few days before leaving for Atlin,\nwhere ho has accepted a position.\n* \u2022   \u00bb\nMrs. George Lee-Warner's circle\nof SI. Saviour's Church Helpers met\nin the Memorial hall when those\npresent were Mrs. Duncan Smith.\nMrs. Brian C. Weld, Miss Connie\nHickman, Mrs. Waldo W. Ferguson,\nMrs. Lee-Warner, Mrs. Reginald H.\nDill,   Mrs,   R.   W.   Dawson.   Mrs.\nJERMAN HUNTS\nThe Easter Store\nOFFERS NEW COATS\nAt amazingly low prices. Smartly tailored and beautifully lined. Tweeds and plain cloths in colors of\nnavy, brown, rust, copper and fawn. Assorted sizes.\n\/JpftaJ\nlpiy.75 and $\u00a35.75\nPHONE 200\nCOLLEGIATE SUITS\nfor Ihe young Miss. In fawn, grey, blue   (Pi I QC\nand green, at $14.\"J\nAnother Shipment of\nSHORT TAILORED SUITS\nIn Worsteds, Twills and Tweeds. Colors are grey,\nnavy and black. (MA QC      (P97 7C\nFrom \u00abJ) 1U. J J to $ JI. IJ\nEASTER HATS\nAll new shades and Spring      fl\u00bb0 AP      tf J Q|\"\nstyles. From $r\u00a3.\"D to $4.\"J\nSTORE OPEN ALL DAY\nDry Goods and Heady-to-Wear\nBAKER ST.\nCharles  H.  Hamilton,  Mrs.  A.  J.\nCoilinson and Mrs. William Taylor.\nJack Kerr of Trail spent the\nweek-end at the home of his son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. S.\nLangill, Victoria street.\nT. D. Edgar of Vallican visited\nthe cily yesterday.\n'.   *   .\nMr. and Mrs. O. Johnson of Sheep\nCreek left yesterday for the coast\non a vacation.\n...\nJohn Avis Jr.  of  Perry   Siding\nspent yesterday in Nelson.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. H. E. Thain, Fair-\nview, have had as their guest Mrs,\nJohnston, who left yesterday for\nher home at Creston.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. L. H. Ctioquette,\nLatimer street, have as their guests\nRev. D. A. O'Carroll of Grand Forks,\nwho is here attending the diocesan\nconference and Holy Week services\nat the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate.\n...\nMiss Dorothy Corbie of the staff\nof Kootenay Lake General hospital\nhas returned from five months spent\nin England.\n.   .   *\na\\mong those attending Mrs. A.\nT. Stephenson's circle of St. Saviour's Church Helpers Monday at\nMrs. Stephenson's home were Mrs.\nJ. E. Bedford, Mrs. George Wady, [\nMrs. Hugh W. Robertson, Mrs. F. A I\nJewett, Mrs. W. G. C. Lanskail and1\nMrs. Stephenson.\nW. C. Tabott of Vallican spent\nyesterday in town.\n.   .   .\nShoppers in the city yesterday\nincluded Mrs. Fitzpatrick of Ainsworth.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nS. N. Ross, manager of the Whitewater mine at Retallack. was a\nvisitor in Ncison yesterday,\nMrs. Spurg Langill and her infant son have left Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital for their home on\nVictoria street.\n...\nA. D. Trickett was in lown from\nNew Denver yesterday,\nTlie Misses Lucy and Gionanna\nDavis, resident pupils of St. Joseph's academy, leave loday to\nspend the holiday in Greenwood\nat lhe home ot their parents. Major\nand Mrs. Angus Davis.\n(Continued on  Page  Five)\nW.M.S. Presents\nEaster Program\nat Annual Meet\nA short program embracing songs\npoems and sketches all appertaining to the Easter festivities was presented by members at the annual\nEaster thanksoffering meeting of\nthe United churches Women's Mis.\nslonary society held in the St. Paul's\nschool room Tuesday afternoon.\nTwo pleasing solos were sung by\nMiss Margaret Arthur, acoompan-\nied on the piano by Mrs. T. J. S.\nFerguson. Along with various bible\nmessages read by Mrs. Arthur Ter-\nrill, she read Henry Van Dyke's\n\"Message of Springtime\". Others\nwho entertained in various ways\nwerc Mrs. S. Barkley. Mrs. B. Simms,\nDr. Annie Smith, Mrs. J. C. Grummet t, Miss Ida Graham and Mrs. J.\nA. Donnell.\nTea and refreshments were served by Mrs. Robert Smillie and Mrs.\nCharles Young.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, March 22-William\nWardale was a weekend visitor in\nAppledale. On the return lie was\naccompanied by Miss Peggy War-\ndale who has been visiting with\nMrs. A. E. Lansdowne.\nMILD WEATHER\nBRINGS RAIN\nMild spring weather brought\nshowers to Nelson Tuesdny Late\nMonday night a slight sprinkling\noccurred and Tuesday morning\na fairly heavy shower dampened\nNelson streets. A total of 05 inches\nof rain fell.\nAfter the stiff winds of thc previous few days a slight five-mile-\nan-hour wind was'little noticed and\nhelped only to clear the clouded\n.sky a little so the sun could make\nhis brief appearance in the late\nafternoon.\nThe mercury held steady in the\nforties for the greater part of the\nday and attained a maximum of\n45 degrees. The minimum tempera-\nSoren Bock was a weekend visitor in Rossland.\n...\nGeorge Anderson of New Westminster is the guest ot Robert Scott,\n*   *   \u00bb\nJoseph  Lemorc,  Jr.  of  Trail  is\nvisiting his grandmother, Mrs. K.\nLavarato.\n...\nMrs. L. MacAulay and little son\nhave returned home from the Trail-\nTadanac hospital.\n...\nAubrey Penny and Al Laface\nspent the weekend in Trail.\nErnest Leschuietta of Trail spent\nthe weekend in the city.\n...\nWilliam Paven, Allen White, Ross\nSaundry and William Fairfield of\nVancouver, have \u2022 arrived in the\ncily and taken up residence here.\nMisses Millie and Josephine Fisher have left for their home at\nArrowhead, where they will spend\nEaster.\n.   .   .\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Wade spent\nthe weekend with Mrs. Wade's\nparente, Mr. and Mrs. J. Bartlctt.\n\u00bb   *   *\nDan Littan of Trail was a weekend visitor in the cily.\nJohn Noren ot Sheep Lake was\nthe weekend guest of Hr. and Mrs.\nFrank Christian.\n...\nBert Craven of Trail spent the\nweekend with friends here.\nMrs. M. Cuyler of Medicine Hat\nis the guest o\u00a3 hcr son-in-law and\ndaughter. Mr. and Mrs. Irving J.\nTrembath.\nH. Mason left yesterday for Grand\nForks where he will spend a few\ndays with his parents, Mr. and\nMrs. II. R. Mason.\nIvan Conroy, Ray Cullinane and\nTaddy Topliss spent Sunday in\nTrail.\nOle and Olaf Osing and Wynne\nSmith wore weekend visitors in\nNelson.\nJames Forrester of Trail was\namong those spending (ho weekend\nhere.\nArthur Dally, accompanied by\nMiss Marian Daily, Mr. and Mrs.\nM, Dally, and Mr. and Mrs. McDonald, spent Sunday in Trail.\nSalmo Lady Leaves\nNelson Hospital\nSALMO, B. C.-Fred White was a\nvisitor to Ymir Monday.\nMrs. William Wilde, Sr., has returned home after here after being\na patient at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, Nelson, for some time.\nMrs. F. La Chance and sons, Alfred and Albert, visited Nelson Saturday.\nOliver Smith spent Tuesday in\nNelson where Mrs. Smith is a patient at Kootenay Lake General hospital.\nMiss Ida Gray was a visitor to\nNelson Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Clifford Hearn\nwere in Nelson Wednesday.\nR. C. Bush has left on a trip to\nNakusp.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Trembley have\nleft for Penticton where they will\nreside. While in Ncison, en route,\nthey visited at the home of Mrs.\nTrembley's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. A. Stromstead.\nMrs. A. Larsen entertained at a\nparly in honor of her daughter,\nMae's sixth birthday. Games were\nplayed. Among invited guests were\nJoyce and Doreen Madaski, Doryce\nand Alouise Buck, Shirley Water-\nstreet, Verna Ncedham and Ruth\nLarsen.\nThe Pythian Sisters held a dance\nin K. P. hall on St. Patrick's night.\nThc winners of prizes for hard time\ncostumes were Mrs. A. Bremner and\nTom Nelson.\nSLEEP mi\nAWAKE REFRESHED\n11 you don't sleep \u00bb\u2022])\u25a0\n-il night, art inlet-1\nrupttd by wtflwrwwil\n\u2014look to jour kidne-i-n\nII your kidneys ire ontf\nof onto and failinf toB\ncleanse the blood off\npoisons and wsslel\nmatter-- jour rait is\nlilulj ml era*, In.   At tba 6nt ilpr of\nkidna* trouble turn confidently to DooU'a\nKidney Pills   for irer hill a century U\u00bb\nIsrorite kidney remedy. Eny to tike,  11'\nDoddsKidneyPills\nPriests to Meet\nin Nelson Today\nHoly Thursday Service\nTomorrow\u2014Bishop to\nGive Appointments\nCatholic priests of the Diocese of\nNelson will meet in Nelson this\nafternoon, when official announcements will be made of new appointments by Pope Pius XI and Bishop\nMartin M. Johnson.\nHis excellency is also expected to\ntake up the matter of religious vacation schools to be held at various\nplaces throughout the diocese in\nJuly and August.\nOn Thursday, the visiting priests\nwill attend Holy Thursday services\nat the Cathedral of Mary Immaculate, the celebration of the Blessing\nof the Oils. At night they will attend Tenebrae services.\nYou'll want your skin to look\nbeautiful with that new Easter\noutfit . . . Come ln now and\nget your JaciaL\nPHONE 18\nCAPITOL\nBeauty Shoppe\nSS, NEED A BUILDER?\nWHEN you're\nmiserable and\nperhaps in need of\na good tonic,\nweight below normal, and you feel\ntirtcl-out and wtak,\nfollow the advice\nof Mrs. Irving J.\nMelanson of Lake\nDoucette, N. S.,\nivtao auld: \"At one time I could hartly drst\naround tor quite t # 1\u2122\u00bbJR\ntile mat was ust a rack of bones.Bal by\nurine Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Dlicovery\nand the 'Favorite Prescription,' lakln-\nttaem Alternately, my recovery \u00bbU soon\napparent to all nay ([lends. After mini a\nftvv bottle ot each 1 avas In better health\nthan I can ever remember.\"\nBuy oi your druggist today.   Ne* laic,\ntablets 50c  Liquid 51.00 and SI.1J.\n(AUvt.)\nTHE GREATEST\nCLOSING OUT\nSHOE\nSALE\nIN THE HISTORY OF NELSON\nWILL START TOMORROW\nSEETHE BARGAINS IN THURSDAY'S\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nb\nI\nWatson Shoe Co. I\nStock 1\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0J\nSTRANGE MEAL MATES\nBLACK HAWK, Ont. (CP)\u2014Cas-\nual visitors would rub their eyes to\nsee Charlie Petri's pets at work on\nhis father's Rainy River farm. The\nboy's pet cat \"Nigger\" has learned\nto haul a sleigh and his lamed\ngroundhog rides atop the load of\ncordwood. The cat and groundhog\nare pals and eat together in thc\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nPHONES\n831\n832\nVASSARS'\nCASH MEAT MARKET\n! ...   \u2014 . -*\u25a0 \u25a0 -\u25a0     ' '\u25a0' i    \u25a0\u2022  \u2014   \u25a0\u25a0=-*\u25a0\nGood Buying for Wednesdoy ond Thursday\nChoice Steer Beef\njuicy Round Steak, lb.   20c\nSirloin Steaki, lb   25*\nPot Roasts, lb. 10* and 12-;\nBoneless Stewing Beef,\n2 Ibs   25*\nRib Boiling, lb     8*\nVeal Steaks, 2 Ibs. ... 29*\nVeal Stewing, 2 Ibs. . 23*\nLamb Chops, lb. .... 20*\nLamb Stewing, 2 Ibs. . 25-}\nPork, Lean Spare Ribs,\n2 Ibs  25*\nPork Tenderloins, lb. . 30*\nReal Calf Liver, lb. . . 30?\nOur Market will be closed all\nday Good Friday.\nBaby Beef Liver, 2 Ibs. 25*\nTURKEYS     TURKEYS\n8 to 10 Ibs. Good quality.\nPer lb 28* and 30*\nSwift's Premium Hams,\nwhole, lb. 28* half ham,\nLb 30*\nCreamery Butter, Thistlo\nBrand, with meat order,\n2 Ibs  55*\nEggs, local A-medium,\n2 doxen  55*\nPure Lard, 2 Ibs 35*\nHamburger, fresh made,\n2 Ibs  19*\nBreakfast Sausage, choice,\nFresh, lb  12*\nFresh Red Salmon, sliced,\nLb 32*\nFresh Herrings, 2 Ibs. . 25*\nFresh Crabs, each ... 23*\nFresh Ling Cod, lb. .. 20-*\n 11    \u25a0\n\t\nMENUS\nRECIPES\nand\nHINTS\nGood\nHousekeeping\nMenu Mint\nLima Beans au Gratin\nStewed Tomatoes\nButtered Canned Corn\nBaked Apples\nMaple   Gingerbread\nCoffee or Tea\nLima beans au gratin is a good\nmeat substitute in a Lenten meal.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 24. 1937.\nyde\n\u25a0 PAGE  FIVfc\nToday'i Recipes\nLIMA BEANS AU GRATIN -\nThree cups cooked dried lima beans,\none cup medium white sauce,\nthree-fourths cup grated American\ncream cheese, three-fourths cup\nbuttered bread crumbs. Arrange\nlayers in baking dish. Cover top\nwith crumbs. Bake in 360-degree\noven about 30 minutes.\nMAPLE GIGERBREAD - Two\ncups flour, one-half teaspoon soda,\none-half teaspoon salt, one teaspoon ginger, one-fourth cup butter (or similar fat), one cup maple\nsyrup, one egg, two cups flour,\nrind and juice of one-half lemon.\nGrease a shallow pan or 12 to 16\ncupcake pans, heat oven to moderate, 350 degrees. Sift flour, meas-\n'ure and sift with soda, salt and\nginger. Cream butter until of\nwhipped cream consistency. Add\nmaple syrup gradually, stirring it\nin to blend well. Beat, egg?, add\nto first mixture. Add dry ingredients alternately with sour milk,\nbeating well after each addition.\nAdd grated rind and juice of\nlemon.    Turn  into  prepared pans\nTODAY'\nPURE\nSUGARCANE\nGOLDEN SYRUP PIE\n1  cup  Rogers' Golden Syrup\n3 eggs\n1 tablespon melted butter\nNutmeg\n1 lemon\nAdd the syrup, lemon juice,\ngrated rind, nutmeg and melted  butter to the  three well\nk beaten eggs. Bake in baked\npastry shell until\ndone.\nCranbrook Amateurs In Stage Production\nand bake in a moderate oven 25 to\n50 minutes, the former time for\ncupcakes, the latter for loaf. Remove to cake rack, cool slightly\nand frost with cream cheese frost- ]\ning. CREAM CHEESE FROSTING\u2014Work two cream cheeses to j\na creamy consistency. Add one cup\npowdered sugar gradually, working it in well. Fold in one stiffly-\nbeaten egg white. Spread on gingerbread.\nSalt\nSalt, which is possibly the commonest and most used household\nproduct, is chloride of sodium,\nknown mineralogically as halite. It\nlis obtained by evaporation of ocean\ni water, from layers of deposit in\nswamps and old lake bottoms, or a.s\nrock salt in beds, lenses or mines.\nIn the United States salt is produced in New York. Pennsylvania,\nVirginia, West Virginia, Ohm,\n'Michigan, Illinois, Kansas, Louisi-\n[ ana and Texas. Also from the wa-\ni ters of Great Salt Lake, in Utah,\n[and from San Francisco bay.\nI In Europe the most notable de-\nj posits of salt are in the Cheshire\n! district of England; in Germany,\n'Austria, Poland, Hungary, Russia\n'and Spain. The mines at Wielicz-\nj ka, Poland, near Cracow, are famous for their great antiquity and\n| the unusual size of the underground\nworkings.\nCooked Salad Dressing\nOne teaspoon salt, one teaspoon\ndry mustard, dash of cayenne, two\nSociety\n(Continued from page 4j\nMrs. F. W. Hewiss, Terrace apartments, leaves this morning for Spokane to spend the Easter hobdays.\nHer husband will follow at the\nweek-end.\nW. S. (Duke) Harris left yesterday for Cam'bourne after several\ndays in Nelson.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\n0. Larson of the Reno mine visited town yesterday.\nRev. J. J. Cheevers is in the city\nto attend Holy Week services al\nthe Cathedral of Mary Immaculate\nand to attend the diocesan conference. He is a guest al the home of\nGregoire Choquette, Latimei street.\n! Among those assisting at the lior-\n! pital aid tea at the Hume hotel\n! Saturday afternoon was Mrs. B.\n| Lowery, who acted as cashier.\nMiss  Phyllis  Mott,   who  attends\nj St. Joseph's boarding school, leaves\n; today   to   spend   her   vacation   at\nj Cranbrook, where her pan.nts, Mr.\nand Mrs. H. R. Mott, reside.\ners at her home Monday wbrn those\npresent were Mrs. H. W Seamon. j\nMrs. F. R, Pritchard, Mrs Harry\nB. Gore, Mrs. H. R. Townsend. Mrs\nMabel Rockliff. Mrs. A. J. Cornish,\nMrs. Stanley P. Bostock, Mrs. A\nJ. Dunnett and Mrs. Sftel.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nThe home of Mrs. Harold Emery !\nJosephine street, was the scene of\nan entertainment Monday evening\nwhen the mothers' of the Panther\nmidget hockey team entertained at\na combined whist and bridge party.\nHonors went to Miss Ethel Smith,\nMiss E. McDonald, Mr?. D. Smith\nand Mrs. C, Sewell. Those assisting\n, Mrs. Emery and donating prizes\nwere Mrs. L, McKinnon, Mrs. G. F\nHunter, Mrs. G. S. Mcintosh, Mr;.\n;J. Morrison, Mrs. N. C. Stibbs. Mrs,\n; A. Blais, Mrs. Cornfield, Mrs. Sbep-\n| hard and Mrs. A. G. Gelinas.\n. Mr. and Mrs. Henri Gagnon, Car-\nI bnnate street, have as their guest\ni Mrs. Gagnon's mother, Mrs. Moise\n; Bourgeois of Crescent Valky. who\n| is here to spend tse faster holidays.\ni Mr. and Mrs. Leslie P. Trainor,\n! Stanley street, have as their guest\nj Rev.   F.   Monaghan   nf   Revelstoke,\nwho is here to attend the diocesan\ni conference and the Holy Week ser*\n: vices   at   the   Cathedral   ol   Mary\nImmaculate,\nMRS. BEALE DIES\nAT NAKUSP\nNAKUSP, B. C.\u2014Mrs. Beale, for\nmany years a resident of this district, died at Nakusp Sunday after\na lengthy illness. She is survived by\na brother, A. Borne, of Nakusp.\nFOUND COIN OF 1.537\nWELLAND, Ont. (CP). - Harry\nLearn found a coin dated 1837 near\nthe city dump. On one side it b'-ars\na shamrock, rose and thistle in the\nform of a crest, and on the other the\ninscription: \"Province du Bas Canada.\"\nHIGH TIDES\nOVERTON. N. S, iCP)-Tides\nrose to a tremendous height along\nthis roast, and shingles from Howard Watkins home were carried off\nby the waves. Windows were\nsmashed also and several inches of\nwater swirled into the house.\nIf fruit stains appear en linen,\nsaturate the stain with glycerine.\nLet it stand for an hour or so, rub\nbetween thc hands and wash in the\nusual way.\nAbove is pictured the cast of the Cranbrook Little Theatre production of Leslie Howard's \"Murray Hill.\" Reading from left to right the characters are: Mrs. Cass, Mrs. JL L\nHairrison; Aunt May, Mrs. Mackenrot; Appleway, Alan Graham; Aunt Elizabeth, Mrs.\nM. A. Beale; Vane, the butler, C. V. Edwards; Worthington Smythe, W. A. Morris; Wrigley, E. S. Jones, and Amelia, Miss May Maltman.\nMrs. Gwyllm  John,  who  wns  a\nguest of  Mrs.  Jack  Annable,  An-\n: liable block, left yesterday for her\nhome at Creston.   Mrs. John was a\n| former   member   of   the   staff   of\n| Kootenay Lake General hospital.\n|     Mrs.   Ernest   W.   Steel,     Second\n! street, Fairview, entertained mem-\n1 hers   of   Mrs.   Fred   H.   Graham's\ncircle of St. Saviour's Church Help-\nCommander and\nMrs. Smith Are\nBack From Calif.\nLONGBEACH, B. C.~Commander and Mrs. B. A. Smith have taken\nup residence again at \"Craijend\",\nLongbeaeh, after wintering at Vancouver.\nWord has reached here of the ill\nness of D. J. Kerr, who has spent |    The Seri Indians of Tiburon isl-1    Rainbows may sometimes be seen\nthe  winter  in  California with  his | and( in the Gulf of CaWorni8i ran! all day long in siberiai duc to thP\n\"    \u25a0    ' lls wUI I run down horses, coyotes, deer, and j reflection of the sun cn fine parti-\neven jackrabbits, on foot. cles of snow in the air.\ntablespoons flour, two tablespoons\nsugar, two egg yolks, one cup irradiated evaporated milk, one tablespoon lemon juice, three tablespoons vinegar. Blend salt, mustard, cayenne, flour and sugar. Add\negg yelks. Mix well, then odd milk.\nCook over boiling water until mixture thickens. Stir in the vinegar\nand lemon juice slowly. This\namount makes one and one-fourth\ncuns.\nwife i\ndelay their return for at least another month.\nPercy Young left Saturday for the\ncoest. He will be away for two\nweeks undergoing treatment in\nVancouver, rendered necessary by\nan accident last fall.\nJack James has brought his bride\nhome from California. Next month\nthe newly married pair, accompanied by* Mrs. D. H. Ferguson, will\nleave for California to spend a\nmonth's holiday. Later Mr. and Mrs.\nJames will return to stay with Mr.\nand Mrs. Ferguson for the rest of\nthe summer.\nMrs. Rutherglen spent last weekend in Longbeaeh.\nA   government   crew   has   been\nwr-rking for some time on the slide\nat the foot of Hill's ranch trying to |\nsave further trouble\nWrite for fry Recipe Book, sent fm Modern ways le m Cocoa and CfiowlJte, FryCadtarr 111, Montreal\n\/\u00a3\u20acflST\u20acR\nSERVE-\nHON\nH^HPIRE\"\nThe 1936 Dairy Show, held last October in London's Famous Agricultural Hall\ndrew exhibits from all over the British Empire. The comment of one of the judges,\nconveyed to us in a recent letter from our London agent was that this year's show\nwas the \"Finest Exhibit of Empire Bacon yet seen.\"\nAmid the stiffest competition put up by meat packing plants from all over the\nBritish Empire, Burns' Bacon won the highest award for Quality, Fineness, and Mildness of\nFlavor, thus definitely establishing Burns 6-Co. Limited as \"Canada's Leading Bacon House.\"\nThe Shamrock Bacon and Shamrock Hams too, regularly offered for sale from\nVictoria to Halifax are prepared and processed in the same exacting manner as the bacon\nwe shipped to the Royal Dairy Show. Remember, therefore, that when you order Shamrock\nHams and Bacon from your butcher or grocer for Easter, or any time throughout the\nyear, you will receive and enjoy the finest quality the British Empire has yet produced.\nHAM* BACON\nHIGHEST\nAWARD\nThis is a reproduction of the Medal awarded\nBurns if Co. Limited at the Empire Dairy\nShow held October, 1936, in the Royal\nAgricultural Hall, London, England.\nilUfflmiMSIfli ML\nHAMS AND BACtTO\n*Jhp\u00a3mpirrt Standard*\nBURNS L CO.l'M'ted CANADA'S LEADING BACON HOUSE\n \u2014\u2014\nmmma\n\u2014\u2014-\n\t\nWHi.imiiiji|i,\u00bbiiiji-ji-iiji....,aWin,v.\nr*(si \u00abix\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 24. 19J7..\nModernize Your Home Under the H.I.P. and Use\nNelson Cottonwood Plywood\nThe Ideal Wall Finish That Can Be Used Mosl Attractively\nin Every Room of Your House.\nA view of a modern kitchen with walls and cupboards lined with Cottonwood Plywood\nand finished in Enamel,\nWe will be pleased to look after the\narrangements of your loan.\nBritish Columbia Veneer Works, Ltd.\nSPRING IS HERE!\nUNSAFE\nTO.\nSAFE\nSuperior roofing mattrials lhat insure'greater strength and durability, and lasting renier\nSmartly designed fixtures and\nequipment that lend a cheerful\ninviting air to every room\nNOW Is the Time to\nBuild and Remodel\nYour Home\nrite oppcrtuivty to finance your alterations is\nsupplied by the\nNATIONAL HOME IMROVEMENT\nPLAN\nNew Roofs\nNew Porches\nNew Garages\nNew Rooms\nNew Floors\nNew Basements\nIfoprVf*     UJ\nFine quality willboard that It\nideal (cc making extra rooms or\npartitions. Very easy to apply.\nNew Cupboards 0,lr complete selerttons of lumber and millwork make it easy\nfor you to repair or remodel.\nSEE US FOR PLANS\nAND ESTIMATES\nWe will give you every assistance in prepairing your\nimprovements\nPHONE 178\nA. H. GREEN CO., LTD.\nFRONT ST.\nNELSON, B. C.\nYou Have a $2000 Credit Under the\nHOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN\nUSE IT!\nHAVE THE WORK DONE NOW\u2014PAY IN EASY INSTALMENTS\nFOLLOWINC ARE SAMPLES OF MONTHLY PAYMENTS.\nModern\nElectrical\nInstallations\nLet us explain the\nnew modern way to\nlight your home.\nEstimates Freely Civen\nSTANDARD\nELECTRIC\nJACK HOOQERWERF\nPhone 838 Baker St.\nCost of\nImprovement!\nMonthly Payments\nIf Spread Over 1 Year\nMonthly Payment!\nIf Spread Over Z Year*\nMonthly Payment*\nIf Spread Over 3 Yeart\n9100\n$8.34\n94.17\n92.78\n$200\n$16.67\n98.34\n95.56\n$300\n925.00\n912.50\n98.34\n$400\n933.34\n916.67\n911.12\n$500\n941.67\n920.84\n913.80\n91000\n983.34\n941.67\n927.78\n$2000\n9166.67\n983.34\n955.56.\nHOME CHANGES CAN BE FINANCED\nQUESTIONS YOU MAY ASK ABOUT HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS\n1. WHO MAY APPLY?~Any home owner with a regular\nrevenue from an assured source.\n2. HOW MUCH MAY I APPLY FOR?\u2014The maximum loan\non any one property, is $2,000.\n3. HOW LONG MAY LOANS RUN?-From one to three years.\n4 WHAT SECURITY IS REQUIRED?\u2014Only that you have a\nregular income and good credit standing tn your community.\n5. WHAT ASSURANCE NEED I GIVE?\u2014(a) That you own\nthe property; (b) That your mortgage, if any, is in good\nstanding. Tlie standing of taxes, interest or liens against\nyour property must he acceptable to tha bank.\n8 WHAT SIGNATURES ARE REQUIRED?\u2014Signature of the\nproperty holder. No endorsers are required, the signature\nof the property owner being sufficient\nPLUMBING\nREPAIRS and\nINSTALLATIONS\nIf you are contemplating having work done under the\nHome Improvement Plan let\nus give you estimates.\nVIC\nGRAVES\nMASTER   PLUMBER\nPHONE 815\nLumber\nThe finest seasoned lumber in really good grades.\n.   Let us fill your\nneeds for your\nRepairs and Alterations under the\nHOME\nIMPROVEMENT\nPLAN\nOn orders of $5.00 or over\nwe give a 10% discount\nfor cash or 5% discount\nif paid on or before 10th\nof succeeding month\nBe Sure of the Best.\nMake Your Purchases at\n\"THE HOME OF\nGOOD LUMBER\"\nw.w.\nPOWELL\nCO., LTD.\nPHONE 176\nFoot of Stanley St.\nPAINT YOUR HOME-\nBE PROUD OF IT.\nGet extra beauty, extra value, and added protection\nhy letting us paint your home. It will surprise you,\nthe vast, difference in appearanre. Phone for estimates.\nNew spring sunworthy wallpapers now on\ndisplay at our shop.\nMURPHY BROS.\nWallpaper   \u2014   Paints   \u2014   Enamel\nMcKay and Stretton\nElectrical Contractors\nLet us install up to the minute wiring throughout your home\u2014We are\nprepared to give you estimates.\nPhone 544\nModical Arts Block\n7\"?\naV^,\nL\n'  *A .iJuui..iiii   m>\nVENETIAN\nBLINDS\nPRACTICAL\nECONOMICAL\nLet me take your orders\u2014\nI will call and get the\ncorrect measurements.\nAWNING8 OF ALL 8IZE8\nA. TERRII.L\nPhono 435R1\nPLENTV of\nOUTLETS\nThe Home Improvement\nFlan is a grand opportunity\nto modernize the wiring in\nyour home. End the peril of\nfrayed insulation; put in\nplenty of convenient wall\nand baseboard outlets:\nF. H. SMITH\nElectrical Contractor\nPhone 666 Baker St.\nAre You\nGoing to\nBUILD?\nWhether  it  be  a   new\nhome, a garage, or merely\na   small   cupboard,   let\nLamberts supply the\nLumber.\nSHINGLES\nDONNACONA\nINSULATING BOARD\nMOSS-TEX LOOSE\nINSULATION\nCOTTONWOOD VENEER\nFIR VENEER\nOAK FLOORING\nLambert\nLumber\nLimited\nPLAN NOW\nTO MAKE THE\nIMPROVEMENTS\nYou Have Been Wanting for So Long\non Your Home.\nTHE HOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN\nSponsored by the government provides a simple and\nreasonable way to raise the necessary funds and we\nwill be glad to explain this plan more fully if you will\ndrop in and see us,\nAlso when in need of Materials we have\nCEMENT  PLASTER  LIME\nGYPROC WALLBOARD\nINSULATION    SHINGLES    PAINT\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\n \u25a0\n\t\naapar*-*warraar*i*-*rmfy,m9m,,,\",W ,,U    LiUHHj,!\nVol\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NtL\u00bbN, B.twWIBWMOAY MORNINQ, MARCH M. INT..\n-PAor SEVEN\n1937 Is\nNelson's HOME\nIMPROVEMENT\nYEAR-THE YEAR\nFOR PUTTING\n~         \"   MEN\nBACK TO\nWORK\nGEO. R.\nLEASK\nGeneral\nContractor\nand\nBuilder\nLet us lock after all your\nproblems in regard to\nhome improvements.\nWe will make all arrangement! for your bank loan\nAGAIN\nNEW\nFLOORS\nfor Your Home\nFinance your loan for\nbeautiful new floors this\nyear under the Home Improvement Plan.\nWe lay all types of flooring, specializing in Inlaid\nOak.\nSee or Phone\nH. Ronmark\nEstimates Freely Given\nOffice on \/s=i>.\nStanley St.        (p*!\nOpp. B.C. Telephcr\nPhone 622R.\nPROMPT\nSERVICE\nMODERNIZE YOUR PLUMBING\nand Save Many Dollars\nOutstanding beauty and superb quality form\na rare combination In our newest bathroom  fixtures.\nB.C. Plumbing & Heating\nStanley St. Company Nelson, B. C.\nInterior Construction Co.\nFront St, Nelson, B. C. Phone 894\nESTIMATES   AND   INFORMATION   GLADLY  GIVEN\nREMODEL IN 1937\nConsider the facts. Material and\nlabor costs are down; rents are\nclimbing, a housing shortage is\non the way! Property remodeled\ntoday will ba modern 5 or 6\nyears lrom now; and you can remodel for less cost this year than\nyou'll bo able to for years! Now\nis the time to profit by the boom\nof tlie next few years; invest in\nremodeling and enjoy the profit\nwhen you sell!\nCHECK YOUR HOME\nThen sec us\u2014We will help ycu with e:timates, and after complete costs have been\narrived at, we will give every assistance in arranging for your loan.\u2014\nHere are some of the things you can do under the\nImprovement Plan\n1 Start with the kitchen Check the\nplumbing, lighting and built-in conveniences. Work surfaces should be uniform\nin height, arranged foi convenient meal\nplanning\n2 Examine walls in the bathroom See\nthe new tileboard and composition sur.\nfaces for remodeling and modernizing\nRecover the \"cor with composition flooring or tile  Consider fixture?\n3 Plan now to enclose or screen your\nporch. Many new designs fcr glazing .ire\navailable, and the space gained will arid\nan extra room to your home Use for living, dming or sleeping.\n4 Modernize the basement' Add a recreation or game room, a modern laundry\nor a den. Check the heating plant and\nplumb'ng Examine under-floor foi term,\nite damage or dry rot. hreproof\n5 Utilize waote si\nan extra bedroom\ndren, c a den c\nWill  make  thi;   c.\nsmall cost\niace \"1 your attic1 Add\ni playroom for the chil-\n;;mc locin Wallbcard\nIra space a\"ailab'e at\n6 Do all of the bedrooms have adequate\ncloset space and cross ventilation? Built-\nin wardrobes and extra windows will add\nto the comfort and convenience of these\nrooms.\n7 Bookshelves, a new mantel or convenient closets will add new convenience to\nthe living room. New floors, wood paneling and additional windows will make the\nroom comfortable, attractive.\n8 New china cabinets, french doors, and\nconvenient cupboards are appreciated in\nthe modern dining room, and they're easy\nto add m remodeling an older home! See\nour smart new designs.\n0 Is your hallway dark? Refinish the\nwoodwork, install a new stairway, put in\nextra windows. Include a convenient closet for coats and sporting goods The whole\nfamily will appreciate it'\n10 Add a convenient attached garage1\nflie cost is low, and modern equipment at\n' 'I Water's Co, Lid, includes com\nplete door and hardware sets and all Ihe\nmaterials you'll need to build this addition\nIf Ycu Intend to Build\nConsult our home planning experts for advice concerning\nany phase of home planning, remodeling or modernizing.\nIheir service is offered free, and includes plans and estimates for any type of construction. See our selection of\nplans for homes of all sizes; you'll find many-suggestions\nfor your own home! No charge for any service.\nT..H. WATERS\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nPHONE 156 NELSON, B.C.\n(ity Shows Receipts, Disbursements\nFirsl Two Months of Year af $85,734\nReceipts Include Overdraft of $12,039 at\nEnd February; Start Year With\nOverdraft of $24,251\nReceipts md disbursement\" of the City of Nelson for the first two\nmonths of 1937 aire balanced at $89,784.13 hi I statement covering tha two\nmonths. Receipt- include au overdraft of %12.030.32 at February 28.\nThe statement follows:\nSTATEMENT OF RECEIPTS AND WSBURSIMDNTS FOR THE\nTWO MONTHS ENDING FEBEUARY 28TH, 1937.\nRECEIPTS\nElectric Light Rates -. - ..... $27,828.81\nElectric light deposits -.  \u00bb        H2.S0\nGas rates \u2014 \t\nGas supplies   .\nGas deposits _ -\t\nWater rates -  \t\nScavenger rates - ....\nLicences  - \u2014\nReal estate taxes \t\nLocal improvement taxes.\nSewer ranUU \t\nStreet Railway _ .....\nBetter Housing:\nBlackwell, A. E.\t\nFerguson, O. H. -\t\nEmory, A. C . \u2014\nMiller, C \t\n2,360.16\n727.70\n7.60\n$27,633.31\nYoung Alberta Miss ls Typing Champ >>|OT0R VEHICLE\nREGISTRATIONS\nGAIN SHARPLY\n91.08\n47.25\n22.72\n87*0\nClaimant of the world's crown for\nspeed typing in her class, seven-\nyear-old Reta Louisa Elder, of Raymond, Alta., pictured here at her\nmachine, has already won International fame through her ability to\ntype 120 words a minute without effort. The young typist had her first\ntyping training with a number of\nother children in a kindergarten\nexperiment which included spelling\nand writing. The young Alberta miss j\nrecently mode a tour of the United\nStates where she was hailed as s j\nmarvel, but though she faratices\nregularly at hcr typewriter, her\ngeneral education is not being forgotten. Hcr general average is 91\nper cent\nB. C. government unemployment relief.\nCemetery mainteriaince ,.  -\nCement walks  -.___\nCivic Centra Commission \t\nDog tax \t\nElectric light malntenanca ......\t\nForeshore rentals  - \t\nGroup insurance   \u2014.\t\nIndustrial school  \t\nKootenay Lake General hospital\t\nPoll tax _ ~ \u2014 \t\nLibrary fees ..............\t\nPolice court fines - \u2014 \u2014\u2014.\t\nPlumbing fees  .\u2014.\nPower plant maintenance \u2014-     -\nRelief -  _\t\nRoad tax   \t\nSchools _ \t\nTax sale lots\t\nTax aala 1938 __..\nTax sale 1936 \t\nWeigh scailea \u2014 \u2014\t\nKaslo Fifteen Hundred club _\nB. C. government gas tax refund\t\nGas department maintenance _\t\nMiscellaneous -.\n147.17\n5,206.12\n427.75\n139 JO\n1.2(1\n6.00\n612.42\n24.00\n47.08\n20.0(1\n213.40\n8.00\n87.82\n253.00\n8.00\n65.10\n24.00\n2.00\n3,100.90\n30.00\n20.00\n340.16\n580.00\n983.25\n162.12\n72.80\n.50\n$68,790.35\n       4,904.46\nOverdrr,fl February 28, 1937     12,039.32\nCash on hand, January 1st, 1937 .\nDISBURSEMENTS\n(85,734.13\nPower plant salaries -\t\nPower plant malntenanca ....\nElectric light salaries .\nElectric light maintenance .\nNelson District Hos\n468 More Than Two\nYears Ago\nALL CLASSES\nREVEAL GAINS\nTotal Advances Frcm\n1891 to 2459 in\nTwo Years\nGraphically depleting the Increase-\njn motor vehicle traffic In the dls-\n'. ict contiguous to Nelson during the\npart threo years, figures showing\nregistration of vehicles in 1934, 1935\nand 1936 reveal an increase of 468\nin total vehicles registered, made up\nof 268 passenger and 180 commercial. Tlie district includes Nelson,\nSaliflo, Castlegar and Creston licence-issuing offices of tha provincial police,\nit wss and should be a purely civic. TncrM!e, ,r, 8h0wn In mw ng*\naffair. I Orations and renewals of both pas-\nThe meeting was unanimous that ganger and commercial veWclai In\nit should be a children's day. The tha taDle Whleh followr.\nfollowing heads of cily organizations were appointed as a committee\nlo go ahead: Mayor F E. Archer.\nRev. J. Fielding Shaw, pastor of\nSt. Andrew's church. Rev. Gardner,\nvicar of St. Mark's Anglican church,\nRev. Father Chsevers, priest of\nSacred Heart church, A. L. MacPhee. to represent tho city, C. W.\nWebster, the school board, G H\nGiegerich, the board of trade F. S.\nRouieau, ihe boat club, av II. Latham, the fire department, James\nSpeirs, the Farmers' Institute, F. H.\nAbsy, the Canadian Legion, Mrs\nE. M. Sandilands, St. Mark's Anglican Women's Auxiliary, Mrs William MacDonald, Sacred Heart\nWoman's Auxiliary, Mrs. T H. Horner (acting for Mrs. S. H. Green),! end home C00kIng wle gtturday at\nMay 24 celebrations were to be com-1 \u00bb  ^Z[rZiT'L^ Va-1the hmi \u00ab, ** ^^ M\" *\nMrs. Fred McGibbon, Canaoian Le-1 M smcM-nd-, on B avamta.\n\u00bbion Women's Auxil'ary, Mrs F. S.'\nChandler, Kaslo and District Wo-\n1 man's Institute, Mrs. E. H. Latham,\nLadies'  Hospital  Aid  and  W.  L.\nBillings.\nThe committee met and appointed\nMayor   F.   E.   Archer   permanent\nchairman and T. H. Robson per-\nPlan Coronation\nDay Program\nat Kaslo\nCommittee Named; to\nBe Distinct From\nEmpire Day\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014About 25 attended\na public meeting Friday to discuss\nplans for a Coronation day program.\nMayor F. I. Archer was chosen\nchairman end T. H. Robson was\nappointad secretary for the meat-\nint.\nRumors that Coronation day and\nPassenger\nvehicles:\nNew Renewals Total\n.... 273\n1492\n1377\n1767\n1335\t\n.... 254\n1631\n1334 \t\n1479\nCommercial\nvehicles:\n.... 122\n570\n692\n1935 \t\n.... 112\n440\n352\n1834   \t\nls shov\n612\nSummarized, tlie totj\ni r\u00abg-\nistration of both passenger and.com-\nUlOrCittal    VOulCaaC*     *tt-     SCt\n\u25a0sr.clng\nfrom\n1991 to 2459,\nss follow\n:\nTotals:\nPass. Comm. Agg.\n1938\t\n - 1767\n692\n552\n2459\n1938\t\n 1881\n2183\n51]\n1991\n-~-A^~\nblned this year seemed to have no\nfoundation. May 24 will be celebrated In the usual manner and\nCoronation day will have its own\nprogram.\nAs the Canadian Legion Women's\nAuxiliary had already made tentative plans for a Coronation day\nprogram it was suggested that they\nand tha Canadian Legion should\ntake responsibility for the whole\naffair, but it was pointed out lhat\nmanent secretary-treasurer.\nThe  Women's  Auxiliary   of   St.\nMark's Anglican church held s tea\nMrs. Sandilands was general convenor. Mrs. C. Q. Bowker Mrs.\nFred Moulton and Mrs. Fred McGibbon had charge of refreshment\narrangements, guests being served\nChester presided at the tea table.\nMrs. John Cadden and Miss A.\nHodges wera salesladies at the cooking table.\nRev. C S. Wright was \u00bb visitor\nIn Nelson Monda:'.\nSub-station salaries\t\nSub-station maintenance\nGas department salaries\nGas department maintenance\nStreet railway salaries\t\nStreet railway maintenance\nWater works construction\nWater works salaries\nWater works maintenance\nHighways\u2014Cleaning \t\nHighways\u2014Engineering   _\nHighway*\u2014Foreman\nHighways\u2014Oasolina\nHighways\u2014Grading\nHighways\u2014Repairs .\nPlank sidewalks \u2014\nTools and equipment\nSewers maintenance\nSewers By-law 766 ....\n1\nk.l\n*l\n-\nr\nji\n.-\"-a          *\n''     il\n \"il\n\\*\ny*\u00a3\nfj-rt*'\n\\i-l\n*i\nt...\n\u25a0\"\\\nT\n-:]\nri\n\u2022ft\nScavenger salaries\nScavenger maintenance\nIncinerator*-Salery\nPolice\u2014Magistrate\nPolice\u2014Salaries   ....\nPolice\u2014Maintenance\nPolice\u2014Transportation and keep of prisoners\nCemetery\u2014Maries\nCemetery\u2014Malntenanca  ..\nFire Department\u2014Salaries\nFire Department\u2014Maintenance\nLibrary\u2014Maintenance\nLibrary\u2014Rent\nPublic Health-Salary\nPublic Health\u2014Maintenance\nSchools\u2014Maintenance\t\nParks\u2014Oyro\nParks\u2014Lakeside\u2014Salary\nParks\u2014Lakeside\u2014Maintenance\nBand Stand _ ...:.\nCouncil Indemnities\nSalaries and auditor\nPrinting and advertising\nPostage and stationery\nJanitor and supplies\t\nFurniture and fixtures ..\nRepairs \t\nMiscellaneous\nSuperannuation .-\nCivic Centre\u2014Construction\nCivic Centra*\u2014Maintenance\nHome for incurables _....\t\nIndustrial school\nHospital\nMental hospital\nMothers Pensions\t\nRelief\t\nTranquille Sanatorium .....\nRefunds\u2014Gss Deposits\t\nRefunds\u2014Light Deposits ...\nRefunds\u2014Water Rates\t\nWeigh scales .\nTax sale costs\nExchange on debenture Interest\nInterest and exchange\nInterest on debentures\nHospital interest and sinking fund\nOverdraft at Bank January 1,1937\nCash on hand -\t\n$85,734.13\nIn tests of four crops that are\ncommonly Irrigated, scientists in\nNebraska learned that alfalfa and\nsiinnr beets are thirstier plants than\noats and potatoes.\nWELLAND, Ont (CP)-Welland\ndistrict bakeries have boosted their\nbread prices one- cent a loaf, bringing the price to 10 cents. Higher\ngrain prices are the reason.\nYour Chance to Save\non Spring Decorations\nThese Paints, Enamels and Varnishes are guaranteed\nto be regular quality goods and not made down to\na price.\nThis offer will not be repeated this year.\nJust two week's special.\n\u2022\nMarshall-Wells line also includes many other outstanding products such as Shingle Stain \u25a0 Floor\nEnamel \u2022 Lin-Shine - House Paint \u2022 Porch Paint -\nP.A.M. \u2022 Gloss-Cote\u2014at regular prices.\nLET THE  HOME  IMPROVEMENT LOAN PLAN\nPAINT YOUR HOME AND BUILDINGS THIS YEAR\nTake advantage of the opportunity provided by the National Employment\nCommission Home Improvement Plan whereby your local bank will loan\nyou the money without red tape or security other than your own personal\nsignature and you can pay it back in easy Monthly Instalments.\nCOME IN\u2014LET US SHOW YOU HOW EASILY IT CAN BE DONE\nTrail Maaca.it is Co., Ud. Hun'er B:cr.  Limited\nTrcl'   B. C. Rossland, B. C.\nGrand Forks Furnitu.e t> Hdwc. Co., Ltd. H. O. Rorke Hardware Store\nGrand Forks, B. C, Penticton, B. C.\nC. C. MeMynn F. Rmhton Winter Sr Co. F. Park* fr Co.\nMidway.  B. C.\nNakusp, B. C.\nCreston, B. C.\nCranbrook, B. C.\n \u2014\n\u2014\u2022\nPAGE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. \"..\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 24, 1937.\nNrlamt Saily Jfcuia\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n216   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   of   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe   Canadian    Press    Leased    Wire    News   Service.\nWEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 24, 1937.\nPROSPECTING BELOW\nModern geophysical prospecting methods which use\nelectricity and magnetism instead of a forked branch of a\ntree to detect the presence of valuable ore deposits, is the\nway mining engineers are outwitting the obscuring blanket\nof rocks and earth which the great glacial invasions threw\nover the earth tens of thousands of years ago. At the meetings of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical\nEngineers in New York this week, the applications of the\nseemingly \"divining rod\" methods of modern prospecting\nto Canada and the United States were under discussion.\nIn Canada, in particular, the method finds wide usefulness and its greatest development says the Victoria Times.\nHans Lundberg, noted Swedish engineer who has pioneered in the use of the equipment, has pointed out that most\nof Canada's great mineral wealth has been, in the past,\ndiscovered by geologists who prospected on the indications\nof surface rocks and their formation. And this, he added,\ndespite the fact that almost 99 per cent of Canada's visible\nterrain is a layer of glacial deposits from a few feet to\n120 and more thick.\nIt is the method of geophysical prospecting which allows science to penetrate beneath this overlying glacial\ndrift layer and tell what the real nature of the bedrock\nbelow may be like. \"Since the rich ore deposits known in\nCanada,\" said Mr. Lundberg, \"are found in the one per\ncent of the country where they are visible, it is logical\nto assume that there must exist valuable and rich ore bodies\nin the 99 per cent of the country where they are not visible,\nas we know that the geological conditions must be similar.\"\nGeophysical prospecting serves to supplement the findings of a geologist in quite the same way that X-ray studies\nadd to the knowledge of a surgeon. Typical of success last\nyear were surveys made in British Columbia, where, for a\ncost of $6000, deposits were found which in six weeks\nyielded gold ore valued at a million dollars. The same company in the previous year had spent $60,000 in prospecting\nto find deposits of a similar value.\nCANADIAN AIRMEN WELCOMED\nThe announcement from Ottawa that approximately\n150 pilots, holding Canadian civil flying licences, have left\nthis country to join the Royal Air Force in Great Britain,\nis an interesting one. It recalls the role played by Canadians\nin the British aerial fighting during the war. The Canadians\ndeveloped a peculiar aptitude for war flying, and before\nthen end of the war formed a very large proportion of the\nBritish pilots. The achievements of Col. W. A. Bishop, V.C.,\nand many of the other Canadian flyers have been recorded\nby Col. George Drew.\nFlying in Canada has been a difficult business. Few\nof the governments since the war have seen their way clear\nto do much to aid aviation. The result has been that the\nflyers have had to work out their own problems without\nany considerable help. But a great deal has been accomplished. The development to the Northland has offered a\nhuge bonus to capable flyers, and young Canada has hastened to supply the demand. Most cities have flying clubs.\nNeedless to say the British officials are very glad to\nreceive Canadian pilots. Great Britain is engaged in the\nmost ambitious peace-time armament program of her history. In connection with the rebuilding of the air force\nsome 1175 pilots will be trained next year. Civilian pilots\nwill have to undergo additional rigorous training, but their\nflying experience will be valuable. Australia and New Zealand have arrangements whereby cadets in the air service\nof these two dominions serve part of their time in the British Royal Air Force.\nApparently the air service has the greatest romantic\nappeal of any branch of military activity at the present\ntime, so it is not wonder that young Canadians are attracted by it. The British air force has probably the most up-to-\ndate equipment in the world, and should it be necessary to\nexpand the Canadian air force the Canadian members of\nthe Royal Air Force would prove valuable instructors.\nIt is encouring that the public is awakening to the\nneed of conservation of forests and soil. A few years more\nand it might be too late.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nAll letteri to the editor must be itgned with the name of the\nwriter.  A nom de plume may be used for publication if desired.\nLines in typewritten copy should be double spaced.\nFROM THE TRACK\nHere's an amusing little turf story\nfrom the Illustrated Sporting and\nDramatic News:\nThe jockey had come in la?t in\nthe race, and was met by the enraged owner.\n\"Ycu're a fine jockey\" spluttered\nthe owner. \"Why didn't you follow\nmy instructions? I told you to come\naway from the corner with a rush.\"\n\"Yes, 1 know,\" replied the jockey\n\"I tried my best, but I didn't like\nto come away without youi horse.\"\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nWASTE PAPER BASKET\nScavenger of papers\nNo one wants to see\n\u2014Don't you think you really\nOwe a lot to me?\nGems of song and story,\nSundry calls for aid,\nLetters that when written\nFailed to make the grade.\nLetters never answered.\nNever even read,\nPropaganda costly,\nInto me are fed.\nThey would overwhelm you,\nCover land and sea,\nIf nobody ever\nHad invented me.\n-CLARENCE EDWIN FLYNN\nWORSE 'N' WORSE\n\"My entire gardening equ'pmfnt\nconsists of a fork, a rake and a\nhoe.\" That's all there is, there isn't\nany mower.\n* *   *\nAN  AMBITION\nGranddad's youthful ambition was\nto some day have a gig and a fiirl\nDad looked forward to tht time ]\nwhen he would have ? flivver and\na flapper. All Sonny wants is a\nplane and a jane.\n* *   *\n'ROUND THE TOWN\nHere and there\u2014S. M. Whittaker\nof Cranbrook paying a visit in Nelson on his way to Farron\u2014where\nthe C.P.R. plans stringing a new\ntelegraph wire or something of the\nsort \u2014 Jeff Foster presaging the\nchange in the seasons\u2014hy discussing\nmotor boating \u2014and the need of\nsome scheme of promoting the west\narm and Kootenay lake as a great\nboating place\u2014He thinks something\nshould be done to publicize the\nlake\u2014three boys carrying a lengthy\nradio pole\u2014George Steele commenting on the changes in Nelson in a\nfew years\u2014A friend calling attention to a mistake in dates or something in a Kinsmen's poster regarding their show\u2014 Apparently the\nposter reads Wednesday April 1 and\nThursday April 2\u2014Now April 1\nfalls on Thursday\u2014so this informant\nobserved that perhaps the Kinsmen\nare pulling an April fool trick upon\nthemselves\u2014E. H. Evans sauntering\ndown the street with an envelope\nor paper in his hand\u2014John Smith\nand John Notman having a stroll,\nI wonder if they were discussing\nthe Nelson water situation or what?\n\u2014George Fleming carrying a roll\nof paper, a calendar or a map as hc\ncrossed the street\t\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMORE SIGNS\nScoop\u2014I hear Dr. Ray Shaw is\ncontemplating putting a new motor\nin hife speed boat\u2014 which is another\nsign that winter is about over in\nthese parts.\nA  FEW  MEANINGS\n\"Two or three' always means at\nleast three, or three and upwards.\n\"One or two\" seldom, if ever, means\none.\n\"That reminds me of a story\"\nmeans, \"Now you keep quiet while\nI tell my joke.\"\n\"I hold no brief for\" means, \"I\nam now going to defend\u2014\"\n\"While I do not wish to appear\ncritical\" means, \"But I am going to\nhave my say out anyhow.\"\n\"Of course it's no business of\nmine\" means, \"I am simply devoured with curiosity.\"\n\"My conduct calls for no apology\nand needs no explanation' is the\nusual introduction for an apology\nor an explanation.\n\"No one could possibly hsve mistaken my meaning\" is what you\nsay when some one has mistaken it.\n\u2014The Brisbane Mail. r\nTIME OUT\nThe U.S.A. bureau of mines announces the perfection of a whistle\nthat will dissipate smoke. But what\nwoman wants to follow hcr husband\nall over the house tooting a whistle?\n* *   \u2022\nHAIL, THE  SWEET  POTATO!\nAfter three years of experimentation, U.S. government chemists at\nWashington   have   announced   that\nAnti-Sweepstake\nLaw Is Invidious\nSays j.T. Bealby\nTo the Editor.\nSir: The Plain Blunt Man who\ncriticized my study of hospital\nsweepstakes has completely misunderstood my purpose in writing it;\nor perhaps he has preferred to ignore it. I was not concerned to set\nforth either benefits (if any) or evils\nof gambling.\nIn that study my concern was\nsolely with the mental attitude of\nthose who condemn sweepstakes intended for the benefit of indigent\nsick and suffering people in hospitals. Let me be plain and blunt too.\nbut, I trust, with all courtesy. Legislation has been procured which\nmakes sweepstakes for benevolent\nobjects illegal. But certain of the\nchurches have got, or did get, an\nexception made of raffles at bazaars, when those raffles were for\necclesiastical or charitable purposes,\nThus with one breath the same\nclass of people condemn and champion precisely the same kind of action, according as other people perform that action or they themselves\nperform it, This to the plain, blunt\ncommon sense of the man in the\nstreet savors of unfair and invidious treatment, and he, not unnaturally, resents it. All the more since\nthe people who adopt this attitude\ntake, he observes, no specially energetic steps to combat (for suppression) professional gambling on the\nrace-course, football games and card\ngames and leaves severely alone all\nthose forms of gambling which are\ncarried on at Monte Carlo and similar resorts. But they attack actions\nthat are indulged in occasionally by\npeople of moderate means who desire to help the afflicted, and who\nare not without conscience in the\nmatter. At the same time these objectors endorse, defend, praise, and\npersonally share in the results of\nactions which stand fundamentally\non the same footing as the actions\nthey condemn in other people.\nIt is usage, and usage alone, which\ndetermines the current meanings of\nwords. To the man in the street every one of the types of action involving the arbitrament of chance,\nwhich I enumerated, are forms of\ngambling, That sufficiently justifies\nthe term I applied to them, and in\nsofar forth attaches that term to\nthe mental attitude of those who\npraise and defend any or all of those\nacts.\nMy critic commends Shakespeare\nfor making the characters of his\ndramas work out their own several\ndestinies; although that is of course\nsimply the A B C of the dramatist's\nart. But when the critic comes to the\ndrama of real life, his own behavior\nis diametrically the opposite of that\nwhich he commends in Shakespeare.\nHe objects to let his fellow-men determine their own destinies in the\nlight of their own conscience. In the\ncase of hospital sweepstakes he insists, under cover of the coercion of\nlegislation, in substituting his own\nconscience for theirs. Nevertheless I\nthank Mr. Plain Blunt Man for providing such an apt illustration of\nwhat my study aimed to make clear,\nnamely, the inconsistency of thought\nand attitude on the part of those\nwho scotch .sweepstakes for hospitals. My study was meant for nothing more than an application (however imperfect) of the Socratic or\ndialectical method of reasoning to\nthis particular type of thinking and\nacting. J. T. BEALBY.\nNelson, B. C.\nMarch 24, 1937.\nThis Debtor just\nCouldn't Pay After\nGov'ts. Cleaned Him\nA reader of the Daily News has\nforwarded the following skit on the\nover-government and the overtaxation of Canadians:\n\" LOTS OF TROUBLE\"\n\u25a0\nThis remarkable answer came in\nrecently from one of our Canadian\ncustomers, whose bill has been long\noverdue. It was so good that we\nmarked the bill \"Paid in Full.\"\nSmiles like these come rarely in\nbusiness today\u2014so we pass it on to\nthe boys at the club.\nOld Authors Shop\n18, Rideau Street\nOttawa, Canada.\nDear Sir:\nIn reply to your recent and more\nrecent requests to send you a cheque\nfor my bill due you, I wish to inform you that the present shattered j\ncondition of my bank account makes\nit impossible for me to take your]\nrequest seriously.\nMy present financial condition is\ndue to the effect of Dominion laws,\nprovincial laws, municipal laws,\ncounty laws, corporation laws, traffic laws, liquor laws, by-laws.\nmother-in-laws, and outlaws, all of\nwhich have been foisted upon an\nunsuspecting public.\nThrough these laws, I am compelled to pay a business tax, amusement tax, gas tax, income tax, water\ntax, school tax, auto tax, hydro tax,\nand syn-tax.\nIn addition to these irritating\ntaxes I am forced by a strong arm\nof the law to get a permit for this\nthing and a permit for that thing.\nI am requested to get a business\nlicence, a city licence, a Drovincial\nlicence, a sign licence, a dog licence,\na motor licence, a radio licence, a\nliquor licence\u2014not to mention a\nmarriage licence.\nI am also requested and required\nto contribute to every society and\norganization which inventive genius\nof man is capable of bringing into\nlife\u2014to the Society of St. Jean\nBaptiste, the Women's Relief, the\nNear East Relief, the unemployment\nrelief and the gold diggers' home;\nalso every hospital and every charitable institution in the city; the Red\nCross, the Black Cross, the White\nCross, the Green Cross, the Purple\nCross, the Flaming Cross and the\ndouble cress.\nFor my own .safety I am required\nto carry life insurance, liability insurance, burglarly insurance, accident insurance, collision insurance,\nrain insurance, hail insurance and\nbusiness insurance.\nThe government has now so governed my business that it is no easy\nmatter for me to find out who owns\nit. I am expected, inspected, introspected, suspected, compelled until\nall I know is that I am supposed to\nsupply inexhaustible means and\nsupply money for every known\nneed, desire and hope of the human\nrace. To beg, borrow or steal money\nto give away, and if I refuse to donate to each and all, I am cussed,\ndiscussed, boycotted, talked to,\ntalked about, lied to, lied about, held\nup, held down and robbed, until I\nam nearly ruined.\nI can foretell honestly, Mr. Clarke\nthat, failing a miracle, you won't bc\npaid just now, and the only reason\nI am holding on to life is simply\njust to see what the hell is coming\nnext.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nPOORLY PLAYED\nA \"reader\" of the Dispatch,\nColumbus, O., sends in the following deal, inquiring if East can go\ngame at no trumps, against an opening lead of the 3 of hearts. What\ndo you think?\n\u2666QJSS7\nf Kg\n\u2666 AJ\u00bb\n\u2666 Q85\nSoruvyscryings\n\u2666 \u00ab-\n\u00bbAJ7*5\n\u2666 10*\n+ A 10 7 I\nN.\n2     **\nS.\n\u2666 AK\u00bbS\n\u00bb10\n\u2666 KQ8S\n,1\n+ K8\n4 10 4\nVQMS2\n\u2666 72\n*VJ4\u00bb1\nBidding  went:   East,   1-Diamond,\nfourth hand; West, 1-Heart; North,\n1-Spade;   East,  1-No Trump;   West\n3-Hearts,    East,    3-No    Trumps,\nwhich stood, doubled by North.\nAs North had both bid and then\ndoubled the final call, nearly al)\nplayers will agree that South's opening lead should have been the 10\nof spades, and not the 3 of hearts,\neven if the declarer went down\nagainst the heart lead. That was\ndue to his misplay of the cards, not\nto the choice of opening lead. With\nthe same poor offensive strategy,\nEast would have gone down against\neither opening lead, while proper\nstategy would have enabled him to\nfulfill his contract against either\nopening lead.\nTo go down on his contract, evidently declarer must have taken a\nfinesse in hearts, allowing North to\nwin the first trick and lead back\nspades, taking out one of declarer's\nhigh honors of that suit. Now declarer must lose two diamond tricks\nto North, as declarer cannot lead\ndiamonds through North but once,\nso that the doubler establishes\nspades before East can establish\ndiamonds.\nThe long diamond suit is the\nbackbone of East's no trumps. At\nall cost East must at once begin\nestablishment of that suit. Play\nlhe hand as it should be played,\nand see if the defenders can avoid\ngiving East a trick above his contract. Win tlie opening lead with\ndummy's Ace of hearts. Lead the\n10 of diamonds. North should\ncover with the J and declarer must\nwin with the Q. North has diamonds stopped twice if declarer at\nonce leads that suit from his own\nhand. To fulfill his contract declarer must lead diamonds again\nfrom dummy.\nBead a low club from declarer's\nband. Win with dummy's Ace.\nLead the last diamond from dummy. If North plays the 9, win with\ndeclarer's K, then give North the\nAce of his suit. If North wins with\nthe Ace of diamonds over the 6 led\nfrom dummy, declarer will pick up\nthe 9, when he gains entry. North\nwill take his K of hearts, when he\ngains entry with his Ace of diamonds, then he will lead a spade,\nwhich declarer will win with his\nAce. Two tricks in spades, one in\nhearts, two in c'.u'us and five in diamonds will give declarer one trick\nover game.\nWhat y\u00ab lookin' at me like that\nfor? Ya heard me tell Iter 1 wouldn't\ntake eben a dollar tor yal But\nwould ya hab any 'jections t' bein'\nmilcif out by the hour!\nI    10 YEARS AGO    I\n! From Nelton Dally Newi Filet\n(March 24, 1927)\nSarkis Terzian, manager of the\nGolden Age Mining company, left\nfor Portland and points in California.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nNelson ratepayers yesterday passed a bylaw authorizing the guarantee of the proposed bonds of the\nBritish Columbia Veneer Works,\nlimited up to $50,000.\nAltwrt T. Walley, formerly of\nNelson, who died in Vancouver recently was laid to rest in the Ocean\nView Park cemetery in Vancouver.\n\u2022   \u2666   \u2022\nAbout .$500 damage was done when\nthe Kitchener hotel in Creston\ncaught  fire,  which  it is  believed\noriginated in the basement.\nMiss 3rown Bridge of Trail is at\nthe Hume.\n\u2022 *   *\nSheriff J. H. Doyle has returned\nfrom a business trip to Cranbrook\nan4 Kimberley.\nMr. and Mrs. J. D. Kerr have returned after spending the wrter in\nVictoria.\nMrs. Austin B. Sh-\u00bbrp entertained\nat a tea in her on home on Hall\nstreet.\nMrs. H. H. Pitts, Cedar street, has\nas her guest her uncle, Stanley Ty-\nrell of Michigan.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW, Stubbs returned from spending\nthe winter in Ontario.\nTHE DOCTOR\nSAYS ...\nLOGAN   CLENDENING,   M.D.\nQUESTIONS NURSES MUST\nANSWER  ON  EYES\nThe following questions are thoae\nwhich  nurse  or  social worker il\nsupposed to be able to answer about\nthe eyes:\nI. What can a nurRe do to pre-\nvent birth infections of the eye*?\nShe must help in educating each\nexpectant mother to insist on the\nuse of a prophylatic in the eyes of\nher baby at the time of birth, in\norder to guard against. all infections. One per cent silver nitrate ia\nthe prophylatic usually used.\nII. What is meant by testing of\nvisual acuity?\nThe testing of visual acuity is a\nmeans of determining acuteness of\ncentral vision in each eye. It is\nthe most common method of detecting deviations from normal.\nBy using this test it ii possible to\nfind many persons of all age\ngroups who are in need of exami- .\nnation by an oculist. There are |\nsome eye conditions which do not\naffect central vision. The nur\u00ab\ncan observe evidences suggesting\nvisual difficulty, such as abnormal\nposture of head or body during the\ntest, frowning, an obvious effort to\nsee the chart during the test, the\neyes filling with tears.\nIII. When should the first test of\nvisual acuity be given?\nA vision test should be part of\nthe health examination of \u00abvery\npreschool child.\nCharts for performing this test\ncan be obtained from the National\nSociety for the Prevention of\nBlindness, 50 West Fiftieth street,\nNew York, N. Y.\nMOST COMMON DIFFICULTIES\nIV. What are the most common\neye difficulties found among children?\n1, Errors of refraction of various\ndegrees and  seriousness.\n2, Failure of the two eyes to work\ntogether, arising from a variety of\ncauses and generally referred to as\nstrabismus or squint.\n3, Congenital and hereditary eye\ndefects.\nV. Why do the two eyes sometimes fail to work together?\n1. A difference in the state of\nreaction of each eye.\n2. There may be imperfect vision\nin one eye at birth.\n3. There may be a deviation from\nnormal in the muscles which control the movements of the eye.\n4. The fusion faculty may be\nlacking or fail to develop perfectly.\n5. Eye disease or injury may be\nresponsible for the failure of the\ntwo eyes to work together.\nVI. Does reading in bed harm the\neyes?\nIf the proper posture U maintained, adequate light ls supplied\nfree from glare, and attention is\ngiven to the selection of the size\nLeo McKinnon entered the semifinals in the Legion bowlinp tourney by defeating George Djll of B of the type and the character of\nsecti-m. He will meet Fred Hartwig\nfor the championship.\n'    20 YEARS AGO   i\nFrom Nelson  Dally  News Fllei\nWHAT THE PRESS IS SAYING\nBAD FOOD, BAD TEMPER\nFord   Madox   Ford,   the   British\nnovelist, is of the opinion that the\nnresent ferocity of the world is\nthe result of badly prepared food.\nWhen people have bad cooking they\nhave indigestion and when they have\nindigestion they cannot be amiable\nwith their fellows, and want everybody belonging to a race other\nlhan their own to be stood against\na wall and shot,\nIt is an attractive theory, but it\ncontains  one or  two  flaws.   Some\nthe sweet potato may soon provide\na new Industry for the soutn. They\ndeclare that the potato will produce:\nI\u2014Fine quality adhesive required\nby the government for postage\nstamps and envelopes.\n2\u2014Fulp about equrl to sugar beet\npulp as a livestock feed.\n3\u2014Starch for sizing or glazing\npaper and yarn.\n4\u2014Starch for laundries.\nThe chemists said that trial operation of a plant at Laurel Miss.,\nhad demonstrated that thc sweel\npotato industry could succeed, particularly in sections where larjie\nyields can be produced at low cost.\npeople would say it reverses causes\nand effect; that Germany, for example is not war-like at present because it has bad food, but that it\ni.s reduced lo food shortages because\nit is so warlike. But there is a more\nj serious difficulty.\nI Among the world's worst cooks are\n] the English, yet they are far from\n; the most warlike people in the mod-\nj ern world. Further, cooking was no\nI better in the Victorian era than it\nis now, but somehow the world was\n1 on the whole distinctly more peacc-\n[ ful. As a social theory, in short. Mr.\nFord's conclusion is 'a little too\nI sweeping, but as a theory that ap-\nI nlies to many individual it has a\nj great dc?l to recommend it.\u2014From\n! the New York Times.\nTHE RIGHT TO ARM\nj \"In an exclusive interview Baron\n\u25a0 von Neurath, German Minister of\n! Foreign Affairs, stated: 'The extent\nI of German nrmnment is in no pro-\ni portion to the potential strength of\n! her neighbours, which is increased\ni in relation to the military alliances\nIon which th?y can count. Germans\nI has to rely on her own strength\nalone.' He who views German arm-\n1 aments as a menace to other nations\nAUNTHET      I\nBy  ROBERT QUILLEN       I\n$\t\n(March 24, 1917)\nHarold Bridges of Cranbrook was\n:ported wounded.\nDr. M. J. Vign:ux left for Ymir.  uc  Ud\" ,'\n,   ,   , overwork\nthe paper upon which the printing\nis done, reading in bed is not harm:\nful to the eyes. Reading in bed\nduring an illness should not be\nencouraged, even with the physical\narrangements mentioned above,\nexcept with the consent of the\nphysician. After a serious illness\nspecial attention should be directed\nto the protection and care of the\neyes. ' During convalescence the\ndelicate structures of the eyes may\nbe  damaged  through mususe  and\nyj$?t\nj \"I don't think much o' this new\n' doctor. When l pay three dollars\ni to get a little sympathy, I want a\ndoctor to art like he cared.\"\nconfuses the connection of events,'\nsays Hamburger Fremdenblatt.\n\"The British taxpayer does not\nrelish his government's constantly\nrising expenditure on armaments.\nWhat is easier than to make the\ndemands on his resources more\nacceptable by raising the ghost of\nthe German danger? We do not\ndeny the British government's right\nto decide what armaments it needs.\nWe demand the same degree of\nloyalty in regard to ourselves.\"\nJ. A. Oliver of Sandon left for\nSpokane.\nBorn to Mr, and Mrs. G- C. Coleman of Minor ranch, Lake Windermere, a son.\nBritish and French forces have\nmade further important gains\nigainst the German fortifications on\nthe Arras-Soisson front and the\nBritish have taken over 60 towns and\nvillages in the last two days. In a\nfew places the Germans are beginning to resist the advances of the\nBritish and French forces.\nThe sixth Ger nan war loan is\nxinsidcrrd by financial circles as\na failure, it is renorted in London.\n* *   *\nThe Lucky Jack and Swede group\nof claims on Popular creek in the\nLardeau have been bonded for $75,-\n000 by a Spokrne syndicate.\n\u2022 *   *\nPete L. Forrester has left Nelson\nto rejoin his draft in Creston.\n30 YEARS AGO    I\nFrom  Nelson  Dally Newt Filet '\nCONDEMNS GAMBLING\nLONDON (CP). \u2014 Bookmaking,\nslot machines and other games played by those \"seeking gambling pleasures\" should be done away with,\nMayor T. F. Kingamill believes. He\nsays they are a detriment to Lon*-\ndon.\nIf your cold water is always lukewarm, it is probably because the cold'\nwater pipes run too closely to the'\nhot water pipes. The remedy is to\ninsulate the hot water pipes. !\nBRINCINC UP FATHER\nBy Ceo. McManui\n1 OH-YESarAR.JIGeS-YOLJ\nWILL ENJOY DEAH OLD\nENGLAND- IT IS A\nRIPPING COUNTRY-\nAND YOU'LL ENOOY\nTHE THEATRES OVER\nTHERE\nQUITE SO-QUITE SO,\nOLD TOPPER- THE\nPLAYS ARE-WHAT\nSHALL I SAY ?, .\nSAY ANYTHING\nYOU WANT-YOU\nARE DOING THE\nTALKIUS-\t\n7 V\nDO MX1 KNOW-1 WENT\nTO SEE OME SHOW\nTHIRTY TINAES?rA,ND\n\u2022YOU- THIRTY TIM.ES-\nI LAUGHED UNTIL I\nWAS BAWNAY-DON'T\nYOU KNOW?,^..^\nRIGHTO- I WENT TO\nSEE ONE PLAY\nFORTY TIMES-N\\R\nOIQSS- IN THIS\nCOUNTRY DO YOU\nEVAH SOTO A PLAY\nTHAT MANY TIMES*\nI MIGHT SO TWICE-\nBUT IF I DON'T GIT\nIT THEN-1 GIVE IT\n(March 24,  1907)\nBorn to Mr. and Mrs. E. Wood-\nhouse, March 20, a son.\n*\nMrs. E. Kennedy left tor Calgary.!\nTrout fishing season opened.\nThe council set aside $1500 for the j\nplans and specifications for the\nbuilding of a new public school\nhere.\nHarry Wright has been appointed !\ngovernment   ai^ent   for   Nelson.\nMiss N. McLeod, left for Vancou-'\nver. She intends returning to her\nhome in Antigonish, N. B. to reside.\nM. R. McQuarrie has bought two '\nranches at Thrums.\nBert Davidson, assistant, postmaster, has returned to duty after a\nholiday at the coast.\nHOTKAPS\nPROTECT   young   planti   from\nfrost,  Insects, wind tnd\nheavy rains.\nEnsure healthy, hardy\nplants,   quicker  crops.\nPRICE   $11.00\nPER 1000\nWrlte to:\nSmith, Davidson\n& Wright Ltd.\n1198 HOMER ST., VANCOUVER\nIf spring weather favors the grasshoppers this year,  over $1.500.000\nworth of poison will be needed to\nfight hoppers in 22 states.\nj Communism of Russia, Nazi w\n! eialism and the Fascism of Italy\n\u2022j have this in common\u2014thty lead\nstraight to the suicide of civiliza-\nI tion.\u2014Nicholas Murray Butler,\nModernize\nNOW!\nTake advantage of the\nFederal Government's\nHome Improvement Plan\nand secure that new bathroom equipment you have\nwanted so long. We will\ngladly explain the working of this plan to interested prospects.\nCall and Talk It Over With Uil\nPhone 666\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING & HEATINC\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nP.O. Box 646       313 Baker tt\n-aaaaaaaaaaH\n .aaaa\u2014a\u2014^\nmmmmm*mmmmm*tm^\\it}.\\k\u00a7minm,y we*'\nn*!s*jB*wflW*i-m***x*^\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 24, 1937..\n-PAOE NINE\nDetroit, Maroons and Rangers Win Opening Playoffs\nTRAIL TIGERS\nON THEIR WAY\nTO SASKATOON\nTo Meet the Wesleys\nThird Time Cup\nPlaydowns\nWORKOUTS HERE\nIMPROVE TEAM\nStaying Power Much\nBetter for Use\nNelson Ice\nTrail Tigers packed their war-\nbags and skates Tuesday nigM and\nclimbed aboard Uie castbo-jnd Canadian Pacific railway train on\ntheir way to Saskatoon in Iheir\nfifth drive along the Memorial cup\ntrail, and scheduled again to meet\n. Saskatoon Wesleys.\nCoach \"Scotty\" Ross was advised\nearly Tuesday that the Trai' ijjnior\n-team waa scheduled to play in Saskatoon Friday afternoon \u2014 Friday\n\u25a0being a holiday \u2014 and Saturday\nnight. Admitting the lineup might\nmake a tough series of it, Coach\nRobs declared it would bv. just aa\nlough for Wesleys as for Trail, and\nhis team would be out to make il\ntougher.\n\" Trail Tigers have won 1lie B.C.\ntitle five times in six years. Twice\nas they hit the cup trail Saskatoon\nWesleys  have  turned  thcm   back.\n'But  the young speedsters believe\nthis is their year to go to town and\nthey're in thc right mind to turn\nthe trick.\n\"Our team has benefitted  won-\n-derfully during the last few days\nin Nelson through thc \\i orkouts\nwe've had at the civic cent\u2122 arena,\"\ndeclared Coach Ross. \"Mr .StDenis\nand the men in charge of the rink\nhave been most kind to us and wc\ncertainly appreciate the heip they\nhave given.\"\nThe Tigers moved to Nelson\nThursday of last week when their\nhome ice was laid out for a postseason curling bonspiel.\nTrainer Bert Repton asserted thc\nworkouts on the Nelson ice had\nincreased the team's slaying power\nappreciably, and declared it would\n\u25a0be  irt much better  condition  for\n'playdown games as a result.\n*   The \"frail officials  and   players\njJ6liicd  in tribute to  the  splendid\n'.sheet of ice at the arena.\nYanks and Cards\nAre Favored\nST. LOUIS, Mo., March 23 (AP)\n\u2014A poll of baseball writers conducted by thc Sporting News disclosed today overwhelming support\nfor New York Yankees and St, Louis\nCardinals in the 1937 Major League\npennant races.\nYankees were picked to repeat\ntheir American league triumph by\n148 out 'of 197 experts. Cardinals\nwere the choice of 141 in thc National league, with thc Champion\nNew York Giants rated to finish no\nbetter than third.\nRULE BOWLING\nSCORE INVALID\nBowler Competed in\nUnsanctioned Play\nNEW YORK, March 23 (AP)-For\nthe first time in American bowling\ncongress history a score was declared invalid by officials today.\nThe Terminal Industrial team of\nFlushing, L.I., which rolled 2973\nlast Friday for second place in the\nfive-man standing, was ruled out\nwhen it was learned one of its members. John Reeber, had competed\nin an unsanctioned league last night,\nReeber, who bowled in the Metropolitan Life Insurance league, also\nlost his place in singles, where he\nhad scored 607, and thc team's high\ngame score of 1062 also was ruled\nout as a probable prize winner.\nBraddock Dodges\nProcess Servers\nTILDEN TAKES ON\nPERRY TONIGHT\nNEW YORK. March 23 (AP).-\nBefore another prospective sellout\ncrowd, the pro tennis troupers will\nreturn to thc Madison Square Garden court tomorrow night with one\nimportant change in the cast of\nleading characters.\n. When Fred Perry made his commercial debut last January he was\nmatched with Ellsworth Vines Tomorrow evening his opponent will\nbe Bill Tilden, 44-year-old percn^\nnial of the courts.\nChief speculation about thc match\nfirst of a scries of five, revolves\nabout Tilden and his ability to\nstand up under the strain of :i fivc-\n\u25a0aet encounter with the British\nplayer who last year was the\nworld's ranking amateur.\nNEW YORK, March 23 (AP).-\nHeavyweight Champion James J.\nBraddock wasn't in a receptive\nmood today. Through his manager,\nJoe Gould, the titleholdor definitely\nrejected Max Schmeling's $350,000\noffer for a fight in Berlin Meantime, sought on a court order in\nMiami, Florida, Braddock was disclosed by his manager lo be secretly cn route to Chicago, where\nthe champion plans to fight Joe\nLouis June 22 in spite of all attempts to frustrate this objective.\nThc Berlin offer, understood to\nhave bonafide backing from the\nBerlin government, disappeared\nwhence it came. Schmeling announced, it was withdrawn when\nthe time limit expired, al noon,\nwithout any further show of interest by Gould or Braddock. Thc\nGerman challenger, still on the outside looking, in, leaves for home\ntomorrow.\nSchmeling, still much mystified\nby Braddock's refusal to accept a\ncash guarantee of $350,000. plans to\nreturn to New York late in April.\nHe will (hen go into trailing to\nfulfill his part of the contract to\nfight Braddock here.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy The Canadian Press\nMontreal Maroons and Detroit\nRed Wings played thc longest game\nof big-league hockey on record one\nyear ago tonight. In the first game\nof thc National League title scries\nat Montreal the teams battled 176\nminutes and 30 seconds \u2014 almost\nthree hours \u2014 before Moderc Bruneteau, 22-year-old Detroit rookie,\nscored thc only goal of the game.\nThe previous record marathon game\nwas that between Boston and Toronto in 1933. lt went 164 minutes,\n46 seconds.\nI Over (00 Entries lor the Annual\nKootenay Badminton Tournament\nMiss M. Taylor of\nKelowna, Dominion\nTitlist, Coming\nAn unexpected number of entries\nhave arrived to be dealt witli by\nthe committee arranging for the\nKootenay Badminton tournament\nto be held in Ncison over the Easter\nwcekrend. They have climaxed all\nqntries in any previous Nelson badminton event. Late Monday night\nabout 15 entries were received from\nMetaline Falls, Wash , that sent the\ntotal number of entries well over\n400, to top thc previous high set in\n1936 by over 40.\nFor the first time a Dominion\ntitle holdtr will take part in a\nNelson badminton tournament.\nMilt Margaret Taylor of Kelowna,\nDominion ladies' singles champion\nfor 1935 forwarded her entry into\nthree events. She will  take  part\nIn the ladies singles, the ladies\ndoubles with Miss Hazel Brown\nof Kelowna and in the mixed doubles with Allan France also of\nKelowna.\nAn inovation, the four added junior events, has proved popular and\nby the number of entries from district juniors promises to make this\nan outstanding affair in itself. Appraisal of the entries show that thc\nmen's singles and doubles will probably he thc mo.sl. keenly contested\nevent of the affair and of any previous one.\nArrangements of thc draws for the\nday night and it is intended lhat eacli\ntournament were commenced Tucs-\ncn Irani be niven a time card showing the time of every play during\nthe four days, Friday, Saturday,\nSunday and Monday. Willi plenty\nI of space available in the Civic Cen-\n[ tre courts and this arrangement the\ncommittee plan to run of the events\n' with the least possible bother.\nFOUR PLAYERS\nGIVEN MAJORS\nTORONTO RINK\nRough, Thrilling and\nTough Battle Sees\nLeafs Blanked\nBy A. E. FULFORD\n(Canadian  Preii Staff Writer)\nTORONTO, March 23 (CP).\u2014\nNew York Rangen' finely tuned\nhockey machine turned berierk\ntonight and fought out a 3-0 win\nover Toronto Maple Leaf* in the\nfint game of a two-ofthree game\nStanley cup preliminary lerlei.\nThe game, steamed up at a contest that would be clean and fast,\nturned out* rough, tough and\nthrilling. Thirty-two seconds before It ended a young riot broke\nout.\nPlayers tumbled over the ice poking and jabbing at each other,\nsticks and gloves were dr-apped for\nthe heavy going, Badman Ked Horner made menacing gestures at Referee Ag Smith when he singled\nout Horner as a good man to keep\nout of the fight and, for a minute,\na fight threatened between Manager Conny Smytho of the Leafs\nand Referee Smith.\nBob Davidson, lough all evening,\ncross checked Phil Watson across\nthe mouth to start the outbreak!\nIn a second players were sprawled\nover the ice, some standing upright\nand swapping punches, others rolling across thc Ice Jabbing each\nother.\nFOUR MAJORS\nThe battle royal ended with\nConacher, Phil Watson, Bob Davidson and Art Coulter receiving\nmajor penalties that didn't mean\na thing because the game had\nj only 32 seconds to go whjn they\nI   were Imposed.\nShots on goal show clearly how\nmuch advantage Leafs had over the\n| New Yorkers. Toronto banged 45 at\nj Dave Kerr In the Ranger aict and\n! Turk Broda handled only 17 But\n! superb Ranger backchecking beat\n' thcm.\nThe break lhat started Rangers\non the way lo victory carne In the\nsecond period when Horner was\npenalized five minutes for boarding\nAlex Shibicky into the boards vio-\n! lently. In a power play, Lvnn Pal-\ni rick, uncovered before the net. took\nFrank Bouclifr's pass to drive a\npuck behind Broda.\nLess than five minutes remained,\nto play when Murray Murdoch,\nscoreless through a 48-game National league schedule took Butch\nKccling's pass back and beat Broda\nfrom close in.\nIn less than a minute more, Alex\n, Shibicky and Neil Colville roared\ndown together.   They snapned the\n\u25a0 puck 'across the ice in a dazzling\npassing play and Shibicky lifted it\nover Broda's shoulder.\nLineup:\nRangers \u2014 Kerr. Heller  Coulter,\nN. Colville, M. Colville, Shibicky.\nI    Toronto\u2014Broda, Horner, Fowler,\nThorns, Boll, Conacher\nRangers subs: Johnson Pratt,\nCooper, Dillon, Boucher, Patrick,\nWatson, Keeling, Murdoch.\nToronto subs: Jacksoji, Drillon,\nApps, Mel-, Davidson, Fannigan,\nShill, Day, Hamilton.\nOfficials:   Bill   Stewart   and   Ag\nSmith.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u2014\nScoring: None.\nPenalties: Jackson, Coulter, Horner, Coulter.\nSecond period\u2014\n1\u2014Rangers, Patrick (Boucher)\n3:2!).\nPenalties; Horner (major), Pratt,\nM. Colville.\nThird period\u2014\n2\u2014Rangers, Murdoch (Keeling-\nWatson) 15:06.\n3\u2014Rangers, Shibicky (N. Colville)  16:10.\nPenalties: Coulter (major and\nj minor), Watson, Conacher, David-\n! son (all majors).\nAFTER RUTH'S MARK\n4We>i al owe opfi flie-\ntlfi IWOK, A SWoKV C4SE-R.\nwas (Wdiciso For Mm -eowsas-\n(t6'W AS fooTffl fltegOcVETt\"\nComtGHT. I\u00ab7. atfTKAl, PatfSS ASSOCIATTO\"\niilflittfliiiiiniililUi\nRules (hanged in\nYO-I    \u00abUI    lM    .MUl\u00bbt-.l      fill!      alar.*.\nt\u00bb\u00ab dfllclotu   \u00abiii-\u00ab   from   s.nMi\nAfrlra .., app\u00ablUlnit nml dellfllitful\nla (Ut-\u00bbiit and nii*.lit \u25a0.\nJhu advertisement ii not publUhed or dUplaytd bv thc Liquor\nLONDON, Marcli 23 (CP Cable)\n\u2014Important changes in English nig-\nby rules affecting scrummaging and\nconverting of penalty tries have\nbeen made by thc International\nRugby board. Proposal to cut down\nthe value of a drop-kicked goal\nfrom four points was considered but\nit was decided to make no change.\nTo improve scrummage play it\nwas decided thc ball must bc put\ninto lhc scrum at a moderate speed\nand first touch the ground beyond\nthe foot of thc nearest player in\neach front row. Previously the ball\nmight first bounce outside the scrum.\nThe board altered the rules surrounding the rarely-awarded penalty try. In future penalty tries will\nbc warded if scored between the\nposts. Previously they werc award.\ned al thc point on thc goal-line\nopposite where tbe offence was committed. Penalty-try converts will accordingly bc made from in front of\ntlie posts.\nOn thc convert of a penalty try,\ndefending players must be 10 yards\nback of the point where thc offence\nwas committed or on their own\ngoal-line.\nThe obstruction rule was also\ntightened. A player stooping to pick\nup a ball could bc pushed over under thc old law but this will not be\nallowed in future.\nTHE FORTS AND THE PEGS\nWhen Leo Atwell was back in ,\nWinnipeg last fall the Packers team j\nof that city wanted him to slay I\naround for thc hockey season. But j\nhc wouldn't have been eligible for\nthe Allan cup playdowns so some-:\none else who was eligible caught I\nthe proffered place. Al! of which I\nseems to intensify local interest in\nthe now complete Fort William-\nWinnipeg Packers series, and this j\nis how Ralph Allen of the Winni-1\npeg Evening Tribune saw it, and\nhow he figures the Forts in the\nplaydowns:\nFORT WILLIAM-aThc band can |\ntune up any timc for Canada j\nPackers.\nThey fooled me. and if you are j\nquite honest, Mr. Murgatroyd, you'll j\nadmit they fooled you, too. It took i\n180 minutes\u2014not 179\u2014to box them !\nout of this Allan Cup scramble and\nthey might be there yet if the dice;\nhad been a little more amiable. Not\nthat they have any legitimate com-,\nplaint against thc breaks as they,\nrun over the throe games against;\nFort William. They will dispute!\nthis mildly themselves, and there\nare even a few natives of this j\nstrictly one-club city who will Jend '\na friendly ear to this theory. Per-'\nsonally, I have an idea it wound ,\nup about right\u2014a victory for Fort i\nWilliam after as tough a series as J\nhas ever been played in this un-:\nrelenting vendetta between Maui-'\ntoba and Thunder Bay.\nHow do Forts rate in lhc Allan j\nCup sweepstakes? Off hand, I'd\nsay just a notch better than usual.!\nFort William's most learned hockey I\nmen told Cece Browne before thc !\nseries between Packers and Wan-'\nderers opened that Gus Forslund\nwas sending out' the best hockey\nteam this town had ever had. This\nbureau hasn't had a look at them j\nall but if they ever turned out a\nbetter tone, ft must have been before\nmy timc.\nThey miss greatness by a fairly\nnoticeable notch. Still they have\nthese   assets:\nA goal tender who knows the\nbusiness from every angle and will\nbreak your heart every time if\nyou're pounding in after a one or\ntwo goal deficit.\nA defense that excels in bruising.\nbustling hockey of thc type that\nS imbues opponents with a healthy\n[respect no matter which side has\nI thc puck.\nTwo cenlremcn who can make\nand finish plays with a sure and\nsudden finesse that stumps them\na.s a pair of thc best mid-ice men\nany one team has carried into thc\nAllan Cup maelstrom in recent seasons.\nFour wingmen who patrol tlie\ntraffic lanes with the precision and\nmechanical doggedncss of robots.\nBeyond that they have skilled\ncoaching that has produced a long-\npassing team backed by occasional\nspurts of puck-hounding which are\nideally adapted to the wide rin1:\nhere. It's hard to say how well\nthese tactics will go in foreign fields,\nbut you can take it as a statement\nof positive fact that the Forts won't\nbc out-smarted, out-skated or outfought to any noticable extent from\nnow until they have cither won the\nnational championship or hung up\nfor another year. This was the\nclub that Packers almost beat,\nwhich brings us to thc stouthearted Winnipeg kids who will\nnever bc completely forgotten when\nmy dotard days arc taken up with\nmemories. Most of them are better\nhockey players than us average\nfolk ever guessed. As a unit they\nhad fight, speed, and a* general\neffectiveness which jnvariably grew\nwith mounting pressure.\nBASEBALL COMING  ON,\nENGLAND\nBaseball appears to be another\ninvader in.English sports field that\nis catching on. Here's what one\nToronto writer has lo say about\nwhat a London writer lias to say\nabout it:\nThey are saying in England that\nthe equipment of a baseball player,\nnow almost a novelty to the Britisher, will soon be as familiar to lhe\npublic as cricket pads and gloves.\nIt seems like a startling statement\nto make, but Clifford Webb of thc\nLondon Daily Herald visializcs this\nday, and goes on to tell of thc great\nstrides lhe great American pastime\nhas made in Europe.\nThis .summer wilt sec 300 organized English teams, an increase over\nthc preceding year of exactly 50\nper cent. Webb finds favor with\nthe shrewd campaign that the baseball promoters have conducted.\n\"They have been 'pushing' their\ncampaign among schools and organizations catering for boys,'' he\nwrites. \"Thc results is 150 boys'\nlearns arc ready for a new season\u2014\n83 of them in thc London area.\n\"The  baseball  people  insist that\n12,00(1 WATCH\nMAROONSTIRE\nDEFEAT, BRUINS\nTrottier Goes Wild\nand Punches the\nRef; Score 4-1\nMONTREAL, March 23 (CP)\u2014\nMontreal Maroons, riding a late-\nschedule winning streak Into the\nStanley cup playdowns, wore\ndown the- powerful Boston Bruins\nand defeated the United States\nsection second placers 4-1 tonight\nIn the opening game of the best-\nof-three playoff.\nThe second game of the aeries\ngoes on at Boston Thursday night\nwith a third, If necessary, there\nSunday.\nCarl Voss, scoring his first goal   \u25a0\nof the season at 13:56 of the first\nperiod, shot Maroons Into the lead\nand  they  coasted  through  after  j\nthat,  surviving   Bruins'  bumping\nand a late flurry of punch swing-   \u25a0\ning. In the last minutes, Dlt Clap-   I\nper tangled   with   Dave  Trottier,\npunched Referee Clarence Camp-\nbell and took a major penalty.\nBaldy Northcott got the second\nMaroon goal midway through the\n.second period, while Alan Shields\nserved a penalty, but a third-period\npenally to Jerry Carson enabled\nBoston to wipe that oul. Ray Get-\nliffe shot the goal right a (ter Carson skated off.\nUnable to shake off the leechlike\nMaroon checkers. Bruins were nearly\nhelpless after that and their gang\nattacks boomeranged twice. First\nBob Gracie and Herb Cain broke\naway and Cain easily fired past\nGoaler Tiny Thompson. Then Cain\nand Gus Marker set up Gracie for\nthe final goal, scored on a rising\nshot from 15 feet that caught the\ngoalie  unaware.\nA crowd of more than 12,000\nwatched the bruising battle.\nLineup:\nBoston \u2014 Thompson, Portland,\nShields, Cowley, Getliffe, Sands.\nSubs \u2014 Clapper, Smith, Wciland,\nGoldsworthy, Cook. Beattie, Hoi-\nlott, Dumart, Schmidt.\nMaroons \u2014 Bcvcridge. Conacher,\nWentworth, Gracie. Marker, Cain.\nSubs\u2014Northcott, Evans, Voss, Trottier, Carson, Blinco, Robinson,\nRunge, Shannon.\nOfficials\u2014Clarence Campbell and\nBabe Dye.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period:\n1, Maroons. Voss (Conacher,\nNorthcott), 13:50.\nPenalties\u2014Portland,  Runge.\nSecond period:\n2, Maroons. Northcott (Shannon,\nRobinson), 12:11.\nPenalties\u2014Carson,   Shields,   Getliffe.\nThird  period:\n3, Boston, Getliffe (Sands, Cowley i, 6:34.\n4, Maroons, Cain  (Gracie), 16:43.\n5, Maroons, Gracie (Cain, Marker),  17:32.\nPenalties\u2014Carson, Clapper (major).\nCloud d'Or Wins\nOakland Event\nSAN FRANCISCO, Maich 23\n(AP). \u2014 Cloud d'Or, the tavoiile.\nwon thc Oakland handicap. $1000\nadded, on a muddy track at Tanforan today. Happy Knot was second and Manners Man third. Time\nfor the six furlongs was 1:14 3-5.\nThe mutuels paid $4.20 ind $2.80\non the winner, and $4.40 on Happy\nKnot.\nHappy Knot and Manners Man\nfought for the early lead Cloud!\nd'Or remained in back of the field\nfor the first half mile, but came\nup on thc outside of the leaders at\nthe turn into the stretch and won\nby a length, going away.\n\"Proud of Team\"\nRotarian Wire\nTold the Leafs\n\"Sorry you lost, but from broadcast you had best of game. Wc are\nproud ot our hockey team!'1 This\nwire was sent by A. A. Perrier\nsecretary of thc Ncison Rotary club\nto the Nelson Maple Leafs at Edmonton Thursday night, after the\neliminated by thc Edmonton Dominions in thc closest series in interprovincial playoff history.\nMr. Perrier reported thc wire at\nMonday's club meeting, and Dr.\nD. W. McKay, president of the\nj Maple Leafs, thanked the club for\nI thc sentiments, and promised they\n| would be duly acknowledged if\nthey had not been dealt with al-\n! ready.\nCambridge Crew\nFavored for Big\nBoat Race Today\nPUTNEY-ON-THAMES, March 23\n(CP Cable).\u2014The closest race in\nyears was forecast tonight as Oxford and Cambridge completed\ntraining for tomorrow's 89th inter-\nvarsity boat race on the Thames.\nCambridge wcre 3-to-l to 5-to-l\nfavorites to score their 14th consecutive victory over the dark\nblues, but confidence in the Oxford\ncrew was higher than tor years\npast.\nThe Oxford crew together weighed 1562 pounds, 56 pounds heavier\nthan the Cambridge eight, constituting one of thc heaviest benefit\nthis year as plenty of waler is\ncoming down the river and the race\nwill be rowed in a strong flood tide.\nThe order of rowing and weights\nof the rival eights:\nOXFORD\nM. G. Ashby (Oundle-New College) (bow) 172.\n2. D. M. Winscr (Winchester-Corpus Christi)  168.\n3. R. R. Stewart (Eton-Magdalene) 182.\n4. R. G. Rowe (Eton-University\ncollege) 179.\n5. J. P. Burrough (St. Edward's-\nSt. Edmund Hall) 189.\n6. J. D. Sturrock (Winchester-\nMagdalene) 200.\n7. J. C. Cherry (Westminster-Bra-\nsenose) 195.\nA. B. Hodgson (Eton-Oriel)\n(stroke) 170.\nG. J. Merifield (King Edward VI\nSehool-St, Edmund Hall) (cox) 109.\nCAMBRIDGE\nT. S. Crec (Geelong-Jesus) (bow)\n160.\n2. H. W. Mason (Clifton-Trinity\nhall) 162.\n3. M. Bradley (Monckton Combe-\nPemproke)  184.\n4. D. M. Napier (Eton-Magdalene)\n177.\n5. M. P. Lonnon (Westminster-\nThird Trinity) 179.\n6. T. B. Langton (Radley-Jesus)\n193.\n7. A. Burrough (St. Paul's-Jesus)\n171.\nR. J. Perfitt (King's College school\n-Trinity Hall) (stroke) 168.\nT. H. Hunter (Harvard-Trinity\nHall)  (cox) 112.\nIhey arc not out to hurt cricket and\nthat anything against cricket find:;\nno place in their propaganda,\" tlie\nwriter add?. \"All the same, if their\nprogress i.s continued on the same\nlines, cricket is bound to feci the\ndraught\" Webb adds that baseball\nhas found popularity because of\nits continued action, whereas cricket's rest periods break up thc continuity, of activity.\nTrophies for Net\nMeet Displayed\nj Efforts of Nelson and outside bird\n| enthusiasts entering the four-day\nI Kootenay badminton tournament to\nbe held in Nelson, commencing Friday, are to be well rewarded, Six\nchallenge cups have been posted\nfor the various competitions as well\nas trophies for the four junior\nevents. These are on display in\nlocal store window.\nHighlighting the display are the\nsix large challenge cups put up for\nannual competition in this tournament. These are the Wragge cup\nfor open mixed doubles, the Central club trophy for ladies' singles,\nthe Andrew cup for veterans'\ndoubles, the Transfer cup ladies'\nmen's singles and the Wood-Vallance cup for men's doubles. Besides the large cups are smaller\nones to be retained by the winners\nas their own property. Cups for\njunior events have, for the firsl\ntime, becn posted and are displayed\nWORLD HOCKEY\nCHAMPS BLANK\nLES CANADIENS\nDetroit Is Favored\nto Retain Stanley\nMug This Year\nBy ELMER DULMAGE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nDETROIT, March 23 (AP)\u2014Detroit Red Wlngi, world champions,\ncrushed the challenging Montreal\nCanadiens 4-0 here tonight in the\nfirst game of the National Hockey\nleague title seriei and became top-\nheavy favorites\u2014If they weren't\nbefore the game started- to retain\none of their two championships.\nGunning furiously at game little\nWllf Cude In the Montreal cagt,\nthe Red Wlngi found  power In\nevery functioning division to outplay and outhlt a taam that failed\nto bring ipeed and  organization\nInto the playoffs.\nAs speedy Hec Kilrea filled in\nbrilliantly at right wing for the injured Larry Aurie, giving the Red\nWings as potent a No. 1 forward line\nas ever, 12,495 cheering Detroit fan*\nfigured   the  crimson   home  forces\nwould win again Thursday night and\ngo to Montreal with every advantage.\nKILREA SHINES\nA year ago Red Wings won the\nbest-of-five series in three straight\nfrom Montreal Maroons.    .\nKilrea, shooting from the wrong\nside but skating with the efficient\nMariy Barry and Herbie Lewis,\nscored Detroit's last two goala in\nthe third period.\nEbbie Goodfellow had given Detroit a lead in the first period in\na lightning raid that left Canadiens'\ndefence out of position.\nLate in the second period aa \u00bb\nsteady Montreal bombardment gradually died down, Lewis pushed in\nthe second Red Wing goal. Racing\nthrough to the goal crease, Barry\nslashed thc puck into the post and\nLewis had only to tap thc rebound\ninto an empty cage.\nBoisterous Bucko McDonald was\njust out of the penalty box in thc\nthird period when Kilrea snapped\nup a pass from Lewis and rifled in\nto make it 3-0 from his backhand.\nToward thc finish he stickhandlcd\ndown alone and drove a puck that\nglanced into the net off Cude'J leg\npads.\nLINEUP\u2014\nCanadiens\u2014Cude, Buswell, Siebert, Haynes, Gagnon, Joliat.\nDetroit\u2014Smith, Bowman, Goodfellow, Barry, H. Kilrea, Lewis.\nCanadiens subs\u2014McKenzie, Lor-\nrain, Miller, Brown, Lepine, McGill,\nMantha, Desilets, Blake.\nDetroit subs\u2014Gallagher, McDonald, Pettinger, Sorrell, W. Kilrea,\nHowe, Bruneteau, Kelly, Mackie.\nOfficials--Mickey Ion and Johnny\nMitchell.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u2014\n1\u2014Detroit, Goodfellow (Lewis),\nBarry) 5:21.\nPenalties\u2014Gagnon, Barry.\naSecond period\u2014\n2\u2014Detroit, Lewis (Barry) 16:54\nPenalty\u2014McDonald.\nThird periods\u2014Detroit, H. Kilrea (Lewis, Barry) 1:20.\n4-Detroit, H. Kilrea, 17:52.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nInsist on\nASHLESS \u2022-TASTELESS\nCHOOSE WHIOHEVD\"\nf too rarn rou a cuban .1\n(MOOTMIMOB\nI BLACK COVER-Thin Paper]\n[BLUE COVER \u2022 Pure White]\ni Automatic Book \u2022 1001\ntf\nx\\gx*g\nC1C4;RETTE PAPERS\nCHERRINGTON TOP SCORER AMONG THE\nHOOP PLAYERS IN INTER-CITY GAMES\nPlaying five inter-city game:-, this reason, James Cherrington. tall\ncentre of tlie B.C. Telephone club, icd thc scorers of the Ncison men's\nrep basketball league this season witli 43 points. Bob Paterson, although\na guard, was second in scoring with 30 points in eight games, witli\nFred Graves third with 20 points in :ix gamer.\nINDIVIDUAL SCORING\nGa. FT.    C.   F.B. Pts\nCherrington       5 5      3      20 43\nPaterson         8 6      2      14 30\nGraves     6 0      0       10 20\nGreenwood       -I 10        8 18\nAl Smith    0 2      1        7 IS\nS.Smith     3 2      0       6 12\nTemple      3 3      1        5 11\nStan Horswill     (i no       2 4\nBuchanan     I ll      0        1 2\nMills     4 10        1 2\nMcQuaig    2 0      0        1 2\nCarter     2 110 1\nMartin     3 0      0       0 0\nJones    10*00\nStark     2 0      0        0 0\nTownsend     2 10       0 0\nI.egcnq:  G-.-G.me,:  F.T.-Freo  throw,:  C.-Converts:  F.B-JTield.\nTHE EMU WINE CO. LTD.\nj:.alaal,la.lar.l 1IM\nAdelaide t\\ London (England)\nThis advertisement is not\n \t\n\t\n1 i'W.^P.,,WW--!,.w\"\"''\u2022\"\u25a0' V\/1. '****'\nPAGE TEN-\nNELS0N DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 24, 1937.\nFIND YOUR BUYER OR SELLER THE CLASSIFIED WAY\nNflaou Bath} News\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE   144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy $   .05\nBy carrier per week 25\nBy carrier per year  13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree months $1.80; six months\n$3.00; one year $8,00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six month;.\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nAdvertising Rates\nIlea Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\nEXAMPLES:\n2 lines, per insertion \t\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions \t\n(6 for the price of 4)\n:i lines, per insertion \t\n8 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions \t\n2 lines, 1 month \t\n;s lines, t month .  .\nFor   advertisements   of   more\nthan three lines, calculate on\nthe above basis\nBox   numbers   lie  extra.  This\ncover? any number uf insertion:..\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10'\u201e\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nBIRTHS\nGARRETT \u2014 To Mr. and Mr.s\nFloyd Garrett, at Victorian hospital,\nKaslo. March 20, a son.\nPERSONAL\n22\n.33\n1 32\n2.86\n4.29\niiimiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimiimimiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiHtiiiM'.niii iimiii I\nDflYlffrlFORGET\nTttrm -Un of Damrtr. iht jrosU rjfum iUliftt, |fft\nPx.L\\ ll.-:y. rmj^ilrt.lS^djilhilll-'ryfl-U'rifvrm,  II\niTllllll Illllllllllllllllllll Hllllllllllllllllilll Illllllllllllllllllllllll\n\"It's plain, isn't il? Why shouldn't\nI be jealous'.' There are thousands\nupon thousands of women who\nhink they're in love with your husband and would lay down hearts\nand hands for him and he has to\nbe married to you.\"\nJanet, laughed.    \"Ma.  Bed\nsay thc nicest things!\"\nCHAPTER 33\nRussell didn't say anything more\nto Janet while they danced bul\nwhen the dance was over he led her\ngently out toward the garden. Then\nhe found a bench and asked her to\nwait for him.\nHe was gone for only a little\nwhile, a little while in which Janet\nreflected: 1 will not think of Joel.\nIf I do, I'll probably find myself\ncrying on Russell Bede's .shoulder.\nHe's that kind of a man. He makes\nyou want to tell him the story of\nyour life. Janet had never met anyone before who affected hcr thai\nway. It was usually Janet who did\nthe listening.\nHe came back with two plates\nloaded wilh salads and sandwiches\nwhich neither ol thcm touched.\n\"Now what is it that I have thot\ndisappoints you.\" she asked softly.\n\"A husband,\" he answered at\nonce. \"I used lo think that men\nwho made a fuss about their wives\ngoing crazy over movie heroes were\nstupid, but now 1 know how they\nfeel. Only more so.\"\nJanet really didn't understand\nand she said so.\nSilk Print\nyou\nThe new prints arr as gay and\ncolorful as i? postiblr. Mm;'. Schia-\nparelli's   debig.i1-   Lur   reproduction i the had been having separate dates\nHe groaned, \"Don't. Janet. Please ]\ndun'I give mc an ingenue's line.\nOne more gurgle and I'll be finished, f expect better things of you,\"\n\"All right, I'm sorry. But you\nmustn't expect too much nf any\nman's wife. I'm doing the best 1\ncan pretending that I'm a femme\nfatale.\"\n\"You'll never have to pretend\nthat, Janet,\" He never called her\nanything else but by tier first\nname, then or later. You're a\ndangerous woman.\"\nShe laughed sincerely then.\n\"Yes, you are. You're the woman\nthat many men wait for. You're\nnot a predatory female gotten up\nwith blandishments, You're no\ncinema version, you're the real\nthing and when a man realizes that,\nhe fits you into his dreams and that\nis what makes it fatale.\"\nJanet said, \"I have a feeling that\nI oughtn't to sit here and let you\nsay things like that to me but I'm\nloo weak to do anything about it.\nI really enjoy it.\"\nHc was silent then. He was thinking amazedly that perl-nips she seldom heard those things He didn't\nknow anything about Joel Paynter\n--he might bo a right chap\u2014 but he\nknew that a girl like Janet married\nlu a man like Joel, would play a\nsecondary part in their joint life.\nThe compliments would be for Joel.\n\"What do you do when you hear\nthese things?\" he asked after a\nlong moment.\n\"Do?\" Janet returned thoughtfully. \"Why I don't 'do' anything\nfor the simple reason I've never\nheard them before. I guess the only\nthing I can do is to change the\n<ubjL'ct, Have you . . ?\"\n\"Don't ask me if I've read any\ngood books, lady, or I'll take you\nback to the wading pool and douse\nyuur pretty head.\"\nJanet felt relieved that the conversation was taking a lighter turn.\nShe said:\n\"I was only going to ask you if\nyou had any idea what time the\nfireworks start? I've a hangover\nfrom my childhood about fireworks.\nI love them! I, oh! and, ah! and\nwait with bated breath for the\nAmerican flag at the end.\"\nRu.ssell knew that, their brief interview was over. He picked up\ntheir plates and put them on the\ntray on which he had brought them.\n\"Come on,\" hc said. \"I'll stand\nin back of you to catch you when\nyou bend over to see the bursting\nbombs.\"\nYes, Janet thought, he is the kind\nof a man who would always be in\nback of a woman when ever she\nneeded him.\nBut Russell wasn't in back of her\nfor long. He was. after all, the\nguest of honor and Caroline dragged\nhim from one group to another.\nAway from him. Janet's thoughts\nreturned to Joel and in spite of hcr\nenthunam about fireworks, she did\nnot see the exploding stars and\nstreaks cf brilliant color before her\neyes.\nA miserable, sickening thing was\nhappening to hcr. Something she\nhad fought to keep out of her mind\nthese last few weeks since Joel and\nHIGHEST CLASS RUBBER\ngoods. Our quality and service\nwill amaze you. 21 latex lor $1.U0 ,\nGoods shipped same day as ordered. Packed plain Free cata !\nlogue [or men ur women on re-!\nquest. Imperial Distributors, 151! j\nBurrows Ave, Winnipeg, Man. j\n(4927) ;\nMENfGET VIGOR AT ONCE! NEW |\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw j\noyster invigorators and other 1\nstimulants. One dose peps up or* ;\ngans, glandi. If not delighted. \u25a0\nmaker refunds few cents paid |\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co.]\n(5029) .\n1 LOCAL PROSPECTORS; LOOK-;\ning fur financial backing for the\ncoming season. Apply Box 5371,\nNelson Daily News. '53711\nTENDERS WANTED\nCITY OF NELSON\nTenders Wanted\nTenders will be received by the\nundersigned up until 8 o'clock p.m.,\nMonday, April 5, 1937, for tht con- j\nst mrt inn of a water reservoir \u25a0\nPlans, specifications and jnslruc- j\ntions to bidders may he seen 'it the!\nengineer's office. Lowest or any,\ntender not necessarily accepted.\nW. E. WASSON, Cilv Clerk.\n(54141\nup toward Ihem in the peaceful\nheavens above her, that she trusted\nJoel, that -she had respect, for him\neven as. she thought that, she told\nand faith in his faithfulneu-1. But\nherself, I don't really know.\n[ don't really know now and I j\ncan'L bear it!\nShe was sitting in a chair on the j\nverandah of thc Maynard's house. |\nIt was dark there and she slipped j\nout quickly and ran across tlie j\nback lawn toward the piavhousc\nwhere she had left hcr bathing i\ntogs. I\nShe gut hcr tilings quickly and\nwent toward thc garagiu to look\nfor her chauffeur.\nShe heard a whistle at her back\nand turned as Russell Bede came\nup to her.\n\"I lost you,\" he said, \"but I'm\ntaking you home if you're going.\"\n\"Yes, I'm going,'1 she said rather\nbreathlessly. \"But do you mind if\nI ask you to let me go alone?\"\nShe couldn't have him with her.\nShe had to bc alone. Emotions\nheretofore unexperienced had stirred her up, unbalanced hcr and\nfatigued hcr.\n\"Of course I don't mind,\" he said.\n\"Not if 1 can see you again. May\nI come to call on you tomorrow?\"\n\"I'd like to have you,\" she said\nand gave him hcr hand.\n\"At 5,\" hc said and closed the\ndoor of her car for her.\nHcr thought, which had nothing to du with Russell Bede. beat\nagainst her temples and her heart\npounded so that her head ached\nwith a dull thudding pain when her\ncar swung into the drive of her\nhouse. There were lights, she noted,\nin her living room. It must mean\nthat Juc! was at home. Relief was\npainful to her. She had meant to\ngo directly tu hcr room and close\nthe door without looking to see if\nJoel was in his room. She was so\nafraid he wouldn't be.\n\"That you, Jan?\" Joel called from\nthe living room.\nShe went to the door swiftly,\nJoel was lying on a lounge in his\npyjamas and robe.\n\"I couldn't sleep,\" he said. \"I\nguess I was jealous. I got thinking\nabout, that guy chasing you around\nall evening. You lay off those eastern millionaires, Mrs. Paynter.*'\nMrs. Paynter felt as though  the\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nFu\"RN ish ed housekeeping\nrooms for rent.    Annable Block.\n(5067)\nGOOIThOUSE IN NELSON.    Apply  Mrs.  Balding,  Blcwitt,   B.C.\n(5295)\njMALL STORE FOR RENT-EN-\nquire Bishop's News Stand.\n(5365)\nFURNISHED HOUSE, TWO BED-\nrooms, fireplace. Phone 820Y.\n(5389)\nFURNISHED ROOMS FOR RENT\n602 Baker Street. <5387 J\nTERRACE APTS.\" Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites     (5068)\nFURNISHED\" APARTMENT WITH\nbath, 904 Edgewood Ave.     '54011\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXPERIENCED GIRL WANTS\nhousework by the hour or day\nApply 405 6th St. (5345)\nYOUNG MECHANIC WILL IN-\nvest money in gag service station.\nBox 5321, Dally News.       (5321)\nFOR 5ALE, PROPERTY,\nHOUSES, FARMS, ETC.\nELECTRICAL\nEXP.    GIRL    WANTS    STEADY\nhousework. Box 5413, Daily News,\n(54131\nEXP. DAIRYMAN, GOOD MILKER\nand do carpenter work. J. H.. Box\n1025, Fernie, B.C. (5405)\nYOUNG  GIRL  WANTS  HOUSE-\nwork. Likes children. Phone 587X. j\n(5407) |\nyoung'farm or'dairy'man i\nwants work.    Non-smoker    Ted |\nSutherland, Winlaw. <5369i |\nHELP WANTED\nFOR SALE-CONFECTIONERY &\nice cream parlor, modernly equipped, in good Kootenay town, Apply Box 5372, Nelson Daily News, j\n(5372) I\nEXPERIENCED BUSINESS~WO: |\nman will invest some capital in\nreliable firm, with employment j\nNelson ur Trail preferred. Box!\n5396, Daily News. (5396) I\nW ANTED-SM ALL ' IN VESTMENT I\nin Patent Files Char, Bex 5388,1\nDaily News. '53b8>\nFOR SALE\nTUBES\nand FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\n1.   \u25a0;( slock for immediate shipment\nSwartz Pipe Yard\n1st Avenue and  Main 8t.\nVANCOUVER, B.C. _(5390l\n\"UN[dN~MlNE EQUIPMENT: ONE\nhotel range. 2 oven McLary; 1\nlarge ramp range: 2 tents 118 x\n16.1, with flys: I motor or generator, 7% h.p.; 40 steel caaTip cols.\n10 drums diesel fuel. AH in good\ncondition, Grand Forks Furniture\n& Hardware Co. Ltd., Grand\nForks, B.C. (5316)\nCEDAlTcltlBBING\"TIMBER , CE:\ndar fence posts, hard wool pilings,\nany sizes. Chcv. '29 XVz Ion\nIrtick. $151). N. K. Prohachow.\nP.O. Winlaw, B.C. 15370)\n6 MILLION FEET OF TIMBER &\ntwo thousand poles on Liltle Slocan. M. Cameron, Slocan City.\n\u00ab394>\npIpFTnD FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd.,\n250 Prior St. Vancouver, B.C.\n(5026)\nFOR-SALE - BA\u00a5rELS7\"KEGS,\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo, Ltd., Nelson, B.C. (5027)\nfor sale'^one UP-TO-DATE\nNational cash register. J. E. Annable. (5342)\nKITCHEN \"RANGE. USED ONLY 3\nmonths, for cash. For particulars\nphone 746L.                    __ (5395)\nCOMPLETE FURNISHED APART-\nment house. Box 687, Nelson. B.C.\n(40621\n\"XtTh'f\n(5113)\nGOVERNMENT JOBS - HOW TO\nget. Be ready fur spring appointments. Free Booklet. The M.C.C\nChil Service Schools,  Winnipeg\n(5109)\nMAN\" FOR \"RANCH\"AND \"DAIRY\nwork. Reliable. Also middle-aged\nwoman. Box 5411, Daily New.-.\n(54IH\nYOUNG MAN'FOR LIGHT FARM\nwork. Able to milk. K Jansen\nBrouse, B.C. (54101\nPOULTRY FOR SALE\n\"CHICKS\nWHICH\nGIVE\nRESULTS\"\nLEGHORNS\nUnsexed Pullet Chicks    i\n5 12 per   100 $ 26 pei  100\n$110 per 11)00 $125 per 500    I\nROCKS AND REDS\n$ 14 per   110 S 28 per 100\n$130 per 1000 S135 per 500    ,\nLIGHT  SUSSEX\n$ 16 per   100 $ 32 per 100\nGovernment approved. Btood-testcd\nslock. It wil] pay you to sec our'\nillustrated booklet. Write now. It's\n[ice.\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD. j\nLangley Prairie, B.C.\n(5023) j\nNORTH SHORE PROPERTY -\nClose to Nelson. Two cleared-level\n2-acres blocks; each with wood\nlot and 50 apple trees. Constant\nwater supply. One block wilh\nexcellent cottage, veneer lined;\nscreened in large sleeping verandah 21'x9'. Close to beach and to\nhighway. Apply Drawer 270, Nel-\n__son, KC. (5347)\n2 ACRES On'fERTILE LUI.U ISL-\nand; 5 room modern home, large\nchicken house; fruit, berries. One\nblock to car line, 20 minutes by\nauto to centra! Vancouver. Buildings alone worth Ihe $2500 asked..\nSome terms. E. A. Bush, Box 632.\nKellogg, Idaho. __15?P|\nONE STORY BUNGAI.OWM ROOM\n12 bedrooms), 3 garden tails $1350.\nCash payment $300. Bal. $20\nmonthly. Also 6 ruuin house. '<\nlots, central location. -.1800 on\nterms. 11. E. Dill, 508 Wind St\n153541\ng(J6i5Tar\"m\"Tands>6r\"\"s\"ale\non easy terms iy Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write foi full in'\nformation to 908 Dept. ol Natural\nResources, C.P.R, Calgary, Alta\n(r'028l\n-., r\"6oTvi\"h6u\"se7c~l\"osed\"-in sun\nporch. 2 lots fenced in, chicken\nhouse, garage. $800 cash or terms.\nBox 5409, Daily News. '54031\nNINE \"AND ONE HALF ACRE1-\nranch. Within Rossland city limits\nFor further details apply PO\nBox 207, Rossland. B.C. (53291\nATTRACTIVE \"MODERN \"bIINGA-\nlow fot sale. The aarice '<- iust\nright. P.O. Box 881), Nelson, B.C\n(53901\nHOIST MOTORS\nWound   rotor  motors  in  sloek\nfrom 10 h.p. lo 250 h.p. at various speeds.   Enquire\u2014\nCROSSMAN MACHINERY\nCOMPANY. LIMITED\n59 Alexander St., Vancouver, B C.\n(5024i\nLOST AND FOUND\nFOUND-STRAY   HEIFER   CALF.'\nFruitvale Dairy. Owner please call.\n(5059)\nWANT TO SAVE MONEY? Learn\nthe benefits of Classified Shopping?\nTo Finders\nIf vou find a cal or doc,, pockel-\nbook, jewelry or fur. ut any*\nthing else of value, telephone-\nthe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be inserted witln ut cost to\nyou. We will collect (rjui the\nowner.\nBusiness & Professional\nDirectory\nAssayers\nMachinists\nE. W. W1DDOWSON. PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt.. Nelson, B.C. _ (5088)\nGRENV1LLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 618\nBaker Street. Nelson. BC. PO\nBox No. 726. Representing shipper's interest at Trail, BC, (50891\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nI For all Classes of Metal Work Lathe\nWork, Drilling. Boimg and Grinding.   Motor Rewinding, Acetylene\nWelding\nI Telephone 393      321 Vernon Street\n(5103)\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapilol Motors Building\n(50901\nMine & Equipmsnt Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON. AGENT: C C.\nSnowden Oils. Greases, etc Richardson Road Machinery Co. Cul-\nvorls. Graders, Scrapers, Plows,\nScreens, Gravel Eeiuipincnt. -etc.\nMine Machinery. Steam Coals,\nOffice 518 Ward, Plis. 53; Res. 289.\n(50071\nNotaries\nChiropractors\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nYOUNG TEAM HORSES ABOUT\n1400 ea. Give price. P.O. Box 415,\nCity. '5313'\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nYORKSHIRE PIGS. $5 EACH.    F\nForch. P.O. Erie. B.C (53151\nPETS\nYOU TOO CAN SAVE\nARK STORE.\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE\nGIRL'S SMALL SIZE BICYCLE IN\ngood condition. Would trade for\nlarger one or sell for $20. M. MacKay. R.R.I, Nelson, B.C.      (5391)\nMOTORCYCLES\nBABY CHICKS AND SEXED PUL-\nlet Chicks. White Leghorns exclusively. All breeding stock on\nour farm mated to pedigreed\nmales. Government approved and\nblood tested. Price list on request.\nPlace orders early to insure date\npreferred. M. H. Ruttledge. Der-\nrcen Poultry Farm, Sardis. B.C\n(4971)\nBABY CHICKS: LEG HORNS\" $12,\nNew Hampshire* $15 per 100 from j\nGovernment Approved Sc blood\ntested slock. Order early. T. A.\nRobinson, B.C. Lands Co. Ltd..\nGrand Forks. B.C. (5156) i\nRHODE iSLAND\"RED\"CHICKS7l7 I\nyears   under   government  supervision. $14 per 100. Sexcd pullets I\n28c each. Dan Russell, 1806 Gray j\nAve., New Westminster, B.C.\n^(5374) j\nHTTP-APPROVED \"COCKERELS: 1\nR.O.P. and R.O P. sired baby;\nck:;.; all eggs proouced on our I\nR.O.P. plant; Gov. App. and blood\ntested; Deverson, Crawford Bay\n(5208)\nWIRE   HAIRED   FOX   TERRIER\npups, registered  imported stock\nH. Harding, Nelson, Phone 3I4L\n(53171\nj. r. McMillan, d.c neuro-\ncalometer  and   X-ray   16  years\nexperience. McCulloch Blk. (5091)\nW. J BROCKS D.C. X-ray. 13 Years'\nExperience. Gilker Blk., Nelson\n(50921\nEngineers and Surveyors\n11. D. DAWSON Nelson, B.C\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(5093)\nBOY\"D\"c~AFFLECK,\"Fruit\"vale, B.C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor I\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer !\n(50941\nD   J.  ROBERTSON   NOTARY\nPublic.   305 Victoria St.. Nelson.\n15101)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT*\nor, list of wanlcel inventions and\nfull information sent dec Tim\nRamsay Compan;. World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St.. Ollawa.\n(51U5)\nPhotography\nGARDENING AND NURSERY\nPRODUCTS\nFlorists\nFRUIT TREES. ORNAMENTAL\ntrees and shrubs. Rhododendrons,\nroses, etc.. at lowest possible prices\nfor firsl class stock. Layrilz Nurseries, T Roynon, Agent, Nelson.\n(5269i\nARTISTIC FLORAL MAKE-UP A,\nspecialty.   Mrs. Hagarty, Ph. 215.\n(51181\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND PIUNT-\ncd. any size. 25c. Reprints eight\nfor 25c. Deckled edge prints. Valuable coupon. \"Bettor prints at\nlower cost.\" KRYSTAL PHOTOS,\nWilkie. Sask. (5106)\nSanitariums\nFuneral Directors\nALL KINDS OF FRUIT TREES 50c\neach. Climbing an* bushreses 35c.\nBlack and red currants 15c. Eugene Hammerer,  P.O. Taghum.\n15157)\n,oo\"va\"rieties\"of\"rose\"tre\"es\nCarnations and  Gladiolus. Catalogues on request. H. Kitchener,\nMountain Station Gardens, Nelson.\n(5319!\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert, Mortician      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(51021\nLOIS  BRANDON\nPRIVATE SANITARIUM\nWOMEN ONLY\nE1216 Newark Ave.   Phone Lake-\nview 2870, SPOKANE, WASH.\n5312\nDR. ALDRICH. SPOKANE, WASH.\nHeart. Stomach, Kidney, Bladder\nDiseases treated.   X-ray work\n(5107)\nPRIZE WINNING S.C. WHITE Leghorns. Beautiful birds. Cockerels\n$5 & $10. Pullets $2. F. J Har-\nbinson, Fernie, B.C. (5320)\nWANTED\n5  TONS  OF  ALFALFA.    STATE\n(rice.  Box 379,  Kimberley, B.C.\n(54041\nPARAGON    VILLIERS    MOTOR-\ncycles. 3 speed transmission. Close .\nto 140 miles to a gallon. Complete  YOUR CLASSIFIED ADVERTISE-\nwith  lights.  Price   $165.  Palmer ment in the Daily News is read in\nRutledge. Trail, B.C.             (5198) I    more than 5,800 homes throughout\n| the Kootenays, such coverage at\ngates of heaven had opened to hcr. I so low a cost is the greatest bar-\ndo Bt Continued)               ' gain value of the age.\nHOUSES, APTS. WANTED\nMODERN HOUSE, 3 BEDROOMS\npreferred. 1 to 3 year lease. Phone\n115 or Freeman, Hume Hotel.\n(5356)\nWANTED TO RENT - 3~ROOM\nhouse and bath in Fairview by\nApril 1. Write Box 646, Trail.\n(5364)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nSash Factory\nPhone\nJEAN ROBERTSON\n144\nFor the Nelson Daily News\nCLASSIFIED SERVICE\nMutual Benefit Health Sc Ace. Assoc.\nWorld's largest. Al. W Foote, Dist.\nMgr.  Hume  Hotel, Nelson,  B.C.\ni (5137)\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD.\nReal  Estate,   Insurance,  Rentals.\n311 Baker St. Phone 68.      (5095)\nj, rTw. DAWSON, \"Real \"Estaie, Insurance, Rentals.   Next Hipperson\nj    Hardware, Baker St. Phone 197\n(5096)\n' C. D. BLACKWOODTlSurance of\nevery description. Real Est. Ph. 99\n(5097)\nH. E. DILlTXaJTOTNdTiRE Tn-\nsurance. Real Estate. 508 Ward St\n(5098)\nj7~ErANNABLE. REAL ESTATE\",\nRentals. Insurance. Annable Blk\n15099)\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant, 217 Baker St.\n(5108)\nSecond Hand Scores\nWE   BUY,  SELL  &   EXCHANGE\n.   furniture, etc.   The Ark Store.\n(8109)\nNICE RANGE, DRESSER. HEAT-\ners, etc., at MRS. HADCL1FFES\n(5110)\nWatch Repairing\n! CHAS. F. McHARDY INSURANCE\n1    Real Estate. Phone 135.        (5101)\nH. H. SUTHERLAND\n\u25a0 Watchmaker and Jeweller\n] Rutledge Block, Baker St. Ncison.\n\"When Sutherland repairs your\n-watch it is on timc all the time.\"\n(5111)\nS S\"pECfALISTrREA\"SONABLE. Work\nI guaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St.\nI 15112)\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy nuss Wcstover\non silks are delightful.\nFor instance, the charm of tho\nMadame's own French garden is\nraptured in this \"French garden\"\nsilk print <'\":il,k't! bv this fauinir\ndressmi'ka r.\nShe was trying to shut out the\npicture born in her imagination.\nShe was seeing Nina Harley and\nJoel logether. It. was Carol Griest\nall over again. What were they\nsaying? Where werc they? At. Nina's\nSoft red and green flowers ai\u00bb j house a mile beyond her own where\nNina would be saying, \"Come in foi\na nightcap,\" or Joel would suggest\nstopping for something to eat.\nIt'll go on and on this way, she\nthought, and some day I'll find I've\neither   stopped  caring  or  else   I'll\nposed on a black silk crepe ground,\nand Ihe dress is trimmed wilh a\ngreen cartridge pleated hem border, a green belt, and some green\nflowers at the neckline.\n\"The flower pot\" hal is black.\nare bag and shoes, making an in-'blow  up and scream  and  there'll\ntriguing  costume for southern  re- j be little bits of pieces of me like\ning ' these fireworks all over the place.\nsort wear now- or for next spring\nand summer.\nRain-spots will ofte'n mark cloth\nquite badly, if they are allowed to\ndry on. No damage avill result if\nthe marks are deall with promptly.\nWipe off the wet with a silk handkerchief, going Ihe way a,f the nap\nnf the cloth. When all spots have\ndisappeared, allow lo dry slowly\nand this will leave the material\nfrep from marks and quite smooth, j\nDAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS\nnever make the front page or\nheadlines, but they bleak many\nrecords by thi ir (ast and economical salesmanship,\nShe felt a little sorry for her\nself, thinking of her sacrifices to\nkei'p her marriage intact, on the\nshifting .annd foundation.\nFor the first time in tbe three\nyears of her marriage, she wished\nthat Joel wcre something else other\nthan what he was. She wished thBl\nhe were a ... an instructor In a\nboy's school, an engineer on a Irain,\nanything but. a man whose associates were beautiful women of\nstandards different from her own.\nShe wished that women had a little\nmore sportsmanship and decency\nabout other women's husbands. Particularly her own who seemed to be\nfair meat, for every siren.\nShe  thanked her stars, looking\nIT SURE LOOKS\n\u00a9AD, RUT   IT'S\npi\u00aba.r.e f ~**>y\nWASOM\nTO HE\nJSHIMyAflF I'M 60NNA TAKE\nSTH.iV.Aj YOU TO VJOKK B\/aey\n\\\\ \\ \\ V   \\HOBNINQ, I'VE 60TU\n'BVE DAD-TAKE MOTHER OUT FOR.\nDAD-SHE'LL <5ET A THRILL IM THE OLb\na EiDEr, n\nE.US MOVJ ,\nTHE GUMPS\nBy Cus Edson\n p\n\u2014\u2014^\u2014\n\t\nWJ.|aa\\l--*--IIUaPaajiijpai,wa^jp. ,iij: a jaj ..,..\u25a0 iftaiaBp-viiii^i. iia.^ajai.i, 1, |aaa.*.ia^.ii i\u00abaaa*ia\u00bbaai vu; iapau.\u00abaawuii \u00abj.,a ,1\u00aba ..a ill   , a(i 1 ii.lih waa i.\u00ab*..,i,*.,jp^pf. \u00abi,mu~.i>.\n^\nWHITEWATER'S\nORES FIGURED\nAT $9,602.\nEstimate 400,000 Tons\nOre; Scheduled to\nReopen Soon\nCOMPANY CLEAR\nINDEBTEDNESS\nMine Producer for 40\nYears; Ross Will\nReopen It\nOre reserves at the Whitewater\nproperty at Retallack are estimated\nat $9,602,000 according to S. N. Ross,\nwho has been leasing at the property, there being 400,000 tons of ore\naveraging four ounces of silver per\nton and carrying 4 per cent lead and\n11 per cent zinc, the Vancouver Sun\nreports. The coast paper desrnbes\nthe property, which is scheduled to\nreopen shortly, as follows:\nAt today's prices, silver in the reserves would be worth about $730,-\n000 lead, $2,272,000, and zinc $6,1,00,-\n000, or a total of $9,602,000. From\nthese figures all charges would have\nto be deducted for mining, milling,\ntransportation, smelter charges of\nall kinds, including administration\nexpenses, etc.\nW. H. Burgess, managing-director,\nhas just returned from Spokane and\nconfirms the above. He also states\nhe has placed S. N. Ross in charge\nit the mine with instructions to take\nin all necessary supplies, hire a\ncrew, re-condition the mine and\nhave the mill in operation by May 1.\nWhitewater Mines limited has 24\nmineral claims and fractions, covering 507.73 acres in a solid block.\nEARLY-DAY STAKING\nThe claims were among the first\nstaked in the district, following the\ndiscovery of silver in 1891. It has\nhad the most continuous production\nOperation in the entire Slocan camp.\nFor well over 40 years the mine\nhas been listed as a producer. Official records credit the property\nwith an output of 150.183 tons of ore,\nyielding  a  return   from   the  gold,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NEL80N. B. C.-WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 24, 1937.\nsilver, lead and zinc recovered of\n$3,699,868.\nSince 1930, leasers have developed\nand shipped a considerable amount\nof high grade ore. Some of the ore\nwas shipped and returned fair profits despite low prices and a quantity of ore was accumulated awaiting\nimproved prices.\nGOOD PROFITS\nGood profits were returned from\nore mined in the upper levels, notwithstanding the fact that the original mill, which was destroyed by\nfire in 1910, only recovered 60 per\ncent of the values.\nDunng 1926 or before the present\nmodern concentrator was constructed, more than 10,000 Ions of ore was\nshipped to Trail smelter. Out of the\nprofits der.ved a 35 per cent divider! was paid to preferred shareholders.\nWhitewater is equipped with 150,-\nton mill, a diesel power plant, and\nhydro-electric plant, installed at a\ncost of $30,00?, electric haulage and\nother mining equipment, and comfortable camp buildings for 50 men.\nFORCED  CLOSE\nAfter operating from January 1 lo\nJuly 31, 1929, end treating 21,900\ntons of ore, the mill was forced to\nrio.^e down owing to lew metal\nprices.\nOn completion nf recent financial\n;irrangemoni-s the company has authorized capi ilizntion of 3.500,000\nshares, par value $1. all of which are\noutstanding. Working capital of\n$30,000 i.s in the bank as at February\n15, 1937, ready for consumption.\nCLEAR OF DEET\nThe company is clear of all indebtedness. The entire mining and\nmilling plant together with hydroelectric power equipment and camps\nhave been paid in full. No major expenditures will be necessary before\nj producing to capacity. All profits\ni from the out.set, therefore, will be\nI available for divident purposes, . . . ]\n! In future operations of the plant\n| the Whitewater concentrator will be !\noperated nn a 24-hour basis, handling about 150 tons of ore daily. It\nis planned to carry out considerable\namount of exploration work as well\nas further development of known\nore-bodies.   . . .\nThe board of directors is as follows: President, Major-General J.\nW. Stewart, C.B.; vice-president,\nDonald McLeod; directors, W. H.\nBurgers, Angus Stewart and James\nR. Court, London. England; solicitor,\nGen. J. A. Clark, K.C.\nMining and Market News\nINDUSTRIALS AT\nTORONTO, March 23 fCD-The\nindustrial sh:.re markf t 'iPht.ned\nup today and posted 48 gains -re.-insl\n36 recessions and the index was\nraised about a point,\nFord A was marked up l-1', to\n2S3A. Brazilian add'-d 1% whilf\nConsolidate:! Smelters ga <icri 2-4\nand Nickel firmed !':\u2022. O'her in-\nterlisted leaders to advance -2 tn\nni were C P.R., Distillers-Seagrams\nand Walkors Common.\nMarsey-Han:s .stocks were higher\nand Cockshutt PVw and Waterloe\nManuiactiuvng rared down \u2022\u25a0\u2022 to M>.\nBanks were unchanged to slightlv\nlower, fnods qui?' and mamly\nsleidy anrl in 'he utilities ihe balance was down w.th Bell T.-'e^flr-ne\nBeauharnois and Internationa' Utilities B posting losses.\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, March 23 (CP).-Silver futures closed easier today, 25\npoints lower. Sales: One March contract.\nOpen      High       Low     Close\nMarch   45 05      45.05      45.05      45 Od\nDow-Jones Averages\n30 in dus! rials\n20 rails . .   .\n20 utilities . -\n40 bonds\nHigh Low Close Change\n182.96 179.93 181.87-Up 2.0b\n61.43 6032 61.13 -Up    .95\n32 55 31.96 32.31-Up    .39\n101.60\u2014Off   .05\nLATE RALLY AT\nWINNIPEG\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, March 23 (CD-\nBritish and foreign exchange closed\nsteady today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nArgentina, peso, .3009.\nAustralia, pound, 3.8980.\nBrazil, milreis, .0616.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3035.\nNew Zealand, pound. 39294.\nSouth Africa, pound, 48578.\nSwitzerland, fran<\\ .2276.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\n\u25a0PAGE  ELEVEN\nlii, LEADS ALL IN\nCMDA MARKET\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAfton  07\nAlderrnac       1.56\nAlexandria   03\nAnglo Huron      7.55\nArgosy   \t\n      1.00\nArntfield\t\n 82\nAshley   \t\n 12\n.09\nBagamac   \t\n 29 li\nBankfield   \t\n.    ..      1.27\nBase Metals\t\n 43\nBeattie Gold \t\n. ...     J.41\nBldgood iKrk \t\n      1.17\nBig Missouri \t\n 57\nBobjo   \t\n 20\nBralorne   \t\n8.60\n3rett Treth \t\n 12%\nBuffalo Ank \t\n.    .   11.50\nBunker H X\t\n 15\n*an Malartic   \t\n       1.73\n;ar Gold Q\n1 70\nhastle Treth   \t\n.     135\nCentral Pat  \t\n4 30\n.Ihibougamau \t\n. ...     1 74\n^hrom M & S   \t\n..    l.oa\n'laricy  \t\n.06\n^oast Copper \t\n..     6 SO\n-oniaurum   \t\n       1.85\n:ons M & S\t\n....   92 25\nDarkwater \t\n       1.45\nDome   \t\n47.03\nJorval Siscoe\t\n90\nS. Malartic   \t\n... .      172\nEldorado \t\n310\nfalconbridge  \t\n.   J0.25\nred Kirk\n 27\nTrancoeur \t\n. .     103\n3od's Lake   \t\n 74\nSold Belt \t\n 18\nJranada    \t\n 36\n5randora      \t\n 09%\nlunnar Gold \t\n.93\nJardrock    \t\n...     2.30\nlark Gold\t\n. ..       .20V,\nlollinger \t\n.     .    14.15\nlowey   \t\n50\nludson Bay \t\n.   36 00\nnt Nickel \t\n.    68.00\n' M Cons\t\n.43\nCirk L \t\n1 10\n.akeshore  \t\n57 00\naamaque C \t\n.16\n.each Gold \t\n87\n,ebel Oro \t\n.20\na L Lac     \t\n675\n*ay Spiers \t\n 17\nlacassa   \t\n7.25\n\"an  East \t\n.     .        04'4\nIclntyre   \t\n40 (10\nJcLeod C \t\n.    .     250\n1 R Lake \t\n      1.65\nIcWatters   \t\n 9614\nlin  Corp \t\n3.35\nUnto   \t\n.21\nloneta  \t\n167\nIor Kirk \t\n.53\nfipissing \t\n.     2 75\nloranda \t\n.   75 00\n1'Brlen   \t\n...     8.90\n>mega\t\n.90\n'arkhill   \t\n 31\n\u25a0amour Porcupine\n.     360\n'aymaster \t\n82\n1 Oreille \t\n5.50\n'erron     \t\n.      190\n'ickle Crow \t\n7 35\n\u2022ioneer     \t\n5 25\n'remier G\n..   ..     3.10\n'orcupine  C     \t\n.     .       .06 ^\n'reston E \t\n      1.01\nluebec        \t\n.75\n1 Authier \t\n       6 10\n1 L Gold \t\n.68\nLeno         \t\n      1.08\nLitchie G  \t\n.    .       .09\n;oche L L \t\n.26\nan Ant  \t\n.     2.00\n 82\nheep Creek\t\n 60\nher Gord \t\n      3 30\nlscoe       \t\n      5 40\n      185\ntadacona   \t\n.     .      186\nt Anth   \u2022  \t\n.       .22 li\nudbury B \t\n6 00\nullivan\n1 80\nylvanite \t\n.     4 00\nashota \t\n 18\nsck Hughes \t\n575\n\"abum   \t\n      3.10\nsntures  \t\n275\nalte Am \t\n3.30\nWr Hargr \t\n760\nYmir Y Girl     \t\n.35\nOILS\nAjax      \t\n.40\nBritish American Oil\n24.75\nC & E Corporation \t\n415\nChemical Research \t\n1.05\nRovalite              \t\n5n no\nDalhousie   \t\n245\nHome Oil     \t\n2.45\nHome Oil      ..    _\n2.30\nImperial Oil\n22.75\nInternational Petroleum\n?li 10\nMcColl Frontenac     \t\n1360\nMerland   \t\n.20> i\nNordon   \t\n.28\n5 90\n1.75\n.22\nPacalta\nF.r.tish Dominion \t\n.55\nCalmont      \t\n1.10\nEast Crest \t\n.21\nFoundation        \t\n.41\nLowery Petroleum\n.60\nOkalta\n2 20\nSouth West Petroleum \t\n1.15\nHiglr.vood Sarcee    \t\n32\nModel                \t\n.65\nA P Consolidated\t\n,45\nCommonwealth \t\n.45\nUnited      \t\n.35\nSpooner   \t\n.42\n.41\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power     \t\n..     8'i\nBeattv Bros      \t\n..    IS'j\nBell Telephone \t\n161\nBrazilian\t\n.    26%\n9\nBritish American Oil\n24'',\nBrewing Corporation\n3%\nBrewing Corporation Pfd\n17%\nB C Power A     .\n35\nBuilding Products     \t\n.    69%\nBurt FN                  \t\n42\nCanada Bakeries A \t\n4%\nCanada Bakeries B    \t\n66\nCanada Bread\n8\nCanada End Malting\n9\nCanada Car & Foundry\n18%\nCanada   Cement     \t\n.     177i\nCanada Cement Pfd\n108\nCanada Dredge\n42\nCanada   Malting\n..   37 \"<\nCanadian Pacific Railway\n.    14%\nCan  Industrial Ale\n6%\nCan Industrial Ale B\n5%\nCanada Wineries       \t\n..     2%\nCarnation  Pfd\n103%\nConsolidated  Bakeries\n2iv2\nConsolidated Smelters New\n92 VJ\nCosmos\n24\nDominion Bridge         .    .\n57\nDonvnion Stores\n..   11 Vi\nDominion Tar & Chem\n15\nDominion Tar & Chem Pfd\n108\nDistillers Seagrams .\n..   26%\nFanny Farmer\n.    22',\nFord  A\n26%\nGeneral Steel Wares      .   .\n.     15s,\nGypsum Lime it Alabas\n.    16\nHarding Carpet          \t\n5%\nHamilton Bridge Pfd \t\n86\nILnde  Dau.'he\n20\nGoo^vear Tire      \t\n87%\nGoodyear Tire Pfd\n53':>\nInternational  Metals\n18\nInternational  Metals  Pfd\n105\nInternational Milling Pfd\n101 V4\nImperial Ol!          .    .\n2212\nImrenal Tobacco\n14%\nInternational  Nickel\n68\nInternational Petroleum\n36\nLoblaw A\n..     23V,\nLoblaw B        \t\n22 Vi\nK\"lvinator          \t\n33\nMaple Leaf Milling\n91-4\nMassev Harris          \t\n15\",\nMcColl   Frontenac\nHi\nMontreal Power\n.    31\nMonre   Corporation\n43\nOntar'o Steel Products   .\n16V4\nPage Hersey               ..   ..\n.   105\nPower Corporation .\n.    27\nPressed Metals\n32 V4\nSteel of Canada\n87\nShawinigan          \t\n2914\nStandard Paving\t\n7\nMAY WHEAT UP\nA! CHICAGO\nCHICAGO, March 23 (API-Reports that Germany will purchase\n30,030.000 bushels of wheat in addition to amounts already bought gave\na lift lo May wheat prices today.\nOn the other hand, July ano Sep-\ntember futures, representing thc\n1937 winter crop, underwent simultaneously a downturn in value owing to reports of widespread beneficial moisture.\nAt the close, wheat varied from\nli cent lower to % higher. Corn\n%-% uia, oats unchanged to % advance, and rye showing %-% bulge\nOTTAWA,  Marrh  23   (CPL\u2014Th\"!\nUnited  Slutes lei all counties in\nsupplying Canada's imports during |\nFebruary  with  commodities worth j\nC31.765.611, an inrrecse of M 878,094 j\nj or   23 3   per   cent   over   February :\nI 1020, the Dominion bureau of sta- |\nj ts'ics  reported today\nThe United Kingdom was second |\nwith goods worth $9,167,633 a gain ,\nof $1,296,400 or 16.5 per cert.\nImports    from    British    Empire\ncountries   during   Fcbruaiy    wera-\nworth $12,859,966, an increase of 12 1\nner cent compared with $1' 173.366\nin February last year, and imports\nfrom foreign countries totalled $35,-\n820.876, an increase of 18 9 per cent!\n| compared with $30,124,032.\ni    Canada's total imports were worth\n' $43,680,842  against $41597 398.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK. March 23 IftPl-\nCopper steady; electrolytic spot and\nfuture 1625; export 16.57';..\nTin firm; spot and nearby 6400-\n64 25; future 63 00-63 25\nLead easier; spot, New York 6 95-\n7.05; East St. Leu's 6 80-6 85\nZinc steady; East St Louis spot!\nand future 7,50.\nBar silver steady and unchanged\nat 45'.4.\nAt London, closing;\nCopper, standard spot \u00a371 7S 6d;\nfuture \u00a370 7s 6d; electrolytic spot,\nbid \u00a374; asked \u00a376.\nTin spot \u00a3292 10s; future \u00a3284.\nLead spot \u00a331 5s; future \u00a331\n2s 6d.\nZinc, spot \u00a331 17s 6d; future \u00a332.\nBar silver % lower at 20%d.\nWINNIPEG, March 23 (CP). -\nWheat prices were erratic on the\nWinnipeg grain exchange m.-iay as\nbullish and bearish news reached\ntraders. A moderate rally hi the\nfinal minutes left values % cent\nhigher to unchanged for the day.\nAt the final bell, May wheat was\nquoted at 1.3974, July 136\"\u00ab and\nOctober at 1.25%.\nStrong tone of overseas markets\nand good commission house buying\nrallied prices to within fraitians of\nyesterday's close. Reports of rainfall in the United Slates winter\nwheat belt encouraged liberal profit\ntaking.\nExports of Canadian wheat were\nplaced at less than 500,000 bushels\nGermany and Italy were heavy buyers of Argentina wheat with the\nformer taking one cargo and the\nlatter three cargoes of plate wheat.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG,   March   23   (CP). -\nGrain futures quotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWheat:\nMay 140'i   140%   13334\nJuly 137       137%    13i%\nOct. 126Vi   126'i   1241\/4\nOats:\nMay 56',     56%     5614\nJuly 53,1     53%     53%\nBarlev:\nMay 81%     81%     80%\nJuly 76%     77%     76%\nOct.      .     71%     72%     71 Vi\nFlax:\nMay 178      179%   178\nJuly 178%    180       !7\u00ab%\nOct. -        - \u2014\nRye:\nMay 109\" 4   109%    107%\nJuly 108      1081.4   106%\nOct. 97%     97%     96%\nCash Wheal:\nNo. 1 hard 14!Vi; No. 1 Nor. 140%;\nNo. 2 Nor. 138%; No. 3 Nor. 135%;\nNo. 4 Nor. 131%; No. 5 wheat 1267\u00bb,\nNo. 6 wheat 125%; feed wheat 106%;\nNo. 1 Garnet 1337\u00ab; No. 2 Garnet\n132%; No. 1 Durum 159%; No. 1\nA.R.W. 129%; No. 4 special 125%;\nNo. 5 special 11978', No. 6 special\n114%; track 138%; screenings per\nton $13.\n1397.\n136%\n125%\n56';\n5314\n81%\n77%\n72%\n1797i\n180\n176\n109%\n108%\n97%\nGold Production\nin (anada Gains\nOTTAWA. March 23 (CP). - A\nsubstantial increase was shown in\nproduction of gold during January\nwhen the output totalled 328,545\nounces compared with 277,554 in\nJanuary, 1936. the Dominion bureau\nof statistics reported today.\nOntario led the provinces with a\nproduction of 208,943 ounces, Quebec was second with 61173 and\nBritish Columbia third with 38.132\nManitoba and Saskatchewan produced 18,707 ounces, Nova Scotia\n1367, while the output of alluvial\ngold in the Yukon was 223 ounces.\nReceipts of jewelry and scrap at\nthe Royal Canadian mint in January contained 2433 ounces of gold.\nDuring January gold averaged\n$35.01 per ounce and at this price\nthe output was worth $1,502,370.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL. March 23 (CP)-A\nfirm undertone prevailed on Canadian commodity exchange produce\nsection today.\nButter spot \u2014 Que. regraded\n26%-%.\nCheese spot\u2014Unquoted.\nEggs spot\u2014One A-large 22'2\"A.\nSales\u2014Butter, 500 boxes Que buyers-inspection at 26'4.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, March 23 (AP)\u2014Closing: Brazilian $26%; C.P.R. $14%;\nInt Nick $69; U S Steel $116%; Brit\nAm Tob 123s Hid; Cent Mining\n\u00a326; Ford Ltd 32s; HBC 40s 6d;\nVickers 33s; Woolworth 78s IVid.\nBonds: Brit 2% per cent Consols\n\u00a370%; Brit 314 per cent War Loan\n\u00a3102U; Brit Funding 4s 1960-90\n\u00a3111%.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, March 23  (CP)-\nVancouver wheat cash prices\nStraight\nNo 1 hard\nNo. 1 nor.\nNo, 2 nor.\nNo 3 nor.\nNo. 4 nor.\nNo. 5 wheat\nNor 6 wheat\nFeed\n139%\n139%\n136%\n129%\n127%\n120',\n114%\n104%\nTough\n137%\n137%\n134%\n127%\n124%\n118%\n112%\n102 Vi\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nListed\nA P Con\nAmalgamated Oil\nAztec Min Co\nBig Missouri\nBrit Dominion Oil\nBralorne\nC & E Corp\nCariboo Gold\nCons' Breweries\nCommonwealth O\nDentonia\nGold Belt Mines\nHargal Oil\nHome Oil\nInter Coal\nIsland Mount\nKootenay Belle\nMak Siccar\nMcDoug Seg Ex\nMcLeod Oil\nMercury Oil\nMinto \t\nModel Oil\nMorn Star\nPioneer Gold\nPremier Gold\nPremier Border\nQuatsino\nRelief Arl\nReno Gold\nReeves Mar\nSally\nSalmon Gold\nSheep Creek\nSilbak Premier\nTaylor B'- River\nVai.nlt 1 Ltd\nVidette\nWaasuic\nWesko\nYmir Y Girl\nCURBS\nAlexandria C,\nAnaconda\nAssociated O\nBaltac Oil\nBayview\nBeaver Silver\nBluebird\nB C Nickel\nB It Mount\nCalmont Oil\nCapital Estate\nCoast Copper\nCongress\nCork Province\nCiows Nest New\nDictator\nDalhousie Oils\nDevenish \t\n1 ... ,,.-. :i   \u25a0.-a ......   .\nBid\nin\n08\n09%\n.55\n30\n860\n4 00\n1 63\n13 50\nl'i\n16\n21\n19\n2.35\n.21\n81\n04%\nin\n.55\n03\n5,10\n3 01)\n.03',\n.06\n.22\n108\n163\n.10%\n.58\n3 05\n.01%\n26\n.15\n.11%\n.01%\n.02\n.04\n.27\n.13\n107\n750\n5 50\n.07%\n.02\n.08\n.03\n2.36\n.11\nmay.\nA si;\n11\n,58%\n8 75\n410\n168\n13 75\n.44\n17\n.23\n.20\n240\n95\n82\n.05\n100\n.41\n.23\n58\n03%\n5.23\n3.05\n.03%\n.07\n,25\n1 10\n164\n.09\n3.15\n.08\n.12%\n.51\n28\n.10\n.04\n.20\n.01'A\n.02%\n.04%\n.28\n108\n7 75\n.08\n.02%\n.03%\n2 40\nFairview Amal\nFederal Gold\nFoundation Pete\nFreehold Oil\nGeo Copper \t\nGeo Enter \t\nCeo River\nGlacier C\nGolconda    \t\nGold Mountain\nGrandview\nGrange Mines\nGrull Wihksne\nHaida\nHedley St\nHighwood Sarcee\nHome Gold\nIndian Mines\nInter Geld\nKoot Florence \t\nKoot King\nLakeview Mines\nLowery Pete\nLucky Jim\nMadison Oil\nMar Jon Oil\nMarmot Metals \t\nMeridian New\nMerland Oil\nMcGillivray\nMid Wert Pete\nMill City Oil\nMorton  Woolsey\nNicola\nNoble Five\nNordon Oil\nOkalta Com\nPacalta\nl'end Oreille\nPorter Idaho\nPilot Gold\nQuesnelle Q\nRanchmen's\nRehance\nReward Mining\nRoyalite Oil\nRufus Argenta\nRuth Hope .\n] Silver Crest\nSilversmith\nSouthwest Pole\nStandard S L\nSunloch Mines\nTaylor Windfall\nU D L\nUnited Oil\nViking Gold\nVulcan Oil\n1 Waverley T. New\n: Wellington $*incs\n.  'Waaia.aa\nAsk\n.11%\n.05%\n.40\n20\n.75\n.04%\n.03\n.02%\n13\n15\n.21\n.02%\n.12%\n.06\n.32\n.03 V4\n04\n.06%\n.03' 4\n.02\n,01'i        -\nBid\n10\n.05\n.33\n.19\n.65\n.04\n02%\n02\n12\n14%\n.20\n.02%\n.11%\n.01\n.05%\n30\n.03\n.03\n.05\n.03\n\u2014\n50\n.16\n.16%\n11\n11%\n.28\n.30\n.01%\n.01%\n\u2014\n.04\n.18\n.20\n.19\n.20\n06\n\u25a0 11%\n26\n2.00\n03%\n11\n.35\n,021|\n.06\"\n.113\n205\n21\n5.90\n.09\n06\nSmellers Higher\nal Montreal\nMONTREAL. March 23 (CP). -\nConfidence returned to the stock\nmarket today and buyers sent prices\nbounding higher.\nSmelters moved up 1% to 92%\nNickel gained % at 68 and Noranda\nimproved by two points a* 76. Dominion Steel &t Coal advanced %\neach to 15% and 24, respectively\nUnited Steel sold off % and Gypsum Vi.\nBrazilian gained 1% at 26%.\nShawinigan added % at 29% and\nPower Corporation declined IVi at\n27%. -Howard Smith and St. Lawrence Corporation Preferred gained\n1% points each while St. Lawrence\nPaper Preferred lost that much.\nBathurst gained a point at 2014.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, March 23 (CPi-Re-\nceipts: Monday-cattle, 237; calves,\n87; hogs, 235; sheep, none. Up to\nnoon Tuesday-Cattle, 99; calves, 27;\nhogs, 61; sheep, none.\nCattle prices steady. Good to\nchoice butcher steers. 6.00-7.50; good\nto choice heifers, 5,50-6.50; good\ncows, 4.00-4.25; good veal calves, 7.50.\nNo hogs sold. Last prices\u2014selects,\n8.15; bacons, 7.65; butchers, 7.15.\nDividends\nBeatty Bros, 1st preferred, 1% per\ncent, payable May 1 to shareholders of record April 15.\nTuckett Tobacco, preferred, 1%\nper cent, payable April 15 to shareholders of record March 31.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR GAINS\nNEW YORK. March 23 (AP).-\nAn improved demand for French\nfrancs enabled that unit to display\nstrength against the United States\ndollar in foreign exchange dealings\ntoday. The franc advanced .00%\nof a cent to 4.59%. The pound\nsterling gained 3-16 of a cent to\n4.88%. The Canadian do'lar advanced 1-64 cent to .1.00 7-64.\nBAR GOLD DOWN ONE\nMONTREAL, March 23 (CP). -\nBar gold in London down one cent\ntoday at $34.75 an ounce in Canadian funds; 142s- 4%d in British.\nThe fixed $35 Washington price\namounted to $34.97 in Canadian.\nMany smoky fireplaces are caused\nby too low a chimney. Your chimney\nshould top the roof by at least 4\nfeet. If it does not do this, lengthen\nthe chimney by putting a piece of\ndrain-pipe or a decorative chimney\npot upon the top of it.\nREEVES (LOSES\nUP 13 AT COAST\nVANCOUVER, March 23 (CPL-\nSharp declines were recorded in\nthe oil section on the Vancouver\nstock exchange today. Base metals\nwere active and firm while golds\nwere mostly unchanged. Transfers\ntotalled 541.299 shares.\nCalgary St Edmonton Oil was\ndowm 25 at 4,00, Home 20 at 2.35,\nOkalta 35 at 2.00 and \\naronda\n5 at 22. Dalhousie at 2.36 and A.P.\nConsolidated at 40 each dropped\nnine cents while Calmont at 107\nand Vulcan atj 1.43 were both down\n12. Model slipped 5 at 55. United\n3 at 32, Highwood Sarcee 6 at 30\nand Commonwealth 8 at 40.\nBase metals were led by heavy\ntrading in Reeves MacDonald which\nclosed up 13 at 1.63, Pend Oreille\ngained 50 at 5.80. Noble Five IVi\nat 11V4 and Whitewater I at 27\nB.C. Nickel at 27 and Lucky Jim\nat 16 each firmed 1.\nMor\nney\nBy The Canadian Preii\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal \u2014 Pound 4.88 7-32;\nfranc 4.59; U.S. dollar .99 29-32.\nAt New York\u2014Pound 4.88%; franc\n4.59%; Canadian dollar 1.00 7-64.\nAt Paris-Pound 106.36 fr.; U.S.\ndollar 21.77 fr.; Canadian dollar\n21.78% fr.\nIn gold\u2014Pound lis lid; U.S. dollar 59.44 cents; Canadian dollar\n59.50 cents.\nU.S. DOLLAR UNCHANGED\nMONTREAL, March 23 (CP). -\nPound sterling advanced % cent on\nMontreal foreign exchanges today\nto 488 7-32. The French franc at\n459 cents and the United State-\ndollar at 3-32 discount remained\nunchanged.\nC.N.R.   GROSS   REVENUE\nHIGHER\nMONTREAL. March 23 (CP). -\nIncrease of $381,190 is reported today in Canadian National railways'\ngross revenue of $3,614,905 for the\nwreek ending March 21 as compared\nwith $3,233,715 for the correspond'\ning period last year.\nA little vinegar added to the wash\ning and rinsing water in which floral\nvoiles are washed will help to pre\nserve the colours and make them\nclear and bright. The voile will be\nensper after ironing if a very small\nquantity of starch is also added to\nthe last rinsing water.\nMINES RAGGED\nAT TORONTO\nTORONTO. March 23 IC?). -\nRagged trends on the mi-iinf section ot the Toronto stock exchange\nput the index for the go'd eroup\noff .35 of a point at the close today\nNoranda and Hudson Bay advanced IV* to l*i. Falccrbridge\nadd*-d 85 cents. Coast Copper 23\ncpnts, Sudbury Basin and Pend\nOreille firmed 15 cents each, Waite-\nAmulet 10 and Ventures 5,\nEldorado lost 5 to 3.10 Castle\nwas slightly lower and Nipissing\nunchanged.\nO'Brien lost 15 cents. Pickle\nCrow dropped 15 and lossf* of 5 to\n10 cents were boarded for Arntfield. Centra] Patricia, Hard Rnck.\nLittle Long Lac, Pamour, Fremier,\nSlave Lake and Towagamac.\nBONDS BETTER\nNEW YORK, March 23 (APL-\nSupport in the U.S. government\nbond list tightened all along the\nline today carrying most values up\nfrom 2-32nds to 20-32nds of a point\nForeign issues were mixed with\nprincipal advances in loans of Uruguay, Germany and Australia. Polish obligations were lower .\nORE RECEIPTS\nTADANACPASS\n100,000 TONS\nPassing the 100,000-ton mark, receipts of ore and concentrates at\nthe Tadanac plant of the Consolidated Mining St Smelting company\nreached 111,575 tons in the week\nending March 21, the week's contribution to the total being 14,003\ntons.\nReceipts from company mines also\npassed the first major milestone of\nthe year as 13,698 tons brought the\ntolal to date to 108,179.\nCustom receipts at 305 tons brought\nthe custom tonnage for the year to\n3396. The week's total consisted of\n182 tons of ore and 123 tons of concentrates. The custom shippers were:\nOres-Highland-Bell, Beaverdell,\n95; Kootenay Ore Hill, Salmo, 30;\nLucky Thought, Silverton, 5; Relief\nArlington, Erie, 1; Yankee Boy,\nFraud Forks, 51.\nConcentrates \u2014 Relief Arlington,\nErie, 1; Wesko, Ymlr, 43; Yankee\nGirl. Ymir, 79.\nVANCOUVER, March 23 (CP).\u2014\nThere will be no sessions of the\nVancouver stock exchange on Good\nFriday, Saturday or Easter Monday,\nit was announced today by directors\nof the exchange.\nN.Y. RECOVERS\nNEW YORK, March 23 CAP).\u2014\nWall street took a little bet'e*- view\nof the labor outlook today and stock\nmarket leaders climbed back on the\nrecovery wagon.\nSteels, rails, oils, mines and mis*\ncellaneous issues regained fractions\nto four or more points on their\nMonday's losses whicn, on the average, were the most severe ilnce\nlast August,\nThe fly in the day's ointment,\nhowever, from the standpoint of\nanalysts, was that the total turnover amounted to only 1.590,450\nshares, the smallest for a full session since January 4. The aggregate compared with 2,021,750 yesterday.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nAlberta Pacific Grain A     5V<\nAssociated Brew of Cen  15Vi\nBathurst P4PA  20\nBell Telephone   160V5\nBrazilian T L St P\nBrit Col Power A ....\n26\"*;\n6Vi\nBuilding Products A   70\nCanada Cement  18\nCanada Cement Pfd   108\nCanada Northern Power   25'4\nCanada Steamship   3%\nCanada Steamship Pfd   7V4\nCanada Car k Foundry   18V4 i\nCanada Car & Foundry Pfd .. 28 Vi\nCanada  Celanese    28\nCanada Hydro Elec Pfd  \"6\nCanada  Industrial Al  6V4\nCanada Industrial Ale B   - 534\nCanadian Pacific Railway  14%\nCockshutt Plow    19\nConsolidated M Sc S  92V4\nDistillers Seagrams   26V4\nDominion Bridge   56'4\nDominion Coal Pfd   21 \u00bbs\nDominion Steel Sc Coal B   23'i\nDominion   Textile    82\nDryden Paper   15 Vi\nFamous Players Corp  30\nFoundation Co of Can  24%\nGeneral Steel Wares     14Vi\nGypsum Lime Sc Alabas   153,i\nHamilton Bridge  16\nHamilton Bridge Pfd   84\nHoward Smith Paper     26Vi\nHoward Smith Paper Pfd ... 101\nImperial Tobacco  HVi\nInternational Nickel   68\nLake of the Woods  37'i\nMassey Harris  15%\nMcColl Frontenac   13Vi\nMontreal L H & P  31%\nNational Brew . \u201e  40Va\nNational Brew Pfd.  39\nNational Steel Car   49V4\nOgilvie Flour Mills   285\nPower Corporation\t\nQuebec Power \t\nSt Lawrence Corp \t\nSt Lawrence A Pfd  ....\nSt Lawrence Paper  _\nShawinigan W St P \t\nSouthern Can Power\t\nSteel Co of Canada\t\nSteel Co of Canada Pfd\t\nWestern Grocers  -...\nBANKS\nBank of Canada _\t\nCanadienne\t\nCommerce   -\t\nMontreal  \u201e\t\nNova Scotia _...._,.\u2014\nCURBS i^W\nAbitibi P Sc P Co\t\nBathurst P & P B\t\nBeauharnois Power .. \t\nBrewers & Distillers Van ...\nBrewing Corporation \t\nBrewing Corporation Pfd .\nBritish American Oil\t\nB C Packers Ltd \t\nConsolidated Paper \t\nDominion Stores \t\nDonnacona Paper A\t\nDonnacona Paper B -.\nFord Motor Co A \t\nFraser Co's Ltd \t\nImperial Oil Co  -\t\nInternational Petroleum A ..\nInt Utilities Corp A    \t\nInt Utilities Corp B \t\nMacLaren Power & Paper ..\nMitchell Sc Co Robt\t\nPage Hersey Tubes \t\nPrice Bros Co Ltd \t\nPrice Bros Co Ltd Pfd \t\nRoyalite Oil Co \t\nThrift Stores Ltd  \t\nWalk Gooder Sc Worts \t\nWalk Gooder Sc Worts Pfd ..\n27\n20%\n11%\n32%\n86\n29%\n15V4\n87%\nB2\n70\n58%\n154\n198\n227\n330\n. 8%\n. 8%\n. 7%\n. 8%\n. 3%\n. 17%\n. 24%\n. 19\n. 19\n. 11\n. 16%\n. 16\n. 27\n. 40%\n. 22%\n. 17\n. 17\n. 2\n. 31\n. 24\n. 104%'\n. 43\n144\n. 40\n1.15\n. 46\n. 19%\nArtificial silk underwear or stockings should never be wrung when\nwashed, as wringing causes 'ladders.'\nThe material must be gently squeezed between two towels.\nQuotations on Wall Street\n.03%\n,04\n101;\n,11\n48.00\n\u2014\n.04\n.03\n115\n.06\n.10\n043i\n.05\n\u2014\n1.14\n\u2014\n.43\n\u2014\n.50\n.12\n1.05\n.32\n.03%\n1.43\n.01V4\n.05 li\ni*\n1.10\n.33\n.01%\n.07 Vi\nam\nAllied Chem\nAmerican  Can\nAm For Power\nAm Mach & F\nAm Smelt & R\nAm Telephone\nAm Tobacco\nAnaconda\nAtchison\nAuburn   Motors\nAviation Corp\nBaldwin\nBait & Ohio\nBendix Av\nBeta   Steel\nBorden\nCanada Dry\nCPR\nCerro De Pasco\nChes Sr Ohio\nChrysler\nCon Gas N Y\nCorn Prods\nC Wright Pfd\nDupont\nEast Kodak\nF.l Pow & Light\nErie\nFord  English\nFord of Canada\nFirst Nat Stores\nFreeport   Texas\nGen Electric .\nGen Foods\nGen Motors\nGoodrich\nGranby\nGrt Nor Pfd\nGrl W Sugar\nHecker Prods\nHowe Sound\nHudson   Motors\nInter Nickel\nT-t-.  T.1    1.   T\u201el\nHigh\n238\n108\n11%\n25%\n95%\n1703i\n8'.!%\n62%\n81%\n28%\n37%\n25%\n94%\n27%\n35%\n14%\n78ii\n60%\n125%\n40 %\n67%\n7%\n158\n162%\n25\n21%\n7%\n25%\n49%\n27%\n55%\n41%\n62%\n45%\n10%\n51\n35%\n13%\n81%\n20%\n68%\n'\u25a0\"-\nLow   Close |\n236\n107\n10%\n25%\n94\n169%\n81%\n60%\n80\n28%\n7%\n8%\n36\n25\n92%\n26i',\n34%\n14%\n75\n59%\n122\n40%\n67%\n7\n156\n160\n24%\n20%\n7%\n25%\n49%\n27\n51%\n41%\n61\n44\n9%\n50%\n33%\n13%\n80\n20\n67%\ni'ii.\n238\n107\n10%\n25%\n95%\n170%\n81%\n62%\n81\n28%\n37%\n25%\n93\n26;B\n35%\n14%\n78%\n60\n124%\n40%\n67%\n7%\n156%\n160\n24%\n21%\n7%\n25%\n49%\n27\n55%\n41%\n61 %\n45\n10%\n51\n35%\n13%\n81%\n20%\nC8%\nlua,.\nKenn Copper\nKresge S S\nKroegger Groc\nMacK Truck\nMilwaukee   Pfd\nMontg Ward\nNa?h Motors\nNat D Prods\nN Pow & Light\nN Y Central\nPac Gas & El\nPackard Motors\nPenn R R\nPhillips Pete\nTiire Oil\nRad.o Corp\nRadio Keith Or\nRem Rand\nSafeway   Stores\nShell Union\nS Cal Edison\nSouth Pacific\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\nStan Oil of N J\nSlew Warner .\nSludebaker\nTexas Corp\nTexas G Sul\nTimken  Roller\nUnder Type\nUn Carbide\nUn Oil of Cal\nUn Aircraft\nUn Pacific\nU S Pipe\nU S Rubber\nU S Steel\nVanad Steel\nWarner Bros\nWest Electric\nWest Union .\nWoolworth .\nWrigley\nv'' \u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 '''..'.'\u2022\n6?\n25%\n22%\n57%\n2%\n61%\n21%\n24%\n11%\n51%\n32%\n10%\n47%\n54\n20%\n11%\n8%\n25%\n41%\n31%\n27%\n60%\n45%\n15%\n70%\n19%\n17%\n57%\n39\n67%\n86\n104\n25%\n31\n143%\n66%\n66%\n115%\n34%\n14%\n140\n73%\n52%\n68%\n_\u2014\n60\n25%\n27%\n56\n2%\n60%\n30%\nu\n11%\n49%\n32\n10%\n44%\n53\n19%\n11\n7%\n24%\n40%\n30%\n27%\n59%\n11 > >\n44%\n68%\n18%\n16%\n56%\n38%\n67\n86\n101%\n24%\n30%\n112%\n05%\n65%\n113%\n33%\n13%\n136%\n72%\n51%\n68%\n61 %\n25%\n22%\n57%\n2%\n61%\n21%\n24\n11%\n51%\n32%\n10%\n44%\n54\n20%\n11%\n8%\n25%\n40%\n31%\n27%\n00%\n45%\n44%\n70%\n19%\n17%\n57%\n39\n67%\n86\n104\n25\n30%\n143\n66%\n66%\n113\n34%\n11%\n140\n73\n32%\nWe Haven't\nthe Largest\nPrint Shop\nin B. C.\nBut our plant is modern and our workmanship compares with the best. We are\nproud to be able to do all our printing in\nour own shop. Let us give you a\nquotation on\ne RULED FORMS\n\u2022 BINDERS\n\u2022 MINE RECORDS\n\u2022 MILL AND ASSAY\n\u2022 REPORTS\n\u2022 TIME CARDS\nANYTHING YOU NEED IN PRINTING\nPHONE 143\nOur Representative Will Call\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\nCommercial Printing Department\n \t\n\t\nW.''lal^aal*-.a.piip\".:^--|l^\nPAGE  \"*W\u00bbt V*.\nFREDERICK NIVEN'S\nNew Novel\n\"The Staff at\nSimson's\"\nNow Ready\n$2.00\nMann. Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nBY AGE  NOT  INCHE8\nTORONTO, (CP)\u2014Street car mo-\ntormen see little to cheer over in a\nproposal before city council. For\nyears they have been guessing at\nreduced fare .charges to children\nunder 51 inches in height. Now, it\n13 proposed to decide whether children are under 17. -\nMATIC RHEUMA\nFor the belief of\nRheumatic Paint and  Achei\nAT SMYTHE'S\nPrescription   Druggist\nPUY3NE  1\nR. & R, Grocery\nSuccessors J. A. Irving & Co.\nQUALITY GROCERIES AT\nSAVING PRICES\nPHONE 161\nFREE   DELIVERY\nKASLO OLD-TIMER\nLAID TO REST\nKASLO, B. C\u2014Funeral services\nfor Eric Johnson were held Friday\n: afternoon from St. Andrews United\nj :hurch, the pastor, Rev. J. Fielding\n\u2022 Shaw officiating at the church and\nthe upper city cemetery where in-\ni terment took place.\n| Pall bearers were Alex Grant of\nAinsworth, 0. E. Desmond, John\nPaterson, Charles Peterson, William\nEnglish and William Robb, all old\ntime friends and neighbors of Mr.\nJohnson.'\nThe church was filled with\nfriends.\nRev Mr. Shaw paid high tribute\nto the character of Mr. Johnson,\ntaking for his text, in a short address, \"He is not dead, but sleep'ng.\"\nHymns sung were \"Abide With\nW and \"Unto the Hills.\"\nMr. Johnson was born in Sweden\n74 ye.\":rs ago. Coming to Canada as a\nyoung mr.n he followed railroad\nconstruction work for a number of\nveers, arriving in Kislo in 189T. Hc\nfollowed mining in the district from\nthen until his death.\nHe was married here a few years\nafter his arrival. For the past few\nweete he had been seriously ill at\nhis home here, and died at an early\nhour Wednesday.\nSurvivors are his widow, a son,\nErling, employed by the C. M. & S,\ncompany at Trail, and a dair liter,\nClara, who is on the teaching staff\nof the Shoreacres school.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NEL80N, B.C-\u2014WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 24. 1937.\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL CITY\nThis column is In charge of Mrs. Glenn Quayle of Trail. All\nevents of a social nature of interest in Trail and Tadanac will appear\nin this column. Mrs. Quayle will be glad to have any such news\ntelephoned to her at her home in Trait.\nNelson Business\nCollege\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION\nCommence Any Time\nPHONE  815\nfor better tnd orompter terv.\nlee In olumbln- repairs ind\n\u25a0Iterations\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\na*\/*A\/\/,\n$-S5?^*^^KrSv^wV^vvw^\nDEVELOPING\nPRINTING\nENLARGING\nColoring and Picture\nFraming, Kodaks, Cameras and Films. Photo\nFlood Lamps for Indoor\nPictures.\nAllen's Art Shoppe\nSee Our Line of\nEaster Greeting Cards\nl*\u00ab'-S\u00ab'\"8S*S-\u00ab\u00bb\u00abS\u00ab\u00abS'\u00bb*-*^^\nAUCTION\n2 o'clock this afternoon\n912 KOOTENAY ST.\nRE8IDENCE OF MR8.\nGEORGE JOHNSTONE\nHousehold Furniture and\nFurnishings of\nEvery Description\nTerms: Cash.       G. HORSTEAD,\nAuctioneer.\nGoods on view this morning.\nPioneer of the\nSlocan Is Buried\nNelson Cemetery\nGeorge Abney Hodgson, Slocan\nvalley old-timer, was laid at rest in\nthe Nelson cemetery Tuesday afternoon following a funeral service\nfrom the chapel of the Somers Funeral Home. Rev. T. J. S. Ferguson officiated. Services were attended by many friends, especially\nfrom Silverton and Perry Siding.\nHymns sung were \"Nearer My\nGod to Thee\" and \"Abide With Me\".\nMr. Hodgson died suddenly in\nSilverton last Friday, where he resided with his wife and daughter.\nHe was carried to rest by old\nfriends from the Slocan district.\nHoop Finals to\nStart Tonight\nThe N?lson basketball leajrue\nfinals will start this evening at the\ncivic recreation hall at 8 o'clock,\nbut whether the series will be two-\ngame total-points series or best-of-\nthree games will not be announced\nuntil Just before the start of the\nfirst games.\nIn the opening game the Aces\ngirls' club, who were undefe-ted in\nnine games this seascn, will play\nthe Gelinas Red Sox, who eliminated the Maple Leafs in the semifinals after dropping four of five\nleague games to them during tbe\nseason. The second game, starting\nat 9, will feature the Grocers team,\nwhich drew the bye into tht playoffs, and the Fairview A.C. squad,\nwhich nosed out the B.C. Telephone\nclub 59-57 in a two-game total-point\nsemi-final series.\nAces: Isabel Donovan, Elvera\nMatheson. Almeda Graves, Margaret Thompson, Carmelia Delpuppo and Doreen Dunnett\nRed Sox: Rosa Stewart, Agnes\nStewart, Kay McDougall, Mary McDougall, Dot Jarbeau, Edna Jarbeau, Sybil McLean, Louise Col-\nletti.\nGrocers: Stan Horswill, Jack Buchanan, Bud Greenwood, Jim\nStark, Al Bush, Al Smith Sandy\nMartin and Dewitt McQuaig.\nFairview A.C: Steve Smith,\nFrank Jones, Frank Hurford. Art\nLangill, George Wallach, George\nBishop, Tom Carlisle Ron Temple\nand Jerry Wallace.\nTRAIL, B.C., March 23.-An interesting debate featured thf meet\ning Monday evening of the Young\nPeople's club when members met\nin the hall of First Pre-.bylerian\nchurch. Rev. F. G. StDenis. Tommy\nRoss and Harry Smith argued for\nthe aff'rmative and winning side,\nGeorge Bruce, Will ?m Be tstra\nand A. D McKellar putting up a\ngood argument for lhe negative.\nDr. J S. Daly and Mrs. Dalv acted\nas judges. A devotional an* business period precded the debate.\n\u2022 *      9\nMiss Nina Kemp and Miss Joy\nKemp v.'?re hostess s Tue*ay evening to members of \"B\" branch\n.Vomcn's auxiliary 'o St. Andrew's\nAngl'can chur.'h, Conciud'ng a\nshort business s; r 'on a social hour\nwns en'cy d, the hosL.sej scrv.ng\nrof.c. 'am nts.\nMis M'ltgjiret Weir, lending\nGroup No. : of Excl'-'or club of\nKnox Uniled church, end a-'.iined\nother membe s w.th a social hour\nin the church hal: M nday ..vening.\nGames and music wa-re en'oved\nthe event concluding with Lhe serving of refreshments.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Harold Tugwood conducted\nthe final pre-Easter meeti, g of the\nJunior auxiliary to St. Andrew's\nAnglican church at the weekly\ngathering Tuesday afternoon in thcr\nparish hall.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. S. Baker left for Vancouver\nwhere she will take up -esldence.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Geoff Brownin returned to\nher home at Burnaby after having\nbeen called here by the death of\nher father.\n\u2022 aa     aa\nMr. and Mrs. Ralph Crawford,\nThird avenue, have as their guest\nMac Nichol of Medicine Hat, Alta\n\u2022 *    9\\\nMiss Marie Hepworth arr'ves this\nweek from the Okanagan to snend\nthe Easter holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hep-\nworth, McQuarrie street.\n9.9\nMiss Eva Horwell leaves Thurs\nday for Agassiz where she will\nspend the Easter holioays and\nwhere, March 30, she will attend\nthe wedding of her sister, Miss\nMarguerite Horwell.\nMrs.   Ralph Perry  has left for\nVictoria  where  she  will spend  a\nvacat:on with her parents Mr. and\nMrs. Bishop.                   ,\naa     \u2022    aa\nMiss Kay Cairns conducted the\nlast of a ser es of Lentei. stu ies\nat a meeting Monday evening of\nthe Canadian Girls in Training of\nSt. Andrew's Anglcan church at\nthe church hall.\nEntertaining an excellea.t crowd\nnembers of the Home League of\nthe Salvation Army were o-astesses\n7u sd^y afte noon at a sucessful\n'innual spring tea and sale or work\nFoll-w'ng a general song. Mrs. Allison favored with a v ral solo\nwhi-h was fo'hwed ov a S-rlptural\n-\u25a0nd;n\u00bb by Mrs. M. E Rout'.edge\nThe sile was then off ciallv opened\nby Mrs. John Honeyman Guests\nwere receiv?d bv Cant. A Ernies\nIn charge of a well patr'nizea\nfancywork booth was Mrs M. E.\nRout! dge, Mrs. William M;b,e presiding at a home-cooking \"ab'e. Tea\nwas served by Mrs. Hnpeyman\nDaffodils, used in decorating, i^ere\nlater sent to Mrs. easier, a former\n' member, who through illaaess was\nunable to be present.\nShute and Smith\nSet New Record\nPINEHURST, N.C, March 23\n(AP). \u2014 The professional brigade\ntook advantage today of rare golf\ning in the first round of the north\nand south open golf tournament to\ngive the famous Pinehurst course\nits worst lacing in many moons.\nThe gale-like blows customary\nhere in spring gave way to a calm\nsummer-like day, and the salaries\nshooters grabbed the opportunity\nto bombard par thoroughly, as\nDenny Shute and Horton Smith\nhung up a new competitive course\nrecord of 67, five better than perfect\nfigures.\nNews of the Day\nEAGLE8   MEET  TONIGHT   AT\n8 O'CLOCK. (5417)\nNewspapers,  Magazines & Smokes\nBISHOP'S NEWS STAND\n(5063)\nWANTED   GINGER   ALE   BOTTLES. Mcdonald jam co.\n(52031\nWiring repairs and service. F H\nSmith, 313 Baker SL Phone 666\n(5009)\nEaster   Hats,   including   Models,\nNone over $2.95 at Ramsden's.\n(5416)\nEASTER SPECIAL. PH. 386. VENUS BEAUTY SALON. GILKER B.\n(5228)\n50 Dresses on Sale at Half Price.\nSires   14 to 44\nD.C.  DRESS SHOPPE\n(5415)\nJunior High School presents a\nreview, \"EASTER BUNNIES,\" tonight, 8 p.m. Adults 26c; children 15c. (5368)\nBox Lacrosse Sticks, Clock Cord\nand Leather Strung.   Hipperson's.\n(5332)\nGET A MACDONALD'8 EXPORT\nCIGT. 26 FOR 26c. VALENTINE'S.\n(5064)\nTea and Bake Sale at First Presbyterian Church Thursday, March\n25, 3-6. (5381)\nTo express the real sentiment of\nEASTER \u2014 a new portrait THE\nVOGUE.    PHONE 46. (6402)\nFairviewiles at\nMrs. Butler Riles\nA large attendance, predominated\nby Fairviewites, gathered to pay final tribute to the memory of Mrs.\nSamuel J. Butler, who died in the\nKootenay Lake General hospital on\nThursday morning, at the funeral\nservice in the chapel of the Somen\nFuneral Home Tuesday afternoon.\nRev. W. J. Silverwood officiated.\nA profusion of floral tributes were\noffered.\nHymn sung was \"Nearer My God\nto Thee\".\nPallbearers were: Ross Fleming.\nHerbert Logan, J. McCandlish, H. S.\nMatheson, A. V. Rowley and Otto\nThomas.\nMrs. Butler, formerly Miss Gladys\nHobina Rendall, is survived by her\nhusband and two small sons, her\nmother and father, Mr. and Mrs.\nThomas Rendall, four sisters, and\niwo brothers.\nMORE ABOUT\n'Hands Oil'Group\n(Continued From Page One)\nday hurled a charge of \"hypocrisy\"\nat English church leaders.\nStanding on a balcony of the Palazzo Venezla, Mussolini told a fascist throng criticism by Anglican\nchurchmen of the Italian suppression of,an Ethiopian outbreak was\n\"hysterical, hypocritical oratory\".\n(The Archbishops of Canterbury\nand York recently attacked what\nthey called the \"general massacre\"\nin Ethiopia after Ethiopians had\ntried unsuccessfully to kill Marshall\nRodolfo Graziani, Italian viceroy)\nPress attacks on Italy in both\nGreat Britain and France, he declared, were \"a tempest of printed\nncDer and an inundation of turbid\nInk\".\nEngland's oldest factory which\nhas made parchment for 1000 years,\nrecently had to go out of business.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nStart the day out right\u2014EAT the\n30c Club Breakfast at\nTHE WHITE SPOT LUNCH\n(5384)\nFor peerless excellence and lasting   beauty   choose   FIGARO,   the\npermanent of EUROPEAN ELITE.\nPh. 317.   ROSE BEAUTY PARLOR.\n(5377)\nintments\nne 327\nGRIZZELLES AND KANDY-\nLAND FOR YOUR EASTER LILIES, PLANTS, AND FLOWERS.\nORDER EARLY. (5412)\nSCANDINAVIAN   DANCE\nOdd  Fellows'  Hall,   Easter   Monday, 9 o'clock. Music by Waldie S.\nSwendson.\" Ladles  25c;  gents  50c.\nEverybody welcome. (5418)\nThe annual meeting of the Nelson\nSkating Club will be held in the\nCity Hall this evening, March 24,\nat 8 p.m. (5398)\nFURNITURE AT PRIVATE SALE\n\u2014Chesterfield suite, dlninq room\nsuite, etc. 2 to 5 p.m. H. S. Watson,\nOak Street. (5392)\nSomething New in\nBeer Flavor\nAids for Spring\nBEAUTY\nIt's time to think of ccrrrle-ion aids,\nafter the ravages of win.er weaL.er!\nA new hairdress, too! The Haigh Tru-\nArt Beauty Salon is rezdy with comp'ete\nservice! Easter Specials! Phone for\nan appointment now!\nPermanents, Manicures\nFacials, etc.\nThe HAIGH TRU-ART\nBeauty Salon\nON  SALE\nAPRIL\n10th\n\u25a0\\\\*y\\\n'(oetenay\n1-ewe 'es\n' imited\nThis advertisement Is not published\nnr displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard  or  bv  the  Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nWOMEN'S CANADIAN CLUB\nSneaker:   B.  A.   McKelvie,    Tea\nmeeting at Hume, 3:45 today.\n(5264)\nKeep Fri., Mav 7th open to see\n\"ROBIN HOOD AND HIS MERRY\nMEN\", presented by SL Joseph's\npupils at the Civic Auditorium.\n(5406)\nHIGH 8CHOOL BENEFIT DANCE\nR. SIDNEY HORSWILL FUND\nHIGH  SCHOOL  GYMNASIUM\nTHURSDAY,   MARCH   25th\n75c Couple Refreshments\n(5103)\nCARD OF THANKS\nMrs. George H. Hodgson and Mrs.\nE. J. Fl;nn and family of Silverton\nwish to thank their many friends\nfor their sympathy, also for floral\nofferings, in their recent sad bereavement in the loss of a loving\nhu;band and father. (5408)\nAlthough Castlegar ferry will dis-\n.'on'inue operations our coaches\nwill make regular connections tc\nTrail and points.\nEASTER EXCURSIONS\nRound trip at fare and one-quarter to all points in Alta., Sask.\nand B.C. Tic'tets on sale March\n24th to March 29lh. Return limit\nMarch 30th.\nTEACHERS and STUDENTS\nRound trip at fare and one-quarter. Tickets on sale 3 days before\nschool closes. Return limit three\ndays after school reopens.\nCREYHOUND LINES\nPhone 800\nkelson Depot \u2014 205 Baker St.\n(5042)\nTbe Government of\nthe Province ot British Columbia\nDEPARTMENT\nOF PUBLIC WORKS\nPursua.it  to  section  33  of  the\n\"Highway Act\" the use of the roads\nin the Nelson-Creston Electoral district by any person or persons operating any vehicles (or the carrying\nof goods or persons is herebv limited   as   follows   until   otherwise\nordered, namely:\nThe load to be carried shall not\nexceed 50% of the unloaded weight\nof the vehicle, nor exceed the same\npercentage of the authorized carrying capacity of the vehicle, and the\nspeed of such vehicles shall not exceed 20 miles per hour.\nO. G. GALLAHER,\nAsst. District Engineer\nBY    AUTHORITY    OF   THE\nMINISTER OF PUBLIC WORKS.\nNelson. B.C., March 6. 1937     (5160)\nJ, A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg\nfss.\"\nThe Government of\nthe Province of British Columbia\nDEPARTMENT\nOF PUBLIC WORKS\nPursuant  of  Section   33   of  the\nHighway Act the use of the Nakusp-\nEdgewood and the Edgewond-Inon-\noaklin roads are closed to all vehicles, the gross weight of winch\nexceeds 4000 Ibs.\nJ. Taylor. General Foreman.\nBY    AUTHORITY    OF    THE\nMINISTER OF PUBLIC WORKS.\nNew Denver. B.C.\nMarch 12th, 1937. (5245)\nTHE\nBADMINTON\nTOURNAMENT\nIS HERE AGAIN\nWhite Shirts\nShort sleeves, bi-   Cj AA\nswing back. Each .. Y*\"\"wv\nWhite Shorts\nHeavv drill, zipper *>*, yj*\nfastener.   Pair  .    .. *?*--*>J\nCream Flannels\nPure wool. Well       si\/L gli\ntailored.   Pair     *?\"Ov\nWhite Sweaters\nPlain or cable stitch. Sleeveless or with sleeves.\n$2.95  and   $3-25\nBedniinton\nOxfords\nCushion heel. Crepe sole.\nWhite or blue.\n$1.25 to $2.75\nGODFREYS'\n LIMITED\n318 BAKER        PHONE 270\nOUR   OWN\nCIVIC THEATRE\nComplete at Two, Seven and Nine\nTONIGHT\nIS\nGuest Night\n2 Eor 35c\nGRAND OLD GERL\nMAY ROBSON        FRED MacMURRAY\nPOSTAL INSPECTOR\nCOMING THURSDAY\nRemember Last Night\u2014Hollywood Boulevard\nCHILDREN TEN CENTS ANYTIME\nCHILDREN GIVE\nPLAY AT KASLO\n\"When Women Rule\"\nFeatures Program\non St. Patrick's\nKASLO, B. C.-The annual St.\nPatrick's day entertainment, sponsored by the Ladies' aid of the Sacred Heart church, was held Wednesday. * i a whist drive Mrs. Fred\nSpeirs and Bonald Hewat won prizes\nfor high scores, consolation going to\nMrs. L. Lockart and J. J. Ckillicorn.\nA one-act play, \"When Women\nRule\", was put on by the Sunday\nschool class, the Shutty Bench children comprising the most of the\ncast. Those taking parts were Louise\nFuriak, Julia Furiak, Sophie Surina,\nJohn Bendis, Louie Bendls and Benedict Surina. Rev. Father Cheevers\ncoached the children.\nMrs. C. J. White won the door\nprize. Mrs. M. Murphy was in\ncharge of this phase of the evening's program.\nE. C. Cherry was master of ceremonies. Mrs. D. P. Cosgriff and Mrs.\nC. J. White were on the door. Mrs.\nM. White and Mrs, Willaim MacDonald had charge of arrangements\nfor cards. Mrs. Brochier was chairman of the refreshment committee,\nassisted by members of the Ladies'\naid and other helpers when refreshments were served. Mrs. William\nMacDonald, president of the aid. was\ngeneral convener of all committees.\nMrs. W. L. Billings has returned\nfrom visiting friends at Nelson.\nMrs. A. G. Massie, who was a\nguest of her mother, Mrs. Alice Perkins, has returned to her home at\nKimberley. She was accompanied\nby her son and young daughter,\nLenore, the latter having been a\nguest qf her grandmother for several weeks.\nMr. and Mrs. M. Daniels of Trail\nare visitors in the city.\nMiss Virginia Hendricks of Nelson is spending a few days in town,\na guest of Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Hunter.\nMrs. B. N. Murphy was hostess at\na bridge party at her home Friday\nevening. Playing at three tables\nwere Mrs. E. M- Sandilands, Mrs.\nEric Quainton, Mrs. John Paterson.\nMrs. S. A. Hunter, Mrs. J. N. Murphy, Mrs. William English, Mrs.\nR. A. Chester, Mrs. J. R. Tinkess,\nMiss Elizabeth Giegerich, Miss Tina\nBourget and Miss Katherine Streit.\nMiss Bourget won the prize for high\nscore, consolation going to Mrs.\nChester.\nMrs. E. Osier of Riondel was a\ncity visitor Saturday.\nA. C. Raper and son, Jack, of\nJohnson's Landing were visitors in\nthe city Monday.\nMrs. L. Lockard entertained at\nthe tea hour at her home Saturday.\nGuests were Mrs. J. Fielding Shaw,\nMrs. R. C. Gilker, Mrs. M. McQueen,\nMrs. William Murchison, Mrs. John\nPaterson. Mrs. T. H. Robson. Mrs.\nTheo Wood, Mrs. P. M. Elder and\nMiss Margaret McQueen.\nMrs. Watts of Riondel was visiting\nfriends in town Saturday.\nBert MacNicol of Johnson's Landing was a Monday visitor here.\nM. Goepel spent the week-end\nin Nelson.\nMiss Elizabeth Giegerich was tea\nhostess Friday when her guests were\nMrs. E. M. Sandilands, Mrs. D. J.\nBarclay, Mrs. J. McKay. Mrs. Wil-\nEaster\nNeckwear\nNew spring Neckwear to\nharmonize with suits and\nshirts. Colors that mingle\nwithout clash, in designs\nof unusual originality,\n$1.00 $1.50 $1.75\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nQuality\u2014Servlca\nSatisfaction\nTrail \"Vag\" Ordered\nOut of Town by Court\nTRAIL, B.C., March 23\u2014Regner\nFrederickson, charged under \u2022 the\nVagrancy act, was given suspended\nsentence and ordered to leave the\ncity, when he appeared before Deputy Police Magistrate MacDoMld\nin city police court Tuesday.\nliam English, Mrs. S. K. Hunter,\nMrs. Eric Quainton, Mri. .Frank\nHelme, Mrs. E. H. Latham, Mrs. J. N.\nMurphy. Miss C. M. Fawcett and\nMiss Sybil Jesty. The hostess wu\nassisted by Mrs. Sandilands, who\nsen-ed and Mrs. Hunter who poured.\nSEGREGATE WOMEN\nTORONTO (CP)-All Ontario hotels will be refused permission to\nsell beer unless they have separate\nbeverage rooms for women, effective\nApril 1, Liquor Commissioner E. G.(\nOdette announces.\nGrand Drawing of 12 Easter Lilies\nTHURSDAY AT 9:30\nAn Easter Greeting for the Home\nCOMINC COOD FRIDAY and SATURDAY\nDEANNA DURBIN in\n'Three Smart Girls'\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"}]}}