{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0413368":{"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":"2022-04-28","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1938-04-30","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0413368\/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":" Mines Produced $74,000,000 in\nB. C. for Last Year\n\u2014Page Eleven\n<&'\nSore Arm Takes Dizzy Dean Out\nof Game hut Cubs Win\n\u2014Page Nine\nLSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING. APRIL SO. 193S\nNUMBER 9\n73 to 130 Planes in Fight ...     *\nCHINESE AND JAPANESE BOTH LAY\nCLAIM TO WINNING THE GREATEST\nAERIAL BATTLE OF THE WAR, HIGH\nIN THE CLOUDS OVER HANKOW CITY\nJapanese Say They Lost Two Planes While\nDowning 51 of China's; Chinese Claim\n20 japan Planes Were Downed\nu f    T7~.    Tadmit 8 of own\nMactonacnie is     lost or missing\nMining Engineer\nNelson District\nCRESTON, B.C., April 29\u2014J. R.\nMacConachie, formerly field engineer lor Premier and at present\nroving engineer ior the government,\nwill be the new mining engineer\ntor the Nelson mining district.\nNotice to this effect was received\nFriday by Frank Putnam, M.L.A.\nfor Nelson-Creston, in a letter from\nHon. W. J. Asselstine, minister o\u00a3\nmines. The transfer will take effect immediately..\nH. Sargent, who has been in\ncharge at Nelson for the past few\nyears, Is being transferred to the\nVancouver office. Mr. Sargent is at\npresent taking post-graduate work\nat Boston, Mass.\nLABOR TO MARK\nMAY DAY TODAY\nBy The Canadian Press\nCanadian labor forces\u2014faced with\na May day falling on Sunday\u2014plan\nparades and meetings from coast to\ncoast this week-end as they mark\ntho 62nd anniversary ot the -general\nstrike called by the American toleration ot Labor May 1, 1886, in\nseeking an eight-hour working day.\nChief attention is directed to Mon.\ntreal where extra policemen have\nbeen detailed for duty because of\nreports communists and Leftists plan\na parade. No permit has been issued\nfor any demonstration.\nMembers of the communist party\nhave made no announcement of parade plans in Montreal, saying police\nwould be on hand to arrest them\nunder a law banning communist activities. The national office of the\ncommunist party in.Toronto said\n9000 would parade in Montreal.\nToronto'! Saturday night demonstration in Queen's Park promises\nto be the biggest in Canadian history.\nBoundary Youth\nSails for Orient\nToday to Study\nVANCOUVER, B.C., April 29 (CP)\n\u2014Grant Lathe of Grand Forks, B.C,\nwho is studying medicine at McGill\n.university, will sail from here tomorrow on the Canadian Pacific\nliner Empress of Japan for the\norient.\nLathe 1\u00ab a member of an international student commission which\nwill study conditions in China.\nHe is the son of Frank E. Lathe,\n\u2022 director of research information of\nthe national research council.\nGrant Lathe ls a .nephew of Mts.\nF. M Auld of Nelson.\nCustoms Officials\nContinue Drive on\nProhibited Books\nAnother magazine, \"Personal\nConfessions\" was confiscated from\nNelson news stands Friday by customs officers, adding to the two,\n\"Detective Yarns\" and \"Focus\" taken Thursday. The book was seized\n\"as a prohibited book in accordance with Schedule C of the Customs act.\"\nLOGGER   KILLED\nVICTORIA, April 29 (CP)-James\nAnderson, 40, of Victoria, was killed instantly yesterday during logging operations on Raza Island, near\nPowell River, B.C.\nCANADIEN8 WIN\nPARIS. April 29 (CP-Havas) -\nMontreal Canadiens tonight defeated\nDetroit Red Wings 7-5 to win the\nthree-game exhibition hockey series\nIn Paris two games to one. The\nteams will return to England for\nfour further matches.\nW. P. CHRYSLER WED\nNEW YORK, April 29 (AP) -\nWalter P. Chrysler, Jr., son of the\nauto magnate, and Miss Marguerite\nSykes were married today at St.\nBartholomew's church.\nSHANGHAI, April 29 (AP)\u2014\nChinese and Japanese air armadas \"celebrated\" the 37th birthday ot Japan's Emperor Hlrohlto\ntoday with the war's greatest aerial battle high In the clouds over\nHankow. Both sides claimed victory.\nDispatches reaching Shanghai\nfrom the provisional capital said\n300 persons were kllled and 700\nwounded by Japanese bombs In\nthe crowded Industrial Hanyang\narcr.s, across the Han river, before Chinese filers drove the attackers away.\nJust how many planes took part\nIn the clash and how many were\nlost was disputed,\nA Japanese navy communique\nsaid that 50 Japanese planes participated -in the' raid and that 80\nChinese ships engaged them in a\ndog fight. This' communique reported 51 Chinese planes were shot\ndown and only two Japanese craft\nfailed to return to their home base.\nChinese headquarters at Hankow\nsaid 50 Japanese planes and 28 Chinese pursuit ships took part in the\nbattle and that 20 of the Japanese\ncraft, including eight bombers, were\nbrought down. These reports laid\nthree Chinese planes were lost, one\nmade a forced landing and tour\nwere missing.\nSPANISH WAR\nHENDAYE, France, April 29 \u2014\n(AP) \u2014 Storms lashing the eastern\nSpanish fighting zone held the belligerents today in their positions.\nArtillery duels and a brief flight\nof insurgent warplanes which\nbombed and machine-gunned government positions in Teurel province alone broke the lull.\nIn the midst of an intense exchange of artillery fire along the\n12-mile line from Alcala De Chiv-\nert to Albocacer, near the coast 26\nmiles northeast of Castellon de la\nPlana, insurgents sallied forth and\ncaptured a government armored\ntrain.\nThe 8panlsh government In a\nnote to the British government\nprotested against an exchange of\nletters accompanying the Anglo-\nItalian accord signed April 16 In\nRome.\nCharges Secretary\n\"Raised\" Pay Checks\nLOS ANGELES, April 29 (AP) -\nHer secretary stole $11,010, the state\ncharges, but Simone Simon, who\npouts prettily for the films, testified\ntoday that it was a $5 book that\nended her friendship with Sandra\nMartin.\nMiss Simon was the key witness\nat the preliminary hearing of her\nex-secretary, charged with forgery\nand grand theft.\nThe importation from France\nspoke clearly enough, but because\nof her accent attorneys often had\ndifficulty understanding her.\n\"Our last conversation, I think\nit was last April 9, was held in my\nbedroom,\" said Simone. \"I received\na book I did not order and I asked,\n'whose book is that?' She said, 'it\nis mine.' But I noticed there was a\nreceipt with it, charging it to my\naccount.\"\nMunicipal Judge Newcombe Con-\ndee himself was curious to know\nthe title of the book. It was \"Explanation * of Dreams,\" by Freud,\nSimone said.\nShe identified checks she signed\nfor Miss Martin's salary and declared the amounts were supposed\nto be $87.50, the bi-monthly slip-\nend. Checks inroduced in evidence\nhad been raised, some of them by\nhundreds of dollars.\nDuke of Windsor's\nSecretary Corrects\nReport on Bathtub\nPARIS, April 29 (CP-Havas)-\nThe Duke of Windsor's secretary\ntoday called in newspapermen to\ndeny what he termed \"erroneous\nand fantastic\" reports circulated\nconcerning the Riviera residence\nleased by the Duke from Sir Pom-\neroy Burton.\nThere was no 20-carat gold bathtub, the secretary said.\nReports the Duke had leased it\nfor a two-year term at $16,000 an-\nnuall were \"inexact.\"\nReplaces Buffalo\nHEPBURN HITS AT STRIKERS\nWARNS GROUP\nOF RELIEFERS IN\nCAPITAL NO MOB\nRULE PERMITTED\nThomas Jefferson has replaced\nthe buffalo on the new five-\ncent piece recently approved by\nthe United States treasury\nboard. Oh one Side the new\ncoin bears a profile likeness\nof Jefferson, while on the other\nside Is shown his home at\nMonticellg, Va.\nFishing Season\nIs to Officially\nBe Opened Today\nFishing in the main waters of the\nKootenays opens tomorrow, May 1.\nFor. the past week ardent fishermen have been going over their\ntackle and replacing missing items,\nand generally getting ready for the\nofficial seasoning opening, While\nmost of the streams and small lakes\nof the district will remain closed\nfor another month, the Izak VS nitons\nwill tor tbe most part be out Sunday.\nThe South Slocan pool will attract\nmnny,-\u00abr.d tHe'WBita of thS'-feW-\ntenay river will be the favorite spot\nof many others. Devotees of lake\nfishing will be out with rod and\nreel)and trolling lines, and if enthusiasm means anything, there'll\nbe many a fish in the frying pan\nIn this district Monday.\nBlack ants are being seen in considerable numbers and many fishermen will use this type of fly.\nLocusts are reported to be few so\nfar.\nJAPAN EMPEROR\nIS 37 YEARS OLD\nTOKYO, April 29 (API-Emperor Hlrohlto celebrated his 37th\nbirthday today with the customary review of his troops but without much of the ceremony that\nhas marked similar observances.\nLater the emperor said devotions before the three Imperial\nsanctuaries, then received Immediate members of the Imperial\nfamily.\nSectionhouse at\nFernie Destroyed;\nConverted Boxcar\nFERNIE, B.C., April 29 \u2014 Fire\nbelieved to be caused by a man\nsmoking In bed, completely destroyed one Canadian Pacific section-house, and damaged another\nhere about 2 o'clock this afternoon. The building destroyed was\nadapted from an old boxcar. Owing to freights shunting In the\nrailway yard, and the necessity\nof taking a roundabout route, the\nfire department was delayed In\ngetting to the blaze.\nYoung Son of Late\nHowie Morenz May\nHave Skull Fracture\nMONTREAL, April 29 (CP) -\nSix-year-old Donald Morenz, second\nson cf Howie Morenz, the late\n\"Stratford Streak\" of the National Hockey league, is in hospital\nhere with a possible fractured skull.\nThe youngster tumbled from a garage roof while playing near his\nnorthend home today.\nCANADIAN   PRESS\nMAN'S MOTHER\nIS DEAD\nCHARLOTTETOWN, April 29*,\nCP)*-Mrs. Lila Dale Rhude, 71, *\nwl46w of Capt. I. C. Rhude, died .\ntocp^ at the home of her\ndaughter, Mrs, T. G. Ives of\nCharlottetown.\nBeAdes Mrs. Ives, she is survive\"^, by two sons., Evert C.\nRhude; of Halifa^d T. Forbes\nRhude, Pacific superintendent\nof the tanadian Press, Vancou-\nU. S. President . . \u00ab.-'\u2022\nROOSEVELT ASKS\nATTACK ON U.S.\nMONOPOLY AND\nBUSINESS PROBE\nFears Concentration\nof Power Leading\nto Fascism\nSARS LIBERTY OF\nDEMOCRAT UNSAFE\nWASHINGTON, April 29 (AP)\n\u2014President Roosevelt demanded\na broad attack upon United States\n\"business monopoly\" today, lest,\nhe said, a \"concentration of power\nwithout equal in history\" grow\nstronger than the government Itself and engulf the nation In Fascism.\nSending to congress hit long-\nawaited message on the anti-trust\nlaws, a bulky, bluntly-worded\ndocument, he proposed a $500,000\nInvestigation of \"collectivism in\nbusiness,\" followed by aotlon to\nrestore \"the democratic competitive order.\"\nHe said the Inquiry, to be conducted by the federal trade commission, the securities and exchange\ncommission, the justice department,\nand other agencies, should cover\nsuch subjects as improved procedure in enforcing the anti-trust statutes, mergers and inter-locking directorates, financial contrbls, the\nactivities ot trade associations, the\neffec of the patent laws on he\neffect of the patent laws on the\ntax laws.\nHe asked, moreover, a $200,000\nsupplemental appropriation ior the\nJustice department to help enforce\nthe present anti-trust laws; and the\ncreation of a new bureau of Industrial economics to supply industry\nwith statistics which would guard\nit against period* 0t over-produb-\nUon- *   .* \u25a0'.\u25a0;'\" * \u25a0 *** \u25a0:_\ntaught us two stm-ple truths about\nthe liberty of a democratic people,\"\nhe said, at the very outset of his\nmessage.\n\"The first is that the liberty of a\ndemocrat is not safe if the people\ntolerate the growth of private power to a point where it becomes\nstronger than their democratic state\nitself. That, in its essence, is Fascism\u2014ownership of government by\nan individual, by a group, or by\nany other controlling private power.\n\"The second truth is that the liberty of a democracy is not safe If\nits business system does not\u00bb provide employment and produce and\ndistribute goods in such a way as\nto sustain an acceptable standard\nof living.\n\"Both lessons hit home.\n\"Among us today a concentration of private power without equal\nin history is growing.\n\"This concentration is seriously\nimpairing the economic effectiveness of private enterprise as a way\nof providing employment for labor\nand capital and as a way of assuring\na more equitable distribution of income and earnings among the\npeople of the nation as a whole.\"\nFears for\nSchuschnigg\nRene Kraus, former press\nchief for the Schusnigg government, is pictured on his arrival\nin New York. He declared that\nhe feared for Chancellor Schus-\nnigg's life despite promises of\nNazi officials that he would not\nbe harmed.\nGopp, Victim of\nlogging Accident\nPasses at Nelson\nHenry Gopp, 84-year-old resident\nof Arrow Park, was fatally injured\nThursday afternoon when he was\nstruck in the abdomen by a logging\nch*^ta while working In the woods\nat Arrow Park. He was taken to\nSyringa Crjek by boat, and from\nSyringa Creek to Nelson by anv\nbulance, where he died on reaching\nKootenay Lake General hospital.\nGopp wai'born In Alberta, and\ncame to British Columbia some years\nago. He is the son of Mr, and Mrs.\nWilliam Gopp of Trail. Besides his\nwife arid four small children, he\nleaves \u00bb brotheri Richard to Trail;\ntog letfi to Trill this morning lot\ninterment, probably on Monday.\nSEEK UNIFORM\nRELIEF SYSTEM\nTORONTO, April 29 (CP)-The\nwhole national relief structure\nneeds remolding, the Toronto welfare council asserted today, to provide more uniform, adequate and\nefficiently administered unemployed assistance.\nIt accordingly proposed before the\nRowell commission the setting up\nof a central public assistance board\nfor the general supervision of relief, larger administrative units for\nincreased efficiency and a central\nunemployment board to reorganize\nemployment exchanges' and lead in\nprograms to aid the unemployed.\nKeyed to that program as integral parts of it were more uniform minimum wage legislation, national unemployment insurance and\na r.ositive national health policy.\nCOMBINED MIGHT OF BRITAIN AND\nFRANCE NOW CONFRONTS EUROPE\nMilitary and Economic\nPact Completed;\nPraha Glad\nLONDON, April 29 (AP) \u2014\nGreat Britain and France confronted Europe tonight with a\nline-up of their combined might\nagainst possible war and pledged\nmoral If not physical, backing of\nCzechoslovakia.\nThe two democracies In a two-\nday conference among Prime\nMinister Chamberlain and Foreign Secretary Viscount Halifax\nof Britain and Premier Daladier\nand Foreign Minister Georges\nBonnet of France.\n1. Agreed to coordinate their land,\nair and sea forces into one great\nmilitary machine.\n2. Agreed to use their power for\ndefence of common interests and\ntheir national and international ideals\u2014meaning democracy.\n3. Strengthen the democratic\nfront. France approved Britain's\nagreement with Premier Mussolini\nof Italy for settlement of-Mediterranean, African and Spanish issues',\nBritain pressed France to reach a\nsimilar accord with Italy quickly.\n4. Agreed \"on action which could\nmost usefully be undertaken with\na view of assuring peaceful and\njust solution of problems\" in Central Europe.\n5. Examined world problems, including the situation in the far\neast, but did not disclose their conclusions. The policy of non-intervention in Spain was reaffirmed as\nthe best means of confining the\ncivil war.\nIt was reported Mr. Chamberlain\nsuggested opening conversations\nwith Chancellor Hitler in the near\nfuture, but that the French rejected the proposal.\nHowever, Lord Halifax and the\nFrench diplomats will make friendly overtures shortly to Berlin and\nother central European capitals re\ngarding Czechoslovakia.\nPRAHA SATISFIED\nPRAHA, April 29 (AP)\u2014Government circles voiced satisfaction tonight with the Anglo-French combination of military power and the\npledge to back Czechoslovakia\nmorally if not physically in case\nof war.\nThe expressions came after Premier Milan Hodza had postponed\nuntil next week a radio address on\nthe Sudeten German issue in order to see what results the London\nconferences between England and\nFrance might produce for Czechoslovakia.\n\u2122\"n^iMmE'-'.*.'.*>*'-*\"^-\n. \u25a0:.,....r..:..A:r*..rsa.r..\n2\nBACK HOME\nPARIS, April 29 (CP-Havas) -\nA \"democratic axis,\" counterpart of\nthe Rome-Berlin axis, has been definitely established by the two-day\nAnglo-French conference in London, French political sources said\ntonight as Premier Daladier and\nForeign Minister Georges Bonnet\nreturned to report to cabinet colleagues. Informed opinion here was\nthat everything 1- ranee hoped for\nwas obtained in the agreement between British and French statesmen,\nHoward Green , . .\nFEARS RIOTS AT\nVANCOUVER IF\nAID NOT GIVEN\nSINGLE JOBLESS\n\"Serious Situation\" Is\nBrewing Vancouver\nM. P. Asserts\nPOULIOT AGAIN IS\nON THE WARPATH\nOTTAWA, April 29 (CP)\u2014Jean\nFrancois Pouliot, once called the\n\"Bad Boy of Parliament\", today climaxed an attack in the house of\ncommons on the work of the national employment commission by\ndramatically hurling its blue-covered report on the floor of the chamber.\nThe Liberal member tor Temis-\ncouata invited Hon. Norman Rogers,\nLabor minister, to do the same\u2014\n\"throw the report on the floor\nwhere the sweepers can come along\nand put it with the other garbage.\"\nHe was speaking to the debate on\nthe government relief bill, being\nconsidered to committee of the\nwhole house.\nThere were other features of the\nrelief bill discussion, Including a\nwarning by Howard Green (Cons.,\nVancouver 8outh) that riots\nwould develop In Vancouver unless some plan was developed for\nsingle unemployed.\n\u25a0'8ERIOU8 8ITUATI0N\"\nA serious situation has been developing to Vancouver by influx of\nmen from forestry camps and from\nthe prairies, Mr. Green said. He\nunderstood 6000 men were left\nstranded when the forestry camps\nclosed. >\n1 understand the province will do\nnothing'about caring tor these men\nthe camps and the city either\n\"\"\" n.-,or face Ihe .possl-\nt^KG&en'safif.\nWe are likely to have riots to the\ncity of Vancouver within the next\nfew days as the city slipply cannot\nprovide tor these men.\"\nThe Dominion was watching the\nsituation, tald Mr. Rogers, and a\ndecision wat being made whether\nthe camps would be kept open\nafter May 1, the closing date tet\nlast fall.\n\"REMEMBER REGINA RIOTS\"\nThe Regina riots of 1935 should\nbe remembered, cautioned J. S.\nWoodsworth, CCF. leader. He accused the government of inactivity\nin unemployment policies and of\nfailing to develop a concrete plan\nto provide jobs for the men.\nApparently, the government's\npolicy was to wait and watch \"until there are rlott In British Columbia and when there Is rioting\nwe shall turn out the Mounted\nPolice and people will be kllled.\"\nMr. Pouliot figured in the day's\ndebate in more ways than one. Last\nnight he suggested A. B. Purvis\nof Montreal, former chairman of the\ndefunct national employment commission, should be deported because\nhe exploited his position to gather\nconfidential information on his business competitors.\nToday, the Labor minister made\nanother defence of Chairman Purvis. The statistical information gathered from industries on employment\nconditions was solely for public\npurposes and did not Include figures on finances, sales or commercial policies.\nAt no time, said Mr. Rogers, was\nPurvis in a position to see the confidential returns made by industrial\nfirms. They were gathered by statisticians and only given to the public and the commissioners in a collective state.\nMr. Pouliot said report of the\ncommission, which he estimated\ncost $400,000, \"is. worth absolutely\nnothing.\"\nPATTULLO AT\nWASHINGTON\nWASHINGTON, April 29 (API-\nPremier Pattullo of British Columbia returned to Washington today\nfrom Canada to continue here discussions regarding his proposal for a\nhighway linking the United States\nand Alaska,\nARREST RELIEF STRIKERS\nTORONTO, April 29 CP)-Four\nexecutive members of the organization that led a delegation of striking Lakeview district .relief recipients to; the Ontario legislature today were arrested, one on a charge\nof theft of money from the provincial government seven years ago.\nEN ROUTE TO OTTAWA\nMONCTON, N. B\u201e April 29 (CP)\n\u2014Mrs. George O. Spencer, president' of the National Council of\nWomen of Canada, is en route to\nOttawa on a Dominion-wide tour of\ncouncils. Later she will visit all\nlocal councils between Fort William\nand Vancouver.\nAJP. Veteran\nRetires\nFRANK B. NOYES\nPresident of the Associated\nPress, international news-gathering organization, tor 38 years\nand one of its three founders,\nFrank B. Noyes, veteran- Washington newspaper publisher, announced his retirement from the\nchair at the organization's 38th\nannual session in New York.\nMr. Noyes will' continue as a\nmember of the board of directors, who will elect his successor.\nHe will also continue as president of the Washington Star.\nPOWELL FREED\nOF JAIL TERM\nSocial Cfedit Advisor\nParoled on Order\nof Lapointe\nOTTAWA, April 29 (CP) - The\nsensational Edmonton libel trial\nof la*jtfalMiad a sequel here today when Justice Minister Ernest\nLapointe paroled G. F. Powell, Brit-\ntsk\u00ab\u00abirt'<W\u00ab\u00bb5\u00abdTto5r *>\u2022'\u00ab\u00bbAl.\nberta government, who was sen-\nteheed to six-months in jail following his conviction for publishing\ndefamatory libel.\nPowell's sentence was accompanied by a recommendation for\ndeportation but Mr. Lapolnte's parole order made no mention of deportation.\nIn his application to the justice\ndepartment -for release, Powell did\nnot indicate he planned to leave\nthe country but under parole regulations, if he desired to leave before Aug. 10, when his sentence\nwas to expire, he would require\npermission from the authorities.\nEDMONTON, April 29 (CP) -\nGeorge Frederick Powell, British\nadvisor to the Alberta Social Credit board, was free from jail tonight\nafter serving half of a six-month\nsentence started Feb. 10 for publishing defamatory libel.\n\"Just say I have no plans yet\nat all,\" said Mr. Powell when questioned about his future activities.\n\"Oh, in due course, in due course,\"\nhe said when asked If he planned\nto return to England.\nMr. Powell was paroled pn order\nfrom Hon. Ernest Lapointe, federal minister of justice. \"I am very\nglad to hear that Mr. Powell has\nbeen released from prison,\" commented Premier Aberhart while\nGlen L MacLachlan, chairman of\nthe Alberta Social Credit board,\nsaid the release would be \"widely\nacclaimed.\"\nCharges against Mr. Powell resulted from distribution of a leaflet \"Bankers' Toadies,\" which named nine Edmonton men. Convicted\nby Mr. Justice W. C. Ives in supreme court of Alberta Nov. 15 last,\nMr. Powell's appeal was dismissed\nto a unanimous judgment of the\nappellate division Feb. 7.\nShortly after Warden W. J. McLean received word from Ottawa,\nMr. Powell left Fort Saskatchewan\njail in company with Mr. MacLachlan; F. M. Baker, secretary of the\nSocial Credit board; L. D. Byrne,\nBritish technical advisor to the\nboard, and W. H. Wallace, game\ncommissioner.\nOld Charge of Theft j\nLaid Against One\nof Strikers\nHEPBURN FIRM\nIN STATEMENT\nTORONTO, April 29 (CP) \u2014 '\u201e\u25a0'\nPremier Mitchell Hepburn, with\ndramatic suddenness, ordered arrest of four members of a delegation of relief strikers today in\nthe council chamber of the legislative building. The delegation,\nof 50 had marched 14 miles from\nthe Lakeview district, 14 mllea\nwest of Toronto, threatening to.,\ncamp In Queen's Park until relief allowances were Increased.\nGeorge Kellett, 35, was arrested-\non a charge of stealing $310,65 from\nthe Ontario department of agriculture in 1931. Edward Lace, president of the Lakeview branch of.\nthe General Workers union, Fred\nBailey and William Finch, executive members, were arrested on\ncharges of acting In a crowd tumult-\nuously, causing fear of violence\namong nearby persons.\nPremier Hepburn, who announced he would ask for charges\nagainst parents who kept their\nchildren away from school .in\nLakeview at part of the relief\nstrike whloh ttarted Tuetday.\nHELD PRISONER\nPremier Hepburn, who announced there would be no increase In\nrelief allowances, commented on-*,\nthe Tuesday night incident when\nRelief Administrator R. S. Moors\nwas held virtual prisoner for three\nhours by relief recipients, for which\nthree were arrested.\n\"There Is going to be no molt\nrule In this province,\" Premier,.\nHeptoicttMld. \"tt\\j advice ty y&hi\nIs to act like decent citizens. I\nam going to warn you again there,\nwill be no more tactics like hold-' i\ning a relief administrator In hie\ncar. There are going to be  no\nmore summonses; there are going\nto be arrests.\"\nImmediately after the arrests the\ndelegation straggled out in the rain\nto a band stand in Queen's Park\nwhere weeping mothers comforted\nweeping children and the fathers\nmade plans to return immediately\nto their homes.\n$5,000,000 SUIT\nLOS ANGELES, April 29 (AP)\n\u2014Eloise Spann, 21-year-old singing actress, today filed suit against\nMilton Beecher, charging assault\nand asking $5,000,000. In her complaint, she said she was summoned to Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer studio,\nnamed a co-defendant, Aug. 26,\n1936, for a film test and that Beecher, who escorted her home, attacked her.\n80UTHERN  METHODISTS\nFAVOR UNION\nBIRMINGHAM, Ala., April 29\n(AP) \u2014 Southern Methodists voted overwhelmingly today for union\nwith other branches of the denomination in the United States despite warnings of \"secession\" by\ndeep south opponents of affiliation\nwith northern adherents of the\nchurch. The vote in the 23rd quadrennial conference of the Methodist\nEpiscopal church, south, was: For\nunification, 434; against 26.\nPari of Fortune\nStill Coogan's\nLOS ANGELES, April 28 (AP)\u2014\nWilliam Rains, lawyer for Jackie\nCoogan, claimed today he had found\nproof that at least a part of the\nfortune earned by the former child\nstar belongs to him now.\nHe made the statement after he\nhad inspected records of Jackie\nCoogan Productions, Inc., in possession of John Biby, receiver appointed by the court for the holdings of Jackie's stepfather and\nmother, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur L.\nBernstein. Coogan, now 23, is suing\nthem for an accounting.\nI can declare emphatically the\ndocument I found proves beyond\nquestion that a part of the fortune\nearned by my client now belongs\nto him,\" said Rains.\nKillies Avoid\nDemotion Now\nGLASGOW, April 29 (CP Cable)\n\u2014Victorious 3-0 over Morton, Kil*\nmarnock drew out of the relegation zone in the Scottish Football\nleague, first division. The Killies\nnow are tied with St. Mirren and\nQueen's Park with 33 points, one\nbetter than Hamilton Academical*I\nand Ayr United.\nTENDERS   ACCEPTED\nOTTAWA, April 29 (CP) - The\nBank of Canada announced that':\ntenders had been accepted at noon\ntoday for the full amount of $30,-.\n000,000 Dominion of Canada treasury bills due July 30, 1938. The av\u00ab\nerage discount price of the accepted bids was $99.87809 and the average yield ,49 per cent.\nBANK ROBBER IS TO HANQ\nSPOKANE, Wash., April 29 (AP)\n\u2014One bank robber was sentenced\nio hang, a second to federal prison\nfor 15 years and a third man pleaded innocent to bank robbery charges in Spokane courts today. Her-\nbert Allen, 21, was sentenced by\nSuperior Judge W. A, Huneke to\nbe hanged at the state penitentiary\nfor his part in the Feb. 1937 holdup of the Security Bank here and :\nthe killing of William Walker, a\nbank patron. Stanley and Le Roy\nKnapp, brothers and partners of\nAllen, are already under the death,\npenalty.\n^Ja^JaMuMi^iMklslMs^^siM\n:   \u2014\n 'WW-im-u;.\nPAQETWO.\nrMimi' Is Capitol\n(up Winner, High\nSchool Dramatics\nThree Groups Compete\nWith   Pleasing\nPortrayals\n.\"Mlmi\", produced by Georglna\nWllliscrolt's group of high school\nThespians, captured the Capitol trophy Irom its rivals, \"Anniversary\nand \"The Cloak\" in the high school\ndramatic club's three-way play competition Friday night in the Junior\nhigh school auditorium.\nAdjudicator Leslie Craufurd, assisted by Mrs. Lawrence McPhail,\nend Mrs. William Holmgren, awarded the cup to Miss WUliscroft's\ngroup, remarking the girls were exceedingly good, though perhaps the\ncostumes were not quite appropriate.\n.Last year, the first year of compe-\n. tition, the Capitol trophy was won\n\"by Janet Grimes' group, when they\ncompeted with three other groups\nat the Capitol theatre,\n\"MIMI\"\n\"Mimi\" is a tale embracing several romances with the Latin quarter of grand old Paree as the setting.\nMimi, played by Mae Fotos, a flower\nmaker, is passionately in love with\nHudolphe a poet, played by Ken\n\"McBride; Musette, another flower\nmaker, played by Georgina Willis-\ndroft, is in love with Marcel, a\npainted, played by Bob Morris; and\nTimi, played by Audrew Emery, is in\nlove with Blancheron, a musician,\nplayed by Ernest Ball.\nMimi has the caprice to be escorted out by her lover in a black\nlormal coat, which her lover does not\npossess. However, they manage to\nborrow the coat of one of Marcel's\nsubjects, Monsieur Blancheron. Having procured the required coat, Mimi\nchanges her mind and instead of\n'Mimi and her lover going out, she\nsends the other romantic couples out.\nI Thus she finds herself alone with\nEudolphe,   for   the   first  time   in\ninany days.\n, Georgina Williscroft was director.\n\u2022ANNIVERSARY\"\n\"Anniversary\", written by Nelson's own David Scott, involved the\natory of the complications arising\n\u25a0when youth mixes liquor with pleasure, and they find out their parents\ndid the same thing in younger\n\u25a0years.\nArmando Maglio and Ingeborg\nItartschinke played the part of Mr.\nand Mrs. Dean, the parents; Edna\nPush was Phyllis, the daughter;\nHoward Campbell was Roy Dean,\nthe son; Bill Affleck was Mr. Powers,\na rich neighbor and Jean Gibson was\n$fora. Jean Gibson was director.\n\"The Cloak\", presented by the\nhigh school's championship trio of\nJanet Grimes. Sybil Scott-Lauder\nand Peggy Dunnett, pleased the\naudence again as it did when it\n-won the intermediate section cup in\nthe West Kootenay Drama festival.\nAmbassador to\nU.S.\nCount Rene Doynel de Saint-\nQuenton (above), has been appointed French ambassador to\nthe United States. A bachelor\nand 64 years of age, Count de\nSaint-Quenton succeeds Georges\nBonnet in the Washington post.\nIt Is the story of three spirit), one\nunborn, one dead and one an angel.\nJanet Grimes, who also directs the\nplay, is the dead spirit Sybil Scott-\nLauder is the unborn while Peggy\nDunnett is the angel. The dead\nspirit, who wears a cloak covered\nwith a criss-crossed pathway of\nthreads, representing her life and\npersonality while on earth, is seeking to enter heaven, while the angel\ntells her she cannot enter heaven\nunless she sheds the cloak. The spirit unborn is dumfounded and puzzled by the hatred, malice and quarreling among men on earth, and\ncannot understand why it should be\nso, when the dead spirit tells her\nof life on earth. The story ends\nwhen the dead spirit is persuaded\nto cast her cloak and enters heaven,\nleaving the cloak for the unborn\nspirit to don and go her way into\nthe world.\nPLEA8ING PROGRAM\nAnd no small part of the program\nwas presented by the high school\nchorus, orchestra and vocalists. Mrs.\nJames A. Fraser's music club chorus,\n20 strong, came through with several fine selections, \"Fire Down Below\", \"Blow, Ye.Winds of Morning\",\nand \"After the Rain\". Annie Busk\ntook the solo part in \"Blow Ye\nWinds of Morning\". The orchestra\nfilled in the intermissions in fine\nstyle. Frances Linvllle was accompanist\n\"Dance of the Pine Tree Fairies\"\nwas a double duet, sung by Betty\nMiller, Annie Busk, Shirley Scatch-\nard and Margaret Dingwall, while\nBetty Holt, Kan Anderson, Betty\nMiller and Thelma Holm sang \"Barcarolle\" from \"Tales of Hoffman\".\nMembers of the chorus were Joan\nScott-Lauder, Annie Busk,-Connie\nHancock, Iris Moore, Jenny Morrison, Edna Steed, Kay Maber, Anna\nDel Puppo, Rosemary Hornett, Margaret Dingwall, Connie Hamaon,\nBetty Holt, Betty Miller, Frahces\nCampbell, Kay Anderson, Thelma\nHolm, Margaret Bingham, Delia\nWhitfield, Shirley Scatchard and\nOlive Waters. Ushers were Annie\nBusk, Rosemary Hornett, Frances\nCampbell and Delia Whitfield.\nMembers of the orchestra were\nFrances Linville, piano; Leo Foster, bass; Bill Kapak and Don Watts,\nsaxophones; Art Guscott, trombone,\nand Iveison Ruppel and Alan Bar-\nIon, trumpets.\nMrs. Leslie Craufurd, Kenneth\nCampbell and David Scott assisted\nin directing the plays.\nErnest Ball, presiden} of the high\nschool dramatic club, was chairman,\nand Bob Crerar was announcer.\nLadies' Softball\nSeries Opens May\n8 in Trail Loop\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e April 29. \u2014 The\nTrail ladies' softball league for 1038\nwill open Sunday, May 8, it was\nannounced today by Tom Negus,\nsecretary who released the schedule for the first half of the loop.\nJimmies will be the only squad\nbearing their name of last season.\nThe other teams are Jumbos and\nTigerettes.\nThe schedule follows;\nMay 8 Jimmies vs. Jumbos.\nMay 13, Jumbos vs. Tigerettes.\nMay 15, Tigerettes vs. Jimmies.\nMay 20, Jumbos vs. Jimmies.\nMay 22, Tigerettes vs. Jumbos.\nMay 27, Jimmies vs. Tigerettes.\nMay 29, Jimmies vs. Jumbos.\nJune 3, Jumbos vs. Tigerettes,\nJune 5, Tigerettes vs. Jimmies.\nJune 7, Jumbos vs. Jimmies.\nJune 10, Tigerettes vs. Jumbos.\nJune 12, Jimmies vs. Tigerettes.\nJune 17, Jimmies vs. Jumbos.\nJune 19, Jumbos vs. Tigerettes.\nune 21, Tigerettes vs. Jimmies.\nJune 24, Jumbos vs. Jimmies.\nJune 26, Tigerettes vs. Jumbos.\nTrail Baseballers to\nHold Annual Meeting\nTRAIL, B.C., April 29\u2014The city\nsenior baseball club will hold its\nannual meeting next week to organize for the season.\nAll of -last year's team, with the\nexception ot Cliff Hodges, who held\ndown the keystone bag last season,\nhave turned out for warming up\npractices, and a number of new\nprospects are anxious to make the\nteam. Hodges is now a resident of\nKelowna.\nWith the arrival of a Winnipeg\nhurler to augment last year's pitching staff, prospects in this department are particularly bright.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.Cr-SATURDAY MORNINH, APRIL 80 WM\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHumeHotel..NeisonfB.c.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. A. G. Bennett, H.\n.Jewksbury, W. R. Bradley, Calgary,\nJlr. and Mrs. J. II. Hazlewood, M.\nJ. Lennox, A. E. Wilson, F. E. Sloan,\nI S. W. Gillies, J. N. Browning, Van\ncouver: Ernest G. Marshall, New\nWestminster; Mrs. D. P. Kane. Kaslo;\nMrs. J. S. May, Salmo; D. McLeod,\nMedicine Hat; Mrs. A. J. Johnson,\nErie.\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St.        Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. E. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot and Cold Water\nIn the HEART of the City\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nI \"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\" Newly Renovated Throughout\njJUllGYlIl     HOtCl   A.   PATERSON,   late   ol\nRanch home of V. J. Koslancic, near Crescent Valley, as it looked\non New Year's day, 1938. The Kosiancic ranch produces a variety of\nfield products not found on many Kootenay ranches. (\nA Versatile Rancher of Slocan Valley KoSSland AWBllS\nProvision Rink\nfor Boxla Games\nWith the provision that Rossland\nhome games are to be played at\nhome immediately upon provision\not playing facilities, but that In the\nmeantime the Miners will play then-\nhome games at Trail and Nelson,\nthe stage is set for another Kootenay boxla season packed with actions, thrills and fan entertainment\nIn announcing the season's lineup R. E. Crerar, president of the\nWest Kootenay league, outlined the\nseason's plans as follows:\n\"On completion of schedule the\ntwo lower learns will play best two\nof three series, alternate home and\nhome games, the location of iirst\ngame to be chosen by team finishing in second place. Third game, if\nnecessary, ls to be played in same\nlocation as first game and visiting\nteam to be allowed expenses, after\nwhich the two teams will share\nequally in net proceeds.\n\"The winner of this series, will\nmeet the winner of the league in a\nbest three out of five series. The\nlocation of the first game ls to be\nchosen by the league winners, the\nfifth game if necessary to be played\nin the same location as first game,\nand visiting team to be allowed expenses.\n\"All referees and judges of play\nto be appointed by the president\nof the West Kootenay Amateur Lacrosse association.\"\nReferees for the season will be:\nNelson: Bob Paterson and N. D.\n(Dutch)  Richardson.\nTrail\u2014Curley Wheatley, Barney\nArchibald and Bob Gifford.\nRossland\u2014Jockey Walmsley and\nRene Morln,\nUpper Tennis Courts\nOpen Play Tomorrow\nRacket weilding enthusiasts working long hours on the upper tennis\ncourts has reaped results. Four\ncourts have reaped results. Four\nrow, and with a little \"dusting off\"\ntoday, everything will be In shipshape. An open invitation has been\nextended to any one wishing to\nplay tomorrow afternoon.\nLeads\nGeneral \"Garcia Val.lino, who\nwith General Miguel Aranda,\nled the rebel drive which captured the Mediterranean towns\nof Vlnaroz and Benicarlo, thereby completely slicing loyalist\nSpain in half.\nFootball Fans\nTravel London\nfor (up Final\nRadio descriptions of the departure of north of England football\nfans to London for the Preston-\nHuddersfield final of the English\ncup today were followed closely by\nNelson district soccer followers Friday night. Fifty special trains left\nthe north country for Wembley,\ncarrying Preston followers, it was\nreported. Many radio enthusiasts\nreceived broadcasts of the arrival of\nsome of the fans at Euston Road\nstation.\nPreston North End was the popular choice to win today's final. In\nthe cup series leading to the final.\nPreston has scored 11 goals, with\none against; while Huddersfield has\nscored 10, with three against.\nNews of the Day\nAn interior view of the Kosiancic sawmill at Crescent Valley.\nLAST TRIBUTES\nPAID TRAIL MAN\nTRAIL, B. C, April 29 - Friends\nand relatives gathered in Clark's\nfuneral chapel today to pay final\ntribute to Robert P. Collins, 56,\nwho died in Trail-Tadanac hospital,\nWednesday. Floral tributes were\nmany, completely covering the casket. \u25a0\nMr. Collins was a resident of\nTrail for the past 14 years.\nInterment was in Mountain View\ncemetery. Rev. A. W. Mayes, officiated.\nPallbearers were: Oliver D'An-\ndrea, Charles Royce, Charles Lund,\nGeorge Hamel, A. Brown and J.\nMorrison.\nMr. Collins, who was predeceased by his wife, is survived by two\ndaughters, Mrs. N. M. Gowans and\nIrene, and two sons, Albert and\nHarry, Trail.\nNo Meal Tickets for\nTransients in Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., April 2S-Mcal tickets will no longer be issued to transients by the Trail city police office,\nJohn Laurie, chief of police announced today.\n\"In the past we have issued meal\ntickets to transients and have given\nthem shelter in the city-jail. It seems\nto have developed into a racket, and\nwe are entirely unable to cope\nwith it. It is one of the most expensive things in connection with\nthe department,\" he said.\nApplications for relief will be referred to Trail Community Chest\nofficials for further assistance if required, it was understood,\nSend Out Circular\non Rossland Rink\nTRAIL, B. C, April 29-A circular letter addressed to all Rossland employees and employers was\ndistributed in that city today asking for their views on a new rink.\nThe letter signed by J. E. Gordon, chairman of the finance committee of the group of citizens behind the project explains that a\ncanvass will be made of all workers relative to making subscriptions\nover a period of two years and that,\nif it were decided to form a company, all subscribers would become\nshareholders.\nFour Teams Entered\nfor Trail Softball\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e April 29 \u2014 Only\nfour teams will participate in the\nsenior men's softball league, according to entries received to date\nby Len Hornett association secretary; The original closing date of\nentries was extended about a week\nago, and no additional teams have\ncome forward. It is hoped that the\nschedule will be drawn UD'in the\nL. A. Campbell Gives\nChurch Electric Organ\nROSSLAND, April 29 \u2014 Lome\nA. Campbell, vice-president of the\nWest Kootenay Power & Light co\u201e\npresented an electric organ to St.\nAndrew's United churoh here as an\nEaster gift, it was announced this\nmorning.\nThe organ, the only one of its kind\nin the interior, is also equipped with\na four speaker chamber. It is now\nbeing installed.\nDedication services will be held\non Sunday morning with an organ\nrecital Monday evening.\nTrail Favorite Waters\nOpen for Rods Sunday\nTRAIL B. C\u201e April 29 \u2014 Fishing\nseason in Big and Little Sheep\ncreek opens on May 1 and addicts\nof rod and reel will be permitted to\nfish in them until August 14, according to government regulations\nfor the province.\nTrout season on the Columbia\nfrom the railway bridge at Castlegar to the International boundary\nopened on April 1 last. It closes on\nNovember 14.\nPermanent Greens\nOpen on Sunday\nAll nine permanent greens of the\nNelson Golf & Country club open\nfor play tomorrow, an event long\nlooked forward to by Nelson golfers. No medal sweeps will be started until next week.\nA LOVER'S ENVY\nI envy every flower that blows\nBeside the pathway where she goes,\nAnd every bird that sings to her,\nAnd every breeze that brings to\nher\nThe fragrance of the rose.\nI envy every poet's rhyme\nThat moves her heart at eventime,\nAnd every tree that wears for her\nIt's brightest bloom, and bears for\nher\nThe fruitage of its prime.\nI envy every Southern night!\nThat  paves her path with moonbeams white,\nAnd silvers all the leaves for her,\nAnd in their shadow weaves for\nher\nA dream of dear delight.\nI envy none whose loVe requires\nOf her a gift, a task that tires;\nI only long to live to her,\nI only ask to give to her,\nAll that her heart desires.\n\u2014Henry Van Dyke.\nReserve June 8, Women's Canadian Club, 8 p.m. (1223)\nDance at Shirley hall tonight 9 p.m.\nLunch at midnight (1245)\nUnited W.M.S. oriental tea today,\n917 Edgewood ave., 35c.        (1243)\nLawnmowers sharpened and 'repaired. 524 Gore. Ph. 649-R.     (1213)\nROBERT NOLTE, master tailor\nfor ladles and gentlemen.      (305)\nReserve May 5 for Theta Rho\nGirls Whist Drive and Old Time\nDance. (1236)\nORDER YOUR MOTHER DAY\nFtOWERS\u2014 KANDYLAND.\n(1219)\nMY HOME AND 8UNDAY NEWS\nBISHOP'S   NEWS   STAND\n(227)\nDance, Willow Pt. Crystal Hall,\ntonight Margaret Graham's orchestra. 75c couple. (1187)\nMUSICAL    INSTRUMENTS,    REPAIRS, WEBB'8, 806 BAKER ST.\n(1161)\nLacrosse Sticks, $1,50 up\nTHE SPORT 8HOP, (Gellnai')\n(1241)\nAgain Westlnghouse leads In Refrigerators both In price and Beauty\n\u2014Kootenay Music House.        (708)\nHATS\u2014Shapes, Shades and Sizes\nto suit every man. JACK BOYCE,\n(176)\nThe ideal Gift for Mother's Day a\nbox of Gray's home made Chocolates. 580 Baker St (1238)\nWomen's Canadian Club Tea meeting, May 10th. Hume. 3 p.m. Speaker: Mrs. W, Garland Foster.    (1223)\nMOTHER'8 DAY BOXES HAVE\nARRIVED-MAILTHEM EARLY-\nKANDYLAND, (1218)\nSEE A. TERRILL FOR UPHOLSTERING AND DRAPERIES. 120,\nHIGH STREET. (285)\nSPECIAL\u2014Today only\u2014 De Forest Crossley 5 tube console radio,\n$9.95. McKAY & 8TRETTON.   (706)\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nFIREMENS BALL, MAY 0th. CIVIC CENTRE. ADM. 75o & Me. NOVELTIES AND GOOD MUSIC. (1093)\nNOTICE TO THE  PUBLIC\nFor terms as to rental of Eagle hall\napply to W. Scott, Eagle block.\n(1172)\nOfficial opening of Nelson Tennis\nclub on 4 courts at Golf club Sunday afternoon. Everybody welcome.\n(1247)\nWe have a complete line ot English\nFishing Tackle, and Files, Baits\nReels, etc., call In and look them over\nHIPPERS0N8 (751)\nDANCE - TONIGHT - DANCE\nIn Eagle Hall, Musle by\nThe TROUBADOURS\nGents SOc \u2022:- Ladles 25c\n(286)\nFishermen. Remember fishing season opens May 1st The \"Big Ones\"\nare waiting for you. Get a boat from\nSeal at Balfour and try your luck.\n0191)\nWe still have a tew Spalding's Tennis Rackets on which we are allowing a 26 per cent discount. Tennis Balls, Presses, etc, Hlppersons.\n(751)\nAnnual meeting Kootenay Launch\nClub, council chamber, City Hall,\nWed., May 4. All members requested to attend. L. F. Gilbert, Commodore. (1248)\n\u2014ROSSLAND NURSERY\u2014\nWill be on the Market today with\na line of large ornamental trees as\nwell as bearing fruit trees. All acclimated stock. Also Rhododendrons\nand smaller fruit trees and a wide\nline in perennials. No. 1 Roses and\nPeonies. Phone 151, Rossland or\nP. O. Box 54. (1224)\nTickets for Nelson District Rod\n& Gun club annual banquet in Silver Room, Hume Hotel, May 12, 6:30\np.m., may be obtained from Sports\nShop, Valentine's Newsstand, or\nFleury's Drug Store. Game Commissioner Cunningham will be guest\nof honor. Make reservations early.\n(1242)\nI.O.O.F.\nAll members and visiting brothers,\nRebekahs, Theta Rho Girls requested to meet at I.O.O.F. hall 6:45 p.m,\nSunday, May 1st, for purpose of attending Divine service at St. Saviour's pro-cathedral in commemoration ot 119th anniversary Institu-\n! tion ot Oddfellowship. (1220)\nIn the Star Grocery advertisement of Friday, April 29th.' Field\nTomatoes should have read 2 Ibs. for\n39c. (1221)\n\u2014 25c    SPECIAL    25c-\nat LEDINGHAM'S, TODAY-Glazed\nDoughnuts and Silver DeLuxe Cake.\n(1240)\nFor Mother's Day\u2014Your photograph to' have with her always\u2014\nmake an appointment today at the\nVOGUE STUDIO 0157)\nBig Fish need good Tackle, Get\nyour tackle at the SPORT SHOP.\n0241)\nFlowers delivered to your Mother\nin any part of the World. Order today\u2014save telegraph charges.\u2014KOOTENAY FLOWER SHOP        0126)\nMILK\u2014Rich essential bone-building minerals for childan. \"KOOTENAY VALLEY\"- Baity, Pone- IM\n2 HOURS\nNELSON to TRAIL\nCoaches leave Nelson Daily\nfor Trail at\n9:40 a.m., 1:00 p.m., 4:45\np.m. and 7:30 p.m.\nSingle   fare  $1.65.   Return\n$3.00. Week-end $2.10.\nGreyhound Lines\nNelson 800\nTrail 642\n(237)\nrrr:\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nWALNUT TREES $1, $1.50, RASPS\n40c doz., Niagara Grapes 50c each.\nEarly Rose seed Potatoes, Strawberry plants & perennials. C,\n\u00ab\"\u25a0 \u2014-\u2022\"' *\u25a0\u25a0*        '-\"'\u25a0\"\u00bb\nRefrigerators\nToday's Biggest Bargain\nTHE NEW\n-LEONARD-\n\u2022 With the Glacier Unit\u2014Sealed\n\u2022 And Master Dial\n1 Amaiing  new  Glacier 2 Master Dial\u2014\"tunes In\"\nSealed Unit just exactly the cold you\nneed.\n3 Leonard Thermometer\u2014\ntells you temperature of 4 Arranging Shelf on door,\nfood compartment. 8 Sensations!   Ic.   Popper\n5 Zero-Freezer\u2014ice cubes Cube Release\nand desserts frozen am- y Adju|tab,e      Food . f , t\nazingly fast.\nPriced From\n\u00a7149.50\nshelves \u2014 instant room\nfor a big turkey or a\nwater melon.\n8 Leonard Crisper \u2014 keeps\nGreen-groceries    garden-\nfresh.\n9 Vegetable Bin \u2014 holds\n1 Vi bushels.\n10 Len-a-Dor Pedal\u2014opens\nthe door with a touch of\nyour toe.\nEasy Terms\nArranged\nFurniture\nPHONE 553\n441 BAKER ST.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. H. 8. ALLEN\nTRAIL, B.C., April 29-A much\nenjoyed evening was held in the\nOdd Fellows' hall Thursday, when\nthe Trail Adinah Eebekah lodge No.\n8 entertained about 200 sisters,\nbrothers and friends at their 21st\nannual roll call After \"Blest Be\nthe Tie That Binds\" was sung by\naU present, Miss Margaret Sargeant,\nnoble grand, gave a short address\not welcome, after which A. H. Webb\ncalled the roll A short program\nwas then enjoyed. Miss Eva Horwell\ndelighted' her listeners with two\nwell rendered soprano solos, One\nFleeting Hour\" and \"Ten Thousand\nYears From Now\". Mrs. E. H. Rowlands accompanied on the piano. A\nshort sketch, \"The Sewing Circle\nMeets at Mrs. Martin's\", kept the\naudience in laughter irom beginning to end. The cast included Mrs.\nPhilip Coris, as Mrs. Martin; Miss\nCleo Michaeley, Eliza, the servant;\nMrs. W. Thorndale, Mrs. Smith;\nMrs. E. Chandler, Mrs. Bunce; Mrs.\nPaul Jones, Mrs. Spruce; Miss M.\nSargeant, Mis. Badger, the minister's wile; Miss Margaret Chalmers, Mrs. Timmons; Miss Eira Davies, Mrs. Dodge; Mrs. E. J. Fowler,\nMrs. Spooner; Miss Beth Kolmar,\nMiss Peters. Mrs. A. T. Smith directed this enjoyable skit. A delicious late lunch was then served,\nduring which the lovely pink and\ngreen birthday cake, made by Mrs.\nM. L. Barnes, was cut. Following\nreireshments, a tew hours of dancing was enjoyed. The Rebekah social committee, of which Mrs. E,\nChandler, Mrs. E. J. Fowler, Mrs.\nJ. Harris and Mrs. J. Dwyer are\nmembers, were in charge of refreshments.\nAfter spending a brief holiday in\nthe city the guest of her brother and\nsister-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. G.\nRichards, Miss Evelyn Richards left\nFriday morning for her home in\nVancouver.\nMrs. Harry Elvin, Topping street,\nis a patient in the Trail-Tadanac\nhospital, where she is recovering\nfrom an operation for appendicitis.\nDr. and Mrs, O. K. Wright, Tadanac, have returned to their home\nhere after spending the past six\nweeks visiting in Toronto, Montreal\nand other eastern cities.\nPlans for a spring sale, which\nwill be held in May, were made\nThursday, when the Ladies' aid of\nEast Trail United church held their\nregular meeting in the church hall.\nDuring the social hour which followed Mrs. G. Askew and Mrs. 0.\nRobinson served refrshments. Other members present were Mrs. T. F.\nCullen, Mrs. W. Houston, Mrs. I.\nMinion, Mrs. J. McNeil, Mrs. I. E.\nBrinson, Mrs. R. E. Davis, Mis. J.\nF. Ross, Mrs. W. E. Benton, Mrs. C.\nRowe, and Mrs. S. Lennox.\nMrs. E. W. Galloway of Vancouver arrived in the city Thursday to\nspend a few days visiting her\nbrother, George McDonald, whom\nshe has not seen for 18 years.\nMr. and Mrs. Houston and then\ndaughter, Miss Margaret Houston ol\nCastlegar were in the city Thursday\nevening to attend the 21st annual\nroll call of the Adinah Rebekah\nlodge.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Verzuh and\nparty left Friday afternoon to spend\nthe week-end in Spokane. Included\nin the party were Mrs. E. Benson\nand baby son, Richard of Dawson\nCity, Yukon, who are Mr. and Mrs.\nVerzuh's houseguests.\nAltar boys 'had a social evening\nin the parish hall of the St. Francis\nY:.vi\u201er     ,.hn,Y.l,     Thm-Kflnv      tr.     Ili.l\nfarewell to \u00bbne of their most faithful altar boys, Michael Johnson, his\nsister, Margaret of the junior choir\nand brother, Herby, also an altar\nboy, who leave Monday to reside in\nRossland. An impromptu and very\nsuccessful concert was enjoyed. The\nparticipants were Miss Gemma Orlando, piano solo; Yvonne Baril,\nmilitary tap dance and Dutch dance;\nGino Catalano, vocal solo, accompanied by Eddie Catalano; Albert\nLePage, cowboy songs with guitar\naccompaniment; Robert Devito, vocal solo; Margaret Johnson, \u00bboft\nshoe tap and waltz clog; Iona Lang-\nridge, vocal solo and fast tap, accompanied on the piano by Mrs. R.\nWatson, the latter also giving piano\nselections and comic songs; Master\nEddie Catalano, piano solo. Rev.\nFather Renaudo gave a short speech\nand presented Michael with a beautiful Roman missal, to Herby a dally\nmissal and to Margaret, a beautiful\nframed picture. Throughout the program, Miss Gemma Orlando accompanied on the piano. The boys had\nseveral table tennis contests alter\nwhich refreshments were served by\nMrs. J. Woods, Mrs. H. Johnson,\nMrs. W. Baril and Miss G. Orlando.,\nWhen the circles of the Catholic\nWomen's league held their meetings\nThursday, Mrs. E. Leveque, Pine\navenue, was at home to the Nelson\navenue circle in the afternoon,\nAmong her guests were Mrs. C. Catalano, Mrs. J. Hall, Mrs. W. Gerard,\nMrs. J. Simoni, Mrs. D, Orlando, ,\nMrs. Tony Lauriente, Mrs. W.\nYoung, Mrs. A. LePage, Mrs. W,\nAitken, Mrs. A. Vennucchi, Mrs. G.\nBergeron and Mrs. W. Baril. East\nTrail circle met at the home ol\nMrs. J. Cairns Thursday evening,\nthe members present being Mrs. A.\nMillar, Mrs. C. Martin, Mrs. P. Lagan, Mrs. A. Farnum, Mrs. B. Frie,\nMrs. C. Monohan, Mrs. S. Hepworth, Mrs. W. Gaines, Mrs. R.\nLaughery, Mrs. T. Kobluck, Mrs. J.\nGuild and Mrs. H. W. Waite. Mrs.\nE. Provost entertained the Riverside\ncircle in the afternoon and numbered among her guests Mrs. P. H\nDaoust, Mrs. N. Wilmes, Mrs. S.\nHurley, Mrs. S. Walley, Mrs. E.\nMatthews, Mrs. 0. Rygh and Mrs.\nW. Sullivan. Thursday evening Mrs.\nA. Nucich entertaned the Milligan\nhill circle at a delightful card party. First prze was won by Mrs. P.\nLightbody, and sonsolation by Mrs.\nM. Buckna. Refreshments were\nserved by the hostess, who was as-\nistcd in serving by Mrs. R. R. Wylie. Mrs. Buckna's guests were Mrs,\nA. J. Kavic, Mrs. F. Laurente,\nMrs. T. H. Teahan, Mrs. W. Young,\nMrs. J. Shelling, Mrs. J. Slsel, Mrs.\nW. Fitzgerald, Mrs. A. Guzzo, Mrs.\nF. A. Hudoklin and Miss Ethel\nWebster.\nMiss Annie Martin left Friday\nmorning for Vancouver, where she\nwill spend a short Vacation.\nM. Monkhouse, Harvey Weber and\nBert Bruce returned Thursday from\nColville, where they attended a\nmeeting of the Odd Fellows' lodge.\nMELBOURNE (CP) - Bookmakers lost about \u00a340,000 ($180,000)\nwhen Ajax and Marauder won in\nthe Newmarket Handicap-Australian cup double. One bookmaker\nlaid   filOOft*- ($4000)   to   \u00a38  ($32)\n \u2014     NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C^-8ATURDAY MORNING. APRIL 80, 1933\n55^\n-P\u00bbOt THRU\nLadies' Pullovers\nKnitted of fine botany yarns, these\npullovers atop a darker skirt will give\nyou a useful outfit. Round or V-neck\nin short-sleeve style. White, djl 7Q\npastel and darker colors. .. yl.l *>\nMay Charge\nAccounts\nNow Open\nSATIN SLIPS\nPure satin slips that are as nice to wear under better dresses. Bias\ncut for perfect fit. Peach and white in six good styles. A remarkably low price for these slips. Sizes 32 to 40. <M OQ\n \u2014Second Floor HBC\nPrice\nLadies1 Cotton Crepe Gowns\nWith warmer weather you will want cooler sleeping garments. Cotton crepe gowns that retain their krinkle and need no ironing.\nWhite, peach, and blue in small, medium and large. AO\n\u2014Second Floor HBO\nPrice\nLittle Girls' Print Dresses\nGood quality cotton print dresses for the smaller\nchild. Princess and peasant styles in red, blue,\ngreen and yellow in ever so many patterns. 9Q-\nSizes 2, 4, 6 OJl\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nBabies' Broadcloth Rompers\nRoomy, well cut little rompers in fine quality\n^ broadcloth. Easy to wash anc| iron, in fast colors.\n,p     Nicely trimmed in collars an\t\ngreen, yellow, white. Sizes\n5>    Nicely trimmed in collars and cuffs. Blue,   '7Q-\ny\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nPERFECT CHIFFON HOSE\nExquisitely sheer and certainly flattering to wear!\nCradle foot and panel heel. All shades are correctly\nkeyed to the new spring ensem - \"7A-\nf bles. Sizes 8V2 to 10V2. Pair.. 131\nWOMEN'S\nCELANESE HOSE\nAn ideal stocking for morning wear.\nInexpensive yet havd the appearance\nof silk hose. All good shades to choose\nfrom. Irregulars of a better line of\nhose. Sizes 8'\/2 to IOV2. OC.\n' \u2014Main'Floor HBC\nPair\nKOTEX \"SPECIAL\"\nEconomy size, 48 to box.\nPen Box \t\n2 for\t\n87c\n?1.71\nChair Seat and\nBack Sets\nColorful cretonne coverings make these sets very\nattractive for kitchen or\nbedroom chairs. Assorted\npatterns in all colors to\nchoose from. OA\nPer Set   \u00ab\u2022'\u00ab'\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nPaper Serviettes\nAll white serviettes,\nCellophane wrap-   1A_\nped. Bundle 1UC\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nSENSATIONAL SALE OF\nENAMEL WARE\nSlightly imperfect, these useful pieces were bought at\na big discount. Smartly styled in cream with red trim. An\nunusual chance to save money.\nTEA KETTLES: Each  f 1.00\nPERCOLATORS: Each   89<\nDOUBLE BOILERS: Each   ?100\nSAUCEPANS: Each    79-p\nWINDSOR KETTLES: Each   890\nOVAL DISH PANS: Each  890\nSAUCEPAN SETS: Set   81.00\n \u2014Main Floor HBC\nFOOT STOOLS\nStrongly made in oblong shape with turned legs. The padded seat is covered with smart designs in tapestry. d\u00bb1 4A\nQuantity limited. Anniversary sale, each -j)!.*!?\nA Big Towel Value\nThe beach season is just round the corner. These towels\nare mill samples and represent values to 59c each. Wide\nvariety of colors jnd designs. OC.\nAnniversary Sale, each <** Jv\n  \u2014 8econd Floor HBC\nBABY CRIB PADS\nQuilted pads in a size 21x27. Will make the crib comfortable and protect the mattress. A{\\\u201e\nAnniversary Sale. Each    \"Jv\nCHILDREN'S UNLINED\nSUMMER SHOES\nRomp and play with cool, carefree feet. Made from pearl\nor white elk in oxford and 2 strap sandal styles. Cushion\ninsoles, leather soles, and rubber heels.\n5 to 8 8V2 to 12 12'\/2 to 3\n$1.95      $2.25      $2.50\n \u2014Main Floor HBC\nGrowing Girls' White Oxfords\nBuy them during the anniversary sale and save. Pliable\nwhite unlined elk uppers and flexible leather soles and\nheels. Rubber top lift. Sizes 3 to 8. fl|0 AO\nB to D widths ........ f.*v. \u00abP\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab'0\nMen's Tweed and\nWorsted Suits\nMen's two-pant suits, in all new spring patterns, neatly tailored in the latest styles. Suits for business, dress\nor sport wear. Suits for men of all\nbuilds,  tail's,  short's or stout.\nSizes 36 to 44\t\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\n$15-95\nMEN'S GREY\nFLANNEL PANTS\nFor an extra pair of trousers to go with that odd coat\nthere is nothing better than flannels. Medium, dark\nand light shades. Neatly tailored. (PO A\u00a3*\nSizes 30 to 44 $L.VO\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nMen's Blue Denim Pants\nHere's a value you can not afford to miss. 8 oz. blue\ndenims, double sewn, and finished with belt fl|1 AA\nloops. Sizes 30 to 44 ipl.UU\n-Main Floor HBC\nBOY'S\nJOCKEY\nSHORTS\nKnit from fine cotton yarns\nand finished in the same style\nas the men's. 9C\u00ab\nSizes 24 to 32 LOC\nCotton Comforters\nCovered with fast color washable Chintz in Floral design.\nFilled with soft cotton. Note\nthe size, 66x72. Regularly sold\nat $2.95.\nAnniversary Sale,\neach   \t\nSee These Bargains for\nREAL SUMMER WEAR\nMen's Rayon Combinations. 70*\nPrice   i\u00ab\/C\nMen's Cotton Sport Caps. OA-\nPrice   LjC\nMen's Sport Shirts. (fl AA\nPrice    ipl.UU\nBoys' Sport Shirts. CA.\nPrice DUC\n$L98\nBoy's Tweed Suits\nBoys' all wool tweed suits. Sport coat with patch pockets. Long trousers with cuff bottoms. JC AP\nSizes 24 to 32 $\\JsUO\n-Main Floor HBC\nKHUKHES\nSUNDAY, MAY 1, K. P. HALL\n'WHY ARE THERE 80 MANY CHURCHES?\"\nOnly two numbers of the series are left. Be sure to hear both.\n10 a.m.\u2014Bible Class.\nSABBATH (SATURDAY)\n11 a.m.\u2014Preaching\u2014\"I expect to Be a Christian Sometime\".\nfit itaul'0\n3taife& (Eljurrlj\nRev. T. J. S. Ferguson, Minister\nF. E. Wheeler, Organist and\nLeader of Senior Choir\nMill Eileen McKenzie\nLeader of Girls' Choir\nMrs. T. J. S. Ferguson\nLeader of Boys' Choir\n11  a.m.   and   7:30   p.m.\u2014Public\nWorship.\nMorning Theme \u2014 \"Noble Decision\u2014Then,  What?\"\nEvening  Theme\u2014\"Life for the\nFlower and Tree and Life\ntor the Soul\".\nMonday, 8 p.m.\u2014Excelsior Club\nat   Mrs.   J.   Hamson's,   309\nHouston St.\nTuesday, 7:30 p.m. \u2014 Board of\nStewards.\nTuesday. 7:30 p.m.\u2014Y.P.S. Bible\nStudy in the Manse.\n\u00a7ratt&maman\nGUjurd)\n'The Little Grey Church\nWe Love\"\nSunday School: 10 a.m.\nMorning Worship: 11 a.m.\nEvening Service: 7:30 p.m,\nMr. R. Elliot McAllister will\nspeak at all services. All services\nin English.\nALL ARE WELCOME\nBt. Snljn'a\nfttrtljpran (Eljurrlj\nStanley and Silica Streets\nRev. V. L. Meyer, Pastor\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Service in German.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Service and Sunday\nSchool in English, \"The Risen\nLord li Mindful of Hit Own\".\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Service in English,\n\"Jems the Door of tho\nSheep,\"\nA CORDIAL WELCOME\nTO ALL\nW*>|*wW^W^W^<*\u00bb****#w^w**<>#tW#>wi<\u00abtft*)WWMWWWW>^W*l\nSrinthj lluitrb\n(Eljurrlj\nJosephine and Silica Streets\nRev. J. A. Donnell, Minister\nMr. C. C. Halleran, Choirmaster\nPublic Worship at 11 a.m. and\n7:30 p.m.\nSermon subjects:\nMorning\u2014\"Fashions in Thinking\nAbout Salvation.\"\nEvening\u2014\"The Greatest Partnership.\nMorning Anthem, \"As by the\nStreams of Babylon.\" Campian-\nDett.\nSoprano soloist, Mrs. V. M.\nCampbell.\nEvening Anthem, \"O How Amiable.\" J.-H. Maunder.\nAt the close of the evening service, the Zeteo Club are sponsoring a lecture to be given by\nthe Reverend W. J. Silverwood\non \"The Function of Minorities.\" All are invited.\nThe Young People's Society\nmeets on Monday at 8 p.m.\nThe Service Club meets Monday\nat 6:45 p m. at the residence of\nMrs. Walley.\nThe Women's Association meets\nin the Church Parlor on Tuesday at 3 p.m.\nfirst (Eljurrlj of\n(Eljrust &ruutttBt\n209 BAKER STREET\nA Branch of The Mother Church,\nThe First Church  of Christ,\nScientist   in   Boston,   Mass.\nSunday School 9:45 a.m.\nSunday Service 11 a.m.\nSubject  Lessdn-Scrmon\n\"EVERLASTING\nPUNISHMENT\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nFREE READING ROOM IN\nCHURCH  BUILDING-\nAM Cordially Welcome\nMWWMIMMMMMMMM<MMAM||MMWM\nWeekvEnd Radio\ntATURDAY\nN.B.C. KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO\n590     620     640     680     920\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO   KJR   KEX   KECA   KGA\n790  970  1180  1430  1470\nCOLUMBIA   NETWORK\nKVI KOIN KNX KSL KOL\n570 940  1050  1130  1270\nDON  LEE NETWORK\n1270 k. 236.1 m.\nSeattle, KOL 5000 w.\n600 k. CJOR 4.99.7 m.\nVancouver 500 w.\n1030 k. CFCN 293.1  m.\nCalgary 10,000 w,\n4:00 P.M.\u2014\nMusic Hall (CBC)\nInk Spots, male quartet (Blue)\nSwing Club (Col.)\nBarnes' Barnstormers (Don Lee)\n4:15 P.M.\u2014\nErwin Gluckman's orch.  (Blue)\n4:30 P.M.\u2014\nReflections (CBC)\nPlay by Benjamin Lee (Blue)\nMaurice's orch. (Columbia)\nElizabeth Philharmonic symph (DL)\n5:00 P.M.\u2014\nDrama hour (CBC)\nAl Roth's orch. (Red)\nSafety first (Blue)\nLet There Be Music (Col.)\n5:15 P.M.\u2014\nThree Pals (Blue)\n5:30 P.M.\u2014\nAmerican Portraits (Red)\nStars of Tomorrow (Blue)\nNight Serenade (Col.)\n6:00 P.M.\u2014\nSymphony orch. (CBC and Blue)\nKelsey's Design for Music (Red)\nYour Hit Parade (Columbia)\nIt Does Happen Here (Don Lee)\n6:15 P.M.\u2014\nSingtime (Don Lee)\n6:30 P.M.\u2014\nFamily Party (Red)\nFrank Bull, sports (Don Lee)\n6:45 P.M.\u2014\nNews Flashes (Don Lee)\n7:00 P.M.\u2014\nNational Barn Dance (Red)\nJack Crawford's orch. (Col.)\n7:15 P.M.\u2014\nDance orch. (Don Lee)\n7:30 P.M.\u2014\nNews, Weather (CBC)\nHorace Heidt'B Brigadiers (Blue)\nJohnnie Presents  (Col.)\n7:45 P.M.\u2014\nJoe DeCourcey's orch. (CBC)\n8:00 P.M.\u2014\nOld Time Frolic (CBC)\nProfessor Quiz, Bralnbusters (Col.)\nIsham Jones' orch. (Don Lee)\n8:30 P.M.\u2014\nOn Parade (CBC)\nHotel orch. (Red)\nHerbie Kay's orch. (Blue)\nNat Brandywine's orch. (Col.)\nBob Crosby's orch. (Don Lee)\n9:00 P.M.\u2014\nGray Gordon's orch. (Blue)\nNewspaper of the Air (Don Lee)\n9:15 P.M.\u2014\nJra Garber's orch. (Don Lee)\n9:30 P.M.\u2014\nHotel orch. (Red)\nAnson Weeks (Don Lee)\n10:00 P.M.\u2014\nEarle Kelley, commentator (CBC)\nHollywood Barn Dance (Col.)\nSkinny Ennis' orch. (Don Lee)\n10:15 P.M.\u2014\nWeather and News (CBC)\n10:30 P.M.\u2014\nMart Kenney's orch. (CBC)\nBilly McDonald's orch. (Don Lee)\n10:45 P.M.\u2014\nTed Fio-Rito's orch. (Col.)\n11:00 P.M.\u2014\nPaul Carson, organist (Blue)\nLast Minute News (Blue)\nPasadena Civic Auditorium (Col.)\n11:05 P. M.\u2014\nSpud Murphy's orch. (Don Lee)\n11:30 P.M.\u2014\nJoe Saunders' orch. (Col.)\nThe Play Boys (Don Lee)\n11:45 P.M.\u2014\nMusical Program (Don Lee)\nSUNDAY\nCBC (early)\n1:00 p.m.\u2014A May Day Fantasy\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Biblical drama\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Norman McKenzie, review\n2:45 p.m.\u2014Jean de Rimanoczy's\nviolin\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Jack Benny's company\n3:30 p.m.\u2014Hart House quartet\n4:00 P.M.\u2014\nDon Ameche's Co. (CBC & Red)\nWorld Fair Music Festival (Blue)\nSt. Louis Blues (Columbia)\nWar forum, national problems (DL)\n4:30 P.M.\u2014\nLyn Murray's Musical Gazette (Col)\nSumner Prindle (Don Lee)\n4:45 P.M.\u2014\nRabbi Magnin (Don Lee)\n5:00 P.M.\u2014\nMusic hour (CBC)\nManhattan Merry-Go-Round (Red)\nBeaux Arts trio (Blue)\nSymphony Hour  (Col.)\n5:30 P.M.\u2014\nAlbum of Familiar Music (Red)\nReader's Guide (Blue)\n5:45 P.M.\u2014\nArgentineftTrio (Blue)\nLarry Funk's orch. (Don Lee)\n6:00 P.M.\u2014\nWhither Democracy (CBC)\nCarnival, music (Red)\nAll-Girl orch. (Blue)\nLud Gluskin's program (Columbia)\nThe Marines Tell It To You (DL)\n6:30 P.M.\u2014\nAlong the Danube (CBC)\nTyrone Power in drama (Red)\nCheerio,  inspirational   (Blue)\nMy Secret Ambition (Columbia)\nGood Will Hour (Don Lee)\n7:00 P.M.\u2014\nNews, weather (CBC)\nWalter Winchell, gossip (Red)\nNews (Blue)\nAbe Lyman's orch. (Col.)\nNews (Don Lee)\n7:05 P.M.\u2014\nBlue Barron's orch. (Col.)\n7:15 P.M.\u2014\nAlbert Viau, baritone (CBC)\nIrene Rich in drama (Red)\n7:30 P.M.\u2014\nSweet and Low (CBC)\nJack Benny and company (Red)\nLou Breese's orch. (Col.)\nDuke Ellington's orch.  (Columbia)\nOld Fashioned Revival (Don Lee)\n8:00 P.M.\u2014\nChamber Music (CDC)\nI Want a Divorce, drama (Red)\nHotel orch. (Blue)\nHarry Owens' orch. (Blue)\nJoe Penner and Company (Col.)\n8:15 P.M.\u2014\nJack Denny's orch. (Red)\nNames and Faces, Ira Blue (Red)\n8:30 P.M.\u2014\nSerenade in the Night (CBC)\nOne Man's Family (Red)\nJoe Hayme's orch.  (Col.)\nOzzie Nelson's orch. (Col.)\nThe River King (Don Lee)\n9:00 P.M.\u2014\nTwenty Men and a Maid (CBC)\nNight Editor (Red)\nGray Gordon's orch. (Blue)\nNews flashes (Don Lee)\n9:15 P.M.\u2014\nSouthern Harmony Four (Red)\n9:30 P.M.\u2014\nOrgan Reveries (CBC)\nHal Drieske's orch.  (Red)\nRay Keating's orch (Don Lee)\n9:45 P.M.\u2014\nWeather, News (CBC)\nUniversity Explorer (Blue)\n10:00 P.M.\u2014\nIn Recital, J. A. D. Tripp (CBC)\nNews flashes (Rea)\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nJoseph Sudy's orch. (Blue)\nClem Kennedy, piano moods (Col)\n10:15 P.M.\u2014\nBridge to dreamland, Carson (Red)\nThanks for the Memory (Columbia)\nJan Garber's orch. (Don Lee)\n10:30 P.M.\u2014\nPaul Martin's music (Blue)\nSkinny Ennis' orch. (Don Lee)\n10:45 P.M.\u2014\nNat Brandywine's orch. (Col)\n11:00 P.M.\u2014\nCamel Craig's orch. (Red)\nCharles Runyan, organ (Blue)\nLast Minute News (Blue)\nJoe Saunders' orch. (Columbia)\nWeather report (Don Lee)\n11:01 P.M.\u2014\nSpud Murphy's orch. (Don Lee)\n11:15 P.M.\u2014\nMusic As You Desire It (Blue)\n11:30 P.M.\u2014\nReveries, instrumental (Red)\nLes Parker's orch. (Columbia)\nMidnight Moods (Don Lee)\nSocial. . .\nMOYIE\nMOYIE, B. C.\u2014Mr. and Mrs. H.\nMcAlpine and son Fraser have returned to Trail. They were accompanied by Mrs. McAlpine sr. of\nTrail.\nThe April meeting of the Ladies'\naid was held at the home of Mrs.\nErnest Danielson Tuesday.\nThe first shipment of ore from\nthe Leask property, Aldridge, was\nloaded and sent to Trail smelter\nlast week.\nMr. and Mrs. Adams, Mr. and Mrs.\nErnest Danielson and Andy Johnson went by car to Kimberley Wednesday.\nMrs. Helen Lane, Miss Betty Lane\nand Mrs. Nelson, all of Kimberley,\nand Magistrate Leask and Jack\nLeask of Cranbrook were Sunday\nguests at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nBabe Leask here.\nMrs. R. A. Smith, Mrs. Scott, Mrs.\nNelson Smith and Mrs. J. Whitehead spent Saturday afternoon at\nCranbrook.\nMrs. O. Grondahl was \"at home\"\nat tea. Guests were Mrs. McCagherty, Mrs. R. A. Smith, Mrs. Nelson\nSmith,   Mrs.   P.   N.   Conrad,   Mrs.\nCottonwood Falls In Nelson\nFoundations are now going in for the provincial fish hatchery,\nin the vicinity of this pretty cataract, and shortly Cottonwood Park\nwill be added to Nelson's municipal park system, which at present\ncomprises Lakeside park, Gyro park, the tourist park, and the City\ncemetery.\nBraiden, Mrs. Booke, Mrs. McAlpine and Miss Finley.\nOwing to the heavy rainfall, men\nwere called out to near washouts\nalong the highway during Sunday\nand Monday nights.\nAn Easter Monday social dance\nwas held in the community hall.\nVisitors from Kimberley were Albert Almack, Miss Gloria Whitehead and Joni Thorlicfson; from\nCranbrook, Mr. and Mrs. Harry\nMoore, Bill and Peggy Moore and\nJack Farrell.\nMrs. \"Scotty\" Fraser, Kimberley,\nvisited her father, Daniel Dupont,\nhere Sunday.\nMr. Jones and Mr. Stone nf Kimberley were visitors to Moyie Sunday.\nGet Your Job In the \"Want Ads\"\nRossland Social..\nBy MRS. B. B. FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, B.C.-The Catholic\nWomen's league held an enjoyable\ncard party Monday evening. Mrs.\nJohn Milligan was convener. She\nwas assisted by Mrs. J. R. Bryan,\nMrs. Peter Corrado, Mrs. George\nDyson and Mrs. Thomas Fourt. For\ncontract the prizes went to Mrs. M.\nE. Fleury and George Dyson; for\nauction to Mrs. J. Gendle and Patrick Prestley and for whist to Miss\nWinnie Grlgg and Msgr. A. K. Maclntyre.\nLouis Rossi is holidaying ai Grand\n________________________________________\nI is holidaying AC\nm\nForks.\nMr. and Mrs. Ray Underwood\nhave taken up residence at Blueberry.\nMrs. R. J. Kennedy and little\ndaughter of Bonnington are visiting\nMr. and Mrs. T. White.\nMiss Alice Starchuck spent the\nweek-end at her home in Grand\nForks.\nMrs. Gordon Ezart and daughter\nConnie left Wednesday for Vancouver, where they will spend the next\nsix weeks.\nSEEK TO STIMULATE\nCANADA'S ECC TRADE\nOTTAWA, April 29 (CP)\u2014Seeking to stimulate Canada's egg trade\nwith the United Kingdom, the trade\nand commerce department and Canadian exporters are arranging for a\ntie-up between the Dominion's display of eggs at the Glasgow exhibition next month and commercial\nshipments of fresh eggs arriving in\nBritain at the exhibition's opening.\nSand\nAND\nGravel\nfor All\nBuilding\nPurposes\nPHONE 701\nFAIRVIEW\nFUEL CO.\n ~~\n1 \"1PIWMWI\nmm\nwM^mwwfww?w<\nPAGE FOUR\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NEL8CN. B.C-SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL 30. 19M\nHAWTHORNE RECALLS YOUTH WITH\n'\u25a0 ~Z~.  ^   \u00ab^_ ~\n;For Small Child .\nAuthors Agree\nThai Selective\nSpanking Wise\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, PH. D.\nWhen, in 1930, I advocated selec-\n' tlve spanking of young children in\nmy book, \"The Modern Parent,\" I\nalmost became an outcast among\nprofessional parent educators. Five\nyears earlier, in \"The Learner and\nHis  Attitude,\" a book  addressed\n\u25a0 to teachers, I first expressed in\nprint this point of view, though I\n''had been uttering it from the platform for years. Being the first in\nthe field to express such \"outrageous doctrine,\" on account of which\nsome influential writers assigned\nme to the Dark Ages, and some university professors ignored or proscribed my books, I have consistently\nadvocated selective spanking in the\nearly years to train in the meaning\nof no.\nA few years ago another author\njoined me in this point of view. In\nthis column I told you about that\nauthor and her book, \"Common\nSense for Mothers,\" by Mrs. John\nKeilly. Then there were two of us.\nNow there are three. Elizabeth B.\nHurlick, Ph. Dd., in her book,\n\"Modern Ways with Babies\" says:\n\"During Ihe pre-school years an\noccasional use of corporal punishment, such as rapping the fingers\nor spanking, is of value. Before the\nbaby is able to understand words,\nthere is no way in which you can\nactually associate unpleasant meanings with behaviour you wish to\neliminate except through the use ol\nsome form of pain. So if you choose\nto use this form of punishment, do\nnot do so before the second year.\n... Likewise it should be used very\nrarely after the age of three or four\nyears.\"\n, ' I would say that as soon as the\nchild begins to move about and\nface danger is the time lo use spank-\n\u25a0 ing to train in specific inhibitions.\nIn agreement with Dr. Hurlick, 1\nshould like to see spanking completed by the age of four. 1 would\nnot, however, say as she does, that\nit should be used as a \"last resort.\"\nThis last resort business is hazardous. It usually means the time when\nneither the parent is fit to punish\n-nor the child fit to profit from it.\nI prefer deliberated planning, with\nboth parents acting as one.\nThen, as I have said repeatedly\nin this column, there are hundreds\nof situations in which spanking is\nnot desirable\u2014such as for getting\ntte child to do what you want him\nto do, as a rule, and in practically\nall situations connected with eating\nand elimination.\nUse Decorative Fruit\nTrees on Fence\nTurning * fence Into an orchard\nThe desire for  protective fenc-\n. Ing about the garden and home is\nincreasing year  by  year,  due  to\nthe wish for privacy and seclusion,\nAs shown in this Garden-Graph,\nISBI\/SSh.\n0\u00bb2mmt\nNEW SUITS FOR\nJUNIOR MISS\nSeason s Debutante and College\nGirl Models Cleverly Designed\nin Styles That Are Versatile\nBy LISBETH\nThere's a fine swing and a nice\nyouthful softness in the spring suits\nfor the junior miss. Fabric accent\nfor the season's conts and suits is\nplaced on light weight materials\nthat drape easily and in keeping\nwith the dressmaker trend.\nFine woollens such as twills \u2014\nboth corded and plain \u2014 wool\ntweeds and fine men's wear worsteds and flannels, take precedence\namong those favored.\nNicely adapted to sleek, slim tailoring, these fabrics are practical\nas well as comfortable and smart.\nThe bright young thing's spring\nbudget is apt to be limited, although that never seems to \"cramp\nher style,\" as far as her numerous\nactivities go. So this season's debutante and college girl suits have\nbeen cleverly designed in styles that\nare delightfully adaptable and versatile,\nADAPTABLE FOR\nVARIED COSTUME8\nJacket and skirt costumes in navy,\nthe numerous grays, reddish browns\nand lighter spring colors are smartly\ncut to be worn for any number Of\noccasions. The same suit that is attractive in the country with a sporting wool sweater and sturdy brogues\nmay be teamed with a candy striped shirtwaist and tailored shoes\nand,be equally appropriate for town\nwear. For dressier moments it will\nbe youthful and flattering with a\nsheer, ruffly blouse and formal accessories.\nThe wisdom of all this is illustrated by the two models shown here,\nBrief and slightly fitted, these suit*\nare exceptionally flattering to the\nyoung figure in square cut types\nof jacket with notched collars and\nbroad lapels; or they have a gay\ngaucho atmosphere that is smartly\ncasual in feeling. Or they may be\ncollarless, with the new rounded\nfront effect which follows the line\nof the jacket, after the fashion of\nthe embroidered jacket worn by\nSpanish matadors.\nBOLEROS ARE TOPS\nBoleros, of course, are tops. The\nsuit shown right is in dark gray\nmen's wear wool flannel, with\nslightly flared skirt and waist-\nlength bolero. Tor town wear a\nstriped shirtwaist tucks inside the\nskirt, The bolero is sharply squared with high, notched revert and\ncollar edged witli self-stitching.\nDeep gray also was chosen for\nthe smart little suit at the left.\nThis material also is men's wear\nwool flannel. The collarless jacket\nis new this season and this one\nbuttons smartly up the front with\na close-set row oi bright silver buttons. It has four flapped crescent\npockets which add fashion interest.\nThe accompanying short-sleeved\nblouse is white linen, with a childish Peter Pan collar which is worn\noutside the collarless jacket to\ngive an attractive white accent.\nthe metal chain link type of fencing, often found about tennis courts\nand large estates, can be made more\ndecorative by training espalier fruit\ntrees on it. This is advisable only\nwhere the fencing is in the open, so\nthat the sun can reach the fruit\ntrees.\nTrees trained in this manner will\nbe interesting at all seasons, but\nthey are especially beautiful when\nin bloom and when fruit-laden.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nPerennials which are subject to\nfungus diseases, such as hollyhocks,\nphloxes, foxgloves, delphiniums and\naconites, should have a dusting\nwith dry Bordeaux powder just as\nsoon as growth starts, and this\ntreatment repeated at ten-day to\ntwo-week intervals.\nLACK of MINERALS\nCAUSES DISEASE\nThe famous author, Rex Beach, some time ago published a very\ninteresting article explaining this vital matter, also, the discovery\nmade by a famous Physician, Charles Northen, M.D., regarding the\nlack of Mineral salts in our every day foods, and the consequent\nserious effect on human health.\nNO MAN CAN EAT ENOUGH\nMost people think that all fruits and vegetables contain the necessary nutritive properties for health and vigor, but the fact Is as\npointed out by Rex Beach, no man can ent enough fruits and vegetables to supply his system with the Minerals required to maintain\nperfect health.\nFOOD DEMINERALIZED\nMineral-salts as supplied by Nature are the foundation of all life\nand vitality in the human body, and it is a scientific fact that millions of acres of land on which fruits, grains and. vegetables are\ngrown is deficient in these vital elements, the result being that our\nbodies are actually starving for these Mineral substances which\nform the whole basis of the cell structure.\nMOTHER NATURE DOES PROVIDE\nThe genuine healing and vitalizing action of Mineral Medicinal\nSprings has been known for centuries\u2014both sis a preventative\nagainst disease and in giving definite relief from various ailments\nin the human body. People travel across Continents on the advice\nof Physicians, to take advantage of these Springs,\nLANG'S MINERAL ii NOT a patent medicine\nIt has been used for over fifty years, and has proven s blessing to\nthousands of people after years of suffering, by assisting Nature to\ndo her own wonderful work in the human body. Don't suffer with\nindifferent health. Write us for free information.\nLang's Mineral Remedies\n916 ROBSON STREET VANCOUVER, B. C.\n\u25a0  \u25a0' ...\nALCOTTS IN MEMOIRS\nNext-Door Neighbor of Louisa May\nAlcotf Tells of Youth in Concord\nLeft: gray men's wear wool flannel suit; right, bolero Jacket suit In\nmens' wear wool flannel.\nFor Every Type . . .\nDelicate (olors Are Worn by Ihe\n1938 Spring Brides al Style Show\nBy JULIET SHELBY\nFor the fragile type of very young\n1938 spring bride, a dress of softest\nflesh pink mousseline de soie with\ntouches of real jasmin flowers in\nclusters on the full skirt, which was\nheld out by a regular hoop, was\nshown in a recent fashion show for\nbrides. This gown was inspired by\npictures seen of the Jenny Lind\nperiod. The flowers were arranged\ninto a muff of tiny jasmin flowers\nrelieved by delicate sprays of maid-\nModel for 1938 spring bride\nen hair fern.  She wore jasmin perfume. Her makeup was: coral rouge\nand blue eyeshadow and dark blue\nmascara.\nMODERN BRIDE'S DRESS\nThe classic bride wore a dress of\npale lilac chiffon, inspired by lovely designs of Grecian and Empire\ncostumes, and trimmed with ethereal touches of moonstone on dress\nand veil. Her flowers were a design of lilies of the valley arranged\nin a delicate graceful rope such as\nused at ancient Grecian wedding\nceremonies, and carried over the\narm. Her perfume was lily of the\nvalley. Her makeup was light rachel\npowder, cyclamen rouge and lipstick, military blue eye shadow and\nviolet mascara. The bridesmaids\nworea -jjelicatc shade of blue chiff-\na tiny arrangement of real flowers\nin a deep cyclamen shade. The flowers for these bridesmaids were also\nmade rope fashion with pink carnations, lavender lace flowers and\nwere caught at the wrist with a Cat-\ntleya orchid. Their makeup was\nrachel powder, red rouge and lip-\nslick with a slight bluish undertone\ngray eyeshadow.\nThe modern bride wore a dress\nof lustrous pale ivory satin draped\nin soft folds and trimmed with net,\nThe flowers had been arranged in\na pinnacle bouquet of gardenias\nand tied with soft satin ribbon. Her\nperfume was gardenia. Her makeup was: ivory powder, blush rose\nrouge and lipstick, blue green eye\nshadow and dark brown mascara.\nThe flower girl was dressed in a\ndelicate shade of violet mousseline\nde soie trimmed with rosy crimson.\nThe flowers had been arranged in\na small Dolly Varden basket held at\nthe wrist with twisted velvet ribbons in pastel colors blending with\nthe miniature flowers. The page\nboy was dressed in a formal black\nEton suit. He wore a tiny white\ngardenia in his buttonhole.\nThe sophisticated type of bride\nwore a dress of cameo net, delicately embroidered at the neckline\nand on the bodice. The veil was\narranged turban fashion, and caught\nat the side with two real orchids.\nThe flowers were white Cattleya\norchids with purple lips and were\narranged in a hand spray. Her\nmakeup was red rouge and lipstick with a blue undertone, light\nrachel powder, violet eye shadow\nand black mascara. Tne bridesmaids wore cyclamen colored net\ndresses. The hats made of a matching shade were trimmed i. a lovely\ndeep tone of blue. The flowers had\nbeen arranged in a sheaf made of\ntiny miniature calla lilies tinted on\nthe inside with blue powder Their\nmakeup was: light rachel powder,\nred rouge and lipstick with a blue\nundertone, deep blue eyeshadow\nand dark blue mascara.\nWOULD TAX UNMARRIED\nMEN, WOMEN IN CANADA\nTOHONTO, April 29 (CP) \u2014 A\nspecial poll tax on bachelors and\nspinsters\u2014who dodge their duty by\nfailing to raise families on which\nCanada can raise taxes\u2014was suggested before the Rowell Contusion today by the Ontario School\nTeachers' and Ratepayers' association.\nFOR THE SERIAL\nSEE PAGE RIVE\ncHhdL goA.\ndfauMWWSLL\nBy  MRS.  MARY  MORTON\nMENU HINT\nLUNCHEON\nToasted Cheese Sandwiches\nStewed Rhubarb or Other Fruit\nCookies Milk\nDINNER\nBaked Ham Creamed Cabbage\nMashed Potatoes\nRye Bread Radishes\nStrawberry Cream Tarts        Coffee\n\"Bread is the staff of life,\" says\nthe Bible, and isn't it true, in spite\nof reduction diets and whatnot? I\nrecently read a physician's article\nin which he gave very excellent\nreasons why bread is a a. od food\nfor everyone. This real Bohemian\nrye bread recipe Is given by Mrs.\nF. E. Jankovsky, and I hope it is\none you have been looking for for\nsome time.\nTODAY'S RECIPE8\nREAL BOHEMIAN RYE BREAD\n\u2014Three cups warm water, two table\nspoons salt, one-half yeast cake, six\ncups rye flour, one tablespoon or\nmore caraway seed, two cups white\nflour. Add salt to warm water,\ncrumble in yeast, add half rye\nflour and let rise until light and\nbubbly, then add rest of rye flour,\nthe white flour and the seeds.\nKnead well and let rise until double\nI- U..1K.   Bk.\u00ab ,<-... M.....i I~~* \u2014.,4\nplace in round pan, ten inches across\nand four inches deep. Let rise to\ntop of pan and bake in 400-degree\noven ten minutes. Reduce to 300\ndegrees and bake 40 minutes more.\nRemove from pan and brush top\nwith water or shortening. If a blended rye flour is used, omit white\nflour and add more rye.\nSTRAWBERRY CREAM TARTS\n\u2014Bake tart shells, using rich pastry\nand baking it over the backs of\ntart muffin pans. Make a cream pie\nfilling. When shells and filling are\ncool, put filling into shells and arrange perfect, fresh strawberries over the top. Put a dash of whipped\ncream on the berries when serving.\nNEW YORK, April 29 (CP) -\nJulian Hawthorne In his \"Memoirs\" goes back to the boy of 14\nwho had been allowed to go with\nThoreau the naturalist on his woodland and riverside wanderings. Water lilies on the Concord River, when\ngreeting the sun's rays were de-\ncldely worth seeing the boy was\ntold.\nJulian and next-door Abbie Al-\ncott, Louisa May's younger sister,\nwere then bosom friends and determined to tee Ute down-born water lilies together. Since Abbie was\na late sleeper, she tied a string to\nher ankle and hung the other end\nout of the window so that Julian\nmight rouse her at the proper hour\nby pulling the cord. The magic\ncord worked, .\nAbbie appeared in still dark Concord, clad in white muslin: the\ntwo made their way to the river.\nSure enough, they saw the lilies\nopen; and Abbie delighted, leaned\nout of the punt to pick an opening\nbud\u2014and Abbie and Julian promptly learned how deep was the black\nConcord River mud in which the\nlilies had their roots.\nSuch were Julian Hawthorne's\nmemories, set down 75 after the events. He remembered Louisa May\nAlcott, at 28 still a \"black-haired,\nred-cheeked, long-legged hobblede-\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nSays She Cares...\nWife Shows Him\nNo Affection Is\nMan's Complaint\nWhat ls love? asks a man who\nalso suggests that I use that for\nhis signature. This man has been\nmarried 23 years and is in his forties. He and his wife have five\nchildren.\nAbout eight months after their\nmarriage, he says, he and his wife\nhad a \"little trouble\", and lt has\nsteadily been getting worse year\nafter year.\nHis wife says she loves him, but\nshows him no affection whatever,\npays no attention when he is ill.\nHe is at home almost every night,\nhe writes, doesn't drink or smoke\ncigarets, and only a cigar once in\nawhile. 'I get up in the morning\nand get breakfast ( wash out my\nshirt and overalls every Saturday,\noften help to mop the floor, wash\ndishes, always sew my own buttons\non and use the sewing machine\nto sew my overalls and all my\nsewing.\"\nHe has tried to coax her to change\nher ways, but she will not. If they\ngo to spend the evening with\nfriends, she will not speak to him\nall evening; when they ree'ently\nwent on a 150-mile trip with his\nnephew, this wife never once spoke\nto her husband.\nI wish I could look Into your\nwife's heart and find out why she\nact as she does. There are people,\nI am sorry to say, who never forgive a hurt. It may be your wife\nIs this type. You offended her early\nin your married life and she has\nnever forgotten or forgiven. This is\nonly a guess, of course. She may\nhave a thousand things against you.\nSuch people are sure they are Justified In their attitude.\nYou say you have coaxed and\npleaded with your wife to be more\naffctionate and appreciative, and\nshe refuses to change. Then I would\nstop If I were you. You certainly\n 1\t\ndo more than your share of the\nwork, besides supporting five children and the wife you do your own\nsewing and help with the housework. I can't see that it is fair that\nyou should do so much, but that,\nof course is your affair.\nThe only thing I can tell you Is\nto make up your mind that demonstrative love is not for you. Your\nwife may love you In her way, as\nshe says, but maybe it isn't natural\nfor her to show it. Some can't.\nThen take it for granted and stop\nfeeling sorry for yourself. Maybe\nyour children, your daughter, especially, will help make up the lack\nof affection in your life. And it is\njust possible that if you no longer\ncoax your wife to love you she will\ntear she Is losing your love and\nmake more of an effort to please\nyou.\nSocial...\nBOSWELL\nBOSWELL, B.C, \u2014 Ralph, Frank,\nGeorgie, Floyd and John Oliver and\nHarold Mortimer were in Boswell\nfrom Gray Creek Monday.\nRev. C. Harvey was a guest of\nMrs. I. Lewis for the week-end. He\nconducted evensong and Holy Communion at Boswell Sunday evening,\nand took a service at Sanca Monday\nMrs. F. M. Hughes ot Queen's\nBay, formerly of Boswell, arrived\nMonday to spend the holiday week\nas a guest of Mrs. I. Lewis,\nMiss Rita Wall, who teaches at\nErickson, is at home to spend the\nholidays with her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. T. Wall, La France Creek.\nMies Florence Jeffries of Nelson\nis a guest of Mr. and Mrs. M. Mac-\nGrefor.\nMiss Betty Jones of Nelson is visiting Mr. and Mrs. D. V. West.\nBill Affleck of Nelson is a guest\nof Peter Hepher for a few days.\nBill and Harold Mieir of Blairmore, are guests of their grandparents, Mr and Mrs. Carl Mieir.\n. Mr. and Mrs. A. Kennedy have as\ntheir guests, their daughter, Mrs.\nW. L. Hunter, of Lumberton, ahd\n*her two children, Alice and Graeme.\nBuy or tell with a Classified Ad.\nhoy\" though with power In her\njaw, control In her black eyet and\ngood nature In her generous mouth.\nHe remembered old Bronton Alcott\nas a. seedy small-eyed talker. He remembered swimming in Walden\nPond with all the Emersons, all\nthe Alcotts and all the Hawthornes,\nthe women clad In blue flannel\nbathing suits from neck to ankle\u2014\nand Louisa, typically upsetting the\nboat and tearing her own blue flannels from knee to thigh.\nDONT TAKE!\nCHANCES\nINSIST ON\nGENUINE\nO-CEDAR\n1^ Don't yoti accept substituted\nO-Curfnr Polish protects\nproserves your furniture. Insist on genuine\nO-Cedar, favorite\ntbe world\nover for\n. 30 years.\nONI\nQ(edar\nYour Grocer Sells It\n\u2666\nBRAND\nEVAPORATED\nMILK\nPure ai the\nSnow on\nMountain\nPeaks.\nLISTEN, MOTHER !r\nTHERE'S A BIRD\nSINGING IN OUR TRtt!\nIT MUST BE SPRING!\nYES, DEAR, AND IT'S\nTIME TO CHANGE TO\nCRISPNESS. WE'LL\nHAyE KELLOGG'S CORN\nHAKES FOR BREAKFAST.\nYour family is hungry for crispness. Everybody's tired of the winter routine\u2014hot, heavy\nmeals day after day. That's why Kellogg's\nCorn Flakes taste twice as good this time\nof year.\nFill the bowls with those perfectly toasted\nflakes, and pour on milk or cream. You'll\nsmack your lips over their delicious flavor\u2014\ntheir crunchy crispness, as refreshing as a\nspring breeze!\nKellogg's are ready to serve. Rich in energy.\nQuickly digested. Order several packages from\nyour grocer today.\nKellogg's Corn Flakes are always oven-\nfresh in the patented waxtitk inner bag.\nMatchless flavor and crispness. Many generous\nservings for a few cents. Made by Kellogg in\nLondon. Ont.\nKELLOGG'S\nfor EXTRA FLAVOR-\nEXTRA CONVENIENCE\n --\u00bb>\u25a0\u25a0: :,-\u25a0\u25a0\nmmmm\nmmrnmrnw^mm\nSoO\nIn Last Few Years ...\nMany Diseases\nHave Vanished\nor Seldom Seen\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, B. D.\nModern doctors arc completely\nunfamiliar with such diseases as\ncholera, yellow fever, bubonic\nplague and many other diseases\nwhich were commonpla* lo the\ndoctors of 50 or 100' years ago in\nAmerica. They have disappeared. It\nis easy to understand why these arc\nrarities today: they were infectious\ndiseases and their disappearance has\nbeen due to improvements In sanitation, mosquito and. insect control\n\u2014yellow fever and malaria arc carried by insects: cholera and typhoid\nfever are carried by infected water.\nMore curious and, in fact, inexplicable, is 'the disappearance oi\ndiseases which are not infectious\nin origin. For instance, chlorosis,\na form of anemia in young girls,\nthat used to be frequent\u2014it has\npractically disappeared from the\nface of the earth and nobody knows\nwhy.\nIn the same category is a form\nof goiter with staring eyeballs and\nrapid pulse, which is known as\n\"exophthalmic goiter.\" This is not\non infectious disease and, in fact,\nnobody knows the cause, and yet\nIt seems that about 15 or 20 years\nago we were in the midst of a\nworld-wide epidemic of exophthalmic goiter and apparently now it\nhas almost disappeared.\nPHYSICIAN INVE8TIGATE8\nThe late Dr. Henry Plummer ol\nthe Mayo Clinic noticed this and\ninvestigated the situation to make\nsure. He drove around to all the\nsmall towns within a radius of 200\nmiles of the Mayo Clinic, called on\nthe busiest doctors in each town,\nand asked them whether they had\nuny cases of this disease. He founo\nthat it had almost disappeared in\nthe countrvside.\nThat this is not a local condition\nis shown by a report which I have\nheard from Vienna. A visiting student at the great Vienna medical school asked to see some patients\nwith exophthalmic goiter. \"I do not\nhave them any more,\" exclaimed\nthe physician. \"In the old days\u2014ten\nyears ago\u2014when I wanted to show\nsome in my clinic I sent to Dr. X,\nthe surgeon. He always had a supply\non hand, cases he was preparing\nfor operation. Now he has none. He\nhas not operated on a case for two\nmonths,\"\nncLsun daily news, nbloun, d.o.\u2014saiuisimy munmnu, akmil w. w\u00bb\nSEEKS PROBE OF\nSOCIAL SECURITY ACT\nWASHINGTON, April 29 (AP)\n\u25a0- President Roosevelt asked the\nsocial security board today to study\nmethods of. improving the social\nsecurity act including liberalization and extension of the old ago\nbenefit system.\nIGNORE REQUEST\nOF PRESIDENT\nWASHINGTON, April 29 (AP)\n\u2014The United States house ef representatives rules committee, ignoring President Roosevelt's insistence\non enactment of wage-hour legislation at \"this session, refused today\nlo grant the revised wage-hour bill\nright-of-way to the house floor.\nWEEK-END\nSPECIALS AT\nLowery's\nEUREKA BLEACH-\n2 bottles \t\n250\nJOHNSON'S LIQUID WAX-\nExtra 5 oz. in tin at,    *CA\nper tin  ***Y\nA complete range of\nstyles and sizes.\nR. ANDREW\nand Company\nLeaders in Footfashion\nExclusive  Dealers\nFRY'S COCOA\u2014\nVs lb\t\nAYLMER   PEA8-\nCholcc quality 5's; tin.\nAPRICOT8\u2014Malkln's\nBest; per tin \t\nEGGS\u2014Grade A-\nLarge, Local; 2 dot....\n8ALMON \u2014 Sockeye, Rotary\nBrand, '\/a's; ICA\nper tin  ****\nALL-BRAN\u2014Kel\nloss's; per pkt. ...\nCAKE FLOUR-Anna  33A\nLee Scott's; per pkt ataVY\nm\nm\nm\n550\n221\nSUGAR-B.C.\n20\nIbs\t\nGranulated;\n$1*29\nNEW CABBAGE-\nFlrm heads; 3 Ibs.\niAwUKWER20|!25(!\nCELERY\u2014Well bleach-\ned; 2 Ibs\t\nASPARAGUS\u2014Fresh;\n2 Ibs.\t\nBEETS, CARROTS,\nTURNIPS\u20143 bunches.\n25*\nm\n290\n250\nORANGES\u2014Sweet\nand juicy; 3 doz\t\nm\nPeek Frean's Biscuits Always\nIn Stock\nPhone 406 Free Delivery\nTURKO-PERSIAN RUG CO.\nExclusive Repairing, Weaving and Cleaning\nAll Makes of Rugs\nOur service is used by insurance adjusters and rug dealers.\nWc renapc all worn out napes with original shades of yarns.\nAll Work Done by Native Experts.\nOUT-OF-TOWN ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION.\n2113 GRANVILLE ST.\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nButcherteria News\nSATURDAY and MONDAY SPECIALS\nROLLED ROAST BEEF   25(J\nPOT ROAST BEEF- fAA\nUp from, Ib **V\nROUND ROAST BEEF\u2014 22<J\nRUMP ROAST BEEF\u2014Lb.\n2O0and220\nOVEN VEAL ROAST\u2014      |gjj\nFILLET VEAL ROAST\u2014 2g(J\nPORK  OVEN  ROA8T\u2014   JC-f}\nPORK LEG ROAST- *QA\nSHOULDER LAMB- i%OA\nRolled on request; Ib.  *oy\nPURE LARD\u2014In cartons;  f fijj\nONTARIO  STILTON <yCA\nCHEESE\u2014Lb  **Y\nEGGS\u2014Grade A-Large;     CCA\n2 doz  **r\nVEAL STEAK- 2_\\*\nTENDER MADE HAMS- I'M\nHalf or whole; Ib JSr\nSIRLOIN  STEAK\u2014\nLb\t\nROUND STEAK\u2014\nLb\t\nPORK CHOPS\u2014\nLb\t\nBREAKFAST SAUSAGE\nLb\t\nBABY BEEF LIVER-\n2 Ibt. \t\nBOILING BEEF\u2014\nLb\t\niVANCOUVER  MUSHROOMS\u2014Lb. \t\nSPOKANE COTTAGE\nCHEE8E-Lb\t\nPORK PIES-\n4 for \t\nSPICED HAM\u2014\nLb\t\nPOTTED MEAT\u2014\nLb\t\nBREAKFAST  BACON-\nSllced; Ib\t\n290\n240\n340\nW\n25<\nW\n280\n-Oven freih; 28*}\n450\n200\n400\n(reston Choral Society Concert\nDelicto Wilh Ambitious Program\nCRESTON, B. C. - A large and\nappreciative audience greeted Creston Choral Soelety at their concert at the Catholic hall, Tuesday\nevening. This was the second appearance of the season and a pleasing improvement was noted in the\nnumbers submitted by Ihe choristers; with the program, as a whole\nconsiderably more ambitious and\nuniformly well rendered.\nThe designers of tho musical menu\nof ten double items arc lo be commended on excellent judgment\nshown In the selection of the various numbers, all of which combined merit with quite a wide popularity that seldom failed to arouse\nan enthusiastic reception.\nThe outstanding items of the program were provided by the full\nchorus, which submitted \"Dancing\non the Green,\" \"Bells of St. Mary,\"\n\"Going Home,\" \"Perfect Day,\"\n\"Now the Day Is Over,\" and \"Open\nthe Gates of the Temple,\" with the\nlatter the pick of the half dozen,\njudging by the more vigorous applause it elicited.\nMrs. W. H. Kolthammer and Miss\nFrances Knott, who are to be heard\nat the Kootenay festival, favored\nwith \"I Saw a Ship a Sailing,\" and\n\"Little Dutch Lullaby,\" Both were\ngiven a finished rendition; the\nlatter accorded the premier Honors\nby the audience.\nNelson Ball's solo offerings. \"Floral Dance\" and \"Deep River\" were\nnotable contributions to the night's\nofferings. \"Deep River,\" particularly, was interpreted with adequate\nexpression and excellent tonal quality.\nPossibly, due to the popularity of\ntheir numbers, the men's quartette\npresenting \"All Through the Night\"\nand \"Home on the Range\" and made\nup of Ed Erickson, Charles Kolthammer, Arthur Dodd and Alfred\nMoores, shaded the mixed foursomes of Misses Ethel VanAcker-\nen and Nan Armstrong, and Messrs.\nDodd and Erickson, who presented \"God Is a Spirit\" and \"Serenade.\"\nThe audience was favored with\ninstrumental numbers, Miss Dorothy Olivier officiating at the piano and Alfred Moores with the\nviolin, Both were generously applauded.\nMiss Nan Armstrong made her\ndebut as a vocalist in \"Shepherd's\nCradle Song\" and \"In the Heart of\nthe Hills,\" Mr. Moores assisting with\na violin obligato, both numbers receiving a cordial greeting.\nMuch of ihe credit for the all\nround success of the musicale is\naccorded Mrs. Nelson Ball, accompanist and conductor, who has been\nin charge of the society since last\nfall only. The efficiency shown by\nthe group of 40 voices constitutes a\nmusical triumph of which Creston\npeople feel she may be justly pi'oud,\nand whose ability and willingness\nin this connection is very much appreciated by the community.\nF. V. Staples presided, and at\nintermission spoke in praclictl\nfashion of the splendid service\nIhe society is rendering and bespoke the unstinted support of Ihe\nvalley's considerable army of music lovers.\nThe stage was attractively decorated with potted plants and cut\nflowers. Choral society members\nand friends enjoyed a few hour's\ndancing after the program.\nNELSON Social..\nBy MR8 M. J. VIGNEUX-\n\u2022   A museum tea given by St.      \u2022   Mrs, Graham of Park Siding\nSaviour's W.A. Thursday afternoon [spent yesterday in the city.'\nOYAMA SCHOOL WINS\nCUP MUSICAL FESTIVAL\nVERNON, B. C, April 29 (CP)-\nOyama public school won the De-\nbeck cup for the rural and small\nschool choir championship at the\nOkanagan  Valley musical festival.\nDagmar Horry of Vernon won\nthe young vocalist class and combined with Margaret MacDonald of\nVernon to win tlie vocal open duet\nclass.\n;erial Story . . .\nOne More Weddingl\nBy HELEN WELSHIMER\nPhones 527 .ind 528\nFree Delivery\n-^\u2014^\u2014*_*&______\nCHAPTER 22\nRiding back to her office, after\nNatalie's wedding, Barbara consoled herself with the thought that she\nhad nothing new about which to\nfeel badly. It did not help. Garry, in\nthe flesh, had made tho wound\nthrob anew. She reminded herself\nthat work was greater than love;\nand that it stayed with you; and\nforthwith began a new series of\nfairy tales. Tne winged cow would\nnot fly, though, and the speckled\npig kept losing his roller skates\nand the kitten's laic got tangled in\na red hoop.\nShe counted the days until Garry's\nNew York opening. It would link\nher to him again. It would break\nher heart, too, but that didn't matter.    .\nWhile she waited Peter\u2014her tousled, beloved young managing editor\nat Martinsville\u2014dropped in one day.\nHe came to her office in' the late\nafternoon.\n\"Peter!\" Her eyes and mouth flew\nupward, and her hands went out lo\nhim. \"Oh, I didn't know anyone\ncould be so glad to see another!\"\nPeter had a new suit and overcoat. His face, rugged and homely, smiled down\" at Tier.\n\"Busy tonight?\" he asked presently.\nShe shook her head. She banished that throb of quick pain which\ncame because there had been a time\nwhen she was busy every night.\n\"Of course not! I want to sec you\na lot, Peter.\"\nPeter had come on to sign a book\ncontract. Moreover, his story was\nto be serialized. He was modest\nabout it.\n\"My friends will ail be famous,\"\nBarbara said. \"Garry's play, your\nbook \u2014 I'm ashamed I can write\nnothing but animal tales.\"\nMore than once Barbara ployed\nwith the idea of going back to\nMartinsville with Peter. She had\ntasted love and adventure. It might\nbe good to go home. Home? She\nremembered, then, that there was\nno where to go but a boarding\nhouse. No, home now was the Ninth\nsired apartment. Gerry had been\nthere. She didn't want to leave it.\nOne evening she took Peter to\ndinner at Ruth's. \"He's a dear and\nyou'll like him,\" she said. \"Be nice\nto him, especially nice, won't you,\nriuth?\"\n\"Garry's a nitwit,\" Ruth answer\ned. \"Some day he's going to wake\nup and be ashamed of himself. By\nthat time he'll probably have encircled that blonde pretender's finger with a diamond cirelet. Barbara, why don't you try to get him\nback?\"\nWhen Barbara stood still, only\nstaring down at the lights on the\nbridges that swung against the dark\nsky, Ruth said: \"No, you couldn't\ndo that. Love comes and goes unbidden. Like mercury. If you try\nlo hold it, it slips away. But some\nday it won't matter loo much. Believe mc, Barbara.\"\n\"I know.\"\nSome day I can ask him about\nhis health and wonder if he was\nalways fleshy because I won't remember any more! Ruth might talk\nto be kind. She knew that always\nshe would be watching for the\nrough-edged hair and that lean profile; that il would be years before\nshe could hear another say the\nwords that had been strangely his;\nthat she would start at dear, familiar\nlaughter, only to find it came from\nsomeone else. And what if she did\nfind Garry in a crowd? All she\ncould say would be; \"Garry, you\nare looking well.\"\nAnd he would answer: \"Thanks,\nBarbara, What are you doing these\ndays?\" But lie would not even listen lo her answer because t would\nmatter so little to him.\nWhen Peter announced that he\nhad been monopolizing her entirely\ntoo much and intended to give her\na free evening, she was rather sorry.\nShe had come to depend on him.\n\"But, Peter, I like to be with\nyou!\" she said.\nBut he insisted. It was from Ruth\nshe discovered where Peter was\ngoing.\n\"He's taking me to dinner,\" Ruth\nsaid. \"Peter is awfully sweet, Barbara.\"\n\"I know it.\" There was a catch\nin her throat for a moment, \"He's\nsomebody special.\"\nA day or two later Ruth telephoned again. \"Barbara, are you by\nany chance taking Peter to Garry's\nopening? My seats came today and\nI thought It you aren't, I'd like to\nask him.\"\n'That's lovely, Ruth. I'm glad. I'll\nset Natalie.\"\nWhen she reached home Barbara\nhurried to her mail box. The opening was the next night and she had\nbeen watching eagerly for the mail.\nShe pulled out three envelopes\u2014a\nbill, an advertisement for cold\ncream, a note from an old school\nfriend. She ran her hand around in\nthe dark box. There was nothing\nmore in it.\nMaybe the mailmen were later\nwith deliveries downtown than uptown. Yes, that must be it! Her\nseats would come in the morning.\nShe did nbt want to telephone\nNatalie and ask her to go along,\nbut she could not sit in the orchestra alone. She had been waiting for\nthe seats to come before she telephoned. True, Garry might be remembering Natalie and Basil, too,\nor they might have other plans.\nShe would have to risk it. The\nseats had not come by morning, and\nthough she hurried home at noon,\njust to peer into the mail box, it\nwas empty.\nSurely, surely, they would arrive\nthat afternoon! Yet she knew lhat\nGarry had forgotten before she put\nher hand into the empty box. So\nshe mattered so little he could mail\nseats lo others, and never miss her\nname on his list! With deeper import lhat she had known before,\nshe realized how little importance\nhe attached lo her now. She trembled a little and was amazed because anger, not hurt, prompted it.\nLet him give their memories to\nthe ragman! She hated him!' She\nwould work tonight. Work, work,\nwork\u2014it became a chant that carried her up the stairs.\nShe drew the blinds agaihst the\nnight, changed to the brown and\nyellow lounging pajamas, made u\ncup of hot chocolate and some toasl,\nand settled down |p work. Now\nthe winged cow went charging gaily\nover the roof of the Empire State\nbuilding on the way to the moon:\nIhe speckled pig roller skated down\nthe avenue, and did an Irish jig\nwhen the light turned red; the\nkitten rolled a steady hoop.\nWork was greater than love. Oh,\nyes it was! The poets all were goolyi\nBut now and then she raised her\nhead because dimly, in Ihe distance,\nshe imagined strains of applause\nand caught Ihe radiance of a lighted\nstage and a darkened, waiting house,\nPeter and Ruth were there. So were\nisil and Natalie, probably. The\ncircle had closed again, and left her\nout. Then she wrote more madly.\nAt a quarter after 11 she looked\nup, wide-eyed and flushed. Her story\nwas done and she knew that it was\ngood. Uptown the third act would\nbe taking a bow. So would Garry.\nThe critics would go back to their\noffices and pretty soon Ihe morning\npapers would carry Ihe story ot\nthe goodness or the badness of\ndrama that carried Garry's hopes\nand prayers and happiness.\nHe never would know that she\nhad not seen it. He would not remember that he had forgotten to\nsend her seats. Maybe, some time,\nin an off moment lie might wonder\nwhy she had not written him a\nnote, never realizing the fault was\nhis. Or\u2014maybe he wouldn't care.\nThe telephone rang and she picked up ihe receiver. \"Yes?\"'\nIt was Ruth. \"Honey, how did\nyou get home so soon? You must\nhave grabbed the first cab. We've\nbeen looking everywhere for you.\"\nPride kept her tongue silent. She\ncouldn't tell Ruth and Peler that\nGarry had forgotten her.\nRuth was plunging on. \"There's\na party, Barbara, in Garry's honor\nIt's a good play, isn't it? His pro\nducer is having a party but he's\ncoming to ours for a little while.\nCan you come up to my house right\naway, or shall I send the car for\nyou?\" ,\nShe could not go. Tomorrow or\nnext week Garry would not recall\nthat his meory had failed him.\nTonight lie would. He might even\nwonder what she was doing ot the\nparly. Plainly, he did not want her\naround.\n\"Basil and Natalie are coming,\ntoo,\" Ruth was saying.\nat ,thc Memorial hall proved very\nsuccessful and enjoyable, The hall\nwas beautifully decorated by spring\nblossoms and the many interesting\nand beautiful exhibits were very attractive and much admired. Mrs.\nJ. G. Holmes presided at the tea\ntable which was beautiful with its\nold Sheffield plate appointments and\nfloral decorations, loaned by Mrs.\nHolmes. Those in charge of the tea\nwere Mrs. J. Stringer, Mrs. Frost,\nMis. J. Draper, Mrs. Collins and Mrs.\nRobert A, Kirkland. The home cooking bootli was supervised by Mrs.\nE. M. Long and Mrs. F. W. Hewis\nThe museum display was in charge\nof Mrs. A. T. Horswill and Mrs, A.\nS, Ritchie. Guests were welcomed\nby Mrs. G. K. Ashby while Mrs,\nC. E. A. Simmonds was cashier.\nPillow slips donated by Mrs. E. M.\nLong were won by Mrs. Boyce.\n\u2022 Nurman Boss who attends the\nQueen university at Kingston, Ont.,\narrived Thursday to spend the vacation at the home of his parents,\nMr. and Mis. A.H. Boss, 913 Hall\nstreet.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Svoboda and the\nlatter's sister of Spokane were city\nvisitors yesterday en route to Trail.\n\u2022 Mrs. K. L. Higgs, Victoria\nstreet, has as her guest her son and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Higgs of Qualicum Beach and\ntheir two young sons.\n\u2022 John Taylor of New Denver\nvisited town yesterday,\n\u2022 Mrs, Margaret Madden, Baker\nstreet, is visiting at the home of Mrs.\nM. Monaghan at Taghum.\n\u2022 Mrs. Alex Leith, Terrace apartments is expected home today from\nspending the winter in California.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. Rushton, who spent a\nfew days ot the home of Mrs. E.\nC. Johnson, 37 High Street, has\nreturned to her home at Nakusp.\n\u2022 E. J. Pete Levesque ot Trail\nis spending a few days in the city.\n\u2022 Rev Earl Lindgren and Mrs.\nHelga Saare are at Portland, Ore.\nattending the North Pacific Missionary conference of Mission Covenant church.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Robert Quln of\nHarrop visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in town yesterday included William Pratt of Thrums.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. L. Maxwell of Nakusp\nis spending the week-end at the\nhome of her brother and sister-in-\nlaw Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Somers,\nBaker street. ' \u2022\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Allan Forrester, Rosemont, have as their guests,\ntheir daughter-in-law, Mrs. R. D.\nForrester, and grandchildren, Allan\nand Jackie of Handel, Sask.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Henri Gagnon,\nCarbonate street, have as their\nguests, their daughter ;nd grandson, Mrs. Harry Heise and Donald\not Vancouver, who arrived Thursday evening to spend a few weeks.\n\u2022 Miss Doris Mclntyre, Stanley\nstreet, has returned from a visit to\nthe coast.\n\u2022 F. Rapley of Ymir spent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yostcr-\n\u2022 S. A. Williams and daughter,\nday included Lymon Cole of Erie.\nMargaret,  of Vancouver,  formerly\nof Nelson, arc expected in the city\nover the week-end.\n\u2022 Jack Tindale who attends University of British Columbia at Vancouver returned home Thursday to\nSouth Slocan and left yesterday for\nKimberley.\n\u2022 Charles Dickie, merchant of\nSlocan Park, visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 H. Hayes of Crescent Bay\nspent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. Doodson and daughter, Betty, Kerr apartments, have\nretrned from spending the Easter\nvacation at Vancouver.\n\u2022 Lloyd Frame of Vancouver is\na guest at the homo on Latimer\nstreet of Mrs. E. M. Long.\n\u2022 J. W. Holmes of Montreal,\nformerly of Nelson, is spending a\nfew days in town.\nMiss Jessie Ion, of the slaff\nof Kootenay Lake General hospital, whose marriage to Charles\nHowarth, formerly of Nakusp,\ntakes place in Calgary, Juno 3,\nleaves today for Nakusp. Miss Ion'\nhas been much feted in Nelson this\nweek.\nPol ice Must Tip Hats\nEDMONTON. April 20 CP)-Instructions to tip their hats when\naddressing any citizen while on\npoint duty have been given city\npolice.\n\"I believe that generally speaking the members of our force are\ncourteous, but this regulation will\nhelp to make them more so, Chief\nA. G. Shule said. \"This doesnl\nmean that thoy are going to touch\ntiie'ir hats and say 'pardon me,\nbefore arresting an unruly drunk\nthough.\"\nWaldie Mill to\nResume Operations\nCASTLEGAR, B.C-The Waldie\nmill expects to resume operations\nafter a short shut-down due to\nshortage of logs.\nIt is improving tho property by\ninstalling electric lights irom the\nWest Kootenay in the company\nhouses.\nMrs. Olsen Learns\nof Sister's Death\nMrs. George Olsen, of Rosemont\nreceived word Thursday of the death\nof her sister, Mrs. Arthur Oswald\nof Glenwood, Minn.\nCRITICIZES WORDS\nOF MRS. ROOSEVELT\nBOSTON, April 20 (AP) - Emphatically asserting she was not answering any individual criticism,\nMrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt said today \"divorce is necessary under certain circumstances.\"\nMrs. Charles Fcchan, president\nof Ihe Catholic Women's league on\nTuesday called attention to what\nshe said were recent pronouncements by Mrs. Roosevelt on divorce\nand on a motion picture.on the\nbirth of a baby and declared: \"We\nhave a right lo expect a finer taste\nin Ihe words of the wife of the\npresident.\"\nPOPE TO CO TO HIS\nSUMMER RESIDENCE\nVATICAN CITY, April 20 (API-\nPope Pius will leave tomorrow for\nhis summer residence at Caslel Gan-\ndolto.\nThe pope thus will be out of Rome\nthree days before the arrival of\nReichsfuehrer Hitler on his state\nvisit to Italy.\nWill you count me out?\" she\nasked steadily. \"I'd so much rather\nnot come.\"\n(To be continued).\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson  Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nDOUKHOBOR YOUTH HURT\nIN     FALL     FROM    TRAIN\nNEW WESTMINSTER, April 29\n(CPl \u2014 Aldokcn Nevokskonoss,\n20-year-old Doukhobor youth from\nBrilliant, B. C, was in hospital\nhere today with injuries suffered\nwhen he fell from a freight train\nat nearby Port Coquitlam last night,\nALBANIAN KINC^NJT\nQUEEN TO VISIT U. S.\nD1RRAZO. Albania, April 29 (CP-\nHavas)\u2014The newly-married King\nZog and Queen Geraldine of Albania may shortly make a honeymoon trip to Ihe United States.\nNEW FERRY READY\nTO INSTALL, CASTLEGAR\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.-The new\nCastlegar ferry has been completed It will not be put Into use\nuntil the new approaches on either side have been completed,\nabout the middle of May,\n.MANN RECEIVES AWARD\nURBANA. 111., April 20 (API-\nThomas Mann, German novelist,\nnow In voluntary exile, today received the Cardinal Newman award\nfor 1937 at Ihe University of Illinois honors clay convocation.\nThe award is made annually lo\nIhe individual making an outstanding conl.ribul.ion to the enrichment\nof human life in literature, art, science or humanitarianism. Mann received the Nobel prize for his novel\n\"The Magic Mountain,\"\nBODY OF WOMAN\nFOUND IN SKEENA\nTERRACE, B. C, April 29 (CP)\n\u2014An inquest was held here today\non the body of an elderly woman\nfound in a log jam on the Skeena\nRiver at Shames, B. C.\nTRUANT PARENTS SCORED\nTORONTO, April 29 (CP)\u2014Tru-\nant parents\u2014meaning golf-playing\npapas and bridge-playing mamas-\ngot a verbal strapping in front of\nthe Rowell Commission here today.\nHORNER'S\nGROCERY\nNELSON SALMO\nPHONE 121 PHONE 5\nGROCERY   PRICES   THE   SAME\nAT SALMO\n~   SPECIALS   ~\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\n39c\n25c\nanagan\n23c\nGolden\n27c\n10c\n15c\nWOULD AMEND ACT\nOTTAWA, April 29 (CP) - Hon.\nC. D. Howe, minister of transport,\ntoday gave nolice in the commons\norder paper of a measure to amend\nthe New Westminster Harbor Commissioners ast. The amending measure would extend boundaries of\nthe harbor and provide remuneration for services of the commissioners out of harbor revenues.\nSEEK ATTACKER\nVANCOUVER, April 29 (CP) -\nPolice today sought a man who attempted to attack Clara Fetsner in\nthe Kitsilano district last flight. He\nfled Wh.n  \u00abhn  ^raansaA\nCOFFEE: Nabob,\nLb\t\nCORN FLAKES:\nKellogg's, 3 pkgs,\nTOMATOES: Okanagan\nBrand, IVl'h\n2 tins \t\nCORN: Royal City, Golden\nBantam,\n2 tins\t\nCORNSARCH: IA\nCanada, pkg 1UC\nORANGE JUICE:\nLibby's, tin  \t\nOLD ENGLISH WAX: CQ\nHONEY: Cloverleaf,   Cft.\n4 Ib. tin Odm\nBULK COFFEE: OQ\nSpring special, Ib. .. L*\/\\*\nlv;cT0RYTEA:.....49c\nORANGES\n2 doxen   35c*?\n2 doien   -19<\n1 dozen  49\u00a3\nGRAPEFRUIT: Oj-\n6 for   LOm\nBUNCH CARROTS:   OO\n3 bunches uOh\nCELERY:\n2 Ibs\t\nSPINACH:\n2 Ibs\t\nRHUBARB:\n2 Ibs\t\nNEW CABBAGES:\nLt\t\nCAULIFLOWER: Per head,\n25c and 30c\nHEAD LETTUCE:       0|*\n2 for  Lot\nOLD CARROTS: Excellent,\nqualify, *)f*\n10 Ibs \u00a3DC\nPOTATOES: Oj-\n13 Ibs \u00a3dC\nFresh asparagus, green, onions, radishes, bunch beets,\nbananas, etc.\nFree Delivery      Phone 121\nFree Delivery     Phone 121\n19c\n19c\n19c\n8c\nPractical Vocational\nEducation Suggested\nTORONTO, April 29 (CP) \u2014 A\nsystem of practical vocational education to fit a large proportion of\nthe youth of Canada for specific\nskilled jobs when they leave school\nwas proposed today by th. Ontario\nTeachers' council as a step towards\nreducing unemployment,\n, The council said there were\nschools for the academically-minded and in the larger cities expensive schools for selected children of\nlow mentality, but no special training for that large mass of Canadian\nyouth which dropped out of school\nin tlie sixth, seven or eighth grade,\nas soon as the law allowed.\nIncreased federal aid to education was held essential not only\nto introduction of such a plan biit\nalso to guarantee the children of\nall Canada a degree of equality\nof educational  opportunity.\nImproved educational facilities in\nrural areas would benefit directly\nCanadian agriculture, a matter of\nnational concern.\nGOVERNMENT CRITICIZED\nMISSION CITY, April 29 (CP)\n\u2014 The British Columbia government's Yukon-Alaska road policy\nand its expenditure ot $500 a day\non legal fees for presentation of\nthe province's brief to the Rowell\nCommission* on Dominion-provincial relations were criticized by Herbert Anscomb, Independent legislature member for Victoria, in on address last night.\nMr. Anscomb, spoke on behalf of\nW. A. Jones of Agassiz, Conservative candidate in the May 20 Dewdney by-election.\nR&R\nGrocery\nSAVING\nEffective\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nPHONE 161\nSALMON\u2014Red Sockeye, 99_\nVis; 2 tins'  OOC\nTOMATO JUICE-Bul-    -IQ\nman's, 10-oz. tins; 3 for.. lUC\nPORK AND BEANS \u2014 Aylmer,\n10!\/2-oz. tins; O0\u00ab\n3 for  LLt\nBUTTER - Swift's Foreitvllle,\nThird Grade, very popu- AO-\nlar butter; 3 Ib  VuC\nRICE\u2014Best Grade; 1ft,\u00bb\n3 Ibs  lifC\nASPARAGUS CUTTING8-Bee\nCee, tails; Oft\u00ab\n2 tins   zyc\nSOLID PACK APPLES\u2014 1 Q-\n2'\/a'*j per tin   15C\nPEARL SOAP\u2014 Qr\u201e\n6 bars  itOC\nMANY FLOWERS SOAP -| n\n\u20146 bars  lOt\nPLUMS\u2014Aylmer 2's;       -| Q\u201e\nper tin   Lij\\,\nROYAL CROWN 01\/\u2022\nCLEANSER\u20143 tins  \u00a3lC\nNEW SPUDS\u2014 OK\u201e\n3'i Ibs  itOK,\nCUCUMBERS\u2014 OC\u00ab\n2 for  ZOC\nRADISHE8 AND GREEN    (V.\nONIONS\u20142 bunches       J\/C\nCELERY-Best In city;     -I -|\nper Ib  lit\nORANGES-Don't  Miss;  OC\u00ab\n2 doz  ,-SDC\nASPARAGU8 TIP8-       or\u201e\nFirst Grade; 2 lbs  ODC\nRHUBARB-Local; 1A\u201e\n2 ibs lyc\nGRAPEFRUIT-Large;     nr\nCARROTS,     CAULIFLOWER,\nNEW  CABBAGE,  BANANAS,\nAND LETTUCE\nFREE DELIVERY\nSocial...\nROBSON\n\u25a0 PAGE   PIVI\nROBSON, B. C-Mr. and Mn.\nF. McHardy ot Nelson were Rob.\nvisitors Thursday at the home\nMr. and Mrs. L. M. Quance.\nW. T. Wickham of Robson was a\nNelson visitor recently.\nU. B. C. TEAM WINS\nRIFLE CHAMPIONSHIP\nVANCOUVER, April 29 (CP)-.\nUniversity of British Columbia woq\nthe university service rifle championship ot Canada for the secomj\nyear in succession. Thoy had a total\nscore of 757 out of a possible 840.\nTho U.B.C. team led the second\nplace Royal Military college team\nby 22 points.\nUniversity of Manitoba placed\nthird with 705 points.\nSAFEWAY\nFOOD\nSPECIALS\nAdvertised  Friday  are effective today, Monday am\nTuesday\nSPECIALS\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\n180\n200\n220\n210\n53U\n120\n190\n250\n450\n\u00ab0\n190\n140\n350\n280\n100\n450\n190\n250\n290\n250\n190\n190\n290\n490\n350\nPEANUT BUTTER\u20141'ii\neach   -\nJELLY POWDERS\u2014\n4 pkt\t\nSOAP-Pearl White;\n5 cakes \t\nTOILET TISSUE-Purexi\n3 for \t\nSODAS\u2014Ormond'i;\npkg -\nLARD\u2014Pure, 3's;\neach\t\nBAKING SODA\u2014l's;\neach\t\nSOAP FLAKES\u2014\nPrincess; pkg\t\nTOFFEE\u2014Wrapped;\nIb\t\nHOT CHOCOLATE\u2014\nFry's, 1'i; each  .,\nSHREDDED WHEAT\u2014\nPkg\t\nWATER GLASS\u2014Pen-\ndry's; tin\t\nCUT MIXED PEEI\t\n'\/2-lb. pkg\t\nPILCHARDS\u2014Tall tins',\n3 for \t\nSPINACH\u2014\n3 Ib\t\nGREEN ONIONS\u2014\n3 for \t\nTOMATOES-\n2 Ib\t\nCARR0T8-\n3 bunchei \t\nLOCAL RHUBARB\u2014\n3 Ib\t\nASPARAGUS\u2014\n2 Ibt\t\nNEW SPUDS\u2014\n3 Ibs\t\nCELERY\u2014\n2 Ibs\t\nNEW CABBAGE\u2014\n3 Ibs\t\nBANANA8-\n3 Ibs\t\nGRAPE8-\n2 lbs\t\nlemons-\ndo;\t\nORANGES\n1 650   30\nfor .\n750\nHORSWILL\nBROTHERS\nPhone 235     Free Delivery\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nPHONES\n831\n832\nVASSARS'\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nGood Buying for Saturday and Monday\nChoice Steer Beef\nT-Bone Roast, Ib. ... as-*-*\nPot Roast, Ib  Hd\nRoll Rib Roast, Ib. .. 23*\nRump Roast, Ib  X'Zr\nCross Rib Roast, ib. .. 17<-\nSirloin Steaks, 2 Ibs. . 55-***\nVeal Fillet Roast, Ib. 271\nVeal Oven Roast, Ib. . 10<\nVeal Steaks, 2 Ibs. .. 35*^\nLegs Real Lamb, Ib. . 33d\nLamb Shoulders, Ib. . Si-U'r\nPork Leg Roast, Ib. .. 27o\nPork Oven Roast, Ib. . Z3tp\nPork Spare Ribs, 2 Ibs. 35^\nCottage Rolls, Ib. ... '\u00a3\u00bb<\u2022\nBeef Drippings, 2 lbs. \"Tu;\nSwift's Premium Hams,\nwhole or half, Ib  :t5<\"\nOysters, fresh, pint .. 65*****\nFresh Halibut, sliced,\nib  25-f\nDill Pickles, 4 for ... 10<*\nCreamery Butter, Thistle,\n3rd Grade, 2 Ibs 63*^\nEggs, fresh A-large,\nDot 25-f-\nChicken Roasters, Ib.   2Stp\nFowl Boiling, Ib 25c*-\nSausago Meat, seasoned,\n2 Ibs 25-f\nHamburger, good,\n2 Ibs 25<i\nBreakfast Sausage,\n2 Ibs  25*?\nBreakfast Bacon, fresh\nsliced, Ib 4Qtf\nCash and Carry\nOnly\nPure Lard, 2 Ibs. .. 29r\u00bb\nBeef Pot Roast, Ib. 12^\nButter, 3rd \u00abrade, Ib. :!<)<>\nVeal Oven Roast, Ib. 170\nBeef Boiling, 3 Ibs.   29*^\n\u2014\nm,\n Jfdmm latlij 14*1110\nEstablished April 22, 181)2\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every rooming except Sunday by\ntbe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n266   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMcnibeis of the Audit Eureau of Circulations and\nThe   Canadian  Frees   Lersed   Wire  News  Service.\nSATURDAY, APRIL 30, 1938\n!\n\u25a0     ONE MORE CIVIC ARENA\nOnce the expression, \"Civic Arena,\" as description\nof an ice rink provided by the municipal authority, would\nhave sounded funny in any part of Canada.\nBut since Nelson led the way with its famed Civic\nCentre, which includes in its unique group of facilities\nunder one roof, an arena that provides artificial ice for\nhockey and skating in winter and a floor for lacrosse and\nother purposes in summer, \"Civic Arenas\" have been\nsprouting up right and left.\nApparently St. Catherines, Ont., is indulging in one,\nwhich will come into use next winter. Seemingly box lacrosse has not yet hit St. Catharines, for there is still a\nlacrosse grandstand.\nReference to St. Catharines' Civic Arena is made incidentally by the St. Catharines Standard in the following\neditorial paragraph on sports paying their way:\n\"Where Bowlers Pay Their Way\u2014\n\"In this city, the bowlers pay their own way entirely\neven to taxes on their propery. They have never asked\nfor anything else. And in the case particularly of the\nGlen Ridge club, a beautiful and attractive property, quite\na credit to the city, is kept up magnificently. The principle\nthat a community should pay for the sport of all and\nsundry is dying out. It certainly never got a foothold in\nSt. Catharines. The lacrosse team pays for its grandstand\nand other plant on a gate percentage basis. When the Civic\nArena is operated there will be an adequate return made\nby all hockey organziations for the use of the arena. This\nis as it should be. John Citizen, property-owner, is carrying about all he can negotiate.\"\nOur grand business undoubtedly is, not to see wliat\nlies dimly at a distance, but to do what lies clearly at hand.\n\u2014Cmiyle.\nGET SPANISH FACTS STRAIGHT\nNo important event has demonstrated better than has\nthe controversy raging around the Spanish war the dangers\nof the half-truth and the concealed fact. For example, it\nis asseilcd by one group that the Communists are a negligible factor in Spanish politics, and it is argued as conclusive that the Republican government which was elected in\n1936 and which the rebels, attacked, \"did not contain one\nsingle Communist or Socialist.\" Now, it is true that there\nwas not a single Communist in the government formed\nby Premier Azana after Spain's February elections. There\nwere two Socialists, whether or not their party labels disclosed their allegiance. One was Juan Luhi, minister of\nlabor, who had been jailed for his radicalism and released\njust a short time before the election. But, controlling only\n196 seats, of the Republican and radical Centre parties,\nPremier Azana was dependent in the cortes on the 99 seats\nof the Socialist-Communists' \"united front.\"\nFor the election these two groups had pooled their\nvotes, voices and their actions according to the \"pacific\npenetration\" policy adopted by the Comintern on instructions from Stalin in 1935. Azana, therefore, was in.the same\nposition as Premier Blum in France.\nIt will be recalled that the Communists refused Blum's\noffer to participate in his first Popular Front cabinet. But\nthere is not a reputable observer in France today who is\nnot convinced that the pressure they exerted on the government through the strikes forced it to over-reach and\ncontributed more than anything else to its fall. The same\nfact was true when Blum's second ministry fell, and significantly the strikes which he was unable to settle were\nidentical with the tactics followed in Spain after the February elections.\nIn fact in the first months the Socialist-Communist\nFront boasted of the destruction of 17 churches, 11 convents, 10 newspaper plants, 22 miscellaneous buildings, 33\nRight political headquarters and clubs. Their \"liquidation\"\ncount was 51 dead and 194 wounded. The strikes they\norganized had business and industry tied up for months,\nthere being no les than 110 separate strikes, ordered by\nthem, in progress at one time. As evidence of the government's inability to control this situation and the methods\nof conciliation it employed, Juan Lluhi, minister of labor,\nended the Madrid elevator strike by jailing all the owners\nuntil they agreed to the operators' terms.\nBest proof of the corner into which the government\nhad been forced came from Premier Azana himself, when,\nfollowing a united appeal for industrial peace, he asserted:\n\"Violence is deeply enshrined in the Spanish people. The\ntime has not yet come for Spaniards to slop shooting one\nanother,\" It was in recognition of this that Azana quit the\npremiership for the presidency. He-offered the leadership\nto tluce of his conservatively Socialist supporters before\nQuiroga agreed to take it on. The others all refused because of their disapproval of the government's Socialist-\nCommunist alliance, Quiroga was ousted from office for\nseeking to suppress the strikes. His .successor, Martinez-\nBarrio, another \"Republican,\" lasted less than a week.\nAnd Jose Geralt Pereiro, of the Azana party, but recognized as the leader of its \"radical wing,\" was the \"Front's\"\ncompromise selection.\nBy the time the current struggle got under way the\nCommunist Front, secure in the shadow of the government,\nhad account for 250 \"heads\"\u2014politicians and clerics for\nwhom \"hanging was too good.\"\nWhether or not this rule of violence justified the\nv*\"\"> nnrluintr ia not for dalmi.p_ here, hut how well.DEe-\nMBI SON DAILY NEV\/F\nAlX'lteAfSE*-\" ^\nvllKJT 1b 5Ec A      \/\nftW YE^t-TABLE?\n4ROW\nSALLY'S. SALLIES\nBC.-SATUflDAY MORNING. APRIL 30. 193\u00ab\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nMAKING A KING GOOD\nIF YOU HOLD two guard* to a\nking of trumps and the twice-\ngifarded ace sits over lt In the\n(lummy, your nice big honor seems\nticomed, Bince you expect the declarer to hold tha. immediately\nlower ones at your right. But he\ncannot catch your king In a finesse\nit you remove one of those guards\nfrom tho ace. The way to do that\nis to make him ruff in the dummy.\nThen your king is ready (or the\nthird round of tho suit\n4642\nf A 7 5\na 8 3\nIK J 10 6 4\nAQS753\n4 J 10 4\n\u00bbK9!\n4 AKQ J\n4\n|iQ7\nN.\n5.\n\u2666 752\n#9832\nThe amateur gardener never can make up his mind whether its\nless expensive to buy vegetables or liniment.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nLetters may be published over a nom de plume, but the actual\nname of the writer must be given to the editor as evidence of\ngood  faith.  Anonymous  letters  go  in the waste  paper  basket.\nMeaning of Named\nDoukhobor Letter\nWas Misinterpreted\nTo tho Editor:\nSir\u2014\"True Canadian'' says the\nletter of the named Doukhobors\n\"burns him up.\" He quotes a sentence from their letter about their\nwanting to take everything that is\ngood from Canadians which, taken\nas it .reads, makes his indignation\nquite natural. Whether or not they\nreally do want to lake everything\nthat is good away from Canadians,\nwe can leave unanswered. But we\ncan hardly believe they are so naive\nas to say so; especially in a letter\ndefending their actions.\nThough their letter was written\nin fairly good English, parts of it\nshow that whoever wrote it does\nnot fully realize all the implications\nof the language. When he said, \"take\nfrom the Canadians\" he evidently\ndid not mean take away from them;\nhe meant adopt, or avail themselves\nof. If we take advice, or if we take\na custom or a practice from ofer\npeople, we do not deprive them of\nanything. That is evidently the way\nin which the word \"take\" was used.\nThe only purpose of this letter is\nto prevent friction being increased\nby misunderstanding.\n\"COVERING A BIG STORY!\"\n4AK\ny Q J 10 8 6 4\n410 9 6\n*A5\n(Dealer: South. Neither side vulnerable.)\nHere South bid 1-Heart, West 2-\nDiamonds, North 3-Clubs, East\npassed, South called 3-Hearts and\nNorth 4-Hearts,\nWest cashed the diamonds K and\nQ, and having seen the doubleton\nin dummy, switched to the spade J,\n\"which South won with the K. Wi'e\nheart Q was led and allowed to\nride, and when Uu finesse proved\nsuccessful, waa followed by the J,\nso that on the third round the A\ndropped West's K. Before drawing the last trump, South finessed\nthe club J and* came to his hand\nwith the spade A. After cashing\nthe club A, he drew the last ncart,\nand on the club K tossed the losing\ndiamond, so that he made five odd,\nHad West continued a third diamond, declarer would have had to\nruff in dummy, so that the heart\nK would have surely taken a trick\nkeeping the contract to four.\n*   \u2022   *\nTomorrow's Problem\nf A10\n4 K 10 9 7 5 3\n*AQ104\nAKQ.15\n1Q97S\n48\n$,1875\ns.\n4762\n\u00ab83\n4AQJ4\n,**,K63 2\n4 A 10 9 4\n3\n\u00abKJ842\n462\n*9     '\nv'UI-\n(Dealer: South. East-we.i\nnerable.)\nWhatls 'he best bidding on this\ndeal?\npared the Communists were to take power was demonstrated immediately after its outbreak. Catalonia, the secession province and stronghold of the Left groups, was\nseized by a Communist-Anarchist-Syndicalist coalition,\nwhich declared complete independence of Madrid. A few\nmonths later such an authority on Communist tactics as\nWalter Uuranty loured Spain and wrote in the New York\nTimes of a \"revolution within a revolution.\" That part of\nSpain was being thoroughly sovictized. The Communists'\ndomination of the coalition subsequently resulted in three\nseparate Anarchist and Syndicalist uprisings, all of which\nwere suppressed..\nThough it was commonly acknowledged from the out-'\nset of the revolution that the \"legitimate\" government was\nbeing assisted directly from Moscow in tho conduct of the\nwar, the Socialists and Communists refused actual participation until September, 1936. Largo Cabellero, Socialist\ntrade-union leader and extreme radical, was then chosen,\nby the \"united front\" to take over the premiership, and in\nreturn drew his cabinet from its membership. Almost his\nfirst action was rejection of the \"humanizing pact\" proposed to both sides by the neutral powers. His second was\nto promise as a reward fer victory \"a dictatorship of the\nproletariat\" in a really \"Spanish Soviet,\" a promise which\nhis successor, Premier Negrin, nominally a \"conservative,\"\nwas forced to repeat, but which he sought to dilute to a\n\"nationalized Spain.\"\nThe sympathy of the democratic nations is pretty well\non the side of the Spanish government, chiefly no doubt\nbecause of the inhumanity shown by the revolutionists\nunder Franco, and also because of the unjustifiable intervention of Fascist Italy and Nazi Germany on his side, but\nno object is to be gained by denying that the Spanish\ngovernment is what it clearly is\u2014a Communist regime.\nfl Questions ?J\nANSWERS\nThis  column  ot  questions  and\nanswers is open to any reader ot\n' the  Nelson  Daily  News,   hi  no\nI case will the name of the person\nj asking the question be published.\nCuriosity, Nelson\u2014Can you Icll mc\nthe real name of Dortliy Dix?\nDorothy Dix in private life is Mrs.\nElizabeth Meriweathcr Gilmer. She\nhas been writing since 1896 when\n;he became editor of the Woman's\nDepartment of the New Orleans\nTimes-Picayune.\nN, D. S., Nelson\u2014Is it true that\nmonkeys can be taught to read?\nMonkeys have keen sense of sight\nand discrimination and can be\ntrained to remain on a perch when\nshown a card bearing the word no,\nand to come down when' shown one\nsaying yes but this il not reading in\nthe usual sense of Ihe-word.\nW. A., Trail\u2014Was Cyrano de Berger-\nac, the character in Rostand's play,\na real person?\nSavinier Cyrano de Bergerac was a\nFrench author who was born in 1619\nand died jn 1655. Edmund Rostand\nwrote a drama in which da Bergerac\nwas the hero and the play was in\nmany ways true to facts. The real\nde Bergerac was distinguished for\nHis courage in tne field and lor the\nduels he fought, which numbered\nmore than a thousand. Most uf them\nwere fought on account of his huge\nnose.\nH. B., Rossland\u2014ls there any way to\ntell if chicory has been useu as an\nadulterant for coffee?  And docs\nchicory contain caffeine?\nChicory does not contain caffeine.\nThe \u25a0 presence of chicory  may  be\ndetected by adding cold water to the\nsupposed coffee. If chicory is pres\nent the liquid will be quickly dis\ncolored and chicory will sink. Pure\ncoffee will float.\nVERSE\nSANCTUARY\nspirit,\nWhence flees the spirit, in the\ngloomy hours,\nWhen days are dark and joy enshrouded lies,\nWhere is Thy Avalon of Healing,\n0 my soul?\nShattered and spent, as storm-tossed\nbird at dawn.\nContent lo ride the fury of the gale\nAnd  hope for milder  winds  and\nsunny skies ahead\nSo thou must brave the uncharted\nshoes alone,\nThy   sanctuary   lies   beyond   the\nstorms.\nWhere is Thy Avalon of Healing,\nO my soul?\nJESSIE E. WALLER.\nKimberley, B. C.\nThought and theory mat precede (tl! action that moves\nto salutary purposes. Yet action in nobler in itself than\nmMdrnttowtshLinJlm^\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nNON-INTERVENTION A FARCE\nFranco is smashing down the Republican defences by sheer weigh'\not' arms, particularly by an immense\nsuperiority In the air. A few months\nago he did not have that superiority. He did not have these airplanes.\nHe has not manufactured them.\nThey are loaned to him by tlie\nGermans and the Italians. They are\nwinning the war. By refusing to allow the Spanish government to\npurchase arms, and by frightening\nthe French from doing so, this \"national\" government is strangling the\nSpanish republic os effectively as\nif its own hands were round its\nthroitt. Non-intervention is more\nlhan a farce. It is a lie. Italy and\nGermany are winning the war for\nFranco. No less, Britain and France\nare losing it for the, .government.\u2014\nLondon Daily Herald.\nfiawiianuL\nCan't Scotlic\nThese Savage Breasts\nGlasgow business men don't like\nmusic with their morning coffee.\nThe manager of a coffee-room\ntold me tills when we were discussing the habits of coffee drinkers. In most cases, this type of\ncustomer prefers to yarn with his\nfriends,\u2014Evening Citizen. Glas-\nguw.\nMaybe You Can\nFind a Longer\nWhat is tlie longest word ill the\nEnglish language? The word most\nfrequently cited is \"honoriflcablli-\ntudinitatibus,\" which is to be found\nin Shakespeare's \"Love's Labour\nLost,\" Act o, Scene 1, line 44. To the\nPuritan divine, Byfeld, we owe \"in-\nclrcumscriptibleness.\" Doctor Benson is credited with \"antidisestab-\nlishmcntarians.\"\u2014Ripleys Big Book.\nThe Bulky Goering\nOnce Famed Airman\nIn June, 1918, the famous Richt-\nhofen Squadron needed a leader.\nRichlhofcn was dead, and his successor, Reinhard, commanded the\nSquadron only lor a few weeks\nbefore death overtook him, too.\nSo the German High Command\nchose carefully. It chose Goering\nwho made an admirable squadron\ncommander. Under him were the\ncrack pilots of the German Air\nForce\u2014all young men to whom\nsome measure ot fame had come,\nwho rated themselves highly and\nhad the irrepressible arrogance\nthat success give* to youth, Goering ruled them with a rod of iron.\nBut he led them, too.\nBut they followed. The ex-service men of Germany still tell of\nhis exploits, his unutterable daring, colossal energy, ruthless discipline. They say ho never let a\nman down, and that no man' ever\ndared to let him down.\nSnob No. 103\nSurely the most peculiar form\nof snobbishness is that which\nmakes a man prefer to say, in effect, \"I take pride in keeping my\nwife bored and at home,\" to saying \"I let my wife go lo work and\nbe happy.\" Whether the wife\nshould go to work or not should\nbe entirely a question for the\nwife to decide\u2014A doctor in\nMiddlesbrough Gazette.\nAUNTHET-\nI       t$y  ROBERT QUILLEN\nHUMAN SIDE\nWiws\/\nBY   EDWIN  C . HILL\nCarried Upright, Over Snow-Swept Mountain Passes of\nTibet, Body of Panchen Lama Returns\nFrom Exile\nA mummy rides over the roof of\nthe world, with many millions\nbreathlessly concerned. The rider\nis the Panchen Lama, who was the\nspiritual ruler of Tibet, and who\ndied last November in western\nChina. He is carried on a palanquin,\nsitting upright, with a chanting procession ot monks toiling over the\nhign, wind-blown, snow-swept\nmountain passes into Tibet. Their\nprogress is blocked by the followers\nof the Dalai Lama, temporal ruler,\nwho died In 1933.\nThe Panchen Lama had been exiled for many years. His return i3\nopposed, even when he returns only\nto a grave. The Dalai Lama was\nthe 13th head of the Buddhist faith,\nand the Buddhists and the scriptures decree that the 13th Dalai\nLama should be the last. But they\nallowed the succession to revert to\nthe Panchen Lama. Followers of\nthe latter search the mountain wilderness' for a child bearing the stigmata which will proclaim his divinity.\nThere is a stir,' a rallying, treks\nthrough the mountain fastnesses uneasiness and boding. For this divided spiritual and temporal dynasty represents leadership over a\nvastly greater number of human\nbeings than that of Christianity.\nThere arc 500,000,000 Buddhists on\nthis earth of ours.\nOuter Mongolia and Tibet constitute a territory larger than the\nUnited States, rich in mineral\nwealth and grazing lands, still\nknowing only a primitive nomadic\nculture. Wilh Colonel Younghus-\nband, England penetrated it first\namong the western powers, and\nher sagacious scouts of empire have\nFORTY MILLION F * LSE TEETH\nA clause which would intrigue\nmany is contained in the scheme for\nan Anglo-American trade agreement. It provides lhat Britain will\ntake from the U. S. A. some 40,000,-\n000 false teeth a year. Thus American enterprise, in addition to sending Britain more food, will also send\nteeth to cal it with. Actually, false\nteeth figure as a normal item in\nimports from the United Slates. In\n1936, Ihe U.S.A. exported 41,797.000\nfalse teeth to Britain, their value\nbeing over $1,000,000. Already the\nHerald-Tribune takes pride in the\nfad that 4,000,000 Britons\u2014a twelfth\nof the British Isles population\u2014owe\nIhcir flashing smiles to tne United\nStntf. \u25a0\u25a0\u2014Timra nf India\n\"1 reckon I'm narrow, like most\nfolks, but I never think the way\nother people like to live is silly because it ain't my way.\"\nTHE LATE PANCHEN LAMA\nbeen there ever since, chanting and\ngenuflecting with the devotees,\ngently easing the ancient hierarchy\ninlo the zone of benign British influence, and reporting to Downing\nStreet, And so have the missionaries of Russia, Japan and France.\nThere is a tense, wary, slippery\noffstage grapple for power there,\nin the Laocoon struggle for world\ndomination. Conforming to their\nancient religion, neither the Dalai\nnor Panchen Lamas allowed any\ndelving in the earth for gold or oil.\nWhich of the powers will succeed In landing their man as the\nnew Lama and which will get first\naccess to the great mineral resources of Tibet? The mummy riding\nthe roof of the world declines to\nanswer.\nWe of the common herd have\ntaken calmly the upheavals and\nchanges ol modern times. We have\ngazed with pain and horror at utterly fantastic women's hats as we\nstrolled in our crowded streets, and\nstill retained our sanity. We have\naccepted the passing of the pousse-\ncafe and the horse's neck. When\nwomen bobbed their hair we were\nquietly submissive. Meekly we accept whatever design the automotive engineers or the tailors decree\nfor us. We submit tamely to the\nnew five-suit bridge deck. We raise\nno outcry when a third party looms\nin the political arena. Even talk\nof a five-base baseball diamond has\nfound us calm.\nLooking Backward\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(April 30, 1928.)\nMiss Lyda Johnson of Creston is\na Cranbrook visitor.\u2014Miss Lena VI-\npond, Edgewood avenue, leaves to\nday for Nakusp, where she will visit her parents before leaving for\nVancouver, where she will be married\u2014Miss Helen Scanlan, Stanley\nstreet, was the guest ot Mr. and\nMrs. Leslie Mowat of Trail.\u2014Mrs.\nRussel McEwan and her son, Billy,\nFairview, returned from Vancouver.\u2014J. Evans of Medicine Hat is visiting his mother Mrs, G. Ramsey at\nWynndel.\u2014Miss Margaret Reisterer,\nteacher at Salmo, was tho guest of\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. Julius\nReisterer, Robson street.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(April 30, 1918.)\nCreston's   1917  export  statement\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nshows a total of $330,000, which is\nabout $50,000 over 1916. It involves\nlumber, fruit, vegetables, and animals.\u2014W. A. Pease of Creston purchased a new auto al Kitchener \u2014\nCorp. T. H. Carney of Kaslo is officially presumed to have died overseas.\u2014A C. Mesker returned from\ntwo months in California.\u2014Mrs.\nEdgar Mason left for the coast,\nwhere she will visit Mrs. F. Wiish,\nlate of Nelson\u2014Mrs. E. Vant and\nson of Grand Forks were city visitors.\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\n(April 30, 1908.)\nW. A. Galliher, M.P. for Kootenay,\nwho resigned, has accepted a position as western solicitor and legislative agenl for the G.T.P, with\nheadquarters at Vancouver.\u2014E. B.\nMcDermid and Charles McHardy\nwere elected honorary presidents,\nand Dr. Norman, president of the\nRobson Athletic club, when it was\nformed.\u2014W. G. Gillelt has received\nthe necessary machinery to proceed with completion of the walls\nand roof ol the new court house \u2014\n\"Big John\" Linebaugh purchased\nthe empty lot on the south side of\nVernon street, just west of the Glue\nPot saloon, and will erect a brick\nJjUjjdJilj,\nBut there is a limit. Tliora uu-\neasy arbiters ot our destiny, who\nnever let well enough alone, are\nwarned that there will be trouble\nif they keep dn with this new five-\nsuit poker deck. They would have\nfive aces beat a straight flush. When\nthis happens our immemorial liberties will have gone' the way of\ndeuces wild, the one-eyed Jack and\nof one hundred per cent oldliric\npoker has long been the esoteric\ntreasure, the haven of free masculine spirits, the bulwark of our\ndomestic liberties. Slow, corrosive, change assails us everywhere.\nBut here we mount the barricades.\nUp and at 'em, men!\nFOR\nMINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are suitable for\nall mining and other\ncamp buildings. They\nare strong, waterproof,\nlight and very easy to\nhandle.\nDistrict Distributor!\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n\"Build B.C, Payrolls\"\nWhere\nFood\nValues\nCount\nA little bit goes a very long\nway and a little bit means\nmuch\u2014when one must carry\nall his food through rivers\nand over mountains.\nA prospector says he has\ncarried a case of Pacific Milk\n27 miles. It goes much further, he says. \u2022\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, of Course\n\u25a04t*f-f*aa\u2014\u00bba*a mmmiii*u\nWhat a Few\nDollars Bring\nA't the lime when home\nmeans so njuch more to all of\nus, you have the opportunity\nyou want to make that home\na real centre of comfort, of\nconvenience and of pride.\nBetter plumbing is at vour\nservice at less cost. Good\nworkmanship is guaranteed to\nyou and at less cost. Our long\nexperience puts us in a position to tell you that prices,\ndesign and service have never\nbeen more in favor of the\nhome owner than today. We'll\nbe glad to tell you what you\nwant to know about the cost\n-all without charge.\nPHONE 666\nKootenay\nPlumbin*? & Heating\nCOMPANY,  LIMITED\n357 Baker St.\nYour\nMarket\nIs*.\nWHERE\nYou want it\nWHEN\nYou want it\n\u2014and\nQUICK\nRESULTS\nARE\nASSURED\nif you advertise in the\nCANADIAN\nDAILY\nNEWSPAPERS\nThis advertisement was prepared for the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association by\nDuncan S. Blaikie Advertising .Agency, LimtttfJ.\n GOAT\nPONY\n\u25a0*\u00bb\nr_   M'r':      \u25a0      \"\n1\n1' $\n 0m$\ni*)ss_f\n\u25a0'\u25a0\"      \\                   ' \u2022*\u25a0*\u00bb\n* \"1 ' '       ,\nHHP^\"\"f '. \u00bbv- tJ\nRABBIT\nKID\n<5J\nRight\u2014\nR. LIVERSIDGE\nGranite Road rancher, and some\nof his four-footed friends. A visitor to the Liversidge ranch on\nGranite road, just outside Nelson, might truthfully remark in\nthe words of the popular children's song:\n\"I went to the Animal Fair;\nThe   birds   and   beasts   were\nthere.\"\nThe pictures *ere taken by J.\nJ. Boyd, Daily News staff photographer, on a recent visit.\nPUP\nSocial. ..\nSILVERTON\nSILVERTON, B. C. - G. Kirk\nis spending a few days In the Sheep\nCreek district.\nR, Fairhurst. E. Hansen, A, Cooper and J, Fairhurst spent Friday m\nNelson.\nMr. and Mn. V. Sharpe and\ndaughter, Gloria, were guests from\nTrail at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nB. Pengley over the week-end.\nMiss Edith Tattrie, teacher at the\npublic school, has returned from\nspending the holiday at Nelson, a\nguest of her brother-in-law and\nsister, Mr. and Mrs. R. Anderson.\nLeslie Crocker, who was in town\nto attend the Emerson-Shannon\nwedding, left Saturday for Nelson\nen route to hit home at Beaverdell.\nMrt. W. Nixon entertained at the\ntea hour Thursday prior to her departure for Nelson, where the will\nreside. Guestt included: Mrs. S.\nWatson, Mrs. H. Lancaster, Mrs. A.\nKynoch, Mrt. J. Senning, Mrs, C.\nSchmidt, Mrti R. Deuel, Mrs. B.\nFlynn, Mrs. M, Kennedy, Mrs. G.\nHodgson, Miss Johnson and Miss\nBurkitt\nMr. and Mrs. F. Sharpe of Trail\nwere guestt of Mr, and Mrs. B.\nPengally for a few days.\nMiss B. Cummingham of Crescent Valley was a week-end guest\nof Miss Gertrude Kirk.\nMrs. W. E. Marshall and Mrs. E.\nE. Marshall and baby were visitors to New Denver Tuesday.\nW. Hanna and J. Sheplack of the\nStandard mine were in twon Monday,\nAt Presbyterian church, April 17,\nEaster service was canducted by the\nchildren of the Sunday school, under the tupervision of Miss M. P.\nMacKinnon. A large crowd attended. The church was decorated with\nlilies.\nH. D. Davit and E. E. Marshall\nwere visitors to Trail Tuesday.\nF. Mills and R. Fairhurst have\nreturned from Nelson.\nH. Liebscher, who spent the holiday week and at his home here,\nfrom Sheep Creek, returned Wednesday. He was accompanied back\nby his brother, Jack Liebscher.\nH. Norberg and R. Hambley were\nEleven hundred women have answared New\nYork's call for more policewomen and are now in\nactive training to fit themselves for the rigors Of\nentrance examinations to the female police force\nof the metropolis. Mary Ellis, one of tbe applicant!\nis shown turning the tables on Inttructor Jog\nGunther. She it giving Gunther the \"back throw,\"\nso popular In subduing unruly prisoner!.\nBargains in the \"Classified\" today\nSo Bad With Nerves\nWould Lie Down and Cry\nIt it generally admitted that nerve\ntroubles are more frequent than\nformerly and growing more so every\nday.\nWherever there are people whose\nhealth is poor, and their nerves\nshattered, they will find in Milburn's\nHealth and Nerve Pills a tonic that\nwill help to restore the deranged\ncentres, and bring tho nervous\nsystem back to its old time condition.\nMaa. K. M. IIahvet, Bramber,\nN.S., writes:\u2014\"I got ao bad with\nmy nervea I would lie down on tho\nbed and cry. Most of the time it\njust seemed I could not help it and\nwould not know what I was crying\nfor. I used to feel aa if I would go\ncrazy I was so bad.\nI tried several different medicines,\nbut received no relief. I then took\nMilburn's Health and Nerve Pills,\nfour boxes of them, and started to\nfeel better after the first few doses.\nNow I feel better in every way.\"\nPut up by The T. Milburn Co., Ltd.\n(Advt.)\nSocial. . .\nNAKUSP\nHave You Any\nUsed\nGARDEN\nHOSE\ni\n\u2022\nWhy Not Turn\nIt Into Cash\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (21 lines 6 times 80c net\nTwo  (2)   lines rice 20c net\nNelson Daily News\nPHONI  114\nNAKUSP\u2014Miss Clara Salstrom,\non her seventeenth birthday, was\nhostess at supper party lately when\ninvited guests were Miss Vera Johnson, Miss Betty Davison, Miss Edith\nHorrey, Miss Irene Buerge and Miss\nMay Jarbo.\nMr. and Mrs. A. L. Levy ot New\nDenver were visitors to Nakusp on\nFriday.\nMiss Alberta Hascarl of Revelstoke is visiting at tlie home of Her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. L. Hascarl\nof Glenbank.\nP. Williams of Graham's Landing\nwas a visitor to Nakusp Friday.\nJ. Cadden of Burton was in town\nFriday.\nMrs. A. Davis and son, Lewis,\nof Revelstoke are visiting Mis. Davis'\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. L. Hascarl.\nH. L. Miller spent the week-end in\nNelson.\nL. Truscott, principal of Nakusp\npublic school, has returned after\nspending the Easter vacation in Nelson and Spokane.\nG. Mauchline of Rossland was a\nguest of his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. C. Horrey.\nG. B. Dickson, principal of Nakusp higli school, has returned Irom\na week-end spent in Nelson.\nMiss Betty White who teaches at\nGlenbank returned after spending\na few days at Edgewood.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Parent jr. and A.\nMatheson have returned after a fortnight in Calgary.\nH. Jordan spent several days at\nWhatshan lake last week.\nR, Jones was a recent visitor lo\nNelson.\nMrs. Loughcry of Edgewood spent\nthe week-end visiting here.\nL. Bailey and W. Rogers were visitors to New Denver Friday.\nMiss Joyce Johnstone of New Den\nver was a visitor to Nakusp Sun\nday.\nMiss Lillias Kerr of iho teaching\nstall of Nakusp public school has\nreturned after spending several days\nin Nelson.\nSam and Clifford Picard of New\nDenver were guests at the home\nof their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.\nT, Harvey.\nli. Taylor of New Denver motored\nlo town Sunday.\nMiss Joyce Butlin, who spent the\nEaster vacation here, has returned\nlo Cranbrook where she is taking\nher senior matriculation.\nMiss Joan Markwick has returned\nafter spending tho holiday at her\nhome at Graham's landing.\nrsi..-  TUH-.^I Aai.ahlar  Mlop \"Tlar.\nlene Detta, of Fauquier were Saturday visitors to town.\nMrs. Marsland and F. Marsland of\nArrow Park were Saturday visitors\nin Nakusp.\nMiss Evelyn Robins of Arrow Park\nspent Saturday in Nakusp.\nMrs. Welch and Miss Dorothy\nWelch have returned after spending\nthe holiday at Arrow Park.\nCapt. C. S. Leary M.L.A. returned from Vancouver Saturday.\nMiss Helen Rollins, who spent tlie\nEaster vacation at her home in Fauquier, lias returned to Nakusp.\nC. Marshall and A. Holford of\nBurton were visitors to Nakusp Saturday.\nC. Walton of Burton was in town\nSaturday.\nE. S. Thompson of Creston was a\nvisitor here Saturday.\nJ. A. Jones was in town from Rose-\nbery Saturday,\nMiss Florence Picard of New Denver, is spending a few days at the\nhome of her grandparents, Mr. and\nMrs. T. Harvey here.\nMiss Frances returned Thursday\nfrom Nelson where she visited her\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. A. Renwick.\nE. Rushton motored to Edgewood\nThursday.\nMr. and Mrs. R. McWhirter have\nas their guests their daughter-in-law\nMrs. David McWhirter, and grandson, Robert David, of Grand Forks.\nP. Johnson was in town from\nSlocan Friday.\nMrs. B. H. Pearson and son Bill returned to Nelson Tuesday after visiting Mr. and Mrs. G. Hunter Gard\nner.\nMiss Lillias Kerr left on Tuesday\nfor Nelson where she will visit\nher cousin Miss Jessie Ion.\nMrs. E. Oxenham returned Tuesday from Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Fletcher and two\nchildren arrived Tuesday from Nelson to make their home In Nakusp.\nMiss Doris Harvey returned Tuesday alter spending Easter in Nelson and Spokane.\nMiss Betty White left Tuesday\nto visit Edgewood.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Islip have as their\nguests Mrs. Telfor and Miss Creelman of Revelstoke.\nMrs. A. James of Arrow Park was\nin town on Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. C' Horrey spent the\nEaster vacation In Rossland visiting\nMr. Horrey's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nG. Mauchline.\nA. B. Thompson of Trail lj a guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. J. Dolman.\nMiss Dorothy Bedford arrived Saturday from Moose Jaw to Join her\nbrother J. Bedford here.\nThe Golden Keys met Wednesday afternoon in the United church\nparlors with their leader Miss Amy\nKershaw in charge. Miss Kershaw\nread several chapters from the book\n\"Little Dot\" and the remainder of\nthe afternoon was spent in making\nnovelties which are to be sold at\nthe club's novelty sale.\nMrs. G. W. Battershall was honored at the tea hour Monday when\nseveral friends surprised her on\nher birthday anniversary. Tlie guests\nwere Mrs. C. L. Hiltz, Mrs. H,\nAalien jr. Miss D. Chadwick, Mrs\nP. Talbot and Mrs. J. Shelling.\nDr. H. F. Tyreman has returned\nfrom Spokane.\nMrs. England of the staff of the\nArrow Lakes hospital will leave\nSaturday for California where she\nwill visit her son for two months.\nB. Robertson of Burton motored to town on Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. W. B. Allan leave on\nSaturday for Vancouver where they\nwill attend the graduation of their\ndaughter, Miss Margaret Allan who\nhas been in training at St. Paul's\nhospital.\nJ. Jenkins of Arrow Park was in\ntown on Tuesday.\nMr. and Mrs. C. Turner had as\ntheir guests Mrs. Huberts of Burton.\nMiss Eileen Herridge of Nelson\nspent the week-end at the home of\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs, H. W. Herridge.\nMr. and Mrs. Collins arrived this\nweek from, Vancouver and spent\nsome time in Nakusp en route to\ntheir summer home at West Demara.\nrecent visitors to Bonnington and\nNelson.\nMrs. D. MacDearmld of Three\nForks is the guest of her ton and\ndaughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. M.\nMacDearmid.\nMrs. E. Spigariol and son Laurie\nof Trail were visiting friends in\ntown recently.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Kirk and son\nRussell have returned from the\nBralorne Mine.\nG. Lockhart has returned from\nVancouver, where he has been visiting his family fo: the past few\nmonths.\nJ. Fairhurst has returned from\na week's visit to the Bridge River\ndistrict.\nAmong those attending the Emerson-Shannon wedding reception in,\nDenver on Saturday from here\nwere:- Mrs. W. S. Marshall Mrs. J,\nJackel, Mrs. A. Cooper, Mrs, M.\nMacDearmid, Mrs. E. E. Marshall,\nMiss Gertrude Kirk, Miss I. Kennedy, H. Norberg, S, Dewis, R.Fair-\nhurst.\nMiss Belle Cunningham of Crescent Valley was the week-end guest\nof Miss Gertrude Kirk.\nMiss Irene Kennedy was a visitor\nto Nelson.\nMrs. W. Morrison of Trail enter,\ntained Wednesday evening at the\nhome of her mother, Mrs. M. E.\nEmerson, in honor of their house\nguest, Leslie Crocker of Beaverdell.\nA series of games were enjoyed by\nwere served by the hostess, assisted\nby Mrs. E. E. Marshall and Miss\nRose Zadra. Those present included Mr. and Mrs. C. Kennett, Mr. and\nMrs. A. Avison, Miss Effie Shannon,\nMrs. M. Shannon, Miss Rose Zadra\nand G, Avison, all of New Denver;\nMr. and Mrs. E. E. Marshall, Mr.\nand Mrs. J. Jakel, Mr. and Mrs. A.\nErickson, Mr. and Mrs. M. Mac-\nDiarmid, Mr. and Mrs. J. Millar,\nMrs. M. Emerson, Mrs. W. Morrison,\nand the guest of honor, L. Crocker.\nYOUTHS ESCAPE POLICE\nVANCOUVER, April 29 (CP) -\nTwo youths in a stolen car escaped\npolice capture here early today after they were chased through city\nstreets by a patrol car.\nWade Pays $12.50 for\nNot Having Licence\nHarry Waae of Trail, whose auto\nfigured in a collision with a motorcycle on Baker street Thursday\nnight, pleaded guilty and paid a\nfine of $12.50 in city police court\nbefore William Brown, police magistrate, Friday morning, on a charge\nof driving an auto without having a\ndriver's licence.\nThursday night Wade's car was\nin a collision with a motorcycle\nridden by Thomas Crack and Ernie\nElliott, at the corner ot Baker and\nJosephine streets.\nSmall Want Ads bring big results.\n12 Babies at\nClinic Held at\nSheep Creak\nSHEEP CREEK, B.C.\u2014Spontoreil\nby the Service club, a baby citato\nwas opened at the home of Mrs. J.\nMay, April 21.\nDr. Morrison of Salmo attended\nand examined 12 babies.\nWith the new addition to th*\nQueen mine store nearing compl*\ntion, the post office will be opened\nshortly.\nBuilding is active up tha creek.\nAllen Duncan and J. Hendrlckson\nare erecting a number of cabins,\nand several men are building homei\ntor their families on the hill east of\nFawn creek.\nWHITE HORSE\nSCOTCH  WHISKY\nThis advertisement ls not published or displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by ihe Government of British Columbia.\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE RE-OPENS TODAY\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nDEATHS\n(By The Canadian Press)\nPhiladelphia\u2014Dr. Robert Tait McKenzie, 70, distinguished Canadian-\nborn sculptor and physician.\nMontreal\u2014Mrs. Walter Williams,\n64, daughter of the late H. W Walker, for many years general auditor\nof the old Grand Trunk Railway.\n. Detroit\u2014Mrs. Annie G. Curran, 63,\nwife of Dr. W. S. Curran of Detroit,\nformer well-known concert contralto in Toronto and Detroit.\nToronto\u2014Isaac E. Suckling, well-\nknown in Canadian and United\nStates musical circles.\nKingston\u2014G. C Publow, authority\non the manufacture of cheese and\nformer cSeese inttructor for eastern\nOntario.\nGOOD LUCK and\nBEST WISHES\nto the\nGolden\nGate\non their reopening\nAll .painting .and .Interior\n.. decorating wai done by..\nMurphy\nBros.\nPainters, Decorators\nPHONE 658       *  '\nNELSON, B.C.\n(5J\nALL NEWLY\nRENOVATED and\nDECORATED\nNew floor plan allows greater\nefficiency and seating capacity.\nCongratulations to the\nGolden Gate Cafe\nALL REMODELLING AND REPAIRING WAS\nCARRIED OUT BY\nGeo* R* Leask\nGENERAL CONTRACTOR\nMcKay\nand\nStretton\nElectrical Contractor!\nwere responsible for all\nthe new\nElectrical\nFixtures\nin the remodelled\nGolden Gate\nCafe\nWe congratulate Mr. Cassios\non this fine new restaurant.\nYou Are Invited to Attend\nthe Re-Opening\nOF NELSON'S EVER-POPULAR\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\nTODAY \u2014 April 30th.\nThe Interior of the cafe\nhas been completely remodelled and redecorated\n\u2014You'll really appreciate\nour finer foods in this new\nfresh atmosphere . . ,\nDINNER\nFrom\n11a.m. to 8 p.m.\n35c and Up\nTake the Family to Dinner at the Golden Gate\n tmwsmm\niwmmm\nMl 'IOHT-\nProbes Creamery\nI Plan at Creston\n'. CRESTON, B. C. - Fred Wasson\not the dairy branch of the provincial\ndepartment of agriculture, with C.\nB. Twigg, district agriculturist, have\ncompleted a survey ot the valley,\n-assembling information for use in\ndetermining the feasibility of establishing a creamery at some point\nin Creston valley.\n'Before leaving for his home in\nKelowna, Mr. Wasson had an informal discussion of the creamery\nsituation and disclosed some of the\ninformatiun secured by him to President Charles Sutcliffe of the agricultural association, and President F. H. Jackson, Don Bradley,\nQ. H. Irvine, and W. H. Hilton of\nthe executive of Creston Farmers'\ninstitute.\nUntil a report is submitted by\nMr. Wasson to the department at\nVictoria, it is not expected any information will be given out con-\n\"Ctrnlng the survey, but it would\n'appear that his canvass o\u00a3 the valley revealed tlie fact that tlie cow\npopulation is more extensive than\nWas at first estimated, and even\n\u2022iter allowing generously tor on-\n,imals almost enough lo support a\n.butter factory provided the entire\n^.product was available lo a creamery.\ni 'Mr. Wasson was taken wilh the\nvalley as a location for a creamery.\nIta compact nature simplified the\ncteam hauling proposition. In his\nofficial duties he inspects some 28\ncreameries in British Columbia in\n\u2022Which the department is interested,\n\u25a0nd'advises if a building and plant\nis secured to get something large\nenough to take care of a considerable expansion.\n!*The visitor was silent as to what\nprospects were for some govern\nment assistance in establishing the\nindustry. It is learned, too, that his\nestimate of needed initial capital is\nin excess of what has been popularly, considered necessary to launch\n\"such an undertaking.\nJoe Jerome Young\nHost at S. Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B.C.-On Easter Monday, his third birthday, Joe\n'Jerome, little son of Mr. and Mrs. J.\nTjt; Jermo, was host at a party at\nlis home. Games were played and\n^lored hats were distributed lo all\nhe little guests. The tabic was pret-\nHy decorated with yellow tapers\nltd centered by a cart iced in white\n4th green spokes and carrying a\nsen and white iced cake with\n..ee small yellow candles. A sparking green bunny pulled th'c cart\nliven with white reins by Popeye\nhe Sailor. During the afternoon the\n\"later Bunny visited the party.\n\u00bbving a huge mysterious box\nhliih contained favors for each\nuest. Those invited were Margaret\nJtejadden, Joyce Bland, Shiela\n.Vadeson, Jean Gilker, Carolyn and\nuerile Cavlll, Marjory Duns-\n, Bobby and George McDoug-\n, and Jack and Joe Jerome.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING. APRIL 30. 1938\nSociaL...\nBonnington\nSouth Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C. - Mr.\nand Mrs. Harold Hall of Calgary\nare the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J.\nD.  Yeatman.\nMiss Evelyn Burgess, who spent\nthe school vacation in Creston and\nSpokane, lias returned to her duties at the-public school..\nMrs, Henry Nixon was a Nelson\nvisitor  Sunday.\nMrs. Edith Perry is a patient in\nIhe Kootenay Lake General hospital, Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. F. B. Hardin of\nVancouver, former resident here,\nhave returned for a short visit.\nMrs. F. Timaeus and Miss Margaret Taylor have returned from Spokane, Seattle and Vancouver.\nBONNINGTON, B. C. \u2014 Maurice\nWalker, principal of the public\nschool, has returned from Vancouver where he attended the Teachers'\nConvention and also visited at his\nfamily home in Victoria.\nMr. and Mrs. G. N. Brown have\nreturned   from  Spokane.\nMrs. Robert Mam is a patient in\nthe Kootenay Lake General hospital, Nelson.\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. F. B. Hardin, formerly of\nSouth Slocan and now of Vancouver, are guests for a few days at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. P. 0. Bird\nat South Slocan.\nMrs. Slace Smith\nDies al Creston\nCRESTON, B. C. - Mrs. Richard\nStace Smith died Tuesday at Creston hospital after a lengthy illness.\nA family of seven and the huBband\nsurvive.\nMrs. Smith was in her 38th year\nand was a daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. T. H. Smith, who reside near\nPorthill, Ida. She was married in\n1020.\nSocial...\nPASSMORE\nPASSMORE, B.C.-F. Flynn returned from a short visit to Lethbridge Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs, A. Hoplund and infant daughter of Castlegar were recent visitors here.\nW. H. Saunders motored here\nfrom Tnl over the week-end. He\nreturned with Mrs. Saunders, Miss\nE. Saunders and Harry Saunders,\nwho had spent the holiday on their\nranch here.\nMrs. W. Innes and Mrs. J. Innes\not Vallican were visitors here Friday.\nThe Lower Slocan Valley Farmers' Institute met Saturday. President C. Newcomen presided. Tho\nchief business was to arrange for\nthe government veterinary surgeon\nto test cows for T.B.\nIn the Needles District\n(HAMBER MINES INDORSES (OAST\nIN ASKING CONTINUANCE FEDERAL\nGEOLOGICAL SURVEY WORK IN B. C.\nHere is a big raft of logs, on the Lower Arrow\nlake, opposite Needles, destined for the sawmill of\nWm. Waldie and Sons at Castlegar. The tug is the\nWaldie lug, Elco, and the logs arc presumably from\nthe firm's woods operation on Whatshan lake, the\nlogs being \"driven down Mosquito creek in the\nspring to the Lower Arrow lake to be rafted at\nNeedles,\nCRESTON Social ...\n\\m\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nCRESTON, B. C\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles Perry and son, Frank, of\nGolden, have taken up residence in\nthe Paulson ranch house east of\nthe village. They are intending to\nremain.\nCol. and Mrs. E. Mallandaine arc\nSpokane visitors this week.\nMrs. G. R. John has returned\nfrom Montreal.\nJ. Byers of Trail was in Creston,\na guest of Fred Lewis.\nDr. Bruner, who spent the winter\nin Calgary, returned on Tuesday lo\nlook after his dyked land farm operations. He is a visitor to his son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Adamas.\nMrs. T. Dunseath of Wynndel was\nhere Tuesday, a guest of Rev. Andrew H. and Mrs. Walker.\nMr. and Mrs. Dudley Rogers have\nmoved into their residence on the\nReclamation farm, where they will\nremain for spring seeding operations.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Demister of Sar\nnia, Ont, visited Mr. and Mrs. A.\nSitter.\nMrs. K. Matthews of Nelson has\nbeen a visitor to Mrs. J. C. Martin and Mrs. Harry Reed.\nMrs. E. J..C. Richardson is holidaying at Victoria.\nR. J. Forbes, C. F. Hayes and S,\nA. Speers of the board of trade industries committee, were at Bonners Ferry, Tuesday, arranging for\na speaker for the creamery meeting at Creston Thursday.\nMiss Lillian Cookson of Nelson\nvisited last week her sister, Mrs.\nAubrey Kemp.\nHenry Lemoigne of Nelson and\nMr. and MrS. Nedlec of Yahk have\nbeen on a visit to Mr. and Mrs.\nMermet.\nDon Brewster of the Michel-Natal consolidated school teaching staff\nhas returned after an Easter week\nholiday with Herb Dodd.\nDes. Truscott and Clifford Yahk\nhave returned from a trip to Blairmore, Alio.\nKASLO Social \u2666 \u2666.\nKASLO, B. C. \u2014 Miss Sophia\nMarleau entertained at bridge Wednesday evening complimenting\nMrs. Carl Hild on her birthday. A\ndaintily arranged table was centered witli a bowl of seasonable\nflowers. A candle lighted birthday\ncake was cut by Mrs. Hild. Amusing place cards marked the seals.\nMrs. Paterson carried off the high\nscore prize, consolation being won\nby Miss Rouleau. Guests were Mrs.\nB. Murgitroyd of Cranbrook, Mrs.\nCarl Hild, Mrs. John Paterson, Miss\nAlice Augustine, Miss Laura Dale,\nMiss Elsie Rouleau, Miss Iris\nClarke and Miss Daphne Chandler.\nGeorge Baker has been appointed as secretary of the Kaslo school\nboard to succeed B. F. Palmer, resigned.\nMrs. George Hobbs of Ainsworth\nwas a Kaslo visitor Wednesday.\nJames Alexander of Cooper\nCreek is spending a few days in\ntown visiting his daughters, Mrs.\nCecil Pangburn. Mrs. Andrew Jardine, Jr., and Mrs. Ian Leighton.\nWilliam Howser of Ainsworth was\na Wednesday visitor in the city.\nMrs. D. P. Kane has as her guest,\nher daughter, Mrs. Norman Link of\nMcLeod, Alta.\nH. L. Staines has left to spend\nsome time at the Dardanelles mine.\nMr. and Mrs. H. McLeod and\nfamily have arrived from Trail\nto reside at Kaslo at the corner of\nGeorge Craft, postmaster and hotel proprietor\nat Needles, the western terminus of the Needles-\nFauqiiier ferry. Mr. Craft is an old soldier, and in\nthe Great War he was quartermaster-sergeant of\n\"A\" company of the 54th Kootenay battalion.\nC. avenue and Second street. Mr.\nMcLeod recently purchased the\nhouse from F. E. Archer.\nMiss Clara Johnson was a recent\nbridge hostess when guests were\nher mother, Mrs. Eric Johnson, Mrs.\nJohn Paterson, Mrs. Carl Hild, Miss\nAlice Augustine, Miss Daphne\nChandler, Miss Sophie Marleau,\nMiss Laura Dale, Miss Iris Clarke\nand Miss Elsie Rouleau. Mrs, Paterson won high score prize, consolation going to Miss Marleau. After\ncards refreshments were served by\nthe hostess.\nE. H. Morphct of Shutly Bench\nwas a business visitor to Nelson.\nMayor F. E. Archer is a patient at\nVictorian hospital.\nMrs. .). R. Tinkess spent Tuesday\nat Nelson.\nStanley Lakes of Johnson's Land\ning was a visitor in town Wednesday.\nCharles Idle has returned to Trail\nafter spending a few days in town.\nW. H. Seal has returned to his\nschool teaching duties at Shutty\nBench after visiting his parents ut\nBa'four.\nW. G. Robb is a patient at Victorian hospital here.   \u25a0\nOle Stenberg of Johnson's Landing visited the city Wednesday.\nGeorge McCready of Retallack\nwas a recent visitor in town.\nWord has reached the city of the\nbirth of a daughter to Mr. and Mrs.\nRoland Green Of Vancouver. Mr.\nGreen is the youngest son of S. II.\nGreen o( this city and a brother ot\nHoward Green, M.P., of Vancouv-\nMr. and Mrs. R. T. Garland have\nreturned to their home at Trail after\nspending a few days in town where\nthey attended funeral services for\nMr. Garland's father, A. T. Garland.\nMrs. William Hendren has left\nfor a short visit to her brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Edwards of Ymir. She was accompanied by her sister, Mrs. A. E.\nFox of Revelstoke, who visited Ira\nfather, Alderman Alderman A. L\".\nGrayling, here.\nMrs. H. E. Falrwealher has relumed to her home at Oliver, B. C.\nafter visiting her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mrs. E. Amos,\nhere.\nMrs. S. Thornberg of Nelson was\nin the city Sunday to attend the funeral services for A. T. Garland.\nFine  Work   in   Past,\nNeeded Still, Is\nContention\nASSELSTINE MAY\nCOME LATE JUNE\nA resolution from Vancouver urging that geological and topographical survey work carried out in\nBritish Columbia in past years\nshould be continued in view of\npressing needs for maps of this\ntype and in view of fine-work done\nin the past, was indorsed by the\nChamber of Mines of Eastern British Columbia, meeting in the chamber office Thursday \u201eight. J. R.\nHunter, president, was in the chair\nThe resolution, drawn by the B.C.\nChamber of Mines, was addressed\nto Hon. T. A. Crerar, minister ot\nmines, Ottawa. It had been rumored,\nn letter from Frank E. Woodside of\nthe Vancouver chamber stated, that\nthis work was to be curtailed and\npossibly discontinued.\nA resolution from lireenwooo, directed to the Associated Boards of\nTrade of Eastern British Columbia,\nopposing amendments lo the British Columbia Mineral act, was referred to a special committee consisting of .Thomas Brown, H. D\nDawson and Harold Lakes to study\nThis committee previously soi.\nproposed amendments lo that act,\nand to the Mineral Survey and Development act, and as a result the\nchamber asked the government to\ndefer action on the amendments for\na year in order that the effect might\nbe fully appraised.\nSYMPATHY McCOLEMAN\nThe chamber placed on its books\na resolution expressing sympathy to\nthe family of the late Neil McColeman, a letter of condolence having\npreviously been forwarded. Mr. McColeman was one who \"in his quiet\nway has always helped us along\nsince we organized,\" E. W. Widdowson commented.\nMr. Widdowson described his visit\nlo the office of Mineral Incorporated, the body in charge of mineral\nexhibits al Ihe San Francisco world\nfair next year, and told of the\nplans being formulated. It would\nbe loo expensive for this district to\nsend a display, he thought. Differences between the provincial department of mines and Mr. Wood-\nside regarding the latter's talks on\nZeballos at Los Angeles were largely due, Mr. Widdowson thought, to\nnewspaper treatment of Mr. Wood-\nside's address. The Vancouver man\nhad dealt with all parts of the province in his talk, said Mr. Widdowson, but the newspapers featured\nthat part of it dealing with Zeballos.\nTHROUGH DEPARTMENT\nParticipation of this district in\nthe San Francisco exhibit would be\nthrough the provincial department;\nMr. Hunter said. He had the assurance of Dr. J. F. Walker, deputy\nminister, that all parts of the province would be represented.\nA letter from Hon. W. J. Asselstine, minister of mines, stated the\nminister would probably visit the\nKootenays in the latter part of\nJune.\nSocial. *.\nSANCA\nSANCA, B.C.-Mlss Moe Miller\nspent Easter with Mrs. Vic Johnson\nat Lockhart.\nMr. and Mrs. Squarok and party\nof Sirdar visited Sanca Easter Monday.\nMrs. J. Hall, Mrs. Eric Bainbridge\nand Miss Joyce Hall of Boswell\nspent. Easter at Sanca, guesta of\nMr. and Mrs. Ed Bainbridge.\nMiss Elaine Bostock spent the\nEaster holidays with her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Bostock, at Burnaby.\nMr. and Mrs. Eakin of Wynndel\nspent Easter at Sanca, guests of Mr.\nand Mrs. L. Miller.\nSocial. . .\nBULL RIVER\nBULL RIVER, B. C.-Wilfred, Beatrice and Bernice Graf were guests\nof the Misses Noreen and Olive\nCharles Thursday,\nMiss I. Maltman left for Fernie\nto spend the holidays at the home\nof ner parents, Mr. and Mrs. J.\nMailman.\nMiss I. Maltman gave an Easter\nparly to \u25a0 her pupils Thursday. K.\nMacken directed the games for the\nchildren.\nJ. Flodin was a Wardner visitor\nGood Friday.\nJ. Rossi and Pete, Ernie Dillon\nand Alex Sabo were Wardner visitors Friday.\nMario and Vincent Costanzo were\nin Wardner Saturday.\nClaude MacDonald was a Cranbrook visitor Saturday.\nMrs. C. Dillon and sons Ernie\nand Pete were in Cranbrook Saturday.\nMrs. J, 0. MacDonald and Mrs.\nW. Dempsey were Wardner visitors\nGood Friday.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Waskalu and\nAlan MacDonald of Kimberley and\nMildred and Melvin Ukraine of\nCranbrook were guests of Mr. and\nMrs. 0. MacDonald Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Mader and family were guests of Mrs. E. M. Costanzo Sunday.\nMr. and Mrs. L. Doree, Loretta\nRenick and Estelle Clarke of Wardner were visitors here Sunday.\nRev. Father Craig of Yahk was\na visitor here Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. George Niely an!\ndaughter Joyce, of Pecchams Lake,\nwere visitors here Monday.\nMrs. J. Rossi left Monday to visit\nEdmonton.\nMrs. C. Dillon and sons were\nguests of her daughter and son-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. I. Gerrand of\nKimberley.\nMario and Vincent Costanzo left\nTuesday for Golden.\nVerne and Freddie Graf and Osr\ncar Duival and Bob. Noreen Charles\nwere visitors in Jaffray Saturday.\n'he 'Monkey's Fist'\nBy GEORGE H. HADDOCK\n8YN0PSIS\nJiTom Powell, young deck hand\nthe tugboat, Gloria H., finds it\n1 to do his work without mak-\nmistakes.   His   awkwardness\n1)5 worse because Jack, a pow-\njful dock hand,  taunts the boy\njontinually. One night Tom heard\npick and two companions talking,\ntnd his suspicions are aroused by\nWeir remarks.  In   order to  help\nJT6m become familiar with  boats,\n\"Jptain Olsen, skipper of the tug,\nsks him to stay aboard nights. One\nJening Tom is visited by Donna\nIton and Mary Rogers, two girls\nho  come   to   thank   him   for   a\narning which saved them from a\nr4d  smash-up   in   their   outboard\nnotorboat. Later that night Tom has\nHother visitor\u2014a Mr. McDonough,\nbvernment special agent. He tells\n*0m about a smuggling ring oper-\nfing in the harbor, and asks the\niJy.to watch out for anything un-\nisual.  Later  after  he   goes,  Tom\nqnnecls this information wilh the\nysterious remarks he overheard\nitween the dock hand, Jack, and\ni companions. Because of lack of\n*\u00bbf.  however,   he   keeps   silent.\nMeanwhile, through practice, Tom\n*omes more expert in seaman-\nlip, and begins to enjoy his work,\nite on a foggy night, Tom sees\nthree men sneak up to the dock\nKid   begin   to   unload   mysterious\nlicking bundles from a rowboat.\nTV\u00ab  he   watches   them,   one   man\n\" aks,   and   Tom   recognizes   the\nSice of Jack.\nSOW GO ON WITH THE STORY\nINSTALLMENT 7\nTom trembled  with excitement\n|t\"he recognized Jack in Ihe row-\nJilt. \"I was right!\" he said to him-\nJett, \"He  is mixed  up  in  some-\n|hlng\u2014and it looks like smuggling\nme.\"\n'Torn watched the men quickly\nfinish unloading the bundles from\nhe boat, and then the other smuggler In the boat joined his companion on the dock. Jack, still a I\nJhe oars, waved, and silently rowed\n[way into the fog. Tom dared not\nmove from his crouched position\nlehlnd the tugboat rail as long as\nTha men  were on the dock, but\npon they, too, faded into tho mist.\nICautiously  Tom  stood  up.  \"I'll\nJMt try to follow them (or a while,\"\nle muttered to himself. \"Maybe I\nTill find out what they do with\nhe stuff.\"\nJ Crawling   carefully   up   on   the\nlock Tom slipped along through the\n|r|fting fog. Ahead he could hear\ni- faint footsteps of the men, and\n\u25a0 he  hurried  silently   along,  he\nally saw the two shadowy fig-\nI as they passed beneath a ware-\nUse light glowing dimly In the\nllooni.\n(.The men turned down between\npa warehouses and went toward\nstreet. Cautiously approachinr\n[ie corner of the building, Tom\ntred aroind it. \"They must be\nJolng to that car parked along the\nIreet,\" he thought. The men stop-\nled by the auto, got in quickly,\nJul drove off.\niTom  sighed   in  disappointment.\nTifo usj trying to chase them now,\"\nthe licence number.\" He turned\nback toward the tugboat. \"Well. I'll\ntell Mr. McDonough in the morning.\"\nToo excited to sleep, Tom spent\nthe remaining hours of darkness\nstraightening up the cabin, and\nthen went aft to clean up the engine room. Finally at daylight, lie\ncould wait no longer, and locking\nup the cabin, he hurried along the\nstill foggy dock to find a telephone.\nIn a booth in an all-night restaurant. Tom put in his call to McDon-\nough's home. The phone rang three\nor four times before the agent's\nvoice came sleepily over the wire.\n\"Yes?\" he said drowsily.\nTom leaned close to the telephone. \"Mr. Donough,'' he said,\n\"this is Tom Powell, down on the\nGloria H. I think I've just seen\nthe smugglers!\"\n\"Tom Powell?\" came the government man's words, crisply. \"Are\nyou sure?\"\n\"I've gol mighty strong suspicions.\" answered Tom. \"And I know\none of the men.''\nTom heard an exclamation.\n\"Good!\" said McDonough., \"I'll be\ndown right away. Don't say any\nmore over the phone.\nReturning to the Gloria H-, Tom\nprepared breakfast. He had started\nto clean up the dishes when he\nwas interrupted by a hail from the\ndock.\n\"Coming aboard, Tom!\" shouted\na voice which lie recognized as Mc-\nDonough's.\nFollowed by two calm-eyed men,\nIhe agent jumped onto the tug and\nclimbed down into the cabin.\n\"Morning, Tom,\" he said. \"Now\ntell me what you saw.\"\nTom quickly related his experience of the night before. McDonough asked a few quick questions,\ngetting a description of Jack, and\nthen stood up.\n\"We have something lo work on\nnow, Tom,\" he said. \"If we can\npin this smuggling on these men,\nwell have you to thank.\" He nodded to his companions. \"Come on.\nwe'll go first to the dock office.\"\nTom followed them on deck and\nwatched them walk briskly along\nthe dock.\n\"Well.\" he said lo himself, \"I'd\nbetter get the lug ready to go out,\nI can't do any more right now,\nI guess.\"\nAs Tom was working, Capain\nOlsen came aboard and shouted his\nname.\n\"Here I am, Captain Olsen!\" called Tom, sticking his head out of\nthe engine room, \"Say, you missed\nall the excitement.\"\nThe skipper listened incredulously as Tom related the happenings\nof tlie night.\n\"Well.\" he said, shaking his head.\n\"That Jack's a hard one, for a fact.\nBut I guess I ain't too surprised.\nYou had him figured about right\nboy.\"\nTom. still excited, cont'nued to\nexclrum ah^ut the Incidents of the\nfoggv nifdit, till the old skipper\nlaughed and shoved him gently\ndown the deck. \"See here,\" he\nsnorted, \"you're a sailor, not a detective. Suppose you act like it, for\nTHE BOYS AND GIRLS PAGE\nAnyone Who Plays An Instrument\nCan Be a Member of This 'Club'\nBy GRETCHEN  BAIRD\nWould you like to join the \"Make\nMy Own Music\" club? There are no\ndues to pay, no officers to elect, and\nno meetings to attend. In fact, many\nof the people who belong lo the\nclub probably don't even know lhat\nthey are members!\nBut all over the world there are\npeople who make music for fun.\nSome of them arc good enough lo\nearn their living as professional\nmusicians. A few become famous.\nMost of them, however, have a hard\nlime reading and playing very simple pieces.\nThe only requirement for membership in this \"club\" is the fact\nthat you get pleasure from making\nyour own music. The number of\npeople who play instruments themselves, instead of merely listening to\nthe radio, is growing by leaps and\nbounds. The piano business is\nbooming, after years of dullness,\nand people arc buying and playing\neverything from organs to accordions, from oboes to ocarinas. The\n\"Make My Owh Music'' club is\ngaining members fast.\nA BOND OF FRIENDSHIP\nOnce you join the group, you'll be\na life member. No matter what you\ndo or where you go, you'll find other\n\"playing for fun\" fans, and this is\na friendship bond which grows\nstronger the more you use it. So if\nyou ever took music lessons, or\nthought, you'd like to, you'd better\njoin up!\nAnyone who is studying, or who\nhas studied, any instrument\u2014be it\npiano, violin, saxophone, or anything else\u2014is eligible for informal\nmembership in this \"Make My Own\nMusic\" club. All you must do is,\nfirst, perform the necessary amount\not practising to prepare your musk-\nlesson <in case you are taking lessons from a teacher), and then start\nplaying for fun.\nTurn to last month's work; lasl\nyear's will be even better. And play\nthat music from start to finish, without hesitating to find all the notes.\nTry to make it sound pleasant to\nyour own cars. At this stage of the\ngame your family will just have to\nhe tolerant. You'll make plenty of\nmistakes, but you dare not stop to\ncorrect them when you are learning\nto ride the musical hobby horse.\nYOU MUST KEEP GOING\nWhat you are trying to do, actually, is to learn to read notes. And\nthe very first rule in sight reading\nis never to lose your place or lose\nIhe beat. You must keep going, no\nmatter how many notes fall under\nthe table!\nThe more thoroughly you practice\nyour regular lessons, the faster\nyou'll get there. But if you never\nstart olayini on your own. as we\nhave been describing, you'll be forever an outsider.\nAnd now we come to the part that\nis even more fun. This ls duet play-\nInn  nnri dfrnnmnantfing nnnthpr in.\nModern Mother Goose Cutouts\nPlaying with others increases your enjoyment,\n.slrummt. If mother or dad or anyone else in Ihe family plays, that's\nthe best of all. You'll have your\npatiner near at hand, and ran plan\nyour music-making sessions easily.\nOtherwise, find someone in the\nneighborhood.\nPLAYING WITH ANOTHER\nThen get some simple music for\nthe two instruments, or some piano\nmusic arranged for four hands, if\nyou both play the piano. Your teacher can give you some good suggestions. Many public libraries-have a\nlarge collection of all sorts of arrangements, which you may borrow, just as you do books to read.\nThen go to it! And don't mind any\nnasty remarks from people around\nyou. You're not playing for an r,ud-\nWELL, THAT'S PERFECT\n\"Yes,\" said the man in the ancient overcoat wilh bulging pock-\nels. \"Bill and I arc in partnership,\nbut we don't carry Ihe same goods.\"\n\"Explain yourself,'1 said a friend.\n\"Well, Bill goes around selling a\nstove polish that leaves a stain on\nthe fingers, and 1 go around next\nday with the only soap that will\nLake it off!\"\nPROPOSAL\nFred: Would you accept- a pet\nmonkey?\nCatherine: Oh, I'll have to ask\nmy father; this is so sudden,\nHIS POSITION\nCoed: What position does your\nbrother play on the team?\nSister: In a sort of crouched and\nbent position.\nicne?. You're playing for fun. Listening to the best orchestra at a concert or on the radio can never mean\nquite as much lo you as playing the\nmusic yourself. If you manage to\nplay only a phrase hero and there\nas you think it should be played, it\nwil! be a bigger thrill than you can\nget from just listening. Try it and\nsee!\nSomeiimcs a hobby of this kind\nwill lead you into a life work. There\nmay be within you enough talent to\nmake you a professional musician.\nBut if there isn't, this kind of hobby\nwill Jay Ihe foundation of a vital\ninterest that will last all your days.\nYou'll be a full-fled?ed member\nof the \"Mako My Own Music'' club.\nAnd you'll never regret it.\nNICE ON A HOT DAY\nClergyman to Mrs, Jones (whose\nlittle son has just been christened);\n\"Oh, Mrs. Jones, I have never seen\na child that has behaved so well at\na christening!\"\nMrs. Jones: \"Well, you sec, it's because my husband and I have been\npracticing on him witli a watering\ncan for a whole week!\"\nRINGS FROM MOTHER'S\nFRUIT JARS ARE USED\nTO MAKE THIS CAME\nHere's a game which can be played by any number of contestants, or\nwhich, you may play by yourself.\nAnd all you need is a piece of pine\nboard about 24 inches square, six\nrings from your mother's fruit jars,\nand 13 nails. -\nHammer the nails inlo the board\nas in the diagram, and number each,\nin :my order. Lay the board on the\nfloor and throw the rings at it from\na distance of about 15 feet. To win\nyou must score exactly 101. If you\nget more than thai, you lose 20\npoints.\nIt's more fun if you play with partners, but you can practice it alone\nlo work up your skill at hitting the\nright noils.\nGOOD NEWS\nCountry Editor's Wife\u2014\"How\nhappy you seem tonight, Edward.\nHave you had any good luck today*;\"\nCountry Editor\u2014\"Well, I should\nsay I had. You can have that silk\ndrers now.'\n\"Whit lv.'-, hnpirned?\"\n\u2022 \"farmer Henderson, who hasn't\npaid for his paper for seven years,\ncame  in  today  and  stopped  his\nsubsqripUon.\"\nToday we giee you Tweedledum,\nBut where is Tweedledee?\nThey cannot quarrel till he appears\nBut when he does, we'll see!\n-Kay's Corner-\nBy Katherine Houiaon\nFOR MOTHER'S DAY\nTile second Sunday in May is\nMother's Day Specials.\"\nBuy her something she wouldn't\nbuy for herself, wrap it attractively,\nand place tlie whole family's gifts\nin a shallow pan. Cover it with Ian\ncrepe paper to look like a pic, and\nserve it at breakfast with a card\nsaying:\n\"There are pies that make us happy.\nThere are pies that make us sad,\nBut this pie that we're presenting\nIs just sure to make you glad!\"\nOr suppose you give Mother a sur-\norise tea, inviting her special friends\nGet the friends' boys and girls to\nhelp you with a Mother's Day Tree.\nMake a small tree of wire, coyer the\nbranches with crepe paper, set it\nin a large pot, then decorate it with\nodd-shaped colored cirds addressed\nto Mother and their guests, telling\nthem to \"look in the buffet,\" or\n\"behind the radio\", etc. where you\n've hidden your prettily wrapped\ngifts.\nInstead of using a tree, you can tie\nthe gifts to the stems of paper flowers and \"bury\" them in a pan of\nbran. Label the flowers so each one\ncan \"pick\" her own gift.\nAnd here's a last suggestion: It\nyour Mother is no longer wilh you,\nplan a surprise for some lonely\nMother. Run in for a visit, send her\na box of candy or a handkerchief, or\ntake her for a drive, and see how\nmuch happier your day will be because you've made someone's Mother happy.\nBLACK TIMES\nNimkins   \"1 see our Republican\nfriends in Chicago are e.sting rrnw\nPimkins-\"So? What's the caws\"\nIf fish were as big as the stories\nabout them, grocers would have to\nsell sardines in cages instead of in\nANSWERS   TO   LAST   WEDNESDAY'S PUZZLES\n1. Boy, bandage, bat, ball, base,\nbrick, brush, branch, birds, box,\nbucket bench bush, bottle, belt, bicycle, bough, beret, board, button,\nboot, bolt, boat, butterfly, bow, bell,\nblack-board, barn, bark.\n2. COOK \u2014 cork \u2014 core \u2014 cone\n- done \u2014 DINE.\nSOUP \u2014 sous \u2014 sons \u2014 suns \u2014\nnuns \u2014 NUTS.\n3. Because Ella was generous she\nlet her brother Teddy have the\nturkey leg.\n4. L-islc. Dam-c. Meldial.\n5. Crossword Puzzle Solution.\nwi\n\u25a0\np\nU\nz\\z\\i\nj-'Mv\na\\\n\/)\n>jf\nslo\n'N\nT\n0\nM\ns\ns\n\u00a3\nTWO\n0\n*\/.*'\u00ab\n>rmo\nmmr\n__]aW_J_\nisF\nYO\n\/VB'\/'EABS\n*<>\n'mWGiz\nT\\M\nP\n2\n'D\\A_ZM\u00a3\nT\\C\nP\nI\nHE\nL\na\nO\nT7\nJUST A SLIP\n\u2022Student: Waiter, there is a button\nin my. soup.\nWaiter: Typographical error, sir|\nit should have been \"mutton\",       i\n I w\n-\nmm\nsw\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING. APRIL 30, 1938\nPAGE  NIN\u00ab\n\"Well, I Swan!\"\nOr the caption might read \"I swan well.\" It's Al Patnik In action\nat the United States amateur swimming and diving championships\nat Columbus, Ohio. Al is holder of the A.A.U. and intercollegiate\nhigh and low board fancy diving titles, so there's some authority in\nthose movements of his.\nfloAAland  Spo\/it  Spot\nBy M. W.\nROSSLAND, B. C, April 28 -\nDropped in on \"Rocky\" Davis the\nother evening when he and a number of the other Rossland lacrosse\nplayers were getting acquainted\nwith their new coach, Bruce Mclntyre of Vancouver, of course there\nwas the usual \"Mum is the word,\nboy, here comes the press,\" but I\neventually crashed the inner circle,\nand had the pleasure of meeting\nBruce Mclntyre. Bruce says his\nparents resided in Rossland back\nsome 30 years ago, or yas lt 20?\nHe'll have a good gang of players to work with this year, but the\njob will be somewhat tougher as\nhe'll have no home crowds to play\nto, all games being in Trail and\nNelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nOne of Nelson's big guns of last\nseason may be seen in Rossland\nuniform this summer in the person of hard-hitting, curly-haired\nEarl Kelly. He may be remembered\nfor his pugilistic tendencies. Kelly\nhas been at Vancouver but at present is in Nelson.\nMINERS ORGANIZE  MONDAY\nMonday next will mark the annual meetings of the Rossland Tennis association and the Rossland\nSenior Hockey club. The latter\nshould be of particular interest to\nRossland hockey-minded, as Rossland's chances in the local hockey\npicture for the next season are particularly noticeable at this time.\nWith a new rink here, and the Dominion champion Trail Smoke Eaters over in Europe, the local club\nwill have a real chance to establish itself in hockey around these\nparts\u2014a chance to gain a hold that\nthe Smoke Eaters may find hard to\nloosen when they return.\nThose that are in any way interested in hockey should turn out\nto the annual meeting Monday\nnight in the city hall, and do their\nbit in seeing that the destinies of\nnext winter's team are put into\nsatisfactory hands.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTennis is sure to be as popular\nas ever, and will probably have\na somewhat larger membership\nthan last season. Many are talking\nof taking up tennnis this year and\nforsaking certain other sports. Two\nsport moguls, Frank Coates and\nArt O'Reilly, have expressed their\nintentions of joining up, which is\na sign of a cool summer. Though\nnot overstocked with tennis skill,\nways and means of handicapping\nmyself for my match with the above\nmentioned exponents would be appreciated.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMany Rossland citizens are expressing the opinion that Rossland\nwill have a rink built by early fall.\nBoth the financial and construction\ncommittees met for long sessions\nduring the early part of this week.\nThe financial committee meets again\nFriday night, and the project should\nbe well on its way shortly.\nOLD ROS8LANDERS\nON WESTERNS\nRossland basketballers were seen\ngathered around downtown radios\nlistening to the final game of the\nDominion basketball final played\nIn the east which Vancouver won.\nThree of the Dominion basketball\nchampions performed in Rossland.\nWillougby and Bardsley came here\nto play basketball several years\nago, together with Walmsley and L.\nNicholson. Archie Neil, the third\nmember of the present champions,\nplayed in Rossland during the first\npart of this season, returning to\nVancouver somewhere around\nChristmas.\n\u2022   *   *\n\"Jock\" Walmsley ls forsaking his\nhaunts of the past few years for\nthose of Nelson, say his pals. He\nmay be going into business there,\nbut definitely will not be seen in the\nsport light as a player.\nPennink, Banks\nin Golf Final\nLEEDS, England, April 29 (CP\nCable)\u2014Shooting in matchless form,\ndefending Champion Frank Pennink\ntoday gained the final round of the\nEnglish amateur golf championship\ntourney by burying G. Stretton-Cox\nof Handsworth under a seven and\nsix count.\nThe other finalist is S. E. Banks of\nHallamshire who defeated J. W. Butler of Yorkshire in a close match,\none up. '\nFinalists meet tomorrow in a 36\nhole match for the championship.\nSPORTING NEWS\nT. A. A. A. Allots\nTrail Parks for\nVarious Sports\nTRAIL, B. Ci, April 29 \u2014 A special committee appointed by the annual meeting of the T. A. A. A. to\nallocate Butler and Victoria. parks\nto various athletic organizations in\nthe city has drawn up and released\nthe following schedule, effective up\nto and including June 30:\nButler park;\nMonday; Up to 5:30 p.m., track;\n5:30 p.m. till dark, soccer.\n. Tuesday; Up to 5:30 p.m. bantam\nbaseball; 5:30 p.m. till dark, senior\nbaseball.\nWednesday: Afternoon, Bantam\nbaseball.\nThursday: Up to 5:30 p.m., track.\n5:30 p.m. till dark, soccer.\nFriday: Up to 5:30 p.m., bantam\nbaseball; 5:30 p.m. till dark, senior baseball.\nSaturday morning: School soccer,\nSunday: 9 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., men's\nsoftball; 12:30 p.m. till dark, senior\nbaseball.\nVictoria park; Monday: 4 p.m. to\n5:15 p.m., high school softball; 5:15\np.m. tiTl dark, men's softball.\nTuesday: 5:30 p.m. till dark, ladies' softball.\nWednesday: 1 p.m. till dark, men's\nsoftball.\nThursday: 4 p-m, to 5:15 p.m.,\nhigh schol softball; 5:15 p.m. till\ndark, men's Softball.\nFriday: 5:30 p.m. till dark, ladies'\nsoftball.\nSaturday: Junior lacrosse.\nSunday: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., ladles\nsoftball; 4 p.m. till dark, men's soft-\nball\nTimes not given are open and\nmay be applies for to B. A. Pople,\nsecretary, T. A. A. A.\nBaseball Scores\nASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis 9; St Paul 7\nColumbus 2; Milwaukee 9\nLouisville 4; Minneapolis 14\nToledo 3; Kansas City 2.\nINTERNATIONAL\nRochester 2, eJrsey City 4.\nToronto 6, Baltimore 3.\nMontreal 7, Newark 10.\nSOCCER VETERAN DEAD\nBIRMINGHAM, England (CP)-\nAlec Leaks, 66, who played in five\nsoccer matches for England against\nScotland, Ireland and Wales, died\nhere recently. He performed for\nAston Villa and Burnley.\nBIG LEAGUE BASEBALL SCORES\nNATIONAL\nCincinnati      4  7   1\nChicago     6   8  2\nDerringer, Cascarella and Lombardi; Dean, Russell, Bryant and\nHartnett.\nPhiladelphia      4   12  2\nBrooklyn       5    8   3\nPasseau, Smith, Johnson, Hallahan, Kelleher and Atwood, Clark;\nPosedel, Hoyt, Pressnell and Spencer.\nNew  York   at  Boston   and   St.\nLouis at Pittsburgh, postponed, cold\nweather.\nAMERICAN\nBoston     4   6   4\nNew York   6  8  0\nWilson. Ostermueller, McKean\nand Berg, Peacock; Donald, Murphy\nand Dickey.\nWashington    6   11   0\nPhiladelphia      7    9   5\nWeaver, Kohlman, Krakauskas,\nPhebus and R. Ferrell; Ross, Smith\nand Hayes.\nCleveland     3\nSt. Louis   2\nFeller and Hemsley; Van\nBonettl and Sullivan.\nChicago     1\nDetroit       3\nRigney, Brown and Sewell\nfenberger and Tebbets.\n10\n1\n8   0\nAtta,\n7 I\n10 ;\nFof\nCANADIAN RUGBY TEAM\nTO VISIT ENCLAND 1940\nLONDON, April 29  (CP Cable)\n\u2014The English Rugby Union announced today a team from Canada\nwill visit England In the autumn\nof 1940,\nFrom Sunday on\nPermits Must Be\nObtained, Fires\nSunday marks the beginning of\nthe 1938 \"fire season\". From that date\non, in country and city, all persons\nlighting outdoor fire must have permits.\nIn country districts permits must\nbe obtained for clearing fires, camp\nfires, open burners, for sawmills and\nso on. the regulations covering all\ntypes of fires from which flames\nmight spread.\nWithin the city similar regulations\napply, but they may be relaxed for\nArbor day, Fire Chief M, H. Maloney\nstated Friday night\nFiremen Prepare\nior Annual Ball\nPreparations for the second annual\nNelson Firemen's ball, scheduled\nnext week, are fast moving toward\ncompletion. Members of the Nelson\nfire department are at work preparing the decorations and lining\nup final details, and members of\nvarious fire departments throughout\nthe district are laying their plans to\nbe in Nelson for the big day.\nDecoratoins now being made up\nwill strike an entirely new note, the\nfiremen state.\nWhile the festivities will begin\nearly in the evening, the official\nopening of the bal is scheduled at\n10 p.m., when the grand march\nwill be staged.\nCoalmont Constable\nto Be Transferred to\nthe Penticton Office\nConstable J. M. Deane, now stationed at Coalmont, will be transferred to Penticton detachment of\nthe provincial police when the series of transfers caused by doubling\nof the highway patrol force is completed.\nTo further reduce the number of\nauto accidents in B division, Inspector John Macdonald announced patrol officers are to be stationed at\nFernie, Castlegar and Grand Forks,\nin addition to the men at Cranbrook,\nNelson and Penticton, B. division\nwas lowest in the province in 1937,\nlargely as a result of highway patrol work by officers at the last three\npoints.\nFor the second time In its history the Allan cup,\nemblematic of the Canadian senior hockey championship, will rest in British Columbia for the coming year. Trail Smoke Eaters are responsible and\nhere are some of the players after the final game\nIn Calgary, where they defeated Cornwall Flyers,\neastern Canada champions, three games to one.\nD. P. McDonald, convener of the series, is seen presenting the historic trophy to Captain Dave Duchak\nof the winners.\nHangman's Hold In Trail Wrestling,\nRockfel Wins in\n1000 Guineas lo\nBeal Pasch Time\nNEWMARKET, England, April\n29 (CP) \u2014 Rockfel, a filly of glittering speed, won the one thousand\nguineas for Sir Hugo Cunliffe-\nOwen today and eclipsed the time\nmade over the same course Wednesday by Pasch in winning the\ntwo thousand guineas.\nBut Rockfel is not entered for the\nderby, blue riband event of the\nturf to be run June 1, and will not\nbe able to match her speed against\nthe staying power of the opposite\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nBuilding\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nsex over the longer Epsom course.\nSent to the post at a to 1, Rockfel, by Felstead from Rockliffe,\nbeat a handful ot heavily backed\nfavorites ta the second of the sea\u00bb-\non's five classics tor three-year-\nolds and finished Hi lengths ahead\nof D. Grossman's Laughing Water.\nSir Alfred Butt's Solar Flower, a\ndaughter of tbe great Solarlo, was\nthird, three lengths behind Laughing Water.\nRockefel ran the mile In 1:39,\ncutting 8-10 second from Pasoh's ,\ntime.\nTwice Tied, Smith\nIs Winner Eagle\nCarpet Bowling\nEntering final play In a 15-polnt\ntie with Stephen Vingo, Albert H.\nSmith emerged winner of the Eagles\ncarpet bowling for the winter season\nWednesday night. After playing for\nsome time. Vingo and Smith ended\ntheir game in a 9-9 draw, and were\nforced to extend it three extra ends.\nSmith came out on the long end,\nwith a 15-10 victory.\nIn the other match, R. A. England\nbeat Eugene Strangherlin, 8-6. Final\nstandings of the four men were:\nSmith 17, Vingo 15, Stangherlin 10,\nand England 6. Another tourney\nmay be staged later in the season.\nHOME RUN HITS\nBy The Associated  Prett\nYesterday's homers: Bonura, Sen-1\nators; Walker, Tigers; Keltner, Indians; Hartnett, Galan, Cubs, one\neach.\nThe leaders: Lazzeri, Cubs; Bonura, Senators; Klein, Phillies; Lodigiani, Athletics; Trosky, Indians;\nRipple, Ott, Leiber, McCarthy, Giants; Vaughan, Pirates; Greenberg, I\nTigers; Johnson, Athletics, three\neach,\nLeague totals: National 50, American 44, total 94.\nBaseball  Standings\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nW   L PcL*\nNew York    9    1 .900,\nPittsburgh     8    2 .800\nChicago    7    4 .638\nBoston     4    4 .500\nBrooklyn    5    5 .500\nSt. Louis    3    7 .300\nCincinnati      3    8 .273\nPhiladelhpia     1    9 .100'\nAMERICAN  LEAGUE\nW   L Pet.\nCleveland     3     2 .800.\nWashington     7    4 .638'\nBoston    6    5 .545!\nNew York     6    6 .500-\nChicago    5    5 .444\nDetroit    4    8 .400\nSt. Louli .    4    7 .361\nPhiladelphia    3 ' 7 .300\n\"Help!\" cries \"Curly\" Butorac as \"Joker\" Tonelli\naffixes the hangman's hold, at \"Whiskey\" Wyatt's\noutstanding wrestling card staged Wednesday\nnight. Proceeds went to the Trail junior police\ncorps. Referee Teaks has answered the call, but\nTonelli appears to have a \"death\" grip. Butorac\neventually got out of the hold, and won the match\nwith two falls after Tonelli had pinned him to the\ncanvas for the first. A. R'. Joy, Daily News Trail\nrepresentative, shot the picture.\nSore Arm Puts Dean Out ot Game;\nCubs, Yanks and Dodgers in Wins\nBy The Canadian Prets\nTHROUGH WITH BOXING\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP) \u2014\nThrowing back his head to avoid a\nblow, Jack Fletcher was struck in\nthe neck and had his windpipe dislocated in a boxing match here. He\nwas instructed never to fight again.\nSYDNEY, Australia (CP) -\nCaught by a single strand of tape\naround his neck at the starting post,\nTickle came home first in the Gol-\nburn City Handicap here. How the\nhorse became entangled was not\nknown.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 All English\ncounty cricket teams received \u00a3400\nI $2000) each from surplus funds of\nthe Australia-New Zealand tour in\n1036-37. Playing field societies also\nreceived grants.\nThis advt. Is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board or by the Govt of.British Columbia\nDizzy Dean, Chicago Cubs' $185,-\n000 plus three-player pitching acquisition, returned to the \"sore arm\nbrigade\" Friday after starting his\nthir game, but the Cubs defeated\nCincinnati Reds 6-4 to sweep the\ntwo-game series.\nDean retired from the game after\nhurling 3 2-3 innings and allowing\ntwo hits and a walk. He said he\npulled a muscle in his arm in the\nfourth, but that he could go on.\nManager Charley Grimm, however,\nremoved him from the game as a\nprecaution against further injury.\nDizzy announced afterward he\nexpected to be able to take his\nregular turn on the mound. Jack\nRussell who replaced Dean, limited\nthe Reds to two hits until the ninth,\nwhen Clay Bryant relieved.\nIn the only other National league\ngame Brooklyn Dodgers eked out\na 5-4 12-inning decision over Philadelphia Phillies.\nYANKS WIN\nAs a prelude to Joe DIMaggio's\nreturn to their lineup Saturday the\nNew York Yankees defeated the\nBoston Red Sox 6-4\u2014but they were\npractically handed the game on a\nplatter. Three Yankee runs were\nunearned on four Boston errors.\nPhiladelphia Athletics nosed\nout Washington Senators 7-6;\nCleveland Indians continued their\n\"whooping It up\" with a 3-2 victory over the St. Louis Browns,\nand Detroit Tlgert beat Chicago\nWhite Sox 6-1.\nJoe Krakauskas, Washington's\nyoung southpaw, lost one of the\ntoughest decisions of the American league baseball season when his\nmates bowed to Philadelphia Athletics.\nWith the score knotted at 6-all,\nthe former Brantford, Ont., and\nHamilton chucker took over the\nmound from Kohlman in the ninth.\nHe walked Bill Werber and was\nrelieved by Ray Phebus. But later\nWerber stole home with the winning run and Krakauskas was\ncharged with the loss.\nFELLER NOT PUZZLE\nBob Feller wasn't the puzzle to\nthe Browns he was 10 days ago\nwhen he let them down with a\nscratch single, but his teammate,\nrookie third baseman Ken Keltner,\nwas poison aa Cleveland nosed out\nSt. Louis. The Browns made eight\nhits off Feller, Keltner accounted\nfor all the Indians' runs with a\nhomer and a single.\nPatrolt -rlBBH dm.. .Tnhm,, PL.\nney from the mound in the seventh inning to beat Chicago. Boots\nPoffenberger scattered seven Chicago hits.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\n(By The Cantdlan Press)\nJohnny Walker, hailed as greatest\nof all Canadian swimming coaches,\ndied at his Long Branch, Ont., home\nthree years ago today. George\nYoung, Walker's foremost protege,\ngained international fame when he\nconquered Catalina Channel. Such\nstars as Marvin Nelson and Margaret Ravior were piloted to world's\nprofessional championships by\nWalker.\nBuy or sell with a Classified Ad.\nCHINESE DEFEATS\nBRITON, TENNIS\nBOURNEMOUTH, England, April\n29 (AP)\u2014Kho Sin Keil Chinese\nDavis cup player, whipped Nigel\nSharpe, veteran Briton, 7-5, 6-2, 6-4\nin the semi-final round of the British Hard Court tennis championship\ntoday,\nPeggy Scrlven eliminated Kay\nStammers in an all-British women's\nsemi-final, 6-2, 6-3.\nKho Sin Lie's rival In the finals\nwill be the defending chapipion,\nHenry Wilfred (Bunny) Austin,\nwho eliminated Yvon Petra of\nFrance, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2, 5-7, 6-4.\nThe other finalist in women's\nsingles will be Nancy Wynne, Australia's No. 1. Miss Wynne yesterday eliminated the defending champion, Anita Lizana of Chile. She\ndefeated Miss V. E. Scott in the\nsemi-finals, 6-4, 6-2.\nBIG SIX BATTERS\nBy The Associated Prett\nBaseball's batting big six underwent a shakeup yesterday, with the\nstatisticians ruling out all those\nshowing less than minimum of 20\ntimes at bat, and the result left\nHal Trosky of Cleveland's Indians\nas the temporary No, 1 hitler in\nthe big leagues.\nPlayer and club     G AB R H Pet.\nTrosky, Indians  10 35 16 18 .514\nSteinbacher, W. S.   8 30 6 14 .467\nHayes, Athletics ....   9 22 3 10 .455\nOwen, Cardinals ....   9 32 4 14 .438\nLeiber, Giants  10 39 9 16 .410\nTriplet1*, Cubs     5 22 4  9 .409\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government\nBritish Columbia.\nAVIATION Beckons Canadian YOUTH\nThe demand for Pilots and Air Engineers is- Increasing daily\nas AVIATION prepares to play a more important\nrole In Canada's progress.\nNOW Vancouver has a FULLY EQUIPPED AIRCRAFT\nTRAINING SCHOOL, offering training In\nPractical Aircraft Engineering\nCombined Home Study and Practical\nAircraft Engineering\nTuition from $198 to $1000, payable on monthly terms.\nBRISBANE AVIATION CO., LTD.\nVancouver Civic Airport, Vancouver, B. C.\nFor pertontl Interview tee MR. REU8CH, Shop Represents-\ntlve, at the HUME HOTEL, NELSON, after 9 p.m. MONDAY,\nor write BOX NO. 1181, Nelson Dally Newt..\nM \u25a0'\n.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.'.\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0..\u25a0- \u25a0-      ...      \u25a0    \u25a0      . ..:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0. .:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 * :\nI,\nF a bull's-eye whisky ir. your\ngame, set your sights on\nHiram Walker's OLD RYE, for\nsmoother whisky never came\ndown the trail! It's a really ripe\nwhisky at a really right price.\nv\n:\nDouble Your Enjoyment with\nFor sale at Vendors or direct from \"Mail Order Dept.\", Liquor Control Board, 847 Beatty St, Vancouver, B.C.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by <he Liquor Contro, Board nr hv th. Covern.ent nU^r_W^J\n HOE TEN\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING. APRIL SO. 1938\nMore Results - Less Cost, When You Use the Classified Ads\nJfaluott latlg SfottiB\nJlember oj the Canadian Dally\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 $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nUnited States, same as above\nplus any extra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nUc a Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per insertion .$ 22\n2 lines. 6 consecutive\ninsertions _ _   .88\n(6 for the price ot 4)\n3 lines, per insertion   .33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions  1.32\n2 lines, 1 month 2.86\n3 lines, 1 month 4.29\nFor advertisements of more than\nthree lines, calculate on\nthe above basis.\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATE8 LE8S 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nBIRTHS\nHANNA\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Rankin\n, Hanna of Slocan City at the Koote-\n' nay Lake General Hospital, April\n27, a daughter.\nHALE\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hale\nof Salmo, at the Kootenay Lake Gen-\n\u25a0 eral Hospital, April 26, a daughter.\nSocial...\nHARROP\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED WOMEN OVER 27 TO BE\ntrained to sell Spencer's foundation Garments both style and surgical. Box 1146 Daily Newt.\n(1146)\nMIDDLE AGED FARMER, MUST\nbe good gardener. Good home,\nsteady employment. Box, 1 Mirror\nLake, B.C. (1233)\nPERSONAL\n(Continued)\nCOMFUtt H0MF\nPERMANENT WAVE\nMACHINE  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0\nmflHUELumuf to\n(1150)\nWE HAVE HELPED HUNDREDS\nto obtain position! at Letter Carriers, Postal Clerks, Custom! Examiners, Clerks and Stenographers, etc.. and can* help you. Write\nus for proof and free Information,\nM C. C. Schools Ltd, Winnipeg.\nOldest in Canada (218)\nMEN! IF YOU'RE WEAK, WORN-\nout, try raw oyster invtgorators\nand other stimulants in new\nOSTREX Tonic Tablets. Pep up\nrundown body. It not delighted,\nmaker refunds price, $1.25. Call,\nWrite Mann, Rutherford Co, (761)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\nAND   APARTMENTS\n204 VERNON STREET HOUSE\nexcellent condition, three bedims,\nfull cement basement, furnace, tire\nplace, $35 per month.\u2014206 Vernon\nstreet, five room house, electric\nrefrigerator, range, etc, cement\nbasement, available May 1st, $30\nper month. Ph. 662 or 569R. (11U3)\nALMOST COMPLY FUR BUNGA-\nlow. Summer Months. Appleyard.\n(1186)\nAN IMPROVED RANCH FULLY\nequipped with furnished house,\ntwo cows, all implements. Must\nhave references a good home for\npractical Married Farmer, Apply\nP.O. Box 1 Mirror Lake.      (1235)\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL, GTD.\n25 for $1.00 or Jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (free catalogue). National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton,\nv     (214)\nHARROP, B. C. \u2014 Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Fairbank entertained Friday\n' evening at cards, those present being Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Ogilvie, Mr.\n' and Mrs. E. Harrop, Mr. and Mrs.\nL. C Piper. Mr and Mrs. J. Berry,\nMr. and Mrs. W. J. McConnell, Miss\nSadie Mcintosh, Miss Violet Hillyard of Nelson, Miss Susie Berry,\nMiss Ethel Fairbank, William Howard and David Fairbank.\nMiss Ethel Fairbank has had as\nher guest, Miss Violet Hillyard of\nNelson.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Neale and W. J.\n.. McConnell were at Nelson Saturday.\nRoy McCleary of Nelson was a\nrecent guest of David Fairbank.\nJ. C. Wilson was a Nelson shopper Saturday.\nStuart Irving of Nelson, who had\nbeen holidaying at Balfour, was a\nrecent Harrop visitor,\nMr. and Mrs. C. D. Ogilvie entertained recently when those present\n\u2022were Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Fitchett r.nd\nchildren, Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Ogilvie,\nMiss Gladys Ogilvie, Roy Ogilvie,\nWilliam Howard, Winifred Howard,\nVivian B. Rowley, David Fairbank\nand guest, Roy McLeary oi Nelson.\nMiss Edna Steed, Miss Kay Maber\nand Miss Connie Hansen of Nelson were guests Friday at the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. H. Fairbank.\nMiss   Gladys   Ogilvie   and   Roy\nOgilvie of Trail are spending the\nEaster holidays with the former's\n\u25a0parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Ogilvie.\nI   Miss Ada Andrews, who attends\n\u25a0 high school at Nelson, is home with\nI her parents for the Easter vacation.\n:    Miss Elizabeth Wilson left Tuesday to reside at Salmo.\nC.D. Ogilvie has returned from a\n] abort visit to his son and daughter-\nin-law, Mr, and Mrs. C. Orville Ogilvie at Wynndel.\nMrs. L. Kosmo and daughter Miss\nI Annie Kosmo of Nelson are spend-\n|- ing the Easter holidays at the ranch.\nC. Wonstal of  Salmo spent the\ni week-end here, a guest at the home\nof C. C. Wilson.\nH. C. Carne has been in the district  a few  days  from  Sunshine\n[Bay.\nMr. and Mrs, E. Harrop enter-\nI \"teined Miss Jessie Harrop. Mr. and\nMrs. H. Harrop, Mrs. Noel Harrop\nI and Miss Annie Reisterer of Nelson\nI Easter Sunday.\nThe   Harrop   Women's   Institute\n1 met at the home of Miss L. Grant\nThursday, and completed arrangements for a whist drive and dance\nduring Easier week.\nMiss Ruby Whitfield  of Nelson\nI has been a guest of Mr. and Mrs.\n| *W. D. Ogilvie.\nDick Holmes, who attends school\nat Trail, is spending the holidays\n.with his father, H. Holmes.\nI    Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Ashby and\nI Mrs. J.  Berry left Sunday on  a\nI motor trip to Vancouver. On their\nj return  Ihey  will  be  accompanied\nhy Miss Joan Ashby who has been\n| a student at U. B. C.\nMrs. Frank Andrews and daughter, Miss Ada Andrews were Nelson\n\u00abhoppers Tuesday.\nMiss Betty Dronsfield of Nelson\nI has been visiting her cousin, Miss\n1 Elva Holmes.\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY HOUSE\nkeeper,-capable taking full charge.\nApply P.O. Box 10, Salmo, B.C.\n(1227)\nWOMAN FOR FARM WORK. AGE,\nGood Milker, etc. W. R. Forrester,\nBox 534 Grand Forks.        (1205)\nWANTED\u2014EXPERIENCED MAID\nwith references. Apply Mrs. E. M.\nStiles, Tadanac. (1125)\nBEDRM SUITE, STOVE HEATER,\nNearly new. other goods 911 Cedar\n(1145)\nWAITRESS  AND   DISHWASHER.\nRight Lunch Cafe, 453 Jos. St.\n(1180)-\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nRate for advertisements under\nthis heading 25c for any required number of lines for six\ndays, payable in advance.\nRELIABLE YOUNG MAN, 26 YRS.\nof age with good training and experience at bookkeeping, clerical\nand office work, desires position\nin Nelson or district. Good references. Available to start work approximately May 1st or earlier.\nReply Box 1031, Daily News.\n(1031)\nMEN'S SUPERFINE QUALITY\nsanitary rubber. Send $1.00 for 16\nunexcelled. Also LATEX at 25 for\n$1.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co, 18 Hastings St,\nW. Vancouver. (213)\nMETROPOLE HOTEL VANCOU-\nver. $1.00 per day up. Private bath\n$1.50. Best value in Vancouver.\n320 Abbott St. (1062)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nCOOK- STEADY. ECONOMICAL.\n30 yrs. experience. Worked steady\nlast years in 2 mining camps. Don't\ndrink or smoke. Write or phone\nF. S. McLean, Winsor Hotel,\nGreenwood. (122?)\nYOUNG MAN, 26, EXPERIENCED\nfarm hand, good milker, wants\nsteady work immediately. Alfred\nWitts, 1927 Fifth Ave, Trail.\n(1140)\nCAPABLE WOMAN WANTS\nwork on or about May 3rd. as\ncamp cook or housekeeper. Apply\nBox 1165 Daily News.\n(1165)\nRELIABLE YOUNG MARRIED\nman wishes work, truck driving\npreferred, experienced, mechanical, go anywhere. Phone 864,\nCabin 6, Nelson, B. C.        (1130)\nSocial. . .\nNEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER. B. C.-The Wom-\nI en's auxiliary to the Canadian Legion met at the home of Mrs. S.\nChristopherson April 20. The president, Mrs. F. L. Beggs, presided,\nI The hostesses served refreshments.\nI Those present were Mrs. Beggs, Mrs.\n1 W. J. George, Mrs. T. Flint, Mrs. R.\nW. Crellin, Mrs. Belle Pendry, Mrs.\nT. Pearson, Mrs. J. Draper, Mrs. G.\nBurkitt,  Mrs.   A.   Schnaeble,  Miss\nMay Meers and the hostess, Mrs.\nI Christopherson.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Schnaeble en-\nI tertained at their home, April 22,\nI at a surprise birthday party in\nhonor of Mrs. Belle Pendry. Whist,\nI cribbage and five hundred were\nI played. After refreshments the guest\nI ot honor was presented with a birth-\nI day present. Invited guests were\nI Mrs. Belle Pendry, Miss Alice Cas-\nI ley, Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Crellin and\nI son David, Mr. and Mrs. S. Chrlsto-\nI pherson and son Bobby, Mrs. T.\nPearson and son Tommy. Mr. and\nI Mrs. E. Betteli, Mrs. M. Thompson,\nI Mrs. D. Shannon, Alfred and Her-\nI bert Crellin,\nCAPABLESTENOGRAPHER, FUL-\nly qualified, desires a position.\nSprott-Shaw training. References\non request. Write Box 1137 Daily\nNews. (1137)\nMARRIED MAN AND WIFE WANT\nposition in mining camp. Man good\ntimber man wife good cook. Apply 913 6th St. (Fairview) Nelson.\n(1147)\nRELIABLE YOUNG MAN WISHES\nposition as second cook or flunky\nor on a dairy farm. Have 25\nyears experience. A. V. Anker,\nSirdar, B. C. (1124)\nFOR    EXPERIENCED    GARDEN.\nflag stone, or rockery work (stones\nsupplied) call Hans Otting 306-X1.\n(1217)\nSTENOGRAPHER WOULD LIKE\nwork, full or part time. Good references. Box 1208 Daily News.\n(1208)\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nESTABLISHED TAXI BUSINESS\nin village of Salmo and Sheep\nCreek vicinity. Pontiac sedan, 1837.\nCarefully driven and in excellent\ncondition. A wonderful opportunity for owner-driver. Cheap for\ncash. Apply Box 1138 Daily News.\n(1138)\nPERSONAL\nTHREE BURIED TOGETHER\nWALLACEBURG, Ont. CP)-Vlc-\nI tlms of a drowning accident here\u2014\nI Joseph Delorme, 14, and Leroy and\nI Jimmy June, 8 and 12 respectively\u2014\nI were buried together in Wallace-\nI burg cemetery.\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJnmlrson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\n|_ADIES, Q1RLS\nLEARN THE MOLER METHOD\nOF BEAUTY CULTURE\nA PLEASANT, PROFITABLE\nPROFESSION FOR GIRLS\nLearn  under  recognized  Moler\nmaster instructors. To learn more,\nenroll now with the Moler school\nthat gets best results.\nTrain by same Moler System at\ntaught to thousands of most successful    hairdressing    graduates\nworking in New York, Chicago,\nHollywood,   Paris   and   world's\nlargest cities. Visit us before joining any school. Practical, expert\ntraining guaranteed.\n\"The University of Beauty Culture\"\nMOLER  HAIRDRESSING\nSCHOOL\nEnroll now. Reasonable rates.\n303 W. Hastings St, Vancouver, B.C.\nB. Gooch, Manager All Moler\nB.C. Schools\n(780)\nPRIVATE HOME KINDERGART-\nens pay. We start you. The Canadian Kindergarten Institute, Winnipeg, Man. (280)\nLADIES;    REGULATING    PILES\ndouble strength. Price $5. Nurse\nBrown, P. O. Box 504 Vancouver.\n(747)\nNo. 1392-1935\nIN THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nIN THE MATTER OF THE \"EXECUTION ACT\" R.S.B.C. 38, Cap. 91,\nand\nIN THE MATTER OF AN ACTION\nLATELY PENDING IN THE\nSUPREME   COURT   OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nBETWEEN:    THOMAS   LLOYD\nBRACE, Petitioner (Judgment Debt\nor).\nAND: DAISY BRACE, Respondent\n(Judgment Creditor).\nAND: EDWARD C. KIGHTLING-\nER, Co-Respondent (Judgment Creditor).\nPURSUANT to the Order of the\nHonourable the Chief Justice dated\nthe 16th day of March, A.D. 1938 and\nto me directed, I will offer for sale\nby public auction at my office at\nthe Court House, City of Nelson,\nProvince of British Columbia, at 1:30\np.m. on Monday, the 9th day ot May,\n1938, all the right, title and interest\nof the Petitioner (Judgment Debtor), Thomas Lloyd Brace, and\u2014or\nEarl L. Isaman, in the following\nlands to satisfy the judgment obtained by the above-named Judgment\nCreditors against the above-named\nJudgment Debtor, dated the 18th day\nof December, 1935, in the total sum\nof $803.70, and the costs of these pro-\nceedings.\nLot 8443 Kootenay District\nRegistered Charges:\n19919-D. Right to Purchase, dated 1-9-33, in favour of Thomas\nLloyd Brace, from Mildred Blair.\n22512-D. Sub-Right to purchase,\ndated 19-6-37, in favour ot Earl\nLionel  Isaman,  from  Thomas\nLloyd Brace.\nJudgments:\n4172 (Renewal of 4118). Judg\nment tor $727.00 against Thomas\nLloyd Brace, obtained on 18-12-\n35, by Daisy Brace and Edward\nC. Kightlinger in the Supreme\nCourt, Vancouver.\nTerms of Sale, Cash,\nDATED at the City of Nelson,\nProvince of British Columbia,\nthis 6th day of April, A.D. 1938.\n\"M. E. HARPER\"\nSheriff of South Kootenay.\n__^ (1229)\nin The matter of the bank-\nruptcy of kurt haustein,\nsheep creek, near salmo\nbritish columbia.\nnotice to creditors of\nfirst meting\nNotice is hereby given that Kurt\nHaustein of Sheep Creek, near Salmo, British Columbia made an assignment on the 23rd day of April,\n1938, and that the first meeting of\nCreditors will be held on the 9th\nday of May 1938 at the hour of 2\no'clock in the afternoon, at the\nCourt House, City of Nelson British Columbia,\nTo vote thereat, proofs of claims\nand proxies must be filed with me\nprior thereto.\nThose having claims against the\nEstate must file the same with the\nCustodian, or the Trustee when appointed before distribution is made,\notherwise the proceeds of the Estate will be distributed among the\nparties entitled thereto, without regard to such claims.\nDated at Nelson, B.C, this 26th day\nof April, 1938.    .\nAddress of Custodian,\nBox 196, Nelson, B.C.\nD. STDENIS,\nCustodian.\n706, SILICA STREET, 7-ROOMS,\nAvailable May 1st, $25.00 monthly.\nAlso furnished residence during\nsummer months. $50 per month.\nPh. 662 or 569-R (1232)\nFOR SALE\nPAINT\u2014PAINT\nFor the past three years we have\nsupplied hundreds of gallons to\nhundreds of customers of our\nguaranteed Enterprise brand\nPaint and without a single exception everyone testifies to its quality. All colors for all purposes,\n$2.50 per gallon. Light ply Roofing 125 ft. by 12\" wide, 50c per\nroll. 2Vi\" Nails $3.50. per 100 lbs.\nFull line of new and used Pipe\nand Fittings. Belting. Wire Rope.\nPulleys. Bearings. Canvas. Doors\nand Windows, Roofing. Grain and\nPotato Sacks. Logging Equipment\nand Mill Supplies. Merchandise\nend Equipment of all descriptions.\nB. C. JUNK CO.\n135 Powell St, Vancouver, B.C.\n(287)\nSUMMER COTTAGES TO LET.\nGood fishing and bathing. Mackereth, Broadwater, B.C.       (1226)\nFURN. SUITES.\nKERR APTS.\n(220)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent Annabie Block.\n(219)\nFOR  3  MONS.   FROM   MATT0.\nFurnished house. Close in 613 Mill.\n(1201)\nTO RENT-HOUSEKEEPING RMS.\nand suites. Strathcona Hotel.\n(1123)\nHOUSEKEEPING ROOMS. 615\nVictoria St. Apply after 5 p.m. No\nchildren. (1209)\n2   RM.   FURN.   HOUSEKEEPING\nsuite. Apply 311 Vernon St.\n(1212)\nHOUSES TO RENT. D. MAGLIO,\n1019 Latimer St. Ph. 808L.   (1023)\nrERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (221)\n822 VICTORIA ST. 6 RM. HOUSE\nJune 1st. Phone 892-X. (1207)\nNEWLY FURN. SUITES FOR RENT\nPhone 940.140 Baker St       (702)\n4-RM HOUSE RICHARD ST. AP-\nply 1334 Falls St. (1202)\nFOR RENT 924 EDGEWOOD AVE.\nPhone 271-R. (1189)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd.\n250 Prior SL       Vancouver, B. C.\n (215)\nPIPES,  TUBES,   FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main SL\nVancouver, B. C.\n(216)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners McDonald Jam\nCo, Ltd, Nelson, B. C (217)\nFOR SALE CHEAP, ONE WELL-\nbred yearling heifer from good\nmilking strain. Also light double\nwagon. Ellison Milling and Elevator Co. Ltd, Nelson, B.C.   (1174)\nICE BOX $4, KITCHEN CUP-\nboards $2, curtain stretcher, 50c,\ngarden gate 50c, 3 blinds 60c, 2\nwicker chairs $3. F. A. Baker, 624\nThird St., Phone 695,        (1246)\nLOT 169 AT FRUITVALE, B.C, 10\nacres, about 8 acres cleared, 2 good\nwells at head of lot. Also some\ngood goats, cheap. Apply W. J.\nGrieve, Fruitvale, B.C.       (1244)\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.\n\"THE CHICKS WHICH\nGIVE RESULTS\"\nInterested In bigger\nprofits buy EC.\nchicks \u2014Best In the\nWest Bred tor\nhealth and production under ideal conditions and 100% live\ndelivery guaranteed. Pullorum\ntested and government inspected.\nLEGHORNS\nUnsexed Pullets\n$11 per 100 $24 per 100\nROCKS, REDS, NEW HAMPS.\n,    AND LIGHT SUSSEX\n$13 per 100 $26 per 100\nDiscounts   on   quantity   or   pool\norders. Prices reduced after May 1.\nCatalog on request Free book to\ncustomers on raising and care ot\npoultry. For good results order from\nRump & Sendall Ltd.\nBox N. Langley Prairie, B.C.\n(210)\nWINTER    EGG    FARM\nHATCHERY\nLETHBRIDGE, ALBERTA\nLeghorns: May  $9.50 per 100\nJune   8.00 per 100\nBarred Rocks: May $11.50 per 100\nJune  10.00 per 100\nSpecial Discounts. Free Catalogue.\n(278)\n1938 CATALOGUE\nWrite for a copy, which contains\na price list and gives information on feeding poultry.\nWhite Leghorns, Rhode Island\nReds, New Hampshires. White\nWyandottes, First Crosses.\nFor better results get your\nchicks direct from\nL. F. SOLLY\nLakeview Poultry Farm,\nWESTHOLME, B. C.    (225)\nINSURANCE\nCAR INSURANCE\nThe careful driver is seldom the\ncause ot an accident, but the\nvictim\u2014your turn may be next.\nIt is the unexpected that always\nhappens\u2014who pays?\nINSURE NOW!\nH. E.\n532 Ward St.\nDILL\nPhone 180\n(1199)\nBEES\nI AM BOOKING ORDERS FOR\npackage bees to 5th. May. Price\n$4.25 for 2 lb. with Queen to be\nincluded with order. J. Rueckert's\nApiary, P.O. Box 126, Nelson.\n(1144)\nCARDEN AND NURSERY\nPRODUCTS\nHARDY PERENNIALS AND AL-\npine Plants. British Sovereign\nStrawberries McDonald's Rhubarb\nand Asparagus roots. W. Mawer,\nHardy Plant Gardens, Nelson.\n(1067)\nGLADIOLI, 12 VARIETIES. P1C-\nardy and Nuthall Included $2 a\n100. Mixtures, $1.15 and $1.50 a\n100. Postage 35c. Herolz, 590 W.\nHastings St, Vancouver.      (945)\nROCK PLANTS & PERENNIALS\nA large selection ot hardy acclimatized plants. Send for catalogue. Mc-\nDiarmid & Squires, Robson,   (1204)\nONE YEAR OLD CHERRY TREES;\nBings, Beacon and Morello's $1\neach. Apples and pears, 75c each.\nT. Roynon, Nelson, B.C.    (1239)\nCLASSIFIED MAIL ORDERS\nfrom out-of-town residents given\nprompt attention.\nBUSINESS and PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt, Nelson, B. C. (182)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 420\nFall Street, Nelson, B. C, P. O.\nBox   No.  9.   Representing   shipper's interest, Trail, B. C.      (183)\nMATS GOOD FOR INSULATING\nlining chicken coops, garages,\nfarm buildings, etc, 75c per 100.\nat Daily News. (657)\nPLATFORM SCALE IN 1ST CLASS\ncondition. Cheap for cash. Apply\nJack Scott, Castlegar.        (1228)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept of Natural\nResources, C. P. R, Calgary, Alta.\n(228)\nDONKEY ENGINE, 1ST CLASS\ncondition, $75. For quick sale. Ph.\nBalfour 2-R. (1211)\n6-ROOMED HOUSE, WELL FURN-\nished, ipendid view exceptional\nvalue $1500. Chas. F. McHardy 554\nWard St. (1149)\n6-RMD HOUSE. FULLY MODERN,\nCheap for cash or good down payment 3 lots & fruit trees Ph. 613-R.\n(1151)\nKASLO 6% ACS. BEAUTIFUL LO-\ncation, 232 fruit trees, 3 rm. house\nfor sale. See Dan McKenzie, Kaslo\n(1075)\nWANTED 2-3 RM HOUSE OUT OF\nbus. section. Box 1153, Daily News.\n(1153)\nLIVESTOCK\nPUREBRED TAMWORTH BOAR\nand sow, 2V4 yrs, bargain $40.\nMackereth, Broadwater, B.C.\n(1225)\nWANTED GOOD RANCH HORSE.\nChas. G. Bowker, Mirror Lake B.C.\n(1158)\nBEDS 50c AND $1 EACH, WASH\nstands 50c to 75c each. 517 Vernon\nstreet (1216)\nTWIN BED SET. WASHING MA-\nchine, Frigidaire. 908 Stanley St.\n(753)\nFOR    SALE-R.    S.    WILLIAMS\nPiano. Apply 420 Victoria St.\n(1129)\nMILL   ENDS,   $3.75   OR   THREE\nloads for $10. Phone 434-R1.\n(1133)\n9-P1ECE MODERN DINING ROOM\nsuite. Ph. 752-L. (1152)\nFRUIT FARM^RITE 1334 FALLS\nStreet (1203)\nWANTED\nWANTED TO BORROW $12,000\nfirst mortgage Trail building and\nproperty business section. Fair interest particulars Box 1215 Daily\nNews. (1215)\nBUY GAME'S EXTRA QUALITY\n\"Red Label\" Rhode Island Red\nChicks for large brown eggs and\nmeat combined. Write for price\nlist George Game, R. O. P. Breeder, Armstrong, B. C. (211)\nBABY CHICKS: NEW HAMP\nshire Reds $12 per 100; Leghorns\n$10 per 100. Satisfaction guaranteed. Weekly hatches. T. A. Robinson, Grand Forks, B. C.   (410)\n4 WK. L'HORN COKRLS. HUSKY.\n15c ea. P. W. Green Willow Point.\n(941)\nAUTOMOTIVE\n'1935 2'\/2TON\nINTERNATIONAL TRUCK\nDown Payment Required\n$250\nBalance Easy Terms\nBUTORAC MOTORS\n1225 PINE AVE.\nTRAIL, B.C.\n(704)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE\nFRESH JERSEY COW & HEIFER.\nApply Box 1101 Daily News (1101)\nFOR SALE OR TRADE FOR HEIF-\ner to fresh soon, 1 good wagon\nwith brake. British Sovereign\nstrawberry plants. $4 per 1000.\nA. R. Johnston, Procter.    (1127)\nMOTORCYCLES\nNew Indians from $327.50\nB.S.A. from 250.00\nVilliers from   165.00\nUsed Buys from $35 up.\nWrite for literature.\nPALMER RUTLEDGE\nTRAIL, B. C.\n(281)\nHAROLD S. ELMES. ROSSLAND,\nB. C. Provincial Assayer. Chemist.\nIndividual Representative for\nshippers at Trail Smelter.     (184)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk\n(185)\nW. J. BROCK, D. C, 16 years' Experience Ph. 969 Gilker Bk, Nelson\n(186)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert Mortician      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(190)\nCorsets\nSpencer Corsets, Surgical Belts, M.\nW. Mitchell, 370 Bsker St, Ph. 668.\nAlso Cinderella Shop, Trail, B C.\n(187)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK Fruitvale, B.C,\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n(188)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding, Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593      324 Vernon Street\n(199)\nH. E. STEVENSON, Machinists,\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mil! work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St. Nelson.   (201)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD\nReal Estate. Insurance. Rentals\n347 Baker St, Phone 68.      (191)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD.   Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99.\n(192)\nH. E. DILL AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 532 Ward St.\n(193)\nSEE D.   L.   KERR,  AGENT  FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(194)\nJ. E. ANNABLE.   REAL ESTATE.\nRentals, Insurance.  Annabie Blk.\n(195)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135. (196)\nR W.  DAWSON, Real  Estate, Insurance.   Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St Phone 197.\n(197)\n1929 ESSEX COUPE, GOOD SHAPE\n$35 cash Ph. 383-R2, (1141)\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE NUMBER\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,  SELL  &   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc.   The Ark Store.\n(207)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L WARBURTON, Representing\nC. C. Snowdon, Oils, Greases,\nPaints, etc. Agt: Mine Mchnry It\nequipt, rails, steels, piping, sheet\niron, etc. Steam coals. Phone 980,\nBox 28, Nelson. (203)\nPhotography\nNOW IS THE TIME TO HAVE RE-\nprints made from your negatives\nfor mounting in albums. Never\nfade prints 3c each. Films developed and printed 25c. KRYSTAL\nPHOTOS, WILKIE, Sask,    (205)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S     SASH     FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker St\n(206)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwatch it is on time all the time.\n345, Baker St, Nelson. (209)\nWant to Sell Something?\nPhone\n144\nNelson -The Huh of B. C.'s Inland Empire\nMAY X \u00abJM\"=   INTO\nTHE BIS BOSS' PKIV\/STE\nOFFICE ?J\nLISTEN, MAC_1 WAS WMD OP PUT OUT ad\nBECAUSE   -SOU Dl&NT C<DME TO My PA.WVry\\\nbut i can -see novm it was because of jS\nTHE RESPONSIBIUTy  -XXIME* TAKEN OMBbJ\namd you'Me PBoveo youe-seiF a Brilliant ,\n3&S3ES5\nFOR RENT OR SALE\n20 ACRES NEAR FRASER LAND-\ning, Balfour, Good beach. Frame\nhouse; 6 nim. bath. Closet in each\nbedroom. Fireplace. Electric light.\nLarge veranda. Or would rent part\nfor summer months, Apply Box\n1237 Daily News. (1237)\n260 AC. RIONDEL, B.C. FOR SALE\nor rent, Also 775ac. Cottonwood\nCrk. for sale $3 per ac. G. B. Matthew, 905 Edgewood Ave.\n(1210)\nDOCS, PETS. FOR SALE\nif'..,.ti.u.r..l  I,  Navt rViliimnl\nPURE BRED POLICE PUP, 4 MOS.\nHousebroken. Phone 434-R2,\n(1234)\nAn Ad Here Is Your\n,     Boat Aonnt\n mmmrnmmwm*mmw';\nSB\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, April 29 (CP).-For\nthe tirst time in several weeks there\nwere insufficient receipts to establish a cattle market here today. Re-\nceipts to noon totalled only five\ncattle and six calves.\nNo hog sales. Thursday's prices'.\nSelects 8.75; bacons 9.25; butchers\n8.75 off trucks.\nFRENCH FRANC DOWN\nLOUDON, April 29 (AP), - The\nUnited States dollar closed net unchanged at $4.98% to the pound in\nforeign exchange trading today. The\nrate compared with New York's\novernight sterling at $4.98 11-16.\nFrench francs ended 182.12 to the\npound against 180.12 yesterday.\nSmall Want Ads bring big results.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAtton Mines Ltd      .02%\nAldermac Copper      .44\nAmm Gold  22\nAnglo-Huronian     3.30\nArntfield Gold 17\nAshley Gold Mining  08%\nAstoria Rouyn Mines 02*4\nAztec Mining Co      .OO*\nBagamac  Rouyn  _ -     MVs\nBankfield Gold      .75\nBase Metals Mining 37%\nBeattie Gold Mines -    1.08\nBidgood Kirkland 29\nBig Missouri - 40\nBobjo Mines Ltd      .WV4\nBralorne Mines      8.10\nBrett Trethewey       .03%\nBuffalo Ankerite    14.2o\nBunker Hill Ex      14.50\nCanadian Malartic 90\nCariboo Gold Quarts     2.13\nCastle Trethewey  88\nCentral  Patricia        2.52\nChibougamau  24%\nChromium M It S 51\nCoast Copper     2.25\nConiaurum Mines     1-25\nConsolidated M & S    55.25\nDarkwater  12\nDome Mines Ltd    52.00\nDorval-Siscoe Gold        12\nEast Malartic     1.58\nEldorado Gold       2.40\nFalconbridge Nickel      5.75\nFederal Kirkland       .04%\nFrancoeur Gold 33\nGillies Lake 22\nGod's Lake Gold 45%\nGold Belt 37\nGranada Gold Mines 05%\nGrandoro Mines      -      .07\nGunnar Gold Mines 76\nHard Rock Gold      2.18\nHarker Gold \"Vi\nHollinger      12.60\nHowey Gold       -28\nHudson Bay M & S   26.50\nInter Nickel.         45\nJ M Consolidated 07%\nJack  Waite  41\nJacola Gold 20\nKerr-Addison      1.70\nKirkland Lake     1.03\nLake Shore Mines     51.50\nLamaque Contact  - 03%\nLapa Cadillac  45\nLeitch   Gold    79\nLebel Oro Mines  08\nLittle Long Lac     4.15\nMacLeod Cockshutt     3.45\nMacassa Mines .             4.35\nMadsen Red Lake Gold 31\nManitoba & Eastern  01%\nMandy   ..  13\nMclntyre Porcupine    38.65\nMcKenzie Red Lake      1.03\nMcVittie  Graham   21\nMcWatters Gold 51 %\nMining Corp    _    1.75\nMinto Gold  02%\nMoneta Porcupine      2.14\nMorris Kirkland 09\nNipissing Mining     1.72\nNoranda    57.75\nO'Brien Gold _     3,35\nPamour Porcupine     3.60\nPaulore M        .09%\nPaymaster  Cons   42\nPend Oreille t.     1.60\nPerron Gold     1.30\nPickle Crow      4.70\nPioneer Gold     3.05\nPremier Gold     2.00\nPowell Rouyn Gold      1.85\nPreston East Dome  79\nQuebec Gold  46\nRead Authier     2.90\nRed Lake Gold Shore 10\nReeves MacDonald    25\nReno Gold Mines  55\nRitchie Gold Mines       .02\nRoche Long Lac  11%\nSan Antonio Gold     1.25\nShawkey Gold  19\nSheep Creek Gold O\nSherritt Gordon      1.07\nSiscoe   Gold        2.37\nSladen Malartic      1.17\nStadacona Rouyn  73\nSt. Anthony  14\nSudbury Basin     2.30\nSullivan Consolidated     1.00\nSylvanite      8.05\nTeck Hughes Oold -    4.7a\nToburn Gold Mines \u201e     2.30\nTowagamac  38%\nVentures Limited      5.00\nWaite Amulet     1.30\nWhitewater ..        04%\nWright Hargreaves      7.30\nYmir Yankee Girl 17\nOILS\nAJax  -     .20\nA P Con 22\nBritish American Oil    20.00\nBritish Dominion      .11\nBrown Oil  51\nCalmont  41\nCalgary & Edmonton     2.35\nChem Research  \u2122 26\nCommonwealth  32\nDalhousie  52\nEastcrest uu%\nFoundation 18%\nFoothills      70\nHighwood    12\nHome      1.30\nImperial     17.00\nInter  Petroleum      25.90\nMcColl Frontenac    13.00\nMerland 06\nMonarch Roy 17\nNordon  09%\nOkalta     1.63\nPacalta 09%\nPantepec     4.65\nRoyalite    42.00\nSouthwest Pete 30\nTexas Canadian     1.25\nUnited  18\nVulcan  90\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi  Power \u201e      1.65\nBeatty Bros              9\nBell Telephone     155%\nBrazilian T L Ji P      11\nBrewers & Dist           5%\nBrewing   Corp            1.00\nBrewing Corp pid     17\nBC  Power A     29\nBC  Power B-      4\nBuilding Prods     43\nBurt F N Co      19\nCar. Bakeries pfd     25\nCanada Bread Co  \u201e     3%\nCan  Bud  Malting -    6%\nCan Car & Fdy     11%\nCan  Cement  .       9%\nCan Cement pfd     93\nCan Dredge    25%\nCan Malting    29\nCan Pacific Rly       8\nCan Ind Ale A     3%\nCan Ind Ale B  \u201e     3%\nCan   Wineries     2%\nCarnation   pfd   101%\nCons   Bakeries   -   13\nCosmos     18\nDominion Bridge      27%\nDominion  Stores       5%\nDom Tar it Chem -    6%\nD Tar & Chem pfd   75\nDistillers Seagrams     13\nFanny Farmer    17\nFord ot Can A    16%\nGen  Steel Wares     5%\nGoodyear  Tire      55\nGypsum L & A     4%\nHarding  Carpet       2%\nHamilton Bridge pfd    40\nHinde Dauche -    Wis\nHiram Walker       36%\nIntl  Metals        6\nIntl Milling pfd     99%\nImperial Tobacco    13%\nLoblaw A  -  22\nLoblaw  B      20%\nKelvinator    10%\nMaple Leaf Milling     2Vs\nMassey Harris      6%\nMontreal Power    28%\nMoore  Corp      28\nNat Steel Car     39\nOnt Steel Prods    10\nOnt Silk Net     5\nPage Hersey     88\nPower Corp     12%\nPressed Metals      13\nSteel of Can    63\nWHAT'S\nYOUR BUSINESS?\n0 Groceries, Meats, Shoes, Automobiles, Clothes, Law \u2014 Then\nyou use printed stationery?\nPrinting Is Our Business\nA And just as you are anxious to\nserve your customers the best\nat a reasonable price so we are\n% anxious to give you the best in\nprinting at a reasonable price.\nAll work is done in our modern\nW       plant.\nPHONE 144\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING  APRIL 30. 1.38\nMarket and\nNews\nWinnipeg Wheal\nPrices Are Lewer\nWINNIPEG, April 29 (CP) .-Winnipeg wheat futures receded from\nmaximum gain of two cents today\non liquidation induced by nervousness at the approach of the first\nday of the May delivery month\nFipal quotations were %\u20141% cents\nlower. May $1.19%, July $1.09%-%\nand October 88% cents.\nWeakness at Chicago in late stages\nadded to selling pressure that forced\nthe October future almost a cent\nlower near the close.\nDespite reports overseas firms\nwere good buyers of May wheat,\nCanadian' overnight export sales\nwere difficult to confirm.\nDrought concern In Italy, France,\nUnited Kingdom and Australia lead\nlo sufficient buying to keep prices\nhigher in early dealings. Reports\nItaly probably would be in the market for Argentine wheat also was a\nfactor at Liverpool where final values were %\u2014%d higher. Buenos\nAires averaged fractionally higher.\nSlow demand for cash wheat resulted in spreads for Nos. 1 and 2\nNorthern grades easing a cent. Durums were off two. The No. 2 Northern grade was at one cent discount\not the May future for the first time\nin many months.\nExport interest for barley and domestic purchases of oats kept those\ncoarse grain futures slightly higher\nnear the close. Flax and rye eased.\nMines Production at\nAll Time High, B. C.\nVICTORIA, April 29 (CP).-Final\nestimate by the British' Columbia\ndepartment of mines production in\nthe province's mining industry last\nyear is slightly more than $74,000,000\nan all-time high record.\nThe final estimate of production\nis about $1,000,000 higher than the\npreliminary calculation made at the\nfirst of the year and represents a\ngain of $20,000,000, or about 37 per\ncent over 1936.\nThe mineral industry gave employment to about 16,000 men, 2000\nmore than in 1936, also a new high\nrecord. Wages amounted to $21,000,-\n000, an increase of $3,000,000. Dividends paid were $15,000,000, a jump\nof $4,500,000, constituting another\nnew high.\nTRADING QUIET CALGARY\nCALGARY, April 29 (CP) .-Except for a buying splurge in National Pete, trading in oils was virtually at a standstill on the Calgary stock exchange today. National\nPete, with sales of 16,300 shares, was\n% higher at 33%. Richland advanced\nVi to 6% and Sunset the same to\n40. British Dominion was up 1 at 12.\nLeading the downward swing was\nCommoil, three lower at 87. Okalta\nand Wellington were lower.\nVancouver Unlisted\nBid Ask\nColumbia   01% \u2014\nDurango 03 .04\nRoyal Can 16 \u2014\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, April 29 (AP) .-Closing: Copper, standard spot \u00a339 ls\n3d, off lis 3d; future \u00a339 6s 6d,\noff 10s; electrolytic spot, bid \u00a343 5s,\noff 15s; asked \u00a344 5s, off 10s.\nTin spot \u00a3161, off \u00a33 5s; future\n\u00a3161 15s, off \u00a33.\nBids: Lead spot \u00a314 (6s 3d, off 6s\n3d; future \u00a315, off 5s.\nZinc spot \u00a3 13 5s, off 6s 3d; future\n\u00a313 6s 3d, off 6s 3d.\nBar gold 139s 6%d, up % penny.\n(Equivalent $34.80).\nBar silver 18 ll-26d, off 3-16.\nNEW YORK\nCopper steady; electrolytic spot\n10.00; export 9.85\u201495.\nTin easy and nearby 36.85; forward 36.70,\nLead steady; spot, New York\n4.50\u201455; East St. Louis 4.35.\nZinc steady; East St Louis spot\nand forward 4.15.\nBar silver 42%, unchanged.\nMONTREAL\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic, 11.35',\ntin 39.25; lead 4.65; zinc 4.30; antimony 16.50; per 100 pounds f.o.b.\nMontreal, five-ton lots.\nBar gold in London up a cent at\n$35 an ounce in Canada funds 139s\n0%d in British. The fixed $35 Washington price amounted to $35.18 In\nCanadian.\nSilver futures closed easier today,\n40 points off. No sales, Bid: May\n41.80.\nH. Y. LOWER\nNEW YORK, April 29 (AP) -\nStocks put on a quiet last minute\nrally in today's market and substantially reduced or cancelled early losses running to a point or more.\nInspiration for the belated comeback was attributed mainly to word\nfrom Washington the wage-hour\nbill, much disliked in the financial\nsector, may have received its death\nblow through action of the house\nrules committee in refusing to approve a special resolution to bring\nthe measure before the house.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 stocks recovered sufficiently at\nthe finish to limit its day's decline\nof .1 of a point at 38.2 The only\nreal activity in the session was in\nthe first hour. Volume dwindled\nlater and transfers totalled 543,820\nshares compared with 537,260 yesterday.\nDividends\nMcColl Frantenac Oil, 10 cents.\nSullivan Consolidated Mines, 2%\ncents.\nMcKenzie Red Lake Gold Mines,\n3 cents.\nFRANCE TO FLOAT LOAN\nPARIS, April 29 (AP) - The\nFrench government will float a\nfifteen - billion - franc ($480,000,000)\nnational defence loan to bolster\nFrance's armaments.\nBuy or sell with a Classified Aa.\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh\n30 industrials   111.88\n20 rails     21.32\n20 utilities     18.01\n40 bonds  ' \u25a0\nLow\n109.83\n20.98\n17.60\nClose Change\n111.68\u2014ofi .32\n21.21\u2014unchgd\n17.98-up .10\n86.24-off   .25\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain\t\nAssoc Brew of Can\t\nBathurst P & P A\t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian T L & P\t\nB C Power A\t\nB C Power B\t\nBuilding Products\t\nCanada Cement \t\nCan Cement pfd \t\nCan North Power\t\nCan Steamship \t\nCan Steamship pfd\t\nCanadian Bronze \t\nCan Bronze pfd \t\nCan Car & Fdy pfd ...\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Celanese pfd \t\nCan Ind Ale A \t\nCan Ind Ale B \t\nCan Pac Rly \t\n,'ockshutt Plow \t\nJon Min it. Smelt\t\ndistillers Seagrams\t\n)ominion Bridge\t\nJominion Coal pfd\t\n3om Steel & Coal B .\nDominion Textile \t\nDryden Paper\t\nFamous Players C C ...\nFoundation C of C\t\nGatineau Power\t\nGatineau Power pfd .\nGurd Charles \t\nGyp Lime & Alab\t\nHamilton Bridge \t\nHamilton Bridge pfd .\nHoward Smith Paper .\nHolt Renfrew \t\nH Smith Paper pfd\t\nImp Tob of C \t\nInter Nickel of Can .\nLake of the Woods\t\nLake Sulphite \t\nMassey Harris \t\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nMontreal L H & P\t\nNational Brew Ltd\t\nNat Brew Pfd\t\nNat Steel Car\t\nOgilvie Flour Mills ...\n,    3\n.   13%\n.     8%\n. 155%\n.   11%\n.   29\n.    3%\n.   42%\n.    9%\n.   93%\n.   17%\n.    3\n.    8\n.   32%\n. 105\n25%\n11%\n100\n3%\n.    3%\n6%\n.     8%\n55%\n13%\n26%\n16%\n11%\n60\n6\n24\n11\n4%\n5%\n40\n13%\n20\n95\n14\n45%\n11\n3%\n6%\n12%\n29\n37\n40\n39%\nOntario Steel Prods -     5\nPower Corp of Can    13\nQuebec Power    15\nSt Lawrence Corp      3%\nSt Lawrence Corp pfd     12\nSt Law Paper pfd    30\nSouth Can Power    11%\nShawinigan W is P     18%\nSteel of Can    62\nSteel of Canada pfd     59\nWestern Grocers   60\nBANKS\nBank of Canada  59\nCanadienne Nationale   160\nCommerce  184\nMontreal  201\nNova Scotia \u201e 300\nRoyal   170\nCURB\nAbitibi P tt P Co 1.60\nAbitibi 6 pfd     13%\nBeauharnois Corp     2%\nBathurst PtPB     2%\nBrew Corp of Can 1.90\nBrew Corp of Can pfd    17\nBritish American Oil    20\nB C Packers     12\nCan Malting Ltd     29\nCan Dredge & Dock     26\nCan Marconi  1.05\nCan Vickers      7\nCan Wineries      3\nCons Paper Corp      5\nDominion  Stores       5\nDonnacona Paper A      4%\nDonnacona Paper B     4\nFairchild Aircraft      5%\nFord Motor A    16%\nFraser Co Ltd    12%\nImperial Oil    17%\nInter Petroleum   25%\nInter Utilities B  60\nMcColl Frontenac pfd     96\nMacLaren P&P     8%\nMitchell Rob!     10\nPage Hersey Tubes     87\nPrice Bros     10%\nPower Corp pfd     94%\nRoyalite Oil     42%\nUnited Dist of Can 90\nWalker-Good & W     36%\nWalker-Good pfd    17%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAm Can   84%\nAm For Pow .... 3\nAm Smelt & Re 36%\nAm Tel   126%\nAm Tob   68%\nAnaconda   27%\nAv Corp  3%\nBaldwin  6%\nBait & Ohio .... 5%\nBendix Av   11%\nBeth Steel   46%\nBorden   16%\nCan Dry  14\nCan Pac  6%\nCerro de Pasco 34%\nChrysler   41%\nCon Gas NY.. 22\nC Wright pfd .. 4%\nDupoht  97%\nEast Kodak   145\nFord Eng   4%\nFord of Can  16\nFree Texas   25%\nGen Elec  32%\nGen Foods   26%\nGen Motors   29%\nGoodrich  13%\nGranby  3%\nGreat Nor pfd.. 14%\n\"- -\u2014 \"\u2014J \u2022\"\u25a0\nLow\n84\n3\nClose\n84%\n35\n36%\n125%\n126%\n68%\n68%\n26%\n27%\n3%\n3%\n6'\/.\n6%\n5%\n5%\n11%\n11%\n45\n46%\n16\n16\n13%\n14\n6\n6%\n33%\n34%\n20%\n40%\n20%\n21%\n4%\n4%\n95%\n97%\n143\n145\n4%\n4%\n16\n16\n25\n25%\n31%\n32%\n26\n26\n29\n29%\n13\n13%\n3%\n3%\n14\n14*\/\nHud Motors   6%\nInter Nickel .... 45%\nInter Tel & Tel 7%\nKenn Cop   32%\nMack Truck  19%\nMont Ward  30%\nVA\n12%\n4\n15%\n33%\nNash Motors\nN Y Central\nPack Motors\nPenn R R ..\nPhillips Pete\nRadio Corp  5%\nRem Rand   11%\nSafeway Stores 15%\nShell Un  12%\nS Cal Edison .... 21%\nStan Oil of N J 45%\nTexas Corp   37%\nTexas Gulf Sul 29%\nTimken Roll .... 35\nUnder Type  47%\nUn Carbide ..... 63%\nUn Aircraft  26%\nUn Pac  60\nU S Steel  43%\nU S Rub  26%\nWarner Bros .... 4%\nWest Eleo  71%\nWest Uni\u201e  21%\nWoolworth   4?\n_^_m___0_________m____l__\n6 6%\n44% 45%\n7% 7%\n31% 32%\n19% 19%\n29% 30%\n7% 7%\n11% 12%\n4% 4\n15% 15%\n32% 33\n5% 5%\n11% 11%\n15% 15%\n12% 12%\n21% 21%\n45% 45%\n36% 37%\n29% 29%\n34 34%\n47% 47%\n62% 63%\n26% 26%\n60 60\n42% 43\n25 25%\n4% 4%\n69% 71%\n20 21%\n41 42\n__t___________m\nPrices Chicago\nWheal Take Drop\nCHICAGO, April 29.-Turning decidedly downward late today, Chicago wheat prices showed 2 cents a\nbushel drop to a new four-year bottom record, 79 cents for May.\nStop loss selling, especially in\nMay contracts, became an outstanding feature.\nAt the close, Chicago wheat futures were 1%\u20142 cents lower compared with yesterday's finish, May\n79\u201479%, July 78%-%, corn Vs oft\nto % up, May 58%\"\u2014%, July 60-\n70%, and oats %\u2014% down.\nWHEAT:\nOpen  High  Low   Close\nMay    80%    81%    79       79\nJuly    80       80%     78%     78%\nSept    80%    81%    79%     79%\nCOASTRALUES\nVANCOUVER, April 29 (CP) -\nA mild rally in the last hour on\nVancouver stock exchange today\npushed oil prices higher. Base metals were firm and golds a few cents\nlower. Transactions totalled 91,455\nshares.\nIn the base metal group, B. C.\nNickel at 15%. Lucky Jim at 2%\nand Whitewater at 4% firmed fractions. Unchanged issues included\nPend Oreille at 1.55, Nicola at 4%\nand Grandview at \"6%.\nPioneer Gold slipped five cents\nat 3.00 while Premier at 1.99, Hedley Mascot at 1.08, Kootenay Belle\nat 1.15 and \u2022\u2022Sheep Creek at 94 each\ndipped 1. Reno eased 2 at 53 as\nCariboo Gold Quartz at 2.18 and\nBralorne at 8.75 held unchanged.\nBig Missouri added 1 at 38.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, April 29 (CP)-Graln\nfutures quotations;\nWHEAT:\nMay 120%   122     119%   119%\nJuly  111%   112%   109%   109%\nOct   .89%     89%    88%     88%\nOATS:\nMay    45%    46       45%    45%\nJuly    42       42%    41%    41%\nOct      37%    37%    37%    37%\nBARLEY:\nMay    57%    5C%    57%     57%\nJuly    57%    57%    57%    57%\nOct    52%    52%    52%     52%\nFLAX-\nMay   .....\", 155%   154      153      153\nJuly  155      155%   154      154\nRYE:\nMay    60%    62%    59%    60\nJuly    61%    63%    60%    61%\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT\u2014No. 1 Nor. 124%; No. 2\nNor. 118%; No. 3 Nor. 111%; No. 4\nNor. 101%; No. 5. 83%; No. 6, 77%;\nfeed 70%; No; 1 Garnet 114%; No. 2\nGarnet 111%; No. 1 Durum 86%;\nNo, 4 special 97%; No. 5 special 80;\nNo. 6 special 72; track 121%; screenings $1 per ton.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 47%; No. 3\nC. W. 43%; Ex. 1 feed 44%; No. 1\nfeed 41%; No. 2 feed 39%; No. 3\nfeed 36%; track 45%.\nBARLEY\u2014Malting grades: 6- and\n2-Row Ex. 3 C. W. 57%. Others: No.\n3 C.W. 55%, No. 4 C.W, 53%; No. 5\nC.W. 52%; No. 6 C.W. 51%; track\n57%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. and track\n153; No. 2 C. W. 149; No. 3 C. W.\n138; No. 4 C. W. 121.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 60.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, April 29 (CP). -\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStrt.    Tough\nNo. 1 hard   116%      114%\nNo. 1 Nor.   116%    . 114%\nNo. 2 Nor  109%      107%\nNo. 3 Nor.  100%        97%\nNo. 4 Nor.     90%        87%\nNo. 5 wheat    68%       66%\nNo. 6 wheat    59%       56%\nFeed     49%       46%\nLondon Close\nLONDON, April 29 (AP)\u2014Traps-\natlantic securities continued heavy\nin today's stock market and prices\nwere down anywhere from 1 to 5\nat the close. The industrial group\nwas inactive and slightly lower and\nmining issues sold off on profit taking sales. Rubber, copper and rail-\niroad shares were mixed while for-\n' eign bonds were exceptionally firm,\nespecially Prague 7% per cent issue.\nClosing: Brazilian $11%; CP.R.\n$6% International Nickel $45; U.S.\nSteol $42%; British American Tobacco 105s 7%d; Cable & Wireless \u00a361;\nConsol Gold Fields 71s 10%d; Cour-\ntaulds 40s Od; East Geduld \u00a310%\nH.B.C. 19s 9d; Woolworth 64s 6d.\nBonds: British 2% per cent consols \u00a374%; 3% per cent war loan\n\u00a3101%; funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3112%.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nMINES\nBID ASK\nAztec        .07 -\nB C Nickel 15% .17\nBig Missouri  38 .40\nBluebird  01% .02%\nBralorne      8.75 8.85\nB R Con        \u2014 .03\nB R Mt  -       \u2014 -04\nCariboo  \u201e     2.18 2.20\nDunwell         \u2014 .05\nFairview        .03% .03%\nFederal    01 -\nGeo Copper 25 \u2014\nGolconda    04 .05\nGold Belt  37 .38\nGold Mt        .02% .02%\nGrandview    06% .06%\nGrull Wihksne 04% .05%\nHaida  07% .08\nHedley Mascot     1.08 1.09\nHedley St        - -05\nHome Gold  01% .014\nIndian Mines 02 .03\nInter C & C 28 -\nIsland Mountain 75 .80\nKootenay Belle ......     1.15 1.18\nKootenay Flo        \u2014 .01\nLakeview        .00% .00%\nLucky Jim   02% .02%\nMak Siccar  01 .01%\nMcGillivray      .20 \u2014\nMinto 02V\u00ab .02%\nNicola          .04% .05\nNoble Five  02% .02%\nPend Oreille      1.55 \u2014\nPilot      01% .02\nPioneer      3.00 3.05\nPorter Idaho  02% .03\nPremier Border ....      .01 \u2014\nPremier Gold       1.99 2.00\nQuatsino  02% .03%\nQuesnelle        .08 .09\nRed Hawk  04% .05\nReeves Mc  25 .35\nRelief Arl 15 .17\nReno  53 \u2014\nReward  - 04% .04%\nRufus Arg  01% -\nRuth Hope         - .02%\nSalmon Gold  06% .08\nSheep Creek      ' .94 .97\nSilbak Pr      165 2.00\nVidette           \u2014 -10\nWaverly T  00% .01\nWellington  M  .......      .02 .03\nWesko    03% .03%\nWhite Eagle       .01 .02\nWhitewater  04% -\nYmir Y Girl 15 .18\nOILS\nAssoc   05 \u2014\nAmalg   01 .01%\nAnaconda       .09% \u2014\nAnglo-Can        1.50 1,55\nA P Con 20% .23\nBaltac 03 .04\nB R Dom  11 \u2014\nBrown Corp        51 .53\nC & E      2.49 2.50\nCalmont    41 .44\nCommonwealth 34 \u2014\nCrow's Nest  01 .01%\nDalhousie    50 \u2014\nDavies Pete  52 \u2014\nEastcrest  09 \u2014\nFirestone    23 .24\nFour Star  17 .20\nFreehold 06% .07\nFoothills   50 -\nFoundation    19 \u2014\nHargal  21 -\nHighwood  12 \u2014\nHome Oil       133 1.35\nImperial       16.75 -\nInter Pete     25.\"0 -\nMadison          .0-514 .06\nMar Jon  09 .10\nMerland    05 \u2014\nMercury   11% -12\nMcDougal  20 \u2014\nMcLeod New 15 \u2014\nMill City  08 .10\nModel    35 -\nMonarch     .17 .18\nNordon\nOkalta Com     169 '.70\nOkalta pfd   25.00\nPacalta\nPrairie R       .48 .49\nRoyalite      42.00 48.00\nSpoontr .._. \u2122\u00ab.m-    \u201e.W.\nS W Pete 40\nTexas Can      1.20\nUnited  .\u00bb. 19%\nVanalta       .08\nVulcan    92\nWestflank        .17\nINDUSTRIALS\nCoast Brew     13.00\nCapital Estates      2.60\nB C Power A     28.00\nBrew & Dist     5.12%\nCPR      6.00\nGrowers Wine     13.00\nPacific Coyle  20\nU D L  94\n13.25\n6,00\n6.50\n15.00\n1.00\n- PA OF III Vitt]\nIncrease Canada's\nDomestic Exports\nOTTAWA, April 29 (CP) - Due\nlargely to an increase in purchases\nfrom British Empire countries, Canada's domestic exports during the\n1937-38 fsca! year rose to $1,070,228,-\n609 form (1,061,181,906, a gain of\nmore, than $9,000,000.\nThe United States was the beat\ncustomer, purchasing $428,130,636\nworth of goods compared to $436,-\n014,544 in the corresponding period\nof 1936-37. Australia led British Empire -countries with purchases valued at $32,422,489 compared to $26,-\n943,810 in the previous fiscal,year.\nOther leading markets with figures for 1936-37 in brackets: Newfoundland $9,388,860 ($7,728,211);\nFrance, $7,609,382 ($11,717,806); Argentina, $7,419,569 ($3,727,088); Norway, $6,671,605 ($6,907,015)- Irish\nFree State, $5,153,371 ($3,799,710);\nJamaica, $4,387,567 ($3,327,133): British India, $4,348,171 ($3,221,062);\nBrazil, $4,830,149 ($3,872,899).\nDomestic exports in March totalled in value $74,219,408 compared\nwith $88,326,529 in March,'1937. The\ntotal to countries of the British Empire was $38,366,979 compared with\n$39,032,779; purchases by foreign\ncountries totalled $35,852,429 compared with $49,293,750.\nSMELTERS OFF\nMONTREAL, April 29 (CP) -\nPrices failed to rally on the stock\nexchange today but volume was\nabout 50 per cent higher.\nWidest drop was provided by St.\nLawrence Paper preferred, down\n2% at 30%.\nSmelters sold down % at 55% and\nNoranda Copper advanced % at 58.\nInternational Nickel finished up %\nat 45%. Brazilian and Shawnlgan\nslipped Vt each.\nDominion Bridge dropped one.\nCanada Cement eased % and Steel\nof Canada dropped %. Canadian\nPacific was steady and Canadian\nCar h Foundry common and preferred lost fractions. Canadian\nBronze was down % at 33.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, April 29 (AP) -\nBritish and foreign exchange closed higher today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nArgentina, peso, .2636\nBelgium, belga, .1694\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3121\nFrance, Iranc, .030775\nGermany, reichsmerk, .4048\nHolland, florin, .5599\nHungary, pengo, .2003\nIndia, rupee, .3756\nJapan, yen, .2926\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0387\nNorway, krone, .2521\nSouth Africa, pound. 4.9905\nSweden, krone, .2585\nSwitzerland, franc, .2315\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nTORONTO PEPPY\nTORONTO, April 29 (CP) - Vol\u00ab .\nume aggregated 481,500 shares on\nthe Toronto market today and 151,.\n000 shares of the turnover was\ntraded in the last hour. Secondary\ngolds especially came forward la\nthe final stage and the industrials\nalso made a good showing in the\nmild rally. Senior golds played an\nInconspicuous role and Dome and\nMclntyre were off % to % whlli\nLake Shore posted a minor advance and Hollinger closed un-\ncharged.\nHard Rock was up 1 at 2.16. Mac-\nLeod-Cockshutt also gained. Other\nissues of the group closing on the\nup side included Pamour. McWat\"\ntars, Gillies Lake and Omega, Sen*\nlor base metals trimmed early loss*\nes up to a point to small fraction! I\nexcept the Hudson Bay point dq*\ncline. Nickel and Smelters lost ty\nto % and Noranda finished a frac*\nHon up. Pend Oreille and Waite*\nAmulet registered minor losses. El*\ndorado swung up from a low of 2.25 :\nto close 7 net higher 2.40.\nWorld   Exchanges    |\nNEW YORK, April 20 (AP) \u2014\nLeading European currencies flue*\ntuated narrowly today in termi ot\nthe dollar in a quiet foreign exchange market.\nClosing rates follow: Great Britain in dollars, others in cents. Great\nBritain demand 4.98%; cables 4.98%;\n60-day bills 4.98; France demand\n3.06%; cables 3.06%; Italy demanl I\n5.26%; cables 5.26%.\nDemands: Belgium 16.84; Germ*\nany 40.32; benevolent 21.90; travel\n24.40; Holland 55.67; Norway 26.07;\nSweden 25.71; Denmark 22.27; Fin*\nland 2.22; Switzerland 23,02; Port*\nugal 4.53%; Greece .92; Poland 18.98;\nCzechoslovakia 3.48%; Jugoslavia.\n2.35; Hungary 19.90; Rumania .75;\nArgentine 33.25N; Brazil (free)\n5.90N; Tokyo 29.08: Shanghai\n27.37%; Hong Kong 31.00; Mexico\nCity 24.75N; Montreal in New York\n99.46%; New York in Montreal\n100.53%; (N\u2014Nominal).\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Press\nClosing exchange ratts:        *,\nAt Montreal: Pound 5.01 5-llj|\nU. S. dollar 1.00 17-32; franc WtoM\nAt New York: Pound 4.98%;' Cmi'j\nnadlan dollar .99 15-32; franc 3MH,.\nAt Paris: Pound 162% fr; U. S\ndollar 32.50 fr; Canadian dollar 3231\nfrancs.\nIn gold: Pound 12s 2d; U. S. Wj\nlar 59.39 cents; Canadian dollar 59.0S <\ncents. t\n , _tjfl\nCANADIAN  INDUSTRIES  LIMITED\nEXPLOSIVES DIVISION\nHEAD OFFICE   \u2022    MONTREAL\nDISTRICT OFFICES: (IALIFAX TORONTO WINNIPEG VANCOUVER\n \u2022\nPAGE TWELVE -\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B,C-SATURDAY MORNING, APRIL \u00bb. 1931\nDEODORANTS\nPeritop .... 39c and 50c\nDaw 35c and 60c\nMarvellous 75c\nNon Spi 35c and 70c\nOdorono ..... 35e and 60c\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nONE COMPANY REDUCES\nPRICE OF NEWSPRINT\nNEW YORK, April 29 (AP) -\nThe Great Northern Paper Co. today announced newsprint will be\n$48 a ton tor the second half of\n1936, $2 a ton less than was an\nnounced for the period late in 1937.\n.Other producers have quoted $50\n.a ton for the year.\nI Ott Your Job In tha \"Want Ads\"\nMan Wanted al\nSalmo and Trail\nJailed, Slewarl\nGeorge M. Rozeck, {or whom warrant) are held by provincial police\non false pretence charges at Salmo\nand Trail hai been sentenced at\nStewart to serve six months in Jail\non four similar charges,.provincial\npolice divisional headquarters at\nNelson were advised by* radio Friday.\nThe radio message stated Rozeck\nhad been convicted under the name\nDavid Sidney Shaw.\nPolice stated the charges Involved\nworthless checks. It was also stated\nthe -warrants bald la this district\nwould be executed later.\nSAY DOMINION SHOULD\nGIVE MORE TO RELIEF\nTORONTO, April 39 (CP) - The\nDomlnionTgovernment is not eon.\ntributlng its fair share towards direct relief, considering all the weans\nof taxation at its disposal, the Toronto Home Builders' association\nclaimed today before the Rowell\ncommission.\nPLUMBING\nmow in\n\u25a0X.HIMBIMO\nB HEATING CO.\nCarpenters\u2014\n\u2014Attention\nAll carpenters of Nelion and District, a mass meeting will\nbe held at the K. P. Hall Saturday, 30th, 1938 at 7:30\np.m. All carpenters are requested to attend. Organising\ncommittee..\nTO HEAR DISPUTE\nCALGARY, April M (CP)-Publlc\nhearings of the conciliation board\nacting in the dispute between the\nwestern Canada bituminous coal operators' association and district 18,\nUnited Mine Workers of America,\nwill open here May 19,\nENFORCE RAILWAY ACT\nOTTAWA, April 29 (CP) - Members of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, It was announced today,\nhave been instructed; to \"rigidly\nenforce\" the Railway Ad through\nout the Dominion with regard to\nIllegal riding on trains, In conjunction with police of the Canadian Pacific and Canadian National\nrailways.\nTO HOLD INQUEST\nBRALORNE, B. C, April 29 (CP)\n\u2014An inquest will be held Saturday into the death of John Trefiak,\nkilled early Thursday when the\nautomobile he was riding plunged\nover a 1000-foot cliif.    .\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg.\n-PHONE 25-\nthi'V-MMa-NaTM 1-M\nPRESCRIPTION\nFleury's Pharmacy\nUtDlCAl  A\u00bb>* BIOCK\nNelson Business\nCollege\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION\nCommence Any Time\nCOMMENCING\nMONDAY MAY 2nd.\nStage from Salmo to Sheep Creek Camp\nwill leave as followst\nSALMO AT 9:30 A. M.\nRENO MILL AT 2 P. M.\nDAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY\nSHEEP CREEK STAGE\nM. C. DONALDSON, LTD.\nSalmo, B. C.\nFOR QUICK SERVICE IN\nLIGHT DELIVERIES\nHEAVY HAULING\nHousehold Removals\nWith Experienced, Courteous Men\nWilliams1 Transfer\n614 WARD ST. PHONE 106\nFISHING SEASON\nOPENS SUNDAY\nDON'T\nForget your anglers licence\nor\nLose the big one on your\nold line.\nWe have a complete assortment of\nRODS       LINES       BAITS\nAT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD\nAnglers licence may also be obtained from ut.\n$1.00 SEASON\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd,\nTHE FISHERMAN'S HEADQUARTERS\nWhen You Haul in That Ten-\nPounder, Relax With a Bottle of\nThe Kootenay'i Finest Beer\nColumbia\nLager\nKootenay Breweries Limited\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government ot British Columbia.\nXhe\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nComer Mill 8t and Josephine\nSPECIALS\nFor April 30 and May 2\nOranges (the best yet)\u2014  \u00a3ttt\\\n$ doi. tor - *W*\nQrapetrult (thin-skinned __9__\nfruit)\u20146 for  -. *****\nGrapefruit\u2014Texas, very   iCt)\nlarge; 3 for **r\nFresh Eggs (Local Urge) _*_**_\n\u20142 doz. for ******\nChocolate Eclairs (Fresh *%i_\\\nstock)\u2014Lb  m*T\n5 Ibs. Granulated Sugar, 1 Ib.\nOur   Special   Fresh   Ground\nCoffee\u2014\nBoth for \t\n601\nStrawberry and Apple       A\\_t_\\\nJam-^l Ibs. for **r\nSliced Side Bacon (no      ACA\nrlnd)-Per Ib. Wt\nSliced Bologna\u2014\nPer lb.\t\nApples (Fine Eating or\nCooking)\u2014* Ibs\t\nPork and Beans (Llbby's,\nlarge tins)\u20143 for\t\nTomato Juice (Llbby's,\nlarge tins)\u20143 for\t\nSockeye Salmon\u2014i\/fc-lb.\ntins; 4 for\t\nPacific Milk (tall tins)\u2014\n3 for\t\nFresh Cakes\n200   250   300\n200\n250\n350\n350\n550\n280\nSOCIAL CREDIT STUDY\nCLUBS FORMED IN EAST\nOTTAWA, April 29 (CP)-Jobo\nBlackmore.. leader ot the federal\nsocial credit group, said social credit study clubs had been established\nin Nova Scotia, Quebec and Ontario.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nSEE PAGE TWO\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nPHONE 815\nfor better and prompter service In plumbing repairs and\nalterations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nRfcXALlSIOHE\nLet us load your\ncamera with Kodak V. Film. AU\nsizes. Fresh stock.\nOur Finishing\nDepartment   gets\nbest results from\nyour exposures-\nland REMEMBER,\nI   Free  Enlargement with every\n$5.00 worth  of\nFinishing done\nby us.\nOPEN ALL DAY SUNDAY\n^m\nYale psychologists would like to\nuse an island off Puerto Rico as a\nchimpanzee colony, where the animals could range freely and where\nanimals for experiments could be\nobtained.\nCIVIC\nPHONE 110\nFor the Finest In Groceries\nFresh Milk, Cream, Ice Cream\nand Revels\nPicture\nTaking\n\u2022 AIDS\nDeveloping Tanks, Tripods, Lens\nHoods, Portrait Attachments,\nColor Filters, Neckpods etc.\nidnnwjMo^\nTHE\nSatisfaction\nYOU GET OUT OF A\nSUIT\nDepends entirely upon\nwhat your tailor puts into\nthe clothes when he\nmakes them. We add\nplenty of fine tailoring to\nthoroughly good materials. We may sell a man\nhis first suit\u2014but it's\n\"satisfaction\" that brings\nhim back for more.\nSUITS\u2014Up from\n$27.50\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nTHE STAR\nAlton's  Moat  Po\nCAFE\nIl   Nilton't  Moat  Popular\nIff\nElectric Exposure\nMeter .... $20.00\nRange Finders . $8.70\nKodaf lector... $6.00\nAllen's Art Shoppe\nMOTHER'S DAY CARDS NOW\nON DISPLAY\nMAT 1 MARKS OUR FIRST TEAR IN BUSINESS AND OWING TO THE\nCONTINUED POPULARITY OF PONTIAC AND McLAUGHLIN-BUICK\nMOTOR CARS, WE CELEBRATE BY OFFERING THESE\nRECONDITIONED CAR BARGAINS\n'34 CHEVROLET COUPE\n$495\nHUPMOBILE  SEDAN.\nHad only one owner.\n$345\n'37 WILLYS DELUXE COUPE\u2014New car guarantee.\n$795\n'36 TERRAPLANE BROUCHAM\u2014Radio, ete.\n$765\nMcLAUCHUN-BUICK\nSpecial Sedan. New car\ncondition.\n$395\n'32 DODCE SEDAN\n$395\nSTUDEBAKER SEDAN.\nNew paint, good upholstery.\n$295\n'30   CHEVROLET  Sport\nRoaiter.\n$195\nCHRYSLER 60  Roadster.   New paint and\ntop.\n$178\nESSEX Coach. New tire\nand paint. One owner.\n$165\n'28 BUICK Coach. Mechanically   like   new.\nNeed paint job.\n$145\nFORD Sport Roadster.\nRumble seat.\n$165\nPONTIAC CABRIOLET.\nRumble seat\n$245\n'29 CHEVROLET Coupe.\nSnap at\n$165\n78 NASH Coupe. At li\n$145\n'31 PLYMOUTH Sedan.\n$325\n'36 TERRAPLANE SEDAN\u2014Mechanici tpecial.\n$695\n'36 WILLYS DELUXE SEDAN\u2014Heater and duel\nequipment\n$685\nLIGHT DELIVERY SPECIALS\n'36 TERRAPLANE Vi Ton Steel Cab and Box.\n$695\n'34 FORD four cylinder motor. New truck condition\n$375\n'28 CHRYSLER 52 Sedan.\nAi it\n$125\n'28 STUDEBAKER\nDictator Sedan\n$195\nSm\\\nKtftf\n\u00a3   mtS ___t\nComplete at 2:30, 7:00 and 9:00 p.m\n'*\\COMING MONDAY\n\"THE SOLDIER and\nthe LADY\"\nwith\nAnton Walbrook\nElizabeth Allen\nand a caste of thousands\nMONDAY IS\nBANK NIGHT\n$20 Is the Award\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 665    510 Kootenay St,\n\u25a0 lllllll 1 Bill 1S1I1I11111111IIIIIII1111III1II til\nOur best endeavor and constant\neffort is to maintain\nand Improve the\nQUALITY\nin order that we sell goods\nthat insure results,\nSMYTHE'S PHARMACY\nPhone 1\nlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\n\u2014Coming-\nCIVIC THEATR1\nMay 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th\nKootenay\nMusical Festival\nSEASON TICKET*\nAdults $1*1 Students 75c\nSINGLE ADMI88ION\nMorning and Afternoon\nAdults 35c Children 15c\nEvening\nAdults 50c Children 26c\nOn sale at Gllker's, Kootenay\nMusic House, and Mann,\nRutherford Co.\nMany More to Choose From\nJ.McDowelL^,. H.Thurman\nTHESE PRICES FROM   Ac j-)*Ar<\\APR. 30 TO MAY 10 ONLY\nBODY AND\nFENDER\nEXPERTS\nFirst-Class\nRepairing\nIn Charge of\nMILTON\n(Frenchy)\nFRENCH\n206 BAKER ST.\nTEXACO\nUBMCATION\nI  \u25a0^l\/ m.mm)llHiLtmf\nW \u2022***\u25a0 sWUmM'\n40 FOR 1 MARFAK\nLUBRICATION\nUnsurpassed\nMechanical\nDepartment\nAll Work\nGuaranteed\nIn Charge of\nW. (BUI)\nKLINE\nPHONE 700\nKLINE'S CITY SERVICE\nPONTIAC-MCLAUGHLIN BUICK\u2014 AND G.M.C. TRUCKS\n' .* , - , \u25a0 \" .\nTHE WHITE SEASON\nIs just Around the Corner\nWhite Shoei are very\n\u2022mart this year.\nWe are now showing a complete range of styles and\nfittings.\nOxfords \u2014 Ties\nZippers \u2014 Sandals\nGODFREYS'Ltd.\n378 BAKER ST.\nPHONE 270\n\u25a0\u00ab\u00ab\u00abW*\u00bb*******4S***^^\nCONTINUOUS SHOW FROM 1:00\nFeature Start! at 3:00, 6:18 and 9:35\nHOP-A-LONC RIDES ACAIN\n\"Partners of the Plains\"\nwith\nWilliam Boyd \u2014 Gwen Case\nAtSmm*.\nALSO\u2014MICKEY MOUSE and PARAMOUNT NEWS     I\nSPECIAL MATINEE FOR CHILDREN AT 1:00\nOUR NEW SERIAL\u2014\"THE PAINTED STALLION\"\nCARTOON and COMEDY\nNABOB COUPONS ACCEPTED UP TO 5:00\n1 Prices:      Matinee 10c and 25c\nNite 15c and 35c\nComing Monday and Tuesday\nCLAUDETTE COLBERT and CARY COOPER\nin   \"BLUEBEARD'S EIGHTH WIFE\"\nPlus:  \"LANCERSPY\"\nS&SSlSttiSSiif&St^^\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1938_04_30","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0413368","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}