{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0413394":{"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":"1938-04-15","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0413394\/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":" -'V<-   ;- -'t- \u2022    '     *' .*-''\u25a0\n.Trail Now Is Favorite for 2nd\n\/    Game Saturday Ni^ht\n*-Pa_\\e Seven\nVOLUME 36\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\n'.\u25a0CTOHI**;,, B C.\nChicago and Winnipeg\nMarket Prices Soar\n\u2014Pa&e Nine  -\n'3-\nWheat\nNi BRITISH COLUMBIA* CANADA-FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 16. 1938.\nNUMBER 304\nCAMS. CO. LETV CONTRACT FOR 142 HOMES\nJAPANESE UNIT ANNIHILATED IN\nTRY AT BREAKING CHINESE LINE\nChina Chants Praises for Two Generals as\nSuccesses Continue; Tightening Ring\nAround Walled City of Yihsien\nJAPANESE SUFFER\nCRUSHING DEFEAT\nTOKYO, April 16 (Friday)\n(AP)\u2014A serious crisis confronted\nthe Japanese cabinet today, and\nthere were rumors Premie'\nPrince Fumlmaro Konoye, Unable\nto control warring factions, was\npreparing to resign.\nThe premier officially was silent, but reliable sources said the\ngovernment* was divided on the\nIssue of mobilising Japan's full\nmilitary strength In an effort to\nachieve quick and complete victory In Chins.\nBy LLOYD LEHRBAS\nAssociated Press Foreign Staff\nSHANGHAI April 16 (Friday)\n(AP) -While Chinese forces kept\nup spirited attacks today against\nJapanese forces strung -across\nShantung province most of China\nchanted the praises of two men.\nThey are General LI Tsung-Jen\nend General Pal Chung-Hsl, front\n' line commanders In the vital central Chine corridor, acclaimed as\nthe first really to defeat Japan's\narmed forces.\nPartners and friends since boyhood, they were directing Chinese\nforces tightening a ring around the\nwalled city of Yihsien, northwest at\nTaierhchwang, where the Japanese\nspearhead suffered a crushing' defeat.\nWar bulletins said a Japanese\nunit was annihilated after almost\nfighting its way through the encircling Chinese at Yihsien. They said\nthe city .was besieged,and supply\nlines cut so the Japanese,could receive food and munitions only by\nairplane.\nGeneral. Li, 48, is in command ot\nthe Shantung front with General\nPai, 48, in the field as General Chiang Kai-Shek's chief of staff.\nIh their career together they hate\nrevolted twice against Chiang and\nwere His bitter enemies until the\nfight against Japan gave them all-a\ncommon cause.\nFRANCO TROOPS\nPRESS ONWARD\nHENDAYE, France, April 14\n\u2014Spanish insurgents tonight whipped the ends of their 160-mile eastern Spanish front toward the Mediterranean on the south and Andorra\non the north.\nGeneral Miguel Aranda's troops\ndrove from San Mateo into the little Castellon village of La Jana,\nnine miles by air from the sea and\n14. miles by highway from coastal\nVinaroz. ,\nFar in the north, amid snow-covered mountain slopes, Insurgents\ntook control of the village of Tor,\nthree miles irom where Andorra's\nwestern frontier with Spain strikes\nthe French border.\nNearly midway between these\npoints east of Balaguer the government fought desperately in an effort to break the insurgent advance\ninto the interior of Lerida province.\nBritain and Italy\nto Sign Saturday\nLONDON, April 14 (AP)-Great\nBritain and Italy on Saturday will\nsign.'a friendship pact expected to\nremove tension in the Mediterranean Sea.\nThrough its long-range operations\nthe new agreement, observers. believed. May gradually bring .Italy\nback into theorbitof London and\nParis, aw\u00aby from -Germany's Influence:*,-   \"'*\nPrime Minister Chamberlain stood\nin the house of -commons; today,\nshortly before it adjourned until\nApril 26 for the Easter vacation, and\ntold members negotiations with Italy\nvirtually had been concluded.\nIn Rome, Premier Mussolini went\nover the draft agreement with the\nEarl of Perth,* British ambassador,\nand foreign minister Count Ciano of\nItaly.\nAt the same time, Leslie Hore-\nBelisha, war secretary, left on a\nMediterranean Inspection tour which\nwill include a'courtesy call on II\nDuce April 23. Mr. Hore-Belisha\nflew to Marseille, France, where he\nspent the night.\nSTRIKE SETTLED\nSEATTLE, April 14 (AP)-More\nthan 2000 members of local 7, Cannery workers and Farm Laborers\nunion, gave approval today to the\nJoseph Cheney peace proposal ending the tieup which delayed ooen-\ning ef the 1938 Alaska salmon fishing season.\nThe union is a C. I. O-affiliate.\nShipping firms and packers announced plans for immediate dispatch of snips to Alaska from PUget\nsound ports. They will haul passengers and cannery supplies to the\nfishing banks and bring much of\nthe canned salmon pack back to the\nStates.\nANTI-AIRCRAFT DEFENCE\nIS MAJOR OBJECTIVE\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP)-\nAnti-alrcraft defence training was\na major objective of the present\nmilitia program, Hon. Ian Mackenzie, national defence minister\ntold Interviewers here today. He\nsaid the government had experienced considerable difficulty In\ngetting orders for equipment filled quickly.\nFARMERS OPPOSE\nPRODUCTION TAX\nDUCHESS, Alta., April 14 <CP>-\nFarmers of the Brooks and Duchess\ndistricts were on record today as\nopposed to the Alberta government's new production tax adopted\nat the recent session of the legislature.\nThe production tax, which will be\nreferred to the courts for a reference on its validity before it becomes operative, calls tor a seven\nrcent tax bn agricultural produce\nreplace certain lend taxes and\nprovide a system of crop insurance.\nShowers on Good\nFriday Expected\nfor Coast of B.C.\nVICTORIA, April 14 (CP)-Easter\nparaders who wish to display their\nspring clothes tomorrow may have\nto do so underneath umbrellas.\nForecasts issued today by the Dominion meteorological bureau here\nsaid the outlook for Good Friday\nwas not very hopeful. Scarcity of\nreports from ships in the Pacific\nmade an accurate forecast difficult,\nthe observatory said, but cloudy\nskies and light showers were expected with moderate southwesterly\nwinds.\nJAPAN DEPLORES\nBUILDING OF HUGE\nWARSHIPS BY U. S.\nTOKYO, April 14 (AP)-The navy\nministry spokesman today characterized reports the United States was\nbuilding 50,000-ton battleships as\n\"interesting but deplorable.\"\nTokyo newspapers gave prominence to dispatches attributing to\nSenator Bone (D-Wash.)' a statement that he was informed the navy\nhad construction of two such warships under consideration.\nTO PROBE .UNEMPLOYMENT\nSITUATION,    VANCOUVER\n\\*NCOUVER, April 14 (CP) -\nConcentration ot single unemployed\nIn Vancouver will be the subject of\ninvestigation and conference with\nmunicipal authorities, Hon. Ian\nMackenzie, national defence minister, told interviewers on his arrival here today.\nTO NAME DESTROYERS\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP) -\nHon. Ian Mackenzie, national defence minister, said on his arrival\nhere today the two destroyers Canada Intends to purchase from the\nBritish admiralty this, year would\nbe renamed \"Ottawa\" and \"Resti-\ngouche\" and would both be stationed on the* Pacific coast.\nATTENDANT TELLS OF SCUFFLE THAT\nRESULTED IN SCOTT'S BROKEN LEG\nGUELPH, Ont, April 14 <CP)-\nWalter Scott, former premier of\nSaskatchewan who died at Home-\nwood sanitarium here March 23, suffered a broken leg March 19 when\n\"he went down on the floor\" after\nbeing- grabbed by the shoulder by\nNorman McKendry, an attendant,\nMcKendry said here today.\nMcKendry was testifying at the\nRoyal commission inquiry into the\naffairs of the sanitarium and described the March 19 incident when Scott\nwas injured. The latter, the attendant said, had been asking for cigars,\nalthough he had been told none wss\navailable.\n.Later he asked McKendry for a\nbook the latter was reading.\n\"He looked at it, and then started\noft to his room with It,\" McKendry\nsaid. \"I asked him tor it and he\nthrew the book at my head, He was\ncursing violently.'! went after him.\"\nMcKendry testified he ordered\nScott to go tp his room. \"I grabbed\nhim by the shoulder and he went\ndown on the floor,\" the attendant\nsaid.\nHe thought Scott had slipped on\nthe floor, which waa waxed, Scott\nhad been wearing cotton socks at\nthe time. McKendry said he helped\nScott to-his - room by'putting his\narms under his-shoulders and pulling him-along. Scott wouldn't let\nthe attendant put him to bed.\nBANFF   SEEKS  A\n\"SEPARATION\"\nFROM ALTA.\nBANFF, Alta., April 14 (CP)\nBand advisory council- today\ndecided to make representations\nto the federal government for a\n\"separation from Alberta\" because permanent residents of\nthis Rocky Mountain resort\ntown claim they are burdened\nwith taxes.\n\"It is not really a secession\nmovement,\" said a council member, \"because Banff is not a part\nof the province but a unit in\nCanada's National Parks system.\"\nThe council, under Chairman\nW. E. Round, will petition members of parliament for support.\nBanff is administered under\nthe Dominion parks board, but\nis part of Alberta.\nWoman Sent Up\nin Murder Trial\nVICTORIA, April 14 (CP) - Mrs.\nVera Colebourne today was committed for trial at the fall assizes\nhere on a charge of murdering her\nhusband, Sidney W. Colebourne.\nCommittal was made by Magistrate Henry Hall in Oak Bay police\ncourt, a few blocks from the modest three-room cottage where Colebourne was shot to death last\nApril 1.\nMrs. Colebourne listened calmly\nthrough \u25a0 today's preliminary hearing as witnesses repeated testimony\ngiven at the\" inquest-10 days ago.\nThe 43-year-old ship's rigger was\nshot through the forehead as he\nlay asleep on a couch in the room\nhe shared with his wife and live-\nyear-old'daughter, Hilda.\nB. C. CANNET\nGOING HOME\nVICTORIA, April 14 (CP)-With\nfour days recess before resumption\nof provincial duties, members of\nthe cabinet were en route today to\ntheir homes. The provincial executive will reassemble here on Tuesday. Mainland members crossed on\nthe afternoon boat to Vancouver,\nfor the holiday.\nStan Laurel Is\nInsolvent, Says\nLOS ANGELES, April 14 (API-\nStan Laurel, who cries crocodile\ntears in film comedies, sighed in\nearnest today over the cost of supporting three wives.\n\"I'm insolvent.\" he said. \"All I've\ngot out of my earnings which they\ncan't touch is a $50,000 annuity. It\npays me $217 per month. If this\nkeeps up, I'd be better off to quit\nworking.\" - -\nLaurel is opposing a court action\nby his first wife, Lois, to compel\nhim to pay $1000 a month to support their 10-year-old daughter. Mrs.\nLaurel said he hadn't paid anything\nfor five years, but admitted the\nproperty settlement he made for her\nis worth $274,000.\nDUKE OF ALBA IS\nGRANTED PRIVILEGES\nLONDON, April 14 (CP-Havas)\n\u2014The British government today\nformally granted to the Duke of\nAlba, London representative of the\nSpanish insurgents, all the customary privileges enjoyed by ambassadors and foreign envoys accredited to the Court of St. James.\nELECTED\nVANCOUVER, April 14 <CP)-\nR. Crombie of Victoria was elected vice-president of the newly-\nformed .British Columbia Table\nTennis association.\nSTREET LIGHTS BROKEN\nTO HELP DAN CUPID\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP)-\nDan Cupid is playing havoc with\nVancouver's street lights\u2014at considerable cost to the city. Iifta report to the civic traffic commission\ntoday City Electrician ThomaJ,Mar-\ntin said a sjufflbn of Angus'drive\nWas beinsj-'used by young couples\nfor parking, \"and to keep the streets\nini.darkness, stones are thrown, at\nthe lights.\" Six lights-a night wat a\ngood average.\nCOTS AND ROBBERS GAME\nCHESTERFIELD, Ont., April 14\n(CP)--A game of \"cops and robbers\" in which two 'teen agtd boys\nshot it out with loaded rifles ended\nfatally today for Eric State, 14, of\nthis town 35 miles south of Ottawa.\nStata was rushed to Cornwall hospital and died shortly after admission. Two bullet holes were\nfound in his head.\nWHALING OPERATIONS MIT\nHARBOR GRACE, Ntld., April 14\n(CP Cable)\u2014Depressed whale oil\nmarkets were believed today to have\ncaused a complete cessation ol.operations of the Newfoundland Whaling\ncompany, causing the loss ot a season's employment to approximately 400. men.\nBRITAINMAYBUY\n500 LATEST TYPE\nBOMBINGPLANES\nIN UNITED STATES\nGov't. Experts to Sail\nWednesday to Open\nDiscussions\n$25,000,00015\nESTIMATED COST\nBy EDWIN 8. JOHNSON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON.-April 14 (CP Cable)\n\u2014Great Britain means business In\nher determination to build up her\ndefensive air arm to a state of\npower and efficiency where It\nwill be second to none'among\nworld powers\u2014even If It entails\nthe Importation of machines, parts\nand equipment\nOn the heels of Earl Winter-\nton's announcement fo th__ house\nof commons that exploratoi\nhad been taken In regard\nchase of warplanes from\nand the United States, Thi\ndlan Press learned authoritatively\nthat air ministry experts will tall\nnext Wednesday for the .United\nStates to open official discussions.\nBritain, it is reported, is ready to\nbuy. at least. 900 of the latest type\nbombers from United States manufacturers and negotiations are said\nto have been started with three Canadian firms for additional craft\nThe estimated expenditure would\nexceed \u00a35.000,000 ($25,000,000).\nThe original Royal Alf Force\nbuilding program .called Ior completion of 1750 fully mode*, first-\nline aircraft by- next -Mara but it\nnow, is.;#Bd\u00abstood, the ,;*6*w. ***%\n'\u25a0fi^l.ieaIfi:lor. constrffltibh\"\u25a0*\n1300 machines.       .\nIf the United States deal materializes it would be the largest military contract placed outside the\nEmpire since the Great War when\nBritain purchased tremendous quantities of munitions from the United\nStates.\nIt is pointed out here the United\nStates neutrality act empowers the\npresident to ban the export of war\nmaterials to belligerents at his discretion, but British Authorities believe this problem could be hurdled.\nFINED $160 ON A COMMON\nDANGER COUNT\nLADYSMITH, B.C., April 14 (CP)\n\u2014Cyril Ryan was fined $150 by\nMagistrate R. S. Wood in police\ncourt here today when he pleaded\nguilty to a charge of driving to the\ncommon danger laid in connection\nwith a recent collision which injured 21 persons. His driver's licence was cancelled indefinitely.\nNelson Board Trade Protests\nReturning Doukhobor's Vole as\nControlled by Spiritual Head\nVATICAN MARKS\nHOLY THURSDAY\nVATICAN CITY, April 14 (AP)-\nArchpriests and Canons of St. Peter's, headed by Cardinal Pacelli and\naided by lesser clergy, humbly\nwashed the altar stone of the Basilica's great altar at sundown today\nin a traditional Holy Thursday ceremony.\nThe altar, at which only the pope\ncelebrates mass, was stripped of all\nits cloths and decorations. The\nstone was sprinkled with wine and\nthe essence of aromatic herbs and\nscrubbed in the dim light of the\nhuge church.\nAll the Roman cardinals will participate in the good Friday services\ntomorrow, beginning with a mass\nin the Sistlne chapel.\nFAIL TO FIND\nLOST B.C. BOY\nCHILLIWACK, B. C, April 14-\n(CP) \u2014 A search party of 50 men\nreturned to this Fraser valley town\ntonight after an unsuccessful daylong search for Eliot K. Edstrom,\n19-year-old farm boy who disappeared from his nearby Sardis\nhome Tuesday.\nBritish Columbia Police Constable T. D- Brunton said the search\nparty split into groups and searched the bush bordering the Yale\nroad, both sides of the Vedder river\nand Columbia valley south to the\nUnited States border, without finding a trace of the boy.\nBURGLARS DEFY\n\"PADLOCK LAW\"\nMONTREAL, April; 14 (CP) -\nQuebec's \"padlock law\", may be\npotent,,weapon against communism\nbut Montreal burglars just sheer at\nIt. Executors bf Alphonse Vali-\nquette's estate, petitioning Superior\ncourt for removal of an anti-communist seal on a building, said it\nalready had been violated by thieves\nwho entered the place and. stole\nmerchandise\nSeek Development of\nNon-metallic Minerals\nVICTORIA, April 14 (CP) - Efforts of the British Columbia department of mines to develop industrial non-metallic minerals in\nthe province are receiving the attention of Industrial firms in eastern Canada Hon. W. J. Asselstine,\nminister of mines, and minister\nof trade snd Industry, said here\ntoday.\nOne,, and possibly more firms\nwill send representatives here\nduring the summer to study particularly the possibility of manufacturing rock wool on the coast,\nhe said.\nReport on Smeller Fumes Hearing\nExpected lo Be Known in Few Days\nOTTAWA, April 14 (CP) -\nBasis for permanent settlement of\nthe long drawn out dispute over\ndamage claims arising In the\nstate of Washington from operation of the Consolidated Mining\n& Smelting company plant In the\nborder town of Trail, 6. C\u201e Is expected to reach the American and\nCanadian governments within a\nfew days.\nAn International tribunal under\nchairmanship of Jan Francois\nHostle, a prominent Belgian jurist, made an exhaustive examination of the claims last summer\nand Its report Is expected momentarily by the two governments. Chief Justice R. A. E.\nGreenshlelds   of   Quebec   super\nior court and Charles Warren, a\nformer assistant United States attorney, ware the Canadian and\nAmerican members of the tribunal.\nClaims of farmers and others in\nihe state of Washington, for alleged damage to vegetation and farming operations, catised by sulphur\ndioxide fumes contained in smelters\nemanations amounted to- over $2,-\n000,00.\nOnce the report is received it\nwill be considered by the tWft governments and a summary made\npublic simultaneously in Washington and Ottawa. It is expected to be\na voluminous document and has\nbeen a lohg time in preparation.\nGrey Owl an Englishman \"Playing\nIndian', Former Associate Says\nNORTH BAY, Ont., April 14 (CP)\n\u2014Claim that Grey Owl, famous Indian naturalist with the braided\nhair, colorful costume and moccasins, was a full-blooded Englishman,\nwho came into northern Ontario in\n1906 with a Cockney accent, was\nmade today.\nGrey Owl died\nyesterday at\nPrince Albert,\nSask,. and if the\nstory told by William H. Guppy of\nTlmagami station,\nnear here, is true,\none bf the world's\nbest known Indians was no Indian at all.\nGuppy said that\nGrey Owl's name\nwas Archie Be-\nOREY OWL laney, a fact Grey\nOwl admitted when in 1915 he\njoined the Canadian forces at Dig-\nby, N.S. But Grey Owl said later\nhe Was born near the Mexican herder. His father was a Scot named\nMcNeil, his mother an Apache Indian.\n\"YOUNG\nENGLISHMAN\"\nGuppy said: \"Archie Belaney was\n_ Engl' '\nmet him at Temiskamlng in 1906. I\na young Englishman when I first\nshould say he was about 23 or 24.\n\"He spoke with an ordinary English accent, a Cockney accent we\nused to say in those days. He did-\nnot know a word of Indian.\"\nGuppy took him in hand and\nmade a guide of him.\n\"He really was a good guide and\nhe delighted to learn all the tricks\nof the woodsman, like'using an axe\nskilfully and all the arte of the\nguide,\" Guppy related. He was, in\nfact, like a toy playing Indian.\n\"He Just loved cowboys and Indians, and spent his days trying\nto be one. Indians were his friends\nand he lived with them. Then he\nwent out to war and I lost sight ot\nhim;\"\nGuppy said he was amused years\nlater when he read and saw photographs of Grey Owl. He was positive it Waa the Englishman, ''still\nplaying Indian\".\n\"As Class Undesirable\nCitizens,\" Says\nResolution\n\"STILL REFUSE\nOBEY OUR LAWS\"\nWith the assertion that although\nDoukhobors \"have lived in our\nmidst for 25 years they still refuse\nto obey our laws and as a class\nare undesirable citizens,\" and that\ntheir votes would \"be controlled\"\nby one man, the Nelson board of\ntrade at its luncheon meeting\nThursday passed a resolution protesting against the federal franchise being returned to Doukhobors. They were disenfranchised in\n1934.\nWhen the resolution was presented to the board by the special\ncommittee drafted to study reports\nthat a bill before the federal house\nproposed to return the vote to these\npeople, H. D. Dawson expressed the\nopinion some Doukhobors were becoming citizens and should not be\nplaced in the same classification as\nothers.\nC. F. McHardy suggested those\nbreaking away from the Community might be entitled to the franchise.\nNO DISTINCTION \u2022\nWilliam Waldie felt no distinction could be made between Community members and Independents,\nsince they all admitted allegiance\nto the one spiritual head.\n\u2022 (Continued on Page Two)\nSENDS EASTER\nEGGS TO QUINS\nBUFFALO, N. Y., April 14 (AP)\n\u2014Foiir-year-old Maryanna Ma-\ngona's wish to share her Easter\neggs with the Dionne quintuplets\nwas assured of speedy fulfillment\ntoday..Mary walked into a newspaper office holding five colored\neggs in chubbv hands.\n\"I'd like to send them to the\nquints,\". she explained. By coincidence, Dr. Allan it. D4fo*v who\"\nbrought the famous babies into the\nworld, was In town. A meeting was\narranged, and the doctor promised\nto deliver Maryanna's eggs to the\nquints in Callander, Ont.\n93-Veor-Old Weekly\nto Become Monthly\nMONTREAL, April 14 (CP)-At-\nter 93 years of uninterrupted publication as a weekly newspaper, the\nMontreal Witness announced today\nit would become a monthly after\nthis week's issue.\nFrederick E. Dougall, editor apd\npublisher, explained in a message\nto readers the change was \"forced\nby heavy decline in subscriptions\nto the Witness during a long continued depression.\"\nNEW YORK, April 4 (CP) -Tomorrow at sundown the Jews of\nthe world retire to the privacy of\ntheir homes to celebrate the feast\no! the passover, commemorating the\nexodus' of the Israelites from Egypt.\nAccording to tradition, the first\npassover\u2014the passover of Egypt-\nwas preordained by Moses at the\ncommand of the Lord, to strengthen\nthe Israelites for the trek across the\ndesert from bondage in'Egypt to\nthe Sacred Mountain.\nNow, as then, the feast is preceded ana followed by ceremonial\ndrinking fours cups of wine.\nFIRST VERNON\nMINISTER DEAD\nTORONTO, April 14 (CP)-Fun-\neial service for Rev. Paul F. Langill,88, United church minister who\ndied-yesterday at Flngal, Ont, win\nbe held here tomorrow. \u25a0',\n.VWh'Etagtll *\u00abs -ord*rfft*tf.%i Me*\nand was the first ordained minister\nat Vernon, B. C.\nJOSEPH CHALMERS IS\nCOMMITTED FOR TRIAL\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP)-\nJoseph R. Chalmers of the brokerage firm which bore his name today was committed by Police Magistrate H. S. Wood to. stand trial in\na higher court on a charge laid under the British Columbia Securities\nact.\nJohn T. Birch, employee of the\nfirm, now in liquidation, was remanded to April 22 for police court\nhearing on a similar charge.\nMINING OPERATOR DIES\nCOEUR D'ALENE, Idaho, April\n14 (AP)-Edwln 8. Crane, 84,\nwidely known Couer d'Alene district mining operator, died here\ntoday from pneumonia. He had\nbeen III but two days.\nit\n54\n52\n54\n60\n42\n30      42\n44\nMin. Max.\nNELSON      31 63\nVictoria     46\nNanaimo     42\nVancouver     44\nKamloops    _ 44\nPrince George  36  \u25a0 50\nEstevan Point   44 50\nPrince Rupert  40 46\nLangara     _  38\nAtlin   \t\nDawson, Y. T.\t\nSeattle        46 60\nPortland     - 44 64\nSan Francisco  48 58\nSpokane '.  38 58\nLos Angeles  48 62\nKelowna  34 59\nPenticton      34 \u2014\nGrand Forks   30 64\nKaslo   31 \u2014\nCranbrook  25 62\nCalgary  26 62\nEdmonton     36 62\nSwift Current  36 66\nMoose Jaw  32 68\nPrince Albert  30 84\nSaskatoon     28 68\nQu'Appelle     30 64  .\nWinnipeg      30 84\nForecasts: Kootenay \u2014 Moderate\nto fresh southerly winds, mild with\nincreasing cloudiness and showers\nst night.\nGOV'T.  OFFERS $1\nEACH FOR SOME\nSALMON\nOTTAWA, April 14 (CP) -\nThousands ot Atlantic salmon\nare swimming in Maritime waters marked with a price tag of\none dollar each. The Dominion\ngovernment will pay the dollar\nto anyone catching them, . '*\"\u201e\nIt's part of a scientific plan\nto gather accurate'data on the\nmigration of salmon, their travel routes and other characteristics.\nThe salmon were liberated by\nDominion hatcheries in New\nBrunswick and Nova Scotia\nstreams as fingerllngs. Each had\ncertain tins missing\u2014a painless\noperation, so the department of\nfisheries says.\nWhenever a fisherman catches one ot the finless salmon, he\nmay collect his dollar by telling\nhow and where he landed it\n\"and sending to the department\not fisheries about three dozen\nscales from the left middle side\nof the fish and enough skin to\nshow the scars left by removal\not the fins.\nJEWS CELEBRATE\nPASSOVERTODAY\nAgainst Making\nDistribution of\nMilk Civic Duty\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CF) -\nA special civic committee today declined to recommend to the city\ncouncil that distribution ot milk be\nmade a public utility.\nAnnouncement of their decision\nwas made after a conference, with\ndelegates of the Vancouver Housewives\" league. They agreed, however, to make further study of the\nsubject. Alderman H. L. Corey\nsaid the committee did not agree\nwith the league's charge that the\nprice of milk was \"prohibitive\" in\nVancouver. The milk price here is\n10 cents a quart.\nSUCCESTS BRITAIN\nBUILD AIRCRAFT\nFACTORIES, CANADA\nLONDON, April 14 (CP Cable)-\nThe air ministry refused today to\ncomment on a suggestion the United\nKingdom lend money to Canada for\nestablishment of aircraft factories at\nWindsor, Ont.'\nThe suggestion was made in a\ncolumn of the Sunday Express edited by Viscount Castlerosse. Windsor\nwas mentioned because, the writer\nsaid, skilled- labor and equipment\nare available there.\nINJURED WHEN\nTRAIN DERAILED\nLAS VEGAS, Nev., April 14 (AP)\n\u2014Two passengers and five employees on the Union Pacific's east-\nbound passenger train, The Challenger, were slightly injured today\nwhen two cars were overturned and\nthree others were derailed by a\nbroken rail.\nTO RESIGN\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP) -\nDr. Jennie Wyman Pllcher, many\nyears associate professor of phsy-\nchology and education at the University of British Columbia, will\nresign from active teaching this\nspring.\n$175,000 WORTH\nOF HOMES TO BE\nCONSTRUCTED BY\nBENNETT & WHITE\nTo Be Bungalow Type\nand Situated at\nWarfield\nWORK-STARTS IN\nABOUT 10 DAYS\nErection of 142 modern houses\nof bungalow type, VA stories, Is\nInvolved In a contract awarded\nthe Bennett & White Construction Co., Ltd., of Calgary, by the\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Ltd., yester-'\nday, F. W. Forster, the construction company's district manager,\nwith headquarters at Nelson, last\nnight confirmed reports of the\nreceipts of the contract,\n- The houses are tp be erected In\nthe C. M- & S. company's new\nsubdivision at Warfleld, under the\ncompany's recently announced\nhousing scheme. As outlined by\n8. G. Blaylock, vice-president and\ngeneral manager cf the Consolidated, In his repent annual report, the company has made provision for 200 houses, which employees may have on the loan\nprinciple that the company has\nbeen applying practically since\nthe end of the war.\nWork on the big contract, which\nwill run around $275,000, will be\nbegun in about 10 day, and the\nhouses will be completed in six to\nseven months from the commence* \u25a0\nment of work. The Bennett & White\ncompany will bring in one of it*\nmen as construction superintendent. From 100 to 125 workmen will\nbe employed, recruited as far as\npossible from the district.\nNEL80N  ARCHITECT\nDE8IGNS THE HOUSES\nDesigns for the houses were\nmade by W. F. Willlami, Nelson\narchitect. There are four main\ntypes, each with an alternative,\nmaking In all eight distinct plans,\nwith still further diversification\nmade possible by- a wide variety\nof finishes. The specifications call\nfor first-class materials of whatever kind used. *\nThe Bennett ic White Construction company, which has varlotl\u00bb5\nbranches, has been operated in this\ndistrict the past two Beasons, on\nroad construction projects of the!\nprovincial  government.  Its  work\/\nhere last year included- standardizing a portion of the-Nelson-Castlegar highway in the South Slocan\narea, the \"low road\" in the Creston .\nFlats area, and a couple of wharves\non the Arrow lakes, the wharves\nbeing built for the Dominion government.\nExpects Higher\nZinc and Copper\nPrices This Year\nTORONTO, April 14 (CP)-Hlgh- -\ner prices for copper and zinc this\nyear are expected by J. S. Murdoch,\nK. C, president pf Noranda Mines.\nLtd., he told shareholders at the an-.:\nnual meeting of the company here-:\ntoday.\nMr. Murdoch quoted prices to;\nshow the average price of copper,\nwas 13.248 cents a pound in Cana-\"\ndian funds in 1937 against 9.470 cents\nin 1936. \t\nWILL NOT PERMIT\nOUTSIDERS TO\nENDANGER PEACE\nWASHINGTON, April 14 (AP) -\nPresident Roosevelt declared today\nthe American nations would not\npermit peace in the western hemisphere \"to be endangered from aggression coming from outside.\"\nSeamen May Strike\nTORONTO, April '14 (CP)-The\nCanadian Seamen's union announced today it would call 1800 memberr\nto strike on 150 Great Lakes vessels\nat midnight Friday unless ship-own?\ners signed agreements with the un-\nion before that time.\n\"We are striking for the right\nof Canadian seamen to belong to\norganizations of their own choosing wilh a right of collective bar?\ngaining,\" said J. A. Sullivan, president of the union who announcjd\nthe strike call.\nCRERAR CALLS SOCIAL CREDIT'THIS\nWEIRD THING IN ALBERTA'; NOBODY\nUNDERSTANDS IT, MINISTER STATES!\nWINNIPEG, April 14 (CP) - Canadians' conception of their responsibility to the state has deteriorated\ndefinitely since the Great war, Hon.\nT. A. Crerar, \"federal minister of\nmines and: natural resources, said\ntoday in addressing the Laurier\nclub here.\n\"Take this weird thing in Alberta\nthat they call Social Credit,\" he\nsaid. \"Nobody, understands it. But\nwe find it in parliament. We had\na debate there on Social Credit\nwhich consumed probably five or\nsix days. Mr. Bennett made a contribution of five or six hours where\nhe could have compressed it into\n15 minutes.\n\"At the same time we 'had. a\nsplendid discussion initiated the\nother day on a very vital question,\nthat of appeals to the privy council. But while the debate started od\na high vote it ended on a perfectly\nabsurd note because a member from\nAlberta got up and advanced the\nfantastic argument that we were\nnot a parliament at all, that wsj\nwere not legally constituted as\nsuch.\n\"Why has this thing happened in\nAlberta? When any sort of indiv-i\nidual who has any sort of capacltJ\nfor a flow of words can get peopH\nto listen to any sort of slaptrap hi\nwants to put up, then that's a danger signal to the democratic system.*\nIftiftiiM^iiiiti^^\nmAhiii\n'^^^^\u2022^\u25a0itt^-^'^mm\n mmsmm\nmm*^m*mm\nf\nTEN NEW POWERFUL, STREAMLINED\nOIL LOCOMOTIVES FOR PASSENGER\nRUN FROM CALGARY - REVELSTOKE\nMONTREAL, April 14\u2014Arrange-\nments for the construction of $2,350,-\njMO worth of new railway equipment by Canadian workers were\ncompleted today by the Canadian\n(Pacific railway, it is announced by\nIpL B. Bowen, chief of motive power\nand rolling stock.\nf Th. orders consist of 10 new loco-\nlOttves of heavy and powerful de-\n. \"\u2022 special automobile cars and\n. special refrigerator cars.\nThe 10 locomotives, which will be\nifconstructed by the Montreal Locomotive works, are a further development of 20 locomotives of the\nsame wheel arrangement which\nwere constructed and put in service1\nin 1929 over the mountain grades\nbetween Field and Revelstoke. These\n10 5-1-B class locomotives are the\nheaviest and most powerful in service in Canada and will be used to\npower passenger trains between Calgary and Revelstoke.\nThey will be semi-streamlined,\nwill use oil as fuel, and will be\nequipped with latest locomotive developments. They will have a 2- 10-\n4 wheel arrangement and two wheel\nleading truck. Five pairs of 63-inch\ndrive wheels, and a four wheel trailing truck.\nB.C. HOOPERS\nIN WEST FINAL\nSASKATOON, April 14 (CP)-\nIVancouver's Westerns' continued\n.their unbroken march toward the\nmen's Canadian Basketball championship tonight when they downed Saskatoon Grads 63-55 here. It\nwas the\" second victory for Westerns in the total point series which\nthey won with a total score of\n101-89. They now advance to the\nwestern final.\nJolly Crowd at\nJoymaker Whist\nMrs. Fred Johnson, Mrs. Mills, W.\nE. Sommers and Harry Stirzaker\nemerged winners after a playoff\ngame with Mr. and Mrs. John Leeming, Mrs. Fred Foster and George\nWalton, at a successful military\nwhist drive staged by the Joymakers' club in Eagle hall Thursday\nnight. Altogether 18 tables were in\nplay. A large company gathered for\nthe old time and modern dance that\nfollowed. ,\nRefreshments were served by the\nladies' executive, composed of Mrs.\nW. P. Kidwell, Mrs. Joseph Habe-\ngard, Mrs. P. J. Cote and Miss Evelyn Bate.\nNEW\nTRAVEL COMFORT\nKettle Valley - Kootenay Express\nTht Canadian Pacific Railway Company takes pleasure\nin announcing new coach equipment on its Kettle Valley\nTraim 1.1 and 12, between Vancouver and Medicine Hat\nwith tha inauguration of\nLIGHT WEICHT SEMI-STREAMLINED\nAIR CONDITIONED COACHES\nA Few of the Features:\n\u2022 AIR CONDITIONING\n\u2022 LIGHT COLORED UPHOLSTERY\n\u2022 MODERN CHROME FINISHINGS\n\u2022 IMPROVED TYPE FOOT RESTS\n\u2022 SCIENTIFICALLY DESIGNED SEATS\nSeats  have concave back with  individual hand lever\ncontrol for reclining position and are completely reversible.\n\u2022 Spacious Men's Smoking Room and Ladies' Lounge.\nDally service from Nelson in each direction: Westbound leaving\n10:05 a.m. for Vancouver; Eastbound leaving 1:30 a.m. connecting\nat Medicine Hat with the \"Dominion\" for Montreal and Toronto.\nFor further information ask your local Ticket Agent or write:\nN. J. LOWES, City Ticket Agent, Nelson, B,C.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel.\n, Nelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\n\u25a0 HUME\u2014Miss Irene Kennedy, Miss\n[Catherine Gunn, New Denver;\nharles Unsworth, H. D. Swoboda,\n[ 0. C. Thompson, J. F, O'Dell. Nor-\nl Boyd, Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs.\nI A, M. Ham, Silverton; Mr. and Mrs.\nIH. Armes and child, Mrs. A. Fors,\nMrs. Ted McDonough, Salmo; Barbara Lang, Trail; J. A. Lambert, Everett, Wash.; B. E. Burr, A. Mitguard.\nEarl Quails, H. Toreson, Spokane;\nG. G, Smart, Seattle; 0. Sibley, R.\nCrawford, Medicine Hat; H. S.\nSpittle, Montreal.\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St. Phone 89V\nH. WAS8ICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nSSSMliMMMMMI\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. E.  MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled.\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART ot the City\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"        Newly Renovated Throughout\nDuff or in Hotel A. paterson. 7a\" ot\n900 geymour St,      Vancouver, B.C.    Coleman. Alta, Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\n'\n i-t\t\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\n\t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING. APRIL 15. 1938.\nMuir of Rossland Is\nFined for Carrying\nPassenger on Truck\nJames Muir of Rossland was fined\n$10 and $3,75 costs when he was\nfound guilty Thursday by William\nIrvine, stipendiary magistrate, on a\ncharge of unlawfully carrying a\npassenger on a licensed freight vehicle.\nConstable R. A. Lees of the highway patrol testified he stopped\nMuir's truck near * Taghum r and\nfound two men in it, one of whom\nwas employed by Muir, the other\nbeing a transient.\nIn his defence Muir stated the\ntrqansicnt had been employed by\nhim earlier in the day, but was' not\nin his employ at the time of the\ncheckup. \u25a0 t\nBuilding Permit\nTotal First Half\nof April Is $11,515\nBuilding permits in Nelson\namounted to $11,515 in the first\nhalf of April. Eighteen permits were\nissued at the office of R. E. Potter,\ncity engineer, during this period,\nmost of them for spring repairs and\nalterations.\nNew construction included a residence on Douglas road for which\nN. F. Nelson obtained a \u00a5300 permit, and a cottage planned by B.\nLowery at 1024 Beatty street, this\npermit being for $150.\nOther permits in the period were;\nJulius Riesterer, to build fireplace, 210 Robson street, $150.\nA. J. Crack, to repair coal bunkers, CP.R. flats, $1000.\nLouis Gilbert, to renew siding on\nupper part of shop front, 610 Baker,\n$25,\nJ. Staples, to shingle roof, 421\nCarbonate, $100.\nW. Graham, to put window in\ndormer, 601 Latimer, $40.\nQueen City Motors, limited, to\nerect arch sign, Josephine and Victoria, $50.\nT. H. Waters & Co., Ltd., to\nchange store front, raise section of\nfloor, remove portion of interior\nwall, Hudson's Bay company, $8,300.\nE.jP. Crawford, to build leanto,\n309 limes, $100.\nRev. T. J. S. Ferguson, to repair\nhouse, add basement, etc., 504 Mill\nstreet, $500.\nJ. Horvath, to reshingle house,\n913 Sixth, $25.\nT. Hulls, to build concrete foundation and reshingle part of roof, 412\nMill, $375.\nLouis Gilbert, to replace with\nplate glass the show window at 616\nBaker, $75.\nMrs. R. Mills, to build porch, reshingle and move six feet, 513\nThird, $175.\nG, A. Fleury, to build garage,\nCottonwood, $85.\nS. J. Newell, to reshingle porch\nand put in a window, 99 High, $15.\nJ. Middleton, to shingle walls of\nMrs. Morrison's cottage, 820 Fifth,\n$50.\nMORE ABOUT\nDoukhobor Vole\n(Continued From Page One)\nA. F. Dodd declared any proposal\nto enfranchise Doukhobors should\nbe \"stepped on.\"\n\"They've been with us for years\nbut instead of improving they're a\ngreater curse than ever,\" asserted\nJ. A. McDonald, chairman of the\ncommittee. \"They won't assimilate,\nthey are not good neighbors for the\nfarmers, and as competitors their\nchiselling ways make it impossible\nfor the business man or the worker\nto compete, with them.\"\nTHE RESOLUTION\nThe resolution as passed follows;\n\"Whereas* it is currently reported\nin the press that the minister of\nhealth, on behalf of the Dominion\ngovernment, proposes to restore the\nvote to the Doukhobors disfranchised in 1934; and\n\"Whereas it has been proven by\nexperience that members of the\nChristian Community of Universal\nBrotherhood are unfit to use the\nright to their franchise, their votes\nbeing controlled by their leader as\ntheir spiritual head;\n\"Therefore be it resolved that the\nsecretary be instructed to write the\nminister of health protesting\nstrongly against the Doukhobors being given the right to vote.\n\"Furthermore we would point out\nthat although they have lived in\nour midst for 25 years they still refuse to obey our laws and as a class\nare undesirable citizens.\nCHILLIWACK, B. C, April 14\n(CP) \u2014 A verdict of accidental\ndeath was returned by a coroner's jury at the inquest on John\nAndrew Tolmie. He was crushed\nearly this week, near here, when\na logging train jumped the tracks.\nRoute althts air-conditioned\nEmpire Builder\nnew style\nmoney-saving\nTourist Sleepers\nYou pay less for train\nfare and berth when you\ntravel in a new-style,\nluxury Tourist Sleeper.\nDeep upholstered seats\n\u2014restful berths with\nreading lights, fine large\ndressing and smoking\nrooms.Excellentmealsfor\n50fi. Let us tell you more.\nE. G. WESTBY, City Freight\n& Passenger Agent, 387 Baker\nStreet, Nelson, B. C, Phone 57r\nTrail Board Comes\nlo Halt, Castlegar\nFerry Situation\nBuscumb,  Wilkinson,\nDr. Lees Made\nMembers\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e April 14\u2014A recommendation of the roads and bridges committee that no further steps\nbe taken towards increasing the\nhours of free service of the Castlegar ferry, was referred back at a\nmeeting of the Trail board of trade\nhere tonight. As ferry soon would\nbe operating on a 24-hour schedule,\nit was felt that the matter should be\nleft in abeyance for the time being.\nTim Buscumb, J. Wilkinson and\nRev. Dr. M. W. Lees were elected\nnew members without ballot.\n' W. A. Curran, who had been the\nboard's delegate to the Rowell commission at Victoria, reviewed the\nbrief he presented and was pleased\nto note that it had caused the desired reaction.\nA resolution from the Kamloop's\nboard of trade advocating an extensive program of immigration was\nreferred to the board's council for\nrecommendation.\nThat Canada should celebrate the\n75th anniversary of Confederation\nin 1942 was a resolution received\nfrom the board of trade at Orillia,\nOnt., and endorsed.\nIt was announced that the associated boards of trade of Eastern\nBritish Columbia would hold their\nannual convention this year at Trail\non June 6, 7 and 8. Appointment\nof Trail board delegates was deferred to the next monthly meeting and the council was appointed\na resolutions committee.\nNo uction was taken on a resolution from Calgary board of trade,\ndealing with the Canadian railway\nproblem, as it was stated that something of this subject would be submitted to the associated boards.\nMotion of Alex Ewing that the\nboard send a congratulatory wire\nto the Trail Smoke Eaters prior to\neach game henceforth, waB heartily\nendorsed by the entire meeting.\nIt was decided to ask S. G. Blaylock, who recently addressed a body\nof service clubs in the east, to give a\nsimilar talk over the Trail radio\nstation.\nKASLO LADIES\nPLAN BAZAAR\nKASLO, B.C.-St. Mark's Anglican church Women's Auxiliary met\nFriday. The president, Mrs. C. G.\nBowker, presided, others present being Mrs. C. G. Gardner, secretary,\nMrs. Price, treasurer, Mrs. John\nKeen, Mrs. E. A. Matthews, Mrs. E.\nM. Sandilands, Mrs. F. S, Chandler,\nMrs. E. H. Latham, Mrs. Ronald\nHewat, Mrs. Frank Helme, Mrs,\nJames Goodenough, Miss A Hodges\nand Miss Mildred Twiss.\nMrs. Gardner was instructed to\narrange for flowers for Easter and\nseveral volunteered to have the\nchurch cleaned by that time. An\nappeal for bandages for use in the\nchurches Chinese Mission hospital\nmet with generous response and\nMrs. Sandilands .was appointed to\ntake charge of this work.\nCorrespondence regarding the\nforthcoming annual Dioscesan Auxiliary conferrence at Kelowna in\nthe near future was read. .Kaslo\nwill be represented, though final\narrangements have not been completed.\nThere was a short discussion regarding the Indian school bale, but\nfurther action was left for the May\nmeeting.\nFinal arrangements for the annual May bazaar were made.\nAfter adjournment Rev. C. G,\nGardner conducted a short study\nperiod.\nNakusp to Revive\nOld Dramatic Club\nNAKUSP, B.C, April 13.-Major\nL, Bullock-Webster, president of\nthe executive of the British Columbia Drama Association Inc., met\na group interested in forming a\nDramatic society in Nakusp at a\nmeeting held at the home of Mrs. F,\nRushton Friday -evening.\nAfter hearing Major Bullock-\nWebster, it was decided to revive\nthe old Nakusp Dramatic club with,\nthe following, in office: President,\nH. Lowndes; vice-president, Mrs. A.\nJ. Harrison; secretary-treasurer,\nMiss N. Johnson; executive committee, Miss E. Giraud, Mrs. C.\nHorrey, G. Hunter Gardner jr. with\ntwo more to be appointed later. Mrs.\nF. Rushton was asked to be official\nrepresentative to the British Columbia Drama Association Inc.\nHockey Special\nLeaves Tonight\nTRAIL, B.C., April'l4\u2014Trail's sensational victory over Cornwall Flyers last night means that a far\ngreater number of Trail fans will go\nto Calgary to see the next two\ngames Saturday and Monday than\nwas previously anticipated.\nThe question each day this week\nhas been \"are you going to Calgary?\"\nThe special leaves here Friday\nat 7:30 p.m., returning from Calg\\ry\nMonday night after the second game.\nDEATHS \"\n(By The Canadian Press)\nLos Angeles\u2014Robert Davis Clarke,\n64, wealthy oil operator and member of a prominent distilling business family.\nManchester, N.H.\u2014Frank Pierce\nCarpenter, 92, banker, 'manufacturer and philanthropist.\nACQUITTED\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP) -\nCounty Court Judge A. M. Harper\ntoday acquitted Isaac D. Chappell,\n62-year-old veterinary surgeon, on\na charge of false pretences in connection with a $400 investment\nmade by George Young in accused's\n1st Indoor Net\nTourney in West fi\nOpens This Morn\nThey're off! This morning at 9\no'clock, racket wielders from Nelson, New Denver, Harrop, Proctei\nWillow Point, Bonnington, an\nmainly Nelson, swing into action in\nthe first Indoor tennis tournament\never staged in the west, at tha civic,\nrecreation hall and arena. Entries\nwere closed Thursday night, witli\nan actual count of 44 people registered, though with several entered\nin more than one event, the count\nruns much higher. Moguls of the\nracket and net sport see a promising\nplayer in M. G, (Pete) woods, recent addition to the club, and whisperings have it he may turn out a\nbig winner.\nFirst Baby Born\nReeves McDonald\nGiven a Welcome\nResidents of the Pend d'Oreille\nand Salmo river valleys in the vicinity of the Reeves McDonald\nmine have a new citizen in their\nmidst and they are giving her a\nreal western welcome. She is Kathleen Rose Tremayne Haner, born\nat 1:40 a.m. April 3, the first baby\nborn in that vicinity, according to\nresidents of long standing. She is\nthe third child of Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles Haner, who Have resided\nnear the Reeves-McDonald . since\nNovember, Mr. 'Haner being one\nof a number of men panning gold\non -the Salmo river.\nThere has been some agitation\namong neighbors for the baby to\nbe named \"Samona\" to give her\nsomething iri the way of a permanent connection with the Salmo valley. But so far she remains Kathleen Rose Tremayne, being named\nfor her two grandmothers, Mrs.\nRose Haner and Mrs-'Kathleen Tremayne Zeal of Drumheller.\nMra. Zeal has been visiting her\ndaughter and son-in-law for the\nlast month. She is a nurse and\ntook charge when the baby was\nborn, no doctor being within easy\ncall. It was her thirteenth grandchild.\nMr. Haner was formerly in the\ntrucking business in Drumheller,\nleaving it when the field became\novercrowded to try gold panning.\nHe has done better than make\nwages since November.\nMra. Zeal passed through Nelson\nThursday night on her return trip\nto Drumheller., She hopes to return\nto the district to reside when her\nhusband is retired shortly.\nMrs. Blackwell,\nWell Known as\nd   \\\\\\Wnx_ passes\n5 mT  * *    .\nMrs. Alice Blackwell resident ot\nNelson for 37 years and widely\nknown as a private nurse throughout those years, died Thursday at\nthe home she occupied since coming\nto Nelson, 424 Latimer street. The\nfuneral will take place Monday.\nAged 75, Mrs. Blackwell was active as a nurse until eight of nine\nyears ago. For the past two years\nshe had been in poor health She\nwas born at Chalford, Gloucestershire, and resided in England until\nshortly after the death of her husband in 1900. She came'directly to\nNelson from the Old Country in\n1901.\nMrs. Blackwell was one of the\nearly members ot the First Baptist\nchurch in Nelson, and in recent\nyears one of its oldest members.\nSurviving are a daughter, Mra.\nT. H. Waters, and a son, A. E. IBert)\nBlackwell, six grandchildren and\ntwo great-grandchildren.\nBoys' Lacrosse\nDiscussed, Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., April 14\u2014About 60\nboys, many of bantam and midget\nage, attended a meeting here tonight to discuss plans for boys' box\nlacrosse this year. The purpose of\nthe meeting A. B. Thompson, chairman of the junior division, explained, was to get the boys' ideas regarding the game.\nHowever, intermediate and junior\nboxla is about all the branch of\nthe senior organization will be able\nto handle and will not be able to\nexpand further until playgrounds\nand money are available.\nIt was announced that there are\nseveral intermediate and junior\nteams in the making, but nothing\ndefinite aliout them was available.\nEight Kinsmen to Go\nto Coast Convention\nEight members of the Kinsmen\nclub of Nelson leave today for Vancouver to attend the annual convention of Kinsmen District No. 5.\nThey are Walter Duckworth, Ben\nSutherland, Bland Marley, John\nMcLean, Dr. Clare Bennett, C.\n(Buck) Lambert, Jack Boyce, Robert Horswill. Accompanying them\nwill be Gordon Allen, a member of\nthe Medicine Hat club.\nCastlegar Ferry Shows a Large\nGain Compared Wilh a Year Ago\nMakes 547 More Round Trips During March\nThah in March, 1937; Nelson Ferry\nHas More Vehicles, Fewer People\nAn extraordinary increase in\ntraffic as compared with a year ago\nwas shown by the Castlegar ferry\nin March, when it made 2139 round\ntrips, compared with 1592 in March\nof 1937, and carried 3007 passenger\ncars compared with 1828 a. year\nearlier, 1661 trucks compared with\n1029, and 13,687 passengers, compared with 11,518.\nWhile the Nelson ferry showed an\nappreciable gain in motor traffic\nfor the recent March, with a total\nof 4860 motor vehicles exclusive of\ntrailers, its passenger traffic was\ndown materially, from 18,224 to\n15,408. Round trips made were somewhat fewer, accounted for by a\nshutdown of a few hours when a\ntruck went off the ferry approach.\nThe early spring break-up, involving restrictions on heavy vehicles, affected bus and truck traffic\non all the ferries of the district.\nFollowing are the March statistics, with comparisons as to March\n1937, for the five ferries in this district operated by the provincial department of public works:\nNELSON ,\n1938 1937\nRound trips   1,683 1,702\nPassenger   15,408 18,224\nPassenger cars  ... 3,611 3,302\nTrucks   1,076 1,204\nTrailers   13 1\nBuses    173 206\nMotorcycles .'.  9 9\nRigs     39 88\nFreight (tons)   475>A 527%\nHorses    1 12\nCattle   7 0\nGraders, etc  2 3\nMAIN LAKE (Nasookin)\nRound trips ......       62 62\nPassengers       532\n649\n143\n72\n0\n62\n0\n11\n9\n1\n0\nPassenger cars .... 235\nTrucks    ,   78\nTrailers   2\nBuses  .-.  16\nMotorcycles   3\nFreight (tons)   78\nHorses   0\nCattle   4\nOther livestock .... 9\nCASTLEGAR\nRound trips  2,139 1,592\nPassengers   13,687 11,518.\nPassenger cars .... 3,007 1,828\nTrucks   1,661 1,029\nTrailers   80 37\nBuses  198 213\nMotorcycles   88 8\nRigs   179 147\nFreight (tons)   1,076% 556%\nHorses    75 59.\nCattle     10 17\nKOOTENAY RIVER (Creston)\nRound trips   737 1,038\nPassengers   787 943\nPassenger cars .... 18 156\nTrucks   72 224\nTrailers  _ _ 10 0\nRigs  181 271\nHorses   _  8 8\nCattle   2 2\nSaddle horses   101 103\nGraders, etc  30 7\nHARROP-LONGBEACH\nRound trips   633 494\nPassengers   1,552 1,183\nPassenger cars .... 328 215\nTrucks   183 160\nTrailers   32 0\nMotorcycles   5 1\nRigs  18 4\nFreight (tons)   112 60\nHorses   9 8\nCattle .  3 2\nGraders, etc  1 0\nKASLO Social...\nKASLO, B.C. \u2014 F. S. Rouleau,\nMiss Elsie Rouleau and Miss Laura\nDale have returned from a short\nvisit to Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. R. Langille and\nyoung daughter arrived Monday.\nMra. Langille and baby will be\nguests of the former's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. George Baker. Mr. Langille returned to his home at Fruitvale later in the day.\nLeonard Cadden of Trail ls spending a few days in town with his\nmother, Mrs. John Cadden.\nFred Sammons of Trail arrived\nin town Monday and will spend a\nfew days at his summer camp at\nShutty Bench.\nGeorge Baker has returned from\na short visit at Fruitvale.\nMrs. W. V. Papworth has returned from Vancouver where she spent\nthe winter.\nGeorge Mclnnis has returned from\na business visit to Howser.\nDr. Dovid C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nH. R. Campbell of Salmo was a\ncity visitor during the week end.\nS. S. Luffman of Howser spent\nseveral days in town during the\npast week.\nC. Peters Petersen of Poplar Is\nspending the week in Kaslo.\nPaul Augustine has returned to\nSalmo after visiting relatives ta town\nfor a short time.\nMrs. Murgitfoyd and baby daughter of Cranbrook arrived in the city\nSaturday, and are the guests of Mrs\nMurgltroyd's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Baker,   '    ,\nS. Krantz.has left for Howset\nwhere he will be in charge of the\nF. H. Abey ranch, formerly owned\nby the Matthews brothers.\nMrs. John Paterson was a Nelson\nvisitor Saturday.\nB. F. Palmer has been permanently' appointed to the local government\noffice staff.\nE. H. Latham was receiving congratulations Monday on his birthday.\nGolfers thronged the Kaslo links\nSaturday and Sunday, the links\nbeing in very good condition with\nimprovements going steadily on\nMajor L. Bullock-Webster of Victoria was.a city visitor Sunday in\nconnection with the Littel Theatre\nIBI1\nFor\nEaster Hosiery\n\"Lady Nelson\"\nAn Easter Gift\n\u2014of more in\nvalue.\nShe'll say;\nThese are the\nbest in\nHosiery.\nFINK'S LIMITED\nLadies'Auxiliary\nto the Battery Has\nIts Own Quarters\nHeadquarters of the Ladles'\nauxiliary to the 111th (Nelson) battery, R.C.A., were officially opened Thursday afternon when Major\nA. E. Dalgas, officer commanding,\nturned over the keys to Mrs. Lionel\nLeask, auxiliary president.\nThe new quarters, comfortably\nfurnished, are in the balcony overlooking the drill hall and will serve\nas a ladies' rest room for dances and\nC. P. R. Policemen\nGet Promotions\nWINNIPEG, April 14 - Changes\nin the department of investigation\nof the Canadian Pacific railway affecting Calgary and Winnipeg become effective Saturday, April 16\nit is announced by J. P. Burns, assistant chief of the department for\nthe company's western lines. Three\nof the department's Inspectors take\nover their new duties on Easter\nSaturday.\nInspector H. McGowan, Vancouver, is transferred to Winnipeg as\npolice inspector, western lines. Inspector J. Stevens, Calgary, is moved to Vancouver as his successor,\nbecoming inspector for the British\nColumbia district, and Police Inspector W. J. Wallace, Winnipeg, is\nappointed to Calgary as Inspector\nfor the Alberta district.\nAll three have notable records in\nempire services.\nOPERATIC REHEARSES\n\"MERRIE ENGLAND\" AGAIN\nNelson Operatic society's cast of\n\"Merrie England\" went through another \"strenuous\" workout Wednesday night in the Canadian Legion\nhall in preparation for presentation\nof its opera.\nGood Friday Is\nPointing Toward\nEaster's Advent\nOnce every year, about now,\nwhen green grasses begin to sprout\nup, Old Man Sun seems to shine\nparticularly bright, Easter lilies appear in almost every store and hotel\nwindow, care free school children\nforget school for over a week, and\ncitizens in new spring outfits stroll\nabout the streets, that's Easter,\nToday, Good Friday, all stores\nand offices close and churches hold\nmany services.\nIn store windows for the past\nfortnight or so, all the little knick-\nnack so dear to youngsters' hearts\nhave been displayed, Easter bunnies, colored and chocolate eggs,\nvari-colored chicks, little wagons\nand carts filled with eggs or bunnies, cosily nestled, in wrinkled\npaper and imitation straw, and 101\nother attractions have all been displayed. The old customs of rolling\n\"pace\" eggs and seeking out the\neggs Easter morning will all be\nrevived in the next two or three\ndays.\nDry cleaners and tailors for the\npast week have reported a rushing business, cleaning and patching up \"last year's outfit\", rakrd\nout of the mothballs. Dry goods\nand clothing stores have had no\nlittle share ot business either.\nOn Easter Sunday, women, to sav\nnothing of the men, will step forth\nin new bonnets, suits, coats, dresses\nand what have you. Special mush'\nand services are in store at city\nchurches, to mark the resurrection\nof the world's Savior.\nBIRMINGHAM, England (CP) -\nThought to have been in dire poverty, a widow died leaving \u00a37000\n(nearly $35,000) to a 78-year-old\nbrother with a family of 12 children.\nRossland Social..\nBj MRS  B B  FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, B, C. - Mrs. Charles\nSchwatzenhauer of Deer Park, who\nhas been the guest of Mrs. Donald\nDewar, left Tuesday for Nelson.\nA. Saunders of Haleman, Sask.,\nis visiting friends here.\nRev. and Mrs. W. J. Silverwood\nmotored over from Nelson Monday\nMiss E. Neal of Winnipeg ,has\nbeen visiting her brother, Jack\nNeal.\nMiss Violet Smithers of Vernon\nis the guest of her sister. Miss Kay\nSmithers.\nMr. and Mrs. Stuart Terhune of\nBralorne, B. C, are enjoying a holiday at the home of Mr, Terhune's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. George Terhune, Le Roi Heights.\nMr. and Mrs. T. Palmquist and\nlittle son have taken up residence\nat Zeballos, B. C.\nMrs. Duncan J. McDonell announces the engagement of her eldest daughter, Helen Ursula, to John\nDuncan Mitchell, son of Mr. and\nMrs. Robert D. Mitchell. The marriage will be solemnized on Thursday, April 28.\nMrs. A. J. Slater of Waneta was\nin the city Monday.\nROSSLAND, B. C\u2014Lawrence E.\nE. Hamilton spent Tuesday In Nelson.\nMr. and Mra. Archie Crawford ot\nSeattle are guests of Mr. and Mrs.\nLome deLong of this city.\nMrs. Rhys Williams has taken up\nresidence in New Wes'minster,\nMr, and Mrs. C. J. McDonald,\nwho were recently married in Colville, have taken up residence in\nthe city.\nRex Derrig of Kamloops is a city\nvisitor this week.\nMrs. Harry Smith sr. has returned\nhome from the hospital.\nWHAT'S NEW\nThe inevitable question\u2014everybody asks it, and\neverybody hopes that the answer will fill the desire\nto learn of something new in politics, sports, fashions, art, science and innumerable other spheres of\nactivity. Readers of the Nelson Daily News find that\neach copy of the paper brings them up-to-date on\nnews from near and far\u2014on fashions and shopping\nnews\u2014on new developments the world over.\nYou Too, Can Enjoy Up-to-Date News\nIf You Subscribe to the\n\u25a0 British, Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\n President Asks Additional Grants\nfor Works Program; Expansion ot\nHousing; Deslerilizalion of Gold\nin $i8000r000r000 Recovery Plan\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B C-FRIDAY MORNING. APRIL 16. 1938,\nWASHINGTON, April 14 (AP)\n\u2014 President Roosevelt proposed today a $7,000,000,000 recovery program, embracing $5,000,000,000 of\nfederal spending and lending and\na $2,000,000,000 expansion ol bank\ncredit.\nSetting forth to the United States\ncongress measures by which he said\nthe government could \"help start\nan upward spiral\" and summoning\na \"united national will\" for a vigorous attack on the recession, Mr.\nRoosevelt told legislators who recently have dealt stunning defeats\nto major administration measures:\n\"Our capacity is limited only by\nour ability to work together. What\nis needed is the will.\n\"The time has come to bring that\nwill into action with every driving\nforce at our command. And I am\ndetermined to do my share.\"\nThe presidentx divided his program, designed to start national income upward again, into three\ngroups of measures. The first involved mainly additional appropriations for the fiscal year beginning July 1, It was;\n$1,250,000,000 for the works progress administration;\n$175,000,000 for the farm security administration;\n$75,000,000 for the national\nyouth administration;\n$50,000,000 for the civilian conservation corps and\n$1,500,000,000   made   available  to\nthe    reconstruction    corporation\nfor lending to business enterprises.\nIn a second group of measures,\nMr. Roosevelt asked;\n$300,000,000 for Immediate expansion of the housing and slum-\nclearance work of the United\nStates housing authority;\n$1,450,000,000 for public works\nloans and grants;\nAn additional $100,000,000 for\npublic roads;\nAn additional $37,000,000 for\nflood control and reclamation\nprojects already authorized and\nAn additional $25,000,000 for\nfederal buildings.\nA third group listed by the\nchief executive referred to prl-\nate credit.\nIt Involved desterllizatlon of\n$1,400,000,000 of gold and a reduction by the federal reserve\nboard of member bank reserve\nrequirements which would add\nanother $750,000,000 to the credit\nresources of the nation's banks.\nWith these actions, Mr. Roosevelt coupled a simplification of\nsecurity commission regulations\nto expedite small-business financing.\n\"These measures,\" the president\n..aid, \"will make more abundant\nthe supply of funds for commerce,\nindustry and agriculture.\"\nMr. Roosevelt said the total \"out\nof pocket cost to the federal government\" under the new PWA program should be limited to $1,000,-\n000,000 and that loans or grants\nshould not be made on projects\nwhich cannot be started within\nsix months after legislation is enacted and completed within a year\nand a half.\nWhile I do not wish in  this\nmessage to over-emphasize some\nof the needs,\" the president said,\n\"I do want to say that I believe\nthat we must be definitely aware\nof certain of them \u2014 the elimination   of  future   tax   exempt\nbonds  of  all  kinds of  government agencies', the subjecting of\ngovernment  salaries  and  wages\nof all kinds to federal and state\nincome taxes;  a serious undertaking to solve the railroad problem and the problem of monopolistic practices and price fixing.**'\n\"In this situation there is no reason and no occasion for any American to allow his fears to be aroused or his energy and enterprise to\nbe paralyzed by doubt or uncertainty.\"\n\"But the very vigor of the recovery,\" the president said \"in\nboth durable and consumers'\ngoods brought Into the picture\nearly in 1937 certain highly undesirable practices which were in\nlarge part responsible for tbe economic decline which began in\nthe later months of that year.\n\"There were many reasons for\nthis over-production. One was\nfear\u2014fear of war abroad, fear of\ninflation fear of nationwide\nstrikes. None of these fears have\nbeen borne out. There were other\ncauses of over-production and\ni these causes differed In each industry.\"\nOf federal debt he said:\n\"Let us unanimously recognize the fact that the federal\ndebt, whether it be $25,000,000,-\n000 or $40,000,000,000, can be only\npaid if the nation obtains a vastly increased citizen income. I repeat that if this citizen income\ncan be raised to $80,000,000 a\nyear the national government and\nthe overwhelming majority of\nstate and local governments will\nbe 'out of the red.'\"\nROY MILLS LAID\nREST IN SLOCAN\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-Roy Mills\nof Silverton died at Slocan Community hospital here April 10. He\nwas born in Silverton and was 28\nyears old.\nMany from Silverton and New\nDenver gathered for the funeral.\nRev. F. Browne of St. Stephen's\nAnglican church officiated.\nBeautiful flowers covered the casket.\nPallbearers were Harry Elsmore,\nBert Marshall, Everett Erickson,\nJack Kelly, Jack Leibscher and M.\nMcDermott.\nHe is survived by his mother,\nMrs. A. Mclntyre of Nelson, and\none brother, Frank Mills of Silver-\nton.\nJapan May Seek\n. Truce Soon Says\nChinese Visitor\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP)-\nThe only peace terms China will\naccept are complete independence\nand evacuation of every Japanese\nsoldier now in the country, Dr.\nHeng Chih Tao, noted Chinese educationist and \"unofficial diplomat,\" said here today\nDr. Heng, who arrived here after attending conferences in Europe, said three unexpected developments might compel Japan to\nmake an early peace with China.\n\"Japanese plans for conquering\nChina have been upset by the unexpected resistance of the Chinese,\nthe big navy programs of Great\nBritain and the United States, and\na voluntary boycott of Japanese\ngoods in many countries,\" he said.\n\"Japan did not expect these\nthings. She may seek a truce very\nsoon\u2014before she is weakened further.\"\nDr. Tao, director of the People's\nEducation Movement in China,\nwas a delegate to the recent International People's Conference in\nLondon. In 1936 he represented\nChina at the nine-power conference in Brussels.\nThinks President\nRoosevelt \"Swell\"\nNAHANT, Mass., April 14 (AP)\n\u2014Joan Clark, 11-year-old sister\nof Anne Lindsey Clark \u2014 who\nwill wed John Roosevelt, the\npresident's son In June\u2014thinks\n5Uncle Franklin\" (the president)\nIs \"swell\" and her big sister's\nmarital choice is \"okay;\"\nAsked In an interview, if she\nsat on the president's lap while\nvisiting at the White House,\nbright-eyed Joan  replied:\n\"I never sat on his lap. I like\nhim. He's smart. He wrote his\nname in my autograph book and\nsaid I was one American who\ncame to Washington without a\nset of demands.\"\nFour Applicants\nNaturalization\nObtain Approval\nNaturalization applications of Tom\nAnderson of Salmo, William Grams\nof Winlaw, Angelo Maddalozzo of\nYmir and Lars Axel Wetterstrom\nof Nakusp were granted by His\nHonor Judge W. A. Nisbet in county court chambers.\nThree others failed to appear for\nhearing of their applications. They\nwere Claude Frank Duplat of Robson, Wayne Elias Kuhn of Nelson,\nand Lars Larsen of Needles.\nMr. Anderson, a miner, single, has\nresided in Nelson and district from\n1926 to date. He arrived in Canada\nvia Quebec in May, 1924. He was\nborn at Kirklund, province of Jyl-\niand. Denmark, in 1892.\nBorn in Oschewo, province of\nUkrania, Russia, in 1892, Mr. Grams\nresided for a time in Germany,\nwhere two of his sons were born,\nbefore emigrating to Canada in\n1924, landing at Halifax. Two sons\nand a daughter were born at Yel-\nlowgrass, Sask., previous to the\nfamily taking up residence at Wa-\npella, Sask., in 1929. Mr. and Mrs.\nGrams and their children removed\nto Winlaw in September last year.\nThe Italian applicant, Mr. Maddalozzo, has been in the West Kootenay since 1927, the year he landed at Quebec. A miner, he has resided at Nelson, Silverton and other district points, and latterly has\nbeen at the Wesko mine, Ymir. His\nwife and\/three daughters live in\nArsise, Italy. He was born at Ar-\nsise In 1891.\nMr. Wetterstrom, Nakusp lumber\nman, was born at Svegs, Jamtlands,\nSweden, in 1911. He came to Canada in 1929, going directly to Nakusp, where he has resided since.\nHe is single.\nCOMMUNIST PAPER\nCENSURED BY HOUSE\nLONDON, April 14 (AP) - The\nhouse of commons today censured\nthe Communist newspaper Daily\nWorker for what was termed \"gross\nlibel\" on the speaker of the house,\nCaptain E. A. Fitzroy.\nNew Arrangement for Education\nof Quints May Be Made Shortly\nTORONTO, April 14 (CP)- New\narrangements regarding the education of the Dionne quintuplets may\nbe made shortly. It was learned on\ngood authority today the Ontario\ndepartment of education would\nprobably take over the education\nof the five little girls from their\nboard of guardians.\nSAYS VARICOSE VEINS\nCAN BE REDUCED AT HOME\nPROVE IT AT 8MALL COST\nIf you or any relative or friend is\nworried because of varicose veins,\nor bunches, as good advice for home\ntreatment as any friend can give, is\nto get a bottle of Moone's Emerald\nOil.\nSimply ask Mann, Rutherford Co.\nor your druggist for an original\nbottle of Moone's Emerald Oil and\napply night and morning to the\nswollen, enlarged veins. (Soon you\nshould notice that they are growing\nsmaller and the treatment should be\ncontinued until the vc.ns are no\nlonger burdensome. So penetrating\nis Emerald Oil that it also helps\nsimple swellings due to strain to\ndisappear. (Advt.1\nJudge J. A. Valin, chief guardian,\nwas quoted in a despatch from Callander today as saying \"the active\nguardians will be delighted If the\neducation department takes control\not the teaching of the babies. The\nactive guardians would then be in\ncharge of, that most important phase\nof their life \u2014 health \u2014 and of\ntheir business affairs.\"\nThe Toronto Star today said the\nexpected change would be the outcome of a controversy over teaching which developed since the staff\nof the Dafoe nursery was changed\nsix weeks ago.\n\"Retirement by the active guardians of Nurse Jacqueline Noel and\nTeacher Claire Trembley, both\nFrench-Canadians raised a storm of\nprotest from French-Canadian organizations, representatives of the\nRoman Catholic church and from\nOliva Dionne, father of the children,\" said the story.\nNora Rousselle and Sigrid Ul-\nrichson replaced Miss Noel and\nClaire Tremblay.\nWest Transfer Co.\nTHE PIONEER FIRM\u2014ESTABLISHED 1899\nLOCAL AND\nLONG DISTANCE\nMOVING\nAt your service with the largest\nend finest moving van in the\ninterior\nFOR SERVICE-PHONE 33\nLaskody Funeral\nLargely Attended\nNATAL, B. C-The funeral of the\nlate Andrew Laskody, who was fatally injured in the Michel mines,\ntook place at Natal. The funeral was\nlargely attended as the procession\nheaded by the members of the Michel Local of the United Mine\nWorkers of America, left the home\nof the deceased and proceeded\nslowly to the Michel Catholic church\nwhere funeral services were conducted by Father Harrison of Michel. After the church services were\nover the procession proceeded\nthrough Michel and Natal, thence to\nthe cemetery where the final services were said by Father Harrison\nand by Simon Weaver who represented the Michel miners.\nDeceased was born in Czechoslovakia in 1874. He arrived at Michel from his native land in 1904\nand had worked around the Michel\nmines for the'past 34 years, being\none of the oldest miners around the\nMichel district He leaves his widow\nand four step-children at Natal and\na son in the old country.\nThe pall-bearers were Andrew\nTurlick, Paul Karas Andrew My-\nernick, John Balavik, Joe Gergel\nand Mike Balint.\nMRS. LATHAM IS\nHEAD OF KASLO\nLITTLE THEATRE\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Sunday evening a\nnumber of Kasloites interested in\nthe Little Theatre movement were\ninvited to the home of Mr. and\nMrs. W. M. Gibson to meet L.\nBullock-Webster, who is organizing Little Theatre groups through'\nout the district. Owing to short\nnotice it was impossible to get in\ntouch with all who might be interested but all these will be invited\nto attend a meeting in the near future.\nRonald Allen was named secretary\nfor the meeting. Mr. Gibson introduced Mr. Bullock-Webster who\ngave an outline of the purpose of\nhis visit. He answered numerous\nquestions.\nIt was decided to form the Kaslo\nLittle Theatre group, the following\nofficers being unanimously elected:\npresident, Mrs. E. H. Latham; vice-\npresident, Walter Wright; secretary-\ntreasurer, Ronald Allen; executive\ncommittee, Mrs. D. J. Barclay, Mrs.\nJ. R. Tinkess .nd W. M. Gibson.\nThese will have power to add three\nadditional members. Rev. C. G.\nGardner was to be asked to act as\nrepresentative on the advisory\nboard.\nMembership forms were filled and\nthe group decided to affilliate with\nB. C. Drama association.\nAs soon as preliminary arrangements can be made a meeting will\nbe called to decide on the group bylaws and further activities.\nThose present were Mr. and Mrs.\nW. M. Gibson, Mrs. Frank Helme,\nMrs. Rilla Ball, Mrs. M. Q. Driver,\nMrs. F. S. Chandler, Mrs. E. H. Latham, Mrs. D. J Barclay, Mrs J. R.\nTinkess, Mr. and Mrs. Walter\nWright, Miss Katherine Streit, M;ss\nSybils Kydd, Miss Irene MacGillivray, Miss Mary Welch, Mrs. P.\nM. Elder, Mr. Lawrence, J. A.\nRiddell, R. E. Green, E. C. Cherry\nand Ronald Allen.\nMANY CHILDREN HAVE\nHEART AILMENTS, B. C.\nSAYS HEALTH OFFICER\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP)-\nModern week-ends are making the\nchild an easy prey to heart disease\nin the .opinion of Dr. Harold White.\nThe chief medical health officer\nof Vancouver's Metropolitan Health\nBoard in an address to a health-\nweek meeting here last night declared that already one per cent of\nthe children in Vancouver schools\nand elsewhere have chronic heart\nailments,\nMisuse of modern inventions such\nas the radio and motion pictures\nwere given as a contributing cause\nby the doctor.\nShock Was Too\nMuch for Him\nSAN FRANCISCO. April 14\n(AP) \u2014 The automobile accident\ndidn't hurt Philip Collins but the\nrepair bill did.\n\"How much?\" he asked one gar-\nageman when he went to get the\ncar.\n\"Eighty dollars.\" was the reply.\nCollins fainted, struck his head\non the concrete floor and was taken to Mission emergency hospital\nsuffering from head lacerations\nand a possible brain concussion.\nReport of Answer\nIncorrect Labor\nMember Is Told\nBy I. NORMAN 8MITH\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nLONDON, April 14 (CP Cable)-\nArthur Henderson, Labor, drew the\nattention of Malcolm MacDonald,\nsecretary for the Dominions, in the\nhouse of commons today to Prime\nMinister Michael Savage's statement\nof yesterday regarding the respect'\nive views on foreign affairs of the\nUnited Kingdom and New Zealand\ngovernments.\nMr. MacDonald told the house:\n\"I have questioned that the re\nport of my answer (to a question in\nthe house) which went to New\nZealand and on which Mr. Savage\nbased his statement was incomplete\nand incorrect, I have received a\nmessage from Mr. Savage saying the\nfull report of what I said removes\nmisunderstanding and makes clear\nthat my answer was in accordance\nwith the facts.\"\n10,489 REGISTERED IN\nRECREATIONAL CLASSES\nVICTORIA, April 14 (CP)-Regis-\ntrations in the provincial recreational and physical training classes in\nBritish Columbia have increased\nfrom 2,768 to 10,489 in the past two\nyears with the number of centres\noperating increased from 19 to 58,\naccording to the annual report issued today by Ian Eisenhardt, director.\n\"When we realize that the cost\nper head was only $2.86 for a period\nof eight months\u2014hardly more than\nthe average golfer's expenditure\nper week\u2014then we can understand\nbetter the immensity of the work\nwhich is being carried out at such\na low cost,\" Eisenhardt said. \"With\nbetter facilities we could handle\ntwice as many people in the same\ndistrict.\"\nDESTROYERS SAIL\nFOR ESQUIMALT\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP)-\nThe four-day visit to Vancouver of\nfour Canadian destroyers ended\nearly today, when the vessels sailed\nthrough the First Narrows en route\nto Esquimau, B.C., near Victoria.\nKaslo Auxiliary\nin New Clubroom\nKASLO, B. C\u2014The Women's auxiliary to the Canadian Legion held\nits monthly meeting Thursday afternoon in its club room in the\nLegion hall, the president, Mrs. Fred\nMcGibbon, in the chair. The secretary-treasurer, Mrs. J. G. Fox, gave\nthe usual fine report, the society\nbeing in a satisfactory financial\ncondition. Mrs. Fox also gave a\nvery comprehensive report of the\nrecent visit of Mrs. McDonald, of\nRevelstoke, provincial president of\nWomen's auxiliaries for British Columbia, which was made March 25.\nThe president extended thanks to\nall members who had done so much\nto make Mrs. McDonald's visit a\nsuccessful and happy one, especially\nMesdames H. T. Hartln, J. R. Tinkess, T. H. Horner, A. Moulton and\nA. Carney, who were responsible\nfor the beautifully decorated tables\nand supper arrangements for the\nbanquet. In the absence of Mrs.\nCarney, the \"cheer-up\" secretary's\ngood report was given by the president.\nSuggestions for alterations in the\npresent constitution of the local\nbranch were proposed, but laid on\nthe table for one month.\nIn future all meetings will be held\nin the Legion building clubroom,\nwhich has undergone enlarging and\nrepainting, which will be more convenient than meeting at the homes\nof members as done in the past.\nTea was served by Mrs. Billings,\nwho was assisted by Mrs. George\nPalmer, Mrs. J. R. Tinkess and Miss\nMartha Tinkess.\nJ. Wigen Again\nHeads the Co-Op.\nWYNNDEL, B. C. - The annual\nmeeting of the Coop. Fruit Growers\nwas held March 29 with J. Wigen in\ntne chair.\nElection of officers resulted in J.\nWigen being reelected, F. Hage\/; and\nA Joy to fill vacancies. Others on\nthe board are T. Mountford, J,\nBathie and C. Ogilvie.\nMARCUS MARTIN FIGHTS CHARGE\nBEING IN GAMING ROOM BUT LOSES\nBases Plea on Fact Th[at He Was Not Playing\nGame of Chance; Magistrate Brown\nFinds Him Guilty; Fined $30\nMarcus Martin, the only one to\nplead not guilty out of nearly 60\nso far, as a consequence of last Saturday's raid on four cigar stores,\nhad his day in court yesterday,\nwhen he stoutly fought the charge\nthat he had been \"found without\nlawful excuse in a common gaming\nhouse ... to which persons did resort for playing games of chance,\"\nbut it did him little good. The net\nresult was that after a trial lasting\nthree hours, in police court, he was\nfound guilty by Magistrate William\nBrown, and fined $30, with the alternative of a month in jail. He paid\nthe fine.\nEarlier in the week some 25 others who were participating in games\nwere fined $25 each, while an equal\nnumber who were present but not\nplaying got off with fines of $5\neach. At his previous appearance,\nMr. Martin claimed the game he was\nplaying being solo, was not a game\nof chance, but the court ruled that\nhe had to plead to the charge as it\nread, and so his plea was entered\nas \"not guilty.\"\nAt his trial, it was explained to\nMartin that he was not charged\nwith playing games of chance, but\nmerely with being found in the gaming house It was his contention,\nhowever, that in effect he was\ncharged with playing games of\nchance, and he conducted his defence on that line.\nHOU8E 8AY8 MARTIN\nHAD CARDS\nConstable Richard House of the\ncity police, first witness, described\nthe search made of Bush's cigar\nstore in compliance with a court\norder. Whe he entered, Martin was\nsitting in No. 4 position at table No.\n2. Chips and cards were on the table\nin front of Martin's partners, but not\nin front of Martin. All had cards in\ntheir hands and on the table. House\nasserted the table was a round one,\nwith a felt covering, and had a\ndrawer underneath in which chips\nand money could be held.\nWhen the table was brought into\nthe courtroom to satisfy Martin\nthere was a drawer in it, the drawer\ncould not be found, but the officer\nmaintained the drawer had been in\nthe table the night of the raid.\nHouse further testified that when\nhe entered the room, Martin had\ncards in his hand, and on the table.\nThere were 19 men in the room'* besides the two police officers who\npreceded himself Into the room.\nThere was a doorway but no door\nbetween the cigar store proper and\nthe back room.\nIn Martin's cross-examination of\nHouse, the latter was asked if he\ncould swear Martin had gone to the\ncigar store for the purpose ot playing '\"games of chance, to wit, poker.' House answered he could not,\nand that he did not actually see\nMartin playing a game of any kind.\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson  Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nAn examination of an envelope in\nwhich Martin's cards had been placed when the raid occurred revealed\n14 cards. Martin asked what he\nwould be doing with 14 cards if he\nwas playing poker.\nWhen Martin asked what constituted a disorderly house, Magistrate\nBrown answered that a man with\ntwo eyes and two ears who entered\na room where games of chance were\nbeing played should know something of what was going on.\nBARWIS\nDESCRIBES RAID\nCorporal C. W. A. Barwis of the\nprovincial police testified he entered\nthe building with Constable House.\nThere were four tables in the room,\n19 men and 27 chairs. Seven mtn\nwere at table No. 1, right at the\ndoorway; four at table No. 2, one\nof which was Martin; six at table\nNo. 3, and two standing watching.\nCard games were being played at\nthree of the four tables, and cards\nand chips were on the three. He ordered all men in the place to throw\ntheir cards on the tables, sit back\nand touch nothing. He heard Constable House taking the names of\nthe men at table No. 2, but as he\npaid no special attention to table\nNos. 1 and 3, he had not noticed\nmuch conversation between House\nand the men.\nBarwis stated it was evident the\nroom was being used for playing\ngames of chance, as there was no\nparaphernalia for anything else.\nThere was nothing to prevent Martin's seeing what was going on at\nthe other tables, as the tables were\nalmost touching in the comparatively small room.\nWhen Martin cross-examined him\nthe corporal admitted Martin's back\nwas \"more or less\" turned to the\nother tables, and something could\nhave happened so that Martin could\nnot see what was happening.\nAt this junction the court was adjourned to 2 p.m.\nWhen it resumed C. B. Garland,\nprosecuting for the city, explained\nthe charge against Martin, and said\nhe was not charged with playing\npoker. Ignorance of the law was\nno excuse for frequenting gaming\nhouses, he said.\nASKS CONSIDERATION\nMartin, in addressing the court\nasked the court to realize the handicap under which he was acting, as\nhe had never before been tried in\ncourt He stated there had been\nno definite evidence given that he\nhad been playing games of chance\nwhen the raid occurred. He presented three discrepancies in Constable\nHouse's evidence which he labellej\nas contradictory statements. He\nstated House had said that Martin\nhad cards in his hands when ne\nentered, and l:i(cr said the cards\nwere on the table. Next, House had\nsaid he had received the cards from\nMartin's hand. Also the table which\nHouse had said was covered with\na felt covering, was covered with\noil-cloth, as seen in court.\nIn giving judgment, Magistrate\nBrown said that evidence produced\nbrought the case within the charge.\nDiscrepancies in House's evidence\nwere small, he said, and he found\nthe accused guilty. I\nPropose Increase\nLendable Funds\nof U.S. Banks\nWASHINGTON, April 14 (AP) -\nPresident Roosevelt proposed today\nan increase af about $2,150,000,000 in\nthe lendable funds of the banks in\nthe United States \u2014 the theoretical\nbasis for a $21,500,000,000 expansion\nin private credit.\nPutting his recommendation Into\neffect will boost to a record high ot\nabout $3,730,000,000 the lendable resources of the banks. Theoretically,\nevery dollar of lendable money can\nproduce $10 of ultimate credit because every time the money is loaned part of it flows back to the banks\nand can be loaned again,\nThe president sought the increase\nby ordering release or \"desteriliza-\ntion\" of $1,400,000,000 of idle treasury gold and by announcing the\nfederal reserve board would reduce\nreserve requirements of banks by\napproximately $750,000,000. The\npresent excess reserves of the banks\ntotal $1,580,000,000.\nGold will swell the excess reserves \u2014 which constitute the lendable funds of banks \u2014 indirectly.\nThe treasury will put the gold to\nwork by using it as the basis for\nissuing an equivalent amount of\ngold certificate currency with which\nit can get a spendable deposit credit\nat the federal reserve banks.\nAs the treasury disburses the\nmoney to the public for relief and\nother purposes, the public \u2014 either\nthe direct recipients or the merchants with whom they spend it\nwill put the money in the banks, and\nthe banks then will have it avail\nable for loans to business men or\nothers.\nLady Golfers al\nKaslo Plan Year\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Ladies interested\nin the Kaslo Golf and Country club\nmet Monday with President Mrs.\nF. S. Chandler, presiding. The secretary-treasurer, Mrs. E. H. Latham,\ngave annual reports.\nFollowing officers were elected:\npresident, Mrs. J. J. Skillicorn;\nsecretary-treasurer, Miss Phyllis\nWright\nTea hostesses will be chosen by\nthe president from time to time.\nWith Mrs. Skillicorn presiding\ndiscussions as to the season's activities took place.\nThe ladies will again provide the\ntrophy for junior championship and\nwill endeavour to keep shields, etc.,\nup to date on club trophies now held\nfor competition by the club.\nAs a member of the match committee, Mrs. Chandler was instructed to ask the co-operation of other\nmembers of this committee in arranging local events.\nINFLUX OF MEN FROM\nFOREST CAMPS VEED NOT\nALARM, SAYS PEARSON\nVICTORIA, April 14 (CP)- Hon.\nGeorge S. Pearson, British Columbia minister of labor, said today he\ndid not think Vancouver need be\nalarmed over the influx of men\nfrom the winter forest camps.\nAll these men, he said, had deferred pay coming until May 15, and\nmost of them left the camps with\nsome cash in addition which should\ncarry them into the month of June.,\n*$llteM#$\u00abQ (KlW9*Jt&\nINCOWOKATtO  W* MAY l\u00ab70.\nGOOD FRIDAY\nSTORE CLOSED\nALL DAY\nSeven Babies Are\nExamined at Clinic\nSeven babies were examined by\nDr. C. M. Bennett at the Women's\ninstitute baby clinic at the Nurses\nhome Wednesday afternoon. Miss\nNancy Dunn, public health nurse,\nassisted. Representatives of the institute were Mrs. T. B. Tallyn, Mrs.\nJ. Draper, Mrs. J. C. Robison, Mrs.\nPostlethwaite and Miss R. Bate.\nAt the next clinic, which will be\nheld May 11, vaccination for small\npox will be given tb all children\nover one year of age who attend the\ncliiiic, with the parents' consent.\nSeattle Publisher\nqnd Family Spend\nHoliday in B. C.\nVANCOUVER April 14 (CP) -\nCurtis Boettiger 11-year-old grandson of U. S. President Roosevelt\nthinks his grandfather is \"pretty\nswell.\"\nThat's what he told interviewers\nhere today. Curtis passed through\nVancouver on the way to Harrison\nHot Springs B. C. for a brief vacation. He was with his stepfather\nand mother and sister Eleanor, aged\neight. Mrs. Boettiger is President\nRoosevelt's daughter.\nJohn Boettiger publisher of the\nSeattle Post-Intelligencer, said he\nhad been looking forward to his\npresent vacation \u2014 \"but I regret\nhaving to miss the University of\nCalifornia-Washington crew race\nat Seattle Saturday.\n\"We are both very fond of Canada,\" he said, \"and never miss an\nopportunity of coming here.\"\nMr. Boettiger said business In\nthe United States was \"generally\ndiscouraging,\" although the west\nwas much more favored than the\n\"In my own business, we have\nno complaint to make,\" he said.\nSOCIETY PLEASED\nWITH WORK IN B. C.\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP)-\nNatlonal officials of the Red Cross\nSociety are pleased with the work\nof the organization in British Columbia, -Hugh Birch Jones, commissioner of the British Columbia\ndivision, said here today.\nThe British Columbia division's\nplan to enlist services of amateur\nradio operators in times of major\ndisasters met with commendation\nand will probably be extended\nacross Canada, Jones said.\nB. C. PIONEER DIES\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP)-\nFuneral services will be held here\nSaturday for Mrs. Addie Garvin,\npioneer British Columbia resident\nwho died Wednesday.\nNew Denver Shot\nfo Invade Nelson\nNew Denver Rifle club will send\na team to Nelson Sunday to shoot\nagainst the 111th Battery, R.C.A. ait%\nthe Nelson Rifle club, it was an*\nnounced Wednesday by Frank Wells,\nsecretary of the Nelson club. Seven\nor eight men are expected to comprise the visiting team, and the matches are slated for 2 p.m.\nTryouts for the Nelson club's team\nwill be held at the Armory riflft\nrange tonight and tomorrow, and the\nteam will be selected on the ball*\nof performance.\nCANADIAN WARSHIPS\nREACH ESQUIMALT\nVICTORIA, April 14 (CP)-Whlle\na naval band played nautical airs\nand hundreds of persons, mostly\nwomen, watched from the wharves\nand rocks of nearby Esquimalt harbor, four Canadian destroyers\nthe Skeeha, Fraser, Saguenay and\nSt. Laurent \u2014 moved into the navy\nbase shortly before noon.\nIt was the first time the SaguS-\nnay and the St. Laurent had been\nin Esquimalt and marked return oi\nthe Skeena and Fraser from winter\nmanoeuvres south of the equator.\nAlso, it was the first time in many\nyears that four warships had been\ntogether in Esquimalt, which onfe\nsheltered the Pacific squadron i)t\nthe British navy.\nWILL HOLD NATIONAL\nMEETINC 1. O. D. E.\nAT VANCOUVER, JUNE\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP)-i\nFor the first time in 16 years, tin\nannua] meeting of the National\nChapter of the Imperial Order\nDaughters of the Empire will be\nheld in Vancouver from May 26 Qj\nJune 2.\nAfter two days of executive meet\"\nings, the annual session will be officially opened Saturday evening;\nMay 28.\nMrs. W. G. Lumbers'of Toronto\nwill be in the chair.\nCLEAN FALSE TEETH-\nGET RID OF STAINS\nNew Ea\u00bby W\u00bby\u2014No Brushing ' I\nStera-Kleen, amasing new discovery, re\nmoves blackest stains, tarnish, tartar Uk<\nmagic. Just put false teeth or bridges In i\nglass of water and add Stera-Kleen powder\nNo meany brushing. Recommended by den\ntints\u2014approved by Good Housekeeping. A1\nall druggists. Money back if not delighted\n(AdvU\nHOME IMPROVEMENT PLAN\nThe Contractor's Opportunity\nBUILDERS\nMASONS\nBRICKLAYERS\nPLUMBERS\nHEATING\nCONTRACTORS\nELECTRICAL\nCONTRACTORS\nINTERIOR\nDECORATORS\nAnd Others\nrpHE Dominion Government's Home Improvement Plan\n\u25a0*\u2022 was designed to provide employment In trie building\nand allied trades and at the same time aid homeowners to finance the cost of renewals and repairs.\nUnder this plan, repairs are financed in easy payments\nover a term of years at a very low rate of interest.\nContractors should obtain a supply of the loan application forms, make themselves familiar with the simple\nrequirements and be prepared to take the home\nowner's application for a loan. The loan money may\nbe assigned to the contractor to be paid on the owner's\ncertificate that the work is satisfactory.\nThere are many people in every district who do not\nyet realize the opportunity this plan offers to them.\nPlumbers.. .roofers., .carpenters.. .decorators\u2014canvass\nyour districts, and obtain Home Improvement Loan\nApplications from any branch of this bank.\nALL BRANCHES OF THIS BANK ARE PREPARED\nTO HANDLE [HOME IMPROVEMENT LOANS\nIMPERIAL BANK\nOF CANADA\nHead Office: Toronto\nBRANCHES   THROUGHOUT    CANADA\n\u00ab..'-^.--^-.M   .Kui\n.M&i&il\n PAGE POUR \u2022\nNELSON DAILY NIW8. NELSON, EC-FRIDAY MORNINO, APRIL 18. 1888.\nEASTER PARADE TO BE MOST FEMIMNE \"IN \"MANY YEARS\n{treatment Good...\nInstitution Is\nBest Plate lor\nthe Mentally III\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, PH. D.\nEver so many parents write me\n,:to name a private .institution where\nH child or adult who Is mentally\n\u25a0handicapped or mentally sick can\nhave proper care and treatment,\nand they usually say they have iit-\n;lle, or no money to pay for such\nservice. There are good private.institutions for such cases. The advantage of a private institution\nmay be that it can give more individual care to the patient, and can\nprovide the. services of more expert treatment. But such services\nmust be costly.\n, And whlle__I _would_nOt discount\nthe fine services oi the private institution, I think it is unfortunate\nthat so many persons take the attitude they do toward the state institution. The patient there who ls\nmentally sick or feeble minded is\nso much better off, as a rule, than\nhe can be in the best sort of home.\nUsually he has better physical care\nand is happier in the institution\nthan at home.\nBut the biggest argument for the\ninstitution is for the relief and protection of the patient's famfty. If\nthe mental illness is such as to be\nrecommended by the doctor or specialists as an institution case, the\nlives of the family and the neighbors may be in danger of the patient so diagnosed, in case he remains in the home.\nBURDEN TO FAMILY\nWhile mentally handicapped children may not be so hard to manage in the home, they, especially\ngirls, on reaching adolescence, may\nbecome moral hazards to the community. But the burden to the\nfamily of the low grade feeble\nminded child! If there are other\nchildren they must sulfer all sorts\nof_ ..enjba.traisp)en.t, eyen neglect.\nNaturally parents will centre their\nattention on this child so handi-\nI Many Gifts ...\nLast Minute Shoppers Are Told\nWhat lo Give Girls for Easier\n~ - By JULIET5HELBY\nEaster is io .the-air,.and if you\nhave been.vaguely wondering what\nyou are going to give a lovely lady,\nwe are rushittgrti.the'rescue. We've\nalways been last-minute shoppers\nourselves, so we k\"now how it Is\nFlowers are always a safe bet if\n'you are a member of the stronger\nsex. Byt maybe this year you want\nto put one over on the other boys\nby crashing through with a more\nlasting gift. And of course if it's\nft>..w.o<nan :- to\" -\"'Woman question,\nwhether mother, daughter, sister,\n\u00abunt,..cousin-cr-iFiead, you'll want\n,to give her something in the present line.\nPerfumes are always welcome.\nAnd this, season the stores are\ncrammed with so. many different\nintriguing scenU.-all-dressed up in\nInelr Easter packages. There are\ncute rabbit boxes, Easter eggs, Easter baskets, purse-sized flacons, and\nall sorts of gay and happy choices.\nThere have also been some new\n.Parisian imports that are the last\n\u2022word in chic and have been inspired\nS>y the exposition. One of these perfumes has the hnusual quality of\ncreating a different fragrance with\neach inmviduarsltin ircontacts.\nWEEK-END GIFT\nMaybe the idea of perfume seems\na bit too .expensive for your budget, but you can carry out the same\nthought by getting one of the delightful new eau de colognes or\ntoilet waters all done up in holiday finery.\n*\u2022\u2022 If it's week-ending you - are going, a remembrance for your hostess will make you a doubly welcomed guest. The scented soaps\nIn alluring boxes, guest face powders for ner extra bedroom, and\n\u25a0 makeup kits, are some good exam-\nKales. .JPresenis.liko.tbese are .pec-,\n\u25a0 feet because they strike Just the\nfright note of friendshop and appreciation without being too Intimate\n| personal.\nLACKHEADS\nBlackheads simply dissolve and disappear by this one simple, safe and sure\nmethod. Gettwo ounces of peroxlne\npowder from any drug store, sprinkle\ntt on a hot, wet doth, rub the face\ngently\u2014every, blackhead will be gone,\nHata a Hollywood complexion.\n(Advt.)\nStuffy Head\nA few drops'.'., and-\nyou breathe again!\nClears clogging mucus, reduces swollen\nmembranes\u2014helps\nKeep sinuses open.\nViCKS\nVa-tro-nol\nUnhygienic..J\nMan's Habits in\n; .     ANN MILLER\nFavorite powder good Easter gift.\n\"' Don't worry your head about\nwhat to give your favorite friend\nat the office or your roommate at\nschool or college. Maybe you know\nthat she yearnslor a compact, a\ntrick bit of costume jewelry or a\nflowered - hair- ornament. But if\nyou are without an idea, then here\nare some suggestions that are always- a huge success. Sachets, that\ncome in. many lovely odors and are\ndone up in soft pastel shaded pillows, are a real luxury, and she\n-will think of you every time she\ntakes out a handkerchief or a piece\nof lingerie. Dusting power in\nglamorous boxes with large, soft\npuffs, are another favorite. They\nwill dress up her bathroom and\nmake her. daily ablutions a charming ritual. -     - \u25a0  \u2022 \u25a0\nAnother nice thing about these\ngifts is that even if you've only a\nfew minutes left for your shopping\nyou can rush into your favorite\nstore and make a quick selection\u2014\nbecause ,they are all there in the\nsame department, and whatever\nyou choose you are sure to thrill\nthe girl in question.\nServe\nlAnwri Jsufidsut TJtack <Hlwl\nUNION   TENDER   MADE   HAM\nGive Yourself and Friends a Real Treat\nSo TENDER a Fork Cuts It\nECONOMICAL\u2014It Cooks in One-Third the Time of\nOther Hams.\nScarcely Any SHRINKAGE\nMILD and DELICIOUS to the Last Slice\nThe First and Only Genuine TENPERIZED Ham\non the Market\nThe Ham That Revolutionized the Ham Trade of Canada\nAsk for UNION'S TENDER MADE HAM\nAccept No Substitute\nJust One of the Many High Class Products\nManufactured by\nTHE UNION PACKING CO., LTD., CALGARY, ALTA.\nSold by All First Clan Crocers and Meat Merchants\nHer, Says Woman\nBy VIRGINIA LEE,\nIf you read a book about life in\nthe middle ages\u2014the dafrk ages, as\nthey are called \u2014 ydu'wonder how\nanyone lived to grow .old, so unhygienic were the conditions.\nMany of the diseases that ravished\nand disfigured people then have\nbeen almost stamped out. because\nof our knowledge of sanitation, and\nmany more are coming under control. Most of us know and practice\nthe rules of hygiene.' But it. is easy\nto get into careless habits that shock\nus when they are called to our attention. So many men I see spitting around the streets. They Seem\nto start when they are small boys,\ntrying to act grown up. But if men\nstopped to think how many germs\nthat may be in their mouths and\nthroats may be dried - and blown\nabout by the wind to infect other\npeople, I am sure most of them, at\nleast, would stop the habit.       :\u2022 **\nORDINANCES NOT\nENFORCED\nCities have anti-spitting ordinances, but they are not enforced.\nI have even seen, women expectorate in the gutter or on the sidewalk. I feel it is a beastly* habit,\nand those who do it would agree\nwith me if they thought about it..\nA woman has a problem along\nthis line upon which she wants, my\nadvice. An old man in her family\nspits in the kitchen sink in -the\nstove, when they are-cooking, on\nthe stairs, in the scrap bucket. He\nseems to have catarrh, or perhaps,\nshe suggests, he smokes too much.\nAt any rate, the woman who writes\nme, says it makes her. ill. We can\nquite understand it would. It made\nme feel queer just to read it. She\nhas talked about sanitation in. his\npresence, she writes, but it hasn't\ndone any good.\nIt's just a very bad, thoughtless\nhabit of an otherwise fine person,\nI presume. I don't wonder you\ndislike it exceedingly. You might\nbe able to ridicule him out of it by\npretending to be afraid he was\ngoing to expectoraie into something\nthat he would not dream of doing.\nHe may be the type that you could\nbreak of the habit in this way, and\nhe might not.\nAt any rate, try to be as affectionate and appreciative of all his\ngood points as you can, showing\nhim that you like him and are\nproud of him. Gradually it may\nbe that he will grow to \"ivSht to\nplease you so much that he will\nbreak himself of the habit, I certainly hope so. If you cannot help\nhim in this way, I'm afraid you will\njust have to bear it until you no\nlonger have lo live with him.\nNavy with color is the most popular of the spring suits, say the\nshops. The navy may be trimmed\nwith yellow, with dusty or \"hazy\"\npink, dusty blue, with white, cherry\nred, elc. \"Sfliked\" with color is\nthe term.\ncapped and won't be able to do\ntheir best by the other children.\nNor even by themselves. Some parents wear themselves out physically and emotionally caring for a\nfeeble minded child for whom a\nstate institution could provide better care.\nSerial Story . . .\n7 One Marie\n'By mLEN\"WEL8K1MER\nREAD THIS FIRST: '\"'.'.   \"\"\nGarry Page, New YorkTRrtufniT-\nIst, hat Just sailed for a few weeks\n' abroad. Among his friends at the\npier to see him off was Barbara\nKingsley who came to New York\nthe day\"-;before, it, fill a vstancy\non a child magazine at the* suggestion of her close friend Natalie\nKendall.'Barbara' and Garry' became Interested In one another a\nfew weeks previously when, she\nwas Society editor of the- Mart-\nihsvillo J>o\u00bbt:and Garry had come\nto. Martinsville .fgr a. .wadding.\nJ'acK Metcalf, an authdr and friend\nof Gai\u00bbjir* takers kindly Jnterest\nIn,Barbara after\/Garry sails..Barbara finai ah^apartmeftr. A few\ndays later Ruth Merryweather, attractive-heiress imd-another-close\nfriend of.Garry's, invites her to\nluncheon\"it\"her penthouse,\nNow  go on with the story\nCHAPTER. \u00bb...,\u201e,-,....\nIced consomme, in delicate gold-\nlined china, followed the melon\nballs at the luncheon table.on.the\nterrace, high above the city. Then\nthere were creamed sweet breads,\nand a crisp,-cold, salad,with,long\ncheese wafers and frosted glasses of\nfruit juices.\nBarbara, hearing -her- voice send\ning words spinning across the wide\nterrace, knew that two months be-\nfore she would have been, happy\njust to be here. But now her mind\ncould focus on nothing but the\ncable that Ruth Merryweather had\nreceived from Garry Page.\nWhat could it mean? Ruth had\naccepted it so casually.. W.as that\nbecause it mattered so little or so\nmuch? One could never tell.\nBut Ruth. .herself.. brought.. up\nthe subject pretty soon.'\"Mind if\nI see what Garry said?\" She slit\nopen the envelope.        - \u25a0\nShe laughed and the notes were\nrich and throaty. \"Garry is a dear.\nHe didn't have to cable. A note\nwould have done. But it's something\nI'm eager to know about, you see.\"\nShe read and her face sobered. The\ncloud deepened iri her eyes^' She\nput the cable down, and the words\nsprang up to meet Barbara's eyes.\n\"Impossible to obtain an immediate\nberth.\"\nRuth explained, as though she\nwanted to talk to somebody. \"A\nfriend-of-mine wants to go to England in one of my father's companies. Dad's Over there now and\nGarry was \u25a0 going to talk to him\nto see if it could be done. I guess\nit can't.\"        .\nSO that was ell. All, of a sudden tjie sun was .shining brightly\non the brigRt wicker chairs \"and\ndivans and cushions of-the terrace,\nand the salad was delicious and\nsweet. It had been a business cable.\nRuth talked.on, \"It's so heavenly\nto have Garry on Whom to rely. I\ndon't know what I'd do without him.\nHe's an oasis In the midst of turmoil. I can't imagine getting along\nwithout him.\" She caught her breath\nas though the future without Garry\nwere.too. frightening to contemplate.\n\"He sent a radiogram the other day\n\u2014a perfectly sweet and ridiculous\nLabel Roses So You Will Know Them\nThere are many reasons why you\nwill want to have your new roses\nlabeled. First, the tags are a means\nof checking to see if the nursery\nman has sent the roses ordered. Second, if you should decide to move\ncertain varieties of the roses after\nthe foliage has fallen, the tags are\na moans of identification. And,\nthird, there is the satisfaction of\nknowing the names of the roses you\nhave, and in a large rose bed of\nmany varieties this is difficult unless each rose is tagged.\nFigue 1 of this Garden-Graph\nshows the rose bush as received\nfrom a nursery, with the name tag\nwired to a stock. This label should\nbe removed as soon as the rose\nbush is planted, otherwise it will\neventually kill the branch by choking it or by cutting the bark as the\nbranch is whipped about by the\nwind.\nFigure 2 shows a simple method\nof labeling roses by attaching the\nname tag to the \"eye* ot a wire\nstake which can be stuck in the\nground close to the plant,   ...  '\u25a0\u25a0\nThe wire stakes can be made at\nRight and.wrong.tagging-0f xose*\nhome from galvanized .wire..:The\nlabels can be kept clean and readable by painting with a transparent shellac.\ndiiniL $fi*L\ndbllA&WWflL\nBy  MRS.  MARY  MORTON\nMenu Hint\nTomato Juice\nClam Casserole    Baked Potatoes\nOrange and Grapefruit Salad\nCreamy Rice Pudding with Raisins\nCoffee or Tea\nYou can cook the'rice pudding in\nthe oven, as you are using it for the\ncasserole and the potatoes. Light the\noven about two hours before dinner\ntime, but keep the fire low, around\n300 or maybe 275 Wash half a\ncup of. rice, mix it. .well through\ntwo quarts of milk', and bake it\nslowly in the oven, stirring it occasionally to break the crust. You\ncan add one-half cup sugar, one\ncup raisins and one-half teaspoon\nsalt to it when you first mix it or\nlater on in the cooking. Cook for\nabout two hours.\nTODAY'S RECIPES\nCLAM CASEROLE -\u00bb One can\nclams cut fine, one can creamy\ncorn, one-half cup crearti, one cup\ncracker crumbs, two slises bacon\ncut fine, one and one-half tablespoons chopped onion, salt, -piper,\none egg, beaten, one\" fablestfoon\nbutter.. MU. all ingredients jnd put\nIn buttery! dish, reserving a quarter\nof the crumbs to sprinkle over top.\nBake half an hour at 350 degrees.\nChUdren and Traffic\nSafety education \"in the schools\nreally educates''the \u25a0 children and\nsaves their-'HveS7*artaiysis-df-trafflc\naccidents records shows. From 1926\nlo 1035 child -deaths, in traffic decreased 18 pel-.cent, .while deaths\nof adults increased 91 per pent.\nThe greatest gains have been^with\ngrammar school children, the bureau of public roads finds. These\nare the children. influenced .by\nteaching in the -schools.- \u2022 The bureau finds that high schools need\ntraining courses for drivers to carry\non the safety idea with the young\npeople about to begin driving. Preschool children as a group have not\nbeen consistently and \/effectively\ntrained to keep off- the-sfcreets, and\nthe result, is a high death rate for\nthat age.\none. *yoi know,.I don't think\"! appreciated-him until this summer.\"\n\"Have you known .Garry long?\"\n\"Oh\" yes\u2014three . to four . years.\nHe was a* college chum' of a friend\nof mine and it was the other man\nwho held a roild place in my life.\nIt's just this last month or two\nGarry and I decided to grow ac-\n'qU'ainted.\"\nBarbara knew who the man who\nhad held a \"mild interest\" was. It\nwas Bill Jameson. Was Ruth turning\nnow to Garry?\nShe thanked the girl for.the luncheon and went back to Natalie.\nShe had packing to do for tonight\nshe was moving but. One thing she\nmust do. She must starid at the door\nof her living room and order every,\nghost of Garry out. .The one. from\nthe biggest chair, the one that put\nlogs on trie fire, the one that watched her broil a steak. Then she would\nnot be lonely for someone who\nnever even had entered the rooms.\n'She would' not\" 'imagine ' anything\nany more, except stories for very\nlittle chjldren.\n\" Iterr goo'd\" f eMUliOn \"held * u'df il\nshe asked for the key and mail at\nthe desk. The attendant smiled.\n\"A ca*ble for you; Miss Kingsley.\"\n\"For me?\"\n\"Sign here, please.\"\n- She- carried it upstairs, locked\nthe door of her bedroom, and opened it. Five words laughed up at her.\n\"How .are you doing? Garry.\" A\nsimple sentence, impersonal as rain\nand yet as intimate as\u2014as two\no'clock, in. the morning.in a-cab\nin Central park.\n\"Oh, I'm doing fine, fine now,\nGarry!\" she answered, \"But what\nabout you? Oh, Garry, Garry, may-\nbe you have a girl but I'm not so\nsure, after all!\"\nShe began her new job and came\nhome each evening, tired but happy,\nbecause. the work was good and\nshe was catching on so easily.\nThen, one evening, Marie Rinehart\nJameson telephoned her.\n\"Barbara? I've menat to look you\nup ever since the night we met but\nyou know how time goes. Did you\nknow\u2014but how silly of me, of\ncourse you do\u2014that Julia will be\nhere Monday? I'm having a dinner\non the Marine Roof and of course\nI want you. It's Thursday night.\"\nBarbara heard her, voice saying\nsweetly, \"How lovely, Marie. But\nThursday is a bad night. We close\nup the book that day and I may\nbe still in a dither with cut-lines\nand-copy at nine o'clock,\" --\n\"Come when you're , through,\nthen. Dinner's at half-past eight.\nWe'll be there until rather late. I\nmay not have much more chance to\nsee you.\"    * :.-'-. \u2022 -\n\"You are moving?\"\n\"To England. Isn't - It 'glorious?\nWe'll be close to Paris and. gaiety.\"\n\"Then Bill is changing jobs?\" -\n\"Well, it's almost certajh. A friend\nof his has some pull and it's being\narranged.'\"\nBarbara hung up and sat at the\ntelephone table for a moment. Ruth\nwas the friend with the 'pull and\nthe pull wasn't working, but Marie\ndid not know that. So this explained Garry's cable and it threw a\nlittle light on Ruth's dependence on\nGarry.\nWhile she sat 4here musing, the\ntelephone rang again. It was Ruth\nwho answered her \"Yes?\"\n\"I was thinking about you.\" Barbara admitted.\n\"I hope it was something fitting.\nOnly what could be called fitting?\nBarbara, I want*to ask you an outrageous favor.\"\n\"That sounds fascinating. Ask\nahead.\"\n\"I have to see a friend of mine,\na man, in private, and,.there isn't\nWomen's Hah Will JelMen Agape\n-as Usual-Predicts News Writer\nBy Mary Elizabeth Plummer\n(Associated. Press Staff -Writer)\nNEW YORK, April 14 CAP)-\nThe floweriest*: most ' feminine\nEaster parade, in.many a year js\nready to swing down the avenues\nand at this stage lt seems-safe'-te\npredict:\n1. That the wpmen's hats will,.as\nusual\/set men agape. -    -    - . \u25a0-\u25a0\n2. That' there UDe a lot'jof good\nold navy blue, notwithstanding all\nthe-new grays, rusts, checks and\nflower-sprigged prints.\nVirtually no holds are barred as\nto hats. There are Gibson Girl sailors swathed in veils with waist-\nlength ends, giddy little pillboxes,\nclown cones, Donnets and shallow,\ntilted bits of headgear held on with\nan old-fashioned ^ snood'.- \u25a0\n' Everything has light, gay touches\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJemleion Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\n\u2014even the gray man-tailored suit\nwhich apparently is going to be an\nEaster favorite. This year lt has a\nfrilly lingerie blouse\nShoes have cut-out toes, and\nstockings are sheer enough to show\ntinted toe-nails.\nany pTace. wh\u00abi\u00bb IMt%.M^\ndon\"t. peer.-It's nothing;for -their\ncolumns'but they'll' think -id. Do\nyou think I. could see'him .*at-your|\nhouse?\"\n\"Of course. When shall I leave the\nkey under the mat, Ruth?\"\n\"You're\".an angel.but don't leave\nit.- You're, vto; be.-there, too.- And\ncould- it be in half an hour! He's\ncalii'itJto'i-l'rlLiLfi^JiVS.Sfe'SJ?\nand when I can see him.\"\n\u25a0ais^lime'B\"wna\u00bb\".d4'\"d'-hc^\"sil'-at\nthe table musing. She grabbed a\ndust cloth, ran it over the shining\nsurfa'ees ,\/M the* 'old, furniture,\nstraightened the magazines and\nbooks that crowded the tables, turned on some larnps'affd iurned out\n'sortie'otheri* She carried the evening papers into the bedroom where\na chaise lounge faffed a* wide window that looked -down Into a dozen\nback yards tiny as the squares in\na patchwopk-qullt. Then she slipped\ninto a ^green chiffon dress and ran\na lipstick over her mouth. She was\nready.    ,  -\nIt was less than\"half an hour when\nRuth came. She spoke quickly. \"You\nwonder why I asked you to let me\ncome..don't you?. .Somehow I felt\nthat I could, and I'm afraid to trust\nany of the people I've known. They\nmean well, but a piece of news\u2014and\nanyway,\" she smiled her slow,\nfrank smile.. \"Garry told me I could\ncome, to you if I needed help.\"\n\"Of course you can. Take off your\nhat.\" -\nRuth threw a silly-piece of black\ncrepe that probably had cost more\nthan the month's rent for the apartment into another chair.\nWhen she spoke, her voice didn't\nfalter. \"Barbara, I didn't fall out\nof love with, someone when he fell\nout of love' with me. He married\nthis other girl but he had had social position and rating all of his\nlife so he didn't know they mattered such a lot to her. My uncle had\nbeen thinking of making him a vice-\npresident in one of his companies\nand the girl had heard it. That was\nwhen we were . engaged\u2014I.\"mean\nthe job was suggested then. My uncle wants the post for a man in the\nfamily, so it left Bill\u2014the man-\nout in the cold.\n\"Bill-It's Bill Jameson - didn't\ncare. He liked his. own job better,\nanyway, ano\\ we wereplanning to\nfix it up so he could thank Uncle\nGeorge and turn the thing down.\nBut Marie never knew that. Could\nhe have obtained it later, he would\nhave, to please her, hut \"by then it\nwas filled. And Marie is raising\na tempest and blaming me. Bill\nwants a foreign post. He doesn't\nknow there isn't one.\"\n\"But his present job?*\n\"He |Can't live on what he makes\nand keep'\"Marle .happy, 'He.has to\nbroaden out. One lives more'cheaply in England.\" Then she changed\nher voice. \"I want them to go away.\nMaybe I'll'forget'him. He's sweet\nbut he's sort of weak. Everybody\nadores him but, he needs to be\nshaken. Garry, always'said so. I\nknow it, too.j'llbe'soglad when I\nneedn't worry 'about him-any more!\"\n\"Yet you love'.hlm.\"..\" .\u2022*\n\"That's the* deoge of\" % Oh, he\nnever asks for.idvick.br.'.help but\nhe doesn't know what. to?db about\nthings.\"     ' *...\",. '\n\"He's here,\" Barbara said as the\nbell rang. She pressed the button\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\n;\u2022: Miss Florence Stephenson,\nKerr. apartments, - will spend the\nweek-end at Spokane.\n\"\"_\u2022\" Miss Connie Smith of the\nteaching staff of Hume' school intends spending the Easter vacation\nat the coast. \t\n\u2022 R. A. D. West of Castlegar\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. J, McCann, Hall Mines\nroad, entertained at a small tea in\nhonor of her sister, Mrs. Kay Alexander of Fernie, when shd.was assisted by Mrs. David Kerr who\npoured. Invited guests were. Mrs.\nFrank Baker, Mrs. Arthur Parker,\nMrs. Horace Whitaker, Mrs. D. Kerr,\nMrs. Frank Simms and Mrs. Alexander.\nt Rev. R. Cragg of the Moyle-\nWindermere district was among the\nclergy attending the consecration\not Holy Oils yesterday morning at\nthe Cathedral ot Mary Immaculate.\n\u2022 Mrs. N. A. Winlaw assisted by\nMrs. D. Beatty entertained the Women's Auxiliary of the Boys' Band\nat the' home of the former on Carbonate street Wednesday night\nwhen those attending were Mrs.\nGeorge C. Palethorpe, Mrs. C E.\nJorgenson, Mcs:. W. A... Harrison,\nMrs. E. Christian, Mrs. P. DeFoe,\nMrs. V. Doyle, Mrs. C. Anderson,\nMrs. Henrietta Madden, Mrs, G.\nBarton, Mrs. David Wade, Mrs. E.\nMills, Mrs. G. Hunter, Mrs. E. Morgan, Mrs. J. A. Wilson, Mrs. Leslie\nPickard, Mrs. W. Graham, Mra. F. C.\nRobinson, Mrs, Winlaw and Mrs.\nBeatty.\n\u2022 Jack Collingwood Gray of\nBonnington spent yesterday in the\ncity.\n\u2022 Charles Holt of Balfour was\na Nelson' visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. M. Brady of New Denver visited town, yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. \"and Mrs. W. J. McCann\nand -Mr.' and Mrs. Arthur Parker\nplan to motor, to Spokane today to\nspend the week-end,\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Peters of\nGray Creek visited the city yesterday...- .     \t\n\u2022 Sidney Davidge, who was a\nhouse guest of Fred Robinson;\"Sec-\nond 6kseU\/FairView, has returned J\nto his home at Wynndel.\nthat released the lock on the outer\ndoor.\nBill looked past: her, and found\nRuth. For a second she wasn't so\nsure that his heart had been given\nsolely into Marie's keeping.\n(To Be Continued)\n\u2022 Miss Ottilie Olson of the staff\nof Central school, plans to- go to .\nSpokane to meet Mrs. Coleen, Silica street, who has been east.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. A, Deverson of\nCrawford Bay visited town yester't\nday...\n\u2022 Mrs. E. M. Sandilands was in\nthe city from Kaslo yesterday.\n\u2022 A. J. Moore, who spent a few\ndays in Nelson, returned to his home\nat Port Crawford yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in town yesterday \u25a0\nincluded Mr. and Mrs. Carl Lindow \u2022\nand family of Salmo.\nt Mrs. Kay Alexander has returned to her home at Fernie after\nvisiting her brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. McCann,\nHall Mines road. She was accompanied home by her young niece,\nEileen McCann, who will spend her\nvacation at Fernie.\n\u2022 Rt. Rev. Monsignor A. K. Mclntyre ot Rossland was in the city\nyesterday to assist in the ceremony\nof the consecration of Holy Oils.\n\u2022 Maurice Walker, who-teaches\nat Bonnington, plans to leave today\non a vacation at the coast.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. A. Shea of Castlegar\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Dr. D. W. Wilkinson, Carbonate street, plans to spend today at\nBalfour.\n-   \u2022   Mr. and Mrs. W. Driver ot\nKaslo visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Rev. M. Murphy.of the In.\ndian residential school waa in the\ncity yesterday.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nI\nBRODER'S\nBEST\nSWEET PEAS\nThe Scientific\nEgg Preservative\nNo mess\u2014No preparation\u2014No pails of liquids\nor Chemicals\u2014Open a small tin and\nit is ready for use.\nOTEG Treated EGGS can be boiled, poached, whipped or fried.\nPreserve your. J5GGS by using.the OTEG SIMPLE METHOD.\nFull directions with each tin.\nFor Sale at Your Local Grocer or Dealer\nJAMES MARTIN CO., LTD., Western Canada Distributors,\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\nBIG\nBATHTOWEL\\\n20\"x40\"\nFREE\nfor only 30\nwrappers\nLftttM\nTEA TOWEL '\n i9\"x32\"\nFREE\n- {or only 25\nwrappers\nI OUR CHOICE of the to-tfels\nyou always need\u2014and as many as\n.you want\u2014absolutely FREE! Fine\nquality' Bath Towels\u2014beautifully\n\" soft,-hf smart colour patterns. Or\nTea Towels, all linen, nicely\nhemmed, good quality and long-\nwearing. Both towels ate, FREE\nfor Royal Crown Soap wrappers.\nRemember, ONLY the wrappers\nfrom Royal Crown yellow'liuhdry \u2022\nsoap will be. exchanged for these ,\ntowels. \u2022'.\u2022..*.    ..';\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nmazutf\nBATH and TEA TOWELS\nFREE\nIQk ROYAL CROWN^jfrw\nSOAP WRAPPERS *to*emm\nHow fe get your FREE Towels\nJust save the rcqdircil number of Royal\nCrown yellow laundry Soap Wrappers\n\u25a0Trod-nml-them-tor - '\nThe Towel Depl.\nThe Royal Crown Soaps Lid.\n308 Georgia St. E.\nYfliieouvor\nIf you cannot call or send for your\ntowel, mail your wrappers by parcel\npost, enclosing a slip of paper on\nwhich- you .have printed clearly your\n\u25a0h.imc and address, and which towel\nyou desire. Your towel will be sent to\nyou immediately.\nacaeptexL\nfro\u00b1theM\nv-  toure\u00a3&\n'\/>\n**i\nOFFER   CLOSES   SEPTEMBER   10th;   1938\n \"--,\"\u2022\"' *\u25a0\u2022,\";-\u201e'; \u25a0\nH9D\nWe're Putting in\nA\nJust where It's needed. Let\nus wire your heme the way\nit should be done.\nSTANDARD\nCLEM K\\\\-\nElectrlcal Contractors\nPHONE 838       611 WARD ST.\nJ. HOOGERWERF, Prop.\nUSL80!! DAILY NEWS, NELSON. p,C.~FRIDAY HORNINQ. APRIL 18. MS.\n-PAOEPIVI\nDO  YOU  WISH TO  TAKE  ADVANTAGE OF\nLOW  INTEREST  RATES  UNDER  THE\nDOMINION HOUSING  ACT?\nIF SO, FILL IN THE FORM BELOW AND SEND IT TO THE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nBuilding, under the Dominion Housing Act in Nelson\nand district has been lagging\u2014there has been none because\nso far there have been insufficient applications to,encourage\nany of the loaning companies concerned in the Doniinion gov-1\nemment scheme to enter this field.\nThey will come in. It is simply a matter of showing them,\nthat enough applications are in hand. The Daily News is therefore undertaking to receive applications. When a sufficient\nnumber has been received steps will be taken to bring to Nel-'\nson a representative of a company which has undertaken loans\nunder the Ottawa scheme.\nIf you want to borrow money to build a houso, fill in the\nform below and send it to the Daily News: Address Building\nEditor. They got action in Trail and Rossland. Action can be got\nin'the Nelson district. Please do not delay filling in the form\nbelow as the sooner action is taken the better. Your name will\nnot be published.\nBuild Under the\nDOMINION HOUSING ACT\nBe Sure to Get the Finest in Building Materials From LAMBERTS.\nLUMBER\n9 Shingles 9 Moulding\n\u2022 Roofing donnacona \u2022 X?.nMr\nft Lath insulation ft Windows\n\u2022 Building Paper . ft Doors\nLAMBERT LUMBER Limited\nNAME \u25a0\u25a0 IN FULL\nADDRESS'\t\nPLUMBING\nWhen you build or renovate. Consult us as to estimates and equipment.\nCONTRACT PLUMBING WITH SPEED AND\nEFFICIENCY\nSee our display of the\nlatest modern bathroom\nend kitchen fixtures.\nB* C. Plumbing & Heating\nCompany\n323 VICTORIA ST,\nPHONE 181\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nGeneral Contractors\nOCCUPATION _\u201e._\u201e_..\nHOW LONG EMPLOYED\nLOCATION OF LOT OWNED.\nVALUE OF LAND\nVALUE OF HOUSE TO BE BUILT.\nAMOUNT OF LOAN (80% of value of house and lot) _\nWHEN ARE YOU PREPARED TO BUILD?,\nUse This As Your Application Form!\nMAILTO DAILY NEWS\nREPAIR\nRENOVATE\nAND\nIMPROVE\nYOUR\nHOME\nS!*\u00ab\u00ab*\u00bb\u00ab*!\u00bb*\u00ab*!\u00bbM*4\u00ab4\u00ab**\u00ab\u00bb5\u00ab**\u00bb\nWITH TWO POWER SHOVELS WE ARE ABLE\n\u2022 TO SPECIALIZE IN\nExcavation Work\nOF ALL KINDS\nIf planning on building this spring see us for\nplans and estimates.\nPhone 178\nNELSON B. \u20ac.\nIs Your Bathroom\nUP TO DATE?\nTake a peek in right now,\nand then remember that we\ncan do a real job with minimum inconvenience to you.\nJULIUS\nREISTERER\nContracting Plumber   '\nROBSON ST.        NtjLSON, B.C.\nChest of .\nDrawers\n\u2022\nTables\n\u2022\nKitchen\nStools and\nLadders\n\u2022\nCabinets\n.    ft\nBook\nCases\n\u2022\nCedar\nChests\nLet. us supply your new furniture for bedroom, garden and\nden, All piece* made on\nthe premises.\nHANDICRAFT\nSHOP\nCabinet Makers\nOPP. CITY HALL    WARD ST.\nPAINTLASTS\nONLY 4 YEARS\nWhen Was Your\nHouse Painted Last?\nLet us give you estimates\non painting your house.\nAgents for\n(AP-A-LAC PAINT\nMURPHY BROS.\nPainters and Decorator*\nPHONE 586       624 BAKER 8T.\nBUILD NOW\nNelson Real Estate Is Moving Freely\nSEE US FIRST ABOUT LOTS\nWe have several choice building sites throughout the city.\nWe can also assist you to finance since we have funds to\nplace on first mortgage city property.\nJL Wo Dawson\nPHONE 197 387 BAKER ST.\nINTERIOR CONSTRUCTION\n- COMPANY LIMITED  \u25a0\u25a0\nENERAL CONTRACTORS\nAND BUILDERS\nPHONE 894\n\u2022   ESTIMATES\nP.O. BOX 279\n\u2022  PUNS\nWE CAN GET YOU SOME ACTION UNDER THE\nDOMINION HOUSING ACT\nNELSON\n____m\nINSULATE\nYour Home Against\nHeat-Cold-Noise\nwith\nSPUN ROCK WOOL\nREQ'D.\nHere Is INSULATION that\nwill outlast the house itself\n\u2014saving its cost in fuel bills\neach year!\nRock-spun into long, resilient fibres. Supplied in bulk.\nbatts, rolls, pipe covering\nand blankets for industrial\nuse.*\nDiscuss it with your architect\nor builder.\nDistributors for British Columbia\nBURNS COAL\n& CARTAGE\nCompany.\nNELSON, B.C.\n\t\nBURNS COAL & CARTAGE\nWILL SUPPLY YOUR'\nNEEDS IN\nBUILDING\nSUPPLIES\nWe handle local and coast lumber, Shingles, Moulding,\nFlooring and Finish\nLet Us Qive You Quotations\nand Estimates on Your\nNeeds\nDistributors for Canada Roof Products\nAce Tex Asphalt Shingles, Insulation\nBoard, Roofing and Building Paper\nPhone 53   NELSON, B.C.   568 Ward St.\nPhone 176 Nelson,B.C. P.O.BOX 1138\nWe have a complete stock of Dry and Well Manufactured Dimension, Boards, Shiplap, Flooring\nand all other local lumber. Also Coast Fir Flooring and Finish, Cedar Shingles, Pine Lath, Cottonwood and Fir Veneer.\nWHEN IN NEED OF BUILDING\nMATERIALS SEE US\n'\u25a0 *l<) \u00abl \u25a0 m:****i*i'**ts,'>m*mm\nWE TRY TO PLEASE AND\nPRICES ARE RICHT\nW. W. POWELL COMPANY, LIMITED\nLet Us Work Towards the Establishment of Building Under\nThe Dominion Housing Aet\nWtW\" \u25a0     3**'\n,' \u25a0   \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0    \u25a0\nIF PLANNING TO BUILD\u2014LET US SHOW YOU\nTHE MANY ADVANTAGES OF USING\nC. COTTONWOOD PLYWOOD\nTHE FINISH THAT ADDS TRUE BEAUTY AND LONG\nLIFE WHEREVER IT IS USED\nB. C. VENEER WORKS LTD.\nPhone 282 Waterfront Nelson, B. C.\n^mmmmmmm^t^mmm^mmimwmmm\n '\n\"\"\"^W\nPAQE SIX\nNdum Battg'NttM'\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished  every\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING\n206   Baker   Street.  Nelson,\nmorning  except  Sunday  by\nCOMPANY, LIMITED,\nSunday\n, LIMI'l\nBritish   Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMembers of the Audit Bureau ot Circulations and\nThe Canadian  Press Leased  Wire  News Service,\nFRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 15, 1938.\nVERDICT NOT AGAINST CHAMBERLAIN\nInterpretations of the byelection victory of the British Labor party that see in it a national rebuke for the\nBritish prime minister are regarded as extremely exaggerated and foolish, by the Toronto Globe and Mail, At best,\nI the verdict was a local one, it claims, and contributed to\nby many factors. The Toronto daily sees nothing but\ntrouble for the British Labor party if it continues to oppose\nat every turn the efforts of Chamberlain to work out a\nsolution for British and European problems short of challenging war.\nThe Toronto paper's full comment is as follows:\n\"The West Fulham by-election will give Prime Minister Chamberlain's Labor opponents a day in the sun-\nbut only a day. If momentarily embarrassing, the government's loss of the seat is not nearly so indicative of where\npublic opinion stands on the foreign policy issue as the\nopposition seeks to make out. By-elections are often used\nas national testing grounds, but it is only at infrequent\n\u25a0 intervals that they can be said to* mirror the mass mind.\n\" From the make-up of the constituency and on its political\nhistory, West Fulham is by no means one of these.\n\"For the mbst part the eligible voters are small wage-\nearners, office workers, clerks, hairdressers' assistants,\nwaiters, taxi drivers. For the past two decades they have\nconsistently followed the policy of sharing their loyalty.\n:\u25a0 In 1920 the constituency went Labor, At the next election\n.(1924) it was won by the Conservative with a majority of\n5400. It reversed itself in 1929, going Labor by a margin\nof 2200. Sir Cyril Cobb recaptured it for the Conservatives\nin a by-election the next year by a bare 240 votes. In the\nNational election of 1931 he repeated, and on the issue of-\n\"domestic collapse\" ran up a majority of 12,000. In 1935\nhe was re-elected, but his majority was cut to 3400.\nOn the strength of this it was Labor's turn. But there\nare other factors to Wednesday's vote which shadow its\nclaim to victory on foreign policy. The vote was signifi-\n| cantly light in consideration of the issue and in comparison\nj  with the records. It was, in fact, the smallest vote, including\nthe. by-election of 1930, polled in West Fulham since 1924,\nfor which year there are no available figures. A psycho-\n' * logical influence not to be discounted is the fact that more\n'   than 57 per cent of eligible voters are women, and Labor\nwas running the first woman candidate ever to contest the\nseat, the well-known Dr. Edith Summerskill.\n\"Guided only by these local influences, it is possible to\nconclude that the Conservative strategists were out-foxed,\n\u25a0 * and erred in placing all their emphasis on the 'vital' issue\nof showing united support for the government. Dr. Summerskill made it the challenge, but not the sole issue. She\nplayed heavily on the 'rising cost of living,' the danger of\nincreases in rents, and other 'cash considerations' which\nto persons on $10 and $15 a week incomes transcend most\nvital issues.\n\"When conditioned to such circumstances the Fulham\n| victory was more local than national. And when it is considered alongside the Labor party's rout in the house- of\ncommons on Monday its importance shrinks perceptibly.\nIndeed from one view the opposition was more in need of\nthe victory than the government. The vote in the house rejecting its demand for an election by no means ignored\npublic opinion. It showed more clearly than any taken since\nthe resignation of Foreign Secretary Eden the extent to\nwhich opinion had crystallized behind the prime minister.\n\"Failing to deflect one vote from the government,\nLabor's attack on foreign policy has become .something of\na boomerang. Whatever reading one gives to West Fulham, it has been unable to substantiate any of its charges.\nIts attempts to prove the weakness and dangers of the\n' policy have only served to emphasize that it is without a\npolicy of its own. Instead of splitting the government,\nwhich was the main objective of the attack, Labor has itself suffered desertions. At least three followers in the\nhouse of lords have quit the party and there is anything\nbut unanimity in the ranks outside the house of commons.\n\"It is more than likely that the worst blow to the\nLabor case is yet to come. Negotiations with Italy are\nmoving to an agreement which, according to all authoritative speculation, will be reached without any of the\n'sacrifices' the opposition feared most and condemned loudest, While no one would attempt to assess the value of this\nagreement to peace in Europe this early, its accomplishment should bring what Mr. Chamberlain needs most at\nthe** moment\u2014the time in which to plan against the future.\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.\nNEWS ITEMl'IN THE NEXT'WAR; EVEN FARM'ANlMAlSSHAll BE\n'\u25a0'-'--'CONSIDERED PART Qf.THE GERMANI ARMY?     -      '.\n'.-FRIDAY MORNING. APRIL 15, 1938,\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nty\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nWHEN HOMERS NOb\nALL HOMERS nod when they\nget sleepy. That last rubber of a\nlong evening ls the one to watch if\nyou like to see revokes, leads out\not turn and efforts to ruff tricks\nwith a suit which is not the trump.\nRare is the player who haa learned\nto use a little more care at that\nstage, to protect himself frtm\ninch laoses.\n\u2022AAK5\n\"\u2022SKJ08II\n+ 76\nJ.K9 3\n\u2666 61\n*A4 2\n*>Q9S32\n476'\nA\/.\n\u00a3     li\nS.\nAJ84\n<# Q 10 7 b\n3\n\u2666 A 10\n*AQ5\nON THE AIR\nCJAT\n319.6 m.\n1000 w.\n910 k.\nTrail\n7:00 Morning Vespers\n7:15 Request Program\n8:00 Morning Bulletin Board\n9:00 See CBC Network except:\n9:30 Old Timer\n10:30 Good Morning Neighbor\n11:15 Stella  Dallas,  drama\n11:30 Backstage Wife, drama\n11:45 Variety Show\n12:00 Hawaiian Stomp\n12:15 On Wings qf Song\n12:30 Chandu the Magician\n12:45 In Lighter Mood\n1:30 Dance Hour\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Yesterday's Favorites\n3:30 p.m.\u2014Monitor news\n3:45 Lavender and  Lace\n4:00 Theatre News\n4:15 Kootenay Echoes\n4:30 Time Presents\n4:35 Tea Time Tunes\n4:45 Concert time\n8:30 Police Headquarters\n10:00 Easy to Remember\nN.B.C. KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO\n590     620     640     680 ' 920\nN.B.C.-KGO  BLUE NETWORK\nKGO   KJR   1CEX   KECA   kg a\n790  970  1180  1430  1470\nCOLUMBIA   NETWORK\nKVI KOIN KNX KSL KOL\n570    W0    1050    1130     1270\nDON LEE NETWORK\n1270 k.\n236.1 m\nSeattle, KOL\n5O00 w\n600 k.            CJOR\n4.99.7 m\nVancouver\n500 w\n1030 k.           CFCN\n293.1  m\nCalgary\n10,000 w.\nThere are some faults so nearly allied to excellence,\nthat we can scarce weed out the vice loithout eradicating\nthe virtue.\u2014Goldsmith.\nREASONS AGAINST GETTING GLOOMY\nA. L. Jackson in an article in Printers Ink says of\nUnited States conditions that on the surface business sentiment is pessimistic\u2014and yet, if we probe beneath the\ngloom, we find many fundamental factors that give a\nstrong foundation for optimism.\nMr. Jackson discusses five specific and encouraging\nfacts that point the way to recovery:\n- (1) The correction of last year's over supply. (2) The\ncorrection of commodity price maladjustment. (3) While\npurchasing power declined, the reaction has not been so\npronounced as the decline in production schedules. (4) Re-\ntaiNemand has held up. (5) Purchasing'power during\nFebruary and March has increased.\nSeems sensible. Canada's position is very much stronger, tyootenay's stronger still.\n5:00 P.M.\u2014\nGood Friday (CBC)\nWalter KelSey's orch. (Blue)\nGhost of Benjamin Sweet (Col.)\nCookie Kids  (CJOR)\nEventide Echoes  (CFCN)\n5:15 P.M.\u2014\nDick Tracy, drama (CFCN)\nPelican club,(CJOR)\nJazz Nocturne (Don Lee)\n5:30 P.M.\u2014\nEddie Swartout's orch.  (Blue)\nTopics of the Day (Don Lee)\nJimmy Allen's Adventures (CFCN)\nOrgan concert (Red)\n5:45 P.M.\u2014\nBoake Carter, Commentator (Col)\nLittle Orphan Annie (Do;i Lee)\n6:00 P.M.\u2014\nHollywood Hotel (CBC & Col)\nGene and Glenn, comedy  (Red)\nConcert Hall (CJOR)\nBeaux Arts trio (Blue)\n6:15 P.M.\u2014\nRicardo and his violin (Red)\nPhantom Pilot (Don Lee)\n6:30 P.M.\u2014\nSouthern Harmony Four (Red)\nFrank Bull, sports (Don Lee)\nRed Head Family (CFCN)\nSpelling Bee, Paul Wing (Blue)\nStopper News (CJOR)\n6:45 P.M.\u2014\nYour government, talk (Red)\nNews flashes (Don Lee)\nLate Sports review (CJOR)\nVibraphone (CFCN) >\n7:00 P.M.\u2014\nCanada 1938 (CBC & CFCN)\nFirst Nighter, drama (Red)\nSong Shop (Columbia)\nTwenty years ago and today (D L)\nPaul Martin's music (Blue)\nGillman & Mclntyre (CJOR)\n7:30 P.M.\u2014\nMeditation (CBC)\nJimmie Fidler's gossip  (Red)\nSeven Last Words of Christ (Blue)\nLone Ranger, drama (Don Lee)\nRadio Rascals U?JOR)\n7:45 P.M.\u2014\nExperience talks (CBC)\nPeople in Ihe news (Red)\nAmerican Viewpoints (Columbia)\nWilf Wylie, pianist (CJOR)\nJoe Shaw (CFCN)\n8:00 P.M.\u2014\nNews, weather (CBC)\nAmos 'n' Andy (Red)\nJerry Blaine's orch.  (Blue)\nSing and Swing (Columbia)\nScattergood Baines (Col)\nNews (CJOR)\n8:15 P.M.\u2014\nOzzie William's orch. (CBC)\nUncle Ezra's radio (Red)\nLum and Abner (Col)\nJack Betzner's orch. (Don Lee)\nSt. Mary's Choir (CJOR)\nKnox church choir (CFCN)\n8:30 P.M.\u2014\nPoet's Gallery  (CBC)\nLou Breese's orch. (Blue)\nPaul Whlteman's orch. (Columbia)\nRuby Newman's orch (Red)\nHow Sffibrt Are You? (CJOR)\n8:45 P.M.\u2014\nHouse of Peter McGregor (CFCN)\nBook Parade (KPO-Red)\n9:00 P.M.\u2014\nEveryman (CBC)\nG. Circus, variety (Red)\nCarl Ravazza's orch. (Blue)\nArt Godfrey, John Salb, songs (Col-\nNewspaper of the air (Don Lee)\nNews flashes  (CFCN)\nSong Almanac (CJOR)\n9:15 P.M.\u2014\nCalif. Chamber of Commerce (Blue)\nSam ICaye's orch.   (Columbia)\nMusic In Fuller Fashion (CFCN)\n9:30 P.M.\u2014\nDick Stabile's orch  (Red)\nTim and Irene, comedy .Blue)\nTed Fio-Rito's orch. (Col)\n9:45 P.M.\u2014\nSeven Last Words of Christ (DL)\nDick Stabile's orch. (Blue)\n10:00 P.M.\u2014\nI Cover the Waterfront (CBC)\nNews flashes (Red)\nCarl Deacon Moore's orch. (Blue)\nHenry King's orch. (Columbia)\nRhythm Wranglers (CJOR)\n10:15 P.M.\u2014\nNews, weather (CBC)\nFreddie Henkel's orch. (Red)\nLud Gluskin's program  (Col)\n10:30 P.M.\u2014\nTrevor Page's orch. (CBC)\nRoger Pryor's orch. (Red)\nFrank Trombar's orch. (Blue)\nNews  (CJOR)\n10:45 P.M.\u2014\nLarry Kent's orch. (Col)\nIsham Jones' orch. (Don Lee)\nDevotional Service (CJOR)\n11:00 P.M.\u2014\nHerbie Kay's orch. (Red)\nCharles Runyan, organ   (Blue)\nLast Minute News (Blue)\nPasadena auditorium (Columbia)\nHalibut Fishing News (Don Lee)\nBallads (CJOR)\n11:05 P.M.\u2014\nBob Crosby's orch. (Don Lee)\n11:15 P.M.\u2014\nMusic As You Desire It (Blue)\n11:30 P.M.\u2014\nArchie Loveland's orch. (Red)\nJoe Saunder's orch. (Columbia)\nBob Millor's orch. (Don Lee)\n11:45 P.M.\u2014\nSlumber Time (CJOR)\n4> Q 10 9 7 3\nV None \u00ab\n4>KJ84\n-   + J1084\n(Dealer: EasL Both sides vulnerable.)\nThe bidding on this deal started\nwith East, who bid 1-Heart, South\novercalled with 1-Spade, West\npassed and North bid 2-Spades.\nSouth took this to three and North\nto 4-Spades.\nWhen the' heart A was led, the\nleclarer took time out to decide\nhow he would go about making the\ncontract and after due deliberation\nplayed the. 6 from dummy and the\ndiamond 4 from his own hand.\nWhen he attempted to take the\ntrick, his opponents called to his\nattention the tact that spades were\ntrump, not diamonds.\nWhen this matter waa cleared up,\nEast led a spade. This lead out of\nturn brought South back to life and\nhe discovered ho now had a good\nchance tor game. He called for a\nheart lead. West played the 2,\ndummy the 9, East the 10 and\nSouth ruffed. The spade Q was\nnext cashed; followed by the spade\nK. The heart 8 was led, East covered with the Q and South ruffed.\nThe spade A was played and the\ntwo high hearts cashed, on which\nSouth discarded a club and a diamond. When a diamond was now\nled, East played the 10 and South\nthe K. The diamond J now threw\nEast In the lead with the A, and\nEast was obliged to lead a club.\n*   \u00bb   \u2022\nTomorrow's Problem\n*A4   .\n\u00bbj 08 e\n4)K5\n* A J 10 8 3\nA ,1 10985\n\u00bbK 7\n\u00ab 110 9 6\n42\n4 None\nA\/.\ns.\nA76\n\u2022> Q 10 3 2\n+ AQ83\n*642\nAKQ3 2\n, VA54\n\u2666 7\n4KQ975\n(Dealer: South. North-South vulnerable.)\nWhat should East lead against\nNorth's contract of 6-No Trumps?\nGLANCES INTO THE MIRROR OF\nLIFE IN KOOTEN AY-BOUNDARY\n8LOCAN PARK - Miss Myrtle\nStorbo, second daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. 0. Storbo of Slocan Park, was\nunited in marriage to James Johnson, also of Slocan Park, at Colville,\nWash., March 30. They have returned and will reside with the\nbride's parents for the time being.\n,. . Larion Virigin from Alberta, is\na guest here of Mr. and Mrs. George\nPolonikoff. . . . Pete Demonkoff\nfrom  Kamsack,  Sask.,  is  visiting\nrelatives here Mr. and Mrs. Pen\nBaskin are spending a week at\nSouth Slocan.... Mrs. Stanley Reid\nspent Thursday at Vallican. . . .\nFred Konkin has returned after\nspending six months in Saskatchewan vising relatives.\nNAKUSP\u2014Mrs. H. Thurgood entertained recently at three tables of\nbridge when prize winners were\nMrs. E. J. Leveque and Mrs. G.\nGill. Assisting in serving refreshments was Miss K. Reid. Invited\nguests, included Mrs. E. Leveque,\nMrs. F. Mayoh, Mrs. A. Herridge,\nMrs. M. Barrow, Miss M. Butlin,\nMrs. J. Norris, Mrs. G. Gill, Mrs.\nE. Olson, Mrs. A. Matheson, Mrs. J.\nParent, Jr., Mrs. A. Watson, Mrs. R.\nBuerge,   Mrs.  J.  Motherwell  and\n^atwAamcL\nMiss K. Reid. . . . Mrs. A. Kennedy\nof Arrow Park was a Wednesday\nvisitor to town. . . . Miss Betty\nJowett of Edgewood was a visitor\nhere Wednesday. . , . Mrs. R. McWhirter, who spent several months\nat Vancouver with her daughter,\nMiss Bessie McWhirter, has\nturned. On the return trip she visited Grand Forks at the home of\nher son and daughter-in-law, Constable and Mrs. David McWhirter,\n... P. Williams of Grahams Landing was in town Wednesday. . .\nMiss Viola Morice spent the week\nend with relatives at Nelson.\nVARYING DATE FOR EASTER GIVES\nMODERN THEME FOR OLD DEBATE\nFixing of Date for Christian Feast Vexed\nAncient Church and Is Argument Used\nin Efforts to Reform Calendar\nBy The Canadian Press\nBRITISH   EMPIRE\nTRANSMISSION 6\nGSD 11.75 Mcs. (26.53 m.)\nGSC 9.68 Mcs. (31.32mm.)\nGSB 9.51 Mcs. (31.1)5   i.)\nGSL J.11 Mcs. (49.1m.)\n6:20\nverse,\n' 7:10-\n7:30-\nments.\n7:50\u2014Welsh songs.\n8:10\u2014Next week's programs,\nlay.\n>y John Masefield.\nOrgan, Douglas Hawkridge.\nBig Ben.   News, announce-\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILI.EN\n\"The honor system In Lucy's\nschool looks silly to me*. I may be\nold-fashion, but teachin's young\nuns to spy on one another and tattle\nain't my idea of honor.\"        .\nHALIFAX (CP) - Number of\napproved poultry hatcheries in Nova Scotia under the federal approved hatchery policy now stands\nat 26 as compared with 23 in 1937\nand four in [931, the provincial agriculture department announced.\nttkM&jitMl\n  J\t\nLONDON (CP)-First \"director\nof music\" in the British army, Major J. C. J. Hoby, one time of the\nIndian army and well known composer, ls dead at 09,\nWould Prefer\nDependable Peaches\nEndorsement of the new \"Select\"\npeach grade by the grades committee of the B.C.F.G.A. is a step in\nthe right direction. Crying need on\nthe prairie market today is a peach\nthat can be depended upon. Experiences with Okanagan peaches\nduring the past few years has somewhat soured the trade because of\nthe rubbish which has been allowed to flood the market,\u2014Penticton Herald.\nThe Dictators\nand Christianity\nCan moral or religious considerations stop wars today? The answer\nis unequivocal. Germany condemns\nany force, whether moral, ethical,\nor religious, which might seem to\nthreaten the absolute domination\nthe government exercises over its\npeople. Thus anti-Semitism is advocated to such a degree that Nazi\ndoctrines brand Christianity as poisoned because It has its roots in\nJudaism.\nIn Italy the government is on excellent terms with the Vatican. But\nwould-religious consideration stand\nin the way of a decision of war?\nLast October, in his official organ\nII Popolo d'ltalia; Mussolini had\nthis to say regarding British pro\ntests against the massacre of women\nand children on the open streets of\nChinese cities: \"We congratulate\nJapan on it's 'elan vital.' We understand perfectly the spirit that animates Japan, and we find it justifiable. The cries of the pusillanimous and the sermons of the church\nmake us laugh or nauseate us, as\nthe cause may be. \u2014 Conferencia,\nParis.\nThese Regimental\nGood Manners -\nMen,\" he cried, \"there is an announcement I want to make. Last\nnight my wife presented me with\nson.\" .\nThe men broke rank, cheered,\nthrew their hats in teh air, and the\ngeneral pandemonium reigned for\nnearly five minutes. When order\nhad been restored, the Colonel,\npleased with the enthusiastic reception of his announcement and\nthe congratulations, indicated that\nhe had another announcement,\n\"Men and officers,\" he cleared\nhis throat, \"I thank you.\" \u2014From\n\"Laughter for the Millions,\"\n\u2022 (Louellen)\nSLOCAN CITY-Ladles Aid of\nKnox United church met Thursday\nat the home of Mrs. T. McNeish,\nMiss Carol Purney being the hosted, assisted by Mrs, McNeish, and\nMiss Vanen. Those' attending were\nMrs. M. Terry, Mrs. A. Ewing, Mrs.\nD. Ewing, Mrs. R. G. Warner, Mrs.\nMcNeish, Mrs. Walter Clough, Mrs.\nR. E. McMillan, Mrs. J. P. Sutherland ( Mrs. Whalberg, Mrs. W.\nDavies, Miss Irene Terry, Miss Velma Clough, Miss Pauline Vanen and\nMiss C Purney. .. . Alexander McMillan of Sandon, spent a few days\nhere visiting relatives..-.. J. Marchi\nwas a visitor to Silverton Tuesday.\n... A. Carlson and ftis young niece,\nMiss Madalene Carlson, of Pcrrys,\nvisited relatives here Wednesday,\n... Miss Irene Terry was at Silver-\nton Monday to spend the day with\nMiss Bena Matheson.'\nRound Figuring\nI have been totalling up the figures from both sides in Spain\u2014and\nis my head aching?\nHere are some examples in round\nfigures for 18 months:\nTotal'ground won in advances-\nfour times the area of Spain.\nMileage advanced \u2014 six times\nacross Spain,\nEnemy casualties\u20144,000,000 (yes,\nfour millions).\nEnemy aircraft brought down\u2014\n150,000.\nMachine guns captilred\u2014650,000.\nRifles, etc, captured\u20148,000,000.\nHeavy artillery captured\u2014100,000.\n\"About to enter\" key positions\u2014\n2000 occasions.\u2014From \"JJie Leader\", London.    ,\nBULL RIVER, B.C-Mrs. Walker\nof Nelson is visiting her daughter\nand son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. B\nBattersby and daughter, Julie. . . ,\nMrs. Hennessy and her daughter\nSheila and uncle of Cranbrook\nwere visitors here Saturday. .\nR. Egge has returned from Fort\nSteele.. . . Mrs. Bellandre of Kitchener, B. C, was a guest of her sister and brother-in-law, Mr, and\nMrs. J. Flodine and son, Willie. , . .\nMrs. J. Rossi was in Cranbrook for\nmedical attention on Thursday. . . .\nMiss I. Maltman was the guest of\nMr. and Mrs. K. Macken for the\nweek-end. ... Mr. and Mrs. A.\nEimer and George Negard motored\nto Cranbrook Wednesday. ... J.\nJohnson was a Wardner visitor on\nWednesday. . . . Miss I. Maltman\nwas a guest of Mr. and Mrs. C.\nSavorie Tuesday. . . . Dance and\nwhist was held at the school hall\non Friday evening. A great crowd\nattended. Prizes were won by Mrs.\nBellandre and D, Skoregko. . . .\nAndre Tescari of Wardner was a\nvisitor here Sunday. ... Mr. and\nMrs. J. Rossi and Alex Sabo and\nD. Skoreyko were Wardner visitors\nSunday. ... Mr. and Mrs. K. Mack-\nen, Mr. and Mrs. L. Davies and Miss\nI. Maltman motored to Cranbrook\nSunday. . . . Ernie and Pete Dillon,\n0. Duraful, Bob Charles motored to\nKimberley Sunday.. . . Claude Mac-\nonald was a Wardner visitor Sunday. . . . James and Mario Costanzo\nleft for Fernie to visit relatives.\nRight you are, Easter on April 17\nis late this year but it might be\neight days later and on various\noccasions in the present generation\nhas gone the limit in lingering in\nthe lap of spring. This movable\nfeast has a wide spread for its wanderings\u2014anytime from March 22 to\nApril 25.\nNowadays, the annual festival\nobserved throughout Christendom\nto commemorate the resurrection\nof Jesus Christ is marked on the\nGregorian calendar for the first\nSunday after the full moon following the vernal equinox\u2014when the\nsun crosses the equator on its way\nnorth in the spring.\nNO PAGANISM\nUnlike some Christen festivals\nthere Is no taint of paganism In\nEaster's origin but the controversy over the date of celebration\nIs as old as Christianity Itself.\nFor many centuries the so-called\neastern churches argued with the\nwestern on this questions. The\ncouncil of Nlcaea in A.D. 326 tried\nto settle It but the vagaries of\nthe sun and moon thwarted the\nwell-intentioned efforts of the ecclesiastics by appearing at varied\ntimes In different longitudes.\nCorrections to the Gregorian calendar in 1582 smoothed matters to\nsome extent but ii! was not until\n1752 that Great Britain and Ireland\nand British possessions got into step\nwith other nations for Easter. Some\nof the eastern churches still ignore\nthe Gregorian calendar in this respect and their Easter may fall\ncither before or after the date kept\nby the majority ot Christian countries.\nIN CALENDAR REFORM\nThere'* is a modern trend to the\ncontroversy over the data ot Easter\nin the effect of its mobility on the\ncase for calendar reform. Sponsors\nof the proposed \"world calendar\"\u2014 ,\nall years alike and all quarters\nequal\u2014point to the movabilitjr of\nEaster as one of the grave defects\nof the present set-up of dates.\n\"As a result, school and college\nheads have sizeable\u2014and recurrent\nvacation problems,\" writes Jane\nCorby in the Journal of Calendar\nReform. \"Women are equally affected with men, on all these\ncounts, ot course, but they also\nhave a more personal Interest in\nthe vagaries of the calendar. Grave\nlosses are laid to the calendar, just\non Easter's'account. If it's too early\npeople go on wearing their winter\nclothes and buy no spring togs; if\nit's very late, everybody thinks it's\ntoo late to bother about spring\nclothes anyway.\"\nPromoters of the new calandar\nwould spot Easter on some Sunday\nIn  March  or April\u2014stabilise  It\nthrough a conference of Christian\ndenominations.\nWhile the origin and object ot\nEaster is strictly Christian the name\nitself, also the German designation\n\"Ostern\" like the days of the week,\nis thought to be derived from the\nfeast of tlje Teutonic goddess \"Eos-\ntre\" or \"Ostera\" worshipped by\nSaxons of past centuries as the\ndivinity of spring. Names of the\ndays of the week were taken from\nthe same Teutonic mythology.\nBolton H. Pearson nad son, Bill, of\nNelson arrived Tuesday to visit\nMrs. Pearson's parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nG. Hunter Gardner Sr. . . . Mrs. G.\nWalton of. Burton visited at the\nhome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. I. Moseley, Tuesday. . . . Mrs.\nAshdown of Burton was a Nakusp\nvisitor Tuesday.\nAINSWORTH, B.C.\u2014Mr. and Mrs.\nSherraden, Mr. and Mrs. B. Di-\nvall, J. Griffen, R. Griffon and W.\nHowser were visitors to Nelson on\nSaturday. . . . Mrs. J. B. Fletcher\nand. her daughters Corinne and\nDoris were in Nelson Saturday . . .\nMr. and Mrs. F. J. Dumas and Miss\nMavis Fletcher were among visitors\nto Nelson Saturday. ... Mr. and\nMrs. A. Norberg and family motored Nelson Saturday. ... Mr. and\nMrs. J. J. Scott of Procter were in\ntown Saturday for the Campbell-\nEfyan wedding. . . . Among guests\nfrom out of town for the wedding\non Saturday were Mrs. A. McQueen,\nRonald McQueen and Mr. and Mrs.\nW. Driver, of Kaslo.. . . Miss Eileen\nFletcher who attends high school\nin Kaslo spent the week-end at her\nhome. here.. .'. Ernie Delpuppo and\nSanto Delpuppo of Nelson were\nweekend visitors in town. .. . Mr.\nand Mrs. A. A. Vassar and Miss Ban-\nscesco of Nelson were here Sunday.,\n. . . R. Bell jr. and Stan McLellan\nhave returned from Ymir and district. . . . Ted Repp was a visitor\nto Nelson and Trail at the weekend. ... A. Norberg returned to\nYmir on Sunday after spending the\nv\/eek-end with his family, Bob Bell\nsr,, motored to Nelson with him.\nV* Questions ??\nANSWERS\nThis column ot questions and\nanswers is open to any reader ot\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\ncase will the name of the person\nasking the question ba published.\nSLOCAN   CITY  \u2014  The   Ladles'\nAid of St. Andrew's Presbyterian\nchurch met at the home of Miss\nIrene Grant Thursday. Those present were Mrs. R. Cook, president;\nMrs, J. Law, Mrs. J. Life, Mrs. T.\nRussell, Mrs. E. Paterson, Mrs. W.\nMiddleton, Mrs. J. McGuire, Mrs.\nS. Grant, Miss Irene Grant. After\nbusiness tea was served. . . Mrs.\nW. Parker and young son, W. H.\nParker left Saturday for Trail to\njoin Mr. Parker who is employed\nthere. . . Mrs. T. McNlesh, Mrs. R.\nL. Reynolds, Miss Carol Purney and\nW. E. Graham were visitors to New\nDenver Thursday.\nROBSON \u2014 Mrs: Alex Miller-and\nMrs. R. Webster of Trail were Robson visitors on Friday to attend the\nDramatic society banquet. . . About\nthirty members and friends of the\nRobson Amateur Oramatic society\nattended the drama festival in Nelson on Wednesday. . . L. Craufurd\nof Nelson conducted the Church\nof England service at Robson Sunday morning.\nG. B\u201e Kimberley\u2014Where  Is  the\nlongest  railway  tunnel  in  the\nworld and how long is it?\nTlie Simplon, Switzerland-Italy Is\nthe longest. It is 12.26 miles long.\nThe Moffet, 6.09 miles is the longest In the U. S. and the Connaught,\n5 miles long, the longest in Canada.\nJ. H., Balfour\u2014Can you give me a\nsimple method ot waterproofing a\ncanvas tent?\nThe following will make a tent\nwaterproof without making it stilt\nand hard to handle: Dissolve 2 lbs.\nsoft soap in a quart of hot water.\nAdd one pound of iron sulphate.\nThis makes an iron soap which\nmust be washed and dried and mix--\ned with linseed oil. The soap prevents the oil from cracking and at\ntho same time water has no effect\non it. Wet the canvas thoroughly\nbefore immersing in the solution\nas it will be more absorbent when\nwet.\nX. Z\u201e Trail-What are the tallest\n'buildings in the world and how\nhigh are they?\nThe Empire State building 1248\nfeet; Chrysler Building, 1030 feet,\nboth in New York; Eiffel Tower,\nParis, 985 feet; Radio Building, New\nYork, 840 feet; Bank ot Manhattan,\nNew York, 838 feet and Woolworth's,\nNew York, 792 feet.\nK. K. C\u201e Nelson-What is the population of Edmonton, Alta.?\nAccording to the 1936 census the\npopulation is 85,676.\nCurious, Nelson\u2014How old are Fritz\nKreisler and Efrem Zimbalist?\nKrclsler was born in Vienna in\n1875 and  Zimbalist was born at\nRostoff on the Don, Russia, in 1889.\nB. F. F., Kimberley\u2014What are the\nusual instruments in a dance orchestra?\nThe average dance orchestra consists of from five to nine pieces\nand the instruments vary, usually\nconsisting qf piano, violin, drums,\nbanjo, saxophones and cornet or\ntrumpet.\n\"God has given us tongues that\nwe may say something pleasant to\nour fellow man\"\u2014Heine.\nAINSWORTH, B. C.-The home of\nMr. and Mrs. J, McCallum was the\nscene of a pretty wedding Saturday afternoon when. Mrs. Mary\nCampbell of Trail, daughter of\nMrs, McCallum became the bride of\nJ. E. Bryan, also of Trail. Rev.\nFielding Shaw of Kaslo performed\nthe ceremony. The bride's sister,\nMrs. George McPherson of Nelson\nwas her sister's attendant. Mr. Bryan was supported, by his brother.\nA number of out of town guests\nand relatives were present. A wedding supper was served to 30 guests,\nafter which dancing was enjoyed.\nNAKUSP, B.C.--W. J. D. Rogers\nof Arrow Park was a business visitor to town on Tuesday. . . . F.\nMiller was a visitor from Burton.\n, Bert Buerge. of Fauquier is\nspending a few days in town at the\nhome of his parents, Mr. and Mrs,\nR. Buerge. . . . G. Dodds has ra-\nturned from Lardeau. . . . Mrs. G.\nLea and family of Arrow Park spent\nMonday in Nakusp.. . . Among the\noijj-of-town shoppers in Nakusp on\nTuesday were Mr. and Mrs. H.\nKnelson of Arrow Park. . .' . Mrs.\nLooking Backward...\nTEN YEARS AGO\nApril 15, 1928\nMrs. O. Bisson, Miss Marion Bis-\nson and Miss Dorothy Bisson of\nRossland ' left for Spokane\u2014Miss\nFrances McHardy of Rossland is\nvisiting in Coeur d'Alene, Ida\u2014B.\nT. O'Grady, assistant resident engineer, returned from Renata\u2014Mrs,\nG. D. Nagle, Victoria street, had as\nher guest her brother, Philbert\nErickson of Kaslo\u2014Miss Elizabeth\nGalbraith, who teaches at Tarrys, is\nvisiting Mrs. Mocke, Houston street.\n\u2014Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Shaw, Carbonate street, have as their guest\nMr. Shaw's sister, Miss Nellie Shaw,\nR.N., of Grand Forks\u2014E. Lupton\nand his son of Vancouver were\nguests of Mrs. W. H. Walker, Vernon street.\nto town a black wolf skin, which he\nshot at Sunshine Bay on the Arrow lake.\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WASK.\n__\nTHIRTY  YEARS  AGO\nApril 15, 1908\nG. G. S. Lindsay, K.C., of Fernie,\npresident of the Crow's Nest Pass\nCoal company, received word of his\nfather's deatli at Toronto. His father was Charles Lindsey, former\neditor of the Toronto Leader.\u2014Duncan Ross, M.P. for Yale-Cariboo,\nwas nominated by the Liberal convention at Vernon for the coming\nelection.\u2014A. Larson is making a\n$500 extension on the Kootenay\n(Steam Laundry at the east end of\nBaker street. About $1500 of machinery will be placed .in the 50x12-\nfoot addition.\u2014Mrs. J. W. Holmes\nreturned from spending the winter\nin California.\u2014A prospector brought\nHove You Any\nUsed\nGARDEN\nHOSE\nx\n\u25a0\nWhy Not Turn\nThem Into Cash\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (2) lines 6 times 80c net\nTwo  (2) lines race 20c net\nNelson Daily News\nPHONE 144\n NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-FRIDAY MORNING*. APRIL IB.\nDoubles Champions In Trait\nRoland Webb (left) and Ed Kalcy, winners of the men's doubles In\nthe recent Trail city championships.\nMrs. W. E. Jackson (left, and Mrs. V. C. Huycke, who won the ladies'\ndoubles.\n__*\n1 k    \u00ab \"mam\nt_m\n'* MM\nJmmmmmT^^'               ^^VWf         tt          M        \u25a0\n1WFZmw ^^Bi\nH                         '             ;%1                     Ml     -j\nHI\n:. : r. . r...   !\u25a0\nIE*                  *^^H\n\u25a0C-u? *   f I\nW&M$Wm\\m\nHtHf                      k ^H \u25a0-\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0.-.*.\nWwfXi^^^^s\nSfc.r\u00bb-7i^a\n\u25a0 s*                        T;:^p   '                            1\ni\\-r C\\;M-**JPP\nHal          \"              ' 9 \u25a0\n1\nW>^$*?$Zm\nIB*ii>      ttJ\niKi^ffiEHlk,\n$*_\u25a0 -J\n\u00ab^f^^-\u2022i'-,i*'t5SW          *\nr~^~\"\"^i\n_            : ,lS**^'-*1*^^\n\\tf                    t\n\u25a0\/      I                  Pi\nIpS*-^;.\nfJO;       \u2022B\n1\nH   fl\nI                     ' 3^-*'*1\n1\n-C&   .*\u25a0\n1\n\\         .71\nI\nj. * Vvl-SBB\n1   ;           JqfeX\n*\"*m4\nNed Rhodes and Mrs. J. Turner, who took the mixed doubles title.\nITICANDHEARTS, POINT APART,\nWAVE HARD GAMES FOR WEEKEND\n\u2022GLASGOW, April 14 (CP Cable)\n\u2022Midweek matches resulted in some\n\u2022visions in the Scottish football\nlague table but the duel between\nleltic and Hearts for the champion-\nlip and the last-ditch struggle of\nI least seven teams to retain ma-\n|r league status keeps interest at a\nIgh pitch in the fast-dying cam-\nlign.\nIWhen Hearts triumphed 2-1 over\n\u25a0orton yesterday, the points kept\nllinburgh's squad In the title hunt,\nIly one point behind Cells. With\nI points and a much-superior goal\nlerage Celtic has four games to\npy while Hearts have three.\nNo  Good  Friday   contests   arc\nheduied and on Saturday Celtic\nJes to Dundee where the home\nInn Is fighting to avoid demotion,\n[arts visit Arbroath for the Gay-\nlid Park outfit's last match of the\npson. The championship contend-\ni will need to play at top form\nnatch maximum points.\nAt the other end of the league\nwhere Morton is certain of relegation, the question of the Greenock\nteam's partner to Junior company\nmainly concerns Clyde and Queen\nof the South. Both are bracketed in\n18th position with 29 points but\nClyde has three games to play,\none more than the Dumfries players. Clyde has a home fixture with\nHamilton Academicals at the weekend but Queen of the South is idle,\nthe game with Aberdeen having\nbeen played earlier in the year.\nOnly   slightly   better   off   than\n\u00a7ueen of the South and Clyde arc\namilton Ayr United, Kilmarnock,\nQueen's Park and Dundee. Queen's\nPark entertain \"the third-place Rangers while Ayr is away lo Falkirk,\nLONDON, (CP) \u2014 Two men, accused of stealing a car, were found\nplaying football at a park here by\npolice who waited until the match\nended and arrested them '\nSPORTING NEWS\nHockey Figures\nan Argument for\nNew Trail Rlnk\nTRAIL, B. C, April 13-A review\nof attendance statistics in the six\ncities In the West Kootenay Hockey\nleague during the past season points\nto one inescapable conclusion\u2014that\nTrail sorely needs a new skating\nrink to accommodate Its hockey\ncrowds.\nLethbridge, with an urban and\nadjacent rural population of approximately 15,000, drew an attendance of 33,500 cash customers to 13\nleague games during the 1937-38\nseason. In Trail, with an urban and\nsuburban population of over 12,-\n000 only 19,989 were willing to endure the discomforts of an overcrowded rink to see 15 games.\nAccording to figures supplied by\nJ. A. Wadsworth, secretary of British Columbia Amateur Hockey association, Lethbridge Maple Leafs\nplayed to the largest crowds in the\nloop with Trail Smoke Eaters next\nin line. Nelson, where 13 league\ngames were played, was third with\n11,683 spectators. Kimberley fans\nturned out 13,438 strong to 14 loop\nfixtures. In Coleman, with Lethbridge a newcomer to the West Kootenay circuit this season, 12 games\nwere attended by 7416 spectators.\nAn equal number of loop tussles\ndrew 3000 customers in Rossland.\nSmoke   Eaters * were   the   most\nSmoke Eaters Now Favorites\nfor Second Qame on Saturday\ncrowd pleasing club In the circuit,\naccording to the statistics. They set\na record as the biggest drawing\ncard for any one game in Kimberley,\nLethbridge and Nelson. They made\na aeason mark In Lethbridge when\nan outpouring of 3087 paying customers Jammed the renovated arena\non the Trail team's lint appearance. Smoke Eaters played before\n2328 spectators In their last showing In the Nelson civic centre arena,\nand were popular favorites in Kimberley, where the attendance was\n1656 at their opening game against\nDynamiters.\nDuring the season 92,076 specta.\ntors paid to see 79 games, an average of 1165 per game. Of these, 78,-\n725 were adults and 13,351 children.\nThe game found Its greatest support\namong Junior fans in Lethbridge,\nwhere 5400 paid to see games during\nthe season. Trail boyB and girls had\na slight edge on Kimberley with\n2402 attending against 2350 In the\nebneentrator town.\nDespllje-ti>e rIsln? popularity of\nthe Lethbridge Leafs, whose second performance here was seen by\n2105 spectators, Dynamiters packed\nthe largest crowds Into Trail rlnk.\nIn their second game here 2686\ncrowded to the rafters of the old\nRiverside street building.\nCornwall RIghl-Winger in Hospital;\nCoach Says He Was Cross-Checked on\nHead and Butt-Ended In the Stomach\nDick Kowcinak Severely Bruised on Chest in\nCrash With 212-Pound Flyer Rear-Guard,\nBut Piper Says He'll Play Tomorrow\nSASKATOON, April 14 (CP)-\nCornwall Flyers' Allan cup stock\nsank lower today as word came out\nof the eastern Canada champions'\ncamp that Harvey McClelland, hard\nshooting right winger, was in hospital.\nCoach Don Pennlston reported\nMcClelland was cross-checked over\nthe head and butt-ended in the\nstomach In the series opener last\nnight when Trail Smoke Eaters\ncame from behind in the third period and won 6-4 in overtime.\nThe burly Cornwall coach said he\ndid not know whether the first\nstring forward would be able to\nstart in the second game of the\nbest-of-five series at Calgary Saturday.'But an attending physician\nstated there was a good chance that\nMcClelland would play.\nThe textile town outfit had a\nlight skating practice today but\nSmoke Eaters rested before their\ndeparture tonight for Calgary.\nThe \"third period\" pucktters from\nthe Rocky mountains never work\nout the day after a game.\nCORNWALL TO\nARRIVE SATURDAY\nThe Cornwall board of stratgey\nhas decided to lay over in Saskatoon until Friday night, hoping to\narrive in Calgary late enough Saturday that any possible reaction\nfrom the change of altitude will not\nset in until after the game that\nnight. They figure they will be acclimatized for the third contest\nMonday.\nAll Smoke Eaten were In top\n\u2022hape except Dlok Kowolnak, diminutive left winger who scored\nwhat proved to be the winning\ngoal last night on a pretty solo\nrush In overtime.\nThe former member of the 1937\nDominion Champion Winnipeg\nMonarch juniors staggered off the\nice in the second period after big\nMilke McMahon, Flyers' 212-pound\nrearguard, caught him squarely.\nKowcinak rallied enough to count\nthe winning goal but after the game\nit was found he had been bruised\nseverely across the chest. Coach\nElmer Piper said he would be playing Saturday.\nPennistor figured the officiating\nwas a \"little lax\" last night but\nadded he was \"all right\".\n\"We lost that game ourselves,\"\nthe coach added. \"We'll have to do\na little better.\"\nNo definite announcement has\nbeen made but It wai expeoted\n\"Army\" Armstrong of Oshawa,\nOnt., and Pete Sande of Calgary\nwould be the referees for the second encounter.\nFear Adding Machine Necessary If Kootenay\nBoys Can Get Around to Playing Hockey\nin First Two Periods of a Game\nSCRIBE SAYS SCODELLARO LOOKED BAD\nON 2 GOALS; FLYERS GOALIE ON TOES\nBy LORNE BRUCE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nSASKATOON, April 14 (CP)\u2014If Trail Smoke Eaters can ever git\naround again to playing hockey In the first two periods of a game,\nscorekeepers probably will need an adding machine but the fans will\nmlu the thrills of their dynamic finishes.\nThi \"comeback\" boys did everything wrong hire last night In\nthe first and second sessions of the Allan cup finals Inaugural garni\nand then broke loose.\nThree goals in the third stanza earned a 3-3 tie and another trio in\n10 minutes of overtime brought a 6-4 victory over Cornwall Flyers.\nSmoke Eaters' stretch rally installed them as favorites for the second\nA game of the best of five series at\nCalgary Saturday.\nJoe Benoit and DaVe Duchak with\ntwo each, Bunny Dame and Dick\nKowcinak were the Trail marksmen.\nPERRAS DELAYED\nVICTORY\nThe British Columbians might\nhave won In regular time but for\nfine work of Floyd Perras in the\nCornwall nets. He stopped 31 shots.\nThree of them, in the last minute\nof regular time, off Benoit's stick\nlooked like sure goals. He had no\nchance on the six that beat him.\nAt the other end Duke Scodellaro looked bad on Cornwall's\nsecond and third period goals. He\nfailed to play thi two anglo shots\neorroctly.\nHarvey McClelland, Flyer right\nwinger, was Just about parallel with\nthe goal oh the right boards in the\nsecond period when he fired a high\nshot that Scodellaro never saw as it\nwent inside and caught an upper\ncorner on the other side.\nIn the third Conny Brown raced\nin from the left side after taking a\npass from big Mike McMahon and\nthe Trail netminder failed to get\nnear his low hard shot.\nOther goals for the eastern Canada champions were counted by Ab\nMacDonald in the first and Dick\nProulx in overtime.\nFANS OUT OF SEATS\nCoach Elmer Piper's streamlined\nbrand of hockey with its intricate\npassing looked ineffective for two\nperiods against the tight defence-\nquick break style shown by the\northodox Ontario outfit but when\nthe plays began to click In the third\nperiod and overtime, they had the\n5600 fans out of their seats most of\nthe time.\nHARROP WINS IN\nSOFTBALL GAME\nPROCTER, B.C.-The first soft-\nball game of the season was played\nApril 10 at Harrop when Procter\nDiamonds lost to Harrop Outlaws\n14-2. After the Procter team had\ntied the score 10-10 in the ninth\ninning, the Harrop club went on to\nscore four runs in an extra inning\nwhile holding the visitors to two.\nHallam MacKinnon, pitcher, and\nBud Mclvor. catcher, made up the\nbattery for Procter while Tom\nHolmes, pitcher, and William Howard, catcher, performed for the losers.\nThe visitors' lineup included two\nsubstitutes in place of regular players, absent at the time. The teams\nwill meet again at Procter- on April\n17.\nUmpires were Bert Fitchett and\nRaymond Hong. Miss Evelyn Rowley was score keeper.\nTeams:\nHarrop \u2014 William Howard, Tom\nHolmes, Fred Ferguson, Cyril Fitchett, Lon Merriam, Vivian Rowley,\nWalter Fitchett, W. D. Ogilvie and\nSam Podmoroff.\nProcter \u2014 Bud Mclvor, Hallam\nMacKinnon, Henry Johnson, Gilbert McMullin, Maurice Major, Colin Major, Frances McMullin, Angus\nMacKinnon and Jim Heighton.\nBEST BEAU WINS\nSAN MATEO, Cal., April 14 (AP)\n\u2014Setting all the pace, Best Beau, a\nlong shot, won the feature race on\nthe Theatre Day program at Bay\nMeadows today, defeating Wild\nTurkey by one-half length. Real\nClear was third.\nBest Beau ran the mile and one-\nsixteenth in 1:44 4-5 and rewarded\nhis pari-mutuel followers with a\npayments of $16.60. $5.40 and $3.\nWild Turkey paid $4.80 and $3. Heal\nClear paid $3.\nThere will be no racing tomorrow, Good Friday.\nNEW YORK, April 14 (AP) -\nLou Daro, Los Angeles promoter,\nsaid today he had offered Jim Londos, former world wrestling champion, $25,000 for a match this June\nat Wrigley FielfJ, Los Angeles,\nagainst Bronko Nagurski, ex-Minnesota football star and title claimant. Nagurski, Daro said, already\nhas accepted terms.\nLINCOLN, England (CP)- The\ndaily double at the recent racemeet\nhere brought rich winnings to one\nracegoer. For an outlay of 10 shillings ($2.50) he received \u00a3816 ($4080)\n\u2014odds of 1,632 to 1.\nNORTHAMPTON, England (CP)\n\u2014A. H. Bakewell, Northamptonshire\ncricket star out of the game since\n1936 owing to motor accident Injuries, is unlikely to play this sea-\n| son, having undergone an arm operation.\nSPORTS ROUNDUP...\nBy 8ID FEDER\n(Plnch-hlttlng for Eddie Brlitz)\nNEW YORK, April 14 (AP).-\nFor a couple of old guys giving\nPop Time Ihe willies, take a look\nat Tony Lazzerl and Luke Sewell. .\n. old Poosh 'em Pop is hitting a\nmere 519 for the Cubs this spring,\nand Luke shows a .478 mark for the\nWhite Sox. . . The Indians have\ntagged that famous Giants' pitching\nfor only 10 homers in eight games.\n. . . Larry MacPhail says Van Mun-\ngo'll be the National league's top\nflinger this year.... Will old\nHonus Wagner break into the movies after the 1938 season?. . . In a\nbaseball picture, of course. . . Col.\nE. R. Bradley'll be back in the\nKentucky Derby in '39... His stables are packed with 23 juveniles.\n. . . The Puerto Rican legislature\nre-named the island's hall park\n\"Sixto Escobar Athletic Park\" In\nhonor of the bantamweight champ.\n. .. Tarzan Taylor, Marquette's line\ncoach, is getting the business from\nthe boys around the campus. .. A\nphotographer snapped him with a\nbunch of roses, a gift of co-eds,\nand he's been steaming ever since.\n. .. Jimmy Braddock referees in his\nhome town (West New York, N. J.)\nMay 19 for the first time. . . He'll\nbe the third man when Gus Lesne-\nvlch and Buddy Ryan tangle in\nLew Diamond's Miller stadium promotion. ... In case you haven't\nheard, Jimmy Dykes is more worried than he's letting on about the\nWhite Sox shortstopping and hitting. . . M. D. Burgess, Watertown\nS. D.) sports ed, teed oft the other\nday and hit a ghopher on the 'head\non the sixth hole of the municipal\ncourse . .. \"Needless to say,\" writes\nBurgess, \"friend gopher was disinterested In future living.\".\nOnlyWorldWar\nWill Postpone\nOlympic Games\nNEW YORK, April 14 (AP) -\nNothing short of a world war will\nprevent the Olympic games from\nbeing held \"somewhere\" in 1940,\nAvery Brundage declared today\nupon his return from the international Olympic committee meeting\nat Cairo.\nJapan now is going ahead full-\nspeed withpreparations to hold the\ngames in Tokyo, confident all obstacles in their path will be cleared,\nbut with a warning from the I.O.C.\nto keep its \"grave -responsibilities\"\nfully in mind.\nBrundage disclosed the I.O.C. contemplates holding the 1940 games on\na modified basis elsewhere if, for\nany reason, Tokyo decides to give\nthem up.\nKrall Again to\nManage Miners\nNATAL, B.C.-Wlth a large attendance the Natal Miners Baseball\nclub was reorganized for the 1938\nseason Sunday. The following officers were elected: Hon. president,\nH. P. Wilson, Fernie; Hon. vice-\npresident, G. Fisher, Natal; president, A. Krall, Natal, replacing T.\nAndrolick, Natal; vice-president, A.\nWalker, Natal, replacing B, Dryden,\nBellevue; secretary-treasurer, P.\nChala, Natal; executive, J. Zima.\nMichel; Father Harrison, Michel;\nand P. Zeith, Natal.\nLouis Krall of Natal was again\nchosen as manager of the Natal\nMiners.\nIt was decided to form a town\nJunior league to give all the youngsters a chance to play.\nThe repairing of the baseball field\nwill continue.\n38 ENTRIES FOR\nKING'S PLATE RACE\nTORONTO, April 14 (CP).-Headed by Suffern, winter-book favorite,\n38 thoroughbreds were nominated\nfor the 1938 running of the King's\nPlate, Canadian turf classic, at\nWoodbine Park May 21, the Ontar-\nion Jockey club announced today.\nThe race Is open to three and\nfour-year-olds, foaled and trained\nin Ontario, that have never won a\nrace other than events for two-year-\nolds. The winner receives 50 guineas, donated by the King, and the\nmajor portion of a $7500 added\npurse.\nPACIFIC C0A8T  LEAGUE\nSeattle 1, Los Angeles 5.\n-PAGE SEVEN\n'You Fellows Had Me Scared for\nAwhile'Says Piper;'We Threw II\nAway Ourselves\/ Says Pennlston\nHard-Fighting Cornwall Boys Wonder How It\nHappened as Trailites Pound Each Other;\n'.One Up, Two to Go\/ Cries Kowcinak\n8ASKATOON, S\u00bbk\u201e April 14 (CP)\u2014There wasn't much talking\nIn either drilling room for several minutes aftir Trail Smoke Eaters\nand Cornwall Flyeri finished 10 minutes of overtime hire last night\nIn the first game of the Allan cup hockey finals.\nThi British Columbia champions wire too happy after coming\nfrom behind to difeat tha eaitermri 6-4, and too busy pounding tach\nother on the hiad and shoulders. The Hard-fighting Flyers were\nwondering, how they lit that two-goal lead slip away In the third\nperiod.\n\"Well, you fellows had ma\nicarad for a while,\" sold Elmer\nPiper, soft-spoken Trail coach, as\nhli chargei stopped their pummelling and began to undress.\n\"But, boy, what a comeback,\"\n\"One up and two to go,\" shouted\nDick Kowcinak, bushy-haired left\nwinger who scored lone handed and\ngot an assist in overtime.\nDon Penniston, Cornwall's hefty\ncoach who has instilled some of his\nown \"fight\" into Flyers, moaned\n\"We threw that away ourselves.\nNow we got to win the hard way.\"\nEmphasizing he wasn't offering\nany alibis, Pennlston laid his\nplayers found It hard to breathe\nduring thi game and seemed to\nhi \"filled up around thi chest.\"\nGolfers Held Up by\nSnow Still on links\nWith mow reported still on the\ngolf links last Sunday, golfers of the\nNelson Golf Si Country club will\nbe held up for another week or two\nbefore the greens are In condition\nfor play. Charlie Blunt, \"pro\" of\nthe club last season, li back and\nhard at work getting things in\nship shape. Golfers estimated it\nwould take a week for the snow to\nmelt and another week for links to\ndry out sufficiently to allow them\nto start \"swlngin' the irons.\"\nRed Dutton Considers Joe Benoit\nWhalHeNeedson Right Wing of\nAmericans; Pal Egan Also lo Join\nR. H. Maber's trundlers nosed out\nNick Cassios' lads 1700-1712 Wednesday night on the Canadian Legion alley ih Collinson cup competition play. Maber headed his squad,\nclaiming high aggregate scoring\nhonors with 529 points and high individual honors with 211 points.\nEach team In the tourney has\nabout three more games to play\nbefore the season ends about April\n29.\nTeams in order of first, second,\nthird and fourth, Wednesday night\nwere:\nMaber\u2014 H. Sutherland, J. Aurillo,\nN. Jackson and Maber.\nCassios \u2014 J. Ford, Vic Graves,\nRcss Riley and Cassios.\nFIGHTS\nAKRON, 0. - Ray Sharkey, Cleveland, and Chief Baoy Miller, Florida, drew (10); (weights unavailable).\nOSHAWA GENERALS IN UPSET WIN\nBY MOVER ST. BONIFACE SEALS\nTORONTO, April 14 (CP)-Osh-\nawa's unpredictable Generals set\nthe experts back off their heels tonight when they defeated St. Boniface Seals 4-2 in the third game\nof the Memorial cup hockey series.\nEntering the game on the short\nend of 2-1 odds, the eastern champions, inspired by the sensational\nwork ot Bob Forster, were never\nbehind after they opened the scoring\nearly in the second period.\nThe Manitobans came back to\ntie the score shortly after that but\nfailed to match a three goal splurge\nin the final frame.\nShowing a decided reversal of\nform from Tuesday night's game,\nwhich they dropped 4-0, Ihe gallant\nGenerals won because they were\nthere in the pinches.\nOutshot and  oubkated by  the\nspeedy Seals, Oshawa hung on grimly, making the most o\u00a3 their scoring\nchances.\nFor sustained speed and spectacular play, the game eclipsed any of\nthe two previous contests and the\ncrowd of 7706 never once stopped its\nclamor.\nFirst period\u2014Scoring, none.\nPenalties \u2014 Taylor, McGregor,\nTonn (2).\nSecond period\u20141, Oshawa, Taylor\n3:31; 2, St. Boniface, Burron (Gordon, Simpson) 5:30.\nPenalties\u2014Burron, Knipfel.\nThird period\u20143, Oshawa, Tonn\n(Taylor) :52; 4, Oshawa, Taylor\n(Shortt) 2:21; 5, St. Boniface, Stanowski 12:32; 6, Oshawa, Shortt (Dafoe)  17:08.\nPenalties \u2014 McGregor, Knipfel\nBrunell.\nCALGARY, April 14 (CP)-Mer-\nvyn (Red) Dutton, manager of the\nNew York Americans In the National Hockey league, returned to\nhis Calgary home from the hockey\nwars today and announced he was\nprepared to talk player deals with\nany clubs.\nDutton said he was going to bring\n\"new blood\" into the ranks of the\nAmericans next season.\n\"I am going to bring up some\nyoung players,\" he said.\n\"Pat Egan, a Calgary boy, who\nplayed with Sudbury last season,\nwill be with the club and Joe\nBenoit, former Edmonton Junior\nnow with the Trail Smoke Eaters,\nwill be given a trial. We need a\nright winger and I consider he is\nthe player.\" Pat Egan was formerly\nwith the Nelson, B.C., team.\nHe also plans to obtain Wilf\nFields, a Seattle defenceman and a\n\"forward by the name of Thompson\nwho was with one of the Regina\nclubs the past season\".\nDutton had no announcement to\nmake on the reported deal which\nwould send Nels Stewart and \"Hool-\ney\" Smith to the Montreal Maroons.\nCommenting on the Stanley cup\nseries he said the Americans got a\n\"bad break\".\n\"Had our team been allowed that\ngoal scored In Chicago with less\nthan five minutes left to play the\nclub would have been in the finals\nagainst Toronto Maple Leafs. There\nwas nothing wrong with the goal.\"\nAnother Decision\nfor Packy Paul\nLONDON, April 14 (CP Cable)-\nPacky Paul, heavyweight from\nRichdale, Alta., tonight took a decision on points over Len Rowlands\nof London in an eight-round boxing\nmatch.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy thi Canadian Press\nTommy Farr, rock-Jawed battler\nfrom Wales, punched out a 12-round\ndecision over Max Baer at London\none year ago tonight and rocketed\ninto the forefront of world's heavyweight championship contendera.\nDefeated by Joe Louis and Jimmy\nBraddock, Farr recently dropped a\nsizzling 15-round verdict to Baer.\nDudas Hopes lo Outbox Schmeling\nin Hamburg Tune-Up Fight Saturday\nHAMBURG, Germany, April 14\u2014\n(CP)\u2014Steve Dudas, veteran heavyweights from Edgewater, N.J., said\ntoday he would rely on his boxing\nability rather than punching power\nwhen he meets Max Schmeling over\nthe 15-round route here Saturday\nnight.\nThe bout was arranged as a final\n\"tuneup\" for Schmeling before he\nmeets Joe Louis, June 22, in the\nUnited States for the World heavyweight title.\nSchmelihg, firm in the belief he\nwill defeat Dudas\u2014and he ls far\nfrom being alone in that belief-\nplans to leave immediately after the\nDudas bout to train for Louis in tha\nUnited States.\nGerman writers hava been Impressed with the American's showing. They regard him as the strongest rival Schmeling will face in the\nseries of \"tuneups\", the last of which\nwas a decision over Ben Foord. Although the schlaeger won that one\nby a wide margin, the result was a\ndisappointment to most German experts, who had looked for a knockout.\nIn addition to the main event,\nthere is a good deal of interest in\nthe semi-final, a 12-rounder between\nWalter Neusel, Germany's No. 2\nheavyweight, and Foord.\nEASTERWEEK-END TO SEE ENGLISH\nTEAMS PLAY THREE DAYS OF FOUR\nMove lo Abolish \"Icing-Puck\" Rule\nExpected in(.A-H.A. Meeting Today\nOTTAWA, April 14 (CP)- Preparing for convention floor battles\ntomorrow, leaders of the Canadian\nAmateur Hockey association huddled in hotel rooms tonight working on proposed resolutions \u2022 and\nrule changes.\nTlie annual meeting got away to\na low-gear start today when only\na brief session was held. It moveB\ninto high tomorrow with a full-dress\nmeeting at which several contentious matters are expected to be\ndiscussed,\nIt was considered certain the rule\ncommittee would recommend throw\ning out the \"icing the puck\" rule\nwhich causes delays.\nThe rule penalizes a full-strength\nteam by a faceoff near Its goal it a\nplayer hsots the puck up the ice to\nget it out of his defence zone and it\npasses over two blue lines.\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJnmleson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nLONDON, April 14 (CP Cable)-\nEaster holidays\u2014Testing time for\nEngland's footballers \u2014 will see\nleague teams in action three times\nin four days. All but 10 of the\nteams in the league's four divisions\nstart the gruelling program tomorrow, idle clubs completing the schedule with matches on Easter Tuesday Good Friday and Easter Monday finds the same clubs in oppo\nsition, home and away games being carded. The series will go a\nlong way towards deciding promotion and relegation struggles although in some divisions it appears\nlikely these will not be cleared up\nuntil the last matches of the season\nMay 7.\nArsenal's three-point margin at\nthe top of the first division looks\nbig as top-notch squads start the\nclosing drive for the championship.\nThe Gunners meet strong opponents in Brentford and Birmingham,\nbut their supporters are counting on\ncoolness and experience to carry the\nLondoners to the champibnship.\nDrake, veteran centre-forward, returns to Arsenal's team for the home\nmatch against Brentford tomorrow.\nHapgood, Copping and Bastin who\nplayed for England last Saturday\nwill also be in the lineup.\nTHREE BRACKETED\nA8 RUNNERS-UP\nBracketed in the runner-up position are Preston North End, Wolverhampton Wanderers and Middlesbrough while despite recent lapses, the young Wolves squad is looked upon as Arsenal's most dangerous rival.\nWanderers may take the points In\ntwo games with Leicester City but\nSaturday's home match with Preston, English cup finalist, should\nprove one of the tightest of the\nholiday series. Preston's other encounters are against Chelsea while\nMiddlesbrough clashes with Liverpool and Blackpool.\nAny one of the last eight clubs\nin the first division may find itself\nin lower company next season.\nGrimsby Town mired in the cellar\nposition will be forced to fight hard\nfor points against Portsmouth and\nLeicester.\nGOOD YEAR\nFOR VILLANS\nAston Villa, second division leader, is enjoying the best financial\nyear in theclub's history. Last year's\nprofit of \u00a38500 ($47,500) will prob-l\nably be exceeded, and directors announced Villa park will be enlarged\nto accommodate 85,000 persons, 10,-\n000 more than ita present capacity.\nVillans, one point up on Manchester United, Sheffield United and\nCoventry, are idle tomorrow. They\nplay Tottenham Hotspurs Saturday,\ncompleting the schedule Monday\nand Tuesday with Swansea Town.\nIn third division, southern section, fight for promotion is a hot\none, with Millwall and Queen's\nPark Rangers out In front. Hull\nCity, Tranmere Rovers and Rotherham United are Joint leaders in the\nnorthern loop.\nARE YOU\nOut of Work?\nFor only 25c cash you can\n\"Tell your Story\" under Situations Wanted.\nFor only 25c cash your advertisement will run a week\n(6 Insertions).\nFor only 25c cash your\nqualifications will be read\nby over 6000 readers In the\nKootenay District each day.\nWHY WAIT? Come in or\nmail in your advertisement\nand 25c.\nNelson Daily News\nCLASSIFIED DEPT.\nNelson, B.C.\n mm\nNELSON DAILV NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING. APRIL 18. 1931.\n\u2122^-\nmmm^W.fi\u00bb .-ii..,.*. ,\u25a0\u25a0*..\nPut Your Goods on the Best Market With a Classified Ad\nNew Sunday Hail\nService lo Ihe Wesl\nIs Being Provided\nA new service providing for mail\nto points west of Nelson to go out\non the morning westbound train on\nSundays is now in effect, R. M. Manahan, postmaster, announced Wednesday. The service was inaugurated Sunday, providing the first Sunday mail to the west in some time.\nThe new Sunday service is a\n\"closed service\". Bags for specified\npoints are made up at the Nelson\npost office and are handled in the\nbaggage car of the train, there being\nno Sunday mail car. The service includes Grand Forks, Greenwood,\nMidway, Rock Creek, Beaverdell,\nPenticton, Princeton, points between\nRuby Creek and Vancouver, and\nVancouver and Victoria.\nPreviously, with no Sunday service to the west, mail received at\nthe post office after the Saturday\nwest mail closed; could not be sent\nout until Monday morning except\nvia Yahk and Spokane at 1:30 a.m.\nSunday, and this service was good\nonly for coast points. The new\nservice covers points between Nelson and the coast.\nSunday mail to Trail, Rossland\nand Castlegar has been provided for\nsome time.\n\"Blues\" for Two\n! Members Battery\nWith two sets of \"blues\" available,\nBombardier C. Boyt and Gunner A,\nL. Clark of the 111th (Nelson) Battery, R.C.A., have been chosen for\ntheir keenness, attendance and so\non as the first members of the battery other than officers and noncommissioned officers to receive the\ndress uniform. The selection was\nmade by Major A. E. Dalgas, officer commanding. The two sergeants-major and four senior ser-\ngents of the battery.\nMajor Dalgas stated It was planned to carry on this method, at least\ntemporarily, until the entire battery was outfitted, unless it should\nbecome possible to obtain the blues\nmore rapidly,\nSingle Delivery\nMail on Friday\nOne delivery of mall by letter carrier will be made Good Friday, and\none Easter Monday, it was stated\nWednesday by R. M. Manahan, postmaster. Saturday service will be\nas ordinarily, two deliveries.\nThe lobby of the post office will\nbe open all day Friday and Monday, but the wickets will be open\nfrom 8 a.m. to 12 noon only.\nGREY OWL TO BE\nBURIED ON SHORES\nHIS BELOVED LAKE\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask., April\n14 (CP) \u2014 Grey Owl noted Indian\nauthor and naturalist who died\nhere yesterday, will be buried on\nthe shores of his beloved Ajawaan\nLake, Prince Albert national park,\nJ. A. Wood, park superintendent,\nannounced today.\nThe funeral services will be held\ntomorrow morning with Canon J.\nI. Strong, of the Anglican church,\nofficiating. The body will be taken to the game conservationist's\nretreat deep in the northland wood.\nTHOMAS' WHISTLE\nIS A CHEST COLD\nPHYSICIANS SAY\nNEW ORLEANS, April 14 (AP)\n\u2014It may be a bad cold to the doctors but it's still a whistle to little Thomas Stanton. Thomas, aged\nsix, told his mother yesterday he\nhad swallowed a whistle.\n\"Hear it?\" he asked, ejecting a\nwheeze.\nHis mother rushed him to a hospital. Physicians heard the wheeze\ntoo, and made an X-ray.\n\"That's no whistle,\" they diagnosed. \"That's a cold in the chest.\nTO START TESTS FOR\nB. C. DRIVERS IN FALL\nVICTORIA, April 14 (CP)- Attorney-General Gordon Wismer of\nBritish Columbia, announced today\nthe provincial police traffic branch\nexpects to be ready early in September to go ahead with testing of\nautomobile drivers in the province.\nIn Vancouver a new building will\nbe constructed in the west end to\nhouse the whole provincial police\n\u25a0office, the public works traffic department and provide space for\nboth driving tests by the provincial\npolice and mechanical testing of automobiles by Vancouver city.\nNelson iaiUj Npwh\nMember of the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll Departments\nSubscription Rate.\nSingle copy .'. \u2022$  .05\nBy carrier, per week _.-    .25\nBy carrier, per year \u2014-.-   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.\t\nOPPOSE PURCHASE OF\nSERUMS AND VACCINES\nCALGARY, April 14 (CP) - A\nresolution asking that no more\npublic monies be used for purchase of serums and vaccines, was\npassed at last night's meeting of\nthe Anti-Vivisection Society here.\nThe resolution will be forwarded\nto city council and the provincial\ngovernment,\nBOXLA LEAGUE SERIES\nSTART MAY 9, COAST\nVANCOUVER, March 14 (CP)-\nFirst game of the 1938 inter city\nbox lacrosse league series will be\nplayed  in New  Westminster May\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie* Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion $ .22\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\nInsertions\n(0 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions ._.\u2014\u2014.\n2 lines, 1 month _,._.\n3 lines, 1 month \t\n.33\n. 1.32\n, 2.86\n, 4.29\nFor advertisements of more than\nthree Hues, calculate on\nthe above basis\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED A YOUNG MAN FOR\nfarm work. Must be good milker\nand handy. Give experience and\nwages expected to Box 948 Daily\nNews. <948)\nWANTEiT^YOUNG MAN FOH\nfarm wk. Must be good Mlkr. and\nhandy. Give experience and wages expected. Box 948 Daily News.\n(948)\nWANTED EXP. GIRL FOR HSWK.\nOnly reliable need apply. Nelson\nGrocery or Ph. 89. (956)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nRate for advertisements under\nthis heading 25c for any required number of lines for six\ndaiys.\nMINING CAMP COOK, 1st CLASS\nman, 20 yrs. experience. Past record gladly furnished. Would like\njob with accommodation for wife\nand family and school for children. No summer camp or small\nprospect job desired. Write J. Mc.\nC, 1502 Columbia Ave., Trail, B. C.\n(967)\nYOUNG MAN ABLE TO DRIVE,\nwishes position as helper on\nfreight, truck or as driver for private party, also able to milk cows\nand accustomed to dairy work\nand poultry. Box 893 Daily News.\nDIESEL ENGINEER ON ALL\ntypes of Industrial, Marine & Stationary Diesel Semi. & C. 1. Air,\nrail or pump injection. Also lineman experience. Box 882 Daily\nNews. (882)\nWORK WANTED FOR MAN Wl'l'H\nDiesel Bulldozer. Building roads\nor surface stripping for mines. Go\nanywhere. Apply Box 876 Daily\nNews. \u00bb876)\nWANTED IMMEDIATELY POS1-\ntion as private secretary, stenographer or clerk. References on\nrequest. Write Box 141 Kindersley,\nSask. (896)\nCLEAN   EXPERIENCED   YOUNG\nWoman  wants steady  work  by\nhour or day with a few families\nin Nelson dist. Box 933 Daily News\n(933)\nA MARRIED WOMAN, AGE 36,\nwants work as housekeeper or\ncook. Apply 913, 6th St., Fairview,\nNelson, B. C. (908)\nELDERLY LADY WANTS Position as companion help to elderly\nlady or couple. Phone 613R.  (963)\nFULLY EXPERIENCED GIRL DE-\nsires store or cafe work immediately. Phone 686. (9131\nA CAPABLE WOMAN WANTS\nwork by the hour. Apply Box 917\nDaily News. (9171\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nFOR SALE GENERAL STORE IN\ninterior town with a good pay roll,\nMerchandise handled, groceries,\nmen's wear, hardware, flour and\n' feed. Will sell entire business or\nGrocery Department. Apply Box\n944 Daily News. (944)\nGETS APPOINTMENT\nEDMONTON, April 14 (CP) -\nCandidate for bachelor of science\ndegree In honors physics at University of Alberta convodation services, May 13, Roy Thomas, Prinw;\nRupert, B. C, has been appointed\ngraduate teaching assistant in\nphysics at the University of Southern  California.\nThomas won board of governor'?\ntuition scholarships in 1935, 1936\nand 1937 and in 1936 was awarded the Edmonton B'nai B'rith\nccholarshiD.\n1\nCAFE FOR SALE IN ROSSLAND.\nExcellent opportunity. Good location. Further particulars, apply\nBox 926 Daily News. (92(1)\nCLASSIFIED MAIL ORDERS\nfrom out-of-town residents given\nprompt attention.\nPERSONAL\nMEN! IF YOU'RE WEAK, WORN-\nout, try raw oyster invigorators\nand other stimulants in new\nOSTREX Tonic Tablets. Pep up\nrundown body. If not delighted,\nmaker refunds price, $1.25. Call,\nWrite Mann, Rutherford Co. (781)\nSTOLEN - TEN DOLLARS RE-\nward for person finding or giving\ninformation leading to recovery\nof Travellers' samples of bedroom\nslippers and men's Oxfords stolen\nfroni car. Daily News. (969)\nMEN'S SUPERFINE QUALITY\nsanitary rubber. Send $1.00 for 18\nunexcelled. Also LATEX at 25 for\n$1.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co., 18 Hastings St.,\nW. Vancouver. (213)\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL, GTD.\n25 for $1.00 or jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (free catalogue). National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton,\n(214)\nLADIES:    REGULATING    PILLS\ndouble strength. Price $5. Nurse\nBrown, P, 0. Box 504 Vancouver.\n(747)\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.\n\"THE CHICKS WHICH\nGIVE RESULTS\"\nIf you are interested in bigger\nprofits buy B. C.\nchicks \u2014Best in the\nWest Bred for\nhealth and production under ideal conditions and 100% live\ndelivery guaranteed. Pullorum\ntested and government inspected\nUnsexed        Pullets 97% Accurate\nLEGHORNS\n$12 per 100 $26 per 100\nUnsexed        Pullets 97% Accurate\nROCKS, REDS OR NEW\nHAMPSHIRES\n$14 per 100 $28 per 100\nDiscounts on quantity or pool\norders. Prices reduced after May 1.\nCatalog on request. Free book to\ncustomers on raising and care of\npoultry. For good results order from\nRump 0 Sendall Ltd.\nBox N, Langley Prairie, B.C.\n(210)\nVITALIZED CHICKS\nThere are more Bolivar chicks sold\nthan any strain in B. C.\nTHERE MUST BE A REASON\nLeghorns, Red, Rocks, Hampshires.\nPrices Sc Folder on request\nBOLIVAR HATCHERIES LTD.\nPac. Hwy.  New Westminster, B. C.\n(509)\nHUSKY NEW HAMPSHIRE\nChicks, easy to raise, rapid\ngrowth, lay like Leghorns, $14.00\nper 100. Leghorn chicks from\nlarge birds $12.00 per 100. Weekly hatches. Order early. T. A. Robinson, Grand Forks, B. C.     (410)\nBABY CHICKS R. I. R. W. LEG-\nhorns and B. Rocks. Pullets booked 6-8-10 weeks old. R. 1. R. Hatching Eggs, $1.25, selling from R.\nO P. sired and B, T. stock. Tom\nNeale, R. R. 1. Nelson. (843)\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. 0. P. Breeder, Armstrong, B. C. (211)\nR. I. RED Sc WHITE LEGHORNS.\nSexed chicks. Hillcrest Poultry\nFarm, Salmon Arm, B. C.   (609)\n4 WK. L'HORN COKRLS. HUSKY.\n15c ea. P. W.'Green Willow Point.\n(941)\nMEXICAN SILVER IS\nNOT BARRED FROM U. S.\nWASHINGTON, April 14 (AP)\n\u2014 Treasury Secretary Morgenthau\nsaid today the government had not\nbarred Mexican silver from sale\nin the United Slates.\nThe only change made by the\nsuspension of the Mexican .silver\nagreement, he explained, was to\neliminate the 5,000,000-ounce quota\nwhich gave Mexico advance assurance of how much silver it could\nsell the U. S. treasury each month.\nVANCOUVER DAFFS IN\nLETHBRIDGE DAY PICKED\nLETHBRIDGE, April 14 (CP)-\nDaffodils picked in Vancouver\nWednesday morning were on the\nluncheon table of Mrs. William\nLeich here the same day. Mrs.\nLeich is the mother of E. L. Leich,\nchief instructor of Trans-Canada\nairlines pilots.\nABERHART AT VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP)-\nPremier William Aberhart of Alberta arrived in Vancouver today\nfrom Edmonton to spend the Easter holidays with his son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. C. A,\nMacNutt.\nMr. Aberhart was met at the\nstation by Mrs. Aberhart who has\nbeen visiting here for 10 days.\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH.\nROYAL CITY BOY\nWINS ESSAY PRIZE\nLONDON, April 14' (CP) - D,\nHamilton of Lord Lister Junior\nHigh School, New Westminster, B.\nC, won second prize in one class\nof an essay competition held by\nthe Royal Empire society.\nSubject to the class was a description of \"the most interesting\nfeatures of bird and animal life in\nyour neighborhood,\" open to children under 14. Bijoy Krishna Guha\nof Midnalore, Bengal, India, won\nfirst prize.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nFORD.\nPICK\nOF  THE\n1931 ST?-$350\nA Real Buy\u2014Licensed\n1 no*7 F0RD Tudor   $QOn\n1\"01 with heater  JDOUw\n1937 SS $795\n1.929 \u00a3u\u2122.T $175\n1928 Roadster  3)175\n1937 JSSIH^L $900\nHeater, Defroster, Licence\nVISIT OUR USED CAR LOT\nAND INSPECT THESE\n*    VALUES\nQueen City\nMotors Ltd.\nFORD   DEALERS\nNelson and District\nPhone 43 519 Josephine St.\n(977)\n1930 CHEVROLET SEDAN\nIn good condition.\nDown Payment Required\n$100\nBalance Easy Terms\nBUTORAC MOTORS\n1225 PINE AVE.\nTRAIL, B.C,\n(704)\nFOR SALE ESSEX SEDAN, 1928\nmodel in A-l condition. Cheap.\nBox 946 Daily News. (946)\nFOR  SALE INTERNATIONAL 2-\nton truck, good cdn. Ph. 752-Y eve.\n(901)\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog, pocket-\nbook, jewelry or fur, or anything else ot value, telephone\nthe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be Inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner.\nGARDEN AND NURSERY\nPRODUCTS\nSTRAWBERRY PLANTS, GEM\noverbearing $1.50 per 100, $10 per\n1000, British Sovereign $1 per 100,\n$8 per 1000. Mrs. O. Pennoyer,\nP. O. Box 37, Grand Forks.   (968)\nGLADIOLI, 12 VARIETIES, PIC-\nardy and Nuthall included $2 a\n100. Mixtures, $1.15 and $1.50 a\n100. Postage 35c. Herolz, 590 W.\nHastings St., Vancouver.      (945)\nCHOICE GLADIOLUS BULBS, 10\nvarieties  $2  100;   mixture  $1.19\nand $1.50 100; postage 40c. H. J.\nHerolz, Deer Lake, Burnaby, B.C.\n(658)\nCHERRY TREES, ANY VARIETY\".\nWell rooted $1 each delivered. T.\nRoynon, agent, Layritz Nurseries.\n(929)\nGLADIOLUS, MEDIUM BULB, 20\neach 5 varieties $1.00. W. Cooper,\nWynndel, B. C. (890)\nFOR SALE OR RENT\nFOR SALE OR RENT- 7 ROOM\nfurnished or unfurnished house,\nfully modern; 3 lots, fruit trees.\nPhone 613R. (964)\nDOCS, PETS, FOR SALE\nFLEMISH RABBITS, BRED DOES,\n$2. Young stk. 50c up Taylor, Kaslo\n(968)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFARM\nFor Sale\n50 ACRES\u201426 cultivated, water\npiped under pressure, 300 bearing fruit trees, 5-room house,\nlarge barn, 2 poultry houses,\ngarage, etc. A good producer.\n$3000\n23 ACRES\u20146 cultivated; plenty\nof water, family orchard, 5-\nroom house and outbuildings,\ngood location, Price\n$1800\n5 ACRES\u2014All cultivated, east\nof Nelson, water piped, 75 fruit\ntrees, small fruits, one-story 4-\nroom house (2 bedrooms), poultry house, hay shed, etc. Price\n$1000\n181. ACRES-16 cultivated, 10\npasture, balance in timber, lots\nof water, 5-room house, outbuildings. Price\n$2200\nH. E. DILL\nFIRE and CAR INSURANCE\n(975)\nBUSINESS SITE: 2 LOTS, BAY\navenue, Trail. Inquire, C. F. McHardy, Nelson. (974)\nFOR  SALE  2  GOOD   LOTS  ON\nHouston St. Phone 246X2.     (953)\nKASLO 6Vi ACS. BEAUTIFUL Location, 232 fruit trees, 3 rm- house\nfor sale. See Dan McKenzie, Kaslo.\n(566)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Wrlte'for full Information to 908 Dept. ot Natural\nResources. CP.R, Calgary, Alta\n(228)\n(Continued In next column)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\n(Continued)\nFOR SALE-MINK RANCH, MARA\nLake, B. C. 20 mink, 18 females\nbred) 120 acres, halt mile lake\nfrontage, five acres seeded to alfalfa and clover, five room house\nwith running water, barn, garage,\nchicken house, Ice-house, eight\ntons ice, 2 h.p. stationary engine\nwith meat grinder, 18 foot motor\nboat. For particulars write A. L.\nGlbbard, Box 182, Rossland.  (889)\nTEN ACRES OF LEVEL BENCH\nland, Slocan Valley, Modern\nhouse, fruit trees, alfalfa, poultry\nhouses, incubators, breeders, ete.\nEnquire Wood, Box 197, Nelson.\n(889)\nCity Homes\nFor Sale\n5-ROOM BUNGALOW-2 lots,\nconcrete   basement,   hardwood\nfloors. A desirable property.\nPrice\n$2500\n8 ROOMS\u20144 lots, stone foundation. Including furniture, price\n$1500\nHalt Cash\n6   ROOMS\u20142   lots,   concrete\n.   basement, fruit trees and garden. Price\nWANTED\nMEDIUM LOAD ROTTED COW\nmanure. No rocks, wood or pine\nneedles. Box 152-or 91 High SL\n(958)\nWANTED HSPNO. ROOMS IN PRI-\nvate home for 2 girls. Ph. 482L2.\n(972)\nWANTED PRAM IN GOOD CON-\nditlon. Box 914 Dally News. (914)\nLIVESTOCK\n4 NANNY GOATS WITH 6 KIDS,\n$15 or trade for chickens. Owles,\nCastlegar, B. C. (950)\nCOW, JERSEY-AYRSHIRE, 5 YRS.,\nquiet, good milker, cheap. Innes,\nRobson, B. C. (891)\nTEAM OF HORSES, 1300 EACH,\nHarness, wagons, etc. Box 415\nNelson, B. C. (878)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\nAND   APARTMENTS\nFOR RENT - SMALL MIXED\nfarm between Fruitvale and Trail.\nApply P. O. Box 199, Trail.   (922)\nFURN. SUITES.   KERR APTS,\n(220)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms tor rent. Annabie Block. -   <\n(2111)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites,   (221)\nNEWLY FURN. SUITES FOR RENT\nPhone 940.140 Baker SL      (102)\nPHONE 144\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nBUSINESS and PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAssayen\nt W. W1DDOWSON. PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, EC. (182)\n$2000\nTerms\n6 ROOMS\u2014Large lot, concrete\nbasement, adjoining city. Price\n$1200\nFirst Payment $250. Balance\n$20 Monthly\nH. E. DILL\nFIRE and AUTO INSURANCE\n(976!\nFOR SALE\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 - LIVING ROOM AND\nbedroom suite, kitchen famiture,\nMcClary range, rugs and other\nhousehold goods. Bargain for cash,\nPhone 124X or call 306 Robson St.\n(942)\n7-TUBE ELECTRIC MANTEL RA-\ndio, Philco, in good condition. $12,\nApply P. O. Box 15, Nakusp.\n(951)\nMATS GOOD FOR INSULATING\nlining chicken coops, garages,\nfarm buildings, etc., 75c per 100.\nat Daily News. (657)\nFOR SALE - 3-PIECE CHESTER-\nfield suite. Apply 203 Terrace\nApts. Evenings. (965)\nTENT,   HOSE,   GARDEN  TOOLS.\nChesterfield, Beds. 908 Stanley St.\n(753)\nFor Want Ad\nService\nPhone 144\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 420\nFall Street, Nelson. B. C P. O\nBox   No.  9.   Representing  ship-\nper's Interest, Trail, B C.     (183)\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(183)\nW. J. BROCK, D. C 16 years' Experience Ph. 969 Gilker Bk, Nelson\n(186)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker SL Phone 252\nCert Mortician      Lady. Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(190)\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)\nE 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 SL Phone 197.\n(197)\nPHONE 980, STUART AND WAR-\nburton. Mutual Benefit. II. & A.\nA. First and All Classes Fire and\nAutomobile Insurance. 577 Baker\nStreet. (198)\nCorieti\nSpencer Corsets, Surglea! Belts, M.\nW. Mitchell. 370 Baker St Ph. 668.\n(187)\nEngineer! 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, Laths\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding, Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593      324 Vernon Street\n(189)\nH. I STEVENSON, Machinists,\nBlscksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders, Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine Ss Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St, Nelson,   (201)\nMine & Equipment Machinery I\nE. L. WARBURTON, Representing\nC C. Snowdon, Oils, Greases,\nPaints, etc. Agt: Mine Mchnry & !\nequlpt, 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 negative\nfor mounting in albums. Neve\nfade prints 3c each. Films develop\ned and printed 25c. (CRYSTAL,\nPHOTOS, WILKIE, Sask.    <20\u00bb)\nSash Factory'\nLAWSON'S     SASH     FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker St\n (208)\nSecond Hand Stores\n3\nWE  BUY,  SELL  Ss   EXCHANi\nfurniture, etc   The Ark Store.\n(207)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs youl\nwatch It Is on time all tha time\n345. Baker St, Nelson. (209)\nWant to Sell Something?\nPhone\n144\nBoost fqr the Kootenay District - It Pays!\nGIRL PLUNGES 12\nSTORYS TO DEATH\nNEW YORK, April 4 (AP) -\nThe 12-storey death plunge of Norma de Marco, 22, heroine of a\nGreenwich village night club holdup two days ago, was termed by\nPolice Inspector Michael McDermott as \"undoubtedly a suicide.\"\nMUST KEEP TAIL DOWN\nKANSAS CITY, April 14 (AP)\n\u2014Black boy will have to keep\nhis tail down.\nBlack Boy, a cat, lives at a\nhosiery warehouse. Police, puzzled by a series of false burglar alarms, found when Black\nBoy walked with tail erect it\nregistered on an \"electric eye\"\nsignal.\nMURDERED\nMEXICO CITY, April 14 (AP)\n\u2014 Gabriel Chavez, former mayor\nof Parral, Chihuahua, was murdered last night by four unidentified\nassailants. He is the third politician slain in Chihuahua within a\nmonth,\n________\n_\nmm.\n \t\nu\nMARKETS HAVE\nEASTER HOLIDAY\nNEW YORK, April 14 (AP) -\nWorld security and commodity exchanges will observe Easter festivities with either complete or partial\ncessation of activities.\n,,. Included in the list of Friday\nclosings are markets in Canada.\nNew York, Chicago, New Orleans\nLondon, Liverpool and Paris. The\nNew York stock and curb exchanges, and the Chicago board of trade\nwil resume operations on Saturday\nwhile New York commodity markets will carry the holiday through\nthe week-end.\nLeading foreign markets, including some Canadian, will remain\nclosed until Tuesday. The Winnipeg\ngrain market, however, will operate Saturday and Monday and the\n\"Montreal and Toronto security exchanges will be open Saturday but\nclosed Monday. There will be no\ntrading in silver futures at Montreal\n\u25a0 from Thursday until Tuesday.\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nBy the Canadian Press\n* Toronto \u2014 Mines and industrials\nhigher; oils slightly lower.\n.    Montreal \u2014 Stocks    irregularly\nhigher.\nNew York\u2014Stocks higher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Wheat lVi-1% higher.\nToronto\u2014Bacon hogs off truck 10\nhigher at 8.85-10.       . <\nLondon\u2014Bar silver, copper and\nzinc higher; lead lower.\nNew York\u2014Silver, lead and zinc\nunchanged; export copper higher.\n.   Montreal\u2014Silver higher.\n-\"New  York\u2014Cotton,  rubber and\ncoffee higher; sugar unchanged.\n\u25a0 New York\u2014Canadian dollar up\n.1-16 to 99 9-18.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, April 14 (CP) -\nBritish and foreign exchange closed\nhigher today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts;\nAustralia, pound, 4.0052,\ni   China, Hong Kong dollars, .3115.\n1  Denmark, krone, .2241.\nFrance, franc, .031748.\n\u2022'   Germany, reichsmark, .0043.\nGreat Britain, pound, 5.0190.\nHolland, florin, .5589.\nJapan, yen, .292(1.\nNorway, krone, .2522.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0374.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.9914.\nSweden, krone, ,2586,\nSwitzerland, franc, .2316.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nanada).\nNELSON DAILY NEW8. NELfON. B.C-FRIBAY MORNING. AI-...L 15. V**3.\nWorld   Exchanoes\nNEW YORK. April 14 (AP) -\nSterling climbed 1 cent to $4.99% today while the French franc advanced .00% of a cent to $3 15'*.\nThe Canadian dollar was up 1-16\ncent al 99 7-16.\nClosing rates (Great Britain in\ndollars, others in cents);\nGreat Britain demand 4.99%, cab-\nles 4.99%, 60-day bills 4.98*4; France\ndemand 315%, cables 3.15%; Italy\ndemand 5.26\"?. cables 5.26%.\nDemands; Belgium 16.87; Germany 40.24, registered 19.50, travel\n24.00; Holland 55.65; Norway 25.09;\nSweden 25.73; Denmark 22.30: Finland .20; Switzerland 23.04; Portugal\n4.53; Greece .91; Poland 18 90:\nCzechoslovakia 3.48%; Jugoslavia.\n2.35; Hungary 19.90; Rumania .75;\nArgentine 35.15N; Brazil, (free)\n5.90N; Tokyo 29.07; Shanghai 27.37%:\nHong Kong 30.92; Mexico City\n25.00N; Montreal in New York\n99^56%; New York in Montreal\n100.43%.\n(N)\u2014Nominal.\nWheal Soars on\nChicago Market\nCHICAGO, April 14 (AP) .-Soaring of 2% cents in wheat prices\ntoday and lively outbursts of buying accompanied an uhcement ot\nPresident Roosevelt's $7,000,000,000\nrecovery program.\nHighest prices of the day in wheat\nwere reached just before trading\nended. Publication of the president's message caused two cents immediate jump, but profit taking\nsales caused temporary moderate\nsetbacks, with a renewed wave of\nbuying later.\nAt the close, Chicago wheat futures were l'\/s\u20142% above yesterday's finish, May 84%\u2014%, July 82%.\ncorn ',i\u2014% up, May 60%\u2014%, July\n61\u201461%, and oats %\u2014% advanced.\nWHEAT:\nOpen   High  Low   Close\nMay    82%    84%    82%    84%\nJuly    80       82%    80       82%\nSept    80%     83       80%     82%\nReno Drifting on\nDonneybrook Vein\n\"Drifting Is now proceeding on\nthe Donneybrook vein\" of Reno\nGold Mines limited \"in the vicinity\nof the diamond drill intersection obtained last year showing good indications\" states a Vancouver broker's bulletin.\n\"Officials describe the condition\nof the vein where drifted on so far\nas encouraging, but decline to give\nvalues until more length is obtained,\" the bulletin adds.\nDow-jones Averages\nHigh\nI 30 industrials 117.57\n20 rails    21.71\n1*20 utilities  _    17.95\n|'*U bonds  \t\nLow Close Change\n113.56 116.82-up 1.97\n20.99 21.39\u2014off .22\n17.53 17.85-up .21\n  84.56-off   .40\nToronto Stock Quotations\n1 MINES\nfAfton Mines Ltd     .01%\nI Aldermac Copper  54\nI Amm Gold   21\nl-Anglo-Huronian    3.00\nlArntfield Gold    17\nI Astoria Rouyn Mines  02%\nAztec Mining Co      .07\nBagamac Rouyn  15%\n\u25a0Bankfield Gold     88\nrBase Metals Mining  33\niBeattie Gold Mines     1.15\niBidgood Kirkland  32\n\u25a0Big Missouri        .40\n\u25a0BoBjo Mines Ltd 08\n|Bralorne Mines     8.40\nBrett Trethewey      .04\nBuffalo  Ankerite   14.2a\nBunker Hill Extension   17.00\nCanadian Malartic        93\nCariboo Gold Quartz     2.01\nCastle-Trethewey   .  59\nCentral Pat        2.59\nChibougamau .   -  - 25\nChromium M Sc 15      -56\nCoast Copper           2.25\nConiagas Mines     1.35\nConiaurum  Mines       1.35\nConsolidated M Sc S 56.00\nQarkwater 13%\nDome Mines Ltd    51.90\nDorval-Siscoe Gold  15\nSast Malartic     1.57\nEldorado Gold   2.43\nfalconbridge Nickel    5.75\nfederal Kirkland  _.    .08\nfrrancoeur Gold  35\nBillies Lake  19\nBod's Lake Gold      :43\nBold Belt  38\nEranada Gold Mines  05%\nBrandoro Mines     OTA\nGunnar Gold Mines  07%\nHard Rock Gold    2.05\nBarker Gold  10%\nHollinger   12.90\nHowey Gold  24\nHudson Bay M & S  25.75\nInternational Nickel  47.25\nT-M Consolidated     *.06%\nlack Waite  32\ntacola Gold      .24\nterr-Addison    1.81\ntirkland Lake    1.08\nake Shore Mines 50.00\nnaque Contact 03%\napa Cadillac 48\neftch Gold   83\nebel Oro Mines \u201e 07%\nlittle Long Lac  -   4.05\n\u25a0acassa Mines    4.15\nBacLeod Cockshutt   3.40\nadsen Red Lake Gold 31\nanitoba tc Eastern  -    .01%\nBandy 13\nIclntyre-Porcupine  40.00\nIcKenzle Red Lake 95\nIcVittie-Graham  18%\nIcWatters Gold   65\nlinig Corporation    1.90\n[into Gold    02%\nloneU Porcupine      1.95\nlorris-Kirkland  10\nllplssing Mining    1.80\npranda  55.50\nJormetal 64\nIBrien Gold     3.60\n|mega Gold  39\nlimnur Porcupine     3.65\nbulore M  10%\nlymaster Cons  48%\n\"Sid Oreille     1.70\nJrron Gold       1.50\nIckle Crow Gold     4.20\nloneer Gold    3.00\nlemier Gold    2.00\nIwell Rouyn Gold     1.74\nreston East Dome  92\niebec Gold  46\nfad-Authier    3.00\nJ Lake Gold Shore 19\ntaves MacDonald  26\n|no Gold Mines  52\ntchle Gold Mines     .02\ntche Long Lac    12\nn Antonio Gold     1.25\nawkey  Gold   20%\nleep Creek Gold ,...v 98\nlerrltt Gordon  ;   1.12\nleoe Oold -     2.32\nEden Malartic \u201e     1.17\nSt. Anthony  12\nSudbury Basin      2.55\nSullivan Con      1.06\nSylvanite     3.05\nTashota Goldfields  03\nTeck-Hughes Gold         4.75\nToburn Gold Mines a     2.00\nTowagmac    45\nVentures Limited      4.95\nWaite Amulet     1.40\nWhitewater  03,\nWright Hargreaves      7,25\nYmir Yankee Girl 20\nOILS\nAjax   .      27%\nA P Con      24\nBritish American Oil     19.40\nBritish Dominion       11\nBrown Oil  54\nCalmont        .44\nCalgary Sc Edmonton     2.40\nChem Research     36\nCommonwealth    33\nDalhousie    52\nEastcrest      10\nFoundation  18\nFoothills    70\nHighwood   13%\nHome     1.32\nImperial       17.50\nInter Petroleum     25.00\nMcColl Frontenac    12.15\nModel   23\nMonarch Roy  18\nNordon  10\nOkalta        1.76\nPacalta  11\nPantepec        5.15\nRoyalite     42.50\nSouthwest Pete  32\nTexas Canadian       1.23\nUnited    20\nVulcan        1.00\nINDU8TRIAL8\nAbitibi Power      1.55\nBeatty Bros     5\nBell Telephone  154\nBrazilian T L & P    10\nBrewers & Dist      5%\nBrewing Corp            1,30\nBrewing Corp pfd    16\nB C Power A    27%\nBC Power B        4\nBuilding Products    42\nBurt F N Co    19\nCan Bakeries pfd    40\nCanada Bread Co     3%\nCan Bud Malting     7\nCan Car Sc Fdy     10%\nCan Cement .'.     9%\nCan Cement pfd    89%\nCan Dredge     25\nCan Malting     29%\nCan Pacific Rly     6\nCan Ind Ale A     3\nCan Ind Ale B     3\nCan Wineries     2%\nCarnation pfd    101%\nCons Bakeries     14\nCosmos      17%\nDominion Bridge    26\nDominion Stores     6\nDom Tar Sc Chem      6%\nD Tar Sc Chem pfd    78\nDistillers Seagrams    13%\nFanny Farmer    177'\u00bb\nFord of Can A    16%\nGeneral Steel Wares     6%\nGoodyear Tire  _    53%\nGypsum L Sc A     5%\nHarding Carpet     3\nHamilton Bridge      6\nHamilton Bridge pfd     34\nHinde Dauche    14%\nHiram Walker     37\nIntl Motals     6%\nIntl Milling pfd    99%\nImperial Tobacco    13%\nLoblaw A ....>.    21\nLoblaw B     19%\nKeivinator     10%\nMaple Leaf Milling _..    2%\nMassey Harris         6\nMontreal Power    29\nMoore Corp    26%\nNat Steel Car    39%\nOnt. Silk Net      6\nPage Hersey    81%\nPower Corp       12%\nPressed Metals     13\nSteel of Can   ......   64\nMarket and Mining News\nSHIPPING OPENS\nON GREAT LAKES\nTORONTO, April 14 (CP) -At a\nslow tempo, perhaps the slowest in\nyiars, shipping on the Great Lakes\nopens officially tomorrow under\ntwin clouds of dark hue\u2014a threatening strike of Canadian seamen on\n150 vessels and the prospect of light\ngrain movement from the head of\nLake Superior.\nInsurance rates on vessels go into\neffect at midnight, but no rush by\nsteamship companies to send oui\nfleets of freighters lpaded with\ngrain and iron ore, oil and package\nfreight was expected. For the most\npart opening of navigation will be\ndelayed because of the Good Friday holiday.\nCrews have been engaged foi\nweeks at lake ports preparing vessels for the season. Some are loaded and ready to go ahd a few have\nmade short runs in the last two\nweeks in the lower lakes.\nN.Y. RALLIES\nNLW YORK, April 14 (AP)-The\nstock market rallied today, though\nnone too briskly, as the president's\nicco'very program was handed to\ncongress.\nRelatively apathetic upturn in response to what Wall Street generally viewed as \"highly inflationary\"\nspending plans of the administration was attributed by brokerage\nqu.-.rters to a variety of factors.\nAmong these were: There was no\nparticular element of surprise in\nthe white house anti-recession figures; most trading forces desired\nto find out the attitude of the legislators toward the proposals, in addition to waiting for what the chief\nexecutive had to say in his evening\n\"fireside chat\" broadcast to the nation.\nINCOME TAX, EXCISE\nDUTIES SHOW CAINS\nOTTAWA, April 14 (CP). - Finance Minister Dunning closed his\njooks March 31 at the close of the\ngovernment's fiscal year with substantial increases from the income\ntax and customs and excise collections.\nThe income tax yielded $120,365,-\n531 in the. fiscal year, an increase\nof $18,000,289.\nNet collections from customs\nduties, excise taxes and excise duties totalled $319,046,053, an increase\nof $44,701,517 over the previous 12-\nmonth period.\nFRENCH FRANC STEADY\nLONDON, April 14 (AP).\u2014The\nUnited States dollar declined % of\na cent to close 4.98% to the pound\nin foreign exchange trading today.\nThis compares with New York's\novernight sterling rate of $4.98%.\nFrench francs were net unchanged at 158% to the pound.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, April 14 (CP). -\nGrain futures quotations:\nOpen  High  Low  Close\nWHEAT:\nMay  125%   127      125%   126%\nJuly  114%   116%   113%   115%\nOct    90       91%     89%    90%\nOATS:\nMay    47%    48%    47%     47%\nJuly   44       44       43%    43%\nOct    -       -       -       38%\nBARLEY:\nMay    57%    57%     57       57%\nJuly    56%    .56%    56%    56%\nOct   -       -       -       52%\nFLAX:\nMay ........ 153%   154%   153%   154%\nJuly   -       -       -      155%\nRYE:\nMay    63%    66%    63%    64%\nJuly    64       66%    63%    65%\nWHEAT-No. 1 Nor. 144%; No. 2\nNor, 134%; No. 3 Nor. 120%; No.\n4 Nor. 109%; No. 5, 85%; No. 6, 76%\nfeed 66%; No. 1 Garnet 120%; No, I\nGarnet 117%; No. 1 Durum 88%; No.\n4 special 103%; No. 4 special 82%;\nNo. (j special 73%; track 141%;\nscreening $1.50 per ton.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 52%; No. 3\nC. W. 47%; Ex. 1 feed 48%; No. 1\nfeed 46; No. 2 feed 43%; No. 3\nfeed 39%; track 50%.\nBARLEY\u2014Malting grades: 6-and\n2-Row Ex. 3 C. W. 57%. Others: No.\n3 C. W. 55%; No. 3 C. W. 53%; No. 5\nC. W. 52%; No. 6 C. W. 51%; track\n57%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 153%; No. 2\nC. W. 149%; No. 3 C. W. 139%; No. 4\nC. W. 122%; track 154%.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 64%.\nVancouver Gains\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP) -\nSmall gains were posted in all sections at the close on Vancouver\nstock exchange today and the market closed with a firm'trend. Activity was mostly in. the' oil sec-\nand transactions totalled 101,846\nshares.\nBralorne gold advanced 10 cents\nat 8.55, Premier was up 5 at 2.03 and\nCariboo Gold Quartz added 3 at\n2.03. Big Missouri at 42 and Hedley Mascot at 1.10 each gained 2\nwhile Kootenay Belle at 1.14 and\nSheep Creek at 95 were each one\ncent higher. Pioneer remained unchanged at 3.00.\nPend Oreille led base metals and\nclosed up 6 at 1.66. Whitewater at\n5 and Grandview at 6 were each\none cent higher while Nicola at 4%\nand Noble Five at 2% held steady.\nB. C. Nickel firmed a fraction at\n17%.\nNINE NEW COMPANIES\nINCORPORATED, B. C.\nVICTORIA, April 14 (CP) -Nine\nnew British Columbia companies\nwere incorporated during the past\nweek according to the list issued by\nthe registrar of companies office today.\nCivic Theatre, Ltd., $10,000, Nelson, was one of the new companies.\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\nCan Bronze\t\nCan Bronze pfd \t\nCan Car Sc Fdy\t\nCan Car Sc Fdy pfd ....\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Celanese pfd\t\nCan Ind Ale A\t\nCan Ind Ale B\t\nCan Pac Rly\t\nCockshutt Plow\t\nCon Min Sc Smelting ....\nDistillers Seagrams\t\nDominion Coal pfd\t\nDom Steel & Coal B ....\nDom Textile \t\nDryden Paper \t\nFamous Players C C ....\nFoundation C of C\t\nGatineau Power \t\nGatineau Powei^ pfd\t\nGen Steel Wares \t\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 \t\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\t\nOntario Steel Prods\t\nPower Corp of Can\t\nQuebec Power \t\n2%\n.   12\n.     8%\n153\n10\n.   28\n.     3%\n.   42\n.     9%\n.   89%\n17%\n.     2%\n.    8\n35\n106\n10%\n24\n11%\n.   96%\n3\n3%\n6%\n9%\n56%\n13%\n16%\n12%\n60\n5%\n24%\n11%\n8\n81\n6%\n.     6\n5%\n5%\n34\n13%\n20\n90\n13%\n47%\n.   12\n3%\n6\n12\n29%\n38%\n40%\n. 39%\n26%\n10\n12%\n14%\nSt Lawrence Corp \u201e    3%\nSt Law Corp pfd    12\nSt Law Paper pfd     31%\nSouth Can Power    12\nShawinigan W Sc P     18%\nSteel of Can ;...._    63%\nSteel of Can pfd    59%\nWestern Grocers     50\nBANKS\nBank of Canada   59\nCanadienne Nationale 160\nCommerce    161\nDominion  193\nImperial  \u201e  197\nMontreal 200\nNova Scotia  297\nRoyal  \u201e  172%\nToronto  230\nCURB\n'Abitibi P & P Co  1,55\nAbitibi 6 pfd    14%\nBeauharnois Corp     3%\nBathurst P Sc P B      2%\nBrew & Dist Van      6%\nBrew Corp of Can      1%\nBrew Corp of Can pfd    16\nBritish American Oil     19%\nB C Packers     12\nCan Malting Ltd   30\nCan Dredge & Dock    23\nCan Industries B 1.79\nCan Marconi 1.10\nCan Vickers  \u201e \u201e    6%\nCan Wineries      2%\nCons Paper Corp     5%\nDominion Stores \u201e     5%\nDonnacona Paper A     5\nDonnacona Paper B     4\nFairchild Aircraft     4%\nFord Motor A    16%\nFraser Co Ltd    13%\nImperial Oil     17%\nInter Petroleum    24%\nInter Utilities A :     6\nInter Utilities B 70\nMcColl Frontenac pfd    87%\nMacLaren P&P     9\nMitchell Robt  :...   10%\nPage Hersey Tubes \u201e   81\nPower Corp pfd    93%\nPrice Bros    11%\nRoyalite Oil     42\nThrift Stores 25\nUnited Dist of Can  86\nWalker-Good Sc W    36%\nWalker-Good pfd     18%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAm Can   88%\nAm For Pow .. 3%\nAm Smelt & Re 38%\nAm Tel   128%\nAm Tob   70%\nAv Corp   3%\nAnaconda  29\nBait & Ohio .... 5%\nBaldwin     7%\nBendix Av  11%\nBeth Steel   49%\nBorden   16%\nCan Dry   14%\nCan Pac   6\nCerro de Pasco 34%\nChrysler   46%\nCon Gas NY.. 20\nC Wright pfd .. 4%\nDupont    105%\nEast Kodak   148\nFord Eng   4%\nFord of Can .... 16%\nFree Texas   26\nGen Eec   35\nGen Foods  26%\nGen Motors  33%\nGoodrich     14%\nGranby   4%\nGreat Nor pfd .. 16\nHowe Sound .... 34%\nHud Motors   7%\nInter Nickel  47%\nInter Tel & Tel 7%\nKenn Cop   35\nMack Truck .... 20\nMnn. waWt aa ..\nLow\n86 .\n3%\n36\n126%\n70%\n3%\n26%\n5*;i,\n7%\n11\n47%\n16%\n13%\n.6\n33\n43%\n19%\n4%\n102\n144%\n4%\n16%\n26\n33%\n26%\n32\n13%\n4\n14%\n33%\n6'\/s\n45%\n7\n32%\n20\n311,4\nClose\n88%\n3%\n38%\n128%\n70%\n3%\n28%\n5%\n7%\n11%\n48%\n16%\n14%\n6\n34%\n45%\n20\n4%\n105\n147\n4%\n16%\n26\n34%\n26%\n33\n14%\n4%\n15%\n33%\n6%\n47%\n7%\n34%\n20\n82%\nNash Motors ....\n8%\n8%\n8%\nN Y Central ....\n12%\n11%\n12%\nPack Motors ....\n4%\n4%\n4%\nPenn R R \t\n16%\n16%\n16%\nPhillips Pete ....\n35\n33%\n34%\nRadio Corp \t\n6%\n6\n6%\nRem Rand ........\n12%\n12%\n12%\nSafeway Stores\nShell Un \t\n15%\n14%\n15 >\/4\n14%\n14%\n14%\nStan Oil of N J\n48\n46%\n47%\nTexas Corp \t\n39%\n38\n39%\nTexas Gulf Sul\n29%\n29\n211%\nTimken Roll ....\n40\n39%\n40\nUnder Type .\nUn Carbide \t\n46\n46\n46\n69%\n66%\n68'*\nUn Oil of Cal\n20\n19%\n111%\n25%\n23%\n25\nUn Pac \t\n62%\n60%\n61\nU S Rub\t\n27%\n25%\n27\nU S Steel \t\n47%\n44%\n46%\nWarner Bros ....\n5%\n4%\n5%\nWest Elec \t\n74%\n74%\n75%\nWest Un \t\n23\n.21%\n22%\nWoolworth \t\n41%\n12%-\n40%\n41%\nYellow Truck ..\n11%\n12%\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WASH\n-;\u25a0*\u2022\nCATTLE PRICE\nTREND HIGHER\nOTTAWA, April 14 (CP)-The\ndepartment of agriculture said today in its livestock review that\nthe cattle market has seldom passed\nthrough the Lenten period with as\nmuch strength as during the past\n40 days. The price inclination has\nbeen upward and this underlying\nstrength was interpreted as indicating the reported large oversupply\not fed cattle does not exist.\nAt the Toronto market durlng'the\npast week, exporters to Great Britain took about 300 steers and paid\ntop prices of $7 per cwt. for a load\naveraging 1330 pounds. Montreal\nwas active with a practical top of\n$7.50. Winnineg top was $6.26 and\nCalgary $6.35.\nWinnipeg Wheal\nPrices Are Up\nWINNIPEG, April 14 (CP). - A\nbrisk short-covering . rally which\nfollowed reports of inflationary\ntalk in the United States pushed\nWinnipeg wheat futures two cents\nhigher today. Final quotations were\n1%\u20141% cents higher, May $1.26%,\nJuly $1.15%\u2014% and October 90%\ncents.\nTrade for the most part was dull.\nCanadian export sales were estimated below 100,000 bushels.\nLiverpool closed %\u2014%d higher.\nBuenos Aires was on holiday.\nSpreads for top grades of cash\nwheat improved a cent. Nos. 1 and\n2 traded at. 18% and 8% cents premium.\nRye and July flax registered gains\nof nearly three cents. Oats and barley were fractionally higher.\nGOLDS HIGHER\nTORONTO, April 14 (CP)- Recent strength oL senior gold stocks\nwas apparently explained by President Roosevelt's message to United\nStates congress today recommending credit expansion through agency of desterilized gold. The group\nadvanced on Toronto market, which\nwill be closed tomorrow.\nBase metals boarded a gain of\nmore than a point. Gold index firmed about a half point and industrials\nmore than a point.\nLake Shore posted a small gain\nwhile Mclntyre added 1%. Dome\nand Buffalo-Ankerite improved\nnarrowly. O'Brien traded actively\non a rise Of 35 cents to 3.60.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, April 14 (CP).-Receipts to nhon today; Cattle 111;\ncalves 8; hogs 96; no sheep.\nThe cattle market was moderately\nactive and prices held steady. Good\nto choice butcher steers 5.50; common to medium 3.50\u20145,00; good\nheifers \u2022 5.00\u20145.50; good to choice\nfed calves 5.50\u20146.00; medium 4.50\u2014\n5.25; good cows 3.75\u20144:00; medium\nto good stacker steers 3.40; good to\nchoice veal calves 7.00\u20148.25.\nNo hog sales; Wednesday's close:\nSelects 9.95; bacons 9.45; butchers\n8.95.\nOILS LOWER AT CALGARY\nCALGARY, April 14 (CP).-In\nlight trade, oil shares with few exceptions worked lower on the Calgary stock exchange today,\nCommoil dropped 1 to 79 while\nCalmont was down 3 at 43 and Commonwealth 4 at 30. Model dropped\n1 to 34. Okalta gained 1 at 1.75 and\nC, & E. was 2 down at 2.37. Turner\nValley was 2 higher at 17 and foundation 1 at 18. Many other stocks\nshowed fractional losses.\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, April 14 (AP) .-Closing: Copper, standard spot \u00a339 16s\n3d, future \u00a340 2s 6d, both'off ls 3d;\nelectrolytic spot, bid \u00a344 5s, asked\n\u00a345 5s, both lip 5s.\nTin spot \u00a3170, future \u00a3170 15s,\nboth off \u00a3s.\nBids: Lead spot and future \u00a315\n17s 6d, off 6s 3d.\nZinc spot \u00a314 Is 3d, future \u00a314\n6s 3d, both up ls 3d.\nBar gold 139s 8d, off 2s pence.\n(Equivalent $3441).\nBar silver 18 15-16d, Up 1-16.\nNEW YORK\nCopper steady; electrolytic spot\n10.00; export 10.07.-\nTin steady; spot and nearby 38.70;\nforward 38.79.\nLead steady; New York spot 4.50\n-55; East St Louis 4.35.\nZinc steady; East SL Louis spot\nand forward 4\u20144.15.\nMONTREAL     ,\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic, 11.55;\ntin 41.25; lead 4.85; zinc 4:40; antimony 16.50; per 100 pounds f.o.b.\nMontreal, five ton lots.\nBar gold in London unchanged at\n$34.99 an ounce in Canadian funds;\n139s 8d in British. The fixed $35\nWashington price amounted to $35.16\nin Canadian.\nSilver futures closed firmer to-\nda* 45-79 points up. Sale: May\n40.85.\nOpen High Low Close\nMay  -MS  40,85  40.85   41.10\nSMELTERS GAINS\nMONTREAL, April U_ (CP) -\nGains of up to two points marked\npre-holiday trading today on Montreal stock exchange. There will be\na short Saturday session but the\nmarket will remain closed Easter\nMonday.\nNational Steel Car closed up 1%.\nCanadian Car Sc Foundry had a net\ngain of 1% with the preferred up 1%\nto a new high.\nSmelters was up 1% at 56% with\nNoranda up slightly more than a\npoint and Nickel up %.\nThinks Mining .a\nWasting Industry\nVANCOUVER. April 14 (CP)-\nDr. John F. Walker, deputy minister of mines for British Columbia,\nthinks mining is a wasting industry\nand neither it nor forestry or agriculture can bring any great population to British Columbia.\nThat is what he told a meeting of\nVancouver engineers last night.\nBut he thought cheap hydroelectric power available in British\nColumbia favored the \"artificial\nfabrication\" of industries\u2014the only\nway there will be any major industrial development in the province, since industrialization follows\npopulation.\nDiscussing work of his department, Dr. Walker said he expected\nan increase in gold production this\nyear over the 1937 figure, but that\nzinc and lead production would\ndrop'. Total mineral production in\n1938 would probably be about $67,-\n000,000.\nMoney\nBy the Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal: Pound 5.01 29-32;\nU.S. dollar 1.00 15-52; franc 3.17 1-32.\nAt New York: Pound 4.99%; Canadian dollar .99 9-16; franc 3.15%.\nAt Paris: Pound 158.23 francs;\nU.S. dollar 31.77 francs; Canadian\ndollar 31.59% francs.\nIn gold: Pound 12s Id; U.S. dollar 59.37 cents; Canadian dollar\n59.07 cents.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, April 14 (CP)-But-\nter spot\u2014Quebec fresh (92 score)\n33%A; New Zealand finest 34%A.\nEggs spot\u2014Ontario A-large 22A.\nButter futures steady and unchanged; April 33%N.\nVancouver\nBid\nMINES:\nAztec   07\nB C Nickel 17%\nBig Missouri       .42\nBluebird         .01%\nBralorne         8.55\nB R Con       .02%\nB R Mt        -\nCariboo          2,03\nDentonia          .08%\nDunwell          .04%\nFairview    -     -03%\nFederal    -      \u2014\nGeo Copper 25\nGolconda    04%\nGold Belt  37\nGold Mt  02%\nGrandview         .06\nGrullWlhksne       .05%\nHaida      07%\nHedley Mascot   ....    1.10\nHedley St        -\nHome Gold       -01%\nIndian          .62\nInter C Sc C - 25\nKoot Belle      1.14\nKoot  Florence  ...     .01\nLakeview    00%\nIsland Mt  75\nLucky Jim       ,02%\nMak   Sicar    01%\nMet M Sc L 30\nMcGillivray 20\nMinto      02%\nNicola           .04%\nNoble Five       ,02%\nPend Oreille      L66\nPilot 01%\nPioneer          3.00\nPorter Idaho  02%\nPremier Bord.. ...     .01%\nPremier Gold      2.03\nQuatsino         -02%\nQuesnelle 07%\nRed  Hawk        .05\nReeves MacD' 28\nRelief Arl 17\nReno     51\nReward          .04\nRufus Argenta 01%\nRuth Hope        \u2014\nSally Mines  03%\nSalmon Gold       .05\nSheep Creek       .95\nSilbak Prem     1.80\nSilvercrest       .01%\nSunloch    12\nVidette       10%\nWesko      '..      -03y4 ...\nStock Exchange\nAsk\nBid\nAsk\nWaverly    \t\n.00%\n.00%\n.08\nWhitewater   \t\n.05\n.05%\n.18\nYmir Yank Girl....\n.18\n.20\n.43\nOILS:\n.02%\n.05\n\u2014\n8.60\nAmalg     _\n.01%\n.01%\n.03\n.10\n.10%\n.04\n1.35\n1.40\n2.05\nA P Con\t\n.24%\n.26\n\u2014\n.04\n\u2014\n.05%\nBrown   \t\n.53%\n\u2014\n.04%\nC & E  :..\t\n2.41\n2.43\n.01%\n.44\n.46\n\u2014\nCommonwealth ....\n.34\n.36\n.05\n.01\n.01%\n.38\n.50\n\u2014\n.02%\nDavies Pets\t\n.58%\n.59\n\u2014\nEastcrest    -\n.10\n\u2014\n.06\n.17%\n.17\n.06%\n.18\n.08%\n.20\n.07\n.06\nFoothills   \t\n.75\n1.00\n.01%\n.17\n\u2014\n.02%\n.29\nJO\n.13%\n1.16\n1.34\n1.38\n\u2014\nImperial   \t\n17.00\n\u2014\n.01\n24.75\n\u2014\n.80\n.06%\n.07%\n.07\n.03\n\u2014\n.06\n.13%\n\u2014\n.35\nMercury    \t\n.14\n\u2014\nMcDoug  Seg \t\n.22\n.23%\n.02%\nMcLeod   \t\n.15\n\u2014\n\u2014\nMid-West   \t\n.05\n.08%\n.10\n.03\nMill City\t\n.10\n1,69\n.33\n\u2014\n.02\n.17\n\u2014\n3.10 ,\n.09%\n29.00\n.10%\n.38\n\u2014\n.03\nOkalta Pfd ,\t\n\t\n,01%\n.12\n2.05\n.38%\n.1)4\nRoyalite    \t\n41.25\n\u2014\n.07%\n.16%\n\u2014\n.06\nSpy Hill\t\n.06%\n.08\n\u2014'\nS W Pete \t\n.35\n\u2014\n.18\nUnited    \t\n.19\n.20\n.54\nVanalta    \t\n.07%\n1.00\n.08\n.04%\n1.05\n\u2014\nWest Flank \t\n.14\n.IS\n.02%\nINDUSTRIALS:\n\u2014\nCoast Brew \t\n12.75\n13.00\n.07\nCapital  Est  \t\n2.25\n2.50\n.98\nBrew Sc Dist \t\n6.25\n\u2014\n2.00\nCPR \t\n5.75\n6.25\n\u2014\nFord A\n12.78\n13.00\n.20\nPac Coyle\n.20\n\u2014\n.11\nU D L\n.85\nl.'JO\n,03%\n' Total sales 101,846 shares.\n*\u00bb\u00bb*\"-\u25ba    NINt\nm\nEASTER GOODS, SPRING SEEDING\nSUPPLIES WHOLESALE SPOTLIGHT;\nSTRAWBERRIES DUE FOR EASTER\nAustralian Grapes'on\nMarket, Onipns\nComing\nPRICES FRESH\nMEAT ADVANCE\nMeats, groceries and candles for\nEaster, and seeds and fertilizers lor\nspring planting occupied the spotlight on the wholesale market during the past week. On Wednesday\ndealers reported the Easter movement was Just about over, but seeds\nand fertilizers were in keen demand\nand were moving out fasL Hay and\nfeed is also in.demand, since green\nfeed is not yet available for stock.\nFeed prices Just now are subject\nto unusual fluctuations, bran having gone down 50 cents a ton while\nshorts advanced $1.50 during the\nweek. Flour is 20 cents lower, two\ndeclines of 10 cents each having\nbeen reported.\nEaster tables this year may be\ngraced by strawberries. Fruit dealers are expecting fruit and vegetable shipments today which will\ninclude strawberries from Louisiana,\nAustralian grapes are also on the\nmarket, first shipments of the season having been received during\nthe past week.\nAUSTRALIAN ONIONS\nVegetable supplies will be reinforced today with the receipt of\na carload of Australian onions. Local supplies have been low for\nsome time. Two carloads of fresh\nCalifornia vegetables will be on\nhand today, it Is expected, to meet\ndemand for the holiday week-end\nFlorida tomatoes as well as Mexican are available.\nFresh meat prices are showing renewed strength, advances of a cent\na pound on pork, 2% cents on lamb\nand two cents on beef being report\ned. This is due to early spring\nfeeding, and is usual at this time\neach year.\nBUSINESS LIVELIER\nBusiness Conditions are reported\nlivelier among grocery wholesalers,\nwith district roads again open to\ntraffic.\nStocks of gallon canned goods\nare low, but it is hoped new crop\nAustralian apricots and peaches will\nbe available shortly to fill the gap.\nAn increased crop of Australian\ndried fruits is reported. Crushed\npineapple from the Antipodes is expected soon at lower prices than\nstock currently offered.\nSoaps and cleaning lines' are en-\nJoying the usual spring demand.\nPrices on lobster in one-pound\ncans have advanced due to closing\nof fishipg grounds in the east in an\nendeavor to restore depleted beds.\nDemand is reported to be growing\nfor B. C .canned clams.\nTO DISTRIBUTE\nPOTATOE8\nAn interesting development announced at the coast is that an advisory committee representing\nwholesalers, retailers and consumers will be formed to assist the\nCoast and Interior Vegetable Marketing boards in distributing the\n1938 potato crop. The suggestion,\ncoming from retail merchants, has\nbeen approved by the boards, it is\nsaid, and the committee will be\nformed to go into action when 1938\npotatoes are ready for marketing.\nCarlot arrivals were a little better than average in the week, including one of bananas, one of oranges, one of California vegetables,\none of corn, one of alfalfa from the\nArrow lakes district, one of salt,\none of corn flakes, one of sugar, one\nof groceries and two of meats.\nTwo cars of jam were shipped\nto prairie points in the week.\nDominion Bonds\nWINNIPEG, April 14 (CP)-Do-\nminion of Canadian  bonds,  bid\n4% per cent, SepL 1, 1940, 107%,\n108%.   '\n5 per cent, Nov. 15, 1941, 111%,\n112%.\n5 per cent, Oct. 15, 1943, 113%.\n114%.\n4 per cent, Oct. 15, 1945-43, 108,\n109.\n4% per cent, Feb. 1, 1946, 111%,\n112%.\n3% per cent, Oct. 15,1949-44,103%\n104%.\n3Vs per cent, Nov. 15,1951-48,101%\n102%.\n4 per cent, Oct. 13, 1952-47, 107%,\n108%.\n3 per cent, June 1, 1955-50, 98%,\n99%.\n4% per cent, Nov. 1,1858-48,111%,\n112%.\n4% per oent, Nov. 1,1959-49,111%\n112%.\n3% per cent, June 1,1968-56, 90ft,\n100%.\n3 per cent perpetuals 89, 90%.\n(Note \u2014 Bond market closed until next Tuesday.)\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP).~\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStrt. Tough\nNo. 1 hard  138% 136%\nNo. 1 Nor  138% 136%\nNo. 2 Nor 128% 126%\nNo. 3 Nor  114% 111%\nNo. 4 Nor  104% 101%\nNo. 5 wheat     90% 77%\nNo. 6 wheat     71% 68%\nFeed    .'.    61% 58%\nBuy or sell with a Classified Ad.\nMORE BANK OF\nCANADA NOTES\nIN CIRULATION\nOTTAWA, April 14 (CP)-An increase of $3,617,888 in notes jn circulation was shown today in the\nBank of Canada's statement for the\nweek ended April' 13. Dominion\ngovernment deposits decreased\nwhile those of chartered banks were\nhigher.\nRatio of net reserve of notes and\ndeposit liabilities was 55.76 per cent\nthis week, 56.46 last week.\nThe statement, with last week's\nfigures in brackets, showed:\nLiabilities: Capital paid up $10,\"\n100,000 ($10,100,000); rest fund 1,-\n348,414 (1,348,414); notes in circulation 154,388,266 (150,770,378).\nDeposits: Dominion government\n24,363,726 (26,250,351): chartered\nbanks 183,423,853 (181,942,694); other\ndeposits 2,351,189 (2,812.042); total\ndeposits 210,147,769 (211,005,039); aU\nother liabilities 1,983,255 (2,011,370).\nLondon Close\nLONDON, April 14 (AP).\u2014Closing: Anaconda $27%; C. P. R. $6%;\nHydro Elec $4%; Int Nick $46%;\nU.S. Steel $45%; Brit Am Tob\n107s 6d; Courtaulds 42s 3d; Crown\n\u00a315%; De Beers did \u00a37%; East\nGeduld \u00a310%; H. B. C. 22s 9d; Imp\nAirways 24s 9d; Woolworth 65s 4%<L\nBonds\u2014British 2% per cent Consols \u00a375; 3% per cent war loan\n\u00a3103; funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3112%.\nRESERVE LAND\nFOR RAILWAY\nVICTORIA, April 14 (CP)\u2014The\nBritish Columbia government today authorized a reserve of 16.5\nacres of foreshore at Squamish,\nB.C., for use by the Pacific Great\nEastern railway as a site for a\nwharf and trestle approach.\nHave You\nChanged Your\nAddress?\nWe are making corrections and changes\nfor the 2nd edition of the\nNELSON STREET\nADDRESS DIRECTORY\nWe want to make this directory up-to-date. If you have\nmoved since December or are contemplating moving in\nthe near future we would appreciate having your\nNew Address\nPHONE 144\nASK FOR CD. PEARSON\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING  DEPARTMENT\n PAGE  TEN\nPPPPPIPPIP\u00ab!IPI|PPPVP\n\u25a0i **\u25a0    .-..j ' '    -ft1!   .\u2022\u25a0'\u2022  -.\u25a0!\u25a0.,.-*\u25a0'.'\u25a0  -\u25a0    '**'     '\u25a0)\u25a0 '.'>*. \u25a0 \u25a0<*\u25a0* ;*.\u25a0'\u2022\u25a0 ' * V\nNEl,SON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C\u2014FRIDAY MORNINO.AMIL 1S, 11*\n(i \u25a0 J'l*HlH>, !>W\nEaster Gifts\nBIBLES,    PRAYER BOOKS\nHYMN BOOKS\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nJune Is Set for\nBoard oi Trade\nDistrict Visits\nPlans for a motor caravan to Kaslo, the Slocan and Nakusp were\nplaced in the hands of the entertainment committee ot the Nelson board\nof trade, headed by L. H. Choquette,\nwhen the board met at luncheon at\nthe Hume Thursday.\nThe board decided lt would travel\nto Kaslo first for a noon meeting, go\non to Nakusp for an evening meeting, and return to New Denver for\na noon meeting the next day, completing the homeward trip in the\nafternoon. The trip was scheduled\ntor mid-June or later that month.\nLetter from the Nakusp board,\nwelcoming the proposal for a visit,\nand asking for information, was\nturned over to the entertainment\ncommittee.\nSmith, Vingo\nTied in Bowls\nAlbert Smith and Stephen Vingo\nare tied In the race for top honors\nin the Eagles carpet bowling league,\neach having 13 points. Eugene Stangherlin has 10 and R. A. England\nfour. '  \"'\nSmith beat Stangherlin 6-5 and\nVingo trimmed England 8-7 in this\nweek's games.\nIS ELECTED\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP)-\nG. H. Darling ot Nanaimo was elected president of the British Columbia branch \"of Laboratory .Technologists at the inaugural meeting\nhere.\nDr. David C. Cowen\nDENTIST\nJamieson Building\nSPOKANE, WA8K\n-PHONE 25-\nThe* Vew H**w Thai Yen*\nPRESCRIPTION\nFleury'\u2022 Pharmacy\nHfOiCtl Am IkMK\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR.H. MABER\nPhone 03}        510 Kootenay 8t\nLARGER KOKANEE PARR, BRITISH\nIMMIGRATIONS OF RAILWAY\nLOSSES URGED BY NELSON BOARD\nWould  Finish  Roads\nBefore Highway\nto Alaska\nAPPLEWHAITE\nLIFE MEMBER\nPresentation ot an honorary life\nmembership to E. H. Applewhaite\nof Willow Point, one of the two surviving charter members of the Nelson board of trade, election ot a\nnew member, J, A. Stewart,' and\nwelcome to a recently-elected member, G. M. Williscroft, marked the\nNelson board of trade luncheon at\nthe Hume Thursday.\nE. A. Mann, vice-president ot the\nboard, presented the life membership to Mr. Applewhaite, and with\nit a framed photograph ot a Kootenay lake scene and a copy of the\nboard of trade booklet, \"Nelson'and\nthe Kootenay\". He was welcomed\nby W. M. Bamford, president.\nExpressing his appreciation, Mr.\nApplewhaite told several incidents\nof the early days and said the present board with its large membership and luncheon meetings was\ngreatly changed from the board of\nthe early days.\nAs illustrating the honesty of\nearly-day citizens he told how he\nhad once seen a $10 bill wrapped\naround a door knob on an office\nbuilding, and how his companion\ncommented someone had probably\nlost it and would be along later\nlooking for it Thla proved to ba\nthe.case, he said, the man who lost\nit showing up shortly afterward.\nAt the annual meeting ot the board\nIn January the other survivl.-ig\ncharter member, T. A Mills, also\nof Willow Point, was similarly honored.\nFORWARD\nRESOLUTIONS\nThree resolutions recently approved by the council tor presentation to the annual meeting of the\nAssociated Boards of Trade of Eastern British Columbia at Trail in\nJune were passed and a fourth added, the last repeating a request for\naction to prevent cattle wandering\nat large on highways.\nPresenting it, C. P. McHar\"dy suggested all that would be necessary\nwould be to declare the highways\npound areas. This would remove the\nonus'from car drivers to the owners\nof fee cattle. H. M. Whimster declared such a resolution had been\npassed by the Associated several\ntimes but that no action had resulted. Mr. McHardy replied it might\nbe advisable to send a committee\nto Victoria to present this and other\nAssociated Boards resolutions and\ntb press them before the proper authorities.\nThe other resolutions urged the\nenlargement Of Kokanee Glacier\npark from 100 square miles to 335\nsquare miles; asked for-adequately\nfinanced and regulated immigration\nfrom Britain to provide a larger\npopulation; and called upon the\nfederal government to find a means\nof terminating heavy losses under\nthe present railway system in Canada.\n\"AGREED CHARGES\"\nThe board took no action on Vancouver correspondence stating the\ncoast board was protesting to the\nDr. C. M. Bennett\nANNOUNCES THAT\nDr. W. K. Blair\nIs Now Associated With Him\nin the\nPRACTICE of MEDICINE\nand SURGERY\nBURNS BLOCK NELSON, B. C.\nGET YOUR CAR IN\nTUNE WITH SPRING\nYou Are Offered a Complete Tune-Up\nService at the Beacon\n\u2022    Carbureter Service\n\u2022   Tire Service\n\u2022    Synchro-nixing\n\u2022    Chaiiis Lubrication\n\u2022    Spark Plugs\n\u2022    Brake Service\n-IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIP*\n1 WE ARE EQUIPPED WITH THE FINEST, MOST I\nI UP-TO-DATE BRAKE MACHINE ON THE MARKET. I\nI BEST SERVICE LOWEST COST |\nJiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuP\n\u2022    Finest of Gasoline, Oil Accessories and Service\nBeacon Service Station\nPhone    \"We Take a Personal Interest      70,1\n578 in Your Car.\" Baker  St.\nfederal government against legislation before the house providing tor\n\"agreed cllarges\" for freight and\n\"regulation of coastal and inter-\ncoastal services.\"\nThe correspondence was previously turned over to R, L. McBride,\nchairman of the freight and transportation committee, for study.\nThrough W. G. C. Lanskail, secretary, Mr. McBride presented a report urging no action which would\nbring turmoil or confusion in busi-\nnes conditions. This might follow\ndisturbance of freight rates. He\u00aburg-\ned that general stability should be\nmaintained.\nR. D. Barnes, chairman of the\nroads and bridges committee, stated the committee had received copies of a resolution being circulated\nin rural areas by one of the branch\nLiberal associations at Vancouver,\nurging support of proposals for construction of a highway through British Columbia to Alaska. The committee had written to Hon. F. M.\nMacPherson, minister of public\nworks, seeking information before\ntaking action,-he said.\nC. F. McHardy stated the coast\nresolution was going to farmers' institutes, women's institutes and individuals. He asserted Vancouver\npromotion had \"put over the P. G.\nE. and the Big Bend Highway,\" and\nhe felt the entire interior of the\nprovince should take action. The\nboard Indorsed his contention that\nexisting roads should be put into\ngood condition and missing links\ncompleted before any highway to\nAlaska was launched, and that action should be taken before support\nfor the proposal could gain momentum.\nSuggesting the American government might be interested in the\nhighway and might contribute a\nlarge sums to it, J. R. Hunter asserted British Columbia would nol\nwish to \"pass up' any of this money,\nand would not approve the project\nit it was to go through at the expense of other roads in the province.\nDaughter of U. S.\nPresident Visits\nB. C. Hot Springs\nVANCOUVER, B. C, April 14 -\nMembers of the Roosevelt family\nwere on Canadian soil again today\nwhen John Boettiger. youthful publisher of the Seattle Post Intelligencer, his wife, the former Anna Roosevelt and her two children, Eleanor\nand Curtis, arrived from Seattle this\nmorning aboard the Canadian Pacific coastal liner Princess Charlotte.\nBreakfasting anoard the Princess\nCharlotte, the party left at 9 a.m.\nto spend Easter week-end at Harrison Hot Springs hotel.\n\"Sisty\" and \"Buzzy\" were looking forward to- bathing in the 'sulphur pools and frolicking around\nHarrison lake, while stepdaddy\nBoettiger gravely discussed affairs\nof the day with the Vancouver press.\nNEW TRADE\nVICTORIA, April 14 (CP) -\nThe trade of moulder was brought\nunder the British Columbia apprenticeship act by government order\ntoday, bringing to 18 the number\not trades covered by the act.\nINJURED IN FALL\nVANCOUVER, April 14 (CP)-\nAlbert Cadman was in hospital today with severe head and back injuries suffered when he fell 15 feet\ndown an elevator shaft in the Marine building.\nCAR LOADINGS GAIN\nOTTAWA, April 14 (CP) - Car\nloadings for the week ended April\n9 totalled 42,938 cars against 42,089\nthe previous week and 47,340 in the\ncorresponding week last year, the\nDominion bureau of statistics reported today.\nSociety\n(Continued From Page Four)\n\u2022 Miss Barbara Lang, who teaches at Slocan City, plans to leave tor\nthe coast today.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Gaston Bourgeois\not Crescent Valley spent yesterday\nin town.\ne Rev. J. COyne, CS.8,H, ot\nYmir missionary district, has left\ntor EganviUe, Ont., where hia father is seriously 111.\n> Miss Margaret McDonald, teacher at Brilliant, was in town yesterday en route to Kaslo where her\nparents reside.\n> Mr. and Mrs. W. G. McGlnnls\nof Ymir were city shoppers yesterday.\ne Mrs. Hendricks, sr., of Kaslo,\nwas in town yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. R. Jarvis and Miss\nMary Jarvis of Procter visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yesterday\nincluded Mr. and Mrs. Jess Sanders of Crescent Bay.\ni Mrs. Thomas Brown, Hoover\nstreet, plans to leave today for Vancouver to visit her daughter, Mrs.\nMaurice Preece, Mrs. Dorothy Gussin and Miss Georglna Brown.\ni Mrs. E. J. Shardelow, Fair-\nview, is a patient at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital.\ne Miss Margaret Ball, who attends high school- here, plans to\nleave today for Fort Steele where\nher parents reside.\ne Rev. Mr. Motte of Salmo was\namong city visitors yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. F. H. Chanter\nwere in town from Longbeach yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in Nelson were Mr.\nand Mrs. W. S. Ashby of Harrop.\n\u2022 J. Taylor of New Deliver visited the city yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Gausdal, 520 Silica street, have taken\nup residence at 121 High street.\n\u2022 Miss Winnie Lutes, Kerr apartments, plans to spend the week-end\nat Penticton.\nBland Morley, Ben Sutherland,\nWalter Duckworth and John McLean left yesterday by motor for\nNorth Vancouver to attend a Kinsmen meeting. %\ne Mrs. A. Major accompanied by\nher son, Colin Major, and her young\ngrand-daughter, visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Captain P. Hartridge of Balfour spent yesterday in town.\ne Miss Agnes Eliason and brother, Herbert Eliason, are \u25a0 spending the week-end at Spokane.\n\u2022 Mrs. D.-P. Graham and daughter, Margaret, recently visited Trail\nat the home of Mrs. Graham's am\nand daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.\nGeorge Graham. They were accompanied home by Mrs. Graham's\nyoung granddaughter, Margaret.\ne Mr. and Mrs. E. Gordon of\nBonnington visited town yesterday.\ne Mrs. Amy Sturgess, Medical\nArts apartments, left yesterday to\nvisit her daughter, Miss Dorothy\nSturgess at Vancouver over the\nholiday.\n\u2022 Clarence E. Harmon ot Ainsworth spenty esterday in the city.\ne Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Towgood\nof Sandon are spending Easter week\nin the city.\ne Mrs. Oscar B, Appleton ot\nSunshine Bay was in town yester\nday to attend the reception for her\nfather, W. M. Stubbs, who was cele\nbrating his 89th birthday.\nFINED FOR DISTURBANCE\nAT ITALIAN CONSULATE\nMONTREAL, April 14 (CP)\nThree men were fined $10 today\nfor creating a disturbance April 1\noutside the Italian consulate, and\ntwo others were assessed court costs.\nThe five were arrested during an\nanti-fascist demonstration broken\nup by police.\nECONOMIC INDEX UP\nOTTAWA, April 14 (CP)\u2014Five of\nthe six economic factors recorded\ngains in the week ended April 9\nwhile one was unchanged, the Dominion bureau of statistics said today in reporting its economic index\nrose to 106.8 from 106 the previous\nweek.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. H,\nTRAIL, B.C., April 14-The three\ncircles of the Women's auxiliary of\nKnox United church held their\nweekly meetings Thursday afternoon, members of circle No. 1 being\nthe guests of Mrs. W. E. Wilson,\nwho entertained at the home of her\ndaughter, Mrs. M.'Brennan, Third\navenue. Those attending were Mrs.\nT. Temple, Mrs. Robert Weir, Mrs.\nF. Wilby, Mrs. G. A. Burton, Mrs.\nM. Burnham, Mrs. C. Fransen, Mrs.\nW. Spooner, Mrs. E. Swankie, Mrs.\nR. Cooper, Mrs. W. J. Wagstaff, Mrs.\nW. W.Dick, Mrs. A. Holflen. At the\nconclusion of the meeting Mrs.\nBrennan assisted her mother in\nserving. Circle No. 2 met at the\nhome ot Mrs. Walter Douglas, Government road, and among her\nguests were Mrs. A. Johnston, Mrs.\n5. F. Weir, Mrs. R. R. Burns, Mrs.\nW. Barchard, Mrs. H. Clark, Mrs.\nT. Brown, Mrs. D. Forrest, Mrs. D.\nChalmers, Mrs. H. O. Hinch, Mrs. F.\nB. Moran, Mrs. A. R. Buchan, Mrs.\nD. R. McLeod and Mrs. L. Crowe.\nCircle No. 3 was entertained by\nMrs. W. C. Aston, Topping street,\nthe members in attendance being\nMrs. W. H. Morton, Mrs. R. R. Well-\nwood, Mrs. R. B. Dimock, Mrs. M.\nW. Lees, Mrs. H. Garvin, Mrs. E. L.\nBice, Mrs. J.Dwyer, Mrs. J. Currie,\nMrs. A. C. B. Cooper, Mrs. A. J.\nRandell, Mrs. F. Phillips, Mrs. N.\nElder, Mrs. T. G. Roninson and Mrs.\nA. McMillan. At the conclusion of\nthe meetings refreshments were\nserved by the hostesses.\nElmer Ringheim, Daniel street,\nafter spending a few days in Kaslo,\nwill return to his home here Sunday.\nAn interesting address was given\nby Miss Etta DeWolfe, missionary\nto the Japanese and Chinese in\nVancouver and the Fraser valley,\nTuesday afternoon, when she was\nguest speaker at the Easter thank-\noffering meeting of the Women's\nMissionary society of Knox United\nchurch in the church hall. Mrs. W.\nC. MacKenzie was in the chair and\nconducted the devotional period.\nThe Mission band, under the leadership of-Mrs. J. R. Syphert attended and pleased all with their sing-\nIn?. Mrs. G. A. Burton was appoint-\n, S. ALLEN\ned associate helper's assistant, succeeding Mrs. W. H. Morton, who is\nleaving the city. At the conclusion\nof the business refreshments were\nserved.\nMr. and Mrs. A. T. Gill. Topping\nstreet, have had as their guests\nsince Monday, Mr. Gill's mother\nand brother, Mrs. T. S. Gill, and\nOtto H. Gill, who left for their\nhome in Cranbrook Thursday morning.\nMrs. V; Hutchinson, Annabie, is\na patient in the Trail-Tadanac hospital.\nMiss Eva Horwell leaves Friday\nfor Agassiz, where she will spend\nthe Easter holidays, the guest of\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. B. Hor-\nwelL\nMrs. William Irvine is a patient\nin Trail-Tadanac hospital.\nMiss Kathleen Crowe, who is attending Strathcona Lodge school.\nShawnigan Lake, is in the city to\nspend the Easter holidays with her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Crowe,\nTadanac.\nF. J. Sammons is spending a few\ndays visiting in Kaslo, leaving Trail\nMonday.\nMrs. Irene Condy presided Wednesday evening when the Women's\nMissionary society of First Presbyterian church held its Easter thank-\noffering meeting in the churoh hall.\nMrs. J. Mowat as guest speaker gave\nan address on Easter. Mrs. J. II.\nHenderson gave an appropriate\nreading, and Mrs. John- Allison\npleased with a solo. During the social hour that followed, refreshments were enjoyed.        i\nLance Emerson leaves Friday\nmorning for Silvertop, where his\nmarriage will take place Saturday.\nMiss Mary Lamont left Friday\nfor Vancouver, where she will\nspend the holidays,\nMrs. B. Farrar accompanied by\nher little daughter, Monica, left on\nFriday morning to spend tlie coming two weeks visiting Mrs. Far-\nrar's parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Slater\nin Vancouver.\n' Leonard Cadden and Erling Johnson are spending a tew days in\nKaslp. . ' \u25a0 -,-'\u25a0-.\n'Airport Nelson\nWould Serve a\nBoard Trade Airport\nCommittee Meets\nInspector\nThat in his opinion \"an airport at\nNelson would serve a useful purpose, and It Is hoped that provision\nof such a facility may be contrived\nat an early date,\"' was set out in\na letter received by the Nelson\nboard of trade Thursday from J. R.\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR SALE NEW HULL 19 by 5 ft.\nCheap for cash. Ph. M7-Y.    (983)\nWANTED-FURN. COTTAGE FOR\nJuly, Nth Shr. Box 985 Dally News\n(985)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nUnited Good Friday services in\nTrinity church II a.m; Mr. Ferguson\nwill speak.      t (980)\nEDISON MAZDA LAMPS. F. H.\n8MITH, PHONE 666, 351 Baker St.\n'  i (224)\nAdm. fee 25c one day; 50c.three\ndays, to indoor tennis tourney. No\ntickets sold Sunday. (984)\nBig stock must go! Clocks, kettles,\npans, trunks, beds,, ejc.;Bargains.\nMrs. Radclifie, Vernon St,      (899)\nBuy your rose trees from the\ngrower, 100 varieties. List free. H.\nKitchener, Nelson,;B. C.        (871)\nElectrical Contracting. Free estimate. McKAY & 8TRETTON.   -\n(179)\nCertified. Green Mountains, $1.90\nper 100 lbs., F. O. B; Cash with order. E. Hardy, Burton, B, C.    (947)\nThe Washer that does not tear fragile Cloths\u2014EASY Vacuum Cup\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOU8E\n(708)\nOpen all day Friday, A Glorious\nDisplay for Easter at moderate prices. Phone 982\nKOOTENAY FLOWER 8HOP\n.,.-.. (978)\nQRENFELL'S EASTER SPECIAL\n50c turkey and chloken dinner, (Oo\nSaturday, Sunday, Monday\n(970)\nA ilia and price KELVINATOR\nRefrigerator for every home at\nMcKAY & STRETTON'S\n(706)\nRobertson, district inspector tor\nwestern airways, The letter which\nwas referred to the airport committee stated:\n\"Confirming our conversation on\nthe occasion of a meeting of the\nairport committee ot your -board\nof trade . .,. we wish to sum up\nherewith, our comment and recommendations relative to the proposal\nto establish an airport at nelson.\n\"Your committee has given consideration to two sites on the waterfront at Nelson, either of which\nwould appear fo provide a suitable\nlocation for a landing strip. The nature'ot-the sites is such that the\ngeneral direction of such a strip\n'would be parallftl to the valley and\ntherefore in the direction of the prevailing winds. Each site is free from\nobstacles, so that a landing surface\nof- approximately 4000 feet could be\ndeveloped,at either, with the proper\nclearance in the ratio ot 20-1 at\neither, end.,' \u25a0 \\ \u25a0 **\"\n\"Asjwas stated, the minimum, requirements' for issuance of a liqence\nwould be the proysion of a surface\n2200 feet by 400 feet, with the proper marking devices and wind indicator, and a the same time provision\nShould be had for ultimate development . of not less than 3300 feet,\naftd-'-of* course,-.,as much 'greater\n'length up to possibly 5000.feet, as\nm\u00bby be- possible- in^the\/circdm'\nstances. .\nTEMPORARY LICENCE,\n\"On provision of a landing surface of the minimum dimensions as\ndescribed above, a temporary licence will be issued, by. this department: You will recall that it was\nstated that the issuance'of a permanent licence would depend- upon\nthe provsion'of hangar, telephone\nahd refuelling facilities.\n;\"It. is -realised that the physical\ndifficulties in the way. of such development are not Inconsiderable.\nIt is recommended that you make\na complete survey of the situation\nIn-order to determine as-exactly as\npossible the cost of development of\none or the other of these sites.\n, \"With reference to the question of\nfinancial assistance . from - this department you are advised'tha the attitude of this department has been\ntaht provision of municipal airport\nfacilities is entirely the-> responsibility of the municipality concerned, an exception - being, made\nin the case - of certain - municipalities on the transc'ahada * airways. If, as was suggested, you propose making application;to the,department for financial 'assistance,\nsuch application should be directed\nto our headquarters, since this office is not empowered to make any\nWEEK-END SPECIAL \u2014 large\ndaffodils 45c doz. MAC'S GREENHOUSE, Cedar & Front St. Ph. 910.\nMall Orders Given Prompt Attention. Open evenings. (954)\nAT THE BUTCHERTERIA\nGrade A Alberta Turkeys, Show\nBeef, fresh killed Chickens and\nFowl, Place orders early. See our\nwindow tonight for the choicest\ndisplay. (979)\nCHURCH  OF THE  REDEEMER\nFairview\nGood Friday:\nMorning Service at 9 a.m.\nLantern Servlte at 7:30 p.m.\n(971)\nCR08LEY 8HELVADOR RE\nFRIGERAT0R8. Your best buy.\nElectrosaver hermetically-seeled\nunit \u2014 glass wool Insulation \u2014 all\nthe best features \u2014 the shelves in\nthe door save you $40. FLEMING'S\n8T0RE, FAIRVIEW. (988)\nFirst Church of Christ, Scientist\nannounces a free Lecture on Christian Science by Francis Lyster Jan-\ndron, C, S. B., of Detroit, Michigan,\nmember of the Board of Lectureship\not THE MOTHER CHURCH, The\nFirst Church ot Christ, Scientist in\nBoston, Mass., on Sunday, April\n24th at 3 p.m. in Civic Auditorium.\n-The public is cordially invited to\nattend. (973)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nBRODIE, MR. JAMES - Passed\naway Wednesday. Body rests at\nSomers Funeral Home until Saturday, thence to St. Paul's United\nchurch where service will be held\nat 2 p.m., Rev. T. J. S. Ferguson\nofficiating. (982;\nPublic Notice is hereby given that\nby regulation dated. April 14 1938,\npursuant to Section 33 ot the Highway Act all traffic restrictions are\nremoved from the Salmo-Trall road\nbetween Fruitvale Bridge and the\nTown of Erie. \u25a0\u00bb'.\"\nW. A. TALBOT,\nAsst. Dist. Ehgr.\nBy authority of the Minister Of\nPublic Works.      '       .-'-.\n',. (981)\nTEACHERS AND\nSTUbENTS\nTRAVEL HOME BY BUS\nLow Fares   ,\nFrequdnt Service\nSpecial Time Limit\nSee your local agent..\nGreyhound Lines\n221 Baker St'\"''      'Phbhe 800\n087),\nREXALL STORE\n\u25a0Let nsloed your\ncamera with Kodak V.'Film. All\nsizes. Fresh stock.\nOur Finishing\nDepartment   gets\n.beat results from\nlyour exposures\u2014\nand REMEMBER,\nI   Free  Enlargement with every\nt*M\u00bb worth of\nFinishing done\nby us.   \u25a0\ncTfJLSB^\nModerntM-\nPLUMBING\nrwNi.tn\nB.C.PLUNBDIO\nO HEATING CO.\n.)\u25a0'\u25a0'. \". \"   s.\"\nCIVIC\nTODAY\u2014SATURDAY\nMatinee Today at 2:30\nThe finest all  technicolor\ncomedy of the season.\nComplete at 7:00 and 9:00\nADMISSION\nEvenings 30c, 16c   Matinees 28c, 10c\nBKflf\n' DAVJD 0. JIUHICK'5\nStmallftiiol    <\nTICHHICOlbl\n'  ComMy\nSACRED\nmr\nfof Easter\n$200 ,$3.50\nThere's nothing so freshly cool\nand comfortable for the man\nwho wants neat appearance\u2014as\na white shirt\u2014especially on\nEaster Sunday. See our selection\nof white shirts in all collar\nstyles. Highest quality\u2014pre-\nshrunk fabrics.\nEmory's Ltd.\nWeek's\nTrail lor 31 Unlicensed (ar Parkers\nTRAIL, B. C. April 14-^Thlrty-\none owners of cars, who had neglected to purchase licence plates\ntor 1938 and had left their cars\nstanding on city street, appeared\nbefore Magistrate Donald MacDonald in' the city police court this\nmorning and were each; given, one\nweek's suspended sentence to allow\nthem time to remove' their'vehicles.\nIn giving suspended sentence the\nmagistrate'pointed out the tact that\nmen were charged with obstructing traffic on the. streets and that\nin all cases licence plates for the\ncurrent year were'not:on the cars,\n\"As this seems to be a community violation of no great crime, but\ncomes under a city bylaw charging\nobstruction, I will give suspended\nsentence in each case for one week.\nYou' must.reslisetthat ,st\/eetsare\nmade lor traffic and not to be used\nas garages,\" he said.   - i.-\u2022        .-y|\nThe persons, charged and pleading guilty were: J. B< Thompson,\nOscar Pearson, W. W. Dick,Wiilieta\nBurns, J, Wilson, C. R. Stephenson,\nD. S. Moynes, J. Van Loon, G. M.\nWadds, I. Lewis, J. H. Mathews,\nJ. Mason, G. Bishop, J. II. Howell,\nH. M. McLean, N. Bowscher, A. Eng-\nfelt, A. G. Eldridge, A. Bowden, P;\nCaruk. S. Wiley, J. McKbrtolt, J.\nAnselmo, \u201e C. Hvambe, J. Thorner,\nD. H. Weir, K Potter, E. K. Thomas,\nG. James, William Crozler.F. Watkins. '\nM. M. Butorac, charged with the\nsame offence, stated that his car was\non the street only about three, hours\nand was waiting to go into the paint\nshop. He had used dealers plates\nto take it to the* shop and bad left\nthe car there. Chief ot Police John\nLaurie asked to have the charge\nwithdrawn, which Magistrate MacDonald allowed.        ..:,.,\ni\ncommitment whatsoever In this regard. \u25a0'\"\u25a0-\u25a0.,'.\u2022'\n\"It Is the oplnlon'of the undersigned that'an-airport at Nelson\nwould serve a useful purpose, and\nit ls hoped that provision of such a\nfacility may be contrived at an early\ndate.\"\nNO HOPE OF REUNION\nLABOR ORGANIZATIONS\nWASHINGTON, April 14 (AP) -\nDecision ot the C. I. O. to form a\npermanent' organization' apparently\nlocked the door today against any\nreunion with,the A. F. L.\n- The two embattled factions of organized labor, most observers agreed\nwih prepare now for an intensified\nrivalry overshadowing all previous\nstruggles.\nJohn - L. Lewis, who has guided\nthe committee for industrial organization since its inception in 1933,\nsaid his associaton would adopt a\nnew name, but the initials \"C. I. O.\"\nwould bo retained. ,\nSmall Want Ads bring big results.\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 20s        ' Medical Arts Bldg.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all, yoitr needs In plumbing repairs, alterations) and-\nInstallations,, ..* '.-;\nPh. 815        30t VICTORIA St.\nTHE STAR .\nll.Ntlto-n'i   Most   Populir W\nCAFE     *\nBetter    minis   li*\nlift   you'll   IMtl\n\u2022lata th* \u00abTAft..\nCORRECTION\nIn the Safeway Stores Ltd, Advertisement of Thursday,\nApril 14th, the items below should have read:\nTOMATO JUICE: IOV2 ox 3 tins 19c\nPer doi  69e>\nAPRICOTS: Aylmer, 17 ox 2 tins 29e\nEVERY COLOR YOU WANT FOR EASTER\nSTYLES for NOW and LATER\n\u2022 BLACK CALF\nSwing Strap.\n\u2022 CABARDINE TIE\nPatent Trim, navy\nor black.\n\u2022 COLONIAL PUMPS\nGODFREYS'LTD.\n378 BAKER ST.\nTELEPHONE 270\nVMW\nTODAY AND\nSATURDAY\nCONTINUOUS SHOW FROM 2:00\nIf You Have Seen This Wonderful\nPicture Onee\u2014SEE IT AGAIN\nWALT DISNEY'S\n1\nand the Seven Dwarfs\nIN  THE   MWWUOIJ\/   MUlTIPlBNt  TECHNICOLOn,\nStirh**t ii00, 4:05, 6:10, 8:15; ltf:|l)\nPLUS\u2014 COMEDY, SPdRTLICHT and NEWS\nI PRICES ALL DAY:     ADULTS 35c      CHILDREN 25c I\n1 \u25a0'\u25a0 ..s.s,^Mlisiji*lita__\u00a7'___________t\nIfjfggft.\n^xL^j^m_\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. 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Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}