{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0413416":{"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":"1938-04-01","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0413416\/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":" Trail Strong Favorites to End\nPorts'Hopes Quickly\nv' \u2014Pa&e Nine\n^thm ma^tm*\nChica&o Black HawksNud&e Out\nCanadiens, 2-0, in Overtime\n\u2014Pa&e Nine\nVOLUMES*\nFIVE CENTS PER COPV\nCANADA-FRIDAY  MORNING,  APRIL 1, 193S\nNUMBER 325   1\nhi\n*a*\nPROBE IS UNDER\nWAY AFTER FIVE\nKILLED IN A MINE\nBLAST IN ALTA.\nStrike  Contemplated\nat Hinton Collieries\nOver Wages\n16 MEN IN MINE\nAS BUST CAME\nHINTON, Alta., March 31 (CP)\n\u2014 Investigation wai underway\ntonight Into the explosion In the\nHinton collieries In this coal\nmining area 165 miles west of\nEdmonton that caused five deaths\nand Injury to five others.\nA. A. Miller, chief Inspector of\nmines, and T. Home, Inspector,\ncame here to Edmonton to In-\nveslgate the blast which occurred as day and night shifts were\nchanging late Wednesday.\nNo date for the Inquest Into\nthe deaths of the five men has\nyet been set.\nThe dead were Tony Pastushak,\nMartin Sprela, George Blcha William Ilecka and Peter Philllpino.\nSprela is survived by hia widow and\nfour children, Pastuchak Is survived by his widow and one child\nand Ilecka by his widow. Mr. and\nMrs. Ilecka were married about a\nmonth ago. Blcha and Phillipino\nwere unmarried.\nThe Injured, suffering from burps\nand wounds are recovering. They\nare William Aitken, sr\u201e fire boss;\nThomas Baumbartner, Gus Kubek,\nJdnas Pallo and Reginald Wlll-\niams.. They ate receiving medical\ntreatment here.\nSixteen men were In the mine\nwhen the explosion, of undetermined origin, occurred. The men killed and injured had Just started\nwork in a 75-foot room off a slope\nabout 2200 feet from the mouth * of\nthe mine\t\nFour of the bodies were found at\nthe site of the explosion and the\nbody of Tony Pastushak was found\nat a cross-cut where he fell while\nattempting to escape.\nA strike was being contemplated at the mine over .wages. With\nthe working agreement expiring\nat midnight tonight, the miners\nwen seeking a 20 per cent- Increase in wages and operators\nwere suggesting a 10 pen cent reduction. It was expected an arbitration board would consider the\ndispute before any actual strike\noccurred.\nShe Knows How\nIt Feels to Float\nST. CHARLES, Mo., March 31\n(AP) \u2014 Catherine Roedenbeck,\n10, knows how it (eels to \"float\nthrough the air with the greatest\nof ease.\"\nClinging to an umbrella, the\nthe girl was carried So feet by\na violent windstorm which swept\nthrough here last night. She was\nunhurt.\nYOUTH POSED AS\nBARON AT LODGE\nSALT LAKE CITY, March 31\n(AP)\u2014Authorities accused a handsome youth today of posing as a\nbaron at Sun Valley lodge in Idaho\nand writing $874 in worthless\nchecks to live In high style.\nHe was booked as Lewis J. Sullivan and Sheriffs Deputy R. C.\nJackson said that at Sun Valley he\nposed as \"Baron Hans von Rlchter\",\nan expert on skiing.\n\"Sullivan lookedjike a rich man's\nson,\" said Jackson. \"He told me he\nhad been a student at Dartmouth\ncollege and left there when his family cut off his income.\"\nDECISION ON DIVORCE\nBILL IS POSTPONED\nOTTAWA, March 31 (CP)-The\nSpecial senate committee set up to\ndeal with a bill to widen grounds\nfor divorce in Canada decided today to postpone further consideration of the bill's provisions until\nafter the Easter recess. The bill has\nbeen given first and second reading in the upper house and is now\nin committee stage.\nLOSES EYE IN ACCIDENT\nNEW    WESTMINSTER,    B.    C.\nMarch  31   (CP)   \u2014  David  Black\nlost his left eye In an accident\u2014\n, but lt happened in the right place,\n-ipyway.\nBlack was repairing the electrical bell system at St. Mary's hospital when his screwdriver slipped, Ttie Injured eye was removed\nby operation Just a few feet from\nwhere the accident happened.\nOIRL HIT BY TRAM,\nCRITICALLY INJURED\nVANCOUVER, March 31 (CP)-\nVlctorla Thompson, 17, was taken\nte hospital tonight In a serious\ncondition after she was struck\nand tossed several feet Into a\nravine by a British Columbia\nElectric Railway Interurban tram\non the outskirts of the city. Hospital attaches said the girl \u00abuf-\nfered a fractured skull, broken\nleg and arm. Her condition was\npoor.\nDORE \"LITTLE BETTER\"\nLOS ANGELES, March 31 (API-\nWhile the condition of Mayor John\nDore of Seattle was \"perhaps a little better today, there still is very\nlittle hope,\" said his physician, Dr.\nCharles M. Hayes. His temperature,\nDr. Hayes said, was lower today\nthan at any time since he became\nill.\nBlizzard and\nTornado Toll\nin Damage High\nCALGARY, March 31 (CP)-Past\ndisappearing snowdrifts, melted by\na warm sun, today revealed heavy\ntoll of livestock killed in the blizzard which lashed across the Alberta range-lands southeast of Calgary.\nThe heaviest storm toll was reported from the barren prairie\ncountry between Medicine Hat and\nBrooks where cattle and sheep drifted ahead of the storm, were caught\nIn fence corners and trapped in the\ndeep snow drifts.\nTORNADO TOLL IS\n38 DEAD\nCOLUMBUS, O., March 31 (CP)-\nRelief and rehabilitation progressed\nrapidly tonight in the tornado-torn\ncommunities of five states, where 36\nwere killed and property losses\napproached $2,000,000.\nHundreds of refugees, homeless\nand injured, huddled In emergency\nquarters. The Red Cross said 4000\npersons were \"acutely affected\" by\nthe storms whichi 'tore'at the tri-\nstate corner of Oklahoma, Kansas\nand Missouri, hit northern Arkansas and roared up the Illinois valley in central Illinois.\nRoyal Assent on\nSi Alberta Bills\n... \"EDMONTON, Match SI <CP) -\nLleut'-Oov. J. C. Bbtoeq today gave\nroyal assent to'58 bills in the Alberta legislature, Including taxation measures, the Appropriation!\nact, the Act to Provide for Establishment of Credit and'Savings Unions and the bill paving the way for\noil and gas conservation.\nAmong other bills receiving assent were the bill to provide the\nRealization of the Social Credit of\nAlberta, which outlines duties ot\nthe Alberta Social Credit board and\nauthorizes distribution ot information, and the bill amending and\nconsolidating the Workmen's Compensation act.\nImmediately after his honor had\nwalked into the chamber and given\nroyal assent to the bills, the house\nadjourned until tomorrow.\nTO VACATE GOVERNMENT\nHOUSE END OF APRIL\nEDMONTON, March 31 (CP)-\nLeutenant-Governor I. C. Bowen\nwill not find it necessary to vacate\ngovernment house before the end\nof April it was learned today.\nDealing with estimates for 1938-\n39, the Alberta legislature voted\nthat funds for the upkeep of the\nlieutenant-goverpor, his office and\noffice assistance]\"!* not spent\"\nTHREE R. A, F. FLIERS\nARE KILLED IN CRASH\nLINCOLN,! England, March 31\n(CP-Havas) \u2014 Three persons were\nkilled today when two planes\ncrashed in mid-air, 000 feet above\nSoampton, Lincolnshire.\nAll three were Royal Air Force\nfliers \u2014 Pilot Officer Tyrell of\nLondon, Sergeant Davies of Leicestershire and Aircraftsman Sco-\nberg of Glamorgan.\nDE GRAVES QUITS\nCOAST PROBE\nVANCOUVER, March 31 (CP) -\nThe city council's enquiry Into codfish marketing conditions, halted\ntoday by the resignation as investigator of Alderman H. J. De Graves,\nmay develop into a federal probe\nunder the Combines Investigation\nact. Alderman H. D. Wilson announced later if the city council\nsupported further investigation and\nevidence warranted a more sweeping enquiry, he would move a resolution to. appeal to the Dominion\ngovernment to conduct the inquiry.\nPEDEN8 IN SECOND PLACE\nBUFFALO,'*. Y., March 31 (AP)\n\u2014The Franco-Belgian \"red devils\",\nAlfred Letourner and Omer De-\nbruycker, forged ahead of the battling Canadians, Doug and Torchy\nPeden, gaining two laps as they\npassed the 900-mIles mark ot the\ninternational six-day bike race tonight Shortly before midnight the\nPedens got back a lap.\nTWO YEARS FOR HEAD OF J. R. THOMAS\n[SECURITIES, LTD., A VANCOUVER FIRM\nVANCOUVER, March 31 (CP) \u2014\n(John R. Thomas, 33-year-old preirl-\nLdent of the J. R. Thomas Securities\n[limited, was sentenced to two years\nI imprisonment by Judge J. C. Mc-\n[ Intosh in county court today for\n*\" '    '\u25a0\u25a0'\u25a0\u25a0\ndefrauding Joseph  Staudacher  of\n$500 by false pretences.\n\"You are an utter rascal and have\ntaken much money from many\ncredulous people by deceit\" Judge\nMcintosh said as he passed sentence.\nHOPE NOW ENDED\nFOR 6U.S. NAVAL\nAIRMEN ABOARD\nMISSING BOMBER\nBrings Death Toll to\n11 in Two Days of\nManoevres\n$300,000 LOST IN\nTHREE CRASHES\nHONOLULU, March 31 (API-\nHope for the lives of six navy\nfilers aboard a missing bomber\nwas abandoned tonight by United States raval officials directing\nan unprecedented search amid\ncasualty-strewn Pacific manoeuvres, which kllled five other airmen yesterday.\nOfficers, although continuing\nthe hunt expressed belief the six\nmen died when the plane fell Into\nthe sea yesterday morning, a few\nhours after five other filers had\nbeen kllled In the crash of another bomber.\nThe second tragedy culminated\na week of aerial accidents In which\nthree planes, valued at a total of\n$300,000, sank and at feast six others\nescaped possible crashes by forced\nlandings at sea in the navy's greatest mid-Pacific war games.\nPROVED VALUE\nA high naval official said the accidents had not demonstrated any\nfundamental wrong with the planes\nor pilots, but on the contrary, the\nperformance of planes in manoeuvres designed to test Hawaii's defenses, had conclusively proved their\nvalue in scouting operations.\nThe missing bomber dropped out\nof a six-plane formation during\nscouting operations against a powerful fleet converging upon the islands\nin a mock invasion.\nAboard were Lieut. Charles Signer; Aviation Cadet R. J. Iarrobino;\nAviation Machinist's Mates P. D.\nPancoast and J. A. Bingham, and\nRadiomen G. T. Williamson and\nC. R. Oulundsen.\nTHREE BODIES RECOVERED\nNaval-salvage workers recovered\nthree bodies from the wreckage of\nthe first bombing plane whlch\/Crash-\ned yesterday, Two other bodies presumably remained in the submerged and broken fuselage.\nFleet authorities also disclosed\nfive* men were injured, three seriously, and five others received cuts\nand bruises in landing 1400 bluejackets southeast of here. Heavy\nsurf swamped nine boats and four\nwere wrecked in the landing feat.\nLos Angeles Zoo\nAnimals Starving\nLOS ANGELES, March 31 (API-\nSeveral hundred lions, tigers, monkeys, camels and other animals at\nZoo park are near starvation and\nmay be put tp death.\nUnless immediate arrangements\ncan be made to teed them, said Dr.\nC. C. Warn of the city humane\ndepartment, \"we will put them to\nsleep humanely.\"\nFurtds of the California Zoological society, which operates the zoo,\nhave been depleted and admittance\nrevenues sharply curtailed because\nthe zoo was damaged in the March\n2 floods.\nALBERTA DECLINED\n$100,000 FROM\nOTTAWA\nOTTAWA, March 31 <CP)-\nIt's news  when  a provincial\nfiovernment won't take money\nrom the Dominion treasury.\nHon. J. G. Gardiner, minister\nof agriculture, told the house of\ncommons tonight the Dominion\nproposed paying $200,000 last\nyear to Alberta for feed and\nfodder assistance in municipalities fringing the drought area.\nThe province, however, represented that 10 municipalities\nnorth and west of Hanna, Alta.,\nshould be included In the\ndrought area, with the result\nonly $100,000 was requested for\nthe marginal municipalities.\nThe money is not repayable.\nSEVENTH DEAD\nIN SERUM CASE\nORLANDO, Fla., March 31 (AP)\n\u2014Deaths of seven women and the\nillness of four other persons\u2014all\npatients at a clinic where a serum\nwas injected for the treatment of\ncancer\u2014were investigated br county, state and federal health authorities today.\nThe seventh victim of a strange\npoisoning, much like tetanus (lockjaw) yet differing In its reaction to\ntreatments, died this morrdng. She\nwas Mrs. F. E. Moonert, 63, of Winter Park, Fla.\nSMALL CRASS FIRE AT\nHUME SCHOOL.HARMLESS\nApparently started by school\nchildren, a small grass fire on school\ngrounds fronting, or on the south\nside of the Hume school did little\nor no damage before it was extinguished with chemicals by the city\nfire department Thursday afternoon.\nThe department was called about\n4:30.\nMY8TERY WARSHIP IN\nJAPANESE MANDATED\nHARBOR\ntOKYO, April 1 (Friday) (AP)\n\u2014The Japanese press gave prominence today to a report that a\nmystery warship had entered the\nharbor of one of Japan's mandated Islands March 27, and Indicated\nthat \"various quarters\" believed\nthe vessel was American. The report said the ship played Its powerful searchlights ever the harbor and surrounding hills, then\nquickly disappeared. The time of\nthe visit was said to have been\n2 a.m.\nLAST   EIGHT   OF   16\nDE8TROYER8 STARTED\nLONDON, March 31 (CP-Havas)\n\u2014Start of construction of the last\neight of 16 destroyers of the 1937\nnaval program was announced to\nthe house of commons today by Geoffrey Shakespeare, parliamentary\nsecretary to the admiralty. The destroyers will be named Lively,\nLarne, Legion, Lightning, Lookout,\nLoyal, Laforey nnd Lance.\nBANK OF CANADA TO\nHANDLE OTTAWA INTERE8T\nOTTAWA, March 31 (CP) -Hon.\nCharles Dunning, minister of finance, announced today, that effective tomorrow, the Bank of Canada will act as agent of the government \"In payment of interest on\nand principal of Dominion government securities payable in Canadian currency, In other words, the\ndomestic debt of the Dominion.\"\nThe bank will act also as agent of\nthe government generally in management of the public debt, the\nminister said.\nBRITISH PUN\nIS SUBMITTED\nLONDON, March 31 (CP)-Great\nBritain today laid before representatives of Europe's major powers new proposals for obtaining\nearly withdrawal of foreign troops\nfrom tho Spanish civil war.\nThe British plan to end foreign intervention in Spain, where insurgent armies\u2014with Italian and German aid\u2014are sweeping toward the\nMediterranean and apparently toward final victory, was submitted\nto the chairman's subcommittee of\nthe non-intervention committee in\nits first to-fietlng in nearly two\nmonths. ..  \"**__,__  _\n\u25a0 -.si*:***.*!* ..*.; \u2022\u2022%$\u25a0 \u25a0i-.*-*\u2122***\"'-*\nNaval Race Is\nNow UnderWay\nWASHINGTON, March 31 <AP>-\nThe International race to build bigger dreadnaughts officially began\ntoday when the United States discarded a treaty clause limiting\nsuch vessels to 35,000 tons.\nSecretary of State Hull sent notes\nto the British and French embassies and to the Canadian legation,\nadvising them of Uncle Sam's intention. At the same time a note\nfrom Britain, announcing a similar\nintention, was en route to Washington.\nFrance took another course, electing not to build super-battleships\nunless other European powers (I.e.,\nGermany and Italy) do so.\nTexts of the notes will not be published until Saturday morning.\nN. E. C. Report to\nBe Issued Today\nOTTAWA, March 31 (CP)\u2014The\nreport of the National Employment\ncommission will be issued tomorrow and Monday will be devoted\nby the house of commons to a discussion of general unemployment\nconditions.\nQwft. Troops Flee\nas Franco's Forces\n2ND. PROVINCE\nto France\nDrive on\nOF CATALONIA IS\nENTERED BY THE\nINSURGENT ARMY\nTwo Villages Taken in\nStrong Drive to\nthe Sea\nNEAR IMPORTANT\nCITY OF GANDESA\nHENDAY, France (at the Spanish Frontier), March 31 (API-\nInsurgents entered a second province of Catalonia today in their\neastward drive to the tea, while\nto the north thousands of government militiamen and civilian refugees streamed toward and\nacross the French border.\nNavarrese troops were reported\nto have penetrated Tarragona and\ncaptured the village of Bitea In\nsmashing their way to a point\nfive miles from the Important\ncity of'Gandesa.\nA second column In the sector,\nInsurgent dispatches said, occupied the village of Calacelte, In\nwestern Teruel province, crossed\nInto TarragCtia and took the village of Caseras.\nNavarrese reported they had taken a government battalion composed entirely of Englishmen In the\nsouthern sector.\nTo the north of these operations,\nLerida, \"key\", to the defences of\nCatalonia, 80 miles west 'of Barcelona, was announced by the Insurgents to have been surrounded.\nLerida is the capital of the province of the same name, the first of\nthe four provinces of Catalonia the\ninsurgents entered.\nGandesa, goal ot the Navarrese,\nIs almost due south pf Lerlda, 21\nmiles from the Mediterranean and\nabout. 80 miles southwest .of Barcelona)\"   *\u25a0\u2022*  :'*\u25a0*\nSouthwest of Gandesa was the extreme right wing of .the insurgents,\nwhich .was reported to have occupied the village of Fornoles and\ndriven to within five miles of Val-\nderrobres.\nOn the northern sector of the\n165-mile front, the insurgents advanced through mountains eastward from Jaca toward Boltana, 65\nmiles northwest of Lerida.\nThe government's Pyrenees divisions were reported fleeing in disorder.\nHon. Walter Scott\nBuried at Victoria\nVICTORIA.March 31 (CP)-Rep-\nresentatives of two provincial governments today attended the funeral here of Hon. Walter Scott,\nfirst premier of Saskatchewan who\ndied last Wednesday in Guelph,\nOnt\nEven as Mr. Scott was burled,\npreparations went ahead in Toronto for an inquest into his death.\nHon. Gordon Conant, Ontario attorney-general, directed that Dr.\nSmirle Lawson, Toronto chief coroner and supervising corner for\nOntario, preside over the inquiry.\nThe funeral was held from First\nUnited church here. Hon. G. M.\nWeir, provincial secretary, represented the British Columbia government, and Saskatchewan was represented by G. B. Johnston, a former member of the Saskatchewan\nlegislature.\nDr. Wyatt Sees Possibility of\n60,000 New Farms in Ihe Northern\nBlack Soil Areas oi Alberta\nBy CARL REINKE\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nEDMONTON, March 31 (CP)\u2014\nWithin the next 26 years another1\nquarter-million people can be settled on land suitable for mixed\nfarming In Alberta's northern\nl.lack soil or Park Belt area, Dr.\nF. A. Wyatt, professor of soils at\nthe University of Alberta, said\ntoday before the Rowell commission.\nHe felt It might be assumed an\nequal number would be supported In the urban areas by that\nsettlement.\nDr. Wyatt estimated that about\n12,000,000 acres of land was available In the Park Belt area suitable for dividing Into three farms\nIn each 1000 acres, Including pasturage. He suggested about 60,-\n000 farms could be established\nthere eventually.\nSettlement od the irrigated lands\nof southern Albert**, could gradually be doubled, bjr, more Intensive\ncultivation on smaller units, he suggested. At present: between 4000\nand 5000 farm units are served by\nirrigation.,\nNo further settlement was possible\nin the southeastern part of tne province known as the drought area.\nDr. Wyatt said, and only a slight increase would be possible in the\narea of dark brown soil in the central part\nJ, M. Stewart commission counsel, recalled the commission had been\ntold in its Saskatchewan sittings\nthat tHe gray soil in the northern\npart of that province was not good\nfor cultivation.\nDr. Wyatt said the same soil extended Into Alberta in the Primrose\nLake area and he felt a good manager could grow good crops on it\nby using more clover. If land were\nleft in clover half or one-third the\ntime, it could produce 30 bushels\nof wheat or 50 bushels of oats to the\nacre, he said.\nSIX OTHER\nSUBMISSIONS\nDr. Wyatt's estimate of available\nland featured a day in which the\ncommission established something of\na record by hearing six other submissions by various organizations\nand having two more briefs merely\nfiled without being read into the\nrecord,\nThe list consisted of private committees In Alberta of Alberta bondholders proposing a refunding\nscheme with Dominion guarantees;\nan appeal by the Alberta College\nof Physicians and Surgeons for increased federal aid for health services; a tax qualification for municipal voters proposed by the Edmonton Taxpayers' Protective association; the Calgary board of\ntrade's request for help now in\nmarketing oil and coal so it could\nhelp the other provinces later; and\nsubmissions by the Calgary real\nestate owners and the Canadian\nchamber of agriculture.\nMontreal Importer Charges He\nWas Drugged and Taken lo the\nHomewood Sanitarium in Guelph\nTORONTO, March 31 (CP)-An-\ngus Mcintosh, Montreal importer,\ncharged today at an inquiry into\naffairs of the Homewood sanitarium\nat Guelph, Ont, that he was taken\nto the institution after being given\na drug by a Montreal physician.\nThe inquiry, conducted under an\norder-in-council of the Ontario government by F. H. Barlow, K.C,\nmaster of the Ontario supreme\ncourt, had Mcintosh as first witness.\nMcintosh said Dr. Colin Russell\nof Montreal visited him in March,\n1934, and asked if he would have a\nblood test. He consented and \"I\nwoke up in the sanitarium.\"\nMcintosh related he was visited\nby a Dr. Baugh and Dr. Harvey\nClare, superintendent of the institution. He said: \"I was locked up in\nmy bedroom and I remember nim\n(Dr. Baugh) pointing his finger at\nme and saying *We got you by the\ndrug route.' when I got strength I\nchallenged Dr. Baugh and asked\nhim what he meant by saying they\nhad got me by the drug route. He\nsaid 'We want fellows like you.\nThat's what I'm here for, to fill up\nthese rooms. If I don't do it somebody else will.'\"\nOn one occasion Mcintosh said\nhe saw an attendant beating one of\nthe patients.\n\"All the advertisements about the\nHomewood say it's quiet\u2014it's no\nsuch thing,\" the witness asserted.\nMcintosh said his room was so\ndirty he had to get down on his\nknees and scrub it himself,\n\"I had lots of company\u2014cockroaches by the hundreds, and mice,\"\nhe said.\n\"I refused to eat their food and\nlived on bread and butter and\nSpanish onions.\"\n'MARKED'(HECK\nFOR $3500 A FAKE\nEDMONTON, March 31 (CP) -\nA warrant .for the arrest of George\nWagner, alleged to have uttered a\nforged document, was held today by\nEdmonton police.\nThe warrant police said, was Issued on a complaint from Nick M.\nOstryzniuk, manager of real estate\nfirm here. Police said Ostryzniuk\ntold them Wagner had agreed to\nbuy an Athabasca district farm'from\nhim for $1800 and in payment had\ngiven him a \"marked\" check for\n$3500.\nOstryzniufc had given Wagner the\ndeed to the farm along with vari-\nous checks\/and money orders amounting to-$1700.     .*.*\"\u2022\nOstryzniuk told police he had taken ; the \"marked\" check tb a bank\nhere .and was told no account in\nWagner's favor was held in the Calgary bank on which it was drawn.\nAberhart Has No\nWord From East\non Bank Proposal\nEDMONTON, March 31 (CP) -\nPremier Aberhart told the Alberta\nlegislature today he had received\nno communication from Finance\nMinister Dunning offering assistance in the establishment of a provincial bank in Alberta.\nThe statement was in reply to a\nquestion by D. M. Duggan, Conservative leader, who pointed out Ottawa dispatches had quoted Mr.\nDunning as saying he would support an application for a provincial\nbank charter and invited such a test\nof Social Credit monetary theories.\nCALGARY JOBLESS\nPLAN TO STRIKE\nCALGARY, March 31 (CP) \u2014\nPlans for a strike of* Calgary relief\nrecipients, heads of families who\nare required to work 40 hours a\nmonth on civic work, were completed by the action committee of\nthe unemployed union here today.\nThe strike will become effective\nApril 8 and not April 4 as first\nmentioned\nThere are approximately 11,000\npersons on relief In Calgary\u2014a total\nof 2,700 families\u2014whose relief allowance will be reduced one to 11\nper cent, according to the number\nof persons in each family.\nWeather\nMin. Max.\nNELSON     --.   30 51\nVictoria       36 54\nNanaimo     _    29 54\nVancouver        32 58\nKamloops       28 56\nPrince George    12 46\nEstevan Point    3' 52\nPrince Rupert     32 56\nLangara       36 52\nAtlin       24 42\nDawson, Y. T.    18 38\nSeattle    _    36 56\nPortland        36 56\nSan Francisco \u201e    44 58\nSpokane        32 48\nLos Angeles     48 68\nKelowna       22 51\nPenticton        22 \u2014\nGrand Forks    24 50\nKaslo        30 \u2014\nCranbrook        25 42\nCalgary         10 28\nEdmonton     8 26\nSwift Current    10 20\nMoose Jaw     16 22\nPrince Albert    14 22\nSaskatoon    -   16 22\nQi'Appelle       12 18\nWinnipeg        20 24\nForecasts:  Kootenay:     Light  to\nmoderate winds, shifting to easterly, fine, warm by day, cool at\nnight.\n,t\nFormer Austrian\nMinister Arrested\nVIENNA, M*arch 31 (AP).-It was\nlearned from reliable sources today\nthat Karl Vaugoin Austrian de'\nfence minister under the late Chancellor Engelbert Dollfuss, is under\narrest on charges of corruption.\nIt was stated Vaugoin was especially involved in the Phoenix scandal\u2014he was a vice president of the\nlargest Austrian insurance company\nwhich crashed two years ago.\n(Vaugoin previously was reported to have escaped into Hungary,\nMarch 13 when Adolf Hitler seized\ncontrol of Austria).\nJailed for Not\nKeeping Bargain\nVANCOUVER, March 31 (CP) -\nEdward Kelsey Francis, 20-year-old\nmagazine salesman, was sent to jail\nfor three months today because he\naccepted a reward to recover a stolen saxophone without attempting\nto bring the offender to trial or keep\nhis bargain.\nMartin Olia Locy, musician from\nwhom the instrument was stolen,\nsaid Francis told him he could get\ninformation leading to the whereabouts of the instrument. Lecy gave\nhim.$15 after Francis told him he\narranged for the return of the saxophone on payment of $10 and a\nfurther $10 after It was returned.\nLecy, in accordance with previous\narrangements, waited in the lobby\nof a downtown hotel but neither\nFrancis nor the missing saxophone\nshowed up.\nBRITAIN'S LIVESTOCK\nVALUABLE IN EVENT OF\nWAR, MINISTER SAYS\nLONDON, March 31 (CP-Hav\nas)\u2014Seventy per cent of Great\nBritain's farm revenues come from\nlivestock breeding, a prime source\nof food supply in time of war, Hon.\nW. S. Morrison agriculture minister declared at the annual dinner\nof the Central Landowners associ\nation last night\n\"I don't know if we see as clearly as we ought the immense advantage, from a food point of\nview of our livestock production.\nThe stockage of the livestock population of this country ls 170,000,-\n000 \u2014 not concentrated In vulnerable silos but walking on its own\nfeet over fields of our country.\"\nMr. Morrison said.\nBILL INTRODUCED\nINOTTAWAHOUSE\nSEEKS CHANGE IN\nTHE MILITIA ACT\nSeveral   Amendments\nWould Transfer\nAuthority\nHOUSE WOULD ACT\nON CONSCRIPTION\nOTTAWA, March 81 (CP) \u2014 A\nbill the object of which Is \"to\nprovide that Canada shall not be-\ncome Involved In any war be- I\nyond Canada without the sanctions of parliament,\" was Introduced In parliament today by\nGrant MacNeil, (CCF-Vaneouver\nNorth).\nThe bill's object Would be attained by requiring the consent of\nparliament to tha participation of\nCanadian forces In any active service beyond Canada. Another provision would require the eonsent\nof parliament for enforcement of\nconscription of men for active :\nservice.\nThe bill Is titled \"an act to\namend the Militia act.\" An accompanying measure It \"an act\nto amend the Naval Service act\"\nThe Militia act would be amended in th following respects:\n(Continued on Page Twtlvt)\nHAND-TO-HAND\nFIGHT IN CHINA\nSHANGHAI, April 1 (Friday)\n(AP) \u2014 Bloody fighting surged\nthrough the barricaded streets of *\nTaierchwang today with the sue-\ncess of Japan's drive toward Su\u00ab\nchow hanging on the outcome.\nAbout 10,000 Chinese wielded\nbroadswords against the bayonets ot\nan equal Japanese .force In primitive contact fighting. Hand gren-\nades and machine gun fire at 50\nyardive-so played -a deadly, jait la*\ntlie fierce battle which has contin\u00ab\nued for days.\n\u25a0 Japanese acknowledged they\nwere being forced to hack their way *\nthrough solidly barricaded streets\nto take the city, on the line of their\nadvance south of Suchow, where the\nTientsin - Pukow and East - West\nLunghai trunk line intersect\nCrews Concentrate\non Boat Race Starts\nPUTNEY-ON-THAMES, England,\nMarch 31 (CP Cable \u2014 Oxford and\nCambridge oarsmen in their second last training session before\nSaturday's annual race, concentrated today on starts.\nThe light blues showed fine,fettle in a two minute spurt, outstripping their reserve crew by a\nlength and a half, equallylng Oxford's performance yesterday In '\ntheir surprise spin against the Cambridge reserves.\nOxford did no serious rowing today, experimenting with style and\nstarts. Later they rowed a short\ndistance unpaced, attaining a pace\nof 38 strokes a minute. .\nBoth crews will have outings to- '\nmorrow, their last before the race.\nBARKER AND COX\nCASE, APRIL 6\nVANCOUVER, March 31 (CP)-\nTrial of R. Barker and William Cox,\ncharged with conspiracy to defraud\nthe public, will open in assize court\nhere April 6, it was announced today.\nThe charges were laid In connection with properties of Hedley\nAmalgamated Gold Mines Ltd.\nThe trial was traversed from the\nfall assizes because of the illness of\nBarker, former president of tha\ncompany.\nCANADIAN PRESS-EMPLOYEES DISPUTE\nIS AIRED IN THE HOUSE OF COMMONS\nOTTAWA, March 31 (CP)-A. A.\nHeaps (CCF. Winnipeg north) said\nin the house of commons today a\ndispute between The Canadian Press\nand its employees had been going\non for some time and appeared \"as\nfar away from a settlement as ever.\"\nApparently the management had\ntaken \"a rather high-handed attitude\" and refused to recognize the\nemployees' organization.\nThe employees had been in touch\nwith the department of labor seeking a conciliation board but he understood certain formalities were\nholding up the establishment of a\nboard and keeping parties to the\ndispute apart instead of contributing to a settlement.\nThe Canadian Press was \"a sort\nof semi-public organization\" and\nshould set an example to other employers of labor and at least do\nwhat all good employers did, recognize a properly established union.\nMr. Heaps quoted from a memorandum he said had been submitted by the employees to the management and compared rates of pay and\nhours of work for Canadian Press\nteletype operators with those prevailing for the same work in the\nUnited States. Wages in the United States were* higher and hours\nwere shorter but the workers on\nboth sides of the line were members of the same International union.\nWhen the Canadian Press em\nployees asked for a board they were\n\"met with all kinds of obstacles, difficulties and technicalities.\" One of\nthe difficulties was the necessity\nof talcing a strike vote.\nEmployees should not be compelled to take a strike vote before a\nboard was set up. A strike vote only\nmade a dispute more difficult of\nsettlement\nHon. Norman Rogers, minister of\nlabor, said it was quite true a dispute had existed between the Canadian Press and employees operating teletype equipment.    '\n\"The department had hoped the\ndispute could be settled,\" he continued, \"but apparently the differences\nare not capable of settlement by direct negotiations. An application for\na board had been made and is now\npending.\"\nHe could assure the house it would\nbe dealt with \"entirely on its merits.\" The department had no intention of placing obstacles In tha\nway ot granting the application.\nIn order to avoid the setting up of\nconciliation boards in frivolous casea\nthe minister said, a declaration from\none of the parties to a dispute that\nit was reasonably likely a strike\nwould occur was necessary before,\na board could be set up. Normally\na strike vote was taken as evidence\na strike was likely but without\nconsulting the act and the regulations he would not say a strike\nvote was always required\n____________________________________________________________________\n puipw,.iuii|ii|liiiiiui in.\nujiniiHn\nPAGE TWO\t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NIL80N, B.C-FRIDAY MORNINO. APRIL 1, HS8\nDefinite News\nFish Hatchery\n\\   Expected Soon\nCunningham to Visit;\nFisheries Men Join\nGame Department\nHILLS WILL GO\nTO PENASK LAKE\n\u25a0 James G. Cunningham of the British Columbia game commission Is\nexpected to visit Nelson shortly\nand it is anticipated that during or\nImmediately after his visit definite\nplans for a provincial government\nfish hatchery at Nelson will be announced. It is hoped that with city\ncooperation, offered last year, year-\nround hatchery operations will be\nresumed.\nC.  H. Robinson, fisheries over-\n92 Years Old-And\nas a\nTakes Kruschen Every\nMorning\n\"I feel in duty bound,\" writes Mrs.\nA.J.W., \"to express my gratitude for\nthe marvellous results my father has\nobtained from Kruschen Salts. He\nis ninety-two years old, and is as fit\nas a fiddle. He can get around easily,\nand even run up and down stairs.\nHis friends marvel why it is he is\nalways alert, and never feels listless.\nHe always tells them the reason:\n\"my regular daily dose of Kruschen\nSalts in my first cup of tea every\nmorning.\"\u2014(Mrs.) A.J.W.\nMost people grow old long before\ntheir time because they neglect one\nVital need of. health\u2014the need for\nInternal cleanliness. Eventually they\nstart the healthy Kruschen habit\nThen, probably for the first time in\ntheir lives, they start getting rid\nevery day of all waste matter from\nthe system. Instead of being clogged\nthe intestines are clean and clear.\nInstead of liver and kidneys being\nsluggish they are active and efficient. New, healthy blood goes coursing through the veins \u2014 carrying\nhealth and strength and energy to\nevery part ot the body.        (Advt.)\n(K*e\u00a3\n. \u25a0 \u25a0 *.    .\n:\u25a0    \u25a0*\u25a0                                  '..*:\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n.      ...\nrSttaWk\n.\nWEBffi**\nHIHMk      \u25a0 _,_,____! *\",{\/.P           '-M-.initaii.Mte\n\u2022^wwfiiiii! mmmmmjj^s^M\ns__g^_fl_^^j_f__m^^s_^M^_f_^.\/  \u25a0                             -\u2022:.;..,: B^?w       \u00a3\nBpgjjjjly'^-' \u25a0&*&\u2022'*>\n_______fr  rr. w\/M              . -  \u25a0\n'    mW'rr       W    I\n^^^\u00abflH\n\"                        \u2022\u25a0:\u00b0j'$Q8$w3M\n... ...    .*\u25a0\u25a0.\u25a0. '- ' \u25a0\u2022        *' :*:vft-i'-\" *\u25a0  '.'.*\u25a0\u00a3\u2022\n''\"'\u25a0-\u25a0-                   \u25a0  '\u25a0l'i$B_\\\nr    ,                              :\u25a0:--    \u25a0  \u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0   r. rrr\nWham! A critical moment in a girls' softball game at Hume school during recess.\nseer for the district when this work\nwas carried out by the Dominion,\nhas Wen on the strength of the\ngame commission since January,\nand two other men formerly engaged steadily in hatchery operations\u2014\nA. P. Hills and P. B. Stratton, are\nnow with the fish culture branch\nof the B. C. game department.\nMr. Hills leaves soon for Penask\nlake to take charge of collection\nof Kamloops trout eggs for distribution throughout the province.\nMr. Stratton will have charge here\nwhile Mr. Hills is at Penask lake,\nand it is expected there will be local collections of eggs from Six-\nMile  and  Cottonwood lakes.\nROBINSON FIELD MAN\nIn his work as overseer Mr. Robinson will act as a field man for\nthe department. His district has\nbeen extended to include the Okanagan as far north as Vernon. He is\nnow supervising the.installation of\nfish traps at various points for the\npurpose of reducing the number of\ncoarse fish such as suckers, squaw-\nfish and carp.\nIt is anticipated that the hatchery\nat Nelson will operate on a year-\nround basis, as it did under federal\ngovernment auspices. Operations\nwill include a summer collection\nExcavation for\n(oal Bin Civic\nCentre Proceeds\nExcavation for a big coal bin at\nthe civic centre is nearing completion, a few feet greater depth only\nbeing necessary. The completed bin\nwill have capacity for a carload \u2022\u00bb\ncoal, and will also provide a coke\nbin and an ash bin.\nStakes were set Thursday by R. E.\nPotter, city engineer, for a concrete sidewalk to replace the present wooden walk along the Vernon\nstreet frontage of the auditorium,\nextending to, Hall street. It will involve a small fill to eliminate the\npresent ramp at the west entrance\nof the building.\nand hatch of Kamloops trout eggs,\nand distribution of eggs and try.\nFall and winter collections of Eastern brook trout and Kokanee eggs,\nand hatching and distribution, will\nalso be carried on, it is expected.\n\u2022 Travelling advertisements for\nmodern merchandise \u2022 . . that's what they call\nthese big, smartly streamlined Chevrolet trucks!\nBut there are other important reasons for the\npopularity of Chevrolet trucks. For example:\n(1) There's the record of this famous line, in\ndependability, adaptability, and economy. (2) Its\nconsistent price leadership. (3) Nation-wide parts\nand service facilities. (4) The wide range of\nfactory-built-or-installed bodies it offers.\nApply these factors to your own hauling problem, then come in and see us. We are\nqualified to advise you on all matters of economical transportation!\njjgjgjp\nNelson Transfer Co. Ltd.\n323 Vernon St.Chevrolet Truck Dealers for Nelson and District  Nelson, B. C.\nWESTERN      MADE      FOR      WESTERN      TRADE\nReady for April\nFool's Day Jokers\nBOSTON, March 31 (AP) -\nFranklin Park zoo and south\nBoston aquarium will be ready\ntomorrow to answer all telephone calls for \"Mr. Fox\" or\n\"Mr. Fish.\"\nCity officials said one worker\nat each place had been detached\nfrom regular duty to answer\nApril Fool's Day calls.\nThey'll answer unknowing\nvictims of practical Jokes with\na single sentence: \"I'm sorry,\nsir you're speaking with the\naquarium (or the zoo).\"\nTRAIL CITY TO\nDONATE $500 TO\nNEW BALL PARK\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e March 31 (CP) -\nCity of Trail will donate $500 for\ndevelopment of a new playground\nand baseball park. The city will so\nadvise Trail Rotary club which\nholds the deed to the ground. A\nboard of directors, representing the\ncity council, parks board, Rotary\nclub and sport organizations will be\nnamed to control operations of the\nplayground.\nSmiling Skies Say\nGoodbye to March\nat Smelter City\nTRAIL, B. C, March 31 (CP) -\nWith smiling skies and a warm sun,\nTrail crossed up the weather man\ntoday, as the month of March was\nquietly rnaking its exit in the same\nlamblike manner ft appeared here\n31 days ago.\nAt Rossland, only eight miles\naway, however, the old adage of \"In\nlike a lion and out like a lamb\"\nheld good today as the Golden City\nbasked in warm sunshine and recalled the blustery, snowy day that\nushered in this month.\nSAN DIEGO, March 31 (AP)\n\u2014 Frank Grunhoff was a great\nlover of dogs. He held a cookie\nbetween his teeth and invited\nBowser to have a bite.\nBowser took a bite \u2014 of Grun\nhof's nose.\nWAKE UP LIKE\nA CAVE MAN\nFeel Full of Ufe-No More\nTired, Dull, Heavy Mornings\nKeep jour liter liciltl.y ind you'll leel\nireit bbj morning. When you wake up\nfeeling \"rotten\" jour liter is oat of order.\nTow liver clem tho Hod ol poisoni,\nluttite, helps itwnich, kidneys snd intestines to work properly. A mare bowel\n\u25a0mment isn't enoujli. \"Fru!l-\u00ab-lites\"\n\u25a0nd. Irom fruits tnd herbs, will strengthen\nand build up jour lira like nothing tin will.\nYou'll bo imued how well you are every\nmorning.   Try Frui.-i.-t.tea.   All tlru[giils.\nFRUITATIYESriSSs\nRoosevelt Has 'No\nInclination lo\nBe a Dictator'\nBy HAROLD OLIVER\n(Associated Press Writer)\nWARM SPRINGS, Gr., March 31\n(AP)\u2014President Roosevelt, charging organized opponents ot the\nUnited States government reorganization program had \"planted\nbogles under every bed,\" asserted\nin a letter made public today he had\n\"no Inclination to be a dictator.\"\nThe letter, addressed to an unnamed friend under date of March\n29, urged approval of the measure\n\"in its present form\" and replied to\ncharges that the legislation would\nmake him a dictator by asserting:\n\"As you well know, I am as\nmuch opposed to an American dictatorship as you are, for three simple\nreasons:\n\"(a) 1 have no Inclination to be\na dictator.\n\"(b) I have none of the qualifications which would make me a successful dictator.\n\"(c) I have too much historical\nbackground and too much knowledge of existing dictatorships to\nmake me desire any form ot dictatorship for a democracy like the\nUnited States of America.\"\nSeeds for Later\nTransplants\nAre Feature Now\nGardeners who have hotbeds or\ngreenhouses or who use seed plots\nindoor, are already busy planting\nseeds fpr later transplanting as\nseedlings. So far the vegetables\nhave had most attention, current\nplantings including cauliflower, cabbage, egg plants, tomatoes, Brussel\nsprouts and peppers. Lettuce and\nspinach are receiving some attention.\nAny of the flowers suitable for\ntransplanting, such as petunia, zin-\nia, pansies, lobelias, asters and so\non, may also be planted in seed\nflats now. Comparatively few sweet\npeas are treated thus, though it\nwas standard practice among pea\nfamilies a short time ago. '\nRoses, asters and sweet peas appear to be* the favorites in this district, but gladlolas have many\nstaunch supporters. Considerable\ninterest is being shown also in\nhardy lillies. Perennial seeds are in\ndemand, for many perennials are\nhardy and do well in the Kootenays.\nAMENDMENTS SOUGHT\nNAVAL, MILITIA ACTS\nOTTAWA, March 31 (CCF)-\nParllamentary sanction for any participation of Canadian miltary and\nnaval forces in hostilities other than\nfor direct defence of Canada would\nbe necessary under amendments to\nthe naval service act and the militia\nact introduced in the House ot\nCommons today by Grant Mac-\nNell (C.C.F., Vancouver North.)\nro\u00bb FURNITURE \u25a0\nNEW FURNITURE-BIGGER AND BETTER VALUES\n(USE OUR CONVENIENT CREDIT PUN)\n*\u00abMMHHI'HH\u00abBHH.^BM''''''HBMn\n\u25a0'-*\n4 Piece BEDROOM SUITE\nSelected walnut veneer, chiffonier, vanity with\nplate glass mirror and upholstered bench. Full size\nbed. 4 pieces. SPECIAL .\n69*50\nUnequalled Values\nDRAPERY SPECIALS\nShadow cloths, homespuns. Heavy quality, suitable for\ndress or coverings. All new, modernistic designs. Full\nrange of shades, double width. 4Q-\nYARD  *wt\nBROCADED RAYON DRAPES\n50\" wide. Beautiful new designs. Blue, green, rust, tan.\nSuitable for living room windows. Heavy quality. QC__\nYARD  V JC\nCURTAIN SETS\nOf finest quality Marquisette. 42\" wide. Standard length.\nBeautiful pastel shades. tl QC\nPAIR  , , .<P-UJ\u00abI\nManx Calf Answer\n\u2022 to Prayer He Says\nMOOSE JAW, Sask., March 31\n(CP) \u2014 A manx calf, bom on\nthe farm of C. A. Hughes, today\ncaused speculation of a milker's\nparadise \u2014 garnering milk from\ntail-less cows.\nMr. Hughes, former president\nof the Lake Chaplin agricultural society in the Moose Jaw\ndistrict said:\n\"It is the kind of a calf that\nthe farmer's wife, his daughter\nand hired man who did the\nmilking have long prayed for.\"\nRelief Situation Becomes More\nAcute in Fernie Under New Policy\nFERNIE, B. C. \u2014 The Fertile\nboard of trade held its annual\nmeeting Wednesday evening. The\nfinancial statement shows a slightly larger cash balance.\nIn reviewing the year's activities,\nthe president, E. K. Stewart, drew\nattention to the very precarious\nsituation in the city at the present\ntime. A large number of Fernie's\nunemployed are being classified\nas \"unemployables\" and as such\nare becoming charges of the city.\nThis would cause an Increase of\nabout 60 per cent in the relief\ncosts to the city, adding greatly to\nthe large civic taxes already being\npaid by the overburdened ratepayers, which in turn would make it\nnecessary to find some plan whereby the  taxpayers'  load  could be\n(Advt.)  lowered. Mr. Stewart advised the\nNEW\nTRAVEL COMFORT\nKettle Valley - Kootenay Express\nThe Canadian Pacific Railway Company takes pleasure\nin announcing new coach equipment on its Kettle Valley\nTrains 11 and 12, between Vancouver and Medicine Hat\nwith the inauguration of\nLIGHT WEIGHT 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 DESICNED 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.\nDaily service from Nelson in each direction: Westbound leaving\ni.m. for Vancouver; Eastbound leaving 1:30 a.m. connecting\nat Medicine Hat with the \"Dominion\" for Montreal and Toronto.\n10:\nilly S'\n05 a.i\nFor further Information ask your local Ticket Agent or write:\nN. J. LOWES, City Ticket Agent, Nelion, B.C.\nmembers of the board to give serious thought to the form of civic\ngovernment best suitable for Fer-\nnie.pointing out the three available\nalternatives: namely, a continuance of the present commissioner-\nship which may at any time be\nconcluded, a return to the charter\nform with a city council and mayor or the reversion to an unorganized district under the provincial\ngovernment Owingto the fact that\nthe civic financial statement for\n1937 has not yet been issued and\nthat A. B. Sanborn was In Victoria where he is discussing the\nmatter with provincial authorities\nMr. Stewart asked that any discussion or action be deferred until\nthe first board meeting.\nThe meeting endorsed a letter of\nthe Rooseville Liberal association\nto provincial minister of public\nworks, Hon. Frank McPherson,\nasking that work be continued on\na road from Elko to Roosville to\nconnect with U. S. highway No,\n93.\nJ. Boese, caretaker of the city\ntourist camp, reported that further improvements were being contemplated for an already, beautiful\nand well-equipped camp. There was\na slight increase in the number, of\ntourists using the camp.\nA. B. Sanborn, Tom Beck and\nJ. R. Wallace were appointed as a\ncommittee to receive and prepare\nresolutions to be presented at the\nAssociated Boards * of Trade convention which is to be held In Trail\non June 6, 7 and 8. The committee\nwill also arrange for delegates to\nattend the convention.\nA policy committee consisting of\nE. K. Stewart, A. B. Sanborn, Bert\nJohnson, Tom Beck and J. R. Wallace was appointed to ascertain\nthe tonnage of freight hauled by\ntruck to and from Fernie and to\ninvestigate the possibility of boycotting . goods  hauled by  trucks.\nFernie is dependent on coal mining and as the railroads are the\nchief consumers of coal it was considered good policy to have as much\nof the freight business as. possible\ndiverted to the railways with which\nthe city's future prosperity is linked.\nThe election of officers resulted\nas follows: President, E. X. Stewart;\nvice-president. H. L. Reid; secretary\ntreasurer, Tom Beck; \u2022 Executive\nboard of directors, Bert Johnson,\nRobert McKeown, A.'B. Sanborn,\nRobert Nolan,. John T. Mangan, J.\nR. Wallace, Joe Aiello, John Boese,\nCharles Edgar, Louis Maflioll and\nFrank Ingrarn.\nSupervision Radio\nAdvertising Urged\nEDMONTON, March 31 (CP)-\nCloser supervision by tbe Canadian\nBroadcasting Corporation of radio\nadvertising claims for patent medicines and remedies was urged be-\nfor the Rowell commission today\nby Dr. A E. Archer for the Alberta\nCollege of Physicians and Surgeons.\nVery enthusiastic and extravagant claims were being made over\nthe air where the remedies were\noften useless and might be harmful\nin delaying the obtaining of proper\ntreatment, Dr. Archer said.\nChairman N. W. Rowell suggested\nthe matter might better brought to\nthe attention of the broadcasting\ncorporation.\nDuring 1938 France will observe\nthe 300th birthday of Louis XIV.,\nthe monarch who built the Palace\nof Versailles.\nAlbertan Remanded\na Week on a Trail\nCar Theft Charge\nTRAIL, B. C, March SI (QPJ-\nDuncan McKinnon of Calgary and\nMedicine Hat was remanded one\nweek when he appeared before\nMagistrate Donald MacDonald in\ncity police court on a charge of automobile theft.\nThe car, owned by R. C. Crowe,\nK. C, general counsel for the Consolidated Mining & Smelting company of Canada, limited, was stolen\nMonday and recovered when abandoned Tuesday.\nVANCOUVER, March 31 (CP)-\nCity police forested eight stowaways who travelled only 40 miles.\nThe men were removed from a\nCanadian Pacific Railway transfer barge when it reached here\nlast night from Ladysmith, B. C\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, BC, HOTELS\nHume Hotel\n, Nelson, B. C\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :    EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan. $1 50 up\nC. M. Schak, H. H. Underbill,\nSpokane; Mr. and Mrs. S. Leary,\nNakusp; L. Lubett, Nelson; W. A.\nWilson, W. G. Quast, L. Lucas, A.\nV. McLennan, P. R. Cottingham, A.\nC. Parker, H. C. Oliver, M. O. Cork-\nill, Vancouver; G. A. Humphreys,\nToronto; H. Sinclair, Rer.o mine; P.\nM. Wards, T. A. Burns, Medicine\nHat; M. H. Roberts, Calgary; E.\nHankedahl, Ymir; O. Redpath,\nCranbrook; R. G. Tjebbes, Grand\nForks; J. M. Perie, Winnipeg;\nGeorge T. Danieli, Procter.\nOccidental Hotel\n\/0t Vernon St. Phone 89\/\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLlceued Premises\nmmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmmmm\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJAS. E. MAODEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled,\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART ot the City\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nI -YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDuff erin Hotel\n900 Seymour St\nNewly Renovated Throughout\nPhones      Elevator\nA. PATERSON. late of\nVancouver, B.C.    Coleman, Alta. Proprietor\nI\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\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.     -\n 4SSf\n^0%,\nA MILLION\nMOTHERS\nCAN'T BE\nWRONG\n\u2022 All over Canada, Heinz Strained\nFoods save mothers hours of work\n, and worry every day. Soup, vegetables, fruit, cereal, ready to heat,\nseason and serve. Quality, safety\nand flavour assured by medical\nacceptance arid Heinz 57 trademark. 12 varieties.\nFOR\nLENT\nneve ^acceptance.\nSr&onithat-ery   ,.me\n\u201eTal-maker appreciates M m t\nSSSft2& the cooled\nVIM FROM\nVEGETABLES\n\u2022 It's newi It's a hitl It's\nthe most nourishing vegetable soup\u2014without meat\u2014\nthat was ever simmered to\nperfection in small batches\nby master chefs. Heinz Vegetarian Soup. Rich. Thick,\nHome-made taste. Satisfying. Sustaining. Serve this\ndelicious soup soon.\nHEINZ\nIZl SOUPS\nnii\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL* 1, 1938\n(anon Hinton\nDead; 48 Years\nService, B. C.\nVICTORIA, March 31 (CP)-Can-\non J. W. flinton, 71, for nearly half\na century associated with church\nwork on Vancouver Island died here\nlast night, Canon Flinton was! widely known in the Anglican ministerial field in the Diocese of Columbia and served under the first\nbishop of the diocese, assisted in\nthe building of a number of\nchurches in places he ministered to\nand was intimately connected with\nthe pioneer days of up-island com-\nmunities.\nCanon Flinton was born in Scarborough, England and came to Victoria in 1890. Since then he was in\ncharge of parishes at *Norihfield,\nWellington, Nanaimo, Sidney,\nCourtenay-Sandwick, his last parish\nbeing that of Saltspring Island. He\nwas also minister in St. Mark's parish in the Great Victoria area.\nSurviving are his wife, two sons,\nAustin, Victoria; Eric, Courtenay\nand two daughters, Mrs. A. E. All-\nberry, Courtenay and Mrs. I. 1.\nMerrlman, Victoria.\nAUSTRIAN NAZIS\nRETURN TO HOMES\nSALZBURG, Austria, March 31\n(AP)\u2014The Austrian legion came\nhome today.\nThese' Austrian Nazis fled Into\nGermany in 1933 and 1934 as outlaws, tattered tramps \u2014 fugitives\nfrom the laws of Engelbert Dollfuss and Kurt Schuschnigg's independent Austria.\nThey returned a carefully drilled,\nmotorized corps, neatly uniformed\nas Nazi storm troopers. How many\nreturned is an offcial secret, but\none estimate placed 14,000 in the\nline that thousands cf cheering,\nweeping home folk greeted.\nKING'S ADDRESS\nTO BE BROADCAST\nLONDON, March 31 (Cp Cable)\n\u2014 An annoucement from Buckingham Palace today said the king's\naddress at the opening of the Empire Exhibition at Glasgow May\n3 will be broadcast throughout the\nempire.\nAlberta's Coal and Oil Industries\nNeed Assistance in Finding Markets\nEDMONTON, March 31 (CP)-\nIt Alberta were given a little help\nin finding markets for her oil and\ncoal, the province would soon not\nrequire assistance from the federal\ntreasury but would shortly be in\na position to help the other provinces, the Rowell Commission was\ntold today by C. B. Clark, spokesman lor the Calgary board of\ntrade.\nThe possibilities of Alberta's coal\nand oil industries had not been\ngenerally realized, Mr. Clark said.\nHe suggested \"not a great deal\nwould be necessary to give us very\nwide markets,\" particularly in oil.\nBecause of lack of markets, oil\nproduction in Turner Valley had\nbeen held down to 35 per cent of\nthe potential production last December, when 392,000 barrels were\nproduced, Mr. Clark said. He told\nthe commission the most conservative engineers were convinced\nnow that that area would provide\na regular supply for many years\nseveral times as great as is now\nbeing produced.\nSomething more than a decrease\nin price of gasoline to the consumer was required to provide a market,  Mr. Clark said. Various ex\npedients had been advanced, \u2014 a\ntariff, freight rate subsidy, a pipe\nline to Saskatchewan and Manitoba.\n\"It is obvious that if anything is\nto be done, the solution will require at least the cooperation of\nthe Dominion government, perhaps\neven taking the whole matter, into\nits own hands,\" Mr. Clark suggested.\nTo enlarge the market for Alberta coal, he proposed all public buildings in Canada should use\nCanadian coal and all coal supplied for relief in Ontario should\nbe of Canadian origin.\nHe advocated expansion of the\npresent subvention policy to meet\ncompetition from imported coal\nand coke. The railways might reduce freight another 50 cents a\nton and the National Employment\nCommission grant a bonus of 50\ncents a ton for the creation of employment. He suggested formulation of some national policy for\nthe best use of Canadian coals.\nOtherwise, the Calgary board of\ntrade fully endorsed the submission made before the commission\nby the Edmonton chamber of commerce, Mr. Clark said.\nMore Dominion Aid for Public\nHealth Services Is \"Imperative\"\nBy CARL REINKE\n(Canadian Press Staff Writer).\nEDMONTON, March 31 (CP).-\nIncreajed Dominion assistance in\nfinancing of public health services\nis \"immediately imperative.\" The\ncollege of physicians and surgeons\nof Alberta asserted today.\nNo provision had been made for\npublic health in the British North\nAmerican act so that responsibilities of the provincial and federal\ngovernments now stood in need of\nbeing clearly defined, the college\nsubmitted to the Rowell commission.\nIn general it urged the Dominion\nto assume a large share of the load\nand seek \"more activity\" to elevate\nand unify the standard of public\nhealth work across Canada.\n\"The question of the health of\nthe people of Canada is of vital importance to all the people of Canada,\" said Dr. A. F. Archer.\n\"To have the responsibility refused by the federal government,\naccepted by the provincial and by\nit passed on to the municipality,\nthe body with the least taxing power and the least financial ability to\nassume it, means the maximum expectation is met with the minimum\naccomplishment. On humanitarian\ngrounds the medical profession has\nborne the major load.\"\nSpecifically, Dr. Archer suggested\nenlargement of a separate federal\nhealth department. A policy of federal grants-in-aid to provincial en-\n- terprises, a limited scheme of health\n| insurance and a large measure of\nfederal responsibility for providing\nthe entire needs of the unemployed,\nemployable or not.\nUnder the last head were included \"adequate relief\" unemployment\ninsurance, adequate necessary medical care.\nAs to the health insurance Dr.\nArcher suggested whenever it was\nintroduced it should be concurrent\nwith or should not precede unemployment insurance and should include all unable to contribute be:\ncause of poverty. It should be Dominion-wide or on a provincial basis\nwhich could become part of a Dominion scheme. It should also be\nassisted by the Dominion and pro-\nvincially administered on standard\napproved by the Dominion.\nThe financial position of hospitals\nwas an urgeiit problem, when the\nprovince contributed only 45 cents\na patient per day, Dr. Archer said.\nUnless increased assistance was received in a few months, several\nhospital in the province would have\nto close, since the municipalities\nwere unable to extend greater aid.\nDr. Archer suggested among\nother things, that the Dominion\ncontrol treatment of mental diseases. He suggested immigration had\nsubstantially increased the number\nof mental patients, out of proportion to the number of immigrants.\nHe said 60 per cent of those In\nmental institutions came from the\n36 per cent of the population who\nwere immigrants.\nHe advocated mental hygiene\nclinics provided by the Dominion\nas an essential way of reducing\nmental disease.\n-PAGE THREE\nRossland Social..\nBy MRS. B. B. FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, B.C. \u2014 A pleasing\nfeature of the Sunday school service at St. Andrew's United church\nSunday was when five boys took\ncharge of the opening exercises, giving a review of the previous Sunday's lesson. William Polonikoff\nacted as chairman. The general topic was \"Love the Law of Life.\" Raymond McLeod, Donald Reed, Bruce\nMcKenzie and Albert Nichols, treated the subject from various angles.\nGeorge Wright, who has been a\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. W. Wright,\nhas returned to Red Deer, Alta.\nMr. and Mrs. John Metzgar are\nleaving for Riley, Alta., where they\nwill spend the summer.\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Halarcovitch\nof South Slocan have taken up resi\ndence in the city.\nMr. and Mrs. William Arrowsmith\nentertained with two tables of court\nwhist at their home on Washington\nstrete. First honors went to Mrs.\nL. A. Read nad R. J. Portman and\nconsolations to Mr. and Mrs. W. A.\nTurner. Those present were Mr. and\nMrs. R. J. Portman, Mr. and Mrs.\nLeslie A. Read, Mr. and Mrs. William A. Turner.\nMrs. J. Black has returned from\nNelson.\nMrs, L. Wright is visiting Grand\nForks.\nMiss Mary McDonell, who has\nbeen spending several weeks at her\nhome in this city, has returned\nto Seattle to resume her nursing duties.\nKASLO Social...\nKASLO, B.C.,-Mr. and Mrs. W.\nP. Rudkin left Monday to reside\nat Vancouver. After they resided in\nKaslc for several years.\nFor a number ol years Mr. Rudkin\nwas CP.R. operator and agent prior\nto a motor accident of October, 1936,\nwhich caused the death of the then\nKaslo mayor, W. V. Papworth, and\ninflicted such Berious injuries to\nMr. Rudkin that he has not yet fully\nrecovered, though he is making\nrapid strides toward ..ormal health.\nBoth Mr. and Mrs. Rudkin have always taken an interest in any movement for the betterment of Kaslo\nand its citiens. Mr, Rudkin is a member of the city council. Intending\nto return from time to time, he\nhas not resigned but has been\ngranted three months leave of absence. It is possible that they may\nreturn to Kaslo to reside.\nR. R. Wallace, R. W. Wallace, W.\nC. Wallace and H. Hughes, who\nvisited the Eureka .nine during the\nweek-end, have left for their respective homes at Walla Walla, Wash.\nJ. A. Fraser, G. H. Grimwood and\nMr. LaBatt of Nelson were guests\nof the Kaslo Boat club at their annual meeting Monday.\nWith the opening of the fishing\nseason, A. W. Bavington landed the\nfirst Dolly Varden trout, recently,\nthe catch weighing six pounds.\nfjlftitf Vjg (laitqwtt^\n*m\nINCQRPORATED  2?? MAY l\u00a770.\nBRIEF BOLERO SETS\n&   FOR SPRING\n$1.79\nBoleros lead for Spring. Briefer and\nyounger than ever, they are \"tops\"\nfor all your frocks. Try them over\nthat dress, and add that gay sash to\nthe waist. Vivid prints.\nGIRLS'\nSWEATERS\nBright, new little sweaters for the school girl.\nKnitted of fine botany\nwools that are warm and\ncosy for early spring.\nShort and long sleeves.\nPullovers, also buttoned\ncardigans. A11 colors.\nSizes 8 to 14:\n$1.59\nBabies Coats\nDainty little coats of fine\nall wool material. Full'\nskirts and. yoked tops,\nwith gay touches of embroidery. Nicely lined in\nsilk, with poke-bonnet to\nmatch coat. Pastel shades\nin sizes 1 to 4. Set\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nSALE OF\nNUBBY TWIST\nYARN\nCLEARANCE OF 1200 SKEINS\nWe have been fortunate in sharing a manufacturer's\nclearance of this popular suit yarn\u2014and now pass it\non to you! Select yours for that extra sweater or summer suit from the 20 beautiful shades. Regular 30c\nper ounce skein. Clearing at\n15\nC PER OZ. SKEIN\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nHBC Pure Food Specials\nON 8ALE TODAY, 8ATURDAY AND MONDAY\n193-PHONES\u20141M 193-PH0NE8\u2014194\n23*\nBUTTER\u2014Hudsonlt CI _<y\nFirst Grade; 3 Ibs... 9*\u00ab**\nCOFFEE\u2014HBC Coun- }QA\ntry Club, fresh; per Ib, **T\nPEACHES\u2014Quaker, Sliced or\nHalves, 2's; _ m_\\\nper tin *\/r\nASPARAGUS TIPS\u2014 *_1_\\\nBee Cee, 10\/a-oz.; tin .. **r\nBROWN SUGAR\u2014       -%___\\\n3 Ib **wr\nPRUNES\u20148unsweet;\n2-lb. carton \t\nCUT GREEN BEANS \u2022%*__\n-17-oz. tins; 2 for \"*T\nJAVELLE WATER\u2014    _t_\\A\nExo, quarts; 2 for \"*rr\nFLOOR WAX-Old __*%__\nEnglish, Ib. tins; each .. \"\"Ir\nTOMATO JUICE\u2014Lib- (MA\nby's, 101\/i-oz. per doz... \"\/ r\nMIXED PEAS and CARROTS\n\u2014Aylmer, 17-oz. tins;   _\\m*A\n2 for v \"I*\n8ALAD DRES8ING-  <%i_\\\nKrsft; 12-oz. bottle \"*\u00bb*\nSALMON-PInk, tall *__&__\ntins; 2 for \"**\nnt\nPEANUT BUTTER- ys**J,\nSquirrel 2's; per tin .. mtf\\\nFIG BAR BISCUITS\u2014Fresh\nstock, 1-lb. cello pkgs.; f%_\\\neach   **V\nDATES-Unpltted;        *)__A\niVs lbs **\"*\nSTRAWBERRY  JAM  _Cm_A\n\u2014Sunllne; 4-lb. tin vlT\nSHORTENING-Do- |M\nmestlc; 1-lb. carton .... *JV\nMARMALADE-Kell- m*%_\\\nler's Dundee; 4-lb. tin.. \/*V\nSPICED HAM\u2014\nSwift's; 16-oz. tin\nBONELESS CHICKEN -yr*A\n\u2014Aylmer, Vis's per tin **-\u00bbr\nWAX PAPER-100-      _tit\nfoot rolls; each  \"afT\nTEA\u2014HBC Hostess;     __{\\_k\nper  Ib ow*J'\nCORN\u2014Country  Klst, *%_*_*,\n17-oz. tins; 2 for \"3r\nPEAS\u2014 Broder's Best,   <%>__*\nsize 3; 2 for  \"IT\nORANGES\u2014Sweet        A*A\nand Juicy; 2 doz Wr\nEGG\"S-*-Locaf fresh Tlt_\\\nGrade A-Large; doz, .. 3\"r\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nMEN'S BROADCLOTH\n-PYJAMAS-\nnew SPRING COLORS\nNew snappy colors in Men's Broadcloth Pyjamas. Jacket tailored with\nFrench collar and silk frogs, the trousers with elastic waist band. d>1 QP\nSizes 36 to 44 \u00abpl.\"0\nBOYS' BROADCLOTH\nSHIRTS\nLITTLE CENTS SHIRTS\nSnappy patterns in well tailored broadcloth shirts. Plain\nshades and new fancy patterns, with the long     \u00bb7Q\n-Main Floor HBC\npointed collars. Sizes 11 to MVi.\nSAYS MUSSOLINI HAS NO\nSPECIFIC WAR IN MIND\nROME, March 31 (AP) - Premier Mussolini's declaration he intends to keep Italy semi-mobil.\nized \"regardless of cost\" was no\nmere oratorial gesture, Fascist officials declared today.\nThe duce's speech in the senate\nyesterday tended to quicken Italian war preparation although authorized spokesmen said he had no\nspecific conflict in mind.\nNAMED AS PUBLISHER\nOF WORLD-TELERAM\nNEW YORK, March 31 (API-\nMerlin H. Aylesworth, founder\nand first president of the National\nBroadcasting company, was named\ntoday by Roy W. Howard as publisher of the World-Telegram, the\nNew York unit of the Scripps-\nHowerd chain of newspapers.\nDamage Suit Names\nFormer Associates\nin Townsend Plan\nCHICAGO, March 31 (AP) -\nTwenty-four men and women accused of injuring the reputation of\nDr. Francis E. Townsend and other\nmembers of his old age pension\nmovement were named in a $27,-\n000,000 damage suit filed in federal\ncourt today.\nThe action was brought by Huston H. Marrs of Denver, and other\nsupporters of the Townsend Plan.\nThe suit asked a total of $15,000,-\n000 actual damages from all defendants and $500,000 unitive damages from each ot them.\nThe bill accused Robert E. Clements of Los Angeles, a defendant\nand former officer of the movement,\nof originating a plan to \"wreck\" the\npension organization in 1936,\nAmong the defendants were congressmen Robert L. Doughton of\nNorth Carolina, Scot W. Lucas of\nIllinois and John S. McGroarty of\nCalifornia, and several former associates of Townsend,\nKILLED AT WORK\nHARRISON HOT SPRINGS, B.\nC\u201e March 31 (CP)\u2014Leonard White,\nemployee of Hellenbeck and Daw\nLumber company was killed lata\nyesterday in an accident while at\nwork.\nThe Scientific\nEgg Preservative\nNo mess-\npails of liquids\n\u2014No preparation\u2014No pails of He.\nor Chemicals\u2014Open a small tin and\nit is ready for use.\nOTEG Treated EGGS can be boiled, poached, whipped or fried.\nPreserve your EGGS by using the OTEG SIMPLE METHOD.\n\/\nFull directions with each tin.\nFor Sale at Your Local Grocer or Dealer\nJAMES MARTIN CO., LTD., Western Canada Distributors,\nVANCOUVER, B.C.\n\u00a7 |j    m ^fSSf\nHave YOU got your\nFREE 44727\nmm towels p\n&$$\nIf  HP\nLook\u2014only 30 wrappers for \u2022\n(ret Bath Towel, or only 25\nwrappers (or a free Tea Towel.\nOnly a smalt supply of this gr.-mu\nyellow laundry soap to buy. Get\nsome from your grocer TODAY,\nOFFER CLOSES\nSEPTEMBER 30th, 1938\nHow te get your Free Towels\nDon't miss this big, free offer of fine\nquality towels ... as many as you\nwant, FREE! A strongly woven Bath\nTowel, in smart colour patterns, welcome in any home. Or a heavy\nweight, all-linen Tea Towel, bright\ncheck design. Send no money\u2014these\ntowels are FREE!\nJust save the required number ol Royal\nCrown yellow laundry Soap Wrappers\nand mail them to:\nThe Towel Department\nThe Royal Crown Soaps Limited\n308 Georgia St. E.\nVancouver\nIf you cannot call or send for your towel,\nmail your wrappers by parcel post, enclos-\nhich\nand which towel you deiire. Your towel\ning a slip of paper on which you have\nna\nprinted clearly vour name and address,\nand which towel you deiire. Y\nwill be sent to you immediately.\nFREE TOWELS ^^\u00a3WS0AP WRAPPERS\n4p   \/\n''\u2022\"'\"'^\u2022\"'\u2022-SiMiiAiiililltiiii -   \u00bb\nmm\n_\n--. - - - \u25a0\u25a0*\u2022\u25a0-\n-M\n Jum\nPAGE FOUR i\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 1, 1\u00bbM\nSURVEY SHOWS MOST WOMEN WORK BECAUSE THEY MUST\n\u2022Unintentionally . ,\n(hildren Learn\nDeceit Quickly\nAided by Parents\n,\u201e By GARRY C, MYER8, PH. D.\nConscientious parents give a lot\nof practice in deceit by commanding a child, what to do or not to-do\nin their absence. Suppose you tell\nyour Ethelbert of eight not to go\ninto the swjet.shop opposite his\nschool; or-you tell-him he must\nchoose spinach, carrots and milk for\nlunch. In the evening you ask him\nif he has avoided the sweet shop,\nor if he has had the proper lunch\nthat day. If he tells you he was in\n\u25a0 the sweet shop or that he has had a\n1 meal lacking milk or spinach, you\nrebuke his disobedience. Soon Ethelbert discovers how to answer prac-\n.'tically, regardless of the facts. Then\n'how you do approve your \"dear\n_ child for being so obedient!\" If you\nact more wisely next time, you will\nmerely tell him you hope he will\ndo so and. so, and then you won't\nhave a court trial afterward.\nConscientious teachers, too, will\npay children for lying\u2014will assign,\nfor' instance, stars. on a chart for\ni holding up the hand when it is\nj asked \"How many were in bed last\nnight at 8!\" or \"How many ate a\nleafy vegetable for dinner?\" and so\non, The purpose of this practice is,\nof course, superb, and many children are induced accordingly to\ndevelop good health habits. Also\nmany are well practiced in deceit.\nAll the good of this school practice might be gained, and the ills\navoided, if the child could win the\n! star only on the written evidence\n1 sent by his parents. But won't some\nI parents lie? A few will. They have\ni already ruined the child's integrity.\nWHEN CHILD GOE8\nl FROM HOME\nWhen your child grows old\nI enough to be away from home at\n1 night, you find yourself wanting to\n\u25a0 inquire into his conduct while he\ni' has been absent; so when he comes\nI home you put him on the witness\ni siand. Should he disclose some conduct of which you disapprove you\nI will rebuke or pupish him. Since\n' he alone has all the facts, he will\ni; soon discover it to his advantage to\ni' censor his answers, with the result\nthat he may tell you as little as possible, and even leam to report what\nis not so. You have incurred a double loss \u2014 loss to his truthfulness\nand loss to his comradeship.\nIn case you really care to cultivate both virtues in him, you will,\nfrom this time on, cease to hold an\nInquisition when he returns home.\nYour inquiries will be only of the\nsort you might make of an honored guest, with your chief concern\nthat he has had a good time. Nevertheless, from time to time, you\nwill, at moments when you feel\nclosest to him, tell him you wish he\nwould or would not do so and so\naway, from home.'Then, if your relationship to him is one of trust\nand confidence, and he feels himself\na \"Worthy ftiember of the family,\nyou will hardly have occasion to\nexercise concern about his conduct.\nUnchristian ...\nMother Detests\nDrunken Husband\nBoys Hale Father\nBy VIRGINIA  LEE\n\"Dear Virginia Lee: I wonder\nwhether you can give me any light\non my case. Have been married\nmore than 20 years and have a husband that I do not love, as he deceived me. All that I thought he\nwas before marriage, he just wasn't.\nI have tried to make a go of it, as\nthere was no alternative,\n\"I have a small family of boys,\nand oh! what a life I lead! I have\nfine children. I try to raise them\nreligiously and they are obedient\nand love me devotedly. He shows\nsuch a bad example-for them by\nswearing, drinking, running around\nwith the wrong kind of people. He\ntells them religion isn't true. My\npeace of mind is when he isn't\naround.\n\"He keeps a goodly. amount of\nmoney, and we have to get along\nthe best we can on what he gives\nme and be satisfied. I am. trying\nto educate two of the boys and the\nother one is working, but we don't\nhave enough to support us. I am\nnot strong enough to do outside\nwork. All I would ask in the world\nis a good husband and a congenial\nhome for my children, the right environment. I can never have it with\nhim, because I hate him for the\ndeep hurts he has caused me. The\nchildren loathe him because he is\nmean to them. What do you sug-\nSomysayings\nf So now you has run both our legs\noff, an' has got a. far away from\nhome' as yer can, you wants me t'\ncarry yaf 1 had ought 1' pin back\nyer ears.'\"\ngest? Do I have grounds for divorce? I can't stand it much longer.\n\"CHARITY.\"\nGranted that your husband is as\nbad as you say, I hardly think it is\nright to teach the children to\n\"loathe\" him and for you to allow\nyourself to \"hate\" him, do you?\nAfter all, religion teaches us to\nlove our enemies and do good to\nthose that despitefully use us. A\nman certainly will not reform and\nbelieve that religion- is true and\ngood If those he live, with hate\nhim. It ia one ot the saddest things\nabout so many who call themselves\nChristians, that they do not live the\nsort of life that their leader, Jesus,\ntaught; It you did, and taught your\nboy. that hard as it ls tb live with\na man with a disposition like their\nfather's, and one who does the\nthings he docs, he it, after all, to\nbe pitied and will never be happy\nwhile he acts so..\nWELFARE AGENCY\nMAY HELP\nApply to your welfare agency\nand .see If they cannot persuade\nyour husband to give you and the\nboys' enough to live op.\nYour life has been very dlsap'\npointing, I understand, but you have\nthree fine boys, so you cannot be\naltogether unhappy, If you could\nstop worrying and have faith that\nif you do what is right- and are a\ngood wife and mother you will\ncome out all right, maybe it would\nimprove your health. It is hard to\nknow what to advise in such a\ncase. Often it is more practical to\nput up with things for the sake of\nkeeping the home, than to get a\ndivorce and have nothing to live on.\nIf you were well, I would advise\nleaving and working for yoursell\nand the children,\nFOR THE SERIAL\nSEE PAGE SEVEN\nRestful Too\nStretching Exercises Can Be Done\nAnywhere; Give Youth and Grace\nBy  JULIET SHELBY\nVIRGINIA TORRELL        .\nDoe. a bit of stretching between broadcasts.\nHave you gotten to civilized?\nIf you have, you've probably forgotten all about stretching. Well,\ndon't do it. Start stretching right\naway, because it's the only natural\nthing to do.\nStretching exercises, surprisingly\nenough, can be done in bed, standing up, and sitting down. First, lie\ndown and stretch every muscle\nfrom your head to your toes. Extend your arms out at both sides,\nstretch. Do this several times, relaxing between stretches.\nNext, with your right arm over\nyour head, stretch your right leg\ndown, toes pointing. Then do the\nsame with the left arm and leg.\nThen, with both arms over your\nhead, stretch your legs downward\nand pull as if you were trying to\npull yourself apart in the middle.\nRelax between each movement of\nthis exercise. _,\nLie face down on the floor, stretch\nyour full length. Relax. Raise your\nshoulders and arms off the floor\nand stretch backward. Relax and\nrepeat several times, going limp be\ntween each move. This will really\nhelp correct round shoulders.\nDO THIS AT DESK\nThe following can be done while\nsitting at your desk. Starting at the\nwaist, stretch as high as you can,\npull the muscles up, until your\nhead is high and slightly back. This\nwill keep your from getting a double chin and, by taking all the\nkinks out, will make you feel rested and refreshed.\nThis one has to be done at home.\nPlace a chair just out of reach.\nStretch from your waist and try to\ntouch the back of the chair. Keep\nyour heels on the floor when you\nfirst do this. After more practice\nyou can do it on your toes without\nlosing your balance.\nLast, bring your right arm up.\nCurve it and carry it over your\nhead. Try stretching the finger tips\nto the opposite shoulder. Stretch\nyour left arm down the side of your\nleg to knee. Then reverse. This\nwill take fat off your waist and\nunderarm section.\ndiintL fo\/L\ndbuMwivsA,\nBy  MRS.  MARY   MORTON\nMENU HINT\nFish Chowder Crackers\nMixed Vegetable  Salad\nHot Cheese Biscuits\nScalloped Apples with Hard Sauce\nCoffee or Tea\nFish chowder is always a good\nLenten dish. It Is a good Friday\nmain dish all through the colder\nmonths. I often have it for my\nFriday lunch, as the place I frequent makes very good clam chowder. Scalloped apples are much like\napple betty. You can serve them\nwith the meat some time, if you\nwish, Instead of a dessert, 'f you do,\ndo not make them as sweet as you\ndo for a dessert\nFISH CHOWDER \u2014 Four pounds\ncod or haddock, one pound salt\npork, six medium onions, three medium potatoes, one-fourth pound\nspinach, cream or top milk, salt and\npepper. Cook fish five minutes in\nvery little water. Remove from kettle, take off skin, remove fish from\nbohe by flaking with fprk. Cut pork\nin cubej and fry till brown. Slice\nonions thin and fry  till yellow\nbrown in fat remaining from, potk.\nCut potatoes in cubes and parboil in\na little fish broth long enough to\nhold shape. Cook spinach, chop\nfine. Put fish, salt pork, onions, potatoes and spinach in soup kettle\nwith remaining fish broth. Add\ncream or top milk to make consistency of thick soup..Season and boil\nall together for another 10 minutes.\nAdd.a little chopped parsley before\nserving if desired. Serves eight to\n10.\nSCALLOPED APPLES-Grease\na baking dish or casserole. Sprinkle a layer of bread crumbs In the\nbottom. Over it. arrange sliced\napples. Sprinkle apples with sugar\n(white or brown) and with a bit of\ncinnamon and nutmeg. Dot over\nwith butter. Add another layer ot\napples, sprinkle with sugar, seasoning, dot over with butter. Add\na final layer of crUmbs. Moisten\nwith water to which has been added a small.amount of, lemon Juice\nand grated lemon rind. Bake In a\nmoderately hot oven, 375 degrees\nuntil apples are tender and crumbs\nare nicely browne'\nAlkali-Forming\nFoods Listed by\nDr. (lendening\nBy LOGAN CLENDENINQ, M.D,\nI am requested to print, a list of\nalkali-forming foods.\nAlkalinizatlon of the body has\nbeen so promiscuously advised from\nsources outside the medical profession, that it is well to point out\nthere are very few indications for\nthis procedure. It ls mostly used\nwhen the kidneys give an indica'\ntion of being overburdened.\nAlkaline-ash foods contain a preponderance of sodium carbonate)\nand bicarbonate and alkaline phosphates. They are found chiefly in\nfruits and vegetables.\nAlkalinizatlon of the body can\nbe most easily influenced by the\nadministration of the alkline\nsalts, such as sodium bicarbonate\nor potasium citrate themselves.\nBut for the use of the alkaline-ash\ndiet, a milder degree of acid-base\ndisturbance in the body is present\nFood. Listed for Menu.\nThe following list permits preparation of menus for this purpose:\nVEGETABLES: Asparagus, beans,\nbeets, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower,\ncelery, cucumbers, endive, leeks,\nlettuce, mushrooms, parsnips, peas,\npotatoes, pumpkin, radishes, spinach, tomatoes, turnips, watercress.\nEXCEPTIONS: lentils, fresh or\ncanned corn. MISCELLANEOUS:\nAlmonds, chestnuts chocolate,\ncider, cocoa, hazelnuts, honey\njelly, maple syrup, olives, whey,\nwine. FRUITS: Apples, apricots,\nbananas, blackberries, cantalonpe,\ncherries, currants, dates, figs,\ngrapefruit, grapes, lemons, limes,\noranges, peaches, pears, pineapple,\nraisins, rhubarb, strawberries, watermelon. Exceptions, prunes plums\ncranberries.\nSince the foregoing lists omit\nthe commonest breadstuffs and fats,\nnote that the following foods are\noften called \"neutral\" in their effect\non the residue of the diet: CARBOHYDRATES: Cornstarch or corn\nflour, fresh peas, sugar, tapioca.\nFATS: Butter, cream, lard, vegetable oils.\nFruit Trees Girdled\nby Pest Moy Be Saved\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY.\nDressing girdled trees\nYoung fruit trees which have\nbeen girdled by mice or rabbits may\nbe saved, even though the girdle\nhas been made allaround the tree,\nif they are treated before the wood\nbecomes hard and dry.\nFigure 1 of the accompanying\nGarden-Graph shows the tree girdled.\nFigure 2 shows all the rough\nedges of the bark trimmed away\nand an antiseptic applied to the\nwound. Then the entire surface\nshould be covered with melted wax\nand bound dp with cloth bandages.\nIf the girdling covers a large area,\nbridge grafting is the only resort,\nand this requires the services of a\ntree expert.\nWhile this promises to be an unusually early spring, there is nothing to be gained by doing garden\nwork before the soil and weather\nconditions are favorable.\nOne of the commonest mistakes\nin seed sowing, especially indoors,\nis to get the seed too thick, this\nmaking after-care and transplanting\ndifficult. Another mistake is to neglect to label each batch of seeds\nsown with both name and date.\nWomen Working lor'Pin Money'Are\na Very Small Minority II Is Stated\nNEW YORK, March 31 (CP)-\nBased on a survey conducted by the\nNational Federation of Business and\nProfessional Women's Clubs, the\npublic affairs committee has published a pamphlet on \"Why Women\nWork\". Replies to questions were\nreceived from 12,043 women from\nthe 48 states, Hawaii and Alaska. It\nwas found that half of these women\nhave individuals solely or partially\ndependent on their earnings and\none of every six has the entire responsibility for a household of from\ntwo to eight persons.\nThe Herald-Tribune thinks the\npamphlet attacks with convincing\nfigures the statement that \"women\nwork for pin money\". This statement is often used to justify a lower rate of pay for women than for\nmen doing the same work. The\n\"pin money\" women disclosed in\nthis survey is only 3.4 per cent of\nthe total number. These are the\nwomen who work, not because they\nmust but because they choose.\n\"These results are not particularly surprising, though they may\nbe of value in helping demolish the\nargument against paying lower\nwages to women than to men for\nthe same work,\" the Herald-Tribune\nsas. \"It likewise is not surprising,\nalthough it is important, to note\nthat the number of dependents per\nwoman has increased since 1930\nwhile the average earnings have\nfallen. It may be that the same is\ntrue of men, although no comparable study has been made.\n'Thus it turns out that the vast\nmajority of women with jobs work\nprimarily because they have to, to\nsupport either themselves or others.\nThe 'pin money* residue ls very\nsmall indeed, and constitutes ho\nserious threat to the well-being of\ntheir employed sisters.\n\"Perhaps, the woman who works\nfor *pth money', or for no money\nat all, never really needed much\ndefence. ITa woman wants to work\nto escape boredom, or to justify\nsome inner urge to be doing something, or because she happens to be\nintensely interested in some type of\neffort, let her. It cannot upset the\nInternal economy Of this country or\ncause much additional hardship\nupon women who have to work.\"\nAsk Your Grocer\nFor-\n..'..j\ni RQYAL\nHOUSEHOLD\nFLOUR\n^Tomato Products\nDOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK OFFER\nShould rou'not agree thlt LiMiy'a three \"Gentle Press\" Tomato Ptoducti are the beat you\nhave ever tasted, Llbby will pay vou double your money back. Juit print your namo and\naddreaa, the purchase price, grocer's name, on the back of any one or all three labeli and mall\nlo LIMiy, McNeill & Libby pf Canada, Limited, Chatham, Ontario.\nYES, INDEED! MOTHERS EVERYWHERE\nARE DISCOVERING. THAT LIBBY'S EX-\nCLUSIVE \"GENTLE PRESS\" METHOD\nMAKES A \"MAGIC\" DIFFERENCE! The\nyoung lady welcomes her steaming bowl of\nLlbby's \"Gentle Press\" Tomato Soup*\u2014Dad\njoins het^-and insists on Libby's \"Gentle Press\"\nTomato Catchup with his meat, while the\nwhole family goes for Libby's \"Gentle Press\"\nTomato Juice\u2014Canada's most popular and\nfrequently bought Tomato Juice. There is a\nreason for this well deserved popularity. Libby's\nTomato Products are made the exclusive\n\"Gentle Press\" way. \"Gentle Press\" is a patented method, which Libby alone can use, of\ngently extracting only the pure juice from certified tomatoes on which Libby has lavished 25\nyears of seed * selection. The natural tomato\nflavour is captured and held in all its August\nfreshness. To discover the magic of Libby's\nTomato Products\u2014try them. See for yourself\nhow their very presence on the table brightens\nthe appetite of every member of the family.\n'Here are other dellcloua Libby aoupa you wilt enjoy, K\u00bbld under\nthe \"Doutle Your Money Back\" guarantee! VEGETABLE\u2014PEA\u2014\nASPARAGUS-SPINACH\u2014SCOTCH BROTH.\nIf your grocer cannot supply you, please send his name to us\nat Chatham, Ontario, and wc will sec that you are suppliedi\nUBBY, MCNEILL & LIBBY OF CANADA, LIMITED\nChatham   \u25a0   Ontario 3P438B .\nT\n^\u25a0\u25a0h.\n ^^^mjmmvv^m!mmm\u00bb\nPerley Putnam\nWeds Miss Hare\nCRESTON, B.C.-A wedding ot\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n'<_>t.n  TOO\"1\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 1. 193S\ngreat interest here is announced\nfrom Banners Ferry, Idaho, Monday\nafternoon, at which Perley, eldest\nson of Frank Putnam, M.L.A., and\nMra. Putnam, was married to Miss\nRuth, eldest daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. C. H. Hare. The bridesmaid\nwas Miss Marion Cooper, and the\ngroom was supported by Lyle Kemp.\nFrom Bonners, Mr. and Mrs. Putnam continued by motor on a honeymoon trip to Spokane and Seattle.\nBoth are well known in Creston's\nvounger set. The bride has been\noutstanding in basketball both at\nhigh school and later with Creston\nMotors in the local commercial\nleague.\nOn their return they will reside\nat Creston where the groom is actively identified with orchard work\nand wheat land operations in Creston Dyking district.\nAmerican Indians were familiar\nwith rubber long before Columbus\ndiscovered the continent.\nPRINT DRESS SPECIAL\nFriday and Saturday Only\n20% DISCOUNT 20%\nThe entire balance of our new Spring Print\nDresses  on Sale   Friday  and   Saturday  only.\nAT 20% OFF\nSIZES FROM 14 to 46\nNew Denver's\nTemple Has a\nBirthday Party\nNEW DENVER, B.C. - Lucerne\nTemple, Pythian Sisters, celebrated\nits 17th anniversary by entertaining the Knights of Pythias and a\nfew friends at a social March 22.\nBowling was followed by whist.\nPrizes were won by Mrs. J. Draper\nand W. Jeffr\u00bby. firsts, and Mrs. J.\nDepretto and H. Wooley, consolations.\nA special prize was also won by\nMrs. Depretto.\nThe Sisters served refreshments,\nthe long tables being decorated\nwith flowers in the temple colors,\nand centered with a birthday cake\nwith 17 lighted candles,\nSister Annie Avison, Mother ot\nthe Temple, welcomed the guests.\nT. R. Flint and C. F. Nelson responded. Sister Dora Clever, grand\nofficer, presented past chiefs' pins\nto May Crellin, Lila Thomlinson,\nIris Beggs and Pearl Depretto.\nANNABLE BLOCK\nOPP. CAPITOL THEATRE\nSIX MONTHS AND FINE\nON NARCOTICS CHARGE\nVANCOUVER, March 31 (CP)-\nOmar Guay was sentenced to six\nmonths in jail and fined $200 when\nhe pleaded guilty in police court\ntoday to a charge of possessing narcotics.\nEDDIE CANTOR SAYS\nHIS LIFE THREATENED\nBECAUSE HE IS A )EW\nWASHINGTON, March 31 (AP)\n\u2014 Eddie Cantor, screen and radio\ncomedian, declaring that Adolf\nHitler \"has made it his business\nto exterminate Jewry,\" told a dinner and audience last night his\nlife had been threatened and that\nhe had a bodyguard in Hollywood.\nUrging 1000 guests at a Hadas-\nsah Society fund raising dinner\nto give more time to combating\nmovements against Jewry, Cantor\nsaid.\nThe comedian said his radio\nsponsors \"have been told I was\nusing the radio for Jewish propaganda and have been threatened with boycott of their products.\"\nREVISED CONSTITUTION    ,\nAPPROVED, SWITZERLAND\nBERNE, March 31 (AP) - The\nnational council, lower house of the\nSwiss parliament, today approved\nthe revised constitution of the Canton of Geneva, which forbids Communist, Nazi or Fascist organizations in that canton (state). The\nvote was 112 to 42.\nNO C. O. D. MAIL TO\nMEXICO FROM U. S.\nWASHINGTON, March 31 (API-\nPostal officials said today they had\nordered 45,000 postmasters throughout the United States to refuse\nmail addressed to Mexico calling\nfor C.O.D. payments.\nOrange Pekoe Blend\n\"SALAM\nTEA\nMarch Permits\nin Trail Record;\n$82,550 Figure\nTRAIL, B.C., March 31-Spring\nand fine weather has brought with\nit a surge in new building construction in this city, $82,550, total value\nof building permits issued during\nthe month of March, establishing a\nnew high for the third month of\nthe year, according to figures released by the city building department.\nTotal value of permits for the\nfirst three months of this year was\n$88,630 compared to $12,550 for the\nsame period of last year and $43,080\nin 1932, the previous record for the\nfirst three months.\nLargest permit issued in March\nwas for alterations to the Esling\nblock, corner Bay avenue and Spokane street, for $35,000.\nA new bus terminal and garage\nat the corner of Tamarae avenue\nand Weir street was started under\na permit issued this month, and\ncompletion of the new Strand theatre required a permit of $15,000\nvaluation. At the corner of Victoria\nstreet and Tamarae avenue a new\nservice station is going up, value of\nwhich is,$5000.\nINITIATION TO BE\n\"MILD\" AT U. B. C.\nVANCOUVER, March 31- (CP)-\nAt a meeting of the students'\ncouncil of the University of British Columbia yesterday a motion\nwas passed cutting down the freshmen initiation period from two\nweeks to four days.\nThe council also voted to forbid \"horseplay\" and lily pond\nduckings. Mass football and basketball games between freshmen and\nsophomores will replace the former\ncustoms, the council said.\nThe traditional Initiation regalia\nof green caps, nail polish adn large\nplacards, bearing the student's\nname, will still be enforced but\nsnake parades and other \"boisterous\" features of past initiations\nwill be abolished.\nShooting marbles and pitching marbles are universal pastimes these\ndays outside school hours.\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS M  J  VIGNEUX\nCustomers are requested to telephone\ngrocery orders early Friday to ensure\nprompt delivery.\nSAFEWAY\nSALE  PRICES   EFFECTIVE\nFRIDAY    SATURDAY    MONDAY\nApril 1-2-4\nApril 1st Is April Fools' Day But There's No Fooling\nAbout the LOW Everyday PRICES at SAFEWAY\nFLOUR\nKeynote\n98 lb- $3-98\nPOTATOES\nNetted Gems\nioo-lb. sack ... $1.65\n504b. sack 850\n25-llr. sack 45*5\nSnowflake\n2ib 25<\nCOFFEE\nMax-l-mum\nPer lib.Tin 34c\n3 lb. tins\n$1.00\nper tin\nCORN\u2014Aylmer Golden Bantam, 17-oz. v%A\ntins; 3 for ***>\nPEAS\u2014Aylmer Sieve 5, 17-oz. tins; Mil\ncut GWe\u00a5TEANiiPi^'iiw'riV-Mir 25*}\nPEARS^Ayimei 2'i'i         |<**ljj\n\"GRAPE\"JUICE\u2014\n1 tins; 2 for *#r\nPLUMS\u2014Aylmer\nW,quat:. \u00bb*\"\nASP ARAGU8\nCUTTING8\u2014Aylmer, 2's,\nsquat; tin..\nAYLMER\nPORK& BEANS\nSpring Cleaning Needs\n - __-IW\nBROOMS\u2014Highway Bllndcraft;\neach   :...\nBROOMS\u2014Safeway, finest quality;\neach  \t\nBON AMI POWDER-\nPer tin \t\n80AP\u2014Fels Naptha;\n3 bars \t\nS1LVO or BRASSO\u2014Removes tarnish;\ntin \t\nEUREKA BLEACH-\nPer bottle \t\nSANI-FLUSH\u2014\nLarge tin  \t\nCLEAN8ER\u2014Old Dutch;\n2 tins \t\n1 pint GLO-COAT and 1 Applier,\ncomplete with handle\u2014All for\t\n7#\nW\n201\nm\n120\nm\n590\nCATSUP-Hclnz; *.___\nlarge bottle  **V\nCHOW SAUCE\u2014 me___\nBottle  \u201e ***>\nPICKLES\u2014Sweet; , Ofi_f*\nper gallon J\"*r\nCOCOA\u2014Fry's; tit*\ni\/2-lb. tin \u201e *WV\nTEA\u2014Max-l-mum; AQtr,\nper Ib \u00bb\u00b0*F\nMILK\u2014Alpine; *_\\m__\n3 tell tins **\/*\u00bb\u00bb\nHONEY\u2014Okanagan, pure; fl**\n4-lb. tin  JIV\nAPRICOT JAM\u2014     0jA\nI      ,     Empress pure; 4 Ibs. *Vwt\n\\ ______   MARMALADE-      <_*___\n^^k Empress; 2-lb. jar .. ml\\\n\u25a0 Cakes   never   fall   when\ni \"EMPRE8S BAKING POW\nDER Is used; f g._\\\n12-oz. tin *\u00b0V\nB. C.   GRANULATED\nSUGAR 10 ib 63c BUTTER 3 ib. $1\u00ab\nHIGHWAY FIR8T GRADE\nOATS\u2014Robin Hood, China or __>]__\nSilverware; pkt  **\"\/V\nCORN FLAKE8\u2014\n3 pkts\t\nWHEATLETS- _\\_S_S\n6 Ib >tr\nALL-BRAN-Kellogg's;\npkt \t\n3 pkgs. HUSKIES, 1 pkg.   OP _\nCORN FLAKES: All for .. LDC\n260\n200\nSEA FOODS\nPINK SALMON\u2014Cloverleaf;     *%**_,\n2 tins  OV\nCLAMS\u2014Cloverleaf    l's; 1Q\u00ab*\n2 tins  *V>\nSARDINES\u2014 King Oscar; \u2022%***%.\n2 tins  **T\nLOBSTER: Golden Key,\nQuarters, 2 tins\t\n37c\nBRAZIL  NUTS-Shelled;\nVs lb\t\nRAISINS\u2014Seedless;\n2 Ibs\t\nWHITE BEANS-\n3 lbs.\t\nAPRICOTU-Dry;\nIb\t\nBROWN SUGAR:\n3 Ibi\t\n190\n250\n190\n190\n19c\nT3INGER SNAPS\u2014\n2 lbs\t\nGRAHAM WAFERS\u2014\nLb. pkt\t\n80DAS\u2014Large;\n2-lb. pkt\t\nCHEESE\u2014Old Vintage;\ni\/a-lb. pkt\t\nDADS COOKIES:\n2 dozen \t\n290\n210\nm\n240\n21c\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Grubbe\nhave returned from a few weeks\nvisit in southern California.\n\u2022 Mr. Allsebrook was in the\ncity from Kaslo yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in town . yesterday\nIncluded Mrs. Horsfield of Willow\nPoint.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Walter Douglas\nof Trail spent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. Charles F. McHardy is\nexpected home today from a few\nweeks in Eastern Ontario and New\nYork.\n\u2022 Mrs. Patrick Moran of the\nBayonne mine at Tye was a city\nvisitor yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. J. Denny of Ymir visited\nNelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wassick,\nVernon street have returned from\nSpokane. They were accompanied\nhome by their eight-year-old daughter, Elizabeth (Betty), who had been\na patient at Sacred Heart hospital\nand is now convalescing.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. Wilson was in the city\nshopping from Blewitt.\n\u2022 Visitors in Nelson yesterday\nincluded Mrs. R. Wood of South\nSlocan.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Jarvis and\nMary, who spent the winter in Nelson, plan to leave today for their\nProcter home.\n\u2022 J. F. Donaldson of Salmo visited town yesterday. '\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Heise,\nwho spent the winter in Caliiornia,\nwere in the city yesterday em route\nto their home at Balfour.\n\u2022 Percy Deitritch of the Relief\nArlington mine was a city visitor\nyesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Wilbur Hicks left yesterday for Slocan City alter a few days\nin Nelson.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. A. Thurman, Silica\nstreet, spent yesterday in Trail and\nvisited Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Rutledge,\n\u2022 Mrs. Alex F. McDonald was\nin town from South Slocan yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yesterday\nincluded Mr. and Mrs. Robert Waldie of Robson.\n\u2022 S. Romer of Balfour visited\nNelson yesterday.\nKasloites Return\nFrom English Trip\nReturning from journey that took\nher to almost all parts of England,\nMrs. A. P. Allsebrook and two children, Naomi and Eric, of Kaslo, arrived in Nelson Thursday morning,\nand in the evening left for their\nhome.\nIn their trip they visited at Southhampton, London, Worthing in Suffolk, Nottingham, Bridlington in\nYork, Reading, Bournemouth and\nLiverpool.\nSULTAN OF JOHORE\nDIVORCES HIS WIFE\nSINGAPORE, March 31 (AP)-\nThe wealthy Sultan Ibraham of\nJohore divorced his beautiful Scottish wife today.  \u2022\nThe sultana, the former Mrs.\nHelen Wilson, was said to have received an allowance of $5,000 ($25,-\n000) annually and $225,000 in jewelry.\nThe divorce was by Mohammedan\nlaw. The sultan merely repeated\nthe word \"talak\" (get out) four\ntimes.\nGARBO COES TO TUNIS\nPALERMO, March 31 (AP) \u2014\nGreat Garbo, the movie actress, and\nLeopold Stokowski, the symphony\nconductor, departed tonijht for\nTunis on the steamer Citta de Palermo.\nThey left Ravello 10 days ago\nafter a month of vacationing at a\nseaside villa. In the interim they had\ntoured Italy. Miss Garbo and Stokowski boarded the steamer for\nNorth Africa several hours before\nsailing time and did not come on\ndeck.\nHave You Read the Classified?\nLeask, Oliver Listed\nfor Military Exams\nTwo non-commissioned officers of\nthe 111th field battery, R. C. A.,\nSergeant Frank Leask and Sergeant\nA. D. Oliver, have been listed for\nsupplementary military examinations, Major A. E. Dalgas, officer\ncommanding, announced Thursday.\nThe examination must be written at\nNelson before May 2.\nCONTRACT IS AWARDED\nFOR POLICE UNIFORMS\nNelson's city police will soon\nstep forth in new uniforms. Contracts for four uniforms was awarded by the finance committee of the\ncity council to Gilkers', the only\ntenderers whose bid provided for\ntailoring of tho suits in the city,\nMayor N. C. Stibbs stated Thursday.\nThe awarding of the contract was\nplaced in the hands of the finance\ncommittee, of which Alderma'n Roy\nSharp is chairman, by the council.\nENGINEER NOT GUILTY\nEDINBURGH, March 31 (CP\nCable)\u2014David James Anderson, 42-\nyear-old driver of the Edinburgh-\nGlasgow Express which crashed in\na snowstorm Dec. 1, was found not\nguilty today on a charge of culpable homicide. Thirty-five lives\nwere lost when the express hit the\nrear of a stationary Dundee-Glasgow train near Castlecary station.\nBREAK INTO CLUB HOUSE\nVANCOUVER, March 31 (CP)-\nThieves broke into the club house\nat Marine Drive golf course, and\ncarried off goods valued at $200.\nThey also looted a cash register\nof an undetermined amount of\nmoney.\nm\n-PAGE FIVE\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nTOMATO JUICE\u2014Llbby's, 10|\/2-oz.\ntins; 3 for\t\nPINEAPPLE JUICE\u2014Llbby's, 1's;\n2 tins \t\nRIPE OLIVES-Llbby's, Vi;\ntall tins \t\nLOBSTER PA8TE\u2014i\/4's;\n2 tins  \u201e\t\nSANDWICH 8PREAD\u2014\n2 tint  \u201e\t\n80AP-8unllght;\n4 bars\t\nCHIPSO\u2014\nLarge pkg\t\nAMMONIA POWDER\u2014\nPer pkt.\nm\n250\nm\n230\n170\n250\n200\n90\n240\nSOAPSXan lobars\nPalmolive Soap\n4 BARS    23c\nZ\u00b0m MEAT DEPARTMENT \u2122\u00b0\u2122\nSTEAK AND KIDNEY Lb. 150\nPrime Ribs Rolled\u2014Lb. .. 22c\nSmall Pork 8autaget\u2014LI\n.22c\nRump Roast\u2014Lb 18o\nFillets Veal\u2014Lb\t\n25c,\nPot Roast\u2014Lb  10e 12o\nVeal Pattlee-Lb\t\n25c.\nSirloin Steaks\u2014Lb 23c\nLeg Roatt Pork\u2014Lb\t\n.25c\nClub 8teakt\u2014Lb 23c\nLegt Lamh-rLb\t\n28o\nSteak and Kidney\u2014Lb. .. 16c\nLamb Pattlet\u2014Lb\t\n25n\nHamburgei*\u2014Lb 10c\nTfln\nSausage Meat\u2014Lb 10a\nPollth 8autage\u2014Lb\t\n20c\nBreakfast Sausage\u2014Lb. .. 15c\nFreth Cod\u2014Lb\t\nMn\nLarge variety of Cold Meats\nreasonably priced.\nSmoked Flllett-Lb\t\n25r,\nFinnan Haddle\u2014Lb\t\n??o\nFISH\nWhlteflth\u2014Lb         12c\nAtlantlo Klppert\u2014Lb\t\n??<\u2022\nHalibut\u2014Lb 2Sc     '\nAcadia Cod\u20142-lb. box ..\nbOc\nLARD 2ib. 20c\nTOMATOES\nCARROTS ..\nRHUBARB-\n2 Ib\t\n.   Lb.\n3 for\nNEW CABBAGE\u2014\n3 Ib\t\nCUCUMBERS-\nEach \t\nMUSHROOMS-\nPer Ib\t\nAPPLES\u2014Northern 8py',   *)___*,   Per\n9 Ibt \"Or   box..\nGRAPEFRUIT-\n6 for\t\nBANANAS\u2014\n3 Ibt\t\nORANGES\u2014Extra good size;\n2 doz\t\n220\n190\nw\n210\n230\n390\n980\n250\n290\n490\nORANGES\n3 doz. 390\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES\nSAFEWAY STORES LIMITED\nmm\nBy MRS. H\nTRAIL, B.C., March 31\u2014The three\ncircles of the Women's auxiliary to\nKnox United church held their\nweekly meetings Thursday afternoon, circle No. 1 was entertained\nat the home of Mrs. Robert Weir,\nBay avenue, her guests including\nMrs. T. Temple, Mrs. F. Wilby, Mrs.\nW. Spooner, Mrs. K. Scheer, Mrs.\nE. Swankie, Mrs. R. Cooper, Mrs.\nW. J. Wagstaff, Mrs. C. Fransen,\nMrs. G. A. Burton, Mrs. W. W.\nDick, Mrs. W. E. Wilson, Mrs-W.\nC. McKenzie, and Mrs. N. Kilpin.\nMrs. M. W. Lees, Pine avenue, was\nat home to circle No. 2, among the\nmembers present being Mrs. W. C.\nMcKay, Mrs. J. Clay, Mrs. A. B.\nWebster, Mrs. A. R. Buchan, Mrs.\nH. O. Hinch, Mrs. J. Forrest, Mrs.\nG. F. Weir, Mrs. F. B. Moran, Mrs.\nT. Brown, Mrs. D. Chalmers, Mrs.\nH. Clark, Mrs. W. Douglas, Mrs. R.\nR. Burns and Mrs. A. Johnston. Mrs.\nN. Elder, Short street, was hostess\nto circle No. 3, those in attendance\nbeing Mrs. W. C. Aston. Mrs. J,\nBalfour, Mrs. R. R. Wellwood, Mrs.\nA. J. Randell, Mrs. J. Dwyer, Mrs.\nD. Henderson, Mrs. J. Currie, Mrs.\nP. Phillips, Mrs. M. Michaely, Mrs.\nT. G. Robinson, Mrs. R. B. Dimock,\nMrs. A. C. B. Cooper and Mrs. W.\nH. Morton. Refreshments were served by each hostess at the close of\nthe business.\nMr. and Mrs. J. J. Fingland, Tadanac, who have been spending the\nJast three months holidaying at.La\nolla, Los Angeles and Piedmont,\nCal., have returned to their home\nhere. While in Piedmont they were\nthe guests of Mrs. Fingland's brother, A. Andrew.\nThe East Trail branch of the\nWomen's auxiliary to St. Andrew's\nchurch was entertained at the home\nof Mrs. W. Robertson, Second avenue, Tuesday evening. At the close\nof the business refreshments were\nserved by the hostess. The members\nand visitors present included Mrs.\nJ. Wilkinson, Mrs. A. Yates, Mrs.\nC. T. Conry, Mrs. T. Hinton, Mrs.\nH. Eperson, Mrs.' W. Simmonds,\nMrs. E. G. Fletchers, Mrs. A. Dawson, Mrs. A. Stainton, Mrs. R. H.\nScott, Mrs. G. Brant, Mrs. r. Wyatt,\n8. ALLEN\nMrs. H. Currie and Miss E. Whitby.\nMiss Doreen Curran, Birch avenue, has as her guest Miss Mary\nRode of Syringa Creek.\nAfter spending the past two\nweeks visiting in Vancouver, Mrs.\nGeorge Murray returned Thursday\nto her home in Tadanac.\nMrs. W. Houston and Mrs. C. Howe\nwere tea hostesses Thursday afternoon when the Ladies' Aid of Easi\nTrail United church held its meeting in the church hall. Tlie members in attendance included Mrs. T.\nF. Cullen, Mrs. G. Palmer, Mrs. D.\nC. Spain, Mrs. J. S. Ross, Mrs. J.\nChambers, Mrs. O. Robinson, Mrs.\nR. E. Davis, Mrs. A. Adie, Mrs. J.\nMcNeil, Mrs. I. E. Brinson, Mrs.\nW. E. Benton and Mrs. F. Freeman.\nMr. and Mrs. Robert A, Willis\nof Montreal are guests of the former's brother and sister-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. F. S. Willis, Tadanac. After spending a week here the visitors will proceed to Vancouver.\nSpring flowers were used in profusion Wednesday evening, when\nMrs. Palmer Rutledge, Columbia\napartments, entertained at a delightfully arranged bridge party.\nMiss Amy Atherton was awarded\nthe first prize, Mrs. B. Taylor of\nCalgary, received the secona, and\nMrs. Robert Bainbridge the consolation. At the close of an enjoyable\nevening, the hostess served dainty,\nrefreshments. Mies Florence and\nMiss Gertrude Rutledge assisted in\nserving.\nAfter spending the past few days\nthe house guesi of his son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. M. M\nGoldstein, Riverside avenue, W.\nBercov returned to his home in Calgary Thursday evening.\nMrs. Bert Taylor of Calgary is\nthe house guest of her parents, Mr\nand Mrs. W. E. Schwanz, Riverside\napartments.\nCONCERT GIVEN\nAT NEW DENVER\nNEW DENVER ,B. C. - A concert, sponsored by the New Denver band, was held at the K. P.\nhall March 27. W. R. Workman waa\nchairman.\nThe program consisted of remarks\nby the chairman; a march \"Step\nLively,\" by the band; a Hymn \"0\nWorship the King,\" was sung; \"Twilight Thoughts,\" by the band; recitation by Mrs. M. Thompson: song\nby E. Adair, accompanied by Mrs. A.\nL. Harris at the piano; address by\nthe chairman; a Hymn \"Tell me the\nOld, Old Story\", overture by the\nband; recitation by R. Mills; \"Dainty\nMaid\" by the band; Hymn \"Day is\nDying In the West.\"\nCafes  in  Sarajevo,  Jugoslavia,\nserve coffee in thlmble-sized cups.\nBLAQKHEADS\nBlackheads simply dissolve and div\nippear by this one simple, safe and rare\nmethod. Get two ounces of peroxlna\npowder from any drug store, sprinkle\nlt on a hot, wet cloth, rub the fact\ngently\u2014every blackhead will be gone.\nHave a Hollywood complexion.\n(Advt.)\nYou Can Walk a Mile on a\nSlice of Bread!\nTo supply needed energy lor\nspring eat Ledingham's variety\nof BREADS:\nSliced white, malt, dark\nrye, Dutch, health, milk,\nFrench, fruit.\nWatch for Our\nFRIDAY AND 8ATURDAY\n8PECIAL8\nLEDINGHAM'S\nBREAD\nHood Baking Co., Ltd.\nOverwaitea\nLimited\nSpecials\nFRIDAY \u2014 SATURDAY\nMONDAY\nApril 1-2-4\nJohnson's\nWax Special\nGlo-Coat: pints .. 57***\nLiquid Wax: Pints 57f\nPaste Wax: Pints . 57-i\nCut,\nMacaroni:\n5 Ib. box\t\nBakeaiy:\n2 Ibs\t\nTuna Fish: White\nmeat,, VVs, 3 tins\nDates: Fresh stock,\n3 Ibs ,\nPrunes: Choice,\n10 Ib. box ....\n38c\n29c\n27c\n..19c\n85c\nEGGS\nGrade A-large,      OQ\nDoxen LJ\\Z\nMilk: All kinds, tall\ntins, 3 for\nSalt: Iodized,\nCarton\t\nSalt:\n7 Ib. sack ...\n!.29c\n7c\n16c\nExo: The New Bleach, it's\ngood, OC.\n2 bottles i-Olj\nSoap: Sunlight,\n4 cakes for ...\nSoap': P. & W.\n6 cakes  \t\nChipso:\nPkt\t\n23c\n25c\n20c\nBeans: With Pork,\nCampbell's, 2 tins\nKetchup:   Heinz,\nBottle \t\nKetchup: Aylmer,\nBottle \t\nScotch Mints:\nLb\t\nButter: First grade,\nAlberta, 3 Ibs.\nBacon: Swift's prem- OQ.\nium, sliced, Ib J\u00ab\/C\n17c\n23c\n17c\n22c\n$112\nB.C. SUGAR\n10 lbs. for    Mt\nFresh Fruit and Vegetables\nPHONE 707\nPhone Orders Strictly C.O.D.\n mwm^m.\nppppfppippipirfiipn\nPAGE SIX\nJMarm Satttj Jfatua\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n266   Baker   Street,   Nelson,. British   Columbia.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMembers of the Audit Bureau of Circulations and\nThe  Canadian* Press  Leased  Wire  News Service.\nFRIDAY, APRIL 1, 1938\nSUBMISSIONS TO THE\nROWELL COMMISSION\nThe Edmonton chamber of commerce on Monday made\nan admirably sane and practical submission to the Rowell\ncommission on Dominion-Provincial relations. The submission recognizes the patriotic as well as the economic\nand political basis of confederation. It does not fall into\nthe error of some of our British Columbia boards of trade\nwhich went out for replacement of provincial legislatures\nby crown councils appointed by and controlled by Ottawa.\nSenator Farris, during the seating of the Rowell commission at Victoria, described the plan as fantastic. That perhaps is a harsh word but certainly the proposal is impractical. Worse than that, if it were practical it would\nlead inevitably in the direction of a sort of Fascist government in Canada. We want a strong national government\nwith adequate powers but we do not wish for a government possessing such power of tyranny as would enable it\nto interfere with our everyday lives, and with laws which\n, we in the provinces, in accordance with the principals laid\ndown by the Fathers of Confederation, can best attend to\ni ourselves. Rather, do we wish for a strong national government devoted to the interest of all Canada which is\n' able and willing to interfere by power of disallowance\nwith the not infrequent attempts, which are made in our\nown provinces, to cripple the liberties to which every\nBritish subject feels he is entitled.\nWe do not wish for a police force controlled at Ottawa\nalong the lines of the police forces on the continent of\nEurope and in the dictator controlled countries. That would\nbe giving too much power to central authority.\nBut we do desire that Ottawa should have the power\nof interfering if some provincial authority, cast to the\nsurface by some ephemeral political wave, attempts to use\nits own police powers to interfere with such basic liberties\nas the right of free speech, the right of public assembly,\nthe right of free expression of opinions, the right of a\nfree press. We have had many recent examples of such\nmisuse of police and other powers within the provinces.\nThere was in British Columbia our own Special Powers\nact. We have in British Columbia also on our statute books\nsuch laws as those which would Send to jail a hair dresser\nwho dared to tell his customers the price for which he\nwould do a permanent wave, or which would punish a dentist if he dared to tell the buying public, who pay the bills,\nthat he is able by the use of some particular modern process or material, to provide dentures at a lower price than\nformerly, or of a better quality. We have in Canada, the\nnotorious Padlock law in the Province of Quebec. We had,\nuntil the Dominion exercised its powers, at least two statutes in the Province of Alberta which would have taken\nfrom the public, and placed in the hands of the government of the day, the right to control the expression of\npublic opinion through the newspapers or to close down a\nnewspaper it disliked.\nThe submission of the Edmonton chamber of commerce recognizes the necessity for the exercising of the\nDominion of power to prevent local or provincial interference with long established liberties of the people.\nIt points out that establishment of any inter-provincial barrier interfering with the free movement of Canadian citizens or commerce between them ia a false ambition\nof provincial autocracy. Under the principal of confederation it was never intended that the provinces should have\nany such right. Very definitely it was intended that they\nshould not.\nThe submission proposes that practically all social\nservices should be taken over as a national responsibility.\nThere is every argument that legislation effecting hours,\nwages, pensions, unemployment relief, public health, workmen's compensation and the like should be a matter for\nuniform legislation for the whole of Canada. That social\nservices were not originally made a Federal responsibility\nwas for the obvious reason that seventy or more years\nago social services were not a problem. Social services\nwere more a matter of charity by individuals than the\nresponsibility of the state as a whole.\nIf the Federal government took over the responsibility\nfor social services that in itself would go a long way in the\ndirection of relieving financial inequalities now existing\nbetween the provinces and the Dominion, It would not, of\ncourse, clear up the situation completely. Separate special\nenquiries dealing with each province would have to be\nmade. The Edmonton chamber proposed that the provinces\nwhich would be relieved of their tremendous burden of\nsocial service costs should relinquish to the Federal government the whole right to income tax, subcession duties,\nsales tax and corporation tax. The effect of this would be\nto do away with much of the duplication and waste which\nnow exists in the collection of taxes and automatically\nwould cut approximately in half the amount which tax\npayers have to spend upon preparing dual reports, each\nof a different nature, to Federal and provincial authorities. They would prepare one report only. It would also\navoid duplication of taxation.'\nThe transfer of income tax, succession duties, sales\ntax and corporation tax would tend, as the Edmonton\nchamber suggests, to reduce the possibilities of unfair\ncompetition in inter-provincial trade arising out of unequal\nincidence of taxation upon business and industry in the\nvarious provinces.\nThe Province of Saskatchewan which has also made\na sound submission to the Rowell commission is strongly\nj in favor of Dominion control of social service legislation,\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NEL80N, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 1,1*938\nCONTRACT\nSALLY'S' SALLIES\nMost women want their shoes to fit like a glove, and not like a '\n.   shoe.'\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nLetters may be published over a nom de plume, but the actual\nname of the writer must be given to the editor as evidence of\ngood faith. Anonymous  letters go  In the waste paper basket.\nHere's the Answer\nto That Train\nand Stone Problem\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014Speeds and combination of\nspeeds are generally our reliable\nprophets to mechanical truth, but\nwhile trains and bullets have been\nfavorable puzzlers for long time, it\nnow appears that a train and a\nstone have formed a combination.\nThe problem, by W. B., Kimberley in your question column of\nMarch 25, of a stone thrown outward from a moving train was not\nvery explicit and may therefore\nhave different answers. But if the\nstone was thrown horizontally and\nin a right-angular direction to the\nmovement of the train\u2014thus moving with equal speed of 30 m.p.h. in\neach direction\u2014the resulting direction of the stone's path would obviously be at a 45 degree angle to\nthe movement of the train and its\nconsequent speed increased 1.4142\ntimes 30, or 42.42 m.p.h. But if this\nstone were aimed and thrown at\nthe signboard, while passing\nsquarely opposite, the path of the\nstone would evidently go disgustingly wide of the mark to the forward and miss the board as much\nas the thrower's distance from it.\nAn important factor apparently\nignored in the problem was the\nheight of the stone's starting point,\nwhich would form a determining\nfactor in the gravitational acceleration of the stone, and which, according to Newton's mathematical\ndiscovery, would bend its horizontal flight downward, about 16 feet\nduring the first second, and so end\nits journey in a nose dive, perhaps\nbefore it crossed \"'the right of way.\nJ. M. MYRDAL.\nTrail, B, C.\nMarch 31,.\nRegrets no Photo\nof Christina Lake\nin B. of T. Book\nTo the Editor:\nSir\u2014The Nelson Board of Trade\nhas published a booklet of beautiful scenes and descriptions of interesting activities, all the way from\nCreston to Bridesville They overlooked nothing, nothing, except the\nbeautiful Lake Christina.\nIt is too, too obvious, Nelson. You\nare getting to be a big town, and\nwhy not be a good sport, for once.\nYour careful omission of views or\ndiscription of Chris'ina lake has\nmagnified its importance. Is little\nChristina such a thorn in your\nside? Christina is a very lovely\nmountain lake, wonderfully warm\nfor bathing. The members of the\nNelson B. of T. have surely missed a\nglorious panorama it they have driven past Mile 4 on the Rossland-Cas-\ncade highway and failed to observe\none of Nature's masterpieces visible\nfrom that point. It is breath-taking.\nR. R. Burns, M.L.A. should know\nthat many people are not satisfied\nwith his explanation as to why a\ngood highway could not be built by\nthe shortest route to connect Rossland and Cascade or Christina lake\nAnd forgive me, if I seem impertinent, but ft seems odd that Mr. Burns\nin his careful study of the proposed\nroutes, did not discover that the\nmountains are not the Cascades but\npart of the Monashee range, Tho\nCascades are near the coast extending into the U.S. (when I went\nto school).\nThe peculiar idea of routing a\nnew highway via Blueberry, Blackberry, Robson, Thrums, Huckle\nberry, Nelway, Strawberry, etc.\nseems a weary way to arrive at the\ndesired spot! Such a highway probably would divert its traffic into\nNelson, but the vacationists and\nothers who will go west will simp\nly hit the trail for Northport of old.\n\"Seen From a Rossland Eyrie\".\nHALIFAX (CP)-Halifax harbor\nhas its marine monstrosity, too, but\nit's not a serpent. It's a tiny bug,\nthe Ronald F., which plies its merry\nway with a funnel made from three\nred and yellow gasoline drums.\n\"The characters and lives of men\ndetermine the peace, prosperity, and\nlife of nations.\"\u2014Mary Baker Eddy.\nbut would include crop insurance. Whether the Federal\ngovernment should be asked at this time to go into such\nfields is questionable, but it would seem that undoubtedly\nthe power to undertake such enterprises should be Federal\nrather than provincial.\nAs in the case of the brief of the British Coltimbia\ngovernment, the Edmonton chamber of commerce goes at\nlength into matters which are of particular concern to its\nown province. Both provinces are deeply effected by such\nmatter as freight structure, indirect contribution by various provinces to the welfare of the Dominion as a whole,\nwiping out of provincial debts to Ottawa for relief and\nso on.\nQuite naturally, people of every province will fight\nf\u00abr the best possible deal they can get for their own province and we in British Columbia will wish our provincial\ngovernment good luck in its efforts to obtain that special\nconsideration which is considered necessary to wipe out injustice. On the other hand we must look at the matter in\na national way. The Fathers of Confederation made a\nmarvelously good job when they drew up the B. N. A. act.\nThe strongest testimony to this is that it has worked so\nwell for so long, but the time has come for revision, and\nin endeavoring to secure satisfactory revision, we cannot\ndo better than to approach the subject from the view point\nof the Edmonton chamber which is that all modifications\nof Canada's constitution shotild.be within the boundaries of\nthe original principles established by those who laid so\nwell the political foundation of our country.  ,\nWith the proposal that the Dominion should furnish\na substantial increase in aid to finance the cost of education and construction and maintenance of highways, it is\nnot so easy to go whole heartedly. Certainly the provinces\nmust control education. If so, should they not pay for it?\nThere are many problems involved in combining Federal\nand provincial construction and maintenance of highways.\nOn the other hand, it is quite obvious that the Dominion\nshould control commercial traffic on highways for the\nsame reasons that it was found desirable that it should\ncontrol commercial traffic on rails and water, and in\nmore recent years, in the air.\n* -^^^^\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nby\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nDON'T INTERFER-i\nWHEN YOUR opponents have\nIterrlfically misbld a hand and are\nabout to wind up with a contract\nIto the worst suit they could pick,\ndon't Interfere. Let them stay In\ntrouble. A double will only scare\nthem out of a suit you like into\none they will like. Ordinarily a\nigood rule ls not to make a penalty\nidouble of one suit unless you would\nwelcome a chance to double anything they may thereafter select as\na refuge.\n410 9 8\nV A K Q J 9 6 i\n4 None\n*A97\n\u00a5742\n\u2666 A876\n42\n(UP\nNorth for his decision.\" North now\ndecided to show his voffl In diamonds with a bid of four, and\nSouth being unable to read North's\nholdings, decided with his fit in\nthat suit, his lack of heart support\nand North's failure to support\nspades, to let the contract stay\nthere.\nWest, who was delighted with\nthis contract, caglly passed, figuring that If he doubled North would\ngo back to his hearts. There was\nnothing North could do about lt at\nthat point. South, of course,\nshould have realized that North\nwith two heart bids was not afraid\nof that suit, and have taken the\ncontract to 4-Hearts.\n\u2022v.\n$   iii;\n4632\n\u00bb85\n\u2666 KJ5\n4.KQ10 5\n\u2666AJ764\n*\u00bb\u00ab\n\u2666 Q 10 9 3\n4.642\n(Dealer: North. East-West vulnerable.)\n| This deal arose In a rubber game\nand the Nortli-South pair did some\nfancy bidding that landed them In\na disastrous contract. North\nStarted oft with 1-Heart, East\npassed, South bid. 1-Spade, West\npassed and North jumped to\n3-Hearts. South rebld his spades\nat the three level and North called\n4-Clubs. East doubled this, and\nSouth decided to pass this up to\nTomorrow's Problem\n4KJ10\n\u2022 78\n4853\n*A0642\n4987\n\u00bb2\n4AQJ7\n,2\nJ.J875\n-V.\nas \"\"i\ns.\n4AQ64\n32\n*9 5\n494\n\u2666 Q10J\n45\nV A K Q J 10 8 0 4\n4K106\n*K\n(Dealer: West. *Nelther side vulnerable.)\nHow should South attempt to\nmake his contract of 4-Hearts, the\nspade 9 being led to East's Q and\na switch made to the diamond 9?\nGLANCES INTO THE MIRROR OF\nLIFE IN KOOTEN AY-BOUNDARY\nNEW  DENVER-0. W. Webber\nhas returned from Kaslo where he\nspent a few days visiting relatives.\n. . . Miss Annie Kennett returned\nFriday after spending the winter\nvisiting relatives in the United\nStates. . . . Rev. F. Btowne has returned from Vernon.., .Miss Ruth\nAlywin was a patient at the local\nhospital for a few days.... Mr. and\nMrs. C. Kennett of Waneta were\nvisitor in town over the week-end.\n... Ed Munn of Nakusp spent Friday in town. ... Dr. A. Francis, H,\nK. Johnstone and C, R, Kennett\nmotored to Trail Wednesday. . . ,\nEd Alywin left Friday for the coast,\n... Dr. and Mrs. A. Francis, Miss\nAnnie McKean, Miss Marjorie Francis and Donald Francis were recent\nvisitors to Nelson. . . . Miss Gladys\nCoombs visited relatives at Trail\nover the week-end. . . . Miss Edna\nShannon spent the week-end at\nTrail. . . Miss Stewart of Edgewood\nis a guest of Mr. and Mrs. J. II\nNesbitt. . .. Miss Mary Patterson ol\nSlocan City is a patient at Slocan\nCdmmunity hospital. . . . Miss Rita\nPatterson and Miss Alice Caisley ol\nSlocan City were visitors in toWn\nThursday. . . . George Avison left\nMonday for Calgary... . Miss Cecile\nBalageon of Slocan City is a guest\nof relatives in town. . . . Mrs. J,\nZambone has returned from a visit\nto Trail.\nIl Questions V,\nANSWERS\nThis column of 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 be published,\nJ. D. R., Trail\u2014Could you please\ntell me what color to mix with\nhenna to make the hair a dark\nauburn?\nAdd two (2) tablespoons of malt\nvinegar to the henna paste. Henna\nmixed with cold tea gives a better\ncolor than when it is mixed with\nwater. A sprinkling of powdered\ncloves is an improvement.\nM.  L.  D.,Nelson\u2014If   aelurophobla\n(fear of cats) is a disease, is there\na cure for it?\nConsultation with a psychiatrist\nis the best course to follow.\nG. C, Nelson\u2014If a man signed an\nagreement of sale, stating that he\nwould not start in the same business for a number of years in the\nsame town, is it impossible that\nhe can break the agreement?\nWe advise you to take the agreement to a lawyer because much\ndepends on its exact terms.\nG. M., Nelson\u2014If a man pays a deposit on a house on the 10th and\nmoves in 10 days later, paying\nenough to make up a month's\nrent, does he pay rent from the\n10th of the month or from the\ndate on which he moved in?\nFrom the date'on which he took\npossession.\nAnxious,  Trail\u2014A   man  buries  i\nfortune in currency and dies lcav\ning no will. Ten years later a dis\ntant relative discovers the biding\nplace. Can the present owner of\nthe property claim any portion of\nthis money, and is the currency,\nwhich has been taken out of circulation, negotiable?\nUnless the present owner of the\nproperty  can   prove   abandonment\nthe heirs are entitled to the hidden\nfortune. Assuming that the currency is Canadian, it is negotiable.\nI      AUNT HET      I\nj       By ROBERT QUII.LEN      |\n\"Outsiders stirrin' up sharecroppers don't do any good.\nLand owners just quit rentin'\nto the ones that are liable to be\ntroublesome,\"\npatwMmcL\nThe Milk Business\nBorden's company, largest fluid\nmilk distributors in the world, last\nyear made one-ninth of a cent a\nquart profit.\nNo Major War\nUntil 1940s\nThe author says: \"A major international war may come\u2014as many\npredict\u2014in 1939, but I am not one\nwho believes it. It will probably\ncome \u2014 unless man can indefinitely\npostpone it \u2014 in the 1940's, and it\nseems certain that the Four Horsemen will ride again during the lifetime of the present generation.\"\u2014\nHanson to Baldwin, military expert\nin \"The Caissons Roll.\"\nProfit in This\nWant Ad, Anyway\nR. H. Gohmert, Cuero, Tex., farmer, is convinced that classified\nads really get results. He inserted\na \"lost\" in the Cuero Record for\nhis hbund. dog. Two Bays later a\nwoman called the Record: \"Tell\nMr. Gohmert to come and get his\ndogs.\"\n\"But Mr. Gohmert lost only, one\ndog,\" protested the ecjitor.\n\"He lost only one but there are\nseven now,\" the woman replied.\n\"She had six pups shortly after\nwe found her.\"\nVERSE\n-<i>\nPIONEER OF THE KOOTENAY\nJust an old pioneer of the Kootenays\nAnd the end of his days draw near,\nAnd he'll answer the call of the\n\u25a0Great Divide\nFrom this land he loves so dear.\nOft has he followed the blazed trail\nSlept 'neath the lonesome pine,\nLulled by the song of the rushing\nstream\nThat melts from the high snow line.\nAnd oft 'tis a search for adventure\nAnd oft 'tis for gold he seeks,\nThrough the green valley of wonders.\nCross the jvhlte mountain peaks.\nAnd there in the virgin forest\nWhere the wolves and the cougars\nroam,\nIs a cabin fallen in ruins,\nOnce 'twas a trapper's home.\nSo let's keep a fond remembrance\nFor the pioneers gone before.\nWho rest in the mountain's shadows\nTill Time shall be no more.\n(Mrs.) SOPHIE WADE,\nNelson, B. C.\nYARMOUTH, N.S. (CP)-When\nattendants at the Yarmouth Curling club sprayed the ice surface,\na five-inch \"striper\", common in\nlocal waters, emerged from the nozzle. It was the second time this\nwinter a fish, alive and hearty,\nlanded on the club's curling surface from a hose.\nLooking Backward.,.\nTEN YEARS AGO\nApril 1, 1928\nMrs. J, T. Armstrong of Slocan\nCity was the guest of her daughter\nand son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. H. '1*.\nButler at Roscbery\u2014Miss Edith\nA. Thompson of Tadanac was the\nguest of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Hassard.\n\u2014John Albert Hutton of Grand\nForks has been gazetted stipendiary magistrate for the county of\nYale\u2014Mrs. C. Hookings has returned from Kelowna where she\nattended the Kootenay Diocesan\nmeeting of the Women's auxiliary.\u2014\nGeorge Leece leaves for the coast\nsoon\u2014Miss Alice McDougall, teacher at Brilliant, spent a few days\nWilli her mother, Mrs. S. N. McDougall.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nApril 1, 1918\nPremier Lloyd George has sent a\ncall for more Canadian soldiers to\nthe Duke of Devonshire, governor-\ngeneral of Canada.\u2014A. % Carr of\nNelson has been gassed overseas,\u2014\nJames Belfry of Rossland has been\nwounded overseas.\u2014Part of the\ntunnel on the C. P. R. line just west\nof Castlegar caved in, blocking traffic for several days, as the result\nof rain leaking through the roof\u2014\nF. Hedley Auld, deputy minister of\nagriculture for Saskatchewan,\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. D. G.\nSmith, Mill street-Robert Smillie\nhas returned from a few days spent\nat his ranch on the Arrow lakes.\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\nApril 1, 1908\nGrowing of grapes is expanding\nrapidly at Grand Forks. Several new\nvineyards have been started recently.\u2014The telephone line between\nGreenwood and Cascade has been\nentirely rebuilt by the B. C. Telephone company\u2014John Burns was\nawarded the contract to make various changes at the Strathcona hotel.\n\u2014The Canada Zinc company expects to have the pole line for power completed by the end of next\nweek-end and the plant itself In\noperation by the middle of May.\u2014\nII. A. Stewart is expected bsck\nfrom England tomorrow.\nI\nSpokane for a week. .,. Miss Catherine Ferguson ot Nelson spent\nThursday with her parents, Captain\nand Mrs. J. Ferguson. Mrs. J, Sewell\nis spending some time with her\ndaughter, Mrs. J. Schell who ls ill\nat New Westminster. .. . Mrs. Albert Fletcher of Nelson is visiUng\nat the home of her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. J. Sewell. . . . Mrs. Nick Dosenberger and two children are staying at the home on Edgewood avenue, Ne_lson\u201e of the former's mother, Mrs. W. MacLean. .. . Miss\nLouella Htjng is taking a hairdressing course at Spokane, Wash. . . .\nCaptain McCarthy has returned\nafter being a patient at Kootenay\nLake General hospital, Nelson, for\nseveral days. ... Fred Fransen was\na Nelson visitor Thursday. . . . Mrs,\nFerguson was a Nelson visitor Tuesday.\nBOSWELL\u2014Mrs. W.  L.  Hepher,\nMrs. H. Johnstone, Mrs. C. Holden,\nMrs. W. Van Koughnett, Mrs. J. H.\nSmith, Miss Donalda Walker, Miss\nPat Wall and Tony Kunst attended\nan entertainment given by the Porcupine club at Gray Creek Wednesday. . . . Bill Mackie was at Nelson\nThursday. . . . Stephen Sherman\nwas a recent visitor to Nelson. . . .\nRev. C. Harvey was a guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. W. L. Hepher at the weekend. ... Mr. and Mrs. D. V. West\nwere week-end visitors to Nelson.\n. . . Kenneth and George Mulloy,\nwho were staying with their uncle\nand aunt, Mr. and Mrs. D. V. West,\nleft Sunday for their home at South\nSlocan. . . . The \"new\" organ, purchased by the Church Guild from\nGray Creek, was used here for the\nfirst time at evensing on Sunday. It\nis a ghat improvement over the old\ninstrument, whose inability to respond promptly to the \"stop\" and\n\"go\" signals latterly had been a\nsource of annoyance to the organist\nand of bewilderment to the congregation. . . . School was closed\nMonday owing to the illness of the\nteacher, Miss D. Walker.\nSHEEP CREEK\u2014At a recent social of the Service club in Lodore\nschool, E. Whiteley held high score\nin bridge. Ladies high score was\nheld by Mrs. T. Olson, Mrs. T.\nMcDonough being second. A cake\npresented by Mrs. May was won by\nMr. Whiteley. Lunch was served bj\nthe convenors, Mis. May, Mrs.\nWhiteley and Mrs. Duncan. . . ,\nMrs. Romanovitch has left for Portland, Ore., called by the illness of\nher brother. . . . Janette Le Maire\nentertained seven young friends at\ntea March 19, her birthday. . . .\nNelson visitors during tbe week included Mr. and Mrs. V. MacDowell,\nMrs. A. Thompson rnd Miss MacDowell. ... Mr. and Mrs. E. Mellor\nand Mrs. Austin motored to Nelson\nThursday. . . . Among week-end\nvisitors to Nelson were Mr. and\nMrs. Ole Johnson, Mr. Kelly, G.\nWright, G. Taylor, J. Morrison and\nhis son, Linus.... Jack Sutcliffe and\nC. Murphy are patients at Kootenay\nLake General hospital. . . . Mrs.\nAustin, who was a guest of Mrs,\nJames A. Fraser of Nelson, returned\nSunday. . . . The Up Town Bridge\nclub met at the home of Mrs. O.\nJohnson. Playing were Mrs. Mclntyre, Mrs. B. York, Mrs. T. Olson\nand the hostess. . . . O. E. Austin is\nconfined to his home with a severe\ncold. ... Vic Ericson is at Nelson\nwaiting for some improvement in\nthe Nclson-Salmo road to enable\nhim to drive his truck here. . . .\nDon McCormick and Harry Corbie\nare on the \"sick list\"\nWYNNDEL, B.C-Mrs. Pederson\nand Mrs. Dunseath were Cranbrook\nvisitors last week. . . . Mrs. Broley\nreturned from New Denver. En\nloute she visited at the home of Mrs.\nJ. Lund in Nelson.. . . Warren Hook\nof Spokane was a week-end .visitor\nto his grandmother, Mrs. Grady. .\nMrs. E. Uri was hostess at a bridge\ntea March 10. High score prize\nwent to Mrs. Slingsbyl consolation\nlo Mrs. A. Bennedetti. . . . Mrs. E.\nFoxall has returned from Nelson.\nShe was accompanied by her granddaughter, little Virginia Payne. . . .\nMrs. Eakin sr. was tea hostess on\nMarch 10. ... A contract bridge\ndrive was held in the home of\nMrs. M. Hagen, March 14, prizes for\nhigh score going to Mrs. E. Uri and\nR. Uri. Consolation prize went to\nMrs. Butterfield and Mr. Kollicr.\n. . . Mrs. Baxter of Cranbrook is\nvisiting her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. A. Burch.\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C\u2014George\nJameson spent the week-end at\nNelson. ... Mr. and Mrs. McLeod\nand young daughter arrived Monday from Trail to visit Mrs. Mc-\nLeod's parents, Mr. and Mrs. McGregor. Mr. McLeod has .returned to Trail, his wife and child remaining for a longer visit. . . . Mrs.\nH. Richardson spent a few days at\nNelson, a guest of Mrs. Marlin. . ..\nMr. and Mrs. Hedstrom were Nelson visitors. . . . Miss A. Johnson\nreturned to her home Friday from\nNelson.\nQUEEN'S BAY\u2014J. R. Hughes ol\nNelijon visited his family here. . . .\nMrs. John Pcachey of Balfour spent\na day here, a guest of Hon. Kenneth and Mrs. Aylmer. . . , Hon.\nMrs. H. Perry-Leake has returned\nto her home at Balfour, and has as\nher guest, Mrs. Ernest Ware of\nTaylorside, Sask. . . . Miss Gwen\nScott-Lauder of Vancouver is\nspending a few days with Mr and\nMrs. Alec Attree.... James Madden\nof Nelson was a recent visitor to\nthe Bay.... The Church Guild met\nat the home of Mrs. J. S. Hirst on\nSt. Patrick's Day. The members at\nthe previous meeting had been asked to spend 25 cents as talent money\nand make the most they could of it.\nPrize winner was Mrs. J. S. Mahood\nwith two beautifully crocheted\npairs of collars and cuffs made of\nstring. Hon. Mrs. Perry-Leake was\nsecond with 30 small dolls as place\ncards, made of paper, and dressed\nin various colored dresses and hats\nmade of crepe paper. Some of the\n\"talent\" work was auctioned by\nMrs. J.S, Hirst, and the rest saved\nfor the summer sale. Members present were Mrs. G. F. Attree, Mrs.\nJ. S. Mahood, Mrs, Alec Attree,\nMrs. Kenneth Attree, Mrs. G. Porteous, Mrs. F. M. Hughes, Mrs. J. S.\nHirst, Hon. Mrs. K. A. Aylmer.\nGuests present were Mrs. Ernest\nWare, Miss Betty Porteous and Miss\nJanet Hughes.\n8ILVERTON - W. McNut left\nMonday for Nelson.... Mrs. C. Holmer has returned from Nelson after\nvisiting here sister Mrs. H. Jacob-\nson. . . . Harry Olson of New Denver was a visitor to town Sunday.\n. . . Roy Kennedy left Monday for\nthe coast.... Miss Doris Harvey of\nNakusp was a visitor to town Saturday. . . . L. Truscott of Nakusp\nvisited town Saturday. . . . Miss\nCora Cooper is spending a few days.\nat New Denver. . . . C. Holmer has\nreturned from Sandon. ... J. Stan-\nfield of Nelson was a visitor to\ntown Monday.\nAPPLEDALE\u2014A surprise party\nwas held in honor of Mrs. J. Fordyce. Three tables of cards were in\nplay and one of crokinole. Refreshments were served by the guests.\nThose present were Mr. and Mrs. V.\nSawcltle, Mr. and Mrs. R. Burket,\nMrs. F. Trozzo, Mrs. Pearse, Miss\nI Honcysctte. Miss J. McKinnon,\nMiss J. Trozzo, Miss A. Trozzo, G.\nSteele, H. Wynne, B. Bridge, E.\nTrozzo, J. Brown, M. Pearce and\nF. Trozzo. . . . Mrs. J. Fordyce has\nleft for Trail to spend a few days\nwith relations.... A. S. Woyna wasA\na visitor to Nelson, Trail and South\nSlocan. ... Mr. and Mrs. D. Call\nwere visitors to her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. F. Day.\nWARDNER, B. C. \u2014 Mrs, MacDonald and Miss I. Maltman of\nBull River visited Wardner Sunday.\n. . . M. Stipinski left for Cranbrook Tuesday after visiting at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. W. Muir, Sr.\n. . . H. Simpson was\" a week-end\nvisitor at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. L, Doree. . . . Lawrence Ballard left for Galloway Wednesday.\n. . . Weekly bridge was held at\nthe home of Mrs. Hamrin. Those\nattending were Mrs. Richmond. Mrs.\nRosicky, Mrs. Reed, Mrs. Fisher,\nMrs. Embree, Mrs. Renstrom and\nMrs. Shellborn. Prize went to Mrs.\nFhjher. . . . \"Harold Holmes, Victor\nHolmes and Mrs. Richmond and\ndaughter, Jocelyn, visited. Cranbrook Saturday. . . . Mrs. E. Olson\nreturned from Victoria Thursday.\n. , . Lawrence Ballard returned\nfrom Galloway Thursday. . . Mrs-\nP. Keyandway was a visitor to\nJaffray Thursday. . . . E. Hamrin\nwas 0 visitor to Jaffray Thursday.\nSUNSHINE BAY, B. C. \u2014 Mrs.\nH. Harrop and Miss Jessie Harrop\nof Nelson visited Mr. and Mrs. R.\nS. Stevenson Wednesday. .. . Mrs.\nRobert I* Hong has been visiting\nI\nSLOCAN CITY \u2014 John Bolsvert\nwent to New Denver Friday to\nvisit his young son, Joe, who is a\npatient at Slocan Community hospital, suffering from the effects of*\na blow on the head with a rock,\nwhich he received while playing\nwith other children, . . . Miss Mary\nPnterson, who was rushed to Slocan Community hospital Friday for\nmedical attention and who was operated on for appendicitis Monday,\nis doing well. . . Miss Linda Reynolds was a visitor to Nelson, leav-.\ning Sat. for Vancouver. . . Ray Reynolds was home from the Ottawa\nMine Friday evening. . . . Mrs. J. P.\nSutherland was a visitor to Nelson during the week.\nHave You a Used\nCARD\nTABLE\n\u2022\nWhy Not Turn\nIt Into Cash\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo 12) lines 6 times 80c net\nTwo  12)   lines  ence 20c net\nNelson Daily News\nPHONE  144\n mmmmvm********^****\u2122!'\nUSH\nRock Gardens\nand Pools In\nthe Limelight\nToday's trend In gardening fash-\nIons Is toward rock gardens and\nsmall pools.\nAlmost every plot of ground, unless It be In the open and flat, contains one or more spots where a\nrock garden fits as nothing else will.\nIn most Kootenay gardens these\nspots are many and the thing to do\ntoday is to put them to practical\nuse, rather than to try to eliminate\nthem.\nParticularly outstanding results\nhave been obtained by the Trail-\nTadanac parks board utilizing banks\nand dead ends of streets.\nThe garden pool with its water\nlillies and gold fish, generally surrounded by rock borders and rock\nplants, is a favorite.\nRock garden annual seeds and\nwild flower mixtures are in demand for these purposes.\nSAFECRACKERS FAIL\nVANCOUVER March 31 (CP)-\nSafecrackers failed in an attempt\nto force open a strong box in Pacific Coast Pipe Company Ltd.\noffices early today. Desks in the\noffices were ransacked.\nf\nLandlords'\nOpportunity\nAodem plumbing . . . modem heating ;;; a\nmodern kitchen, will rent a houte, and keep It\nrented\u2014with a belter dais of tenants, at a\nhigher rent. A houie attractively decorated In\nthe modem manner will attract tenants quicker\nthan one with a shabby, old fashioned Interior.\nLandlords may finance these Improvements very\neasily by taking advantage of the Dominion\nHome Improvement Plan, by which the Bank and\nthe Government co-operate in order tb encourage activity in the building trades and provide\nemployment. Amounts up to $2000 may be\nborrowed upon personal integrity.\nFor further particular! apply to any office of\nIhe Bank.\nIMPERIAL BANK\nOF CANADA\nHead Office i Toronto\nNIL80N DAILY NBW*!, NILSON, M\u2014FRIDAY MORNIN9, AWL 1.1W\u00bb\nan charged with the murder ot\nMary Thurston You will be further\ncharged with the murder of Dr.\nAlexander Thurston.  It is also my\nSerial Story . . .\nA Case for 3 Detectives\nBy LEO BRUCE\nW. R. GRUBBE\nManager Nelion Branch\nCHAPTER \u00ab\n\"The first on the murder'scene\nis Mr. Norris, because 'e's got no-\nthink to delay 'im,\" explained Sergeant Beef. \"Then up comes Dr.\nThurston, calling out 'er name, and\nMr. Williams and Mr. Town-\nsend, and start breaking the door\nin. Wot's 'appened to the others you\nmay well ask. Two of them's gol\nsomething to 'ide before they puts\ntheir noses out of their doors,\nThere's Mr. Strickland, with the\ndiamond pendent, wot Mrs. Thurston 'ad giv' 'im before dinner,\nlying on 'is dressing table as bold\nas brass. 'E 'as to conceal that before\n'e dares open 'Is door. And here's\nStall with two 'undred of the best\nin 'is room, 'e can't come running\ndown before they're away. Then\nthere was the chauffer. Well, don't\nforget 'e 'ad been sent for to Mrs,\nThurston's room that evening. I\nshouldn't be surprised If 'e'd been\non 'is way down the stairs when\n'e 'eard those screams, and got a\nnarsty turn, and run back to 'is own\nroom for a minute. Something of\nthat anyway.\n\"Then you break the panels of\nthe door, and look in. \"Ullo,' you\nsay, 'murdered, is she?' For there\nshe lies in a pool of blood, you\nthink And Dr. Thurston, 'e walks\nacross to 'er and examines 'er,\nand say she's dead. And you start\nsearching the room like mad, thinking that someone's been in there a-\nmurdering of 'er, just as you was\nmeant to think. And all the while\nthe poor lady's smiling to 'erself,\nthinking she's 'aving a rare Joke on\nyou. So she was, up to then.\n\"So you looks 'igh and low, up\nthe chimney, out of the winder,\nand under the carpet, not knowing as you know now, that no one\n'adn't been in there since Stall was\nthere, and 'im only for a couple of\nminutes. But at last you've finished, and leave the lady alone. Mr.\nTownsend and Mr. Strickland and\nMr. Nrris go out in the gardens,\nwhile the chauffeur comes for me.\n\"Then, with no one else there,\nand an alibi established, it ain't\nno trouble to slip back in the room,\nmurder the poor lady, and drop the\nknife out of the window in time\nfor Mr. Townsend to find it on the\nground. See? I told you it was\nsimple. 'Ardly worth telling. But\nyou seemed to want to know 'ow\nit was done.\"\n\"But good heavens, Beef,'.' I said,\nreally appaled by the story which\nsounded uncomfortably true, \"what\nproof have you got?\"\n\"Proof?\" repeated Beef, \"i got\nplenty of proof. D'you know 'ow\nI got onto this? Why, examining\nthose bloodstains you was all so\nsarcastic about. You see, in that\nsort of way I've got a bit of an\n\u00ab\u00ab\u2022\u00bb*\u2022\nFROM\nApril 1 T.April 16,1938\nINCLUSIVE\n\\*w\nwe offer Big Savings in\nMarshall Wells\nPaint Products\nas much as $1*75 per gallon\nKsK\n+*\n%\nWhy not re-decorate your Home inside and out with Marshall-\nWells Finishes?  If it Is a small job you can do it yourself. If\nlt is a big contract\u2014The National Home Improvement Plan\nwill help you pay for it\u2014And in any event, you will\nbe surprised how little it will cost you.\n\/\n\\\n\u25a0%\nCome In and Let Us\nTalk It Over\n*00 PR!\nOn Sale at the Following Dealers\n10^\n#\n*\nCRESTON\nTRAIL\nPENTICTON\nGRAND FORKS\nCRANBROOK\nNAKUSP\nROSSLAND\nWinter & Company\nTrail Mercantile Co., Ltd.\nH. 0. Rorke Hardware Store\nGrand Forks Furn. & Hdwe. Co.\nF. Parks & Company\nFrank Rushton\nHunter Bros. Limited\nadvantage over these gentlemen.\nI mean, I can't work out theories,\nlike what they can, I only wish I\ncould. Only we're taught things\nIn the police, see? And one of the\nfirst jobs In a case like this is to\n'ave a good look at the bloodstains.\nWell, I done that, and found something funny about 'em, It was a\nclean pillow slip, or 'ad been before\nthe blood was on It. And the stains\non the pillow slip was blood, real\nblood. But when I came to look at\nthe pillow itself Inside, what d'you\nthink I found? No only blood, but\nred ink! That taught me a thing or\ntwo. Oh, I says, so that was it, was\nlt? Acting dead, was she? And the\npillow slip with the inkstains on\nbeen took away after the real\nmurder, was it? Only there wasn't\na chance to take the 'ole pillow,\nwasn't there? I see That's 'ow\nI come to discover lt Of course,\nI got the pillow and the pillow\nslip. Exhibits A and B, them. That's\nproof enough, isn't lt? And not circumstantial, wot's more.\"\nSo at last we knew who was\nguilty. As Sergeant Beef said, the\nevidence of the pillow and pillow\nslip was not 'circumstantial, but\nwas hard and certain proof. I\ncannot pretend that I had suspected\nDr. Thurston, because lt had seemed to me impossible that he, who\nhad been with us front the time\nthat Mrs. Thnurston went to bed\nuntil we had found her apparently\nmurdered, could have had anything\nto do with it. Who could even have\nsuspected that his accomplice, his\nunfortunate and unconscious accomplice, had been none other than\nthe murdered woman! It seemed\nvery horrible, but even as I re1\nalized it, it seemed diabolically\nclever.\nBut there was one man who had\nevidently decided to remain loyal\nto Thurston. The doctor was about\nto speak In answer to Sergeant\nBeef, when Williams placed a hand\non his arm. \"Doctor, as your lawyer\nI forbid you to say anything In an-,\nswer to this at present The whole\nthing is outrageous, and we shall be\nable to prove that this blundering\nfool of a policeman has made some\nfantastic mistake.\"\nLord'Simon leaned back easily.\n\"Not this time, Williams,\" he said.\n\"I am not one to get excited about\nthe Jolly old police, but I'm climbin'\ndown a peg.\" Then he added, \"Lord,-\nwhat a relief it is to have been\nwrong for once! You don't know the\nmonotony of infallibility!\"\n\"1 also, the great Amer Picon,\nshall rest contented. At last I have\nmade the faux pas. Hooray, as you\nsay in English, it is a great change\nfor me!\"\nAnd Mgr. Smith murmured softly, \"I am so pleased.  So pleased.'\n\"At all events,\" said Williams\nfiercely, \"say nothing, doctor, till\nwe have conferred.\" Then he turned to Beef. \"I take it that there ls\nno objection to.Dr. Thurston coming with me to the study for a while\nbefore you ... take any more steps?\"\n\"None at all, sir. There are police in the grounds and no one can\nleave. I will give you 10 minutes.\"\nThe two went out of the room,\nand Sergeant Beef made an unpleasant noise as though he were\nsucking his teeth, as indeed he\nprobably *was doing. Then suddenly he rose heavily to his feet.\n\"I don't know whether I ought\nto leave them ...\" he began.\nBut his words were' rudely interrupted. There was the sound\nof a revolver shot which seemed to\nshake the house, and sang deaf-\neningly in my ears for some seconds. We jumped up, and ran out\ninto the hall. The study door was\nopen, and full length on the ground\nlay the weighty bulk of Dr. Thurston, while in his right hand was\nstill clasped his revolver. Williams\nstooped over him, and Beef followed.\n\"I'm afraid there can be no doubt\nabout death in this case,\" Williams\nsaid. \"It must have been instan\ntaneous.\"\n\"How did it happen?\" 1 asked.\n\"He led me in here, then asked\nif I would leave him alone for a\nmoment He said he wanted to\ncollect himself before conferring\nwith me. And foolishly I agreed.\nFor some reason it never occured\nto me that this was his intention.\nI had scarcely opened the door\nwhen I heard the shot behind me.\"\n\"Let's go back to the other room,\"\nI said, for the body of the dead\nman was gruesome. There was an\nexpression of startled horror on\nThurston's dead face which was .unendurable. Before we left him,\nhowever, a rug was laid over the\ncorpse, and Beef took care to lock\nihe door when we were all out of\nthe room.\n\"Well, that seems pretty well to\nprove your theory, sergeant,\" said\nWilliams, when we had got back\nto the more natural atmosphere of\nthe lounge.\nAnd indeed if further proof was\nnecessary I felt that here lt was.\nWhat could be more conclusive\nthan the suicide of the protagonist?\nBut it appeared that Beef was\nmodest.\n\"Wot theory?\" he said. \"I 'adn't\ngot no theory.\"\n\"Oh yes, you had,\" said Williams, \"and a very brilliant one, and\nas it now turns out amazingly true.\nPoor Mary! I wonder what Thurston's motive was? I expect we\nshall see when we come to go\nthrough her papers. It was a\nfiendishly clever idea, though, for\nThurston to persuade her into that\npretense, and then, with his alibi\nestablished, for him to go back and\nmurder her.\"\nSergeant Beef was standing between us and the door.\n'\"Oo said anythink about Dr.\nThurston going back and murdering 'er?\" he asked suddenly.\nFor a moment I did not understand the implications of this extraordinary question, then I was\nhorrified to see that the sergeant\nhad pulled out a pair of handcuffs\nand drawn himself up to his full\nheight.\n\"Samuel James Williams,\" he said,\n\"it is my duty to arrest you. You\nduty to warn you that anythink\nyou say may be used In evidence\nagainst you.\"\nBefore I had recovered from my\nsurprise I saw that he had slipped\nhis handcuffs over the lawyer's\nwrists.\n\"But.'. . but...\" 1 said. \"You've\nJust been proving it was Dr. Thurston \u00bb\n\"I beg your pardon, sir, I 'aven't\nbeen proving nothlnk ot the sort.\nI knowed It waa 'im all through.\"\nSergeant Beef then did a very\ncommonplace thing. He blew loudly on a Whistle.\n\"Really!\" said Lord Simon, whose\nsensibilities were touched by the\nsound.\nTwo policemen entered.\n\"Take 'lm along,\" said Sergeant\nBeef. '\"E won't say nothink, being a lawyer.\" But 'e's for it, orlght.\n'Anged by the neck till 'e's dead,\n'e'll be.\"\nThe sergeant thereupon helped\nhimself to a glass of beer, and\nafter thoroughly sucking the ends\nof his straggling ginger mustache,\nhe said, \"You see, gents, I 'adn'a\ngot no theories, not like yours. I\nstill thing they was remarkable.\nBut I did 'appen to know 'oo done\nIt It was simple enough. What\nI told you about the lark was true.\nThat was Dr. Thurston's idea\u2014for\na joke like. 'E never 'ad no intention but a joke, if you get my\nmeaning. 'E took that bulb out\nto 'elp the Joke, not wanting anyone\nto see she was still alive and spoil\nit ,and he snipped the telephone wire\nIn rase anyone should ring up the\np'lice and 'ta get into trouble for\ngiving us unnecessary trouble.\n\"Then lt all 'appened just as I\nsaid it did. Only when Williams\nwas searching the room 'e notices\nout of the corner of 'is eye that\nMrs. Thurston's no more dead than\n'e Is. Or p'raps he 'ears 'er\nchuckling. And 'is brains quick.\n'E thinks, \"Ullo, 'ere's a chance\nto do 'er In.' 'E get rid of you\nall out of the way like. Dr. Thurston 'as to act as though 'e's cut up,\nfor the sake of the Joke, see? So\nthe doctor stays downstairs. Then\nthis 'ere Williams who'd said 'e was\ngoing to 'ave another try at telephoning, slips up and cuts 'er\nfroat while youVe going out to\nsearch the grounds. He throws the\nknife out of the window, like\nsaid. It couldn't of teen there many\nseconds when you found it, Mr,\nTownsend. No wonder the blood\nwas still wet.\"\n(To Be Continued)\nNEW CHEMICALS\nARE DISCOVERED\nBALTIMORE, March 31 (API-\nDiscovery of two narcotlc-llke\nchemicals which have the pain-\nkilling effects of morphine without\nits addiction properties was announced today at a general meeting\nopening the annual convention of\nthe federation of American societies\nfor experimental biology.\nPAWilVfH\nPROTEST POSTAGE RATI\nVANCOUVER, March 31 <CP>-\nThe Vancouver board of trade tald\ntoday they would protest to Ottawa about the steamer mall postage\nrate across the Pacific to Empire\npoints.\nThey ywill ask authorities to restore the former three cent-per-\nounce rate. The present rates is six\ncents per half ounce.\nREGRET LACK OF\n\u2022      COURTESY ALBERTA\nEDMONTON, March 31 <CP)~\nRegret that the province of Alberta\nhad not been more courteous to the\nRowell commission was expressed\nto the commission today by G. E.\nGariepy, for the Edmonton taxpayers' protective association.\nThe Purchase of Good Reliable Seed Is a\nSound Investment!\nINSIST ON\nKENNIES\nFAMOUS SEEDS\nFIELD SEEDS    VEGETABLE SEEDS     FLOWER SEEDS\nBULBS     SHRUBS      GARDEN FERTILIZERS\nCATALOGUE ON REQUEST\nWilliam Rennie Seeds\nLIMITED\n250 Terminal Ave.       Vancouver, B. C.\nNext fo a new car-\nFORD V 8 is best\nR & G Ford V-8s enjoy the same popularity\namong used cars that the 1938 Ford V-8 does in\nthe new cat field. Here's the reason. When your\nFord Dealer puts his R & G label on a 1934, '35,\n'36 or '37 Ford V-8 it's a sure sign of used car\nvalue. It. means that paint and upholstery are\nrenewed. It means that Ford factory-trained me-\nchanics, working with precision equipment, have\ndone a real mechanical job. It means you'll save\non sas, oil and service from the moment you\ndrive it away. The R & G guarantee gives yon\ntwo-fold protection\u2014an iron-clad, 2-day money-\nback guarantee plus a 50-50, 30-day warranty\nagainst mechanical defects.\nFord leadership in new car sales have given\nyour Ford dealer the'best selection of aU popular\nmakes and models \u2014so count on getting the car\nyou want. Don't delay a moment longer. Get\nyour R & G used car NOW!\nSEE YOUR\nFORD\nDEALER\nQUEEN CITY MOTORS LTD.\n519 Josephine St.\n\"SATISFACTION IS OUR AIM\"\nNelson and District Ford Dealers\nNelson, B.C.\nBUERGE'S GARAGE\nBroadway St. Nakusp and District Ford Dealers Nakusp, B.C.\nF. Nadon, Prop\nUNIVERSAL MOTORS\nCreston, B.C.\nCreston and District Ford Dealers\nHANSON GARAGE CO., LTD.\nPhone 126      Cranbrook, Kimberley and District Ford Dealers      Cranbrook, B.C.\n216 Victoria St.\nFERNIE GARAGE\nFernie and District Ford Dealers\nFernie, B.C,\n MOI -tOHT\t\nEASTERN FIRMS\nINQUIRE ABOUT\nDISTRICT MINES\nChamber Mines Has\nMany Letters as\nResult Exhibit\nSEEK SUBSTITUTE\nMINING ENGINEER\nInquiries from eastern people regarding Kootenay mining properties and prospects have been numerous since the exhibit ol Kootenay\nores at the Toronto and London exhibitions, Miss Edythe Thompson,\nsecretary, told the Chamber ot\nMines of Eastern British Columbia\nat a meeting Thursday night Sixty\nperson:; an hour visited the Kootenay booth at the Toronto exhibition\nand 40 an hour at the booth at London.\nAmong recent letters was one\nIrom an eastern company proposing\nto specialize on B. C. mining stock\nand asking information about Kootenay companies; another from\nNew York asking for information\non gold claims; and another from\nWindsor, Ont., inquiring about prospects.\n8EEK SUBSTITUTE\nENGINEER\nThe chamber will take up with\nFrank Putnam, M. L. A., stationing\nof a mining engineer in the district\nIn place of H. Sargent, resident engineer, at present attending Massachusetts Institute of Technology at\nBoston for post graduate work. It\n\u2022was explained prospectors applying\nfor grants for trails, who could not\nnow place their applications with\nMr. Sargent, could send them to Victoria after having them signed by\nthe district mining recorder. Members ot the chamber felt the present\nsituation, with Mr. Sargent absent\nand no engineer in his place, was a\nserious handicap.\nIt was decided to keep in touch\nwith Hon. W. J. Asselstine, minister of mines,, with respect to his\nproposed interior trip.\nWOODSIDE  DESCRIBES\nTRIP\nFrank E. Woodside, manager of\nthe B. C. Chamber of Mines, described a recent trip he made to San\nFrancisco, proposing there should\nnot be a big ore exhibit at the\niorthcoming exhibition there, but\nrather distribute information. He\nproposed that an interior representative attend.\nJ. R. Hunter, president, stated\nBritish Columbia's deputy minister\nof mines, Dr. John F. Walker, had\npromised to seek assistance for a\nchamber exhibit at San Francisco.\nPraises Catholic\nYouth Movement\nat Fernie Dinner\nFEKNIE, B.C.\u2014On Sunday morning Fernie Council Knights of Columbus assembled to receive Holy\nCommunion in a body, the occasion\nbeing Founder's Week. In the evening they were hosts to their wives\nand lady friends at a banquet in\nthi Catholic auditorium.\nRev. Father John Knox said grace\nand the company sat down to a\nsplendid dinner prepared by the\n\u2022wives of the Knights. In a talk entitled \"Stray Straws in the Wind\"\nBev. Father Harrison of Michel\nmade a strong appeal to the Knights\nto foster Catholic youth organizations and to help to make the\nchurch the hub of the social and\nathletic activities of the younger\ngeneration. He illustrated how the\nplan had been successful elsewhere\nand gave several suggestions of\n\u2022what might be done in Fernie.\nA short sketch of the ,growth of\nthe Knights of Columbus from the\n10 members at the time of its inception in 1877 to' the present membership of over 700,000 was given\nby W. Coughlin. Bernard Neary explained the four aims of the organization, namely charity, unity, fraternity and patriotism, illustrating\nhow they affected the individual\nmembers. The toast to Pope Pius\nXI was proposed by Rev. Father\nJohn Knox who described his observations of the Knights and commended them highly, for tho work\nthey were doing. He also paid high\ntribute to their feminine counterpart, the Catholic Women's league.\nOther items on the program were\na toast to the ladies by John Harrington, a violin solo \"Overture\nZamba\" by John Bella, vocal solos\n\"Because\" and \"Danny Boy\" by\nWilliam Riley, community singing\nand a short skit directed by Bernard\nNeary.\nBlocks of aerated concrete, composed of sand, cement, water and\naluminum powder, will float in\nwater.\nN. A. H. A. Banquet\nPostponed to 9th\nPostponement of the Nelson Amateur Hockey association's banquet,\nto which all teams participating In\n1937-38 season under the association, Including the Ymir Rock\nCrushers, have been Invited, to\nApril 9 was announced by M. N.\nPorter, banquet committee chairman, Thursday night. It was previously s\\ated for April 4.\nThe postponement was made to\nallow extra time for special arrangements.\nChinchillas Held\nal Kinpsgafle Port\nAre Worth $10-000\nKINGSGATE, B.C.-A very-urt-\nusual shipment has Wen held at\nthe customs office here pending the\narrival of some papers. This shipment consisted of three pair of real\nChinchillas not the often seen Chinchilla Rabbit, but the genuine South\nAmerican Chinchilla whose fur is\nso valuable that coats of it can only\nbe possesed by millionaires' wives\nand run anywhere \u2022 from $50,000 to\n$150,000.\nThe six little animals held here\ncost around $10,000. They are very\nfriendly animals with round mouse\nlike ears, squirrel like tails and\nsit up like miniature kangaroos. The\nfur Is almost unbelievably soft and\nsilky.\nThe owner, Mrs. Irene Williams of\nCradston, Alta., was the guest of\nMr. and Mrs. M. E. Olsen during her\nstay here.\nCreston Invites\nInvermere Pastor\nCRESTON, B. C-Rev. J. G. Cler-\nIhue, now at Invermere, will be\ninvited to become pas'tijr of Trinity\nUnited church Creston, with duties\nto commence in July, to succeed\nRev. Andrew H. Walker who will\nconclude his ministry at midsummer.\nMonday night Trinity board of\nmanagers and members of the congregation agreed to invite the Invermere pastor.\nRev. T. W. Reed of Rossland, moderator of the Kootenay presbytery\nof the United Church, spoke highly\nof the prospective pastor, and promised to use his endeavors to persuade him to accept the work at\nCreston. G. W. Taylor and J. G.\nAbbott of the Wynndel church managing board were present, and gave\nWynndel's endorsation of the call.\nLast week the congregation had\na reunion for the purpose of saying farewell to Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Goodwin, who have left for Vancouver Island. Mrs. Goodwin was\npresented with a travelling bag, and\nMr. Goodwin with a supply of fishing tackle.\nThe presentations were In the\nhands of Rev. Andrew H. Walker,\nassisted by Mrs. George Cartwright\nand A. Comfort. The former reviewed the many years of useful and\nunselfish service rendered the choir,\nchurch and Sunday school by the\nGoodwins, and wished them long\nlife and happiness wherever they\nlocated. Mr. Goodwin replied suitably.\nMake Presentation\nto Mrs. Rebillard\nKINGSGATE, B. C. \u2014 Mrs. T.\nBalf and Mrs. Gordon Worley were\njoint hostesses at the Community\ncard party Tuesday evehing. About\n30 members were present After a\ndessert luncheon, bridge was played. Prize winners were Mrs. Paul\nThorn and.J. W. Maldin.\nMrs. Hiighie Hannah and Mrs.\nAaron Rebillard entertained at a\nbridge luncheon Thursday. High\nscorers were Mrs. Spencer Lewis\nand Mrs. A. Pontesso.\nThe Ladies' study club met Friday at the home of Mrs. M. E. Olsen\nwhen there was a good turn out of\nthe members.\nContinuing the series of Famous\nWomen, Mrs. T. Balf took as her\nsubject Mrs. Franklin Roosevelt, the\nhighlights of whose Hie she presented in a very lucid and entertaining way.\nNewmarket was played during\nthe social hour, Mrs. Thomason and\nMrs. John Mauldin being the prize\nwinners.\nTlie opportunity was taken to\nmake a presentation to Mrs. A. Rebillard, Mrs. Rebillard is leaving at\nthe end of the month to take up\nresidence in Coeur d'Alene where\nher husband has been transferred.\nA guest of the club for the evening was Mrs. Irene Williams of\nCardston, Alta.\nThe birth rate of families on U.\nS. relief rolls is almost twice as\nlarge as families not on relief rolls,\nstatistics show.\nCRESTON Social...\nCESTON, B.C. \u2014 Mrs. Charles\nMurrell returned on Sunday from\na three months' visit at Vancouver\nto her daughter, Miss Mary, and\nson and daughter-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. John F. Murrell.\nMr. and Mrs. W. M. Archibald re\nturned on Monday from a several\nweeks visit in eastern Canada and\neastern states, returning via Spokane.\nMr. and Mrs. \"Bud\" Andrews are\nhome from a few days' visit to Cal\ngary.\nW. Dale of Vancouver was here\nat the week-end from Vancouver.\nHe is a landowner on the Reclamation farm and was here for the\nmeeting of the Reclamation Farmers' association. He and G. P. Salter\nleft for home on Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. C. F. Hayes left to\nday for a short holiday visit to\nSpokane friends.\nDoug, and Rod. Putnam are home\nfrom a visit at Kitchener.\nMr. and Mrs. Murray have returned to Yahk, after a visit here,\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Allan.\nMiss Margaret and Ed. J. Roberts are home from Spokane, to\nwhich city they were called due\nthe death of their grandmother.\n.Miss Gates has returned to Kitchener after a visit at the home of\nMr. and Mrs. G. Currie.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 1, 1338\n\u25a0 '\u2022., , \\ % 1         .\n?&***.;            '.                    iv'V \u201e;,*'          *.\nf                         -\n\u25a0   .\n- a sty***...      ;,'\n\"        \"1\nj\n\u2022II\n',\nMR*   '\n.'..P-v *\nFull of high spirits, the Hume school boys play \"dog pile\". It is more fun being on the top than at the\nbottom of the pile.\n9nAhk & Out!\nOF NELSON HIGH SCHOOL\nBy R. M.\nBLUE BOMERETTES\nAs you probably know, the writers of this column for this week\nare members of the fair sex. Having had no previous experience at\nnewspaper work, we have probably\nmade some mistakes, but we have\nthoroughly enjoyed our undertaking and we hope you will enjoy\nreading it.\nPerhaps, because we are girls, or\nperhaps we have read so much\nabout the \"Blue Bombers\", we feel\nthat the \"Blue Bomberettes\" deserve some praise. These girls, who\nwere organized for the Creston-\nWynndel trip, held their own\nagainst those opposing teams. They\nhold a victory over Wynndel which\nis one of the strongest teams in the\nbig Creston league. We probably\nknow all these girls and will observe that Red Donovan is the only\none who may leave us next year.\nTherefore we hope these girls will\ncontinue their good work and bring\ngreater honors to Nelson High\nschool next year.\nPUBLICATIONS COMMITTEE\nThe publications committee, it is\nreported, has given up the Idea of\nissuing an \"Annual\" to be on sale\nat the end of June. Instead they\nplan to have a complete \"Years Activities\" published in December\n1938. To build up the circulation,\nthey are going to introduce members of the school that were here\nin by-gone days. The publications\ncommittee urge anyone interested\nin the literary field to turn in any\nof their accomplishments as material for this Annual so that it may\nbe a grand success. Come on, school,\nlet's make our school famous by a\nlamous Annual. Support it 100 per\ncent.\nSPRING BADMINTON\nTOURNAMENT\nConcluding the spring badminton season, a tournament was held\u2014.\nmeet the champs Margaret Ball.\nKen McBride, Bill McCracken and\nMurielle Whimster. The girls\ndoubles was taken after a fight of\nthree games from Loraine Carew\nand Annie Kosmo by Murielle\nWhimster and Margaret Ball. The\nboys' doubles was slashed through\nto'victory by \"Walter\" McCracken\nand Ken McBride. The ladies'\nsingles were won by Margaret Ball\nand the men's by Ken McBride. Together they took the mixed doubles.\nThe badminton season this year has\nbeen one of the best, and this was\nonly made possible through the cooperation cf the teachers who came\nup to supervise. Tlie club really appreciates their assistance.\nWHO SAYS7\n1. I'll whip up in five minutes.\n2. Yep-yep-yep-sure-sure. (Not\nAl Pearce).\n3. I'll be there as soon as I can.\n4. Translate for the children,\n5. Come and kiss your little\npappy.\n6. Oh Gosh\n7. Do you mind? (Not Sir Von\nPlatter).\n8. The class seems listless lately.\nCHATTER\nThe \"society editors\" of this column are having a rather hard time\nto find gossip and startling news.\nDon't tell me it is because the students have started to study for the\nEaster exams! We have nflticed,\nthough, the Czar Maxime wears a\nblue tie with a green sweater. We\nthink the color contrast terrible.\nCouldn't it possibly be improved?\nThis is besought of his wife on\nbended knee.\nSpeaking of the young married\ncouple of Division 2, Mr. -Smillie\nrequests that they keep their minds\non.their studies and not on themselves.\nStrange to relate, 'Ken McBride\nhanded in his Latin trans, on time.\nI'm sure Mr. Rogers appreciated\nthe gesture, as it was the last time\nthat Latin trans, was to be handed\nin this year.\nSpring is here at last. The first\nsign in Division 2 was Betty Bird's\nappearance in ankle sox. Another\nsign is Bill Taylor's poetic moods of\nlate. Here is the result of one of\nthem.\n\"Of gentlemen, it never can be\nsaid\nThat the age of chivalry ls dead.\"\n\u2014Or Chevrolets).\nWE WONDER\nWhat caused the epidemic of\nseat-moving in Division 6? It annoys the teachers, not to say anything of the more \"stay-at-homish\"\npupils.\nDivision 6 has a new-comer, John\nHuyck. Welcome to our school,\nJohn.\nWhere did Kay Manahan disappear to on Saturday night? Have\nFairview (four persons) been looking for her?\nStewie Macintosh reports that\nthe lake is the only public bath in\ntown.\nMiss Dunn was missed in division\n3 the other afternoon, by her failure to examine the throats of the\n\"lads and lasses\". A remark was\nmade that perhaps she had chicken-\npox, and then added, \"that would\nkeep her scratching.\"\nThe favorite haunt of the High\nSchool students is the last three\nrows of the theatre on Friday night.\nOur \"Grape\" (J. B. Gray) whipped\nin an hour late, and nearly fell out\nof his seat looking at the fashions\nof the hour.\nJimmy Allan got punched in the\neye during a basket-ball game, and\nto be sure it would be black in the\nmorning, slept with his fist in it.\nCHATTER\nIt seems a young lady in Junior\nHigh has won our president's heart.\nBeware, Doc!\nSCOOP\nIn division 1 a mouse was found\nin tho waste-paper basket. Miss\nCampbell can now be added to a\ngreat number of others who have a\ndecided dislike for mice.\nI wonder what made Rolfe Brock\nmove over to the spare seat beside Margaret Smillie?\nThose who saw the show last Saturday night would be interested to\nknow that one of the members of\ndivision 5 has got Donald Duck's\nlick-tock dance down pat. He may\ngive you a demonstration.\nBob\u2014May I get through?\nSheila\u2014What do you want to get\nthrough for?\nBob\u2014A doctor! (Ha Ha).\nDo the girls wish to put in a\ncomplaint to the Science club for\nmaking the gym a bit foul? On Monday afternoon? Well, folk.s this is\nall. We wish you all luck possible\nin the forthcoming exams, and a\nhappy Easter holiday.\nST. ANDREWS, Scotland (CP)\u2014\nThe British open golf championship\nfor 1939 will be played over St.\nAndrews course here.    *\nNAKUSP GIRLS\nTREAT MOTHERS\nNAKUSP, B.C.\u2014In.the Small hall,\natractive with evergreen and pussy\nwillows Saturday evening, the Wide\nAwake group of Canadian Girls in\nTraining entertained their mothers\nat the annual \"Mother and Daughter\" banquet. The U-shape table was\npretty with daffodils and sweet\npeas, the flowers made by the girls\nthemselves.\nMiss Nellie Humphries proposed\nthe toast to the mothers to which\nMrs. F. Rushton responded. The toast\nto the Sunday schools was proposed\nby Miss Evelyn Davison and and\nMiss M. H. Butlin replied. Mrs. A.\nJ. Grigg spoke in appreciation of the\nwork Mrs- E. W. Bill as mentor of\nthe girl's group. A toast to the girls\nwas made at the suggestion of Mrs.\nA. Stanley and Miss Vera Butlin\nreplied. Mrs. R. Islip expressed her\npleasure at being present at the af'\nfair, and said how worthwhile the\ngirls 'work is.\nMiss Dorothy Welch sang as a\nsolo, \"Little Old Lady\", Miss Georg-\nina Munn recited, and a musical\nnumber by seven of the group was\nrendered. Miss Mary Rushton and\nMiss Irene Buerge tap danced a\nduet to guitar accompaniment was\nsung by Miss Evelyn Davison and\nMiss Betty Davison, and a recitation\nwas given by Miss Sheila Leary.\nMarch 21 the annual meeting of\nthe Brouse and Box-Lake Improvement society was held in the Brouse\nhall with 16 members attending. Teh\nfollowing directors were elected:\nPresident, Marteen Henke; vice-\npresident, Mrs. K. Jansen; secretary,\nF. Kershaw; directors, V. Erickson,\nM. Goniak, Miss M. Baird, T. Rappe,\nH. Hohenlightner and J. Bedford,\nChildren's Party\nfor Nakusp Tot\nNAKUSP, B. C. - Mrs. E. Oxenham entertained delightfully Saturday afternoon when she gave a\nchildren's party for her daughter,\nJoy, on her sixth birthday anniversary.\nDaffodils and pussy - willows\nformed the table centrepiece and\ntiny kittens made of pussy-willows\nwere the place cards. Each little\nguest received an Easter favor.\nThe children present were Mel-\nvin and Rae La Rue, Sonja Dolman, Betty Miller, Beth Rushton,\nBruce Motherwell, Doreen Parent,\nAllan and Kenneth Stanley, Joy,\nBernard and Shirley Oxenham.\nMrs. Oxenham also was hostess\nat the tea hour to Mrs. F. Rushton,\nMrs. J. Dolman, Mrs. J. Parent, Jr.,\nMrs. H- L. Miller, Mrs. M. La Rue.\nMrs. R. S. La Rue, Mrs. J. Motherwell, Mrs. A. Stanley and Miss E.\nGiraud. Assisting her were Mrs. M.\nLa Rue, Mrs. J. Motherwell and\nMiss E. Giraud.\nONTARIO   ASKS\nLEGAL   SWEEPSTAKES\nTORONTO, March 31 (CP)- A\nresolution requesting the Dominion government to legalize operation\nof sweepstakes in the provinces to\nbenefit hospitals was passed late\ntoday by the Ontario legislature.\nThe vote was 48 to 34. Eight members in the 90-member house did not\nvote. The vote came after house approved the budget.\nA domestic squabble among the White Leghorns on J. R. Ramsden's west arm ranch.\nTwo Upsets in\n(Mm Rounds\nCity Badminton\nTourney   to   Resume\nSaturday; to Draw\nConsolations\nOpening rounds of the Nelson\ncity badminton tournament were\nin full swing at the civic centre\nhall Thursday night, and most of\nthe tournament entrants got in their\nfirst games. The tournament resumes Saturday.\nThe opening rounds were featured by two upsets. In the men's\ndoubles. \"A\" class, the team of Gordon Roynon and Harold Chapman\nturned back Benny Monteleone and\nJ. Parker in a hard-fought three-\nset match. After losing the first\nset 8-15, Roynon and Chapman t> ok\nthe lengthy second 18-16, and the\ndeciding set 15-11.\nMiss Gertrude Whitehead provided the other upset as she defeated\nMiss Murielle Whimster in another\nthree-set, close match, 7-11, 11-9,\nW-9.\nDraws will be made tonight for\nthe consolation events. There will\nbe a consolation for every class, all\nplayers who lost their first game\nbeing eligible.\nMrs. Kirk Heads\nEastern Star\nCRESTON, B.C-Brltish Columbia's youngest and most promising\nchapter of the Order of the Eastern\nStar is at Creston, where Kootenay\nChapter was auspiciously constituted at a largely attended communication at the Masonic hall, Saturday evening.\nMrs. E. Bailie, grand worthy matron, Kamloops, with J. G. Hartley,\ngrand worthy patron, Victor j, ably\nassisted by officers of Kimberley\nChapter, had charge of the constitution ceremonies which were effectively exemplified. In addition\nto the group from Kimberley, visitors were present from Cranbrook,\nTrail, Nelson and several other\ncentres.\nAfter the chapter had been established the officers for 1938 were installed by Mrs. Bailie, assisted by\nMr. Hartley. Those who will preside over the new lodge are:\nW. Matron\u2014Mrs. Charles Kirk.\nAssociate Matron\u2014Mrs. Harold\nLangston.\nAssociate Patrons\u2014E. C. Messlnger, W. L. Bell.\nTreasurer\u2014Mrs. R. B. Robinson,\nSecretary\u2014Mrs. C. H. Messlnger.\nConductress\u2014Mrs. Tom Kirk.\nAssistant conductress \u2014 Mrs. W.\nFraser.\nMarshall\u2014Mrs. A. -L. Palmer.\nOrganist\u2014Mrs. B. Imhoff.\nAdah\u2014Mrs. M. R. Joyce.\nRuth-Mrs. W. L. Bell.\nEsther\u2014Mrs. R. M. Telford.\nMartha-Mrs. W. S. Weir.\nElectra\u2014Mrs. T. W. Bundy.\nChaplain\u2014Mrs S. A. Speers.\nWarden\u2014Mrs. H. E. Ostendorf.\nSentinel\u2014W. G. Armstrong.\nA buffet lunch was served. Prior\nto the lodge opening the visiting\nStar members were guests of Kootenay Chapter at a dinner.\nOn Sunday the officers and many\nof the members were assembled at\nthe hall for a lodge instruction conducted by Mrs. Bailie.\nKootenay Chapter starts off with\na membership of 32 and gives every\npromise of being both active and\nuseful. Mrs. Bailie remarking that\nfor enthusiasm and intelligent appreciation of chapter work and\nactivities the lobal ladies were -h^\nequal of anything in her jurisdiction.\nThe register showed the following visitors to Creston for the constitution of the new chapter: Mrs. C.\nM. Suttie, Mrs. Laura Douglas, Mrs.\nPocock, Mrs. Bentley, Mrs. Morrison, Mrs. Ford, Mrs. Parsons, Kimberley; Mrs. Armstrong and Miss\nNan Armstrong, Canyon; Mrs.\nFrench, Mr. and Mrs. McKechnie,\nMrs, Curran, Nelson; Mrs. McKay,\nMr. and Mrs. J. Woodburn, Mr. and\nMrs. Buchan, Mrs. Mawhinnie, Mrs.\nWilliamson, Trail; Mr. J. H. Bailie,\nKamloops.\nThe Creston lodge has been generously remembered with gifts of\nregalia and lodge furniture, as well\nas other donations, and commences\nits career under the most favorable\ncircumstances.\nNATAL JURY ADVISES\nSAFETY PRECAUTIONS\nNATAL, B. C. \u2014 The inquest into\nthe death of Robert McFegan, overman of the No. 3 mine of the Michel\nColleries, took place at Natal. The\ncoroner's jury decided that he was\naccidently killed when a huge slab\nof coal and rock fell from an overhanging side-wall in an abandoned working where the pipe-line\nleak was bsing repaired. The jury\nrecommended that when work had\nto be done in old or abandoned\nsections of the mine, \"all timbers\nshould be adequately braced and\nstrengthened before \u2022 permitting\nmen to be employed therein.\"\nCHARLOTTETOWN (CP) - Important problems demanding solution in Prince Edward Island agriculture were pasture improvement,\nuse of limestone and the question\nof weed'control, B. F. Tinney, assistant superintendent of the Char-\nlottetown experimental station, said\nduring a lecture to a seminar.\nMahatma Ghandi is said to have\ntaken inspiration for his \"disobedience\" campaign from an essay written by the American naturalist.\nHenry David Thoreau, who was\njailed in 1845 when he refused to\npay taxes for the support of the\nMexican war.\nIONA. N.S. (CP)-A meeting of\ndelegates of credit unions in this\nCape Breton district named a committee to look into the possibilities\nof a cooperative medical service and\nprepare a report.\nMen's Table Wins\nJoymakers' Whist\nMen proved themselves superior\nwhi6t artists when four of thero\nvanquished a field of 27 tables to\nwin first prize at a successful Joymakers' military whist drive Thursday night. Konnie Hessler, Henry\nFrocklage, Konrad Kuhn and Joseph\nSchrath were the prizewinners, with\na score of 58. A. S. Read was master\nof the whist and Albert Smith master of the oldtimc and modern dance\nthat followed. Refreshments were\nserved by the ladies' committee,\nemposed of Mrs. W. P. Kidwell,\nMrs. Joseph Habegard, Mrs. P. J.\nCote and Miss Evelyn Bate.\n83 Hours of Sun\nin March Heralds\nSpring's Advance\nPaced by 9 1-2 hours on the last\nday of the month, and increased by\nthe sun's northward movement\nMarch's total of sunshine was 18%\nhours above that of February.\nMarch 31 also saw the month's\nhighest maximum equalled at 51\ndegrees. The same mark was chalked up on the 26th. March's brightest day had two hours more sunshine that February's brightest\nwhich was the 24th.\nMarch's lowest temperature was\n19 degrees on March 21 compared\nwith the lowest at 16 degrees in\nthe previous month on February\n17. While March's hours of sunshine were higher, Its snowfall was\nlT\/s inches less than February's fall\nof 26 inches. Only 8% inches fell in\nMarch. Rain in March amounted\no 2V4 inches with .63 inch falling\non the 15th.\nDuring the month the highest\nwind velocity was 24 miles per\nhour and hill fell on two days, the\n15th and 17th.\nClaude McDonald\nNew Government\nAaent for Kaslo\nKASLO, B.C. - After about 20\nyears' service as clerk in the local\ngovernment office, Claude McDonald has been appointed government\nagent to succeed Ronald Hewat,\nwhose superannuation takes place\nMarch 31.\nRossland Hears\nCoast Chairman\non Housing Act\nROSSLAND, March 31-\"The Dominion Housing act has been legislated for and put into effect to help\nthe people of Canada and there is\nabsolutely no reason why the citizens of every community should not\ntake the fullest possible advantage\nof it.\n\"But this can only be done in the\noutlying districts, by forcing the interest of loan companies to come\ninto the field and make loans under\nthe act. Use every available means\nto do so, not forgetting \"your local\nmembers of parliament and boards\nof trade. The act is there to be used\nby legitimate citizens who want\ntheir own homes.\"\nEXPLAIN8 ACT\nThis was the key note of an address given a well attended public\nmeeting in Rossland Court house\nWednesday night by P. W. Fields,\nVancouver, chairman of the B.C. executive of the Dominion Housing\nact. In explaining the act to the public.\nW. G. Ternan was chairman of\nthe meeting, held under auspices\nof Rossland board of trade.\nNatal Enjoys\nBenefit Dances\nNATAL, B. C. \u2014 The Russian\nBenevolent Worker's organization\nof Natal staged a successful concert\nand dance March 26.\nThe Michel Medical Committee\nheld a dance to raise funds lo permit one of the member's wives to\nleave for a six months' period in an\nendeavor to try and regain her\nhealth in some different climate\ndown south.\nGet Your Job In the \"Want Ads\"\nMRS. McFADDEH\nGIVEN SEND-OFF\nAT BONNINGTON\nBONNINGTON, B.C. - Mrs. Andrew Willey and Mrs. Charles II.\nBland were co-hostesses at tha home\nof the latter Thursday at a \"Bon\nVoyage\" tea for Mrs. A, McFadden,\nwho was to leave Saturday for England.\nThe nautical inspiration was evident in the arrangements.\nMrs. G. N. Brown [.resided at the\ntea table with its lace cloth, centred\nwith a decorated boat laden with\nspring flowers, flanked by yellow\ncandles In silver sconces. Assisting\nIn serving were Mrs. J. P. Cavell,\nMiss Ruth Willey, Mrs. G. M. Helbecque, Mrs. G. Hall and Mrs. E.\nC. Johnson.\nA \"ship\" contest was won by Mrs.\nGordon L. Thompson.\nMrs. Willey spoke, followed by a\npresentation of a purse of money to\nMrs. McFadden from her Bonnington friends. Young Miss Joyce Bland,\ndressed as a sailor, presented the\ngift.    \u25a0\nInvited guests were: Mrs. G. N.\nBrown, Mrs. M. Croll of Nelson, Mrs.\nJ. Duck, Mrs. R. Greyson, Mrs. C.\nB. Sharp, Mrs. A. Coates, Mrs. F.\nHawkins, Mrs. J. Riley, Mrs. G. E.\nHelbecque, Mrs. G. M. Helbecque,\nMrs. A. MacCrone, Mrs. E. L. McGregor, Mrs. E. C. Johnson, Mrs. W.\nE. Motley, Miss Phylis Motley, Mrs.\nR. Kennedy, Mrs. E. Gordon, Mrs. A.\nSomerville, Mrs. W. G. Elsdon, Mrs.\nJ. Gilker, Miss Ruth Willey, Mrs.G.\nBiddlecombe, Mrs. J. H. Jerome,\nMrs. J. P. Cavell, Mrs. J. E. Parkin,\nMrs. Grant Hall, Mrs. A. Servold,\nMrs. J. Ostlln, Mrs. Turner-Lee, Mrs.\nG. L. Thompson, Mrs, W. D. Ridge,\nMrs. R. G. MacDonald, Mrs A. Duns-\nmore, Mrs. J. Hawkins and Mrs. R.\nMcFadden.\nBanquet Swanson\nKimberley Affair\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. - A banquet Friday evening was in honor of\nA. R. Swanson, local C. P. R. agent,\nwho has just completed 12 years\nservice in Kimberley. His service\nwith the company began In low\nwhen he was stationed at Frank. On\nthe new school board he has been\nsecretary.\nHe ended his connection with the\nC. P. R. on Saturday, having reach- j\ned the age of retirement.\nAt the banquet Charles Christ-\nford, president of the Retail Merchants, was chairman, and among\nthe speakers were A. J. Ironsides,\nassistant superintendent of the Nelson division of the C. P. R.; J. Mc-\nKim of the school board; R. B. McLeod of the board of trade; Messrs,\nLindsay, Oughtred, Banks and Lea-\nman of the C. M. St S. Co, H. Stafford, principal of Kimberley Elementary schools; W. Andrews ol\nCranbrook, representative of the\ntelegraphers, who presented a gift\non behalf of the telegraphers, while.\nMr. Chrisford made a. presentation\nin behalf of the assembled guests.\nMr. Swanson thanked the gathering\nfor their remembrances and for\ntheir kindness and cooperation during his stay in Kimberley.\nMr .and Mrs. Swanson left on\nMonday for their new home, Swansea Resort, on Mara Lake, near\nGrindrod, B. C. Mr. Swanson will\nrun this resort, which is 40 miles\nfrom Vernon.\nThey were accompanied by\nand Mrs. Ralph Swanson.\nH. Godderis is acting agent of the\nC. P. R. here until the appointment'\nof the new official.\nALFALFA 15 INCHES\nHIGH AT L1LLOOE'\nLILLOOET, B.C., March 31 (CP..\n\u2014Alfalfa 15 inches high was evidence here today spring had cofne\nto the Cariboo to stay. It was one1\nof the earliest on record for this interior country.\n%\nKIMBERLEY Sockl...\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. - A number\nof friends gathered at the home of\nMrs. H. Derby on Thursday in\nhonor of Mrs. W. Hawke and Mrs.\nJ. Neilson, who are leaving tor the\ncoast. Four tables of whist were\nplayed, first prize going to Mrs. T\nWills, consolation to Mrs. Art Johnston After refreshments had been\nserved, Mrs. Derby', on behalf of\nthose present, gave the two guests of\nhonor suitable gifts.\n11. Michalyshyn of Edmonton, Alberta, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. M.\nKoper.\nMiss G. Hall left Friday for Oak-\ndale, Wash., on reeelpt of the news\nthat her mother was seriously ill.\nThomas Horribin of the Wallasey\nBrick works was married recently\nto Miss Edith Stanton. They are living at Noriton,\nMrs. Caukill entertained at 500\nWednesday with Mrs. Lang taking\nfirst. Mrs. Gallpen second and Mrs.\nH. Douglass consolation.\nMrs. J. Thompson entertained at\n500 Thursday, with Mrs. Caukill\nfirst, Mrs. McVicar second and Mrs.\nHorribin, consolation.\nMrs. Horribin entertained at\nFriday with Mrs. D. Crooks first;\nMrs. Hutchinson second and Mrs.\nCaukill,  consolation.\nOn Friday evening Miss Helen'\nand Miss Frances Plant entertained\nfriends at their home in Upper\nBlarchmont. Cards, songs and muJ\nsical selections irom piano, gul\u00ab\ntar and violin were enjoyed.\nThe Lawn Bowling club of Can\nheld its fourth card party in Ought-]\nred hall Friday evening with. 19\ntables in play. Winners were: at]\nbridge, ladies' first, Mrs. Larmonts\nconsolation, Mrs. A. Evans; incn'^\nfirst, Mrs. J. Patterson; consolatioi\nMrs. Eccleston.\nWhist: ladles' first, Mrs. 1'amesJ\nconsolation, Mrs. N. Morrison; men\nfirst,  A. D. Pearson; consolation!\nMiss Wesche.\n- PACKING - HAULING - CARTAGE -,\n15\n>\n,0\nI\nEstablished 1899\nExperience Counts\nEfficient\nService\nPHONE\n33\nWest Tf ansle*\nCompany\n-    THE   PIONEER   FIRM\n\u25a0n\nC\nm\n8\ni\no\no\no\nI\n wmw\nus^\nAppearances Are Deceptive\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C^-FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 1, 1938\nCHICAGO SQUARES UP SERIES BY\nl-O OVERTIME WIN OVER AMERKS\nIt looks here as if Goalie Earl Robertson of the New York Americans is' about to deliver a hefty swat at Larry Molyneux, but while\nthe camera isn't lying it's at least deceptive. The action occurred\nwhile the Amerks were defeating Rangers in the first playoff\ngame, 2-1, and Robertson has just tossed the puck over the nets\nwhile the Ranger defenceman, brought up from the minors for the\nplayoffs, follows its flight with a somewhat awed (or is it odd*) expression.\t\nMany Badminton Crowns Change\nin the Trail Cily Tournament\nBut  Ned   Rhodes   Is\nStill   Singles\nChampion\nTRAIL, B. C, March 31. \u2014 Many\nshuttlecock crowns changed hands\nlast night when finals of the city\ntournament were staged at the Tadanac municipal hall. All but two\nof the finals required three sets to\ndecide the victors. ,     ,\nNed Rhodes, last years singles\nI \u2022 champion, was one of the few to\nretain titles, a third set being necessary to dispose of Ivor Solly who\nlost to the repeating champion\n11-15, 15.-3, 15-9..\nMEN'S DOUBLES OUTSTANDING\nPaired with Art Eldridge in the\nmen's doubles open event, Rhodes\n', went down to defeat by Ed Haley\nI and Roland Webb, 11-15, 15-8, 15-18.\nThis was undoubtedly the outstanding final of the tourney. Losing the\nl first game by four points, Webb\nI and Haley came back strong to win\nI the second match after being down\nI in Its early, stages. All through the\n[third set  the play  tied the new\n! champions winning by a series of\nI terrific smashes.\nMrs. W. E. Jackson and Mrs. V. C.\nHuycke took the ladies' open doubles by disposing of Miss Dorothy\nI Williams and Mrs. W. B. Hunter\nllfcW, 8-15, 18-17 in another keenly\nI'cohteSted battle that required three\n| sets to decide.\nMrs. Alex Smith, last year's la-\nI dies' singles open champion, was\nI beaten by Mrs. J. Turner in earlier\nIstages of the event, Mrs. Turner\nIromping through to be declared a\nI new titllst, defeating Miss Dorothy\nI Williams 7-11,11-8,11-8.\nJMen's doubles handicap went to\nfW;'0. -Williams and Art Evans, who\n\u2022vanquished Art Eldridge and Jack\n|West 15-11, 15-2.\nHarry Yolland and Mrs. Len Hor-\nInet garnered the mixed doubles\n\u25a0handicap by defeating S. E. Angus\nland Mrs. J. B. Thompson 15-10, 9-15,\n115-0.\nMiss D. Hannay and Miss Irene\nlEvans beat Miss Dorothy Williams\nland Miss A. Munton 14-15', 10-15,\n|l5-14.\nLadies' singles handicap went to\nMiss Irene Evans, who beat Mrs.\nLen Hornet 11-6, 11-8.\nJust to round off the night of\n\u2022championship 'finals, -four   veterans of the badminton game engaged\n(in a friendly game, Jack West and\nlAlex  Smith  playing  Herb   Oxley\nand Harry Parker, the former win-\nfling 15-8, 6-15, 15-18.\nWANT ADS GET RESULTS\nPATRIOTIC IN\nUPSET VICTORY\nSAN MATEO, Calif,, March 31,\n(AP) \u2014 Patriotic, owned by Jean\nChatburn, film actress, recorded an\nupset victory at Bay Meadows today in the $1000 Vanderbilt club\nclaiming race.\nPatriotic travelled the six furlongs in 1:11 4-5 to defeat the favorite, Cloud D'OR by one half\nlength. Black Highbrow was third.\nThe winner paid $26.40, $9.40 and\n$6.60. Cloud D'Or paid $4.20 and\n$3.40, and the show money was $4.20.\nDANNY PAUL IS\nFINALLY BEATEN\nSHEFFIELD, Eng., March 31 (CP\nCable) \u2014 The law of averages (and\nan opponent's fists) finally caught\nup wilh Punching Pauls tonight and\none of them took a licking.\nWhile Packy Paul continued the\nCanadian brothers' reputation of\nwinning all their lights in England,\nhis brother, Danny, lost a 10-round\ndecision to Harry Lister here.\nPacky knocked out Jack Casey in\nthe third round of a 10-round bout.\nAll four are heavyweights.\nDanny's loss was the first since\nthe brothers arrived last November\nfrom Richdale, Alta., to seek fistic\nlame and fortune.\nCHICAGO, April 1 (Friday)\n(CP) \u2014 Chicago Black Hawks\nlevelled their best-of-three seml-\nflnali with New York' Americans\nIn hockey's Stanley cup playoffs\nearly today, defeating the Gotham\nclub 1-0 In two overtime periods.\nCarl (Cully) Dahlstrom, who was\nannounced by The Canadian Press\nonly yesterday as the outstanding\nrookie of the season as judged by a\nsports writers' pool, notched the\nwinning goal. He scored on a pass\nfrom Louis Trudel.\nWhipping home Louis Trudel's\npass in the second extra session, the\nflashy young centre broke up a battle that had been predominated by\nGoalies, Mike Karakas of Hawks\nand Earl Robertson of Americans.\nThe teams had waged a wide-open\nbattle until after midnight without\nscoring.\nIt was Trudel's pass to Paul\nThompson that paved the way tor\nChicago's 3-2 overtime win against\nCanadiens Saturday, advancing the\nBlack Hawks into semi-finals at\nMontreal, Tonight's was the third\novertime affair in five playoff matches for Americans-rthey had won\nthe other two against New York\nRangers.\nKarakas stood with Dahlstrom-as\na hero of the long duel before 13,500\nfans. The shutout was only his third\nof the season.\nStarting Blocks Now Official\nHockey Scores\nSYRACUSE    ELIMINATES\nPITTSBURGH\nPITTSBURGH, March 31 <CP)-\nSyracuse Stars, third-place club of\nthe eastern division of the International-American Hockey league,\ntonight eliminated Pittsburgh Hornets from the league playoffs with\na 5-2 victory in the second game of\ntheir best two of three series.\nRAMBLERS IN SEMIS\nNEW HAVEN, Conn., March 31\n(CP) \u2014 Philadelphia Ramblers advanced to the semi-final round of\nthe International-American Hockey\nleague playoffs tonight by defeating New Haven Eagles 3-2 after\nthree periods of overtime for their\nsecond straight victory of the best\nof-three series. '\n69 ENTRIES FOR\nEPSOM DOWNS DERBY\nLONDON, March 31 (CP)-The\nfield for the derby at Epsom\nDowns June 6 was reduced to 69\nhorses. Out of the original field\nof 294 entries, 115 were withdrawn\nat the final acceptances last summer and 110 more were withdrawn\ntoday.\nCurrent favorite Is Sir H. de\nTrafford's Portmarnack at odds ol\nto 1.\nAmong those entered are two\nsons of Gallant Fox, William Woodward's American-owned Olympus\nand Valerian III and Joseph E.\nWidener's Unbreakable and Silver\nSpear II, also American-owned.\nEIGHT CLUBS AREIN DANGER OF\nRELEGATION IN ENGLISH SOCCER\n. LONDON, March 31 (CP Cable)-\nItpdicating the close struggle among\nSil-end first division clubs of the\nnglish Football league to avoid\njelegatlon, a mid-week 3-0 victory\nlover  Huddersfield  Town  enabled\nPortsmouth,   cellar   occupapt,   to\nJump five places in the standing.\nAs the long season goes into its\nfinal month,, eight clubs are in danger, Manchester City, league champ-\nIons, occupies the last rung of the\ngdder with 27 points, one less than\nEverton and Grimsby Town. Huddersfield. Portsmouth and Birming-\n*m are bracketed with 29 and West\nBromwich and Liverpool are only\nRightly better off.\nThe championship race is also\nlight, -Arsenal leading this week\nwith a two-point margin over Wolverhampton Wanderers, Preston\nWorth End and Middlesbrough tvith\nCharlton Athletic and Brentford in\nposition to take advantage of the\nslightest opening.\nCharlton and Arsenal meet at\nHighbury Saturday and the London rivals will make it a real battle.\nThe Athletic is relying on the same\nteam that whipped Wolverhampton\n4-1 last week.\nPreston, cup finalist with the low-\nplaced Huddersfield squad, has an\ninteresting match at Blackpool.\nFrank O'Donnell, former Preston\ncentre forward, will play against\nhis old club while the visitors will\nhave Watmough, erstwhile Blackpool winger, in the line-up.\nReturn of Cullis, star half back,\nmay prove beneficial to the declining Wolverhampton eleven in its\nhome match with Birmingham while\nMiddlesbrough may find points hard\nto get at Leicester.\nlully Dahlstrom Awarded Calder\nTrophy as Best Rookie in N.H.L.\nBy A. E. FULFORD\n, Canadian Pren Staff Writer\nL TORONTO, March 31 (CP)-Min-\nlesota's famed frozen lakes have\npven the National Hockey league\nJ second outstanding rookie. Carl\n\u25a0Cully) Dahlstrom, a product of the\nlockey they play around Minneapolis, Is the season's best first-\ntear man the Canadian Press announced today.\n1 The tall Swedish-American lined\ntp with Chicago Black Hawks\n\"gainst New York Americans at\nhlcago tonight in the Stanley cup\nJeml-nnals as the holder of the Caller trophy, awarded to the best\nTookle by President Frank Calder\nk the N.H.L.\nI He was  selected by 30  sports\ntriters  after  demonstrating  in  a\nreat season with Ha**s that he is\nworthy successor to Syl Apps of\nToronto Maple Leafs who was selected by the writers last year and\nbecame the first holder of the Calder trophy. Mike Karakas, Chicago\ngoalie and another Minnesota product, won in 1936.\nDahlstrom beat out four other\nfirst-year men in a battle for the\naward. His closest opposition was\nprovided by Murphy Chamberlain\nof Toronto Maple Leafs, like Dahlstrom a centre. Des Smith, Montreal\nMaroons' .defenceman, was third,\ntrailed by Bingo Kampman of the\nLeafs' defence and Carl Liscombe,\nDetroit Red Wing left winger.\nThe writers were asked to select\nfirst, second and third choices and\nthese were counted on a three, two\nand one basis. Dahlstrom received\n56 points of a possible 90, Chamberlain 37, Smith 18, Kampman 15 and\nLiscombe 13.\nGame Increases\nExpected Result\nof Mild Winter\nGame animals and game birds\ncame through the past winter in\ngood shape, the mild weather being\nexceptionally favorable to them, and\nreports from various parts of the\ninterior indicate that game of all\nkinds will be more plentiful this\nyear. Grouse, which periodically\nbecome scarce and then increase in\nnumber, were at the low ebb of the\nseven-year cycle last year, and are\nexpected to show a steady increase\nfor the next few seasons.\nIt is also reported that the inroads of - predatory animals upon\ngame animals and birds were not as\nmarked in the past winter as for\nseveral previous seasons.   .\nExcept in one or two scattered instances, the game department did\nnot have to set out feed for waterfowl in the southern interior, and a\nlittle feed only was required for\npheasants. No feed was put out for\ndeer.\nCornwall Trims\nFalcons by 5-1\nTORONTO, March 31 (CP) -\nCornwall Flyers, using a bone\ncrushing offensive, ground Falconbridge seniors into the ice to win\nthe first of a best of three series\nin an Allan cup hockey playdown\nhere tonight. The 5-1 score surprised even Cornwall's most ardent\nsupporters. The teams meet again\nin Ottawa- Saturday.\nMcCarthy Says\nHe Can Manage\nWithout'DiMag'\nST. PETERSBURG, Fla., March\n31 (AP) \u2014 Manager Joe McCarthy\nof the New York Yankees spoke his\npiece on holdout Joe DiMaggio to\nday, and figured the Yanks \"can\nget along without DiMaggio\" if\nnecessary.\n\"Presidents and kings have died\nand ball clubs have lost great ballplayers before,\" he explained. \"But\ncountries have survived and ball\nteams have gone ahead.\"\n\"We'll get along all right, don't\nworry about that. And what's more\nthe $25,000 salary offered him is\nfinal and will not be increased.\"\nDiMaggio,is still in his home in\nSan Francisco. He has demanded\n$40,000 from the Yankees for 1938\nhis third season in major league\nbaseball.\nPheasant Stock\nPlanted, Grand\nForks, Creston\nWithin the past weeks 96 pheasants\nhave been released in Creston district, and 84 at Grand Forks, in the\nB. C. game department's campaign\nto increase the number of these\nsport birds, it was announced Thursday by game officials. Open seasons\nare in effect each fall in these districts.\nIn other parts of the Kootenays\nwhere experimental \"planting\" of\npheasants is being carried out, the\nbirds are said to be doing well, and\nadditional stock will be released at\nthese points as soon as they can be\nobtained from bird farms.\nSUNDERLAND WINS\nLONDON, March 31 (CP Cable)\n\u25a0 In a first division, English football league 'match (played Tuesday) Sunderland defeated Grimsby\nTown 2-0 on the latter's ground.\nThe game originally set for March\n26 was delayed through Sunderland's participation in the English\ncup semi-finals. The Aston Villa-\nBurnley second division tilt, also\n:heduled for March 26, will be\nplayed later In the season.\nHave You Read the Classified?\nStarting Jan. 1,1939 short sprinting races are to start with starting blocks according to the edict issued by the Union of International\nLight Athletics during their congress in Paris. One of the types of\nstarting machines is shown being tested by Trossbach, hurdling\nchampion of Germany.\nRITCHIE HEADS NELSON CURLING\nCLUB FOR ITS'BONSPIEL YEAR'\nSPORTS ROUNDUP...\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nNEW YORK, March 31 (API-\nHenry Armstrong openly predicts\nhe'll be wearing three ring crowns\nwithin a year. . . . There's nobody\nin sight to take his featherweight\ntitle; he thinks he'll take Barney\nRoss in May and he'll bet some\nof his money he will take the\nlightweight crown away from Lou\nAmbers if they meet in an outdoor\nshow this summer. . . . Armstrong,\nthe outstanding fighter produced\nin 1937 is a miniature edition of\nJoe Louis ... He can swat 'With\nboth fists and take it with the best\nof them. . . . There is nothing\nwnong w'th his heart, either, . . .\nBut we still say, if Barney Ross\nis in shape May, 26 he will jab the\nlittle negro silly.\nNew reports are bobbing up that\nDon Budge may change his mind\npretty soon. . . . Some of the golt\npros seem to go Out of their way\nto make it tough for Sammy\nSnead. . . . Hard to understand\ntoo. . . . Sammy is a likeable chap\nand was very popular with the\ngalleries both at Pinehurst and\nGreensboro. ... . '. \u25a0   -\nShovel Hodge, the old big leaguer, is telling a good story around\nthe south. ... It is how Paul Waner came to break into the lineup\nof the San Francisco Seals, where\nhe got his first real baseball\nchance. . . . Paul went to the Seais\non condition that if we were not\nretained beyond a certain date he\nwas to be paid $2500. . . . Well\nthe dead line came around. . . .\nPaul hadn't had much of a chance\nto show. . . . That night he was\nto be handed his dough and told\nto scram. . . . But that afternoon\nduring an exhibition game, a guy\nnamed Kelly, his mouth crammed\nwith chewing tobacco, led off the\nfirst inning with a triple\t\nAs he rounded first he swallowed\nthe tobacco. ... He became so\nsick he barely made third. . . .\nThey took him out and put in\nWaner. . . . The Seals were playing a double header and Paul\nbroke in with nine hits \u2014 three\ntriples, two doubles, and four\nsingles. . . . P.S.\u2014He has been a\nregular ever since.\nMallard drake belonging to H. B. Smith, ThirJ street, a family pet.\nIt was found at Slocan City as a duckling.\nMarshall, and Horton\nDelegates  for\nB. C. Meet\nDesiring strong leadership for\nthe 1938-39 season, Nelson's \"B.C.\nbonsplel year\", the annual meeting of the Nelson Curling club, In\na Canadian Legion room, Thursday night elected Alderman A. G.\nRitchie to the presidency.\n,C. H. Marshall and R. E. Horton were drawn as delegates to\n> the B.C. Curling association meeting next season, with Arthur Gilker and C. E. Mansfield as alternates.\nFinancial statement of the past\nseason, presented by Secretary P.\nT. Andrews and audited by C. F.\nMcHardy, showed a bank balance\nof $4.96. Total receipts received were\n$2977.50, while expenditures totalled\n$3011.63. A balance of $39.09 remaining from the previous season,\nmade up the difference.\nAll committees, previously elected\nby the annual meeting, will be appointed by the executive it was\ndecided. An ice committee, abolished when the club transferred their\nactivities to the new Civic Centre\nrinks, will again come into being.\nArthur Gilker, past president, in\nretiring, voiced especial appreciation of his supporting executives\nwork and to E. H. Woolls, the membership committee, especially J. H.\nLong; the intercity 'spiels and entertainment committee and the rules\nand regulations committee of the\n1937-38 season.\nJUNIOR CLUB\nSUGGESTED\nSuggestions that a junior members club be formed to interest the\nyounger folk in the roarin' game,\nand that the Civic Centre commission be asked to supply more club\nroom lockers, were made.\nInterest in the points competition\nduring the past season certainly demanded that a regular competition\nbecome part of the year's schedule.\nJ. B. Gray asserted, claiming he\nwould be pleased to put up prizes\nfor the event.\nOther officers elected were: Mr.\nGray, vice president, Bishop Martin M. Johnson, chaplain; and Syd\nHaydon, J. J. (Micky) McEwan, T.\nA. Wallace, R. E. Horton and H.\nM. Whimster, executive committee.\nVotes of thanks were passed for\nErnest Woolls, the Canadian Legion\nand to The Nelson Daily News.\nPheasants Set\nFree at Creston\nCRESTON, B.C. \u2014 Seventy-five\npheasants\u201460 females and 15 cock\nbirds\u2014have just been released in\nthe district by Game Warden W. H.\nCartwright, and some excellent\nshooting may be looked for as following a mild winter birds are numerous and in good shape, according to reports reaching the local\nRod and Gun club.\nThe club announced its annual\ncrow shoot, which got under way\nat the middle of the month, and\nwill continue until the middle of\nJune. The usual bounty will be paid\nand the financing of this effort will\nbe undertaken by the group of about\n15 Spokane hunters who operate\nover the flats each year.\nA new feature to this year's kill\nis announced by the club which\nproposes to band three crows and\nthe lirst one. killed will draw a\nspecial prize of $5. For the other\ntwo, prizes of $3 and $2 will be\noffered. There will be the usual\nguessing contest as to the number\nof crows killed, an the best guess-\ners will receive prices from Victor\nMawson.\nNew Head Nelson\nCurlers\nALDERMAN A; G. RITCHIE\nwho was elected president of\nthe Nelson Curling club Tuesday evening.\nST. BONIFACE IS\nWINNER BY 8-3\nWINNIPEG, March 31 (CP)-\nSt. Boniface Seals took a stranglehold on the western Canada junior\nhockey championship tonight, defeating Edmonton Athletic club\n8-3 here In the second game of\nthe three-of-five Abbott cup series. Seals won the first game at\nEdmonton 7-3 and another victory here Saturday would put\nthem In the national final.\n~  PAGE NINI\nTrail a Strong Favorite\nat Edmonton to Finish\nPorts in Three Straight\nFirst Game Saturday in Allan Cup Semis at\nEdmonton; Dates and Scene of Later\nGames Are Still Not Announced\nEDMONTON, March 31 (CP)\u2014Trail Smoke Eaten, British\nColumbia's Allan oup contenders, ruled a strong favorite here tonight\nto finish off their beit-of-flve series with Port Arthur Bearcats for\nthe western Canada senior hockey title In three straight games.\nSmoke Eaters, winners over Calgary Rangers and Flin Flon\nBomber. In their Interprovlncial playoff*, have marked up an Impressive list of shutouts as they swept through with ease to their\nwestsrn final berth. The Thunder bay champion, met only Red Lake\nThunderers, surprise winner, over Winnipeg Inernatlonal., In their\n' playdown schedule, winning that series In two straight game.,\nThe team, meet here Saturday In the first game of their series.\nNo announcement ha. been made a. to where or when the rest of the\n.erln will be played. <**>\u25a0\u2014-t \u2014\u2014 .\nBoth team, went through light\nworkouts today.\nThe British Columbian., who\narrived from Saskatoon early this\nmorning, practised during the af<\ntcrnoon and all the player, were\nreported in top condition, Bearcat., here .Inc. last Saturday,\ntapered off a. Coach Phat Wilton figured his outfit had reached again the form that won over\nFort William. It wa. expected the\n\u00bbame Port Arthur lineup that eliminated Red Lake would .tart\nagainst Trail.\nWith Edmonton's hockey Interests centered for the present on\ntheir Junior finalists, no attempts\nwere made to estimate how many\nwould attend the senior opener\nSaturday.\nPete Borsato's ten pin trundlers\nTuesday'night ran up another victory in the Legion Bowling club's\nCollinson \u2022\u2022 cup competition. They\ntrimmed Frank McClement's quartet im-m.      i \u2022\nHigh individual score\/of 10j and\nthe aggregate of 513 was rolled by\nMcClements, losing skip.\nTeams and scores follow:\nTeam 1:\nBorsato  121\nC. Miller 144\nW. Duckworth _\u25a0 126\nH. Miller 175\nTeams 2:\nMcClements  167\nN. B. Bradley .... 120\nW. Woolls  101\nJ. Baylis  121\nVictories in the Legion Bowling\n'club's Cassios cup competition Wednesday fell to Mrs. J. H. Chapman's\nand Mrs, H. Ross' teams. The results\nwere:\nMrs. Chapman 716, Mrs. Thomas\nSowerby 671.\nMrs. Ross 733, Mrs. Ben Whiteside\n108\n103\n120\n113\n121\n188-458\n121-363\n113\u2014347\n140-418\n153-513\n120\u2014360\n133\u2014347\n106-248\n\u25a0 Teams and scores follow:\nFIRST GAME\u2014\nMrs, Ross :  134 122-256\nMrs, V. Graves  98 137\u2014235\nMiss J. Riley   107 135-242\nMrs. Whiteside   97 98-195\nMiss M. Palmquist .. 142 114-258\nMrs. H. Hunt   104 83-187\nSECOND GAME-\nMrs. Chapman   159 116\u2014275\nMrs. H. Pitts   127 104\u2014231\nMrs. D. Hinton   105 105-210\nMrs. Sowerby   133 109\u2014242\nMrs. N. Cassios   121 122-243\nMrs, R. B. Smith  89 97-186\nINTEREST IN SCOTTISH FOOTBALL\n(UP SEMI-FINALS AT HIGH PITCH\nFIGHTS\nNEW YORK\u2014Henry Armstrong,\n133, world featherweight champion,\nknocked out Lew Feldman, 134,\nBrooklyn (5), non-title.\nMILWAUKEEE \u2014 Tony Bruno,\n162, Milwaukee, knocked out Herman Collins, 156, Chicago  (5).\nLONDON KCP) \u2014 Brothers J. G.\nColeman and L. J. Coleman dead-\nheated for first place In the 10-mile\nnational junior road walking championship at Golders Green recently. They are members ol Belgrave\nHarriers.\nGLASGOW March 31 (CP Cable)\n\u2014Interest in Scottish Football cup\nsemi-final matches is at a high pitch\nwith the draw assuring a final,\nApril 23, between first and second\ndivision clubs.\nSt. Bernards and East Fife, representing the junior league, clash at\nTynecastle park, Edinburgh, Saturday in one of the penultimate\nround games and Kilmarnock and\nRangers, famous first division\nsquads, will attract a huge crowd\nto Hampden park here.\nRangers' achievements In cup\nplay are well known, the Light\nBlues having won the trophy 10\ntimes, but none of the other sur-\nviors of the current competition\ncan claim such a record. Kilmarnock was successful in 1920 and\n1929, St Bernards away back in\n1895 while East Fife has never\nearned the distinction.\nFeature match in Saturday's\nleague schedule finds Celtic away\nto Falkirk and In vlewof the Celts'\ndisappointing displays in their last\ntwo fixtures anything may happen.\nTwo drawn games have whittled\nCeltic's advantage over Hearts at\nthe top Of the league to one point\nbut the leaders have two games in\nreserve.\nSTERN FIGHT TO FINI8H\nThe Kilmarnock-Rangers cup tussle will be a stern light to the\nfinish. Since the new year the Kil-\nlien under the managership of Jimmy McGrory, former Celtic centre-\nforward, have displayed a complete\nreversal of early season form capturing 17 of 22 league points played\nfor.\nWhile Rangers have fallen away\nin league competition this year the\ncolorful squad has performed convincingly in the cup. They defeated\nAlloa 6-1 in the first round and\nfollowed this up with a 3-1 victory\nover Queen of the South. Falkirk\nalso fell to the Light Blues who\nwon 2-1 away from home. Rangers\ndrew a third round bye.\nEast' Fife and St. Bernards are\namong the leading clubs in the second division. The Methill squad is\nin fourth place and still has a\nchance to accompany Raith Rovers\nto the major league next year while\nSt, Bernards Is sixth in the table,\nonly one point behind.\n20 lot Thai Louis Retains His\nTitle Tonight Against Thomas\nCHICAGO. March 31 (AP)- The\nswingman from Minnesota's farm\nlands Harry Thomas, gets the chance\ntomorrow night to swing the biggest upset in modern ring history.\nThomas meets Joe Louis, the 23-\nyear-old world heavyweight boxing champion, in a scheduled 15-\nround bout at the Stadium\u2014and no\none except Thomas himself, and\n'his manager, Nate Lewis, has come\nforward to say Thomas will win.\nThe betting odds, theoretically,\nare 20 to 1 that Louis retains his title\nby decision and 10 to 1 he knocks\nThomas kicking amid total absence of wagering.\nFacts and figures on the title bout\nare-\nEstimated attendance\u201415,000 wilh\npossible gross refceipts of between\n$60,000 and $70,000.\nFighters shaves \u2014 Louis, 40 per\ncent of receipts after deduction of\nstate and federal taxes; Thomas,\n12V4 per cent. * \u25a0\nThe card\u2014six bouts, with Louis-\nThomas contest scheduled to start\nat approximately 9 p.m.'M. S. T. (8\np.m. P. S. T.)    \"\nMeasurements and ages of principles:\nLOUIS THOMAS\n23 age 27\n200 weight 196\n6 ft. 2 inches     height 6 feet\n7(i inches reach 75 inches\n41 Inches chest norm.) 41 inches\n44 inches chest (expnded.) 44 inches\nlli'\/i inches\nneck\n17 inches\n31 inches\n,  waist\n32 inches\n2!! inches\nthigh\n22 inches\n11) inches\ncalf\n15 'A inches\n11) inches\nankle\n8% inches\n14 inches\nbicepts\n15% inches\n12 inches\nforearm\n^\u2022inches\n8 inches\nwrist\n8 inches\nUVs inches\nfist\n11 inches\nNELSON WILL\nSTA6E INDOOR\nTENNIS MEET\nThree-Day   Tourney\nto Draw District\nCompetition\nPLAY TO BE IN\nHALL AND ARENA\nArrangements for an intercity indoor tennis tournament, to be staged by the Nelson Indoor Tennis club\nApril 15,16 and 17, have been made,\nit was announced by the club organizing committee.\nCompetitors from Rossland, Trail,\nSpokane, Coeur d'Alene, Bohninfr\nton, South Slocan, New Denver,\nSilverton, Willow . Point, Harrop.\nProcter, and possibly Ymir and Salmo as well as. Nelson, were expected to take part,\nThrough the cooperation of Denis\nStDenis, secretary-manager of the\nNelson civic centre commission, arrangements were made for play in\nthe boxhj arena as well as in the\ncivic centre recreation hall, so little\ndifficulty is expected in completing\nplay within the three-day limiL\nThe indoor play has an advantage\nover the outdoor courts in that it\ncan be continued at night.\nConsiderable difficulty overcome\nIn arranging the tourney, a novelty\nin Western Canada, but ajl has\nbeen surmounted, the committee reported, and an ambition at the first\nof the season was to become a re-*\nality.\nBecause of the green color of tha\nboxla arena floor, which lends itself to speedier play, the faster open\nevents were to be run off there.\nHandicap matches were to be played on the recreation courts.\nNorval German, J. A. Stewart\nand Dr. L. J. Maurer are in charge\nof arrangements.\nGame Act Clause\nPermits Destruction\nof Dog Chasing Deer\nNumerous complaints of dogs\nchasing deer have been received\nlately by the game department, local officers stated Thursday.\nThey pointed out that the Gama\nact has been amended to permit\nimmediate destruction of dogs which\nare chasing deer. Formerly there\nwas no provision of this nature in\nthe act, and the efforts of. sportsmen and game wardens were considerably hampered, it was explained. Their only course of action formerly was to prosecute the owner ol\nthe dog.\n II\n\u2022mmmmms-\nmvtsf'm\nPAGE TEN\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 1, 1*538\nAnyone Who Has an Eye for Opportunity Has an Eye for These Ads\nHighlights of Scouting In Nelson and District In the week ending March 26, 1938\u2014by L.P.W.\nInternational camp will be held\nat Camp Busk on the Kootenay Lake\nJuly 9 to 23. Between 75 and 100\nPullman Scouts and officers are expected at the carhp.\nLook for the Scout or Cub on\nApril 2, Apple Day.\nDonnie Ross of the First Nelson\nCub pack is doing finely in the\nKootenay Lake General hospital,\nand the pack hopes to have him\nback among them shortly. We are\nalso pleased to report that Commissioner James Dronsfield is up and\nwell again alter three weeks' illness.\nFIRST NELSON CUBS\nThe 1st Nelson cubs had as their\nvisitor on Tuesday, Mr. Wallis, district commissioner of Vancouver.\nCubmaster Wade introduced Mr.\nWallis, asking him to take charge of\nthe meeting, which he did. First he\nled the boys in a new game, called\nThe Elephant Roll. This was comical to the watchers, and so bewildering to the players that we had to\ndiscard it for another one. \"DC\"\nwas not foiled yet though. He produced a stack ol paper bags, which\nhe utilized in a sort of starting\u2014gun\nrelay race. As each boy used one bag\nit was necessary to take time out\nto clean up the hall after.\nSeeing the Cubs had' excellent\nlung power, Mr. Wallis decided upon\na game with sound effects. First we\nhad a mob scene with each group\nof boys saying a phrase in crescendo.\nThen came the \"big sneeze\", which\nMr. Wallis illustrated to the Cub's\ndelight. Finally he told a story, also\nwith a sound effect by the Cubs.\nThis was an Indian story, and told\nin Indian fashion, with the lights\nout and a candle blazing in the centre of the hall. At the climax of the\nstory our narrator gave a realistic\nwar dance. Senior Sixers Tommy\nMadden and George Hoover presented Mr. Wallis with a 1st Nelson Cub\nneckerchief as a souvenir. Mr. Wallis responded by taking a coil of\nrope and producing a one-end \"sausage knot\" which made the knot-\ntying Cubs look sick. The pack's\nroster now numbers 46, and is closed\nto new members. Lloyd Dodd, .one\nof the sick boys, is now out of the\nTHIRD NELSON CUBS\nThe District Commissioner of\nVancouver, Mr. Wallis, had complete charge of the meeting Wednesday. He held several games including The Elephant Roll, an Indian War Dance and Drop the Handkerchief. The Cubs gave him a\nrousing welcome, and three cheers\nwhen he left. The boys also welcomed Comissioner J, Dronsfield\nback.\nCubmaster Don Ure and Assistant Cubmaster Frank Oliver are in\ncharge of this pack.\nSECOND NELSON TROOP\nPlans for the making of a trek\ncart were laid at the meeting of the\nSecond Nelson Troop ot Boy Scouts\nThursday evening. Scout Bill Harrison volunteered to decorate his\nbicycle for the Apple Day, April 2.\nThere was a 100 per cent attendance.\nA court of honor was held at\nwhich other plans for the Apple\nDay were discussed extensively.\nCreston Amateurs\nin Play Contest\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014In preparation\nfor the B.C. Dramatic festival at\nCranbrook in May, Creston amateurs submitted three one-act\nplays to a capacity house at the\nnew Catholic hall Friday evening.\nThis was their second appearance,\nhaving presented a group of two\nothers in December, and from the\nfive the judges, Mrs. C. B. Twigg,\nMrs. Nelson L. Ball and John Hall\njr., have been asked to select the\nbest production for submission at\nthe East Kootenay competition at\nCranbrook where the opponent for\nWest Kootenay amateurs will be\nselected.\n\"Just Till Morning \" featured Arthur Dodd, Duncan Rbss, Arthur\nConstable and W. A. Marchbank.\n\"Drums of Death\" was the offering\not Herb Dodd, Alf. Avery, T. E.\nGautier and Miss Ethel VanAcker-\nen. Both were supervised by Mrs.\nW. Fraser.\n\" The third presentation was \"Mrs.\nJones and the Bourgeoise.\" In the\ncast were Misses Nan Armstrong,\nAnne Bale, Dot Wightmann, Mrs.\nW. S. Weir and W. A. Marchbank,\nRichard Avery and Ed. Erickson.\nThe play was under the direction\nof Mrs. Frank Nadon.\nBetween the plays the Harmony\nFour orcheslra supplied music, and\nthe eexcutive staff included: Miss\nOlive Norgrove, seating; R. Currie\nand J. Chernoff, tickets; Misses\nMarjorie and Doris Crosby, makeup Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Avery, costumes, and Ray Truscott, sound effects.\nFernie Wins\nat Basketball\nNATAL, B. C. \u2014 The Natal-MI-\nchcl High School girls and boys\nplayed Ihe Fernie high school girls\nand boys a double-header in basketball with the refult that the Fernie quints took both games by close\nmargins, winning the first game\n16-12, and the second by a 20-13\nscore.\nON THE AIR\n910 k.\nTrail\nCJAT\n319.6 m.\n1000 w.\n7:00 Church in the Wildwood\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 Memory Lane\n12:15 On Wings of Song\n12:30 Talking Drums\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\n, 4:15 Kootenay Echoes\n4:30 Time Presents\n4:35 Tea Time Tunes\n4:45 Concert time\n5:30 Music Graphs\n8:30 Police Headquarters\n10:00 Easy to Remember\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KF1 KPO KOMO\n590     620     640     680     920\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX  KECA KGA\n790      970    1180    1430    1470\nCOLUMBIA  NETWORK\nKV1   KOIN   KNX   KSL  KOL\n570  940  1050 1130 1270\nDON   LEE   NETWORK\n1270 k. 236.1 m.\nSeattle, KOL 5000 w.\nCOO  k. CJOR            4.99.7  m.\nVancouver 500 w.\n1030 k. CFCN           293.1 m.\nCalgary 10,000 w.\n5:00 P.M.\u2014\nLet Us Sing (CBC)\nWalter Kelsey's orch. (Blue)\nCookie Kids  (CJOR)\nSkiing news (Don Lee)\nEventide Echoes (CFCN)\n5:05 P.M.\u2014\nErnie  Fio-Rito's  orch.   (Don Lee)\n5:15 P.M.\u2014\nDick Tracy, drama (CFCN)\nPelican club (CJOR)\n5:30 P.M.\u2014\nTopics of the Day (CBC)\nEddie Swartout's orch.  (Blue)\nString trio (Columbia)\nTopic of the Day  (Don Lee)\nJimmy Allen's Adventures (CFCN)\n5:45 P.M.\u2014\nBoake Carter, Commentator (Col)\nLittle Orphan Annie (Don Lee)\nThe Fusbies CCBC)\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 (Blue)\nSkipper 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)\nApostoli-Lee boxing bout (Blue)\n7:30 P.M.\u2014\nLloyd Huntley's orch. (CBC)\nJimmie Fidler's gossip (Red)\nLone Ranger, drama (Don Lee)\nRadio Rascals (CJOR)\n7:45 P.M.\u2014\nExperience talks (CBC)\nPeople in the news (Red)\nSpecial talks  (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)\nPoetic Melodies (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)\nWalley Peters, guitar (CJOR)\nKnox church choir  (CFCN)\n8:30 P.M.\u2014\nPoet's Gallery  (CBC)\nHenry Busse's orch, (Blue)\nPaul Whiteman's orch. (Columbia)\nSports broadcast (CJOR)\nRuby Newman's orch (Red)\n8:45 P.M.\u2014\nHouse of Peter McGregor (CFCN)\n9:00 P.M.\u2014\nNorthern Messenger (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)\n9:15 P.M.\u2014\nCalif. Chamber of Commerce (Blue)\nSam^iaye's orch,  (Columbia)\nMember ot tbe Canadian Dally\nNewspaperi Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll Department*\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy  $   .05\nBy carrier, per week     .25\nBy carrier, per year     13.00\nIly mail In Canada to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree months $1.80: six months\n$3.00: one year 56.00.\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.\nClassified1\nAdvertising Rates\nIlea Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion $ 22\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions _...__-\t\n(C tor the price of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions \t\n2 lines, 1 month _\n3 lines, 1 month _\nFor advertisements of more than\nthree lines, calculate on\ntbe above basis\nBox  numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATES LE88 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nBIRTHS\nSMITH - To Mr. and Mrs. R. J.\nSmith (nee Dorothy Stanley, Vernon), March 20, at Trail-Tadanac\nhospital, a son,\nHELP WANTED\nA RESPONSIBLE SAWMILL PAR-\nty to contract the logging and\nsawing of at least 2 million feet\nof lumber per year. Apply Box\n688 Nelson Daily News.        (688)\nWANTED - MIDDLE AGED MAN\nto care for invalid. Live in. Apply Box 106, Trail, B. C.    (699)\nMAN FOR STUMP FARM, GIVE\nage, qualifications, references. $25\nmonth. Box 705 Daily News. (705)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nRate for advertisements under\nthis heading 25c for any required number of lines for six\ndays\nMAN WANTS WORK AS GAS OR\nDiesel caterpillar tractor operator\nExperienced. Able to repair. References if requested. O. Muth, 128\nUnion St. Nelson, B. C, Ph. 358L1.\n1637)\nYOUNG WOMAN, EXPERIENCED\nstenographer, book-keeper, urgently requires position in store\nor office. Clerking, cashier. Will\ngo anywhere. Box 833 Daily News.\nREFINED, 50 YEAR OLD WOMAN\nwants housekeeping position for\nbachelor or widower, in or around\nNelson. Box 368, Rossland, B. C.\n(478)\nTWO RESPECTABLE YOUNG WO-\nmen would like to have care ol\nchildren during daytime. Phone\n792R1 or write 240 High St. (639)\nYOUNG MAN, AN EXPERIENCED\nbookkeeper, and stenographer,\nwould like part or full time work.\nBox 672 Daily News. (672)\nEXPERIENCED GIRL DESIRES A\npositions as housekeeper or hotel\nwork. Box 679 Daily News.  \u00ab79)\nFULLY QUALIFIED HAIRDRES\nser desires position. Apply Box\n749 Daily News. (749)\nPERSONAL\nLONELY PEOPLE SHOULD MAR-\nry. Professional men, R. R. men,\nranchers, farmers, engineers, business men, mechanics, teachers,\nnurses, housekeepers, widows\nwith property, some with means.\nNew members every day. New\nlists now ready. Particulars 10c,\nsent you in plain, sealed envelope.\nCanadian Correspondence Club,\nP. O. Box 128, Calgary, Alberta.\n(Established 1924.) (744)\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL, GTD.\n25 for $1.00 or Jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (free catalogue). National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton,\n(214)\n(Continued in next column)\nCanadian Legion (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\nMusic in Fuller Fashion (CFCN)\n10:00 P.M.\u2014\nI Cover the Waterfront (CBC)\nNews flashes (Red)\nCarl Deacon Moore's orch. (Blue)\nHenry King's orch. (Columbia)\nRonnie Matthews, organ (CJOR)\n10:15 P.M.\u2014\nNews, weather (CBC)\nRoger Pryor's orch. (Red)\nLud Gluskin's program  (Col)\n10:30 P.M.\u2014\nSandy de Santis (CBC)\nJoseph Sudy's orch.  (Red)\nFrank Trombar's orch. (Blue)\nJack Betzner's orch. (Don Lee)\nNews (CJOR)\n10:45 P.M.\u2014\nLarry Kent's orch. (Col)\nDevotional Service (CJOR)\n11:00 P.M.\u2014\nHerbie Kay's orch. (Red)\nCharles Runyan, organ  (Blue)\nPasadena auditorium (Columbia)\nJan Garber's orch. (Don Lee)\nCarleton Cabaret (CJOR)\n11:30 P.M.\u2014\nArchie Loveland's orch. (Red)\nJoe Saunder's orch. (Columbia)\nJay Whidden's orch. (Don Lee)\n11:45 P.M.\u2014\nLast Minute news (Blue)\nRhythm Wranglers (CJOR)\nBRITISH  EMPIRE\nSHORT WAVE\nGSD   11.76 mcs.   (25.53m.)\nGSC    9.58 mcs,   (31.32m.)\nG3B    9.51 mcs.   (31.55m.)\nGSL    6.11  mcs.   (49.10m.)\n6:20 p.m.\u2014Made In Great Britain\n\u20148; London Buses,\n6:50\u2014Musical Variety.\n7:50-8:20\u2014B.B.C. Theatre Organ.\nPERSONAL\n(Continued)\nMCM| TO GET VIGOR, VI-\nmi-iN. tality, try raw oyster in-\nvigorntorc and other stimulants in\nNew OSTREX Tonic Tablets. Tone\nup worn, exhausted, weakened system. If not delighted with results,\nmaker refunds price, $1.25. You risk\nnothing. Call, write Mann, Rutherford Co., Nelson. (212)\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)\nLADIES: REGULATING PILLS,\n(double strength) price $5.00. Box\nNo. 504, Vancouver, B. C.     (747)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\nAND    APARTMENTS\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent. Annabie Block.\n(219)\n5 ROOM FURNISHED HOUSE,\nFrigidaire, etc. Available about\nMay 1st. Phone 656X. (686)\nSMALL HOUSE. APPLY RUECK-\nert's Apiary, Mill St., eas. Box 126.\n(673)\nPOOL ROOM, APPLY D. MAGLIO,\n* Phone 808-L. (583)\nSEE THE FURN.. AND UNFURN.\nsuites. Kerr Apartments.      (220)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (221)\nNEWLY FURN. SUITES FOR RENT\nPhone 940, 140 Baker St.     (702)\nAUTOMOTIVE\n1935 DELUXE FORD SEDAN\nRadio, Heater, Defroster.\nDown Payment Required\n$225\n'Balance Easy Terms\nBUTORAC MOTORS\n1225 PINE AVE.\nTRAIL, B.C.\n(704)\n1937-2 TON HEAVY DUTY FORD\ntruck. Hydraulic Hoist and Steel\nDump Body. Low mileage and in\nperfect condition. Priced reasonably. Terms arranged. Box 647,\nDaily News. (647)\nPHONE 144\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nLEGAL NOTICES\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.\nMINERAL ACT\n(Form F.) j\nCertificate of Improvements\nNOTICE\nLillian Frac, No. 10 Frac, G. B.\nFrac, Fraction No. 1 Frac, Fractional No. 2 Frac. Mineral Claims\nsituate lh the Nelson Mining Division ol Kootenay District\nWhere located:\u2014\nOn both sides of Sheep Creek\nnear the Gold Belt mine.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, A. L. Purdy,\nacting as Agent for the Gold Belt\nMining Co. Ltd. (N. P. L.)\nFree Miner's Certificate No. 4780-E,\nintend, sixty days from the date\nhereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for Certificates of Improvements for the purpose of obtaining\nQrown Grants of the above claims.\nAnd further take notice that action, under section 85, must be\ncommenced before the issuance of\nsuch Certificates of Improvements.\nDated this 1st day of February,\nA. D. 1938.\nA. L. PURDY.\n(4795)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR SALE - RANCH BEAUT1-\nfully situated on Arrow Lakes one\nhalf mile from Needles, and six\nmiles from Edgewood, B. C\u201e on\nNelson-Vernon bus line. Total acreage sixty-three acres, fifteen acres cultivated and ten acres planted in trees. Substantial two storey\nhouse,- kitchen, dining-room, bath\nroom, summer dining-room, sitting room, four bedrooms, dressing room and box room. Adequate\nwater supply. Other buildings on\nproperty are packing shea and\nwood shed and ice house. Will be\nsold at sacrifice price by Execu\ntors of Estate in Scotland. Apply\nBrown & Dawson, Solicitors, Nelson, B. C. (687)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write tor full in'\nformation to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources. C.P.R, Calgary, Alta\n(228)\nFOR SALE-20 ACRES OF RANCH\nland in Canyon district. Four acres cultivated. On main roa*d. Water. Apply Mrs. H. M. Whimster,\n407 Third St., Nelson.        . (581)\nKASLO 6V4 ACS. BEAUTIFUL Location, 232 fruit trees, 3 rm. house\nfor sale. See Dan McKenzie, Kaslo.\n(566)\nCOUNTRY HOTEL AND STORE\nwith Licence, for sale. Apply Box\n634 Daily News. (634)\nFOR SALE\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.\n250 Prior St.       Vancouver,-B. C.\n(215)\nPIPES,   TUBES,   FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St\nVancouver, B. C.\n(218)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B. C. (217)\n4 RING GAS RANGE, SINGER\nsewing machine. Campbed, camp\nstove, ice box, hot plates, heaters,\netc. 918 Kootenay St (678)\nMATS GOOD FOR INSULATING\nlining   chicken   coops,   garages,\nfarm buildings, etc. at Daily News.\n(657)\n\"THE CHICKS WHICH\nCIVE RESULTS\"\nIf you are Interested In bigger profits buy B.C7 Chicks\n-Best in the West.\nBred for health and\n\u2022production under\n'Ideal conditions and\n^^U*r 100% live delivery\nguaranteed. Pullorum tested and\ngovernment Inspected.\nLEGHORNS\nUnsexed  $13.00 per 100\nPullets, 97% accurate 28.00 per 100\nROCKS, REDS OR NEW\nHAMPSHIRES\nUnsexed  $15.00- per 100\nPullets, 97% accurate 30.00 per 100\nDiscount on quantity orders. Prices\nreduced after April 16th. Catalogue\non request Free book to customers\non raising and care of poultry.\nFor good results order from\nRump & 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 & Folder on request\nBOLIVAR HATCHERIES LTD.\nPac. Hwy.  New Westminster, fl. 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)\nR. I. R. LAYING PULLETS $1.25\neach. Baby Chicks R. I. R. W. Leghorns and B. Rocks. Pullets booked 6-8-10 iiveeks old. R. I. R. Hatching Eggs $1.25, selling from R.\nO. P .sired and B. T. stock. Tom\nNeale, R. R. 1, Nelson.       (745)\nGARDENING AND NURSERY\n(Continued)\nCHOICE GLADIOLUS BULBS, 10\nvarieties  $2  100;  mixture  $1-15\nand $1.50 100; postage 40c. H. J.\nHerolz, Deer Lake, Burnaby, B. C.\n(658)\nRELIABLE NURSERY STOCK,\nfruit trees, ornamental St shrubs,\nat lowest possible prices. For 1st\nclass stock T. Roynon. Nelson. Agent for Layritz Nurseries,    (355)\nLIVESTOCK\n6 COWS, WILL FRESHEN DURING\nApril and May. 1 Bay mare, 8\nyears, 900 lbs., good to ride or\ndrive. Box 748 Daily News.  (748)\nFRESH COW FOR SALE. APPLY\nAlex Toth, Parks Siding.     (748)\nWant to Sell Something?\nPhone\n144\nBUSINESS and PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAssayers\nE. W. W1DDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst. Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B. C. (182)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 420\nFall Street. Nelson, B. C P. O-\nBox   No.  9.   Representing   shlp-\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(185)\nW. J. BROCK, D. C, 16 years' Experience Ph. 969 Gilker Bk. Nelson\n(186)\nCorsets\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)\nLEGHORN CHICKS. MARCH, $13\nper 100; April, $12; April Pullets\n3 weeks old, 40 cents. P. W. Green,\nWillow Point. (6421\nR. I. RED & WHITE LEGHORNS.\nSexed chicks. Hillcrest Poultry\nFarm, Salmon Arm, B. C.   (609)\nR. 1. R. HATCHING EGGS, ALSO\nroosters. Phone 350-L-l.        (656)\nROOM AND BOARD\nWANTED RM. St BRD. FOR HIGH\nsch. studt. Box 682 Daily News.\n(682)\nGARDEN AND NURSERY\nPRODUCTS\nOUR STOCK IS COMPLETE FOR\nGovernment tested field seeds,\netc. Dr. Rusk's famous CHICK\nFOOD, GRANULATED WHEAT,\nand CORN, and all CHICK requirements. Organic also Chemical FERTILIZERS, SEED POTATOES. Get our prices before\nbuying. PHONE 238. Ellison Milling Co., Ltd., Nelson, B. C.   (661)\nWE CARRY A COMPLETE STOCK\nof Govt, tested field and garden\nseeds, seed grain, potatoes and\nonion sets. Write or phone us for\na quotation on your requirements,\nNelson & District Farmers Supply\nCo. Phone 174, Nelson, B. CJ662)\nGO-WEST WEEVIL BAIT FOR\nStrawberries should be on hand\nfor use second week in April. Full\nstock now on hand at Nelson. The\nBrackman-Ker Millg. Co., Ltd.\n(750)\nSpencer Corsets. Surgical Belts, M.\nW. Mitchell, 370 Baker St. Ph. 668.\n(187)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYDC AFFLECK Fruitvale. BC.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(188)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert Mortician      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(190)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD\nReal Es}ate. Insurance. Rentals\n347 Baker St., Phone 68.      (191)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD.   Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99.\n(192)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 532 Ward St.\n(193)\nSEE  D.   L.  KERR,  AGENT  FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(194)\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE.\nRentals, Insurance.  Annabie Blk.\n(195)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135. (196)\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance.   Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St. Phone 197.\n(197)\nPHONE 980, STUART AND WAR-\nburton. Mutual Benefit H & A.\nA. First and Al) Classes Fire and\nAutomobile Insurance. 577 Baker\nStreet. (198)\nMachinistl\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all Classes ot Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinding, Motor Rewiring. Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593      324 Vernon Street\n(199)\na E, STEVENSON, Machinists,\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mill work a\nspecialty Fully equipped shop. Ph.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St, Nelson.   (201)\nMaternity   Home\nLOIS BRANDON\nFemale  specialist; strictly  private\nmaternity home.  1218 E.  Newark\nAve., Spokane, Wash. Phone Lake-\nview 2870.\n(202)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON, Representing\nC. C. Snowdon, Oils, Greases,\nPaints, etc. Agt: Mine Mchnry It\nequipt. rails, steels, piping, sheet\niron. etc. Steam coals. Phone 080,\nBox 28, Nelson. (203)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted Inventions and\nfull information sent free. The'\nRamsay Company. World Patent\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St, Ottawa. a\n(204) '\nPhotography\nNOW IS THE TIME TO HAVE RE-\nprints made from your negative!\nfor mounting in albums. Never\nfade prints 3c each. Films develop,\ned and printed 25c KRYSTAL\nPHOTOS, WILKIE, Sask.     (205)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S     SASH     FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker St.\n \u25a0\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,   SELL  &   EXCHANGI\nfurniture, etc   The Ark Store.\n(207)\nTypewrlteri\nH. R. KITTO, Cleaning, Repairing,\nAgt Royal Typewriter. Ph. 964.\n(208)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs youi\nwatch it Is on time all the time,\n345. Baker St., Nelson. (2091\nCLASSIFIED MAILORDERS\nfrom out-of-town residents given I\nprompt attention.\nBoost for the Kootenay District - It Pays\nVMHEfte'S- MISS TOIMBS?  T -TOLD\nHWiTolVvAVT\/'OUT HERE\n#\n1   COME  IM )\n'\n\\Knoca\nV    ,J__     ___[\nh\nIvt IV ,\n\/\n\u00bb   y JPi   \\\/\nYOU LEFT My PLACE VaIITHOuT\nfilVlMfi M6 A. CHANCE TO EJtPLAIH\nMy POSITIOM IM THIS MATTERTILIAE\na3BMBBBB\nVOUR. POSITION WAS\nVHiy 06v|OOS\/PB--FE^Soe\nVOU VMERE IM THE\nASM*\"***, OT AMOTHBB-\nVJOK\u00ab-N,SO THERE'S\nMOTHlMd TO eypLAIN\nTV\nI USED TO SINS IN THE\nOPERA- SOMETIMES I\nWOULD SEE VOU AND\n\u25a0YOUR WIFE SITTING\nIN A STAGE BOX - I\nSUPPOSE MDU ARE\n\u2022SURPRISED TO SEE\nME SHINING SHOES-\n\t\n.\n mmwmmmimmmmm\nM<3|o\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 25, 1938\nTariff-Protected Industries Should\nProtect Public, Em ployees - Turgeon\nOTTAWA, March 31 (CP) -\nResponsibility to the community of\nemployers in tariff-protected industries wss emphasized in the\n180,000-word report of Mr. Justice\nW. F. A. Turgeon on the textile Industry tabled today in the House of\nCommons by Finance Minister\nCharles Dunning. The report con-\n' talned findings resulting from an\ninquiry into Canada's textile Indus-\nl try that lasted from March, 1936,\nuntil March 1937.\nJudge Turgeon devoted much of\nhis report to labor relations and\nrecommended shorter hours of\nwork, uniformity in piece-work\npayments, and, in view of the fact\nI that Industrialists have themselves\n] become grouped in trade associations, recognition of the workers'\nright to do the -same thing, The\ncommissioner urged development of\n\"the processes  of  collective  bar-\n' gaining.\"\nEffective publicity as a means to\ncounter efforts at deception regarding costs, profits, stock watering,\nsecret reserves and other elements\ndisclosed during the Investigation\n\u25a0was recommeneded. By this means\nthe commissioner would curb also\nactivities of industrialists who promote propaganda with a view to\nrestricting competition.\nMr. Justice Turgeon found closing of the Sherbrooke, Que., plant\nof the Dominion Textile company\nin January, 1936, was not justified.\nIt was this incident which precipitated the Investigation.,The action was \"hcsty\" and taken \"without due consideration of the real\nsituation.\"\nIt had caused distress and alarm\nand was \"calculated to Impress the\ngovernment with the necessity of\nacceding at once to the request put\nbefore it by the delegation.\"\n(This was the delegation which in\nJanuary, 1936, saw a sub-committee\nof the cabinet and pleaded for\ngovernment action on the ground\nJapanese competition in textiles\nwas resulting in cancellation of orders.)\nMr. Justice Turgeon suggested\nparliament should consider extending provisions of the customs tarif\nto make concerns enjoying protection realize that such protection is\na privilege which may be withdrawn if they fail properly to discharge their responsibilities to the\npublic.\nSILVER PRICE STEADY\nWASHINGTON, March 31 (AP)\n\u2014The treasury retained for the\nthird day its price of 3 cents an\nounce for foreign silver.\nNEW YORK (CP) - Just to show\nhow a fellow will take on weight.\nJimmie Wilde, former flyweight\nboxing champion, now weighs 190\npounds.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAlton Mines Ltd 02\nAldermac Copper      .40\nAmm Gold  20\nAnglo-Huronian  -  3.10\nArntfield Gold  -    .17\nAshley Gold Mining ......    .05\nAstoria Rouyn Mines  _    .02%\nAltec Mlnig Co  \/.     .07%\nBagamac Rouyn   13\nBankfield Gold        71\nBase Metals Mining  -    .75\nBeattie Gold Mines    1.07\nBldgood Kirkland  28\nBig Missouri        \u2014.    .35\nBobjo Mines Ltd      -07\niBralorne Mines  80.00\nBrett Trethewey      .04\nBuffalo  Ankerlte    12.00\nBunker Hill Extension  16.00\nCanadian Malartic  85\nCariboo Gold Quartz     1.90\nPajtle-Trethewey  55\nlentral Patricia    2.28\nhibougamau       20\niromium M & S - -    .50\noast Copper     2.00\n\u00a9rilagas Mines     1.70\nponlaurum Mines    1.25\nbnsolidated M St S  48.00\nparkwater   16\nlome Mines Ltd     48.00\n|3orval-Siscoe Gold  _    .14\nit.Maiartic     1.18\nHdorado Gold    2.05\nFalconbridge Nickel     4.75\nederal Kirkland  08\n\"rancoeur Gold  31\nbillies   Lake           .08V!\n[Sod's Lake Gold  31\nold Belt  33\nbranada Gold Mines  05%\nBrandoro Gold Mines  06\nSunnar Gold Mines 75\nird Rock Gold     1.76\nitarker Gold  09%\n.ollinger   11.50\n[owey Gold  24\n'Udson Bay M & S   21.35\nlternational Nickel   38.25\n\u2022M Consolidated  0\u00ab\nsck Wait*   31\n>col\u00bb  Gold   23\nterr-Addison       1.46\ntlrkland Lake   97\nke Shore Mines  49.25\naque  Contact   03%\nlapa Cadillac  41\njeltch Gold 23\nRebel Oro Mines  OTVi\nlittle Long Lac    4.00\npacassa  Mines       3.55\nfacLeod  Cockshutt       3.15\n:adsen Red Lake Gold      .20\nnitoba tnd Eastern     .01%\nndy  12\nIclntyre-Porcupine  87.00\noKcnzle Red Lake  80\ntVittie-Qraham  1214\niWatters Gold     .63\nining Corporation     1.45\nInto Gold     .02%\noncta Porcupine    1.75\norris-Klrkland  09\n.pissing Mining     1.75\noranda  48.25\normetal 59\n\u2022Brlen Gold    2.80\nnega Gold 31\njusour Porcupine    3.00\njus YOU\nhit of Work?\n*or only 25c cash you can\n'Tell your Story\" under Sit-\njations Wanted.\nFor only 25c cash your ad-\ntertlsement will run a week\n6 insertions).\nFor only 25c cash your\nIualifications will be read\ny over 6000 readers in the\n.OOtenay District each day.\n\/HY WAIT? Come in or\nbail In your advertisement\n(nd25c.\nilelson Daily News\nCLASSIFIED DEPT.\nNelson, B.C.\nPaulore M \t\nPaymaster Cons  \t\nPend Oreille \t\nPerron Gold \t\nPickle Crow Gold \t\nPioneer Gold\nPremier Gold\nPowell Rouyn Gold \t\nPreston East Dome \t\nQuebec Gold\nRead-Authier\nRed Lake Gold Shore\nReeves  MacDonald\nReno Gold Mines\nRitichie Gold Mines ...\nRoche Long Lac\nSan Antonio Gold \t\nShawkey Gold     \t\nSheep Creek Gold\t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSi6coe  Gold     \t\nSladen Malartic \t\nStadacona Rouyn \t\nSt. Anthony  \t\nSudbury Basin \t\nSullivan Consolidated\nSylvanite\nTashota Goldfields \t\nTeck-Hughes Gold \t\nToburn Gold Mines\t\nTowagmac \t\nVentures Limited\t\nWaite Amulet     \t\nWhitewater\nWright Hargreaves ......\nYmir Yankee Girl \t\nOILS\nAJax      . ...\nA P Consolidated \t\nBritish   American   \t\nBritish  Dominion  \t\nBrown Oil \t\nCalmont      ,,..\nCalgary & Edmonton ..\nChem Research \t\nCommonwealth \t\nDalhousie  \t\nEastcrest   \t\nFoundation \t\nFoothills   \t\nHighwood\t\nHome       \t\nImperial     \t\nInter  Pete      \t\nMcColl Frontenac  .....\nModel \t\nMonarch Roy \t\nNordon   \t\nOkalta   \t\nPantepec  \t\nRoyalite \t\nSouthwest Pete\t\nTexas Canadian \t\nUnited\t\nVulcan  \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power \t\nBeatty Bros \t\nBell  Telephone  \t\nBrazilian T L & P \t\nBrewers St Distillers ..\nBrewing Corp \t\nBrewing Corp Pfd ....\nB C Power A \t\nB C Power B \t\nBuilding Products \t\nBurt F N \t\nCan Bakeries Pfd \t\nCanada Bread Co \t\nCan Bud Malting \t\nCan Car Sc Fdy \t\nCan Cement   .....\nCan Cement Pfd \t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Malting \t\nCan Pac Railway \t\nCan Ind Ale A \t\nCan Ind Ale B \t\nCan Wineries \t\nCarnation Pfd \t\nCons Bakeries \t\nCosmos\t\nDominion Bridge \t\nDominion Stores \t\nDom Tar St Chem \t\nD Tar & Chem Pfd ....\nDistillers Seagrams ....\nFanny Farmer \t\nFord of Can A \t\nGen Steel Wares \t\nGoodyear Tire \t\nGypsum L & A \t\nHarding Carpet \t\nHamilton  Bridge  \t\nHamilton Bridge Pfd ..\nHinde Dauche \t\nHiram Walker \t\nIntl  Metals  \t\nIntl Milling Pfd \t\nImperial Tobacco \t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B \t\nKelvinator   \t\nMaple Leaf Milling, ...\nMassey Harris \t\nMontreal Power \t\nMoore Corp \t\nNat Steel Car \t\nOnt Steel Prods \t\nOnt Silk Net \t\nPage  Hersey  \t\nPower Corp\t\nSteel of Canada \t\nStandard Paving\t\n.10\n.40\n1.37\n1.15\n4.05\n2.05\n1.82\n1.60\n.84%\n.41\n2.70\n.18\n.25\n.51\n.01%\n.1114\n1.25\n.1914\n2.27\n.89\n.18\n.11\n2.00\n.89\n2.70\n.02\n4.50\n1.90\n.    .35\n4.20\n1.10\n.04\n6.55\n.15\n.    .18\n.18\n17.10\n.06\n.43\n.35\n1.89\n.    .30\n.    .26\n.40\n. .15\n. .50\n.09\n. 1.00\n15.15\n23.25\n. 11.90\n. .20\n. .16\n. .07\n. 1.27\n. 4.25\n. 36.00\n. .25\n. 1.14\n. .13\n.    .90\nMarket and Mining News\n1.05\n9\n145%\n8\n5%\n1.10\n14\n30\n214\n37\n19\n30\n2%\n(1%\n7%\n6%\n89\n25\n29\n5%\n2%\n2'A\n214\n101%\n11\n18\n22\n4%\n5\n78\n11',4\nWA\n14%\n5\n54\n4*14\n2'4\n5\n45\n12%\n30 li\n5\n95%\n13 \"4\n20 %\n18%\n1014\n114\n5\n27\n25 %\n32i\/4\n12\n5\n75\n9\n56\n2\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG,.March 81 (CP). \u2014\nGain future quotations:\nOpen   High  Low  Close\nWHEAT:\nMay 122%   122%   120%   120%\nJuly  11014 .100%   108%   10914\nOct      89%     9014     88%    68%\nOATS:\nMay    4614     46%    46%    46%\nJuly    4314     -       -       43%\nOct    -       \u2014       -       37%\nBARLEY:\nMay    60%     6014    60%    60%\nJuly    58        58%     57%     57%\nOct    -       \u2014       -     . 53%\nFLAX:\nMay   \u2014       \u2014  -.   -T-     153\nJuly    -        \u2014-.-.-      158%\nRYE:\nMay    67%     68%    67%    68\nJuly    68       68%     67%    68%\nCASH PRICES:  ...\nWHEAT-No. 1 Nor. 144%; No. 2\nNor. 134%; Nos. 3 Nor. and 1 Garnet 114%; No. 4 Nor. 103%; No. 5,\n87%; No. 6, 78%; fede 68%; No, 2\nGarnet 111%; No. 1 Durum 86%:\nNo. 4 special 9714; No. 5 special\n84%; No. 6 special 75%; track 142%;\nscreenings $2 per ton.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 51%; No. 3\nC. W. 47%; E. 1 fede 48%; No. 1\nfeed 44%; No. 2 feed 40%; No. 3\nfeed 37%; track 4914.\nBARLEY\u2014Mailing grades: 6- and\n2-Row Ex. 3 C. W. 61%. Others:\nNo. 3 C. W. 57%; No. 4 C. W. 56%:\nNo. 5 C. W. 55%; No. 6 C. W. 54%;\ntrack 60%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. and track 152;\nNo. 2 C. W. 148; No. 3 C. W. 126;\nNo. 4 C. W. 121.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 66%.\nChicago Wheal\nPrices Are Down\nCHICAGO, March 31 (AP) .-Setbacks of 114 cents a bushel in Chicago wheat values late today accompanied lower prices for securities.\nNew crop futures of wheat almost\nequalled the lows for the present\nseason. Only a moderate export business in North American wheat was\nconfirmed today, about 300,1)00 bushels.\nAt the close, Chicago wheat futures were %\u2014IVi under yesterday's\nfinish, May 85%-%, July 81%\u2014%,\ncorn %\u2014% down May 60%, July\n61%, and oats %\u2014% off.\nWHEAT:\nOpen   High  Low  Close\nMay    86V4     86%     85%     85%\nJuly    82%     82%    81       81%\nSept    82%     83       81%    81%\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, March 31 (CP) -\nBritish and foreign exchange closed higher today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nAustralia, pound, 3.9928.\nBelgium, belga, .1703.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3082.\nDenmark, krone, .2232.\nGermany, reichsmark, .4045.\nHolland, florin, ,5578.\nIndia, rupee, .3780.\nItaly, lire, .0530.\nJapan, yen, .2919.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0250.\nPoland, zloti, .1912.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4,9759.\nSweden, krone, .2577,\nSwitzerland, franc, .2310.\nUnited States dollar, 23-32 p. c.\npremium.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank ot\nCanada.)\nSticks Dive to New 5-Year Lows\nal New Vork Alter Morning Gains\nNEW YORK, March 31 (AP) -\nStocks dived to new 5-year lows In\ntoday's market, many losing one to\nfour or more points at the worst,\nwhen a morning rally again failed\nto follow through.\nWhile last:minute buying support\nenabled an assortment of issues to\nreduce extreme declines substantially, and a number of gainers were\nin evidence, most leaders were well\ndown at the sound of the closing\ngong.\nBrokers could point to no special\nnews development as a cause for\neither the forenoon run-up or the\nfinal hour's tumble.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 issues was off .5 of a point at 38.7\na new bottom since April, 1933. The\nindustrials touched new lows since\n1934 and the rails since 1932. The\nutilities were unchanged at a 1935\nlow. Transfers totalled 1,271.030\nshares compared with 1,667,260 yesterday.\nBRITAIN HAS A\nNET SURPLUS\nOF $1(3,930,000\nLONDON, March 31 (CP Cable)-\nGreat Britain today ended her financial year with a net realized surplus of \u00a328,786,000 ($143,930,000) it\nwas announced tonight.\nRevenue for the year was \u00a3872,-\n580,000 and expenditure \u00a3843,794,-\n000.\nThe revenue exceeded the budget estimate by \u00a39,480,000.\nExpenditure fell short of the budget estimate by \u00a319,054,000.\nThe realized surplus, in accordance with the Defence Loans act of\n1937, Is available for use during the\ncoming year to meet defence expenditure which otherwise would\nhave to be met by borrowing.\nThe defence expenditure totalled\n\u00a3262,000,000 during the year-\u00a3197-\n250,000 from budget revenue and\n\u00a364,750,000 from borrowed money.\nVANCOUVER OFF\nVANCOUVER, March 31 (CP) -\nSmall declines were registered in\nall groups on Vancouver stock exchange today for the fourth day\nthis week. Trading was brisker as\noil stocks featured fairly active\ntrading and transactions totalled\n104,931 shares.\nCalgary & Edmonton headed the\noil\" rally but dropped 9 cents at\n1.90. Okalta slipped 2 at 1.26, Home\n4 at 1.00, and Anglo Canadian 5 at\n1.10. Other leading issues were unchanged.\nBralorne Gold at 8.05, Pioneer\nat 2.85 and Premier at 1.83 each\ndeclined five cents. SHeep' Creek\nwas off 2 at 93, Big Missouri 1%\nat 35 and Gold Belt a cent at 33.\nHedley Mascot at 1.02 and Reno at\n49 were unchanged while Cariboo\nGold Quartz firmed 3 at 1.85.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER March 31 (CP).-\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\nStrt.    Tough\nNo. 1 hard 133%      131%\nNo. 1 Nor  133%      131%\nNo. 2 Nor  125%      123%\nNo. 3 Nor  111%    \u2022 109\nNo. 4 Nor    99%        97\nNo. 5 wheat    84%        82\nNo. 6 wheat     75%        73\nFeed   65%       63\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nQuotations of the Montreal Stock Exchange were not available\nto the Nelson Dally News owing to serious disruption of telegraph\nservices In eastern Canada yesterday.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nBid\n.07\n.16%\n.35\n.0114\n8.05\n.02\nCariboo G     1-35\nMINES:\nAztec  \t\nB C Nickel ....\nBig  Missouri\nBluebird\nBralorne\nB R Con\n.08%\n.04\n.03%\n.20\n.04%\n.33\n.01%\n.05V4\n.05%\n.07%\n1.02\n.01%\n.02%\n.25\n.81\n1.03\n.01\n.00%\n.02%\n.01%\n.22%\n,20\n.02%\n,05\n.02%\nPend Oreille        1.36 *\nPilot           .01%\nPioneer          2.85\nPorter   Idaho    02\nPremier  Bord         -01\nPremier Gold      1-83\nQuatsino  02%\nQuesnelle   Q    07\nPed Hawk            .04%\nReeves MacD  25\nRelief_ Arl    18\nReno '       \u2014'\nReward            \"~\nRulus Argenta        \u2014\nRuth  Hope         \u2014\nSally Mines  03\nSalmon    05\nSheep  Creek   93\nSilbak Premier     1.70\nSunloch      10\nTaylor Br  _...      -04\nVidette            \u2014\nWaverly T 00%\nWellington M  01%\nWesko         ' -03\nWhite Eagle 01%\nDentonia   \t\nDunwell  \t\nFairview   \t\nFederal     \t\nGeo Copper \t\nGolconda    \t\nGold Belt \t\nGold Mt \t\nGrandview   \t\nGrull Wihksne ...\nHaida \t\nHeoley Mascot ...\nHome Gold \t\nIndian \t\nInter C & C \t\nIsland Mt \t\nKoot Belle  \t\nKoot Florence \t\nLakeview     \t\nLucky   Jim   \t\nMak Siccar\t\nMetaline M & L .\nMcGillivray    \t\nMinto     \t\nNicola      \t\nNoble   Five   .......\nAsk\n.07%\n.17%\n.38\n8.10\n.02%\n1.90\n.08%\n.04%\n.04\n.01%\n.05%\n.02%\n.05%\n.06\n.08\n1.04\n.01%\n.03\n1.04\n.01%\n.01\n.02%\n.02\n.26\n.02%\n.06\n.03\n1.40\n.02\n2.90\n.03%\n.01%\n1.84\n.03\n.07%\n.06\n.31\n.53\n.04\n.02\n.02%\n.07\n.95\n1.75\n.15\n.13%\n.03%\nBid\n.04\n.15\nWhitewater  \t\nYmir Yank Girl.\nOl'.S:\nAssoc     04\nAmal       01  *\nAnaconda      08%\nAnglo  Can      1.05\nA P Con  19\nBaltac     03\nB R Dom  08.\nBruwn 42\nCalmont     34%\nC & E       1-90\nCommonwealth  ....      .26\nCrows Nest        .01\nDalhousie     40\nDavies Pete  52\nEastcrest             .08\nFirestone       14\nFour  Star   16\nFreehold    04%\nFoothills     65\nFoundation    14%\nHargal 20\nHighwood     09\nHome         1.00\nMadison     05\nImperial        15.25\nM_.r Jon  06\nMerland     06\nMercury     12\nMcDoug Segur 17%\nMcLeod       18\nMid-West    03\nMill City       .06%\nModel    22\nMonarch    15%\nNordon             -08\nOkalta com      1.26\nOkalta pfd     29.00\nPacalta            .08\nPrairie R  31\nRoyalite        36.00\nSpooner            .16\nSpy Hill          .09\nS W Pete  30\nTexas Can     1.10\nUnited 14\nVanalta      04%\nVuican    85\nWellington    \u00bbi\nWest Flank  11\nINDUSTRIALS:\nCoast Brew        \u2014\nCapital Est        \u2014\nBrew & Dist     5.25\nCPR     5.12%\nPac Coyle  ,       \u2014\nU D L  .'.       .80\nTotal sales 104,081 shares.\nAsk\n.04%\n.17\n.01%\n.09\n1.10\n.22\n.10\n.45\n.37\n1.92\n.28\n.01%\n.53\n.09\n.14%\n.20\n.05\n1,02\n.14\nDominion Bonds\nWINNIPEG, March 31 (CP)\u2014Dominion of Canada bond quotations\ntoday:\n4% per cent, Sot. 1, 1940 (C)\n106%, 108.\n5, Nov. 15, 1941 (C) 110%, 112.\n5, Oct. 15, 1943 (C) 113, 114.\n4%, Feb. 1, 1946  (C)  110%. 112.\n3%, Oct. 15, 1949-44 (C) 102%,\n103%.\n3%, Nov. 16, 1951-48, (C) 100%,\n101%.\n4, Oct. 15, 1952-47, (C) 106%,\n108%.\n3, June 1, 1955-50 (C) 97%, 98%.\n4%, Nov. 1, 1958-48 (C) 110%,\n112.\n4%, Nov. 1, 1959-49 (C) 111, fl2%.\n4%, Nov. 1, 1959-49 (C) 111, 112%.\nMontreal Loses\nIts Early Gains\nMONTREAL, March 31 (CP) -\nSome semblance of steadiness appeared in early trading on Montreal\nstock exchange today but a late depression beat back recovery forces.\nInternational Nickel found a new\nlow at 37 before climbing back to\n38% for a net loss of 1%. Noranda\ndropped to a new low at 48 but recovered at the close to 48%, down\n1%. Smelters added %.\nBell,Telephone broke eight at a\nnew low of 147. Cement preferred\ntumbled four to a new low at 90,\nand Steel of Canada reached a new\nlow at 56, off 2%. Dominion Bridge\ndipped to a new low level at 21, off\n1%. Sherwin-Williams was off-four\nat 10.\nNO LAYOFF C.N.R.\nSHOP MEN IN WEST\nOTTAWA, March 31 (CP) -\nThere will be no layoff of shopmen of the Canadian National\nRailways in the western or central regions.\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Press\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal \u2014 Pound 4.99%\nU. S. dollar 1.00 23-32; franc 3,07\n11-16.\nAt New York \u2014 Pound 4.96%;\nCanadian dollar .99%; franc 3.05%\nAt Paris - Pound 161.65 fr.; U. S.\ndollar 32.60 fr.; Canadian dollar\n32.36 fr.\nIn Gold \u2014 Pound 12s 2d; U. S.\ndollar 59.41 cents; Canadian dollar\n59.07 cents.\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, March 31 (CP) -Closing copper, standard spot \u00a338, ofi\n7s 6d; future \u00a338 5s, off 7s 6d; electrolytic spot, bid \u00a34115s, off 5s; asked \u00a342 15s, off 5s.\nTin spot \u00a3169 5s, off \u00a33 15s; future \u00a3169 15s, off \u00a33 fOs.\nBids: Lead spot and future \u00a315\n13s 9d, off 5s.\nZinc spot \u00a31315s, up ls 3d; future\n\u00a313 15s, unchanged.\nBar golds 140s %d, up 1% pence.\n(Equivalent $34.69.)\nMONTREAL \u2014 Spot: copper, electrolytic 1.00; tin 40%; lead 4.80;\nzinc 4.40; Antimony 16.50; per 100\npounds F. O. B. Montreal, five-ton\nlots.\nDominion Gov't.\nBank of Canada\nDeposits Down\nOTTAWA, March 31 (CP)\u2014 A\ndecrease of more than $1,000,000 in\nDominion government deposits was\nshown today in the Bank of Canada's statement for the week ended\nMarch 30. Chartered bank deposits\nwere higher while a slight increase\nin notes in circulation was also\nshown.\nRatio of net reserve and deposit\nliabilities was 55.60 per cent this\nweek, 55.97 last week.\nThe statement, with last week's\nfigures in brackets, showed:\nLiabilities: Capital paid up $10,-\n100,000 ($10,100,000); rest lund 1,-\n348,414 (1,348.414); notes in circulation 148,802,406 (148,801,315.)\nDeposits: Dominion government\n24,003,486 (25,666.591); chartered\nbanks 195,267,201 (194,034,823); other deposits 2,646,606 (2,877,320); total deposits 221,917,294 (222,587,735);\nall other liabilities 1,357,490 (2,300,\n233); total liabilities 383,525,606\n(385,128,698).\nToronto Slumps\nTORONTO, March 31 (CP)\nBearish forces had the whip hand\nin the stock market today and all\nindex groups were hammered for\nlosses of 2.35 to 3.75.\nInternational Nickel dropped to 37\nwhere it was only % above bottom\nfor the last three years. Recovery to\n38% left the price down 1% for the\nday. A dozen or more industrials\nclosed at new lows for the year.\nBeU.Telephone was off 6 to 146%.\nImperial Oil, British American and\nInternational Petroleum registered\nnew lows and finished % to % down.\nImperial at 15% and Pete at 23%.\nWalkers common sold on a 2-point\ndrop to 30%, a new low. Distillers-\nSeagrams recorded a % gain.\nAside from a loss of 2% for Dome,\nthe senior golds were not disturbed\nby the selling drive. Some of the\nsecondary issues, however, slipped\nin the last hour selt-oft.\n\u2022 PAGF -fLEVSN\nPROVINCIAL REVENUE COLLECTION\nFOR FISCAL YEAR SETS A RECORD\nVICTORIA, March 31 (CP) -Income tax payers, automobile owners, liquor consumers and industries\ngenerally have been pouring revenues Into the British Columbia treasury' at a record rate for the last 12\nmonths, and as the government's\nfiscal year 1937-38 came to an end\ntoday collections stood at the highest point in the history of the province.\nDetails of the revenue will not be\nrevealed until the government\nmeets the legislature in the fall.\nTreasury officials said they were\nnot even prepared to make a guess\nat the total. Unofficial estimates\nplaced lt at $30,000,000 with tbe possibility it might reach $31,000,000.\nIn practically all the major sources of revenue money has been rolling in stronger than in the fiscal\nyear 1936-37 which achieved the\nprevious high record of $28,102,612.\nThe government's estimated collection of $26,469,341 which was based\nlargely on the revenue of two years\nago, is far exceeded.\nThe treasury itself will not know\nfor some weeks the exact total of its\nrevenues since the books must be\ntallied up after the close of busi\nness today. Last * November Hon.\nJohn Hart( minister of finance, predicted a revenue of $29,000,000.\nThe income tax, producing one-\nquarter of the government's total\nrevenue, has gained substantially\nover the previous year. Against a\ncollection of $6,777,424 in 1936-37 this\nyear's total is expected to exceed\n$7,500,000,\nAutomobile owners contributed\nabout one-tilth of the treasury's income. With their ranks at a new\nnigh mark during the year it is estimated they paid about $6,000,000\nih licence fees and gasoline taxes\nagainst $5,346,000 in the previous\nyear.\nSales   of   beverages  from  the\ngovernment   liquor   stores   will\nprobably amount to around $4,-\n000,000, as compared with $3,607,-\n316 In 1936-37.\nUpwards of 19 per cent of the total revenue has come from the timber industry which contributed\nclose to $3,000,000 the previous year.\nThis has been maintained and augmented in the last few weeks by\nthe rush to reinstate unpaid timl\u00aber\nlicences.\nWorld   Exchanges\nNEW YORK, March 31 (AP) -\nThe French franc, which advanced\n.01 of a cent to 3.05%, was aided today by short covering apparently\nstimulated by rumors of possible\nformation of a National Front cabinet. Sterling lost % of a cent at\n$4.96%. The Canadian dollar was\ndown 3-16 ot a cent at 99%.\nClosing rates, Great Britain in\ndollars, others in cents: ,\nGreat Britain demand 4.96%, cables 4.96%, 60-day bills 4.95 11-16;\nFrance demand 3.05%, cables 3.05%;\nItaly demand 5.26%, cables 5.26%.\nDemands: Belgium 16.90; Germany free 40.15; registered 19.70, travel 24.50; Holland 55.36; Norway\n24.94; Sweden 25.57; Denmark 22.16;\nFinland 2.20%; Switzerland 22.29;\nPortugal 4.51%; Greece .91%; Poland 18.92; Czechoslovakia 3-49%; Jugoslavia 2,35; Hungary 19.90; Rumania .75; Argentine 33.10N; Brazil (free) 5.80N; Tokyo 28.96; Shanghai 26.25; Hong Kong 30.60; Mexico\nCity 23.00; Montreal in New York\n99.25; New York in Montreal 100.85.\n(N)\u2014Nominal.\nOIL ISSUES LOWER\nCALGARY, March 31 (CP). -\nWith few sales, oil issues were\nlower on the Calgary, stock exchange today. Home declined 10 to\n$1.00; C. & E. down 9 at 1.91 and\nRoyalite was $1.00 lower at $36.\nDavies and National Pete were point\nlosers while Vulcan was off 2 at\n85 and Spy Hill down a fraction at\n9%. Sunset gained % in fairly active trading and West Flank was\nfractionally higher at 12%.\nWant Ads Get Results\nBonds at New Lows\nNEW YORK, March 31 (AP)-The\nbond market moved to new low\nground today with the pace accelerated by a considerable drop in\nU. S. governments and top grade\ncorporate loans.\nU. S. governments closed 4-32ds to\nll-32ds lower.\nMost foreign groups recorded losses, the principal exceptions being\nFrench stamped 7%s, German 7s and\nPolish 6s.\nVancouver Unlisted\nBid Ask\nBayonne      09 .10\nColumbia 0 00% .01%\nDurango   04 .05\nEuphrates    02% \u2014\nALBERTA PROVIDES FOR COMMISSIONS\nTO INSURANCE AGENTS SO LONG AS\nPOLICIES ARE IN FORCE OR RENEWED\n1.27\n.09\n.32\n38.00\n.10\n.15\n.06\n13.00\n2.50\n5.50\n.20\nEDMONTON, March 31 (CP) -\nPayment of commissions on insurance policies while the policies are\nin force to agents after they have\nleft the employ of the company\nwas written into tbe Alberta Insurance act by the Alberta legislature\nin committee of the whole today.\nThe house added two sections to\nact requiring commission payment\nto agents or sub-agents on renewal\npremiums.\nHon. E. C. Manning, provincial\nsecretary,  introducing the  amend\nment, said it had been sought by\nmembers and had been proposed\npreviously by S. A. G. Barnes (Ind.\nS. C, Edmonton).\nAlthough there might be exceptions, Mr. Manning said he supported the principle. Fred Anderson\n(S. C\u201e Calgary) declared he supported tie amendment because the\nmen who wrote the insurance were\nentitled to the commissions on renewal premiums. J. J. Bowlen (Lib.,\nCalgary) said it might lead to reduction of the rate commissions.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAm Can  78\nAm For Pow .... 2%\nAm Smelt & Re 31%\nAm Tel    113\nAm Tob   60%\nAnaconda   23%\nAv Corp   2%\nBaldwin     5%\nBait & Ohio .... 4%\nBendix Av   9%\nBeth Steel   44\nBorden  16%\nCan Dry   13%\nCan Pac  5%\nCerro de Pasco 29\nChrysler   39%\nCon Gas NY.... 18\nC Wright Pfd .. 3%\nDupont  98\nEast Kodak   128\nFord Eng  _-. 4%\nFord of Can .... 14%\nFree Texas  20%\nGen Elec   29\nGen Foods    23%\nGen  Motors  .... 27%\nGoodrich     10%\nGranby    2%\nGreat Nor pfd .. 13%\nHowe Sound .... 25\nLow\n75%\n2%\n28%\n111\n58%\n21%\n2%\n5%\n4\n8%\n40\n15%\n12%\n5\n28%\n35%\n17\n314\n90%\n121%\n4%\n14%\n20\n2714\n23\n25%\n10\n2%\n12%\n25\nClose\n7514\n2%\n29 Vi\n111%\n59'\/,\n22%\n214\n5%\n4%\n8%\n41%\n15%\n12%\n5\n28%\n37%\n17%\n3%\n93%\n122\n4%\n14%\n20\n2\"f%\n23\n25%\n10\n2%\n13%\n25\nHud Motors\n5%\n5\n5%\nInter Nickel ....\n40%\n36%\n38%\nInter Tel & Tel\n6%\n5%\n5%\nKenn Cop\n28%\n27%\n28%\nMack Truck ....\n17%\n16%\n16%\nMont Ward\n27%\n25\n25-%\nNash Motors ....\n7%\n7\n7%\nN Y Central ....\n10%\n10\n10%\nPack Motors ....\n4\n3%\n3%\nPenn R R\n14%\n14%\n14%\nPhillips Petti ....\n28%\n25%\n25%\nRadio Corp\n5\n4%\n4%\nRem Rand ..\n10%\n9%\n10\nSafeway Stores\n13%\n12\n12%\nShell Uri\n10%\n10%\n10%\nS Cal Edison ....\n1914\n19%\n19%\nStan Oil of N J\n41%\n39%\n40%\nTexas Corp\n34\n32%\n33%\nTexas Gulf Sul\n27%\n26%\n26%\nTimken Roll ....\n31%\n31%\n31%\nUnder Type ....\n42\n41\n41\nUn Carbide \t\n61%\n57\n58%\nUn  Oil of Cal\n17%\n17%\n17%\nUn Aircraft\n21\n. 19%\n20%\nUn Pac \t\n60\n55%\n55%\nU S Rubber\n24%\n21\n22%\nU S Steel\n41%\n3D\n39%\nWarner Bros ....\n4\n3%\n3%\n68%\n61\n63%\nWest Un\n17%\n16%\n16%\nWoolworth   \t\n37\n36\n\u202236%\nYellow Truck \u201e\n10%\n9%\n^\nKILLAM IS AGAIN\nHEAD B. C. PULP\nVANCOUVER, March 31 (CP) -\nOfficers and directors of British Columbia Pulp St Paper company were\nreelected at the annual meeting here\ntoday.\nLawrence Killam is president;\nGeorge Kidd, vice-president; O. A.\nJorgensen, treasurer; and W. H.\nMalkin, R. C. Buchanan, Cecil Kil-\nlan and I, W. Killam, directors.\nAnnual reports presented at the\nmeeting showed net profit for 1937\nwas $225,001 compared with $15,-\n214 in the previous 12 months.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, March 31 (CP) -\nPrices ruled steady on the produce\nsection of the Canadian commodity\nexchange today.\nButter spot: Quebec grass regraded 36A; New Zealand finest 33%.\nEggs spot: Ontario A large 22A.\nButter futures: Steady and unchanged, April 33%.\nDow-Jones Averages\nClose   Change\n30 industrials \u201e   98.95-off 2.02\n20 rails     19.00\u2014off   .23\n20 utilities    1S.14\u2014off   .04\n(Due to wire trouble average\nrange unavailable).\nWinnipeg Wheal\nDown Two Cents\nWINNIPEG, March 31 (CP). -\nWinnipeg wheat futures and cash\nprices tumbled more than two\ncents today. Profit-taking and lower outside markets caused futures\nto drop while in addition lull in\ndemand caused cash spreads to narrow.\nFutures closed 2%\u20141% cents\nlower, May $1.20%, July $1.09% and\nOctober 88%\u201489 cents.\nLarge advances for top grades of\nCanadian wheat Monday encouraged enlarged farmers deliveries. No,\n1 Northern premium fell three cents\nyesterday and two today to 24 cents\nabove the May future while No, 2\ndeclined four yesterday and three\ntoday to 14 cents premium. No. 3\ngrade was at a discount of five\ncents, basis May future. Durums\nwere a cent better.\nThe May wheat future showed an\nadvance of 6% cents at the open\ntoday but profit-taking followed reports of precipitation in western\nCanada and the United States. Even\nfears of frost in the U. S. southwest\nfailed ot check scattered selling.\nWeakness in stocks at the close\ncaused additional sales.\nOnly a small export business In\nCanadian wheat and rye could be\nconfined today.\nLiverpool closed 1%\u2014l%d lower,\nreflecting declines of North Ameri*\ncan markets yesterday, poor demand for wheat and lower Australian offers. Rains in the Argentine\nreplenished sub-soil moisture there\nand Buenos Aires futures slumped\nfractionally.\nCoarse grains averaged lower but\nrye supported by export firms,\nmoved % higher in late dealings.\nDIVIDEND  PAYABLE    '\nVANCOUVER, March 31 (CP).\u2014\nInterinm dividend of Island Moun\u00bb\ntain Mines Ltd., ot five cents per\nshare, will be payable May 10 to\nshareholders of records April 14.\nA previous announcement declare\ned the dividend payable to share;\nholders of record April 15.\nNEW YORK, March 31 (AP) -\nThe General Electric company and\nthe United Electrical Radio and Machine Workers of America, a committee for industrial organization affiliate, signed a one-year contract\ntoday. .   '\n..\nYou Have Ideas \u2666\u2666\u2666\nVoice Them Through the\nWhat Do You Think\"\nColumns of the Nelson Daily News\nLetters to the Editor perform a valuable public service. They express public opinion on a great variety\nof subjects. They are widely read by members of governments, by' leaders in community affairs, by the\ngeneral public. Often plans of great public importance have first seen the light through a suggestion in\na Letter to the Editor.\nOpinions can be expressed on even the most acad\u00ab\nemic matters. All are interested in the views of their\nfellow men.\nA letter about Hitlerism, about the success or\nfailure of the Five-Year'plan in Russia, the recent\ndecisions in the Alberta Social Credit cases, the reasons we now hear little about the \"School of Seven\"\nin art, the latest literature\u2014about anything under\nthe sun\u2014will be read with interest and may be tha\nmeans of starting to move an avalanche of thought\nthat may influence the course of the world.\nThe Daily News welcomes Letters to the Editor.\nWe will use a nom-de-plume if the writer so desires.\nAll we ask is that we are given, for our information\nand as evidence of good faith, the actual name of the\nwriter. It need not be published, though letters over\nthe writer's actual name often bear most weight.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\n ppppt\nmw~ww^:\nPAGE TWELVE-\n\u2014\u2014        NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY MORNING, APRIL 1, 1938\nNEO-CHFMICAL\nFOOD\nA tonic unsurpassed for rundown conditions.\nRegular size  If 1.10\nEconomy size .... If 2.45\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Go.\nWOLVERHAMPTON, Eng (CP)\n\u2014Barred by the Football association\nfrom a continental tour last sum\nmer, Wolverhampton Wanderers\nhave received permission to play\nat Prague, Vienna, Budapest, Katowice and Paris' at the end of the\nEnglish league .season.\nLMadlm, Trail's\nFirst White Baby,\nPasses al Coast\nrison, and a brother, John MacLlm,\nboth of Trail.\nA few years ago Mr. MacLim\nwas in an automobile accident on\nthe Rossland road, and It Is believed\nthe effects of injuries received then\nwere somewhat responsible for his\nillness.\nTRAIL, B.C., ttarch 31 \u2014 Louis\nMacLlm, 41, the first white person\nto be born in Trail, died this morning at New Westminster, according\nto a report received by hiB father,\nA. E. MacLim. He had been ill for\nfive weeks, and went, to the coast\nabout two weeks ago.\nHe was a great hunter, and frequently to6k out parties acting in\nthe capacity of guide. Mr. MacLlm\nwas a steel worker and high rigger\nby trade, and worked.on several big\nconstruction Jobs in different parts\nof the United States.\nBesides his parents, he ls survived by a sister, Mrs. Alex Mor-\nFuneral of Mrs.\nKoteras at Fernie\nFERNIE, B. C\u2014The funeral ol\nMrs. Kasmar Koteras, 21, who died\nal Kamloops March 22, was he|d in\nFernie Monday and was very largely attended. Services were conduct'\ned by Rev. Father John Knox, S.J.\nPallbearers ware John-Pfoh, Hugh\nStewart, Eddie Swiderski, Louis Ku-\nbos, Mike Petrosky and Michael\nMlsura. Mrs. Koteras is survived by\nher husband, her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Joseph Salanski and several\nbrothers.\n'hv Not a Want Ad!\nBUY THE BEST\nand (Payofectd\/\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY SPECIALS\nGROCERY VALUES\nCampbell's Tomato\nSoup: 3 tint\t\nBeit Foods Mayonnaise: 8 ox. jar....\n25c\n22c\nMaxwell House OQ\nCoffee: Lb. tin 0\u00ab\/C\nTender Leaf Superior Quality Tea: OQ\n7 ox. pkt LVK,\nROYAL CITY CANNED\nFOOD SPECIALS\n2 tins Tomatoes, 2 tins No. 5 Peas, 2 tins\nGreen Cut Beans, 1 tin Golden Corn\u2014 OQg\\\n98o value for \u00b0'r\nASPARAGUS CUTTINGS\u2014Malkln's\nBest, choice; 2 tins\t\nCARROTS AND PEAS\u2014\n2 tins \t\nSPAGHETTI AND TOMATO 8AUCE\nWITH CHEESE-16-oz. tins; 2 for\t\nTOMATO KETCHUP-Helnz;\n2 bottles \t\nOLD FASHIONED CUCUMBER\nPICKLESr-Helnz; special, 20-oz. Jar\t\nCHEESE\u2014Finest Ontario Medium;\nIb\t\nMACARONI-Creamette;\n2 pkts\t\nFANCY SOCKEYE SALMON\u2014Nabob,\nVz's] 2 tins \t\n290\n29(5\nW\n250\nW\n3W.\nTUNA FI8H\u2014Solid Meat,\n2 tins \t\nVis;\nEGGS\u2014Fresh Local Grade A-Large;\n2 doz\t\nSALT\u2014Windsor Iodized;\n2 cartons\t\nICING SUGAR\u2014\n2-lb. carton \t\nYELLOW SUGAR-\n3 Ibs\t\nRAISINS\u2014Australian Seedless;\n2 Ibs\t\nPRUNES\u2014Nabob, extra large size;\n2-lb. carton \t\nCAT AND DOG FOOD-Pard;\n2 tl ns \t\nCLEANSER-Old Dutch;\n2 tl ns\t\nTOILET TISSUE\u2014Purox;\n3 rolls \t\nSOAP\u2014P. & G.;\n3 bars \t\nFLOOR WAX\u2014Johnson's, all kinds;\ntin  \t\n25*\n25(5\n29U\nm\nlot\nw\nFRESH FRUITS and VEGETABLES\n250\nBANANAS-FIrm ripe fruit;\n3 Ibs\t\nORANGES: Navels,\nFamily sixe, dox   1!)**?\n5 doxen   Sdti\nPACKED IN MESH BACS\nExtra large, 20 for  05^\nLarge sixe, 30 for 65f\nMedium, 36 for  65c1\nGRAPEFRUIT-\nSugar; 5 for\t\nNo-Needa\nm\nGRAPEFRUIT-Texas Pink\nFlesh;2 for \t\nGREEN PEAS-Fresh;\n2 Ibs\t\nASPARAGUS-Fresh;\nper Ib \u25a0.\t\nSPINACH\u2014Fresh Walla Walla;\n2 Ib\t\nRADISHES, GREEN ONIONS\u2014\nBunch   \t\nNEW CARROTS\u2014\n4 bunches \t\nRHUBARB\u2014Hothouse, fancy\nquality; 2 Ibs\t\nLETTUCE-Large heads;\n2 for\t\nA  competent\ndelivery service.\nUphill\n9 a.m.      11 a.m.\n2 p.m.       4 p.m.\nFairview\n10 a.m.     3 p.m.\nNELSON'S FINEST FOOD SERVICE\n.     10    PHONES    11\nSATIN - GL0\nSALE\nContinues Today and Next Week\n,00\n0FF2CAL\n50i\noffQUARTS\n251\noff PINTS\nSATIN-GLO\nENAMEL\nFor Furniture\nCALGARY,   EDMONTON\nCHARTERS   CHANGED\nEDMONTON, March 31 (CP) -\nAmendments to Calgary and Edmonton city charters were approved by the Alberta legislature in\ncommittee of the whole today and\nnow stand for third reading. The\namendments included authority to\ngive final ratification to the Fortin\ndebt refunding plan.\nSATIN-GLO\nVARNISH\nFor Floors\nSATIN-GLO\nSATIN FINISH\nFor Walls\nDO YOUR\nSPRING\nDECORATING\nNOW\nCranbrook Airport Equipped With\nAll Facilities for New Air Lines\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 203 Medical Arts Bldg\nCRANBROOK,\nthe Inauguration of the new Trans- i\nCanada Airmail service, the Cranbrook airport was Improved by the\ninstallation of marking lights and a\nrevolving beam, making it not only\na perfect field commercially, but\na beauty centre of the valley during\nthe dark hours of the night. White\nlights mark the runway of the field.\nThe ends are indicated by green\nlights and red obstruction lights are\nplaced on the hangar, the Kimberley\nrailway line, the adjacent buildings,\nand the aerial beams.\nThe new revolving beam tower\nat the remote control station of the\nradio beam transmission station, is\nnow complete and ls equipped with\na 1000 watt lamp which revolves a\nfinger of 3,000,000 candle power of\nreflected light from sundown to sunrise. The tower, which is topped by\nthe light beacon, is 51 feet high. The\nlight is automatically regulated to\nturn on and ofi by a sauter clock\nin the remote control station building. It is lined up with the sound\nbeam beacon and revolves the same\ncourse. With the revolving of the\nsemi-spherical reflector at the in-\nterval when the light at 180 degrees is invisible from an angle, an\nobstruction light at the base of the\nreflector automatically turns on\nshowing ambient aircraft the on-\ncourse signal visibly, just as the\nsound beam shows it orally.\nHEATER FOR\nBEAM  RAMP\nThe Deam lamP 's equipped with\na heater so that even very low temperatures cannot interfere with the\ndaily turning on and off. Also'on\nthe beam tower is the anemoneter\nfor recording velocity and direction\nof the wind, and the mounting for\nthe wind cone is close to the top of\nthe tower.\nAn Important Item In the equipping of the station was the Installation of the sauter clock to register slderlal time by which automatic adjustment of the revolving\nbeam Is regulated. Slderlal time,\nused In adjusting the revolving\nbeam, Is star time, as against sun\ntime, which does not record the\nday by day differences In duration\nof light. All obstructions and\nboundary lights are regulated by\nthe sauter clock.\nThe Dominion meteorological bureau at the remote control station at\nCranbrook has inaugurated a new\nschedule with two sets of code messages anent weather conditions required by headquarters daily. The\nfirst, a word code, is sent off at 8:30\na.m. and again at 5:30 p.m. and a\nfigure code report on speciol observations sent off at 11 a.m. The report is sent out by teletype from\nall stations and the whole coordinated for weather forecasting work.\nFLIGHT PLAN FORMULATED\nTrans-Canada training flights\nhave been conducted on the western\nsection over the mountains and\nweather reports covering the entire\nroute east to Lethbridge were analyzed and a flight plan formulated.\nDuring the flight weather reports\nare checked against ground reports\nand terrain information added. As\neach of the radio range stations is\napproached its operation is checked,\nthen checked again as the plane\nleaves the range station.\nThe training for the pilots in\neluded instruction in mechanical\nfunctions, primary transport instruction, instrument flying, local\nradio range flying, local night fly\nIng, advanced instrument and radio\nrange Hying.\nThe department of transport representatives in Cranbrook are now\noccupying their new building constructed at the airport near the hangar. The building is divided into\ntwo main sections, one for the T.C.A.\noffice with transmitters for receiving and broadcasting and office\nequipment for the company representatives stationed here. The other\nhalf is occupied by the department\nof transport representatives, with\nthe remote control transmitter for\noperating the sound beam, the tele\ntype, and the various instruments\nof the Dominion meteorolpgical bureau.\nTELETYPE ALL-DAY\nAmong the most recent equipment for the station Is the teletype, which carries messages almost continuously through the day\nfrom the western circuit, which\nIncludes stations from Lethbridge\nto Vancouver. Once every hour\nweather conditions ere noted here\nas to temperature, pressure, cloud\nformations, celling and visibility,\nand sent on the Cranbrook keyboard out to the circuit. The two\nteletype   operators   stationed   at\nBayley Receives\na Club Bag From\nTrail City Staff\nTRAIL, B.C., March 31-D.  H.\nBy RUTH MoKOWAN\nB.C.,\u2014Preceding i    Cranbrook are L. Poekett and B,\nMarshall.\nThe celling here can usually be\ndetermined by the height of the\nclouds above*the mountains, but\nwhen the celling ls low\u2014seven or\neight thousand feet\u2014It la determined by balloons filled with hydrogen. These balloons are released and\ntimed as they rise at the rate of 400\nfeet a minute.\nAdverse weather conditions over\nthe mountains have delayed or caused cancellation of several of the\nscheduled early flights of the system.\nBayley, A.CJEJ!, retired member of\n\"     **        *      '--\u25a0ata\"'' *\nbag,\nthe \"city itaff at an informal func-\nthe\" city engineering statf, was the\nrecipient ofa club bag, present of\nSteel Embedded in\nWynndel  Man's\nEye for Years\nWYNNDEL, B. C. \u2014 Gweedo\nBennedettl Is recovering after\nhaving a piece of steel removed\nfrom an eye. It had bean embedded there for several years. The\noperation was performed In a Calgary hospital.\nLavagne of Ymir\nSentenced Month\nTheft Groceries\nPleading guilty before John Cartmel, stipendiary magistrate, to\ncharge of theft, William Lavagne of\nYmir was sentenced Thursday to\nserve a month In jail. He was arrest\ned a week ago and held on-remand\nfor a week, and his sentence dated\nfrom the time of arrest. Lavagne\nwas charged with stealing groceries\nwhich had been set out for shipment\nREXALL STORE\ntion In the city hall auditorium this\nafternoon.\nMayor E. L. Groutage made the\npresentation. \u2022\nMr. Bayley first joined the city\nstaff in 1926. He came to Trail that\nyear to supervise laying of pavement on. Bay avenue and Riverside\naveAue, and reading In a notice of\na council meeting that S. S. McDIarmid, city engineer, required assistance, joined the staff as assistant\ncity engineer. It was not long before he was made building inspector. Later he acquired the additional\nposition of school engineer. His\nduties soon mounted, and he later\ntook charge of electrical inspection\nahd plumbing Inspection. He was\nalso made deputy assessor, which\nposition he held m to the time of\nhis retirement.\nWILLOW POINT MAN\nAn oldtimer in the Kootenays.\nMr. Bayley arrived at Willow Point,\nsix miles from Nelson, in 1011.\nThere he ranched until war was\ndeclared in 1914. He served four\nyears overseas with the Royal Engineers. On returning to Nelson\nafter the armistice, he was employed by the provincial water\nrights department, in which he\nworked until coming to the smelter\n(ulicura\nSOAP\n2# \u00bb\nOINTMENT\ncake    2W.nd50tf\nSOLD BY\n^H\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nBEDROOM FOR RENT. CENTRAL\nlocation. Ph. 716-L. (752)\nFOR SALE HOUSEHOLD FURN1-\nture. 511 Silica St.   > (691)\nTHE STAR\n.tlion'i   Moat   Pd\nCAFE\nIl   Nilisn'i   Moat   Popul\nModernize -\nPLUMBING\nPHONI III\nB.C.N.VMBMO\n\u00ab HE ATI NO CO.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\n-PHONE 25-\nPRESOUFTION\nW,l> *. C.-W-.*.. Ck.,.1\",\nHenry's Pharmacy\nM!l)i.*l  AMI HOC-:\nFOR   SALE   ALL   HOUSEHOLD\ngoods. Frigidaire. 908 Stanley St.\n(753)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nDon't forget tomorrow's April 2.\nScouts' Apple Day. (360)\nFor ' Gardening Tools, Wheelbarrows, Bamboo Rakes, Lawn\nGrass Seed, try Hlpperson's.   (761)\nBuy your rose trees from the\ngrower, 100 varieties. List free. H.\nKitchener, Nelson, B. C.        (671)\nEDISON MAZDA LAMP8. F. H.\nSMITH, PHONE 666, 316 Baker SL\n(707)\nElectrical Contracting, Free estimate. McKAY & STRETTON.\n(179)\nCop Emoff, the local policeman,\ncopped off his Corns, Calluses and\nBunions with Cress Corn and Bunion Salves. Featured by MANN,\nRUTHERFORD Co., and all drug\ncounters. (680)\nWhen you stand within a foot of\nyour 193S KELVINATOR you can\nhardly hear the mechanism running.\nMcKAY t. 8TRETT0N\n(706)\ncity.\nHe will leave soon for California\nlo spend a vacation. On returning\nhe proposes to remain in TraiL\nGIVEN SEND-OFF\nAT NEW DENVER\nMrs. J. E. Mathieson\nand Daughter Go\nto North\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-Mrs. J. E,\nMathieson and daughter, Irma have\nleft for Prince Rupert, to join Mr.\nMathieson, who has been there all\nwinter, and who is forest ranger\nthere.\nMrs. J. Taylor entertained at the\ntea hour recently in honoi of Mrs.\nMathieson.\nInvited guests were Mrs. Mathieson, Mrs. F. M. Brady, Mrs. A Francis, Mrs. J. Greer, Mrs. L. W. Sells,\nMrs. J. Dewar, Miss Gladys Reynolds and Miss Nellie Alywin Miss\nReynolds and Miss Alywin helped\nthe hostess serve lunch.\nAt the home of Mrs. A. Francis,\nthe Women's association of the United church held a farewell tea\nfor Mrs. Mathieson.\nGames and contests held sway.\nMrs. E. Fier wbn a prize.\nMrs. O. V. White presented Mrs.\nMathieson with an address and a\nMadiera tea cloth from the members. Mrs. F. M. Brady gave several selections at the piano.\nMrs, Francis was assisted In serving tea by Mrs. F. Brady, Mrs. E.\nTier, Mrs. E. Adair and Mrs. E.\nKirkwood.\nThose present were: Mrs. J. E. Mathieson, Mrs. F. Brady, Mrs. J.\nDewar, Mrs. E. Angrignon, Mrs. E.\nKirkwood, Mrs. E. Tier, Mrs. J. Tier,\nMrs. A, Carter, Miss Inga Carter,\nMiss Vera Coombs, Miss Gladys\nCoombs, Mrs. A. Coombs, Miss Lillian Boates, Mrs. J. Depretto, Mrs.\nW. J. George, Mrs. J. Taylor, Miss\nGladys Reynolds, Mrs. E. Adair,\nMrs, L. R. Campbell, Mrs. W. Cropp,\nMrs. F. Campbell, Mrs. A. Nesmith,\nMrs. M. J. Nesmith, Mrs. A. D.\nTrickett, Mrs. G. Burkitt, Mrs. J.\nBurkitt, Mrs. O. V. White, Mrs. H.\nK. Johnston and Mrs. A. Francis.\nMORE ABOUT\nCANADA IN WAR\n(Contlnu d From Page One)\nCommand in chief of the militia\nwould continue to be vested in the\nKing, \"and shall be exercised and\nadministered by the governor-general acting by and with the advice\nof the King's privy council for Canada.\" The present act vesta command in the King and says such\ncommand shall be exercised by him\ner by the governor-general as his\nrepresentative.\nCONSCRIPTION\nConscription of males from 18 to\n60 might be enforced \"providing\nthat the governor-general acting by\nand with the advice of the King's\nprivy council for Canada, may, if.\nparliament has passed an act authorizing such action, require all tho\nmale inhabitants of Canada capable\nof bearing arms to serve in the case\nof a levee en masse.\" The present\nact provides the governor-general\nmay require the affected males to\nbear arms, there being no qualifying provisions to the exercise of this\nauthority.\nAnother amendmet would take\naway from the governor-general\nand transfer to the governor-in-\ncouncil, the power to detail an officer \"who shall be charged with\nthe military command of the militia.\"\nA specific act of parliament would\nbe required for the placing of troops\non service beyond Canada \"for the\ndefence thereof.\" The present act\ngives this power to the governor-\nln-council \"at any time that it appears reasonable so to do by reason\njf emergency.\"\nThe bills would Drovide that Dar-\nliament must be convened within\n15 days when it is proposed to place\nCanadian forces on duty outside\nCanada. The present act requires\nthe summoning of parliament within 15 days when the militia is placed on active service but does not\nmake a prior meeting of parliament\na condition of putting forces on active duty outside Canada.\nIf You Are More\nCONSERVATIVE\nCome to Emory's!\nWhen you look for a new\nsuit, do you shy sway;\nfrom wild patterns and\nschoolboy styles? Do you\nlike tailored style and soft\ncolors? If so, come to Emory's today and we'll give\nyou- the right suit for\nspring wear.\n$27.50\nALSO UP TO\n$30.25 $35.00 $40.00\nEMORY'S\n*** Limited    W\nWynndel Honors\nMrs. T. Slingsby\nWYNNDEL, B. C. \u2014 Wynndel\nWomen's Institute met March 24. A\nsocial hour honored Mrs. T. Slingsby, on her 70th birthday. A large\nnumber of gbests were invited for\nthe occasion. A presentation was\nmade the guest of honor by the institute, which was suitably acknowledged.\n\"Love's Old Sweet Song\" by Mn.\nC. KIndley and Mrs. R. Eakin, and\na \"girl's name\" contest were features of entertainment. Refreshments were served by the institut**\ncommittee.\nMrs. Dunseath was winner of th*\ncontest.\nOf the 3,000,000 lepers in thi\nworld, continental United Stata\ncontains merely 1200.\nFrlgldalre's  Silent   Meter-Miser\ncuts current cost deeper than ever,\nonly three moving parts. Hlppersons,\n(751)\nWhile they last\u2014two Tubs and a\nBench with every EASY Vacuum\nCup Washer \u2014 5 year guarantee\nEA8Y Terms\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE\n(708)\nNELSON - SPOKANE\nEffective Immediately, GREYHOUND LINE8 announce\nthrough service to Spokane via\nTrail DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY.\nLv. Nelson   11:00 a.m.\nAr. Trail     1:10 p.m.\nLv. Trail     1:45 p.m.\nAr. Spokane    7:00 p.m.\nDirect communication with Spokane for Seattle, Vancouver!\nPortland, Chicago and Salt Lake\nCity.\nGreyhound Lines\n221 Baker St. Phone 800\n(237)\nCIVIC\nTODAY AND\nSATURDAY\nMatinee Saturday at 2:30 p.m.       Complete at 7:00 and 9:02 p.m.\nAdmission: Matinee 25c 10c; Evenings 30c, 16c.\nm \u25a0>\u25a0\u00bb!! mm\nSAMUEL GOLDWYN\nesisittrs\nam      M\nIII****    -\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0\u00bb\u2014   I  |M\nz__j__m_%\n*M\n^7-\/\/y it   . *  . r\u00ab*\nf\u00a3$^^t\nWEST KOOTENAY DRAMA FESTIVAL\nCOMING April 4-5-6\nTHREE ONE-ACT PLAY8 EACH EVENING\nSeason Tickets (Transferable)\u2014Adults $1.00, Students 50c\nOn Sale at Mann, Rutherford Co.\nSpring Merchandise\nfor Men, Boys and Ladies\nOur store has been remodelled and redecorated and we\nthink that you will find shopping here attractive and\nconvenient.\nLADIES' SHOES are our specialty, and we are featuring\nthe season's finest assortment at one price only. I\nPair   \t\nGODFREYS'\nLIMITED\nLZLm \u25a0 I k *\u25a0\/i\n*_sM*M!Mftft&\nJ$$5$$$$-$$$S$$$$$-5$$$$$$\u00ab^^\nWTOVWW^fWWW^^\nmVAANVW\/i\n$$$$$$$$$\nTODAY AND\nSATURDAY\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT\n2:00, 7:00 and 9:02\nBringing love to hearts\nfilled with hate...a twinkle\nto eyes brimming with\ntears...in a picture of\nwarming loveliness for all\nof you who hoped that\nsome day, somewhere,\n\"Heidi\" would come fo\nlaughing,loving life,\nand Shirley would play ill\ntpi i pit r*\nTEMPLE\nHEIDI\nA 20th Century-Fox Picture with\nJEAN HERSHOU\nARTHUR TREACHER\nHELEN WESTLEY\nPAULINE MOORE \u2022THOMAS BECK\nMARY NASH \u2022 SIDNEY BLACKMER\nMADY CHRISTIANS \u2022 SIG RUMANN\nAt 2:44, 7:34 and 9:46\nADDED TREATS\nColored Cartoon\nComedy\n\"PERSONALITY\nPARADE\"\nAnd World Events\nin\nParamount  Newt\ny^ygK3^_y^3-E3y_333$3$$3Sy,li-$**-3S''*3-**^^ * *^\/^A^\/W^X^^\/:^ft^\nV&V&X)VX!&&)-v&x&^^\n_^HH\n_mmmSmmmm\nMi.^k.\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1938_04_01","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0413416","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}