{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0414314":{"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":"2022-05-11","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1938-05-07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414314\/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":"  .\\i\\^mmiK^ mummmM\\i. i, ,  i  urn jpuphbi jh\u25a0   n  \u00abii;tijH..\u25a0\u25a0\nSmall But Fast Fieldjiines Up.:\nfor Kentucky Derby Today\n\u2014Pa&e Nine\nVOLUME 17\n*i\u00bb* \/**\u00bb \"^.   '\u25a0' \u2022\u00bb\u2022\n5H3\nToronto, Montreal and New York\nStock Markets Higher\n\u2014Pa&e Eleven\nFIVE.CENTS PER COPY\n38B\n8    ' *k     NELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING. MAY 7.\n1938.\nNUMBER 15\nil and\nChoirs Take\nh\nNelson Has Three and\nProcter One; 24\nCompete\nORCHESTRA WINS\nONLY ENCORE\nTwenty four choirs sang their\nway Into the hearts of Kootenay\nMusic festival audiences Friday as\nschool children ot the district had\ntheir big day of choral singing. They\nmade a.real job of their singing,\nand won repeated commendation\nfrom Mrs. Elizabeth Morrison ot\nSaskatoon,, Sask., adjudicator.\nOf the nine school and Junior\nchoir classes, lour were won by\nTrail, three.by Nelson, one by Tadanac and one by Procter. Trail arid\nNelson divided honors evenly In the\nschool choir classes, each taking two\nevents. Even the school championship was divided evenly, for .it\nwas awarded to the choir with the\nhighest marks;and Miss Eva A. Harwell's, choir from Grades I and II,\nEast Trail, tied with\/Miss Winifred\nBorthwick's choir Irom Grades III\nand IV, Nelson Central. Possession\nol the. shield will rest six months\nwith eaqh.\nMrs. Morrison was captivated by,\nand in her turn completely won, the\nyoung choristers. Twice, to emphasize points she wished .to make in\nher .adjudication, she conducted\ntrom the platform, the tint time\ntaking St Paul's boys of Nelson and\nTrail Central boys In \"With Jockey\nto the'Fair\",' arid at the dose leading three girls' church choirs\u2014St.\nAndrew's of .Kaslo, St. Paul's ot\nNelson and St Andrew's of Trail-\nin \"Jesu, Joyaunce ot My Heart\".\niMuii.rtfigKt, .     \u2022 -;f';r\n; Once, when a winning choir broke\ninto 'applause,-\u25a0 she admonished it\nwith: \"ltoL*lniuto\u00abtwiWbt'' W>\nIng th'atTto wlrmet* We conel8>'\neration for less fortunate competitors. And then she took .the sting'\nout of' the rebuke by leading the\naudience in applause lor the .victors.\nRepeatedly, Mrs. Morrison voiced\nher appreciation.of the fine singing\not younger competitors, and again\nand' again the paid tribute to the\nteachers ot these choral groups .and\not the vocal, piano and violin soloists. Children in this district were\nbeing well taught she asserted.\n\"You hIV* more beautiful children, around here than I've seen in\nB.c!\/Sa\u00abd. that'i< no blarney,\" she\ndeclared on another occasion.\nMn. Morrison's adjudications\nwere eagerly \\awalted at the conclusion of each class, not only by\ncompetition waiting to learn how\nthey, had done, but also by the audience, lor in addition to her keen\nappreciation of the work put into\ntraining and her constructive critical, comment upon performances,\noften illustrated, she delivered her\nadjudlcatloni with'a fine personal\nhumor.\nAlmost as often as she told competitors how to do better she gave\nconductors hints on how to obtain\nimproved performances..\nThe evening . session of the festival again produced music ot high\nstandard. It encompassed also a\nwide range ot musical entertainment and was thoroughly Interesting to the audience at all times.\nHIGHEST MARK8\nHighest marks ot the festival to\n\u2022date were scored by the Nelson\nString orchestra in the elementary\norchestra class, final event on the\nFriday program. Mrs. Morrison gave\nthis orchestra 92 and 90, a total of\n'(Continued on Page Two)\nQUEBEC WOMEN ARE TOLD\nTO WEAR MODEST DRESS\nQUEBEC May 8\u2022 (CP)^-Quebee\nwomen were reminded today of\n\"Christian morality's requirements\"\nin the matter of dress by La Sem-\naine Heligieuse, official organ of the\nSoman Catholic Diocese ot Que\nbee\nAppearing over the signature ot\nCardinal Rodrlgue Villeneuve, the\nreminder drew the \u25a0 attention of\nwomen to the number, ot open air\nreligious, services, which will accompany the Eucharlstlc Congress\nHere next month and to church\nrule* of modest garb.\nTORONTO SYNOD SHELVES\nMARRIAGE TEST MOTION\nTORONTO, May 8 (CP)-TOronto\nsynod of the Anglican church decided, today to shelve tor.* year\nI. motion urging the synod to seek\nprovincial legislation making it necessary tor marriage applicants to\nhave medical certificates \"showing\nfreedom trom the social disease,, active tuberculosis or mental diseases\nincluding epilepsy.\"\nThe Day's Winners\nPIANO\u2014\nDuet, under 14 \u2014 Catharine\nMaude Argyle and Pamela Dewdney, Nelson, 89, 88\u2014.177.\nDuet under 17 \u2014 Goldie E.\nWalker and Bob C. Weir, Creston, 85, 89-174.\nVOCAL-\nYoung vocalist, low voice, under 20\u2014Carlyle Ferguson, Nelson, 84.\nVocal solo. In Italian\u2014Mrs. G.\nM. Williscroft, Nelson, 84.\nMale duet, open\u2014Sidney Horswill and Donald' Seattle, Nelson,\n89.\nLyric soprano, open\u2014 prances\nM. Knott, Canyon, 87,84\u2014171.\nContralto solo, open\u2014Nan Armstrong,; Canyon, 89, 90\u2014179.\nJunior championship \u2014 Donald\nBrown* .'\u2022-.' \u25a0\n: CH0IR8-. ..J,,    .\nSmall; or rural school choln,\none or two classrooms\u2014Procter\nSuperior school, Procter, 84, 86\u2014\n170. '.'.\u25a0'\nSmall or rural school choirs,\nthree- or four classrooms\u2014Tadanac school choir, Tadanac, 87, 88\u2014\n176.    -   \u25a0 ,'..:\u2022\nBoys'  choir\u20148t.  Paul's choir,\nNelson, 89, 89-178.\nDay school choln:\nGrades I and II -East Trill\nschool, 89, 91-180.\nGrades III and IV - Nelson\nCentral school, 91, 89-180,\nGrades V and VI - Nelson\nCentral, 8\u00bb\u201e90-r17V .    ,\n.    Grades VII and VIII -Trill\nCentral, Choir B, 84, 89-173.\nSchool .championship \u2014 Esit\nTrail, Grades I and II and Nelson\nCentral, Grades III and IV, tied,\n' 1W\"MM\u00a3\n'    Junior choir, girls or mixed\u2014\n.', St .Andrews Trail, 88,, 88-17'\nJunior, church choirs-*, An-\n,\u2022 *w'^^i),-\u00ab,;\u00ab-i7i\u00a3 r --:\u2022\u2022\nElementary orchestra \u2014 Nelson\nString' oreh\u00bb\u00abri,.'W,\/90-^8#\nToday's Program'\n AFTERNOON\n8:30\u2014Ladles' choln, open; Trail\nLadles'.choir.' -   '-'\u25a0\u25a0''    '*\n8:45 \u2014 Church choirs, open; St.\nPaul's, Nelson.\n3:00 \u2014 Nelson String orchestra,\ncourtesy, program,\n.   3:15\u2014Instrumental     ensemble;\nIsobel Wcnstrop, George Kerr and\n. Frank Hosek, Hillcrest, Alta,    '\n\"3:25\u2014Solo  for, bass instrument;\nWilliam Blinston, Cranbrook.\n3:30\u2014Quartette, open; Frank\nHosek, Billy Royle, George Kerr\nand.W. H. Moser, Hillcrest,-Alta.\n3:4\/MMllltary or brass band,\nopen; Rossland City band, Cranbrook City Legion band.\n4:00-Violin ensemble; Blairmore ensemble,.Blairmore, Alta.\n\u00abykNiNQr,*,\n8:30\u2014Mezzo soprano, open; Mrs.\nDaisy -Clarke, Erickson, Mrs. G.\nM Williscroft, Nelson.\n8:90\u2014Instrumental solo,' challenge , Competition;, Otto Nicder-\nman,' Trail.\n9:00\u2014Ladies' duet open; Francis Knott and Mary Kalthammer,\nCanyon.\n9:J5\u2014Vocal solo, senior championship; winners Classes 28 to 31.\n9:25\u2014Mixed Quartette, under\n20; Donald Brown; Bob Graham,\nGuy Cawley and Carlyle Ferguson, Nelson. '.\n9:30\u2014Vocal solo, senior cham\npionshlp; winners daises 33 to\n\u25a0\u00bb: .-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 *\n8:40\u2014Duet for violin and piano,\nopen: Mrs. E. A. Tweeddale, and\nOtta Nlederman, Trail; Georgette\nDau and George Kerr, - Hillcrest,\nAlta.; Freda Antrobus and Frank\nHosek, Hillcrest, Alta.\n9:55\u2014Male voice choirs, service\nclubs.or lodges; Rotary Club of\nNelson.\nTOM LYNCH DEAD\nBRIDGEPORT, Conn, May 8 \u2014\n(CP) \u2014Tom Lyrtch, onldt the best-\nknown figures In the circus world\nwho knew P. T. Barnum, died last\nflight *t his home here. He was 82.\nMAJOR OPERATION\nPERFORMED ON SHIP\nVICTORIA, May 8 ,(CP)-Appar'\nently more operations have been\nperformed aboard the Canadian\nAustralasian Liner Niagara than on\nany. other Pacific liner. In the last\nsix years at least 12.major operations have been. performed while\nthe vessel was steaming at tea,\nbetween Victoria and Australia.\nWhen- the Niagara' arrived here\ntoday her surgeon, Dr. A. White,\nreported he had performed an,operation for appendicitis last Tuesday, night on 16-year-old Donald\nMacDonald of Sydney, one ot the\ncadet stewards.  .\nIL DUCE SHOWS\nHITLER PARTOF\nGREAT ARMY OF\n9,000,000 TOJOM\nNazi Chief Admires as\nHuge War Machine\n: Is Exhibited\nTO BE SHOWN THE\nAIR FORCE TODAY\n\u25a0,'.: i \u2022\u25a0* ' v? '.-.\"\u25a0\ns ROME, May 8 (AP) \u2014 Premier\nMussolini today showed Adolf\nHitler \u00bb sample of the 9,000,000\nmen he recently asserted he could\nmobilize In the event of war.,,\nThe part he exhibited\u2014some 30,-\n000 soldiers or one-third of one\npir cent Of his: asserted total manpower\u2014was Itself a war machine\nbristling with means of destruction.'1   ,.\".V '     '\"\nArtillery, tanks, armored can,\npolion (|t dispense\u2122 ind flame\nspreading units passed before the\neyes of the Fascist ind Nail lead\ners for more than two hours with\nII Dues proudly pointing to the\narmed force he created and the\nfuehrer showing his admiration.\nMen ready for combat women\nprepared for Work behind the lines\nand boys bearing toy rifles as the\nstart of their military training-all\na part of Italy's vast war organization\u2014marched in the parade.\nYesterday Mussolini showed Hitler ' his, navy' In'- action-. Tomorrow\nhe will show him his air force,\nSHADOW OF      ,'\u25a0      r    '\nJ08EPH8TALIN\nOver this display of might as over\nall tjte German leader's consultations with Mussolini i hovered the\nshadow ot Joseph Stalin.     . ';\u2022\nInformed German circles say that\nback of all Hitler's bids for Italian\nsupport is his desire somehow to\neliminate Soviet' Russia : entirely\nfrom dnfluence in. Europe. To - do\n(this he wants first ot all to break\n.ttotij\u00bbjjf|J^ak ^u^.to rrtnci.\nted u navitg\npromised: to, bring all diplomatic\npressure ..possible upon. the Czechoslovakia government to grant the\nSudeten German's demands to\nloosen,' if not severe, the republic's\nalliance with,Russia.\nFIRE DAMAGES\nC>. STIAMER\nVANCOUVER, May 6,(CR) -\nFire which broke out aboard .the\nCanadian Pacific steamer Princess\nJoan in dock here today caused\nconsiderable' smoke- damage to'\nstaterooms and lounges in the tear\nof theiveisel. ,.\nFiremen had the blaze under control in less than an hour.\nI Crowds were attracted to the pier\nby smoke pouring 'from portholes,\nwindows and ^ntilators. The.tug\nQualicum stood by to tow the ship\ninto the harbor if the need arose\nbut her services were not heeded.\nTO  MARK   KING'S\nBIRTHDAY ON\n9\nJUNE\nOTTAWA, May 8' (CP)-A\n. proclamation was published today in the Canada Gazette set-\nting JUne 9 as the date on which\nthe. birthday, of King George\nVI will be officially celebrated.\nAlthough he was born'Dec. 14\nhis Majesty requested, on his\nascension that his birthday be\ncelebrated June 9. \"..\n j  '. ' ;\nARTIST ii!S\nVANWJYS, Calif;, May 8 (AP)\n\u2014Leonard Moore Davis,, 78, Internationally known artist died yesterday. He was known particularly\nfor-his .paintings of Alaska.\nTO REORGANIZE PARTY\nTORONTO, Miy 8 (CP)-Plani\nfor reorganization ot the Conservative party ranks In Ontario will be\nlaid before the Ontario Conservative association at its next executive meeting, Hon. Earl Rowa, provincial leader, declared today.\nKILLED BY FAILING TREE\nVICTORIA, May'8; (CP)- Alex\nTauno Sends, 27, head taller at the\nIndustrial Timber Mills camp six,\nYoubou, B.C., was instantly kilcd\nyesterday when struck on the head\nby a falling tree,   ,,,\nELLIOTT IMPROVES\nOTTAWA,, May 8 (CP)-Hon. J.\nC. Elliott postmaster general, has\nbeen Improving steadily.in hospital,\nwhere he has been I confined the\npart ,11 weeks, his physician said\ntoday. He will, be able to leavo hospital within a few days.    '\nUNKNOWINOLY HAD '*'\n\u25a0JHmMi CHECK\nSEATTLE, May 8 (AP) \u2014 Cur-\niosity, they say, killed a cat, but.\nit never even nudged John F. Dore,\"\nJr., son of Seattle's late mayor. He\ndiscovered the-letter he, casually\ncarried in his coat around town\nand On a yachting trip,;contained\na check from Uncle Sam lor $1\n241.061. The check represented a\nWPA grant tor the city light department's. Skagit power project, it\nwas addressed simply to Mayor\nJohn F. Dore, and his successor, Arthur Langlie, forwarded it to the\nDor* home. The latter bore a three\ncent stamp.\nWin Six Yoke Events in Music Festival\nThese three Nelson boys, left to right Paul Hielscher, Donald Brown,\nand Billy Baird, acquired between them six titles jti the voice classes,\nBrown, being a winner singly or in combination five times, Hielscher\nthree times,,and Baird once. Brown won boys' sacred solo, ybung\nvocalists'high voice and junior vocalist championship; Hielscher won\nboys' treble solo, over 12:, Brown and Hielscher together won the\nyoung vocalists* duet; and the' three boys together won the young\nvo\u00bbHit*' trio. '     '\"   ,\u25a0.\u2022'\u2022.   , *\u25a0s -'   \u2022\nof Gilbertson\nTOKYO, May 7 (APl-fSaip\nd|j|)\u2014The release was expected*today of Joseph Gilbertson, 'Vancouver ship engineer, arrested and\nheld at Osaka,'Japanese pottcKarg-\nAt Vancouver the Japanese consul-general, H, Nentichi, said he had\nbeen advised Gilbertion was fined\n30 yen (about $8.73) in Osaka police\ncourt and added that; \"Has is U*s-\nly Mr. Gilbertson has paid the tine\nby how, he is a free-man. I hardly\nthink he will do otherwise, tor the\nfine la very, very light.\"\nCommander of Rome\nArmy Corps Is Dead\nROME, May 6 (APMJeneral r>o-\nmenlco Siciliana, IS, commander of\nthe Rome army corps, who was\nscheduled to lead today's military\nparade in honor ot Chancellor Hitler, died of a sudden: Illness shortly before the event started.\n! i \u2014-\n\u2022THE KID\"'TO BE FATHER?\nHOLLYWOOD, May 6 (AP) -\nFriends of Jackie Coogan hinted\ntoday \"The Kid\" may become a\nfather by year's end. Jackie; embroiled in a $4,000,000 accounting\nsuit against his mother and stepfather, met the hints with silence.\nBetty Grable, his bride of last November, indicated Coogan is the\nfamily spokesman. '       \"3 .\nINSULTS'MUST..BE\n-OVERHEARD TO\n;  BE ILLEGAL.:; ,\n- PARIS, May 6 (AP)-Deaf\nmutes may insult each other in\nthe sign language all they, please\nin Paris and nothing will be\ndone, about it.\u25a0 \u2022'-',u \u25a0, s - \\ \u2022\nUs. deat mute couple found\n\u2022 out. ween thej-sstss^tsmrlm\n\"\u25a0\u25a0 to-fheparia courts, that bar hi*\ntend .h|d -inaitited her, T\u00bb\u00bb\ncourt held that insults must bo\n'\u2022'oyerh\u00abar(li*' .\u2022.'\nPARENTS DECIDE NOT TO SACRIFICE\nCHILD'S EYES TO TRY TO SAVE LIFE\nCHICAGO, May 8 (AP)-Thi parents of five-week-old Halalne\nCelan today decided they would not attempt to save tha baby's Ufa\nby submitting her to an operation.\nGlioma, I tumor which creep! along the optic nerves to the.\nbralii, his dimmed both the Infant's eyei. Surgeons advised they\nmight halt the deadly growth by removing hir eyes. Such a course\nwould leave her blind for Ufa. Failure to operate, they held, would\nmean death within two months.\nThroughout th* dly the parents, Dr. Herman Colin, 30 i dentist,\nand his wife, Eatelle, 23, sought to reach I decision, It wis made\nknown late this afternoon by tha maternal grandfather', Dr. Morris\nL. Hershman.   .\nThey hive decided, ha said, \"to lit nature take Its course.\"\nLord's Day Ad\nOTTAWA, May 8 (CP)-A motion\nrejecting senate amendments to'the\nbill to amend the Lord's Day act,\nwaa adopted in the house of commons tonight on' ntotiori of Herve\nBrunellc (Lib. Chcmplain), sponsor of th\u00ab' bin    '   v,    '\nPurpose of tha measure waa to\nImpose heavy penalties on violators\nof the act and Its main purpose was\nto reach Quebec industries.\nAmendments adopted in the senate weri rejected becausj thy w,ould\nhave the effect ot removing that\nprovision which imposed'the penalties upon corporation officials who\noperated, on,Sunday instead ot the\ncorporatoin alone, because they left\nthe minimum fines where they were\nin the present act, and because the\nproposed jail penalties were removed. The bill was sent back to the\nsenate,,\nM. P. DROWNED!\nI BUCKINGHAM, Que, May 6 (CP)\n\u2014 Missing tor more than three days,\nFred.C. Betts, 42-year-old Conservative member ot the commons for\nLondonibni., was feared tonight to\nhave drowned in the Blanche river\nnorth bit here while.llihlng. ,,,\n\u2022'    \u2022 \" ,WMj|rt'|eeii by Ottawa\nWOULD   SUPERVISE\nFARM IMPLEMENT\nINDUSTRY\nOTTAWA\u201eMay 8 (CP)-Gov-\nernment supervision of the farm\nImplement Industry by a board\nof railway commissioners, was\nsuggested Irt the house ot commons today by Malcolm McLean\niLIb, Melfort).\nA full afternoon was devoted\nto considering a report, presented last session, ot a committee,\nwhich investigated the implement industry. During the discussion, J. J. Duff us (Lib. Peterborough West) suggested\nparts and raw materials for\nfarm machines be placed on the\nfree list\nHENDAYB, France,. May 8 (AP)\n\u2014 Spanish insurgents advanced,on\neastern Spain's southern front today while government iorces gained high in the Pyrenees,mountains\non;the'nbrth.'        >  .'    >\nA' government offensive broke\nthrough the insurgent left flank in\nthe central Pyrenees to counterbalance partially loss of, several lines\nof trenches-to General Miguel Ar;\nmida's Insurgents in the Alcala de\nChiverf sector,on the south.\nUNABLE TO IDENTIFY\nBODY FOUND IN RIVER\nPRINCE RUPkitT, B.C., May 8\n(CP).\u2014British Columbia police here\nhave been advised by Constable H:\nL. JfcKenney of Terrace, B. C, that\nhe had been unable to identify the\nbody,of a woman found in the\nSkeena river near Shames, B.C\nrecently..\nMusic Festival Winners\nPATRICIA. DOUfJAN i(laft) .ind KATHLEEN GLOVER, Tr\u00bbll\n\u00ab. Wlnnera pianoforte duet, under 20.\ncompany lor tha trip t<i the flihlng\nstreams 'near this town, 25 miles\neast of the capital.\nDEATH OF DUKE\nOF DEVONSHIRE\nELEVATES SON\nLONbOK..May,\u00ab '(CP).- With\ndeath of of the Duke ot Devonshire\ntoday at Chatsworth house in\nDerbyshire, his historic seat where\nonce Mary, Queen'ot Scots was imprisoned, the; title pasr.es to son,\ntha Marquess of Hartlngton, who\nhas served as under-secretary for\nthe dominions since 1839,\nAs Lord.; Hartlngton will go to\nthe.house of lords, a house ot commons byelectlon will result in West\nDerbyshire\n. The 69-year-old duke spent much\nof his lifetime'In the public service.\nSIR ABE BAILEY\nSAILS FOR ENGLAND,\nCAPE TOWN, South Africa, May\n8 (AP)\u2014Legless but smiling, Sir\nAbe Bailey, Bluff, 73-ycar-old gold\nrush pioneer, sailed for England today to see one of his horses, Golden\nSovereign, run in the Derby June\n1. Lady Bailey, a doctor and four\nnurses tailed with him.\nBURIED NEAR PATRON\n\u25a0 LONDON, May 6 (AP)-The will\not Vivian'-Forbes,- artist who suicided after attending the funeral\nof his patron, Glyn, Phllpot, last December, disclosed today his desire\nto be burled at Phllpot's feet\nHe] Is burled a few feet from,\nPhllpot in the churchyard at Petersham, Surrey.    ....\nGREATER UNITY\nLEAMINGTON, England, May 6\n(CP)\u2014Anthony. Eden tonight pleaded tor \"greater national unity, to\nmeet the challenge of the totalitarian states, in on\u00ab of his rare speeches\nsince he resigned Feb. 20 as foreign\nsecretary.'''. V>\ni \"This nation can always achieve\nunity, in time ot war,\" he declared.\n\"Is it any less necessary to: seek\nto aAltnnruhlty to avert war? \"\n; \"It means. a united, national effort to agree upon the fundamentals of a truly national policy, and\nS W^^toTot ach-\nlevament yet I believe it to be the\nonly method whereby the democratic states can hope to put forth sufficient strength to preserve without., conflict, those liberties which\nare \u25a0 their heritage.'-',\nMr, Eden addressed votera of his\nWarwickshire constituency here.\nRoid't Bill on\nGrain Rates Is\nAgain Talked Out\nOTTAWA, -Maya' (CP) - The\nlong extended efforts of Tom Reid\n(lib. New Westminster) to get lowered'domestic rates on grain from\nthe prairies to the pacific coast\nmet a further check tonight when\nthe house of commons- talked out\ntt>e motionfor second reading during the hour devoted to private\nbills. -\nDisorders in\n\":.'.'   Czechoslovakia\nPRAHA, Czechoslovakia, May 8\n(AP) \u2014 Minor disorders marked\nthe celebration today ot the 40th\nbirthday of Konrad Henleln, the\nobscure instructor; of gymnastics\nwho.thrust himself into prominence as leader of Czechoslovakia's\nGerman minority.\n- At Saaz, one person was Injured\nslightly in a crowd that gathered\nafter' two persons were taken Into\ncustody when stocks ot Swastika\nflags were discovered on their\npremises.\nIITH. MONTH OF\nCONFLICT THAT\nJAPANESE HAD\nHOPED END IN 3\nChinese Admit Drive1\nSlowing Up; Invaders\nGain Little\nGERMAN ADVISERS\nBIG AID TO CHINA\nBy ELMER W. PETERSON\nAssociated Preii Foreign Staff   j\nSHANGHAI, May 7 (Saturday)!\n(AP) \u2014 A bitter deadlock today I\nushered In the 11th month of war\nbetween China and Japan.\nOn the main front In southern\"\nShantung province, Japan's mod-1\nem army wai halted for the sec-1\nond time in ilx weeks. It had\nbeen forced back from. Its further advances In other provinces.\nChinese asserted they still were.\ngaining slightly In their counter-\noffensive against the Japanese\nnorth of Plhsel, In the centre of:\nthe Japanese lines. They aoknow-,\nlodged, however, that Japanese\nartillery again was buttressing\nthe enemy .positions. At Tan-.\nCheng, on their left wing, Japanese said they hid captured sever-j\nil villages to the south.\nTeh months ot warfare have made j\nmany changes in China since the\ntint shot was fired near the historic\nMarco Polo bridge west of Feiping\nin the dark ot the night July 7,1997.\nWhat Japan confidently began\nll a military sideshow on the at-\nsumption It would be over in\nthree months has become a war-,\ntesting the empire's military and\neconomic resources.\nCHINA TALKS OF VICTORY,       'f.\nToday, with the legend ot japan,\nese invincibility smashed, China\neven talks of ultimate victory. Her\narmy, with vast manpower,'has become organized and disciplined.\n'-Jtot, only have the Japanese fait-\ned to gain in southern Shantung,\nbut they have lost ground in Shan*\nsi and Honan province! because\nthey have had to drain those fronts\nof troops to bolster their main campaign,  ,\nNeutral observers believe three'\nfactors\u2014China's German military advisers, her. Russlin-mide\nairplanes and China's new spirit\not resistance \u2014 now seriously\nthreaten Japan's hopes.\nPrince George\nEstevan Point\nPrince Rupert\nLangara\nAtlin .....\nDawson\nSeattle .\nPortland\nSan Francisco\nSpokane  ....\nLot' Angelei\nKelowna \t\nPehtlc'ton\nGrand Forks\nkaslo \u25a0-...;\t\nCranbrook \t\nCalgary \t\nEdmonton\t\nSwift Current\nMoose Jaw\nPrince Albert\nSaskatoon'. -....\nQu'Appeili .....\nWinnipeg\n** .... ..^1^,^,^,,..,,^^\nForecasts: Kootenay \u2014 Light vir-\nlabia winds, fair and warm.\nYOUTH HANGED\nMONTREAL, May 6 (CP) -\nGeorges Dagenais, 23-year-old farm\nyouth, was hanged today for the\nmurder of Joseph Sylvlo Benoit,\ntobacco merchant slain during an\nattempted holdup of his Jacques\nCartier Square store last Dec. 22,\nBRITAIN, FRANCE\nPLAN ACTION ON\nCZECHOSLOVAKIA\nLONDON, May 6 (AP) \u2014 Great\nBritain' and France decided today\nto make a quick effort to easo^\nCzechoslovakia's minority trouble.\nInformed sourceB said that with-,\nout waiting for Adolf Hitler's return\nfrom his state visit to Italy, Sir\nNeville Henderson, British am-1\nbassador to Germany, would see\nField Marshal Hermann Goering,.\nacting chancellor, tomorrow In Berlin on behalf of Britain and France,\nBRITAIN   ADMITS\n-BUYING GUNS\nIN CANADA\nLONDON, May 6 (CP) \u2014 Slr\nThomas Inskip, minister of defence coordination, tonight stated the government had ordered\na considerable number of Bren\nmachine-guns from a Canadian\nfactory in order to assist Canada\nin economic production of the\ngun for her own use, as Well as\nto provide the British army -\nwith a duplicate source of supply.\nSir Thomas spoke at the Disraeli dinner which honors' the\nmemory of the Victorian statesman.\nBASE METALS BREAK ALL RECORDS\nIN B.C. PRODUCTION IN LAST YEAR\nValued at $41,300,000; Lead, Gold and Zinc\nReach Ail-Time High; Total Output\nof Mines for 1937 $73,800,000\nVICTORIA, May 8 (CP)-Biie\nmetals broke all records for production In British Columbia last\nyear, topping gold,.ind contributing 841,300,000 to total production\nvitues of $73,800,000, according to\ncompleted estimates for 1937 In\nthe hind* of the British Columbia mlnea department today. Lead,\ngold, ind zinc reached all-time\nhigh* In the official records of\nthi province going hack to'1887.\nDividend! ot $14,700,000 and payroll! of 521,300,000 were reported\nduring the yeir.\nRecovery of the biie metal\nmarket wai ihowii In lead production valued at $21,300,000 com-\nwlth i previous ncord of\n$18,670,329 In 1925. Loda and placer gold were next, at $17,800,000\nIn Canadian funds; compared with I\n$18,000,000 In the year previous.\nZlno contributed $14,400,000; as\nagainst a previous high of $10,-\n586,810 In 1926. Copper, produc-1\ntion of which was almost eliminated In the year previous, revived, with $5,600,000 as the value of\nthe output last year.\nOther values Irt the list of British Columbia minerals and metals\nfor 1937 Included silver worth $8,-\n100,000; coal at $6,100,000; structural materials of $1,800,000; and '\nmiscellaneous materials $1,700,000;\nfor a gross total of-$73,800,000 for\nthe 12-month period ending . December 31 last ' .   , .\n , , \u25a0\n\u2014\u2014\u2014 '\n'it^jlmmmmmmmmi\n PAGE TWO\u2022\nNIL80N DAILY NBWI. NELSON. \u25a0\u2022C--8ATURDAY MORNINtt. MAY 7. titt.\nMotor Licences\nlo End ol April\n| Bring in $46,647\n'\u25a0\u25a0 Total revenue to April 30 tor the\n.current licence year tor licences Issued under the Motor Vehiole act\ntotalled $46,647.65. Licences were\nIssued at Nelson, Castlegar, Creston,\n\u2022Balmo and Ymir. Passenger and\ncommercial licences to date on May\n5 totalled 1016, of which 1355 were\npassenger licences and 561 were\ncommercial licences. Drivers' licences totalled 2381, class \"A\" chauf-\ndfeurs, 40, class \"B\" 36, and class \"C\"\nKlondyke Dance\n;   Pleases at Michel\nNATAL, B.C.-Michel-Natel Leg-\nIon, sponsored another unusual\ndance in a \"Klondyke\" dance. Pnres\nwere given to the best dressed\n\"prospector\" and the best dressed\n\"dancing-girl\"'; \u25a0.-.'\u2022   :'-\nSocial...\nROBSON\nROBSON, B.C\u201e (B.H.)-Mr*. Edmunds of Trail is visiting Mrs. F.\nE, Oborne.\nAlex Miller spent a few days at\nRobson at the home of his parents.\nJunior Board Adopts Procedure\nfor Action in Municipal Realm\nIvVould Have the City\nGet   Technical\nAdvice\nelaborate plans have besn work-\nid out by the civic affairs commit-\niae of the junior board of trade, for\ncontributing to the cause of good\ntnunicipal government In Nelson, in-\n'< eluding discharging such duties as\na ratepayers association might discharge.\n'.These plans, which are embodied\nin a report made by the civic af-\nfairs committee to, the junior board\nol trade Thursday night, were apodt-\n*M as a working policy by the organization, when - it accepted the\nreport.\nText of the report is as follows:\n\"Whereas there js at present no\nactively functioning ratepayers' as-\nsoelatoin in the city of Nelson; and\n\"Whereas  the  junior  board  of\n-trade by virtue   of its interest in,\nnnd close touch with, civic affairs\nis in a position to act tn the role of\nsuch a ratepayers' association; and\n.\"Whereas in technical matters, it\nis; not likely that any council Will\n'\u2022have on its roster members with the\ntraining to judge and pass upon all\nquestions:\n\"It is therefore recommended;\nRECOMMENDED COURSE\n\"(1) That when questions are before the council ot a highly technical nature, which ordinarily might\n(M considered outside the knowl-\n;'edge of the council because of tech-\nnicnl difficulties, it should be the\n;*<Suty of the council to secure competent technical advice, even if\nthU action should entail additional\ncost Having secured competent ad-\nVice, it Is felt that the opinion of\n' {the consultants should be followed.\nCoincidental with the aldermanic\n. discussion, the matter should be\nthoroughly examined by at least the\n; civic affairs committee, and, if possible by the executive of the junior\n\u00bb.\u2014\nboard of trade, If it should be felt\nthat the council is not acting in the\nbest interests of the citizens, then\ndiscreet but direct action should\nbe taken to point out that in the\nopinion of the junior board of trade,\nsufficient light has not been thrown\non the question at hand. As any\ndemocratic for m of government,\nwhether federal, provincial or civic,\nis responsible to its citizens for their\nactions, it is considered within the\nscope ot the lunor obard ot trade\nto urge the above procedure on the\npart of the council\n''<2) That if our petitions be Ignored, an endeavor should be made\nto enlist the cooperation of other\ninterested organizations, with the\nview of placing greater pressure\nupon the council.\n\"(3) That in the event of a ratepayers' association becoming active\nin Nelson, our organization should\nstill function in civic affairs and\nwork in conjuction with the ratepayers' association,\n\"(4) That this report be filed for\nguidance of future committees.\n\"It is the opinion of this committee that the above should be adopted as the policy of the junior board\nof trade.\n\"Civic affairs committee ot the\nNelson junior board of trade.\n\"M. BERCOV\nStrained honey, mixtd with Wtttn\ncheese, a few broken nut melts snd soft\ntoiler makes delicious sandwiches for u>>\ncchool child's lunch. \"\u2022-\u25a0*\nCRESTON Social...\nCRESTON, B. C. \u2014 Rev. Andrew\nH. and Mrs. Walker, with Miss\n.Goldie Walker and Bob Weir, are\n*\u00abt Nelson for the musical festival.\nG. Dickinson of Vancouver visited a few days with his brother,.A.\nyf. Dickinson.   \u25a0 I\nLeslie Mclnnis, who is employed\n\u25a0t Longbeach, was\u00ab week-end vlsl-\n| \u00abpr to Mrs. Mclnnis.\n' Miss Winnie Palfreyman has returned from Vancouver. She was\nBuest at the Tebby-Roughsedge\n.wedding at Cedar Cottage United\nchurch, contributing a vocal solo\nduring the signing of the register.\nRussell Clark of the Imperial bank\nstaff, Nelson, spent the week-end\njfcrlth his parents at Creston.\n; Rev. J. L. Clerihue of Invermere\nWas a visitor to Creston Friday. He\n. has been tendered a call to the local\nUnited church pastorate, and was\naking a look over the field,\n'Mr, and Mrs. E. Payne of Nelson visited the former's parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. E. W. Payne.    ,\n\u2022  \u2022 Mrs. Alf. Avery, Mrs. W. Fraser\nand Miss Laura Holmes were at\nanbrook at the week-end.\nErnest Drlffil of Kitchener Is a\nguest of Mrs. G. A. M. Young.\nMrs.,M. Smith of New Westmin-\n, \u25a0'\u2022*\u2014\u2014\t\nster has returned to Creston and\nwill be staying with Mr. Powell and\nfamily, while Mrs. Powell and Dorothea are absent on a few months'\nvisit at the old home at Barton-on-\nSea, Hampshire.\nW. S. Dale was at Nelson Tuesday,\nH. P. Doleman and son, Marvin,\nof Portland, Ore., have been on a\nvisit to Mr. and Mrs. C. C. French.\nFred Kratez, who spent the winter at West Creston, has returned to\nhis home in Prince Alberta, Sask.\nMiss Helen Caldwell of Cranbrook has been on a visit to Miss\nErma Fisher.\nMargaret and George Vincent\nhave returned to Coleman, Alerta,\nafter a visit to their grandparents,\nMr. and Mrs. Henry Campbell..\nMrs. B. B. Stallwood has returned to Nelson after a visit to her parents, Col. and Mrs. Fred Lister.\nMr. and Mrs. Matt Bisila of Kitchener have arrived to reside permanently at Creston, having purchased\na residential property.\nLloyd MacLaren, a second year\narts student at the University of\nAlberta, Edmonton, has arrived for\nthe  summer  holidays.\nGuide for Travellers\nMORE ABOUT\nFESTIVAL\n(Continued From Page One)\n182, and described its playing as the\nhighlight of the festival for her.\nFollowing, two test pieces the orchestra' played a third number In\nrespondse to insistent applause, the\nonly \"encore\" ot the festival so far.\nThe Instrumental section suffered\nthrough the inability ot some ot the\nAlberta violinists lo travel tor the\nfestival. This afternoon, with St.\nAndrew's church choir of Trail\ndropping out and the Albertans absent, the orchestra will present a\nshort-concert program in mid-afternoon. The orchestra plans to compete at the B.C. Music festival at\nVancouver shortly.\nResults, showing the classes, test\npieces set and the marks given,\nfollow:\nCHOIRS\nSmall or rural school choirs, one\nor two classrooms (\"Slumber Song\"\n\u2014Peter Cornelius, and \"The Lass of\nRichmond Hill\"\u2014Dunhill); Procter\nSuperibr school, Procter, 84,86\u2014170.\nMiss Victoria Robinson, conductor.\nSmall or rural school choirs, thffee\nor folr classrooms (\"Dreamland\nCalling\"\u2014Alec Rowley, and \"What\nthe Birds Think\"-Schubert): Tadanac school choir, Tadanac, 87, 88\u2014\n175; Miss Nora Ellis, conductor. Adjudication; These were two hard\npieces, well done. \"It didn't sound\nhard to the audience, because they\nmade it sound easy, but it was hard\nfor children of their age.\" They have\nbeen well taught \"I'm going back\nto Saskatchewan to tell them about\nyour unison singing.\"\nBoy's choir (\"The Harmonious\nBlacksmith\"-Handel, and \"With\nJockey to the Fair\"\u2014W. G. Mr-\nNaught) St Paul's boys' choir, Nelson, 89, 89\u2014178, Mrs. T. J. S. Ferguson, conductor; Central school boys'\nchoir, Trail, 90, 87-177,' Miss Florence *L. Rutledge, conductor. Ad-\njudication) \"We take in a bigger\narea in our festival but I doubt it\nwe could produce as many good boy\nsingers, They're marvelous.\" In the\nfirst choir someone thought he had\nto carry the burden of the singing.\n\"Don't, no voice must stand out\"\nIn the second choir excellent unanimity but phrasing broken.\nDay school choirs, Grade 1 and 2\n(\"Loving Shepherd\"\u2014Martin Shaw,\nand \"Robin -\u00bb-Thursh\" \u2014 Cecil\nSharp): East Trail school, 89, 01\u2014\n180, Miss Eva Horwell, conductor;\nNelson Central school, 88, 91\u2014179,\nMiss Eileen S. Mackenzie, conductor; Hume school, Nelson, 88, 90\u2014\n178, iMss Greta E. Curwen, conductor. Adjudication: \"I want to\ncongratulate the teachers; it may\nnot appear so to the layman, but it\nis a difficult task to get children to\nsing as those children sang. They\nwere all so unanimous.\" The two\npieces gave an opportunity to do\neverything emotional, There was\nnot enough prayerfulness in the\nfirst piece; too much performance\nand not enough prayer. All did the\nother piece beautifully. \"I want to\ntell the teachers always to make\ntheir gestures gracefully, and to\ntell the children always to keep an\neye on the conductor. I had to weigh\nevery little thing to make the decision.\"\nDay school choirs, Grade 3 and 4\n(\"Stars All Dotted Over the Sky\"-\nEvelyn Sharp, and \"The Brave Old\nDuke of York\"\u2014Dunhill): Nelson\nCentral school, 91, 89\u2014180, Miss\nWinnifred Borthwick, conductor;\nEast Trail school, 89, 90\u2014179, Miss\nEva Horwell, conductor; Hume\nschool, Nelson, 87, 88\u2014175, Miss\nGreta E. Curwen, conductor; Trail\nCentral school, 86, 87\u2014173, Miss A\nMary O'Donnell, conductor. Adjudication: Again beautiful songs. \"I\nwonder if the teachers impressed\nthe children with what the first'\nsong was about. You mustn't let the\nlilt get too much into rt You must\nhave rhythm, but must not lose the\nthought of the story\u2014tenderness\nand yet the gladdest story ever\ntold.\" \"Sing your words as ,you\nwould say them; never sing more\nloudly than you can sing sweetly.\"\nDay school choirs, Grades 5 and\n6 (\"Dreams\"\u2014Markham Lee, and\n\"Oh Dear, What Can the Matter\nBe?\"\u2014arr. Geoffrey Shaw): Nelson\nCentral school, 89, 90\u2014179, Miss\nWinnifred Borthwick, conductor,\nEast Trail school, 89, 89\u2014178, Miss\nEva A. Horwell, conductor; Trail\nCentral school, Trail, 91, 86\u2014177,\nMiss Florence L. Rutledge, conduc\ntor; Hume school, Nelson, M, 8eV\n176, Miss Greta A. Curwen, conductor. Adjudication: \"You really\nhave some beautiful child singing\nhere, I'm enjoying it very much.\"\nAll made the mistake in the first\npiece of upsetting the tranquility\not the piece. None were quite distressed enough in the second, \"You\nall sang beautifully.\"\nDay school choirs, Grades 7 and\n8 (\"Sweet Babe\"\u2014arr. Ronald Olden, and \"Love, Farewell\"\u2014Alec\nRowley): Trail Central school, Choir\nB, 84, 89-173, Miss Florence Rutledge, conductor; Trail Central\nschool, Choir A, 89, .87-178, Miss\nFlorence Rutledge,-conductor; Nelson Junior High school, Choir No.\n1, 86, 05-171, Miss Enid Etter, conductor; Nelson Junior High school.\nChoir No. 2,85,86-171, Adjudication;\nQuite good singing. \"You know,\ngirls, music only begins where the\ncopy ends. Get the spirit behind it.\nYou get some assistance out of the\nbooks, but you've got to get the real\nmusic out of yourself, out of your\nhearts.\" All choirs but one went off\nkey in the first piece, only two ot\nthe choirs got the idea ot the second\npiece. \"Get more into those 'aht'.\"\nChampionship, school choirs, for\nhighest marks in Classes 1 to 6:\nEast Trail school choir from Grades\n1 and 2, conducted by Miss Eva A,\nHorwell, tied with Nelson Central-\nschool choir from Grades 3 and 4,\nconducted by Miss Winnifred Borthwick, each with 100, and each will\nhold the trophy for six months,\nJunior choirs, girls or mixed, under 20 (\"Echo Song\"\u2014Alec Rowley,\nand \"Shepherd, Shepherd, Leava\nDecoying\"---Purcell>: St Andrew's\nJunior girls' choir, Trail, 88, 86-174,\nconducted by Mrs. R. S. G. Anthony;\nNelson Junior High School Noon\nHour choir, 88,85-173. Adjudication;\nOne of the points ot the first piece\nwas that it was called \"Echo Song\".\nBoth did it well, but the second\ngot the idea across better than the\nother, getting the effect of the echo\nand getting great beauty and delicacy. \"The second song says 'Glad:\nsome Heart) Know No Repining'\u2014\nsnd you looked worried to death.\nForget about everything but the\nwords.\" Watch thehalf notes at the\nend.\nJunior church choirs, girls er\nmixed (\"Sunday\"\u2014Schumann, and\n\"Jesu, Joyance of My Heart\"-7arr.\nMartin Akerman: St. Andrew's,\nTrail, 85, 86-171, Mrs. R. S. G. Anthony, conductor; St Paul's, Nelson,\n85, 85-170, Miss Eileen S. Mackenzie,\nconductor; St Andrew's, Kaslo, 64,\n84-168, Mrs. M. B. MacPhee, conductor. Adjudication: Teach the approach first In -the first piece it\nwas \"the Sunday of Schumann's\ntime, and I want that atmosphere,\nthat churchly attitude.\" All had\nmomentary lapses of intonation.\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume HOtel.. Nelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.      '\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nHUME\u2014J. A. Mclnnis, New Denver; K. Martin, A. Acorn, Rossland:\n|   Mrs, N. J. Murphy, Kaslo; H. W.\nSeaman, H. McManus, F. M. Mills,\n| W. Webster, L. Hannay, G. S. Mont-\n1 gomery, W. F. Meredith, F. C. G.\nHillard,   Vancouver;   C.   Hairsine,\nVernon; S. Addison, Penticton; R.\nKirby, Trail; W. R. Green, Nelson;\nEleanor Blair, Canyon; George S.\nAckerman, Ymir; Thomas Vinec-erg,\nMontreal; H. N. Coursey, D. McLeod, Medicine Hat; H. MacLaren,\nCreston; D. F. Sutcliffe, Kootenay\nBelle mine.\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St,        Phone 897\nH. WA88ICK, Prop,\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits'You\nJAS. E. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled\nHot and Cold Water\nIn the HEART ot the City\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"        Newly Renovated Throughout\nPhones        Elevator\nt A,   PATERSON,   late  of\nsoo Seymour St.   ... Vai)oouyer, B.C. ;' Coleman, Alta, Proprietor,\nDufferin Hotel\nARROW LAKES\nSERVICE\nEffective May 9, S.S. Columbia\nwill replace S.S. Minto on the\nArrow Lakes between Arrowhead and Robson West until\nfurther notice.\nSchedule  will  be  as  follows:\nLv. NAKUSP\n6 a.m. Monday, Thursday\nAr. ROB80N WE8T\n6 p.m. Monday, Thursday\nLv. ROBSON WEST\n6 a.m, Tuesday, Friday\nAr. NAKUSP\n5 p.m. Tuesday, Friday\ntv. NAKU8P\n8 a.m. Wednesday, Saturday\nAr. ARROWHEAD\n11:15 a.m, Wednesday, Saturday\nLv. ARROWHEAD\n12:35 p.m. Wednesday, Saturday\nAr, NAKUSP\n3:35 p.m, Wednesday, Saturday\nPassengers will be ticketed only\nbetween Arrow Lake points.\nLandings will not be made at\nOatescott, Macklnsons, Birds,\nRock Island and Glendevon, and\npossibly at Burton.\nPassengers to and from these\npoints will be accepted or disembarked at the nearest accessible landing.\nNo sleeping accommodation Is\navailable on S.S, Columbia nor\nwill automobiles be transported\nby this steamer. \"\nFor further details apply\n'     to nearest agent or\nN. J. LOWES\nC.T.A., Nelion, B. C.\nNelson Continues\nin (lean-Up Prive\nClean up, paint up and modernize\u2014that's the slogan ot Nelsonites\nthis week. And Nelwn busine** men\nand citizens, under Impetus supplied\nby the Nelson Junior board of trade,\nhave responded nobly In the drive\nto beautify the city,\nTidy' yards.and allays followed In\nthe wake of the first days of the\ndrive, which opened Tuesday. Especially In Fairview yards were the\nsigns ot the cleanup noticeable.\nThe city is dong its bit In the\ndrive. Work by city men ha started\non clearing Ot empty, lots on Vernon\nstreet These eventually will be\nlevelled and made into a large playground for children of that section,\nThe drive, continue* until next\nTuesday;       \u25a0\nSOUTH SLOGAN\nSPRING SALE\nIS A SUCCESS\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C.-A spring\n\u2022sis of work under the auspices ot\nthe 'Women's Auxiliary ol SI Matthews church, was successful.\nRev. W. J. Sllverwood, vicar of\nthe parish pronounced the sale open.\nMrs, John Murray and Mrs. O. W.\nHumphrey received the guests.\nThe needlework stall was In\ncharge ot Mrs. F, H. Russel and Miss\nRita Jones. The home cooking stall\nwas In charge of Mrs. E. J. Bow-\nkett. Mrs. J. D. Yeatman and Mrs.\nM. Downle -had charge of a candy\nand floWer stall. ...\nA variety of Ice box flowers was\nin charge of Mrs. Harry Nixon.\nTea'was served on daintily set\ntables under charge of Mrs. C.\nGrayson, Mrs. C, O. Xenw'ck and\nMrs. W. A. MacCabe,\n T\u2014I\u2014-\u2014 '\nVOCAL\nYoung vocalists, low voices, under\n20 (\"The Sheep Under the Snow\"\u2014\nMarx Air): Carlyle Ferguson, Nelson, 84; Charles Kalthammer, Can-,\nyon, 83. Adjudication: These lads\nare at a difficult time tor their\nvoices. If they are careful they can\nkeep on singing, but \"too often we\nneglect their voices at the time\nthey are breaking, I should like to\ncongratulate the committee tor\nthinking ot this class and including\nit\"\nVocal solo In Italian, open (\"Vlssi\nD'Arte, Vissi d'Amore\"\u2014G. Puc-\nclne): Mrs. G. M., Williscroft, Nelson, 84. Adjudication: Nerves gave\nher no freedom from herself. She\nhas a lovely voice and good stage\nappearance.\nMale duet, open (\"Still as the\nNight\"\u2014Bohn): Sidney Horswill and\nDonald Beattie, Nelson 89. Adjudication: They have lovely voices,\nthey've a nice blend, nice balance,\nYou must make it more persona}.\"\nLyric soprano, open (\"Heffle Cuckoo Fair\"\u2014Martin Shaw, and own\nselection): Frances M. Knott, Canyon, 87, 84\u2014171; Freda Antrobus,\nColeman, Alts., 82, 85-187. \"Heffle\nCuckoo Fair\" is a light and dainty\nthing and \"you must have your\nvoice under control.\"\nContralto solo, open (\"Shepherd's\nCradle Song\"\u2014Somervell, and own\nselection): Nan Armstrong, Canyon,\n89, 90\u2014179. Adjudication: In the\nfirst piece her nerves broke the\nphrasing. \"She did my heart good\nwhen she sang 'When Childer Play'\nfor it was sung as it should be\nsung. She got absolutely the right\natmosphere.\nJunior championship, winners of\nclasses under 12 to under 20 (each\nsinging test piece): Donald Brown,\nPIANO\nPianoforte duet, under 14 years\n(\"Minuet\"\u2014Mo-art, and \"Turkish\nMarch\"\u2014'Beethoven): Pamela Dewdney and Catherine Maud Argyle,\nNelson, 89, 88\u2014177; Lindsey Holt,\nBalfour, and Allison Holt, Balfour,\n84, 86\u2014170; Gordon Coughlln, Trail,\nand Hunter Dougan, Trail, 84, 85\u2014\n169. Adjudication: Three very good\nteams. They didn't quite get the\nidea of the soldiers approaching,\npassing and going away in the\n\"Turkish March\". \"Don't pound the\npiano.\"\nPianoforte duet, under 17 (Nos,\n1 and 3, Book-1\u2014Dunhill): Goldie E.\nWalker, Creston, and Bob C Weir,\nCreston, 85, 89\u2014174; Sheila MacLeod, Trail, and Mary Broadwood,\nTrail, 80, 88\u2014168. Adjudication:\n\"Don't run away with a dance.\" Always maintain the rhythm. \"It's\nstrange how many children don't\nfeel the rhythm.\" \"If you are ever\nin doubt about music for children,\nchoose Dunhill. He has produced\nmore good child music than any\nother man.\"\nMISCELLANEOUS\nElementary orchestra (Allegro,\nSerenade in Four Movements\u2014Moiart, and Glgne fro* \"Two Dances\"\n\u2014Handel): Nelson String orchestra, 92, 90\u2014182. Mrs. Gladys Webb\nFoster, conductor. Adjudication: A\nvery unusual aggregation; it would\nbe unusual in a much larger community. They play well, and are\nwell conducted, though there were\nmoments when their youthful enthusiasm spoiled their unanimity.\nIn the main the tone was lovely and\nthe discipline was excellent.\na,... .11 \u201e1\u00ab. \u25a0 1*1.,,\u00bb\u25a0-<  AA\nSocial...\nCASTL^R\nCASTLEGAR, EC-Miss Evelyn\nMoore, daughter ofij&fLjicy Moore\nand the Tate Robert'Moore of Outlook, Sask., and Hilton F. Bacon of\nCastlegar, son of Mr.-:?. G, Bacon\nand the late Mrs. Bacon ot Saskatoon, were quietly married at Colville, Wash., April 30. After a trip to\nSpokane they arrived home Sunday\nevening to be greeted by many\nfriends with an old fashioned welcome, i\nMiss Dorothy Davidson of Ymir\nspent the week-end visiting her\nparents, Mr, and Mrs. J. Davidson\nhere.\nMr, and Mrs. Ernest Spain of\nTrail visited Mr. and Mrs. O. N.\nAskew.\nA dance Friday evening under\nauspices of the Castlegar school\nproved successful. A record crowd\nwas.in attendance. The school children served refreshments.\nMiss Belle McGaulay ot Nelson\nspent the week-end at the home of\nher parents here.\nMiss Betty Fisher of Trail visited\nher brother-in-law and sister, Mr.\nand Mrs. Victor Jenlts.\nConstable Henry and family,\nformerly of Crahbrook arrived at\nCastlegar Monday, Constable Henry\nwill assume duties as traffic officer on the Trail-Castlegar highway; ;\nMr. and Mrs. J. Smith of China\nCreek were guests during the weekend ot Mr. and Mrs. J. McKinnon\nhere.\nSAINT JOHN, N, B. (CP)-To\nrelieve overcrowded conditions at\nthe boys' industrial home here,\nsome of the youths are being placed\nwith New Brunswick farmers under a system of cooperation with\ntoe home.\nWANT ADS OET RESULTS\n.5 at Big Bam\nAnniversary ol Gray (reek Hall\nGRAY CREEK, B. C - The 25th\nanniversary of the opening of the\ncommunity hall here Was celebrated in festive fashion by a monster\ndinner, Saturday night\nThe hall was beautifully decorated with mauve and silver stream-\n\u2022rs, and wreaths ot evergreen framing silver \"25's\". Three long tables\nwere arranged In banquet fashion.\nThe while leloths laid with mauve\nribbons and crimson crackers. Vases ot daffodils and crimson tulips,\nwith silver ornaments, made a colorful display. Covers were laid lor\n62.\nThe dinner itsell was In traditional style\u2014roast beet and;Yorkshire pudding,'supportM by a **\u2022'\nriety of vegetables and salads. A\nbottle of beer stood at every plate;\nelder was served and' glasses of\nmilk for the children. Th* dessert\ncourse consisted of an array ot\ntempting pies and tour giant birthday cakes.\nAfter coffee, cherry win* was\npoured and Leonard dark, chairman reminded the guests that, this\nwas the silver birthday of the hall,\nthat the hall had provided endless\namusement and useful accommodation to the settlement since it\nhad been built ffora logs by the\nunited labor of the first settlers.\nWith the hells long span ot usefulness, he would like to associate the\nenergy and ever-ready help of Mrs.\nOliver, pioneer resident of Gray\nCreek, who now sat- beside him\nas guest of honor. Mrs. Oliver's activities, especially for the young\npeople, had extended over years;\nher strawberry socials had been\nfamous. He asked Mrs. Oliver to\naccept a small memento ot the occasion which had been subscribed\nto by all members of the community\nand called on all to drink to the\ntoast\u2014\"Long years of usefulness to\nour hall and long life to Mrs. .Oliver.\" .\nMrs. Oliver, holding the presented silver clgajette-cas\u00ab she touched\nbriefly on the building of the hall\nby the first settlers' and on their\nhopes that it might provide a center for social recreation and also\nchurch and school accommodation.\nThese hopes had been fully realised, continued Mr\u00bb. Oliver. After\n25 years, the building stood In improved form on deeded land and\nwas still as available tor social purposes as the builders had intended.\n\"We must not forget the Gray Creek\nwomen\", Mrs. Oliver reminded the\naudience, and spoke of the literal\ntons of refreshments that had been\ndonated in that time by the ladles\nof the settlement.\nWith a warm tribute to the new\nsettlers who had so cordially worked in with the old inhabitants, Mrs.\nOlivet wished long life to the hall\nand a happy birthday to Mr. Clark,\nand sat down amid rousing cheers.\nPresentation of an alarm-clock\nwas then made-by D'Arcy Bacon\nto Leonard Clark with the birthday\nwishes ot all present. It was on a\nformer birthday of his, Mr. Bacon\nrecalled, at the opening of the hall,\nthat Mr. Clark had lost his new\nwatch, A clock, suggested Mr. Bacon, might cure this habit of falling asleep in boats.\nMr. Clark, laughing, expressed\nhis surprise and pleasure and ended with the thought 'that the lost\nwatch story followed him through\nMe. :.;\u25a0\nThe chairman proposed the health\nof Mrs. Norman Anderson, second\npioneer settler of Gray Creek, sitting on his left, who had superintended the cooking of this banquet,\npersonally, roasting the joints and\nYorkshire puddings. He called for\nthree cheers tor Mrs. Anderson and\nthe company responded heartily.\nMrs. Anderson thanked everyone\nfor their good wishes. Tha committee Working with her had been\nsuper-helpful, and efficient. All\nthat she had had to do was to eat,\nasserted Mrs, Andersn-\nA. W. Lymbery spoke W the committee\u2014Mrs, Anderson, Mrs Wolf-\nhard. Ifa. Lvmhvrv.\nand Mr. Bacoir\u2014who ftad\nthis magnificent dinner, which had\nobviously called tor great organization and effort. He touched on the\nhopes ot tM builders for the hall's\ndestiny. Hope was the one thing\nleft In Pandora's box after the\ntroubles In it had flown wide, and\nevery building was erected in the\nspirit ot hope. His partner, Harry\nGoodall, had designed the hall; it\nwas a good building in beautiful\nsurroundings. \"We will still have\ngreat hopes for the ball's destiny,\"\nsaid Mr. Lymbery, and asked a\nvote of thanks to the committee,\nThis was heartily endorsed by the\nguests.   -\nPulling of crackers, reminiscences,' accompanies) by frequent\nflashes of Fred 'Wilmot's candid\ncamera followed. Tables were\ncleared and a social evening followed with cards and games with the\nchildren. The evening ended In Impromptu dancing, with Mrs. Oliver\npresiding at the piano.\nMcKim-McGlnnls\nWedding Popular\nEvent, Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B.C. - A pretty\nwedding took place at tha United\nchurch manse April 27 when Kathleen Myrtle McGinn's, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl McGinnls\nbecame the bride of Phillip Alexander McKim, elder son of Mr. and\nMrs. J. P. McKim.\nThe bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore a pale\npink ensemble, with white fur trim\nand white accessories and carried a\nbouquet of pink and white carnations.\nShe was attended by Mrs. Ruth\nSmith, in an ensemble of pale blue\nwith white accessories and carried\na bouquet of rose colored snapdragons.       - '\nThe groom was supported by Donald Bentley. \u25a0\nRev. S. T. Galbraith officiated,\nAbout 40 guests sat down to the.\nwedding supper in K, P. Hall. The\ntables' were beautifully decorated,\nthe bride's table being centred with\na three tired wedding cake.\nA reception and dance followed.\nMr. and Mrs. McKim left by car\nfor Spokane for a brief honeymoon.\nThey will make their home In Upper Blarchmont where Mr, McKim\nhas purchased a house.\nFour showers were given for the\nbride recently: The first by Miss\nOlla Bentley and Miss Norma Waldie at the Bentley home; One by\nMrs. W. Watson and Mh, J. Kelly at\nthe home of Mrs. Watson; one by\nMrs. J. Shannon and Mrs. K. Mc-\nFarlan'e at the home of Mrs. Shannon and one by Mrs. Ruth Smith at\nthe home of Mr. and Mrs. McGinnls.\nHEEL\nHUGGER\nSHOES\nMake healthy feet and _\nhealthy bodies.\nSelling at $7.50\nThe Lowest Price In Canada   ,\nSee Our Selection\nFootwear\nPhone 73 Burns Block\nMeyer Returns\nFrom Conference\nRev. V. L, Meyer of St. John's\nLutheran church here, returned Friday night from a three-day B.C.\nLutheran church conference at Vernon, B.C. Other district pastors, who\nattended were Rev. C. J. Henriig\nof Needles and Rev. E. A. Blber-\ndorf of Trail\nChurch problems and matters pertaining to missionary work, were\nthe chief subjects of discussion at\nthe conference.\nCRESTON  MINISTER\nOPES TO KELOWNA\nIt was announced that Rev. C.\nF. Baase of Creston had answered\nthe call to the First Lutheran\n' church of Kolownn, and would be\nInstalled there May 22.\nSmall Want Ads bring big results.\nKIMBERLEY Social...\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. - Lloyd\nCrowe ot Trail, a well known business man in Kimberley lor years,\nvisited town last weak. He returned to Trail Sunday. , \u25a0. \u201e\nMrs. L. Alderman of Edmonton\nIs visiting her daughter and son-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. Earl McGinnls, and will stay tor some time.\nShe arrived in time to attend her\ngrand daughter's wedding.\nMrs. J. TannahiU of Chllllwack\nis visiting her sister and brother-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. L. McLaren\nand Cecil, who is a patient at the\nMcDougall hospital.\nMiss N. Avoledo left Sunday for\nCalgary where she will reside Friday evening Mrs. J. Siega entertained In her honor. The evening was\nspent at cards,\nCRANBROOK Social...\nCRANBROOK, B. C-Mrs. Marshall MacPherson entertained at\nluncheon and bridge at her apartment In the Hanson block. The\nfloral decorations were pink and\nwhite-snapdragons and carnations.\nMrs, G. II. Thompson and Mrs. W.\nH. Wilson were winners at bridge.\nThe guests were Mrs, S. Herchmer\not Fernie, Mrs. O. H, Thompson,\nMrs; F. Scott, Mrs. W. J.' Barber,\nMrs. O. J. Little, Mrs. A. J. Ironside, Mrs. tt L. Large, Mrs. H. A.\nMcKowan; Mrs. N. Hogarth, Mrs.\nE. S, Jones and Mrs. W. p. John\nstone.\nDr. and Mrs. H. L. Large have\nleft for Kamloops, where they will\nvisit their son, Dr. M. Large,\nMiss E. Van Ackeren of Creston\nwas a week end visitor in the city.'.\nMrs. Bobble ot Invermere spent\nthe week end here*.-._,. .    :   ,\nDonald Sneath, who has been\nattending the University ot Alberta,\nhas arrived to spend the summer\nwith his parents Mr. and Mrs. C. A.\nSneath.\nMr. and Mrs, E. -Peatfield of Invermere were recent city visitors.\nWB MAKE this bold prediction: in\n\u00abN\u00absh *\u00bb\u00bb'\/\/ erferimcvmtorhg\nlike you've never known before.\ntot the first time, travel without\ndust, drafts, stuffy air... have instant\n70* warmth on chilly nights... with\nNash \"Conditioned Ait'\"*!\nFor the first time, you can do 500\nmiles a day and feel fresh ... in >\nfatigue-proof Nash.\nFor the first time, nerve-wracking\nAt the touch of your foot is the gigantic pull ot a new kind of engine\n. i: geared to give you four* speeds\nforward... plus economy that's averaged 17.5 miles U.S. gallon for thousands of owners. (Higher in Canada))\nRoom? Nash is so big It becomes a\n\"sleeping car\" for weekend trips!\nAnd behind all this Is Nash engineering ... such long-life features as\n7- and 9- hearing crank-shafts, 'cms*\nplete full-pressure lubrication.\nGet the whole thrilling story. Then\nset the X-Ray System-tor the inside\nstory on 1938 cat values.\n\u25a0Otitkml-tllthlMlllnulek.ru)\nAS\nLOW\nAS\n$\nDelivered to you.\nPhone 117\nSERVI\nNASH - LAFAYETTE DEALERS\nFOR NELSON AND .DISTRICT\nKOOTENAY MOTORS\n(Neison) Limited\nNelson, B. C.   ,      213 Baker St.\nABLE    ACROSS   CANADA\n mmmmmm\n.\n)||||P!|!iJ|P^^\n      NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.Cr-8ATURDAY MORNING. MAY 7. 1MA ; \u25a0  i\u2014 \u2014\nCLOSING LECTURE OF SERIES\nK.P. HALL, SUNDAY, MAY 8, 7:80 P.M.\n\"The Foil of Modern Babylon\"\nRead Revtlatlon* 17, then hear all about the woman riding a scarlet\noolortd beast; the beait that wai, li not, yet Is; 10 kings who give\npower to beast for 1 hour.\n8ABBATH (SATURDAY)\n9:45\u2014Bible Clan; 10:46\u2014Preaching Service followed by Baptism\nat fiyro Park. \t\ntatty Hi\\M\nQthurrb.\nJosephine and Silica Street!\nRev. J. A. Donnell, Minister\nair. C. C. Halleran, Choirmaster\nPublic Worship at 11 a.m. and\n7:30 p.m.\nSermon subjects:\nMorning, \"Susannah's Home,\nand Otheri\".\nEvening, \"Samuel Weiley'i\nLine ol Descent\".\nJunior Choir in the Morning.\nSenior Choir in the evening.\nYoung   People's   Society   on\nMonday at 8 p.m. In Church Hall.\nJffirat (EJjurrlj al\nQtyrtet fcrbnttet\n209 BAKER 8TREET\nA Branch of The Mother Churclt,\nThe First Church  of Christ,\nScientist  In   Boston,   Mass.\nSunday School 0:48 a.m.\nSunday Service 11 a.m.\nSubject Lesson-Sermon\n\"ADAM AND FALLEN MAN\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nFREE READING ROOM IN\nCHURCH  BUILDING-\nAM Cordially Welcome\n\u00a7t. lofyt'e\nftutl)?ratt (Eljurrff\nStanley and Silica Streets\nRev. V. L. Meyer, Pastor\n0:45 a.m.\u2014Service in German.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Service and Sunday\nSchool in English, \"By Me, If\nAny Man Enter In, He Shall\nBe Saved\".\n7:30   p.m.\u2014Service   In   English,\n\"Witnessing for Christ\".\nA CORDIAL WELCOME\nTO ALL\nDEATHS\nSherbrooke, Que.^-Robert McCrea\n30, ion of the late Frank McCrea,\nformer member of parliament for\nSherbrooke.\nMontreal\u2014Napoleon G. Korousc,\n73, prominent Quebec City business\nman and governor of Laval university.\nBrockvllle, Ont\u2014Mr*. Lumb wife\not Lieut.-Col. Harold W. Lumb of\nBrockvllle.\nDrumbeller, Alta.\u2014Mr*. Florence\nWall, 55, nurse overseas during great\n\u25a0war.\nLondon\u2014Lawrence Ennis, 68, en'\ngineer in charge of construction of\nthe great harbor bridge at Sidney,\nAustralia.\nRun Down-Tired Out\nOnly Weighed 96 lbs.\nMilbum's Health and Nerve Pills\nare what weak, nervous, run down\nmen and women need to help make\nthem strong and well again,\n1 They are a well balanced tonic\ni for the treatment of those whose\ni nerve* are shattered, and for those\nl feeling* of faintneas, weakness and\ndizziness caused by an overworked,\nrun down constitution, or whose\nhealth is not up to par.\nThey help to infuse new life and\nenergy into depressed, health shattered men and women who have\ncome to think there is no relief for\nthem.\nMb*. P. Brouohton, Fenwick,\nOnt., writes:\u2014\"I waa to run down\nand tired out all the time I did not\ncare whether my housework waadone\nor not.\nI only weighed 86 pound*, but\nafter taking three boxes of Milburn's\nHealth and Nerve Pills I now weigh\n122 pounds, and do my own work\nfor eight in the family.\nI only wish I had started taking\nH.4N. Pills a year ago.\"\nPut up by The T. Milburn Co.. Ltd.\n(Advt.)\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0a\nSand\nAND\nGravel\nfor All\nBonding\nPurposes\nPHONE 701\nFAIRVIEW\nFUEL CO.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nft. Paul's\nlitfyft GUjurrlj\nRev. T. J. S. Ferguson, Minister\n10 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11 a.m. and 7:30 p.m.\u2014Public\nWorship.\nMorning\u2014Mothers' Day Service.\nGirls' Choir.\nEvening\u2014\"Learning From God\nin the Garden\". Senior Choir.\nMonday, 3 p.m.\u2014Women's Association.\nTuesday, 7:30 p.m.\u2014Y.P.S. Bible\nClass. >\nThursday and Friday, May 12\nand 13, 8:15 p.m.-Y.P.S. will\nJiresent the Comedy, \"Pay-\nng the Fiddler\".\nBETTY BROWN, Nelion\nWinner girls' high voice, under 12,\nMusic Festival Winners\n-PAOl tyjni|\nGOLDIE E. WALKER and BOB C. WEIR, Creiton\nWlnneri pianoforte duet, under 17.\nFRANK H08EK, Bellevue, Alta.\nWinner violin solo, under 20,\nand also of junior championship, violin.\nWarns of Increase\nInfantile Paralysis\nTORONTO, May 6 (CP)-Dr. J.\nT. Phair, chief medical officer for\nOntario, warned the Ontario medical association today of a steady increase in infantile paralysis in the\nprovince during non-epidemic ai\nwell as epidemic years.\nHii suggestion of a possible relationship between infantile paralysis and the season complaint affecting children, called \"summer 'flu\"\nwas a highlight of his report.\nWhile there Is a difference of opinion on the portal of entry, most\ndoctors favor the theory the germs\ninvade the body through the nasal\nmucosa, although some evidence\nwould indicate the theory of a gastrointestinal invasion.\n\"Nothing in the finding of the In-\nPAMELA DEWDNEY (right) and CATHERINE MAUD ARGYLE, Nelion\nWlnneri pianoforte duet, under 14.\nTiniest Competitors\nHERBERT SHERMAN AND DOLORES 8HERMAN, Balfour\nThe tiny mites of the festival. They competed In the piano duet, under 11.\nvestlgating group would support the\npreiumption.fruit, Insects, water or\ndomestic animals played any part\nin disease transmission.\"\nBORSTAL SYSTEM  PRAISED\nVANCOUVER, May 6 (CP)-At-\ntorney-General Gordon S. Wismer\nsaid in a business club address here\ntoday that if British Columbia made\na niccess of its experimental Borstal\ntype school for juvenile delinquents,\nthe scheme would \"sweep Canada\nand the United States.\"\nWhen that occurred, he said, \"our\npotential holdup men, burglars and\nmurders will be saved from careers\nof crime before they start them,\"\nHe Knows How\nPopular He Is\nDRUMHHELLEH, Alta., May 8\n(CP) \u2014 Gerry Fish knew today\nhow popular he is in Drumheller.\nThe bakery manager took HI\nTuesday and was in bed until yesterday. In the meantime a rumor\nthat he had died circulated,\nThe minister called at hit home\nto offer his services, florist! received many orders for wreaths\nand friends kept the telephone\nringing to offer condolences.\nMean time Mr. Fish said he\nwould be too busy catching up\nwith his work to attend funeral\nservices.. \u201e\nTfytib&ttf vty (lomjrant.\nINCORPORATED  2t? MAY 1670.\nLAST DAY\nMEN'S GOOD QUALITY SUITS\nEvery suit has two pair of trousers. New spring patterns, neatly tailored in the latest spring\nstyles. Sport and regular models. Lots of neat check patterns to choose from. (DI Q CA\nSizes 36 to 44. . <     $lU,d\\)\n_ , ;  \u2014Main Floor HBC\nMEN'S SUMMER FLANNELS\nFor an extra pair of\" trousers for business or sport wear. You can't beat flannels.     M AF\nShades of medium light and dark grey. Sizes 30 to 42 $L.JO\n-Main Floor HBC\nMEN'S NEW\nSPRING FELTS\nMen's stylish snap brim\nhats in all the latest colors and styles.    fl\u00bb0 70\nSizes 63\/4 to 7'\/4\u00abP\u00a3. 13\nBOYS' SPORT\nSHIRTS\nSee these new sport shirts\nthat arrived too late for\nthe opening of our Anni;\nversary sale. Sizes 6 yjQ\/a\nto 16 years TWv\n500 Pairs Men's\nDRESS SOCKS\nFine quality all wool hose\nin new spring patterns.\nWei) reinforced at heel\nand toe. Sizes 10    AF\nto 1 IVi; 2 pair..   VdZ\nBOYS' WOOL TWEED LONGS\nJust received a new shipment of boys' tweed longs, in new spring and summer patterns. All\nneatly tailored with belt loops and cuff bottoms. Sizes 6 to 16 Years. d\u00bb| AC\nPair\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\nLadies Spring and Summer\nCOATS\nATA REMARKABLE SAVING\nTailored tweeds or dressy fleeces in. the very newest in styles andtrims. Fitted at waist or lopse-\nback swagger. Guaranteed linings. Sizes 14 to 20; 38 to44.. \u25a0.'' (PA AO\nRegular $13.95 \" '    $J.35\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nNEW MILLINERY\nThe first of the summer millinery. Straws, felts and silks In\ndark colors, gay pastels end whites. Every style (M Oft\nimaginable.  $1.0*)\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nNew Woolen Sweaters\nWear them with suits or match them with that odd skirt. Fine\nall-wool in short sleeve style with round or V-neck. School\ngirls will find them particularly useful. (Tl  \/1ft   <\nPrice tplAV (\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nRAYON SLIPS\nRun-proof rayon that is very practical for everyday wear.\nRoomy and well-cut in tearose and white. Nicely iQ\ntrimmed in lace. Small, medium, large 43C\nLady Hudson\nHOSIERY\nGive Mother stockings!\nWhether she prefers service, semi-service, chiffon or crepe, they're here\nin the \"Lady Hudson\"\u2014a\nquality that is hard to\nbeat! Smart shades in all\nsizes 8V2 to\nlOVi. Pair ..\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\n23-Piece TEA SETS\nThis is ideal for tea on the\nverandah or general use.\nBeautiful patterns on fine\nchina. 6 cups and saucers,\n6 tea plates, cream and\nsr.ieapo?'..$i.i9\nLawn and Porch\nChairs\nA complete stock at the\nlowest\u2022 prices. Hardwood'\nframes and strong striped\nseats.\nCamp Stools, each . 39\u00a3\nFolding Camp Chairs,\nEach,  79?\nComfortable Porch Chairs,\nEach    ?1.50\nReclining Lawn Chairs,\nEach fl.39\nLawn Chair with canopy\nand leg rest, each $3.49\nTwin Travelling\nSets\nThese Grey or Fawn Linen\nSets consist of 20-inch\nTravelite fitted to carry 4\ndresses and suits, and 14-\ninch Fitted Dressing Case\nwith full mirror. Lined\nwith special fabric.\nAnniversary (Ml AC\nSale, set .... *4>11 W\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nREMEMBER\nMOTHER'S\nDAY\nMAY 8th.\nYard ley's Sets $1.00\nLavender Sachets\/ each 25c\nLavender Perfume, each 40c\n$1.00\n\"LAST DAY\" Values in the Staple Dept.\nPRINT SALE\n300 yards 36\" print in a wide range of colorfast designs.\nRegularly sold at 19c and 25c. 1 F\nAnniversary Sale, Yard IOC\nGREY FLANNELETTE SHEETS\nBuy now for the season. You will want these for the\nchildren's bed or camp. Sizes 64x80.\nAnniversary Sale, each\t\nPRINTED CELANESE CREPES\nFor the printed summer dress that will wash perfectly\nthis fabric is ideal. Medium and light grounds in 38\"\nwidth. Anniversary Sale, PA\nYard       dVZ\n\u2014Second Floor HBC\nWABASSO BEACH CLOTHS\nA firm weave suiting that will not shrink, For short suits\nand dresses. Colors are maise, Alice, fawn, green   OQ\nor tan. 36\" wide. Anniversary Sale, yard u\\\/Z\nTwo Bedding \"Specials\" for Saturday\nComforters, c o v e r e d Rm|    Feather    piNows\nwith fast color chintz in\na size 66x72.   d\u00bb1 ftQ with feather proof -7A\nEach    tJH.l\/O ticking, each ... \u2022 \u2022'V\nLINEN\nHANKERCHIEFS\nMake dainty gifts! Ap-\npliqued and tatted edges.\nAll pure linen.        \u00abir\nYour choice. Each  \u00ab-DC\nSMART SCARFS\nAscots or tubulars in clever floral designs! Any of\nthese will make a really\npleasing remembrance for\nMother on Sunday\u2014Her\nDay! Your tf 1 AA\nchoice. Each .. \u00abJ)1.UU\nJUST ARRIVED\nMEN'S BLACK\nBLUCHER OXFORDS\nDressy black oxfords, that\nwill give plenty of hard\nwear. Square toes. Sizes\n6-toll. C9 0Q\nPair $L, JO\nCanvas Play Shoes\nfor Children\nBeige or white duck uppers in oxford or T-strap\nstyles. Sanisol insoles and\nrugatex rubber soles.\n4 to  10'\/2     11 to 2\n69c    79c\n\u2014M\u00abln Floor HBC\nGrowing Girls'\nWhite Sport\nOxfords\nNew white walking oxfords with leather soles\nand military heels or crepe\nsoled low heeled sport oxfords. Just the thing for\nearly summer wear. Sizes\n3 to 8. B to D.\nPair\t\n\u2014Main Floor HBC\n\u25a0\n PAGE POUR\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B. C.-8ATURDAY MORNING. MAY 7. 1938.\nBRITISH WOMEN BEING TRAINED FOR WAR TIME SERVICE\nNAKUSPW.I.TO\nDISCUSS SCHOOL\nUNION FURTHER\nNAKUSP, B. C-Twenty-seven\n^members and two visitors were\npresent when Nakusp Women's In-\nttitute met Tuesday, with Mrs. F.\nRushton presiding.\n\u00bb'; A letter dealing with the consolidation of schools sent by Dr.\nKing of Victoria was read by the\nsecretary, Mrs. E. Oxcnham. Considerable discussion centred about\n.this, and a committee of Mrs. J.\nDolman, Mrs. H. W. Herridge, Mrs.\nG. Elder, Mrs. G. Keys, Mrs. 0.\nSalstrom and Miss M Kirk was appointed to meet the school boards\nto further -deal with it\nI Although it is customary to discontinue the meetings of the institute during July and August it was\n' decided to hold a July meeting this\n[fear.\ni. The institute Is urging that a new\n[government wharf be built at Na-\njkusp, &nd the secretary was in-\n[itructed to write to headquarters.\nj During the month improvements\n; Were made to the cemetery, it was\nf reported. The grounds were leveled\nland a cedar hedge was planted.\nI Several of the pines were cut down\n[and maple-trees planted instead. A\ni row of maples also was planted\n! along the front of the cemetery,\nt The hospital was redecorated and\n> new linen is to be purchased immc-\nf HUately..\nI Arrangements were made for entertaining the New-1 Denver Drama-\ni lUc society, wtecit,jrill stage a play\n'here next- v*iek ifcaid of institute\n; funds. Mrs. M. Baird was appointed\n', convener of the refreshment com'\n! inittee.\nI Miss Mary Kirk of the staff of\nNakusp public school gave a paper\n; on \"Education and. Better Schools.\"\n! A pianoforte.solo was rendered by\ni Mrs. G. P.\" Horsley. Tea hostesses\nj were Mrs. J. Dolman, Mrs. A. Bra-ling and Mrs. T. Steenhoff.\n.SociaU.*\n^Bonnington\npouth Slocan\nMr. and''Mrs, -George M. Hel-\n\u25a0^cque have returned from a mot-\nfring trip to Spokane.\n,t   Mrs. F. Rushton ot Nakusp was\n1 a guest of Mrs, C. H. Bland.\nU   Mrs. Ronald Greyson and sons,\n-Dickey and Bobbie, were at Tarrys\nliior a few days, guests of Mrs. M.\n\u25a0Irving, Mrs. Grayson's mother.\n'  Captain and Mrs. C. Applewaite\nfit Wilow Point is a guest of Mr.\n(land Mrs.-:Stanley Dawson for an\n1 Indefinite time!\nI   Mrs., E.-Jy.-Bowkett and daughter,\nMae, spent' a week at Trail, guests\n[ of Mr. and Mrs. 7W. Laurie, Mrs.\nI Bowkett's parents.\nI Mr. ad Mrs. R. G. Elliot had as\ni tteir guests Sunday, Mrs. Elsie M\n: Ixjng, Miss Mary Long,- Miss Dor-\n\u2022en Long, Miss Jill Wigg, Hareld\ni Long and D.. Gibbons.\nMISS FERGUSON\nHEADS GOLFERS\nFERNIE, B.C.\u2014The annual meet-\n| kg of the Fernie Ladies' Golf club.\n; waa -held Monday, Following officers were elected: Presdient, Miss\nE. Ferguson, vice-presdient, Miss El-\n; len    Hughes;    secretary-treasurer,\nI Miss   J.   Campbell,   entertainment\ncommittee Mrs..Mnrcar and Mrs. A.\nB. Sanborn, competitions, Miss Ellen Hughes, house committee, Mrs.\nW. W. Browne and Mrs. S. Wilson,\nteam captain Mrs. J. C. Connick.\nIt was decided to have the open-\n| Kig day on Saturday, May 7 when a\ntwo ball mixed foursome will be\nplayed.\nCleans Dirty Hands\nMusic Festival\nWinner\nROBERTA-PATTERSON, Nelson\nWinner girls' high voice, 12 to 16.\nMental State..,\nSkin Eruptions\nOften Caused by\nEmotional Upset\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\nSkin diseases are so evident and\nreal that it seems impossible that\nthe mental state, could have anything to do with them, and yet\nemotions play a great part in skin\ndiseases and also skin changes.\nThe psyche, through the influence of the sympathetic nervous\nsystem, produces such common\nphenomena as blushing, pallor and\nsweating, and it is possible, there-,\nfore, that it could actually produce\na skin disease-\nMany: cases of lives.are reported as due to mental influences.\nKaposi, the great Vienna skin specialist,\/ had as a patient an emotional author who broke out with\nred wheals on the skin whenever\nhe saw a lobster painted on canvas. \t\nFear brings on akin disease In\nsome eases. A storekeeper, following a hold-up and a beating,\ndeveloped a generalized eruption\nand itching all over the body. He\nwas cured when he went to the\nhospital, but as soon as he returned to the store\u2014that is to say,\nthe scene of the crime, the eruption returned. He was only cured\nwhen he sold his business and opened a store in a different placa.\nA 21-year-old girl was struck by\na horse's hoof on the forehead and\na skin eruption developed there\nwhich persisted long after there\nwas any reason to suppose it was\ndue to the injury. It was finally\nhealed by psychotherapy.\nBoy Is Scared!...\nMother Asks Help\nin Allaying Ms\nTerror ol Storms\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, PH. D.\n\"Dear Dr. Myers: My three and\na half \u2022year-old'boy Is' deathly afraid\nof electric storms. We have never\nfrightened htm about lightning, but\nhave tried to teach him that It is\npretty to look at We .have two\nother children who are not in the\nleast afraid.\"\nMy answer was about like this:\nOften little children are frightened\nby the thunder clap. This sudden\nnoise alone may induce the tear.\nHowever, older persons will often\ncringe, jump or express fear and\nanxiety in some other way during\nan electric storm. Little children\nsense the fears of others.\nFirst work on yourself and other\nadults to make sure all control\nthemselves well during an electric\nstorm, especially in this child's\npresence; and to do so in his absence: emotional control is largely\na matter of habit It he is awakened In the night by a clap of thunder,\ngo to him. Be near him, indeed,\nwhen you know an electric storm is\napproaching. Calmly talk to him\nthen. Improvise some fanciful yarns\nabout the raindrops, wind, lightning\nflash or thunder. Tell or read his\nfavorite story. Get him.to watch\nwith you the play of lightning and\nhear the distant thunder after the\nstorm has almost passed. Be patient. Any terrifying fear that may\ncome in the twinkling of an aye may\nlinger for years.\nSocial...\nPASSMORE\nPASSMORE, B.C. - The first\ndance of the year under auspices\nof the Passmore hall association was\na success financially. Mrs. M. Hop-\nland and Miss M. Forbes were hostesses. J. Forbes was master of ceremonial. Miss E. Coleman won a piglet\nW. B. Perry was a Nelson visitor\nTuesday.\nMiss R. Nye and Mrs. A. Angrig-\nMusic Festival\nWinner\nwmv*i^4X'\nFREDA ANTROBUS, Coleman,\nAlta.\nWinner pianoforte, under 20.\nnon of Nelson were visiting here\nWednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Hird and daughter were guests of Mr. and Mrs. W.\nR. Perry Monday.\nMrs. G. A. Hird has returned to\nher home at Slocan City after\nspending a week at Silver Spring\nranch, a guest of Mr. and Mrs. W.\nR. Perry.\nVisitors from Trail over the week,\nend included Mr. and Mrs. W. H.\nSaunders, Gird Hinch and W. Fowler.\nGIRLS' SOFTBALL\nTEAM FOR KASLO\nKASLO, B.C.-A girls' softball\nclub to be known as \"The Royals\"\nhas been formed in Kaslo with the\nfollowing officers: President, Miss\nPhyllis Fox: secretary - treasurer,\nMiss Eleanor Horner; manager, Miss\nPeggy Dryden; captain, Miss Mabel\nBeck; vice-captain, Miss Bernice\nShaw; coach, A. Carney.\nHEALTH\nDEPENDS ON\n| Proper Food | Fresh Air | Sunlight | Exercise I\nPROPER FOOD MOST IMPORTANT\nOne might maintain a certain degree of health with a nunlrmun\namount of fresh air, sunlight, or exercise, but without proper\nfood the human body cannot long ward off sickness and disease.\nFOOD DEMORALIZED\nMost of our day foods are lacking in Minerals due to impoverished soils. Cereals, fruits and vegetables are deficient in these\nvital elements so essential to health. In addition, so much of our\npresent day foods are artificial, containing no building properties\nWhatever.\nEVEN MILK DEFICIENT\nThe Department of Agriculture, New South Wales, discovered\nthat milk cows pastured on the best grasses available showed\nsymptoms of exreme malnutrition, which affected both the\nquantity and quality of the milk, found to be due to lack of\n..Minerals in the soil where'cattle were fed.\nNATURE WILL RESTORE\nMother Nature has supplied us with a simple means to regain\nhealth and enable our bodies to throw off disease. Doctor Geo.\nCarey, in his book \"Chemistry of Life\" has stated:\n\"Doctor Sr.hifcajlr-r, one of the world's greatest .scientists,\nfirst found the constituents of the human body, and knowing the value of Mineral Springs he conoluded that they\n' contained Just what tha system required.\"\nLANG'S MINERAL contains important Minerals necessary for\nthe health of the human body that are lacking in bur foods. For\nover fifty years this Mineral has been instrumental in bringing\nhealth to thousands who had suffered from various ailments. It\nis a most valuable home remedy, used Internally and externally\nwith remarkable results. Call or write for free information.\nLang's Mineral Remedies\n\u25a0 946 Robson Street Vancouver, B. C.\nKASLO Social-\u2666\u2666\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Mrs. John Keen\nhas returned trom a short visit to\nNelson.\nMrs. Mary Vallance is visiting\nYmir, a guest of her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. John Vallance.\nMr. and Mrs. George Wellington\nhave as their guest their daughter,\nMrs. X. Reisterer ot Nelson.\nMrs. J. A. Riddell and daughter,\nMiss Kate Riddell, are spending a\ntew days at Nelson attending the\nKootenay Music festival,\n. R. Hamilton has left to. spend the\nsummer at Hall Creek.\nAmong those attending the music\nfestival at Nelson are Mrs. F. S.\nChandler and daughter, Miss Winnie Chandler.\nL. H. Ssmmons, Portland mining\nman, has arrived in the city to look\nafter his mining property located\nin the Woodberry basin.\nMrs. T. H. Horner and daughter,\nMiss Clara Horner, are attending\nthe music festival at Nelson.\nJ. B. DeLong, provincial high\nschool Inspector, was a visitor in\ntown Thursday. He was accompanied by Mrs. DeLong and her\nsister. They are all from Vancouver,\nMrs. J. Fielding Shaw and daughter, Miss Beatrice Shaw, are spending a few days in Nelson attending\nthe music festival\nSerial Story\nOne More Weddingl\nBy HELEN WELSHIMER\nCHAPTER \u00bb\nIt was snowing again. Not fast\nsharp Hakes but great white ones\nthat came slowly, as though they\nmade a lacy valentine, and wanted\nthe world to watch.\nBarbara had a ski suit which she\nhad worn, now and then, at the\nclub to which week-end house parties went on winter jaunts when\nshe was In college. She had brought\nit with her. It resembled a pair of\nold-fashioned brown woolen overalls, with a yellow shirt. Large\nbrass buttons held the costume together. There was a yellow stocking cap and yellow mittens that\nwent with it. She had ski boots, too.\nWhen she came downstairs, the\ngroup in the dining room was scattering. She decided, on a sudden impulse, to make some sandwiches,\nand stay out until Bobbie grew cold.\nThey found a hilltop with a nice\nslope and skied a while. Then they\nbrought the skis back and began\nto tramp. Now and then, through\nthe white network of the trees, they\ncaught the gaiety ot other hikers'\ncostumes, or the refuse of laughter\nleft behind. Barbara stopped suddenly, and held the little boy's hand\ntighter. She had an unexplainable\nsense that never again would she\nfind long stretches of white peace.\nHope, that had glowed like a candle\nfor a shining moment that morning\nwhen Garry had said: \"Could you\nmake me just one cake, please?\"\nhad flared its last\nNow she knew why she had come\nso suddenly from the lodge. It was\nthat look in Garry's eyes when\nWenda chattered with Jimmy Minton. She did not want, to see Garry\nlooking like that\u2014looking as though\nhe were hurt and lost, even as she\nhad been\u2014even as she was now, at\ntimes. If he wanted his yellow-\nhaired rag doll, then'why didn't he\nseize her and make off with her\nInstead of letting other people waste\ntears they needed for themselves on\nhis problems? -. \u00bb-\n\"Bobble, always be glad you are\na maul\" she told the child.\n\"You bet I'm glad I am,\" he said.\n\"Why?\"\n\"You can take anything In your\nstride and when you do get hurt\neverybody feels so sorry for you.\"\n\"I won't get hurt,\" he answered.\n\"I wonder,\" she mused. ''Let's go\nback, pobbte.\"\nIt was about half a mile from the\nlodge, where the road forked, that\nthey came upon Wenda and Jimmy\nMinton. They were deeply engrossed in some subject of conversation\nand only Bobbie's excited: \"Aunt\nWenda, Aunt\" made them wave indifferent .hands as they went back\nto their theme.\nJulia's confidence, half-lingering\non the fringes of Barbara's mind,\nmoved in a little closer. Wenda\nseemed to be on good terms with\nthe playboy.\nBut when the whole part gathered presently in the long room that\nheld the swimming pool, Wenda\nwas devoted to Garry and paid no\nattention to Jimmy Minton. Purposely Barbara had brought along\na green bathing suit instead of the\nyellow one which she had worn a\ntime or two with Garry, last September, before the beaches closed.\nThe pool was warm, and its green\nwaters were reflected in the glass\nceiling. There, were sun lamps and\ngay chairs and parasols along the\npool's edge. Natalie had paid her\nprice tor wealth and ease. She had\nbeen repaid richly in the coin for\nwhich she reckoned.\nBarbara stretched out lazily on\nthe water and floated but, when she\nheard Garry and Wenda's merry\nvoices nearby, she began to swim in\nearnest. She had to! She must not\nremember those few afternoons at\nAtlantic beaches near New York\nwhen she and Garry had tumbled\nthrough white breakers; rested under striped umbrellas, sunned themselves, talked and were silent.\nYou could throw away souvenirs\nwhen a party was over. If you\ndidn't hear music for a long time,\nyou could forget how the melody\nwent. Why couldn't you pack all\nyour memories in a trunk and address it to Timbuctoo? Only, even\nIf you did address it to Timbuctoo,\nSingapore, Madagascar, you would\nfind It waiting tor you in the hall\noutside your door when you came\nhome at night. There should be\nsome chemical manufactured which\nwould destroy memories.\nA strange young man was saying something to her and she knew\nshe was answering with no knowledge of What she said. He seemed\nto be waiting, at the moment for\nan answer. So she sang out blithely\nto him, \"I'll race you to the othei\nend ot the pool and back.\"\n(To be continued).\nWrong Spirit,.:.\nGrows Indifferent\nWhen Youth loses\nJob; Is Not Loyal\nBy VIRGINIA LEE\nWhat do I think ot a girl who's\nvirtually engaged to a man and\nwhen hard luck hits him and he\nloses his job, tells him about other\nfellows who would like to take her\nout and how well they^lways treated her? '\nI have had this problem before.\nWe must give the girl credit for\none thing. I suppose there never\nwas a man who lest his job and\ntried to find another one, but that\nhis relatives and friends\u2014and that\nincludes his girl friend \u2014 have a\nsneaking suspicion that he isn't looking hard enough for another. I don't\nknow why this is, but I know It to\nbe a fact. They don't mean to and\ndon't want to, and the right kind\nof relatives nhd friends would sooner die than admit to the poor jobless\nman they have any such thought,\nbut it usually persists, and he is\nsure to feel it, too.\nDOE8NT LOVE UNSELFISHLY\nBut there Is the rub! If your girl\nfriend, J. R. D., really cares for you\nU the right way, she will never,\nnever, mention another boy who\nwould give her good times, but always, try to encourage you and cheer\nyou by saying that she prefers you\nto anyone else, and that she will\nstand by you. She will show her\nfaith in you by saying that she\nknows you will soon get work and\nbe all right That is the loyal and\nloving spirit which women of all\ntimes-have displayed to keep their\nmen encouraged.\nSo, you see, I don't think this\ngirl loves you in the right way.\nMaybe she is just young and\nthoughtless, but she certainly isn't\nshowing the right spirit\nSLOCAN W. I.\nPLANS DANCE\nPASSMORE, B.C.-Slocan Valley\nWomen's, institute met April no\nwhen Mrs. W. Young presided.\nMrs. C. Harrison won a,photo\nguessing contest\nMrs. W. Young was appointed to\nattend a conference at Vancouver in\nJuly. Miss B. Perry Is the alternative. ,\nA dance was arranged.\nThose present were Mrs. W.\nYoung, Miss B. Perry Mrs. S Reid,\nMrs. A. P. Wblteman, Mrs. F. Flynn,\nMrs. M. Baskin, Mrs. E. T. Coleman,\nMiss Crcbbin, Mrs'. C. Harrison, Mrs.\nW. Beaton and Mrs. M. Hopland.\n,$mal...\nHtJSCROFT\nHUSCHQFT.RC. - BUI Chilton\nand son. Jack, who have been working at Ryan for C. 0.' Rodgers of\nCreston for a month have returned.\nMr. and Mrs, Bill Smith of Port-\nhill were in Creston on Friday for\nthe funeral of their daughter, Mrs.\nR. StacejSrnlth.\nMr. and Mrs. Bert Hobdon and\nfamily were Sunday visitors at Bon-\nners ferry, guests of the latter's\nsister and brother-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. 0. Vanetter.\nMiss Gladys McColloch and 3.\nStrong ot PorthlU were Sunday visitors at Bonners Ferry. , :\"\u2022\u25a0'\nBill ad Wilfred Smith of Cranbrook- Were visitors with their, parents, Mr. \u25a0 and Mrs. Bill Smith' of\nPorthlU, coming for the funeral of\ntheir sister, Mrs. Stace-Smth.\nW. Miller of Alice Siding, was a\nweek-end visitor to the Chilton family.\nMatt zork of Creston was a visitor\nhere.\nPete Slkora cut a thumb quite\nbadly, blood poison setting in. He\nwent to Creston for medical attention. \u25a0\nCharles Montgomery is working\nat Camp 2 ranch, driving tractor\nfor Mr. Ivany.\nFrank Baker ot Creston was a\nvisitor.\nPreparing for Emergency,.. .\nModern Army Has Place lor Women\nSays War Secretary Hore-Belisha\nLONDON, May 8 (AP)-Modish-\nly-garbed women tripped into the\nwar office today to confer with\narmy chiefs on plans for mobilization of an army for non-combatant\nmilitary duties tn the event of an\nemergency. - . :   .\n. In preliminary talks over which\nMajor-General Sir John Brown presided, formationiOf a women's military organization was discussed in\naccordance with ideas ot the secretary for war, Leslie Hore-Belisha.\nGeneral Brown is deputy director-\ngeneral of the Territorial army.\nThe women Included the Marchioness of Londonderry and Viscountess Haitsham. No announcement\nconcerning the consultations will be\nmade until the \"schemes have been\nfully worked out,\" the war office\nsaid.\nLeslie Hore-Belisha declared a\nmodern army had a place for women. It was recalled 1,000,000 British women during the Great War\nworked in munitions factories,\nserved as nurses, and enlisted in\nthe women's auxilary army corps\ndUnlL fait\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\nWaNUHINT\nCOttage Cheese Omelet\nParsley Potatoes\nButtered Cauliflower\n\"Garden Sass\" Salad\nPineapple Tapioca    Tea  '\nIt is a peculiar thing that so many\npeople who are not permitted to\neat meat on Friday dislike fish. 1\nlove fish, but there are, I am sorry\nto say; many who do hot The cottage cheese omelet is a dish that\nwill take the place of fish and be\nnourishing.and delicious. Make the\n\"garden sass\" salad of whatever garden greens you can obtain.\nCOTTAGE CHEESE OMELET\u2014\nFour eggs, one-half teaspoon salt\none-half, cup cottage cheese, two\ntablespoons pimento, four tablespoons milk, one tablespoon butter.\nWhip egg whites until very stiff.\nBeat egg yolks well and add cottage\ncheese and other ingredients except\nbutter. Fold mixture into whites.\nMelt butter in frying pan and pour\nin mixture. Cook over slow fire\nuntil under side is a delicate brown\nput into moderate oven to brown on\ntop. Fold and serve. Serves four.\nPINEAPPLE TAPIOCA-One cup\nquick cooking tapioca, three cups of\nwater (more If too 'thick). Cook\nuntil clear, stir in one and one-\nhalf cups sugar, take from tire and\nadd juice of a lemon and one and\none-half cans grated pineapple and\nthe beaten egg whites of three eggs.\nBeat with wire egg beater 15 to 20\nminutes. Serve in sherbet glasses\nwith whipped cream. This pudding\ncan be made the day before you\nare going to use it and will serve\n20 persons.\nPURITY\nirXOUR\nMAKES  BETTER  BREAD\nand women's Royal naval services\nperforming non-combantant 'duties.\nThe war secretary said the purpose to train women \"in various\ntasks so that on mobilization women could supply military requir-\nment for various non-combatant duties.\"    ' -\"'       .\nThe army and air. councils already have recognized \"emergency\nservice,\" an organization training\nwomen as officers for women's\ncorps in war time.\nThe Duchess ot Gloucester is\npresident of the service. Army and\nair force officers give instruction\nat day and evening classes.\nSocial...\nMicheLNatal\nNATAL, B.C-Mr. and Mrs. Joe\nHalko returned to Natal after a holiday at Spokane at the home of Mr.\nand Mrs. G. Bouton.\nMr. and Mrs. F. Yates and family\nreturned to Natal from the coast\nJames Altomare and daughter Virginia are visiting California.\nW. Laurie and daughter, Miss Lillian Marchie and Miss Florence Le-\nRoy returned to Michel from Penticton.\nGus Pugliese, Sandy Giordano,\nJohn Martini and Albert Forco returned to Natal after visiting Penticton and Spokane,' With them\nthey brought Miss Beanie Bombino\not Spokane who will visit Natal\nGAINING NEW FRIENDS\nEVERY DAY\nEVAPORATED\nMILK\nPure at the\nSnow on\nMountain\nPeaki.\nillpine\nfiti\u00a3fc\n\"We like it better than a whistle!\nDoes your child fuse at breakfast\u2014have to be coaxed\nto eat? Kellogg's Rice Kriapiea will put an end to that)\nBecause children juit can't resist that \"snap-crackle-\npop\" sound, that tells how super-crisp and crunch?\nthose toasted rice bubbles are. Rice Kriapiea is the only\ncereal so crisp it crackles out loud in milk or crcnml '-\nLet the whole family join the criipnen chorus I They'll\nlove this wholesome food, light and easily digested. And\nthere's nothing better for the children's supper. Rice\nKrispies never disturb restful sleep.\nAt all grocers, oven-fresh and ready to\necrvc. Made by Kellogg in London, Out.\nKELLOGG'S\nfor EXTRA FLAVOR\u2014\nEXTRA CONVENIENCE\n *\u25a0- -!\n5<^\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NIL80N, B.C^-SATURDAY MORNING. MAY % 1935,\nFOUND DEAD IN\nHOMEATKASLO\nKASLO,  B.  C\u2014Edwin   Charles\nWard was found dead in a chair\nTHE AWFUL PRICE VOU\nPAY FOR BEING\nNERVOUS\nQuIverlM nrm ran mall, you old sni\nfjunrd looldns, cranky sad bird to Un\nwith\u2014can keep yon awake nights and\nrob you of good health, good stem and\nfobs.\nWhat you should try Is \u25a0 particularly\nfood woman's tonic\u2014and could you ask\nfor anything whoso benefits are better\nproved than that world-famous Lydia E.\nPinkham'a Vegetable Compound? Let\nIts wholesome herbs and roots help\nNature calm your shrieking nerves, ton.\nvp your system, givo more energy sod\nmake life worth living again.\nMore than a million women hava reported bonefit\u2014why not lot Pinkhim's\nCompound help YOU, too, to go \"smiling thru\" trying times Ilka ft has other\nS-ateful women for the past 8 gencrt-\nontt IT MUST BE GOOD!\n(Advt.)\nby the stove In big home here when\nL. MacPherson went to visit him.\nMr. MacPherson had made it a custom to put In fires and generally\n\"keeps an eye\" on the welfare'of\nMr. Ward, who lived alone near\nthe MacPherson home. Mr. Ward\nhad been in ill health for some\ntime.\nA native of Ontario Mr. Ward\nspent a number of his early years\nin the United States, coming to this\ndistrict about 1893 He followed\nmining and bridge building for\nsome years, and, for a time, ranched at Popular.\nAbout ten years ago he purchased\nproperty In Kaslo and had made his\nhome here since.\nHe was a widower for many years\nbut it is believed that a son in\nSouth America and a daughter in\nthe United States survive, He was\nIn his eighty-third year.\nMrs. Goetz Extends\nHotel Activities\nMrs. Harry Goetz of Spokane who\nis known In Kootenay as manager\nof the Coeur d'Alene hotel and R.\nW. Owen, president of the Coeur\nd'Alene Hotel company In Spokane,\nhave leased the Pend D'Oreille hotel\nat Sand Point, Idaho.\nCONSTABLE PROMOTED\nTO NELSON DIVISION\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, May\n6 (CP)\u2014Constable J. M. Brown,\nclerk in the* New Westminster\nBritish Columbia police district office, today received word of his\npromotion to divisional headquarters at Nelson, B. C.\nTURKO-PERSIAN RUG CO.\nExclusive Repairing, Weaving and Cleaning\nAll Makes of Ruga\nOur service is used by insurance adjusters and rug dealers.\nWe renape all worn out napes with original shades of yarns.\nAll Work Done by Native Experts. i\nOUT-OF-TOWN ORDERS GIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION.\n2113 GRANVILLE ST.\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nAt Seen in Vogue, Mademoiselle and Harper's Ba*aar_\nYOU WOUID\nWEAR ORDINARY\nPUMPS, MY OEAR,\nNOW I SUPPOSE\nI'll WAVE TO\nCARRY YOU TO MY\nTANGO STORE.\n~J\nfsngos are flexible\n\u00bbt the instep, the very\nspot where ordinary\npumps hurt most\nRw Andrew & Co*\nButcherteria News\nSATURDAY and MONDAY SPECIALS\nBlue Label Steer Beef\nPRIME  ROLLED  RIBS\u2014Lh.\nW.\u201ed28<\nCHOICE RUMP ROASTS e^tLp\nSIRLOIN AND T-BONE    Jft#t\n8TEAK8-Lb Wt\nGOOD STEER BEEF\nPOT ROA8T8- |2\u00ab}\n201221\nUp from\nRUMP R0AST8-\nLb,\nSIRLOIN AND T-BONE   oftg*\nROAST8-Lb m*T\nSIRLOIN AND T-BONE   *JCA\n8TEAK8-L0 *\u2022\u00bb*\nROUND STEAKS\u2014 ABA\n2 lbs **r\nVEAL FILLET ROA8TS   2<\u00a3\nVEAL SHOULDER\nROA8T8-Lb\t\nVEAL 8TEAK8-\n2 lbs\t\nVEAL CHOPS\u2014\nLb\t\nm\n45*\n250\n25<\n25<J\n25<\nOUR    FIRST   8HIPMENT   OF    FRE8H    KILLED    BROILER8\nARRIVED  YESTERDAY\u2014LIMITED  NUMBER\u2014ORDER   EARLY\nLEG PORK ROASTS-\nLb\t\nSHOULDER LAMB\nROA8T8-^Lb\t\nRolled on Request\nFRE8H     HAMBURGER     AND\nSTEW BEEF\u2014\n2 lbs\t\nLEAN BOILING BEEF- JJg\nCREAMERY BUTTER-    -inA\nThird Grade; lb. Vr\nCash Only\nBREAKFA8T BACON-    AftA\nSliced; lb. W\nLARD\u2014In cartons;\neach\t\nFRESH RENDERED f Aft\nDRIPPING-Lb.  *wr\nEGGS\u2014Grade A-Medlum; yAl*\nPORK PIES-Oven\nfresh; 4 for.:.\t\nSPICED HAM-\nPer lb\t\nJELLIED VEAL-\nPer lb\t\nPOTTED MEAT\u2014\nPer lb\t\n8POKANE COTTAGE       2\u00abJl}\n15*\n25*\n200\nCHEE8E\u2014Lb.\nPhones 527 and 528\nFret Delivery\nWeek * End Racio\naaiiai\u00bb^\u00bbi*i\ntATURDAY\nN.B.C. KPO RID NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KF1 KPO KOMO\n590     620     640     680    880\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO   KJR   KEX   KECA   KOA\n780       870     HBO      1480      1470\nCOLUMBIA   NETWORK\nKV1 KOIN KN.X KSL KOL\n970    940    1050    1180     1270\nDON LEE NETWORK\n1270 k. 236.1 in.\nSeattle, KOL 5000 w.\n600 k. CJOR 4.99.7 m.\nVancouver 500 w.\n1030 k. CFCN 293.1 m.\nCaigary *     -        10,000 w,\n1:00 P.M.\u2014,\nStudies in Contrast (CBC & DL)   '\nMelody Serenade (Black)\nSwing Club (Col.)\n4:30 P.M.\u2014\nTribute to Hawaii (CBC)\nHarry Rosenthal's orch. (Red)\nMaurice's orch. (Columbia)\n5:00 P.M.\u2014\nSymphony orch. (CBC & Red)\nSafety first (Blue)\nLet There Be Music (Col.)\n5:15 P.M.\u2014\nThree Pals (Blue)\n5:30 P.M.\u2014\nStars ot Tomorrow (Blue)\nNight Serenade (Col.)\nBarnes' Barnstormers (Don Lee)\n6:00 P.M.\u2014\nKelsey's Design for Music (Blue)\nYour Hit Parade (Columbia)\nSingtime (Don Lee)\n6:30 P.M.\u2014\nMusic Hall (CBC)\nfamily Party (Red)\nfrank Bull, sports (Don Lee)\n5:45 P.M.\u2014\n\"Jews Flashes (Don Lee)\nlapitol Opinions (Columbia)\n:00 P.M.\u2014\nNews and weather (CBC)\nNational Barn Dance (Red)\nTack Crawford's orch. (Col.)\nf-I5 P.M.\u2014\nSports World, talk (CBC)\nJimmy Dorsey's orch, (Don Lee)\n7-30 P M.\u2014\nHorace Heidt's Brigadiers (CBC &\nBlue)\n\u25a0Tohnnie Presents  (Col.)\n*<!00 P.M.\u2014\n\"rofessor Quiz. Bmlnbuaters (Col.)\nDance Orchestra (Don Lee)\nS:30 P.M.\u2014\nOld Time Frolic (CBC)\nBlue Barron's orch. (Red)\nHerbie Kav's orch. (Blue)\nNat Brandvwlne's orch. (Col.)\nBob Crosby's orch. (Don Lee)\n<\u00bb:00 P.M.\u2014\nOn Parade, military music (CBC)\nriray Gordon's orch. (Blue)\nNewspaper of the Air (Don Lee)\n9:15 P.M.\u2014\nJan Garber's orch. (Don Lee)\n<\u00bb:30 P.M.\u2014\nEarle Kelley, commentator (CBC)\nJack Marshard's orch. (Red)\nAnson Weeks (Don L*e)\nCarl Ravazsa's orch. (Blue)\n0:45 P.M.\u2014\nWeather and News (CBC)\n10:00 P.M.\u2014\n''tan Patton's orch. (CBC)\nToseph Sudy's orch. (Red)\nHarry Rosenthal's orch. (Blue)\nHollywood Burn Dance (Col.)\nSkinny Ennls' orch. (Don Lee)\n'0:30 P.M.\u2014\nHal Drieske's orch. (Red)\n\"rank Trombar's orch. (Blue)\nRoger Pryor's orch! (Don Lee)\n'0:45 P.M.\u2014\nOzzie Nelson's orch. (Columbia)\nM:00 P.M,\u2014\nHarry Owen's orch. (Red)\n\"aul Carson, organist (Blue)\nTast Minute News (Blue)\nPasadena Civic Auditorium (Col.)\n11:05 P.M.\u2014\nSpud Murphy's orch. (Don Lee)\n11:30 P.M.\u2014\nArchie Loveland's orch. (Red)\n\u25a0Toe Saunders' orch.- (Col.)\nThe Play Boys (Don Lee)\n11:45 P.M.\u2014\nMusical Program (Don Lee)\nSUNDAY\nCBC (early)\n1:00 p.m.\u2014Nova Scotia folk songs\n2:00 p.m.\u2014Choral Musjc\n2:30 p.m.\u2014Musical Camera\n2:45 p.m.\u2014H. M. Canadian Grenadier Guards Band\n3:00 p.m.\u2014Jack Benny's company\n3:30 p.m.\u2014Dr. H. L. Stewart, news\nreview\n3:45 p.m.\u2014Jean de Romanoczy, violin\n4:00 P.M.\u2014\nDon Ameche's Co. (CBC & Red)\nSpy al Large, dr. (Blue)\nWar forum, national problems (DL)\n4:30 P.M.\u2014\nSongs we remember (Blue)\nLyn Murray's Musical Gazette (Col)\nSumner Prlndle (Don Lee)\n4:45 P.M.\u2014\nRabbi Magnln (Don Lee)\n\"?:00 P.M.\u2014\nMusic for you (CBC)\nManhattan Merry-Go-Round (Red)\nJoseph Sudy's orch. (Blue)\nSymphony Hour (Col.)\n5:30 P.M.\u2014\nSir Ernest Macmlllan, organ (CBC)\nAlbum of Familiar Music (Red)\nReader's Guide (Blue)\n5:45 P.M.-\nArgentine Trio (Blue)\n6:00 P.M.\u2014\nWhither Democracy (CBC)\nCarnival, music (Red)\nAll-Girl orch. (Blue)\nLud Gluskin's program (Columbia)\nThe Marines Tell It To You (DL)\n6:30 P.M\t\nNational Hospital day, dr. (CBC)\nTyrone Power In drama (Red)\nCheerio, inspirational (Blue)\nMy Secret Ambition (Columbia)\nGood Will Hour (Don-Lee)\n7:00 P.M.\u2014\nNews, weather (CBC)\nWalter Wlnchell, gossip (lied)\nNews (Blue)\nAbe Lyman's orch. (Col.)\nNews (Don Lee)\n7:05 P.M.\u2014\nBlue Barron's orch, (Blue)\n7:15 P.M.\u2014\nRichard Manning, tenor (CBC)\nIrene Rich in drama (Red)\n7:30 P.M.\u2014\nMusical Mirror (CBC)\nJack Benny and company (Red)\nLou Breese's orch. (Col.)\nDuke Ellington's orch. (Columbia)\nOld Fashioned Revival (Don Lee)\n8:00 P.M.\u2014\nChamber Music (CBC)\nI Want a Divorce, drama (Red)\nHarry Owens' orch. (Blue)\nJoe Penner and Company (Col.)\n8:15 P.M.\u2014\nJack Denny's orch. (Red)\nNames and Faces, Ira Blue (Red)\n8:30 p.M.\nSerenade in the Night (CBC)\nOne Man's Family (Red)\nHarry Rapp's orch. (Blue)\nNat Braridywine's orch. (Col.)\nThe River King (Don Lee)\n9:00 P.M.\u2014\nTwenty Men and a Maid (CBC)\nNight Editor (Red)\nGray Gordon's orch. (Blue)\nOzzie Nelson's orch. Columbia)\nNews flashes (Don Lee)\n9:15 P.M.\u2014\nSleep Serenade, poetry (KPO-RED)\nEmerson Gill's orch. (Red)\nDick Liebert's orch. (Don Lee)\n9:30 P.M.\u2014\nOrgan Reveries (CBC) ,\nHal Drieske's orch. (Red)\nBeaux Arts Trio (Blue)\nHenry King's orch. (Col.)\nRay Heating's orch (Don Lee)\n9:45 P.M.\u2014\nWeather, News (CBC)\nUniversity Explorer (Blue)\n10:00P.M.\u2014\nIn Recital, Parnham Duo (CBC)   <\nNews flashes (Red)\nEddie Swartout's Music (Blue)\nClem Kennedy, piano moods (Col)\n10:15 P.M.\u2014\nBridge to dreamland, Carson (Red)\nThanks for the Memory (Columbia)\nJan Garber's orch. (Don Lee)\n10:30 P.M.\u2014\nPaul Martin's music (Blue)\nSkinny Ennis' orch. (Don Lee)\n10:45 P.M.\u2014\nDick Jcvken.s orch. (Columbia)\n11:00 P.M.\u2014\nBob Sounder's orch. (Red)\nCharles Runyan, organ (Blue)\nLast Minute News.(Blue)\nGROCERY\nSAVING EFFECTIVE\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nPHONE  161\nCORN\u2014Golden Bantam   OQ\/\u00bb\nor White; 2 tins  AOL\nBROOMS\u2014Good weight;\neach\t\n35c\nPUREX TI88UE-\n3 rolls\t\n21c\nJELLY POWDERS\u2014Mai- nt.\nkin's; 5 for  UOL\nRED PLUM JAM-Em- \u25a0repress; 4-lb. tin ,... cJtJL\nCOCOA-Fry's, Mb. tins; Qnn\neach  \u2022J\u00ab\/v\nWONDER FLAKES^      1)1).\n2-lb. pkg  iiOL\nCOFFEE-Ambrosia;\nper lb\t\nBAKING POWDER--\nBlue Ribbon; 3-lb. tin .\n24c\n59c\n8UGAR\u2014B,C. Granu- Cr7-\nlated; 9-lb. aack   Ol t\nCash and Carry\nRHUBARB-Fresh Local; nr\nLETTUCE-\" OP_\n2 large heads uu\\i\nSPUDS\u2014Firm Local;       in.,\n11 lb LuL\nORANGES-Famlly     OC_\nslse; 2 doz  iuJL\nASPARAGUS TIP8-\nNo. 1| 2 lb\t\n23c\nSPINACH\u2014Fresh Local;\n2 lb\t\nNEW  CABBAGE-\nPer lb\t\n19c\n7c\nGRAHAM WAFERS-      fj Q _\nRed Arrow; Mb. pkg  lot\nNEW 8PUDS-Whltei;     <)K\/\u00bb\n31\/4 lbs  UOL\nGREEN ONIONS, CELERY,\nGRAPEFRUIT and APPLES\nFREE  DELIVERY\nNELSON Social-.\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNIUX\n\u2022 Mr. end Mrs. A. L. McCulloch,\nMill street, have returned from an\nextended visit to La Jolla, Calif.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. J.' P. Morgan,\nOak street, have as their guests,\ntheir son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs, Frank Pennojer ot Trail.\n\u2022 Mrs. D. D. McLean, Victoria\nstreet, has returned from a few\nweeks at Vancouver where she was\na patient at St.,Paul's hospital. Her\ndaughter, Sybil McLean, who accompanied her to the coast, also\nreturned.   .    \u25a0\ne Mrs. F. Willis of Trail la a city\nvisitor.\ne Mrs. E. Burbeski was in town'\nfrom Sheep Creek yesterday.'..\ne A shopper in Nelson yesterday\nwas Mrs. Johnson of the Kootenay\nBelle mine.\ne Mrs. O. Redgrave of Trail\nspent yesterday tn the city.   t\ne, Mrs. D. L. Clark of Canyon\nCity is visiting Nelson.    \u2022\ne Mr, and Mrs. Charles Norris,\nFairview, have as their guest, Mrs.\nJ. T. Ironside of Silverton.\ne Mrs. M. M. O'Brien and son,\nJimmy, of Trail visited town yesterday.\ne Mr. and Mrs. B. B. Stallwood,\nFairview, have as their ' guest,\nCharles Kolthammcr of Canyon city.\ne Mrs. W. P. Dunbar was in\ntown from Trail yesterday.\ne Mr. and' Mrs. Joseph Schell\nof Cranbrook arrived yesterday to\nspend a few days at the home of\nthe latter's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. F. .DCnison, Carbonate st,reet.\ne Mr. - and Mrs. James May,\nRichard street, have as their guest\ntheir daughter, Mrs. Fredrick St.\nDenis, who is attending the music\nfestival.\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Burns, Car-\nLighten Noble's orch. (Col.)\nWeather report (Don Lee)\n11:01 P.M.\u2014\nSpud MUrphy's orch. (Don Lee)\n11:15 P.M.\u2014\nMusic As You Desire It (Blue)\n11:30 P.M.\u2014\nReveries, instrumental (Red)\nLes Parker's orch. (Columbia)\nMidnight Moods (Don Lee)\n\u00bb\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022##\u2022\nMOTHER'S DAY\nTreat her to a real thrill\non Sunday. Dine with her\nat the newly completed\ndining room of the\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\nShe's Sure to Enjoy It.\n\u2014 SPECIAL MENU \u2014\nG\nOLDEN\nATE CAFE\nHORNER'S\nGROCERY\nNELSON\nPHONE 121\nSALMO\nPHONE 5\nGROCERY   PRICES   THE   8AME\nAT 8ALMO\n~   SPECIALS   ~~\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\n52c\nCOFFEE: Chaie and   OQ\nSanborn, lb <3\u00ab\/C\nPUREX TOILET 0%\nPAPER: 3 rolls ..... LLl\nPEANUT BUTTER:\nMcColl's, 4's, tin .\nSALMON\nPink Seal, Vi'i, each .    \u00bbe\nPink Seal, Pi, 2 for.. 25^\nClover Leaf, Sockcyc,\nVi'i, 2 for  39\u00bb*\nConner'i Herring and Tomato Sauce: OC\n2 tint    CJC\nGRAHAM WAFERS: 00.\nI.B.C., pk\u00ab LLX\nORANGES\n2 doxen 350\n2 doxen 490\nGRAPEFRUIT: 250\n6 for \t\nFIELD-TOMATOES:   00.\nRHUBARB:\nfresh, 3 lb\t\nASPARAGUS TIPS:   OC\nBUNCH CARROTS:   09\n3 bunchei  Lo\\>\nFRESH CABBAGE:     Of.\n4 Ibi U Jt\nCelery, Head Lettuce,\nSpinach\nFREE DELIVERY\n22c\nDonate Btreet, have as their guest the\nlatter's sister, Miss Mable L. Smith\nof Toronto, who is here on au extended visit.\ne Mrs. H. Saunders and daughter of Trail visited town yesterday.\ne Mrs. G. G. Fair and daughter,\nDoreen of Salmo, spent yesterday\nIn town,\ne Mrs. L. Trevorrow and Mrs.\nWilliam Irvine of Trail were Nelson\nVisitors Thursday.\n\u2022' Thursday evening Mrs. J.\nMutaro entertained Mrs. Henry\nGagnon's circle of the Cathedral\nof Mary Immaculate at her home\non Granite road when those attending were Mrs; L. S. McKinnon\nMrs. F. Boyd, Miss W. Klnnahan,\nMrs. Henri Gagnon, Mrs. Norbert,\nO. Choquette, Mrs. V. Doyle, Mrs.\nA. T. Noxon, Mrs. G. F. Stevens,\nMrs. Vito Romano, Mrs. George\nMcPherson, Mrs. M. J. Varseveld,\nMrs. Philip Rahal, Mrs. M. Scally,\nMrs. Defoe, Mrs. F. C. Davis, Mrs.\nRex Jarvis, Mrs. Joseph Sturgeon,\nMrs. M. J. Vigneux, Mrs. T. L. Marquis and Mrs. A. G. Gelinas.\n\u2022 E. Paul and daughter, Bertha,\nof Rossland, spent yesterday in\ntown.\ne Mrs. John Kerr, and daughter, Mrs. Spurgeon Langil, of Trail,\nand children, Jackie and Robert,\nare spending a few days in the\ncity.\ne Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kelman,\nWard street, have as their guest,\nMrs. W. R. Williamson and daughter, Lois, of Trail. \u2022.,\nLowery's\nWEEK-END SPECIALS\nPEARL WHITE NAP- >y%A\nTHA-8 bars m*+\nCOLEO TOILET 80AP |\u00a3jk\n\u2014^ cakes    W>\nRECKITTS* BAG CA\nBLUE\u2014Per pkt     *T\nCARBOLIC SOAP-    JBaJ\nJergen's! \u00ab bars \",\u00ab\u00bbf\nWIND80R 8ALT-       f]A\n2 pkts *lr\nRIN80 OR OXYDOL- y*A\nPer pkt, **y\nJOHN80N'8 FLOOR WAX-\nExtra 5-oz. tin: J\"Q|*\neach  ...- *'+\n80CKEYE 8ALMON- JIM\nTall tins; each *+T\nMAXWELL HOUSE      -inA\nCOFFEE\u2014Per tin ***\nWAVERLEY COCOA- fnA\nMb. tins; each *f\u00a5\n8HREDDED WHEAT- ffA\nPer pkt. ***\nBANANAS\u2014Choice;     <jnA\n3 lbs *\u2022*?\nGRAPEFRUIT-Large; <ytA\n4 for ***\nCARROT8, BEET8 and yCA\nTURNIPS\u20143 bunches.. *\u2022\u2022?*\nCAULIFLOWER-        <%**\nLarge, white; lb *\u00ab\u00bbr\nGREEN ONIONS-       1QA\n3 bunches *wy\nORANGE8\u2014Sweet and juicy;\n&g 451 end 551\nPHONE 406\nfor Reliable Delivery\nSPECIALS\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nSYRUP-Rogers, 6's; k+A\nROLLED OATS- *BA\n6-lb. bag *\u00b0T\nGRAHAM WAFERS-       ffA\nCello pkg r. **r\nCOFFEE\u2014Blue Ribbon;    ynA\nPUMPKIN-214's; |\u00bb\u00abJ\nWHITE BEANS- <%\u2022**\n4 lb **V\nBAKING  POWDER-       <**SA\nMagic; 12 Ob  \"J*\nSPAGHETTI-Helni; *AA\nOLD DUTCH CLEANSER- QA\nTin yy\nCORN FLAKES-Quaksr; 11A\npkg.' **r\nTOILET  TI88UE-West-   1QA\nminster; 3 for  *<fr\n2ic7UCEI <25*\nNEW CABBAGE\u2014 1QA\n3 lb *5'r\nNEW SPUDS- fCA\n3 lbs *Jr\nASPARAGUS- smgA\n2 lbs *5*\nRHUBARB- fCA\n4 ib *5v\nTOMATOES-Hothouse;    ag\u00a3\nTOMATOE8-Fleld; tmA\n2 ibs , ny\nCUCUMBER8- inA\n2 for *7*\nSPINACH- fOA\n3 Ibs *\u25a0\u00bb\nGRAPEFRUIT- t*A\n6 for *SF\nGRAPEFRUIT- <yoA\n4 for *\u00b0V\nCELERY- fM\n2 ibs *5n\u00bb\nCARR0T8- |\u00ab\n2 bunches *2r\nBEET8 OR TURNIPS-     in A\n2 for  *JFV\nCAULIFLOWER- ss,tAA\n2 ibs **r\nBANANAS- \u25a0   >%t\\A\n3 ibs **>\nORANGES\nm  m 4st\nHORSWILL\nBROTHERS\nPhono 235     Free Delivery\n. \u00bbAOf   Fll\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Affleck,\nMill street, have as their guest,\nMrs. W. L. Hepher of Boswell who\nis here for the Kootenay Musical\nFestive).\ne Mrs. W. A. Curran of Trail\nspent yesterday In the city.   .   <\n\u2022 J. F. Donaldson was in town\nfrom .Salmo yesterday.\ne Mrs. J. Gill's of South Slocan visited Nelson yesterday.\ne Mr. and Mrs. A. K. Olson of\nthe Reno mine spent yesterday in\ntown.\ne Mrs. A. E. G. Colls of Trail\nspent yesterday in the city.\ne Mrs. Harry Bryant of Kim\nberley is a guest of her mother,\nMrs.   F.  Jarrett,   Latimer  stret.\ne Mrs. Harry Helse and son\nDonald of Vancouver, who were\nvisiting Mrs. Heise's, parents, Mr..\nand Mrs. Henri Gagnon, Carb>\nstreet, went to Cranbrook yei\nday to visit Mr. Heise's parent!\nMr. and Mrs. H. H. Helse.\ne  Carl Mohr has returned :\na trip to Toronto.\ne   Mrs. B. A. Stlmmel of\nvisited town yesterday.\ne   Mr. and Mrs. Vere McDou\nyesterday In the city.\ne   Mr. and  Mrs. T. E.\nand daughter, Melody M, of Gn\nCreek have left for Montreal\nsail on the Montcalm for England]\nMay 20.\ne Mr. and J. Dewlck hava\ntheir guest Mrs. William Kolll\nmer of Canyon city.\ne  A. Batchelor of Procter\nited town yesterday.\n(Continued on Page Nine)\nREMEMBER\nMOTHER'S\nDAY MAY 8\nwith these smart\npersonal, gifts!\nGive Mother something \/\u2022\"\"\"\"^\u2022N*.\nfor .herself! She'd love I t^SSSk\nany of these crisp new | p\/^*^-\naccessories.\nNEW   GLOVES\nFabric gloves of Kayser\nSilk Kay spun matw-\nials. With zippers and\ntrimmed kid. New colors of luggage tan, rust,\nnavy, bright red, bright\nblue and grey.\n79c - $1.00\nDAINTY HANKIES\nJ! Hand    embroidered,\n% drawn thread work and\n\\ hand tatted edges on\n\\ pure Irish linen. Hand\n\\ rolled hems. Each\nI 25c to 75c\nNEW\" BAGS\nGabardine trimmed\nwith leather. Real patent leathers and novelty leathers. A wide\nselection in new colors, especially luggage\ntan.\n<pl.\u00a3J to *p\u00ab3\u00bbt\/3\nSHEER HOSE\nFull fashioned sheer*\nand service weights.\nNew colors of tropic\ntan, mulberry, exotic,\nsunni sand, copperlite.\n75C    and   $1.00\nTHE GIFT MOTHER\nWILL REALL EN-\nJOY IS AT HUNT'S.\n*L\n[tffrl\nPhone 200    Dry Goods and Ready-to-Wear    Baker St\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\n9    PHONES\n831\n832\nVASSARS\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nGood Buying for Saturday and Monday\nChoice Steer Beef\nRump Roast, lb.  22t?\nPot Roasts, Ib  I'M\nRib Roast, rolled, Ib. . 23()\nJuicy Round Steak,\n2 Ibi  47.?\nSirloin Steak, 2 Ibi. .. 55<?\nCross Rib Roast, Ib. . Hit:\nVeal Fillet Roatt, Ib. . 25<\nVeal Oven Roast, Ib. . 17t?\nVeal Steaks, 2 Ibi.... 35^\nLegi Real Lamb, Ib. .. 32<-\nLamb Shoulders. Ib. . 23c>\nLamb Stewing, Ib. .. 15\u00ab^\nPork Leg Roast, Ib. .. 25i\nPork Oven Roast, Ib. . 23t*\nPure Lard, 2 Ibi  29<\nSmoked Picnics, Ib. . 22<t\nCottage Rolls, lib. ... 27<t\nBreakfast Sauiage,\n2 Ibi  251\nSwift's Premium Ham,\nwhole or half, Ib  35c?\nOysters, fresh, pint . . <J5it)\nDill Pickles, 4 for ... lOt?\nCreamery Butter, Thistlo,\n3rd grade, 2 Ibi f>9\u00a3\nKootenay Lake Trout,\nfresh, Ib 25e>\nEggs, local A-large,\n2 doi 55e>\nBreakfast Bacon, fresh,\nsliced, Ib  401\nChicken Roasting, lb.   28t?\nFowl, Boiling, Ib 25r*\nSauiage Meat, seasoned,\n2 Ibi 25*\nHamburger, freth,\n2 Ibi 25t>\nCash and Carry\nOnly\nBeef Pot Roast, good,\nLb    12\u00ab*\nBeef Lean Boiling,\n3 Ib  27^\nButter,,3rd grade,\n2 Ibi  5Sc*\nVeal Roast, Ib. ... 16e*\nPork Roast, Ib. ... 22<\n^\n MM BIX\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 ot the Audit Bureau of Circulations and\nThe Canadian Press Leased Wire News Service.\nSATURDAY, MAY 7,1988.\nARROW POINTS AT CZECHO-SLOVAKIA\nSomewhat earlier than was expected, though hastened,\nperhaps, by events, real and prospective, in Europe's realignment, the direction of Germany's \"push to the East\"\ngrows clear. Konrad Henlein, leader of the Sudeten German party, said all that was necessary in his Karlsbad\nspeech to indicate that Czechoslovakia comes next and to\ndefine the policy Hitler proposes to follow. In the light of\nthe Austrian \"negotiations\" it means just one thing \u2014\nAnschluss again.\nTo be sure Henlein did not go that far in words. But\nit was blatantly an \"inspired\" piece. From it were dropped\nall the pretences of the past and all the bluster about concessions. Its 'rejection of Premier Hodza's \"minorities\nplan\" even before the terms were made known, and Hen-\nlein's belligerent demands for complete \"autonomy,\" should\nmake it obvious to the most incorrigible optimist that on\nthe German side there can be no thought of compromise\nshort of annexation.\nOpenly and for the first time Henlein allied his party\nwith the Nazis. He demanded privileges for the Sudeten\nminority that in adoption would mean the creation of a\nstate within the state. On top of this he piled demands for\nspecial privileges for the Germans scattered throughout\nthe nation. He attempted to dictate the conditions of\nCzechoslovakia's future foreign policy, not only as to her\nrelations with Germany, but by demanding that the alliances with France and Russia be abandoned.\nIt is impossible to suppose that Konrad Henlein believes for a minute that such demands will be considered\nby Premier Hodza as a basis for negotiation. On the contrary, the reasonable conclusion is that they were deliberately made in an effort to break up the government's\nefforts at a settlement and prepare the stage for a paternal\nGermany's intervention. And it may yet prove to have been\nmore than a coincidence with a special meeting of the\nHungarian Revision league, which drafted and approved\ndemands for a \"new status\" for the Hungarians in Slovakia.\nThey are by no means begging trouble who can see in\nall this the gathering danger of another European clash.\nAutomatically it raises the question of the Rome-Berlin\naxis and to what extent Mussolini is still a partner, silent\nor otherwise, of the Drang nach Osten. It is not easy to\nconceive of him playing Crown Prince to Hitler's \"Emperor\" in Central Europe, nevertheless the drag which Prime\nMinister Chamberlain managed to exert on the axis\nthrough the Anglo-Italian agreement has not been enough\nto throw it out of balance.\nIts real value is as a stop gap by means of which, as\nthe tremendous increase in the British armament program\ntestifies, Mr. Chamberlain is hoping for the time to prepare against the future. Far from \"allowing the people\nto be lulled into any sense of false security by it, he is using it to secure their support in his drive to consolidate\nthe defences, which, it must be remembered, are being\nerected- against the axis. And, considering the aims and\nmethods of the dictators and what little is known of the\n\"deal\" between them, the friendship treaty certainly cannot be accepted at this stage of developments as a permanent settlement.\nNothing can disguise the fact that democracy and\ndictatorship are not congenial bed-fellows. The Nazi pressure on Czechoslovakia comes as a reminder of how incompatible they and their programs are. And, while it is\npossible that Britain's policy will yet succeed in keeping\nthings right, it is difficult to see the latest developments\nin Central Europe as anything but an effort to complete\nthat-jphase of the pan-German program before it has had\ntime to crystalize. If this be the proper reading of the\nHenlein speech, then the outlook for peace is far from\nbright.\nALBERTA A FARMING PROVINCE\nDoes Alberta want any more farms?\nThis question is evoked by the reception given to Prof.\nWyatt's testimony before the Rowell commission, as to\nthe abundance of arable land still unused.\nAlberta daily newspapers seem to be cdnsenting to a\ncounsel of limitation. At least, they are not enthusiastic on\nthe subject of agricultural expansion.\nOne of them discusses the topic as follows;\n\"There is sufficient unused land in Alberta in the\narea lying north of Calgary for a distance of some five\nhundred miles to support an additional farm population\nof between 200,000 and 250,000, according to evidence\nsubmitted by Dr. F. A. Wyatt, professor of soils at the\nUniversity of Alberta, to the Rowell commission. The\nregion he referred to is mostly covered with tree growth\nand, of course, would have to be cleared, which takes a lot\nof labor and considerable money. Dr. Wyatt testified\nthat about one-quarter of the drought area in the southern\nsection of the province is fit for grain growing.\n\"The Alberta wheat pool budget protests against any\ninference that agricultural production should be further\nextended in this province. It maintains that the opinion\nso generally held in earlier years that farm settlement\nshould be continually encouraged is basically wrong. Farming'is a highly specialized business, the budget states,\nNELSON DAILY NlWt. NELSON. B.C-SATURDAY MORNING. MAY 7. 1938.\nSACtY-S SALLIES\nFunny, but keep to the straight path If you want to travel in the\nbeat circles.\nSAYS DOUKHOBORS HAVE TRODDEN\nTHE ROAD OF CALVARY IN CANADA\nTo the Editor ot the Dally News:\nSir\u2014A word, it you wljl, to True\nCanadian:\nIn the issue ot Tha pally News,\nApril 26, 1938, you answer a letter\nof The Named Doukobors on their\nreaction to a proposed grant of the\nfranchise.\nTherein you state that you note\ntheir letter was addressed to Intelligent Canadians and groups\nthereof. Having noted this circumstance, silence would have been discreet Further you give thanks, and\naver that \"you got it\".\nBut, did you? The general tone ot\nyour communication to the Public\nEar Implies that emphatically you\ndid not \"get it\". The Doukohobors\nstate they \"do nothing contrary to\nthe dictates of their religion.\" Nor\ndoes any intelligent man, nor group\nof men.\nThe parlous state ot Europe today\nIs the result ot ignoring this trenchant resolution on the part of the unintelligent minority ot those various\nstates.\nAn outspoken statement concerning adherence to this resolution la\nby no means a sign ot a \"whining\nsoul,\" as you suggest But that of\na courageous, undaunted spirit,\nworthy ot emulation in these days\not universal, pusilahimoUs retreat\nbefore the fulminations of the overbold aggressor.\nNOT BITTEN HAND\nTHAT FED THEM\nThe Named Doukhobors have In\nno way, \"bitten the hand that ted\nthem.\" For, since their unfortunate\narrival in Canada, no hand has been\nextended in aid, and no mind has\nsought for understanding. Ever' It\nhas been the act of \"True Canadian\"\nto deprive, to browbeat, and to slur\nand calumlate.\nWhat Canadians have done Is a\ndifferent matter. Woefully inarticulate'though they be, there are millions of Canadians who sympathize\nwith the Doukhobors in their hard\nlot. The day will come when Canadians will demand and obtain adequate protection for these unfortunate people, against their calumi-\nators.\nDisturbances which have occurred\nere not the acts of the Named Douk-\n\u2022\u2666\nAUNTHET\nBy HOBERT QUTLLEN\n\"Jim's pious, but it's a poor religion that makes a man love his\nneighbors all day and then let his\nbarkin' dog run loose to keep 'em\nawake all night.\"\nhonors, but those of a rebellious,\nback-sliding group thereof. Last\nyear's pyrotechnic display In the\nscholastic field has not yet been\nbrought home to either group.\nGrant unto Judas the crimes ot\nJudas.\nThey came here pennyless. Yes.\nThat is no disgrace.\nL0YALI8T6 CAUSE\nD1S8ENSION\nThat great group, the Empire\nloyalists, came here pennyless. Since\nthat day they have caused, and are\nstill causing, through their descendants at ihe present day, dissension\namong our polyglot multi-national\npopulation.\nWhen has the Named Doukhobor\nclamored against his neighbor? He\nspeaks only to defend himself\nagainst unreasonable oppression.\nAnd that, meekly.\nThe road ot the Doukhobor in\nCanada has been the road ot Calvary. \"By their deeds ye shall knOw\nthem.\"\nGet out on your ricketty back-\nporch. Step caretuly lest you tall\nthrough. Look over at the well-\ntilled, fruitful Doukhobor farm\u2014the\nresult of toilsome labor, of adult and\nchild.\nThen look at your own unkempt\nacreage, your tumble-down fences,\nyour halt-starved cattle, your ragged children, the result ot idle,\nthriftless, unavailing, envious, cankering spleen. Emulate the endless\nIndustry of the Doukhobor. Try, oh!\ntry to be intelligent\nThe Doukhobor does not wsnt\nthe vote, with Its inevitable turmoil\nHe wants peace. Aid him Intelligently and sympathetically to attain this haven.\nJI. 3. O'LBARY\nWaneta, B.C., May 2,1938.\nBURLINGTON, Ont. (CP)-Glv\nIng a motorcar ride to two young\nstrangers, Alfred Jackson, 62, had\nhis left shoulder dislocated and\nsuffered other injuries when they\nhit him over the head, threw him\nout ot the car and drove oft\nfimwAamcL\nBuilding Up\na Healthy Race\nAnother high Russian official\nhas died from natural causes.\nWhen you reach a certain age in\nRussia, and the degenerative diseases set in, you have to be\nmighty careful of over-strain, as\nyour heart may give out, for example, when struck by a bullet.\nNot Even Our\nDreamt Our Own\nDr. Carl Gustav Jung, professor\nof analytic psychology, Technische\nHochschule, Zurich, Switzerland,\nspeaking:\nAwakening in your bedroom\nyou may think, in your innocence,\nthat you did some tall imagining\nwhile you slept. Dr. Jung, however, holds that the credit belongs\nin quite a few instances to your\n' great-great-great-grandmother, or\nmaybe father. Dreams, he argues,\nand the farm is not the place for people who happen to\nbe unemployed and who have not the special knowledge\nor the capital properly to operate a farm. It says further\nthat the idea that farm production should go on increasing endlessly has been disadvantageous to the farmers\nalready on the land.\n\"It is quite likely that Dr. Wyatt had no intention\nof advocating further farm settlement when he mentioned\nthat this great area had possibilities for further development. Certainly few people in this province would advocate any intensive settlement of farm lands right now.\nBut Alberta is launched into the food exporting business\nand cannot very well draw back from it. It may be that\nthe present outlook for increasing markets for farm exports is not bright, but that does not prove that such a\ncondition will always prevail.\n\"The numher of unemployed families being placed\non farms is limited and the plan is more for the purpose\nof providing sustenance fanning than for extensively increasing surpluses. Certainly a family can live better on a\nfarm, and much cheaper, than in a city. It was never intended that the plan should be very extensive in scope.\"\nElocution Adjudicator\nL. BULLOCK-WEBSTER, Victoria\nwho Judged elocuUon classes on the opening day of the festival.\nPopular Adjudicator\nMRS. ELIZABETH MORRISON, Saskatoon\nA noted conductor and teacher, Mrs. Morrison's adjudications are\nwinning her the confidence and affection of festival competitors and\naudience alike. She makes her adjudications interesting as well as\nconstructive.\nMusic Festival Winners\nQWEN  GARLAND,  Nelson\nWinner pianoforte -under 12.\nmay well deal with things the\ndreamer never experienced but\nwhich were banded down to him\nthrough a sort ot subconscious\nheredity from ancient time.\n\"The Fuehrer Is\nAlwayi Right\"\n\"Thirteen commandments\" are\nglvefl In the Nazi year-book for\n1938, of which the first is: \"The\nFuehrer Is always right.\" This\nmakes the twelve others rather\nsuperfluous, especially since the\ntwelfth explains: \"Right is whatever profits the Nazi movement.\"\nNear-Blind Lord\nPlays Cricket, Tennii\nThe life of Lord Sanderson, who\nWILLIAM  B. AFFLECK, Ntlson\nWinner elocution under 20, also\nwinner Junior championship,\nelocution.\nhas just resigned from the Labor\nParty in Britain, is an illustration of\nwhat can be done by determination\nto overcome a serious disability. He\nwas born practically blind. After a\nlong and fruitless struggle to save\nhis sight, he once wrote: \"I said,\n'Damn my eyes!' and decided to\nlet them go hang.\" He learnt to play\ncroquet, tennis, and even cricket,\npassed his examinations at Oxford\nby employing an amanuensis, and\nfor nine years was principal of\nRuskin College, His peerage was\nconferred on him in 1930 in recognition of his services to the cause of\nworkers' education.\nfojrfMicL\nfihidqsL\nBUND HAN'S BUFF\nIF YOU think the declarer has\nyou beaten by straightforward\nbridge, try to Inveigle him Into the\nold-fashioned gams of blind man's\nbuff, Make turn grope around In\nthe dark imagining the situation Is\nentirely different trom what It\nreally is. By befuddling him, you\nmay causa him to bump his bead\nMfalnst a door while trying to protect himself from an Imaginary\nobstruction which doesn't exist\n\u2666 AQ078\"\nvilli\n\u2666 \u2022\n\u2666KIJ9\n.. and Shep Barclay\nTells How to\nScore High\n\u2666 K102\n\u2666 0874\n*'\u00ab32\nW,\n\u2666 83\n\u00a5852\n\u2666 KQJ32\n*865\n_J4\n\u00bbAQ7\u00abJ\n\u2666 A108\n.  +AJ10\n(Dealer: South. Both sides vulnerable.) ..      <\nNorth and South reached a contract of 6-Hoarts on this deal\nSouth opened with 1-Hcart, North\ncalled .-Spade, South 2-No\nTrumps, North 8-Spades, South\ni-Hearts and North 6-Hearts,\nWest felt that he had a fair\nchance of cashing the heart K, but\nfrom the bidding had little hope of\nwinning a trick with his spade K.\nThe optimistic bidding cf'the dp\".\nponents Indicated there was small\nchance that East would capture a\ntrick.\nIn desperation, therefore, West-\nled the spade 2, hoping South\nwould read It for a singleton,\nSouth gave the lead vary thoughtful consideration and finally went\nup with tha A, figuring that If East\nheld the K, and the lead had been\na singleton, the play might cost\nhim an extra trick.\nWest was highly elated when he\nsaw the A played, for he then\nknew the contract was set\n\u2022  .  \u00ab'\nTomorrow's Problem\n4\u00bb8\nf MM\n\u2666 AQ84\n\u2666 Q7M2\n\u2666 4\n\u00bbA9876\n2\n\u2666 '6\n\u2666 AJ83\nJ__\n\u2666 AKQ,\n\u00bbKJI\n4>J3\n4>K\u00bb\n\u2666 1078J\n\u00bbQ5\n\u2666 K 10 0 6 2\n\u00ab109\n(Dealer. North, Neither aids vulnerable)\nAgainst bidding of 1-Spade by\nEast, 2-Hearts by West 8-Spadel\nby East 4-Clubs by West and\n4-Spades by East what should\nSouth lead*\nLooking Backward...\nTEN YEARS AQO\n(May 7, 1928.)\nMrs. Rochfort of Shoreacres left\nfor Vancouver.\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Hacking and family of Kaslo\nWere guests of Mrs. Hacking's\nbrother-in-law and sister, Mr. and\nMrs. Wlb Bennitt at Bonnington.\u2014\nMiss Maxine Chapman of South\nS|ocan returned' recently from attending the University of British\nColumbia at Vancouver.\u2014Joe Harris\nreturned to his home on the Bosun\nranch at New Denver, from the\nUniversity of British Columbia.\u2014\nMr. and Mrs. Fred Cullen were\nguests of Mrs. R. Hepburn at Fruitvale.\nTWENTY YEAR8 AQO\n. (May 7, 1818.)\nLieut William Sturgeon has now\nrecovered sufficiently to escort\ntroops from Calgary to New Westminster. He has been accepted for\nthe Royal Air force and will go\noverseas In a short \"time.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. _. J. Patch left for Seattle to\nreside.\u2014M\/. Nlkkolet of Blairmore,\nAlta., has bought the _ Machoh 12-\nacre ranch at Creston,\u2014Sergt A. W.\nLymbery has returned to Gray\nCreek on ten week's leave.\u2014Mrs. J.\nJ. Binns returned to Kaslo after an\nabsence of several months.\u2014Pte.\nW. J. Dow of Creston, and Miss\nAnnie Goodwin, a sister ot Mrs. J.\nW. Dow of Creston, were married\nat Dlsbury, England, early in April.\nTHIRTY YEAR8 AGO\n- (May 7, 1908.)\nFrank Bell of Grant Iowa, has\npurchased halt an acre on Vancouver street, Creston, and will erect\na two-story structure, the eleventh\nbuilding in Creston since January 1.\n\u2014E. A. Crease purchased A. J.\nKerr's house at the corner of Cedar\nand Silica streets.-Jttoy Sharp rang\nup a 221 bowling score at the bowling alley.\u2014Grant McLean has the\nContract for the erection of the\nbuildings for the jam factory at\nHarrop.\nJ? Questions t\\\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers is open to any reader of\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\ncase will the name of the person\nasking the question be published.\nW. K. W., Rossland\u2014What is the\nmeaning of \"coat and conduct\nmoney\"?\nThis expression was used for a\ntax exacted by Charles I, for the\npurpose of raising money for coats\nand transportation to the rendezvous, ot men furnished by the hundred for the army of the king.\nS. B., Trail\u2014Can you tell me the\norigin of the name Whig?\nThere has been considerable controversy over this. One contention\nis that the initials of the motto of\nthe Scotch Covenanters \"We hope\nin God,\" caused the name to be\napplied to that body of people. Another claim is that the wold was\ntaken from Whey, pronounced\nWheg, an allusion to the \"sour milk\nfaces of the lowlanders of Scotland.\"\nThe third contention is that ,lhe\nScotch word Whiggam used by peasants to describe horse and cattle\nthieves was by them transferred to\nthe adherents of the Presbyterian\ncause In Scotland.\nL. P., Nelson\u2014Is it true that wearing\na wrist watch while typing will\nCause it to lose or gain time?\nMany  jewelers   claim  that  the\ntypewriter   injures  the  works  of\na wrist watch. The constant movement tends to make some watches\nlose while some gain.\nW. P. B., Nelson\u2014When did Bls-\nmark live?\nBismarck was born in 1819 and\ndied in 1808. He is regarded as the\nfounder of the modern German\nEmpire, of which he was the first\nChancellor in 1871.\nTORONTO (CP)-Members of the\nToronto Physical Culture club had\nto form a human chain to rescue\ntour of their number who had dropped to a ledge of a ravine near here\nWhile scaling. Nobody hurt\nHome\nImprovement\nCover your cracked plaster\nwith Cottonwood Panels. You\nwill beautify and Insulate\nyour home.\nDistrict Distributors:\nWood. Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nTTTTnTTtTTTrTTTTtTlTTTT\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nWhere\nValue\nCounjts\nMost\nIn going over the letters of\nthe recent contest we are\nsurprised to find that a- great\nproportion of those who mention the economy ot Pacific\nMilk live In places where\ntransportaUon is difficult and\npeople must get the utmost\nvalue from every ounce of\nfood products,\nPacific Milk is almost universally used in these places.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, of Course\nU-UUUll_UUi.lLU.UU\nNOTHING ADDS\nCHARM\nto a bathroom like a\nbuilt-in bath. The new\npatterns are modernistic\nin design and finish and\npresent a graceful 'appearance.\nWrite, phone er call us\nand we will gladly quote\non the installation.\nPhone 666\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING & HEATING\nCOMPANY. LIMITED\n367 Baker Street\nHave You a\nUsed\nROW BOAT\nj\nWhy Not Turn\nIt Into Cash\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (2) lines 6 times 80c net\nTwo  (2)  lines f:ice 20c net\nNelson Daily Newt\nPHONR  144\n \t\n\t\n. ,: jmm\n13?\nNIL80N DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B.C-8ATURDAV MORNINO. MAY 7. 1688.\nMusic Festival Winners\nCAROL WRIGHT (right) and BETTY SUMMING, Trail\nWinners pianoforte duet, under 11.\nCOLIN H. BAKER, Nelion\nwho tied with Donald Beattie,\nNelson, In tenor, open.\nDONALD BEATTIE, Nelson\nwho tied with Colin H. Baker,\nNelson, In tenor, optn.\nitem\/\n$10.75 A MONTH PROVIDES\n$25 A MONTH PENSION\nFOR LIFE AND $5000\nINSURANCE\nOn Monday we were aaked by\na man to provide a solution to\nthe following problem:\nPROBLEM\nMarried man, age 27, with on*\nchild. Needs insurance protection\nfor family. Also wants retirement\npolicy for himself.\nCannot afford both. Can nve\nabout $10 a month. Whit should\nhe do?\nW* offered him the following\nsolution:\nsolution\nMutual Life \"SECURITY AT\n60\" Policy. Saving required etch\nmonth {(10.73.\nProvides:\n(15,000 Life Insurance ($10,000\nIn case ot death by accident)\u2014\nand a pension of $25 a month it\n\u2022ge 60. (Increased by dividends.)\nWaiver of premium if disabled.\nHe now owns i Security at 60\nPolicy and will add to it \u2022> hit\nmeans permit. If you have a similar\nproblem we shall be glad to suggest a solution for you. Consult\nyour nearest Mutual Life representative or our Head Office at\nWaterloo, Ont.\nMUTUAL IIFE\n\u25a0 '\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0or CANADA InMi\n\u2022       E<raMi>ft\u00ab! IMP\n\"O.-ned by ihe Policyholders\"\nHeld Office Waterloo, Ont.\nGEO. GIBBONS, District Agent,\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\nGEO. W. DILL, Representative,\nNELSON, B.C.\nH. A. POWELL, Representative,\nCRE8TON, B.C.\nJAS. SKINNER, Representative,\nTRAIL, B.C.\nTHOS. BECK, Representative,\nFERNIE, B.C.\nvyonne Armstrong, Nelson\nWinner girls' low voice, under 12.\nAVONIA STEWART, Nelson\nWinner violin solo, under 18.\nB. C. \"ANOTHER ENGLAND\"\nWOMEN'S  COUNCIL TOLD\nOWEN SOUND. Ont.. May 8 (CP)\n\u2014Each section ot Canada Is a little\nworld In itself, Byrne Hope Sanders\ntold the Provincial Council of Women last night at the semi-annual\nmeeting here.\nThe Toronto magazine editor described the Maritime provinces as a\na picture of contentment; Quebec a\nstep into the past where women are\nstill struggling lor their rlgh's; Ontario a modem and energetic province; Western Canada a leader In\nmatters of education and health, and\nBritish Columbia another England.\nIn Alberta, where women suffer\nfrom sand fever, surrounded by\nshabby children, each shack still ha*\nCARLYLE FERGUSON, Nelion\nWinner young vocalist, low voice.\nGEORGETTE DAU, Coleman, Alta.\nWinner   pianoforte   under   17,\nand alio of Intermediate championship, pianoforte.\nIt* tomato can of geranium*\u2014\"a\nshield, and armor ot tho spirit\"\u2014\nsaid Miss Sanders.\nQuit Road Work\nat Boulder Creek\nSIRDAR, B.C.\u2014The road camp at\nBoulder Creek has been closed, evidently for lack of funds.\nSplendid progress wai being\nmade in eradicating one ot the\nworse corners and straightening out\nmany narrow places. It is hoped\nan early resumption of work will\nbe arranged to complete a good\npiece of road between Creston and\nthe ferry.\nJUNIOR BOARD STAYS WITH VIEW\nFIX THE EXISTING ROADS FIRST\nTo -Circularize   All\nJunior  Boards\non Roads\nTo the resolution submitted, by\nC. F. McHardy, to the senior board\not trade at It* meeting Thursday\nupon, J. G. McKay, president of the\nJunior board ot trade, laid at the\nboard meeting Thursday night In\nthe Hume, proposed thi* added,\n\"Whereas at the last convention ot\nB. C. Junior board* ot trade, which\ntpok place at New Westminster, It\nwas decided that no new road construction in the province could be\nrecommended until existing road!\nwere Improved,\"\nMr. McKay thus aroused some\ndlicusslon concerning the proposed\nAlaska highway through British\nColumbia. Robert Foxall voiced hi*\nopinion, stating the road was surveyed by United States as a military road. The purpose ot the road,\nwas partly, he (aid, In case of attack\non the west coast He felt the United State* would not expend $15,-\n000,000, which Is the required\namount, unless there was $$43,000,-\n000 coming out of the venture., The\nroad 1* to be financed partly by\nBritish Columbia and partly by the\nUnited States.\n' \u25a0Vwv*\u00bbWyNi\nCopies ot the resolution read by\nMr, McKay will be lent to all the\njunior board* In British Columbia.\nThe senior board* will take the\nresolution up with the associated\nboards.\nReferring to trips through the\ndistrict thi* summer, Mr, McKay\nlaid that he and the executive, at\na meeting, had felt It wise to visit\nseveral places. He numbered among\nthem Nakusp, Kaslo, New Denver\nand Salmo, The board bad already\nreceived an invitation from Salmo.\nRobert Foxall stated that the purpose of the trip* was not only to\ncontact the district board*, but-to\ncreate a friendly feeling among the\ntown* In the Welt Kootenay.\nFred Lena suggested the board\nshould remove the neon street signs\nerected last Christmas, a* they were\ngradually being broken, and the\nnovelty of seeing them was wearing\noff. Dave Valentine suggested taking half of them down, and storing them, leaving only those appropriate to all occasion! and seasons. He stated a traveller trom\nMontreal had told him Nelson wai\nthe only city In Canada that he\nknew of that had street sign* ot\nthat kind.\nMr. Leno later withdrew hi* suggestion and substituted a motion\nthat the city check up on broken\nlight* and repair them, and light\nup the suitable one*.\nThe board adopted recommendation* of the civic attain committee,\nsubmitted by Morris Bercov, chairman.\nMr. Bercov alio read a report ot\nwhat the city had done to check\nradio Interference. The city had\nplaced 38 condensers,on electrical\nmachinery and appliance!.\nA motion waa submitted by Mr.\nBercov, eompllmcnting the Edmonton Journal on the stand it had\ntaken In the preservation ot civil\nliberties, and congratulating the\npaper on winning the Pulitzer\naward through It* writing.\nGordon Burn*, reporting for the\nKokanee park* committee, said letters had been received trom Frank\nPutnam, M.PJP, for Neljon- Creston\nriding, and Hon, A. Well* Gray,\nminister ot lands and municipalities, assuring assistance in having the\nboundaries of Kokanee park enlarged to take In more territory.\nMr. Bumi felt sure the park boundaries would be enlarged.\nF. W. Forrester, E. Fisher and\nGlenn Morris were welcomed as\nnew memberi of the junior board.\nAIR MISSION AT SEATTLE\nSEATTLE, May 8 (AP)-A British air mission wai here today to\ninspect the Boeing airplane works\nand the new \"flying fortress\" military planes, the only recent local\nmilitary model available for export.\nLength of the stay and next destination had not been determined.\nTo Move Bridge\nMachines, Sirdar\nSIRDAR, B.C. \u2014 The Canadian\nBridge company, which has\nconsiderable equipment tor bridge\nbuilding lying at Kootenay Landing\nfor the past two year* under the\ncare ot Frank Hamilton, will remove the machinery within a tew\nday* to the coast Mr. Soucy will\ntake charge of loading with part ot\nlis regular crew.\n.     \u25a0\u00bb\u2022\u2022 sivm\nCONSTRUCTIVE POLICY\nBIRTH   CONTROL   NEEDED\nOWEN SOUND, Ont, May \u00ab\n(CP)\u2014A \"eonitruct.ve\" Dominion\ngovernment policy regarding iterll-\nIzatlon and birth control 1* needed,\nMrs. H. J. Cody, national -convenor j\not child and family welfare, told\nthe semi-annual convention it the\nprovincial council of women here\nyesterday. \"We mutt have constructive education tor parenthood,'\"']\nihe raid.\nWhy Use A \"Sissy\nLaxative?\nV*\nChronic constipation has to do\nwith the colon or large intestine.\nUnless the large bowel 1* thoroughly emptied from time to\ntime you become a victim of\nchronic constipation and poisoning of the system which results\nin colitis or other serious disease*.\nMild or \"sissy\" laxatives merely cause a movement of the\nbowels without effecting a thorough cleaning out of the colon or\nlarge bowel. For this reason\nyou are misled Into thinking that\nyou are doing all you can to overcome a constipated and poisoned\ncondition of tne system.\nThose who know Dr. Chase'*\nKidney-Liver Pill* appreciate the\nvalue of a real medicine which\nnot only effects a thorough cleansing of the colon or large bowel but\nalso arouse* the liver and kidneys\nto activity in filtering poisons\nfrom the blood.\nOnce you have proven the\nmerit* of Dr. Chase's Kidney-\nLiver Pills you will never return\nto the use ot \"sissy\" laxatives.\nUsed regularly once a week thi*\nmedicine ensures pure blood and\nfreedom from constipation and\nthe pains, ache* and serious\ndiseases which accompany it.\nDr. Chaae'* Kidney-Liver Pill*,\n35 cts., at all druggists or The Dr.,\nA. W. Chase Medicine Co.,'\nLimited, Oakville, Canada,\nBIG in SIZE and SAVINGS\nThe glee and comfort of the new Ford V-8\nIt surprising. Bodies are designed and styled\nfor beauty inside and oat And, of coarse,\nthe compact V-8 engine allows more useful\nspace for passengers and luggage.\nIn performance, the Ford Is equally out\nstanding. The V-8 engine gives dependable\npower with remarkable economy. Letters\nfrom owners report that they get from 22\nto 27 miles per gallon.\nThis year's Ford V-8 is available in De\nLuxe and Standard models. Both are built\non the same 112-inch wheelbase and powered\nwith the famous 85-horsepower V-8 engine.\nThe Deluxe, at a slightly higher cost, gives\nyou more room, more luggage space and\nfiner appointments \u2014 all included in the\ndelivered price.\nIf yon haven't driven these newer, finer\nFord cars, see your dealer for a demonstration. It will give you a new conception of\nlow cost and high comfort.\nf Q A A MONTH, \u00bbilft reasonable (fown-poymenf, 6ayt any\nv \u00ab* v new fori V-8 car under 7. T. C, National Finance Plan\nNo Extra Charge lor All These \"Extras\"\nFord V-8 delivered price* an low and Include\nthe following equipment!\nON DI lim MODUS -twin tallllghti, two wind-\n\u2022hlcld wiper*, two an visors, twin electrle\nhorni, cigar lighter, de Ion iteerlng wheel,\nglove compartment dock and lock, nude**\n\u25a0teal wheel bandi, In addition to front .and\nrear bumperi and guards, .pare wheel and\ntire and tube, tire lock, and headlight beam\nindicator.\nON STANDARD MODUS-front and rear bumper! and guards, spare wheel and lire and tube,\ntire lock, one tall light, one windshield wiper,\none iun visor, cigar lighter, headlight beam\nIndicator, and two horn*.\n||MMjaMMi\u00abaMaMliiM|jr^ [ I   i   I < i II il WWyMl'MWl1... H'll'1'.\"    '\"   'Jl \u25a0  I   'I  I\" '        '     '  I\"1       ' \u25a0   \"I \"\u25a0\"\n\"\u00a7>     TM CANADIAN CAR ' '        '    '      . ...\nQUEEN CITY MOTORS LTD.\n^***' \"RATiRFAr.TirtN la mm aim\"\nJosephine St.\n\"SATISFACTION IB OUR AIM1\nFord Dealers for Nelson and District\nNelson, B.C.\nBUERGFS GARAGE\nPhone 22Y Ford Dealers for Nakusp and District Nakusp, B.C.\nUNIVERSAL MOTORS\nF. Nadon, Prop. Ford Dealers for Creston and District Creston, B.C.\nHANSON GARAGE CO., LTD.\nTelephone 126\nFord Dealers for Cranbrook, Kimberley and District\nCranbrook, B.C.\n216 Victoria St.\nFERNI2 GARAGE\nFord Dealers for Fernie o\/id District\nFernie, B.C.\n ******\nPAGE \"irJHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C,-8ATURDAY MORNING. MAY 7. 1938.\nKindness first Among Many Virtues\nof Nursev Bishop Johnson Tells Five\nGraduates of Hospital al Cranbrook\n. CRANBROOK, B. C.-Five graduates of the, St.- Eugene training\nichool, Miss'Margaret E. Owen of\nCoronation, Alta., Miss Elizabeth C.\nStewart of Nelson, B. C, Miss Florence H. MacDonald of Grand Forks,\nMiss Mary Edith Lindsay of Armstrong, Miss Ruby J. Collier of Vulcan, Alta., and Sister Uleric Marie\nreceived their diplomas and medals\nat: the graduation exercises held in\nthe,Cranbrook auditorium Tuesday\n| evening.\n.Streamers of silver and blue, the\nclass colors, formed an effective\nbackground on the stage for tne\ngraduates, and at the foot of the\nstage were vases of roses, daffodils,\nlilies and snapdragons. Each graduate carried a large bouquet of red\nroses and white carnations, the class\nflowers.\n.Mayor T. M. Roberts, as chairman, mentioned that Cranbrook is\n,'thls- year celebrating the 40th anniversary of the coming of steel,\n[and that during those 40 years\nthere hid been many changes, most\n'of, them for the better, giving us\nmany conveniences, such as water\n\u2022*i\u00bbirk\u00bb and electric lights, vhich\nhave not only added to the general\ncoinfort.of the public but to the\nefficiency and high standard of St.\nEugene hospital. Forty years ago,\nhe'iald, the St Eugene hospital was\nif there shack; today it is one of\n;the,most up-to-date hospitals in the\n\"province. He paid tribute to the\n\u25a0titer* of the hospital and the wonderful organization behind them,\n\u25a0toting that the citizens of the dis-\nplrltSt have contributed to a small\neaftent to the hospital, but the real\neredit is due to the sisters and the\n-doctors.\nRev. F. V. Harrison said he had\n^'had close association with the hospital. He felt an increasing admiration for the work being done. The\n-nurses were able to get much en-\nj6yni\u00abnt out of some of their 'work,\n,.and. for the more serious tasks they\n- do not spare any effort to help. Mr.\nHarrison said he knew of no case\nWhere there had ever been even\n, miter negligence in the hospital. He\nreferred to patients who refused to\neobperate, demanding unneeded at-\n'eention and making the work of\n'.the nurses much harder.\n? .Miss Esther Paulson, district welfare worker for East Kootenay, said\nj the five graduates had been look-\njarig''forward to this evening lor\nthree long years. She told of the\nmany fields of nursing the graduate's could now enter, such as prists duty, Institutional nursing,\nlibllc health, V.O.N, district nurs-\n{ services and clinic nursing. She\nroJcpIained that the educational stan-\n-idaids of nurses were advancing as\n- the medical profession advances.\nThese standards, she said, must be\nhigher as rapid advances are made\n', itt'the medical fields, and it is es\nsential that nurses have knowledge\nand Judgement to. cooperate with\ndoctors arid patients. Professional\nnursing organizations have done\nmuch for the standards of nursing.\nA nurse must uphold these standards, not only when on. duty.\nMiss Olga Belecky-presented the\nmedals to the graduates, and His\nExcellency Bishop Martin M. Johnson presented,the diplomas. Bishop\nJohnson stated ithat it was very\ngratifying. to see. so many friends,\nrelations and teachers present to\npay tribute to the young ladies now\nqualified to help stricken people.\nThe honors they have won will be\ncoveted for' the long hours, the\nweary tasks, the hours of study and\nthe many sacrifices they have made\nduring the, past three years. He\npointed out that graduation marks\nthe conclusion of. a.period and the\nentry into fields of endeavor, into\nwhich they will carry many virtues\nwith kindness,the main one. He explained that the kind nurse is never\nself-occupied, and that kindness is\ninfectious,, leading people from' un-\nhappiness to happiness, saving many\na saddened: soul, bringing - many\nfrom sickness to health. Bishop\nJohnson stated that while we congratulate these graduates we are\npaying tribute. to the doctors and\nsisters.\nBefore administering the Florence\nNightingale pledge, Dr. F. W. Green\nsaid that the graduates had done a\ngreat deal of work, taken much\nblame, and any honors bestowed\non them were richly deserved. :He\nexplained that as science progresses\nso does medicine progress, which\nmeans the nursing profession, and\nthat those who.study.have to keep\nin touch with the progress of sci\"-\nence. He mentibned that he, had\nvisited many. New' York hospitals\nrecently, and that the St. Eugene\nhad progressed as had these New'\nYork hospitals, and-the citizens of\nthe district should be grateful to\nthe sisters and to the Hospital Ladies' aid for this splendid up-to-\ndate institution.\nDuring the program, selections\nwere played by the Cranbrook Concert orchestra, with J. A. York as\nconductor and. Gordon Finley as\nconcert master. Mrs. G. E. MacDonald rendered \"My Prayer\" and\n\"Charity\" with Mrs. P. Douglas as\naccompanist. J. C. Little rendered\n\"Song of Songs\" and \"By the Bend\nof the River\" and a vocal-duet.with\nDouglas Pattern,.\"Flow Gently, De-\nva.\" T. S. Beynon accompanied,\nMANY DEER IN\nSIRDAR AREA\nSIRDAR, B.C.\u2014Deer are retnark-\nably plentiful. Geese on Duck lake\nare rather scarcer now than in the\npast week or two, but ducks have\nincreased considerably.\nThe \"Monkeys Fist'\n|V; By GEORGE H. HADDOCK\nAnimals Die in\nFlooded Kootenay\nSIRDAR, B.C.\u2014The seriousness\n, of the flooding In the States It\nreflected by the amount of debris\nfloating down the Kootenay river\nMany oaroattet of animals were\nnoted. \u25a0_',\nSaturday night a boom ot logs belonging to the Schaefer-Hltchcock\ncompany of Nelson in course ot\ntransit via the Kootenay river broke\nup and got tied up in the piling and\ndrift wood at Kootenay Landing. A\ntugboat has been engaged all week\ncollecting the logs.\nDramatic Club\nElects, Robson\nROBSON, B.C. (B.H.)-The Dramatic club met at the Robson hall,\nWednesday.\nThe following officers were elected: J. Webster, president; Mrs. A.\nThorpe, secretary; Mrs. R. Waldie,\nvice-president; Mrs. D, Magee and\nMiss D. Whellams on the executive;\nFrank Webster, stage manager; J.\nWalker, assistant stage manager;\nMrs. M. Quance, Mrs. C. Duplat and\nR. Waldie, reading committee.\nIt was decided to put on a three-\nact play in the fall with Mrs. R.\nWaldie as director and Mrs. Hett\nas alternative. Three one-act plays\nare to .be produced next spring for\none evening. One of these plays will\nbe taken to the Dramatic Festival\nat Nelson.\nSettlers Clear Land\nArrow Creek Area\nARROW CREEK, B. C. - The\nsettlers of Arrow Creek seem quite\nambitious this spring by the number of fires and the amount of clearing that'is going on.\nThe government grader Is at\nwork In Arrow Creek putting the\nroads in good shape.\nLog hauling has commenced from\nArrow Creek to Rogers Mill, Creston.\nHigh water did'slight damage to\nsome small bridges in the valley but\nseems to be fairly well over now.\nMost of the snow has disappeared\nfrom the mountains.\nNew Denver Wins\nFirst Ball Game\nNEW DENVER, B. C.-The first\nbaseball game of the season was\nplayed at New Denver May 1, when\nNew Denver beat Burton 15-5.\nTeams were:\nBurton\u2014J. McCormick, R. Hard,\ning,, A. Mason, R. Rees, R. Johnson, P. Bateman, S. Walker, L.\nJohnson, G. Hartley, R. Bateman,\nand R. Childs.\nNew Denver\u2014B. Johnson. W.\nTuring, F. Meers, M. Campbell, E.\nCrellin, J. Burkitt, E. Shannon, A.\nJeffrey, C. Thrlng, jr., C. Campbell and T. Clever.\nTernan Retained\nas President of\nRossland Board\nTRAIL, B.C., May 8\u2014Atheugh he\nexpressed a strong desire to retire\nfrom office, W. G. Ternan was reelected president of Rossland board\nof trade to serve his 25th term, and\nthe entire executive was reappointed at the annual meeting here.\nI* A. Campbell F. S. Peters and\nE. M. Daly were appointed delegates to the forthcoming convention of the Associated Boards ot\nTrade of Eastern British Columbia,\nto be held In Trail on June 8. 7 and\n8, with S. Patterson and J. N. Crann\nas alternates; .\nA resolution committee composed\not Mr. Ternan, Mr. Cran and Mr.\nDaly, was appointed to go into the\nmatter of drafting resolutions from\nthe Rossland board of trade to the\nconvention.\nThe executive follows: W. G.\nTernan, president; F. S. Peters, vice-\npresident; E. M. Daly, secretary-\ntreasurer; and L. A. Campbell, J.\nD. McDonald,* W. F. McNeeill, S.\nPaterson, J. C. Urquhart, R.' J. Clegg,\nG. W. Hertig, Earl Mellet, S. R.\nDavies, Robert Anderson, W. M.\nVan, and J. Wright, council.\nBETTER 8ERVICE\nThe question was raised of obtaining better connections between\nbuses leaving for Rossland and\ntrains arriving in Trail, arid it was\nleft with the secretary to write the\nCanadian Pacific Railway In Nelson with a view to obtaining bet\nter service in this regard, and also\nto see if the overnight stay at Castlegar for persons'catching the boat for\nthe Arrow Lakes could not be eliminated.\nMr. Peter's, as chairman of a committee appointed to interview R.\nR. Burns, M.P.P. on the Paterson\nroad, reported that Mr. Burns had\nstated that at present no appropriation had been made for fixing it,\nbut promised cooperation in putting\nthe malter before the minister of\npublic-works in Victoria. Mr. Burns\nthought that the road would be\nrepaired in the near future.\nGIVE ENDORSEMENT\nSeveral resolutions to come before the Associated Boards convention werctaken up at the meeting, principally one from Nelson\nboard of trade on the railway problem in Canada asking for a petition to the Federal government to\ntake such measures necessary as to\nterminate the heavy, annual losses\nunder the present system. It was\nendorsed.\nA resolution from the Greenwood board of trade, asking' the.\nAssociated Boards ol Trade of Eastern British Columbia to ask the Dominion government to withhold the\nprojected granting of the franchise\nto Doukhobors, was also endorsed.\nTo Ship Logs\n.       to Rogers Mill\nSIRDAR. B.C. \u2014 j The tlnhorst\nBecker logging outfit ha* completed\nskidding of the logs and will start\nshipping by truck to the,Rogers\nsawmill at Creston. \" V\nIt Is likely cutting may start on\nanother stand when this parcel is\ncleaned up. \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0 - \u25a0..   \u2022 .: ' '\nMiss Jean Burns        \u2022\nBride at Michek\nNATAL, B.C.\u2014A very beautiful\nand interesting wedding took place\nat Michel when Miss Jean Burns,\nformerly of Penticton became the\nbride of Primo Cimolini, eldest\nson of Mr. and Mrs,'P. Cimolini of\nMichel. The wedding ceremony took\nplace at Michel Catholic church\nwith Father Harrison of Michel officiating. The bride was a memoer\not the Michel-Natal school staff\nand will continue her duties until\nthe end of the term.\nThey will make i their home at\nNatal where they have secured an\napartment. Mr. Cimolini is employed at the Michel colliery.,'.,\nYear's Suspended\nSentence Selling\nto Trail Minors\nTRAIL, B. C, May 5 \u2014 Found\nguilty of supplying liquor to minors,\nWilliam G. Duncan, 1842 Bay avenue, was given one year's suspended sentence and ordered to post\nthree sureties totalling $800 this\nmorning in Trail police court by\nMagistrate\u00abDonald MacDonald.\nThe accused pleaded not guilty,\nand evidence of the two rhinors established the fact that Duncan had\nobtained the money for the liquor\nfrom them, later caching it where\nthe boys could get it.\nADMITS TAKING MONEY\nDuncan admitted getting the money from the boys, but denied he\ncached the liquor with their knowledge, slating that it was his own\nliquor which was later found,\nMagistrated MacDonald allowed\nthe accused to go on suspended sentence with a surety ot $800 put up\nby himself and two sureties of $180\neach from responsible property\nholders. :\nFrederick McKenna, no fixed\naddreu, pleaded guilty to a\ncharge of theft and wai sentenced\nto 80 days In Nelson Jail,\nThe charge arose -out of theft of\nfour turkeys from the Star cafe.\nNatal to Have\nModern Theatre\nNATAL, B.C-Bulldlnq In Natal ll expected to excel that of last\nyear. The building of the new\nMichel steel tipple will be tha\ngreatest job. The tipple hat already taken shape.   r\nNatal It. to have a modern theatre. The. Plant tar the Roxy theatre which will be owned by J.\nSorrentlno of Natal have arrived\nand It; It expected that Building\nwill commence shortly. Mr. Sorrentlno operated the Natal theatre until a short time ago when\nhli lease ran out.\nTwo wooden houses are being\nbuilt, by J. Carner of Michel and\nP. Watylyn of Natal.\nChinese Child\nDies in Trail,\nTRAIL, B.-C, May 8 \u2014 Henry Ed-\nard Lee, 2Vs year-old son of Mr.\nand Mrs, Sing Lee, 1318 Bay avenue,\ndied at 8:15 Thursday. The .child\nwas rushed to hospital Monday suffering trom severe burn* on the\nlower part of the body, received\nwhen he was believed, to have fall'\nen Into a-pot of hot grease while\nplaying In the basement ot his\nfather's cafe.\nHenry was born In Trail, where\nbesides his parents he is survived\nby a sister, Pearl, and two brothers,\nStanley: and Billy. Another sister\nLily, is now In China.\nFREDER1CTON (CP)-Hon. J.\nB. McNair, attorney-general and\nacting minister ot health and labor\nfor New Brunswick, will address\nthe University ot New Brunswick\ngraduating class at the encacnial\nexercises May 12.\nLET A WANT AD SELL IT.\nTelephone Your Mother\non Mother's Day, May 8\nIf your mother lives in a distant city, give her great pleasure and\nhappy memories by telephoning her on Mother's Day, Sunday, May 8.\nWhat a thrill it will be for her to hear your voioe coming to her over\nthe wires! Ihe miles that separate you will be swept away, and you\nwill talk to each other as though you were in the same room. Remember\nthat long-distande rates are cheapest every night after 7 o'olook\nand all day Sundays, As there will be a great many people using the\n\u25a0 long-distance servioe on Mother's Day, wjb suggest that you oall as\nearly as possible.\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA   TELEPHONE   COMPANY\n\"    ssseai\n\"\"\"\"\u25a0 I\nTHE BOYS AND GIRLS PAGE\nOver the little boat went, tipping him and the two glrlt Into the channel.\nINSTALLMENT 9\n;Totn struggled to his feet, his\nisvaA   throbbing   from   Ihe   hard\nbump. Dazedly he looked around.\n\"Suddenly a cry roused him to ac-\ntion.\n\"Tom!\" came Donna's voice, in a\ndespairing wail.\nRunning over to the edge of the\npier, Tom's heart sank as he heard\n. the motor start.\n-\"He'll get away!\" he said frantically to himself. But as he spokei\n; the motor died again.\n. Tom saw Jack working frantically over the motor, cursing as he\ntried to start it again. The two girls\nwere hanging on desperately as\nthe little craft rocked with the burly dock hand's efforts to get' it started. Tom realized that the boat was\nalowly drifting away. Then suddenly; in the distance, lie heard\nthe pounding feet of men approaching through the fog.\n.\"I've got. to stop - him now!\" he\n\u00abrl*d to himself, \"or he'll be gone\nbefore McDonough gels here!\"\n' Looking around for some sort of\nweapon, Tom glanced down at the\n- heaving line in his hand. Suddenly\nhe was galvanized into action.\nHe quickly separated the stiff\neolls of the new line, and set hlm-\n\u00abelf. Pivoting, he flung the heavy-\nended line with all his strength at\nthe crouching figure in the boat's\nttern. The weight whistled as it\nflashed through the air, the snaky\ncolli unwinding behind.\n' Tom tensed as he watched the\nflight of the line. \"It's GOT to hit\nhim!\" he breathed, unconsciously\ntwaytng his body, as it to help\nguide the \"monkey's fist.\"\nJack hail raised his body as the\nmotor caught. As he turned, the\nflying weight struck with a soggy\nthud on the side of his head,\n\"That'* got him!\" yelled Tom\nexultantly.\nThe dock hand's body sagged.\nDazed, he tried .desperately to regain his balance, but failed. Over\nthe little boat went, tipping him and\nthe two girls into the channel,\nA stand later the dock hand's\nhead appeared beside the round bottom of the overturned boat. Grasping the wet keel,.he hung on desperately. Tom looked quickly for\nDonna and Mary. First a light head\nand then a dark one, appeared. But\nTom's relief turned lo consternation as he heard Mary's shout.\n\"Tom!\" she screamed! \"Donna\ncan't swim!\"\nTom looked quickly toward Donna, and saw her mouth fill with\nwater as she tried vainly to scream.\nThen the waters o( the channel\nclosed over her head.\nKicking off his shoes, Tom dove.\nComing up quickly, he struck out\n(or' the spot' where Donna had disappeared,'and.then.surface dived.\nHis groping hands,found the submerged girl almost instantly, in a\nmoment he had carried her to the\nsurface. Swimming easily, he towed\nDonna toward a ladder attached to\nthe pier,\n\"Donna!\" came a cry from the\npier. Glancing up, Tom saw a gray-\nhaired man, his eyes filled with\nfear, standing beside McDonough\nand his two companions. .\n(To Be Concluded)\nAre You Better Than an Animal?\nYou have noticed how a mother bird will\nfeed and take care of her little birds until\nthey are able to look after themselves.\nProbably you have watched a mother cat\nwash and feed her kittens. And if you have\never been rough with a puppy dog while its\nmother was around, you know that it's dangerous.\nIn other words, mothers of all kinds look\nafter their children, just as the mothers ot\nboys and girls do. .   '   ' \u25a0   \"\n _  . But have you ever noticed a young bird\nor a kitten or a puppy doing anything fine for its mother? No.\nYoung .animals are interested in what their mothers do for them,\nnot what they can do for their mothers.\nNow, human beings ought to be better than animals. But sometimes they are not. There are lots of boys and girls who are\nseemingly Interested only in what their mothers do for them, and\nnot in what they can do to help their mothers and make them\nhappy.\nThis is something to think about on Mothers' Day. You can do\nbetter than a bird or a puppy or a kitten, can't you?\n\u2014The Editor.\nRIDDLES\nLet's all celebrate Mother's Day!\nHow about entertaining your\nmother with some of these new\nriddles which the Riddle Man has\njust received? See if she can guess\nthem!\n1. What is the difference between\none yard and two yards?\u2014Lawrence\nSorrell.\n2. What has a tongue, goes all\nover the place, and sits in the corner  at  night?\u2014Madeline  Garrett.\n3. What 1b it that is bought by the\nyard and worn by the foot?\u2014Mike\nKelso.\n4. What does a car have that Isn't\nany good to it, and yet it can't run\nwithout it?\u2014Gertrude Rhoden.\n5. What time was it when the\nChinaman pulled out his tooth?\u2014\nJohn Seely.\nPOSERS\nHere are eight posers for you to\ntry as a test of your knowledge.\n.1.  Who    discovered    electricity\nwith the aid of a kite?\n-2.  What is the latitude of Hie\nequator?\n3. Who was the supreme Boman\ngod?\n4. Who wrote Peter Pan?\n5. To  whom  did  Prlscllla  say\n\"Speak for yourself, John?\"\n6. What is a metronome?\n7. What are prune6?\n8. From what do we get turpentine?\n8PEAKIN' 0' 8PEEO\nThe restaurant had taken fire and\nRastus ran for his life. After three\ndays he returned and the boss said\n\"Rastus, where have you been all\nthis time?\"\n\"Ain't, bin no place,\" was the reply. \"Bin comin tyack.\"\n-Kay's Corner-\nBy Katherlne Houltcn\nHAND-MADE SCRAP BASKETS\nYou can make lovely scrap baskets, singly or In pairs, for your own\nspecial room, with tall, round coffee cans and scraps of colored silk\nor fancy paper.\nFirst, enamel the inside of the\ncan to suit your color scheme and\nlet it dry thoroughly. Cut your\nsilk in pdd shapes and glue these on\nthe outside of the Can. You can\nmake a sort of design with the plain\nand figured pieces, or just put them\non \"hit and miss.\" If you're short\not pieces, enamel the outside some\nneutral shade and cut your pieces\nlo form a spray or a geometric design around the bottom. Or cut a\nsilhouette of black material and use\nit with a white or bright-colored\nenamel background.\nIf you have some fancy wrapping papers, you can work out quite\na picture\u2014a horse and sleigh, stars\na moon, a tree or two, or a house\nand flowers. There's plenty of scope\nfor expressing your own individuality.\nUse a contrasting band top and\nbottom. Cut the material or paper\ntwice the width you want the band\nlo be, and long enough to go around\nyour can. Now fold this and glue\nit to form a band inside as well as\noutside the can. When the glue is\ndry, give the finished can a coat\nof spar varnish to protect it from\nwear and make it washable.\nThese scrap baskets have the advantage of being hand-made and\nunique, as well as inexpensive.\nONE OR THE OTHER\nDasher\u2014\"! hope you don't object\nto my smoking?\"\nRev. Mr. Mylde\u2014\"N-not in the\nleast, If you don't object to my\nbeing tick.\"\nBuddy Lewis, Young Third Sacker\nSays Infielders Must Have Speed\nBUDDY   LEWIS\nAt 21; Buddy Lewis is the youngest veteran Intielder in the\nmajor leagues. He has been a regular for three seasons, and last\nyear led his club with most runs scored, most hits made, and\nmost home runs. He is a fine defensive player, a clever base-\nrunner, and a deadly bunter.\nONE   FOR   THE   DOCTOR\nMiss Keane (to handsome young\nphysician at tho ball)\u2014\"Oh, doc-\ntorl how do you do? You look quite\nkilling this evening.\"\nYoung Physician\u2014 \"Thank you,\nbut I'm: not! I'm off duty, don't\nyou know?\" ...\nTWO  PIECE8  OF  PIE\n\"Ma, can 1 have another piece of\nmince pie?\"\n\"No, my child, you'd dream ot\nyour grandmother.\"\n\"I like to dream ol grandmother,\nMa. She used to give me two pieces\not pie,\"\nEditor's Note: This is the first ol\na series of articles in which Major\nleague ball players will give you\ntips on the game. Future articles\nwill cover batting, base rurthing,\nplaying the outfield, pitching and\ncatching.\nBy BUDDY LEWIS\nStar Third Baseman of the Washington Senators\nSo you want to play the intield?\nwell, before you try, I advise you\nlo ask yourself a few questions.\nAre you quick on your feet? An\nIntielder is so close to the batter that\nhis first step after the ball is hit must\nbe at a full spring. Have you a strong\narm? An intielder has to throw almost every time he handles a ball.\nThose are two thingsevery infield-\ner must have, regardless of his position. You can easily practice throwing and quick starts. It helps if you\nhave what we call \"good hands\",\ntoo. That means big hands with\npowerful finger grips. You can help\ndevelop them by gripping a baseball in each hand and squeezing as\nhard as possible. Try this every day\nfor a while.\nQET LOTS 'OF PRACTICE\nYou'll need plenty of practice at\nfielding. Get a friend to bat to you.\nTry catching hits on all sides, hard\nones and slow ones. You will have\nto learn to judge a ball. Some you\ncan get by charging in, others will\ncome so fast you have to go bsck for\nthem: The idea is to get to the ball\nas fast as possible.\nDon't be afraid of the ball or fight\nit. Get behind it every time you\ncan, so your body will stop it it you\nfumble. Use both hands If possible.\nMany times, however, you will be\nlucky to get one hand on It. Thats\nwhere lots ot practice counts.\nNow lets take a look at the various\ninfield positions. We'll start with\nfirst base and end up with third, the\none 1 know best.\nSmall men have made the grade at\nfirst base, but most Big Leaguers\nare big fellows like Lou Gehrig,\nJimmy Foxx and Hank Greenberg.\nA big man otters his teammates a\nbetter throwing target, and that's\nimportant. Practice starting toward\nfirst as you field a ball. Always get\nthere as fast as you can when another man is fielding the ball Keep\nyour feet out ot the runner's way.\nYou need only a toe on the bag to\nmake the out.\nSECOND AND SHORTSTOP\nA second baseman should be even\nfaster than the first sacker. He\nshould practice backing up his shortstop and first baseman. Learn to\nkeep your eye on a ball when someone else runs in front of it. Always\ncover second when.a ball is hit toward third.\nIf shortstop Is'your position, practice throwing the ball as fast'as it\ncomes to you. Shortstops start most\ndouble plays. Study various plays\nso you will always know the right\nbase to throw to Learn to throw\nfrom every position.\nMy greatest trouble at third base\nwas throwing\/No matter how good a\nfielder you are, you must be able\nto throw accurately and quickly.\nYou throw to first more than any\nother base, so practice that most.\nDon't worry about bunts. They are\nactually the easiest balls to handle\nwhen you expect them. Go in fast\nand get them with the bare hand\nwhen you can. Know your shortstop and don't try to cover his territory.\nWatch a good Intielder and try to\nimitate his style. I learned a lot by\nwatching Ossie Bluege. You can't go\nwrong by watching such fellows\nas Joe Kuhel, Gus Suhr, Jim Collins,\nCharley Gehringer, Luke Appling,\nArky Vaughan, Lyn Lary, Red Rolfe,\nDick Bartell and Pinky Hlgglns.\nHow many of them do you see each\nseason?\nRIDDLE ANSWERS\n1. A fence. 2. A shoe. 3. The carpet.  4.  Noise.  5.  Toothwenty,  or\nANSWERS  TO   LAST  WEDNESDAY'S PUZZLES\n1. Crossword puzzle solution.\n2. The diamond is C, Mae, molto,\ncatcher, ether, o'er, R.\n3. Straight, strait.\n4. Shortstop, coach, pitcher, and\ntrainer.\n5. HIT - hut - rut - RNU.\nBASE \u2014 bale \u2014 hale \u2014 hole\n- HOME\n\"My new mustache Is coming up\nnicely, isn't it, Lulu?\" \u2022   \u2022\n\"No, Freddy, It's down.\"\nP08ER ANSWER8\n1. Benjamin Franklin. 2. Zero. 3.\nJupiter. 4. Sir James Barrle. 5, John\nAlden. 6, An Instrument which betts\nmusical time. 7. Dried plums. 8. The\njuice ot pine and llr trees.\nQO UP HEAD\nTeacher\u2014\"What was there remarkable about, the battle of Lookout?\"\nLittle Dick (at the foot of the\nclass) \u2014 \"It paused bangs at th*\nbrew ol a mountain.\"\n . '\nBowling Prodigies Strut Their Stuff\nI, Note the position of the ball, the position ol the feet, the\n\u25a0 nifty wrist movement. These demonstrators of form on the ten\npin alleys are nine and eleven years old. Reading from left to\nright, the girl is June Hammill, from Ocean City, N.J., and\nthe boy is w. E. English, Jr., of Narbeth. Just to put W.E. in his\nplace, June defeated him in a three game match, 346-343. Both\nyoungsters use regulation balls in their efforts, which some-\n\u25a0 times take them over the 200 mark for a single game.\nSMALL BUT FAST GROUP IN FIELD\nFOR THE KENTUCKY DERBY TODAY\nLOUISVILLE, Ky., May 6 (API-\nOne of the smallest but fastest Kentucky Derby fields since the Great\nWar days will respond to the roar\nof the crowd at historic Churchill\nDowns tomorrow in the whirl that\nhas become the most spectacular\nthree-year-old horse race In the\nUnited States.\nThe names of 10 thoroughbreds,\nwith the ill-fated and erstwhile favored Stagehand missing, were\ndropped in the entry box today. It\nall 10 go to the post at approximately 2:30 p.m. P.S.T. tomorrow, the\nfield will be the smallest since Ben\nBlock's Morvich led nine rivals to\nthe finish in 1922. The race will\ncarry a gross value of $57,575.\nThe    twin    favorites,    William\nWoodward's Fighting Fox and Warren Wright's Bull Lea, may face no\nmore than a half dozen rivals at\nthe barrier. Some doubts existed\nwhether Co-Sport, only gelding entered, or Mountain Ridge, Mrs.\nEthel V. Mars' 50-to-l shot, would\nrun. Both are considered certain\nwithdrawals if the weather takes\nan unexpected turn for the worse\nand produces hea'vy going.\nFighting Fox ruled the 5-2 choice\nin most 'betting, with Bull Lea well\nsupported at 3 to 1. Two-year-old\nrivals last year, when Bull Lea beat\nthe Fox twice in three attempts,\nthese two colts figured to fight it\nout in the stretch. There seemed\nsufficient class otherwise in the\nfield, however, to support the idea\nof a reasonably wide open race.\nSPORTS FIELD\nSCHEDULE MADE\nUse of the Nelson Recreation\ngrounds to various Nelson sports\norganizations has been allotted by\nDenis StDenis, secretary-manager of\nthe Nelson civic centre commission,\nas follows:\nSenior baseball \u2014 Tuesday and\nThursday evenings, .\nIntermediate, Junior baseball \u2014\nSaturday evenings.\nTrack and football \u2014 Wednesday\nevenings.\nLadies\" and men's softball\u2014Monday and Friday evenings.\nUse of the grounds on Sundays\nwas allotted as follows: \u25a0\nMay 15\u2014Cricket.\nMay 22\u2014Senior baseball.\nMay 29\u2014Open.\nJune 5\u2014Senior baseball-\nJune 12\u2014Cricket.\nJune 19\u2014Senior baseball.\nJune 26\u2014Softball.\nJuly 3\u2014Senior baseball.\nJuly 10 \u2014 Intermediate, Junior\nbaseball.\nJuly 17-Cricket.\nJuly 24\u2014Senior baseball.\nAugust 14\u2014Cricket\nAugust 21\u2014Intermediate, junior\nbaseball.\nAugust 28\u2014Senior baseball.\nWednesday afternoons through'\nout the season are open dates and\nany sports club may apply for use\not the grounds for any paid admission attraction on that day.\nMajor attractions at the grounds\nthroughout the season follow:\nCanadian Legion Bugle band Dominion day celebrations, July 1.\nClan McLeary Labor day celebrations, September 4.\nNelson Fall Fair association, September 18 to 23.\nI\nExhibition. Mark\nFirst Week Boxla\ni\nTwo exhibition games Friday\nnight, culminating a week of city\nboxla practices, will feature the\nopening week of play for city boxla\nteams. Hornets and Catholic Boys\nclub will tangle in a bantam fixture,\nwhile Panthers and Bluebirds midgets are slated to meet in the second\ngame.\nThe schedule for the week follows:\nMONDAY\n4:00:5:00 p.m.\u2014Bluebird bantams.\n8:00-6:00 p.m.\u2014C.B.C. bantams.\n8:30-9:30 p.m.~FA.C. Juveniles.\nTUESDAY\n4:00-5:00 p.m.\u2014Hornet bantams.\n5:00-6:00 p.m.\u2014F.A.C. bantams.\n7:00-8:00-p.m.\u2014C.B.C. ntldgets.\n8:00-9:00 p.m.\u2014FTa.C. midgets.  ..\n9:00-10:00 p.m.\u2014Hornet juniors.\nWEDNESDAY\n4:00-5:00 pjn.\u2014Bluebird midgets.\n5:00-6:00. p.m.\u2014C.B.C. juveniles.\n8:30-9:30 p.m.\u2014F.A.C. juniors.\nTHURSDAY\n4:00-5:00 p.m.\u2014Panther midgets.\n6:00-6:00 p.m.\u2014Hornet juveniles.\n7:00-8:00 p.m.\u2014Panther juveniles.\nFRIDAY\n4:00-5:00 p.m\u2014Hornets vs. C.B.C.\nbantams.\n5:00-6:00 p.m.\u2014Panthers vs. Bluebird midgets.\nTrail Soccer Clubs\nto Clash Saturday\nTRAIL, B. C.', May 6 \u2014 Second\nsession of the Trail schools soccer\nis to be staged at Butler park Saturday morning. Rangers are scheduled to play Rovers at 9 a.m. and\nBombers to tackle Aces at 10 a.m.\nBatting Leaders\nBy the Associated Press\nFirst   three   and   ties   in   each\n' league:\nPlayer, club G AB R HPct.\nTrosky, Indians 16 53 20 23 .434\nHayes, A's 15 36  6 15 .417\nFox, Tigers  16 70 12 28 .400\nKlein, Phillies  16 63 14 23 .365\nLeiber, Giants  17 66 14 24 .364\nSlaughter, Cards \u201e 17 69 12 25 .362\nHome run leaders: Goodman,\nReds Leiber and McCarthy, Giants:\nGreenberg, Tigers and Keltner, Indians; five each.\nRuns batted in leaders: Foxx, Red\nSox, 24; McCarthy, Giants, 20.\nSIR ORACLE WINS\nSAN FRANCISCO, May 6 (API-\nSir Oracle, carrying top impost of\n120 pounds, raced to an impressive\nfour-length victory over Bill Farns-\nworth in the Rancho Casitas handicap today at Tanforan. Captain Cal\nwas third.\nHerbert Oxley\nHeads Memorial\nTennis, Trail\nTRAIL, B. C-, May 6 \u2014 Herbert\nOxley, veteran tennis player, was\nelected president of the Memorial\nclub at the annual meeting. Other\nofficers were:\nHarry Yolland, vice-president;\nNed Rhodes, secretary; Yolland,\nMiss Irene Evans and Leri Evans,\ntournament committee; Miss Cara\nRingwood, Miss Evans, Mrs. Tug-\nwood, Ralph Smythe and Guy Kin-\nnear, social committee; Yolland,\nEvans and Miss Evans, with power\nto add, coaching committee; Oxley,\nYolland and Rhodes, grounds committee.\nSPORTS ROUNDUP...\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nNEW YORK, May 6 (AP).-Well,\nthe esteemed San Francisco press,\nwhich raised the very dickens because Col. Ruppert wouldn't capitulate to Joe DiMaggio's demands for\n$40,000 per, but instead made Joseph\nholler \"uncle\" and sign for $25,000\ncould spare a few columns for another home town find, Dario Lodi-\ngani who is doing such a slick Job\nof second basing for the Athletics\nand knocking the American league's\nbest pitchers all over the lot. .. .\nCompared with DiMaggio's $25,000\nSignor Lodigiani draws down $2500\nfrom the Fhiladelphians.\nWithdrawal of Stagehand from tomorrow's derby may put the kibosh\non a clever plan Trainer Earl Sande\nhas been toting around in the back\nof his head... . Thaf s a tip for any\nwestern school looking around for\na good man.... Cardinal supporters\nthink Stu Martin, the infielder, will\nbe the \"comeback man\" of the 1938\nseason. ... Joe Beggs, the Yankee\nrookie, who beat the Browns, Wed\nnesday, has just about cinched a\nJob with the Yanks. ... Examination time for the other young\npitchers is over.\nEd Brewster, veteran Western\nUnion baseball operator, covered Iub\n7863rd game yesterday since he took\nover the key in 1880. ... He has\ntapped out the scores from the old\nYankee plant, the Polo grounds and\nthe Yankee stadium..;. Up in Vermont they have the baseball fever\nbad. ... At a church meeting at\nWest Burke, the other night, $300\nwa3 voted for the support of a baseball team and $100 for the support\ndf the church. Oakland papers are\naccusing Don Budge of ducking\nCalifornia's most competitive tennis\ntournament\u2014the annual championships. . .. They advanced the date\nof the tourney hoping to suit the\nHon. Budge's convenience but with\nno luck. . .. One player says few\ntears, will be shed if Budge goes\nthrough with his recent threat to\nchange his present address from\nOakland to Hollywood.\nStiff\ni^PINS\nLast of the Legion Bowling club's\nsilverware was distributed Thursday night as R. H. Maber's quartet\ntrimmed Nick Cassios' men 1729-\n1671 in the Collinson cup final\nSkips Maber and Cassios, battling\nfor high scores, split the game's\nhonors, Maber rolling a high individual count of 196, while Cassios\nchalked1 up an aggregate of 499\npoints.\nTeams and scores follow:\nMaber team:\nMaber L 126   196  151-473\nN.Jackson 127   143   126\u2014396\nJ. Aureus 151  65   154-470\nH. H. Sutherland 138  129   123-390\nCassios' team:\nCassios   175  158   166-499\nRoss Riley  156   156   158\u2014470\nVic Graves 144  139  115-398\nJ. Ford  115   100    89-304\nAdditional Boxla\nClubs Suggested\n\" at Trail Meeting\nTRAIL, B. C, May 6 \u2014 Possibility of forming three lacrosse\nleagues to take care of intermediate, junior and juvenile boys was\ndiscussed at a meeting of the Junior\nLacrosse club executive at Memorial hall.\nBoys of these three divisions will\nbe asked to register at a future date\nas it is not expected the rink will\nbe available for practice until after the senior league commences.\nIt is. proposed to receive names ot\nall wishing to play before a decision is made on the three loops.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\n(By The Canadian Press)\nGene Tunney, reigning as light-\nheavyweight boxing champion,\nscored a technical knockout over\nJack Clifford of St. Paul 15 years\nago tonight. Later world's heavyweight titlist, Tunney pummelled\nClifford for eight rounds before the\nbout was stopped. He retired undefeated in the heavyweight division in August, 1928,\nBaseball Scores\nINTERNATIONAL\nJersey City 0, Toronto 5.\nSyracuse 7, Montreal 10.\nNewark 22, Buffalo 9.\nBaltimore 7, Rochester 8.\nASSOCIATION\nIndianapolis 10, Milwaukee 1.\nAll others postponed.\nPACIFIC COAST\nPortland 5, San Diego 7.\nC.B.C. Softballers\nHalt Central 11-10\nNelson Central school softballers\naccepted their first setback in the\nrace for the Dr. Ray. Shaw cup\nThursday afternoon, as Catholic\nBoys' club edged them out 11-10. At\nthe Nelson Recreation field.\nThe teams and scorers were:\nC. B. C. \u2014 Jack Prestley,-, Albert\nFrocklage, 1, George Lapointe, 1;\nDavid Wigg, 1, Jack Jarbeau, 2,\nWillie Vulcano 4, George Deg, Arthur Choquette, Robert Gillis and\nD. Long 2.\nCentral \u2014 Bob Morrow, Harry\nWassick, Elmer, Dyck, Reid Sahara 2, Jack Gallicano 1, Arthur\nSmith 2, John Arnot 1, Lloyd Rid-\nenour 2, Bud Whitfield 1, and Richard Wassick 1.\n7 Trail Teams in\nLine for Softball\nTRAIL, B.C., May 6-Girls of the\nCentral school went one better than\nboys when they mustered four\nteams to organize a senior girls'\nsoftball loop this week, senior boys\nentering only three teams in the\ncircuit.\nEach team already has one game\non the records, Yankees triumphing\nover Cubs 22-19 in the initial boys'\nfixture and Rotarians beating Macs\n11-6 in the girls' starter.  -\nThe schedule ot both leagues provides for each team meeting the\nother twice. Playoff series will follow to decide the champions.\nThe teams follow:\nSENIOR GIRLS \t\nRotarians\u2014M. Alty, G. Romano,\nM. L. Michaely, N. Zonailo, M.\nClayton, V. Catalano, A. Belisky, C.\nDemeo, C. Kinnis, R. FilllpeUi, K.\nPamplin.\nMacs\u2014F. Mclntyre, B. Patton, J.\nYates, G. Spain, E. Morrison, J\nSniith, B. Evans, E. Dwyer, I. Sargent, B. Coughlin and A. Jones.\nSmoke Eaters \u2014 B. DeYong, F.\nThompson, M. McGregor, V, Magli-\nani, L. Rlnaldi, D. Crowe, I, Kemp,\nM. Johnson, H. Merry, N. Halifax\nnad F. Webb.\nShamrocks \u2014 Eileen Powell, A.\nWolfe, K. Lennon, J. Mutch, C. Cuddy, E. Minto, H. Hunter, M. Brown-\nHe, J. Bowden, A. Henscheli and A.\nHutchinson.\n8ENI0R BOYS\nGiants\u2014O. Lazzarato, N. Forte, G.\nSmart, G. Borsato, H. Hodge, A.\nMcAuley, F. Woods, J. Twaddle, D.\nMcKinnon, F. Jones, D. Poscento\nand J. Sherley.\nCubs\u2014B. Brownlie, I. McLeod, B.\nEdmunds, J. Monaldi, R. Smart, G.\nPatterson, E. Wilson, B. Scheer, L.\nMurdoch, G. Farell, L. Brown and\nH. McLellan.\nYankees-T. Wolfe, S. Zuk, A.\nMartin, M. Jones, N. McLeod, \"W.\nLangille, M. Sammartino, L. Trevi-\nson, A. Crombie, Francis Jones, G.\nWebster and V. Bryan.\nYankees vs. Cubs:\nBatteries:\nYankees\u2014F. Wolfe and F. Jones,\nA. Martin and F. Jones.\nCubs\u2014I. McLeod and J. Monaldi,\nR. Smart and J. Monaldi.\nUmpires\u2014A. MacDonald and G.\nSmart.\nMacs vs. Rotarians:\nRuns:\nMacs\u2014B. Patton 1, J. Yates 1, F.\nMclntyre 2 and E. Morrison 2.\nRotarians\u2014M. Michaely 1, M. Alty\n3, M. Clayton 1; N. Zonailo 1, O.\nBilesky 1, C. Kinnis 1, G. Romano\n1, V. Catalano 1.\nCROWS SCARCE\nCRESTON AREA\nCRESTON, B.C.-Creston Valley\nRod and Giia club members were\nat Wynndcl Tuesday evening for\nan open meeting with the hunters\nand fishing fraternity in that area\nat which open seasons, bag limits\nand game matters generally were\ndiscuss eel\nWith President Charles Sutcliffe\nin the chair, routine business was\ntransacted. Decision as to enlarging\nthe clubhouse on Barton avenue\nwill be made at the next regular\nmeeting.\nThose taking part in the 1938\ncrow shoot report these birds are\nscarcest ever known, probably\ndue to the fact that in Idaho a drive\nhas been under way for the past\nthree years to get rid of these destroyers ot other bird life.\nIt was announced the first of the\ncrow shoot dinners will be held\nMay 24.\nVic Mawsoh Informed the club\nthat he is again offering attractive\nprizes for the season's biggest samples of black bass, rainbow and\nlake trout. The contest closes November 15.\nFIGHTS\nBALTIMORE\u2014John Henry Lewis, 179, Pittsburgh, light heavyweight champion, outpointed Dom-\nentc Ceccarelli, 178, Italy, 10 (non-\ntitle).\nBUENOS AIRES \u2014 Alberto Lov-\nell, 198, Argentina, outpointed Ed-\nuardo Primo, 207, Argentina.\nMIAMI, Fla.-The Yucatan Kid,\n133%, Mexico, technically knocked\nout Charlie Gomcr, 133%, Baltimore (4).\nHONORS EVEN IN\nTENNIS MATCHES\nZAGREB, Yugoslavia, May 6\n(AP) \u2014 Czechoslovakia and Yugoslavia split even In the first two\nsingles matches of their Davis cup\ntennis series today. Ference Puncec\nof Yugoslavia defeated Ladislaus\nHecht, 7-5, 6-3, 6-3, but Roderich\nMenzel evened the count for Czechoslovakia by stopping Josip Pal-\nlada, 6-2, 6-2, 6-1.\nWINS $1676 IN GOLF PLAY\nSOUTHPORT, Eng., May 6 (AP)\n\u2014Don Curtis, 33, of Bournemouth,\ntoday won first prize of \u00a3315\n($1575) in the Southport \u00a31600 pro.\nfessional golf tournament as he\nposted a fourth-round 70 for a\n72-hole total of 287. A. Lees was\nsecond with a 74 for 289, and Ait\nPadgham third with 71 for 290, Lees\nwon \u00a3160 ($800) and Padgham\n\u00a3100 ($500).\n ,\nLET A WANT AD SELL IT.\nSPORTS MEN DEMAND\nRELEASE VON CRAMM\nSAN FRANCISCO, May 6 (AP).\nA group ot California sportsmen,\nIncluding world amateur tennis\nchamp, Don Budge, and Joe DiMaggio of the New. York Yanks,\ntoday demanded immediate release\nof Baron Gottfried von Cramm, Germany's No. 1 net star, from a Natl\nconcentration camp.\nNew Rector Heard\nat Creston Churches\nCRESTON, B.C.-Rev. A. S. Partington, B.A., new rector of the\nAnglican churches at Creston,\nWynndel, Yahk and Camp Lister,\ntook his first services at Creston\nSunday \u2014 early communion and\nevensong\u2014and made a favorable\nimpression.\nWith him are Mrs. Partington end\ntwo daughters, Misses Frances and\nMary, and they are now getting\nsettled in the rectory, which has\nbeen renovated throughout\nThe new rector has been at Coleman and Blairmore, Alta., since\n1930. Prior to leaving for Creston\ntluy were tendered a farewell supper at Coleman, where the minister\nwas suitably remembered by the\nchurch officers and members ot\nboth parishes.\nThe Misses Partington, who have\nbeen members ot the choir at Coleman church, were also honored.\nSociety\n(Continued From Pane Five)\n\u2022 Mrs. Q. A. Wallinger was In\nNelson from Trail yesterday.\ne Mrs. F. Denison and daughter,\nMrs. Garnet Blaine, of Kimberley,\nspent yesterday in Trail guests at\nthe home of Mrs. Denison's son-in-\nlaw and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.\nRonald Beattie, also with her sister\nMrs. B. J. Walsh.\nMrs. Biloski, Granite road,\nand young baby have left for Spokane where they are visiting' the\nformer's mother.\ne Mrs. Arthur Bolt and daughter, Lorraine, of Cranbrook, are\nguests at the home on Baker street\nof Mr. and Mrs. L. L. Boomer.\ne Mrs. W. J. Rutledge of Trail\nspent yesterday in town. \u2022\ne W. R. Green, mining man of\nSpokane, was in Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Rev. Frederick St. Denis of\nTrail was in the city yesterday en\nroute \"home from Creston.\ne Clifford McKinnon, Baker\nstreet,, has left for Toronto as a\ndelegate to a Canadian Pacific Express convention.\ne Mr. and Mrs. George McKay\nof Trail, who spent a year at Big\nMissouri, have been guests at the\nhome of the latter's father, Gregoire\nChoquette, Oak street, en route to\ntheir home at Trail,\ne Mr. and Mrs: J. G. Bennett,\nMiss Mary Madden and Miss Thelma\nHoule have returned from a few\ndays at Spokane.\n\u2022 Miss Vivian Rowley of Har-\nrop spent yesterday in the city.\ne Mrs. M. Rogarz of Mackinson\nleft yesterday after a few days in\nNeison..\ne Mrs. Raymond Burkett was\nin town from Appledale yesterday.\ne Mrs. J. B. Thorn of Trail is a\ncity visitor.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. W. Moore and daughter, Muriel, spent yesterday in Nelson.\nShoppers in town yesterday\nIncluded Mrs. Oscar Johnson and\nchildren of Procter.\ne Mrs. W. M. Cameron of Trail\nis a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Louis\nChoquette, Silica street\ne Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Blackwood have as their guest their\ndaughter, Mrs. William B. Hunter\nof Trail who plans to return today\nMiss Frances Knott of Canyon City Is a house guest of Mr.\nand Mrs, Carl Anderson,\n\u25a0 e Mr. and Mrs.' H. E, Thaln,\nFairview, have as their guest their\ndaughter, Mrs. Neil Derby of Trail.\ne Ernest Hartford, formerly ,of\nNelson and Calgary, was in the\ncity en route the visit his sister\nat Rossland.\ne Mrs. F. W. Hewls, Terrace\napartments, has returned from a\ntrip on the Arrow lakes.\ne E. Quails, Great Northern\nroadmaster, with headquarters at\nMarcus, spent yesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Frank A. Stuart, Stanley\nPenny and\u00abH. H. Sutherland were\nin Trail attending the Dokkie\nclub Ijanquet.\nBoswell District\nPlans Sports Day\nBOSWELL, B. C\u2014The teachers\nfrom the east side of the main lake\nmet at Boswell last week, to discuss plans for a sports day. The\nmeet will be held at Boswell again\nthis year on June 3.\nThose present were: Miss Violet\nYoung, Crawford Bay; Miss Ivy\nWalker, Gray Creek; Miss Donalda\nWalker, Boswell; Miss Elaine Bos-\ntock, Sanca; and Arthur Rutledge,\nSirdar.\nCHERRY TREE8 IN BLOOM\nThe cherry trees are in full bloom\nhere. There is promise of a big\ncrop.\nIn the gardens, tulips and narcissi are replacing daffodils and\nearlier spring blosoms.\nThe dandelions, too, are in bloom,\nand their golden masses rival in\nbeauty, all the cultivated flowers,\nthough the farmer who sees them\nin his alfalfa or berry patch, finds\nit difficult to appreciate their loveliness.\nBaseball  Standings\nNATIONAL LEAGUE\nW L\nNew York \t\n \u201e. 14   4\n._  12   6\n  10   7\n    9   9\nBoston\t\n _.   6   7\n    6 10\n _   6 11\nPhiladelphia \t\n    3 13\nAMERICAN\nLEAGUE\nCleveland  \t\n  12   5\n......... 11   7\nWashington ...\n _ Hi 7\n    9   8\n    7   8\nDetroit \t\n    7   9\nPhiladelphia \t\n    5 11\n5 12\nPet.\n.778\n.667\n.588\n.500\n.462\n.375\n.353\n.706\n.611\n.611\n.52!)\n.467\n.438\n.313\n.294\nAustralians Win\nSecond Victory\nLONDON, May 6 (CP Cable) -\nDisplaying decided superiority in\nbatting and bowling strength, the\ntouring Australian cricket team overwhelmed Oxford University by\nan innings and 487 runs today for\nits second successive victory on\nEnglish soil. In their opening match\nthe visitors defeated Worcestershire\nby an innings and 77 runs.\nAided by centuries scored by A.\nL. Hassett, J. H. Fingleton and Stanley McCabe, the antipodean: declared with 679 runs for seven wickets.\nThe university players made only a\nfeeble attempt in reply being dismissed for totals of 117 and 75.\nDuring the match L. O. B. Fleetwood-Smith took nine wickets for\n59 runs. In the two fixtures to date\nthe clever spin bowler has dismissed 20 players for 195 runs.\nYORKSHIRE WINS\nA spirited recovery by Surrey\nagainst M. C. C. Just failed, the\ncounty eleven going under by five\nruns. Put out for a paltry 67 in\nthe first innings, Surrey came back\nto score 460, In the other non-\ncounty fixture Yorkshire defeated\nCambridge University by an innings and 105 runs.\nSussex, Lancashire and Hampshire recorded victories in the season's opening county championship\ncontests. Sussex defeated Somerset\nby eight wickets, Lancashire had a\n10-wickets margin over Worcestershire while Hampshire nosed out\nGloucestershire by 30 runs after a\ntight match.\nC. W. Walker, Australian wicket-\nkeeper, did not take his place behind tha stumps today owing to\nan injury to his left hand suffered in yesterday's play, Fingleton\nreplaced him and stumped three\nvarsity batsmen.\nThe scores:\nAustralians 679 for six wickets\ndeclared; Oxford University 117 and\n75; at Oxford.\nM.C.C. 196 and 336; Surrey 67 and\n460 (Gregory 130, Barling 129); at\nLord's.\nYorkshire - 540; Cambridge University 264 and 171; at Cambridge.\nSomerset 240 and 224; Sussex-297\nand 169 for two; at Hove.\nHampshire 279 and 874 for seven, declared (Pothecary 118); Gloucestershire 271 and 352 (Hammond\n112); at Portsmouth.\nWorcestershire 342 and 143; Lancashire 468 and 19 runs for no wickets; at Manchester.\nPAGE   NINB\nSchool Board of\nTrail Voles $100\nto Send Athletes\nTRAIL, B.C., May 6\u2014The eum of\n$100 was voted to the T.A.A.A. to\nassist in defraying the cost of sending eight athletes to, the Kootenay*\nBoundary high school meet at Kim*\nberley this year, it was decided at a\nmeeting of the Trail-Tadanac board\nof school trustees.\nPermission was given Trail- Girls'\nSoftball association to use Central\nschool playground three nights a\nweek. Trail junior Lacrosse association will use the same ground*\nfor practice Saturday mornings, and\ngoal nets will be supplied by the \u2022\nboard.\nPurchase of six softballs for- use\nof high school pupils was - authorized, as was the payment of $10\nper month for cost of rink lighting\nfor school lacrosse teams.\nThree substitute teachers will be\nneeded in Trail Friday, it was reported by W. M. Cameron, principal of Central school, who explained\nthat 400 pupils and 11 teachers\nwould attend the Kootenay Musical\nFestival in Nelson on this day.\nTrail schools track meet will be\nheld May 28, and plans were already going forward, Mr. Cameron\nsaid, in requesting the board purchase medals and ribbons for win*\nners.\nPictured In action is Catherine Shuster, who at 16 stands\nout as a serious threat to the\npresent top-notch feminine golfers. A student in California, she\nmakes 200-yard drives with\nease, and recently defeated the\ndoughty \"Babe\" Didrickson.\nFour Homers in\nFour Nat. Games\nBy the Canadian Press\nThe heavy guns of the National\nleague went into action yesterday,\nand four homers were pounded out\nin the four games played in generally cold weather.\nJohnny McCarthy and Hank Leiber each hit his fifth homer of the\nyear to help Cliff Melton, and the\nNew York Giants defeated Pittsburgh 11-7. Eddie Mayo and Max\nWest crashed out homers for the\nBoston Bees at Chicago only to go\ndown to defeat against the Cubs\n13-9.\nRookie Ken Keltner drove out the\nonly homer of the American league\nfor the Cleveland Indians and a 4-1\nvictory over the Philadelphia Athletics.\nDetroit at New York was rained\nout.\nThe Cincinnati Reds were handed\neight unearned runs in the first\nfour innings, and coasted in with a\n10-3 victory over Van Mungo and\nBrooklyn's doddering Dodgers.\nRookie Enos Slaughter drove a\ntriple to right centre field in the\nninth inning to score Jimmy Brown\nand give the St. Louis Cardinals a\n4-3 victory over the Philadelphia\nPhillies at St, Louis.\nAt Washington, old Pete Apple-\nton pitched and hit the Senators\nto a 4-3, 13-lnnlng victory- over\nthe White Sox. The grizzled hurler came Into the game In the 12th\nInning and pitched masterfully In\nrelief.\nBuck Newsom received shabby\ntreatment from both his past and\ncurrent teammates at Boston when\nthe Red Sox trounced St. Louis 7-3,\nin a game that was delayed 14 minutes by a heavy shower.\nField of 14 for\nJubilee Handicap\nLONDON, May \u00ab (CP Cable) -\nA field of 14 was named, today for\nthe great Jubilee handicap to be\nrun at Kempton Park tomorrow\nover a distance of I'A miles. The\nprobable starters, in order at horse,\njockey and ownerr\nDaytona, Beary, Sir (J. Bullough,\nMonument,   Beasley,   Duke   of\nMarlborough.\nThe Hour, E. Smith, Sir L. Phil- ,\nlips.\nMansur, Simpson,. K. Macombe*.!\nSt Magnus, Perryman, Lord Dti\u00bb '\nby.    - - .\nNoble Turk, Lowrey,. A. gain*-\nbury.\nMagnet, G. Richards, Lord Hint,\nBattle Song, Gethln, G. Barnes,\nNoble King, D. Smith, Sir A. But,\nZaimis, Weston, Z, Michalinos..\nCarioca, Sprague, Maharajah, ol ',\nRajpipla. \".     '\nBurdock, Sirett Mrs. H. Cayzer. j\nPath of Peace,. Jockey 'not listed,,\nLord Glanely. \u25a0\nRodeo II, Richardson, owner not,\nlisted. :\nLet Contract for\nSchool Foundation\nTRAIL, B. C., May 6 \u2014 Contract\nfor excavation and the erection\nof concrete footings for the new\naddition to Trail high school was\nawarded to Moncrieff & Vistaunet,\nafter Trail-Tadanac board of school\ntrustees had considered bids of seven contracting firms. The successful, tender was for $2174. Excava\ntion work was expected to begin\nwithin a few days, and the board\nwill apopint a building inspector at\na later date.\nTHETARHO GIRLS\nHAVE SUCCESSFUL\nWHIST AND DANCE\n\"Easily the most successful whist\nand dance we have had,\" said Theta\nRho girls Thurdsay night when they\nwere hostesses to a merry-making\ncrowd in the I. O. O. F. hall. Frank\nKorolack, A. McKay, G. Roth and\nJ. Schrath, playing for Mexico\ngarnered first prize honors with a\nscore of 50 in the 17 tables of military whist. Mrs.'F. Rapley won a\nspecial prize in a game. The whisl\nand dance were in the hands of the\nJoymakers club executive, with Albert Smith as dance manager, and\nA. S, Read assisting Jack Draper\nas master of whist. Old-time and\nmodern dances were enjoyed. Refreshments were served by a girls'\ncommittee composed of Carmella\nDelPuppo, Rhona McLanders, Dor-\neen Long, Sarah Firth and Margery\nBrown, assisted by Mrs. A. S. Read.\nMrs. Jack Draper and Mrs, S.\nBrown. '    \u2022 ..._ ;-.\nCranbrook to\nSee Operetta\nCRANBROOK, B. C\u2014Rehearsals\nfor the public school operetta, \"The\nMagic Key,\" which will be presented in May, are well under way.\nThe students taking the principal\nparts are Gordon Cooley as the\nchief magistrate of Berossa; Colin\nCarswell as Sancho, the barber; Don\nSmith as Pat Flannigan, a stray Irishman; Miss Annie McGlllivray as\nSanchia, the barber's daughter; Cecil Kendricks as Juan, a bandelero;\nMiss Helen Voisey as Juanita, a\npeasant girl; Gordon Harris as Pedro, a peasant; Miss Ruth Veeberg\nas Kadiga, a fortune teller; Miss\nBarabara Mason as Dolores, a peas-\nnt girl; Jack Frey as Father Time;\nMiss Shirley Bridges as the Fairy\nQueen; Miss Margaret MacKinnon,\nas Viola, a fairy; Miss Teresa Pas-\ncuzo, as Fugita, a fairy; Miss Grace\nStewart as Ariel, a messenger; Miss\nDoris Martin, as Tris, a fairy; and\nMiss Mabel Alward as Pepita. Walter Laurie is the town crier.\nThere are 24. fairies add -12\nnymphs, with Miss Anne Graham\nas the chief nymph. Alphons Ber-\ntoia.is the.chief ot 12 gnomes.\nThe play is being produced by the\nstaff of the public school with Miss\nA, Woodland In charge, and the\ncolorful costumes have been made\nby the staff, assisted by the students. Mrs. E. Davies is accompanist\nTrail Amateur\nBody to Handle     t\nNew Park Work'\nTRAIL, B. C. May 6 - The Trail\nAmateur Athletic, association has :\nagreed to take over control of carry*\ning out developments-to the new\nproposed park at Shaver's .bench,\nW. 0. Williams, president announced here.\nThe executive will\" meet In the\nnear future with the playground*,\ncomimttee of the Rotary, club to de*\ncide the next step, thet. Rotary club\nhaving deed to the land title.\n.   ITALY LEADS TENNIS\nDUBLIN, May 6- (AP)';\u2014 Italy\ngained'a lead'of two matches to\none in Davis Cup tennis play\nagainst Eire today,, .'winning the\ndoubles. V. Taronl and A. Qulnta*\nvelle defeated Lyttleton Rogers and\nDan McVeagh, .Eire, 6-8, 4-fl, 6-L\n6-2.' Two singles matches complete\nplay tomorrow.   ..       :.\nBIG LEAGUE BASEBALL SCORES\nNATIONAL\nPhiladelphia\ni   9\nSt. Louis   4 12  1\nMulcahy and Atwood; Weiland, Si\nJohnson (8), Davis (8) and Owen.\nNew York - 11 11  3'\nPittsburgh    7 14  1\nMelton, Coffman (9), and Dan-\nning; Brown, Sewell (1), Klinger\n(7), Heitzelman (8) and Berres;\nBrooklyn   3 10  8\nCincinnati  10  8  0\nMungo, Marrow (5), Frankhouse\n(7), and Spencer, Shea '(6); Hoi-\nlingsworth and V. Davis.\nBoston  _   9 12   4\nChicago  13  8  0\nHutchinson, Niggeling (1), Er-\nrlckson (3), Weir (5), Lanning (7),\nReis (8) and Mueller, Riddle \u00ab)(\u25a0\nLee, Russell (5), and Hartnett,\nAMERICAN\nCleveland  ._\u25a0\u201e,.    .,,.,,, 4 IS  t\nPhiladelphia ...^.t^tof-j- \u00bb t\n\u2022 Allen.and Pytlak; Caste*, Potter\n(7V Nelson ,(8), and Bruoker.\nSt Louis \u2014 ~,. i ,'\u201e,\nBoston _................\u2014,-.___\nNewsom and. Sullivan1\nand Desautels.\nChicago  _____\nWashington\n3 10   i\n7 10   I\nMaroum\ntil\n410.\n(13 innings).\nLee, Logan (6), Root (6), Brown\n(12) and Sewell; Weaver, Kelley\n(8), Chase (10), Appleton (12) and\nR. FerreL\nInsist on \"Grant's Best Procurable\"\u2014The Original. For sale at Vendor* or\ndk^ct from Mail Order Dept, Liquor Control Bd., 847 Beatty St, Vancouver.\nCHANTS\nPROCURABLE\nSONNY JONES BEATEN\nOTTAWA, May 6 (CP) \u2014Steve\nHalaiko of Rochester, N.Y., defeated Sonny Jones of Vancouver in the\nmain bout of a boxing show here\ntonight when Jones fouled him in\nthe fourth round of their scheduled\n10-round bout, Halaiko weighed\n14714 pounds and Jones 148.\nT\nThis advertisement Is not putilisned or displayed by the Liquor tyhttol |\nBoard or by the Government of British Columbia., j\n ___\n\u25a0\nFAQS TIN\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B. C.-SATURDAY MORNINO. MAY 7. 1988,\n[You'll Find a Round Up of Opportunities on This Page Daily\nKaslo Institute\nto Seek Site of\nOld Skating Rink\nKASLO, B.C.-Kaslo and District\nWomen's Institute met Friday at the\nhome of Mrs. H. T. Hartin.\nPresident ,Mrs. Fred Speirs presided. Others present were the secretary-treasurer,' Mrs. A. MacGil-\nlivray, Mrs. L. Lockard, Mrs. John\nTonkin, Mrs.J. J. Skillicorn,' Mrs.\nJ. R. Tinkess, Mrs. J. M. Allen, Mrs.\nJ. Fielding Shaw.Mrs. F. S. Chandler, Mrs.' Driver,' Mrs, George Baker,\nMrs. Morton, Mrs. .William Whit-\naker, Mrs. John Keen, Mrs. H. T.\nHartin'and Miss Mildred Twiss. Visiting non-members were Mrs. T. H.\nHorner, Mrs! E. M. Sandilands, Mrs.\nFife, Miss Mahel Beck and Miss\nJulia Furiak. The two latter assisted Mrs.' Hartin and her co-\nhostess,' Mrs. Whittaker, in serving\nrefreshments.\nA card party held recently netted\n$12.95, it,was reported. -\nA letter was read from the Edge-\nWood Institute and the ladies decided to make an entry of a bedroom set for exhibit at the Edge-\nwood, lair.\nIt\" was voted to hold a flower\nshow during the'summer.\nit was suggested, that the Institute try to secure the site where\nthe ikatlng rink formerly stood,\nwith the Idea of holding It for\nthe -use of Kaslo children and\n,   possibly erecting a rest room or\ni   dressing  rooms on  the site for\ni   present purposes and In time, poi-\n;   slbly, erect a suitable Women's\n|  Institute  building.  A  committee\nI   was appointed to look Into the\ni   matter and report at a subsequent\nmeeting.\nMrs..J. Tonkin, chairman of the\nwelfare committee, gave a report of\njnuch work done during the month.\nThanks were extended to Mrs.\nHartin for the use of her home for\nthe faceting and to Mrs. Hartin,\nMrs. Whittaker and their assistants\nfor refreshments. June meeting will\nbe at the home of Mrs. Horner.\nNrlamt Satin Stoma\nMember ot the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE  144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll Department!\nSubscription Ratei\nSingle copy J  .05\nBy carrier, per week     .25\nBy carrier, per year 13.00\nBy mail in Canada to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree months $1.80; six months\n$3.00; one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nUnited State's, same as above\nplus any extra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie a Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion $ .22\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\nInsertions  -   .88\n(6 tor the price of 4)\n3 lines, per insertion    .33\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions 1.32\ne 2 lines, 1 month 2.86\n3 lines, 1 month 4.29\nFor advertisements of more than\nthree lines, calculate on\nthe above basis. -\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATES LE88 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED.. STRONG HEALTHY\nmaid \u2014general. No encumbrances.\nTake.full charge at times. 4 adults.\nSleep out. Good wages. Reply in\nwriting giving references to Box\n1294 Daily News. (1294)\nKaslo Plans tor\nMay M Festival\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014At a recent public\nmeeting here it wa6 decided that\nMay 24 should be celebrated as has\nbeen the custom for many years. R.\nE. Green was appointed 1938 chairman of the celebration committee,\nFred Aydon to carry on as secretary.\nThe financial statement showed a\nfair balance In hand, but if possible\nthis is to be held in reserve for\nunforeseen contingencies.\nThe sports program will include\na girls' softball game, a baseball\ngame, trap shooting, tug-o-war, a\nmucking contest and a fine program\nof children's sports.\nIt was also decided the crowning\nof a May queen would again be one\nof the big attractions. This beautiful\n.pageant has always appealed to\nchildren and adults alike.\nCommittees appointed were:\nFinance\u2014H. Exter, L. Riley and\nC. J. hite.\nGeneral sports\u2014Carl Hild, A. h.\nMacPhee, O. E. Desmond, F, T.\nAbey and Ted Allen.\nTransportation and advertising\u2014\nF. S. Rouleau, J. R. Tinkess and A.\nL. MacPhee.\nChildren's sports\u2014J. A. Riddell,\nfiev. C, G. Gardner, W. M. Gibson,\nC. W. Webster and F. H. Abey.\nMusic\u2014F. S. Rouleau, H. T. Hartin and H. South.\n\u25a0 Decorations\u2014W. L. Billings, F. S.\nChandler and C. J. White.\nMay queen\u2014Mrs. John Keen.\nThe first named, in each instance,\nIs chairman of his committee.\nSign Petition\nWASHINGTON, May 6 (AP)-A\nmad scramble followed filing of a\npetition today to force a vote in the\nUnited States house of representatives on the revised wage-hour bill\nand within hall an hour 100 members had signed.\nRELIABLE MAN TAKE CARE OF\nstore route. Distribute, collect.\nNew Products. No Selling. Earn\nexcellent weekly income. B. & W.\nNut Co., St. Paul, Minn.     (1348)\nWANTED GOOD MAN OF BOY TO\nwork on farm. Small wages and\nboard. Box 1353 Daily News.\n(1353)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nRate for advertisements under\nthis heading 25c for any required number of lines for six\ndays, payable in advance.\nRELIABLE MIDDLE AGE MAN\nwants position. Widower. Experienced at farm work, with good\nhabits. State wages. Have car. Box\n1286 Daily News. (1286)\nWORK WANTED FOR MAN WITH\nBig Diesel Bulldozer, Building\nroads or surface stripping for\nmines. Go anywhere. Apply Box\n1267 Daily News. (1267)\nSASKATCHEWAN GIRL DESIRES\nhousework or work of any kind,\nBox 1291 Daily News. (1291)\nYOUNG GIRL DESIRES HOUSE-\nwork. Is fond of children. Please\nstate wage. Box 1284 Daily News.\n(1284)\nFOR    EXPERIENCED    GARDEN.\nflag stone, or rockery work (stones\nsupplied) call Hans Otting 306-X1.\n(1217)\nEXPERIENCED GENERAL FARM\nhand,   age   32.   Good   carpenter,\nwants work, P.O. Box 42 Nelson.\n(1336)\nWOMAN WANTS WORK, FEW\nhours daily. Can take full charge.\nSleep out. Phone 576-L3.     (1334)\nMALE INSTRUCTION\nWE WANT TO SELECT RELIABLE\nmen, now employed, with foresight, fair education and mechanical inclinations, willing to train\nspare time or evenings, to become\ninstallation and service experts on\nall types AIR CONDITIONING\nand Electric Refrigeration equipment. Write fully, giving age,\npresent occupation. Utilities Inst.,\nBox 1346, Nelson Daily News.\n(1346)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nSPACE FOR BARBER SHOP OR\nstore beside beauty parlor. Apply\n1741 Second avenue, East Trail.\n(1259)\nPERSONAL\nI ADIES, QlRLS\nLEARN THE MOLER METHOD\nOF BEAUTY CULTURE\nA PLEASANT, PROFITABLE\nPROFESSION FOR GIRLS\nLearn   under  recognized   Moler\nmaster instructors. To learn more,\nenroll now. with the Moler school\nthat gets best results.\nTrain by same Moler System as\ntaught to thousands of most successful    hairdressing    graduates\nworking in New York, Chicago,\nHollywood,   Paris   and   world's\nlargest cities. Visit us before joining any school. Practical, expert\ntraining guaranteed.\n\"The University of Beauty Culture\"\nMOLER HAIRDRESSING\nSCHOOL\nEnroll now. Reasonable rates.\n303 W, Hastings St., Vancouver, B.C.\nB. Gooch, Manager All Moler\nB.C. Schools\n(780)\nNo. 1882-1835\nDJ THE SUPREME COURT OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nIN THE MATTER OF THE \"EXECUTION ACT\" R.S.B.C. 38, Cap. 81,\nand\nIN THE MATTER OF AN ACTION\nLATELY PENDING IN THE\nSUPREME   COURT   OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nBETWEEN:   THOMAS   LLOYD\nBRACE, Petitioner (Judgment Debtor).\nAND: DAISY BRACE, Respondent\n(Judgment Creditor).\nAND: EDWARD C. KIGHTLING-\nER, Co-Respondent (Judgment Creditor).\nPURSUANT to the Order of the\nHonourable the Chief Justice dated\nthe 16th day ot March, A.D. 1938 and\nto me directed, I will offer for sale\nby public auction at my office at\nthe Court House, City of Nelson.\nProvince of British Columbia, at 1:30\np.m. on Monday, the 9th day of May,\n1938, all the right, title and Interest\nof the Petitioner (Judgment Debtor), Thomas Lloyd Brace, and\u2014or\nEarl L. Isaman, in the following\nlands to satisfy the judgment obtain'\ned by the above-named Judgment\nCreditors against\" the above-named\nJudgment Debtor, dated the 18th day\nof December, 1935, in the total sum\nof $803.73, and the costs ol these pro.\nceedings.\nLot 8443 Kootenay District\nRegistered Charges:\n19919-D. Right to Purchase, dated 1-9-33, in favour of Thomas\nLloyd Brace, from Mildred Blair.\n22512-D. Sub-Right to purchase,\ndated 19-6-37, in favour of Earl\nLionel   Isaman,   from  Thomas\nLloyd Brace.\nJudgments:\n4172 (Renewal of 4118). Judgment for $727.00 against Thomas\nLloyd Brace, obtained on 18-12-\n35, by Daisy Brace and Edward\nC. Kightlinger in the Supreme\nCourt, Vancouver,\nTerms of Sale, Cash.\nDATED at the City of Nelson,\nProvince of British Columbia,\nthis 6th day of April, A.D. 1938.\n\"M. E. HARPER\"\nSheriff of South Kootenay.\n(1229)\nGIRL WANTS HOUSEWORK BY\nhour. Phone 346-L3, Tuesday and\nFriday from 11 to 3. (1275)\nTWELVE FOREST FIRES\nREPORTED IN B. C.\nVICTORIA. May 6 (CP) - The\nopening of British Columbia's forest\nfire season was officially recognized\nhy the forest branch today with the\nissuance of its first weekly report of\nlire occupances.\nTwelve fires were reported in the\n\u25a0week, nine of them in the interior\ndistricts of Kamloops and Fort\nGeorge. There was one in the Vancouver district, which includes Vancouver Island, and two in the Prince\nRupert section.\nTORONTO TEACHERS MAY\nNOT RECRUIT FOR ARMY\nTORONTO, May 6 (CP)-Teach-\ners may \"explain\" to Toronto students about the Canadian militia but\nthey must not recruit actively for\nany unit, the board of education\ndecided 12 to six early today after\nprolonged debate.\nThe decision followed a request\nfrom the Canadian Signal Corps\nthat teachers be allowed to talk to\ninterested students about enlisting,\nA sheaf of protests was read.\nSodaL...\nBOSWELL\nBOSWELL, B. C\u2014Miss Daphne T.\nWilliams of Victoria was a recent\nguest of Miss Donalda Walker here.\nMrs. H. Johrjstone, Miss Patricia\nJohnstone, Miss. Blanche Yager and\nJim Johnstone motored to Creston\nThursday.\nMr. and Mrs, J. Hall and Miss\nJoyce Hall were Creston visitors\nFriday.\nJim Johnstone, who was at home\nhere for a few days, has returned\nto Trail.\nMiss Abbie Wall of La France\nhas returned from Vancouver, where\nshe spent the winter.\nMiss Pat Wall plans to leave\nshortly to visit at the coast.\nMr. and Mrs. John Lusk and\nlittle son, Barry, returned at the\nend of the week from Salmo, where\nthey were guests of Mrs. Lusk's\nbrother and sister-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Stanley Bebbington. Sunday,\nMr. and Mrs. Lusk visited Crawford\nBay.\nMurdoch McLeod, whose home at\nLockhart Beach was burned down\nlast week has taken up residence\nin a shack on Vic Johnson's land\nat La France. Mr. McLeod managed\nto save his clothing and bedding\nfrom the flames, but everything else\nwas a total loss. He was particularly unfortunate in having just\nlaid in a large stock of groceries,\nwhich he was unable to save. Also\ndestroyed were four rolls of woven\nwire fencing which were to have\nbeen used to fence in the park.\nSOVIET SENDS A NEW\nAMBASSADOR, GERMANY\nMOSCOW, May 6 (AP)-The government today announced appointment of A. T. Merekaloff as new\nambassador to Germany, replacing\nDr. Constantine Youreneff, implicated in charges of treason by witnesses in the Moscow trial two\nmonths ago,\n*\nnil M ssmstsrmm\nHOPE TO BUILD NEW\nRUNWAY AT AIRPORT\nVANCOUVER, May 6 (CP). -\nAirport Manager William Templeton\nsaid today he would forward to\nOttawa Monday plans for a $90,000\ndevelopment project which he hop\ned could be completed this year.\nThe plans include construction of\na paved runway 3,000 feet long and\n150 feet wide, running in a northwest direction. Final grading of the\nnortheast runway\u20143600 feet by 500\nfeet\u2014would also be done this year.\nPREDICT EARLY\nSETTLEMENT STRIKE\nLONDON, May 6 (CP-Havas)-\nEarly settlement of the cinema operators' strike, which began April\n14, was predicted today after new\nconsultations held at the head-\nquarters of the trades union congress by representatives of the interested'unions.\nWE HAVE HELPED HUNDREDS\nto obtain positions as Letter Carriers, Postal Clerks, Customs Examiners, Clerks and Stenographers, etc., and can help you. Write\nus for proof and free information,\nM C. C. Schools Ltd., Winnipeg.\nOldest in Canada (218)\nBACHELOR, WITH NICE HOME,\nnew car, to meet lady 28-35 not\nover 5 ft. 3 in., Norwegian preferred (not essential) Non-drinker or smoker. Good, economical\nhousekeeper. One child no ob\njection. Object matrimony. Box\n1347 Daily News. (1347)\nMEN1 IF YOU'RE WEAK, WORN-\nout, try raw oyster Invigorators\nand other stimulants In new\nOSTREX Tonic Tablets. Pep up\nrundown body. If not delighted,\nmaker refunds price, $1.25. Call,\nWrite Mann, Rutherford Co. (781)\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL, GTD.\n25 for $1.00 or jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (free catalogue). National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton,\n(214)\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)\nMETROPOLE HOTEL VANCOU-\nver. $1.00 per day up. Private bath\n$1.50. Best value in Vancouver.\n320 Abbott St (1062)\nPRIVATE HOME KINDERGART-\nens pay. We start you. The Canadian Kindergarten Institute, Winnipeg, Man.  (280)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR SALB\nPAINT-PAINT\nFor the past three years we have\nsupplied hundreds of gallons to\nhundreds ot customers ot our\nguaranteed Enterprise brand\nPaint and without a single exception everyone testifies to its quality. All colors for all purposes,\n$2.50 per gallon. Light ply Roofing 125 ft. by 12\" wide, 50c per\nroll. 2y.\" Nails $3.50 per 100 lbs.\nFull line of new and used Pipe\nand Fittings. Belting. Wire Rope.\nPulleys. Bearings. Canvas. Doors\nand windows. Rooting. Grain and\nPotato Sacks. Logging Equipment\nand Mill Supplies. Merchandise\nand Equipment of all descriptions.\nB. C. JUNK CO.\n135 Powell St, Vancouver, B.C.\n(287)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd\n250 Prior SL       Vancouver, B. C.\n(215)\nPIPES,  TUBES,   FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, a C.\n(216)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B C. (2171\n5 H.P. FLEXTRED GARDEN TRAC-\ntor with plough and cultivator,\nChas. G. Bowker Mirror Lake, B.C.\n(1288)\nGREY WICKER CARRIAGE GOOD\ncondition. Ph. 499-R or call 102\nMorgan Street. (1354).\n$125 SEWING MACHINE FOR SALE\n$50 cash. Phone 777-L3.       (1307)\nAUTOMOTIVE\n1938\nC.M.C. PANEL DELIVERY\n$1115\nA GOOD SELECTION OF\nUSED CARS TO CHOOSE\nFROM\nBUTORAC MOTORS\n1225 PINE AVE.\nTRAIL, B.C.\n(704)\nMOTORCYCLES\nNew Indians from $327.50\nB.S.A. from 250.00\nVilliers from    165.00\nUsed Buys from $35 up.\nWrite for literature.\nPALMER RUTLEDGE\nTRAIL, B. C.\n(281)\n1935 FORD DeLUXE FORDOR SE-\ndan\u2014Heater, licenced. Privately\nowned, $650. Regular value $775.\nNo trade accepted, terms arranged\nBox 1330 Daily News. (1330)\nMATS GOOD FOR INSULATING\nlining chtcken coops, garages,\nfarm buildings, etc, 75c per lot),\nat Daily News. (657)\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.\n\"THE CHICKS WHICH\nGIVE RESULTS\"\nIt  you  are  Interested  in  bigger\n^AUg^.   profits    buy     B. C.\nJHm chicks-Best tn the\nmm,    m\\ West.    Bred    lor\nWm\/Za^B health   and   produc-\n^smsmmW tion under ideal c6n-\n^^r\u00bb      ditions and 100% live\ndelivery  guaranteed. P u 11 o r u m\ntested and government inspected\nLEGHORNS\nUnsexed Pullets\n$11 per 100 $24 per 100\nROCKS, REDS, NEW HAMPS.\nAND LIGHT SUSSEX\n$13 per 100 ' $26 per 100\nDiscounts on quantity or pool\norders. Prices reduced after May 1.\nCatalog on request Free book to\ncustomers on raising and care ol\npoultry. For good results order from\nRump & Sendall Ltd.\nBox N, Langley Prairie, B.C.\n(210)\nLAWN MOWER WOODYATT 14\"\nA-1 Con. $5 524 Gore. Ph. 649-R.\n11349)\nTWIN BED SET. CURTAINS, RUGS\npiano,'radio, 908 Stanley street.\n(753)\nMILL   ENDS,   $3.75   OR   THREE\nloads tor $10. Phone 434-R1.\n(1133)\nMONARCH RANGE. COAL AND\nwood. $30. Phone 519-Y.      (1357)\nCEDAR POSTS AND LOGS. S. P.\nPond, Nelson, B.C. (1289)\nGARDEN AND NURSERY\nPRODUCTS\nHARDY PERENNIALS AND AL-\npine Plants. British Sovereign\nStrawberries McDonald's Rhubarb\nand Asparagus roots. W. Mawer,\nHardy Plant Gardens, Nelson,\n(1067)\nBRITISH    SOVEREIGN    STRAW.\nPits. 75c 100. $4 per 1000, t o. b.\nSunshine Bay, W. Donaldson, R.\nR. 1, Nelson, B.C. 1323)\nPLANTS,    CABBAGE,   TOMATO,\netc, D. Maglio. Ph. 808-L.     (1280)\nDOGS, PETS, FOR SALE\nLOVELY PUREBRED SCOTTIE\npups. 6-wk. old. E. Noakes, balfour\n(1285)\nWANTED\nWILL PAY CASH FOR 4 OR 5\nroom bungalow 607 Mill Street.\n(1343)\nAn Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\n1938 CATALOGUE\nWrite for a copy, which>contatns\na price list and gives information on feeding poultry.\nWhite Leghorns, Rhode Island\nReds, New Hampshires, White\nWyandottes, First Crosses.\nFor better results get your\nchicks direct from\nL. F. SOLLY\nLakeview Poultry Farm,\nWESTHOLME, B. C.    (225)\n-WINTER    EGG    FARM\nHATCHERY\nLETHBRIDGE, ALBERTA\nLeghorns: May  $9.50 per 100\nJune 8.00 per 100\nBarred Rocks: May $11.50 per 100\nJune  10.00 per 100\nSpecial Discounts. Free Catalogue.\n(278)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\nAND   APARTMENTS\n204 VERNON STREET HOUSE\nexcellent condition, three bedrms.\nfull cement basement, furnace, tire\nplace, $35 per month, Ph. 662 or\n569-R. (1103)\nFURNISHED MODERN HOUSE,\nclose In, June, July, August Box\n1299 Daily News. (1298)\nFOR RENT: MODERN 5-ROOMED\nhouse, 606 Gore street. Phone 361.\n(1303)\n2  HOUSEKEEPING   ROOMS,  615\nVictoria St Apply after 5 p.m.\n'        (1209)\nFOR RENT-FLAT ON BAKER ST.\nApply 338 Baker st. Phone 89.\n(1302)\nTO RENT-HOUSEKEEPING RMS.\nand suites. Strathcona hotel.\n(1266)\nMODERN 6-ROOMED HOUSE, $25\nmonthly. Ph. 950-R evenings. .\n(1341)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\nAND APARTMENTS\n(Continued)\nFURN. SUITES.   KERR APTS.\n (220)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent Annable Block.\n(218)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigldaire equipped suites.   (221)\nHOUSE. MODERN. NEAR CIVIC\nCentre. Apply 501 Cedar Street.\n (1352)\nNEWLY FURN. SUITES FOR RENT\nPhone 940.140 Bake; St |     (702)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE\nTRAILER FOR SALE OR TRADE\nfor small house. Can be seen at\nShardelow's Auto Camp.     (1338)\nCLASSIFIED MAIL ORDERS\nfrom out-of-town residents given\nprompt attention.\nBUSINESS and PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAssayen\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt, Nelson, B. C. (182)\nGRENVILLE H. GR1MWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 420\nFall Street, Nelson, B. C, P. O,\nBox  No.  9.   Representing   shipper's interest, Trail, B. C.     (183)\nBABY CHICKS: NEW HAMP-\nshire Reds $12 per 100: Leghorns\n$10 per 100. Satisfaction guaranteed. Weekly hatches. T. A Robinson, Grand Forks, B. C.   (410)\nEGGS, 1.25. LEGHORNS, R.I. REDS\nLight Sussex 1st. cross Leg, and\nRed. Also Perennial plants, trees,\nlily bulbs, J. R. Ramsden, R.R.I.\n\u00bb (1293)\n4 WK. L'HORN COKRLS. HUSKY.\n15c ea. P. W. Green Willow Point.\n(941)\nLIVESTOCK\nONE MARE 5 YRS WGHT ABOUT\n1600 lbs, one cow second calf\nAyrshire and Jersey. Fred Anderson, South Slocan, B.C.       (1270)\nEXCELLENT    AYRSHIRE    COW\nfreshens soon Milks from 45 to 50\nlbs. J. D. Macdonell, R.R.I. Nelson.\n(1271)\nAYRSHIRE JERSEY COW FRESH-\nens early In May. Good milker. T.\nB. tested. A. Scott, R.R.I, Nelson.\n(1269)\n8 WEEKS PIGS, $5 EACH. 9\nweeks pigs, $5.50 each, F.O.B.\nKaslo. C.O.D. C. Young, Kaslo.\n(1324)\n2 YOUNG SOWS IN PIG AND 2\nyear old pure bred boar cheap. L.\nCaronni.Taghum, B.C.       (1326)\nWANTED GOOD MILKING GOAT.\nNewly freshened. Also puppie. Box\n1306 Daily News. (1306)\nYOUNG HOLSTEIN COW, TO\nfreshen in June. $50. H. Nixon,\nPerrys Siding. (1287)\nFOR SALE: 2 HORSES 1400 LBS.\n1600 lbs. Apply Ellison Milling Co.\n(1315)\nJERSEY COW $45. HEIFER READY\nto serve $20. Box 1292 Daily News,\n(1292)\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND\nB. C. Provincial Assayer. Chemist\nIndividual Representative for\nshippers at Trail Smelter.     (184)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk\n(185)\nW. J. BROCK, D. C, 16 years' Experience Ph. 969 Gilker Bk, Nelson\n(186)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert Mortician      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(190)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD\nReal Estate. Insurance. Rentals\n347 Baker St, Phone 68.      (191)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD.   Insurance oi\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99.\n(192)\na E. D1LU AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 532 Ward St\n(193)\nSEE a  L.  KERR,   AGENT  FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(194)\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE.\nRentals, Insurance.  Annable Blk\n(195)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135. (196)\nR. W   DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance.   Rentals, Next Hlpperson\nHardware, Baker St. Phone 197.\n(197)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,  SELL  &   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc   The Ark Store.\n(207)\nCorieti\nSpencer Corsets, Surgical Belts, M.\nW. Mitchell, 370 Baker St, Ph. 668.\nAlso Cinderella Shop, Trail, B C.\n(187)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK Fruitvale, BC,\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor,\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\n(188)\nMachinists\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nFor all Classes ot Metal Work, Lathi\nWork, Drilling. Boring and Grinding, Motor Rewiring. Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593      824 Vernon Street\n(189)\nH. E. STEVENSON, Machinists,\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylem\nWelders, Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Ph.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St, Nelson.   (201)\nMine tr Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON, Representing\nC C Snowdon, Oils, Greases,\nPaints, etc. Agt.: Mine Mclinry. &\nequipt, rails, steels, piping, sheet\nIron, etc. Steam coals. Phone 980,\nBox 28, Nelson, (203)\nPhotography\nNOW IS THE TIME TO HAVE RB\u00bbj\nprints made from your negatives\nfor mounting in albums.   Never\nfade prints 3c each. Films develop. \u25a0\ned and printed 25c. KRYSTAL\nPHOTOS, WILKIE, Saik.    (205)\n8\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S     SASH     FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker St.\n(206)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwatch it is on time all tha time.\n345. Baker St., Nelson.        (209)\nWant to Sell Something?,\nPhone\n144\nNelson - The Hub of B. C.'s Inland Empire\nhL,ZOtOHT\n!TOB~t GUESS THIS\nOf   STICK ON MY\nj oueeeep_ME\nDESIRABLE 5-RM. BUNGALOW,\nconcrete basement, haidwood\nfloors etc., 2 lots lawn and garden\n$2500. Also 6 Rm. House stone\nfoundation, 4 lots, Douglas St. including furniture $1500, H. E. Dill,\n532 Ward St. (1328)\nIMPROVED   FRUIT   RANCH   AT\nBoswell. Sell or trade for Nelson property. Box 1337 Daily News\n(1337)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write tor full information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources, C. P. R, Calgary, Alta.\n(228)\n4 RM. HOUSE FAIRVIEW, 3 LOTS\n,$900. $350 cash, $20 month, also 3-r\n' Douglas st. 2 lots $600. $400 cash,\n$20 month, H. E. Dill, 532 Ward st.\n(1327)\nHOUSE AT ELKO, B.C., 6 ROOMS\nfull cement basement. Lot 100 ft.\nsquare. What offers? Apply owner,\nA. H. Boss, Nelson.        ' (1276)\nNEW 3 RM BUNGALOW, 418 DEL-\nbruck St. $200 down, bal. $20 mth.\nU. Aho, 1185 Green Ave. Trail.\n(1268)\nDIES SUDDENLY\nROME, May 8. (AP)-Gen. Dom-\nenico Sicillani, 59, commander of\nthe Rome army corps, who was\nscheduled to lead today's military\nparade in honor of Adolf HHltler,\ndied ot a sudden illness shortly be-\nlore the event started.\niiiiiniiliiiiiMilM\nKASLO SVi ACS. BEAUTIFUL LO-\ncation, 232 fruit trees, 3 rm. house\nfor sale. See Dan McKenzie, Kaslo.\n(1075)\nIMPROVED FARMS FOR SALE.\nWrite or call for particulars. H.\nE. Dill, 532 Ward St. <1329)\nPHONE 144\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\n PfWpwupp\nipipiil\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING. MAY 7. 1938.\nStaples Mines\nin Washington\nCRESTON, B. C. - Frank V.\nStaples, returned trom the Monica\nmining property on Glade creek, in\nthe North Mcthow valley, Wash.,\nabout 50 miles from Hedley, B. C.\nMr, Staples, who Is president ot\nthe Highland-Bell mines at Beaver-\ndell, with his brother, R. B. Staples,\nmanaging director of the Highland-\nBell, took a working lease on the\nMonica, early last tall.\nThey are cooperating with the\nAzurlte mine operators and state\nauthorities in opening up a road\nto these properties. The heavy snowfall Is now pretty well gone and it\nshould be possible to take a crew\nIn early next week.\nThe present plan Is to work on\nthe Glory Hole vein reached last\nfall.\nIt 1* expected to encounter a\nlarge body ot high grade ore after\nwhich the mill will commence operations.\nSheep Creek Gold\nMines Recovery\n$73,200 in April\nVANCOUVER, May S (CP)-Pro-\nduction tor April at Sheep Creex\nGold Mines wai reported today at\n$78,200 from milling of 4918 tons ol\nore with average recovery of $16.96\nIn March the company had output\nof (74,191), with average grade ot\nmillhcads $10.02.\nSmall Want Ads bring big results.\nMarket and Mining News\nWheal Futures\nFirmer,\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, May 0 (CP)-Brlt-\ntsh and foreign exchange closed\neasier Friday. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nAustralia, pound, 4.004.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3127.\nDenmark, krone, .2240.\nFranca, franc, ,028197.\nGermanyrTeichsmark, .4048.\nGreat Britain, pound, 6.0180.\nHolland, florin, .8988.\nJapan', yen, .2028.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0307.\nNorway, krone, .2522.\nSouth Africa, pound, .4.0008.\nSweden, krone, .2887.\n(Compiled b; the Royal Bank of\nCanada,)\n!\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh Low\n30 Industrial* 112.44 113,27\n20 rails     S2.84 21.68\n20 utilities  -      19.88 18.57\nClose Change\n117.18-up 3.70\n22.90\u2014up 1.83\n19.91-up US\n87.46-up    .68\nI       Toronto Stock Quotations\nMINES\nAfton Mlnet \t\nAldermac Copper\nAmm Gold\n     .03\n     90\n -    .24%\nAnglo-Huronlan  .  3.03\nArntfield Gold       20\nAshley Gold Mining -    .07\nAstoria Rouyn Mines OS\nAztec Mining ;     .07\nBagamae Rouyn- _    .14%\nBankfield Gold       .79\nBase Metals Mining      .37\nBeattie Gold Mines ...    1.11\nBidgood Kirkland      .28\nBig Missouri         .37\nBobjo Mlnet        11%\nBralorne Mine*  .......   8.85\nBrett Trethewey      .04%\nBuffalo Ankerlte   13.00  '\nBunker Hill Extension 13.50\nCanadian Malartic      .   1.02\nCariboo Gold Quart* ...........  2.15\nCastlerTrethewey  -, 68\nCentral Manitoba  02\n\u25a0 Central Patricia    2.55\nChibougamau   30\nCoast Copper   2.50\nConiaurum Mines  1.30\nConsolidated M & S 57.29\nDarkwater    _. 12%\n> Dome Mine* .._.  94.90\nDorval-Siscoe - 13\n|f-''East Malartic    1.67\nEldorado Gold .   2.45\nFalconbridge     5.75\nFederal Kirkland \u2022   .05\nFrancoeur Gold 33%\nGillies Lake  u    .19\nGod's EsftaXSold ..:.........;....   ;4T\nGold Belt     .35\nGranada Gold Mines     .05%\nGrandoro Mines     .06%\nGunnar Gold 72\nHard Bock Gold    2.25\nBarker Gold 11\nHollinger  1  13.35\nHowey Gold 26\nHudson Bay M & S-  26.75\nInternational Nickel  .' 47.50\nJ-M Consolidated    '.15\nJack Waite     .40\nJacola Gold 21\nKerr-Addison    1.75\nKirkland Lake         1.05\nLalfe Shore Mines ...,*......:.. 51.15\nLamaque Contact  03%\nLapa Cadillac 47\nLeltch Gold     '     .78\nLebel Oro Mines 07%\nLittle Long Lac     \u2014    4.20\nMacassa Mines            *.. o\nMacLeod Cockshutt .............   8.40\nMadsen Red Lake     .31\nManitoba & Eastern      ,02\n' Mandy  13\nMclntyre-Porcupine  40.00\nMcKenzie Red Lake     1.09\nMcVlttie-Graham     .20%\nO'Brien Gold\nOmega Gold\nPamour Porcupine .\nPaulore M .\nPaymaster Cons\t\nPend OrelUa\t\nPerron Gold    .   ...\nPickle Crow Gold\nPioneer Gold '\nPremier Gold\n3.59\n.49\n8.60\n.09%\n.45\n1.09\n1.35\n4.70\n3.00\n2.00\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, May 6 (CP).-Grain\nfutures quotation*; .   .\nOpen  High  Low  Cloae\nWINNIPEG, May 6 (CP) .-Winnipeg wheat future* -firmed in tinal\nstages today on buying prompted\nby talk of an oversold market condition and improved cash wheat\nspreads. Final quotations were %\nhigher to % cent lower, May at\n$1.19%, July $1.08%-% and October\n87%-% cent*. . -     ' ,\nFutures earlier dipped about a\ncent in line with outside markets.\nDelay in western Canada seeding\nand poor germination weather with\ntemperatures hovering around the\nfreezing point waa stressed.\nCanadian export business was estimated below 190,000 bushels. Improved demand for Nos, 1 and 2\nNorthern grades boosted spreads\nmore than- twe cents.\nLiverpool closed %\u2014% lower due\nto poor demand, cheaper Canadian\noffers and lower outside markets.\nLower southern hemisphere weekly\nwheat shipments\u20145,480,006 busheis\nagainst 6,890,000 last week, tended\nto check decline*.\nBuenos Aires noon values were\n%-% cent off.\nExport barley buying and improved demand tor oats boosted\nthese coarse grain* slightly. Flax\nwas neglected and rye eased fractionally. Volume ot coarse grain\nbusiness, however, wai small.\nOILS HIGHER\nWHEAT;\nMay 115%\nJuly 108%\nOct. *i   87%\nOATS:\nMay\t\nJuly\t\nOct.\nBAHLEY:\nMay -\t\nJuly\t\nOct\t\nFLAX:\nMay ;\t\nJuly\t\nOct ...:...\nRYE:\nMay\nJuly\n47%\n44%\n38%\n57%\n96%\n52 %\n115%\n108%\n47%\n44%\n88%\n57%\n97%\n52%\nPowell Rouyn Gold   2.05\nPreston East Dome  \u2014. .89\nQuebec Gold   .46\nRead-Authier   2 90\nRed Lake Gold Shore     .18\nReeves MacDonald .... .26\nReno Gold Mines        .......    .55\nRitchie Gold Mine*  .01%\nRoche Long Lac      \u201e 11\nSan Antonio Gold '. 1.29\nShawkey Gold    -..-  .18\nSheep Creek     ....\u201e.._.-    .93\nSherrltt Gordon ......1  1.14\nSiscoe Gold        ,  2.36\nSladen Malartic    1.19\nStadacona Rouyn ...........    .70\nSt Anthony  _ 12%\nSudbury Basin  - 2.25\nSullivan Consolidated   1.00\nSylvanite    .    3.15\nTashota Goldfield*       .02%\nTeck-Hughes Gold   4.70\nToburn Gold Mines  2.25\nMcWatters Gold\nMining Corporation ...........\nMinto Gold  \t\nMoneta Porcupine \t\nMorris-Kirkland\t\nNipissing Mining  _...,\nNoranda  \u201e..!_..\n.45\n1,85\n.02%\n.  2.18\n,    .08%\n.   1.71\n. 61.00\nNormetal 64\nTowagmac .\nVentures ,\nWaiie Amulet\t\nWhitewater\nWright Hargreaves\nYmir Yankee Girl\nOILS\nAJax'\t\nA P Consolidated\n.38%\n9.00\n1.50\n.05\n7,45\n.16\nVANCOUVER, May 6 (CP)-Ac-\ntive buying In the western oil issue* pushed price* i substantially\nhigher in that section on Vancouver\nstock exchange today. Gold* were\nunchanged to a tew cents lower and\noase metals irregular as transaction* totalled 122,436 shares.\nCariboo Gold Quartz slipped 6 at\n2.10, and Bralorne dropped 5 at\n8.70. Big Missouri was fractionally\nhigher at 36, while Pioneer at 2.99,\nPremier at 1.99, Sheep Creek at 93\nand Hedley Mascot at 1.07 remained\nunchanged.    .\n99%\n60%\n59%\n114%\n107%\n87%\n47%\n44\n38%\n67%\n96%\n52%\n59\n60%\n115%\n108%\n87%\n47%\n44y4\n38%\n97%\n98%\n92%\n150%\n152\n190%\n59\n60%\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT-No. 1 Nor. 118%; No. 2\nNor. 114%; No. 3 Nor. 107%; No. 4\nNor. 97%; No. 5, 82%; No. 6, 76%;\nfeed 69%; No. 1 Garnet 110%; No. 2\nGarnet 107%; No. 1 Durum 86%; No.\n4 special 93%; No. 5 special 79%;\nNo. 6 special 71%; track 115%:\nscreenings $1 per ton.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 49%; No. 3\nC. W. 45%; Ex. 1 feed 49%; No.\nteed 42%; No. 2 teed 39%; No. 3\nfeed'36%; track 47%.\nBARLEY\u2014Malting grades: 6- and\n2-Row Ex. 3 C. W. 97%. Others:\nNo. 3 C. W. 56%; No. 4 C. W. 53%,\nNo. 5 C. W, 62%; No. 8 C. W. 51%;\ntrack 57%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. and track\n150%; No. 2 C. W. 146%; No. 3\nC. W. 135%; No. 4 C W. U8%.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 58.\nMeggitl Heads\nForks Farmers\nGRAND FORKS, B. C. - The\npostponed annual meeting of the\nGrand Forks Farmers' institute was\nheld April 29. Officer* elected\nwere: C. V. Meggitt, president;\/J.\nT. R. Lawrence, secretary-treasurer; James Cookson, Ivor Morris,\nR. E. Scott and Henry Wlebe, directors.\nA' committee of C. V. Meggitt,\nHenry Wlebe and G. L. Landon wai\nappointed to look Into the mutter\nof a proposed district exhibit at\nthe Nelson fair.\n6RASSH0PPSR CONTROL\nARIA\nThe first meeting of the Midway\ngrasshoper control committee was\nheld at Midway April 27 with William Bruce of Kettle Valley; A.\nR. Jackson and Arthur Roberts ot\nMidway; Grant Lee of Midway and\nG- L. Landon of Grand Forks present. Mr. Lee was elected chairman\nand G. L. Landon, secretary ot the\ncommittee. Details ot the campaign\nagainst the grasshoppers tor 1938\nwere outlined and arrangements\nmade for mixing and distribution\nof the poisoned bait etc.\nOTTAWA, May 8 (CP)-Although\nthe number of bee colonies increased to 391,350 in 1987 from 370,680 In\nthe previous year, the total honey\ncrop in Canada was estimated at\n21,700,000 poundi compared to .28,-\n200,000 In 1936. The five-year average, 1932-36, was 23,800 pounds.\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, May 6 (AP)-Closlng\n\u2014Copper, standard spot \u00a338 8s 9d,\noff 7s 6d; future \u00a338 13s 9d, oft 8*\n9d; electrolytic, spot, bid \u00a343, unchanged; asked \u00a343 10s, oft 10*.\nTin spot \u00a3166, up low frture \u00a3168\n10s, up 10s.\nBids\u2014Lead spot \u00a314 19s, oft 9a;\nfuture \u00a314 17s 6d, off 5s.       ,\n\u25a0 Zinc -spot  \u00a313,  unchanged;  future \u00a313 3s 9d, oft 13s 3d..\nBar gold  139* 8d, up  1 penny\n(equivalent $3189).\nMONTRSAt      .\nSpot copper, electrolytic, 11.20; tin\n40; lead 4.69; line,4.30; antimony\n16.50; per 100 pound* f.o.b. Montreal,\nflveTton lot*.     \u25a0';';..\nBar gold in Landon oft three\ncent* at $35.04 an ounce In Canadian funds; 188* Sd in British. The\nfixed $39 Washington price amounted to $35.18 in Canadian.\nSilver future* doted steady today, 5 point* up. Sale: May 42.85.'\nMay-Open, 4.285; high, 42.89; low,\n42.89; cloae, 42 JOB.\nNEW YORK\nCopper steady; electrolytic spot\n10.00; expert 9,68.\nTin steady; spot and nearby 37.80;\nforward 37.66.\nLead steady; spot, New York, 4.50\nto 4.55; East St Louis, 4.35.    .     *\nZinc steady; East St, Louis spot\nand forward 4.19.\nINCOME TAX RETURNS UP\nOTTAWA, May 6 (CP)-Income\ntax payments which poured Into\nthe revenue department in April\nenriched the Dominion treasury by\napproximately $30,000,000, departmental officials today stated. This\nwas almost $9,000,000 greater than\nin April, 1937,\nThree Suffer Minor\nInjuries, Crow Towns\nNATAL, B.C.-Joe Urban. Jr., of\nMichel while working in the No. 1\nmine ot the Michel Collerie* had a\nleg injured. He is making rapid progress at Michel hospital.\n.Pete Melnlk ot Natal broke a\nfinger on his left hand while working around his house.\nYoung Herbie Travi* of Natal had\nthree fingers badly cut when he\nhad them caught in a trolley at\nBpvln's while crossing the Elk river\non a fishing trip.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, May 6 (CP) .-Cattle\nInsufficient to establish a market\nReceipt! to noon: 21 cattle; one calf\n97 hogs; 400 sheep.\nNo hog sales to noon; previous\nclose: Selects 10.15; bacons 9.65;\nbutchers 0.19.\nLONDON, May 6 (AP)-The United States dollar wai off 3-16 cent\nIn final foreign exchange trading\ntoday\/Quoted $4.99.% to the pound,\nthe rate compared with sterling at\n$4.99% in New York Overnight\nFrench francs finished 188.37 to\nthe pound against 178.87 yesterday,\nWheat Slightly\nHigher, Chicago\nCHICAGO. May 8 (AP).-Wheat\ntrader* here chiefly marked time today, and temporary downturns ol\na cent a bushel were more than\novercome at the last\nA general disposition waa shown\nto await definite development* in\nregard to progreu of the American\nwinter crop. Winnipeg messages said\nexport Interest* were fairly good\nbuyer* ot wheat futures on price\nbreakt there.\nAt the dose, Chicago wheat future* were unchanged to % higher\ncompared With yesterday's finish,\nMay 80-80%, July 78%-%, com\n% off to % up, May 97%, July 88%-\n99, and o\u00bbt* %\u2014% advanced.\nWHEAT:\nOpen  High Lew  Close\nMay   79%    80%    79       SO\nJuly.......  78%    78%    77%    78%\nSept   79%    79%    78%    79%\nN. Y. Slocks Soar\nNEW YORK-, May 6 (AP)-Utility\nstocks went through the roof in today'* market,, and, In the broadest\nrally for nearly a month, numerous\nIssue* were listed one to more than\nfour point*.\nThe Associated Press average of\n60 issues was up 1.7 points at 40.8,\ntha belt day'* advance since April\n9. The turnover of 1,021,990 ihares\ncompared with, 687,220 yeaterday,\nand was the largest since April 22.\nThe utllties composite made the but\nday'* showing since October\n1937.\nSPIT\noanr f i sviw'\nMusic Festival\nWinner\nCommittee Unanimous\nShould Not Be Granted Franchise\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nSelf-Interest\nleads to Sales\nIt has become a well\nestablished habit for\nthe business man and\nthe investor to open his\nDally Newspaper at the\nfinancial page to scan\nthe latest news\u2014local,\nnational, International\n\u2014with an eye as to\ntheir effect on his business and his investments.\nSuch intense self-interest explains the high\nsales value of the financial pages for the\nsale of products and\nservices that are logically purchased by business men and investors.\nThis advertisement prepared tor the Canadian\nDally Newspapers Association by the Financial\nAdvertising Company ot\nCanada Ltd.\n.20\n.21%\nBritish American  20.00\nBritish Dominion      .11\nBrown Corp      .54%\nCalmont           .42\nCalgary & Edmonton    2.78\nChemical Research     .27\nCommonwealth 33%\nDalhousie     .49\nEastcrest       .09%\nFoundation 20V4\nFoothills      70\nHighwood  ,      .13\n1.33\n17.00\n26X0\n11.50\n.06\n,     .32\n.    .18\n,    .10\n.   1:73\n.    .09\n.   170\n. 45.00\n.    .39\n.   1.29\n.    .22%\n.     .02\n.\"'\u25a0 1.65\n- 6%\n. 159%\n. 11%\n, 8%\n,. 1%\n. 17\n. M\n.. 4%\n. 43%\n,. 15\n. 25\n3\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain .\n13%\nQuebec Power .\nHome\nImperial    :\t\nInter Pete     \t\nMcColl Front \t\nMerland\nModel .:\nMonarch Roy\t\nNordon \t\nOkalta      ......\t\nPacalta     ~ ..-\nPantepec  \u201e_\nRoyalite      __.\nSouthwest Pete \t\nTexas Can  -.\nUnited - \t\nVulcan     \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power \t\nBeatty  Bros  \t\nBell Telephone\nBrazilian T L h P .\nBrewers & Dist\nBrewing Corp    ..\nBrewing Corp Pfd\nB C Power A\nB C Power B\nBuilding Products\nBurt FN  \t\nCan Bakeries Pfd ..\nCanada Bread\nAssoc Brew of Can\t\nBathurst P & P A\t\nBell Telephone  159%J\nBrazilian T L Is P    11%'\nB C Power A      29\nBuilding Products    43%\nB C Power B .\nCanada Cement \t\nCan Cement pfd \u2014\nCan North Power ...\nCan Steamship ........\nCan Steamship pfd .\nCanadian Bronze \t\nCan Bronze pfd .\u2014\nCan Car & Fdy \t\nCan Car & Fdy pfd .\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Celanese pfd ....\nCan Ind Ale A\t\nCan Ind Ale B \t\nCan Pac Rly\nCockshutt Plow\t\nCon Min & Smelt \u2014\nDistillers Seagram* ..\nDominion Bridge\t\nDominion Coal pfd ..\nDom Steel & Coal B .\nDom Textile\u2014\u2014-\nDryden Paper \u2014 -.\nFamous Players C C ...\nFoundation C of C .....\nGatineau Power. _\nGatineau Power pfd _\nGen Steel Wares ......\nGurd Charles\t\nGyp Lime at Alab \t\nHamilton Bridge\nCan Bud Malting       6%\nCan Car It Fdy\nCan Cement \t\nCan Cement Pfd\nCan Dredge \u201e\t\nCan Malting\t\nCan Pacific \t\n11%\nn\n92%\n27\n30%\n8%\n!%\n8%\n2%\nCan Ind Ale A\nCan Ind Ale B\nCan Wineries\nCarnation Pfd   101%\nCons Bakerle*  13\nCosmo* ,  18\nDominion Bridge  \u2014 26%\nDominion Store*   5%\nDom. Tar & Chem .....  6%\nD Tar Sc Chem Pfd  75\nDistiller! Seagram*  13%\nFanny, Farmer  17%\nHamilton Bridge pfd\t\nHolt Renfrew \t\nH Smith Paper    13%\n3%\n9%\n91\n17%\n2%\n7%\n33\n105\n12\n25%\n10%\n100\n3%\n3%\n6%\n8%\n67\n13%\n27\n17%\n12%\n62\n5\n24\n11\n9\n83Vs\n5%\n6%\n5%\n5%\n30\n20\nSt Lawrence Corp\t\nSt Law Corp pfd .....\nSt Law Paper pfd ......\nSouth Cap Power \t\nShawinigan W & P ...\nSteel ol Can    64\nSteel ot Can pfd\n15%\n3%\n13\n32\n11%\n19%\nWestern Grocer* .\nBANKS\nBank pf Canada \t\nCanadienne Natlonale .\nCommerce .._...._....\u2014\nDominion   \u2014\nImperial ..._..\u201e__._..-.\nMontreal \t\nNova Scotia ....._......\u2014\nRoyal\n50\n. 160\n,162\n. 197\n.200\n 295\n...... 172\n 233\nH Smith Paper pfd ....\nImp Tob of Can\t\nInter Nickel of Can .\nLake of the Woods ..\nMassey Harris..-\t\nMcColl Frontenac ......\nMontreal L H & P ....\nNational Brew Ltd ..\nNat Brew pfd ....\u2014\nNat Steel Car .\nOgilvie, Flour Mill*  \u2014\nOntario Steel Prods\t\nPower Corp of Can\t\n91\n14\n47%\n11%\n6%\n12\n28%\n37%\n40\n41%\n27\n5\n13\nToronto  .\u201e\u201e.\u201e__...-\nCURB\nAbitibi P 8t P Co ... V65\nAbitibi 6 Pfd    14\nBeauharnois Corp *     3%\nBathurst P & P B ._     2%\nBrew & Dist Van      5V!i\nBrew Corp of Can _.r 1.70\nBrew Corp of Can pfd    17\nBritish American Oil   20%\nB C Packers     12\nCan Dredgo & Dock    26%\nOTTAWA, May 8 (CP)-Doukho.\nbors will continue to be excluded\nfrom the franchise if the House of\nCommon* adopts the amendment\nwritten into the new election act\ntoday by the committee on electoral matters,\nA sub-section was inserted unanimously into the clause which\ntreats of disqualifications, to embrace the' Doukhobors, although not\nspecifically mentioning them' by\nname.\nChairman Charles E. Bothwell\n(Lib., Swift Current) read to the\ncommittee the order-in-council of\n1888 which permitted admission of\nthis sect to Canada. In those days it\nwas represented to the Canadian\nauthorities that the Doukhobors,\nwho inhabited the slopes ot the\nCaucasus mountains, were an in\nduitrtout and well-behaved people\nwho had fundamental reiiglou*\nscruples against bearing arms.\nTsarist Russia 40 yean, ago was\ndisinclined to extend exemption\nfrom military service to them but\nwai willing to have them emigrate.\nThe order-in-council recited that\nthe western plain* of Canada would\nbe a suitable place tor this people,\nwho were desirable and thrifty and\nthe Doukhobors were consequently\nadmitted to Canada with all their\nconscientious objections against\nmilitary service guaranteed to them.\nNOT RACE BUT SECT\nThe Doukhobors, said Hon. Grote\nStirling (Con., Yale) were not a race\nbut a' teot They may have been\nwell behaved in Russia but, if so,\nthey had left their good behaviours\nbehind. They had won encountered\ntrouble with the government of the\nNorthwest Territories and had moved into British Columbia. Most of\nthem were now settled in the districts of Yale and Kootenay.\nCan Malting Ltd .\nCan Vickers\t\nCan Wineries\t\nCons Paper Corp \t\nDominion Stores\t\nDonnacona Paper A .\nDonnacona Paper B\n30%\n7%\n2\n5\n5\n4%\nFairchild Aircraft      6%\nFord Motor A\nFraser Co Ltd\nImperial Oil\n16%\n12%\n17%\n26\n\u20225\n.60\n4\n8%\nInter Petroleum ..__..\nInter Utilities A ......\nIpter Utilities B\t\nLake Sulphite\t\nMacLaren P & P\t\nMcColl Frontenac pfd .\nMitchell Robt  ' 10%\nPage Hersey Tube* .  _  85%\nPrice Bros   _.    11%\nPower Corp pfd      95\nRoyalite Oil \t\nThrift Stores \t\nUnited- Dist of Can \t\nWalker-Good & W .....\nWalker-Good pfd \t\nTheir behavior there had been\ncharacterized by recurrent clashes\nwith the provincial and federal authorities, by the!burning of school*\nand,nude parades. In British Col-\numbia they were disqualified from\nexercising the provincial franchise.\nPROVINCE BEST JUDGE\nMr. Stirling thought the electors\not the province were best qualified\nto judge ot the fitness of those\npeople and he urged where pro\nvlncial restriction* barred exercise\nof the franchise, In thi* particular\nrespect that restriction should be\ncarried Into the Dominion election!.\nThe committee agreed and the\nclause making specific references to\nthe people embraced within the order-in-council ot 1898 was carried\nby the committee.\nThe committee retained In the new\nact the bar against voting by Orientals.\nMuch of the committee'! attention\ndevoted to discussing tho**\nwho should have the right to vote\nand the sections ot the old act were\nclosely followed.\nMAKES SUGGESTION\nA suggestion that provision be\nmade In the election act tor taking\nreferendum! \"on important matter!\nand questions\" was made by T. L.\nChurch (Con., Toronto-Broadvlew).\nIn a letter to the chairman, Mr,\nBothwell, Mr. Church declared:\n\"In other countries \u00abuch legislation Is enacted in the Interests ot\ngood government and at an aid to\nstrengthening the government of\nthe country.\n\"In view of the attack* being\nmade in the past few yean on federal authority, I think some action\nshould be taken along these lines.\"\nThe suggestion will be taken into\nconsideration.   '.\nSMELTERS GAINS\nTORONTO, May 6 CP)-Start-\nIng with Western Oil* and following along with bate metals, Toronto market moved higher today\non expanded volume. Base metals\nand western oils were up 1.31 and\n1.16 respectively In the Indices at the\nclose. Volume was 691,000 shares.\nEldorado Silver pushed up to\nclot* at 2,45 tor a gain of 17. Naybob\nGold traded 133,900 shares and held\na gain of 4% at 28%, Amm Gold\n.moved actively and firmed 2% to\nmvs, \u2022\nNoranda advanced a point to 61.\nIn the last few minute* Nickel pushed up 1% to 47%. Smelter* closed\n1% up and Hudson Bay % higher.\nRAYMOND THOMPSON, Nelion\nWinner boy't solo, treble,.under 11\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, May 6 (CP)-Van-\ncouver wheat cash prices:\nStrt.\nNo. 1 hard 109%\nNo. 1 Nor. 109%\nNo. 2 Nor.   108%\nNo. 3 Nor.\nNos4Nor. ...\u201e\nNo. S wheat .\nNo. 8 wheat .\nFeed ..\u201e.,\u201e...._\n99%\n89%'\n72%\n86%\n39%\nTough\n107%\n107%\n103%\n86%\n86%\n69%\n63%\n56%\nMoney\n\u25a0y th* Canadian Preii\nClosing exchange rat**:\nAt Montreal-Pound, 8.0111-32; V.\nS. dollar, 1.009-16; franc, 2.819-16.\nAt New York-Pound. 4.98%; Ca-\nnadlan dollar, .99 19-82; franc, 2.80%.\nIn gold\u2014Pound, 12* Id; U. S. dol-\nlar, 89.30 cent*; Canadian dollar,\n98.98 cent*.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nQuotations on Wall Street\nFord of Canada A .\nGen Steel Ware* ........\nGoodyear Tire\t\nGypsum L & A\t\nHarding Carpet \t\nHamilton Bridge \t\nHamilton Bridge Pfd .\nHlnde Dauche\t\nHiram Walker \t\nIntl Metal!\n16%\n5%\n56\n5%\n3\n5ft\n30%\n14%\n36%\ni 6\nIntl Milling Pfd       99%\nImperial Tobacco      13%\nLoblaw A      22%\nLobtaw B  ,      20%\nKelvlnator     10%\nMaple Leaf Milling\nMassey Herrli\t\nMontreal Power ,.\nMoore Corp\t\nNat Steel Car \t\nOnt Steel Prods\t\nOnt Silk Net\t\nPag* HerWy *.,\u201e\u2014\nPower Corp\t\nSteel of Can \t\n2%\n4%\n28%\n.28%\n41%\n85%\n12%\n63%\nStandard Paving        2%\nHigh\nLow\n87\n89%\nAm For POw _\n3%\n3%\nAm Smelt Si Re\n40\n37*\nAm Tel '._\n130%\n126%\nAm Tob . ..\n72\n70%\n29%\n27%\n4\n3%\n7%\n7\nBait & Ohio ....\n6%\n3%\nBendix Av\t\n12\n11%\nBeth Steel    \t\n49\n49%\nBorden\t\n' 16%\n19%\n15%\n14%\n8%\n6%\nCerro de Paico\n36\n34%\n45%\n41%\nCon Gas N Y ..\n25%\n23%\nC Wright pld ..\n5\n4%\n104%\n100%\nEait Kodak ....\n151\n148\nFord Eng\t\n4%\n4%\n16%\n16%\nFree Texas \u2014\n28%\n2-r%\n36\n32%\nGen Food! \t\n26%\n25%\nGen. Motor* .....\n32%\n30%\nGoodrich  \t\n14%\n13%\nGranby\t\n4%\n4%\nGreat Nor pfd\n17%\n\u00bb\nClose\n88\n3%\n39%\n130%\n72\n28%\n4\n7%\n6%\n12\n48%\n16%\nWii,\n6%\n351-,\n45%\n25%\n4%\n104%\n151\n4%\n16%\n25%\n35%\n28%\n32%\n14%\n4%\nHowe Sound ...\nHud Motors .... 6%\nInter Nickel .... 47%\nInter Tel & Tel 8%\nKenn Cop  33%\n20%\n8%\n13%\n3%\n17\n39%\nMack Truck\nNash Motors ....\nN Y Central ....\nPack Motori ....\nPenn R R\t\nPhillips Pete ....\nRadio Corp      9%\nRem Rand ....'.  11%\nShell Un  13\nS Cal Ed   22%\nStanOllotNJ 49%\nTexas Corp   39%\nTexas Gulf Sul 30\nTlmken Roll .... 35%\nUnder Type  49\nUn Carbide   68%\nUn Oil of Cal 19%\nUn Aircraft  27%\nUn Pac .\nU S Rub \t\nU S Steel \t\nWarner Bro*\nWest Elec ......\nWest Un .\u2022*;::.\n65%\n28\n45%\n9%\n78 '\n23\nWoolworth     42%\n17% Yellow Truck ..-, 12%\n33%\n6%\n49%\n8\n33%\n19%\n7%\n12\n3%\n13%\n34%\n9%\n11%\n12%\n21%'\n47%\n87%\n29%\n34%\n49\n89\n19%\n26%\n61%\n26%\n42%\n4%\n71%\n22\n41%\n11%.\n39\n6%\n47%\ni%\n35%\n20%\n8%\n13%\n3%\n17\n\u25a085%\n6\n11%\n13\n22%\n49%\n39%\n30\n35%\n49\n86%\n19%\n27%\n65%\n27%\n49%\n9%\n77%\n28\n42%\nMINE8\nBid\nAztec    - \u00b07 ,\nB C Nickel -     -15%\nBig Missouri        .36\nBluebird   01^\nBralorne  \u2022    8.70\nBridge Rive; Con     .01%\nB R Mount  ., ....   \u2014\nCariboo Gold    2.16\nDentonia  04%\nDunwell          \u25a0jjj\nFairview Amal      .03\nFederal Gold      M\nGeorge Copper 25\nGolconda       \u2014\nGold Belt  :      f\nGold   Mountain  .     -02%\nGrandview  -     \u202206%\nGrull-Wlhksne       \u00ab*.\nHaida Gojd       -07\nHedley Mascot     1-07\nHedley Sterling ....     \u2014\nHome   Gold    91\nIndian Mines\\ 02\nInter Coal & Coke .26\nIsland Mountain .75\nKootenay Belle .... LIS\nKootenay Florence     .00%\nLakeview  0S%\nLucky Jim      J\u00bb%\nMak  Slccar G 01%\nMcGillivray  20\nMinto  Gold    02\nNicola M & M 04\nNoble   Five    02%\nPend  Oreille       1-64\nPilot Gold      -01\nPioneer Gold      259\nPorter   Idaho         .02%\n.01\nAsk\n.08\n.17%\n.40\n.02%\n8.75\n.04\n2.25\n.04%\n.03%\n.05\n.38\n.02%\n.06%\n.05%\n.07%\n1.10\n.04%\n.01%\n.02%\n.SO\n1.15\n.00%\n.01\n.02%\nPremier Border\nPremier Gold      i\u00bba\nQuatslno .,      .02%\nQueinelle Quartz       .09%\nRed'Hawk-G        .04%\nReeves-MacDonald     .27\nRelief Arlington 15\nReno  Gold        -52\nReward  - 04\nRulu* Argenta .....     -01%\nRuth Hope          \u2014\nSalmon Gold       .06%\nSheep Creek  .......     -93\nSllbak Premier ....  .175\nSilver Creit       .01\nSunshine   .       12\nVIdette Gold 10\nWaverley  Tangier     .00%\nWellington -01%\n.02%\n.04%\n.02%\n1.85\n.02\n3.00\n.03\n.01%\n2.00\n.03\n.09%\n.07\n.35   \u2022\n. .99\n.04%\n.02%\n.02\n.08\n2.'0tf\n.10%\n.00%\nWesko Mines       .03%\nWhite Eagle  \u25a0     .01    .\nWhitewater        .05\nYmir Yank Girl 15\nOILS\nA P Cons  22%\nAmalgamated      .01\nAnaconda  -     .10%\nAnglo Canadian ....    1.46\nAsooclated  05\nBaltec    .',       -03\nBritish Dominion  11\nBrown Corp  55\nCalgary  Is  Edm     2.77\nCalmont ...'....: 43\nCommonwealth  ....     .34\nCrow'*    Ne*t  01\nDalhousie 48\nDavies Pete  33\nEast Crest -     .09\nFirestone Pet* 21%\nFoothill*' 70\nFoundation  Pete        .19%\nFour Star Pete 17\nFreehold Corp 06%\nHargal    20\nHighwood Sarcee       .13\nHome       1.35\nMadison       .92\nMar Jon  - 10%\nMcDougall Seg ...     .20\nMcLeod New  19\nilO\n.09\n.05\n.07\n.35\n.16%\n.08\n1.72\n29.00\nMercury  \t\nMerland   \t\nMid   West   Fete\nMill City Pet* ...\nModel  \t\nMonarch  Roy  \t\nNordon Corp\t\nOkalta Com\t\nOkalta pfd\t\nPacalta   ...........\u201e\u201e.\u201e\nPrairie Royal \t\nRoyalite\t\nSouthwest Fete\n.49%\n44.29\n.40\n.04\n.05%\n,17\n.29\n.12\n1.50\n.04\n.15\n.57\n2.80\n.44\n.34%\n20\n.20\n.07\n1.35\n.54\n.12\n.21\n.11%\n.10\n.08%\n.18\n1.73\n.50\nGOLD OUTPUT 148,768\nOUNCES, BRIDGE RIVER\nVICTORIA, May 8 (CP).^Three\nproducing mine* in the Bridge River\ndistrict of British Columbia turned\nout 148,768 ounce* ol gold and 90,550\nounces of silver from 351,118 tons ot\nore mined last year.\nThis production wai divided at\nfollows: Pioneer Gold Mines 61,335\nounces ot gold and 11,657 ounces\nsilver from 147,878 tons of ore.\nBralorne.Mlnet, 83,081 ounce* of\ngold and 28,028 ounce* silver trom\n170,686 ton*.   -\nMinto Gold mine*, 4382 ounces of\ngold and 12,887 ounce* silver trom\n32,996 torn,\nHALIBUT CATCH UP\nSEATTLE, MayvS (AP). - The\nUnited State* and Canadian fleet*\nturned in catches ot 7,330,889 pounds\nof halibut the first month ot the\nseason, from April 1 through April\n30, compared with 6,434,643 pounds\nthe tame month last year, the international fisheries commission reported today.\nMONTREAL DULL\nMONTREAL, May 6 (CP)-A dull\nsession on the stock exchange livened up at the close today and\nleaders showed advance* of up to\n2 points.\nInternational Nickel firmed 1% at\n47%, Smelters gained 1% at 87, and-..\nNoranda was up 1% at 61%. National Steel Car advanced 1% at\n41%. Canadian Pacific firmed % at\n6%. Canadian Car k Foundary moved up % and the preferred gained %,\nDominion Bonds\nWINNIPEG, Mey 6 (CP)-Donw\ninion ot Canada bonds, bid and\nasked: v  S\n4% per cent, Sept 1, 1S40, 107%,\n108%.\n5, Nov. 15,1941,111%, 112%\n5, Oct 10, 1943, 114, 119\n4, Oct. 15, 1945-43, 108%, 108%\n4%, Feb. 1, 1946, 112%, 113%.\n3%, Oct 15, 1949-44,104%, 108%,\n3%, Nov. 15 1991-48, 102%,103%,\n4, Oct. 15, 1952-47, 108%, 109%.\nJ, June 1,1955-50,100%, 101%.\n4%, Nov. 1,1958-48,112%, 113%.\n4%, Nov. 1, 1959-49, 113%, 114%.\n8%, June 1,1966-56,100%, 101%.\n3 per cent perpetual* 89%, 90%,\nLondon Close\nLONDON, May 6 (AP).-Cl0*in|:\nBrazil $11%; C p. R. $8; Inter Nick\n$49%; U.S. Steel $43%; Anglo Am\nof So Africa Sin 3d; Brit Am Tob\n105s; Consol Gold Fields 68s 9d;\nH.B.C. Ills; Metal Box 68s l%d; Rho-\ndesian 'Anglo Am 20s; Hio Tinto\n-\u00a314%; Woolworth 64* 7%fl.\nBonds\u2014British 2% per cent Con-\nsols  \u00a374 9-16; 3% per cent war ,\nloan   \u00a3101%;   funding  4s   1060-90\n\u00a3113%.\nOILS TURN UPWARD  '\nCALGARY, May 8 (CP).-Wlth a\nturnover of 54,300 shares, National\nPete 2, newest crude producer in\nthe Turner Valley field, led an upward trend on the Calgary stock\nexchange today. It advanced 5 to 38\nduring the morning and closed up\n4% at 37%.\nC. & E. gained 13 at 2.73 and\nOkalta was 5 higher at 1.71, Davies\nPete gained. 1 at 53; Firestone Pat*\n% at 22 and Sunset the same at\n44. West Flank %- higher at 18. Three\nPoint boarded the only loss, down\n2 at 6.\nOXFORD, Eng, May 8 (CP-\nHavas)\u2014Confidence in the ability ot\nBritish industry to avoid a slump\nwas expressed today by Viscount\nNuffield in his speech to the annual\nmeeting of Morris Motors limited at\nCowley.\nSpboner 16 \u2014\nSpy Hill Royalties ,07%      -\nUnited   \u201e'.  .23        .24\nVanalta  j09%\nVulcan  ........._  .88\nWeit Flank    .18%\nINDUSTRIALS\nB C Poorer  28.00\n.24\n.10\nm\n.18%\nBrewers' & Dist\nCanadian Pac ...\nCapital Estates ....\nCoast Breweriei\nPacific Coyle\nUnited r\n6.00\n6.00\n2.W\n12.75\n.20\n6.90\n\u2022m\n13.50\nNo matter what your printing needs may\nbo, our plsnt il equipped to handle them\u2014\ndue to expert personnel and modern equipment. Let ui show you simples of work\nwo esn do. We will gladly give you a quota-\n'  tion on your next printing order.\nPHONE 144\nMmn latlg faa\nCommercial Printing Department .\u00ab'\n \u2014\nPAGE TWEf VI\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. WEL80N, B, C-8ATURDAY MORNING. MAY 7.\nMOTHER'S DAY\nCHOCOLATES\nIn Handsome boxes.\n601 *\u00b0 ?2>50\nMann, RutherEord\nDrag Go.\nNight Baseball\nWESTERN INTER.\nWenatchee 6, Vancouver 7.\nYakima 2, Tacoma 5.\nSpokane 0, Belllngham 9.\nPACIFIC COA8T\nSeattle 1, Sacramento 0.\nLET A WANT AD SELL IT.\nJ\n\u2666 A\u00bb v\/\u00bb La\nOptometrist\nSuite 205\nMedical Arts Bldg.\nWITH HI*\nPLUMBING\nniOM in\nB.C. PLUMBING\ntt HEATING CO.\nBEAUTIFUL SCENERY, BEAUTIFUL\nCHILDREN IMPRESS ADJUDICATOR\nFine Instrumentalists\nand Vocalists in\nKootenays\nWhen Mrs. Elizabeth, Morrlion of\nSaskatoon, music adjudicator tor the\nninth Kootenay Musical testlval,\ngave \"My Impression! ol the Festival\" Friday night she declared her\nfirst Impression was of the beautiful scenery of the Kootenays, and\nthe second of Its beautiful children,\n\"We must really do a good Job\nof tjiese festivals,\" she asserted, 'So\nwe all may grow better and so that\nwe may rejoice with those who\ndo better than we do. Keep this\nspirit of pacing each other.\"\nMrs. Morrison advised teachers to\ninstruct children, ta the fundamentals, the technique of music, and\nthen \"let them express themselves.\nSo-many try to impress their personally on the children. Don't do\nthat\" '.    ,  \"'v.   .\nThe adjudicator declared she had\nheard \"some marvelous vocalists,\"\nand added; \"Your school^ choirs are\ngood. I'd like to see some rhythm\nbands and singing games, for they\n ' T\n-PHONE 25-\nTl*. Vee Km* T>* Yew\nPRESCRIPTION\nFleury't Pharmacy\nMlOiCl  *\u00ab\u00bb! \u00bbLOC\u00ab\nWELCOME FESTIVAL VISITORS\nOn Mother's Day\nRelieve her of work on her day of the year\u2014She'll\nenjoy a lovely dinner at the newly decorated\nREX CAFE\nTHE POPULAR\nPLACE TO\nDINE  \"\nNOTICE\nOf Dissolution of Partnership\nNOTICE is hereby given that the partnership\nlatterly subsisting between Frank A. Stuart and Ernest\nL. Warburton carrying on business as insurance\nagents at Nelson, B. C, under the firm name and\nstyle of Stuart and Warburton, has been dissolved\nas from the 20th. day of April, 1938, A.D.\nDated at Nelson, B. C, this 6th. day of May,\n1938, AD.\n(Signed) FRANK A. STUART.\nK\nThe fifth set is tough\u2014But you'll find that\na bottle of that prime favorite\nO\nRainbow\nKootenay\nBreweries\nLimited\nWiil Just Hit the Spot\nThis advertisement la not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nFISHING SEASON\nIS NOW OPEN\nDON'T\nForget your anglers licence\nor\nLose the big One on your\nold line.\nWe Have a complete assortment of\nRODS      LINES      BAITS\nAT PRICES YOU CAN AFFORD\nAnglers licence may alio be obtained from ui.\n$1.00 SEASON\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company) Ltd.\nTHE FISHERMAN'S HEADQUARTERS\nare excellent for teaching\"     \u2022\n\"Your Junior instrumentalists are\nof exceptionally high calibre.\"\nMrs. Morrison stated 'she would\ntake back to Saskatchewan a number of Ideas suggested by classes of\nthe Kootenay festival.\nShe also paid tribute to her secretary, Miss Mary Jarvis, to George\nHorstead, secretary-treasurer, and\nto all members ot the festival committee for their complete organlza-\ntion bf( the festival and for their,\nkindness to her. ; i'.\nHospital Auxiliary\nPlan Tag bay; Servo\nTea on Hospital Day\nArrangements for Hospital Tag\nday, to be held next week-end,\nwere\" made at the meeting of the\nWomen's auxiliary to Kootenay\nLake General hospital at the Nurses'\nhome, Friday afternoon.\nIt was decided.that the auxiliary\nwould serve tea, in the Nurses'\nhome, next Thursday, Hospital day.\nProceeds trom the bake sale held\nIn April amounted to $20.75 it was\nreported..\nTHE, STAR\nli  Nelson',  M\u00abl  Popular\nCAFE\nlip\n\/\n1     If   M*   Ilk*   th\u00ab     1       f3\nI     better   tnlnoi   In     I       \/\n\u25a0 life  you'll Wpfo      If\n\u25a0 ciiU   the   STAR,    1      W\nNews of the Day\nTennis restrlngs\u2014and Tuftex Tennis Balls. SPORT SHOP.,      (1358)\nPortrait* live forever\u2014guaranteed\nwork. At VOGUE studio.       (1283)\nMOVINO . . . USE WILLIAMS'\nVAN, PHONE 108. (1288)\nLawn mowers sharpened & rpd old\nmowers bought 824 Gore. Ph. B4B-H\n(1348)\nBox Laorosse Sticks, All leather\nitruno $2.25 and $3.60 at Hlppersons\n(751)\nNewspapers, Magazines and Smokes\nBISHOP'S NEWS STAND\nI \" (227)\nFOR SALE\u2014A real car bargain.\nNo reasonable offer refused Bob\nHorswill, 478 Baker St. (1355)\nSPECIAL, TODAY at LEDING-\nHAM'S\u2014Apple Sauce Cake and delicious Butter Homs. . (1358)\nWANTED\u2014Young man for office\nwork who understands bookkeeping.\nAddress-J.M. Dally News.    (1360)\nSEE A. TERRILL POR UPHOL8\nTERINQ AND DRAPERIES. 120,\nHIGH STREET. (286)\nUnderwood-Elliott Fisher Co., Nel\nson office for typewriter sales and\nservice. Repairs all makes. Ph. 98.\n(1314)\nKNIGHTS OF PYTHIAS\nAll Knights and Pythian Sisters\nare requested to be at Lodge 7 p.m.\nMay  8th  to  attend  Presbyterian\nchurch. (1280)\nROBERT NOLTE, matter tailor\nlor ladles and gentlemen.      (805)\nMUSICAL    INSTRUMENTS,    REPAIRS, WEBB'S, 808 BAKER ST.\n(1181)\nYou are protected with a 10 year\nwarranty when  you. buy a 4938\nNORGE at MoKAY & STRETTON'S\n\u25a0    r       1708)\n1938.\nNEWS OF THE DAY\n(Continued)\nRemember MOTHER with out\nflowers or plants. Prices reasonable.\nKOOTENAY FLOWER SHOP.\n(1128)\nREXALL STORE\n\"KOOTENAY, VALLEY\"   Dairy\nMilk\u2014you'll appreciate Its finer flavour. Phone 118 for free delivery.\n., (284)\nNelson Registered Nurses association annual Silver tea and sale, home\nmade candy. Nurses' Home, May 28,\n3 to 6 p.m. (1282)'\nNOTICE TO THE PUBLIC\nFor terms at to rental of Eagle hall\napply to W. Scott, Eagle block.\n(1172)\nTooke and Arrow Shirts. Smart\npattern!  and  popular  prices.\u2014\nJACK BOYCE\n(176)\nClothes DO last longer when\nwashed the EASY way. For proof,\natk ui about the LINT TEST. KOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE (708)\nSNAP\u20141936 Chevrolet coach, reconditioned. In perfect shape. Owner leaving for Old Country Nelson Auto Wrecking; Tel. 946. (1362)\nDANCE - TONIGHT - DANCE\nIn Eagle Hall, Music by\nThe TROUBADOURS\nGentt 80o \u2022:\u2022 Ladlet 25c\nv. (286)\nVISIT the NELSON TRANSFER\nON THE OPENING DAT TODAY OF THE\nMOTOR SHOW\nMAT 7 TO 15\nIt Isn't Logical to Pass Up These Values if Ton\nAre in the Market for a Car\nFREE-\n$35. IN FURNITURE FROM NELSON'S LEADING FURNITURE STORES\nAll Perioni Visiting Our Show Will f FIRST PRiZE-Qooda value      ...... $20\nReceive a Free Ticket Entitling Thorn    second'PRlzE,-Q,oli.U v.iuT. $10\nto  a   Chance   on   Our   Lucky   Draw, i      at Freeman S, Leew Furniture Co.\n-Com. Down Tod.v-You May bo|f^^\u00bb\na Winner!\nI      Prizes on Display at Both Stores\nHERE ARE SOME OF THE VALUES NOW ON\nDISPLAT AT OUR SHOWROOMS\n1931 Buick Sedan\n1933 Chevrolet Spec.\n1935 Ford Sedan\n1930 Ford Coach\n1931 Ford Coupe\n1929 Durant Sedan\n1928 Dodge Sedan\n1927 Studebaker Cpe.\n1936 FORD\nCOACH\nNew Rubber\nONE 1936\nCHEVROLET\nStandard\nCoupe\nNew Rubber\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany, Limited\nThe best costs leal. Phone 980. Est.\nMutual Benefit Health and Arcldept\nAss'n. Dist. Hgr, Frank A. Stuart,\n577 Baker st., Nelson, ETC.      (1364)\nFish bite better on SPORT SHOP\nFishing Tackle. (1338)\nNew Summer Schedule (Including\nCrawford Bay) leaves Nelson Monday and Thursday and Creston Wednesday and Saturday. Glen's 'transfer.       , (1344)\nMcDONALDS Ginger ale, Coca\nCola, and other fine drinks, pack\ned In a sanitary factory bottles sterilized in an up-to-date Miller Sterilizer. \u25a0 \u25a0      (1361)\nA general meeting of THE NELSON OPERATIC SOCIETY will be\nheld in the Canadian Legion Tuesday May 10th at 8 p.m. Full attendance requested. (1350)\n- ROSSLAND NURSERY -\nWill be on the Market today with\na line of large ornamental trees as\nwell as bearing fruit trees, All acclimated sl^ock. Also Rhododendrons\nand smaller fruit trees and a wide\nline in perennials. No. 1 Roses and\nPeonies. Phone 151, Rossland or\nP.O. Box 54. (1351)\nLet us load your\ncamera with Kodak V. Film. All\nsizes. Fresh stock.\nOur Finishing\nDepartment   gets\nbest results from\n'our exposures\u2014\nand REMEMBER,\nI   Free   Enlargement with every\n86.00  worth  of\nFlnlihlng done\nby us.\n11\nATTENTION SPORTSMEN\nDon't miss this opportunity to see\nthe Provincial Game Dept. pictures\nof outdoor life, at tha Nelson District Rod and Gun club banquet.\nAlto Guest Speakers. May 12, Hume\nHotel, 6:30 p.m. You mutt have a\nticket Get them at Valentine'!\nFleury'i, The Sport Shop, Price 60c\n(1386)\nGeorge Ma (lark\nDies al Coast;\nNelson Pioneer\nWord has been received to the\nfIty of the death of George Morrison Clark, formerly 'of 607 Cedar\nstreet, who died suddenly at the\ncoast in his 83rd year. His wife still\nlives at her Cedar street home. '\nMr. Clark has been a resident ol\nthe Kootenays for 42 years, and In\nthat time was a carpenter and cabinet maker. He worked for John\nBurns the contractor. \u2022\nHe is a brother of William Clark\nof Ymir, and of Mrs. Noble Binns\nof Trail. Harold J. Clark, station-\nmaster at Nakusp, la a son.\nFuneral services will be held at\nNelson Monday.\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nCLARK \u2014 George, Morrison, of\nNelson passed away Friday, Body\nWill rest at isomer's Funeral Home\nwhere service will be held Monday\nat 2 p.m., Rev. J. A. Donnell officiating. . (1368)\nNELSON-VERNON\nDAILY SERVICE\nEffective Immediately\nDirect through service is resumed from Nelson to Vernon\nvia Nakusp. '\nLv. Nelson  \u2014.....  8:00 a.m.\nAr. Nakusp  ................. 12:35 p.m.\nLv. Nakusp . .......   1:05 p.m.\nAr. Vernon .............  8:10 pjn,\nConnections at Vernon for Kel-\nowna, Penticton, Kamloops and\nother Okanagan points.\nPhone 800 for further\nparticulars,\nGreyhound Lines\n1221 Baker St Phone 800\n> (237)\nSixth Timber Sale\nWas to Polonikoff\ni A sixth timber tale, not mentioned'to Frldajra list, waa regiatered\nat the forest branch office in Nelson\nin the. part three weeks. The tale\nwas to: \t\n! W. J. Polonikoff, Bossland\u2014l,-\n186,000 board feet of sawlogs \u00abnd\n42,000 lineal feet of cedar poles on\nSanta Rosa 'creek; estimated revenue $4463.13.\nK\nPHONE   815, \u2022 <-.\nfor better and prompter service In plumbing repairs and\nalterations. . ,. \u25a0'\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLOST-SPARE TIRE AND RIM,\nbetween South Slocan and Nelson, Phone 932. (1363)\nOur\nSpecialty\nFor shoo shiner, pool games,\nping, pong,  cigarettes,  tobaccos, soft drinks, tee\n.'..-.   George at\nTHE PORTER CLUB\n812 VERNON ST.\nNELSON, B.C.\nREMEMBER\nMOTHER\nWith a Greeting Card \u00bb\n:; or a Gift from our com- '\\\n: plete line of Gift mer- :j\n!   chandise. If\nAllen's Art Shoppe\nBuy Your Films Today for Use\nTomorrow\nUSELARVEX\nTO INSURE NO TROUBLE\nWITH MOTHS \u25a0     \u25a0\nAt SMYTHE'S\nProscription Druggltt\n.'PHONE 1\nCIVIC\nTODAY\nFINAL SESSIONS\nKOOTENAY\nMUSICAL\nFESTIVAL\nAfternoon Session, 2 o'clock\nEvening Session 8.30 o'clock\nAFTERNOON\nAdults 35c    Children 15c\nEVENING\nAdults 50c     Children 25c\n\u25a0 \u25a0;*!*> \"\nSugar Bowl\nGrocery\nCorner Mill St and Josephine\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nSPECIALS\nLocal Fresh Eggt\u2014Large   {M\nsize; 2 doz. for _ *W\"\nFresh Bologna\u2014Sliced;      IDA\nper lb.  \u201e..,  *\u00b0r\nSliced Side Bacon\u2014J\/j-lb. *9|4\npkts.; eaoh ^*r\nStrawberry and Apple      At A\nJam-4 lbs.  Mr\nFresh Grapefruit\u2014Arl-     49ft\nzona; 6 for     *T\nOranges\u2014The very finest; (.jtA\n>i doz. for _.... PpBf\nGranulated Sugar\u2014      tff fag\n20 lb*, for  V*03\nNabob Coffee\u2014 ISA\n2 lbs. for J**\nPurex Titiue\u2014 AtA\n6 rolls for \u201e Mr\nFresh Asparagus\u2014    -       ttA\n2 lot. for .. *J\u00bb\nTenderized Picnic Hams\u2014 yeA\nPlnett flavor; per lb._. jgppf.\nFarrow's Marrowfat Peat tHA\n-2 pktt. ,...*3t*\nPork and Beam\u2014Large    ]ia|\ncant!'3 for , \"r\nTomato Juice\u2014 Llbb'y't,     *mA\nlarge size; 3 for \u00abMr\nSalmon\u2014Sockeye, [\/fib.     \u00a3C*\ntint; 4 for  SJy\nPHONE 110\nFor the Finest Quality Groceries\nFresh lee Cream In Bricks, Conet\nor Revels\u2014Delivered Free\nQUAUfeY  :\nCLOTHES\nThe man who looks\nahead does not allow a\nbargain price to blind\nhim. He kno>W that-\nelothes with a future\nwill take him. further\nthan those that-must\nsoon be side tracked.\nHe knows that ;the> \"extra\nfare\" he invests in good\nsuits will help-him to\ngo further and \"srrlvd'*\nquicker.\nYou will be thoroughly at\nhome anywhere' In one\n', of our'quality suits?\nEMORY'S\n~ LimiM   W\nTrailite Is Fined        <\n$10, Castlegar\nCASTLEGAH, B. C. - Bruce Ter-\nnunc of Trail appeared before J.\nSpeakman, J.P., -at the provincial\npolice court at Castlegar May 2 and\npleaded -guilty to a charge of driving to the common danger. The\ncharge arose following an accident\nat Kinnalrd on the morning of April\n22, Involving his car and one driven\nby A. W. Anderson of Trail. Considerable damage was done to both\"\ncars but no one was Injured.\nMr. Terhune paid a fine of $10\nand costs.\nK\nA CORONA PORTABLE\nTYPEWRITER\nThe first and oldest portable.\nOnly $1.00 per week. See them\nat or write to:   .. . '\nNELSON STATIONERY CO.\n880 Stanley St     Nelton, 1.C,\nNelson Business\nit-- \"'\u2022'\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION\nCommence Any Time   't\nm* <>j i^.'misty tttAtmhs^gss^mi\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 888     610 Kootenay St.\n\u25a0 j \u25a0'.-.- -ij-irmririi-ij-.nn- nr -,--\"-\u2014*^j*mA.\n:\\\nCOTTON\nDretty cotton theert with freely\ndabt of white. White dott on\nnavy, black, brown or wine\ngrounds. 8lzet 14-20, 38\u00bb44, eUtra\nsizes 41-63,     -'',.:\nWO\nGODFREYS'\nW \u2014.'     '  , \u25a0'\u25a0 LIMITED\n379 BAKER       PHONE 470\nW:liMi>)l XSk Today\nCONTINUOUS SHOW FROM 1:00\nFeature Starts at 2:15, 5:03,7#. ?:jl\nPlus:    POP-EYE and NEWS\n1    1    ' 1 (1 TliiV    '   '\nSPECIAL MATINEE FOR CHILDREN AT 1:00\nSERIAL \u2014 \"THE PAINTED STALLION\"\nCARTOON and COMEDY\nNABOB COUPONS ACCEPTED UP TO 5:00\n_   1.1       1 1. illftii 1     1 ,1   'if!\nPrices:    Matinee 10c and 25c\nKite 15c and \u00bbc\nMonday \"HER |UNCLE LOVE\nTuesday \"NICHT CLUI SCANDAL\"\nsWktkWs^tslstssVss^lssVsM\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_05_07","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0414314","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"}]}}