{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0414940":{"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":"1938-06-08","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0414940\/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":" Have You Seen Her1\n\u25a0 _-i.huv.fe ku. \u00abm uic   truss    vitiuiia sjay ..ccui'atlon, When this\npicture-wai taken, wa? ttoytrC*-*r_^'I_tfeun*i_e,, daughter i of Mr,\nand Mrs.-Morris Lajeunesse of the Ymir .Yankee Girl mine camp.\nShe disappeared from the comp Monday aboutUO a.m., and has been\nunsuccessfully sought since. Hoping she may have been carried off\nby someone\u2014the alternative to believing that she is dead\u2014Ymir folk\nhave appealed to district residents to keep an eye out for her. Carmella was wearing khaki overalls over a yellow blouse; red socks and\nblack shoes when she disappeared. She has a birthmark on her left\ncheek. ,*'*'.'\nHer mother, a patient In Kootenay Lake General hospital at Nelson, lias not yet been told that her daughter is missing.\nToday a crew of 200-odd men will again comb the ground where she\ndisappeared.\nWORKLESS MAY\nGO TO CAPITAL\nCampbell States Next\nMove Will Be Onto\na Boat\n-VANCOUVER, June 7 (CP)-R.\nW. Campbell, publicity chairman for\nthe Relief Project Workers' union,\nI .aid single unemployed men, sev-\n, eral hundred of whom have been\nbivouacked in two public buildings\nhere ilnce May 20, would move\n\"right to the doorstep of the pro-\ni vincial government\" and if neces-\n; lary go on to Ottawa.\n1 \"We are not going to move out ot\nthe art gallery or the post office\nuntil we move onto a boat, headed\n, for Victoria,\" Campbell said in addressing an outdoor meeting here.\nI \"We'll raise the funds somehow\nby public subscription,\" he said.\n\"We are going to carry our protest\nright to the doorstep of the provincial government and, if we don't\nsucceed there, we'll all go on to\nOttawa by some means or other.\n. \"Fifteen hundred strong, we are\ngoing to camp on the government\ndoorstep until we get action,\" lie\n\u2022Oncluded.\nBAN ON U.8. FLIERS\nWITH REBEL FORCES\nWASHINGTON, June 7 (API-\nPresident Roosevelt warned United\nStates fliers today their licences\nwould be revoked if they fought on\nforeign soil on the side of revolutionists against existing governments. Without naming any particular country, the president told a\npress conference American aviators\nwere participating actively and passively in' revolts by flying planes\nor working as mechanics. '\nDEMOCRAT IS\nCONCEDED WIN\nDES MOINES, June 7 : (AP)-\nIoWa Democratic leaders tonight\nlooked to Sen. Guy Gillette to heal\nparty scars as Rep. Otha D. Wearin\nbrought a bitter senatorial primary\nto a close by conceding Gillette's I\nvictory.\nWearin sent n telegram of congratulation to the senator as unofficial tabulation of the primary\nvote neared completion. With only\n103 of the state's 2447 precincts still\nunreported, Gillette had polled 77,-\n718' votes, nearly 5000 more than\nthe combined total of his four opponents.\nWearin trailed in second with 41,-\n229, while three other candidates\nshared the rest of the estimated\n150,000 total vote volume.\n[2 British Ships Bombed\nOne Is Wrecked, One Set Afire in Harbor of\nAlicante by Lone Insurgent Seaplane\nMADRID, June 7 (AP)\u2014Insurgent bombers raked Spanish government coastal areas today killing, maiming and damaging foreign snips\nand property. v\n\u25a0 Casualties were expected to run into the hundreds. At least 42 were\nknown dead at Valencia and Alicante, both Mediterranean ports, and\nSegorbe, about 25 miles inland. - .<  \u2022\nE At Alicante, a lone seaplane swooped over two British ships, the\n3688-ton freighter Thorpehaven, wrecked by three bombs, and the bulk\n\u25a0Starter, \"Eglish Tanker\" of 8387f 1\t\n| tons, let afire.\nI Subsequently four raiders returned snd unloaded 50 bombs Into Ali-\ncante itself, destroying the Belgian\nvice Consulate and other buildings\nend narrowly missing the British\nsbnsulate.\nI The captain of the 3072-ton British cargo boat Thurston, meanwhile,\nhurriedly drydocked his ship at\nValencia after insurgent bombs\nWrung her plates and she started to\n\u2022ettle.\nI These raids raised to 11 the number of ships damaged or sunk In a\nfortnight's insurgent attacks on\nSpanish government ports. No casualties were reported today aboard\nIhe three ships.\n(Continued on Page Seven)\n\u25a0 IIIIIllll tlllllllll 11111 llllilllll II1IIIE1\t\nNEW FLARE-UPS\n'   REPORTED IN\nJAMAICA\nKINGSTON, Jamaica, June 1,\n(AP) \u2014 New flare-ups of labor rioting were reported today. They broke out in two Ja-\nmnica pnrlshcs last night resulting in death of one striker and\nInjuries to 12 others when police fired into a demonstration\nof strikers and unemployed\nsympathizers.\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllt.llllllslsl.1\nDYKE BREAKS\nVOLUME 87       FIVE CENTS PER COt-. ,,        .EL80N, BRITISH COLUMBIA, CANADA-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ, JUNE 1.1938\nNUMBER 42\nPOLICE DOG IS\nUNABLE FOLLOW\nTRAILS IN HUNT\nFOR TINY GIRL\n200 Men and Police\nto Join Intensive\nSearch\nEAGLES-NESTS TO\nBE INVESTIGATED\nHave you seen a tost little girl\nIn the West Kootenay district?\nHava you seen a strange little\nSlrt In a house where she did not\nelong?\nHave you any suggestion that\nwould assist In searching over i\nmountainside for a little girl lost\ntwo days and two nights?\nHav* you seen any cougar recently In Ymlr vicinity?\nThere are the questions being asked of residents of West\nKootenay in a broadcast appeal\ntoday by Ymlr folk who since\n10 a.m. Monday have prosecuted an unsuccessful search\nfor tiny Carmella Lajeunesse,\nnot yet three years old,. the\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs, Morris. Lajeunesse, She wandered\naw|y fiWs'.hjST.rJ${ii)rt \u00abt.$hf\nlr1w-i\"\u00a3lrT*m!ne camp about\nthat time and not a trace of\nher has been found since,\n(Continued on Fags Seven)\nPlane Searchers .\nSpurred by Find\nVICTORIA June 7 (CP) -Stir*.\nen for a Ginger Coote Airways\nplane missing 11 days with four\npersons, moved tonight to investigate a report a west coast Vancouver Island fisherman had found\nwhat is believed to be part ot an\nairplane.\n' The report, received by Gonzales\nwireless station here trom Estevan\nwireless station on the west coast,\nsaid the fisherman arrived at Kyu-\nquot, a few miles north of Zeballos,\nwith the article.\nThe report spurred searchers who\nhave sent planes and boats out of\nZeballos since Msy 28 seeking Pilot\nLen Waagen and the three passengers of his yellow Falrchild pWne\u2014\nMrs. George Nicholson, Zeballos,\nCharles IT Rumsey, of Toronto, and\nH. Boyd of Steveston, B. C.\nCherry Processing ^Jf\u2122\nNelson Is Subject of\nGrowers' Discussions\nChambers Describes\nSuccess of Work\nto Date\nLOT \"MISSIONARY\"\nWORK   IS   NEEDED\nAssociated Growers of British\nColumbia hava under consideration a cherry processing plant at\nNelson to relieve seasonal pressure\nand price deflation during the cherry marketing season, E. 3. Chambers of Vernon, president of the Associated, told the annual meeting of\nKootenay members at a convention\nat the board of trade rooms Monday.\nWith the Associated plant at Vernon and the plant at Summerland\nbeing operated by a committee of\nfruit growers, from 400 to 600 tons\not cherries would ba processed annually. At the Summerland plant,\nhe said, it was proposed to produce\nfinished glace cherries, but the Associated would continue to put the\ncherries up In sulphur dioxide solution and market them in this form\namong manufacturers.\nAs a remit of .'growers' representations to Ottawa, dump at\nm%'\nDEBT REFUNDING\nACT OF VICTORIA\nISFOUNDVAUD\nVANCOUVER, httt 1 (CW-RV\nversing a decision of Mr. Justice H.\nB. Robertson ot British Columbia\nsupreme court handed down May 6,\nfive appeal court judges today\nunanimously declared valid the\nVictoria Debt Refunding act of\n1937.\nThe decision was announced by\nChief Justice Archer Martin, who\nsaid all the appeal court judges\nwere of the opinion the act was\nwithin the powers ot the British\nColumbia legislature.\nMr. Justice Robertson had previously granted John Day, Victoria\nbusiness man, a holder of a Victoria City debenture ot $100, an injunction restraining the city from\ntaking further proceedings under,\nthe statute.\nApple Crop Cleaned\nat Cut Price Says\nChambers\nPROSPECTS 193$:\nAPPEAR BRIGHTER\nWhile the 1037 apple deal was\ndisappointing in that prices slipped\nback to 1934 levels following two\n.yjjars of gains, a splendid.apricot\n\"drop, a record peach crop and a good\npear crop were features of the year,\n_., 3. Chambers ot Vernon, .president of the Associated Growers of\nBritish Columbia, r told Kootenay\nmember-delegates at their, annual\nmeeting at the board of trade rooms\nTuesday. A big crop and severe\ncompetition from the largest citrus\nfruit crop in the history of tbe\nUnited States'mitigated against the\nprice obtained for apples, he said.\nBy reducing prices and taking other\nsteps the entire crop, except a 20\nper cent dump, which was not abnormal,'had been marketed, the one-\ndesk plan finally clearing it up,\n(Continued on Paga three)   \u25a0'\nFive Bush Fires\nBurn on Coast\nVANCOUVER, June 7 (CP) -\nFive widely scattered bush fires\nburned tonight in the lower British Columbia coast district, according to provincial government forest officials here.\nWorst outbreak wu near Scjua-\nmish, head of Howe Sound 40 miles\ntrom Vancouver, where 200 men\nhave fought an 1800-acre blaze on\nthe Merrill Ring Logging company\noperation since Friday.\nAbout 10,000,000 board feet of cut\nlogs, two bridges, three donkey engines, one loader and an unknown\namount ot property was reported\ndestroyed. '\u25a0-> .\nBritish Columbia police at Squa-\nmlsh said the fire wu out of control. None of the small army of\nloggers, fighting the fire, has been\nhurt, \\\nAt Half moon boy, 40 miles northwest of Vancouver,' > fire swept\nthrough 290,000 feet of timber on\nthe Osborne Lumber company\ngrounds. Forty men fought It\nTwo shingle bolt and two saw\nlog operations were damaged In a\n190 acre blaze at Indian river, head\nof Burrard inlet.\nA small tire was reported along\nthe Kettle Valley railway near\nOthello while four ranches and a\nschool house tn the Columbia valley, south ot Chllllwack, were\nthreatened by a slash fire sweeping a mile squire area.\nAt Whonnock, 60 miles east of\nVanoouver In the Fraser Valley,\na 100 acre ilaih blare was brought\nunder control after It threatened\nseveral homei.\nSTEVENS   BLOCKED\nON GRANDTRUNK\nAPPEAL\nOTTAWA, June 7 (CP)- A'\npoint of order raised by Hon.\nErnest Lapointe, minister of Jus;\ntice, in the house of commons to\nday halted an appeal launched\nby Hon. H. H. Stevens (Recon.\nKoc\n{ootenay East) on behalf of the\nfirst and second preference\nstockholders of the Grand Trunk\nrailroad and. their claims against\nthe government which took over\nthe Grand Trunk when the Canadian- National railways was\nformed.\nMr. Lapolnte said this old dispute, was still before the privy\ncouncil and it wu his opinion'\nthe house should not debate a\nmatter before the courts. Hoa\nPierre Cugrain, speaker, ruled\n\"ie discussion out Of order.\nMr. Stevens thought the courts\nhad dealt with the dispute sufficiently to clear the way for discussion In the house of commons.\nOTTAWA, June 7 (CP) -An-\nnexation of a small corner of the\nState ot Maine to Canada was\nproposed In a petition submitted\nto the house of commons today\nby J. F. Poullot (Lib., Temiscou-\nata).\nA trained Alsatian, successful'\nseveral times in locating lost\npersons, was unable to lead\nsearchers to her Tueiday. The\ndog, pictured above on arriving\nat Nelson, wu rushed from\nCanal Flats with his master,\nConstable C. A. Bellhouse of\nthe provincial police, to aid In\nthe search.\nWater Meters Will\nBe Installed for\nCommercial Gardens\nWater meters are to be placed on\ncommercial market gardens serviced by city water mains. Decision to\nthis effect was made by the council\nTuesday night following a report by\nR. E. pPtter, city engineer, that a\nproperty which was paying for water for a house, and annual sprinkling charge for one lot, wu found\non inspection to be using the city\n.service to irrigate an entire market\n1 garden.\nWISMER TO PROSECUTE IN THIRD\nTRIAL OF MACCHIONE AT VERNON\nVICTORIA, June 7 (CP) -Attorney-general Gordon S. Wlsmer\nannounced today he will personally\nconduct the crown's case against\nVincent Macchione, railway\" section\nhand, whose third trial,on a charge\not murder will begin at Vernon\nIng assizes next Ilondny.\nMice the 37-year-61d Sicilian has\nbeen, convicted for the murder of\nMlclael HudOckl whose body, rld-\ndledtwlth a shotgun slug, wu found\non tie bank of the Elk river near\nFernfe, B.C., early to 1036.\nSeven times British Columbia\nlaw authorities have told Macchione\njust when he would die for Hu-\ndock'i murder. Seven timet he has\nbeen reprieved.\nMacchione's first trial ended In\na conviction and he was sentenced\nto hang August 12,1936. The execution date wu set ahead to November 8 when lie lodged an appeal,\nand when the new trial wu granted execution wu stayed.\nIn May, 1937, Macchione was\nfound guilty by Mr. Justice A. M.\nManson, and told he would hang\nAugust 8. Again an appeal wu\nstarted. The execution date was\nmoved to November 8. Another\npostponement advanced that date\nto November 28.        ,   \u00bb\nBefore the court of appeal finally granted the Sicilian a third\ntrial the execution date was advanced again to December 17, and\nthen )o January 21,1938.\nFLAYS THE GOV'T.\nFOR'INACTIVITY'\nTory Leader Admits.\nTalks Too Much,\nBlames Gov't,\nSLAMS PREMIER\nFOR ABSENCES\nOTTAWA, June 7 (CP)-Tem.\nperi flared In the house ef com\nmons today as Rt Hon, R. B, Bennett charged the government with\ndoing nothing while the house\nwas In session for five months end\ndeclared Prime Minister Mioken-\n<le King did net spend an average\nof an hour ind a half * day In\nthe house.' The prime minister\nwas absent it the time ai the\nConservative leader end Hen,\nCharles Dunning, flnsnce minister, clashed.\n\" It started when Mr. Bennett\nsugaeited i Imposition ef a dump*\nIng duty on crude oil from Men-,\ntana to assist In utilization of oil]\nfrom wells In Turner Valley, Alta.\nThe government was fully alive\nto the Turner Valley problem, said\nMr, Dunning, but he did not consider a dumping duty would meet\nthr|itu*U<ffl..:.       ...   \u25a0\u2022J.i\n\"A_^\u00bbp:NClTHll_|!0l^v\nThen Mr. Bennett read a quotation trom a Calgary newspaper that\nuid: \"In Ottawa 243 costly politicians talk for five months and accomplish nothing. Tht Cinadian tariff board investigates toe Turner\n|v_U\u00aby situation and adjourns forever.\" \".-       \u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0\nMr. Dunning observed the quo;\ntation had been sent to all members\nand Mr. Bennett said that did not\nlessen its value.\n(Continued on Page Seven)\nt   \" ...\nSASK. 60ES TO\n_USGlNA^,J_n\u00bb T(CP)- Final\nappeals were being made for votes\nat meeting? throughput Saskatchewan tonight as more than'400,000\nvoters prepared to cast ballots tomorrow and elect the ninth legislative assembly in Saskatchewan's 33-\nyear history.\nCandidates numbering IU have\nbeen mined tor the 80 seats in 47\nconstituencies in which voting takes\nplace from II a.m. to 3 p.m. (M, S. T.)\nwhile in two other constituencies,\nAtliabaska end Cumberland, voting will take place July 28.\nPremier Aberhart of Alberta,\nleader of the western Canada Social Credit association, spoke at Indian Head this afternoon and at\nMelville tonight. A counter attraction for the Melville constituency\nvoters tonight was the address of\nHon, J. G..Gardiner, federal minister ot agriculture and a former premier of Saskatchewan.\nPremier Patterson, head of the\nLiberal government, of the province\nsince November 1, 1933, whhn Mr.\nGardiner accepted the federal post,\nmakes his final appeal for reelection at Kipling.\nQuebec Tourist\nBureau Addresses\nVictoria, U.S.A.\n5 VICTORIA, June 7 (CP)-Thli\nIs one on the Quebec tourist bureau.\nTony Peetz received a letter\nfrom the bureau addressed thus:\nTeliy Peetz,\n\"822 Island Road,\n\"Vletorli, B.C.\n\u00abU. 8. A.\"\nS-ld Mr.- Peetz: \"I did think I\nlived In Canida,\"\t\nJ. 0. SPEIRS OF\nTRAIL IS 0EAD\nAFTER A CRASH\nON MOTORCYCLE\nKaslo Native Son Dies\nin Nelson Hospital\nWithin 8 Hours\nHIT TRUCK AS\n'      IT MADE TURN\nAbout eight hours after he\neraihed headlong en his motorcycle Into \u25a0 truck neer thrums,\n\u2022James Gordon Speirs ef Trill,\nKailo native son, died of hli Injuries early yesterday morning et\n|,, Xeote\u00bb\u00abx Lake.. .General. hosnl-\ntil.'Nelioh.\nHe sustained a number of frac\ntures, lacerations and internal Injuries, The; true), wu the property\nof the Douglas family at Thrums.\nSpeirs wes riding toward Nelson from Trail, Mendsy afternoon,\nfollowing  the truck   along   the\nThrums flits. About a mile east\nof Thrums station the truck made\n'  a left turn end Spain crashed\nInto It, provincial police were Informed, He was rushed to Nelson\nhospital.\n, (Continued en Page Ten)\nINTERIOR TOWNS\n. INTERESTED IN\nNEW LOANS\nVICTORIA, June 7 (CP) -\nSeveral municipalities in the\ninterior have expressed \"keen\ninterest\" in the Dominion government's new plan of low interest loans for municipal\nworks, Hon. A. Wells Gray, minister of municipal affairs, said\ntoday on his return from an\ninspection trip through tbe\nCariboo and North Okanagan\nareas.\n' Mr. Gray said his department\nhad not been advised officially\nof details of the scheme but he\nhad discussed the proposal informally with municipal representatives in the interior towns.\nThe loans will be for- self-\nliquidating works. Mr.' Gray ,\nnld this probably would confine most cities to such schemes\nis waterworks extension' and\nprojects that could be liquidated\nwithout being a charge on the\ngeneral tax rate. ...'   .\nAnother suggestion wu thli\nfunds obtained through these\nchannels could be used for con-\n7300 ACRES OF\nLAND COVERED\nWHEN WYNNDEL\nSECTION GOES\n14,500   Acres   Total\nNow Under the\nWater\nLITTLE DAMAGE\nTO PROPERTIES\nCRESTON, B. c, June 7 -\nFourteen thousand five hundred\n\u25a0cres of dyked lands In the Kootenay river valley it Creiton ire\nnow flooded ind the steadily riling water In the river ind Kootemy like oontlnue to Jeopardize\nthe one remaining district of 2200\nicrei on Nicks Island. A total of\n7300 acres In Creiton dyking district on the east tide of Kootemy\nriver between Creiton ind Wynndel were tubmerged Tuesday afternoon when in unlooked for\nleak occurred it the Wynndel\nend.\nBy ten o'clock onrushing waters\nfrom Kootenay lake had spread\nthrough the dyked acres ind were\nsteadily mounting up the dykes\nopposite Creston and along the Kootenay river bank. The other 7200\nflooded acres are In the old reclamation farm, tbe south end of which\nwent out just one week earlier end\nthe cross dyke failed Friday, permitting the north end ot the old-\ntime farm to be flooded.\n(Continued on Page Seven)\nCOURT ORDERS\nMEXICO RETURN\nOIL CO. MONEY\nl\nSan Francisco\nSpokane  .\u201e\nLos Angeles .\nKelowna\nPenticton\nGrand Forks\nKaslo\t\nCranbrook ..\nCalgary :\t\nEdmonton .......\t\nSwift Current\t\nMoose Jaw  \u201e\t\nPrince Albert ......\nSaskatoon ,..\u201e.\u201e.\u201e _..\nQu'Appelle ..'.\t\nWlndTpeg \t\nForecast\u2014Kootenly-\nerly winds, cloudy and much cooler\ni lew light showers.        .\nm___\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014_eiii__^\u25a0_i_^_^_h\nMEXICO Cm. June 7 CAP)-\nDistlct Judge Manuel Bartlett lit*\ntoday upheld constitutionality ot\nPresident Lazaro Cardenas* expropriation of the $400,000,000 foreign\nowned oil industry.\nHis decision denied an Injunction\nasked by the British and United\nStates companies whose property\nwas taken over March 18 in a drastic\nmove that resulted in Severance of\ndiplomatic relations with Great Bri-\n, The Judge ruled, however, the\nMexican government was at fault\nIn Nixing bank deposits, archives\nind correspondence of the companies ind ordered the oath ind\nrecords be returned.\nstniclion of i civic irena.\nFEWER RUN IN\nEIRE ELECTION\nDUBLIN, June 1 (CP)- iat the\nsecond time within a year, electors\nof Eire go to the polls June 17 in an\neffort to break the party deadlock\nwhich brought about the government's defeat May 29. ;\u25a0   \u25a0\nNominations today put 96 Fianna\nFall (government) candidates in the\nfield, 79 Fine Gael (opposition), 30\nLabor and 13 Independents \u2014 a\ntotal of 218 candidates for the Dall's\n138 seats. In the last election 296\nwere nominated.\nSince the general election of July I\n1, last year, Prime Minister Eamon\nDe Valera hu weathered a number\nof major divisions although the combined opposition outnumbered hie\nFianna Fail followers by two in a\nhouse of 138 members.\nOttawa House\nto Sit on the\nKing's Birthday\nOTTAWA, June 7 (CP)\u2014Parliament will sit ai usual on Thursday,\nJune 9, birthday of King George\nVI, Prime Minister Mackenzie King\ntold the house of commons today.\nA conference between party\nwhips indicated a general desire\nthat the house should sit on the'\nholiday. This was done by the British parliament last year.\nThousands Flee Canton\nThree More Air Raids lay Japanese Inflict\nDeath and Destruction; Will Continue\n.CANTON, June I (Wedneidiv) (AP)\u2014Jipineu wirplinei eirly\ntodey returned to ittiek this terror-itrlekon city for the twelfth iuc-\neenlve day teeming Canton and IU South Chlm envlrom hive been\nsubjected to the horrors of bombardment.\nThe new attack came shortly before dawn.\nJapanese bombs apparently struck the elty'i power station. Lights\nfilled throughout Cmton ina In \" '      '\nquarter,\nShameon Island ,the International\nFive Elected In\nEire Nomination\nExtent of damage ind the casualties could not be determined immediately.\nCANTON', June 8 (Wediesdiy)\n(AP)\u2014Chinese thronged Canton's\nrailway stations ind waterfront bj\nthousands today in attempted fligh\nfrom expected new and more terrible Japanese air raids on this\nbomb-stricken city.\nJapanese planes struck three\ntimes Tuesday, adding to the. dead\nand wounded which already bad\nreached 6000 in 11 days of bombing.\n(From the Japanese navy came I\nwarning the raids would continue\nwith 'wen greater vigor\". Hear\nAdmiral Naokuni Nomura, chief of\nthe navy special service station,\ndeclared at Shanghai that loss of\ncivilian life was to be \"deeply regretted\" but the air raids would 2\non until Chinese authorities reel\nlzed the futility of their nnti-Jap-\nanese attitude.)\n(Continued on Page Seven) \\i\u00a7J\nDUBLIN, June 7 (CP Cable)-\nFive government ind two opposition candidates were elected by acclamation today u nominations\nWere held for the general election\nof June 17.\nGovernment\u2014Fianna Fall\u2014party\ncandidates were returned In two\nconstituency In South Kerry and\ntwo west of Donegal. The fifth unopposed wu Speaker Frank Fahy.\nTwo members of the Fine Gael-\nopposition party headed by William\nT. Cosgrave\u2014were uturned without opposition.\n PAQE TWO-\nBoards Commend, Withholding of\n\u00a7    Franchise From Ihe Doukhobors\nI Ask Governments to Be Chary of Royal\nCommissions and to Balance the\nBudgets and Reduce Debts\nTRAIL, B.C., June 7\u2014As the pro-\nvincial government had already tak-\n\u25a0 en action in not granting the franchise to Doukhonors, no action was\ntaken by the Associated Boards of\nTrade of Eastern British Columbia\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nhere today on a resolution by the\nGrand Forks board of trade, protesting against the proposal to extend the franchise to them.\nA resolution from Greenwood, on\nthe same matter was received but\nno action was taken upon it for the\nsame reason. The convention went\non record, however, as endorsing the\naction of the Dominion government\nin withholding the franchise and\nurging it to continue to withhold it\nuntil such time as the' Doukhobors\nbecame filed for citizenship.\nCOMMISSIONS DEPRECIATED\nAs the provincial and Dominion\ngovernments had spent vast sums\non commissions which had achieved\ncomparatively small results, a'resolution from Greenwood, -which petitioned the governments to cut expenses on commissions and to appoint them only on most urgent matters, was endorsed.\nDugald McPherson, Grand Forks\ndelegate, informed the convention'\nthat $2,000,000 had been spent on\ncommissions in the last four, or five\nyears.\nA Greenwood resolution petitioning aid for prospectors resolved\nthat all prospectors holding free\nWILLARD EQUIPMENT LIMITED\nTAR TARPHALT 1 AR PAINT-'PEDLAR\nPRODUCT!: MUNICIPAL. MINING. CON\nTRACTORS    AND   ROAD  MACHINFRs\nPEDLAR'S   DLASTER 5AViNG\nThis expanded metal mesh assures\nsmooth, plastered wills that never\nshow streab and remain, free from\ncracks. The small openings prevent waste of material and provide a perfect \"kev\" for the plaster.\nIt is the ideal plaster base in small home construction.\nVrile fir simples .nd (rial.\nTHE PEDLAR PEOPLE LIMITED\n860 Beach Avenue; Vancouver \u00ab_,\nPEDLARIZE * WALLS AHD CEILINGS AGAINST FIRE\n11 DEAL\nFuel for Summer\nj WEATHER\n(gDRY SLABS\n$4.50 PER LOAD DELIVERED\nWest Transfer co.\nPHONE 33\nEstablished   1899\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel..is[eison, b.c.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS   :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nHUME-A. Anderson, P. M. Wards,\nMedicine Hat; J. A. Rowland, Penticton; Mr. and Mrs. L. Hardy, W.\nM. B. Nichols, T. S. Bremner, H. J.\nBuraett, R. G. Holmes, Vancouver;\nC. L. Bailey, Betty Wright, Montreal;\nG. C. Martin, R. G. Kellaway, W. L.\nCarlyle, Calgary; John E. Stryker,\nSt Paul, Minn.; James E. O'Brien,\nMinneapolis; W. H. Ahier, Procter;\nMr. and Mrs. A. V. Read, Erie; E. S.\nJones, Cranbrook; II. L. Hayne,\nKamloops; Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Chambers, Vernon; W. A. Drayton, Fort\nSteele; L. E. Lytle, Mrs. A. R. McGregor, Crawford Bay; Mrs. L. J.\nEdwards, Nakusp; D. B. Young, Coleman, Alta.; J, B. Rander, J.\" W. Dang-\nlefield, Regina; David Donaldson,\nNew Westminster; James S. Wilson,\nSirdar; Frank Romano, Creston.\nOccidental Hotel\n706 Vernon St.        Phono 89?\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nWHEN IT'S NEWS\nYou Read About It In the\nNelson Daily News\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nNewly Renovated Throughout\nDufferin Hotel  PhonM   E,ev,tor\n900 Seymour St\nA,   PATERSON,   late   of\nVancouver, B.C. Coleman, Alta. Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Exeapl Sunday\n- Trail Livery Co.\nfrail\u2014Phone 135        Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ. JUNE 8. 1938\nminer's certificates be supplied with\nall mining .reports, Including the\nannual report of the minister of\nmines, tree of charge, and that two\nfree assays be allowed annually for\neach claim so held, provided the\nproperty is actively worked, was\ntabled.\nW. E. McArthur, Greenwood delegate, felt prospectors were entitled\nto all they could get.\n\"There is no mine operating today that has not involved the prospectors\", he said. \"If they want\nreports they should get them. Whom\nare these reporta for? Anything\nthat can be done for the prospector\nis, justifiable. The mining engineer\nand the prospector are two separate\nanimals. If you can assist the prospector you are helping the other\nfellow. It is the prospector that haa\nthe gambling spirit, as Heinze had\nDesirable Immigration Properly\nFinanced Approved by Convent^\nCouncil to Consult\nSchool Board Pupils\nI;City Power Plant\nHe never thought about the price\nof a 10-cent pamphlet.\"\nPresident w. G. Ternan pointed\nout that the Chamber of Mines, rendered assistance to prospectors.\nJ. R. Hunter, secretary told the\nmeeting that \"tons of * literature\"\nfrom the government was free and\nwas distributed by the Chamber of\nMines. The resolution was tabled!\nfor a year.\nDEMAND  ECONOMY\nThat the provincial and Dominion\ngovernments adopt the policy of not\nspending more money but cutting\ndown government expenditures and\nhaving a balanced budget with a\nsteady decrease in the public debt,\nwas urged in a resolution submitted\nby the Trail board of. trade, which\nwas endorsed.\nResolutions from Cranbrook asking that manufacturers of electrical\nequipment build in filters in all\nmachines put on the market was not\nendorsed, it being decided that all\nin this direction was being done at\nthe present time,\nEAST KOOTENAY\nSTATION TABLED\nFrom the Kimberley board of\ntrade a resolution petitioning the C.\nB. C. to erect a radio station in the\nEast Kootenay as residents In that\ndistrict had to depend on American\nstations was laid on the table until\nit is first investigated whit the government will do in the matter.\nThat the Mineral act not be changed in any way for the time eblng,\nwas asked in a resolution from the\nGreenwood board, which waa carried.\nA resolution of the Nelson board\nof trade for legislation providing\nthat on all arterial and main highways where there may be no pound\narea, live stock of any kind allowed\nto wander or grate on the public\nroad, shall do so at the owner's risk,\nwas not approved lt being decided\nto reaffirm a similar resolution indorsed last year.\nW. E. McArthur, Greenwood and\nJ. R. Hunter, secretory, Nelson, on\nmotion were appointed to draft a\nresolution petitioning the government to make some arrangements\nto  that  more  convenient   travel\nthrough the customs ports along the\ninternational boundary could be\nmade.\nMore strict enforcement of penalties to curb the Increase of traffic\naccident was proposed in a resolution from the Cranbrook board,\nwhich was rejected.\nDISTRICT TH*\"PT8\nA resolution from Cranbrook regarding petty thieving in outlying\ndistricts was approved without much\ndiscussion. It read: \"Resolved that\nIn the public interest it Is Imperative that some action be taken to\nStamp out the epidemic of petty\nthieving prevailing in many outlying districts, including the breaking\ninto and ransacking of prospectors'\ncabins and vacant buildings; Resolved that the Associated Boards ot\nTrade petition the attorney-general's\ndepartment to augment the present\npolice force by sending plain\nclothes men to districts so complaining, In order to.clean up a situation that has developed within the\npast several years.\"\n* i\nNelson Tourist\nPark a Disgrace\nTyler Declares\n\"Dr. Sparks' report Is too' mild.\nThe tourist park is a disgrace to\nNelson,\" declared Alderman C W.\nTyler at Tuesday night's city council-meeting following a report by\nDr. F. P. Sparks, medical health\nofficer, on the-condition ot the park,\nand his recommendations for improvement. Alderman George M.\nDen well, parks chairman, and Alderman Tyler, a member of the\ncommittee, Inspected the park a few\ndays ago.\n\"We should fix it up or close- it\nup,\" Alderman Benwell declared.\nThe doctor recommended painting\nand Improvement of lighting and\nsanitary arrangements.\nSKY LINE\nHIKERS\nCAMP\nSPEND four thrilling days\nthis summer in camp at\nSummit I__ke,^Yoho Pass,\nYoko National Park\/ B.C.,\nwhere tha Sky Una Trail\nHikers oi th* Canadian\nRockies will hold their 6th\nannual camp.\nAUG. 5-8\nCongenial company with nature guides\nla an Alpine wonderland oi flowers.\nRate: $20 lor the period of the camp\nIncludes lent accommodation, meals\naad tranipoit ol duffle bon\u2014and\nback to\u2014Toko Lodge, near Field, B.C\nAn Ideal holiday in nature lor.n\naad amat.ur photogiaph.ii.\nfor re\u00bbrvationi writ*\nDan McCowan, Western Secretary\nSky Line Trail Hikers, Buff, Alta.\nFor Information on rail fares apply\nto any Canadian Pacific Agent\n_\\__w^_mL\nGOLFERS VIE,\nSMYTH SHIELD\nCOMPETITION\nDraws for play in the Smyth shield\nmixed foursomes on handicap match\nplay which begins today and continues Thursday at the Nelson Golf\nit Country club, were drawn up\nTuesday night Contestants will arrange with their opponents as to\ntimes of play. It is a three-day event.\nDraws follow:\nWednesday\u2014Maurice Beatty and\nMrs. T. D. Rosling vs A. M. Parker\nand Miss V. Eidt; R. Watson and\nMiss B. Johnson vs Mr. and Mrs.\nR. L. McBride; V. C. Owen and Mrs,\nH. Whittaker va T. R. Wilson and\nMiss C. Hickman; R. B. Allan and\nMrs. R. Watson vs L. S. Bradley and\nMrs. W. Taylor.\nThursday\u2014W. R. Grubber and\nMrs. J. O'Shca va Mr. and Mrs. J.\nCartmel; T. Schroder and Mrs. A.\nM. Parker vs W. Blane and Mrs.\nB. Townshend; R. Pollard and Mrs.\nMcKay, va Ken McBride and Mrs.\nL. S. Bradley: Mr. and Mrs. H.\nLakes vs W. W. Ferguson and Mn,\nA. E. Murphy; J. D. Kerr and Miss\nC. Smith vs J. G. Allan and Mrs.\nW. W.. Ferguson.\nThe winners of Beatty-Parker and\nWatsori-McBride match will play\nagain on Thursday to complete the\ndraw.\nDr. Bennett Fined;\nNo Driver's Licence\nPleading guilty to a charge of\ndriving without having a driver's\nlicence, Dr. C. M. Bennett was fined $12.50 Tuesday by John Cartmel,\nstipendiary magistrate.\n\"Cottonwood City\"\nPetitions Nelson\nfor Light Service\nPetition of 14 residents of \"Cottonwood City\" \u2014 the former rifle\nrange south of Nelson \u2014 for city\nelectric light service wu referred\nby the city council Tuesday night\nto R. E. Potter, city engineer, for a\nreport on the permanence of _er\nvice and cost of installation.\nB. C. RESORTS\nDELIGHTFUL\nVacation\nI     Spend Your Holidays and\nWeek-Ends at the\nOUTLET HOTEL\nProoter\nGood meals, friendly service. Excellent   fishing,   boating,   hiking,\nswimming. Furnished cabini. Grocery store In connection.\nW. A. WARD, Prep.\nLAKESIDE PARK\nNELSON, B. C.\nJune-July-August\nBoating \u25a0 Bathing - Fishing\nTravel by Canadian Pacific to this\nIdeal spot for the Sunday outing,\nsituated one mile from Nelson on\nthe Kootenay Lake. Train leaves\nTrail 10:00 a.m. Returning, leaves\n7:48 p.m: Trains will run to and\nfrom Ukeilde Park,,Nelion.\nSee Your Local Ticket Agent\n_Mi______\nAssociated Boards\nWants Suitable\nSupervision\nTRAIL, B.C, June 7\u2014Although a\nresolution from the Nelson board of\ntrade advocating \"an early resumption of British immigration under\nadequately financed and fully supervised plans\" was endorsed here\ntoday by the Associated Boards of\nTrade of Eastern British Columbia,\nIt was done so after the resolutions\ncommittee had approved it after deleting the word \"British\" and the\nclause \"under adequately financed\nand fully supervised plans\", and inserting the clause \"of a desirable\nclass\" after \"immigration\".\nVARIED OPINIONS\nIt brought forth much discussion.\nDonald MacDonald, Trail, of the\nresolutions committee, said there\nshould be some scheme where the\nDominion could handle a reasonable volume of Immigration each\nyear, and that \"Henry Ford's idea\nof 'back to the land' Is worthy of\nconsideration.\" He felt that unemployment would be a problem\nhenceforth.\n\"If we are to be held back from\ndevelopment because we have an\nunemployment condition, I don't\nthink this country will be what lt\nwas destined to be,\" Mr. MacDonald\ndeclared, He considered assisted immigration would be \"national suicide\".\n\"We must consider the man on\nthe street,\" President Ternan said.\n\"We must consider his attitude toward bringing In people while men\nare out of work ana jobs hard to\nget   - '\n\"There's no use bringing In labor\nin which we ate already overstocked,\" said C McDowell, Cranbrook. ''If they can come with money let them come; if no money, let\nthem stay home.\"\nMayor T. A. Love, Grand Forks,\nfelt the resolution was repugnant\nat this time. \"We want those who\ncan make good and make the Dominion good.\"\nMr. Ternan didn't think Canada\ncould receive immigrants at this\ntime, expressing the belief that the\nidea wasp recocious.\n\"If we do get the proper class,'\nMr. MacDonald continued, financing\nwon't matter; Jf we don't get the\nproper class, financing won't help.\"\n\"There are.many young Canadians whb need jobs and can't get\nthem,\" pointed out Mr. Ternan.\nneed   immigration   of   money  to\nmake jobs.\"\n\"Yes, but how many of those\nyoung fellows want to till the aoll?\"\nasked L. A. Campbell, Rossland.\n\"How are we going to pull the railways out of the hole unless we go\nback to the land? We want the type\nthat will go back on the land and\ntill the soil, I'm in accord with\nimmigration ot the right kind.\n\"Spuds last winter were $35 a\nCity council will take up with\nthe Nelson school board the prob-\nlem of providing schooling for children of employees at the city pow.\ner plant who have been crossing\n\u2022 Kootenay river in boat above\nie falls to attend school at Bonnington.   < >\nTCliis decision was made at Tuesday night's council meeting following reading of further communications between the city. Dr. S. J: Willis, superintendent of - education,\nand F. A. Jewett district inspector\nof schools.\nVernon Street\nWork finished\nPotter Reports\nNew   Ball   Diamond;\nto Concrete Block\non Falls\nOutline of the work of the city\npublic works department for the\nweek May 31 to June 7 was presented to.the city council Tuesday\nnight by R. E. Potter, city engineer, aa follows:\nVernon street paving was finished during the week, including the\nnorth curb. The sidewalk was extended to tie in with the concrete\non Cedar street\nTbe last section of concrete was\npoured at the curling rink retaining wall. The wall is now finished\nexcept for a short piece of decking.\nWe are. now bulldini\nton, and people were buying thi\n*~ \"   mnd lots when they shot,\nen buying a aack for $1.35.\nin 10-\nhave\nIf  it  wasn't\" fat  tbe  marketing\nboards, fellows could tell all kinds\nof that stuff.\"\nKOKANEE PARK\nResolution from the Nelson board\nof trade that the government of\nBritish Columbia be requested to\nenlarge the boundaries of Kokanee\nGlacier park, enlarging its limited\narea of 100 square miles of 362\nsquare miles, wu indorsed without\ndiscussion. H. M. Whimster of Nelson pointed out that a portion ot\nland near Woodberry creek which\nwaa considered good farming land\nbut included in the proposed new\nlimits, would be excluded.\nSPECIAL MEETINGS\nIN FUTURE -\nThat In the future special meetings ot the Associated Boards\nshould be called to consider all important matters, waa the decision of\nthe convention following endorsa-\ntion of a resolution from tbe Cres\nton board of trade as follows:\n\"Resolved that thli board disapproves of any action or representation by the Associated Boards\nof Trade of Eastern British Columbia purporting to be the considered\nopinion of tbe member boards,\nWhich is based on replies received\nfrom member boards in answer to\nquestionnaires submitted by other\norganizations in the Dominion to\nthe Associated Boards for reference\nto.their affiliated boards for consideration and reply, and views with\nregret the recent departure from\nthe traditional and constitutional\nmethod ot obtaining the opinions\nof the member boards in accordance\nwith the provisions of the bylaws at\nregularly constituted conventions.\"\nAnother resolution from tbe Creston board setting forth that a resolutions committee of the Associated\nBoards acting In its prior consideration of a resolution to be submitted\nto the convention, exceeded Its authority in expressing any measure\nof approval or disapproval; that\nthe principal function of' such a\ncommittee was to save the time of\nthe convention by consolidating\nresolutions dealing with the same\nor similar matters and bettering the\nwording of a resolution without alteration materially; and that resolutions submitted regularly to the\nconvention should receive the consideration of the Convention as t\nwhole without prejudice, was withdrawn on motion of Col. E. Mallan-\ndaine, Creston board delegate, who\nstated the resolution was one of an\nindividual, and not indorsed by the\nCreston board.\nFruitvale History\nTold trail Gyros\nby Thomas Watten\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e June 7\u2014The growth\nof Fruitvale, which now boasts a\npopulation of 1700 people, was described by Thomas Watteri, resident there, at the regular supper\nmeeting ot the Trail Gyro club in\nthe Crown Point hotel Palm room\ntonight\nHe described the water supply\nsituation, the sewerage problem\nconfronting the residents, and development of the townsite as a\nwhole,\nDesire for the .Gyros to play a soft\nball game Sunday morning with the\nTrail Times was expressed and arrangements will be made for It\nVisitors Included Bob McLeod.\nKimberley; Jim Draper, New Denver; Dudley Foster, Nelson; Howard\nBright Los Angeles; and Mr, Walters.\ngarage\nThis is\n.. _   g two drive\nways from the alley fo thi\nfor residents at this point,\non ah agreement basis.\nFour men have been supplied to\nthe cemetery, two to the park and\nfour to the electric light department for clearing right of way on\nthe North Shore. Two also have\nbeen supplied to the waterworks\non the extension on Morgan street,\nA new baseball diamond was recently constructed by the grader at\nRecreation park, and the steam roller put over it Three hundred\npounds  of  calcium chloride  was\nNEMO FLEX C0RSETIERE\nMISS ADA MARTYN\nWill tern this store-JUNE 9 and 10\nHave Miss Martyn fit you with\ngarment Friday or Saturday.\nReady-to-\nWear\nFootwear\nPHONE 73 BURNS BLOCK\nspread to assist in keeping down the\ndust.\nThe road oiler has been in use\ntwo days. The third car ot oil is\nnow due.\nROLtER AT KINSMEN PARK\nThe grader waa used one day to\nlevel the Kinsmen park and the\nroller will be sent there as soon as\npossible to roll in the loose stones.\nThe grade has been prepared for\nconcrete on Falls street between\nBaker and Victoria. Concreting will\nfollow immediately. From this work\nwe will go to the block of Hendryx\nbetween Vernon and Baker streets.\nWe have started the weed spraying and it seems to be satisfactory.\nThe public works committee\nauthorized the purchase of a heavy\nduty plow at {110. which has been\nordered\u2014as well as a new blade for\nthe grader.\nOn June 3. 800 sacks of cement\nwere ordered. This is the sixth carload this year.\nAn average of 44 men were employed during this period.\nPresident Asks\n$50,000 to Aid\nin Kidnap Hunt\nPRINCETON, Fla.. June 7 (AP)-\nA request by President Roosevelt to\nthe United States congress for $50,000\nto aid in solving the Jimmy Cash\nkidnapping case gave new impetus\ntonight to the 10-day search for the\nchild's abductors.\nThe unprecedented presidential\naction followed reported recovery\ntoday of one of the $5 bills paid a\nweek ago by the boy's father as\npart of $10,000 ransom demanded\nby the kidnappers. ..   .\\\nDignitaries Begin\nArriving Today for\nCatholic Centenary i\nToday will see Catholic dignitaries arrive from north, south, east\nand west for the centenary to be\ncelebrated tomorrow of the first\nmass said In the Northwest Mainland, inclusive of British Columbia, |\nWashington and-Oregon.\nOver 1000 persons, . Including\nnoted persons in the Catholic\nchurch in the west and a great many\nwho will take part in Thursday's\ncentenary, are expected to be in\nNelson on this occasion. A special\ntrain will operate from Rossland\nand Trail.\nVANCOUVER, June 7 (CP)-The\npenalty-ridden New Westminster\nSalmonbellies went down 17-0 to--\nnight before the youthful Burrard\nOlympics in an Intercity Box Lacrosse league fixture here.\nFIRESTONE TIRE\nHere's your opportunity to gat Firestone\nTint at bargain prices, for effective to-  ,\nday, Firestone Standard, Sentinel and\nTruck Tires and Tubes era greatly reduced in price. These new low prices art\nsubject to change without notice-\ntake advantage of them to equip\nyour car today with safe, new\nFirestone   Tires  and   save\nmoney.   See  your   local\nFirestone Dealer now,\nTIRES\nfor Every\nPURSE\nNo matter what you can afford for tires, first go to your\nlocal Firestone Dealer. He has\nFirestone Tires in every price class\nto suit your purse. Every tire bears tht\nFirestone name and guarantee\u2014your assurance of long mileage, extra safety and\ndependable, carefree service. See the nearest\nFirestone Dealer today.\nre$ione\nFIRESTONE TIRES\nSOLD BY\nThe Smedley\nGarage Co.\n508 Vernon St. _y|j||yy^\nFIRESTONE TIRES\nSOLD BY\nEric's Motor\n*\n^Service\n295 Baker St. Ne\u201e.n. B. C\n NELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ. JUNE 8. 1938\nBoards of Trade\nAccept Nelson's\nInvitation 1939\nTRAIL, B. C, June 1\u2014The As-\n'\u00abocialed Boards of Trade ot Eastern British Columbia concluded its\n38th annual convention here early\nthis evening, after a long day of\ndealing with approximately 25 resolutions submitted by affiliated\nboards. The convention was slated\n|br three days, but all business was\ncleaned up in the first two which\nwere Monday and Tuesday.'\nInvitation1 from H. M. Whimster,\nNelson delegate, for the convention\nCatarrh\nHay Fever   \u2022   Summer Colds\nQUICK RELIEF. New British\nNOSTROLINE Nasal Remedy acts\nin 30 seconds. Reduces running from\nnose and eyes, opens breathing passages. Soothes soreness, inflammation. \"NOSTROLINE\" ends constant\n(irritation and burning. Endorsed by\n14.000 British doctors. 50c.\nNOSTROLINE\nSold by: Mann, Rutherford Co.,\nDruggists. Nelson.\nnext year to be held at Nelson, was\naccepted. J. R, Hunter, secretary,\ncommended some of the boards for\nhaving resolutions in his hands at\nan early date, and issued a plea for\nothers, who had been delinquent,\nto get them in early.\nOn motion proposed by E. M.\nDaly, Rossland, that information regarding replies to the resolutions\npassed at the convention be sent to\naffiliated boards of trade when it\nwas available. Mr. Hunter stated he\nwould issue a half-yearly or quarterly report on them,\nCONVENTION COMMITTEE\nWILL MEET IN OTTAWA\nOTTAWA, June E (CP) - The\nnational convention committee preparing for the Conservative convention July 5, will meet in Ottawa Saturday. J. R. MacNicol, the\nmember for Toronto-Davenport,\nwith Hon. Maurice Dupre, former\nsolicitor-general, is Joint .chairman\nof the committee.\nNomination proceedings for the\nelection of a national Conservative\nleader will take place on the evening of July 8 and the election the\nfollowing afternoon.\nCHARGED WITH MURDER\nHONG KONG, June 7 (CP Cable)\n\u2014Ordinary seaman Edwin Dwyer.\n19, of Weston-Super-Mare, England,\nappeared in magistrate's court here\ntoday charged with the murder May\n2 of leading seaman Robert Dickinson, 29, shot aboard the cruiser Dorsetshire off Townsville, Queensland.\nArchibald Hears\nof Broken Dyke,\nMiddle oi Talk\nTRAIL, B. C, June 7 -1 D. K.\nArchibald, Creston, had just finished telling the Associated Boards\nof Trade of Eastern British Columbia about conditions caused by high\nwater at Creston this year, when\nhe received a message that the dyke\non the Creston Reclamation company property had gone out, so he\nleft Immediately for home.\nHe said the loss already sustained\nwould come hard on Creston next\nyear, for schools of the district had\njust been consolidated and a new\n$80,000 school was under construe\ntion. Five new school buses also\nhad been purchased. Consequently\ntaxes would be heavy after the loss\nof crops.\nHAS BEEN THREATENED\nTORONTO, June 7 (CP)-Alder-\nman William Croft, in the news\nfrequently for his advocacy of an\necomony program for Toronto, said\ntoday that twice in the past three\nmonths he has been threatened with\ndeath if he don't \"lay off that chatter about firing guys and cutting\ncosts.\"\nNamed His Sentence\nTARBORO, N.C., June 7 (AP).\n\u2014 A Jury convicted Clarence\nBrown of house breaking and larceny.\n\"What would you give yourself\nif you could set your own sentence?\" asked Judge Luther Hamilton.\n\"Six months,\" replied Brown,\nunhesitatingly.\n'All right,\" said the judge, \"six\nmonths it is.\"\nSI. Paul's Boys\nir lo\nTrail Station\nTen members of St. Paul's Boys'\nchoir will travel to Trail Thursday\nnight to broadcast over station CJAT\nfrom 7:30 to.8 p.m.\nLast week, boys of the choir, with\ntheir mothers and fathers, held an\nenjoyable season's windup in the\nform of a social evening in the\nchurch hall. About 125 were present.\nA program of music by the boys\nwas presented. Short addresses were\ngiven by Charles Morris, Sydney\nHorswill, Donald Wilson, Gary Bow-\nell and Rev. T. J. S. Ferguson.\nThe boys presented Miss Frances Linville with a large bouquet\nin appreciation. of her services as\naccompanist during the Kootenay\nMusic festival. Mrs. W. Graham, on\nbehalf of the mothers, presented\nMrs. Ferguson, who is leaving Saturday for England, with a gift of\nmoney.\nMany kind words of appreciation\nwere expressed to Mrs. Ferguson,\nfor her work with the boys. The\nsplendid showing the boys made at\nthe Kootenay Music Festival was\nhighly commended, the choir hav-\ning won 14 first places, four seconds and three thirds, besides retaining the Boys' Choir shield for\nthe eighth consecutive year, and\nwinning the junior vocal championship for the third time.\nDEMONTRATION FAILS\nMONTREAL, June 7 (CP)\u2014Can\nadian league for peace and democracy's plan to demonstrate for\npeace\" failed to materialize today\nwhen foot, mounted and motorcycle police formed a cordon around\nthe freighter \"Staylianos Chandris,\"\nbeing loaded with scrap metal for\nJapan.\nBill Was Worthless\nBRISTOL, Conn., June 7 (AP).\n\u2014Vito DiPinto was afraid the $2\nbill someone gave him was counterfeit, so he showed it to police.\nInstead of \"two dollars' the\nbill's denomination read \"two rollers.\" Under President Jefferson's\npicture was printed: \"The guy's a\nsucker who accepts this.\"\nPolice agreed with DiPinto that\nthe bill was worthless.\nSomething new and decidedly\nchic are the ostrich capes and boas\ndyed to match ejvening gowns.\never\nCUT  DOWN  FUEL C08T8I\nInstall a Major\nSAWDUST   BURNER\non Your Kitchen Range\nB. C. Plumbing\n& Heating Co.\nMORE ABOUT\nAPPLE CROP\n(Continued From Page One)\nProspects for 1938 were more Inviting, however. The English crop\nhad beep extensively damaged by\nfrost, so that market should be livelier, there had also been considerable damage to the United States\ncrops, reducing competition, and\nmoisture conditions on the prairies\nindicated a better year and better\nmarketing prospects there.\nCLEAN UP CROP\nWhen, after the one-desk plan\nhad been in operation for a time,\nthe rate of sales indicated that about\n400 cars of apples would be left\nover, price adjustments were made,\nspecial transportation rates were obtained and additional advertising\nwas undertaken, Mr, Chambers explained, sales being increased almost 100 per cent. While some claimed price levels should be maintained and carryover dumped, \"the public pretty well makes up its mind\nwhat it is going to pay,\" Mr. Chambers said, and price reduction was\nadvantageous in avoiding consumers' antagonism and possible loss of\nprotection.\nCitrus fruits were selling cheaper than apples during the winter,\nthe American orange crop being 33\nper cent over the five-year average. This competition also affected\nseriously the export market,\nThe one-desk proposition htd delayed the closing of the various\npools, he stated. Losses on any one\npool were spread over all the pools\nand it was impossible to close any\nof them until all were completed.\nFAIRLY GOOD YEAR\nDespite these conditions, it had\nbeen a fairly successful year for the\ncentral office and the larger locals,\nMr, Chambers said, explaining that\nthe volume handled reduced the\ncosts per box and increased rebates.\nFrom the control angle the apple\nmarketing situation was uncertain,\nhe stated. While the Tree Fruit\nBoard was campaigning for a uniform growers' contract, a large number of growers were not sighed up.\nIf it did not \"go over\" and British\nColumbia control legislation was\ndeclared ultra vires by the privy\ncouncil, the Tree Fruit Board would\nprobably be able to effect control\nby an agreement with shippers.\nThe man shippers were unanimous that control was desirable,\nMr, Chambers said, having been\n\"converted\" by the various control\noperations of the past and present.\nThey would still be willing to effect\ncontrol if there were no True Fruit\nBoard and no uniform contract, he\nbelieved.\nShippers did not favor the one-\ndesk plan of operation, feeling l\\\nwould eliminate the independent.\nThey had, however, operated under\nit when \"in a jam\" and found lt\nsatisfactory.\nSales Service limited and the Associated Growers felt that a growers' committee should be associated\nwith any cpntrolllng body, and\nhence if there was any voluntary\nagreement this year, it would probably include the Tree Fruit Board,\nMr. Chambers felt.\nDescribing plans to eliminate one\nof four box labels ljow in use for C\ngrade   apples,   Mr.   Chambers   re-\n-PAGE THREE\ncelved the recommendation of the\nmeeting that the change should not\napply to Cox Orange owing to the\nattitude ot the old country toward\nthis apple and the- desirability of\nkeeping an established label to the\nfore in that market. George Porteous of Queen's Bay and Major\nTurner Lee of Bonnington joined in\nurging this action.\nMORE ABOUT\nCHERRY PUNS\n(Continued From Page One)\nhad been applied on Imported processed cherries coming to markets\nfrom Winnipeg to Vancouver, thus\npreventing the low-priced Italian\nsemi-finished product from undermining the market The duty had\nalso brought greater interest among\nwestern manufacturers in the B. C.\nproduct\nWELL ESTABLISHED\nThe business of processing cherries seemed to be fairly well established, Mr. Chambers said. While\nthe crop so far had not been heavy,\nthe deal had been placed on a much\nsounder business.\nWhile lt was possible tor eastern importers to bring in cheaper\nprocessed cherries from Italy, it\nwas unlikely they would attempt\nto undermine the western market\nsince this would provide an excellent argument for dump duty\nin tbe east as well as in western\nCanada, Mr. Chambers thought\nHe declared it was essential to\nthe success of the processing plan\nthat the cherries be picked at the\nproper stage ot maturity,\nJ. J. Campbell, Willow Point,\nagreed that education of growers to\nthis point was vital. It would be\nnecessary to overcome the inclination of growers to leave cherries\non the tree as long as possible for\nthe sake ot greater weight\nIt was Mr. Chambers' opinion that\nover a five-year average growers\nwould find their tonnage greater\nby picking for processing than if\nthey picked only mature cherries\nfor marketing fresh,\nBETTER MATURED FRUIT\nHorticulturists claimed that picking a portion of the fruit unripe\nwould result in a better mature\ncrop since the tree would be\nstrengthened. Picking some of the\nfruit unripe for processing would\nalso lengthen the picking season\nadvantageously.\nRobert Foxall, manager of Nelson sub-central of the Associated\nbelieved most of the Kootenays\ncould be included in cherry processing arrangements, but it might\nnot be economical for the Arrow\nlakes because of the cost of returning empty packages.\nIf the whole deal was'to be pooled,\nthe Arrow lakes might well be included, suggested W. J. Claridge of\nArrow Park, although until processing was further developed the\nArrow lakes area was '-'out\" in this\nrespect,\nGLAD TO COMPLY\nGeorge Porteous, Queens Bay believed most growers would be glad\nof an opportunity to pick cherries\nearly, since the longer they remained on the tree, the greater was\nthe loss as a general rule.\nIt would take a lot of missionary work, Mr. Foxall commented.\nW. P. Dickson of Willow Point\nsuggestd a color chart should be\nissues to show the proper stage of\nmaturity for picking.\nG. D. Barwis, Sunshine Bay, re'\nported considerable dissatisfaction at Harrop, Procter and Sunshine Bay because independent\nshippers were marketing uninspected cherries. Mr. Foxall expressed\nIWCOKPOKATtP ?\"\" MAY 1670.\nSwing Into Summer\nIN THESE\nCOOL    \u00ab>\nFROCKS\nGay Prints!\nSoft Past-Is!\nAiry, cool frocks you'll\nprize for those hot summer days. Cay new styles\nwith slim pleated, or full\nflare skirts. Rayons, sheer\ncottons, linens. All easy\nto launder.\n$2-95\nAir Cooled Hats\nHat that will keep a cool smart head on\nyour shoulders. Porous, light straws in\nsummer's best styles. Sizes 21 Vi to 23. ..\n$1-95\ni\nthe belief this would be remedied\nin the coming season by Inspection\nof shipments on the eastbound train.\nThe difficulty had been to obtain\ninspection in view of government\nInstructions to inspectors to cut\ndown expenses,\nMajor Turner Lee of Bonnington\ndeclared that inspected cherries\nwere invariably of superior quality, and to permit uninspected cherries to reach the market depressed\nthe price for the better fruit,\nFIND SWASTIKAS\nON SHOP WINDOWS\nVALLEYFIELD, Que., June 7\n(CP)\u2014Several merchants of this\nmilltown 30 miles west ot Montreal\nfound fascist swastikas painted on\ntheir shop windows today. Some\nfound the words \"Jew\" and \"thief\"\nadded to the swastika emblem.\nNEW DISCOVERY BANISHES\nFOOT  ODOR\nTAXJ-tiy NU.FEET INSOLES,\nf COD*^ -i|My medicated with\nalkaline, antiseptic suite, are giutf\nanleed to relieve tired, aching feet\n\u2014 control perspiration and banish\nfoot odor permanently. Price <)E,\nper psir ..., _.\u201e,,.\u201e Attkttt\nNU FEET\nEDICATED\n1NSD L t5\nFIND DEATH DUE\n, NATURAL CAUSES\nVANCOUVER, June T (CP) -\nA coroner's jury investigating the-\ndeath May 25 of Mrs. Eva P. Huntingdon, 82-year-old nursing home I\ninmate, found today the woman died\nof natural causes.\nHIS BACKACHE\nMOM\n*\"\"\u00ab\"hJa Z yW mm \u25a0\nUrn.-*\u2022\"' \"...-loll-*. am\n\u2022**\"__?\u00a3\u2022 *M \"\"\"h\n\"Prove *M,r tt*\nth-ir* U*L\"\nIN PILLS\nSix Inning Pitcher\nBy W. BOYCE MORGAN\nInstalment 6\nOn the following Saturday, Gordon came close to realizing his second ambition. Burnham went to\nBuffington for a game that looked\nlike the toughest one of the season.\nBuffington had'nt been beaten, and\nthey had a pitcher named Engle-\nhart, who had been mowing down\nbatters all season,\nEnglehart lived up to his reputation in the first inning, and Burnham went out in order. Then Buffington hopped on Hal Robinson\nfor two runs. Burnham again went\nhitless In their half of the second.\nand in the latter half of the inning,\nthe first man up for Buffington\ntingled.\nOn the Burnham bench, Coach\nGraham was watching Hal anxiously. He didn't appear to have his\natuff today. Sitting close by, Gor-\ndon was wondering whether he\nmight not be sent on to the bull\npen to warm up.\nThe second Buffington batter\nwaited Hal out until the count was\nthree and two. Then as Hal grooved\na fast one, he swung sharply. The\nhit was a liner straight back through\nthe pitcher's box. Hal didn't even\nhave time to dodge as the ball caromed weirdly off the top of his\nhead and bounded into the'outfield.\nHal collapsed on the grass, and in\na moment the diamond was in an\nuproar.\n-Gordon was right behind Coach\nGraham as they rushed out to the\nmount. A doctor hurried down from\nthe stands, and in a moment they\nWere working over Hal. Finally the\npitcher's eye-lids fluttered, and the\ndoctor straightened up.\n\"A nasty crack, but he'll be all\nright except for a headache,\" the\ndoctor said, \"It was aglancing blow,\nond his thick hair protected him\nBbmewhat.\"\nCoach Graham whistled with relief. Then he turned quickly to\nGordon.\n\"Get out there and warm up in a\nhurry,\" he ordered. \"You'll have to\ngo in.\"\n' One of the substitutes grabbed a\ncatcher's mitt, and he and Gordon\nbegan to lob the ball to the other\nboy.\n\"Eight Innings to pitch. This time\nI've got to last!\" he told himself\ngrimly. '\n;He kept warming up, throwing\neasily but with no time between\npitches. He didn't want to go in\ncold against a team like Buffington.\nOnce, glancing over his shoulder,\nhe saw that Hal was on his feet,\nWith the other players clustered\naround him. A moment later the\nhoy who was catching Gordon held\nUp a restraining hand.\n\"Wait a minute!\" he cried. \"They're\nstarting to play again. Hal is staying\nIn!\"\nGordon wheeled, unable to believe\nthat any pitcher could continue\nafter a bump like the one Hal had\nsuffered. But the other boy was\nright. Hal was still in the box, and\nthe other nlavers had taken their\npositions. Then Coach Graham signalled to Gordon to continue to\nwarm up. Evidently he wasn't at all\nsure that Hal, who hadn't been doing too well anyway, could last.\nBut Hal fooled everyone. He not\nonly stayed in the game, but he\npitched inspired ball. Neither of the\nrunners already on base advanced\nan inch in that inning, and Buffington was retired in order in the\nthird. It happened again in the\nfourth, and Coach Graham signalled\nGordon back to the bench.\nThere he sat for the rest of the\ngame, watching Hal Robinson, with\na bump oh his head as big as an\negg, pitch seven innings of no-hit\nbaseball. And even though Burnham got only one run and lost the\ngame 2-1, the team and the fans\nTHE BOYS AND GIRLS PAGE\nHere's a Game That\nWill Give You Good\nBasketball Training\nHere's a game which is not only\nfun in itself, but which makes excellent practice for basketball, for\nit involves quick throwing and catching, and quick jumping to intercept the ball,\nUsually about 10 people play it\nwere hysterical with pride and joy\nwhen the last out had been made.\nTo Be Continued\nHealthy Bodies\nIt usually takes boys and girls many years before they learn to\ntake cars of their health. When they are young, they first depend\non their parents to look out for them, and then\nthey are so busy with school and play that\nthey never think about the welfare of their\nbodies.\nPeople who think too much about health\nare foolish. But on the other hand, there is\nnothing quite so valuable to you as a robust,\nsound body\u2014as you will learn as you grow\nolder. For that reason, all boys and girls should\ntake some pains to keep themselves in the\nbest possible condition.\nYoung, people usually get plenty of exercise and fresh air. They also get lots of regular\nsleep. But most children eat more sweets than they should, particularly at certain times. And they are careless about catching cold,\nabout brushing their teeth, about straining, their eyes.\nDon't fuss about your health, but be reasonably careful. It will\nrepay you greatly in years to come. \u2014The Editor.\nThe players stand in a circle, with\none player in the centre. Then a ball\nis passed rapidly from one player\nin the. circle to another. This ball\nmust always be thrown over the\nhead of the player standing in the\ncentre, who tries to catch it, or at\nleast touch it as it passes over him.\nWhen he does, he changes places\nwith the one who threw the ball\nlast.\nIt is sometimes fun to time the\none in the centre in order to see in\nhow short a time he can touch the\nball. Keep a record for each player\nand announce a winner at the end\nof the game.\nSOME PITCHING\nThe girl-ather first baseball game\nhad just seen a member of the home\nteam hit a three-bagger.\n\"Oh, isn't that visiting pitcher\ngreat!\" she cried. \"He hits our boys'\nbats no matter where they hold\nthem.\"\nHe was at his club, and he had\ntalked politics for an hour and a\nhalf.\n\"That's the situation in a nutshell,\", he finally declared.\n\"Heavens!\" exclaimed a member\nto his neighbor. \"Some nut!\"\nRIDDLE ANSWERS\n1. Difficulties. 2. 82 Oxford. 3. At\nthe South Pole. 4. In mail. 5.   To\nkeep his pants up.\nThis Trick With Matches Proves\nThat One-Half of Eleven Is Six!\nBy Thomas the Magician\nSome years ago, when I was attending high school, a young professor under whom I was studying\nphysics showed me a very clever\ntrick combining both matches and\nnumbers.\nWhen he presented the effect for\nme, he demonstrated it on the blackboard in the physics laboratory,\nbut the way I am going to explain\nit to you today, it can be done anywhere,\n\u2022EFFECT: The performer places\nsix matches upon a table so that\nthey form eleven in Roman numerals. To be exact, that would be XI.\nHe then explains that the magicians in ancient Rome believed that\nhalf of 11 was 6, and could prove it.\nHe then offers to show his audience\nthis seemingly impossible proof, and\ndoes so with profound success!\nEXPLANATION: This effect is\ndependent upon the peculiar shape\nof the Roman numeral for 11.\nAs you will see by glancing at\nthe drawing, when the two bottom\nmatches are removed from the figure \"X\", it leaves \"V\", or 5. And\nalso, when the .loWer match is removed from the \"I\" it still leaves a I,\nhut a much shorter one. Therefore,\nas you look at the figure now, you\ncan readily see that it leaves just 6.\nSince half of the matches have\nbeen taken away, then evidently\nhalf of 11 is 6!\nShowing the 6 matches\nlorming the Roman\nnumeral'ILjorll\nfl\u2014\nShovfmqha'So'i them\njvmo'QedMVnigTfoman\nnumeral M,otQv\nDOGGY DRAMAS PRESENT\nMutt-iny on the Bow-wow-nty \u2014 Scene 4\nIn building a skyscraper, they\nstart from the bottom and work\nup, but in solving this puzzle you'd\nbetter start at the top and work\ndown!\nTHE SKYSCRAPER\ni\n4\n.\nt\n7\n6\n4\nThe definitions:\nACROSS\n1. Belonging to him\n4. To annoy or trouble\n5. Male child\n6. Thick\n8. Used with \"either\"\n9. Cent (Abbr.)\n10. Used with \"neither\"\n12.   An artificial waterway\n14.  Coagulated blood\n16. To look sullen\n19. Exclamation of amusement\n20. Before\n22. Therefore\n23. An Illegal rate of interest\n25. Point\n26. Organ of hearing\nDOWN\n1. Passes the winter\n2. A metal\n3. A tall building\n6. Perform\n7. Eastern Time (Abbr)\n11. Upon\n12. Company (Abbr.)\n13. Behold!\n14. To talk lightly\n15. Musical note\n17. ,'We\nIH Extensive Journey\n21. Floor covering\n23. Toward the top\n24. You\n-_\u2014\nTwo material! used lu buildii\nskyscraper are hidden in the sentence below. Can you find them?   I\nGrace   mentioned   her  fears   to\n.neither of her friends,\nHere's a start of a four-word\nsquare which shouldn't stop you tor-\nlong. The second word is a brave\nperson, the third means annoys, and\nthe fourth is part of the face.\nCHIN\nN--I\n[ibarHupeso^BuHdmcA\n>-__r*TM<_ it     tl\n1     ,\u00ae XJ\nRIDDLES\nIf you find these riddles hard, I\ndon't give up too easily. You mustn't :\nlook for the answers till you're sure\nyou can't guess them.\n1. What has three eyes and can't\nsee the bright side of things?-Hazel\nPotter.\n2. If shoes were hanging on the I\nclothes line and a goat came along\nand ate them, what would be his\ntelephone number?\u2014Jack Becker.'\n3. \u2014Where could you build a\nhouse with all four sides facing\nnorth?\u2014Maxine Krise.\n4. Where gallant knights of old\nwere found, and picture postal cards!\nabound.\u2014George Howes.\n5. Why does a rich man wean\nred suspenders?\u2014Marjorie Halford.\nMother: Don't cry. dear. Which!\none of the naughty boys hit you? I\nTommy: The one wth the blackj\n MWjPW\nPAGE   FOUR-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNING. JUNE 8, 1938\nAGED INDIANS ATTEND VICTORIA EUCHARISTIC CONGRESS\nChief Joseph, 92; Queen Mary, 85,\nEnfoy Week-End Visit lo Victoria\nVICTORIA. June 7 (CP)\u2014Queen\nMary visited Victoria  today.  She\n\u2022 wore her regal raiment, complete\n- with fur collar, a necklace made\n- from empty glass vials from a doctor's laboratory and several rows of\njearl buttons.\nQueen Mary came here Saturday\n\u25a0 with 45 other Indians from the tribe\nat Clayoquot, on the west coast of\nVancouver Island. With her was her\nhusband, Chief Joseph, who first\nVisited Victoria 80 years ago when\n' the city wat gateway to the gold\nI fields in British Columbia's Cari-\n: boo district.\nChiet Joseph, by his own calcula-\n. tion, is 92 years old, and his wife\nBays she is 85. They held court last\nI night in St. Ann's auditorium.\nj   Queen Mary speaks English and\ntalks freely with those who speak\nto her. Chief Joseph keeps silent,\n.' but his wife told interviewers he\n.' Was a \"good man and never fights\nI With other tribesmen or even the\nwhites.\"\nJames Douglas was Chief Factor\nOf the Hudson's Bay company post\nand also governor of the crown\ncolony of Vancouver Island when\nChief Joseph came here first.\nThat's only one of innumerable\nchanges that have taken place\u2014but\nthe old man takes them with an\n\u2022Ugh\" and a shrug Of the shoulders.\nLast night he wore a crown of\nknotted straw and feathers. His\ndark coat was decorated with brass\nbuttons and gold braid, and on his\nlapel was a gold medal presented\nto his brother, Schewish, in 1881\nfor saving the lives of persont\naboard a United States Barquentine\nwhich was wrecked along the west\ncoast.\nChief Joseph and Queen Mary\nwere married about I860 at Clayoquot, the ceremony being performed by Father Seagers, famed as an\nIndian missionary on the Pacilic\nclast\nThe chiet and his wife spent much\not their early lives oh sealing vessels. Father Hildebrand Melchoir, in\ncharge of the Indian residential\nschool at Kakawlz, near Clayoquot,\nsaid chief Joseph still longs lor the\nold sealing days.\n. Father Melchoir brought the Indian party to Victoria to attend the\ndiocesan Eucharlstlc congress during the week-end. He followed\nJoseph as long as he could.\nThen Sunday night the party\nattended a dinner in a downtown\nhotel. The priest told chief Joseph\nhe should be Careful how much\n\"white man's food\" he at*.\nBut the old Indian ate everything\nput before him. Today it was not\nhe but Father Melchoir who wis\nconfined to his room because he\n\"couldn't take it.\"\nQueen Mary still performs the\nold Indian dances despite her 66\nyears. Chief Joseph still walks about\nwithout trouble, but his legs are too\nshaky for the difficult dance gyrations.\nImprove Self . . .\nYoung Man Wants\nto Find Perfect\nGirl, He Writes\nBy VIRGINIA  LEE\nLONELY FELLOW is 20, is bashful, not well educated, cannot dance,\nhas little money and no car as he\nis out Of work at present, poor chap,\nbut seems to. have hope of getting\nsomething.\nHe   doesn't   like   the   girls   he\n' knows\u2014says they get drunk and\nrun about with fellows who have\nmoney and cars.\nHe seems to want me to correct\nilis 'grammar and get him a girl,\ni.\u00bbnd this is his description of the\n\u25a0pn he wants for a \"steady\" friend:\n|f She must be from 18 to 20, tall,\n. weight around 115 or 125 pounds,\njwith light or blonde hair and pretty. One who is affectionate, smokes\nrU she likes but doesn't drink. Must\n'loom* trom a good home, be able\n* > cook and run a home like a good\nOne that will be easy on the\njeketbook   and   invite   her   boy\nfiend to her home to get acquaint-\nd with her parents, and who will\n\u25a0teach him to dance, and not grudge\nTilm anything.\nHe would prefer a Catholic girl\nor one willing to become one. One\nWho will \"take the shyness out of\nfellow and be satisfied with a\n.ttle education and not brag about\nerself.\"\nShe must be satisfied to go to a\nshow when her boy friend has\n{money and not get mad when he\nhasn't. He doesn\" want a flirt or\nIahow off\u2014just \"a common, sensible\n^and good looking girl.\"\nI I think this is a pretty large ord-\nler, my dear chap. Do you think a\nJglrl as nearly .pejfect as that will\n,,8e Interested in you\u2014etfen if I knew\ntone\u2014which I don't?\nFmAKE Y0UR8ELF WORTHY\nI   Why don't you start to prepare\nlyourself to be worthy of such a\nPjlrl now, while you have leisure?\n|You can overcome your bashful-\n} ness by going where  people  are\niand   making   yourself   agreeable.\nf. You can learn to dance. Surely you\nI know some boy or girl who can\nj teach you, if you haven't money\ns enough to take lessons. You can\nalearn to swim, too. This is just the\nI season to learn. If you start now\nlyOu'll be quite proficient by aut-\nSumn.\n11   You see I think you should make\nI! yOurself a match for this paragon\nIIof womanhood you want for a girl\n|| friend. I don't know of such a one\nIjwho is in need ot a Sweetheart.\nI- But. don't worry, you'll meet her\nII in time if you keep on striving to\n-improve  yourself.   You  can  even\nimprove your education and learn\nto talk and write correctly if you\n-are interested in doing so. Educa-\nConstipatcd? You\nShonld Get at the Camel\nLett of people think they cant ba\n\"regular\" without frequent trips\nto the medicine chest. \"I Just\ndose up and get it over,\" they tell\nyou. But doctors know they\ndon't\"getltover\"atall-unait_ey\nlet at the cause of the trouble I\nChances are it's simple to find\nthe cause lt you eat only what\nmost people do-meat, bread,\npotatoes. It's likely you don't get\nenough \"bulk.\" And \"bulk\"\ndoesn't mean a lot of food. It's a\nkind ot food that Isn't consumed\nin the body, but leaves a soft\n\"bulky\" mass in the intestines\nand helps a bowel movement.\n'    at f\nhy\nIorb's All-Bran. It contains the\nIf that fits you, your ticket is a\ncrunchy breakfast cereal-Kel-\n\"bulk\" you need plus the great\nIntestinal tonic, vitamin B,.\nEat All-Bran every day, drink\nplenty ot water, and Just watch\nthe old world grow brighter!\nMade by Kellogg in London, Ont.\ntion is a continual process, Lonely\nFellow, and you can get as much\nof It as you want or are capable of\nassimilating, by reading, studying\nand learning from those who have\nit\nAnd about the girl: When you\nfall in love\u2014as you will\u2014you will\nthink she is just perfect, with all\nthe virtues you say you want your\nsweetheart to posses*. Good luck\nto you!\nKootenay Diocesan\nW. A. Meets, Home\nof Mrs. Applewhaite\nAn executive meeting of the\nKootenay Diocesan W. A. held at\nthe home of Mrs. H. Applewalte at\nWillow Point Monday afternoon.\nRev. W. J. Silverwood of Nelson\nmotored out a party, including Mrs.\nSilverwood, Mrs.' Turner Lee of\nBonnington, Mrs. J. Calbick and\nMrs. G. K. Ashby. Mrs. John Keen of\nKaslo and Mrs, W. Worsfold attended the meeting.\nSerial Story\nFIESTA\nBy   OREN   ARNOLD\nREAD THIS f IftST;\nHaving saved the lite of Ellen\nDale, screen star, with a lucky\nparachute jump after his plant had\nrun out of fuel in a, terrific storm,\nBill Baron and his lone passenger\nfinally arrive at a ranch house\nacross the Mexican border, unharmed and fatigued. Here they are\nwarmly received by Don Julio Montoya, wealthy Mexican, and extended every courtesy. Ellen becomes intrigued with the life at the Montoya\nranch and her interest in Bill grows.\nShe feels almost resentful When Panola Montoya, attractive daughter\nof their host, asks Bill to ride with\nher. Ellen befriends two Yaqui\nIndiahs, taken captive by Felix\nMontoya, the host's son, for stealing\ncows. Alarm is felt at the ranch\nwhen Bill and Panola fall to return.\nDon Jullb questions Ellen about\nBUI, still missing with his. daughter,\nbut she can tell him nothing.\nNOW GO ON WITH THE STORY:\nCHAPTER 6\nELLEN  fiALB  used  what  the\ncalled common  sense at about 3\na. m. with still no word from Bill\nBaron and the Mexican girl, and\nWent determinedly to bed.\nProbably it was common sense,\nat that, because exhaustion immediately dominated her mental\nturbulence and she went to sleep.\nShe did not even dream. At 6\no'clock, though, a putty-putt putty-\nputt putty-putt then a commanding\nHOI\" outside her window awakened her. instantly the was up and\nstaring out\n\"Bill? . . . Mr. Baron?\"\n. She called but got no answer.\n\"Who Is there?\" she demanded\nagain. The answer came not direct, but in conversation between\nthe horseman and Don Julio. Felix\nMontoya. Don Julio's son, had returned* As soon as she could dress,\nEllen hastened out to him.\n\"Is there any news?\" she demanded at once.\n\"I know nothing,\" he spoke fair\nEnglish. \"Father send a messenger\nfor me at Hermosillo. I have ride\nfast to get here. All I know is that\nsister and your man are gone to-\n(Continued on Page Six)\nMrs. T. J. Si Ferguson\nand Daughter Leave\nfor England June 22\nMiss Helen Ferguson, who teaches\nat King George high school In Vancouver, and her mother Mrs. T. J. S.\nFerguson Of Nelson, art leaving\nSaturday for New York, from where\nthey will sail June 22 on the Europa\nfor three months in England., Miss\nFerguson will do some research\nwork in history in London, and will\nalto take an extension course,\ngiven by a Swedish university, in\nphysical education, which is to be\nheld at Sturfy, in Kent, Later in\nthe summer. Miss Ferguson and her\nmother will visit relatives in the\nisland of Jersey,    \t\nITALIAN PRINCE TO WED\nNEW YORK, June 7 (AP)-The\nItalian consul general's office announced today that Prince Don Gui-\ndo Colonna di Paliano, Italian vice-\nconsul at Toronto, would be married here tomorrow to Miss Tatltna\nConsus, 22, MOscow-born daughter\nof the late Gules Consus, musician\nand composer. Her mother was princess. Mary Lieu En.\nGood Way to Water\nSweet Pea Vines\nCRESTON Social...\nCRESTON, B.C. \u2014 Miss Fanny\nLewis of Vancbuvef it visiting her\nfather, Fred Lewis.-She is a nurse-\nin-training at the General hospital\nin Vancouver. * .'.\nMrs. H. R. Willis Of Eastend, Sask.,\nit a visitor to Creston, a guest of\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. M. B. Ashby.\nMrs. J. J. Grady of Wynndel was\nrenewing Creston acquaintances on\nMonday.\nG. L. Salter Of Vancouver wat a\nvisitor on Monday, coming in for a\nconference Of the executive of the\nReclamation Farmers' atsociation, Of\nwhich he Is a member.\nE. E. Poole of Edmonton is spending the week in Creston. He Is interested with Dr. C. P. Bruner in\n2200 acres of dyked lands on Nick's\nIsland, and will remain for the high\nwater period.\nMiss Esther Vatseur left Friday\nfor Medicine Hat, where she it to\nretide. Prior to leavlhg she was\nguest at-a party at the home of Miss\nE. Armltage, at which the wat presented with a photo album filled\nwith local scenes.\nMits Margaret Blinco visited Nelson friends.\nR. Buydens of Nelion has been\non a visit to Creston.\nCyril Burns of Lethbridge is on\na visit to his parents, Mr. and Mn.\nPeter Burns.\nMrs. T. LaBelle and daughter, La-\nvonne, of Williams Lake, are visiting the former's parents,' Mr. and\nMrs. Roy Browell.\nMrs. Matt, Clayton and son, Bill,\nare home from a visit to her son,\nRobert, at Kitnberley.\nKASLO Social \u2666 \u2022.\nKASLO, B. C. \u2014 Among the many\nNelson golf fans to visit Ratio Sunday were Mrs. Vic Owen, Mrs. R.\nWaldie, Mrs. R. L. McBride and son,\nMrs. R. Watson, Mr. and Mrs. B.\nTownshend, Mrs. W. W. Ferguson,\nMr. and Mrs. E. A. Murphy, Dr. and\nMrs. J. H. Bourgue, Mr. and Mrs.\nWallach and son, and T. E. L'evas-\nseur, who, in themselves formed a\nlarge part of the throng who followed the players in the semifinals and finals of the Kootenay\nGolf Association tourney held over\nthe week-end.\nMiss K. Nisbet of Nelson spent the\nweek-end at the Nisbet summer\nhome in Mirror Lake.\nMrs. L. MacPherson of Trail was\nthe week-end guest of her father-\nin-law. John MacPherson.\nA. R. Barrow returned Friday\nfrom a visit to Nelson and left Saturday lor his home in Johnsons\nLanding.\nJ. R. Thompson was in from Six\nMile Lake Saturday to visit his\nwife and infant daughter, who are\npatients in the Victorian hospital.,\nP. C. Rice of Trail spent Sunday\nIn town.\nH. A. Newcomen, who attended\nfuneral services for his father in\nNelson Tuesday, returned to Kaslo\nWednesday, and visited the Lardeau district the latter part of the\nweek, returning to Kaslo Saturday.\nHe will spend several days Jiere\npn business before returning to his\nhome in Field.\nMr. and Mrs. C. E. Wilt and small\ndaughter of Spokane are spending\na few days in town.\nMr. and Mrs. A. J. Harris of Retallack are spending a few days in\ntown.\nMrs. R. A. Chester is confined to\nher home by illness.\nMr. and Mrs. Floyd S. Rowe of\nSpokane are holidaying in town.\nBy MRS. MARY MORTON\n*    MENU HINT\nBaked Ham Creamed Potatoes\nPineapple Ring Sandwiches\nHot Roils\nIce Cream Cake\nCoffee\nThis may be a luncheon or supper menu. Whatever it is, the tempting platter of pineapple ring sandwiches will prove very attractive\nwhen you entertain. In the following recipe the two slices of pineapple are put together with cottage\ncheese, but you can eliminate the\nham and fill the sandwiches with\ncrab, chicken or lobtter talad, if you\nprefer. Likewite the centre may be\nmade of sections of orsnge or grapefruit, banana or other fruit instead\nof the avocado.\nTODAY'8 RECIPES\nPINEAPPLE RING SANDWICHES\u2014Put two slices of pineapple together for each person to\nbe served, with a filling and top-\n\u2022ping of cottage cheese. Top mixture with cherry or olive. Garnish\nthe plate with watercress, and in\nthe centre, on a bed Of lettuce and\nwatercress, place tllcet of avocado.\nMayonnaise or French dressing may\nbe served in a separate dish.\nMaple Refrigerator Cake\nOne and one-third cups (one cm)\nsweetened condented milk, two-\nthirds cup maple syrup, one-half cup\nwhipping cream, 24 vanilla wafers.\nThoroughly blend milk and maple\nsyrup In a heavy saucepan. Bring\nto boil over low heat add boll ttlr-\nring constantly about tour minutes\nor until mixture thickens. Cool. Beat\ncream until stiff and told into mixture. Line narrow, oblong pan wth\nwax paper. Cover with maple mix-,\nture. Add layer of Waters, alternating in this way, until maple mixture is used; finishing with layer\nof wafers. Chill in refrigerator six\nhours or longer. To serve, turn out\non small platter and carefully remove wax paper,^>>t ii, sheet and\nserve plain 6r ^^g-hipped cream,\nIrrigation ditches for tweet\nNo doubt your Sweet peas were\nplanted last fall or early this spring.\nDid you know a succession of sowings may be made at intervals\nthrough late May and June? A fair\ncrop can be obtained from these\nplantings it they are kept well watered and mulched.\nAs shown In this Garden-Graph,\nthe best method of watering it to\n\u2022have a V-shaped trench about six\nInches back trom the plants. -Then\nwith a hose let water slowly How\ninto the trench until the toots have\nreceived a thorough soaking. It it\nadvisable to give the vines a thorough watering once a Week, or\nmore often It the ground seems dry.\nThis method of watering sweet peas\nit more effective than .frequent fight\nsprinklings.\n1 At tweet peas require cool toll,\nthe vines thould be well mulched\nwith either straw, peat moss or well\nrotted manure.\nIn Tired Faces ...\nInexpensive Facial Is Easy to\nGive Oneself and Erases Lines\nBy JULIET SHELBY\nDon't let the day's work leave\nits mark on your face. Even the\nyoungest girl can look 10 years\nolder than she really is after a\nlong hard day.\nOne of the best methods of eradicating lines caused by temporary\ntiredness is to give yourself an Epsom salts facial. This type facial\nis also helpful In correcting an Oily\nskin, and If this is one Of your\nproblems you can take an Epsom\nsalts facial every day in addition\nto your regular skin care. If, however, you nave no oily skin prob-\nfor tried facet and can be taken\nabout twice a week.\nThtt it a very inexpensive beauty\ntreatment because it only require!\nInteresting . . .\nDoctor Disagrees\nWith Book About\nHoney and Health\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING, M.D.\n\"HONEY AND HEALTH\" is the\nname of a book by Dr. Brodag Beck,\nwhojmblished a book on \"Bee Venom Therapy\", which advocated the\nuse of bee venom in arthritis and\nrheumatism. At the time the book\nwas published I did not think much\nof the scientific evidence prodU6ed\nto substantiate hit claims, but when\nI published an article on arthritis\nnot long after, I was severely criticized by several doctors for not\nadvocating the use of bee venom.\nThis book on honey is interesting, but hardly more convincing\nthan the on* o nbet venom.\nI don't believe Dr. Beck will obtain many devotees of honey by\nreminding us that \"the indefatigable German Fuehrer il a liberal\nconsumer of honey, in which he indulges daily at breakfast.\"\nThen, Dr. Beck says, \"foods\nwhich by themselves ate salutary\nbecome injurious when combined.\nMeat, eggs, milk, starches, tweets\nand acids alone are digettible, but\nbecome heavy and Indigestible when\nmixed.\" I wish people would not\nsay such things, because they simply\nare not true and do a great deal\nof harm with nervous people who\nstarve themselves into a state of\nmalnutrition from fear after hearing nonsense of that kind. Also\nwhen he says, \"Ice cream is not\nobjectionable, but when eaten after\na meal it will convert the Otherwise digestible food to a state of\ndecomposition,\" he It absolutely and\nentirely false. Ice cream is a splendid food, particularly after' a meal.\nHe says honey in hot water is\nbetter than alcohol as a pick-me-up.\nHoney, according to Dr: Beck, prolongs life, being responsible for\nAnacreon's living to the age of 115,\nPythagoras to 90, Thomaa Parr 'to\n152. Unfortunately lor this argument, In the time when these centenarians lived, honey was-.the only\nfood used for sweetening. Sugar\nhadn't been tavettted. What became\nof til the other people in those days\nwhen everyone ate honey?\nHoney is advocated for rheumatism and as an expectorant, a diuretic and for diabetes. It may be\nall right to give lt for rheumatism,\nAntidote for Jitters . . .\nParents and Children Should Enjoy\nNature; Urges Quiet Country Walks\nBy GARRY C. MYER8,  PH.  D.\nHow can one get enjoyment and\nappreciation of the Country whiz.-\ning through it at 50 miles an hour?\nWe need to go on foot and with\nleisure.\nIn this generation of jitters,\nwhen every other bed in our hospitals on the average is occupied\nby a mental patient, it might be\nwell if we and Our children would\noften seek quiet and repose amid'\nthe trees, flowers and birds, provided we slowly walk among\nthem, taking time to look and listen and respond to them. Parents\nwho begin with the tot to go with\nhim to enjoy the calm and beauty\nof Nature might be able to cultivate in him a lasting interest in\nsuch peaceful environment.\nFine if dad would hike with his\nboy on Saturday or Sunday afternoon, if mother would hike w\"th\nher daughter and if, occasionally,\nall would go walk together into\nthe neglected quiet places not. so\nfar away. Thousands of parents\nin big cities if they cared, could\ndrive out to good places trom\nwhich   to   hike;   thousands   more\ncould go by but or train. The cost\nmight be less -than\" if they all went\nto a movie. And how much richer\nthe returns! Why not more family\npicnic dinners, too?\nThen if we parents would learn\nthe names of trees and flowers and\nbirds, how much more interesting\nto be among them with our children. AS with a person, so with\na bird, flower or tree, we feel so\nmuch more friendly when we\nknow the name.\nBEING, GOOD  CITIZENS\nBut we need to be good citizen!\nwhen we are enjoying Nature with\nour children. Whether in the public park on the roadside, by the\nbrook, in the woods or fields, we\nshall be careful to leave no paper\nor anything else to mar the beauty\nor, to be a nuisance to others; careful to injure no plants, shrubs,\nflowers, treet or fences. We ehali\nnot even cross private places without permission of the owner. In\nsuch situations we have rare opportunities to get over to our children basic moral principles dramatizing them.\nbut for diabetes I flatly disagree.\nThe author's personal comprehension is that the abuse of artificial\nsugar and salt are mainly to be\nblamed for It (i. e. diabetes)\nwrites Dr. Beck, which shows that\nhis personal comprehension Is incapable of wrestling with scientific\ndata. Diabetics are warned to avoid\nthe doctrine that honey is good tor\nthem at their own risk.\nThe folklore Of honey Is interesting. If a bee lights on the lips of\na new-born baby he ts endowed\nwith eloquence. Hohey was much\nUsed in marriage ceremonies\u2014in\nEgypt the groom always presented\nhis wife with a pot- of honey. Perhaps the word ''honeymoon\" came\nfrom this. It was a belief of the\nancients that anyone drowned In\nhoney would revive.\nsalts to each and lei the salt c:\ntals dissolve thoroughly. If you wish\n        li\"'    '\na package of Epsom salts, two bowls\nand some clean wash cloths. Cleanse\nyour face thoroughly, either with a\nmild soap and -tepid water, or with\nyour favorite cleansing cream. After\nyou have removed the cleanser apply a lubricating cream and leave\nit bn while you prepare your materials for the face treatment\nFill one of the bowls with very\nhot water and the other with ice\nwater. Add a tablespoon ot Epsom\ncrys-\n      wk\nto make the solution a little stronger\nyou can put in two tablespoons of\nthe Epsom salts but never use any\nmore than that. Put a wash cloth\nIn the hot bowl and one in the\ncold bowl.\nTREAT NECK TOO\nNow remove all traces of lubricating cream from your face. Put\na towel around your shoulderB but\nleave your neck exposed so it can\nalso get the benefits of the applications. Wring out the cloth that\nhas been soaking in the hot solution and hold it on your face and\nneck tor a minute. Then take the\ncloth from the bowl of cold solution. Apply it to your face and\nneck in the same way. Before you\nstart using the iced solution put\nyour other cloth back in the hot\nbowl so lt will be ready for your\nnext hot application. Do this 12\ntimes, alternating hot and cold.\nPat your face dry with a soft\nhand towel. If you have been giving yourself this treatment to eliminate signs of fatigue, it is often\nhelpful to again smooth some lubricating cream over your face and\nthroat Leave the cream on tor at\nleast 30 minutes, and lie down.\nNew Under-am\nCream Deodorant\nsafely\nStops Perspiration\n1. Does not rot dresses \u2014 does\nnot irritate skin.\n2. No waiting to dty. On be used\nright after shaving,\n3. Instantly stops perspiration\nfor 1 to J dtyt\u2014removes\nodor from perspiration.\n4. A pure, white, greaseless, stainless vanishing cream.\n5. Arrid Is the nil deo.ot.nt to\ntup petspiration which has\nbeen awarded the Tested tad   '\nApproved Seal of the American\nInstitute of laundering, for\nbeing HARMtESS TO FABRICS.\nARRID   tjar\ntt <_**g, co-meilf, and \u25a0MWHgMWt MMM\nMill OIL\nPALMOLIVE\nMore than 3,600 years ago, slaves blended\nthe tropical tret oils ot Olive and Palm.\nThit costly mixture, crude though it was,\nplayed a moat Important part in tht toilet\nof beautiful women. They knew It toothed\ntheir skin, kept it toft, clean... smooth\nand lovely.\nfor 3,000 years nothing has been discovered that it finer, gentler, mote soothing for your skin than these wonderful oils\nof the Orient.\nAnd today, with the most careful\nscientific methods, these same precious,\nFlritonlyOliv.Oll.,.Now,\nonly Palmolive Iceept tht\nQuint' tklnt lovely\nnatural oils are blended into Palmolive\nSoap.\nPalmolive't purity; its safe, gentle, penetrating lather; and iu natural, delicate\ncolouring, are due only to the secret blending of these two age-aid beauty aids.\nSo, knowing what Palmolive It made with,\nyou can use it safely, without fear, for your\nmm delicate skin; Truly, Palmolive will\nkeep ia your complexion that toft, lovely\nyouthfuloets. In 72 countries of the world,\nmore women ute Palmolive than any other\ntoilet soap.\nTHE KIDS WANT\nMETOTtUYOU\nDAD...THEY\nTHINK YOlfRE\nA'HUMDINGER'\/\nTUT-TUT.\u201eSutH AN\nBXPP.E.SION\/...STIU.-AHEM-I AM A\nPRETTY (3000 MAfilQAN\/\nWhen You're at a \"Low Ebb\"\n... Just Try This Friendly Stimulation\nWhin you feel tired end jaded\u2014\nthat's when you need a fragrant\noup of Maxwell House. Its friendly\nstimulation will buoy you up... it\nnever lets you down. And how you\nwill love the rich, mellow flavour\nof thit blend of finest coffee.\nMaxwell House comet to you In\na super-vacuum tin\u2014the one ture\nway to bring you truly roaster-\nfreah coffee, For a drip-pot or glass\ncoffee maker ask for Drip Qrlrtd\nMaxwell Houte\u2014for boiled or percolated coffee get the Regular Grind.\nNOW 2 GRINDS\nDRIP GRIND\nAND RIOUUR\nMAXWELL HOUSE. COFFEE\nwM\n1    HOUSE\n' Coff*'\nMOP\nMHIt\n NELSON DAILY. NEWS. NELSON. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNING. JUNE 8, 1838\nw%\nFirst Delegates Arrive lor Ihe\nConference of Womens Institutes\nWill Be Shown City in Afternoon\n-First    delegates    from    distent\nfronts have already arrived tor the\nopening of the West Kootenay Cent-\n- ral  Women's Institute  convention\nwhich opens at the Institute room\nat the Civic Centre this morning,\nif end at which it is hoped to have 30\nInstitutes represented. A busy two\ndays has been planned during which\na number of addresses on Institute\n[  work, health topics and subjects ot\nL Interest will be given. Following\nf afternoon tea, today, delegates will\n|  be guests of the City Fathers who\nI will drive them through the city and\nI  to points of interest\n'  WEONE8DAY\nRegistration of the delegates will\nI be followed by prayers by Rev. J,\nI G. Holmes after which Mayor N. C.\nI Stibbs will officially welcome the\nt| visitors.\nB Mrs. H. H. Pitts, president of the\n, Nelson Women's Institutes, who\nI will preside, will give a short talk\ni1 on the work of Women's Institutes\n;; in general, followed by the ap-\nI pointment of the resolutions committee, after which reports of some\nI of the institutes will be given.\n\\ Delegates will be guests of the\n;\u25a0 Nelson Women's Institute at lunch.\n? >- During the day addresses will be\nI given by F, A. Jewett, who will\nL speak on an educational topic; Dr.\nF. M. Auld on \"Cancer\"; Mrs. V.\nFOR SOUR\nSTOMACH AND\nDon't suffer from after-eating discomfort, Eno's \"Fruit Salt\" will soon set you\nright, for Eno is alkaline. It neutralizes\nacid condition anil sweetens the stomach.\nAnd mote... Eno gets at the root of\nthe trouble and prevents recurrence. It\nregularizes intestinal activity, keeps the\ncliminative tract free from poisonous\n' waste.\nA dash of Eno in a glass of water morning and night soon normalizes and revivifies the entire inner system. Doctors\nrecommend Eno and take it themselves\nbecause they know it is safe! It acts gent-\nly, effectively, forms no habit. Remember, life today calls fot Eno's \"Fruit Salt\"\n_ | so 'phone your druggist now. Handy size,\nP ' -30c, Household size, 83c\n(Advt)\ne\nJyou are Buffer-   .\n,   ing from Asthma, Hoy  ,\nFever or Bronchial trouble, .\ninhale the fumee of Kollogg's\nAsthma Eclief.You\nwill got easy relief.\nFor over 60 yearn   jlfAsntMA j!\nthis famous herbal   ||| reuef |[\npreparation has\nbenefited thousands of .uffor ers.\nYoitrnetrratdmsstori\nhasit. _\n$1.00 per Un, trial aizo Me.\nObtainable also in cigarette fans. i\nNurtttropana Lyman Co. United\nEaulillsltad 1854\nToronto, Canada\nS. McLachlan, superintendent ot\nWomen's Institutes tor B. C, who\nwill speak on Institute work and\nmethods; Miss Nancy Dunn on\n\"Diphtheria and Immunization\";\nand Dr. W. Laishley on 'Eye Work.\"\nThe convener's report will be given\nby Mrs. K. Popoff and Mrs. C. W.\nTyler will give a vocal solo.\nA concert is planned for the evening, an interesting feature of\nwhich will be an address by Sidney\nHorswill, who will speak on \"My\nCoronation Tour.\"\nTHUR8DAY\nFollowing the singing of \"Our\nRally Song,\" Thursday morning,\nprayers will be offered by Rev. T. J.\nS. Ferguson, after which reports of\nthe Institutes will be continued.\nAn address by Mrs. H. McGregor\nof Penticton will be followed by\nfurther reports and a talk by Dr.\nC. M. Bennett on baby clinics.\nAt the afternoon session Mrs.- H.\nMcGregor, president of the Federated Women's Institutes of Canada\nwill speak on the Aims and Objects\nof the Federated. Further reports\nand a violin solo by Catherine Argyle will be followed by a talk on\nOld Country Institutes .by Mrs.\nDuncan Carter of Robson.\nDr. F. P. Sparks will speak on\n\"Diagnosis and Treatment of Early\nTuberculosis,\" Glenna Lowes will\nplay a piano solo, and the report\nof the resolutions committee will\nround out the day.\nREGULATIONS WOULD\nAID ADMINISTRATION\nN. Y. MARRIAGE LAWS\nALBANY, N. Y., June 7 (API-\nRegulations designed to facilitate\nadministration of the law which\nbans marriage of persons with communicable syphilis, effective July\n1, were announced today by New\nYork state health department.\nThe law, one of two enacted by\nthe 1938 legislature in a campaign\nto-curb the disease, requires prospective newlyweds, with certain exceptions, to undergo a physician's\nexamination and a serological blood\ntest* before applying for a marriage\nlicence.\nHOLD NEGRO YOUTHS\nON MURDER CHARGES\nCHICAGO, June 7 (AP) - An\ninquest into Mrs. Florence Johnson's slaying was thrown into turmoil today when her husband, Elmer, made an attack upon Robert\nNixon, 18-year-old negro accused\nof killing her with a brick as she\nslept.\nThe coroner's Jury recommended\nNixon and Earl Hicks, negro, be\nheld to the grand jury charges of\nmurdering Mrs. Johnson. Police\nsaid both youths confessed they\nhad entered the Johnson's south\nside apartment, but each accused\nthe other of wielding the brick\nwhich killed Mrs. Johnson, mother\nof two small children.\nFINDS 30 PEOPLE IN\nCONDEMNED TENEMENT\nVANCOUVER, June 7 (CP) -\nAlderman H. J. De Graves told the\ncity council today he had found a\nlarge east-end tenement house In\nwhich 30 people were living although the building had been condemned by the city health department. -\nAt the front and rear doors of the\ntenenient, De Graves said, were city\nhealth department notices posted\nmore than a year ago declaring the\nplace \"unfit for human habitation.\"\n\"The Story of a Century\" Pageant to Be\nFeature of Catholic Centenary in Nelson\nA feature of the commemoration of,the centenary of the first Catholic Masses said in Nelson\ndiocese, whicfvwill take place in Nelson Thursday, vvijl be a pageant by pupils of St. Joseph's\nschool. The pageant will be a tribute to the devotion and heroism of pioneer\npriests who brought civilization and Christianity to the Northwest.\nAlfPhotos Below Are by McGregor;\nii\nSAFEWAY\nMID-WEEK FEATURES\nWEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\u2014JUNE 8 - 9\nCHOICE   FIELD\nTOMATOES   2 lb. 25c\nWEDNESDAY  ONLY\nQUAKER PUFFED WHEAT*. Pkt 9i\nCOWAN'S COCOA: 1 Ib. tin  24\u00ab\nPEANUT BUTTER: 13 oz. tin  16*\nBrown Sugar\n3 Ib. 19c\nP. & G. SOAP\n3 Bars 10c\nHEINZ BAKED BEANS: 18 ox., 2 tint  25*\nHICHWAY COFFEE: Lb  19<>\nROGERS COLDEN SYRUP: 2't, tin  10<*\nTUNA FISH: White meat, \u25a0\/_\u25a0-, 2 tlm  151\nBUTTER\nFirst  Grade   Highway\n3 Ib. 87c\nSALT\nIted or Plain-\nCarton 15c\nIodized or Plain\u20142's\nPACIFIC MILK\n.9<>\nDemonstration by Mri. Wilson\nWE RESERVE THE RIGHT\nTO LIMIT QUANTITIES\nSAFEWAY STORES\nLIMITED\nL.i\t\nShirley* Lunn  and Bena   DeLecruzio  will Miss Catherine Rahal as the Mary L, Davis and Beverley Cady, who will\ndance the French Minuet, ..   Angel of the Century. dance the Irish Jig.\n'MSI  fl_\n43.19 Per tent of Cars Checked in !j\nSafely Compaign Have Defeclive\nLighlsr 3.55 Per Cent Bad Brakes\nHiqhway Officers Find\n298 Cars Have.Bad\nHeadlights\nDRIVERS WELCOME\nCHECKUP OF CARS\nProvincial police highway patrol\nofficers in their safety campaign in\nNelson and Trail found that 43.89\nper cent of the cars and trucks\nchecked had defective headlights,\nbut' that only 3.55 per cent had defective brakes. They issued 325\ncheckup slips requiring the operators to have defects remedied and\nto report the work done.\nFigures compiled from the reports of Constable It. A. Lees of\nNelson and Constable J. A. Henry\nof Castlegar revealed that out of a\ntotal of 879 cars and trucks checked\nfor headlight defects, 298 required\nremedying; and that 'out of 591 vehicles checked for defective brakes,\n21 required mechanical attention.\nOTHER DEFEATS\nOther detects listed included:\nDefective tail lights  24\nLicences and plates not in place\nor missing  13\nDrivers unable produce licence .. 16\nMiscellaneous:\nRear view mirrors    2\nWindshield     1\nWindshield wiper  ..'.    1\nClearance lights    2\nOther Highway act regulations ..  9\nA notable feature of the safety\ncampaign, the officers reported, was\nthe cooperation of the driving public. In most instances drivers wete\nglad to have their vehicles checked:\nand in others operators inquired\nof the police in advance when and\nwhere the checkups would be made\nin order that they might take their\nvehicles to be checked.\nOBJECTOR8 FEW\nIt was pointed out tha the few\nstrenuous objectors in the majority\nof cases instances were those whose\ncar or truck was most in need of\nattention.\nConstable Lees reported: \"With\nthe exception of headlight adjustments, the majority of vehicles\nchecked in connection with this\ncampaign were found to be in good\nmechanical condition. It was not\nfound necessary to remove any vehicle from the highway due to extreme mechanical defect.\"\nConstable Henry found \"the cooperative attitude of the public toward these checkups seems to be\nmore pronounced and the good will\nof not a few persons to same wss\nopenly mentiond.\"\nThe polka-dotted pleated skirt\nwith the plain fitted jacket blouse\nis a great favorite this season. It\nis good for town or country wear.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press -\nBEXHILL, England - Major Cl\nB. Grace, 56, member of one  of |\nEngland's notable cricketing families.\nOTTAWA, Ont - Donald },\\\nMacDonell. 69, founder of the Mac- 1\nDonald-Conyers Lumber company 1\nand former superintendent of UM\nJ. R Booth company.\nVERA CRUZ, Mexico _ Monsignor Rafael Gup?ar Y. Valencia, ML\nBishop of Vera Cruz and one ofl\nMexico's    most    widely    known!\nchurchmen. f\nBOSTON \u2014 Mrs. George Hfl\nVlure Lee, 67, widely known philanthropist and daughter of Colons\nel George McVlure, a founder of\nTiffany and company. New York.\nNEW YORK - R. Gonzales, 46.\nfor 14 years a type expert In.\ncharge of production and layout\nin the promotion department of\nthe New York Herald Tribune.\nPLACES GARDENIAS ON\nJEAN HARLOW'S CRAVE\nHOLLYWOOD,- June- 7 -(AP)\u2014j\nJean Harlow's death one year ago'\nwas remembered today with tne'\ngardenias she loved. Fresh whita,\nblossoms were to be placed on the,\nactress' crypt by William Powell,\nher last suitor.\nMiss Mary McDougall as Miss\nCanada,\nMiss' Betty Kirkpatrlck, who\nwill represent the Northwest.\nMr. George'Lunn, who is the\nNarrator of'\"The Story of a\nCentury\".\nMiss Rosa Stewart as\nEcclesia\".\n'Mater\nNELSON Social\n\u2666 \u2666\nBy MISS PRISCILLA GELINAS\n\u2022 Mrs. George Dill entertained\nat her home Monday for her daughter, Joan, who celebrated her seventh birthday. Invited guests were\nMiss Joan Kerr, Miss Eileen McCann, Miss Verna Blackwell, Miss\nGwen Clarke, Miss Paula Bates,\nMiss Jean Sixtone, Miss Joan Annable, Miss Marjorie Simms, Mis).\nMolly Arneson, Miss Donna ClarK,\nMiss Norey Cummins, Miss Audrey\nGreer, Jackie Bates, Herbie Pitts,\nBobbie Pitts, Bobbie Fleming, Tom-\nmie Shorthouse, Teddy Annable\nand Harvey Fleury.\n\u2022 His Excellency Bishop Johnson and A. G. Gelinas motored to\nKaslo Tuesday.\n\u2022 Mr. and' Mrs. W. Kline and\nMr. and Mrs. Jack McPhail left\nMonday on a motor trip to Rochester.\n\u2022 Miss Elsie Smith left Monday for Vancouver to spend two\n.weeks vacation a guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs, William Smith.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs, F. S. Chandler\nHave You a\nUsed\nTEA WA60N\ni\n\u25a0 '\nWhy Not Turn It\nInto Cash?\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (2) lines 6 times 80c net\nTwo  (2) lines once 20c net\nNelson Daily News\nPHONE 144\n\\\nof Kaslo were city shoppers Monday.\ne Miss Paula Gansner has returned from two months at Rossland.\ni Jack Riddell and daughter of\nKaslo were Nelson visitors Tuesday.\n\u2022 , Norval German has returned\nfrom a two week vacation at Wey-\nburn, Sask.\n\u2022 Miss Anne Muraro and Miss\nMary Muraro entertained the Junior C. W- L. at their home on Granite road Monday evening when\nthose present were Miss Margaret\nScanlan, Miss Helen Scanlan, Miss\nJeanette Ledger, Mrs. Douglas\nCummins, Miss Helen Denison, Mrs.\nR. R. Brown, Mrs. A. Rash, Miss\nHelen Stubbs, Miss Helen Ferman,\nMrs. C. Deferro, Miss Jean Robertson, Miss Helen Sculley, Mrs. A.\nDuclose, Mrs, C. A. Larson, Mrs.\nW. A. Reid, Mrs. J. P. Duffy, Miss\nPriscllla Gelinas, Miss Mary Muraro\nand Miss Anne Muraro.\n\u25a0 \u2022 C. E. Fisher, Vic Owen and\nVincent Fink motored to Trail Monday to attend the board of trade\nbanquet.\n\u2022 Ronnie Allan of Kaslo is visiting Nelson for a few days.\n\u2022 Seymour Robertson of the\nKootenay Belle mine spent the\nweek-end in town.\n\u2022 Lome Mansfield is spending a\nvacation at Vancouver.\n\u2022 G. Barwis of Harrop was a\nNelson visitor Tuesday.\n\u2022 Andy Shutty spent Monday at\nKaslo.\n\u2022 W. McCandlish of Trail is\nspending a few days in town a guest\nof his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. Mo\nCandlish.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. J. Tindale. of South\nSlocan was a Nelson visitor Tues'\nday.\n\u2022 Arthur Vance of the Durango\nmine left Monday for Kelowna to\nspend a few, days. He plans to return by motor accompanied by his\nfather.\n\u2022 Enid Graham of Slocan City,\nwho was visiting Nelson for two\nweeks, returned to her home yes'\nterday.\n\u2022 Ed Martin of the Reno mine is\nspending a few days in town.\ne Mr. and., Mrs. Norman Mahon,\nCarbonate street, have as their\nguests Mrs. Million's mother, Mrs.\nA, Chappe'l, her. sister, Mrs, Gra\nSIMPLIFYDE SPELING SOSYETI TO\nORGANYZ NU-SPELING CAMPANE\nLONDON, June 7 (CP) \u2014 The\nSimplifyde'Speling sosyeti iz cum-\ning too Lundun Joon 18 too organ-\nyz a campane which, it lz hopet,\nwil make speling eerier.\nA smawl armi of bludles revol-\nooshunariz heded by Profesor Gilbert Murray and reinforst by Profesor Lloyd James wil invade the\ncapital on behaf of the nu-spelers.\nThe Simplifyde Speling sosyeti\nis an outgrowth of the old nu-spelers founded by the late Sir George\nHunter, shipbuilder, who died last\nyear at the age of 91. The new sosyeti hopes to reawaken interest in nu-\nspeling and is holding its conference lor the first time in 12 years.\nEven members of the sosyeti have\nnot decided what will happen to\nBritish family and christian names\nif their form of speling gains general use. Professor Murray will have\nto drop wun \"r\" from his name.' H.\nG. Wells would becum Wels. Greater difficulty is seen if the system\nshould involve such English names\nas Cholmondely (pronounced Chum-\nly), Majoribanks (Marshbanks) or\nDe Uphaugh (Dupper).   ,\nAdherents of the sosyeti claim\ntheir system of spelling which appears difficult to the beginer, inured to orthodox spelling, becomes\nfar easier than the customary manner after its principles have been\nlearned.\n'ALL MEN ARE\"\u2014NO, IT'S JUST '\n\"LAZY\" SAY PARLIAMENTARIANS\nOTTAWA, June 7 (CP) - The\nhouse committee on the civil service act today heard a discourse\non laziness by R. J. Deachman\n(Lib. Hurcp North) based on the\npremise that \"all men are lazy.\"\n\"All progress depends on laziness, by obtaining a maximum of\nwork with a minimum of labor,\"\nhe said. \"Cabinet ministers are\nlazy and deputy ministers are\nlazy. They are anxious to have efficient chiefs nf departments so\ndepartmental matters will run\nsmoothly without their personal\ntouch.\"\nIf all men are lazy, the efficiency experts of the organization\nbranch would be lazy too and we\nQUEEN HAS A COLD\nLONDON, JUne 7 (AP).-Quee^\nElizabeth is suffering from a slight\ncold and is remaining at the Royal'\nlodge at Windsor for the time being as a precautionary measure.\nLOWERY'S\nGROCETERIA\u2014BAKER ST.\nQUALITY AND SERVICE\nALWAY8 RELIABLE\nPhone 406      Free Delivery\nGRENFELL'S CAFE\nFor quality and reasonable\nprices.\u2014Our   pastries   are\ndelish.\u2014We satisfy.\nR. & R. Grocery,\nThe Home of Better Foods..\nQUALITY   GROCERIES   AT\nSAVING PRICES\nPHONE  161\nFREE DELIVERY       :\nButcherteria News\nWEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY SPECIALS\n8PECIAL VEAL STEAKS ajjjj\nSPECIAL VEAL PAT-      fCl*\nTIES-Lb  *-\u00bb>\nLAMB CHOPS- Tl\u00a3\nROUND 8TEAK-Tender;\nPORK SPARERIB8-        JJ|*\n2 Ib _\u00bb-\u00bb>\nBONELESS STEW BEEF <%**\n-2 Ibs *-\u00bb>\nLEAN STEWING VEAL-_i_#\u00ab\n2 ibi a5v\nLOIN PORK CHOPS-\nLb\t\nNIPPY CHEESE\u2014\nLb\t\nJ2*\n28*\nLIGHT LUNCH SPECIALS\nMade In Our Own Sanitary\nKitchen\nPOTATO 8ALAD\u2014\nLb .:\t\nMACARONI8ALAD-\nLb\t\nJELLIED CHICKEN It's*\nM0ULD8-Each   OV\nPORK PIES\u2014Oven fresh!\n4 for \t\nJELLIED VEAL\u2014\nLb - - \u2022-,\u25a0\u2022\nPOTTED MEAT\u2014\nLb _ _\t\nCHICKEN LOAF-\nLb \t\nSPICED HAM\u2014\nLb. ..'.\t\n8POKANE COTTAGE\nCHEE8E-Lb _\n25*\n35*\n25*\n50*\n45*\n28*\nPHONES 527 - 528\nNelson's Premier Market\nFREE DELIVERY\nwould have a lazy civil service,\"\nsaid W. H. Golding (Lib., Huron-\nPerth).\n\"Men may be physically lazy\nbut mentally bright,\" replied Mr.\nDeachman.\n\"In the beginning, Adam tilled\nthe soil with his hands, then on\nthe advice of Eve, used the spade,\nand so on through the ages came\nprogress,\" said Mr. Deachman.\n\"Even eating the forbidden\nfruit was a sign of laziness,\" suggested Mr. Golding.\n\"Adam was too lazy to pick the\nfruit \u2014 he had his wife do it,\"\ncommented J. F. Pouliot (Lib.\nTemiscouata), chairman of the.\ncommittee.\nham Hamilton and niece, Gail, of\nVancouver, who will spend a month\nin Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Sarkis Terzian\nof the Euphrates mine were Nelson\nvisitors Tuesday.\n\u2022 . Army Armstrong of Trail, who\nis spending the summer on the\nNorth Shore, was a visitor to Nelson\nTuesday.\n\u2022 Walley Meaklns of Trail Is\nspending a few days in town a guest\nof his father, B. Meakins, Anderson\nstreet.\n\u2022 Mrs. H. Carlin has returned\nfrom a week at'Trail.\n\u00bb, Mrs. O. G. Dunn of.Grand\nForks Is a guest of her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. J, P,\nHoogerwerf,' Nelson avenue.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. John McPhail,\n917 Silica street, and Mr. and Mrs.\nWilliam Kline, left by car Sunday\nfor Rochester, Minn. They expect\nto be away about two weeks.\nONTARIO GIRL KILLED\nIN CANARY ISLANDS\n. TORONTO, June 7 (CP)-Miss\nMary Lowe of Fort William was\nkilled yesterday afternoon in the\nCanary Islands when an automobile\nhit a wagon in which she was riding.\nMiss Lowe, 28-year-old daughter\nof Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Lowe of\nFort William, was en route to Nigeria in French West Africa where\nshe was going to be a nurse and\nlonary for the Sudan, interior\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nVASSARS'\nPHONES\n831\n832\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nGood Buying for Wednesday and Thursday\nChoice Steer Beef\njuicy Round Steaks,\n2 Ibs 45.+\nBoneless Stewing, Ib.   15*\nPot Roasts, Ib  15*\nBoiling Beef, Ib 10*\nCalf Hearts, Ib 10*\nReal Calf Liver, Ib. .. 35*\nVeal Steaks, 2 Ibs. .. 35*\nVeal Stewing, 2 Ibs. . 25<\nPork Spare Ribs. 2 Ibs. 33.+\nPork Liver, 2 Ibi. ... 25*\nLamb Stewing, 2 Ibs.   35*\nLimb Chops, Ib. .... 30*\nEggs, fresh local A-large,\n2 doi. ........... 65<i\nBeef Drippings, 2 Ibs.   25*\nHamburger, 2 Ibs. ... 25*\nSauiage Meat, seasoned,\n21b  251\nCreamery Butter, Thistle,\n3rd grade, 2 Ibs 57*\nBaby Beef Liver, 2 Ibs. 251\nDill Pickles, 4 for ... 10*\nJcllicd Veal, sliced, Ib.  301\nHead Cheese, fresh, lb. 20<*\nSwift's Bologna, Ib. .\nHalibut, fresh, Ib. ..\nPickled Pigs Feet, lb.\nFresh Fowl, Ib\t\nSmoked Picnic, Ib. .\nPure Lard- 2 Ibs. ...\n20*\n23*\n15*\n25*\n23c*\n33*\nCash and Carry\nOnly i\nEggs, A-pullets,\n2 dox  55*\u00a3\nBeef, Pot Roast, Ib. 13<&\nBeef Boiling, 3 Ibs.   27*|\n TT, -i\n **!\nMl SIX \u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ. JUNE 8. 1938\n;M0on lattg -to*.\n'    Established April -_. 1B03\nBritish Columbia's Most Interestvng Newspaper\n. Published\nmorning\ntoe\" news publ-shTng I'ompa'nv. UMnm\n268   Baker   Street   Nelson   British  Columbia.\nB -   Phone 144. Private Ehtchange Connecting All Departm_n-_\nMembers of the Audit Bureau ot Circulations and\nThe Canadian Press Leased  Wire News Service.\nWEDNESDAY, JUNE 8,1938\nSASKATCHEWAN'S MOISTURE\nEven the disturbance of an election campaign cannot\ntown the feeling of greater cheerfulness which prevails in\n.Saskatchewan today. And that better feeling is well found-\n>ed, for the crop outlook is better than it has been for nearly\na decade.\n\u25a0 Of course Saskatchewan has learned to temper its op-\n' ttaisni by a proper consideration of the many hazards that\nI remain. There are many. The crop is still a gamble. But it\nI is a much more hopeful gamble than for a long time.  -\nThere has heen an ample supply of 'spring moisture\n\u25a0> over the West. In some sections there has been a surplus.\nI At points there is enough to carry on for several-weeks.\nI The growing weather has been nearly perfect. Frequent\ni showers, occasional general rains, followed by bright days\nWithout extreme heat. It could not be better if devised by\nI a farmer himself.\nThere has been little soil drifting even in the \"dry\"\nfiareas and the danger of grasshoppers is said to have been\n['substantially reduced. Crops are growing well. At one point\ntit is reported wheat is nine inches high and on the whole\n[there is ground for comparing the present season with that\nI of 1928 when Saskatchewan reaped a $400,000,000 bushel\nrcrop.\nThe Hon. Mr. Taggart, Saskatchewan's minister of\n^agriculture, a technical agricultural expert himself, has\nI said there is some slight evidence to indicate that follow-\nI ing a drouth period the productivity of the soil increases\nI even with the same amount of rainfall. That is to say, it\n\\; may perhaps be refreshed by a rest. .   \u2022\u2022\nOn the whole there is reason for a more cheerful out-\nI look because of crop conditions and because there are indi-\nt cations, too, that market conditions may also be favorable.\nI:| Adversity, if for no other reason, is of benefit, since it\n* tststwe to bring a season of sober reflection. Men see clearer\n'\u25a0aisuch time. Storms purify the atmosphere.\u2014Beecher.\n^RACKLESS TROLLEYS IN CAPE TOWN\n'  Nelson is still considering its domestic public trans-\nplrtation problems, There is the.question of maintaining\nithe present street railway system or of replacing it by\n{ trackless trolleys or gasoline buses, or diesel engine buses.\nIt is interesting in this connection to note that Gape\nI Town, South Africa, is among the cities which have adopted trackless trolleys.\nThe problem which confronted the authorities in Cape\n; Town was in some respects not very different from that\nI with which other tramway operators have been and are\n:, being faced all over the world. If, the tram.car system was\nto be continued, very considerable expenditure would have\nto be incurred on the repairs of portions of tramway track\nand the relaying of others. Traffic conditions, as in other\ncities, were-becoming more and more difficult, loss of time\nwas incurred by tramcars being delayed at loops on some\nroutes, and in some of the narrower thoroughfares congestion was becoming a factor requiring to be dealt with.\nAdded to this, the public was demanding a system of\ntransport more in line with present-day standards from the\npoints of view of comfort, speed and suppression of noise,\nwith an increased degree of mobility to meet traffic conditions;\nInvestigation led to the belief that the adoption of the\n: trolley bus would represent the best solution to the problem. From the financial point of view, its employment\nwould avoid the necessity for track repairs and renewal,\n. while the existing tramway assets would, to a, great extent,\nibi. retained, together with the valuable electric traction\n\\-load on the power station. On the operating side, traffic\ndifficulties would be largely overcome, and a silent, fast,\nreliable and flexible system of transport placed at the disposal of the public. \" \u2022 \u25a0\nEventually, in 1934 the Cape Town Tramways decided\nf to install trackless trolleys.\nConditions in Cape Town are considered more than\nusually severe. The city nestles around practically three\ni sides of the foot of Table mountain, up which its residential\n1 areas creep. Most of the routes of the transportation system embrace gradings of 1 in 9 and some of 1 in 8. The\n:\u2022 average number of stops per mile is approximately six.\nA technical investigation of operating costs in Cape\n.Town shows a marked improvement over the old tramway\n: system. '       ;\n\u2022 The worst men often give the best advice.\u2014Bailey.\n,ooking Backward...\nTEN YEARS AQO\nJune 8,1928.\nI. British Columbia entered upon a\ngeneral election campaign with the\ndissolution yesterday of the  sixteenth   legislature  and   announcement that polling will take place\nton July 18\u2014 Mrs. Richard Triggs\nI and daughters of Rossland are the\nguests of Mrs, Triggs' parents, Rev.\n. and Mrs. M. M. Eaton, Spokane.\u2014\nJohn Moncrleff, basso of the Ameri-\nf.can Opera company, passed through\nI town on his way to South Slocan.\n'.where he will be the guest of Mr.\n[and Mrs. G: F. Chapman.\nTWENTY YEARS  AOO\nJune 8, 1818.\n-. \u25a0 Walter Houston of the Royal Air\nI _s*oree arrived home to spend a few\n\u25a0 days.-J. H. O'Neill of Ymir left for\nVicjoria\/lo report lax military duty,\n\u2014The first Fordson tractor to be\ntaken Into the Grand Forks valley\nwas consigned to H. C. Herman.\nThe tractor is driven by a coal oil\nfeed and has the pulling power of\nabout 10 horses.\u2014Creston'board of\ntrade is urgng the government to\nput the road between Sirdar and\nKuskanook in shape.\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\nJune 8, 1908.\nGood progress Is being made on\nimproving the racetrack at the Recreation grounds by. Warden Jarvis.\n\u2014Mr. and Mrs. G. Hoggarth and\ntheir twins are in the city from\nCranbrook.\u2014C. H. Ink and G. B.\nMatthew left for n fishing trip to\nRiondel.\u2014R. E. Beattie of Cranbrook\nis a city visitor.\u2014Mrs. A. B. W.\nHodges and daughter, Miss Marlon\nHodges, left Grand Forks,for Spokane, to attend the graduation of\nMiss Daisy.Hodges from Brunot\nSALLY'S SALLIES\nfioMhiU^\nShepard Barclay\nTell? How to Bid\nand Play\nWEAKNESS ADVERTISED\nREPEATED overca'ls by your\npartner against vulnerable opponents who keep on to game despite\nthem, do not necessarily proclaim\nany defensive strength In his band.\nIn fact they frequently advertise\nweakness more definitely than If he\nhad not bid at all. With great\n.length in his own suits and corresponding shortage In the hostile\nones, he may ba striving with\nmight and main to find a sacrifice\nfit with you against probable powerful holdings.\n\u25a0   f AMI    ,\n\u2666 \u00abs \u25a0'.:,.\n+ AQJ543\n\u2666 QJ10 9\n*A8\n\u20227 65 4 3\nACiil :\n*K*0.\n-V.\n\u2022Si\ntj\nONone\n\u2666 KJ10 8\n5 2\n*7\nA professor says that all great fairy tales have been created 1\n:   men. Married men?\nON THE AIR\n910 k.\n319.6 m.\nOJAT\nTRAIt\n7:00 a.m.\u2014Morning Vespers   *\n7:15 a.m.-All request program\n8:00 a.m.-Morning bulletin\n9:00 a.m.vSee CBC except.\n9:30 aJn.-Old Timer '\n9:45 a.m.-Organ fantasy\n10:30 a.ra.-Good morning neighboj\n11:3- a.m.-Backstage wife  .    .\n11:45 a.m.- Variety show      ,\n12:00 Melody Time     :-,   .\nlitis p.m.-Spokane welcomes you\n12:30 p.m.\u2014Chandu the Magician \u25a0'\n12:45 p.m.-Sport Page of the Air.\n1:00 p.m.\u2014Dance Hour1\n3:00 p.m.\u2014News\n3:15 p.m.\u2014Lavender and Lace\n3:45 p.m.-Kootenay Echoes\n4:30 p.m.\u2014Time Presents    ,\n4:35 p.m.\u2014Orchestra   \u2022\n4:45 p.m.\u2014Concert, time\n6:00 p.m\u2014Cynthia Docksteader\n6:15 p.m.\u2014Story Behind the Song\nN.B.C. KPO~RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KF1 KPO KOMO\n590     620     640 '   680     920\nN.B.C-KGO BLUE NETWORK\n,KGO   KJR   KEX   KECA    KGA\n790       970     1180      1430,      1470\nCOLUMBIA. NETWORK\nKV1 KOIN KNX KSL '.OL\n570 940  1050  1130  1270\nDON LEE NETWORK\n1270 k.\nSeattle,\n600 k.\nVancouver\n1030 k.\nCalgary\nKOL\nCJOR\nCFCN\n236.1 m\n.5000 w\n. 4.99.7 m.\n500 w\n293.1 m.\n10,000 w.\n4:00 P.M.\u2014\nOne Man's Family (CBC)\nEddie Swarthout's niusic (Red)\nRoy Shield Revue (Blue)   :\n4:T5 P.M.\u2014       '\u2022\nEnnio Bolognini's orch. (Don Lee)\n4:30 P.M.\u2014\nSouvenir (CBC)\nBeaux Arts Trio (Red)\nParsons' Hollywood gosslb (Blue)\nWesterner's Quartet (Col)\nLet's Visit (Don Lee)\nI\n4:45 P.M.\u2014\nBarry McKinley, baritone (Blue)\nBoake Carter, commentator (Col.)\n5:00 P.M.\u2014\nThe fled Ledger (CBC)\nSilver Tones (Red)\nTune Types, Hodeck's orch. (Blue)\nKostelanetz'   brch.,-  Grace   Moore.\n(Col.) '\nEventide Echoes (CFCN)\n5:15 P.M.\u2014\nThe Johnson Family (Don Lee)\nClub for Kiddies (CJOR)\nDick Tracy, drama (CFCN)\n5:30 P.M.\u2014\nSpotlight Parade (CBC).\nRicardo and his violin (Red)\nLud Gluskin's program (Columbia)\nJimmy Allen's adventures (CFCN)\n5:45 P.M.\u2014\nKnox Manning, commentator (Col.).\nLittle Orphan Annie (Don Lee)\nHowie Wing, drama (CJOR)\n6:00 P.M.\u2014\nSymphonic strings  (CBC)\nKay Kyser's music class and dance\n(Red)\nRainbow's End (Col.)\nPopeye, the Sallorman (Don Lee)\nConcert Hall (CJOR)\nThis Rhythmic Age (CFCN)\n6:15 P.M.\u2014\nPhantom Pilot (Don Lee)\n6:30 P.M.\u2014\nSingers (CBC)\nJack Shannon, songs* (Columbia)\nFrank Bull, sports (Don Lee)\nNews review (CJOR)\n6:45 P.M.\u2014\nHowie Wing, drama (Don Lee)\nLate Sports review (CJOR)\n7:00 P.M.\u2014\nNews, Weather (CBC)\nAmos 'n' Andy (Red)\nBen Cutler's orch. (Blue)\nScattergood Baines (Columbia)   '\nJust Entertainment (KSL-Col.)\nNews flashes (Don Lee)\nMusic In Fuller Fashion (CFCN)\nAb Hlne's music (CJOR)\n7:15 P.M.\u2014\nUnder tbe Big Top (CBC)\nUncle Ezra's radio station (Red)\nLum and Abner (Columbia)\nReggie Child's orch. (Don Lee)\nNames that Live Forever (CJOR)\n7:30 P.M.\u2014\nHorace Heidi's orch. (CBC It fled)\nChick Webb's orch. (Blue)..\n>>-\u00bb ii  ii  i itusaiaii-. iriiiiiiniiliLi\nLone Ranger, drama (Don Lee)\nConcert Hour (CFCN)\n7:45P.M.\u2014    -     v \u25a0 '.-'\/\nRadio Rascals (CJOR) \"\n8:00 P.M.\u2014\nFamiliar music (CBC)\nTown Hall, Fred Allan (Red)\nNano Rodrigo's orch. (Blue) '\nCavalcade ot America IColumbia)\nNews flashes (CJOR)\nDixie Memories (CFCN)\n8:15 P.M.\u2014\nWilliam Nelles, organ (CJOR)\nHit Parade (CFCN)\n8:30 P.M.\u2014 .';..\nLights Out, drama (CBC)     ,\nPacific Coast Baseball (Blue)\nGlen Miller's orch. (Blue)\nBuddy Rogers' orch. (Columbia)\nSons of Pioneers (Don Lee)\nBaseball broadcast (CJQR)\n8:45 P.M.\u2014\nRolling Stones (CFCN)\n9:00 P.M.-,\nToday's Music (CBC)\nTommy Dorsey's -orch. (fled)\nStan Norris' orch. (Blue)    ..\nGang Busters, drama (Columbia)\nNewspaper of the Air (Don Lee).\nNews flashes (CFCN)\/\n9:15 P.M.t-\n'Clear Roberts, organ (CFCN)\nAnson Week's orch. (Don Lee) \u25a0..' \u2022\n9:30,P.M.\u2014   ;,;\nWoodsmoke, camping talk. (CBC) -\nFreddie Martin's orch, (Red)\nWaltz Interlude (Blue)\nHub- O'Hare's orch. (Col)\n9:45 P.M.\u2014\nWeather and news (CBC)\nPeacock Court (CFCN)\nHarry BluestOne, violin (Don Lee)\n10:00 P.M.\u2014\nAfter Twilight (CBC)\nNews flashes (Red)\nHarry Owen's orch. (Blue)\nMary . Lou  Cook, Marshall  Grant\n(CoU\nEverett Hoaglund's orch. (Don Lee)\n10:15 P.M.\u2014\nBob Saunders' orch. (Red)\nVour Witness, drama (Columbia)\nRonnie Matthews, organ (CJOR)\n10:30 P.M.\u2014\nDance -orchestra (Don Lee) .\nNews (CJOR)\nHal Drieske's orcMBlue)\n10*45 P.M.\u2014 \u2022'*\nLarry Lewis (Red)\nPua Kealbha's Hawaiian. (Pon Lee)\nRonnie Matthews, organ (CJOR)\nU:00fcM.\u2014\nFrank Trombar's orch. (Red)\nPaul Carson, organ (Blue)\nLast Minute News (Blue)\nHenry King's orch. (Col.)\nSwing Club (CJOR)\n11:05 P.M.\u2014\nSkinny Ennis' orch. (Don Lee)\n11:15 P.M.\u2014       ,..'''\nMusic as You Desire It (Blue)\n11:30 P.M.\u2014\nReveries (Red)-\nNat Brandywine's orch. (Col.)\n11:45 P.M.\u2014\nHal Steam's orch. (Col.)\nBRITISH EMPIRE\n8H0RT WAVE :'\nUSD 1171 mc. (25.53 m.)\nOSC   9.SS me. (31.32 m.)\nQSB   0.51 me. (31.55 m.)\n. GSL   6.11 mo. (49,10 m.)\n6:20 p.m.-World Affairs, talk -\n6:35 p.m.\u2014Virginia Knott, Canadian\npianist. ...\"-.-\n6:50 p.m.\u2014The Adventures of Jack\nand Jill.\n7:30 psn.\u2014Big Ben, News, Announcements\n7:50 - 8:20 - Excerpt from the Al-\ndershot Searchlight Tattoo.\nSerial Stoiy* .;>.\nFIESTA\n(Continued from .'age,Four)\ngether. Can you not say where?\"\nEllen missed the fact that he said\n\"your man\"; disappointment had\ngripped her, hard. '   ;\n'wo,\" she said, \"No, Mr. M\n\u2014Senor Montoya, I nave not the\nslightest Idea. Panola -came and\ninvited him to rMe--5he invited\nhim, took him\u2014and they.rode qway\nsoon after breakfast today. Yesterday. I mean, Goodness,.it has.been\nalmost 24 hours!\"       '    .   \u25a0   \u2022\"\nDon Julio, spoke crisply to, his\nson in Spanish, and -Felix turfied\nagain to Ellen.    -. -,\n\"This Bill Barpn, Miss, -Dale\u2014\n' who is lie? Father is quite concern\ned, as of course mother and I are\ntoo. I am afraid it is tune lo do\nsomething.. We demand to kbow\nwho you are?\"        . a .,\n\"I am a :motlon picture actress,\nand Mr. Baron Is an aviator,''\n\"You must admit you came to\nus under very unusual circumstances. Is'is some sort of\u2014how you\nsay?\u2014gag? A trick for the publicity?\nAre you married? Is it advertising?\nIt Is past the trick stage, Miss Dale1.\"\nFelix Montoya himself was a\ncommanding figure! He was darker of-skin than either.of his parents. Black eyes made him i strikingly handsome, yet -Just a little\nfearful too. He wore some sort of\nuniform, evidently an'offlcer's ser-\nvlce'outfit of some kind, Ellen could\n\u25a0tell He was dirty and wrinkled\nconsiderably front riding, but one\nhardly noticed these details now:\nWith 'his father. constantly talking to him, with his mother now\nstanding by, and With servants\nslipping anxiously into the - picture,\nFelix' anger began to mount.\n'\u2022Panola is my sister, Miss Dale!\nCan you not understand that?\"'\nSEEKING THE LIGHT\n' It has at last dawned on .many\npacifists that a rigid neutrality policy means the destruction of America's great potential influence for\npeace. Even Worse, it is calculated\nto encourage aggression by serving\nnotice In advance that the United\nStates can be, counted upon not to\noppose aggressive action.\u2014Washlng-\ni-aLEasL\n.*S52\n\u00bbKQJ98\n\u2666 A*.\n+ 8 6 2\n(Dealer: North. North-South vul-\niflerable;)     ,..\nThe bidding on this deal was\nstarted by North with 1-Club,\nwhich Eaat overcalled with 1-\nSpade. South now called 2-Hearts,\nwhich West passed. North retdd\nhis dubs at the three lovel and\nBast put In a bid of 3-Diamonds.\nAfter 3-Hearti by South, Norm\ntook the contract to 4-Hearts.\nEast passed this but West decided\nto double in view of the fact that\nhe held live hearts and his partner\nhad been able to put In bids of two\n\"\u2022its.\nIt should have been quite evident'\nto West that East's hand was of\nvery doubtful value If the vulnerable opponents were not deterred\nfrom bidding to game In spite ef\nhis bids.     . \"\nThe double east Bast-West plenty\not points, for South succeeded In\nmaking not only his contract but\ntwo ovcrtricks.\n\u2022 ' e   \u2022\nMonday's Problem \u25a0\nltVK-2\n\u00ab9S.\n\u2666 10 2\n*1075\u00ab\n\u2666 \u00ab.\u00bb    *\nfl S 1\n\u2666 QJ75J\n*9 8 6\n'\u2666 M ties-\n!*?\u2022 .\n,     \u2666K9 84\n;,.   \u2666*\u00ab\n(Dealer: South. Neither side vulnerable.)\nWhat \u25a0 Is the best defense by\nEaat-West against South's .-Spade\ncontract?\n\"Certainly I do. But I tell you\nie simply came into the dining\nroom after breakfast, told B1-\u2014\nMr. Baron\u2014that she had two horses\nsaddled, and asked him to ride with\nher. I was surprised that she did\nnot invite me too, not that it mattered, but\u2014\"     '\"'\u25a0\u201e-\n\"Panola would \\have Invite you.'\n\"But she didn't! She vamped Bill\nand took him alone!\"\nInstantly Ellen was sorry she\nhad. said that. It sounded spiteful. But if, was true.\n\"She vamp him!\" echoed Felix,\ndisgust in his tone. \"He get funny\nwith her, I tell you! Well, I get\nfuiiny too! My sister! -Nobody's\nman can come here to make fool\nof the Montoyas, Miss Dale. < We\ndo npt get excite about the moving picture trick. You think We\nare estupid peons! Well, I show\nhim. I run film down, and with\nmy own hands will 1 tear the vitals\nfrom him, the swine!11, '\nFelix was not acting; he meant\nevery word he said ahd Ellen knew\nit. She had lo say something to\nconvince him..   \u25a0    \u25a0\u25a0 '\u25a0\"%\n\"Mr. Montoya,'it is not reasonable, It is not a trick of any kind,\nI do not know what happened to\nthem, but I do know-It has nothing to do with me or with the moving picture business. QUI Baton\nnever saw me before I hired him\nand his airplane.\" .\nFelix had not listened. He had\nturned to the servants and was\nspeaking to them In Spanish,\nThe mother urged him to pause\nand strengthen himself with food,\nbut all he would take was a mug\nof coffee offered by a woman. He\nhad ridden all night, but he began\nat once to organize the search.\nAnd, like his father, he strapped\non ammunition .and guns.\n\"Mr, .Baron was hot armed,\"\nEllen told him then, \"Nor Panola.\"\nFelix looked at her for. a, long\nmoment\n\"I do not expect them to fight,\nMiss Dale. But Mexico has other\nAUNTHET      '\nriy '.OBERT QUILLEN\n'f don't care how pious she Is-\nReligion don't impress me. much if\nit don't make people pay back what\nu_X'\nACTIVE IN . . .\nKOOTENAY LIFE\n^simsmmmmmtms^tvsst).\nficUWMJfUt\nMay His Prayer\nBe Granted\nNational-Socialism is, to us, such a\ndear, holy, German cause that we\nfeel inclined to pray-that God may\nkeep it primarily for our own\npeople.\u2014Herr Hitter.\nT, M. Roberts, mayor of Cranbrook. He holds the long distance record in Brtish Columbia\nfor the offce of chief magistrate\nof a city. He is now serving his\n14th term. Before being elected\nto the mayoralty of the East\nKootenay city, which Is this\nyear celebrating the 40th anniversary of the arrival of the\nC.F.R., he was city clerk.\ndangers, I am sorry to say. If\nthere Is no trick, If they have been\nkidnap or something, then I shall\nheed guns. . If he have make a\ntrick, and I find this man, then I\nshall want guns, too.\"\n\"Could they have been kidnaped?\" she demanded.\n\"Well, they are gone!\"\n\"But by whom? And why? 1\nmean\u2014I don't understand why they\nshould just ride off and disappear.\nI don't understand It,- They were\npractically strangers to each other!\"\n\"We do not understand, either.\nIn Mexico, when pne does not understand, one carries guns.\"\nA fresh horse was brought from\nthe corrals for him, and three\nOther mounted men, vaqueros of\n(_e rancho, appeared also. Ellen\nnoted that the three did not loo*.\nlike Mexicans or Americans either-\nThey were darker, dressed somewhat differently from any of the\nothers.\n\"Where will you go?\" she asked\nFelix: .    ' .    \u25a0\n'-'I do not know. My father and\nother, of the men nave already\nbeen to all the ranches within\nseveral miles. Those ranch people\nwill be on the lookout too, and will\nlet us know. There is only one\nthing left to do, unless you have\na better idea? Where do you\nthink your man might possibly\ntake her?\"-   '\"\nEllen's anger mounted at that\n\"He is not my man I tell you, Sen:\nor Montoya! Can't I make yotl\nbelieve I know nothing about all\nthis, that I am as confused and as\nworried as you are? And hj did\nnot 'take' her anywhere. She took\nhim. She invited him. I think he\ndidn't even want to go.\"\n\"They did not talk? No mention\nof where they .might go?\"\n\"No.1 Absolutely not. I remember everything they sStd. I was\n\u2014well, I was a little insulted'because she took'him away trom\nme when. we were talking , together. Bill and I were making\nplans.\"\n\"I thought you said he was -a\nstranger to you also? Not your man.\"\n\"He waB. I meant-eoh!\"\nShe couldn't explain It. Not to\na family distressed about a daughter and sister being gone. Not to\nanyone, probably, Her lip trembled, and Ellen thought she was\ngoing to. cry In spite Ot her efforts\nat self-control.\nFelix and the'man. rode away\nwithout another Word. Don Julio\nwas preparing to follow, but before\nmounting spoke comforting words\nto his wife, then apparently felt\nhe must say something to Ellen\ntoo.    '\n\"FayleeX,. he have los Indiosv\nthee- Indian, senorita; tres Indian,\nyou see?\" he held up three fingers\nand pointed to the men with' his\nson..' \"They follow thee foot\u2014the\ntrack. How you say?\"\n\"The Indians will trail Bill and\nPanola?\"\n\u2022 .\"Sl| senorita, si!\" he was nod'\nding.\n_y_l\np. Questions tl\nANSWERS\nIbis column of questions and\nanswers ffowa to an\u00bb reader of\ntbe Nelson Daily Newa In no\ncase will tbe, name of toerterson\nasking tbe question be published\nDead Malt\nFinds Empty Bottle.\nTHE FOLLOWING head line appeared In the Eagle-News of Pougn-\nkeepsie, n7y\u201e May 11:\n7 ALCOHOL BOTTLES\n.   FOUND BY DEAD MAN\nBen Smith V\nthe Crapshooter\nKEN has this to say of the dynamic promoter who it one time\nwe In British Columbia were almost calling \"our\" Ben Smith:\n\"Bernard E. (Sell-'Em Ben) Smith\nAmerican partner of British Francis\nW. Ricketts in that Mexican oil\ndeal, doesn't smoke, doesn't drink\nalcohol, tea or coffee, doesn't swear,\nbut he's a crap-shooting addict\nwho'll stick in a game'until everybody else is worn out. He was moved to i back Dick Merrill, in that\nround-trip flight across the Atlantic because he admired Merrill's\nhetve in a crap game.\"\nBritain Wins\nArctic Air tan\nA quiet but furious fight between\nBritain, Germany, and Italy to obtain a foothold in the icy Artie\nOcean which might be used as a\nnaval and air base his Just ended\nIn victory for Britain. The place\nconcerned is Fetsamo, at the top\n6f Finland, the only northern port\nnot Icebound during the Artie\nwinter.\nWhoever has a naval and air base\nat Petsamo controls the whole Artie\nregion and is within striking distance of the great Russian naval\nbase of Murmansk. Following research work by the German and\nItalian fishing company secured\nPet-amp's fishing rights on a 99-year\nlease, but at the same time a British petrol concern set up oil dumps\nthere,' presumably- for the benefit\nof trawlers. .   .     .i\nAt this point the Soviet got wind\nof what was going on and warned\nFinland that she would not tolerate\na Nazi-Fascist base so close to Murmansk. Strangely enough, Moscow\nhad no objection to the British\nbeing at Petsamo, so the Finnish\nGovernment revoked the fishing\ncompany's licence, but allowed the\npetrol concern to stay. The result\nla. that this month a new British air\ntoute is to be opened between Petsamo and the Finnish capital, ot\nHelsinki.\nMX, Lumberton\u2014Where can one\npurchase tickets on Irish eweep-\nitake* and the Kentucky Derby\nand when do these events take\nplace? Where can one get a book\non rules and regulations of same?\nThe  sale  of  such  sweepstakes\ntickets is illegal, but many people\nobtain them through friends. We\nobviously could give no Information; if we possessed It\nMrs. G.B., Nelson-I have,heard\nthat there Is a special department\nof the post office for enquiries\nfrom other countries wishing W\npurchase postage stamps; la this\nso and can you give me the address? ,\nWrite to the Philatelic Branch,\nPostmaster General, Ottawa.\nMrs. G.B., Nelson\u2014Can you tell me\nthe total value of the complete\ncurrent Issue of Canadian postage\nstamps. i,e., He Up to the highest .\ndenomination?\nStamps are Issued in the following denominations: One cent, two'\ncent, three cent, four cent, five cent,\neight cent, 10 cent, 13 cent 20 cent,\n50 cent and $1. There are also a 20\ncent special delivery stamp a six.\ncent airmail stamp, and postage due.\nstamps are issued.in one, two, four,\nand 10 cent values. 1.\nThe Room That\nMust Be Above\nReproach\nModern plumbing fixtures\nof gleaming beauty and\nsturdy construction add a\ntouch of-< everlasting refinement to the home.\nSmart new styles are now\navailable at a very moder- \u25a0\nate cojt.   .\nCall, phone or write us for\nan estimate.\nPHONE 666\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBING & HEATING\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\n3(7 Baker Street\n'\n$5000 INSURANCE\nand $25 a Month\nPension oi Age 60\nfor $11.60 a Month\nThe Mutual life of Canada haa a special\nplan for the young man who wants to provide adequate protection for hia family*\nduring the years when the children are\ngrowing up, and under the same policy\ncreate a fund that will guarantee him a\nmonthly income at age 60.\nThis is the \"Security at 60\" policy, and\nthe protection provided for the annual\npremium required is particularly attractive. For instance, if you are age 30, a\nmonthly premium of #11.60 gives you\n#5,000 insurance to age 60, when you will\nreceive an income FOR LIFE of #25 per\nmonth. (Should you not live to receive\nthe payments for at least ten years, the\nincome of #23 per month would be continued to your beneficiary for the balance\nof the ten year period.) Annual Dividends\nare .paid on this policy.\nAny 'of our representatives or Head Office\nWillBe pleased to give you complete'details\nregarding the Security at 60 Policy, which\ncan be obtained in amounts of #2,000\nand over.\nEOF CANADA!\n\u2022''.'.,;,'.!':       Ettablishid 1SS9\nHEAD OFFICE        -        WATERLOO, ONT.\n\"Owned by the Policyholders\"\nii The Mutual Ufa Assurance Company of Can.--,\n\u25a0 Waterloo, Ont ...\n| I sun interested In a Security st 60 Policy.\n| I wes bora on  - , , ,.'\u201e.,,\u2014,__\nI\nI\ni\nName.\nAddress .\nI\nI\n1     Occupation\u2014  ' ,   \u25a0-\u2014\u2014\nla m m m \u25a0 m m m m m m m ssa i\nGEO. GIBBONS. District Agent\nGEO. W. DILL, Representative ..\nH. A. POWELL, Representative\n|AMES SKINNER, Representative\n ^rrr-rr-   J.\ni _\u25a0 m \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0a* -__\u25a0-_-<\nCRANBROOK, B.C.\n.... NELSON. B. C.\n... CRESTON, B.C.\nTRAIL. B.C\nTH0S. BECK. Representative  J-ERNIE, B. C.\nmmmmmmmmmmmi--\n\u25a0__\u25a0\n  ,\t\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ, JUNE 8, 1938\n143\nselson Boxla\nSquad Defeats\nRossland 22-12\nitep Out With Eorly\nLead and Add to\nIt All Way\nTOA-i* B. fc, Juna 1 -Nelson\nitaple Leafs added another decisive\n\u25a0ietory to their four straight wins\nilready this season when they hand-\nId Rossland Redmen a 22-12 beating\ntt the Trail arena tonight.\nStepping out In the form they\nUtve displayed all season, Leafs\nromped oft with a 6-2 lead in the\nfirst quarter, Increasing lt to 11-4\n_> the second. Redmen pushed ahead\nlo some extent after the half way\nnark, scoring two less goals than\nNelson in the third quarter and one\ness in the final\nlox score:\nra_soN-\n(Penaltles in minutes).\n0\nHbbon\nIgan\nJryant\n\u00bb\u00bblmsley\nbunmond\njooper\nlishop\nlartney\nfiller    ..\nMngwall\ntooker\nfills     \t\nTotals    22    18    14\ntOSSLAND-\nfcNaughton   0\n  2\n ..... 1\n \u201e 1\n  0\n\u201e_,  1\ntlart\nMiy    \t\nUncock _.\n[artney _-\naundry _.\nIcGuire    -\ni*OOd     .....\n.atace .\u2014-.\nentt   _..\ntarns   _ ,\nS-rkner ....\ninderson\n,. 0\n,. 2\n.. 0\n,. 0\n,. 0\n_\\1\nTotals    12     3    14\nReferee:' Curly Wheatley, Trail;\n\u00bbdge of play: Rene Morin, fioss-\nand.  ^^\nU.S. Northwest\nFires Spreading\n8IATTLE, June 7 (CP)-Smoke\nhung foglike over much of the Pacific northwest tonight after the\ntemperature dropped the the humidity climbed to aid the hundreds\nAt firefighters battling stubborn\nblares In Washington, Oregon and\nBritish Columbia fOresUr *\nOne of the biggest and most critical Invaded the Quinault Indian\nreservation, despite efforts of the\n300 men on the flrolincs along Cook\nfreek, 15 miles north Of Humptu-\nlips City, Wash. An all-day and all-\nnight battle saved Neilton, three\nmiles south of Lake Quinault and\ntoe neighboring large stands of\nfederal forest reserve timber. Sparks\nIgnited five homes and a State highway department garage, but all\nwere saved.\nWith increased humidity and the\ntemperature ranging around 10 degrees below Monday's warmest\nreading ot toe year, fire-fighters'\ngreatest worries were over probability of northwest winds freshening and whipping up the flames.\nTORONTO, (CP) - Long a leading pitcher, Grayce Child became\nToronto's first woman softball umpire when she Joined the arbiters'\ntotter ot toe Toronto Church Girls'\nSoftball association the other day.\nSPORTING NEWS\nCricket In\nOld Country\nLONDON, June 7 (CP Cable)-\nMiddlenex and Leicestershire moved ahead of Lancashire in the English County cricket championship\nrace todliy. A 10-wlcketS victory\nover Sussex put Middlesex at the\ntop ot the table while Leicester\nshire, undefeated in three starts\nholds a slight advantage over the\nLancastrians who went Under to\nYorkshire by an eight-wlcket margin.\nLeicestershire trounced Northamptonshire by an innings and 143\nruns in a match concluded yesterday.\nBattling against time, Somerset\novercame Gloucestershire, its western rival, by one wicket Hampshire downed the strong Kent eleven by eight wickets while Warwickshire surprised Derbyshire\nwith a four-wickets decision.. The\nclosest encounter of the series ended with Surrey edging out Nottinghamshire by 11 runs.\nWorcestershire took first innings\npoints from Glamorgan and Free\nForesters defeated Oxford University by five wickets in a non-county fixture.\nThe scores:\nMiddlesex S77 and two runs for\nno Wickets; Sussex 264 and 31*.\nLancashire 232 and 136; Yorkshire 278 and 88 for two.\nGloucestershire 221 and 338 for\nseven declared (Hammond 140 not\nout); Somerset 276-and 264 for nine.\nKent 189 and 347; Hampshire 396\nand 161 for two,\nDerbyshire 224 and 294 (Rhodes\n107 not out); Warwickshire 208 and\n311 for six (Dollery 134, not out,\nBuckingham 124). , _\nSurrey 105 and 339; Nottinghamshire 170 and 263.\nWorcestershire 302 and 318 tor\nthree declared (Martin 128 not out,\nGibbons 113 not out). Glamorgan\n235 and 281 for nine.\noxford university 22a and 97;\nfree Foresters 208 and lOefor five.\nMORF ABOUT\nFLOODS\n(Continued Prom Page Ona)\n\"BOILS\" AT THREE\nThe \"Boil\" at the Wynndel end\nof Creston dyking district came\nabout three o'clock at a point a\nquarter mile beyond the Wynndel\npump house. The leak waa spotted\nby King Hubbard and his assistant, Elmer Hagen, who were on patrol. Hubbard made a rush trip\nalong the dyke tor some bags to\nplug the hole while Hagen rushed\nto Wynndel to secure help. However, in the seconds that elapsed\nwhile Hubbard was In quest of the\nbags toe leak had developed an\nopening ift, the dyke, that toe pressure from Kootenay lake so rapidly\nwidened, that ott Hubbard's return\nthe pouring waters had attained\nsuch leeway that stoppage was entirely beyond human endeavor.\nLITTLE PROPERTY\nLOSS\nAlong with toe flood waters came\nan abundant supply of driftwood\nthat was afloat on toe lake and along\nthe dykes in that locality. There\nwill be little property loss as there\nwere no residences and few farm\nbuildings of sny kind In toe area.\nDue to threatening hjgh water tor\n10 days much of the farm Implements and equipment had been removed earlier.\nThere are about 40 operators In\nthe dyking district. The biggest individual loser is Frank Putnam, M. L.\nA., who was working more than\n1900 acres. Frank Staples will lose\n1000 acres. Hard hit are Chrlttensen\nBIG LEAGUE BASEBALL SCORES\nNATIONAL\nNew York   2  7  0\n'Chicago    ..  4 11  0\nMelton,  Coffman  ahd  Danning;\nLee and Garbark.\nBrooklyn     7 10  1\nfit Louis .._....'   6  7   2\nMungo,  Pressnell,  Tamulis and\nKoy; McGee, Shoun, Harrell, Ma-\nCon, Davis and Owen.\nAMERICAN\n\"Cleveland   7 10 0\n\u25a0Boston  5   5  2\nAllen, Zuber, Humphries and Pyt\nlak; Bagby, McKain and Dosautels.\nSt. Louis li 15   2\nWashington      8 10  4\nH. Mills. Bonnetti and Heath; Leonard, Kelley, Weaver, Hogsett and\nR. Ferrell.      '\nChicago     8 IS   3\nNew York    5  9  2\nLee and Sewell; Ruffing, Andrews, Sundra and Jorgens.\nDetroit    5 10   1\nPhiladelphia    4 11   3\nGUI, Lawson and York; Caster,\nDean and Brucker.\nCjood ^yikiti\nEVERYONE KNOWS 1UT \u2022 \u25a0 JJB(mv Hudson'.\nBay Company.\nSPORT SIMMERING! FROM WIRE\nSOME KNOW 1IM1\n\u2022  \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022*\nB.P. moan. \"BEST\nPROCURABLE.\"\nBUT DO YOU KNOW THAT- \u2022Jj^JE^X.. -\nBEST PROCURABLE\nSCOTCH WHISKY\nit really what tha nam. implies?\nIt contain, tome of Scotland's\noldeat and finest Malta, beautifully blended, so that when it\nreaches Canada it is really and\ntruly the\"BEST PROCURABLE\"\nScotch Whisky.\nHave you tri$d it lately t\n40 oi.    \u2022 $4.8 S\n26Hot. .$3.26\n58-18\nI This advertisement Is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nBy ALAN RANDAL\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nNEW YORK, June 7'(CF)-<.ene\nTunney, now Sports editor ot the\nConnecticut Nutmeg, Is getting to\nbe quite a wag,,. At Speculator, N.\nY., today he talked with Joe Jacobs, Max Schmellng's manager, regarding a bout between Tony Galento and Gargantua the Great, the\ncircus gorilla. , .\nGalento has said he can lick any\ngorilla there Is. . . Tuhney Is said\nto be willing to back the thirsty\nNewark bopper 110,000 worth\nagainst Gargantua. . . The word Is\nthat Tunney and Jacobs agreed on\neverything but the .Mill's cut of\nthe gate. . . Jacobs, through sheer\nforce of habit, Insisted 30 per cent\nwas too much tor Gargy...\nJimmy Braddock celebrated Mi\n33rd (?) birthday by visiting Joe\nLouis' training camp at Pompton\nLakes, N. J. . . Along with him\nwere Henry Armstrong and Letter Patrick, head et New York\nRangers hookey elub.\nJack Doyle, the Broadway betting\ncommissioner, quotes defending\nchampion Ralph Guldahl, Sam\nSnead and Henry Picard as 8 to 1\nfavorites to Win the United States\nopen golf championship, starting\nThursday at Denvft...\nWar Admiral's wlh In the Suburban handicap leaves him only\n$13,000 short of the earnings ot his\nfamous daddy, Man 0' War. , . ,\nNot counting his exhibition tours,\nmoving picture rights and other incidentals, Man Schmeling has earned about $800,000 In the United\nStates with his fists. . .\nBudge and Mako\nin Semi-Finals\nABTEUTL, France, June 7 (CP)\n\u2014Don Budge and Gene Mako, United States Davis cup doubles team,\nentered the semi-final round ot the\nFrench hard court tennis championships today with a 6-1, 6-4, 4-6,\n6-2 victory over the British pair of\nF. H. D. Wilde and D. W. Butler.\nThe other semi-final brackets in\nthe mens doubles were tilled by\nYugoslavian, Hungarian and French\nteams. Fran. Kukuljevic and Josip\nPallada, Yugoslavia's Davis cup\ncombination,  defeated  the Italian\npair ot Rodolpho Boss! and Vlttorio\nTaronl, _\u2022-,\u25a0\u00a3_, 6-1. , __ _\nBernard Destrefneau and Won\nPetra of France beat the other Yugoslavia team ot Ferenc Puncec and\nDlmitrl MM., 6-3, 6-3,10-12, 4-6,6-3.\nOtter Szigetl and Ernest Gabory of\nHungary eliminated Roderich Men-\nzel and LadislSs Hecht of Czechoslovakia, 6-J, 6-3. 7-5.\nAustralia tared badly In the third\nround of the women's singles. Jacqueline Goldschmidt Ot France easily eliminated the Australian champion, Nancy Wynne, 6-0, 8-3. Nancy\nAdamson, also of France, beat Mrs.\nHarry Hopman, 6-4, 6-1 but Susan\nStevenson saved one match for the\nAustralians when she defeated Simone Barbler ot France, 6-8, 64.\nbrothers, who have 500 acres In\nthe dyking district and another 800\nIn the flooded reclamation farm.\nWith the break in the dyke, W. M.\nArchibald -was prompt in getting\nout hli two-passenger plane irom\nthe hangar at the airport on the\ndyked lands and flylft. to Trail.\nThe inundation of these 14,500.\nacres Of Jtraln will be aerio-ialy felt\nIn Creston business section. In 1037\nthese lands produced more than\nhalt a million bushels and the outlook tor 1038 was even better.\nTrustees Guy Constable, Frank\nPutnam and Ellas Uri ot the dyking district have worked night and\nday the. part two weeks directing\ndyke maintenance and patrol and\ntonight could not be contacted for\nany announcement as .to Immediate\nfuture policy. Equally active In the\nwork of safeguarding the levies was\nFrank Staples, managing director ot\nCreston Reclamation company limited. Land owners and citizens generally have also given unstintingly\nof their time and labor In dyke saving work. __^_\nMORE ABOUT\nLOST CHILD\n(Continued From Page One)\nDOG FAIL.\nRushed from Canal Flats with his\nmaster, Constable C. A, Bellhouse\nof the provincial police, a trained\nAlsatian dog which has several\ntimes located lost persons was of\nlittle assistance Tuesday. He followed an unseen track lor a short\ndistahce, but could not \"follow\nthrough.\" The trail, it it was Car-\nmella's was more than a day old. ,\nOn one occasion the, dog led\nsearchers toward nearby Bear\ncreek, but it appeared not to be\non a definite trail and Constable\nBellhouse expressed the belief that\nthe dog had found nothing. Searchers Were satisfied the little girl was\nnot in the creeWiOwever, lor 20\nmen in line, the tenth and eleventh\nmen wading ih the creek, had\nscoured the creek and it* banks\nthoroughly. Two men on constant\nwatch further down the creek at\nthe Wesko dam saw no sigh of a\nbody.\nCALL FOR AID\nYmir folk want more men Out to\nloin In the search; they want people\nill over the district to watch lor\nher, fearing she may have been\npicked up and carried off by someone; they want to know, though\nthey balk at the thought, If some\ndegenerate has the tiny tot; they\nwant to know If possibly some wild\nanimal, perhaps a cougar, has carried her away.\nThey want to know what has become of Carmella before they tell\nher mother, a patient in Kootenay\nLake General hospital, that the tot\nis lost.\nThe widespread search for the\ntiny tot began shortly after she dls-\napeared Monday, crews of men\ncombing the mountainside in the\nneighborhood. At nightfall men on\nnightshirt at the mifte equipped with\nelectric lanterns carried on. Tuesday more men from the mines, residents of Ymir community and unemployed joined the searchers and\nthe ground was combed again.\nGIANT SEARCH TODAY\nTuesday night, With hap* diminishing, plans were laid for another\ncombing of the mountainside. Two\nhundred men, and Ymlr and Salmo\npolice officers reinforced by seven\nother officers from Nelson and district directed by Staff-Sergeant C.\nQ. Barber, will go again over the\nground inch by Inch. Every available man from the Yankee Girl\nand'Wesko mines and Ymlr wil)\nhelp.\nEven the possibility that she may\nhave been picked up by eagles will\nBatting Leaders\nHPct\n68 .384\n61 .372\n47 .370\n57 .356\n66 .355\n40.354\nBy The Associated Press\nFirst three and ties in each league;\nBATTING\nG AB\nTrosky, Indians 42 161\nAverill, Indians 43 164\nLavagetto, Dod. 38 127\nFoxx, Red Sox 42 160\nMcCormick, Reds 43 186\nLombardi, Reds 22 113\nHome runs; Foxx, Red Sox, 15;\nGreenberg, Tigers, Goodman, Reds,\n13; York, Tigers, Ott, Giants. 11.\nRuns batted in: Foxx, Red Sox,\n62; Averill, Indians, 49; Ott, Giants,\n44; Gtlan, Cubs, 41.\nMORE ABOUT\nBENNEn\n(Continued From Pag* On*)\nMr. Dunning: \"It Would b* Impossible to lessen IU value,\"\nMr. Bennett; \"Well, I do not\nlook upon th* matter In Just that\nway.\"\nMr, Dunning: \"That kind of comment I do.\"\nMr. Bennett: \"Well, I am not so\nsure having regard .to my observation of the government of this country tor the last five months that\none is not warranted in making\nthat statement.\"\n\"TALK TOO MUCH\"\nMr. Dunning: \"I says 245 members of parliament talk too much.\nMy friend la On* of them.\"\nMr. Bennett: \"Ot course he Is,\nBut It rests with the government\nto take the initiative. It Is their\nJob to tt* that something It dons\nfor thoy, only, oan tptnd money.\"\nHon. Ernest Lapdinte, justice minister .said the government had Men\nlistening to speeches,        '\n\"Well, they have been poor listeners, for the prime minister has not\nbeen in the house an average of an\nhour and a halt a day since the\nsession opened,\" said Mr, Bennett\nMr. Lapointe said this was not\nfair. The prime minister was tired\nand had not been well for a few\ndays,\n\"I do not think the remark was\ncalled for. We did not do the same\nto my right honorable friend,\" he\nsaid.\n\"READ THE RECORD\n\"You did not?\" asked Mr. Bennett, \"Read the record. Day after\nday, week after week you referred to'the faet that I wat net in\nmy plaoe beoaute I was working\nlong hours on work that I had\nto do.\"\nA reference by Mr. Bennett to\npromises being made by the Liberals in Saskatchewan election drew\nfrom Thomas Vein (Lib., Outre-\nmont) the remark:\n\"I seem to recall a phrase, 'I will\nend unemployment or perish In the\nattempt',\"\n\"My friend Is correot,\" said Mr,\nBennett, \"and we did tnd tht\nunemployment that exltttd at that\ntime. It Is true those who were\nthen unemployed Were raplaotd\n. by Increasing numbers.\n\"And what It more, wt did\nptrlsh In the attempt and that It\nwhat will happen to thit government. But I hav* never complained of any decision of tht\ntlsctorate.\"\nFIGHTS\nBALTIMORE - Holman Williams, 145, Chicago, outpointed Jack\nPortney, 143, Baltimore  (10).\nWASHINGTON - George Abuts, 160, Washington, outpointed\nTed^YaroB, 160, Plttsburflh (lOV\noutpointed\nNEW YORK \u2014 ItalO Coionello,\n108*4,   Italy,   outpointed\n(Big Boy) Brackey, 222%,\nGeorge\n   Buffalo,\nN. ?. (8).\nNEWARK. N. J. - Clarence\n(Red) Burman, 18-tt. Baltimore,\nknocked out Joe Wagner, 180, Newark, In 1:09 ot the sixth round.\nNanny  Drank Pan\nof Gasoline\u2014\nand Blooie!\nCARLINVILLE, 111., June 7 (AP)\n\u2014Nsnny drank a pan of gasoline\u2014\nand then exploded.\nThat's the story of Arnold Garlo\nand Melvin Miller, tenant farmers,\nat they explained the fate of their\npet nanny goat. The goat drank the\ncontents of a dlshman. Presently\none of th* men lighted his pipe and\ntotted the match >to tht ground.\nNanny sniffed. Her whiskers ignited. -\nBlodle.\nNanny doesn't live there any\nmore.\nmsmemmmsmosstsiOssMmiimmsmm w \u25a0inm^mmwiw\npossibility, It It indicative ot the\ncomplete plans made that two\nknow eagle nests on Mount Baldy\nWill be investigated.\nCarmtlla when she disappeared\nwts wearing kthkl overalls over a\nyellow blouse. She wore red socks,\ntnd black shoes. On her left cheek\nWit a birthmark.-\nSearchers who worked on the\nhillside Monday and Tuesday stated\nthtt In many places they were\nwalklpg upon low limbs of underbrush on the hillside, and it wat\npossible she might be under some\n.1 thi. i__>k_\u00bb2k_ union met un-\nCUB. DEFEAT\nGIANTS BYM\nBy The Canadian Press\nNow that the Chicago Cubs are on\ntop they intend to stay there\u2014the\nNew York Giants and all other National league teams notwithstanding.\nCharley Grimm's men demonstrated that fact yesterday at Bill Lee\nheld the slipping Giants to seven\nhits and his mates sounded a home-\nrun tatoo oft Cliff Melton for a\n4-2 victory over the New Yorkers\nto stretch their lead to l'k garnet.\nIt wat the first ot their Important four-game series and the sixth\nstraight victory for Lee, the big fellow who's filling Dizzy Dean's boots\nquite nicely.\nBilly Herman thrilled a crowd of\n16,202 by breaking a deadlock in\nthe seventh with a circuit clout,\nhis first of the season. Before the\ninning ended Jo* Marty clouted another for two mora runs,\nHomers only other National leaguer* saw the Brooklyn Dodgers eke\nout a 7-3 Win over St. Louis Cardinals. The Victory came despite the\nfact Van Mungo failed to go three\ninnings for the Dodgers and Tot\nPressnel, his successor, Wat slugged\nfor home runs by Ducky Medwlck\nand Don Padgett\n7-5 FOR CLEVELAND\nIn the American league a two-run\nblast In the ninth Inning gave\nthe top-place Cleveland Indians a\n7-5 decision over the Boston Red\nSox.\nJohnny Allen wat doing a nice bit\not hurling for the Indians when\nBoston Manager Joe Cronin complained the pitchers tattered right\nsleeve was bothering the batters. Allen wat sent to the clubhouse to\nchange his Shirt But he would not\nobey Umpire Bill McGowan's order\nand was tined $250 by Cleveland\nManager Ossie Vitt and replaced on\nthe mound by BUI Zuber.\nBut despite all the hubub, the Sox\nonly got five hits.       .\nChicago White Sox belted Charley\nRuffing out of th* box today and\nended the big Yankee right-hander's\nseven-game winning streak as they\ntook ah 8-5 win over the world\nChampions at New York.\nFour Washington Pitchers yielded\n15 hits to the St Louil Browns\ntoday, which, combinated with four\nSenator errors, was enough to give\nthe Browns a 11-8 win.\nA long smash by Bob Johnson\nfill Just short of being a homer\nand so Detroit Tigers made off\nWith a 6-4 decision ovtr the Philadelphia Athletics. With the Tying and winning runt on bate and\ntwo out In the ninth. Johnson\nhoisted one toward the left field\npavilion. But Chat Laabt backed\nagalntt the wall and brought It\ndown for the last putout\nMORE ABOUT\nCHINA\n(Continued From Page One)\nLocal government authoritlet ordered women, and children to leave\nthe city. Transportation facilities,\nhowever, were entirely inadequate.\nThousands ot houses had been vacated. An estimated 100,000 of Canton's 1,000,000 pertons. had reached\nthe safety of the Britith crown colony of Hong Kong.\nCAPTURE OF OHENGCHOW\nAPPEARS ASSURED\nSHANGHAI, June 8 (Wednesday)\n(AP)\u2014Despatches from the front\ntoday said Japanese capture of\nChengchow, .unction ot the Peiping-\nHankow and LUnghal railway lines,\nappeared assured as airplanes unloaded new destruction on the city.\nGround forces reached a point only\n10 milet to the east\nSome 70 miles further east, however, the mighty yellow river lapped\nover dykes northwest of Lanfeng.\nChinese said a number ot Japanese\nsoldiers were drowned in the inundated countryside. Flood conditions\nwould slow up and possibly halt\nJapanese forces operating westward\nalong the Lunghai\nIt was Indicated General Chiang\nKai-Shek was bent on fulfilling his\npromise to Kwangtung province officials to send help against repeated Japanese bombardment of Canton. There were unconfirmed report! a new squadron of Soviet Russian manufactured airplanes would\ntake over the task of battling Japanese bombers in Canton's skies.\nMOftE ABOUT\nSPANISH\n(Continued From Pagt Ont)\nTh* mem hotel to Alicante, the\nVictoria, was destroyed. Reports indicated loss of life wu heavy.\nIN8URGENT8 ADVANCE\nHENDAYE, Franco June 7 (AP)\n\u2014Th* spearhead of General Franco's Insurgtnt Infantrymen tmssh-\ned through dtfenoe lines In Cat-\ntailors provlnot today to enter tht\nbroad river valley leading to Castellon de la Plana, Important government seaport.\nInsurgents dtlpatchtt laid a\nOallclan column captured tha village of Adseneta, 18 miles from\nCastellon. Abondonment of the\nvillage by government troops, Insurgent detpatchtt laid, left the\nwty open to the \"Rlvtr of the Widow,\" a stream running through\na low fertile valley touth to Cat-\nttllon.\nFRANCE TO SHOOT\nDOWN INVADERS\nPBRPIONAN, mn.*, Juna T\n(AP) \u2014 Premier Edouard Daladier\ncompleted an inspection ot French\ndefence! on the Spanish frontier\ntoday and ordered artillery and air\nforces to shoot down any planet\nwhich threatened French territory.\nStrength of France'! land and\nair forces at southern centres like\nTtrbel and Montpelller within a\ntew houri of the border, is estimated at 60,000 men.  -\nWYNBIRG, South Africa (CP) -\nA two cent train fare cost Sidney\nBulrsky $10 in-court where he wai\n(I WITHDRAW IN\nU. S. OPEN GOLF\nDENVER, June 7 (AP)\u2014 th*\nlineup tor the 42nd United State*\nnational open golf championship underwent a thakeup today while fresh\narguments developed over the hazards that seem calculated to discourage chances ot another record,\nsmashing tournament\nA total ot 14 withdrawals was\ndisclosed by Joseph Dey, executive\nsecretary of the United States Golf\nassociation. The list In addition to\nEddie Held, Denver amateur, who\nalso was disqualified for an Infraction ot the rules during the district qualifying tests, included auch\nwell known professionals as Al Ea-\npinosa, one time runner-up for the\nopen crown, and Orvllle White of\nGreensboro, N. C.\nSo far, Dey aald, 11 replacements\nhave been named, with the probability that other substitutes will be\nfound to produce a maximum starting field of 170 players for the first\nround Thursday,\n*MtIOT*I*W\u00bbM*WtW*\u00bbM\nNATIONAL LEAQUE\nW L Pet.\nChicago 29 16 .644\nNew York 26 16 .619\nBoston    21 17 ,553\nCincinnati 22 21 .612\nPittsburgh  20 20 .500\nSt Louis 19 23 .452\nBrooklyn  19 27 .413\nPhiladelphia -...._....... 11 27 .289\nAMERICAN LEAOUE\nW L Pot.\nCleveland  29 14 .874\nNew York 24 17 .585\nWathlngton    _ , 26 21 .553\nBoston _. 23 19 .325\nDatrOlt 21 23 .477\nPhiladelphia    17 24 .415\nChicago    \u201e 14 23 .378\nSt. Louis 13 _fl .333\nHarditoff Hurt,\nYardley Named\nfor Test Cricket\nLONDON, June 7 (CP Cable)-\nFurther revision of England's test\ncricket team to play Australia Friday was made necessary today, Joseph Hardstaff, Nottinghamshire\nprofessional, was Injured In a motor\naccident last night and the selectors have named N. W. D. Yardley,\nCambridge univertity captain, to\ntake hit place.\nYesterday John Clay, veteran\nGlamorgan player, reported his inability to play owing to a leg in-\nJury. He will be replaced by Reginald Sinfield, Gloucestershire, newcomer to test cricket.\n-PAQESEVEN\nTUNNEY   GIVES\nAPPROVAL TO\nSCHMELING\nSPECULATOR, N. Y., June 7\n(AP) \u2014 Gene Tunney put hit\nroyal stamp ot approval on\nMax Schmeling today and scot-\nfed politely at a suggestion the\nGerman might go stale before\nhis coming title bout with Joe\nLouis,\n\"Not a chance In the .world ot\nthat\" he tald. \"Max is far too\nsmart.\"\n\"He's in nearly perfect condition now and he's taking it\neasy, like he should, He't the\nmost deliberate lighter I ever\nsaw.\"\nGene denied strenuously he\nhad been over to Pompton\nLakes coaching Louis.\nDAVIS CUP PLAY\nMELBOURNE, Australia, June\n7 (AP) \u2014 The Australian lawn\ntennis association announced that\nthe Australian Davis Cup team\nmeet the Mexican team at Kansas\nCity in the first round ol the\nNorth American .one cup play.\nMatches will be played July 28, 29\nand 31.\nARMSTRONG NO\nTOUGHER THAN\nMcLARNINWAS\nCHICAGO, 'June 1 (AP)-*Bar-\nney Rost, who lost his world's welterweight boxing title to Henry\nArmstrong last week, doesn't expect the negro to last more than a\nyear as welter ruler\u2014If he fights\nseveral bouts which go the lull 15\nrounds.\n\"His type of fighter burns out\nearly,\" said Ross. \"They keep up\na tcn-ific pace tot a time and then\ngo all at once. The human body\ncan't stand up under that strain\nvery long.\n\"Armstrong has the body ol a\nmiddleweight and mauls his opponents every second. I couldn't keep\nhim ott. I don't think he was any\ntougher than Jimmy McLarnin\nwhen McLarnin was at his best, but\nit's hard to tay. He fought a great\nbattle and deserved tho victory,\"\nRots lost his title to McLarnin\nbut regained it from the Vancouver\nfighter at Madison Square Garden\nbowl, the jinx saucer in which ha\ndropped his crown to Armstrong.\nBuy or tell with a Classified Ad.\nmvtAAii\nIF-28\n.-'^\u25a0X-:^;^;.:;^.i'':vi'<-\nBuckingham\nFINE 'CUT\nPACKAGK\u2014lOe \u2022 POUCHES\u201415c  \u00bb  t.ib. TINS\u201470c\nHEW TIH. WINS\nIN SENSATIONAL NON-SKID TESTS!\nLIKE WS|\nStops Quicker Than\nTires Costing up to 40% More!\nNO tire tested, regardless 0\/ price, came up\nto the new Goodrich Silvertown in skid\nresistance! And these tests were made against the\nregular and ptomium-pricod tires Of the six largest\ntire manufacturers.\nThat's because the New Silvertown Life-Saver Tread\naccomplished what Goodrich engineers had apent\nyears in trying to perfect a tread that is actually\na road dryer. A tire so different in appearance, design\nand action that it turns the wet road under your car\ninto a \"dry\" surface\u2014protect* you from skids in\nall directions I Gives you Golden Ply blow-out protection, too. And both of these great life saving features\nare yours AT NO EXTRA COST.\nCome In today for a demonstration that will give you\none of the greatest motoring thrills you've ever had.\nFor safety's sake, ride on Goodrich Safety Silvertown*.\nass MrSSs\u00bbr-ss\n\u00abn price. \"\"* \"\"\"* UP to 40% hlghS\n!sw33s_r?--\"\u00bb-\n!_3p3gg\nfea__-___\u00bb\u00bb\n\u25a0'\nLIFE-SAVER TREAD WORKS LIKE A\nBATTERY OF WINDSHIELD WIPERS\nIts never-ending spiral\nbars sweep the water\nright and left\u2014tores\ntt out through the\ndeep dralnagegreovet.\nThus, you corufan-br\n\u2014J have a dryer, safer\nroad surface for the rubber to grip.\n^GoodriAStfETTSilvertown\nSKID-PROTECTION 01   Ll IL SAVER  'READ   \u2666'.\u2666   GOLDEN  PLY\nTHERE IS A GOODRICH DEALER NEAR YOU\nQueen City Motors Ltd\nHUNTER BROS. LIMITED   DOMINION GARAGE fr SALES CO.   GRAND FORKS CARA*\nWest Kootenay\nGoodrich\nDistributors\nMi Josephine It\nPhone 4S\nNelion, B.C.\n ^*^*^**mmm**m\n      iiIIR \\ii\\ \\mwmmmmwm\nB-fiF FIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNING. JUNE 8. 1938\nThe More You Tell By Want Ads The Quicker You Sett\nRossland Told\nof Fairbridge\nFarm Schools\nFowler   of   Canadian\nClub Council Is\nSpeaker\nROSSLAND, B. C, June 7-Over\n$300,000 Is invested in the Fair-\nbridge farm schools, situated 2*4\nmiles south ot Duncan, said P. B.\nFowler, president of the Regidnal\nCouncil of Canadian clubs, speaking to the.local club in the court\nhouse. Saturday night.\nFOR ENGLISH\nCHILDREN\nKingsley Fairbridge was a native\nof South Africa, said the speaker,\nthe product of four generations of\npioneers. He had his share of privation while working in Rhodesia,\nand on one occasion, when he had\ngone without food for several days,\nhe thought how nice it would be if\nthere were farms all along the road,\nwhere one might obtain food. Going over to England to see his grandmother, he was amazed at the dense-\nness of the population and the number of poor children. He conceived\nthe idea of establishing schools in\nthe colonies where these children\ncould be trained as farmers, with\ngentlemen as their tutors, and afterward given farms.\nComing to British Columbia, Fair-\nbridge was Impressed with the beauty of Victoria and its surroundings.\nGoing back to England, with his\nmind set on becoming a Rhodes\nscholar, he studied under a tutor\nfor six months, and accomplished\nas much academic work as is usually\ndone in several years at the university. He then formed a Society of\nRhodes Scholars, to establish farm\nschools. Two were instituted in\nAustralia in 1912, and when these\nhad proven a success, the one on\nVancouver Island was founded. The\nfirst school was started with eight\nacres, one horse, a cow, chickens, a\nshack with a lean-to. After the war\n\u00a327,000 was raised to increase operations, and the schools now have\n3d00 acres, with good buildings and\nmodern equipment. Nine hundred\nboys have passed through the\nschools and only six have had to be\nreturned to England. In 1934 the\nSociety put on an appeal in London for 100,000 and the Prince of\nWales headed the list with a pledge\nof \u00a31000.\nThe British Columbia project consists of 1028 acres in the Cowlchan\nvalley, with a beautiful stream running through the property. Three\nhundred and fifty acres are under\ncultivation, and there are 300 sheep\nbesides pigs, chickens, etc. All feed\nley the stock is grown on the farm.\nI arid the farm sells produce to the\nI schools at wholesale prices from day\ntit day. The children have all the\nmilk they wish to dririk, as there are\n40' cows to supply the 139 children\nnow at the school.\n[>TTAGE UNITS\nThere are 12 cottages, each in\ncharge ot a \"house mother,\" and\n.rAir more are to be erected this\nyear. The dining hall-will seat 300\nchildren. Breakfast and the \"noon\nmeal are eaten there, but the evening meal is taken in the cottage,\nafter which the house mother gathers the children around her, in\nfront of the fireplace, and listens\nto the happenings of the day. Everything possible is done to promote a home atmosphere. Part of\nthe dining hall has been partitioned\noff  for  use as a chapel, until  a\n' church can be built. All money has\ncome from the Old Country, some\n'om bequests, and some from annual\nubscriptions. The children leave\nschool at 15, and the boys are given\ntn intensive agricultural training,\nwith the girls being thoroughly in-\n.; atructed in domestic science.\nMrs. Fowler said the British Columbia project had reached the stage\nwhere any children are ready to be\naent out, but in Australia there were\n1600 applications for 65 children.\nUntil the boy or girl is 21, the farmer\nto whose care he has been committed pays 50 per cent of his earnings to the society. Later if the\npupil wishes to go into farming on\nhis own account, this amount can\nbe drawn out to use as capital, Each\ngraduate is visited by an officer of\nthe society every three years.\nThe British Columbia school is\nsupervised by a member of the Nanaimo school board. The principal is\nProfessor Logan. The school is under medical supervision, and has a\ntrained matron, and its object is to\nmake Canadian citizens.\nWOOTEN ON\nCANADIAN CLUB8\nR. A. Wooten, secretary of the\nregional council of Canadian clubs,\npaid high tribute to the good work\ndone by Mr. Fowler in connection\nwith the work of the clubs. Under\nMr. Fowler's presidency, the club\nthe Victoria club had attained a\nmembership of 1000, though it now\nhad only 360. Mr. Fowler and he\nhad visited every club in B.C. with\nthe exception of Prince Rupert and\nPouce Coupee. The speaker explained the arrangements under which\napeakers were sent out, the regional\ncouncil having been formed to supply speakers when the national or-\nanization was not sending them.\nTie Canadian club was non-sectarian and non-partisan. Its alms were\nthree-fold; (1) as informed citizenship; (2) Canadian national unity; and (3) Canada as a nation in\nthe British Commonwealth of nations. Never since Confederation\nwas it more necessary that unity be\nestablished in Canada, as opposed\nto disruption.\nIL. E. E. Hamilton was chairman\nof the meeting.\nTHIEVES COOK MEAL\nVANCOUVER, June 7 (CP). -\nHungry burglars broke into Gen-\nelal Wolfe school here overnight.\nThey cooked themselves a meal of\neggs, hotcakes and coffee in the\ncslfeterio. No loot was taken,\n1\nTobacco-Chewing\nHorse Dead at 26\nSTRATFORD, Ont., June 7 (CP)\n\u2014Nellie, Stratford's only tobacco-\nchewing horse, is dead. Ambrose\nWillis, owner, for years fed the\nhorse parts of his plug of tobacco\nand Nellie always wanted more.\nWillis said the horse was at least\n26 years old.\nSays Reports ol\nAerial Bombings\nIndia Nol True\nLONDON, June 7 (CP-Havas)-\nAnswering charges of British aerial\nbombings in India, made by Der\nAngriff, organ of German propaganda Minister Joseph Goebbels,\nthe Times (Independent) said today:\n\"Der Angriff let itself go in glv.\ning exciting and fictitious accounts\nof Royal Air Force operations am\nong villages, wherein It said over\n122 men and an untold number of\nwomen and children had been killed in three months.\n\"No village is bombed unless\ntribesmen have been proved guilty\nof attacks on British stations or of\nvindictive acts such as poisoning.\nNor is the order given until further attempts at a truce have failed and ample warning has been giv\nen to all villages to leave for places\nof safety, taking with them their\nhousehold property and cattle.\n\"The aim and sole result of the\nbombing is the destruction of the\ntribesmen's property in certain selected villages as a punishment for\nproved outrages. There is no record\nof casualties in such raids, nor is\nthere any indiscriminate bombing.'\nShirley Loves Lambs\nbut Prefers Her Dog\nSALT LAKE CITY, June 7 (AP).\n\u2014Shirley Temple has fallen in love.\nIt's with the woolly, frisky lambs\nthat roam the western hills. The\nscreen world's box office champion\ntold her story here today.\n0n the third leg of a leisurely\ntour to Callander, Ont., to see the\nDionne quintuplets, Shirley and her\nparents reached Utah's capital last\nnight.    \u25a0\nAsked if she preferred the lambs\nto her pet Pekingese she wrinkled\nher nose and smilingly declared she\nwould stick to her first choice\u2014the\ncanine,\n\"But I do love the little lambs,\"\nshe persisted. \"They cry like little\nbabies.\"\nWITHDRAW CLAIM\nACAINST VEGETABLE\nMARKETING BOARD\nVANCOUVER, June 7 (CP).-No-\ntice was before the British Columbia\ncourt of appeal today that Kamloops\nProduce Company of Kamloops,\nB.C., had abandoned a claim for\ndamages against the British Columbia Interior Vegetable Marketing\nboard.\nThe company has also withdrawn\nits appeal from an injunction granted by Mr. Justice A. I. Fisher in\na later action by the board, restraining the company from carrying on its vegetable marketing business except through the board.\nJ. R. Nicholson, produce company\n\"counsel, announced the Kamloops\nProduce company has again been\nappointed a sub-agent of the board.\nURGES CREATION OF\nAERONAUTICS BOARD\nVANCOUVER, June 7 (CP)-\nCreation of a provincial board of\naeronautics for British Columbia is\nurged by Dr. Raymond Staub of\nPortland, Ore., chairman of the Oregon state aeronautical council.\nSpeaking before Vancouver Junior Board of Trade yesterday Dr.\nStaub said such a body, \"made up\nof four or five men with transport\npilots in its personnel,\" would\nfoster beneficial legislation, set\nspecifications for planes, services\nand safety and still leave inter-\nprovincial regulation to the federal\ndepartment of transport\nJAPAN BEST CUSTOMER\nFOR WAR SUPPLIES\nWASHINGTON, June 7 (AP) -\nJapan has become the United\nStates' best customer for war supplies. The state department published figures today showing that\nJapan had passed China during\nthe last six months, although Brazil\nled all other nations in May alone,\nwhen she bought $1,494,824 worth\nof arms and ammunition. Japan\nspent $1,334,608 to rank second in\nMay.\nINDIAN INJURED WHEN\nCAR HIT BY TRAIN\nNANAIMO, B. C, June 7 (CP)\n\u2014Adam Manson, Nanaimo Indian,\nwas in hospital here today with a\nfractured hip suffered yesterday\nwhen an automobile in which he\nwas riding was struck by a train at\nCraig's crossing, about 20 miles\nnorth-west of here.\nHAND-CUFFED TWINS\nCAIN WEICHT ON HIKE\nBRANTFORD, Ont., June 7 (CP).\n\u2014Julia and Juliette, handcuffed\nMontreal girls, have gained five\npounds since leaving Montreal on\ntheir trek to Vancouver. They have\ntravelled 25 miles'a day so far, rejecting all automobile rides.\nBURCLARS BREAK INTO\nPOLICEMAN'S HOME\nVANCOUVER, June 7 (CP). -\nConstable A. R. Slattery had a report to turn in at the detective office when he went on duty today.\nHis home was broken open last\nnight and $23 in cash, clothing and\npersonal effects stolen.\nGOOD ROADS CONVENTION\nMONTREAL, June 7 (CP)-An-\nnual convention of the Canadian\nGood Roads Association will be held\nat Bigwin Inn, Lake ot Bays, Ont.,\nSept. 6, 7 and 8, it was announced\ntoday by the president, Hon. F. M.\nMacPherson of Victoria, minister of\nworks for British Columbia.\nNelami Daily Nr-uia\nMember ot the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE  144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll Departments\nSubicription Karfcj\nSlngle copy S  Ob\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.\n' United States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year 57.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nUnited States, same as above\nplus any extra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie a Lint\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per insertion\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\nInsertions\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per Insertion _\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\nInsertions\t\n2 lines, 1 month\t\n3 lines, 1 month\t\n22\n.88\n1.32\n2.86\n4.29\nFor advertisements of more than\nthree lines, calculate on\nthe above basis.\nBox numbers He extra. This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATE8 LE8S 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nBIRTHS\nTHOMPSON \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. R. Thompson of Johnson's Landing, at the Victorian hospital, Kaslo,\nJune 2, a daughter.\nGRAY - To Mr. and Mrs. Alex\nGray, Reno mine, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital, Nelson, June 4, a\ndaughter.\nAMSDEN \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nPhillip Amsden, north shore, at the\nKootenay Lake General hospital\nJune 4, a son.\nERICKSON - To Mr. and Mrs.\nHarold Erickson, Granite road, at\nKootenay Lake General hospital,\nJune 4, a son.\nO'NEIL - To Mr. and Mrs. Richard O'Neil, Taghum, at Kootenay\nLake General, hospital, June 6, a\ndaughter,\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED: COOK-HOUSEKEEPER\nfor the Victorian hospital of Kasto\nSalary $40 month, board and room\nApply stating qualifications to G.\nS. Baker, secretary, Kaslo, B. C.\n(1755)\nLAD FOR FARM, ABLE TO MILK\n$15 month. McColm, Ross Spur.\n(1828)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nRate for advertisements under\nthis heading 25c for any required number of lines for six\ndays, payable In advance.\nBOOKKEEPER - ACCOUNTANT\nfive years experience with large\nfirm, employed at present, would\nlike work in Nelson. Excellent\nreferences furnished on request.\nApply Box 1839 Daily News (1839)\nEXPERIENCED GROCERY CLERK\nage 23, five years experience,\nhonest, reliable and can supply\nreferences, stating the same. Apply Wayne Carpenter, Suite 2,\nVernon Apt?., Nelson,        (1805)\nWOMAN WITH TWO CHILDREN,\nboy 6 years, girl 15 months, wants\nwork immediately. Will work at\nvery reasonable price. Apply 1883\nWilmes Lane, Trail, B. C.   (1786)\nEXP. MAN AND WOMAN WANT\nwork by hour, day. Can do washing, mending, pressing at home\nreasonably. Ap. 712 Railway St.\n(1792)\nEXPERIENCED STENOGRAPHER\nand first class waitress desires\nposition. Two years experience at\neach. Box 1829 Daily News.\n\"   (1829)\nINDUSTRIAL FIRST AID CERT-\nificate holder, wants work round\nmine or other undertaking. Box\n1809 Daily News. (1809)\nYOUNG  MAN,  29,  WANTS JOB.\nWilling to do anything. B. Dahl.\nRoom 47, Occidental hotel.   (1830)\nBUTCHER WITH 10 YEARSTS\"-\nperience,   good   references.  Box\n1843 Daily News. (1843)\nSTENOGRAPHER WITH REFER-\nences wants work. Box 1800\nDaily News. (1800)\nMACHINERY\nFOR PIPE St FITTINGS IN ALL\nsizes write Active Trading Company, 916 Powell St., Vancouver.\n(1499)\nSUMMER HOMES, RESORTS\nAND CAMPS\nSUMMER COTTAGES AT KOO-\ntenay Bay. $10. $15, $25 month.\nOne, two and three rooms with\nscreened verandah. Fully furnished. Apply Storekeeper,   11520)\nFURN. COTTAGES, LAKE FRONT.\nGood beach. Electric light. J\nPeachey, Balfour, B. C.     (1754)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS\nFOR SALE LAUNCH AND BOAT-\nhouse. $125. Box 1824 Daily News.\n(1824)\nGOOD     LAUNCH    FOR    SALE.\nCheap for cash. Ph. 835Y.   (1659)\nTRAINMEN TO STRIKE\nIF WACES ARE CUT\nCLEVELAND, June 7 (AP)-A.\nF. Whitney, president of the\nBrotherhood of Railroad Trainmen;\nsaid yesterday if United States railroads insist on a proposed 15 per\ncent wage cut \"we'll strike and\nwe'll do it the minute the railroads\nannounce they'll put it into effect.\"\nTHREE FLIERS KILLED\nSAN ANTONIO. Tex.. June 7\n(AP)\u2014Two Randolph field instructors and a flying cadet were killed and a student officer was critically Injured in two separate air-\nSlane crashes near the main air-\nrome today.\nThe dead:\nSecond Lieut. Arthur M. Kep-\npler, 29, of Houston, Tex.\nSecond Lieut. Nathan H. Cod-\ndington, 28, ot Los Angeles.\nFlying Cadet William B. Cone-\nby 25, of Washington, D C.\nThe student officer injured wes\nSecond Lieut. Frederick M.\nThompson, 24.-of Lot Angeles.\nPERSONAL\nEXAMINATION\nFOR CIVIL SERVICE CLERKS\nYou have time to ensure success\nat the coming clerks' examination\nif you write us immediately for\nparticulars and proof of our remarkable successes over many\nyears. M.C.C. Schools, Ltd., Winnipeg, (1734)\nWE HAVE HELPED HUNDREDS\nto obtain positions as Letter Carriers, Postal Clerks, Customs Examiners, Clerks ahd Stenographers, etc., and can help you. Write\nus for proof and free Information,\nM. C. C. Schools Ltd., Winnipeg.\nOldest In Canada (218)\nFILMS DEVELOPED 35c, INCLUD-\ning 8 sparkling Velox prints and\none 5 x 7 double weight enlargement Remit with order. Strand\nPhoto Service, 626 West Hastings\nSt., Vancouver, B. C.,        (1556)\nMEN'S SUPERFINE QUALITY\nsanitary rubber. Send $1.60 tor 18\nunexcelled. Also LATEX at 25 for\n$1.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co, 18 Hastings St,\nW. Vancouver., (213)\n\"GENUINE LATEX GUARAN.\nteed.\" Finest DeLuxe Rolled Silver Ray, 36 for $1.00. Postage\npaid. Trl Importers, 484 Church\nStreet, Toronto. (1811)\nFLOOR SURFACING - OLD\nfloors resurfaced to look like\nnew. Also new floors surfaced. For\nestimates Ph. 273-Y, (1713)\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL GTD.\n25 for $1.00 or Jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (free catalogue) National\nImporters. Box 244, Edmonton.\n(214)\nMETROPOLE HOTEL VANCOU-\nver, $1.00 per day up. Private bath\n$1.50. Best value in Vancouver,\n320 Abbott St. (1062)\nLIVESTOCK\n8   HEAD   WORK   HORSES   FOR\nsale at N. H. Greer ranch, 3 miles\nfrom Nelson on Ymlr Road. (1849)\nJERSEY AYRSHIRE COW, FRESH-\nened. 3rd calf, R. Heddle, Blewitt.\n(1812)\nFOR SALE 4 HEAD WK. HORSES.\nCan be seen Ellison Milling Co.\n(1761)\nDOGS, PETS, FOR SALE\nWIRE   HAIRED   FOX   TERRIER\npuppies. Registered stock Ready\nto |o. H. Harding, Nelson, B. C.\n(1459)\nLOVELY  PURE  BRED  SCO-TIE\nPups. Mrs. Noakes, Balfour. (1766)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOMS\nAND   APARTMENTS\nAUTOMOTIVE\nSTORE, 25 X 50, WITH FULL BASE-\nment. Opp. C. P. R. depot. Ready\nfor occupancy. For full particulars\napply Chas. Catalano, Trail, B. C.\n(1752)\n3 CONNECTING ROOMS, PART-\nIy turn; Ground floor, close In,\nMan tt wife, bachelor. 305 Ward.\n(1817)\nFOR   SIX   MONTHS,   MODERN\nhouse, four rooms, bath. $22 a\nmonth. Ap. 105 Park St. Ph. 835 X.\n(1838)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent Annable Block.\n\u2022 (219)\n1,   2   and   3-ROOMED   APART-\nnits., reasonable. Strathcona hotel.\n(1793)\nFURN. HOUSE FOR RENT. ROSE-\nmont. July & August, Ph. 854L.\n(1808)\n5  RM.   UNFURN.   SUITE.   ALSO\nturn, suites, Kerr- Apartments.\n(220)\nFURNISHED HOUSE FOR JULY\nand August. Ap. 624 Victoria St.\n(1851)\nHOUSEKEEPING    ROOMS    FOR\nrent, duplex, 204 Chatham St.\n(1820)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modem\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (221)\nFOR RENT FURN. HOUSEKEEP-\ning rooms, K. W. C, Blk.    (1781)\n2 LT. HSKPG. ROOMS FOR RENT.\n420 Victoria street. (1819)\nHOUSE, NEWLY REDECORATED.\nSilica St. Ph. 662. - (1832)\n2 HOUSES FOR RENT. APPLY 125\nSilica Street. '(lBlO)\nFOR SALE\nPIPE AND FITTING\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.\n250 Prior St. Vancouver, B. C\n(215)\nPIPES, TUBES, FITTINGS\nNEW; AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\n-SWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main SL\nVancouver, B. C.\n(216)\nFOR SALE\u2014HOME, WITH 4 BED-\nrooms, dining room, sitting room,\nbath room, -kitchen, den, new\nbuilt-in plumbing fixtures, gran\nHe foundation, furnace; 5 lots; re\nplacement value $9000. Sacrificed\nat $2500, cash deposit $500. balance\narranged. Write Box 303 Rossland.\nCONFECTIONERY AND SODA\nfountain. A paying business. Next\nto New Strand, Theatre. For full\nparticulars apply Chas. Catalano,\nTrail', B. C. (1753)\nWICKER  BABY  CARRIAGE.    3-\nburner Perfection oil stove with\noven. Bassinet and mattress. Ford\nlight del. truckj Ph. 264 or 793Y.\n* (1846)\nFOR QUICK SALE - UPRIGHT\ngrand piano, bookshelves, kitchen\ncupboard, chandelier and shades\nPhone 598-R1. (1707)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS. KEGS,\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B. C.        (217)\n1937 PHILCO RADIO AS NEW,\n.with Phllco aerial. $40. Terms if\nnecessary. Ph. 660 L. (1776)\nGENUINE AUSTRIAN SCYTHES &\nfittings. J. P. Morgan's, 305 Baker.\n(1655)\n-Want to Sell Something?\nPhone -\n144\nFORD\/\n1935 PLYMOUTH\nCOUPE\nLicensed\u2014New Rubber\n$650\n1935 ccoHa!r_Ei. $675\n193752 $850\n19283? ....$150\nVisit Our New\nUsed Car Lot\nCorner Josephine and Victoria\nueen\nMotors Ltd.\n\u2022      FORD   DEALERS\nNelson and District\nPhone 43 519 Josephine St.\n(1847)\nThis Is a Special Bargain\n1935\nTerraplane Coupe\n$775\nBUTORAC MOTORS\n1225 PINE AVE.      TRAIL, B.C.\n(704)\nFOR SALE 1931 FORD SEDAN.\nExcellent condition. Tires good, 2\nnew. 2 spare wheels. Would consider trade with light truck. J. C.\nClarke, Burton, B. C.       (1844)\nSACRIFICE '29 BUICK SEDAN.\nThe rugged car for heavy loads\nand hard roads. $200 takes it.\nRoom 9, Annable Blk. (1758)\nCHEAP FOR CASH, '29 DURANT\nDeLuxe Sedan. Heater, trunk, 6\nwire wheels. Apply Euphrates\nMine, Nelson, B. C. (1848)\nFOR SALE 1935 CHEV. COUPE.\nGone 16,000 miles. Good condition,\nP. O. Box 434, Kaslo.        (1807)\n$350.   DODGE,   15,000   MILES.   H.\nSchultr, 911 Edgewood Ave.\nI  (1831)\nROOM AND BOARD\nBUSINESS MEN OR GIRLS PRE-\nferred. Ph. 697X, 423 Silica St.\n (1777)\nROOM AND BOARD 706 VICTORIA\nSt. Phone 783L. (1827)\nAn Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\nPROPERTY, HOUSES. FARMS\nWELL EQUIPPED FARM, SITU-\nated 3 miles east of Fernie on\nmain highway; 21 acre farm, 20\nacres' cleared and seeded to hay\nTeam of horses and complete farm\nequipment; 6 roomed house; usual\nfarm buildings; abundance of\nyear round spring water. Cash or\nterms. Box 1780 Daily News.\n(1780)\nFORCED TO SELL WELL-ESTAB-\nlished Grade A Dairy business to\nliquidate estate. Choice stock, an\nideal location. All modern equipment. Immediate possession. Further particulars Phone 3111.1, Box\n1836 Daily News. (1836)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms In Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dc-pt. ot Natural\nResources, C. P. >R\u201e Calgary, Alta.\n(228)\nFOR SALE 564 ACRES LAND AD-\njoining Ymlr. Box 1823 Daily News\n(1823)\n(Continued in Next Column)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS,\n(Continued)\nCALGARY FAMILY WANTS A\nhouse for July and August, near\nLakeside park. Apply 751 Farwell\nStreet, Trail, B. C. (1821)\nWANTED FOR CASH HOUS\naround $1200 would consider\nclose to Ferry. Box 1835 Dail)\nNews. (1835)\nWANTED FURN. HOUSE. CLOS1\nIn. Box 1768 Dally News.    U7\u00ab8)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog, pocket\nbook, Jewelry or fur, or anything else ot value, telephone tht\nDally News. A \"Found\" Ad. will b<\ninserted without cost to you. W<\nwill collect trom the owner.\nLOST - BROWN AND WHITl\nSpringer Spaniel, pup. Fejnalj\nPhone 157Y. (18481\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE NUMBER\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agei,ts at\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B. C. (182)\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 420\nFall Street, Nelson, B. C, P. O.\nBox   No.  9.   Representing  shipper's interest, Trail. B. C.     (183)\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(IBS*\nW. J. BROCK, D. C\u201e 16 years' Ex-\nprnc Ph. 969 Gilker Blk. Nelson.\n(186)\nFuneral Director!\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. RLACKWOOD. Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph, 99.\n(192)\nH. E. DILU AUTO AND FIHE IN-\nsurancc, Real Estate. 532 Ward St.\n(193)\nSEE  D.   L.  KERR,  AGENT  FOB\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 Hipperson\nHardware, Baker SLPhone 197.\n(197)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,  SELL tt   EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc. The Ark Store.\n(20V;\nSecond Hand Stores\n(Continued)\nTHE HOME FURNITURE. Wl\nbuy, sell & exchange, also repati\nand upholstor. 413 Hall St  (1575!\nCorsets\nSample Sale Spencer Corsets, M. W\nMitchel, 370 Baker St. Ph. 668.\n(187:\nEngineers snd Surveyors\nBOYD C, AFFLECK, Fruitvale. B.C\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(188\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lathi\nWork. Drilling, Boring and Grinding. Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding.\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Street\n(1991\nII E. STEVENSON, Machinist!\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed, Mine Sc Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. Pt.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson.   (201)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON, Representing\nC. C, Snowdon, Oils, Gieases,\nPaints, etc. Agt, Mine Mchnry. &\nequipt, etc. Steam coals. Office\nChamber of Mines, Ph. 994. Box\n28, Nelson. (203)\nPhotography\nNOW IS THE TIME TO HAVE RE-\nprints made from your negatives\nfor mounting In albums. Never\nfade prints, 3c each. Films developed and printed 25c. KRYSTAL\nPHOTOS, Wilkie, Sask.       (205)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S  SASH  FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant 273 Bauer St\n(208)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs your\nwatch lt Is on time all the Urn*,:\n345. Baker St., Nelson.        (209)\nTHE BOSS REO.UESTS YOUR\nP_>6SENCE,MAC_I SUESS\nHE WANTS YOU TO SEE HIS\nDARLIN6 DAUGHTER-SHE'S\nJUST BACK. PROM FINISHING\nSCHOOL\nVOU REMEMBER WSl\nJUDY, MY OAuaHTECl\nMAC-SHE SAVS     J,\nHER CAR HAS A\nTERRIBLE K-ATTLE\nIN IT__S_E IF VOU\nCAN LOCATE THE\nTROUBLE FOR- HER\n|ARE VOU fiOOO AT FINO-\nNQ  RATTLES, MR, g\nMAC POUfiALL? jggjlg'\nWELL.I\nDON'T THINK\nT COULD FIND\nTHE ONE r\nHAD WHEN I\nWAS A BABY\nL CANT HEAR]\nA SOUND IN\nTHIS CAR,\nMISS SIMP-1\nKINS, IT RONS\nPERFECTLY;\nOH, FORSET ABOUT\nRATTLES, SILLY\u2014\nYOU'BE A GROWNUP\nMAN NOW, AND I'M A\nYOUNS LADY AND\ni WE'RE\nGOING\nIT'S MAC,TILLIE_l'M A*FI\nTHE PELICAN CLUB WITH|\nMISS SIMPKINS-l KNOW A,\nIT'S Z30A M. ANDXWONTF\nBE ANYQOOOPORWORIC I\nTOMOEI-OW\u2014I CANT SET)\nHEea\n \u25a0\nTiH\n______\nieat Closes Up\ntaJN_P_K-, June 7 (CP).\u2014Reports\ndamage in some sections of the\nitted States winter wheat belt and\nlappolnting crop yields sent buy-\nmInto . North American wheat\nirkets today. Winnipeg futures\nised % higher to % cents lower,\n\u00bbW.-.%, July 79* and Decem-\nr 77H\u2014\u00abs cents.\nWheat advanced up to 1* cents\nove yesterday's close after open-\n! more than a cent down to sym-\nthy with weakness it Liverpool.\nWinnipeg dealings were generally\nill bnt eastern buyers took July\nieat end exporters supported Oc-\nber and December.\nChicago advanced more than a\nnt on reports of frost and rust\nmage in Kansas and Oklahoma,\n((roved market sentiment also was\niked with the belief United States\nrm loam would be based on a\nheat price of 70 cents a bushel.\nJiiverpool closed 1*\u2014l*d lower\ntt Buenos Aires followed North\nmerican markets and at noon had\nirned early losses into fractional\nlins.\nWinnipeg futures advanced des-\nite cash wheat setbacks. Nos. 1, 2\nid 3 Northern spreads cased two\naits. The two top grades were at\nI and 7 cents premium of the July\niture while No. 3 slumped to a\nlb-cent discount. ,\nCoarse grains, except birley, aver-\njed higher. Barley wu fractionally\nnyer near the close.\n! N. Y. Irregular\n|NEW YORK, June 7 (AP)-At-\n\u2022mpts to push the stock market to\nlgher levels met with only feeble\nttpport today and price trends were\notably irregular at the close,\n\"Those who had expected the mar-\n:et to celebrate the outcome of the-\n5wa primaries, which were much\nWall Streets liking, were dis\nJ)bolnte_..\ni Activity bogged down from the\ntort and transfers totalled 371,980\nhares against 467,330 yesterday. The\nissociated Press average of 60 1s-\nues wu off .1 ot a point at 38.8.\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Prett\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal - Pound 8.01%; O\nL dollar 1.01 91-64; franc 2.81 3-16.\nAt New York - Pound 4.94 15-16'\n'anadian dollar .98 21-32; franc at\nth%. \u25a0\n;At Paris - Pound 178.32 fr.: U. S\nfoliar 38.04 fr.; Canadian dollar 35 58\nMr\nIn Gold - Pound 12s Id; U. S.\nlollar 59.48 cents; Canadian dollar\ni8.89 cent!.'   -1:'- *!\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, June 7 (AP) ,-<**oilng:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a313 7s 6d,\noff Is 3d; future \u00a334 121 6d, unchanged; electrolytic spot, bid \u00a339,\nasked \u00a340, both up IDs.\nTin spot \u00a317110s, up future \u00a3172,\nboth up \u00a31 5s.\nBids: Lead spot \u00a313 10s, off Is 3d;\nfuture \u00a313 13s 9d unchanged.\nZinc spot \u00a312 7s Od, tip is 3d;\nfuture \u00a312 lis 3d, unchanged,\nBar gold 140s Id, oft 1 penny.\n(Equivalent 134,75).    \u2022\nBar sliver 19d off 1-16.\nNEW YORK\nCopper steady; electrolytic spot\n9.00: export 8.84.\nTin steady; spot ind nearby\n38.87V.; forward 3_.82*.\nLead steady: spot, New York 4\u2014\n4.05; East St. Louis 3.80.\nZinc steady: East St Louis spot\nand forward 4.00.\nBar silver 43%, unchanged.\nMONTREAL\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic, 10.40;\ntin 41.50; lead 4.35; sine 4.10; antimony 16; per 100 pounds f.o.b. Montreal, five-ton lots.\nBar gold in London dropped three\ncents to $35.22 an ounce in Canadian funds; 140s 7d in British. Tbe\nfixed 130 Washington price amounted to $35.43 in Canadian.\nSilver futures closed steady and\nunchanged. No sales. Bids: June\n42.75; July 42.55; Sept. and Dec.\n41.00.\n(OUT IS MIXED\nVANCOUVER. June 7 (CP)\nActive buying in lower-priced golds\nfeatured trading on Vancouver stock\nexchange today. Prices were mixed\nand transactions totalled 116,755\nshares.\nFairview Amalgamated ted active stocki with a turnover of 58,-\n115 shares and closed up IVs cents\nat bVs. Bralorne gained 5 at 9.35,\nPioneer a similar amount at 3.05\nand Kootenay Belle 3 at 1.18, Sheep\nCreek firmed 1 it 96 and Premier\nwas unchanged at 2.00. Hedley Mascot dipped 2 at 1.05 and Cariboo\nGold Quartz cued 1 at 2.17,\nPend Oreille advanced 15 at 1.00\nwhile Nicola at 4* and Whitewater\nat 4* firmed fractions. Other base\nmetals were quiet and unchanged.\nC*l orv Uv* to-V\nC.*' flABY  June 7 (CP). - Re-\np Cattle 65; calves 11; hogs 7;\n>o sheep.\nDry-fed cattle meeting fur demand et steady prices; off-grass\ncattle slow and unsettled.\nMedium to good butcher steers\n5.00\u20145.75; common MO\u20144_\u00bb; medium heifers 5.25; common 3.00\u20144.00;\ngoods cows 4.00\u20144.25; common to\nmedium 2.50\u20143.75; good bulls 8:00\u2014\n5.50; medium stacker steers 3.00\u2014\n3.75. I\nNo hog sales to noon. Yesterday's\nprices: Selects 0.70; bacons 9.25:\nbutchers 6.75 off trucks.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNINQ. JUNE, 8. 1938\n-PAGE NIN-\nMarket and Mining News\nDow-|ones Averages\n8\nindustrials _.\nrail.  _..\nfutilities ___-\n'\"\u25a0bonds _.\t\nHigh\n. 114.51\n. 20.75\n.   19.22\nLow\n112.84\n20.51\n18.78\nClose Change\n113.12\u2014oft   J7\n20.55\u2014off .03\n18_38-oft .10\n88.08\u2014up   .08\nToronto Stock Quotations\n{MINES:   .\njjdermaq Copper \u2014\nAmm Gold  \u2014\t\nAiiglo-Huronlan   \t\nArntfield Gold\nAstoria Rouyn Mines .....\nAztec Mining '.\n.54\n.28\n1.00\n.18\n.02V*\n.10\n.16\nBagamac Rouyn  \t\nBankfield Gold      \u2122%\nBase Metals Mining      -36\nBeattie Gold Mines ,...     107\nBidgood Kirkland   \t\nBig Missouri    \t\nBobjo Mines         -\nBralorne  Mines    __\t\nBrett Trethewey    -\nBuffalo Ankerite        -\u2022\u25a0\nBunker Hill Extension __.\nCanadian Malartic      ~\nCariboo Gold Quarts\t\nCasUe-Trethewe>\t\nCentral Patrldi  \t\nChibougamau       \u2014\u25a0\t\nChromium M tt S ....-.\u2014__\nCoast Copper        \u2014\nConlaurum Mines\nConsolidated M & S\t\nDarkwiter   .\nDome Mines\nDorval-Siscoe\nBast Malartic    __-_\nEldorado Gold\t\nFalconbrldge Nickel\nFederal Kirkland   \t\nFrancoeur Gold \t\nGillies Lake      \t\nGod's Lake Gold\t\nGold Belt,\n.26\n.34\n.10\n9.40\n.03\n16.50\n12.00\n.95\n2.20\n.65\n2.58\n29Vs\n.45\n2.50\n1.25\n60.50\n.11%\n59.00\n.12\n1.67\n2.17\n5.50\n.05\n.16%\n.44\n.34\n.05\n.06\n.85\n2.15\n14.25\n20\nHudson Bay'M & S    24.65\nInternational Nickel    43.65\nMl Consolidated\nlick Waite  \t\nTacola  Gold  \t\n.err-Addison\nlrkland Lake\nGranada Gold Mines \t\nGrandoro Mines     \u2014\nGunnar Gold ,\t\nSard Rock Gold\t\nHollinger        \u2014\nHowey Gold\n.11\n.40\n.19*.\nMS\n1.11\n.03\n.52\n.73\n.06\n3.85\n\u25a0eke Shore Mines  50.75\nlEtmaque Contact\t\n,apa  Cadillac    \u2014\nditch Gold  \u2014\n_\u00bbbel Oro Mines\t\n__ttle Long Lac \t\nUacassa Mines  -\u2022*\"\nHacLeod Cockshutt     3.25\nUadsen Red Lake Gold .... 30\n-Manitoba & Eastern  01*\nIKendy  \u2022\u00ab\nIntyre-Porcupine       42.35\n.JCen-le Red Lake   102\nMcVlttie-Graham     IB\n-McWatten Gold  _- -65\n\u25a0Mining Corporation   1.85\n\"Minto Gold   0-\nMOneta  Porcupine   2.00\nMorrls-Klrkland       -OW\nNlpisslng Mining  1-8-\nNorandl'     - M-00\nNormetit  ...\nBrian  Gold\t\n,_iega Gold  ._-.'\n\u2022amour Porcupine ...\nPaulore M ..- ....\n\u2022aymaster Cons \t\n|_>end  Oreille  \t\nJerron Gold\t\nBickle Crow Gold \t\n\u25a0Pioneer Gold  -     3.05\n\u25a0premier Gold        2.04\n\u25a0Powell Rouyn Gold     2.15\n\u00bblton But Dome _     .73\nlebec Gold .........____     -4'\n.01\n3.45\n.40\n3.45\n.05\n.43%\n1.62\n1.35\n4.70\nReno Gold Mines\t\nRitchie Gold Mines\t\nRoche Long Lac    \t\nSan Antonio Gold\t\nShawkey Gold       \t\nSheep Creek Gold\t\nSherritt GorBon    _.\nSiscoe Gold      ,    \t\nSladen Malartic\"   \t\nStadacona Rouyn  \t\nSt Anthony\nSudbury Buin    .\nSullivan Consolidated .\nSylvanite\nTeck-Hughes\n\u25a0Toburn Gold Mines ....\nTowagmac .._._\nVentures      ''    ____\nWaite Amulet      _.\nWhitewater\nWright Hargreaves  \t\nYmir Yankee Girl \t\nOILS:\nAjax ...__\nBritish American   \t\nChemical Research \t\nImperial \t\nInter Petroleum ...._.\nMcColl Frontenac ___\nPantepec ___\nTexas Canadian ,\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi Power A\t\nBeatty Broe       ______\nBell Telephone      __\nBrMlllin T L tt P _\nBrewers ft Distillers ...\nBrewing Corp\nBrewing Corp Pfd \t\nB C Power A       \t\nB C Power B\t\nBuilding Products \t\nBurt F N\nCan Bikeries.Pfd ...__.\nCanada Bread    \t\nCan Bud Malting .:\t\nCan Car.& Foundry .\t\nCan Cement\t\nCan Dredge    _..\nCan Malting\nCan Pacific Railway\t\nCan Ind Alcohol A\t\nCan Ind AlcbhoJ B \t\nCan Wineries\t\nCarnation  Pfd   _.\nCom Bakeries\t\nCosmos \t\nDominion Bridge\t\nDominion Stores \t\nDom Tar it Chem\t\nD Tar It Chem Pfd\t\nDistillers Seagrams .....\nFanny Firmer\t\nFord of Canada\t\nGen Steel Wires\t\nGoodyear Tire __.\nGypsum L It A .....\u2014\nHarding   Carpet   _._._\nHamilton Bridge _\nHamilton Bridge Pfd ...\nHlnde Diuche \t\nHlrim Witter ............\nIntl Meteli   \t\nInU Milling Pfd\t\nImperial Tobicco \t\nLobliw  A  \u2014\nLobliw B \u2014\nkelvlnitor      _\nMaple Leaf Milling\t\nMlssey Herrli\t\nMontreil Power \t\nMoore Corp  ...\nNat Steel Car  _\t\nOnt Steel Prods _,.\nOnt Silk Net.'.\t\nPage Heney  _\t\nPower Corp ______\n-ii.\n.-21.\n1.23\n.12\n.98\n1.05\n2.20\n1.08\n.45\n.13\n2.50\n.94\n3.30\n4.90\n2.10\n.45\n5.50\n4.45\n.04\n7.75\n.14\n_\u00bb\n20.25\n' 33\n16.50\n24.75\n10.55\n4.15\n1.16\nIH\n\u00bb\u2022\u2022\n182%\n10Vi\n5\n1.80\n18\n28*\n4\n46*4\n17 ,\n25\n3%\n6%\n11\n8\".\n24\n3m\n544\n8\n3\n2%\n\/101V4\n13\nievt\n20 V*\n44>\n\u00ab\n74\n18%\n18V*\n16*\n8%\n57\n4'*\n2*\n5*.\n30\n3.*.\n8%\n100\n1*\n21%\n20*\n10\nilk\nS*\n28%\n27*\n39*\nlb\n5\n90\n10*\nChicago Wheat\nValues Higher\nCHICAGO, June 7 (AP). - Ad-\nvmces of 2* cents a bushel hi Chicago wheat values late today accompanied suggestions the government firm loan price would be\nhigher than expected.  -\nChicago July wheat led the gains.\nand rose to a top of 73* at the last,\nu against 71* in yesterday's final\ntransactions. Further stimulating the\nupturn were reports from the domestic south-west indicative of disappointing yields and of poor quality to numerous sections.\nAt the close, Chicago wheat futures were 1*\u20142* cents above\nyesterday's finish, July 73\u20147314,\nSept. 74*. Corn * lower to * higher,, July 56%\u201457, Sept. 57*, and\noats *\u2014* advanced.\nWHEAT:\nOpen  High  Low  Close\nJuly _    70*    73*    70*    73\nSept    72       74*    71*    74*\nDec. _   73*     75%    73*    75*\nTORONTO GAINS\nTORONTO, June 7 (CP)-Senior\nand Junior base metals fell In behind Waite-Amulet early in today's Toronto market and pushed\nhigher in heavy trading. Waite\nclosed it 4.45 unchanged. Trade\nreached 103,500 shares.\nNoranda closed * down. Nickel\nsnd Hudson retained a portion of\nearly gains. Smelters finished unchanged. Closing prices Were higher by 4, at 10 for Sherritt, Aldermac\nand Pend Oreille and 20 to 35 up\nfor Ventures, Sudbury Basin and\nCoast Copper. Silver share market\nwas dull.\nGolds were spotty and closed with\nthe Index back 39. Hollinger and\nLake Shore dropped % to %. Kerr-\nAddison suffered a 10-cent setback.\nWorld   Exch\"\u00abi'\u00ab\u00ab*s\nNSW YORK, June 7 (AP)-The\npound sterling advanced * today to\n'54.94 15-16 end the French franc\n.00* of a cent to 2.77*. The Cam-\ndlan dollar closed it a discount of\n1 11-32, off 3.-32.\nClosing rates (Great Britain In\ndollars, others In cents): Great\nBritain, demand 4.94 15-16, cables\n4.94 15-16, 60-day bills 4.94 3-16;\nFrance, demand 2.77*, cables 2.77%:\nItaly, demand 5.26*, cables 5.26*.\nDemands: flelglum 16.92; Germany 40.17, benevolent. 21.15, travel.\n23.75; Holland 55.22; Norway 24.85%;\nSweden 25.52%; Denmark 22.10*;\nFlpiind 2-0; Switzerland 22,78%:\nJugoslavia 2.35; Hungary 19.85; Rumania .75; Argentine 32.95N; Brazil\n(free) 5.MN; Tokyo 28.87; Shanghai\n20.68%; Hong Kong 30.89; Mexico\nCity 22.00N; Montreal in New York\n98.85%; New York ih Montreal\n101.34*.\nN-Nomln-1.\nVancouver Unlisted\nBayonne\t\nColumbia _\t\nEuphrates \t\nUtica\nYmir Cons\t\nBid\n.06\n.01*\nAsk\n.08\n.02\n.04\n.05*\n.02*\nWINNIPEG EXCHANGE\nTO CLOSE |UNE 9\nWINNIPEG, June 7 (CP). - The\nWinnipeg grain exchange will be\nclosed Thursday, June 9, In observance of the King's birthday.\nEARNINGS DECREASE\nFLEMINGTON, N. J\u201e June 7 (AP)\n\u2014Standard Oil of New Jersey earnings for the first four months were\nbetween 21 and 22 per cent below\nthose of the same period in 1037,\nW. S. Parish, president, told stockholders here today.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, June 7 (CP).-Griin\nfutures quotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWHEAT*\nJuly  '99*\/*   102%    99%   101%\nOct, ___.   77%    80*    77%    79*\nDec.    76       78*    78       77*\nOATS:\nJuly    43*    44*    43*   .44*\nOct.       35*    36%    35*    .36*\nDec    33*    \u2014       \u2014       33*\nBARLEY:\nJuly.   53%    56       55%    55*\nOct    48%    49%    48%    48*\nDec    -       -       -       47%\n. FLAX:\nJuly  138      138*   138      138*\nOct  138*    -       -      138*\nRYE:\nJuly    52*    53%    52%    53*\nOct     52*    53%    52*    52*\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT: No. 1 Nor. 112%; No. 2\nNor. 108%( Nos. 3 Nor. and V Garnet\n99%; No. 4 Nor. 91%;-No. 5, 67%;\nNo. 6, 61%; feed 59*; No. 2 Garnet\n96%; No. 1 Durum 75*;, No. 4 special 87%; No. 5 special 64%; No. 6\nspecial 60%; track 107%; screenings\n50 cents per ton.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 44*; No. 3\nC. W. and Ex. 1 feed 41%; No. 1\nfeed 40%; No. '2 feed 37%; No. 3\nfeed 35%; track 44%. .    .\nBARLEY\u2014Malting grades: 6-and\n2-Row Ex. 3 C. W. 65. Others: No.'3\nC. W. 54; No. 4 C. W. 52*; No. 5\nC. W. 51%; No. 6 C. W. 50*; track\n55%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 137%; Nb. 2\nC. W. 133%; No. 3 C. W. 123%;\nNo. 4 C. W. 108*; track 137%.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 52%.\n606 Free Miners'\nLicences Issued\nin Zeballos Area\nVICTORIA, June 7 (CP)- Widespread search for gold along Vancouver Island's west coast, following gold discoveries at Zeballos are\nreflected in mines department returns showing the number ot free\nminer's licences issued in the area.\nFigures compiled today showed\nthat in the 12 months ending May\n31, 606 certificates were Issued in\ngovernment offices at Albemi, Torino and the sub-office it Zeballos. This compared with 187 to the\npreceding year. \u2022\nLondon Close\nLONDON, June 7 (AP).-Clostag:\nBra.il $10%; C.P.R. $5%; International Nickel $43%;.U. S. Steel $43;\nBritish American Tobacco 97s 6d:\nCable & Wireless \u00a348; Consol Gold\nFields 71s 10%d; Courtaulds 84s;\nEast Geduld \u00a311%; H. B. C. 20s Od;\nWoolworth 60s 10*d.\nBonds\u2014British 2* per cent Consols \u00a374 5-16; 3* per cent war\nloan \u00a3102*; funding 4s 1960-90\n\u00a3 113%.\nDividends   ;\nSun Life Assurance company, $3.75\nper share.\nFalconbrldge Nickel Mines, 7*\ncents.\nEastern Steel Products, $1.75.\nPage-Hersey Tubes, Ltd., $1,\nLACK OF UNIFORMITY\nCAUSE OF COMPLAINTS\nOTTAWA. June 7 (CP)-Uck\nof uniformity in adjusting debts\nunder the farmeri' creditors arrangement act, together with board\nof review decisions which tailed to\ndo full justice to priority mortgages,\nformed the chief complaint of witnesses heard today by the senate\nbanking committee, studying amendments to the legislation.\nTORONTO EXCHANCE\nTO CLOSE JUNE 9\nTORONTO; June 7 (CP). - The\nToronto stock exchange will remain\nclosed on Thursday, June 9, In observance of the King's birthday,\nMontreal\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain\t\nAssoc Brew of Can\t\nBathurst P & P A\t\nCanadian Bronze \t\nCan Bronze pfd ,.\u201e.\t\nCan Car It Fdy pfd __.._._.\nCan Celanese .........\t\nCan Celanese pfd _.-..\t\nCan North Power\t\nCan Steamship ..... .\nCm Steamship pfd\t\nCockshutt Plow  1\t\nCon Min & Smelt\t\nDom Goal pfd \t\nDom Steel & Coal B\t\nDominion Textile  :\t\nDryden Paper \u201e\u201e.____.\nFoundation C of C\t\nGatineau Power \u201e\u201e\t\nGatineau Power pfd \t\nGurd Charles :....\nHolt Renfrew  \t\nHow Smith Paper\t\nImperial Oil \t\nInter Petroleum   ......\nInter Nickel of Can ...\t\nLake of the Woods ...\t\nMcColl Frontenac\t\nNational Brew Ltd \t\nNational Brew pfd  \t\nOgilvie Flour new\t\nPrice Bros\t\nQuebec Power \u2014\t\nShawinlgan W St P \u2014\t\nSt Lawrence Corp\t\nSt Law Corp pfd\t\nStock Exchange\n2%\n13*\n7%\n35\n105\n27%\n17*\n3V*\n11*\n7%\n50*\n18\n11\n58*\n5\n11*\n11%\n14\n12\n16*\n24%\n43*\n11%\n10%\n39\n41*\n29*\n10*\n15\n19*\n3\n10*\nSouth Can Power\t\nSteel ot Canada Pfd .\nWestern Grocers\t\nBANK8\nBank of Canada\t\nCommerce -\t\nDominion  \t\nImperial\t\nMontreal . _.. \t\nNova Scotia \t\nRoyal\t\nToronto -\t\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 pfd\n,  11\n.  59%\n.  50\n.  54\n. 158\n, 198\n.201\n.203\n.296\n,170\n,230%\n14*\n2\n2%\n20%\n13\n180*\n95\nBathurst P _. P B\t\nBeauharnois Corp ....___\nBritish American Oil ...\nB C Packers\t\nCan Industries B\t\nCan Marconi\t\nCan Vickers _.,.  IVs\nCons Paper Corp  '. _._ 5\nDonnacona Paper A  . 4%\nDonnacona Paper.B   3*\nFairchild Aircraft     5%\nFraser Co Ltd   10\nInter Utilities A      5*\nInter Utilities B _...._..__.\u201e.... 60\nLake Sulphite   3\nMacLaren P tt P  _._ 8%\nMcColl Frontenac pfd  95\nMitchell Robt  _ 9\nPower Corp pfd ......;.. 97*\nRoyalite Oil    38%\nUnited Dist of Can   30\nWalker Good It W _  36%\nWalker-Oood pfd ...\u201e    18*\nQuotations, on Wall Street\nHigh Low Close\nAm Can   86* 86 86%\nAm For Pow ....    3%      3% 3%\nAm Smelt & Re 35% 34% 33 .\nAm Tel   130* 129* 129*\nAm Tob   68% 68 68\nAnaconda  24* 23* 23%\nAv Corp     3%     3% 3%\nBlldwln     6%     6% 6%\nBait tt Ohio     5%      5* 5%\nBendlx Av  10% 10* 10*\nBeth Steel .\u2014 45* 43* 44\nBorden  13% 15 16\nCm Dry.  16% 15% 13%\nCM Pac     5%     5% 5%\nCerrode Pisco 34 33* S3*\nChfyiler   43* 41* 41%\nCon Gas N Y .. 24% 24 24*\nC Wright pfd -    4%     4% 4%\nDupont  98% 96* 96*\nEast Kodlk   15* 154 r 154\nFord Eng    4*     4* 4*\nFore\" of Cm .... 16* 16* 18*\nFree Texu ....... 25 . 25   , 25\nGen Elec  34% 38* 33%\nden Foods _--,- 28% 28V. 28*\nGen Motors ..... 29* 28* 28%\nHud Motors i\nInter Nickel ....\nInter Tel It Tel\nKenn Cop \t\nMack Truck ....\nMont Ward\t\nNash Motors ....\nN Y Central ....\nPack Motors .._\nPenn R R \t\nPhillips Pete ....\nRadio Corp\t\nRem Rand\t\nShell Un\t\nS Cal Edison ....\nStan Oil of N J\nTexas Corp \t\nTexas Gulf Sul\nTimken Roll ....\nUnder Type ....\nUn Carbide .....\nU Oil of Cal.\nUn Aircraft ...\nUn Pac ..,\t\nU S Rub ........\nU S Steel\t\nWarner Bros .\nWest Elec ....\n31%\n7*\n32\n5V\u00ab\n11\n5% 6% 5%\n44 43* 43%\n8% 8% 8%\n29% 28% 28%\n18% 18* 18*\n30% 31\n7 7*\n11% 11% 11%\n3% 3%      3*\n.14% 14* 14*\n32* 32\n5% 5*\n11% 11\n11% 11* 11*\n21% 20% 21*\n47 46* 46%\n29% 38* 38%\n30* 30 30\n35* 35* 33*\n45* 45* 45*\n65% 64% 64*\n18* 18* 18*\n26% 25% 25%\n62* 62 62\n27% 26* 26*\n48 41% 42\n4* 4* 4*\n10, H 74*\nii r\nMontreal List\nChanges Narrow\nMONTREAL, June 7 (CD-Irregularity was apparent on the\nstock exchange today but most\nprice chmgei were narrow.\nCanadian Celanese dropped two\nto a new low it 9. Bank of Canada\ntouched a new low for the year at\n54, off a point\nGatineau Power rose to a new\nhigh at 12%, up 1% though it\nwound up the day at 12* for a net\ngain of %.\nMetals were mostly lower, though\nNoranda added a point at 64. Telephone eased a point ond Brazilian\nlost %.\nRails, Papers and constructions\nwere dull but firm. Lake of the\nWoods Milling advanced i point at\n12, McColl Frontenac picked up %.\nMARKETS AT\nA GLANCE\nBy The Canadian Presi\nToronto \u2014 Base metals higher\nother groups lower.\nMontreal and New York \u2014 Stocks\nnarrowly tower.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Wheat % cent higher to % cent lower.\nToronto \u2014 Bacon hogs off truck\nsteady to strong at $10-510.25.\nLondon \u2014 Bar silver and lead\nlower: copper and line higher.\nNew York \u2014 Silver, lead and sine\nunchanged; Export copper higher,\nMontreal \u2014 Silver unchanged.\nNew York \u2014 Cotton and sugar\nlower; rubber and coffee slightly\nhigher.\nNew York \u2014 Canadian dollar\ndown 3-32 to 98 21-32.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, June 7 (CD-British and foreign exchange closed\nhigher today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nArgentina, peso, ,2636,\nCzechoslovakia, crown, .0353.\nDenmark, krone, .2241.\nFinland, finmark, .0223,\nFrance, franc, .028118.\nGermany, reichsmark, .4073.\nHolland, florin, .8599.\nHungary, pengo, .2012.\nIndia, rupee, 3731.'   ,\nJapan, yen, ,2917.\nNorway, krone, .2528.\nPoland, rioti, .1916.\nSweden, krone, __5B8.\nSwitzerland, franc, .2309.\n\u2022  (Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, June 7 (CP). -\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\n_;__\u25a0.*_ Strt   Tough\nNo. J herd   101%       99%\nNo.- 1 Nor. 101%       99%\nNo.2Ndr    97%       95%\nNo.-S Nor.   91%       88%\nNo. 4 Nor    82%       79*\nNo. 5 wheat   68%       65%\nNo. 8 wheat    62%       59*\nFeed -     55% .'.,   52%\nDominion invited     >\nto join aberhart\nEDMONTON. June 7 (CP)\u2014Premier Aberhart has invited the Dom-\nlon government to join Alberta \"to\noppose the organized opposition of\nthe financial interests.\"^ It was revealed here today in the 'text ot a\nletter he wrote last week to Premier King at Ottawa.\nThe letter declared prevailing economic stress \"is due to a faulty\nfinancial system, and . . . those in\ncharge of the financial system must\nbe held responsible for their administration.'\n$50,900  RECOVERED'\nBY ISLAND MOUNTAIN\nVANCOUVER, June 7 (CP) -Island Mountain Mines Ltd. recovered 1459 ounces of gold valued at\n$50,900 trpm 1450 tons of ore milled\nduring May this year, according to\nthe mine's monthly report released\ntoiiay! The production value was\nbased on a prioe of $33 an ounce\nfor the gold. ,\nGeneral Motors\nMan Promoted\n3. N. LI8TER\nVANCOUVER, B.C.-June 7.-J,\nN. Lister, until recently manager\nof the General Motors office at\nVancouver, has been appointed\nmanager of the western zone for\nGeneral Motors Products of Canada, with head-quarters at Regina.\nMr. Lister succeeds E. R. Birchard,\nwho has been appointed sales manager for one of the divisions, in\nthe newly-created central zone at\nOshawa, Ont\n27 Mineral Claims'\nRecorded in Week\nA total of 27 mineral claims, located mostly on Yellowstone, Toad\nand Morning mountains, were recorded at the Nelson mining recorder's office in the past week.\nClaims on Yellowstone mountain\nwere White and Yellow by JS. M.\nMitchell; Van fraction by Alfred J.\nGaul; Blue by Robert S. Calquhoun;\nGreen by L. Calquhoun; Orange by\nGeorge Rogers; and White by Earl\nMatheson. Claims on Toad mountain\nwere the Perry Nos. 1 and 8 by\nEd Bedrick; Perry Nos. 2 and 5 by\nJohn Elliott; Perry No. 3, by W.\nE. Johnston; and Perry No. 4 by J.\nR. Farrell; and Ned fraction, by\nJohn E. Marquis,\nMorning mountain claims were\nthe Mercer fraction, and Mercer No.\n3, by B. C. Grant; Mercer Nos. 2,\n5 and 7 by J. P. Nichols; Mercer\nNos. 1 and 6 by J. R. Farrell; and\nMercer No. 4 by W. E. Johnston.\nOther claims recorded were the\nTuTn Creek at Anderson and Tell\ncreeks, by A. C. M. Sorenson; Lucky\nGirl near Kitchener, by E. C. Stewart; Baltic Sea, on Hall creek, by\nHenry Erickson; S.S.P. near Hall,\nby 0. A. Tanlnila; and Lilly at\nSheep Creek, by P. T: Horton.\nSAY IAPAN KNOWS MORE\nTHAN U. S. OF SALMON\nINDUSTRY BRISTOL BAY\nWASHINGTON, June 7 (AP) \u2014\nThe United States congress heard\ntoday that the Japanese government \"undoubtedly knows more\nthan Americans know about the\nred salmon which are the basis of\n$12,000,000 a year industry in the\nBristol Bay area of Alaska,\nThe house of representatives an-\nfiropriations committee made puo-\n1c this statement by Ward T. Bower, chief of the fisheries bureau's\nAlaskan division, in connection\nwith a bill to meet deficiencies ot\ngovernment departments, including\nthe rounding out of \"wholly inadequate information now available.\"\nFORE8T REVENUE8 HOLD UP\nVICTORIA, June 7 (CP)\u2014Provincial government forest revenues\nfrom the timber industry were holding up well this year, Hon. A. Wells\nGray, minister of lands, said today.\nReturns for the month of May, released this morning, showed a substantial gain over May of last year\nand the year before,\n. . BONDS MIXED\nNEW YORK, June 7 (AP)-U. S.\ngovernment bonds today were 13-\n32ds off to 5-32ds up. Foreign governments were generally higher,\nthe average of 10 issues advancing\n.3 to 62.\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nMINES:\nAztec    \t\nB C Nickel ..........\nBig Missouri \t\nBluebird   \t\nBralorne   \t\nBridge Riv Con ....\nCariboo Gold \t\nDentonia   \t\nDunwell    ,:\t\nFairview Amal ....\nFederal Gbld \t\nGeorge Copper .....\nGold Belt  _\t\nGold Mountain ...\nGraridvlew   .!\t\nGrull-Wihkine    ....\nHedley Mascot ....\nHome Gold \t\nIndian Mines \t\nInter Coal te Coke\nIsland  Mount  \t\nKoot Belle  \t\nLucky Jim \u2014\t\nMcGilllvray   \t\nMinto Gold \t\nNicola M st M ....\nNoble' Five \t\nPend  Oreille  \t\nPioneer Gold\t\nPorter Idaho  \t\nPremier Border ....\nPremier Gold \t\nQuatslno-\nQuesnelle   Q   \t\nRed Hawk Gold ....\nRelief Arlington ....\nReno Gold \t\nReward _\u2022\nRufus Argenta .....\nRuth Hope i\t\nSally Mines  -\nSalmon Gold \t\nSheep Creek   _\nSilbak Premier\t\nVldette Gold \t\nWaverly T \t\nWellington   \t\nW>_ko Mines.'._\nBid\n.11%\n.09*\n32V,\n.01*\n9.35\n.03\n2.07\n. .06%\n.02\n.05%\n.01\n_\u00bb\n.34\n.02\n.05\n.05\n1.05\n.01\n.01*\n.26\n.78\n1.18\n.02\n.22\n.03%\n.03%\n.02\n1.60\n3.05\n.02%\n.01\n2.00\n\u201e2\n.09%\n.05%\n.14*\n.57\n.03%.;,\n.01*\nJB\n.06\n.96 .\n1.70      \u25a0\n'   .00%\n.01%\n_______\nAsk\n.13\n.12\n.34\n.02\n9.40\n.03*\n2.20\n.07\n.02%\n.05*\n.02%\n.05*\n1.08\n.01%\n.02\n.78\n1.22.\n.02%\n.04\n1.88\n3it\n.01*\n2.03\n.03\n.10\n.58\n.04\nj01%\n.01\n30\n.07\n.97\n2.00\n.08\n.00%\n.02\nBid\nAsk\n01U8:\nA P. Con\t\n.16\n.18\nAmalgamated   \t\n.01*\n.02\n.06%\n.08\nAnglo Cinadian ....\n1.38\n1.40\n.03\n.08\n.04\nBrown Corp \t\n.38*\n.40\nCalgary. & Edm ....\n2.08\n2.13\n.31\n.26%\n.33\nCommonwealth ....\n.29\n.01*\n.02\nDalhousie\n.40\n.55\nJl\n\u2014\n.06%\n.07*\nFirestone  Pete  ....\n.13*\n\u2014\n.50\n.15%\n\u2014\nFoundation Pete ..\n\u2014\nFour Star Pete ....\n.14\n.17\n.05%\n.05\n.19\n\u2014\nHighwood Sarcee .\n.08\n\u2014\n1.05\n.03%\n1,07\n|04\n.05%\n.13\n.13\n.15\n\u2014\nMercury    \t\n.08\n.09%\n.05\n. \u2014\nMill City Pete ....\n.06%\n\u2014\n.22\n\u2014\n.12*\n.13*\n.07*\n\u2014\nOkalta com  -\n1.09\n1.13\nOkalta Pfd  _...\n22.00\n\u2014\n.06\n.07\n.36\n.37\n37.50\n40.00\nSouthwest Fete ....\n_5\nSpooner    \t\n.13\n.18\nUnited    \u201e\n.16%\n.17\n-   .71\n.07\n_-\nWest Flank \t\n.10*\n\u2014\nINDUSTRIALS:\n28.00\n\u2014\nBrew It Dist \t\n4.00%\n.\u2014 .\nCan Piolfic  .\n5.50\n6.00\nCapital Est\t\nm\n\u20222.50,\nCAMPBELL OF WILLOW POINT AND\n(LARIDGE OF ARROW PARK NAMED y\nNOMINEES GROWER. DIRECTORS\nAssociated   Asks  for\nElimination Wharf *\nFees, Renata\nAssociated Growers delegates of\nWest Kootenay and Arrow Lakes in\nannual meeting at the board of\ntrade rooms at Nelson Tuesday\npassed a resolution asking the federal government to eliminate wharf\nfees on shipments passing over the\nRenata wharf, on the basis it was\nthe only interior wharf at which\nfees were being collected. The resolution will go to federal officials\nand to W. K. Esling, M.P.      \u25a0 ,-\nJoseph Gray of Renata told the\nmeeting that a wharfinger had recently been appointed at Renata,\nand as far as he and hit associates\ncOuld learn, it was the only such\nappointment in the interior. Fees\nwere being demanded on all shipments handled over the wharf.\n'Mr. Gray stated wharfingers had\nin the past been appointed at other\nlake points, but soon ceased to act\nbecause of the unpopularity of the\nJob. No one would take it now. Re-\nnata's candidate was carrying on,\nhowever.\nReport Ready on\nMineral Area East\nof Kootenay Lake\nResults of field investigation by\nH. M. A. Rice during 1937 in the\neastern portion of the Nelson area\nare contained in a preliminary report (Paper 38-17) issued recently\nby the Geological Survey division,\ndepartment of mines and resources,\nOttaws.\nTwo distinct types of mineral deposits are found In the area. One\noccurs exclusively in the diorite sills\nand miy be subdivided into quirtz-\ncalclte veins, ind disseminated sulphide deposits, and the other consists of quartz veins in granite or\nIn Pre-Cambrlin sediments.\nThe latter occur throughout the\narea, and constitute the most promising type of deposit. They vary\nfrom a few Inches to 20 feet or\nmore in width, ind many can be\ntraced for i considerable distance.\nTheir localization ll controlled largely by the folding and faulting, and\ntor this reason the most likely areas\nare those which have been most deformed. >.'    .,, i,t \u25a0\nTbe area Is extremely .mountainous, and although the two sides and\nthe southern end me accessible by\nthe main highway through Kings-\ngate, Yahk, Cranbrook and Kimberley or branch roids, the Interipr\ncan be reached only by trail. Except\nfor a small triangular section ot\nCambrian slates and qusrt-ltes in\nthe centre, the region is underlain\nby lite Prf-Cimbrlan sediments.\nDescriptions ire given in the report, of several at the, more important properties in the area.\nPROPOSE AMENDMENTS\nTO OVERCOME ABUSES\nCTirAWA, June 7 (CP)\u2014To overcome abuses by fraudulent debtors\nunder the companies' creditors' arrangement let restriction of the application of thit let to companies\nwith outstanding bonds or debentures was proposed today before the\nhouse of commons' blinking and\ncommerce committee.\nThe proposal, along with i proposed amendment to the bankruptcy act, was made by H. S. T.\nPiper of the Montreal board of\ntrade as an alternative to repeal\nof the creditors' arrangement act\nObjections to the existing apt centered on \"tbe fact toe debtor may\ncontrol both his own affairs and the\nmachinery for considering the (settlement) proposal\" regarding unsecured creditors, Mr. Piper said.\nLOADS ORE\nMOYIE, B. C.-\"Babe\" Leask is\nbusy loading his second car of ore\nfrom the Moyie Gold mine.\nMacdonell and Squires\nAre Selected as\nAlternates\nJ. J. Campbell of Willow Point\nwas nominated for Kootenay lake ]\ndirector ot the Associated Growers\nof British Columbia, and W. J.\nClaridge of Burton was nominated\nfor Arrow lakes director when As- I\nsoclated Growers delegates of the\nWest Kootenay held their annual\nmeeting at the board of trade rooms,\nNelson, Tuesday. J. J; Campbell,\npresent Kootenay lake director, wsi\nchairman.\nThe meeting named J. D. Mlc-\ndonell of Willow. Point as alternate\nto Mr. Campbell and C S. Squires\nof Robson as alternate to Mr. Claridge.\nAttending were E. J. Chimben\" ot\nVernon, president ot the Assoclited: ,\nJ. J. Campbell, H. M. Greenwood.\nD. L. Doyle and W. P. Dickson,\nWillow Point; S. N. Brown, Major\nTurner Lee and Colonel S. Goode,\nBonnington; C. S. Squires, Robson: -\nH. W. Herridge, Nakusp; Joseph\nGray, Renata; Basil Robertson, Burton; W. J, Claridge, Arrow Park; A.\nH. Noakes, Balfour; G. D. Birwis\nand O. B. Appleton, Sunshine Bay.\nSheep Creek Gold\nProduction, May,     1\nTotals to $74,852\nVANCOUVER, June 7 (CP)-Mly\nproduction it Sheep Creek Gold\nMines was reported today tt $74,.\n852 from 4658 tons ot ore, averaging $16.07 per ton. This compered\nwith $73,200 from 4316 tons in AprU. j \u25a0\nMontreal Produce     j\nMONTREAL, June 7 <CP)-But,\ntor spot:. Quebec fresh (92 score)\n25*-l%. Sales: 200 Quebec fresh\n(92 score) 24%.\nCheese spot: Ontario white 14%-\n*; Quebec white 13%B.\nEggs spot: Ontario A large 25A.\nCheese to arrive: Quebec white\n13*A; Quebec colored 13%A,\nButter futures firmer ind un* . '\nchanged to % cent advance. June,\n25*-*. -';.'     ::-\nm,\n$4\nNOTICE 1\nExamination lor\nScaler's Licence\nwill be held it the following places\non the following dates starting It 9'\na.m. Two days will he allowed at;,\neach location for the examination.  I\nCalloway ...\nCanal Flats .\nCranbrook .,\nCreston ....\nGrand Forki\nArrow Park ,\nSalmo\t\nLongbeach .,\nuna 13 1938,\nuna 16 193$\nuna 20 1938,\nuna 23 1938\nuna 27 1938\nluiy 5 mi,'\nJuly   8 1938\nJuly 12 1938\nEXAMINATION. FEE ?5.00\nApplication forms and further;,\ninformation may be obtained\nfrom the\nDISTRICT FORESTER\nNelion, B. C.\n=af\nPLANNING YOUR\nVACATION?.\nThen don't forget to include a subscription to the Doily News in your list of\nvacation requirements.\nYou'll be surprise'd at tHe pleasure yo.u will get from reading all\nabout the happenings back home..\nGive your order to any carrier, ,\nagent, postmaster or 'direct to the\nDaily News.\nWherever you go we will send you\nyour copy of the\n\u2022toon lailg fas\ni-\nCIRCULATION DEPARTI\n \u25a0    -'\u25a0\u25a0\nPARE   TEN-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-WEDNESDAY MORNING. JUNE 8, 1938\nSun Glasses\n25c to $1.25\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nBOARDS ASK IMPROVEMENT OF\nIHE ROSSLAND-CASCADELINK\nReaffirm Stand for Completion of Southern\nScenic Highway; Against Alaska Road\n. If Canadian Expense v\nScouts Ask Civic\nAid for Camporie\nWaiting on the city council Tuesday night, George Rossington, A. C.\nEmory and Fred Gill asked the city\nto assist thi. Nelson Boy Scout\nassociation in raising funds to entertain American Scouts at a camporie planned at Camp Busk, Kokanee, in July. Local Scouts would be\npaying their own way, they explained, but the Scout association\nwas engaged in a drive for funds to\nentertain their guests, who a short\ntime ago were their hosts at Pullman, Wash. The council gave the request to the finance committee, to\nconsider.\nNelson Business\nCollege\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION\n. Commence Any Time\nBOOKINGS FOR BALANCE\nOF JUNE\nJune 8-9\n\"Sally- Irene and Mary\"\n.,  plus\n\"Checker.\"\nJune 10-11\nJeanette MacDonald and Nelson\nEddy in\n\"The Cirl of lha Golden West\"\n, June 13-14\n\"Radio City Revels\"\nplus the\nRoil - Armstrong Fight\nJune 15-11\n\"Dinner at the Rita\"\nplus\n\"Kid Conies Back\"\nJune 17-18\nJane Withers in\n\"Rascals\"\nplus\n\"Kentucky Moonihine\"\nJuno 20-21\n\"Dr. Rhythm\"\nplus\n\"Bulldog Drummond\nComet Back\"\nJune 22\n\"Westbound Limited\"\nplus\n\"King of the Newsboys\"\nJune 23-24-26\nClark Gable, Myrna Loy and\nSpencer Tracy in\n\"Ten Pilot\"\n*    June 27-28\n\"College Swing\"\nplus\n\"Invisible   Menace\"\nJune'29\nOPEN\n*       June 30, J.iily 1-2\n\"The Adventures\nol-Robin Hood\"\nTRAIL, B. C, June 7 - Highway resolutions of various kinds occupied part of the time of the Associated Boards of Trade of Eastern British Columbia here today.\nIMPROVE CA8CADE\nLINK\nThat the provincial government\nshould be begged to proceed forthwith with Improvement to the cas-\ncade-Rossland highway, was propounded in a resolution from the\nGrsnd Forks board of trade unanimously endorsed by the convention. The resolution referred to urgent requests having been made by\nR. R. Burns, M. P. P.. and E. C.\nHenniger.tM. P. P., to have a sum\nof money allocated for work on this\nroad, which included taking out\nbad turns and surfacing the road.\nMr. Henniger told the meeting\nthat he and Mr. Burns had been\ntold .by Hon. T. M. MacPherson,\nminister ot public works, that he\nwould do all in his power to get a\nsum of money to put the road in\nbetter shape. From several remarks\nfrom different quarters, it was gathered that the government was of\nthe opinion that the existing route\nwas the best for the -centres\nthis road now affected There was\nanother route over which a road\ncould be built, but it would not in-\nelude Trail, Rossland and Castlegar.\nftO FUNDS FOR\nALA8KA LINK\nThree resolutions, two from Trail\nand  one from Nelson  protesting\nIf you are troubled with bed\nbugs.\u2014Fumigate with\nSMYTHE'S BLACK DEATH\nTO BUCS\nAT SMYTHE'S\nPrescription Druggist\nPHONE ,1\nROOFING\nEaves Troughs, etc.\nR.H. Maber\n.Phone .65    810 Kootenay St\nagainst construction ot the Alaska\nhighway, were re-drafted into one,\nand endorsed! Sense of the new\nresolution wss that until such time\nas the roads of the province had\nbeen made into highways and the\nsouthern provincial highway was\ncompleted, no provincial funds\nshould be spent on a road to Alaska, but that it the road could be\nbuilt by American capital without\nany cost to Canada or British Columbia, the Associated Boards ot\nTrsde of Eastern British Columbia\nwould endorse the project.\nDugal McPherson, Grand Forks,\ntold the convention there was no use\nconsidering the Alaska highway, as\nno definite information about lt had\nas yet been released by the provincial government. He said the Associated boards should ignore if, or\npetition the government to give\nthe people adequate information.\n\"Fifteen million dollars won't build\none-quarter of It,\" he asserted.\nFINISH SOUTHERN\nSCENIC\nThe tourist resolution endorsed\nlast year, in which the association\nurged upon the provincial government the necessity of building the\nuncompleted1 portion of the southern\nprovincial highway, and putting the\nsame highway in first class condition as the financial condition of\nthe province permits, and that after the main trunk highways' were\nput in first class condition then\nfeeders to them and the southern\ntrans-provincial highway should be\nput In equally good condition, was\nre-affirmed. Two resolutions from\nFernie which contained the same\nmatters were withdrawn.\nAs the Dominion government haa\nalready been urged to complete the\nnorthern route through Hope, reso\nlution of tbe Revelstoke board asking for completion of the trans-\nCanada highway from Arrowhead\nto Nakusp, was not approved.\nTABLE HIGHWAY\nBOARD'\nRequest ot a board ot control was\ncontained In a resolution trom the\nGreenwood board of trade. On recommendation of Donald MacDonald, speaking tor the resolutions\ncommittee, lt was tabled because,\nhe explained, a resolution for a\nhighway commission Was turned\ndown In Cranbrook two years ago.\nIt was not fair, he said to the minister of public Works \"and the eh-;\nglneers who were doing a good Job\nconsidering the amount of money\nthey had to spend. Besides, the road\nprogram did not Justify a board of\ncontrol. The opinion ihat the money\nspent or. roads was not commensurate with the results was expressed\nin the resolution.\nf\nsSe.wsoftheDaf\nNO BABY CLINIC TODAY.\nEAGLES MEET TONIGHT AT 8\nP. M. INSTALLATION OF OFFICERS. (841)\nPhone  KITCHENER'S tor cut\nflowers and floral designs.'\n...        (1764)\nElectrical     Contraotlng     F.   H,\n8MITH. 881 Baker St.- PHONE Mt,\n(224)\nAUCTION\n823 Josephine St,\n2 p.m. Today, )\u00abne 8\nActing under Instructots from\nthe owner I will offer the following (subject to prior _\u00bble): wau\ntent, baby sling, garden tools,\ntishes, utensils, drop-leal kitchen table and chairs, new cream\nenamel 4-hole range, dark oak\ndining suite consisting pi eatable, 6 chairs, buffet and china\ncabinet wicker chairs, end table,\nradio table, 8-tube Rogers 1937\ntable model all-wave radio, rugs,\ncurtains, chest ol drawers, Remington 22 repeater, single barrel\nshotgun, several wood planes,\nbig wood augers, boat scrapers,\nscales weighing up to 75 lbs.,\ndraw knives, double wood\nblocks, etc., etc.\nGoods on view morning of sale.\nTermsr 0. HORSTEAD,\nCash. Auctioneer.\nIS ONE OF THE FINEST\nMALT BEVERAGES YOU WILL\nFIND ACROSS THE LENGTH\nAND   BREADTH   OF   THE\nDOMINION OF CANADA\nORDER A CASE AT THE VENDORS TODAY\nYou'll Like It at Your Next Party\nThis advertisement Is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nKOOTENAY\nBREWERIES\nLIMITED\nOLD FASHIONED Heating Methods Have\nNOPLACE\nIN\nMODERN\nHOMES\nNow is the time to plan\nand install an up-to-date\nFURNACE and, we have\na size to suit every home.\nBUILT BY\nMcCLARY\nFor Canadian homes\nSee us now for prices ond information\nDon't wait 'till winter comes.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nMORE ABOUT\nSPEIRS KILLED\n(Continued From Page One)\nINQUEST ADJOURNED\nA coroner's jury consisting of H.\nH. Chapman, H. D. Harrison, R. D.\nCalley. E. Rosenthal, R. RIdenO.r\nand  J.   Richard,   was   impanelled\nyesterday afternoon and after viewing the body;-the Inquest, was adjourned to today. \u25a0'  \"\u2022\nMr. Speirs was the ton of Mr.\nand   Mrs.   Frederick   Wellington\nSpeirs of Kaslo, where he was\nborn November 12, 1912. For the\npast three years he had been employed as a laborer at Trail. He\nresided at 1653 Fifth avenue, Trail.\nBesides his parents, he is survived by two sisters, Mrs.^Fred Burrows of Trail, and Lorna at home!\nand two brothers, Jack .at Gold-\nfields and Chester at Ymir.\nThe funeral, will be held at Kaslo\nThursday.\nAustrian Scythes . and Fittings,\nHaying Tools, .Sickle Grinders, and\nScythe  Stones;  Hlpperson's.    (761)\nBoats for hire at ,\nWHAT8HAN LAKE  ,--\n(17.1)\nNewspapers, Magazines, Smokes\nBISHOP'S NEWS STAND\ntrny\nPIANO STORAGE-PHONE 1M\nWILLIAMS'TRAN8FER\n(1266)\nGRIZZELLE'S   FOR    BEDDING\nPLANTS PH, 187 OPEN EVENING.8\n(1444)\nAINSWORTH   HOT  8PRING8\nCottages fitted with Hot Mineral\nWater Baths. (1-W\nConservative meeting Canadian\nLegion ThurBday evening, June 9,\n7:30, to receive reports of resolutions committee.. All Conservatives\ninvited to attend. (18S2)\nPlease take notice that It future\nwe will remain open on Saturday\nafternoons but will close on Wednesday afternoons. Ellison. Milting\nCo., B. C: Paulsen, Manager. (1816)\nWanted rooms for Delegates Masonic   Grand   Lodge  June  23.  A.\nClyde Emory, Housing Committee.\n(1837)\nHALLERAN STUDIOS VARIETY\nRECITAL: DANCING, RHYTHM\nBAND, OPERETTA, JUNE 10, IN\nTRINITY Church Hall. 26c, 10c.\n(1733)\n* '\u25a0\t\nMCDONALD'S Ginger Alo Coca\nCola, and other tine drinks, pack'\ned In a sanitary factory. Bottles sterilized In an up-to-date Miller Sterilizer. Mcdonald jam Co.. Ltd.\n(1361)\nWeitlnghouse Refrigerators are sold\non easy terms at\n\u2022  KOOTENAY MU8IC HOUSE\n(708)\nHUDDERSFIELD, Eng. (CP) -\nCricket coach at Eton, George Hirst,,\nformer England\" and Yorkshire player, has recovered from a long illness at his home here.\nWomen's Canadian Club TONITE\n8 p.m., Silver Grill Room. Speaker\nMr. J. M. Humphrey. New members\nInvited. (WD\nDON'T FORGET your tloket for\nthe STORY OF A CENTURY, Tomorrow nite, CIVIC THEATRE,\n(1850)\n$6.00 down and $5.00 a month puts\na Norge In your.home. You oan't\nafford to be without refrigeration\non these terms. Call today and make\nyour choice.\nMcKAY & STRETTON\n(706)\n\u25a0\nIT'S\nREALLY\nThe way we've SLASHED PRICES for (hit SENSATIONAL USED CAR & TRUCK SALE\nTHIS\nIS\nONE\nTIME\nWHEN\n\"CRIME\"\nAND PAYS YOU WELL, WITH THE MOST ASTOUNDING |SED CAR AND TRUCK\nBARCAINS EVER OFFERED IN THE INTERIOR\nm\nSALE LASTS FOUR BIG DAYS-RIGHT UP UNTIL\nSATURDAY NEXT\nHere Are Typical Bargains\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nSTEPHENS \u2014 Edward and Agnes,\nDied June 3. Bodies rest at parlors\not Davis Funeral Service until\np.m. Thursday, when service will\nbe conducted by Rev. E. E. lindgren.\n(1854)\nSchool Teachers\n-    if     '\u25a0'\u2022..\nPlan your Vacation Trip\n# NOW\nGo by bus and see more\nfor less.\nGreyhound Lines\n221 Baker 8t.        Phone 800\n(337)\nM\u00abMMIiMM|fW\u00abIM\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\n'30 FORD SEDAN\u2014\nWat $300. Now ..........\n78 PONTIAC SEDAN\u2014\nWai $200. Now\t\n'34 BUICK SEDAN\u2014\nWai $675. Now\t\n'35 STUDEBAKER SEDAN\u2014\nWai $775. Now,...\t\n'32 DODGE DE LUXE SEDAN\u2014 (QQC\nWai$500.Now tfOVD\n'31 BUICK SEDAN\u2014\nWas $500. Now\t\n$275\n$165\n$575\n$675\n$385\nRED HOT SPECIAL\n'30 DURANT SEDAN\u2014Good paint\nand upholstery. Wai $275. ffOOC\nSpecial  qLLd\n1938 licence free except\nwith \"As Is\" models listed\n$865\n\u202236 DODGE SEDAN\u2014Wai $900.\nNow '. \t\n'29 BUICK COUPE\u2014\n\"Ai li\"\t\n'33 PONTIAC DELUXE\nCOACH\u2014Wai $485; Now ...\n'36 DE SOTO SEDAN\u2014\nWai $975. Now\t\n'35 TERRAPLANE COUPE\u2014     fiflhC\nWai$775.Now..  tl)0\\7d\n'29 FORD ROADSTER\u2014 (1QA\nWai$185.Now iplJU\nTRUCK BARGAINS\n'34 CHEV. 1 Vi ton\u2014Wai\n$575. Now\t\n'36 DODGE, 2 ton, dual tirei,\nwai $785. Now ..\t\n'31 FORD\u2014I Vi ton, dual tires and body.\nWai $385. tfOOC\nNow..  $0L0\n\u202227 INTERNATIONAL\u20141'\/4 MOC\nton. Wai $285. Sale Price .... yLLO\n'29 FAGEOL\u20142Vi ton, hydraulic hoist\nand body, dual tirei, wai $500. <S_\")A(\\\nNow\"aiii\" \u00abPi>UU\n$495\n$585\nMANY MORE BARGAINS ON DISPLAY IN\nOUR USED CAR LOT IN TRAIL\nMOTORS\nPHONE777\n1225 VINE AVENUE, TRAIL\nOPPOSITE DOUGLAS HOTEL\nWANTED - EXPERIENCED GIRL\nfor housewk. Box 1663 Dally News\n\u2022 '\"\u00ab\u2022 (1858)\nBugle Band Asks\nCity Assistance\nfor. Domihion Day\nBequest of the Canadian Legion\nBugle band for city council assistance toward the band's annual Dominion Day celebration waa referred\nto committee of the whole by the\ncouncil Tuesday night George Latta\nand Clarence Ward represented the\nband.\nA False Alarm .\nHUEBLQ, Colo, June 7 (A?).--\nTo the spectators It was just another foul ball but the fire department disagreed and scored it\na run. The ball struck a fire alarm\nbox near St Mary's baseball field\nand set off the alarm-' The fire\nladdies made the run.\nWANT ADS GET RESULTS\nPHONE 44\nTHE PROMPT, RELIABLE\nTAXI SERVICE\nStar Cafe\nThe finest place\nto eat in Nelson\nCIVIC\nToday\u2014Matinee 2:00\nEVENING 7:00 and 8:40\nWampolei\nSalt*\nActs as a gentle laxative\nend stimulates\nthe liver.\nAgain With His\nOld Friends\nT. W. BNQAY\n\u2022T. W. Blngay, former comptroller of the C. M. _: 8. Co.,\nand for many years active in\nTrail board of trade work and\nvigorous participant in Associated Boards of Trade discussions, ia ah honored guest at\nthis, year's Associated Boards\nmeeting. Retired, he is now a\nresident of Vancouver.\nOur suit sale will continue\nthis week. Don't put If\noff, get that new suit noW.\nwhile selections are. at\ntheir best. Every suit(tf\nthe racks on sale. Leish*1\nman, Cook Clothing and\nFashion Craft makes. AW\nsizes, styles and colors. |\n$18.75\nValues to $27.50\n$24.7S:\n.   Values to $32.50\n$29-75\nValues to $40.00\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nMURDER VERDICT\n.VANCOUVER, June 7 (CP)-A\nmurder,verdict was returned, late\ntoday by a coroner's Jury investigating the death of Joseph Brodowicz,\n48, whose body, the head battered,\nwss found Saturday at his newly-\npurchased Richmond farmhouse.\nWhile police of the lower mainland, continued an. Intensive search\nfor Paul Medwedyk, 3_, from whom\nBrodowicz bought the house, the\nthe Jury found the victim died from\n\"injuries received frbm a blunt\nInstrument wielded by a person or\npersons unknown. We consider this\nto be homicidal.\"\nSEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nPer all your needs In plumb\nIng repairs, alterations, and\nInstallations,\nP\". \u00bb1\u00bb        381 VICTORIA St.\nU. 6. DOLLAR STEADY _\nLONDON, June 7 (AP). -It\nUnited States dollar, at 84.84%\nthe pound, was net unchanged\nfinal foreign exchange, trading, t\nday. The rate compared with $94,\n746 for sterling in New Tforl. ova\nFrench francs ended 178.37 to til\npound against 178.22 Saturday,\nJ.A.C. Laughtor\nOptometrist^\nSuite 303\nMedical Arts Bldi\nPHONE 25\nPreieriptiom\nAccurately\nCompounded\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMedical Arts Slock\nLadies! 1\nA lovely new selection of short\nsleeved 'crepes' In plain colors\n, and very smart prints.\nSixes 14 to 44  ,-\nEach $3.95\nGODFREYS'Ltd.\nPHONE 270\n378 BAKER ST.\n$&swi\u00ae9ee&)mtstrV$i&&tts&ssss&s^^\nFIGHTING\nNOAH .EtW'HHtUtMtY'-Srlt KRCY\nInr, Ik. .10.. _> BAK.TIMEUS\na   A I\nA HERBERT WILCOX\nPRODUCTION\nOlr.ctea W NORMAN WAlflS\nALSO    .\nFreddie Bartholomew\n\u25a0 Madeleine Carroll\n1 and Sir Ctiy Standing\n\"Lloyds of London\"\nP\u00bb!\nTODAY AND\nTHURSDAY\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00, AND 8:29\nALL THESE STARSI\nALL THESE LAUGHS!\nand so much zing ond extra sparkle\nIt's your top-hit musical to datel\nALICE TONY\nFAYE\" MARTIN\nAdmission 25c- 10c\n\"CHECKERS\"\nWith  STUART ERWIN . UNA MERKEL\nComing\u2014FRIDAY and SATURDAY |\nJEANETTE MacDONALD   \u2022   NELSON EDDY\nin \"The Girl of the Golden West\"\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_06_08","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0414940","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"}]}}