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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" .*'p\n8130      UP\nI   !\nn c r.:, t i\u00ab  i c\n&L7\nBerrington Gives\nVIEWS UPON WATER\nSee Page 3\nt\nVOL. 23\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u2014i   ^=~z.\nNELSON, B. C,   MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 2, 1925\nNo. 270       %*=\u2014\nMahon Breaks Hand;\nREFEREE STOPS BOUT\nSee Page 8\nas\nQUAKE ROCKS EASTERN HALF CONTINENT\nOLIVER HOT AT DOUK MOB; GUARD BUILDINGS\nYOU LIE' SHOUTS\nTHE PREMIER TO\nDOUKHOBOR MQB\nEight Hundred Doukhohors\nTell Him British Columbia Laws Killed Peter\nPARADE STREETS;\nTHEN INTERVIEW\nPremier   Tells   Them   the\nLaws Will Be Enforced;\nGod's Law Foundation\nGRAND FORKS. B.C., March l.~-\n\"Ynu lie,\" said Premier Oliver, with\nvehemence this nfternoon to a mob\nof 800 Doukhohors. when they told\nhim that it was the laws of British Columba that liad killed Teter\nVerigln, nnd that they did not want\nnny   of   that   law.\n\"It was not our laws that killed\nMr. Verigln; he was killed in spite\nof our laws, against our laws, just\nna people aro killed in other countries against the law.\" continued\nthe premier.\n.Address Follows Lengthy Slngiiiff\nThis was part nf a spirited parley\nwhich took place ahout 3 o'clock\nthis afternoon in front of the residence of the son-in-law of the premier, Rev. F. B. Jtttnnalls. The\nDoukhohors paraded the streets for\nan hour, and then congregated in\nfront of the parsonage to speak with\ntho premier. Thry first sang at\nconsiderable length for the edification of the pr me minister, then invited  Mr.   Oliver to  address  them.\nThe premier told them that in\nthe interests of th** welfare of the\npeople of British Co hi ni bin certain\nlaws had been, enacted by which the\npeople must be governed; people\ncom nff here from other countries\nwere given the same privileges as\nCanadians, but they must nlso obey\ntho Pame laws, nnd he as premier\nof the province wished to have the\nDoukhohors thoroughly understand\nthat   those   laws  would   be   enforced.\n\"People Killed l-ndr-r Yonr Law\"\nIt was at this juncture that the\nspokesman for the Doukhohors,\nprompted by his followers, told Mr.\nOliver that Brit sh Columbia laws\nhad killed Mr. Verigin. and following the premier's emphatic retort,\nthey told lUm that tbo Doukhohors\nbelieved   God'*   law.\n\"We believe In God's law, not\nyour law; God's law says we must\nnot kill, and people are killed under\nyour  law.\"\nPremier Oliver replied that the\nlaws of Great Britain, of Canada,\nand of BiitJsh Columhia were all\nfounded on the laws of God, and\nthat there waa a mighty power behind these laws to see that they\nwere obeyed. People were killed\nIn Russia, where the Doukhohors\ncame from, ana they were killed in\nnil countries by accident and by\nfanatics, and the premier said he\nwas qu te sure that there would be\nmore killed under tbe Doukhohors'\nidea of law than under Canadian\nlaw.\n\"We believe our laws our more\nright,\" waa the concluding sally of\nthe Doukhohors, to which the premier   retorted.\nMc re Right  if Dotikliobors Dead\n\"The laws would probably he\nmore right If you were dead than\nas   you   are   now.\"\nPremier Oliver reached Grand\nForks last evening from Pen tic-\nton, and after heing met by political friends at the station, he went to\nthe home of his daughter, Mrs. P,\nE.   Runnalls.\nAfter dinner he addressed a meeting of the Liberal association on\nmatters with reference to local politics having to do with the Impending Grand Forks-Greenwood by-\nelection.\n.Early this morning he was met by\na small deputation from the Doukhobor colony, after which he attended\nmorning service at the United church,\nof which his son-in-law, Rev. F. E.\nRunnalls, is minister, whom he\nheard   for  the  first  time   locally.\nMr. Oliver left on the evening train\nfor Nelson, which constituency he\nrepresents in the legislature, and\nafter a couple of days there, will\naddress a meeting in  the Hloean.\nSeveral deputations met the premier while in the city, .but the\nDoukhobor problem took precedence.\nNational Declines\nto Pay for Arrest;\nDetectives' Affair\nGerman President ODIICT Cl IHCC\nDies ol Peritonitis UllUj I uLIULU\n\"\"Opr\"W;JiL0NGLINE0F\n.VANCOUVER, March 1.\u2014Following\nthe award of $*.1fll>0 damages to .1.\nLobb, former CX.R. detective, against\nthat railway and A. J. Wheat ley.\ncompany detective, for having had\nMm falsely arrested, the railway com.\nMaty Statss It will not pay, as Wheat-\nley made tha arrest, and had no\nOBmOto  Jrom  the company  to  do   so.\nVancouver Water\nExtension Bylaw\nSweeps the Polls\n\u25bcAMOOUVER, March 1.\u2014The by-\nlaw    to    spnid    (1,350,000    on    tha\nwater   schema   wu   carried   by   nn\noverwhelming    vote   of    th*   piop-\n. trtj  owner* yesterday,\nLOGAN'S FAULT\nMouth of Saguenay Point\nWhere Tremors Radiated\nj From\nFAULT EXTENDS\nINTO ALABAMA\nNew York's Rock Foundation Thought to Be Im-\nmune to Big Quakes\nHERR    EBERT\nBERLIN, March I.\u2014The funeral of\nPresident Ebert, who died yesterday\nmorning, will be held Wednesday\nafternoon In the Wilhelmstrasse \\va\\-\nace. which is being used as the executive mansion. Chancellor Luther,\nwho is acting president, will deliver\nthe oration. There will be no religious services.\nWillielmslra-j.se was thronged\nthroughout the day and late into the\nnight by crowds which slowly moved\npaat the executive mansion, where\nthe body of Herr -Ebert lies. Two\nsoldiers in gray-green fatigue uniform and green field helmets were\nthe only guards that stood before tho\npalace. Crepe, draped over two lan-\nterns behind the main entrance to\nthe mansion, waa the only alga there\nof mourning.\nEARTHQUAKE SETS\nCATHEDRAL AFIRE\nOil Pipe Breaks and a Fire\nFollows; Damage Put at\nTen Thousand\nMONTIIPL-vU March 1.\u2014St. James'\nbasilica, episcopal see of Roman\nCatholics in Montreal, in the west\nend of the city, was threatened with\ndestruction this morning, when fire,\nwhich may have bean caused by oil\nflowing from a heating system pipe\nbroken during the earthquake Inst\nnight, caught the furnace room ceiling.\nOnly the presence of mind of the\nengineer of the building in turning\noff the oil flows by a safety valve,\nand good work by ihe firemen, prevented the flames from spreading to\nthe. church proper.\nAn it was, t he smoke penet ra ted\nthe church, and the niiiiiv persons\nwho had already gathered there fur\nthe S o'clock maws were forced to\nleave.\nDamage is estimated in the neighborhood of $10,01)0.\nPlaintiff Won't Marry\nNow Willing Defendant;\nSuspects His Motives\nTANCOUVER. March 1. \u2014 The\nsuffgestion of Mr. Juatlco Morrison that Lottie Maud Mutui of\n\"London, suing John Kaahtl, wealthy mine owner of Stewart, for\ndamages for breach of promiss,\nmarry the now willing defendant,\nwill not be carried  out.\nAfter thinking the matter over\ntha whole day, Miss Munn declares she has come to the conclusion that to man y him now\nwould be sordid, ns she suspects\nbis sudden willingness to carry\ncut his promise only arises through\na   desire   to   escape   damages.\nAs a result of ber decision, tbe\njudgment of tha oourt, wbich had\nbeen reserved, Is expected ln a\nfew  days,\nQuarter to Half\nCentury Sentence\non Seattle Thugs\nSEATTLE, March 1,\u2014Edward\nLee Fasick and J. M. Dooley,\nconvicted of robbing two messengers of the Bon Marche department store here last August of\n$14,000 in cash and $8000 in\nchecks, were yesterday sentenced\nto serve from 25 to 50 years in\nthe penitentiary. A woman accomplice was given a sentence\nof from seven  to  15  years.\nThe sentence meted out to\nFasick and Dooley are believed to\nbe the heaviest to be imposed\nfor robbery in King county, of\nwhich   Seattle   is  the   seat.\nSTEAMER ARRIVALS\nMelila, nt Southampton, from it.\nJohn.\nMauretania, at Monaco, from New\nYork.\nLONDON, March 1.\u2014King George\nIs reported still progressing toward\ncomplete recovery from the attack\nof bronchitis which has confined him\nto the palace for more than a week.\nAs the weather is threatening, however, there is no prospect of his\nleaving his room for several duys,\nMiAV YORK, March I.\u2014Scientists\nin many cities and in several lands\ntonight were trying to find the point\nor origin of the earthquake which\nlast evening shook the northeastern\nquarter of the United Slates and\neastern   Canada.\nEpicenter in Lake District\nExperts In the area affected found\ntheir data rather difficult to interpret, but their preliminary observations tended to indicate that the\ndisturbance started In the region of\ntho Great Lakes, perhaps near the\nmouth -of the Saguenav rfvar in\nQuebec. Pother Tordorf. who ' has\ncharge of five seismographs at\nGeorgetown university, estimated that\nthe quake centered ahout 020 miles\nfrom Washington, and that its epi-\ncentral point was in the lake district.\nRearing out this approximation was\nthe report of the Dominion observatory at Ottawa, which, however\ndefinitely placed the point of origin\nat   the   Saguenay's   mouth.\nFather J. S. O'Connor, professor\nat Ford ham university, was not yet\nable to form a positive conclusion,\nbut he thought highly probable that\nlho Ona-dian -seienti.'t's deductions\nwere correct.\n.Mean while several other opinions\nas to the epicentral point were offered. The Oxford university observatory cabled that the cpiake had\nheen recorded there but that, inasmuch as the record was rather imperfect, scientists did not care to\nmiike n definite calculation. However, unofficial reckoning at the Knglish university put the quake's starting point \"a few hundred miles distant from New York, probably near\nWashington.\"\nOther     reports     variously    asserted\nthat   the   center   of   the   disturbance\nWM   In    southern   Pennsylvania,    the\nWalSt   Indies,   and   the   mouill   Of   the\nHaguenny   river   In   Quebec.\nWhe-e    Crust    Fractured    Ages    Ago\nTending     to     substantiate     the\nopinion   that   the   apparently   correct point was the lower St. Lawrence   basin   were   the   assertions\nof several experts that the  tremors    had     followed    the     line    of\nLogan's    Fault,   a   great   fracture\nIn   the   earth's   crust   which   occurred    ages   ago.     This   forma -\nlion,   it   was   explained,   begins   ut\nth**1   mouth   of   the   St.   1*'.wrence.\nextending  to  Montreal and thence\ndown   as   far   as   Alabama.     Last\nnight's     tremors     were     probably\ncaused    by     a    slipping    of    rock\nalong the fault.\nNew York's experience with earthquakes Is so limited that the disturbance caused considerable alarm. Clti-\n?.cf\\a of the metroiKilis. however, were\nassured that the basal rock foundation on which the skyscrapers stand\nhas gone through such a conditioning\nprocess that It is immune from serious quakes. Kxperts of the American\nmut-eum of natural history said New\nYorkers need not fear destruction\noi* inconvenience from a seismic disturbance.\nSaskatoon Needle Moves Three Inches\nKA8KATOON, March 1. \u2014 Kurlh-\nquake shocks, not quite so severe as\nthose of the last big Japanese catastrophe. Were registered by the university set sinograph here between 7:.t0\nand S o'clock last evening. The needle\not the instrument showed a variation\nof three inches, far heavier than that\nrecorded by the average seismic disturbance\nVictoria  Xnstrtunant   Registers   It\nVICTORIA. R.O, March 1.\u2014One of\nthe most severe earthquakes recorded\nhere was registered last night by the\nseismograph at Gonzales Heights observatory, the record beginning at\nd:2ft p.m., reaching a maximum wave\nat R:38 p.m., and continuing for three\nhours.\nIt waft stated at tho observatory\nthat the center of the shock wns approximately 2K00 miles. Its direction\nwas southeasterly, and it was thought\nthat th*** shock originated near the\nWest   Indies.\n\"The shork may havo originated in\nMexico, but I think there would have\nlimn reports from there had it been\nthe case,\" P. Napier Denison, d.rector\nof   tho   observatory,   said.\nGreater   Than   Chile   Shock\n\"Wo recorded the very severe shock\nIn Chilfl several years ago, hut Saturday night's record was much greater.\nThe Japanese earthquake was not\nnearly so evident at Gonzales Heights,\nbut the distance was .much grenter In\nthat case\u2014more than 50(10 miles\u2014as\ncompared with less than 3000 in last\nnlfiht's   shock.\"\nRecorded ln England\nOX-FORD. KnKland, Mirth 1. \u2014 The\nseismograph at the university of Oxford at 4:40 o'clock th,s morning\n(about 11:40 p.m. Saturdny, American\neastern standard time) recorded nn\nearthquake, which It wus thought was\napparently a few h undred miles distant    from    New   York,   prnhnhly    near\n' (Continued on rage Two.)\nHe May Have to\nSit With Cabinet\nPRINCE   HENRY\nIn the coming absence of King\nOeorge on a health cruise oa tlic\nMediterranean, and of the Prince, of\nWales in South Africa, and of llu-\nDuke of Vork in Africa, may have\nto assume, the duties of the throne.\nHe  is  the  King's   third   MO,\nYOUNG LOGGER\nMEETS DEATH\nIN LOG CHUTE\nJames Dick of East Arrow-\nPark Found Dead by\nWorkmen\nWAS SANDING MAN\nON ROBSON FLUME\nInquest Finds Death Accidental;  Employed  by\nEdgewood Company\nWith his head crushed. back\nbroken and two Lfgl broken, the\nlifeless boclv of James Dick, 17-year-\nold son of William Dick, of East\nArrow Carl;, was found beside tlic\nlodging flume of the Kdgowood Lumber company, some two rullcs west\nof East Robson, Saturday at noon.\nIl is thought that the joulh. who\nwas the sanding man of the lumber\ncompany's logging flume, either was\nwalking in the flume, or fell Into It\nand   was   hi!   with   a   log .\nDr. H. 11. MacKenzie. district\ncoroner, went out from .Nelson Saturday night to Castlegar. where an\ninquest fU held, and a verdict of\naccidental death  was returned.\nDick was an employee of the lumber company, and it was his duty to\nsand the chute to slow up the speed\nof the logs. He worked alone. He\nwas last seen cm Saturday morning\nnt 8:^0 o'clock by Warren Hubert, a\nfellow worker, but some hours later\nwas heard by other workmen whistling at   his  work.\nApparently Dick quit work at noun\nand started ta climb the hill in\norder to eat his lunch. It is not\nknown whether hfl slipped from the\nside of the flume nnd fell into il,\nor win ther ho walked In it. H's\nbody was found lifeless shorlly alter\nthe noon hour MOM L'*ui teet down\nthe flume from a. point where his\nhat   was   picked   up   beside   the   tlumc.\nAibyn Thorpe was the foreman of\nthe   coroner's  Jury   thai   \\lowed   the\nbody and reached the verdict of accidental d< aih. The bodv was bronchi\nlo Nelson Hot Ac-day night, and early\nthis morning will ho shipped to llist\nArrow Park, where burial will take\npl;fre.\nGRAND FORKS\nGUARDS HOME\nOF PRINCIPAL\nDoukhobors Hung Around\nPublic School Night of\nSpencer Burning\nCOUNCIL GUARDING\nTHE CITY BUILDING\nDouks Announced in Court\nWould Defy the Laws;\nTalk Klan Remedy\nGUANO FORKS. DC. March 1.\nInvestigation into the burning of\n\u2022 the Doukhobor school ut Spencer\nFriday n*cht. indicate that Grand\nForks' public echoed probably had\na close call. It is now learned\nthat Doukhobors wore. found\nprowling around ubout lho public\nschool lawn and building during\nthe evening, which is a most unusual thing. This was during\nthe hour or two prior to the\nSpencer school fire at 10 o'clock.\nIt is also learned that on uo-\nrount ol threats alleged to have\nbeen made, the school board recently increased the lire Insurance\non the city school  buildings.\nThreatened G la spell House\nIt also appears that the home of If,\nA. t-iluppcll. principal of the Grand\nForks public school, has been under\nguard for the past week because of\nthreats made by the Doukhobors to\nburn It down. Disfavor of Mr. Glas-\npatl comes from his having supplied\nthe names of Doukhobors who had\nnot been attending school, and which\nresulted In the recent prosecutions.\nHis home is at tho edge of th'1 town,\nand special light* havo be-on installed on account of the Doukhobor\nmenace. Mis. QlaapeU is president of\nthe Kootenay preshyteriil, which had\nits annual convention here the past\nweek. 1'iit was prevented from attending sunn' of the \u25a0easiottS bcr.'-uve\nof fear of Doukhobor actio'*.\nIt was Mr. Olaspell's daughter Vine\nIsabel (Jlaspe.'l, who was teacher of\nthe destroyed Ipencsr school up until\nNov. mber, and who was recently paid\noff hy the department of education\nbecause the Duokhohors would not\nsend their children to school.\nspecial precaution*! are being taken\nat     the    cily    buildings,    where    two\nDoukhohors an- held   m   prison,  so as\nto    prevent    d.uiger    from    tho    Honk\nhohor m**n;ico there.\nBelieve   Burning   Reprisal\nGRAND    FORKE     March     1.\u2014Tin\npresumption   is   strong   that   Bpencer!\nDoukhobov school building, five miles\nucst id town, which was destroyed by |\nfire   ahoin    10   o'clock    I'riday    -Bight,\nit   was  burned   by   Doukhobors  as  a\nreprisal    for    having    imprisoned    two I\nDoukhobor parents, .Tneh  fflhtoM and\nIVter   t'loi.-lookin,   for   tailing   to   sen.I .\ntheir children  to schooL\nEl o soli and Ctolstookln were brought I\nbefore Magistrate Neil McCallum a j\nfortnight ago. and fined $,'. each for |\nfailing to send their children to sjhool. ',\nThey were given a week in which to I\npay ihe fine, when they were again '.\nsimilarly < barged last Monday, and\naccepted jail sentence of two weeks :\nrather   than   pay   a   fine.\nA horde of Doukhohors invaded the j\ncourtroom, apparently as intimidation. '\nand have since carried on similar\ntactics during the week without avail. .\nAt the hearing before Magistrate\nMcCallnm the Doukhobors staled that .\nthey    would   noi    send    their   children '\nto  school;   tliat   when   Deter Verigln;\ni (\"nnttnii-pil    on    om tt*-    'i\nHas a Salary Raise\nSIR   SAMUEL   HOARE\nita\nBrltUh   air   mlnisl.T.   ul\nia Ma mm* from IM.M-i to HS.ow,\ntho iminunt imi.l ottMr Brltlah CftbbMt\nminister.-*.     ncoiftlHlon '   tolng     l-MM\nKlven to tlu* Import&nos ol Sir S.,:i;-\nuel'i dutlM.\nTHREE HUNDRED\nMISSING \\\\\nEARTH THROBS\nAND MILLIONS\nSTAND AGHAST\nOver Eastern Canada and\n\u25a0 United States People I\nRush to Open Air\nBUILDINGS SWAY;\nOBJECTS TOPPLE\nTremors Come in Waves;\nin Some Cases Ten Minutes;   Women   Pray\nCH JSUNB\nEipht Known Dead, Six\nHundred Injured, Two\nThousand Houses Burned\nBUEN08 AIRES, March I.\u2014A dispatch to La Xac-ion from liio Janeiro t-ays the known casualties in\nFriday's exploaton on t'aju island,\nnear Nlethoi'oy. are eight being dead,\nand    IM    perwni    injured,   and    that\n.100 persons who were on tha island\nhave   not    been   accounted    for.\nTho l.a Xaeion Correspondent estimates that (00 families lost the'r\nhomes and resources through the\nexplosion,   more   than   J000   houses\nbeing burned down or badly damaged, n rem an were still bmy today\nputting   out    lhc    [lames.\nHundreds nf iin boxes of naphtha\nnre floating on the waters of the\nharbor;    some   of   them   explode    on\ncontact.\nA force of 200 men \\< engaged in\nsearching tor v'.etlms. x ms of ihe\nmen lost bis life wh.-n In- lifted a\ntin of gasul ne, which exploded in\nhis    bands.\nDuring the nigh I the police arres-\ned   DiO   villagers.\nCASCADE HUNTER\nBAGS A COUGAR\nPACIFIC COAST\nPIONEER PASSES\nCarcases of Deer and Coyote  Tell  How  \"Cat\"\nProtected His Kill\nDan Drumheller Drove Cattle,   Washed   Cariboo\nGold; Spokane Mayor\nBPOKANE,  Wash.,   March   1.-Daniel\nM. Drumheller, a pioneer of ihe west\nand one of the tlgnrcs of the earl>\nhistory of lhe Pacific northwest, died\nin D>s AnnelcR yesterduy following an\nattack of pneumonia, infonuaiinn r*--\nceived   by   relatives   here   stated.\n[torn In Tennessee In ]S40, Mr.\nDrumheller cam'* west to California\nat tbe age of 13. He came north\nto Walla Walla In Dill] where ho\nengaged in lb'\" cattle business, driving herds of r.i'fiO to 10,(ita) head overland tu  ('heynue,  \\\\'\\o.\nMr. Drumb-1 Her was one of t In-\nlast survivors of tbe famous oony\nexpress, and one of the last plfteer\nminers of the Caribou eountrv of\nBritish    I'olumhla.\nlie was mayor of Spokane In DS1\nand  IN!-:!.\nMr, Drumheller is survived by his\nwidow, and six sons, three in Spokane,\nthree In Alberta nnd one daughter.\nMrs. l.ula II. Simmons, of S.mt3\nMonies, Cal,     \t\nCA8CADR a C, March 1\u2014Alev\nCharstts, local garajts man and\nhunter, shot a cougar Saturday, this\nbeinir the ihird killed near here this\nwinter.\nMr. Churette has hunted cougars\na number of times recently, and on\none of his trips. In comiKiny with\nGrant Chase-, local trapper, he found\nremains of a deer and ti coyote that\nn cougar had eaten. After eating\npart of the deer the cougar had gone\na wav for n tlnp*. and on returning\nhad found the coyote SOtlffg his deer,\nso lie caught him after n nhort run\nln   tiie deep snow nnd ute him also.\nThe cougar jumped nbout 17 feet\nnt each .lump when ho wan after the\ncoyote, and also when he was elmsiug\nanother deer, which he did not get.\nIN FIRE VALLEY\nQUARTER CENTURY\nAxel Jonson,  Formerly of\nKlondyke Fame. Dies\non Iiis Ranch\nEDOKW     Man h    1- Axel .1\nsen.    a    well-known    pioneer    of i*\nvalley   and   i.'.     Koob na.-.   died *o\nFriday,   ;.;-i.-i*  a   long   llln\nOTTAWA. March 1. \u2014 Four times\nmore severe than any previously recorded here was the official report of\nthe earthquake from the l>omlnion observatory. At 1:21:17 p.m.. the first\npreliminary tremors arrived, eald the\nofficial report, and the vihration continued to be recorded until midnight,\nalthough iu the houses and public\nplaces It was felt only a few minutes.\nThe earth vibrations were one-quarter of an inch. The distance from the\nepicenter was 5*10 kilometers or 315\nmiles, and tbe origin was placed\nsomewhere at the mouth of the Sague-\nnny  river.\nNear Panic In Rink\nAt the Auditorium, where 8000\npeople were Rathered to witness the\nCanadien-Ottawa hockey game, the\nearthquake came between two periods.\nThe building vibrated violently, and a\nfalling window created a tense atmosphere which threatened for a few\nmoments to bring the crowd to a\nverge of a panic. There was a slight\nmovement toward the doors, but when\nthe vibrations apparunLly faded away\nthe   crowd   nettled   down  again.\nA cr-.wd witnessing the annual pu-\n1 pi Is' concert nt tho Olebe collegiate\nMistituir, responded quickly to the\nshakings of the building, and in the\ngallery of the assembly hall there was\npushing im- the exits. Several women grew hysterical, but order was re-\nStored aa the tremors became faint.\nPiaster   r.i lip   In   Museum\nIn lhe it oval Victoria Memorial\nmuseum plaster from several of the\narches fell without injuring anyone\nThe huthling is on \"shaky\" ground\nthat prevented the completion of the\nmuseum lower years ago, hence. _t\nuas particularly subject to the tremors. Seme damage was done by the\nfalling of a brass water container\nwhich regulated Um moisture in the\nnational gallery section of the museum\nbuilding.\nHospital patients were particularly\ndisturbed, and in many cases watch\nvas kepi all Bight t\u20acl a recurrence of\nthe   earthquake\n\u25a0Apart!!'., nt buildings were particularly affec ted, and even ,n private\nbo me \u25a0 suspended chandeliers swung to\nsad fro, rocking chairs rocked vlo-\nlently, and dishes rattled in their\nI 'ac.-s. Plumbing       and       radiators\nfchook   tn   their SSttlagS,  and   the  entire\ni tY. ct    was    sufficient    to    drive    many\npeople  temporarily from their hnmes.\nMother  Earth   Sliruggnd  Her Shoulders\nNEW fORJC, Much 1. \u2014. old Mother\n(Continued <m pane 2)\nll\nii \u25a0:\ni-l\nbind   i*i   Firs     ill- v  ahout   16\n-,o.     I,1L-Linf;    and     Clearlns    Ins    land.\nmd  trapping   In   ih<   winter,\nHe  went   through   the   Klundyke  rush\nto\nHe   was   a    h-u-helcr.   and\nCanada    nrislnnlly    rrom    Finland,    ni\nwhich   country   lie   wuh  a   n*tlve,     lf<\nHe    was    BUCCC   si.il    iu    c-.m m\u00ab   out    Ol\n(in-  bush   a  fno l   rami.     A   n< w   house\nIM   ha.I   built   was   destroyed   by   fire   l\n>\u2022\u25a0;.r   ago.     Tie    int. rmi at   is   at   tin\nEdgewood  r. me.. \u25a0\u25a0>.\nNo Check on Dominion\nStores, Official Finds;\nMillions Not Guarded\nLot Owner Accepts\nAlderman s Challenge;\nBungalow Is Plan Now\nVANCOUVER, March 1.\u2014 Appearing beforo the revision court,\nMrs. John Fraderickson declared a\nlot ass i\u00abred at $900 waa not worth\n$200. .Alderman F. P. Rogers\noffered her the latter sum for it,\nand rhe took the challenge. Now\nhe will eroct a  bungalow.\nAUNT HET\n\u2022I'm glad Mary had it bobbed.\nPn cut up awful, but now he\nknows how I felt when our John\nput   on  Ions   Pauls.\"\nThe Weather\nOTTAWA, March 1.\u2014Sensational charges are mads In Uie report of Auditor-Gene ral *&onthior\nwith regard to control of the government stores. He declare* theee\nStores amount, to about 135,000,000.\nyet) are left lying in various places\naround the country, often wlthoat\nproper records  or check,\nFraser River Current\nTricks a Rum Runner;\nPolice Nab Him on Bar\nVANCOUVER, March 1.\u2014The\nstrong tide in -.he Fraser river\nhas cost G. Van Norstrom, of\nClovJirdale, $150 in fmri. Ho was\nrunning 13 cases of whisky across\nthe river in a rowboat, whon the\ncurrent ran his boat on to a sand\nbar, and br-fore he could get away\nthe polico caught  him.\nTlo- temperatures below are for ths\nrt hours ending ysttMaay afternoon at\nfi o'clock.\nS.-vhii'day's    Weather\nVICTORIA,   **M*.   U.   \u2014   Nelson   nnd\ntlotitlty:    No  toreoasti\nM.n.    Mar-.\nNELSON          211 47\nVictoria            ID 4ft\nVancouver           || 4K\nKamloops          *10 fl\nl.jukervlll.-            i\u00ab 34\n1'rince    Ruperi          40 44\nKstcvun          3S 46\nAtlin            o 22\nDa-Maon :. ,.\\ .. * i. a\nC-aftgary         6 3t\nWlnntpsg     -\u00bb4 6\nl'ortlaud            .is fit*\nSan   Rraneitco       r.6 70\nSeattle          40 r,2\nBp<$taae     \\    3t r.o\nI'entlcton           fl 32\nVernon           \u00ab7 4-1\n'Jrand    Forks          43 4H\nEdmoBton    ..   \u2022 4 u\n Page Tw*T*\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 2, 1925\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAN RATES,   \u00bb3.50   TO   15.00\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths.\nHeadquarters for all Travelling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists.\nROTARIAN   HEADQUARTERS\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER, $1.00\nTHE MOST COMFORTABLE ROTUNDA IN THE CITY\nHUME \u2014 Mr. nnd Mrs. A. J. Cur-\n*on, T. H. Donnelly, H. W. Hrown.\nT. E, Cartwright, R. A. Morley, Vancouver; R. W. Muffin, Colvllle; A. B.\nKitchte, TadRnar; 1.. \\V. Watt, Vancouver; H. 11. Kellv, Calgary: T. C.\nIlaker, Vernon; R. I'. Haralil. J. K.\nHuLhlns, Banff; K. K. Hall. Toronto;\nW. 11. Teskey, Wlnnlnoc; lln nntl Mrs.\nM.    Wolverton,    Mil.    W'olverton,    city;\nI*. J. Edwards. Nakusp; \\V. n. Well-\nwood, D. M. tlstruin, J--. <'. While. C.\nF Edwards, Toronto; I.. W. Vercgln,\nAnnstatla HolohoRf. Rrllllant; W. R\nEreshner. OakvlUe; Charles Smith,\nHiantford; C. L. Hurtch, Vancouver;\nD. A. Cameron. CalKarv; R. E. Johnston. Vancoiiver; T. W. Clark. T. W.\nH. Tuff, Calgary; rt. w. shannon, Toronto; Qaorffe Helllwell, Vancouver; J,\nHcid,   0*l\u2014fT.\nEUROPEAN   PLAN\nDaylight Sample Roomi  for\nCommercial Man.\nHotel Strathcona\nOnce You Get Acquainted With the Strathcona\nYOU WILL STOP AT NO OTHER\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nHot and cold water In every room.\nSteam   heated.\nA.   LAPOINTE,   Prop.\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\nT.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nSteam -heated   Rooms   by   tht   Day,\nWeek   or   Month.\nEvery   consideration   shown   to\nguests.\nCor,  Baker  and   Ward   Sts.  Nelson\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA.  C.  TOWNER,   Proprietor\nThe   home   of   plenty.\nFifty   rooms   of  eolkl   comfort.\nWo \u00ab*arve the best meals in Nelson.\nIt'i  tbo  cook.\nSAVOY HOTEL\nTwo   blocks   from    Depot.\nSteam  Heated.    By  Day,  Week  or\nMonth.    Hot und cold running water.\nFor Your Comfort.\nJ.   A.   KERR,   Prop.\nMADOKN \u2014 Mick Rakas. M. Williams. John Mult-r. Truil; H. Ilippen,\nHlewett;   R   McNeil,   J     McLean.   A.   B.\nDavidson,  l>.  Barrett,  New  Brunawlek;\nJ. Ki Hughe*, luvcrn.-ss. Solland; 1'.\nShaw. (iccrge R I'urvis. Cranbrook;\nH. Harshaw, Arihur Campb.-ll. Ymir;\nJlimi'H   Studley,   H.   Johnstone.   Bpofeuia.\nGRAND FORKS\nGUARDS HOI\nOF PRINCIPAL\n(Continued trom Pmre One!\nwas nlive lie had urged that children\ngo to school, Init now that he was\ngone the DottMlo-bori hail determined\nthat they were a free people, and\nthat they would not recognize any\nCanadian laws. This, they stated, wan\nthe atlitnde or the Doukhobor communities generally.\nFive Burned Since Premier's Edict\nThis is the eighth Doukhobor\nschool huildlnp which has heen burned\nIn the Kootenay- Boundary country\nwithout apparent attempt on the part\nof the government to place the blame.\nTwo years ago premier Oliver*, in a\npublic address here stated that lhe\nburning of these school must stop,\nbut since that time five other schools\nhave   been   destroyed.\nIn December the Doukhobors wrote\nthe premier refusing to go to s.-honl.\nThe minister of education, Hon. J. 1>.\nMaclean, replied stating that the\nDoukhobor children must attend\nschool. There was no compliance\nand after paying two teachers for\nempty school for several months here\nthe department of education pale off\nthe teachers, apparently capitulating\nto the Doukhohors.\nTake Away  Power to Prosecute\nJjSitxi summer Inspector Miller took\nauthority for prose*'Utlltg Doukhohors\nfor failing to send children to school\nout o| the hand-: of local trustee*,\nexcept those incid\u00bb the city limit*.\nThis has boon interpreted to mean\nthat the government\ntaction to DnukhoU\nmight be immune f'*\nthe  law.\nSo defiant have the\nmiinity become that after issuing a\n(heck for local taxes last fall, they\nordered the bank to dishonor the\ncheck, and so have thus refused to\npay for their school taxes locally.\nIncensed   Citizens  Talk   of   Direct\nAction\nThus the Doukhobor situation at\nGrand Forks has arrived \u00bb\\ the\nbreaking point. Citizens are today Incensed beyond expression. People\nare genuinely up In arms, and they\nfeel that the time has about arrived for a showdown whether the\nDoukhobors are to continue to rule\nthis part of the country, or whether\nCanadians are to have a say,\nKu Kliix Klan methods are Ihe\nsuggestions   on    evetybodys   Hps.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616  Vernon   Street   East\nOnly   brick   hotel   In   city.     Steam\nheated;   hot and  cold  water.\nEuropean and  American  plana.\nwai givin,' pro-\nr-. so th;ii th. y\n'io  infractions ol\nDoukhobor coin-\nEARTH THROBS\nAND MILLIONS\nSTAND AGHAST\n\u25a0 (Continued from page 1)\nK.irili shook herself Just a trifle last\nn-.ght, somting a vigorous little earthquake p\u00ab-llnn-ll through the northeastern pari of the Cnited States and\nCanada.   ,-\nThe tremors were noticeable for\nabout two minutes at 9:23 o'clock, and\nalthough not strong enough to cause\nrhiiuage. tl-\"V shook territories from\nI'orlheastorft .New England to the\nMississippi, and from the province of\nOntario\"as far south as Wheeling, W.\nVa.,   Richmond   find   Louisville.\nIn the great m enters of population\u2014\nNeW York. Chicago, Montreal. Toronto,\nPhiladelphia-, Washington, Ptttshurgh\nand Cleveland and Boston. Detroit and\nothers\u2014the quake was severe enough\nto alarm   millions of  people.\nFeoplt  Huriy Into  Streets\nIn some cities, notably Detroit,\nhotel guests hurried into the streets.\nIn other cities, ' theaters and movie\nhallft were vacated, patrons mistaking\nthe   earth.irtRke   for   an   explosion.\nNew fork's many storied conyons\nof steep and concrete felt the shock\ntoo. Jn fact,' reports from observers\nat Fordham university -t*a*.d that the\nitemors, lasting (or more than two\nminutes, were tho strongest ever felt\ntn the metropolis. The needle of the\nKortjhani seismograph jiggled over nn\namplitude   of   seven    Inches.\nThe disturbance appeared to have\nheen of varied Intensity. Described\nby experts ut C.eurgetown university\nia Washington as \"very severe,\" the\n'quake was ran! in have lasted from\nI r. |<i I'll Hf-conds In Hal\nbut    for    more    than    two\niford,\nminutes\nSAVOY \u2014 C. C. Smith. John Muller.\nTrail; J, Illingsworth, Vancouver*. J.\nU Pdlnger. Creston; IE, S. Iteilley,\nBonntnfton; C Larson. Republic; Mrs.\nJ. K. lkltng.r, North port; 11. Lin. ss.\nNelson; A. K. Palfrey. Calgary; Mrs.\nH H Nelson. N.-w Denver; M. C.\nCampbell. Kaslo; Mrs. W. Moore, It.\nNeugar. Cranbrook; S Stogeejf, Trail;\nJ. Chatham. Edmonton; T. <i. Cor*\nniliek, Vancouver; Mr, ami Mrs. Mc-\nInni*. Revelstoke; William Hampshire,\nOldham, Kngland; Thomas Doherty,\nOttawa.\nNKW   ORAM)   \u2014   Prank   Seal.   Procter; a. If. McPherson, citv; 0,  H. M<-\nK.an. Pmcler; Mra, II. W. Schor-\nrneriuer, ip.stdand; Mr. and Mrs. R.\nOaidiner,    Piemen    ami    J      Humphrey\nQardnwr, Elko; W. H. (\"ok-lough, Vancouver; VV. Ji Duncan, Moose .law; J.\nNicol. Rossland; W P. Keep. Vancouver;   U   C   Bomta    Edmonton;   w,   J,\nHnpley,   Alberta;    P.   c.    I.ongham,   Or-\nVille.\nMRS.   MALLETTE\nAnnounces    tha     Reopening     of\nTHE KOOTENAY HOTEL\nVernon   Street Phono   692\nCompletely   renovated.     Thirty   comfortable   rooms.\n\"A Homo for the World at Reasonable\nPrlcea\"\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n715   Vtrnon   Street   East\nSteam heited.   Hot and cold water.\nWo aro hero  to  serve you.\nP. H. BUSH, Prop.\nNelson's Best Cafes\nBurton K. Puck of the New Norway district, south of Camrose, Alta.,\nwho mysteriously disappeared after\nleav ng Buffalo, for Chicago, on his\nhomeward trip about New Year's\nday. has turned up in Camrose. Mr.\nHuok would not say much as to his\nstatement that he had heen In\nhospital in Chicago,\nno explanation of\nance,   hut   stated   he\n.iness   trip.\nlie would give\nb r disappear*\nhad   been  on  a\n~\"D0DDS '<\nfJffDNEY\nk PILLS -\nWhen   at   Nelson,    Eat   at   tha\nGolden Gate Cafe\nOur   motto   In   CIcinlinesH,   Quality\nand   Service.    All   White   Help.\nU*\u2014%   30c   and   I'p\nSHERBR00KE HOTEL\nNear  C.P.R.   Station.\nRoom,   at   Rraaonalile   Hates.\nH. DUNK,  Proprietor\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFlnr-st-equippfd restaurant In the\nritv. (1PKN DAY AND NICIIT.\nSPECIAL-I.e Cream, Soda. Water\nund II..I Drink*. Niee, dean, fur-\nnlHhed rouins;   lint and fold  water.\nWe   Cater   to   Private   Parties.\nCLASSIFIED     ADS     BRING     RESULTS.\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320   Baker  Street,   Nelson,   B.C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30, Special Lunch  35e\n6:30 to 8:00 p.m.,  Supper  35c\nPhone   154\nB. C. Fur Sales Co.\n41    Alexander   Street,\nVANCOUVER,    B.C.\nRend    your    Furs    to    us.\nHighest     Prices    Obtained.\nCuticura\nLoveliness\nA Clear\nHealthy Skin\nln.ur.-l by   F.\u00bb.ry-<Ur\nU.\u00ab   of  Culicur.   So...\nSPRING CAPS\nFAWN   Velours,   Rnapiiy   ehaps.\nMEN'8,  J1.75;   Youths',  $1.35.\nMORRIS QUALITY.\nBond-men\nas***\nMen Suited\n\u25a0several   other \u25a0 cities.    Including    New\nVorl;.\n*3ua*o   I1.ays   Queer Pranki\nAston.shed residents of the cily\ncontinued lodKy jo exchiinffe experiences of the pranks played hy the\ne;irth during Its short awakening for\na space estimated at from one-half .to\ntwo   minutes.\nTunes were played on crystal chandeliers, goldfish were washed from\ntheir bowls, chairs were rocked hy an\nunseen hand, telephones tinkled hut\nno voice answered, and houses \"rolled\nlike s-hips* In the ocean,\" amazed recipients of tiie earthquake shocks said\ntoday.\nVlsit.nl hy such ghostly plienomenn\npeople pouring from their homes Into\nthe* streets in certain si*ctl.ms where\nthe undulations seemed lo reach ft\ncrest, police and firemen, themselves\nmine too sure of the fitness of things,\nrt assured frightened inhabitants\nIl.e ('(ingested quarters, where skimpy\ntenement houses were most rcspons.ve\ntc   the   restless   earth.\nWomen    Pray\nWomen prayed and children cried\nwhile the movement was on. Residents of tbe Italian, district, many\nwith tragic memories of other earthquakes,   were panic stricken,\nOn Itrondway, tiie usual Saturday\nnight crowd in search of a thrill was\nc.nrped up in expensive theaters, and\ndid not know until later thtft they\nhad niissed the sensation of dancing\non the shifting crust of the earth.\nThe sensation was diminished hy the\ntumble and roar of the elevated and\nsubway trains. Ttie general linpres-\nKlon of most who did feel the mo\\e-\nmenl was that an explosion had taken   place.\nCathedral Roof Crack*\nMONTUICAL. Mareh I. \u2014 tCanadian\nPress) \u2014 An earthquake shock last\nevening was felt strongly throughout\nthe- entire province of Quebec. No\nserious damage is reported. In the\ncities broken plate glass wfndowa tell\nof the visitation. The heaviest damage probably took place at Shawinigan\nFalls, where the roof of St. Mark's\ncathedral   was  cracked.\nOccurring at an hour when all the\nplaces of amusement were ln full\nswing near panieH took place In\nseveral of them. In some of the\ntheaters therp was a rush for the\ndoors. In uptown districts the earthquake ceemed to have divided effect*, due to the kind of soil In\nsome huildings there was such a\nswaying rrtotlon that chandeliers rattled and dishes were moved. The effect was like the heaving of a ship.\nApartment House Empty\nOn McCiill College avenue the effect wns particularly noticeable, and\nIn most of the apartment houses\npeople fled to the streets, minus hats\nand eoals and overcoats. The most\nterrfylng pha^e of the disturbance was\nthe deep rumbling tinder the earth.\nCuriously enough in other places\nthe yhock was hardly (Ht at all. At\nthe l-'orum. where the Hamilton-\nMontreal hockey game was in progress, people on the west side of the\nhull.ling felt the tremors while people\non   lhe east   side  did   not.\nOne of the worst spots was rentered\narnund Heaver Hall Hill. At the top\nof it It the system theater. When the\nquake occurred somebody raised the\ncry uf the, and nt once there was a\nslanipede for the door, during which\na   number  of   women   fainted.\nToronto rnrnittirt Knocked Abo-at\nTORONTO, March 1.\u2014Very pro-\nrouiieetl earth tremors were felt in\nToronto last night about 9:22. The\nd.sturbanee lasted mtjre than a minute, and was felt principally on the\nsouthern   section   of  the   elty.\nIn     Toronto     the     tremors    knocked\nover furniture and caused dishes and\nornaments to crash from cupboards\nand   mantels   to   the   floor.\nSan-tar* *\u2022*\u2022>\u25a0  Qntbeo City\nQl'KltKC, March 1. -\u2014 Quebec was\nvisited by five distinct and .--evere\nearth tremors last nlyht and early\nthis morning, nnd as a result a bu\nof da ma\u00abe was caused throngbout the\ncity   and   district.\nThe first shock occurred at 9:111\nsharp last evening, and reached Its\nmaximum at S'M, thereafter diminishing In volume, while the second was\nexperienced ut 11 :S0 with a third ut\n12:20 a,m\u201e a fourth at 2 a.m., and\nthe  last at   4:lfi  a.m.\nFive  Die  of Shock?\nFive people are rumored to have\ndied from \"fright or hy being struck\nhy falling debris at points along the\nsou tli shore, although no confirmation could ze ohtuined tonight, while\nseveral stations ure reported to have\nsuffered  damage,     -^\nThe quake Is said to have lasted\nM minutes at Pule St. 1'aul, while\nthe church there suffered to -such\nan extent that It -has heen condemned. *\nSudbury   Fani   Quit   Rink\nSUDHURY, Out-, March 1.\u2014A distinct ea-rlh shock was felt in Sudbury\nlast hiiftit ahout 9:30 while the hockey\ngame Wis in progress. The big building shook perceptibly, and all th\"\nlights s.wayed. Many people left the\nrink. Throughout the town cltixens\nreport rattling of crockery and rocking chairs swaying. Many district\npoints   report   a   similar   occurrence.\nTopples Ktunlltcn Bottles\nHAMILTON, (Int.. March 1. \u2014 An\nearth tremor was felt here last night,\nbut It was too slight to do any damage. The shock lasted some seconds,\nand in some bouses it wns slrong\nenough   to  topple   over bottles.\nNorthern Ontario  Tvwm  Jarrtd\nNORTH HAY, Oul.. March 1. \u2014 All\nparts of northern Ontario felt last\nnight's earthquake, according to reports reaching here today. From North\nBay to Tlininins, Ooebran, Hearst and\nother points at the northern extremity\nof the telegraph lines, lhe tremors\nwere felt last night, and appeared to\nlast about two minutes.\nIn some parts of North Hay the\nshock was greater than In others.\nThe vicinity of the Roman Catholic\ncathedral seemed to feel the shock\nmore than any other part of the town,\nand In one apartment house a china\ncabinet was upset and the contents\nwere wrecked. Others reported pictures knocked from the walls, dishes\nshaken off tables, and hall trees tip-\nyet.\nExamine   Mine   Working!\nNo damage has so far been reported from any of the northern towns\nthough miners on Hie night shift in\nsome of the deep mining shafts had\na   thrilling  experience.\nIn the Porcupine Held at least one\nmining company has its staff working today for a thorough Inspection of\nunderground   workings,\nWoman   Dies   of  Shock\nTffMea RIVEItS. Que., March 1.\u2014\nThe earthquake which shook the\ncountry around here Saturday night\ncaused one fatality, the victim heing\nMrs. Kugene Hureau, of Ct. Anne de\nIji Paraded about 25 miles from here.\nShe fell unconscious of shock, and\ndied before medical help could\nsummoned.\nThe main damage reported in Three\nRivers Is the crumbling of the tup\nof a 243 foot high chimney at the\nWayugamaek Pulp ami Paper company.\nAt Grande Mere the Sacred Heart\nacademy suffered and the Inside walls\nwere damaged.\nShawinigan Falls was the A'orrd\nsufferer in the district, where, St.\nMarks church is closed on account \">f\nthe crumbling of the wall of ono of\ntho transcepts. One floor g .ve way\nan inch and a half, ut St. M.'iks\nacademy. One of the walls of a\ntwo storey building on Hemlock si.eet\nwent down.\nA very light shock occurred at\n11:20. It lasted about 45 seconds.\nAnother one was noticed at 2 o'clock\non Sunday morning. Faint grmnd\nnoises were heard during another\npart of the night.\nHosiery\nSpecial\nTen Dozen Pure Silk Thread Hose, bought at a special\nprice from a manufacturer.   Heavy weight.   Usual\nprice $2.00.    Special Today, per pair  $1.10\nThese include a good line of shades.\nKID GLOVES\u2014Dent's best. In Black, Tans and\nBrowns.    Regular $3.00.    Clearing at  $2.25\nLADIES' AND CHILDREN'S FANCY RUBBER\nAPRONS\u2014These work aprons are proving very\npopujar.    Prices  , 65< to $1.50\nCREPE   BLOOMERS   AND  GOWNS\u2014Very   new.\nBloomers,  price 90<#\nNight Gowns, price  $1.85\nNelsonDry Goods Co*\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nNot Tait at Wlnnlper\nWIWHIPEO, March 1.\u2014The earth\ntremors which nicked buildings in\neastern Canada and tbe I'nltod States\nlast evening did not manifest themselves in the prairie provinces, according  to  reports   received   here  early   this\nsuccession that the \"stylus\" swung\nwith such intensity and so quickly\nthat It bad not time to trace the\npassage of the earth's tremors for\nabout 10 minutes, when the 'quake\nwas  al   its   worst.\n\"The earthquake Saturday evening\nwas by far the most severe In its\nlocal application which hM heen reg.s-\ntered In the history of the Dominion\nobservatory,\" stated A. 10. Hodgson,\ngovernment seismologist. \"As a matter of fact It Is the largest recorded\nhere.\nCould Destroy  Solid Buildinfi\n\"It was most severe for ahout 10\nminutes, starting from 9:21, and It\nptobably originated somewhere near\nthe mouth of the Saguenay nver,\nwhere the experts have known for\npome time that there Is a nerious\nfault in lhe earth's strata. It was of\npuch a severe character as recorded\nhere, that It would undoubtedly be\nstrong enough to rock. If not destroy, nny bttt solidly built buildings\nIn the vicinity In which It occurred.\nFor the first time in the history of\nthe Dominion observatory, the 'quake\nwas recorded on the mlcrobarograpli,\nwhich records sudden changes hi atmospheric pressure. The markings on\nthe barometric readings show a sharp\nJag, denoting the big kick made by\nold   mother  earth,\"\nThe possibility of Ottawa experiencing an earthquake of such an intensity as that which destroyed Tokyo\nIs practically negligent, according to\nProfessor Stuart, director of the Porn In Ion observatory, owing to the fact\nthat in this district the formation of\nthe earth is very old and nettled. Mr.\nStuart was somewhat surprised to hear\nthat some persons had reported\nhearing\" the earthquake wh.le listening Sn on the radio. He said this\nwould probably be due to the barometric pressure affect ing the metrical\ninstruments, such as amplifiers in the\nbroadcasting   stations.\nBuildlnr   Swaya\n(\u25a0uy Rhodes, a student who was\nstudying the subject of earthquakes on\nthe top fl#or of the museum at the\nlime the 'quake occurred, afterward\nstaled that he bad distinctly felt the\nbuilding hi*gin to sway somewhere he-\n\u25a0en 9:20 and H:2.1 p.m.. and the disturbance continued for about 10 minutes.\n\"All of the windows where I was\nbegan to rattle, and some of them In\nother parts of the building were broken,\"   said   Mr,   Rhodeg,\nHe also stated that all of the bookcases running north and south ln the\nroom In which he was in, begnn to\nswing, and the archea on all floors\nbegan lo crack at their apex.\nburned\nlasses.\nahout   the   face  by  boiling  mo-\nEaitern   Canada  Storm   Bound\nQUKBBC,   Keb.   IS.   \u2014   Kastern   C311-\ni'da is struggling back to normal after\na   tremendou,*-*. storm.\nDeny   Wahibl   Mas sac e r\n-JKKU1ALKM,    l-'eb.    28.\u2014An   Official\ndenial is Issued of the reported slaughter of 1000 people in Trunn-Jolrdanla\nhy   the   Wuhibi   tribe.\nRevenue   Off   Fifty   Million\nOTTAWA.    Feb.    2S\u2014A    decrease   of\n|U,llt,lli   in   customs  and  excise   revenue   for   the   Dominion   reported  is  for\nlast   year.\nCollie Saves Six\nLives on Prairie\nWhen House Afire\nSASKATOON, 3ask., March 1.\n\u2014A cpllie dog saVed the lives\nof Mr. and Mrs. Richard Cole of\nBangor, Sask., and their four boys\nThursday morning, when it tore\nat the bedclothes after overheated stove pipes fired tho house.\nThe homa was destroyed, the occupants making their escape in\ntheir   night  attire.   .\neve\nlac\nCRUST SLIDES\nALONG LINE OF\nLOGAN'S FAULT\n(Continued from Page One)\nWashington. The records of the dls\ntiubances were somewhat Imperfect\nand Professor Turner, In charge of\nthe observatory, hesitated to base a\nprecise  Htateuicnt   on   them.\nToo Fast for Vcedle\nOTTAWA, March 1.\u2014 I'nfort nnalely\nwhile the markings of the earthquakr\nTt gistered on the seismograph at thp\nDominion observatory constitute a fine\nrecord, the preliminary tremors are\nbut faintly marked, due to the fact\nthat the  shocks  arrived   In  such  quick\nSowash Arrives\nat Toronto in\nOfficer's Charge\nTORONTO, March 1.\u2014En route to\nVancouver, where he is wanted on\na charge of murder, Harry 1>\\ Sowash\n\u25a0> brought lure yesterday from\nNew Orleans, L*u., where he was arrested hv Inspectors Parsons of the\ntritlsh Columbia poljce. The chargft\non vvliich Sownsh was arrested aroso\nout of the double killing of ('apt. W.\nT. Oillis ami his son. William, who\nwere slain when a raid was made on\ntheir launch, the Reryl O... last September., lie will he taken west Monday.\nBRIEFS FROM THE WIRE\nFreeldeut Ebtrt Dies\nUKRI.IN, Feb. 28.\u2014President Ebert\nof Cermany Is dead of jt-eritonltlH, following his operation for appendicitis.\nHe was the first president of the\nlielinan    republic.\nBlast  Hurts   Three   Hundred\nRIO    Hi:   JANEIRO,    Keb.   28.\u2014More\nthan    300    people    were    inJuTed    Mnd   a\nnumber   of   Uvea   lost   in   a   |iowder explosion  on f'aju island.\nPARIS, Feb. 27. \u2014 France's gambling casinos made a profit of more\nthun   201,111)0,001)   francs   last   year.\nM':\u25a0!\u25a0\u25a0 an Taction Strike\nMKXH'o CITY, F,b. fe \u2014 The \u00abov-\nernmenl orders tb.- police to remain\nlu barraeks readv to i(u. II disorders\nthat may arise out of a strike on the\nCanadian   owned   tramways   h*-re.\nWaitress  Beats  Up  Ty  Cobb\nATLANTA. Feb. 2S.\u2014Ty Cobb, baseball ;dot, \u00abeis inio a scrap with a\nwnitress, who beats him up and then\nhas   hlm   arrested.\nBsbv Scalded, Mother Drops   Bead\nMONCTON,    N.H.,    Feh.    2S.    \u2014    Mrs\nRnurtteolu     drop*     dead      from     shock\n\u2022 when   she   sees   her   lH-monlhs-old   son\nTHE   GUMPS-NOBODY'S   CLAIM\nf  lOOK   MOVIkTS V>*i\u00abt - TUt VAST Tl^t  \u25a0\n\/   Sr-.\\\u00bb1 H.l-A VAt VgNS   TVH.HC*. \"TO SVVL Ut A t*2\u00b0-\n-\\*. -FCKJ <\\%$ If   8IOO- VJOVH-ft  .J.)-.   \"*<%\nSOVA\u00ab.  S-l?.'V\\'\u00ab  V* CO\\AX>*V1 VKS   *?OR  THt\n\/   ^WKCovM  OF   I*1- COMV-  *->0  IWnH \\wmipt\n1 *k*xt \u2022Su**?. tt) *\u2022*-\u2022\u2022\u00a3 Ck.N\\v rowo-wt^s - ^ov>\nf VtW.1., TH^C^S   K   -Tft.Zt FOV.   SOMt V.V)Cv\\^   Gl^v.  -MHO\n'   ci-.*-1 i-.vFont>-\\o Support * y-.vysw-.t-.0-   h^v-v. *&t\nMaowt ns   vs*a.Fo\\. n-ftouN-o \"rut woost. -vs >.n\n(\u2022Uk-alMA***.--.   f'tNCt -    HVS  VOfce,-OF  \u25ba. Hfc.\u00ab^> ViWS -AJORtt\n\\^, TO O-cT   UP I-..-.-0 \\V\\  B-RtAKf AST-   \"ft..e ON\\.-i\nOx^S   V1WO   \\MOU\\.X>NT   \"TCVST   H.M-Vf*- H-t  VNfVS  *\nVJ.S-; C>U^   1   COVV.t>   UN'&'iRSTAH'b .\nW   -JUT MIS MEND IS  \"-vs      \u2014. _u_-.\nimv-im -vs mvs TOcnt-i-s - (__,_, \"^iiiw\n\\Mtvv., if oust smoins     I ami r~\\  >\n\\HHH1  (-. 1MV.OR CAMTJO-'.\nI \\ M%M!T> V*\\N\\ TtU-INIs tv>t\u00ab.TftQt>--t Miovj-r\n\/ MIS C^R^ ANt> HIS 9MSI\\tRS -SO H*C V-ON T,\nj LAST V.OI-1U- 0, TOV)I*Irv.OSHtR VJIV.I. TMw\n\/ HiKAStvV Out OF M-A-i Vv.&ct Kt CW-\n*T(M.tt WK-.Sti.-f INTO- \\f ,x VtNCOCK HMv\n%\u00abMISS tv-o-Jl-H TO Ktt*? VTS  MOvj-vh\nI -sHin iso o^t -moui-X) KHovo Thnt \\t\n\\   t>.\\>N T   Ht-Nt   A,  SWtt*Tt\u00ab MOlCt  THAN K\nI N.faMT.H^NJt-  RUT   WMM  WONTk TOOL\n\\     SUM   AHt>   V-lHA-r V-ION'T M^*M   *cK^ '\nW  N FAMINE -\nPassenger Falls;\nLegs Are Severed\nand Death Ensues\nKAMLOOPS, B. C., March 1.\u2014\nBelieved to have accidentally\nfallen off a passenger train in\nthe Canadian Pacific railway\nyards here last night, Stanley\nDixon of Vancouver died today\nfrom injuries received, both lege\nhaving   been   severed.\nDON'T LET\nYOUR BOWELS\nGET CONSTIPATED\nA free motion of the bowels every\nday ahould be the rule of everyone\nwho nsplres to perfect health, for\nonce the bowels become e-onstlpaled.\nand cloifffed up, all the other orpins\nof the hody become derm cod.\nKeep Your  Bowels  Regular by   Using\nMILBURN'S\nLAXA-LIVER PILLS\nThey will clear awny nil the effete\nuiii poisonous matter which has col-\n'erted in the system, give you a free,\n>nsy nnd natural motion of the bowels every day. slart the sluggish liver\nworking, nnd Rive tone nnd vitality\no  the  whole   Intestinal  tract.\nMilburn's I,uxa-Uvor I'ills nre for\n\u2022tale at all druggists nnd dealers; put\nup only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited. Toronto, Ont.\nEmployment!\nis a fine thing to have\nWhen the workers and industries of the country are kept\nsteadily busy it means better\ntimes for everybody.\nKEEP THE OTHER FELLOWS BUSY\nand help yourself by buying\nBritish Columbia Product*\nWh\u00abr\u00ab Quality  in*l  t,x*  an  R,,hl\n \t\nms xmsm DA&T news, Monday morning, march m m\nPage Three\n'ROAD TO LOVE'\n\u25a0\u25a0    By ELENORE MEHERIN\nCHAPTER VII.\n\"Don't make any noise, children.\"\nViolet Borley, a sweetness In the\npretty, willful face, stepped I1U0 the\n.kitchen and began filling a great\nhaslii with boiling water. Her dark\nhead In a big;, soft pompadour fhat\nmade tho. groat eyes more puthetic;\nand haunting in their young eagerness. Violet smiled dreamily, and\n\u2022when she spoke it \"was In a low.\nbeautiful tone after the manner of\nthe leading lady then playing at the\nold Central, theater. How Violet\nlonged   for   airy   grandeur!\nThe children seated at tho supper\ntable in a state of hushed yet tingling excitement' watched her expectantly.\n' \"Is-papa gonna dlo?\" Lizzie asked,\nthe   Jlttle  pig eyes  glinting.\n\"X'' don't know, Llule,\" Violet an-\nHWt-yroil with mild indifference. \"But\nyotj must be quiet. You may serve\ntht?   stew,  dear\/'\nI \"I wan ter know! I don't want\npjapa  to   die!\"\n'\u25a0Hush!\"\nAt that Lizzie flopped her head\n\u25a0down on the tahle and mode a\ngreat show of tears. But as soon as\nViolet was gone she looked up, saying abruptly:   \"Let me hold  It,  Katy\n-just for a minute?\"\nTho bride doll stood in the center  of  the  table, 1\n'No yer can't\" Denny answered.\n\"Lizzie Brfrley,'that's not your doll!\"\n'Oooooh, aint you mean to me,\nDenny!\" Lizzie began to blubber,\n\"and  papa's dying, too!\"\nThe soft hearted Katy waa moved\nLEGAL NOTICES\n.1863\nSealed tendorswill be received' by\nthe Minister of .Lands at V \u00abtorla not\nlater than noon on the 30lh day of\nApril,    1925,   for   the   purchase   of   Li-\nence X4863, U) cut 10.314.000 feet of\n\"White   Pine,   Spruce.   \"White   Fir,   Tuin-\nrac, Douglas  Fir, Cedar-  Hemlock and\nellow Pine, and 454,560 lineal feet of\nCedar Poles on nn urea adjacent to\nGoose and (Hinder Creeks.. 5 miles\nsouthwest of crescent Valley, Koot-\naoasB Land   District, j\nFive   (51   years   will   be   allowed   for\nemoval of timber.\nFurther particulars of the Chief\nForester. Victoria, HC, or District\nForester.   Nclr.on,   BC i\u00ab5l'J)\n<'QovE*iiiiiiirT\"i.;QUOR act\"\nNOTICE    OF    APPLICATION     FOR\nBBSR   LICENCE\nNotice Is hereby given that, dn the\n31st day of March next, tbe under-\nnigned Intends to apply to the L.quor\nControl Hoard for a licenco ln respect of premises belnc part of the\nbuilding known ns The Northern\nHotel, situate at Salmo, Hritish Columbia, upon tho lands described us\nLots No. ft nnd >9\\ Block 4, Salmo,\nHritish Columbia. Map MS. Kootenay\nLand Registration D.'strict In tbe\nProvince of Hritish Columbia, for\nthe salo of brer by the ulass. or by\ntho open bottle for consumption on\nthe   premises.\nDated this 20th day of February.\n1923.\nA,   UIBiiON   &   SON.\n(8381)  Applicants.\nLAND   REGISTRY   ACT\n, (ijection  100)\nIN TUB MATTER OF Hlock \"H\" of a\nSubdivision    of    part    of    Lot    30C,\nGroup 1, Map 731-0.\nProof having been filed In my office\n.of the  loss  of Certificate  0*4 Title  No.\n18599-A to tho above-mentioned lands\nI hi tho\" names of Mungo Robert Mc-\n[ Quarrie   and   Hugh   W.   Robertson,   and\nbearing date the 21!n,1 of Sept ember,\n! 1913. I HEREBY GIVE NOTION of\nI my Intention at the* expiration of one\nI calendar month from the first publlca\nf tion hereof to isaue to tbe paid Mango\nI Robert McQuarrie and Hugh W. P.ub-\ni ertson a provisional Certificate of\n[ Title   in   lieu   of   such   lost   Cert.fic&to.\nAny person having any Information\ni with   reference  to such lost Certificate\nof   Title   is   requested   to   communicate\n\u25a0with  the undersigned.\nDATED at the Land Registry Office,\ni Nelson.  B.C.,  this 11th day ot November,   1924.\nI A, W. IDIENS,\n(8101) Registrar\nQOVEBNUENT   LIQUOR   ACT\nNOTICE   FOR   APPLICATION   FOR\nHEEH   LICENCE\nNotice Is hereby given that on the\n23rd of March next, the undersigned\nIntends to apply to the Liquor Control Hoard for licence, under Section\n25B,   Government   Liquor   Act.\nRespect   of   premises   being   part   of\n\u25a0 building known as  Mersey  Hotel,  situated   at   Erie.   Hritish   Columbia,   upon\ntbe    lands    described    as    lot    number\nLots   1   nnd   2,   Hlock   r\u00bb,   Lot   1237,   by\nassessment   rule   in   Kootenay   District,\ni Nelson,    H.C.      For    sale    of    beer    by\ni glass   or   open   buttle   for   consumption\nj on   the   premises.\nDated   February   20,   J 1)25.\nO.   A.   HAOLCND,\n(8417) Proprietor.\n\"GOVERNMENT   LIQUOR   ACT\"\nNOTICE  OF  APPLICATION   FOR\nBEER   LICENCE\nNotlco is hereby given that, on the\n7th day of March next, the undersigned\nIntends to apply to the Liquor Control\nHoard for a licence in respect of premises being part of the build,ng known\nas tho Salino Hotel, situated at Salmo,\nHritish Columbia, upon the lands described ns Lot No. 10, 11 and 12,\nHlock. No. 4, Map Noi fi22, Croup\n206A. Kootenay, Land Registration\nDistrict, ln tbe province of Hritish Columbia, for the mile of beer by I the\nglass or by the open bottle for con\nsumption  on   tbe premises,\nDated this 18th day of February,\n1925.\nARCHIE A. GRAY,\n(8359) __       _ _ Applicant.\n\"GOVERNMENT  LIQUOR  ACT\"\nNOTICE  OF  APPLICATION   FOR\nBEER   LICENCE\nNotice Is hereby even that, on the\n23rd day of March next, tho undersigned Intends to apply to tbe Liquor\nControl \u25a0 Hoard for a licence lu respect\nof premises being part of the building\nknown ns Outlet Hotel, situate nt\nProcter, Hritish Columbia, upon the\nlands described aH Lot Number Part\nof district lot N. 30\u00bb. -Group 1, Block\nNumber A nnd B. Map Number 710\nKootenay. Land Registration Ids tr let,\nIn tbo Province of British Columbia,\nfor the salo of beer by tbe glass, or\nby the open bottle for consumption on\nthn  premises.\nDaled this 21st day of February,\n1925.\nW.  A.   WARD.\n(8258) Applicant\nand pushed the doll toward her:\n\"Please\u2014J tt her hold It. Denny?\" \u25a0\n\"All right now, Miss Katy-kid*. alright;\" Denny hinted darkly through\nshut teeth,.his freckled nose wrinkled\nalmost to extinction. \"Just wait and\nsee!\"\n\u25a0 Violet cal)ed him, sent him to the\ndrug store.\" When he returned, tho\ndoor of the front room, where they\nhad taken Uncle Matt, waa open,\npenny hid In the corner and peeked\nin.\nHis uncle's huge form lay flat\nalmost motionless, on the, bed, hla\nright foot raised and resting on a\nbox. He kept turning his head\nrestlessly, a throttled moaning coming   from   his  throat.\nA friend of Matt Borley's, a stevedore, was telling Aunt Josie of the\naccident. They were loading iron\nsafes* when the-rope snapped and\nthe * safe pinched against Matt,\nstriking him In tho back and against\nthe foot. - i i\nThe low voices seemed to disturb\nthe patient. He tried to speak. Then\nViolet, standing at a liltle table near\nthe bed, took a clothe moistened it\nand with an exquisite gentleness ran\nR over her father's lips. She-took\nanother cloth and laid it on his fore-\nhead, as though she wished to soothe\nnhn. Denny thought this mighty\ngood   In   Violet.\n; \"Kay, lu his foot off?\" he asked,\nbreathlessly, when she came from\nthe. room.\n\"No\u2014it i8 crushed.\"   .\n\u25a0 \"Wilt  he die?\" !\n\"I   don't   know.    Denny.     But   he\nmU be sick a long time. I hope it\n|nn t going to make any difference\nto  you.\"\nJt was months before Denny, understood what she meant. Matt hot-\nwy lay helpless, an air of suspense\n\u00bbnd uneasiness in the sick room\nand on Aunf Josle's face, but over\nthe rest of the house there settled\ngradually a tone of peace, of lightness that was almost joy.\nThe children began to, Jaugh, to\ntalk gayly at the table Mx the kitchen; even the -baby \u2014 a broad\ncheeked, stodgy 1 ttle girl' of 4\u2014\nbecoming animated. Violet, for the\nfirst time In her life, brought out\nall her fanciness, all,her little graces.\nTo the younger oneu a wonderful\nand superior creature. They thought\nit niagnif cent when she said beautifully: \"May I trouble you for thp\nbatter, Lizzie?\" or \"Will you have\na. little more milk, Denman?\" Some\nthing in her manner stirred recol\nlections that were at once .pain and\nsweetness   to   Denny.\nNo one m'ssed Uncle Matt except\nperhaps Aunt Josie. Her coarse,\nheavy face grew anxious\u2014gradually\nIt looked almost pinched. Sometimes\nshe spoke sharply to the cliildren\nand   lately  she  ate  very, little.\nBut Denny became mure light of\nheart and took no heed of Aunt\nJosie's harried fuce, At supper he\nremembered all kinds of funny\nthings and told them delightedly to\nViolet.\nIt was his last term at grammar\nschool and high ambitions glowed in\nhis young heart. One afternoon he\nstayed late to feed the tadpoles. The\nteacher was sitting at her desk makr\ning out the  reports. .     ,\n''Penman,\" she said, looking up\nwith brisk suddenness. . \"\u00a3 guess\nyou'll win  the medal.\"\nThis was one of penny's dreams.\nHis   face   turned   scarlet.\n\"What are you planning to be,\nDenman?\"\nConfusion that was almost panic\ntied his tongue, then he blurted\nhastily;     \"An   engineer.\"\n\"Fine\u2014that's just what you can\nbe. Sturdy hard at high school. Denman. Make up your mind to bo the\nbest engineer in America. You will!'\nExultant as though the \u25a0 medal\nwere pinned un his cunt; us though\nhe were ulready the greatest expert\nIn the country, Denny hurried with\ntho vast news to Katy, making her\ncross her heart to die hefcr* she\nheard one word of It. He studied\n10 times harder than before, the\nresponsibility of greatness weighing\nheavily   upon   hlm.\nA few days after this he eaino\nhome to find men taking away the\ngas meter, Aunt Jos'-j wu sitting\nIn the kitchen, the old shawl flung\nover   her  face,   crying.\nHhe said very little to IVnny. When\nshe was finished he st jo.I inotien-\nless, feeling that he had bent\ntrampled.\n\"Vou mean I goti-i putt. MM\nJosie?\" He spoke bre\u00abthh.-nly, fighting to hide the quivering break In\nhis voice. \"Can't I finish this\nterm?     Can't   I   graduate?\"\n\"Three months more, Denny? Oh,\nI can't help It. I can't do any bitter.\" Hhe wound Iter head in the\nshawl, covered it with her arms. Hot\nbig shoulders went up and down,\nDenny bit his lips, kept winking\nhis eyes. Then he went up and\ntouched her head: \"Don't cry, Aunt\nJosie.     I   don't   care!\"\nWhen he was alone be grit hi*-\nteeth till the edges hurt, yet the\ntears popped into his eyes and raced\ndown his cheeks like uny baby.\n\"Gee! En I wouida got it! I\nsure to get it!\" He ground his f sts\ntogether.\nThere were no Jokes and not much\nlaughter at supper that night. The\nnext day the boy who was to have\nbeen the greatest engineer In the\ncountry, who was to have won\nthe medal and gone to college, went\ndown to the grocery store and be\ncame   delivery   boy.      Early    In   the*\n\"i1. (.\u25a0.\u25a0\u25a0lu.ip-1,   ** \u2014am\u2014w~\u2014?r-\nmorningi he got up to carry a paper\nrunic    \u25a0-    \u2022 ,\nThere wns a clerk with flat-eye*\na ml a Minted scalp who waited on\nthe  grocery  store-\u2014Emmet  Goss.\n\"Work   hard,   Denny,\"   the' own-i*\nid to him, \"and some day you'll\nbe   a   clerk   like* Emmet.\"\nPenny was Insulted, feeling* himself Immeasurably superior tli the\nlean Emmet. He felt like shout\ning to tiie grocer what the teacher\nhad said.\nSometimes ho passed the -school\nand \u25a0 heard the children shouting at\nrecess. He turned his head and\nmade   the   horse    trot    faster.\n,Not even Katy knew the biting\nache of his disappointment ln those\nfirst few weeks. There Was a little comfort on Saturday nights when\nhe turned over his pay to Aunt\nJos'.e and she said In her patient\nvoice: \"God bless you, Denny\u2014\npoor   child.\"\nViolet, too, turned over her1 envelope. She was a salesgirl in a\ndowntown department store. \"Sorry\nIt' isn't a hundred, mother!\" she\nsdid *  with    the    indifference    of    a\n?ueen. Denny thought that very\nine.\nSometimes, when he was driving\nthe delivery horse to the stable, he\nused to see Volet, after she got off\nthe car, stand at the cornt# near\na poolroom and talk to a very dandy\nlooking fellow in a tight fitting suit,\na carnation in his buttonhole. Once\nthe man swung Violet by the elbow\nand stooped over as though he\nwere going to kiss her, Denny saw\nthat and heard Violet laugh. With\ntho exaggerated conventionality of\nchildhood he felt ashamed and\nguilty for his pretty slip of a cousin\". That night he didn't look at\nViolet.\nDenny hod been working four or\nfive months before his uncle was\nhie to get up. The first night he\ncame out to the kitohen for supper\nViolet came jn late, her cheeks\nflushed, h\/cr eyes brilliant. When\nshe .saw her father the Wilful\nmouth straightened, the gladness\nwent out of her eye. He noticed it.\nWhen she sat down his little eyes\nglinted at her. Suddenly he reached\nacross the table, with a rough smear\nran tbe back of his hand across her\nlips. ... : >\n\"Tako off that paint, you young\nchippy! The carmine stained his\nhand. Violet drew back in a white\nfury.\n\"Ma!\" she cried indignantly. Matt\nBorley pulled her to the chair.\n\"Take It off I' he roared. \"Do you\nhere? Where have you been?\nAnswer me! Standing at a street\ncorner? Speak up!\" His lace\npushed almost on top of hers, though\nshe tried hard to bend from him.\n\u2022'Talking to that cheap dude? I'll\nfix you* Paint your face again and\nsee   whnt    happens!''\n. It was a week later that Denny\nSaw Violet talking hj the same\nyoung  man   in  the  tight coat.\n\"Ptnny!\" she called as he passed,\nHe thought Violet never looked so\nsweet, never so tall and graceful.\n\"Tell ma I had to work. We're taking stock. Say, I told you this morn-\nBut don't let him hear. Will\nyou do that. Denny? And tell ma to\nhe sure and leave the latch off the\ndoor.''\nYou   better   come   home,   Vee I\nCome  home!\"   Penny  pleaded.\n\"I can't, Denny. You do that\nfor  nje.\"\nTho lie troubled him, but he loved\nViolet. When he reached the kitchen Matt Borley wns seated nt the\ntabid.) There was  no chanco to tell\nAllot    Josie.\n''Where is she?\" Matt demanded,\nhis massive thumb pointing to Violet's   empty    place; *        \u2022   \u2022\u25a0..-\u25a0     \u2022\n\"She   must   be    kept   late.     Aunt\nJosle's   face   trembled    with    anxiety.\n\"She    has    to    work,\"    Denny    lied\nst imi ily.    \"They're    taking   stock.   She\ntold    me   this    morning.\"\n\"Ho. she did. did she. Told you\nthis morning, did she?\" Matt was\nleaning over the table, shaking\nDenny by the shoulder. \"Told you\nthat this morning eh? What did\nthe damn dude say, he?\" His face\nwas getting purple, and the children,\nwhite faced with terror, crouched\ndown   to   the   table.\n\"This   is   your   doing.   Josie!\"   he\nroared    flinging    Denny    from    him.\nProud of your daughter, ain't you!\"\n\"Violet's  a  good  girl,   Matt.\"  Aunt\nJosie    dared    in    ft    shaking   voice.\n'Good! By God, she'll bo good, or\nI'll know why! Good\u2014when she\nmakes u liar of this brat and a fool\nof  you!     We'll see!'\nSeven o'clock came\u20148, 10. Violet\nhad   not   returned.\nDenny, sleeping nervously awak-\nicd suddenly. He henrd his aunt\niiirieiing. Then .Aunt Josie bent to Implore. ''Don't! . Oh, for\nGawd's    snjfc,'. iMiitt,     don't!\".** ,\nThere wits *.'' toounjl hkt\u00bb a ^lap\u201e\nthen Aunt j'otluVryfRtf.'Dchny crept\nto his .door, pocked .out.. Ho heard\nfumbling -,*tt the frodt tioor,. then *\nlight tapt-ipg.';^ .iJiottKir ,Wi-h o hat\npin. TnOr next, miunent- Matt Bar-*\nley strode Into tho hall, horsewhip\nin ftis ihtiii4, -find flung\" the \u25a0 door\nopen.' Violet,. her enormous \u25a0 (ycj,\ndiluting,-,Via*  ..pulled   into - the   pas-\n[ON ,\n;s FACTS\nWATER-SUPPLY\nUnless Public Favors Bylaw He Will Not Favor\nPipe Purchase\nDROUTH READING\nBEFORE ACTION\nFive-Mile \u25a0 Only    Feasible\nScheme but for Lack of\nThis Information\n(To Ho Continued.)\nj       Thirty Years Ago\n<* 1 1\n(From tho Weekly Miner, March 2,\nl!(ii3.)\nThe steamer Ainsworth hrtH been\nmaking extra trips during the\npast week, bringing down cargoes\nof   ice\n\u2022    *    \u2022\nJ. Fred Hume. M.P.I'., and Mrs.\nHume returned from the coast last\nSunday. .Mr. Hume does not seem\nto he much worn by his parliamentary   duties.\nJfOTICB\nTo whom  It may concern:\nTako notice that the undersigned,\nwho Is proprietor of the Fort Shep-\nperd Hotel, Waneta, Intends to make\napplication to the Liquor Control Hoard\nof the Province of British Columb'a\nfor a, licence under Section l&B, Gjv-\nernment Liquor Aet, lu retail herr.\nC.   A.   WHITE.\nWaneta, ll.C, January 31,1*1:5,     (8092)\nTHE COUGH OR COLD\nTHAT SETTLES ON THE\nLUNGS IS HARD TO\nGET RID OF\nTheso aro the kind that aro dangerous: the kind that weaken the\nlungs, the kind that allow tho germs\nof consumption to gel* foothold In\ntho  system.\nMr. John Itf. Luloff, Gulden Lake.\nOut., writes:\u2014\"Last year I had a\neohl, and a cough which seemed to\nstick on my chest. 1 tried different\npreparalionu, 'but they did not seem\nto help me nny. ' I waa advised, by\na friend,  to  try\nDR. WOOD'S\nNORWAY PINE  SYRUP\nand when I had taken a few dosea\nI began to feel that it was doing me\ngood, ao I kept at It, and Inside of\na Staak I waa relieved of any trouble.''\n\"Ur. Wood's\" haa been on tho mar\nket for tho i>ast 35 years; you don't\nexperiment when you buy It; put up\nonly by Tbe T. Milburn Co., Limited,\nToronto,   Ont; \u25a0\nLovers of angling will be glad lo\nhear that Mr. Procter Is about to\nerect a building of several rooma\non hla property at Half our, which\nwill be available for fishermen during tho coming season, and will\nsave them the trouble of fetching\nalong their own tenia and camp furniture. The fishing from the mouth\nof the inlet down to the narrows\nis renowned, and there will be the\nfurther altntctions of a lawn tennis\nground and about u couplo of Stint\nof strawberries.\n(From The Weeklv Tribune, March\n2,   181>B.)\nGeorge Long la ln Kelson on hla\nway out to Oregon. He has b.-en\nworking ull winter at the Kin her\nMaiden, ami reports prospects good\naround  tho   Four-Mile  camp.\nTu the Kditor of The Daily News.\nHear Hir\u2014In view ot the manv\ncriticiwma'that have been made both\nin public and private on the action\nof the\"' city council last Tuesday\nnight with reference to the proposed\nwiuer system, I think that it will\nbe of interest to many of your\nreaders, to know firstly, just what\nthat action waa, secondly, why that\naction taken and lastly, what the\nlogical   alternative   ,.\nIn dealing with the question, there\nia something to be gained in going\nback over the whole sitdntlon from ular.\nits earliest inception. When I. put\nmy name before tho electors of this,\ncity nils a candidate fur alderman,\nI stated that in my opinion this\nwaa -a*, question that demanded an\nexamination of all the facts obtainable, a'consldered conclusion and\nthen action, -und I may ny that\nI, have to the utmost of my ability\nfollowed out this course of procedure.\nAs far as* I have been able to\nascertain, \u25a0 the first time that tho\nexisting -water system was called\ninfo question was in 1915 when a\nreport waa submitted by the district engineer, W. J. E. Biker, and\nthla waa madu on Instructions apparently given by' the comptroller\nof water rights at Victoria, and I\nwould gather in accordance with n\nrequest for same from the city council   of   that  time.\nBiker Com lei 1 mod .Supply\nTiie essence of thla report is that\nMr. Biker condemns tho then existing ami present source of supply\nfrum Cottonwood creek, and advocates that the city take ateps to\nsecure water from the east fork of\nCottonwood, which he cunsidera to\nbe a fur better source uf supply-\non  every   point  except  volume.\nIt ia interesting to read Mr.\nBiker's criticism of Cottonwood especially when one realizes that this\nreport waa written IU years ago,\nand, that the first definite action\nto remedy the situation was taken\nlast   Tuesday   night.\nMr. Biker states in the first portion of hla report, that on account\nof the character of tho Cottonwood\nwatershed that \"the precipitation\nrushes off almost aa It falls carrying with it debris of all descriptions und that in consequence the\ncity'a supply is cloudy and charged\nwith 1 excessive amount of matters\nin   suspension.\"       -   '\nMr.   Biker lists the alienated   lands\nabove  the   city's intake  as   follows:\n-Lot   504    (portion)   Canadian   i'aclffc\nrailway.\nLot   IJ9,   S.   Poml.\nLot   HUN,   W.   and   W.   W.   BiadleVP\nH.   Wrjfcht   &   if.   Brno,\nLot     8820,     O.     K.    .Matthew    &    It.\nA.    Uenwick.\nLot    8221,    (;.    it.    Mutthrw    -x-     u\nA.   Uenwick.\nLot  l'2-KJ,   M.  B,   Rutherford   (township   231.\nLot   11*40,   11.   1,   Hutherfoid   (town-\nRhlp   ||).I\nAa   some,   if   not   all,   these   lands\nare In the hands of the same parties\ntoday,     and     aa,     of     course,     their\nsituation   is   still   above   our   present\nsource   of   supply,   it   ia   of   interest\nto   make   a   note   of   the  name.\nPollution   Is   Hank\nIn dealing  with the quality of the\nwater being supplied to the cily from\nCottonwood, Mr. Biker says\nthat in November, 1914, ho accompanied the medical health officer,\nHr. Arthur, on a tour of Inspection, and found several possible\nsources of pollution, but principally\nMr. Bond's ranch. Thia i\u00ab described\nas being some 10 to \\i acres lu\narea with house, barns, piggery,\n\u2666table, etc., within 250 feet of the\nstream, tho stock being 25 pigs,\nsix cattle, two horses, hens etc., and\nwith dung heaps, the liquid manure\nrout which was undoubtedly reaching\nthe stream in wot Weather. Mr.\nUiker also states that he found a\nbrown deposit on tho city'a diversitin\ndam, which waa decomposing and\ngiving off a glutinous substance.\nThis was sent to the government an-\nalyist at Victoria, who reported that\nhe found It to be \"partly decomposed    organic    matter.\"\nIn giving these detuils I have !n\nmind the point that while conditions\nmay and may not have been improved at tbe present time, it Is\nobvious that unless the city owned\naud controlled tbe land that they\nait* not in any position to prevent\ntheir roooourrenoo at any time.\nPipe Pitii-il lu 'Nineteen\nTho next report comes from M.\nA. L. McCulloch in August 19ll\u00bb,\nand deals more particularly with the\ncutiditiun Of the pipe line itself. On\nthe fist page Mr, McCulloch atati'l*\nthat the condition of the pipe was\nsuch that \"When the weight of the\ncovering material waa removed,\u2014\nblow outs took place due to tbe pit-\nting of the pipe.\" On another section Mr. McCulloch reports that th*\npipe had practically outlived ,it*\nusefulness, and suggested temporary attempts to stop the leaks to\ncarry over till the following ye*lr.\nThis report Is also of value when' It\nia remembered that it was made\nnearly six yeari ago, and one can.\nto some extent, therefore, estimate\nwhat   the   preeent   condition   li  likely\nurpanitary, states it le noi desirable.\nMyers   Hooorainrnded   Re|K>rt        !\nMr. (Myera \u2022 states that Sr\\ bis\nopinion it. would be very expensive to clean- out Cottonwood lake,\nand he thinks it should not be\nlinden uk cn. Id- recommends that\nthe pipe lin\u00bb. bn exietided- to lhe\neast fr>rk of Cottonwood, (In the\nevent 'that the city's water supply\nshouhf be found to be contaminated)\nabove its confluence with the main\nat ream. The most Interesting por-\nt:on of this report is, however, in\nthe   following:\n\"We believe thut tho council will\nbe well advised to Instruct us to\nutilise a portion of the money placed\nin the water supply funds by last\nyear's council, to make- lhe no-ees-\nsary surveys, and plans for a complete new system.\" This he suggests would have Its source in\nWhitewater creek, and \"would be\n\u2022carried direct without chance of\ncontamination   to   the   consumer.\"\nMr. Myers' statement that the Intake was clean and in good condition in October, 19U3, ia of interest today as it has been suggested to the council thia year that a\ncleaning out of same ia now imperative, and that the statement\nhas been made that the settling\npond   is   now   ftill   of  sand   and   silt,\nnd that it has never been cleaned\nout   since   It   was   put   there.\nTo what extent Mr. Myers' opinion\nta to the existence of contamination\nin the water at that time can be\nrelied on la perhaps open to ques\ntion, but it is evident that he felt\nthat there were good grounds for\nthe necessary surveys, etc., for\nnew system, and it is a matter for\ngreat regret that the council of\nthnt date did not aee fit to act on\nhis  recommendations  In  that  partic-\ncouncil this year, 1 mot Mr. McCuI-rtf\nIcoh for thi* first time, and wee handed ; rah\ncopy of bis rtport   to  read and di-jead\nFifteen pas\nBowMand     on\nengeis left Nelson from\nWednesday's     train.\nA. B. Hendryx Is expected to return from the east with his family.\n\u2022  , \u2022    \u2022\nJohn Hamilton, Canadian Pacific\nrailway trufn-myster Nelson, Is expect ed back 'shortly from southern\nCalifornia, where he has been spending   a   vacation.\nPaton is featuring three sbadea. a\nrosy beige, pervenche glue und a hols\nde rose, lighter, gayer and much\nbrighter than last eeMOO.\nArthur Jlccommended Survey\nth*. Arthur's report of the same\ndate waa to the effect that while\nhe waa' not satisfied that the c:ty's\nwater supply Was safe against possible pollution, he did not think\nthat the cases of enteric fever existing then were due to this cauae. Dr.\nArthur also recummended that the\neouncil of that date should \"at\nonce make a careful survey of\navailable watersheds\u2014and that aa\naoon aa the city's finances would\npermit a permanent- supply should\nbe   installed.\"\nIn conclusion Dr. Arthur pointed\nout that there waa near the rock\ncrusher a pit closet, au situated that\nit must of necessity pollute the\nstream, and he recommends ita\nremoval.\nIt is probable that tlrs waa done,\nbut the point to be remembered is\nthat it is evident that over a periud\nof at least 10 years this city has\nbeen supplied for the most part with\nwater that has been contaminate\nto a greater or lesser extent all\ntho   time.\nOn October the 8th, 1924,\narticle appeared in The Daily News\nheaded: \"Cottonwood Is a Dirty\nBund; Intake Exposed to Live Stock;\nCows Wade in thu Creek; Wash\nWater Thrown Out Near It.\" This\nas a result of a private investigation headed by John Bell und C.\nr.    .Mellardy.\nMayor    llellV    J)iny    Pond\nMr.    Bell    is    reported    as    saying\n\"That   Cottonwood    hike   is    In    poor\nCondition-     It   can   only   be   called   a\ndirty   pond,   most   of   it   is   stagnant\nwater, dead  timber and mud.    There\nare   several   urea   of   mud   at   the\nlouth   end.     por   nooily  a   mile   no\nvater' seems   to   be   rynning   out   of\nhe    laflke    Into    the    creek    channel\nmd  that  if it   were seeping through\nhe   sand   and   gravel    of    the    creek\nled for that distance it would purify\n(self.     But  that   once, the   water   in\nthe   lake   rose   and   overflowed   into\nthe  creek  channel,  all  that   stagnant\nwater   would  come   down   the   creek.\nuf   course.     Mr.   Bell   (stated   that   lie\ndid   not  consider  the  Intake  waa  In\nit *.ati-#fu<*iory condition.\nMi'\/'McHardy ia reported as having said that \"Coming down near\nthe intake which is exposed to Hvi*.\nstock both frjni a aMa of the farm\nand from the roa-d they found three\ncowa wading In the creel-;. Condt-\ntions from the fnrm were serious.\naa all wash water from the house\nwas thrown out close to the creek.\nHe added thut a new settling tank\nshould    he   put    in   at    the    Intake.\nIt was as a result of this article\nthat the council rft 19M decided in\nOctober last to employ A. h. McCulloch and instructed him to make a\nreport on the city'a water system,\nparticularly with reference to getting an adequate supply five frum\neo n tu ml nation.\nIt may be said that it is. unnecessary to prove that the present source of supply is a source\nof danger, but I haVe only this Week\nheard many citizens say Hurt thflie\nwaa no real risk from contamination,\nthat we have been drinkifrg t-his\nwater for many years without uny\nproved injury, and that thero is\nno   Immediate  hurry,\n1 have felt iu consequence tluit a\nplain assembly of the saljent. facts\nIn all the reports that have been\nmade to the city is of value, nnd I\nwill say now that I for one. do not\nfeel that this ia a situation that can\nbo lightly disposed of, and that this\nCity has come through ull these\nyeara without a serious outbreak of\nsickness ia due more to tho mercies\nOf a benevolent providence tha-n to\nabsence of cause. Another factor\n> he considered when urgency is\nnder discussion, is the position of\nthe city If some unforseen accideni\nhappened to a pipe that haa exceeded Its -expectation uf lifo by-\nseven veaia. It has been stated to\nme by Mr. McCulloch. that If such a\nbreak did occur It is entirely'Open\nto question whether It would be\npossible to patch it up. On the\nother hand. Mr. Myers stated to\nme tlirit he felt quite sure that\nno break could pusdiblfcr occur;\nthnf he could not mend satisfactorily.\nThis may lie tho.cu.se, but again\nin my opinion this is a risk that\nthis city cannot deal with lightly,\nur oJEfor-1 t<\u00bb hike any chances on.\nThere U\" luft a baro chanco that\nMr.   Mvwia-Ynay  be wrong.\nAfter   Hie   first   meeting   nf   tho   cltj\nPome   two   days   after   I   haa   8\nall  from him at  my  office  with  tlu*\n.bj.-L-t of exiilaiiriig any points that\nvere nut claef 1 Mt, howcv-T. thai\nhis waa getting along pvrhaps a\nliitk* too fast and while I knew that\nle ISH city touncll must have satisfied themselves as to Mr. McCulloch's\nqualifications, stilt I was not awars\nwhat titty were, nor to what extent I\ncould Pjace relkuice In hla observations   and  conclusions.\nMcCulloch's Qualificaticns\nI therefore asked him If Jut would\ntell nie just what hla experience in\nsuch matters was, aad the next day\nreceived a statement from hlm of\nsame. As I believe that there are\nmany people in this city who are, now\nin the same situation that I was In, I\nam giving this in detail. This has, of\ncourse, a direct bearing on tbe attitude one must take to*varda the report.\nEducational  Quail f lent ions\n1S87\u2014Graduate' of   Toronto  'university\nIn  civil  enKlncerins.\nlm\u2014Qualified   aa   Ontar.o   land   surveyor.\n1903\u2014 Qualified    aa    British    Columbia\nland   surveyor.\n1 Si*l\u2014Elected   associate   member   Canadian   Society   Civil   engineers,.\n190!)\u2014Elected   member   Engineering   institute of Canada.\n1020\u2014Elected       member       Association\nProfessional   eogjneers.\nWattrworks\nXIW\u2014-Resident    engineer,     construction\nKincardine   waterworks.\nISM-t\u2014-Resident   engineer   construction\n(Jalt  waterworks.\nU\u00bb3\u2014Resident     engineer     construction\nPembroke   waterworks.\nISO'S-;\u2014Resident   ensineer   construction\nPetrolia   waterworks.\n1807-1907\u2014Designing   and    construction\nengineer   Nelaon   waterworks.\nHU6-7-S\u2014 Designing     and     construction\nrdfelneer   Trail   waterworks.\n1914-5\u2014Design ine      and       construction\nengineer Cranbrook  waterworks.\n1911\u2014Designing   engineer   proposed   ex-\ntensinn    Kaslo    waterworks,\n1913\u2014Designing   engineer   proposed   extension   Creenwood   Wg ter works.\n1920-1\u2014-Designing     engineer     proposed\nextension    Coldstream * waterworks.\nlP'.'O\u2014Designing   engineer   proposed   extension   Nakusp   waterworks.\n1920\u2014Design,ng   engineer   prop\ntension     Erickson      District\nwurks.\n1911\u2014Designing   engineer   pro])\ntension   Canyon   waterworks.\nSewerage\n1 SOO\u2014Resident    engineer    on    O instruction,   Riirrie.\nIS92-3-\u2014 Resilient   engineer   01   COMtruc-\ntoo, West Toronto.\n1807,   1907\u2014 Designing   and   ConatrgCtioO\nengtneat*, Nelson.\n1010\u2014Designing   and    construction   engineer,   Trail.   ,\nHydro-Electric\nIS97,   1007   \u2014   Designing   and   construction.   Cottonwood   Ealls,   Nclsun.\n1101-01\u2014 Designing     and     construe t.--n\nRonningtou   Kails   plant.   Nelson.\n1907-08\u2014Designing   engineer   St.   Mary's\nriver,      Cranbrook,      Elect\ncompany. !\n1916\u2014Designing   engineer   proposed   ex- !\ntension,   Kaslo.\n1918\u2014Designing   engineer   proposed   extension,   New   Denver.\n1901\u2014Invest.gallon     report,    estimates,\nI'owell   river,\nH01\u2014Investigation     report,    estimates.\nCloholm   river,\nIrrigation\nIf\u2014-Surveys. estimates, reports,\nMr.     McCnllo. 1\/ \u25a0     1   \u25a0    i '\n;im   a   to   is   for   1 'ii i In 1   '\ninvest iyarl.in        ^ bile,    \"f    \"    '   '\nih   impossible   for   me   In   '  '-\nsatisfactory   ills   *er\\ icca   had   hi 1 11    to\nvarious   firms   and    muntcipulUi**    Drrl\nl,a.|    employed    hlm,    still    it    \\v >a    \u25a0 ..\ndent   that   be   bad   had   some   exf\" r[<\t\nin nuch work as the city cuiiti ;\u25a0 I '.\nami the strong presumption was th**\n;.ny M-r.uus mistake that he bad mail'*\nwould be well known, j's considerable\nof thu work that he hud done nn.i n\nthis    immediate    vicinity*    Which    was    in\nItself something of an additional\nicconiim-mbn Ion.\nAnalysis   of  McCulloch  Saport\nTin\nIm\nng    tb.\n-Mr.\nit     ia    j\\tm\nMcCuUoph'fc\ninstructions\n\u25a0^1   uib-i]uatt:\n.\u25a0ontaminatton.\nreport   deals\nled ei\n^'atc\ned\nOoaooyoa\nU(e.\nllfO\u2014Surveys,    estimates\nBrlelcaoB  dlatrlct,\nH'-'l \u2014 Surveys,    estimates\nCanyon,\nKail ways\nldH\u2014Locution      MMVeVS,\nposed Berlin branch.\nUIO\u2014 Right-of-way,    <;.\nWaterloo and Elmlra.\n1194-S\u2014\u2022-Construction       eng\nPreoton & Hevpeler BBe<\nml   rep.\nAfter   consld,\nIt   that   there\n\u25a0ing\nwere\nthis   statement,\ngrounds   for   la\nworth    while\nreport   and   analyzing   it.\nAs before staled, th.\ngiven were t-> fBSBWt t\"1\nwater supply  free   from  \u00ab\nThe   first   part   of   the\nwith    fee    existing    source    of    supply,\nand    Mr.    McCulloch    argues,    in    my\nopinion,   very   fairly    that:\nAa tbe creek now vtxnl runs fdr\nsome distance through property that\nis privately owned, and lhat as It has\nbeen fairly clearly proved that for tin;\npast 10 years ut least at more or Icbh\nIrregular intervals, that thu creek hus\nbeen polluted Sn a manner that cau\nonly be described aa alarming, and\nthat aa the pipes now in use are\" admittedly In the last, stages of usefulness. It is necessary for tbe city to\nconsider   an   entirely   new   nystem.\nTherefore. IT it Were decided to '\nutilize Cottonwood creek for the new\nsystem, it Is pointed out tliat it would\nhe necessary to buy the adjoining\nproperty from the owners. The propel ty being in the main that described\nby Mr. Hiker in 191.1 report. And\nlor this purpose Mr. McCulloch puts\naside, as it were, the very reasonable [\ns*um or f25,Q00. It is also pointed out\nwhat la M-if-evidcntly true, that tbe\ncompletion nf the Ymir road will render\nthis property, and possibly oilier\nproperty more accessible, and that I\nthe road itself, running aa It doe.*-:\nfor 2-14 miles along the banks of\nthe stream, ia perhaps the mpst serious   menace   of   all.\nWithout going Into further detail.\nI may say that at thin point I reached\nthe conclusion that I could nut vote\nfur any system which would bring\nthe water from whatever source Into\nthe Cottonwood creek, unlesa It was\na pipe system all the way from the\nintake, wherever it might he located,\ndirect   to   thu. cit.v'a   maina.\t\nThis   i.-ft  me,   therefore,  with   another   proposal,   which   was   to   utilize\ntin* waler on the east fork of Cotton-- x\nwood,  and   <ui   which   Mr.   Ihkcr   re-  *\nported   favorably   In    1915,   and   uIno\nWhitewater   nnd   Clearwater.\nWater   Necessary   Per   Head\nDot  before dealing with   that.  I will\ntouch   nn   the   next   point   Mr.   McCulloch    raises,    which    ia    tho    quantity\nof  water   that   thla  city  requires,   and\nwhich   it   is  very   necessary   to   know\ndefinitely before considering any new\nstream;-:,     lie slalea that  the capacity\nof   the   present    system   fnun   Cotton-\nwood   and    Anderson   creek   is   over\n2,000,000    gallons    per   day,    and   that\naa    the   cutuhilts   havo    been   allowed\nto   run    to    full    capacity,    tukt'8    this\nas a basis for estimating the require*-V\"\ntnenta    at    present.      These    he    acta'\ndown at  K\u00bb0 gallutiM per head.per day \u00ab.\nin   the   spring   ami   full,   \"DO   gallons,\nper    head    per   day     for   the    winter\nmonths and 300 gallons per head  p\u00ab*r\nday    for    the    summer    months. r T#i\nsupply  this duanUty.'in' another part\nuf   the   report   Mr.   M-CuHuch   states,\nhe   reciuirea   a   flow   from   a   stream\n.if   5.8   cubic   feet    per   MCOVl    for   a\npopulation   double   the  aire  of   Nelaon\nat    the    present    time,    or    IL'.OOO    inhabitants.    Therefore  thia means  that\n\u25a1   fraction  Eeaa than  :i cubic toot per\nsecond   Is  the very  minimum  that  wc\nean   consider   aa   being   sufficient   for\nour  present   reiiuii omenta.\nMr.    .MeCul'och    then   deals    with   a\na. heme  of  bringing   Whitewater  creek\nwater to Cuttunwooii  lake by ;i  pipe\nIin.*, and the using of Cottonwood\nlake for a atorage Uisin. Ay atated\nbefore, I consider the riaka now -Minting, and the hCt that these would increase rather thun denrea-se, prevent\n(Continued   on   page   eight)\nto   be.\nIn     October,      lilt,     two     reports\nwere presented lo the city council,\none by W. W. Meyers, of Green\n1-trothers. Burden *<\" Co.. an.l the\nother from the medical health officer, Dr. Arthur.\nMr. Myeri ftatea that hla lb-\nport la given aa there had been\nseveral cases of typhoid, anil that\nin consequence there might be Rome\nqueatlon on the water system His\nreport la that at that time, \"the in\ntak*> is in very good condition,\nia clean, is running clear, and In\nbehoves to be sanitary.\" He points\nout, however, that about to tier\ncent of the city'a water aupply was\ncoming from Cottonwood lake which\nia bedded .lowti, li B ratal ea, with\nwater-lugged timber, and ' that ln\nconsequence the water 'wffuld probably contain an excess of nitrogen,\n\u00abnU.whilu be dues nut cuiisitlor tbla\nBrooder\n-Coal\n.Autlnniito Nut, tun ... $!*0\nAiiHitaeito   -Nut,   pel*   auck,    100\n-    lbs...   $1.75\nCarbon l.tiitueltes. ton. SU-JS.tM*\nCarbon Ilriquettea, per sack, J00\n.      baCl $1.5<>\nAs \u25a0 wo   have   only   a   limited\nquantity nf this  coal  on  hand,\n' we   would   advlso   placing   yuur\norders early.\nPhone 33\nWest Transfer Co.\nGood education.\n\"Of course the best laid plans might go astray,\nbut Billy'* Child's Endowment Policy provides for\nevery possible contingency.\n\"For instance, I might die to-morrow. Tn that\ncase, there would be no more premiums to pay\u2014\nbut Billy would receive his $5,000 in 1940. just IS\nI planned.\n\"If Billy died before the age of fifteen, I would\nreceive back every cent I'd paid in\u2014plus interest.\n\"If Billy died ftfttf his fifteenth birthday, I\nwould receive the full amount of the policy.\"\nIs your child's future provided for as securely\nas Billy Atwood's? It might pay you to investigate this unexcelled \"Savings, Protection and Investment\" policy.\nThe attached coupon will bring our booklet,\n\"Child's Endowment.\"   Write for it to-day.\nNelson    Branch    Office:\n2-3     Aberdeen     Block,\nNelson,    B.C.\nNORTH AMERICAN LIFE\nASSURANCE COMPANY\n'-Solidas ihe Continent\"\nHead Office\u2014Toronto, Canada.\nSend mS -jrouc booklet, \"Child*, Endowment\"\nName .  _ \t\n,\n\u2014\u2014^\n\u2014^\u2014^\u2014^\u2014\n Paga Fottt1\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 2, 1925\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning; except Sunday by The New* Publishing company,\nlimited,   Nelson.   RC.\nBUBlness letters should b\u00a9 addressed\nAnd checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing company, limited, and tn no case to individual  members of the  staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A.B.C.\nStatements of circulation ma.lcd on\nrequest, or may be seen at the office\nof any advertising agency recof-nUed\nby  the Canadian   press association.   '\nSL'HSf'ltlPTIO.N   ItATICS\nBy mall  (counlry(, per month...I    :t9\nPer   year        6 00\nBy mall  (city), per year 13.00\nOutside  Canada,   per   month 78\nPer  year        7.50\nDelivered,   per week    26\nPer year    13.00\nPayable m Advance\nMalabar Audit Bureau of droulatlom\nMONDAY,    MARCH    2,    1925\nAustralian  Experiment   of\nGovernment Mercantile\nMarine Fails\nThe Australian government\nhas decided to dispose of its\nfleet of 32 merchant ships. The\ngovernment mercantile marine\nhas proved a costly failure in\nAustralia, as it has done in\nCanada.\nLosses in Australia on operation and the sum written off\ncapital total since 1921 more\nthan \u00a311,000,000.\nTenders are to be invited for\nthe whole fleet of ships.\nCanada should follow the\nsame course. Government operation of ships has never succeeded in competition with private  enterprise.\nCherries Pay Growers Well\nCherry growing continues to\nbe one of the most profitable\nbranches of agriculture in this\ndistrict.\nFinal returns show that\ngrowers will receive from the\nAssociated from $3.01 to $3.55\nfor Bings and from $3.17 to\n$3.59 for Lamberts, the greater\npart of the shipments having\nbeen made at the higher prices.\nThese returns are, of course,\nfor the high-grade late cherries\nwhich reach the market at a\nperiod when it is not glutted\nwith cherries from competing\ndistricts.\nBut any rancher can plant\nBings or Lamberts as easily as\nhe can plant any of the earlier\nand less profitable varieties.\nKootenay is shipping a lot of\n.cherries,, but it should be shipping far more. The market is\nhardly being touched.\nOcean Freight Rates\nThe Montreal Gazette, in\ncommenting on the ocean subsidy bill, points out that the\nscheme of the government is\nnot to reduce the cost of ocean\ntransport; that is beyond its\npower. \"All that is contemplated,\" says the Gazette, \"is to\nmake good out of the public\ntreasury the deficit arising out\nof lower rates. All the people\nare to subsidize some of the\npeople, and this policy is put\nforth by a government of free\nand freer trade.\"\nThe other day, in Montreal,\nRobert Redford, head of the\nshipping federation, in the\ncourse of an address, said: \"Although the traffic handled during the season constituted a\nrecord, both as regards the\nnumber of vessels and the quantities exported, the season has\nnot been a profitable one, from\na remunerative point of view,\nfor the regular liners. The\nmovement of grain was most\nspasmodic, owing to market\nconditions of the United Kingdom and the continent, and\nmany boats left with only part\ncargoes. As a result, competition for freight was again\nvery keen and rates were\nforced down to an unremunera-\ntive level.\"\nThat appears to be the situation on the Atlantic, in the face\nof which the federal government is going to subsidize a\nline of steamships. In effect,\nthe government is going to attempt to make the shipping\nbusiness more unremunerative\nthan it has been by granting\na subsidy to a favored company\nat the expense of the Canadian\ntaxpayers. As the Montreal\nGazette says, too, this is to be\ndone \"to the detriment of all\nother ships trading to Canadian\nports. Talk about loading the\ndice! A more monstrously unfair, ill-advised and futile plan\nthan that adopted by the^ gov-\nernment is inconceivable.\"\nNKW YORK. P.I. :\u00bb \u2014 Plans for\nthe recapitalisation of the International Paper company, whi, h will pro. Ide\nfun.Is   for   the   nrqulsltlnn   of   the   Kl'.r*\n,li(i an.l (iatlneau properties m Canada, .in.I I'.r s.l.liti.inal woikhiK c\u00abp.-\ni.il ' a\/ere announced by A. R. GrauH-\n!.,    president\nTl... proposed changes Involved the\n, n at'on of \u00ab -\"..ijii.Minii issue \"f \"\nJer   cent  preferred  fttotlr.\nEfficient\nbuseke\nNKW    UISHKS    THIS WKKK\nTOMORROW'S MENU\nBr\u00abakfatt\nStewed  Dried  Apricots\nCereal Scrambled   ERgs\nToast Coffee\nLuncheon\nBaked Rice and Cheese\nWhole   Wheat   Bread      Celery\nJelly Tea\nDinner\nCorned   Beef       Potatoes\nCabbage Lettuce Salad\nRaisin Tie Coffee\nReef-Bean Casserole\u2014Soak ono pint\nof dried lima beans over night and ln\nthe morning drain, cover with fresh\nboiling water, add a pinch of baking\nsoda, and boil for I\u00bb minutes. Now\nagain drain tho beans and set them\naside to add later to the casserole.\nBrown one pound of stew itexd (cither\nfrom the round or chuck) cut ln\ncubes, in two tablespoons of bacon\nfat or beef drippings with two large\nsliced onions. When the meat pieces\nare seared on all sides, and the\nonions a light brown, begin to fill\nyour casserole as follows; Put in\na layer of the meat cubes, then a\nlayer of the parboiled beans, followed\nby a layer of canned tomatoes;\nseason all generously with salt and\npepper and repeat these layers till\nthe meat and beans are used\" (and\nabout two cups of the more solid\nparts of the canned tomatoes).\nSprinkle      t\\?o   tablespoons   of   flour\nover all, and add one cup of the\nliquid from the tomato can. Y\\nk?\nfor two and one-half hours in a\nslow\/ oven, adding a little boiling\nwater from time to time if It becomes very dry. Serve from the\nsame difh.\nSuet Pudding\u2014 Mix together one\ncup of granulated sugar, one scant\ncup of finely-chopped suet, and two\ncups of flour sifted with one teaspoon of soda and one-half teaspoon\nof salt. Take still another cup of\nflour and mix It with oih cup of\neithor sc*| ltd raisins, or ' finely-\nchopped figs, also adding two teaspoons of gruund cloves and a pinch\nof    grated    nutmeg. Add this\nfloured nnd spiced fruit to the first\nmixture, then turn 'all Into a well\ngreased and floored baking powd-r\ncan, filling the mould only thrM-\nfourths full (ukc two cans if necessary). Put on Unlit fitting cover and\nwei^h down the can In boiling water\nwhich reaches to Its lid, letting this\nwater continue to boil around It for\nthree hours. Serve with an ordinary\nhard sauce. (Note: It you prefer\nto use on cup of stoned and\nchopped dates rather than the cupful of raisins or figs, omit the\nspices, but add one-fourth cup of\nchopped,   candied   orange   peel).\nTomorrow\u2014Answers  to  Inqueries,\nAll lnqulrltes arttlressfd to Miss\nKlrkman fn charge of \"Kfflc.ent\nHousekeepinR\" department will be answered in these columns In their turn.\nThis requires considerable time, however, owing to the great number received. So. If a personal or quicker\nreply is desired, a stamped and self-\naddressed envelope must be enclosed\nwith Hie questien. Be sure to use your\nfull name, street number, and the\nname of your city and provinee.\nTUK   EDITOR.\nCROSS-WORD PUZZLE\n1\nI\n3\n4\nli.\n5\nb\n7\na\ni\niO\nII\na\n13\n2.J\n10\n1\n*\nlb\n17\n8\n19\n11\n11\n33\n\u25a0\n1)\nw.\nlb\n3\/\n17\nIB\n39\n'\n1\nio\nii\n*H\nIk\ntb\nJfa\na\nto\n\u202241\nhi\n5k>\nii\n45\nS3\n4\/\n*.&\nH-j\nbO\nS\n51\nH\n55\n37\n..ti\nH\n5?\nbO   \u25a0\nbl\nbi\n'3\n3S\n10\nIf\n'5\nmm\na\nu\n\u00bb\n71\nl\n\u25a0\nas\n1 H''1*\n>b\n7;\n>S\n\u25a0\n00\nai\nit\ni\\\n6H\n6b\n\u25a0\n5>\n6a\nU\nY->\nl\"\nATI.\n1\nMl   1\nirttt.\nMIO*\nAL   1\nKDIt\nHORIZONTAL\n\u2014Smallest   quantity\n\u2014Lengthened  out\n\u2014In   place   of\n\u2014Belonging  lo  us\n\u2014propeller\n\u2014 Like\n\u2014Orn-.itn.-nt-.il   band   of   ribbon\n\u2014 Small   Insect\n---Kasteni   stale   (abbr.)\n\u2014Male   descendant\n\u2014Htfrn - '\n\u2014Ireland\n\u2014Jeer   at\n\u2014Careless   persnn   (Mang)\n\u2014Ice    crystals\n;\u2014Part   of   the  face\n,\u2014Having a   bad odor\n1\u2014Discontinue\n;\u2014i'art   of   the   neck\ni\u2014An   amphibian\n-\u2014Beforo\n{\u2014Toward\n1\u2014-Important  bones of the body\n! \u2014 K;it   a wav\nI \u2014Half an  em\n;\u2014Confusion\nI\u2014Aquatic   bird\n1\u2014MuhII   biting    insect\n[ \u2014 Waii.t.-r*   about\nI\u2014Spikenard\ni\u2014Important\n;\u2014Rent\n1\u2014Shave   off\nl-Defy\n[\u2014OlrPl  name\nI\u2014Heap\n1\u2014Cognlwnoe\n'\u2014Pronoun\nI\u2014Yibniti.m\ni\u2014a  fruit\n1   tint\nI\u2014Point   of  a   pen\nI\u2014I'.roan\nl\u2014Harveit\n)\u2014South   African   arilelnpc    (pi.)\n\u2014CJrapplei'S\nVERTICAL\n1 \u2014A   line   or   thong\nj_-Ainn's   name   (familiar)\nj\u2014Short  I'm*  a  female   relative\n(\u2014Popular   beveiaBC    (pi.)\nnl\nerlng\n7- H\nI\u2014Bugle\n^   AiiMiinie  monarch*\n10\u2014 Exclamation\nfl\u2014Organ <>f the body\nIS\u2014Droll   sl'-wly\n14\u2014tfmployi 1\nlb\u2014In lha near future\nn\u2014One   of   two ,ciu:tl   portions\n;!:>--'!'iii   eontainers\nIS\u2014Midday\n17\u2014Part <>f a  house\nIt\u2014 Promise to pay\n11\u2014Ruler\n1*1\u2014Village\n15\u2014Produce   by   erosive   action\n37 -Poem\n19  -Length*\n11\u2014Contrite   l\"'i'*\"n;i\nIS * Akir-inlng\nit- Black\nli;.,(-rmip   of   IIiiirs\n-II\n11- Cleaning oampound\nRI\u2014 Division   of   a   hospital\n.\".*.    Pari   of  a  raiiRc\n:.\u25a0*,-  Knure\nSO - Baal   Indian  U-aa\nS2\u2014Rnougb   (not-) >\n1-1  -Drop alowly\nIII   gquar*   ditmnnloa\nIB\u2014Liquid   measuio\n10\u2014Chooan\n71\u2014Declare\n7{ -Nobh man\n71\u2014Mi lal\nII\u2014Part   of   lhe   head\nil\u2014-sn.-iii  deer\nII - inn  of dry  meaauva  (abbr.)\nM\u2014Oreup \"i   eastani  slates  (abbr.)\nt*o \u2014I'ric-  (abbr.)\nof\nSourtf\nA\\s\\vi:it TO s.vn RDAVS\nCUOSKWORD   PUZZM\nBy Jamet IV. Bartan. MJX.\nAn Unusual Sprain\n(JUflBlered   in   accordance   with   the\nCopyright act).\nTb.-   chfuntfoaahlp   arraaU^Bf   bout\nbetween \u2022 \"Strannler\" Uatfta and\nHaruld Kuan, the hune University of\nNehrunka undent, must have been\nthrilling to ibe apactatora, when the\nstudent piuked up the erst-A hili* champion and hurled him to the floor, bo\nviolently that he was unable to n<i on\nwith    the   (second    htiut    for   Ht    least\n20   m hi ulaa Dvan   trim   he \u2022 win\nhelpbM and waa easily thrown ipM\nNow, the otttatandlng thintf to me\nIn the aeeount of the match, was that\nthe pap'-r atatad that Lawta had\nsprained his Mtcrp-lllac Joint, that Is\nthe joint that holds the hip bone to\nthe   spinal   column.\nIn ulhcr words, the newspapers\nthese day* nre Ii-lking about a sprain\ntit this Joint Juat as ihey would of a\nHprnined ankle, or any other Joint.\nXow,   why  is this so   remarkable?\nlie. hus.- It is only a matter of a\nvery few* years since it became Known\nJAMAICA MADE\nSNAKELESS BY\nTHE MONGOOSE\nCrow   Also   Protected   by\nLaw; Jamaica Nightingale a Songster\nARCHDEACON BEER\nDESCRIBES FAUNA\nGiant Ants' Nests Hang in\nthe Air; Ticks Make\nThemselves Felt\nKingston, Jamaica,\nJanuary 27, 1925.\nTo the Editor of The Dally News. ,\nKir \u2014 On Saturday last I left'\nBrown's Town. Mr. Ball took me\nIn his auto to BVerton, 35 miles.\nThere I took the train for Port Antonio, nnd remuined there until thia\nmorn'ne, and today I came to\nKingston, expecting to Kft a steamboat to take me to New Orleans.\nGoing to the shipping company I\nlearned that they did not expect a\nboat In until next Monday, 80 I\nshall\/have a week here in the capital of the Island, and then I am\ntold I shall have to go to Klueflelds\nand Colon on the Panama canal,\nand thence to New Orleans, a trip\nof  12 days duration.\nI am not sorry to go over now\nto Colon and Bluefields which I\nhave not yet been to. I may have\nsomething to say of this trip in a\nlater   letter.\nMeantime there are many things\nin Jamaica that I have not bo far\nmade any mention of, but let me\nhere say that I am still of the\nopinion that the Island of Jamaica\nIs the most fertile place I have been\nIn and the climate Is the best I\nhave   experienced.\nFlour or (ashava Root\nComing to Kingston today I have\npassed by thousands of acres of\nbananas, coconuts, and sugar cane,\nalso cassava, coffee, wild plums\nand quantities of oranges, some of*\nthem growing wild In tho bush, as\nalso do some bananas, limes and\nother fruits. I djd not see any\ngrapefruit today, but quantities are\ngrown on the island, and other fruits\nthat have escaped my memory or my\nobservation.\nI ought to say a word about the\ncassava. It Is a bush from six to\neight feet high, and looks very\nlike the castor oil plant, which many\nof your readers niuy have seen\ngrowing. Only the roots of the\ncassava are ttsjjt These roots are\ngrated fine, ami water Is poured\non the pulp. The water Is drained\noff, and ln draining off the water,\na poisonous principle is also taken\naway. The residue is cassava, and\nwhen dried looks something like\nflour and makes nice cassavn cakes,\nand other nice eating things. It\ntakes a long time to make, and I\nshould think It tedious in the preparation.\nI also mention the wild plums.\nThese plum trees look for all tho\nworld Ilka peach trees, the blossom\nheing the same color as the peach\nblossom. In a former letter I mentioned the akee, cho-cho, and bread\nfruit, so 1 shall say no more of\nthun.\nMongoose Attends lo Kals\nBut so far I have Raid little or\nnothing of the animal and bird life.\nLet ine say, then, that the only\nwild animal I have seen is the\nmongoose. This Is somethink like\na mink In size and makeup. It\nwas Introduced on the Island to kill\nthe snakes and cave rats which\nwere a great pest. The mongoose\nperformed his duty so thoroughly\nlhat hardly a snake remains, and the\nrat population has been greatly lessened. But the natural food of the\nmongoose, having passed away, they\nnow are pretty hard on the poultry,\nbut the DtongOOM is still looked on\nas being as much a friend as an\nenemy.\nAmong the birds, I think ono\ncalled the nightingale is easily first.\nIt is about the size ot a prairie\nlark, only il hu a larger lail. In\nMs marking it is not unlike a magpie, but in sing ng It excels all\nsinging h ids that I have heard.\nIt has a far greater variety of notes\nthan the best canary I ever heard.\nIts voiee is louder and Its trills are\nwonderful. In the early morning\nIt enlivens the whole country with\nits aon-gl nnd seems like the mocking bird, to imitate the song ot\nevery other bird. Were It not for\nthe cruelty of imprisoning such a\nglorious songster, I should like to\nhave one in a cage, but that is a\ncruelty 1 could not contemplate, so\nI content myself with listening to\nits delightful song ot praise to lis\nDivine   Maker.\nI am disappointed in the humming birds here. Ours In Canada\nare more beautiful In coloring and\nmore   d imi unlive   in   size,   and   also\nthey   are    not    more   plentiful   than\nwlih   us   In  Canada.\n\"While the hummingbird Is scarcer,\nit is not so with the carrion crow.\nIt ia protected by law from harm,\nand Its name of carrion tella why.\nIt is the common scavenger, and is\nmost usefully employed In keeping\nthe country tree from the accumulation of garbage. It is so large\nthat\/, I have \u00abotnetlinc*i mistaken\nit for a turkey as it sat on a fence\nor tree ' as I passed by. It is\nblack, and has a head like a turkey, all red and murky. But the\nturkey has a good round top to\nits head, showing the benevolence\nwhich causes It to be eo good as\nto furnish our Thanksgiving dinner,\nwhile the carrion crow has a low\nflat top to Ha head, indicating that\nit has only -brains enough to keep\nitself out of harms way, being\nprotected by law, and .from their\nfilthy food making them unfit for\nhuman food, they are not molested\nand sail through the sky like so\nmany great hawks, and are very\nnumerous   all   over   the   Island.\nThere are few other birds, and.\nthey not calling for special notice.\nBut the nnta and ticks ought to\nbe   passed   by  without  mention.\nAs you go through the country,\nevery here and there you will see\nwhat look like a clustered swarm of\nbeea. These are ants' nests, and ahout\nthe tsize, of a man's head to that\nof a bushel basket. They are often\nstuck on fence posts, and Mten in\ntrees or bushes. The larger nests\nmust contain hundreds of thousands\nof ants, and I am told the colored\npeople sometimes break up these\nnests and throw them to their fowls,\nwhich, of course, furnishes a bountiful and delicious meal for the\nChickens.\nI>uko Needed for lho Ticks\nBut now of the ticks. These are\nvery small, like our sand flies, which\nthe Indians call: \"No seo um.\" \"We ln\nBritish Columbia have wood ticks,\nbut they aro large comparatively.\nThe Jamaica tick is a \"no see um,\"\nbut not by any means a \"no feel\num.\" If you pass through a pasture field, they will swarm In on\nyou, then goodby to peace and\nhappiness. A lady, who used to\nlive in Kaslo. had the misfortune\nto step into a nest of them in a\npasture fieli, and for days had a\nlively time. Scotchmen bless the\nDuke of Argyle for putting up\nposts on which they might scratch\nthemselves when they had the Itch,\nI think the lady referred to would\nalso have blessed the Duke had he\nalso put up posts in Jamaica. Some\nof you may think this a Joke, hut It\nwas no Joke to persons who have\nacquired a dose of Jamaica ticks.\nThero are many other things I\nmight write about, hut probably this\nletter Is already as long as you\nhave space for, so without further\nceremony I will conclude.\nH.   BEER.\nORE RECEIPTS\nFOR WEEK LOW\nlhat this Joint could be sprained. It\nwaa taught thnt there was practically no movement in this Joint, and\nso a sprain was. of course, out of\nthe question.\nHowever, so many people complaining of backaehe, or paid over the\nback of either hip, Were able to give\na history of having lifted some\nheavy Object, had stooped to pick lip\nan objeet from the flnor. had Mg>\nhups, Mapped downwards where they\ndid not know there was any uncven-\nness on the ground or elsewhere, had\nslipped und fallen, or any one of a\nnumber of aeeidents had occurred to\nthem. They attempted to \"work out\"\nthe pain, to have the back massaged,\nto hava various manipulations to get\nrid ol tbe pain. The pain often extended Into the hip and down the\nleg. and caused what 1* called sciatica.     The   pain    was    severe,    as    this\nHcliitic-fl nerve is the largest nerve\nin the body. .\\tl this treatment was,\nof course, wrong, beea use a sprain\nor a strain of a Joint la tho same\nevery where, and the only proper\ntreatment Is rcNt.\nBesting In bed for n few days, the\napplication of adhesive tape across\nthe back, over the joint from one\nside to the other, and the wealing of\na brace for a few months, usually\nbrings  about   a   rompleto  cure.\nThe wearing of lhe brace would\nbe wise in slippery weather, or when\nany lifting has to be done,\nTrail   Reports   Not   Much\nOver Six Thousand Tons\nfor Period\nThe smallest ore receipts te date for\n1927, are those tor the week ending\nFebruary 11, when they totalled only\n63S2 tons. Only three custoni mines\nshipped, In addition to company miii*,s\nshipped, in addition to company\nmines, and in the previous week\nthere were 12. Total t.tnuage, February H, a year ago, was 6(1,60?, while\nthis year on the same date It Is\n73.240. Company shipments to date\nare   611,543   tons.\nShipments for the week were:\nEmerald (lead) 42; Taradise (lead)\n46; Silversmith Head) 177; Silversmith (zinc) 208: company mines,\n5900.\nShipments, with the names of\nmines, districts, classes ot ore, and\namounts to date, show:\nConsolidated\nCompany   mines  69,543\nNelson-Arrow   Lakes\nEmerald.    Salmo    (lead)     \u25a0\u25a0       24S\nOoldtn   Eagle.   Nelson   I lead).. 3\nLightning   i'eak.   Edgewood\n(lead)       9\nMolly (iibson,   KItto's   (lead)   .. 10\nI.X.E., Bossland  (dry)     48\nBoundary-Si mi I kameen\nBell,   ifeaverdell,   (lead)    .... 41\nCrescent,   Greenwood    (lead)    .. 2\nI'rovldcnce. Greenwood  (lead)   . 63\nSally,   Beaverdell   (lead)    \u25a0\u25a0  45\n*Sloc\u00bbn-Ainsworth-Lardcau\nAlbino,   AIiiswm|Ui   (la-ad)      40\nBrandon, Sand h*ad>      .     M\n\u25a0Tork-rrnvince, Zwicky (zinc) .. 35\nGalena Faun, Silverton ,\n(taaft)       2i\nHewitt,    Silverton    (lead)     .... 46\nI*T.,   Slocan   City   (lend)      9\nBatnbler,  Humbler,   (zinc)     36\nRosobery-Surprise,   New   Denver\n(lead)    \u25a0\u25a0  41\nHnsobcry-Surpiise, New  Denver\n(zinc)     S|\nRuth.    Handon    (lead)       67\nStandard,   Silverton   (lead)    .... B\nStandard.  Silverton   (zinc)   .... IH\nSilversmith, Sandon   (lead)   .... 1.8?\nSilversmith, Sandon   (zinc)   .... 480\nSpokane   Trinket,   Ainsworth\n(lrad)      7\nI'nited,   Alnsworth    (lead)      Ti6\nI'nited, Ainsworlh  (zinc)   ...... 4\nVan   Roi,   Silverton   (lead)      54\nVan   Rot,   Silverton   (zinc)   .... P7\nWhitewater, Rtt&lltck tt 1)  .. 91\nEast   Kootenay\nSanto.   Bull   River   (copper)    .. 18\nPanulise, Like Windermere\n(lead)       338\nRossland\nVictory,  Siuithers   dead)     ljj\nManitoba\nBingo,   llcrhcrt   lake,   Manitoba\n(dry)  1\nMcCafferty, Herbert lake, Manitoba\n(dry)\nWashington\nKnob Hill,  Republic   (dry)   ....       821\nTotal    73,240\nNone Will Satisfy\nlike pure, delicious\n\"SALADA\"\nH47\u00bb\nGREEN TEA\nThe   finest   green   tea   produced   in\nthe world. \u2014 Ask for a trial package.\nFREE SAMPLE of GREEN TEA UPON REQUEST. \"SALADA.\" TORONTO\nDo this and keep\nhis clothing soft,\npure and comfort\nable\nNothing is so sensitive as\nhahy'sskinlEven tlicsliglit-\nest roughness in his diapers,\nshirts and bands will inlumc\nand irritate it.\nMuch trouble is directly due\nto washing dijpers with\nharsh soap\u2014soap containing free alkali. The alkali\nclings to the little garment!\nin the form of a line, white\npowder\u2014almost impossible\nto rinse out. This causes\n\"diaper rash.\"\nTo save baby's skin, use\nLux for washing all his\nslothes. It is the mildest,\npurest, gentlest cleanser in\nthe world. Lux contains no\nfree alkali, and the pure\nsuds rinse out completely.\nLux keeps baby's garments\nsoft, clean, comfortable and\n|tftl\nLever Brmlirr. I ilimt-d,\nToronui,\nHow to wash diapers\nRemove solid nutter at once\nand soak diapers in cold\nwater. Whisk two table-\nupoonfnls of Lux into thick\nsuds in a tub of very hot\nwaler. Let diapers soak afew\nmoments, then dip up and\ndown, pressing suds repeatedly through them. Rinse\nthoroughly ia three svatcrj.\nREAD THE ADVERTISEMENTS\n77i<?y Save Your Time\nBuilding\nMaterial  John Bums & Son\nLet ua figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\n25 Per Cent Discount on All\nHeating Stoves\nWe are doing thia in order to clean up\nand make room for Spring goods. This\nis a snap.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware\nnelson .       .       .       \u2022       b. c.\nVoucher\nForms\nHume use a vouchtr check and for those who\nprefer this .style we have worked out a form which\nia very .satisfactory, and it is economical both in\noriginal cost and in bookt'eping time.\nWe also print vouchers for use separate from\nchecks. Just tell us what you want and we will\nmake it for you.\nTHE DAILYNEWS JOB DEPT.\nPrinting\u2014Ruling\u2014Bookbinding\nPhone'144 (Two Lines)\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 2, 192S\nIV* FUt   3\/^\n\t\nThis Classy\nLittle Model\nIn  Black Vici Kid,\nFlexible Sole,\nTHE\nPAIR\nAmericans may   WASHINGTON\nHAVE LONDON CLUB      \t\n$5.00\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nMad Driver Finds\nBalfour Route Is\nClosed by Boulders\ntONGBEACH, March 1. \u2014 George\n'atf, brlt%e foreman, arrived Monday\nwltli a UU Which lias since been\nluiuling piling from the Harrop ita-\ntlun and towlriK it acrofta li> the\nLMlgb*tt<--h short*. Tiny have now\nRtarteri   work   on   tho   ferry   bridge.\nClifford Hay don, the rural mall\nIrlver on the Balfour mute, found his\npraffrean blocked on the rocky bluff\npact Kokant-e by two large bouldera\nweighing M\u00bb\"eral tons. Tuesihiv. Willi\ntho assistance of J. B. Anderson of\nK oh a nee and others, tlu* horses were\nj unharnessed, nnd led over the ob-\nslruction, whilst the mall wniroii was\naUdded over on lugs. John McKay of\nllalfour at once got to work and\nblasted a sal.; passage in time for\nnext   mall   day.\n. Historic Tractln Henry Sev-\nj   enth's Hunting Grounds\nMay  Be  Links\nLONDON, Feb. 27.\u2014An American\nj country and residential cliib may bo\nj organised in London in the neat*\nfuture. One of the historic tructs\nnear London where Henry VIII used\nto hunt has been supfiested as the\nsite, and as there in plenty of space\nfor golf Americans Interested In tho\ndeal rather look upon this place with\nfavor.\nIt has heen proposed by the prime\nmovers in the Idea to take over all\nthe buildinjs's as th\"y stand, this Including a splendid Georgian mansion\nknown as Adding on I'ark, one oT\nthe showplaccs of this flection. The\n| site of the proposed club is near\nCroydon, the larpe airdrome from\nwhich London planes arrive and de-\n' part for the continent, and until a\n1 few   years   ago   was   the  country   scat\nI of  the archbishop of  Canterbury.\nj The hunting lodge of Henry VIII\nstood near where the mansion is\nlocated. Originally this site was\ngranted toy William the Conqueror\nto his cook on the peculiar condition\n' that he and his successors should\nl present at royal coronations a cer-\nI lain mess of pottage In an earthen-\nj ware  pot.\n .^\nAged Winnipegger\nSuicides After\nHis Wife's Death\nAND YANKEES\nSTRONG TEAMS\nPredicted as Leaders in the\nAmerican  League  at\nEnd of Season\nTIGERS, ATHLETICS\nPICKED CONTENDERS\nHaines Adds to the Pitching\nStaff; Ty Cobb Same\nTeam\nJailed Doukhobors\nat Grand Forks Go      j\non a Hunger Strike \\\nQRAND   FORKS,  March   1 Jack\nElciolf and Peter Cloistookin, the\ntwo Doukhebors who have b\u00abn\njal'td for 14 days because they\nrefused to pay 85 fines, are oa a\nhanger itiikf. They hava been In\njell Flnce Monday, and although\nfood hat been taken to them regularly, Uny have refused to eat\nanything all week, except Friday,\nwhen the** ate two oranges. Both\n. have ano. her 10 dayi to go before\nsecuring*   freedom.\nANOTHER STORE\nFOR KIMBERLEY\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 28 \u2014G 1orge\nT. Pankhurst, aged TO, whoso\nwife died last Monday, committed\nsuicide at his horns h.re yesterday   by  hanging.\n *-*-**-\t\nRegina Pats Win\nas a Formality;\nJunior Champions\nR BO IN A, Mareh 1.\u2014Regina PaU\nWon ciowncd Saskatchewan junior\nchampions for another season here\nFriday night, when they went\nthrough the formality of trimming\ntheir northern rivals, .Saskatoon\nWesleyy. on the second game of the\nfinals    series.\nThe score uas 11 to 2. and gives\nthe local club the long end of a\n20-4 count on the round. The game\nwas fairly even until the final period,\nwhen the Itegina team ran in seven\ngoals.\nKlMljrcitU:V. March J. \u2014 The vacant lot between the King's hotel and\nthe Oipheum theater has been sold\nfor J3.\">00. A store is to be erected on\nthis property. When cautious and\nI'Xptirlenced business people pay a.s\nhigh as 11600 for an \"inside\" lot. It\nis fairly strong evidence that they\nhnve- wonderful faith in Kiniberkys\nfuture.\n,    Cherult   Is\nrptlngs' mode\ndressing   green   In   thi*-\nSolly Seaman Wins \t\nOver Frank Lafay\nin the Elimination\nXKW YOUR, March 1.\u2014Solly Seaman of New York, outpointed Frank\nLafay. Albany. Friday night In a 10-\nround hout which was one of the\nelimination bouts iu the state\nathletic coin mission's tournament to\nname   a   light weight   champion.\nItennv VobjBt, New York, won the\ndeeisioti over Ab*x Hart, Philadelphia,\nlu another 10-round bout of the elimination    contesis.\nSocial Happenings\nIn Nelson\nThis column Is being conducted\nby Mrs. Vlgneux. All news of a\nsocial nature, Including receptions,\nprivate entertainments, personal\nItems, marriages, etc., will appear\nIn this column. Telephone Aim.\nVigneux,\nI 81   Macintosh,   who   were   former   reet-\n! dents   of   Nelson.\n\u2022     \u2022     \u2022\nMr.   and   Mis.   A.   J.   t'urzon   of   Van-\nI eouver   were   city    visitors   Saturday.\n|      Mrs,     W.     VV.     Hell     of     Honnlngton\n-\u2014   - ! sprnt   Kuturday   In   the   city.\nMiss Jean   Hunte'* entertained   Satur- I *    \u2022    \u2022    \u25a0\nday   aflerniAm   at   a   moat   prettily   ar- j     Mrs.   W.   II.   Haxenilale  of  Trail   paid\nranged    tea   at    her   home.    Hall    Mines I Nelson   a   visit   Saturday.\nroad.     She   was   assisted   by   Mrs,   Brio \u25a0   \u2022    f   \u00ab\nP.   Dawson,   who   poured,   while   assist-,     William   Hoyle   and   his   sister.   Miss\nlpg    in    serving    Wotv    Ulu    Margaret | Annie   Hovle   of   Queen's   Bay-   were   in\nArthur     and      Miss     t'relna     Horstead. i the   city   Saturday.\nIncluded     in     h<*i*    giienis    were     Mi\nWide sleeve;\nhange In (fell\nare the most important\nyear's silhouette.\nPruning\nSupplies\nHAND   PRUNERS,   8'\/i*INCH\nLONG \u2022 HANDLED      PRUNERS.\n8   AND   10   FOOT\nHAND      PRUNERS,\nHANDLES\n30- INCH\nCUT\nDOUBLE     AND    SINGLE\nPRUNING    SAWS\nDELUGE   SPRAYERS BUCKET   SPRAY   PUMPS\nMYERS'  COMPRESSED   AIR   SPRAYER\nHIPPERSOIN HARDWARE CO.\nPHONE  497\nP.O.   BOX   414\nLook   for   tht   Red   Hardware   Stora\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffice   Smelting   and   Refining   Departmsnt\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC, TRAIL\nNKW YORK, Marvh I.\u2014Washington\nand Xew York will fight it out for\nAmerican league pennant honors in\n1..-J... with Detroit dogging tho heels\n<>r this pair, and Philadelphia. Connie\nMack's \"mystery team,\" looming W\nthe dark horse of the race. This\nppears to Rummarize the situarfon\nan the teams look on paper preparatory to their southern training sessions.\n^ St. Louis. Hoston, Cleveland and\nChicago are uncertain quantities now.\nall four facing the harrier in the\nexperimental stage with green timber\nIn their ranks. Harring ,(n upset,\nnone of the quartet figures to be\nmore  than  a   threatening   prospect.\nThe Ban-alert will find the way\nto their second pendant Imrricade.l\nprincipally by the Yankees. Tigers\n'inil Athletics, all of whieh will likely\nfigure prominently In the season's\nhigh ranking. And despite the advantage of several beneficial trades\nwhich Washington has made during\nthe winter season, the Yankees appear to be the choice of the league\nat this early stage.\nHarris   on   Job\nBut Stanley Harris, youthful pilot\nof the world's champions, hus not\nbeen Idle. He has traded wisely with\nhis contemporaries. Vie has called\nto his aid veteran pitching assistance. The acquisition of the trio of\ntwirling veterans, \"Dutch\" Keuther,\nobtained from the Brooklyn Nationals; Stanley Coveleskie, from the\nCleveland Indians, and Vean flregg.\npurchased from the Seattle Pacific\nCoast team, should bolster up the\ndeflated staff, which has dwindled\nto a trusty quartet headed by Walter\nJohnson and Including Cieorge Mog\nrhlge. \"Firpo\" Marberry and Tom\n2u chary.\nOutside of this twirling staff, Har\nris will stand pat on his team this\nyear. Like Harris, Hugglns will\nstand    pat,    ex.-cpt    for    the    veteran\nUrban   Shoektr,   who   came   to   the\nYankees In exchange for three pitchers. Joe  Bush,  Ciard  and   Q-aatOn.\n\"Ty\" Cobb's fighting team of Bengals will take the field this season\nsimilar in every respect to the 1M-I\nedition, with the exception of second\nbase, where a new face is sine v<\nbe seen. Derrill I'ratt, veteran lu-\nfielder, has been given his unconditional release. The keystone sack\nwill be a problem for tbe Tiger-*.\nO'l^uirkc, former Boston and Toronto player; (lehrlnger, product of\nthe Michigan-Ontario league, and\nBurke Will be the leading candidates\nfor this position, but O'Bourke seems\nto have had the most experience of\nthe trio, and will likely get the assignment despite a weak throwing\narm.\nDown in Philadelphia, Connie Mark\nIs silently building up a formidable\noutfit. The veteran pilot made a\nloud ballyhoo about paying $HMl,li0O\nfor \"Lefty\" droves. Baltimore tooth-\npaw, but aside from this he has been\nworking rather than talking, droves\nwill bole ter up -' weakened pitching\nstaff, while a youthful catcher in\nthe form of dordon S. Cochrane, Boston university star, who was obtained\nfrom the Portland club of the Pacific Coast league, will be a big aid,\nalthough \"Cv\" Perkins will serve as\nthe mainstay in the receiving de-\nI partment.\n, To   Use   New   Blood\ndeorge Sisler at Si. Louis. Kddle\nCollins at Chicago. Lee Kohl al Boston und Trtt Speaker al Cleveland\nhave gone in for vmingsters. and\nwill experiment with several combinations. The ileal v-hi-h sent Both\ndiard and daslou to the Browns aided\nIhe St. Loula club fu'ly as much a-\nit did the Yanks. nf the qu arte'.\nIhe Browns look the best of tin\nfour teams which do not limne Ir\nbe   in   the   running.\nKddle Collins will take the In ho\nof the White Sox to build up a team\nwhich was shattered by the s\u00ab*anda'\nof IIM!* and which has never fully\nrecovered from that disastrous shoek.\nSpeaker, at Cleveland, will try oul\nseveral COUaCt  youths.     Joe  Sewell   al\nshort, JamJeaon In hft. and Myati\nbehind the bat. are the only one-\nsure of their Jobs with the Indian*\nthis coming season. l-'ohl lias tb-\nBed Sox considerably streng.hcned\nbv winter trades, but for Ae most\npart   the   Bed   Sox   will   build   up   for\nJeannelte HigKinbntlinn.. Miss Owyn-\ni-th Vincent, Miss Kitty Johnstone.\nMiss Alta Johnstone, Miss Helen\nTown send, Miss Mildred Irvine, Miss\n-Mlioru. McDonald. Miss Louise Cunliffe. Miss Marjorie Cild.-i wood. Miss\nAJotae WrMH, Miss Toots Miller.\nMiss Joan Hamilton. Miss Margaret\nAllen, Miss Helen Ulgot. Miss Margaret Jar via. Miss Aileen Manefieid.\nMiss Kathryn Jackson of Victoria,\n.Miss Margaret Arthur, Miss Marguerite Adams, Miss H. lid wards. Miss\nFrances McHardy ut Trail, Miss Phyllis Church. Miss Jean dllker, Miss\nCrelne Horstead. Miss <ju.*en,t*\nAnnahle Miss Owen iScott-l-auder,\nMiss Oladya flbrnlf-h, Miss Isabel\nPorin. Miss J etui Fur in sad Mrs. Lric\n1'.   Dawson.\nMr. and Mrs. Frank L\ndaughter of South Iteoti\nvisitors Saturday.\nFrank    Martin\nSaturday   In   Neb\nWatts   and\nwere    city\nof   Bonnington\non.\nof   Trail    spent\nMiss   Violet    Irvine\nthe   week-end   in   Kelt*\nMrs,   A.   Willey   uf   Honn lag ton   wn*-f\ncity  visitor  Saturday.\nMiss Kitty Fletcher, who teaches at\nPun ning to a. was In town over the\nwe.-k-t-nd with her parents, Mr- and\nMrs.   -J.-orge   Fletcher,   Gore   street.\nMrs, H. P. Graham of Cranbrook\nwas In Nelson. Friday, and left Saturday   morning   for   h.-r   home.\nMian\n'an   In\nI'.lna\nth.    1\nWiilts\nUy   Sal\nuf\nSouth\n)'\u25a0\nKl,\nan\nUn,\n:u u nl.\nIIM   UL*\n.1.   A.\n>\u2022     III\ncumpil\nMcKiiv\nNalaoD\nllpil  bv\nof\na\nHal foil\nloppini\naon.   I\nr   8\n..1.\nMM\nShirt.\nMiss Kulalie Gagnou spent the we.-k-\n\u25a0nd In the city with her parents. Mr.\ntod   Mrs.  C.   V.   Gatrrion.   Silica   street.\nHatching Eggs\nIf you wish to buy batching (HP or if you wish\nto sell them, the Classified Columns of The Daily\nNews are the medium of greatest value to you.\nPoultry fanciers and prospective poultry fanciers\nthroughout the district consult the Classified Columns\nof The Daily News regularly. They are either looking for an opportunity of buying \"-products such as\nyours or a chance to sell theirs.\nTo Insert a Classified Advertisement, Phone 144\n(Two Lines), Call At or Write    -\nThe Daily News\nNELSON, B.C.\nthe future with an  ear  tt\nfor further strenKtheninff.\ntlu\nound\nTwo Hundred New\nHouses Are Looked\nFor in Kimberley\nK1MBBRLST,\nout plaBfl are i\nwill soon wltn\nthat will, bef.u*-\nfly* this coon\nn. w    residences.\nMn\nill    1.\nif   pi.\nrley\ntri -it'll    out.    Klrnti\nss    a    hiill'linu     )\u2022\u2022\nthe   sinnni'-r   Is   o'\nni.ty    m.-re    than    1IUU\nand\nI.Ik    contractors\nbuilders   In   I hie   district   have   aln\ntehafl    contracts    for** the    erection\nnmnv    residence***.      Some    of    the    \u00ab\ntruetors,   who   call   themeelvee   \"little\nfellows.\"     have     also      umlrrtakrii      li\n-tree!   several   houses   t'.>r   private    I ml I\nrldnala   aad there are a lew reeldenu\n\u2022Ing\n. \\p.\nrlenced\n\u25a0ni\"\nii,ii*   to   build    their   own    In\nnee.\nLongbeach Ladies\nExchange Pointers\nat Guild Meeting\n-Tl*\nLong-\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0k i\nHue\nLONOBBACH,    March    1\nbench womea'i guild met last v\nthe home of the prealdent,  Mrs.\nLeggatl      Much     eeeful     Information\nwas   exchanged   hy   the   nmatofi   *>\u00bb\nsuch MhjMtl a- the h.*st way t\" \"< t\n(ir cone Kiim off clothlag. thi cor-\nrecl treatment f\"i rheumatism and\nmodern   dieting   In   \u25a0prioi   time,   om-\ntrnfted favorably with thf old-fashioned   physic\t\nA collection wns taken from the\nmembers of the grnml lodge of\nOdd Fellows with which WM secure.] a club bag, which wan presented to J. A. Tully, P.O M., P.O.R..\nwho ha* been for a number of years\neneral agent of the O.lt.K.A., for the\nfour weslern provinces and who Ih\nbeing transferred to Ontario to W-\niume a similar positlun in thnt province.\nT.    F>.    Levasseur.    gllloa    stree\nreturne-d    to   the   city   from   a\ntrip  to Calgary  and  Rdnronton.\n\u2022    \u2022   \u2022\nArthur   Marshull   of   Itevclstoke   is\nNelhoa  on   business,\nMiss Dorothy Wtiltniore of the\nHridgt-t elub in Vancouver ami a former resident of this city, was one of\nthree hostesses at a dunce glvin Jl\nVancou'er recently. A coast paper\n4\u00abys; \"The home of Dr. no<\\ Mrs. D.\nM. Llnehain, 11^0 Sixteenth avenue\nwest, was (he scene of a delightful\ndame this week, arranged by tho\nBridget club. Miss Lillian Imiebam.\nMiss Franz Doherty and Miss Doro-\nhy     Whit more     acting     as     hosh-sses.\nMrs.    George    Smith.    Ulsi    Isabella\nbiult and   Miss   .Marginrile   Harvey as-\ndsted.\nMrs. V.. r. Johnson and In-r daughter, uf Hon ri. tig ton, paid a \\ is it to\nthe   city   Saturday.\nMrs,    S.    J.    McDonald    has    left    the\nlotenay    hake    deneral    tlOMpttal    with\nher   young   son,   Jam.-s   Hwart,   for   her\nie   on   Mill   street.\nhas i     Mr.   Horrte   C\n\u25a0eh*e ' elty   Saturday,\n1'assmore   was   in   th-\nMrs.   11.    Arcure   of   Tegfcun\n)Wn   shopping   Sal in day.\nwas    in\nMr and Mrs, N. Hayoff of Tarry's\nspent  Saturday   In   I own.\nn Friday evening the Nelson basketball girls' team were gloriously en-\nl.-rtalm-il at a delightful reception and\ndance given ln their honor In the\nKaslo amary. The party returned to\nhe city Suturdav morning much iin-\naessed by their short visit. Thos.-\nn the parly Included Miss Gladys\nlelfs. MlM Vera Wall-v. Mis\u00ab Ih-rtle\nCalnan, U.a Alma Smlllie. Miss Anna\nAnderson.      Miss      Dorothy     Titsworth.\nMiss    Charlotte    Ko-ttnaa    ami    their\n-baperon,   .Mrs.   (luy   Wright.\nW. It. BurroWB of Vaneouver is vit-\nttng   with   friends   in   Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs, W. .1. ft Hiker of the\nlorth    shore    had    as    their   guest    last\nvLek Mrs. J. Roaaell of Creeoenl Bay.\nFlic CamsbeU of Bonnington was in\nown   Saturday.\nNoble daimnon of Ke\\ i-lsttdi.- iv-\nutii.'.l last e* eniug from a business\ntrip   to   t'ranbrook.\nColllngwood     dray\npent  .Saturday   1u   the\nof    Bonnington\neity.\nD.   J.   Barcli\nwhi\nat   Kaslo.   who\nbeen    tin    gVftet    of    Mrs.    Thonms\nion.   Carboaate   etreet.   sou-*   Fri-\nlefi   yeeterday afteraooa   for  hei\ne.   with   her   husband.    Dr.    Barch-y\nspent   yesterday   lu   the   city.\nMr.   and    Mrs.   J.   M. Ivor   of    U-\\\nstoke   have  arrived   In   town.     Mrs.   I\nIvor   will   be   the   gmst   of   her   par.-ut**.\nMr.     and     Mrs.     .Monson.     Fairvl\nwhile   here.      Mr.    Mctvor   has   left    for\n\"ranbrook   on   a   business   trip.\nMrs.   J.    Hrown,    Victoria   atreet   ]\nthe   surprised   guest    of   honor.    I 'r id\nerhen  a   Dumber  oi  ner  friends  ei\n[trlalag   Daugfttere  and  Maids of  Bng*\nland, of which socl.lv Mrs, Brown is\niistriet deputy, gathered aad enjoyed\ni social hour, gani.-s, community slng-\nu.g, and dancing, forming a pleasant\nevening's prom a in. Among those at\nthe parte were .Mrs. A. Cuthhert, Mis\nF. Foster. Mrs A. Wood. Mis. T.\nHillvard Jr., Mrs. ft A. Noble. Mrs.\nI. Benaoa, Mrs. Harry Amas. .Mis,\nI Bird, Mrs W Ah xander. Mrs. K\n-lotus, Mrs. F. dohlsmith. .Mrs. .1,\nBaibss,   .Miss   Winnie   Balhss.   Mtss   11.\nPerdae,    Mrs.    s.    Hltlyard,    Mrs    a\nBrunt, Miss xi. Ball.-ss. Miss ft Wood,\nMl^s M. Itamsden. Mrs J. Thompson.\nMls\u00ab    K.    Turner.     Mjsa    F     Suteliffe.\nMiss 1 Thompson. Miss Winnie\nHrown. Mrs II Stirzaker and Mrs. ft\nWard.\nFridav   atti-rtio.\nrllghtfully   ente\nMends at brldgi\nervatory\nn   Mn\ninod\ni*:.\niggi\nal\ntr  In\net.\nMiss\nKa Hula.    Mrs.    File\nMatthew,   Mim\nA.   Merer land,\non   Ob\nplayen\nruid.   Mr:\n*   WhllehouK\nn, lUMllna, I\nW.   M     Walk\nivlon\nn    Jackson    of    V\n'.    Dawson.    Mrs.\nToots   .Miller.    M\nMrs     I.esli.\nBel\nMiss M. Camei\na   Helen digot\nMr:\nMi\nll    Wall\n-esldeii\nSel\u00abon\nll.-l.lW\nI    Mel\neh\n.ml    Will    visit    with    his    i\nnd   daughter,   Mr,   and   Mrs\npi,.\nId     Mill\n(    weeks\nMl\nOf    Bonnu\n;    in    town\nj   D   tm\nelt>    \\|sltfi\n. v    ft\nrtaff   in\nadirday,\n.oil     of     Do-      Bn\nurnod   from   i\ngh    sp.nl   at    tht\nal    ban\nHlt.b*    \u25a0\nH    n.   Applewhaite oi Wl\nto    town    Fridav    e\\e-\nlor   her  home  al   Willow\nMn\nFt id..\nW    .1    Asil.-y\nIVr. v Hhuf\ni-n In rran\nst t'< w da\nMing   ami\nshm I    Huu-\nMis    Willi:\nwhere   sh.\nRichard  Ael\n'   IN-vetstokf.   who   I\nk on buelnesi for\narrived    In    town    I\nholiday  In   Nelson\nWl\nM\"' ' V\nwhile\nephlne   si\n\u25a0i) 'I    b\nin\nMrs.    Fergu\n..-t.    levere\nt    the    bridg.\nMtjOl    game   Of\nil-Hle.l    in    b\n,,(   the   gueeta,     Mrs,   N.   Win-\npint, d   Do-   honors   for   bridge.\nvit.-d    gueete    wciv    Mrs.    ft    ft\nMis      J.din     Tale.     Mrs.     W,    S\ntra   torn\nMr\ni*:.\nclu\nWIiiIhw.     Mrs\nft   j.   Itaale\nMi\nMr\nMrs.   oeoi\nFerguson. Mis.\nin dilker. Mrs.\ny    Ferguson.    M\nWll Ha\nIt.    A.    I1.\nhi.\nM\nW.lll;\nThmnas dlhson. Mis\nFr.d Hume. Miss Addi-\n.   Vlgneux.   Mrs    Boh\nI  Mih., James oshea\nM rs.\nFranet:\nT, A.   Whelldon\nis  in  town  shoppl\nardc\nioulh   il>\naturdiiy.\nvlf.\nA\nt'.arde. termer Neleon boj\n\u25a0 to h.-r frtande in Vaaev\nig to the Follow Ini Hem tt\nl rwently; \"Mrs, p. c, if\nr  Miss  Helen  Dolcte Allan\nfor    the    first     time    since\nt-    at    her    home    on    Car tier\nmi   Friday   afternoon.     The   t.-a\nc.-nter.-d    witii    red    earnettoni\nI    tulle,    was    presided    over    by\niardr.   Mrs.    E.    V    Miller.\nIt.     Dunn     and     Mrs     Gladstone\n\u25a0n. while Mrs.  F   r   ii.  Edwards\ne Icea    Buying the gueate wen\nn-abel Brand. Miss   Violet Card.-\nBus.- dar.lf. .Miss    (Had Allan\nI'nrls Allan and      MiSl Rllle\nTh\nhi v\niih.-\nturns\nwillows\nMrs\nFrl.l.n\nr.  A.  McDonald,  Btanlc\nlord   a    few    rr i\nat    b\nIdg.\n\\'<-i\\   to   Mrs.   j.   rt.   Huntei\nid  iiu- consolation  to  Mrs.  a.  h.   w\nrossl.-y.      The    play.rs    were    -Mrs.    .1\ndroll.    Mrs.   Charles   F    McHardy\nJ    ('.   Hooker,   Mrs,   James   Miln.v\nN.   Peterson.   Mrs   J,   b. Conway,\nA.    D.    Dolphin.    Mrs.    H.    F.    lull\nn    w   Crvaaley  and   Mrs.   j\nnd   Miss   Kalli.-rim-   Hrodii\nMr\nMr\nMr;\nIt.   Hunte\nMb\nclub\nDo\nit..\npart\nI'-ir.n\nKl \u25a0\nof   th.\na   Mr.\nlay     el\nd. lightfiil    party\nil    Mo\nminion\nlatter\nof  her\nie.    IU\nanclni\nMiss T\nimiiil.   a\nLeltch,\ni.-v Ko\nNotman\nFile C\\\nMrs H\nand   Mr\nled   t\nmeats w\nie   affair\nMr.    No\nK.   Fo\n,s..lathe\nMain\nn\nerve\nM.es\n11.-.Idle.    Mies    I,.\nLlllle   Llnbtad,  Miss\nMabel Sharps.  Mis\nLet\nMb\nI     F<\nid   I'm\ndh;i\nMr\nlapman\n.    K.    Foot\n.   and   Mrs\nBd Mra C\nBah., an\ni.i\nTlndall'i\nMr.    an.\nSnijth,\nTinilall  of   V\non   an   eatei\nat    (In-   limni\nand   brethe\nt'harles    Sin\nBOXER BREAKS BONE\nIN HIS LEFT KNEE\nLefty Cooper Loses in the\nEighth After Even Battle   With   Simonich\n\u2022SAX   FBANCIKO,   I'll..   II. .1\n-lilnoiiicli of liiuui. M.ilit.. ;i \\vi.:i.\n.\\eiKlit Uiih ;i h-cllnk-il knurl:,\nivir l.i-li> I'.K.pii- nf this city In i\n\u25a0iBinii   round    nt   :i   a*b*otula\n\u25a0.iiin.l    I.out    hn,.    I;isl    tilKht    in.,\nfir,'\ninyslif\nliillnl..\nIll,-   r\\.\nI  P\nlie tn\nil\nwhich\n.tutors\nI..\nth,-\nu.\n.\\ii.\ni.i\nItnaa\ntin\niiutilli   round   lha   hoi\nn.i i...n f.iirly avan. Ah Hi., in.\n..ill of :i ilin.-li. Sloionl.'ti atruc\nlu.-k   nl.   r,...),.r.      'I'll,.   Inl.r   Mai\nloi .lr.s|,n,. his atrufili\nBU Baker Street,    l'hune 100\nSpring Styles In Crepe\nand Satin Dresses\nAt $35.00 to $59.00 Each\nStylos for every hour of the day and for\nevery social occasion in this showing.\nMaterials are Silk Faille, Ottoman Cords\nand Crepe-backed Satins.\nSome show the straight-line effect; others\nin Tunic and  Ensemble styles.\nAll  the  newest  and   best  colorings  and\ntrimming* used in these new dresses.\nAll sizes from 16 to 44.\nPrices Sftt-j.OO, $10.00, $12.50,\n$50.00 to $59.00 each.\nNew TUNIC BLOUSES\nAt $20.00 to $27.50 Each\nStraight from France come these\nnew  beaded  Tunics,  in  all  the\nnew,   bright  colors,  as  well   as\nin more staple shades.\nSizes 3G to 42.\nPrices   $20.00,    $25.00   and\n$27.50 each.\nNew PLEATED SKIRTS\nAt $8.50 to $12.50 Each\nProperly tailored and shape-keeping Skirts, made of\npure wool French Crepe. Some in plain colors;\nothers embroidered or braided. Colors are Navy,\nSand, Grey and Black. Sizes 2G to SS inch waist.\nPrices  $8.50  to  $12.50 each.\nOwen Sound Ties\nWith Midland and\nPlayoff Needed\nUi.lil\nthf\nOWEN   SOUND,   Out..   Mm\nttiu   for   tlu*   counter   thnt\nI'.tirns.    pkiyiilK    riKht    wool\nOroys   I-'riilny   nlfht,    sectiioil    Owe\nBound   would   no   lontuf   '\"'  In   lh\nrun. for tin- juiiioii o.  il   A   ahum\nplonsliiii. The score wns n two-al\ndraw ami the third Kamo will b\nnecessary to decide wli ch ol Ih\ntwo   teams    will    meet    Aura    l.ee    i;\nthe finals for the Ontario tltla\non the |ilay. tile Midland lean\nwas easily as good as llle Oieys\nand   until   Ilie   lyim*   -goal   r.o\ntntnutea before the end  of tl\nperiod. Midland had llle llreis\nInto their own ffOal. all,] wer\non tin- score l.y 1-1, Tl\njam-! will l.e played in Torol\ntitle    here    Fridav    iiltht.    when    h\"\nthrew     Pal    MrtUll    ot    Nelnaakn    In\ntwo   slea ulu    falls,    both   times   with\nthe   clinch   hold   and   half   Nelson.\nMann     well     llle     tirst     fall     III     11\nminutes   4l>   second-.,   and   the   weeoli'l\nIn    :',   mmat.s   'Jfi    seconds.\nfour\nthird\nickc.l\nI Ilea.I\nfinal\nPolafia! Hotel\nat Tacoma Has\nIts Roof Singed\nTACOMA.    Waeh.    Feh.   II.\u2014Taeo-\nllia's  ni.w  r nullity  hotel,  the Then-\n,1     .VlUlhrop,    was   lie -ll, oed    l.y    file\nfor  a   short   time   Friday   nilslu   when\nftish    tar   on    the    root    her\nllited\npot.\nalii\nft\nin\nIf-\nclt nu\nWAYNE 'BIG' MUNN\nHANDLES McGILL\nROCHESTER,    N.Y.,    March    I\nWayne   \"Hi**\"   Uunn,   world'e   cham-\npimt    heavywelffhl     -.-l-eetlw.    .-;isiiy\neliminated another chertlengtr  for lii*^\nil\ni   ,-lnii.ls   ut   srih.ke   i-ulUnc\nup  ,,f   the   etruetur-e  ui\nfliunei   in,fii*   :i   si..*.'t;u*ii-\nthal   attracted   thtraaanda\nre,   bul   -n.i   domaffe   f*--\nl.-ss    tli.in    llftN,\nhoetelry,    which   is   Op*\nIjiiiiutl   Intererte,  im I\ni.p.\n-.1  Ma\nulld,\nin.\nih\nskul    rutlh-a.\nUN.I\nlit *\nllll'\nA.     Iti.'liiir.ls\nHip    ThitvV     i\nkjiiiii Saturde)\nDr. i\nin tiie\ntrllirv-l\npatvvi\n111**     Cllv\nMcKay bM i\u00bbu\nftt\nrf r\nrt ti\n\u25a0Ul.1\nMr.   end   Mr*   ,1    il    iobooOB,   Kerr\nn|iurtm.-Tit-*, l.t't v.-sti-iilny morning l.v\ntin- C I'.n. f'-r WlnntpcH. \u00bbvli\u00abrt> Mr.\nJohnnon wilt him n.i lln* m<xt rouiiU- of\nWMke. wlill'* Mrs J..tui:'oii nil) re-\nnmln st-vciiil wikH Willi Iiit brother-\nIn liiw    \u00ab\"<!    iUter,    Mr.    una    ilrs.    W.\nEVERSHARP\nCORDELIER SETS\nTllese   sets    for    ladles   are   of\nthe   h us   Uahl   make.     None\nheller on the  market.\nCordelier   Pencil! . $-.50\nCordelier   I'ens J6.00\nSets of Fen and  Pencil. $9 to $14\nA. T. NOXON\nYour   Jeweler\nSIMMONS\nBEDS\nBuilt\nfor\nSleep\n2-1NC11 SUUAKE POST, CONTINUOUS; 1 fei-t 0 inches\nwitle. Same as cut. Coil Spring, Non-Sway, 4 feet\ninches, and Ottarmoor Mattress. t\nThis Outfit Complete for ... $.*>8.75\n2-INCH CONTINUOUS POST BED, l feet, Ivory Finish.\nWith Woven Wire Spring, Double Weave; nntl Sani-\ntarv Mattress.\nThis Outfit Complete for $a8.75\n2-INCH SQUARE CONTINUOUS POST I'.KD,\n4 feet fi inches wide;\nWalnut Finish. With\nCoil Spring. Non-S.vav.\nKelt Mattress. This Outfit ;q~~f\nComplete   for   ..  ? 13.00   ^ I I '\n\"0STERM00R\" MATTRESSES Reduced to $25.00\nThis Mattress Will Last a Lifetime!\nStandard Furniture Co.\nCOMPLETE HOUSE FURNISHERS -  NELSON, 11. C.\nvf^if\n-rmoor\nTRADEMARK\nREGISTERED\nCANAO*.\n P-U-s 5fc\n-THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY, MORNING, MARCH 2, 1925\n\u25a0a.\nMarkets *M Finance\nSTOCK BULLS\nDEMONSTRATE\nGeneral List Moves Up One\nto Four Points; Oils\nAre Leaders\n,NEW TORK, March 1. \u2014 Speculators for the advancu staffed* a earlaa\nof bullish opera-ionn in yesterday's\nstock     market,     carrying     the     general\nlist up 1 to 4 points on total salts\nip' excess of .825,000 shares lor the\ntwo-hour session- Although most of\ntho pivotal industrials and rails failed\nto participate extensively in the ad-\nvan ce, the general averages of both\ngroups were lifted to within a small\nfraction  of record  hiph   levels.\nAn outburst of bullish enthusiasm In\nthe ofl shares followed rumors that\nnegotiations were pending for the\nmerger of several California companies. I'un-Amerlcan A and It touched\n79% and SO-H respectively, the hiKh-\n\u00abat prices Blnoa 192B, on a large volume of trading. General lvtroleum\nmoved more than 2 points, to 56'f,,\nthe highest price reached by the present $25 par shares, und California\nPetroleum crossed tS for a gain of 2\npoints. Atlantic Refining climbed\nnearly 4 points to 114% and a number of othera advanced a point or\nmore.\n. Heavy accumulation of the motors\ncontinued in anticipation of a big\nspring business in motor cars. Jordan, Maxwell H and Gardner all sold\nat their highest prices ln a year or\nmore, while General Motors. Stude-\nbaker and most of the accessories\nstocks   Improved  fractionally,\n* Public utilities continued lo give a\ngood exhibition of group strength, Columbia Gas & Fleetric standing out\nwith a Jump of 1 points to 09, a new\ntop. Brooklyn Union Gas crossed 81\nfor a galh of more than 3 points and\nthen forfeited a part of ita gain while\nLaclede Gas added a point to Its recent gain.\nAtlantic Coast Line- was the lender\nof the railroad group,' jumping nearly\nV pointa, to 157, the highest price\nsince 1906, and then yielding a point\non profit-taking*. Louisville & Nashville, half of the capital stock of\nwhich la owned by the Atlantic Coast\nLine, showed a net gain of 1 *.{\u25a0 points\nnt lil-Vk. Fractional gains were shown\nby   most   of   the   other  active   issues.\nDemand sterling made further recoveries in reflection of the growing\nbelief that the Bank of England rediscount rate would be Increased next\nweek. Demand bills advanced more\nthan a cent to around I7.7-1H. French\nfrancs continued to lose ground as a\nresult of the uneasiness concerning\nthe bank of Franco's- Increasing note\ncirculation, demand bills tiling quoted\naround 5 '.ic German relchsmarks,\nwhich arc pegged nt 11.84c. were unaffected by the death of President\nFbert. \u25a0\nFISHING SHARES\nUP TWO POINTS\nWinnipeg Electric Also Up\nIn Toronto;  Atlantic   .\nSugar Ships\nTORONTO, March 1.\ntnmid was noticed In\n\u25a0shares on yesterday's\nrepresents n net ad van\non tbe day. Winnlpei\nanother that showed ,\n(losing i*, higher, at 41\nalso    the    high   ot    (In\nlished  at\n-A better de-\nIt. c. Fishing\nmarket, which\ne of 2 points\nFlectrlc yas\nrent   atrenrth,\ntt,   which   was\nAtlantic\nand    th.\nSugar common\nloss of 4 'i.\nSmall   lots   of   Davi\ncured    on    Saturday    a\nclose   was   Ht   27   to   |l  ,. ,,,.,,...,.-\nIll   Smelters   Were   made   at   68   to   69H.\nand   the  close  was  at   SS%.<\nAtlantic Sugar closed at 28-^ to 21\nand represented a net loss for the day\nof 1 Vi. Dom in.on Canners common\nwas   put  through  at   90  or better.\nBREWERIES SHOW\nA GOOD RECOVERY\nGain Two Points on Montreal Board; Sugar Shows\nBig Decline\nclo\nd.\nMONTREAL. Mat eh I- A r.\nof two poinis by National Hn\nWas the outstanding feature t\ntrading on the Montreal stoc\nchange yesterday. This Issue\nut 57\"m. At lamh- Sugar clos\n23V,.   a   net   decline   of   l*A.\nSmellers   was   the   strong   spot\nIpg  at   7l>,   a   Mt   gain   .if   |%.\nOther ehauges: B. C. FIHili\n2: Caaada steamships preferr\n%: Cuban Canadian Sugar, up\nminion Canners. -vff 3; Motrtrea\ner. up 1; Span sh River, off '..\nCity, off i: Wayoaamuck. ott\nWinnipeg   Railway,   up   l'i,.\nClos Imr prices; At bint ic Sugar.\n'_'3 '- : RhiKtl. !\", (; Breweries, .',7 ' . ;\nRroii.uton, 21; Cement. 102; B.E. Steel\nsecond preferred. H._; Spanish pre-\nferred. Ill: Spanish common, 10\u00abH;\nMontreal I'ower, 174: Smelters. 7tt:\nWinnipeg Llectric, l-V*; Dominion\nCanners.   89,\nPRICE OF EGGS\nDOWN AT MARKET\nVery   Few   Chickens    or\nFowls Are Displayed;\nApples Sell Well\nSelling was brisk at Saturday's public market in the -Malcolm building\non Vernon street, and many of the\nstalls were practically cleaned out by\nnoon. EBfffl, which sold at BOc to fiOc\nlast week, all went at &0e tt dozen\non Saturday. Apples, of whieh there\nWas a large supply, sold unusually\nwell, and dropped from $1 to ?'- to\n$1.   to   $1.75.\nVery few fowl or chickens were\nd.splayed, and no dressed rabbits.\nHowever-, meats were mueli in art*\nfence, and sntd well. These included\nyoung     pork,     fresh    killed    beef    and\nV.lll.\nPotted   plants,   particularly   of   the\napiing     varieties,    went    quickly,    and\nJams   and   marmalades   sold   well.\nFollowing is a list of the prices:\nChickens,    lb Ma\nFowl,   lb V)c\nReef,   lb Sc to  Uo\nVeal. lb.    llUfl to 2.r,c\nPork,    lb 10c to 2T.o\nFresh  liver. 2 lhs. for nfl\nSnusaye.    lb 2f.C\nPutted   meats,   lh.    ... ., 20e\nDairy   butter,   lb 45c\nFggs.    dozen     50c\nPotatoes,   7   lbs.   tor     IN\nKale,    a    bunch     .....ISe\nOnions,   2   lbs.   for    Ik)\nArtichokes, I lbs. for  ISe\nLeeks,   a   bunch    5c\nOarlic,   a   lb 25c\nApples,   yer   box     $1   to  |l.tt\nRecta,   6  lbs.   for 25c\nCarrots,   6   lbs.   for    25c\nParsnips, per lb.  \".    5c\nTurnips,   per   lb   5e\nCabbages,    lb    5c\nPotted   Plans,  up  from    30c\nMarmalade,   per   lb 30e\nHoney,   a   lb. '..,25c\nWHEAT MARKET\nAGAIN BUOYANT\nOperators Expect Visible to\nShow a Large Decrease\nToday\nCHlCAilO. Mareh 1. \u2014 Surprising\nfresh .strength developed in the wheal\nmarket yesterday largely as a result\nof likelihood that the Fnited States\nvisible supply total tomorrow will\nshow a big decrease, and that unofficial estimates of farmer reserves\nwill   tend   to   enhance   vj-ilues.\nWheat closed buovant. P.e to 4**iC\nnet higher. May $l.St\u00bb'*i to $1.99 TR,\nand JuIy $1.(72 to $1.72-4, with corn\n1 T-gC to life up. nats' showing ';.\u00bb\u2022 to\n*\\e rise, und provisions at gains varying   from   10c   to  22c.\nSterling Exchange\nNKW -CORK. Mar.li 1- St.-rlinu\nexchange Irregular at IL73-K for 60-\nday  bills   and   at   t\\S*i_   for  demand.\nHar   silver\u2014Foreign.   II%C.\nCanadian dollars\u2014jet7,c\nl-'rancs\u2014Demand.   5.12 '\u201ec.\nFire\u2014Demand.   4.0.1c.\nMarks\u2014Demand,   per   trillion,   JltUc\nNet-ton approximate aterllm rat*\n14.21\nFEBRUARY CLEARINGS\n-.VINNH'K'S.       March       I. \u2014 < \u2022'inin.liu.ii\nI'r.ssl   \u2014   Th.-   f..ll..\\viiiK  arc   lilt*   Om;i-\ndlan bank clearings for February !-\u2022\u2022-\nput,  ami   r..r  Palmwrr.   llle\nPsb.ltll      Peb. 1>!S\nHalifax       I MI4.IS0 |10,J1I.U4\nsi.    John    ......  10.BM.1I2 I.IIS4M\nftfoncton         2.Ml,tM    \t\nHherbrooke     .    .    1,006.11! !.7!J.\u00bb70\nFUR FLIES WHEN\nTOHENHAM AND\nARSENAL CLASH\n- \u2014   -\u25a0      r .\nLondoners Blank Opposing\nSide; Burnley Beats West\nHam in Queer Game\nIX)NI>0N, March 1.\u2014The bad blood\nthat was engendered some years ago\nbetween Tottenham Hotspurs ami\nArsenal continues to flow -whenever\nthese two first-string teams face\neach other. Yesterday's game was\nno exception, and the game was\nmarred by several incidents. Tbe\nfur flew in nil directions.\nThe outstanding feature of the\nSpurs' play was the form shown by\nboth the wing men. Dimmock brought\nout many of his old tricks in addition to a large number of new\nones. Arsenal had to accept the\nshort cud cf a 2-0 score.\nTo all appearances Aston Villa\nwill have to fight hard to relieve\nthemselves of a national anxiety regarding their league status. For the\nthird time within a short while they\nplayed West Bromwich, and for the\nsecond time in succession the Villas\nhad to take a defeat, which yesterday\nwas emphatic. The Albion ran up\nfour goals, to which the yilla responded with one counter.\nWest   Ham   Comes   Back   Too   Late\nThe tilt between l-Surnley and Yv'est\nHam was one of the most extraordinary ever played. Burnley led the\nHummers at half-time by five goals\nto one, then the metropolitans sent In\nthree tallies; but the comf-buck was\nstaged too late, as Burnley wer\nable to notch a 5-4 victory.\nDue   for   Relegation\nThe hopes of Preston North Knd\nof remaining in the first division\nhave now reached tbe vanishing point,\nus Sheffield United took them into\ncamp by one goal in a game played\nat   I'reston.\nNotts Forest look like their companions, for Everton recorded a handsome victory on their own ground.\n3 to 1.\nL\njUsed Article!\nReal Estate\n\u25a0   Room*\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and\nAutomobiles\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Fonnd\nLive Stock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines\nMale Help Wanted\nCASH paid' all Sea\u00abiim < fi.r live Mink,\nMarten and Fisher. Trappers write\nor call Canadian Blue Fox Farms\nLimited, Jtogers, Bldg., Vancouver,\nB.C.  IHlt)\nMEN, WOM'EN-i-Td .learn Darbering;\npaid while learning; tools supplied.\nCatalogue free. Moler College, Vancouver. (8115)\nEARN MONET AT HOME \u2014 You can\nearn $1 to |l an hour ln your spare\ntime writing show cards. No canvassing. We instruct you by our\nnew simple Dtrectograph System,\nsupply you -with work and pay you\ncash each week. Write today for\nfull particulars and free booklet\nWest-Angus Show Card Service Limited, 93 Colborno Building, Toronto,\nCanada. (8116)\nTELL your wants through The Dally\nNews  classified  columns.\nFemale Help Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 -Law office stenographer.\nApply to Layve & JFislier, Fernie, B.\nC. \" <8U'5)\nWANTED\u2014First-class woman cook, by\nFebruary -28. State wages. Creston\nHotel,   Creston,   B.C. (8407)\nWANTED \u2014 Capable girl for housework. Applv Mrs. F. H. Wilhs, Trail,\nor  phone   ttSIift   Nelson. (8497)\nLONDON. March 1.\u2014Results of soccer and rugby games yesterday follow:\nBirmingham.   0;   Huddersfleld.   1.\nBolton,   -I;   Manchester City.   2.\nBurnley,   :,;   West   Hum t'nited  .4.\nCardiff Citv, 3; Newcastle t'nited\n0.\nKvxr-rton,   3:    Notts  Forest,   1.\nLeeds    I'nited.    1;    Blackburn,    1.\nNotts County.  1;   1'iiry.   1.\nI'reston North End, 0; Shef field\nUnited,  1.\nSunderland.  3;   Liverpool.   I).\nTottenham, '::  Arsenal, o.\nWest  Bromwieh   4:   Astnn  Villa.   1.\nSecond   Division\nChelsea,   L';   Bortsmouth.   3;\nClapton   Orient,   0;    Derby   County.\ni tttawa\nKingst\"\nf'eterbo\nKitchener    , . .\nWmdsi.r\nF.nt   William\nTS't.SIIS\nuii:..'.\u25a0j i\nB15.SJ4\n'MS. 549\nTruants\n926,21 1\n111,012\nMe\n,la\nTwi\nMinneapolis Grain\nMI.SNKArOI.IH. March 1 \u2014 Klr.ur\n14a to \u00a311** hither, at  tl'iui a liarrrl.\nItran\u2014>2.1.\nWin.at \u2014 N\". I n.ir*iiMti. $ 1 .SO to\n\u00bbl \u00bb1:   Mav,   Jl 90:   Julv.   II.S7V\nCorn\u2014No. s  >\u00abtlow. 11.22 to JI.23.\nlints\u2014No.   2   whit...   49\\.T  to  r,aV\\\nFlax \u2014No.   I.   (317   to   ILilH\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA. March 1-Lgg quotations\na n \u25a0:\nToronto \u2014 JcIdling specials, He,\ncuir-H*.   41c;   firsts.   ,1Sc\nyuel>i-c \u2014 Jobbing United Slates\nfirsts.   4'ic   to   42c\nI'mlries--!\" ne hanged.\nVancouver\u2014I'm hanged\nOilcigo \u2014 Spot, 27c to 2v; Manh,\nSC.   :;,'Kc;    March.   HP,   ^V.   April,\n:.'8V; December*. :t:c.\nNew    Vork\u2014Kxtra   firsts,   'lie;   fiists,\nHe.\nMontreal Produce\nUONfHEAL.   March   !     - Cheese   in-\narllvi'.   eggs   weak,   butter   stiong.r\nButter   \u2014   No.    I    pasti iirii. d,   32>-.c\nto   lie;   No    1   ereain.-ry.   31 *ac   to   32c,\nHec-.ii.m,   30'^c   to   31c.\nIrf*-*.    \u2014    Fresh    extras.    13c;    fresh\nfiism,   *2e.\nNELSON BUTTERFAT\n-ftn^vt   \t\nNo.   1   \u00abour\nho,   2  *<our\n 3\u00abc\n 36\n-i*r*T> \u2022 Itt\nAlbert\nLMhbrldire    .   .\nlaltiiontui)\nlltarv    \t\nM*dlcln*>    Hat\n\\imi\nIS.\".\nI.Mil\n.   11.111,1\n1,111.14(1\n\u2022J,t:i3.ssn\n16.914.179\n3<i,a:,o .-,(13\n1.814,033\nl7.t4S.l11\nUK\nN W.'ritl\n.i.i-m:\nWINNIPEG   GRAIN   QUOTATIONS\nrbaat\u2014        Open   High\nltiu\nir,:,\\\nMB'.\n2II2\\\n16\u00bb%\nMav\nJuly\ncut.\nHarl.v-\n.Mav\n.1II l.v\n(l.t.\nFlax \u2014\n.Mav\n.lulv\nOet\nJuly\nCoventry City,\n11;   l'ortvalc,\n0.\nu-\nivosU-r   Cltv.\n6:   Ilarnslo'\n.   0.\nMa\nm-h.-stcr I'll\n(I.\niic.l, .1; Wolv\nerha\nmil\nOldham, 1.   Ot\na.llorrt  Cily.\n3.\nTh\nc  W-xtaeadt\ny.  U;   South\nShi.\n\u25a0M.\nSo\nutharapton:\n\"-.   Hull  Clt>\n',   2.\nSt.\n.ok|...it.   1:\n1'ulham.  1.\nSt.\nika. !\u2022* Mi.i.\nllMbOTO,   1.\nTh\nird    Division    Northern    Sccti\non\nAc\neiinfllon, 2:\nAahlngton, :\nIII'\na.lfonl.  1'.;   C\n(VWM A.   1.\nt'h\neatartlald. 1;\nSouthport. 2\nWiRan. 0.\nDa\nrliiiKlon. .\".:\nHi\nnisl.v, l:   Li\nncoln Cily. 2.\nHa\nlif.ix.   2:    .\\\nilaon,  4.\nHa\nrUapool   2;\nTraiim.'l'e\nKoi\n'er:\nNew   Brighton.   3;   narrow.   Cl.\nIlnrh.lali-, 2;   tt'aliall, 0.\nItollurliain   County,    3;    Doni:.\nslor,\nWrexliaiii-llui'luiin.   post poll. .1.\n-..'n..\\ha in-Durham,    postponed.\nSnllllll'l-ll    Sot'lloil\nA he! da re-Swansea,     postponed.\nKourneniouth.    2:    \\Vatford,    1.\nBrentford, 2; Merthyr, 2.\nUrKhton an Hove. 2; South Y.nA, 1.\nllrlslol   Cltv,   2;   Uristol   Hovers,   0.\nciiiitiKlniin, (i; Northampton, l.\nLuton,   i:   Charlton,   A.,   n.\nJlilwall.  3; Queens Park  Rovers, 0.\nNorwich   city,   *',   RtMHBng,   2.\nPlymouth,  A.,  0;   Newiiort  CotUtty.\nBwlndon   Town.   1:   V:\\eler  City,   0\nSCO'l-llSll I.KAtil'B\nlli-l     Division\nAberdeen,   '1;   llalth   Hovers.   3.\nAve   I'nite.l.    2;    ilihernintis,    2.\nCeltic,   t;    inuulee.   II.\nHearts,   3.   Hamilton,   0.\nKilmarnock,   T;    Falkirk,   (l.\nMorton-Queens'   I'ark, postponed.\nMothe.rw<*ll,   1;    I'artick   Thistle   3\nK&nfe'ra-Cowdenheath, un played.\nSt. Johnstone. 2; St. Mirren, 2.\nThird   Lanark.   2:   .Morion,   3.\nS<*(-->nd    Division\nSlenhouseinuir,   2;   Arbroath,  0.\nHast   StirlinK.   I;   F.ast   Fife,   2.\nClydebank,   3;   Arthnriie.   a,\nI'.athgate,   3:   Alhion   Rovers,   1.\nAlloa.    1;    lioness,    1.\nDunfermline,   A.,   2;   Armadale,   1.\nDundee  I'nited,   2;   Kings  I'ark,  I).\nJohnstone.    0;    Dumharton,    1.\nForfar Athletic, 0; SI. Bernards, 1.\nBroxburn, 0; Clyde, 0.\n112\/1. your wants throuKh The Dally\n'...H's  classified   columns.\nSituations Wanted Female\nTOUN-3   hidy   wants   work,   housework\npreferred;     good     diameter.      Apply\nSavoy noti-l, Phono iy. (S4\u00bba)\nOSITIOA   rcuuticd   hy   t:xi>ert   KtenoR-\nrapher.     -Apply   ItfaM   WIUIarw,   care\nuf   Mrs.   Galbraith,   Fort   Steele,   H.C.\n(8lt>U)\nCLASSIFIED nds brtnjf results quickly\nand economlcariy.     I'^c a word.\nSituations Wanted Male\nI'KI'NINO,   SpravlnV   and   Gniflini?   ~\nI'hone  U.   H.   Wrnner.   Kelson.     (8123)\nCLASSn^JCIJ'Vrtii hrlriff results quickly\nand econoinlcijlly.' T'-Jt; a word.\n\/fBONDS\nHOW MONEY GROWS\nJ10 tnVMted monthly, with lie\ninterest at 6'\/o yc;irly, uniouuts\nto $700 in S years, or $1640\niu   10   yeurrf,.\nTou can buy a $100 bond on the\nMonthly Installment Plan,\nvhi'.li will start you building\nup a subst.cjillal capital fund,\navailable ui\\y time required,\nI       t V   \/\nWrite fof parlleulara, or call on\nour Local poi-respondent, ]\\Ir.\nAppleyard. I\nWAGH0RN, GWYNN\n& CO., LTD.\nVANCOUVER\n\u2014Local Broker\u2014\nC. W. Appleyard\nNelson,  B. C.\nFor Rent\nFurnished Bungalow, 4 rooms,\nThird street, Fairview. J1G.50 per\nmonth.\nApply\nR. W. DAWSON\nAnnulile   Block\n\u00bb,   BOX   733 I'HONE   1117\n (M8\u00bb)\nHates\nHOUSl'-KEl-'l'lNO suite f..r  rent\nIteasonable.     Club   Hotel,   Nelson.\n(8506)\nInsurance\nTomorrow   may   be   too   late.\nINSURE   TODAY   WITH\nCHAS.  F.  McHARDY\nFire\u2014Life\u2014Automobile  and   Accident\nInsurance.\n , (SHO)\nLive Stock for Sale\nEIGHT HEAD  HEAVY\nHORSES\nNine good sets LOGGING\nSLEIGHS, SAW AND\nPLANING MILL MACHINERY. Sundry other\nequipment.\nLOVERING LUMBER CO.,\nLTD.\nWasa, B.C.\n(8118)\n'INK ynuns TiiKKeiiloirK-Saanaii tloe,\nbred lo rej-lstercil TuKio-nburK. Hue\nMarch 116. Dam ami sire's dam\nMeld 1 ROl, lier dav. Hox 84'JI,\nPally   News. (14*1)\nONE Rood  Ayrshire  e.i\u00bb\nfreshen    soon.      John\nfor  sa\nKubla,\ne; w.ll\n1'ass-\n(S17I)\nYORKSlllIti:   pigs,   }\u00ab.   Ilouthby,   IvlRe\nwood,   H.   ('. - (S1T.8\nPoultry and Eggs\nHATCHING  BOOS \u2014 K.  C.  I'nlversltv\nstrain.   It.  I. Redl,  f: Iin   ner   II.     Or*\n(IMI)\nBRBKDINQ   pen R.  O.  P. White Wy-\nanih.tles, White l,.Rli..rn Pullets\n(InyliiK). While Lifhorn Baby\nt'hieks. fill per hundred. W. J. McKim.   Nelson. (SI92)\nRIDDLES' II.ns Lay. \u2014 Order Baby\nChicks new at Bpeelal lolces: express paid. S. ('. Willie l.eRhorns,\nRose t'oinb'ilrnwn- I.cffht.rns._ Let\nus tell yen about our stuck. Riddles' l'oultrv Harm, .Salmon Arm, Ji.\nC. (MlM)\nRHOllE Island Red obrs, SI. .10 per\nsettink'.     11.   II.   Eraser,   Nelson.\n(8121)\nHAHY CHICKS t'..r March and Aiu*.l\ndelivery. ''Send for price list.\" J.\nT, Webster. Norland l'oultry Farm,\nlliilisnn,   11 '-. (8190)\nFor Sale or Exchange\nH.\nHill\nHi\nHarvard. Yale. Princeton, Pennsylvania and the I'nited States Naval\nacademy bave ad..pied spring train-\nInff  for   their  football  teams.\nNEW TORK, March I.\u2014Old Madison Hiiuare karden saw 16 International bicycle stars start at mld-\niiiulit In the nsth six-day bike, race\nand the last in the famous structure.\nApproximately 4000 persona saw\nIlie I.ek'inninR of the loim grind, which\nincluded such stars as Peter Mocskopi\nof Holland; Alf Crendu. veteran from\nTasmania;' Franco UeorKcttl, youthful\nsensation from Italy, and Hobby\nW.-rttbiint Jr., son of a famous cycling\nfather.\nThe Standard\nof Safety\nTin- jiluasi- \" A*( p-ruid an \"hjs\nbond\" siih-Kt-uls lho Blabllity ami\naatots vf tbe liond as an InveHt-\ninenl. I-'or those careful |n-\nve\u00bbloi*a who ilrmaptl this fi*;i-\nture ftbOTf all othera -when\nplaclnff finals at interest, the\nhond  must appeal.\nA list i>f tlenirahle. generously\nylrldintf    IuhhIh,    with    full    in-\nformMion litid advieo regarttni\nthem, will la* furnished to those\nwho desire it.    \"Head your name.\nPEMBERTON & SON\nFinancial   Agents,\n418   HOWE   STREET,\nVANCOUVER,  B.C.\nAgents    Wood,    Gundy\nToronto\n&    Co.,\nEdit SALE \u2014 Young cow. or will\nIraile for Rood young ranch horse\nabout eleven hundred pounds. M A.\nWoymi.   Appledale. (317a)\n. OOOD Ayrehlre cow. r.\npood   milker.   $T,(l,no   casl\nIrade    for    sIllRle    wagon\nears  old.  a\n.   or   would\nMaunders.\ni-USl\nFurnished Rooms to Kent\n'(111    RENT-Furnished\nsuite,   nlso   furnished   i\nitk.ek: four-room fund\nE.  Annahle.\nhousekeeping\noom,   Annable\nh.d   bouse.   .1.\n(S3GH)\nCity Property for Sale\n5\nFAIRVIEW\nFive-roomed BunRalow, cement\nfoundation; corner lot. Only\nf2000;  terms arranged.\na. t. McMillan\nPHONE C01 P.O.  BOX  fii\n(UGfi)\nQUICK SALE \u2014 Five-roomr-d bungalow on three good lots; Cully modern; good plumbing connected to\neity sewer; concrete basement; parage and ehlrken house. AU in A-l\ncondition. Bearing fruit tiers and\nsmall fruits. One block from Fair-\nview Public School. Owner leaving\ntown. Snap to early purchaser. Apply W. Romaln, Ik-hnsen and Third\nstreets,   Fairview. (8483)\nTWO choice lots near Kama school.\nPrice reasonable. Terms. Pox Xi'M),\nDaily NewK.     (8430)\nLive Btock  Bella  quickly when  It Is\n\u2022 d verllaed   In   these ^ colli inn a. ^^\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nFRED   WILLIAMS\nPHONE 1*06\nFOR BROODER COAL\nOur Throe Hills Coal haa proved\na Bucccse.    Price $12.50  per  ton.\n(8130)\nTELL your wants  tiiroiisn  The  Pall)\nNewa classified columns.\nFOR SALE\u2014On March 12, one horse\nubout eleven hundred lbs.; democrat\nwitii covered In top; set single harness.    I'rice 1150.    J. Rower,   Rox   13.\nTra.l. isr.o?)\nEOlt KAl.E \u2014 12 EatiBC shot Run\n115; 11 foot l'eterboro canoe, ?'-*\u2022:\n.22 IIIrIi I'ower Savage rifle, fit,.\nII. Thorpe,  Fairview. (Slid)\n.'Olt KALE\u20144 horso L'lishlnati pas en-\nKlnc; A-l shape. I'hone [>H'i. or\nwrite   Box   1207.   Nelson. (8406)\nSHINGLES   for   sale.    Thonc   or   write\nClarkn   Brokerage,   Nelson,   B.C.\n(8167)\n101 AltTO-LOAl.INC. HI I'ower llifle\niu perfect condition. For sale, or\ntrade   for   Rood   heavy   revolver\nHint, IlonniiiRtou.\n(8147)\nFOR SALE \u2014 March 1, horse. BinRle\nharness, light wagon, sleigh. On\nview  O.  K.   Bakery,  Stanley  street.\n(SHO)\nFoil SALE ~ Cocker spaniel puppies.\nF.   11.  Shields,  Trail.  B.C. (8431,\nGOOD white potatoes nt $3.00 per\nhundred. J. 1'. Hell, l'alks S'idltig,\nRC.   18133)\na\nCHAMPION     separator,\nFraser,   Nelson.\nJ25.\n(8422)\nOOOD  piano,  snap,   5JO').   \"I'lione   Of.OL\n     (8404)\nBARRELS. KEGS' A ND EMPTT\nracks \u2014 MacDoualil Jam Companv\nNelson. (8170)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS, ETC.\nComplete line Pipe and FlttlnRi,\nall sizes. Special, 1-lnch Pipe, So\nper foot. Roofing Felt, 1-ply,\n$1.00: 2-ply, $2.00; 3-ply, $2.65 per\nroll. F.xtra heavy 3-ply Mineralized Surface, 90 lbs. per roll,\nspecial, $3.25. It-Inch Air Hose,\nsuitable for gardens, 6c per foot.\nMixed Wire Nails, $2.00 per keg.\nWire Rope, Canvas, Logging Supplies and all kinds equipment\nBC. JUNK CO.\n135 Powell St. Vancouver. B.C\n(8121)\nLive  etock  sells  quickly  when  It  Is\nadvertised  In  these columns.\t\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nKElli:   APARTMENTS.\nSUITE    for   rant\u2014-CunpLcll B \" Stud!\n18123)\n....   nr-*)\nJJ\u2014I . J\nPersonal\n,' f! IIAVIi\u2014lnloniiallou Is desired\nas to the Whereabouts of .1. I'.\nDac.s, formerly a resident of Kaslo.\nAny Information regarding Mr. Davis   will    I pineelated   if   Sent*   lo\nBox  1414,   Pally  News. tsir.l)\nHOTEL MENUS\nW* print Hotel M-anut, tlthtr\nwith complete meruit or with\nth\u00ab different headings and\n\u2022lank apacai far typing In th*\nbill   of  far*.\nThe   Dally   News   Job\nDepartment\nThe Homa of Good Prlntlnf\n-Nation,  B,  C.\nWANTED\u2014A   Kocoml  bud  cook  |to\nMust   be   In   k*hh1   contlitlou.      Plume\n\u25a0i'.4ltl.  ^_ ^   ._ <SlvE)\nTKI-iTj. your   wbius   ttirougli   'i'lt*   Dally\nNi'ws   rhiRKlfleil   rnlumn.i.L\nFor Exchange\nFOR    EXCHANOK    \u2014    An    improve^\n\u00abiuartf.-r   in   Alb*-rta   for   un   linprovi\nriincli    In    Kootenay.      d*JO.    O.    MA\nl.\/in-ii,    Nflagn. (8478J\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL    ,\nDIRECTORY]\nCarpenter and Joiner\nLAWSOK\u2014Cedar     Chests\nand Panel Hoard.\nHardwood {\nUeluw Market.\n(84681I\nElectrical\nDIANSKATES   SETILOPKEHT   OO. |\nLTD.,      SXANSKAVEN.     B.     C\u2014 ]\nWestlnghouse Itadlo Sets, Ilndlo Parts.\nComplete Super-Heterodyne Kita, Myers 1\nTubes.      Westlnghouse    Mazda   Lampa, I\nIrons,   Toasters,   lite-     V.  &  K.   Automatic   I;].-.\u25a0trio   Pumps.    Small  Hydro* J\nElectric  Plants   a  Specialty^ (84fi'J)\nTransfer\ni TKINSOW  TBAN3TEK \u2014  Coal  nnd)\nV    Wood.  Phono   421. (81\"'\nLife Insurance\nSUHt    LIPS     ASSURANCE     CO.     OF I\nCANADA\u2014J.   C.   Kennedy,   District |\nRep.   Offices\u2014Gilker Blk. Nelson, B.C.\n (8126) I\nChimney Cleaning\nW\"\nrowz.ES,\nCle-mer,\nChimney\n(S127)\nPrinting\nQuality Printing\n_            . f Forms, Lcdffer\nShcetH   and   Binders   nlwaya   in   etoclt.\nTHH DAILY NEWS-    .\nHulinn, Loose I<eaf Forms, Ledger\nInsurance and Real Estate\nr\u00bb    W.   DAWSON\u2014\nReal   Estate,   Insnrancs.   Renuls,.\nAnnahle Blk.. P.O. Box 733. Phone 1117.\n_(8128)\nS.    DILL,    INSURANCE,    rl\u00abM\nAND    CITY   PROPEKTT.\n508   Ward  Street. Nelson,  B.C.\n18457)\nH.\nMonuments\nCAMPBELL      b      RITCHIB     MONUMENTAL CO P. O. Box 805, Nel-\nson.   h.r.     Teleiihone   1C4. (8120)\nChiropractors\nDR. R. I. OBAY\u2014Chiropractor. Phons\n115. (Hiker Block. Office Hours: 10\nto 12 a.m., 2 to 5 and 7 to 41 p.m.. ex-'\ncept Sundays. Consultations free. (8136)\nALLAH\nOffie.\npoint\nL LLAN   8.   DODDS.   D.C\u2014I'lione   C!C.\nnt. Aberdeen Bloclt, Nelson. 1*1 C.\n(11131-\nAccounting\nCHARLES   F.   HUNTER\u2014 \/\nAnflltor,  McDonald Jam Bulldln-f.\nMelson.  B.C.\n(nn;)\nFlorists\n\/-IRIZZELLE'S  QREENHOUSES, NBL\nw\nson. Cut flowers and Floral designs.\n. (8133)\nf.   S.   JOHNSON\u2014\nPhons  -142.     Cut Flowers.    Potted\ntn nnd  Floral   Emblems. (8134)\nWholesale\nA MACDONALD k CO \n\u2022 Wholesale C-rocerfl and Provision\nMerchants, liuoorters of Teas, Coffei\nSpices, Pried Fruits. Staple and Fanev\nC.roeerles.   Nelson.   B.C. (\u00bbU3)\nEngineers\nMiscellaneous\n_MA1L  YOUIi  FILMS\nami   XoKativfs  for  Fiiii.^hing:  tu\nTill-:   STAU   PHOTO   STUDIO,\nWINMIPBQ,   MAN.\nC85M)\nHIDES\u2014Writa   J.\nfor   pricea.\t\nP.   Morgan,   Kelson,\nCLASSIFIED Hils bririR results quickly\nftnrl  frnni>ml(*nllv.     1 U-f*  k  word.\t\nBoats and Automobiles\nKtil(I)   Tnurlnir\n\u2022\u2014   Miuhinory   ln    A-l\nv  id    apii'-aranrp.      New\ntlrt-M hint t-ranon. Owner I- n\\ inn\ntown. Apply W, Ronulh, BabnttfA\ninni Tiiiid atraata, Palrvtaw, oiroaa So\nKflinuT  (8481)\nPOD KALHI \u2014 3.'i-fi>nt htt;am work or\nplt-aMure boat with complete e'juin-\nment. Bltimted Pllol Bay. (iood-\npaylnc outf.t. E. Montrcuil, Proc-\nter.   KC _(a21!!i)\nLive   Htock   s'-IH   qulekiy   when   It   la\nadvertised  In   these  columns.\nGteen\nBros., Burden C\no.\nNBLSON, B.C.\nCIVIL     AND     MININO     ENOINBDB*\nB.C..   Albsrta   and   Dominion\nLaud  Surveyors.\n   (HM)\nD.    DAWSON,    Land    Survtjor,\nKinliiff   and   Civil   Bn*rUnir.\nII E  (8137)\nII.\nAssaycrs\nW. WIDDOWSON, Box A1108 Hal.\nli.i.'. St.ui.laid webtoru cli.irires,\n(llll)\nAuctioneers\nW    CUTLER\u2014\n\u2022 Goods Sold Privately aad at anotloa\nNelson   Auction   Mart,   Vernon   Street.\n(\u00bbn\u00bb)\nFuneral Directors\nI).\nJ.   XOBBBTSON,   I-.D.D.,   fc   B.-.\nNight   I'lione,   157L.\n(814(1)\nStandard rnrnltnra\nCo. \u2014 Undertakers,\nFuneral ( Directors,\nAuto ln-'irse, up-to-\ndate chapel. Best\n\u2022services. Prlcaa\nreasonabla.     (8141)\nBRINGING UP FATHER\n:\u2014        By George McManoi\n\u00a5\nI'M ^O CLA.D THM NOTHtR\nAMONOO H*-VE OtClDCO MOT\nTO Ou\u00ab*R E L Ar*X M ORC    I\nCA^-t co ToTowMvrri.iis J\nI NEVCK f-'Cl-T\n&E.TTE_r<iM m*y\nLIFE\nill hotnccovou\n*jm*y more -\\*0 mv\ni;attuk'=> *-^\/ith my\ni-HjriiiN- AJttovcn\nn.L thi^o-w it\n'. <qv ~i^\/>tf\n3, Jaa\nM'  LA.'oT  THE\nWORt.O LOOK-b\nem4HT to i\u2014\n THE NELSON MILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 2, 1925\nPage\nSemT\nANDIANS WITH\n\\ LONELY GOAL\nank Nighbor Returns to\nlis Old Form; Goalies Do\n\u25a0Vonders\nTTAWA,   March   J.\u2014Ottawa   Sen-\ns  triumphed  over  Canadiens  here\nnlRht 1 to 0 in another great\no of hockey. In keeping with the\nid   usually   served    up   by   these\ntea-me here, the packed house\nh attended naw some really bril-\nt hockey in the last two periods,\n\u2022h    made   up    for   any    slownopa\nmarked the opening peroid.\nie only counter of the game came\ne minutes and 10 seconds after\nthird period started,\nie game was featured by the re-\ni to real form of Frank Neighbor,\nwas a atone wall in front of Ca-\nion attacks, always dangerous on\ni offensive, und directed opWH-\ns   maslerfully.     Opposed   to   the\ny M\/uenz, he more lhaii held bis\nthe   latter   only   stepping   out   In\nks.\nth   io'I   guardians   were   at    their\nvAina   stopping   Hooley   .Smith\nless    than     five    separate    times\ni   the  latter had   no   one  between\nand a goal but Georges, at the\nr  end  (\"onnoll   wns   no   less   brll-\nOttawae played steady through,\nwhile the Canadlene were more\niy. Their defence was steady\ntheir line worked together. The\nicka had a solid defence, but\nBoucher was weak on the line.\n\u00bb game was a peppery affair,\nReferees Hodden and Ijaflamme\nit   in   hand   in   a   capable   man-\nSchalk'sHand\nInjured Often\nIn 13th Season\nnan Provincial\nBadminton Champ\nMCOUVWt, March 1,\u2014McTaggart\nn- won the British Columhia hart-\n>n    championship    here    ycstenlny\nhe defeated  Jack   Mirtr   Iii,   \",   U,\nft,   3.\nk   Muir  and   Hill   of  KeloWM   pTO-\na surprise when they defeated\nn and dowel <t$ tin* douides in\n0M   sets.      i\ne National Town & Country club\n'leveland plans expenditures of\n1,000 on an 11-story clubhouse,\nie construction of a country rlub-\nand two 18-hole golf courses,\nluh has set its membership limit\n\u25a0 erecled In the city and $500,000\ni.ont 4001).       ___ \t\nCOUGARS WIND\nUP SEASON BY\nLACING SHEIKS\nGive Famed Prairie Team\na Five to One Trimming\nat Victoria\nBy   AL   DEMAREE\n(Former  Pitcher, N.  Y. Oianl'.e)\nNineteen twenty four was Hay\nSchalk's thirteenth year wilh the\nWhite Bop. It was an unlucky year\nfor hts  hand.\nThe picture of Sehalk'a hand\nshown above was sketched from life\nin the Illinois Athletic club, Chicago,\non November 29, 1924. Three of\nthe six injuries were suffered in the\nlast season. Sehalk'a unlucky thirteenth  with  the Sox.\nSchalk's main injuries which have\nleft permanent scars on his hand\nare listed below. Notice that his\nliltle finger has miraculously escaped\ninjury:\n1. Thumb bone shattered by\npitched ball at bat while dodging\nwild pitch, IHU Zachary of Washington.\n2. Joint of first finger broken hy\nball skidding off Heine Groh's arm\nin exhibition game with Giants,  1924.\n3. Hone injured nnd nail knot-ked\noff by foul tip in 1916, Dave Dan-\nforth pitching.\n4. Hone cracked and nail knocked\noff by loul lip, 1924. Hobertson\npitching. Preeent nail la fourth nail\non this finger.\n5. Nail knocked off and bone\nsplintered by foul tip. 1921, Robertson  pitching.\n6. Hone jammed and nail ripped\noff by foul Uii, IIM, Ted Lyons\nD ilchin g.         ^^\nVICTORIA, Mareh 1. \u2014 Lester rat-\nrick's Cougars polished off their regular playing schedule here last night\nv\/ith the most riazKlIng exhibition of\nhockey they have given the fans this\nwinter. Saskatoon, feared In many\nquarters, were played off their feel\nby the blue and gold club, and the\nfinal bell found Victoria far out in.\nfro n t,   the   eco re  be ing  t  to   1.\nA goal by Foyston BOOO after the\nsecond period openrd Was the spark\nneeded to turn on the full attack of\nthe Cougars. Four goals in less than\n10 minutes whizzed by llainsworth.\nand only several spectacular saves by\nthe  diminutive  goalie  saved   others.\nllainsworth was Kiven a very busy\n20 minutes, but U most of the shots\ntame from a fair distance he had tinitio make his clearances. Frederickson\nbroke through and sneaked a goal, bul\nReferee   Ion   called   back   the   play.\nIVnenny picked off a goal for Sas-\nkaiuon five seconds nfter the third\nperiod ojM-ned. He skated through\nfrom the face-off, and drove a rebound off his own shot Into the net.\nJust to offset Meiienny's goal, Meeking\nsqueezed through a goal after Loughlin had twice peppered llainsworth.\nLint-op\nVictoria Position Saskatoon\nGoal\nHolmes     llainsworth\nHe fence\n[ Loughlin           Cameron\nEraser         Relse\n[Raldfreoa   \t\nForwards\nj Walker         W.   Cook\n, Frederickson         Lalonde\n| Hart       F.   Cook\nSubstitutes\nMeeking        Gordon\nKoyston          Denenny\nAnderson           Scott\nSummary\nFirs t   peri od\u2014No  s.*o re.\nSecond   period   \u2014   1,   Victoria,   Foys-\ntcn.    I:M]    2.   Victoria,   Foyston,    from\nWalker.    2:44;   3,   Victoria,   Hart,   2<I7;\n4,   Victoria,   Hart.   ;H,\nThird period \u2014 f>. Saskatoon, Denenny, :0\"; 6, Victoria, Meeking. from\nLoughlin.   7:38.\nSleveni\nST.PATSTAKE\nNINE IN ROW;\nCLOSE TO TOP\n , i\nBeat Boston Team Five to\nOne Though Latter Rain\nin Shots\npins   nnd   in   the   \\n\"\\   hy   10$   p ns.\nR, L. Huchanan. of tbe Gyro teum,\ncarried off the honors with high\na-tlTegeU score of 531 and a high\ngame score of 210 pins. Russell\nM-*Kw;in, Harry Johnston and J.\nB. Gray demonstrated that they were\nId. the same class wilh total scores\nof 'ATI, 379 and 287. In fact, Harry\nJohnston won the booby prize with\ne total of -lOS pins in the first gams.\nbis laurels were keenly pursued by\nJ.   It.   Cray   wilh    109   pins.\nThe  scores   were:\n. ' Gyros\nK.' O. \"Rmythe 146 156 187\u2014 -469\nHarry Ferguson 137 (62 128\u2014 427\n,1. H. 'Cray ...109 139 139\u2014387\n30 159\u2014 435\n9     210\u2014 531\nW, O. Gerbracht 146     13\nB. L. Huchanan 162    15\n:   Totals  ,..,..700 74G 803\u20142249\nAMS(M'tat\u00ab*t   Canadian \u25a0 Trove-lent\nR.> McEwan   ...125 117 130\u2014372\nIf.  Johnston   ...108 145 126\u2014379\nC.   11.   SUrk   ...160 143 135\u2014438\nU    S.    Hradley    149 156 157\u2014 462\nC.   Grlzzelle    ...185 141 149\u2014 475\nTotals      727 702 697\u20142126\nTORONTO, Match 1.\u2014 St. Patricks\nfive to one victory over the tail-\nend Hoston Bruins here last night\nIn the second last local pame nf\nthe season of the National Hockey\nleague was well earned, and ^n \/addition was a very valuable one. It\nwas the ninth in succession for the\nfast-going   Irish.\nThe   locale  are  Just   one   point   behind    the    Hamilton    Tigers,    in    first\nplace, and the Irishmen have a etufaflie ,\nto   tiike   the   leadership   hy   winning j\nIn Hamilton Wednesday ni\u00abht. Everything   considered,    last    night'i*   'err- I\ngagement was one of tho most satis- !\nfactory of the senson. ..,.,].\nBoston  Put  Up Good Game      '    I\nAs   lo   the  game   itself,   Boston   put j\nup  tbe   best   game   they  have   played i\non  local   lee   this season,   but   thr-   de-j\nfence    wns    very    weak,    particularly j\nIn   the   first   two   periods,   and'during\nlitis   time   the   irishmen   sent   In   'om- |\ngoals,  nnd   had   not   Charlie   Stewart\nturned   In   a    si rong   game   in    tbe\nvisiting   nets,   the   score   would    have\nbeen   much   larger.     Time   and   Iim*\"1\nagain   tiie   locals   worked   Inside,   only\nto    have    Stewart    make     waves     on\nseemingly   sure  goals.     He   had   to   be\nat his hest as the Saints, despite  the\nstyle of the  Bruins, turned  in one of\ntheir best efforts of the season.\nBoth goalies were called upon to\nmake some smart saves. The Irish\nduring the game hid 45 shots on\ngoal,   while   Boston   had    39.\nSCOTS BEAT IRISH\nFOURTEEN POINTS\nMONTREALS CUT\nDOWN HAMILTON\nLEAD IN LEAGUE\nBeat Tijrers-Onc to Nothing\nand Have One Point Over\nSt. Pats\nGYRO BOWLERS\nAREJINNERS\nTravelers Downed in Two\nGames After Winning the\nFirst\nAmong the last shows to be held at\nthe famous Madison Snunre garden,\nin New York CKy. was the 4Hth annual exhibition and competition of\nthe Westminster Kennel ciuh. There\nwere    2097    blue    bloods,    representing\n| nearly  70  various breeds of Aogi  en-\nItercd.   \t\nBy a margin of 123 pins the Gyro\nbowling team on Saturday aflernoon\non the Semaphore alleys defeated\na team from the Af-soofated Canadian Travelers' organization. The\nAssociated Canadian Travelers' hoys\nwon the Tirst game by 27 pins, but\nwore   defeated   in   the   second    by   44\nLand of Heather With Three\nStraight Wins Look Like\nChampions\n'\u25a0 tU'BI.IN' March 1.\u2014(Canadian Press\nOuMeJ-\u2014 Paurteen points was lhe score\nthat lhe Scottish international rugfey\n15 stacked up ugalnst Ireland In a\nhJUlbbornly contested game here yesterday, and the victory placed th*\nCaledonians in a position beyond die*\nbbte at the head of the international\nleague. With three straight wins to\niheir cred-t, the Bcotemen look like\nchampions tli is bbbBOO, the first time\nIii   several   years.     One   game   reumlna\nIn    them,    the    fai is    Cabuiiu    eup\nlatM against KnglHinl. scheduled for\nMarch   21.\nThe game here was strenuously\nplayed .notwithstanding a heavy ground\nwhich' made hte hall aomewhat greasy.\nSeveral mistakes were made by both\nteams, hut nn lhc wind.-, a highly\ncreditable    exhibition     of    rugby     was\nWifneeeed,\nThe   international   standing\n\u25a0MONTREAL, March 1.\u2014The Montreal Maroons placed a check upon\nHamilton aspirations of fin shing\nof finishing In first place In the\nNatonal Hockey league race, and\nthus dntwng a bye in tbe Initial playoff seriea with tbe local \"proA\"\nwhen Ihey took a 1 to 0 victory from\nthe leaders here last night. The\ndefeat pulled the Tigers' lead down\nto one point over Toronto St. Pats.\nThe teams, batiled throughout the\nfirst two periods with no score,\nand six m nutes of the third had\npassed before IHnsmore baited the\ndisc Into the het for the only counter   of  the   game.\nThe goal came after a neat rush\nby Noble, who carried In close to\nForbes nnd shot- The goalie blocked\nIhe   puck,   and   Noble   nearly   got   his\nown rebound. In stopping the aec*\nond shot, Forbes fell, to one eide\nof his net, and Bed Green Jumped\ninto the breach and waa Immediately\ncalled upon to stop another ahot\nwhich came netward. This time tho\ndisc dropped right in front, and\nItinsmore   poked   It  In.\nThe Maroons might have had\nmore goals, but wide shooting spoiled\ntheir efforts. Montreal had tha\nedge on the Play, especially during\nIhe first and third periods, and\nForbes had about twice as many\nstops to mak-a as Benedict. The\nlatter, however, had no easy time.\nOne save ln particular, made by\nHenedict,    was    brilliant.\nHamilton's play was mostly Individual, with Billy Burch doing\nmost of the dangerous attacking.\nNoble and Dlnsmore were the stars\nfor the  Maroons.\nFifty-Year Turf\nRecord Smashed\nin Tia Juana Race\nIAMDHDQO. Cal., March I, \u2014 An\nAmerican turf record that has stood\nfor almost 52 years, was shattered this\nafternoon at  the Tla Juana race  traclc\n] when Just Wright, a six-year-old gelding,   ran   the   2!&   miles   of   the   mara-\nj thon claiming handicap ln 4 minutes\n50 3-5 seconds, lowering the previous\nmark set bu Hubbarb at Saratoga on\nAugust 9, Llll, by nearly eight see-*\norals.\nTeur\u2014\n1-\nw\nr>.\nI..\nr,\nA\nScotland    .\n.     3\na\n0\n0\n6J\n;'\u00ab\nKnirlanil     .\n.    2\n1\nl\n0\nIK\n12\nJrelund    ..\n.     3\n1\ni\n1\n:-:i\nfj\nWilli's    . . .\n.    1\n1\n0\n2\n31\n.1\nMra   ..\n.     3\n0\n\u2022\n3\n12\nlfi\nKOOTENAY BITTER ALE\nTh,  Ale  with  tha   real   flavor,  $2.20 doi.    Order  through\nGOVERNMENT   LIQUOR   8TORE.\nFREE DELIVERY  OIRECT FROM BREWERY.\nNELSON BREWING COMPANY  LIMITED\n(This  advertisement   is   not   published   or  displayed   by  the  Liquor\nControl   Board or  by  the Government  of Brltlah  Columbia.)\n^\/bVACUUMIZED   TINS\nAlberta Title Will\nBe Decided Tomorrow;\nRossland at Coast\nCALGARY, Kerch 1.\u2014Coleman\nTlgcri, champion* of the Crow's\nWeft lea<rn\u00ab, and Edmonton Victoria-!, champions of ths Edmonton city ltajne, have agreed on a\nsadden death game at the capital\ncity for Tuesday night to decide\ntht nealor amatenr hockey championship   of   Alberta.\nthe winner will play Rossland,\nB.C., champions, at Vancouver,\nMarch 6  and  9\nIn tennis. Hill Tildcn lost only one\nsiukIph match during the ]ust two\nHcusons\u2014 the one to Man*l*J .Honzo\nin    1,12:1.    Illinois,   state   eh-imiM-nshlp\nOJbwxxfi\nthz Aanne\nOGDENS LIVERPOOL\nThe Bright Sunshine of the Last Few Days\nHas Again Brought 'Spring Thoughts'\nLooking to the bright colors now on display in the store suggests that now is the time to make early selections,\nwhile the assortments are large.\nis soft and almost like silk, but has\ngreat strength. 31 inches wide.\nPi ice   89-?\nPrinted Violettes\nSix different colorings, several of them\nbeing of three-tone. 38 inches wide.\nAt  5\u00bb\u00ab*\nChecked Ratine\nTwo checks, in black and white. 38\ninches wide.    At   95f-\nDry Goods\nAnnouncing another shipment of\nScotch Zephyrs, which arrived by the\nS.S. Pacific Trader, via Panama Canal\nand  Vancouver.\nIMPORTED SCOTCH ZEPIIYKS\u2014In\nsome new plaids. These are woven,\nthe threads being dyed directly after\nthe carding process. Trere are 12 distinct plaids, and all very small, giving\nquite  a  novel   effect. . This  material\nStriped Ratine\nBUok and white only.    38 inches wide.\nAt   as*-*\nPlain Ratine\nIn a'very heavy quality. Made in Scotland. This has a nice finish, and\nhandles well. A perfect riot of color\nin this range, including peach, orange,\nlavender, copen, mignonette, rose,\ngravel, venezia (pink blush), grey and\nwhite.    3G inches wide.    At  89<*-\nScotch Zephyr\nWoven and embroidered spots. Cannot\nwash nff. Colors: White and red,\nwhite and mauve, white and brown,\nwhite and green, white and black. 36\ninches wide.    Yard  89-^\nNew Curtains for\nthe Spring\nCleaning\nCREAM MADRAS CROSS BAR MUSLIN\u2014With embroidered spots. In\ngold or blue.   48 inches wide.   At 79<\u00bb\nNEW EFFECT IN CREAM MADRAS\nMUSLIN\u2014With embroidery in colors\nof gold and green, gold and blue. This\nis something quite new, as the, effect\nof the embroidery is after the crossword puzzle design. 48 inches. Ter\nyard -,....?1.25\nSUN-GLINT ARTIFICIAL SILK CURTAINS\u2014Fringed ends. The colors are\nquite artistic and new, such as Sahara,\nnamed after the African desert; honey,\na pale amber shade; saxe blue, a little\ndarker than the usual shade of this\nname; rose and light rose,'two. good\nfurnishing shades; gold, a color like\na gold sovereign; blue, more on the\npeacock shade, and white. These are\nworth seeing.   At  $5.50\nSUN-GLINT RY THE YARD\u2014Plain, no\nfringe. Colors same as the curtains\u2014\ngold, honey, blue, Sahara, rose. 4\")\ninches wide.    Yard  $1.95\nSPRING CLEANING IS VERY\nCLOSE; in fact, some of it has been\nstarted. Little ends of Cretonnes for\ncurtains and cupboard doors are always\nuseful. We offer today a bundle of\nshort lengths, from 2 to 6 yards in\neach piece, 36 inches wide. 29<* and\n40-f> per yard. There's quite a nice\ncollection of colors, so that you can be\nsure of matching almost any color.\nFootwear\nDepartment\nHere's a boot specially suited to the\nman who must have a real wide-fitting\nboot and who generally has trouble in\ngetting a correct fit.\nMEN'S BOX CALF BLUCHER-CUT\nBOOT\u2014 Sift calf leather lining. Made\nin came manner as the real handmade\nand on a square-toe last. Uppers and\nso'e leather are of the finest English\noak bark tanned. Made in E and EE\nwidths.    A pair  810.00\n*\\\nNew Spring Hats\nAll Ready to Put On\n\/ ^ INCORPORATED   *+*> B*B  MAY  1670 f\\ mfO    <JP\nSOMETHING SMART FOR THE\nBOBBED-HAIRED GIRLS, in a\nrli aw braid, with bows at back,\nF,dgc*. bound silk braid. Colors:\nBlack, fawn, peach, navy. Priced\nal $3.50 and  $3.95\n'LAIN SAILOR SHAPED HATS\nof hemp straw, with the new roll\nbrims. Two-tone effects, fawn\nand henna, plain grey.   At $8.95\nSEE THE NEW POKE DRESS\nHATS, some with the tip-tilted\nbrim. All ready to put on.\nVery smart choice of colorings\nhere.    Each at $5.95 to $7.50\n Page Eight\n(THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,\"! MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 2, 1925\nTHE ARK\nT.ndtf-H,\nlie.,  to c\npair.     Hi\n,M)b run\nthao   l.lsle   Hosier v,   regular\nmd Wool, $1.10\nm,  Ra\u00bbtoa, Cook-\nIt  In  IM  city.\nlear.  4*0. Silk\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhone 634 606 Vernon 8t.\nHERE\nIf you are in need of atten-\ntinn wo are prepared to demonstrate that wa art in a position\nto give you satisfaction.\nWa have two experienced and\nwell-trained Optometrists, with\nan equipment and material second to none on the continent.\n\"We guarantee results or ve\nask no pay. Vou may have a\ndouble <.-hei*k on your rase, by\ne.a< h of the optometrists, if you\nwish. Werviie i* what we are\nout to give,\nJ.  0.  PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST and OPTICIAN\nBERRINGTON\nGIVES FACTS\nWATERSUPPLY\n(Continued   from   r.tue   3)\nfrom   entertaining   such\npus;\na   pro-\nB.C  PLUMBING  &\nHEATING  CO.\nAgents  for\nALBERTA   CLAY    PRODUCTS\n8EWERPIPE and  DRAIN TILE\nWhen   Your  Supply   Runt  Short,  Buy\nMcdonald's jam\nMarie   l.y   ymir   nelgbbor.\nFleming's Store\nFAIRVIEW\nNelson Business College\nIndividual   Tuition\nSUMMER   COURSE.   COMMENCING\n: MONDAY,   MARCH   2.\nDay and  Evening Classes.\nBOX   14 PHONE   603\n0. K. BAKERY\n714   STANLEY   ST. PHONE   18*\nWholesale and Retail Bread\nSupplied\nShoe nepainnj\nThat Lasts\nWe use only the best stork\nthat money can buy. When Wl\nhave finished With your Ke-\nMttttg and Healing, you cm\nhardly lell nur repaired ifcoea\nfrom the new ones.\nCOUCH'S\nREPAIR SHOP\nSTANLEY ST.    -    -    NELSON\nEast Fork Cost Prohibitive\nIt is, however, possible to consider\na line to the east fork of Cottonwood creek, which was recommended\nby Mr. Hiker, nnd from there a line\non to Whitewater and, if necessary\nto Clearwater. As this was not dealt\nwith in detail hy Mr. McCulloch I\nasked him to furnish me with a de-\nt'Uh'd estimate of what this would\ncoat, and 1 have it now before me.\nIt is stated in the report that this\nwas not dealt with In detail beeauso\nof prohibitive cost, and the total estimated for this work i\u00ab $257,050.\nThis is to take a cast-iron pipe line\nrl*hl   through   to Clearwater.\nI made it private estimate of the\namount of waler that Avould he avail\naide at low water, based firstly on\nMr. Hiker's report as far as the'east\nfork is conr-eintHl, and secondly on\nHe report from Mr. McCulloch for\nthe   Whitewater   and   Clearwater.\nIn the 1916 report from Mr. Biker\nthe estimate is given on east fork of\nn low summer flow of l^ cubic fee\nper second; this \u00abH hased on the\ndralnnfa area and the figures given\nas al the city's intake. Mr. McCul\nlo,-h    states    that   he   has    conlimious\nmeasurements on Whitewater showing ii low-water flow of IU cubic fee!\nper second, and Mr. John Bell is\nalso quoted as having frequent measurement*, showing n low-water flow\nof a 1\/3 CUbie feet per second. It is\ntherefore seen that the amount of\navailable water from the two streams\nwill show a low-water flow* not in\nexcess of 5 cubic feel per second, and\nwhile this would be ample for present requirements il dues not come Up\nto UM requirement* ].lin (]own ty\nMr. MoCUlfc>eh for o city dnuhle Ihis\nsize.\nTyphoid on  Clearwater\nTho use of Clearwater creek in conjunction _ wilh    Ihis    scheme    is    riis\ncredited   because   there   are,   or   hav\nheen   recently,   logging  operations   o\nthat    area,    and    from    lhe    reported\namount    of    timber    these    opera tions\nare  likely  lo  be eoniinuoiis  for  many\nyears.     Further   there   waa   a   serious\noutbreak    of    typhoid    on    this    creek\ntwo   years   ogo,   which   fact   renders\nit.    in    my   opinion,    unwise    to    even\nconsider  the   in-lusion   of   this  strean*\nin   any   scheme   that    might    he   proposed.\nHowever, regarding lhe cost of |\npipe to th.. raal fork and to While-\nv.atir. Mr. .\\l .-(.'ullm-hs' estimate on\nthis work is fl2l,tt6, ihis being for\na cast-iron pipe the whole distance\nof something over eight miles. It has\nbeen lagfeeted to me by thOM who\nprefer this scheme that a very much\nlower cm i male couW be made it'\nconcrete were used instead of cast\niron. Due of the engineers of a local\nconcern atated to me that such a\nsystem could be put in for $80,000\nI suggested to him at the time that.\nr.s the council were right now interested in such propositions, he have\nhis firm draw up -.\\n estimate und\nsubmit il tu the council. I state.1\ntliat    I    WOUld    see   lhat    it    would   gel\nevery ronatderaitani 1 may say that\nno   Htlmate   haa   been   received,   and\nI have nothing lo work on but Mr.\nMcCulloch's    report    aad     the    prices\ngiven me for Yemeni by the manager\n..f the Spokane Cemenl Pipe company, who has ottered to estimate\non lhe work when a line has been\nmade.\nCost of Cement Work\n1   have,   bowev.r.  taken   Mr.   McCulloch's   estimate   and,    by   substituting\ncement   for   east-iron   pipe   on   the\nprice quoted for cement, arrived at\na cost of tlSI.8ft8.8T, l'l' course. I do\nnot pretend that ihis is reliable, but\nit should not be so very far from\nthe mark if the price for the cement\npipe is COITeCt, and Mr. McCulloch \u25a0\nother costs are correct. This would\nnot allow anything for breakage of\nlhe cement pipe other than in the\nusual    10    per   cent    a Unwed    for   eoti-\ntlngency, I also feel thai the amount\nplaced by Mr. McCulloch for rock\nwork at $1140 is rather low. although\nthere :,re ihnse wlio contend that\nthere would be no rock work at all\non this line. Hut in my opinion that\nwould make the ground covered very\nexceptional, and I would say that\nthere   are    very    few    places    in    this\nFirst Anniversary and\nSpring Opening\nTuesday,  March   3rd\nThe D.C. Art Shop\nExtends an invitation to tho public lo inspect an\ninteresting showing of new spring merchandise and\nideas for the home.\nCompetition is keen in the fabric world. Greatest\nlace season in years.\nArt Needlework, Fancy Cushions and Lamps for the\nhome.\nThese Should Prove ol Great Interest to All\nUse BAPCO Paint\nFor Spring Painting\nThis is the best ready-mixed paint we ean buy,\nwe carry a wide range of colors to choose from.\nColor Card and Prices on Reqnest\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nand\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON,  B.C.\nRETAlCi\ndistrict where one  could  ko  for  elcht\nmiles without  striking rock work.\n\"While Mr. .McCulloch deals -with\nGrohman creek as a .possible source\nof supply, and states that it is feasible io bring in water from this |Kdnt\nfor u sum of $12li,OQ0. I personally\ndid not consider it worthy of consideration to any extent on account\nof the logKiiiR -operations' now being*\ncarried on and the enormous quantity of timber still remaining in lhat\ndistrict.\nFive-Mile Creek Facts\nThis therefore leaves one more\nstream to be consloereu, namely.\nFive-.Mile creek. It may be stated\nbluntiy that the one weakne-=\" that\nis apparent on this stream ;s thut\nas no council prior to 11124 ever gave\nany engineer instructions to take\nreadings of nny of the streams (OT-\nrounding the city, and aw this is a\nntrenin rising in a very Ina cessible\npart of the country, there are no\ndefinite readings available on its\nwater flow until one was made hy\nIhe Dominion government engineer\nlast December.\n1 will admit that at first this made\nme very dubious, and I read through\nMr. McCulloch's report with some\nsuspicion as to tho accuracy of hifl\ndeductions. However, the known\nfacts are as follows:\nThe drainage area on Five-Mi.o\ncreek Is 1%_ square miles, against\na combined drainage area of Whitewater and the east fork of something over 14 square miles. As the\nCharacter of the country is reported\nas being entirely similar on both\nsheds, it Is not an unfair presumption\nthat the amount of water thai will\ndrain off the larger area will be relatively larger than that daining off\nthe   smaller.\nThe distance from the city Is just\nshort of 4-H miles to where Mr. McCulloch proposes io place an Intake,\nas against eight miles or more to\nWhitewater.\nThe stream is peculiar in that\nowing to its inaccessibility, and nlso\nto the fact that there Is no merchantable timber on It, there 'is no\npossibility of any contamination now\nor at any oiher time. The full water\nrights lire a va ihi hie. The estimate\nof cost is nearly one-half from Kive-\nMile than that from Whiiewater,\nusing the same kind of pipe, viz..\neast Iron. If cement pipe is desired,\ntbe mnnager of the Spokane Cemenl\nI'ilie company slates that they nre\ncompetent to put in a cement pipe\nto   either   source   of   supply.\nWater Flow at Five-Mile\nThe readings taken of water flow\nso far are:\nDecember. 1914: Ten and a quarter\ncithic feet for what had been a very\ndry year, and when the ground might\nbe presumed as aluMu-hing more mois\nture than in ordinary years, ai\nagainst the engineer's estimate for\na  dry vear of 7%   cubic feet.\nJanuary,   llll:    Kight   cubic   feet.\nagainst   f>\\_   estimated  (Of a   dry year.\nA   later   reading   showed   a   similar\nflow,   hut    I   have   not   not   the   exact\nfigures before me.\nAgain in the matter of cost\nit is possibb- to take the saving thai\nhas been offered the cily on the exceptionally low prices tendered for\neast Iron pipe, which 4l IS per cent\nbelow the estimate based on current\nI'niied States prices last December,\nand also the 1ft per cent contingency\nand thus applying approximately $20.-\nftftft for rock work in addition to the\n}2,2P3,ftf)tt already estimated, and still\nwithin the estimates. I mention this,\nas many comments have been made\nthat there would he much rock work.\nand this impression has arisen through\nHie general appearance of the hillside\nfrom  the lake.\nThe engineer, however, states that\nmore recent Investigation shows that\ncn ilie line lhat he proposes io lake\nwill have no rock work, till he passes\nAnderson creek, other than boulders\nor rock that will not be apparent\ntill the excavatioif is actually heing\ndone. Knt discarding that entirely)\nwith ihis sum in reserve, it is hard\nfo see on what polnl the onst can\nbe brought above the total estimated\ncost.\nI may say here that afi*\u00b0r Algoetlng\nall these statements and estimates\nlhal 1 approached another local hydraulic enc-ne-T for an opinion, and\nhe stated that In the matter of vatM\nflow, he was prepared to go on\nreeord supporting the estimates uvole,\nand figures given.\nFive-Mile Feasible Supply\nThe choice tliat was. therefore, offered was whether to take a com-\nbinaiion of streams, the total flow at\nlow water of which is known to br\nbelow our estimated rcrpdremen's,\nalter allowing for growth of the cilv,\ntlio c'osl on which, according to the\nonly Information avallahle. was going\nto   be   nearly    double. Or    take    a\nstream half the distance away with\ndouble the am hut of similar characteristics in every other respect, li\nmay he further he lw>rne in mind\nthat if all estimate figures and deductions are wrong, and tliat in\ndrouth periods Five-Mil* does not\nsupply enough waler for requirements\nit Is still possible to link up wilh\nthe east fork of Cottonwood, and be\nbelow the cost of a through pipo line\nto  White   Water.\nThat decision having been reached.\natTil tenders having heen offered that\nwere IS per cent below the estimate\non cast IfOn plp*\\ on Tuesday last\na motion was put to the council nnd\npassed   that:\nThe council indorse the recommendations of the engineer, as to the purchase of pipe from the firm lhat he\nrecommends,   and.\nThat the city clerk he Instructed to\ncommunicate with this firm to ascertain how Jong they would give the\nelty before they would require the\ndefinite data as to quantities required,\nand sizes.\nIt was officially stated thnt two\nMonth* would he allowed, which was\nconsidered enough to allow Mr. McCulloch to make his final purvey.\nThis motion was vetoed hy his\nworship   the   mayor.\nIt Is. of course, well-known now\nthai lhe general public either from\nlark of Information, fir from a misunderstanding of the Issue, have very\ngenerally condemned the action of\ntha   council.\nIt has been stated that the council were going to buy the pipe before they knew wh<n*e they were\ngoing. If Ihey did not know where\nthey were going, that they did not\nknow whether there wait any water\nthere. And most Important of nil. before they knew whether they were\ngoing to get the money from tin*\npeople for the scheme.\nI will confess that I did not appreciate thnt opposition of IhH character would ho raised. 1 ral her\nthought that It would be conceded\nthat the council, while common ordinary men. would not be likely to commit themselves to buying pipe before\nthey knew the plz*\"s required, nnd\nwhich they did not do. Dr tt\\at they\nwould buy or contemplate buying\npipe beforo knowing where they Intended lo go for the water, and which\nIhey    did    not    do. And    I    rath-*]\nthought   that   after     a   considered   decision was arrived at that It might be\nvery    reasonably    expected    that    any\nj) bylaw necessary would pas* but ?t Is\nrather, evident   that   this   la   not   the\ncase. #\nPr-eferi  Issue of   Debenture*\nThere was n feeling on the part of\nsome of the aldermen that It would he\ngood business to pay for the balance ot the work out of current\nreceipts (sufficient money being in\nhand for that special purpose to buy\nthe pipe). Hut with this view, I did\nmd agree, and am already on record\nas having preferred the issue of debentures to pay for the balance of\nthe work, which would necessitate a\nbylaw. I am, therefore, placed in the\nposition lhat I must recede from one\nor the other of these stands. And 1\nhave decided that unless ihere Is very\ndefinite ovideme that such a bylaw\nwould be passed hy the public, and\nthat this evidence is apparent before\nnext council meeting, that 1 for one\nwill vote for the purchase of pipe,\nand further, that as lhe one posslhle\nflaw in the Five-Mile scheme is the\nlack of readings, that I will move that\nsuch work shall not be proceeded with\nuntil we have the readings for low\nwater on a drought year, which is the\nonly Information which is lacking, and\nthe only reading that has any value.\nT would Judge from tbe engineer's\nreport that drought years occur at\nfairly regular intervals. Jle gives them\nas coming ln 1906. 1910, 1914, 191\",\n1911, and of course, last year was a\ndry year. So there will be ample\ntime to get all Uie data that the\nopponents of the scheme consider\nnecessary and at any rate, the 1324\nand 19L(j councils will be notable\nin that they were the first ones to\ntake any direct and definite step to\nprovide Nelson with an adequate and\nuneontamlnntcd waler supply.\nHoping that you will -se* your way\nlo give this exceptionally long letter\nspace  in  your  publication.\nJ.  T.  BERRnWTON\nNelson.   B.C.,   IVh.   US,   192.ri.\nMOTORISTS WILL\nTRY ROAD TO TRAIL\nTwo Will Attempt to Break\nThrough for First Time,\nThis Morning\nT.ert Trebles and A. Wilson-Holm,\nwill today attempt to get through to\nTrail with two automobiles. This is\nthe first attempt of the year for motorists to make- the trip from here to\nTrail. The roads In'many places have\nhad little use all wlnier. and the\ndrivers   expect   much   difficulty..\nLast year Bert Peebles made the\nfirst trip over this road around about\nthe   middle  of   March.\nSUNSHINE    BRINGS\nMANY OUT-OF-DOORS\nNelson Enjoys Real Spring\nWeather; Popular Walking Places Crowded\nIleal spring weather was enjoyed In\nNt-lson yesterday when \"Old Sol\"\nbtamed forth fur seven and a half\nhours, almost continuously. Ills appearance in so gay a fashion led to\nmany residents taking to the out of\ndoors.\nHundreds of persons availed themselves of the excellent walking along\nthe tracks beyond the shipyards while\nthe track in the other direction was\nalso well patronized with persons\nKektng  a  few  hours'  exercise.\nPersons more industrious, or perhaps harder hit wilh that Rpring\nfever feeling were seen raking at\ntheir lawns or whoeling away that\niieeumulatton of ashes piled up\nihrougli   the   winter   months.\nYesterday's maximum temperature\nwas 48 degrees, and the minimum for\nthe 24 hours ending at o o'clock last\nevt-nlng was 29 degrees. Friday's\nminimum   temperature   was   31   degrees.\nL\nWILL OFFICER\nTHEMSELVES\nChurch of Redeemer Company Take Up Home\nNursing; Self Reliance\nGorman Smashes\na World Record\nin Indoor Race\nST. JOHN, N.B.. March 1.\u2014Charles\nGorman. Canadian t-kaling ace.\nsmashed the world's Indoor mark\nfor the 440 yards when he negotiated the distance lu 34 4-5 seconds\nat tbe provincial skating championships   here   Friday   night.\nThe former mark was 37 3-5 seconds, held by Hobby McLean. This\nmakes (iormim. the holder of both\nthe indoor and outdoor world records\nfor   the  distance.\nTen Years Ago\n(The Daily News, March 2, 1915.)\nDr. B. D. Chown, general superintendent of the Methodist church ln\nCanada, gave a lecture on \"Some\nAspects of Patriotism\" before a\nlaitge audience in Trinity church\nlast   nlpht.\n'\u25a0* \u2022 * \u00ab\nA board nf control for the Nelson\npublic market, whose duty it will\nbe to make rules and regulations\ncovering the institution, subject to\nthe approval of the council, was np-\npo nted last night. It will consist\nof Mrs. James Johnstone, representing the Nelson and district Women's\ninstitute; Mavor J. J. Malone, C. It\nHamilton. K.C, John Hyalop, W. .!\nMohr. J. W. Holmes and Mrs. John\nOilroy.\nTHREE DOGS ARE\nPOISONED IN CITY\nChurch of lho Redeemer Oirl C.uldes\nwill be officered by members ot their\ncompany, under lhe supervision of a\nlocal committee from now on, Mrs. T\\.\nA, KnKland. former captain and now\nchairman of the committee, said last\nnight. Tho young officers have been\nin train.ng as leaders for the past\n>ear, and were finally appointed by\nPt-v. N. D. 11. Larmonth, rector of the\nChurch of the lledeemer, Fairview,\nlast   week.\nThese   officers   are:      Captain,    Margaret Thompson; first lieutenant. Mary\nMorgan; second lieutenant, Idly Smith\nsecretary,      Olga      Melneciuk;      patrol\nb aders   \u2014    Kdna    Chapman,    Margaret\nMer can and Kuby Young.\nThe   |ot*al   committee   consists   of  the\ntrmer   officers   who   are:     Mrs.   Kag-\nnd.    Mrs.   C.    Hooklngs   and   Mra.   C.\nIt.   Choyce.\nThey  will be .n charge of the finan-\nal   arrangements   for   lho   guides,   and\nvlll   appoint   Instructors   for   the   usual\ncourses   fnr   girl   guide   work.\nLoam to Sew mid Han*\nIn addition to preparing for the\ntests fur their second class medals,\nwhich ihey expect to obtain very\nshortly, the 24 members of the company are just beginning a class in\nilress.nakinR under a competent dressmaker. Mrs. England said. They arc\nalso being given a course in practical\nhome nursing hy Mrs. John Shardlow.\nScouter Nelson Ball of Troop No,, 1,\nUny scouts, Is giving s*une of the\nguides n course on nature study, woodcraft, camping und pioneering.\nLearn Self-reliance, Resourcefulness\nIt hns been the aim t\\ the leaders\nof the company to teach the girls\n,*elf-reliance, though (fulness for their\nparenl.s and other people, and resourcefulness, Mrs. Kngland said. For\nibis lenson ihe girU have always\nearned the money for their summer\ncamps nnd olher requirements, and\nhave not depended on contributions\nfrom other smirces. Some of the girls\npicked fruit last summer, turning the\nproceeds over to the company's treasury,  und  all  contribute  monthly  dues.\nMAHON BREAKS\nHAND; SPOKANE\nBOY GETS WIN\nNelson Battler After Forcing Bout Breaks Bone\nin First Round .    -\nALEX STEWART IS\nKAYOED BY McVICAR\nBarnes in Main Event Had\nLittle Chance to Show\nWares\nNelson News of the Day\nMcDonald Jam Co. Is In the market\nfnr all small fruits grown by ranchers\nin   the   dislrict   this   season. (8110)\nSkye Terrier, Collie, Black\nand Tan Terrier, Die in\nlast Two Weeks\nThe dog poisoner Is at work ;n\nNelson, and within the lust two weeks\n\u25a0 Skye terrier, a valuable collie, a\nblack and lan terrier, and, it is re\nported, tno Airedales have died as a\nresult.\nOn Friday afternoon, as Mrs. A. J\nCrack of Cemetery road, came dowri\ntoward town about B o'clock wilh het\noolllc, whieh she had brought from\ntht* prairies with her, she saw bin\npick up a small piece of meat, on\nKootenay street, just opposite (he\nskating rink. He acronipanled her\ndown io linker street, but later died\nat the ranada Drug A Hook company's\n\u25a0tore, ia spite of antidotes, with every\nsi en   of   strychnine   poisoning.\nJust about two blocks shove the\nspot When her dog picked up the\nBlMt on her way down io\u00abn that day\nMrs. Crack saw a group of peopl\nabout a dog which they told her had\nbeen   poisoned.\nTliursibiy, the black nnd tan terrier\nbelonging to James'' I>une was poisoned, and about two weeks ngo W. J.\nAaUey lott his Skye terrier . through\n\u2022the   same   cause.\nIt is reporled that two Airedales as\nwell  have   been   poisoned.\nSevern! local people are giving their\ndogs medicine which Is supposed to\ncounteract the efrt-ct or strychnine.\nOthers are inclined to think that the\ndogs arc poisoned by eating scraps of\nti>\"d   from   tin   cans   which   bave   lain\nIf your Dallv News Is delivered late\nphone   144. (8322)\nNelson   llrand   Marmalade    Is   a   slienor    product,    manufaetuerd    in    Noi- .\nm   by  a   firm   with   an   investment  of|\u21220   bmit\nBob Barnes, of Spokane, was\nawarded the decision, by Referee Joe\nHolland, on Saturday night, when\nJlmmie Mahon, of Nelson, in the\nfirst round of the 10-round bout\nbroke a bone in his right hand and\nhad to retire. The bout had gone\nbut two minutes wht-n the accident\noccurred. Up to the time of Mahon\nbreaking his hand, he had a wide\nmargin for the round, and the fans\nwere settling down for a good go.\nWhen the pair squared off, Mahon\nled with a stiff left awing* which\nfound Barnes' head, it was a heavy\nblow and stung the visiting boy\nsome, Mahon gave hlm little time\nto recover, and he was in with lefts\nand rights to the body and head,\nwhich made Barnes cover up.\nFor a time It looked as though\nMahon would win via the kayo routo,\nand the fans were howling for the\nlocal boy. After forcing Barnes to\ntho ropes, Mahon delivered a terrific\nleft to the bead which rocked him.\nBarnes sprung babk strong and\nlanded heavily to the head and body,\nln another rush at Mahon he missed\nand Mahon connected to the head\nwith a right swing, which sent the\nvisitor rambling into the ropes. A\nmixup occurred shortly after this\nand Mahon delivered a wicked right\nwhich landed on Barnes head. The\nblow broke a bone in Mahon's hand\nand it dropped limp, Mahon showing\nsigns of much pain.\nBarnes   Good   Sport\nBarnes, showing good sportsmanship, did not go after the local lad\nuntil Joe Holland, referee, started to\ncount him out. At eight, Mahon\nstarted In again, but this time with\nonly bis left hand. The pain was\ntorrihlo though, and the referee\nstopped the bout, awarding it to\nBarnes. Following the bout Mahon\nwas examined by Dr. B. __ Borden,\nand a bone In the middle of the hand\nwas   found   broken.\nWhile it lasted, the battle waa a\nwhirlwind affair, and the Spokane\nboy hud little chance to show bis\nwares. Mahon took the ring one\npound heavier than Barnes, whose\nweight  was  142.\nMc Vicar   Wins   By   Kayo\nTho battle of the evening WM that\nbetween Ted McVlear and Young\nAlex Stewart, McVicar gained the\nvictory by a knockout In the third\nround. McVicar had a great advantage in reach and weight, and\nStewart showed much gamenesg in\ncarrying   on   the   battle.\nKrom the first round on McVlrar\nhad a lead, his right hand finding\nStewart's head and jaw repcatpdly.\nIn the second round McVicar had him\nbleeding at the mouth. In the last\nround, after a succession of rights\nto the jaw, Stewart went down for\nthe count of nine. He got up and\nbored into McVicar. A good stiff\nright again floored him and Referee\nHolland awarded McVicar tho bout\nafter counting seven. Stewart was\ngiven a rousing cheer as he left the\nring.\nJimmle Lowder won the first bout\nof the evening, a three-round go,\nwhen he outpointed Don Hurd. The\nboys did not mix much in the first\nround but after that the battle was\ngood. Dick Uenw^k won a decision\nover Sussie Jeffs In the second three-\nroutid go of the evening. These boys\namused the fans a great deal with\ntheir prancing and dancing about the\nring. Neither hurt the other much.\nThe card was a good one and had\n| It not been for\nthr\nhundred thousand dollars ln your\nown city and district. If you want\nthe best, ask for Nelson Brand Marmalade,   New   Season's   Pack. (8397)\nthe sad ending in tlr\nfans   would   have  no\nep   in\nmind the Banff Orchestra\nTuesdav, March 3rd, at\n3   p.m.     Admission   $1.(1(1.\n(8493)\nvou   a  room   which   won   would\nrent'.'    If so,   try  advertising  it\nDaily News classified columns.\n(8100)\nThe Daily News delivered to your\ndoor before breakfast every morning\nfor 2!> cents a week. Call 114 and the\npaper   will   bo  started   Immediately.\n(83135)\nThf\nwonderful    spectacle    sale    now\nHlgftObotham'a.      G*t    your\nnow. (S500)\nEducational pobcUa. Apply for particular-*--, North American Life. E. It.\nHanby,   Dislrict   MnnaRor. 0.:\u00bbU1)\nK.ill\nut  alt\nliter.\nHurls Rock Through\na Jeweler's Window\nand Helps Himself\nVICTORIA, March 1.\u2014Hurling\na rock wrapped in a cloth through\nthe window of F, 3. Martin's\njewtlry atora in Fort atrtet, tonight, an elderly man helped himself to a tray of ringt-and then\nwalked leisurely up tha itreet.\nHii arrest aoon followed, and on\n\u2022his person were found, besidea\nnumerout article! of jewelry, a\nloaded .32-cah ber revolver, a\nshort itick to which waa a attached a hook, and \u25a0 return ticket\nto Seattle. Ht gavt -tha nam* of\nJ. F  Qruan,\nrOOTBALL    NOTICE\noral meeting of the Nelson Foot-\nAssociation to be held in the\nRecreation Club, Wednesday, March\nIth, at 8 o'clock. Election of officers\nand other business. All footballers\nUld those Interested are asked to attend.     II.   Ward,   Sec. (SG04)\nSeout   Auxiliary   meets   nt   Ht.   1'nul's\ntoday,    three   o'clock.      Members,    m\nHanipirt   plans. (R.\"i\ndoubt witnessed one of the best card\nseen here for some time. Joe Holland referced all bouts, and George\nBenwell   acted   ut   timekeeker.\nNearing l.th-j\nFinish!\nLonely Suit\nSale\nS18-50   $245\nJust a few more dal\nand the values we off|\nyou will be over.\nDon't  miss  this  oppo\ntunity.\nRemember,    everythir|\nhere  bears the  stamp\nhighest   quality.     All\nchoice, for we never hai\nanything   but   best   mq\nchandise at any time.\n$34\nOPERA HOUJ\nFriday, March (jj\nDumbell\n\u25a0Springtime J\n- \u25a0vvue\nWITH\nAl.Plunkett\nRoss Hamilton I\ntoNewman I\nPRICES\nMatinee:     UM,    Not    Beser\nEvening:  Reserved, $2.00; ltush,'\nPlus   Tux.\nSeats at City Drug:.\nBASKETBALLERS\nWILL PLAY TI\nMONTRKAL, Feb. 28, \u2014 At a meeting Friday of the directors of the\nManufacturers' Finance corporation\nhere, negotiations were completed for\nthe absorption of the Dominion\nnw-noa corporation limited. The\namalgamated company will have a nald\nup   eapilnl   of   approximately   $l,(Mi0,(H>n\nTwo Teams Asked to\nSmelter City Wedne\nday Week\nNelson'a   senior   basketball   tei\nboth   men's   and   girls'   divisional\nbeen     aaked     to     [day     ln     Tn\nWednesday,    March'   11,    accord\nword    received    in    the   city    by j\nhoop   officials.      Trail   has   eomrf\nniL-prcBations,  nnd two Rood  gnmtj\nanticipated.\nIn order to bo In the besi\nthe local senior men's aggregation\nfrom tonight on practice regif\nThe practices Will take place if\nhigh   school   auditorium.\nThe first English silver table]\nmade In 16It, has been bougrf\ntho Victoria and Albert imia\nThe fork is engraved -withl\ncrests of the Manners and Mon|\nfamilies.\nSons of Kngland meet tonight st fi\no'eloek. ,n the Memorial Hull, Ward\n\u2022treat    It <;. Joy, Secretary.      (IIM)\nKOOTENAY    LAKE    GENERAL\nHOSPITAL    SOCIETY\nNotice    of    Annual    Meeting\nIn accordance with tho bylaws of\nthe noolety, the annual general meeting will be held In tho board of trade\nrooms on Ward Ktreel, nn Tuesday,\nMareh  10. liUtti, nt 3  p.m.\nMembership conditions: All annual\n\u25a0UbsoiitWfl for the Hum of $10 are\nmembers of the %ROelcty, eligible to\ntake part In the election of directors\nfor  the cunning vear.\nQDORCMB  JOIIVSTONK,\nHfcrctary.\n(Wll)\nThe   '\n\u25a0-.iinuni'i\n\"hurrb.\nTea   of   the   Seasons\"\u2014\"Spring.\nA a i nmn.   Whiter\"\u2014Methodist\nMarch   ft.   3   to   7   p.m.     Aus-\norm-n'M   Missionary   Society.\n(Mil)\n\u2022\"apt fi In rinnkr-U'H big Duinbells show,\nearrying 31 people, will uppear ln the\nN.-lson Opera House Yor inahneo nnd\nntnlit performance, Friday, March 6th.\nTlokati will he on snl\u00ab at City Drug\nStore,   Wednesday   morning, <8513)\nTONIGHT\n, Copilot\ntr\\iortOir.ni-.;\nTONIGHT\nIt Set the World Talking\nThe story of a modern cave man, in whose yein3\nran the blood of a flaming ancestry. 'A sensation\nas a novel\u2014a glorious romance on the screen,\nWifeoftheCentaui\nWith Eleanor Boardman, John Gilbert, Aileen Pringle,\nCOMEDY\nThe Fight'\nPathe News '   \"\nCOMING WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY\nDANTE'S INFERNO\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1925_03_02","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0402032","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","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.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"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","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1925-03-02 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1925-03-02 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}