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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":" ?i\nNorth England\nTEAMS OUT\nSet Page 7\nVOL.25\nNELSON, B. C.,    MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 21, 1927\nNo. 250\n\u25a0hos    aniMat\n'rlV. IUCI *L   LIIRARIAN\ni\n2i\n-*****-*\nbtcTt\nide on\nHOCKEY TODAY\nSee Page 3\nMAIN REACHES ACCORD, SOUTH CHINA\nrlANY SHIPS, 12 LIVES LOST IN ATLANTIC GALE\nt\ntroyers and  Steamers  Unable to Approach Vessels\" in Distress\n>HT COAST GUARDS\nLOST WITH PATROL\nConservative Member\nTakes to a Soap Box\nto Answer Radicals\nim 400 to 5Q0 Persons Are\nMarooned on Staten\nIsland\nNEW YOBK, Fob. 20.\u2014A dM-\nI dCnd men, wre-ckcd boots nnd\nirgr*, damaged homes, and\n-Erupted ooronniitf callows lay to-\nglu scat,en \u00abl along the Atlantic\n\u2022.hoard under a hH\/\/in.t. dim-\nttohlng In violence.\nIGMlnuucs plaoed the In\u2014 at\n\u2022it 13,000.000 probably more.\nEight ooa.it guardsmen per-\nla-d when tlu-ir boat smashed\nfragment* off Provin-eetown,\nape Corl. Hie five-masted\n4tooner Nancy wn- piled up on\nle winds iMUJtr Nanta^Ui-t, and\n:e Corln was reported having\narrowly fl^papnd a similar fate.\nRearm* Ship Foiled\nlellev>d to have her rudder dis-\nsd, the barge Calvot was ln dials miles off Ambrose Light. At.\npts of tha steamer Suevier,\nidlng by to rescue the crew, were\nted whtn Ja small host was\nished against the side its It put\nTrio 8tieyier reported h>* radio.\nit neron'd flfttcer jirtl sev ral men\nt,\" the remainder of the rAmmun.\nlon being Cut off in the storm's\nlabfllloo,\n,t Perth Amboy. N.J., the bodies\ntwo unidentified men were wash-\nashore.\noston reported the death by ex-\nit_ of Cha-iei** R Gundy nf Mont-\nwhose body wns found ln n\nrwfcy. Exposure took the life of\nlomen   Rulme.\nCoast t.unr.l Boot Thrown Up\nhe worst gale of the season was\nwhistling over Mprtha'a Vlne-\nd, with ihippitiK hugging the\nThe cotist guard patrol boat,\nof the Wood's Hole base, was\nfrom the wharf where she lay\nly this morning and thrown high\nthe' beach. IWons \"f the crew\ni   injured.\nhree aeheoners which put in when\ngale began wero riding safety at\nhor. They were the Elizabeth\n\u25a0eman. Brunswick for Boston; the\nrothy, Halifax fnr New York, and\nNina   Nadeau.    Liverpool,\n\"New York.\nTwo Barges  CJitmnded\nloast   guard   headquarters   of\ny Park, N.J., reported the rescue\nthree men  from  the  barge   Wesi\n(Continued  on   Page Two)\nLONDON, Feb. 20.\u2014Hdye\npark today witnessed a n>\"w rie-\nparture in soap box oratory,\nwhich had heretofore heen\nmostly confined to radical\nonilors. Sir Harry Britten\nmade a speech denouncing- the\nCommunist b, thus having the\ndistinction of being th\u00bb first\nOlUgtlHUH member to speak\non a Sunday afternoon In this\nnoted arrna.\nl.ady Britten, and other prominent personages lent Iheir support to the new member Sir\nHarry had to submit to much\nheckling. But there was no\nserious disorder. He expr-'-Jsed\nthe hope that other Conservative members would follow in\nhis   footsteps,\nY LAST WEEK\nWon't    Attend    if    Hastings,\nCyclist  Pal,   Is  a\nGuest Too\nTORONTO'S RECEPTION\nBREAKS ALL RECORDS\nBrooks,     Toronto     Financier,\nPosts $25,000 to Secure\nMarathon\nOpposition Understood to Have\nNo Intention of Moving Amendment\nOTTAWA. Feb. 20.\u2014On Monday\nAfternoon the house of commons settles down to the annual debate* on\nthe budget. The debate wilt take\nprecedence over other business, and\nwill be talked through to a conclu-t\nslon. The party whips are out of\nthe capital for <he week-end, but\nfrom what ran be leornad among private members, the debate will last at\nleast a week and -perhaps until\nMarch   1   or  2.\nThe debate will be resumed Monday by o. n. Cooo\\ r.F.-v. Mini .and\nand the government will then take up\ntbe dls4*-tisslon when Hon, Jamas .Malcolm, minister of trade and com-\nmiTiv, -peaks. It is understood that\nHon. I>r. R. .T. Manion. (\"onsen-itiv.'.\nwill be the third speaker of the dav.\nThere Is a'.ways some uncertainty as\nto whether or not the opposition will\nintroduce an amendment to the\nbudget. It Is understood, how* ver,\nthat then1 wfl be Do amendment\nmoved  In  the  present  debate,\nSloan Moves Canada\nShould Denounce the\nOriental Treaties\nVICTORIA,   Feb.   20.-Th\u00bbt   tha\nfederal government renounce all\ntrtaty oh'igstions which prevent\n\u00abt exercising complete control over\nimmigration, and thst Canada\nnsvor #nttr again into any treaties\nwhich limit tha power of provinces to regulate social an industrial activities, ia the proposal\nlaid bttors tht legislature by\nHon. William S oan, minister of\nmines and  provincial   secretary.\nWhile not so stated in tha resolution, the minister's proposal is\naimed directly at oriental's, whose\nactivities here art largely outside\nthe control of tha provincial gov-\n-em men t.\n[\nLi's Executioners Patrol Streets\nand behead Without\nTrial\nHUNDRED THOUSAND\nWORKERS GO OUT\nN ft\nTORONTO. Feh JO \u2014In Btrlklng\ncontrast to hi* departure from Toronto three months*' ago, when ha\nslipped nuietly out of town on an\nancient motorcycle, Oaorge Young,\nworld famous winner of lhe Catallna\nswimming marathon, returned to a\nwelcome In his homo town aavturday,\nexceeding In iti* magnitude and enthusiasm any reception th.-n haa ever\nbeen tendered tn \u25a0 tiomeoomhsa eth-\nlete   in   the  que-m  citv.\nWon't Stand for Pal\nOne incident occurred to mar the\nhomecoming ytotofa recaption. Young.\nnnd hi-*) managm o, Henry O'Byrne\nnnd Ralph Layf, refused tr> attend\nth-1 civil- banquet to Young if llill\nHastings, r.iorRe s sidecar pal on the\ntrjp Jq, California, were there. The\nbanquet was held with the gue-u of\nhonor. Young, ,iH>*\u2022 \u25a0.11. although Hasting.-*   and   his   advisors   :it*ende.l.    aj\nthey had been torltod by tha -tajyot\nCoincident with Yoiing's arrlvaJ\nhere, Q, Rrfmi.i, a im et\\ financier and\nautomobile manufacturer, deposited\nJ25,o(M) a** a guarantee In secure the\nswimming marathon proposed hy Wi!\n11am   YVrigley   Jr.,   for   \u25a0   |60,O*M   prize\nui go to the winner.\n.Mr. Hrooi.-v offer depeAdi on the\nrac being held from -Toungatown,\nN.Y., tn Toronto, a (Hat a nee nf about\n31  miles, on Labor day.\nClaims   Harry  Gale's   Elevator\nGot Jetty; Another at\nWoodward's\nOdium Committee\nPlans Legislation\nCurb Liquor Gifts\nVICTORIA, Feb. 2fl, \u2014 Legislation\nto eurb political campaign fund evils\nIn --the future will be DOnaMered by\nBrigadier-General Victor Odlum'a se-\nbsci campaign fund oamasittea of the\nlegislature   at   sessions   neit   week.\nAfter investigating campaign funds,\nand recommending that (hey he investigated hy a royal commission, the\ncommittee will draft amendments to\nthe Election* act to prevent the corruption of political jiirtlen hrough\ncontribution* hy liquor tatOfeBlB, ll \\t\nunderstood.\n1LLAPSES AND DIES\nDDENLY, FRASER MILLS\nANCOUVKU, Feb. 20.\u2014Collaps-\nluddenly here tonight. Nick\nnnlow, a recent arrival from\njer Mllli, B.C. died before med-\nald could r*|ach him. HS le eur-\n,_ by a daughter living at 12H31\nty-nlnth   itreet,   Edmonton\nids Up Widow, Says\nWill Repay Her When\nHe Can Allord It\nJANCOUVBR. Feb. 20.\u2014\"When I\nJob I'll pay you,\" shouted a\nn In reply to prol.ntatlone of Mrs.\nPatterson, that she was a widow,\nn ahe wns being hold up In her\n11 grocery etore. The gunman got\nf wilh IU.\niNNONITE FAMILIES\nRETURN TO CANADA\nWINNIMG, Feb. 20.\u2014A party\n21 Mannonilei, who left rich\nndi it> wMtarn Canada two\n.era (I* 1\u00b0 ',ke up i,nd '\"\nixlce, returrwd hare today after\n(appointing aapariimcea in tha\nuthern   rppublic.\n\"Too hoti no good,\" waa tha\njrt oorrlmant ol one m\u00abjtib4rr ol\nM party, in diacuHing experi-\nion in  Mexico.\nThe Mennonitai ara v, roufc,\nnl, where they again will buy\nmd and commence farming oper-\nion. in lh* ipring\nFoar Families n\nMoncton Homeless  \u25a0\nWhen Block Barns\nMONCTON, N.R, Teh 20.\u2014With\nthe -rnennnmeter around xero four\nlitmllies were rendered tMMWavSI this\nafternoon, when fire broke out In\nthe Kensington apartments. The\nblaze at*arted In the nnsem-nt. lour\nfamilies lived in the apartment, and\n-il] won driven out Into the hltt- r\ncold, the entire building being gutted.\nLoss Is estimated at $7W>\u00ab. with ln-\nroraaoe of $6000.\nMontclare Brings\nBoys for Farms in\nBritish Columbia\nSAINT JOHN, N.H.. Feb. 2ft.\u2014The\nCanadian lMcific liner Monn-l.-ue\ndocked her.- ut l.M pm- -pdaV# with\nils .'nl'ln |.;issengers an^ 23H I'lh'i\nclass on board, \u00ab total of SO*. In\nadillon.   there   were   37 childre-i\ni in the steamer alio wa.\" a party\nof 80 boys brought out hy the Salvation Army to lie placed on farms\nin   British   Columbia,\nAlleged Burglars Are\nArrested in Less Than\nQuarter-Hour oi Complaint\nCALGAKV. [eh. 10.\u2014Leas than IT.\nminutes ttt'r they had been disturbed -in an alb ge.i a;tempt t..\nburglarlzf    the    home    of    Junus    A\nNesbltt.   Kike   Rowllns   and   Daniel\nB.  Howard, atiapaetad hurilaga, were\nplaced   under  arrest.\nWhen aearchci at headquarters,\nRowllns was found to be in posseN-\naion ^f a complete set of burglar's\ntools which include,! nmslii k\"> t,\nlock, picks, flashlights ud skeleton\nkc\\H of every daacrtptlon\nOTTAWA, Too, If.\u2014Thai $2,000,-\n000 has been wnste.i on the Vancouver port || chnrged by li 11 .Sevens.\nThe house had grnntcd the harhor\n'\u2022otntniswiimers of Vancouver a loan\nof $5.000,ftfta for purpose of improv-\ning    harbor\n\"Sow, I ni latBfl to tell how a\ncouple of million dollars of that\nloan wn expended. , In one in\ns'ance the harbor^. Mmmte*tone*ni\nnuiij-tif ,-. piece \"f f-iid for \u2022 oet\ntain company controlled by a gen.\ntleman bf the nam.* of Mr. Gale,\nwho by the wny was n politiral ran-\nilidate\u2014I am Just .stating taOtl\u2014tot\npurpose of constructing a jetty to\ncarry grain to he |n;ided on to chip!'.\nThat fatty na i< instructed for a\npurpose of serving an elevator i.per-\nated hy the c-inipjiny. i^vne'l hy Mr.\nGale   and   his   associate*-1,\n\"On thai Jetty, out of monies\ngranted by p.irllnmeni was spent the\nsum or approximately  $i.noo.fton.\n'The hai-imrs eomm\nnever have made the expentitnr.-.\nMoney was spent extravagantly;\nOonatftlOtlon anta extravagant and\nthere has been no control over that\nexp\u00ab ndi ture except by auditors appointed hy the commdinners them-\naalTaa, Another million was aauta\ned on  the  Woodward  elevator.'*\nMob .Stones Quarters of British\nDetachment hut No\nReprisals\nUruguayan Flyer\nHops Off on His\nFlight to Europe\nMARINA  I>1  MBA, Italy. Feh..\n20.\u2014Major Tadee UurtevBof'\nges, Uruguayan aviator, hopped\notf today on his projected\ntrans-.\\tlantie. flight to Montevideo. Th*1 plane took tho air\n,'U ia o'olocl this morning with\nMai;,-,'.'!. Spain, as li\u00ab tlrst\nschedtileil   step.\nMajor Um>t PutTgta plans to\nmake the voyage In six hops.\nIncluding a non-stop flight between the mainlands of Africa\nand South .-Xmerlca. which project was abandoned last week\nhy Com. fillliaa' il !>' I inedo,\nItalian avlitor. who started exactly a week agn on an air\nvoyage   in  Booth   America.\nSHANGHAI, Feb. 21. \u2014Beheadings started yesterday by Chinese\nauthorities to stop a spread of ths\ngeneral strike called Saturday,\ncontinued today. Reliable Chinese sources estimated the number of executions at 28, while\nNationalists supporters c'aimed\nthere had  been  90.\nDemonstrations Spread\nSHANGHAI. Feb 2ft\u2014lull, ntniu\nof at least 12 Chinese strike (OttOat*\ners, minor disorders, f-tonlngs and\nspread of the demonstrations io take\n;n I\"* ween 8R.0OO and 100,000 natives., marked the second day of\nShanghai's   internal   disturbances.\nBehendings took place tod\u00bby without semhlance of *t trinl. Souads of\nexecutioners patrolling the n-tive\npopulated part of the elty wer.. armed With heavy swords, and beheaded\non the spot victims alleged to bare\nheen en tight d 1st ri hut ing aobvonfro\nmerit ore or speaking seditiously\nHemls * .ini..i on Pole*\nKeli.hl,-.   e-ye-wltaenaa     described\nthree   such    MMOttUOBB,    arhlla    others\n-au ,at lenst nine heads -ilsplayed in\n\\H\\o\\tOit >n-i'ended on poles or\nirunille.l thVOUfh the sir- i\nwisp hy soldiers Foreign police estimate aaaoattOM ta date as not less\nthan It, while other estimates run\nns high  as  :\u25a0\u00bb\nOoneFal   U   issued   a   proclamation\nthat*    :iny    persons      found      inciting\n(Continued   on   Page   Two.)\nPELLATT TO SUE\nLl\nFormer Rossland\nLawyer Answers\nSummons at Coast\nGeorge Young Will\nStage Own Banquet\nNow in  Toronto\nTORONTO, Feb. 20.\u2014Follow-\nlm; lib. refusal Sa.'-tinlay to I*'\nluvsc-m at \u00bb CMC luiH'lwmi be-\nBMM l^ill Ma-no':*-, bis MMaaaatta\nl.al. WOO \u00bbIni lo IV a giiT*.t.\n\u00ab.ei>rge Voiini:. iflaasatal clwm-\npii.n. hM Imbed Mayor Tlntma.-.\nTOOtOOf mcnil>\u00bbT- nl ib\u00bb* -aasf (BassV\ni'ii   and   bOMtf   of    imi   aiul   a\ntotv othcrw. iiumU'rfng  M>. to a\nlunchi'on on  Tih-mI-* \\\nVANCOUVER,   H.C.   Feb\ndeath occurred   Saturday   night,  of  J.\nU   C.   Ahbott.    aged    II,    prominent\nmember of tho British Columbia  b.ir. .  \u25a0**\u00bb%**\t\nand  a. resident  ,.f  Vancouver  for  !\u00ab      fTOCKHOLM,   Feh   w.\u2014The r.iy-\nyears.       He    WW    the    sui    Of    Hairy    a I    SWf d.fih-Pelgian    matrimonial    ai-\nAbbott. first gen-rai luperlntandonl llanoa hour tea Prlnaoai Astrid and\nfor the C.P.B., and came to British j Crown Prince L*opold of laat fall,\nCoIuMMa from  Brockvl.le, Ont,    Mrs. j has  baaa  followed   If  an  agreement\n.inn.' lewetl of Toronto w a Hater      Ibetwaea Um tw untries MOsai  ta\nFor several years after oomlflg t\u00ab>; *\u25a0\u25a0 :.. war BTtr my -subject. . v,\u25a0*,\nBritish Cnlunibin Mr Abbot 1 practiced j thOOa usually vXCtddtd, \"vital Inlaw   at \"Russian.!, j terests\"   and   \"national   honor\"\nDAD MUST PAY SON'S FIANCEE\nThree Miners Crawl\nto Safety After Being\nCaught in Coal Mine\nI'-TTSBI'limt, Feh. 2IK-Three\n.loath*, tho rwaiilt ol (.now nnd ool<!\nweather, were reported today In tha\nI'lltaburgh dlatrlot. whli-h l\u00bb hurled\nunder IS lnchei of snow, the iea-\naon'i heavleat (all. Other Motion* ol\nweatern Penniylvanla reported trom\nIt CO 24 lnchei.\nA PnrlH divorce haa Juat written \"flnia\" tn tho ronum \u2022\u2022 '>( Chftrlea IV'iin-\nlaa Woodhouao and hla hride, the former Dori-lt Slevona Allhouah Wood-\nhouiar-a father, laoren'io. ahown above, hud himaolf marriotl mit of hia aoelal\nrlfia!\"** fl youth, he atrnnfly oppoMd hli lon'a weddlnhT with the dauahter\nof a loap aaleamah.- After long litigation, Ml\u00bb Stiveni. alao ahown nho\\-.,\nwai awarded 1126,000 heart  balm  by  the lupremo court of   Vermont.\n9 S\nH\\$    Toronto    Bfs&iion    Wm\nCalled  'Pellatt's  Folly':\nNever  Bankrupt\nTORONTO, im. II - It is announced her*1 that Rriuadler-G-aneral\nSir Ilenn IVIlati has, tliroiiKh his\nsolicitors   m    LoAdon,   Iain,   t\u00bbt*tA   BO-\nth b   thi   Evening  Itand \u00abrd  Kewa-\nluip.T OOBpanr. limited, publishers of\nth-      Bvaalaf    Slandanl,    that    he    will\ntake praoaadlaga Bar atlsged iiheiious\nstai'in.iiis aontatoed La aa arUcla pah-\nish.-d In thai paper on Wednesday,\n.lann.u'-.* \"., IMT. Tha brtatala ootnpt4iia*\ned  of   is   headed;     \"A  woadH\nBOM    \"ill    buy.       A    'anadian    palaei\naoatlac E4aa,ee<l    -  Ptllatt's I'.iiv.'*\nThr   artlole   daaot^baa   tba   famous\nivil.nr   oaatll   in   Toronto,   which,  since\niha 't.-aiii of i.,i.u Pallatt, hai net\nPaaa aaed as i reaMeaea, ami wUah it\nis   now   prapaaad   t..   malu   laao   an\nftpnrtment   lnnis.\u25a0.\nSir Htniv I'.iiaii romplalna that the\nnin'i. U I whnh: in isr. *>*v--. nts him\nin mnny w.iys. nnd araald '\u25a0 n'1 '\" injure    eerlnnsly    his    finani'ial    st.indintC.\ni that hs hai never Is   n hank<\nrupt, as the article Intimates;  that  thi\n(treat hous-, *** *.*-.*\u25a0 I..>ma.' wu Imiit\nwith the express Intention Of besuaath*\ning to the goeanuiMat as \u25a0  military\nmuseum    nft. r    his    dece.as. .    thnt    tbe\ndaaerlpUoa  of the house  pvhllihpd  ti\niMoaurats; and thai tha whblt   i \u25a0 of\niha artlela is dnmaKing.\nBand't Killed When\nGarage Hand Opens\nFire Upon Robbers\n\u2022AN flUNCWCOi IM'. i'n.-One\nhandit was killed, and police believe\nnnother wounded, when Sl\u00ab Latipsa.\nKarflRo einp|ti\\-ee. i.peni',1 fire mi |0Ur\nrobbers as they drove out of the\nKaraRe eai*:y today after r'dd'lrn,' tha\ntill of several  hundred  dollars.\nTh\" body was Identified a* that of\nBertram   Rofai I   ti   San   1'ranelsro.\nACCEPT   NAVAL   PROPOSAL\nWaAtKDfOTON, Fab, 20.-~Japan'a\nacreptantH' of the I'nited Statea pro\nlpo#al for a fi^e-yenr mpplaaWtal\nnaval conference at Geneva was made\npublic early today by the state department.\nPERI IN HELD,\nFALSE PRETENSES\n.Man Named Hamilton  Alleged\nto Have Cashed Another's Cheek\nF.'.i'XIK,    B.C\u201e   Kel.    II.    \u2014   W    J.\nHamilton, for whom l warrant WOO\nissu-.l l.'.st ttatki was arrested hy\nprovlncial poUOO at Y.-hk | e-i.'i-.ja>\nand Constable Cameron of the eity\nforce left here today to escort the\naccused   hock   to   I'ein.e\nHamilton,  H  is alleged,   rooorvad  i\nlettfr  from  the   local   post  office   n\ni^ently.  containing  a   check   from   the\nlocal   secretary- of   the   Odd   Fellows,\nfor   9I7.M,   and   aohaaqosatty   oafftod\nLhe check ,\nThe ranilttajiae wot intended far .\\\nT. Hamilton, local plumher, in payment of .**n account, and upon it be\nIns discovered the proceeds had been\nobtained hy the wrong party, an in\nformation was laid chaining* th**1 man\nnow In custody with obtaining mone\nUftdar    fal-.'    pi-iT' nee.-*.\nDraw'ng Room Is\nHeld Amid  Great\nBrilliance, Ottawa\nOTTAWA,   l-'.h.   2't.\u2014Wiih  1raditioB\nai   brilliance   and   he.nity   ihe   .irawing\nroom of his ntcellency, tii.' forornof-'\ngen.M-a'. Lord Wiliing.b.n. was h*M\non   iatarAay   night   in   tha   aanaao\nchamber^ Nearly UM paopta, coming\nfrom every part of Cnnuia, attended\n(\u25a0' make iheir hoWe* t.i \u25a0, ir.'-rny-ilty.\ni:   *.\u25a0\u25a0 i-   the iflrat   drawing   roam   or\nLord    Wlllingilmr--    reftSM     an.l    Wtt\ntoitnred i.y the number ol\nattending\nThe    absence    af    Uni*.     WUlIfisTdon\nwho    is   mourning   the   death    of   her\nsis-ter. Lady Uahotlo PiailOB tftaotad\nthe ottendanee, hoi never was it more\nfopraaantotlt \u2022-.\n\"tic   nf   ih<-   f- atom   \u2022\u25a0'.   this   y .\ndrawing    room    was    the    wearing    ol\nveils   and   feathers   at   ihe   re*iue-\u00bbt\nthalr  '-xceiiencies.\nGaliiian Murders\nWife, Then Suic'des\nTO&QNt-O.     rti   ' M Iti i't:--'i\nMawrocki,   .:,   |   QoHatm.   of   MontMOl,\nsh.H    ;in,t    fainlly    \\v..unded    his    wife\nI,   i.f   llldgayjwi,   '\"onn..   her'\nthis   ev.'niii*..,   and,   turnin*   tha   \u25a0run   on\nhim.self,  blew his  brains.     Two   bull, c\naMarod tha a>oiaaa*i head aad aha 'li-ii\n\u25a0 al   hoesyhal  aaattly\nMaaton,\nDR. GEORGE BRANDES\nDIES IN COPENHAGEN\nCOPENHAGEN,        lei.        td.\u2014Dr\nmtont     Hr,HI.Ies.     Jl. .t.i     rriilc,    db'd\nyes|erda\\*   after   nn    llhiaaa   Ol    -\u2022\u25a0' tt t\nUr      ISi-ind.--     h \u00bb,1     I n     wlfaTlAg\nfrom   Intestinal   ti'mlile,   (Of  which   lv\nundwaf warn an operation i wool, afi\nHanlon, Famous Old\nPrize Fighter, Charged\nMurder in San Francisco\nSAN FRaWCISCO, Vt*h. 20.\u2014\ni ddie HhhIoii, fiutiiHi*. .dd.timi-\nHon I 'mncbcii puftllot, was\nbookcil im murder chorKre hem\ntoday ftdlowlnc thr (tooth early\nthM no.ruing of Walter Noonan.\nagotl 27, a but-chor. Noonan u*an\nsiabhctt to flutih with a knife.\nearly ihi-* morning In Hanlon'M\nriMiinrnnt.\nHanlon was* a nationally--known\nptian fighter i'(\u00bb yeara a\u00abo. In\nIWH he UMight llnttltiyr Nc4m.ii\nfor the Ughtwolcht otuunTpioa*.\nahlp.\nmmm\nDetails Not Known but Thought\nto Be Broad Modus\nVivendi\nMAY REPLACE\nOLD TREATIES\nSame   Proposals  Submitted  to\nPeking; No Answer\nas   Yet\n1IANK\"W. I-'. 20.\u2014An agreement\nof far-renchinK eff-^t and Importanew\nhan heen reached hy the British nnd\nCnntone.se.\nOfficial announcement was made to\nday that KiiKeite Chen. Ntwionnll^t\nforeign minister, .and ' 'wn <) Mi I ley.\nBritish char-Re. folio wins many day**\nof neieotlntion, sismed an aureement\nSfiturday nltrh', Its terms were not\ndivulged.\nAnnouncement   was   made   also that\nOreat Britain will h\u00bb pin eon ver aat loan\nMonday wtth leaders In northern\nChina looklnK to n similar aceord\nwith   the   northern   admln-lotratlon.\nhtaaaajaa from Peking any that I>r.\n. K, WelUiiKton Koo. foreign min-\ntatat for the Peking government and\nmiles W Ijimpsnn, Brltlnh minlnter\nto t'hlna. will begin convcriatlonn\nthere tomorrow for th-\"- purpose nf\nreaching  an  agreement   in   the   north.\nLONDON; i'eh 20.\u2014Signature of\ntin- agree-meo! heuveen th'* Cnntonesw\nforeign minister. Kugem* Chen, and\nthe r^riti*\u00bbh charge, Owen O'Mabey.\nI.-- gratifying to British officials, \u00ab*\njl MBMtha oul the problem** arising\nfrom the foreihle seizure of the Han-\nkaw   nftntaaalon.    i*r   is   thought   that\n[his agreement will form the cornerstone for new rlatinns between China,\nand   Great   Britain.\nThe foreign office tonight was\n,a waiting ileiail- M to whethT the-\nagreement  entered Into concern-- llin\n;,..u \u25a0 Ism ar alao aMfcNo-M Kui \u25a0\nki'iik' It ll prnl>,ihle that certain |o<\ntails will \"have to ba worked out\nI\"..reign       .<\u25a0 crctary       31r       Austen\nChamber-loin   reeerred   the   nawa   at\nhis home it Mayfi-'d, Suwiex. ;ind ||\nagpaolad to make n statement tomorrow outlining th.- important potato\nof the a-giagnaut,\n\\   Joint   Control\nh   i-   andn itood   thai   ihe   ta idtng\nprtnctpla \"f the accord Is withdrawal\nof the Hankow inncession from *x-\neltiafva* I'.ri'ish rontroi and placing it\nunder a joint i-ommlsiilon for ad-\nnilnimation. similar to that of th.,\nformer   QOTVaan   and   llii^slan   OOOOOI\n\u25a0ioni Th- chineea will urtiv. iy par-\ntlclpata in municipal affairs, witli\nInrreaglng  rights ;,n\u00abi  responslbilltlps,\nli    i\u00ab   npOftad   thai   final   signature\nwas    hrniight    al t    b|    Sir    An-t-n'**\n\u25a0Lfroetag i\" divorce the flanko*.s\nproblem .-ntireiv from the largr optt\n\\.\"\\\\ ot Hritish roncesilons in China\ng.nei,iliy. OOA, natural'y, fh.- agree\nmint  has noihing to (]\u25a0> what.-vr with\nth'   \u25a0shangh.ii problem\nMay   Be   Modus   Vivtndi\nToo   agreement   signed  hy   O'tfailey\n(Tontinued   on   Page   Two)\nThe Weather Ai\nMin M.i.\n\\i:i.S':.N'   ,SHllil:iv,                2\u00ab \u00bb*\n.\\Kl,Sn\\   ,;>.',inr<l.',yi      .     :.r, '!\u2022\nVi,-l,,r;a          41 4k\nY.inrouv.-r 4A 4H\nK.'imln.ipa                   lft 4ft\nIlirk.rvil,.                          .14 3*\nPi ill,-.,     RaaPWl                  ..41 4\u00ab\nkMW           40 f.1\nAtlin          \u00ab\u2022 I\nDtunon       u* ,*\n        2* 4.1\n\\Vlnnl|i..ir          \u00bb\u2022 24\nI'nrtl md     4T W\n&an    Franriacn          f,\" I.K\ntm n i,-      44 H\nSni'lmric         2* 9*\nI'.ntlctnn         10 1\u00bb\nVernon         I\u00bb 42\nGrand   Fork     IS 41\n\">k          IT 4ii\nFaimnntnn         12* 12\nSwlfi   furrpnt         \u00ab \u00b0*\nMSN    Alh\u201ert    ,,       4' in\nguApp.|Ir>       \u2022* 1*\n*   HpIow tern.\nPl>n\u00abut\u2014.(For Hunrl\u00bbyi  Nelawn and\nvicinity: l'.irllv rlnuny and v\u00bbry mild.\nFV.rwnJt - (For Monday) Nelion and\nvl.'inlty       Continued    miialli. mild,\nwith anna-   or  rain.\n \u2014___\nI\t\nPage Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 21, 1927\nSouth Africa and\nIndia Reach Terms\non Immigration Issue\nliOJJDON, Feh. 20.\u2014Settl-ement of\nalong-standing dispute betwe\u00abnBouUi\nAfrica and India over Asiatic imml-\n-gr-atlon Ih announced in Capetown\ndispatch to the Westminster Gazette.\nThe newspaper understands that\nth* settlement provided #that the In-\n<lum Kovcrnmiint will assist in the\nvoluntary repatriation uf lndiwis from\nf-rquth Africa, at the expense of the\ns>uth    African    Union    government,\nwhose   terms   were   extremely    generous.\nOn the other hand, the South African authorities agree to withdraw the\nproposed reserved areas bill, which\nhad so deeply offended tho Indian\nsentiment.\nSouth Africa not only bars Asiatic\nimmigration, but intended to go a\nstep further by segregation of those\nnow resident ln so-called reserve\nareas.\nIndia has made -strenuous efforts\nfor many years past to have this restriction removed.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Bt Obtained\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nRooms with  Running Water,  Private Baths and  en   Suite.\nHeadquarters   for   all   Travelling   Men,   Mining   Men,   Lumber   Men\nand Tourists.\nSPECIAL    SUNDAY    DINNER,    $1.00. Rotarian    Headquarter*.\nThe   Most   Comfortable   Rotunda  in  the   City.\nHUME \u2014 T. Una. C. _.. McComh.\nA. N. Dyer. H. Dav. E. L. Stevens, W.\nC. 8. Hobktrk, J. Hi. Rae. J. F. Morrlg.\nVancouver;   E,    Samuels,    Montreal;    J.\nR. Torrance. Calgary; H. H. Robinson\nNew York; J. DeBruyn, Seattle; I. B\nTucker, Anchorage; A. J. Johnson,\nCranbrook.\nSAVOY\nKELSON'S FINEST HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\nSti'iun Heat, Hot and (\nManv Rooms wil\n.    A. KERR. Prop.\nSAVOY \u2014 H. L. Etter. Ymir; T. F.\n<'!*1-, Deer I'ark; J. E. Hutchison, Mnr-\ncir . .1. H. Barcuiso. I.i*inntngton; W,\n{frampton, P. Ca.rnan, Trail; O. 8.\nMorris.  Toronto;  O.   Shieil,   Needles;  T.\ntiming Water in All Koi\n\u25a0,:\u2022\u25a0 Baths i,r Showers.\nNELSON   a. C\nMulr, Coleman; T. L. Lurvls, J. Mcintosh, Vancouver; J. Stapuar, Swcm;\nC. Jnne, Rosaland; C. W. LlncLiw, Salmo; H. R. Cameron, Calgary; \\\\\\ L.ii-\nmer, Kimberley; C. Cherco, Yahk; W,\nH.   Bentley,   Lacombe.\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCt\nHot and cold water in everv room\nSteam   heated\nK   LAPOINTE.   Prop\nMadden Hotel\nT.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nSLam-Heated  Room, by  Iht  Day,\nW\u00ab.k   or   Month.\nEvery conaid.ration ahown to guests\nCor, Baker and, Ward St.., Nalaon.\nHERDS CUT OFF\n.' BUT SHANGHAI'S\n(Continued from Patre One)\nstrike   or  Interfering  with   workers\nwill be summarily executed.\nAimed Against Defenders\nThe strike started yesterday, a political   movement,   fostered   by   Cantonese propagandists, and aiming at\nthe   collapse   of   power   of   Marshal\nSun  C>uan  Fang,  ruler  of  Klangsu\nprovince, 'whose  troops are  fighting\nto   halt   the   advance   of   Cantonese\narmies   on   Bhanglml.   Severe repres-\nCold\nCeT.\nZ  t\nStart\nVkpms Check,\na Cold Overnight\nThere are many ways to treat a\ncold but only one DIRECT way\u2014\nwith vapors that can be Inhaled.\nVapors penetrate Immediately into\nevery corner of the air passages and\nlungs, soothing and healing with\nevery breath.\nVicks Is so remarkably successful\nln treating cold troubles because it\nacts like a \"vapor lamp In salve\nform.\"\nWhen rubbed over throat and\nchest the body heat releases vapors\nof Menthol, Camphor, Eucalyptus,\nThyme and Turpentine. At the same\ntime Vicks Is absorbed through and\nstimulates the skin like a poultice\nor  plaster.\nThis double, direct action often\nchecks the worst cold overnight.\nVICKS\nV  VAPORUB\nV\u00bb 21 Million Jars Used Yearly\nNelson's Best Cafes\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\nOnly White Cafe Open Day and Night\nOysters   Our   Specialty.\nElectric    Frigid-Air   Cooling    System.\nSODA FOUNTAIN iN CONNECTION.\nA    ti I il    will   convince   you.\nPHONE   661 BAKER   8T.\nQUKENI \u2014 W.  Woods, Riondel;   Z.\nOeraux,   Balmo;   E.   Mord, Kimberley;\nMm,    Leonard,   .1.    I.'t-jux, K.   Murray.\n<   ly;   J.   Lines.*,  Hall.\nNew Grand Hotel\nA    Modern    Brick    Building\n516   Vernon   Street,   Nslson,   B.   O.\nHot and Cold Water and Telephone*\nfn All Booms  Steam Heated\nThroughout\nJ. Blomberg, Prop.   -   Buropean Plan\nMADDEN\" \u2014 P. Mnrfoff, Orescent:\nMr. and Mr?. Macleod, Moost- Jaw;\nMrn. Cowley, Miss Cowley; D. Martin.\nVmir; C. McLean, Blalrmore; C Taylor,   U.N.Ry.;   K.   McNeil,   Bonniugtnn.\nROYAL CAFE\nClaaaic Restaurant\nRefinement   and   Delicacy   Prevail.\nOPEN    DAY   AND   NIGHT.\nLuncheon.   11:30 to  1  - \u2014tto\nSpecial  Dinners.  6:10 lo 8 _ tto\nWe  Specialize  ln  Chop  Suey  and\nNoodles.\n\u2014PHONE   1U>\u2014\nSHERBR00KE HOTEL\nNear  C. P.  R.  Station.\nKooms   at   Reasonable   Rates.\nH.  DUNK,   Proprietor\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nFinest Equipped Restaurant in the\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIQHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice Cream. 8oda Water\nand Hot Drinks. Nice, clean, furnished rooms; hot and cold water.\nWe   Cater   to   Private   Parties.\nNKW    GRAND   \u2014   Mrs.   C.    Moore,\nOestoo:    s    Peterson,   ll.   F.   Linab,\nI). Lang, city.\nTrail Hotels\nSTANDARD CAFE\n320  Baker Street, Nelson,  B. C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIQHT.\n11:30 to  2:30,  Special   Lunch      35o\n5:30 to 8:00 p.m.,  Supper  36a\nPHONE   154\nslve measures, amounting to a reign\nof terror so far as the Chinese controlled part* ot the city are concerned, were put ln effect by Oeneral\nlal Pao Chans;, Marshal Sun's defence\ncommissioner ln Shanghai. But despite such measures, the strike continued to spread.\nYaatfsepoo   Disorders\nSeveral minor disorders were not.\ned, chiefly In the factory district,\nYangtsepoo. Mob of boys and loafers stoned the quarters ft a small\ndetachment of British and Punjabi\ntroopa, who were ordered not to\nretaliate unless the mob entered the\nenclosure. After the breaking down\nof the bamboo fence, the police were\ncalled out, and dispersed the rioters,\nwho took refuge ln alleywayB, and\nturned their activities upon the newcomers. There were no casualties\nln this  affair.\nIn other parts of the city there\nwere occasional small brawls, and a\nfew  arrests.\nBritish troops were ordered not to\nleave their billets In the Yangtsepoo\ndistrict except In groups of at least\n\u2022Ix.\nBecause It was Sunday ,lt was difficult to accurately judge the total of\nstrikers, but the city remains without postal or transport services, and\nworkerB in other mills Joined the\nwalkout.\nOne noteworthy phase of the strike\nthus far ahown Is the fact that there\nhas been no marked anti-foreign tendency despite the stoning of the Brit.\nIsh billets. The fact that hostile\ndemonstrations have been largely\nconfined to foreign-ruled parts of\nShanghai Is because within theae limits strikers are protected against\nMarshal  Sun's vengeance.\nWo*   Bvoiw   Score   With   Cluing\nSHANCHAI, Feb. 20.\u2014Oeneral\nWu Pel-Fu evened his military\nscore with his traditional rival, Mar.\nshal Chang Tso-Lln, the Manchurlan\ndictator, today when troops of the\nnorthern leader had a brush ln\nHonan province, the .Manchurlan\ntroops being disarmed by those of\nGeneral Wu. This was reported ln\na Japanese report received here\nfrom Peking. Oeneral Wu's troops\nalso seized an ammunition train belonging to  Oeneral  Chang.\nIn hla action today, Oeneral Wu\nreversed the situation reported in\nHonan province recently, when General Chang's troops disarmed a number of Wu's soldiers.\nThe general labor union issued a\nstatement of its alms. Including:\nContinuation ol anti-Imperialist\npropaganda; elimination of the mlll-\ntarlat formation of a people's government; freedom ct speech and press;\nan eight-hour day; higher wages and\nrecognition of the unions.\nlt Is regarded H \u25a0 preliminary\ntest of labor's organization for effective political action. Tonight ll\nstill wns uncertain, whether the strikers would be (content with a two-\nday holiday or whether the trouble\nwnuld continue.] Today public transportation wns conilned lo  rlkshas.\nFurther northward withdrawals of\nMarshal Sun's forces Is reported, but\nthere ore 40,000 soldiers lyetween Hashing and Sungkiang. which Is taken\nas evidence of another stand. The\nsoutherners appal nl y are not yet\nadvancing, as their forces at Hangchow are stllla believed small and It\nIs necessary to await reinforcements\nand supplies before beginning the\nnext stage of the adventure.\nDr. Waiter Sfsson of Wauseon,\nOhio, has been decorated by the\nRusslon government, for his relief\nwork during the Armenian earth\nquake.\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA.   C.   TOWNER,   Proprietor\nThe home of  plenty.\nFifty  rooms  of aolld   comfort.\nWe serve the  best  meals  ln  Nelson.\nIt's   the   cook.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n2V2   Blockt  East  of   Pott  Office*.\nSteam heated.  Hot and cold water.\nRooma   by  day   or   week.\n.also Furnished  Suites.\nP.   H.   BUSH,   Prop.\nWhen   In   Trail,   Stop   at   the\nHOTEL ARLINGTON\nA    (PETE)    LEVESQUE,   Prop.\n\u25a0'ompletely     Renovated    and     Refur\nnfshed\u2014Hot and Cold Running Water\nSteam    Heated\u2014Centrally    Located\nSample   Rooma   in   Connection\nThe Old   Reliable\nCROWN POINT HOTEL\nA.   McDERMOTT\nBveiy Courtesy  Extended  to Tourist,\nand   Others  Visiting  Trail.\nSt .am Heated\nThroughout\nHot and .Cold\nWater\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nE. L. AND A. GROUTAGE, Props.\nBox MS       Phone 263       Trail, B.C.\nCLASSIFIED\nSULTS.\nADS    BRING    RE-\nNINE ONLY\nMEN'S OVERCOATS\nHALF-PRICE\nSizes 86, 37, 38, 39, 40, 42\nRegular Value\nat Our Popular Prices\nto $30.00\nCANADIAN MINISTER'S HOME\nPhoto shows the homo Juat selected to be the first Canadian embassy In\nWashington, D. C, where Hon. Vincent Massey, who will be the first minister from the Dominion, will have his office. The building is situated on\nthe 1700 block of N. street and is a stone's throw from tho British embassy.\nft FIVE-MASTER,\n(Continued From Page One.)\nPoint, which was grounded at Little\nEgg station, 60 miles south, and that\ntho combined forces of three stations were attempting to launch\nboats to take off the crew of the\nbarge James Howard, aground a few\nmiles north.\n8ummer resorts along the Long\nIsland, Staten Island, and New Jersey\nshores  suffered   heavily.\nDocks. Houws U-wiIk'-I Away\nRr-tween 400 and 500 persons \"were\nmarooned along the south shore of\nStaten Island from South Beach to\nGreat Kills, washing away docks,\nbungalows and movable property.\nPolicemen, firemen nnd coast guards.\nmen set out In boats to rescue thoso\nmarooned. Two policemen were the\nonly persons injured and they not\n\u25a0erlously. Damage to amusement\nparks  waa  considerable.\nFar out at sea the atorm -swept,\ndisrupting shipping schedules. Vessels were delayed from 12 to 24\nhours,\nTwelve-Hour Fight Fail*\nPROVINCETOWN, Mass., Feb. 20.\n\u2014F.lght const guardsmen, the crew\nof the 75-foot patrol boat 238. went\nto their deaths in the surf which\nhammered the beach at High Head,\nnear here, early thla morning. For\n12 hours the men pitted their\nstrength and resourcefulness against\nthe brutality of a 70-mlle gale and\ncutting snow, and then lost when another hour might have meant rescue.\nThe staunch boat, unslnkable by\nthe proud boast of the service,\nsmashed to fragments when the angry\nsen, which had torn her from her\nanchorage,   hurled   her   on   to   the\nMOTHERS\nAND THEIR  CHILDREN\nLXVOPUB rom doxxt\nOne Mother says\u2014\nFrom mother's  flesh  and  peach o\nored   silk   stockings   we   make   char\ning   combination   suits   and   vesta   :\ndolly.     For  the  vests,   simply  cut\nthe stocking at  the correct depth k.\nadd   silk  ribbon  shoulder  straps.    _f\nthe   step-ins  or  combinations,   prepa\nas for the vest and stitch outlines\ndesired.      A little  hand embroidery\nhemstitching   may   be   used   for   trl|\nming.     These    make    dainty    hlrthdi\ngifts for small girls.\nCuticura\nToUetTrio\nI for Sample*\nnja.tMiiujbi\nsands and trampled her bruised hulk\nunder its pounding surf,\nGale   Holds   Off   Destroyers\nThe gale held off with one hand\nthe destroyers which fought doggedly through a 60-mile run to\nreach their beleagured comrades,\nwhile It rendered Impotent the land\nforces  gathered   along  the   strand.\nIllness that sent him to the Chelsea marine hospital ln Boston a few\ndaya before the C.G.-2S8 shoved off\nfor her ill-fated voyage Baved the\nlife of Edward S. Cronln, the ninth\nmember  of the  boat's crew.\nJt waa 6 o'clock lost evening that\n\u25a0the towermnn of tho highland station\ncaught blinker signals of distress from\nthe 238 at anchor three miles off\nCape Cod. The watch found on one\nof the dead hnd stopped at 5 o'clock,\nthe moment this morning when the\nwater took the lif-e of the man and\nmechanism.\nFour   Vetaela   Ruah   to   Rescue\nThe bljiraanl h:nl been In progress\n30 hours when the Utile coast guardian dropped her two anchors in a vain\nhope of riding it out. The blinker\nI flashed the message ashore that engines ami radio were disabled. The\ntowerman shouted the word to his\ncommander, who, by telegraph and\nradio, relayed the cry of distress to\nBase 5 In east 'Boston. Two cutters\nand two fleet destroyers slipped the\nleashes which held them in secure\nharbor and pointed keen noses Into\nthe wind.\nThe crews of land stations gathered\non the beach with guns and breaches\nbuoys ready and faced the windswept\n\u00bbro. waiting for an opportunity which\nnever came.\nThe blinker stopped Its signal*. It\nwas Impossible to keep In sight the\ntiny boat toBsed by tho mountainous\nwaves.\nShortly after the 238 disappeared.\nThe sea had snapped her anchor\nrabies, and was rushing her to destruction on the beach at High Head.\nThere she was slammed down and\nrolled over, picked up and, hurled\nagain, and yet again. The men on\nshore wero still helplesa. The 238\nbroke up.\nMen who -*-\u25a0;*\u25a0 w her wreckage said\nthat the only thing to come nahore\nIntact waa the gun whieh had been\nmounted on her fore deck. The sea\nsoon cast back two bodies. The waiting beach patrol took <hem front the\nsurf before the waves could claim\nthem   again.\nOTTAWA,  Feb.   20.\u2014After enjoying\nsprfnk-like weather during the p\nweek, eastern Canada today expei\nenced a -sharp return to winter,\naero and subzero -weather prevail!.!\naccompanied by high gales. Onti\nand eastern Ontario was enveloped\na blizzard which tied up all count\nmovement and considerably han<\ncapped traffic in the cities. Montn\nwas swept by winds of a velocity\n36 miles an hour. The marltli\nprovinces were swept by high gal\nbut no damage to shipping waa\nported.\nThe  only   reported   damage   eau\nby the blizzard  was  an   epidemic\nsmall    fires,    caused    by    overheat\nstoyes.     No   eaths,   directly   or\ndirectly, due to the weather, was\nported.\nMnn-tiT Schooner High on Beach\nNANTASKET, Mass., Feb. 20.-\nThe five-masted schooner Nan$\nfrom Boston for Norfolk,  in ba^l\nraa   driven   high   on   the   beach\nSurfBide this afternoon.\nThe crew was rescued by vlllagei\nwho brought them to shore befo\nthe Allerton coast guard crew cou\ndrag their lifeboat the four mil\nfrom  the   station.\nTHE  GUMPS \u2014THE MAN OUTSIDE\nJ\nC\nH\\% BUSINESS MISTAKES WILL COST YOO\nMILLIONS OF DOLLARS- HE CANCELED OUK\nCONTRACTS WITH TH)- CANADIAN NUNES \u25a0 _\nANO HE PAID * 1,000.000 TO A PROMOTO&\n\"\u2022\"OR A RAILROAD IN PERU-THAT CONSISTS\nOf ONE*  ENGINT   AND   NO TRACKS -\nHE  ORDERED TOUR CHAIN OP DRUG STORES\nTO SEU. NOTHING  BUT DRUGS - THAT   MEANS A\nLOSS OF AT (.EAST #2 500,000 - YOU   KNOW-\nH\u00a3   FIRED THE  PRESIDENT Of **A)d   IN SURANC***,\nCOMPANY   BECAUSE HE  THOUGHT\nTHE MAN  HAD  A\nCRAFTY fXPRfSSHW;\nthat's bimbo's business manager-\n\u201e    let him knock mp -\nGold is hold- no matter how hard\nyoo hammer it\u2014 an home st clerk\ndoes not fear a cash register-\nthe more uncle bim finds out about\nme - the* more distinguished service\nmedals   i'll be  wearing  when    ,\nthe war is over - (jut if that\nBIRD  LIES ABOUT Mg*\nI'LL  FLATTEN HIM\nOUT AS THIN AS\nA   PANCAKE'S\nSHADOW\nHALIFAX, N.S., Feb. 20.\u2014A strol\nstorm with snow blowing up \u00bbat\nearly hour this mottling aent tl\nmercury down to aero and ke\nmany Indoors, but failed to lnte\nfere with shipping Into the Halltl\narea. \u201e\nNo Losie. at Saint John\nSAINT JOHN, N.B., Feb. 20.\u2014I\nshipping losses were roported here I\nday after a gale that blew from \u00ab*al\nmorning until nightfall. The mercu\nhovered around the zero mark. Snc\nbegtyi   to   fall   in   the  afternoon.\n0\nb\n(Continued  From,Page One.)\nand  Chen  is  probably  in   tha  natu\nof   a   new   modus   vlvendl   to   Ul\nplace  of  treaties   now   In   effect\ntween China and Oreat  Britain.\nNegotiations were begun early\nJanuary and it was then -stated thi\nwere designed virtually to do awi\nwith foreign concessions, exceptli\nShanghai, which is an internatlon,\nsettlement\u2014 extra territoriality, ai\nexisting customs .treaties to whl*i\nboth the Cantonese and Peking go1\nernnvents strenuously obpected.\nAsks   Only    Efficiency\nThe terms upon whioh Great \"Bt\ntain approached tho Cantonese -tto\nnot made public, but they were fa\nto  be  most liberal.\nIt was understood that Oreat Br\n.aln iiHked only such minor conditloi\nis would Insure efficient admJnistn\n.ion of the surrendered concession\nThe negotiations have several tin\n>een suspended because of objectloi\n.'rom Chen.\nThe British proposals to the Cm\nonese were alao presented to (i\nPeking government, but no progpe\nhad been reported, as the Pekii\ngovernment 10 days stgo made obja\ndons similar to those of the C*\ntoneae, objecting to sending of Br\nish troops to Shanghai.\nUrges Motorists Refrain\nFrom Rushing Injured\nPersons to Hospita\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 2o\\\u2014\u00abo tr\nquent has the custom ot autoists I\npick up victims of accidents sj\nrush them to hospitals that the p\nlice chief has Issued instructions\nlocal motor owners to leave t\ntrn nsportntlon of Injured to at\nbu lances.\nIn  several  mishaps  lately,   Injur\nvictims have been so badly jolted\nbeing   rushed   to   the   hospitals\nsmall   car*,   that   their   chances\nrecovery   has   been   seriously   dlmi\niHhed.\nWhile    pl-iying    Clddlewlnk,    on*\nthe disk*  lodged  ln  the  throat  of\n4-year-old   boy   In  Fort  Wayne,\ncausing his death.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 21, 1927\nPage Three\nI\nSEMI\n|*quhart of Rossland Must Decide Today if at Trail\nor Coast\nSATHER MAN IS. BIG\nFACTOR  IN   CASE\n[to Be Played at Coast, Trail\nTeam  Will  Leave\nTuesday\nAIL, Peb. 20.\u2014Whether  thfl   pr*.\nIclal amateur hoaki'y championship\n|1m will  be   played   In  Trail  or  at\n\u2022 coast   will   be   decided   hire   al\nt,   tomorrow.\n,   tlrquhart   ol   RoolautS,   repre-\nItaHlve ol tho West Kootenay league,\n|1 meet other leaKne reprenntatlvei\nIn   the   mornlof   to  examine   ice\ntuitions at  the  Trail  rink  and   to\nIke thc decision,   it  will  lie   wtrad\nIthe coast Immediately.\nMOtlld    Hey    decide    In    favor    cf\nW>     the     coast     cliampicn.-.,     the\nWarn, or tbe Shell team, whiihcvcr\nha the coast serlea tonight ot Vic-\nlla,  will  leavo tho  coast  lor  Trail\nJ Tuesday.    Tho first match of the\njlmpibiislili, aeries would then prob-\nbe played on Thursday night and\nfinal Ramo on  Saturday.    Should\ndecision   favor   the   coast,   how-\nr,   th**.   Trail, team   will   leave   for\ncoast  on  Tuesday  night   laatMd.\nlis week-end saw the heaviest thaw\n1 tho   Hcoflon,   but   when   tho   team\nRat   on   for.  a   Workout   tonight   il\n(nd the ice was  in  very  lair shape.\n.   momentous    iiuustion    icgimtiing\nscene cf the ciiamplonshlp series.\n|vev.r,   Hill   rests   largely   wilh   lhe\nlathcrman.\nIS\nIHT III\nPROMINENT IN SOCIETY\n|fteen  Players. Take  Part in\nFirst Practice; Plan\nLeagues\nFrail, b.c., Feb.  20. \u2014 WW tl\non thi' floor ;ii tin; ftCMMftal\nfcn 011 Kutunluy night, taking t.if.r\n\u25a0at mirln***; pnoUea, MttOf basKet-\nfl here ooauMBOad ratting into shape\nthe projected city leagu.1 BtraM\nplannpd tu utarl n. xt w--\u00abk. The\nIrk of organizing tho teams und of\nVwing op a schedule will go for-\n|rd  tliis week.\n^Vediiih.lay   night   haa   been   set   for\npractice   of   nil   intermediate   players\nwish   to  get  Into  the game.      It\nll bo held mninly  to show what in-\nImedfttti'       talent        |S      ;i\\;,il il.],.. Tf\nIre are. sufficient players to form\nleral teams a league will be organ-\nId, and special match nights allotted.\niled Mails for\nQuarter-Century\nIR.   ROBERT   MILLER   COULTER\nformer deputy postmnster-gr'ncral\nCanada, v.h.. died in Ottawa a\ndays ago. in his 70th year,    fbt\nId the in.jm  for a quarter of a cen-\n|y-\ntoughed So Hard\nlould Not Sleep\nDlnVej,   hy%   OnlJ\nk a  V\nIf\u2122.   Stnlal\nlt\u00abl\u00bb\u2014\"ttaat .Tamiarj I __t . T\u00bbrTi\nW\u00bb 00M and  'migb.1 ao bard l'\naid \u00abol ile\u00abp nlgbu.   I tritxl 4-Tuy'\nInoluding   doctor'!   aajlolua,\nI nothing gave tne relief nnffl I (jjjj\nir. Wood's\nI Norway\nPine\ntyrup\nMm.\nwill  torn ho  without II\nI again.\"\n|on Am 't oip^tHmrtnt whn yon bav\nm. Wood's\" m It has \\mun \u00ab honaa-\n\\ rsm-Mj for tbs put 38 jean.\nt .18a. a botllef larga funllr dt*\nput up ...ilr H- Tli T. Milbtti\u00bb;\n\u25a0aipilnst a rlrl under 14  years of affe.  fffc-rnoon   at   8   o'clock.     The  alleged\n.Adjoun.niertt    ot    the    hearing    wu* -offence waa committed betwioei. Fnb-\ngranted  by   Magistrate   Noble   Binns |ruary 8                      <y'U.\non   application   of   l>.   McDonald,   de-       Shumarin,   who   was   arrested   Frt-\nfendunt'w    cihiii-i-i,     until    tomorrow 1(lay,  was remanda-fl,\t\nVancouver  Speaker  Shows   in\nTrail Slides of Mine and\nForest Wealth\nProminent In society news recehtly were Mrs. W. II. Prire, will1 of Hon. W. If. Price, attorney-general uf Ontario, left, and at tho yi_\\\\t is Lady Boulton, formerly Miss Margaret Lynns Moodk*, well-known Canadian singer,\nand now wife of Sir Harold Boulton. who Is on a visit to the Dominion.\nScore 165 to 123; Bean Feed\nFollows; All Have\nFun\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 20. \u2014 Fifteen\nrlnka of Rossland 'curlers on Saturday afternoon and evening were the\nguests of the Trail Curling club at a\n'spiel and -a bean   feed  par excellence.\nTrail put out every ono of Its 32\nrinks to give the visitors all the battles they desired, and Trail proceeded\nto win with 1613 points aggregate\nagainst Hossland's 123. Six ends\nwere played  to a match.\nRossland opened slnnik' and led at\nthe end of two hours' play, with eight\nmatches decided. But fnun .ri a'ojMk\nonward, when refreshments WOtt available, their play grew steadily worse.\nAt midnight they finished 42 points\ndown. But they obviously enjoyed the\nspiel and the splendid (Md set before\nthem by J. ManniN, the Trail club's\nchef. The scores follow, Bottlaad \u2022in:-\nini;   mentioned   first:\n3 p.m.\u2014Schoiieiuiii!'. U, banl U ail',\n3; Cram, 4, beat Campbell, I; Tertian,'\n8, beat McLennan, 2; Anderson, 3, beat\n8, beat McLennan, 2; And*r-\"n, I,\ndrew   Flngland,   3.\n4 p.m. \u2014 Grigor, 6, but lliiiliaiiaii,\n2; Gosse, 1, lost to fl-izl.'wi-Mil, 1,',;\nChessam, r., in at ,1 I'llCum, 1; Ternan,\nC, drew  with   Willis,  L\n5 p.m. \u2014 Cram, 6. ln-al Truswell, 4;\nAnderson, 2, lost to Murray, 12; Craig,\n2, lost to W. Forrest, fi; (irlgor, 1, lost\nto   Ritchie,   7.\n* p.m. \u2014 Finney, 4, lost to It. Somervllle, f\u00bb; Ternan, 4, lost to McLeod,\n6; McNeill, .'!. lost to McKay, 7; Stevens,  7,  beat  Brown,  2\n7 p.m. \u2014 Hawkins, 4, lost to Tyson,\n7; Burden, 2, lost to A. Balfour, 7;\nCram, 3, lost to J. Forrest, 5; Trigg\",\n\u00ab, beat ,1,   H.  Thom, 1.\n8 p.m.\u2014Kills, 6, beat Cruikslnmk. r.;\nFinney, 8, bott. Woodburn, I; Grigor.\n2, lost to D. McDonald, || Itciil. ii, l..a(\nWilliamson, 0.\n9 p.m. \u2014 Burden, <>. lust to Qmlft\nM| Trlggs, 2, lost to Klnnip. I; \u25a0obOf-\nlenmer, 1, lost to Larama, l'i; ui,. |,\nlost to Clark, I; (Vain. I, I., .-n CnMt-\noott. 2; Chessam,  r., lost  to Carter,  I]\nFinney,    2.    heat    Dotlwaait.    I;    i.n\u00abi.r.\n1, lost to Jackson,  fi.\nWOULD IMS.\nCape  Breton    Coal   for   East,\nWestern Coal on\nPacific\nMONTREAL, Feb, 2i>-A solution\nfor Canada's coal probata. ,\\ u. Mr\nMaster, K.C, former member of parliament for Br om e, suggfuted in an\naddress here on Saturday that coal\nmined in Cape Breton be sold and\nused along the Atlantic seaboard of\nCanada and the Unltetd States, instead of being shipped to central\nCanada, while coal mined In western\nCanada be sold and used along the\nPaciflo coast and the middle western\n-states, American coal from Pennsylvania being used ln the central province* of Canada.\nMr. McMaater'a theory waa baaed\non tho fact, not generally known, ho\nsaid, that the United States only iip-\nposes duty on coal coming from countries which impose a like duty on\nAmerican coal If Canada's coal tariff\nharrier were let down, he explained,\nCanadian coal could enter the United\nStates froe of duty, while American\nrn.il would, likewise enter the central\nprovl lire* ni' r-in'i'l:.. duty free and\nwould be avail.)ble to consumers at\nI   lOWf   I1' ;   '\u25a0\nIndian Up Again\nToday on Charge\noi Housebreaking\nPeter Kassimir, Indian, will en in.\nbefore      Police      Magistrate      William\nBrown at io o'clock this morning,\ncharged with \"breaking and entering''\nfive Nelson houses, occupied by Wallace Davis, N. D. Bradley. .1. P. Mor-\ngon, Guy Browell and H. H. Hhiilt,\nwith \"intent to steal.\" In each case\nthe burglar wakened the .sleeping occupants ,and was frightened off before\nhe  could carry out his  intentions.\nHe came before Magistrate Brown\nFriday morning, but the case was\nadjourned to today In order thai Cbtftt\nof Police Thomas H. Long might find\nan interpreter of tlie Babine dialect,\nKassimir being a member of the Babine tribe. E. 0. Matthew has been\nretained  by   Kassimir.\nVets' Orchestra Is\nAgain Popular at\nTrail Sunday Concert\nTRAIL,   B.C..   I'M',   lft, Trail   Vol\ntrans'    orchestra   tonight    delight. <i    g\n| full house at the Liberty theater, with\n\u25a0 me  of  its   popular  Sunday   night   o'li-\nI cetta,   featuring   A.   T.   Smith,   vocalist.\n| aa tii-' Mast*] uloifti   Mr. smith wns\nvigorously encored for his solo. \"The\nTrumpeter.\" He responded with \"Until.\"\nThi program follows: March, \"Old\ni \u25a0mini;.i|.-,-*,\" by Teike; Idyl, \"Sleepy\nHollow,\" by Allen; overture. \"Golden.\n.Sceptre.\" by Schlepegrell; folk song,\n\"Mebesfri-ud,\" by Krlesler; ch:iraeter-\nIstic, \"Tonwcise,\" by Meyer-IMinuiid.\ns.-lectlon, (-*H.M.S. Pinafore,\" by Sullivan; patrol, \"The Wee McGregors,\" by\nAnn rs; popular, \"Hello, Bluebird,\" by\nfriend;   suite,   \"Atlantis,\"   by   Safranck.\nINVADE STREETS\nVANCOIVKU, Kel.. 20.\u2014Over r.O\nlady volunteers in a battalion of 400\nfrom tho university, many students\nfrom tho technical high school, i\nmeruus boy scouts, 17 members of\nthi town planning InstituU', -is well\n'-\u25a0 iih-iiiImts and engineer--* ul V*.ui-\ni ouver town planning comml-sslon.\nnun prised the army which, on one\nday recently, invaded streets of Van\ni ouver and district to count traffic\n;m 4.ver r.O strategic points for two\nImiirs'.\nTRAIL. Feb. U, \u2014 St. Andrews\nChurchmen's club tonight got some\nInsight into the various natural resources and saw numerous colored\nlantern slides showing some of the\nvaried phases of life open to a dweller in this wonderfully -endowed country, when its members were addressed\nby J. M. Humphrey of Vancouver,\nsecretary of the Lardo MInea Exploration company.\nFrom a  knowledge  of the country\nacquired   In   30   years'   residence,   as\nwe'll as from the alJdM taken by hlm-\n\u00abelf. Mr. Humphrey was able to convey something of  the  rich variety  of\nscenery   in   forest,   lake,   stream   and\nmountain;   to   tell   of   the   opulrnco   of\nnature to tho agriculturist and hortl-\nulturist;   of the great stores of  mineral   wealth   awaiting   only   the  advent of suffllclcnt  capital  to make  lt\navailable;   ol   the   ^real   (offlft   wealth,\nhd, generally, of the spU-ndor of the\nountry ,and   its   attractiveness   as   a\npUca in which to live and work.\nThis same message he Is taking to\ntha cities in eastern Canada and the\nI'nited States, mailnly with a view\ntoward directing capital toward this\nectlon. He plans to show his pictures and lecture in Toronto^ Mont-\nal. Saint John, Detroit, Providence,\nB.I., und New York.\nThough he drew particular attention to the Lardo country, which, ho\nleelarcd, will see much mining acll-\n.Ity In apting and summer, his talk\n.vas .informative of the whole country,\nind touched on every phaso of life\nto bo found  therein.\nMeat may be your poison\nSHREDDED\nWHEAT\nwill keep your arteries soft -and\nhealthy- Eat it with hot milk\nStrengthening <md satisfying\nBROODER   COAL\nCanmore Briquettes\nTHR IDKAL COAL FOR BROODER STOVES\nMaintain  a steady  and  lastiiiK  heat.\nWill  bti pleased  lo  furnish testimonials.\nWEST   TRANSFER   CO.\nP.   O.   BOX   116\nPHONE   33\nCoast Men Are Here\nin Connection With\nthe Liquor Store Fire\nr   Austin,  k   |   Morton  nal I   r.\nHall    are    hfrn    fl     v.uirouver    in\noraaaoUon with appi-sining tht- loss in\ntlie flro whicli, early Thursday morning, l-mki' out lu tin' g-ivnuni-nt liquor\nstore.\nLHia  i \u2022 ad      .i.m --I'M\ntower in ii  Bi nton Hwbor, Mich.\nOaor-fa Bhebas, afa-d I. of vduiiss-\ntown.  Olii*'.  wan   kUtad   by  I   11*u<K.\n\u25a0 Bla    lias   only    |    p\n\\i'li;i|.     ,n\nStataa.\nPRINTING\na\nFor Mining Companies\nWe are in an especially favorable\nposition to give good printing\nservice to mining companies.\nOlfice forms of all kinds, stationery, vouchers, synoptics, loose\nsupplies, binders and supplies ia\neverything needed in the mining\ncompany office.\nThe Daily News Job Dept\nPhone 144 (Two Lines)\nPRINTING-RUUNG-BOOKBINDING\nMiddle-Aged Trail Man\nh Brought to Court\non Statutory Charge\nTRAIL, Keb. 20.\u2014I'eto Shumarin,\n.nlddleaagM Trail man, was arraigned\nll police court Saturday afternuon\nhurged    with    a    statutory    Qtfonce\nFEBRUARY\nCLEARANCE SALE\nSome Very Special Values\nin Rugs and Mats\nPrices Speak for Themselves\nA.XMINSTER RUGS, G II. \u2022'.) in. x 9 ft.   Regular $42.00.\nFor  ., $35.00\nWILTON   RUG,  6  ft.  9  in.   x  9  ft.    Regular $55.00.\nFor    $47.50\nWILTON RUG, 4 ft. 6 in. x 7 ft. 6 in.   Regular $32.50.\nFor    $23.75\nBRUSSELS RUG, 6 ft. 9 in. x 9 ft.    Regular $35.00.\nFor  $25.00\nBRUSSELS RUG, 4 ft. 6 in. x 7 ft. G in.   Regular $26.00.\nFor $15.00\nENGLISH WOOL RUG, 7 ft. 6 in. x 9 ft.   Regular $35.00.\nFor $15.00\nMATS\u2014Clearflax.      Assorted   colors.      Regular   $6.0P'.\nFor $2.50\nAXMINSTER MATS, regular $7.50.   For $5.00\nWILTON MATS, regular $10.00.   For  $7.50\nWILTON MATS, regular $15.00.    For  $12.50\nStandard Furniture Co*\nComplete Hovti FumUken        -       -        Nelson, B. C.\n[ F only that pcrthd tova itory mlghl have\n\u2022one on to a happy andtofl   But in edfc i\nxjyond their foreseeing tepotttod C^abncl\nand I-vungeline for u lifetime\nSuch edicts arc unknown tc-d.iy tnd low 11\nhave now ut their instant c.ill ;i nm*i wondef\nful uid\u2014Chocolates by Motai t> ch mn and\nthnlt the maiden fair.\nAs thc perfect gift to mark an wwitvamr)\nto prove in most .subtle manner one s know-\nledge of what is sochillv QorffKl     tO pl-c -n\u25a0\u2022\nwhen one is late c>r tttOt break an \u2022\nment\u2014Chocolates by Moirs stand ttani\npre-eminent.\nWhcthf r V'ki buv Me-irs by tlu- pound '\" tlt^\npackage tht ijuality is identical Tha Mim\nMoin I0pean CH each individual .-hocul.ite.\nI -.iiard     L*x4c for it.\nAn in\/imlr vurtety\nbfftxtively pdekaged.\n^HOGOLi^IliS\n\"'CANADA'S   CANDY\"\n Page Four,\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 21, 1927\nTHE   DAILY   NEWS\nPublished every morning exc-spt Bun-\n*ty br The News Publishing company,\nlimited. Nelson, B.C. ***\u00bb-\u2014\u25a0<\nBusiness letters should be addreaied\ntoo checks and money orders made\npayable to The Newa Publishing com-\nVfny, limited, and tn no case to tndi-\n-noual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A.B.C.\n\u2022tatementa of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be seen at tlie office\nof aay advertising agency recognited\nOf the  Canadian  Press association-\n8UBBCRIM\"ION   RATES\nBy mall  (country), per month...!    .go\nPer   year    g.00\nBy  mail  (city), \u00bb,er year  H.OO\nOutside Canada, per month 76\nPer   year  .   7 bo\nDtlivered, per week         Jl\nPer Mar    ; 1I>M\nPayable in Advance\t\nMemhft Aa-Ut B-areaa of Circulation\nMONDAY,   FEBRUARY ^1,   1\u00bb27\nfarewell to Succession Duty\n\\ + Bugbear\nHon. Dr, MacLean, in hit) provincial budget, is pretty well legislating the succession tax out of the\nIten of those to whom it has been a\nbugbear.\nFormerly the members of th.. family\nin line of dependence\u2014that is to say,\nwife, husband, father, mother, child,\n-grandchild, son-fn-law, daughter-in-\nlaw\u2014enjoyed an exemption of J10.000\nbefore the \u25a0aooea-flon duty became\noperative. Now they will enjoy a\n$20,000 exemption.\nThe lees dependent category of\ngrandfather, grandmother, uncle, aunt,\ncousin, brother, sister, or descendant\nof cither of the latter, will enjoy,\nwith the claas above, and with all\nother classes, a slash of one-third In\nthe rat.  of the tax.\nThese two changes will pructicaHy\nremove the tax from the sphere of\nthose morally ri.tltled to the fullest\nbenefit of estates, the dependent-*, and\nthe next class, that might be described us \"next of kin,\" for probably 9? or a. per cant of cases When\nestates get. into Iha larger categories,\nthey may well contribute (b the\npublic -gftCahe-quer.\nThe minister is *1m lMlMllll| the\ntax on the family that is left millions,\nand when 11.000,000 is reached there\nwill be no increase in rate, which\nfor the two classes above will halt at\nrespectively 12 and 16 per cent, while\nno beneficiary of an estate will be\nrequired to give up to the exchequer\nmore  than   20  per  cent  of  it.\nBut a particularly wisu readjust\u2022\n\u25a0ment is that which Dr. MacLean is\nmaking in regard to cases where a\nsuccession tax can be claimed in two\ncountries. \"Whore the physical estate\nll in Great Britain. >.wn if the domicile is here, he proposes to relinquish\nthe right to collect succession duties.\nThis will mean that the moneyed\nBriton may come here to reside and\nspend such portion of his fortune as\n-he likes, secure in the knowledge\nthat the province will nut Join with\nthe British government in partitioning\nhis estate In the old country, to the\ndetriment of his heirs. uhould he depart life here.\nThc effect of tin a latter provision\nwill be to lose some money, but to\ngrant ihe Britisher the freedom of\nthe province, a policy that in the end\ncan only be beneficial.\nThe\nLighter Side\nReaders of The Daily News\ncontribute many of the beat Items\nto this column. Just sign your\nname or Initials, or nom-de-plumo,\nand send in your brightest ideas.\n\u2014\u25a0Editor,  Lighter Side.\nAUNT HET\nciM_\\\n\"1 Sua! mucli believe afflictions is \u25ba -.\u25a0nt. It's Just Nature\nthut   ftVai   folks   rli^uiimtisin   an1\ntriplets an1 tilings like that\"\nThero.Is   no  new   uuth.  but   only  a\n11 &w  vision.\nThe  Baa-Si   prayer is to  smile  up at\nheaven.\nThe   first   robbln'   doesn't   indicate\napriiiK   In   Chicago.\nStill,   if   all   ware   wise,  to   many\ndoctors would starve to death.\n******\t\nA   greuter   elimination   cMtaa*,   than\nRickard*! 11 prepared by tftesry Tot\u2014\nTHE UTTLS OW IN THE OOft-\nNKK WITH THB BALD SPOT AND\nthk MLiaK  .'Ac.-;  is  Tin; OBN*\nKRAI.   MANAGER.\nOnes   lbs   tried   lo   hide   her   instep;\nI.u*w  slie  allows   Iht step-ins.\nSTILL.   THEU   SUHKRIuR-l'KKL-\nDfQ I'A.Murs iuvs WOULM-TT Be\nFAMOUS EXCEPT TOB THK HBO*\nPLB TUB1 iM.snsi;\nCanadianism: Thinking tlu \u25a0ttftacsf\nunimportant bsoSVUSl till seems human and  apKoachable.\nAnother good way to .suvteh the\nmuscles is to tell about the huwk j ou\nshot.\n.Lasling refoi ins are not accomplished by  men  who  don t  know   how\n(to laugh.\nFable; once ther-;' was a. wunuin\nwho didn't think her instep unusually\nUf*.\nThey Are Showing Speed at\nOttawa\n\u2022Spaed and attention to business\nseem to be the rule at cuaw* tic\ncurrent session.    This is excellent.\nHon. Mr. Robb had tli- main Mtt*\nmate.* down early In th- ;\u25a0\nmonth, and ths budget, whicli was\nbrought down un Thursday. February 17. practically mid-mon'-h bM\nset   the   record   fjr   reCM*.   Sears\nLot, 1     lUVsmmsnt    and     opposition\nI to equally desire to expedite the\ncountry's legislative  business.\nIf the government brings down lis\nother OfcM legislative proposals early,\ndeparting from Itl usual custom, and\nif the opi\u00ab\u00bbsitiuii diSObarfSS its constitutional duty uf erittdsm with an\neye tu - onomy of time as well M\nefficiency. STS may enjoy the thoroughly i.o\\el experience, for tins\ndtcad.', ot a full-fledged sssstoh winding up tu thc ipriiig.\nTwenty Years Ago\n*\u25a0\n(JTram Thi  Dalli   Nil -    \u25a0*\u25a0 b   It,  1 \u00bbuT \u2022\nMrs. Voaaa Mcii.rdj, uurd TI feaw\nlllfcll  of Charles K. McHardy of Kel-\n\u25a0son, die-j h- it- nstsrday \u2022n--ri-ing\n(tatoVS    DUbotl   Ut    Add J.    Wash      ami\nMiss   Mary   Ann   Grunt   pf   Nt-l-i.;,   WSTl\nmarried h\u00abr\u00ab  j sstsfaay b_   \\t- \u2022    J   T\nFtrguson\nCaptain Moon ol ths i>...m-: Inur-\nnationul reports Crura 11 to IS inches\nof ic\u00a9 on  tin-  W>\u00abt  Ar.a,  bStWeSB   l'\"l\" e-\nMlte i.ini .Nhi.-Mllv potnta He expects tu break u pasMugt* IllHljgll '.\u00bb\nthe   city   wharf   ISSM   ttn.r   Uils   \u00bbnk\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nay lavsa a inw*i\nNEW   DISHES   THIS   WEEK\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreakfast\n(Stewed   Prunes\nCareaJ\nCod   Hsh   Balls Mufnus\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nVegetable    Soup\n\u25a0**,      Whole Wheat Croutons\nCalefy\nL\\>UghnUtS Tea\nDinner\nCream of Caulifljwer  Soup\nbeef  Hash\nRice  CroqUo'.tes Spinach\nSteamed Dute  Pudding\nHard    Sauce\nCoffee\nBreaded Lamb Chops\u2014As tomorrow's lunch-ton menu calls fur doughnuts. It will be a simple mutter for\nLhe housewife to uso the same deep-\nfat kettle the foQuwlng day for .-coking these lamb cho:>s (culled tor in\nWednesday's iluner). Wipe the chops,\nsprinkle them arlth aalt and pepper\nind dip them In crumbs, Ifl eay, and\nthen once more In crumbs. Ft} L-r\neight minutes In smoking-hot deep\nfat. or tlll*a golden brown, Drain u\nmoment vn crumple>l unitary toweling for on clean bro'.-ii phpir Vttl\ncrumpled) before kOrttiiM with tomato' because of  heart \"condition\nThat Body\nof Yours\n\u25a0j  I1U1  W.  \u00bbA\u00bbTO\u00bb,  MD.\nThe Real Heart Test\nA professor of medicine makes tuis\nstatement: \"We hear mucli today of\ntbe ravages of tuberculosis and cancer, but data from fhe United States\nbureau of census shows that In the\ntotal registration area of the United\nHtates, the death rate from kidney\nsnd heart disease is almoat twice that\nof  tuberculosis and cancer combined.'\n'And, when we remember, further,\nthat what has been called heart disease, this Is- heart murmurs, and little\nheart irregularities are not really\nserious und do not cause deuths, w\u00ab\ncan get some' idea of tlie prevalence\nof   heart   disease   prop*-.!'.\nIt was reajly the Great War that\ngave physicians an opportunity of\nsctuully   testing  \u201eut \u25a0 heart  conditions.\nIn the United States und lunula all\ncases of heart murmur and Irregularities -Mrs weeded out au far. as possible.\nIn Iu'uii-ju and England, where the\nut.'4'd for men was most urgent, men\nwith murmurs and Irregularities WOtt\nfound to stand the preliminary training as well as their comrade! who\nposseissed   normal   hearts.\nThen, when the real hardships of\nwar were undergun'*, most of these\nman with the above conditions were\nable to do Ihe'r work as Well A thi\nothers.\nTbe test of llie' health or strength\nOf the heart was ljow tt acl^d when\nIt  was given   work .to do.\nAlso, those returned from the front\nre   care-\nthe Increase in heart ailments due to\ninfection, the treatment in severe\noast* li proper food, suitable work,\nsufficient rest, and a fair amount 01\namusement.\nRemoving snurces of Infection such\nM teeth and tonsils is the first\nthought.\nAnd for all cases, graded physical\nIXsratM under competent supervision\nmeans 'prolongation of life, according\nto Dr. Rablnowltch of Montreal, Dr.\nColton of Loudon, Kngland. and many\nother  re-search  workers.\nt'ai^U|,\"1_1   ,,    .     ... ,.  ,        __      \u25a0  I fully    aorted    out,    according    to    the\nSimple   Mock   Sponge   Ca te--Break   ,_,._,,. .   , _    .., . .\ntwo egg\u00ab into a bowl and beat wall. \\*\u00a3\u00a3* \"* ht**th 1(e\",ieM *hoWtt bj\n.\\.dd two-thirds of a cup of cold .weet j duin* ^n,iUi \u00ab\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u25a0\nmilk and beat again. Now sift l%\\ And tl,y *reat*nent of these coudi-\ncup of bread flour with one cup of UuI\"1' that 1 a-where the heart was not\ngranulated sugar and two teaspoons damaged by Infection of dome kind,\nof baking powder. Stir this dry mix- * was graded physical exercises,\nture Into the batter bowl and beat for The point, therefore, ts thut deiplt\nfive minutes steadily. The secret of\nhis cake's success is in the heating.\nTurn the mixture at once into buttered cup cake pans and slip 'the pan\ninto a hot oven (500 degrees F.) to\nbake for 13 minutes. 1 use a pan\nwith \"wells\" measuring two inches on\nthe bottom and three inches across\ntop with sides one inch high. (Recipe\nmakes 12 cup cakes uf this its*.)\nFrost with the following:\nChocolate Icing\u2014lu a small bowl\nput one cup of confectioner's sugar.\nCrush smooth with a wooden potato\nmasher, then stir in one teaspoon of\ndry cocoa powder and one-third teaspoon of ground cinnamon. Wet to a\npaste with one tablespoon and one\nteaspoon of cold water. -Spread on\nwhile tho cakes are still hot. (As no\nbutter is Used In this cuke, it is a\nsplendid one for young children.)\nRaisin Filling for One l'ie-Put two\ncups of large seedless raisins through\nyour food chopper. Then put tin-\nchopped raisins over to bjil mixed\nwith lVj cup of water. Let simmer\n10 minutes before adding one cup of\ngranulated sugar mixed with four\ntablespoons of dry corn stafch powder. Cook till thick\u2014about three\nminutes\u2014then remove saucepan from\nfire, add the juice of two lemons mil\n)4-teaspoon of vanilla, ahd let coul\nslightly before turning the filling into\nan unbaked under pie crust, \u2022i'ut on\ntop crust and bake 20 nilnu'.-s In :i\nvery   hot   oven   iJOO   degrees   I'M.\nTomorrow\u2014Answers to Inquiries.\nAddress   Inquiries   to   Miss   KIrkman ;\nand   Inclose   stan-med-addresscd   envel-1     TOUONTO,     Feb,      Ife\u2014Un-glftratl\nope  for  reply\u2014Editor. j Edmund    Jones   yesterday    dismissed\nI __ -j j the   cases    against    Hubert    I'ocock,\nThirty Years Aio       11 u~k',,i'itt1'' \u2022\u25a0n,, w, j  nuson, euro*\n- '      fr j praetor,   who   were   charged   by   the\nTen Years Ago\n(From The Dally Xews, Feb. Li, HIT)\nLieut. F. li. Armstrong of lVruie.\nwho has been home un sick have, left\nlast night fur Victoria, prior to leaving  for overseas  service again.\nOtpratlpn oi  the r*SBoUell#-| mill of\nthe     Slocuu     Star     mines    conmnnced\nWt-iliifsday.\nT!-,i 11    here   tu   Mr.   and   Mrs    Ji    F\nLamb of I'rOcter,'a -\"daughter.\nMay ViVif Canada\n_m_\u2014\u2014\\\n|T'            1\n\\*_\n_t-_XL'<\\\nL\nWf\n*     w\nf\nf          \/a -\nr:;\ni_l    m\nm   m\nLORD   HlWART\nLurd chief JnSttCS Of l-^igland, who\nnay visit Canada In August H has\n|>een invited, to be the chief speaker\nit the annual meeting uf the Canadian\nBar association, which lakes place in\nToronto  on  August  2*1   to  2ti.\nBVzzard Shrouds\nOttawa District\nMo.\\TRl-_AL. F.b. |fc\u2014RMtnf 011\n1 gae of wind, Ottuwa and dlatrlct\ntoday enveloped in one of the worst\nsnow sturms of the season. Commencing at II o'clock this muruliiK.\nthe sturm continued unauited tonight. About four InOhss of snow\nfill   during  the   day.\nf-'ireui   ear   ti.iiii.'   wai   oontlnuod\nLhruUKhuut the day with ill help of\nfweepers, but motor traffic was eon-\n(iderably handlcapp-d. Tr iin sei\\ice\n\\pro, raportad nurnial\nNature Meant ^ou to Live\nEvery Day of Your Life!\nSIXTY, KTtnty, eighty\u2014don't you at bsclt tat. w\u00bbtcji\ntlw young folki do everything -when you get on in life.\nStart now to build your body so thst in liter ye\u00bbr\u00bb you \u00bbill\nhave the health, the energy, the endurance of both body\nand mind to litr every day. Eat right. Th\u00abt'\u00ab prunically .\nthe whole secret.\nGrape-Nuts is the kind of food you sbwld hire eMry d\u00bbjr.\nGrape-Nuts, made from whole wheat and malted h\u00abrley,\ngives you the live essential elements of nutrition. It is euy\nto digest. It is crisp\u2014encouragitig chewing, which promote'\nall-round mouth health. And it has a delicious SiTor\ndistinctly its own \u2014 nut-like with t .debate\nsuggestion of malt sugar. ..\nHave Grape-Nuts beginning to-morrow. Costs\nlittle. Four teaspoonfuls, coning less\nthan one cent, malte a sufficient serving. Your grocer has it in wa\u00ab--wlipp\u00abd\npackages from which it U iwily Ml nu\nServe with milk or cream.\njrapesNuts ^\u201e\n(at) for Delicious nourishment   .\nMADF.\nIN\nS<s.- Yosr Ham \u00ab\"\u2022* Minn \/or Tav l,u Trial farka$tt af Gr.^a\nSail aad \"A 800* al Beltrr Srnkfi.li\". Aiirm CaWia. f,ihm\nCtr,.tCo., I.m.tii, Dtp!. G42-  11 , Mrlrmpolttm, ttif., Tarml,!,O.I.\nRead th* Adrertliementt\nTHEY SAV- mm TIMS\nBuilding\nLet us figure your bills\nof Building Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty,\nMaterial   john burns & son-\nCases Dismissed\nAgainst Osteopath\nand Chiropractor\n(From Weekly Miner,  l'Vb.  21, 189\".>   | College   of    Phyaiciana    *    Surgeun.-i\nCaptain     Troup*'   of     the     Caniidlan i with   urting   the   title   \"doctJi\"   vlthoui\nYou may say it with flowera,\nbut you can't bi very fluent at\n$8  a dozen.\nAmi   son.1   psopla   ITS  guoJ   fur   tb-.-\nhum roosoo tba) Ies norsr Mti ttty*\nthing afln\nTin: HARD I'ART OF QBTTtNG\nBUDC1 .:-\u25a0 TO BAT! IHI PEOPLB\nis TO maki; -TBI PBOFLfl lili-\nLISVB THaTT  IOSBD saving.\n\"Whal ibatl ws .1., with tu.bl--\noon9tT Ths bosjl thlnf \u25a0\u2022\u25a0 to imti\ntlieu 1 until attar dtaasr .Fighting\nspoils ClffaflUon.\nTiie srfnasnt that private oMlasni\nneed ptotsli lur protection can now1\nbe   applied   |ui1    SS   WtD   to   inachiiK-\nimu\n0\nCOtUtWCT THIS StJ.NTUNCli:\n\"I'LL TBLL THi: TIM ill, JUDGE.\"\n\u25a0Alp Hi.: 1 was VTATCBIirO AN\na.\\i;i,i; [NBTEAD OF THK ITRIXT\nIX    I'Tti'NT  '\nPacific rall\u00ab,,y i-teaii't-r IMVlM i\u00bb the\nKootenay, has received urder.i from ,\nVHticouvir Is pfoosstf with the con- l\nhtrucllon of a new itsawr which will 1\nopt-ratu on tlu Columbia river The '\nboat will be built ut Nakusp.\n\u2022 a 1\nC. P. R. aurveyinB inftntsrs bSVs\niMiuiili i.-d Ihi survey alonj. the vast*\n\u25a0rm i-hore of IfmrtsniT mtmtt fur the\nCrows' Nest Pssi railroad whlsh win\neonosef at Ifslnon.\nI   i'   sha\u00ab, nottac surveyor ot cus-\ntuius  at   Nehoii.   uml   ItlM   May   RoWa**\nson. duuKhttT <it I*. puly Sheriff and\nMrs. Itobin-^oii. aim of Nelson, were\nmanud lu-iv Tu-.-sday by Hev, C-. H.\nMurden.\nproper luthorlty,\nKm Roof Falls,\nKillng Collier \\\nNAXAlMlt. lt.C, Feb. ^u.\u2014(.\u2022rushed1\nbeneath coal which fell from the roof\nuf a Canadian W.stern Fuel company\n111! ii.-, William (M-nie. aKed 3D, who\nCants tfl N.iiiiini;) last year from\nSiir.ll.-y. iK'lhy-Hhire, Kngland. where\nhis widow reiidus, wan alniu-i a\n\u25a0tantiy killed here  yesterday.\nFarmer ai  Halifax.  SM.  died   from\n\u25a0hook   when  hit-*,  son's uxe   lltppsd   and\ncut  an   artery   In   his   leg.\nOn Harris   Staff\nFORMKR CANUCK  OIE8\n^lOMtuVlA Cat, iv >. Is. J. 1-\nQuick, formerly of Toronto, out. and\nfor many y*ara president rt the\nAmerican llagguxe AgenHN' anaocl<i-\ntlon. died \u00ab: his homs here Saturday.\nUntouched by Hand\n\"SALADA\"\nJl mA\nClean,   pure  and   delicious.   Use it.\nAnother Widow\u2014Looking for a Job\nGEORGE MacDOUGALL'S first\nthought was always for his family's\ncomfort and happiness. Nothing\nthat he could provide was too good for\nthem, fio sacrifice that he might make\nwas too great. He was a model of\ndevotion.\nYet unintentionally \u2014 George MacDougall failed in his imperative duty!\nHe failed to provide completely for his\nfamily's support.\nFor when he died suddenly and unexpectedly\u2014hig widow was faced with\nthe task of \"carrying on\" without sufficient\nfunds. He left her just $3,000.\nShe soon realized that the $3,000 wouldn't\ngo very far. It was up to her to eke out\na living for herself and the children.\nGeorge MacDougall's widow applied for a\njob last week I\nThe pathetic part of it is that things might\nhare been so vastly different, ft woull\nhave been so easy for George MacDougall\nto go on supporting them for years\u2014in\nspite of his death.\nFor $15 a month he could hive hid\n$10,000 of insurance under the Life plan.\nThis would have brought his estate to\n$13,000, which would have provided an\nincome of $100 \u00ab month for IS years for\nhis widow and children. At the end of\n15 years tbe children would have been\nold enough to take care of their mother.\nYou may feel that you can not afford\nfurther insurance. The real question is\ncan you afford not to have sufficient\nprotection for your family? Under the\nLife Plan of the North American Life,\ninsurance is easy to arrange\u2014easy to\n\u2022fiord.   Send the attached coupon today.\nria.-.a wad at, mfo'manor ard littratur. abttt lhs\n1 if. n... .\nPresidents:\nalon     Imatnls\ntnuiHiituiitie\nc,f   N.w   Y..r!t   unci    L\u201en-\n<>f    trsi*,.    0OA1\nphone.\nHUME WRONG\ni ..t ii\u201e, Cnlveraitj ,,' Turjtitu, who\nliita- been al.puluU.1 to a Ht-creUiiiil\npout in .lie Canadian legation at\nWaaBhlngton. He la n son of I'rof.\nIeorge 11. Wrong and haa for aolne\ntime been roniiet-ted with tiie depurt-\nmrn: of history al the university.\nLamps and Lampshades\nAt Cost for 1 Week\nWe are offering exceptional values iu ull LeHitip (Joud.s\nand Vases, as we wish to close these out. You can have\nthem at cost.\nDON'T   MISS   THIS !\nSee Our Windows\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholM.I.   and    R.liil    Quality    Hardw.r.\nNELSON PHONE 21 B. C.\nNelson Branch Office:\n2-3 Aberdeen Block\nNelton, B. C.\nwwwm\n \u25a0\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 21, 1927\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\"\u2014\"\nPi^s Fir-if\"***,\nii\" j . >.\nHave you availed yourself of the opportunity of\nprocuring a pair of those\nSlippers we are clearing\nout?-\nTWO PRICES\nAll high-grade shoes.\nwi.VO and OO.i\/O\na  pair.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nPIONEER DIES\nAT\nNew York to Paris\n1!V\nFire   cauBeti   $26,000   loss   to   three\nstores at  Marlon, Ohio.\t\nJohn  L.  Rumsay  Was Eighty\nYears of Age; Dies Shock\nFollowing an Operation\nCHANBItOOK, B.C., F\u00abb. 2S. \u2014- John\nL. Hunisey passed away early on Saturday aftfrnoon *t th* St. Eugene\nhospital. Me was removed to the hospital on Tuesday to undergo the amputation of rf leg above the knee, which\nwas performed on Wednesday. He\nwas 80 yeara of age, and the shock\nof the operation proved too much for\nhim. '   i\nHe had resided in Cranbrook since\n1912, coming fr-phi the old country.\nHe was an accomplished musician. He\nwaa a member of the Masonic order\nIn England, and leaves a widow here,\none son, Oodfrey Rumsay of- the C. P.\nR\u201e and two daughters, Mrs. C. Van-\nbramm and Mis? A. Rurtfsay. There\nare six other conn, all grown up,\namong them being Septimus of Lethbridge, and Fred, who resides In the\nCalgary district. Mr. Rumsay waa a\nmember of Chriat  church.\nBULL RIVER MAN IS TO\nREBUILD BURNED HOTEL\nCRANBROOK, B.C., eb. 20.\u2014George\nThrasher, of Bull Rtver, la commencing as soon as possible to reconstruct\nthe Tourist hotel there, which waa destroyed during the winter of a year\nago by fire. A. K. Jones of thia city\nhas the contract for the erection of the\nnew hotel, which is to have about 18\nrooms ,and will cost about |12,060. It\nwill be of frame construction, two\nstories.\nHouse Cleaning Brushes\nI . .   \u25a0'\u2022 . -       r\nI) ' :\nWall and Ceiling Brushes, 10-foot handle.\nTwisted-in-Wire Brushes, in Toilet Bowl Brushes, Bath\nBrashes.**\",\nBanister Brushes, Bed.Spring Brushes.\nSoft Hair Brooms, in 14-inch and 16-inch.  .\nO-Cedar Mops, Liquid Veneer Mops. \\\nScrulj' Brushes, Paint Brushes. \\\nVariysh Brushes, Feather Dusters.\nDeck[ Mops, Self-Wringing Mops, Spring Mops.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE CO.\nPHON**^;,\nLook for tho Rod Hardwire 8tor\u00bb\n\u25a0OX  414\n&3^\nJLet Us Sell You\nthe Good Will Idea!\nIT IS said that good will Is more valuable to a\nmerchant than his store Itself\u2014or money In the\nhank.\nIn other words, lf aome tatastrofthe should de*\natroy your Store, established through quality merchandise, moderate prlcea\u2014end good will\u2014that Store\ncould resume business the next day. But If the\ngood name of that Store were erased, that business\nwould   be gone.\nAnd therein Ilea the great security of many an\nInstitution. Oood will la beyond the reach of fire,\nflood, tornado or earthquake. Only through alow\nproceaa -of  neglect   may   It  be  loat.\nLet ua show you through our advertising department how an Institution will endure\u2014Juat aa\nlong as good will Is a part of advertising.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nLIEUT.-COM..   NOEL   DAVIS\n' Preparations are being made in\nsecret at Washington, D. C, ler a\nnonstop flight this spring from New\nYork to Paris under the commpnd of\nLieut.-Com. Noel Davis of the United\nStates naval reserves. The Davis\nhopoff will take place in April or May,\nand the proposed route Is from New\nYork to Newfoundland, across the\nAtlantic to Ireland and down to Paris.\nPublic  and   High  Teams' and\n.Visiting Team  From\nKimberley Play        ,\nTell Us About Your\nWater Problems\nWe Can Solve Them for You\nSave time, trouble and labor. Let gravity do the work\nof bringing your water for irrigating your farm and\norchard, and for serving your home. At small expense\nyou can relieve yourself of endless work by installing\n HARMS\t\nWOOD IRRIGATION PIPE\nSaves its cost in time, convenience and labor and in\nthe increased value of your property.\nMade in sizes 2-in. to 8-in. diameter for any pressure\nup to 250-lb. head;\nWrite us and let us give you the benefit of our experience as tn your needs. It costs you nothing to-find\nout. Tell us approximately the size of pipe required, the\ndistance from source of supply, and the drop in level.\nTHE A. P. HARMS WOOD PIPE CO.\nDEER   PARK,   B.   C.\nShipping   Point\u2014Renata,   B.   C.\nCRANBROOK, B.C., rth 20. \u2014 School\nchildren of all ages enjoyed an evening of hockey at U\" rink on Friday\nwhen games were arranged by the\nAmateur Athletic association for .the\nyoungest tots up. A number of\nteachers at the Central school havt\nbeen coaching the youngstera, and suv.\neral teams have been formed. The\nfirst game wan public school girls,\ncaptained by Lillian Webster, against\nthe team of Pauline Bowness. A score-\nlesa tie resulted, and when these teams\nmet again on Saturday morning the\naame result ensued. The first boys'\ngame was hetween the teams of Byron\nKemp and Marshall Macpherson, which\nalso resulted In no acore. Kdwin Hal-\nley's team beat Owen Halley's on the\nrun of tbe play, though this game wan\nalso scoreless. R. Mulrhead's t**-nm\nbeat Norman Olabratth's 2 to <*\u25a0 and\ntor the Central school championship\nyoung Muirhend's team also 'bent K*l-\nwfn Halley's 2 io 0, the winning team\nconsisting of Bob .MulrheHd, A Calhoun, A. Williams, Angus Rector; Joe\nGenest,  Douglas  Patton.  Darnel   Wain\nThe high sehool girls' team, with\nHelen <*-.*-tnphell H-* captain, met the\npublic school gtrK captained by Pauline Bowness, the result bring a goalless  game.\nTha Cranbrook high achool girls met\nthe Kimberley high sclmol girl-* in a\ngood game, the two captains being\nAudrey McKeown and Bessie Bidder.\nThli* game resflltrj in \u25a0 win for Cranbrook, 4 to o, Helen Cs mpbell acortng\naH the goals., Cranbrook team\u2014Audrey\nMcKeown, \\, Miller, M. Campbell, M.\nWIIHs, I. Dean II, K McPkrMM, with\nK. DMeJL 1. i-'nun-. apa res. Klrnber-\n\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 Bldd< r, a Dacrew, K Mor-\nrison. K. Qarbutt, 1 Can-taron. I. Baker,\nz, Bimtne, J! Brewer, K. MacKinnon.\nAnother good --..ni. ma aoan whan\nthe   Cranbrook   high    school   boys   met\nthe Klmberlej  high act i team. Kim-\nbvrii'.v   won,   t   to   i.    The   Cranbrook\nboys    a\/ara   \u25a0\u25a0     Mchlson,   ciplain,   B.\nRett, J. Barber. W. Klnis, D. l.ari:..,\nMoore, tlardon, P*. Large, Q, Rankins\nKimberley\u2014B, Back, captain. I. Kot*\nheim, Livingston-, Bryant, Bendrlck-\nson,   Morgan, Johnson,  Banon,   Watson,\nChapman Curlers\nFail in Attempt\nLift Bowness Cup\nCRANBROOK,   Bi',   a*,   la.\u2014or   the\nthin) time within a w.-ck Cranbrook\ncurlers were call*~-| ui>oii to defend Hi*\nBowness eup trom challengers, t'hap-\nmnn  Camp  Vending down   tto  rinks on\nSaturday   um ning   skipped   i\nDunki-il. y   nnd   Jack win.      Th-'    former,\nmap 11 ona ol 1'\" conoentrator's baal\nskips,    was    not    in    luck,    Saturday\nigalnst th.' Mi'i-'ti.\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 i ln\u00a3 aai b< had i\ni.ii; |a id pll< ii up agHln.-t win.'ii p\n7-end helped ronsldersbly. Jackson, in\nhis garni*-, beat John Martin, hut could\nti4it (mil ap thi loai sustained by the\ni -inman   rink.     After   the   garni'\nthe rinks met for a friendly supper. If\nlhe Ice hi-Ms till '\" *\u2022' week, Chapman\nrinks will content for the cup again on\nWednesday.\nSCRANTON, Fa.. Feb. 20.\u2014Three\nminers crawled to safety at 9 o'clock\ntonight, after having been held prisoners ln the Archibald mine of the\nGlen Alden Coal company at Taylor\nsince 7 o'clock Saturday night. The\nmen showed no 111 effects from their\nImprisonment.\nThe men were trapped in the underground workings when a massive fall of roof occurred. The res.\ncue work was ended In record time.\nEighty feet of rock and coal had to\nbe removed and the place timbered\nss the work  progressed.\n\u25a0t^soaitY\nThis column le being conducted\nby Mra. M. J. Vigneux. All d\u00abwb\nof a aoelal nature. Including receptions private an ter tain man ta.\npersonal' Items marriages etc., will\nappear ln this column. Telephone\nMra. Vigneux at ber home.\nThe home Of Mr. and Mrs. E;\" C\nWragge, Observatory street, was a gay\nscene Saturday night, wh\u00abn Mtss Alotse\nWragge entertained at a decidedly\nsmart dance. Her invited guest Hat\nincluded Miss Violet Hamilton. Mlas\nAileen Mansfield, Miss Mhora McDonald, Miss Phyllis Churcn, Miss Owen\nScott-Lauder, Miss Sybil Towgood,\nMlSa Dorothea Oraham, Miss Lillian\nHunter, Misa Nancy Gracey, Mfss\nMarlon Blackwood, Misa Creina Hor-\nte*ul, the Misaes Kitty \u2022 and Alia\nJohnstone, Miss Lorna Allen, Mlas\nSadie Edwards, Miss Helen Murphy,\nMlas Dorothy Airey of Cedar Point,\nMiss Carmen Horten, Miss Mildred\nIrvine,* Misa Helen Townsend of Spokane, Miss Morna Foggo of Trail, Mr,\nand Mrs. R. W. -Dawson, Mr. and Mrs.\nA W. Idiens, Charles Hamilton, Jack\nInk, Clifford Dewar, Felix Brealey,\nMr. Jones, William Hebenton, Allan\nOilroy, Mr. Steel, James Carter, Arthur Godfrey, Evans Wasson, Cecil\nCoates of Procter, Tim Bird of Trail,\nA. Hutchison, Percy Toung, Arthur\nLambert, Harry Horton, E. H. Hanley,\nJim Cunliffe, T. R. Wilson, W. J.\nSturgeon, W. L. Munn, Farron Archibald, Terence Rosling, Alfred Noxon,\nPhilip Trail of Trail, Norman Foggo\nOf Tra.ll and Dr. 0. W.  McKay4\nMrs. William Crowther of Nakusp\nspent the week-end in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u00bb    \u2022\nA. Defleux of Bonnington was a\nvisitor to town, Friday, having come\nto attend \"The Beauty Shop'' performance,\nH. Olver of Longbesch was a visitor\nto the city Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Eric Anderson of South Slocan\nspent Saturday in  Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Gilbert Hart in, Vernon street,\nwho hftff been sp-yiding the past couple\nof months In Calgary at the home of\nher niece, Mrs. Ytmng. returned to\ntown  Friday evening.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss Katherlne Edwards nf Ronning-\nton was a visitor to town Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMIsh Katherine Brodie, who teaches\nat Thrurfts, spent the we^k-end In Nelson, the guest of her parents, Mr. and\nMrs.  James  Brodie.  Stanley  street.\nHonoring Miss J. F. Sutherland of\nWoodstock, pnt., Mrs. J. H. Bennett,\nBaker street, made a graceful tea and\nbridge hostess recently on different\noccasions, when she was assisted in\nserving by Mrs. William Douche, Mrs.\nA. D. Emory anil Mrs. fi L. Buchanan\nwho poured, while cutting the ices\nwere Mrs. J. B. Oray and Miss J. F.\nSutherland. Others assisting w*t\u00ab Mrs.\nCharles Kelman, Mrs. M. J. Vigneux\nand Mrs. Robert Thompson. The honors for first and second high scores\nwent to Mrs. Ferguson Wilson. Mrs.\nC. D. Shaw, Mrs. W. O, Rose and Mrs.\nHarry Maundrell. Thi' invited guests\nwere Mrs. Joseph Sturgeon, Mrs. Robert Andrew, Mrs. R. A. Peebles, Mr?.\nQ. E, Sparkes, Mrs, .Je'irge Steed, Ml*.\nW. B. Steed, Mrs. A. W. Nagle, Mrs. A.\nT. Noxon, Mrs, Gilbert Stanl-v. \\V I\nWiddowson, Mrs. P. Cowle, Mrs. Star-\nmer Smith, Mrs. J. Hntnsav. Mrs. J. J.\nFoote, E. H. Redpath, Mrs. M J, Vigneux, Mrs. Archie Donaghv, Mrs. J. B.\nijrav, Miss j. f. Sutherland of Woodstock, Ont., Mrs. William Douche. Mrs.\nE. L. Buchanan. Mrs. A. D. Emory,\nWI J. T. Andrews. Mre. W. B. Rnm-\nfnrd. Mrs. H, L. nanem, Mrs. Oeorge\nM. Clark. Mrs, A. H W, Crogsley, Mrs.\nA. Dolphin. Mrs. L. W. Humphrey,\nMrs. il. Bpsneer Godfrey. Mrs T. VI.\nHlgglnbotham, Mrs J. W. Holmea,\nMrs. J. A. Irving. Mrs. A. G. Lambert,\nMrs. C. D. Mackintosh, Mrs. Donald\nMcLeod, Mrs. T. E. Maddock, Mrs. C,\ntt, Mansfield. Mrs. Harding. Mrs\nGeorge Johnstone, Mrs. O. W. Humphry of South Slooan, .Mrs. C. V. Gagnon, Mra. M. F, Kee let. Mrs. \\\\ Me*\nKachern, Mrs. Oeorge' w. Allen. Mrs.\nH. Maundrell, Mrs. Guy Wright. .Mrs.\ni Robertson, Mrs. R. Q,.McEwan, Mrs\nGeorge Kemmerling, Sft-s. F.. I, Buchanan. Mr- Harry Dunk. Mrs. W. H.\nHoare, Mrs. J. I\". Annable, Mrs. C. D.\ns*hiiw, Mr-. L. L. Roomit. Mi H S\nDill. Mrs. A. I>. Emory, . Miss Weill*\nOundass of Ingersoll, Ont.,M\/s. Oeorge\nFergiifon,   Mrs.   Jjimes   Brodie,   Mrs.   J.\n\\. Gllker, Mrs. Gilbert Hartin, Mra. it.\nR, Chans, .Mrs H, Murphy. Mrs. Charles\nkelman, Mrs. J..R. Hunter. .Mr,-. G. H\nMatthew, Mrs. George Motion, Mr- H\nH. Pitts, Mrs. W. O. Rose. Mrs. W. R\nflmrthS, Mrs. Roh-rt Th.mips.m, Mrs.\nWilliam Waldie, Mr-. H. M Whlmater,\n-Mra. O. B. Russell. Mr\u00ab Ws R. Jarvis,\nand   Mrs.   Ferguson   Wilson,    i 1\na   a   a\nMrs. A.   E.  Allison,   who  has   been   in\nNelson for the past Wi-t-Jt, -riv neal  of\ntrtaadfi lefl on ih-** noon train Saturday\nfor her home in Trail.\n611 Baker Street.   Phone 200.\nSpring's Newest Fabrics Are Here\nIncluded in this showing of Spring Fabrics is everything that is new in Figured Crepe, Fancy Silks, Wash Goods a nd Novelty Muslins. Special attention is\ndirected to the following: t\nJ.   D.\nHasan.\nlay.\nnimun,   merchant   at   South\na   shopper  In   town   Satur-\n-YE!? PRINTED CREPES\nS1.2S to $2.50 the Yard\nNew small desifpis in Silk Crepes. In\nlight or medium colors. 38 inches wide.\nAT Sl-25 TO S2.50 THE YARD.\nJVEIV BROADCLOTHS\n7Sc to $1.00 the Yard\nEnglish' Broadcloth, 36 inches wide.\nNice bright finish. All wanted colors,\nAT 75< TO Sl.OO THE YARD.\nINDIAN HEAD SUITING\n75c the Yard\nFast-color Suiting in a range of colors.\nSplendid material for street or house\ndresses.    PER  YARD,  75<.\nSILK-AND-WOOL BALBRIGGAN\n$3.50 the Yard\nSplendid weight in Silk-and-Wool Balbriggan. All the new spring colors.\n54 intjhes wide. AT $3.50 THE YARD.\nNEW FLAT CREPES\n$2.98 the Yard\n40-inch Flat Crepe in a splendid weight.\nAll the new' colors. SPECIAL VALUE,\nS2.\u00bb8 THE YARD.\nFLORETTE SILK VOILE\n$3.00 the Yard\nExclusive material in novelty Printed\ndesigns. Light and sheer and will give\ngood service. 38 inches wide. AT\nf3.00 THE YARD.\nNOVELTY FLANNELS\n$3.00 to $3.50 the Yard\nNeat check Flannels. Made of pure\nbotany Wool. Assorted colors and designs. 54 inches wide. AT $3.00 TO\n-f.t.-50 THE YARD.\nMiss\nlene\\'levr- McMahon, Miss Mar-\nitob-son, Mlas Allee McPhail.\nKaIhk Esther Nordmftn, Mrs. Robert\nThompson. Mrs. l'aul IMtner, Mrs. Harry Anas, Mr-. Cecil \u00abrlas*>ll.', Mrs.\nWilliam Taylor, Mrs. O. D. Frith. Mrs.\nW W. Fertruson, Mrs. Harold I-aKes,\nMiss Sybil Archibald, Miss I'hyllis\n-'hiiroh, Miss .Mhora. McDonald, Mlai\n'\u25a0.Heen    Mansfield,    Mr*-.   Joseph   Stut- ,\nMrs.   A.   T. I     Miss   Q\ntoria   sire\npoured from tables daintily centered\nwith daffodils and yellow candlea,\nwhile atrvlni srers Mrs. llcasllp, Mrs.\nFred Conway, Miss Helen Scanlan,\n||ra, Dottflaa Cummins, Mrs. c. E.\nMansifield and Mrs. M. J. Vlpneux.\nrit-tnt and Jackie Williams\nfavored tie guests with delightful\n-plana solas mm duets.\nDivorce was granted In Altron,\nOhio, to Mrs. Elizabeth Arnold, tt,\nwho claimed nhe und her huaband\nhad liv.il together and not spoken\nto each other for 16 years.\naeon,   Mrs.   M.  J.\nNoxon, Mrs. w. .1. grots, Mra, l^-ug-\n;as   riimmins,   Mra.  C.  A.   Larson,   Mrs.\n-luy   W.   Davis,   alias   Ina   Iiee4,   Kiss\niClva    Hanna,    Miss    Enid    Ener.    Mis*^\nJosephine   Bladon,   Mr-    L    C    Plojrer\nand  Miat   UWO  Jt'Witt.\nMrs S. Bonnacc[ and h**r daughter.\nMrs. E. Spigarlol. both ot l'rocier. were\nshoppers in town Saturday.\nMrs.    S.    Irwin    of\nSaturday  in  the  city.\nRossland    wptOt\nlent,\nA.   Hufty.   C.F.H.   agent  at   Brill-\nwas a visitor to Nelson Saturday.\nAsthma\nBronchitis1\n\u2014and all affections\nof the respiratory\npassages, qtlickly\nrelieved by\u2014\nis_h\ni   Pcwde*\nMannfa\"'!\"-! ky\n\u25a0 st Clark-*. I id., Im-I-m* lags\n(Ul* l anadi-n A|4Mls.\n\u25a0 Karol-J t. SllrUe O Cm. IU.,\nTlMMiOU-\nII\nCumniand-r ftowlond Ilotirkc, V.C..\ni  ri.  ..it  Bay apeni RfctuMir in th*\niiy   'in  buslni ss.\ns   s    t\nMi     and    Mrs     H,    I.i gg.-it   of    Long-\n-lai'h wir- Nslson shoppers Saturday,\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\ni:.\" ,\\ I afolatyrs ot ths Blo**!an\nllatrlct,  who  was  retlevtof   Rev. J. C,\nMcKentle during his uhnn-nc in Spo-\n*CSDS last week, left Saturday \u00bbfi.rn\"on\nfor   Kaslo.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs.   A.   J.   Robinson  of   Ihlford   and\nher daughter wero city shoppers Sat\nii rday.\naas\nThe girls of St. Paul's C.O.I.T. held\na very profitable tea nnd bake sale on\nSaturday in the schoolroom of the\nchurch. The room was tastefully dec\n\u25a0irated in blue and white, the -C.O.I.T.\ncolors. Tlw lea tnble, which waa een-\ntared wiiii daffodils and pust-iy willows,\nwas presided over by the tour president* and vlce-praaJaaata ofithe van-\n'lUS groups. Misa JfSsle -Jalt ^fted\nits convener of the tea room, and *\u00ab*-\n..I b) the girls. Mian EUo-'if'\nMacKenil.- had -thartfe' of the' bflW\ntable, while dlsp\/nslng the iweeU\nwas .Miss .Martini Srott, who alao had\nwilling helpers. A musical proffran\neontrlDUted to by \u00bbhe members, Was\nmuch eninyi 'I *\nsal\n\u25a0 Mrs. N. -M Cummins, who Is the\ngueat of ber daughter. MrJL-'W> W.\nHennrtt. ..\u00bb Bonnington, returned to\nUonnlngton on ih- noon train yeater-\nday, arte. \u25a0 i\" mling, the week-end with\nher ion and Laughier-ln-laif Mt} ktifl\nMrs.     Douglaa    Cummins.     Carbonate\n-*tll'4 t\naas\nTsstarday morning at 10:50 at the\nbeginning of high maw at the Church\nof Mary Immaculate, the marriage of\nMlaa Annie heomnnka and I'eter Hor-\nlick took place. Rev. J. C. McKenile\nofficiating. The hride who entend the\nchurch to the atralna of Mend*'lsaoHn .\nwedding nmri'h, played by the otgan-\nist, Miss Albertine Choquette, wae\nfrocked in n gown of whlta charm<,us-'\nsatin, wore a veil, and cnrr-Vd a bouquet of whit* carnations snd greenery,\nHer matron of honor wan Mrs. Sophie\nJubi'k, whili* the groom wns supported\nby Btephen .Mfdwld.\na   e   a\nMrs. Lawrence A. McPhail, nee Miss\nMarlon Leitch, held her Initial reception Saturday afternoon in the drawing room <.f the Strathcona hotel, She\nper \"hite nardasuR and aheil\npink carnntlnns for her table miter,\nand was assisted by Mra. P. E. Pon\nenter and Mis. C. I>. Mackintosh, who\npresided over the tea and coffin, urna.\nOthers ashif-ilng were Mrs. J. McPhail,\n-Mrs Harold r.a ken, Mrs. w. J. Grave,\nMisa Sybil Archibald, Mia\n^ordman and Miss Alice McPhail.\nCallers during the afternodTi wer.) Mrs,\nties Carrie, Mrs. W. n. R0*\u00bb, VIr-\nH.nnllt4,n  Brown,  Mrs    ...   Podding. Mrs.\nL s, Bradley, Mrs. William Brown,\nMra. M. Currie, Mrs. r. R. Brown,\nMra. C. ri Sedgwick. Mra. Charlea\nPnrrough. Mrs, p. p. Townsend. Mrs.\nI>ouglas Nagle. Mrs. Carlton J. Currier, Mrs. W. M. Myera, Mra. P. H.\nSheffield. Mrs. H McArthur, Mrt. V.\nE. Ikmcaster, -Mrs. D. McEachern, Mra.\nA. J. Robinson, Mra. A. W. Berry, Mra.\nC. D. MacKintosh, Mm. Philip Rahal.\nMrs. 3. Minnls,  Minn Conatanc- Smith.\nMrs. Thomas Weston of Trail and\nIn i thren children, wi*n- in .N.-l-^mi.\nSaturdav, en route to Procter to ttmt\npart in the celebration. Monday, uf\nihe gulden wedding of her pannis,\n.Mr. find Mrs. Walton.\na   *   a\nCol. J.  Murray  of  S.uith Slocan  spent\nSaturday i\u00bb th- city.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nW. E. Barbert, the Chicago lawyer,\nwoh has been in Nelson on bnslness\n'or   the   past   couple   of   montka,   Isfl\nSaturday  morning  for his  home.\nTh.- S-hyl-T Past Grand club of UM\n'Jneen   City   Reb. kali   lodge   Wi\n11        v rv   aueeeaafu.1   wnlai   drive   Ifl\nh. 1 11 i iF, hall r-ontly. when the\nlienors for top gOMWfl went io Mr.\nTromhonc and Mrs. Su-ph* ns, \u2022 The latter, being a lodge nn-mher, presented\nher priie to the holder of thr second\nhigh score, Mrs. J. Stlrzaker. Conso-\nTatlnns were awnrded to Mr, and lira,\nO. 1-ane. Dance music was played by\nih.-   It* nwick  orchestra.\nMr.    and\nstreet,   ha-.\nMrs.    J.    Turner,    Bsker\nhad   as   their  guest   Mrs\nPhilip Trail \"f Trull was a visitor\nte   i\"wn   Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nI   T.    A.    Wheildon    of    South    Slocan\n-pent   Saturdav   in  th**   city\n1    \u2022    t\nJ. Str'vt, who tMCheS at South Slo*\n\u25a0iin.  spew   th***\" wei-k-rnd ln  to#n.'\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nHon. Mrs. R. A. Hi-ott-Lauder and\nher daughter, Esme, of QneSM Hay\nWare visitors  to  Neirum,  Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u25a0\nGuests at Badminton on Saturday\nwere Mr. and Mrs. H. Leggatt of\nLongbeach, Mrs, J. O. Hunyan. Mrs. I.\nG. Nelaon, Mrs. A. G. Larson of Spo-\nkiirif, Mrs. McDonald of Willow Point,\nJ. Carter, Tim Bird of Trail and Miss\nPorothy   Alr\u00aby   of  Ctdar   Point.\n\u2022 e    *\nA   pleasant   even!\nday,  at  the  heme  t_  -\nShardelow, Falrvlew, when the Girl\nGuide association entertained No. 1\ncompany. Church of the Redeemer Girl\nGuides  at   a  surprise  party.     The  eve-\nnd\n\u25a0\u00ab*.t\nm   was   apent.   Frl*\nof Mr.  and  Mrs.  J\nsurprise  party.     The\nspent   In   games,   muaic\ncontests, after which the guests aat\ndown t.i a well 'spread table, with a\nhuge cake bearing girl guidr anbleflU,\nnnd filled with various charms, as a\nrented Those nreeeni w*fe the captain, Miss N. Thompson, Mrs. Shanl'*-\n|nw, Mj-. Harry Bishop, Mrs. E. V.\nJarvis, Mrs. E, Ogd-n, Mrs. G. Mas-\nsi y, Mrs MelnecK.il-.. Mrs. A. Dolphin.\nMiss   Mary   Shardelow,   Miss   Dorothy\nVyne-, Miss Beatrice Freneh, Miss\nEdith Ogden. Misa Nancy Jarvis, Miss\nWro Morris. Miss Kathleen Keeler,\nMfss Lillian Ionian, Miss Juliana 11--1-\nnecSuk, Miss Olive Gdibim, Miss Sybil\nKeslar, the Misses Murl< I and Beatrice\nWeath-rhead, Miss Kathleen Ma*s\u00bby.\nMlss Grace Young, Mlas Connie O'Sul-\nIh sn, Miss Maud Dal), Misa Oaf tis\nMilne, Miss Peggie Pa vis and Misa\nRuby  Young.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nMlas Theresa Fltipatrlck, Silica\natreet, entertained at two teas recently, when she waa assisted hy Mra. M.\nJ. Pre-nby and Mrs. A. T. N-ton, wh3\nAnnable,    Mr\nKerr and   Mrs.\nW. l.   Marshall nf Hilvi-rton. who tleft  Dundaa'of Iflgen\nFriday    night    for   a    short   visit    to '\nOrand   Forks.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr and Mrs. W. J. Farmer or ras-\nUegar came to town Friday to attend\n\"Tb.' H-rauty Shop\" in tha opera houas\n.hat   night.\n\u2022 \u2022     \u2022\n^rs.    W.   Wadds   nnd   her   daughter,\nMiss   Margaret   Wadds.   who   U\nThrums,   spnt   latnrday   shopping   in\nrtrude   Erickson,    R.N.,   Vlc-\nn,   left   on    the   noon   train,\nSatarda y, for Trail.\nfees\nMrs. i:. Rarrop and hcr dauhter. of\nHarrop,  wets  visitors  In   >'\u25a0 i?. n,  oat*\nurduy.\n\u2022 t    \u2022\nJudge J. A. Forin leaves this morning to hold county court at Revelstoke.\nlie   will  be back   Friday  night.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00bb\nMr. and Mrs, A. L. Walgrln have\nreturned from their honeymoon, visiting the coast cities and have taken up\nresidence jn the McMorris home, corner   of   Stanley   and   Latimer  street.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. Oeorge F. Motion entertained\ninformally at the tea hour Saturday\nafternoon. The living rooms were prettily d..orated wilh a beautiful collection of Brand's giant hyacinths In\nbloom, culturud by Mrs. Motion. Th*-\ntea tablet \"ver which Mrs. William\nDouche presided, was centered with\nEmperor daffodils and tall pink tapers\nAssisting the hostess in serving were\nMr\u00ab. w. R. Steed, Mr*-, iv Mofirefor,\nMra, .\\rhur Lak.-s and Mrs. W. A. Curran. Mr;-. Oeorfs A. Hunter cut ih\u00ab\nleea.    The  guesti   lacloded  Mr-.   1.   It\nJ-..4.!., Mr-. \\ CURimlflfl Of San lYan-\nA T. Noxon, Mrs, DoojHfli\nCummins. Mrs w, II. Smythe, Mrs.\nW. o. Row lira. Q B Matthew, Mrs.\nQeorffs  a.   Hunter,  Mrs.  George Jnhn-\nStone, Mrs. Arthur Lakes, Mrs. J. A.\nFurin, Mrs. W C. .Mawhlnniy. Mrs. J.\nT. Andrews, Mrs, J. Fred Humn. Mrs.\nW. H. Str.d. Mrs. J. A. Gllker. -Mrs. II.\nMcArthur,    Mrs.    P.    H.    Sheffield,   Mrs.\nW. A. Curran, Mrs. o. H. Taylor Mrs.\nJ. E. Anna blf, Mrs, James Urodle,\nMrs. William Douche, Mrs. Harding.\nMr M T K. \u25a0 ll v. Mrs J, H, Wallace,\nMrs. William Waldie, Mrs, Oilh.ri\nHariln. Mr- I: MeQrajor, -Mrs. C. \u00bb,\nGarland,   -Mrs.   A.    P.    Emory,   Miss   N.\nOnt ,   Mis-   Lo\nS      KinK.     Mi-,    P\nA.  Thurmnn.\nCastlegar Institute\nDonates Chairs for\nUse of Gatherings\nCASTLEGAR, B.C. Feb. 1*. \u2014 At\nih. r. Kiilar meeting of the .Castlegar\nWom.n's institute at the home of Mrs.\n^Maxwell, Mrs, MncKlnnon gave a\npaper oa the meaning of Bt. Valaatlae\ndny, and Mra H Paad a farj Intoraat-\nIng one on the life of .Madam Schu-\ntnann-Helnk.\nIt waa decided to give a cabaret\ndance   on  St.   Patrick's   day.\nTh.. women's Inst itati- will donate\ntwo doipn chairs for the use of con-\noirts,  clubs,   tto.\nTea was served after the business\nsession, by the h.istess\u00bb*s, Mrs, Max-\nwell nnd Miss Flarent Maxw. ll. und\na social hour enjoyed. Tha raffle was\nwon hy   Mrs,   Mai'iauley.\nThere were 14 members present,\nMrs.  Rosa,   the president.  In   (he   chair\nCommunity Plate\nTABLE  SERVICE  FLATWARE\nBird of P.ndia. and tht Adam\ndesigns.\nA. T. NOXON\nYour Jtwtlsr\n\"Lat tht Clark Kitoh.nt H.lp You\"\nFOUND DEM IN\nCHAIR AT HOME\nTORONTO, Feh. 20.\u2014Mrs. Florence Pritchard, aged 27, Tsns found\ndead sitting In a chair fn her home\nhere tonight by police. Although\nthe cause of death Is unknown, the\npolice found out she had been using'\npoison as a disinfectant. Tho officers were summoned by a neighbor\nwho heard screams emanating from\nthe women's homo. An autopsy Is\nhelng conducted.\nWash\nR\/NON\nthis\nsafe way\\\n\"D A YON is more sensitive\nto laundering than any\nother fabric\u2014never wring\nit, never twist it, never nib\nit with cake soap. Rayon\nis most fragile when wet\nAs you might expect,\nRayon should be washed\nonly in mild, pure Lux suds\n\u2014dipping it gently up and\ndown as you do silks.\nGoing Out\nof a few llnss of amall cigan which\nwa are Bailing be.low coat.    Packets\nOp* BUSH'S\nUrer Brut hen LisjwJ\n1 -Jiaato\n .*. V*:\n\u25a0J*W fttft J9n -\n=\nTOE NELSON TOTLY NEWS. MONDAY MINING, FEBRUARY .i, 1927\ntt .\n.A  NOVEL OF THE\nNIQHT   CLUBS  OF\nBROKDWAY\n *__t*\nSUMMER BACHELORS\nBy\nWARNER FABIAN\ndi-\n\u2022iK*r>\n.-4ioV *'\ntli\n\"How did you find this place?\" asked Derry of\nTony Landor.\n\"It's  bfeen   the  gayest  afternoon,\"\nhappily, after the ball game.\nsaid   Derry, She wanted to ask when she would see mm \u00ab_.....,\nbut she didn't.\n\u2014\nWHAT HAS HAPPENED lomers out to luncheon, purely as a\n:\u00bb*\u25a0..'     *\u25a0'-\u2022\u25a0    SO FAH matter of business, of course.\"\nIVrry   Thomas,   an   attractive   husl- ....-,            ...\nnesa    girl,    while   shopping,,   permits Y*B'.  l know those business lnvl-\nTony l>an*r. a jouiuj ity.* .whom \u00bbhe tal lona.     They   always   get   Into   the\nhas\/not ajiet, rto pasr for a dreas fabric Kllt              .   _       _..       .\nshtw cannot   afford.       He   leaves   her bm-   somehow.     Therefore   suppose\njjjyjhout' |earnl\u00bb<. n*r   name.   Mr.   Os- you lunch' With me.\"\n\"lafaWoVr,   aleale*   ft!   antiques,    her   em-\npaoyer,  goes  abroad,  leaving  hie  busl- \"That   was   the   Intention   all   Iho\n. St**,   t*   *\"*   charge   on   her   promise lm,_ \u2022, .,_,,_ nerrv  with r-ilm frank\nMl,  marry  for three .years,   llev.rly '    ''*l\"> \"Try, wim cum lianx-\nl4FIreenway, 'an'athletic  young   married ness, '-though It took a good deal of\n'\u25a0\u25a0JESti^JL^JT^Xr.   cKll\"\"****'**  P\u00ab   \u00bb   *\u00bb*\"\u2022   \u00bb\u00ab  *\u25a0\u25a0   VOU\nis  Kue-eti  ot  a   mythical   Mr.   Smith. | a. lowed  to dispense meals to casual\n\u2022 Pft-hton' Pnilth,   a   New   York   alder- busln\nman, turns up and addresses  Perry as\nUp* (-*\u2014\u2014*,_,-_\u2022      until       ,h....       .,.\u2022.,!,. . a.        ll...\nness   women?\n\u25a0yMf*. Greenway until they explain the\nsniiatlon   qn   the   way   back   to   town.\n'\u25a0*mith takes them to the Recherche.\na fashionable night club. Derry sees\nLandor   thero   but   he   makes   no   sign\n..ot. ever having  met  her.  Dick Otley.  a\n. .wealthy dilettante, begins to pay attention to her. She also meets Mortln\nCole, a playwright, and Willowdean\nFrench, the leading lady of most of\nJili* plays. She turns out to be a girl-\nTjood friend of Derry. The latter ban\nGreen way   lunching   with   a   girl,\n\"Allowed?\" He was frankly puzzled.\n\"Then I suppose Mrs. Landor isn't\nso  old-fashioned as to object.\"\nHis face crinkled, lightened, cleared. \"Oh, well, you see, she isn't Jn\ntown.\"\n\"The mouse's carnival! Cat, your-\nHp  calls  Derfy   up_ an3  begs   her\" to | s-Mf. \u00a9erry!\" chuckled the girl. \"What\nwould   she   say   If   .she   knew   about\nJgfaH iliti    rt plain.    He   brings   his   shy\nIJeniRln,   lProf    Waltpr   Blakely,   an\nrt   in   psychoanalysis.   Blakely   takes j the   dress?\nt-aa Fn4ir*.lo  her theater and Oreen-\n_(ra>*, left jjone with Derry. kisses her J     Tnen   Derry   got  her   Jolt\n((And swetflhs  he  Is   going   to   marrv   her   does \"\nijf \u25a0 he has to wait forever. Willow-\nyean asks Blakely if he can hypnotize\nOft and betrays a growing Intereat In\nllm. She carries him off to the Re-\n\u2022fherche   and   dance  swtth   him.   Dvrry\n\"You   told   her?\"\n\"Certainly.\"\n\"I  don't believe\u2014\n\"She\nWhat  did ahe\ngrnws to like   Preston   Hmlth,   but  doea!Rflv'\u00bb\"\ntruat     Otley.'   With    Willowdean. I   ayi\nfhe  Rita   behind   Lantlor   on  a   bua  audi      \"She   laughed.\"\n\u201e35T.*rl*S\u00bb.   kl'sserhT and \"eX's |     \"W\u00bb\u00bb th<\" ***<\u00bb*** **<f<* \u2122*> *\">\u00bb when\ntthe   bus,   The   two   girts   go   to   the   I  saw you at the  Recherche?\nTtechVi-rhe.   Martin   fMe   becomes   JetU-1      \u00ab\u00abnu     Vou     see    ma    it     th\u00bb    Re-\npus    and    Derry    seeing    WUlowdeaa's m    you    \"' \u00b0    nu    ut    l\"p    Re\n\u25a0Towing   attachment   for   Blakely.   who   rhcrche?'   He gave the  Impression  of\nttlr^r.m^t VZn^JtZ- JZ1 :\"',rlVh>*   \u00bbnsc,cntlouSly   to   \u2122n\u201e\u201e\u201en\ngutter of business. memory to his aid. rig again! Double\n\u201e-J>*OW GO ON   WITH THE STORY       p\\K.\nchai^Txhi. .M\"A.f **\u2022 \u2022*_**\u2022 r\"a,'!on !g\n;(.-.-\u2022 . \u201e, _- - - dldn t ask  me to danoe  with you?\nJ- Do you mind telling me how you      \u201e_. _    ,. _.       .        A    , ,-_,\n.\u25a0     .   * ,      ,_.,__      . -  \u201e      . \" would  have been ti violation of\nfWtind thia plan*   Mr. uuidor, '* ueked '\u25a0 tU    v        ...\nthe  bargain.   I'm  an   honorable  gent,\ntrry. trying to be quite impersonal.   a-r|ct]y\niW|f Hks to trace our channels of busl- \u25a0\nn -.\"Through WaKer Blakely, - He Is\njA;mine of information about New\n\u25a0JTo-rk.  At  my  request he gave  mo  a\n* Ukt of concerns* which might lundie\ng-flsph matte ix, nnd, ;i>' he snd that\n'hjjjtnew some one at pstrander'a,  I\n\u2022 t<**Lm\u00ab   here   first.\"\nI   |-\"Do   you   n-.---.in 'to   *\u00bb>'   thnt   j*oH\ni didn't re*lly know tlut it was me?\"\n' ''\"There are mo many Thomases In\n! wiw Tork.\" he pointed out.\ni| *i>iTy stamped, which was unbusl-\nj.n(isallke. and elicited a look of grave\nIjsijrprise from the visitor. \"Oh. do be\n|ih^man ajid answer my question.\"\nI jj\"How human am 1 permitted to\n*ibi?\" Anyway, he was smiling-now,\nSf'St^e   liked   his  smile.   She   llkt-.l   it   a\n1)4\n|     \"As human as you like.\"\nB   \/'As human ns on the bus top?\"\nfi !Now  that  he  got started  he   waa\nB-c-sruinly folng fast enough; a bit too\nrfspt,  perhaps.  Vtry well;   she   would\n\u25a0jit** him a little Jolt. \"If that's your\n5w*iy of claiming payment.\"\nI jJ'Tayment?\" ho repeated. \"Aro\najyilu in my deitT'\n|| I\/'Dottt yo\u00bb regard me as being?\"\njHer tone s.ung a clear flush into\nfca\u00ab weathered brown of his skin.\nAr* you actually -concerned about\njtitln Innocent escapade of the store?\"\n.t-'t asked.\nI' ..\"II I were, what then?\"\n\\- fri'tf send  you a statement  of the\njjbWount,   a-l   once.\"       \u25a0\n*^ '\u25a0\u2022J won't pay i't,,\" she declared, \"un-\n\u2022'\u25a0*'*. I   fet   good   and   ready.   What   are\nu doing next?\"\n,, \u25a0 '-putting It in the hands of a col-\niBf^Uon agency is lhe usual procedure\n4*w\u00ab*tb bad debts.\" He looked quite re-\n5ll4*Vlng1y btiyiah when he grinned that\n'\u2022way: Oerry took Instant snd daring\n1 resolution.\nI' i.\"i  didn't mean  aljout tho  d.M    I\nnre you\" doing  now?\"\n\u25a0 back downtown! Why?\"\n\u2022j'Sometlmes   an*   lavlto   good   cu**-\n\u25a0        i   lunn i   \"\u25a0**\"'\n!mr*ni  what  nn\n!''0h! Going bi\nFor Cystitis\nj|   Tt** ov imw mmogi-M\n\u25a0\u2022ok oa BktB Dlososes. new\npitas tine oa Chronic Dl a eases by\nffarbol Reinedfvn Pamphlet on\nlLoas of Manhood and Diseases of\nmen. Booklet oh rrmale Ills, snd\nlidylc* fre* by m-Ml; *o year*'\nipertenee Without criticizing or\nflli-t-paraglng Vtot 1'*-al do-tors,\nwrite oa before losing hop*.\n|rr*atm*Bt by vail oar specialty.\n\u25a0 nauii msmmoj. sxsrav-\n\u25a0AST tTfi.\nIj   UM dotU* TaMoavsr. BO.\nTbo OM\u00abst Herbal Institution\nin tho matter, too,\" she reminded\nhim. \"SuppoS-i' I didn't want you to\ncome back. Wouldn't it be much\nsaner for .both of us if I Just settled\nup that old account and thanked\nyou for a day\u2014such a.corker of n\nday, Tony Landor!\u2014and quit all\never. ?\"\n\"No.     Not   yet.\"\nShe abandoned her bantering tone:\n\"If ever I do pay that debt, it will\nmean   something.\"\n\"What?\"\n\"That'll  be  for you to find   out.\"\n\"Won't  you   give   me  a   hint?\"\nShe shook her head. \"1 don'-! know\nmyself. Rut I've a deep-dyed hunch\nlt will be something special. If it\never comes off, which It probably\nwon't.\"\nHe held out his hand, \"<ii nil-byr,\"\nhe   said   abruptly.\nIt was on Horry's lips to ask when\nshe would see him again, but she\nchoked It.\n(To Be Continued.)\n\"Is this luncheon thinu in accordance   with   the   bargain?\"\n\"Vou   st:ii*ted   it.\"\n\"I have to start everything.\" com-\n.plained Derry ruefully. ' \"Otherwise\nI lt would  never get n-atart.\"\n\"I   know I'm  slow,\"   h-f-   admitted\n!as  they  left  the office,  \"^jick   of  experience.    I've never had mii*ch time\nfor\u2014for   this   sort   of   thing.   ThlH\nt much I will admit, now that business\nj Is   over.   There   was  a   personal   .\u25a0]\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nI raent in  my coming to you, though\n| it   was   mostly   chance.     If   I   come\nagain,   It   will   bo   my   choice.   No\nchance   in  it.\"\nThe luncheon was skillfully or-\nden-ii, but' not leisurely enough for\nDerry. After it was over\u2014what V\nhack to the grind for the honest\nworking girl,\" she sighed rather elaborately.\n\"The Yankees are playing the Rod\n4S0X this afternoon.\"\n\"Ctash! goes the good old resolution. You've ruined my career for\nthe  day.\"\nHe looked doubtful. \"But you may\nnot be willing to go as I do, as a\nsimple low.down rooter in the bleachers.\"\n\"Oh, yes!\" She recalled smiling.\n\"It's been tho very gayest afternoon I've had since I crashed\nthniu-jh my Bhell,\" laid she as they\nJoatled thir way through tho high-\nhumored mass on the return trip.\nHe did not suggest their repeating\nIt. On the way back he was rather\nsilent. The boyish gayety neemed, to\nhavp died out of him. Ever adaptable, Derry* did not try to make talk.\nAt the office, whither she elected to\nreturn before going home, he said\nabruptly:\n\"I've always thought thia fate thin*;\na   stuffed   shirt.\"\n-\"W*H?\" she Inquired. \"Has noun-\none'been  removing  the stuffing?\"\nIt waa a\\n indirect, if not inadequate answer for him to aa>: \"I\ntold myself that I wouldn't'lift a finger   tn   \u00bbee   you   again.\"\n\"Well, didn't you want to flee me\nagain\u2014ever?\"\n\"t wanted to too much. The purely artistic Interest was a pretty idea,\nbut it didn't qnl;e prove up. 80 I\nstopped   going   to   the   Recherche.\"\n'Ho I noticed.\" Derry bit her Up.\nThat had slipped. But ho took no\nheed of it.\n\"THen  this business of  Mowbray's\nsignature brings me bang up against\n1      What  io  you call that?\"\n\"Luck, flood luck, if you want mo\nto   be   flattering.\"\n\"t don't. We've agreed to call lt\nchance,   thus   far.     And   now   that\nwe've got to the point of choice \"\n\"Whose cholct?    I've got a choice\nBEEII1ULD HELP\nGeneral* Andrews Tells Senate\nWould Lessen Liquor\nConsumption\nWAN]ll.\\<.i\"N, JVC, .I'eb. 20. \u2014\nBleer. not Intoxicating ln fact to the\naverage person, would \"be tt-t Jpful\" in\nthe on force ment of the prqhlbltlon\nlaw, Crt*n. Uncoln C. Andrews, as-\nslar.int MPs'>U>ry Oi the treasury in\ncharge of prohibition, told the means\nsubcommittee in response to a quos-\ntton by Senator James A. Rood of\nfttlM-fturi\nt'nder cross-examination by .Senator R-oe-d and Julian Codman. he\nmi 1 <-f tin- necessity ot reorganising\nthe dry unit when he took office, and\ntalked of the (-onsinnptlon of hard\nli'liii-r in Ani-'riiM teday, and corruption   among  prohibition  agents.\nHi* testimony Imfore th'- snbeom-\nmit'et* wIF considered very important\nby those Eovorttil moiliieation ot the\nlet, paiiiiulaiiy his state-\ni.i. nt rotating to the manufacture\n\u25a0i-mI s il\" of beer. The dries also\n'\\iewe4i wth alarm\" this statement\nand threatened to 'fiet him\" If he did\nnot retract lt. In spite ol this, the\nficiHi-il \"stood by his Kun-V when he\nwm i-.ili'.i l.ii'k to the witness MSM\nby th*1  prohihitlon..^ts.\n\\V. Gillett and McLeod Counter\nfor Victors; Ramsden\nfor High School\nrighting desperately all the way,\nthe high school hockey .sextet suffered a 2-1 defeat at tho hands ot\nthe Wolves at the rink here Saturday\nnight.\nW.   Oillett   scored   for   the   Wolves\n1 a solo invasion, and R, McLeod,\ngrabbing T. Arcure's pass, placed\ntho tiedding counter. C. Ramadcn\n.saved the students from a shutout.\nThe  teams  were:\nWotVM\u2014P.   C.mison,   go il;    II.   Oil -\ntt and A. Jeff.\u00ab, defence; \\V. Qlllott,\nIt Mcleod, J. Wallace, (1. Itich-inl-\n.pon, A. Carlson and T. Arcure, forwards.\nHigh school\u2014U KHto, goal; A.\nRiVRi'ose and Kldle Waterer. defence;\nCarl Ramsd-n, Cecil Ramsden, J.\n(tors will   and   L.   Mansfield,   for ward .s.\nT.ni -i-<lfs have appirod In a creek\nit Wimdbury, .N*..I\u201e fore-casting an\neuily  spring,  according to old-timers.\nProhibition agent in ChlMfD seized\nJco-bol, vi ut'd at JEiO\/O-O, in the Baltl-\nnoie  .S   Oh ij. Brejgltl   yards.\nAcute Bright'* Disease\nud Bladder Trouble\nMn. Logan No. liecom-\nr meiw\/i Dodd'a Kidney Pills\n\"I doctored for about three\nmonths what the doctor called\nacute BNght \u2022 disease,\" writes\nMrs. M. Logan, a well-known\nresident of Glen Sutton, P.Q \"I\nhad used all the doctor's medicine and my husband was loo\nbusy to drive *nine miles to set\nsome more. I told him 1 would\ntry Dodd'i Kidney Pills Within\na week they began to help tne.\nSo now I am never without Ihem.\nII I feel any symptoms 1 ukr a\nlew doses and am all right again.\ni have advised many to use\nDodd's Kidney Pills.l\nDodd's Kidney Pills are sold\nby all druggists.\nKIDNEY\nPILLS\n\"s-^giT'.-C\nT\nHOHTKSAX.EKS   A.BE   OUT\nMHIWIHBHI ) Veh, 20. **** The MM\nling upeed and uncanny checking of- i\nrallying   forward    line   waa   not   suf\nficient to counteract a bad defansive\nslump, and University of Montreal\nwere forced to suffer elimination from\nIho intercolleglste hockey race here,\nSaturday nik'ht, losing to Toronto, 4\nto 3.\nINGENIOUS LADDER USED\nBY COAST BURGLAR\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 20\u2014An Ingenious ladder was left behind by a\nburglar scared away from the\nMoore Photo company premises,\nafter he had ransacked two other\nstores in the vicinity and secured In\nloot about |200.\nThe ladder consisting of a single\npleco of wood equipped with steel\nhook:* and n wire cable similar to\nthat used by firemen In making\nrescues, was ueed in each case by\nthe burglar to enter stores through\ntho ceiling.\nPIES  OF WOUNDS\nTORONTO, Feb. 20.\u2014Joseph Plccadatl, aged 19. who shot and killed\nKailii--.il Lalingo, aged 17, here\nWednesday evening, when his attentions were ;'purned, died thlB\nmorning in a local hospital of two\nself-inflicted   wounds.\nPolice of Steubchvllle, Ohio, mad-e\n118 -OttVtU alid seised $3000\" worth of\ncocaine.\nHND TUXIS BQYS\nmiCES\nTiiuity United Hears liuys Talk\nIdeal;., Aims, Trailing\nof Groups\nFeaturing \"Father and Son\" Sunday, the Trail Rangero and' Tuxlo\nBoys took the service t \u00ab*t Trinity\nt'niu-,1   church   yesterday.\n.\\ t t Iio morning sorvlre Vernon\nIrwin, making an address, took the\nwords \"Trail Rauger\u2022-^,, and gave thA\nBnaning\" of each letter.' \"V 'meant\ntruth'; \"R,\" resourceful; \"A,\" atnbl-\n0OUa; \"I,\" Intelligent, and \"L.\" loyal,\nin tbo word \"Trail.\" In \"fUtngon**'\n\"R\" un.aiit fOVOTOtttj \"A,\" active;\n\"N,\" natural; \"O,\" generous; \"1.,\"\nWfWHtl   \"Rt\"   reliable*, an  \"S,\"   strong.\n{LtobbfT Vurrton, anotlnir Trail Ranger gavo un addre.ss Kcttlng out the\nalms and tdealrf of \"Canadian Standard Efficiency Training,\" and described its program. Oeorge Kirby\nannounced the hymns, and Jack ltu-\nchanan read the lesson.\nTuxis Boys Givo Reasons\nR. Renwick, who renre-senled the\nN-elson Tuxis boys at the last hoys**\nparliament at Victoria, reviewed th-o\nbusiness o( th\" parliament st tho\nevening service, and H. Vyse gave\na talk on the Tuxis Boys' program of\n(training, on tilling his address: \"Tho\nReason I Am a Tuxis Boy.\"\nIn celebration of \"Father and Sou1'\nweek,   a   \"Father  and   Bon'\/   banquet\nCanadian Legion Is\nHost to* Sixty at\nWhist Drive, Dance\nHnnls at a whist drlvo and dancr*\nSaturday night, tho Canadian I\u00bbeglon\nentertained   about   60   people.   It  was.'*'1'1 ** -*lven at inP <*\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab tomorrow^\nthe first of a series to be given by\nthe I.eglon. The winners of the\nwhist drive were: Ladies' first, Mrs.\nN, B. Bradley; ladles' second, Mrs.\nH. E. Thnln; men's first, J. W. Elliott; men's second, T. Folsy. H. E.\nThain  waa master of ceremonies.\n\u2022night.\nAl TO TRAFFIC GROWS\nMrs. Chalmers Says\nSolarium Wonderful;\nat Advisory Board\nMrs. R. \\V. Chalmers of Thrums Is\nattending, as tho representative ot the\nKooteniiy Worn fit's institutes, the sessions of the advisory board ln Victoria.\n\"The Solarium Is wonderful,\" writes\nMrs. Chnlmers, in ref* rence to the\nInstitution which nfter March 1 will\nbe giviug sun treatment to lKile\ncripple*, lar-ely as a result of the\nWOineri'l   Institutes'   efforts.\nAa  the  result   of a  fill downstairs,\nMrs.   WriTbvta   .Tacflbs,   of Manlt-iwi.\\\nWis.,   who   had   beob   de.if two   y;us,\nregained her heaping.\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 20.\u2014Tho re?\nmnrkablo growth of the auto troC-\nfic Is shown in request, Included In\ntho police estimates for the corning\nyear of $4000 to mark streetH with\ntraffic   Instructions.\n\u25a0T*#\nLi\neslion\nSPECIAL    LOW   RATE    ON\nWANT ADS\nA 17-Word Advertisement for a Week for $1.   Daily.\nNews Want Ads Cost Little But They Bring Results\nThey Will Sell\nUSED ARTICLES OF ALL KINDS\nUSED FURNITURE\nFARM MACHINERY\nLIVE STOCK\nREAL ESTATE\nHOUSES\nPOULTRY\nFARM PRODUCE\nCLOTHING\nLUMBER\nAUTOMOBILES\nLAUNCHES\nDOGS AND CATS\nPHONOGRAPHS\nPIANOS\nMISCELLANEOUS ARTICLES\nThey Will Find For You\nDOMESTIC HELP        t\nA SITUATION\nAN APARTMENT OR ROOM\nA DOG FOR THE CHILD\nA PLACE TO BOARD\nA TENANT FOR YOUR HOUSE\nA TIMBER LIMIT OR MINE\nA ROOMER\nA SECOND-HAND GUN\nA BUYER FOR YOUR BUSINESS\nA NEW CLERK\nSTEADY    CUSTOMERS    FOR\nFARM PRODUCE\nBUYERS FOR PROPERTY\nANYTHING YOU MAY WANT\nTO BUY\nTHAT LOST ARTICLE\nTry a 17-Word Advertisement for $1  in\nThe Daily News Want Ads\nYOU   WILL   FIND   THE   RESULTS   PROFITABLE\nJi\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 21, 1927\nrf age Serai\ne Out Capitals; May Get in\nthe Playoff if Leaders\nt .Lose Enough\n>MONTON, Peb. 20,-\u2014The faint\na of figuring lu. the Prulrle\ntry league playoff, held by Ed-\nton Eskimos, revived somewhat\nJ-aturduy night when tliey gained\n1 decision over the Regina Capita a snappy exhibition of the\ncr pastime. Tho cHunecs of tho\ns depended entirely on tho show-\nmade by Saskatoon, Hegina and\n\u00bb Jaw In their remaining games,\ne Eskimos took an early load\n\" were never headed. Morris\n)d the first goal In lesB than\nminutes, , and Harris added a\nttU when tho period was a little\ns- than half over. This was the\ntotal of the Eskimos' scoring*,\nIt was sufficient to win, for the\nthe< Capitals could do was to\na single -marker. Ttys fill to\nchy Morrison In the third period,\nthree   counters   were   unassisted.\nLineup\nImonton Position Regina\nGoal\nler     Morrison\nDefence\nrs        Daly\n'Is    Prowse\nForwards\nig.        Sund'Tluml\nri*     C.- Morrison\nJorrl.--.on     Ro-ie\nennan .;  Acaster\n>\u2022''     Uettse'.lg\n\u00bbt          Nalsmltli\n          Mulligan\n..    Summary    ..\nr=l   period\u2014-1,   Edmonton,    Morris,\nI   2, Edmonton,  Harris,  a:;..,.\nCond   period\u2014No  score.\nilfd   period\u20143,   Regina,   C.   Moi*\n11:35.\nunit ies\u2014First period:   Pro who and\n\u00bbt,\" second period:   Morris.\niferee\u2014 I larry   HCott.   Calgary.\nDOTER AND RUGGER  1\nDRAWS, OLD LAND j\n, \u00bb\n>\u00ab\u00bblWi   Cup\nDINUUltCllI,     V.b.     2\u00ab.\u2014Results\nl**af\u00bbMfcW*iailL.l'l^ll'^J    W**1<1\n.lie   Scottish   Football   association\naeries Saturday:\n1st Tit*, 2; Ounfirn-llno, 0.\nundec,   2;   Celtic,   4.\nangers,   4;   Hamilton,   0.\nllklrk,   I;   Mid   Annandalc,   0.\nucklP,   0;   Bo'ness,   8.\nundec      United-Montrose,      post.\n;d.\nIloa,   0;   Arthurlle,   0,\nlyde,   0;   Purtlck  Thistle   1.\nAV1TY* KEEPS\nFAST BALLS\nFROM RISING\nMAROONS PLAY\nUPMAPLELEAFS\nBrilliant Game in Toronto Goes\nto Third Overtime\nPeriod\nTORONTO, Feb. 20.\u2014Montreal Ma\nroons, displaying* perfection In every\ndepartment, brusliid aside an obstacle\nto their quest for a playoff berth\nIn the National Hockey league when\nthey defeated Toronto Maple Leafs,\nformer St. Patricks sextet, 2 to 1,\nafter 12 minutes overtlmo here Saturday night.\nFor three regulation periods the\nteams battled on even terms. The\nfirst few minutes of overtime witnessed some sparkling hockey, but ns\nlbe going had been strenuous throughout, both learns showed signs of\nweakening when the second 10 mln-\nptea of overtime commenced. The\nforwards on both sides commenced\nlobbing the puck from tho blue line\nat the cages, and though It was a\nlong shot by Dune Munro that decided the issue in favor of the Ma-\nroom It was not aimed with the\napparent Indifference that the majority of tho shots wero at this stage.\nSummary\n\u2022 First  period\u20141,  Toronto,  Patterson,\n12:15.\n. Second    period\u20142,    Montreal,    Stewart, 10:15.\nThird   perlofl\u2014No  Bcore.\nOvertime\u20143, Montreal, Munro, 12:15.\nPenalties\u2014First period: Broadbent,\nSiebert, Brydges; second period: Corbeau, Siebert (majors); third period:\nCorbeau, Phillips.\n!\nBF\nENGLAND ELM\nEiiglitili Cup Ties Exclusively of\nSouthern Counties\nNow\nCARDIFF SENDS\nBOLTON TO REAR\nOnly Two First Division Teams,\nArsenal and Cardiff,\nStill Left\nrraft \u25a0larrcM*!*.\n\u00bb- LINfl MOM plTCMtr-5 To CM-CHER\nV6 KXPECTtSD COOH$ *\u00a3 OF ftAtl.\nIC-TRUE   COUI*S\u00ab   Oi*  \u2022ALW*\n\u25a0 y   AX.   DEKAILtE\narmer Fltobfr, Hew Tork OUcata)\ninung the Uczi'iis uf letters from\nI all over the country in answer\nuy query, \"Voett an overhand fa.sl\nreally nnf waa a very plaualble\nInteresting explanation, frum Jack\nng <if Washington, D.C.\nr. Irving says that the apparent\np uf the fast ball when lt reaches\ntiftl-r is really an uptlcal IIIusI-jii.\nilon ruining ball playertt i.s -JlvWl.-l,\niy pitchers, catchers and bluer--, being there Is really a \"hop\" on a\nJ fast ball, and uthei-H denying It.\nr. lrving'fl explanation follows:\nLMie lo the force of gravity, It Is\nuskIMi fur a ball to be llimwii on\nitralghl Hue; It fullown a curve\nling downward. The pitch-*-*-,\nher, und batter all uncotiHclously\n;e altuwunco for this curve, which,\nthe caae of a fast hall, Ih quite\n11. Winn the ball Ih thrown by an\n\u25a0hand pitcher It Im given a apin\nll.fr to that which causes the\n\u2022iik\" of a curve, except that fu the\ni of the fast ball the axia of the\nIs horizontal and the ball would\nUnplaced vertically. Wlun the hall\nihes the batter ft Js going slightly\naward, but due to the aplu the\naward angle fs decreased, so that\nvotilil reach the batter at a point\nhtly higher than he had expected,\nto hla allowance for a certain\n>, and therefore\/ while actually go-\ndown  would  appear  to  rise.\"\nFIR Tl HAWKS\nThree of Them in Third Period\nGive Good Margin\non Cougars\nWINDSOR, Ont. , Feb. 20.\u2014Hay.\nwingmun for the Chicago Blackhawks,\nwon a National Hockey league game\nlust night. His threo goals In tho\nthird period gave tho Hawks a 4-1\nvictory over the Detroit Cougar.-., and\nit waa liis 1.,-ij*-**- which enabled Fraser\nto score In the first period.\nKeata made the Cougar goal; T^app\nuf Chicago til given a mujur penalty\nfor   rough   tripping.\nSummary\nFirst period\u20141, Detroit, Keats, 4:00;\n2,  Chicago,  Fraser,   11:10.\nSecond   period\u2014No   score.\nThird period\u20143. Chicago, Hay, 2:10;\n4, Chicago, Huy, 7:40; 5, Chicago,\nHay,   11:20.\nrenames\u2014Hrhlen, .Arbour (3),\nSheppard, xFraser (3), Traub, Wilson   (2),  Trapp  (major).\nNew WoAd Record\nin Furlong Relay\n1'OMUNA, cal, I'eb. 20. \u2014 A now\nworld', record was set ui> here yesterday during the course ol the Lajs\nAitx.'lcs Athletic c-:ub I'uinona colloge\ntruck meet, \"\"when a lour-nian relay\nteam, IiicludhiK Churle.* l'addock,\nchampion sprinter, reeled ofl 220\nyards in 21 6-10 seconds. This time\neclipsed by two seconds a mark thut\nwas set  in  1911   in Australia.\ntoosnsM duv\nMOHTKZAIa,     T.9.    JO.    \u2014    Tha\n4)vK>-n'a  OalTaT.atx,  TGTOatO, MaltV\nhooter1 tMun aaid th* \u00aboj.l Yto-\ntorla colls** \u2022' XoatMal, battUa\nthread. BO ulnM ol fart koakay\nDam,    f\u00bbttir4\u00bbr,    *>    i\nNEEDED PUNCH;\nlUN-llfTES\nThey Are Outplayed but Succeed in Scoring Sole\ntfally\nLONDON, Feb. 20.\u2014The complete\nelimination of North of England\nteams In the fifth round of English, cup was tbe chief feature of\nthe results yesterday. From now\non the contest is exclusively the\nproperly of the southern counties,\na circumstance that has not hap\npened for many years. Three London\nteams continue ln the running, Arsenal, Chelsea and Mlllwall; Cardiff\nCity represent Wales, while there\nIs a strong prospect of the principality having additional representation ln Swansea Town, and South,\nampton and Reading give the south\ntheir great predominance. Wolverhampton Wanderers are the only\nmidland combination to find their\"\nway into the sixth round.\nThree Leaders TrLninMtl\nThe defeat of Bolton Wanderers,\ntho cup holders, on their own ground\nby Cardiff Ct{y, was a bitter pill\nfor Lancashire to '-swallow. The\nWanderers were the only team to be\nwhipped by a visiting team.\nThe leaders  of the   first  ami   sec-\nid    divisions   of   the   league    went\ndown    to   defeat,    NewcssUo    United\nat  Southampton  and  Mldtllceborough\nat Mlllwall.\nOut of the eight teams that survive, or will eventually survive when\nthe South Shi elds-Swansea Town\ncontest is disposed of, only two be-\nlong to the first division, Arsenal\nand   Cardiff   City.\nHuge attendances were attracted\nto all of the games, the one at\nStamford Bridge contributing nearly $20,000 to the revenue of Chelsea,\nderived from the 62,328 fans who\nwitnessed the encounter. A crowd in\nthe neighborhood of 50,000 saw Bolton succumb Jo Cardiff, and paid\n$18,000 to do so.\nEnglish   Cup\nLONDON, Feh, 20.\u2014-The fifth\nround of tho English Football association cup competition, played Saturday, resulted as follows:\nWolverhampton,   1;   Hull,   0.\nChelsea,   2;   Burnley,   1.\nArsenal,   2;   Liverpool,   0.\nBolton.   0;   Cardiff,   2.\nSouthampton, 2; Newcastle, 1.\nReading,   1;   Brentford,   0.\nMlllwall,    3;    MiUdlesbro,    2.\nSouth Shields. 2;  Swansoa, 2.\nOTTAWA, Feb. 20.\u2014The ability of\nthe* Ottawa Senators to take advantage of thc breaks of tho play*, which\nhas been largely Instrumental ln attaining for them the lengthy lead\nthey hold over other members of the\nNational Hockey league pack, was\ngiven further proof when the Pirates\nof Pittsburgh i Invaded the home Ice\nof the red, white and black troop\nher.* Saturday night. The locals were\noutshot by their opponents, but at a\ncrucial moment of the contest had\nsufficient punch to break up .the\ntaoOtttfcff machine lopg enough to\ntally a lone goal, and thereby capture\nvictory,  1  to 0.\nSummary\nFirst  period\u2014No score*\nSecond period\u20141, Ottawa, KUr-ea,\n4: to.\nThird period\u2014No score.\nPenalties\u2014H. ' Smith, Langlois,\nClancy, Boucher, Finnegan, H. Smith.\ns\nSINHRNEY\nCassios Has High Total of 596;\nMaber, High Single\nof 222\nFRESHTTH\nT\nFIFTY-MILE SWIM\nThe Semaphore singles bowling\ntournament lor tha Al Gelinas cup\nla drawing out the beat of Nelson\nbowlers, according to the lateat summary.\nNick Cassios haa made the highest three-game aggregate lo dato\nwith 596 pins. He has two other\nhigh totals of 552 and 550. H. Wat\naon has won each of the four games\nhe has played, three of them with\nscores of 668 and 631. It. H. Maber\nhaa won two of his games with\nscores of 566 and 501. He has also\nmade tbo highest single-game acore\nof the tourney, 222. F. Hill la another high scorer with 652, and J.\nBell Just topped the 500-mark with\n607.\nAlthough the first three rounds are\nnot yet completed, the fourth round\ndraw has been made tn order that\nthere may be no delay In completing\nthe tourney. It la as follows: Maber\nvs. McKinnon, Oraham \u00ab. Watson,\nBrogan rs. Allen, Hamson vs. Hill,\nTyler vs. Brake, Bush va. Hunt, Dill\nvs. Langlll, Goulding vs. Cassios,\nHinnitt vs. Hartwlg, Bell vs. Skellern, and Gray vs. Brotra.\nTbo  Standing\nThe standing ln the tournament to\ndate  Is:\nWon\nII. Watson   4\nN. Caaalos    4\nj.  Goulding   ....  >\nR. H. Maber 2\nTT   Bushj      2\nBell   t\nSullivan, Who Did Both Channels,  Out to Circum-\nnatatc Catalina\nl.nNO ItlOA-'ll, l'ul, Feti'-IO. \u2014\nHenry Sillllwm oi I^iwivl, Masa., the\nonly perron Mho hie swum both tht'\nEngliah and Sun 1','dro eh*binols, an-\nnounri'd li.'re u.>t nlKtit that he had\ntuH'n backed lv the rxent of )25,000\nby W. W. Compton ol Iaong Beach\nlor a race around Santa Catallna\nIsland, to take place between June\n15 und  July   15.\nMust Find $25,000\nAny swimmer in tire world\"* may\ncompete lor tbe ' niuney, but flrat\nmust put up an equal sum. The\nmoney, Sullivan Bald, will bo posted\nfor 3u days. Should lite contestants\nfull to complete. Ui I \"\u00bb0-mile swim\n..round the Island, the money will go\nto the tatator covering tho greater\ndistance. In the event of each swim\n:nIn.,' the same distance, tho man or\nwoman making the best lime will be\n.nviirdcd  the prise.        *\nRangers Increase'\nLead Over Brains\nNational Tennis\nMeet Is Awarded\nto Coast Again\nVANCOUVER, I'eb. 20.\u2014For the\nthird year in succession, llio Canadian national lawn tctuiis cliainplon-\nslilp annual tournament will be held\nat   the  Pacific  coast.\nThis announcement was nmde lr re\nfollowing recoipt of word tliat the\nevent will be p'ayed here during UM\n.six-day period commencing July 25,\nfrom E. J. Cardinal!, president of the\nVancouver laawn Tennis club, who attended tiie annual meeting In Toronto yesterday, of the Canadian\nLawn Tennis association.\nTin: tournament was held here In\n1925,  and  in  Victoria laat  year.\nWin the Province\nBadminton Titles;\nTry for Dominion\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 20. -AI Ihe con-\nclu-lon uf tlie British Columbia badminton championships tournament\nhere Saturduy afternoon, lt waa announced tliat Jack Underbill, newly\ncrowned singles title bolder, and Miss\nEileen George, holder of tile ladies-\nsingles title for eight yeurB, both of\nVancouver, will be sent to Montreal\nto represent this province in iho\nDominion aeries commencing there\nOO  March 4,\nMiss Oeorge. who has played previously in the national championship,\nretained hcr title by defeating Mrs.\nFawcua of Vancouver, 5-11, 11-7, 11-8.\nPORT ARTHUR, OM.. Feb. 20. \u2014\nTort Arthur, lenders of the Thunder\nBay Hockey league, scored a 5-1\nvictory over Kenora here Saturday\nnight.\nLONDON, Feb. 2.\u2014League games\nplayed ln England and Scotland Saturday resulted as follows:\nBKOCaHS HBMWK\nllr-l  Dirilalon\nAston  Villa,   2;   Manchester  U.,  0.\nEverton,   1;   Blackburn   Rovers,   0.\nLelceater City,   2;   Huddersfield,   4.\nWednesday, 4; Sunderland, 1.\nTottenham,  1:  Bury, 0.\nWest Hum i:.,  1; West  Hrom., I,\nDerby   County,   1;   Leeds   U.,   0.\nSecond Division\nBarnsley, 4; Clapton, 2.\nFulham, 0:  Grimsby,  S.Manchester City, 1; Notts Forest, 1.\nOldham  A.,   1:   Blackpool,   3.\nPreston, 4;  Darlington,  1. \u2022\nThlril mvMoia\u2014Soutl.cn. Section\nCharlton,   0;   Bristol  City,   1.\nCoventry C, 3; Plymouth Argyle, 3.\nCrystal Pal., C; Newport County. 2.\nExeter City, 8; Northampton, 2.\nGllllngham,  0;  Luton Town,   0.\nMerthyr,  1:  Brighton and Hove,.0.\nQueens P.  R.,  1;  BournemodTh,\" It\nSouthend   U.,   3;   Norwich   City,   3.\nWatford, 2; Aberdarc Ath\u201e 2.\nThird Division\u2014Norllict-n Section\nAccrlngton.   0:   Barrow,   1.\nBradford,   6;   Chesterfield,  0.\nDoncaster,   2:   Wrexham,   2.\nDurham,  1;  Crewe Athletic,  2.\nLincoln.   3;   Halifax,   1.\nRochdale, 2; Stockport, 0.\nRotherham,  5;  Ashlngton,  0.\nStoke City,  |1  Ntaw Brighton, I.\nTranmere Rovers, 2; Hartlepools, 0.\nWalsall.  4; Nelson, 1.\nWIgan Boro, 3; Souihport. 1.\nSCOTTISH LEAGl'K\nFirst  Division\nAldrlconlans,   5;   Queens   Park,   0.\nHearts,   1;  Kilmarnock,  1.\nMotherwell, 2;  Hibernians,   1.\nSt. Johnstone, 4; Morton. 0.\nSecond Dl.iston\nAyr U., 4; Nlthsdale, 0.\nDumbarton, 1: Arbroath, t).\nEast Stirling, 4;  Albion Rovers,  4.\nForfar Alb., 1; St. Bernards, 0.\nQueen of South, 3: Kings Park, 2.\nHaith Rovers,  0;  Clydebank,  0.\nStenhousemulr,  5;  Bathgate,  3.\nBELFAST CITV CUP\nLinfleld.  2; Ards.  1.\nCliftonvllle,   li   Olcnavon,   0.\nNewry, 2; Lame, I.\nPortadown, 1;  Celtic. 2.\nBarn,   2:   Distillery,   3.\nQueens Island, 4; Glentoran, 1.\nHugby  la-aagtu-\nBradford,   2;   Wakefield   Town,   6.\nBrougbton,   16:   Bromley,   6.\nDcwabury,   10:   Hunslet,   13.\nFeatherstone,  17;   Barrow,  6.\nNEJV TORK, Feb. 20.\u2014The Ran\ngers scored a 8 to 1 victory over the\nBoston Bruins in a National Hockey\nleague game, Increasing their lead\nover the Bruins in the American\nsection, to 4 1-2 gamea. Thompson,\nBoucher and Bill Cook scored for\nthe Rangers, and Frederickson for\nBoston.\nFifteen Dog Teams\nEntered in Contest\nThat Starts Today\ngri.HliC, Feb. 2\u00ab. \u2014 Fifteen sturdy\ndog team drivers, aach with a team of\nseven \\lotfs, are scheduled to start in\nllie Un,,-day IL'lMnlle Quebec international dog dertiy classlo here at\n8  a.m.  tomorrow.\nKmlle St. liuiKliinl. winner of the\nrecent Tlie I'as. Man . derby, and\nLeonard Heppulln. Alaskan muslier, are\nfavorites tiiuiglit. having replaced\nFrank Dupuis, last year's winner, In\nthe betting.\n1's.ldy Nolun, a 15-year-old freckle-\nfaced li isli Ciiialiau. 15 i'Q|ej-c,d, col),,\nrial, iit of victory, though he was unsuccessful   in   tbe   1926   derby.\nHlxly-flve thousand more automo\nbiles ai\u2014 licenced and In operation\nin New   y,,rk City than a year ago.\nNew   Mexico   aceks   to   change   the\nii une of the state to Coolidge.\nHalifax,   12;   Widnea,   6.\nHuddersfield,   1C;   Kelghlcy.   0.\nHull Kingston,  11;  Swlnton,  6.\nLeeds,   28;   Wigan,   2.\nLeigh,  0;   Rochdale  Hornets,   3,\nPontypridd, 18; Hull, 8.\nSt.   Helens,    13;    Battley,    8.\nWarrington,   13;   Salford,   10.\nWig. Hlgbfld.. 8: St. Hel. Rccs., 28.\nTork,   20;   Oldham,   18.\nRugby Union\nNavy,   S;   Air  Forces,  8.\nBluckhcath,  10;  Northampton,   I\nGuys,   IS;   Plymouth,  6.\nLondon  Scottish,  8;   Bristol,   3.\nItoHslyii Park, 23; Richmond, 11.\nSt. Barts, 6; Old Mercahnt Tay., 0.\nAberavon,   10;    Gloucester,    3.\nBridge water,   3;   Abertlllery,   0.\nBath,   18;   Lclcesttg,   8.\nBedford,  12;  Hid  Allcynlans,  3.\nClifton,   9;   Moseley,   26.\nCoventry,   22;   Kings  Col.   Hot.,   8,\nLlanelly,   20;   Swansea,   0.\nNewport,   5;  Cardiff,  9.\nNeath. 32;  Bridgend, 0.\nOxford   Univ.,   20;   Harlequins,   31\nPontypool,   6;   Croaaktys,   8.\nChatham Sere.  8:  Edgware,  28,\nGlaagow  V..   10;  Edinburgh In.,  8.\nGlasgow Acads., 6;  Watsonlans,  8\nWest of Scotland, 16; Edln. U., 37.1\nLost\n0\nPlayed\n4\nJ. A. Skellern ..\nO. Dill  \t\nJ. Allen \t\nE. C. Hunt\t\nJ. BtaOgan  \t\nF. Hill   \t\nJ. B. Gray ....\nF. Oraham     0\nLanglll     0\nHamson     0\nHartwlg .... 0\nT. Brake .... 0\nTyler   ..*..... 0\nBrown    0\nA. Hinnitt ... 0\nMcKinnon ... 0\nAlloa  and  Arthurlle  Play  to\nScoreless Draw; First\nStringers Win\nGLASGOW, Feb. 2\u00bb. \u2014 With the exception of the game at Alloa, where\nthe home team was held to a scoreless\ndraw by Arthurlle, ail games ln the\nthird round of the Scottish cup played\nyesterday had a decisive outcome. The\ncontest scheduled for Tannadlce Park\nbetween the borne team, Dundee United, and Montrose, was unplayed due to\nthe fixture clashing with Dundee aad\nCeltic encounter at Dens  Park.\nCeltic, Glasgow Rangers, Falkirk and\nPartlck Thistle were first string club\nsurvivors, while East Fife and Bowness also went up one more step into\nthe fourth round. In five of the\ngames the losers were whitewashed,\nDundee being the only defeated team\nto register a score.\nTNE AMER\nNew Yorkers Blanked, Losing\nThird   Stre^M;* in      j'\nCrttic\/d Week\ni\nHill of Kelowna\nBadminton\nChief\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 20.\u2014R. H. Hill\nof Kelowna was reelected president\no( the British Columbia Badminton\nassociation at tho annual meeting,\nwith H. R. Partington as vice-president. These, with E. H. Polehamp-\nton, E. U Molliett, (Parksville), the\npresident of tho University Badminton club, and W. H. Dennieton oT\nVictoria, will constitute the executive.\nIt was decided that in future open\ntournaments a levy ot 10 cents per\nentry would be made for the British.\nColumbia association -treasury, It\nwas further decreed that alt players\nin the provincial event mu*t be\nmembers of clubs affiliated with the\ngoverning   body.\nMONTREAL, Feb. JO.\u2014Th* Caaa-\ndlena romped through % sUggertog\nNew Tork American defensive syrtefh\nbefore a wildly cheering crowd loif\n11,000 pro hockey -faiis h^re BaturdW\nnight, -and blanked them I'lo i. It\nwould have been a mora decisive;\nscore had not Forbes dleplayed 00*1-\nrageous goal-tending in the New York\nnet In the second period, when h*k\nteammate* were almost helpless to\nstop the attacks. Forbea alone stood\nup under the raking fire and allowed\nbut one tally.\nSeldom baa such speedy and determined attacking been seen In pro\nhockey as that launched by the lociil\nteam In -the Mcond session. It w^s\nthe third straight loss for the Americans in a week of Important tussled,\nand considerably lowered their stock\nas possible contenders In the play\ndowns. iJ\nSummary ji\nFirst period\u20141, Canadiens, Lepine,\n12:47. 1\n-Second period\u20142, Canadiens, Gange,\n5:06. ,-\nThird period\u20143, Canadiens, Jollat,'\n14:32.\nMISS HELEN PAGET\nWINS BERMUDA GOLF\nHAMILTON, Bermuda, Feb. 20. \u2014-\nMiss Helen Paget of Ottawa yesterday\nwon the finals for the ladles' golf\nchampionship of Bermuda. She defeated Miss Aileen Pattlson of Bermuda, the holder of the title for the\npast  three years.\nWALTER HAGEN WINS\nFROM GENE SARAZEN\nMIAMI, Fla.. Feb. 20. \u2014 Wallct\nHagen, national professional golf!\nchampion, Von 3 up In the II hoick\nof the 72-hole match with Oene BatV-\nten in the first half of their mAtcn,\nplayed  here today. \u25a0*' ^\nThe second 38 holes will be played\nhere next Sunday over Hagen's koine\ncourse at Pasadena. * ,1\nTwins have arrived la a Valln\nriver, I ChlcoutImi, family for the\nfourth   time   In  five  yeara\nPresident Diaz, head of the Nl- Soviet Russia still re\/uses to *t-\ncaraguun Conservatives, is willing to tend League of Nation meetlnga\nretire   to   please   the   United   States,     when    held   on   Swiss, soil.\n' \u25a0   ' mSKS\u2014tOOO\nST. PAU U Minn., Feb. 20.\u2014St.\nPaul defeutcd Winnipeg, 3 to 2, here\n.last night to keep p.ace with the\nMaroons in the American league race,\nclosing the series where they started,\ntwo  points  behind  the  Canadiens.\nThe(^sotia^tedMiniDg&Si^\nfompany of Canada, Utwki\nOfnoe   gfTtettrnfl   seW    Rs*rttSa^(   DaotanSHSB\nTRAIL.   BRITI\u00abH  COLUMBIA\noDCitC-Tt UM  KCfl-BCfall\nPnirhasert of Gold, Sliver, Copper, Lead and !\nProducer* of GoM, Silver, Copper, Pi* \"\nTADANAC TRAIL\nNowadays\nyou press a button\nOR PERHAPS a switch, or some little gadjet, and\na lot of things happen around a home that lighten\nlabor and banish trouble.\nA whirling fan brings a cooling breeze, and a little\ncopper, dishlike affair throws out a sizzling blast that\nwarms the room in no time.\nAnother button boils coffee, toasts bread and cooks\nwaffles.  Another does a better job than a broom.  Another makes a happy laundress out of a dismal washwoman.   Another one cools the ice-box.   Another\u2014but\n,    why go on?\nLabor and time saving devices have come and\nare today within the reach of the humblest home.\nAnd one of the chief reasons why they have come\nand why they are within the reach of the humblest\nhome is the power of advertising.\nAdvertising has carried the news of these better\nways of doing things to every home. It has created\na desire to possess them, and countless thousands have\npurchased them, and live better because of them.\nReading advertising not only tells you about new,\nhelpful mechanical devices for the home, but it is an\nunfailing guide to reliable products.\nRead advertising regularly. It points the way to\nbetter liv'ng.\n\u2014J\n BPPate HgH'\"\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,    MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 21, 1927\nCANADIAN FACTORIES NOT FOR AMERICANS\nHied Article!\nRealEitatt\nRoomi\nBoard\nToRenl\nBoats and\nAntomobiMt\nClassified\nAdvertising\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Minee\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant  and  Classified  AATarttsiag \u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per insertion, if paid In advance, Oo per word\nper week, or 22-v4c per word per month.\nTransient ads accepted only on a cash-\nin-advance bast*-**. Each initial, figure,\ndollar sign, etc., counts as one word.\nMinimum 25c, If charged BOc.\nMarriages, Deaths asd la Msmorinm\nCards\u2014Three cents per word; 50o minimum.\n-Local meadlng NoUcea \u2014 Three cents\nper word each Insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals, 4c per word. Blackface capitals 6o a word. Twenty-five\nper cent discount if run dally without\nchange of copy for one month or more.\nWhere advertisement Is set out ln short\nlines the charge is 15c a line for Roman\ntype, 20c for blackface and 25o for\nblackface capitals. Minimum 350, lf\ncharged 50c.\nBirth iTottoes\u2014Free. \t\nControl of these two  Mk  MUMJ WsttIs  plants in Toronto and  ISr.ini.fo H   Is  to remain   In   Can.iil;.   as  a   ree lit  of  the  courageous   and   patriotic\nefforts of Thomas Bta&aha* and J. H. Gundy and Sthsri tfl raatM i\u00aborti th \u25a0<\u25a0   Mm  b*tHi   tnaAa   by   United  Stain   interests  to  Kain  control.\nNELSONITE HEARS KETTLE VALLEY\nE\nWilliam   Brown   Tunes   In   on\n5-CL Early Sunday Morning;\nChurch,  Band,  Sing-en\nWilliam Urown Of Kaii'v ,-\u25a0-,-.. t Ir.-t\nNelsonlte to hear an Australian broad-\ncastlng station, reported last Right to*\nception a second time of statloa ICl*\nAdelaide. Australia, Some tiinr* as<**\nMr. Brown lu-aid 2 HI., Sydney, snd\nmore recently <CL, Adelaide, for the\nfirst tlm*\nMr. Brown tuneil In Ot Adelaide ut\n2:15 yesterday morning. At |;H h'\nheard a mftuHt\u00abr in a Mi-moo compar-\nIng the .strength of th.e Lord In nuiii\nto the Ktrenptli of a trerltt'a < tiiimpinii\nboxer.\nThen he hen I'd n liy inn. tin* nunftwf\nof which Wiis t;i:,, and whieh was entitled \"To Tliy Temple I Refer.\" Blaf<\niug of psalms by the congregation\noft-fed that part of the Adelaide pin-\ngram.\nBand   Frogram\nA   musical   prog fata   0$   t   military\nhand followed.    Three  Blind  KI \u25a0\n(\u2022election   which   d< tight, i)   Kootenaiana\nwnen    the    Coldstream    Guards    band\nplayed  here' total  summer,  wot  \\-\\ foi\nfollowed by \"it  twos*.  Home.\" Tl:\nband   then   played   a   hymn,   \"Son   of\nUf Soul.\"\n\"Wh.'ii All My Dreams Come True.\"\nsung by 'a lady soprano, wan next,\nand thin tin- bund played .*\u25a0 waits, \"I\nLove You. Al] Ko Blue.\" A .-\"iin by\na   barltun.,   followed   by   \u25a0   band   selec-\ntlora,    began     tu     fade,     and\nAdi lan!-     pessn-d    in'\"    lhe\nwhich  it  came.\n: This  reception\nMr.   Brown   said,\nstepped  \\i\\<  considerably.\nat\n11 \"in\nwas   imi    |\nami    tin-    poft - I\n!.\n! Six Buildings and\nThree Lake Steamers\nBurned. Racquette Lake\ni\n|    RACQUKTTE LAKE, N.V.,  Keb. *),\nj    -l-'ire.   whii-li   ilesii-nyeil   Mix   billldiim's.\nIttiCahkHng   tin-   Rae-quatta   boms   ami\n11 hr-1   lake  ifteameroi   pftaosd domagi\n[hon today   ..J   :,-   i,.;,st $4lJii,0W.\n7,'.   pOHOni l<V\u00ab   homclesH   ns   the   result of the fire.\nStarting ut a fa-noral store about\n10:45, and fanned by a high ea-st\nwind, the l>la;so toon got beyond control nt tlu> liicil fire forma, and aa-\n\u25a0Igtanco ttat sumiiinned fn\u00bbm Inlet.\nwhore ft fofoe of viHagers wi-n- quick-\nay soourod.\nThree cdttftgofl nnd   two  b:irn.s  weie\n'\"' * also   destroyed,   but   69   horses   were\nAbout!\n'rescued.\nLength Is 60 to 70 Feet,  Wo**.\nof Coryell; Little Time\nIs  Lost\nLEAVE CHINA\ni\nAlthough didayed gbotll 1\" min-\nutes a mile west of Coryell on the\nboundary line, by a snowslidi', th'1\nKettle Viilb-y train reached tho elt]\non time last night. Thc train Wat\nbrought to \u25a0 iio$ bftfOfft UM slide\nwas encountered. It was six or seven\nfeet deep, und from 60 to To teet\nhMg, Ir .oiisisted of snow with a\nlarge tree embedded lirnily in the\npile.\nAidi 11     by     some     pftftOftftagMl       tlM\ntrain crew gOJ to, work OO ihOVOla\n\u25a0md in a short time, OllOUffh of the\nslide Nil r\"iiio\\eil U> alb.u tin-\n;rain to pHott throiigh. Wlun Mo\ntrain roftsHod (he city tftll niyht tbo\nI urine    pilot     was    piled    high    with\nMl'IW.\n\u25a0 in of rolkgknis broad- j\n-Mating    Is    bein-.'    (AftBDOd    fW     NOW j\nIfork'N.Y. \t\nMarrlod  fof  nearly  77 foata.  John i\n, \u25a0   i., m  i   ngod  n, died  recently  m \u25a0\nv. y. k..ir.  .\\'..l.\t\nKstimated population ot United'\nBtatrs on Jttft 1 *W H paaOftd ftl\n11MS8.0W.\nBirths\nTHOR \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs. 8. Thor of\nKimberley, at Kimberley , hospital,\nFebruary   17,  a. son.\nMale Help Wanted\nSECURITY SALESMEN desiring to\nrepresent strong financial corporation with unusual record of succwfi-\nful achievements in Important Industrial and mining enterprises should\nImmediately communicate with Mr.\nKennedy, 812 Transportation Building,   Montreal. (6838)\nWANTED AT ONCE\u2014Capable manager and secretary-treasurer for the\nS. K. Farmers' Co-Op. Association at\nFruitvale, B.C. Apply, statins experience, salary expected, to secretary, 8. K. Farmers' Co-Op., Frult-\nvalf*.   B.   C.  (6789)\nFemale Help Wanted\nCOOD HOME, small salary, to reliable\nwoman, for services; country, Box\nNo.   683b,   Daily   News. (6835)\nWANTED \u2014 Competent cook, general,\nfor family of two. $35 per month.\nNone but experienced need apply.\nReference required. Apply Government   Employment   Agency,   Nelson.\n_____         (6730)\nSituations Wanted Male\nPRUNING,   SWAYING   AND   GRAFT-\n1NG\u20141'hone  <;.   H.   Fraser. <6819)\nLive Stock for Sale\nONE OOOD COW, tiv.' yean old, Grade\nI Jersey, doe to freshen Pebruary It,\n.inhn Randall, Granite Road, Nelson,\nU.C. , (6829)\ni TEAM    OF    H0R8EK-.SIX    years    old,\n1     sound,   broken,   weight   3200.     A   real\ni     bargain    at    $1R5.       John l   Garfield,\n(\"rest.m.    Hi' (6817)\nBLACK HOUSE\u2014Weight HOD; good\nI for single or double; J12... Apply\n'     Ilox   <-;so\">,   Dally   News. (6805)\nDr. Man well, d-.'in ol' ths lour oMoM t'a nadian DllftBldharlOJ BOW < n route\nio ilir COftgl fn-in bis ol-i bOflM In CbangtU. inland Chlnn. He leaver .Szeehwaa\nwith fTOftl n-lui taine. when' Ins wo. k has had highly favorable re-iilis.\nHe has ftlftO been imllned to tftllO I t ivmalile view oi ihe Cliimse situation\nin gftswffJ,\nRecently    Appointtd    Juvenih\nJudfe'e   Now   n   Stipendiary   Also\n; I>. P. Kane of Kaslo has l-fen ap-\n-,pointed stipendiary maglstrato, ac-\n-cordlng to the current Issue of the\nBritish Culumbl i Gasette, foi a large\nWest Kootenay t*m*-i\\ Notice of\nMr. Kane's appoint men. as Juvenile\nJudge for llo- saint territory appeared\nId a recent   |sou<   o|   ths OftftOttO,\nThe area ovoi wtitoh  -Mr. Kan\u00ab  tttti\nliave   Jurisdiction   includes   th<\nof  Kootenay   lake,   and   goos   into   ths\nSlocan, Trout   lake,  gloca^   Alns-worth,\nOolden   and    K->r.    Steele    inininu   dlvi-\nMuM\nMr. KftAS replaoss Ki.ii.nd il   Orarw\nIn the-se  posll\nflfot Worried\nCONDENSED 1ANT ADS ORe FORM\ntJ-443 tW\u00bb blank <m which to write your condensed ad., one word In each epae***.\nEnclose money order or check and mail  direct to Thc Daily News, Nelson, B. C.\nRate: One and a half cent a word each insertion, six consecutive insertions for\nprice of four when cash accompanies order. Minimum, 25*. Each initial, figure, dollar\nlifjns, etc- count as one word.   No charge less than B0 cents.\nPlease publish the advertisement below\n. -Unies, foi-whidi I enclose $_\n'                \u2022\u25a0\n-,\n1\n0\n1\n\u25a0\n1\nIf  dMiaaai,   r.Dls*   na,   bs   iddrMaatcl   .-)   bo>   numbsrs  it Tli.  Daily  Nsws OffleSL    If  rspliss  v*\nbs msilf-l, .ncloss 10c txtrs to eovsr cost of poslsgs  \u00bbml  \u00bbllow  Tiv. words  anrtr.  lar  box   numbsr.\nLive Stock Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Fnah .1' rscy cow, must\nbs ynunK sad lentlo. <':i\u00bby to mtlk.\nApjily   Aljrusimoff,   Thrums,  B.C.\nHMD\nV.ANTKT) _  Brood  hows,  March  far-\nr,m-.     A.   Wrny.   Waneln. ttitttlttt\nFruit Trees\nFRUIT   tkkks   Order   now  f.,r  \u00bbrl,\nsiuiiik'   delivery   \u2014   Cherry,   Appia,\nr,;ui). tto,, all varieties; also Roses\nami  shrttM.    Iluthtrford  DruK  f'.\n(Mil)\nFnUIT ANn ORNAMENTAL TRUSS\u2014\nOrder   now   lo   insuro   early   ,i,ll\\,:v.\nT.   Royaoa.  uscnt  Laarits  Nurseries.\nPoultry and Egisa\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nPOWER SPRAYER, 200 gallon tank;\nHardle Duplex pump, hour, two rods,\n800 pounds pressure, $200 cash. Also electric water heater connected\nto 15-g-allon tank, $40 cash. Box\n1E8,   Grand   Forks. (6786)\nGUIDE TO OUT-OF-DOOltK KNTER-\nPRIZE3\u2014-25c postpaid. Chaa. Pro-\nvan, Fort  Langley, B.C (6770)\nA BTAY PREST keeps trousors\npressed. Price $3.50. Smith _\nHourke   Agency,   Rossland. (676S)\nSAVE YOURSELF MONEY by placing\nyour pipe orders now; 2, 3 and 4-\nInch at low prices. Write us for\nfull particulars. Deer I'ark Wood\nPipe Co., Deer Park, B.C. (6716)\nBARRELS, KEGS AND EMPTY sacks\n\u2014MacDonald  Jam Company,   Nelson.\n(6.176)\nPIPE AND . FITTINGS,\nBARBED WIRE, ETC.\n10,000 teet l>4-lnch Pipe, Special, 10c per foot Full stock other\nsizes, also Fittings, at low prices.\nNew Galvanized Barbed Wire.\n$4.00, Black $3.00, per spool. Roofing Felt, l-ply $1.60, 2-ply $2.00,\nS-ply $2.65, per roll. Extra heavy\nMineralized Surface, 90 lbs., per\nroll $3.00. Mixed Wire Nails,\n$2.00 per keg. Wire Rope,, Canvas, Logging Supplies and all\nkinds of equipment\nB,  C.  JUNK  CO.\n115 Powell St Vancouver,  B.  C.\n  (6577)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically,    l^c a word\nNursery Products\nGI-ADOI.I    PffONIEi       -    If   yog    want\nthe loveliest and best, Mnd tot Era*\ncatalog. M. & O. Podiln, Bomnto,\nR.C. <______>\nFurs\nGKKCHEIT KUrt OO. LTD., 167 Cordova Stri'i'i West. Vuoouver, B.C\nHighest prices paid all kinds <\u25a0( raw\nfur****.     We  Npeciallxe   In   all   kind\nrabbit   skins\n(t',7-11)\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nWANTKD AT ONCE -Good Mcond-\nhand watt tot rauUI oountn \u25a0tort,\nS. K. Farmers' Coup,, Fruit val\u00ab,\nB.C. (\u00abTM)\nWANTED \u2014 Clean cotton  rags.    Dnlly\nNewn\u2014. cents a pound- *f5795)\nLive stock sells quickly when it Is advertised fn these e-oluTim****\nInsurance\nHAPPEN\nWfien ynu bast HQMd them,\nand notUy wlun you cannot af-\n\u25a0 ford them. We have an ACCIDENT and SICKNESS POLICY\nwhich will protect your savings\naccount and ease your mind. Call\n\u2022or phone today.\nR. W. DAWSON\nPhone 197 - Annable Blk. - P. Box 733\n(6t>83)\nTaxidermist\nTAXIDERMY   AND    FURRU '\nBlakeman,  Sdgewood, B.jZ (*76\nMachinery for Sate\nMINING MACHINERY\u2014Marcy mill\nWllfley tables, Coppus blower\npumps, Diesel engines, water wheel\nRobert C. Sweatt, Ltd., 406 Hornb\nstreet,  Vancouver. (623C\nFOR SALK \u2014 J. I. Case portable engla\nand boiler In good condition, mil Labi\nfor small mill, or will trade for lun\nbar. Alao office safe, Underwoo\ntypewriter, complete blacksmith out\nfit, large camp -stove aud dishes. T,\nClarke, P.O. Box 1207.   ' (6601\nTELL your wants  through  The  Dal^\nNewB claasincd columns.\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\n\"\u2022\u2022URNISIIE DROOM To RENT\u2014PbM\n12.  (CS39\nF'U'RNIHHKD \" HOUSEKEEPING\nROOMS- Over  Poole.Drug. <67\u00bb3\nFURNIB Hb'd HOUSEKEEpfNi\nROOMS, liiiino.     624   Latimer  street.\n  (67(8\nFURNISHED\n(street.\nSUITE\n507\nSlllc\n(G669\nKERR APTS.\u2014Furhlshcil_sulte8.\nSUITE\u2014AHiiman's  Apartments.\n(1578\nFOR RENT\u2014In Annable Block. Slngl\nfurnished room. Also two and thr.\nroom suites. Hot and cold watar\n\u25a0team heat and light. (6574\nCLASSIFIED ads-bring results fluicltl\nwnri aconomlraHV     IU. n word\nArticles Wanted\n80-10   CARBINE\nin good  \u25a0hap*.\nsimilar bore\n1, Deer Park.\n (6786\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY]\nAccounting\nCKASLES   r.       HUNTSR\u2014\nAuditor, MacDonald Jam Bnlldlmg\nUM 1491. Natioa, SB (6571\nTransfer\nATXIHSON   TRINSrEH\u2014 Coal,   Wood\nara ami b4a(VIVa\nWILLIAMS*\nCosl snd \\v\nTBANSPB*\u2014HnfTgage\n,od.    Phnn,   10S.     I \"*\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON--RcI(,w   iii.'irliet.     Carpent.\nan,I   .tnj\u201e<.r.      Hardwood. (6511\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR.\nH.\nW.   DAWSOV\u2014\nHeal   Bstats,   Zninrauc,   at.nt.ls\nAnnable Blk. P.O. Boa  73J. Phone   18'.\n____________     _ _ (\u00ab682\nM.    DILL,    IKSDBANCB,    TABM\nAND   OZTT   PBOPEBTT.\n r,(l\u00bb  Ward  Slr,-et (65S.I)\nMiscellaneous\nFOR    SAI.K    \u2014     in    Leghorn    pallsts.\nlaying   hsavltr,   $i.*,o   sask,     Phons\n608L1.    Dally News, Box 6794. (6794)\nBARRONS   LEGHORN   I1ABY   CHICKS\nfrom   ttapni st, 'i   Btoak,    t-\n^ir,\u25a0s  from   it.   o   P.   htna    nttlni\neggs and cockerels.    Dcverson, Craw-\nf.,nl   Hay. (67r,2)\nHouses Wanted\nWANTED TO.UI'T Small Iioiim., 4 ,,r\n5 roomH. Apply Box 6:,79. Dailv\nNsws. (6758)\nWANTED TO HUNT within (he next\ntWO IiiOQtlis, lm id, I'll .Ix or seven-\nroom house or bungalow, with garage,   rellnM,    ;iml    responsible   party,\nWllO   is   pie|i;U'il   to   llll.e   Ii.isi,   WoUl*l\nbnfsr   jilaee    with    foitiaiv       *a_nfy\nHox   6775.   Dally   New\u00ab. (6775)\nFarms-Ranches for Sale\nFOB    SALE\u2014Itl4    aeies    nf    land    on\nLake    Koutenay;    Lot   914.      Address\n. Ml    W.sl.y   St.   Naiialiini,   ill'    n'.v::7l\nLEGAL NOTICES\nNOTICE   OF   CAWCELIGATION   Or\nRESERVE\nNOTICE   US   HKREBV   GIVEN   thai\nnri    . xistlng   over   Lot   13*86,\nKootrnay   District,   Is   cancelled.\nOEO.   R. NADBN.\nDeputy  Minister of Lands.\nDepartinftit   of  I-andH,\nViotorla.  B.C.\nIfith   I'Vliruary,   tMfi i\u00bbiv:ti;i\nTENDERS FOR LANDS\nA   RAMS  CHANCE\nTlie DiiMtora uf the Kootenay-\nSlocan Fruit Co., Ltd., have de-\n<1iU'd lo wind up the company.\nThey ask for Sealed Tenders for\nall the Lands, C33 acres, of the\ncompany. Landn in the MooAfl\nValley. M tho (',*ui;uliaJi PftolflQ\nlUilway, U mill's mn N'cl.s'Mi,\nkttOO ii M HoMt 1'arli. Htutlon,\nBchool, church Hervlceu, cummunlty\nhall. In tlie park. Thirty-tine^\nacres fully u|*i|Hfl .'ind uimIi-i* nil\nliv.itk'n,' nine-acre orilmrij.liuiisc,\nlams, IrrlKiibMl. well time-!, much\nvmlnblt litniiei*.    Bfftttd  tt\nBUM Ind \"Kuiileii;i\\ -Sloi.iii Ti'ii-\ndcr,\" receiv.Hl, ami full Inform,i-\ntlon given, by ,\\. Wniw i ton, N\u00abl-\nson, B. C, up to M;inli II MX!\nroiseaslon given in time for the\nspring work.\nitsot)\nLost  and   Found\nChiropractors\nDR, R. a, GRAY\u2014Chiropractor,    alitor\nblk.     Phones: Office* 115.     Rub. 611T\nllcurs:  10-12 and  2 to  fi   Evenings \"\nMti)i4.liiini'nt.    S-u.:   1> 3\"  to   12m.   (158*1\nFlorists\n\/.kizzellc-s quebkhoubes, m.\n\"  son. Cut flowers and floral designs\n(\u00ab!,nr\nWJH.   S. JOHKSOlT\u2014\n.,    Phone 343..   Cut  flowsra     Potts\nPlant\u00bb nnii   moral   Emblems.        (6516\nWholesale\nA MACDONALD 9, OO \n\u2022 Wholesale Ororers and Provlslos\nMerchants, Importers of Teas, Coffees.\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple and  Fane,\n'\"\u25a0i-iii-      \\e n.   I\"- (6517\nEnirineers\nAX. QB\u00bb> CO \nCOTTTBAOTOaS\nFormerly Oreen, Bros., Burden, Nelson\nCl.il  k Mlnimr BnrtnMrs.\nB.   C   Alberts   aad   DoBttnlon   Laad\n Sarrsyors (858S>\nD.    DAWBOB,    Land    inrr.yor,\nMlnhis- snd Clrll Ivluar,\n11.\nAssayers\ni-:\nW. widdowsow, Boi AllOS, Nel-\n\u2022 ion, B.C. Standard western charnen\nLOST ON PHI DAT NIGHT. i>-tw.\nCanada Drug ami Si hi In ml *l'li. a!-\npair ol KlaMM With MM, l'i--;!\nrt-tuni   in  Canada   Drug.     IJ>\\v'im!\nFuneral Directors\nBoats and Automobiles\ni''t nt   lALB\u2014Om   I ihmbimoi   l-cylln\nAn ovitIhihI tmning Bar, in good\nrunning condition, cheap tor 'iiilck\nHtu. nr will traile fur secondhand\nhlaek Iron pipes. Koataacie Broa.,\n; i   VaUey,   B.C.         _   MIKid)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically.    IVjC a word,\nD. J. ROBERTSON.\nr.   D.   D.   A   _.\n\u2022anlt.rr Parlors and Benl Motor I.uit\n..tata tit  Days   Bight   157L.\nSERVICE\n(r.r.ai)\nw*****\nitaadard Taraltan\nCo. \u2014 Undertakers.\nAuto Hearae, up-ro-\ndate chapel. Bast\nOk.} services. Prices\n\"    rea nnabtt.    (8S9 )\"J\nFEV.   ROBERT  A.   MITCHELL,   M.A.\n\u25a0   A returu\u00abil ChlaoM mil\nhatted     with    Ht,    0\u00abor\u00bbt's     Unltad\nbhttrch,   North   Tm-onto,   who   believes\nthat fli'- ' 'tn'.--\u25a0\u2022' iltuation will\nptrairhten Itself out, If people have\n-patience.\n-     CLASSIFIED    ADS    BRING    RE\niliUIfc\t\nr ;:-HE.-TAKE TlVS CHECK VOH\n! A HUMDRED DOLLARS DCWM\nj TODINTVMOORES AN'\n!  TELL HIM TO CASH   IT   FOR\n, |   MI- HURRY IWCK AS FAST\nA*** YOO  CAM AS 1 NEE.D IT\nALL     |\nRICMT.'\n\u25a0ii.\nHE. MIAT6E ClTTlMOFFTHE CAR-\nMOW   Wft PASTHM' DOCaV\/vl'-b STORE\nMOW   HE'S CROiSlN   TM6 STREtT\nTjCIMIN'OP   PAUO~f\"S   L>*aVIE-HE\nSHOULD  BE   PASSIM* 0LINN>> HJIVI6C\n-.ARD NOW- NOW HE!** IN   OINTT\"5-\nHt\"5 GOTTKV l>>ONEV   AN' l^' WALKIN'\nTO THE STREET -MOW   HE\u00abb  pM\nTHE  CAR AN' >*> AOOOT  IN   FRONT\nOF MULA\u00bb-IPWVS ClCA*^ STORE-NOW\nHE\"b   CrTTlN'OfT THE  CAR-HE\nfcHOUUO BE COMIN UPTMt STAIRS\nI   HEAR Wi F-y^T-jTEPft'\n| OO YOU WANT TME   I\nj MONhV IN   LIVE OR\n[TEN'OOLLAR Blt-tft? J\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, MOlfa>AY MORNING, FEBRUARY 21, 1927\n' Page Ntas\nNorthern Pacific, Great Northern Only First of Large\nNumber\nNEW TOBK, Feb. 20. \u2014 The New\nfork Tribune says: Contributing foe-\n|om ln the steady advance of railroad\nnull ln the Mock market He deeper\n;han good earning reports and conttnu-\nnc Improvement In volume of freight\nelng carried this year bb compared\nith last, nor IB speculation  the chief\nItlraulator of rati market prices. Un-\n\u2022rlylng these are the movements to-\nrard consolidation of a large number\nf Individual lines into strong sys-\nems, which the various carriers have\nmade and are now making. Official\n|innouncement of the unification of\nNorthern Pacific and OreHt Northern\nral followed quickly by the purchase\n|lf Wheeling & Lake Erie control by\nfew Tork Central, Baltimore & Ohio\n|nd Nlckle Plate, from the Rockefeller\nnterests and others. The proposal to\nMerge southern central lines. Including M., K. & T. and St. Louis Sotith-\nSrestern, Is now being argued before\nhs Interstate commerce commission,\nnd the Van Swerlngen Interests have\nenllsed their billion dollar trunk line!\nystem. It Is evident that other I\ntrong roads, like Pennsylvania nnd\nLtlnntic Coast Lino, \u00bbre nlso moving]\nnto advantageous position with re*\n:nrd to subsequent consolidations.\nMew York Quotation*\nHigh Low Ctoso\nflllled Chain. ... 141% 12914 139*4\nner. Loco. ... 110% 11014 HOU\nllmer. T. 4 T. ... 160 159(4 !<<**\nJlb.. Copper ... 48*4 4614 46<4\nT. ft a. P. .. 172H not* non\nbelt, ft Ohio .. 114*4] 114 114%\nCan. Pacific ... 187(4 184<4 185\nChile    Copper 36 jr>7\u00bb      357i\nChrysler Corp. ... 4214 ll|| 4154\nCorn  Products   ..     50*,     r,0        49^\nlodge   \"A\"          2514     25 25\nbupont          178'4    177       177\n[Jan. Motors ... 157 155 155>i\n[Iranby    Cons.    ..       34'4      34(4      34\nN.  pfd       9K4     8144      9014\nHenna   Copper   ..      62(4     62*4     6244\nT.   Cent     116(4    115       145U\nNor.   Pacific          91(4      89 89%\nPhillips   Petr.    ..      B8I4      58 58.4\nIhell   Union   Oil..      31 30%     30%\nline.   Cons       21%     21%      21%\nItan. Oil Cal. .. 58% 58% 58(4\nItan.  Oil   N.J.   ..     19%     38%     38T4\nllude.   Corp       53 50%      51\nr\u00ab. Gulf Sulph. 51(4 53% 53%\nUnion Oil Cal. .. 53 52% 52%\nOnion Pacific .. 117<4 169% 169%\n8. Rubber ... 62% 61% 61%\nS. Steel .... 114% 114% 114%\nrillyi Ovid       22%     21V,      it\n I\nIN MONTREAL LIST\nForcings and Cuban Sugar Are\nStrong Spots; List\nIrregular\nMONTREAL, Feb. 20.\u2014Whlls stocks\nwere Inclined to move In an Irregular\nmanner in Saturday's quiet session of\nthe Montreal market, the undertone\nwas firm. Braslllan continued active\nand closed at 116T*. ex-dlvldend, for\na net loss of H- Dominion Bridge\ncame second and closed at 1*16% for a.\nnet sain of IH. British Columbia Fishing: closed at 93 for a net gain of 1%.\nCanada Forglngs and Cuban Canadian Sugar preferred, each with a net\ngain of 2 points, were the strong\nspots, while the greatest loss was suffered by Spanish River, which closed\nat 101 for a net loss of %.\nClosing   Quotation*\nAbitlbl  Power & Paper   88-ii\nAsbestos   Corporation     22%\nAtlantic Sugar pfd 92\nBritish   Columbia  Fishing    97%\nBrazilian T. L. and Power   116%\nBrompton   Paper 82%\nCan.   Cement , 137%\nCan.    Indus.   Alcohol     U%*\nCan.   Steamship  Lines    8*3\nOn.  Steamship Lines pfd  87%\nCons. Mining & Smelting  243\nDominion    Bridge     146%\nDominion   Glass    106\nDom. Textile   10914\nHollinger    Mines     22.30\nLake of the Woods 160\nLaurentide      107%\nMontreal    Power       78%\nOgllvle  Milling    240\nPenmans  Limited    817\nQuebec   Power    , 225 %\nShawinigan        67 %\nSpanish   River     100%\nWayngamack        47\nWinnipeg   Railway       t.4\nSEVERAL LINES\nAHE SOLD\nLOCAL\nPork and Veal the Beat Sellers;\nEggs Also Cleared\nOut\nPork at from 2Sc to 30c a pound,\nand veal at from ISc to 30c a pound\nwere the best sellers at the local market Saturday mqrnlng. Both lines\nwere sold out. A good supply of eggs\nat 60c a doles was quickly disposed\nof. Butter at 45c a pound was also\na brisk seller.\nNo change in the prices of commofli-\ntleg took place.\nFollowing are the prices quoted:\nEggs,  dosen    50C\nButter,   lb    . \u201e ,  46c\nBeef,   lb *. 10c to 85c\nVeal,   lb     16o to 80c\nbaby beef, lb., 15c and   85c\nPork,    lb 25c to 30c\nSausage   meat,   lb , 80c\nSpring Chicken     36c\nFowl,    lb   30c\nHeadcheese       20c\nCheese,   lb 86c\n(Jarllc  35c\nPotatoes, 9 lbs. for 26c; 100 lbs..$2.85\nMarmalade,   lb i IW\nApples,   box    81 to $1.50\nCabbage, red and white, lb 5c to 8c\nBeets,  6  lbs    25c\nCarrots, 6 lbs. for J5c;  100 lbs $2.35\nTurnips, 5   lbs.   for      15c\nParsnips,   6   lbs 35c\nLeeks,   bunch      6c\nOnions, 6 lb*,  jot  85*\nFlowering  plants,  up  from 80e\nVancouver Stocks\nOutstanding . Stock on Toronto\nBoard; Massey-Harris\nIs Stronger\nTORONTO, Feb. 30. \u2014 City Dairy\ncommon was the outstanding strong\nstock ln the active Saturday market\non the Toronto exchange. It was bid\nup 5% to a new high price for all\ntime at 11%. It finished at the top.\nNickel was the most active stock on\nthe board. Starting at 42 H, it reached\na high point at 43%, finishing at that\nfigure, Up 1%.\nMassey-Harris common was definitely stronger. This stock started at 88,\nand firmed up to 11%, The last trans\naction was made ar :\u2022!>,, a gain oi\n2%.\nKEPT CONTROL IN CANADA\nTOWARD II END\nSnow in Mid-West Section One\nof the Bearing Factors\nin Market\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Feb. 20. \u2014 Sterling\nExchange firm, $4.80% for 60-dsy bills\n(nd $4.84% for demand.\nForeign  bar  silver\u201458 4c,\nCanadian   dollars\u20145-32  discount.\nFrancs\u20143.91% c.\nLire\u20144.37 \"ic\nSpokane Stocks\ni Reported tar-G W. -tpplerard)\nBrazilian    Tr.ictii.n      $116%\nConsolidated   llM$tgfl    $243\nUnited   States   Stoel    |1M%\nAmerican    Locomnivt*     $110*4\nCanadian   P.iclflc   Railway    ,...$184%\nHowe    Sound     $ 39\nFamous Players    $ 1 OS* ^\nDodge   Brothers     $ 25%\nRadio   Corporation $ 52 '*4\nGranby   Consolidated     $34%\nInternational   Nickel    ..$ 43%\nInternational   T.   &   T $131 '*\nChrysler   Company     $ 41%\nCrcat    Northern $ 90%\nTeck   Hughes     $6.34\nSilversmith      $ 34\nLeadsmith              7%c\nLucky    Jim      15c\nRichmond          15 %c\nGoldsmith           18%c\nCir   8.   Foundry  .$ 92\nBritish Columbia Fishing    $ 92 %\nCanada Steamship common   ....$ 36%\nCanada   Steamship   preferred   ..$ 87%\nB.   C.   Silve*.   ,\nSelkirks    \t\nDunwell    \t\nGlacier    ......\nGladstone\nUranhy    Cons.\nBid\nMl\n\u2022oi%\n1.45\n.11\n.27%\n33.00\nHowe   Sound         38.00\nIndian Mines 07\nIntl.   Coal            .16\nLucky  Jim         ,n^\nPremier       2,17\nSllvercrest     07\nLeadsmith 07%\nNat.   SU.   O,   B 20\nCoast    Copper             6.7.1\nB.   C.   Mont 00 1-16\n\u25a0rib    Petr 13%\nMaple   Leaf    ,        .17\nTrojan   Oil     01%\nAsked\n1.70\n.02\n1.50\n.11%\n.28\n35.00\n40.00\n.07%\n.18\n.16\n2.19\n.08\n.08%\n.20%\n7.50\n.00%\n.14\n.18\nCHICAGO. Feb. SO. \u2014 Wheat eased\ndown Saturday at the last after showing unusual steadiness. Snow at numerous points in Kansas, including\nsome In the western section, were\nbearish  factors  near  the  close.\nFinal (guotatlons were settled at the\nsame as Friday to % lower, with corn\nunchanged to % higher, oats at a\nshade to % to advance, and provisions\nvarying from a shade decline to a rise\nof 17c.\nToronto Mines\nniti\nAmulet            1.40\nArea     52\nArgonaut      41\nHolllnrer          I2.S5\nDome Mines         MS\nWeat   Dome     13H\nKirkland     81\nLake   Short        18.1\u00ab\nAiked\n1.41\n.61\n.4114\n:;.so\n9.20\n.14\nA dramatic stock shuffle. Involving $7,000,000,' with the control of the gigantic Massey-Harris company, limited, of'Cftnfldn. nt stake, took place with Canadian interests winning out despite strenuous efforts by Unltatt\nStates interests to wrest control. ThotMl Prailahaw, l**ft, nnd J. H. Gundy, right, ihe heroes of thc stock battle,\n:n  uhrm  was  transferred enough  stock to  keep  control   of  the   .Mas^cy-liuii-is   company   in   Canada.\nWAS PAL OF YOUNG\nVAWCOTJVE*    EGOS\nVANCOUVER.    F.'h.    20.    \u2014\nColumbia eggs\u2014Fresh tXttOt\n36,   pullets   34.\nBritish\n\u25a0;,  fir.-***--\nSimms Pete May Get\na Larger Dividend\nNKW rOWC Nfc 20.\u2014Slmms Petroleum Is on>* Of llio oil Issues for which\na larger dividend is in prospect. Some\nquarters expect that at the ne*t meeting the dividend declaration will be\nchanged from the present 50c a share\nsemi-annually, to 37 %c a share quarterly. This would mean 81-50 a share\na year, Instead of 11 a year now paid.\nMontreal Produce\nCanadian  Loralne   ..\nMclntyre     \t\nWright  Hargreaves\nNoranda     \t\nMining   Corpn\t\nTeck   Hughes\t\nVipond      ,\nKeeley    \t\nNipissing     \t\nTough  Oakes   \t\n.57%\n28.70\n10.25\n20.45\n8.20\n8.85\n1.80\n1.82\n9.80\n.65\n13.20\n.68\n.28.80\n10.30\n20.50\n8.40\n1.82\n1.83\n9.85\n.68\nMONTREAL, Feb. 20. \u2014 Butter and\neggs unchanged, cheese market not\nitv'tJlablf.\nButter\u2014No.  1   pasteurised 40%   to  14.\nEggs \u2014 Storage firsts 43, storage\nseconds 88, fresh extras 50 to 51,\nfresh  firsts 48.\nWinnipeg Sittings\nMay Touch March\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 20. \u2014 At least another week will be required to deal\nwith the work' which the customs\ncommission has to do ln Winnipeg, and\nsittings here may run Into the early\nC part of March.\nDuring the past' week the attention\nof the commission has been directed to\na number of cases of commercial\nsmuggling and undervaluation, but\nthere has been, very little in connection with bootlegging, compounding of\nwhisky, or other offences of that\nnature.\nThis   picture  shows  \"Bill\"   Hastings,   former  pal   of  George Young, and his mother, photographed\nflepot,  Toronto,  on  their nrrlval  horn*1  from  California recently.\nFire   gutted   an   eight-roomed   school\nIn   Port   Arthur.\n'Canada and Cuba\nWitt Have Treaty\nMONTREAL, Feb. 20. \u2014 According\nto the Information given out by Luis\nSotto, acting consul-general for Cuba\nn Montreal, a commercial and friendly\ntreaty will be consummated between\nCnnoda and Cuba before th\u00a9 middle of\nthe year.\nQuestioned as to the likely nature of\nthe treaty, Mr. Sotto said: \"We will\napply to Canada the tariff accorded\nto most favored nations In our new\ntariff. We will, of course, Imp th-1\npreferential tariff with the United\nStates, but Canadian producers and\nmanufacturers will be in a fair position to compete with the merchants\nof other countries.\"\nWinnipeg Grain\nWheat\u2014 Open High Low Close\nHay ... 129 139!, 1S8H 139',\nJuly ... 137 137H 13\u00ab7. 137\nOct. ... 12S 128 mat 127%\nOats-\nMay ...     r..i, r,\u00abs SH't r,s',\nJuly ...     Mit r,\u00abs 5\u00abH 5<\u00ab\nOct    n_\nBarley\u2014\nMay    ...      :!%      7J'\u00bb.      72*      7S\nJuly   ..       71'.      71'4     7H4     7114\nOct      set;\nFlax\u2014\nMay   ...    1)\u00ab'S    197       19\u00ab't    196's,\nJuly   .         199        199H    199        199',\nOct     201L,\nRye-\nMay   ...    IOS',4    inn       105*4    19tH\nJuly   ...    10l<4    104%    104*4    104M,\nOct.     ...       '..\u00bb'.       98*',       98 'b      9\nCask PrlOM\nWheat \u2014 No.  1  northern  14044,  No\n2 northern 135... No. 3 northern 127%\nNo.  4  117!,,  No.  t,   10114,  No.  >  :\u2022!',.\nfeed  84',,,,  track   140!*,  screenings $3.\nOats\u2014No.    2   CW    62i,i,    No.    S   CW\n5S!4, extra No. 1   feed B2U, No,   1   feed\n50H,   No.   2   feed   4744,   rejected   444i,\ntrack 6814.\nBarley \u2014 No. 8 CW 7014,  No. 4 CW\nI714,   rejected   11414,   feed   OJtj,   ,rn,.k\n7014.\nFlax \u2014 Nn   1   NWC  192, No. 2 CW\n188,   No.   3   CW   1\u00ab8I4.   rejected   163V4I.\ntrack 19214.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Feb. 20. \u2014 Flour\nunchanged.    Shipment*  .IL'.s.Tl   barrels.\nBran\u2014127 to 127.50.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 northern 139'i tfl\n14214,  May  14044, Jul)'  HO7..\nCom\u2014No.   3   yellow   .70   lo   ft,\nOata\u2014 N\u00ab.   :i  irMta   13',   to 24 H.\nFlu\u2014No. 1 21914  to IUM,\nCOMMERCIAL ARTIST\nPOISONS HIMSELF\ntime last night and died. In the\nletter to his wife, Haldsey said he\nhad been selling his clothes to provide  food.\nTORONTO,    Feb.    20.\u2014Leaving    a j iroBTHSmv  FACirxc\nnoto  to  his  wife  In  Treathem,   Eng- | INCOUX\nland,  snyintr That  he could  not stand \u25a0 \u2014 \u25a0- \u2014\nhelnp without work and facing starv-       M:w Ym:K, Feb. 20. \u2014 The North-\natioti,    Arthur    Hnlsey.    aged     6*1,    a , \u25a0'-'\"   ''-\"'i'i-'  railway  |n   the   yenr ended\ncommercial   ,n- Isi,   drank  a   i]iinnti(y\nuf    pOiMHI   in   his   room   In tc   sonn'\nDMunbff   SI,   i'.t'2-i,   curtis   a   net   In-\n-.-mi'   cijiiai   to   $8.-17  a   share,   against\n|f.jl   in   tli-'   previous   year.\nutem\nompanQ\nmro        t ***>\nBUTTER EXPORTATION\nFROM CANADA DOWN\nMKTR\u2014 nUTTPR   EXPORTATION\u2014   7\nOTTAWA, F-*h. 20. \u2014 The effect of\nthe increase of the United Htaten duty\non butter from Sc to 12c per pound\nlast March Is shown in the sharp decline of Canada's exportation of that\ncommodity, la the 12 months ended\nNovember, IS26, Canada shipped 311S9\nhundredweight of butter to the United\n\u2022State--- ns compared with 11,000 hundredweight in the preceding 12 months.\nOther dairy products show \u00bb increase-\nLadies' Ready-to-Wear\nPRINCESS SLIPS\u2014If you havo never worn Wat ton's Sprintr Needle Rib Underwear, the soft, finely tailored parments will be I wonderful surprise to\nyou. A revelation of comfort, in all the latest colors of lipstick red, japonica,\npowder blue, maize, peach, preen, sand, black, white, navy, orchid.   Sizes 36\nto 40.   Price  , , $2.98\nExtra large size, price  '....$3.5\u00a9\nVESTS AND BLOOMERS, tailored to fit, in just the style you want, in shades\nof peach, white orchid, maize, flesh. f\nVests  $1.25, $1.50\nBloomers  .'. $1.95, $2.50\nFOR MONDAY'S SELLING: 7 ONLY,DRESSES\u2014Silk and Balbriggan. All on\none rack, in assorted shades: green, grey, sand, rose, blue, brown and black.\nSizes 36 to 40.   Bearing tickets, all one price       $14.95\nArt Needlework\nAn Event Expressly for Easter Bazaar Workers!\nFUDGE APRONS\u2014On fine quality Cotton; clearly stamped.    Each  69?\nGUEST TOWELS\u2014Striped buck and honeycomb   towels,   with   colored   stripes.\nHemmed or hemstitched.    Size 18x34.    Stripes of gold, mauve, rose and blue.\nHemmed 40*?   Hemstitched 50<   Honeycomb 5&a*\nCUT WORK TOWELS\u2014Italian  cut work, on pure ovsler linen.    Hemstitched\nends.    Size 15x34, each  $1.50    Size 17x36  $1.95\nPOT HOLDERS\u2014On Linen Crash, finished edges, bias tape.   Assorted colors.\nEach 594*\u00bb\nLUCKY DAY APRONS\u2014Clearly stamped on good cotton material. Adults...$1.50\nChild's, each  95<\nBUFFET SETS\u2014On linen and cotton materials; clearly stamped.   Linen 6*V\nCotton, each  39f\nKIDDIES' ROMPERS\u2014Quality woven Pique, snow white.    1 to 4 years  sizes.\nStain-ied  flat.    Each   68f and 98**\u00bb\nPERSONAL SHOPPER will gladly make an assortment of art needlework\nfor out-of-town customers. Write us full details of your requirements. We\naccepl orders for all pleating work.\nLinoleum\n\u2022lust in time to anticipate Spring requiuments  comes  this  new  shipment  of\nLinoleum and Lino Rugs with border.   Bring  your   measurements  and   we   will\nhelp you.\nFLOOR OILCLOTH\u20142 yards wide, in new designs, specially attractive for bedrooms and kitchens.    Square yard  754 and 85***\nHEAVY PRINTED LINOLEUM\u2014Most dependable, in a wide range of excellent\npatterns.    6 feet wide.    Per square vard      $1.15\nHEAVY PRINTED LINOLEUM\u2014Heavy enamel surface, cork base and canvas\nback.   6 feet wide.   Square yard  $1.20 and $1.25\n \u25a0r Page\" Ten\"\nTHE NELSON BffTLY NEWS,. MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 21, 1927\nThe Ark\nHistorians' aay nothing of Its motive\nftosrsr. Our power Is ln selling at low\nprla'aa. Brass Voiles, latest patterns,\nSOt 90* 60* -S,\u00bbrd'   I-adies' Bloom-\ntr\u00bb.   85*;   \u00bb>\"*.   $1.25.    i-\u00bb'\u00ab\u00ab\n(Planneletle  Blankets,   $3.25.    t3n-\nt>leached    Colton,    20*.       All-over\ntprons, Sl.OO each.    Boys' Pants.\n1.50 to $2.50.   AU-Wnol Serge,\nH Inches, 91,10 wri.\nJ. W. HOLMES\n\u25a0 606 V.rnorr St\nHOWE .ELECTRIC CO.\nNELSON.\n\"Ths Houee for Good Lighting*\nW* have, a new catalogue of\nU latest designs In Ughtlng Fixtures, illustrated In actual color?. If you anticipate changing\nfixture* this spring It will undoubtedly appeal to you.\nWo will be pleased to send it\nif you pJione 530.\n0. K. BAKERY\n714   Stanlay   St. Phon.   1W\n,    WHOLE8ALE  AND  RETAIL.\nYou   Must  Have   It\nFor   Perfect   Toast   in   the   Morning.\nFree Lecture\nOa the Natural Resources\nof the Selkirk?\nIllustrated  With   Lantern  Slides\nBV\nJ. M. HUMPHREY, M.E.\nOf  Vancouver\n\u25a0 O'CLOCK SHARP, CITV HALL\n'.    Nelson Business College\nEVENING CUSSES\nIndividual Tuition\nIncrease Your Salary\nj. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nSpecialising   in   Correcting   Defective\n'   Sight   by   Proper   Glasses.\nQuick  Repair Service.\nQRIFrift  BLK.     -     .     PHONE 12\u00bb\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\nCITY DRUG CO.\nFilms,  Kodaks,   Drugs,   Stationery.\nMall   Orders   Pronr)tlv   Despatched.\nBOX 1083     Nslson. B   C.    PHONE 34\nCome   and   Get   Your   Weight   Free.\nWant Province to Increase Contribution to Keep\nDown Fire\nALSO ASK SUSPEND\nMINIMUM WAGE ACT\nNichols of Eagle Lake Company\nHeads Association\nNow\nA fund of $760,600 per year for\nthe purpose of \"forest protection and\nflro prevention and control,\" proposed by the timber industries representatives on the Joint forest protection committee of the industry\nand the forest service, has the backing of the Mountain Lumber Manufacturers' association, given at the\nrecent annual meeting, held at Calgary.\nIt Is the idea that the fund should\nbe provided by continuing the levy\noo previously held timber not to\nexceed the present rate of 2 1-2\ncents per acre, tho government\nmaking up the balance. The fund\nwould be much larger ihan what Is\nnow utilized.\nA   R-nttnr   Patrol\nOther recommendations in the memorandum    Indorsed    were:\n\"That a more effective patrol of\nhazardous forested areas be Instituted and adequate and efficient\nprotection provided, with the end ln\nview of obtaining better control of\nfires when they first  originate.\n\"That greater efforts be made to\nprocure the services of competent\nrangers, the latter to be in-vested with\nfull power to hire and discharge\nsubordinates in their respective districts.\n\"That administration, supervision\nond overhead costs bo reduced so\nthat a greater proportion of the\nfunds  be  available  for field  work.\"\nOne of the moves taken at the\nanniml meeting was to indorse tho\ncommunication of the coast lumber manufacturers to Premier Oliver, requesting that the Minimum\nWage act, as applied to the lumber\nIndustry in British Columbia, be\n(AJspi-ndtd pending nn Investigation\nof the lumber situation in the in\ndustry by a commission to be ap\npointed.\nI'or  nmaoVr   InvcMlgaUon\nIn additkin, the association asked\nthat the scope of the proposed investigation should bo broadened to\ncover the general state of the lumber Industry, with t view to devising ways and moans- for placing it\nm on   a   stable   basis.\nThe   view   taken   by   the   asrocla-\nWANTED\nCLEAN COTTON RAGS\nIn u large size as possible, but\nnot smaller than 18 inches square.\n5 CENTS A POUND\nTurn Old Rags Into Money\nTHE DAILYNEWSJOB DEPT.\nPhone 144 (Two Lines)\nMNTING-RUUN C,   BOOKBINDING\nPruning and Spraying\nTime Is Here\nWe have in stock Pruning Sheara, Pruning Saws,\nTree Pruners, 6 ft. and 8 ft.\nAlso Perfection Sprayers, several varieties.\nLtt us supply your ipanf*.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOIaCSAlat\nNELSON, B. C.\nRETAIL\nCANADA'S MINISTER AT WASHINGTON\nHon.   Vincent   Mnssoy   Is  shown   on   his  departure   rroni Toronto   (\u2022  u\u00bbUOW his  new  duties  as  Canadian  minister at   Washington.    On  the  left  Is  shown  Mr.   Massey ami his private secretary, T.  X. Stone.    Mrn.  Massey to\ntho is^il^H\ntlon wns that If the effect of legislative enactments was to increase\nthe' cost of production and operation\nIn this industry, then It was only\nfair that timo ntnl mn.sIsI-iih'o should\nbe given for the working out of some\nway to rniiMr the industry to carry\non under the working condition! thus\nmade more onerous.\nThe proposal under consideration\nby the association for nearly the\npast yoar, for a joint sales agency,\nor some other form of cooperative\nmarketing, was further studj* d. lt\nIf a matter of working out <l>\u25a0 aiN,\nthe members being favnrahle to the\nmove,   in   principle.\nA check of the results of the\ngrading last year showed steady\nprogress being made by the association mills In attaining more uniformity in grades of manufacture. The\nassociation has the advantage of the\ninspection service *>f the Western\n1'ino    association.\nNo overproduction in the interior\nexists, for prodin'Uon has steadily declined for the last 10 years, and\nIndications nre that it will be still\nless ln 1927 than In 1926.\nTlie   Offices\nOfficers were elected by the association as follows:\nPresident\u2014W. K. Nichols, general\nmannger, Eagle Lake Spruce Mills,\nOiscome,   B.C.\nVice-president\u2014H. P. Kllnostivi \u25a0**,\ngeneral manager. & C Spiiuv Mills,\nLumberton,  B.C.\nDirectors\u2014C. D. McNab. manager\nBaker Lumber company, Waldo, B.C.;\nC ,M. Pennock, vice-president Crow's\nNest Pass'Lumber company, Wanl-\nner, B.C.; A. Gregg, manager McLaren Lumber company, Blair more.\nAlta.; II. A. McKowan. president\nCranbrook Sash & Door company,\nCranbro^it, B.C.; Charles llowartli.\nmanager U. G. G. Sawmills, Hutton\nB.C.;   C.   O.   Si iry   Otis\nStaples Lumber company Wyellffe.\nB.C.\nMassey9s Secretary\nTHOMAS   A.  STONE\nSon of Mr. ahd -Mrs. Spencer Stone,\nof Chatham, Ont., who has beta appointed private secretary to Hon. Vincent Massey, Canada's first minister\nto Washington- Ill is a graduftU oi\nthe. Unlvor-gity of Toronto, and spent\ntwo years studying In Paris, having\nwon  the  Massey  s-'holarship\nTwo-Inch pen*1:! .,\\i<> wat MOOMf\"\nfully removed from ths windpipe cd\nan 8-year-old girl at Chicago.\nWhen the taxi he was driving\ncrashed into * street car In Chicago,\nfrank  Vuteck was instantly  killed.\nWins Scholarship\n\"Slushy Streets Accompany Snow\nand Rain; Moro Thaw\nIndicated\nMISS   KATHRYN   SELLS\nOf Toronto, who has been awarded\nthe Mlna Barrett scholarship for the\nfurther ed urn tlon of a talented blind\nmusician. Tho scholarship is ihe\nfirst of Its kind to he MU#ltsh#d In\nCanada.\nOF\nwith snow afld rata falling nlter-\nnat< ly. ami OoaVOrUng thi' streets and\nsidi'wall-s ni a slushy condition, there\nwait a tola! of ptvcipuiiiion of .*W\niTK-iifH h-,'14' ovaf ths week-end. Ws-\nterday (In snow aniounti'd tn 2 Inches\nand tin1 rain io ...'- inelw\u2022**, I total precipitation i.i ,41, or marly half nn\ninch. Saturday's snow amounted to\nI.!! Inches, while tin- rain was .13\niiiehis, Whioh loaih' a total precipitation of Jl .neti* \u2022**.\n-  Saturday   mW  a   minimum   of  2.   and\na   maximum   of  M,   while   ysat*erday*l\nli nipei'itun s   w.-iv   II  and   3*8.\nIndication of f-ntinued squalls and\nmild -.w-iih'T with ram nr snow was\ngiven    liy    the    liarometer    last    night,\nilai instrument  rogJatarlng v.ry low.\nAn Advance Showing\nSpring Suits\nfAOR Spring, the new Cromwell Double-Twist, arid\nKniililo-Sovvii'i* Tweeds, carefully tailored of (he\nfinest fabrics, in thc soft gray and cheerful tan shades\nwhich are very popular. Made in both single and double\nbreasted models.\n$35.00\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nQuality Has No Substitute\nCars\nAN ENQUIRY\nwill convince you  that our prices- Va\nreasonable. WO guarantee satisfaction.\nSMEDLEY GARAGE CO.\nB. C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING CO.\nAfrnts  for\nALBERTA   CLAY   PRODUCTS.\nSEWER PIPE 4  DRAIN TILE.\n308  Bsker  St. Nelson,  B.  C.\nDeveloping\nPrinting\nEnlarging\nFraming\nJ. a ALLEN\nAmstour Fimahlng '\nPicturo   Framing\nNothing   is   too   good   for   tha   sick\nSmy the's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION   SPECIALIST\n,     Tn business for your health.     Let ni\nfill   your    prescription*..       Mall   orders\n' promptly -p-iepiited.      Qall and wait for\nSunday bourn:   1 to 4 aad T to t p-m.\ni your ear,   Phone I.\nTRY  A CLASSIFIED Xp.    \"__'\nE\nTrophy in Vocational\nSpiel Is Won hy\nProvincial Curlers\nKi .innt; thslr opponents. C.P.R.\nNo. 2. lUto I, tho Provincial Government rink Saturday af.ernoon captured the fUvarwara In the vocational   spiel.\nCurling in tht Plugs and Colts\n\u2022playdown competition which was\nscheduled to start tonight will bo\nptiVtponad until further notice, unless\ntho weather taken a decided turn\nduring tkt day\nSo \"Reports Occupant; Mattress\nand   Bedclothes    '\nBurned\nFire starting from on unknown\norigin ln the bedding of a down-\nstnlrs room at the Ocoldental hotel\nearly yesterday morning destroyed\nthe mattress and bedclothes before\n,: WM <xtingulshed by the occupant\nof the room, Louis Wowner. Mr.\nTowner, proprietor of tho hotel was\nnotified lat <-r iu the morning by\nMr.   AVowncr.\nMr. Wowner, a transient, who haa\nbeon employed until just recently\nby a lumber company at Apex, occupied the room Saturday night.\nHe sold he was awakened yesterday\nmorning about 3 o'clock when some\nperson whom he could not Identify\ni nu i .1 tin' room by way of the\nwindow and set fire to tho clothes\non the bed, lat* r escaping by the\nway he entered. He said he promptly  put out  the  fire.\nThe   loss   Is   covered.\nE\nSTILL STALLED\nMust   Unload   Machine   More;\nMay Mean Leaving Mechanician Behind\nrOHTO      PRAIA,     Cape      VoHm\ni l rn-!     i't-i.   |8    s- v*t_l ilinos Com.\nmand'r De  PlnedO,  the  It.(linn  ;i*. .-iim*.\nhai ittimpte.l to force his hydro-\na-trplnno, Bants M ma. Into the air,\nbut without intt-tM.   Hla next port Dl\ncnll,    If   It   Is   possible    tn    innke    tlie\n,x porl Natal, on the Brut*\nllan coast. That will ncceseltate a\nfliKh-t of n.'.t' miles, ud man* mnny\npounds -more of fn< I. It Is largely\nowing in thin Ultra weight th il thi\nHsntn Maria failed to leave the wiuer\nAt any rat', ont >\u25a0( the IWO ui---\neh.'ini* ium will proh.ilily Ih led behind at  I'nrto Praya.\n.1 lHHt Dlgiml in\nthe moonlight io witness the departure of the Iiali:ms, but they re-\nm-.iiii'.i pertoroa, iad siopt in the\npalace until 9 o'clock UUi morning.\nNelson News of tbe Day\nIi It uuiuckv to bo bora on Ftbro-\nary 29?    rind oat from tho \"FXXATBI\nOF    PENZANCE.\" <\u00ab848)\nt    \\et   thi\n11- -,11 l   ruin\n\u25a0galnsi  I.-\n\u2022lulec  Bates or- n     it\nfor   tli4-   young   people.\n\u25a0r  parlors,   UVdnfsdny.\n(S841)\nS\u00abe thu light betw\u00ab*-\"n th* polio* aad\ntit*   \"PXKATE8   Or   rEHlAKOS.\"\n(6844)\nMarket    Hall,    Wednenday\n-tlmu    ttoiigh    nnd    peppy\n(68-10)\nDance\nnight,\nniUHte.\nA inmlcal tr**t oa r*bna*ry  33 and\n24,  at th* ' PLttATES  Or  PEHTAMCE.\"\n(8845)\nTlw attach i* Eannehed, What will\nyou do io kef-fi frour eity clean? Vote\nngalnst i\" 11  NTioPa, W' dnoMstga\ni'NIL',\nSons\n'etook\nEngland   meet   tonight  at   8\nMemorial   Hall. (\u00ab828)\nMrs. j. Qlbeoa'Si top of Vernon\nitreet, for I.O.D.R. Olrl QaMetf Tea,\nSaturday.   26th  of- 1-Vbruary. (6846)\nIf you wisli to r-at'i Kiiaril your city\nmd young people, prevent them going\nIsewhere f->i their beet and wild nar-\niii-s,    \"Voto Wat Beer.\" (68S2)\nt'-ii.'i Church of i'litist. Scicntlut, of\nNel on, B.C., snnouitcrs a free leotura\nnn Christian Kolencs by l\">r. John M.\nlint, C.H i:., at Kinaas City, MUsourt,\nMember of ihr Board of Kectureshtp,\nnf Boston, lUamchusettBi on Friday,\nhVbruary 16th, ai lile. p.m. in the\nM\u00bb inorial Halt. ' 'srtonats and Ward\nPtreeta, nn-i oordlnlly invitrs the pub-\nh.   ff. be  preifBt (6831)\ntaAdlet' Auxiliai v to Tralnnun will\nhold L'mirl Wlnsi nl Canadian I-eglon,\nKi'lirunry    It,    K    p.in.      Admlaflon    35\noeats.    Kvitj to uly  treteoiae,        (681!*)\nLadiea*    * ontllttoafM    nnd    reducing\ni   Bn ii.   Btrathopnr\nTwo   o'clock,   Mondayw.\nPAY NITE\nreducing\nna Hotfl.\n(Iiii)\nThs adjourned Annunl Meeting of\nthe Nelrtnn Agrleuliural & Industrial\nAhuoclation    will    bfl    held    in    ths   Cily\nMall   on    Monda)    evening,    February\nt  s o'clock. (ealf)\nTwn-rnnm     furnished,     Pteam-heatsd\nshIH'.     Btlrllag   Hotel. (6803)\nDemand   MeUon   Bund   New   Pack\ns. vill. itiange Marmalade, It'n made\nin Nelson, llelp hulld up your own\niiidiistri.-s (67SP)\nIf your paper in mn d.llvered by\nfl II o'clock everv morning, plenfte\nt*lephon< Ths Hally Newx. You are\ni nti tied  to N esTva yoot paper hy\nhy  tjtalR\n11 yT6 >\nPHONE\nDr. M. F. Setters\nPhysioisn   and   8urgson\nSuit*   5<)3   to   509   Rookery    Suilding\nCorner  Rivsriid*  and   Howard\nOvar Whitshouae.\nIP0KANE, WASH,\nWNG, VIDOI^S\nBARDEL\nfZfte Mag\nStarring^\nWM GILBERT\ni > ONE  moment \u2014 the  power\n\u25a0 bound the state; the not\ni of fal> glory, * tnutor\nta Qtrf lor hit  folly.\nfAmiiJH for Ike lor, o,\\, trrl\n\u25a0  kt htd mr\u00bb bt once!\nViae m fossjsous ronisnaT, rials ia!\nj   Aad vfaai  s tnaasndoua triunpli\nIoc  John   (jilbsn   aa   Bvoalra,  \u2022\ngTSaU   AffaaaSr   btat   .    gTSatUa-   aOVCT!\n,    CftaWrt sad King Vidor, itar sad\n;    diranor of Tha Big Psrad*\" snd\n-Ls Bohnnaa.\" la s story by Sabs-\ntsoi, sudsor of -Scarrsmouchr\" and\n_-Tl\u00bb Sssi Hami\"!    Try ,o bvi\n'    tmm,  lor  rmmUWmrnf ___(__\nBlbAN<Olt  BOABDMAN\nROY l> AfK.1\nKARL DANE\nGB0O3B K. ABTHUt\nARTHUR LUUN\naW Imi  Pi*,, fnm+m man\n\u25ba, a>M t.ljiui'   l4,ai, a,\n I\nAdvanced Prices\nChildren, 25c; Adults, 50c\nBetter than Bonds\nSCRIP BOOKS\na^ the co^tu-et,\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_1927_02_21","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\/1.0403284","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":"1927-02-21 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":"1927-02-21 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":""}]}