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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":" \u00aeht\nw\nVol. 26\nNKUSON   B C. TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 31, 1928\nNo. 242\nREMIER HINTS TAX REDUCTIONS\n  , 4- >\t\nnnnmiPTP        Stanford Students Are ! Illinril MITM f.riwt^iWAncworc tho fall\nVatervftiys\n\/Canada\nFrom U\nProject,    He\nAwaits Word\nS. A.\nStanford Students Are\nBami From Athletics\nOuting to Paralysis Scare\nNTANM.KI)      I MVKK.1TV,      111.,\nJan, JO.\u2014All social activities at\nNtantord university has been Indefinitely postponed, both swimming pools have been closed and\nother regulations are under contemplation as a result ol the discovery of several cases of Infantile\nparalysis, lt was announced today.\nUETT DEBATES ON\nI ADDRESS WITH  KING\nChieftain Opposes Foreign\nations in  Favor  of,\nade Commissioners\nJjTAWA, Jan. 3*\u2014Debate on\njMMnu In the house today-\nBed with the reception to Presl-\nCosjrave\/of the Irish Free\ntrough, crowds to parlla-\nhlU' reminiscent of the\n\u2122* d_js two years ago with\nconstant struggle for party\nffMr. Down the corridors,\n}' after hour, a long queue walt-\nadmisslon to the house gal-\nand to tbe reception.\ntint the first occasion on\n||\/h Hon. R. B. Bennett as Con-\nIjrtlve leader, and rremler King\n* sen at Issue across the floor\nhouse. Mr. Bennett opened;\nMatte affairs. Imperial relations\n\": foreign relations were the \u00bbub-\n> which *\u00bbm for himself. He\n| id a serious unemployment slt-\nI hwthe Dtenlwlon, a airline\nlimy reteiran aad a decrease\nbpuutlon.\nGODLIDEESAYS\nHIT BUILDING\nWILL BE SPEEDY\nU. S. Intends Build Warships\nas Fast as Treasury Will\nWarrant\nMEN Ti TASK\nPooley Dislikes \"Captious Criticism\" of Opposition in McDonald's Speech\nBELIEVES SPEECH WAS\nWRITTEN BY MANSON\nUrges   Cheap  Money  for   the\nFarmers;  Says Mine Department Asleep\niphftsiztng    Immigration    ques-\ni. he urged ft committee ol the\nKof commons to Hold an ln-\nInto the preaent situation to\ne a suspicion that waa abroad\nUft&ftda , regarding the depart-\n-bf Immigration. Declining lmmt-\nn threatened the life of the Doll and the problem must be met\n* large way. The Conservative\nwas positive ln demanding lmme-\nipenslon  legislation and  the   re-\nKof the natural resources of Alto that province. The equality\ntuB claimed for Canada by mem-\nM the government waa \"a spe-\ntf deception\" to which he could\nb a party.\nH   COMMISSIONERS\nJm opposed  to  setting  up   these\nlegations   Instead   of   appolnt-\nUade commissioners,\"  he said.    It\nJail nonsense\"  to talk:  about  lm-\nwk Canada's status by the  sender a minister to Japan.    The   tm-\nj pna of   such   things   were   most\ntiler King early ln his speech took\nWith Mr. Bennett on the subject\n^migration and unemployment,\nemployment situation had not\nbetter for yeara and the governed not propose to extend imml-\n[ft to the point where lt would\nabout unemployment. Building\nI Les, bank returns and the debt\nion were brought Into the speech\n| ive the prosperity of Canada.\nBE  TAX  (JUTS\n(llmpse  Into the  budget  possibil-\nvas  offered   to  the   house   when\nrime minister said he would be\nsurprised lf  the minister  of  fi-\nwould  not  announce\"  a  reduc-\njja the public debt, a surplus and\n|r tax reductions.\"\nprime minister took the occa-\nfo give the house the first otfl-\nttatement   on   the   St.   Lawrence\nI Way situation, since the advlstory\nIttee   concluded   its    work.     He\n[he government Was communlcat-\nlth the United  States to  obtain\nlews of that country on certain-\nI mental   points   which   had   been\nI mended by the advisory commit*\n\/id until  the  government  of  the\nStates   replied,   he   could   not\now  the   negotiations  would   pro-\nMr.   Klni.   was   still   speaking\nthe house rote at 8 o'clock.    He\n.onttnue   on   Tuesday.     Tonight\nsrs  of   parliament  and   senators\n.tending   the   government   dinner\n\u2022sldent, Cosgfave.\nI INO IN WEST\nSaskatchewan   118,461  farms  were\n>d   in   1991,   while   only   117,787\nwere  occupied  in  1936;   In  Al-\ntha number  of  occupied   farms\njcreased  from  83,964  in   1921.  to\nin 1926.\nBennett spoke of the Dominion-\n:lal conference which took  place\nwa last fall.   He wished to point\nI e said, that in the speech  from\nrone,  at  the  Quebec  legislature,\nintimated  tfcat  the   conference\nj t a conference making for unity,\npossible source of discord,\nlink,\" said Mr. Bennett, \"that lf\nImportant to keep a  precis of\n* (transpired at the Imperlall  con-\nit   waa   far   more   important\nprecis  ahould  have  been   kept\nrecent Dominion-provincial con-\n:tion .\na  year   ago,   the   minister   of\nsnd   the   minister   of   the   in-\nIon   behalf   of   the   government\nitned  an  agreement  with   repress of Alberta for the return of\nresource* to that Province,\nhas not been ione yet,\" com-\ntMr. Bennett. \"The question\nowever. been referred by the\ntent to tht? supreme court of\nThe decision of that body\nat the Albei\nin every\n:ontinued  on  *\u2022*\u2022  Two.)\nWASHINGTON, Jab. 30\u2014Discussing\nfor the first time the administration's I\nWarship construction program, President j\nCoolidge declared tonight that lt was I\nthe Intention to build the ships as I\nfast as the. condition of the treasury\nwould   warrant.\nIn an address at the semi-annual'\nbusiness meeting of the government,\nln which he stressed economy and\nasserted that lt would be better to\nhave no tax reduction than too much,\nthe president by inference replied to\ncongressional critics of the administration's naval plans on the ground that\nthey do not \u25a0peclf y a date for beginning or conyto-ttng construction ,qf\n71 pew. ships,\nPointing out that no authorizations i\nhave been made for navy building since\ntlie program of 1926, Mr. Coolidge said:*\n\"The recommendation now before\nthe congress to replace obsolete naval\nvessels i and moderately Increase our\nnaval strength contemplates that the,\nconstruction program will be carried I\nout as conditions dictate and treasury\nbalances warrant. The plan I have;\nIndorsed does not contemplate any Um->\nitatlon as to the beginning or the j\ncompletion of this tentative program. |\nBut lt does contemplate the building\nof the ships as,fast as possible.\"\nBased on present construction costs,]\nIt has been estimated that the navy\nprogram which Secretary Wilbur has\nlaid before congress would cost about j\n$740,000,000.\nThe president emphasised that while:\nhe believed a constructive program\nshould be adhered to, lt would be an\nerror to curtail activities necessary to\nthc' well-being  of the nation.\nNew Zealand WiU\nBroadcast Special Radio\nProgram, Sunday, Monday\n< HKIST< ill KCII, N.Z., Jan. 30.\u2014\nA Kprrlat Maori radio pageant wlll\nbe broadcast from station \"VA,\nWellington, N.Z., on a wave length\nof \u00ab0 meters, on the evenln-js of\nFebruary 6 and 7. The hours will\ncorrespond with 11:30 p.m.. Pacific\ntime, on February 5, and 2:30 a.m.,\nFebruary 7.\nThis entertainment will depict the\nhistory, life and jcustoms of the\nnative people of New Zealand. A\ngroup of Maori performers have\nbeen chosen from the best talent lu\nthe famed Maori territory of Wan-\nganul.\nPremier i. G. Coates will speak.\nVICTORIA, Jan. 30.\u2014Abolition\nof the absentee vote and Its replacement with advanced polls; reduction of the procurage on loans\nto farmers from 3 *\/\u25a0_ per cent to\nIH; and the wiping out of the\nunearned Increment tax which was\npassed last year to come into operation on April 1 next were Iteqps\nof Conservative policy announced\nby B. H, Pooley, opposition leader\nMonday   ln   the   legislature.\nIn opening hla attack on the\ngovernment Mr. Pooley took J. A.\nMcDonald, Nelson member, to task\nfor having In hts maiden speech\nreferred to the \"captious criticism\"\nof the opposition. He felt, however,\ntbat Mr, McDonald might not be to\nblame, 'as he believed that his\nspeech was widMsii ieq him. by the\naltorifry-general, the \"medicine\nman of Otnlneea.\"\nHIGH  INTEREST RATE\nHe was surprised, said the opposition\nWader to hear the government member for Port George say that lt did not\nmatter what procurage farmers paid\nfor money they loaned. He thought\nit did matter as Colonel Fred Lister\nhad pointed out that the farmers\nwere charged 3 V. per cent more for\nmoney than the government paid tor\nlt, especially when the Lands Settlement act specifically stated that the\nprocurage should not be more than\nl'\/a   Per  cent.\nHe   would  suggest   that  the   government hang out the three golden balls\nthat was the  sign of the  extortionate.\nJewish   money  lenders  of  London.\nCHEAP MONEY\n\"We wtll give the farmers cheap,\nmoney, and will not charge them any\n3'\/a per cent,\" he declared. Such a\ncharge was typical df the encouragement that was being given to settlers\nand was ln keeping with the 25c an\nhour  paid  to  forest  fire-fighters. j\nIn   referring   to   the   return   of   the\nPeace   River   block   and   railway   lands\n(Continued from Page Eight)\nEarl Douglas'\"HW?!!c6mmamler-!n-ch1ef of the British forces\nin the great war, who died yesterday of heart failure in London.\nStrain caused during the war left the great soldier with a weak\nheart and death came suddenly. He was 66 years of age and\nserved in various capacities in the Boer war. Britain is in mourn\ning at his passing.\nE INSANITY\nIN HIS FAMILY\nRelatives   in    Hickman   Case\nSay Grandfather Subject\nof  Fits\nHumble Subject Plants\nResounding Kiss on the\nDuke of York at a Ball\nLONDON, Jan. 30.\u2014The Duke of\nYort \\onlght had the unprecedented\nexperience of being kissed by one\nof the humblest of his royal father's\nsubjects in the present^ of the\nduchess.\nThe royal couple were attending\ntl\u00bbe annual ball ot the London\ncostermongers and frere sitting un\na platform watching dancers after\nhaving been participated ln the\nopening dance, when a Mrs. Palmer,\ndealer In second-hand clothing,\nrushed to the platform, threw her\narms around his neck and gave him\na resounding1 kiss.\nExcusable Homicide Is\nVerdict of the Jury in\nMontreal; Damage Suit\nMONTREAL, Jan. 30.\u2014A verdict of\n\u25a0'excusable\"\\ homicide\" was returned by\na Jury under Coroner Prince tonight ln\nthe ease of Sydney Yarmulnik, 27-\nyear-old hat designer, who was killed\nby a policeman when mistaken for a\nholdup man on January aa last.\nBefore the verdict of the Jury had\nbeen rendered, however, notice had\nbeen filed before the supreme court of\naction in damag of 110,000 against the\ncity of Montreal by the widow and\nfather of the dead man.\nTHIRTY-FIVE MEN ARE\nSUFFOCATED IN MINE\nHATAV1A, Java, Jan. 30.\u2014Thlrty-\nrive men were suffocated today in\na fire ln a coal mine at Sawaroso.\nTwenty-four other workers escaped.\nNine bodies had hem\nthii afternoon.\nPremier MacLean Denies\nGovernment to Offer Any\nSolution P. G. \u00a3. Problem\nVICTORIA, Jan. 30.\u2014Reports that\nthe government Is about to announce e solution of the Pacific\n(\u2022ireat Eastern railway problem were\ndenied  by  Premier MucLean  today.\nBank Cashier Seized\nand Held in Bank Till\nTime Loch Comes Open\nCHICAdO, Jan, 30\u2014The \"kidnapping system\" of bank robbery, used\nfor the third time within a month ln\nChicago, today netted its practitioners  $30,000.\nJames Dillon, cashier of the Industrial State Bank of Chicago, told police that he was held a prisoner ln\nthe ' bank all night while his four\ncaptors waited for tbe time lock ln the\nbank Vault to open at 7 a.m.\nLOS ANOELES. Jan. 30.\u2014An attempt\nwas made today to show alleged traces\nof Insanity among the ancestors of\nWilliam E. Hickman to prove the 19-\nyear-old youth was insane when he\nkidnapped and killed Marian Parker,\nLos  Angeles schoolgirl.\nTaking of testimony ln the trial\ngot under way today before the completed Jury of four women and eight\nmen after Superior Judge J. J. Trabucco had denied a motion by the\ndefence fur dismissal of the indictment\nagainst Hickman almost as promptly\nas lt was offered.\nPictures of a grandfather subject\nto fits, a grandmother of frail physique\nand bed-ridden during her closing\nyears, were painted before the Jury\nIn the depositions of relatives and acquaintances of thc Hickman  family.\nLOST SUBMARINE\nCanada's Two New\nCruisers Are Named the\n\"Vancouver,\" \"Champlain\"\nOTTAWA, Jan. 30.\u2014The department\nof national defence today promulgated\nthe following:\n\"On February 1, H.M.S. Toriuy and\nToreador will be transferred from the\nroyal navy to the Canadian naval service. Upon transfer these two *h.__t> . c j .\nrenamed H.M.C.8. Champlain aud Vancouver, as it ts considered that the s.iips\nof the Canadian naval service should\nbear names of national historical significance.\"\nHeavy Fire Damage\nto Medical Building\nToronto University\nTORONTO, Jan. 30\u2014Damage estimated at 136,000 was done to the medical building of the University of Toronto, and of some 1100,000 to chemicals\nand scientific equipment, by flra this\nmorning.\nTOEONTO CHURCH UlBNfl\nTORONTO, Jan. 30.\u2014-Fire this morning practically destroyed the Metropolitan churoh, one of the leading United\nChurches tn Canada, and formerly a\nMethodist church. The loss la estimated at hall a million dollars. Rev.\nDr. W. H. Sedgewlck is the pastor of\nthe church.\nSister   Ship   of   S-4   Lost   in\nHeavy Gale Weathers the\nStorm in Safety\nWASHINGTON. Jan. 30.\u2014d*fety of\nthe missing submarine S3 was reported\nto the navy department tonight by Admiral H. A. Brumby, commands, of the\ncontrol force. The admiral's message\niiaid the commander of the submarine\ndivision three, of the control iorce, reported that the S3 at 6 o'clock tonight\nhad been found In latitude 27.id, longitude 74.07, and was proceeding to Guan-\ntanamo, Cuba, destination of tne convoy\nof which she was a part.\nHEAVY GALE\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 30.\u2014TLo submarine S3 lost contact with a convoy\nsouth of Hatteras at sundown, Saturday,\nand word has not been heard irom here\nsince.\nWhile officials expressed confidence\nthat the submarine, a sister ship of the\nsunken 84, would turn up all .ight at\nGuantanamo, Cuba, her destination, the\nnevy department today ordered an intensive search for the submersible.\nThe 83, with its crew of 41 men. became separated from the control force,\nbound for winter manoeuvers in a gale\n100 miles south of Cape Hatteias. one of\nthe worst storm centers on thc Atlantic\ncoast.\nAt the department, officers, while\nplainly concerned^ said they wou'd have\nno grave fears for the S3 until after\nWednesday night, when she U due at\nGuantanamo. The ship ls In cemmand\nof Lieut. P. W. Warren of Spnngfteld,\nIUIoqI*\nj Nations and Leaders\nRegret Sudden Passing\n\\      of Haig, the Soldier\nVICTORIA, Jan. 30.\u2014Following*\nthe speech of the Conservative\nhouse leader, lc. H. Pooley which\nconcluded with a* feeling reference\nto the death of Field Marshal Earl\nHaig, the legislature on suggestion\nof Premier J. 1). MacLean, adjourned\ni his afternoon, out of respect to\nthe great soldier's memory. The\npremier also referred to the loss\nthe Empire had sustained ln the\ndeath of Earl Haig.\nrOCB    IS    SAD\nMCE, France, Jan. 30.\u2014Marshal\nF<K-h, generalissimo ot the allied\nforces ln the last stages of the,\ngreat war, today paid tribute to\nEarl Haig, the British commander\nIn  France,\n\"1 letmi with profound sadness\nof the unexpected death of Field\nMan. hai l.onl Douglas Haig,\" he\nsaid. \"He had always been for\nme a perfect brother In arms. I\ndo not doubt that his loss will\nbe greutly felt by all ex-service\nmen as it will be througbout the\nwhole   British   Empire,\"\nIIYNO   SHOCKED\nLONDON, Jan. 31).\u2014Aiscouiit\nByng, commander of the Third\nBritish army In France, und later\ngovernor-general of Canada, speaking to thc Canadian Press today\nabout the death of Earl Haig said:\n\"I consider that the Empire has\nsiiffned a very great loss*. Earl\nHaig was one of the Empire's greatest personalities of this century.\nThe news of his death has profoundly   shocked   me.\"\nUNITED   STATES\nSYMPATHETIC\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 30.\u2014The\nroniioieuces of the United States\ngovernment on the death of Earl\nllulg were convey* today by Secretary Kellogg to Sir Austen Chamberlain, secretary of the foreign\noffice   at   Loudon.\n\"May 1 express to, by, and\nthrough vou tu the bereaved family, the British people, the deep\nsense of loss experienced hy the\ngovernment and people of the United States In leiirulng of the death\nof Field Marshal Earl Haig,\" Mr.\nKellogg    cabled.\nFORGES IN GREAT\nStrain From Heavy Campaigning in War Takes Great\nSoldier at Age of 66 Years; Family Not Present\nWhen the End Comes; His Son Is DI\nBRITISHERS MOURN PASSING OF MAN WHO LED\nHER ARMIES IN FLANDERS; BURIAL IN ST. PAUL'S\nCame From Famous Scottish Family and Trained for Army;\nServed in Africa Undo* Kitchener; Expert at\nHandling Cavalry; Foch May Attend Funeral\nLONDON, Jan. 30.\u2014Earl Douglas Haig, one of the\nmost outstanding of the military leaders during the great\nwar, his heart weakened by war strain, died suddenly here\ntoday.\nCommander-in-chief of the British armies in France\nand Belgium, he was 66 years old.\nWith his death the British Empire bowed her head in\nsorrow at the passing of the man who led His Majesty's\nforces to victory across the shell-torn battlefield of Flanders. Field Marshal Haig got his call from the Great Commander-in-Chief shortly after midnight, and with his death\nthe Empire lost one whom military experts place in the first\nrank of Britain's soldiers.\nToday the Empire was paying tribute to its hero.   Old\nSt. Paul's cathedral, with its thousand hallowed memories,\nprobably will be the last resting place of the marshal.\nFOCH MAY ATTEND FUNERAL\nA definite decision had not yet been made tonight, but\nSt. Paul's has come to he regarded1 as Britain's hall of fame\nfor her military leaders, and if Earl Haig is buried in this\nancient house of worship he will lie in the company of the\nT\/ufte of Wellington, Lord Roberts, Wolseley, and Napier.\nand Sir Henry Wilson, as well as other distinguished\nfighters.\nIt is possible that Marshal Foch, generalissimo of the\nallied armies in France at the end of the war, and King\nAlbert of Belgium, with whom Earl Haig was so closely associated during the world conflict, will come to London to\ngive a last salute to their comrade in arms. Hundreds of\nother famous men and women also pay homage at his bier.\nSTRAIN OF WAR\nEarl Haig died of heart disease caused by wai- strain, and so\nhe passed on as truly a victim of the conflict as though he had\nfallen on the field of battle. Death came suddenly and unex-\n, \u2014\u2014 4expectedly at the home of his\nLnn I rum sister, Mrs. Wv G. Jameson, at\nnf    HlM iPrince's Gate.    Countess Haig\nULLILILU        'was n\u00b0t wi'n h'm\u00bb ***\u25a0 s**e was\n'visiting friends, and his youth-\njful heir, 10-year-old George Al-\nI exander, is ill at the Haig home\nin P>einei'syde.\nThis lad,  who now assumes\nhis father's distinguished title,\nwas a child of the war, being\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ born early in 1918, during that\nFound   Badly   Frozen   in   Closed   Heart-breaking  crisis  when the  British\narmies, commanded by his father, were\nCar;  fiancee Survives at retreating under a terrible Qermnn on-\nPort Arthur\nTO BE ill\nIN EAST:\nPORT ARTHUR, Jan. 30.\u2014Finding of\nCanadian Rockies\nWill Have Peak Named\nHonor British Premier\nVICTORIA, Jan. 90.\u2014In honor of Rt.\nHon. Stanley Baldwin, British premier,\nHon. T. D. Pattullo, minister of lands,\nannounced today that a pea* ln the\nCanadian Rockies, near Veilowhead\nPaaa, has been officially named Mount\nBaldwin.\nA mountain ln the same vicinity wlll\nbe named Mount Oliver ln memory of\nthe late John Oliver, premier oi British Columbia.\nlaught. \t\ntJlSTOEIC   OUDFH\nIt was ut this period that Karl Haig\nIssued his historic order of the day:\n_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_^_m \u25a0 \"With our backs to the wall, apd\nthe body of 19-year-old Florence Mc- believing In the Justice of our cause,\nCarthy ln an automobile parked all Cach one of us must fight on to the\nnight by a  roa-iside In  the  north  end   end.\"\nof the city. iMs morning, has been The declaration might form au\nfollowed today by a police check of cpitaph for the field marshal, for lt\nthe story told by the young woman's epitomizes the dogged courage, fear-\ncompanion and fiancee, John Hollands, leanness and grasp of affairs which\nIt Is understood the statements made characterized hts career.\nby Hollands have been pretty well con-| Eari Haig's personality was rather\nfirmed and it seems likely the Jury.] cotd and austere, but those who knew\nwhich will meet next Monday, wlll hlm weU reaiized that this was only\nftnH   th\u00bb*   **\u2014*\u00bbk   -..  \u2014,.\u2014.   *.-   \u2014    on the 8Ufrace   and  that in reanty he\nfind that death was caused by monoxide gas. which entered the closed\ncar, a coupe, while the engine was\nleft  running  to  keep lt warm.\nHollands and Miss McCarthy were\nengaged to be married and as the girt\nhad only the meagre facilities of a\nboarding house for entertainment, the\ntwo had been ln the habit of sitting\nout frequently in a parked car.\nHollands' story ls that he called for\nthe girl Sunday evening about 8 o'clock,\nthat they drove around until nearly\nmidnight, when he parked on the roadside and left the engine running.\nShortly afterward he went to sleep\nand awakened this morning to find\nthe girl dead. Her legs were frozen\nalmost to the hips, the arms were aiso\nfrozen to the elbows, and so\nwas one side of the face. Tlie temperature had gone to 12 below zero during the night. The gas tank was\nempty and the engine still. It ls\nsupposed the two went Into a stupor,\nand that the girl died, but before the\nman had succumbed the gas supply\ngave out.\nHollands Is still detained by the\npolice as a material witness. The girl\ncame here a few months ago from\nLethbrldge, Alta., bringing a younger\nsister, who has since been ln her\ncare.\nwas warm-hearted. Since the war.\nthe earl had become one of the moet\nbeloved men ln the Empire because of\nhis unceasing work in behalf of disabled  soldiers.\nBesides a son, the earl leave three\ndaughters, the oldest 31 years and. the\nyoungest  9.\nThe King sent a personal message of\ncondolence to Lady Haig and ln a\ncourt   circular   issued    from   Sandiing-\n(Continued   on   Page   Two.)\nThe Weather\nlit (IE JEWEL THEFT\nCHICAGO. Jan-: 80\u2014 William I.\nDarress, a Jeweler, reported to polio*\ntoday that three armed men held hlm\nup ln hla office and rifled his safe of\nJewelry valued . at between $45,000\nana leo.ooo. i\nNew Governor-General\nof Irish Free State\nIs Safely in Dublin\nDUBLIN, Jan. .0.\u2014Traveling under\nrumors of a plot against his life by\nIrish extremists. Jamea McNeill, thc\nnew governor-general of the Irish Free\nState, arrived here safely tonight after\nan uneventful crossing from England.\nHe was accompanied by detective* and\nnumerous police were waiting at the\npier, but then was no indication that\ntheir servlcea would be needed.\nfrom the Dominion -Uteoroloda.1\nOffloe,   Victoria\nMln. Max\nNELSON    33 37\nVictoria         44       63\nVancouver     _   44 48\nKamloops       33 36\nBarlierville          t 38\nEstevan       48 48\nPrince Rupert      38 44\nAtlln      *-0 M3\nDawson      *34 '18\nSeattle       48       54\nPortland      84\nSan Francisco     80 60\nSpokane        83 38\nPentlcton       38 43\nVernon      33 40\nKaslo    33 37\nCranbrook      36 36\nCalgary          3 83\nEdmonton      '6       16\n8wlft Current   _ \u2022 4 33\nPrloe Albert      1       13\nQu'Appelle         0       14\nWinnipeg          0       13\n* Below aero.\nForecast:   Nelson   and   vicinity\u2014Generally fair and mUd followed by rala.\n_   J\n PaRe Two \"\"\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 31, 1928\nr\nLeading Hotels of the West\nSuperior Accommodation May Bt Obtained\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of {he Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nRooms with Running Water.   Private Baths en Suite\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men, Lumber\nMen ana Tourists.\nSpecial Sunday Dinner $1.00.        Rotarian Headquarters\nThe Most Comfortable Rotunda in the City.\nHUME\u20143. Walman. Nelson: J. E. Dea- j McLeod, W. B. McLeod. A. O. Knowland.\nman. Spokane: F. Clark, T. Pennington, A. T. Anderson A. M. McCurrail. Van-\nC. E. Allen, C. Blnoschln. F. Meeker. F. I couver: O. C. Thompson, Klmberley; J.\nWheeler, H. Walklnshaw. Mr. and Mrs. i W. Peck, Ymlr; R. GriWe. Montreal; H\nHosfall. B. Preston, ThPlma Baird. Lyllan J. Johnson. Cranbrook- E B. Proud. Vic\nCane. H. Beveton, H. a. Menells. Toron- ' torla; S. O. Beadle. Winnipeg.\nto, Ont.; C. R. Oordon, B. Johnson. H. S. <\nSAVOY\nNELSON'S FINEST HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\nHot and Cold Running Water in All Rooms.\nlintlis or Sho'\nNELSON.  B. C\nSAVOY \u2014 E. L. Groutage. W. Framp-   Brown.  Fernle;  P. C.  Stevensou,  Cran-\nton. Trail; Mrr Mlddleton, A. C. Maurer.   brook:   J. Person   Revelstoke:   D, Craig\n-   \u2122 __   __   __   >       \u2022**     \u00ab\u25a0   _-___!. _    C. McNeil. C. J. Clark. T. L. Purvi-s, Van-\nJ. Terry, A. S. Morley, Mrs. E. Oraham,   ^wrer; Mp Strelief. Winlaw; G. W. Mor-\nSlocan Ctty; J. J. Stakes, Lardo; W. R. I ria, Kamloops; J. M. Sandfoot, Calgary.\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nHot and cold water ln every room.\nSteam Heated.\nM. E. BARNETT, Prop.\nQUEENS\u2014J. D. Moore. K. Murray,\nKaslo; Mrs. D. C. McEwIng and aon, Mrs.\nR. Stewart and son. Salmo; C. Talbyn.\nC. Mass, Ymir; Olga Swan, C. Swan. Sandon; M. Murray, H. O. Zlnn, Lemon\nCreek.\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\n\u2022     UNDER    THE    MANAGEMENT    OF\nWILLIAM  .KIMS\nGOOD,  CLEAN ROOMS.    REASONABLE\nRATES\nPHONE   15. 516  VERNON  ST.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nA Modern Brick Building\n610 Vernon Street, Nelson, B.C.\nHot and Cold Water and Telephone\nin All Rooms.   Steam Heated\nThroughout.\nJ. BLOMBERG, Prop. European Plan\nNEW GRAND\u2014M. Harrop, Harrop: H.\nHarrington, Edgewood; Mrs. J. C. Hansen, Sheep   Creek.\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n2H  Blocks East of Post Office\nSteam Heated.   Hot and Cold Water.\nRooms  by  day  or week.\nAlto Furnished Suites\nP. H. BUSH, Prop.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nT. MADDEN, Prop.\nSteam   Heated   Rooms   hy   the   Day,\nWeek  or Month.\nEvery   consideration ' shown   to\nguests.\nCor. Baker and Ward Sts., Nelson.\nMADDEN\u2014G.  Karigan,  G.  BUtset, J.\nF. Green. Winnipeg.\nTrail Hotels\nIteam Heated\nThroughout\nHot and Cold\nWater\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nE. I.. AND A. OROOTAOE, Props.\nBox \u00abM Phone 263 TraU, B.C.\n'^ *i*>j\"^ffpl\n, ;*Y- ,, l\u00ab tfsV\nOCCIDENTAL    HOTEL\nA.  C.  TOWNER,  Proprietor.\nThe Home of Plenty.\nFifty  Rooms  of  Solid   Comfort.\nHeadquarters   for   Loggers   and   Miners.\nDeer shot near Squaw Mountain,\nMe., had a pine knot completely encircling one hoof.\nMore than 6000 applications for\nchildren to adopt were received last\nyear In New York,\nDODDS '\n'kidney\nk PILLS\nOF\nLoosen Up That Cold\nWith Musterole\nHave Musterole handy when a cold\nstarts. It has all of the advantages of\ngrandmother's mustard plaster without\nthe burn. You feel a warm tingle as the\nhealing ointment penetrates the pores,\nthen a soothing, cooling sensation and\nquick relief.\nMade of pure oil of mustard and\nother simple Ingredients, Musterole ls\nrecommended by many nurses and\ndoctors. Try Musterole for bronchitis,\nsore throat, stiff neck, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, croup, asthma, neuralgia, congestion, pains and aches of\nthe chest. It may prevent pneumonia\nbruises, chilblains, frosteu feet, colds of\n'he back or Joints, sore muscles, sprains.\nThy Musterole Co. of Canada, Ltd.\nMontreal\nBetter than a mustard plaster\nNELSON'S BEST CAFES\nROYAL  CAFE\nClassic   Restaurant\nRefinement and Delicacy Prevail\nOPEN   DAY  AND  NIOHT\nLuncheon, 11:30 to a _  SOc\nSpecial  Dinners, 6:30 to 8   .36c\nWe specialize in Chop Suey and\nNoodles.\nPHONE   183\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n120  Raker  Street,  Nelson,  B.C.\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30, Special Lunch  36c\n5:30 to    8:00 p.m., Supper  .85c\nPHONE   154\n~THE lTdTcAFE-\nFinest    Equipped    Restaurant    ln    the\nCity.    OPEN DAY AND NIGHT,\nSPECIAL\u2014Ice Cream,  Soda Water  and\nHot Drinks. Nice clean furnished rooms,\nhot  and   cold   water.\nWe Cater to Private Parties.\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. P. LEVENQIE, Prop.\nCOMPLETELY RENOVATED AND REFURNISHED\nHot and Cold Running Water European Plan\nSteam Heated Centrally Located\nRotary\nHeadquarters\nSample Rooms in\nConnection\nh WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT\nREMEMBER\nThis\nAdvertisement\non Thursday\nArtists assert that the\nproperly proportioned man\n\u25a0is seven heads high. Only\none-seventh, then, of a\nman's figure is revealed\nand\nSIX SEVENTHS\nIS CLOTHED\nJUST OUTSIDE THE ftIGH REftT WSlto\n(Continued   from   page  one)\nham tonight, the field marshal's death\nls  thus  referred   to:\n\"The King knows that the sudden\nand Irreparable low of this valuable\nlife will be deeply felt throughout the\nwhole Empire by the army, and more\nespecially by Earl Halg's old comrades,\nto whose welfare he had devoted himself since the close of the great war.\"\nFOLLOWER OF\nBRCCE\nThe military achievements of Lord\nDouglas Haig consummated seven centuries of military service by the ancient\nand aristocratic family of Haig of\nBemersyde, in Berwickshire. Like so\nmany other clans, they rose from the\nquarrels of Bruce and Ballol, and once\nestablished they were represented whenever the history of Scotland was being\nmade.\nThey reared their sons for the service\nof Bruce and his Stuart successors\nand when their country took on the\nobligations of union with their southern neighbors, the Halgs fought under\nCllve, Earlborough and Wellington. In\nmore peaceful times they were distillers and as such the family fortune\nwas made and Increased through several centuries.\nProm the day he waa born June 19,\n1681, the third and youngest son of\nJohn Haig, J.P., of Cameronbridge, Fife-\nshlre, a military career was planned for\nDouglas Haig. Hts father, a member of\none of the younger branches of the\nfamily, gave hlB sons a thorough aca\ndemlc education, a necessary part of Her\nMajesty's officers of those days.\nENTERS ARMY\nSCHOOL\nAccordingly, young Haig went to exclusive Clifton and later read at Brase-\nnose college, Oxford. His work there\nfailed to attain for him any distinction\nbeyond class dramatics and he left\nthere In 1883 to enter the army staff\ncollege. Here he threw off the family\ntradlt'ims to the extent of entering the\ncavalry ln preference to the Infantry,\nbecause of his fondness for riding and\nhis belief that this branch of service\noffered greater chance of advancement.\nHe obtained a commission ln the\n7th Hussars ln 1885 and then settled\ndown to the dull existence of an army\nofficer awaiting war. In the ordinary\ncourse of events he had attained the\nrank of a captain in the 17th Lancers\nwhen he was ordered to the Soudan to\nserve under Kitchener. He accompanied\nthat officer to Khartum, his distin-\ngulnhed Bervlce winning for him the\nadmiration and friendship of his commander. Captain Halg's fortune changed\nwith this friendship and from then onward his advancement was meteoric.\nHe is said to have the record for\nrapidity of promotion in the cavalry.\nWINS   ADVANCES\nFor his service at Atbara and Khartum he was mads a brevet-ma] or. In\nthe next war, the Boer war, under\nOeneral Sir John French, hlB success'\nful commanding of several cavalry\ncolumns again won the praise of his\ncommander and he was made a brevet-\ncolonel and added to his store of\nmedals.\nThese campaigns were a basis upon\nwhich the colonel was able to build a\nreputation as a strategist and leader.\nThe friendship of Kitchener soon gave\nhim the command of Inspector-general\nof cavalry In India from 1903 to 1906\nand he was gazetted a major-general in\n1904. just eight vean= after he had been\na   lieutenant   of   cavalry*\nHe was knighted ln 1911.\nGOER TO FBANCE\nWhen the war started he was director of military training at the war\noffice. He trained and sent the first\ncontingent to France, but at the urgent\nrequest   of   Field-Marshal   French,   he\nWAS SO NERVOUS\nand SHORT OF BREATH\nCOULD HARDLY SLEEP\nMrs. Louise Raglin, Golds. Laka,\nOnt., writes:\u2014\"For several years I\nwaa greatly troubled with my heart\nI was so nervous and short of breath\nI could hardly sleep at night, and if\nX did sleep for a while 1 had bad\ndreams.\n\"I managed to keep at my work,\nsomehow, until I began to have diary\nspells which got so bad I had to give\nup. I used many kinds of medicine,\nbut found no help until I got a box ef\nAfter the first boi\nI found a great\nchange, and after\ntwo boxes I was\nas well as I could\nbe.\n\"I   told   my\nmother,   who   had\nchoking sensations,\nabout   them   and\nthey helped her greatly.\"\nPrice 50c. a box at all druggists and\ndealers, or mailed direct on reseipt of\nprice by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,\nToronto, Ont\nwas sent to France to command the\nFirst Ana; Corpe.\nIt fell to Oeneral Haig to command\nthe English divisions at the first battle\nof the aiarne and this he did with\nsuch skill that his work was singled\nout by Lor* French ln his report to\ntbe war offloe. For this service Haig\nwas made a full general and despite\nthe fact that there were older and\nmore experienced officers ln the field,\nhe came to be recognised as the ablest\nof the Bngllsh commanders.\nHis knowledge of the strategic Importance of the cavalry and his faith\ntn that branch of service caused him\nto use lt more than most commanders\nin the great conflict were Inclined to\ndo. The retreats from Mons and Ypres\ncovered by the cavalry have been known\nas the finest examples ot military\nscience produced ln the war. This\nbrought more commendation for the\ncommander of the First Corps and when\non December IS, 1915, French was relieved of the supreme command of the\nEnglish forces and raised to peerage,\nthe nation ln one loud acclaim welcomed the appointment of Haig aa generalissimo, Halg's service was so brilliant\nas to win him further renown.\nBECOMES AN EARL\nHe had been appointed field marshal\nin 1917 for distinguished service and\nwhen he returned to England after ths\nwar the mantle of Wellington by popular desires was thrust upon his\nshoulders. In 191) he wss received by\nthe King on relinquishing hts command\nand retiring from tbe armj. when His\nMajesty raised him to the dignity ol\nan earl. Hs was later called before\nparliament publicly thanked and voted\na gift of 1300.000.\nOETS AN ESTATE\nA public subscription was taken and\nwhen a fund of \u00bb1.430.000 was raised\nthe ancestral estates of Bermersyde were\npurchased and presented to him as a\ngift of the people. Before retiring to\nhis estates he received the freedom of\nall large English cities snd waa made\nchancellor of St. Andrew's university.\nIn 1933 he accepted a directorship\non the board of the largest whisky\ncombine in Scotland, which at that\ntime absorbed the distilling Interests\nof the Haig family.\nIn most of his charactertatcs Lord\nHaig was typically the Scotchman. HU\nmanner was tipped with that which\nwas considered more adamant than the\ngranite of Aberdeen and he possessed\nthat primary vlrture of his country\npatience. Lord Halg's manner through\nthe entire war ls said to have never\nchanged, never was there depression\nor elation shown on his face.\nHis reticence nnd natural aloftnesa\ncaused him to be accused of a frigid\npersonality, but his silence was not the\n_Z,1\u00b0' \\.l!\"* \u00b0' \u2022raw*****. h'\u00ab\nfriends say\u2014lt was because he used\nwords as he used men, sparingly, but\nalways with method.\nLord Haig married in 1905 the Hon\nDorothy Vivian, a daughter ot Lord\nVlvl\u00bbn.   They had four children\nALSO PREDICTS\nREDUCTION OF\nDEBLSUBPLUS\n(Continued    irrom    Page    One.)\n\"Instead, the government had made\nan application to the privy council in\nEngland to hear an appeal on the matter and when the application came\nberore the privy council there was no\nrespondent on hand to uphold it.\n\u25a0TRUES   NO   DELAY\n\"I suggest that the government without further delay turn over to Alberta its natural resources,\" said Mr.\nBennett. The long delay tn doing this\nhas created a most unfavorable Impression throughout the country.\n\"Why should we delay.\" asked the\nopposition leader. \"We were informed\nthat the railway problem^ of the provinces had been discussed at the Dominion-provincial conference. The fact\nthat parliament was not appraised of\nthe nature of these discussions indicated that the government now eend-\ned to ignore the representatives of the\npeople in these matters.\nBAY    LINE    CHANGES\nHe referred to the change from the\nport of Nelson to Fort Churchill for\nthe Hudson's Bay railway. He was not\ndiscussing, he said, the relative merits\nof Churchill and Nelson as terminal\nports. He merely wished to draw attention to the way ln which the change\nhad  been  made.\nNelson, said Mr. Bennett, had been\nselected as the terminal of the Hudson's Bay railway by Hon. Prank Cochrane, when he was minister of railways\nin the Borden government. The selection had been made on the advice\nof competent engineers. Six million\ndollars had been spent on making Nelson a proper terminal port. Now Mr.\nDunning, on the advice of a British\n'\u2022\u25a0Htuarlal engineer,\" had changed to\nChurchill.\nWha* was most Important about the\nchange, however, was that the minister of railways announced the change\nby radio as coming from himself. Mr.\nDunning intervened to say that his\nannouncement had been made on behalf of himself and his colleagues.\nIP   TO  PARLIAMENT\nMr. Bennett replied that as far\nhe knew there was nothing to show\nthat even the government was authorized to make such an announcement\nIt was a matter upon which parliament should have been consulted- The\nvery first  speech which  he  had  made\nIn the old bouse of commons chamber, Mr. Bennett said, toad been la\nfavor of construction of the Hudson\nBay railway.\nUnder the Railway act the minister\ncould not cause such ua expenditure\nwithout  tt^e  sanction  of parliament.\nOf immigration, Mr. Bennett said that\na state of unrest and suspicion of the\nadministration existed throughout the\ncountry, a suspicion of the methods\nby which the permit* were Issued for\nImmigrants. It was blgh time something should be dona to bring people\nand settle them ln this country.\n' In 1930 British immigrants had\nnumbered 59.000 with 6000 from other\nEuropean countries. In 1936, 49,000\nBritish people had oome with 73,000\nIrom the throne 7 declaration of the\nsuitable type of Immigrants arriving\nip view of this increase from continental countries? It was the most\nImportant question that could engage\nthe public attention.\nIN  LARGE  WAY\nWe have not In any one year sines\n1931 brought In one-half as many Im*\nmigrants as ln 1913, This threatens\nthe life of ths Dominion. We must\nhave settlers, said Mr. Bennett, and lt\nmust be done ln a large  way.\nMr. Bennett suggested a special\ncommittee of parliament to bear the\nevidence of railway presidents, officials of the department at home and\nabroad. The committee should hear\nthe question ln its entirety ln order\nthat the people should have their suspicions  of tbe department  removed.\n\"Only this day I had a cable from\na friend In London, vitally interested ln\nthese matters saying: 'Your new medical   regulations  are  absurd'.\"\nThe   government was  doing  next  to\nnothing  and   it  was  not   getting  settlers.    The figures Indicated an almost\ntotal   failure.\nITSTOMH REPORT\nTurning to the customs report, Mr.\nBennett said that nothing had more\nvindicated the statements made by\nHon. H. H. Stevens, than tbe report\nrecently Issued by the royal commission. \"Wfcen that report Is considered\nby this house, the minister of customs\nwill have more to answer for than\nglorification In the newspapers for the\nefficiency of his department,\" said\nMr. Bennett, referring to the alleged\nneglect  ln prosecuting  certain  cases.\n\"I am wholly ln accord with the\nsuggestion made by the minister of\ntrade and commerce, that we should\nuse large sums of money for research\nwork,\" said Mr. Bennett. Nothing\nwas more fatal ln the successful prosecution of this work than duplication\nof effort, and he hoped this point\nwould be borne ln mind by tbe government.\nMr. Bennett was amazed that the\nspeech from the throne had made no\nmention of pension legislation. He had\ncome in contact with many men who\nwere IU ln body and out of work, but\nwho had been refused a pension on\nthe grounds of \"postwar disability.\"\nThe situation was calculated to make\nthese men indignant and somewhat\nresentful.\nCLAIMS   IS   UNTRUE\nPremier King and the minister of\nJustice, Mr. Lapolnte, had, Mr. Bennett\ncontinued, referred ln several utterances to Canada's alleged equality of\nBtatus. \"When we say that we have\nequality of Btatus, we are saying\nsomething that is untrue in fact,\"\nsaid Mr. Bennett. It was a \"species of\ndeception\" to tell the young men and\nwomen of thlB country that Canada\nhad equality of status. He would not\nbe a party to any \"subterfuge\" of this\nnature.\n\"There can be no equality of status,\nsaid Mr. Bennett, \"so long as the Colonial Laws Validity act remains ln\neffect.\" Until, he continued, the British parliament repealed the Colonial\nLaws Validity act, Canada could not\nhave equality of status.\nWON'T   BE   CAUGHT\n\"Will my honorable friend Join with\nme ln asking for the repeal of the\nColonial Laws Validity act?\" interjected Hon. Ernest Lapolnte, minister of\njustice.\n\"I observe that my honorable friend,\nthe minuter,\" retorted Mr. Bennett,\n\"when confronted with the difficulties\nof his own situation, desires to escape\nby asking a queBtion. I will not be\ncaught    that   way.\"\nHe would, said Mr. Bennett, use bis\nendeavors to see that Canada, as a\npartner ln the British Empire should\nhave an equality with the other parts.\nMr.  Bennett was of tbe  opinion\nthere   was   to*  ltttls   known   on\npart of tbe people ln reaped to\ntranspired 1* the work of coma\nin   tbe   League   at   Nations   in   *\nCanada   was a  member.\nOPPOSES   LEGATION  PLAN\nWhen Canada undertook to sat\nminuter   in   Tokyo   this   country\nundertaking   a   matter   ln   whlcft\nimplications   were  moat   dangerou\nam   opp<>jd   to setting  up\nsign   legations   Instead   of   i\ntrade    commissioners,\"    Mr.\nsaid.   He felt that such a courM\neventuate   In   disaster.     The   pit\not a Canadian minister in Jafean\nplied   that   Canada   assumed   ri\nslblllty for all mat\u00bbrs, such at\ngratlon,  etc.\nA few yean ago, tke opposition 1\ner stated, tbe ministry heralded e \\\nfuel   policy  which  was   to\nberta coal.   The speech from tha 1\ncontained no reference to such\nNo  effort  was being  made\nemployment    for    ths    thousands]\npeople In Alberta who could\nby  mining  the coal  ln  th%t  provj\nTAX    REDUCTIONS\n\"Tlie  speech  from the throne\nto  enunciate  a  policy   of  eoono\nIndicate   tax   reductions.     The\nof Canada were demanding reductloi\ntaxation.    We  ask  tbat  the  a\nbe   entirely   abolished   at   tbe . pw\nsession  of  parliament,\"  said  Mr.\nnett.    If   Canada  were   to  retain I\npopulation,  the  taxes   ln  thU  coi|\nmust  not  be  appreciably   higher\nln ths United  States.\nPremier King congratulated Mr.\n(Continued on Page light.) 3\n1   t. '       '\u25a0\u25a0   \u25a0\u25a0 '    '      '      H\nWhen You\nFeel a Cold\nComing\nOn\nTake*'\n'Lueite*\n\\Bromo\nfiuininej\nGrip, Influenza and many Pneumonias begin as a common cold.\nPrice 30c.   (Made in Canada.)\nThe box bears this signature\n\u2014Proven Merit since 1889\u2014*\nTHE  GUMPS\u2014GOLIATH  GUMP\nFor Six Years\nPIMPLES\nCovered Her Fact\nUt*. Albert Stubbs, Nswburr, ,\nwrites:\u2014\"My face was ooverid\npimples and wu so bad I was asha\nto be seen.   I suffered ln this way I\nsix years, until ons day a friend (\nms to use\nBlood\nand after I bad used two bottles I\npimples were aU gone and my skin 1\nas clean and smooth as ever.\"\nPut up only by Ths T. Milburn (\nLimited, Toronto, Ont\nLISTEN! SKINNY FOLKS\nWHYNOTPUTONFLES\nWHERE FLESH IS NEED\nTens of thousands of exceedi\nthin men ahd women have put\ngood healthy flesh with MeC\nCod Liver Extract Tablets\u2014and pt\non where lt was most needed.\nThere's nothing in McCoy's that\nhurt you\u2014They will not only help\nto take on weight you need, but\nmake you stronger, more energetic\nvigorous.\nMcCoy takes all the risk\u2014Read\nIronclad guarantee. If after ta\n4 60c boxes of McCoy's Cod Liver\ntract Tablets or 2 gl boxes any t\nunderweight man or woman do\ngain at least S pounds and feel o\npletely satisfied with the marked\nprovement in health\u2014your druggU\nauthorized to return the puro]\nprice.\nAsk the City Drug & Book comj\nor  any  good  druggist.\nTwo\nGood\nFacts\nA chef who has lived twei\nyears in British Columl\nwrites he is impressed by 1\nfact that Pacific Milk is 1\nper cent British Columbian,\nmeans something to the peo\nto have such an industry\nthe province, a fact particula\ngood in this case, he says,\nPacific is such a good milk.\nPACIFIC MILK\nWEAK ANDNERVOH\nStrengthens Nerves and\nBuilds Up Firm FU\nWhen the nerves are shattered and\nwhole system run-down, lt Is a wonti\nful thing to be able to get at your dr\ngist's such a health builder cs Tan\nwhich strengthens nerves and builds\nfirm flesh.\n\"I always take Tanlac when I begit\nrun down, Bays Mrs. Samuel aiielly,\nWood St., Toronto, \"for It has met\nhealth needs for the past three ye\nBefore I learned of Tanlac, I would\nbo weak and nervous I couldn't do\nhousework. I was down almost tc\nskeleton, and losing weight all the tt\nHeadacheB nearly drove me wild, an\nhad a sickly, sallow complexion. Iat\nhas Increased my weight 14 pounds .\nhas given me a wonderful appetite.\nnerves ara steady. I Bleep well and h\nhealth and strength that make lift\nPleasure.\"\nEach of the roots, herbs and barka\nTanlac has its own special value\nbringing back health to the sick. O\nIn Tanlac can you get this invalua\ncombination. 80 it ls Important to\nslst on having Tanlac, not a substlt.\nOet a bottle today at your druggist's.\nTanlac\n& MILLION ROTTUS V$g\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. TUESDAY MOfWINCT. JANUARY 31. 19\u00bb\nP*& THrW^\nI\nHEW EAST TIL\nAndrews in Vestry Meeting\nLearns of Progress of\nNew Church\nSSETS TWO HUNDRED\nSHORT OF LIABILITIES\n\t\ninancial Statement Shows Deficit $23; j Great Progress\nPast Year\nUvea were appointed to attend the\ndiocesan synod, should lt meet this\nyear. They were: Delegates, H. O.\nCaldlcott. C Whlttemore and T. H.\nOllls; alternatives. H. Vlckers, R. Gordon and T. 11. Cairns.\nA property committee was named\nwhich wlll Include tn its duties the\ncare and regulation ot the parish hall.\nIts members were: W. H. Saunders. H.\niW PPU CUI1PTIV \u00ab\u2022'Mrr'B^diD'outt-\n11 ill Mrs.   C.   Mitchell   was  named   repre-\nJIIUIIUII    UllUII I Ll    tentative   of  St.   Andrew's   church   on\n\u2022         the  Trail   branch   of   the  British   Co\nlumbia   Bible   society,   which   Is   being\n.. Andrews in Vestry Meeting f\u00b0\u2122\u00ab>, t\u00b0 distribute at cost. Bibles in\n\u00b0   every   language   spoken   here.\nOREAT   YEAR\nRev. N. D. B. Larmonth, rector, ln\nhis report to the congregation, said\nthat activities were badly curtailed\nln the fall by the epidemic of infantile palalysls. There was now a membership of 733. Including the members residing in East Trail, who presumably would Join the East Trail\nmission church which is to be opened\nnext  month.\nHe called attention to the two vis-\nIts of Rt. Rev. A. J. Doi)U, DX). Bishop\nof Kootenpy. who confirmed two\n' classes of candidates, and to the visit\nof Ven. Archdeacon Fred H. Oraham\nTRAIL. B.C., Jan. 31.-8t. Andrew's \u00b0? NeIson- wh0 attended the patronal\nureh tonight reviewed a year of many fe\u00a3lvaV , . .\u201e . . .tff +H.+ 4h_\ntlvltles, of growth ln membership of _ \u00bbf was Pleased to point out that the\n. church and its various organizations <>\u2022\u00ab<>\u00bb \u00abJe f\u2122* ^m\"*; *\u2122,}\u2122\nA a-at, thP nroBress of the new at tne end of 1926 nad been reduced\ntl\\ttW mluL !2ESh in East tX\u00ab to *1200> lar*ely Wltn the aBBlst&nce\nil!?il!fT Yni ot the Women's auxiliary. He looked\n^nTJ rnn\u2122imvts\"y\u00b0L8etinf?n \u2122 to greater and more useful\nKe parish haU. activities.\njRev. W. 8. Beams, coworker with the\nW who is particularly In charge of  \u201e__ \u201e\u201e\u201e \u201e   th. 8ecrct        u\u201e   _\n^'e Salmon valley district, reported that\n.  conducted 42 services ln Fruitvale,\nln  Salmo, 23 in Ymir,  10 ln Park\nling and Ross Spur and 11 ln Wa-  ^   of-   work   and   by   the   personal\nita.    They  Included  church  services,  work of the lRdieSi  had been abi6  to\nlages,   baptisms   and   funerals. fulfm   |t>   di00eBan   pledges,   to   make\n,8T  TRAIL donations    to   the    church    basement\n\u25a0OGRESS ' fund,  to  donate altar  vases, and cas-\nHe spoke. optimistically on the prog-  80Ck8 for the choir boys, and to send\nlets being made ln East Trail, where  the U3uai summer and winter clothing\nmission church was now built, though  outfits to the Alert Bay Indians. The\nit yet  finished Inside.    It would be  giriB' auxiliary sent $10 to ^ie diocesan\nined officially oh February 7.   It waa  treasurer.\nnned to hold a service at 7:30 with  siNDAV school\nArchdeacon   Fred   H.  Oraham   of   t'LOl'RIHHING\nIson in charge and the clergy of the      j. c. D. Olasson for the Churchmen's\nsanery present. club enumerated the activities of this\nLaat Sunday, he said, the mission organization. Including lectures, de-\nnirch was occupied for the first time bates, socials, a Christmas dinner, and\nan East Trail Anglican Sunday social, participation in bowling. He\nhool, comprising 50 children under declared the club's finances were in\nyears and nine teachers. The church good shape, that it was becoming more\niuld be used for divine service on serviceable to the church, and that It\njnday next. , was a remarkably good recruiting  sta*\n_>RM ALTAR tlon   for   the   church.\nUILB I    R.  Gordon reported  flourishing con-\nAlready, he said, an altar guild la in dltions ln the Sunday school tn re*\nwesa of formation for this new gard to growth ln membership, and of\nmreh, which he declared had largely  finances.\nime Into being through the generous Miss A. Baxendale, secretary of the\n^lp of the East Trail Women's auxiliary Anglican Young People's association,\nOder the convenerBhlp of Mrs. J. H. reported that this newly formed body\nwen. He thanked St. Andrew's for Us was functioning well in social, devotional  and  educational  lines,  and  was\nT, HALE\nCouncil   Accepts  Recommendation of Police Board; While\nChief Off Duty\nCOUNCIL ASKS COST OF\nPROVINCIAL POLICING\nPeebles and Dr. MacKenzie Are\nPrime  IHovers;   Want  to\nObtain  Proposition\nTrail News of the Day\nThis column Is conducted by l_Qsa\nE. A. Thompson of Tadanac. All\nnews of a social nature, including\nreceptions, entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, etc., occurring in\nTrail and Tadanac, wlll appear ln\nthis column. Just 'phone Miss\nThompson at her residence. She\nwlll also handle any advertisements\nappearing under Trail News of the\nDay.\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 30.\u2014Mrs. W. C. McKenzle and Mrs. B. Oaten, delegates\nfrom Knox United church, left tonight\nfor Cranbrook to attend the presbyterial\nof the Women's Missionary society meeting there Wednesday.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nReserve Friday, February 17, for Cab\nrtret ln Odd Fellows' Hall at f) p.m.   Ad\nmission    50    cents.   Including    refresh\nments.   Under auspices of St. Andrew's\nChurch. (2128)\nAUXILIARY   ACTIVE\nActivities  of  the   Women's  auxiliary\nVlckers, who stated that the mem\nbershlp grew from 45 to 50. The aux^\nlllary, by a number of social events and\n.nerous help and support.\nMrs. D. A. Bell, secretary of the East attracting numbers\nill Women's auxiliary, reported mem-\nirshlp grew from 13 to 21 during the\nar. The auxiliary held 28 meetings,\nro sales of work, four socials, a silver\nand other affairs and had been\nlocessful ln raising a considerable sum\nmoney. It donated $150 to the\nit  Trail   church  building  fund  and\ntoward furnishings.\nThe financial statement presented by\nC.   Caldlcott   showed   gross   receipts,\niciuding aii organizations, of \u00bb5047.68 j^0  prost Has  Been  Recorded\nir the year.   There was a slight deficit,\nnounting to *23i.66, representing the   in City Since Saturday Night;\nilance  of current  liabilities over  cur-\nnt assets.\nOFFICERS\nOfficers elected were: T. H. Ollls,\nctor's warden; H. C. Caldlcott, people's\nfirden; O. F. Reimann, H. E. Wadfe, C.\nTiittemofe, H. Vlckers, A. C. Clarke,\nB. Warden, W. H. Hannay, T. M.\nlirns and Mrs. H. P. Klngwell, church\nimmlttee. Mrs. Klngwell was also\nnned envelope secretary.\nr\nBiVV\non\nQUITO! SLOPPY\nHigh Point 39 Degrees\nRecommendation from the police\ncommission for paying \"the acting chief\nand the acting sergeant\" each a bonus\nof $12.50 a month during the period\nof the absence from duty of Chief of\nPolice Thomas H. Long, was accepted\nby the city council last night, the Increases for the two officers, Sergeant\nAlex. Stewart and Constable Ralph\nHale, being retroactive to the beginning of the chief's treatment for his\ninjured knee last fall.\n\"Why did you recommend this Dick\u2014\nor rather. Your Worship?\" asked Alderman H. H. MacKenzie after the\nbonuses had been voted\nMayor R. D. Barnes replied that\nthe matter had come up through one\nof the officers applying for an Increase.\n\"On examination of the matter, we\ndecided that both officers were having more responsibility than normally,\nand that the bonuses were coming to\nthem,\" he explained.\nPEEBLES PRESSES\nPROVINCIAL    IDEA\nAlderrian R. A. Peebles\u2014When I\nfirst became a member of the council, we asked City Clerk Wasson to\nwrite the provincial police and ask\nfor a proposition on the provincial police policing the city. I would like\nto know if that was done, and what\nthe result was, lf any.\nMr. Wasson\u2014I wrote as Instructed,\nand gave the department all the data\nit seemed likely they would want. They\nwrote and asked us to give them the\naverage cost of our police department\nover a period of years. I also gave\nthem that.\nAlderman    Peebles\u2014Did    they    make\nany  proposition?\nMr. Wasson\u2014No.\nAlderman   Peebles\u2014I   move  that   we\ngo further,  and  obtain  a  proposition.\n\"Yes,    let    us   Investigate   anyway.\"\nsupplemented   Alderman   H.   H.   MacKenzie.\nAlderman Peebles explained that all\nhe objected to was \"this wraugle and\njangle about nothing\" ln connection\nwith the police. If the city **j\u00abive the\npolicing to the provincial police, lt\nwould \"get away from this small-town\nstuff.\" Policing was the bushier of the\nprovincial pdlice. ahd they would \"give\nthe city greater efficiency.\"\nI\u00bbR. MACKENZIE\nAFTER DATA\nIn seconding Alderman Pecblte' motion, Alderman H. H. MacKenzie said lt\nwas not with him a question ot favoring\nhanding the policing over to the provincial police or not favoring H, but lt\nTO RESUME PIS!\nFour Teams  Enter Senior Division; Not Decided About\nIntermediates\nTRAIL,    B.C.,    Jan. 30.\u2014Twer.ty-odd\nsenior basketball players tonight decid\ned to resume an active league series on\nFebruary 18.\nFour teams are already organized and\nentered ln the senior division.   They are\nLoans   for   Purchase   Church\nBuilding Repaid by Extension Board Graqt\nSUNDAY SCHOOL DOUBLES;\nORGANIZE  FOR  C.  G. I.  T.\nPark, Gray, May, Winlaw, Nairn\nAre Managers; Miss May\nIs \"Presented\"\nof the congregation's appreciation of her\nefforts.\nUr. Lelth's suggestion that the congregation should express to Ven. Arch- \\\ndeacon Fred H. Graham Ita sincere\nsympathies for him and his congregation ln the loss of St. Saviour's church,\ndestroyed by fire a week ago, enthusiastically carried.\nMr. Youngson stated the rati Presbyterian congregation has secured a\nchurch site and now hopes to erect\na building before next winter.\nJ   P. Coates\nJ.  O.  Patenaujl*\nSons of England. Nelaon\n$13$\\50\nLADIES' CURLING\nSEMES AT TRAIL\nTRAIL. B.C., Jan. tl\u2014Three matches\nplayed thla afternoon ln tbe ladles'\ncurling club schedule competition gave\nthe following results:   Mrs. Hazelwood.\nI, beet  Miss Brooke,  4;   Mrs.   Klnnla,\nII, beat Miss Bruce,  4;  Mrs.  Buchan,\n10. beat Miss Kirby, 4.\nTomorrow's matches wlll be: Mrs.\nMcDonald vs. Mra. Tyson: Mlsa Wlleon,\nvs. Mrs. Blols, and Mlas McCallum vs\nMiss  Kelr.\nRearing reports of great progress |\nduring 1927, the congregation of the\nFirst Presbyterian church met ln Its recently acquired church buttling ln annual meeting last night, J. B. Gray\nacted as chairman and Alex. Leith as\nsecretary of the meeting.\nDay's      Subscriptions      Total\n$36.50; Grand Total Is\nNow $136.50\nFirst organization to subscribe to the\nfund for replacing the colors of tbe 54th\nKootenay battalion, lost when 6t. Saviour's church burned last week, is the\nSons of England lodge, Nelson, which\n_i **.__ '-et night voted a subscription of $5 to-\nMcLeod. treasurer, reported the . th.     b1   t\nArrow Lakes Boat Club \"A\" team, Arrow\nA. D. MCLeoa, treasurer, repurtcu w.   Wfcrd tmg obiect\nchurch   expense   fund   showed   receipts      Yesterday's subscriptions amounted to\nduring the last eight months of  1987 |3850i   bringing   the    fund    now    to\n$136.50.\nSo far, Kaslo ls the only other Kootenay center to announce an organized\nlocal movement to obtain subscriptions,\nof   9926.81,   disbursements   of   $830.19,\nand a balance of $96.63.\nLOANS REPAID\nThe church building, purchased from\nthe First Church  of Christ,  Scientist,! though they are coming ln to The Dally\ncost   $3250.     Of   this   amount   \u00bbiufl.26l News every day from district poiLts    At\n-*,_\u00bb_, .TiiMPrihwi   anrt thp rest had been K*810 the local branch of the Canadian\nBoat Club \"B\" team, the Sheiks and the | J\u00a3ed to \u00a3Si    Aie\u00ab loans werIn -U\u00abton is acting publicly in the matter.\nIndians. - ral8e.a. _*._.,_.  Izl _.___?!! ., .\u00bb_*J^ ,._, \" It ls expected that organization of com\nmittees at other points will be heard of\nIndians.\nThough there were several Intermediate players present, it was not decided\nhow many Intermediate teams will be\navailable for play in this dlvlslcn.\nThe representative senior team which\nhas been practicing assiduously for the\npant two weeks, Is preparing to meet a\nKlmberley representative team here on\nFebruary 11. The Klmberley sextet are\narranging also to play a match In Nelson on February 10. Trail anticipates\nilaying a return ln Kimberley t*o weeks\n'ater. H. Weldon, president, piesided.\nThe meeting was held at the Memorial\nball.\nTRAIL CURLERS\nCLUB SCHEDULE\n39HkgundTynand\u00b0774 \u25a0JJXSy^.SSEd \u00ab\u2022 \u00abt*t \u00bb <>u\"*'\u00b0\" \u00b0< \u00ab*\"\"* >\u00bb<\u00b0\u2122*\n.1 __?.. tnrt \u00ab,n<rnm_Mnn of the .Won as to the cost of the service, and as\nn L^r'nVounced thaw at NelsS? *-\u00b0 what the relations of the provincial\npresent   pronounced   thaw   at   \u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u00bb\u2022  pollce t0 thc clty would be.   Afttr the\nI^.h \u2122    rllt'tDTliZn liS  Ct information was all ln. then ne would\n\\T me\u2122ury'lroUWp^lgthotS.7aVjre,es   -Ut. whether he favored the change.\nFriday   night,   and   30   Saturday   night,\nThree lay delegates and three alterna-  ^ut after that the thaw held contlnu-\nBUSY BEE\nSECOND-HAND   STORE\nIndies'   and    Children'.*   M'tar,\nKitchen Cabinets, Chairs, Davenports, Wicker Chairs.\nPHONE 501.   3rd Ave., East Trail.\nous sway, Sunday  night's lowest  tem\n1 perature being 33  degrees, or  one de\ngree   above   the   frost   murk.\nThe thaw has been accompanied by\nprecipitation of .10 of an inch, or\nabout a fifth ot an inch, Saturday\nhaving 1.1 Inch of snow, and yesterday   .08  Inch rain.\nWater Is running on the downtown\nand  the club schedule competition of\nO. A. NEWMAN, President\nH. E. R. BEDFORD, Secretary\nConsolidated Employees'\nBenevolent Society\nOffice of the Secretary\nTRAIL. BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nA Special General Meeting\nWILL BE HELD IN THE\nMEMORIAL HALL\nON THE 31ST JANUARY, AT 7:30 P.M.\nBUSINESS\nTo receive the draft of the proposed new bylaws, and\nif approved to pass the same.\nThe proposed alterations are as follows:\nBYLAW 2. To increase the number of Directors from\nfour to six and add a clause limiting each department to one member.\nBYLAW 4. To add a clause giving the right to any\nfifteen members to call on the President to summon a\nmeeting.\nBYLAW 11. To be made to include employees of the\nW. K. P. & L. Company working in Trail or Rossiand.\nBYLAW 15.   To strike out the last clause.\nBYLAW 16. To amend by adding a clause fixing the\namount of arrears to be collected on a member returning to work after absence through sickness, accident,\nor leave.\nBYLAW 17. To strike out the words \"and so lose their\nwages.\" This will enable members on the staff who\nare drawing salary to draw benefit when sick.\nBYLAW 21.\u2014To strike out the words \"and consequently\nsuffering a loss of wages.\"\nBYLAW 24. To strike out the last four lines of the first\nparagraph.\nBYLAW 31.\u2014To add the word \"extraordinary.\"\nAll members are requested to attend and vote on these\nalterations.  Any employee of the W. K. P. & L. Co. or\nof the C. M. & S. Co. who wishes to attend the meeting\ncan do so, and can take part in the discussion but cannot\n(Signed) II. E. R. BEDFORD,\nSecretary-Treasurer.\nAlderman Peebles\u2014A lot of small\ntowns ln British Columbia have turned\nover their policing to the provincial\npollce ln the last five years, and they all\nseem satisfied. Of course. Nel.ion might\nnot care for it.\nAlderman H. H. MacKenzie \u2014 One\nthing, they have a habit of keeping the\nmembers of the provincial police circulating around from one part of thc province to another. A provincial police officer doesn't get a chance to stagnate.\nThe moflon wns adopted.\nTRAIL GARAGES\nTHE AUTO CLUB\nDecline to Continue Operating\nOfficial Garages Account\nFinancial Loss\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 30.\u2014Tonight's\nnatches in the President's knockout\n\u25a0treats, and the Ice is soic underfoot,\nhe curling club resulted as follows:\nPresident's knockout\u2014G. Murray, 14,\n!ieat A. J. McDonnell. 10; Walsh, 11,\n^eat Flngland, 8; Balfour, 10, beat\nBlngay, 7; Thom, 9, beat P. R. Mc\nDonald,   5.\nClub schedule\u2014Kerr, 7, beat Jackson'\n1: Harkness, 17, beat McKay, 7; Twaddle, 8, beat Willis, 7; W. Forrest, 10,\nbeat   Coghlln,\nrepaid with the receipt of $3000 from\nthe Presbyterian church extension\nboard. The building fund amounted to\n91328.13 on December 31, and since\nthen had increased, stated the treasurer.\nC.*G. I. T. CROUP\nMrs. R. L. Oliver reported that during\nthe last summer and fall a girls'\nbasket class had been organised. The\nirlrls did hand work which was Bold\nat the Women's association bazaar,\nnetting 143.60, of which $10 was expended.\nThe olass wa\u00ab then reorganized Into\na COLT, group, with herself, Mrs. J.\nB. Gray. Mrs. H. H. Currle and Miss\nHenrietta May as leaders. The $33 was\nturned over to Rev. James YoungBon to\npurchase a pulpit Bible. The girls had\nplaced themselves at the disposal of\nthe Women's association, to mn errands,\nto visit the sick, or to do any work\nthey might be asked to perform.\nNEW MANAGER*\nRev. James Youngson reported the\nchurch membership was steadily Increasing. Two members left during\n1927 to reside ln the east, but 11 more\nhad been added. The Sunday school\nmore than doubled, and altogether the\nprospects were very bright.\nA. T. Park, J. B. Oray, James May, A.\nN. Winlaw and R. C. Nairn were elected\nto the board of managers for 1928.\nA. D. McLeod was reelected treasurer.\nMrs. J. B. Oray reported the Sunday\nshortly\nLATEST\nSI BHCHIPTIONS\nThe state of the fund now ls:\nPreviously acknowledged   $100.00\nMrs. Thomas Frost   1.00\nMrs. S. 8. Fowler, Riondel  8.00\nInnlskilllngs     1.00\nMrs. Alice Brown    1-00\nR. W. Hinton   5.00\nCol. H. M. V. Harlngton, Edgewood 2.80\nThe Colors   2.00\nB. T. O'Grady  ...__  2.00\nW. Hebenton   2.80\nCol. M. V. Allen   1.00\nJ. O. Bunyan   1.00\nTomorrow's   matches will  be* school membership more than doubled,\nPresident's   knockout,   at   6:30\u2014Cogh-   naving   **rown   teom   20   t0   \u00b0\u00b0-     Tne\nlin vs. Baldrey, Crowe vs. D. MacDon-  sch001   was   self-supporting   and   was\naid;  Woodburn vs. Wade, and Cruick-  flourishing in every way.    Its greatest\nshank vs. Leckie. I need was more teachers.\nClub    schedule,    at    8:30\u2014Craig    vs. I M \"PRESENTED\"\nMcLennan.   Caldlcott   vs.   Klnnis,   WU-      Miss   Daisy   May,   organist,   was   the\nliams vs. Williamson, ahd J. Forrest vs.   recipient   of   a   beautiful   gold   brooch,\nRobertson. J tendered   by   Alex.   Leith   as   a   token\n:\n\"Good Goods at Gray's\"\nSILVERWARE\nWe have a splendid assortment\nof Silverware.\nTEA SETS\nSI CAR AND CREAMS\nCASSEROLES\nBON BONS\nBUTTER DISHES, ETC.\nThese   are    new   designs   and\nreasonably priced.\nJ.   B.   GRAY\nWatchmaker\u2014Jeweler\u2014Optician\n707 BAKER  ST.      PHONE 333\nRegular Cleaning\nKeeps Your Garments\nHEALTHFUL AND\nSMART\nH, K. FOOT\nHlth-Class Dyer and Cleaner\nFairview, Nelson, B.C.\nFOR\nSALE\nBUSINESS BIX.CK\nThree   stories\u2014Best   Corner  in Town.\nFour stories on ground\nfloor.\nOne Double Office and one\nSingle Office.\nOne three-room suite, four\ntwo-room suites, ten bedrooms\u2014Completely furnished.\nRevenue Producer\u2014Owing\nto 111 Health of owner\nwill be sacrificed for\n$4250.   Some terms.\nI H. A. Hill\nRossiand\nPhone 39       Box 177\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 30.\u2014Trail Auto\nOarages association, meeting the executive of Trail branch of the Automobile Club of British Columbia tonight, declined to continue operating\nofficial garages of the Automobile\nclub.\n8. walley and J. A. Wadsworth, representing the garage owners, pointed\nout that they couid not continue the\nemergency and towing services without financial loss, as official garages.\nThe club executive did not come to\nany agreement for a reconsideration,\nbut later In the session recommended\nto the provincial executive of the\nAuto club that the clause covering\n\"emergency service by official garages\" should be deleted trom the1 contract and that towing charges should\nbe increased 50 per cent.\nThose attending the \u2022hieetlng were:\nW, E. B. Monypenny, chairman; H. W.\nCasler, Miss M. C. Llngle, Dr. MacDonald, J. R. Wood, H. P. Tiedje, and\nT.   H.  Ollls.\nLONDON. Jan. 30.\u2014The 35th annual\nreport of the Imperial Cancer Research fund recently issued here tells\na story of patient Investigation which\nfor a Quarter of a century haB been\nln progress. Unhappily there is as\nyet no indication that the goal of the\nwork is ln sight.\nDr. Murray, the director ot the fund,\ndeals at some length in the report with\nthe disputed question whether or not\ncancer ls a solitary invader of the\nbody\u2014that Is to say, whether or not\ntwo or more cancers can begin together\nand co-exist as do, for example, warts.\nDr. Murray believes that the evidence\nhas has obtained justifies him ln accepting the \"solitary\" view. This is a\nmatter of some Importance because If\nit be true that a second cancer cannot easily grow In a body in which\na eancer Is already established, then\npresumptive evidence exists that the\nbody does make an attempt to rid\nItself of cancer, and hope ls engendered\nof being able some day to make use\nof thie natural healing power.\nTransportation Conference\nmm\u00ab3raBBSJi.\u00abm\u00abii\u00ab_^\nFord Power\nand\nIn the ARMORY\nWednesday, February 1st, 1928\nat 2 p.m. and 8:15 p.m.\nPROGRAM\nINDUSTRIAL POWER USES\nFilm\u2014\"Demonstrating the Fordson\"\nTalk\u2014\"Power Advantages  for  Farm  and\nIndustry\"\nFilm\u2014\"Solving the Problem\"\nTalk\u2014\"Fordson Power in Agriculture and\nIndustry\"\nFilm\u2014\"Lumbering in British Columbia\"\n8:15 p.m.\nTRANSPORTATION AND\nPOWER\nFilm\u2014\"The Quest for Quality\"\nTalk\u2014\"The Ford Industry in Canada\"\nFilm\u2014\"Lumbering in British Columbia\"\nTalk\u2014\"Power Advantages for  Farm and\nIndustry\"\nFilm\u2014\"The New Car\"\nA Film Program of SpeciaMnterest to Children\nWill Be Given at 4:15 p.m., to Which All\nChildren Are Cordially Invited\n4:15 p.m.    CHILDREN'S PROG*RAM\nFilm_\"The Man of Tomorrow\"\nFilm\u2014\"The New Car\"\nFilm_\"Lumbering in British Columbia\"\nA cordial invitation is extended to one and all, as the Films and Talks are interesting\nand instructive. A special Five-Reel Film oi the manufacture of the NEW FORD will also\nbe shown.\nNo Charge for Admission Everybody Welcome\nTo obtain full advantage of conference, it is important you attend both afternoon and evening showings.\nPEEBLES MOTORS, LTD.\nFORD DEALERS\ntm_}mm-mmmmmmm-m\\t-mmmwmm^\n____________\n Vngp Taut'\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JANTTARY 31, T928\nTHE   DAILY   NEW8|r\nPublished every morning except Sun-\nflay by The Newa Publishing company,\nlimited, Nelaon, B.C.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nand checks and money orders made\npayable to The News Publishing company, limited, and In no case to Individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and ABC.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be seen at the office of\nany advertising agency recognized by the\nCanadian Press association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy mall (country), per month..     I   .60\nPer year    \u00ab.00\nBy mall (city), per year  18 00\nOutside Canada, per month 78\nPer year     7.M\nDelivered, per week       _38\nPer year   13.00\n.___     __ _Payab!e ln Advance\nMember Audit Bureau of Circulation\nNEW SHRINE UNDER CONSTRUCTION\nTUESDAY,   JANUARY   31.   1928\nThe Snail and the Census\nThe much-lauded snail that across\nthe garden will so gaily \"wriggle on his\nchassis\" has a dangerous rival In the\nCanadian census bureau. Our friendly\nUttle mollusc won't be ln it tf the\naong writers once get the record of the\ncensus   bureau.\nThis reflection ls Induced by the arrival of volume 111 of the 1921 census. The enumeration was taken In\nJune. 1921. Volume I\u201e which concerned\n1; elf only with the simple count of\nnoses, bears the date 1924. Volume II.,\ndealing with various assays of the\npopulation, as to conjugal state, clti-\nEenship, language, and so forth, reached\nthe public ln 1928, as did also volume\nV.. dealing with agriculture. The newest volume. III., which discusses dwellings, children, wage earners, and other\ntopics related to the Canadian family,\nhears date of 192.7. It ls true, each\nvolume was out of the hands of the\ncensus bureau and In the hands of\nthe government printers earlier that\nthe time credited above.\nBut making allowance for the tedious Job of publication, lt ls quite a\ntime now since the enumeration\u2014\nnearly seven years\u2014and not all the\nvolumes are out yet.\nOne thing ls certain, the Canadian\ncensus, at this rate, will never be of\ncurrent, but only of historical, interest. All its facts wlll belong to Almost a past age.\nJi British Columbia Content\nWith This Sort of Census?\nAUNT HET\n\"It makes me boilln\" mad to\nhave a clerk tell nt I look good\nln a hat an' think I'm Idiot\nenough to believe her when I\nknow good an' well it makes me\nlook awful.\"\nSome drinks play havoc In an empty\nstomach, and some ideas act that way\nin an empty head.\nThe tourist ls funny. He tries to\n'do\" a foreign city ln 24 hours, though\nhe has learned little about hla own\ncity   ln 24   years.\nWell, then, let's abolish \"aggressive\nwars.\" Nobdy wlll mind a nice passive\nwar ln which everybody can stay at\nhome and profiteer.\nIt is very obvious that the census\nbureau is a continuing organization,\nwhose work Is spread over a 10-year period.\nIt is only a trifle over three years to\nthc next decennial enumeration. Very\nlikely the broad outlines of that enumer-\natlon are being settled, or are about to\nbe settled, now. Certainly they must be\nnettled a long time ln advance.\nNo doubt also it requires almost the\nmythical \"Incalculable force\" to Jar the\ncensus bureau. Recall the inability last\nyear of the deputy minister of state,\nThomas Mulvey, to concede the the\npxlstence of a Canadian citizenship! He\nwas very kind but very firm in his\nexplanation of why there could not be\nsuch   a   thing.\nIf there is going to be any change\nln thp form of the census to give British Columbia \"a fair shake,\" somebody\nwill have to get busy applying that incalculable   force   right   away.\nWest Kootenay dismissed, in the\npopulation enumeration volume that\ngives local volume in 12 lines 1 East\nKootenay ln eight 1 British Columbia ln\nunder two pages, while Manitoba has\n22 pages, Alberta 46, and Saskatchewan\n69Va- Points with not a living soul\nseparately recorded on the prairie, and\nWest Kootenay considered to have\nonly five worthy of being named, and\nEast Kootenay only two I\nThe duty of demanding a different\nkind of census-taking ln British Columbia, one that will record separately\nall the many thriving communities large\nand small, an enumeration on an\nequality with those given the other\nprovinces, must be shared hy the provincial government, and the business\norganizations of the province.\nRefinements on a car are those little\ndudads that say: \"Rattle, rattle, rattle.\"\nWHEN   AT    LAST   EVERYTHING   IS\nPERFECT. ALIENISTS WILL EXAMINE\nTHE LAW MAKERS AS WELL AS THE\nLAW BREAKERS.\nPuzzle: What did you do on January\nfirst tbat has since reminded yo\\j that\nthe washed sow returns to her wallowing ln the mlrc.\nIf you want to get rich, provide\npleasure Instead of misery. The\ncoach gets more than the professor\nof   mathematics.\nThe annual prize for charming modesty goes to civilization, for trying to\nmake the heathen like Itself.\nWe wash the criminal and educate\nhim, so he can keep out of Jail longer,\nand call that the progress of civilization.\nYou can eat Just so much during\nyour lifetime. Devour it in smaller\nportions and you get to stay here longer\nto finish your share.\nAmerican Money for Canada\nThat the money available ln Ameri'\ncan money centers for Canada's devel\nqpment ls \"illimitable,\" ls the statement of Henry Reed Hayes, president\nof the Investment Bankers' Association\nof America.\nArriving at Toronto, the head of\nthe bond house organization described\nCanada as \"the premier field of ln>\nvestment for the United States lnves\ntor.\"\nthe American big Investor as a rule\nIs  a  shrewd  Investor.\nWhen there are so many of him in\nterested ln Canadian securities that the\nAmerican bond houses find lt extremely\neasy to underwrite the average Canadian development proposition of merit,\nthere must be something Inherently\nsolid   ln   Canadian   business   after  all\nA good many Canadians could with\nbenefit to the country Increase thetr\nfaith ln Canada to the quality lhat\nAmericana are displaying ln It.\nWith the total cost estimated at\nnearly five millions, Bt. Joseph's Oratory on Mount Royal, Montreal, Is\nrapidly rising, the picture, right, showing it as lt will look when completed.\nThe crypt in the forefront is finished.\nThe height of the basilica will be 387\nfeet, higher than the Royal Bank or\nthe Metropolitan building, Toronto. The\nleft picture shows the original chapel\nHere Brother Andre began the work\nwhich has made St. Joseph's a famous\nshrine.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy   LAURA   A.   KIRKMAN\nANSWERS  TO INQUIRIES\nTOMORROW'S MENU\nBreakfast\nLeft-Over Prunes\nCereal\nCodfish Balls\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nCelery\nSpanish Omelet\nBran Muffins\nJam Cookies\nDinner\nCreamed Pork Leftovers on Toast\nSweet Potatoes Spinach\nLettuce Salad\nFruit  Cup Sponge   Cake\nCoffee\nToast\nTea\none with you. But this ls what dwellers ln the Panama canal zone do:\nThey burn an electric light bulb inside\nof their pianos at all times when the\nsun is not shining, and they find that\nthis prevents rust entirely.\nTomorrow\u2014Practical Cheese Dishes.\nAddress Inquiries to Miss Klrkman,\nand Inclose stamped-addressed envelope\nlor reply,\u2014Editor.\nRadio Programs for\nToday From Stations\nNearest the Kootenay\nAnother way to shine ln society is to\nrefrain from powdering your bald head,\nlf Nero's fiddle sounded like the\none the neighbor's boy ls learning\nto play, It was the people next\ndoor who set Rome afire.\nPrance is willing to outlaw \"aggressive war\" only, reserving the right to\ndefend herself against small countries\nthat reBent invasion.\nCorrect this sentence: \"He made good\nin the city,\" said the gossip, \"and nobody ln the old home town was\nastonished.\"\nThat Body\nof Yours\nBy JAMES W. BARTON.  M.u\nYoung Housewife\u2014-I am Just beginning to entertain, and want to svrve\ndishes which are not known to my\nfriends. Is there any recelpe you know\nof, to servo eggs stuffed with canned\nlobster for a salad? i\nAnswer\u2014Yes, I happened to have an\nexcellent recipe for Lobster Stuffed Egg\nSalad: To make six portions, boll six\neggs toll hard, (for about 10 or IS minutes) , then gently remove shells, cut\na slice from the white part of each\negg at one end, so that the egg wlll\nstand upright, then cut a larger slice\nfrom the top end, scoop out yellow\ninteriors and save these yolks to use\nln some other way. Fill the white cup\nlike egg with canned lobster put\nthrough the grinder and mixed with\nequal parts of finely chopped celery.\nMoisten the mixture with mayonnaise\ndressing, add salt and pepper to suit individual liking, and chill before serving\neach egg on a bed of crisp lettuce or individual salad plates, each portion!\ntopped wltb an extra dab of mayon-1\nnalse.\nB. B.\u2014How can I take bleuing stains\nout of fabrics?\nAnswer\u2014Soak the fabric in strong\nammonia water or else soak it ln\nkerosene and wash wlith naptha soap\nin lukewarm water.\nPuzzled\u2014How can a boiled pudding\nbe made in a perfectly round shape?\nAnswer\u2014Inclose thc bag lontainlng\nthe pudding ln one of those globular\nwire lettuce drainers while cooking.\nForeslghted\u2014I am studying to be a\nprofessional musician and my mother\nand I are planning our next summer's\nvacation well ln advance of warm\nwaather. We would like to rent a shore\ncottage for a couple of months, but this\nls what puzzles me: If I move my good\npiano there, will its strings become\nrusted? I have to have an especially\nhard action Instrument for practice.\nOther people who own cottages at the\nbeach say that the constant fogs cause\nrust In their pianos. How can I prevent rust?\nAnswer\u2014It might be safer to rent a\nsecond-hand piano for the summer\nmonths,   rather  than   take' your   good\nCURLING RESULTS\nCRANBROOK ICE\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Jan. 30.\u2014In the\nladles' curling competition, the finals of\nwhich were played Friday evening, Mrs.\nO. Thompson's rink defeated Mrs. E. H.\nMcPhee's ln a closely contested game.\nIn the men's finals for the possesion of the Cameron cup, supported by\nindividual cupe, the rink skipped by P.\nMack Morrison, after playing on extra\nend to break a tie with James Milne's\nrink, defeated F M. MacPhenwn'a rink\nby tbe narrow margin of one point.\nMacPherson had Just come from % victory over Doran In an extra end.\nPoints About Appendicitis\nWe are talking and hearing about cancer and heart disease so much, lhat we\nare apt to overlook the fact Lhat the\nnumber of deaths from appendicitis has\nbeen increasing during the past few\nyears, despite thc increase in oui knowledge thereof.\nAnd, of course, ln the majority of\ncases the surgeon who performed the operation receives the blame wnen the\npatient dies.\nI spoke once before about the death\nrate from appendix operations Increasing according to the delay ln performing the operation; that whereas the\ndeath rate was only about 1 per cent lf\noperation was performed the first day\nafter discovery of symptoms, that it\nwas nearly' 10 per cent lf dc.aycd for\nthree or four days.\nDrs. ' Bower and Clark repoi t their\nfindings ln 760 cases operated upon ln\na Philadelphia hospital, and ln almost\nhalf of this number the appendix had\nburst before the case arrived at the\nhospital.\nNow, this delay means danger, and lt\nle with the hope that lives may be\nsaved that these physicians and others\nare trying to warn the public about the\nsigns of appendicitis.\nThe signs, as you know, are pain,\nnausea, vomiting, and tightness and\ntenderness of abdominal walls. The outstanding symptom in every case is pain.\nPain was the only symptom of which\nevery patient complained. Nausea waa\npresent ln some, vomiting ln others, hut\npain was present always.\nTenderness over appendix was the\nnext most frequent symptom, being present in about 90 per cent of the cases.\nBeside the danger from delay, these\nphysicians give warning regarding the\ndanger from giving a laxative, castor oil\nor anything else.\nDuring the year 1926, over 92 per cent\nof all patients who died from a perforated appendix had had laxatives before admission.\nNow, what Is the suggestion?\nIn the presence of abdominal pain,\ngive nothing by mouth.   That an ab\"\nTVE8DAY,  JANUARY   3t\nPacific Standard Time Throughout\nSPECIAL FEATURES\nCKWX, Vancouver. B.C. (410.7. m.) \u2014\n6:30-7:30 pjn., \"Eveready Hour,\" sponsored by the Canadian National Car-'\nbon company, limited: \"A Night in\nJune,\" \"Blue River.\" \"Havana.\"\n\"Roodles,\" \"Blue Baby,\" \"Just a Memory.\" \"Shady Tree,\" \"Merry Widow\nWaltz,\" \"Desert Song,\" \"Flapperette,\"\n\"Chloe,\" \"Sailing In.\" \"Rickety, Rackety Shack,\" \"My Blue Heaven,'1 \"I'll\nThink of You,\" \"Sad 'n' Blue,\" \"Rain,\" I\n\"Just Once Again.\"\nCNRV. Vancouver, B.C. (291 m.)-9 p.m., |\nPresentation of Fanchon and Marco's\ninnovation with Jackie Souders and\nhis orchestra, from the Strand Theater; 10-11, dance program by Les\nCrane and hts Canadians; 11:45-12:45\na.m., organ recital.\nKFI, Los Angeles, Cal. (468.5 m\u2014-6:30\np.m., Oene Johnston's music box\nhour; 7, Oypay String quartet; 8,\nEveready hour; 8:30, bridge game; 9,1\nRetold Tales; 9:30, The Rounuers; 10,'\nMetropolitan dance orchestra, Gone\nCowan, Blues singer.\nKPO, San Francisco, Cal. (422.3 in.)\u20149-]\n10 p.m., Neapolitan quartet, Robert j\nNurok, with the KPO popular ensemble,\nREGULAR PROtiR VMS\nCFAC, Calgary, Alta, (438.8 m.) \u2014 10:30\nto 11:15 a.m., morning program; 12:15\nto 12:30 p.m., grain elevator, Winnipeg and Chicago, wheat, oil. stock\nprices, wheat news and live stock reports; 2:30 to 3:3\u00a3>. musical hour; 0 to\n6. concert orchestra.\nKOO, Oakland, Cal., (384.4 m.)-*8 p.m..\ndinner concert; 6:55, news, time signal, weather, market and btock reports; 8 to 10, NBC program.\nKHQ.. Spokane, Wash. (370.2 m.)~ 12:18\np.m., luncheon program; 1, happy\nhour: 2, battery service; 3, concert; 4,\nmusical program; 5. service huur; 6,\ndinner hour concert; 7:15, travelogue;\n7:30, concert orchestra; 8, curfew\nchimes; 8:30, bridge lessons; i), correct\ntime; 9 to 10. silent; 10. NSC program; 11. dance music; 12, midnight\nchimes.\nKOIN, Portland, Ore. (319 m.)--6 to 7\norgan recital; 7, what to do and where\nto go; 7H5, Mlsha Pelz's orchestra; 8.\ntalks; 8:15, talks; 8:30, educational\nlecture; 8:30, question box; tf:I0 to\n9:30, studio program.\nKOMO, Seattle, Wash. (305.9 m.) \u2014 10\na.m., inspirational services; 10:15,\nhealth exercises; 10:30, what to prepare for dinner; 11, farm radio council; 1:15, varied program; 12, farm\nflashes; 12:15 p.m., grain, report,\nweather reports: 12:30. orchestra and\nsoloists; 4:45, silent; 6, kiddies' program; 5:30, stock, bonds, news and\nsports; 6;15, concert orchestra; 7:30.\nI lecture; 7:45, concert orchestra; 7:57,\nweather report; 8. Eveready hour;\n8:30, bridge games; 9, time signal,\nNBC program; 10, varied program;\n10:30. late news; 11:15, dance oiches-\ntra; 12:15, varied program; 12.3u a.m.,\nsilent.\nMARCONI RADIO\u2014For Radio Service\ncall at D. B. Crowther's Radio Store, 509\nWard St., Nelson. (2046)\nAFTER DISPUTE\nIs Outcome of \"Economy Campaign\" Started by the New\nCouncillors\nHAVE NOT FILLED THE\nELECTION CLAUSE\nAll but One Councillor Resigns;\nCitizens Prepare for New\nElection\nRENFREW, Ont., Jan. 30.\u2014The ruler\nof Renfrew's municipal destinies ls In\nconsiderable doubt tonight followlug the\nresignation from office of the mayor,\nreeve, deputy reeve and three of the\nremaining four councillors, and the un\nusual situation is directly linked with\nthe political controversy which hu stirred the town since the council brought\ndown Its \"economy campaign.\"\nOn Saturday Mayor David B. McLaren,\nReeve W. A. Moore, Deputy Reeve Frank\nPlaunt and Councillors J. G. Fraser,\nJames Fennessy and C. J. Muryhy officially resigned. To the press the following statement was issued: 'A doubt\nhaving arisen as to whether owing to a\nchange ln the municipal code in 1927,\nthe undersigned are legally entitled to\nsit In public office, we have tendered\nour resignations to the town clerk.\"\nQUIT SEATS\nEarlier in the week Robert McEwen\nand Charles Logan quit their council\nseats as gestures of opposition to the\neconomy campaign. This leaves Councillor William Miller the sole occupant\nof the civic chamber.\nRenfrew's controversial bubble was\nblown Into existence last Monday when\ncouncil approved a finance committee\nreport discharging the sole night constable, reducing the fire chief's salary,\ndoing away with other public oflices\nand eliminating the annual grar,t which\nmaintained the citizens' brass o\u00abnd. It\nwas announced that this action would\nbring Renfrew a lower tax rate.\nAn influential group of objectionlsts\ndiscovered that a clause in the town\nstatutes providing that \"every qualified\nperson elected to municipal office shall\ntake the oath of office within 20 days\nafter election and ln default shall be\ndeemed to have resigned\" had not been\ncomplied with by the civic officers.\nIndications are that a nominating\nmeeting for the election of a new council will be called immediately.\n(From The Daily News, Jan. 31, 1918)\nBorn, on January 27, to Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Horllck, Sandon, a son.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBorn, on January 28. to Mr. and Mrs.\nJ N. Nelson, Fairview, a aon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBorn, on January 26, to Mr. ana Mrs.\nR. V. Ramsden, Cemetery road, a daughter.\nRose Garde, a stenographer In C. W,\nAppleyard's office, sustained Injuries to\nher head at the skating rink on January\n29, when she fell, striking her baud on\nFOUR INSTANTLY KILLED\nIN   AUT0-TRA1N   CRASH\nDETROIT. Jan. 30\u2014Four persons\nwere Instantly killed ana a fifth seriously injured when the automobile in\nwhich they were riding stalled on the\nWabash railroad tracks near here late\ntoday and waa struck by a passenger\ntrain.\nThe dead are: Joseph Walc*ak. hla\nwife and baby, and Mrs. J. Mapeora,\n60 years old. Walczak's father, Joseph\nWatczak Sr., was seriously injured.\nCare of Babies\nWhy do so many, many babies of\ntoday escape all the little fretful spells\nand Infantile^ ailments that used to\nworry mothers through the day, and\nkeep them up half the night?\nIf you don't know the answer, you\nhaven't discovered pure, harmless\nCastorla. It ls sweet to the taste, and\nsweet in the little stomach. And Its\ngentle Influence seems felt all through\nthe tiny system. Not even a distasteful dose of castor oil does so much\ngood. And it ls so pleasant to take.\nTaste tt yourself, and you'll know why\n\"Children Cry for It.\"\nFletcher's Castorla is purely vegetable, so you may give lt freely, at first\nsign of colic; or when you even suspect the approach of constipation; or\ndiarrhea. Or those many times when\nyou Just don't know what is the matter. For real sickness, call the doctor.\nalways. At other times, a few drops of\nFletcher's Castorla. See how quickly\nall fretfulness or wakefulness will cease!\nOnly one wofrd of warning: the above\nadvice is true of genuine Castorla.*\nThe kind called Fletcher's, bearing\nFletcher's signature ls genulne~-**nd\ndoes not contain opiates or any other\ndrug that can harm your baby. Other\npreparations may be just as free from\nharm; the writer does not know aa to\nthat, but does know one family whose\nchildren will never make the experiment!\n\u2022 SPECIAL NOTE: With every bottle of genuine Fletcher's Castorla Is\nwrapped a book on \"Care and Feeding\nof Babies\" worth Its weight In gold to\nevery mother or prospective mother.\nChildren Cry for\nCastoriA\ndominal pain which persists over a period of six hours Is usually serious.\nAn Injection of enema may be given\nto \"shift gas.\"\nAlways keep in mind, therefore, the\nabove-mentioned dangers\u2014delay In consulting a physician, and giving laxatives in coses of abdominal pain.\nNew\n| Haiti,\nYork    man,    returning    from\nclaims    whisky-soaked    worms\nmake  excellent  bait  for  ocean  fish.\nNew York magistrate suggests cure\nfor wlfe-beoters would be to let them\ntry  their  fists  on  each  other.\nSKIS\nSLEDS\nSKATES\nWe still have a fair assortment of Skis and Flexible\nFlyer Sleds which we will\nclose out at\nREDUCED PRICES.\nCALL AND\nSEE THEM\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale and Retail \"Quality Hardware\"\nNELSON, B. C.\nBUILDING\nMATERIAL\nLet us figure your bills of\nBuilding Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nJOHN BURNS & SON\nTHE DOCTOR\nand Kotex\nDOCTORS warn against inferior\nmakeshift pads, unscientific\nand unsanitary. They recommend\nKotex.\nKotex is made of softest materials, 5 times as absorbent as ordinary cotton.... It is scientifically\nshaped to fit the body without revealing its presence.. .. Kotex actively deodorizes, thus ending all\nfear of offense.... It ends, too, the\nbother of laundry. '\nIf you do not know Kotex, obtain\na package today from your nearest\ndrug, dry goods or departmental\nstore.\nMADS m CANADA\nkotgx\nSanitary NafAlni\n\"One problem\nIn 3 sixes: Kotex Regular and\nKotex-Super; 12 to the packets\n_____\u25a0\n THE KELSON DAILY ftEvTS, TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 31, 1928\n(on\nPage fbr.\nWOMEN'S SHOES\nat Unusual Prices!\nSLIPPERS AND OXFORDS\n$1.65 $3.65 $4.95\n207<\nON ALL FELT SLIPPERS FOR\n0 MEN,    WOMEN,    CHILDREN.\nSPATS AND LEGGINGS for Women anc|\nChildren  50f, f_-.35, fl.65\nRUBBERS\u2014Childs', 3 to W\\_ 45^\nMEN'S HEAVY RUBBERS\u2014Regular priie\n$5.00 and $6.00.   Now f 3.65 and ?3.85\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nIN MI FIELD\n11 SILVER!\nSeveral Properties Have Large\nCrews; Sixty Men on the\nHewitt\nfesses Murdering\nof Friend So Could\nMatry the Man's Wife\nUNOFIELD, Mo., Jan. 30.\u2014\nn after 13 hours ol constant ques-\ni8 by officers of two states,\n_s Edwards, 23. confessed today at\n\u00bbn. Ark., that he murdered his\nI, Sherman Thompson, so that he\nmarry   the   man's   young   wife\nand   collect   an   insurance   policy  for\n\u00bb-0O0.\nThompson, 30-year-old fanner, was\nshot to death December 10 last at his\nhome near Eufaula, Okla, where he\nand his wife had moved from Arkansas.\nMOBE KILLED IN BATTLE\nMEXICO CITY, Jan. 80.\u2014Ei Universale said today that 16 federal coldiera\nand a number of rebels were killed in a\nsevere and bloody battle, Friday, ln the\nmountains of Michoacan.\nRemove\nBlackheads\ni this easy way\n!Don't torture yourself and ruin your\ncomplexion by painfully squeezing out\nblackheads. Tne Radox way is quicker, simpler, painless.\nSimply tip a teaspoonful of Radox Bath Salts\ninto a cupful of comfortably hot water.\nApply bv dabbing on the face. After a few\nminutes treatment, wipe your face dry.\nBlackheads will be seen to have vanished.\nFollow with a little cold cream. Read this\nletter:\n\"7 wonder how many people know tht twine\nof Radox Bath Salts jar treating that unsightly complaint, 'Blackheads.' Before\nusing Radoz I had to receive medical '*._'-\nmen* on account of trying to rtnmt tome\nfrom et* chin by forceful equating. Thi.\ncaused ticeration. By using Radar tl>r\nBlackheada come out quite easily,.leamng\nthe then oil aglow. My brother, arc a\/so\nusvng Radox with equally good results.\"\nD. M. r.\nThe Radox treatment is more lasting nud\ndoesn't leave ugly red skin bruiser. \\ )^-lb.\npink package contains many treatments, (lei\nRadox today. End thoee dis- sr. at. any\nfiguring blMkheads to-night. OV\u00ab- druggist's.\nSILVERTON, B.C., Jan. 30.\u2014Activity\nln tba mining industry In this vicln\nIty appears mors protMslns than has\nbeen expetrenced for 'its years. A half\ndozen mines are working mostly on a\ndevelopment basis. Other small properties wiU be further developed ln the\ncoming   spring  and  summer.\nThe Victoria Syndicate, limited, operating the Hewitt, have SO men. Three\nshifts are working at both the mine\nand mill. A quantity of lead and zinc\nmill lead has already been shipped to\nthe smelter. A new tramway has been\ncompleted from the Carnation to the\nHewitt mUl and lt ls expected that a\ngood Quantity of mlllfeed WiU soon be\ncoming down for treatment. A large\ntonnage ts expected to move from these\nproperties during the spring .nd\nsummer,\nTHE  MAMMOTH\nThe Western Exploration company\nare carrying on extensive development\nwork at the Mammoth. This property\nlooks very promising and it Is expect\ned tbat lt wiU develop into * big mine.\nAbout 10 men are .employed.\nDEVKLOP BOSUN\nTbe Boaebery-Surprlse company, operating the Bosun, are carrying on development work and at the aame time\ntaking out a Quantity of ore. Twenty\nfive men are employed.\nGALENA   FABM\nA new company have taken over the\nOalena Farm. Extensive development\nwork at the mine and concentrator ls\nplanned and indications point to the\nGalena again becoming a fair producer.\nLeasers continue work at the Van\nBoi  and Standard.\nJt ls expected that operations will\nbe resumed on the Fisher Maiden, L. H..\nand others as Boon as the weather be-\ncomes more promising.\nCRANBROOK NOTES\nCRANBROOK, B.C., Jan. 30.\u2014W. D\nQilroy ot toe Kootenay Telephone company, limited, went to Fernle Saturday\non business.\nThe Cranbrook hookey team went\ndown to defeat at Fernle Friday night\nhy the score of 6 goals to I.\nMaster Charles McQuade, son of Mr.\nand Mrs. J. H. McQuade, underwent\nan operation for appendicitis at St\nEugene hospital Saturday morning. He\nls  doing well.\nVincent Liddecoat, who haa been\nspending a few days at hts home here.\nreturns to the Paradise mine on Monday.\nThe monthly social evening of the\nCranbrook Conservative association was\nheld in tbe K. of P. hall Friday evening\nfrom B o'clock until 1:30, and the\npopularity of these gatherings\nagain demonstrated by the attendance\nand by the demand that they be held\noftener. Cards were played from 6\nuntil 10 o'clock, 25 tables being filled\nThe bridge wli\/ners were Mrs. W. F\nCameron and James Allen, the consolations going to Mrs. James Henderson\nand Dan Ryan. The whist prizes were\nwon by Mrs. Dan Ryan and J. MoFad\nden, while the low players were Miss\nDolly Steward and Mr. Jack MacDonald.\nAfter the cards, dancing was Indulged\nln until 1:30 Saturday morning, about\n76 couples taking the floor. Dainty\nand appetizing refreshments were\nserved by the Ladles' Conservative association.\nSILVERTON JUNIORS\nBEAT NEW DENVER\nRECEPTION\nand\nDANCE\nINVITATIONS\nBEAUTIFUL  PRINTING\nPN SUITABLE CARDS\nHave you seen the fashionable new\ntinted Invitation and Announcement\nCards?\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)\nITHE DAILY NEWS JOB DEPT.\nPSINTING-RUUNG-BOOKBINDING\nSILVERTON, B.C.. Jan. 30.\u2014A hockey\ngame   was  held  ln  the   rink   Wednesday    evening,    between    the    Silverton\nand  New Denver Juniors.    The Btlver-\ntonites being victorious with a score of\n8-2.     Much   credit  must   be   given   to\nthe Silverton goalie, who stopped many\nshots.      Stanley    Thomilson    of    New\nDenver was the  referee.\nThe lineup was as follows:\nNew  Denver      Position      Silverton\nGoal\nJ. Sanderson   R. Falrhurst\nForwards\nj.   Kirk       R.   Peachey\nR. Laird  - L. Emerson\nL.  Vandergrift       J.  Kelly\nA. McPherson  E. Stanton\nDefence\nL. Fogle  \u2022 B. McAulay\nJ.  Oomm    R-  Harding\nSOCIETY\nSelkirk Curling\nBonspiel Opens at\nCranbrook Today\nr CRANBROOK, B.C., Jan. 80.\u2014The Selkirk Curling association will open Its\nannual bonspiel at Cranbrook on Wednesday, February 1, provided the\nweather ls suitable. It wu the unanimous verdict of the executive meeting\nThursday evening, that no more spiels\nwould be held on soft ice. Rinks from\nKlmberley, Chapman Camp, Bull River,\nLumberton and Moylfc will be present\nwtth the Cranbrook rinks to enjoy\nthree days curling.\nIf iHtRt W*Xt A\nftWMORt f>AM**3\nLiKt rmsL\n\" \u2022   ' I**\"-1\nThis column is conducted by Mn.\nM. J. Vigneux. All news of a social\nnature, including receptions, private\nentertainments, personal items,\nmarriages, etc.. will appear ln this\ncolumn. Telephone Mrs. Vigneux at\nher home on Silica street.\nMiss Merle Archibald was the guest\nof honor Friday night at a decidedly\nsmart surprise party given her at the\nhome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. C.\nI. Archibald, Stanley street by a number * of ber friends. The evening was\nspent in music dancing and games.\nThose present included Miss Helen\nVance, Miss Jessie McLeod. Miss Edna\nMaundrell, Mlas Florence Maundrell,\nMias Olive Gibbon, Miss Phyllis Sheffield, Miss Phyllis Archibald, the Misses\nIsa and Nellie Leslie, Bennie Sutherland,\nRobert -Loot, -Ven Crawford, Douglas\nHaU, Thomas Bishop, Alec McLeod, Warren Cartmel, Arthur Gibbon and Edward   Chace.\n* . \u2022   *\nMrs. S. 8. Fowler and her son Pat\nof Rlondel wsre in the city yesterday and left last night for Victoria.\n* *   \u2022\nMrs. W W. Bell and her daughter of\nBonnington spent Saturday in the\ncity.\n* #   *\nThis morning Mrs. Robert Armstrong,\nMrs. James Armstrong, Mrs. James\nBrodie, Mrs. John Stobo and Mrs.;\nJohn Reld leave for Cranbrook, where\nthey wlll go as delegates from St.\nPaul's United church to the meeting\nof  tha  Kootenay  Presbyterial..\n* \u2022   *\nA. Galrns of South Slocan spent\nyesterday  in  town.\nMiss Whllemlna Watson  has arrived\nin the city worn Pimlico, London, to\nreside ln Nelson.\n* \u2666   *\nP. Hardy of Castlegar was a visitor\nto  the  city  yesterday.\n* *   \u2022\nCaptain McCarthy of Procter spent\nyesterday   In   town   on   business.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. R. McDonald of South Slocan was among visitors to Nelson yesterday.\n* \u2022   *\nGerald Rees, C.P.R. port steward, left\nlast night for Pentlcton.\n* *   \u2022\nP. T. D. Celle. formerly of the Nelson school staff and now of Vancouver, Is now enjoying a vacation ln\nBermuda, according to word received\nfrom  him  yesterday  by  friends.\n* *   *\nA delightful birthday i\u00bbrty was given\nby Mr. and Mrs. John Horllck, Railway street, Saturday when their daughter. Frelda, was 10 years old. She had\nas her guests her school mates Miss\nMargaret McKlm, Miss Ruth McKlm,\nMiss Alvia Matheson, Miss Violet Porter, Miss Nancy Smith, Miss Evelyn\nLundle. and Miss Wllma MUlen. The\nparty ended up with a most enjoyable\nsleigh  ride.\nMrs B. E. Chace, Kerr apartments,\nwho has been ln Vancouver and Edmonton for the past two months, owing to the serious illness of her father.\nE. Earle. She returned to town Sunday night from Edmonton, where she\nrecently accompanied him. He will\nreside there with his daughter. Mrs.\nChace was met at Kootenay Landing by Mr. Chace and their son, Edward  Chace.\nE. Gourtage of Trail spent yesterday  In town.\nMr. and Mrs. William Rutherford\nhave as their house guest their daughter, Mrs. Frank Willis and her daughter, Dorothy, of Trail, who arrived in\nNelson yesterday morning for a few\ndays.\n* \u2022   *\nc.   Laininedee,   Latimer   street,   who\nspent the week-end ln Trail the guest\nof Mr. and Mrs. Percy Halliwell returned   to   Nelson   yesterday   morning,\n* *   \u2022\nJ. W. Conklin of Los Angeles left\nlast night for the coast, after a week\nend   visit   to   Nelson.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. D. Thompson and her daughter, Miss Joan Frances, who have been\nguests at the home of Mr. and Mrs.\nW. J. Gerbracht, Mill street, left last\nnight for their home in Vancouver.\ns   e $\nC J. Renwick of South Slocan was\na   visitor   ln   town   Saturday.\n* \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. R. E. Horton, Fair-\nview, have taken up residence in the\nW. W. Powell home on Oak street,\nFairview.\nMrs. C. W. Mawhlnney, Mrs. T. B.\nHigglnbotham and Mrs. Norman Stibbs,\nleave this morning for Cranbrook as\ndelegates from the Trinity United\nchurch to the meeting of the Kootenay   presbyterial\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nH. Newcomen of Lardo spent yesterday ln the city.\n* \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. James Brodie, Stanley street, had as their guests over\nthe week-end their daughter. Miss\nKathleen Brodie, and Miss Isobel Galbralth, who teach at Tarrys.\n611 Baker Street, Phone 200\nCHILDREN'S SWEATERS\n$1.00 EACH\nOdd tines of Children's Sweaters and\nPullovers. Assorted sizes and colors.\nDOLLAR     DAY    SPECIAL,    fl.00\nWOMEN'S UNDERSKIRTS\n$1.00 EACH\nSateen and Gingham Underskirts in assorted colors.   All sixes.   EACH fl.OO.\nSATIN CREPE\n$1.00 THE YARD\n15 yards only, in Peach or Pink. 36\ninches wide. SOCIAL, YARD, $l.OO.\nRAYON VESTS\n$1.00 EACH\nMade of good quality Rayon yarns in\nassorted colors.   All sizes.   SPECIAL\nAT $1.00 EACH.   !\nSILK-AND-WOOL\nHOSE $1.00 THE\nPAIR\nA fine knit Silk-and-\nWool Hose in all the\nwanted colors. Sizes\n8i\/2 to 10. SALE\nPRICE, $1.00 THE\nPAIR.\n4 PILLOW SLIPS\nFOR $1.00\nHemstitched Slips of good quality Cotton. 40 inches wide. SALE PRICE,\n4 FOR $1.00.\nWOMEN'S CORSETS\n$1.00 THE PAIR\nOdd lines of Women's Corsets in sizes\n21 to 25 only. Less than half price,\nAT $1.00 THE PAIR.\nWOMEN'S BRASSIERES\n2 FOR $1.00\nOdd lines of Brassieres in front and\nside fasten. Assorted sizes. SPECIAL\nAT 2 FOR $1.00.\nMIDt)Y BLOUSES\n$1.00 EACH    ,\nOdd lines of Middy Blouses in Misses'\nand Girls* sizes. Good material. ONE\nPRICE, $1.00 EACH.\nCHILDREN'S HOSE\n4 PAIRS FOR $1.0\u00bb\nHeavy weight Hose in Black only. Assorted sizes, 6 to 10. 4 PAIRS FOR\n$1.00.\nWINTEft VESTS\n2 FOR $1.00\nGood weight .Winter Vests. Assorted\nsizes.    SPECIAL, 2 FOR $1.00.\nFLANNELETTE\n3 YARDS FOR $1.00\nStriped Flannelette in good English\nmake. 36 inches wide. AT 3 YARDS\nFOR $1.00.\nBATH TOWELS\n2 FOR $1.00\nWhite and colored Bath Towels in good\nweight.   Full sizes,   AT 2 FOR Sl.OO.\nHUCK TOWELS\n3 FOR $1.00\nHeavy weight Linen Huck Towels. Medium sizes.   SPECIAL, 3 FOR \u00a31.00.\nHAND BAGS\n$1.00 EACH\nGood quality Leather\nHAND BAGS in assorted    styles    and\ncolors.   SPECIAL, Sl.OO EACH.\nPEARL NECK BEADS\n2 STRINGS FOR $1.00\nIndestructible Pearl Beads in assorted\nsizes.   AT 2 STRINGS FOR ?1.00.\nTABLE DAMASK\n$1.00 THE YARD\n54-Inch Table Damask in good weight.\nSPECIAL, Sl.OO THE YARD.\nWOMEN'S SCARVES\n$1.00 EACH\nKnitted Scarves in a range of colors and\npatterns. CLEARING AT Sl.OO\nEACH.\nCHILDREN'S UMBRELLAS\n$1.00 EACH\nGood strong Umbrellas in Black only.\nJust the thing for the kiddies.   SPE-\nDotfble weight Cha-   CIAL, ?1.00 EACH,\nmoisette   Gloves   in\nWOOLEN DRESS\nGOODS\n$1.00 THE YARD\nCHAMOISETTE\nGLOVES\n$1.00 THE PAIR\nassorted colors, and\nsizes. ALL ONE\nPRICE, ?1.00 TIIE\nPAIR.\nREMNANTS AT HALF PRICE\nRemnants of Silks, Dressgoods, Linens,\nFlannelette, Chintz, etc., 1 to 3-yard\nlengths. CLEARING AT HALF PRICE.   Sl.OO THE YARD.\nPlain and Plaid Dress-\ngoods in assorted colors.\n40 inches wide. Less\nthan    Half   Price   AT\nGordon and Boy Bradshaw, who have\nbeen spending the paat six weeks, the\nguest of their parents. Mr. and Mrs.\nJoseph Bradshaw, silica street, leave\nthis morning lor Toronto, where they\nwill remain a week en route to Swas\ntlka,  Ont.\n...\nJ.  P.  Bourne  of  Procter   spent   yesterday ln the city shopping.\n...\nMrs. O. W. Humphrey, of South Slo\ncan was a visitor to Nelson yesterday.\n...\nMrs. W. A. Sewell. Silica street and\nher daughter, Dorothy, have returned\nfrom week ending in Trail at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs.  Wilfred  Carrie.\nWUmer McHardy, of the Canadian\ngovernment merchant marine, who recently arrived from Halifax to visit\nhis father, C. F. McHardy, for t few\ndays, wlll leave this morning for Coeur\nd'Alene City, Idaho, to visit his mother\nfor a Bhort time, before leaving for\nVancouver to return to sea.\nNew   Jeraey   peach   production    was\n2.304.OOO   bushels   ln    1037\nCranbrook Merchant\nIt Going to Open Up\nin Flin Flon Area\nCRANBROOK. B.C..  Jan. 30.\u2014Camllle\nOodderls   has   purchased   the   business\n_I Oeorge Tater and takes lt over  on\nFebruary   10.     Mr.   Tater   will   go   to\nVancouver  for a  short  time, on busl\nness,  and   about   March   1,  wlll  go  to\nFlln Flon to enter business In the new\nt-amp.    He does  not expect to remain\nIor  any  length  of   time  ln Plln  Flon\n03 his ultimate aim  ls Port Churchill,\nthe proposed terminus of the Hudson\nBay   railway.    Mr.   Tater  will  not   re\nmove   his   family   from   Cranbrook,   a\npresent.\nCome in\nOur stock of pipes, clgaret holders,\npouches and everything a smoker\nneeds ls right up to dat-t.\nBUSH'S\nCOAL WOOD COAL\nLet us fill your orders today for Dry Wood\u2014any length.\nor Gait Lump Coal\nNELSON  TRANSFER  CO.,  LTD.\nCor. Vernon A Stanley Sta. Nelaon, a O.\nPHONE 36\n\u25a0\u2014\n__MM\nearn\nDB. FERGIE WINS AT\nBILLIARDS,   CRANBROOK>\nCRANBROOK. B.C., Jan. 30.\u2014In the\nfinals of the Legion billiard tournament\nheld Saturday night, Dr. Fergie defeated Corporal Dennlson Wilson by\n8 points. Corporal Wilson had to give\nhis opponent 30 points ln the string\nof  300.\nTRY  A  CLASSIFIED  AD.\nMagistrate   of   New   York   ordered\n\"toothless\"   dog   to   be   muzzled.\nPHONE 44\n44 TAXI & TRANSFER\nDAY   AND   NIOHT   SERVICE\nCON. CUMMINS * GEO. McINNES\nProprietor*\nAll   Passengers   Insured\nf\n\u2022r\nI\nI\nf\nMade Its Way by the Way It's Made\nCURLEW\nICE CREAM BRICKS\nFor the Party\nSolve the problem of suitable dessert for dinner\nor refreshments for afternoon or evening function\nby ordering an Ice Cream Brick from your dealer.\nMade in several varieties, of which the new\nLovers' Delight Sherbet Brick is very popular.\nCURLEW CREAMERY Co., Ltd.\nBUTTER ICE CREAM MILK\nAD Perfectly Pasteurised Products\n_-_-,-__ jet,*,*, -tut _M\n1\nj\nr\n.\n1\n1\n*)\nI\n1\n9\n .Page Six\n' THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 31, 1928\n-a\n'Her Husband's\nSecretary'\nBy WILLIAM ALMON WOLFF\n-SS\nSLOCAN CITY\nCLOSES TEH.\nE\nnetted  M3O.05, and a sale of property\nowned by tbe city brought ln $181.\nOovernment grants to schools totaled\nH7N.00, of Which 11696 waa for salaries.\nI High school fees amounted to i-01._5.\ni which, with the balance of $142.i)i from\n1826, made the grand total of W766.9-.\nI    Chief expenditures for tha year were      OLACE   BAT,   HM.,   Jan.   JO.\u2014Act\n\u26664S63.36 for schoolsof which WMO> was   m \u201e        tto^fcou,   th,   o\u00bbp.\nfor salaries;   $400.06 was  paid  out for ~*\nextensions to the olrtc water worls, and  coUlery fields has developed since 1\n$182:03 for repairs to same.   To the $600  Dominion   Coal   oompany   put.\ndebentures  retired  was  added  $480  ln   or   ,\u201e   ____   _   .   -^w\u2014_   -&_\ncivic salaries, $102.68 printing and sta- w   mu\"\"\"   \u2122   \"   **a\"*ma   wa'*'\ntlonery. $2W.7\u00bb for    maintenance    of :\u00ab*\u00bbnul$.    Relief orders amounUng\nCapt Breton't Mist\nFields is Ntti Since\nWork Schedule It C\nof over $1J00 and the church Insurance\n! of $7000, which he thought would\nnearly all be paid over, the congregation could Immediately put Its hands\non nearly $20,000. With outside help,\nthe sum would take ln addition to thla\n$20,000 to replace (be church according\nto present plana was well within the\nreach of the congregation. J\nOPEN FBKE OF DEBT\n\"I hope 'we shall be able to open the\nnew ctKweh In October, free of debt.\nAnd If every one feels as earnestly and\nheartily about lt-as I do we shall do\nIt,\" hs asserted.                                       Pov\u00ab Off ll.h_ntn.__ _.. i.\u201e,  highways, and $60 as a donation to the  about  $1000  were paid  out em* I\nintension    of    present    organization rays UI.   ueoentures ana l_nas  8l0Clin   Valley agricultural   association.   \u201e._, \u201e   ,.   LI ,   _,   \u201e._.   ______\nArchdeacon   Graham   Tells   the  must be effected immediately, the aroh-\ndeaoon  stated.    He   asked   support   ol\nWomen of Congregation Now\nHave Nearly $20,000\nYear With $2194.81 to\nCredit\nCHAPTBR    IS\nAnd (till, shadowed though she was\nby ber premonitions of coming trouble.\nBUeenj MacVelgh  could  only  carry  on,  \u25a0**\u2022  knew,  of  a  little   chill  of  dlaap\nI'd open It now and keep it going till ASKS  FELLOWSHIP  AND\n1JTouroZ.ri.'vn.ASrntb\u00ab)\u00bb .h.     SUPPORT OF COMMITTEE\nsaid,   and  was  conscious,   absurdly,   as \t\nthe altar guild, tbe Woman's auxiliary,\nthe Association of Church Helpers and\nthe  Mothers'   club,  first  by   increased\nmembership,   and   then   by   every   one     SLOCA1.   CrtY, B.C..  Jan. Jo.*-After\nturning to and helping to the best of having paid off debentures amounting\ntheir ability. I to $600. the laat Ot the civic drbl, Blo-\n\"CARBT ON\" I can City commences 1928 with a lavor-\nIn   the   meantime,   aaid   the   arch- able balance of $2194 81.\ndeacon, \"we must carry on.\"   No mat-      Reports  for  1937  were  gratifying  to\nweek-end in several of the dlstrl\nand supplies raised ln Halifax are I\npected to arrive hen shortly. They 1\nbe distributed by the United\nWorkers.\nAn appeal wu made today bj 1\nmer     Lieutenant-Governor     McCalh\nGrant for further monetary aaslstai\nj for the miners and their families w.\nOTTAWA.  Jan. 30\u2014Mre. H. B. Pa- I ettart* to (et additional work foe I\n-sud, mother of the wife of Hon. Luclen mines are under way.\nCannon, solicitor-general, died yesterday!     In   an   effort   to   mitigate   the\nOrand total expenditures, lesa the bal-\nI ance on hand and ln the bank, amounted to $6673.11.\nSOLICITOR-GENERAL'S\nWIFE'S MOTHER DIES\ncontinue to mark time. Down on Long\npolntment.\n\"No,\"   he   said.     \"My    sister   does,\nwww   on.     wne   m*   \u00abithough.    Helen   Bishop;   I  expect  you\n\u25a0alvag,  there  wm  from  the  wreckage knOW   her  it you  d0  llve  htre...\n5fJ *\\ ^!. **?' ** tne h0U8*: John We've Just bought a place. I don't\nJS*.\"!* ttJ\" ,*\"\/_.P\u2122 \u00ab\u00ab \u00ab\u00bb *Tc..know ftny0ne ftt all. I'm staying a\n*etton and furnishing of the houKifew dsys t0 get thlnf8 !n> It-t easier\nto Tony Larue, And Fielding came to\nber about that phase of the work.\nTm no decorator\u2014never wae,\" be\nMid. \"Moreover, I feel that that's up\nto\u2014the people who are going to live\nlh the house. Anything I can do to\nhelp you I'll be glad to do, but I'd\nlike you to have the say about every-\n\"  W\u00abi* rnntHhntiim Tnwnrd New  *\"   what   pl*M   **\"   made   foL *\u00a3* ?tJ-,n1' **\\-- __**M\u00b0n *J> the tavorable I *n Uwry  Minn., where she resided. The ! frees   the   Canadian   National   fall*.\nnrSl -tOninDUUOn  lowaru new   ,utur.   .-our   Dre\u00abnt  budget  must   be balanoe, civic affairs are In better shape   \u2666.,-._i   -,*  \u25a0K\/,aj*art,^  T>\u00ab._\u00bb__ri   win   t_\u00bbir.   nmrnti*   nn)\u00abii   ...   ._-... it i *-*_*-. i   mi\nfuture,  \"our   preaent  budget  must   be  balance, civic affairs are ln better shape I funerfti   ot  Madame   Pacaud   will  take, recently   ordered   an   additional   60,<\nChurch Made by Member \u00ab\u2022*\u2022\" .*\u2022_.\u2022*\u2022* for increased contribu-  than they have been for NW-ttai.       j place Jn Quebec. I tons   of  banked   coal.\nthing   Important.\nAnd so, quietly, without consulting\nJohn\u2014of whom, indeed, ehe wm now\nseeing len and less, ao busy wm he,\nso constantly did he find It necessary\nto be away at night\u2014Eileen went\nahead. And, m matters turned out,\nFielding's bark proved worse than hts\nMte. He made changes, but he did,\nm a matter of fact, succeed In preserving, much of the house that ahe\nhad loved at sight, and the additions\nwere cunningly and skillfully contrived.\nThe house, as lt finally began to take\nIts new form, greatly resembled Its old\nMlf; Its new bulk wm concealed; Eileen\nfound herself falling In love with lt all\nover again, almost In spite of herself.\nBy May part of lt wm habitable and\nahe moved down, for a week, to be\non the ground while certain work\nwm done. John was away on a long\ntrip of Inspection out West; she\ncould not have consulted him even\nhad   she   wished  to   do  so.\nThe country she loved. The house\nwm set among sand dunes; she went\nto sleep with the roar of the Atlantic\nln her ears, and woke to look from her\nwindow across the beach and see the\ngreat rollers coming lazily In, white\nagajpst the... vast expanse of tossing\ngreen.\nAs yet the summer people had not\ncome. The great houses, set ln their\nbeautifully cared for grounds among\nthe dunes, were cloned, their windows\nshuttered, their doors barred. Only\nth_p natives were about, and In her\nleisure hours Eileen drove much and\ncame to know the Island roads. Once\nahe vent clear to the end of land, at\nMontfcuk Point, on a day when the\nwhole* sandy waste wm pink with wild\nln bloom, with strange, shaggy\n, tlons by the envelope system so that     Principal receipts were $687.28 arrears\nBible  Class the   current   expense   fund   and   the of taxes,  with  $668.14  current  general\n_ | block assessment might be met by the rate taxes, and $623.34 debenture tolls,\nend  of  the   year   without  special   ap-  which, with the Inclusion of $749.44 city\nAppealing   for   uninterrupted   tellow-  peals. school taxes and $710.16 district school\nship and asking for support of  plans     Speaking  of  the  work done  by  the  taxes, made a total of $2655.08.   Other\nthe church committee may offer for re- Sunday  echool   ln   meeting   the   block  taxes,  licence  few,  etc.,  amount\nthan going back and forth.\"\nae\"l\\\\T \u25a0\u25a0^L^omTJTrt^ssa' P^Th. 'iu^tJeVo^'with a I_S25_riSM^a^^5   *\"___*\"  \u00ab>\"  t\u00b0t*1  W   \u00bb\"*\"*\nto   keen   her  comnann     Where's   vour  bigger and more beautiful churoh, Ven. the first  contribution he  received  to-  Iro\u2122 __***\u25a0   ._ ,   \u201e\u201e   ___\nhou\u00abr           co,nlwn\u00bb-    Wtar\"  your A^LdeKpn rred H. Oraham addre\u00abed \u201e.\u201e,  construction   of   a  new   church     \"**\u00ab_.\u201e,gJS.\u00bbr\u00bbi    r-rTmuttZ\nh<Z'pointed to where th. low, slop- women o, St. ^-c^H^ln = *- . mNnbW of his own Bible ^ tf^? ___^T__Ti\\.\nlng roof could Just be seen back among \u2022>*\u2022 lt'm0,'_,t'*U f\"^y.,\u201e^!\u00a3X c.._S_\u00bb\u00bb__.,\u2122,__\u00bb.                                     e-ncn fees, and a refund to the hospt-\nthe   dunes. He  described   again   the  oPPorttmlty CWTB_BIJTI0N8                                      I t\u201e eJxoxl_t 0, $162 3B ,rom A   attmn\n\"Oh,   yes,'   he   aaid.    \"You  must  be the members of St. Saviours have to     Then two boys who made some pocket  All 0f these were government revenue or\nMrs. MacVelgh, then, aren't you? Helen \"\"how what  weTe made of,    and  ap- money by distributing church envelopes   ,ranti ^ ttt  clty     clty watcr wori\u201e\nYou   ought   to   know   one   another\u2014 pealed   to   the   women   to   'turn   out badgered Leelle Craufurd, people's war-      __^\t\nyou'll be next door neighbors, practl- adversity Into a blessing.\"                    | den, until he gave them their money, i  \u2014\ncally.\" I    Giving some Idea of the church fl-' They   immediately   turned   1(  over   to .to prove itself.   It had suffered a great\nEileen hesitated.   She had been reso- nances   as  they   now  stand,   he   said Archdeacon Oraham aa their contribu- material loss, but the eentlmenal loss\nlute  ln her determination to take no that with the building fund of over tlons toward the new church.                I was far greater than the material, as-\nstep  toward achieving social contracts $11,000,  the  chancel  furnishing   fund'    St. Saviour's had a great opportunity) serted the archdeacon.\nhere.    And   she  knew;   only  too   well,  '\nwho and what Helen Bishop was. The\nCuticura Comforts Tender\nAching Irritated Feet\nBathe the feet for several minutes whh Cuttcura\nSoap and warm water, then follow with a light\napplication of Cuticura Ointment, gently nibbed\nin. Thla treatment ia moat successful in relieving\nand comforting tired, hot, aching, horning feat.\nUrns. LU.Mwtml,\"   PHm, 8mp a*. Otatewli ud Mt.\nWOT Cmtiemm Slttvtat Slick 25c\nBishops were' of the inner circle of\nNew Tork; they belonged to that old\nManhattan aristocracy that looked upon\npeople like the Fosters as upstarts and\nparvenus. But another look at the\nyoung man decided her. His simplicity, the genuineness of his kindly\nImpulse, were too plain to be misunderstood.    She got up.\n\"I'd   like  to,  very   much,\"  she  said.\n\"We're Just camping out\u2014there Isn't\na servant ln the place,\" he told her.\n\"But come on. I got thrown out\u2014\nmy sister said I wm more of a hindrance than a help, I expect she'U put\nyou to work.\"\nHe laughed as they fell Into step\ntogether.\n\"I have the advantage of you, Mrs.\nMacVelgh, as they used to say,\" he\nsaid. \"My name's Ted Chandler. It'a\nall right for me tc Introduce myself,\ndon't   you think?\"\n\"I think it's very nice,\" Eileen said,\nsedately. But why wm her heart racing so?\n(To Be Continued.)\nSCENE OF Mil\nChimney Fires  When  Kiddies\nPut on Big Fire in Kitchen\nin Mother's Absence\npoglks,  almost  wild,   moving  about  In\ntbevery shadow of the lighthouse.       |\nTWs' days were warm, though thai\nnights were still chilly. Sometimes!\nshe took a book and a packet of sand-\nwlsbee and went to He on the beach.\nThe ' sun-warmed sands were soothing\nto her;? there was Infinite peace and\ncomfort ln the ageless, endless surging\nof the sea,  the resistless advance,  the, \t\nInevitable retreat, of the tide.\nAnd here one day as she lay, half- Duplicating a fire of nearly a year\nhidden from any one coming toward ago, a chimney at the home of Mrs.\ntbe water by a heap of sand thrown Harry Anderson, 1011 Water street,\nup,by the wind ln the night, a man burst Into names early last night when\ncame, on soundless feet, and started the Anderson kiddles built a big fire\nnkek, with an amused eiclamatlon, at ln the kitchen stove. Mrs. Anderson\nthe : sight of her. l was out.\n\"By  Jove\u2014I'm sorry!\"  he  said. The fire department was called about\n\u25a0* Eileen sat up and smiled. 16:30.    Chemicals extinguished the blaze\n\"Why?\" she Bald. \"It's not my ln quick order, no damage being done,\nbeach,  you know.\" On February 10 last a flre occurred\n\u25a0 \"\"Oh. of course; but I nearly stepped   ln the same house ln tbe same manner,\non youl\" but about two hours later ln the eve-\n\"JRearly doesn't count,\"  she  said. nlng.\n- She didn't know when she had felt A. L. McCulIoch, who ls wintering ln\nas ehe did now, when she had felt California, ls the owner of the building,\nas, she. did now, when she had before,\nlf Indeed she ever had, spoken freely,\ncasually, to a man she hadn't met.\n'Hut about this young man\u2014he was\nyoung, younger than she, no older\nanyway\u2014there was something engaging\nand disarming. She had liked his\nlooks the moment she saw him;\n\u25a0he knew, Instinctively, that here was\none \u00abt_uned   to  her  spirit.\nft*\"Stood above her, looking down,\nsmiling, with his eyes though, not his\nlips, which was what somehow, made\nall .the difference. She hadn't known,\nuntil, this stranger looked at her so,\nhow hungry, how starved, she had\nbeen,   these   many   weary   weeks,   for\nJust that look in a pair of human eyes,   VU__[__. ]_,.  C\u201ev- II'\na   look   friendly.  Interested. 5?..        \u2022><\"'\" \u00ab-\u00bb\u2022-'* \"IS\nWhatMouIIriiik?\nThe Dally News Invites letters\nfrom readers upon matters of public\ninterest. A nom-de-plume may, if\ndesired, be employed, but every letter must be signed by the writer as\na guarantee of good faith, though\nnot necessarily for publication. Letters should be brief, and must avoid\npersonalities.\n'These are the best days of all,\ndon't you think?\" he said. \"These\nand the warm days that come ln the\nFail, when everyone's gone away again.\nB* Jove,  if I had a place down here\njot* Haifa Century\nthe Standard,\nSuccessful  Treatment\nDiCHASE'S\nOINTMENT\n*\nn't Stay Fat\nin These Days\n\u25a0jjfou see countless people who have\ngained new beauty, new health and\nvlh. by fighting excess fat. Some have\ndene thla by abnormal exercise and\nd.ft. scane in a modern, scientific way.\nyfky not follow their example?\nAdhere is a way based on scientific re-\ns\u00a3rch.   It   combats  a  cause   of   exceft.\n3 which starvation cannot fight. That\nthod la embodied in Marmola pre-\nlptton tablets, now used for 30 years.\nMillions of boxes of them. The results\nyihi see wherever you look should in*\ndfif   yon  to  accept   them.\nifcach box of Marmola contains the\nformula, alao the reasons for results.\nMf there   ls   no  secret,\nOffer to Pay Refused by\nKirby When Gorman Sick\nTo the Editor of The Dally News;\nSir\u2014As one of the backers of Jim\nGorman I wish you would kindly pub'\nllsh this letter to correct the news\nItem In your paper of this morning's\ndate.\nMr. Gorman wm taken sick on Sat'\nurday morning, and Dr. McKay wm\ncalled in to attend him. Mr. Kirby\nwm notified and he called ln Drs,\nBennett and Gussin. All three doctors agreed that Mr. Gorman wm very\n111.\nI offered Mr. Kirby to pay any extra\nadvertising which might be occMloned\nby a postponement of the fight, but\nmy  offer wm not accepted.\nMr, Gorman as soon as he Is well ls\nready to take on Mr. Harlow, and lf\nMr. Kirby does not care to promote\nthe right, I am quite willing to do\nso   myself.\nWILLIAM JONES.\nNelson,  B.C.,  January  30,   1938.\nAustria's Best Singers\nWill Parade With Torches\nin Honor of Song Writer\nVIENNA, Jan. 80.\u2014Five hundred of\nAustria's best singers carrying flaming\ntorches wlll march through darkened,\ntortuous streets of sleeping Vienna in\nthe wee small hours or Tuesday. They\nwill inaugurate the celebration of the\n131st anniversary or the birth of the\n100th anniversary of the death of\nFranz Schubert, whom many account\nthe greatest classical song writer of all\nages.\nCRICKET IN AFRICA\nJOHANNESBURG,  South  Africa,  Jan.\n30\u2014South Africa in their reply to Eng\nland's first Innings total of 366 scored\n336 in the fourth cricket test match today.   The Englishmen, who have scored\nno   reason   to   333   for  seven  wickets  by  painstaking\nteM harm. You will know that all the   batting on Saturday, were all out after\ng<_bd   results  come   ln  a   natural   way.   ^j hour's batting this morning.   Taylor\nOf learn   them   now,   by  asking  your   belabored tbe deliveries of the\nflPfV-STt\nfor a 91 box of Marmola.\ntrundlcrs and scored 101,\nSIX GREAT COMPANIES\nUNDER ONE DIRECTION\nThis advertisement is published to $jw ihepublic a clear\ndefinition of Canadian Indtislries limited; its products;\nthe reason for its expansion and entry into new, though\nrelated, fields of commercial endeavour; and its aims.\n1 HE main products of the\nsix manufacturing entities\noperated by Canadian Industries Limited are: Commercial Explosives and Accessories; Ammunition and\nTrack Signals; Pyroxylins,\n(sole Canadian manufacturers of genuine Duco), Lacquers, Paints and Varnishes;\nPyroxylin and Rubber-\nCoated Fabrics (Fabrikoid);\nCleanable Collars and Cuffs,\nCombs and Toiletware\n(Pyralin).\nProbably few are aware that nearly\nall of these seemingly unrelated products have a common chemical origin.\nCanadian Industries Limited, the\nmajority of whose stock is owned in\nthe British Empire and which is managed entirely in Canada, in addition\nto its own research staff, has the\nknowledge and research backing, for\nthe Dominion of Canada and New-\nDOMINION CARTRIDGE COMPANY\nLIMITED *\nB^BB!l-!=aS!*_!\u00bbS5\nfiint paint *_. Varnish umited\nfabrikoid;\n\u25a0IMITCP-\nCANADIAN FABRIKOID LIMITED\nARLINGTON COMPANY OF CANADA\nLUUTII)\nfoundland, of two of the world's\ngreatest chemical engineering\norganizations\u2014Imperial Chemical\nIndustries Limited of Great Britain,\nand E. L DuPont de Nemours &\nCompany of the United States.\nTo this unique background, Canadian Industries Limited in large\nmeasure owes its development\nThe Canadian Industries Limited\ntrade-mark therefore stands for the\nlatest development and the highest\nstandard of quality in the various\nKnes which chemistry has allied with\nexplosives manufacture.\nCanadian Industries Limited enterprises are the means of employing\nvery large numbers of Canadians, to\nwhom its Welfare Plans bring'a certain amount of comfort and security,\nand are keeping circulating in Canada many millions of dollars.\nCanadian Industries Limited intends\nto serve its Canadian customers by\nselling its products at the lowest\nprices consistent with the maintenance of high quality and service\nstandards, believing that in so doing\nit also serves its own best interests.\nCANADIAN INDUSTRIES LIMITED\nAND SUBSIDIARY COMPANIES\nMONTREAL\nleis is Nnmeer One ef e mies\naf eAerrliutntntt ukuh mill\nettear ta Ike pttit Ikrenrteul\navtsta-tt\n ' THE mSON DXTLY NEWS.     TUESDAY HORNING, XSNUXRY ST. ,m\n0,\nIONARCHS WIN VANCOUVER PUCK TITLE\nie Round by Four Goals to\nThree in Hard-Fought\nGames\n'NARCHg NOW MEET\nVICTORIA CAPITALS\nDraw for Fifth\nRound English\nCup .Competition\nLONDON, Jan. 80.\u2014The draw ln the\nfifth round of the English Football\nassociation cup competition to be played\non February 18 waa made today and\nwas announced as follows:\nBury or Manchester United-Birmingham.\nThe   Wednesday-Sheffield.\nArsenal-Aston   Villa.\nLeicester-Tottenham.\nManchester   City-Stoke.\nHuddersfleld-Mlddlesbro.\nEieter or Blackbum-Portvale.\nDerby County or Notts Forest-Cardiff.\ntilers    of    Monarch-Capital\nGame WiU Meet West\n-.\u25a0   Kootenay Winners\nTD PLRY HERE\nII AT TRAIL\nVancouver, Jan. 30. \u2014\ntaring the final came of a\n|,>g\u00bbnre playoff series for the\njitnpionship of the City Senior i)ate8  Set  by  Jimmie  Carter\nlateur   Hockey   league   one     Are satisfactory to Kim\nPLAYLASTTIME\nVictory Last Game Here Upsets All Dope; Outcome Is\nDoubtful\nNslson and Rossiand clash ln the\nrink here tonight ln their laat meeting\nIn Nelson of the 1927-28 season. They\nmeet for the last time ln Rossiand on\nFebruary  8.\nWhen Rossiand last played here tt\ndefeated Nelson 6 to 3, playing overtime periods. In previous meetings\nNelson came out on top every time.\nRossland's victory, its only one of the\nseason, upset all the dope, so fans\ndo not quite know what to predict for\ntonight.\nNelson's team wlll be: Notman, goal;\nRichardson   and   L.   Deslreau,   defence^ S5V,V\u201e     \u2022\nHexlmer,   Walman,  Pelletler,  Penny,   S.\nDeslreau  and Ogenski,  forwards.\nberley Basketeers\n;il down to Ex-King George,\njriarchs tonight took the title\nwinning the second game ,   _ \\\ngiving them a J* victory; J^Tf Alison. S^l\nthe Series.    Ex-King George, soclatlon,   last   night   from   Klmberley\nn Friday nicrht  2 to 1 .stating that the dates he had set for\nll rnaay nlgnt, i. W 1. ' the. bMketball games  between  a  team\n\u2022Monarchs will meet Victoria from that city and the high school\nft   Friday   and   Monday   for  cadets,   leaders  of  the  City  Basketball\n'\u201e    ...   '       ,   ....     ,, .      league,  and  a representative  team  of\nf Pacific Coast title, the Win-1 ^* c'ltyi   were   satisfactory   to   them,\n.8    to    meet    the    Kootenay  providing   they   could   also   make   ar-\nimpions for Drovincial hon- \u2122\u2122\u2122\u2122t8 t0 play ta T\u212211 on the\ni   and  the   right  to   repre- to play\nt  British  Columbia in  the\nan cut) playoffs.\nBEAT CENTRAL\nBRITISH SOCCER I\nLEAGUE STANDING ,\nIncluding games of Saturday, January 38:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\u2014\nFIRST DIVISION\nP. W. L\nEverton     *\u2022 14   5\nHuddersfield T  35 14   7\nLeicester City 27 13   8\nCardiff City       35 10   7\nNewcastle  U 28 10   \u00ab\nBlackburn Rov.    .36   9   8\nArsenal     24 10   8\nLiverpool 25   9   8\nBurnley 28 12 12\nBolton  Wan 34 10   9\nSunderland    24   9   8\nTottenham H. 26 10 10\nBury     36 13 13\nMlddlesboro 26   8 10\nSheffield U  36   9 II\nDerby  County 25   8 10\nManchester U 25   9 11\nWest Ham U. 25 10 13\nAston Villa 25   9 12\nBirmingham     25\nBirmingham     25\nPortsmouth     35\nThe Wednesday ... 26\n0 12\nGoals\nL>.   P.A.Pt.\n7 7\u00ab 39 as\n4 03 42 32\n1 80 44 31.\n. 44 44 28\n7 56 33 27\n9 38 47 31\n8 60 60 26\n5 07 48 28\n2 52 61 28\n_ 17 37 25\n7 ',7 43 25\n5 49 54 26\n1 47 92 26-\nil 61 54 24\nt, 17 66 24\n7 60 57 23\n3 41 46 38\n3 33 62 23\n4 49 51 22\n4 49 51 82\nE\nMeeting Turns Down Request to\nContinue League; May Form\nIndependently\nBOYS' DIVISION TO\nSTART IN TWO WEEKS\n5 9 11 40 51 21\n7 12\n6 12\n6 40 62 20|\n8 44 64 18 i\nJimmie Carter's Resignation as\nSecretary Refused; Meeting   Lively\nb 50 22 38|\n3 66 36 37l\n4 69 32 361\n6 68 34 34\n5 48 36 31\n6 46 39 30\n4 63 46 28\n5PLAI\nDNEiL DRAIN\nSeventy Minutes' Fast Hockey;\nSheiks Stilt Lead the\nLeague\nChelsea     28 16\nManchester  City... 35 17\nLeeds United  36 18\nPreston N. B.    86 14\nStoke  City     36 13\nOldham Ath 34 12\nNotts Forest  34 13\nI BrlBtol  City    86 11 10   5 51 46 37\n' West, Brom. Alb.     36 10   9    7 68 52 27\n' Grimsby Town       25   9   8\nI Hun   City    24   8   7\nSwansea Town   25 10 10\nPort Vale    24 11 11\nBarnsley     36   8 11\nNotts County   35   7 11\nReading    26\nClapton Orient .... 26\nBlackpool    37\nSouthampton     25\nBlackpool     37\nSouthampton     35\nWolver. Wan  36\nFulham    38   6 14\nSouth Shields  35   2 18\n(No results of South Shields-Hull Ctty\ngame and not included in standings.)\n\u00abrsr * sir re.\u00bb\/e*p'\nRANTS\nBest Procurable\n(THE ORIGINAL)\nRICHEST IN FINEST\nHIGHLAND   MALT\ntnHU eni\nGimi a 5mm\nkyWahai\n__  Mi*.-*\nDnha. Os*.\nPare Scotch Whisky\nI nit. advertisement T?  not  ouhlished hi   \u2022ti**ni\u00ab\nthe Liquor Control Board nr bv thp Oovprnment nf Rrit*\u00ab-\nColumbia\n8 4. 50 26\n0 29 32 25\n5 jl 49 25 -\n2 41 37 24 I\n7 44 67 23\n7 42 48 21\n7 12-   8 38 52 20\n8 13 4 30 68 30\n7 51 70 19\n0 38 61 IS\n7 -1 70 19\n8 33 51 18\no 40 80 17\no 43 63 17\n3 _6 75   9\n7 16\n8 13\n7 16\n6 13\n8 14\nAT TRAIL\nIt ls planned to have the Klmberley\nboys   play   here   on   February   10,   and      SASKATOON,  Sask.,  Jan.  ...   \t\non   February   13,   the   Klmberley   team toon  Sheiks  and  Moose  Jaw  Maroons. '\"'\"\"\"* ii\u2122,\/\u2122.-\ntraveling  to Trail  on February   11,   to battled through 70 minutes, 10 of which] \u201e\u201e',\u201e'_\u201e,' _f_,     \u201e\ntangle   with   a   team   there.    Arrange- were overtime, to a 1-1 draw, ln\nnrn   City  Team   5\nTight Hoop\nBattle\nto 6  in\nments are also being made to have a first meeting on the second half of the\nTrail Junior team mil with the high schedule of the Prairie Hockey league,\nschool Junior cadets ln a curtain raiser The match was clean and fast and was\nto one of the games being played In, featured by the heavy checking. The\nNelson. Both Nelson games ore to be result leaves the Sheiks still at the\npiryed at the high school. | head of the league with a clear margin\nThe committee appointed by the Nel-  over the  other clubs,\nson Batftetball league to select a repre- UNEl'P\nsentatlve team turned ln a list of names      Saskatoon      Position      Moose Jaw\nlast   night   at   the   executive   meeting. Go*'\nThose   named,   as   well   as   any   others  Alkenhead       TorTM\nthat wish to try out for a place on the Defence\nteam, are aaked to turn out for practice  Graham      Matz\non Friday night at the high school at Stevens      Taylor...\n7 o'clock, and again on Monday, Center\npleating   Central   by   a  lone   point,   PLAYERS CHOSEN I Denenny   Conn\nre  School Midget  league, hoop ar-      Those  specially  asked  to be  present wm* u.t_.n___n\nclimbed    one    step    nearer    the  at   the   try-outs   were:   Ted   McVlcar.  Westwick   ^_fhS_\u00a3_i\ntne   .hatnplonshlp   last   night. Jlmmle Carter, B. Vance, O. Roynon. H.  Wakeford   _\u2014\u2014\t\noth   teams   were   on   their   mettle,   Farenhofta, S. Genest. J. Ionian, Chap- substitutes\nan   equal  determination   to   win.   man. Kan Fish, Rankin Hanna, J. Jeffs  Moffatt\t\ndaberry    played    a    brilliant    game   and E. Vance. JFJ\u00ablh    -\u2022 -\t\nthe Hume, although he scored only      The committee chosen to handle the Glroug\u2014\u2014-\u2022 \u25a0-\u2014\t\nbasket.    Weaver waa the star man   financial  end  of the  games  wae  com-      Referee\u2014Battel!\nie Csntral squad, playing an aggres-  posed  of  A.  Wallach,  J.  S.  Donaldson\ngame throughout.    F. McRae held   and Jimmie Carter.\nwhistle,  handling  the  game  satis-  em>\n. Teel\nEvans\nBrown\norily to both sides.\nteams were:\n;ume\u2014Moran,     Baker     (4),     Stout,\nens, Goldsberry  (2), A. Bishop,\nentral-1 . McLeod, N. McLeod, Buch-\nTeOgue,  Weaver   (4).\nManitoba Witt Take\nAll Liquor Profits\nSUMMARY\nFirst   period\u20141,   Saskatoon,   Oraham,\n10:13;  2, Moose Jaw, Sutherland,  :17.\nSecond period\u2014No score.\nThird period\u2014No score.\nOvertime\u2014No score.\nNORTH BEND TRAIN MAN\nWINNIPEO,    Jan.    30.\u2014Under    Manl-  1x117*\ntoba's new liquor legislation,  which ls l\/lbd\nnow   being  considered  by  the   legislature,   the   government  will  obtain   the\nwhole of the profits, Instead of dividing\nthem,   as   under   the   old   Moderation\nBattle Untd the Fall _*. \u00ab_ .t*;***^-*^ * tt* Fa^T^i^S; y_i,T wTeSTag\u2122\n.\/. Dempsey has\nInjured Eye; Cannot\nFROM    INJURIES\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 30.\u2014Albert Smith,\na trainman, who was badly crushed ln\nan  end-on   collision  on  the  Canadian\nOS ANOELE9, Cal.. Jan. 30.\u2014Handl-\n>ed with an injury to his left eye,\nDempsey, erstwhile champion of\nlism, let it be known today that he\nably will not toe ready until  next\nI night.\nvoiced by opposition members to-\nALASKAN   SHIP   IS   REFLOATED\ndied at St. Paul's hospital Sunday\nI The deceased was a resident of North\n] Bend and had been ln the employ of\nI the railway for a number of years,\n..--.--*,-.-.      -         -*_-_.       __.   \u2022___ Wolves    chased    a    fisherman    near\nVICTORIA,    Jan.    30.-The    Alaskan Watersmeet,   Mich.,   and   kept   him   ln\n-\u201eember to take another shot at Gene steamer Northwestern, wrecked at Cape a tree for three hours\ninty's heavyweight crown.    Derr,*)sey Mudge on December  11  last, was  buc-  ^     \t\nDaled that the muscle of the eye had cessfully floated by the Pacific Salvage While   cleaning   a   revolver   at   Peru,\n11 hurt ln one of his recent bouts, company this morning and Is now en ind., Henton Miller,  aged 32,  acclden-\ndoes not regard it as serious.         1 route  to Vancouver.                                 j tally shot  and killed  himself.\nSolid as the Continent\n.;\nTHE 47th year in the history of the North American Life\nAssurance Company was marked by substantial growth and\ndevelopment.\nThe financial record of 1927 is such as to inspire continued confidence in the stability and progressiveness of the company.\n\u2022 \u2022       $ 35,608,067.00\n\u2022 \u2022 6,400,567.00\n\u25a0 - 3,082,510.00\n\u2022 - 32,090,726.00\n\u25a0 \u2022 165,684,200.00\nAssets\t\nSurplus     ......\nPayments to Policyholders\nPolicies Issued and Revived\nInsurance in Force   -   \u2022   \u2022\nPolicyholders\nMay congratulate themselves on this splendid showing:\u2014.\nThe year 1927 ended with the Largest Surplus\nearnings in the Company's history.\nPayments to Policyholders increased by $515,845\nover the previous year.\nAn increased scale of dividends announced for\n1928.\nA record of continuously improving dividend payments\u2014progress in every department.\nNORTH\nASSU\n\"Solid as ihe Conii)\nNELSON  BRANCH  OFFICE\nS-3   Aberdeen   Block,\nNelson,  B.C.\nUFE\nMlllwaU Athletic .. 25 17\nNorthampton    23 14\nExeter City   23 11\nPlymouth Argyle .. 25 14\nSwindon Town .... 20 11\nCharlton Ath  22   9\nQueens Park R  -4 11\nB. & H. Albion ... 21 11\nNewport County .. 24 10\nBourne. & Bosc  24\nCrystal Palace  24   8\nSouthend  Unit  22 11 10\nBrentford     J\u00ab   9 13\nNorwich City   24   7 11\nBristol Rovers   24\nCoventry City   24\nGllllngham   33\nWalsall     24\nMerthyr Town  36\nWatford     34\nTorquay United .... 24\nLuton Town   29\n9 9\n9 13\n8 13\n6 9\n7 13\n5 13\nS 13\n5 12\n3 78 37 37\n4 63 37 3-\n9 44 27 31\n3 57 37 31\ni 55 87 27\ni  34 33 37\n5 S. 29 17\n5 51 49 37\n6 _5 43 26\n0 44 43 24\n8 40 49 34\n1 40 39 23\n3 46 52 21\n0 47 48 10\n2 43 60 30\n4 44 57 30\n7 37 45 19\n4 36 61 18\n8 36 53 18\n3 40 61 17\n7 39 61 17\n5 14 4 53 57 14\n1IIIKI) DIVISION\u2014\nNORTHERN,1 SECTION\nBradford     35 17   2 8 41 34 40\nDoncaster Rov  25 17   4 4 58 20 38\nStockport County.. 26 15   7 3 49 31 33\nTranmere  Rov  23 12   5 6 55 31 30\nLincoln  City    28 13   9 4 60 50 30\nHalifax  Town     35 10    7 8 48 36 38\nWrexham   34 13   9 3 38 36 37\nDarlington    34 11    9 4 50 37 36\nAccring.  Stanley... 36-9   8 8 40 41 26\nRochdale     33 13 10 i 60 49 36\nBradford  City    36   a   8 9 53 41 35\nHartlepools U  3T 10 12 3 44 50 39\nChesterfield     36   8 11 7 43 60 33\nSouthport     33 10 11 3 49 43 33\nNew Brighton    38   8    9 3 41 35 31\nRotherham V  33   7 10 6 39 40 20\nCrewe  Alex  24   6 11 7 43 53 19\nDurham City   28   7 14 5 36 61 19\nAshlngton     26   8 13 7 40 68, 19\nNelson     24   7 14 3 17 74 17\nWlgan   Borough..... 23   5 16 5 30 68 10\nBarrow    26   4 16 6 il 73 14\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE-\nFIRST DIVISION\nRangers     25 19    3 4 80 25 42\nMotherwell     26 18   4 6 67 31 38\nCeltic     26 16    3 7 66 23 37\nHearts     28 16    7 4 64 34 84\n8t. Mlrren   36 14    9 3 53 55 31\nKilmarnock     26 11    7 8 43 61 30\nCowdenbeath     26 13    9 5 .5 45 39\nAberdeen  27 13 11 J 31 49 39\nFalkirk     26 13 11 2 52 42 28\nPartlck Thistle ... 26 11 10 5 o2 49 37\nHibernians    38 10 10 6 58 47 36\nSt.  Johnstone    27 10 11 6 49 63 36\nAlrdrleonlans    26   7 10 9 41 51 23\nDundee     36   9 13 4 43 69 33\nqueens Park    28   8 13 . 48 52 21\nHamilton Acad  26   7 15 4 48 60 18\nClyde     28   7 15 4 34 80 18\nRalth Rovers   28   6 14 5 43 63 17\nThe .econd half of the boys' dlvl\nslona of the City Basketball league will\ncomirtence on February 18, lt waa decided last night at a lively and somewhat sensational meeting of the Nelson\nBasketball aseoclatlon, with Rev. W. C.\nMawhlnney In the chair. The meeting\nturned down a request made to also\nstart a second half for the girls'\nleague.\nSMILLIE TAKES\nISSIE\nThe turning down of this request,\nmade by Alma Smillie and Margaret\nCotter, who were delegates, resulted In\na great deal of discussion. R. Smillie\nstated that the executive was showing\nthat they were not interested ln the\npromotion of girls' sports. It was\nshown, however, that at the first meeting when the schedules were submitted,\nIt was made clear that the girls' league\nwould be completed at Christrpas, as the\nBusiness college team would not be able\nto com.ete after then. Alma Smillie\nconsented to let the matter stand for\nthe time being.\nMAV FORM\nINDEPENDENTLY\nAfter the meeting, Mr. Smillie expressed lt as his opinion that in all\nprobability a meeting of all girls Invested In forming a Nelson Oirls'\nB_skrtb_ll association would be held\nwithin the next few days. This association would Include about six Intermediate teams, made up from the present Intermediate and junior teams\nunited, as well as a Juvenile league\ncomposed of probably six teams\u2014two\nti'om Central school, two from the high\nschool, one from Hume school and one\nfrom the oonvent. The league would\nhave no bearings on the city championships.\nRESIGNATION\nREFUSED\nJimmy Carter, secretary of the association and star of the Bankers quintet,\nhanded 7t his resignation, explaining\nthat It was inconvenient for him and\nfor the executive for him to hold the\nposition while being a player on one of\nthe t \\ ms In the league. The meeting\nrefused to accept his resignation, expressing Itself as being more than satis-\nfled wiVi the way he was handling the\nnffnlrs of the association.\nCAN'T CHANGE\nREPRESENTATIVES\nAn application on the part of R.\nSmillie to be permitted to take the\nplace of the playing representatives of\nthe high school at their wish, on the\nexecutive of the league, was turned\ndown, after not a Uttle heated discussion between Mr. Smillie and John Notman. member of the advisory executive.\nIt. was shown that rules adopted at the\nfirst meeting of the year ruled out any\nattempted change of the team representatives. It was decided that the\nteams must be represented bv playing\nmembers unless a nonmember waa appointed at t*.e '.eginnlng of the year.\nROUGH PLAYING\nA motion was passed dealing with\nrough playing. During the balance of\nthe season all rough playing ls to be\nImmediately reported to the executive.\nwhich will then deal severely with the\noffender.\nThe meeting again became lively\nwhen the subject of rules governing\nJunior players playing ln Intermediate\ncompany was brought up. The rule\nadopted at the first meeting, stating\nthat after playing two games ln inter\nmediate company, a Junior cannot again\nplay Junior, was upheld.\nBo'ness   \t\nDunfermline A\t\nSECOND DIVISION\nAyr United \t\nDundee United ....\nKings Park \t\nForfar Ath\t\nArthurlle  \t\nThird Lanark .\t\nBathgate   \t\nQueen of South ....\nEast Stirling \t\nAlbion Rovers \t\nArbroath \t\nClydebank   \t\nEast  Pyfe  \t\nStenhousemulr   ....\nAlloa  \t\nSt.  Bernard  \t\nLeith Athletic \t\nMorton   \t\nDumbarton   \t\nArmadale \t\n0 17\n3 21\n2 30 64 14\n2 28 92    8\n26 19\n26 13\n28 13\n28 12\n36 13\n26 11\n26 9\n26 11\n26 9\n36 10\n26 11\n26 11\n26 10\n28 10\n26 9\n26 10\n26 tt\n26 8\n26 9\n26    4\n4   3 87 38 11\n7 6 81 44 32\n8 8 53 44 32\n7   7 59 63 31\n10 3 04 60 39\n9 6 60 43 28\n7 10 54 53 38\n11 4 73 72 26\n7 03 54 25\n5 49 47 35\n3 68 57 25\n3 54 57 34\n4 52 56 34\n4 54 N 24\n6 50 56 34\n3 46 73 _3\n6 34 53 23\n6 43 61 33\n3 41 54 31\n6 38 81 14\nHUME WINS\nf            s\nsrwmu\n_.,.\nm.\n\u00bb*__*_\u00ab_\n\u2022r.\nVmmmae-mm)\nDempsey Wires Thanks\nWESTERN\nUNION\nBLUE  4 EXTRA**!) LOSANGUES  CALIF   20  12J0P\nAC    DEMAReC, SPORTS CAIU00N .ST>\nClUtHoBL tSHERS  SYNDICATE  jq  NORTH LASALLC ST  CHICAGO   ILL*     -\nWAR AL  GLAD   TO  RECEIVE YOUR TELEGRAM  ANNOUNC 11*0 ME   THE\n'lINNER   IN  TOUR GIGANT.IC  SPORT POPULARITY CONTEST  CONDUCTED-\nTHRU  YOUR, SPORT  CARTOONS  APPEARING   IN  SO MANY  PAPERS  THROUGH\nNORTH   AMERICA   STOP CANNOT   PEG IN  TO   EXPRESS  MY   THANK$   TO  NY\nMANY   MANY  FRIENDS  CONFERRING   UPON  ME   THIS  GREAT   HONOR  WONT\nYOU  PLEASE   TELL  THEM HOW DEEPLY   APPRECIATIVE   I   AM  OT .THEIR\nINTEREST   IN ME  STOP   IN MY  FUTURE  AS   IN   THE   PAST   I   WILL\nCONSIDER   IT   A   DUTY  AND  A   PRIVILEGE  TO   JUSTIFY   THE  CONFIDENCE\nTHE   PUBLIC   HAS   ALWAYS  HAD   IN  ME   BOTH    IN  AND OUT   OF   THE\nRING STOP KINDEST REGARDS-\nJACK   DEMPSEY      HOTEL  BARBARA  L0SANGELES CALIF.\none night to try to get a story from\nwhat these two had to say to eachj\nother after they were put off the tee (\nfor scrapping. Naturally I supposed\nthat they would continue their feud\nduring the couple of minutes they were;\nbarred from competition.\nThis ls what I heard:\n\"How's the wife. Bddle?' asked Trapp.\n\"Fine, Bob,\" Eddie replied. \"How's\nyour  wife   and   family?\"\nThe way the boya cooled off, after\ngetting away from the public, reminded\nme of a lot of ball flayers and managers who wlll make a great fusa and\nrumpus before the umpire, waving their\nhands and pawing the earth, when what\nthey are saying is: \"What horse do you\nlike in the third?\" or \"Any good fishing around?\"\nCANUCK ATHLETES\nFancy Skaters and Shier Proceed to St. Moritz; Grads-\nGo to Antwerp\nHOCKEY  RESULTS\nleated Ice Men\nCool Off Quickly\nHer! swoffe anp\nTRAPP-ODTSIOE\n7\nTrim High School  Quintet 12\n'to 10 in Best Game of\nSeason\n'ANY\nHKADOmCE\nTORONTO ONT\nOne of the best games of the Jut\npnlle league was witnessed tonight\nwhen the Hume school five defeated the\nhigh   school   ball   tossers   13-10. |\nFlay was close all the way through\nthe game, which was featured ey a\nnumber of fouls and considerable Uni\nJumping. Both teams did their share\nof this, and, the outcome waa in doubt\nuntil the final whistle. F. McRae refereed.\nThe teams were:\n\u2014Hume    school\u2014Skinner    (2),    Harrison   (8),  Waldle, Hoyehen   (1), Langill\n(1>.\nHigh school\u2014Olson, Conway (2), McLean (l), Bishop (0), Bums, Prichard\n(1). i\nH!5'i*f||ll,,HII'HII||lM|||ii'\u00bbi||||ii^,l|l\nHOWS  THih\nwifc ano\nKll>3,EPP*E?\n|FiNe,&oB\/\nHowfe Yoor\nFAMILY?\nYHB SAMe TWO  Pl\u00abDS   IM THfc\nPENALTY  BOX t%  MINUTC   tUTtrt\nDCT.CTH  BLANKS  MILLERS\nMINNEAPOLIS. Minn., Jan. 30.\u2014Taking an early lead, the Duluth Hornets\ntonight whitewashed the Minneapolis\nMillers 3-0 In an American hockey\nleague  tussle.\nFORTS   BEAT   BRANDON\nPORT WILLIAM, Ont., Jan. 30,\u2014Port\nWilliam senior hockey team tonight\nadded another to their string of victories in the inter-provinclal hockey\nleague by defeating Brandon 6-1. The\ngame was played on hard ice and speed\nwas   the   keynote.\nMAROONS   WIN\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 30.\u2014In the fastest\ngame of the season, the Winnipeg\nMaroons shut out the Kansas City\nPlamors, 2-0. After a scoreless first\nperiod, Winnipeg took the aggressive,\ntallying ln the second and third sessions to gain a well-earned victory.\nPARIS, Jan. 30\u2014The Varsity Grads\nhockey team and ihe figure skaters. I\nspeed skaters and skiers, who are to'\nrepresent Canada In the Olympic winter\nsports at St. Moritz next month, arrived in Cherbourg Sunday after a\ntempestuous but record steamship voyage from Canada of six days snd 18\nhours. They proceeded directly to\nAntwerp,  where they  arrived todsfy.\nThe skaters and skiers are leaving\nAntwerp immediately for St. Moritz,\nbut the Grads are remaining at the\nBelgian city until Saturday, regaining\ntheir form after the voyage by prsctlfc-\ning on the ice at the Palais De Olalce.\nFive Persons Killed\nWhen House Blown Up\nNEWTON, Mass., Jan. 20.\u2014Five persons were killed when an explosion\nshattered the home of Frank Goi-\ncone, ln West Newton, near the Wal-\ntham line, late today. The cause of\nthe explosion was not at first determined. Gorcone and his Infant bon,\nSalvatore, were taken from the ruins\nalive, but suffering from *_e-riblc burns.\nCentral and Hume\nGirl Hoopsters\nto Tangle Today\nThe Central Hume school girls of\nthe intermediate class make their debut in basketball this afternoon when\nthey tangle in an exhibition game st\n4:15. This will be the first of a series  of   exhibition   matches.\nFISHERIES HEARING\nSET FOR WEEK'S TIME\nOTTAWA, Jan. 30.\u2014The chief Justice of the supreme court In chambers\ntoday fixed February 7 as th_ hearlnii\nof the reference to the supreme court\non the constitutional validity of certain sections of the Fisheries act. The\ncase ls one in which British Columbia\nand the Japanese fishermen are particularly   Interested.\nTHE NEW\nDOUGLAS LIGHTER\nHandy,   Automatic   and   Efficient\nStandard    Lighter $5.00\nLeather Covered   $7.50\nBILLIARDS\nBy Al. DEMAREE\n(Former Pitcher New York Oiants)\nIce hockey, that famous game of\ncutting figures\u2014all over your opponent's anatomies\u2014had two perpetually\nquarrelsome gents ln Bob Trapp of tbe\nBlackhawks and Eddie Shore ot the\nBostons.\nThese  two  lads   belligerents  of  long\nstanding.    They  are  always .in  a  jam\non the lee, and they are always being\nshunted off to tbe penalty pen.\nI slipped around by tbe penalty box\nCANADIAN\nPacific\nCANADIAN WINTER SPORTS\nREVELSTOKE\nSKI JUMPING\nFEBRUARY   6-10\nBANFF\nWINTER CARNIVAL\nFEBRUARY  4-11\nEXCURSION FARES\nFare  and  one-third return.\nFrom all stations west  of  Calgary\nand   Kootenay   Landing.\nOn  aale   February   5-9.\nReturn limit, February 13,\nFare and  one-third  return.\nFrom all stations. Kootenay Ll\nlng. Revelstoke and east.\nOn   sale  February   1-11.\nReturn  limit,   February  IS,\nFull   Information   from   any   Agent,  or  writ*\nt. 8. CARTER,   Dlst.   raasr.   Alt.,   Nsbon.\n______\u25a0\n ' PetyQ Bpfcl\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 31, 1928\nTrain   Carrying   Irish   Official\nDerails at Speed of  55\nMiles Per Hour\nROADMASTER IS KILLED\nIN CRASH NEAR OTTAWA\nCosgrave  Marvels at  Coolness\nof Travelers; His Physician\nInjured\nOTTAWA, Jan. 30. \u2014 Narrow\nescape from death or aertoufc injury\nwas the lot of Wlllliim T. Cosgrave,\npresident of the executive council\nof the Irish Free Htates, on the final\nstag*- of his train Journe> liom\nPhiladelphia to Ottawa today when\nat Limoges, a small station about\n2S miles fast of the Canadian capital, the special train In which he\nwai traveling Jumped the switch\nand crashed Into the ditch. None\nof the presidential party was Injured, but the driver of the train,\nJ. A.  Boyd  of  Montreal,  roudi-ias-\nter, was thrown out of his rah on\nto a snow bank, and almost instantly killed. One other man, J. La-\nfl-ur. also of Montreal, a tirakf-man,\nhad his leg broken and several\nother members of the train crew\nreceived Injuries, none of which Is\nbelieved serious.\nThe train was traveling at a rate\nof 55 miles an hour when the accident happened.\nAs soon as the accident occurred,\nPresident Cosgrave descended irom the\ntrain and made his way foi ward to\nwhere the trainmen were treating those\nwho had sustained hurts. He and his\nparty displayed the utmost solicitude\nJir the Injured.\n1MPKKSHKS   him\nTlie coolness of all around htm in the\nemergency impressed lUelf on Mr. Cos-\ngrave.\n\"You are all very plucky and courageous travelers,\" he said to a number of\ntrain -\"officials and newspaper .nen who\nwere with him. \"I never Baw au many\ncool people.\" Mr. Cosgrave arr ved in\nOttawa shortly after thc accident on a\nrelief special.\nHe  waa welcomed at  the slat.on.\nbehalf of  Canada, by  Krlc  C.  Mieville,\nsecretary to his excellency.\nFollowing the presentations tc gov>\ncrnment and civic notables, Mr. Cos*\ngrave made his way to where arakeman\nLafleur was lying on a stretcher and expressed the hope that his injuries were\nnot serlouB and that his recovery would\nbe rapid.\nHigh praise was given to Dr. J. J. KU-\ncen of Chicago, who wns traveling with\nPresident Cosgrave as Ills speclul physi'\nclan, for the part he played in a'tend\ning to the injured. Dr. Klleen sustained\nsome Injuries himself through broken\nglass, but continued to care for the\nothers ln spite of his own hurts.\nbad totalled 1186.000.000, an 18 per'\n.\u2022ent Increase over 1828. \"My honorable\nfriend opposite would better help lm- j\nmigration by giving these figures toi\nthe country and to the world than by I\ngiving the tbe Impression that businees\ngenerally was bad.\" Mr. King added.\nVaat strides had been made ln mining. Canada was now the leading\nproducer of newsprint ln the world.\n\"This country is no longer malting\nonly Imperial records ln trade, but ls\ncoming to the point where It Is capturing world records,\" said thd premier.\nTAX  SEDUCTIONS\nThe prime minister stated that never\nbefore ln parliament had the leader\nof the government presented a record\nof past achievement or present prosperity and future hope As he himself\nhad just done.\nMr. King gave to the house a list\nof the taxation reductions which had\nbeen effected by the government. \"It\nIs not for me jto forecast the budget,\"\nhe added, \"but I will be very much\nsurprised if the minister of finance\ndoes not announce a reduction in the\npublic debt, a surplus and further tax\nreductions.\"\nMr. Bennett had objected that parliament was not Informed of decisions\nreached at the Dominion-provincial\nconference. He proposed, said Mr. King,\nto lay on the table tomorrow a precis\nof the proceedings at that conference.\nPEOPLE DIE JN\nFireman Goes to Hospital Suffering With Asphyxiation\nTOBIES DISCUSS\nSPEECHJpCUS\nDecide  Not  to  Move  Amendment; Congratulate Bennett\non His Start\nMAIDEN SPEECH\nTAKEN TO TASK\n(Continued  Prom  Page  One.)\nfor  which  Premier  MacLean  gave  entire    credit    to    the    attorney-general\nMr.   Pooley   declared   that   this   was\n\"pure political bunkum.\"\nCREDIT   TO  GOSNKLL\nCredit he said should ln the main\ngo to R. E. Gosnell, who under the\nConservative regime and since had\nworked for years on a brief, which\nhe declared had been used by the government.\nHon. A. M- Manson\u2014I didn't see his\nbrief   until   after   argument.\nMr. Pooley\u2014Well those who prepared\nthe attorney-general's brief for him\ncertainly did, for I recognize Mr. Oos*\nnell's argument and whole phrases' of\nhis   composition.\nContinuing he added that he would\nlike to see the parks ln the railway\nbelt continue under the Jurisdiction\nof the Dominion government which\nhad an efficient parks department.\nIn   addition   to    cheap    money,   he\nsaid, Conservatives would undertake an\nagricultural   survey   of   the   province.\nSTUDENTS   LEAVE\nimiTISIl   COLUMBIA\nHe attacked 'the agricultural department for not employing on the permanent staff graduates of the Agricultural college of the University of British Columbia, saying that only a dozen\nor so were employed. Others had to\nleave the province while strangers\nwere given positions. This was no way\nIn which to keep the young men and\nwomen  of the  country  at  home.\nHe agreed with the Vancouver Sun.\nhe said, which recently hod declared\nthat the department of mines had not\nbeen properly functioning for five\nyears.\nHe wanted to know why research work\nwas not being done to ttme uses for\nmetal, and ask the minister on mines\nto declare himself on the unearned\nIncrement tax, saying that this tax\nwas a greatest possible handicap to\nprospectors. He promised that if the\ntax was not wiped off this season that\nthe Conservatives would do so next\nyear. He favored the Ontario system\nof   taxation  on   mines,   by   which   only\nOF\nDEBT. SURPLUS\n(Continued from Page Two)\nsett on the moderate tone of his speech\nas compared \"to that which we have\nbeen accustomed to hear from the\naame seat.\" He then congratulated\nthe mover and seconder. He expressed\nthi sympathy of the Liberal side of\nth* house ln the death of Earl Haig.\nMr. King referred to the Importance\nof the confederation celebration which\ntook place during the  past summer.\nThe Prince of Wales and Prince\nOeorge had both been ln this country. The prime minister of Oreat\nBritain and ministers of Australia and\nNew Zealand had also been in Canada.\n-Today I am pround to say,\" he stated,\n\"that we have as our visitor the president of the Irish Free State, one of\nth* slater dominions in the British\nEmpire.\"\n4'OSGSAVE    VISITS\nMembers of both sides of the house\nassociated this reference to President\nCosgrave, who was occupying a seat ln\nthe gallery. These visits, from the\nleading citizens of various parts of\nth* Empire developed the spirit of International goodwill and with that\nobject ln mind, the prime minister was\nglad that the United States secretary\nof state, Mr. Kellogg, would soon be a\nvisitor to the  capital.\nOn behalf of parliament. Premier\nKing expressed his appreciation of the\ngifts announced last summer by tbe\nPrince of Wales from Hla Majesty the\nKing of oil portraits of Their Majesties   and   the  late   King   Edward.\nMr.   Bennett   had   referred   to   the\nqtaMtlon   of   immigration.    Ths   policy\nof the  government,  was,  said   Premier\nKing   \"that  while  this   country   needs\nj all   the  Immigrants  we  can   assimilate\n' and put into employment, we do not\n: Intend   to   extend   Immigration   where\nwe   will   bring  about  large   unemployment.\"\nPremier   King   took   Issue   with   Mr.\nBennett's   reference   to   unemployment.\n\"Al* a matter of fact,  said   Mr.  King,\n\"there   has  not   been   for  some   years\n' paat  less   unemployment.\"    He   quoted\n: from   statistics   to   show   less   unem-\n. ployment than  ln former  yean.\nBUILDING   GAINS\nThere had also been a considerable\nIncrease ln the gross receipts of rall-\n\u25a0 way- Mr. King quoted as evidences of\n* Canada's prosperity the building permits Issued ln 1830. He read from\ntrade reports which referred to 1837\nu comparable to th* boom yaar of\npt2.     In   88   cities   building   permits\nNo    Trace     Found;     Eastern\nStorm Abates, but Damage\nIs Large\nSHOE FACTORY FIRE\nDOES HEAVY DAMAGE\nTragedy   Surrounds   Death   of\nAged Destitute Couple in\nTenement\nMONTREAL, Jan. 30\u2014Fires in the\ndowntown district of Montreal today\nclaimed two lives and sent an officer of\nthe Montreal fire department to hospital suffering from asphyxiation.\nAmos White, 80, and his wife, Catherine, 48, were burned to death in their\nbeds when fire destroyed the building\nln which they lived at 820 St. Tlmothe\nstreet.\nWhile fighting a blaze at the Lepage\nShoe factory, Lieutenant Albert Maillet\nwas trapped in the building and suffered from asphyxiation. He was rescued\nand sent to the hospital. Thc loss at\nthis fire was estimated at $30,000.\nA tragic story surrounds the deaths of\nthe Whites. The couple were m> poor,\naccording to neighbors, that ne*c-papers\nwere their only fuel for the sma'l Btove\nthat supplied heat to their flat. During\nthe early hours of this momii.g, the\nheater was packed full of paper und the\nvictims retired. White they slept the\nstove became overheated and ignited the\nwalls, the flames trapping the Whiles.\nROARING\nFURNACE\nWhen the firemen arrived the house\nwas a roaring furnace.\nThey forced an entry and found the\nbodies of the couple. Other trssldents\nof the tenement managed to escape.\nThe fourth serious fire in 20 years occurred in the boys' reformatory school\nin the east end of the city today when\nfire started on the first floor of the shoe\nmanufacturing wing of the Institution,\nignited the wooden walls and ..he celling, and rapidly spread to the upper\nfloors of the building. There was no\none in this section of the building at\nthe time of the outbreak. The lower\nentrances of the building were locked,\nand it took the firemen considerable\ntime before they were able to chtip their\nway into the building.\ndividend earning properties were called\nupon  to pay.\nMr. Pooley at soma length attacked\nthe department of public works saying\nthat on 12 contracts alone expenditures\nover estimates had aggregated more\nthan 82.000,000. He also referred to\nthe statement of Charles Woodward,\nLiberal member for Vancouver, who\nsaid that the government has wasted\n830.000.000    on    the    P.G.E.\nHe was anxiously awaiting the announcement *of the premier on a solution of the railway problem he said.\nHe could not agree with Hon. J. D,\nMacLean that taxes had been reduced.\nIn fact they had increased per capita\nby \u00bb30 ln  10 years.\nIt was evident that the election was\ncoming ond was anxious to see the\nabsentee vote abolished before that\ntime.\nIn any event the people agreed with\nMr. Woodward, who, although a Liberal, was free and outspoken. He had\ndescribed the government as being\nneglectful \"foolish,\" \"wasteful.\" \"crazy,\"\n\"dilatory,\" \"Insane\" and \"actuated by\nmeanness and  Jealousy.\"\nOTTAWA, Jan. 30.\u2014Conservatives wffl\nnot move any amendment on the address ln reply to the speech from the\nthrone,\nThis was the decision arrived at this\nmorning at the first caucus of t.ie opposition since the opening of the house.\nWhile ,a general discussion of ihe speech\nfrom the throne took place, there was\nno announcement to make at the conclusion of the meeting on thc party's\nattitude on any particular question referred to in the speech.\nPledges of loyalty and support were extended to Hon. R. B. Bennett, new Conservative leader, by many members and\nsenators in attendance. The general\nsentiment expressed, lt was said, was\n\"that Mr. Bennett has made the most\nauspicious start of any Conservative\nleader in the history of the party.\"\nReference was also made to tne temporary leadership of the party last session by Hon. Hugh Outhrle, and lt was\ndecided to appoint a committee to deal\nwith the question of recognition to Mr.\nGuthrie for his services.\nFlnlay MacDonald, Conservative, Cape\nBreton South, was chairman of the caucus, and tt ls possible that the piactlce\nwill be established of electing a temporary chairman for each meeting lather\nthan a permanent chairman.\nMain Line Farmers\nWill Ask Divorce\nFrom Marketing Act\nVICTORIA, Jan. 30,\u2014Discussion of\nmarketing will open here before the agricultural committee of the legislature\nshortly when a delegation of vegetable\ngrowers along the main line of tne Canadian Pacific from Chase to Lytton ls\nheard. They will ask to have their districts divorced from the new maiketlng\nlaw so far as vegetables are concerned.\nDr. H. C. Wrlnch of Skeena wai> elected chairman of the committee today, to\nsucceed the late Dr. E. J. Rothwell. J,\nIt. Colley of Kamloops were reelected\nsecretary.\n*\u2014*\" '\nUied Artklet\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and'\nAutomobiles\n. t\nClassified\nAdvertising\n1                                 s\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Fond\nLivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mines,\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2014,     , \\\nClassified Advertising Rates\nLocal \u25a0wading Mottoes \u2014 Thres cents\nper word each Insertion. In blaekfaea\nor machine capitals, 4o per word.\nBlackface capitals 6c a word. Twenty-\nfive per cent discount if run daily without change of copy for ons month or\nmore. Where advertisement lfl set oot\nIn short lines the charge is 16c a Una\nfor Roman type, 20c for b'ackfaoe and\n25c for blackface capitals. Minimum\n3Go, If charged 60a\nWast an* Clswlfltd AdTsrtfataf \u2014\nOne snd a half cents a word per Insertion. If paid in advance, So per word\nper week, or 82%c per word per month.\nTransient ads accepted only on a cash-\nin-advance basis. Bach Initial, figure.\ndollar sign, ste., counts as on* word.\nMinimum 16c, lf charged 60c\nWrth Vottesa\u2014rroe.\nCards\u2014Three cents per word; 60o mini-\nBirths\nOREENWOOD\u2014At Victoria on January\n18, to Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Greenwood.\nformerly of Willow Point, a son.\nHelp Wanted\nAlbert, 3-year-old son of Preston\nCorrell of Kunkletown. Pa., died from\nburns received wfoen 'his clothing\ncaught   fire   from   a   stove.\nEdwin Braxton asks $50,000 from\nWest Jersey and Seashore Railroad\nfor injuries received when freight car\noverturned  at Philadelphia,  Pa.\nFROM   WINTER,   PORT   ST.   JOHN\n*\u2022 Feb. 10\u2014Liverpool    Metagama\n\u2022 Feb. 17\u2014Liverpool Melita\n\u2022 Feb. 24\u2014Liverpool    Mlnnedosa\n*\u2022 Mar.   1\u2014Antwerp  .Montnairn\n\"Mar.  2\u2014Liverpool Mo.itclare\n\u2022Mar-  9\u2014Liverpool  Montrose\n\u2022* Mar. 15\u2014Antwerp    Mtlagama\n\u2022\u2022 Mar. 16\u2014Liverpool   .Montcalm\n\u2022* Mar. 22\u2014Antwerp Marloch\n\u2022 Mar. 23\u2014Liverpool    Mmnedosa\nMar. 29\u2014Glasgow    Melita\n\u2022\u2022 Mar. 30\u2014Liverpool    Montclare\n\u2022\u2022\u2022Apl.   5\u2014Antwerp    Montnairn\nG\u2014Liverpool    Montrose\n12\u2014Hamburg  Meiaramn\n13\u2014Liverpool Muntcalm\n. _   19\u2014Antwerp    Marloch\nApl. 20\u2014Liverpool    Mlnnedosa\n\u2022\u2014Calls at Glasgow (Greenock).\n\u2022\u2022\u2014Calls at Belfast.\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2014Calls at Cherbourg, Southampton.\nUse Canadian Pacific Express Travellers'\nCheques\u2014Payable Everywheie\nBerth reservations can now be made.\nAsk about the New Tourist Third Cabin.\n1 Full details   with rates from any Agent,\n\u25a0 or write\nJ. S. CARTER\nDUtrlct PawenKer Agent, Nelson. B.C.\n'Apl.\n'Apl.\n'Apl.\n\u2022\u2022Apl.\nGIRL  OR   WOMEN  FOR  HOUSEWORK\n\u2014Apply Ouy's Electric Store.     (2069).\nWANTED\u2014Maid for general work.   One\nchild  In  family.    Good  home.    Will\npay fare to Rossiand.   Phone Rossiand\n123R, or write P.O. Box 281, Rossiand.\n<2108)\nGolden\n(2126)\nEXPERIENCED   WAITRESS\nGate Cafe.\t\nSituations Wanted\nFARMERS! ORDER NOW TOUR HELP\nFOR SPRINO AND SUMMER \u2014 Farm\nemployment wanted for British and\nContinental Immigrants who will arrive ln Canada during the spring and\nearly summer. Experienced and inexperienced men, and married couples\nand families supplied. Apply, stating\nnationality preferred and wages paid,\nto Department of Colonization and\nDevelopment, C.P.R., Calgary.    (1802)\nPLAIN SEWING BY THE DAY.\u2014Phone\nJ_V__. _ (2044)\nMAN WANTS ODD JOBS OF ANY KIND\n\u2014Call 94. (2107>\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014Small coal oil lamp.   Finder re-\nturn W. Clack, Latimer street-    (2110)\nLive Stock for Sale\nTWO MILCH COWS, very quiet; one\nJersey Ayrshire, 5 years old. witn heifer calf. 6 weeks, $75; one Jcr&ey Hol-\nstein, 2 years, with bull calf, 5 weeks\nold.   A. North, Sirdar. (2119)\nCOW\u2014Freshen soon, part Jersey. A.\nLlmRcher, corner Slocan and Vancouver streets. (2020)\nTWO YOUNO YORKSHIRE BROOD\nSOWS, farrowing middle of March.\nChalmers, Thrums. (2043)\nGRADE TOGGENBURG GOAT\u2014Freshen ln April, or exchange for Leghorn\npullets.    P. O. Box 238. (2068)\nPURE BRED COCKER SPANIEL PUPS,\nmales, parents good bird dogs. Couch's\nShoe Shop^ Nelson. (3067)\nFOR SALE\u2014Good quiet Holstein cow,\nrising five. Freshen 7th February.\nPrice $70^ Gates, Balfour. (2077)\nPOR SALE\u20148-weekB-old Yorkshlre~pigs.\nJ. Dozenbfrg, Procter.        (2096)\nLive Stock Wanted\nJERSEY OR GUERNSEY COW, to freshen soon.   Hudson, Balfour.       (2053)\nNEW YORK, Jan. 30.\u2014The weekend gale that lashed the eastern states\nfrom the Great Lakes to the Everglades and piled deep snow over\nwide areas, had spent its fury tonight,\nbut  Its  cost  waa  not  counted.\nDuring the storm the submarine 83\nwith 41 men aboard, was separated\nfrom several others with which lt was\nproceeding to Cuba. It was later located.\nThe Norwegian freighter Arica, which\nsent out an SOS yesterday had not\nbeen   found.\nAbout all that was left of the storm\ntoday was general Bevere cold, but\nin many sections the temperature was\nrising   rapidly.\nIn Dade county alone the loss was\nbelieved to be $250,000. Two-thirds\nof all the tender truck crops in southern Florida was reported to have been\nkilled.\nHAMMOND STORE\nIS BURGLARIZED\nHAMMOND, B.C., Jan. 30.\u2014One thousand dollars worth of merchandise\nwas stolen by burglars, who broke\ninto the general store of O. G. Cor-\ndelle here during the week-end. En\ntrance was obtained by smashing the\nlock of the front door. The loot consisted mostly of silks and fancy\ngoods.\nCONDENSED'WANT'ADS ORDER FORM\nUse thia blank on which to write your condensed 1&, one word in each space,\nEnclose money order or check and mail'direct to The Daily Newi, Nelson, B.C.\nRate: One and a half cent a word ea<?h insertion, rix eonBecuttfe insertions for\nprice of four when cash accompanies order. Minimum, 25c. Each initial, figur%\ndollar sign, etc, count as one word,   No charge lew than SO cents.\nPlease publish the advertisement below.\n. times, for which I enclose !\nH MM, npUet teej e. tMtnri to boi Dumbo, it Thi Dally News.   If replica sr, to a.\n\u25a0netaM ll* extra lo cover oost if postals snd mow seven words ertrs for boi number.\nProperty For Sale\nPOR SALE\u2014Two paying ranches: clear\ntitle. Particulars, Postmaster, Taj-\nhum.\t\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nBARRELS, KEQS AND EMPTY SACKS\u2014\nMcDonald Jam Company. Nelson.\nFRUIT TREES\u2014Order now for spring\ndelivery. T. Roynon, agent forLay-\nreta. Nurseries, Nelson; __**\u21222\nTOR^ALE\u2014010 Hoover street, 8 rooms,\nhot water heating, good repair. Apply\nMrs. Greenway. (8081)\nPOR SALE \u2014 Dining room suite, dark\noak. comprising pedestal table, 4 feet\ndiameter, enlarging to over seven feet;\n6 chairs, leather seated and a 4 feet by\n18 Inch buffet. All as new. price (176.\nKenneth Harvey, R.R. 1, Nelson, B.C.\n(2080)\nA BARGAIN IN SAXAPHONES \u2014 One\nBuescher C Melody recently overhauled, also one Buescher E. flat alto:\nsnap. Pads In excellent condition\nwith case.   Write P.O. Box 394, Klm-\n_bertey,_B.C. (2062)\nBARBER  CHAIR  (hydraulic)   for sale,,\n\u202288.   Apply 604M, Baker, or phone 118.\n(2071)\nOEPPERT KLEER\nWHAT OEPPERT KLEER TONE will do\nfor your radio set.\u2014Reduce 2.V).-90C'r\nstatic, increase volume, bring ln more\ndistant stations, tune out powerful local stations, give, ypur _et one more\nstag, separate congested wave lengths,\nworks on any type of set, easy insulated. Kleer Tone mailed to any address\nC.O.D., price 84.00. Ten days* free\ntrial. Money refunded if not pleased.\nJ. M. Wilson, Winlaw. B.C. (2082)\nCABIN TRONIC, good condition.   Room\n25, Annable Block. (1990)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nNOTIPE\nNorman McDonald, Claude McDonald,\nNellie McDonald, Flora McDonald and\nKate McDonald, Sons and Daughters, respectively, of the late Peter McDonald,\nformerly of Nelson, B.C., are hereby requested to communicate Immediately\nwith the undersigned.\nNORMAN A. WATT,\nOfficial Administrator, Prince\n Rupert. B.C. (2042)\nMisceiianeous\nWANTED\u2014Clean\nDally News\nWANTED\u2014Hides.   For price, write J. P.\n_Morgan, Box 417, Nelson. (2073)\nWANTED TO RENT, with view to purchase,   small   business   in   Nelsou,   or\ni small ranch near Nelson. Apply, first\nInstance, Box 2121, Daily Newa.  (2121)\nInsurance\nFIRE\nInsure Now\nHave you made any Improvements\nto your  property recently?\nHave you bought any new furniture  or  stock  lately?\nCheck over your fire Insurance\npolicies\u2014-Tou may find you are carrying very much less than the\nvalue of your property. It will pay\nyou.\nTelling your friends or creditors\nwhat you intended doing wlll not\nhelp after the Fire.    DO IT NOW.\nWe have a splendid line of the\nstrongest Board Companies and wlll\nbe glad to give you rates and write\nyou a policy to bring your risk up\nto what you should carry.\nPHONE   68\nRobertson Realty\nCompany, Ltd.\nWard Street\nNelson\n(2094)\nThe Winter Season greatly Increases  the DANGER OF FIRE.\nIs YOUR building and contents\nfull insured? If not, then you\nrequire additional Insurance. Just\nstep to the telephone and call 136\nand your Insurance requirements\nwill be taken care of.\nCHAS.  F.  McHARDY    '\nReal    Estate.    Insurance\n614 WARD STREET, NELSON, B.C.\n(1989)\nPoultry and Eggs\nWHY NOT TRY APPLETON bROS.,\nProcter, for Leghorn baby chicks, than\nwhich there ls probably no better lay-\nlng strain ln British Columbia? (8081)\nFOR SALE\u2014Six Wyandotte pullets, one\nrooster not related. T. A. Wright, Box\n358, Nelson. (2112)\nBusiness Opportunities\nBARBER  WANTED \u2014 Your  chance\nget In  business for  yourself.    Apt\nRichard Dodd. Nelson. B.C. (202\nFurnished Rooms to Ret\nSUITE\u2014Ashman's Apartments.      (IBS\nf__REE^ROOM_PCRNISHED~SU_rBr\n8terllng Hotel. (208\nFor Rent\nFOR RENT\u2014120 acres, good hay\ndairy ranch, house and barn; close J\nFor   particulars,   apply   to   Box 2<\nRossiand, B.C. (1*)\nLIVING AND DINING ROOMS, kltcht\nthree bedrooms, pantry, furnace, |\nverandah,   large   lawn,   garage,\n2098, Dally NeWB. (209\nFOR RENT\u2014Tne Ofobe Hotel, l'i row\ncorner Bay Avenue. Victoria Strei\nTrail. Apply James Harper, Rossini\nB.C.        (211\nFor Sale or Rent\n140 ACRES AT SHOREACRES. nsar Nl\nson, B.C. Good buildings and pi\ncleared. Apply to H. C. Allen, Stat\nler. Alhorta. (203\ntee fhe\nclassified\nads\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR\nAccounting\nCHARLES  F. HUNTER\u2014\nAuditor,     McDonald    Jam     Bulldln.\nBox 1191. Nelson. B.C.  (1811\nAssayers\nR. W. WIDDOWSON, Box A1108. Nelso\nB.C.   Standard western charaes.   (181*\nBadminton\nH. R. KITTO\u2014Badminton Racquets n\nstrung and repaired. We carry a fu\nline of these goods. (1811\nDairies\nREAD  THIS  AND ACT NOW \u2014 All Ot\ncows are T. B. tested.   We guuranti\nQuality  and  service.      Coll    llf\n..86R1.   Kootr-nay Valley Dairy. (2127\nPiano Tuning\nEXPERT   PIANO  TUNER\u2014L.  Slngletoi\nPhone 261; Mason Is Risch.       (1810\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'   TRANSFER\u2014Baggage,   Co\u00ab\nand Wood.   Phone IM. <ir\"\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON   \u2014   Baker  8t.   Carpenter  an\nJoiner.   Screens and-Hardwood.   (1R21\nInsurance and Real Estat\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014\nReal Estate, Insurance. Rentals, Ann\nable Blk.   P.O. Box 733.   Phona 197.\n (IM\nH. E. DILL\u2014INSURANCE,\nFARM AND CITY PROPERTY\n 508 Ward Street. (1828\nChiropractors\nDR. ORAY, GILKER BLK., NELSON\n__  (1884\nFlorists\nGRI7ZFI,I.E'S   GREENHOUSES,   Nelson\nOut flowers and floral designs.     (1838:\nWM. S. JOnNSON\u2014\nPhone 842. Cut Flowers. Potted Plant\nand Floral Emblems. (1826\nWholesale\nA.  MACDONALD ft  CO.\u2014\nWholesale Grocers and Provision MOT'\nchants. Importers of Teas, Coffees\nSpices, Dried Fruits, Staple and Fane:\nGroceries, Nelson, B.C. (1827\nEngineers\nA.  H. GREEN  CO.\u2014CONTRACTORS\nFormerly Green Bros.. Burden, Nelson\nCivil and Mining Engineers\nB.C., Alberta and Dominion Land\n Surveyors      (18-8)\nH. D. DAWSON\u2014Land Surveyor.\nMining and Civil Engineer\n  Kaslo, B.C. (1889)\nFuneral Directors\nStandard Furniture\nCo. \u2014 Undertaken.\nAuto Hearse, up-to-\ndate chapel. Best\nservices. Prloei\nreasonable,     (1680)\n \t\n\u2014\n0\nTFE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 81, 1928\nPag\u00ab Ninav\n\u25a0*\u2014 \u2022-\nMarkets\n#_\u25a0\nELD\nMONTREAL GAINS\nTH\nHas Nine Crown Granted Claims\nat Retallack; Development\nUnder Way\nExtreme Declines in Ralls, In\ndust rials; Montana Power\nIs Sensation\nNKW YORK, Jan. 30\u2014A sudden outburst of buying ln some of the public\nutilities checked a sharp reaction In today's stook market. Extreme declines\nln the standard Industrials and rails\nran from 1 to 3 points and ln some of\ntha volatile specialties from 4 to 15\npoints, but theae wen substantially reduced In the late buying movement.\nPredictions of a poor quarterly report by the U. S. Steel corporation on\nTuesday contributed to tbe growth of\nbearish  sentiment.\nMontana Power wu the sensational\nindividual performer, dipping four\npoints to 142*4 ln the early selling\nmovement and then bounding upward\nto a new rscord high at 166ft on the\nurgent retreat of the short Interest.\nBayuk Cigars soared 13 ft points to a\nnew peak at 130ft, and then eased to\n134; Brooklyn Edison Jumped more\nthan 6 points to a new top at 130.\nOn the other hand. Midland Steel\nProducts preferred broke 15 points to\n333ft, as against a recent high of 301,\nand rebounded to 336. American Republic's collapsed nearly 8 points and\nrallied 4ft. United States Steel common clipped to 144 Vi and rallied to\n. 145 ft. off 1ft net. Oeneral Motors\nferred. up to 110, a gatn of 44. o\u2122   \u00b0 <*lm A^ Siin\u2122 blunder olosed  ft   net  lower at  133.    Hudson\nEasier features Included SpaW4h River   \u00bbll*'^ta S urtltofv Whe west  replaced   Hupp   as   the   leader   of   the\npreferred,  which  was down 3,  to  136; ! one ownership all tert tory tfc tee west     \u2022* climbing 2ft points to\nConsolidated Smelting down to 383*,'of \u00ab\u00bb Whitewater mine extending as ^or,\u201e^7,p\u201e7\u201e,\u2122 .i_l, *   \u201e_\u201e-,\u201e_\nIrregularity on Market; Stetl,\nCottons, Laurentide Up;\nConsolidated Slips\n.MONTREAL. Jan. 30.\u2014Stock, tarned\ndistinctly irregular lo today's trading on\ntw Montreal market, but gains .ware\nexceeded by losses at the close.\nInternational Nickel furnished trad-\nlag tn 10,360 shares and closed at 91ft\ntqt a net loss of ft.\nBritish Empire Steel second preferred offloere and  directors wlll  bs elected;\ndosed unchanged to 7ft  alta  having President, R. H. Stewart, Vancouver, B.C.;\nold up-to ths new high of 8. j vice-president, Edmund P. Twoby, Spo-\nC. C. Cotton preferred was tne strong   kane,   Wash.,   secretary-treasurer, J.  V.\nfeature, closing at ths new high Ot 88   Pohlman,  Spokane;   directors,  ln addl-\nloj a net gain of  17ft  points.     The tlon to the above. L. K. tarsen, Nelson.\ngreatest  loss   was  suffered    tij    Lyall,   b C   and Edward Pohlman, Spokane.\nI whtth closed st 83ft for a net decline      xke   Wellington   company   owns   the\n' mine of that name, consisting of nine\ncrown   granted   claims,   adjoining   the\n*   *1.C. anJ \"\nroyalty\nconsisting   of\nCon-\nSPOKANE, Jan. 30.\u2014Authorization to\ndo business having beers received last\nwsek from the registrar of public companies at Victoria, B.C., tha recently\nIncorporated Wellington Mines, limited,\nwlll hold the statutory organization\nmeeting  forthwith  when the  following\nNew highs were established i)> British\ni Empire Steel first preferred, up 3ft. to   wmi-ifcer at Retallaok. B.C.. and also\nreached 137, and Winnipeg Electric pre-\nthe   Mathleson   pfc.perty.\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, Jan. 30.\u2014Egg prion are aa\nfollows:\nToronto\u2014British Columbia eggs Jobbing at: Extra* 46c, firsts 43c, pullet\nextras 38c.\nMontreal\u2014British Columbia eggs Jobbing at: Extras 44c to 45c, firsts 40c\nto 41c, pullet extras 36c to 96c. Storage eggs jobbing at 33c to 33c, firsts\n30c to 910,  seconds  38c  to 39c.\nVancouver\u2014Prices to producers: Extras 38c, firsts 36c, pullet extras 33c.\nChicago\u2014Spot, 43Vic; January, *\\2%c;\nFebruary, 27% c.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nGeneral Advance; Big Missouri,\nKootenay    Florence    and\nKuTus in Good Demand\nBAKERIES LEAD\nBoth Make Gains After Heavy\nBeatings; Nickel Off; Oil\nIssues WeU Traded\nIS TENDERS 0NMU09E GIVES \u00ab|\nfor a decline of 3\\, and Brazilian down ,ttr *\u00bb Murray orsek. and from the railroad In a northerly direction up the\nmountain to an elevation of 3500 feet\nabove the track.\nDevelopment of tire company's property ls now under way with a small\ncrew, which is pushing a drift on the\nWhitewater ledge in Wellington ground\nfrom an old tunnel on the Mathleson\nproperty. The drift Shows a foot of\ngood ore on the contact between a slate\nfootwall and a lime hanging wall. W.\n<X Harris, formerly superintendent of\nthe Marsh retne at Burke. Idaho. Is\nAbltlbl Power Is Paper 183'A   superintendent of the Wellington, ml\u2122\" ?tee'\n-r.beatos  corporation \u00a3\u00a3   Arthur Lakes. ME   of Nelson, B.C., con-  5\u21221* \u2122'* 8lii\nsuiting engineer\ntc 198%, a decline of 3>4\nTotal, sales, -61,363 shares; bonds, 8197,-\n200. .\ncloning qroT.M'ioNs\nAT MONTREAL\nBank of Commerce    379\nTTomtnlon   Bank     263\nImperial Bank   247\nBank   of  Montreal  jssyj\nBank of Nova Scotia   379\nRoyal Bank   345\nStandard  Bank  .;...  246\nBank of Toronto\n88%, but it reacted a point on realizing\nTotal stock sales 2,184,300 shares.\nCLOSING    QUOTATIONS\nAT   NEW  YORK\nHigh Low\nAmer. Can.\\      78% 74%\nAmer. Loco    113Vi 113%\nAm. Smelt. Refln.      176% 174%\nAmer. Tele    189% 179%\nAmer. Tobacco         168% 167%\nAnaconda          85% 66\nAtchison        187% 186V_\nBaldwin      249 349\nBait. Is Ohio      114% 113%\n57V_ 66%\n' tlantic Sugar    24%\n\"\u25a0ill  Telephone  loo\nBritish Columbia Pishing   11\nBrazilian T.  L. Is Power  199\nBrompton Paper   67\nCip. Car Is Founrry   63\n'\u25a0\"iriridA Cement   33%\nCanadian   Converters     107%\nC-.n. Inrt-jtsrtal Alcohol   36%\n'\"'an. Steamship Lines  33\nCan.   Steamship  Lines  preferred 90\nOju. Mining  & Smelting   380\n\u25a0Dominion Bridge  69\nDominion Olass   134\nA. P. Oraln   69\nHoward Smith Paper   93\nImperial   Oil    ,  G0'\/_\nlaurentlde   134\nMassey Harris   43%\nNational.Breweries   117\nOgtlvte  Milling    418\nSpanish River   133\nSnanloh River preferred   186\nSteel of Canada   191\nSt,. Maurice Paper    100\nWayagamack  w...  134\nWinnipeg Railway .\u201e  Ill\n -\u00bb 1\t\nMetal Markets\n1JEW YORK, Jan. 30.\u2014Copper, steady;\nelectrolytic, spot and futures, 914.13.\nTin\u2014Easy; spot and nearby and\nMarch, 9M.75.\nIron\u2014Steady; No. 3 f.o.b. eastern\nPennsylvania, 910.50; No. 2 f.o.b. Buffalo, 917;  No. 2 f.o.b. Alabama, 916.\nLead\u2014Steady; spot, New York, 96.50;\nEast. St. Louis, 96.37.\nRinc\u2014Firm; East St. Louis, spot and\nfutures. 95.67 to 95.70.\nAntimony\u2014Spot, 911-36.\nQuicksilver\u20149133.\nAt London:\nStandard copper\u2014Spot, \u00a362 15s;\nfutures,  $62  2s 6d.\nElectrolytic copper-\u2014Spot, \u00a366 10s;\nfutures. \u00a367.\nTin\u2014Spot. \u00a3249 17s 6d; futures, \u00a3249\n12S -6d.\nLead\u2014Spot, \u00a321 2s 6d; futures, \u00a32115s.\nZinc\u2014Spot, \u00a326 5s; futures, \u00a326 5s.\nVancouver Stocks\nBid\nss. C. Silver  \u00bb 1.50\nBig Missouri   69%\nCork Province  35\nDunwell   38%\nGlacier    05%\nGladstone 14%\nIndependence   18%\nIndian Mines  10%\nInternational   Coal   ...     .37\nLucky  Jim         3*\nLeadsmlth  06\nMarmot Metals  18\nPremier     3.61\nPorter  Idaho 59\nRtlth Hope   61\nSelkirks    06\nSilver Crest  12\nSilversmith         JS\nRichmond    17\nNat.  811.  O.  S 33\nCoast Copper 61.00\nB. C. Montana \t\nBr. Petroleum  06%\nSunloch       3.90\nWhitewater      2.38\nSlocan   King    14%\nArgenta  60\nGeorge   Copper       3.36\nL.   Is   L       iO\nPend Oreille      8.16\nRufus    52\nKootenay   Florence   \t\nCORN MARKET GOES\nUP AND WHEAT DOWN\nCan.   Pac - 205\nCerro dc Pasco   66%\nChile Copper   40%\nChrysler   67%\nCorn Products   68%\nDodge   90\nDupont   317\nAsked  Flelsclimen Co. 73%\n$1.80    | Preeport-Texas   103%\n70      Gen. Motors   133%\n.36    [Oen. Bee  131\n.29%   Granby   40%\n.06%   Gt. Nor. pfd  95\n.15    I Howe Sound   42\n'l8y4   Hudson Motors .... 69\nHU   Insp. Copper   19%\n'2714   Inter. Nickel   98\n'34S   Mack Truck    103%\n1,   Marland Oil    38%\nMiami Copper    18%\nKeune. Copper   83\nKreage 8. S  70%\nNat. P. & L  38\nNash Motofs   86%\nN.  Y. Can  159%\nNor.  Pac  98%\nPackard    Motors 59\nPhillips Pete    41%\nRadio Corp  99%\nSchulte     62\nShell Union Oil .... 26%\nBin. Con  19%\nSou. Pac  130%\nStand. Oil Cal  65\nStudebaker     68%\nTexas Corp  53%\nTexas Oulf  Sul.  .. 74%\nUnion Pac  189%\nU. 8. Rubber   89%\nU. S. Steel    146%\nWestlngh'se  Elec. 98%\nWillys Over  19%\n202%\n86\n40\n66%\n88%\n19%\nClose\n75%\n113%\n175\n179%\n167%\n66%\n186%\n249\n113%\n57%\n156\n204%\n65\n40%\n67\n68%\n19%\n313%    313%\n72 73%\n.19\n3.65\n.83\n.52\n.06%\n,u\n.34\n.24\n52.50\n.00%\n.06%\n4.06\n2.28\n.16\n.70\n4.00\n.23\n8.25\nCHICAGO, Jan. 30.\u2014Brisk demand for\ngood grades of corn and scantiness of\nrural offerings lifted the corn market\ntoday.    Wheat went lower.\nCom closed firm at the day's top\nlevel of prloes, % to l%c net higher,\nwith wheat at %c to %c decline, oats\nunchanged to %c advance, and provl\nsions varying from 17c to 20c lower to\na rise of 12c.\nB.C.\nMINING\nSTOCKS\nWe are receiving hour by hour quotations on British\nColumbia mining stocks.\nOn account of tire unprecedented business in these stocks which has\noverloaded our offices here and ln Vancouver we must ask thc indulgence of customers in the event, of delay In statements, etc.\nR. P. Clark & Co.\nPhone\n100\nNELSON, B. C.\nWith Whom  Are Associated McDonald, Jukes  &  Uraves,\n101\n133%\n139%\n40%\n95\n42\n86%\n19\n96\n101%\n35%\n18%\n81%\n68%\n26%\n85%\n159\nSS\n68%\n41%\n97\n51\n35%\n19%\n119%\n66\n68\n53%\n73%\n188%\n58%\n144%\n94%\n19\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 30.\u2014A keen demand came out for practically all active\nIssues on the Vancouver stock exchange\ntoday, with sales for the two sessions\napproximately 750,000 shares.\nBig Missouri, Kootenay Florence and\nRufus were ln good demand, with a substantial Increase over Saturday's close\nThe low priced Issues were also In demand, but tbe price changes were held\nwithin fairly narrow limits.\nTorlc Mines, which was active last\nweek, closed with a net gain of 56c to\n84.06, against Saturday's close of 83.50.\nCoast Copper, which rallied this morning 61.60 to $63.60. eased off ln the\nafternoon, dosing at $61. Premier made\nI net gain of 4c, closing at $3.61;\nKootenay Florence, 8c to 43; Whitewater\n9c to $2.26; Silverado. 7c to $1.15; and\nHome Oil, 46C to $2.86.\nGeorge Copper softened 50c to $3.25.\nwhile Sunloch advanced 16c to $3.\nafter touching $4 this morning. Georgia\nRiver advanced 16c over the week-end\nto 55. Pend Oreille closed with a net\nloss of 10c from Saturday.\nTORONTO, Jan. 30\u2014Seagrams and\nNorthern Bakeries again had that buoy\nancy which covered them most of last\nweek and they were the principal lea\ntures on the market of the Toronto\nstock exchange today. .Northern Bakeries closed at S3, up one point. Seagrams, on sales of nearly 1900 shares,\nolosed at 30%, a gain of 1%.\nInternational Petroleum, B. A. OH and\nWalkers were also well traded. Last\nsale of oil was 38, up %; Petroleum, 39,\ndown %; and Walkers, at 64, off %.\nInternational Nickel was not Inclined\nto keep up to the century price touched\nlast week and cloeed at 98, down\nWestern Canada Flour Mills company\nadvanced 1 to 49.\nOther gains Included F. N. Burt, 3%\nto 78%; Canadian Industrial Alcohol,\n1% to 36%; Canadian Oil, 1 to 68;\nShredded Wheat. 1% to 74%; and Twin\nCity, % to 49%.\nLosses Included Christie Brown. 2 to\n133, and Massey .(arris, 1 to 43%.\nCity Preparing for Day When\nIt Will Supply \"Juiee\" to\nFlorence Mine\nIDEA OF ft\nAllows Appeal of Motorist Who\nIs Charged With Driving\nWhile Drunk\nGET PRICES ON A NEW\n\"BENCH\" FOR GAS PLANT\nCity Council Accepts Invitation\nfor Opening Ceremonies at\nInstitute Rooms\n102%\n133%\n130%\n40%\n95\n43\n87%\n19\n97%\n101%\n36%\n18%\n81%\n69%\n26%\n86%\n159%\n96%\n58%\n41%\n98%\n62\n25',\nIS?.\n119%\n55\n58%\n53%\n74%\n188%\n59%\n145%\n95\n19\nON MIS LIST\nEarly   Advances   Wiped   Out\nB.  C. Issues Irregular;\nArno Mines Leader\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 30.\u2014Dominion war\nIssue pqlces:\nWar loan  renewal*\u20141933,  \u2022104.15.\nRefunding loans\u20141928, 9100.35; 1943,\n$105.75; 1944, $103.45; 1940, 1102.35;\n1946, $102.55.\nBRITISH  COLUMBIA   EGOS\nEquipping  of  the   West   Arm   trans\nmission line with heavier service trans\nformers and line in preparation for de\nliverin* electric power to the Kootenay\nFlorence   Mining   company   at   Princess\ncreek was foreshadowed last night when\nthe   city   council,   at   Its   first   ordinary\nmeeting of the year, instructed the city\nclerk to call for tenders \"for the supply\nof   equipment   and   material   necessary\nfor   the   Weat   Arm   transmislon   line.\"\nThe tenders are to be received not later\nthan  February   10.\nTO  PLACE FIRST\n(JAS  BENCH\nFurther development of another of\nNelson's public utilities was also foreshadowed, when the city clerk was in<\nstructed to secure prices on the cost of\ninstallation of a new bench at the gas\nworks. This new bench will replace the\npresent No. 1 bench, for some time,\nunder   Increased   consumption,   a   sec-\n8ASKATOON. Sask.. Jan. 30.\u2014Thick\nspeech, staggering gait, liquor on the\nbreath, and bleary syes do not In\nthemselves necessarily prove that a\nman Is In that degree of Intoxication\nas to make lt unsafe for him to drive\na motor car, was the finding of Judge\n\u25a0 A. A. McLorg tn district court today\nwhen he allowed the appeal of Fred\nLewis against a conviction for drunken\ndriving. The conviction of Police Magistrate Brown last fall Was quashed\nand costs allowed the appellant. Hla\nlordship found a reasonable doubt of\naccused's guilt.\nIn his Judgment, which came after\na number of witnesses had been heard,\nalso argument by counsel, his lordship referred to section 21VJ-C of the\nCanadian Criminal code, ln which the\nvarious degrees of intoxication are mentioned. The Judge found ln the caae\nbefore him evidence of slight Intoxication, but no evidence of Intoxication\nsufficient to uphold the conviction,\nchiefly because Lewis' mental oondltlon\nfrom the time of the accident until\ntwo doctors had examined him at police station, had not been shown to\nhave been below normal.\nFurther. Dr. Rose had stated that\nLewis answered all questions Intelligently,\nThere was an interesting contradiction between the tern physicians. Dr.\nDonald MacKenzie found the man\nconsiderably under the influence\nliquor.\nPrices   have   advanced   again   In   the   \u201e,\nVancouver market, the new'rise  being  \"J J?eiV?n  haa been  ln  U8e\n_     _ ** Rnrh    + !.___-__    _____\u00bb* _.\u2014_.    \u2022__._____    __..\none   of  2   cents,   and   making   a   total\ngatn of 5 cents ln the past four days.\nFresh extras selling to retailers at\n35c. The price at country points Is 20c\nsnd 30c.\nCUBA HOPES 1\n[\nI\nSecretary of State Tells Press\nThat Cuba Hopes for Wider\nMarketing\nof\nBoth these matters were put through\nwithout discussion,  being recommended\nby the committee of  the  whole, which\nconsidered them last Friday night.\nORDER CAR\nOF (OAL\nA third item from this committee\nwas recommendation of the purchase\ncf a car of coal lor the fire hall and the\ncity hall.\nThe council accepted with alacrity\nan invitation from the Nelson and\nDistrict Women's Institute to be present\nat the- formal opening of the Institute's\nrooms next Friday.\nTORONTO, Jan. 30.\u2014After early advances the mining market turned heavy\ntoday and declines were spread throughout the list at the close. Teck Hughes,\nwhich opened at \u00bb9.30, declined to \u00bb9.10.\nLake Shore was 40c JVlgher at \u00bb24.90\nbut Wright Hargreaves eased to $5.80\noff 5c.   Bldgood declined mo to 87.\nArno Mines was the leader ln activity with sales amounting to 175,000\nshares and advanced 7c to 30c.\nHudson Bay Mining tit Smelting was\nmuch weaker, selling down to 920.50, a\nloss of 90c.\nSudbury Basin was 40c lower, at\n(12.50, and Tread well declined (1 to\n(29.50 on a turnover of only 100 shares.\nThe British Columbia stocks were\nquite Irregular. Premier adyanced 15c\nto (2.65, and Kootenay Florence was 3c\nhigher at 38Vi. but Pend Oreille was\noff 70c to (8,25 and Big Missouri lost\n6c to 74.\nMining Corporation declined ln sympathy with the movement and finished\nat (4.75, a loss of 10c.\nTotal sales  1,379,088 shares.\nFIRST   STEP   TOWARD\nINCLUSION OF CANADA\nHAVANA, Jan. 30.\u2014The committee on\ncommunications of the Pan-American\nconference took a first step toward Including Canada in the Pan-American\ndeliberations by approving a suggestion\nthat on account of America's northern\nneighbor, the proposed inter-American\ncommercial aviation treaty be open to\nadherence to all countries.\nToronto Mines\nBid\nAconda  6   -32\nAmulet         3.65\nAmity    34\nAro    *\u00bb*\u00ab\nArea           -33\\e\nAtlas    - 04\nBeav_r          1.90\nBedford    46\nBaganac    06\nBaldwin   03%\nBarry Holly    86\nCastle    70\nCan. Lorraine   15\nConlagas          4.80\nCrown Reserve   50\nCapital    15'\/_\nDuprat    93Vi\nDome       13.50\nDon Rouyn       118\nAsked\n$    .33\n3.70\n.38\n.37\n.34\n1.91\n.47\n.03.4\n.87\n.71\nI Hi\n.51\n.16\nKOOTENAY BOND & INVESTMENT CO.. LIMITED\nINVESTMENT   SECURITIES\nGOVERNMENT\nMUNICIPAL AND\nINDUSTRIAL\nBONOS\nBRITISH  COLUMBIA,\nONTARIO, MANITOBA\nAND QUEBEC MINING\nSTOCKS\nHOME OFFICE, TRAIL, B.C.\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\n._   SnwWni ani   Refining\nTRAIL.   BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nof Cold, Silver, Copper, Lead\net Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig\nTADANAC. TRAIL\non.\n.36\n.10\n.36\n.11\n17.50\nOold Dale\nGold Reef\nGold  Hill\nGranada\nGrover Daly\nHolly   \t\nHowey         1.48\nIndian    10\nKlrklaKe         3.33\nKirk Hunton  19\nKeel?    55\nKeora    03\n'.ake Shore       34.90\nLaval    _...       .33V.\nMacaana    46\nMclntyre       37.75\nMcKtnley    16\nMonnta    10\nMining Corpn\t\nWplMilng         6.36\nNeuhec    )\t\nMight Hawk   08V,\nNoranda       30.76\nPorcupine  Crown         .06.4\nPioneer    53Vi\nPremier           3.80\nRouyn  \t\nRlbago   \t\nStadacona\t\nSylvanlte   \t\nTeck Hughes \t\nThompson Krlst  ...\nTough Oakes \t\nTowagamac    .........\nTemlakamlng   \t\nWrlRht Hargreaves\nWest Dome Lake ...\nCent. Man.   Mines.\nPotter  Doal\t\nWakcnda   \t\n.3714\n.1014\n.33\n.26 li\n.1114\nWinnipeg Grain\nWHEAT-\nOpen\nHigh\nLow\nMay\n135%\n135%\n135%\nJuly   \t\n135._\n13614\n136 '\u201e\nOct\t\n12914\n129%\n1291,\nOATS\u2014\nMay\n63%\n83%\n631,\nJuly   ..\n6214\n62%\n62%\nOct.   .\n66%\n57\n56%\nBARLEY\u2014\nMay\n8814\n8814\n86\nJuly   ....\n85%\n86\nbo%\nOct\t\nFLAX\u2014\nMay\n189\n189 Vi\n189\nJuly   .\n193\n193 V.\n192\nOct\t\nRYE\u2014\nMay   .\n108%\n108%\n108\nOct\t\nClose\n135%\n135%\n12914\n63%\n88%\n85%\n75%\n108%\n106%\n98 V4\nIVIIKAT   POOL   MEET\nIS  INNER  DISCISSION\nWrNNIPEO. Jan. 30.\u2014Preliminary arrangements Ior the  third  International\nwheat   pool   conference   were   discussed\nI at a meeting of the International con.\nHAVANA, Cuba, Jan. 30.\u2014Cuba hopes  ference committee  held  Here  today,\nthat the existing vlvendl wtth  Canada      Thf conference  wlll  Be  held  ln  Re-\nwill result ln a permanent trade agree-   B'na'  Sask..  June  6.   6   and  7.  and   lt\nment ln the  near luturc. Dr.  Raphael  ls.   \"\"Pasted   that   all    the   Important\nOrtiz, secretary of state In the Cuban J    ,?*'\u25a0 e*I>ortl<>8 countries ot the world\ngovernment,   told   the   Canadian   Press  wl\u201e   be   represented,\ntoday.    He thought that Canada would   .J10   st\u00bb'\u00abn'\u2122t   was   moSe   concerning\nderive   more   direct   benefit   from   the  5,he. \u20221\u2122\"m'nary   Plans- discussed  today,\npact than would Cuba, but Cuba hoped  \u201e\u201e,\u201e\"   *\u2122 \u2022nnouiiced   that  the com-\nfor   a    wider   market    for    Its    sugar  mlttee  would  meet  again  ln May,\nthrough    Its    association    with    British \u25a0 \u2014\ncountry. Canada, through Its exports; FrOSer ValleV Boards\not refined sugar and condensed milk\n.o countries enjoying the British preferential tariff, might prove an Indirect market for Cuba's surplus of\nraw sugar. In return, Cuba offered an\nimmediate market to the Dominion\nfor potatoes, canned fish and certain\nbrands  of   fresh   fish.\nDr. Ortiz also hoped for the conclusion of an agreement whereby parcel post between the two countries\ncould be extended, to facilitate the\ncarriage of parcels up to 11 pounds ln\nweight. This would permit Cuba to\nship tobacco and cigars In small quan\ntitles to Individuals direct with com\n;jarattvely   little   restriction.\nof Trade Indorse Delta\nFarmer Policy on Market\nHAMMOND, B.C.,  Jan.  30.\u2014Representatives   of   the   Associated   Boards   of\nTrade of the Fraser Valley, at a meeting  here Saturday  indorsed  the policy\nof   Delta  farmers   in   cooperative   marketing of fruit and  vegetables and  ln\nthe  non-leasing  of   lands  to  orientals.\nResolutions  urging   formation  of  an\norganization  similar   to   the   Delta  Cooperative    association,    to    cover    the\n| whole   of  the  lower   mainland  and  to\ni follow the lead of the river municipal-\nMore   homes   are   broken   up   when  \u25a0*\u25a0? tn regard to orientals, were passed.\nthe   husband   takes   his   bride   to   the *m\t\nhome of his people than when theyj Sounding of automobile horns frlght-\n{o to her parents, Judge McLaughlin] ens pedestrians and causes numerous\nobserves after 21 years In Tennessee j accidents, according to Registrar Good-\ncourts. 1 win   of  Boston,  Mass.\nLOGAN & BRYAN\nPrivate Wires\nSTOCKS,    BONDS,    COTTON,\nGRAIN\nMEMBERS\nNew York, Montreal and Vancouver Stock Exchanges, Chicago\nBoard of Trade, Winnipeg Grain\nExchange and other leading ex-\nchantV\u00bb-\nOFFICES:\nVancouver,   Spokane  and   Seattle\nRambler\nCariboo\nIf you can use 10,000 of\nthis stock at a good\nprice see me\ntoday.\nC. W. Appleyard\nINSURANCE     STOCKS     BONDS\nCITY PROPERTY\nC. W. Appleyard    H. E. Appleyard\nF. A. Whitfield\nBaker Street Office\u2014Phone 269\n.16\n.10\n.03\n.63\n5.60\n.12\n1.72\n.16\n.08\n1.49\n.11\n2.33\n.20\n.57\n.12\n4.70\n2.85\n.03'A\n.17\n.20\n3.36\n0.00\n.64\n3.40\n.60\n1.74\n.17\n.0814\nDominion Live Stocks\nCALGARY, Jan. 30.\u2014Receipts: Cattle,\n271: calves. 43: Hogs, 17.\nSteers\u2014Choice 19.60 to 810.50, fair\nto good 18.25 to 6928.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice 81 to 86.75,\nfair to good (7 to 17.76.\nButcher cows\u2014Choice 97.60 to 88, fair\nto lood 96.60 to 67.25.\nBulls\u2014Oood 96 to 96.\nStocker steers\u2014Choice 97.60 to 98.\nStocker heifers\u2014Choice 96.60 to 96.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice 98 to 98.76,\nfair to good 87 to 97.79.\nCalves\u2014Choice 910 to 913.\nLambs\u2014Fair to good 911 to 912.\nIJl.ee)>\u2014F\u00bblr to food 96 to 9960.\nCASH WHEAT^-No. 1 northern 141*4\nNo. 2 northern 1.15.4. No. 3 northern\n112.4, No. 4 110%. No. 6 98V No. 0 8014.\nfeed 81%. track 105%, screenings 810.\nNew Westminster Lets\nContract for Elevator\nhut Tenderer Withheld\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B.C., Jan. 30.\u2014\nA contract for construction of a grain\nlevator was let by the New Westminster\nharbor commission today, but announcement of the successful tender has been\nwithheld, pending official confirmation\nfrom Ottawa. Official announcement\nis expected from Ottawa in about a\nweek's time. The cost of the elevator\nwlll be about 9500,000.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK. Jan. 30.\u2014Sterling eichange easy at 4.83 1-16 for 60-day\nbills and at 4.86%   for demand.\nBar  stiver,  foreign\u201467  1-8.\nCanadian dollars\u20143-16 discount.\nFrancs\u20143.02%.\nLire-5.28%.\nNelson   approximate   rate   sterling-\n84.88%.\nMarks\u201423.80.\nKronen\u201426.81.\nCOMPRESSOR PLANT FOR\nAINSWORTH PROPERTIES\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, whloh recently op-\ntioneU the Albion, Banker and Bonlta\nclaims at Alnsworth, ls equipping these\nproperties with a compressor to be used\nln driving a deep level tunnel.\n\u2014 -^\t\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Jan. 30.\u2014Eggs and butter easier, cheese steady.\nOhsest\u2014Wasterna 10c to l\u00bbVic\nButter\u2014No. 1 paateurlied 36c.\nEggs\u2014Storage extras 42c, Urals 88c,\nseconds 30c. fresh extras 60c, firsts *6c\n^^nl>5on]fl!\u00bbii(i dumpmtfi.^lf\nNftSOftPOnATCB If* MAY I********.\nOther Branches at Winnipeg, Yorkton, Saskatoon,   Edmonton,   Calgary,   Lethbrldge,\nVancouver, Kamloops,   Vernon and Victoria.\nLadies' Wear\nNEW SHIPMENT OF LADIES' SILK AND GEORGETTE DRESSES\u2014In Black,\nNavy, Red and Green.   Exclusive designs.   Sizes 16 years to 44 bust.\nPrices    919.95 TO ?39.50\nCHILDREN'S ALL-WOOL TOQUES\u2014In White, Fawn and Blue 75tt TO ?1.25\nCHILDREN'S PULL-ON AND COAT SWEATERS\u2014Ages  3  to  14  years.    All\nnew shades.   Keasonabiy priced 91*75 TO $5.95\nSecond Floor\u2014H.RC.\nOveralls\nSilver Bar Double-Wear Fabric, the new material for overalls, strongest and\nbest wearing material obtainable.\nMen's Overall Pants  $2.25    Boys' Bib Overalls  ?1.25\nMen's Bib Overalls  ?2.50    Youths' Bib Overalls .S1.50\nMen's Combination Overalls  $4.25    Boys' Combination Overalls  $2.75\nYouths'   Combination   Overalls     $3.00\nIt will pay you to give Silver Bar Overalls a trial.\nMain Floor\u2014H.RC.\nDry Goods\nBED COMFORTERS\u2014Full size, in beautiful blended colorings, expressly made\nfor the Hudson's Bay Co. Every Comforter is of high standard quality and\nfilled with Purified Downs. These come in Printed Sateen and Sateen Coverings, showing; a 4V2 and 7-inch panel.\nSateen    $10.95       Sateen    $15.50       Satin  $27.50\n $11.50 \"        $19.50 \"      $35.00\n..$13.50\n$23.50\n$25.00\nMain Floor\u2014H.RC.\nTODAY, TUESDAY, JAN. 31, is the last day of our Financial Year.\nWe shall appreciate any outstanding accounts being paid before 12 o'clock\nTomorrow, Wednesday.\n-sa\u00a7\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\n' THE NELSON DAILY NEWS. TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 31, 1928\nThe Ark\n\u00abttaeUtS \u2014 Bon' Ron. 25* PS>\n\u2022air; CHrls' and Boys' Underwear, 5^\nMr garment; Heavy Factory Cotton\nflannelettes. Quilting, Print, Canton\nPress   Flannel.   Apron   oing\n.\u00bbm Oalatsa. Shirtings, all 25* *\u00bb\u2022\nJ\u00abrd Ladles' 811k Vests snd Bloomer.\ntl.00 *Mh: furniture. Stoves. QullU\n'tnd Run chsapsst In the city\nJ. W. HOLMES\nrtOUt 6-. \u00abM VERNON g*.\nBE YOUT One of\nthose tbat put oft\nthings from day to\nday, always Intending? Mow If you\nhave trouble with\nyour eyes, stop putting off\u2014there are\nmany that hava rued lt. Tour\nhappiness, efficiency, snd all, depend on your eyea. Treat them\naccordingly. Come In and let\nua   diagnose   your  case.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMKTI_I.it  and  optician\nEXPERT   SERVICE\nnasi\n^-^MCLSOI*\nSjC\nSociety Brand Clothes\nCAPS      j\nI\nQ_SBts\\\nI\nA NECESSITY IN EVERY\nrh WARDROBE\nVJ The   new  Caps  are  in   the   light\n\/ shades, but decidedly new in patterns.\nf 2.00 TO $3.50\nTRY\nr\nWhen Yon Are ln Need of\nELECTRICAL GOODS\nOur experience Is at your service.\nWe can help you choose, or ad-\nvist you.\nBENNETT'S, LTD.\nThe Borne ot Electricsl (loads\nGOLDFISH\nALL  THIS  WEEK  FOB  75^\nOet your choice of Nyal Tooth\nPaste, Par shaving Cream, Face\nCream, Face Powder or Plnol\nCough Cure and a bowl ot Oold\nFish with fish food.\nRUTHERFORD DRUG CO.\n-j;  V_\nTONIGHT!\nTONIGHT!\nHOCKEY\nDoors Open 7:45.    Game Called 8:15.\nRossiand vs. Nelson\nGet your tickets downtown. On sale at Bush's, Thurman's,\nMatthews', Poole Drug Co., Wright's, Gelinas'.\nriTTTFI\nJANUARY SALE\nLAST CALL\nAFTERNOON DRESSES\nA splendid selection at  $14.95\nEVENING GOWNS\nThe newest creations in a special offering at $17.95\nGIRLS' FLANNEL DRESSES\nAttractive little Dresses in good quality flannel at $3.50\nSale ends today.    Economy shoppers will save many\ndollars here today.\nIKam^cn JGros.\nMillinery, Ready-to-Wear, Dry Goods, Boys' Wear\nEntertainment Extraordinary\n8 p.m.   Wednesday, Feb. lst   8 p.m.\nST. PAUL'S UNITED CHURCH CLUB ROOM\nUnder the Auspices of the S.-T. Club, Featuring\nTOM COPELAND\nFrom Queen's Hall, London, Eng.\nInternational Entertainer\nCHARACTER AND COMEDY SKETCHES\nNOVELTY MUSICAL NUMBERS\nCOME AND ENJOY YOURSELF\n200 LAUGHS GUARANTEED\nADMISSION\nAdults, 50c; Children under 16, 25c\nII DI\nBEST IN HISTORY\nIHE PAST YEAR\nProduced   13   Per  Cent   More\nCurrent Than in 1926; Gains\nin All Services\nBOTH UNITS HAD\nSOME OVERHAULING\nB. C. VENEER\nIs the best for Panelling, Lining Walls and Ceilings of\n\"Homes, Camps, Factories, Stores, Offices and Garages.\nCan be stained, painted or kalsomined.   Made in Nel-\ni from native Cottonwood.\nLiterature and prices on request.\nWe Are District Distributors.\nWood, VaUance Hardware Co., Ltd.\n)LESALE NELSON, B.C. RETAIL\nHeavy  Snowfall Caused  Some\nTrouble; Circuits Improved;\nMuch General Work\nThnt Nelson's power plant has oper\nated satisfactorily during the year and\nhas given more service than ever tefore\ndemand on aU kinds of service., having\nIncreased, It ths tenor of the annual report of the city's electrical department,\nmade by City Electrical Engineer J. F.\nCoates and laid before the city council\nlast night. The maximum load for the\nyear carried for a period of 30 minutes\nwas 1B8I kilowatts, the capacity of the\ntwo units together being 17S0 kilowatts,\nwhile the average for the whc'<e year,\nnight and day, was 018.66 kilowatts. Altogether the plant generated 6418,600\nkilowatt hours, the greatest performance\nIn Its history, and a gain over i._e prevl\nous year of 018,036 kilowatt hou.s.\nMr. Coates' report was as follows:\nUMTS\nOVERHAULED\n\"The power plant has operated very\nwell throughout the year without Interruption accept on one occasion, December 8, when lt was necessary to reduce the load In town and shut down\nNo. 2 unit for a short time to enable\nthe removal of some driftwood which\nhad got Into the turbine. Fortunately\nthis did not in any way damage the\nmachine.\nNo. 1 unit has operated satisfactorily\nthroughout the year. The lower bearing was taken out during the Lcbur Day\nholiday week-end, rebabbltted and bored\nout, and replaced. This was necessary\nowing to the sand, etc., cutting the\nbearing during the high water pi-rlod.\nNo. 3 unit was shut down on April 3\nin order to overhaul. Tlie main bearings, the top section of shaft was removed and sent to the Nelson Iron\nWorks. The bearings were rebabbltted\nand bored out. The shafting was placed\nin the lathe and the bearing surface\nturned and polished, and the face of the\ncoupling turned to bring It true with\nthe shaft. The collector rings and exciter commutator were turned up. Some\ndifficulty was experienced in pressing\nthe rotor off the shaft, and the bad\nstate of the roads caused a further delay of two days, three teams being required to haul the shaft to Nelson.\nIn spite of these difficulties, however,\nthe work was completed and the machine operating ln 33 days. AU oil\nswitches, transformers and llghtiilng arresters have been Inspected and are ln\ngood condition. The power house roof\nhas been reshtngled with surfaced rub-\nberold shingles.\nBK-3 INCREASE IN\n\"JUICE\" GENERATED\n\"The total kilowatt hours generated\nfor the year were:\n1927 6,418.600 Kw.  Hrs.\n1936 4,799,875 Kw.  Hrs.\nIncrease for  year  618.626  Kw.  Hrs.\n\"The maximum load for 30 minute\naverage was 1S81 K.W. The average load\nfor year was 018.56 K.W.\n\"There have been considerable repairs\ndone to the roof of the sub-station, and\nlt will be necessary ln the near future\ntc put a new roof on this.\n\"Disconnecting switches ha\\j been\npurchased and are being Installed as\nopportunity arises. A wire guard has\nbeen made and hung under the 3300\nvolt bus bars to prevent accidental contact by any person working near them.\nCIRCUITS\nIMPROVED\n\"The electrical department has been\nengaged ln considerable work. A power\nMne was built along Front street, down\nCedar street, across the railway track to\nthe British Columbia Veneer Works, and\nthree 75 K.V.A- transformers far power,\nalso one 6 K.V.A. transformer for lighting, were Installed ln a building covered\nwith corrugated Iron. The power circuit\non Front street was rearranged Owing to\nthe burning out of a power tnnjform-\ner. The load was ppllt up. and by purchasing a 10 K.V.A. transformer, and\nusing two 10 K.V.A. transformers which\nwere formerly used at the snap factory,\nan additional circuit was made, which\nenabled the load to be handled without\nreplacing the large power transformer\nwhich was burnt out.\n\"The power circuit ln alley between\nBaker and Victoria streets was rearranged, owing to a large Increase in the\nload. An additional bank of three 15\nK.V.A. transformers were Installed near\nKootenay street, and the load from Curlew creamery was put on this b.ui__. This\nalteration has given the creamery a\nmuch better service.\n\"A 10 K.V.A. transformer was installed\non Josephine street to take caic of the\nload at St. Joseph's academy, wnere they\nhave Installed a very large si&c electric\nrange and water heater.\nHER VICE  WORK\n\"The department has Installed 74 new\nservices, repaired 64 old service*, set 36\npoles, reset 11 poles, installed 15 guys\nand anchors, installed 645 mcleis and\ndisconnected 603 meters. In addition,\n393 meters were taken out of seivice to\nbe tested by the government inspector,\nand, after testing, replaced in rervlce.\nmaking a total of 1641 meters handled\nby the department for the year. The\ntotal number of meters ln use at the\nend of 1927 was 1849, and at the end of\n1936, 1773, showing a gain of meters for\n1937 of 76.\nThree service transformers wcie burnt\nout.\nEight transformers were Installed with\na total capacity of 325 K.V.A.\nTROUBLE  FROM\nHEAVY SNOW\n\"During November we had considerable trouble due to an exceptionally\nheavy snowfall causing trees to fall\nacross the lines. On November 16 tbe\npower was cut off completely from 10\np.m. to 3 a.m., due to a tree which came\ndown the hill and fell across the road\non to tha main line about half a mile\n\u25a0from the power plant. This trouble was\nlocated by one of the power plant staff,\nbut, owing to the phone line bch.g broken, tt was some considerable tlmr before\nthe power plant could communicate\nwith the sub-station. The power was\nput on and worked on No. 1 line till\nNovember 17. when the power was shut\noff during noon hour and No. 3 line was\nthen repaired and put Into service\nagain.\n\"We also had trouble on tht north\nshore line, November 13. This wu the\nworst experience we have bad on this\nline, \u00bb\u25a0 it was November 16 bcloie this\nline was working again. There were 16\nspans completely broken and trees ware\nlying three and four deep on 07 spans\naround about Ten-Mile These trees In\nmost cases were 'ops 36 to 30 feet long.\nE\nE\nLIGHT II\nPresident Leith Tells Rotarians\nProbably Ask Council for\nReferendum\nMcHARDY TELLS ABOUT\nWORK OF THE BOARD\nNelson  Needs  More  Advertising; Board's Work Is Proving Influential\nIndicating that the board of trade\nwlll probably ask for a referendum on\ndaylight saving, proposing to reestablish\nthe system here, Alex Leith, president\nof the board, asked the support of the\nRotary club tn this measure when he\naddressed the club at the Hume yesterday.   President A. Browne presloed.\nC. F. McHardy, retiring president of\nthe board of trade, gave a resume of the\nwork done by the board during the past\nweek.\nMr. Leith stated New Tork and Chicago, the two largest cities in tbe\nUnited States. ai*d Montreal and Toronto, the two largest Canadian cities, used\nthe daylight saving system.\nSAVE WASTED LIGHT\nAny objections that might be made\non the ground that lt would be confusing to have two times, daylight saving\nand railroad, could be refuted by the\nmere statement that Fernle and Cranbrook, which are essentially lallroad\ntowns, use the system.\nMr. Leith stated the board would prob\nably ask the city council for a refer\nendum. It was a pity, he thought, that\nso much early morning daylight was\nnow wasted, whereby use of the daylight\nsaving scheme another hour could be\nadded to the evenings.\nWORK OF BOARD\nMr. McHardy, main speaker, com\nmended tha 1927 publicity committee of\nthe board of trade, of which F. C- White-\nhouse waa chairman, for Its splendid\nwork. But, he added, lt was necessary\nthat Nelson should be advertised to a\ngreater extent. The time was coming\nwhen the city council would contribute\nfive times as much as lt did uow for\nadvertising, be ventured.'\nDuring 1927 the board entertained the\nBritish Empire Mining & Metallurgical\ncongress, a body of world-wide influence. Letters of thanks for Nelson's\nhospitality were now being received, Mr.\nMcHardy said.\nUPPER DUNCAN\nThe speaker credited the board of\ntrade, through Its Industrial committee,\nwith giving Nelson the British Columbia Veneer Works.\nMr. McHardy told of . the preasure\nbrought to bear by the board of trade\nln having a survey made of the Lower\nDuncan, so that when the Upper Duncan country ls opened up lt will be pos-\nA. S. Horswill & Co.\nTIP TOP CREAMERY  BUTTTO\u2014\n2  lbs. for  95^\nCHASE &  SANBORN COPPIS\u2014\n***  \u00ab\u00ab    435*\nMcLarens baking powl*Rt-\nla-os. Un  (1 pkt, Jelly Powder\nfr\u00bb>  35*\nCOWAN'S   COCOA\u2014\nVi-**-   Un    25*\n2-LB.      PACKET      DEL     MONTI\nPRUNES\u2014Large    35*\nCLARK'S     EflUDT     LUNCH\u2014Assorted.   3 tins  45*\nNetted   Oem   Potatoes,   Cabbage,\nCarrots,    Turnips,\nParsnips\nOUR  PHONE   IS   X21\nDeliveries   Uphill   and  Fairview\nTwice Dally.\nbroken off hy the weight of the snow\nand carried down the hillside, when they\nstruck the power line. It took the\nunited efforts of all the men available\ntwo complete days to clear the ttces off\nthe line before we could attempt to\nsplice up the broken wires and straighten up the poles.\nConsiderable time was spent by the\ndepartment ln decorating the streets\nwith colored lights and flags, on several\noccasions, for conventions, etc., also for\nChristmas decorations, and wori lor the\nannual fair ln September.\nSUMMARY OF\nSERVICE  CHANGES\n\"During  the  year, services gained  as\nfollows:\nLight consumers connected 607\nLight   consumers   disconnected... 577\nIncrease of light consumers  30\nPower consumers connected.-  30\nPower consumers disconnected.... 16\nIncrease of power consumer*      4\nRanges  connected     18\nRanges disconnected   10\nIncrease of range consumers    8\nWater heaters connect**...  31\nWater heaters disconnected  16\nIncrease of water heaters  16\nNelson News of the Day\nKnights of Pjlh Ins - All members are\nrequested to be at lodge. 7:30 sharp tonight.    Third  degree  to  be  conferred.\nRefreshments.   D. Laughton, K. R. & S.\n(3134)\nThomas Dunbar has been confined to\nhis bed owing to sickness. Barber shop\nwlll be open in a few days. (2126)\nDon't fail to hear Tom Copeland at St.\nPaul's Church. Wednesday, February lst.\n(2129)\nThe annual meeting of the Chamber\nof Mines wlll be held in the Hoard of\nTrade Rooms on Thursday evening, February 2nd, at 8 o'clock. (2130)\nAn extraordinary general meeting of\nCrvstal Club will be held in Crystal Hall.\nWednesday, February 8. at 8:30 p.m., to\nconsider the estimates for building a\npermanent stage and the possibility of\nborrowing a sum of money not exceeding 1500. to meet c^st of same.     (2131)\nATTENTION\nEvery member of the congregation of\nSt. Saviour's Church Is asked to attend\nmeeting to be held In the Memorial\nHall tonight at ft o'clock, to consider\nplans for the rebuilding of the church.\n(2106)\nDANCE. EAGLE HALL. WEDNESDAY.\nI EH. 1st. ..oon MUSIC. REFRESHMENTS.    ADMISSION 35 CENTS.  (2133)\nA cordial Invitation ib extended to the\nLadles of Nelson to attend the official\nopening of the Women's Institute\nRooms, Vlotorla street. Friday afternoon.\nFebruary 3rd, from 3 to 6. (3133)\nSchuyler Club will hold whist drive tonight at 8 o'clock sharp. In I.O.O.F. Hall.\nAdmission 36 cents.   Everybody welcome.\n(3X30)\nStuttering a specialty, also singing\nand   elocution.    Interview   Wednesday.\nStrathcona Hotel.\n(3073)\nMASQUERADE DANCE at I. O. O. F.\nHall, February 2. Scandinavian Club.\nOents \u00abi, ladles 25 cents. Luncheon\nserved. (3103)\nPRONE\nDr. M. F. Setters\nPhysician and ferffeoa\nSake 60S to 60\u00bb  Rookery Building\nOver  Whlteboom.\nSPOKANE.    WASH.\nOomer Btventde ui\nsible to know,at once what it will cost\nto make the Lower Duncan navigable.\nThe board was host, at different times\nto C. A. Cottrell, superintendent of the\nBritish Columbia division of thc Canadian Pacific railway, to the Northwest\nAssociation of Sheriffs and Pollce, and\nto the British Columbia Press association.\nTHANK8 FOR GIFT\nMr. McHardy saw, in the board of\ntrade and its provincial and Dominion\naffiliations, an opportunity to develop\na Canadian national spirit by bringing\ntogether business men who would represent the voice of the people.'\nA letter was received from Miss M.\nHodge, provincial director of Junior Red\nCross, thanking the Rotary club for IU\ngift of 910, with which Christmas gifts\nwere purchased for crippled children gt\nthe Malahat Beach solarium.\nBlue Serge Suits\n$35.00\nThese $35 Blue Serge Suits are 8 feati\nwith  us\u2014and   they're  all  up-to-dat\nmark-down   left-overs.    Suits  that\nproud to show and sell, because we knov\nyou can be proud to wear them.  Absolutel]\nguaranteed fast colors, in both single\ndouble-breasted models.\nQuality\nServict\nSatisfaction\nPREMIER GARDINER\nATTACKS KLANSMEN\nNo Fuel Problem\nTon wUl always be comfortable\nand have constant bot water for all\npurposes  If you  live ln  Uw\nAPpHEKTS\nNotblnf   Is Too   oood   for   the   Sick\nSmyttie's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION   SPECIALIST\nIn  business for your health    Let va\nfill   your   prescriptions.   Mall   ordm\npromptly executed.   Call and wait foe\nyour oar.   Phone 1.\nSunday hours: l to 4 aud 7 to \u2022 p.m.\nREGINA, Sask., Jan. 80.\u2014Keen interest was aroused in the crowded galleries\nat the night sitting cf the Saskatchewan\ngalleries tonight, when Premier Oardlner denounced the activities of the Ku\nKlux Klan organizers. An investigation\nhad been made on behalf of the government, he revealed, ln Toronto, Detroit and other places, regarding the history of the organizers, and lt was found\nthat their \"record would not bear very\nclose investigation,\" said the premier.\nThree days after the government investigator returned to Regina, the Klan organizers-* left the city, and members of\nthe Klan began to shake, wondering\nwhat was their responsibility regarding\nthe collection of the money taken by\nthese men, said Mr. Oardlner.\n\"As leader of the government, I do\nnot want the support of that kind of\nmen,\" the premier declared. \"If we\ncant get support ln this province without cooperation of that kind, then let's\nnot have government at all under our\npresent form.\"\nReno has lost Its prestige as the\ndivorce Mecca of United states, since\ngreater numbers go to Paris, reports\ncensus bureau.\nIncrease Yonr Salary\nEvening Classes\nIndividual Tuition\nNelson Business College\nGrocery Specials\nOUR  SPECIAL BULK TEA\u2014\n3 lbs. for  81.10\nOUR  SPECIAL  BULK   COTTEE\u2014\nrinsst  - GO*\nNEW LAID 1GGS\u2014Per doz. _Qf}\nCOOKED  BAM\u2014Sliced,  lb.   SO*\nWSTKEY'8   CONDENSED  MINCEMEAT\u20142   for    25^\nCHOICE   LARGE   PRUNES\u2014\n\u00ab lbs,  for 50*\nSWEET  POTATOES\u2014\nLane  Un   30*\nCHOICE  SIDE   BACON\u2014\nSiloed        45*\nMUFFETS\u2014Per p_l fj*\nFor   Hl\u00bbh   Clans  Groceries\nPHONE   HO\nDeliveries 8 >.m. to I p.m.\nTHE SUGAR BOWL\nGROCERY\nLate Joy Bros.\nJ. A. C. Laughton,\nSpodalfclnt    ln   Cerrectin.    Defsi\nBlrht to Proper Glasses.\nQuick Repair Service.\nGRIFFIN BLOCK. PHONI\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNelson's Dispensing Cl\nFilms, Kodaks, Onus,\nMall   orders   propmtly\nBOX IMS NELSON, B.C.\nCome tn ud Oet Tov  Welrtt\nKitchen\nDaylight Units]\nComprising   holder,   socket   u\nwhite  opsl ilsss.    Speolel\n$2,50\nGuy's Electric Store\nNext r. * W. Oroeertsrta\n\"Collinson for Quality\"\nDIAMOND RINGS\nEXQUISITELY MOUNTED IN\nWHITE, GREEN AND YELLOW\nGOLD BETTINGS.\nSPECIAL VALUES\n$25, $35. $50. $75,\n$85 *ND $100\nE. COLLINSON\nJEWELER\nEXPERT WATCHMAKER\nC.P.R. and G.N.R. Time\nInspector\n'Ull       :   ' \u25a0 \u25a0EillllKIHIIMIWI\nP &w\nGR0CERTER1A\nPHONE 235\nCOMB    HONEY\u2014Presh.\nfar   frame    35^\nFRESH EGGS\u2014Firsts.\nDosen     45^\nMACARONI\u2014Read.    Cut.\n4 \"\u00bb 45*\nJUTLAND    SARDINES\u2014In    Salad\nOU.   3 for  35*\nQUALITY   FIRST\ns 1\n1 When the\nCarrier Calls\nto Collect\nPlease pay him promptly.\nHe has many subscribers\nto collect from. He is in\nbusiness for himself, paying in advance for the\npapers, just as do subscribers.\nHelp him all you can.\nHe will appreciate it.\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPHONE 144\nKs-mm \u2022\u00bb\u00ab*,_______\u25a0 ________J\nIF\nIT IS GOOD\nPOTATOES\nCALL US\n^GROCERY*\nPhones 10 and 193\n*****\nGlorifies Good\nTeeth\nSound teeth influence\nyour general health and\nenhance your beauty.\nLet us examine yours. A\nlittle inexpensive work\nmay do wonders.\nDR. KEELEY\nDENTI8T\nW\/,  Baker  Bt,  Nslson,  B. C.\nAND    AT   TRAIL\nCLASSIFIED    ADS    BRINQ    RESULTS.\nTONIGHT ONLY\n^tff\/.\nPositively\nRICHARD\nDIX\nGreatest Picture, and that\nmeans something\nSHORT FEATURES\nFRENCH FRIED\nCRAZY CAT\nPATHE NEWS\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_1928_01_31","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\/1.0403633","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":"1928-01-31 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":"1928-01-31 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":""}]}