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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":" V I - I Oh I A    b    C\n\/95\n=\nTrail-Vernon Tie\nSetPm.\n\u00aebe lailu ^ta\u00bb\nVol.26\nNELSON. B. a THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 16, 1928\nNo. 256\nCreston Year Good\nSee Page 5\nCOOTENAY FLORENCE BUYS LAKE SHORE\n1IG TAX SLASHES EXPECTED IN TODAY'S BUDGET\nBE DUTY\nMOIHST\nBe   Included   in    Robb\nidget Speech  Today,  It\nIg Anticipated\nBS TAX CUT MAY\nIE BY FIFTY PER CENT\nret Duty Slash Will Be Ma-\nial Is Thought; May Restore Penny Postage\n\"Well, What of That?\"\nand the Prince Shakes\nHands With tke Waiter\nWINDSOR, Eng., Feb. 15. \u2014 The\nPrince of Wales has won the affection of another subject by hts democracy. Arriving tonight at the\nWHIte Hart hotel here to attend a\nmunicipal dinner at which venison\nfrom the royal herd was to be *erv-\ned, the prince began to shake hands\nwith a group or men and women\nwho gteeted blm,\nOne man drew book In obvious\nembarrassment when the prince nf-\nfereA him his hand.\n\"Pardon me, your royal highness,\nbut I am one of lhe waiters,\" he\nsaid.\nThe heir to tbe throne, smiling,\nresponded: \"Well, what of that?\nWhy uoi shake hands with me?\"\nThe waiter then did, most heartily.\nONE DETECTIVE DEMOTED ANOTHER STEPS UP\nTAWA, Feb. 15.\u2014Heavy reductions\n\u2022 sales tax, reduction* ln the cus-\ntarlff on imported liquors, cuts ln\nxcise duties on cigarettes and on\nmanufactured In Canada, reduc-\nn the income tax on business cor-\nionj, and revision of the tariff\nules on cotton goods, are among\nnation changes anticipated ln the\nit which will he presented to par-\nnt Thursday afternoon by Hon. J.\nbb, minister of finance.\nthe proposed alterations being\ned with all the usual care, it ls\natble to reach any definite conclu-\na* to the exact extent of the\nHowever, It Is believed that\nsduction ln the sales tax may run\n[h as 50 per cent, while the cut in\nxcise duty on cigarettes win be of\nKrtal nature.\nLLJED WARE\nire ls sortie talk of a reduction ln\narlff on enamelled and aluminum\nea ware, but UUle is heard aa to\nlar tbe diity on automobiles and\nlaary will-be altered.\ntils budget tomorrow. Mr. Robb will\ntube a surplus and available fig-\ni minister wtll  also announce an\n*\u2022 In the grand total of Dominion\nalthough not as large as had been\noned in some quarters.\nV POST\nsuggestion has been made tbat\nobb may announce tbe restoration\nany postage between Canada and\n\u00bbt of the Empire.\nyear, first criticism of the mln-\nstatements will come from C. H.\nof Montreal.    He wlll  probably\nbriefly and adjourn the debate\nnext week.\nShareholders Ratify Enterprise\nConsolidation in Meeting at\nVancouver\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15.\u2014Plans to\nJoin the Enterprise Mining Consolidation group, capitalized at 12,-\n400,000, were ratified by- a meeting\nof shareholders of the Selkirk Mine\ncompany In the offices of R. s.\nLehnte here Wednesday. Selkirk approved liquidation proceedings and\nlt Is expected share exchange basis\nwill be around six or seven SaUrt-rVs\nto one In the Enterprise. The Enterprise acquisitions Include Good-\newtgto* -Ymlr,- and Yankee Oirl\nclaims in the. Nelson district, and\nare to be financed bf Htoble I oriong\n& Co., Toronto, who have Just been\nelected to the Vancouver stock exchange.\nLeading figures In the recent shake-\nup of the Vancouver police force. Left.\nDetective J. 1t Jewltt, who leaves the\npost of Inspector of detectives to be\ncome a detective seargeant. Right. Detective John Thompson, who succeed!\nJewltt.\nTHI FOR '1'\n\u25a0fl\nIETEEI VICTIMS\n\\RE LAID TO REST\nFinns Arc Buried in One\n\u2022ave; Fellow Countrymen\nDig the Grave\nBALLOT AFFAIR\nA\nOntario's Premier Says He Will\nExplain Today; Sinclair\nCriticizes\n\u25a0MINIS, Out., Fab. ,15.\u2014Timmlus\ncompleted the taak of burying Its\nNineteen .victims, of the Hol-\ndlsaster   were   taken   on   tbeir\nJourney today. Of these eight\ni, and one Ukranlan, were ln one\nre, the four Croats formed another\nFrench-Canadians, three of them\n\u2022d, were in a third, and tbe re-\nIng  two,  C.   Johnson  and   H.   Ir-\nwere buried together from the\n.st church this afternoon.\n. Finns' funeral took place from\nFinnish hall, and the nine cas-\nwere. conveyed tp the cemetery on\nopen sleighs with a band play-\nin the lead and a large company.\nWomen and some children fol-\n\u00ab behind. -Then was no religious\nlony   at   the   hall,   but   addresses\ndelivered by meapbers of different\nizatlons and  some telegrams  and\nmesaages   were   read   from   socl-\nand Individuals. The men were\nd  together  In  one  grave.  77  feet\nahd dug by 73 fellow countrymen\nvolunteered for the work.\nOTTAWA, Feb, 15. \u2014 Nineteen ballot\nforms ln the possession of Liberal Leader W. E. N. Sinclair, reference to which\ncaused a stir in the Ontario legislature\nTuesday, were found on Sunnyside avenue ln Ottawa,, lt was declared today by\nRussell Sparkes, \"who, as Liberal candidate, unsuccessfully contested the Ottawa South riding in the last provincial\nelections. There were many more ballots scattered along the avenue, Mr.\nSparkes declared, but the civil servants\nhad gathered up only 19 of them.\n\"The Election act calls for the return\nof all unused ballots to Toronto, and\nthis certainly could not have been\ndone,\" Mr. Sparkes declared. The government denied that there had been any\nirregularities in the election, and Premier Ferguson stated he would have an\nannouncement tomorrow to explain the\nballot forms.\nate Committee has\navorably Reported on\nU. S. Farm Relief Bill\nJSHINGTON, Feb. 15\u2014The revised\nry-Hsugen farm relief bill was or-\ntavotably reported by the senate\nIt-tee today after twp hours' conation. By Its action the committee\nthe controversial farm problem\nIt before the senate by a  unanl-\nvots  of  those  members  present.\nhowever, reserved U\u00bb right to op-\nthe bill on the floor and to offer\nintents. *\nate on Budget\nWiU Begin Next\nMonday,Says King\nTAWA, Feb. 15.\u2014Preiser W. L.\nmale King announced in the\ntoday that debate on the budget\nbegin on Monday afternoon. As\nas Hon, J. A. Robb, minister of\ncompleted his budget speech\nrow afternoon, the premier stated\nresolutions of private members\noccupy tha rest of the day. As\nday l# private members' day,\ner King stated tbat the time\no discussion of private members'\ntlons tomorrow would be given\nlater date in th* Mtslon.\nNegro Gets Eight Years\nand Twenty Lashes for\nAttack on Young Girl\nCHATHAM. Ont., Feb. 15\u2014Bight\nyears in Portsmouth penitentiary and\n20 lashes was the sentence Imposed by\nJustice Fisher today on Frank Turner, aged 27, negro, who was found guilty\nby a Jury on two counts of robbery\nwltb violence and assault and bodily\nharm.\nThe victim of his attack was Willa\nArnold, 16-year-old Chatham girl and\nthe outrage was perpetrated Christmas\nevening.\nDefence Contesting Every Step;\nJury Is  Picked;  Hunt\nAlso on Trial\nLOS Alton-IB, Feb. 15.\u2014A stubborn\nfight to sees William Bdward Hickman\nfrom a second death sentence was begun\nby defence attorneys ln superior court\nhere today, with the selection of a jury\nto try the youth and his former pal,\nWelby Hunt, afced 10, for the murder of\nC. Ivy Thorns, druggist. In an attempted\nholdup.\nHickman went to trial 34 hours after\nhe had been sentenced to death for the\nkidnaping and slaying of Marian Parker.\nDetermination of Hickman's counsel\nto contest every step of the way was\nevident In the examination of prospective Jurors and an unsuccessful effort\nto delay the trial.\nHunt faced trial with the knowledge\nthat the death penalty cannot be exacted In his case because of his youth.\nFlyweight Champ Is\nCharged With Theft\not Fifteen Cents\nNEW YORK, Feb. IS.\u2014Describing himself an a \"mechanic out of\nwork,\" Frankie Genaro, National\nboxing association flyweight champion of the world, waa In night\ncourt tonight charged with stealing IS cr-ntK from the coin box of\na public telephone. He denied the\ncharge, wjrt-rh was dtom^wd.\nGenaro, who gave tlie aame Frank\nMantella, aged 26, and Lester Bay,\naged 21, were taken Into custody\nby the investigators for the telephone company.\nSpecial Committee to\nConsider Pensions and\nReturned Men's Affairs\nOTTAWA, Feb. 15\u2014A special committee to consider pensions and other\nproblems of returned soldiers was\nappointed ln the house of commons\ntoday. Hon. J. H. King, minister of\nhealth and soldiers civil reestabllsh-\nment, moved for the appointment of\nthe committee and his motion carried\nwithout  discussion.\nWOMEN  (JET  CHANCE\nLONDON, Feb. 15.\u2014French women\nare to be Admitted to the diplomatic\nservice of their country, according to\nMadame Kramer Bach, editor of LTn-\nternatlonale Feminln of Paris. At a\nmeeting here today of the Women's\nFreedom league, she said:\n\"The consent was signed only a few\ndays ago and will be publicly announced next week.\"\nBill Would Make the\nBetting in Canada on\nGreyhounds Illegal\nOTTAWA, Feb. 15.\u2014Betting on greyhound races ln Canada wlll be legal,\nIf a bill which ls being Introduced in\nthe house by E. It E. Chevrter, Liberal, Ottawa, becomes law. Betting on\nrace horses ln Canada Is legal under\nCriminal Code and the effect of Mr.\nChevrier's bill ls to put the two forms\nof racing on an equal footing. During\nthe past summer the sport of dog racing was very much to the fore ln\nMontreal.\nTraffic on Great Lakes\nCoastal Law Suspension\nIs Up Before the House\nOTTAWA, Feb. 16\u2014A notice of\nmotion for the return of correspondence and reports respecting the traffic\non the Great Lakes and the suspension\nof the coastal shipping laws, presented\nby T. L. Church, Conservative, Toronto,\nwas adopted ln the house this afternoon. Mr. Church'p motion alao asked\nfor the list of' ships lying Idle for\nlack of cargo. He said Canadian boats\nwere lying idle and foreign boats carrying grain because of the suspension\nof the coastal laws.\nWillingdons to Spend\nAlmost a Month at\nPoints on the Coast\nVICTORIA, Feb. 15.\u2014His Excellency\nthe Governor-Oeneral and Lady * Willingdon will arrive tn Vancouver on\nApril 6 and stay there until April 13,\nwhen they wlll corns to Victoria, lt\nwas announced this afternoon from\nGovernment House here. Ther will\nremain in Victoria and up-lsland at\nQuallcum Beach for about two weeks.\nThree High Power Specially Built Motor\nCars WiU Race at Daytona Beach in Try\nto Beat Record Established by Seagrave\nDAVT0NA BEACH, Fla., Feb. 15.\u2014Three motor cars, one\nBritish, andf two American, were prepared today to attempt to\nlower the world's speed record for automobiles\u2014203.7 miles\nan hour\u2014set last year by Major H. 0. Seagrave in his British\nSunbeam Special.\nThe, three sallies against time will be part of the 25th annual speed carnival. The entry of Malcolm Campbell of London,\nis designed to combat the wind, one striking feature being a\nlarge fin-shaped rigid rudder in the rear to prevent the car\nfrom deviation from its course or developing tail wag. This\ncar boauits a 900-horsepower British air service motor.\nFrank Lockhart, Indianapolis, has entered a small \"Black-\nhawk Special\" bullet-shaped, 15 feet and 6 inches in length with\na width of but two feet.\nThe speedy appearance of the car is enhanced by its total\nheight of (jnly three feet, with ground clearance of five inches.\nTwo banks of light cylinders each comprises its motor, which\nhas no radiator and is cooled by both water and ice. It is said\nto develop, 400 horsepower. T!v. entire automobile is \"designed\nto minimise wind resistance.\nJ. M. White, Philadelphia, will rely on titanic power, ex\npecting his 36-cylindered motor to make up for an almost total\nlack of stream line desi; i. His has three drive shafts direct to\nthe rear a,xle, no clutch, transmission or reverse gear and has\nonly one speed forward.\nThe three cars have ur til n&xt Wednesday to make their official attempts at beating the record of Major Seagrave.\nDAYTONA BEACH, Fla., Feb. 15.\u2014The huge 36-cylinder\ntriplex racing machine, owned by J. C. White of Philadelphia\nhas been barred from competition in the 25th annual speed\nclassic because it does not (Rmform to the rules of the\nAmerican Automobilo association, A. Means, secretary, announced tonight.\nThe machine was barred, Mr. Means said, because it did not\nhave a clot.)), differential or reverse gear, as provided by rules\nof the assotiation.\nIRE DISMISSED\nCommission     After     Hearing\nChief on Three Complaints,\n. Upholds His Action\nTWO COMPLAINTS AS TO\nSTEWART ALSO QUASHED\nThird to Be  Further Investigated;  Maber  Withdraws\nWhen Officers Called\nBourke Says C. M. S.\nCo. kas Not Agreed to\nBack Hotel Project\nTo the Editor of The\nDally News:\nSir:\u2014In regard to the account\nof the hotel project ln Trail in\nwhich my name Is mentioned,\nappearing ln your Issue of February isth, I would like to state\nthat it is absolutely untrue that\nihe Consolidated Mining dc Smelting Company of Canada had\nagreed   to  back   the  project.\nROWLAND    BOURKE.\nNelson,   B.C.   Feb.   16.\nSERIOUSLY CUT\nThree complaints against Chief of\nPollce Thomas H. Long as a police officer, and an equal number against Sergeant Alex Stewart, formally filed with\ntbe pollce commission Tuesday, were\ndealt with by the police commission\nyesterday afternoon, sitting ln camera\nThe three complaints against Chief\nLong and two of those against Sergeant\nStewart we*e decided in the negative\nruled out. The third complaint\nagainst Sergeant Stewart was deemed\nworthy of further inquiry, which will\nbe held at the next meeting.\nAfter one complaint against Sergeant\nStewart had been disposed of, and when\nthe majority of the commissioners decided to call ln the two officers to hear\nwhat they had to say in respect to the\nothers, Commissioner R. H Maber withdrew from the sitting, the balance of the\nbusiness being done by Mayor R. D.\nBarnes, as chairman, and Commiwloner\nW. T. Choate, who constituted a majority.\nThe complaints, which were all typ^d\netid slgifed, and drawn In a formal manner, Included those made verbally at a\npublic session of tbe old commission be*\nfore the civic elections, and others,\nmade within the 30-day period the new\ncommJ^sldn\" ttsed on January 17 for receiving charges against Sergeant Stewart, ln the absence of wblch his reinstatement was to be made permanent.\nAfter     yesterday's     session.     Mayor\nBarnes, on behalf of the commissloh, issued the following summary of the proceedings:\nOFFICIAL\nSTATEMENT\n\"Pursuant to the action of the police\ncommission in fixing a period for the\nreceipt of formal charges against any\nmember of the Nelson pollce force, and\nreinstating Sergeant Alex Stewart for 30\ndays pending the filing of formal\ncharges against him, six complaints \u2014\nnot charges\u2014wero filed with the clerk\nof the pollce commission, Tuesday, three\naffecting Chief Long, and three affecting Sergeant Stewart. A meeting of the\ncommission was called for this aftern-\nnoon at 4 o'clock, to go into these complaints, the three commissioners belnr.\npresent.\nComplaint No. 1, signed by P. J.\nSheran, against Sergeant Stewart, was\nof such a private nature that the majority of tbe commissioners decided that\nlt had nothing whatever to do with the\nContinued   on    Page   Two.)\nMr.   Gates   Falls   Onto   Saw;\nHand Nearly Severed; Ley\nIs Badly Cut\nLIQUOR POLICE\nST\nColonel MeGugan Says Govern\nment Paid $300,000 in Four\nYears' Time\nVICTORIA, Feb. 15.\u2014In four years'\ntime the \"secret fund\" of the liquor\ncontrol board's pollce force reached the\namazing total of $300,000. according to\nstatements made to the public accounts\ncommittee of the legislature by Colonel\nDonald MeGugan, assistant commissioner, and head of the liquor board law enforcement department. In addition to\nthis Impressed fund, heavy expenditures\nwere made in maintaining the paid officers, and in meeting legal expenses\nand other liabilities. Then, too, municipalities were assessed by the pollce in\nconnection with work done within their\nborders by the provincial sleuths. The\nfigures were only provided from October 1, 1023. to September 30, 1927. H. D.\nTwlgg, Conservative, asked for the production of additional figures back to\n1921 In an effort to arrive at the total\n\"under cover\" pollce system of tbe provincial government's liquor board. The\n\u2022300,000 had been entirely handled by\none man, Oeorge Miller, an inspector of\nthe board.\nMan Wanted for\nMurder Arrested\nin Edmonton Theater\nEDMONTON. Alta., Feb. 15.\u2014Oeorge\nEdward Jackson, wanted for the murder of Mrs. Nellie Pendleton at Was-\nkateneau, Alta., on Tuesday afternoon,\nwas arrested ln a local theater at 4:30\np.m., today. City police officers effected the arrest.\nTK1 E   Kill    IN   Ml KIH II\nCHARGE,   ST.   JOHNS\nST. JOHNS, Nfld., Feb. 15.\u2014A grand\nJury has brought ln a true bill In the\ncase of Charles Williams of Pools Cove,\nFortune bay, charged with the murder\nof his step-father, William Nurse, of the\nsame place, on November 22 last. Ths\ntrial will begin on Monday. It Is alleged that following a quarrel over i\nland claim, Williams shot Nurse.\nHAU OIK. IK . Feb. 1.1.\u2014Slipping\non t he show as he was sawing\nwood and falling onto a power saw,\nV. M. ft at eg, rancher here, had his\nright hiind nearly severed at the\nwrist and received a bad cut on the\nout-ride of his right knee about\n10:30 this morning. He was taken\nIn to Kootenay Lake General hos-\nplt.it at Nelson on the steamer\nkuskanook tonight.\nNeighbors rendered\" first aid to\nthe ligurert man tmtll Iff. Majrtf o*\nProcter arrived. The doctor deemed\nII wiser lo send tbe man Ih on the\nboat, nit her than hy motor, on account of the rough condition of the\nronrf-**. Hr. J. ll. Bennett of Nelson\nIs attending the man at the Iio*-\npihil.\n.Mr. Qetee Is well known In the\ndistrict, bavin* resided here for V!\nyears.\nI THE MEA\nNew Impost in Connection With\nGasoline Tax, States the\nPremier\nVICTORIA, Feb. 15.\u2014Although the\nbudget last week announced taxation\nreductions, Premier MacLean on Wednesday Introduced an entirely new Impost. This surprise measure is In connection with the gasoline tax which ls\nappearing under a new act to prevent\nIts attack under circumstances similar\nto the Fuel Oil tax. The surprising inclusion ln the new act. however, is the\nimposition of a licence fee on every\nperson who sells gasoline. This compels the vendors, who are now acting as\nunreimbursed tax collectors for the government, to pay tl a year for doing the\ncollecting.\nFLORENCE VOTE\nLl\nletter Company WiU Liquidate\nand Get 1,200,000 Shares\nfor Title\nSTOBIE FORLONG & CO.\nUNDERWRITE NEW ISSUE\nEighteen Applications\nOnly for Revaluation of\nSoldier Lands Dealt With\nOTTAWA, Peb. 15.\u2014Seven thousand,\neight hundred and elghty-slx soldier\nsettlers have applied for the revaluation\nof their lands under the act passed at\nthe session of parliament, lt was shown\nIn a return tabled in the house of\ncommons today. Of these applications only 18 have been dealt with\nThese were in the province of Saskatchewan and a reduction of 32^ per\ncent   was  given.\nLast year during thc collection period\nended June, 85.4 per cent of the\namount due was collected on soldier\nsettler   loans.\nHinchliffe Backs the\nWoodward Move for a\nSubsidy Western Coal\nVICTORIA, Feb. 15\u2014 Led by Charles\nWoodward, the senior member for Vancouver, the legislature Is discussing an\nendeavor launched by Mr. Woodward to\nsecure from the federal government\nsubsidy on western coal moving across\nCanada to the markets of the east.\nStrong' indorsement of the proposal was\ngiven by Joshua Hinchliffe, Conserv\nattve, Victoria, who declared that the\nsuggestion was one of the most statesmanlike and effective that had come before the legislature ln a long time. H.\nG. Perry. Prince Oeorge, Is continuing\nthe debate.\nJuvenile \"Beer Keg\nBurglars\" Rounded Up\nby Police at Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG, Peb. 15\u2014A new and\nnovel gang of Juvenile bands, \"beer\nkeg burglars\", have been rounded up\nby the police. The gang consisted of\nsix  youths.\nThey are alleged to have broken Into\nseveral homes and clubs throughout\nthe city, stealing beer kega and cases\nof   empty   bottles   and   sold   tbem.\nPart of Money by New Financing Will Go to Develop\nl-ake Shore\nAcquisition of the well-known Lake\nShore property of the Alnsworth camp,\nby the Kootenay Florence Mining company, wlll be effected, ln consequence\nof action taken at a general meeting\nof the Kootenay Florence company\nheld ln Nelson Tuesday, when a resolution to take over the Lake Shore\nwas  carried.\nUnder the agreement made, the Lake\nShore company wlll go into liquidation, and wlll deliver a dear title to the\nKootenay Florence company in return\nfor 1.200.000 shares of Kootenay Flor-\nenoa stock.\nStoble Forlong & Co., wlll underwrite\ntbe first 800,000 shares at 2ft cents,\nand a second block of 300,000 shares\nat 40 cents, leaving 100,000 shares tn\nthe treasury.\nCOMPANY IN STSLONG\nPOSITION\nR. B. Lamb reported $53,000 In the\nbank to tbe credit of the Kootenay\nFlorence, with all bills and payrolls\npaid  to  date.\nThe new financing will place ln tho\ntreasury a sum of $370,000, of which\n150.000 will be spent ln developing the\nLake   Shore   property.\nIt was stated that the company wis\ngoing ahead with the power line, which\nIs to serve lhe Kootenay Florence mine\nwith city of Nelson power, to be completed by May I. Other betterment*,\ninclude new compressor, and new hunk-\nhouses   and   dining   room.\nShareholders expressed keen appreciation of the advent of eastern capital\ninto the province for mining Investment.\nTO\nMen Off  During Disaster Receive Full Pay for Time Lost;\nCommission to Investigate\nTIMMINS. Ont., Feb. 16.\u2014With the\nofficial announcement today that\nwork at the Hoilinger mine would bo\nresumed here tomorrow and that all\nthose who had been Idle due to the\ntragedy which took a toll of 39 miners,\nwould receive full pay for the days on\nwhich they were not working, the disaster which befell this northern mining\ncommunity last. Friday and extended\nwell Into the present week, was passing  into history.\nOnly the process of cooling the rock\nIn the neighborhood of the stope\nwhere the blaze had Its origin remains.\nA commission will Investigate the\ndisaster at thc behest of the Ontario\ngovernment while the Hoilinger company ls undertaking an Inquiry Into\nthe cause of the fire.\nInquest Into Deaths\nof Hoilinger Victims\nOff Until Tuesday\nTIMMINS, Ont., Feb. 15.\u2014The Inquest into the death of the victims\nof the Hoilinger disaster this afternoon\nwas further adjourned until Tuesday\nnext. Today the Jurors were taken\ndown the mine on an inspection trip\nof the workings and on their return\nto the surface, lt was arranged to\nmeet again on February 21.\nThe Weather\nProm  the  Dominion  Meteorological\nOfllce,   Victoria.\nMln. Max.\nNELSON      29\nVictoria       38 45\nVancouver    33 44\nKamloops       32 42\nBarkervllle        22 34\nEatevnn    32 62\nPrince  Rupert   -   38 44\nDawson              4 18\nSeattle       34 44\nPortland    32 60\nBan Francisco    60 68\nSpokane    16 36\nPentlcton        12 40\nVernon       28 85\nOrand   Fork!       18 34\nKaslo    16 33\nCranbrook      6 30\nCalgary        10 40\nEdmonton     _.    4 32\nSwift   Current    _   10 34\nPrince Albert  _  8\nQu'Appelle       42 20\nWinnipeg        12 22\nForecast: Nelson and vicinity\u2014Continued fair, stationary, or higher temperatures.\n Tage Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 16, 1928\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhoa Superior Accommodation May Bf Obtained\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel ol the Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.00 UP\nRooms with Running Water.   Private Baths en Suite\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men, Lumber\nMen and Tourists.\nSpecial Sunday Dinner $1.00.        Rotarian Headquarters\nThe Most Comfortable Rotunda in the City.\nHUME\u2014H. A. Clements, W. O. Scott,\nW. P. Kaye, W. H. McKle. L. Rowder, A.\nM. Dod-, J. McRae. D WslUe. Vancouver; Mr. and Mrs. J. Binns. Kaslo; C. V.\nMorel. Lardeau; G. P. Elliot. Kelowna;\nO. Trlcklt, New Denver; N. T. MoOlalne\nJr., T. O. Berg. Sookan?: D. R. Bowen\nJ. C. Scholfleld. Toronto: Mrs. L. J. Edwards, L. J. Edwards, Nakusp; M. C. Donaldson, H. A. Stewart. Salmo; W. Shaw\nLethbrldge, the Bishop o( Kootenay\nVernon.\nSAVOY\nNELSON'S FINEST HOTEL ABSOLUTELY\nin Heat, Hot and Cold Running Water in All Boo\nMan. Rooms 'with Privat- Baths or Showers.\nNELSON.  B. C\nSAVOY\u2014Mrs. E. M. Miller, Ymir; E. | Beavermont. Miss Powell. Pern's; H.\nt nm,.*___\u00ab\u25a0 t\u00bb n niooonn Trull- c. W Sunderstorm, Burton; P. Gallop. Banli;\nL  Groutage, P. C. Gleason, Trail, C. w.   R   Q   parker  M  H   ufaloWt F. L, Bott,\nLlndlow, Lardeau; T. Grenery. Roseber-   Q    p    Atkinson,   Vancouver;   C.   Dean,\nry;   A.  Bourgeois,   Crescent  Valley;   D.   Creston; A. E. Kemdid, Revelstoke.\nAfter 39 years a member of the Manl-\ntowa, Wis., police force, Captain Charles\nDueno. wlll be retired on a pension.\nPaul Volkmann and George Geiger,\nfarmers of Beaver Dam, Wis., were killed\nwhen a train struck their automobile.\nIAMOND\ntMner\n** PILLS\nAN EXCELLENT LAXATIVE\nNew Treatment Stops Fits\nBrooklyn. N.Y.\u2014Wonderful results are\nreported by Epilepsy Colonies using a\nnew remedy that stops the1 most stub-\nbom cases ol Epileptic fits or spasms and\nis not habit forming, Any reader who\nsends name to Phenoleptnl Cu., Dept\n334, Box 71, St. Johns Place Station,\nBrooklyn, N.Y., wlll receive a. free booklet explaining this new guaranteed treatment    Writr ihrm todav.\nNow Enjoys Eating,\nThanks His Wife\n\"For years I suffered with stomach\ntrouble. Then, Bay wife got mp to\ntakP Adleril.n. Today J f-v] fino &ftd\neat  what I  like.\"\u2014Wm.  Opp.\nAdh-rika relievos Stomach grij* -hhI\nsourness in TEX manic... Acting on\nBOTH upper and lower bowel, it removes old waste matter you never\nthought was in your system. l_\u00bbet\nAdlerika give your stomach and\nbo we Is i RBAli cleansing and sot1\nhow much better you will feel. , It\n.vili surprise youl Poole Drug Con*-\nosny.\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nBot and cold water In every room\nSteam Heated.\nM. E. BARNETT, Prop.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nA Modern Brick Building\n616 Vernon Street, Nelson, B.C\nHot and Cold Water and Telephom\nIn All  Rooms.    Steam  Heated\nThroughout.\n\u25a0I. BLOMBERG, Prop. European Plan\nTake This When\n\"Flu\" Threatens\nI Don't watt until you're I\n*. \"down\" with La Grippe or *\n\"Flo\" before positively end-\nIng that cold with Buclcley'i\nMixture. The rery first dose\nof \"Buckley's\" proves ltt\nunique power to instantly\nrelieve any cough and remove the cause of the trouble\nKeep a bottle of \"BuckleyV*\nId the house. Druggists\neverywhere sell and guarantee it.\nW. K. Buckley, IJmlted.\n142 Mutual St* Toronto 3\nQUEENS\u2014J. Bentlte, Trail; J. J. Sherbinin, Crescent Valley; E. Summers, Mrs.\nD. McEwing. R. M. Reener, Salmo; H.\n,Tnc-\"-ni j. rt Kublski, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nPe Groat, Ymlr.\t\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nIND.R    THE    MANAGEMENT    OF\nWILLIAM   JONES\nOOOD, CLEAN  ROOMS.    REASONABLE\nRATES\nPHONI  75. 516   VERNON   ST.\nNEW ORAND \u2014 G. A. West, Kaslo\nMrs. J. Hltcher, Mrs. Nash. Renata; B\nAdams. H. Murray, Trail; Mrs. House\nRevelstoke; E. Glllstrom, Calgary.\nMADDEN HOTEL\nT.   MADDEN.  Prop.\nsteam   Heated   Room,   by   the   Ha.\nWeek  or Month.\nEvery  consideration  shown   to\nffuesta.\nCor.  Balier and Ward  *4*.   1.tu\u2014\nI    ___r  ;   MIXTURE\nActa like a tlcuh\u2014e single rip proret ll\nSTIRLING HOTEL\n2%   Blocks  East   of   Post   Offloe\nSteam Heated.   Hot and Cold Water\nRooms  by  day  or  week.\nAlso Furnished Suites\nP. H. BUSH, Prop.\nMADDEN\u2014M. Sopoff, Salmo; Katherlne McAvoy, Ymir; D. McLeod. W. Patterson. Winnipeg; H. J. Murphy, J. Louk-\nhoff, J. Maxwell. Sandon.\nTrail Hotels\nSteam Heated\nThroughout\nHot and Cold\nWater\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\n-.  I.. AND A. GROUTAGE. Prop.\n-Boi 6M Phone 283 Trail, B.C.\niilHU'i I     I\nW*l-L_!i\u00a3-\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA.  C.   TOWNER,   Proprietor.\nThe   Home of  Plenty\nFifty   Rooms  of  Solid  Comfort\nHeadquarters   for   Loggers  and   Miners.\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B. C\nA. P. LEyESQL'E, Prop.\nCOMPLETELY  RENOVATED AND  REFURNISHED\nHot and Cold Running Water European Plan\nSteam Heated Centrally Located\nRotary\nHeadquarters\nSample Rooms in\nConnection\nWATCH the price item\nsure,\nBUT scan the quality also.\nFROM maker to merchant,\nIN Men's and Boys' Wear,\nIS our proposition.\nCAN you buy more direct?\n\u25a0\"'\u25a0%\u2014 MENS\nWEAR\nARLSS\u201eM0|\nBOYS\n*\u00ab^ WEAR   -MP\noui-ioi 'nt High tftfr WSWo\nCOMPLAINTS RS\nTO CHIEF LONG\nARE DISMISSED\n(Continued  from pare one)\nefficiency of Sergeant Stewart    \u00bb    a\npollce officer.\nMARKK WITHDRAWS\n\"Mayor Barnes, chairman of the commission, stated he thought it was advisable that the officers against whom the\ncomplaints were made should be preaent\nto hear them.\n\"Commissioner Choate made a motion\non those lines, and the chairman also\nbeing in favor of It, It was carried.\n\"Commissioner Maber voted ln the\nnegative on this motion, refused to act\nfurther, and left the meeting.\n\"The police commissioners were greatly surprised at the action of Commissioner Maber, as the meetings so far had\nbeen harmonious, and stated they could\nnot understand his action, as they felt\nthey were dealing with the matters before the commission tn the way that\nwas best for all concerned, and regretted\nto see him take the action he did.\n\"Chief Long and Sergeant Stewart\nwere then called ln, and the business of\nthe meeting proceeded.\n\"Complaint No. 2, signed by Marcus\nMartin, related to the efficiency of Chief\nLong, as to running down certain offenders alleged to have thrown stones at\nmotor vehicles. After going into the\nmatter, and finding explanations made\nby Chief Long satisfactory ln regard to\nthe two cases mentioned, Commissioner\nChoate moved that the commission regard this complaint as not worthy of\nconsideration. The chairman concurring ln the motion, this complaint was\nthrown out.\nJARVIS NOT\nDELINQUENT\n\"Complaint  No.  3,  signed  by  P.  J.\nSheran,  wae  to the effect that Chief\nLong suspended Pollce Constable P. Jarvis after the liquor store fire laat February, on the ground that he was under\nt*e influence of liquor whtle on duty,\nand then reinstated him without any\ninquiry having been held by the police\ncommission.    Chief Long informed the\ncommisBton that this man was never a\npol'ce constable of the city of Nelson,\nI and at the time mentioned was acting\n' ab a special officer, only hired from day\nj to day.   He stated special officers had\n| in the past been engaged as needed by\nthe chief, wtth the concurrence of the\n| -\"T-avor,  their  employment    not    being\nj brought  before  the  commission.    The\nt chief also informed the commission that\nt on  investigating  the  case    of    Jarvis\n' further, he found that he had not been j\n( under the influence of liquor, but had\nl been    suffering    from   poisoning.    He \\\n, therefore  saw  no  reason    why    Jarvis j\nj should not be engaged again as special,\nofficer if the necessity arose, as he had'\n\\ alwavs found him efficient as an officer J\n; in the past, and considered him such at\nthe present time,\ni \"Commissioner Choate then moved |\nI that, ln view of the satisfactory explana- \\\nj tlon given by Chief Long, this matter '\u2022\n, be dropped, and. the chairman being ln\ni favor of the motion, it carried.\n\"Complaint No. 4, signed by Henry\nHughes, was to the effect that Chief\nLong had made some remarlre against\n: his character. The explanation of Chief\nLong on thlB matter was such that the\nsame action was taken as on the two\nprevious complaints against the chief..\nCOMPLAINTS\nAGAINST STEWART\n\"Complaint No. 5, Bigned by John\nHorning, was as to the efficiency of Sergeant Stewart ln regard to something\nsaid to have occurred in 1922 or 1923.\nAs the complaint was extremely vague,\nand of such age, Commissioner Choate\nmoved that no action be taken, and the\nchairman being in favor as well, this\nmotion was carried.\n\"Complaint No. 6, signed by Fred \"Urban, affecting Sergeant Stewart, was of\nsuch a nature thnt *h* commissioners\ndecided that some investigation was\nnecessary, and It will be brought up\nagain at the next meeting of the commission.\n\"The chief submitted his thirteenth\nannual report of the pollce department,\nwhich was received and filed.\n\"The commission adjourned at 6:50\no'clock.\"\nSEE SCENE OF\nE\nPassages Sooty and Still Hot\nFrom  the  Hoilinger\nFlames\nSMELL OF BURNED\nWOOD QUITE STRONG\nWater Playing Over Spot; Carbon Monoxide Was Most\nDeadly\nNational Parks Are Not\nAffected by Return of\nRaUway Belt Lands\nVICTORIA, Peb. 15.\u2014Heturn of the\nrailway belt landi to provincial Jurisdiction by the Dominion government\nwlll not affect the National parks contained ln the area, such as the Toho,\nRevelstoke. and Glacier, lt waa revealed\nhere today. These WIU remain under\nfederal Jurisdiction and the province\nhaa no desire to take over administration of the areas, It waa stated.\nThe status of the National parks was\nmade known ln connection with legislation introduced to give the governm.nt\npower to cancel park reserves. Opposition to the bill, which has developed,\nmay result ln Its being amended or\nwithdrawn.\nNELSON'S BEST CAFES\nROYAL  CAFE\nClassic Restaurant\nRefinement and Delicacy Prevail\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\nLuncheon 11:30 to 2  _ \u201e  35c\nSpecial  Dinners 5:30  to 8  85c\nWe specialize in Chop Suey and\nNoodles\nPHONE   182\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320 Baker Street, Nelson. B.C.\nOPEN  DAV  AND  NIOHT\n11:30 to 2:30, Special Lunch  36c\n6:30 to 8:00 p.m. Supper  35c\nPHONE   154\nA WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nFinest Equipped Restaurant ln the City\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\nSPECIAI-\u2014Ice    Cream,    Soda    Water\nand Hot Drinks.    Nice clean furnished\nrooms, hot and cold water.\nWe Cater to Private Parties\nEvidence Winds Around\nMan Charged With the\nMurder of \"His Girl\"\nCAMBRIDGE. Mass., Peb. 15. \u2014 The\nprosecution today rested its case in the\ntrial of Joseph P. Buckley of Weston,\nformerly of Halifax. N.S., for the murder of Grace Mills of Waltham, Immediately after Dorothy Mills, sister of the\nslain girl, had collapsed while under\ncross-examination. Dorothy had been\ncalled as a government witness.\nGrace Mills was shot and killed while\non an automobile with Buckley on November 15 last. Buckley claimed she\ndied as a result of a suicide pact, that\nshe fired the first Bhot Into her own\nbody and that he fired the second on\nher plea that he \"finish her.\" Buckley\nshot and seriously wounded himself.\nDorothy Mills testified that she had\nheard her sister tell Buckley to cease\ncalling on her, and that at her sister's\nbirthday party Buckley became angry\nwhen another young man gave her sister a present, and said \"If I can't have\nher no one else can.\"\nTIMMINS, Ont,, Feb. 15.\u2014Newspaper men assigned to the duty of\ncovering the Hoilinger mine disaster\nwere given an opportunity this afternoon of surveying for themselves\nthe scene of the fire, the reawms\nwhy no extensive underground blaze\ncould be anticipated and the efforts put forward to subdue the\nfire nnd rid the mine of Its smoke\nand gas.\nOf (lie 100 miles or so of subterranean tunnels, the group con-\n.Ittcted by John Knox, assistant\ngeneral-manager, and C. O. William*, mine superintendent, explored one mile, the trip taking\nthem to 55A stope on the 550-foot\nlevel and embracing a circuit of\nthe Immediate vicinity. It was at\nthis stope No. 12 cross cut between\nthe fifth and sixth levels, that,\nthe fire broke out.\nTHROW; 11   TUNNEL\nStepping out of the cage on the fifth\nlevel the party proceeded through the\npassage hewn out of the solid rock\nand timbered at intervals to M4, one\nof thc principal tunnels. While both\nwidth and height of the passages varied\nconsiderably, these appeared to be\nabout seven feet between the walls and\nabout the same from floor to roof. In\nthe middle of the floor ls the narrow\ngunge trolley line leading to all parts\nof the workings, while overhead are\nthe compressed air lines, the wires\nfor the electric lighting system and\nfor operating the trolley. Hoilinger Is\na wet mine and this was amply disclosed ln the stream that flowed along\nthe sides of the light railway and\ndripped down the rockwalls. It was\nnot until No. l crosscut was reached\nthat evidences of the fire began to\nbe revealed. The smell of burned wood\nwas strong although there were no\nsigns of charred timber. But in No.\n12 crosscut a few feet further on, the\nfull extent of the blaze was exposed. i\nTHICK WITH SOOT\nThe roof of the tunnel rose higher i\nand on all aides the walls were thick:\nwith soot, a deep coating stretching\nevery whore. Number 55A stope ls about i\n60 feet or so up from M54. It ls a\nyawning cavernous opening ln the rock\nwhich extends inward for about 40 feet\nand downward to the next level about\n100 feet below. The stope ls excavated\nfrom the solid rock as the miners followed the ore, thc rocked being dragged\nupward to the level. Originally, however, the opening Into the stope waa\nno more  than  a small  hole. j\nArthur Brlgham, general manager,\ntold newspaper men on Monday that\na mine inspector could pass and repass lt continually without detecting\nthe   contents   below.\nThe work of cooling tho rock Is now\nbeing carried on. The miners were\noperating hoses and tons of water were\nbeing poured in. The air ln the vicinity\nof the stope was somewhat warmer than\nln other parts of the mine, but there\nwas no Indication that the fire was yet\nalive. Further into the workings beyond 55A slope, there had been no\ntrouble with smoke, lt was explained.\nAll' of the casualties there were due to\nthe carbon monoxide.\nOAfl WAS\nDEADLY\nThe operations of the special rescue\ncrew showed themselves everywhere.\nTheir work had been progressive. Men\nequipped with the special masks had\ngone forward erecting brattices or canvas screens in the main tunnel. As they\nput up these, the compressed air was\nblown through that section until the\nparticular part was clear of both smoke\nand gas.\nCarbon monoxide' gas, lt was explained, was deadly when Its proportion\nIn relation to fresh air reached four-\ntenth of 1 per cent. On Sunday when\nthe Pittsburgh crew began operations,\nthey found by scientific test that the\npresence of gas was l3i per cent, a condition which gave a man only three\nminutes of life.\nMEMORY OF II\nEARL OF OXFORD\nParliament  Pauses  and  Party\nLeaders Express Tribute to\nGreat British Leader\nDeclares War\n\"Fruit-a-ti W-*l* Enomj\nof DyspepaU\nST. URSULE, QUE. \u2014\"For tarn\nyeen I cmrtd not *fteet food.\nNow I Mt like a new ma*.\nFrult-a-tlvea relieved ma completely.\" Joa. Martin.\nOur way of living lay a moat\nof ua open to recurrent attacks\nof dyepepala and kindred ailments. To remedy thla, tha\nregular use of Frurt-a-tlvet la\nhighly recommended.\nTha gentle, natural at inflation of the bowela and digestive\nsystem far tha fruit juice attracts and tonics In Frult-a-tlvea\nsoonhea la bothersome and painful digestion. Try It. Sold by all\ndruggists\u201425c andMc par bog.\nOTTAWA, Feb. 15.\u2014The prime minister at the opening of the houae this\nafternoon rose to suggest that the\nhouse should pause ln the midst of\nits duties to pay a tribute to the memory of Lord Oxford and Asquith. Mr.\nKing reminded the house that Lord\nOxford's career extended over tbe\ngreater part of half a century and that\nhe had held the poet of prime minister continuously for a longer period\nthan any who had ever held that office.\nAs to his part In the war, Premier\nKing stated that the burden of responsibility affected the constitution\nof the former prime minister of Britain and hastened hts death. It was\nfitting that members of the Canadian\ncommons should Join with the members\nof Westminster ln extending sympathy\nto the people of Great Britain for the\ngreat void that had been created.\nBENNETT   PATS   HONOR\nHon. R. Bfc Bennett, leader of the\nopposition, said that lt fell to the\nleader of the house, the premier, to extend the sympathy of Canada. On behalf of the opposition he desired to\nJoin in the sympathy that had been\nexpressed.\nThe prime minister, Mr. Bennett\nsaid, may feel that he was a worthy\ndisciple of Mr. Asquith because the\nlatter had held office for some time\nby aid of the two conflicting groups\nin the house. Mr. Asquith had been\na great scholar, a great orator and had\nwell maintained the noble traditions\nof parliament. The Empire had lost\na very fine citizen, but he had left\nbehind  a  most  inspiring  legacy.\nRobert Gardiner, United Farmers of\nAlberta, speaking on behalf of his\ngroup, joined in the tribute to Lord\nOxford.\nf\u2014my        FOR   SKIN   OISE-*\n-oolha-Salv;\n)Thc GudtH\n5oolhindHe\u00bblini    \u2022\nconsist of the statement that by re\nvatlon as laid down thete ls Intend*\nbe no use of sacrament other t,\nChrist himself commanded: namely,'\nby faith ln receiving the same \"ve\nfed the spiritual food of the preo\nbody and blood of Christ.\"\nThe house of clergy also passu\nresolution requesting the bishops\nconsider the possibility of changing\nform of Invocation ln the prayer\nconsecration ln the communion eer\nThe vote was 75 to 61.\nAnother motion carried requested\nbishops to make further provision\nseoure the right of the clergy anc li\nwho desire to do so, to use the b- ot\ncommon prayer ln whole or in par' '\nIS\nBY\nE, CLERGY\nDuring 1927 production of cigarettes\nIn United States Increased 8.6 per cent\nover 1926, totaling 07,176,607,484.\nBYELECTION  CALLED\nLONDON, Feb. 15.\u2014The byelection In\nIlford, due to the death of Sir Frederick Wise. Conservative, who died on\nJanuary 27, 1928, after having represented the riding from 1920, wlll take\nplace on February 23.\nThe candidates are: Sir Oeorge Ham-\n| llton. Conservative; C. R. Degruchy,\nLabor, and A. S. Comyns Carr, k.C,\nLiberal.\nConsiderable Heckling; Ask the\nHouse Bishops Consider Addition to Rubric\nLONDON, Feb. 15.\u2014\"Self-denial in the\nmatter of speaking\" was, at the request\nof the Dean of Westminster, the order\nof the day when the house of clergy\nof the Church of England assembly resumed discussion of the revised prayer\nbook today, and finally adopted the\nfourth rubric, dealing with administration of the sacrament.        .\nThere was considerable heckling, however, during discussion of the Bishop\nof Middleton's motion to request the\nhouse of bishops to Introduce rubrics\nto the effect that the elements be so reserved that worshippers would regard\nthem as outside the area of ceremonial\nobservance. This was designed to avoid\nthe practice of some clergy and servers\nshowing marked acts of reverence to the\nreserved sacrament during ordinary services.\nThe motion was carried by a vote of\n93 to 84.\nANOTHER\nMOTION\nThe Bishop of Middleton succeeded In\ngetting another motion carried, requesting the house of bishops to consider an\naddition to the fourth rubric providing\nagainst the use of the sacrament \"except as Christ commanded.\" This motion was Identical with one introduced\nIn the house of laity by Mrs. Crelgh-\nton, widow of a former Bishop of London, and carried.   The addition would\nTHE  GUMPS\u2014LOOK WHO'S HE\nPurchasers of Hard\nLiquor in Winnipeg\nCarry \"Staff\" Ho\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 15,\u2014Purchasers\nhard liquor got a surprise here toda\nInstead of having to wait for the\nlivery man to bring their purch\nhome, they were permitted to c\nthem. It was not expected thst\ncash and carry system would start i\ntomorrow, but the new order of\nwas put Into effect at the main gov\nment store today.\nAt 10 o'clock tomorrow mornln?\nthe Winnipeg liquor stores will be\ncrating on a cash and carry basts.\nNERVOUS DYSPEPSIA\nTORTURED   HER\nTOR 7 YEA\n\"I wouldn't take $10,000 to feel\ndid before I got Tnnlac.\" writes T\nGertrude Lupson, 33 Becker St.. Lot).\nOnt. \"I don't believe any woman \u25a0\nsuffered more than I did from Nen\nDyspensia. I would no all dav with\nnourishment and suffered so with c\npains and dizzy spells that I could\nsleeo. Many days. I was so wea\ncould not get out of bed.\nA druggist advised me to try Ta;<\nand all the monev in London could\nbuy the good It has done me. I ga.\n37 pounds: the chest, nains di*-innea\nI eat three hearty meals a day and nt\nhave a dizzy spell. Mv nerves\nstrong and the care of mv eight child\nahd my house \u25a0\u00a3._\u00a3_ pleasure since T\nlac gave me bscc my streneth. I wc\nadvise every mother ta use Tanlac.\"\nRoots, herbs and barks\u2014these are\nIngredients of Tanlac\u2014nature's t\nmedicines for the sick. Get a ,bo\nfrom your druggist today. Your mo\nback if it doesn't help you.\nTanlac\n52 MILLION BOTTLES US1\nAching,\nSwollen Feet\nMoney Back If Moone's Em\naid Oil Doesn't Do Aw\nWith All Soreness, Swell\nand Distress in 24 Hour,*.\nTwo or three applications of Moo\nEmerald Oil and ln fifteen minutes\npain and soreness disappears.    A\nmore applications at  regular inter\nand the swelling reduces.\nAnd best of all, any offensive c\nls gone for good\u2014It's a wonderful .\nmula\u2014this combination of east l\noils with camphor and other antisfp\nso marvelous that thousands of hot\nare sold annually for reducing van-\nor swollen veins.\nEvery  good   druggist  guarantees\nvery   first  bottle  ot  Moone's Emm\nOH to end your foot troubles or . r\nback.\nIt\nHas\nGreater\nRichness\nMrs.   R.  H.  Bowman  writes us\nletter:\n\"We came here from Ontario 1\nthe midst of a Made-ln-B.\u00bb\ncampaign. My husband ls\ngrocery salesman, and he ht\ntaught me what buying a loo\nproduct means to a oommunlt\nBut Pacific Milk can make 1\nown way. After using a tin\nfound it so rich that I needs\nno other reason to maKe ft\nwant It. It improves my cool\ning.\"\nWe are very glad to get this lette\nPACIFIC MILE\nFactorta  *t   miner  MHl   AMotifc\n\"BUILD B. C.-'\n TBE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 16, 1928\nPage ThW\nEIGHTHS\n1ET SURVIVE\nJIL PLAY\nFtfllt Round President's Knock-\noat < '.uipetttion Starts on\nTBAIJ,, B.C., J*_b. 15.\u2014Kjht rlnka\nsurvived play on tha fourth round of the\nman s curling club President's knockout\nwm'jetitlon tonight, and will contest\nth* fifth alone on Monday.\n\/'The results were:\nStiles beat Dodimead 10-7, Jackson\nneat Palmer 11-7, Klnnis beat Wlll-\nJras 18-4, Woodburn beat Baldrey 9-3,\nT\u00bb\u00bbn beat Shaw 19-7, Twaddle beat\nHannay 14-8, Crulckshank beat Kerr 10-\n*, O. Murray beat A. Balfour 9-8.\nTomorrow's match.s will be confined\nto play on the Patrons' knockout competition.\nThe draw ls:\nAt 8:30 o'clock\u2014McDonnel vs. Williamson, sheet 1; Hazlewood vs. P. R.\nMcDonald or Craig, sheet 2; Caldlcott\nvs. Truswell, sheet 3: Ritchie vs. winner\nCoghlln vs. J. Forrest match, sheet 4.\nAt 8:S0 o'clock\u2014W. Porreet vb. Hunter, sheet 1; Harkness vs. J. Campbell,\nsheet 2; Blaylock vs. winner of McKay\nvs. Crowe match, or Flngland, sheet 3\nDewdney vs. McLeod, sheet 4.\nTrail News of the Day;\nThis column la conducted by Miss\n-\u25a0 A. Thompson of Tadanac. All\nnews of a social nature, lncludlfur\nreceptions, entertainments, personal\nItems, marriages, etc.. occurring ln\nTrail and Tadanac, will appear ln '\nthis column. Just -phone Miss !\nThompson at her residence. She\nwlll also handle any advertisements\nappearing under Trail News of tba\nTRAIL, B.C.. Peb. 16\u2014Miss Smith of\nTrail was a visitor to Kelson Tuesday.\n...\nA. O. Wilson of Trail was a Melson\nvisitor Tuesday.\n...\nR. Sharp of Nelson arrived In tha city\nthis evening.\n...\nOn Tuesday evening, ln the Parish\nhall, ths membera of the A.Y.T.__ held a\nvalentine party. The hall was very artistically decorated with red and white\nstreamers. During the evening refreshments were served. The main feature of\nthe evening was dancing, and a moat\nenjoyable evening was spsnt by thoee\npresent,\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. N. D. B. Larmohth left Tuesday\nmorning for Spokane, where she will be\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. Trone for the\nnext week.\nOordon Walllnger of the Consolidated\nMining is Smelting company's staff left\nTuesday evening for Vancouver.\n...\nHockey Pans! Celebrate. Friday's\nchampionship game afterwards at the\nShifters Dance, Elks' Hall, Riverside\n(2321)\nAlso Steel Barge for Kootenay\nLake Service Included in\nC.P.R. Program\nCOALING PLANT ALSO\nPLANNED FOB TADANAC\nColeman   Announces  Extensive\nImprovements Over Western Lines\nABANDON  FLIGHT\nHAVANA, Feb. 15\u2014Abandoning his\nprojected flight from Chicago to Santiago, Chile, to demonstrate the economy of airplane travel, Joseph P. Don-\nuella-t left here today for Key West\non the first leg of his return trip to\nChicago.\nHOTEL\nFully Modern\n39 Rooms\nBeer Parlor\nBiggest Paying Proposition\nin Interior.\nFor a Few Days Only\n$15,000\nH. A. Hill\nRossiand\nPhone 39        Box 177\nBUSY BEE\nSECOND-HAND   STORE\nA shipment of nice rugs  Just\narrived.   Red, Oreen and assorted\ncolors.    Just what you want for\nyour floors.\nPHONE \u00a301.   3rd Ave., East Trail.\nTrail & Rossiand\nBUSINESS\nCOLLEGE\nTRAIL   PARISH   HALL\nNOW OPEN\nDay Classes 10 a.m. to 12:30\nand 3 to 4:30 p.m.\nNight Classes, Mondays and\nThursdays,   7   to   9:30   p.m.\nPhone Trail 552, or write General Delivery, or Box 281, Ross-\nland.\nVERNON COLE,\nPrincipal.\nORGANIZED, TBI\nExperiment Being Conducted at\nMemorial Hall in Boys'\n\u2022  Work\nTRAIL, B.C., Tab. 15.\u2014An experiment\nln boys' work, organized play and direction of group games, athletic activities\nand, later. Insertions! tallu, the whole\nhaving for Its subject the development\nof virile, ambitious youths and cltlaens\nof the future, ls to be started In Memorial hall this week.\nBetween 50 and 60 boys, ranging from\n10 to 15 years, who are at present unattached to any organization doing similar work, are being taken ln hand. They\nwill he divided Into groups which will j\nbe led by older boys specially Qualified\nfor leadership, and will, nt first, be\ncoached ln organized play at Memorial I\nhall gym. In the summer, outdoor activities will, of course, be pursued, probably with baseball, football, swimming\nand life-saving Instructions, aa the big\noutlet.\nOn Friday a number of them wlll be\nstarted off at the gymnasium with the\nformation ot an indoor baseball league.\nHours are being set apart for them,\nfrom 6 to 7 o'clock on afternoons yet to\nbe designated, and Saturday mornings.\nTRAIL SMELTER MAN\nJ1URT IN FALL\nTRAIL, B.C., Fob. 16.\u2014T. Leas of Ce-\nciar avenue, former hotel proprietor and\nnow a Consolidated employee, ls in hospital suffering from considerable bruising, the result of the fall of about 20\nfeet which he had while working on\nMonday,\nLEGION WILL ELECT\nON MONDAY IN TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C.. Peb. 15.\u2014Trail Legion-\naires are again ln the throes of electioneering. A complete new Blate of officers ls to be elected on Monday next.\nAccording to the nominations already\nmade, there will be stiff contests for the\npresidential chair and for several Important seats on the executive committee. The poll will be taken between 10\nin the morning and 7 at night.\nDROWNING VICTIM IS\nLAID AT REST, TRAIL\nTRAIL. B.C., Feb. 15\u2014The funeral of\nthe late Mrs. T. Ceremlelli, drowning\nvictim, was held at 3 o'clock this afternoon from the undertaking parlors of A.\nG. Graham. The pallbearers were C.\nLauriente. D. Balolse, D. Orlando, J. Le\nRose and F. Mario.\nToday's Matches in\nLadies' Curling, Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 15\u2014Tomorrow's\nmatches In the ladles curling club\nschedule competition wlll be: Mrs,\nMcDonald vs. Miss Kirby, sheet 1; Miss\nBrooke vs. Mrs. Buchan. sheet 2; Mrs.\nBlols vs. Mrs. Hazelwood, sheet 3; Miss\nMcCallum vs. Miss Bruce, sheet 4.\nROSSLAND NOTES\nROSSLAND, B.C., Feb. 15. \u2014 Arthur\nMilligan of Trail spent today in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022    #\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Kelderman spent\nMonday evening in Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Mary Dodds, nurse-In-training at\nthe Kootenay Lake Genera! hospital, has\nreturned to Nelson after visiting at her\nhome In this city.\nWINNIPEO, Man., Feb. ll\u2014New coal\nlng plants will be erected at Nelson and\nRt Tadanac, the rebuilding of an engine\nhouse at Nelson and building of a new\nsteel transfer barge for Kootenay lake,\nis Included ln the extensive program of\nbetterments announced by 8. D. C\nColeman, vice-president of western Unas\nC. P. R., today.\nln addition to increased trackage at\nthe head ol the lakes, Winnipeg, Calgary And Vancouver, In order to take\ncare of the ever-Increasing grain haulage, the program calls for a comprehensive increase in the capacity of the\nwestern shops, rock ballasting between\nWinnipeg and Port William, bridge replacements and new station houses,\ncodling plants and passing tracks.\nDETAILS\nThe details of the program follow:\nNew stations will be erected at Bradbury and at Russel, In Manitoba, at\nMcMahon, Armley, Sylvania, Lavert.\nNeHburg, Grant. Valley, Ruberouse\nRockglert, Coronach. Pox Valley anf\nCarmichael. in Saskatchewan. at-Queen*-\ntown and Hobbema. in Alberta.\nCoaling plants wlll be butlt at Elk\nhorn. Manitoba: at Hflrdlftty, Wilkie an-\nGoudle. In Saskatchewan; Vulcan, i-\nAlberta: and nt Crow'-1! Nest. Nelson an-'\nTadanac. ln British Columbia.\nThe engine house wlll be rebuilt p\nNelson, B.O.\nAdditional wasVout plants w'll b\u00ab I**\nBtalled at Port William. Keno-a a\u00abi \u2022\nCalgary, and a new power plant will b\nInstalled at Brandon.\nAutomatic block wlll b? installed b\u00b0\ntween Dunmore and Medicine Hat. between Indian Head and Grenfell. be\ntween Golden and Beavermouth, and p\ndistance of four miles immediate!'\neaat of Vancouver.\nMOM\nTEACKAG1\nTo provide for tbe ever increasing\ngrain traffic, additional trackage wil'\nbe constructed at Fort William and\nPort Arthur. Kenora yard will be very\nmaterially enlarged. Red Deer terminal\nwill' be extended. Additional trackage\nwill be provided at Ogden, Calgary and\nWinnipeg. At Va ncouver new track!\nwill be built to serve the company's\npiers and also to serve the grain elevators to be constructed near the second\nnarrows bridge. In addition, 14 new\npassing tracks will be provided ln the\nwest and  many others extended.\nImportant grade revision work will be\nundertaken   on  the  main  line  between\nBrandon and Sydney.\nNEW BARGE\nNELSON'\nA new transfer barge will be built\nat Nelson for service on Kootenay lake.\nAt Weston shops the capacity of the\nfreight car shops will he doubled by the\nbuilding of an extension. 305 feet by\n315 feet, which will be of concrete and\nbrick construction with steel girders and\ncolumn. The locomotive shop will also\nbe extended io provide for the larger\nlocomotives now ln service.\nThe rock ballasting program on the\nmain line between Winnipeg and Fort\nWilliam will be vigorously pressed and\nlt Is hoped to complete approximately\n100 miles during the year.\nA very extensive program of bridge re\nplacements will be undertaken, and approximately 250 miles of 100-pound steel\nwlll be placed in the main track west\nof Swift Current.\nfrail Rotarians\nHave History of\nRotary Examination\nTRAIL, B.C., Fib, 15.*\u2014Reports on\nprogress being made ln assisting crippled children hers\u2014the work specially\nadopted by Trail Rotary club as an expression of Its servioe to ths community\n\u2014was Um feature of ths club's weekly\nluncheon at the Arlington.\nT, W. Blngay, the newest member,\nproved to be the best informed on notary geography, and won the first prize\nin a competition on that subject. The\n\"prize\" was the honor of preparing the\nclub's next luncheon program. P. Levesque knew the least.\nnow ln storage must be moved by\nJune 30. It had been reported that\nthe Dominion government was planning\nto develop legislation to the point where\nonly the provincial government liquor\ncontrol boards would be able to import\nliquor, but the order came as a complete surprise to exporters here. If\nprivate warehouses are abolished importing and exporting business could con-\nwept: shs\nSays   Alberta   Should   Receive\nReplacement Value in Railway Offers\nfcDMONTON. Feb. 15.\u2014That the province of Alberta should receive the replacement value of the Edmonton. Dun-\nvegan & British Columbia and Central\nCanada railways was the declaration\nmade by Premier Brownlee during his\nspeech which dealt with the railway offers received by the Alberta government,\nIn the legislature Wednesday afternoon.\nThe governments' reply to the Joint offer of the Canadian National and Canadian Pacific railways would be \"We will\nnot accept.\"\nThe government ls prepared to await\nanother Joint offer from the railway\ncompanies, or eeparate offers, but In the\nmeantime will go ahead and operate the\nlines, confident that the value of the\nAlberta railways can be demonstrated,\nand satisfied that the replacement value\n*an eventually be obtained.\nIn concluding a forceful presentation\nof the railway situation and the government's stand on the various offers\nPremier Brownlee sounded a vigorous\n\u2022allying cry to the boards of trade.\nnewspapers, and every organization In\nhe province desirous of bringing about\n* successful solution of Alberta's rail-\nay problem, to stand togs-ther and cooperate toward the desired end.\nWish   to   Be   Exempt    From\nMarketing Control;  Leary\nQuestions Speakers\ntinue through suffrance warehouses operated by the Dominion government\nwhich provide facilities for storage ln\ntransit, but such freight must be\ncleared within 30 days. It is doubtul,\nIt Is said, Whether shippers would continue to use this port under such conditions.\nTwo warehouses tn Vancouver are affected   by  the   order.    There  are   also\nl\nseven  or  eight  licenced  private  warehouses ln the interior.\nA large parcel of whisky, totaling\n120,000 cases, reached Vancouver last\nweek, consigned to one of -the private\nhouses here, and ls being rushed to tbe\nwarehouse for storage before the and of\ntbe month. There arc said to be at\nleast 830,000 caeca of liquor to private\nbond ln the ctty at present.\nACCOUNTANT  ARRESTED\nREOINA, Sask., Feb. 15.\u2014A. E. Chant,\na former city accountant, wus arrested here today on a Vancouver warrant charging him with theft of a\nlarge sum.\" Chant returned to the city\nonly a few days ago from the coast\nand was visiting friends here when ar\nrested.\nFAVORITE   WINS\nNEWBURY. England, Feb. 15.\u2014J.\nParsonage's Master Billie, the favorite,\nwhich started at 2 to 1 against, won\nthe Newbury steeplechase over a course\nof three miles today. Twelve horses\nstarted.\nHealth department of Chicago announces epidemic of rabies among dogs\nhas spread to the cats.\nItPufeintheBeeF\n\"OXO\" Cubes save time and\ntrouble for the cook and are\nwonderfully economical. With\n\"OXO\" Cube, yesterday's left\novers can be made into dainty\nappetizing dishes and ordinary\nfare made more nourishing and\ntasty. Soups, sauces and pavies\ncan be made in a few minutes\nby adding a few I'OXO'lCubes.\nOXO LIMITED, SM St. Antofaw ftreet\nMontreal\nI\n a.\t\nVICTORIA. Feb. 15.\u2014\"Main line'\nTrcwers of vegetables, especially po-\natoes. want to be exempt from thf\n\u2022ulings of the committee of direction\n:t marketing, unless the authority oi\n'\u25a0hat body ls made effective over all thf\nprovince, argued E. Clark of Kamloop.*\nbefore the argrlculture committee this\nmorning, before that body went intc\ncommittee to consider its recommendation to the legislature on changes lr.\nthe Marketing act.\nC. S. Leary, Slocan, asked if it was\nnot the view of the growers of Kamloops district that \"the fruit growerf\nare trying to force thc potato growers\nunder the control of the committee.\"\nand Mr. Clark  replied  \"Exactly.\"\n\"The committee of direction is a\nprivate corporation, vested with great\npowers, and should be surrounded with\nmany safeguards,\" pleaded Mr. Clark.\nA. D. Paterson. Delta, pointed out that\nthc growers of his district asked 1 per\ncent to come under the act, and he believed that partial enforcement was not\nfair. R. W. Bruhn, Salmon Arm, remarked, \"The reason we are complaining ls mainly because all parts are not\ntaken in.\"\nPROMINENT    MASON    DIES\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 15.\u2014Dr, Alexander\nMclntyre, prominent ln educational\nand Masonic circles died suddenly at\nhts home here tonight. He was 65\nyears of age.\nBlackhand Case Is\nBeing Heard Welland;\nPrisoner Threatened\nWELLAND, Ont., Feb. 15.\u2014Welland\ncountry's first blackhand case in which\nGulseppe Itallanno of Niagara Falls Is\ncharged with extorting and the hearing\nof which consumed all day will go\nto the Jury Thursday morning, Mr.\nJustice McEvoy presiding at the spring\nassizes of supreme court having reserved\nhis address to the Jurors until tomorrow.\nW. M. German, counsel for Itallanno,\nasked for a postponement of the case\nshortly after it had opened today. The\nrequest was made because a letter had\nbeen read ln court threatening the\nprisoner that they \"would get him\" if\nhe  told  anything about  their society.\nThe prisoner told of being the Intermediary for two men who drove an\nAmerican car, who threatened him\nwith death, lf he did not make Mango\n\"come  across\"  with a sum  of money.\nWAREHOUSES ARE\nTO BE TABOOED\nOttawa Gives Notice to B. C.\nOperators; Can't Store Aft*\ner End of Month\nVANCOUVER. Feb. 16.\u2014Abolition of\nprivate liquor warehouses in Vancouver\nand with them, perhaps, the export\nliquor trade, ls forecast by an unexpected order from Jthe .mincer of customs at Ottawa. The order states that\nprivntr warehouses must not receive\nliquor after  February  -tf, and supplies\nSold\neverywhere\n\"From North and South, from East and West\nThe Valentines come and they're all addressed\nTo Plain Mr. York, so cheery and bright,\nThe chocolate he brings is such a delight.\"\n-Chuckles Plain Mr, York\no(\\orn,Yorlts.\nIf you want lo make a hit with your sweetheart,\nlet Plain York Chocolate be your Valentine.\nThia delicious plain chocolate is loved by sweet*\nhearts, old and young, for its smoothness, its\ndelicious, different flavour.\nMade by Rowntree's, world famous for quality,\nPlain York is a unique and better taste in chocolate.\nDINING and\nBED ROOM SUITES\nFebruary Furniture Sale\n8-Piece NoMar Walnut\nSuite\u2014Buffet 66 inches\nlong. No Mirror. Dining Table and 6 Chairs,\nSlip Pad Leather Seats.\nThis Suite is guaranteed not to be affected\nby dishes hot as boiling,\nliquids (hot or cold),\nacids, inks, etc., and is\noutstanding in durability and wear resisting properties.    Regular $280.   FEBRUARY SALE $209.50\n9-PIECE QUARTERED OAK\u2014Old English finish.    Last a lifetime.    Buffet 66\ninches long.   No Mirror.   China Cabinet, Extension Table and 6 Chairs, Slip\nPad Seats Leather.   Very massive legs.   Regular $425.00.\nFEBRUARY  SALE  PRICE      $337.50\n8-PIECE SOLID OAK SUITE\u2014Old English finish.    Regular $165.00.    FEBRUARY SALE PRICE     $128.00\n4-Piece large sized Bedroom Suite \u2014 Walnut\nDresser 44 inches,\nLong Mirror 32-in. x 27-\nin., large roomy Drawers, 2 Top Drawers; 6-\nDrawer Large Vanity,\nBow Foot Bed and\nBench. Reg. $265. FEB.\nSALE PRICE $197.50\n4-PIECE  SUITE\u2014Damaged  by  water, caused from leaky roof.    Regular price\n$345.00.    DAMAGED SALE PRICE    $202.50\n1 LARGE ODD DRESSER\u2014Walnut, 45-in. wide, Mirror 84-in. x 26-in., S large\nroomy drawers.   Regular $85.00.   DAMAGED SALE PRICE  $67.50\nStandard Furniture Co.\nComplete House Furnishers\nNELSON\\ B. C.\n Page Pour\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 16, 1928\nTHE   DAILY   NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sun-\nL7 by The News Publishing company,\nnlted, Nelson. B.C.\nBusiness letters should be addressed\nandck\u00bbclcs__and__ money   orders   made\nItSSS)   1\n ___M\nPayable to The News Publishing company, limited, and tn no case to Individual members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A.B.C.\nstatements of circulation mailed on\nIt-quest, or may be seen at the office of\nany advertising agency recognized by the\nCanadian Pnss association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy mall (country), per month ..|   .00\nPer year \u2014 \u201e    \u00ab.00\nBy mall (city), per year  13.00\nOutside Canada, per month _     .75\nPer year     7JJ0\nDelivered, per week       .35\nPer year ...._. _.  13.00\nPayable ln Advance\nMemberAudlt Bureau of Circulation\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1938.\nCongratulations to Coast\nCities\nCities of Vancouver, Victoria and New\nWestminster are to be congratulated on\nheading the lists of cities of the first,\nSecond and third class, respectively, of\nthe Pacific tier ot states and province,\nIn regard to fire preventive status.\nSouth  of  the  line  the  Victoria  fire\ndepartment    enjoys    a    special    fame,\nI   and   has   enjoyed   lt   for   many   years.\n' It Is extremely satisfactory to find\nthat British Columbia cities head all\nthree classes. In the opinion of the\nunderwriters   International   authorities.\nNo city ever suffered by reason of\nl   having wisely invested ln fire fighting\nequipment and service, whether award-\n['   ed distinguished honors or not, for this\nkind ot Investment pays Incalculable\n|    returns.\nMore Roads Opened to\nWinter Traffic\nThe\nLighter Side\nAUNT HET\n\"Pa ain't never snooped around\nthe kitchen to see lf I'm wasteful\nSince he done lt once an' I fed\nhim bean soup for ten days hand\nrunnin'\"\nInferior races; Those that will be\nleft after the next great war.\nJUDGE A MAN'S BRAIN POWER BY\nTHE AVERAKE OF THE COMMUNITY\nHE IS CONTENT TO LIVE IN.\nMoreover, the wages of sin ls higher\n'fe  insurance rates before death.\nBut think how many divorces there\nvould have been ln the old days if\nvlves hadn't been afraid.\nThe provincial department of pub-\nl He works ls clearing, or has cleared, the\nb *now from the Rossiand-Paterson hlgh-\np. way link, so that motor traffic from\nNelaon, Trail and Rossiand to spo-\n| kane, and vice versa, ls possible. Though\n| the snowfall of the early winter months\nwas abnormal, this road opening has\noccurred   earlier   than   ever   before.\nThis   is   excellent   work.\nIt would also be excellent lf the de-\nI' parturient would meet the request of\nthe Ymlr district mines and put the\nSnowplow over the road, from Nelson\nto Salmo, or through the entire Salmon\nValley. In this case, there would be\nImmediate use of the road for business purposes.\nThe time will undoubtedly come\nwhen lt will, be a matter ot course\nfor all roads, except, possibly, purely\nscenic ones, to be kept open for traffic ln winter. The department ls doing more than ever before ln this\nline, but let lt not halt In well doing.\nAmerican Rescue Car Helped\nat Hoilinger\nAction of the United States bureau\nnf mines ln loaning its special rescue\ncar fitted with oxygen tanks and special apparatus, for use for rescue work\nIn connection with the Hoilinger mine\nfire disaster has been appreciatively\nreferred to by Premier Ferguson of\nOntario. The car materially aided the\nwork  of  rescue.\nDisaster and sorrow may fall anywhere, and sympathy Is always International.\nThe people of Japan were touched\nbeyond measure when practically the\nwhole civilized world, and particularly\nCanada and the United States, rushed\nrelief supplies and made contributions,\nafter the terrible earthquake and fire\n\u25a0disaster that levelled great Japanese\ncities and took 300,000 lives.\nIn the United States the Red Cross\nsociety has taken as Its peacetime activity the maintenance of supply depots and relief forces for emergency\nuse ln disasters, and many times has\ndone distinguished work as the first\non   the   ground.\nThere has never been a great fire\nor other disaster ln Canada, but American contributions for relief have been\nj volunteered.\nAlimony:   The   reward   a  hard-boiled\n-.chemer gets for having picked an' easy\nmark.\nAn enemy Is Just like a friend, except that you don't understand him\nas well.\nCanadianism: Scolding people who\ndon't respect the law; yearning for a\ncar that can pass anything on the\nhighway.\nEvery rose has Its thorn. The nation\nthat has the most gold has the most\nantl-fat remedies.\nALMOST EVERYBODY HAS OOOD INTENTIONS, AND DOUBTLESS CAINS\nIDEA WAS TO REFORM HIS BROTHER\nABEL.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy   LAURA   A.   KIRKMAN\nSERVING  SALMON\ni\nTOMORROW'S MENU\nGrapefruit\nCereal\nCodfish Balls\nPop-Overs Coffee\nLuncheon\nJelly Omelet\nFruit  Salad\nRoils Cookies Cocoa\nDinner\nSalmon Souffle\nEscalloped Potatoes\nButtered  Beets\nLettuce French  Dressing\nLemon Meringue Pie\nCoffee\nThe following dishes may be made\nMther fro*n canned or left-over freshly\n-ooked salmon:\nSalmon \u2022ouffle\u2014Make two cups of\nhick white sauce (of milk, flour, butter\nind seasonings, following a thick white\nauce recipe on any reliable cook book)\nand Into this fold two cups of lightly\nflaked salmon freed from bones and\nskin. Add a drop of Wort-heater sauce,\nand one teaspoon of lemon juice, then\nfold ln the stiffly beaten whites of two\n:ggs. Scrape the mixture into a buttered baking dish. Mix one pint oC\nsoft bread crumbs with enough salad\noil to moisten the crumbs slightly, and\nsprinkle theae over the top of the dish.\nBake ln a moderate oven 30 to 40 minutes and serve at once, while still high\nand light.\nSalmon \"Chops\"\u2014Mix together two\ncups of flaked salmon and two cups of\nvery thick, hot white sauce. Add one\ntablespoon of onion Juice, one tablespoon of lemon Juice, two or three\ndrops of Worchester sauce and salt and\npepper to suit Individual liking, then\nturn this mixture Into a pan which contains a light layer of dry bread crumbs\nIn Its bottom. Stand the pan ln a cool\nplace so that the contents may become\nfirm. The mixture should be abut two\nInches ln depth. When cold and solid,\ncut out a two-inch square of lt for\neach croquette or \"chop,\" molding with\nthe fingers Into the desired shape, and\npressing ln more dry crumbs as you\nmold. Lay the little chops on a buttered or oiled pan, pour a Uttle more\nolive oil over the top of each croquette\nor chop, and bake ln a hot oven for 10\nto 15 minutes, or till well browned, then\nserve wtth lemon sltorr.\nTomorrow \u2014 Felt-Decorated Fancy\nwork.\nAnother thing you can bay with\nflowers Is that you think your sweetie\ntoo plump to be eating candy.\nAll things are relative, and the\nweather you whine about would make\nsome other community boast.\nNote to parents: The world's first\nboy went to bed\u2014and lt wasn't the\nfault of the neighbor's brats.\nWhen you no longer yearn to pass\nthe car ahead, and no longer care how\nmany pass you, there wlll be no more\nwars.\nSpring would be pleasant, however, lf\nthe road hog would go back into his\nhole for 40 days.\nCorrect this sentence: \"He carries\n100,000 life Insurance,\" aaid the gossip,\n\"but  never mentions It.\"\nTEN   YEARS   AGO\n\u00bb \u00ab\n(Prom The Dally News, Feb. 16, 1938)\nD. B. McEachern of Trail was a visitor\nto Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nDr. W. O. Rose was called to Harrop\nVesterday on a professional visit.\neee\nJ.'R. Marshall of Nelson has been officially reported wounded ln action at\nthe front, and Sapper R. C. Kerr of Ferine has been reported gassed.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nChildren's afternoon at the women's\nInstitute meeting yesterday was well attended. Those contributing to the program were Miss Arthur, Miss G. Keefe,\nMiss E. Morrison. Miss V. McQuarrle,\nMiss Halgh and Miss Rosle Halsay. The\ncommittee In charge was Mrs. H. H.\nPitts, Mrs. Blssett and Mrs. W. H. Walk-\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(From The Dally News, Feb. 10, IMS)\nThe Installation of the new board at\nthe city office of the British Columbia\nTelephone company, which was started\nJust before Christmas, has been completed. This is the fourth board Installed ln the 14 years there has been an office ln Nelson, and shows the rapid\nstrides being taken by this city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHoward Bush and Elizabeth Brady,\nboth of Nelson, were married last evening In St. Paul's church by Rev. J. T.\nFerguson.\nGeorge F. Motion left last night to attend a general meeting of coal agents\nst Bankhead. Alta.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nFrederick Cannell and Miss Annje\nMonler Davidson, both of Rlondel. were\ni.ian-led today at St. Saviour's church by\nf_ev. Fred H. Oraham.\nAmendment Calls for an\nEarlier Opening of the\nSpring Assize Court\nOTTAWA, Feb. 15.\u2014Third reading was\ngiven today to a bill amending thc\nsupreme act. Among other things the\namendments provide that the spring sittings of the supreme court shall open\non the fourth Tuesday ln April Instead\nof on the first Tuesday in May.\nThat Body\nof Yours\n\u25a0\/  MME*  W.  BARTON.   MD.\nRADIO PROGRAM\nPreventing Backache\nBecause you can bend your back\nbone which ls really a number of\nbones piled one oa top of the other,\nyou may be of the opinion that whether lt Is bent or straight does not affect your health In any way.\nNow although lt Is meant that you\nshould be able to bend lt. nevertheless\neveryone of these bones ts held one to\nthe other by means of cartilages between ,the bones, by ligaments, and\nby  muscles.\nNow ^bending forward, backward, or\nfrom sftle to side, Is the normal function of the spine, and the more bending that is done, < the stronger wlll\nthe muscles and ligaments become.\nHowever, lf one bending position ls\nheld for any length of time, then instead of development we get \"strain\"\non those particular ligaments and\nmuscles, and strain will mean pain.\nThis is what actually happens In\nmany oases of pain ln the lower back.\nPerhaps the individual is overweight,\nand the abdomen protrudes or hangs\nforward, thus pulling 'on the ligaments\nand muscles that are supporting or\nconnecting the bones of the spinal\ncolmun.\nOn the other hand, the individual\nmay be underweight and weak, and because he la weak, allows his body to\nsag forward, with the result that\nthese bones of the back are pulled\nforward, causing a strain on the ligaments and muscles holding them together. There is thus not only a\nstrain on the ligaments holding the\nbones of the spine together, but also\nthe ligaments holding bones of the\nhip together.\nYou aee everything is pulled by the\nheavy abdomen, or the slouching position of the weak  or  tired  Individual.\nI have spoken before about strapping\nup the huge muscles with adhesive\ntape, and of the benefits of supporting\nbraces, but I'd like to say a word\nabout   preventing   this   trouble.\nAfter all It is Just a matter of standing   and    sitting    properly.\nStanding with chin drawn ln, chest\nout, abdomen in, thighs slightly drawn\nback, and weight of body on the forepart  or   balls  of   the   feet.\nSitting with lower part of back well\nsupported, Beat, wide enough that at\nleast two-thirds of thigh Ib supported,\nand Juat high enough to let the feet\nrest firmly on the floor. This means\nthat your thigh and leg wlll form two\nsides of a squar.\nThere would not be so many backaches if we would stand and sit correctly.\nMrB. Anna Kemper, Oak Park, Chicago, was fined 5150 ahd costs as bookmaker.\nPatrolman Schalkhan of New York\nCity has recovered 105 stolen motor\ncars.\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY  16\n(Pacific Standard Time Throughout)\nCKWX. Vancouver, B.C. (410.7 m.)\u2014Ilia p.m., organ recital from the Capitol theater, Sidney Kelland at the console.\nCNRV, Vancouver, B.C. (391 m.)\u201410-11\np.m., dance program.\nKFI, Los Angeles, Cal. (468.5 m.) \u2014 7\npjn., KFI symphonette; 6, Packard\nConcert orchestra; 9, Dodge Brothers'\nprogram; 9:30, moon magic; 10, Pur-\ncell Mayers In violin classics.\nKFOA, -Seattle, Wash. (447.6 m.)\u20148:80\np.m., The Golden West Qlrl and her\norchestra; 7:30, vocal trio; 8, program by the Seattle Chapter of De\nMolay; 9, Dodge Brothers; 9:30-10,\nmoon magic.\nKFRC, San Francisco. Cal. (454 m.)\u20148-\n10 p.m., studio program\nKOO. Oakland, Cat. (384.4 m.)\u20148 p.m.,\ndrama, \"Just Piannin*,\" presented by\nKGO players, music, Rembrandt Trio;\n9. Dodge Brothers; 9:30, moon magic;\n10-11, dance orchestra.\nKQW, Portland, Ore. (491.5 m.)\u20146:30-\n7:30 p.m\u201e Golden West Girl; 8. Ore-\ngonian concert: 9-10, programs over\nthe Orange chain.\nKJR, Seattle, Wash. (348.6 m. \u2014 7\np.m., studio program; 9-10, concert\norchestra.\nKPO, San Francisco (433.3 m.) \u2014 8 p.m.,\nCaswell hour; 9, NBC program; 10-11,'\nMerton Bories and Bob Allen, ln two-\npiano novelties.\nRKGL'L.IK PROGRAMS\nCFAC, Calgary, Alta. (434.8 m.)\u201410:30-\n11:15 a.m.. morning program; 13:13-\n12:45 p.m.. grain elevator, Winnipeg\nand Chicago wheat, oil and stock\nprices, wheat news and live stock reports; 2:30-3:30, musical hour; 8, radio\nauction bridge; 8:30-9:30, CNR pro-1\ngram;  11, test program.\nKHQ., Spokane, Wash. (370.3 m.)~6 p.1\nm., service hour; 6. concert orchestra;\n6:30, The Golden West Girl; 8, Calpet\nhour; 9, time signal, NBC program;\n9:30, moon magic; 10-12, dance orchestra.\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; 11:16, varied program; 13, farm\nflashes; 13:15 p.m., grain and weather\nreport; 13:30, varied program; 4, concert orchestra; 4:46, silent; 5. kiddles'\nprogram; 5:30, stocks, bonds, news,\nsports; 6:15, concert orchestra; 6:45,\nopening the mall; 7, concert orchestra\nand soloists; 7:57, weather report; 8,\nCalpet hour; 9, time signals, NBC pro- |\ngram; 10, concert orchestra and solo- .\nlsts; 11, late news; 11:15, concert orchestra and soloists: 13:30 a.m.,.\nsilent.\nMARCONI RADIO\u2014For Radio Service\ncall at D. B. Crowther's Radio Store. 609\nWard St.. Nelson. (3153) j\nAmendment May Call\nfor Redaction of Vote\nfor Tokyo Legation\nOTTAWA, Feb. 15.\u2014An amendment\nto reduce the vote of $60,000 for the\nestablishment of the Canadian legation\nat Tokyo likely wlll be made ln the\nhouse of commons when estimates are\nbeing considered. Whtle the matter\nwas not discussed at this morning's\ncaucus of Conservative members,  lt ls\nCENSOR OF ETIQUET   j\n\u00ab : *\nAmendments to Pat'\nActs Gtts Third kit\nOTTAWA, Feb. 1*.\u2014The house of\ncommons gave third reading this after*\nnoon to amendments to the Pamela\nact. T. L. Church, Conservative, .Toronto, asked Bon. F. Rlnfret, seete-\ntary of state, who was piloting the e*SX\nthrough, what he proposed to 46\nabout formulating a national patent\nand trade mark policy. Ninety percent <tf the patents and trade merits\nat Canada are now held by alien cU-\nisens, he declared. The American citizen came over, applied for a petaat\nand went home with ln bis pocket.'\nMr Rlnfret replied that the amendments before the committee bad noting to do with national policy. They\nwere of a minor nature.\nMrs. Wilfrid Ashley, wife of Lleut.-\nColonel Ashley, M.P., who has been\nappointed to the unique position of\ncensor of etlquet ln British films.\nreported that an amendment probably\nwlll be moved from the opposition side\nof  the house.\nOTTAWA, Feb. 15.\u2014Four hundred and\nsixty-one motor cars, have been purchased by the federal government - for\nIt*-various departments since,'Jan. 1,\n1936, according'to a return tabled in\nthe commons today. Sixteen different\ndepartments are responsible ,for tfte\npurchases. The majority of the can\nwere light vehicles for field srork by\nInspectors and others. .Thf department\nof agriculture bought 17.\"* the department ol national revenue 14, interior\n88, national defence 34, mounted police 1Q, and soldiers' settlement fx^grd\n173. The balance were pu?c\" -Mid two\not three to the dena-*-\"--*-*\nl            I       II, III      \u25a0!\nL\nIncrease your\nenergy and\nvitality\nby drinking\nBOVRIL\n\"The goodness of prims beef\"\nBUILDING\nLet us figure your bills -of\nBuilding Material.   .Coast\n_r_.  _     Lumber a specialty.\nMATERIAL JOHN BURNS & SON\nMiss Margaret Beaven, lord mayor\nof Liverpool, who welcomed the party\nof 70 Canadian farmers now touring\nEngland. Miss Beaven, who ls 50\nyears old, has been called \"Little\nMother of Liverpool.\" She has taken\nan active Interest ln children's welfare\nand hospital work. When elected lord\nmayor last October she was the first\nwoman ever 10 ue so honored ln England. She was able to create another\nprecedent by \u25a0 combining the offices of\nlord mayor and mayoress. Her civic\n; salary   is   \u00a33000 ' a   year.\nThe Ed$e~Grained\nflorthl&ndcSka\nmwm_wm____Ka_I_%_____,_^_____X____Wmm-**\nIs a Winner\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.\nsPure Country Milk\n(Evaporated to Double Richness\n.andthe name TJente*.''guarantees its quality\njf I coun\n*JCJ It'sl\nInaiat upon tetting\nBorden's St. Charlea\n-rend et your gro-\nera. It'e the tin\nwith the OoU Com\non if\nADEN'S St. Charles is carefully selected\ncountry milk with some of the water removed.\n1 the same as bottled milk only much richer,\ncreamier\u2014unsweetened, of course. Most women use it\njust as it pours from the tin because, being doubly rich\nmilk, it improves every recipe. Others add an equal\nquantity of water and use it as ordinary bottled milk.\nSince it keeps perfectly in the unopened tin we suggest\nthat you buy three tins of Tall Size, four of Small, at a\ntime, and use it freely in all cooking.\nThe Borden Co. Limited, V\u00abncouver\nSend me free illustrated SI. Charles Recipe Bee*\n\"\"3II CF\u2014^23\n4J|f-4\nordm* ST.CHARLES\n(Un sweeten ed)   m IL l\\\n r*VrW, NELSON DAILY NFWS..THURSDAY MQRMN(J, FEBRUARY 16,1928\nHI\nPage Five\"\n20\n%\nDiscount\n'Pn all Felt Shoes and Slip-\npel's. Men's Women's and\nChildren's.\nAndrew & Co.\nleaders  in   Foo.fashion\nOVEB HALF MILLION DOLLARS\nBOARD TMDLREPORT SHOWS\nFruit and Vegetable Yield $255,000; Forest Wealth $225,-\n000;  Apples and Strawberries Leaders;  Haying\nAway Off; Poultry Industry Expands\nMOfHEi\n|ba\nD MAIDS\nET AT KASLO\nCKESTON, B.C., Feb. 15.\u2014Shipments\nfrom the Creston district ln 1927 In\nproducts of the orchard, field, forest,\npoultry and live stock accounted for\nan Inflow of cash Just over the half\nmillion dollar mark, according to the\ntrade statement submitted In considerable detail by President Major Mallandalne In his report at the annual meeting of Creston and District hoard of\ntrade.\nConcisely stated forest production to-\ntolled $225,000: fruit and vegetables,\n(255,000; poultry products, $85,000;\nlive stock, etc., $10,000.\nOutstanding in fruit production, of\ncourse, la apples, with a 1927 crop\nshown at 92.376 boxes, which brought\ntbe BTowers $183,000. Satisfactory as\nthis may look, tt_* crop was a very\nlight one, ns compared with the year\nbefore, when there was a shipping of\nalmost 155,000 boxes.\nSTH.UVBEBRV   CROP\nNext to apples, the great revenue getter was strawberries with an outgo of\n30,000 crates, for an intake of $60,\n000. In addition to this 16 tons went\nout for Jam manufacture, and another\n30 tons were processed and shipped\nto Toronto for making soda fountain\ncordials, flavorings, etc. Of this creditable total lt must be stated that fully\n76 per cent was produced at Wynndel,\nsix miles west of hers.\nBASP CROP\nOf raspberries 6716 crates were mar\nketed worth $15,113, and when to\nstrawberries and raspberries ls added,\nthe value of the loganberries, black\nberries, gooseberries exported, Creston\ndistrict c\u00abn claim a 1927 berry crop\nworth not less than $85,000.    Bed and\nKA$LO, B.C., Feb. 15,-\u2014Friday evening *ie local C.O.IT. held a \"mother\nand laughter\" banquet In the united\nchurop Sunday school rooms. There\nwere |gbout 60 rarsons present and a\nmost Tenjoyable   evening   was  spent.  A\nhot *iiipper of soup, salads, meats, were worth about $3000.\nvegetables, various brands of plea, fruit Now that practically\nand tSjip and 'coffee proved most appe-\nt!;__n_rfand saUsf^'ng. Miss Phylls McQueen, president of the society acted as\n\u2022 oust mistress, the first toast being\nfClng,\" ,the toast to the church\npponded to by Rev. D. W. Scott,\nScott replying to the wel-\n\u2022the   mothers.     Miss  Margaret\nsand  containers  for   the  several  other\nvarieties of small fruits.\nHAY  CUT   DOWN\nThe year 1927 saw but 450 tons of\nhay cut on Kootenay flats, instead of\nthe normal harvest of about 2000 tons,\nand lt ls thla shortage of feed that\naccounts for a shipping of 268 bead of\ncattle of all ages\u2014the velV biggest\nlive stock shipping ln local history- The\nrecords show a disposal of 22 head of\nhorses,  and  863 hides.\nIn a scrutiny of the official records\non local live stock, as kept hy Creston Valley Stockbreeders' association\u2014\nwhich society controls grazing and\nhaying hereabouts\u2014President Mallandalne learns that there are 2200 head\nof cattle ln the district; 175 of which\nmay well be classed as dairy cows-\nThere are almost 600 sheep, of which\n360 are breeding ewes,\nAs compared with his 1926 review the\npast year shows a .considerable stride\nforward In the poultry industry. 1927\nrecorded shipments of 14,000 day-old\nchicks, mostly of the White Leghorn\nand Barred Rock varieties\u2014as well as\n600 fowl for breeding pens and 45,\n000 dosen eggs, Quite a lot of which\nwere for hatching. The sale of dressed\nfowl ls placed at six tons.\nFIR   FARMING\nA start ls also recorded in tbe district at fur farming, with two fox and\na coon farm already ln operation, and\nthe fall of 1937 witnessing a number\ngoing in for Chinchilla rabbits In approved   fashion.\nIn his address the president once\nmore directs attention to the yearly\nImports of hay, which totalled 1100\ntons last year, and 13 cars of feed, such\nwheat,   bran,   crushed    oats,   etc.,\nthe cultivated land is set out to orchard that\nis almost into bearing, Creston's vegetable tonnage Is beginning to look\nslim, valued at but $10,000 for last\nyear. Ripe and green tomatoes marketed accounted for $6000 of this, and a\nvariety of other vegetables ran to\nabout $4000. Only 46 tons of potatoes\nwere marketed last year.\n''AHrfcQiieen gave a talk on'UMBER INDUSTRY\n\"The >ind of daughters we expect our According to President Mallandaine's\nO.d.t.T. girls to be.\" After the ban- j survey the lumber Industry in the\nquet and program there was a general   district  gave  employment  to  an aver-\n. *\u25a0 _.'_   . \u2022\u2022 \u2022 nn_>    _-if    Q(V_     mnn     thiviiirtl-ini if.    +>__\u00bb    ti-csv\n?lftCk J_^Hant\u00a3*   ?to_2\u00a3__\u00bb*t   1M6   CTatM'  Bome considerable part of which might\nwell have been produced locally  and\nyT^k\" a\\ a very pleasing solo\n'\u25a0singJ song.\"'\nTapestries dating back to the middle\nof the sixteenth century have been hung\nin u^dftrUsslem chamber of Westminster 4ffetoey:.   '\u25a0-.'\nage of 300 men throughout the year,\nwith tbe total payroll set down at\n$155,000. The cut of lumber was 6,-\n400,000 feet, with an outgo of some\n86.000 , railway ties, and a make of\nalmost' 100,000 apple boxen, and 33,*\n000 berry crates,  besides several thou*\nCuticura Treatment\n[For Dandruff\nPert tha bair and gently rub In Caticura Ointment tyntil the whole sf\u00ablp baa been treated.\nLet thip Ointment remain on for some time, over\nnight if cbnveiu'etu. Then shampoo with a suds\nof Cuticura Soap and warm water, (Do not rub\nSoap on th* hair) Rinse thoroughly. A light\napplication of Cuticura Ointment to tbe scalp\nbetween shampoos is often beneficial.\nlUafl. Im* Fn* kj K\u00bb\u00ab    Aad\u2014it i\"\u00bbn___l_f_n  D#p*t:   \"ttaa-\n_\u00bb\u00ab*.   I.U , Kuat.til.\"    .'ne*.   \u2022_\u25a0\u00bb\u2022> S_r.  OiatMoaul \u00bb .*\u25a0* Wi\n,   W-*~~ Cuticura She-tint Suck 2ik.\nPRINTING\ni ;\nFojr Mining Companies\nStock Certificates\ntympany Seals\nlietterheads\nEnvelopes\nLoose Lkht Binders\nRubber Stamps\nProspectus's\nOrder Forms\nPay Checks\nSynoptic Forms\nAssay Forms\nVouchers\nLedger Sheets\nPayroll Sheets\nStandard Forms or Specially Ruled or Printed\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)\nTHE DAILY NEWS JOB DEPT.\nPRINTINC-RULING-BOOKBINDING\n\u25a0\nthus keep at home much of the $36,\n000 that was sent out of the district\nfor these commodities.\nGIRLS TAKE CHURCH\nSERVICE AT HARROP\nHARROP, B.C., Peb. 15.-\u2014The service\nat the United church on Sunday afternoon was under the auspices of\nthe Canadian Oirls ln Training of\nProcter. Miss Morag McKinnon gave\nout the hymns and Miss Eleanor Merrifield read the lesson. Short addresses\non \"Training bomemakers\" and \"The\nC.G.I.T. and Its purposes\" were given\nhy Miss Violet Mulrhead and Miss An\nnte McKinnon, respectively, Miss Iris\nCronln and Miss Eleanor Merrifield\nsang a duet. A splendid talk on the\nIdeal attained through C.G.I.T. train\ntn* was given \u2022 fcy ^'e leader, sin.\" G\nKinney. Other girls ln the group and\non the platform were Miss Hilda Heigh\n-ton, Miss Olive Mulrhead and Miss\nlily Helghton. The organist was Rhod-\nerick McKinnon.\nJ. E. Pitchett arrived Monday morn\ning from the coast.\nN. Harrop of Harrop spent Sunday\nhere with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E.\nHarrop.  \u25a0\nW. J. McConnell was called to Nanton, Alta., Tuesday morning ewing to\nthe serious illness of his father, J. G.\nMcConnell.\nR. W. Begg or Balfour was a Harrop visitor on Saturday.\nKIMBERLEY NOTES\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.. Peb. 15.\u2014The recently organized Scotch society, the\nSt. Andrew's Social club, held their\nInaugural public dance ln the K.\nP. hall here and despite the fact that\nthe prelenten' dances have been moat\nfrequent their .was a very good at\ntendance. The regular dance program\nwas interspersed with a number of\nquadrilles and reels all of which were\nmuch enjoyed. The Chapman orchestra\nmade a good impression wltb their\nexcellent   music.\nThe smoker given by the local lodge,\nB.P.O.E., last evening proved to be a\nvery enjoyable social function, besides\nan enjoyable supper a highly enter-\ntalnlng  program  was  given.\nMrs. Crawford, wife of Mr. C. P.\nCrawford, local Superintendent jf or\nt_he OensOll&ted ('-old Fields, limited,\nhas return*.*.! after an absence of several months In her parental home in\nGeorgia. Mr. Crawford, who recently\nunderwent un operation\" for appendicitis, ia progressing favorably toward\nrecovery.\nMrs. Knickerbocker, who has been on\na week's purchasing trip to Calgary,\nreturned   today.\nR. Potter of the Kimberley Press has\nreturned from a 10 days' visit to Penticton.\nThree rinks of curlers left last night\nfor Cranbrook to compete in the Selkirk bonspiel which started there on\nTuesday. Two rinka going from Klmberley  nnd  one  from  Chapman.\nSALT RHEUM\nAll Over Her Hands\naod Between Fingers\nMm. Walter Maner, MidvilH Bruuh,\nN.8., writ*:\u2014\"I had lalt rheum ill\norer my hands, aod especially between\n017 Angara. It wis Impossible for r\u00bb\nto put thos ia water, or do my house\nwork.\n\"After trying medicines and salves,\nwhich did ms no good, I heard of\nbeing so wonderful, and after taking\ntwo bottles I am entirely relieved ot\nmy trouble.'*\nManufactn-ed only by The T. mitran\na. Henri ttt, \"-t\n^SOCIETY\nThis column is conducted by Mrs.\nM. J. Vigneux, All newa of a social\nnature, Including receptions, private\nentertainments, personal Items,\nmarriages, etc., will appear In this\ncolumn. Telephone Mrs. Vigneux at\nher home on Silica Btreet.\nA most enjoyable bridge was given\nn the women's Institute rooms yester-\nlay afternpon by Mrs. Fred W. Conway\nfind Mrs. Harry Dunk, under the auspices of the Catholic Daughters of America, the proceeds to go toward the furnace fuhd of the K. C. Parish hall. Fifteen tables were tn play, and the first\nprize, which was a crown Derby cup and\nsaucer, was won by Mrs. J. P. Gamble,\nthe second prize, a crown Derby Mikado\npattern, was carried off by Mrs. G. B.\nMatthew, while Mrs. Norman McLeod\n; consoled with a dainty china tray.\nThose assisting Mrs. Dunk and Mrs.\nConway at the tea hour were Mrs. Leo\nMcKinnon, Miss Albertine Choquette,\nMlas Helen Scanlan, Miss Mary DSFerro,\nMrs. Norman McLeod, Mrs. Colin P. Macdougall. Mrs. Thomas Dunbar, Mrs. Jasper and Mrs. B. E. Chace.\nMr. and Mrs. D. D. McLean, Carbonate street, have as their house guest Mrs.\nStanley Bryne and her daughter. Miss\nElaine, of Vancouver, who formerly resided in Nelson.\n\u2022 t   6\nA. P. Perry, M.E., of Klmberley, who\nwas In the city Tuesday, left yesterday\nmorning for Ymir.\nMrs. W. 3. E. Biker of the north shore\nhas returned from a tew weeks spent in\nSpokane, Moscow and Wallace, Idaho.\n\u2022 *   *\nR. C. Crowe, lawyer for the Consolidated Mining & Smelting oompany in\nTrail, spent yesterday In town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR. G. Gallup of Howser, who has been\nat the coast on business, left yesterday\nafternoon for Kaslo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Jerry  Dona van of Grand Forks,\nformer resident of Nelson, ls in the\ncity.\nMiss Kitty Johnstone, who leaves Nelson In a fortnight for England, where\nwhe will be married, was on Monday evening the incentive of a very Jolly gathering, which took place In the newly\ncompleted reception room of the Nurses'\nhome, of the Kootenay Lake General\nhospital. The Graduated Nurses' association presented Miss Johnstone with\na picture, after which the nurse-\nin-tralnlng class had secretly arranged\na huge three-tier wedding cake, which,\nwhen cut, proved to be filled with all\nsizes of towels. Music and games followed by refreshments completed a very\nenjoyable evening. Those present vtefe\nMiss Kitty Johnstone, Miss Aryi Mac-\nArthur, Mrs. T. Dolphin, Mlas Agnes\nCant, Miss L. McVlcar, Miss Christina\nAllan, Miss M. Leonard Miss M. Parkinson, Miss E. Graham, Miss E. Wallace,\nMtss D, Edwards, Miss A. Cook, Miss J.\nArcher, Miss B. Forsberg, Miss P. Daw-\nney, Miss R. Dawron, MIsh Rose Hartwlg\nMiss M. Hayden, Miss T. Hamilton, Miss\nH. Wharton. MIsh E. Houston, Mis? M\nDoods and Miss 3. Short house.\nMrs. W. J. Grove, Kerr apartments,\nleft yesterday morning for a few weeks\nto be spent ln Spokane, Marcus and S>\nattle. In the latter place, she wlll visit\nher sister, Mrs. 8. Davis.\nF. Lefeaux, chief clerk of the CunA'rci\nHteaaaRliip \u2022company., limited ln Vancouver, left last night for the coa*-.-\"\nafter a visit to Nelson and district.\nMr. and Mrs. L. J. Edward:, of Nakjisp\narrived ln the city last evening and wlll\nbe the guests of Mr. and Mrs. George. D\nMacAfee while here.\nMr. and Mrs. P. H. Chanter of Longbeach spent yesterday in town shopping.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. C. 3, Brockington of Slocan Park left last night for the coast.\n.   \u2022   *\nMrs. J. G. Bunyan, Hall Mines rdad.\nwho has been on a month's visit \"to\nfriends and relatives In Spokane rjhd\nMullen, Idaho, has returned to town.'\nMr. and Mrs. J. J. Binns of Kaslo wfere\nvisitors to the city yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nT, Allshouse, who has been on a visit\nin the east, was in town recently en\nroute to his home at Summit Lake.\nMrs. M. C. Donaldson of Salmo 1st in\nthe city with her son, who has been admitted to the Kootenay Lake General\nhospital suffering from appendicitis.'\ne   e   *\nMrs. A. T. Richards of Tarrys spent\nyesterday In town.\nMr. and Mrs. D. A. Thorpe of Ross-\nland, former Nelsonitee, are visitors ln\nNelson.\nMr. and Mrs, W. R. Thomson, Front\nstreet, and their daughter, Miss Edith,\nleft last rilght for Vancouver en route to\nsouthern California where they will\nspend several weeks.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Bert Peebles, who have\nbeen spending the past fortnight honeymooning tn Spokane and district, have\nreturned and taken up residence on Sec\nond street, Fairview.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJack Paterson, who has spent the past\nfew months in town, has left for the\ncoast.\n\u2022 t   \u2022\nRev. Leo A. Hobson. parish priest at\nRevelstoke, has left for Grand Forks,\nwhere he will spend a few days with\nRev. A. K. Mclntyre.\n\u2022 *      m\nYesterday afternoon Mrs. H. Rosllng\nentertained a few friends at bridge ln\nher apartment In the Strathcona hotel,\nwhen her invited guests were Mrs. Hugh\nRobertson, Mrs. D. A. McFarland, Mrs.\nR. W. Hinton, Mrs. W. M. Walker, Mrs.\nH. R. Townsend, Mrs. P. G. Morey, Mrs.\nW. M. Cunliffe. Mrs. P. C. Whltehouie,\nMrs. L. E. Borden ahd Mrs. D.O. Thomas\naud Mrs. Leslie Craufurd.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. A. T. \"Park, Richafd\nstreet, have as their house guest Win-\nlam Reith of Waneta.\n\u2022 t   \u00ab\nPaul Lincoln, mining man of Sandon,\nwas tn the city Tuesday en route to the\ncoast cities on business.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Catherine McBrlde, Carbonate\nstreet, has left tor Bellingham, where\nshe went to attend the reception of her\ndaughter, Sister M. Stephen, nee Dorothy McBrlde, at, Bellingham, which took\nplace yesterday.\n\u2022 *   *\nMiss Betty Meredith has returned\nfrom Sandon, where she was called owing to an accident, which btfell her\nmother.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nGordon Irving of South Slocan was a\nvisitor to town Tuesday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nE. V. Morel of Marblcheed ls a visitor\nln the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. C. V. Gagnon, silica atreet, leaves\nvia the Great Northern this morning\nfor Spokane, where she win spend a\ncouple of days the guest of Mr. and Mrs,\nJ. Wright, en route to Vancouver to visit\nher daughter and son-in-law; Mr and\nMrs. A. D. C. Parnell.\n\u2022 e   *\nIn Christ .church, Vancouver, on Feb-\nAN INTERESTING DISPLAY OF NEW GOODS\nThe newest of the new in Silks and other fabrics for spring have been\nassembled for vour immediate choosing. We believe it to be the finest\ndisplay we have ever made and we cannot impress upon you too forcibly the advantage of making: your selection early.\nFANCY VOILES\n$1.00 TO $1.50 THE YARD\nNew Voiles in Flowered, Figured\nand Plain. Comes in all the new\nspring colors. 40 inches wide. AT\n$1.00 TO ?1.50 THE YARD.\nPRINTED RAYON\n$1.35 TO $1.95 THE YARD .\nThis comes in all the new spring\nshades. A lovely selection of patterns to choose from. 86 inches\nwide. AT ?1.35 TO $1.95 THE\nYARD.\nFLAT CREPE\n$2.98 THE YARD\nA special weight of Flat Crepe in\nfine bright finish and nice even\nweave. This comes in 30 different\nshades, and is the best value in the\ntrade for the money. SPECIAL AT\n$2.98 THE YARD.\nKASHA FLANNEL\n$2.50 TO $3.95 THE YARD\nr>4-inch Kasha Flannel. This comes in all the new colors. AT $2.50 TO $3.95\nTHE YARD. T v\n, J  BLACK CREPE-BACK SATIN\n$3.50 TO $3.98 THE YARD\nThe season's most popular fabric. This\ncomes in a wonderful quality. Full 40\ninches wide, AT $3.50 TO $3.98 THE\nYARD.\nWASHWELL GINGHAM\n45c THE YARD\nThis Gingham is guaranteed to wash.\nComes in all the new checks and plaids.\n3'6 inches wide.   AT 45\u00a3 THE YARD.\nLATE EH HMG\nSunday  Memorial  Event  WelJ\nAttended; Review History\nof Great Militarist\nI\nCRANBROOK. B.C., Feb. 15.\u2014On Sunday nftenuoon at 3 o'clock a memorial\nservice for Earl Haig, commander of the\nBritish forces It the late war, was held\nby the local crunch ol the Canadian\nLegion In the Star theater, which had\nbeen donated for the purpose by the\nmanagement.\nRev. Bryce Wallace, as chairman,\nopened the service by extending a welcome, on behalf of the legion, to those\n\u25a0vho were able to attend.\nThi congregation, led by the volunteer\norchestra, sang a hymn, followed by a\n\u25a0hort prayer by Rev. Wallace and scripture reading by Rev. M. 8. Blackburn\nof Knox ehurch. Rev. Mr. McNeil of the\nBaptist church then offered up prayer\nund the congresatiou Joined In singing\nunother hymn.\nF. H. Buck, prlnctpal of the high\nvohool. member of the legion and one\nv.'ho had seen much service overseas,\nnve the address of the afternoon. He\nearri\u00ab4 hla audience. In Imagination,\nbnck to the vicinity of Nelson's monument tn Trafalgar square, where a huge\ncrowd lu orderly ranks, many with the\nMamp of military training evident ln\niielr bearing, and all. men, women and\nchildren alike, with a look of remembrance on their faces, remembrance of\ntlie dark days of Britain's laboring,\nwaiting for the appearance of the\nfuneral cortege of the man upon whom\n'hey had pinned their hopes.\nAnd, presently, from around the cor-\nti r leading to Buckingham palace, appears the Guards' band leading the\nfuneral procession of the man whom\nel] the Empire mourns. The carriage,\noq which the body lies, ls draped with\n.mny battle scarred flags and Is followed by men whose names are already\nhistorical, Foche. Koenlg, Methuen, Jel-\nv<:oe, Beatty and others. The personal\nuitendant of the marshal for over 30\njvnrs leads his matter's horse, with the\nempty saddle, boot,, turned backward.\nills Majesty's sons walk in this procession to show their respect to departed\nKreatness.\nMr. Buck touched lightly on the ca-\nPWT of Earl Haig, as soldier, mentioning\nthe different campaigns through which\nlie had passed, in Egypt, South Africa.\nIndia and Europe.\nAs a man he  was reserved,  but  his\nmury 7, the marriage took place of Dorothy Jane, second daughter of Mrs. M.\nWhltmore, to A* J. Scott of Calgary. The\nuiiendants were Mist Rene Hawers and\nOene Bradahaw. After a few weeks In\nVancouver Mr. and Mrs. Scott will reside ln Calgary.\nMr. and Mrs. Vernon Forrester of)\nGrand Forks arrived In Nelson Tuesday\nand are guests of Mr. and Mra. Q. A.\nTapanlla. 1410 Stanley street. They\nattended tht ball given last night fn the\nEagle hall by the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Arthur Harmston of Crescent Valley was a visitor ln town last week ln\ncompany   with  her daughter,  Mrs.  W.\nLitter of South Slocan.\nreserve covered a wealth of emotion\nand affection for hts men. He was\ndeeply religious, and after the conclusion of peace he spent his time i\nmoney in caring for and vltlting the\nmen of his command, who had suffered\nin the great conflict. It was largely\ndue to his influence in Canada two\nyears ago that the several orders of\nveterans had been consolidated into the\nCanadian Legion.\nThe meeting closed lyy the audience\nsinging. \"Onward Christian Soldiers,\"\nand Bugler Ingles playing the \"Last\nPost,\"\nKASLO NOTES\nKASLO,   B.C.,   Feb.    15.\u2014Mrs.   J.   J.\nBinns was a luncheon and tea hostess'\nlast Friday.\nSaturday evening Miss Gertrude Nelson was hostess to a number of her\nyoung friends at her home on \"D\"\navenue. Bridge and other card games\ntook up the time until refreshments\nwere served after which George Baker\nnnd Sam Gardener entertained with an\nexhibition of new dance steps. The\ninvited guests were Miss Jane McGllll-1\nvray, Miss Phylls McQueen, Miss Mar-!\nJorie Black, Miss Veronica Murphy,\nMiss Helen Burkitt, George Baker, Samj\nOardener, Eric Patterson, Philip Good-'\nenough, John Stubbs, Peter Fowler anfl\nRalph   Read.\nJo Gallo of Gerrard was a visitor!\nto  town  over  Sunday.\nCharles O. Rodgers of Creston was\na   Saturday   visitor   In   tho   city.\nR. Byrnes of Creston was a Saturday\nvisitor  to  Kaj>lo.\nJack Sherman was up from Alns-1\nworth   Saturday.\nMrs. O. Strathearn of Sandon was'\nthe week-end guest of Mayor W. H.|\nand   Mrs.  Burgess,   her  daughter.  Miss\nKathleen Strathearn of the Daw\nAssheton Concert company waa all\na guest at the Burgess home during hd\nstay  in the  city.\nSaturday Mrs. T. P. Lane was hcalM\nto a few friends the affair being decidedly novel, the decorations oonalstj\nlng of moss and toads and tbe lunch\neon \"piece de resistance\" being \"Toad\nin-the-hole\" disguised in a most ap\npctltlng manner. Tbe guests enjoyn\nthemselves hugely with the \"callsthen\nlc parade\" after luncheon. Tbe in\nvlted guests were Mrs. H. C. Giegerich\nMrs. D. J. Barclay, Mrs. A. W. Ander\nson, Mrs. W. H. Burgess and Mn\nPenny.\nC. W. Webster, who has been confined to his home by Illness for th.\npast two weeks It able to be out again\nKIMBERLEY NOTES\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.. Peb. 15\u2014Th*\ndance given by the Ladles' guild ol\nthe Anglican church on Tuesday craning was not favored with as large aa\nattendance as its sponsors would have\nliked.\nKlmberley is surfeited with dance\nthis week, there being no leas than five\nof a public nature listed.\nUnited States department of agriculture predicts better year ln 1928 tor\nfarm products.\nFirst by a Mile\nOur SPECIAL MIXTURE. Trr lt\nand be convinced. Our stock ie\nalwaya  fresh.    Best  value  ln  91\npipes.\nBUSH'S\nCOAL WOOD COAL\nLet us fill your orders today for Dry Wood\u2014any length.\nor Gait Lump Coal\nNELSON   TRANSFER  CO.,   LTD.\n\u2022 Oor. Vernon A Stanley Sta.\nPHONE 35\nNe-aoa, B. ft\nF\n\"S\n!l\n\"Made Its Way by the Way It's Made\"\n' CURLEW'\nICE CREAM BRICKS\nPLEASE EVERYONE\nYou never make any mistake if you\nserve Curlew Ice Cream Brick for\ndessert or at the afternoon or evening\nfunction.\nCURLEW CREAMERY Co., Ltd.\nBUTTER ICE  CREAM MILK\nAll Perfectly Pasteurized Products\n\u25a0\u25a0*****i \u25a0*-**i**A**JUh*ft_fta_*___jgd^?\n itefff\n\"fHE ARSON BITOT NWS, fmiP^AY MORNfNO, FT.Bf.UARY 16, 1928\nI I III\nHer Husband's\nSecretary*\nBy WILLIAM ALMON WOLFF\n\u25a0in in in in 11 ^r; i ;i:.-u^r:\n.irIUmiTifl-H.lflfll,,- i\nCHAPTER XXXVII.\npeen MacVeagh waa far better pre-\n|A than John tor the critical dlscus-\nf-that awaited his return that night.\n\"lays, even for weeks, she had been\n: ready. Not that Bhe had, always\niat time of preparation, known what\nl that lay before her; not that ahe\ndeliberately, and In cold blood,\nned this particular scene. But all\n'gradual realization of what was goon, every new discovery she had\nla, had led toward some such cul-\n\u25a0ation\npr resolution almost    broke    down\ntt  John  came  ln.    He  greeted  her\nIf, caught her in hla arms, kissed her.\nsee months since he had embraced\n'to, kissed her so; she returned his\nt without a thought; it was the only,\nnatural thing for her to do.\nUe, lt seemed to her, was her lover\nt again, the lover she had lost in a\nband       dissatisfied,       discontented\ntQue.   Here, Just for a moment, was\nllmpse of old days, good days, before\ntble had come between them.    She\n.very near, then, to surrender;  very\nr giving up, without a struggle, all\nhad been resolved to fight for.\nfou're tired, aren't you?\" she said.\nUddling,\" he admitted.   \"I've had a\nt time.   And lt was hard sleeping \u2014\nwere  making  short  Jumps  on  bad |\nna,   and   being  shunted  around   at 1\nIt a lot.   I feel good, though.     And j\nhungry\u2014didn't have time for lunch,\nhave a bath and clean up\u2014then do\n\u2022at?\"\nEhe minute you're ready,\" she assur-\nWm.   \"Hurry, and I'll see to it that\nper isn't held up.\"\ntor was lt.   He sat opposite her, smll-\nWf Oeorge\u2014you're a grand house- j\nper!\" he said. \"It's good to sit down\ni- meal like this again\u2014all the things \u25a0\nMe best I My soul\u2014I've eaten meals ;\ntome awful dumps on this trip! New |\nk's spoiling me, I guess\u2014I never used I\ntnlnd.\" 1\nThe \"Flu\"\nLEFT HER WITH\nA VERY WEAK HEART\n. Beulah Demone, Pleasant Biver,\n1, writea:\u2014\"Having suffered with\n'fla' a few jeer* ago, I waa left\nh \u2022 very weak heart\n'I waa unable to go about, and\nlid not do my housework.\n*I would get dixrv spells and would\nre to go and Ue down.\n\"I could not deep at night aa the\niat little notie would wake me up.\n\"I tried different kinds of medicine,\nt they seemed to do me no good.\n\"A friend recommended\nw\nI have used five\nboxes and am much\nbetter; do not get\nthose dizzy spells,\nand can do my\nown work aa well\nas ever.\"\nPrico SOc. a box at all druggists and\ntiers, or mailed direct on receipt of\n(ee by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,\nuronto, Ont\nlor Half a Century\nthe Standard.\nSuccessful Treatment\nDiCHASE'S\nOINTMENT\n\"New York does change one,\" said\nEileen.\nHe gave her a quick glance. But lf\nthe words had any hidden meaning her\neyes did not betray lt.\n\"That's so, no doubt,\" he said. \"I\nwas glad to see lt again, though I never\nthought I'd come to have any affection\nfor New York\u2014for the city itself, I mean.\nBut\u2014I don't know\u2014I get an awful kick\nout of these building they're putting up\nwith their setbacks and their towers.\"\n\"They're very beautiful,\" said Eileen.\n\"Mr. Fielding aaid the other day that he\nthought ln a few years New York would\nbe the loveliest city the world has ever\nseen.\"\n\"I guess that's right,\" said John. \"Too\nhad they didn't strike the idea sooner.\nHow's he doing, with the house?\"\n\"Very well, I think,\" said Eileen, \"I'm\nnot wholly pleased with everything, but\nit's much better on the whole than I\nexpected, from the way he talked.\"\nOnce more John gave her a curious,\nslightly puzzled, look. There was a new\nnote, a note he had never heard before,\nlu Eileen's voice. Decision rang sharply in what she had Just said! lt was as if\nshe had gained, somehow, u new respect\nfor her own opinions.\n\"Well, that's good,\" he aaid. \"You can\nchange things around, I suppose, lf\nthere's anything you don't like.\"\n\"I expect to\u2014I fully Intend to,\" said\nEileen. \"I'll never again live ln a place\nlike this apartment, hating lt every minute.\"\n\"Oh, come \u2014 It's not as bad as all\nthatl\" said John. \"I mean\u2014I suppose\nit's pretty freakish\u2014but\u2014after all\u2014lots\nof people like lt\u2014\"\n\"No normal person likes lt,\" said\nEileen. \"The only people who have a\ngood word for It are creatures like Tony\nLarue. We made a frightful mistake\nletting him bully us as he did\u2014why not\nadmit lt?\"\n\"I suppose you mean I made a mistake\u2014\"\n\"No. I don't. I meant Just what I\nsaid\u2014that we'd make a mistake. I knew\nbetter, and I had no business to give ln\nas I did, simply to avoid an argument,\"\n\"Well\u2014 1\" John grinned at her, and\npushed his chair back a Uttle. \"It seems\nto me you're stepping out, Eileen! I\nnever heard you carry on like this before!\"\n\"I'm sorry.\" she said. \"Am I as positive as all that? That's the trouble with\nmeek people, of course\u2014they go along,\nand no one ever expects them to assert\nthemselves, and when they do\u2014well\u20141\"\n\"So you're planning to assert yourself, are you?\" he said, banterlngly. She\nnodded. \"Going to stop being the downtrodden little wife?\"\n\"That's exactly right,\" ahe aaid, nodding again, and with greater vehemence.\n\"It's only fair -to prepare you, for the\nchange, isn't It?\"\nHe laughed.\n\"I've never thought of you as precisely downtrodden,\" he said. \"I should\nsay that you usually manage to do about\nas you please.\"\n\"I expect you do think that,\" ahe\nsaid. \"In a way It'a a great compll-\n\u25a0nent\u2014because it shows that at least I\nhaven't made a parade of things. I hate\nwomen who do that. John\u2014I'm Interested ln something you Just said\u2014about\nhow you'd thought of me. Have you, as\na matter of fact, thought very much\nabout me since we have been here ln\nNew York?\"\n\"Oh, Lord!\" he said. \"I thought I\nwas one husband who was safe from\nthat kind of talk! Eileen, I've been one\nof the busiest men ln America since\nwe've been here. If I've seemed to neglect, vou, that's the reason. That, and\n\u2014well\u2014\"\n\"Tuat's not what I mean at all,\" ahe\nInterrupted. \"It's aomething much\nsubtler and much more frightening.\nYou've often been frightfully busy, but,\nuntil lately, you've always thought of\nme a great deal. Lately\u2014well, you\nhaven't.\"\nShe rose.\n'Let's have our coffee now,\" she said.\n\"In the living room. We can talk there.\nAnd we've a lot to say, I think. Because\u2014John, things can't go on this\nway.\"\nCLAIM HEALTH\nManitoba    Minister    Has    No\nProvision for Extensive Survey, Says Opposition\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 15. \u2014 Charges that\nthe preelection promises of Dr. E. W.\nMontjomery, minister of public welfare,\nfor a better health program for the\nprovince had not been implemented aa\nprovision for lt had not been made In\nthe estimates, were made by membera\nof the opposition ln the Manitoba legislature today. Dr. Montgomery replied\nto the attack by stating that there, had\nbeen no time since he assumed office\nrecently to complete the gigantic task\nhe had undertaken, but that he would\nformulate his program after a general\nsurvey of health conditions, now In\nprogress, had been finished, which\nwould not be till the beginning of July.\nThe onslaught precipitated a debate\nwhich lasted the greater part of the session, and when the committee of supply\nrose not even the first item, Dr. Montgomery's salary off \u00bb5400, had been\npassed.\nThe survey Ib being conducted by\npublic health nurses, health officers and\nthe medical profession generally.\nDr. Montgomery said that the sanatorium board had decided to provide\nfurther accommodation for the treatment of tuberculosis, particularly among\nchildren.\nJohn Queen. Labor, declared there\nwould be no more wonderful way of advancing public health than by treating\npersons In the Incipient stages of the\ndisease. Instead of waiting till the Incurable stage was reached.\nA Foundation of Pleated\nFlounces Adorns This\nFrock\nr,S NOT HARD\nTO GROW THIN\nPeople all about you can testify to that.\n\u25a0ost of the slender figures seen today\nBve been won in easy ways. Many have\npen won by Marmola prescription table, based on a modern scientific discov-\n*. People have used Marmola for 20\n.jrs\u2014-.millions of boxes of it.   Now\nJender figures in almost every circle\nbow what Marmola does.\nA book in each box of Marmola gives\nbe formula and states the scientific rea-\ni for results. So users realize how\nwhy effects are beneficial.   A way\nI which has done so much for so many\nLfcservts a test from you. Make it now,\n\u25a0watch the results for a little while, then\nUecide. Ask your druggist today for a\n71 box of Marmola.\nMothers, Do This\u2014\nj When the children cough, rub Muscle on their throats and chests. No\n; how soon the symptoms may de-\nlnto croup, or worse. And then's\n_ you're  glad  you  have   a  Jar   of\njtnaterole at hand to give prompt relief.\nflrat  aid,   Musterole  is  excellent.\n_jep a lar  ready  for  Instant  use.\n| It la -the remedy for adulta, too. Reives sole throat, bronchitis, tonsillitis.\nUp,   \u00abtlff   neck,   asthma,   neuralgia,\n\u00ab_W,   congestion,   pleurisy,   rheu-\nfttlsm,   lumbago,  pains and  aches of\nje back or Joints, sprains, sore muscles,\nhllblatns. frosted feet and colds of the\nfcp-t.   (H  mav  prevent  pneumonia).\nTbtlAwtetoUCe. of Canada, Ltd.\n\u2022lop\n\u25a0jHwey mtsSme w (^wpep''ww\nCASTLEGAR NOTES\nCASTLEGAR, B.C., Feb. 15.\u2014A large\nlathering of friends was entertained to\nwhist, games and a dance here by Mrs.\nH. Olsen, assisted by Mr. Olsen, Mrs.\nWallmer and Miss Edith Olsen. After\none of the most pleasant of whist\ndrives, when prizes were won by Mrs.\nMcKinnon, first ladles', Mr. Robinson,\nfirst gents'. Miss E. Chrlstenson, second ladies', H. Shearman, second gents',\nMrs. Wallmer engineered some most entertaining games, chief of which was\n\"Shake the lady's leg.\" Dancing w\\\nindulged ln later, and altogether a very\nconvivial night was spent. Refreshments were served at Intervals. Among\nthose present were Mrs. and Mr. McKinnon, Miss F. McKinnon, Mrs. and Mr.\nChrlstenson, Miss E. Chrlstenson, Mr\nand Mrs. Pratt, Mr. and Mrs. Lampart\nMr. and Mrs. Robinson, Mr. and Mrs\nDavidson, Mr. and Mrs. Cook and H.\nShearman.\nDawn Assheton Company\nPlease at Kaslo With\nTheir Concert Numbers\nKASLO, B.C., Feb. 16.\u2014The concert\ngiven by the Dawn Assheton Concert\ncompany Saturday evening proved to\nbe one of the finest ever heard ln\nKaslo, and the music lovers of the\ncity enjoyed a real thrill. The affair\nwas held In the drill hall which was\nfilled to capacity. Miss Assheton's\nregister and voice control seemed little\nshort of marvelous, while, of course,\nKathleen Strathearn, more than pleased\nher home town friends, who are predicting a very brilliant future for\nher. The violin numbers of Lazlo\nSchwartz were alao most pleasing as\nwere the ensemble numbers of the\nwhole party.\nAt work or play, Madge can feel\nsnappy in this dress. And\u2014as Mndge\nand everybody else knows\u2014happiness\ncomes very, very often from tbe know\nledge that one Is properly dressed.\nMadge can wear this to business or\nto a luncheon that isn't too formal.\nIt is made ap of a combination of\nvery clever lines emphasized by trimming bands. The pleated flounce is\nattached to the frock in a curved outline that forms a point at the center\nfront. Following the same curve tbe\nbands of the waist disappear Into the\naide seams. The tied collar is new\nand has a very softening effect.\nSimply tailored cuffs and a buckled\nbelt finish thin smart frock that will\nbe found most useful, it may be of\nsilk crepe, georgette or nl_p*r wool in\nall one color or may omit the bands\nand have the collar, belt and flounce\nof a harmonizing color. A lovely\ncombination is satin crepe with trimming bands of tbe reverse side of the\nmaterial, (('enyright, 1027, by Hut\ntend*)\nINDIANS HELD FOR ATTACK ON OLD COUPLE\nSchool nurse says\nall girls should\nknow this\nit\u00abi#!\n:   %     M\ntAt^tf     A\n1\n.   >\u25a0\u25a0'\nAmendment to Bank Act\nDeals With Mergers\nOTTAWA. Feb. 16 \u2014First reading was\ngiven In the houae of common, this\nafternoon to a bill amending the Ban-\nact with respect to mergers. In sponsoring hla bill, T. h. Church stated tbat\nthe measure would require the approval\nof all bank mergers by parliament, ln\nplace of the governor-ln-councll, or the\nminister of finance.\nTALKING to a roomful of high\nschool girls on personal hygiene,\nan experienced district nurse said:\n-'One of the basic rules of health for\ngirls is to keep the system functioning\nnaturally at all times. Normal exercise\nand diet habits should be encouraged.\nBut when necessary there's no harm in\ntaking nujol, since it works mechanically and can't disturb the normal\nfunctions of any organ of the body.\nParticularly with girls, there are times\nwhen nujol should always be taken,\nTake a spoonful every night for a few\ndays. It's a thoroughly safe and harm-\nless method. It won't cause distress or\ngas pains or griping.\"\nNot Like Medicine\nNujol is different from any ather substance. It contains no drugs or medicine. It can be taken safely no matter\nhow you are feeling because It la ao\npure and harmless, and works ao\neasily. Every woman should keep \u00bb\nbottle on hand. Every druggist has this\nremarkable substance. Get the genuine.\nPerfected by the famous Chemical\nProducts Division nf the Standard Oil\nCompany of New Jeraey. Look for ths\nNujol bottle with the label on the back\nthat you can read right through tha\nbottle.\nFour Indians are held as the result\nof the midnight attack on the home\nof Mr. and Mrs. Barclay, near Orange-\nvllle. Mr. and Mrs. Oeorge Barclay\nare shown aa they appear following\ntheir harrowing experience ln 1. The\nsigns of the unequal conflict are plainly visible on the old gentleman. Mre.\nBarclay ls suffering from shock. The\nUttle  farm   house   ln   which   the   two\nCHARGED WITH MURDER\nPRINCE ALBERT, Sask.. Feb. 16.\u2014\nAs a sequel to the alleged drunken\nbrawl ln the Pruden shack, north of\nthe river on Monday evening, J. W.\nFindlay appeared ln police court before   J.   E.   Lusaler,   provincial   police\nBarclay families reside, about ten miles,\nfrom Orangevllle, ls shown ln 2, while\nNo. 3 shows two of the accused Indians. From left to right they are:\nTardy Doxater and Roy Williams. The\nshattered door, through which the\nentrance of the mldhlght attackers was\nforced, ls shown in 4, whlla 5 ls Provincial Constable Joseph Nelson, who\nls Investigating  the case.\nmagistrate today charged with the\nmurder of Charles McNaulty, who died\nin hospital, following the affair. Accused was remanded until Tuesday,\npending the result of post mortem.\nTwo wolves have been shot at Cicero,\nChicago suburb, during past week.\nInformation\nIt ii inevitable that this wealth\no\/ experience has been reflected\nin the high standard o\/North-\nirn Electric products which\nere in daily use for the service\ncf Canadian*, and the develop\nment of Canada's resources.\nPRIDE\nMaster Workmen Work for Canada\nIN Northern Electric plants and branches 4,625 workers daily\nexert all their wealth of training and experience to create,\nperfect and distribute much of the equipment necessary to transmit\nelectric current to supply the needs of Canadian householders and\nCanadian industries from coast to coast. Thus each worker is play*\ning an important part in the development of Canada and in the\nbuilding of a great industrial nation.\nThe guild spirit, which inspired the master craftsmen, of former\ndays and created a standard of perfection which was easily\nrecognizable by all, is strong in the hearts and minds of these\nworkers. This healthy pride of workmanship has become a part\nof every product of Northern Electric workshops.\nThe Northern Electric Company is proud of the record of service of its employ*..\nees. The oldest employee in point of service has been with the company for forty*\nnine years; another man for forty-four years; and a third for forty-three yeara, \u25a0\"\nThere are twenty men who have a record of more than thirty-five years of .service;\nsixteen who have been with the company upwards of thirty years; one hundred\nand twenty-six for more than twenty-five years; and one hundred and ninety\nseven for more than twenty years.\n. Northern Electric\nCOMPANV  LlMITCO\nEquipment for trammitting Sound ani Power\n313 WATER STREET\nVANCOUVER, B.C,\n\u25a0 j *\n)\nJ35R\n-\n s__\nTHE N^ESON DSILY NEWS,     THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 16, 1928\nfrYPmrrc\nUN IT KILL\n<ALL OF WINTER\nCHINS URL\nT\nOLYMPIC EVENTS\nflooded   With   Water;\nSupposed to Play\nHockey Today\nPut Down Rovers 12-4.School\nMatch; C. Bush Stars for\nVictors\nT.' MORITZ, Switzerland, Peb. 16.\u2014\ni. unprecedented thaw which haa\nMd the Olympic winter game* haa\nb freah tmpetua to the movement\nstart the .1933 aporta transferred\nn the United states to Canada.\nJ.   Mulqueen.   chairman   of   the\nadlan   Olympic   committee,   pointed\nthat   If   auch   condition   ahould\n\u25a0all while the gamee were at Mont-\nin. 1933, the eventa could be run\nln the two Montreal artificial Ice\ntie movement generally is making\nrrees especially among the United\nea party.\ntHle Canada ls scheduled to play\nn tomorrow in the first of the\nhockey game, all the rinks are\nded With water and new plans must\nregarded skeptically. The Swiss\nnplc committee realizing the Balances of the situation, has called\neitraordinary meeting of teams for\nirsday  evening.\nib Ester the^'Prize\nCbcle\" inWinmaeg's\nAnnual Bonspiel Event\nCanadlens scored a 12-4 victory over\n'he   Rovers   yesterday   afternoon   in   a\n* eedv school league basketball match.\nThe Canadlens led 8-3 at the end of the\nfirst period.\nC\u00ab Bush was decidedly the star of the\nnadlens,  netting every  one  of  thetr\nolnts, while Kirby and Steed each contributed   one   basket   for   the   Rovers,\ntaking all the scoring honors.\nJ. 8. Donaldson handled tbe game\nvery well. Three personal fouls were\n'led on T. Mllburn. while Kirby, Wat's Russell and Hucal each had one\n.- .Iked up against them.\nThe teams were:\nCanadlens\u2014C.   Bush    (12),   D.    Mc-\n\u25a0i   S   Russell, W. Cartmell, T. MU-\nijjrn, J. Wallace.\nRovers\u2014Kirby (\u2022), O. Steed (2,)\nYoung, L. Crack, Stewart, N. Hucal, O.\nBrown.\nftKttttQ,  Feb.   15.\u2014The   Manitoba\nng association's 40th annual bon-\nl was neartng the finals tonight after\niy of -hotly contested matches which\nleased  the progress of  many rinks\nthe \"prize circle.\"\n:cLeod  of Saskatoon and Flnlay of\neouver. with hla trio of Strathcona\nurates, found the keen Ice to their\nI today, and when play concluded\nht had two victories each to their\njit.\nstood sceured a walk-away win in\nHudson's Bay event, defeating Mc-\n_ ., Portage, 14-6, while ln the Eaton\nit he won from Campbell of Kenora.\nVancouver skip marked up wins\nhe Hudson's Bay event and Kiewell\npetitions. In the former he defeat-\nJttle, Treherne, 9-8, and in the Kle-\nwon from Anderson, Dominion City.\nfl.\nINTERNATIONAL\nLEAGUE ALL OFF\nCoast  Series Concludes When\nCanadian Teams Warned;\nMay Finish Two Games\ntkey Walker ls\nIndefinitely Suspended\nfor Not Defending TiAe\nLONDON, Conn., Feb. 15. \u2014\n;ey Walker, middleweight champion.\nIndefinitely suspended today by the\ninal Boxing association, ruling body\nj States and Canada, for not \"hav-\nihown any Inclination to defend his\n'though the six-months' grace al-\nhim has expired and proper\nlng has been issued to him.\"\nd\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 15. \u2014 The Inter-\nCity Hockey league recently organized\nand made up of teams from Victoria,\nPortland and Vancouver, was disbanded\ntoday as a result of the order forbidding\nBritish Columbia teams from playing ln\nit, Issued by Dr. P. 1. Sandercock, Calgary, president of the Canadian Amateur Hockey association. Two more inter-city games may be played, however,\nthose of Vancouver at Victoria on Friday night and at Portland on Sunday\nnight. The games must be played under amateur rules and with no cup at\nstake. The concession was made on\nrepresentations that Portland should\nhave return games for those played by\nthe Rosebuds ln Victoria and Vancouver, the only two games which had been\nplayed ln the'leaguc.\nJack Delaney Starts\nTraining Today for\nHeeney Bout, March\nBRIDGEPORT, Conn., Feb. 15. \u2014 Jack\nDelahey will start active training for\nhis bout with Tom Heeney of New Zealand ln Madison Square Garden, March\n1, at his gym tomorrow, his manager,\nJoe Jacobs, announced today. Delaney\nworked out lightly today.\nSelkirk Bonspiel\nEAST KOOTENAY\nGRAND CHALLENGE\n[Cameron )Cameron \\\nDouglas I ] Halcrow...\nHalcrow 1 Halcrow..\nWilson (\nBarber\nHarris\nBarber...\n^fen..}\"*\"\"\t\nSS&S^**\"-\"\"11--\nJ?\"\"\"*1** I Bowness...\nBowness- \/\nW. Douglas... J 8haw.\t\nJMorrisi\n\"  I Shaw...\nKuglas...\nj\"1\"\" | McPherson.. >\nMcPherson... I\nKIMBERLEY   CUP\n}*.Dou\u00bbl\"-lw.Dou,lM...,\nWilson......\u2014 J '.Bownet\n^-Z^Bownese 1\n} Spence...\n) Barber...\nMorrison.\nSpence\t\nBarber...\nOray\t\nHalcrow.\nJames....\n\\ Halcrow...\nLindberg I Harris\nHarris J hums\t\nP. DOUglBS 1 ,)...,,\u201e .\nHutchinson. . Dou\u00ab\">\" j UoPhM...\n!&.:>*\u2022\u25a0 i\nCAMERON CUP\n\u201e}8h\u00bbw- IShaw: ]\nW. Douglas... \/\nCameron\nF. Douglas-\nHarris\t\nLindberg\nJames....\nBarber...\nJ McPherson.\n\\ Cameron\t\n| Harris\t\n\\ Barber\t\nMtPhe;\nCraT*        }***\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nSRSS&ad1*\"*\"\nI Spence...\nCOSMOPOLITAN\n\u25a0\u25a0} McPherson...\/) MoPlMm>n...A\nI McPherson.\nHalcrow...\nfc_::z}8h<w\t\naSSSr,::_:::K\u00b0\u00ab\t\nBjrbj^;....} Cameron..\nJQray\t\nISpence..\nOray\t\nBowness.\nS33S_=}>\u00ab\u00bb\"\t\nHauls..\u2014\nL Morrison.\nTO KIMBERLEY\nMarch 24 and 25 Set by Executive; Team to Be Picked\nby a Committee\nTWO   REPRESENTATIVE\nWILL WILL GO, TRAIL\nBankers-Cadets Game for Tonight Postponed; Arrange for\nFloor Space\nMarch 24 and 25 were the dates, set\nlast night at a meeting of the executive\nof the Nelson Basketball association for\nthe reurn games with Klmberley at\nKlmberley. One representative team, to\nbe picked by A. Wallach, E. Chapman\nand J. D. Notman, will play both games.\nTO TRAIL ALSO\nAt a later date two representative\nteams of Nelson wlll invade Trail. One\nof these teams wlll be picked mainly\nfrom the winners of the city league here.\nBoth teams wlll be chosen by the same\ncommittee, as tn the Nelson-Kimberley\nreturn games, the members having been\nappointed to act ln that capacity for the\nbalance of the season.\nRev. w. C. Mawhlnney, president of\nthe Nelson association, proposed a vote\nof thanks to E. C. Hunt, J. D. Notman\nand J. 8. Donaldson for choosing the\nlast representative team. The vote was\nheartily carried.\nARRANGE\nWITH GIRLS\nThe secretary of the league, Jimmie\nCarter, was Instructed to get ln touch\nwlh Mrs. Guy Wright, member of the\ngoverning committee of the Nelson\nGirls' Basketball association, ln an endeavor to have the girls' games, which\nare soon to start, played In the afternoons, and so avoid any clashing with\nthe boys' schedule, newly drawn up.\nIt was decided last night that for the\nbalance of the season each team ls to\nchoose a man before the game and toss\nthe coin to see which man officiated as\nreferee and wnlch would act as Judge of\nplay.\nThe  financial  report  of  the  Nelson-\nKlmberley  games here  last  Friday  and\nMonday nights was read and found to\nbe satisfactory.\nGAME\nPOSTPONED\nIt was agreed to postpone the Bankers-Cadet Intermediate fixture scheduled\nfor tonight, on account of an Injury\nsustained by Jlmmle Carter, member of\nthe Bankers, to his arm.\nLong Count\nBeckons Jack\nBack to Ring\nBy   AL   DEMAREE\n(Former   Pitcher   N.   Y.   Giants)\nThe voice of the people has nominated\nJack Dempsey by 10 to 1 to go Into the\nring for the next title race with Gene\nTunney, the present champion.\nLetters arriving from oil points east,\nwest, north and south indicate that the\ncustomers want to see the ex-champ get\nanother big shot at the tile. Very few\nexcept the straight Tunney followers ap\npear to be satisfied with thc result of\nthe notorious \"long-count\" battle ln\nChicago last September.\nThere are a few votes for Heeney, the\nAustralian; Jack Sharkey, and Godfrey.\nThis Oodfrey is one fellow none of the\nmanagers seems to be gunning for. Nobody wants to meet him, for some reason or other.\nProm the standpoint of the \"gate''\nhowever, Dempsey appears to be the\nman, by all odds.\nGUNTHER SKATES WAY\nTO VICTORY ON SLUSH\nSARANACLAKI, N.Y., Feb. IS.\u2014Skating over Ice that was little better than\nslush, Lloyd Gunther of the Cadillac\nclub, Detroit, today took honors ln the\nfirst event of the Adirondack gold cup\namateur speed skating tournament.\nOunther fought his way to the front In\nthe 440 yards dash, barely beating out\nthe youthful Iddle Jacobs of Chicago.\nThird place was taken by a Detroit skater. Perry Johnson. The winner's time\nwas 49 4-6 seconds. The mile race,\nscheduled for today, was postponed until tomorrow, because ol tbe spit ice.\n\u25a0\u2014#   Crewe Alexandra .. 27\nI   Ashlngtoa   ..\nLEAGUE STANDING ii^mCty\"\nBRITISH SOCCER\nplayed\nUp to and Including\nFebruary 11.\nENQLIHH LEAGUE\npulsion I.\nGoals\nP. W. L. D. T. A. Pt.\nEverton          < \"38 14   1 7 18 48A9\nHuddersfield Town 37 15   8 4 87 47 34\nLeicester City   39 13   9 7 88 51 33\nBolton Wan .... 27 13   9 5 57 42 31\nCardiff City   37 11    8 8 48 48 30\nBurnley     29 14 13 3 80 87 30\nNewcastle     28 11 10 7 57 54 29\nTottenham H. ... 28 13 11 5 59 80 29\nBlackburn Rov  38 lo   9 9 40 49 39\nSunderland     28 10   9 7 48 48 27\nArsenal  38 10   9 7 55 66 27\nAston Villa   28 11 12 5 58 52 27\nLiverpool     27   9 10 8 58 62 26\nWest Ham U  27 11 12 4 58 86 28\nMlddlesboro'     28   on 8 40 61 28\nBum     28 12 14 2 47 53 28\nDerby County  27   9.11 7 80 84 25\nManchester D  27 10 12 5 47 62 26\nSheffield U  28   9 12 7 60 80 25\n7 13\n7 14\ng 16\n8 15\n5 17\n5 18\nBarrow      28\nWlganborough     26\nSCOTTISH  LEAGl'F.\nDivision  One\n7 51 82 31\n7 47 74 21\n5 38 82 21\n3 51 77 19\n6 33 78 16\n6 34 72 15\n6 43 88 22\n0 49 00 19\n6 56 27 40\n4 69 42 38\n6 84 40 38\n4 71 30 38\n8 65 34 34\n6 61 40 83\n6 03 60 30\n8 61 52 SO\n7 10 3S 34 38\n2 47 40 38\n8 46 55 28\n6 55 52 28\n5 54 52 27\n8 15\n7 13\n7 14\n7 16\n7 16\n3 19\n5 41 58 23\n6 66 73 33\n7 80 56 211\n7 44 64 31\n5 61 67 19\n5 43 08 19   Alloa\n6 40 83 11\nBirmingham   37   8 10 11 41 66 23\nPortsmouth      37   8\nSheffield   Wed  37   5\nDivision II\nChelsea     37 17\nManchester  City.... 27 17\nPreston N. E  28 18\nLeeds  City    28 16\nOldham Ath 37 14\nStoke City   27 14\nNotts, Forest   26 12\nWest Brom. Alb... 28 11\nHull   City    26   9\nPort  Vole      27 13 12\nGrimsby  Town  .... 37 10   9\nBristol  City    28 11 11\nSwansea  Town  .... 27 11 11\nBarnsley     38   8 13\nNotts County   27   8 12\nClapton Orient .... 27   a 13\nBlackpool     29\nReading    27\nSouthanfptotr''.: 27\nFulham    27\nWolverhampton .... 27\nSouth  Shields   27\nDivision HI\/\u2014southern\nMlllwaU Ath  27 18   5   4 82 38 40\nNorthampton     25 16\nPlymouth   Arg  27 15\nExeter City   25 11\nB. __ Hove  27 13\nQueens P. Rang.... 36 12\nSwindon Town .... 22 12\nNewport County... 26 11\nCharlton  Ath  25   9\nBournemouth   26 10 10\nCrystal Palace   26   9   9\nSouthend   24 11 10\nBrentforrl, \u201e..,  27 10 14\nWalsall  27 10 14\nOlllingham     26   7 10\nNorwich City   26\nBristol Rovers ....... 28\nCoventry City   29\nMerthyr Town   27\nWatford     20\nTorauay United .... 26\nLuton Town   26\nDivision Three  (Northern)\n-*r   '\u00bb \"cfoalj\nP. W. L\nBradford      28 19    2\nDoncaster Rovers... 27 17 6\nStockport City .... 27 11 7\nrranmere Rovers .. 26 13   6\nLincoln   City    28 14 10\nDarlington   28 13   9\nHalifax Town   27 11\n4ccrington Stanley 27\nWrexham Town ... 21\nBradford City -\nRochdale   \t\nHartlepools  United 20 il\nSouthport   25 11 11\nChesterfield   28   8 12\nRotherham United 38 8 11\nNew Brighton   24   8 10\nP. W.\nRangers 26 19\nMotherwell 37 17\nCeltic   36 16\nHearts     38 17\nSt. Mlrren ...\nKilmarnock\nPartlck Thistle\nCowdenbeath\nAberdeen\nFalkirk\nSt. Johnstone\nHibernians \t\nDundee\nAlrdrleonlans     27\nQueens  Park 28\nClyde          28\n3on__s   27\nHamilton Acads .... 28\nRalth  Rovers     26\nDunfermline     28\n27 14\n28 12\n28 13 10\n28 12 9\n29 14 12\n28 14 12\n29 11 11\n28 10 11\n27 10 13\n7 12\n8 14\n7 16\n0 17\n7 17\n6 16\n3 22\nGoals\nD. F. A. P.\n4 80 27 42\n6 89 31 40\n7 67 23 39\n4 78 37 38\n4 64 58 32\n8 62 58 32\n5 87 40 31\n7 47 48 31\n3 54 54 31\n2 60 52 30\n7 57 54 39\n7 54 61 27\n4 46 59 24\n9 41 56 23\n6 49 65 22\n5 35 62 19\n2 34 65 18\n4 48 84 18\n5 43 68 17\n3 30 95 0\nDivision Two\nAyr  Unlied\nKings Park\nDundee   United\nThird Lanark\nArthurlte\nForfar  Athletic\nQueen of South\nEast  Stirling\n7 45 61 25 . Bathgate\n7 44 66 23 ; East File\nArbroath\nLfith Athletic\nAlbion Rovers\nClydebank\n7 12\n9 15\n8 14\n0 13\n7 14\n5 13\n6 14\n4 68 40 36 _\n4 60 38 34! Dumbarton\n0 44 32 31\n6 57 49 31\n6 44 32 30\n5 57 41 39\n7 48 43 29\n8 10 38 41 28\n6 47 48 26\n8 47 51 26\n3 44 43 25\n3 48 66 23\n3 46 64 23\n7 38 46 21\n7 51 63 21\n2 49 66 2C\n4 45 66 20\n8 38 86 30\n5 44 54 19\n8 32 67 18\n5 66 49 17\nMorton\nStenhousemulr   28 10 14\nSt. Bernard   28 10 14\n. 29 10 16\nOoals\nD. F. A. P.\n3 92 40 45\n8 64 48 34\n6 61 46 32\n7 68 47 31\n3 69 67 3!\n7 61 57 31\n5 79 77 31\n6 73 58 30\n28 9 9 10 50 61 28\n28 11 12   5 57 60 27\n3 59 62 27\n7 60 56 27\n4 52 49 26\n2 60 64 26\n7 52 58 25\n6 45 62 24\n4 54 65 24\n4 49 76 24\n3 44 61 23\n28    5 17   6 41 83  16\nP. W. L.\n28 21    4\n28 13   7\n27 13   8\n28 12   9\n28 14 11\n28 12   0\n29 13 11\n28 12 10\n28 12 13\n29 10 12\n28 11 13\n29 12 15\n28 9 12\n27    9 12\nScore 24 to 5 in School League\nFixture; McLean and Conway   Good\ni.\nD. F. A. P\n7 72 29 4.\n4 59 25 38\n5 62 34 35\n6 61 37 32\n4 56 53 XI\n4 66 37 30\n8   8 54 42 30\n7 8 53 44 30\n10 3 44 39 29\n8 10 67 43 38\n11 1 52 52 27\n5 40 57 27\n3 53 44 25\n8 44 53 24\n7 44 45 23\n6 42 40 22\n13\nHigh- :-hool defeated the Central ln\nt fast school league basketball match\nvt^terclax afternoon 24 to 5. Thc score\nit half time was 18 to 1.\nMcLean and Conway were stars for\nhigh school, each netting five baskets,\nvhlle Don Bush was best on the Central\n-earn, scoring four of their points. J.\nS. Donaldson refereed, handing out two\npersonal fouls to D. McQualg and one\neach to A. McLean, C. Pritchard, R.\nOloen and J. Sutherland.\nTbe teams were:\nHigh school\u2014R. Olsen, J. Burns, R.\nConway (10), A. McLean (10), C.\nPritchard  <4).\nCentral\u2014Bush (4). Gee (1), J. Reld.\nA. MacDonnell. J. Sutherland, D. McQualg.\nOLD COUNTRY\nFOOTBALL RESULTS\nLONDON. Feb. 15\u2014Results of football games played ln the old country\ntoday:\nENGLISH LEAOIE\nFirst Division\nDerby  County,  2:   Liverpool,  3.\nSecond Division\nReading.  3:   Bristol City.  3.\nThird Division\u2014Southern  Section\nSouthend.  1:  Exeter City 3.\nThird Division\u2014Northern Section\nAccrington,   3;   Tranmere,   3.\nNew Brighton, 0;  Southport,  1.\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nFirst Division\nMotherwell,   6:   Ralth,   0.\nSecond Division\nDundee United, 3:  Morton. 3.\nSASKATOON   RINKS   WIN\nWINNIPEO, Feb. 16 \u2014McLeod of Saskatoon, after two victories in the afternoon draw of the 40th annual bonspiel\nhere tonight, staged another win ln\nthe Hudson's Bay competition, and\nadvanced nearer the Jewelry. He defeated  McLeod of Vlrden.  11-9.\nAir mall line wlll be established between Mexico City and Laredo, Tn.\nCape Cod canal will be operated tree\nwhen taken over by the United Statea\ngovernment.\nt\nr\n.lb**\n'  \u00a3o>\n8\u00b0^Ctastes8_\\V^e<;\nV>eeISedatvddSepVani;\nis we 7 up'10'.\u00ab**<*\u2022*\ntod** i7B*K*V4<*\nTor Kale r.t Government\nLiquor Stores and Beer\nParlors.\nVICTORIA- PHOENIX   BRG.   CO. LTD.\nVictoria. BC\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board cr by the Government of British Columbia.\nReal Value\nfor your money\u2014\na delightful Virginia Blend\nTWO valuable\n\"Poker Hands\"\nin each 25c. package\nI H 11 \u00abI _  _,      \u2014\nEach unit\nof 10 is\nseparately\nwrapped in foil\n20\/o 25^\nSturdy cardboard package\nkeeps Turret Cigarettes\nin perfect condition\nThey are never crushed\n_____\u25a0\n mm\u2014^\u2014\nPage Eight\n' THE NELS\/.N DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 16, 1928\nSpeed  Skating  Competition Is\nWiped (hit by Skating\nFederation\nORDER RACE MUST\nBE RUN ONCE MORE\nJaffee   Will   \"Race   Them\nSkis. Skates or on Foot,\"\nHe Says\n[\n5\nOF 'PIFIK'\nMany Encores of Numbers Have\nto Be Given for Clamorous\nAudience\nEXTRAVAGANZA BASED\nON NAVY DELIGHTS\nNelson Operatic Society Scores\na Great Success; Repeated\nTonight\nBT. MORITZ, Switzerland, Peb. 15.-\n*The United States today lost ln com\nmlttee the Olympic victory lt was vir\ntually conceded yesterday by executive\ndecision in the 10,000 metres speed\nBleating   event.\nTwelve hours after the executive\ncommission of the olympio committee\nhad proclaimed Irving Jaffee of New\nYork the 10,000 metres champion, the\ninternational skating federation overturned the commission's decision, wiped\nyesterday's competition off the books\nand ruled that the race must be re-run.\nThe fact that most of the skaters already have left St. Moritz apparently\nprecludes any satisfactory attempt to\nre-run the race leaving conclusion of\nthe event as the probable eventual\ncourse.\nThe federation's action, generally regarded as final, added one more chapter to a  short  but  strenuous dispute\nof the event.\nSTRONG  OBJECTIONS\nJaffee had made the best time and\nwas regarded as virtually certain to win\nfirst place. Cancellation of the race\nbrought forth strong objections from\nO. T. Kirby, official representative of\nthe  United  States.\nKirby, however, has not accepted the\nfederation's decision as final. Propped\nup in bed, Kirby, who Ib suffering\nfrom a heavy cold, dictated a letter tonight to Dr. Otto Messertl, general\ne-ecretary of the Swiss Olympic committee, demanding that the federation\nbe overruled and Jaffee allowed to retain the championship.\nHennlng Olsen of Norway who was\nresponsible for the federation's action\nsaid:\n\"It  was   all  according   to  the  rules\nand  regulations   of  the   Olympic  competition.    I  have   nothing  further   to\nBay.\"\nRACE *EM  ANY   W \\Y\nAlthough 'Kirby's letter was taken\nunder consideration hy the Swiss committee, members of that body said they\nwere powerless to act since the skating federation was supreme ln any\nAction taken  on  technical  grounds.\nAsked whether he would race again,\nJaffee said: \"I wlll race them again\non skates, sklis. or at foot running.\"\nPending a decision on the protest,\nthe -\"American skaters planned to remain ln  St. Moritz.\nFinal decision on what is to be done\nprobably wtll come at a meeting of\nthe Swiss committee tomorrow night,\nEven should arrangements be made\nfor rerunning the race, the weather\nmight have the final say. The weather\n\u2022was worse than ever tonight. It was\nraining hard and there were indications\nthat the entire winter sports program\nmight have to be called off.\nAll citizens of Kingston, Wis., have\nbeen ordered to kill or muzzle their\ndogs.\nT*AVfit\nfOURlS?\n\/ tixirdcabin\nCEUROPE\nand BACK\nChooae famous Cunard and\nAnchor-Donaldson Tourist Third\nCabin Service to Europe this\n-summer. Weekly -sail i nn * from\nMontreal ant<_L,Quebec to Plymouth,\nCherbourg and London by the\nAurania, Alaunla, Asranla and\nAuaonla.. to Belfast, Liverpool and\nGlasgow by the Athenia, Letitia,\nAndania and Antonia. Round trip\nfares 1184.50 and up.\n*_\\m Cabin dsee and Third Cl\u2014 mf\neammadatlon i\u00bb of \u25a0 corr-napon-Jingly\nUgh atandard M all \u25bas,kn**\u00ab* Umbmi.\nSmtobi local ataamahip afcat or writ*.\n--   CANAMAMf SERVICt\nCts_&*~m\nTypically tuneful, as are all the Gilbert -Se Sullivan light operas, with the\ntypical and happy Inversions, quaint\nsituations, rollicking music, and Inherent comedy, \"H.M.S. Pinafore,\" most famous of the Gilbert & Sullivan masterpieces, was produced by the Nelson\nOperatic society last night In a way to\nwin \u00bbthe unbounded approval of the\npacked \"first night\" house. Encore after encore was demanded of the more\npopular numbers, and throughout the\natmosphere of this rollicking skit on the\nBritish navy and officialdom of half a\ncentury ago was reproduced in the way\nonly known to light opera.\nRULER   OF   Qt'EEN'S   NAVEE\nRt. Hon. Sir Joseph Porter, K.C.B.,\nfirst lord of the admiralty, tn the person of G. S. Godfrey, strutted as \"the\nruler of the Queen's navee,\" all the\nmore because he had risen to that eminence by faithfully polishing the knob\nof the big front door, and by never being to sea. Visiting the Pinafore along\nwith his \"sisters and hts cousins \u2014\nwhich he reckoned by the dozens \u2014 and\nhit aunts,\" he laid dignified siege to\nthe heart of Captain Corcoran's daughter, Josephine, despite the difference in\nstation. But he had, unknown to him.\nbut fully known to all the crew, a rival\nln a tar, Ralph RackBtraw. personated\nby D. Cretney.\nThe lovely Josephine, portrayed exquisitely by Mrs. C. W. Tyler, at first\nrepelled the advances of her \"common\ntar,\" but after being \"officially assured\" by Sir Joseph\u2014with his own\nends of course In view\u2014that love\nleveled  all  stations and brought all to\ncomman plane, decided In favor of\nher lowly but ardent lover.\nProbably the most popular number of\nthe opera was the catchy trio, by Captain Corcoran, Joseph, and Sir Joseph\nPorter, in which, they, to the well\nknown tuneful lilt, with a hint of the\nChimes of Normandy\" in it, gave their\nvarious versions of the love match each\nhad In mind. The gay Sir Joseph\ndanced with the dazzling but dissembling Josephine with abandon. The\nhouse recalled this number repeatedly.\nLOVE   TKHMI'il*.\nOf course in the end tho usual overturn occurred and true love triumphed.\nSir Joseph oent Rackstraw to thc\ndungeon. for daring to aspire to Jose\nphlne's hand, but after hearing from\nMrs. Cripps. 'Xlttle Buttercup,\" how\nshe had changed Corcoran and Rack-\nstraw ln Infancy when she conducted\na baby farm, reversed his ruling. Rack-\nstraw reappeared as captain, and Corcoran as a common tar, and it being\nobvious that one of cabinet rank could\nnot mate with a seaman's daughter,\nSir Joseph gave his blessing to the\nmatch.\nIn comic opera weddings never can\ncome singly, so Seaman Corcoran took\nMrs. Cripps or Little Buttercup, while\nSir Joseph was consoled ' when his\ncharming first cousin Hebe consented\nto bless his life, provided he dismissed\nthe rest of his cousins.\nCaptain Corcoran was portrayed with\ngreat ability by J. S. Waters, while Mrs.\nJ. Ward, was one of the \"hits of the\npiece\" In the character of Little Buttercup, Mrs. Cripps, the Portsmouth bum-\nboat woman. Primary among all the\nsisters and cousins and aunts was\nMiss Mary Morgan as Hebe. Among\nother characters efficiently and adequately taken were Dick Deadeye, represented by H. H. Hinitt, and Bill Bob-\nstay, boatswain's mate, recognized as\nMajor    Gilbert   Anderson.\nTwo midshlpmltes, Miss Myra Humphrey, lent attraction to the scene, and\ndid the \"Sailor's Hornpipe\" to encores.\nSTRONG   CHORUS\nA very large and most effective chorus\nwas thc background of the action, and\ndances of many kinds, suitable to the\nscene and period, were given. The male\nmembers of the chorus were chiefly\ncommon seamen, ln white uniforms,\nthough there were a few marines, while\nthe \"sisters and cousins and aunts,\" ln\nvaried and gay apparel of a past period,\ncharacterized by huge sunbonnets and\ncurls, provided the fair sex and the\nsopranos and altos required.\nThe deck of the Pinafore was the\nstage.\nFred L. Irwin was musical director,\nV. A. Graves stage manager, and Miss\na. Scott-Lauder dancing instructress.\nNelson Symphony orchestra, conducted\noy Ross Fleming, gave the overture.\nThe  production  wlll be given  again\nonight to a house said already to be\n\u25a0old out.\nparties united under Rt. Hon. J. K.\nWhitley, speaker ot tht house of commons here tonight at a welcome home\ndinner to Rt. Hon. L. C. Amery, secretary of state for dominion affairs,\nwho has Just returned from a lengthy\ntour of the dominions.\nRt. Hon. J. H. Thomas, former secretary of state for dominion affairs, in\nthe Labor government recounted how,\nwhile his party, for an all too brief\nperiod, ruled, he Mt out himself to\nvisit the dominions. He went to\nSouth Afrloa, but on his way back,\nthe news came that the government\nwas   punctured.\nResponding in the same humorous\nspirit Mr. Amery described himself a\ndove returning with olive branches to\nfind hU colleagues had kept the ark\nwell pitched and floating high. He\nsaid the whole problem of imperial\neconomy development had taken a newi\nand  immensely  hopeful  aspect.\nTouching momentarily on foreign relations, Mr. Amery said that if any of\nthe dominions found it desirable in\nparticular circumstances to establish\ntheir own machinery for conducting\naffairs with foreign powers, then the\nrest of the British Empire could trust\nthat dominion to exercise no less a\nsense of responsibility that the British\ngovernment itself.\nII\nSeaplane Falls Into Ocean; One\nMan   Has  His  Hand\nSevered\nMACHINE   HEAVILY\nLOADED ON TEST\nTeams Fail to Score in 90 Minutes of Hockey in Intermediate Series\nVERNON, B.C., Feb. IS.\u2014Battling\nlii-m-h for 90 minutes, Vernon and\nTrull Intermediates failed to break a\n\u25a0rnielm tie In the British Columbia\nsemi-finals here tonight, The question as to who will meet Merritt In\nthe finals Is still unsolved. Referee\nW. W. Iiarroeh held the play and\nplayers in check.\nThe Ice was soft, and though at\ntimes the puck rolled and bounced\nabout, whenever a player worked\nthrough the defence, he could not\nlift it past the goal tender. Five\nTrail visitors visited the penalty\nbox for four times Vernon players\nwere shoved off.\nLINES\nTHE CUNARD   STEAM   SHIP   CO.. LTD\n622   Hastings   St.,   W.   Vancouver\nOlympic  Contestant   Does   240\nFeet, but Is Seriously Injured in Fall\nMONTREAL, Feb. 15.\u2014Word has been\nreceived here that Leonard Lehan of\nthis city, captain and star performer\nof the Canadian Olympic ski team, yesterday, made a trial Jump of 240 feet,\na new world's record. In completing his\nmarvellous leap, however, Lehan fell\nand tore the ligaments in his right I Urges\nknee, besides injuring his groin. He\nwill not be available to the Canadian\nteam for the Olympic ski Jumping competition for the world's championship\non Saturday.\nEngines Stop Suddenly; Rescues\nAre Heroic; Machine Sinks\nAfter Crash\nMIAMI, Fla., Feb. IS.\u2014A Cuba-\nAmerican Line seaplane, carrying 19\npersons, plunged into Ulscayne bay,\ntwo miles from shore, late today,\nseriously Injuring Ray Jackson, aged\n88, of Miami. Members of the crew.\n;i government Inspector and 12 other\npassengers suffered only minor\nbruise^ and shock when the plane\nfell to the water from an altitude\nof 200 feet.\nThe crash came when one of the\nplane's two motors stopped without\nwarning while the machine was\ntilted Into a turn, and the power of\nthe second motor was not sufficient\nto straighen the craft out ln the\nair.\nC. A. Rowe, pilot, leveled the machine   Jnst   before   lt   struck   the\nwater, but the forre of the Impact\nripped   the   bottom   out   of  the  cabin\nmd cockpit.    The plane sank.\nHAND   SEVERED\nJackson's right hand was severed\nwhen he attempted to save himself by\n,'iasplng the still revolving propellor of\nthe second motor.\nSome of the plane's passengers, among\nwhom were five women, were thrown\n'nto the water through the bottom and\nothers crawled out the cabin door. The\npilot and mechanics climbed to safety\nfrom the cockpit.\nA. B. Chalk, piloting a plane of the\nCauseway Airways, bbw the crash from\nthe air and landed his plane near\nship dock and enlisted aid of a speed\nboat, which proceeded to the scene of\nthe accident and picked up thc passengers and crew of the wrecked ship,\nThe plane was making a test flight\n[or carrying capacity and the j\nsengers had been selected at random\nfrom a group of spectators at the municipal seaplane base.\nLeo C. Wilson. United States district\naviation Inspector, who was in the\nparty, exonerated the pilot of blame.\nUied Articles\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rest\nBoats ud\nAutomobiles\nClassified\nAdvertising\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nlivestock\nMachinery\nFann Produce\nTimber and Mines\nClassified Advertising Ratet\nbnl Bsedla* INM \u2014 Tire. \u00bbu\nper word each insertion. In tilac-faes\nor   ma-blne capitals,    4o    per\nword\nBlack-io-'eapTtai- (o > word. Twenty-\nfive per cent discount if run dailr wltn.\nout chanie of copy for one montn or\nmore. Where adv-rtinem.nt le eet out\nIn short llnea the charge la 16o a line\nfor Roman type, loo for t>UMm\u25a0 MJl\n25o for blackface capitals. Minimum\n350, lf charged 60c. .\u00ab__-_!__.  _\nWast a** tnaaetaetl *\u00abt\u00abu*b\u00bb \u2014\nOne and a half centa a word per Insertion. If paid In advance, \u2022- per word\nper week, or >-Vic per word per month\n\u2022Transient ade accepted only pn a cash-\nin-advance basis. Each Initial, figure,\ndollar sign, etc., oounts as one Word.\nMinimum 25c, lf charged 50c\nBlrOi Monuea   Free.\nCard*\u2014Three cents per word; lOo minium\t\nHelp Wanted\nGIRL TO ASSIST IK HOUSEWORK and\nlook after chfldren.. Phone 684*\/. or\nBox 563, Nelson.     (2226)\nWANTED\u2014Man and wife to work on\ndairy farm: or girl or widow to do\nhousework and dairy work. H. Bourgeois, Crescent Valley, B.C.       (2322)\nSituations Wanted\nFARMERS I ORDER NOW TOUR HELP\nPOR SPRING AND SUMMER\u2014 Farm\nemployment wanted for British ana\nContinental Immigrants who will arrive ln Canada during the spring and\nearly aummer. Experienced and Inexperienced men, and married couples\nand families supplied. Apply, stating\nnationality preferred and wages paid,\nto Department of colonization and\nDevelonment. C.P.R.. Calgary.    (2146)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nBARRELS, KEGS AND EMPTY SACKS\u2014\nMcDonald Jam Company, Nelson.\n(2148)\nPRUIT TREES\u2014Order now for spring\ndelivery. T. Roynon, agent for Lay-\nretz Nurseries. Nelson^ (1930)\nNOW IS THE TIME TO ORDER apples,\npears, cherries, plums, apricots,\nprunes. Wlll send list on application. Kelowna Nurseries, Box 178. Kelowna, B.C.        (2189)\nMiscellaneous\nWANTED\u2014Clean   cqtton  rage.\nDally News\t\nWANTED \u2014 Oraln grinder; particulars\nand lowest cash price. ' Robt. Rldd.\nFruitvale. B. C. (2384)\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTOR\nWOULD LIKE TO HEAR from party\nwith small sawmill for sale. Olve\nfull particulars, price and location.\nPalace Hotel, Trail, B.C. (2299)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nSUITE\u2014507 SILICA.\n(2313)\nSUITE\u2014Ashman's Apartments.      (2147)\nHouses Wanted\nYOUNO COUPLE, NO CHILDREN, would\nlike to rent furnished house around\nMay lst. Por about six months. Box\n2289. Dally News. . (2289)\nProperty Wanted\nWANTED TO PURCHASE\u2014Stumpage on\n5 to 15 thousand cedar pole timber.\nWill pay good price If proposition satisfactory. Also, would consider a fair-\nBlze contract to take out poles. Box\n2295, Dally News. (2295)\nWANTED\u2014Small ranch, bearing orchard\nand usual buildings. Terms and particulars to F. E. Jackson, Dorenlee,\nAlts.   (2294)\nTELL\" your wants through The Dally\nNews classified columns.\t\nFor Rent\nFOR RENT\u2014120 acres, good hay and\ndairy ranch, house and barn; close lh.\nPor particulars, apply to Box 266,\nRossiand, B.O. _ (1973)\nFOR RENT \u2014 Furnished house. 712\nJosephine street. (2305)\nNKLS    NELSON'S    MARK\nWINNIPEG. Feb. 15.\u2014In connection\nwith the reported world's ski Jumping\nrecord of 240 feet set at Bt. Moritz\nby Leonard Lehan of Montreal, western\nrecords here reveal that Nels NelBon,\nCanadian professional ski jumper, also\nmade a jump of 240 feet over the\nRevelstoke, B.C., Jump in 1927. It was\nnot known whether the Nelson mark\nwas considered as an official world's\nrecord, but tt was accepted by the\nRevelstoke ski  club.\nMANCHESTER HEARS\nBRYSON'S SYMPHONY\nGovernment    Consider\nMaking of Crude Oil From\nCanadian Coal\nLONDON,    Feb.\nMANCHESTER, Feb. 14.\u2014The first\nperformance by the Halle Orchestra\nIn Manchester of a new symphony by\nErnest Brysoii, whose opera, the Leper's Flute, was heard in Loudon a\nshort time ago, was a striking success\nWriting of the performance the musical critic of one of the London papers\nsays:\n\"The symphony Is full of vitality\nand considerable charm. The berfor-\nmance was very vigorous with some\nstriking themes; the most arresting\nportion of the first movement was\na passage which suggested the onrush of a large mounted army. The\nslow movement is more peaceful in\ncharacter, but, at the same time, has\na   suggestion   of   vigorous   action.\n\"One passage, of which a good deal\nof use ls made, Is strangely suggestive of the well-known giant stairs ln\nBeethovtn'B Seventh Symphony. The finale ls an effective and baffling move\nment, which suffers slightly from the\nfact that, like so many composers, Mr.\nBryson finds lt difficult to finish.\nlhe great merit of the work ts that\nit seems to go on coherently to a definite point. The orchestration ls\nthroughout effective, and the harmony,\nwhile free and flexible, is not too mod-\n15.\u2014Members   of   all | em.    The  perforhianca  was  admirable.\nMembers of All Parties\nJoin in Welcome Home to\nRt Hon. Amery in House\nOTTAWA, Feb. 15.\u2014The house of commons today called upon the government\nto consider the conversion of Canadian\nlignite and bituminous coal into crude\noil. A motion of T. E. Kaiser, Conservative, Ontario, advocating steps with\nthis end in view was aproved after brief\ndebate.\nDr. Kaiser, in-presenting the motion,\nurged the government to have coal\nfrom Canada sent to Birmingham, ?Jng\nland, and there tesed as to its adapa\nbiltty to the processes being used to\nconvert coal into oil.\nSpeaking of scientific effort, Dr.\nKaiser suggested that at the gateway of\nthe prairies a monument should be\nerected to Dr. Saunders for his work ln\nwheat to show the world that there\nwere great victories of peace as well as\nIn war.\nA. W. Neil. Independent, Comox-Alber-\nnl, suicl that many things could be done\nin chemistry but not Wways economically. He criticized the \"mandatory\ncharacter of the resolution.\" as it would\nInvolve the government In large expend it ure.\nFOR SALE\u2014McClary range, $40; Good\nCheer heater, \u00ab25; congoleum rug,\n$10; kitchen oilcloth, $8; all In good\ncondition.    Phone   616R. (2249)\nFOR SALE, CHEAP \u2014 One secondhand\nfountain.   Kandyland. (2251)\nFOR SALE\u2014Four-cylinder car engine,\nin good condition. Used for running\nwood saw. Write S. Brown, Renata.\nB.C.  (2261)\nFOR SALE\u2014Adding machine, typewriter\nand cash register. Box 2266, Dally\nNews. (2265)\nCHERRY TREES, FIRST QUALITY \u2014\nShrubs, spring bulbs and plants \u2014\nAgents for Lagritz nurseries. Rutherford Drug Co. (2175)\n6-Room  House,  Mill  Street $20.00\n6-Room House, Hoover Street..$36.00\n8-Room House, Vernon St $40.00\nALL   MODERN\nCHAS.   F.   McHARDY\nReal    Estate,   tntnirnnne\nPHONE   136. NELSON,   B.C.\n(3297)\nLive Stock for Sale\nLive Stock Wanted\nWANTED\u2014A good, fat animal for beef.\nM. Heddle. R.R. No. 1. Nelson.    (2247)\nWANTED\u2014To   buy,   cattle.     K.   Popoff,\nSlocan, B.C. (2273)\nPersonal\nINFORMATION as to the whereabouts\nof Miss Lima Folger, lately of Watts-\nbtirg, B.C., ts desired by Capt. A. C.\nFolger, 610 Johnson Street, Victoria,\nB.C. (2298)\nTELL your wants   through  The Daily\nNews classified columns-\nYORKSHIRE PIOS, SEVEN DOLLARS\u2014\nBoothby, Edgewood. (2138.)\nFOR SALE \u2014 One Yorkshire boar, 2-A\nyears old, $36.   H. Bourgeois, Crescent\n_yalley: \\ (2272)\nSELLING FRESH JERSEY  COW, cream\nseparator,   breeding   pen   White   Leghorns.   John Graham, Perry Siding.\n  (2300)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring tesulta nulckly\nand economically,   l^frc a word.\t\nPoultry and EifKs\nWHITE LEGHORN HATCHING IGGS\nand day-old chicks from record of performance and registered hens. Chalmers, Thrums. (9->m.\nPLYMOUTH ROCK ROOSTERS. University strain. H. Richardson, Crawford\nBay. __  (2260)\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand economically.    IVjC a word.\nAccounting\nCHARLES f. HUNTE*\u2014\nAuditor,    McDonald    Jul   BotMli\nBox 1191. Nelson. B C. 1-1.\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, Boi A1108, Nels.\nB.O.  Standard western oharges.   (all\n_ oharges.\nBadminton\nH. R. KITTO\u2014Badminton Raoqueta i\nstrung and repaired. We carry a f\nline of these goods.        tilt\nDairies\nREAD THIS AND ACT NOW \u2014 AU i\ncows aTe T. B. tested.   We guaran\nquality  and servioe.      Call,    116\n386R1.   Kootenay Valley Dairy   cai_\nPiano Tuning\nEXPERT   PIANO  TONER\u2014L.  8___I\u00abtl\nPhone 251: Mason & Risch.        12V\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'   TRANSFER\u2014Banal*),  <X\nand Wood    Phone 106. (_t\u00bb\nWood Working Factory\n14wsn*.   -   Bake,   at.  carpenter  _\nJoiner. Screens and Hardwood.    (1\\t\nInsurance and Real Esta\nHeal Estate. Insurance, Rentals. An\n,hle Blk     PO  Bo\u00bb 733    Phone 1-7\n     till\nr. nn.L\u2014iNirRANCE,\nFARM   WI. FITV PROPERTT    _\n608 Ward Street WIU\nChiropractors\n'IH    liUW \u25a0 lilt KKH   HI.K\nNFI.HO.\n(ail\nFlorists\n\u2022 ,*\u2022*.\u00bb. Mini HE*.\nCut flowers and floral designs.\nNel*\n(311\n\"\u2022M   S. JOHNSON\u2014 _\nPhone 343 Cut Flowers Potted Plat\nand Flo-nl fmhlems,  (211\nWholesale\ni >i-hihi vxi.n a co.\u2014\nWholesale Grocers and Provision Jfi\nchants Importers of Teas, Cotte\nSpices. Dried Fruits. Staple and Fai\nOrocr-es  Nelson  B C. (W\nEngineers\n\\    H.   ORKKN  CO.\u2014CONTRACTOR..\nformerly Green Bros., Burden, Nelso\nCivil and Mining Engineers\nB.C., Alberta and Dominion Land\nSurveyors <iM\nII  D  OAWSON\u2014Land Surveyor,\nMining and Civil Engineer\nFuneral Directors\nstandard   Fm__\nPo. \u2014 Undertak.\ntuto Hsarse up-i\nlate ehaoel B\n\u00abe r v I o' *     Prli\nORAMiKMEN MEET\nVICTORIA. Feb. 15.\u2014Nearly 90 delegates to the annual meeting of the\nBritish Columbia Ladles' Orange Benevolent association were ln Victoria this\nmorning for the opening ceremonies in\nconnection with the two-day meeting.\nMrs. H. Allen, W.G.M., of British Columbia, presided.\nAirplane will be used to aid fishing fcraft in Alaskan waters this season.\nNational convention of Eagles will be\nheld ln Columbus, Ohio, week of August\ne.\nTwenty-eight persons were killed by\nautomobiles ln Philadelphia, Pa., during\nJanuary.\nCONDENSED'WANT'ADS ORDER FORM\nUse this blank on which to write your condensed ad., one word in each space.\nEnclose money order or check and mail'direct to The Daily Newa, Nelson, B.C.\nRate: One and a half cent a word eac*h Insertion, six co__jecnti?e insertion* for\nprice of four when cash accompanies order. Minimum, 25e. Bach initial, figure\ndollar sign, etc, count as one word.   No charge less than 50 cents.\nPlease publish the advertisement below.\n. times, for which I enclose I\nB  tea-re*,  replies  esnj   a.  addressed   U>   koi  numbers  at  Tba Dally  Newa.    If replies null\n\u25a0ailed, enclose loe tstra to cover oost af posUxs and allow seven words extra for k<n nossbar.\nt\u00absmps i_____*Si\nPACIFIC\nFROM   WINTER,   PORT   8T.   JOHN\n\u2022 Feb. 17\u2014Liverpool    MelH\n\u2022 Feb. 2<4\u2014Liverpool    Mimiedo.\n\u2022'\u2022Mar.  1\u2014Antwerp   Montnai;\n\u2022\u2022Mar.  2\u2014Liverpool     Mo.itcla\n\u2022Mar.  9\u2014Liverpool   Montro\n\u2022\u2022\u2022Mar. 16\u2014Antwerp    McUgan\n\u2022\u2022Mar. 16\u2014Liverpool    Moutcal.\n\u2022\u2022\u2022Mar. 22\u2014Antwerp   Marloc\n\u2022Mar. 23\u2014Liverpool    Mnmedor*\nMar. 29\u2014Glasgow    Mellt:\n'\u2022Mar.80\u2014Liverpool   Montclaj-\n\u2022\u2022\u2022 Apl.   6\u2014Antwerp    Montnalr\n\u2022Apl.   6\u2014Liverpool  Montro-?\n\u2022\u2022\u2022Apl. 12\u2014Hamburg   Meiagam\n\u2022\u2022Apl. 13\u2014Liverpool   Moiitcalr\n\u2022\u2022\u2022 Apl. 18\u2014Antwerp    Marloc\n\u2022Apl. 20- -Liverpool    Miunedos--\n\u2022\u2014Calls at Glasgow (Greenock).\n\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2014Calls at Belfast.\n\u2022\u2022\u2022-\u2014Calls at Cherbourg, Southampton\nUse Canadian Pacific Express Traveller\nCheques\u2014Payable Everywhere\nBerth reservations can now be made\nAsk about the New Tourist Third Cabin\nFull details   with rates from any Agent\nor write\nJT. S. CARTER\n, JUFtttet Powenfer Agent, Nelson. B (\n1\nHELLO- MIKE- KIM ^COU\nCOME O\/ER? TME FOLKS\nARE OOT- I'VE COOKED\nSOME COrXNEO 6EEF AN'\nCABBAGE-COME RIGHT\nAWAY-\nTHERE IT 16- MX- IT\nSMELL-b GOOD-THERE\nGO-.-. THE FRONT\n.\/WOOOR BELL- HE\nGOT HERE\nQUICKLY-\n TFE NELSON DAILY NEWS. THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 16, 1928\nPPl\nPage Nine\"\nMarkets\nES.\nTREND DOWNWARD\nMassey Harris Off; Oil Stocks\nShow   Fractional    Drop;\nGoodyear Tire Is Off\nGeneral   Motors   More   Active\nand Stronger; Baldwin Jumps;\nPools Active\nTORONTO. Peb. 16\u2014Price movements\n09 the Toronto stock exchange today\ntended downward.\nMassey Harris dropped from a high\nof 43 to a close at 40%, which was \\y_\ndown.\nHiram Walker closed 1\u00bb\u00a3 down, at\nSOVa. Seagram was down %, to 24.\nCariing Breweries eased Vi down, at 35.\nOU stocks all showed a fractional\ndownward tendency except McColl-\nProntenac, which closed up I, at 32,\non sales of 125 shares.\nOood year Tire was down 2, to 162,\nand Cockshut preferred declined another\n2 points, to 122. Western Canada Flour\nMills down 2Vt, to 39%, while the rights\nwere down 50c. to $4. Shredded Wheat\nwas down Vk. to 69Mt-\nOther losses included Alberta Oraln.\n\\y_, to 63'\/i. and Smelters. 2%, to 281.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Feb. 15.\u2014Butter steady;\noheese  unchanged  and  eggs  fan*.\nCheese\u2014Westerns,  lS'.jc to lBc.\nButter\u2014No. 1 pasteurized, 36%c to\n37c.\nEggs\u2014Storage extras, 34c; firsts. 28c;\nseconds,   23c;   fresh   extras,  47c;   firsts,\n43C\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA. Peb. 15.\u2014The correct figure\ncf eggs ln cold storage In Canada on\nFebruary 1 is now given by the bureau\nof  statistic-,   as   1,040,000  dozen.\nCalgary-Buying prices to country\nshippers'. Extras 30c, firsts 27c, seconds 22c.\nEdmonton\u2014Dealers quoting country\n-shippers: Extras 31c to 34c, firsts 27c\nto 28c, seconds 22c to 23c, delivered,\ncases returned.\n0'^ lcago\u2014Spot, 28 >\/_. c to 29c; Feb-\n\u25a0mrv, 26&c; November, 30*yac.\nNEW YORK, Peb. 15.\u2014-Hlthl\u00bb erratic\nprice movements in today's Btock market\nreflected the play of opposing speculative forces. Pools succeeded ln marking\nup more than a dozen issues to new\nhigh records, but bear traders also un\ncovered p. number of weak spots and\npushed a few Issues to their lowest\nprices in a year or more.\nSpeculative uneasiness over the credit\nand brokers loan situation Is believed to\nhave inspired much of the day's liquidation.\nRevival of activity and strength of\nOeneral Motors was associated with un\nconfirmed reports thrft WlUlam C. Durant was again operating In that stock\nHupp closed 2 points higher, at 39, but\nthe other motors were mixed, Pierce\nArrow sagging two points to a new low\nlevel.\nBaldwin Jumped 7 points to 250 on a\nfew sales, despite the recent publication\nof a poor 1927 earnings report.\nBullish operations also were quite\npronounced in American Snuff. Brook\nlyn Edison. General Refractories, Liggett & Myers \"B\", Moiitana Power and\nStandard Plate Glass Issues, all of which\nsold 2 to 5 points higher.\nTotal stock sales  1,655,800 share**.\nNew York Stock Quotation*\nHigh     Low    Close\nAllied Chcm     152%    151%    152\nAmer.  Loco     109%    108       1093\u00bb\nAmer. 8. & Ref     179Vi    178%    17Nt\nAmer.   Tele     1*8*%    178%    178%\nAmer.  Tobacco  ....    164%    163       163\nAnaconda         68%     67%      67%\nAtchison        186%    184%    185%\nBaldwin       250       250       250\nBait. & Ohio      110T'a    110%    U>%\nBeth.  Steel        60%     69%     60\nBunk. H. & 8     156\nCan. Pacific      202-%    202%    203%\nCerro de Pasco ....     65        64%     66\nChile   Oopper         40%     40%     40%\nChrysler         69%      58%     68%\nCorn  Products   ....     67%     67%     67%\nDodge  \"A\"         19%      18%      19\nDupont       3*26       320       324\nFlelschman Co. ....     70%     70%      70%\nFreeport-Texas   ....     83%     78%      80%\nOen. Motors      137%    135%    137%\nGen. Electric       128%    123%    129%\nMIKED TREND ON\nMONTREAL LIST\nGains and Losses About Equal*\nIy Divided; Shawinigan Up\nFractionally\nMONTREAL, Feb. 15.\u2014The trend ol\nvalues was mixed in today's trading\non the Montreal stock exchange with\ngains and losses nearly equal ln number ln a broad, but less active list at\nthe   close.\nShawlnlgan furnished trading tn\n6589 shares and closed at 98% for a\nnet gain of %, after having sold up to\nthe new high of 99. international\nNickel closed at 92% for a net loss of\n%. Brazilian new closed at 63% for a\nnet gain   of   %.\nCanadian Converters and Southern\nCanada, each with a net gain of 3\npoints were the strong spots, while\nQurd and Consolidated Smelting with\na net loss of 4 points each were the\nweak features.\nMassey-fla rrls closed at 40% for a\nnet decline of  1%  points.\nTotal sales, 42,963 shares; bonds $36.-\n650.\nCLOSINO   QUOTATIONS\nAT   MONTREAL\nBank of Commerce     287\nBank  of   Montreal       343 \u2022\nBank  of  Nova  Scotia        38*7\nRoyal Bank      366\nAbitibi Power -St Paper       77%\nAsbestos   Corporation         34%\nAtlantic   Sugar            23%\nBell  Telephone      161\nBrit. Columbia Pishing          7\nBrazilian  t.  L. & Power      209%\nBrompton Paper        62%\nCan.  Car  &  Foundry        60\nCan. Cement        34\nCan. Converters     123\nCana.   Industrial  Alcohol         37%\nCan.  Steamship  Lines          34\nCan. Steamship Lines pfd      92\nDominion   Bridge        67\nDominion  Glass     130\nDom.   Textile          131%\nA.  P. Grain      64%\nHoward Smith Paper       86%\nImperial   Oil         60%\nLake of the Woods     174\nLaurentide    133%\nMackay         113\nMassey-Harris       41%\nMontreal   Power          92\nNational    Breweries        118%\nOttawa L. H. &, Power     130\nPenmans,  Ltd     104%\nPrice  Bros      90\nShawlnlgan          99\nSpanish  River pfd     134\nSteel of Canada      194\nSt. Maurice Paper       93%\nWayagamack       121%\nWinnipeg   Railway       115\nWinnipeg Railway pfd    100\nVancouver Stocks\nDominion Live Stocks\nCALGARY, Peb. lS.\u2014Becclpta: (tattle,\n526; calves. 86:  hoga, 856; sheep, 139.\nSteers\u2014Choice \u2666__ to 810.60, fslr to\ngood \u00bb9 to 88.75.\nButcher heifers\u2014Cholc* 18.26 to 44.14,\nfair to good 87 to 88.\nButcher cows\u2014Choice 87 to 87.25, fair\nto good 86 to 68.76.\nBulls\u2014Oood 65 to 66.60.\nStocker steers\u2014Choice 67.75 to 86,\nfair to good 66 to 67.\nstocker heifers\u2014Choice 68 to 87, fair\nto good 65 to 66.60.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice 68.75 to 69.\nfair to good 67 to 68.\nCalve*\u2014Choice 610 to 613.\nLambs\u2014Fair to good 611 to 812.\nSheep\u2014Fair to good 68 to 610.\nEnterprise Consolidated\n28c per share\nSlocan Rambler \u00a3\u00a3&\nOur Allotment of 20,000 Shares Is Going Fast\nR. P. Qark & Co. pf0T\nNELSON, B. C.\nWith Whom Are Associated McDonald, Jukes & Graves, Ltd.\nI B. C. Silver  $\nI Big Missouri\nBUY\nEnterprise Consolidated\nWe offer a limited amount of pre-listed\nFIRST ISSUE SHARES AT 28c PER SHARE\nWhen listed on Toronto and Vancouver Stock Exchanges\nwe understand first offering will be at a higher price.\nSome well known developed properties in the\nconsolidation include\nEnterprise, Yankee Girl, Ymir, Goodenough,\nNugget and Mother Lode\nMail Orders Promptly Executed\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD.\nPHONE 68 NELSON, B.C. BOX 1074\nKOOTENAY BOND & INVESTMENT CO., LIMITED\nINVESTMENT   SECURITIES\nOOVERNMENT\nMUNICIPAL AND\nINDUSTRIAL\nBONDS\nBRITISH COLUMBIA,\nONTARIO, MANITOBA\nAND QUEBEC MINING\nSTOCKS\nHOME OFFICE, TRAIL, B.C\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffice Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIL,  BRITISH COLl'MBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC,  TRAIL\n_7D 93\t\nCork  Province\nDunwell   \t\nGlacier   \t\nGladstone   \t\nIndependence    \t\nIndian Mines \t\nInternational Coal\nLucky Jim \t\nLeadsmlth   \t\nMarmot  Metals  ....\nPremier   \t\nPorter  Idaho  \t\nRuth Hope \t\nSelkirks   \t\nSilver  Crest  \t\nSilversmith\t\nRichmond   \t\nNat.  811.  O.S\t\nB. C. Montana  ....\nBr. Petroleum   \t\nTrojan   Oil   \t\nSunloch   \t\nWhitewater    \t\nKootenay Florence\nSlocan King \t\nArgenta   \t\nOeorge Copper \t\nGolconda   \t\nL. & L\t\nPend d'Orellle  \t\nRufus    \t\nSilverado   \t\na -....y\nBid\n1.35\n.69\n  \u00ab...\n.41\n.34\n.08 V_\n.0814\n\u25a020 Vi\n.00!.\n.30\n.30\n.06\n.17',,\nAskcd\n\u00bb 1.60\n.so\n.41 Vi\n.36\n.30%\n.10Vi\n.31\n.39 Vi\n.00\n3.74\n.58 Vi\n.56 Vi\n\u202204 y,\n.10%\n.19\n.17\n.33\n.03%\n3.36\n2.95\n.35\n.12\n.51\n5.26\n.84\n,ievi\n17.80\n.52\n1.47\n.80\n.04..\n.12\n.20 Vi\n.\"Vi\n.24\n.00 V,\n\u25a004Vi\n.02\n3.40\n3.00\n.38\n.12 Vi\n6.26\n.87\n.ny,\n1800\n.58\n1.49\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Feb. 15\u2014Copper, steady;\nelectrolytic, spot and futures, H4V_.\nTin\u2014Easy; spot and futures, $51.25.\nIron\u2014Steady;   unchanged.\nLead\u2014East St. Louis. \u00bb6.10 to 86.15.\nZinc\u2014Steady; East St. Louis, spot and\nfutures. \u00bb5.63V4 to \u00bb6.\u00ab5.\nAntimony\u2014\u00bb10.7B.\nAt London;\nStandard copper\u2014Spot, \u00a382 6s; futures, \u00a361 17s 6d.\nElectrolytic\u2014Spot, \u00a366 10s, futures \u00a367.\nTin\u2014Spot, \u00a3229 2s 6d, futures. \u00bb231\n12s 6d.\nLead\u2014Spot, \u00a320; futures, \u00a320 10s.\nZinc\u2014Spot, \u00a325 12s 6d, futures, \u00a325\n12s Od.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK, Feb. 16.\u2014Sterling exchange steady at $4.83 3-16 for 60-day\nbills and at \u00bb4.87 1-16 for demand.\nForeign bar silver\u2014857Vi.\nCanadian dollars\u20143-16 discount.\nFrancs\u20143,92 *^c.\nLire\u20145.29c.\nNelson approximate rate on sterling\n$4.89.\nMarks\u2014 28.83 %\u25a0\nKronen\u201426.82. \t\nGranby\"  41V4 40% 40%\nHowe  Sound    44V4 43 43    '\nHudson Motors .... 83% 82V4 83\nInsp. Copper    20        I9V4     WH\nInter. Nickel   92V4 My. \u00bb2V4\nMack Truck   101 MVi 100%\nMarland OU   38% 33V4 33%\nMiami Oopper   1\u00bb 19        19\nKenne.  Copper  .... 84Vi 83V4 83Vi\nKreage  S.  S  67 -6V_ 68V.\nNational P. * L... 36% 25%      25%\nNash   Motors    85% 86%      86%\nN. Y. Central   151 156% 156%\nNor. Paclfio   94% 93% 94%\nPackard Motors .... 69 68% 88%\nPhillips Petr  37 36%     36%\nRadio Corpn  91% 90% 90%\nRock   Island     108% 108% 108%\nSchulte   \"IK M% 81%\nShell  Union  Oil... 24% 24% 24%\nSine. Cons  18% 18        18%\nSou. Paclfio   121 119% 120%\nSUn. jOU C\u00bb  53% 83% 53%\nStewart   Warner... 81% 80% 81%\nStudebaker    84% 63% 83%\nTexaa Corp  51% 60% 60%\nTex. Gulf Sulph... 71% 70% 71%\nOnion Pacific   193 191 191\nB. 8. Rubber   63% 60% 52\nU. S. Steel   1*4% 143% 144\nWesting. Eleo  M% 96% 86%\nWillys   Ovid  1\u00ab% 1\u00bb% 18%\nThis   Issue   With  Pen  Oreille\nLeads Day's Trading on\nToronto Mines List\nTORONTO, Feb. 15\u2014The activity\nand strength of Sudbury Basin and\nPend d'OrelUe completely overshadowed\nall other developments on the Stand\nard mining exchange today. The total\nvolume of sales- amounted to 1.246,\n946  shares.\nSudbury Basin opened at $14.70, but\nunder the stimulus of an active demand quickly moved upward, attaining\nlhe peak for the day and a new high\nfor all time at (18.30. During the\nafternoon all offerings wete absorbed\nat around 18.00 and the cl.se was\nthis point, a net gain of $3.55. The\nflurry was caused chiefly by the cli-\nculation of reports that the diamond\ndrill on the property had cut a substantial width of good ore.\nPend d'Orellle opened at $14.85, and\nalso shot up quickly, surpassing all\nof Its former marks and closing at the\ntop price for the day. Final sales\nwerts at $17.70, an advance of $3.40.\nOther British Columbia Issues were\nrather uneven. Coast Copper declining\n50c to $50.60, while Premier was up\n5c  to $2.75.\nNoranda fluctuated between $19.7.\nand $19.90, with the close at the lattei\nmark, a gain of 20c, while Towagamac\nwas up 15c to $3.25. Amulet eased 8.\nto $3.70 and Arno was 3c lower at 26c.\nKIrkland Lake Issues were incllnec\nto  easiness.\nInternational Nickel dropped $2.5C\nto $91.50, and Treadwell was 10c lower\nat $27.\nMining Corporation moved up 9c tc\n$3.99. Pioneer scored an advance of\n4%   to 59c  with  a  peak  of  60c.\nSherrltt-Oordon was up 20c to $7.60\nbut Hudson Bay Mining & Smelting\ndropped 55c to $18.75. Central Manl\ntoba was a cent higher at $1.69. San\nAntonio  reacted   to   41c   a   loss   of   4c\nTORONTO MINES\nAconda  $   .89\nAmulet  3.70\nArgo   \t\nArea   \t\nAtlas  \t\nBeaver   \t\nBaganac  \t\nBaldwin  \t\nBarry Holly \t\nCastle   \t\nCan.  Lorraine\nCorona   \t\nConlagas   \t\nCrown Reserve\nCapital    \t\nDuprat\n.26!.,\n03 Vi\n1.63\n.06\n.02 %\n.79 >,_\n.65\n.12\n.10'4\n.46\n.16\n.10\nDome        1350\n 17\n$    .40\n3.74\n24\n.26\n.03%\n1.66\n.06 Vi\n.02 !i\n.80\n.69\n.12!i\n.11\n4.70\n.47\n.I6V2\n.11\n12.60\nDon Rouyn\nOold  Dale    34\nOold   Reef    01%\nGold   Hill    25 .26\nGranada    22 .23\nGrover  Daly 08'i .09\nHolly         1725 17.50\nIndian           09        \t\nKlrklake       2.03 2.05\nKirk Hunton   17 18\nKeely    - 62 .63\nKeora    03'i     \t\nKootenay Florence 36 .36\nLake Shore      23.00 23.10\nLaval    22 .23\nMacassa     40 .42\nMclntyre       2700 27.26\nMcKlnley  1\u00bb       \t\nMoneta    ...,. 10 .12\nMining  Corpn      3.95 4.00\nNlplsslng         4.85 6.00\nNight Hawk  07 .07%\nNoranda     19.70        20.26\nPorcupine Crown          .04 .04%\nPioneer   69\nPremier         2.70 2.78\nPreston     04 .04%\nRouyn\nStadacona    17 .17%\nTeck   Hughes         8.80 8.88\nThompson Krlst         .02        \t\nTough Oaks   68        \t\nTowagamac          3.36 3.40\nTemlskamlng    08        \t\nVlpond   63 .65\nWright Hargraves       4.85 4.70\nWest Dome Lake   15 .16%\nCent. Man. Mines      1.69 1\nWinnipeg Grain\nWheat\u2014 Open   High   Low   Close\nMay 134%    135      134%    134%\nJuly . 135% 135% 136% 135%\nOct     129%    129%    128%    129%\nOats\u2014\nMay 63%      63%     63%     63%\nJuly          62 62%     61%     61%\nOct  66%\nBarley-\nMay 88% 89% 86% 89%\nJuly . ... 87% 87% 86% 87V.\nOct -        ..:'       78%\nFlax-\nMay        -    188       188%    -87%    187%\nJuly          1\u00bb1V-\nOct       10*\nRye\u2014\nMay         107%    108%    107%    108%\nJuly       ..    106%    106%    106%    106%\nOct        106%\nCash  wheat\u2014No.   1   northern,   140%\nNo. 2 northern, 136%;    No. 3 northern.\n122%;   No.  4,   110%;   No,   5,  98%;   No.\n6, 89%; feed, 80%; track, 134%; screenings,  $10.\nWINNIPEG. Feb. 15.\u2014Dominion war\nissue prices:\nWar loans\u20141931. $102.30b, $102.40a:\n1937, $106.13b, $106.50a.\nVictory loans\u20141933, $105.86b, $106.00a;\n1984.   $106.60b,   $105.76a;   1937,   $110.16.\nRenewals\u20141932, $104.\nRefunding loans\u20141928, $10020: 194.1,\n$106.90b, $106.10a; 1944. $102.80b,\n\u202210-.-0-, $102.90a; 1940. $102.40b,\n$102.90a;   1940, $102.40b.\nMajority of Stocks Led by Pend\nOreille  Move  Upward;\nWhitewater Soars\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 16\u2014A heavy demand for Pend Oreille stock from eastern Canadian points gave the Vancouver\nstock exchange a bullish tendency today\nand the majority of listed stocks swept\nupward. From a close of $14.80 on Tuesday, Pend Oreille rapidly mounted today, finishing with a net gain of $3.30.\nat $17.80, with the demand still unsatisfied.\nWhitewater common scored a net gain\nof 20c, to $2.95; Big Missouri closed at\n59, 6c up; George Copper advanced 25c,\nto $5.26; B. C. Silver 10c. to $1.35;\nwhile numerous other Issues were 1 to\n5 points stronger.\nCoast Copper, traded ln lightly, eased\n$3, to $49, while Sunloch was steady at\n$3.35, as was also Premier at $2.74\nasked.\nRuth, Rufus and Argenta were the\nweak figures, receding 2, 3 and 4 points,\nrespectively.\nSales 386,500 shares, valued at $391,-\n951):\nFlint Cables\nSaint John\u2014British Columbia apples,\nbox, Stayman, cxtrn fancy, \u2666\u25a0*.\nQuebec\u2014British Columbia apples. Mcintosh, box, fancy, $3.76 to *4, C grade\n$3 to $3.25; Jonathans, fancy. \u00bb3.75.\nMontreal\u2014British Columbia apples,\nbox, Delicious, fancy, (3.75 to 94, C\nS3.60 to \u00bb3.75; Bome Beauty, extra fancy,\n*3.76 to M.\nOttawa\u2014British Columbia apples, box,\nMcintosh, fancy. $2.50 to $2.75; Rome\n3eauty, Winter Banana, fancy, $3.60 to\n3.75. Imported: lettuce. Iceberg,\n_ to 6 doz. crate, Cal., 6450 to $4.75;\npinach. bus. hamper. $3 to $3.25;\naeets, bUB. hamper, $3.50; carrots. $3;\n\u25a0abbage, per crate, $4.50 to $4.75:\ntlery, crate, $750 to $8; onions, Span-\nsh, choice. $6, half-crate, $3.25; caull-\nlower, $2.50 to $3.75; tomatoes, 6-basket\nrate. Fla.. No. I, $5.50 to $6.50; Cuban,\n'-basket crate, No. 1, $4 to $4.50:\n\u2022rapes, Malaga, keg, No. 1, $8.50 to $10;\nlears, Columbia and Winter Nellis, box,\nnncy, $5.50 to Rfl. Auction prices:\n\"ranberry Pippin, No. 2, $3.50 to $4;\n>py, Dom. (slack), $4.60 to $6; Russet.\nIo. 2. $5; Ben Davis (slack), $3.62 to\n;4.25; celery, Fin . 4-doz. crate (frosted)\nH.55 to $3.50.\nToronto\u2014British Columbia apple's,\nDelicious, extra fancy, $4 to $4.25. fancy\ns4;  Wagner, fancy, *3.26.\nWinnipeg\u2014British Columbia apples,\nRome Beauty, \u00abt*\u00bb fancy, $3.25, fancy,\nIS, C $3.85; Yellow Newtown, Spltzenburg, Stayman, extra fancy. $3.50, fancy.\n\u00bb3.25,   C,   $3;   Spy,   C.   $3   to   $3.25;   De-\niclous, extra fancy. $4 to $4.25; Winter\nBanana, fancy, $2.75; Boidwln. fancy\n$3, C. $2.80. Onions, Yellow, Standard\nand Sample, $4.\nReglna \u2014British Columbia potatoes,\n>?etted Oem. Canada B, cwt.. $2. Onions.|\nStandard, cwt.. $4, Cabbage, lb., 2\n^ents. Apples, boxes, Wlnesap, Yellow\nNewtown, Spltzenburg, extra fancy.\n13.60; Rome Beauty, extra fancy, $3.35;\nlalome, Russet, Gano, Stark, fancy,\nJ3.10; Salmone. Black Twig, C, $2.85;\nlome Beauty, C $3.10; various varieties.!\n\u2022rates, 11.19 to $2.35.\nEdmonton-\u2014British   Columbia   apples,\nbones. Yellow Newtown, Wlnesap, extra\nfancy, $3.60 to $9.05, fancy, $8 40 to\n$3.50, C, $3.25 to $335; Rome Beauty,\nSpltzenburg,' Stayman, fancy. $3 to\n$3.25, C, $2.76 to $8. Above varletiea,\ncratea, $3.26 to $3.50. Salome, Oano.\nBlack Twig, Ben Davis, fancy, $2.76 to\n$3, C, $2.60 to $2.75, crates, $2 to $2.26.\nOnions, Yellow, Standard, (reconditioned) $3.50 to $4. Sample (original\npack) $2.50 to $3. Hothouse rhubarb,\npound, 16 to 16 cents. Imported applea,\nboxes, Wlnesap, C, $2.76 to $3; Rome\nBeauty, Black Twig, Ben Davis, C, $2.60\nto $2.75.    Mexican tomatoes,  lugs, No.\n1, repacked, $6 to $6.60. Celery, cwt..\n$5.60 to $6.60. Lettuce, crate, $3 to\n$3.60.\nCalgary\u2014British Columbia pears, boxes,\nFlemish Beauty, fancy, $2-25 to $2.50.\nApples, boxes, Wlnesap, Yellow Newtown,\nextra fancy, $3.50, fancy $3.26, C, $3;\nRome Beauty, fancy, $2.75 to $3, C, $2.60\nto $2.76; Spltzenburg, extra fancy, $3,\nfancy, $2,76, C, $2.50; Delicious, fancy,\n$3.50, C, $3.26; Ben Davis, fancy, $2.50,\nC, $2.25.   Potatoes, Netted Oem, Canada\nB, cwt., $1.75 to $1.85. Onions, Yellow,\nStandard, cwt., $4. Hothouse rhubarb,\npound 15 cents. Imported tomatoes,\nMexican, lugs, $5 to $6.60. Apples, boxes,\nWinesap, C, $2.66 to $2.75. Onions,\nBrown, Standard, cwt., $6. Headlettuce,\ncase, $5 to $5.50. Cauliflower, doz.,\n$2.75 to $8. Celery, pound, 6 to 7\ncents. New cabbage, pound 5\\_ to 6\ncents.\nVancouver\u2014Business fair. Market\nwell supplied. First car Texas cabbage\ndistributed. Okanagan prices advanced.\nBritish Columbia apples, boxes, Delicious, extra fancy. $3.25, fancy, $3, C,\n$2.66, crates, $1.50 to $1.80; Yellow\nNewtown, extra fancy, $3.25 to $3.40,\nfancy, $3.25. C, $2.86 to $3, crates, $2.25;\nWinesap,  extra  fancy,  $3.25,   fancy,  $3,\nC, $2.75; Stayman, extra fancy, $2.76,\nfancy, $2.60, C, $2.25, crates, $1.85; Rome\nBeauty, extra fancy, $2.50, fancy. $2.26\n10 $2.50, C, $2, crates, $1.80; Spltzenburg, extra fancy, $3.25, fancy, $3, C,\n$2.65. Pears, boxes, D'Anjou, fancy, $3\nto $3.50, C, $3.25; Winter Nellis, fancy,\n92.60 to $275. Hothouse rhubarb, lb..\nU to 12 cents. Tomatoes, hothouse, 4-\nbasket  crates,  No.   1,  $8.26  to  $0,  No.\n2, $7.25 to $7.50. Local potatoes, Canada B, cwt., 70 to 60 cents. Highland\nCanada B, 90 cents to $1; Drybelt\nGems. Canada B, $125 to $1.40. Onions,\nStandard, cwt., sacks, $3.25, Imported\napples, boxes, Yellow Newtown. C, $2.60.\nHothouse cucumbers, doz., $4. Mexican tomatoes, lugs. No. 2, $5 to $5.50.\nHeadlettuce. crate, $4.25. Texas cabbage,\nlb., 5','j cents. Cauliflower, doz., $1.90\nto $2,40.\nHTIUIIKES\nSI WITH WIT\nBut Walkem Comes to Rescue\nof Kaslo-Slocan Member on\nForest Stand\nVICTOBIA, Feb. 14.\u2014The forestry\ncommittee of the legislature wlll investigate the forestry conditions ln British Columbia la respect to future development and conservation.\nHon. T. D. Pattullo, minister of land*,\nin speaking to the subject took Issue\nwith C- S. Leary, Kaslo-Slocan, who last\nweek electrified the house when he declared that the big stands of Douglas\nfir would be but memories ln 60 years.\nHe maintained that while *; waa true\nthat the forects were receding near the\nlarger centers of population, they were\nholding their own ln districts more removed.\nColonel George A. Walkem. Conservative, declared that he had been informed by an authority u\"oi logging\nthat the estimate of Captain Leary was\nwell within the mark and that the situation was very grave Indeed.\nJoshua Hinchliffe sought by an\namendment to Ian Mackenzie's resolution for the appointment of the committee to have as precedent to the Inquiry the minister make a report on\nthe subject. The government voted the\namendment down with the help of\nBrowne and Neelands, Labor, The\noriginal motion carried.\nLOGAN & BRYAN\nPrivate  Wires\nSTOCKS,    BONDS,    COTTON.\nGRAIN\nMEMBERS\nNew York. Montreal and Vancouver Stock Exchanges. Chlcagc\nBoard ol Trade. Winnipeg Oratr\nExchange and other leading et\nchantVs.\nOFFICES:\nVancouver,   Spokane   Bnri   <entf\nCorn Market Goes\nto Highest Price\nLevel of Season\nCHICAGO, Feb. 15.\u2014Brisk upturn\nln the corn market today lifted values\nto the highest price level yet thie\nseason. Closing quotations on corn\nwere llrm at \u00bb,_c to lV_c net higher,\nwith wheat v.c to 'Ac oil: oats at a\nshades decline to tit to Vic advanoe.\nand provisions varying Irom 10c setback  to an equal gain.\nCase Plow Works Is\nSold to Massey Harris\nCompany of Toronto\nRACINE. Wis., Feb. 15.\u2014The J. I.\nCase Plow Works, one of Racine's\npioneer Industries, and which since its\nInception in 1876, haB developed into\na million dollar concern, was sold today to the Massey-Harris company, limited, of Toronto, Ont., it was announced\nat the Case company offices.\nNo announcement of the consideration   was   given.\nTo Those of My Clients\nWho Wish to Purchase\nEnterprise\nI Can Deliver This\nStock at\n28c\nC.W. Appleyard\nINSURANCE     STOCKS      BONDS\nCITY PROPERTY\nO. W. Appleyard    H. E. Appleyard\nF. A. Whltlleld\nBaker Street OHlce\u2014Phone 369\n___        _______________   __\\  WAY   \u25a0\u2022****\u00bb. I\nOther Branches st Winnipeg,  Yorkton,  Ss skatoon,    Edmonton,    Calgary.    Lethbrldge.\nVancouver. Kamloops,   Vernon snd Victor!*.\nShoe Department\nH  f \"STYLEMODE\"   SLIPPERS\u2014New   smart   styles\n{      now await your approval.   Price $7.50\n_~g-j Main Floor\u2014H.B.C\nA        Tm^^\"^*-**      spECIAL CLEANUP IN MEN'S HEAVY RIBBED\n\u2022nisWal W0OL C0MBINATI0NS\nH.  B.  C. RED  LABEL  PURE WOOL  RIBBED\nCOMBINATIONS\u2014Clearing price  $3.95\nH. B. C. GREEN LABEL PURE WOOL RIBBED\nCOMBINATIONS\u2014Clearing  price   $2.95\nALSO SPECIAL CLEARING PRICES ON  MEN'S  WOOL  SWEATERS\u2014Heavy\nand medium weight $1.95 TO $4.95\nMain Floor\u2014H.RC.\nLadies' Wear\nNEW SPRING SUITS! Come early and select your Easter Suit, in Tweed or\nNavy Blue, just unpacked. The newest short double Sweater Coat and Skirt\nwith flaps. Side very stylish. These come in Blue, Brown, Grey and Fawn\nTweeds, also plain tailored, Navy or Black, with pin stripe, Poiret Twill. Sizes\n16 to 40 bust.   Prices ranging \u201e $19.95 TO $39.50\nPARIS MODELS IN BLACK SATIN HAT with lace and new flare, and rhine-\nstone ornament. Suitable foil afternoon or to wear with your new Suit. Also\ncolored models.    Prices  $9.50, $10.50, $12.50\nBUTTONEERS for you Dress Coat or Spring Suit.   Small or large, ragged Mums\nin large assortment of colors.    Prices ranging, each  35* TO $1.50\nSecond  Floor\u2014H.RC\nDry Goods\nA WONDERFUL RANGE OF SWISS LACES AND  INSERTIONS  from ^4-in.\nto 2 inches wide.   Shown in a large selection of pretty patterns.\nPrices, per yard, from  3*  TO  15*\nCHILDREN'S AND MISSES' HOSE SUPPORTERS\u2014Strong elastic.   Stocked in\nall sizes, in Black and White.   Prices, pair .. .25*\/, 29-f, 35f., 4S*p AND 50f\nCOLGATE'S RIBBON  DENTAL CREAM  ...,.  2Se*\nCOLGATE'S RAPID SHAVE CREAM   35*\nCOLGATE'S BRILLIANTINE\u2014Per bottle  45*\nCOLGATE'S DENTAL POWDER    30*\nCOLGATE'S REFILL SHAVING STICKS   25*\nEGYPTIAN .ROSE FACE POWDER   25*\nMain Floor\u2014H.RC\n____\u25a0\n 'ftg* l^n\"^\n'tm, msm jm? news, thitrsmy moaning, February i\u00ab, m\nThe Ark\nI SPECIALS \u2014 Boys- Hoee. 25\u00ab*> P\"\n*-*dr; Girls' and Boys' Underwear, 54)4\nMr garment; Heavy Factory Cotton,\nflannelettes. Quilting, Print. Canton\ntlannel, Drees Flannel. Apron Glng-\nVun, Galatea Shirtings, all 25* p*r\nfcrd. Ladles' 811k Vesta end Bloomers.\nSl.OO eeeh; Furniture. Stoves. Quilts\nft) Waste cheapeet ln the olty.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nI   PHONE 534 (08 VERNON SI.\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\n\u2022tacU-l-dng    m    Correcting    Defective\nSight by  Proper Glasses.\nQniek Repair Service.\n(.BIFFIN BLOCK. FHONE 1.8\nf Rea\n=_\nRead the Advertisements\nTHKY LIGHTEN WORK\nSir Harry Lauder Does\nNot Sing for Canadians;\nCosts Money to Hear Him\nNEW YORK, Feb. 15.-**-The amity of\ntbe English-speaking people Is the keynote of tbe civilization and peace of-\nthe world, Sir Harry Lauder, Scottish\ncomedian, told the Canadian club today.\n\"I'd rattier contribute to friendships\nthan battleships,\" he declared-\nSir Harry attributed the large attendance at the luncheon to the Scotch\ntendencies of Canadians, who, he said.\nprobably came ln the belief tbat he\nwas going to sing and they would not\nhave to buy tickets to hear him. He\ndid  not sing,\nNEW   RADIO   INVENTION\nNEW YORK. Feb. 16\u2014Development\nof a 800,000-voIt cathode ray tube, regarded as an important step toward\nthe production of artificial radium\nradiation, was announced tonight by\nDr. w. D. Coolidge, assistant director\nof the General Electric company's re-\n| search laboratory at Schenectady. The\n\u25a0 announcement was made before the\nI American Institute of Electrical Engi-\ni neers.\nT\nOFST.SAVIOUR'S\nMr. Curtis Shows Church Committee and Bishop How to\nAdd to Appearance\nIS TOLD TO EXTEND\nPLANS AS OUTLINED\nWill Be Submitted to Bishop,\nWith Plans for Future\nEnlargement\nWHIPPET\nSIX SEDAN - -$1199\nFOUR SEDAN -$ 975\nHAS STOOD THE TEST\nBuilt by the Famous\nWILLYS-KNIGHT\nENGINEERS\nCapitol Motors\nBOX 783\nNELSON, B.C.\nGEORGE W. PEASE, Manager.\nPHONE 63 OPP. POST OFFICE\nRt. Rev. A. J. Doull, D.D., bishop of\nKootenay, arriving from the Crow last\nnight, conferred with the church com-\nmlttoe of St. Saviour's congregation,\nand with O. D. Curtis of Vancouver,\nthe architect, ln regard to the plans\nfor the rebuilding of St. Saviour's\nchurch, destroyed by fire on January\n25, Mr. Curtis submitting rough\nsketches of certain modifications of the\noriginal extension plans, which In his\nopinion would add to the appearance\nof the building.\nWILL EXTEND  NKETCHES\nThe church committee authorized\nMr. Curtis to proceed to draw sketch\nplans of modifications that would be\nsuitable to ths building as planned,\nthese to be submitted to the bishop,\ntogether with plans for the future enlargement   of   the   church.\nIf the bishop approves the amended\nplans, and they prove to bo within\nthe financing ability of the congregation,  eventual   acceptance   ls   probable.\nFurther consideration of the building details will now be deferred till\nthe plans as proposed to be amended\ncome back, a building being sought\nthat will be completely satisfactory to\nthe architect, the bishop, and the\ncongregation.\nAs under any plans a large sum of\nmoney must be raised, the canvass for\nfunds will proceed without Interruption.\niiiiffliiiHiiiioiiiiiiiiiiii;!\"!;!.,:;!.:;!::' \u25a0 iiiiiraiiHiiii: mx.: ,11   \u25a0;, mmmunm\nA Morning Treat at Any Time Throughout the Year\n'NELSON BRAND'\nPINEAPPLE MARMALADE\nTry a tin today.   You will find it will be enthusiastically received by young and cl.l alike.\nWhen ordering insist on your grocer sending \"Nelson\n.Brand.\"   He will have it in stock.\nI\nMade in Nelson by\nMcDONALD JAM CO., Limited\nWILLOW POINT NOTES\nWILLOW POINT, B.C., Peb. 15\u2014The\nBadminton club held a small but very\nenjoyable whist drive ln Crystal hall\nSaturday night. Miss K. Hillyard and\nCaptain Burton were responsible fop,\nthe success of the evening. Five tables\nwere played, Mrs. A. Scott and Charles\nBean securing the first prizes and\nMiss Margaret Campbell and Jack\nThompson consolation. After refresh\nments A. Fleming entertained with\nmusical selections on the victrola attached to loud speakers radio.\nI Miss E. Turner of Windermere is\nthe guest of Mr. and Mrs. F. Nlven.\nMiss Dorothy Alrey was tea hostess\nat badminton yesterday. A large percentage of the club attended, also two\n' visitors, Miss Turner and C. Hamilton\nof   Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Sewell and Dorothy of\nNelson were the guests of Mr. and\nMrs. Rasmussen over the week-end.\nhys Bible Clou at\nKimberley Sets Movies\nof Recent Hunting Party\nKIMBERUT, B.C.. *8b. 15.\u2014Tuesday\nevening tbe tfbys' Bible class of tbe\nAnglican church was given a rare treat\nwhen Allan De Woll of'Cranbrook entertained them with most Interesting and\ninstructive moving picture views, depleting a recent bunting expedition, of\nwhich he was one of tbe party. Pictures illustrative of lumbering activities\nwere also shown. Bev. W. J. Crick\nand his class conveyed to Mr. Dc Wolf\ntheir appreciation of bis kindness ln\ngiving them the pleasant evening.\nFi\nFOR TfEUHjIBIT\nTenders to  Be  Called  for  at\nOnce;  Perrier Passes the\nCigars\nIt was decidedd-*at a meeting of the\nhospital board Tuesday night to aak\nfor tenders for cyjrating the laundry\nat Kootenay Lake Oeneral hospital,\nafter alterations being made are completed. The secretary, James C. Forbes,\nwas instructed to call for tenders at\nonce.\nUtile else outside of routine husiness\nwas taken up at the meeting, for all\nthose present were ardent hr^key fans\nand eager to see the Nelson-Trail game\nA. A. Perrier, Celebrating the arrival of\na son, passed cigars around to the\nmembers with a broad grin.\nThose present were Oeorge F. Motion, president, J. C. Forbes, secretary;\nL. K. Larson, William Irvine, J. A.\nIrvine, A. A. Perrier, George Johnson,\nj. P. Morgan. Carl Larson. W. R. McLean, C. F. McHardy and W. M. Rutherford.\nEARL OF OXFORD\nE\nLadies'  Auxiliary  to Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen\nSplendid   Hosts\nCROWD IS HAPPY;\nMUSIC LANGUROUS\nRobert   Armstrong   and   Mrs.\nLindsay Lead Grand March;\nLasts Till Morning\nA. S. Horswill & Co.\nTIP  TOP  CREAMERY  BUTTER---\na \u00bb\u00bb - 95**\n1 Tin Malkin's Best Loganberries\n1 Tin Malkin's Best Strawberries\n1  Tin Malkin's  Best  Raspberries\n3 ^  v $1.00\nWe are giving away a Cup and\nSaucer with:\nt JffF  WASHINO POWMR\n*ROTAL CROWN SOAP\nWHITS  SWAN  SOAP\nWHITTS  WONDER  SOAP\nWITCH   HAZEL  SOAP\n,   l Cup and Baucer with any order for 60c.\nRED   ARROW   BISCUIT   DEAL.\nAny    combination    order    for\n*1.10\nPAIR   SCISSORS   FREE.\nOUR PHONE NO. IB 121\nDeliveries   Twice   Dally\nUphill and Fairview\nThe first annual ball and banquet\nof tbe ladles' auxiliary to the Brotherhood of Railroad Trainmen, held last\nnight ln the Eagle hall amid beautiful |\ndecorations, was a huge success from\n[\u2022very angle. The music was wonderful,\nthe crowd that danced was a happy\n;>ne, the eats were great, In fact everything was run o_f ln a splendid manner\nThe evening opened with the grand\nmarch, led by Robert Armstrong, divisional superintendent of the Canadian Pacific railway and Mra. Lindsay. Following the march, the happy\ncrowd danced away the hours till midnight wben the banquet was served,\nsome clever dance Innovations being\nincluded ln the program. After the\nbanquet the dance continued and at an\nearly hour this morning was still going\nstrong.\nThe success of the affair was due\ngreatly to those who assisted Mrs. F-\nBeck, convener of decorations; Mrs.\nSam Waters, convener of invitations,\nand to floor manager, Blair Kerr. Mra.\nW. B. Lutes was ln full charge of the\nrefreshments, while Mrs. Dave Maloney\nacted as cashier. The members of the\nmen's body assisted greatly, also, In\nvarious ways.\nIN IHE ABBEY\nWill  Be   Buried   Privately   at\nOwn Request; Service Will\nBe Held Westminster\nBllilllililBDIIBi IBEI'iiHIIBIIIIli.\nTry us and see if\nwe do good work\nand charge reasonably for it.\nBENNETT'S. LTD.\nTh<\u00bb  Horn\" nf rVrtr'rtil  O-vwJ*-\nete\nf\n_-__-_,.\u201e-.\u201e_\u25a0!.. ,\u2014\u2014...,,,.,.1! Tr.,_n.r_r,._M.,H..-_._.__.l_l_1_._l_l_l_ llllllMlll\nA BIG HIT\nSAY ALL WHO SAW IT\nGO GET ON BOARD THE\n'H. M. S. PINAFORE'\nAT THE OPERA HOUSE. 8:40 TONIGHT\nDoors Open 7:45.   Overture 8.20.   Curtain 8:40.\n\"Rush Seats 75c. Children and Students 50c\nI 1\nI 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\napers, just as do subscribers.\nHelp  him  all you can.\nIe will appreciate it.\nSUTTON COURTENAY. Er*land. Feb.\n15.\u2014While eminent men and the press\nof Oreat Britain praised the Earl of Ox\nford's life of service and mourned his\ndeath, the body oi tbe aged statesman\nwho died at his home here early today,\nwas carried tonight to the parish church\nof Sutton Courtenay.\nThe earl will be buried privately, and\nnot in Westminster Abbey. This announcement was made tonlgbt by the\nfamily and the decision was ln accordance with the special wish expressed by\nLord Oxford some time ago.\nA memorial service for the former\npremier, however, will be held at the\nabbey at noon, February 21.\nA simple service for the family wlll\nbe held -in the parish church Saturday\nmorning.\nPraise for tho Earl of Oxford and\nAaiuith as.a great parliamentarian, a\nforceful, gracious debater and an unselfish servant of the nation's welfare,\nls contained in thousands of messages\nof condolences published and received\nby his widow. All recall his activities\nln the early days of the war, when, as\nprime minister, he breathed the British\nspirit of confident courage.\nIncrease Yonr Salary\nEvening Classes\nIndividual Tuition\nNelson Business College\nIM DOWN TOWN\nAnd save time and street car\nfares.  You get real comfort\nin the\nKERR APARTMENTS\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNrlRon's   Dispensing   Chemist*\nFOR\nVALENTINES\nof  Every  Description\nNELSON,   B.C.\nTake     Intercity     Telegraphic\nGame 2580 to 2477; Maber,\nStri\/.ic, Feuchak, High\n'COLLINSON\nfor QUALITY'\nE.C0LLINS0N\nJeweler\nExpert Watchmaker\nC.P.R. and G.N.R. Time Inspector\nSouth Slocan bowlers once again defeated Nelson ln an intercity telegraphic\ngame last night. The score was 2580\nto 2477, an average of 616 per man tor\nSouth Slocan and 405.4 per man for\nNelson. Nelson bowled on the Semaphore alleys.\nNelson took the honors for high man,\nMaber running up a high aggregate for\nthe evening of 656, four more than\nSouth Slocan's high man, Striate,* who\nrolled 664, and also rolling up the high\nsingle for the evening of 231, which was\n27 more than South Slocan's high man,\nFeuchak, who rolled 204.\nTIIE  SCORES\nThe scores were:\nSouth Slocan\u2014\nMaarsund     170\nFeuchak     173\nStrlzic     104\nBleeker     156\nMarshall     166\nUMMiuiumnwuiuiui\nBRUSHES\nWe carry \u00bb\u2022 large and varied stock of Brushes.\nFor Every Purpose\nPaint, Varnish, Kalsomine, Scrub Brushes, etc.   Best\nquality only and prices right.\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE        NELSON, B.C.        RETAIL\n1\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nCLAIMS BLACKLIST\nEL\nBurde   Says   Accidents   Kept\nQuiet;   Urges  Safty  Inspectors and Lawyers\n145\n304\n188\n199\n186\n193\u2014 116\n138\u2014 (19\nlit\u2014 444\n168\u2014 801\n160\u2014 491\nTotals     866 932 80S   3680\nNelson-\nBell    \u25a0  177 140 179\u2014 496\nWhitehead     169 110 184\u2014 458\nMaber     148 181 331\u2014 558\nBrown       156\nOraham       150\n170   143\u2014 458\n190    161\u2014 503\nTotals        788   791   898   3477\nSLASHES    HIS    THROAT\nBALCARRE8. Sank., Peb. 16\u2014Oeorge\nsto-fell, aged 34, Polish laborer, who\nhas been working lor Anton Moss, of\nthe Kronsberg district, slashed hll\nthroat wtth a razor this morning while\nsitting ln the home of WlUlam Huster.\nstoffell ls survived by bis widow and\ntwo children ln Poland. He had been\nin the country for about a year and\na half.\nI\nPHONE 144\nJ\nVICTORIA, Feb. 15\u2014That British\nColumbia logging operators. maintain a\nblacklist by which they discipline men\nwho tell the truth regarding camp accidents and fatalities was the declaration made ln the legislature by Major\nR. J. Burde, Labor, Wednesday. He\nasked the government to appoint safety\ninspectors and to have the relatives\nof lumbermen killed In accidents represented at coroners' inquests by\ncounsel provided by the attorney-general's   department.\nA. E. Munn, Liberal, declared that\nthe statement made by Major Burde\nwas \"Incapable of proof.\"\nThe Alberni member repeated the\naccusation and asserted that the existence of such blacklists was well\nknown to the provincial department of\nlabor. Tbe attorney-general, he declared, could afford to send high priced\nlawyers about- the country to prosecute\nsome miserable offender against the\nliquor laws, but he had no lawyers to\nsend to attend inquests where men\nhad been killed ln industrial accidents\nSenior Hockey-Nelson vs. Trail\nSpecial Train\nLeaves Nelson 6:15.   Return right after game.\nFriday, February 17\nRETURN FARE $2,00\nNelson News of the Day\nHockey Pans! Celebrate Friday's\nchampionship game afterwards at the\nShifters Dance, Elks' Hall, Trail. (3330)\nOnly a few seats left for the \"H.M.8.\nPinafore.\" Oet yours early. Doors open\nat 7:45.    See display ad. (3333)\nThere will not be an evening session\nof the Gesso class this week. Announce-\n-\u2022\u2022nt   of   next   week's   evening   classes\nlater. (3310)\nEverybody welcome at Woman's Benefit Association old-time dance, February\noth. in K. P. Hall. (33131\nA.  O.  F.\nAll members of Court Ellen are invited to a social evening with Court Royal,\nNelson, at 8 p.m. Past Chief Rangers'\nnight. Court Star of Kootenay meets\ntonight at 7 p.m. (3SH)\nWINTER      DANCE      CLUB,      FINAL\nDANCE,   FRIDAY.   FEBRUARY   17U\nP.M.\n'&,..\nTenders wlll be received by tbe Kootenay Lake General Hospital up to February 25th for the oneratlon of their\nlaundry, Particulars may be bad from\nthe secretary, Jas. P. Forbes. (3310)\nELKS    MEET    TONIGHT    AT   EIGHT\nO'CLOCK. (3317)\nKeep Wednesday afternoon, February\n22nd, free for Trinity Tea at Mrs. A. D.\nEmory's, 811 Vernon street. (3818)\nThe monthly meeting of the Nelson\nWomen's Institute wlll be held Friday\nafternoon at 3 o'clock ln the Institute\nRooms. Children's afternoon\u2014program\nput on by the kiddies. Refreshment*-\nEveryone welcome. (3310)\nDance  In  the  K.   P.  Hall, Saturday\nnight, 9 to 13.   Troubadour Orcheatra.\n(3011)\nWATSON'S  for prompt and aatWac\nl tory i\nepalrlng.\nisfac-\n3264)\nDr. M. F. Setters\nrh). Irian and Surfaoa\nSuite   643   to   SO.    Rookery   Building\nOver    WhltehooM,\nSPOKANE,    WASH.\nComer Wverilde and Howard\nDOLLAR DAY\nSPECIALS\nThursday and\nFriday\nGenuine Bargains prevail during this two-day\nevent. We have to make\nroom for new goods arriving.\nHere's a few items:\nHandkerchiefs, 9 for....SI\nSheeting, 2 yds ?1\nFactory Cotton, 5 yds. $1\nFlannelette, 5 yds SI\nFlannelette, 4 yds $1\nFlannelette, 8 yds $1\nDimity, 4 yds ?1\nPrints, 4 yds ?1\nSatinette, 2 yds fl\nGingham, 3 yds SI\nCotton Crepe, 6 yds *)1\nFancy Cotton Crepe,\n8 yds SI\nVoile, 2 yds :.?1\nRayon Silk, 2 yds ?1\nCurtaining, 4 yds $1\nLinen Table Cloths, ea. $1\nCotton  Hose, 4 pr SI\nWool and S. & W. Hose,\npair    $1\nRayon Bloomers, pair ...SI\nCotton Vests, 4 for  $1\nCotton Vests, 2 and 3.. $1\nBath Towels, 2 for ......SI\nRubber Aprons, 2 for..?l\nON  SECOND FLOOR\nChildren's Dresses, ea. 91\nChildren's Mitts, pr fl\nChildren's Bloomers,\n2 pair  fl\nBoys' Caps, each  fl\nBoys' Shirts, each  fl\nStockings, 2 pair  fl\nOdd Corset;. $1\nOdd Waists  fl\nMany   other   items   to\nsave you Dollars.\nRubbers Vi price.\nRAMSDEN BROS.\nNew Spring\nHATS\n$5\nThe New Spring Hats\nare here.and this season we are featuring\na new hat at $5.00\u2014\nThe Waldorf hat-in\nall the latest shapes\nand new colors.\nNothing   is   Too   Good   for   the   sick\nSmy the's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION  SPECIALIST\nIn business for your health.   Let us fill\nyour prescriptions.  Mail orders promptly executed.   Call and wait for your oar,\nPhone 1.\nRon-toy hours:   l to 4 and 1 to 9 p.m*\nPHONE 44\n44 TAXI & TRANSFER\nDAV  AND NIOHT  8EBVICE\nCON. CUMMINS Is GEO. MoINNKS\nProprietors\nAU   Fusemen  Insured\nNeglect of the eyes when\nj young carries its danger*\nI through life.\nGlasses now, when need-\n1 ed, will enable children to\ndo more satisfactory school\nwork and insure protection from nervous and\nmental strain caused by\npoor eyes.\nOur    examination   will\nshow what is needed.\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST   AND   OPTICIAN\nEXPERT  SERVICE\niiffliiiiBiiiiiiraiiiissiitiii\nSoap\nand\nStationery\nSALE\nALL THIS WEEK\nBATH SOAP\u2014Large round cakss.\nRegular 16c.   5 for  60*\nCASTILE   SOAP\u2014Regular   .   tot\n25-.     3   Ior 25*\nCASTILE SOAP\u2014Large bars. Reg.\nular 26c.   3 for  45*\nLUX OR BABYS'  SOAP\u2014\n3    tor     25*\nCUTICURA  SOAP    25*\n6   cakes   _ Sl.OO\nSTATIONEBY\nPAPETRIE8\u2014Regular   60c.\n1 i\u00b0*  ss*\nPAPETRIES\u2014Regular 40c.\n' rat  _ 45^\nTwenty   Per  Cent   Off   All   tait\nand  Envelopes\nENVELOPES\u2014Regular 16c.\n3   packets    --35*\nBLUE   LINED  ENVKLOPKS\u2014\nReg. \u00bb1.50 xnx  $1.15\nRUTHERFORD DRUG CO.\n**\u25a0**\u25a0\u2014\u2014\n 'j .\u2014i- .\u25a0is.. \u25a0\u25a0\n<i\u00a3_B\nLAST TIME TONIGHT\nOld\nIronsides\nYou should see this picture.   It's an exceptionally\ngood one.\nCOMING TOMORROW\nWALLACE  BEERY\nand\nRAYMOND HATT0N\nThat   Inimitable   Corned)'   Team\n\"The Wife Savers'\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_02_16","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\/1.0403686","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":"1928-02-16 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":"1928-02-16 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":""}]}