{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2021-11-17","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1930-02-06","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404148\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. 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":" Wheat Slump\nCAUSES WORRY\nSee Page 6\n8\u00a3fo lailjj Sfetog\nI c\n-..\u25a0\u00bb, .0-. 0. Buchanan,\nPIONEER, PASSES\nSee Page 10\n>L28\nNELSON, B. C. THURSDAY MORNIfijG, FEBRUARY 6, 1930\nNO. 261.\ns\/dges Beats Seppala by\n28 Seconds for Second\nPlace\nOUSANDS SEE\nDOGS CROSS LINE\nNEW MEXICAN\nPRESIDENT IS\nBULLFTJARGET\nWounded    in    Jaw;\nWould Be Assassin\nIs Arrested\nGoddard Takes Chateau\njiurier Cup First Time;\na   Compete,   Quebec\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5.\u2014The -king of\nushers.' still reigns. Hardy young\npile St. aoddsjrd, ivho hod placed\n(oiself on the throne by wln-\nng eight of the principal Can-\ntan dog racea ln the last skits, further secured his position\n.en be scampered over Ihe fln-\ntlng line today, the winner of\ntawa's ftrtf annual 100-mile In-\nrnatlonal dog derby.\nFromo Mortday, first day of the\n*nt, when he turned ln the\nsTOrd time of two hours and 37\nInates lor the S3V4 mile course,\nfa M-yeof-old The ras driver lias\ntver been dangerously threatened,\nhad a lead then of nine mln-\ni and 25 seconds, Increased It\nmore than 20 minutes the\ncom! dny and retained his advance today to finish 20 minutes\nId \u2014! seconds ahead of Earl\n-yitte of Cranbrerry Portage, his\nst Mend,\nrjdges, who displaced Leonhart\n\u25a0nla as \u2022\u2022ootid place holder yes-\nay with, ft lead of 43 second., man-\n\\ to holft' ofi to most of that ed-\n>_ges today and finished just 28\ntat.- ahead  of   the Home,  Alaaka.\naly four mmhers finished tha ioo-i\nrVlnd, i*   *hlci> seven   started,\nrtas Ch-WWIt*.. Quebec City, taking\nth place,\nste drivers, and thts total times fol-\n\u25a0nile  St.  Ooddard.  8:13:33.\n.rl   Brydgee,   8:83:45.\nlharil Seppala,  8:84:13.\nforge*  Chevrette,  9:35:87.\nirry Wheeler, 0:18:05   (92 mllea).\n4.   OhajUtfng,  7:14:30,  72   miles.\nlank  Dttpuls.  8:05:40   (88  miles).\nowds  variously  estimated   at   from\nA   to   30.P0O   people   watched   Uje\nrng of the flrat two stages of the\nbut the! hl\u00bbher figure was far\neded today When enthusiasts were\n-ed. along tha course for mites.\nV wlaner wtll receive \u00bb10CO in\n. from the Ottawa business men's\nelation, which sponsored the\/ race,\n'' the Chateau Laurier challenge cup\n\"must win the latter three years,\n.ever,   to   gain   permanent   poeses-\n. Brydges' cut of the prlsze money\nilOO while sseppaia gets \u00bb100, Chev-\nl  will  receive  fourth  place  money\n76.    All the drivers receive expense\ney also.\n. Goddard and Brydges stated  to-\nthey would go on to Quebec for\nderby   there  before  returning   to\n: homes ln Manitoba.\nPit. Program\non the Prairies\n168 Miles\ntTAWA, Feb.- 6\u2014The Canadian Pa-\nRaHway will have five bills for\nch lln^s DMSre parliament this\non. ThaWlto provide for the oon-\nsjtlon of approximately 168 miles\nInee dlstrlUWd ssjmong three pro-\nea \u2014 Alberta, Saskatchewan and\nbeo. They pro as follows:\n\u2022om a point on the Taber subdl-\n>n of the C.P.R. near Tempest,\n,., southwest for approximately ten\n\u25a0a.\nom. Durielm, Sesk., on the Swift\n\u00abnt souttaaaaterly branch of the\nIr. aouthweaterly for a distance or\nit 60 \u00abUU_. ;\ntim Duv\u00bbl, ___t., on the Pheasant\n. branch easterly for a distance or\n. 80 mllea.\n\u00abK a po)nt ln townships 46 or 47\nof OlWOee, Sask., In an easterly\n*Uoti-**o Shellbrook.\nie flftlivjlne is a short one ln\nParish of He Perrot, Vaudereul\nkty, Quebec.\nie bills will Mk tor authority to\n?   aacuritlea   In   respect   to   these\nto   ah   'amount   not   exceeding\n|X>0 a mile.\nC. HORSE BREEDERS\ngOCIATION   FORMED\nMEXICO CITY, Feb. 5.\u2014Pnsriul\nOrtiz Kublo, new president of Mexico, was wounded In the Jaw by\na would-be assassin who fired on\nhim a few hours after he hnd\nbeen  sworn   tn  or  chief  executive.\nIt was announced at the hospital the president's condition was\nnot serious. The bullet was removed.\nNlr shots were fired. Two other\nmembers of tbc presidential party\nwere struck, the president's wife\nbeing crazed by a bullet and his\nUttle niece, Opella Ortega, sustained a light wound. A bystander\nwas also  bit.\nThe   assailant  was  arrested.\nMAKES TRAGIC\nDISCOVERY ON\nRETURN HOME\nSherbrooke Miss Finds Father\nand   Mother  Dead   in\nCold House\nSHERBROOKE. Que,, Feb. 5\u2014Having\na feeling that all was not well at\nher home 1H Brome village, where her\naged father wfcs suffering from a severe\nstroke, Misa Ella Fraser, who ls employed In Cowansvllle, -decided that\nahe would go home for a short visit.\nShe took the train in Cova_wvlUe\nyesterday and about nine o'clock last\nevening arrived in Brome Village. On\narrival home she found the house ln\ntotal darkness, the doors locked and\nwindows   fastened.\nSummoning a nelghbdr to her as*-\nslstftnce, the front door of the house\nwas forced open and there on the\nCUnlng room, float^-ehe found her mother's body, while In the adjoining\nroom her father was almost frozen to\ndeath. So serious was the condition\nof the aged  men that he died today.\nJust what happened is now known,\nalthough it la believed that the woman\ndied of heart failure, while her husband, owing to a stroke, was unable\nto talk or assist himself ln any way.\nThe unfortunate man and women were\nbetween 60 and 70 years of age.\nCTORIA, feb. 5\u2014With horse own-\nsod breeders representing all parts\nthe provlnee In attendance, the\nIsh Columbia horse breeders aeso-\non wu formed at a meeting here\nie election of officers was the main\nnesa of the Inaugural meeting\n\u25a0wing a short address by Dr. W. R.\n_%, provincial live stock commissi-.\nf, Ounn- gtressed upon the breeders\nlecesslty of breeding the type of\nIor i-mifch tbe market called and\nattention   to : opportunities   of\nColumbia breeders for markets\nUrlo and  possibly  Quebec.\nIjSRAR ELECTED\nN.BY ACCLAMATION\nj^w, Fen 6\u2014Hon. T. A. Crerar,\n0j\\raHw\u00bbye,   wa\" elected   bj\nation  i\"C. ty-ay for  Brandon\nFrance Faces\nYear in Sound\nFinancial Way\nPARIS, Feb. 5\u2014Substantial reductions ln the National debt ln the past\nyear and gold holdings second only\nto those of the United States enable\nFrance to face the year 1930 In a\nsound financial position, according to\nan outline of the financial situation\ngive the financial committee of the\n\u25a0chamber of deputies today by Henri\nCheron,  minister of France.\nThe budget for 1030 calls for a total\nrevenue of 11,982,600,000 with a prospective surplus of \u00bb1,260,000. The\nsize of the surplus may be affected by\nchanges in the French naval program\nln consequence of the present naval\ndisarmament conference and by un-\nforseen requirements under the social\ninsui-anee scheme.\nAt present, M. Cheron pointed out,\nthe Bank of France holds $1,713,200,000\nin gold.\nAPPROVE PROPOSAL\nTO REORGANIZE THE\nB. C. STOCK BREEDERS\nLIB LU\nBusiness Too Pressing to\nHandle Two Jobs, Tells\nLegislature\nRETURNING TO ENGLAND\nCAPT. J. T. SHAW LIB\nLEADER   SINCE   1926\nWill  Carry  on   as   House\nLeader Until End of the\nPresent Session\nEDMONTON, Feb. 5.\u2014As forecast  by\npress rumor- earlier in the day Captain '\nJoseph    T.    Shaw,    provincial    Llber.il ,\nleader   and   provincial   Liberal   member ,\nfor   Bow   Valley- on   Wednesday   afternoon  in the legislature -announced hlK\nrtsijmatlcn as leader of the provincial\nparty.    He  will   however,   continue   as\nhouse       leader   of   the    party   until\nthe end  of the preesn* legislative session,\nMr. Shaw's announcement came at\nthe end of his address in the debate\non the speech from the throne, when\nconcluding his remarks, he said:\n\"I now come to something of a personal nature which I desire to an -\nnounce to this house. As mr**t of you\nknow, I am a lawyer by profession and\nthe law Is a hard task master. Much\nto my regret. I find that I cannot attend to my place as a lawyer.and at,\nthe same time give proper care and\na tten tlono to the many duties 1 m -\nposed ufcon me as provincial leader cf\nthe Liberal party.\nCARF.Fl'l.   THOIOHT\n\"It is therefore with a feeling of\ngenuine regret that I have decided.\nafter much cartful thought and consld-\nerrvtiorn. to tender my resignation hs\nprovincial \"Liberal leader, and I have\ncommunicated this decision to the\nproper  authority.\n\"In reaohing this decision I wish\ntc make It clear that there has been\nthe best Of understanding at all times\nbetween myself and my colleagues\nin the Liberal opposition in this legislature, and that my resignation is\nfor personal and business reasons\nonly.\nI have agreed to continue to act\nas house leader for my party during\nthe  term  of  the preesnt   session\nThe resignation of Captain Shaw wa\u00ab\nby no means unexpected, and it was\na matter of fact, quite strongly rumored by The Journal during the 1929\nsession   of   the   legislature.\nNor is Captain Shaw's assurance that\nthere h*\u00bb been the best cf understanding between himself and his colleagues\ntaken   entirely  \"Cum  Grano Sails\"\nIt was \u2022 known at the last session of\nthe legislature that there had been a\ndecided split between Captain Shaw\nand others, notably 6. H. Webster of\nCalgary, on the question of public\nownership and though there were\nstrong denials at the time cf Captain\nShaw's resignation, the breach has\nevidently widened further with the\nopening Of another session. Captain\nShaw succeeded Hon. C R. Mitchell\nas Liberal provincial leader on Apratl\n21.   1926.\nTWO MILLION\nIS MANITOBA\nLIQUOR GAIN\nCitizens Expend  Six\nMillion   Dollars  to\nQuench Thirsts\nSEEK   SPEED   AT   PARLEY\nk.   Qoddard   Wins   Ottawa   Derby\nUSHER Kl\nLEAD\nFINAL RACE\n.VINMI*f.(f. Man., Feb. ,*i.\u2014Almost two million dollars was the\namount turned over to the province of Manitoba as profits of tbe\ncore r nine nt liquor control rommK-\n\u25a0\u2022ion for the fiscal year ending\nApril 30, i.r.H. it was disclosed In\nthe legi\u00ablulure today. The com-\nn i Irion's report as tabled save\nprofit*   amounting   to   $ljte.1,10g..\"i7.\ni uixetiH ot tne provinee expended upword of mI\\ million dollar*, to satisfy their appetites for\nliquor* and beer, sale's of liquor\namounted to $3,87*,0-MO, ami nf\nbeer.  s;,^\u00abR,\u00bbfi|._!>.\nLONDON URGE\nHeads   of   Delegations   at\nNaval Conference Agree\non This Subject\nSUBMARINE IDEAS\nCOME UP TUESDAY\nHere are shown Sir Esme and Lady Isabelln Howard as they arrived tn Toronto. They spent a brief visit at Government House as guests of the lieutenant-\ngovernor and Mrs. Boss. 8ir Esme concludes *7 years in British diplomatic 'service with hl_ .resignation tt British ambassador to the United states at Waih-\ningion. He and body Isabella have left for Washington, from where they, will\nifnve for England on Feb. ll\nFLYERS RETURN\nTO CALGARY FROM\nVANCOUVER HOPS\nOrosss Rockies Successfully; Declare Can Make Flight\nin Four Hours\n$12,000 Will Be Spent This'\nYear by B. C. Government for\nEducation of Vets' Children\nCA1XT.ARY, Feb. 5.\u2014Back from a\ndaring flight from Calgary to Vancouver across the highest peaks of\nthe Canadian Rodklea, Plying Officer W. L. Rutledge, Calgary aviator,\nbrought his Curtiss- Robin monoplane\ntc earth at the municipal air port thts\nevening shortly after 6 o'clock. He\nwas accompanied by Percy J. R, Payne,\nseretary-treas-urer of Rutledge air service,   limited.\nTwo important announcements were\nmade by Plying Officer Rutledge as a\nresult of observations made during\nthe- flight.\nNo longer need the mountains be\nbarriers and coast clttee, he said. An\nair mall and passenger ser-rio* could\nbe operated- He said, and ths trip be\ntween the two cttlaa made ln four\nhours.\nTlie time of the flight from Merrltt\nB. C. where the aviators were delayed fcr a few days because of bad\nweather, was three hours and five\nminute*, covering slightly over 300\nmiles.\nVICTORIA, Feb. 5\u2014Approval to a\nposal for the reorganization of the\nB. c. Stock Breeders association, wae\ngiven at the annual convention of\nthe organization, which was held here\ntoday at the Empress hotel, and attended by representatives from all\nsections  of the province.!\nThe meeting was Informed that the\nrevised constitution was not yet ready\nfor presentation and ln view of that\nfact it was decided to defer further\naction until next June, when the proposed reorganization will be completed, and officers of the new body\nelected.\nA special committee composed of\nPresident Mat Hassen, of Armstrong,\nA. D. Paterson of Delta, George Sang-\nster, Victoria, and P. E. French, Vernon, was appointed to meet the representatives of all live stock organizations-fet. an early date and discuss the\nbasis  of  reorganization\nGRAY TO MOVE\nADDRESS, DUPUIS\nWILL SECOND IT\nOTTAWA, Feb. 5~It was announced\ntoday from the office of the prime\nminister that the motion for an address\nln reply to the speech from the throne,\nat the opening of the Dominion session, will be moved by Rosa W. Oray,\nLiberal member for West Lambton.\nThe seconder will be Vlnoant Dupuis.\nLiberal member for Lapralrie Napier-\nville.\nBoth the mover and seconder are\ncomparatively new members of the\nhouse of commons. Mr. Gray, who\nsucceeded W. T. Goodlaon aa represen\ntatlvt for West Lambton, sat in the\nhpuse tlie last session. _4_*. Dupuis\nla the successor to the lata Roch\nLfcnctot,   and will   take   his  seat  for\nBALDWIN TALKS\nEMPIRE TRADE\nBEFORE PARTY\nUrges Development of Empire\nTrade   in   Coopefative\nManner\nLONDON. Feb. 3\u2014The Conservative\nparty todgy gathered to hear Rt. Hon.\nStanley Baldwin, their leader, expound\nthe party policy. He did so, paying\nmuch greater attention to domestic\nissues and to Empire trade than to\nforeign problems, and Empire trade\ndeveloped Into the keynote of his\nspeftCfr. -He proposed a thorough development of Empire tndustrtea ln a\ncooperative manner, he even foresaw\nsuch *a cooperative development, bolstered by extension of the preference\nsystem, as would enable an Empire\nIndustry tb carefully pick the best\nlocation in the whole Empire for-its\n\u25a0special needs, whether It was Canada.\nSouth   Africa   or   Australia.\nBut Mr.,Baldwin did not espouse the\ncause of f*fee trade within the Empire.\nHe ramarked: \"Whether such a scheme\nmight b* guarded by one tariff, with\na vast area of free trade within, I\nknow not. These things a rs in the\ndistant future. But of on? thing I\nam sure, and that ls that proceeding\nstep by step along the course I have\nrecommended today, is the safest and\nsurest lf we wish to reach that common goal of a united Empire which\nlies before all of us.\" Consequently,\nLord Beaverbrook presided over a\nspecial meeting later today of his\nEmpire crusade committee. It passed\na resolution expressing regret \"that\nwe cannot regard Mr. Baldwin's declaration of policy aa affording an\nadequate solution of the present Industrial  and agricultural  problems.\nOVER   $14,000,000\nWORTH OF B. C. ORE\nTREATED, TACOMA\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 5.\n\u2014Report of the harbor\nmaster at Tacoma as to\nthe amount of British Columbia ore shipped to Tacoma smelter shows that\nduring 1929, ore from\nBriitsh Columbia to the\namount of 218,037 tons\nwas shipped to Tacoma.\nThe value of that ore was\n$14,094,572.\nStatement of the monthly ore shipments which\nreach Tacoma shows that\nBritish Columbia supplied\nmore than 42 per cent of\nall the ore treated at the\nsmelter.\nFrom 73 to 100 Children Will\nBe Selected;  Bill Stood\nOver\nUNEMPLOYED AT\nVICTORIA MEET\nPREMIER TOLMIE\nDelegation  of  Five  From  Parade of 100 Meet B. C.\nHouse Leader\nVICTOIIA. Feb. 5.\u2014Provincial government plans to as-ist tne education\nof soldiers' dependent children provide for an expenditure of $42,000 this\nyear and for the educational care of\nfrom 75 to 100 students. Hon. Joshua\nHinchliffe. minister of education, ax-\nplained , to the British Columbia legislature this afternoon when the leg-\nislatidn   was   considered   in   committee.\nAfter extensive review of all provisions of the bill, discussion waa\nstood over pending receipt of the\nviews of. returned soldier organizations\nand   other   lntefested  bodies.\nMr. Hinchliffe told the houBe that\nthe scheme was purely selective. \"It\nwan i not the Intention, he said, to\ngive scholarships to every child or\nevery soldier, but merely- to oh\u00bbose a\nlimited number, basing the selection\non the academic promise of the-child.\nThomaa Uphill, Labor, Fernie, declared that the plan should be broadened to include the children of men\n\u2022'killed in industry,*' and to the d\u00ab'\npendents   of   workers   generally.\nThe minister said he was personally\nsympathetic to broadening the scheme,\nas its real object was to benefit the\nchildren now living in the province,\n\u25a0'It is the interests of the child we\nare considering, not those of the parent.\"   he  explained.\nHowever. Mr. Hinchliffe pointed out\nbroadening the plan would merely\nwiden the field of selection without\nIncreasing the number of children\nbenefited. He expressed the cpli^ltn\nthat, the scheme might be broadened\nto apply to thc whole school system\neventuoily.\n\u2022_*isk.*t.chcwan was spending |10O,0OO\nyearly on a similar scheme, sgld Mr.\nHinchliffe.\nFEW DISTRICT\nROADS BLOCKED\nBYjNOWSLIDES\nAinsworth-Queen's    Bay    and\nSlocan   City-Silverton\nPortions Blocked\nAccording to District Engineer W.\nRamsay last night district highways\non the whole are not, as yet, suffering\nbadly from th effects of snowslides Inevitably experienced during soft wea.-1\nther at this  time of the year.\nThe only portions of road seriously\nblocked are those between Alnsworth\nand Quft?ns Bay and between Slocan\nCity and Silverton. This latter portion\nof road Is expected tc be opened up\ntoday.\nYesterday a snowplaw made the trip\naround   by   Frultvale   to   Trail.\nTRADES AND LABOR\nCONGRESS WAITS\nON QUEBEC HOUSE\nQUEBEC, Que.. Feb, 5,\u2014Led by the\nmembers, of the executive committee\nfor the province of Quebec of the\nTrades and Labor congress, organized\nlabor in this province as represented\nby internationally-affiliated unions today made their yearly requests to the\nprovincial    government\nPremier Taschereau received the delegation.\nThe requests made reiterated those\nof other years, such as an eight-hour\nday, fair wage clause, abolition of\nprivate employment bureaus, social insurance, and also a number of new\ndemands, all of whtch were passed\nat the last convention of the Trades\n\u00bbnd  Labor congress.\nLOREN BOBIER\nPAYS $5 FINE\nLoren Bobier, charged with causing\ndisturbance ln a public place and incommoding a paaclful citizen. A.\nCherry,.pleaded guilty and was fined\n$5 by Magistrate William Brown ln\nthe   ctty   police   court   here   yester-\nVICTORIA, Feb 5\u2014tncmployed of\nVictoria, 100 strong, marched into the\nlegislative buildings here last night\nand demanded assistance fruirt the gov- |\nernment. Provincial police assembled\nthe crowd into a corridor and persuaded them to el-ect a delegation of\nfive, whom Premier Tolmie received in\nhis private office. The premier said\ntoday' that the delegation had been\nvery courteous In its presentations.\n\"I am not In a position to say anything about the unemployment situation here.\" the premier stated, adding\nthat the responsibility of oaring for\ndestitute people rested primarily with\nmunicipalities.\nMeanwhile officials of the labor and\npublic works departments are tn con\nference on the general unemployment\nsituation. The public works department, foreseeing the present situation.\nIs carrying on public works ln many\nparts off the province, which ordinarily\nwould  have  been  completed   last   fall.\nAdam Bell, British Columbia representative at the recent unemployment\nconference at Winnipeg, has returned,\nbut  has  not   made   a   final  report.\nDUES PKOM IKEK\/JNI.\nVANCOUVXR, Feb 5\u2014R6bert Barclay,\n65. found locked ln a - water front\nshack; three days ago, unconscious,\nwith both feet frozen, when the police\n-orokf through window, died today.\nHayward Again Is\nHead of Municipal\nCommittee, House\nVICTORIA. Feb. 5\u2014with tlie organi-\nzation today and the re-election of\nReginald Hayward as chairman and\nJ. Cornett secretary, announcement\nis made that the union of British\nColumbia municipalities will be heard\naa to any desired legislation op February 12, while February 26 will be\npositively the last day at which delegations will be heard by this committee.\nTWIGG CHAIRMAN OF\nPUBLIC ACCOUNTS\nCOMMITTEE,   VICTORIA\nVICTORIA, Feb. 5\u2014Affairs of the\ndepartment of industries and industrial loans promise to provide th*\nfirst subject for discussion In the public accounts committee of the British\nColumbia   legislature.\nAa organization meeting was held\nthis morning at which H. D. Twlgg\nwas named chairman and W F. Kennedy,   secretary.\nManitoba Telephone\nSystem   to   Build\n10-Story Building\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 5\u2014Plans for capital\nexpenditure of about six million dollars\nln providing a 10-story office building\nand a great system expansion diu-tng\nthe next three years by the Manitoba\nTelephone system were contained tn\nthe annual report of the system submitted to the legislature today by Hon.\nW. J. Major, attorney-general and\nminister of telephones.\nProposed extension Include Installation of the servloe into the mining\ndistricts of Northern Manitoba, where\nalready a great part of the work lias\nbeen  completed.\nAn accumulated deficit of over $884,-\n000 in 1931 had been entirely wiped\nout, according to the report, and in\nits place there was a surplus of\n$156,335. Total revenue for 1930 was\ngiven at $3,840,784.99 and net earnings\n$281,190.56.\nMacDonald Urges Disarmament Conference Deal\nWith Land FoTcei\nLONDON, Frtt 6 -The Domlntofia\nwant more spec* in Uie naval conference. The British Mid Dominions\ndelegation*\u2014 all ths rtpneentatlves of\nthe Brltiah cognmonnuMJth of nations\u2014\nmet this aftfflnoon. It was the lifm\nof the British and Dominions alike\nthat efforts to speed tip ahould be\nmade.\nSubsequently a meeting of the heads\nof all delegations agreed with this\naim. The first indication of a apeed-\ning up was the announcement that\nthe next plenary session of the conference has been summoned for next\nTuesday, when Oreat Britain will-submit proposals for the abolition of\nthe submarine. This Is an old desire,\nwith both Oreat Britain and the\nmuted   States.\nWhile the conference thus tacklea\nthis thorny subject, the fitst committee wtll contlrriue to delve into the\nFrench and British compromise proposals on the question oi methods of\nlimitation of naval armaments, whether\nby global tonnage or by vessel categories.\nIS   ENLIVFAED\nThe conference atmosphere waa enlivened todaor by Prime Minister Bam-\nsay MacDonald'* expressed belief that\nan international disarmament conference for land as well, as sea, forces\nwould be reached when the five-power\nnaval conference haa concluded, and\nby explanations of the British, naval\nprogram reductions offered lp parliament by the first lord of the admiralty. Right Hon. A v. Alexander.\nPremier MacDonald said he hoped\nthat on conclusion of the naval conference, the preparatory romm-ssion on\ndisarmament of the league of nation*\nwould meet to enable the itext league\nassembly to arrange far thc summoning of an international disarmament\nconference.\nAlexander explained the cancellation\nof construction of four cruisers, four\ndestroyers, three submarines and smaller craft, followed by g policy sgreed\nupon five months ago.\nProposed Changes\nin Marriage Laws\nTalked in House\nVICTORIA. Feb. 5.\u2014Benefits of Briitsh Columbia's proposed new marriage\nlaws were explained to the house today\nby Hon. R. L. Maitland, minister\nwithout- portfolio, In moving second\nreading   of   the   bill.\nmobility hitherto to check the right\nof clergymen to solemnize marriages\nwould disappear with the registration\nof all qualified ministers, he pointed\nout, and hence thwe could no longer\nbe any uncertainty as to the valldlty\nof the rites. No properly qualified\nperson would have dlffioulty in securing registration, he added.\nAs a safeguard against hasty' marriages by minors. Mr. Maitland said,\nanother provision would require the\nlapse of eight days between the application for a marriage licence and\nita Issuance. At the same time, he\nexplained, the registrar under the bill\nIs authorized to walv* this restriction\nin special  cases.\nCleveland Indians\nHeld to 4-4 Draw\nby Hamilton Tigers\nCLEVEIAND, Ohio. Peb. 6\u2014Clove-\nlanii Indiana, leaden of the International league, were held to a lour\nto four tie by the rough and tumble\nTlgera of Hamilton tonight. The battle\nlaated for 70 minutes\u2014three ferocloua\nregular periods and a spectacular overtime   ueaelon\nHE THINKS AIR\nPROSPECTING\nSUPERFICIAL\nOTTAWA. Peb. 5.\u2014While the airplane has many advantages In northern\nexploration, prospecting by air la more\nor less superficial, O: H. Blanche!,\nsaid today ln addressing members of\nthe association of Dominion Land Surveyors at their annual meeting. \"Tho\nwealth of the itreat nonhland can\nonly be realized.\" he said, \"by hard\nworlt, carefully planned.\" Expert\nground work by trained men waa .necessary to supplement aerial Inveatlsja-\"\ntlon.\nTHE WEATHER\nTemperatures uin   Uue.\nNELSON jj _\nVictoria 43 44\nVancouver . 42 60\nKamloopa 3g M\n\u25a0Prince   Oeorge 3t \u00ab\nEstevan Point  31 2\nPrince Rupert 3J 3\u00ab\nAtlin     13 30\nDawson 6*       D\nSeattle 44 40\nPortland 48 53\nSan Francisco . . 5* 60\nSpokane .. 43 SO\nLos Angeles 56. W\nPentlcton 36 54\nVernon  as 44\nOrand   Porks 38 ST\nKaslo I \u2014 vr\nCranbrook 34 45\nCalgary 3\u00ab 48\nEdmonton 14 40\nSwift  Current 33 t_j\nPrince  Albert a\u00bb la\nQu'AppeUe    _  ia jo\nWlnnlptg     __  _, _\nTraU     jj M\nPoreossMte for Thursday. N__on and\nvtolntty; QuwnUy (tit Md oo_v.\n____\n ^^^H\nTHE NELSON D\/VlLY NEWS,.   THURSDAY M(\nWith   Banning\nWaUr\nfttrats   Botha  K__Solt\u00ab\nThe Hume\nGEO. BEKWELL, Prop.\nTX\u00bb Premier Hotel oi the\nInterior\nHUMS\u2014J.   Entwtale.   A.   M.   Morgan,   Vancouver;  Ur.  antl  Mre.  W.  Sheeler.\nCclena Farms; N. Brnlt. Montreal; Mrss.\nW. Gray, Salmo; C A. Heaard. Cal-\ngssry; J. Malone, Princeton; Mr. and\nMm. T. Bnly, and daughter, Nelaon;\nW. Matthews, Toronto.\n_. L. KcBweyn. B. J. Aliair-. ... W\nAyne. A. J. Sanderson, A. J. Dim. C.\nMunk Mr. and Mra. B. Wright, w M\nPepper,   D,   A.   Brcmnea,   S.   Wllsion.\nGRAND FORKS HIGH\nANNUAL JOY NIGHT\nIS SEASON'S HIT\nMatriculation   Class and  Staff\nKntertain  at Big Celebration\nMUSICAL NUMBERS\nFEATURE   PROGRAM\nThree   Sittings   Required   for\nBanquet; Dancing Holds\nInterest\nWhere Diver Met His Death\n- -      .     -i   -   i i \u25a0\u25a0 iyw,ii>'m ',\nWhere the Guest Is Kinfc\nThe Savoy\nNELSON'S    NEWEST   AND   FINEST   HOTEL\nMANV   BOOMS  WITH   I'HIWTF,\nsBATHS  OB  BUOWEBH\nJ. A. KERR. Prop.\nSAVOY -J. V SUvenaon.    Thrums:    Frultvale,   M. \u00a3\u00ab\u00a3;*\u2022<\u00ab   \u2122%l'.\nQueen's  Hotel\nHie center of convenience\nBot sad cold water in every room\nsteam   Heated\nA. Lapointe, Prop.\nMadden Hotel\nsteam Heated Rooms by tbe Day\nWeek or Montb\n\u25a0very consideration shown to\nguests\nCor Baker and Wud sta., Nelson\n' QU_ENS_A. Allison. Kltclmcr;  K. D. , _,_A   Carlson,   \u201e.   Nel90n,   \u00ab\nliclntosh, Salmo; W. Bcottle, Procter; ___ proct(!r. B Muncll, Valllcan;\nO. Vnndry, Nelaon; . Robinson, Trall. j p. Bennett. Saskatoon; W. Smith,\n.        . ^^ \u2014 Crescent Valley; R. E. McCain, Spokane.\n{% OUGLA \u00a7\nHOTEL\nRooms and Baths\nEL.   and A. OBOUTAOE. Props.\nSteam Heated Bot and Cold\nthroughout Water\nBoi \u00ab0\u00bb   Phone 263   TraU. B. C.\nThe Standard Cafie\n320 Baker Street, Nelson, B.  C.\nOPEN   DAT   AND   NIGHT\n11:30 to 2:30 Bpeclal Lunch ..._...SRc\nfi:80 to 8 p.m. supper Uo\nPHONE  154\nGRAND PORKS. B. C. Feb. 6.-\nAmld cheery purpie ana goid festoons\nand gay balloons, a happy crowd made\nmerry on Friday night, it being UM\noccasion of the second annual \"Joy\nNight\" of the Grand Fork, high school.\nThe matriculation clasa and the teaching staff -were the hosts and hostesses,\nwhile the guests included the high\nschool students and their parents,\nthe ex-high students, the staff of the\npublic school, the school board and city\ncouncil.\nTheir were- about 30 tables set UP\nfcr \"Five Hundred,'* priMs belny won\nas   follows:\nLadies'   first\u2014Miss   A.   Spraggrtt.\nLadies'  second\u2014Mrs. H.  Lightfoot.\nMen's first\u2014Walter Ronalds.\nMen's second\u2014Joe Lydon.\nWhile the guests were playing cards,\nthe high school orchestra consisting\nof Lucille Donovan. Jessie Sweezey,\nLouise McPhereon and Art Blckerton\nplayed  a  few  selections.\nCards were followed by several raus-\nslcal numbers, the first being a chorus by the girls. \"I Sing Because I\nLove to \u2022Sing\". This was followed by\na Japanese song by Mlss Barbara Lov?,\nMlss Laura Sweezey and Mtss Dorothy\nLlddlcoat. Barbara Love rendered In\na pleasing manner. ''Japanese Fantasy\".\nThc school danoers. Irene Biclterton\nand Jean Murray entertained the\naudience with the \"sword danice\"\nand the \"Irish Jig\".\nThis program was followed by dancing, after which supper was announced\nfor the first hundred guests. In the\nbanquet room the school colors were\ncarried out in the dainty table decorations, even to the grape and orange\njellies.\nSupper was followed by a chorus and\ndance, \"Tip-toe T\"nru the Tulips\", followed by the second supper sitting,\nThe dancing; continued with more\nmusical   numbers   between   dances.\nMiss Pat Cook and Mlss Lucille Donovan ln costume sang a very pleasing\nDutch duet from -'HuJda from Holland\". This was followed by a humorous encore after which beveral\ncouples sang the \"Milk-maid song\"\nwhile dancing.\nThe High School supper was then\nannounced when all the students\nsat down together. The hit of the\nevening was the high school male\nquartette, \"Rlgby\" Euerby, 'Buzz- Waterman. ''Pat\" Patterson and Charlie\nEgg, who, dressed as hoboes, sang in\ndismal tones the cheery song, \"On\nthe Road to Anywhere.\" \"The Nightingale\" was sung by the girls' chorus.\nAccompaniments were played by Mr,\nand Mrs. j. c. Tonks and Ml*_. L.\nDonovan.\nDancing continued until ihe \"wee\nsma' hours\" when the orchestra struck\n.'Ho^m\nA view of Outrades Falls, Que. where Peter I oned on river bottom by fallen cub beam waa\nTrans, diver, alter nearly three days impris- | finally   brought  to  the   surface  by  divers,\nNOBLE FIVE PLANS\nTO CONTINUE IN\nFULL PRO!\nScale of Operations Only\nduced to Extent Pqwe?\nShort\n'\u25a0'We are still otttratlng sssd\npoet to continue so,\" yesterday etej_\nPaul   Lincoln,   preet*int   sand\nmanager of Noble Fire Minus, who\nJust returned trom a trip to the <\n\"Water  shortage  ol  count*\n\\)l \u00ab_m\u00bb.\" siammed Mr. Lincoln,\nfor that reason our scale of product\nIs down a little, but we are operatl\nto the extent of our available\naq_   arc   mintag   and   milling  trou_\nto  HO tona of ore a day.\n\"You can't make  lt too plain\nproduction Indefinitely.\"\nup   the   final   waltz.   \"Three   o'clock \u2022\nIn the Morning\".\nThe feature of the evening was the\nbirthday cake, thc gift of Orade X.\nThe cake wu decorated with violet\nand yellow lalng and had two purple\nand gold candles. To the strains of\n\"Tlppcrary\", the crowd marched up\nto the end of the hall where each\nreceived a piece ol cake.\nAll agreed that Ihe party was the\nmost successful soclsl event of the\nreason, much credit being due to\nPrincipal and vMrs. Tonkfl.\nGREEN TO BUILD\nWHARF.JECYON\nLocal Fii-m'a Tender of $7080\nAccepted.   McLean   is\nAdvised\nGame Wardens\nSpeak, Fernie\nRotary Lunch\nTell of Reserves and of Trappers; Club Has 100 Per\nSent Attendance\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n\u25a0703 Vernon St. PHont I87L\na. WASSICK\nfifty Rooms of Solid  Comfort\nHeadquarter-    for    Loggers    and\nMiners\nOne ol thp smartest formal afternoon or evening gowns of the moment is lace. softened with ruffles,\nflounces, the capelet. or the bolero,\nwhile evening laces nre shown ln baby\nblue. pink, m-een, flesh and in black.\nami beige lace is veiy .-mart for the\nafternoon dress, and for dining several\nol these evening frocks are completed\nby short coats or Tne same or capes\nwhich tie on and may be removed to\nreveal the formal decolletage.\nThe Royal CaSe\nCLASSIC  HFSTl'RANT\nUrfl.srmi.it and Delicacy Prevail\nOPEN   DAT   AND   NIGHT\nSpecial Dinner 11:30 to 2:30 35c\nHopper   5:30   to   8    35c\nWe specialize In Chop Suey and Noodle*\nPhone 182\nHE PAIN\nEnds in I Minute\n\"Ended burn, itch and ptin of piles\ninl minutewith'Sootha-Salva*,\"writes\nL. T. Sears. -\"Bleeding stopped. Piles\nsoon vanished. Avoided operation.\"\nOct iastaat results today. All dfBfftstfc\nTender of A. 11. Oreen & company\nor Nelson of 47060 for construction of\na wharf at Halcyon, on Upper Arrow\nlake, was the lowest submitted and\nthla firm haa been awarded \"the contract, according to D. D. McLean,\nLiberal candidate In Kootenay West in\nthe forthcoming federal election. Mr.\nMcLean waa advised by Hon. J. C,\nElliott federal minister of public works,\nTenders were public.\nThis firm alao succeeded in secur--\nlug the contract for construction of\nu stores shed in Fairview for the de\npartmeut, at a price  of $995.\nTWENTY YEARS\nAGO\n(From The Daily  News, Feb, 6.  1910>\nWilliam Faber Elliot was married to\nM1.sk    Selina    Waterman   at   the   St.\nSaviour's  church   hore  yesterday.  Rev.\nFred   H.   Oraham,   rector,  officiating.\n\u2022    *    *\nOrand Forks Intermediate defeated\nthe Nelson Rovers 1-0 at Orand Forks\nyesterday In a frltfndry hockey tussel,\nW. Ferguson bcorlng for Kelson. Whit*\nover in the Boundary the Rovers played\nOreenwood.   being   defeated   4-3.     E.\nscored   the  three goals  for | %'e\"re\"*wM\" another\"\"aW about iifteen\nNew Grand Hotel\nA Modern  Brlc*  Building\n016 Vernon Street. Nelaon. B .C\nBot  and  Cold   Water  and   Telephone  tn  all  Rooma   Steam\nHeated Throughout.\nRooma   W   Week's   Rata\nor by \u00bbhe Month\nMn.  P.   Kapak.  Pro*.\nEuropean Plan\nKEW GRAND\u2014F. Morgan, Vancouver;\nMrs. Garland. Kaslo: W: J. Soukeroff,\nThrums: Mlss Lottie Barrett, Trall;\nA. Boselk. Corbin: J. F. Masloff. Tag-\nnum;  G. Soukornff. Castlegar.\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\nTrail B. \u00a3\nA.  P. LEVESQCE, Prop.\nA News Class Ad Brings Result\nThe Branch\nthat put our\nlights out\nSunday\nEvening\nIs in our window. It's\nquite an    interesting\nexhibit, and when you\nlook, don't nriiss\nOur Suit Prices\nTHEY SPELL\nSAVINGS!\nj_^f0_] Ml\n\u00a3.        BOYS\n'UST OUTSIDE THE HIGH REMT DISTRICT\nFERNIE. n, C\u201e Feb. 5,~There was a\n100 per cent attendance at the Rotary\nluncheon  on  Monday.\nThe club agreed to sponsor the\nWestminster Glee Singers entertain-\nment in Pernle,\nGuests of the club were Game Wardens Ira  Brown  and Hubert Broley.\nMr. Brown took for his subject\n\"Game Sanctuaries\". He said the word\n\"sanctuary\" had appealed to him erer\nsince he was a boy and read In ancient history of the law which protected an accused, condemned or hunt-,\ned man if he reached a \"sanctuary\".\nThis waa usually in a church.\nNow the \"sanctuary\" was not needed\nfor men but had been found advisable\nfor animals. In spite of many good\ngame laws in Canada certain animal\nspecies were found to be in danger\nof extinction through hunting. The\ngame sanctuaries had been Introduced\nand were operating with 100 per oent.\nefficiency, said the weaker. The idea\nhad originated in large estates in England, Although very restricted hunting\nwas done on these estates and It wa_i\nfound advisable to set apart a portion\nof the area where no shooting waa\npermitted even by the owner or his\nguests.\nTELLS OF RF.SKKVl.H\nMr. Brown said Pernle was advantageously situated ln the heart of the\ngame sanctuaries. He mentioned Banff\nPark reserve and the Upper Elk river\nreserve to the north; Waterton lakes\npark In Canada, and the Glacier park\nreserve ln the United States lhat to\nthe   south '\nThe speaker en id that these reserves\ngave shelter to a wide range of species\ntlon to further reserves on account of\nreducing   still   -further   tht   easily   accessible hunting grounds.\nIIKOIKY  SPEAKS\nGame Warden Hubert Broley also\nspoke on gam? protection and trapping\nHe said he and Mr. Brown patrolled,\nsome 3700 square miles of territory.\nMuch had been stated publicly about\nhow hard the winter had been on\nthe deer this year, but from thft observation of himself and Mr.. Drown\nthey were not suffering as much as\nhad been lndlqated. Some had been\nkilled an the easy runway of the\nrailroad track by trains, and some of\nth\u00ab herds were thin. This year, however, had not te\u00abn nearly so hard\nno tliem as some of the winters when\nthe  snow  had   been   very   deep.\nThe speaker said that deer, if fed,\nwould return year after year to the\nsame place so as- to get easy food\nIn regard to trafffillhg Mr. JJroley said\nthe registration of trap lints by which\nMEXICO CITY. F*b. 5.\u2014THe\npalgn for prohibition In Mexlo\ncontinuing. When President Emllo 1\ntes G)l noticed that the republic j\nnot yet ready for the experiment,]\ncause the overwhelming majority\nMexicans appear to be strongly ]\nposed to lt, be conceived the\nconcentrating the campaign amohgl\nschool children, ao that possibly |\nnext generatloi) will hnve dlffq\nviews on  the  matter.\nThe preaidant took advantage\nMexican child's Innate love fori\nand hli ability at expressing hliff\nthrough tha medium of-art. He I\ndded the best way to call the al\ntlon of the *cWodl' children to I\nevils of drink was to let the chll|\nthemselves picture them.        ^^^\nTbe   result   was   (.hat   new   in |\n\"Jardln   del   Carmen,\"   a   small\nm In a PW section of Mexico City,\ni\"'triSiS\"___4\"tii same\"tapping\"*a7\u00abi| ^ *^^,IblJhl'?i\u201ea\u201eboul,JS0' J?\".\nPROHIBITION IN\nMEXICO TAUGHT!\nINTHESC800\nAfter being closed cne week, while\nbeing moved to its new quarters In\nthe Selou;*- block, the Nelson library\nwill be opened today when a book\nguewlng competition will be the feature  of  the  opening.\n* *   *\nW. G. McMorris resigned his position\nof. president of the Street Railway company here last night ln the ev<?nt of\nhts leaving for Vancouver shortly. J. E.\nTaylor   was   elected   president   In   his\nplace.\n* *   *\nThe Grand Aggregate, British Columbia curling and Grand Challenge\ncurling trophies fell to the Walley\nrlnk when the British Columbia curling bonspiel wu brought to an end\nhere  last night. ^mi**~l~l~*-~*\nyear by year was working out to great\nadvantage to both trapper and game.\nSome trappers had radios fn their\nshacks and thus kept In touch wltb\nthe market price of furs during the\nwinter.\nThis year the price of furs was low.\nsaid Mr.s Broley, through the buyero\nhaving surplus stocks from last year.\nThe curtailed buying power of those\nwho had suffered In the stock market\nslump was thought to be responsible\nfor this. Although the fur thts yaax\nwas particularly thick some trappers\nwere lifting tbelr traps and Leaving\nthe furred animals ln their area for\nnext year's trapping season because\nof tho price being so low. concluded\nMr.  Broley.\nPUBLIC WORKS TO\nGET NEW STORES\nSlffiD, FAIRVIEW\n\u2014i,\u2014\nContract   Awarded   to   A.   H.\nGreen & Co.; to Coat\nOver $1000\nmiles south of Pernle which should be\nmade a sanctuary said the game war\ndm, Almost every year numerous deer\nwere slaughtered ln this area, It was\nadvisable to make this a protected\nnrea particularly for the preservation\nof the white-tailed deer, which found\nthis district such a good wintering\nground that they congregated here In\nlarge herds. He described the area\nas being to the south and commencing\nwhere Morrlssey creek enters the Elk\nriver; thence up Morrlssey creek to\nMorrissey Meadows; from the Meadows\ndown Bean Creek to Lodgcpole river,\nthen down the Lodgepole and Wigwam\nto the Elk river and up the Elk River\nto Morrlssey creek. He said the owners\nof privately owned land in this area\nwere agreeable to the reserve. Hc said\nthat in some quarters there was opposl-\nMENS\nWEAR\nA new stores shed, which when competed will have ogs-s wen over $iooo,\nwill be constructed at the federal department of public works store yard*\nln Falrview by A. H. Green At company. Nelson. The shed will be\u201elj<3\nby 23 feet, and will be one and u\nhalf stories  high\nD. D. McLean. Liberal candidate ln\nKootenay West in the forthcoming\ngeneral election, has received word\nto the effect lhat Hon. J. C. Elliott\nfederal minister of public works, has\nauthorised the local firm to proceed\nwith the work, Its tepder of $695 hav-i\ning  been accepted.\nTwo other Nelson firms submitted\ntenders for the work. John Burns -St\nSons estlmaaed $U26 and T. H. Waters\n8* company submitted a price of\n(1194, according to Mr. McLean.\nONLY PABT OF WOKE\nQuestioned last night, P E, Lancaster, district engineer for the federal\ndepartment of public works, stated\nthat the contractors' tender covered\nonly a portion of the work, and that\nthe balance would be completed by\nday labor some time in the next flsoql\nyear, which starts on April 1. Only\nregular members of the department's\ncrew would be neceesary to do the\nwork,  lie  sftid.\nThe shed, which will be an addition\nto tbe stores yards situated next to\nthe C. P. R. yards in Falrview, will\nhfl tised to store departmental equipment.\nby    school    children,    most\nless, than -15 years old, the  palnd\nportraying    the    evils    of    drink]\nseen   by   the   youngsters.    Later\nexhibits,    which    represent    about|\nthh-d   of   tho   harvest   resulting\nthe  President's   school   campaign, i\nbe   moved   to  other  parts  of  Mel\nCity,   and  finally  they   will   be  bf\nto  ether  parts of  the  republic.\nREALISTIC   TIIKMKS\n_*he  pictures are  original and\nferent\"   without   exception,   ance\nchildren    were   given   a   free\nin their expression.   Some of the cn\nren  chose  realistic   themes  and   a\ntheir  works ___\\.  while other pjet]\neeem  funny   because  of  tbe  ei\nof    the    Imagination    of    the\nartists.\n\"Home  Without  Vices\"  ls  tlje\nof  one  of  the   moat  striking   of |\npaintings.   In the home that Is\nture'd   are   \u00ab   father   and   a\nand   they   are  not   quarreling.\nIs   a   sewing   machine   and   a\ngraph.    Babies   are   playing.    A -\nturkey   is   strutting   peacefully\nthe  clean  parlor   floor.\nPresident   Portes   Gil   himself\nto   the   exhibit   recently   to   see\npaintings and expressed himself |s|\nmi' pleased   with   results   ao   fa{ T\ntalned.    in order to further enterj\nthe throngs that were present to '\nthe paintings .the president railed I\nof   his   military   bands   to   the' f\nand  since  then  a  military  band |\nbeen playing there every day, mln\nsentimental   music   with   sentlq\nart.\nWas Helplest\nFOR FOUR YEAR*\nWith Rheumalisl\nMr. Fmd Keet*, 31 Cr\u00bbirfonl .\nWlniior,   Out,   writei:->'I\ns)pwt))ed  witk   rheumatism   tot\nteen, awl for (our yean I *\nUptw I had to be helped oat of I\natsi could not -it straight in a r'\n\"1 derived such good rwnlti f\nAMI'l'llkK    111)1.111 I-\nVANCOUVER,   Feb.   b\u2014mtarUns   the\nflfty-clRhth    hold-up    Blnce    Jan..     I,\nJames Hurley, complying with a Strang- I\ner'..' request*,   for   a   cigarette,   found I\nhimself  facing a revolver sand handed I\nover Vie.\nB ]____________\nI wiih to voice my prai\u00bb\u00bb on 1...\nyour wonderful medicine, sand to\nl\u00bbv it ii helping others whoa 1 f\nadvised to t_k_jt.\u00bb*^\nPut np only by The T. 1B___ I\nToronto, 0\u00bbt\nA new pair of canvas gloves costs\nonly a trifle, but they are fine for\nhogging  out  clothes.\nI\nI\ni\n1\nDo You\nWant\nRooms?\nIT IS EASY to get\n* one or more by advertising in The Daily\nNews Classified col'\numns.\nTke\nDaily Newi\n1  day, Ide a line.\n(i dais, 40c a line.\nNo extra   cost   If   the  \u00bb_<\nvertlwtaient ls .barged.\n mm\u2014mmm._^*_____-_*_, \u201e\t\nI   \u25a0\u25a0\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,    THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 6,193.\n* _>age thrte\"^\nTRAIL L0.D.L\nREELECTS TWO\nOFFICERS AGAIN\nMra. I1. E. Dockerill, President,\nMrs, F. H. (Mils, Vice-President, Third Term\nTRAIL. B. C. Feb. 6.\u2014Mra. P. E.\nDMkerHl wits elected regent and Mrs.\nP. H- OUIb first vlce-preblden- of the\nArthur Chapmen chapter of the I. o.\nD, E. when ths annual meeting was\nheld this afternoon ln the Memorial\nhall. Both these officers were elected\nfor the third successive term. Other\nofficers elected were. Mrs. W. C Mc-\nKerale, vlccrpresident; Mrs, w. Davles.\n\/ecretary. who haa been serving since\ntttP___t*Lt(_cLle of 1026,Mrs. Dciespe, aa-\naut secrztary; Mrs- M. Emsley,\ntreMurer; Mrs. R. B. Bums, educational secretary; Mrs. James Ccupland.\nEchoes secretary; Mrs. Bergeron, standard beam; Mrs. T. S. Mulr. Mn. E. W.\nRealewood. Mrs. F. W. Steacy, Mrs. E.\nStllK  and Mrs E.  Hall, councillors.\nVotes of thanks were extended to\nretiring officers and to those who were\nrr..-lectetl ior their work during the\nyaar. Mrs, Ccupland and Mrs. Morrison\nas chairmen of special committees, also\nwere thanked.\nThe chapter decided to sponsor the\nXT. B. C. players this spring and  will\nmake arrangements for their presentation during the latter part of May.\nD SUM ATI OS   KKPORTS\nResults of the delegation which\nwaited on the city council were heard\nMid It is expected the same members,\nwho were asked to continue their\nwork for a health nurse In Trail, will\nmeet a delegation from th.\nboard. The delegation was composed\nof Mrs. Dockerlll, Mrs. Guillaume, Mrs.\nOtis and Mrs.  Couplaud.\nDurtjig tli& year donations to the\nemrunt of $517-38 were made to worthy\ncsusis. An additional |10 was donated\nto the community chest this afternoon.\nRcccptU for the year totalled \u00bb8ll.56.\nsuch monies receited from dus, Alexandra Roee day, U. B. C. Players, teas\nand   from   other  metnbere.\nRe-ports on the advance of the girl\nguides were heard.\nAt   the   conclusion   of   businese   re-'\nfre;hment_   were served by  Mrs.  3tlles.\nMrs. P. Willis aad Ml*. J. Carter.    Mrs,\nT  A. Love wo* received into the order.\n\"Skinny! I Gained\n11 lbs. in 8 Weeks\nand Boy Friend\"\n\"After trying several\ntonics tried Ironlzcd\nYeast, In 6 weeks\ngained 11 lbs., new\ncomplexion, round\nlimbs; best of all a boy\nfriend.\"\u2014S. M, Sallno.\nMen    and   women   are   amazed   at\ngitln of 5 to 15 lbs. in 3 weeks, Ugly\nhollows   vanish.     Bony   limbs     round\nout.      Sallow,    blemished    skin    gets\nclear  and  rosy   like  magic.    Nervousness,     Indigestion,     constipation   dls-\ni appear   overnight.    Bound    sleep. New\npep from very first day.\n;    Two great    tonics    in    one\u2014special\n! weight-building       Malt      Yeast     and\nstrengthening    Iron.       Pleasant    Uttle\n, tablets.  Par  stronger    than    unmedl-\nI cated yeast. Results    in  '\/_    time. No\n' yeasty taste, no gas.\ni     Don't go  round   \"skinny,\" ugly,  urv-\nattraclve.   Oet   Ironized     Yeast     from\n1 dhigglst     today.     Peel   great     tomor-\n1 ifow.     Money    back     from     manufac-\n, i-urer If not delighted with results.\nJanuary Total\nat Trail Plant\nIs 36,085 Tons\nTRAIL, B. c.i Peb. 3\u2014Three hundred\ntons of blister copper were received\nat the Tadanac reduction plant of\neoiwpany during the ptr.od January\n32 to 31. according to thc or* statement issued by the company. It was\nthe first shipment of blister copper\nthe Consolidated Mining At Smelting\nreported   this   year  so  far.\nA total of 3fl,0S5 tons of ore and\nconcentrates were received at the Tadanac plant during January, total receipts\nIn the last 10 days of the month\nbeing 11,891 tons.\nCompany mines shipped 11.535 tons\ncf the 10 days' total bringing the\ncompany mines total fqr the first\nmonth of the year to 33.115 tona.\nThe custom tonnage received in the\nclosing 10 days of thc month amounted\nto 338, making the total for January\n970.\nFollowing were the custom shippers:\nBell. Beaverdell, 25; Duthie, Smlthers\n63: Noble Five. Sandon, 113; Planet\nNicola, 44; Ruth Sandon 72; Whitewater, Retallack,  19.\nMORRISON HEAD\nOF  RELIGIOUS\nBODY AT TRAIL\nSUIT AGAINST\nCONSOLIDATED\nISJISMISSED\nFrench    Ore   Company    Loses\nOut; Trail Office Is\nNotified\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 5\u2014S. Morrison\nwas elected president of the Trall\nReligious Educational association last\nnight when the association's postponed\norganization meeting was held tn the\nBaptist church. Mrs. D. Downie was\nelected secretary-treasurer, and R. E.\nHawkes vice-president, all three being\nelected to permanent office. The meeting was well attended. R. McKeadrtck\nwas ln  the  chair.\nA short address was made by Rev.\nFredric   St.   penis.\nIt was decided by the association\nto -undertake leaders' training work.\nThe ministers cooperating in the work\nwere made honorary members of the\noxecutive. ,\nTRAIL, B. C, Peb. 5.\u2014Tne appeal\nof tlie French Complex Ore Reduction company, limited, before tbe supreme court of Canada against the\ndecision of. the exchequer court of\nCanada in the actien for impeachment of the A O. French Canadian\npatents relating to the electrolytic recovery of zinc has been dismissed wtth\nooata. In this appeal the Electrolytic\nZinc oompany, which ls a holding\ncompany for the consolidated Mining\n& Smelting Company of Canada, limited, and the Anaconda Copper oompany,  was  the  defendant,\nDecision of the supreme court cf\nCanada was handed down yesterday.\nNotification of the decision by wire\nreached the head office of the Consolidated ..-ining St Smelting Company\nof Canada In Trall last evening.\nThe exchequer court upheld the\ncontention of the Electrolytic Zinc\ncompany that the French patent was\nnot valid. From this decision the\nFrench Complex Ore Reduction company   appealed.\nIt will be remembered that previous\nto thc bringing on of this Impeachment action thc French Complex Or?\nReduction oompany had sued the Consolidated Mining -Sc Smelting Company\nof Canada, limited, for an infringement\nof Its patent, claiming *#8,0O3,000 and\nan account ing.\nThe Electrolytic Zinc company is a\nholding company for the Consolidated\nMining & Smelting Company of Canada, limited, and the Anaconda Copper company Insofar as the electrolytic zinc patents of each company are\nconcerned.\nThe case for the Electrolytic Zinc\ncompany was argued beforo the supreme court of Canada by W. M. Tllley, K. C, Alme Oeoffrlon. K C, and\nR C. Crowe. Argument continued from\nNovember  18  to November 23\nCounsel for the French Complex Ore\nReduction company were R. A. Smart.\nK.  C,   and   Henry  Lajoie,  K.  c.\nApproximately 7.000,000, pounds of air\nmall were flown over tlie 25 domestic\nair routes of the United States ln\n1929. This is a gain of nearly 100\nper cent over 1928, when but 3,542,079\npounds  were carried.\nTHE\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nYour Spokane Home\n\"Where Canadians Are Among Friends\nWhen in Spokane.\"   '\nThe only hotel in Spokane with FREE\nBUS service and our own garage adjoining.\nBarber Shop,  Cigar Store and  Cafe.    Complete  service  under  one  roof.\nJOE PEDICORD, Manager\n309  TO   219  KIVEKSIDE 208  TO  218  M'lt.ltjl t\nSPOKANE, U. S- A.\nOur New Schedule\nLeave Rosslnud\nAUeu Hotel\nA. M.\neao  __..\u00ab__\t\nLeave TraU\n_lectric Bakery\nA. M.\n      6:65\t\nUnion Oarage\nA. M.\n\u201e      7.10\nP. M.\nP. M.\n\u25a0P. M.\n   _..        1.00\n2-10       ~\n _ _   2:55 \t\n,,      3*:10\n2:50   _\t\n '. 10-68 \"ZI'IZZI\n     3:40\n    11:10\n7:30  \t\n10:10\n   11.65\t\n  _    12-00\n8 TRIPS DAILY\u20148 TKU'S     .\nOCB FARSS ARE ONE WAY, 60c. RETURN, 90o\nBuMtjes will pick up passengers or baggage nt any hotel In Trall\nor Roasluii- upon receipt ot a phone call, 20 minutes before leaving Ume\nLOOK FOB TUE GREEN AND ORANGE BUSSES\nRossland-Tadanac-Trail\nTransportation Co.\nI  H. Kelderman, H. S. Taylor\nSTILES ARRIVES IN\nEAST ON WAY HOME\nFROM   ITALY   TRIP\nTRAIL.   B.   C,   Feb.   5\u2014E.   M.   Stlle-i,\nchief    engineer    for   the   Con.undated I\nMining to Smelting Company of Can-\nads,   limited,   who  has  been  Ln  Italy !\nfor the past few mouths in the inter- j\nest of the oompany. has reached  the\neast   en  route   home\nIt   is  expected  that  ur.   Stiles  will\narrive  ln  TraU j next  week\nBrownlee Offers\nDefence of His\nParty Policies\nSPACE PROBLEM      Trail News of the Day\nFACES SCHOOL\nBOARD, FERNIE\nClasses Will Be Crowded; Sherwood Herchmer Is New\nChairman\nEDMONTON.    Feb.\n-Waim'.:.'\nat-\nTRAIL SCHOOL\nSUPPLIES WILL\nBEJISCUSSED\nBoard   to   Meet   Next   Week;\nNew Principal Suggests\nImprovements\nTRAIL. B. C, Feb. 5.\u2014It was decided\nthat a special meeting should be held\nnext Tuesday to discuss supplier, for\n1930 when the school board met tQ,\nnight. H. J. Palmer was in the chair,\nA number of improvements were suggested by Mr. woodward, new principal\nof Central school. These will be dealt\nwith by the board at an early date.\nMr. Allison, principal of the high\nschool, reported that his supplies for\n1&30 would cost approximately $500,\non a par with  last year.\nA motion was made that two extra\nsewing machines be purchased for\ndomestic science use.\nW. C. Aston stated that G. D. Johnson, physical trainer, hsd requested\na room for personal use and a suitable\nplace had teen found in the basement.\nFire Chief A. A. McDonald started\ngoing over Central school and reported\neverything ln excellent form. Teachers\nwill be instructed to discard old\ncloths at the end of each school day,\nas   a   fire  prevention.\nA letter of complaint was read from\nMrs. Leduc and an approdrlat? reply\nordered   written.\nfending the policies of the provincial government, Premier J. K. Brown-\n1ms ln the throne speech deb-u* thl;.\nafternoon, characterized the *2*,noo,-\n000 highway building propo*uls of Conservative Leader D. M. Duggan as \"a\nsort of window-dressing ptlicy\" and\nsaid that the government would ln\nall probability, in five years, spond\nas much on the highway-\nPremier Brownlee scorned the sug^er-*-\ntion of Liberal Leader J. T, Shir*, that\nthe Dominic n could not make contributions to the Old Age Pensions act.\nbecause lt was debarred from so doln\nunder the British North America act.\nThe premier Insisted that \"The British\nNorth America act was formed to\nserve the nation; the nation was not\nformed to serve the British North America  act.\"\nDealing with the unemployment Mr.\nBrownlee declared' that the situ'itim;\ntlisl year was not a normal one u\nlast year there was practically no unemployment problem. Porr crops, stock\nmarket recession, depreer_ed buslnrs,.\nconditions and the admitting of Immigrants beyond the province's power to\nabsorb them were nil factors ln the\nsituation, though he did not blame\nor cTltldae the immigration minister for the latter Item, since he had\nto meet the demand that existed,\nfor more people.\nTeam work between mur.fclp-UJties\nand provinces and between the pra-\nvlnces and the Dominion was essential to a proper solution of the unemployment problem, the premier said.\nDealing v\/lth the natural resources\nproblem, Mr. Brownlee said. \"There\nwill be more than one confeernce with\nthe brat brains of the Dominion gov-\nt ernment\u2014and there are some good\nmen in the various rwrurces departments, before we can decide on the\nbest plan for the settlement of lands,\nfor the handling of the mineral resources, the fisheries, etc.\n\"Wo can, I thlilk. safely go on the\nassumption that the Dominion government has been, wise in tlie administration of the resources and we will\nbe on fairly safe grounds lf from\nJuly or August next, when wc take\nover the resources, wc simply carry on\nalong existing lines, until the hous?\nmeets again.\"\nPERNIE, B. C, Peb. 5.\u2014Sherwood\nHerchmer was elected chairman of the\nschool board for 1930. when a meeting\nof the board was held  Monuay\nMlss Norma Douglas, now at th?\nUniversity of British Columbia, wrote\nasking to be considered as an applicant for any vacancy on the public;\nschool staff W*\\lCh might occur after\nAprii ta, Uic time when the university\ncloses.\nMi*s Nicolettt. Mlss Kerr and Miss\nChuora were* mentioned as teaching\non the occasional staff of the Bchoola.\nNineteen new pupils had. it was reported, presented themselves at the\nschools    to   commence    the    FVt-ruary\nterm Monday  morning,  13 at Central.   ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nthree   at   Wert   Fernie,   and   four   at' p \\ 1VTI? * I I    U'FRIi'\nihe  Annex.  The-qucstlon of  taking  ln. **^*l^r -\\t-lt   n__-I\\_Zi\nnew   pupils   not   yet   six   years   of   age\nwa. discussed. The board did not favor\nIt,   especially   hi   view   of   the   crowded\ncondition of the rooms.\nThe board for some time discus.-ied\nthe problem of the size cf classes\nfor the next term. Unless a new teuch-\ncr   Is  employed   several   of   the  classes\nTRAIL. D C. Feb 5\u2014Mrs William\nRoutledge was pleasantly surprised\nMcnday evening when tlie ladles of the\nSalvation Army Home league called to\nhonor her on her birthday. During\nthe evening a birthday gift was presented by Mrs. parrett on behalf of\nthc league thimos and a short program were enjoyed and a few short\nspeeches made by members of the\nparty. Refreshments were served by\nthe guests at the close of tht\nThe guest list included Ur_. William\nRouletdge, Captain Mac Young. Mn.\nT. Routltdge. Mrs. Honeyman, Mr_. T.\nBarrett, Urs. Casler. Mrs. William\nUurle. Sr.. Mrs. William Laurie, Jr,\nMrs. Milne. Mrs. A. McLuckle. Mlss J.\nAltken   and   Mi.-,..   Cathie   Laurie.\nMrs.   T.   J.   Muir' and   Mrs.   Monty\nDavidson left today for Spokane.\nTRAIL   HOUSES    AND    LOTS.      Insurance.  Notary.    J.  D. Ander_on   Trail,\n-.12488)\n\u2022    *    \u2022\nMr\u00bb.   W.   C.   MacKenzie.   secretary   of\nthe   Kncx   United   church   missionary\nsociety,   left   today   for   N?lson.   where\nthe  fifth  annual   Presbyteri-il\nIng a meeting this week.\nIS PLENTIFUL;\n1.3 IS RECORDED\nSCOTCH WIDOWS\nMAY TRANSFER\nTHEIR PENSIONS\nSo  Declares Mr.  K.sling  After\nInquiry in Scotland; fa\nContinuing Quest\nNelson ls getting her share of  moisture ln full  the past  week.   1 _   inches\n______________________________________________________________________________       of  rain  having  fallen  here   last   night\nwill have over 40 pupils. This matter r when the snow which fell steadily\nwas laid over until next week's meet-1 here the day before, again changed to\ning, and 1q the meantime Inspector \u25a0 rain. Yesterday the temperature mount-\nV. 2. Manning will be consulted on ed again when tlie maximum tem-\nthe subject. If another teacher ls em-! perature was recorded at 41 above\nployed   It   may   mean   thc   renting   of   and  minimum   temperature  27   degrees\nMAX REIMANN,\nTRAIL MAN, IS\nDEAD AT COAST\nTRAIL. B. C Feb. 5\u2014Tlie death\noccured at the coast this morning of\nMax Relman, aged 44 years, son of\nMrs. A. Reimann of Trill, Mr. Reimohn\nhad been failing In health for some\nmonths and had gone to the coast a\nfew weeks ago in the Interest or hts\nhealth.\nThe death of Mr. Reimann ls directly attributed to disabilities Incur-\nred during the late war, In which\nhe served with the 6th South Staffordshire regiment of lnJuntry. Mr.\nReimann was a member of Uic Terrtt-\nirial forces at the outbreak of. war\nand proceeded overseas with thc first\nof these troops. He served throughout\nthe war and was with tho artny of occupation following the signing of tbe\narmistice.\nUpon his discharge from the army\nhe came to Trall and was employed\nin the office Of the Consolidated\nMining __ Smelting Company of Canada,\nlimited, latterly as a eost accountant.\nHe had been a resident litre for 10\nyears and was active ln musical circles\nhaving been member of TraU Veteran's\norchestra.\nMr. Reimann wns born at Wolverhampton,  EnglaiW.\nHe is survived by his mother, a\nsister, fc'elma and tft-p brothers. George\nand Herman, all residents of Trail.\nThe body will be brcught to Trail\nfcr   interment.\nATTENDANCE IS\nFAIRLY HIGH AT\nTRAIL SCHOOLS\nTRAIL, B. p., Feb- 5\u2014Two clus_?_.,\nDivisions. 4 and 5. had over 96 pei\ncent attendance at Central school during January, according to atu-nUiiin.*?\n\u25a0records. Division 5 had 93.G1 per cent,\nenly .34 ahead cf Division 4.\nDivision 24 was the lowest in the\nschool with 85, but It wu-i the only\nclass that had a figure below the\nnineties.\nDivision 4 led East Trail school In\n\u25a0itt(-ndance during January with 96.39\nper  cent,   reports   show.\nDivisions fl, 6 and 8 were all in the\n88 per cent class, the lowc.t for month.\nschocl-room outside the present\nbuildings.\nSeats were auhorized to be built ln\nthe girls' playrooms along one wall\nso that the children could rest when\nthey desired.\nIrust-ces Hesketh ' ana Cummlngt;\nwere instructed to examine thc dealr-\nablMty and feasibility of making a\nsmall room ln the Central school\nln which to varnish the manal training products. THs iilepartme*. \\ j is\nciamped for room, and the other work\ncreates too much dust to allow of\nvarnishing   In  the  same room.\nMr, Lcask. teacher of thc el&#ilh\ni;nidi'. wu given a \u00bb2C0 raise In salary.\nIn authorizing this thc board took\nInto  consideration that Mr.  Ln_d_   was\nman with a family, and had had\nfour   years   university   training.\nMr. Lossalle tendered $5 for the\ngrass growing in the Annex achool\ngrounds tills year. This was accepted,\nwith the proviso that he leave the\ngrounds In good shape.\nTho secretary was asked to include\nfunds for extensive repairs to the Annex school fence ln his tentative estimates for the year.\nThe estimates for the coming year\nwill be considered by the board at\nIts meeting next  Monday.\nThe financial school year closed with\na surplus of $4521.18. made up of a\nadrplttt of 827(13.,i*j in 1928 and a sur-\nplUl   of   61754.35   for   l'.UO.\nTrustees Herchmrr. Asselstine. Phillips, Hesketh cud Cummings were\npre.ent.\nTHAW CONTINUES\nSTRONG, TRAIL\nTRAIL. B. C, Feb. 5.\u2014A minimum\ntemperature of 32. Just at. tlie melting\npoint, and a masimum of 44, were recorded In Trail today, marking a\ncontinuation of the general thaw experienced   tlie   past   few   days.\nabove for the 24 hours ending at 6\no'clock, but failed to reac-, tht- high\npoint attained on Monday when tlie\nlowest temperature recorded was at\n35   above.\nROSSLAND,    B     C.    Peb.    6.-\nwldows In West Kootenay who ware tt\nreceipt of a Mother's pension ln Scotland before coming to Canada, wit.\nbe glad to know that their pensions\nwill be transferred and continued here.\nW K Esllng, MP, has been i__ correspondence with thc undersecretary ot\nstate for Scotland, and has been advised that the amendment to the Pensions act providing for this, has bwn\nenacted and took effect as from January '2, 1030. Ex-pensioners should\ncommunicate with the department ol\nhealth for Scotland. Grassmarket, Edinburgh, stating their present addxesf,\nand thetr List address in Scotland, to*\nthat arrangements may be made to\nhave payment of their pensions resumed.\nThe matter originated with a Scotch\nwidew residing ln Trail, whose oase\nMr, E-lin-f took up with the under-\nfecretary of state, and he ls now taking up the case of an English widow\nln this district, and also endeavoring\nto see lf tlie same benefits cannot\nbe extended to those who were in ***-\netipt of old age pensions in the oH.\ncountry.\nTrenton, Ontario, police arrested\nJohn O. Pryuc on a charge of stealing\n10.0 tablets of codeine. It is alleged\nthat Bryne - stole the tablets from\ndoctors' surgeries while the owners\n.sent. When arrested Bryne 15\nsaid to have had a hypodermic needle\ncodeine atblets and a bottle of paregoric  on   his  person.\nTt i_ hinted thnt much taffeta will be\nworn in thc spring. MpectaDy In form\nai costumes, and a very lovely caps\nlftrap of taffeta In solid color Is -shown\nIn one shop for rexnrt use. Its color\naccenting the predominating color In\ne chiffon print  gown.\nT. H. WATERS Co. Ui\n* Builders and\nContractors\nI'll ssi is' Ui P. O. Il.sv 835\nmuoK b. c.\nsOll Olll I'KKK.s, ON\nBuilding Material\nUKh'OKi:   VOU   111 11 II\nCOAST LVMBKK\nProdmed itt Canada\nThe Safeguarded Milt\\\nwf mm Contented Cows*\nTRAIL CURLING\nTRAIL, B. C. Feb. 5.\u2014Tonight's pl\u00bby\nin the president's cup competition .t\nthe Trail Curling club resulted as\nfollows:\nAt 6:30\u2014J. A. McLeod 12. W. F.\nTruswell 3: H. A. McLaren 6, Dr. W. A.\nCofihlln 0: J. E. Carter 9, A. B.\nRitchie  7.\nAt 3:30\u2014J- B. Craig a. 3. J. Fine-\nland 16; J. A. Wadsworth 6, C. Dodimead o: A. A. MUllgsan 8. S. O. Blaylock G;  W. B. Hunter 15, F. S. Willi* \u00ab.\nLadles'   games   drawn   lor   tomorrow\nand  Friday  are:\nTlliasDW\nAt 3:30\u2014Mrs. J. Young vs Mrs. D.\nFwrefrt.\nAt  3:30\u2014Mtss S.  McCallum   vs.  Mre.\nR. W. ClarKe:  Miss S. Ewart vs. Mlss\nM.  Malott.\nFRIDAY\nAt 2:30\u2014Mrs. O. Kinnis vs. Mrs. L.\nF. Tyson. .\nAt 3:30\u2014Mrs. A. Buchan vs. Mm.\nR. W. Clarke; Mlss M. Malott vs. Mrs.\nW.  F.  Truswell.\nTomorrow  night's draw  ls:\nAt 6:30 Dr. c. S. Williams vs. J. B.\nTwaddle; Dr. J. H. Palmer vs.. W. H.\nBaldrey; G. Kinnis vs. W. F. Doubt;\nL. H. Jackson vs, O. C. Robertson.\nAt 8:30\u2014Dr. J. R. Thorn vs. A.\nBuchan; A.- M. Chewer Vs. P. R. -McDonald; K. A. Margeson vv. J. Campbell;\nW. E. Wilson ve. L. P. Tyson.\nDecorative minings and necfc-llnee\nturrod or fabric trimmed are stressed\non spring capes,\nlni>*m* _\u00bb\u00ab. (Im-mmi.\nINCORPORATED   2??  MAY 1670.\nOther   Branches   at   Winnipeg,   Yorfcton,   Saskatoon,   Edmonton     Calgary,   Lethbriilgc,   \\..iuuu\\rr,   h.mi loop-,   Vernon   und   Vlcturia\nMen's Shirts\nN'ew   Shirts   [or\n.spring io plain\na n tl       fancy\nBroadcloth-\nwith      colloi-\n, aUached 0f\ntwo separate\ncollar-\n$1.95 \u25a0\u25a0*\n3lol$5.50\nFine lirnanclotli\nShirts with 2\ncollar a to\nmatch in silk\nnew patterns.\n.$2.50 **\n3for$7.00\n-\\luii floor\u2014II ii t \u2014\nDry Goods\n36-inch Worrall's   Velveteens.      Guaranteed  las.   to\nrubbing.     Our entire range consisting of all Ok\nnewest colors offered at greatly reduced prices\nPer yard  $1.69\n88-inch French Crepe Bask Satin. This beautiful\nrich quality silk regularly sold at $3.50 is today offered at a price which cannot be repeated. A limited quantity of shades at this clearance price. Uec-\nular price ?3.5(T.   Today lot, yard ?1.95\n\u2014Main Hour\u201411 B C\u2014\nLadies' Wear\nPull Over Sweaters. Suitable for skating and the\ncold days. In shades of brown, green, navy and\ngrey, High and \\'-iu;k-. Peter Pan collars. Plain\nand fattcy knit. Sizes Small, Medium and Large.\nValues from $8.96 to 16.96. Sale Pries range\nfrom s:;.50 t   $5.50\nLadies' Cat Sweaters   Good quality knit.    Made of\nMonarch end .Northland Wool,    Sizes 30 to 44.\nPi i.vs         93.95  to  $6.50\nHeavy Jumbo Knit Toques. Suitable for skating or\nsleigh-ridisi^'.     In   shades  of   no,   whit,  blue  and\nblack.    Prices 8Sf and $1.00\nScarves   E Brushed Wool,   in shades of fawn, blue\nand red.    Price 004 and $1.50\nSkills.   Made of ser.e. and flannel.    Pleated and plain\nstyles.    Colon are navy, fawn. sa_e and green.\nSi_es l! to 20 years.   Prices        $3.05 to $5.95\n\u25a0M-issnil   I l....r\u2014II   II   1'\u2014\nShoe Department\nAU( 11   SUPPORT\nS IK IKS\nThe   asl mi thing    ci m-\nfort  of the  American\nGirl    Arch    Support\nShoe, can not be adequately described ta\nwords, !.!\u25a0!. yi ur fee'\ninstantly tell you ii\nis your shoe, and with\nthis   wonderful   com-     ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\ntoft, vs.si have brillianl styling, outstuuding models\nfor wait your choosing here.\nStocked In Black and Brown Kids and Patent Leather...   In Straps or Tie styles, wit.h Cuban heels.\nI'vi,, .$7.50\n\u2014Second floor\u2014HB C-\u00bb\nX\n__\n Page Four\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublication ovary monuur aac vi\n\u2022unday by The Neva Publishing Company,  limited.  Nelson.  B   C\nIhialnaai   letter*  ahould  be addnaaeJ\n.backs   and   money   orders   made\n\u25a0 payable  to The  News Publishing Company,   limited,  and  in  no cose  to tn-\n, -Urldual members of tbe staff.\nAdvertising rata  cards and  A. B. C.\nStatements    of   circulation   mailed   on\n, fcquest. or mar ba seen at the office\n\u2022f   any   advertising   agency   recognised\nby     the    Canadian    Dally    Newspaper\nI association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES\nBy   mall   (country,  pen  montb)   I   .60\nP\u00abr    year 6 00\nBy mall (city), per year .... 13.00\nOutside   Canada,   per   month .75\nPer    year 7.50\nDelivered,   per   week 25\nPer year 13 00\nPa.-able   lu   \\dt anrr\nMember   Audit   Bureau   of   (irvulaMon\nTHURSDAY.   FEBRUARY  6.   1930\n\u25a0GOSSIP IS BUSY ON\nfcLECTION DATE\nIX DOMINION\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 6,1930\nWhen will the next Dominion general election be? This\nis a question occupying the\nminds of many political followers, and political gossip from\nOttawa includes many conjec-\n*\u25a0 tures as to the probable date.\nIt wag in 1926 that the last\n\u2022  general election occurred. Thus\n1  the life of the present parliament will not  necessarily end\n' until   1931,   but  it   is   seldom\nthat a general  election  is deferred until the latest possible\n;r date.\nIt ha. been the usual practice for a government to go to\n\u2022' the people some time during\nthe fourth year after the preceding election. From this pro-\nceedure it is calculated that\nthe electors will be summoned\nto the polls some time during\n.- the pressent year. The doubtful\npoint seems to be whether or\nnot dissolution will come before or after midsummer.\n:* Owing to this uncertainty a\nwatchful eye is being kept by\nthe parties on the voters' list.\nIn former years the provincial\nlists were largely used, but a\nnew method is being undertaken just now.\nA new list for all Dominion\nconstituencies is to be prepared\nby officials appointed by the\ngovernment. This step is to\nbe taken, it is stated, becauses\nin some of the provinces the\nlists are several years old, and\nit is desirable to have lists\nthoroughly up to date when the\npoll is taken.\nThe intention is not to have\nthe lists compiled until shortly\nbefore the election. Thus any\naction taken by the appointed\nreturning officer can be taken\nas an intimation that dissolution is not far off.\n- To date no instructions have\nbeen issued from Ottawa to\nprepare the lists. But returning officers for the various\nelectoral districts have just\nbeen appointed.\nArgument is that these appointments would not have\nbeen made unless the government contemplated the jxissi-\nbility that the services of these\nOfficials might be required in\nthe near future; that i.s, in\nother words, unless the gov-\nenunent contemplated the pos-\nsiblity of a general election at\na date earlier than had, until\nrecently, been under consideration.\nIt is, therefore, with keen\ninterest that politicians are\nawaiting news that instructions have been issued, returning officers informing them\nbow the lists are to be prepared, and what steps they\nai\" to take for that purpose,\n4.hey and the public at present\n'are very much in the dark.\ncAmt Het\n\u2022\u2022I don't know of nothlu more M-\ngr\u00abvss..1n' tfc.n the hive, unless Its\nwVtchin' a m\u00bbn tryin' to thread a\nneedle.\"    \u00bb      *\t\nThe\nLi&hter Side\nChristianity    Isn't    practiced    much,\neither,    but    that     doesn't     prove     it\nwouldn't    be   good    for    the    country.\n\u2014o\u2014\nA   new   kind   of   hteel   \\s   too  expensive   tn   uf*   l\u00bb   cart.   And   we\nthouKht    thi*e    little    |l \u2022\u25a0*\u2022\u2014\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\nmmilnTMl   plate*   were   tin.\nThe Rangarco trust to its lags\nand the bear hugs. Oh, nothing; except they are are only animals taught\nto    box    like    prize    fighters.\nThe world was made in sit days.\nYou sec it wasn't neces_ary to wait\nfor   an   appropriation.\narent hungry  If they filled op at\nthe  bridge  part).\nStorms and oold waves and warm\nspells have got things so mixed up you\ncan't Judge a climate for the weather.\nIn England they speak of the \"upper middle class.\" Probably something\nlike our Uppity  middle  class.\nFront*ir newspaper men must have\nbeen amateurs Instead of professionals.\nThey got their reward ln potatoes and\ncordwood    Instead    of    cash.\nLabor\u2014saving schemes aren't a blessing. Think how much happier people\nwere when they spent two hours a day\npolishing   the   brass  on  the   flivver.\nCorrect this sentence:-. \"I know her\nnew living-room ault* cost a lot,\"\nsaid the gossip, \"because she was\ncareful not to say anything about the\nprice.\"\nIt Isn't true that treat -mi tiles\nnuihe you forget NttD \u25a0 \u2022*\"\u2022\u25a0 TfM>tli-\narlu* affects married rn-\u00bbn Just as\nIt   din's   others.\n\u2014o\u2014\nThe   people   have   faith    in   Hoover.\nThey   are   with   hiin   and   areu't   quite\nsure   where   he   Ls.\n\u2014o\u2014\nThe one weak point In  the comrnts-\nBtOQ  idea  is that  an errand  boy won't\nhurry back if he's paid by  thc month.\nDflllMil-    lo    the (oiifcit'iu-e begin    with   one   thlnir   In   common.\nI   ch   knom   !\">\u00bb    many   ships   the\nother  should   have.\n\u2014o\u2014\nMCHSRNieM:   LAUGHING   AT  OLD-\nTIME FARMERS WHO BOUGHT  OOLD\nBRICKS:      SWA___.OW!NG       FNDLE38\nPit OP AG AN DA.\n\u2014O\u2014\nTobacco men  want  an   Idea  to popularize the pipe. Well, the first man to\nsmoke  one made a  hit with  a  queen.\nKnew\u2014It\u2014all people seldom annoy\nhumble students, but how they are\nhated   by  know\u2014lt\u2014all   people.\nWives ure people who think yuu\nWhat Do\nYou Think?\nCorrection to Sentence\nin Correspondence\nTo the editor of The Daily News\nBlr,\nWill you kindly correct the following sentence in my letter ln reply to\n\u25a0Nelson Citizen..?\nAs it a.*opears ln The News, lt reads:\n\"Does 'Nelson Citizen\" consider that\nIt is the 'respected tradesman\" with\nwhom he sympathizes?\"\nThis should read as follows: \"Does\n' Nelson Citizen\" oonslder that it is\nmore objectionable for the hospital\nto benefit by death, than for 'the\nrespected tradesmen* with whom he\nsympathizes'?\"\nThanking you  for  this  favor.  I  am,\nYours sincerely.\nEdgar Jamieson\nPassmore,\nFeb. 5.  1930.\nWhat the Press\nIs Saying\nLABOR   AND   PATRIOTISM\nWithout doubt the time will come\nwhen Mr. MacDonald and Mr. Thomas\nwill renounce the habit or thc bagman. They will cease to \"travel' and\nwill be compelled to face the House\nof Commons and the country with\nwhat courage they may, We have as\nlittle hope for their success as pride\nIn their knowledge or their skill. They\nbrag n vast deal about their country,\nand they have never hesitated to raise\ntheir hands against it. They have\nsnapped the chain of tradition, which\nshould have bound them to the past.\nThey care only for the advantage of\ntheir party and their class. So bitter ls their diBllke of patriotism that\nthey are commonly to be found on the\nside of their country's enemies. And\nthe result of their pretending to govern\nEngland wtll be to drive well-thinking\nmen and women further and further\nfrom politics.\u2014Blackwood's Magazine\n(Edinburgh).\nShat Iniuj\nof *Unur0\nBj    l.\\m.   w.   BARTON,    M.D.\nGRADUALREDUCING IS\nSATE\nYou are overwetafct and have decided\nto take off a number ot pounds so as\nto get 'Just right* according to tha\nweight   and   height   tables.\nNow'lf you were thin at one time\nand have accumulated the extra weight\nsimply by eating and gradually taking\nless exercise, then forget about thyroid\nextract or other \"quick' methods of\nreducing.\nIf you are in good health, and are\nsay 30 pounds overweight, decide to\ntake off about 24 pounds, leaving on\nabout six pounds as a nort of safety\nvalve. Decide further that you will\ntake lt off in six months, four pounds\na month.\nThe best and easiest time ls curing\nthe cool weather when you would\nnaturally eat considerably more than\nln warm weather. You can cut down a\nlarger percentage when you are eating\nmore. And the foods to cut down on\nmostly are the fata, the liquids, and\nthe  starches.\nDo not cut down on meats and eggs.\nThey satisfy the appetite better than\nother foods, and repair worn out tissue. In older folk cheese and milk\nsometimes take the place of meat and\neggs. 4 a\nYou see. you have plenty of fat in\nyour body anyway, so if you do not\neat fats (cream, butter, animal fats)\nthen your own fat helps supply the\nbody needs and supplies them well,\ngiving plenty of heat and energy.\nThe starches\u2014bread, potatoes, sugar,\npastry and so forth\u2014should be cut\ndown but green vegetables and fruits\nshould take their place, as they not\nonly supply heat and energy, but also\nsupply vitamins and prevent constipation and tendency to acidosis.\nWatch the water intake carefully.\nYour body needs water. Water has\nmost important uses In the body\u2014for\nthe blood, digestive Juices, keeping\ngliding surfaces moist and so forth\u2014\nbut as most overweight folk have tissues that hold more water naturally\nthan those of thin folk, they can really\nget along with less water than they\nthink they need. Taking a quarter\nglass every time you think you need\na whole glassful is a simple but. effective method of keeping down the\nfluid Intake.\nAnd then as to exercise. Most overweight individuals hate the word exercise.\nTogether with a - natural disinclination to take exercise, there Is the fact\nthat when they exercise they have\nmore weight to move than others and\nthis lessens the desire to take the\nexercise. Further they have considerable, fat in and about the region of\nthe heart and ln abdomen beneath the\nfloor of th chest and thus heart ancl\nlungs are a little crowded when exercise is taken.\nHowever, wearing heavy woolens,\ncovering the whole body and doing\neome bending and twisting exercises\nwill cause a more profuse perspiration\nand reduction comes faster.\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nt\u00bb  UHU  V Kitthimt\nTOMOHKOW'S   HM\nHreakfas;\nBananas\nCereal\nFried Liver and Bacon\nColfee   Cake Coffee\nLuncheon\nCream of Onion Soup\nCroutons\nCole  Slaw\nJelly   Doughnuts Tea\n\u2022Dinner\nFruit   Cocktails\nCold  Sliced  Lamb\nCatsup\nSweet Potatoes Carrots\nLettuce French Dressing\nCottage   Pudding\nCoffee\nplan to make a plhk one for a Utility\nBridal Shower 1 am toon to attend.\"\nAnswer: Thank you, reader friend,\nfor calling this new and useful article\nto our attention. I am aura other women will wish to make tome. Another\nuseful, yet decorative, article which waa\nsaw at the holidays is a round boa\nresembling a candy box. wtth floral pa-\npar cover, but inside, instead of candies\none finds divisions filled wtth silk\nstockings, and In the centre a group\nof small spools of darning cotton ln\nthe various popular colon.\nBride: \"Is a piano scarf or cover absolutely   necessary  today?\"\nAnswer: Indeed no. Many housekeepers prefer a perfectly bare piano.\nHowever, lf you own a very beautiful [\nold shawl or scarf, of a color' which will \u25a0\nhelp to carry out the room's color\nscheme, I ahould by all means use lt.\nIt Is a matter of taste, today, whether\nour piano ls covered or not.\nTomorrow\u2014The Bridge Luncheon\nTEN YEARS AGO\nWMU KS    TO    lNQl'IKIF.M\nA. J.: \"What is a 'Dessert Bridge'\nPa*-tv?\"\nAnswer: A party at which dessert,\nonly, Is served. The guests are supposed\nto have had a light lunch, or a sandwich, before arriving for the afternoon\nof bridge, and before playing their hostess serves them a cup of hot coffee,\naccompanied by a rather substantial\ndessert\u2014fiuch as Ice cream and cake,\nor shortcake with whipped cream, or\nmeringue tarts\u2014placing these refreshments on the card  tables.\nMlss G: \"I wonder if other women\nhave noticed the new oilcloth cases,\nnarrow and very long, which are hung\nup in the kitchen to hold a yardstick?\nI received one for Christmas, bound\nwith red cotton binding tape, and I\nfind that lt is easily copied,.ao I am\nmaking several ln my spare minutes to\nput away  as  gifts  for  my  friends.    Z\n:::::::::::::::::;:::::;::\nPalm Beach reports that prints are\nfar more prominent ln evening gowns\nthan ln daytime costumes, and especially ln chiffon Is the print a favorite,\nthe design large and spaced.\n(Prom The DaUy News, Peb. fl, 1930)\nThe Kootenay district of British\nColumbia, says the Pacific Coast lumberman, has 23 billion feet of standing\ntimber which le being worked by IS\ndifferent taw nulla with a total capacity of 1310 feet per 10 hours.\n* s   \u2022\nMayor Swan overwhelmingly defeated\nEx-Mayor   McNlsh   In   the   civic   elec- |\ntlons  at  Slocan   City.    The  following |\naldermen were elected: J. IC. Rae, W.\nClough. H, D. Curtis, D. S. McVannel.\nH. O. Henderson and H. U Fife.   Tha |\npolice   commissioner   is  T.   Armstrong.\nThe   new council  is elected on a pro I\ngresslve   policy   which   Includes   elec-1\ntrie   light and  a  high  school  for  tha\ncity.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022 *\nIn recognition of seven yean da-\nvoted service in the various officee\nincluding treasurer and deacon. Deacon\nE. H. Evans of the Baptist church\nwas presented with a purse trom the\nmembers of the congregation last\nnight.\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bills oi\nBuilding Material Coast Lumber a specialty.\nJohn Burns & Son\n_*\u2022(\n-m ILI> b. c.\"\nThe shortest airmail run In the\nUnited States Ls from Oakland to San\nJose, Calif., 36 miles. A daily round\ntrip is made.\nA well-known resident of veadon\nYorkshire, disguised himself and went\nfrom door to door begging. He collected\nthree pounds odd, half of which he\nsent to the local women's hospital and\nhalf  to  Dr.   Barnardo's  homes.\nToronto has the highest assessment\nand the second lowest tax rate of\nany city In Ontario. Ottawa has the\nlowest rate.\nI: i.\ntHE NORSE WOMEN\nGET RECOGITION\nUnder   proclamation   of   the\nI ;fcing   of   Norway   the   women\nof that country are to be made\neligible   to   any   offices   under\ntho   government.      Even    the\narmy  and navy  are  open  to\nrStra. At that we never exjieit-\nto  see a  Norwegian lady\njSUmiral. But it is a fine thing\nImp reveal the Vikings so tender\nconsiderate of their ladies.\nfor\n\u2014Thirty-Second\u2014\nAnniversary Sale\nFor Thirty-two Years\nWe have served the people of the Kootenay district to\nthe best of our ability, giving them the best grades of merchandise at the most reasonable p rices.\n\u2666 \u2666 \u2666 Now\nIn order to show our   appreci ation for your generous patronage all these years we are sett ing aside the month of\nFebruary\nn bargain month, when we will select lines from every department of our immense stock and place on our bargain c ounters at prices, in many cases, far below CO t. Wc will also place cn sale such lines as we are closing out and lines\nover stocked.\nIT WILL PAY YOU TO STOCK UP NOW\nRemember Every Day This Month\nWc sec hundreds of articles priced away down and it will pay you to watch\ndaily our\nBARGAIN COUNTERS AND WINDOWS\nPolishes and Floor Wax at about half price.\nBroom*  - 2 for 98%*\n______  -wrrt\u2014twr Door Mats 59*+\nTUlX U\/KVa Granitewaie 33 1-3 OFF\nIII   fl 1-1 _l\\ Aluminum  Coffee Percolators and  Double\n,\u25a0; \"\u25a0\"\u25a0\"*\u00bb Boiter?|     Ea(;h      QQj.\nBoys' Watches, each  98**\nPottery, each 50< am} $1.00\nNo Qooods Charged-No Qoods Delivered\n\u2014Cash and Carry\u2014\nAll Qoods Carry Our Usual Quarantee\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale and Retail\u2014Quality Hardware\nNELSON i-: B.C.\n J asm\nPacific\nMilk\nAs a\nFood for\nInfants\nFor the best letter on Pacific Milk\na* a tcott for babies we will give\nprizes   as   fallows:\n1st\u2014$25  Cash.\n2n_-J\u00bb10   CsMh.\n3rd--Full    Case    Pacific    Milk.\n4th\u2014Half   Case   Pacific  Milk.\n1    Dozen   Cans   each   for   the\nnext six  best  letters cnosen.\nAddrtts:\nPacific Milk\nVZ'IH   Homer   Street\nVancouver,  B.  C.\n::.:::::::::\nAnnouncing\u2014\nFriday and Saturday as\n\" .   95 c Days\nAnd on account of changing windows and rearranging store we will allow Monday morning until 12\no'clock for all specials.\nSEE OUR WINDOWS\nWatch for our Advertisements\nTOMORROW AND SATURDAY\nLADIES HATS. Early spring arrivals,\nto $15.00.   Two days and 350 hats to\nselect from \t\nHOUSE DRESSES\nnew numbers\t\nRAYON SILK LINGERIE.   Including        Qt__\nWatsons' heavv $1.75 Bloomers. Each     VOK-\nLADIES' HOSE, Silk and Wool. Cashmeres, QE\u201e\netc. Regulra prices up to $2.75. Pair   *7Ul\/\n:\nRegular\n95c\n95c\nSmart Shoppe for Smart Women\nFEBRUARY\nFurniture Sale\nMany people have been waiting for   our February Sale. Remember' that\nyou cannot expect such values at   other times of the year\nTea Wagons\nWalnut  $10.75\n$21.75 and $13.50\nSome Very Special\nOdd Chairs and\nRockers\nWicker Rocker, Upholstered Seat and Back.\nRegular $20.00. February Sale price $12.50\nLarge Arm Chair. Tapestry. Regular $45.00\nSale Price  $22.50\nMorris    Chair.      Regular\n$35.00\nSale Price $22.50\nBed room Chairs or Rockers.       Regular    $15.00\nFobruary   Sale\nPrice  $7.50\n3-Piece Chesterfield Suite\nVery attractive.   Covered in Durable Tapestry. Reversible Marshall cushions. FEBRUARY SALE\nPRICE    $167.00\nMOHAIR SUITE  $217.50\n7-PIECE   WALNUT   BEDROOM   SUITE\nConsisting of Dresser, Vanity,   Bed, Chiffonier.\nBench, Coil Spring and Felt MaStrcss.\nFEBRUARY SALE PRICE  $187.50\nWicker Fernerys\n$8.75 and $11.00\nCretonne\n300 yards.   One yard wide.\nAll dolors. 31\/2 yds. $1.00\nSUITABLE TERMS ARRANGED\nStandard Furniture Co.\nComplete House Furnishers\nNelson B. C.\n \"\"\"\nb<\n\",r XTr? cn*> HA1I.Y NEWS. ' THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 6, 1930\nSpring\nClean Up\nIn line wi* t. definitely\ndetermined policy of oprs\nwe are' clearing out broken\nlines of merchandise and\nwinter goods to make\nroom for Spring Stock.\nTwo Prices in\nWOMEN'S SLIPPERS\nAND PUMPS\nNot every size in each\nline but all sizes represent-\ned$3.15.and$4.35\nOA PER CENT\n_\ntr1'\nI    All Hockey Shoes\nSociety\"\nThla   column   1*   conduct**   br\nMm. U. j. Vtowau.   411 mmi. ot\n.  \u25a0___   nature*  Its?}***.!**** __s?p~\nUona,  private enter______,  per-\n\u2022onal item*, rnattlatee, etc.. will\nemeu In thle column. Telephone\nUn. vigneaux at het home, Ken\nApartment*.\nTuesday afternoon a very delightful\nInformal tea wm given by lire. W. M.\nsSunliffe, Oheervatory etreet. ln honor\nof her hm\u2014e gtieet. Mra. John Gilroy.\nof Willow Point. Thoee preeent tx-\nsldes Mrs. Qltroy, Included Mrs. A, J.\nDunnett, Mrs. H. P. Fraier, Urs. O.\nSjxsncer Godfrey, Mrs. James Johnstone,\nMrs.   C.   V.   Oagnon.   Mrs.\nWllllanu. and  Mrs.  W. S.\nA.   A.\nKing.\nC\n0\nu\nN\nT\nAll  Overshoes\nAll Felt\nFootwear\nR. Andrew\nSlCo.\nLeaders   in   Footfashion\nThe ajjeence or fur trimming from\nmany of the coats, suits ana ensemWea\nof wool and silk for the spring brings\nthe separate fur scarf to a distinctive\nnew vogue, snd though flat fur neckpieces ss of last year that were supple\nand fairly becoming, failed of tilth-\nmission for the reason that women always h^ve preferred animal scarfs\nwhich possess more natural beauty and\nare intensely flattering to the face and\nto ttile costume.\nBobert Yulll, who has been vJ*ita_g\nfrlenda ln the city for the paost few\nweeks, has returned to his home at\nLockhart beach.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nVV. ti. Oscarson apd his brother,\nE. O. Oscarson of the Oscarson Mining company at Erie, were visitors to\ntown  yesterday.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mra. Ronald Greyson of\nUpfter Bonnington spent yeeterday\nshopping fn towtj.\n* *   *\n4ft. and Mrs. J. M. Wilson, who have\noeen holidaying in California, are spending a few days ln Nelson en route to\nheir home in Wlnlaw.\nGarland   of  Kaslo  ls   a\nMr\u00bb   A.  T.\ncltj visitor.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. D. A. McNaughton of Silverton\nand her daughter lea laat night for\nVancouver.\n\u2022 *   *\nMrs. O. Gray, Latimer street, has as\nher guest from Cranbrook. Mrs. Moffatt\nand Mrs. Parker. Both, are hear as\ndelegates to the Kootenay Presbyterinl\nof the Women's Missionary society, of\nthe Cnlted church being held ln Nelson,\n# \u2022   *\nW. Frampton returned Tuesday flight\nfrom Vancouver and left y<yterday for\nSanca where he will spend the next\nfew   days.\n* \u00bb   \u2022\nChrlsiiolm Gray of Bonnington paid\na  visit  to  town  yestmiay.\n* *   #\nWilliam Muraro. GraiUtr road, lwe returned from a couple of week? spent\ncalled through the serious Illness of\nthe boy's mother Urs. Thomas Hawes,\nwho Is a patient ln the Kootenay Lake\nOenrni   hospital   for   the  past   waak.\nH. Talbot Airey, ME., who haa been\nvisiting hts parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. T.\nAirey at Cedar Point, also hi* brother-\nin-law and sister. Mr. and Mrs. Charles\nff. HamlKon, Bobapn street, left Tuesday evening for Banff en route to\nBrlunnla   Beach.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Charles K.lman. Silica\nstreet, have as their guest, Mrs. W- C,\nMcKenzie of Trail, who Is ln the ctty\nto attend Kootenay Presbyterlal of the\nWomen's Missionary society oC the\nUnited   church  being   held  in  Nelson.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nAdam Taylor, Vancouver business man,\nis spending today ln Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nA. Ling bf Praser landing paid a\nvisit to town yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nT. Peck, CJP.R. conductor of Orand\nPork*,   ls   a  visitor  ln  Nelson.\n\u00ab   *    s\nMlse Laura Parkinson, matron of\nthe Community hospital at New Denver,\nwho has been a patient in the Koote\nnay. Lake Oeneral hospital for several\nweeks, ha* left for the home of her\nsister. Mrs. H ,M. Heath, 502 Fifth\nstreet,   Falrview.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nDr. and MA. W. B. Steed. Latimer\nstreet, hft-ve as their houae guests,\nMrs, McParlane of Cranbrook, and Mrt.\nJames Broley of Pernle. who are here\nto attend the Kootenay Pre\u00bbbyteri*l\nof the Womens Missionary society, of\nUnited  church  being   held  in  Nelson\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. W*. H. Smedley, Observatory street, have had as their\nguest recently, Mr. and Mra. Howard\nDuck and daughter. Jean, of Ymir\nMISSION SOCIETY\nPRESBYTERIAL HAS\nSESSIONS^ TRINITY\nDelegates From  AU  Over the\nDistrict Are in Attendance Here\nTWO SESSIONS TO BE\nCONCLUDED TODAY\nMuch Business and Many Interesting Topics Up in\nFirst Sessions\nro:\nat   the  coast.\nE. Collinson, Kootenay street,  leaves\nthis   morning   for   Toronto   to   attend\na Jewelers'  convention,  He  will  go  to\nMontreal also on business.\n\u00bb   *   *\nMr. and Urn. J. H. Spence and son\nW. B. Spence of Cranbrook were in\niowp. yesterday eu route to the coast\ncities.\n\u2022    \u2022    t\nMr. nnd Mrs. Joseph Hawes and\nalso Thomas Hawes, nil of Rlondel.\nhave   #rrtve<*J   in   town   having   hern\nPLOWS EAT INTO\nTHE SNOWSLIDES\nIN GREAT SHAPE\nFourteen in Vicinity of Zincton\nCleared    During;\nYesterday\nHOPE FOB RESUMPTION\nOF SERVICE SHORTLY\nSlow Progress With Ice-Breaking on Lak\u00abs; Rosehery\nDelayed\nWEBER\nEnjoys an enviable reputation among\nCanaaVs best nxalrn\nBy those who are intimately acquainted wittJi this\nlovely piano, a genuiite appreciation is held. Among\ndiscriminating musicians\nit is recognized aa an instrument of sterling quality, embodying strictly\nhigh grade specifications\nthroughout. The many\nbeautiful case designs in\nrich mahogany, fancy walnut and funned oak offer\nan unlimited, choice to suit one's individual requirements.\nVICTOR RADIOS SOLD ON EASY TERMS\nViatot Records Write for Catalogue\nHeintzman & Co., Ltd,\n611; Baker Street Npl_on, B. C. Phone 299\n$425\nOk Easy Terms\nFourteen mnrp snow-slides on the\nKaslo & Nakusp branch Mn (.roupfi\n1 relay by the Canadian Pacific\npnowplows nnd crews of aectlonmen\nwhich r>re bencuim eve^y effort to re\nopen the line which became blocked\nat many points' during tbe wefk-end\nIn the two days that the company has\nbeen able to bring equipment to bear,\n22   slides   have   been   cleared.\nZlncton seems the center ,>t the\nslide ..mi, and that vicinity wm the\nscene of operations yesterday of the\nplow working out of Kaslo. Another\nplow, which was ct Ko.sr-t.erry. ia bains\nused Irom the Parapet * end of the\nslide  area.\nThere ore still a number of slides between Zlncton and Parapet, afld It 1\"\n\u00a9\u25a0ejected new slide* will -require attention In tlm ni-wr already clearefl. tu,\nslides were still coming down yesterrtuv\nMU    FINISH   ion   TOIMY\nWhile it is considered that there\nis a possibility of the ]iiiP being\nopened in time for the resumption ct\nthrough service between Kaslo and\nNaku:p tomorrow, this Is not being\nUnked on. If the line U still blocked\ntcmorrow, there will be tht local .service between Sandon and Nakusp that\nwas operated   Monday and  yesterday.\nAlthough the ice on the Arrow lakes\n\u25a0\u25a0.nd Slocan lake Is getting Better day\nby day, getting tlie upper hand of lt\nls a  hard   grind.\nIn order to give Captain Walter\nWright of the Minto an entire day\ntoday to devote himself to widening\nthe channel between Arrowhead and\nNalcusp, the scheduled trip from Arrowhead to Burton, which at present\nmeans Nakusp, has been cancelled.\nThe heavy snow on the Jcp has greatly\nincreased the Minto's dlftculties. and\nTuesday the Minio had to drop her\niccrbreaking barge at Halcyon in order\nto make Nctkusp reasonably.\n(OMMBIA sTIM. tiOISTi\nOn the Lower Arrow lake tlie Columbia when last heard from was ice-\nbreaking somewliere north of Syringa\nCreek. Last word from her was tha'\nshe was encountering somewhat softer\nice. As the telephone line on the Arrow lakes \"went out\" yesterday morning, tliere was no direct comuni cation\nwith her yesterday, but at a reasonable rat* of prosress it is supposed she\nis in ths vicinity of Deer Park.\nThe steamer Rosebiry- instead of\ntying up At Slocan City some time\nduring Tuesday night, as expected.\nmade port only yesterday. At last\naccounts tho extremely thick Ice\naround the slip was making it very\ndifficult for her to maneouver her\nbarge to the slip so that the ' cars\ncould be taken off and returned to\nthe tracks that they left January 25\nfor their northward trip that failed\nWhen the barge'is relieved of its\nload of freight cars, the Roseberry will\nstart out again using lt as an icebreaker. Breaking of nine more miles\nof ice will give a channel from Slocan\nCity to the open water north of Ten-\nMile.\nBETTER IN OKANG.W\nOver in the Okanogan the company\nhas extended \u2022 its Bteamer run once\nmore to Summerland, to which a\nchannel has been broken, making con-,\nh*ctions by motor for West Summer-\nland and Pentlcton. During the height\nof the cold snap the Slcamous, on Its\ndaily run from Okanagan Landing, was\nunable to get further south than\nGretna.\nThe fifth Presbyterlal of the Kootenay United Church Woman's Missionary society opened hare yesterday\nmorning at the Trinity United church.\nThree sessions were Included on yesterday's program and a morning and\nafternoon meeting today will close\nthis  annual event.\nYesterday morning's sessfon, presided\never by Mrs. McFarlane of Cranbrook.\nopened with the doxologv and Lord's\nPrayer, followed by a devotional period\nwhich was conducted by the Trall and\nRowland auxiliaries.\nMrs. McParlane voiced the regret of\nthe preebyterial at the absence \"of the\npresident, Mrs. R. Arrtwtrong, formerly\nof Nelson, and the vice-president, Mrs.\nB. L. Oaten of Trail.\nMrs. T. E. Hlgglnbotham welcomed\nthe delegates to N*-*on in a short,\nbright address.\nTho minutes of the 1929 prcabyterial\nwere adopted as read by the corresponding secretary,   Mrs.  J.  Armstrong.\nReports of the sub-executive meetings held during the year were also\nread   by the secretly.\nMrs. Wallace asked that the recpmr\nmendation of last year, ihjit presbytery\nin conjunction with a committee of\nthe Women's Missionary society, ba\nagain * submitted to the conference\nbranch.\nI K.MtROOKN   INVITATION\n\\( < \u00a3:i\u00bbted\nThe invitation cf the Cfiilibrook\nbranch to hold the presbyterlal next\nyear at Cranhrook was accepted by the\nmeeting.\nTho report of the supply committee\nread by Mrs. Kerr nf Midway showed\nthe work done by this committee to\nhave been extensive among hospitals,\nIndian schools, c. G. I. T. .groups.\nSupplies sent to the various points\nwere valued at $445.21. Sprclal mention was made of tho good work done\nin Wardner by the Women's Missionary\nsociety  and  Mission  Band,\nMrs. T. E, Higginbotham presented\nthe report of the literature secretary\nand Mrs. W. C. McKeiuie of TraU\nread a report on Christian stewardship.\nOut of ll auxiliaries  In  the district\neight    reechfrd    tjielr    allocation    and\nthree  exceeded  It.\n\\l IFUNOON   M-SHION\nAt the -afternoon session, over which\nMis. R. N .Matheson of KlmbWlcy presided. Mrs. Parker of Cranbrook and\nMrs. Robinson of ci*-*lon conducted\nthe   devotional   period.\nReport ot Uie com*_ponding secretary\nwas made by Mrs, G. E. Sparkes. The\nreport ti.oweu that the past year had\nben one of, advance in interest and\n(\u25a0< nuihji.ow,, ..special mention was\nmade of tht excellent work done bv\nthe newest- awtiliarles at Rossland and\nKimberlay.\n'Tlie treasurer's report presented by\nMrs.   F.   R.   G.   Drediio   showed\nCsMeagher's\n611 Baker Street.     Phtme 200\nStore Neivs^\nMiss Los Angeles\nDresses\n$2.95 each\nAn extra smart house frock. Made\nsleeveless style with high waist and circular skirt. Material is a fast color\nand sun proof print in a range or new\ndesigns. Sizes 14 to 20.\nEach $2.95\nWomen's\nSports\nDresses\nat $5.00 to\n$10.00 Less\nGoll'k'x Dresses in a\nwith- range of Golflex\nstyles. Made of all\nu.iiil Jersey, novelty\nTweed and Wool\nGeorgette. One or two\npiece styles and in\nall wanted colors.\nSizes 16, 18 to 42.\nRegular $25.00, $39.\nto $50.00 each.\nSpecial Price $20.00\n$31.00 to $40.00\nMisses' Tailored\nBlouses\n$8,50 each\nNew tailored\nBlouses o f\nDouble weight\nFugi or heavy\ns i ik crepe\nMade with\nhigh or Channel collars and\nplain or tucked fronts. Colors white or\nsand. Sizes\n34 to 42.\nEach   ..$8.50\nSpecial\nClear*\nance of\nMisses'\nCoats\nAt $19,95 Each\nYou can buy these coats for next sea-\nsen and save a lot. They come in\nFrench Broadcloth in all wanted colors.\nShawl collars of Oppossum or French\nBeaver. Silk lined throughout. Sizes\n14, 15, 16 and 17.\nAll One Price, Each $10.95\nTOLD IN RIME\nTill:    MINSK   IX    TI1K    MOINTAINS\nMRS. THOMAS HAWES\nPASSES AWAY HERE\nthere were ] i auxiliaries, nine mission\nband.' and 12 C. G. I. T. groups cod,-\ntrtbuting 8-*-.M6.40 during the year. Ot\ntljis sum 92,400 w\u00bbs sent to the con-\nfareui     bnuM_b  tunsury.\nr-.IM.KS   At-.M,\nMis. w. C- MeKeozie of Trail gave\nan interesting paper on chrisiiun\nKteav.nrdslilp and Mrs. H. M. Whltting-\nton of cranbrook followed with one *\ndealing   with   temperance.\nMrs. Holtby'b report on the Mission ,\nband was read urging the training of\nboys and girls in world friendship and\nMffVlOt.\nMrs. C. VV, Tyler delighted the audience wiui MVtffl delightful vocal solos.\nThis WMlen was closed by Dr. Anna\nSmith.\nFollowing the banquet tendered the\ndelegates in-the basement of the Trinity United church at 6 p.m. laat night\nlOMta to the King and various de-\npurtments of the \"W. M. S. organization\nwere  heard.\nThc various totcta and replies were\nmade by: The Church\u2014Mrs. C. H.\nD.ily. Rev. w. C. Mawhinney; Missions\n\u2014Mr-. W. C, McKPnzie, Mrs. F. M.\nAuld; C G. I, T.\u2014Mrs. N. C. Matheson.\nMiss t.l.ii G. Hanna; Mission Band-\nMrs. B. Wallace, Mrfc. M. Mahoney; The\nGuests\u2014 Mra. J. Armstrong, ML\u00abs M.\nMsers.\nDREDGE   DPKNK\ni.vkmm;   *tmw\nRev. F. H. a. Dredge opened the\nevening session at which he was chairman with a short address that dealt\nwith the enthusiasm of the modern\nmissionary both at home and abroad.\nThis enthuslflam. he stated, wa# most\ncertainly  derived from God.\nMrs. A. C. Pond of Moyie spoke\nbriefly of her experiences during her\nsix years of missionary work in the\nforeign fields and another six years\nspent in. the home missionary work.\nShe announced that she would give\nher lantern lecture at the session this\nmorning.\nMiss Margaret Arthur entertained\nwith two vocal boIos and Mrs, Gordon\nAllen present ;d a sermon story In\nrecitation.\n. Dr. P. M. Auld spoke In an Impressive manner of the Jot of the missionary wh.t is often looked upon as a\npolitical spy ns he goes about his work.\nOften, too, the Christian word ls the\nobject of scorching and unfair criticism.\nMrs. W. M. Gowans of Grand Forks\nrendered  charming vocal  solos.\nRev. W. C, Mawhlnney closed the\nsession.\nAway aiucug the mountain.;\nStands an Old  neglected shack.\nAnd within there dwells a miner\nWho   witn   Droi-en   heart   looks   back\nthnt   Oo  the   happy  days  he   used   to  spend\nAround    that   cabin   door.\nWith   his  loving   wife  and   little   child\nWhat, could he wish for more.\nBut   now    that   he    has    been    bereft\nOf ones no kind and true;\nHe   lives   a    life    of    -solitude\nWith nothing else In view.\nAnd when his neighbor friends would\ncall,\nTo give  a word  of cheer.\nHe'd  meet them sternly at the door\nAnd say \"Don't want ycu here.\"\nFor many years he .struggled on\nWith  weary step and slow;\nUntil at last there came a day\nWhen sickness laid him low.\nAnd there upon the old log bed\nWith   body  wreiithed  in   pain.\nHe   thought   \"Well,   here's   the   end   at\nlast\nI'll   never  rise   again.\"\nAnd  as   he  lay   there  sighing\nA  knock   came   to  the   door;\nA sound  that for so many years\nHe  ne'er  had   bMVd  before.\nAnd with a voice so weak nnd low\nHe bid them to come  in,\nThen   waited   anxiously   to   see\nWho should come to visit him,\nTlie door it slcwly opened\nAnd   a   lady  stepped   inside;\nWith a basket full upon her arm\nAnd a .girlie by her side.\nShe said  \"I  thought  I'd  come  along\nAnd   see   what   I   could   do\nUrs. Thomaa Hawes, died here last,\nnight after a serious illness. Members\not the family arrived yesterday having been called here through  her ill-\nThe linen hat fashioned as though\ntt were felt looms so prominently\nin resort millinery that it promises\nto assume a role of even greater import;! nre when summer arrives, while\nthe colored Unen hat matched by-\nbag and shot's combining kid and linen\n' is shown  with  the  all-white southern\nresprt costume.\nSo  if  there's  anything   you  re-quire\nI'll  get  it   new  for  you.\nFor a mement. he could not answer\nHis eyes  were dim with  tears;\nAs  he  nazed   upon   the   lady\nAnd  the  child  of tender  years.\nIt   brought   back   happy   memories\nOf  the  days he  loved  so  well;\nHe   thanked   her   and   with   quivering\nvoice.\nDid then his story tell.\nThe  lady  stood   in silence\nAr  he  told  her   of  tne   past:\nBut his voice  was getting weaker\nAnd his strength wa_ failing fast.\nHe   said:   \"I   knew   I'm   going'*',\nAnd  with eyes  toward  the sky\nHc  said   a   prayer   to  God   above.\nBefore tliat he should die.\nSo that night the aged miner\nPassed   quietly   to   his   rest;\nWith the lady steading by his side\nWho had come to do tyr best.\nHe had  gone to meet his laved  ono\nWhom  he mourned tor many year*\nBut   now   they      reunited   are\nla a land that knows no |\nMRS. L. PICKARD\n. 511 Silica Sb\nNames of approximately 3000 , ,per-\nsons, many of them leaders ln Chicago's social and political life, Wen\nfound in a card index when dry agenta\nraided the ricW.y outfitted studio aj)art<\nment of James Michel, alleged airplane bootlegger.\nHearing of the petition of Lady Mortimer Davis and Mortimer Davis; Jr.,\nasklntf that Lord Shaughnessy and Alexander Reaper be removed as executes of the estate of Sir Mortimer\nDavis, was adjocrned until March 3.\nDelicious Salada quality\nis an inexpensive luxury\n\"SALADA\"\n\u25a0\u00a5\u25a0 *\u25a0 A\nJi   Jr-mitFmh\n\u2666Fresh from the gardens'\nThe Secret of\nSkin and Hair\nI_oveline\u00a7\u00a7\nIN THB regular daily use of Cafe-\neitra Soap and the occasional use\nof Cuticura Ointment, women\neverywhere have discovered the\nsecret of natural beauty. The Soap,\nfragrant and pure, to cleanse; the\nOintment, antiseptic and healing,\nto remove pimples and irritations.\nSoap 23c   Otatmeot 25c. ind 30c.\nTilaim2')c.   Sample each tret*.   Aiitm\nCsMetii*- Difst:}. T. Wait Co.. Ltd., Montreal,\nrggngj\n:_:::\nRobin Hood\nFI\/OUR\nFojf All Your BAKING\nWeak After\nOperation\n\"After Having an operation, I waa\nvery miserable, weak, nervous and\nvery tiear utrfit to work. 1 saw Lydia\nE. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound\nadvertised and tried it and believe It\nhelped me wonderfully. I have oo\nweak spells any more, the pains have\nleft me and my nerves are much bee-\nter. I fed safe in saying Lydia E.\nPinkham's medicines have helped\nme wonderfiiUy.\"~MT_. Wnb. R\nBpvMer, Box 143, Port CofittMi,\nOntario.\nlydia I Pinkham's\nVegetable Compound\n\u25a0\"-\u2014\u25a0--\u25a0\u25a0\nIs Milk Protection\nPasteurization is the modern method of protecting miHc consumers from the dangers of infection from deleterious diseases.\nWc have a modern p'ant which perfactiy 1\u00bb\u00bb- \u2022\ntei.rizes our mijk.\nCurlew Creamery\nCo\u00bb* Ltd.\nIts Creun\n mm\u2014wm\nTHE NELSON DXILY NEWS,' THURSDAY MORNING, FE$RUARYjUg>\narket and Mining\nClerks Busy When Brokers Arrested\nRICES MOVE IN\nHARROW RHP\n\u25a0end  Is  Definitely Irregular;\nSnowfiake Leads Mining\n,   Activity\nLIVE STOCK\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 6.\u2014Dominion Hee\natoek recelpta are aa. followa: Cattle\n\u202290. calvea 100, hog* 2470, sheep 176.\nSteers\u2014Choice \u00bb9.60 to 110.00; tall\nto ssrood (.850 to M_5. etc.\nButcher     hellers\u2014Choice     18.75     to ,\nWU:   (air  to  good  17.00 to  \u00bb8.60.\nButcher cows\u2014Choice 17.00 to #7\u20146;\n(air to good \u00bb5.75 to 1B.75.\nOien\u2014Oood   MOO   to   W.50.\n\u2014 Stocker steer*\u2014Choice 17.75 to 18-25;\nC  Feb.   S\u2014Prices   (air  to  good  W.60  to  \u00bb7.50.\ndu'- i    Stocker heKera\u2014Choice \u00bb6.50 to $6.76\nthe   (air to good \u00bb5_0  tb W.35.\nFeeder steers\u2014Choice WOO to |l_;\nlair   to   good   \u00bb6.50   to   17.50.\nCalvea\u2014Choice    111    to    $16;    good\n110 to \u00bb14. ^^***^**m\nHogs\u2014Bacon   913   to   $13:\n911.66;   lights   and   (eeders\nLambs\u2014Fair to good 99 to #11.\nSheep\u2014Fair  to  good   95.00  to  MM.\n_________ra\nbssanilr moved In narrow ranse\nt tot\u2014\u2014', trading session on\nmccuver eichange, with the trend\nfflhltelv irregular. A. P. Consolidated\n[tb* oil section, aad Snowfiake In th*\nIBM dlvlalon led the list ln act-\nIt}, but neither Issue showed little\ntsetse ln value. A. P. Consolldat,*.\nit up three oents to 93.08 whllr th*\n\u2022ding sspm.ng issue was o(( ohe\nsat at 14.\nBOme QU. which loet 70 to 9960\neeterd-i'.,' rallied fifteen cent* to\n1.75 toda\u00bb. while Royallte. wf'-h\nrop>pe4 9* to 140.00 the previous C'\n*\u00bb out In only a broken lot toiav.\nshhmres selllhg a -948.00 the cloal.ict\n_ waa unKhaikged nt 940 however.\nOther changed todav were c  .nd r\n>or*tlon   olf   10   at   9336'   M-Leo.1\nnine at MM; Okalta oils oft 8 at\nU0;   Aaeodated   Oil 'up   5   st   9130\nbutcher*\n910.00   to\nSTOCK MARKET\nSALES REACH\nFOUR MILLION\n\u00bb5-TTl>tabVU_ I> First Kg D\u00abr of 1930 on\n\"-60-  Wall Street; Utilities Again\nVANCOUVER  rt**'r   '        Pronouncedly Buoyant\n,yvlew   .\nM-asor!\n-itrttlta\ny.Tnt\/tlnce  \t\nCtopper   \t\n-tret  \t\nilcoitda\nandvlew '_____________\nependence .04\nt 0. Jt C  ...     .30\n.emery' florence    .04\nsjBlotens.)'    Kin* .     .05\niraiot    River  01'n\nsitorton   Wolle\u00bby     08\nlUktlonal   Sliver   ..       .06i4\n\u25a0\u2022ble   Five\nsBtecoo capper\nsSiemlsw  Oold\nOreUle\nIMrteT Maho ,\nbieves, TfcDooiild\nbutus   Jtf\u00abenta\nBlofu.  JU\u00abent,\nRuth sSlWe\nstUveroreet\n.23\n.10'A\n1.48\n3 40\n.35\n1.15\nMy,\n.10\n.04\n.01\n.14\nNEW YORK, Peb. 6\u2014A display of\nbull pyrotechnics mildly reminiscent of\nold times gave tbe atock market Ita\nfirst 4*00,000 share day during 1930\ntoday. Stocks were taken ln blocks of\n5.000 to 16,000 ahaxea and ticker delays of a quarter of an hour were\ncommon. Important shares generally\nrose 1 to 6 polnte, but the bull crowd\nwaa   hampered   by   profit-taking.\nFavorable trade reports and the\nreductions   ln   the   New\nIMPROVED DEMAND\nON TORONTO LIST\nMarket   Featured   by   General\nUpswing in Prices; Recessions in Last Half Hour\nTORONTO, Feb. 5.\u2014WhUe reduced\ntrading Interest and sofetnlng prices\ndeveloped ln most stocks on the\nStandard Mining exchange today, the\nmarket was featured by a general upswing ln prices and improved demand\nfor many of the higher-priced metal\nIssues. During the morning session\nprices, as a whole, showed a firm\nstand but within the last half hour recessions set ln that brought practically\nthe entire list under thetr high point\nfor the day.\nTotal sales amounted to 471,341\nshares. The price movement was 39\nlosses, 30 advances and 23 unchanged.\nGeneral Improvement in prices and\ntrading developed ln International\nNickel and Noranda issues. With sales\nrunning up to 10,773 shares Nickel\nopened at $39.25, made a high for thc\nyear at 140.50 and cloeed firm at\n\u266640.25, a net gain of (1,35. Noranda.\n\"with 11.043 shares Involved, opened at\n$41.76, touched a high of 943.45 and\ncloeed at 143. showing a gain Of $1.50\nover the previous closing price. Hudson\nBay moved up 10 cents to 912.10. Mclntyre was also prominent in the gain\ncolumn and closed up 70 cents at\n118.70. while Lake Shore had a rather\nIrregular movement, opening at 923.60,\nadvanced . to a high of 923.75, then\nbroke to touch t. low for the day of\n922.50 and closed at 932.80. a decline\nof   91.05  for  the day.\nMinor price recessions held In most\nof the non-ferrous stocks. The Llnd-\nsley issues, while active In trading,\nwere off in price. Falconbrldge and\nSudbury Basin each fell 10 points, the\nformer to 95-25 and the latter 94.60:\nSherritt Oordon dropped six cents to\n92.95 and Ventures advanced a point\nBase   Metals   jumped    20\nthe big-\nin\n'\" '                                                            + a I nlnced at $100,00.    The pnve   the b\nn        1              f   u*. rirrvin* outi of Toronto, where members were arrested P^           *       ^ ^^business\nGeneral scene of clerks cam ing out                             curacy,   bail   being    the history\" of Canada,\nboxes from one of the brokerage firms,on   charges   of   cnospimcy, a _ _\nDrospect   of   \u2014 ______________\nYork and London bank rates tomorrow\ngave the adrantage to speculators for\nthe   rise     Utilities   were   again   pro-   to   $2.60.\nTopley Hl-hftflrt   . 04\npwungtoa  02\n^Whltwr-jbr   . .19\nTobacco   \"B\".   American   Can,\nPneumatic,  Fox-Film,   Oeneral  Electric\nand   Westlnghouse   Electric.\nAmerican Locomotive Bagged below\n; 95 to a new 1930 low on rumors of\n1 a reduction of the dividend, but closed\nat 100. up 3, on official denial. Otl-\n1 lette was pressed on rumors of delays\nj in bringing out Its new model, which\nI were also officially denied, but the\n1 stock closed off 2%.\nhills dropped 39 cents to 9151; Lowery\nPete at 91.75 and Merland at 60 cents,\neach declined 20 cents; Dalhousle down\n15 cents to 91-90 and Calgary and Edmonton fell lo cents, closing at 92.30.\nAJax with sales running to 40,600\nshares gained nine cents to close at\n91.39.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nShadow of Falling\nWheat Prices Hangs\nOver Winnipeg List\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nHigh\n879%\nWHY OLDEST\nand LARGEST?\nWHROUOH three nation-wide\nlllnihcial panics In Ita IS\nyear's history without ever\n\u25a0 (Mend's worry, because of\nOt*. <nultls,le sjfe.usrds around\nft. Invested fundi\u2014\nWith a plan for accumu-\njatiafl larje sume of money by\neenverisnt payment! whleh\nkas proven \u2022\u2022 attractive that\ntt ta now used by more thin\niMMQO careful, ambitious pep*\nW-\nInvestors Syndicate hap\nMeeme the largast aa well em\n_f oldest Institution of Itp\nkind in tho world. Find out\nHow Ita time-proved plan can\naarVe VOU.\nitlement Kindly furnish ma\nfiayment   schedules   ana\nsrmstlon on ths mveit-\nSyndicate PUn,\n102\n300%\n63%\n226\n.   41!4\n. 114%\n.   90%\n60 y.\n131\n59\nim-.\nAUt,m\nInvestors\niYNDICATE\nS\nLIMITS-\"\n505 Standard Bank\nBuilding\nVANCOUVER, B. C.\nSeymwjr 5342\nAllied  Chemlcat\t\nAnd*     ,*'\u2022*- \u2022\u2014\nAmerican Can .... 1S3H\nAm Foreign Power 99J4\nAmerican   Loco    ... 100y\u00ab\nAm Steel Fd-;      4Mi\nAm Smelt ft Refln   TO'\/.\nAm   Telephone     231\u00ab\nAm   Tobacco     226%\nAnaconda        TO%\nAtchison,     240\nBaldwin     -    33\u00bb\nBait   St   Ohio   ....r.. 119\nBendix   Aviation\nBethlehem   Steel\nCanadian  Tactile\nCerro de  Psasco\nChes  -  Ohio\nChrysler    \t\nCon Oas N Y ...\nCom Products  .\nCurtis   Wrlsjht   \u2014   \u2014\nEastman Kodak  .... 194%\nBrie    \t\nDupont   \t\nFirst Nat Stores\nPord   (English)   ....   \u2014\nI Ford of Canada \u2014.   \u2014\n, rreeport   Teas   ....   41%\nOeneral  Motors   \u2014   45\nI Oeneral   Electric   .   TO\nOr\u00ab_by       \u2022\u2022_\nO N Preferred      98%\nI Oreat   West   Sugar   80y.\nI Howe   s3ound       *lVt\nI Hudaon   Motors   ....   61\nInspiration    Copper   30%\nInt   Rapid   Transit   31%\nInt   Nickel        40%\nInt Tel _ Tel .... 68%\nKelly Springfield . 4%\nKennecott   Copper..   60 Vi\nKresge S 8      33%\nKroegser   and   Toll   29%\nMiami    .-    33 ,\nNorthern Paciilc .. 87%\nPackard Motora ..,.   \u2014\nPhlUlpa  Pete       34\nRadio  Corp       40%\nRock Island   119%\nSchulte        1<>\nShell Onion Oil \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022   23%\nSinclair Con       26%\nSouthern Pacific .. 133%\nStan OU of Cal .... 61%\nStan OU of N J .... 66'A\nStewart wamer ...   42%\nStudebalcer        47\nTerns  Corp       64\nsTexsaa Oulf Sulph 6214\n'United Aircraft .... \u2014 .\nUnion Oil of Cal ..   44%\nUnion Pacific   334%\nU 8 Rubber  -   26%\nU S Steel   188y.\nWest  Electric     18814\nWillys Overland . 10Vi\nyellow Truck     19%\nLow\n377\n181%\n96%\n94%\n48%\n76%\n238\n334\n77%\n338%\n33%\n118\n100%\n300%\n63%\n333\n40%\n112%\n98%\n193%\n69%\n128%\n68\n41\n44%\n74%\n68\n97%\n28%\n40%\n60\n29%\n39\n67%\n4%\n59%\n33\n29\n31%\n88%\nAbana     \t\nAconda     \t\nAJax     -\u2022\u2022\nAmulet   \t\nAmity    \u25a0-__: r\nA P. Consolidated\nAssociated   \t\nBaltic  Oil\t\nBedford    \t\nBarry   Holllnger   \t\nBwana    \t\nBig   Missouri    \t\nC   and   E.   Landa   \t\nCentral   Manitoba   .\n33% | Dome     ,\t\n118%    Dalhousie\nFalconbrldge Nickel ...\nHome   Oil\nHowey     \t\nHolllnger    \t\nHudson   B*y   \t\nInternational  Nickel\nKirkland Lake \t\nKootenay  Florence  ..\nMacasaa    \t\nMandy\t\nMalartic   \t\nMcDougall   \t\nMclntyre\nMining   Corporation\n.,_. Mayland    \t\n41%   Newbec\t\n44''\u00bb   New Imperial Oil\n78      Nipisslng   \t\n58U   Noranda\t\n97% I pend Oreille\nPremier   Oold\nSherrlt   Oordon   \t\nSudbury    Basin    \t\nSterling   Pacific   \t\nSlscoe    \t\nStadacona    -\t\nTech   Hughes   \t\nThompson   Cadallac\nVlpond   \t\nVentures    \u25a0  \t\nWright Hargreaves\nLake Shore  \t\nWanwcll   \t\nTORONTO, Feb. 6.\u2014Supporters of\nleading Issues were called on to absorb\nconsiderable liquidation of favorite\nholdings ln today's session on the Toronto stock exchange.\nThe response ot the prairie provinces\nto the call for support by the pool was\nwell received locally for it halted the\ngradual decline of prices of the stocks\nln the wheat group. Canadian Pacific\nremained unchanged at 1200 as did\nCocksuhtt   Plow   at   132   and   Massey-\n^ ^^^^ Harris at \u00ab41.   Mining issues were de-\nWINNIPEO, Feb. 5\u2014Shadow of fall- 0( the COODeratlve agency M t\u2014\u2014ttR cldedly Btronger with Nickel to the\ning wheat prices still hung ominously stand now pool backers contend, the 'ore- .1_*vmg \"P*\u2122\"1 _ end the\nover the Winnipeg ma.r_x ,oday un- overseas buyer can see that tho pools d\u00bbv &t *__',^ *'_._\u25a0 L__Zl ''Se\ndissipated by  prairie  government's  de-   are   not   threatened   with   any   dlftl-   \u2122r'      S\u2122\"er,,a   _*>    'T_f0_S\u201e   ?0\nh\u00bb'Sow\u2122 thr*  \"^-\"^JHSi   S     *________!''IftttttE..\nValues Slip Downward More Than Cent and Half\nBushel; Pool Officials Declare Condition Unwarranted by Basic Supply &\\}A Demand\nOILS IRREGULAR,\nTORONTO LIST\nDecline in Prices Malted; Noranda Moves Forward Sharply; C. P. R. Firm\nCANADA BONDS\nWINNIPEO, Peb. 6.\u2014Qjiotatlong on\nVictory bonds are:\nWar loans\u20141931, S%.. 99.85 to 100.10.\n1937, 6%, 101.25.\nVictory loan\u20141933, 6%. 101.60; 1934,\n5%,   101.35  to  101.40;   1937,  6%.  14.00.\nWar  loan  renewal\u20141932. 5%,  100.66.\nRefunding loan\u20141943, 5%, 100.30 to\n100.80; 1944, 4%, 96.00; 1940, 4%.\n95.26.\nQuotations on victory bonds are for\n$1000 denomination.\nEXCHANGE RATE\nNEW YORK, Feb. 5\u2014Sterling exchange steady at \u00bb4.82V, for 60 day\nbills and at 8486 for demand.\nForeign bsar silver 43%c; Canadian\ndollars 31-32C discount; Francs 3-92%c:\nUre 6_3%c; Marks 33.86a Kronen\n20.83c.\nNelson approximate rate sterling exchange 84.88.\nMeanwhile, thousands of   ho knows that even  a\n\u25a0   \u2014  - ' will not force the pools onto the mar*\nCloee\n378%\n35\n133\n98 H\n100\n48%\n78\n331%\n336\n78%\n339%\n40%\n102   ;\n200%\n62%\n224\n41%\n114%\n98%\n7%\n193%\n60%\n139%\n69\n13%\n31%\n'OfBcH In\n\\\u00abt Cltiaa\n33%\n39\n119\n9%\n33%\n34%\n122%\n60%\n64\n41%\n46%\n53%\n61%\n43%\n230\n26%\n182%\n165%\n10%\n17%\nno\n41\n60%\n29%\n31%\n39%\n67%\n4%\n60%\n33%\n29 Vi\n32\n87%\n17\n34\n1.22\n.06\n138\n1ST\n.12\n195\n130\n96\n.29%\n.15\n5.50\n.69\n2 30\n.19\n7.90\n1.90\n6.15\n9.50\n1.04\n6.60\n13.10\n40.10\n.78\n.     .05\n.      .10\n.36\n.     .03 Vi\n_3%\n18.50\n3.90\n.    1.65\n31\n\u202225\n.    1.70\n.. 42.96\n.    3.35\n.    1.48\n3.95\n.    4.60\n...     .66\n...     .61\n...     .04\n.    6.45\n..      .09\n.70\n...   3_5\n...    1.90\n.... 33.60\nwheat pools.    \u201e_\u201e    _\nwheat farmers awaited the end of a\nperiod of drastic price reductions char-,\nacterlzed by pool otficiala as unwarranted   by   baslo   supply   and   demand\nWill      UUt,     L_C      __      ,\nket;  so he will be willing to pay the\nfair price reaucsted.\n\"Under existing conditions.\" in the\nopinion of Sir John Aird, president of\nthe Canadian Bank of Commerce, expressed at Toronto, \"The course of the\nprovincial governments ls the right\nthing Io do.\"\nMONTREAL LIST\nHAS A RALLY\nNickel Touches $40.75; Brazilian Up; Paper Group Shows\nDown Trend\n119%\n9%\n23%\n35%\n133%\n60%\n64\n42%\n47\n64\n62%\n47%\n43%\n234%\n35%\n184%\n166\n10%\n18%\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG,\ntlons:\nOpen\nWheat-\nMay      --H\nJuly   \t\nOct.    ... ^^^^\nOats-\nMay        \u00bb*\nJuly   \t\nOct\t\nBarley\u2014\nMay    \t\nJuly   \t\nOct \u00bb\u25a0\nFlax-\nMay     358\nJuly       \u2014\npeb.   5.\u2014Oraln   quota-\nHlgn     U>W     Close\n120\n137%\n55Y4\n52-%\nIt Is estimated approximately one-\nthird of the population of the United\nStates ls partly or wholly dependent\nfor support on either Individuals or\nOtfe-odjea.\n66\nism\n69%\n128\n129%\n127%\n66%\n62%\n65%\n57%\n59%\n125\n126%\n124%\n55 V4\n64%\n51%\n65%\n66%\n125%\n126%\n125\n85%\n64%\n61%\nMay\nJuly\nOct,\n80\n82%\n80%\n82%\n77%\n80%\n53%\n66%\n59\n257\n256%\n77%\nBO%\n83%\nNo. 1\ncondition.\nResources of Manitoba, Saskatchewan\nand Alberts, stood pledged aa guarantees for the 15 per cent margin demanded by Canadian banks An loans\nto the cooperatives\u2014but wheat values\nslipped downward more than a cent\nand a half per bushel. On the cash\nmarket, No. 1 northern was quoted at\n$1.20%. more than four cents below\nlast year's figure\u2014and the world crop\nthis year ls estimated at 653.000,000\nbushels less than that of 192S<29, and\n132,000.000 bushels less than the five\nyenr average from 1924 lo 1928.\n\u00a5i.oo ci.i! nrsaix\nAlready $l,00 per bushel has been\npaid out to members of the prairie\nwheat pools ajid values had been generally regarded as approaching closer\nthan ever belore to the 16 per cent\nprotective margin above loans.\nIt ls pointed out, however, that the\n$1.00 per bufhel payment in no way\ncan bs considered thc pool's indebted-\nnrss to the banks. Under the pool's\nfinancing system, bank loans are reduced automatically as sales are executed.\nHad the western governments not\ncome to the aid of the cooperatives\nand had the market been depressed\nto    \"substantially    lower     levelB\"\u2014the\npools would have been forced to liquid- 1 'uw \"* ***___, \"ir.-,___.\nate a part of their holdings on mar-11(* a ^^LjffiJi\";\nkets already depressed, according to a\nstatement by George Mclvor, general\nsales manager or the Canadian wheat\npool. This, he points out, would have\nhad disastrous consequences, not only\nto western farmers but to the business\nstructure  of   the   entire   country.\n\"It was with a view of avoiding such\na catastrophe in the event of a further\ndrastic break in the market that the\npools  requested   and   received   immed-\nI lately the support of the governments\nof   Manitoba,   .Saskatchewan   and   Alberta,\"  Mr. Mclvor  explained.\nOVARWl'K   SHAKES\n\"The , three provincial governments\naccordingly forwarded a letter to the\nchairman of the banks' lending com\nmitee, agreeing to guarantee their re\nspectlve provincial pool's share of the\nCanadian   pool's   margin.1\nUncertainty arising out of the stock\nmarket crash and the probe into brokerage methods in Canada brought to\nthe investing public a loss of cont-\nfldencc which in .turn depressed the\n\u25a0- I grain markets during the past few\n.,    weeks, Mr, Mclvor mentioned.\n\"aa a result  of  this  condition.\"   he\n.  prices  \u00bbvMi\u00ab.iiM\u201e,\ndrastic  decline |*t\"^*      4\"'\u2122*,T ._-__.     v_\u00bb    _\nI advanced to $89%, up three, while the\n' B\" stock moved up half that amount\nto $12^4. Page-Hersey bettered Its\nposition by half a point to $101%.\nStandard Steel at 12 dropped % while\nSteel of Canada moved up one to $48\nOil Issues were irregular. British-\nAmerican after dipping to a new low\nfor the year at $45, recovered to end\nthe day at $45%, down %. McColl\nand Super Test accounted for half\npoint gains with Imperial at $25%.\nInternational Pete dropped to a new\nlow of $20, but closed at $20%, down\n%. AJax added six cents to its previous closing quote and now stands at\n$1.40. Crown Dominion and Service.\nStations were weaker, dropping .*% and\none points respectively to 7 and $48.\nCALGARY OIL\nA. P. Consolidated     3.06\nDalhousle          1*5\nDevenish     19\nEastcrest     - \u2014       ^^\u2122\nFreehold    \t\n*icKei   umiiicu   w--,*y   -*-\u2014-,   --~       -     Home   Oil \u2014\nhe highest mark it has reached since j Illinois   Alberta      -i-ra\n\u2014v   t__h   Nnmrnihor.   and   closed I McDougall  Segitr  ex        .24%\nMONTREAL, Peb. 5.\u2014Following a\nstrong trend on Wall street the local\nmarket rallied considerably today.\nNickel touched $40% during the day,\nthe highest mark it has re\nthe crash last November, and closed\nup Hi at $40%. Bra_:ilran closed \\.\nup at $40%. with sales volume of some\n6000 shares. Nickel had a turnover or\nover 33.000 shares. The paper group\nfollowed Canadian Power and Paper\ndown when the stock sold to a new\nlow of $11 %, closing at that figure\nme half point loss. Moderately\nactive issues lnclunded Industrial Alcohol, hair higher at $12; Canada\nBronze, unchanged at $53%; Famous-\nPlayers, another point higher at $50;\nGeneral Steel Car, off ,; Canada Gyp-\n  off l %; Dominion Bridge, unchanged at $78%: Steel of Canada, a\npoint higher at $48, and Massey- Harris\nunchanged at $41.\nTotal   sales   were   57,488   shares   as\ncompared with 23,803.\nmontrealTstqcks\nClose\n265\n.65\n9.75\n27%\nMcDougall  Segur  new\nMercury   \t\nMcLeod .\nMill City\nOkalta New .\nRegent        \t\nRoyaJite       \t\nVulcan   \t\nWan well\nGARDNER-DENVER\nROCK   DRILLS   and\nCOMPRESSORS, etc\niIrifters\nSTOPERS\nCONCRETE\nBREAKERS\nCLAY DIGGERS\nSHARPENERS\nOIL FORGES\nPORTABLE\nCOMPRESSORS\nPOWER PUMPS\nHOLE PUNCHERS\nETC.\nSales Agents\nB.C. EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n240\nAUTHORITATIVE COUNSEL\n<m WESTERN CANADIAN\nNATURAL RESOURCES\nPHONE 66     ^H\t\n^LLER.COUKfcCO'\nINVESTMENTS\nNELSON, B. C.\nC) wh\u00ab^-l\u00bbo. 1 bardl__ nm-\nnorthlm wovi; no- 2 wrf*\u2122;%o\nNo. 3 northern 113%; No. 4 106\/\u25a0 \u2022 \u00a3\u00a3\nnow: no. e eovi; teem'~\\%. \u00ab\u2022\u00bb\"*\n120%;  .screening\"  W V I0D-\nEGx^MARKET\nOTTAWA, K.b. 6-T)W\u00bb to \u2122___\\\nol  importance on CansadlMi  etg trmr*-\nk'?orSl_\u00abler. are quoting country\n,hlpS\u2122-or ungnuled eggs extras 46c to\niecV firsts 42c to 43c; pullet extras\nS7e to 38c: seconds 35c.\n37Montr4_-Brltlsh Columbia W \u00bb\u00a3\nsoiling on spot at extras 48c; firsts sloe\nCWcago-Spot 37c; February futures\n27%c; November refrigerators -Q'_c,\np____-\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nbelting Company of Canada, Ltd.\nHf-ning Department\nCOLUMBIA\nJjrERS\nLondon reports a growing. \u00bb\u00ab\u2022 J;\n\u00bbhion lor wonwa to remove their hats\nat lunch.\t\nstated, \"grain in volume out of all\nproportion to the present actual demand has been ottered on our commodity markets, which has naturally\nbrought about a drastic reduction ln\nprices not warranted, by basic supply\nand demand conditions,\"\nNO ALTERATION\nNo alteration in pool policy will result from the government's action, ac-;\ncording to Mr. Mclvor'. He emphasised\nthat the pool would make no attempt\nwhatever to hold up wheat sales when\nthere was a demand for the actual\nwheat, but would continue to offer\nwheat for sale whenever there was\na demand from domestic mills or foreign buyers and would refrain from\noffering in the absence of demand or\nOn depressed markets. Mr. Mclvor\ncorroborated the statement In Manitoba\nlegislature by Premier John Bracken\nthat tbe financial re-toonslbillty assumed by the provincial governments\nls almost negligible. Before the governments would be in afcy way financially Involved, he ment uned, all the\npool's wheat would have to be sold at\nan average price of bcl >w $1.00 per\nbushel, basic No. 1 nort tern at Fort\nWilliam- \"There Is not th* remotest\nchance of this happenu g,\" he said.\nSupporters   of   the  pooj  policy\u2014who\nBank of Commerce \t\n\u25a0dominion   Bank   \t\nImperial   Bank    \u2014\t\ndank of Montreal     310\nBank of Nova Scotia ...-    338\nRoyal Bank      310\nBank of Toronto    280\nAoltibl Power & Paper      \\Wk\nAsbestos  Corporation         lW\nAtlantic  Sugar         8\nBell Telephone     165\nBrazilian TU Power       38>4\nBritish American  Oil   \"      45%\nBrompton   Paper         38\nCanada Bronze       54V_\nCan Car * Foundry       27%\nCanada   Cement         18\nCanada  Cement   (ptd)         83\nCanada Industrial  Alcohol  ........     10V4\nCanada   Cottons         86\nCan  Gen  Electric   (pfd)    285\nCanada   power         11%\nCanada Steamship Lines ....:      17%\ncons Mining &, smelting    220\nDominion Bridge  78\nDominion   Glass    140\nDominion Steel Corpn (pfd)  ....     40\nDominion  Textile        77\nA. P. Grain       23%\nHill-rest  Colliers      50\nLawe  ot  the  Woods      45'\/*\nMassey   Harris         40\n109\nMontreal   Power\nLogan 6t Bryan\nGftATN\nSTOCKS,  BONDS.  COTTON\nMEMBERS:\nNew   York,   Montreal   aad' Van-worn\nStock   Exchanges,   Chicago   Board   ei\nTnd_v.VloaliKgUh.iln ETfikMgt I\nare  numerous  through  tl\nalmost  60\nper cent pool west-discount JJ\u00bb \"S-\ntenttons from some Q^arlJp  tna^an\nnounctment of the govern\nIng for the pools would\nverae result on conditions,\njiave   an  ad-\nThey stig-\nmatlzed aa faultily-deduedd the opinion expressed by some, thr* \"* *\u2014*-*\u2022**\ntlon   buyers   would   consUL - _^\nexposed   at>   ln   a   weakened   condition\nand     would     consequently    withhold\nfrom   the   market   until   Canada   *\u00bbe\nforced to sell,\nThose   in   harmony   with{ the -OB*\n\u2014*\u2022\u2014* _tf__i__\n\u2022-t-.ru..\nMontreal   Telegraph      HV*\nMontreal  Tramways       18t\nNational  Breweries  . \u25a0.      80%\nNatlonal steel Car      89Vfi\nOgilvie    Milling    .       405\nOntario Steel \\Ko&oii1^^^^mmmmmmm\nOttawa L H & Power\nPenmans,   Ltd\t\nPower  Corporation  \t\nPrice  Bros   \t\nQuebec   Power   \t\nShawlnlgan    \t\nSherwln  Williams  .\nSo  Canada   Power   -J^^^^^^^^\nSteel  of  Canada            48\nSt. Lawrence Flour Mills **\nWabasso   Cotton   \t\nWestern   Grocers   \t\nWinnipeg  Railway   (pfd)\nIf circumstances permit the Prince\nof Wales will unveil the statue to\nMarshall Foch( which Is to be erected\nIn London, towards the end of May.\nThe site chosen Is on a triangular piece\nof ground near -to Victoria station.\nMaliwyurd    the    French    sculptor    will\n'it8\n138 \u00bb4\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   THURfDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 6,1930\nrS_S -OVfOt*\nSPORTS\nEATS OF MIGHTY\nWINNIPEG 'SPIEL,\nARE THREATENED\nesser   Luminaries  Stage  Assault but Favorites Come\nOut on Top\nSOCCER RESULTS\nIN OLD COUNTRY\ntariNNIPEG, Man.. Ptb. 6.-\u00abeftt* of\nhoe of the curling mighty quaked\n\u2022* today V lesser Luminaries staged\ndetermined assault on favorites to\nn honors in the Manitoba curl ine\n\u25a0oclatioiiH\" '42nd annual '-.bonspiel.\nt with one exception, failed to\n1. Playing In the Purity flour\ni*phy event, Ker DunXoo's set of 8t,\nJul. Minn., stars fell down for the\n,st time In two davs. They were\nMm 12 to 10 by Sangster of St.\n\u2022nn's.\nThe \"ace\" quartets from Winnipeg\n-athcona club won but both of\nf\u00bbm were forced to fight It out over\n\u00bb last few ends, Gorden Hudson's\nminton champtonns eliminated the\n\u25a0Oregor rlnk from Klmwood, 2 to 8,\na thrilling contest to keep thetr\noM clean for the first two days\ncurling.\n.pectators at Fort Garry rink saw\ngreat itniffitfe, when Ness Wlfte, bat-\nig to retain the grand aggregate\nnors, he \"won a year ago, eked out\n11 to 9 victory over Fisher of\nnltoba varsity.\n\u2022_. P. Moffat and hia Unity, Sask.,\njir dropped their second match of the\nif to Pritchard of Kilmarney.\nW. Lothian, cf Kennedy, Bask., was\nSeated by D. Campbell, of Kenora,\nt\u201e   10   to   8.\nIn the Shea trophy competition\naw, concluded late tonight, Leitch\nFeirobert, Sask., defeated the Prea-\n1 four skipped by D. J. Campbell\nHe Campbell of Kenora defeated\nnderson of Manitoba Varsity, ll to 8.\nd McEwen, of Fort William, again\nt, being beaten by Smith of Gran-\no,   10   to   9.\nGLASGOW, Feb. a\u2014Tbxt draw for\nthe third round of the Scottish cup,\ntc  be' played  Pebruary   16  Is:\nHamilton Academicals vs. Kings Park.\nPartlck  vs. Aberdeen.\nHibernians  vs.  Hearts.\nDundee   vs.   Alrdrlonlans.\nCeltic vs. St. Mirren.\nFalkirk or Queen of South vs. Leith\nAthletic.\nAlbion  vs.  Mont roue.\nMotherwell    vs.   Rautfera.\nLONDON.     Feb.    5\u2014Football    games\nplayed -today were:\nEnglish   League;   Flrat   DIvMon\nPortsmouth   3,   Bolton   Wanderer.   0.\nManchester City   1,  Bverton  2.\nAston  Villa  1,  Burnley  3.\nDerby County 4. Westham United 3\nHecond   Division\nReading 1, Oldham Athletics 1.\nNotts   Forrest   1,   Millwall   1.\nBarnsley   1.  Bradford   1.\nThird Division; Southern  sect inn\nExeter   4,   Clapton   Orient   0.\nKciittl-h   League;   First   DtvtttM\nCeltic  1,  AlrdricnoniauK 2.\nScottish  Hound   Replays\nHearts 4,  St. Bernards   1,\nCowdenbeath  0,  Rangers  3.\nFlin Flon Will\nBoast Magistrate\nand Police Court\nTHF PAS, Man., Feb. 5.\u2014starting tomonow Flin. Flon, famous mining\ntown, will have a permanent police\noourt with a resident magistrate. A\nnumber of cases will be heard when\nthe court holds IU official opening\ntomorrow.\nThis marks another step northward\nof the law courts, and It ls one of the\nfarthest north permanent police courts\nln Canada,\nOCKEY RESULTS\nEAST AND WEST\n0. H. A, Score:\nNIOR  11:\ntratf crd   4;   Port   Cal borne   2.\n'reston   7;   Gait   ft.\nTER MEDIATE\nBlenheim  3;   Stratford  3.\n-tunnvllle 2;  Slmcoe 9.   (Round tied\nI)\nBowmanvllle 3;   Pert Hope  0.   (Bow-\nuivllle   won   round   &-2>\nQodertch    1;     Seaforth    0.\nPeterboro 4; Lindsay 4.\nNIOR\nBrampton 2: Organgeville 4.\nOwen Sound 7;  Quelph 3.\nNewmarket    4;    Wtllowdale    1.\nNiagara Falls 9;-Hamrtltoft. 5  (Niagara\n,11s won round 14-9).\nO-t-tville  2;   Milton 3.   (Oakvllle won\nund   7-5)\nLNADIAN    LEAGUE\nBrantford   3,   Guelph   6.\nNIOR   B:\nWestern     0; London  East  2.\nCanadian Pacific\nBunna\nFROM\nWINTER    PORT\nSAINT   JOHN\n20       Mellt*\nCherbourg-Southampton-HamhurB\n28       Montrose\nTo Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\nrch   7    Metagama\nTo Cherbourg-London\nrch 7   Minnedosa\nTo  Glasgow-Liverpool\nrch  14    Montcalm\nTo Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\nxch  14   Duchess  Bedford\no   Cherbourg-Southampton-Liverpool\n.rch   20   .\u201e  -Melita\nTo   Belfast-Glasgow\nurcU 21 \u00ab.  Duchess York\n| To Liverpool\nrch  37    -    Montrose\no    Cherjjpurg-Southajnpton-Antwerp\nrch 28  *.'.!.-  Duchesa Atholl\nTo Glasgow-Liverpool\n*.  2     ...   Montclare\nCherbourg-Southampton-HatnDurg\n'. 4   Duchess Richmond\nTo Liverpool\n.   5       Mhmedoau\nTo  Bellast-Glas^ow\n.   10       Metagama\nHo Cherbourg-London\nROM VANCOUVER TO\nHAWr All-JAPAN-CHINA-MANILA\n>. 15  .!  Empress of Canada\nr.  ft      Empress  of  Russia\nr. 29    Empress of Asia\n.  17     Empress cf Canada\nAsk   for saltings  to   Honolulu\null details with  rates and  Passport\nirmatlon from any a-*ent or write\nf.    S.    CARTER\ntrlct  Pannenger   Airent.   Nelmn.  R   C\nARMSTRONG BEATS\nREVELSTOKE TEAM\nREVEL.STOKE. Feb. 5.\u2014Armstrong\nsenior hockey team trimmed the local\nseniors in a fast gamo of hockey at\nthe community rlnk tonight. The score\nwae 1-0 the winning tally being scored\nln the final period. The tee was heavy\nand the goal keepers, particularly Be-\nruschi -of Revelstoke. were heavily\nbombarded. Graham Klncaid handled\nthe contest.\nNew Plane Developed, Ontario\nPETE SANDES IS\nALL-ROUND SKI\nCHAMP OF WEST\nBeats Jorstad of Winnipeg br\nOne Point in Revelstoke\nCompetition\nREWARD ENGLISH\nCRICKETER WITH\nPURSE, TRINIDAD\nPORT OP SPAIN, Trinidad. Feb. 5\u2014\nSo wtll did England do ln its second\nInnings in the cricket test match with\nthe West Indies today, lt declared\nwith 426 runs for eight wickets. It\nset West Indies the task of hitting\n300 runs to win. At the close of today's   play   the  score   was:\nEngland 208 and 425 for 8 wickets\ndeclared.\nWest Indies 254 and 47 for no\nwickets.\nPat Hendren Increased his overnight\nscore of 155 to 206 and was still undefeated. His was a remarkable effort\nand beyond two hard chances ln the\nslips, was unblemished. The crowd was\nso delighted with his exhibition that\na purse of $200 was raised for him.\nHe hit 29 boundaries for four each.\nHOW THEY STAND\nPACIFIC   COAST   LEAOl V.   STANDING\nP. W. L. D. P. A. Pt.\nVancouver      33 11    6    6 49 32 28\nPortland      22 12   6   4 31 19 2*\nSeattle     23   9   8   6 40 39 24\nVictoria     22   4 16   2 34 64 10\nmmVIDI'AL SCORING\nGoals Assists Pts.\nTORONTO TO SELL\nMAPLE LEAF PLAYERS\nTORONTO. Feb. 5.\u2014A numbr of\nMaple Leaf players may be sold to\nother clubs in the National Hockey\nLeague, H was announced today. Art\nemith and Eric Pettlnger, forward and\ndefense man, are said to be slated\nfor the ranks of the New York Rangers.\nThe deals are expected to be consummated shortly.\nNEW HAVEN BEATS\nRHODE ISLANDERS\nPROVIDENCE. R. I.. Feb. 6.\u2014The\nNew Haven Eagles handed thc Rhode\nIsland Reds a 5-2 defeat here tonight\nthe first defeat for Provldencp on Its\nown   ice   ln   nine   starts.\nHitherto they had not even been\ntied since Sprague Cleghorn took\ncharge.\nBrowne.   Seattle     ft\nSanderson,   Vancouver   .. 8\nJ    Jerwa,   Vancouver     . 5\nBeattie.   Vancouver     5_\nOsmundsen,   Victoria   ... 7*\nMcAdam,   Vancouver   .... 0\nReinlkka.   Seattle     6\nKelly,   Victoria     4\nArmstrong,   Portland   .... 4\nCoupez.   Portland     8\nF. Jerwa, Vancouver   7\nP. Runge, Victoria   5\nSutherland,  Seattle    5\nBrennan,   Vancouver   .... 4\nDaly,  Seattle  4\nPhillips, Vancouver   5\nEvafts.  Victoria   6\nMcOoldrlck, Portland   ... 4\nLoew.   Victoria     2\nWalker,   Seattle     2\nAnderson,   Seattle     5\nTeel,   Portland     3\nLeacock,    Victoria      2\nCummlngs,   Vancouver 4\nRedpath,    Victoria      4\nHarris,   Seattle     4\nBensou,   Seattle     2\nDunn.    Vancouver     3\nH.  Runge. Victoria    3\nConn.   Portland     3\nDownie.   Portland     3\nPratt,    Portland      3\nSavage,  Seattle   3\nArnott,   Vancouver     1\nKenny,  Victoria    2\nLyons,    Portland      2\nHuffman.   Portland     1\nTownsend. Seattle   1\nWilliamson.   Vic.-Va.n   .. 1\nRevelstoke Seeks\nThe Dominion Ski\nTitle Competition\nREVELSTOKE, B. C, Feb. 5\u2014Revelstoke will make application at the\nannual meeting of the Canadian Amateur Ski association to (lave the I*0\"\nminion championships here next year\nlt was decided at the annual meeting\nof the western branch of th eassocia-\ntlon,  held  today.\nGrouse Mountain was granted the\nwestern championship; Princeton gets\nthe British Columbia championships\nwhile the 50 kilometer race wtll be\nheld at Burns lake.\nR. J. Verne of Vancouver was reelected president, J. Nordmoe, Camrosc,\nvice-president and W. H. Walklnshaw,\nVancouver, secretary.\nNorwegian Girl\nIs Again Figure\nREV_L_TOKE. Feb. J\u2014Pete SandM\nof Burns Lake. British Columbia, today\nwon the western Cantda alVrounr ski\nchamplonehlp by compiling 17J29\npoints In the combined Jumping and\nracing event*. K. Jorstad of the Vat-re\nclub, Winnipeg, was second with 17.828\npoints. 0o dose were the first two\nI contestants that lt took the Judges\nuntil  Just  before  midnight to decide\nths w-mier of tb* title.    J.\not  Ootttnee.   Albert*,   was  thlnl.\nWeU Xsleon. world's\nJumper, did not figure IB tlie\npionship tabulation, a* he did not\ntake part ln Use stl race. In _m\nJumping event, however, he excelled\nhis oposltlon with . leap of 171 leet.\nThe Jumping hill was in a l.tiam't.\ncondition today, and as a result, ta.\nclass \"A\" longest steading jump n\ncalled off. This marked the fourth\nyear tn succession that this event hM\nbeen cancelled owing to the ronjHMtH -tit\nof the hill. H. I Kngstad ot WU -f\nlake, was badly shaken up during >\nJump today, and eecepa '\nserious injury by a alight margin.\nI. Coueffm of Revelstoke won tS\nexhibition clasg \"B\" Jumping competition with a leap of 13s feet.\nCommercial aviation in Prance prefers\nflying boat* to land planes equipped\nwith pontoons, the reason being that\nPrench commercial Une* um thetr\nmachines over sea and not over lakw .\nor riven.\nNEW YORK, Peb. 5\u2014For the fourth\nstraight time, Mlss Sonja Henle, 17-\n, year-old Norwegian girl, won the women's figure skating championships\nhere tonight before a crowd of 10,000.\nIt was the first time the title com,-.\npetition had been staged ln the united    (states.\nKarl Shafer of Vienna, Australia,\nsucceeded  to the men's singles throne\nThc i holographs here show features\nof the parasol type one-past\naeroplane built by Theodore ana\nChailes Dietrich of St. Agatha. Out.\n' 1) Four-cylinder special Henderson\nengine used ln the machine; (2) the\nacnplane complete; '3) Teodcre Dietrich who made a successful solo flight B^ich Willis ^ammtrx^ST SwM^\n___. thi llV?- *!\u00a3__. {V_ Ch_Tl5 Dletrich- j failed to defend.    Mr. and Mrs. Pierre\nBrunet of Paris, France, completed\nthe foreign domination by winning\nthe  mixed  doubles crown.\nMiss Cecil Eustace-Smith of the\nGranite club, Toronto, Canadian champion in 1024 and 1925, was second and\nMlss Marlbel Vinson of Boston, United\nStates champion ln 1928 and 1929,\nthird\nwho   helped   build   the  craft.\nBRITISH FOOTBALL\nLEAGUE STANDING\nIncluding   games   of   Saturday.   February   1:\nEMilJSH   I.K.W'I I.\nFIRST    DIVISION'\nOwner of John J. Jones'\nShows Drops Dead\nLOS ANGELES. Feb. 5.\u2014Bert W.\nEarles, 56, prominent local business\nman, and owner of John Jones' shows\nin Canada dropped dead ln a telegraph\noffice   tonight.\nEarles, who came here eight years\nago from Winnipeg was writing a telegram to a business associate when\nstricken. All he had written was \"I\nam  ready\u2014\"\nEarles had suffered from a mild attack   of   Influenza  recently.\nMayor Raleigh P. Hale, of East Chicago, Ind., who was convicted with\nnearly a score of others ten days ago\non charges of conspiracy against the\nnational prohibition laws, .has resigned.\nChief of Police James Regan, also convicted,   remains   In   office.\nA new record was set during MUD\nwhen estimated total of 4.000,000 tourists crossed the border from the\nUnited States Into Canada and spent\napproximately 1300,000,000.\nGreen tones are a high fashion on\nthe spring color chart, and heart of\nlettuce, sponsored In Paris recently,\nls much to the fore while lemon Is adaptable for coats aa well as dresses and\naccessory colors and more colorful greens\nwill be worn for sports, such aa a\nbright jade.\nPatrick Sullivan, editor of a Toronto\nlocal weekly publication, was found\nguilty of criminal libel against Henri\nCorti. editor of a Toronto Italian\nweekly publication.\nTeaching\nGolf Is\na Lot of Grief\n::\n3____s_x;*\n*****_______\n:.*.:_ \u25a0_,.:,-\nro\u00ae\u00ab\nParts Service\n(or the\n\"Caterpillar\"\nTractor\nAND OTHER EQUIPMENT\nOur Nelaon Warehouse is most complete and from\nhere all genuine parts may be had on short notice.\nWrite Mr. K. D. Woodworth, at the Nelson Warehouse\non alt problems. Whether you own a \"Caterpillar\"\nor can use one, our consulting service is at your command.\n\/\u25a0 you're EncooiwgmSx\n\"< ;\/>ruAST-i'M iiwYooW*\ncA-Ime There.are Feople Who,\n\/*c*tuauy Hit iTI_\\\n4tV-4>Awrtsr<\u2014\u2014\nHy    Al..     I.KM\\1UK\n(Koniict  I'ltoher New \\ortn <;Units.\nThe tuittcs of beglnnera have always Riven the pros many a laugh.\nJock Hutchinson was recently telling\nme of a oertain duffer to whom he\nwas  Hiving  lessons.\nAfter showing l_m -how to ho'.d a\ngolf club and patiently teaching him\nthe rudiments of a good swing for\nan hour, Mr. Dubb turned to him after\nthe lesson was over from which Jock\nwas almost In a state of collapse.\nand calmly aald: \"Now I'll hit one\nmy way!\"\nThis   was  probably   the  reason   Alec\nSmith told  the duffer who was  complaining     of    always    \"topping\"     __\nturn lt over suit hit It on\n3 ei 27 aa\ne 67 21 36\n4 67 31 34\n3 42 23 33\n8 43 24 30\nP   W   L   D   P A   Pts\nSheffield Wed    25 15   4   6   63 20 36\nManchester   C   36 14   6   6   63 47 34\nDerby   County   26 14   8   4   51 47 32\nLeeds    United    26 14 10   2   50 37 30\nHuddersfield  T 27 12 10   5   40 44 20\nLiverpool 27 12 10   5   46 63 29\nBlackburn    R    28 12 11   5   69 85 29\nAston   Villa   ..   26 12 10   4   53- 52 28\nLeicester   City   27 12 11   4   57 58 28\nBolton    Mfext    27 10 10   7   50 42 27\nMiddlesbrough    27 12 12   3   58 55 27\nSheffield   Unit   27 11 12   4   56 55 26\nBurnley    37   0 11   7   65 64 25\nManchester Un 37 11 13   3   43 54 25\nPortsmouth   ....   26   8 10   8   44 42 24\nArsenal       26   9 12   5   40 38 2>;\nBirmingham ... 26   8 11   7   42 40 23\nSunderland .   . 26   8 11   7   43 51 23\nWest  Ham   Un  27   9 13   5   54 56 23\nEverton    27   6 12   9   47 57 21\nGrimsby  Town  25   8 13   4   46 81 20\nNewcastle Unit 26   9 16   2   47 69 30\nSECOND  DIVISION\nOldham    Ath    26 15   4   7   60 29 -37\nBlackpool 26 17   7   2   06 51 36\nChelsea       27 12   5 10   48 27 34\nBradford 26 13   7   8   65 44 32\nBury       27 13 10   4   52 47 30\nSouthampton..    27 12 10   5   53 49 29\nWolverhampton 27 11   9   7   53 49 29\nW Bromwlch A 26 12 10   4   72    63 28\nCharlton   Ath   1* 9   8   9   39   38 27\nCHrdffl    City    2-\/ 11 11    5   37 38 27\nStoke    City....    28 10 12   6   53 53 26\nNotts    Forest    26   8   9   9   32 41 25\nHull   City   ....    26 10 11   5   37 47 35\nNotts    County    27    6    9 13    39 44 24\nTottenham   H    27   8 11    8   39 44 24\nPreston N End 27   9 12   6   43 52 24\nBradford   City   26   B 11    7   38 46 23\nMillwall  Athlet  26    6 10 10    40 96 22\nBristol   City   ..   26   8 12   6   45 60 22\nReading         27   7 12   8   33 44 22\nBarnsley         26   7 13   6   34 47 30\nSwansea  Town  27   6 16   6   35 48 18\nTHIRD   DIVISION\nSOITHKKN  SECTION\nBrentford      36 18   5\nPlymouth    Ar    23 15   2\nBrighton _   H  24 15   5\nNorthampton T 24 15   6\nBoume'th  _  B  23 11    4\nSouthend Unit 25 10   5 10   41 33 30\nNorwich    City    26 12   8   6   55 49 30\nCrystal   Palace   27 11   9   7   55 55 29\nFuUham         25 11   8   6   50 48 29\nCoventry   City   24 12   9   3   64 40 27\nQueens Park R 24   8   8   8   34 41 24\nWalsall       25   9 11   5   40 48 23\nLuton Town .... 25   8 11   6   37 49 32\nSwindon Town 26   7 12   7   41 47 21 ]\nClapton Orient 24   5   9 10   22 32 30 j\nExeter City   25   7 12   6   43 47 20\nNewport Count 25   7 13   5   43 60 19\nWatford   26   7 14   5\nTorquay   Unit   26   6 14   6\nBristol   Rovers   28   6 12   5\nDillingham   27   6 17   4\nMerthyr  Town  23   2 14   7\nTHIRD  DIVISION\nNORTHERN   SE( TION  .\nPort  Vale 2(1 19   3   4\nStockport   Cott   24 18   3   5\nDarlington   ....   27 13 10   4   \u201e. \u2014\nAccrington   St   25 12   8   5   62 43 39 !\nCrewe  Alexand  25 12   0   4   65 41 28\nSouth    Shields    27 1 10   6   46 51, 38\nHartlepools Un 25   9   7   9   47 39 37\nSouthport    27   8   8 11    63 48 27\nChesterfield 25 11 10   4   44 40 26\nCur lisle United  25 11 10   4   59 66 26\nYork City   26   6   6 13   37 32 25\nLincoln City .25   6   6 13   37   35 25\nRochdale       25 10 10   5   54 56 26\nNelson       25 10 10   5   35 44 35\nTranmere  Rov  26   9 11   6   50 53 24\nNew   Brlghtan   27   9 14   4   40 60 22\nDoncaster  Rov  24   9 12   3   85 M 81\nWigiui Borough 27   8 14   5   41 67 21\nWrexham      25   7 12   6   36 49 20\nHalifax    Town   28   6 15   7   33 49 19\nRotherham   Un  25    6 13    6    38 58 18\nBarrow       25   7 13   3   27 81 17\nResults of York City ve Nelson, played January 18, not Included ln above\ntbale.\nSCOTTISH   LEAOl'E\nURST    DIVISION\nRangers    24 19   2   3   83 20 41\nAberdeen        27 17   6   6   84 41 39\nMotherwell 26 16   7   3 .67 39 35\nSt.  Mirren .      26 14 10   2   55   38 30\nPatrick  This. I.'   20 13    9    4    60    43 30\nKilmarnock   .     26 11    7   8   47   43 30\nCeltic      24 13    8   3    64 33 29\nHearts       26 10   8   8   53   50 28\nAyr United  .     26 13 11   3   49 60 37\nqueens Park  .. 28 13 13   3   63 60 27\nFalkirk   ...J!    25   8 10   8   45 \u2022 52 34\nCowdenbeath      25   8 10   7   37 39 23\nHamilton Acad  25   9 11   6   52 56 23\nDundee 27   9 14   4   30 43 23\nMorton 27    8 13    6    51 64 23\nClyde 20   1 13   7   46 66 21\nAlrdrleonlans....   25   8 15   2   86 44 18\nHlbemlsjns 26   5 13   8   27 44 18\nDundee United 26   6 16   4   39 74 16\nSt.   Johnstone   27   4 16   7   39 63 15.\nBECOND   DIVISION\nLelth   Athletic   26 18   2   6   62 35 42\nAlbion   Rovers   26 18   4   4   73 35 40\nThird    Lanark   27 17   6   4   70 38 38\nEast   Fife 27 17    6    4    80 45 38\nRalth    Rovers   27 12   8   7   70 44 31\nMontrose        26 11   7   8   66 62 30\nPorfar    Athlet    26 12   9   5   84 93 39\nKings   Park       29 11   9   6   76 56 '28\nQueen of S        26 12 10   4   46 45 38\nDunfermline A 27 10 11   6   74 58 26\nArmadale    27 11 12   4   44 rl 36\nArbroath       26 10 11   5   64 68 35\nE  Stirlingshire 25 11 12   2   90 43 34\nBo'ness       27 10 14   3   42 88 33\nSt. Bernards       26   8 14   4   43    45 20\nClydebank 27   6 14   7   60   86 18\nStenhousemuir   27   6 16   5   63 76 17\nDumbarton   ....   27   8 18   1\nAlio*   ....\nYOUTH WANTED IN\nREGINA HELD BY\nTORONTO POLICE\nTORONTO. Feb. 5.\u2014Clarence Neilly.\n16. was arrested here today for authorities In Regina. Local police said ac-\ncusd Is wanted ln the western Canada\ncity on a charge of theft of several\nmotor cars ln complicity with another\nyouth. On one occasion, police allege,\nthey, in a stolen automobile, were\nchased by a police constable whom\nthey knocked off the running board.\nThc  constable's  Etull  was  fractured.\nREGINA- Feb. 6.\u2014Regina police.\nappraised today of the arrest at Toronto of Clarence Neilly. 18, wanted\nher\u00a9 for theft alleged to have been\ncommitted several months ago, are\n\u25a0ending an escort to bring the prisoner\nbefore a local magistrate.\nStratford Rinks\nWin Championship\nToronto Bonspiel\nTORONTO, Peb. 6\u2014Stratford rlnks\nskipped by M. Bruce and A. U. Batche-\nlor, defeated rinks representing Cog-\nourg and skipped by Judge O'Connor\nand W. G. Potts, 36 to 333, In the\nfinal for the silver tankard, emble-\nmatc of the Ontario Curling association championship, at the Granite\nclub  late  today.\nHENNESSY BRANDY\nIS A SAFE STIMULANT\nIN ALL EMERGENCIES.\nKEEP IT HANDY\n\u2022 I    r,\\\nBOTTLED AT COGNAC, FRANCE\nTnis advertisement is not published or displayed by the UQ-\nrOR CONTROL BOARD or hv the (Tovernmen* of B  C,\nN\n45\n19\nM\n59\nM\n43\nn\n17\n21\n57\nl(s\n\u25a026\nIs'B\n11\n.17\nM\na\nM\nn\nii\nn\nH\nM\nMaking up\na shopping list\n(THE hall needs a new rug.    More towels are needed for the bathroom,\nand the kitchen floor could certainly stand a coat of paint.   The\nchildren need shoes.   The car will soon need tires.   Well, we buy a\nhundred new things every year.\nScattered throughout Canada are manufacturers who make the\nvery things we need. Their produdts are on sale in certain stores within\neasy reach. Certain of these products, and certain of these stores, are\nespecially fitted to take care of our special need. But which products\nand which stores? Which can we afford, and which do we think is\nbest?   We must look to advertising for advice.\nAdvertising is the straight line between supply and demand. It\nsaves time spent in haphazard shopping. It leads you directly to your\ngoal. By reading the advertisements, we can determine in advance\nwhere the best values are to be found. With the aid of advertising,\nshopping becomes a simple and pleasant business, and budget figures\nbring more smiles than frowns.\nFrom the pa&es of this paper you can make up a\nshopping list that will save you money.\ni\nl\ni\n \t\n\u2022**Pige Eight '\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 6,1930\nH'l'H i ii.iimmi' in? mum.\nBarberry Bush\nBy Kathleen Norris\n11 I'l ''IM\ni\n5R\u00bb story  thu* lar.\nBarbara Bush Athertoc and her\nctster Amy lived with their father,\nfoot, Atherton, in a modest Uttle bungalow In Cottonwood, Cal. Lincoln\nMackenzie, the richest boy In town and\nom of the nicest, is Interested ln\nBarbara, but she, much to Amy's \u00ab__\u25a0-\n(Uat. show* a preference for Barry du\nSpain, m poet and dreamer. Tbey\nhave all grown up together, and Barry\nnot suspecting Barbara's feeting and\nquite content with their preesnt\ncompanionship,   never  speaks   of   love.\n-i.f._-l;.::\nU\\ I i - i tl\nis king]        BI Consider an Act\nControl Distribution\nFruit in Alberta\n^\ntbelr  croM\u2014etitched\ncases,   and   Barbara   used\nA.\" over both\nthem   wth\nout   hesitation\nTbe streaks and strains of black\ncame off readily, and ahe felt better.\nShe loosened her hair and brushed\nlt; took off her apron and went cautiously  to  the' closed door.\nBarry's appreciative chuckles and the\nstranger's droning voice were still keeping each other company; Barry was\nenchanted wtth hlB new acquaintance,\nand   Barbara   oold   hear   his   enthus\niastic: \"By goll, that's the most won-\nUnk, walking with Barbara in 'the Idw\u2122 \"tu\" } e\\fT ^f* ln W ___\u2022\"\nmoonlight, tries to kiss her, and when iM _?in&*r described alls and police\nahe objects, accuses her of being stand- I fturte\" \"W1** hospitals, crooked rou-\nafftsb and Insist* that her attitude ls   otte  \u00abJn5**n,i  \u00a3\u2022 codes  and  cus'\nunntfturel. Marianne Scott, pretty\nand sophisticated, comes to Cottonwood to visit her cousin, Inez Wilson.\nLink's wealth attracts her and she\nuses her wiles to bring him to her\nfeet. Almost against his will, he falls\nIn love with her. And at the thought\nof Marianne Scott becoming Mi's.\nLincoln Mackenzie, Barbara finds herself unaccountably distressed. On an\nimpulse Barry and- Barbara decide to\nmarry and a few hours later are on\ntheir way to hts ranch for their honey-\nmoo*.\nterns  of  hold-up  men\nSuddenly a determined light came\ninto Barbara's eyes, and with e:ttra-\nordinary quickness and nolslessness she\nundressed, slipped ln between the\nblankets   that   even  now  seemed   none\nHerbert   H.  Ball,   whose  appointment\nns King*! Printer    hi Ontario I\nannounced   by   Premier   Ferguson\nINSTALMENT l_v\n(Continued)\nYawning, se poured the coffee. Later,\nperhape, she thought, she might heat\na pot of water, and try to clean her\nblack handi and face. But food was\nthe Important thing at presnt.\n\"It's only ten minutes of 6,\" ahe\nannounced ln amazement pushing her\ncuff aside with her chin to avoid touching lt with her grimed fingers, and\nglancing at her wrist watch before the\napron sleeve had time to slip back\nagain. \"It fels to me like midnight!\u2014\nWhat's this?\"\nFtor there was a timid knock at the\ndoor. Barbara's eyes widened in quick\nfright, but Barry only laughed.\nHe  crossed   the  kitchen   and   peered\nthrough   the   door  he   partly   opened.\nA pale, rather sickly  looking man  oi\neprhaps   40,   shabby   and   bareheaded.\nstood there smiling.\n\"Oood  even',  mate.\" said  the  caller\n,    best tut Ing ly. Didn't want to scare you\n1   or the frau and thought I'd better come\nover and say howdy.\"\nBarry  glanced  over  his  shoulder  at\nBarbara,   who   was   poised   beside   the\n.   tlvble.  expectantly  watching,  and  with\nthe   lamplight   glowing   on   her   lovely face.\n\"Come In,\"  he said.\n\"*My name's Slinder,\" tlie man said\nfrankly. \"Harry Slinder,\"\n\"My name's du Spain,\" Barry answered in his friendly, simple way,\" and\nthis ls Mlss\u2014Mrs. du Spain.\"\n\"Let's  shut   this  doo,\"   Slinder  said\ncompanlonably,   doing   so.   \"Mate,\"   he\nwent   on,   to   Barrry,   \"before   you   see\na  luunny   man.  A  man   that  life   has\nhandled a dirty deal to and that ain't\nbitter.   Crazy,   that's   what   you'll   say.\nand!  the   madam  here   will  say,   All -\n- right\u2014crazy. And what of lt? I ain't\n'; so crazy but what I can do a friend\n_  a good  turn.  I  don't   want  to shock\nyou or your lady  here,  but  I've  done\n^ time. And 1 want you to know It!\"\ntoo   dry   or   sweet   smelling,   blew   outjJOhn MrOmbeFg IS\nher    candle,    and    placsed    herself    iu\na  position   that  stimulated   sleep.\nHer heart beat high, but wbetlier\nwith nervousness, anger, fatigue, bewilderment or a mixture of all four\nemotions, she did not stop to consider.\nShe could hear the sea far off in\nthe dark, and now and then a breaking noise ln the fire in the adjoining room, and the fresh crackle of\nflames. And she could hear Barry's\nvoice, amused and angry, and the droning   recitation   of   the   stranger.\nBarbara's eyes eloped. She turned\nslightly, smuggled her face against.\nthe soggy pillow. She was too tired\nto care, too tired to remember all that\nhad happened since she hag gone\ninto the kitchen on a foggy, gloomy,\nsmoky morning to put the cupboard\nin order. Too llred to resent anything\nor. wonder   about  anything   any   more.\nShe was asfeeep.\n(To   be . continued   tomorrow.*\nGypsy Princess Is\nBuried, California,\nWith Pagan Rites\n\"Well,\"   Barry   commented,   with\nbrief  laugh,   -that   doesn't  make   you\nany less a friend of mine!\"\nThe man looked at him keenly his\nwatery eyes in a pale leprous face.\n\"Boy,\" he said with emotion. \"I\ndidn't know they made 'em like you\nany more. Bay you ain't the du Spain\nthat owns this place, are you?' he added suddenly.\n\"That's what I am,' Barry said.\nThe man glanced from Barry .to Barbara) straightened up and spoke with\na sort of apologetic dignity.\n\"Then I'm a trespasser on your place,\nfolk,\" he said. \"Old  Slinder has been\nliving here like a rat ln a cheese for\na week. I ain't hurt your place, neigh-\nbar. Your Portuguese turned your cattle\non to the next farm, but a lot of 'em\nstrayed   back,   and   I've   watched   'em\ntot ye. Im bunking in the little shack\ndown here  past  the  windmill,  and  I\ndidn't want to scare ye with my fire\u2014\nao I come up. If you'll let me stay there\n\"Until tomorrow I'll get out.'\n\"Well,* said Barry,'I don't see any reason\n\u25a0Jor you to be ln a hurry. My\u2014my wife\nand  I   have   come   down  to  stay   here\nfor a while and get the place somewhat\ninto shape. I'm writing a play, and when\nIt's finished we'll  rent the plaoe and\ngo on to New York. Meanwhile\u2014Bur-\nbura, how about the cats?**\nIn Barbara'.-, coat pocket there was\nthe .little collapsible metal cup aho\nand Barry took on their trumps and\nplcplcs. She fumbled for it, and mixed\nher own coffee in it rather than send\nBarry on another trip to the big house.\nTbe sandwiches ware served on the\npasteboard cover of the bov In which\nAmy\u2014how many centuries ago!\u2014had\npacked them. *The stranger neatly and\ndeftly mended the fire, he praised\neverything, and wae voluble in helpful, respectful suggestions as to tho\nmanagement of the ranch.\nThe food made Barbara feel dreamy\nurxd stupid: she sat listening to the\n(pen's voices dully, too tired to stir,\neven to begin to clear away the papers\nadd   cups.\nIn a very agony of effort. Rhe presently lighted a long, new candle, without a stick, and staggered into the\nthe adjioning room, tossing the contents of her suitcases wearily about\nIn the dim Candlelight. She smeared her face and hands generously with\ncold cream; no towel, but Amy Ind\napread   the   pretty   linen   covers   with\nLOS ANGELES. Feb. 3.\u2014Walling\nchants dating back Into the dim pnst.\nmembers of the Nicols tribe of gypsies\nburied their princ.ss, 1&-year-old Rosa\nNicols. at Odd Fellows Cemetery.\nWhlttier Boulevard. The ceremony was\na mixture of Christian and pagan rites\nCatholic priest performed the ceremony for the dead at the grave. After\nhe retired, women cf the family, led\nby Queen Amelia, mother of thc girl,\nga?ssd a pan of glowing fire above\nthe coffin. Then, too, water was\npoured Into the grave and sprigs of\nblossoms dropped on the white casket\nas it slowly descended into the earth.\nOwing to the fact that the girl had\ndied of typhoid fsver quarantine regulations were enforced by the City\nhealth department and none taut close\nmembers of the family and pall bearers\nwere allowed to be at the grave. Lining\nthe fence at some distance the friends\nand subjects Of the princess joined\nin the ancient songs of mourning of\nthe Romany tribes. The chants surged\nand lifted wildly through the grows\nthat shaded the quiet burial place.\nWEIRD    DEMONSTRATION\nJulia anc! Maria Nicols, sisters of the\ndead girl, screaming, tried to throw\nthemselves into the grave but were\nrestrained by the men. Fire and water\nregarded as potent magic cf old. were\nagain invoked and then, crossing themselves devoutly, the members of the\nfamily walked \"lowly to the cemetery\ngates,\nRosa Nicols died at thp San Pedro\nGeneral hospital of typhoid fever. The\nmother Is known as \u25a0 fortune teller\nand the gypsy princess attended schools\nthis winter at San Pedro. She was\nborn in the Argentine. Officials did\nnot know of the rank of the girl until\nscores of members of the Nicols tribe\nbegan assembling at San Pedro to\nattend the funeral.\nHEALTH   HOARD   ORDERS\n\"In 1921 the state board of health\npassed a rule making typhoid fever \u25a0\nquarantinable disease\" said City Health\nCommissioner Parrish. \"Under those\ncircumstances we ordered a private\nfunenil. just the same as if one had\ndied ->f smallpox or any other communicable disase. We* did not fear con-\ntah'lon from the body but it i.s iilways\npossible thy other members of thc\nfi'iuily might spread the AJMttfc heii'v\nthe precaution,\"\nBuried, Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. Feb, ;.-Julrn\nStrom-berg, whose death occurred in\nMemorial hospital rn Wedn.sday morning, was laid to rest ln Kimberley\ncemetery   on   Sunday   afternoon\nA native of Surden, he had no\nrelatives in this country but many\nfriends and fellow countrymen gathered\nin United church to pay last reepects\nto this lonely man who bad, through\nillness been removed from the activities\nof life lor more than  two years.\nThe service was conducted by the\npastor of United church and members\nOf the choir led the tinging.\nKiMiu km:v d-M i   WELL  \\th;niii;o\nKIMBERLEY. B. C, Feb. 5\u2014The\ndance arranged by the Library o '\u2022:.\u25a0\nmittSe of thc public school to raise\nfunds and held in the I.O.O.F. hull\non Friday evening waa well patronized\nand from a financial as well as\nsocial point of view wa-, a\ncessRU  I\nClassified Advertising\nCLASSIFIED   DIRECTORY\nEDMONTON,   Alt*..   Feu.   6\u2014Whether\nor not ao act to ooiurul thc distribution   of   Irultt   and   vesrrtablcsj   In   Alberta Bhall h\u00bb IntHxlurrrt ut the pree-\nent \u25a0___\u00ab of the   legislature  la  now   -_\u25a0\nbelnc  conslArred   by   the   government.   J!'!;.,*,,\"\u201e\" WANTED\nAction   along   tnew   llnea   haa   been I \u00ab\nurged by Hon. B. H   Pooler, attorney\nBIRTH*\nIII   til.\"\nMAHHIAUEM\nIN    MIMOKIAJsJ\nI'KKSUNAI.\nHELP    WANTED\n-III ITIONH    WANTED\nM K1IM.\n\u2022 H HMIIILII\nROOMK\u2014For\ngeneral of Brltiah Columbia, -he statea i n jmsiii I.    ROOMS\u2014Wanted\n0)\nUI\n(31\n(41\n(I)\n(11)\n(11)\n(It)\n(UI\n(14)\nRent\u2014(151\ntlTIATIONS   WANTED\n4__ JJVE9T0C\u00bb FO* ***-\nSCANDINAVIAN   OIRI^-Wan-domasjtlc\nwork.   Phone __\u00bb_. (IM\u00bb) I\nFOR   8A__\u2014Two\nBar-ley,   Erie.\n,**,\nYOUNG LADY\u2014Wlshea  homework.  Inquire Savoy Hotel. NelaOB,        (MMOi\n_ letter to Attorney-General Lym\nburn that the oooptruUon tsl ail the\nweatern province* is. desirable in the\nIntareata both of the proweie at the\ncoaat and the consumers on tha\npralrlee.\nA 8\u2014ee on coi_isstim.'sii act waa\npassed by British Columbia In 1917,\nbut never proclaim..! .n >_u__ehmll\nand Introduced but withdrawn ln Al\nberta and Manitoba.\nIt was based upon the results of\nan Investigation Into the activities of\nirult Jobbers and broken, several years\nago, when charges were laid .against\n4a   compahles   and   11   individuals.\nThe uct. which Mr. Lymburn aays\nla to he takes Up again In Alberta\nfor possible Introduction and which, it\nIs understood. Is al-ss. being, considered\nIn Manitoba, puts In statutory form\nsion law duties cl au agent\nhandling  goods   a 'tit.   gives\nstatutory effect to refognls\/ed honest\noon__vetli practice sstitl .nukes illegal\nthe simultaneous operation by the\nsame organisation ol ronriicUiig business  of  the  consignee   and   purchaser.\nIKHIM   AM.   HOARD\nllll.IMS    WANTED\nROOMS\u2014Tn   Rent\nHOI his   WANTED\nHl.l MS   KIR   RENT\nK.H   SALE   OR  KENT\nLIVESTOCK    EOR   KALB\nLIVESTOCK   WANTED\nRABBITS   IOR   S'.l I\n101 I I HV    AND   LOOS\n.LANKOL8   K>K   SALE\nFERNIE NOTES\nPEHNIE, B. C. Fess 5 (Icrgc Short-\nhouse of the Im, crlal Oil company\nstaff here has hs en transferred to\nPrlnoaton. He will leave Wednesday\nmcrnlng for hia new position going\nvia   Nelson.\nHarvey Harrison hM 'list re'.'\"\"1'\"l\nfrom Vancouver ami Calgary. While\nin the coast city 1. a_e_._> the __.\nventicll of the British Columbia Fruit\nGrowers association. A. Calgary he\nalso attendod a slmilssr convention of\nfruit dealer;\nI.?ave thc lid off thi ko-tle lu which\ndumplings are cooking ani ihe ton-\ntents will not boil over, nor will ihe\ndumplings   tall.\n(llll\n(171\n(IS)\n(ID)\nI till\nfill\nlit.\n113)\n111.\nIIS)\n(SO)\nC!7)\n<2\u00ab)\n(J9I\n130)\n131)\n(32)\nMl\n(34)\n< 33.\nMl\n(37)\nMISCF.LLANEOL8   FOR   SAI\nMIX'Ell.AMors    WANTED\nMISCELLANEO! S\nIII SINESS    OPPORTUNITIES\nLOST   AND   FOIND\nSCHOOLS\nINSI KAM'E\nPROPERTY   FOR  SALE\nPROPERTY   WANTED\nFARM    PROPERTY\u2014For   Rale\n\u2022 OH   SALE   OR   EXrilANUE\nMIMNG,   TIMBER   ASH   LUMBER   (3SI\nFARM   AMI   DAIRY   PRODUCE        (\u00bb9l\nAl lll.MOHII.ES   FOR   SALE (III)\nAl TOMOIIII ES   FOK   HIRE (\u00ab)\ntl TOMOHII.ES   WANTED (4\u00bb)\nIK.ITS anil LAI (His\u2014for rent\u2014O.)\nLAI NCHEH anil BOATS\u2014for sale\u2014(4-1)\nLAUNCHES AND BOATS WANTED (45)\nFURNITlKi;   FOK   SALE (46)\nM kSERY   PRODUCTS (\u00ab)\nSKIRLS   FOK   KENT _ (11)\ni MS   AM)   DOGS  FOR  SALE (IB)\nllltill\n(ll\nBROWN-To Mr. and Mi's. William\nBrown, at the 'Irail-Tadanac hospital.\nFebruary   4.  a   son.\t\nMcALPINE\u2014At Creston on February\n4, to Mr. and Mrs. William S. Mc,-\nAlpine,  a  son.\nDEATHS\n<\u00bb\nPFEIFER\u2014 Anton.     ants     7\u00ab     years,\nsv.v   at   his   home,   Fairview.\nMonday. Funeral services st t.he Howell\nfuneral   home,   Sunday   afternoon   at   2\no'clock.   KnlRhts of Pythiaa In charge.\n(12551)\nPERSONAL\n___\nThe   population   ol   Greater   Toronto\nis placed at 73L775.\nTRUSS TORTURES Eliminated by\nwearln. our supports. Thirty days\nfree trial. Write for booklet. A,\nLnmlbcrg Co., U3U Pender W.. Vancouver (12478)\nHELP    WANTED\n(10)\nWANTED-To hear from nromlslnp\nvoting saxaphonc player. Apply P. O.\nBex 668. U3510)\nHOUSEKEEPER\u2014 With boy school age\nwants employment. Apply P. O. Box\n772.   Nelson. (12531)\nEXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER\u2014Wants\nemployment In or around Nelaon.\nBox   12425  Dally  Hews. (12426)\nWAINTED\u2014By middle aged married\nman, position as Janitor or any post\nof   trust.     Phone   708X (12443)\nLIVESTOCK   WANTED\nWANTED\u2014Oi1e\n-   pi\nDairy,   Nelson\nwo   young\nApply Henry Dejong, C\nfreah\nw\u00bbv.t\n(12B09)\nWANTED\u2014Good family cow. woung\nJeraey-Ayrsihlre preferred. Just fteah-\nened. James C. Forbes, Box Hli\nNalson, B. C. (12444)\nPOULTRY   AND  EOGS\n(26)\nRHODE   ISLAND   RED   COCKEREL\u2014\u00bb5\neach.    Good birds.    G. H. Fraser.\n(12490)\nMISCELLANEOUS   FOB   BAsLI! .\nEPRAY PUMP\u2014In good order 115 with\nequipment.     G.   H.   Fraser.     < 13481)\nCANARIES FOR BALB\u2014Singer \u00bb5.Q0,\nhens \u00ab1.50. Mrs. John Grieve, Frultvale. \" (12431)\nFOR S3ALE\u2014Orthophonic Cabinet phonograph cost $165.00. Price 980.00\nwith choice selection records As snew.\nPhone 756L (12843)\nULTRA VIOLET (Artificial Sunlight)\nLamps for Home Use from 139.60.\nAlso Violet Ray Machines, send for\nllustrated pamphlet. Empire Agencies Ltd.. 643 Granville St., Vancouver. (12482)\nWANTED--Youn\u00ab man to work for\nfirm ol contractors about first of\nMarch.    News Box 12527. (13527)\nWANTED\u2014A partner to sell Sspeclaltlea\nHave some s^ood Agencies and stock\ncn hand. R. Johnstone. Madden\nHotel. (12513.\nWANTED\u2014An    experienced    woman   or\ngirl   for   general   housework.     Apply\nMrs.   A.  B.  Ritchie,  Tadanac,  B.  C.\n(12495)\nFor Satisfaction in\nQuality   and Service\nPhone 106\nWilliams\nTransfer\nCOAL AND WOOD\nPiano Moving* Our\nSpecialty\nFOR  SAIf\u2014Ayshlre cow,  good  milk\nto freshen March  ut.    t$ts70. -TV*\nChanter, R. R. l (1341\nPROPERTY   FO\u00bb  SALf\nFOR SA_g\u2014 6 room house, 3 lota,\ngarden, fruit treea. cow and. eve\nbeme, opposite high school, turnlsl\nor unfunilaned. App.y K. Upesn\nSr.. Rossland d\u00bbf\nFOR sssale\u20147 acre,    6    roomed hoi\nlight and water, chicken housea,\nchickens,    garage.     Close   to   to;\nWrite    fot\nCranbrook.\narage.     Cios\nparticulars.\n__\nPROPERTY f ffANTEP\nWANTED-Farmls_nd near Nelson,\nrent, with option of buying. W:\nout building preferred. Apply I\n20th   West,   Vancouver. (131\nMINING.  TIIWUBK  AND  LUMRER\nFOR   BALE\nTIMBER AND POLE TRACTS\nLARGE  AND  SMALL\nLOCATION\u2014COLUMHa   BIVBR\nARROW LAKES\u2014KOOTEIAT LAB\nM.   A.  OttAINOER * CO..  LTD.\n713   METRoFOUTAlT BUTLDINO\nVANCOUVER,   B.   C.\n<1_\nCATS  AND  DOGS FOR  SALE\nFOR SALE\u2014Registered Oerman Po\nPups. 3 months old. For infon\ntlon write tsjrs. t. Nlmslck. R\nland. B. C. (12(\nBUSINESS,  _RO-\"E_StON.\nDIRECTORY\nAccounting\nE. NORMAN\nACCOUNTING,    AUDITING\nGOVERNMENT   REPORTS\nBox 864. Nelson (131\nCHAS. F. HUNTER\n\/UDrriNQ        INCOME TAX RETO1\nJOOKKEEPINO        INVESTIOATIO\nBox  1191, Nelson. B. C.\n aa\nAssayera\nINSURANCE\n(33)\nWANTED -YounK or ml.'.dle-aKcd girl\nfcr light general housework. Family\nof thiee. one child, six years. Modern home. Apply Robert Hendricks,\nKaalo. (12547)\nWANTED AT ONCE\u2014Lumber Shipper\nand (irader. A man that will take all\nIn his work. Please state\nage Nationality, experience and where\nworked for the last two years, married or .'single, and wages wanted.\nApply to Charles O. Rodgers, Creston,\n11   C (12497)\nFURNISHED    ROOMS\u2014pur   Bent\u2014(1.1)\nIt is TOO LATE to get\nINSURANCE\nwhen the\nFIRE BELL RINGS\nWhy not carry sufficient insurance and have an easy mind\nDon't put it off. It'b no\ntrouble. Just telephone 135 or\ncall at the office.\nChas. F. McHardy\nPhone 135 Nelson, B. C.\nReal Estate and Insurance\n(1247B)\nE. W.  WIDDOWSON. Box AHOg'Ne\nB. C.   standard western charges.\n\t\nCECIL     E.     CROSSLEY. ft-ovln\nAssayer.     Address   Reno   Oold   Mil\nLtd.,-Salmo, B. C. (133\nAuctioneer and Bailiff\nl.AMFS   II.   DOYLE\u2014Bailiff, Auction\nNelson, B. C. (131\n Chiropractors\nDR.    MITTUN,   X-RAV.   CRANBRO\n or\nDB.   GRAY,   GILKER   BLK.,\nNELS\n(ID!\nDentists\nTWO ROOM furnished housekeeping\napartment, steam heated, mooern\nImprovements.   Phone 12.        (12415)\nROOM   AND   BOARD\nJill\nROOM   AND  BOARD\u2014Telephone  755L.\n(12446)\nROOMS\u2014To   Kent\nFOR    RENT\u2014Three    furnished    housekeeping rooms.   Apply 511 Carbonate.\n(12526.\nHOI'SEH   FOK   RENT\nBUNGALOW TO RENT\u2014Close ln.   Ap\nply J. H.  Wallace.  Mill St.      (12521)\nFOR   SAI.I)   OH   KENT\n('-':!.\nSEVEN-ACRE ranch for sale adjoining\ncity limits. 800 fruit trees, shack,\nbarb wire fence nnd city water.\nWrite box 764, Nelson, B. C. Easv\nterms. (125481\nBUSINESS    OPPORTUNITIES\n(3(1)\nBAKERY AND STORE\u2014For rent. East\nTrail. Apply C. J. Neisor-, sr. \u2014\u25a0 Box\n1054. Tnilh (12550)\nThe first course given to students\nal 111\u25a0 \u25a0 Aviation College of France le\nOn how buds, fly and application of\ntheir methods  to avlution.\nHugh W. Robertson\nIN BUSINESS FOR\n22 YEARS\nSTILL IN THE RING\nReal Estate and\nInsurance\n' Stocks and Bonds\nRobertson Realty\nCompany Limited\n414 Ward St. Phone 68\n(12518)\nDR.  G.  A.  C.   WAU_Y\u2014Orlffln   Bis\nX-Ray.    Nelson, B. C. (139\nEngineers\nU. D. DAWSON\u2014Land Surveyors,\nIng sand Civil Engineers, Kaslo, B\n(li\nP. W. RACEV, MINING  ENGINEE\n616  Ward St..  Nelson,  B. C.\nd_\nA.     II.    GREEN    CO..\u2014CONTRACT!]\nFormefly Gren Bros.. Burden, Nell\nCivil   and   Mining   Engineers,   B.\nAlberta   and   Dominion   Land   \u00a3.\nveyors. (12i\nFlorists\nGRIZZELLE'S.  GREENHOUSE...   Nell\nCut flowers and floral designs.\n(131\nWM.   S.   .101INSON\u2014\nPhono 342 Cut flowora, Potted Pla\nand Floral Emblems. (121\nInsurance and Real Estati\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Estate. In\nansce. Rentals. Next Hippersons Hi\nware, Baker St, (121\nPhotographers\nGEORGE  A.  MEERES\u2014.Artist and V\ntographer.    715 Baker St.     _(13!\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'  TRANSFER\n3AGGAGE.  COAL AND  WOOD\n Phone  106 (H(\nWood Workh^ F\u00bb<ft>T\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nLAWSON\u2014Baker    St.    Carpenter\nJoiner.    Sash   and  Hardwood.\n(12!\niVMpple'ss Have to Be Shown, Too-\nBy Westov.\nTHAT   POLICY PROVIDES\nFoe THE   IWSUPAWCE OM\nTHE  1-1 FE OF  kACH\nPAfeTNEp, . AND   HAVING\nTHE   PR.EM1UH  PAID BV\nTHE F\u00bbEM, IT\nCO.TS   NEITHER.\nOF  VOU AMV -\nTHINS, AMO VtllEM\nOME \u00a9lES. THE\nptviEsE. Girrs EMOUtiH\n\" Z__\u00a3ABt;\npTO-W\n\\ IF   MR\nVNHIPPli\nE.HOUL0\nDIE, I\nv*J0ULO\n<__tau\nTHE\nFsEIMt  -iHA'TTT\nI'M OWE OF    Tl\n\"THE- P-CO-NEE.\nI'D UKE  TO  '\nKMOUJ  NAJHAT\nALL\nTHIS\n\u25a0\u00bb_.       s\nsQOlMto\nCOST\nTHAT'S, THE LEA-:,\nTO CONSlOEG{_fH<\nMAIM THIMCo 13 FOP-\nvou Both to  &u\nEXAMIME-0 BV OUR.\nDOCTOR FOC THC\niNSuCAMCE- \\*_l_\nLEAVE  Hl-S_ 30MES\nTHE  \u2022dOCTOR'-?,;-\n'40' \u2014The Danger Age\nFor Most Men\nMikIi     III     Health     of    Later    Yean\nDue      tn      N-KM      \u00abt      (oixlilti.tw\nFirst     NMtBN     In     Middle     ute.\nWith middle e.T~e ailment* attack.rip\novtr two-thirds of those past 40. lt ls\ntime every man who notices such cUb-\ntretslnjf symptoms as Lameness. Palna\nln back and down through groins\nscanty but frequent and burning Urination. \"Gettlng-Up-Nlghts,\" N\u00bbl*vous irritability and Lack of Force\u2014should at\nonce try the amaEtng value of Dr.\nSouthworth's   URATABS.\nWhile new to many, the truly re-\nmarkable value of URATABS has been\n\u25a0proven bv manv years of successful use.\nReports from Doctors and Users alike\noffer convincing evidence. \"I never\nfound anything to help mv caw until\n1 tried URATABS.\" \"URATABS thc tht\ntest thing for Bladder Weakness and\nIrritation I have ever tried.\" \"No\nmore backaches, no more pain, no\nmore daily embarrassment or Gettlng-\nup-Nlghts.    I   now  sleep  soundly  and\nSet \u00abp In the morning full of pep\u2014\nhwiks to URATABS!\"\u2014This is amazing\nevidence (\nHo matter how long you have been\ntroubled or how stubborn you case may\n* aaam to be. a ten-day test of Dr. South-\n^\u25a0k   URATABS   offers   comfort   and\n^^^^Kpad you can make tbe test with-\n^^^^\u25a0l coat, for any good drugg.it\nill auppty you on guarantee of money\nb-ack   tf   not jm\" \"\n THE NEI\nDAILY NEWS,\" THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 6,1980\nage\nUNIFORM MAPPING\nSYSTEM FOR CANADA\nident Dominion Land Surveyors  Emphasizes\nAdvantages\nOTTAWA, Ont, Peb. 6\u2014In the elocution and malaWnance oi a lopg-\npaphic map ot Canada, on a national\nMaIg, Dominion land surveyors have\n\u00bb most Important mission and can render a very great service in the cause\nat national development, was the statement of Praaident _. H. Bartley. U8J..,\nat the annual convention of Dominion\nland surveyors held today.\n\"Tbe benefits ot such a map system,\"\n\u2022aid Mr. Bartley, \"need scarcely be\nBfentloned to an aaaociatlon of this\nkind. In place of the confusion due\nto various types of maps each based\nUpon independent contfol surveys of\nVarying degrees of accuracy, fhjeh can-\npot be expected to fit when they meet,\nM_d each prepared by different methods\na\u00bbd making use of different symbols,\ntie country la securing a uniform\nsystem of maps based on a unified\nstandard control ef geodetic surveys of\ntbe highest accuracy. This system\nol maps ls characterised by standard\nmap areas, standard methods, standard\naccuracy and conventional signs and\nIs printed in accordance wltb definite\n\u2022standards of tbe lithographic art. Consequently each of these maps are equally intelligible to tha citizen, whether\nIt be for an area near Vancouver or on\nPrince Edward Island.\"\n\"Jn carrying out this work under\nfederal control or super.-isl lon\", declared ilr. Barttey, \"Canada has followed\nthe welt establishes practice of Great\nBritain, the United States and nearly\nall European countries.\" Such a cen-\nWoliZ-d arrangement, based on co-op-\nration with the provinces,\" he said, \"Is\nby far the nw\u00bbt conductive t> the\nBtandardiiiation already referred to and\n1H productive of major economies.\nCANADA IN FOftTl NATK  POSITION\n\"Cfmada is in the fortunate position\nof having efficient federal organizations\nto'deal with topographic mapping on\na DomlnloB wide basis, with the extensive mechanical equipment essential to map product.i<m of a high\nolder, and n highly specialized technical\npersonnel, the result of many years development.\nBrogns. on this national mapping\nhas been very substantial considering\ntft*. vast- aras. involved.\" said Mr. Bartley. \"More than 40 per cent of the\narea of the provinces of Manitoba,\nSaskatchewan and Alberta has already\nbeen  topographically  mapped  or  Is in\nHeart md Nerves\nCauMd Her To Have\nCold Hands and Feet\nMrs. Joseph price, Rea p^ NB\nwrites:\u2014\"Several years ago I was\ntroubled with my heart and nerves\n\u2022ltd was so bad, at times, my\nhoods and feet would become\nnumb   and   cold.\n\"1   happened   to   see\nthe process of being so mapped, under\nfederal auaploes, while in Brtlsh Columbia Ontario, Quebec and the Mart-\ntime Provinces, similar work is being\nadvanced each year by the same federal organiMUoos, so thft uiumately\nwe will have a splendid topographical\nrecord  of  Canada's   heritage\n\"Data collected by the United States\nBoard of Surveys and Maps shows many\nconcrete illustration* of %ixa value Of\nsuch topogrspbic maps.\" said Mr. Bart-\nIpy. \"One manufacturer stated that tbe\ntopographic map Just issued at a cost\nof \u00bb8000 of the area in which his company was interested, bad saved that one\ncompany alone 110,000. a railway location engineer revised the location of\na railway Una by using an advance\ncopy of a topographic map secured slnoe\nhe tint made his plans tbe result was\n\u00ab saving of M6.000 while the total\ncost of making the map was only\n\u20224000. Man' similar cases are on record.\"\nMr. Bartley also dwelt upon the constantly growing Importance of aviation,\nnot only in connection with the development of aerial photographic mapping, and tbe investigation of many\naatrlneertog ond hydraulic problems by\nmeans of aerial photographs, ln which\ndevelopment and Investigation Dominion\nland surveyors have taken the lead but\nalso on the-, very rapid yearly Increase\nln Its use many activities both governmental   snd  commercial.\nPresident Bartley also referred to the\nfact that whereas a few years ago a\npartial failure of the Canadian wheat\ncrop would have produced stagnation\nand hard times, today such is not tbe\ncase, so rapidly Is Canada becoming\nan Industrial nation. He pointed out\nthat Canada had a dally output in\nxaanuacturlng of #12.000.000 a day, and\nher exports are valued at $241 per head\nof population an compared with $190\nfor Great Britain and $77 for the\nUnited States.\nMr. Barney stated that while the\nstock market ajtunp cf last fall resulted\nto some losses to individuals and a\ntemporary hesitancy In Canada's advance Its effect was largely past; that\nall indications pointed to an increnwa\nactivity in the development of Canada's raw assets and a resumed era of\nprosperity and that the outlook was\nfull   of  promise,\nFROST THREATENS\nKIMBERLEY MAINS\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Feb. fr\u2014The\npeople of Kimberley hoped that the\nheavy snow fall would sufficiently\nprotect the water system to prevent\na repetition of the experiences of lost\nThere Is No\nLiquor at\nSt. James'\nNext to 'a salute from one at tbe\ngorgeous mounted men who n*x --heir\nsteeds like statues at tbe Horse Guards\nArchway, very young Canadian subalterns of the C. E. P. lowed to be greeted by the smart 'Present arms\" accorded all passing officers by the Poot-\ngpar\u00ab sentries at St. Jame's Palace\nOne of the few remaining relics of Tudor dags in London, this old brick building with ita Henry Vlltb gatehouse\nand It* centuries of history, comes\nonce more into the limelight aa tne\nplace wherein the great powers of the\nworld will meet to try and settle the\nquestion of naval armament.\nKTOOD   ON   lom-xy   *iti;\nWhat would bluff King Hal, its\nfounder, and Charles II, tbe Merry Monarch, say could they hear that balls\nwherein kings and courtiers drank deep\nat banquets there, were, ln deference\nto the American delgatee, being barred from all splritous liquors during\nthe conference? But- such ls the case.\nSet lu the very heart of club-i-mri\nand of tbe great city of to-day, the\npalace once atood out ln green field*\nof the countryside. When, ln 163$.\nthe\"Laaar House\" named after thc\nlesser St. James and then standing\non thc site, and long serving aa a hospital for female lepers, passed Into\nthe hands of ttenry VIII, the situation was wild to have been \"discreetly\nchosen iciylnallyj, Os lt was a dreary\nand lonely as could be desired for\nthe Isolation of its inmates.\" At tbat\ntime the Lazar House was three mile*\nfrom the houndarloes of ancleqt London.\nKINO    Htl.S    \"LOVE    NEST\"\nHenry VIII apparently appropriated\nthe site as a nice place whereon to\nbuild a \"love pest\" for his newest\nbride, Anne Boleyn. And from thc day\nin 15^2, when the royal pair moved\nin, until the present day. St. James's\n(which, unlike the name of Toronto's\nAnglican cathedral, is Invariably spelt\nwith an apostrophe and \"b ), has been\none of the official residences of thr i\nkinns   of   England.   Even   now,   when\nFRANCE HAS WORLD'S\nLARGEST SUBMARINE\nlbs largest and most powerful submarine In the world now ls a warship\nof  the  French  navy.\nBecently launched, this wwel la\nthe Suroouf. She Is 424 feet long\nand hua surface spaed of 33 mllea\nan hour, can travel 10 and one-half\nmiles an hour when submerged and can\ndive to a depth of 420 feet, or SO fe-ej\ndeeper than the existing record. Her\ntotal displacement is 3.257 tons.\nThe Surcodf carries a crew of 160,\nhas four 6.2-lnch guns and one antiaircraft gun and has 14 torpedo tubes.\nall of which can be fired at once. Her\ndesk is armor plated and she has a\nwaterproof hangar housing a seaplane,\nwhich can he. taken out and made\nready for flight ln five minutes.\nTo all intents and purposes, the\nSurcouf is a powerful cruiser which\ncan submerge when desired.\nNational Order\nof Canada Will\nHelp Legislation\nNew      Organization      Reports\nGreat Progress.; Welfare Program\ne.\u2014al#ctlngs\ntin*;    John   L.   Bolton,   Toronto\nLeonard   W*ath*rty.   Toronto\nRalph   Webb.  Winnipeg.\nThla oomprlaea the actve Natlonal\nCouncil of the Order which will meet\nagain In Toronto at the end of February.\nTELLS ABOUT TIBET\nPEOPLE WHO NEVER\nWASH THEMSELVES\nTOKYO, Feb. 5\u2014 _Jlp Lafcuglf. young\nFrench writer sand i artist who for\nmonth* masquesnsuled a* a man ln\norder to enter the forbidden section of\nContinue Work\nof Identifying\nSoldier Dead\nLONDON, Feb. 0\u2014 Trusted agents of\nthe British Empire are ceaselessly working to people the most trffcic townships\nin the world the Hilent cities of Flanders. The military cemeteries packed\nwith ranks of white stone crosses which\nlook In the twilight like ghosts on\nparade) are still kept open for those\nBritish dead, .who, us yet, have no\nknown grave.\nTens of thouNinds of little crosses\neach commemorating the remains of\none British solldler have already been\nplaced in a dozen different countries\nbut there Is still a vast an shadwy\nbattalion whose final roetlns place ,1s\nundecided.\nEaeh day more of them are discovered, and restored to their rightful place\namong their comrades. It is the difficult work of Identifying these unknown\nsoldiers tbat a branch of the Imperial\nWar Graves Commission is accomplishing   with   such   patience   and   success,\nTORONTO.   Ont.,   Feb\t\nof the National counci o- ttl* Na- X libet, has returned here and will soon\ntlonal Order of Canada held here re- go back to France.\ncently approved a very broad pro- Mile. Lapugle visited Tibet on two\ngramme of endeavor for the year 1930. separate occasions In two successive\nand heard the address of National yean, choosing each time the six\nComander,  J. Turner Melville, dealing J summer months owing to the fact that\ngrowth of the  Order.      Mr.   in   that  country   there   is  no  modern\nMil-,:',    predicted   during   tbe   present   system  of  heating  during  the   winter.\nNational  Order  will   rise  to I in  all  she spent seven   months  in  a\nemtrfn   a    amona    the    orslanjzatiora. I ccuhtry   never   before   penetrated   by\nda,  and cited  during  his address     the    opinion    of    public    men\nat    Canada,    who    have    ex-\npreoseu   themselves   on   the   matter.\nOne   if tbe principal things approved\nforeign  travelers. \t\nNRVKR   WASH\n\"The people of Tibet never wash, and\nmany Tibetans don't even know what\nsoap  ls.    The  interior of  the average\nhv National    Council    was    the ; house is very filthy and there Is no\n;  a   fund  of W50.000  for the   thing    comfortable    ln    it.      But    the\nwelfa-t    work   of   the   Order.   S126.0001 net>plr* are always happy  and  cheerful.\ntvate   subscriptions.     Approval   Tbey were very  hospitable and always\ni  the appointment of | offered   tea  to  me.    The  teacup  was\n^       Somewhere    ln    France\"    there    are\ntorge no Igngsr'lUw t_uw.\"'5NJ tb\u00b0Jf*    l50,opo   British   soldiers   lying\nfrr. .\nal.. >\na  p:.r\nami\nfor  .-\nThi*.\nagent   to  attend   the\nof   i he   House   of   Commons.\n\u2022   i no   appointment   of   Aleuts\n.   islntures.\nbeen considered  tv. In\nroom is yet ln use and tbe King and\nwinter. However, the first hud gone Queen'still IwW levees in the old pile\ntufliSS? ^ lnoW \u00b0ame ,aud with I though long since the royal family\n\u00abfd\/ft L\u00abl t*VZ__\\r **ftth*' !t fia. a whole have dwelt in nelghbor-\nSSltni'^fu*        *?  deeper Several    ln(f    ftml    more   mo(ienj    BucWnKhftm\nthawing outfits arc busy to keep the\nmains and service pipes open and some\nsmall sections of thc city are shut\noff  altogether.\nMILBURN\n1    HEART y\n' .-lERVEPlU.\nadvertised and .started taking them\nat once. I continued for some\nUttle time' end.slnoe then I have\nhod no return of my trouble.\"\nPrice, 60c a box at all druggists\nahd dealers, or mailed direct on\nreceipt of price by The T Milburn\nCo..  Limited, Toronto,  One\nC. G. I. T. GIRLS\nCONDUCT CHURCH\nSERVICE, PROCTER\nProcter, B. C, Feb. 5\u2014The Procter\nCanadian Girls in TrainlriK held their\nannual service in St. Andrew's United\nchurch on Sunday evening. The girls\nin uniform formed a choir.\nNoreen Lumb told the story of C. O.\nI. T. and Morag MacKinnon told the\nhistory  of C  O.  I.  T.\nRev. O. Kinney gave a splendid\naddress,  on  \"Youth   Faces  Life\". %\nThe girls sand appropriate selections,\nusing as their anthem, \"Lord I Want\nto Be a Christian\".\nMlss Morag MacKinnon, Miss Noreen\nLumb. Mlss Hilda Helghton and Miss\nEleanor Merrifield sang \"For the\nBeauty of the Earth.\"\nThe C.O.I.T. girls, present were\nNcreen Lumb, Moray MacKinnon, Helda\nHelghton, Olive MacLean, Marion Parker, Ida Scott, Annie MacKinnon. Doris\nSears and Eleanor  Men-lfle^.\nThe rebel group of the Labor pprty\nin the British parliament was supported\nat the half-yearly conference of the\nWelsh division of thc Independent Labor party.\n     ._,   7\u00a3LY''*ii..tH_n' undiscovered'. Their actual nam.* hftvi\nsign ambassadors u..ajaat Brt\"\u00abi already been commemorated la such'\nare ^W*0^1**\u2122*1\u2122 \u00a3 *J memorials aa the Menln Gate, but the\nCourt of St. J\u2122\u00ab \u00bbnj\u00bb n\u00a3* ^1 search for their bodies never ceases,\nof Bucklnsham or Windsor. The throne I    Everyday somc ^^..^ Iamily in the\nHighlands  of  Scotland, or  in  London,\nor ln thc wilds of Manitoba,  is comforted by tho results of tho unceasing\nInvestigation.\n0U.NDEE    r l.l KM\nBodies of fallen British soldiers are\nstill being discovered ln Flanders at\nthe rate of about thirty a week; nnd\na short time ego thc number amounted to between forty and fifty a .week.\nA muddy bit of a. man's boot, a\ntorn \"piece of groundsheet, a ring, are\noften the able clues. Vet from these\n.slender personal shreds have been traced the identity of thousands of men.\nThe British commission never lnden-\ntlfy a man unless they arp absolutely\nsatisfied they arc makipg no mistake.\nAlthough every sol d ier was given\ntwo identificatlon dlacs, the number\nof bodies lound without them is surprising\nI'LIU   OF   A   MM:\nThese, soi lders are themselves often\nkilled before they could carry out their\nintentions, Their bodies were found\ncarrying the discs and letters of an*\notheet man, and there are many coses,\ntherefore of men being burled in their\nfriends'   names.\nA recent example of the persistence\nof the registration branch of the Imperial War Grave* commission, concerns a -young boy officer reported\nmissing in 1915. Tho investigators had\nonly one renl clue to his Identity\na gold ring with a cr_et\u00ab-a bull, and\nthe motto \"Manners Makyeth Man.'\nIt 1MM discovered thnt only two fam\nHies bcre the crest and only one school\nhad tliat motto.\nBy   means   of   correspondence   with\n|  SUDDEN TRIUMPHANT CONCLUSION\nTO BLINDFOLD TEST\nTAKE off the blindfold!\" he cried. \"Keep\nthe other chocolate bars for somebody\neke. This one is so good I know it must\nbe Rowntree's York Milk!\"\nAnyone would be blind indeed who couldn't\nspot the superiority of Rowntree's York Milk.\nIt is so smooth, so distinctive in flavour, so\nutterly delicious, tliat it marks a tiew standard\nof milk chocolate goodness. Try it yourself.\nRegister for yourself the wholessome, velvety\nperfection of this new chocolate bar. York\nMilk has a quality all its own\u2014it will open\nyour eyes!\nTlur. If alao Tori N\u00abl\nMilk__.il. _*l.<sl\u00b0\u00ab\u00ab\nwhole   sjtlbcrtsf\u2014\/or   Ihoaa\nha artier n|H \u00bb\u00bb'\u00bb\u25a0\nTHIS R0WNTRB* CO, LIMITED, TORONTO\nVICTORIA.   (-EOROK   V.   *TI>   TftKRi:\nHardly a square foot of ancient rami\nbllng brick St. James's Palace, whose\nwalls are mellowed and grimed by the\nsmoke and rain of centuries lacks\nhistoric associations. Here were born\nMary I, \"Bloody Man'-. Prince Henry\neldest son of James I; Queen Caroline,\nwife of George II, died there; Chaijles-\nI slept there on Uie night before his\nexecution; Charles II and his son, thc\nold Pretender of Jacobite days, were\nboth born there. So were Mary II,\nQueen Anne and George IV. William\nIII of Orange made it his chief residence in London, as did the Duke\nof York, later James II. Holbein was\naald to have designed the place ior\nHenry VIII. but little of the pile and\nits big courtyards where troops assemble dates bock to that Tudor monarch except the picturesque gatehouse, the pesenco or tapestry room\nand a bit of tlie royal chapel where\nQueen Victoria married the Prince\nConsort, and the future King George V\nher present gracious Majesty, then\nPrince Mary of Teck.\nIIIDDKS TKEAHIRKS ^^^^^^^^\nAs the palace is closed to visitors\nfew are privileged to view the monograms of dead kings and queens inscribed on Its stone fireplaces, the\nancient copper water pipes which still\ndrain its roafs, and scores of other\nfascinating relics. But when they are\nnot engaged in the business of limiting  warships  delegates  to the coming\nview    uf    the    heavy    legislative    p-rn-\ngramn.r*- tliat has MHtvad  Hie endorse-\ntion   < t   the   Order.\n-SPBTIA1   KFFOKTs\nSpecial efforts will be made to secure the passage of legislation through\nthe House of Commons to prohibit\ntbe granting of assistance. In any form,\nto Immigrants, the Western Commands\nof the Order strongly representing\nthat their province did not want assisted immigration. The Public Bela-\ntlcns Commission reported a great\ndeal of work accomplished with the\nDepartment of Immigration and Colonization, in regard to the proposal\nto bring a large number of I^eunon-\nites  into  Canada.\nTbe Old Age Pensions Conun lsslon\n\u25a0rerforted tl)|tvlnj; condul^d certabl\nspecial investigations, and a copy of\nthe brlff laid before the Interprovincial\nBoard Jan. 13 at Ottawa was read\nto the Council. The Order Is sponsoring a movement to eliminate the five\nyears residence requirement, and also\nla seeking to have abolished the provision that a person who has resided\nin one of the provincss that has not\nadopted  thc pensions scheme shall  bo\nnot clean and dust In the tea was\nusually visible. I hated to drink it.\nbut I usually accepted li because It\nwas cf.ered to me.in a kindly sport\nand I could not very wtlt refuse.\n\"Cm*- oi t_M most remarkable phases\nOf -social Ufl l:i '..bet Is Ihe fact that\none woman has several husbands. It\nhi often thc case that a woman when\nshe marries takes all brothers as her\nhusbands. Thc word 'mother' ls on Important one ln that country, but there\nls no word that corresponds to father.\nChildren call their fathers uncles.\"\nJUDGE ANNULS      M_\nJOKE NUPTIALS\nLOS ANGELES. Peb. 5\u2014It was only\na Joke when Elma Fuller married B,\nL, Arnold, Jr., she told hlm eight\nhours after the ceremony, according\nto Arnold, who appeared before Su\nperlor Judge Gould yesterday seel;\ning   au   annulment,\n\"She told me before our EOatTlafa\nshe was madly in love with me.\"\nArnold   declared.\nEight hours ..after the ceremony\nhis   wife   left   him,   hc   said.\nA  decree  was   granted.\nSHIP SEEK OOT \/fc>5\nEXTINCT BIRDS\nHas Been Sailing With Expert*\nfor Seren Years; Finds\nMany\nconference   will   haye   much   pleasant  !!IaA^L off lean doctuments, movement\nslght-seclng to do. Entering by the Frt-' \u00a3 *5E2L y, ;UmiliatiI,\u00ab ali oth\"\nary Court and thc Ambassadors' Court L,T      t,   \"\"^   missing   in   that\nthe   visitors   will   see   tbe   original   of \u00a3_\u00a3.?in.J^lcn'u      * lty  hM\nEllzebcth Thompson's \"Roll Call\" hang- ^\/T, WWhi.V^ *a\u00b0ubt-\ning on a wall. They will ascend a' f??e Mf,upr,cml dI\/\"cu\u00bbtlw connected\nstairway designed by Sir Christopher *'\"L lhj. . *CIik ? fMl\"?,ine11 wn\nWren and see Geoge HI as Prince of f*8'1* bt^ -\"*****\u25a0\u00ab*\u2022.K^en it Is remem-\nWales gazing dlstainfully down upon \u2122d. *\u2122 in the **\"\u25a0<** sections\nthe people attempting to usurp tbe ?L\"* \u00abe men were often hurriedly\nrcy&l prercgatibe. They will **___ that _^_\\^L \u2122ly \" 2E- hour8 before a\nportion Cf palace known aa York Hoase, ^\"\"ter*^tac\\ r1olletI \u00b0vcr the \"****\nwhere the present Prince of Wales, ^l,,?\"0! ton\u00ab MoTe a hait^\na very different person to autocratic flQ\u201e ar^ \u2122y ^^J\"\"-? up the \u00abround\ngreat-great-grandfather of thc Amcri- f\" rm'\"d lh\u2122; 0n in\/!n>' occasions\ncan Revolution, has snug quarters and !\u00bb wtw no time to burV *\u25a0'*\u25a0*** \u2022**\nmeets a few Intimate Canadian friends.! _ \u00ab,,\u201e.,, *.,.\nPRICFl k.nk   PICTIKFS uutish ofiicer now working on thi\nIn the throne room visitors will see   SSmJScn  dwcflb5. onp  of  tllc  G,ld'\na   marble   mantelpiece   brought   from \u25a0 de\" \u00a32 most significant alghts he re\nPrance by thc Duke of Wellington and\na splendid portrait of Oeorge IV by Sir\nThomfas LawTance, pictures of Victoria and Albert by Winterhalter. of\nWilliam and Mary, and speaking likenesses of Charlos II and Jnmes II. In\nthe old tapestry room they will behold priceless Mortlako tapestries mad-\nto the order of Chalcs II, and on Its\nmarble fireplace the ctphar \"H\" and\n\"A\" joined by a true lovers' knot,\nhe Plantagenet rose, and the ficur-de-\nlys rcpreseentlng Henry Villi's claim to\nthe   throne   of   France.\nReal beauty spot of the palace with\nwhich delegates to the conference will\nbecome familiar is Queen Anne's drawing room, designed by Wren when he\nremodelled the place, Its modern silk\ncovered walls are hung with prlce'3s.-s\nportraits of notables. They include\nCharles II's Queen Henrietta by Van\nDyck; John Manners, by Sir joshui\nReynolds; Mary of Modcna, by Simon\nerlest; GeVorge I, by Sir Godfrey\nKneller. and George III, by Reynolds;\nthe Duchess of York end Catherine\nof Braganza. by Sir Peter Lely, besides\nother   gems.\nWOMAN INJURED\nIN SAVING DOG\nFRESNO, Fth. 5.\u2014Risking hor own\nlife rattier than Injure or kill a small\ndog that ran in front pf her car bere\nMrs. P. Bonnie, 26 years cf age. of this\ncity, overturned her car and badly\ndamaged the vehicle and suffered painful personal injuries. She was treated\nat the hospital few lacerations of the\n\u00ab-a!p and numerous bruises about the\nlimbs  and  body.\nYMIR NOTES\nYMIR, B.C., Feb. 3\u2014 Mr. and -frs. H\nBttvani gave a party for their daughter, Shirley, on Monday afternoon, it\nbeing the sixth anniversary of ber\nbirthday. The guests were Miss Betty\nClark, Mlss Lottie Anderson, Mlss Jean\nDuck, Mlss Lizzie Chernoff, Mlss-Polly\nVerlfl-in, Mrs. N. Peterson, Mrs. W. B.\nMclsaac, Mrs. J. H. Duck and Mrs.\n8. O. Mclaaac. Mrs. Stevens was assisted ln serving by Mrs. B. C. Mclsaac.\nMrs. S. A. eurwen is convalescing\nfrom a sudden illness.\nThe Riviera now is sparkling with\nwhite\u2014tho white of wool coats, -crepe\nand satin dresses, ermine and fox furs,\nwhile the sleeveless dress of white\nflourishee again in shantnug, ln maro-\ncain aod even In satla,\nmembers of the war\u2014two lines of\nBrtiish dead, left In unbroken eolumni\nas they hnd been mowed d\u00abvp by t\nmachine gun. The men still wearing ga-\nmasks remained where they fell tor\nmany   days..\nWhat happened to those men? Perhaps they arc resting honorably beside their comrade*, but more likely\n\u2022hey too luve Joined the shadow;\nhost of men who ha**** \"no known\ngraves.\"\nAn example of how misleading per-\n\u25a0onal Information sometimes becomes\nis illustraled by the recent request\nof a Lancashire mother for the inden-\ntlficattcn of her sen's body, who wae\nKilled a few miles north of Arras. She\nlocated thc spot Dicat precisely from\ntwo lc' ters\u2014one written by a. friend\nand another by the chaplain.\ntttlllMl   THF   LINE\nWhen the War Graves commission\nlooked into the matter they found\nthat the week in which the lad was\nreported burled after on action near\nArras, his particular company was resting  miles   behind  the  line.\nPerhaps the most pathetic aftermath\nof thc war still to be seen are those\nlittle packages marked O. H. M. s\nthat come daily from Flanders to thc\noffices of the commission. They are\nthe   clues   to   the   unknown   soldiers.\nI watched a commission expert opening some of these packages. One contained o rut.ty button; another was\na letter (\"Easy! that one\") 'another\nwas Just two pieces of leather from\na bcot '\"1st Battalion Devonshire\n1\u00bb16,\" said the eipert); another fi\ncap badge and a dental plate.\nH4ETAL MARKETS\nNEW YOKK. Feb. 5\u2014C0PI\u00bbr quiet;\nelectrolytic wpot nnd futures., 118.00.\nTin\u2014Basy; spot ana nearby \u00bb38,87'\nI futures,  \u00bb30.97.\nIron\u2014Quiet,  unchanged.\nLesid Stviciy: spot New Vork $8.25\nEast St.   Louis  86.10.\nZinc\u2014Quiet: East Rt. I.uls apot antl\nfutures   I8.J5   to  8S.30.\nAntimony\u2014$8.76.\nAt London:\n?tundard    copper\u2014Sspot    \u00a373   3s   6d;\nures \u00a379 5s; electrolytic apot \u00a3B3 loe\nfutures \u00a384 5s.\n' Tin\u2014Spot \u00a3175 10s; futures \u00a3178 10s.\nLead\u2014Spot and futures \u00a331 10\u00ab. .\nZinc\u2014Spot \u00a319 10s.\nSt. Paul's Anglican church, Toronto,\nof which Rev, Canon Cody is rector,\nreported total receipts of 8143.841.00.\nprobably the lanrert for any Toronto\nchurch  of   any   denomination,\nL\npenalized to the extent of $1.00 a -\u00a3_?*._m{ l?*a !l \"\u00bb number of\nmonth for the number of years diir- I J?8,'\" .^\/^ \u00b0frt TS?ni\u00b0; Jhe\ning the past 20 years that they have J\u2122* J^ .?\u201e T\" :,\u201e! ' r\"\"'\nresded in that province. It was re- Itmrd- ftnd Roman CWhoIlc fourth,\nported that a number of pensioners\nwere receiving only *8.00 a month,\nbecause they had resided 12 years\nln Quebec. The Quebec Command\nof the Order, reports that it Ls fighting to adopt the -scheme for that\nprovince.\nNATION    HIM.   SlRVFA'\nA nationwide survey for thc securing of material pensions was approved.\nIt being reported that assistance was\ngiven in this regard by the Department\nof   Labor.\nThe Order authorized proceeding\nwith a contest open to all young people\nln Canada on thc civic responslbtitles of Canadian Citizenship, and the\ncouncil approved the plan for the first\nprize of this contest to be a scholarship j\nto either McGill or Toronto universities.\nThe Public Relations Commission\nreport that arrangements are nearing\ncompletion for the first National Con- I\nference on text-books, which will be\nheld ln Toronto, urcbably during\nApril. Several of the Western Governments have already Indicated that\nthey will send official representatives.\nand a large attendance ls expected at\nthis conference.\nI.NDOKSKs  PROGRAM\nTbe council endorsed the program\nfor the revision of the text-book\nsystem In order to have a uniform\nsystem of text-books throughout Canada, coupled with a uniform Normal\nschool system and the privilege for\ninterchanging of teachers certificates\nbetween   one   province   and   another.\nIn connection with the educational\nconference, a conference of text-book\npublisher* Is also to be held -under\nthe auspices of the Order, prior to\nthe  National Conference.\nThe Prisoners Aid Commission report* progress with plans for a reform\nof tif* penitentiary systems, to which\na .gri -it deal of public support hos\nbeen offered. Tho Council approved\nof Uie Hubmisslon of a memorandum\nto t he Royal Commission on Public\nWelti \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 on this question.\nF.YWHts   SIOOE8TION\n11 Council comments favorably on\nthe suggestion of Mayor Ralph Webb\nof Winnipeg, that the Order should\n\u25a0pernor a movement to have a map\ncf i ,c Dominion of Canada placed\n'n t'-.iry home in the country. Colonel\nWibli m a speech delivered at a banquet of the Order in Regina recent lv declared a great number of\n.he people In Canada knew little or\nnothing about their country, particularly   geographically.\nThe report o fthe Organization Board\ntnd lei tea tremendcus strides in the\npast few months, and comment favor-\nbly on the large number of members\nthat ore pledged from the Western\nirovinces.\nMEMBERS   ELECTED\nThe election of members of the\nNational council for 1930 resulted In\nthe following being elected: Con-\nroller. W. D, Robblns. Toronto; Ma-\n'or Gen. H. B. Ketchen. Winnipeg;\nJ, Turner Melville, Toronto; Major\nP. S. Hargreaves, M. C, Montreal;\nAlexander J. Morris, Toronto; W, A\nDawe, Toronto; A. H. Russell, K.C.\nHalifax; Hon. J. H. Dilllon K.C, Quebec; John Lewis Thomas, Regina*\nPrederck Hambly. Toronto; John W,\nWild, London; George Armour, Win-\nnpeg;   Capt.  J.  B.  Bagshaw,   K.C.  Re-\nKhild's\n:Needs this\nDouble.\nTreatment\nChildren hate to be\n\"dosed.\" When rubbed on,\nVicks relieves colds 2 ways\nat once without \"dosing\":\n(1) Its healing vapors,\nreleased by the body heat,\nare inhaled direct to the\nair passages;\n(2) \"It draws out\" the\nsoreness like an old-fashioned poultice.\nm*-Qt:,x-.\nVICKS\nTOKYO. Peb. 6\u2014Hunting\ntlnct birds, and finding t\nbut one of tbe unusual and id\ning things being done under tbe)\nauspices of tbe Pacific Science .\nelation, -according to Dr. Herbert Gregory, frho is now Ln the  Par  last-\nDiscussing some cf tbe unusual\nfeatures of tbe work which ta going\non under tbe association. Dr. Gregory\nsaid:\n\"We have had a ship sailing around\namong tbe islands of the Pacific Ocean\nfor seven years now, the man oa\nbeard all being experts and interested\nln tbe study of birds. Tbe field la\nsuch a new one that they keep coming\nacross new species at every tqm.\nThe discovery of a specie* that la\nthought extinct ts a common occurrence tome of the students of botany\nor biolcgy go ashore on one of tha\nsmall Islands and almost without\ntrying tbey coma upon two or thraa\nhitherto unheard of varieties of plant*\nor shells.\nFIELD   -<\u00bb   WIDE\n\"The field of the Pacific U ao\nwide that no single government or\norganization can possibly begin to\ncollect sll the material that ta available there.''\nThe thought of the influence which\nthis region of the Pacific la bound\nto exert on -the rest of the world ia\nseme thing which impresses Dr. Gregory.\n\"Tliere are 30,000 islands in tha\nPacific area, what we call Oceania,\"\nhe said. \"Of course many of than\nare pretty small specimens but them\nare 30 or 40 which offer as many\npossibilities for improvement M did\nthe islands of Hawaii. Think what\nth!K means. There you \/hav# a\npartial answer to your population\nquestion. It's only a matter .of getting\nthc information. Vou can't study\n,'ibout something you don't know exists\nThe investigations which are going\non now under tlie Paciric Science\nAssociation are the beginnings of eon-\ncctred effort* lo gather soipe knowledge of these very important matters.\"\nrHM8TM.ll   CARD   VH Disc sVEWTD\nNEW YORK. Feb. 5.\u2014Somebody haa\ndiscovered what to do with Chrtstmaa\ncards after Christmas. Cartloads at\nthem are being bound by school\nchildren into picture books for children   in   hospitals.\nIt Is Not\nthe Quantity\nYou Eat\nBUT\nthe comparatively small\namount you digest\nbuilds your vitality.\nTbe unique power of\nBOVRIL\n(so easily digested)\nBUILDS STRENGTH WITHOUT FAT\nTo tell rich jo'.cy oranges from inferior ones you\nlook for the tra_cms_rk. Why not buy lamps] the\nsame way? Edison Mazda Lamps assure you of\nhighest qualitv and long service. L-tot\nEDISONMAZDA\n\"LAMPS*\nXDIAN GENERAL ELECTRIC PDODUCT\nColumbia Electric Ltd.\nNelson and Kimberley\nGUY'S ELECTRIC STORE\nWe Carry a Complete Line of\nEDISON MAZDA LAMPS\n\u25a0     \u25a0 \u25a0. \u25a0\u25a0 j  ..\n-----    \u25a0 -\n Pag. Ten\"\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,' THURSDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 6,183(5\n\"1\nTo Those Who Valentine\nWE HAVE A BIG STOCK OF NEW\nDEVELOPMENTS   IN\nVALENTINE IDEAS\nValentine Cards  5t to 35\u00a3\nValentine Party Invitations, per doz 75^\nValentine Serviettes, per doz 15^\nValentine Party Hats, each  15^\nDecorated Crepe  35\u00a3\nG. 0. Buchanan, Real\nPioneer of District,\nPasses At the Coast\nStreamers\n15<\nMANN-RUTHERFORD CO.\nMan Who Was Among First in Nelson Dies; Was\nFirst President Associated Board Trade;\nPioneered, Kaslo, Trail, Rossland\nI fflAUP\n\u2014Dispensing Chemists\u2014\nNEGLECT OF THE\nEYES WHEN YOUNG\nGLASSES    now,   when    needed\nwill   enable    children   to   do\nmore satisfactory  school   work\nand  insure protection  from ner-\nE   vous   and   mental   strain   caused\nby   poor eyes.\nOur    examination    will    show\n_\u2022  whs:  is needed...,.\nJ. O. Patenuade\nOptometrist  and  Optician\n.  Expert  Optical  Service\nElectrical and\nMechanical\nSupplies and\nRepairs\nPrompt Service\nBennetts Ltd.\nEYES\nInvaluable,   Working   Every\nSecond of the  Day\nNEGLECT IS\nABUSE\nlf   Mis'tf'oiis\u2014or   to   be   sure-\nCome   In  and  see   us\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nGrtmn Block     ,        Phone  125\nElks Taxi Transfer\nThe  only  heater!  seAan*  In   Nel\u00abon\nDa; and  Nljhl  Service\nBUD   STBVEN8\nPhone 77\n\"Weeks\"\nBBKAK-UP-A-COsU)  TABLETS\nJtor Colfls, Constipation and Headache*\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription  Specialist*\n407 Baker Phone 1\nlearn to Earn\ni\nCity Drug Go.\nWXSON'H      DIHPENHINO      CHEMISTS\nFilms,    Kodaks,    Drugs,    Stationers\n,    Mall orders promptly dispatched\n' Come In snd ret your wright free\nBOX   1038   NELSON,   B.   C.   PHONE   34\n- New -\nDodges\nStraight 8\nSedan  .$169\u20ac\nDeLuxe Coupe .$1686\nRoadster   $1646\nNew Six\nSedan $1344\nCoupe $1294\nRoadster  $1319\nDodge\nTrucks\nGeorge 0. Buchanan, Kootenay pioneer, died in New Westminister cn Sunday morning after a brief illmss.\nMr. Bu<?hanan was born in -Nova Scotia 80 years ago, living in Truro in the early part of nis life.\nHe was an oldtimer of this district, having been among\nthe first to enter\nNelson, Kaslo and\nTrail. Mr. Buchanan cut the lumber for the first\nbuildings ever er-\n| ectcd on the site\nwhere Nelscn\nstands today and\nwas the first man\nrther than a prospector to ccnie into\nthis valley.\nHe came to British Columbia with\nthe Canadian Pacific railway company in the autumn\nof 1885 as one of\nthe employees. He\nwas acting agent\non the main line\nbefore    the    firsi\ntranscontinental\ntrain  cros^d    thc\nRockies and cleared a fanner's fence across the line put up during the winter, to\nallow the transcontinental to run over the mountain in '86.\nIt was in the spring of 1888 that Mr. Buchanan first came\nto this part of the country. He came d:wn the Arrow lakes\nfrom Revelstoke to the spot where Robson stands today. There\nwas not the least sign of a trail up the Kootenay river and he\nhad to force his way through 27 miles cf woods and underbrush\nfrom the Columbia to here.\nTENT AT NELSON\nTravelling up the Kootenay, Mr. Buchanan saw not the least\nsign to show that a human being had ever entered this area\nbefore he came upon a tent set on the exact spot where the\nHume hotel was later built. Apart frcm the tent and a log\nshanty nothing but forest clothed the mountains was to lie seen\nin this valley. <?>\u2022\nW.R. CAMPION\nGROCERIES\nOur Phone No. Is 121.\nOraiiefrult,   3  Ior ine\n0ramr\u00ab,   \u00bb   down %t\u00bb\nI vi si..   itlDlmn   Tea,   Ib. m*e\nlllu..   Ribbon   (afire,   in.   .      Mr.\nBraid   lle\u00abt    Coffee.   Ib.\nMalklns  Best   Coffee,   lb H-\nApple  and   strawberry  Jam\n\u25a0   4    lbs. 50c\nOrange   Marmalade,   4   IN.   Me\n4   tins   Slleed   Mnmpfile    15c\nApples,    box     M.M\n)Ve  Have  some  Calendars  Leu\u2014\nAsk for ..Oe\nDellverfea   Twice   Dally\nI phlll   and   Fain lew\nNash Six\nSedan  $1585\nThe   above   prices     fully\n\u25a0quipped  f.  o.  b.  Nelson\nDealers  for\nNelson,  Trail and  Rossland\nCapitol Motors\nLimited\nGF.ORGF.   W.   PEASE,   Manager\nNelson.   B.   C.\nBo\\   Nl Phone   65\n(iKOROR   O.   BlCHAYW\ncoast to take up his residence At New\nWestminster near when he operated\na sawmill. While there he was president of the local Prohibition association, and was a member of Queen\nAvenue  United   church.\nMr. Buchanan was In Nelson lost\nJune attending the annual convention\nof the Associated Boards of Trade of\nEastern British Columbia, and then\nadvocated that an lnter-provlnoial\nhighway be built from the head of\nKrotenay lake to the Windermere by\nway of Earl Orey pass, a route which\nhe stated would be of unsurpassed\nscenic beauty and would put Nelson\nwithin a day of Calgary by motor\nHis patriotic address was given at the\nbanquet at Pltnert was pronounced\none of the meet moving addresses ever\nheard   in   Nelson.\nAt the request of the Chamber of\nMines of Eastern British Columbia\nha handled Its ore exhibit at the provincial exhibition ln New Wwtmlnstr-r\nlast fall. \u2022\nHe s survived by his wife and two\ndaughters' Dorothy and Sheila Claire,\nall   of  New   Westminster.\nSHE Will Af>f>ro\u00ab;e\nYour Holeproof Socks\nShe notices. You ean bet she does. The tasteful def.isjns and colois of Holeproof socks win her\napproval  because they're so  fashionably right.\nSclec* the colore that harmonize with your suitings. The designs tha* complement your acaess-\noriei1.   We have a wide variety of choose from\n75c \u2014$1.00 ~\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nfr*\nFIVE MILLION\nEGGS ARRIVE\nOF WHITEFISH\nDuring the same summer, 12 or 13\nprospectcrs came in here to stay, while\nthe Halls up the hill had a crew of\nabout a dozen men working on their\nclaim. He spent that summer staking\ntimber limits around this district and\nup the Aj-m as far as 16-mile polht,\nwhere Harrop is now. About thin\ntime the Bluebell mine was showing\nup wonderfully and it looked as if\nAinsworth was going to be the first\ncity of this district, so as to be with\nthe spoils he built a saw mill on 16-\nmlle point to be closer to Bluebell at\nthe time to supply the mine with lumber.     Business   prrved   ao   flourishing\nBELL MINE AT\nBEAVERDELL IS\nIN NEW HANDS\nR.  B. Staples  and  Associates\nMay Buy It From Mcintosh and Lee\nSuperintendent  Reid  Sets  Up\nNew Section in the\nHatchery\nSTART COMMERCIAL\nFISHING   INDUSTRY\nEastern Brook Trout and Red-\nfish  Eggs Also Being\n'Incubated'\nForth Coining Events ^\nReserve March 15 for Excelsior club\nShamrock   Tea. 112545.\nNelson News of the Day\nMothers Club Apron s3ale Pebruary 35\n,12549)\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nWe will be pleased to have you\ncall and discuss your\nlumber problems\nPhone 176\nOffice foot of Stanlev St.\nMoral design*. Plants, Flowers. Grlsz-\nrall-'\u00ab and Kandyland. (12+851\nPOR RENT\u2014Two room furnished\nsuite.   Apply Kerr apartments.    (12486)\nACTON'S BEV TV, PARLORS\nAll aids for beauty's needs.      (13487)\nValentine tea and sale of home\ncooking St. Saviour's rectory Pebruary\nM. (13544)\nHerman  wolpert,\nOen. Del., Nelson.\n(12512)\nP\nBeautiful Floors\nGOOD FLOORS REQUIRE ATTENTION\nUse Old English or Johnson's Floor Wax\nWe Also Stock Felt and Brush Hand Polishers\nand Johnsons New\nELECTRIC FLOOR POLISHER\nWhich We Will Be Pleased to Demonstrate\nat Any Time\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany,    Limited\n10LE8ALE    Melton, B. C    RETAIL\nWW!\u2014\u2014\npiano Instruction.\nStuttgart, Germany.\nRegular Oeneral Meeting Nelson\nBranch Canadian Legion Tonight at 8\no'clock sharp. (125401\nT    Ootirt   Star   of   Kootenay\nCourt Royal\nA.   O.   -\nmeets tonight at 7 p.m.\nNelson at S p.m.\n_   to   Boiler-makers   Brawl\non Friday  Klght by written Invitation\nInvitation   committee.       (12533.\nAdmittance\n.1 r \u25a0\u25a0\nonly.\nCOM_ ANO BRING A FRIKND TO\nIM ANJ) BAKC SALE ON FRIDAY.\nFEBRL'ARV __ AT THE INNTITI'TF\nR(S)MS.   \"pRbCEHlS     TO    FINANCE\nHEATING THE ARMOIRY FOB\nSCOUTS   AND   CI'US, (125411)\nla    the    afternoon   when    thc\nI  tha  Women's 1\n,o   Grandmother*\nMothers Qf tha Women's Institute entertain the Grandmother* Splendid\nmusical program. Birthday cake and\ntea will DC wired, This ls the second\nannlveraary of the opening of the Institute Rooms. Bet us have a bumper\ncrowd   and  help swell   the  '\"\"\"J\"-.,^\nMercury\nCoal\nIf you do not know the\nvalue of it just ask your\nneighbor who has tried it.\nLUMP  SIZE\nftl.50 PER TON\nSTOVE SIZE\n$0.50 PER TON\nTransfer Go.\nRenwicks\nPHONE 797\n44 TAXI AND\nTRANSFER\nnun __a_ can tn tne Cttr\nOpm DMT uid Nl\u00bbht\nthat   25   men   were   employed   by   the\nmill.\nM-xsos oWrtri\nNow, however Nelson began to grow\nand by 1800 had a considerable population of minei-.-i ond prospectors, all\nof whom lived In tent* were placed\nIn a -small space along what would Itt\nVernon   street   now.\nHaving brouuh his family Into the\nKootenays. Mr. Buchanan put up two\nframp buildings one on the corner of\nWVd and Victoria streets and one\nlust betides It cn the present- Victoria street. \"Monte\" Davles, now at\nKaslo look the centre house and Mr.\nBtrclinnni, himself lived ln the oth&\\\n1891 about 200 pgonle had net-\nled . in Nelson ahd the frame buildings, for which he supplied the greater amount cf lumber began to sprlne\nup everywhere .It was about that\ntime that .f. pred Hume and R. L.\nLr-mon started the first stores. J.\nWllvn, who was a brother of Blake\nWilson cf Vancouver, followed soon\nafter' with the first butcher shop.\nResidences and stores became\nnumerous alonq Baker street that\nthe ravine which used to cut ihe\nstreets about where the bank cf Commerce ls now with a 160-foot wooden\nbridge. He had to take the men from\nhis mill at Harrop to do the work\nas no able bodied man at that time\nwould do anything but mining. The\nnext vear hc built the first whr.rf\nhere   for   the   government.\nMeans of getting supplies into the\ndistrict at this time was through\nBonners Ferry, by boat. Dr. H^ndivx's\ntwo propellored steamboat \"Bluebell\"\nwas the largest on the lake. In the\nwinter time the wholes ot the Kootenays was Isolated frota the rest c*\nthe world due to- the- Ice \u2022 on thr\nKootenay river above.,, the souther-\nhead Of the lake, Rett service can-i-*-\nln from Robson about. '92 but th*-\nrallrrad crew would pack up and leaV\nfor the winter every yew for five\nyears after building the railroad.\nSAW   TRAIL    SOLD\nThe development of other cltif\"*\nwere most humorous at hi* time. Out\nIng his stay in Nelson the town site -v\nTrall changed hands for $60. E. T\nTopping who later became th - fathr-\nof Trail; set out to stake out a sit-\non the Columbia river sotne time I*\nthe summer of 'Bl. Wishing to keer\nhis intentions secret be te-Jd Albert\nMcLeary a cock and bull story as tc\nWhere he was going. Albert saw a^\naxe .slip out from under Mr. Buchanan'-*\npeck and suspecting his idea he\nwent hot foot down the river. When\nTopping arrived at the present town-\nslte of Trail he found that Albert had\nstaked ahead of him and would take\nnothing less than $50. Topping paid\nthe  ISO  and  Trail  waa  his\nIn 1880 Mr. Buchanan staked cut\n\"Kaslo\" for a timber limit and waa\nthere to clean up when the Slocan\nmining, rush came a few years later.\nThe first time Mr. Buchanan was ln\nKaslo there were 14 barbers and one\nschool teacher. Later when he visited there were 14 teachers and cr\u201ev\nohe  barber.\nRossland was not in existence when\nne firet entered the district but during his stay in the valley S. J. Topping\ngot the control of the Le Rol mine\nfor the recording fee and later sold\nit for $17,000. which was paid to\nhis in part real estate .around Spokane\nand partly in cigars,\nMT. Buchanan and six other men\nbuilt  the first  school  house.\nIn 1002 he was elected president of\nthe Associated Board* of Trade of\nEastern British Columbia, which years\nearlier he had helped to organise. Thla\noffice he held for eight consecutive\nyears with  conspicuous  ability.\nDuring that period he was appointed\nby the Dominion Government as lead\nbounty commissioner, administering the\nbounty paid to the producres of had,\nwhich were all  ln  the Kootenay.\nFor many years he was a member\nof the University (flub of Nelson\nduring tbe time tt wm conducting.a\nprovince-wide campaign for the ttu\ntabllshment of a provincial university.\nMOVED TO COAST\nAbout u mn nto b$ wwt to tht\nBEAVERDELL. B. C, Feb. 0\u2014The Bell\nmine, for some years a marked producer of hig-grade silver ore on Wallace mountain. Beaverdell, has been\n\u00bbld to a small syndicate headed by\nR. B. Staples of Kelowna. Mr. Staples\nbecame Interested In the Beaverdell\ncamp some two years agt> when he\nJoined Kelowna and Pentlcton interests\nLn the operation of the Highland Law\nclaim   adjoining   the   Bell.\nThe working of the Lass under the\nmanagement of A. J. Finch has been\nhighly encouraging and this property\nis now producing ore similar to the\nBell ahd will also manage this property\nfor his associates.\nOWNKHS   CLEAN   IP\nThrdugh the sale of the Ball the\ncamp is losing two men of outstanding personality and ability in the\nmining   field   of  British   Columbia.\nDuncan Mcintosh, a practical miner\nfrom youth, has spent 14 years In camp\noperating the Bell with varying success\nuntil the past few years' operation\nhas placed him in financial circumstances beyond all need.\nHenry Lee come to Beaverdlell In the\nInterests of the Federal Mining to\nSmelting company, of Wallace, Idaho,\nand took options on several properties,\nincluding the famous aally group. After\nsix months' operation the Federal company dropped all Interests and Mr.\nLee ls a firm believer in a long, successful future for Wallace Motmtaln\nproperties. His four years' work at\nthe Bell has shown that high-grade ore\nbodies exist that will take many years\nto work out.\nDeposited In trays upon wnich cracked Ice sends ice water in refreshing\ntrickles the trays contained ln four\nhuge boxes, 6,000,000 .my gray flab\neggs in the \"eyed\" stage, eggs of the\neastern whitefish, repose today in the\nDominion hatchery at Nelson, the\nfoundation probably of a future commercial fishing industry in Kootenay\nwaters.\nWeldon Reld, superintendent of\nKootenay hatcheries, received only a\nfew days ago the first inkling that he\nwas to have the honor of Introducing\nWhitefish Into these waters, this coming tn the form of a notification from\nOttawa to stand by to receive shortly\n5,000,000 whitefish eggs from the Port\nQu'Appelle hatchery in Saskatchewan.\nHaving nothing ln tbe shape of equipment to deal with whitefish, he wired\nhis superior at Vancouver for confirmation  and   Instructions.   It   happened\nThey are' taken with gill nets when\nthey ccme out of the deep water to\ntheir spawning beds in September\nand  October.\nTbe whitefish are being accommodated on the eastern side of the, hatch?\nery. whloh occcuples the basement floor\nof 'the armory:\nNEARLY  2,000,000  OTHER*\nBesides .these unexpected pets, Sup-\/\nerintendent Reid has on hand - 1$X\nthe troughs 1,250,000 eggs ot the\neastern brook trout, collected tfC\nBoundary and Violin lakes last fall, and\n600.000 eggs of the redfiah er silver\ntrout, collected troth, Kokanee and\nRedflsh    creeks,   alao   laat   fall.\nThough the water flowing through\nthe trays is of freezing temperature,\n32 degree*, seme of the redflsh eg|\nthose earliest ooUlcctefl, are hatching.\nTomorrow 300,000 of the eyed cpH\nfish eggs will be planted in gravel\nshallows of Slocan lake The modpm\noffice that the redflsh. formerly of Voxr\nportance here for human fpod,- fills in\n'Kootenay economy Is tbat of acting\nas provender for the Kamloops trout,\ncolloquially designated salmon. Sogn\nafter the war protection for redflsh, which were \u2022 almost vanished\nfrom theee waters, was introduced in\na partial way, but now tt ts absolute.\nA. CAMPBELL GETS     >\nFINE OF $75 HERE\nAlex Campbell, pleading guilty to a\ncharge of having liquor ln other than\na private guest room, was sentenced to\npay a fine of $75 by Magistrate William Brown In city police court \"here\nyesterday.     He   paid  the  fine. ,\n \u2014 \u2022\u2014-^.\nTHE llll slllMl BRIDE\n\"I   think  big weddings are  messy,\"\nsaid  the  former Mlss  Couzens of .Detroit, when interviewed after her elope-\nthat   the   inspector   was   coming   t^ils' m(mt at waghington, D. C.   The yiJtmt\nGREENWOOD, B. C, Feb. 5\u2014The\nBell mine at Beaverdell started operations again on Wednesday under hew\nmanagement. This mine haa beep.\nclosed down for a period and the people\nof Beaverdell welcomed the commencing of operations again which will\nestablish a payroll.\nway, and Mr, Reld accompanied him to\nPentlcton. and produced 40 tall glass\nJars that had been used there ui\nhatching whitefish for Okanagan lake.\nOn returning to Nelson, he found the\nconsignment    had    arr|-|ed    Saturday,\nInstead of some weeks hence, as he had\nexpected.\nHATCH      IN   IJI.ISS   JARS\nCarpenters are rushing up framework,\nshelving and troughs for the reception\nof the millions of tiny eggs, and more\nJars   have   been   wired   for\nIn a day or two the whitefish section of the hatchery will be in. working order. From a feed pipe, water will\nbe spouted to the bottoms of the 62\ntall Jars, whose contents of eggs will\nthus be ln constant agitation, each Jar\nhaving a low Up and spout by which\nthe overflow will empty into the central\ntruogh.\nDead eggs, rising to the top of the\negg mass, will be slponed otff When the\ntiny wrigglers In the yolk-sac stage\nemerge from the develcped eggs, they\nwill work their way up to the top,\nand will flow with the current lnt> the\ntroiigh, which will take them to the\ntanks that will be their home till\nthe time comes to liberate them as\nfully  developed  fry\nThe   bulk   of   the   consignment   will\nlady's opinions are Important because\nif she had not eloped, she co-qld have\nhad one of the biggest ond, by ber'ov^^\ndefinition, one of the messiest wed*\ndings of the season. Iter father Is\nboth a jnultmillionatre send a United\nStates senator, which would have aaf-\nsured the presence at the wedding,ol;\nat least two battaltonA of reporters\nphotographers .and movietone operators\nIt may have been this last feature\nthat made elopement seem destrabW\u00bb\nA girl likes to attract attention at. ber\nwedding, but not so much rattentiott\nthat it makes her feel Uke a chaong\nswimmer or a movie star. Bridegrooms\nhave always been opposed to pc#4>.\npageantry and publicity, but fte a rule\nthey   are   not  consulted-,      \u2022        \\_\nThe former MlAs couzeiie, for .aU .her\ncomendablo contention that het mar-\nriaee Is .her own buslnesa, will not\nentirely escape the spotllg^. - gh* -has\nadmitted that she .will keep hou\u00abe \u00abV\na small apartment and do her own\nwork and if she can keep from being\nphotographed in a kltahn apron, frying\nan egg, she will show greater powers\nof resistance than most girts.\u2014Spokesman Review.\nThe average life of an airplane motor is around 2000 flying hours which\nmeans   about   200,000   miles.\nThere are leather bracelets witfi\neventually go into Kootenay lake, and pendant ornaments of wood o* cW\u00abtal\nthe balance into Slocan lake. i attached  to   some   of   the   nj$w   sport\nWhitefish.   while  occasionally   reach- \u2022 gloves and the bracelet gloves are the\ning   12   pounds   ln   weight,   seldom  go ] pull-on type, while the bracelet i\u00bb^$d;\nbeyond four or five pounds, and ;#eragej justable   and   takes   the .plaoo\nof   course   much   under   that   figure. I wrist   strap.\nof   a\nA GREAT STAGE PLAY NOW A GREATER PICTURE\n-MM\u25a0___\u25a0______\u25a0___\u25a0\u25a0____- ^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0______________-___,\nAlias Jimmy Valentine\nThe Greatest of All Crook Dramas Lives Again\non the Screen as\nWilliam Haines'\nFirst Talking Picture, and What a Picture. It's Human,\nIt Has Romance, It Has Comedy, in Fact\nIt Has Everything\nShort Features\n'The Treasurer's\nReport\nComedy\nMovietone News\nTONIGHT\nComing Monday\nDAVEY LES\nThe little lad you\nloved in 'The Singing   Fool'   in   a\ngrand new picture\n'SONNY BOT\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_1930_02_06","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\/1.0404148","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":"1930-02-06 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":"1930-02-06 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":""}]}