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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Air Base String Across Canada\nIs Nearly Completed\n\u2014Pc_e Two\nI 10 3 IMAfl-5\n\u2022ruvincial usrai;\nCToru s c\n^^\"^\n\/^sr\n#0W\ni*\nPerrier Mine To Be Refinanced\nby Coast Interests\n\u2014Pa&e Two\nVOLUMI 84\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-TUESDAY MORNINQ. FEBRUARY 4. 1988\nNUMBER 238\nIL DUCE PREPARES FOR EUROPEAN WAR\nMAKALE FULLY\nSURROUNDED BY\nETHIOPIA'S MEN\nSucceed in Diverting\nRiver Which Gave\nWater Supply\nMOBILIZATION IS\nBEING PUSHED\nItaly's Fighters on\nSouthern Front\nRepulsed\nCopyright, 1936, by tht Hivu News\nAgency\nADDIS ABABA, Feb. 3 (CP-\nHavas)\u2014The Ethiopian forces in the\nnorth have completely surrounded\nMakale, according to an unconfirmed report received here tonight.\n' The report added that the Ethiopians had succeeded ln diverting Uie\ncourse of a river which provided the\nItalian garrison in Makale with its\nwater supply.\nMakale Is the major point to\nwhich the Italians have advanced on\nthe northern front Numerous engagement! hive taken place in that\narea ln the prat month. Ethiopian\nforces hive conducted \u2022 guerrUli\n(Continued on Pigt Ttn)\nSEVEN WORKMEN\nPERISH IN FIRE\nTrapped in Bunks at\nParker Dam\nLOS ANGELES, Tfb. 3 (AP)-\n* Seven ot 90 workmen ileeping in a\ndormitory at the Parker dam construction camp perished today in\nfire that trapped them ln their\nbunks.\nTwo other workmen sutlered critical burns md 16 more were given\nhospital treatment.\nThe bodies were placed in t temporary morgue. Four were identi-\nfied u Harold Herman, Joe Peter-\nion, Otton Doran and Albert Johnion. All docton ind nurses in\nNeedlu, Cal., a railway dlvlilon\npoint, were summoned there.\nThe dormitory and a men hall,\nalio destroyed, were opented by\nAndenon brothen, lubcontnctori\nfor the ilx companlei, bullden ot\nthe dam, it wu wld by Los Angeles\nofficiali of the metropolitan witer\ndiitrict ot southern California. Tht\nwater diitrict let the contnct for\nthe dam ConitrucUon.\nAgain Heads B.C.\nJournalists\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 3 (CP) -\nAubrey F. Roberts, city editor ot\nthe Vincouver Daily Province, hu\nbeeen reelected preiident of the\nBritish Columbia Institute of Jour-\nniliits.\nVice-preildent A. H. Williimson\nwu alio reelected md Aim Jeuup\nmd George Perry were choten lecretary md treuurer, respectively.\n\u25a0 -\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0ww ww-__-_n mme\nSMUTS OPPOSES\nSOUTH AFRICAN\nNEUTRAL MOVE\nCAPE TOWN, South Afrlct,\nFtb. 8 (CP ctble vii Reuters)\u2014\nTha house of assembly todty\nrejected by a large majority a\ntuggestion that the Union of\nSouth Africt should remain neu-\ntril in any war not concerning\nher.\nCAPETOWN, South Africa,\nFeb. 3 (CP cable)-Gen. Ju\nChrlatiaan Smuti, itrong proponent of empire solidarity, today vigorously opposed a motion tor South African neutrality.\nThe Union'! minliter of Juitlce\nmd former prime minister set\nup i three-point policy with regard to League ot Nation! unctioni. They were:\n1. Keep and strengthen the\ncollaboration and cooperation\nwith the .Union's frlendi ln tht\nBriUih commonwealth;\n3. Maintain tht umt collaboration with ita other frlendi;\n3. Stand by tha League of\nNationa..\nDr. D. F. Malm, minliter of\nthe Interior in the lite Union\ncibinet, moved thit the house\ndf isiemhly \"expreu Itself\nagalnit my steps, Including military or economic isncUonl, that\nmight trend toward extending\nthe (Eut African) war.''\ni__-___\u00bb _-,->__---_-__--,\u00ab-_.\u00ab\nSPOKANE POLICE\nQUIZ TRAIL MAN\nIN MURDER CASE\nTRAIL, BC, Ftb. S-After\nsevere quesUonlng today of\nFrmk Naccarato, Trail cafe proprietor, whou wife's body wu\nfound recently stuffed ln a\ntrunk in a Spokane hotel, four\nSpokme officen were satisfied\nthat he had no connection with\nthe crime, according to announcement ot Trail Chief of\nPolice John Laurie. Detective!\nGeorge Seximlth and A. E.\nAlkmen, of Spokme city police, Sheriff Ralph Buckley and\nDeputy Sheriff John P. Griffin,\nmotored from Spokane to make\nthe lnveitigaUon, arriving in\nTrail about 2 pjn.\nSPOKANE, Wuh., Feb. 3 (AP)-\nDetectlvei George Sexsmith md A.\nE. Aikman ot the Spokane police\nuid todty they would go to TnU,\nB.C, ln their investigation ot the\nunsolved trunk slaying ot Mn.\nDolorei Naccarato, 24.\nThey said they would queition\nFrank Naccarato, who wai served\nwith divorce piperi in November,\nthe day before hii wife lut was\nseen st the hotel here where her\nbody was found stuffed in a trunk\nJanuary 26.\nTrail authorities informed the\nsheriff's office here that Nacarato\nottered iron-clad proof of .hit presence there it the time officers believe his wife was slain ln her Spokane hotel room, but the police officers expressed a desire to question\nhim.\nnilltlUtllUWlMMM'\nFADDEN REACHED\nRAINIER'S PEAK\nPrints of Pictures He\nTook Show That He\nMade Ascent\nSEATTLE, Feb. 3 (AF)-Ctmert\npicturu told today what Delmar\nFidden, lost \"thrill climber\" of\nMount Rainier, did not tlve to teU,\nthat be had made the tint January\nascent of the country's third hlghut\npeak, before freezing to death on\nthe descent   .\nThree printi made from the rolls\nfound when Fadden's body wu recovered at the 13,000-foot level lut\nFrldty were viewed by Ome Delber,\nmountaineer who led the searching\npirty which tound the body.\n\"He made lti He made lt!\" Daiber\nraid. \"That'i a plcturt of tht crater.\nThe two others were taken from\nhigh on the mountain, one probably\nnear the level where he died.\"\nMeanwhile, the youth'i pirenti,\nMr. md Mrt. H. D. Fadden, made\nplmi tor public funeral tervicei\nWedneiday afternoon at Plymouth\nCongregational church. Mmy friendi\nhid urged iuch services.\nCharge Governor\nAllowed Slaying\nMINNEAPOLIS, Feb. 3 (API-\nMrs. Walter Liggett climaxed a\nhighly dramatic session of Iudor\nBlumenfeld's trial for her huiband's\nasiaulnation with the usertlon that\nGovernor Floyd B. Olson\u2014and his\n\"gtng\"\u2014\"permitted\" the tlaylng.\nSoon after, nervoui from the\n\u25a0train of her long teitlmony, ihe\ncollapsed and court recessed.\nAt Rochester where he ls recuperating trom an operaUon, the\ngovernor Mid ht had no itatement\nto make.\n\"The murder would not have been\ncommitted without Governor Olson's permission,' 'the slight womin,\ngirbed in black, told a crowded\ncourtroom. She explained her itatement u \"meaning they either ordered it or permitted IL\"\nSlot Machine Act\nIs Invalid\nREGINA, Saik, Feb. 3 (CP)-Slot\nmidlines banned trom the province\nlut year will likely return with\ndeclaration of Sukatehewtn court\nof appeal today thit the Slot Machine act of the legislature wu invalid. The tut cue originated at\nSaskatoon when Willlim Karminoi\nof that city wu convicted lut\nAuguit of keeping a slot machine.\nChief groundt for the decliion wu\nthit the province wat paulng legislation infringing Dominion criminal Uw. .\nAcquitted at Coast\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 3 ^-Roderick J. Ltwson thd Henry Lem-\nteux ippeared in police court today\non chirgei of being ln unlawful\npossession ot \u2022 revolver ind were\nacquitted by Maglitrate H. S. Wood.\nA third men, Henry Willis, wu ic-\nquitted previouily on t ilmUtr\nchirge.'\nCOLD SWEEPING\nCANADAiNELSON\nHAS 3.4 ABOVE\nWarmest Time of Day\nHere Is But 18   .\nAbove Zero\nLOW IS 42 BELOW\nON THE PRAIRIES\nWinnipeg Has It Also;\nGale Blows Itself\nOut at Night\nYeiterdiy wu tht third day af\nntir itro weither for Nelwn u a\ncold ipell, genenl throughout\nCinidi, took a firmer grip on the\ndlitrict. Tht ttmparaturt tdgtd\ndown fractionally below Sundiy'i\nlow of 3_2 degreei tbovt itro\nttrly In tht morning for a ntw\nwlnter't low mirk. Sundiy'i low\nwu 3.4 ibove.\nA biting wind mide condltioni\noold ind riw throughout tht dty\ntnd tht mixlmum temperature\nfor thl diy, 18 degreei, wu tht\nloweit thit wlnttr.\nBy thl Cinidlin Prut\nOld Ontario stood alone lait night\namong Canada's cold-weather provlncu with temperaturei ibove the\niero line. It tu below zero on Uie\npriirlu, in northern Ontario, Qut-\nbee md Uie maritime!.\nBut winter's sting wai mining ln\nsouthern Ontario temperaturei were\n20 to 28 above aero during the day.\nAt Ottawa, however, a low of 18\nunder the tero Une wai regiitered.\n1' \/\n(Continued on Pige Tin) -\n12 RIOTERS ARE\nBANISHED\nKINGSTOWN, St Vlneent Teb. 3\n(CP Cable)-Lifting of a rigid government censorship tonight.disclosed that 12 of 28 penoni convicted\nof participating In Uie fatal October\nrioti had been baniihed to the\nnearby Iiland of Granada.\nA itate ot emergency,-declared in\nthe colony while Uie priionen were\ntried before Judge G. C .Willlimi.\nwhoie car had'been imaihed by the\nrioten, wu continued tonight u\ngroupt 01 ntUvra discussed the sentences.\nNo outbreaks of violence occurred, however, md the police did not\nanticipate any lerioui trouble.\nStarting In Kingstown OcL 21\nwhen the rioten surrounded Governor Sir Selwyn Grler ln front of\nthe courthouse, the dliorden continued for thret dtyt, iprtading over\nthe island.\nSoviet Army's High Command\nCharges Japan With Attacks\nRamsay Macdonald His Seal for\nReopening ol Parliament Today\nWins By-Election by\nMajority Over\nTwo Others\nMicdonild\nLONDON, Ftb. 3 (CP cable).-\nThanki to the voten of the Scottish\nUnlverslUes the fimlliir but care-\nworn fice ot Ramuy Macdonald\nwill not be mining when parliament reconvenw\ntomorrow. Suc-\nceu of the former\nprime minister ln\ntht Scottish Unl-\nvertlties division\nbytltcUon wti\ninnounced today.\nThui the deilre\nof Prime Minister\nBildwin to retain\nUie \"national\" at-\npact of hii government by Including Uie two Micdontldi In his\ncibinet wis partially fulfilled. Ramsay Micdonald wiU retain the office\nof lord pruldent of the council.\nThere rernalni now Uie by-elec-\nUon in Uie Rou md Cromarty diviiion Februiry 10, which Malcolm\nMacdonald is contesting. The secretary for tht dominions tacu a\nstiff tut tgilntt Randolph Churchill, t son of Wlniton ChurchUl, who\nhai the backing of the local Con-\nlerviUve organisation although\nMacdonald hai the recommendation\nof Mr..Baldwin. Two. other candl-\ndatei, \u2022 Liberal and a Labor party\nmember, are alio in the f jeld.\n, Ramsay Macddnald, 10 veerp old\nbut vigorous ln ipirit despite failing\neyei, led hli two opponent! in tbe\nimlvwl.y poll by large mtrgtni. He\nwon '18,383 votei whUe Proftuor\nDenir Gibb, Liberal, obtained 0034,\nmd Cleghorn Thomson, Labor, 3587.\nMarkets at\na Glance\nCRESTON GETS\nITS BEER\nVICTORIA, Pah. I (CP)--Form-\nal proelimatun allowing ula of\nbeer by tht glut In Cruton polling dlvlilon af Ntlton-Cruton riding wu Iuued by the govtrnmtnt\ntoday, Creiton voted In fivor of\nbur Dtotmbtr \u00bb.\nOIL COMPANY TO\nPAY MORE\nCALGARY^ Feb. 2 (CP)-Sub-\nitantial increue in tbe prlcu paid\nfor Turner Villey naphtha ud\ncrude oU wera announced here today by the Imperial OO compmy,\nLtd. The compmy wlU pay $3.70 a\nbarrel tor clear naphtha, agalnit\nthe former price of $2_M md from\n81.55 to 8212 for crude, md 82 ~-\nfor abtorpUon plmt guoline.\n\u25a0y The Cinadian Prut      ,\nToronto tnd Montreal: Induttrlal\nstocki higher.\nToronto mlnu: Higher.\nNew York: 6tocki closed higher.\nWinnipeg: Wbeit down tt to %.\nToronto: Bacon hogi otf truck unchuged it 8.50.\nLondon: Bar illver higher; othei\nmetali lower.\nNew York: Silver, export copper,\nlead ud line unchanged; tin lower.\nMontretl: Silver itudy.\nNew York: Cotton md rubber\nhigher; coffee lower; sugar iteady.\nNew York: Canadian dollar up V,\nto 1WH.\netttwtttuiiiiemwtWi\nDIONNE HOSPITAL\nHEAD LEAVES\nVoting Time on\nLibrary Extended\nVICTORIA, Feb. 9 (CP) - The\nUme limit for taking votei on the\nunion library icheme in rural tchool\ndistricts wu extended by the government today until February 28.\nIt wu explained that in tomt diitrict! it htd not bam poulble to\ngtt tht votei completed during Jinuary.\nAbdomen Pierced\nby Stick of Wood\nVANCOUVIR, Ftb. 2 <CP)-A1-\nfred W. Stgtr wtt removed to hotpital from tht Robertion ud Hackett siwmlU on Falae creek today\nafter hli tbdomtn had bean pierced\nln u iccldent tt thi plut.\nHii condition waa rtported fair.\nReporti of tba accident itated\nthit a piece of wood became wedged\nin a revolving belt and wu driven\nigilnst Siger'i body.\nCALLANDER, Ont, Ftb. 8 (CP)-\nDr. Aliu Roy Difoe innounced todiy thtt Mlu Cecile Ltmoureux, in\ncharge of the Dafoe hotpital for tht\nDionne qulntuplett ilnce June l.\n1835, left the itaff Friday. Mlu Lam-\noureux replaced Madame Louise De\nKlrUipe.\nPendlngthe tppolntment of a successor to Mlu Ltmoureux, Miu\nDorothy Dilt of North Biy ii it-\nlisting Yvonne Leroux, veteran\nnurse of the staff who hu been with\nUie bablei ilnce their birth.\nDuring the put wtek the babiu\nihowed slight weight decreue, except Merit, the smillest, who giined\none-hilf ounce.\nCHINESE LOSES LEO\nVERNON, B. C, Feb. 2 (CP)-\nLouii Chew, Chlneie resident ot\nArmstrong, had hia left leg tevered\nhere Stturdty night when he (ell\nbeneath the wheeli of the local\nswitch tngint U lt wu approaching\nthe station.\nFORMER NELSON\nWOMAN JUMPED\nAT 70 M.P.H.\nMrs. Jeanette Nelson Near\nDeath After Leap From\nSpeeding Train\nMAUSTON, WU., Feb. 3 (AP)\n\u2014Mn. Jeannette Nelion of Chicago wu netr death today after\na lup from the Milwaukee railroad'! itretmUntr Hiawatha u\nit iped toward SL Paul at 70\nmilei m hour.\nEn route to Winnipeg, Mn.\nNelion told uother woman pu-\naenger ai the train paued\nthrough Mauiton yuterday, \"I\nfeel itrmge. Something terrible U going to hippen to me.\"\nA few momenta later the\nleaped trom a platform betwMn\ntwo coachei u a cudy teller\n\u25a0ttemptad to itop her.\nThe crtw halted the train and\nbacked It tix miles to pick up\nthe injured woman. She wu\ntaken to a hotpital here.\nEmployees at a Chicago apartment hotel where Mr. ud Mra.\nNelson Uved for the lut five\nweeks said tht huiband, H. O.\nNtlson, lett for here when informed whit hid happened.\nConductor Tern Conley ot the\nHiiwithi uld he learned Mn.\nNelson Wu from Nelton, B.C.\nOpen Honwill\nHearing Today\nCartmel, to Hear\nManslaughter\nPreliminary\nMimliughter proctedlngi will\nopen In prfvlnclil pellet court\nthli morning agalnit R. (Slim)\nHonwill, driver of a .light delivery truck it Silmo Jiguiry 28\nwhen It upset ud two of lti pit-\nungtrt, Jem Smith tnd Roy\nBradihiw, wtrt killed. Tht pre-\nllmlmry heirlng will eomminee\nit 10 a.m. btfort Stlptndltry\nMiglitrttt John Cartmel. Corp.\nDavid Hilcrow It prosecuting ud\nE. P. Diwion of Brown k Diwion\nIt rtprtiintlng Mr. Honwill.\nBEER PRICES CUT\nAT QUESNEL AND\nPRINCE GEORGE\nVICTORIA, Feb. 3 (CP)- The\nprice of beer it Ques.cl ud Prince\nGeorge wu cut from $2.05 to 82.00\nt doitn pints ud from 827.10 to 825\na barrel to llcenceei by government\norder today. Thil is effected by adjustment of freight charges.\nNewspaper Editors\nInvited to Testify\nat Toronto Probe\nTORONTO, Feb. 3 (CP)-the royil commiuion lnvutlgitlng Toronto\npolice tfftln todiy invited police\ncommlsslonen, put ud pretent, officiali oecuylng high offlcei ln the\npolice depirtment, ud miniging\nediton ot dtily ptpera or othen delegated by them, to give evidence ln\nprivate leuion before the Inquiry.\nPrlvitt seulons will be held tomorrow ud Wedneiday, after which\npublic hearlngi wlU be returntd.\nThe commlulontn uid tbey were ot\nthe opinion thtt their lnformtnti\nwould feel freer to expreu themielvei if invited to give evidence ln\nprlvite.\nSCHOONER OF NUDIST COLONIZERS\nFOR VIRGIN ISLANDS GOES AGROUND\nTAMPA, Fla, Fab. I  (AP)-A\nparty of prospective nudist colonisers who put to tea without a ndva-\ngitor becauie none would ihed hit\nclothes to than thtlr lot wtrt reported tgrouad in their schooner\ntonight it-the mouth ot tht Hillt-\nborough bay.\nPaulng freighter! brought word\nof tht thip'i plight to Tirana. The\n\u25a0hip lett here bound tor tha Virgin\nlilanda\u20141400 mllet away.\nThou aboard the heighten that\nlighted Uie nudiit ichoontr uld iht\nippirenUy hid been left itrandtd\nby tbe ebb tide t..d might float\nlater on the flood. Tbey uid tht\n\u2022ppeired In no dinger.\nTha craft, a 65-footer tuxilitry-\npowered, wiled yuterday. Ita commander li Miurice Allird, foundtr\not Uit \"Vut Vana todtty.\"\nWtterf ronton helped the craw of\nthe ichoontr, tht Fleetwood, load\ntheir automobile, tuppllu, ud a\ndeck load of fuel oil, and watched\nu the craft itood out tor the open\naaa on lti 1400-mile Journey.\nRaids by Troops Are\nProvocatory,\"\nNote Says\nFRANCE WORRIED\nOVER GERMANY\nWork to Prevent Any\nMove by Hitler\nto Austria\nMOSCOW, Feb. .3 (AP)-Sovlet\nRussia's fir-etitern irmy high corn-\nmud in u unusual itep todiy issued a communique accusing Jap-\ninese ud Minchoukuan troopi of\n\"provocatory ralda\" into Soviet territory.\nSoldlen of the Jipenrae-tponsor-\ned itate of Manchoukuo, the communique ataerted, have taku up a\npoiition ntar the Soviet border and\nare dltpatcbing scouts into Russian\nterritory.\nThli wtt the lateit development In\ni long series of bother incidents\nwhich htve strained relitioni between Moscow and Tokyo. The communique, issued from Khabarovsk\nmd made public ln Moacow, said\n(Continued on Ptgt Ttn)\nMEAT FAMINE IS\nFEARED, LONDON\nLONDON, Feb. 3 (CP Htvu).-\nMort than 8000 worken employed\nat tha big Smithfield central market hare voted tonight to continue\ntheir wage strike, which threatens\nto cause a meat famine among Lon-\ndoa'l 8,000,000 residents.\nThe decision wu reached despite\nt govtrnment appeal for mediation,\nwhich led earlier ln the day to a\ntwo-hour meeting in Butchen' hall,\ncalled by the ministry ot labor.\nErneit Bevln, general lecretary\nof the Transport ud General Worken' union, refused tonight to com-\nment on the itrike decision. It was\nknown, however, thit union leaden\nhad appealed to the dissatisfied\nworken to stop the walkout md return to work.\nMemwhile, Londonen began to\nhuiband their kitchen reserves ot\nmeat u the situation assumed increasingly grave proportions.\n73 Cancer Deaths\nIn B.(. in Month\nVICTORIA, Feb. 3 (CP)-Cancer\ntook a toll ot 73 deaths in British\nColumbia during December, according to the monthly bulletin of\nthe vital itatiitici brinch. Tuberculosis accounted tor 40 deaths;\npneumonii, ill types, 28; smallpox\n1; influenza 5; diphtheria 1, dysentery 1, encephalitis 1, and eight persons lost their Uves in motor accident!. There were 33 children under\none year of age Included in the total.\nNotifiable diseases reported in\nJinuiry wert: cancer 4; cerebral\nspinal meningitis 1; chicken pox 359;\nconjunctivitii 4; encephalltii 1; ery-\nilpelu 14; .Germm meaelee 534; Influent! 84; meeiles 487; mumps 703;\npneumonii, ill typu 23; icarlet fiver 148; teptic sore thrott 28; smallpox 2; tetanus 1; trachoma 12; tuberculoili 59 ud whooping cough 102.\n\u25a0 Draper Approves\nProbe Findings\nOTTAWA, Ftb. 3 (CP)-Hope the\ngovernment wlU mtke provision\n\"it the eirllest poulble moment\"\nfor putting Uto effect recommendations ot the labor departments committee on reUef camps, u embodied ln the report Just issued, wu\nexpreued todiy by P. M. Draper,\npreildent ot the Tradei ud Labor\nCongreu ot Canada.\n\"I am in thorough agreement with\nthat part ot the report ot tbe committee advocating thit 'relief camps\nihould bt cloied u toon u poulble to tht but intereit! of the\nentire country,'\" Mr. Draper uld.\nTAYLOR CASE ADJOURNED\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 3 (CP)-Trlll\nof Eric Tiylor, 28, on t charge of\nrobbery with violence, opened before Judge A. M. Harper ln county\ncourt today ud wat adjourned to\nFeb. 7,\nThe iccuied mm It alleged to\nhave held up Mlu Ann Corra ln\ntha Rex confectionery, Hutingi\nitrtet, on Dec. 28, md eiciped with\n128.80.\nSUMMONS ALL-SUPREME DEFENCE\nCOMMISSION TO MEET HIM AND\nMAKE SURE EVERYTHING READY\n\u25a0 \u25a0i. nn i mm !\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0   _p^_\u2014\nWar Plans Show What Million-Man Military\nMachine Could Do; Warning Oil Embargo\nMeans World War Aaain Is Sounded\n___________________ i\nLEAGUE STARTS TO CONSIDER OIL\nSANCTIONS; EYES ARE ON THE U. S.\nWoman Dies as\nHot Water Bottle\nExplodes in Bed\nPORT QU'APPELLE, Silk., Fib.\n3 (CP)\u2014 Mn. Ivtn Mickie dltd\ntodty from ihock ind icildi received by the explosion of a hot\nwater bottlt In htr bed lut Wedneidiy night\nThe British Colony of\nKenya Charges\nEthiopia\nRESERVE VERDICT\nON FERNIE MAN'S\nAPPEAL AT COAST\nJ. E. Ball Convicted of\nManslaughter for\nShooting Harmas\nVICTORIA, Feb. 3 (CP)- The\ncourt of appeal today reserved\njudgment In the case ot James Everett Bill, convicted of manslaughter in connection wth tne fatal shooting ot Mik Harm-is at Dorr, Koot-\ntnay district, on May 8 lut, md\nsentenced by Mr. JujUce P.J.. Mcdonald at the lait Fernie assizei to\n20 yean Imprisonment\nBall, through couniel, J. R. Nicholion, appealed against sentence on\nthree groundi\u2014extreme provocation, no previoui criminal record,\n.and excessive sentence, as well as\nthe strong recommer, .ation for\nmercy returned by the jury which\nreduced the charge from murder to\nmms'aughter.\nThe shooting culminated a serlu\nOf mirltal disagreement! bstweon\nBall ud hli wife, Involving Hir-\nmu. Colonel Eric Pepler for Uie\nciown oppoiad reduction of len-\ntence.\nBy A.  K. 8TUNTZ\nAuoclited Prtu Stiff Writer\nROME, Ftb. 3 (AP)-Prtmltr\nMuuollni hu summoned his all-\n\u2022uprtmt defence commission te\nmttt with him tomorrow to mtkt\nturt Italy It ready In the tvtnt of\na Europun war.\nWar plant thowlng whit tht\n1#<AO-0-min military machine\ncould do to protect Italy's 44,0.0,-\n000 population If League of Nations unctioni ruult In war will\nbt gone ovtr.\nTht commiuion will mttt t ftw\nhoun btfort tht ttoond Ftbrutry\nseulon of tht Fatcltt grind council to mtp Italy'i Immedlite military program, chiefly In Africa.\nWhile letgue experts studied the\npossibilities of an oil sanction, Vlr-\nginio Gtyda, friud of II Duce ud\ninformed writer, aaid in u editorial\n(Contlnutd on Ptgt Ttn)\n(RAZED FARMER\nBURNS FAMILY\nMcGeerSuspends\nAudit Clerk\nFive Children Perish\nWith Father in\nBlazing Home\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 3 (CP).*-W.\nA. Tucker, Internal audit clerk, was\nsuspended by Mayor G. G. McGeer\nwhen the inquiry-into the audit department's affairs wu resumed today.\nTucker's luspenslon followed his\nadmission that he had retained Vancouver public library books for\nfour years. The Inquiry resulted\nfrom affidavits made by Tucker\nconcerning Walter Wardaugh and\nInternal Auditor Fnnk Stead, who\nhave been suipended pending completion of tbe civic committee's\nprobe.\nThe mayor, ln unounclng Tucker'! suspension, uld he had checked\nUie itandardi of ethical requirement! which are to be expected In\nauditing ud wu agreed that my\ntampering with petty cuh or itamps\nor borrowing from individuals, are\npracticu that can't be tolerated\nwithout running the rlik of i major\ndlaaater.\n19 LOSE JOBS\nWITH VANCOUVER\nHARBOR BOARD\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 3 (CP>.~\nTwo executive ud 17 employeei have been dlsraiued from\n\u2022the Vmcouver harbor board by\nthe centnl port authotity at\nOttawa. They were givu notice\nof dismissal Friday.\n. Those affected are J. A. Blair,\nsuperintendent of Second Ntr-\nrowi bridge, M. D. McLetn, gtntril tuperlntendent of the Vu-\ncouver harbor board terminal\nrailway md 17 clerki, foremin\nmd subforemen employed it\nBallantyne md Lapointe piers\nor at the Second Narrows bridge\nud in the central offices.\nMUSHER NEAR BURWA8H\nJUNEAU, Aluka, Feb. 3 (AP).-\nMary Joyce, 24, travaUing by dog\nteam from Taku to Fairbanki, Atas-\nka, wu expected at Burwash Landing, Y.T., tonight or tomorrow, Robert EUli of Juneau wu inforirV\ntodty by t radio mesuge from the\nPiclfic Alaska Alrwayt itatlon it\nBurwash.\nREGINA, Feb. 3 (CP)-Whlle hia\n-ite tad two stepsons were absent\nat a party in town, Joseph J ott, 47-\nyear-old farmer and former scoot\n.eacher, residing iwo mllu north ot\nLemberg, ict tire to hli barn ud >\nall home, burning himieif ud five\nchildren u> deaUl at 11:30 o'clock\nSunday night\nOn.y lj-year-old Annie Joit, who j\nslept in the aame bedroom with her I\nfather, escaped. After a battle with '\niief  apparuiitly   demented . parent,\nshe leaped through the window and\nru three-quarten of a mile to a\nneighbor'i home in 30-below zero\nweather, badly freezing her btre\nfeet\nTht other five chUdren ilept ln\nanother room ud were burned to\ndeath in their beds.\nThey were Margaret 18 monthi\nold; Genevieve, 4 yean; Irene,. J\nyears; Lucy, 8 years; Ramond, 10\nyean.\nAnnie Jost la at the home of a\nneighbor, with feet ud legs frozen\nto her kneei but with fair dunce\nof recovery.\nRemaining memben of the family\nare Mrs. Joseph Jost, and three\nchildren by a former mintage,\nPeter, WUlie ud Clara Schick.\nFERNIE GRANTED\nRELIEF LOAN\nVICTORIA, Ftb. 3 (CP)-Rtlltf\nloans of $8837 to Fernlt, tnd 81880\nto Merritt, wtrt ipprovtd todty\nby tht provlnclil govtrnmtnt\nTHE WEATHER\nNELSON\t\nVictoria\t\nNualmo \t\nVancouver _.\nKamloopi\nPrince George\t\nEstevu Point \t\nPrince Rupert \t\nAtlin _. \t\nDawson , \t\nSeatUe \t\n.Portland - \t\nSu Franciico\t\nSpoktne\nMln.\n- 8\n-.38\n-.30\n-.28\n- 2\n_10'\n...38\n... 24\n.. 10\n~3V\n..30\nLos Angelei\t\nPuUcton\t\nVernon  \t\nGrmd Forki \u2014\nKulo - \t\nCrmbrook ......\nCilgiry\t\nEdmonton .\nSwift Current \u2014...\nPrince Albert\t\nSaskatoon  ....\nQu'AppeUa\t\nWinnipeg .\n44\n. 10\n...46\n. 11\n. 4\n. 12'\n. 6\n. 13-\n. 14*\n. 18*\n. 18*\n\/44\u00ab\n. 42*\n40*\n.42*\n28*\nMix.\n18\n57\n58\n58\nIB\n6\n40\n34\n13\n2V\n38\n40\n50\n22\n80\n8\n2\n12*\n2\n12*\n24'\n14\"\n12'\n10*\nMooie Jiw\t\n\u2022\u2014Below zero.\nForecut for Nelion md vicinity\u2014\nIn-reaiing eaiterly winds, cloudj\nwith snow.\nI\n Mas two -\nPerrier Hlne Being Refinanced;\nle Add Ball Mill, Diesel Plant\n -- \u25a0-\nVancouver Parties Interested; Propose to\nEventually Build a New Mill\nSy SIDNEY NORMAN\nMining Editor, Vmcouvtr Sufi\nVancouver parties have undertaken refinancing of the Perrler\nmine, tour miles south ot Nelson on\n: Cottonwood creek, Just bft the main\nNelson-Spokine highway. Thl property is traversed by the Great\nNorthern railway and the Ymlr-\nSheep Creek powtr line ot Wtlt\nKootenty Power k Light company.\nTht old mill is to bt revamped\nby addiUon of ball mill, jigs and\n1  classifier and preient witer power\n, will be augmented by installation\nof a 45 h.p. diesel plant\nEventually lt Is proposed to con-\n{ itruct t new mlU below a new shaft\nto bt lunk above the railway track,\nabout 750 feet north of the present\nmain shaft and all machinery will\n' then be hooked up to the Weit Kooteniy electric power lines.\nI The old shift hu already bttn\ncleaned out and retlmbered and\nNo. 2 level li being driven north. A\nrecent report estimates ore ln sight\nat around 10,000 torn, averaging between .4 and & oz gold per ton. Ore\nIn thi north heading ls at around\ntwo feet\nIn the put the mine hai produced\ntbout 3000 toni of ore, milled or\nihlpped to imelter, containing values\nas above.\nGENERAL OUTLOOK\nIn iplte of considerable activity\nln eaitern mining markets, there\nhu bttn no reflection in shape of\nbetter trading ln tht Vancouver\nmarket\nWhile there have been tomt price\napprtciiUoni, thiy have been largely  confined  to  lnterllited  issues,\nIf a Cold\nThreatens..\nespecially designed\naid (dr note and\nupper thrott, helpi\nprevent mtny cofcls.\nVicks Vatrohol\nCREATiipRTHERN\nWEEK-END\nEXCURSION\nFARES\nto SPOKANE\n*\nFrom South Nelson\n5.00 ROUND\nTRIP\nTlekits oi uli Frldivs tnd Sttur-\ndlys, Jtn. 31 to April 28. Flml\n^^^^^^^ rtturn limit\n. following Tuesday. Children\nhalf-fart.\n881   Baker  St\nPhona 67\nTrivol by Trsln\nSAFETY \u2022 COMFORT\niuch ti Pionetr, Bralorne ud Premier.\nAi t matter of fact, new promotion has practically, ceased In Vancouver and thtrt ire few Junior\ngold issues to catch tht tyt of tht\ntraders.\nThtt suggests lomething wrong In\nfundamental conditioni ln this provinct, especially ln vltw of tht fict\nthat producing mines art operating\nat capacity, with every promise of\nhigh returns tor January\nOur conclusion is that administration of the draiUc provincial \"blue-\nsky\" law has largely driven the\nprospector and smill promoter out\nof the gime and thus ltd to a condition that ls to be deeply regretted\nfrom the viewpoint of the future\nprosperity of the province.\nit is exiomatic that new mlnu\nmust be tound and brought Into\nburlng from time to Ume to takt\nthe places of thoie that become exhausted and any curb upon honeit\neffort helps to preclude that possibility.\nWe do not hesitate to lay, after 40\nyears' experience in mining throughout the United Statea and Canadi,\nthat Uit pruent liwi must be liberalized before any material improvement can be expected.\nIn thit connecUon, in tddress\nmide ln SeatUe lait week by H. G.\nGarrett admlnlitrator of the act\nand superintendent ot broken, before the Mining Institute at tht Univenity of Wuhington, ii Illuminating as definitely establishing the\nfact that the government hu gone\ninto the buiineu ot valuating mlnu\n-an abiolute impouiblllty lt Uit\nfuturt of tht lnduitry and Justice\nto Uie individual are to be kept In\nsight\nPIONEER OPENING\nNEW LEVELS\nWe understand -that January producUon of Pionetr, Brldgt River,\nwiU be up to tht uiuil Itvtl and\nthat rapid progreu is being made\nin the 12 new levels btlow the 14th\nof No. 2 shaft.\nElectrical hoisting uid pumping\nequipment is being instilled and\nwhen that work hu bten completed,\nit ii expected that croucut will be\nrun to vein tt tht 28th level, thui\ndisclosing lt at depth of 3200 teet\nfrom surface.\nSo far, the loweit level at which\nit hit been opened li tht 17th, where\nwidths and valuei hive been proven\nnormal. At all levell btlow, the\nwork ot running partial crosscuts of\nibout 100 feet in length to prevent\ninjury to the ihift from blutlng\nhu about been completed)\nBefore the ahd of Februiry lt la\nreasonable to expect newt ot the\nutmost Importance. So fir, the rich\nvein hu ihown no ilgn of losing\nlti value ind lt li considered a reasonable aisumpUon that no diminution will be disclosed at tht lowut\nlevel.\nBRALORNE'S NEW\nRESERVES\nEarly this week No. 6 Itvtl of\nBralorne mine, ott No. 1, or Ida\nMay, shaft, had proved t length of\n1000 feet of ore on tht Ida May\nvein and 400 ftet on tht Blickbird\nvtln, (which mty prove to bt t\nfaulted section of the Ida May), with\nvaluei avenging between .4 tnd .5\noz gold per ton.\nSince thtt time tht heading hu\nbeen contlnutd on the Blickbird\nsection ind on Friday was reported\nstill In ort ot average width and\ngrade.\nRecent work hu largely added to\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest in tht Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\n\u2022Yet Bui Servict Oto. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST SOo tnd UP\nLUNCHEON 40o to 50c DINNER 40c to 88e\nROTARY AND OYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 717 NELSON. B.C. 42E VERNON ST.\nHUME\u2014P. Willlimi, M. Hermin,\nTrill; S. Silverman, Winnipeg; J. H.\nLewii, R. Crawford, Medicine Hat;\n0. Sherman, New York; G. E. Landon, W. Margetion, London, Eng.;\nW. C. S. Hobklrk, Vancouver; C. B.\nR. Sargent, Hong Kong, China; S. O.\nP. Sargent, Longbeach; A. E. WatU,\nSouth Slocan; S. H. Davii, Mn. D.\nFisher and daughter, Slocan City;\nMn. Hogarth, Crawford Bay.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Whert tht Guett it King\"\nNELSON'S NEWEST AND FINEST HOTEL\nFully tlceneid\n124 Baker St.        W. K. Clirk, Prop.        Nelson. B. C\n[ Mew Grand Hotel\nP. L KAPAK. Prop.\nHot tnd Ctld Wttir\nUncle 80e uo: double 60. up\nMonthly ritei 810.00 UD\nPH 114      811 VERNON ST.\ntoelnmt Sally Nrmn\nJnterlor of British Columbli's\n|Mo\u00abt Interesting Newspaper\nOccidental Motel\nrOS Virnon St Phonl 887L\nH. WASSICK. Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortablt Roomi\nFullv Lloenied\nMadden Hotel\nA Wtleomt Awaitt You\nJAS. A MADDEN Proo.\nCtmiltttlv Remodelled\nHM tnt Colt Wtter\nIn tht HEART ot thl CttV\nPHONI H     IM WARD IT\nVANCOUVER, B.C., HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDuSf erln Hotel\n808 l^vmour St      Vincouvir. B.C.\nNiwlv Renovitid Throuthout\nPhones   -   8 levator\nA. PATERSON, lttt of\nColemtn. Alta. Proprietor.\nNELSON DAILY NIWS. N-fLSON. I.C-TUESDAY MORNINO, FEBRUARY 4.1\nore reserves tnd thtrt Is bow little\ndoubt thit, birring outiide troublu,\ntht mint wUl be btck upon I dividend buis within the ntxt two\nmonthi, with the cuh ruerve of\n81,000,000 and at ltut 800,080 toni\nof gold ore reasonably in sight.\nOperations havt bttn conducted\nstetdily during January and production ihould bt about tbt time\nas in December,.when a record wu\nmadt.\nCARIBOO'S MILL STEP-UP\nOrderi hivt been plactd for ad-\ndlUonal machinery to itep Up ct-\npaclty of plant ot Cirlboo Oold\nQuartz Mining company, Cariboo\ndistrict, from 150 to 200 tons dally,\nwith expectation that the work will\nbe completed in May or June. It\nwill bt remembered thtt ctpicity\nwu Increued from 100 to 180 torn\nlut August.\nR. R. Rose, M.E,, managing director, reporti lirgt reserves being\nopened from No, 2 shaft In the\nRainbow fault area and No. 3 shaft\nin the Sanden area, at the 1600 and\n1700-foot leveli, with values holding\nsteadily at about the usual avtragt.\nA crew ot about 200 men li -employed ln the operation. One of the\nmost complete hospitals lh the Interior of the provinct wu recently\ncompleted, together with 22 cottages for married employees, at\nthe town of Weill, owntd by tht\ncompiny,\nKOOTENAY BELLE'S\nDECEMBER OUTPUT\nF. M. Black, managing director of\nKootenay Belle Gold mlnei, Sheep\nCreek cimp, reporti 1200 torn of\nore milled in December, 1838, yielding 580.1 ou gold and 887 oil illver.\nfor approximate grou value of\n$20,480.\nNet satUement, after deduction of\nfreight and imelter chargu, but\nwith part of gold premium calculated, wu $18,804.\nExpense!, Including the 2 ptr cent\nmlnertl tax, wtrt $11,116, leaving\nnet operating profit for the month\nat $8488, lubject to It! proportion\nof depletion, depreciation and Dominion Income tax.\nBroken ore on hand tt the end\nof December wu utlmited at 10,468\ntons.\nDENTONIA ENTERS\nOREBODY\nIt ll officially rtported thtt It t\npoint ibout 3(0 feet from tht main\n550-foot level croucut, louth drift\n\u2022t Dentonis mint, Greenwood dlitrict, hu entered a good-looking\norebody, about three fett widt.\nWhile valuei were low at that point\nthe development li considered Important, u the heeding is now entering the area where downward continuation of Uit Rowe orebody may\nbe expected. At upper levels thii\norebody yielded targe tonnage of\ngood ort.\nWhUt rumors wire afloit thit\nthe compiny hid taken over snother\nproperty, the report was officially\ndenied, although It il tdmltted that\nseveral propositions hava bttn considered. So far, nothing definite\nhu resulted. In any event President Nelson S. Smith, who Is now\nperminently settled ln Vincouvir,\nuys tint my new deal entered Into\nby the company wUl Include provision thit sums idvanced wiU be recovered from tint production, thui\npreserving the present cash surplus\nat $20,000.\nOperaUons are being continued\nunder normal conditions.\nISLAND MOUNTAIN'S DEBT\nThe loin to Island Mountain\nminu, Cariboo diitrict, from Ntw-\nmont Mining corporation, which\nhu optriUng control of tht property, standing at $225,000 in December, 1834, has been reduced to $37,000\nthe difference having been paid off\nfrom earnings during 1838, in addition to heavy expendlturu for new\nsurface equipment new domuUc\nquarter! and all costs of development.\nThe obligations, in view of the\nmine's iplendld producUon record,\nis coniidered trifling, tupportlng\nthe belief that the company will\nbecome the second divldend-piylng\nlode mine ln Uie diitrict within the\nnext few monthi.\nQOLD BELT CROUCUT\nDeep-level crosscut it Gold Belt\nmine, Sheep Creek cimp, operating control of which wai taken\nover by North American mlnei, of\nBoston, Mui. lilt spring, il now\nin 1190 fut from portal, or about\nhilf wiy to iti objective at verticil\ndepth of iround 1800 fett from\nsurface.\nNew cimp hu been built neir Uie\nportal ot thi deep level, at about\nthe same elevation ai the Reno mill,\ntht Mme elevation as the Reno\nmill, and new equipment, Including\nmucking machine, dieiel plant and\nlocomotive, hu been added.\nIt li reported thit progreu Is\nbeing mide it the rate of about 16\nfeet dilly, io thit the main objective ihould be reached ln about\nthree monthi.\nVIDETTE MILLING\nSTEADIEY\nMilling operations at Vldette mine,\n38 miles trom Savons, Ashcroft\nmining dlvlilon, wai returned on\nDecember 6, 1888, and have ilnce\nbeen maintained it a dally average\nof about 32 toni, resulting in shlpmenti up till list week of 80 tons\not concentrate, of ipproximite value\not $23,908 pow.\nAll development fices ire rtported ln ore avenging IS lnchu ln\nwidth ind with values avenging\naround 1.8 on gold per ton.\nRecent development! have Included disclosure of the downward\ncontlnuaUon of the Broken Ridge\nore ihoot it i point 180 feet eut of\nthe miln croucut. Drifting is under\nwiy ind it last report length of 20\nfeet or on had been disclosed, wlh\naverage width of 20 lnchu, running\n1.8 ot gold per ton.\nOVER (3,000\nTONSJANUARY\nTrai\nReceipts for 10\nDays Exceed\n13,000 Tons\nBor Gold Up Three\nMONTREAL, Feb. 3 (CP)-Bir\ngold ln London up S ctnti it $38.28\nan ounce ln Canadian fundi; 140s\nlid In BriUih fundi. Tht flxtd\n$88 Wuhington prlct amounted to\n$34.81 In Cinidlin.\nAn tttnctlvt iprlng outfit consists of s three-piece iuit which in-\ncludu I two-piece grty flannel\nJscket iuit ind a teparate topcoat\nin plaid tweed which lntroducu\nblack and red on a gray ground.\nReceipts of ore and concentrates\nby the Consolidated   Mining\n$2,300,000 IN\nBONUS FOR MEN\nWITH CHRYSLER\nNEW YORK, Feb. 3 (AP)-A\ndistribution of $2,300,000 to 30,000\neraployets in Cmada and United\nStatei is planned by Chryiler corporation, it wu announced today by\nWalter P. Chrysler, chilrmin, snd\nK. T. Keller, preiident.\nThe fund his been spproprlited\nbut of the corporation'! eimlngs,\nand will be distributed to present\nemployees who were on the payroll!\nGold Fern, Nelion ,\nHighland Lais, Beaverdell .\nLitUe Daisy, Silverton\t\nRambler, Beaverdell\t\nSally, Beaverdell \t\nConcentratei:\nHomestake, Louli Creek .\nMeridian, Beaton\t\nReno, Salmo\t\nYankee Girl, Ymlr .\u201e\nI\n85\n4\n7\n43\n198\n48\n36\n162\nWeek's cuitom tonnage    380\nWeek's company tonnigt     13,486\nWeek'i total recelpti  18,846\nPROVIDES INDIAN\nWITH LIQUOR AND\nIS SENT TO JAIL\nSimon Nieson wai lodged ln the\nNelson provincial jail Sunday to\nserve a three month's term for providing in Indlin with liquor. He\nappeired before Stipendiary Magistrate J, M, Leask at Cranbrook and\nwai ucorted to Nelson by Constable\nR. W, Powen,\n$47,700 Output\not Sheep Creek\nfor Last Month\nVANCOUVER, Ftb, S (CP)-\nSheep Creek Qold mlnu, Ltd., todiy reported production viiited\nit $47,700 for January comp%ed\nwith $48,000 during December.\nU.S. DOLLAR OFF\nMONTREAL, Feb. 3 (CP)-Gtln\nof 2 8-16 cents waa marked up On\nMontrul foreign exchange! today\nby the pound iterling at $5.01 13-16.\nThe United States dollar dipped 1-16\nof one per ctnt st 89 11-16 cents\nwhile the French franc held even\nat 6.67 cents.\nof 1938,\nTht minimum payment U eich\nemployee will bt $30.\nSmelting Company of Canada at! during any part of the flnt quarter\nTrail for January were 43.632 tons,\nwet weight, made up ot 42,472 tons\nof Company  shipments,  tnd  1160\ntons of cuitom shipments.\nOver one-third of this total represents the lait 10 days of the month,\nWhen 13,848 tons wu added to tht\nstock pile, 13,488 tons of lt from\ncompany sources, and 360 ton! from\ncustom producers. Of the custom\nreceipts, 198 tons was crude ore\nfrom aeven propertlei, and 162 torn\nwas concentratei from tour properties.\nFoUowing are detailed receipts\ngiven in the current on itatement\nfrom Tnll, covering the period of\nJanuary 22-31:\nOre:\nBell, Beaverdell      4!\nEvening Star, Rossland       16\nMONTREALLISI\nIS IRREGULAR\nMONTREAL, Feb. i (CP)-Salto-\ntlve buying put a number of special\ntin In front on Montrul itock exchinge todiy but the remainder of\nthe list failed to follow the lead and\nthe market closed irregularly.\nConsolidated Smelters finished\nwith s five-point gain it 280. Noranda gained a fraction while Hollinger held even.\nInternational Nickel finished\noff Vt.\nMining leaders wu Falconbrldge\nwith a gain of 35 cents. Wright Hargreaves added 29. Bulolo dipped ..\npoint\nSalu of the stock exchange totalled 46,818 shares and $22,775 ln\nbonds. Curb market salu were 273,-\n535 sharei.\nAIRBASI\t\nAMOSSOMM\nNEAR (OMPLETE\nLanding Fields, Fully\nEquipped, Soon to\nBe Ready\nRelief Arlington,\nYankee Girl Gain\nVANCOUVIR, Feb. ! (CP)-Ap-\npirenUy spurred by the Increase\nin crude oil prices reported ln the\nprairie provinces and eastern Canada, Calgary k Edmonton OU took\nover the spotlight on the Vincouver\nstock exchange today. Galni of 1\nto 10 pointa were recorded in tha\noils Hit, with C. k E. topping the\ngroup with a 10-point idvince to 93.\nSales totalled 112,947 shares.\nIn the golds, Bralorne added 8\nat -6.75, Relief Arlington It 45 and\nYmlr Yankee Girl at 68 each added\n1 cent. Losses of 2 centi were noted\nin Cirlboo Gold at 1.20, Premier at\n1.90 and Gold Belt at 38. Sheep\nCreek lost 3 centa it 67 ind Kooteniy Belle wis down 1 cent at 33.\nPioneer and Vldette remained unchanged at 11.25 and 61 respectively.\nPrices on other precious metals\nwere mixed.\nBralorne Output\nIs$.o4.500\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 8 (CP) -\nBralorne Mlnet, Ltd., produced 4700\nfine ouncu of gold, valued at $184,-\n500, from 14,170 torn of on during\nJanuary thli yttr, according to \u25a0\nreport iuued todiy.\nThil approximate! tht iverage\nmonthly value of production of the\ncompiny. In December the output\nwas valued at $187,440.\nSpecial Commercial and Aulo\nLicences Are Now Available\nal Nelson; Green and (ream\n1550 Auto Plates Are\nSold During '35\nat Nelson\nTrucks will appear on Kootenay\nand British Columbia roads this\nyear with licence plates designed\nespecially for this type of motor\nvehicle. Classed as commercial\nplatei they will be the ume shipe\nind color as those for automobiles,\ngreen with cream letters, but Insteid\nof the district numbers in front nf\nthe plate numben, they will be\nmarked CA, CB, CD, etc,\nAuto and truck licence plates for\n1936 are now procurable at Nelson\nfor holders of 1935 plates. Those who\nturnod In their platei for the refund last tall, or thoie who have\npurehued ntw vehicles, muit wilt\nuntU February 24 to secure tht '30\nplaten.\nAl lutolita who trt still optratlng\non list year's licence! hive a full\nmonth in which to secure their new\nones, and thou without licences\nhivt two diys, no grace will be allowed. Car and truck ownen are\nwarned that prosecution will follow\nif the 1933 pistes trt dlspltyed on\nor after March 1.\nThe new licence platei which hive\nbeen received at Nelson, are small\nand neat, being fully an inch and a\nhalf shorter than those of last ytar.\nThey are dark green with crum\nletten ind a small border of Uit\nsame color.\nIn the cise of plates for trucki two\nleries will be Issued it the Nelion\ngovernment office, from CK 661 to\nCK 999 and CN 1 to CN 75. Serial\nnumben for automobile! are from\n47.481 to 48,723. Application formi\nfor trucks are marked with a large\nC, signifying commercial.\nAnother change In the Motor\nVehicle act thii year Is provisions\nmade for automobiles which have\nbeen converted to serve U trucks.\nOwners of such vehicles must mike'\napplication through the government\noffice it Nelson to Victoria for a\nlicence. In order to secure plates\nwithout delay ownen are advised\nto make early application.\nStatistics show that ln Nelion\nthere wu a substantial Increue in\nthe number of tutoi on the roid lest\nyeir. In 1934 ipproxlmitely 1400\nplates were iuued u compared\nwith 1850 lut year.\nMore Marriages and Deaths but\nFewer December Births In B.C.\nNelson Has Three Births, Two Deaths and 14\nMarriages; Trail Has 12 Births, Six\nDeaths and Eight Marriages\nVICTORIA, Feb. 8 (CP)-There\nwu s decided decrease in the number of births In BriUsh Columbii in\nDecember ti compirtd with the\numt month ot 1934, iccording to\ntht monthly bulletin of the vital\nitatiitici brinch. Lut December 763\nblrthi wen registered ll igalnst\n888 In Dectmbtr 1984.\nDttthi increued from 474 In December 1834 to 651 ln the corru-\nponding month of 1934. Marriages\nalso Increued; there having been 424\nsolemnised In December lilt ll compered with 393 ln Uie umt period ot\n1934.\nA general lummiry of births,\ndtaths and marriages throughout\ntha provinct Includes: Kamloopi 10\nblrthi, 11 deathi and 9 marriages;\nMerritt 4, 1 snd 0; Revelitokt 8, 3\nind -J; Kelowna tl, 5 tnd 4; Vtrnon\n10, S tnd >; Cranbrook 1, 1 ind 3:\nFernlt 3,2 ind 2| Ntlion 3,2 tnd 14;\nRosslind 8, 5 and 3; Trail IX 6 and\n8; Grand Forks 5,3 and 0.   *\nockshutt Plow\nHas Net Loss\nBRANTFORD, Ont., Feb. 3 (CP)-\nOperations of the Cockshutt Plow\nCompany, Ltd., Brantford, during\nthe year ended Nov. 30,1935, showed\na profit of $119,195.36, before depredation and Interest, compared with\na lou of $182,931.33 in the preceding\nyear the annual report showed today, i ,\nAfter deductions, I ntt lot_T of\n$218,627.99 was shown. Salu for the\nyear showed an increase over the\npreceding year of approximately 42\nper cent, the report showed.\nSy PRANK FLAHERTY\nCinidlin Pren Staff Wrlttr\nOTTAWA, Feb. 3 (Ci.-Canada's\ntranscontinental airway li ripldly\nnaarlng the stage where malls may\nbe whisked from the AUantlc to the\nPacific ln leu than 24 hours.\nTht transcanada air line hu been\na cherished dream of avlaton en-\nthuiasts for yeara and quiet but persistent work on the part ot the civil\navlaUon branch ot the national defence department ln the put two\nor three years is now in evidence all\n{across Canada.\nI As the whole rqute ls now surveyed and the ground work of providing landing fields weU advanced\nI bit of Intensive effort could place\nthe airway in operaUon in the space\not a few monthi Perhaps the event\nwhich will give the project its final\npush will be the opening of a trans-\nAtlantic air service, now set down\nfor 1936 or 1937.\nWhen the airway ls completed it\nwill string emergency landing fields\nat Intervals of 23 or 30 miles. Larger\nfields with hangars and equipment\nfor servicing and refuelling will be\nlocated at a few key points. The\nwhole coune will be equipped with\nradio and meteorological service! for\naircraft and all except the mountain\nsection will be lighted it night. It ii\nexpected flying through the mountain! will be done ln diyllght\nFrom Vincouver to HiUfix the\nairline distance along the protected\nroute is 3108 milu. On s westward\nhop an airplane could leave Montreal at eight or nine pin. and arrive in Vancouver at noon the following day on the basis ot present\nnormal flying speeds.\nThe return trip could be made by\nluving Vancouver at one p.m. and\narriving in Montreal in time for\nmorning mail deliveries the following day. The hop from Montreal to\nHalifax of 680 mllu would require\nabout four houn more. The distance\nbetween the two coasta could be\nspanned easily in less than 24 houn\nflying Ume.\nWork ii now being pushed on\nthree sections of the lirwiy, the\nmountain lection, the Ontario section md the Quebec and Maritime\nlection. The prairie tection wu completed in 1929 and 1930 and wu in\nactual UN while tir mail lervices\nwen maintained acrou the province! of Manitoba, Saskatchewan and\nAlberta. It hu not been uied for\nthe past two or three yean.\nMOUNTAIN ROUTE\nFrom Vancouver the route proceeds eastward through the Crows\nNut Pau to Lethbridge, Alts, The\nCrows Nut wu choien in preference to the Kicking Hone md Yellow Koid Pauei becauie lt ii tht\nshortest and most direct route and\npaues through better flying country. It traversti in area which ii\nmort highly developed md better\nsettled than the othen md enjoys\nbetter weither.\nOn tht mountain ttttlon thtrt\ntrt new ilx llemotd lirports\nmilntilnid by municipalities ar\nprlvitt Interests. Thi govirnmtnt hu completed tnt lirpert\nIt Princeton ,iix more tn miring completion ind four in undtr\ndevelopment Six mon mult be\nicqulred.\nTht prairie section hu 27 completed tending fleldi tlong Uit routei\ntrom Lethbrldge to Winnipeg ind\nLethbrldge to Edmonton. Lighting\nequipment for these fields ls in\nstorage md there are five radio\nbeaconl.\nFrom Winnipeg the airway follows the lint ot the Canadian National railways through northern\nOntario to Cochrane. Thli northern\nroute wai choien beciuse of better\ncllmitlc conditions previlllng back\nfrom tht Great Lakei and because'\nlt WU euler to find suitable landing sites. The Mitern md of the\nroute pisses through the clay belt.\nBy avoiding the rocky territory\nalong the northern ihorei of the\nlake) It wis easier to build the air-\nWay in straight line sectlonl to conform to beam wireless courses.\nIn Northtrn Ontario 14 sites hive\nnow been developed to the point\nwhere landing is possible. They are\nnot yet open to the public however\n\u25a0nd hive not been marked on maps\nIuued to pilots. Work Is progressing under the unemployment relief\nplin on 21 other sites md six more\nhtvt ytt to be icqulred.\nFrom Cochrane tht lint swings\nlouth to Emidale, Ont, where it\nsplits into two branchu, one going\nto Toronto md the other to Mon-\ntnal.\nThe eastern end of the airway\ncuti itraight eait from Montreal to\nStint John and Moncton, N. B, paulng over the State ot Milne. A turvey showed this wu the most direct\nroute md the but flying country.\nUnder the unemployment relief\nplm flvt Intermedtte airdromes\nhive been constructed on this section md in now luitible for tending by departmental aircraft Two\nother sites are being developed and\ntwo mon hivt been icqulred for\ndevelopment ln 1938. No development hu betn undertaken by Cinida In Uie State ot Maine but It is\nlikely arrangement! will be made\ntor Cmadian flien to makt uie ot\nexisting tlrdromu for tmirgency\nlandings.\nFrom Moncton one brinch of tht\nairway will cut southeut to Hallftx\nand tnothtr. although not yet completely surveyed, will itretch eait-\nwtrd to Sydney by wiy of New\nGlugow.\nINDUSTRIALS\nAT NEW HIGH\nTORONTO, Feb. 3 (CP)-Advmc-\nlng on active buying late In the day.\nindustrial listings of the Toronto exchange set a new high mark since\n1933 in today's tnding.\nNickel iwung down 'i from 48H\nto 48H but Consolidated Smelters\nclosed 13 points under Saturday'!\nfinal.\nBratilian alio turned huvy, ug-\nging V, to in. Ford A loit H.\nC. P. R. H md Bell Telephone cloied\nunchanged at 150.\nThe oil itocki churned about. British American and Intematinal Petroleum were down Vt to % at the\nclose.\nBAYONNE PUNS\nPOWEP. PROJECT\n375 H.P. on Summit\nCreek Near Tye\nEastern Company\nViews Properties\nDevelop and Diamond\nDrill Properties\nAcquired\nBen  H.  Budgeon, director of\nmines for the J. E, Himmll Interests of Toronto ind pirty of engineers, who have been In thl Nelson\ndistrict for the put two weeks,\nhtvt left for Vancouver en route\ntut vii Chlcigo.\nWhile ln Nelson the pirty made\nseveral preliminary inspections ot\ngold properties on Toad and Morning mountains, immediately south\not tht city.\nBefore leaving, Mr, Budgeon Intl\nmated that development md poisl-\nbiy diamond drilling program would\nbe carried on at such properties u\nthey had acquired, as soon as weither condltioni permit\n\"Unlesi you hive exceptional\nmowi in the next few weeks,\" Mr.\nBudgeon stated, \"we should be ible\nto get an earlier start than usual,\njudging from the fall to date at the\n4000 and 5000 foot elevations. Iit's\nonly about half the usual amount ot\nroughly 10 ftet.\"\nBeyond itating that hli compiny\nwu lntereitlng themielvei In several\nproperties in this area, tht euterner\nmade no specific mention at the\npresent time.\nMr. Budgeon stated that W, 3.\nTurner of Nelson had been retained\nu representative of the HamiU interests in this district.\nThe party apent two days In Uie\nYmir camp Immediately prior to\nluving, chiefly on pleuure.\nIncluded in the party were R. D.\nAdams, who is well-known in northern BriUsh Columbii md California,\nJ. W. 8torer of Toronto and William\nDe Villier, field engineer for the\ncompany.\nPrior to accepting hll preient appointment a few monthi ago, Mr.\nBudgeon wu In charge of open\ntiom at Pickle Crow Gold minet\nfor Mr. Himmill.\nOTTAWA, Feb. 3\u2014IncrtUed IC-\nMvlty in the mining lnduitry ln\n1935 was responsible for new hydro-\nelectric Installations In many parta\nof Canada, aocording to the recent\nstatement on water power development in tht Dominion Inutd by\nHon. T. A. Crerar, minister of the\nInterior. Of the total new Installation! tht principal additions to\nlerve the mining industry took\nplice ln Yukon Territory and in\nthe provinces ot BriUih Columbia,\nManitoba and Ontario.\nNew water-power installaUom In\nBritish Columbia during the year\nwere confined to two, both In con\"\nnectlon with the mining lnduitry.\nBullion Placers, Ltd., completed and\nput Into operation a 500 h.p. Installation from which electrical energy\nts transmitted a distance of five\nmilei to a pumping plant to augment the water supply for placer\ngold operations at the Bullion mine\nnear Hydraulic, B.C,\nThe company also his under contemplation the ConitrucUon ot a\nhydro pumoing plant to use the\nwaten of tho louth fork of the\nQuesnel river.\nPioneer Gold minu Installed a\n880 h.p. water-wheel in place ot the\nformer wheel of 100 h.p.\nA number of other new Installations are In contemplation In British\nColumbia, those growing out of the\ndevelopment of mining Including a\nproposed addiUon by the British\nColumbia Nickel minei of another\n2000 h.p. to its plmt by developing\nEmory creek, and the Bayonne\nConsolidated mines' contemplated\nconstruction of a power project of*\n375 h.p. on Summit creek near\nTye, B.C.\nMINES BULLISH\n$5,000,000 IN GOLD\nFOR FRANCE\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 3 (API-\nSecretary Morgenthau announced\nlate today the United States treasury\nhad licenced gold shipments of more\nthan $3,000,000 to France and $363,-\n000 to Holland.\nMore Export of\nFarm Machinery\n0'_~AWA, Feb. 3 (CP)-Canadlan\nexports of farm Implements and\nmachinery In December wen valued\nat $47,700 for January compared\nititiitici reported today. This wu\nan Increase of $157.VI8 over December, 1934, and ot $30,588 over November, 1935.\nThe United States wai Uie largest\nbuyer taking $168,689 worth and\nBritish Souht Africa took the second\nlargest quanUty, $94,481 worth.\nBUTTER LOSES\nMONTREAL, Feb. 3 (CP)-But-\nter prices shaded slightly during today's dealing! on the produce section of Cmidlan commodity exchange.\nButter, Que. regraded 23; western\nregrided 23V\u00ab.\nCheese, Quebec whltei UH.\nIn Guanajuato, Mexico, bodiei of\nthe dead whose relaUves have failed\nto pay the rental fees for their\ngraves were placed in long catacombs beneath the burial grounds.\nTORONTO, Feb. 3 (CP)-After\nlagging through moit of tbe session\nthe mining list ot the Toronto exchange turned buUlsh in the last\nhour as inflation sentiment gathered\nstrength ln Wall atreet.\nIn the late up-tum, Mclntyrt advanced IH to Vm, md Dome and\nLake Shore added % to tt uch. Pioneer, Hollinger tnd Brilorni ug-\nged moderately.\nHigh lights of the cheaper gold\ngroup were Macassa, Beattle md\nProspectors Airways, all adding 18\nto 25 cente.\nHeavy buying ihot Filconbrldge\ntoward 40 centi to 8.60, Ita high\nmirk. Hudion Bay hit 18. Venturei\n16, Waite Amulet 9 end Aldermic Vt.\nOils were mixed.\nGENERAL MOTORS\nTO PAY DIVIDEND\nNEW YORK, Feb. 3 (CP)-Gen-\neral Moton CorporaUon today declared a regular quarterly dividend\not 80 centa s common share payable\nMarch 12 to stock of record Feb, 13.\nCanadian Dollar\nGains at N.Y.\nCold Shipped to Europe ts\nCurrencies Continue\nUpward\nNEW YORK, Feb. 3 (CP)-Gold\nshipments to Paris ind Amsterdam\nwere arranged today u leading cur-\nrendu continued to advmce in\nterms of Uie United States dollar\non the foreign exchange markets.\nThe eastward shipments of the yellow metal will be tht first linct\n1934.\nThe franc rait MV, of I ctnt io\n8.69U cente, the level tt Which shlpmenti ot gold from New York to\nPiris are profitable. The pound\nsterling was up 3 cents at $3.03H at\nttl peak and cloied 2H cents higher\nit fs.oav*.\nThe Canadian dollir Increued Its\npremium over the United Statu unit\nfrom Yi to H of 1 per cent\nSCIATICA\nSukDUg pain ia kip us* ttlf*\n\" Wu imsble to-Imp or stiD-ap lieu K__le\u00bb;\nFrem Uk flnt i.m, _ T-R-C \u2022 (lot nU; now\nno -mi|om.\"-J. C. mt-ernm, UtM-\nuoiM, Oat 1-rXC, -111 M> rm <t\u00abl-_\n-v-i_ ________., ^\u2014Ttsitean oat td\nlitU-te)\nnome, Ont.   T-KC, am orai eat\nnliri i\u00bb _M\u00ab Dm J\u2022l\u00bb\u00ab*\u2022__\u00bb,\nrH.bc^iT\u00bbS_Xu.\nJ. H.M.Greenwood\n420 Baktr St Nelion. B.C.\nHlghut Prlcu\u2014Honeit Griding\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS|\nNORWAY\nPINE\nSYRUP\nTroublesome Night Coughs\nHard on the System\nIt U tht cough that stick\u25a0; thl cough thit li\nhard to get rid of; the cough, accompanied by a\ntickling Tn the throat, that causes the nerve and\nthroat wracking trouble that keeps you awaki _t\nnight.\nDr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrop relieves this\ncoughing condition hy soothing the irritated parte,\nloosening the phlegm, and strengthening the\nbronchial organs. When this is done there is ao\nmoro lying awaki at night with thl system wracking, irritating cough.\nOtt t bottlt trom your druggist. It wUl help you.\n \\fl\nNELION DAILY NEWI. NELION. B.C-TUESDAY \"OWNING. FEBRUARY 4. 1936\n- PAGI THREM\nRAMS FIGHTING\nPUT ON SCREEN\nIN GAME TALK\nMovies and Slides of\nWild Life Shown\nby Mr. Pop\nCANADIAN CLUB\nLADIES FAVORED\nBig Game Hunter Puts\nin Plea for Game\n\u25a0Management\nA pair of bighorn rams battling\nover a ewe, a couple of mountain\ngoats climbing a vertical precipice,\na pair of silvertips moseying along,\nf silvertip being shot, a black bear\non Its way, elk, caribou, deer feeding or on trek\u2014these were some of\nthe outstanding thrills retained\nJrom the Illustrated address given\nSaturday night by G. L. Pop, Vancouver big game hunter, before the\nWomen's Canadian club, at Its\nluncheon at the Hume.\nThe animals here mentioned were\nshown in moving pictures personally\ntaken by Mr. Pop, and the movies\nwere preceded by lantern slides of\na still wider range. Altogether, Mr.\nPop held his audience for nearly\ntwo hours, the slides and movies,\nwhich followed his address, taking\na full hour to present.\nTwo exquisite solos by Mrs. Reginald Hagarty opened the evening's\nprogram.\nIn introducing the speaker, Mrs.\nH. H. MacKenzie, president of the\nclub, expressed the conviction that\nMr. Pop would make his subject of\n\"Big Game in British Columbia\" of\nintense interest, and mentioned the\ngeneral interest big game had In\npublic attention, enforcing the latter point by a reference to the way\nVictoria's citizens, including the\ndenizens of the parliament buildings, threw work aside and rushed\nout to the beaches whenever there\n\u2022was a rumor that \"Caddy\" was to be\nseen. Conceding Caddy's astuteness\nin never appearing In the same place\nor before the same person twice,\nMrs. MacKenzie left it to be inferred -that this was another evidence of the excellent mentality of\nthe lower orders of nature.\nTHII PROVINCE FIRST\nMr. Pop, who stated he had travelled In practically every part ot the\nworld, hunting and collecting big\ngame, including the African continent, the Aleutian islands, and the\nKenai peninsula, said he had made\ncomparisons of the big game ot the\nvarious countries, and of the ways\nthey were hunted, and had come to\nthe conclusion that British Colum\nbia led all others both in quality and\nquantity at tte big game, while\nhunting conditions were far superior ln this country. While Africa\nmight be exotic, It was not so\nhealthy, and in frequent trips be-\ntweens the tropics and Canada he\nhad talked with many foreign\nsportsmen, who admitted their visits\nhere had not been disappointing.\nOnly two great game areas used\ntheir game advantages for effective\npublicity to draw sportsmen to hunt,\nthose being Africa and Alaska, Mr.\nPop said. Last year, for instance,\nwhen he went north to hunt, 20\nother hunting parties bound for\niCoriiak Bay were on the same boat,\nPREDATORS THE DANGER\nHe argued that the people of the\nprovince should be educated tu\nknow their big game, and to realize\nthe fnancial opportunity it offered.\nTo.wait until the game sank was\nnot the time to act, but before a decline siarted, for Nature, as had been\nconclusively proven many times,\nwould not take care of it alone.\nCougar.; and wolves did more damage ti t . game than all the hunters,\nhe co.,.timed, and mentioned that\nhe had Just heard from Vancouver\nIsland that the cougars there, having\ncleaned up on the deer, were starting on the raccoons, ln the north\nhunters reported that the cougars\nhad become plentiful, while wolves\nwere destructive to the sheep.\nThe 16 species of big game here\nwere wortn millions to tne province,\nhe contended, and should receive\nrecognition. The eastern provinces\nonly had three species, and Alberta\nhad nine. He argued that the number of outside hunters, who could\ncollectively make a great financial\ncontribution to the province, would\nonly be a drop in the bucket in the\ntotal number of hunters, and would\nnot adversely affect the game supply\nas long as the does were left. Nature,\nhe said, was more destructive than\nthese hunters. For instance, a bull\nelk with a harem of 20 hinds would\ndrive off younger bulls and perhaps\nsome of them would be fatally gored. Removal of that bull by a hunter would result ln a favorable redistribution of the band.\nGAME MANAGEMENT NEEDED\nIn speaking \u201e the financial returns of game, he mentioned that\nAlaskan guides charged $2500 for\ntaking out one hunter for a limited\nperiod, and it would cost two men I\n$5000. He mentioned one Alaska j\nguide who took in $16,000 ln one\nseason All this money would find\nlocal distribution. In this connection, he saw an opportunity for British Columbia youth to enter lucrative calling in guiding, and for others\nto become expert in game management. The value to the government\nof attracting foreign sportsmen he\nillustrated with the $12,834 paid to\nthe government in fees in 1934, by\n179 outside big game hunters,\namounting to $71 a head, as compared with $135,000 from 35,704 local\nhunters, cr about $4 a head. Getting\nin these visitors would not be unfair\nto the local hunters, as the latter had\nabout the cheapest hunUng conditions that existed anywhere\u2014the\ncheapest be had met with.\nHis conclusion was that the gov-\nI ernment should get in experts to\nBURNS HONORED\nAT CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK,  B.C. -  Another j\nhighly successful Burn's night celebration was held by the Cranbrook j\nCaledonian society in the Cranbrook |\nauditorium January 21. Some 275 j\npeople sat down to a meal which 1\nIncluded all the well-known Scot- |\ntish dishes, prepared by the ladies ]\not the society with Mra. J. MacDon- !\naid as convener.  The haggis was\nborne to the feast by Miss Nan McLeary, .accompanied by the pipers,\nA.   Graham,   H.   Strachan  and  L. j\nEwen. The address to the haggis was !\ngiven by J. MacDonald.\nG. J. Spreull was chairman.\nR. McNish sang two Scottish songs.\nMiss Nan McLeary accompanied by\nPiper H. Strachan, danced the Highland fling. \"Immortal Memory\" was\ngiven by Rev. R. W. Hardy. Mrs. G.\nMacDonald rendered two beautiful\nScottish songs. A reading \"Cuddle\nDoon,\" and a song, \"The teason We\nWill Wear the Kilt\" were rendered\nby Miss Nan McLeary by special\nrequest. J. Little sang two Scottish\nsolos.\nFollowing the dinner the dance\nwas opened with the grand march\nled by the three pipers. Dancing\ncontinued until 1 o'clock with several old-time numbers, including all\nthe famous old Scottish quadrilles,\nbeing danced.\nS. McLeary was floor manager.\nROMILLY BOYS\nAGAIN THRILL\nMUSIC LOVERS\nA large gathering of Nelsonltes\nwas thrilled for a second time Sunday night by the singing of 12\nWelsh boy singers, the Romilly\nboys choir, at a sacred concert in St.\nPaul's United church.\nEach number in itself was a treat\nand the singers were given undivided attention. The program was almost entirely different, chiefly of a\nsacred nature, from Friday night.\nCRESTON MAN\nAT SIRDAR\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO COMMISSION\nNETWORK\n5:00 From the Green Room, back\nstage, Montreal (not B.C.); 5:30\nNews, BC. Net.; Music tor Today,\nB.C. 5:46; 6:00 No Mournful Numbers, Winnipeg; 6:30 This Is Paris,\nsoloists and orch., dlr. Andre Duri-\neux, Montreal to M.B.S.; 7:00 By\nMoonlight, soloists and orch., Edmonton; 7:30 Women of Yesterday\nand Today, Ottawa; 7:45 Canadian\nPren News; 8:00 Time Signal;\nAcross the Border, C.B.S.-N.Y.; 8:30\nOn the Riviera, Calangls Family,\ndlr. Jack Avison, Gerhardt \u2022 Oily,\nVancouver; 9:00 Just S'posln', drama, dir. W. McQuillan, Winnipeg\n(West. Net.); 9:30 Melody Moods,\ndir. Ina McCartney, Vancouver\n(West. Net.); 10:00 Starlight, orch.\nand soloists, dlr. Percy Harvey, Vancouver (B.C. Net.); 10:30 News (B.C.\nNet); 10:43 Your Province and Dominion, Vancouver (B.C. Net).\nannounced; Jack Armstrong, drama,\nKGO; 6:00 Crosscuts From the Log\no' the Day, Dr. Laurence L. Cross,\nSouthern Harmony Four; 6:30 Old\nWorld Music, vocalist; S. F. Municipal Government, interview (KPO);\n6:45 Air Adventures of Jimmy Allen\n(KGO); 7:00 Popeye the Sailor Man\n(KGO); N.B.C. Cinema Theater; 7:15\nArgentine Trio; 7:30 Meredith Will-\nson's orch.; 8:00 California State\nChamber of Commerce (KGO); John\nTeel, baritone; 8:15 Dick Gasparre's\norch.; 8:30 Harold Stern's orch.;\nShandor, violinist; 9:08 Joe Rines'\norch.; 9:30 Enric Madriguera's orch.;\n10:00 Paul Pendarvis' orch.; 10:30\nDel Courtney's orch.; 11:00 Curfew,\nCharles Runyan, organist.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO\n590 620 640 680 920\n3:00 Beaux Arts Trio, instrumental; 5:30 Visiting Capt. Dobbs, Armand Glrard; 6:00 Ben Bernie and\nthe Lads; 6:30 Jumbo, serial, Hippodrome, Don Novis, Jimmy Durante,\ndir. Billy Rose; 7:00 Stud'o Party,\nSlgmund Romberg, Deems Taylor.\nHelen Marshall, Morton Bowes; 7:30\n.nmmv Fidler, Hollywood gossio;\n7:45 Night Editor, Hal Burdick,\nKPO; Ella Logan, songs; 8:00 Amos\n_ Andy; 8:15 Lum and Abner; 8:30\nLeo Reisman's orch., Phil Duey,\nJohnny; Eton Boys, Sully Singer;\n9:00 Death Valley Days, Old Ranger,\nnarrator; 9:30 Crime Clues, mystery\ndrama; 10:00 News Flashes, Sam\nHayes; 10:15 Tom Coakley's orch.;\n10:30 Jimmy Grler's orch.; 11:00\nShep Field's orch.; 11:30 Griff Williams' orch.\nSIRDAR, B.C.-S. Nastasi of Creston was a visito rhere at the weekend.\nGeorge Everal was a visitor here\nMonday by car and later went on\nto Creston.\nBuck Davies of Creston was here\nThursday, bringing his truck with\na load of supplies.\nArt French from the kitchen staff\nat the road camp was at his home at\nCreston for the week-end.\nSydney Rogers was here for the\nweek-end from Glenlily. He expects to return there by motor cycle.\nNelson Minister\nIs Registered\nAmong ministers in thii district\nregistered under the Marriage act\nrecently were Rev. J. M. Burns of\nthe Roman Catholic church at Kimberley and Rev. Victor L. Meyer\nof the Evangelical Lutheran church\nat Nelson. Notice ot their registration appears in the last issue of the\nBritish Columbia Gazette.\nN.B.C\n-KGO\nBLUE NETWORK\nKGO\nKJR\nKEX\nKECA\nKGA\n700\n970\n1180\n14S0\n1470\n8:00 Pair of Pianos; 5:46\nTo be\n-a_a\n\u25a0  \u25a0\n\u25a0H \u25a0\nM____fc\nPOSITIVELY\nThe finett ceal that wa\nhave ever had the privilege to offer\nDRUMHELLER\nREGAL\nLUMP, ten .... $10 50\nNUT, ten     $9.00\nFairview\nFuel Supply Co.\nPHONE 701\nC.B.8. DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN K8L KOL\n670 610 940 1130 1270\n5:00 The Harmonettes; 5:15 Eddie\nDunstedter, organist; 5:30 Lawrence\nTlbbett, baritone, Don Voorhees'\norch.; 6:00 Don Lee Workshop, D.L.;\n6:15 Gaylord Carter, D.L.; 6:30 Country Church of Hollywood, DX.; 7:00\nTo be announced; 7:30 March of Time\n7:45 On the Air With Lud Gluskin,\nKOL; 8:00 Myrt and Marge, serial;\n8:15 Ozzie Nelson's orch.; Male Chorus Parade, D.L.; 8:30 Caravan: Walter O'Keefe, Deane Janis, Glen\nGray's orch.; 9:00 Fred Waring's\nPennsylvanlans; 10:00 Jimmy Bit-\ntick and orch., KPO; 10:30 Larry\nLee's orch., D.L.; 10:45 Sterling\nYoung's orch., D.L.-KVI; 11:00 Jimmy Dorsey's orch., D.L.; 11:15 Ted\nDawson's orch., D.L.-KVI; 11:30 Les\nHit's dance orch., D.L.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouver 600 w\n5:15 Cariboo Cowboys; 6:15 News\nFlashes; 6:30 King's Messenger; 7:00\nSelf-Heip; 7:15 Voice of Commonwealth; 7:30 Lie Leeson, Hawaiian;\n7:45 Ozzie Ross, songs; 8:00 Investment Talk; 8:10 Laddie Watkis,\nsongs; 8:30 George White; 8:45 June\nDay; 9:00 Len Chamberlain's orch.;\n9:30 Jimmy Morris, singer; 9:45 The\nHomesteaders; 10:15 Stan Inglis'\norch.; 10:45 News.\n1030 k CFCN 291.3 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n5:00 Cecil and Sally, E.T.; 5:15\nBlack and Blue; 6:00 Helen ot Troy;\n6:30 Hi-Hilaritles; 6:43 Do You Believe ln Ghosts? 7:15 Song Souvenirs; 7:45 Watanabe and Archie,\nE.T.; 8:00 Club Cabana; 8:45 True\nConfessions; 9:00 News.\nBRITISH   EMPIRE   PROGRAMS\nShort Wave\u2014Pacific Standard Time\nTRANSMISSION 6\nTwo of the following frequencies will be used: G8D, 11,760 k.\n(25.53 m.): GSC. 9580 k. (31.32 m.);\nOIL, 6110 k. (49.10 m.l.\n7:00 pm. Big Ben, Two Plays:\n(1) \"The Power and the Glory\", a\nmodern tragedy, (2) \"Jessie's Eggs\"\n(or 'The Downfall of Septimus\"), a\nradio play; 7:40 Musical Interlude;\nmanage the province's game supply,\nand the money should be found\nsome how to keep down the predators.\nThe rest ot Mr. Pop's facinating\naddress was in explaining and commenting on the pictures, Mrs. J. C.\nArgyle handling the lantern, and\nMr. Pop himself later the projecting\nmachine for the movies.\nThe four great game areas of the\nprovince were stated by Mr, Pop\nto be the East Kootenay, the Cariboo, the Cassiar, and the Coast\nrange.\nRECORD ELK EAST KOOTENAY\nHia first slides were of the East\nKootenay, which haU elk, sheep and\ngoat, as well as moose, though the\nmoose was not the best species. Several of his slides were from pictures\nhe had taken with telephoto lens\non the Palliser stream in East Kootenay, including the world's record\nelk, which he had bagged there. One\nof the slides showed a nine-toot\ngrizzly he had bagged in the Big\nBend country. Incidentally he held\nthe opinion that the British Columbia silvertip though topped by the\nAlaska brown bear ln size, was its\nsuperior in strength, and was the\nfinest bear.\nMount Robson area he described\nas a moose and cariboo country,\nwith also great sheep range. Woodland Caribou were pictured, this\nspecies having antlers of a more\nerect carriage and narrower compass than the northern caribou,\nwhose habitat is more open country.\nTo get into the Cassiar district, a\ntwo-day boat trip on the Stikine\nriver was necessary, and the trip\nwas worth taking entirely apart\nfrom hunting. He told of a steamer\nload of visitors, Including himself,\nhaving a battery of cameras trained\non a huge grizzly that was fishing,\nand of how in the thrill of watching\nthe monster flip out a big salmon\nwith his claw, all forgot to click\nthe shutter.\nPRIZES IN EUROPE\nSome of the slides were of game\ntrophies he had personally secured,\nand which subsequently he showed\nat a world exhibition in Europe,\nwhere he took the prize ln every\nclass he showed In.\nThe movies were still more thrilling than the slides, and covered a\nwide range of British Columbia's big\ngame.\nMra. J. A. Gibson moved a vote ot\nthanks to Mr. Pop for his fascinating\naddress, after which, she asserted,\nthe club members would follow the\nbig game with interest. Mrs. MacKenzie extending him the thanks\nof the club.\nMany men Joined the audience as\nguests after the luncheon period,\nto enjoy the lecture.\nFEBRUARY   action   FLASHES\nAT \"THE BAY\"\nJ DAYS - TUESDAY-WEDNESDAY-THURSDAY\nFEBRUARY MADE-TO-MEASURE SUIT CLASSIC!\nTWO-\nTROUSER\nSUITS\nTalk about value\u2014These suits pack plenty! Come in and see these fine tweed fabrics\nin checks, herringbones and plains\u2014Then be measured for the best suit value you ever\nhad! Remember, just three days\u2014Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday\u2014to take advantage\nof this great offer.\nwool! WOOL! WOOL!\nA SPECIAL THAT DEMANDS ACTION\nA Superior 3-ply Canadian wool. Excellent for Afghans, rugs, mitts,\nsocks, and sweaters. 22 different shades. 1-OZ. BALL\nWOMEN'S BOUDOIR SLIPPERS\nBlue embossed leather slippers with padded\nchrome  soles, pom-pom and  rubber heels.\nSizes 4 to 8.\nPAIR \t\nSO'\nChildren's Oxfords\nFLOOR MOPS\nComplete with handle. Regular 49c OP<*\nvalue. EACH   _-J\nSHERWIN-WILLIAMS'\nFLOOR WAX\nThese are 1-lb. tins and sell regu- *\\M\nlarly at 45c per tin. EACH LV\nMISSES' SKIRTS\n25 only, heavy skirts in black, navy and\nbrown. 9 size 14, 9 size 16, 3 (1 QQ\nsize 18, 3 size 20. EACH fll-Jj\nRAYON BROCADE\nBEDSPREADS\nJust a few at this low price. Size 80\ninches by 100 inches. ffl QQ\nEACH  4)1.30\nPASTEL TOWELS\nChecks and stripes. Medium size. 09^\nHeavy absorbent quality.    EACH Let\nFLAT CREPE\nBeautiful pastel shades and some dark\ncolors. 38 inches wide. Regularly AM\n85c per yard. YARD *_->\n59 Only\nWHITE SHEETS\nLimit of 2 hemstitched or plain sheets to\neach customer. Size 80 inches (1 A A\nby 90 inches. EACH .pl.UU\nHOUSEDRESSES\nA dress for the price of an apron! AM\nSmall and medium sizes. EACH ..   -f\nTEA APRONS\nDainty patterns, fresh, tubfast . OQa*\nprints. Pretty shades. EACH J 3\nMEN'S TROUSERS\nMen's dress pants in plain blue M 4Q\nand stripes. PAIR  aP-L.f J\nMEN'S SWEATERS\nAll wool coat sweaters. Heather fll QC\nshades. EACH  fll.JJ\nCUPS AND SAUCERS\nHeavy kitchen quality. Plain white. Ct\nCUP AND SAUCER O\nBlack  Elk  uppers,  blucher  cut,   flexible\nleather soles and rubber heels. Practically\nall sizes from 5 to 1 Vi.\nPAIR  \t\n*1_49\nJ&\n0*\n^ WOMEN'S and\nMISSES' CREPE\nDRESSES $2\nSmart dresses for early spring wear in plain or printed crepes, trimmed\nwith pleatings, bows and fancy buttons. Big color range. Sizes 14 to 44.\n.95\nBE HERE AT THE DOOR OPENING\nPerfect SILK HOSE\n89\nSheer chiffon, dull crepe and heavy service weight hose at\na price that pleases all. Full-fashioned, and remember\u2014\nEvery pair is PERFECT.\nPAIR  \t\nPimm\n50 ONLY\nFLANNELETTE\nSHEETS\nAll white first quality. Size 70 inches by 90 inches.\nWhipped singly. Limit 2 to a customer. Be on hand % *M aOO\nearly to take advantage of this offer. X\nEACH   \t\n3 DAY SALE OF FELT BASE     ]\nFLOOR COVERING\nGood patterns suitable for any room. These are 6 feet wide\nand are offered for 3 days only at this extra low price. AQC\nPRICE, PER SQUARE YARD . - - \u2022* w\nj-:-.:;:;-:;:::::;;::..:_ .\u2022.-\u2022-':--;'>.>;;.:;:. _\u25a0:\u2022;\u2022:-;\u00ab;.\nttfcutf? mi (wttq. utifi*\nATSD  2^? MAY 1670.\nTtftrniih. \u2022.' .''j *-\u25a0-' 'it i' r ~' ~* ' *' * I r i'i ' '\u00bb-_\u25a0\u25a0 *iM it i' ri \u25a0 * \u25a0 *-*\u25a0\u2022- \u25a0 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u2022 \u25a0 \u2022 \u25a0 \u2022 * \u2022^whH\u00bbwii*_-\u00abi\n&\u00bb\u2022!&-!:%*\u2022-&:\u2022:\u2022:\n:_:\u25a0.\u2022:\u2022:__:::\u2022-::::\n IQE FOUR -\niASOLINE MART\nHERE UNRUFFLED\n\\dvance on Plains, a\nWar at Coast, of\nNo Influence\nRising gasoline prices on the pral-\ne, and a gasoline price wtr at\nancouver with the Texaco people\nitting prices, alike left the Nelson\n(tail guoline mirket unruffled\nlonday.\nH. B. acre, preildent of the Wut\nootenty Automobile Deiltri tan-\nation, when aiked what changes\nany had occurred in Neiaon, uid\nIat prices were unchanged,\nAdvances of halt a cent in retail\nrices in both Manitoba ud Al-\n\u25barta, reported ln Calgary and Win-\nIpeg dispatches ln Monday's Daily\ntws, and credited to itrtngthen-\nK prices ln tha United Statu, had\nI direct bearing here, Mr. Gore\nated, as this district received its\nipplies from the coast.\nOn the other hand, he stated the\nIgular distributing houses, at tht\nlast had maintained existing pric.es\nhen tbe invading Texaco compapy\n|ade a four-cent cut last week, and\niat nothing had occurred to alter\nMiditions tor the trade here that\nu supplied by established chan-\nlls.\nJAPAN IS HIGH\nWHIST TABLE\nMn. J. Culton, C. McCallum and\nMr. and Mrt, H. J. Metzgar, occupying table Japan, carried off whist\nhonon it a whiit drive and old\ntime dmce held by the I.O.OJ.\nlodge In the I.O.O.F. hall Monday\nnight. Twenty tables were in play.\nCommittee members wert Mrs. A.\nG. Lane, Mn. I. Boyce, Mrs. M\nOrmerod, A. Q, Lane, Jamei Robertson, A. Welth and 3. Draper.\n31 PIGS BURN\nWILLOW POINT\nUKUSP LADY\nIS TEA HOSTESS\nNAKUSP, B.C.-Mrs. L. Ward en-\nitained at the tea hour Wednu-\nfar on her ion, Raymond'! lecond\nirthday. A birthdiy cake with two\nIlk candlei centered the tea table\nfcich wai presided over by Mrs. G.\ni Horsley. Mn. L. Brown usisted\n| serving.\nCuests were Mn. J. Dividson tnd\ngrne, Mrs. A. SUnley ind Allan,\n|rs. E. Oxenham, Joy and Bernard,\n[rs. L. Brown and John, Mrs. G.\n, Horsley, Miss Ruth Horsley and\nUu Anita Horsley.\nMrs. W. Carruthers has retutned\n!0m  several week's visit at the\nlast.\njj. Popplewell of Revelstoke wis\n[Visitor in Nakusp.\nC. McLeod of Nelson visited in\niwn.\nMr. and Mrs. E. Nelson, Florence,\ntm and Clifford Picard left Satur-\n|y for New Denver to reside.\nR. McWhirter has returned from\nleison where he was employed for\niveral weeks.\nA. Ruzicka of New Denver was\nI town Friday.\n\u2022Mr. and Mrs. Ivor Johnson were in\n>wn from Arrow Park on Friday.\nleison City\nCouncil Briefs\nNelson city council Monday night:\nReferred to. the finance committee\nrequest tor a price on tome lots\nRosemont,   requested   by   Vic\nblick.\nReferred to fire, witer md light\npmmittee i petition for salary ad-\nastmenti received trom operators\npd oilers it the city power plmt.\nGranted a Ucence to Mn. F. Main-\nfid to operate the Strathcona hotel\na lodging house.\nGranted Nelson school board an\n(ditional two weeki on filing of\nnual estimates.\njHeard a requeit tor five new\nkatlresses for the fire hall. Fire,\npater and light committee will instigate.\nJReferred to the finance committee\nId the public works committee the\nlatter of improving grounds around\nae city schools as suggested by the\nBison school board.\nlAppointed Alderman T. W. Slider,\nnairmtn of the parks board, at a\neuncil representative on the \"beau-\n\u25a0ication committee\" of the Nelson\nbard of trade. The move il a co-\nfcerative one for suggestions, etc.,\npen chtnges tre mtde by the city\nIta varioui beiuty spots.\njAnnual reporti for wtter worki\nId public worki were received\nlorn the city engineer and were\nId over for further consideration.\nElection payroll amounted to\n.60.87 according to Uie finance\njmmittee'i report.\n(Referred to the public works com-\n\\tttt several tenden received for\nIpplylng an order for fire bricks.\nheard that street railway receipts\nJanuary,   1036,  were  11243.75\n|mpaiod to $1919.90 for the same\nnth in 1933.\n[hawing Outfit Is\nBusy in Nelson\nith the continued cold spell of\npast tew dayi troubles are de\n\u25a0oping for the city electrical and\niterworks  departments.   Monday\nly Engineer Potter reported three\nps for uie of the electrical thaw-\nmachine. ConUnued cold weath-\nwlth tht smill imount of mow\nthe ground miy give idded grief\nI wtter users.\nMoorish womin who doei not\nf e birth to \u2022 ton miy be divorced\nher huibind but miy mirry\nJin, with Ult consent ot the tribe.\nproceu miy continue until the\nfive birth to i ion.\nOwner Chas. Bing and\nMrs. Bing Rescue\n50 More\nNELSON DAILY NEWS NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. FEBRUARY 4. 1936\nClaims Marketing Ad Gives the\nDominion Power le Control Every\nSmall Business in This Country\nAttack on Act Opens Before Supreme Court;\nAnswer Is That Can Legislate Against\nCombines or for Them\nThirty pig! were burned to deith\nor died from burn! in a fire which\ndestroyed Charles Blng's pig shed\nat Willow Point about 3:30 Monday\nafternoon. About M other pigs were\nrescued by Mr. and Mrs. Bing at\nthe cost of slight body md arm\nburns, A truck housed in an adjoining shed ctught fire but wu driven\noff md Uie fire extinguiihed. The\nihed burned.\nAi the blue was in the doorway\nof tha pig ihed the ownen hid difficulty In freeing the mimals md\nonly mantgtd to slow up the fire\nby poking tht shakes off the roof.\nRotary Host to\nMayor, Council\nGuests Speak of\nCivic Center\nProject\nMayor J. P. Morgan md members\nof the Nelson city council were\nguests of the Rotary club at ill\nnoon luncheon In the Hume hotel\nsilver room Monday, and iU ipoke\nbriefly. Aldermm N. C. Stibbs was\nunable to attend.\nA letter wu received from the\nLondon, Eng., Rotary club stating\nthat J. F. Campbell, Nelwn Rotarian, had viiited with them and\nhad left an autographed booklet ol\n\"Kootenay md the City ot Nelton,\"\nmd a similar letter wu alto received from the Southtmpton club.\nM. E. Harper announced the attendance of the club was up for\nJanuary, and every effort would be\nmade to continue the improvement\nduring February.\nIn Introducing his aldermen,\nMayor Morgan praised them for the\nmanner in which they had given of\ntheir time md efforts on behalf of\nthe city. Commenting on the auditorium project, he said that the cost\nwu greater than expected, but that\nwas due, mainly, to the fact that a\nbetter building was put up thm\nwas plmned at the beginning. The\nwisdom of this move would prove\nbeneficial later on in lower insurance costs, lower upkeep and so en.\nHe uked the Rotary club to take\nthe ume lnterut in the clvlo centre\nthat it had in the past and thanked\nthem for the part they had taken\nat the official opening of the rink.\nAs the city had returned all but\none of Uie council, that member\nhaving not found it convenient to\nstand, lt must be in accord with the\ncouncil, obierved Aldermm Roy\nSharp, chilrmin of tht finance committee. Last year the civic center\nwis only a possibility md this yur\nit was nttring realization. From the\nportion ot Uie centre that was completed, there were greater returns\nthan had been expected, md ho\nhoped that as the remainder was\ncompleted, returns from it would\nbe correspondingly larger.\nAlderman H. B. Lindsay, chairman of the fire, wtttr md light\ncommittee, declared that lut year\nwu the greatut in the hiitory of\nNelton from a financial point of\nview, and he hoped that the pruent\nyeir would be even better. He believed some changes were needed\nIn lhe light rates and intended\nbringing some action to bear on that\nmatter.\nAldermm T. H. Waten, who wu\nintroduced u the alderman who had\ngiven more Ume to the city than\nany other ont ln lti hiitory, believed thtt the publicity given was\nworth the price expended on the\ncivic centre. He had had requests\nfrom eastern publictUont for information and pictures ibout the\ncentre. Although the centre htd cott\nmore than wu anticipated, the\nvalue was there, and the extra cost\ndid not ariie through mistakes, but\nthrough a deiire to build more\nsoundly. Also the value of Uie centre In making for a community\nspirit could not be estimated.\nAlderman AUck Ritchie, chairman pf the itreet railwiy commltttt, promiied every effort to mike\nthe railwiy pty.\nAldermm T. W. Slader, who\nMayor Morgan itated mtde the\nstreet railway piy better than in\nprevioui years, observed that the\ncouncil had to do something lait\nyear ai the local business men had\njeopardized their standings in many\ncases by giving too much credit md\ntht civic centre project hid tervtd\nto alleviate the difficulties In some\nmeasure.\nPresident R. W. Dawson said the\nRotary club wu highly lymptthttlc\nto tht council md even though\nmuch criticiim hid been levelled it\nthtm, tht mtmbtn realised thtt\ncriticism would bt forthcoming no\nmitter whit the venture might be.\nThe community iplrlt the civic centre wu foitering could not ba ovtr-\nlooked, md lti vtlue In thtt rupect\nwu worth tht additional cost. Tht\nclub, ht concluded, wu gltd to have\nthe mtyor tnd council preient.\nCity Clerk W. E. Wiuon uld he\nOTTAWA, Fab. a (CP)-Under\nthe far-reaching provisions of the\nMarketing act, the Dominion hat\npower to control practically every\nsmall busineu ln the country, paying no attention to provincial boundaries or local condition!, it wu\ncontended before the supreme court\ntoday by '\u2022 A- Humphries, deputy\nattorney-general for Ontario.\nThe Ontario official joined Aime\nOeoffrine, reprteenting Quebec, ln\na general onsliught on all important\nclauses of the Marketing act, claiming lt wu unconstitutional.\nEarlier ln the day, the court reserved judgment on validity of the\nUnemployment Iniurance act anu\nturned to the marketing legislation. It left only one of the eight laws\nInvolved in the constitutional reference, tha Farmen' Credlton Arrangement act, to be reviewed,\nLouii Saint-Laurent attempted to\njustify the Marketing act on itvtral\nconstitutional points. He argued that\nparliament hid exclusive Jurisdiction over trade and commerce, He\nthat the Marketing act involved a\nnew policy Of licenced combinu\nwith the object pt enhancing prlcu\nfor producen, The essence of each\nmarketing icheme, he iaid, was to\nbring about a combine so producers\ncould ba paid more money. Mr.\nSaint-Laurent argued that it parliament could make one policy, It could\nlegislate the other,\n\u2022 The Ontario deputy attorney general submitted parliament'! power\nto regultte trade md commerce did\nnot extend to regulating individual\nindustries. The power was general,\nnot particular.\n\"This act,\" Mr. Humphries said,\n\"meins complete control over par\ntlcular businesses and trade within\na province.\"\nOntario submitted that parliament had no power to regulate a trade\nCASSIOS ROLLS\n255 FOR LEGION\nBOWLING HONORS\nNick Cassios rolled a single of\n265 to pace the way tor his doublet\nvictory wrth S. J. Hillyard over J,\nH. Allen md A. Fleming by 1]\npointa.\nScorei were:\nCASSI08 ANO HILLYARD\nVS. ALLIN AND FLEMING\nlit  2nd  Srd  Tot\nS. Hillyard 152   127   149- 426\nN. CatliOl  166   2S6   167- 588\nTotal\n.1016\nlit\nA. Filming 193\nJ. H. Allen 203\nSnd\n161\n153\n3rd Tot\n166-480\n168- 524\nTotal\n.1004\nROSSLAND BOYS'\nBAND FETED\nFIRSTSTEPSON\nEDUCATION WEEK\nTeachers Executive to\nMeet Tuesday and\nStart Action\nLegion Auxiliary Gives\nLads a Banquet\nFint steps ln connecUon with the\nlocal observance of education week\nwill be taken Tuesday ifternoon, tt\nis expected, when the execuUve ot\nUie Nelion brinch of the Brltlih\nColumbia Teachers fedentlon will\nhive a meeting. It ii thought the\norganization miy suggest to the\nschool board the calling of a public\nmeeting ot interested organisations\nand individuals, for the purpose of\nnaming cooperative committees to\nwork out a general program and\ncarry out the idea of education\nweek generally.\nSEATTLE GOES\nINTO LEAD\nLEGION BOWLING\nSCHEDULE\nGamu scheduled to the doubles\nbawling competition tor play at the\nCanadian Legion bowling alleys today ara as follows:\n7:15~R. Glaiebrook and C. Larson vs. P. Grovu md E. Langill.\n8:30\u2014J. S. Goulding and George\nPtrkim vs. J. Robinson and N.\nFletcher.\n9:15\u2014W. Woods md F. Carmlchatl\nvi. C. Ward and S. Doney.\nCOUNCIL LOOKS\nAT NEW CHAIRS\nFail to Reach Decision\non Seats for the\nAuditorium\nVANCOUVER, Feb, 3 (CP)-Seat-\nROSSLAND,I6.C, Feb. 3.-Hav\nina due reganrto the old adage \"m\nwithin a province 'based on a mere the way to (the hurt of a male it ...^S__i_Y'1\\ \u201e\u201e.,, ,\u00ab_\u201e,\u00bb hv Prank\npoisibility that at some future dite,j through hii, stomich (no matttr \"e Seahawks lfted bodily by Frank\nsome far-off time, some of the prod-! what hll age) the Women's Auxll-! ^f10\" \u25a0 \u00abuldln\u00ab \u2022\"\u00ab 'rom \u00ab*\nucta may be exported.\" He said the | lary to Rouland branch. Canadim ' \"\"\" pt\"Uion '\" wwc,h ^M'T2\nLegion, B.E.S.L., tendered a ban-! \u00bbhem\u00bbe7> \"\"* \u00ab0'\u201eton'\u00abht *\u00b0k\nquet to the members of the Legion : over leadenhip of the Northwes em\n- -,  m.     m.       _\u00ab,     _,     , jj^jy league with I 5-3 victory\nact enabled parliament to regulate\na imall Ontario lumber dealer even\nit his product wu sold within his\nargued when parliament paued the j own community, a dealer who never\nact it went back on Canada'i old\nnational policy of unrestricted trade.\nIt it could pau laws forbidding\ncombinu, it could reverse thtt policy ud permit combines.\nTha Dominion couniel traced the\nold policy of no combines and unfettered competition through the\nstatute books. He then submitted\nexported a foot of lumber outside\nhis province or his country.\nMr. Geoffrion agreed with Mr.\nHumphries the purpose of the act\nwaa to regulate individual trades\nmd submitted numerous court Judgments to show parliament did not\nhave that power. He will continue\ntomorrow.\nFlashes From the Wires\nWHOOPINQ COUQH\nUNDER CONTROL\nCHETICAMP, N-S.-An outbreak\nof whooping cought that caused two\ndeaths in thii Cape Breton community within the lut two weeks\nwas well under control, Dr, W. G. L.\nPoirier Mid u ba continued hit\nroundi over snow-blocked roadi.\nDOOR OPEN TOO MUCH\nLtuiBKliXJE, Alta. - Under\ncross-questioning by A. L. Smith,\nK.C, counsel for the mine owners,\nJohn Ramage, Sr., testified at the\njudicial inquiry into the Coalhurst\nmine dsaster last Dec. 9 that a door\ninto the main entry of the mine had\nbeen open too much of the time.\nRamage is one of the mrvivors of\nthe mysterious blast that rocked\nthe workings killing 16 men.\nGERMAN ARMY OF 1,600,000\nBERLIN \u2014Germany Is forging\nahead with her rearmament plans.\nInquiries made here indicate that\nby the end ot thli ytar the men\ncapable of being put ln the field-\nincluded thote trained md ptrtly\ntnlntd-wUl number it leut 1,600,-\n000.\nWOULD CHECK COMMUTERS\nWASHINGTON - The home of\nrepresentative! interposed legislative objection to aliens commuting\nback and forth acrou International\nboundary lines to employment in\nthe United Statea.\nA bill was paued and sent to the\nsenate to restrict habitual commuting ot aliem from foreign contiguous\nterritory to engage In skilled or unskilled labor or employment in continental United Statu. It the biU\nbecomes law it will hit several\nhundred worken raiding in Cinada.\nNO DETAILS OF CHASE\nWASHINGTON - Detalli of \u2022\nUnited Statei coast-guard cutter's\npursuit of an alleged rum runner\nwhich took the vestal into Hamilton\nHarbor, Bermuda, remain undisclosed by treasury officiali htre.\nThey taid thtre wu no information\non tht trip of tha cutter Mendota,\nbut that they assumed she madt\nthe reported chue during the coune\not \"ordinary cruising\" operaUons.\nNEWSBOY  ROBBED\nVANCOUVER-Willitm Stevenson, 15-yeir-old Vancouver newsboy wu gagged md robbed of $18\nby a lone gunman u he made hit\nway home through a lme near hii\nhome. Young Stevenson reported\nto police thit he wu wilklng in the\nlane in the vicinity of Laurie avenue\nwhen he wu confronted by a man\nwho shoved a gun in hli ildt and\ntold him to keep quiet.\nPERRY TO TRAIN\nWITH ARSENAL\nLONDON \u2014 Fred Perry of Englmd, ranked u the world! No. one\namateur tennii player, uyi he Intends to go Into training with the\nArsenal football team. The player\nwho wu Injured in a match with\nWilmer Alllton of Texu when he\nwti elimlmted from the United\nStatea chimpionshipt lut yetr, uid\nhe wu the flnt tennii pliyer to\nadopt profeuional footbtlltra' training methods.\nsome officiali thought came from a\nsubmarine was received by the wire-\nleu staUon at Coco Solo, Canal Zone.\nAll submarines stationed at local\nbues were found to be safe, however, and authorities, not knowing\nthe position of the ship which apparently wu in distress. Hid they\ncould take no action.\nSCHUMACHER SIGNS\nNEW YORK-PHeher Hal Schumacher interrupted his honeymoon\nlong enough to \"drop in\" on the\nNew York Giants office and sign his\ncontract for 1936. Thereupon he anu\nthe former Alice Sullivan entrained\nfor Malml. The Yankees announcea\nthe receipt of ligned contracti from\nPitcher Vilo Tamulis, second baseman Jack Saltigaver and catchei\nWilliam Hlrachberger.\nO'DONNELL TRIAL OPENS\nTORONTO-Groundwork of the\ncrown's case against Harry O'Donnell, accused of murdering Ruth\nTaylor after ravishing her In an\nIsolated ravine here lait November,\nwu laid at the opening session of\nUie 25-year-old filling station attendant'! trill. Five wi.neues givt\nevidence tgainst the unemotional\nO'DonneU.\nC. H. REID DIES\nMONTREAL - Charles Burnett\nReld, for mmy years in the purchasing department of the Canadian\nPacific railway, is dud, aged 47,\nStarting at Saint John, he subsequently held positions with Uie Canadlm Pacific In Vmcouver, Calgary, and Montreal.\nINT. BALL SCHEDULE\nNEW YORK-The International\nBaseball league owners ot the eight\nclubt hive adopted a 154-game\nschedule, opening April 16. The\nschedule calls for Toronto to open\nat Newark, Montreal at Albany, Rochester at Syracuse and Buffilo at\nBaltimore.\nUNIVERSITY CLOSED\nRAMASCUS, Syria-Police cloied\nthe Syrian univenity after students\nrioted in a recurrence of ditorden\nover a French campaign to suppress\nthe nationalistic politicil bloc. Communist students allegedly broke\nwindowi md started Uie dlsorden.\nSOS RECEIVED\nCOLON, Panama-An SOS which\nLIBEL ACTION DISMISSED\nCALOARY-Chlef Justice W. C.\nSimmons, of tha Alberta supreme\ncourt, in a judicial order hu dismissed a 3300,000 libel action agilnst\nGeorge M. Bell, Calgary publisher,\nJohn F. O'Connor, birrliter and\nE. A. Freemrn, busineu man. The\nplaintiffs, Reed Hendenon Limited;\nReed Henderson St Vtux Limited;\nVmx Bury k Compiny Limited; G.\nH. V. Burroughi, Charlei Reed tnd\nGilbery John Vaux were ordered\nto pey cotts. The sum of $50,000 wai\n\u2022ought by rich ot tht lix plaintiffs.\nBoyi' Bugle bend, in Uie Rossland\narmories, Siturdiy evening.\nAfter the viindi htd dluppeared,\nat. Rev. Migr, A. K. Maclntyre,\nexpreued hii pleasure at having\nBeen invited. Msgr. Maclntyre declared that the bmd wu a big\nasset to the town u well as to tht\nLtglon, and wu \u2022 wonderful thing\nfor the boyt themselvei. He wished\nthe boys every succeu, and expressed the opinion that if there\nihould be a competition with othen\nof their age, Uie Roulud boya\nwould come off with flying colon\nand at the hud ot the lilt.\nRev. D. S. Catchpole, after ex-\npreuing hii pltuurt at being preient, laid he wu keenly interested\nin young people ud boys especially.\nThere were certain things which\nhe thought a community had a right\nto expect of Its boyi. The fint wm\nwhat might be called \"stick-to-it-\niveness.\" So many organizations got\noff to a very enthusiastic itart, but\ntell down after a few months because the mtmben found hard\nwork was Involved.\nTha returned men present knew\nhow much drilling was necessary\nbefore a man became a soldier, and\nmuch spade work wu a necessity\nln every walk ln lite. Then a boy\nihould bt trustworthy. Unless a\nman had a sense of penonal responsibility, he wu not u asset to\n\u25a0ny organization.\nThe speiker warned the boys not\nto be thin-skinned and not to expect too mmy compliments along\nlife's way. He urged them to follow\nthe admonition of St. Paul and \"put\naway childish things,\" and strive\nto be manly.\nEx-Mayor W. A Turner though:\nUie band a splendid thing for the\nboyi. A certain amount of discipline was necessary to build up\ncharacter. The band was making\ngreat progress, and would be a real\nasset to the Legion, and the Women'a auxiliary had done \"a very\ngractious thing in putting up the\nlupper.\"\nOuy F. Cooper expressed .the\nthanks of the Legion to the auxiliary for giving the banquet to the\nboys, and hoped the ladi would\ntake to heart the good advice given\nthem by Msgr, Maclntyre, Rev. Mr.\nCatchpole ud Mr, Turner.\nPercy J. Harrli thanked the ladlu\nfor the supper and said the boyt\nwere a credit to the Legion, which\nwas \"very proud of them.\"\nOn behalf of the memben of the\nBugle Band, Paddy Topllsa thanked\nthe ladlu for the banquet.\nMemben of the Canadian Legion\npretent were Guy F. Cooper, Willlim A. Turner, Percy J. Harrli,\nWilllim Butorac and R. Belmder.\nThe Bugle Band boyt ln attendmce were David Wood, Alex Turner, Jack Richardson, Leonard Lint,\nSonny Lins, Leonard Turner, John\nIrvin, Frank MacLean, Irvln Conroy, Ernrat Cleverley, Pit Ward.\nJack Cox, Ira Page, Cyril De Kuyi-\nscher, Thomu Jones, Joseph Lt-\nface md Paddy Topliss.\nThe commute from the auxiliary\nin charge of the supper was composed of Mn. William Gresly-Jones,\nMn. Thomu Wood, Mn. Williim\nBuick, Mn. John McCullough, Mn\nErneit E. Turner, Mn. Joseph Dup-\npenon, Mrs. R, Symons, Mrs. William Butorac, Mn. Powell and Mri\nHoward Ferguson.\nBonnington Folk\nHere to Skate\nover Vancouver Lions, who had pre-\nviouily shared the lead with Portland.\nLineups:\nSeatUe: Vcnne; Houbregi ud Gilhooley; McAdam; Tabor and Proudlock. Subs: Mullen, Lyons, J. Sheppard ud Lafruce.\nVancouver: Clark; Hutton and\nCreasy; Smith; O'Neill md Hex-\ntail. Subs; Carse, F. Sheppard md\nPtlm.\nReferee: Bernie Morris-\nSummary: First period:\n1-SeatUe, Gilhooley, 18:30.\nPenaltlei: None.\nSecond period:\n2 \u2014 Vmcouver, Smltii (Hutton-\nO'Neill) 8:39.\n3-Seattle, Tabor (McAdam) 10:37\n4-Vancouver, O'Neill 16:10.\n5 \u2014 Vancouver, Hutton (Palm)\n17:18.\n6-Seattle, McAdam Tabor) 19:51.\nPenalty: Gilhooley.\n7-Seattle, Proudlock, 2:49.\n8-Seattle, Mullen, 11:00.\nPenaltlw: None.\nHEALTH BODYTO\nMEET SHORTLY\nWill Go Into Matter of\nAppointment of a\nHealth Officer\nAU memben ot Nelion'i city\ncouncil were chilrmin on Mondiy\nnight ud the council chamber resembled a amal] portion of a furniture store. The reason was tbe opening of tenders for 950 theater chain\ntor the auditorium portion of the\nnew civic centre. There were several stmplei ot stveral klndi ot\nchtin on display and three salesmen\nippeared trom Vincouver to repretent their flrmi. After clote to two\nhoun' discuulon the council tailed\nto come to a declilon as to what\ntype ot chair or teat they wanted\nand the matter was referred, to the\nfinance and auditorium committees\nwith power to act.\nFive firms tendered, including:\nStandard Furniture compuy, Nelson; Marshall-Wells, Vancouver; La\nSalle Recreations, Ltd., Vancouver;\nGlobe Furniture company, Vancouver, md tha Interior Hardwood\ncompany of Kitchener, Prien ranged\nfrom $8.70 to $13,97 per teat installed in the concrete floor. Aldermen seemed inclined to the La Salle\nbidi for seats manufactured In Englud, but no decision wu arrived it.\nThe city clerk wu Instructed to\ntabulate the tendered figures so the\nspecial committees could come to a\ndecision today.\nHealth committee of the Nelson\ncity council will meet immediitely\nupon the matter of a city medical\nhealth officer md director (or the\nlaboratory at the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hotpital stated Aldtrman\nT. W. Slader, chairman at Monday\nnight's council meeting.\nDr. F. M. Auld appeared at the\nmtetlng regarding the appointment\nbut the councU decided lt needed\nmore information on the itand of\nthe provincial govtrnment apd directon of the hoipital u to finmcial aid in keeping up the office. The\nhealth committee wUl report to the\ncouncil afttr lti meeting.\nBURNSPROGRAM\nAT ROSSLAND\nFarmers to Hear\nof Power Rales\nCity Willing to Meet\nNorth Shore Power\nConsumers\nFollowing recelpti of numeroui\ncompliints ud petition! for revi-\ntion ot power rites on tht north\nshore line Nelton city council Monday night decided to have representative! meet the power uien at\nany desired place up the arm, uy\nat Balfour, at any ut date to discuss\nthe situation in full. The council\nnamed City Clerk W. E. Wasson ud\nAlderman H. B. Lindsay, chairman\nof the fire, water and light committee, to meet the complainants;\nDeclilon followed receipt of a\nletter from P. Hartridge of the Bi-\nfour Farmen institute, with a petition asking for a caih discount,\nume as enjoyed by Nelson power\nusen ud a cancellation of meter\nrentali.\nThe farmers claimed that Uie rates\ncharged on the north shore were\nout of proportion to charges made\nin other places; that it wu difficult for the tarmen to meet the\nhigh costs; that there would be an\nIncrease in users If rates were\nslashed; that it was undentood a\nreduction would be made later\nwhen the original line was built;\nthat living conditions wtre better\nwhen the line was installed and\nthe farmen got higher prices for\ntheir produce and were, therefore,\nable to meet higher charges, whereas many were now on relief.\nMayor J. P. Morgan suggested\nthit the city clerk attend a meeUng\nup the lake to explain the chargei\nfor llghti in the district. He believed\nthe customers were dissstisfled and\nif the whole mitter wu explained\nthey would become satisfied. The\nfirmen were Juit not cleir whit\nother rates ln the city and district\nwere. They did not know that Nelson had a minimum rate and that\nNelion power users paid meter\nrental. They did not know Uie cost\nof maintaining the north shore line.\nNELSON CURLING\nRESULTS\nGames played at the Nelson curling rink Monday night resulted as\nfoUows:\nE. E. L. Dewdney 10, D. Laughton 8.\nDr. W. B. Steed 6, W. Brown 10.\nT. R. Wilson 8, A. Jeffi 8.\nR. D. Hall 9, A. G. Ritchie 6.\nM. Michelion 10, H. S. Watson 12\nG. W. Steele 6, E. H. Woolls t.\nW. Allen 4, A. B. Gilker 8.\nC. F. McHardy 11, G. H. Ferguson 5.\nR. E. Crerar 9, H. W. Robertson 10\nW. Biner 10, W. M. Vmce 5.\nROSSLAND, B.C., Feb. 3.- A\nBurni\" program wu given at a\nmeeting of St. Andrew's Women's\nFriendly Circle, Wedneiday.\nMn. C. H. Daly gave an interesting talk on the Ufe of tbe poet, describing his birthplace and other\nscenes associated with tba \"plowman bard\" which were viiited by\nher during her tour of the British\nIsles some monthi igo. Tht speiker\ndwelt on the influence of the writings of Burns on the succeeding\ngenerations, saying thtt Burns lived netrer to the hetrt of Uie laboring man than any wrlttr ot hii\ndiy.\nSoloi by Mrs. J. C. Hooktr and\nMn. Robert Richardson and reading! by Mri. William Buick and Mn.\nHoward Ferguion completed the\nprogram, afttr which tbout 60 members and friends ut down to bountifully spread ttblu containing mmy\nSeottiih diihu.\nMusi Observe\nBuilding Law\nAll Permits Must Be\nSigned in Nelson\nBefore job Starts\n  i    BONNINGTON, B.C.-A ikating ! The city wti not mak Ing money on\n\u00abf_^T.n ! P,r|y \"\"\"\"red t\u00ab the Nelson rink ; 'he lin' <,ndJth* '\"\"\u00bb\u00ab\",.*\"\u2022 not\n334 KILLED Thursday evening and returned to   bein* ch,r''d *ny mn th,n w\"c\nHOME-Thlrty officen and 304   the home of Mr   and Mrs   J   E   other clty \u00b0' N,lMn cu!t\u00b0m\u00abn In\nBlackshirts in the \"Oct. 28\" division | Parker at Corra Linn where thty  ,lmU,r circumstances.\nwere killed or wounded In a sharp i were entertained at supptr. Thou\nengagement in the Tlmbltn mountains, according to a cablegram received from Brigade Commander\nGeneral Dlamtntl. (The Ethiopian\ngovernment had claimed that a brigade of 5000 men under Diamanti\nhad been wiped out when it attacked an Ethioplin column.)\nbelieved the miyor tnd tldermen\nwere too modeit. All they hid\n\u2022poken of wtt tht civic ctntrt and\nthat wu only ona of many thingi\ndont tnd nothing htd been neglected.\nJ. I. Anntblt lugguted thtt Ntlton Ud Trail might cooperate thil\n\u25a0ummtr to put the Koottnty to tht\ntort. Befort the Vmcouvtr jubiltt\nwu hild, lomethlng might be dom\nln thli ana to induce travelltn to\nUlt Jubilee to journey through thii\nwty, Ht believed If the virloui\norginlzitlom   warked\nworthwhile entertainment could be\nprovided.\nOther visitors it tha club included\nFrank Pennoyer, lecretary-treu-\nurtr of Ute TrtU Rotary club, md\nC. Carttr Guut of Vincouver.\nLILACS IN BUD\nAT MOYIE\nMOYIE, B.C.-Poulbly tlgnlfylng\n\u2022n urly ipproich of iprlng, leveril\ntogether lilac treei here are ln bud.\nattending were Mr. and' Mn. H. t.\nMcDougall, Mr. and Mn. A. Servold,\nMr. and Mn. R. Kennedy, Mr. and\nMn. E. J. McGregor, Grant Tindale,\nAllan Willey and John Lees.\nPrior to tht skitlng pirty Mr. and\nMn. E. J. McGregor entertained at\ndinner honoring Allan Willey on\nhis birthday when dinner guests\nwere Mri, Elmer Spelr, Grant Tin-\ndale and Allan Willey, Guests railing liter were Mr. and Mra. E. C.\nJohnson, John Leei and George\nBlddlecombe.\nB. 3. Irving of Nelion ii ipending\na few dayi a gueit of hli brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. R.\nOrtyton.\nEAST LONDON, South Africt-\n(CP)-Adulti ud children htd a\ngala day htn when Mumohin\nSingh, the Indlin aviator, gave\ntownsfolk 300 tree flights In three\ndaya. \u00ab,\n5t Cases Measles\nReported In (Ity\nTo dite 54 casu ot measles have\nbeen reported In Nelson in the recent outbreak according to a report\nof Dr. F. M. Auld, acting city medical health officer, made at Monday's city council meeting. He declared every precaution was being\ntaktn in the schools. Chief outbreak has been at Central ichool\nwhere attendmce hat been cut down\nconsiderably. Following is hli report on Infectious diseases for Nelson ichool dlitrict: Chicken pox,\ntwo; measles 54; scarlet fever two;\ndiphtheria one; Erysipelai three.\nCLASSIFIED ADS OET RESULTS\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, B.C., Feb. 3.-Mlss\nEletnor Erskine left Friday for a\nholiday at the coast, planning to\nvisit at Grand Forki ud Seattle, en\nroute.\nlet\nA. E. Lindell is visiting In Ptulsen.\na   ,   .\nH. Rou of the Velvet mine hu\ntaken up residence in Trail.   \u25a0\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nUnder auspices of the local Canadian Club, G. L. Pop of Vmcouver,\ngave an iddress on \"Big Game\nHunUng in B.C.\". Some fine pictures\nIllustrated the address.\n'   '   * P\nThe Catholic Women's league held\na card party in the Parish hall, the\nattendmce being exceptionally good\ninspite of the tact the party had\nbeen postponed from the previous\nweek, in deference to the period of\nmourning for the late King George.\nFirst honon at bridge went to Mrs.\nR. W. Terguson and Jack Zentner,\nand the consolations to Mn. O. Frleu\nand Joseph Jorgensen. At whist the\ntint prize was won by Mrs, J. A.\nCameron and Mrs. A. Bcsso, and\nthe consolations by Mrs. M. Slubow-\nski and Mrs, George Nixon. The\ncommittee in charge of the affair\nwu composed of Mrs. Lmil Leduc,\nMn. J. Donahue, Mrs. E. L'-cluse,\nMn. G. Mcintosh, Mrs. J. A. Cameron and Miss Catherine McLean.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nA. Hurry has returned to his home\nin -U-Ci-son after spending a month\nIn tho city, a gueit of Frank Sals-\nbury.\nt .e t\nO. H. Goody of tho Velvet mine\nhu left tor Nelson.\ntit\nMn. O. Bisson his rtturntd from\nVancouver wnere the wu called by\nthe illness and death of hcr sister.\n\u2022 *   \u00ab\nMrs. Powell entertained several\nyoung folks Saturday afte.noon In\nnonor of the tweUth birthdiy ol\nMiss Ruth Finney. Luncheon wis\nserved, the tabic being prettily decorated with valcntinet and centered\nwith a beautiful birthday cake. An\nhour wu ipent pleasantly witn\ngamei and dancing ud then the\ncompany attended the theater matinee. Guesti were Misses Olga Mo-\nline, Elsie Parker, Mary Sommtr-\nvUle, Helen Douglu, Helen Purcello, Vergie Johnson, Marjorie Tln-\nney and the guest of honor,\ntit\nMr. md Mn. Robert Lee htvt\nbeen celled to Greenwood by the\ndeath ot Mn. Lee'i sister.\nttt\nMn. William Butorac who his\nbeen recuperating following a serious operation at Mater Misercordiae\nhoipital, Is able to be around again.\nCity of Nelion'i building bylaw\nwill be enforced to the letter following complaint ot Aldermm T. H,\nWaten it Mondiy night'i city council meeting. In future all permiti for\nbuilding or alterations in Nelson\nmust be approved and signed by th'e\nfire marshals, Alderman Allck\nRitchie and T. H. Waten, tht city\nengineer, R. E. Potter and the fire\nchief, M. H. Maloney, before work\nii commenced.\nAlderman Waten reported t cue\nwhere alterations were made on\nBaker itrtet tor which a permit had\nnot been obtained unUl tht carpenter had been checked up. The bylaw\nshould be enforced uld Alderman\nWaters. He did not think lt fair that\nfirms with large investments should\nbe held to the byliw while uy Tom,\nDick ud Harry with a law or hammer stepped into the work without\ngetUng a permit. The matter arose\nfollowing receipt of the tire chief's\nreport showing four alarmt In the\nmonth: 127 inspections; nlnt orders\nfor better conditions. Alarms hid\nbetn tested and found In order\nAgreement Hade\nfor a Dry Wall\n75-Foot Wall Will Be\nBuilt Behind Bush\nProperty\nNelson city council Monday night\npaued resolutions governing certain\nagreements entered into with P. H.\nBush ln regard to his property md\nthe new civic centre. Tho council\nordered an agreement drawn and\nput on record that no windows be\ncut Into the western tldt ot the\nauditorium and that the present\nskating rink windows be kept shut.\nThe agreement binds a verbal agreement made lut year with memben\nof the civic centre committee ot\nthe council.\nIn addition the council pasted a\nresolution accepting an easement on\na portion ot the Bush property at\nthe rear of tbe Sterling hotel. For\nthe easement the city tnlends to\nconstruct a dry wall across the rear\nof the Bush property to hold the\nbank there. The wall will be 19\nfeet high and 75 feet long. It will\nslope three lnchu to the foot and\nwill be 57 lnchu wide from toe to\ntop. A pipe md mesh fence will\ntop the wall. Cost will be approximately $1200. E. P. Dawson of Brown\nk Dawion appeared tor Mr. Bush,\nthe latter okaying the wall plans\nas submitted by the city engineer.\nAid. N. C. Stibbs\nIII With 'Flu\nAlderman N. C. Stibbs, recently\nelected to Nelson city council was\nabsent at Monday'i meeting owing\nto Illness with the flu. Aldermm\nRoy Sharp reported he was getting\nplenty of muitard plaiters.\nREAD THE WANT ADS-IT PAYS\n t\nLl\n\\{\nNELSON LADY IS\nHONORED GUEST\nMrs. Barber Entertains\nfor Mrs. Varner at\nCranbrook\n, CRANBROOK, B.C. - Complt-\n. menting her guest Mn. Vimer ot\nI Nelson, Mrs. Barber entertained at\nbridge and tea Friday afternoon and\nagain at the tea hour Saturday. The\nprize winners at bridge were Mri.\nG. E. L. Mackinnon and Mrs. W. 11.\nWilton. Mrs. ScheJl preiided at the\n< tea table. Invited guesta wert Mrs.\nVarner, Mrs. MacKinnon, Mrt. Wll-\n1 ion, Mrt. Llttlt, Mrs. Fergie, Mrt\nFink, Mn. Ironside, Mrt. Church,\nMn. Fournler, Mn.  R. Edwards,\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n(o PIUS ^\nWAY STORE'\nREMEMBER TO\nSTOCK UP ON\nORANGES\nat (he SPECIAL PRICES\nwe ire offering in our Pint\nof the Month Food Silt!\nPHONES 865\u2014866\nIAFEWAY   STORES   LIMITED\nTODAY\nONLY\nThis Is the last day of our winter\nsale and we have arranged some\nvery special bargains tor the last\nday.  Wt quote only a tew here.\nA eomplttt ttock of wools\nat Salt Prices.\nPurple Heather, made in Scotland, all colon and 1 C \u201e\ntweeds. On sale at, oz. xO 1\/\nCrochet, Andalusian, Bouclette,\nBaby Wool. 1Q-\nPtr oz.   ltJv\nChildren's Heavy QQ<-\nBloomen at   Otl->\nChildren's Wool Vests     KQ\u00ab\nChildren'i Heavy Vests   O0\u00ab\nChildren's Silk and (MIK\nWool Combs . \u00abD 1.1(1\nLadles' Silk and Wool flJ1 OQ\nCombs HXee-V\nStrong Elastic 2-way.      QQ_\nGirdles   Ot. t\nBoys', also girls' all wool Pull-\novtn, sizes to 34, QQ\/t\nand only   OS7V\nLadles' English wool       AQ_%\nOloves   _t. C\nChildren's Wool Mitts 1 Q_\nand Glovet . .... 1\u00ab7\\.\nLadles' Fur and Wool Lined\nCape Gloves, (PI   AA\nonly, pair  (Dl.W\nHeavy Jumbo Knit Sweaters\u2014\n$1.95and $1.59\nLadies' and Boys' Breechs and\nSluing, doublt seata.   fljl  AA\nRamsden's\n322 Baker St. at SUnley\nMn. Miller, Mrs. Sang, Mrt. Coe,\nMn. Schell and Mn. Large.\nGuests Saturday were Mn. Vara-\ner, Mn. Osborne, Mn. Baird, Mrs\nIronside, Mn. Selwyn, Mra. McKowan, Mn. Scott, Mrs. Ward, Mn.\nWhee.tr, Mrs. T. Moore, Mn. Ellis,\nMrt. W. Taylor, Mln Mty Maltman.\nMiss Delia Baxter and Miss Pegijy\nMcKay ot Klmberley. Mn. Ironside\npresided at the team table.\nThe Romilly Boy singers ot Barry,\nWales, who were in Cranbrook on\nThurtday and Friday, wert entertained by the Cnnbrook hotel at\ndinner Thursday night by Rtv. and\nMn. J. F. Bell. Mr. Williams, Mr.\nDetautelt and tht 11 boy slngen\nwtrt pretent. Thursdty afternoon\nthe 12 boya were guttta ot the Cranbrook Rink association at the skating rink.\nMln Olive Norgrove of Cretton\ntptnt the wetk-end visiUng hei\nparents here.\nGordon Dezall lett Thursday for\nVancouver to viiit for a week.\nMr. WaUinger it spending a tew\ndayi in. Calgary.\nMisi Lily Brlxa hu lttt tor Klmbtrlty to ipend a wtek visiting\nfriends.\nMr. and Mn. A. Burch ot Wynndel were guesti of Mrt. A. Baxter.\nC. Brlxa of Cretton is a Cranbrook visitor.\nKASLO LADY IS\nBRIDGE HOSTESS\nKASLO, B.C-Mn. Fred Aydon\nentertained a tew frlendi at I\nbridge party Thurtday, Mn. Wilson\nwon high tcore prize, the consolation\nbeing awarded to Mrs. Murphy.\nGuests were Miss Margery Speirs,\nMiss Tina Bourget, Mrs. J. R. Tinkess, Mrs. Frank Wilson, Mrs, Brunei Murphy, Min Katherine Streit\nand Miss Jo Landry.\nMrs. A. Coombes, who was a\nhouse guest ot Mr. and Mrs. W. L.\nBillings, has returned to ber home\nln New Denver.\nMr. and Mn. C. J. White have returned to their home here after\nspending a few months at Retallack.\nMyles MacPherson has returned\nto Trail titer viiiting hii father,\nJohn MacPhenon, here.\nE. Bowman ot Johnson'a Landing\nvisited Kaalo Friday.\nArchie Greenlaw of Lardo was a\nThursday visitor ln town.\nJack Tonkin is spending a few\ndayt at his home here after having\nbeen a patient in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital, Nelton for several\ndayt.\nDavid and Jack Hartin, who attend lunlor high school in Nelson,\nspent the wetk-end with their\nparenti, Mr. and Mn. H. T. Hartin,\nhert.\nGordon Speira has. returned to\nTrail after viiiting hit parenti, Mr.\nand Mn. Fred Spein.\nBert MacNleol of Johnion'i Landing wit a Friday viiitor in town.\nStanley Lakes of Johnion'i Landing ipent Friday in the city.\nMalcolm Greenlaw of Lardo was\na city viiitor Friday.\nSirdar Lady Is\nCreston Viiitor\nSIRDAR, B.C.-Mn. Martin wai\nI viiitor to Creiton Saturdiy by\nstage and wu a guett of her parents, Mr. end Mn. Simlster.\nGut Rochow of Kootenay Landing\nwat a viiitor to Wynndel Sunday.\nJoe Karpowitch of Sanca wu I\nvisitor to Atbara.\nJ. S. Wilson, who wu on a trip to\nthe Crow has returned home.\nMiu Margaret Rogen, Misi Daisy\nRogen and Mist Lily Cam were\nguests of Mn. James Wilton Saturday.\nMn. Martin wu a visitor to Nelson for several \"d\u00bbys.\nArt Rutledge wu a visitor to\nWynndel Saturday.\nTht wattr u Indicated by the\ngauge at Slough bridge reada 0.64 a\nrise of 0.01 for the week. The Ice in\ntbe vicinity of duck lake wu going\nfut tha lut tew dayi and unlets\nthe weither becomes colder, a rise\nin the water level will follow.\nMat Hagen, foreman of tha road\ngang here, who received a severe\ninjury to one of his fingers while on\nduty, is still suffering trom the effects.\nGino Bugtrt was a visitor to\nCreston Saturday by car.\nDonee to Aid the\nNakusp Hospital\nNAKUSP, B.C.-A special meeting ot the Women'i Hoipital auxiliary wu held Thunday at the hotpital board room when arrangements were made for the auxiliary\nto aid an orcheitra ln the sponsoring\nof a Valentine dance here. Proceeds\nwill be divided between the two\norganizations.\nO-O-Oh, I\nLIKE BUCKLEYS\nAND HONEY\n\"MY, WHAT A COUCH YOU'VE\nGOT. TAKE THIS BUCKLEY'S\nAND HONEY AND YOU'LL SOON\n NELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. EC-TUESDAY MORNINO  FEBRUARY 4. IIM\nNEW PUN FOR\nNAKUSP VOTING\nEach Ratepayer Has a\nVote for Each $100\nof Property\nNAKUSP, B.C.-The annual matting ot the Nakusp Development district was held in tht Small hall\nThursday to hear tht financial\nitatement and to elect a commit-\ntioner for * three-ytar period.\nA new procedure wu followed\nlo the voting. Each voter wu accorded the privilege of voting according to statute, hit voting powtr\nbated on tht valut ot his property\nand in units ot ont vote for uch\n$100 in vtlut. Considerable discussion centered around the uie of thit\nmethod. It wat decided, however, to\nuse this system in tht future.\nCollections wtre lit'.'r better than\nlait year. Outitandlng rstes and\ntexts art creeping steadily upward.\nThe matter of penstock was again\ndiscusnd and after tome debate the\ncommissioners were instructed to\nhavt thia constructed tt tht intake.\nThe labor thereon la to be furnished\nby tax and rate delinquents,\nB. Parkinson wat reelected com-\nmistioner for another three-year\nterm. The commissioners now are\nF. Rushton, H. W. Herrldge and B.\nParkinson. \u2022\nChrist Church\naf Invermere\nNames Officers\nINVERMERE, B.C-The annual\nmeeting of the congregation of\nChriit church, Invermere, wis held\nThursday with Rev. P. Stanford,\nvicar of the Parish of Windermere,\nIn the chair.\nReporti read by the lecretary-\ntreasurer, Comander J. C. Fowles,\nR.N., showed' the finances in a\nhealthy condition. All dues had bttn\nmet tnd the different orgtnlzatlont\nof the parish were running\nsmoothly-\nThe peoples' warden, Arthur Taylor, also had a tttlsftctory report\nshowing the number of servicei\nheld and the attendances.\nMiss Mary Maclean gave the report of the Sunday school.\nThe reports of the Women's auxilliary were read and a hearty vote of\nthanks given to this organiuUon\nfor help In the financei of the pariah.\nThe lecretary-treasurer read a\nletter from the secretary-treasurer\nof the Diocese of Kootenay thanking this parish for good work in\nyearly making the fuU payments on\nthe block assessments.\nIt was decided to augment the\nparish committee and three church\nmembers were chosen trom Invermere, Windermere, Ed<tewatcr and\nCanal Flat, to assist in the busineu\not the parish.\nA vote ot thanki wu paued to\nMiu Mary Maclean for her work in\nthe Sunday school and the belt\nwiihu of the congregation wera extended to her for lucceu in her\ntraining in the nunlng profession.\nCommander J. Copley Fowlei,\nwas again choien vicar's warden by\nthe Rev. Mr. Stamford, and Arthur\nTaylor was elected unanimously as\npeople'! warden.\nSALMO LADY IS\nNELSON VISITOR\nSALMO, B.C.-Mrs. W. Wilde wai'\na shopper to Nelson Saturday.\nRalph Mifflin of Colville, Waih,\nspent last week-end visiting relatives ln Salmo and Ymir.\nRev. C. E. Motte of Trail was here\nWednesday evening and conducted\nMemorial Service for King George\nV, in the K P. hall.\nMr. and Mn. Grlndy and children were vislton to Nelwn.\nMrs. A. Stubbs of Nelson ls visiting her son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. and Mrs. H. Grutchfleld.\nMn. F. Johnson of Sheep Creek\nspent a few days here the gueit of\nMn. G. Fair.\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nThl! column ta conducted hy Mrs M. J. Vlgneux. All newt of i\n\u2022octal naturt Including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nitemi, marriagei. etc, will appear In thli column. Telephont Mn.\nVlgneux at htr homt, 319 Silica itrtet\nVan. Archdeacon Fred H. Graham\nand Mn. Graham havt bad t\u00bb their\ngueit Jamei Bryden ot TraU who\nreturntd yeiterday.\nate\nM. Smith ot Kingigate visited\nNelson yesterday,\n\u2022  \u2022  \u2022\nW. O. Mulrhead wu in town fram\nSunihlne Bay during tbe week-end.\n...\nFred Irvine leavee thii morning\ntor Chewelth where he will visit\nhll brother, William Irvine.\n...\nW. O. Mulrhead ot Sunihlne Bay\nviiited in Nelion yesterday,\n...\nMrs. P. W. Orten of WUlow Point\nspent yesterdiy in tin city.\n...\nHenry Uayat of Crescent Bay,\nwho hai been a city visitor, hu\nreturned home after ipendlng tht\npait ftw weeks vliltlng friends in\nVictoria, Vancouver and Nelwn,\n...\nPercy F, Horton, mining man of\nSalmo, wu among week-end vliiton\nin town.\n...\nFred Blakeman bu left lo begin\nhit fint aid claiaet in Cranbrook.\n...\nJ. J. Malone ot Princeton ii a city\nvliiton.\n...\nMrs. J. Sewell of Sunihlne Biy\nwu among visiton in the city yeiterday.\n...\nJ. E. Sutherland of Procter visited\ntown yesterday.\n...\nDavid and Jack Hartin have rtturntd to Ntlion to resume thtlr\nstudies after spending the wetk-end\nat tht home of their parents, Mr.\nand Mn. H. T. Hartin.\n...\nJ. Breau ot Ymir visited the city\nyesterday.\n...\nDr. Wilfrid Latihlty returned lut\nnight from Loi Angelei, where he\nwttkg'\nhu btto taking a three\npost-graduate count.\nShoppen tn Nelion yesterdty Included Mrs. T. A. Mllli of WUlow\nPoint and her grandson.\n...\nA. 8. WUlford of Vallican ipent\nyeiterday to the city.\n...\nR. J. Boyle wai a Nelion vltitor\nduring the week-end.\n...\nMr. and Mn. A- WUley of Bonnington visited In town yeiterday.\n...\n3. Ferguion of Procter viiited in\nNelion during the week-end.\n...\nMn. H. Bryant of Klmbtrlty It\nvisiting at the home of her mother,\nMrs. F. Jarrett of Ntlson.\n...\nMn. F. F. Payne, Hoover itreet,\nentertained the members of St.\nSaviour's Church Helpers' Bridge\nclub yesterday when thote playing\nwere Mra. E. E. L. Dewdney, Mrs.\nLatlle Cnuturd, Mrt. Jamu O'Shea,\nMn. P. G. Moray, Mn. J, G. Bun-\nyin, Mn. John Cartmel end Mn.\nLeilie V. Rogen.\n...\nT. W. Smith of Crescent Bay wu\nln town Saturday, receiving attention for a broken finger.\n...\nMrt. T. H. Hickey hu returntd\nto Creiton after a visit at tht homt\nof her ton-ln-taw and daughter,\nMr. and Mn. Guy Browell, Baker\nitrtet.\n...\nMrt. Stanley P. Bottock entertained the members of Mn. Fred\nH. Graham'i circle of St Savlour'i\nChurch Helpen yuterday when\nthoie pretent were Mrt. Harry Gore,\nHn. A. J. Cotniih, Mn. Gtorge\nHontead, Mrs. Ernest W. Steele,\nMn. H. R. Townsend, Mrs. H. W.\nSeamon, Mn. Mtble Rocliffe and\nMn. Graham.\n...\nMrs. J. H. Wensley of Crescent\nBay wu ln town yeiterday.\nKaslo Women's Institute fo Give\n$100MoreToward a Denial Clinic\nWill Hold Early Flower Show This Yeor ond\nNot a Fall Fair; Urge Early Action\nfor May 24 Celebration   -\nKASLO, B.C.-Kulo and DUtrict\nWomen'i institute met Friday at\nthe home of Mn. M. A. Tinkess. The\n\u25a0.resident, Mn. John Keen, was ln\nthe chair. Mrs. D. Costello, secret-\nary-trtuunr, gave her reports\nshowing the tociety to be In I\nhealthy financial condition.\nCorreipondence read Included let-\nten from the local bnnch of the\nWomen'a auxllliary to the Canadian\nLegion acknowledging with thanki,\nthe initial donation to the dental\nclinic fund and asking thtt t further substantial donaUon be made\nby the Institute in order that this\nwork could bo carried on properly\nand at once; from Mn. D. H. Ntllis\nof Woodbury, txprtuing thanks\nfor Chrlitmu cheer; from tht department of agriculture and Mri.\nJ. J. Hunter regarding Kulo fall\nfair returni; noticet of annual meetings of tht Crippled Children'i hot-\nnital and tbe solarium; trom Miss\nMoscrop, loctl ichool teacher, regarding training \"tttn\"-tge girli\nto act u life-guards on tht Kailo\nbeaches during the summer holidays. From Big Beaver, Sask., came\nan appeal tor cut otf clothing, etc.\nTht president told of a visit to Uu\nCrippled Children's hospital, lut\nyur.\nTht mitter ot taking up the processing of cherries, to eventually become marischino cherries, u a commercial venture wu laid before the\nmeeting. After discussion Mrs. Keen\nand Mn. M A. Tinkess were ippointed a commltttt to tecure further data tnd makt their report at\nthe next meeting.\nMENUS\nRECIPES\ntnd\nHINTS\nGood\nHousekeeping\n\u25a0v\nMrt.\nMarv\nMorten\nMENU  HINT\nCom Chowder\nCracken or Whole Wheat Tout\nSpicy Cabbage Salad\nCranberry Moms*\nCookies or Cake       Tea or Coffee\nHere is a simple menu to serve to\nyour family or to friends on a cold\nwinter evening, or in the middle of\nthe day, if desired. If it does not\nseem a complete meal to you, add to\nit as much as you wish. The chowder, however, is an adequate main\ndish.\nTodty'i Recipes\nCorn Chowder\u2014Two ounctt salt\npork, one imall onion, sliced; one\nNo. 2 can corn (two and one-fourth\ncups), two cupi diced potatoes, one\nand one-half cups raw or canned\ntomatoei, one teupoon ult, one\ntablespoon sugar, pepper, one quart\nboiling water, one cup Irradiated\nevaporated milk, crackers. Cut pork\nPURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES   BETTER   BREAD\nInto tmall pieces tnd fry ilowly to a\ngolden brown in a large tauceptn.\nAdd onion and cook ilowly without\nbrowning, five mlnutei. Add corn,\npotatoes and tomatoei in alternate\nlayers. Sprinkle with salt, tugtr and\npepper; then add water and cook\nslowly until potatoes are tender. Remove trom fire and lUr in the milk\nilowly. Pour over ertcken in hot\nwup plates. Servei ilx.\nCranberry Mouite\u2014Two and one-\nhalf cups raw cranberries measured\nafter sorting, one and one-fourth\ncupi cold witer, one and one-fourth\ncupi sugar, one cup Irradiated lemon Juice, one-fourth cup orange\nJuice. Waih cranberries, add cold\nwater and cook ilowly until soft,\nabout 19 mlnutei. Press through 1\npotato rlcer or sieve. There should\nbe ont and one-fourth cupi pulp.\nAdd sugar and boll 10 minutes.\nThere ahould be one and ont-fourth\ncupi Jelly. Chill milk thoroughly.\nWhip until stiff. Add lemon Juict\nand conUnue whipping until vtry\n\u25a0tiff. Cut and fold in tht cold cranberry pulp and orange Juice, UghUy\nbut thoroughly. Pour into cold\nfreezing tray of an automaUc refrigerator and freeze. Or pour Into a\nmold and pack ln a 1:9 nlt-lce mixture. Servei six.\nThe advisability of holding a fall\nfair ln 10M wu thoroughly dlr\nousted and lt wu decided that a\nflower ihow would takt tht place\nof tht fair thil yur it it eould bt\nheld earlier in tht season whtn\nflowen would bt at their but Womtn'i tnd girls' work of virloui\nklndi would ilao be on exhibition.\nIt wti suggested thtt the Farmen'\nInstitute should sponsor an agricultural ihow liter ln the ytar and that\nboyt work of ill kinds including\nmtnutl training exhibits could be\n\u2022hown.\nThe preiident luggetted that Mayor Papworth and tht city council\nihould be uked to call an early\nmeeting to mike plant for the Mty\n24 celebraUon tnd, If poulble, to\narrange tor an excursion boat from\nNelton on that date. Mn. E. M.\nSandilands was appointed to take\nUte matter up with the mayor and\ncouncil.\nMn. Fred Spein, Mn. Fred McGibbon and Mist Irene MacGUlivray volunteered to act at a_.con.mH-\ntee to interview Mlu Moscrop and\nto preient further details of her plan\nat tht Februiry meeUng.\nBegirding clothing tor Big Beiver, Mrs. J. M. Alltn will act on the\nhill and Mn. Lockhart down town.\nTht matter ot a further tubstan-\nUal donation to Uit dtnttl clinic\nfund camt up tor * lengthy and\nminy sldtd discussion, tht members\nfinally agreeing to guarantee the\n$100 donation asked. Aa an initial\nventure to raise thtte fundi Mrs. H.\nT. Hirtln, Mrs. W. V. Papworth and\nMrt. F. S. Chandler were to ipon-\nwr a card party to bt held tt the\nhomt of Mrt. Hartin.\nVotei of thinks wtre extended to\nMn. Tinkeu tor tht um ot her home\nfor tht meeting tnd to Mn. Tlnktts\ntnd Mrt. Fred Spein and their u-\nslitanti tht Mlnei Dorcai and Dorothy Tinkess for refreihmenti.\nThete ittendlng wtrt Mn. M. A.\nTtnkeu, Mn. Fred Spein, Mn. John\nKeen, Mrs. D. Coitello. Mn. E. Sin-\ngel, Mrt. Chtrlu Lind. Jr., Mn.\nJohn Tonkin, Mn. E. H. Latham,\nMra. John McLellan, Mn. Carr, Mn.\nWilliam Whlttaker, Mn. H. T. Hartin, Mn. T. H. Horntr, Mrt. W. V.\nPapworth, Mn E. A. Mitthews, Mn.\nLockhard, Mrs. Jamu Spien, Mn.\nRilty. Mn. M. Murphy, Mn. Fox,\nMrs. F. S. Chandler, Mn. E. M.\nSandilindi, Mn Frank Helme, Mrs.\nJ. M. Allen, Mrs. Chester Sptirt,\nMrs. R. MtcOllllvray, Mra. D. J.\nBarclay, Mn. Ronald Htwtt, Mlu\nMildred Twiu, Miu Dorothy Ttnkeu, Mlu Irene MacGiUlvrty and\nMiu Dorcu Tinkess.\nKASLO HONORS\nTHE LATE KING\nRev. E. Pitt-Griffiths\nPays Tribute; Many\nAttend Service\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014A memorial amice for the late King Gtorge V wu\nheld ln 81 Mark'i Anglican church\nMonday. WeU over JOO citizens assembled.\nThe service wu conducted by Rev.\nE. Pitt Grlffifthi, vietr ot St. Mark'i\nWho stressed the wlemnlty ot the\noccaiton.\nTbt vicar paid tribute to tht ulf-\neffacing cooperation of Uit local\nclergy which bad made thia service\npoulble. Ai toe royil family wtrt\nmtmbtn of the Church of England\nit bad seemed moit fitting that thii\nlervlce should be held is the Anglican church and conducted by tht\nAnglican minliter, tnd in his otiica\nu vicar ot St. Mark's Rtv. Mr. Grit-\ntithi welcomed th( con\u00abregaUon.\nTht city council tnd other civic\nofficial! attended ln a body, at did\ntht local branch of tbe Canadian\nLtglon. All branches of the Christian church, fraternal and itrvlct\ntocitUtt wtrt wtU rtpretented. Of\nmany of thtit tht lite King had\nbetn patron.\n\"O God Our Help in Agu Fait\"\nwu tht ilnt hymn sung, followed\nby the raiding ot the burial itrvlct\nand responsive reading. The ISOth\nand 2Srd Pilama wtrt chanted, followed by tht lunn. The choir sang\n\"I Heard a Volet From Httvtn\".\nand after further respomive reeding, according to Uit ritual of Ult\nAnglican church, tht reptaUng ot\nprucribed prayen tht hymn \"Lead,\nKindly Lignt\" wu tung. Thta wu\nfollowed by tht addreu ol tha vicar\nwho eulogized the lite King for hll\ntruly regal ytt fatherly reign of it\nyean, which from tbs vtry beginning, had been beiet by unprecedented trlali.\nThe great war had bttn oet of Ute\ngreateit ot thue but through lt all\nHit Miiuty had not only beta\n\"king, but t father to those wno wert\nupholding tht honor of hii Emplrt.\" Tht war and ita aftermath\nhad taken Ul toll trom Hli Majuty'i\nphysical itrength, but hli mind had\nalwayt bttn centered on the welt ire\nof hit ptoplt.\nTht vicar aaktd, \"Why tola pronounced and wrnut intereit to the\nKing!\" He tniwered by uylng thit\nthe loyalty of King Gtorge hlmielf,\nthroughout the 39 yun of hit reign\nhad engendered tola interest Hit\nitrong penonality and his love for\nhi! people had iniUUed lo tbt hetrti\nof till lubjtcta profound rupect,\nlove and loyalty. Ht had bten a\nking indeed but hid alw been a\n\"father to his people who mourned\nhli paulng Sn evtry comer of tht\nEmplrt.\"\nWith Queen Mary, hll sympt-\nthetlc tnd loving companion during tht long yean of hii reign,\nthought tor their weaker tubjtcti\nbad evtr bten upptrmoit ln their\nmindi, Utt view declared. Thty\nwrrowed with tht lufftrtog and rejoiced in tht Joy ot their ptoplt, tnd\nwith their gnat mlnda and generoui\nhearta, wught to relieve the auffer-\ning and add to tht Joy ol thoit owing fealty to the crown, tnd Uw\ngreat mats of people honored and\nloved thtm u \"possibly no King\nand Queen had ever betn w universally loved and honored.\"\nWithout doubt ont ol tht mott\noutitandlng figurei ln world hiitory\nduring the put 23 yun, the Kings\nthoughti for hit lubjtcta alwayi\ncamt beiore thoughti ot itlf, Utt\nipeaker itated, and tn tola ht wu\never tided and abetted by hli loyal\nwlft and companion, Queen Mary.\n\"We ihould feel grateful that to\ntheir ton, King Edward VIII, thtre\nla another itrong personality who\nhai alio ascended the throne In\nmost trying tlmu,\" Uie putor uid,\n\"but he, Ukt his father, hu the\nwelfare ol hli lubjtctt vtry much\ntt hurt tnd wlU be t moit worthy\nsuccessor to carry on thou duUu'\n\u25a0o long bornt by hit father with\nhumble thankfulness and prayen\nfor Ult well being of the great nitlon ot which ht wu tht beloved\nmonarch,\n\"Our loyalty, love and eympathet\nlc understanding ihould be extended to him who by birthright, hu hid\nthe cares ot state and toe ruling of\na great Empire laid upon hli shoul\ndert. With all the world wt Join In\ndeep tympathy with King Edward\nVIII, Uie Queen Mother and all the\nroyal family.\"\nPrayen were thtn rtptattd and\nthe late King'i favorite hymn,\n\"Abide With Me\" wu lung. The\nDud March ln Saul wu rtndtred\nby Mn. John Keen, who prulded\nat tbe organ.\nTht time honored \"Tht King Ii\nDeid; Long Live the King\", pronounced by the vicar, wai foUowed\nby tht singing ot tht naUonal an\nthtm.\nVISIT SUNSHINE\nBAY\nI SUNSHINE BAY, B-C-Mr. and\nMrs. Arthur Mackereth of Broadwater, after ipending t ftw dayi to\nTrail, are vliltlng tht lormer'i parents, Mr. and Mn. Macktrtth.\nMiss Myrtle Johniton. who ii\nworking In Ntlton, wu visiUng her\nptrenta over tht week-end.\nMiu Hazel Knauf ii visiting her\nbrother-in-law and lliter, Mr. and\nMn. R. Mtlda. at TraU.\nRobert L. Hong and ton, Raymond, were viilton to Trail Monday and Tuesday.\nJ. r. Stevenson is Improving ln\nhealth, although he Is sUU confined\n|o his home.\nOhm B. Appleton wu a shopper\nin Nelion.\nKASLOCHURCH\nELECTS\nLIFT M0NIY TO DO-\nBRADFORD, England, (CP). \u2014\nWilter Turton, 73, of Idle, nur hare,\nbefore drowning himself ln a canal\nwrote a nott leaving 3390, all ha\npoueued, to \"my pal, Jet.\" Jet wu\nhli dog.\nCLASSIFIED ADS OET RESULTS\nORANGE PEKOE BLEND\n\"SAUK\nTEA\nKASLO, B.C.-The annual vwtry\nmeeUng of St Mark'i Anglican\nchurch wu held Sunday. Rev. E.\nPitt-Griffiths, vicar, preiided. There\nwai a vtry good attendance.\nReporti were received from every\nbranch of church worken.\nTht vicar reappointed Ronald\nHewat u vicar's warden and Mr.\nHewat and Major J. H. Stubbi wert\nappointed liy readers. Mijor Stubbi\nwu alto reappointed vutry clerk.\nHis acceptance of these offlcei await\nhli return trom Victoria where he\nll spending the winter. R. A. Chester\nwu reelected people's warden.\nTht church committee is composed ot tbe two wardens, the vtttry\nclerk, Mrs. E. M. Sandilands, Mrs.\nJamei Goodenough, C. G. Bowker,\nE. a Cherry, W. P. Rudkin. and E.\nM. Sandilands.        '\nSynod delegate! elected were E.\nM. Sandilands and W. P. Rudkin\nwith C. O. Bowker and R. A. Chester\nas alternate!.\nUnited Church\nNames Officers\nal Invermere\nINVERMERE, B.C.-At the annual meeting ot Trinity United\nchurch congregation TTiundey Rev.\nJ. L. Clerihue wu chairman.\nMr. Clerihue thanked not only the\nmemben ol hia congregation, but\n111 Uit realdent! ot tht dlitrict tor\nUie kind manner ln which he, hii\nwilt ud lamily, had bten received\nis newcomen.\nThe lecretary-treaiurer, Mr. Aih-\nworth read the reports, showing I\nsatiitactory year. The miulonary\nmaintenance fund and other aisess-\nmtnta had been lully met There\nwu a graded Sundty school with\nUie Rev. J. J* Clerihue as superintendent tnd thret teachers, R. McCormick, Mr. Brown and Mlu Mirion Tunnacllffe.\nTht C O. I. T\u201e under direcUon ot\nMn. Elmes was doing good work\nand \u2022 branch ot the Tuxii hid recently been itarted by Rev. Mr.\nClerihue.\nTht report of the Ladiei' aid wai\nreid by Mrt. Letik their secretary-\ntreaiurtr, ihowing thit Uie faithful\nwork of the memben htd met with\ngratifying results.\nVote! ol thanks wtre accorded to\nthe officers and othen of the church\nwho had performed various duUei.\nTht following were elected to\ncarry on the bualntu ot the church\nfor the preient year: Dr. Hawke,\nR. G. Newton, W. H. Cleland, Mr.\nArmstrong, Mr. Tunnacllffe, with\nA. Ashworth ai secretary-treaiurer.\nFor decorative house planta ln\nwinter, a botanist suggests trying\nsweet potatoes, panley and carrots, all aUracUvt.\n\u25a0      '        \u25a0\u25a0  \u00bbAQg FIVE\nMOYIE TEACHER\nGIVEN A PARTY\nCommunity Honors\nMiss Cullum on\nHer Birthday\nMOYIE, B.C.\u2014A community lurpriie birthday ptrty was given Jan.\n33 complimenting the teacher Mlu\nCullum.\nThe junior elan room wu nwtly\ndecorated with purple and white\nstreamen. Thii work wai accomp-\nUihed by a bevy of helpers with a\nlot of credit given Philip Conrad\nfor his helping htnd.\nProgressive whist wis playtd. A\ntable lunch wu served by the ipeciil convenon Mrs. P. W. ConraiJ\nand Mrs. T. H. Sanden. FoUowing\ntht refreshments, Mr. T. H. Sanders\naddressed the guest of honor on\nbehalf ot the entire gathering. Miss\nCuUum wu the recipient of in enlarged framed picture ft the Upper\nMoyle lake in the way of a birthday\ngift and a note of appreciation for\nher lnterut at all times In the every\nday concerns.\nHonors at cards wart awarded\nMn. Bobby Smith, Entile Gascon,\ntint prize; A. J. Smith and Mn. M.\nConrad, second. During the evtnlng\nall prizes were glvtn to Mill Cullum.\nIn ruponu Mlu Cullum voiced\nhtarty thanki.\nDancing held sway until 3 a.m.\nGuests numbered 90. Ernest Dan-\nielson with his accordion, Miu\nFrances Whitehead and Mn. Barr\nhelped out at tht piano for the\ndanct numben.\nAmir Geroux ot Cunon ipent\nSaturday at his homt htrt.\nMr. Kenhaw ls again at home alter a narrow escape to a bus accident. Mr. and Mrs. Kenhaw returned by car Monday night\nJack Taylor and ion Hirry, were\nin town Monday.\nTwo Nokuip Boyi\nBreak Legs\nNAKUSP, B-C-Alf red Dunn ana\nBobble Steenhotf, both 1. yean old,\neach broke a leg In a sleighing accident on Stephenson hill. Their legi\ngot twisted beneath the crowded\nbob-iltd on which thay were riding.\nQUALITY\nMEATS\nBONELESS BEEF AND *)\u00a3t\nKIDNIYi 2 Ibi. fer . Ld\nMINCED STEAK:      OP*\n2 lbt. for LO\nBREAKFAST Ogl\nSAUSACE: 2 Ibi. for Ld\nLEAN LAMB OP*\nSTEW: 2 Ibi. for ... LD\nFRESH PORK LIVER: IA*.\nPer lb.    IV\nFRESH CALF 1(W>\nHEARTS: per Ib. ... IU\nPICS FEET: .    OM\n3 iht. for Ln3\nSPARE RIBS: Freih;   1C<\nper Ib  It)\nBURNS\nU CO. LIMITED\nPHONE 50\nFree Delivery\nDRIVES\nCHILLS\nAWAY\nTHE four hid-* loganbtrriu ihown above an but a few of talUljni\n1 which were on the vinu lut yur In Brltlih Columbia. It is a delightful,\nlarge, illghtly tert, winwolortd berry ol utmost value to miny rtclpte.\nTht lutt jam U madt from fmh berrlu and pun iugir with nothin. tlm\nadded. We have just been told that Royal City Jams an made ln thli way.\nand that they an now being told it lower prion.\nI\n \u25a0\nPAGE SIX\nN_\u00bb80N DAILY KIWI NELSON B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. FEBRUARY I. 1186\nfttlaim latty Jfanifl\nEitabliihed April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nALJ. THE NIWS WHILE IT IS NEWS.\nPubUihed every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n216  Baker  Street,   Nelion,  Brltlih   Columbia.\nPhone 144, Privatt Eiehange Connecting All Departmenti.\nMember  of  Uie  Audit  Bureau  of  Circulation!  and\nThe   Canadian   Preu   Leated   Wire   Newi   Service.\nTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1936.\nNAVIES OF THE THREE GREAT POWERS\nWith Japan deserting the London Naval Conference,\ndeciding that she has the right to build a navy as big\nas that of Britain or the United States, it is interesting\nto note the comparative strength of these three Powers\nat the present time. Taking no account of ships under\nconstruction or planned, it is as follows:\nBRITAIN- N<\nCapital ihlpi           1*\nAircraft cirriers  .'\t\nCruliert (A)    - \u2014\nCrullers (B)  \u2014 \t\nDettroyert  -\t\nSubmirines\t\nTotals    -I*\nUNITED STATES\u2014\nCapital ships\t\nAircraft cirriers \t\nCruisers  (A)   _\u201e\nCruisers (B)\t\nDestroyers  - _.\nSubmirinu  -\t\nTotals\nJAPAN-\nCapltal ships \t\nAircraft carriers\nCruiieri (A) .\nCrullers (B)\nDettroyert \t\nSubmarines\nTotals\nNo.\nTons\nlft\n474.750\nA\n115,350\n111\n183,886\n32\n159,170\n152\n174,444\n52\n51,259\n276\n1,158,659\nlft\n455,400\n4\n92,000\nId\n149,775\n10\n70,000\n288\n250,715\n84\n70,040\n357\n1,088,430\n1\n272,070\n4\n68,370\n14\n123,520\n2(1\n93,375\n.103\n122,101\n7D\n77,125\n220\n758,561\nJust how this comparison would be changed for or\nagainst Japan with account taken of ships under construction or planned, isn't exactly clear. What is certain\nis that Japan's last budget included a tremendous sum for\nnaval construction.\nTHE POST WITHOUT THE NAME\n\"What's in a name?\" Evidently Soviet Russia thinks\nthere is some untoward influence in certain titles, for\nexample: The word signifying \"general\" is officially\ntaboo, although a military hierarchy gradually is being\nestablished. To the ears of authority \"general\" contains an inward menace to proletarian safety.\nIn contrast to the rejection of the title in Russia,\nHaiti is of .all places in the world, the one in which the\ntitle of general flourishes. Summed up by a statistician\nwho js interested in the subject we have the following\naccount:\n\" 'Haiti it governed by generals in ill sires. The general li to\nubiquitous thit it leads you to doubt whether it miy not be\npoulble thit, whUe to be a general li no compliment, not to be\none is In Uie niture of \u2022 slap In Uie face.' He declared that he had\nbeen ible to find no exict statistics liter thin 1867, but thit\nthere were then in Haiti, 6500 generali of division, 7000 regimental officen, and 6500 privates.''\nProbably the Soviet has rejected the name while\nretaining the office because there is an ultra martial tang\nto the sound. In any case, Russian will have none of it\ndespite the fact that the army there has been enormously\nincreased in the past few years.\nEvidently to the present day Russian authorities,\nsome names are overcrowded with significance!\nMINERS'STRIKE AVERTED\nThe British miners, regarded as perhaps the most\ndogmatic section, of trades unionism, have accepted a\ncompromise offer by the operators in the latest wage\ndispute that has arisen. There will be no strikes as threatened. The miners sought an increase in wages of two\nshillings a shift for men and one shilling for boys and\na national agreement affecting wages. The operators in\nreply presented figures to show inability to meet the\nminers' demands in full and continue to carry on the industry. Three of the principal coalfields in the country\nare now being operated at a loss.\nThe compromise agreement reached involves an increase in the miners' wages averaging a little less than\none shilling a shift. The executive of the miners has\naccepted the settlement with the proviso that it is an \"acceptance on account.\" It, however, averts a strike and\nindicates conciliation and moderation in the matter of\nthe demands made. It would have been unfortunate, indeed, if the new King's reign had opened with anything\nin the nature of a domestic upheaval.\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nAll letten to the editor mutt be ligned with the mme of the\nwriter.  A nom de plume mty be used for publication if desired.\nLinu In typewritten copy should be double spiced. .\nTOO MANY STARCHES NOT GOOD\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING. M.D.\nWOULD LIKE TO\nSEE THINKERS\nWRITING HERE\nFORTUNATELY\n\"Was ye fear't in the airyplane,\nDonald'.\"\n\"Indeed I was fear't! I cried oot to\nthe pilot: 'Five poons If ye put me\nsafely doon!' Fortunately he dldna\nhear me.\"\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMUSIC IN THE AIR\nAs I start this column, one ot the\nboys, while waiting for an inspiration on a news itory, is softly whittling \"Drink to Me Only With Thine\nEyei.\" I have listened to the tune\nseveral Umes and I wonder where\nI heard it lut. No. I have it I heard\nit last at the Klmberley bonspiel.\nIt was in a hotel room. The boyi on\nUie 11 o'clock draw had just meandered ln and were warming up.\nBob Eckleston ls sitting on the bea\npitying his accordion. Can he play\niti Jim Ewan parades down the corridor and enters the room with hit\nbag pipes skirling \"Cock o' the\nNorth\" oi the \"Road to the Isles.\"\nFrank Strachan of Trail, just otf\nthe ice and still in beret and sweater\nof the famed Somerville rink, rushes\nhr with his violin. Then the fun is\non. They play and sing and sing\nand play. The audience gets bigger\nand bigger. The room is too small.\nIt almost bulges\u2014but Uie music\ngoes on. Everyone in the vicinity is\nlike Beethoven\u2014he had heard muiic\nand was tempted to enter. The music\ngoes on. Then comes a halt. Someone suggests a song and they pick\ntheir men. Here's the crowd: Bob\nEckleston, George James, Jim Pearson and a couple of the Hogg boys,\nfirst names have slipped my memory. After a few warming-up chords\nthey are away. They sing in unison\nand in part \"Drink to Me Only With\nThine Eyes.\" It is a muterplece\nwith solo parts, etc. The conductor,\na Nelson curler, is a maestro. He\ngets everything out of the song that\nis possible. He bawls this one out\nand then another. They have perfect\nharmony. They have trouble with\nGeorge James' bass. He comes in\nwith a deep \"pomp, pomp, pomp.\"\nThey sing on and on. I left after a\ntime thinking that aft.r all there is\ntalent among curlers. I will not forget the little concert, neither wlU a\nlot of the visitors. No wonder they\nhave musical festivals and cups galore around Kimberley.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMORE NAMES RECALLED\nAnd while on the matter ot music,\nif you can caU bagpipes muiic. I\nshould pass compliments to Angus\nScott who wu here and there when\nthe curlers were a little down and\nneeded a little Scotch music to pep\nthem up. And before I forget about\nthe bonspiel for another year I\nmuit recall meeting George Janes\nin Uie Kimberley hotel. Gtorge il\nan old 54th and 2nd G.M.R. man\nand knowi a lot of West Kootenay\npeople. Then there wu Duke Hyslop, a wrestler or boxer\u2014but Itill\na genial toul\u2014and an au revoir to\nJoe Stella ln the SuUivan. Thank\nyou, Joe.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFINE 8WIMMING\nWEATHER\nOver in Trail they have a year-\nround swimmer, I refer to William\nGopp', the bridge diver\u2014but this\nyear he has some rivals in Nelson.\nSeveral skaters had the opportunity\nof trying out Kootenay Like on\nFebruary 2 when they unwillingly\ntook their first dip of the season. I\nhear Tommy Bishop descended into\nthe depths up to his neck and that\nHerb Young and Ian Dingwall were\nclose seconds. Boys will be boys\u2014\nand you know that old story\u2014you\ncan't forever skate on thin ice\nwithout hiving a break down.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTHERE WAS ANOTHER\nj   The magistrate glowered at the\n1 man in the witness box. \"You say\n1 this man  robbed you?\" he uid,\nheavily. \"Can you pick out any of\nyour property from this heap of\narticles found on the prisoner?\"\n\"Yes, that'i my handkerchief with\n'B' in the corner,\" said the witness.\n\"But that is no proof, my man,\"\nsnapped the magistrate. \"I have a\nhandkerchief with 'B' in the corner.\"\n\"Well, I'm not surprised, I lost\ntwo handkerchiefs.\" retorted the\nwitness.\nPARENTS WHO ARE NERVOUS HARD ON\nCHILD, SAYS MYERS\nBv GARRY C. MYERS. PH. D.\nHead Dtotrtment Parent Educition Clevelind College, Wtittrn\nReierve Unlvenity\nBlessed is the child whose pirenti\nhive poiie. How unfortunate If hli\npirenti or one of them Is known u\n\"very nervoui\". And when such l\ncrisis ii a nervous breakdown\ncomes!\nW. B. Wolfe, M.D., director of the\nCommunity Church Hygiene clinic,\nNew York City, his written an excellent book, \"The Nervoui Breakdown \". In a sensible way he dii-\neuiui the ciuies, lymptomi ind\ncuret.\nIf you hive i nervoui breikdown,\n\"You hive tranigreised Uie ltwt of\nnature,\" he sayi... \"No one cm pit\nhli prlvite opinion against niture\nand win. Nature hai given you \u2022\nlng signal which nature hu given\nyou mty be annoying, but you\nshould be happy thtt you hive perceived it. In the fice of the overwhelming evidence of t mistaken\nstrategy of life, the sensible thing to\ndo it to eximlne the pittem of life\n\u2022nd discover Just what mlitokes you\nhave mtde. The leu time you wute\ncompliinlng ibout your symptoms\nor Indulging In orgies of self-pity\nthe better ... As soon as you have\nlearned where you hive mide your\nmistake, begin early coniclously towird \u2022 normal goal... You are not\ntoo old nor too weik to begin over\nagain ... The fact that you have a\nMORTGAGED\nThe public debt ot tile United\nStates, which was $1,223,000,000 in\n1916, is now more than $30,000,000,-\n000. Canada'i het debt-$615,156,000\nIn 1916\u2014had grown to $2,729,978,000\nln 1934. When nations are mortgaged\nto the hilt, where will the leaders\nturn?\u2014Toronto Globe.\n_   nervous breakdown Indlcitu that\nwarning sigr.il thit you may no i ?\"- have tmple powers of resist-\nlonger dliregird. The dimage ii not j ance-II isn'' too late to be normal,\ntoo great to repilr... There It iome   CONSULT PHYSICIAN\nBi'.tll<t '1 your ,lr,ten  of  Ufe     \"\u00bb you think you have a nervous   \u201e.\nWhich his brought you Into conflict   breakdown, it is your first duty to I selves thot they are worrying about\nwith nature ind retlity. The warn-' consult a competent physician, pref-, someone else\nerably your family doctor, and get\na thorough and complete physical\nexamination. If you cannot find any\nevidence of physical or organic disease, ask your doctor to recommend\na reputable psychiatrist.\"\nHis chapter on \"Creative Self-Realization\" is exceptionally good. In\nit he discusses the art of getting\nalong with yourself, of using your\nleisure, of living in the present; Uie\nart ot avoiding arguments, of being\ngrown up, and ot cultivating a sense\nof humor.\nAnd I might add that some persons with nervous breakdowns\nmight get almost immediate reUef\nif they were able to turn their attention from themselves to doing\nsomething to help other persons. I\nhive wen some almost magic\nchanges in persons who suddenly\ngrew absorbed ln helping a family\nln distreu, or trying to bring cheer\nto a blind, crippled or bed-ridden\nperson. After all, a greet many nervoui breakdown! ire self-centered\npersons, even when they fool them\nThe Editor, Neiaon Daily News:\nSir-1 ihould like you to iniert\nthe foUowing letter under the cip-\ntion \"What do you think?\" I Uke\nyour caption, and would also like to\niee thinkers write under It Real\nmodern, 1936 thinkers, should, If\nthey analyze preient day conditions,\ndiscard even much of 19th century\nIdeas. It seems to me that many of\nour writers, professional and ama-\nteu persist in presenting ideu\nwhich fit in to the 19th, 18th, 17th\nand sometimes 16th century periods. The 19th century gave Uie advanced industrialized social production a very high, and orderly efficiency. The machine age within\ntheie advanced countries caused, out\nof the necessity of speclaUzed production, a minute syitem of\ndivisional labor. No one can dispute\nthe fact that each improvement in\nthe machinery used in production\naccelerates or intensifies the division of labor.\nAcknowledging the fact that social production is the rule prevailing\nin all highly industrialized coun\ntries, we should, it we can reason at\nall, admit the fact that a social form\nof ownership should take place.\nWhy? I hear Meurs. Bealby, Rees,\nOnlooker, Hayseed and aU their\nbourgeois friends ask. This is the\nreason. In 1914-18 the industrialized\nworld discovered that it could not\nonly feed, clothe, shelter \u2014 in a\nfuhion\u2014and mpply the armiei with\nwasteful war material, but also, it\ncould feed, clothe and shelter those\nwho were engaged in useful production. It stands to reaion, if we\ncould do that in t time when a\ngreat part of the world was at war\nwasting production, that, when\npeace is declared, a reaction on the\nworld market must take place. In\nother words, in peace time, we can\nproduce, owing to the social and\ndivisional character of the method\nof producUon, too much for the\nworld commodity market That is,\na sale market, the purpose of which\nis to realize profits, can, and ts now\nalmost continually choked. Therefore it behooves us as modern thinkers to deduct from this economic, industrial and political situation, the\nlogical application of scientific ownership vested in all the people. That\ndone, the next itep ihould be tn\nequitable distribution of the socially\nproduced commodities according to\nthe needs of the people.\nThis, to me, seems to be a 1936 idea\nwhich would fit in with 1936 conditions. The application ot this practical test would Immediately increase the home consumptive abilities in all the highly industrial\ncountries from Japan back to Japan\nat leut 200 per cent. We should need\naU the unemployed and other non-\nworking people at the wheels ot industry in order to meet the reasonable demands of the released consuming possibilities. The very best\nof necessities aU ahould hive. This\nin itself would accelerate industry.\nModerate luxuries should in a comparatively short time be commonly\nconsumed and used. Thli would not\nonly raise the standard of Uvlng, but\nwould again help to hasten the\nwheels of Industry. It would also\nbe a great factor in developing the\nnow latent art talents. There ii no\nreason why, when once the world\nIs properly organized under such a\nsocial order, that mui travel on a\npercentage basis in order to avoid\ndisruption in production, should not\ntake place. Each individual would\nchoose their destination. Society\ncould surely maintain 1-12 of its\npopulation when all able bodied are\ndoing useful work.\nMy chief reaion for writing is to\ncriticize Onlooker's letter of Jm.\n5, 1936.\nHe starts out boosting himself tnd\ncriticizing the Encyclopedia Brit-\ntanica's definition of socialism. I\nam not supporting Uie definition of\nany dictionary or encyclopedia in\ntheir entlretly. All of them falli to\nexplain lt scientifically for Uie simple reason that Uie capitalist economists do not understand the subject,\nor, if they do, they deliberately mistake the question. I advise anyone\nseeking a proper definition of\nsocialism to read \"Socialism, Utopian and Scientific,\" by Engels.\nBellamy's \"Looking Backward\" ls\nnot a book for the itudent beginaer\nin economics. It it rather, an idealist\nbook for light profitable reading\nafter having mastered the first nine\nchapters, and the famous 32nd chapter of Capital by Karl Marx. However, apart from the above, Onlooker would have a difficult task\nto undermine the philosophy Bel*\nlemy uses In \"Looking Backward.\"\nI am very pleased Onlooker detected the weaknesses in sophistry.\nThe socialist school who adhere to\nthe materialist conceptions of historical explanation discarded sophistry lince 1848. Not that there are\nno sophists ln the socialist movement; there are too many of them.\nWe all have a decoction of conceit\nand the habit of presuming, there-\ntore, a mirror would iuit eich md\nevery one of us who is worth looking at in the mirror. Show me one\nperson who has accomplished something above the average who lacks\nconceit, md I will show you 1000\nwho need a mirror.\nA \"policy\" and a \"theory\" are very\nclose relations, but Onlooker separates them with a \"gulf of eternity.\"\nA policy is a theory until It has been\nput into pracUce. Once an established fact it loses Its theoretical characteristics. It Is alwayi something\nto be done. It presupposes t necessity. A policy becomes practical as\naction tikes place, but prior to acUon lt ls t theory. Before fuedtllsm\nwu displaced by capitalism, the\npolicy ot the rising bourgeois wis a\ntheory greatly questioned by the\nscholars of that day. But when the\nbourgeois defeated fuedalism theii\nI\ntheory \u2014 poUcy \u2014 became a Uvlng\nfact Today the theoi? -of toclal\nownership md the free distribution\nof comodlUu according to human\nneeds instead of for the benefit of\nthe capitalist clau is greatly questioned by our capitalist economists\nand the heads of our seats of learning. The mighty press ilso questions\nthe lociallit theory. In the compira-\ntlve near future, however, the ioc-\nliliit theory\u2014policy\u2014will become\nan estabUshed fact.\nWe must not forget thil, that between two seeming opposites, the\ngulf ii not so grest u to exclude e\nrelationship. Good and bad are but\nthe extreme endi of one pole There\nil only one absolute truth, that is\nthe whole universe. Within this\ntruth are wrapped up all Uie relativities discovered md undiscovered.\nIf Onlooker wants to see taxation\nfor management of world .-\" -s let\nhim read the Canidi T *ok.\nAlio let him read the f life.\nThousands of fanners ui pay\ntaxes. We have also hae ad\nmirable Instances of Inflation and\ndeflation. Confiscation on a large\nscale taku place in the midst of\ndear old capitalism. Every time a\nbrainy politician brings down a reduction of interest on any investment it confiscates what is supposed\nto be a Just profit. It reduces the\nsmall holder to such,a low ebb that\nhe sells out. Sometimes he ls squeezed out. This action reacts on Invested capital and forcu, the growth of\ncombines. More confiscation takes\nplace. Besides in the dally grind of\nworking, every, worker is exploited\nby being paid less than the producing capacity of labor power. The\nexploiter takes, in commodities,\nwealth created by labor for which\nhe pays nothing. This is a dally act\nof confiscation from millions of\nworkers for several hundreds of\nyears. Confiscation ls no new thing.\nWe should be well acquainted with\nthis established fact if we are modern 1936 thinkers.\nTtit machine age, coupled with\nthe imperlaUstic character capital-\nIsm develops in every country\nwhere It is established tends to regimentation. Onlooker's jibe at Russia\nreacts unfavorably towards this fair\ncountry, Canada. We should be far\nin advance of Russia, but I tm afraid\nwe have some lessons to learn even\nfrom the' .and of the Soviets.\" They\nspend more and more on education,\nwe spend leu and less. They are\nImproving home life, we let our\nhome life drift They tend to increase expenditure, we tend to decrease it They are heading for full\nproduction and distribution, we curtailed production md hinder diitrlbution unless a pound ot flesh accrues to the capitalist shylocks.\nThey are heading for a plenty policy\u2014which is a theory at pretent\u2014\nwe practice a Scarcity poUcy, which\nis a fact amidst Plenty. Onlooker:\njust peep Into the home mirror, face\nfacts md your fancy sophistry will\nbecome such an excellent water\ncontainer u a sieve held two feet in\nspace.\nNo! I hadn't forgotten that Onlooker denounced sophistry, and 1\nstill think he is \u2022 real good sophist.\nIndividual ownership of the\nmeans of life with the objective of\nexploitation ls a social development\narising out of economic conditions.\nIt is not a natural law. Yet lt is a\nconsequence of a set of conditions,\nand in its relation to them Is \u2022\nnatural consequence.\nOnlooker confuses nitional laws'\nand instincts with sociil md economic laws and customs. The law of\nself preservation is common to man,\nbeast and insect But mm being not\nonly 1 social animal is, it the sime\ntime \u2022 tool using animal, thli latter\ncharacteristic distinguishes Uie difference between man and his nearest approach. The habit of thought\ngrowi with the development of the\ntools used. True, the tool ilso helps\nmm to think a little ln advance.\nMin protected the common rights\nprobably for millions of years; but\nhe eventually arrive! it t point of\ndeparture when one unscrupulous\nindividual could lord it over the\nrest. Since then, broadly speaking,\nwe have had societies based on class\ndifferences. This hu now developed\nInto an extreme phase. We have on\nthe one hand untold evidence of\nwealth, md on the other\u2014in ipite of\ngrowing charitable organization!\u2014\nextreme poverty The law of lelf\npreservation again thrusts itself upon society. It hii now developed Into \u2022 social law. The masses are asking for a square deal. They want\nequal economic security ind equal\nsocial status. It ls a natural consequence of modern conditions.\nA young forest will have a veritable thicket of trees, but m old\nforest will be composed of stately\ntimbers. There Is no conscious action. The reasons for the death of\nmost of the small trees are a lack\nof food ln the soil and air, a lack of\nlight and moisture. A natural law\nof the survival ot the fittest\nIn human society the survivor of\nthe fittest means the survival ol\nthe mightiest md not necessarily\nthe best\nNo one respects the dog who lets\nhis bone be stolen, neither do we\nrespect the thief who takes the\nmeat off the dog's tail md throws\nthe bones back to the former owner\nof them.\nDon't be afraid Onlooker, the\nsocialist administration, when It gets\npolitical power backed up by the\nworkers wiU not confiscate your\nhome; will not tax you out of existence; will not for -lose on helpleu\nlarge families; will not Inflate nor\ndeflate currency. It will guarantee\nyou tecurity to your persoml property such as your home tnd tur-\n-oundings. Money, or credit will be\nIssued u neir u possible to cover\nthe totel production. The total production wlU be distributed iccording to humm needi tnd not for ult\ntor profit it now.\nThank you,\nWILL BAYLISS.\nCrawford Bay, B.C, Jan. 29, 1936.\n\u2022t\nElderly memberi of i houiehold\nrequire proper food nearly u much\nai Infants md children, md just u\nmuch u the middle-aged members\nof the household. But frequently\nthey do not obtain this. There ls no\neffort on the part of the family to\nsupervise their dietary habits. They\nire supposed to be old enough to\nknow whit they wtnt to eat, md\ntheir individual crotchet! md tastes\nmay lead them far astray.\nOne of the common faults tn the\ndietary of elderly people ls that they\neat too many ttarehu, which supply\nmore calorlu than their physical\nacUvity warrants. Another fault is\nthat they select foods which lack in\niron md vitamin B and may lack\nother vitamins. As 1 reiult, the bone\nmarrow receives in imdequite lupply ot material necessary to build\nblood cells. Just u the more rapid\ngrowth in chUdren maku a certain\ntype of diet necessary for them, so\nthe rapid destruction of tluue and\ndegeneration of tissues in Uie elderly\nmaku a properly selected diet necessary for them.\nNO DEFINITE DISEASE\nLong ago I wu Impressed with the\nfinding that elderly people with anemia, especially pernicious anemia, j\nhad for many years eaten practic-\nally no meat, eggs or milk at all.\nThese conditions are particularly\nlikely to occur in elderly people who\nUve by themselves md cook their\nown meals. They live mostly on processed foods and starchy foods, such\nas crackers, and out of canned goods,\nand all too frequently take a nip at\nthe bottle or a nip at a tonic in lieu\nof something substantial to eat. Not\na few cases of actual scurvy have\nbeen found in people living under\ntheie conditioni.\nFresh foodi partlculirly\u2014not a\ngreit quintlty of foods, but fresh\nfoods\u2014are necessary to maintain\nhealth in people past the meridian\nof life.\nQUESTIONS   FROM   READERS\nM.S.B.\u2014\"(1) Could a pounding of\nthe heart from walking fast going\nupstairs or uphill be caused by anemia? (2) My heart has been exam-\ninted and found 100 per cent. Yet 1\nhave this pounding and i choking\nNOT IN THE\nNEWS\nBy WORTH CHENEY\nThete old people need not ihow I senution when doing Uie things I\nmy definite disease picture, iuch it\nAfter seeing this column's apprali-\nal of the yarns told by policemen,\na reader quite appropriately aski:\nWhat about the firemen?\n\"People seldom hear of the heroism of a fireman.\" he writes. \"They\nseem to believe that bravery is part\nof his job. It is, after a fashion, but\nthat doesn't mean these deeds ot\ndaring ihould go unheralded, even\nif they are unrewarded.\n\"If you can get a fireman to talk,\nhe can tell some mighty interesting\nstories. I know, because I was ona\nfqr 20 years.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u00bb\n\"I remember once we were called\nto a fire at a private residence. It\nwas rather a big house, with eight\nrooms. When we arrived we found\nthat the rear of the house on tha\nground floor was in flames, and tha\nfire had ascended the staircase to tha\ntop floor.\n\"We were about to go to work\nscurvy, pellagra or anemia, but they\nare on the border line ot some such\ncondition. In an elderly man who\nhas some hardening of the arterlu,\nhave described. What could be done j when \u00absomeone  informed  ui  that\nfore that?\" i there were two children on the top\nAnswer\u2014 (1) Anemia requires the\nheart to push the impoverished\nblood around at a more rapid rate\nwith iome natural deterioration in ! and, therefore, will cause pounding.\nthe force of the heart, it li more\nnecessary than ever that the quality\not his blood should be iuch that lt\nbringi nutriment to the tissues without imposing additional effort on\nhis heart. \u2022\n(2) Sometlmea unimportant irregularities of the heart due to coffee,\ntea or tobacco, will cause the sensations which you describe. They are\nnot dangerous and need not be a\nsource of concern.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nCOUNTING AND TIMING\nThere are all sorts of individual\ncrotchets. One of these is to use an\nopening minor bid (presumably to\nmake one-over-one bidding easier)\nrather thm using an opening bid of\na four-card major suit Out of deference to his partner's views. Mr.\nT. E. Noble, sitting North, foUowed\nthis convention. The real point about\nthe hand is, however, declarer's Immediate recognition of the type of\nhand held, counting hii wlnnen md\ntiming his play so is to pull the list\nadverse trump after having obtained the two essential ruffs in dummy.\nIt was pretty work.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"I don't care If Pa marries\nagain. I'd like to know that he's\nteilin' some imperfect woman\nhow perfect I was.\"\n10 YEARS AGO  j\nFrom Ntlion Dallv Niwi Fllu I\n\u2666 AUI\n\u2666 KQ84\n\u266697664\n\u2666 None\nBidding went: North, 1 Club, third\nhand; South, 1 Diamond; North, 1\nSpade; South, 4 Spadu. The compromlie on the third iuit named, tor\ntrumpi, ceUed for m opening spide\nlead, to cut down obvious cross-\nruffing.\nThe J of spides wu ciptured with\ndummy'i A. A low heart wu led,\nmd declarer waa in with hll A.\nDummy ruffed a club. Declarer led\na low diamond. West's A captured\nNorth's lone Q, and mother trump\nwas led. Declarer's Q won the trick\nand dummy'i lut ipade spade wis\nused to ruff a club.\nNow declarer could see a certain\ngame. He led a diamond, ruffed lt\nwith next to his last trump, then led\nthe K ot spades, at the eighth trick,\npicking up Eut'i 10\u2014the list outstanding trump.\nThe next three tricks were won\nby declarer's and dummy'i good\nhearti. At the end two club tricks\nhid to be given to Eut Three trump\ntricki hid been won by meins of\nspide leads. Dummy had jutted two\nclub leads. Declarer had ruffed one\ndiamond lead. Four heart tricks had\nbeen taken, making 10 trlcka total\nwon by the declaring ilde, juit giving lti fulfilment of iti contract\nOnly two out of five typu of hinds\nrequire trumps to be pulled at once.\nThe first of theu it where declarer\nhu t long estibliihed or estibliih-\nible tldt tult which he dou not\nwant ruffed. The tecond it when\ndummy holds thtt long tide iuit, requiring protection from advene\nruffs. The remaining typu do not\npermit pulling trumpi immediately,\nai wu the case with Uie above hand.\n\u2666 \u00bb\nf JM\n\u2666 10 S 7 \u00ab 4 a t\n\u2666 A (J\n(Februiry 4, 1926)\nMr. md Mrs. W. R. Gibbon, Silici\nstreet, hid u their guest over the\nweek-end, Mrs. S. Walton of Calgary, who has left for Trail, en\nroute to the coast.\na- t   \u2022\nRev. J. C. McKenzie of Revelstoke\nit to be tendered \u2022 reception upon\nhia arrival here to take charge of\nthe Nelion parish. Very Rev. A. K.\nMclntyre, V.G., of Rossland, is to be\nin Nelson to welcome him.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nL. W. Oughtred, Ainsworth mining man, was a Nelson visitor.\nlit\nMr. ind Mrs. S. A. Curwen of\nSalmo were Nelson busineu visitors.\n|   20 YEARS AGO   !\nI From Nelion Dilly Newt Files\n(Februiry 4, 1916)\nTwo ire known to be dead and\nfour men are reported buried in the\nruins is the result of fire thit deitroyed Uie parliament bulldlngi at\nOttiwi lut night. Damage is estimated at 11,500,000.\nits\nBorn, Februiry 2, to Mr. md Mrs.\nThomas Roynon, Fairview, a ion.\n\u2022 '.tt\nBorn, Jtnutry 31, to Mr. ind Mrs.\nCecU Croisley, 308 Robson street,\n\u2022 ton.\nt'ti\nJohn H. Hoyle and J. Homer\nHoyle of Queen's Bay are Nelson\nvisitors.\nfloor trapped by the flames. A lad*\nder was immediately pitched up to\nthe windows of the upper floor, but\nour men couldn't enter because ol\nthe heat\n\"The chief then decided someone\nwould have to try to reach the children from the inside. He picked ona\nof the younger men and he entered'\nthe house from the front, where tha\nfire was not very bad. He made hia\nway up the flaming stairs, and finally reached the top floor landing.\nBut once there he was enveloped\nin fire and was forced to Jump to\nthe comparative safety of the landing below.\n\"Once more he fought his wiy up\nto the upper floor, md pushed into\nthe front room, where he found the\nchildren, badly burned, but itill\nalive.\n\"By this time the boys had extinguished some of the fire in the upper storey so the tiremsn was able\nto carry the children down a ladder,\n\"He was severely burned on thit\nrescue, but few people ever learned\nwhat an heroic thing he had done.\ntee\n\"When I first became a firemm\nwe hid a grizzled old chief of 72\nwho refused to retire. He wat a\nhearty man, but ln his later yeara\nhe was suffering almost constantly\nfrom colds. Despite his doctor'!\nwarning not to expose himself, he\nstubbornly continued ip his job and\nwas on the scene at every fire.\n\"One night we were called to\nfight a fire at i large warehouse\nnear the downtown section. It wu\nbitter cold, and the prospect of an\nall-night job to keep the flames\nfrom spreading was none to desirable. Because ot the doctor'! orden,1\nthe chief could htve had a good excuse to leave the icene ind go homt.\nBut he didn't He stayed right on the\njob until Uie company left In tin\nmorning.\n\"He contracted a severe cold dur-\nhe died. He was t her\ning thit session, ind later developed\npneumonia. A couple of dayi later\nhe died. He was a hero, but tew people ever knew about it\"\nTO MAKE an ixtra\n1 room In tht attic or\nbuemtnt To Ily un-\nder linoleum. For\nttorm doon. etc.. wt\nrecommend '\/i-lneh C.\ngridi Cottonwood\nPineli.\nWood, Vallanct\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nDistrict Dlitrlbutort\n\"BUILD B.C. PAVROLL8*\n\u2666 958\n\u00bb A K 10\nSI48\n\u2666 A KQ\n\u2666 None\nA\/.\nI?\n\u00a3_.\n\u2666 QS<\n\u00bbQ-2\n\u2666 None\n\u2666 J 10 8 6\n43 2\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nUNWORTHY OF US\nA high school pupil came home the\nthe other day quoting one of her\nteachers u authority for the belief\nthat if a Canadlm ship were attacked it (and presumably all Canada If need be) would be defended\nby the United States. It ls itrmge\nhow mmy of ui are under that im-\npreulon. We use it as an argument\nfor not incurring the expense of\nprotecting ourselves. But could we\ncount on such protection? Is It becoming \u2022 virile young nition even\nif we could?\u2014Calgiry Albertan.\nThese\nMild\nDays\nFor instance take yesterday.\nThere wasn't a cloud and the\nsun was warm. Look what such\nweather means to Pacific Milk.\nThe cows can be themselves.\nA drink of water that in some\nplaces might freeze them to\nthe marrow, here brings refreshment and they feel so\ngood they give to Pacific a\nmilk at its best.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated of Court*\n\u2666 A K1101 4\n\u2666 None\n\u2666 Jtt\n\u2666 K974\nWeit pliys 4 Hetrti, doubled by\nNorth. The opening lud Is the 2 of\nspides. Before tomorrow iee whether the contract cm be defeited. Alio\nsee how mmy tricki South can win\nat ipades.\nA MAJOR QUESTION\nDeipite the decrease in number ot\nfamilies on relief ln most of the\nmunicipalities, the question of relief\npayment! will be \u2022 major one in\n1936. In Toronto, where thue piy-\nments in Ute yeen hive been met\nout of borrowed money, \u2022 propoul\nwill be coniidered to ipply the pay-\nas-you-go principle to at leut part\nof the burden.\u2014Toronto Star.\nSPECIAL SALE OF ALL\nCHRISTMAS\nSPECIALTIES\nAT GREATLY REDUCED PRICES\n25 TO 50% OFF\nWHILE THEY UST\nSot Our Counten for Bargains\nNelion Hardware Co.\nNtlton\nWholtult tnd Rettll Quility Hirdwire\ni.e.\n 1^\nTHE DRAMA\n___\\w\nm\n: \u25a0   'Jm\\\\___ __\n1\nV        _m.\\     r\nW !v$m:                         '               _l\nOfftrfnQ\nyou \u2022 itudy In grlmacei, pictured whtn Jot ttvoldi, lift,\n\u2022nd Dinno O'Mihony wrestled  recently.\nRugby - Skiing <- Indoor SV.lmn.lng - Curling - Bowling\n!*$$I_d____#\nHtm\nHockey - Bodminton - Soccer - Basketball - Boxing - Wrestling\nMOE eivir.-\nNILSON DAILY NIWI. NILSON. i.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. FEBRUARY 4. HM\nlOMHESCLOSE\nTO SCHRINER\nTakes Leadership of\nAmerican Section\nMONTREAL, Feb. 8 (AP).-Chl-\nigo Black Hawks' drive to tht top\nt the National Hockey league's\nInlted States section and the re-\nirganlzed New York Rangers' fight\n0 stay out of the cellar were fully\nefta-ted tonight ln weekly itatls-\nIci Issued by President Frank Cal-\nItr.\n1 Doc Romnes scored a goal and\nhree assists for Chicago during\nhe past week to take over leader-\nhip of the section with eight goals,\nI assists, 24 pointa. He crowded\nie heels of Dave Schriner of New\nork Americans, leader of the whole\n.ague with 10-19-29,\nPaul Thompson got two goals and\nn nssist to aid the Hawk advance\nnd tied with Cecil DiUon and\n'rank Boucher of Rangen for sec-\nnd place ln the United States sec-\nion, each with 23 points. Dillon\nsored three goals, two assists dur-\nig the week while Boucher got\nne of each. Another Hawk to\nlgure prominently wu little Mush\nMarch who had two goali and two\nassists.\nIn the Canadian section BUI\nThorns of the Toronto Maple Leafs\ntook lecond with 12-12-24, up two\npointi on the week. Art Chapman\not Americani wu third with 0-14-\n22.\nRed-Horner of Leafi tried hard\nto keep liis penalties down but wos\nsent off twice at Chicago lut night\nto boost his total to 127 minutes,\nby far the greatest ln the league.\nOther bad men were Allan Shields,\nMaroons, 97, and Soger Jenkins.\nBoston, 49.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy the Canadlin Press\nElzear Rloux, French-Canadian\nheavyweight, was fined $1000 and\nsuspended indefinitely by the Illinois state athletic commission because of his \"unsatisfactory showing\" against Prlmo Camera, the\ngiant Italian, ln Chicago. That was\nsix years ago tomorrow. C-trnera\nknocked out the Canadian woodsman in 47 seconds.\nWINS TROPHY\nNEW YORK, Feb. 3 (AP)-For\nhis achievement in capturing the\nmile race featuring the Millrose\ngames in 4:11, with the renowned\nGlenn Cunningham among his victims, Joseph R. Mangan ot the New\nYork Athletic club today wai\nawarded the Rodman Wanamaker\ninternational trophy.\nOld Country Football Standings\nIncluding   games   on   Saturday,\n.ebruary 1.\nENGLISH LEAQUI.\nFlnt Division\nP. W. L. D. F. A. P.\nlunderland .. 20 18 9 3 74 413 39\nluddersfleld 27 14 7 6 41 39 34\nItrby County 27 tt   7\nLnenal  28 11  7\nllrmingham  . 26 50  8\nItoke City  28 12 11\njoeda United   28   9   8\nV. Brom. Al.   28 12 12\n28 10 10\n23 10 10\n28 10 11\n28 11 12\nJverpool\n'ortimouth  ...\nffolverh. W.\nWinchester C.\nJolton Winds. 28   9 10\nJrimsby T. .... 27 11 13\nSielsea  28   8 10\nliddleibrough 37 10 18\nIrentford  27   \u00bb \u00bb\nSheffield Wed. 25   9 11\n\u2022roston N. E. 28 10 13\ntverton  26   7 12\nHackbum R.  26  9 14\naston Villa 28   8 15\n7 41 28 33\n7 54 29 29\n8 39 37 28\n3 38 38 27\n8 41 34 26\n2 63 47 20\n6 43 39 26\n5 34 41 23\n6 81 50 25\n3 40 42 25\n7 43 49 25\n3 38 47 25\n6 37 49 24\n4 88 47 24\n6 48 45 24\n5 44 60 23\n3 38 41 23\n7 47 59 21\n3 39 66 21\n5 52 83 21\nSecond Division\nCharlton Ath. 27 14 5 8 49 31 36\nLeicester City 27 15\nWest Ham U. 26 14\nSheffield U. . . 27 14\nrot'ham Spun 26 14\nManchester U. 25 13\nPlymouth Arg. 27 12\nFulham  26  8\nBlackpool    27 11 10\nDoncaater Rov. 28 12 12\nNewcastle   U. 24 12 10\n28 10 12\n26   9 10\n27\n27\nNottingham F.\nBradford\nSouthampton\nSwansea T. ..\nBarnsley  27\nBurnley    26\nBury  28\nNorwich City 26\nBradford City 25\nPort Vale 25\nHull City. 28\nThird Division\nLuton Town\nCoventry City\nQueens Pk. R.\nCrystal Palace\nBeading  \t\nWatford   \t\nBright k H. A.\nBournemouth\nGillingham \t\nTorquay U\t\nMlllwaU  \t\nNottt County\nClapton Orient\nBristol Bov.    .\nBriitol City\nCardiff City ...\nExeter City\nNorthamp. T.\nAldenhot    \t\nSouthend V. ..\nSwindon T\t\nNewport C\t\n8 10\n9 11\n9 12\n9 12\n7 10\n9 13\n3 12\n6 15\n4 16\n8   4 54 36 34\n7 5 61 43 33\n8 5 59 36 33\n8   4 62 37 33\n8 4 47 26 30\n9 6 46 37 30\n7 10 48 34 28\n6 55 46 28\n4 33 50 28\n2 58 49 36\n6 58 51 26\n7 38 46 23\n9 28 96 21\n740 83 28\n640 58 24\n8 34 39 28\n9 42 50 23\n4 41 46 22\n8 24 39 18\n4 31 69 16\n5 28 65 13\nLincoln City ..\nStockport Cnty\nChester \t\nAce Stan\t\nWalsall  \t\nHarUepools   U\nDarlington \t\nCrewe Alex ....\nRotherham U ..\nOldham Ath ..\nWrexham \t\nHalifax Town..\nCarUsle U \t\nBarrow\t\nGateshead  \t\nYork City \t\nSouthport \t\nMansfield T ...\nRochdale  \t\nNew   Brighton\n24 13   5\n26 13   8\n26 10   6\n27 13 11\n25 11   8\n25 11   8\n27 13 12\n28 11 11\n26 10   9\n27 11 11\n27 11 12\n25 9 11\n26 9 12\n9 11\n8 11\n7 12\n7 15\n7 15\n5 13\n6 18\n6 56 28 32\n5 47 34 31\n10 57 25 30\n3 49 58 29\n6 55 33 28\n6 39 39 28\n2 54 53 28\n6 48 80 28\n7 45 33 27\n6 62 57 27\n4 43 42 26\n5 35 36 23\n5 29 42 23\n4 38 37 22\n9 35 54 21\n6 41 72 20\n5 32 89 19\n4 42 65 18\n8 37 63 18\n3 30 71 15\nSCOTTISH   LEAGUE\nFirst\nAberdeen  _\nCeltic\t\nRangers\t\nMotherwell ...\nHearti \t\nSt. Johnstone..\nQueens Park..\nPartick ThisUe\nDunfermline A\nKilmarnock\nThird Lanark..\nArbroath  \t\nAlbion Roven\nHamilton A ....\nDundee \t\nQueen of S .\nClyde \t\nAirdrieonians..\nHibernians \t\nAyr U _\nDivision\n29 20 2\n37 21 4\n27 19 2\n26 15 6\n28 16 7\n27 12 11\n28 10 10\n27 11 11\n29 10 12\n26 10 10\n28 10 13\n28 9 13\n29 II 16\n27 9 13\n7 14\n8 15\n7 13\n\u00ab 16\n8 16\n720\n7 74 39 47\n2 77 26 44\n6 79 30 44\n8 62 40 38\n5 68 40 37\n4 48 56 28\n8 48 51 28\n5 52 50 27\n7 53 63 27\n6 50 39 26\n5 40 4125\n6 34 62 24\n2 56 71 24\n5 46 65 23\n8 54 W 22\n6 40 59 22\n7 43 86 21\n5 44 67 17\n8 43 89 18\n2 34 74 16\nSecond Division\nFalkirk  26 20  3 3\nSt. Mirren . 25 20   5 0\nMorton   __. 24 15  8 4\nAlloa     26 18   8 3\nSt. Bernards .. 25 14   7 4\nE. Stirlingshire 26 12   8 6\nEast Fife  26 12   9 5\nCowdenbeath..  26 12 11 3\nDundee U ..... 26 10 11 5\nMontrose   25 10 12 3\nLeith Ath 26 10 13\nStenhousemulr 25 10 13\nEdinburgh City 26  7 12\nThird Division (Northtrn Section)\nTranmere Rov 25 16 2 7 65 30 ft\nChesterfield ... 25 15   2   8 85 27 38\nKings Park\nForfar Ath ...\nDumbarton _..\nBrechin City ..\nRaith Roven -\n8 14\n6 13\n4 16\n4 17\n5 18\n97 31 43\n87 31 40\n59 36 34\n50 43 33\n32 52 32\n56 45 30\n61 57 29\n64 61 27\n63 66 25\n44 56 23\n44 84 23\n44 53 22\n43 55 20\n36 77 19\n33 59 18\n37 84 13\n40 74 13\n42 59 12\nIRISH LEAGUE\n3 66 28 43\n5 71 36 41\n4 68 26 36\n5 80 80 13\n5 50 48 27\n3 56 80 17\n4 49 65 26\n5 53 58 23\n5 49 61 23\n5 41 59 19\n3 47 72 18\n6 40 58 17\n5 28 44 IS\n3 44 94 13\nm\\\\i\u00b0yty\nv.___i_^     %p\n$M*t n \u25a0\u25a0*\nDoubleheader\nWednesday Night\nTwo Commercial\nGames on\nTap\nWith no ienlor hockiy on tap\nthis week, the Commercial league\nwill get a chance on Ita delayed\nschedule. There will be a double-\nheader Wednesday night with Uie\nSavoy club meeting the Fairview\nFalcons, and the Fairview Intermediates meeting the Wolvei Sporting\nclub.\nBoth the Fairview teams has a\nwin credited for Uie ont game\nplayed whereu the Savoy team has\ntwo losses and the Wolvu have one\nvictory and one lou. The Savoys\nhave made a couple of additions to\ntheir lineup and will preient a\nmuch itronger team.\nSaturday night another double-\nheader will be played and if possible\noutside teams will be brought In.\nSnow, Frost Cheer\nOlympic Folk\nGARMISCH - PARTINKIBCfflCN,\nGermany, Feb. 3 (AP)-The tempo\nof this flag-bedecked Olympic village quickened today when the\ntemperature took a nose dive and\nthick mow, Uie tint ln nearly two\nweeks, began to mantle the itreeti\nand the red houie tops.\nWith the opening of the winter\nOlympici only three dtyi away and\n\u25a0now to be found only on Uie foothills of the surrounding peaks, officials were growing deipente. Tonight however, even Uit bobsled-\nden who had been sulking ln thtlr\nquarten like woundtd bean,\nemerged to tramp the white carpet\nand listen to the music of Oirmlsch'i\nnumberless cafes and taverns.\nNelson Teams to\nPlay Outsiders\nSaturday Night\nIn the Nelion skiUng rink ichedule for thli week Saturday night\nwill be devoted to Intermediate\nhockey and possibly outside teams\nwill be brought in to mett locstl\nsquads. The gamei and turns wlU\nbe announced later. Due to an error\nIn the advertisement Monday morning the imoreuion wu given that\nno outiide teami would be brought\nln.\nNEW RULES TO SPEED UP BASKETBALL\nBEING INTRODUCED AT U. OF TORONTO\n-rw, \u2022HSR\nSISTERS\nTnt Kotnpi listen, Ernt, lift, tnd Illubtth, art Olympic iwimming\ncindlditei. They're backstroke Hart-\nOLD COUNTRY\nSOCCER\nLONDON, Feb. 3 (CP Ctbll).-\nSoccer gamu played in tbt Old\nCountry today wtrt:\nENGLISH CUP\u2014Fourth Round\nBradford City 3, Blackburn Rovers 1.\nFourth Round Rtpiay\nWut Bromwlch Albion 1, Bradford 1 (after extra Ume).\nSCOTTISH CUP\u2014Flrtt Reund\nAlloa 1, Dundee United 2 (second\n.eplay).\nTWO DRAWS IN\nO. C. SOCCER\nLONDON, Feb. 8 (CP Cable). -\nIn a tint division, Engllih Soccer\nleigue match today, Sheffield Wedneiday and Everton drew 3-3 and ln\na second division fixture Wut Hani\nUnited and Burnley played to a\nscoreless draw.\nJoe Connelly\nWirren Steveni, coich\n\u2022y PHIL WARWICK\nCentral Prtu Cinadian Wrlttr\nTORONTO, Ont, Feb. 3. \u2014 Tho\nUnlvtnlty of Toronto basketball\nteam, which went through iti regular ichedule lait year with only ont\ndefeat iwung Into action again this\nseason, ln quett of intercollegiate\nand Intercity honon. The team il\nunder the genial coaching of Warren Steveni, mentor for the past\nthree yean ot the Vanity footbaU\neggregaUon.\nLou of sevenl iter playen ot\nlut year due to graduation, necei-\nittatM comlderable rebuilding.\nDanny Meagher, one of the outitandlng playen ln all Canada lait\nyear, along with Levy, Numan,\nCowley and Bill Bodrug will not set\nictlon with tht iquad this season.\nPhil Gold, captain and veteran ot\nmany yean, ii back and ls one ot\nthe icoring threats of hit tum,\nwhile Marks and Connolly, who\nwere outstanding lut season in buketball and starred with their footbaU passing attacka, art again\namong the mainstays ot tht team.\nTry niw rules\n\"Wt UM a modified form of the\nfoul lint pity,\" Mr. Stevens itated\nHockey\nC-H.A'T\u00abT-E.R\nby W.W.W.\nIt would letrn Tnll and Klmberley have about ai much chance of\nbeating each other as a candidate\nhad of getUng in by acclamation at\nthe lait Dominion election. They\nhive tied three gamei In a row, two\nwith scoru of 2-2, and the other 3-3.\nLooki ai if thty art getting ready\nfor a great playoff strlu.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nTrail outshot Klmberley Saturday\nnight the only team to do that thli\nyear.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nNelson will net enter thl Allin\ntup pliyoffi unlet! Smith, Goble\n\u2022nd Bicknell trt pronounoed eligible by tht powers thit bt. Will,\nJudging from tht idimintlnt rulings of Gilroy list yttr, theft It\nlittle chinoe ht will ten a cream\npuff this way and permit the thrtt\npltytn to tikt pirt. But there li\nt tentative playoff between Trail\nand. Ntlion, thui clubs finishing\n\u2022uond  tnd  third  in  thi  Wett\nKootenty Commtrelal league. Tht\ndates proposed art February 22\nat Ntlion  tnd  Ftbrutry 24 tt\nTrail. Such a playoff would  bt\ndirectly In keeping with the Wut\nKoottnty  Commtrcltl   leigue,\nwhich li Juit btlng brought to t\nconclusion. Klmbtrlty would not\ninter this  picture  it ill,  btlng\ncounted In tht Eut Kooteniy.\nProviding then, that the three Nelion pliyen are not permitted to\nplay in Allan cup matches, a lerlM\nu stated above with Trail would\nbt Uie logical move for it ls much\nbetter to have Nelion meet Trill\nwith a strong team and,' perhaps\ngain the Wut Kooteniy Commercial tlUe, than to take a bob-tailed\none an\u00a3 itart after the Allan cup\nwith nothing more in tbt Way of\nstrength than a few playen.\n\u2022 a   ,\nLester Patrick they ny in Ntw\nYork Is whistling his wty past tht\ngraveyard. He lUU thlnki hll turn\nwill mike tht pliyoffi, but tht oddi\nlook all agalnit thim.\nttt\nWilvers htvt bun Uktd on\nButch Killing, Ayrte ind Muon,\nu thi Rsngen btgin unlttdlng\nae thty Iold. Keeling mty lind\nwith Americms but Dutton doei\nnot wmt to piy thi waiver prlct\n(WOO).\nAyres apparently ls dutlned to\nfiniih hli career is a minor letgut\nplayer. Eddie Gerrard, Buck Boucher and Letter Patrick all tried to\nmake a major leaguer out of him\nbut Jumbo li too ilow.\nHere and thett ... Whtn Charlie\nConacher got back into the game\nafter btlng injured and out tor\niome time, he weighed 312 poundi.\nWhat i chance for iome compiny to\ngtt t tutimontal for a bodybuilding tonic. . . . Bun Cook, fimous\nwinter of tht Rangen, who il ln Uie\nhandi ot Uie doctor, denies that he\nis thtough and writu, \"I'm good for\npltnty more seasons, and don't let\nanybody kid you.\"... Toronto playen believe \"Decoy\" Jackion will\nmakt ill-star rating igaln thil yur.\nThty cill him \"Decoy\" becauie they\nsay he hu only been ln imbush\nind wlU come ahead now In a bunt\nof glory.... Last Spring tht Roche\nbrothen, Carl and Deut, wert\nheroes when they aided tht Detroit Olympici to win Uit I. H. L.\nchampionihip. A few dayi ago they\nwert impended by tht Plttiburg\nShimrocki and fined |100 for Indifferent playing.. . . Normie Hlmu,\na native of Gait,\nwho considered a<\nLondon contract!\nat tht tint ot tht^\nseason, but later\ndecided to join\nUit New Haven\ntaglee, it now\nmanager of the\nEaglei. . . . Billy\nHudion, thin-\nhaired center for\nPittsburgh Shamrocki, ii the leading icorer ln tht\nInternational\nHockey league...\nHowie Morenz\nquoted Major Frederick McUugh-\nlln, Chlugo Black Hawks owner, ai\nuylng, \"Howie, I could htvt dont\nbitter out there than you did.\"\nMortm idmltted thtrt wu t Umt\nand place tor everything, and thai\nIM did not consider tht bid gamt\nwu ciuit enough for dressing bim\ndown in front of hia clubmates. At\nany rate, Howfc ls happier now that\nhe ll with the Rangen.\nPhil Qold\nln explaining the plan of Va.slly'i\nattack, ln thia ityle ot play the\ncenter man Is stationed to one side\nof the foul line and hii mates uie\nt crlsi-cross pawing attack, finally\npasting the ball Into the pivot man\nand cutting towards the baaktt foi\nreturn passes or Mt ihots,\nFour teami comprise the Intercollegiate group: Queen'i, which wu\nthe itrongest last year; Western, McGlll ahd Toronto, Much tuter and\ncloser competition looms thli yur\nwith moit ot the itudent squads\nstrengthened.\nMuch experimenting wUl be done\nthli leison by officii.! and coachei\nIn an effort to ipeed up the game.\nOne of the miln 1dm is to bring\nmlu into effect giving tht \"little\nmtn\" more possession of the ball to\ncapitalize his speed and agility.\nGreat advantages will be derived by\nimall stature* teams, Mr, Stevens\npoints out, If these rules are effective.\nOne of the new rules tried out\nforbids a plc.er to remain in the\nfoul lane for more thtn three seconds with or without the ball. This\nihould tend to optn up the game,\nItated Coach Stevens, becauie with\ntht old rule a big bui iy player wu\nitationtd ln the foul lane Juit In\nfront of the baiket and could hold\nthe ball until he htd an open inot\nAnother rule, tried out pflvitely,\nIs raising of the buket by two feci\nwhich will ciuse tht ball to rebounu\nfarther and so leave mofe space\nunder the baiket for icoring. It will\nalio keep the tall fellows from tek-\nlnk euy shots. Al tht game standi\ntoday the smaller playen are beaten\nout on the center jump and alto on\nrebound shots from the basket\n\"BasketbaU ls improving steadily,\" Mr. Steveni itated, \"and wu\nhope to enlarge our ichedule next\nyear to u to Dt aole to oring up\nsome of the good teams from the\nUnited States. We hope lt ii not Impossible to bring such teafm as\n.<otre Dame, Micnigan, Cornea anu\nothen. More boyi anu young mm\nart tailing up bai-cetball uut to open\nwinters, nigh icnool teams au\nipringing up aU ovtr Canada an-\ninert are tnousanai more piayinr,\nthe gatae now than five yea.s ago.\"\nDuring \u2022 pre-season tour of the\nUnited butea, the Varsity five played three gamu witn their lut effoti\nthe best of the lot\nI $4000 Purse for\nWinners of the\nInter. Boll Loop\nNEW YORK, Feb. 3 (AP)-International Baseball league club ownen voted today to reward tbe team\nfinishing first In tht 194-game pennant campaign with a purse Ot\n$4000 to be distributed among the\nplayen, A purse ot $2000 wiU bt\ngiven the lecond team. The money\nwill be raised by the league with a\ntax on admissions.\nThe team winning the post-seaion\nplayoff tor the governors' cup will\nbe the International representative\nin the \"Junior world's terlu\" with\nthe American tuocaitlon winner.\nGame Jockey, Now\nParalyzed, Wants\nRace Track Stand\nMONTREAL, Feb. 3 (CP)-The\ntragedy ot Jimmie Darou, game\nyoung Jockey paralyzed from Uie\nchest down ln a spill at Connaught\npark rice trick near Ottawa in the\nlummer ot 1933, li outlined todiy by\nE. W. Ferguion in his sporti column\ntn Ult Montreal Herald.\nJimmle'i ambition la to havt a\nUtUe stand at the race tracks next\nlummer. \"We'll be looking ifter it,\nJimmie,\" the iporti editor promiied.\nBut Itt Jlmmle's letter, written a\nday or two ago trom a hospital ln\nMontreal'i north end, tell the itory:\n\"I've got to be quite well, but 1\ncannot move my legi yets, u 1\nhave po feeling from my chut on\ndown, but I feel well. Don't you\nthink it would be a good Idea for\nme to get a UtUe itand at the racetracks next lummer, io I could\nmakt a llttlt monty to Uve In \u2022\nnouse igiln, tnd gtt \u2022 whtel-chatr\nand Iron braces for my legs? I don'l\nwant to make a lot of money. All\nI'd like ls a chance to make a living\nagain. They Intend to tear this place\ndown ln the spring In order to build\na new place, io 111 have to go. The\ndocton told ma long ago they could\ndo mt no mort good, thtt lt all depend! on myself. I'U tight this to\nthe end, Mr. Ferguion. I'll never\nlive up, Pleue don't you think I\n_ould do lomethlng? A man without\n_egt isn't much good but It'i no uu\ngoing down without trying.\"\nNEWPORT WI..S\nDEVONPORT,  England,  Feb.\nCP Cable). - Newport defeated\nJevonport Services 6-S In an Engllih  Rugby  Union  game  played\nhere today.\nNormie  Hlmta\nDAVIDSON IS\nMIN.o SUP'T.\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 3 (CP)-At a\nmeeting ot directon of Minto Uolo\n.nines, Ltd., hert today Warren A.\nDividson wu appointed superintendent of the mine with no supervision ovtr the mill.\nA. G. Lanon, M.E., made a report\nto tht dlrtctori for their guidance\nbut hu not been formally appointed\nu consulting engineer to the company.\nA previoui report that George\nShaw had been appointed purchasing agent was termed Incorrect.\nTo Serve Three\nMonths for Theft\nJunes Dunseath, convicted on a\ncharge of theft at Cranbrook, wu\nbrought to the Nelson provincial\nJail Sunday by Constable R. W\nPowtn, to serve a term of three\nmonths. He wu charged with itral-\ning 878 trom Thomas Rhine tnd appeared before John Ltuk, stipendiary mtglitnte.\nU.S. TO MEET\nMEXICO FIRST\nAustralia Meets Cuba\nFirst Round for\nDavis Cup\nLONDON, Feb. 3 (AP)-The United Stttet will pity Mexico and\nCuba wiU batUt Australia In the\ntint round of American zone D_vli\ncup compeUUon, It was determined\nloduy oy the ar.v. of 1930 InternaUonal tennis warfare.\nThe draw wai_r-.de in th! Mansion house by the lord mtyor, Sir\n.'arcy Vincent\nIn flnt round European tont competition, Monaco wlU meet the Netherlands, China will face France tnd\nSpain wlU battle Germany. AU\nother challengers in thii zone, Including Argentina, draw flnt round\nbyu.\nRumania icratched ita entry reducing Uit total number of challenger! to 38.\nFint round play ln tht Europetn\nzone must be completed by Mty I;\nsecond round by M\u00bby 17; third round\nby June 8; Uie seml-flnali by June\n18 and the final by July IS.\nThe lnterzone final, bttwetn tht\nwlnnen ot the European and North\nAmerican zonu will be played July\n18, 30 and 31 at Wimbledon. Tbt\nchallenge round hu bten icheduled\nfor July 28, 27 and 28.\nWhat ta known u shoddy ii the\nreworked wool that manufacturen\nsalvage from used fabrlci by chemical or mechanical proceu.\nN.H.L. Statistics\nOFFICIAL STANDING i\nCanadian Stctlon\nWL D f A Ptl\nMontreal 13 12  4 88 8130\nroronto   \u00bb \u00bb  8 78 74 28\nCanadient -   - \u00bb  7 87 72 28\nAmerican!  10 18  3 82 67 23\nUnlttd Statet Stctlon\nChicago  1\u00ab 11  3 67 48 38\nDetroit  M  \u00bb  6 67 86 34\naoeton   14 12  3 62 48 31\nRangen  -. 18 1-   6 60 70 31\nSCORING  LEADERS\nCinadian Stctlon\nO A P Ptn\nSchriner, Amni  10 18 25 4\nThon* .ot .... - 12 12 24 13\nChipmin, Amni   8 14 22 12\nComcher, Tor 11 10 21 44\nBoll, Tor \u25a0  12  8 20 10\nJoUtt Cdni \u00bb  - \u00bb 1!\nOoldiworthy, Cdn ... 12   7 lt 8\nHiyntt, Cdni .   4 14 18 10\nSmith, MU   8  7 16 47\nMetz, Tor -\nH. Jickion, Tor .-\nNorthoott, Mtl \u2014\nRoblnion, Mtl \u2014\nKelly, Tor  _.\nOUver, Amni ....\nLepine, Cdni\t\nStewirt, Amni\t\n2 3 16\n8 7 18\n7 S 18\n6 10 IS\n8 8 14\n7 .14\n6 8 14\n8 9 14\nUnited SUtee Section\nRomnu, CM _   8 18 24\n13 10 23\n13 10 23\n9 14 23\n10 11 21\n9 11 20\n11 8 18\n10   9 18\n9 10 19\n,  8 11 19\n9   9 18\nPatrick, Rgn .... _  7 10 17\nMorenz, Chl-Rgn ... 8 11 IT\nBrydion, Rgrt-Cht _.    -5 12 17\nGottetUg, Chi     8  8 16\nMcFayden, Chi S 12 13\nH. Kilrea, Dot 4 11 16\nhompson, Chi\natllon, Rgn \t\nBoucher, Rgn .\nWelland, Bstn _\nLewis, Det\t\nAurle, Dot\t\nBtrry, Dtt \u2014\n.larch, Chi ___\nBeatUe, Bstn _\nHowt, Det'.\nAUSSIES WIN\nKtMBERLEY, South Africa, Feb.\n8 (CP cable)-The Auitrallan touring cricket tetm today defeated\nOrlqualand Wut by an innlngi and\n108. Againit Ult tourists' total ot\n438 runs tor ilx wlckots, tht homt\npliyen could make only 198 and\n130. During the match W. J. O'Reilly,\nvisiting bowler, took 13 wickets\ntor 141 runs.\nBy RAY COLlETT\nTli a far cry from the league\npenalty gathering championihip to\ncaptaincy of hii team, where hli\ndutiu include cabling irate playen\nwhoie tempers are inclined to flare,\nbut big J-uit Short hu effected\nthe trausformaUon. The Bruin defence tee hu toned down t lot from\ntlie bruising buiUer ot other yean.\nWhen hotkey ieltcton art picking out tht grett rearguard! of ell\ntime tor bockey'i Valhalla, they are\ngoing to find lt tough getUng Eddie\nShore down trom top of the Hit In\nhii day there were tew more dangerous icoring threat! ln hockey\nthan the wheat farmer trom Fort\nQu'Appelle either among forward!\nor defeneemen. Today, though he\nhai mellowed with age and the\nweight of many hockey years, he li\nstill the Boston Bruins' mainstay.\nFrank Patrick, who now coachu\ntht Beantown crew\u2014and Shore hu\nbeen with Boiton since he entered\nthe league ln 1927\u2014once turned\ndown the puckster when he applied\nfor a berth. Patrick was on the Pacific coast stirring the hockey pit\nthen, and Eddie Shore wu an unknown. Patrick couldn't lee him u\na coming star.\nThere li a story told of Eddie that\nwhen he wu a railroad engineer before turning to professional hockey,\nhe had as a fireman, Vtrnt Sankey.\nSankey hanged himself ln an American Jail cell after a hectic crime career which ended up with a kidnapping charge. But Eddie goei marching on, still ont ot Uit mos'. colorful\nand courageoui of playen in big-\ntime hockey.\nTODAY'S HOCKEY STICKLER\nWhat team did Earl Rob' non\nturn pro wiA.'and what It hli native .city? Aniwer In next Hockey\nSidelight!. '\n-     ty WALTER JOHNS\nA itory with lomethlng ot \u2022 moral it told of \"Cap\" Anton and hta\nfamoui old Whltt Stocking!.  Bueball training with Anion wu no bed\n0t 'ow hot d_y ln training cimp, Anion tolled around tht pirk at tht\nhetd of a atring of penplring playen. \"Bill' Dahlen wai one\nIf there wu an \u2022lout'fto anything, Dahlen wai the mtn to And lt And\non thii pirticular hot-day, \"Bill\" found it\u2014a looie boird In the fence.\n\"Bill\" ducked behind the fence. On the next lip leveral otheri followed iuit At test the whole iquad wu on the other ilde of tht fence,\nwitching Anion toll on. , . i^__,_a vi\u2014\n\"Cap,\" however, mined the thump, thump of hll iquad bA'nd U\u00abt\nHe kept on, however, completed Uie circle, and then puihed hll penpir\nlng fice through the hole in the fence and blurted:\n\"Your turh, now, boys.\" While he forced them to circle the park twlct\nu many times u uiuil, \"Cip\" ut and reittd. When they flnlihed, be\n^'Gutti I won't have to nail up that hole In the fence, anyhow, th,\nboyi?\" _\n\"X-Rayed\" for\nHidden Flaws\nGILLETTK blade iteel It\n\"X-rayed\" by t icientlfic in-\nttrument that \"leei\" throuih\nraettl. No ftawi in tht metal era\npus thli rigid inipertion-one ot\ntte many to inure you mitchleu\n\u2022hiving comfort. Buy t packige\nof Blut Gillette bladu today at\nyour dealer'!.\nblue GILLETTE blades\nNOW 5 FOR 2S< -10 FOR SO.\n PAGE SIGHT\n1.8. NELSON B.C.-TUE8DAY MORNINO. FEBRUARY 4,\nJ-flami Satly Nrroa\nMember.of the Canadian DaUy\nNewspapen Aisociation\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchingt connecting to\ntil Deoirtmtntt\nSubscription   Ratei\nSingle copy $   -05\nBv cirrier per wtek -25\nBy cirrier. per yeir 13 00\nBy mill ln Canada, to lub-\nscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per mouth. 60c;\nthree months. $1 SO, six months.\n$3.00: one vear. $6.00.\nUnited States md Great Britain, one month 75c; six months,\n$4.00; one vear $7.80.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S.. ume u above plus my\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie \u00bb Line\nMinimum 2 Llnu\n2 llnee, onct     $ \u2022_-\n3 Unei. once     33\n4 Unu. once       .44\n2 Unei 6 times  -88\n3 lines 8 times     132\n4 lines. 6 tlmei      1-76\n2 lines. 1 month    2\u00ab\n3 linu 1 mouth   4.29\n4 Unu. 1 monUi     8.72\nAll ibove lus 10% for prompt\noavment\niURDER\nI ES UPSTAIRS   au\n\u25a0\u25a0______\u25a0 -_\u25a0\u25a0_ \u25a0_-__\u25a0 \u00bb___-_\u25a0 \u00ab*\u25a0__\u25a0  \u25a0*\u00bb\u25a0\nADAM\nBLISS\nCHAPTER 80\nI wu completely at sea after my\ntelephone convenation with Dr. Rudemar. I didn't know where to turn.\nThe booth was hot, airless. Whether\nlt was my despair, or the stuffiness,\nI could hardly breathe. I leaned\nagainst the little shelf which held\nthe phone books, conscious that behind me, pressed close to the glass\ndoor, wai a detective, and In front\nof me wu something that was impossible.\nPracUcally impossible, anyway,\nfor if Kirk Larrabee with all the resource! and power at his command\ncouldn't find the murderer, how\neould I? With all his information ...\naU hit training , . . And yet, as I\nthought of that I realized that I\nknew all he did about the case, md\nmore, too. There were things I had\nnot told him. Purposely had held\nback; the talk I'd had with Dr. Rudemar, what Grace had confided to\nme about Doris Reeve\u2014Helen Starmont\nThe booth was getting warmer. I\nconsidered opening tbe door a trifle\nbut decided against It Finally, the\ndetective opened lt hlmielf.\n\"Are you ill, Mi*. Penny?\"\n\"No,\" I snapped. The door closed,\nbut the new air was very welcome.\nIt cleared my head, and I think that\nminute when I felt the rush of lt in\nmy nostrils, for the tint time since\nTuesday morning when Delia had\ncaUed me to come upstairs, I wu\nune again. So une that, u if a\ncurtain had lifted the darkness\naway, I knew who the murderer ot\nMr. Darlen and Delia was!\n, The Idea was io perfectly ridiculously preposterous, that I discarded\nlt almost immediately, I laughed to\nmyself in the stuffy phone booth.\nThere was a small mirror on the side\nCranbrook Pays\nGreat Tribute\nCrowds at Memorial\nService Overflow\nto Street\nCRANBROOK, B.C. - Hemorial\ntervicei, observed the world over\nfor the late King George, were\nmarked by a program at the Cranbrook auditorium Tuesday, Tbe hall\nwas packed to the doon, and, in\nipite of the very cold weather, people lined both sides of the street\noutaide the hill to heir the tervlce\nwhich wu amplified for thou outtide.\nThe Canadian Legion, tbe Royal\nCanadlm Mounted PoUce, the city\npolice, the Kootenay regiment, the\ndty bmd md tht regiment band\nmarched from tht trmorles in ilow\ntimt with reverted armi and muffled drums to the auditorium. There\nthey wen met by the county court\njudge, the police court Judge, the\nmayor, tire chief, city clerk, aldermm and memben of the school\nboard, who had marched from the\ncityhaU.\nThe psalm wu read by Rev. J. F.\nBell. Rev. Father Burnt, O.M.I., give\nthe scripture reidlng.\nRev. E. E. King, pastor of the Baptist church, gave the address. He\npaid tribute to the late King George\nwith the declaration that he was the\ngreatest King of all Umei. The pray-\ner wu offered by Rev. R. W. Hardy\nmd Rev. F. V. Harrison gaVe the\nbenedlcUon.\nThe city choln combined were as-\n\u25a0Isted by the audience ln the singing\nof hymns \"O God Our Help in Ages\nPast\", \"Forever With the Lord\", md\n\"For All Uie Saints Who From Their\nLabon Rut\". The service closed\nwith the sounding of the Lut Post\nmd the singing of the national anthem.\nThe city Boy Scouts usisted with\nthe arrangements tor the service.\nBAYONNE GETS\nBIG PLOW\nSIRDAR, B.C.\u2014 A large rotary\nplow was delivered to the Bayonne\nConsolidated Mining company at\nTye at the end of the week. The\nplow, of the dual rotary type, will\nbe used ln clearing out the road to\nthe mine to permit the transportation of ore md will be put to work\nImmediately. An expert bas arrived\nfrom the coast to operate It until\nanother driver can be taught to\nhandle IL\nCLASSIFIED ADS GET RESULTS\nHANSEN-To Mr. md Mn. A. G.\nHansen, at Kootenay Lake Genenl\nhoipital, February 1, a son.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nNEAT   EXPERIENCED  GIRL,   18\nyean seeks housework. Ph. 711L3.\n(5399)\nEXP. GIRL, 21 YRg. SEEKS STEN-\nbgraphy, store or housework.\nPh. 7UU. (5398)\nof the wall, and I saw my face reflected in it, the smile on my lips,\nmy hat pushed ludicrously back\nover my head where I had put it so\nI could hear Dr. Rudemar more\nclearly. The mirror had a flaw ln it\nwhere the refiecUon of my nose\ncame, and I recall touching my nose\nto see what was the matter. There\nwas noUitng the matter\u2014but the\nmirror and its flaw, and the fact that\nI wu a trifle giddy.\nI'm telling you this to make you\nunderstand how irrelevant Uie Idea\nthat came to mc in that booth seemed. I wasn't shocked by It, I wu\namused, lt seemed to me quite funny, so funny this second Ume that I\nlaughed aloud.\nWhen I straightened my hat by\nthe crazy mirror, the smile wu still\non my lpis, but when I started powdering my nose\u2014I wanted to look at\nleast respectable when I came out\nof the booth\u2014the smile wu fading\nslowly. I watched it, not from a sense\nof dramatics or vanity, because I've\nlong since left both of those behinc\nme, but because with the passing of\nIhe smile, my eyu changed. They're\nblue eyu, and the years haven't\nchanged theircolor much, to my relief. When, in my youth, I used to\nbecome frightened, people said they\nturned black. I never bothered very\nmuch about that, probably because\nI was never looking in a mirror\nwhen I was frightened. Yet my eyes\nas I looked from to the mule on my\nlips, were turning black. It was as\nthough I were studying mother person, not myself whom I had known\nand lived with for 53 yean, but\nsomeone else, a stranger to me.\nIn that phone booth glass I saw\na woman, not badly preserved, with\na decided double chin, and itaring,\nscared eyes. The smile hid faded\nmidway, as it were. It was still on\nthe woman'j lips, a faint smirk.\nI finished with the powder mechanically, put my puff in my pune\nwithout looking down, snapped it\nshut. 1 couldn't take my eyu oft\nthose features in the glass and the\nwheels of my mind were picking up\nlhe idea I had laughed at a moment\nbefore. Picking it up, md bringing\nit closer, closer to me.\nIt must have been there all the\ntime, waiting for something to bring\nit out. It must have been there on\nTuesday morning. Yet it had taken\nuntil now, when I was hot and miserable in this phone booth to drop\nfrom my subconscious mind to my\nconscious.\nIt wasn't preposterous, I whispered to myself. It was plausible\u2014\nbut awful!\nThe image in the glass wu terror-\nstricken. Its face was, getting whiter\nand whiter, and the eyes darker and\ndarker. I aliyays blame the mirror\nfor what happened afterwards\u2014for\nif I hadn't been looking Into lt, I\nmight have gone on laughing md\nlaughing at it. Of course I'wasn't\nsure. 1 couldn't be sure, because I\nhadn't seen either murder.\nThe door opened again, and the\ndetective, Ramsey was his nime,\nasked me once more in a worried\ntone If I were HI. I said I wasn't,\nbut this time I staggered out of the\nbooth, and gulped in the fresh air\ngreedily. I needed his arm as we\nwalked away.\n\"You were in there for three-quarters of an hour, Mrs. Penny,\" he\nwas saying. \"I was right worried.\"\nIt didn't seem three-quarten of\nm hour to me. It seemed only a few\nminutes. As I went along with him,\nleaning on his arm, my bnln was\nbusy with restless disturbing\nthoughts. Larrabee should know\nwhat I knew, but when 1 wun't\nsure, should I tell him? Now that I\nwas out in the clear, cool air, we\nwere in the alley by this time, I\nwasn't so sure about my Idea. In\nthe hot booth it had been so vital, so\ncertain. Larrabee wouldn't laugh at\nme if I told him. I knew that. He\nwould take what I said seriously,\nand start working on that angle. If\nmy hunch\u2014it was only a hunch\u2014\nwu false, then all my life I'd have\nthat to worry about. I would have\naccused an innocent person.\nWhen we reached the undertaker's\noffice, Miss Cambridge was ilttlng\nbolt upright on a chair. She wai annoyed at my delay\u2014for I hadn't told\nher where I wu going.\nWe were in the cab before ihe\nasked me what I'd been doing. I\nknew It was coming, so I told her\nhonestly I hod been phoning.\n\"You can phone from the house,\nMrs. Penny.\"\n\"I didn't want Lieutenant Larra-\nbee to know what I raid.\"\nShe looked at me queerly, md I\nthought I knew whet was pr-sslng in\nher tnind. I stalled off the queition\nimmediately.\n\"I can't tell you to whom I phoned.\nMiss Cambridge, but It wu important\" Sho had lo be content with\nHELP WANTED\nSELL \"CENTURY\" ORIGINAL\ngenuine leather ties. Fmcy colored patterns, look like silk,\nwuhable, durable, wrinkle-\nproof, sell on sight Big profits.\nSend for informaUon. Emery\nBros., P. O. Box 371, Ottawa, Ont\n(5420)\nPERSONAL\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 latex auortment for $1\nOrder direct md be sure of best.\nPacked plain. Free catalogue. NaUonal Importers, 812-Centre St.,\nCalgary, Alta.  (5417)\nWHY WORRY7CONSULT \"MAD-\nam M\" Clairvoyant. 4 questlone.\nSend birth month. Donation. 2531\nWoodland  Dr.,Vancouver.  (}421)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent. Annable Block.\n(5407)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrlgidaire equipped suites. (5408)\nFOR SALE\nSHOEMAKERS SINGER SEWING\nMachine, also Solidity Jack with\n30 lasts. Hmd finishing outfit, all\nin first class condition. J. H. Zac-\nodnik, Erlckson, B. C,       (5451)\nTHREE CONTINENTAL 67 HORSE\npower. Power units. Fair running\ncondition. Price $350. F.O.B. Cranbrook Auto Wreckers. (5422)\nWe carry largest stock reconditioned\npipe and fittings suitable for al)\npurposes. Write Swartz Pipe Yard.\n_2M-it E. Vancouver, B. C. (5404)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.\n250 Prior St. Vancouver, B. C\n(5405)\nSCHOOLS\nCANADIAN DIESEL ENGINEERING SCHOOLS. Travellers Bulging. Calgary, are now giving complete DAY and HOME STUDY\nCOURSES in DIESEL ENGINEERING under authorized instructors. Write for particulars. 15402)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nPOULTRY FOR SALE\nthat I wu feeling better.\nWhen we had gone a few blocks,\nshe remarked dryly, her curiosity\nlUU unsaUsfied, \"tt seems to me,\nMrs. Penny, thit you know more\nabout theie murden than you wUl\nadmit\"\nI denied that I did, but ihe didn't\nbelieve me. Then iwkwardly, I began on my new, astonishing theory,\nthe one that had come to me in the\nphone booth.\n\"You remember Monday night,\nMiu Cambridge. Well, when you\nstarted downstairs that night to the\nkitchen, did you hear anything?\"\nShe turned her face rather wearily to the window.\n\"I've told Lieutenant Larrabee a\nhalf dozen times all I heard and all\nI didn't hear. It's useless to go over\nit again. Besides, I told you all I\nknew tbe next day.\"\n\"I know, but I wu hoping you\nmight have forgotten something.\nSome little thing, probably so unimportant that yoq don't remember\nit Let me go over it for you. You\ncame downstaira by the front way.\nThere were no lights on the third\nfloor except the small one near the\nstain. Is that right?\"\n\"Yei, that's right.\"\n\"I wanted to know becauie when\nI came down it wu the same, but\nwhen we came up together you remember there wu a light under Mr.\nTalbot's door, and one shining under\nMr. Withen' door.\"\n\"That's true.\".\n\"On the second floor, when you\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar ucks, liners, McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelion, B. C.      (5408)\n2 CARLOADS ALFALFA. HATt_.\nSmith, Camp Lister, B. C. (5411)\nFARM   LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy, terms ln Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full Information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources, C.P.R., Calgary, Alta\n(5400)\ncame down, there wu a light under\nMr. Hemingway's door and the second floor stair light was on?\"\n\"Yu.\"\n\"And you heard no sound on either floor?\"\n\"I would have noticed if I had\nhurd anything. 1 have excellent\nean, Mrs. Penny. There was no\nnoise. Everyone seemed to be\nuleep.\"\nI wasn't discouraged. Miss Cambridge wu right about her cars.\nShe has very acute hearing.\n\"You didn't hear Mr, Withers\nthrowing stones at my window?\"\nBy now everyone in the house\nknew that Conrad Withers had come\nin late Monday night and had awakened me to let him in,\n\"Lieutenant Larrabee insists I\nmust have heard Mr. Withers, but I\ndidn't. I was probably in the kitchen\nby the time he started to throw his\ngravel, md even my ears can detect\nno sound with three stout door between them md Mr. Withen. Four\ndoor, to be exact the front door, the\nhaU, the pantry and the kitchen. I\nheard you when you came into the\ndining room, because as you came in\nyou bumped into a chair.\"\nI had, although I hid forgotten\nthat until she mentioned il. Wc both\nsmiled.\n(To Be Continued)\nBETTER CHICKS\nMean More Profits!\nOur Chicks are BETTER because\nwe continually select oui  breeding stock and hatch scientifically\n(Prices quoted per 100)\nPullel\nChicks      Chirks\nLeghorns $11.00        $26.00\nReds and Rocks $13.00 $27 00\nLight Sussex      $15.00 $30.00\nPullet  Chicks guaranteed    '\n97% accurate.\nCockerel Chirks - Leghorns, 2c\neach.   Heavy   Breeds 6c each.\nBe SAFE and order from\nRump & Sendall Ltd.\nMILNER. B.C.\n(5403)\nRANCH \u00abOR  DELIVERY   HORSE\nmd wagon. Box 5388 Dally News.\n(5366)\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVEN-\ntor, list of wanted Inventions md\nfull Information sent free. The\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St. Ottawa.\n(8401)\nPHOTOGRAPHY\nFILMS DEVELOPED ANY SI7E,\n25c! With 1 print from each negative. Extra prints. 8 for 25c Saskatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon. (5418)\nCOAL\nBABY CHICKS AND jjEXED PUL-\nlet chirks; White Leghorns and\nBarred Rocks. All breeding itock.\non our own farm. Governmei 1\nApproved and Blnrdtested. Write\nfor price list. M. H. Ruttledee.\nDerreen Poultry Farm, Sardls\n(5277)\nCARLOAD OF\nPEERLESS\nCOAL\nJUST ARRIVED\n$9.50 per Ton\nWilliams Transfer\nPhone 106\n(5450)\nDo You Need\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nCHAS. F. HUNTER, S.F.A.E.\n213 Medical Arts Building.\nP. O. Box 1091,        Nelson, B. C.\n(5423)\nAsiayen\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Chemist, Chemical and Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling agents at Trail and Tacoma smelters 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B. C.    (5424)\nGRENVILLE  H.   GRIMWOOD\nProvlnclil Assayer and Chemist, 818\nBaker street, Nelson, B. C? P O\nBox No. 276. Representing Ship-\npen' Interest at Trail, B.C. (5425)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c. palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk., Nelson\n       (5426)\nCS. WARREN, D. C, BOX 872\nFor Canaries. Phone 115 or 755L\n(5427)\nElectrical\nJ. \u00bb'. COATES. The Electric Store.\nSupplies and Installations.\nPhone 766. P. O. Box 1068\n(5428)\nIf you do. just remember that Nelson Daily\nNews Classified Ads are made-to order for helping\nyou over almost any obstacle that may arise.\nIf you need a maid or an automobile\u2014want to\nrent an apartment -or buy a house\u2014the Classified\nAds will take care of any or all of these matters.\nNelson Daily News Classified Ads will assist\nyou in emergencies\u2014and are a wonderful source of\nsupply for your everyday needs! Read the Classified\ncolumns and note the variety of merchandise and\nservices offered. Your requirements can be met and\nfill in this great daity market.\nRead and Use the Classified Ads.\nPHONE 144\nEngineers end Surveyor*\nE. L. WARBURTON, NELSON,. B.C.\nOffice 518 Ward St. Phone 53, P.O.\nBox 668. Agent; Oils, Greases, Paints\nSpecialties: mining machinery,\nCrow's Nest Pass Steam Coals,\nStructural steel piping, sheet iron.\n (5429)\nOTbAWSON. Nelson, B. C\nMine Surveys and Reports\n_____ __ (5430)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Frultvale, B C\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Professional Civil Ehglneer\n_       __.  (5431)\nA. H GREEN CO., LTD. 516 WARD\nSt. Phone 264, Nelson, B. C. (5432)\nFlorists\nSprays, wreaths, symboUc dulgni\ncarefully made at reasonable pricei\nShipped anywhere. Cut flowers an\nplants.   Phone  233.\nNELSON   FLOWER   SHOPPE.\n(5440\nMachinist!\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work. Lath\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grind\nlng.  Motor  Rewinding, Acetylen\nWelding\nPhone 593. 324 Vernon Stree\n(5441\nMaternity Hemes\nELIZABETH  PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private, ConfldenUal Physl\ncian in attendance. Ph. Broad. 3071\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane.' Wash\n(5441\nMining and Mill Machinery\nEMPIREnMACHINES LTD., NEL\nson. Mining and mill machinery\n(5443\nNotaries\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD\nReal estate, insurance, rentals, 217\nBaker St. (5433)\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate. In\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker Street.     (5434)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD. Insurance ol\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99\n   . (5435)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance Real Estate, 508 Ward St.\n (5436)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE\nrentals, insurance. Annable Block\n  (5437)\nLIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulin, Ph. 70. (5438)\nCHAS F. McHARDY, INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Phone 135.      (5439)\nD. J  ROBERTSON\nOflice 305 Victoria St., Nelson.\n15444\nPhotographs\n\"PHOTOGRAPHS THAT PLEASE\nGEO. A. MEERES, 715 Baker Ph 41\n(5448\nSanitariums\nHEART DISEASE CAUSES EVER'\nfilth deatii This advert iscraer\npresented at Dr. Aldrlch Sanilan\nium, E-4504 Fredrick Ave, Spa\nkane, Wash:, by Feb. lOUi will eii\nUUe patient lu 25ri discount fo\nexamination and treatment. 1 d|\nthis to prove treatment is success\nful. 15448\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTOR\\\nHardwood merchant. 217 Baker &\u25a0\n(5447\nWigs and Toupee*\nLADIES AND GENTLEMTnI\nwigs and toupees, etc. Free iUui\ntrated Catalogue. Over 20 year\nIn B. C. We buy cut hair. Hansot\nHair Goods Co. P. O. Box 801\nVancouver, B. C. (5448\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE Worl\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St\n(5440)\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nHave Uie Nelion Dally Newi delivered daily Reid the news nn\nthing In Uie morning Phone 148.-\nCirculation Deportment\nBy Russ Wntover\nTHI GUMPS\nBy Gus Mson\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManu*\nGRACIOUS - I'VE BEEN\nSTUOVING   FOP  FOUR\nHOURS-I'M  \u00a9LAD \"TO\nSEE  \\OU SIT THE-!-'\nANO  TAKE   I1MTBOSST\nUKE  THAT   IN   Wi.\nBV   GOU-V-\nDINTV  lft RKSKT-\nTHESE THNSS\nHE <_*\/_ TO W_-\nMAKE   HOKAE A\nBETTER  PLACE\nIN  WHICH  TO\nLIVE\n_-eu.0-Dlt-T.-l PUT\nTHEW. TMN6S MXl\n_mi_ NIE-M HfW EARS\nAN1 I NBVER HEAPD\nONE NOTE WHILE ,\nMAOOE V\/A* StNOIN-\n 150\nIONARCH LIFE\nIN GOOD YEAR\nReserves Increased,\nAnnual Meeting\nLearns\n%t 80th annual meeting of the\nlarch Life Assurance company\nheld In Winnipeg January 29,\n.the very ittlttictory report ot\ncompany'i operatloni In 1936\nreceived with enthuilum by\nlhareholden and policyholder!\nittendance.\ni moving the adoption ot tht\nWt, I. J. Ttrr, X.C., pruldent of\ncompiny, referred with pride to\nsubstantially Increaied reserves\nthe protection of policyholders.\naddition ot $147,000 during tht\nr being the lirgest Increue ln\neomptny'i hiitory. Total turplus\nIt Md special miml, now\nWit to $1,427,674. Full provision,\nMinting to $118,137, his been\nle for accrued dividends on\niquennlal pollclte, and the vere for unreported death claim!\nll lubttantlally larger. Mr. Terr\nalio pointed to tha very favorable\nInvestment poiition of tht compiny\nand to tha valuation ot bondi and\nitocki tt coniiderably Itu thm\nmarket pricei. Notwithstanding\ntheu lUbstantlal allotment! and Uie\ncomervatlve treatment of assets,\nthe compuy'a free surplue retched\nt new high point.\nGordon C. Cumming, general\nmaniger, commented on the results\n\u2022chleved during the year. For the\nsecond comecutlva year, builnui\nin force hai Increutd ud now\nstandi at $64,400,666, Lapau and\nterminations decrtued for the\nfourth successive yeir md com-\nparatlvely, over the put lix yean,\nbuilnesi hai ptrslited better than\ntht gtntril txperltnct. Anita Increued by nearly half a million\ndollan to $11,977,103. Premium Income alao Increaied while opertting\ncosts and expenie ratio ihowed \u2022\nfurther tubstantlil reduction.\nNELSON DAILY NIWI. NILION. I.C-TUItDAY MORNINQ. MIRUARY 4. IIM\nMinneapolis Groin\nMINNEAPOLIS, Feb. $ (AP) -\nWheat ealb No, 1 heavy dirk northern spring 60 lbs. 1.32-38. No. 1 red\ndurum 86tt-81tt. Flour unchanged.\nCar load lota family patents 7.10-3O\na barrel in 98-pound cotton sacks.\nShlpmenta 18,963. Brain 15-15.60.\nDow-Jones Averages\nIndustrials\nRlla\nHigh\n151.08\n46.30\nlitllities         12.15\npondi\t\nLow\n145.32\n45.70\n31.43\nClote Chinge\n150.62\u2014up 1XH\n46J1-UP .11\n32.00-up .17\n10118-off   .06\nMontreal Stock Prices\nJ Telephone _.\u2014...\n\u25a0Packing New\t\nElian, :....   _..._\ni Power A\n.149%\n. u\n14\n29\n35tt\n38\n.    6%\nTA\n. 67\nUH\n9%\n.  lltt\n2*\n.   itt\n.237\nm\n ^M\niinion TexUlu      71%\n\u25a0ding Producti\t\nLda Bronze \t\n[Car Fdy _ \t\nI Cement ..   _. \t\n[Cement Pfd \t\nlind Ale A \t\nlind Ale B...\n|Paclf lc Railway\t\nSteamers \t\nSihutt  _____\ntl Mining k Smelting .\nllnlon Bridge ...\u2014\nUnion Glau\nof Cmada A .\n\u25a0sral Steel Wares.\nlies Gurd \u2014\n\u25a0Uton Bridge .....\ntlckel \t\niy Harrli\t\nll Power .......\n|8teel Car\t\nBrewing\t\n|tle \t\nr Corporation ...\n\u25a0_\n. IV,\n. IH\n,, t\n. 46*\n, 7\n, 12%\n. IStt\n42tt\n.208\nlltt\nPrice Brot ...\u2014.--.\u2014.\nQuebec   .\t\nShiwlnlgin ......._....\u2014\nSherwin Williami .....\nSouth Cinada Power\nSteel of Cuada ..........\nCURBS\nAu'd Breweriea \u2014...\nBrew tt Dlit \u2014\nB A Oil \t\nCan Celineie ......\nCan Dredge  .\t\nCu  MalUng  _......._._\nCu Winerlu ............\nDominion Storei .........\nDryden Paper\t\nImperlil Oil  \u2014\nImperial Tobacco Cu.\nInt Petroleum ...._,_._.\n! McColl Frontenac ........\nMitchell Robert\t\nPage Heney\t\nBANKS\nCanada    ____\nCanadienne \u2122...._.___._\nCommerce\t\nMontrul  \t\nNova ScoUa\t\nRoyal\t\n4\n14\n. 20tt\n. 17*\n.   li\n. m,\n. 13\n. 1.15\n. 22tt\n. SStt\n. 4114\n. 34\n.    2*\n. lOtt\n.    6*\n. 23%\n. 14\n. $8*\n. 17\n6%\n84\n. 63\n. lWtt\n. 164\n.201\n.286\n.171\nFORGING AHEADI\nTHE 80th ANNUAL REPORT OF\nTHE\nonarch Ufe\nASSURANCE COMPANY\nRio oynei\u2014wnnttrno\nA -Progressive Canadian Company\nht-uusib  \u2022   tttt\nFeaturts:\nIncreased Business in Force\nIncreased Premium Income \"\nIncreased Assets\nIncreased Policy Reserves\nIncreaied Special Reserves\nsnatt reserves. am> atmrum rtntM\nM du Hnrltr .1 nHuSaMm \u25a0_\u2022* \u2022_. luru\n\u2022( lltf.Nt.il mt ikCatw1! mrethn rarnri\n$1,427,874.25\nm S\u00abt-_\u00bb et __\u2022_<\u2022_\u2022 if \u00bbrtMMt*l iMani\n(vtkM-an\". mt lh. .VernOn al a UMUIUtf\nlaii\u20144 meant ta, nite.-Hen' p-tu.\nCot. of Annual Report MtileJ en Retool\n& J. TARR, K.C.\nA. F. W. Borehim\nBrueh Maniger    *\n801 Rogers. Building\nVANCOUVER\nG. C. CUMMING,\nGaoer&l Xll-ttti\nDlitrlct Representative!\nT, Kennedy\nC. F. McHardy\n\u25a0    NELSON\nMarket and Mining News\nWINNIPEG SINKS\nWINNIPEG, Feb. I (CP)-Wheat\npricei declined almoit ot their own\nvolition on the Winnipeg grain exchange today. A selling order or\ntwo sufficed to leave viluu Ti to %\ncent lower, May tt 86%, July If tnd\nOctober 85% ctnti.\nWeek-end export Ulei ot leu\nthan 15,000 buiheli ot Canadian\nwheat proved Insufficient to item\noccasional offerings.\nLiverpool wu ttd tower for the\nday, while low ot nearly a cent a\nbushel wis registered tt Chicago.\nBuenoi Airei wu off fractionally.\nCaih wheat ud coane grains\nwere quiet.\nLondon Clow\nLONDON, Feb. 3 (AP)-Cloilng:\nCPR 112%, Nickel (48Vi, BrIUsh\nAmtrlctn Tobacco 133s M, Centnl\nmining \u00a324%, DliUUen Ml 6d,\nHudson Biy 24s, Imperlil Tobacco\nI55i ex-dlv, Crown Mints \u00a3l3tt,\nEut Oeduld \u00a3 1%, Vicken 24a td.\nBondi\u2014Brltlih Stt per cent consols \u00a385%, Brltlih 2tt per ctnl\nwtr loan \u00a3106tt, Brit funding 4s\n1060-00 \u00a3118%.\nBONna DULL\nNEW YORK, Ftb. t (APl-Inde-\npendent itrength ln the low-priced\nrailroad groupa wat the lole feature\nof the bond market today.\nThere wis little change ln Uie\nforeign division.\nC.P.R. IARNINCI UP\nMONTREAL, Feb. 3 (CP) -Canadian Pacific railway traffic earning! for tha 10-day period ended\nJanuary 31, 1036, were 13,102,000\ncompared with 32,330,000 tor the\ncorresponding neflod of 1033, u\nlncreaie Af $572,000.\nCN.R. RIVINUI INORIAII\nMONTREAL, Feb. 3 (CP)-OroM\nrevenuet of Cuadian National railway! for the 10-day period ended\nJinuary 31, 1036, were (4.202,331\ncompared with \u00bb4,192,066 tor the\ncorresponding period of 1133, an\nlncreaie of 310,211.\nMetol Markets\nNEW YORKTVebTs (API-Copper quiet; electrolytic apot ud tuturt 1.25; export 6.70.\nTin barely iteidy; ipot tnd nearby 48.13tti tuturt 46tt.\nIron quiet, No. 2 f.o.b. eutcrn\nPennsylvania 20.50; Buffalo 11.50;\nAlabama 15.50.\nLead steady; ipot Ntw York 4.60\nto 4.35; Eut St. Louli 4.35.\nZinc dull; Eait St. Louli ipot and\nfuture 4.85.\nAluminum 10.00 to 22.00.\nAntimony, spot 12.15.\nQui iksllver 77.80 to 18.00.\nBtr silver iteady, unchmged from\nFriday at 44!i.\nAt London\u2014Copper, itandard ipot\n\u00a334 10a: futufe \u00a334 17s 6d; electrolytic, ipot \u00a338 10a; futurt \u00a339.\nTin, ipot \u00a3204 13s; future \u00a3101\nl-i 3d.\nLead, ipot and future \u00a315 Hi.\nZinc, ipot \u00a314 15s; future \u00a311,\nBir stiver firm, tt higher at lt\n13-16d.\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG,~Feb. 3 (CP)-Orein\nfuturei quotatlonii\nOpin   High   Low   Clou\nWheit:\nMiy  ..     81       81       Mtt    87%\nJuly 81tt    81%    SStt    81\nOct. SStt    86tt    85%    86%\nOati:\nMay 32tt    Sltt    -Itt    -tt\nJuly Sltt    Sltt    31%    31%\nBarley:\nMay SStt    36'4    36%    36%\nJuly  ...    -       -       -       81%\nFlax;\nMay     -      -      __     150\nJuly   ....  -     -     -     151\nRye:\nMay 45      46      44%    44%\nJuly 45%     45%    45V.    45%\nCash wheat: No. 1 hird 84%; No.\n1 nor. 83%; No. 2 nor, 61%; No. 3 nor.\n17%; No, 4 nor. 74%; No. 5, St; No. 6,\nSltt; feed 41%; No. 1 garnet 70%; No.\n2 girnet 76%; No. 1 durum 18%; No.\n1 A, R. W. 14%: No. 4 ppeclal 66%;\nNo. 5 iptrinl 61%; No. 6 special 55%;\ntrack 83%; screeningi 15 centi per\nton.\nMonty\nBy the Cinidlin Prtu\nClnsing exchingt ratui\nAt Montreil-Pound 6.01 18-16,\nU S doUir ,M 11-16, fruc 6.61.\nAt New York-Pound 5.03%, Canadian dollar 1.00%, franc 6.60%.\nAt Ptrli-Pound 14.01 truu, U 8\ndollir 14.94V* francs, Canadim dollir 13.M franct.\nIn geld\u2014Pound 12i ld, V 8 dollar\n58.60 centi, Cinidltn dollar 58.66\ncenti.\nVancouver  Stock  Exchange\nLISTIO\nA P Coniol\t\nAmal Oil\t\nBig Miu \t\nBrtw k Dilt\t\nBrit Dom \t\nBralorne Minu \t\nBridge R Con\t\nBRX Oold\t\nCirlboo Oold \t\nC At E Corp\t\nCoait Brew\t\nCoast BrewRti .......\nCommonwealth .'...-\nDentonia \t\nOold Belt -\nHargal OU \t\nHome Oil \t\nlntemat Coal \t\nIll Mount\t\nKoot Belle\t\nMak Siccar\t\nMcDougal Segur Ex\nMcLeod New\t\nModel Oil\t\nMorning Star\t\nNaUonal Silver \t\nPioneer Oold\t\nPremier Gold\t\nPremier Border\t\nQuattlno \t\nReno Gold \t\nReeves MacDonald\nSally Mine*\t\nSalmon Oold\t\nSheep Creek\t\nSpooner ...\u25a0\t\nTaylor Bridge\t\nVanalata \u2014\nWayiide   -\nCURB\nAnaconda  ~.\nBaltac      \t\nBeiver Sliver\t\nBid Good Klrkland\nB C Silver\nB C Nickel\t\nCalmont \t\nCentral Pat\t\nCoait Copper\t\nChibougamml \t\nCongreu  \t\nCrow'l Neit __\nDilhousie OUi\t\nDictator Gold ..___\nDominion Ex \u2014\u2014\nEast Creit \t\nFalconbrldge -...._\nFairview   \u2014\nFawn  \t\nFederal Oold __....\nFreehold  \t\nGeo Copper \u2014\nGoleonda Lead \u2014\u2014-\nGold Mnt\t\nGeo Enterprlte\t\nGeo River\t\nGrudview\t\nGrange\t\nGrull Wihkme -\nHedley Amal ......\nHighwood Sarcee ..\n\u25a0Id\nAik\n.12%\n.14\n.06\n.01\n.72%\n.13%\n\u2014\n1.30\n\u2014\n.11\n6.75\n6.80\n.03%\n.04\n.11\n.12\n1J0\nUl\n.OS\n.05\n13.30\n14.M\n4.76\n5.25\nM%\n\u2014\nit\n_27\nAt\nM\n.04%\n\u2022M .\nJO\n.81\n.10\n.20\n1-32\n1.33\nis\n.36\n.18%\n.16\n.Mtt\nAfl\n.lltt\n_20\nX\n\u2014\n.Oltt\n,08\n.Mtt\n.Mtt\nWAS\n11.80\n1.10\n1.93\nMtt\nMtt\n.01 tt\n.02\n1.15\n1.11\n\u2014\n.11\n.12\n.11\n.10\n.12\nHI\n' .tt\nAt\n21\n.11\n.11\n.05\n\u2014\n.16%\n.lltt'\nHome Gold\t\nIndian Mlnet ._.\nKlrkland Lake .\nKoot Flor\t\nLakeview \u2014.....\nLucky Jim\t\nMictsu \u2022\u2022\u2022-\nMackenzie R L .\nMadison\t\nMar Jon \t\nMercury\t\nMeridian .\nMerland \u2014\nMill City\t\nMorton Woi \u2014\nNicola\n.03\n.03\n1.70\nAl\n3.40\n4.00\n.59\n.14\nMtt\n.55\n.04\n.Mtt\n.Mtt\nM\nM\n1.60\nM\n.07\n3.15\nAS\n.13\nM\n.49\n.03%\n.OStt\t\nM\" -\n8M -\n-        M\n.40 -\n.05\n.25\n.15%\n.05$\n.05%\n.01%\n.03\n.Mtt\n.00\nai\n.utt\nNoble Five\t\nNordon OU  ......\nOkalta Oils Com _\nPaealta  \t\nPend Oreille ..\u2014\nPerron \u2014\u2022\u2022-_-\nPickle Crow\t\nPUot Oold \t\nPorter Idaho _...-._\nPrmdoro  _.._____\nQuesnelle Q \t\nRinchmen'i OU \u2014\nRewtrd  \t\nRtlltf Ari ~\nRoyiUto ......\nRufui Arg...\nRuth Hope .\nSilvercreit ..\nSilverado ....\nSilversmith\nSnowfltke ._,\u2014\nStan Silver\t\nSulllvtn ._,.\nTiylor Wind\t\nTeck Hughet   \t\nTexu Cm Oil \u2014\nUDL. \t\nUnited OU -.\nVidette Gold\nViking Gold\nWaverley Tangier\nWellington\nWhitewater\nYmir Y Girl   ....\nM\n.01%\n.52\nMtt\nAl\n1.M\n.01%\n.11\n.13%\n.12\n.14\n.07%\n.00%\n.10%\nJ04\n.Htt\nMtt\n.04%\n1.11\n141\ntXI\nMtt\nM\nMtt\n\u25a0Oltt\n.45\nMM\nMtt\n\"\" Mtt\n.    M\nm\nMtt\nM\n1.11\nMtt\n5.10\n3M\n.15\nM\n.81\nMtt\n.00%\n.Oltt\n.Mtt\n.58\n.Ottt\n.Mtt\n.01\nMtt\n.02\n4.55\nIM\n.Oltt\n.14\n.14tt\n.13tt\nM\n.01\n.11\n,04tt'\n.18\n.05\n.05\n1.12\n1.62\nMtt\nM\n.05\nMtt\nMtt\n.41\n3316\nM\nMtt\n.01%\n.11\n3.55\nMtt\n.81\n.00%\n.05\n.64\nMONTREAL, fab. I (CP)-Brlt-\nIsh ud foreign  exchange cloied\niteady,\nChina, Bong Kong dollars      .3284\nJapan, yen                .2924\nNew Zesland, pound           4.0464\nSouth Africa, pound 4.9926\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCauda).\nCHICAGO LOSES\nCHICAGO, Ftb. 1 (AP)-Widt-\nipread beneficial moisture over tht\nUnited Statu winter wheat tone\nwent hand ln hand today with material letbicks of prlcu.\nAfter t maximum drop of Itt\nctnti, whtat closed unsteady, tt\nto tt lower, Miy Mtt to Mtt, Corn\nunohanged to tt lower, May 60%.\noati also unchanged to tt off, and\nprovisions unchanged to 10 cents\ndown.\nEastern Sales\nMONTREAL, Feb. 3 (Cp)-Salei\not IM shares or more on tht Montreil stock exchange today:\n328 Smelters. 360 DM Seag, 3110\nElectrolux, 1199 Nickel, 260 Massey\nHar, 1240 Noranda, 9113 Brazilian,\n130 B C Pow A, 1420 Ind Al A, 150\nInd Al B, 2725 CPR.\nTORONTO, Feb. 3 (CP)-Silu\nOf IM lhares or more on the Toronto stock exchuge, lndustrlil\nitctlon, today:\n16,331 Bratilian, 17M Br it DU,\n126 B C Pow A, 990 Can tnd Al,\n826 CPR, IM Con Smelt, 130 Dti\nC Seag, 561 Ford A, 145 Imp Tob,\n,5003 Nickil, 370 MlU Hal?, 1303\nPantepec O, 340 Stl of Can ptd, 405\nH Walken, 240 Walk pfd.\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, Feb. 1 (CP).-S!lv*r cloied steady today, five pointa\nhigher. No uiu. Cloilng bids: February, March, May, July end September, all 44.50. |^|\nVoncouver Soles\nVANCOUVER Feb, 3 (CP) -\nMining sharei iold on the Vancouver\nitock exchuge today:\nListed\u2014Big Miu 4500, Bralorne\n2160, BRX 500, Cariboo 1025, Dentonla 54M, Gold Belt 1600, Island\nMount 1200, Koot Belle 1100, Mak\nSiccar 2000, Morning Star 1000, Pioneer 173, Premltr isoo, Reno loo,\nSally 500, Salmon 300, Shtep Creek\n2600, Taylor Br 1000, Wayiide 3750.\nCurb-B C Nickel 9100, Chibou-\ngamau 200, Dictator 1000, Fairview\n2000, Federal 1000, Gold Mount 2000,\nGeo Hiv 2000, Goleonda 1600, Grange\n2M0, Grull W 1700, Orandora 1000,\nHedley Amal 6000, Indian 1000, Meridian 3300, Minto 7000, Hcola 3100,\nPerron 100, Pilot 2000, Porter Idaho\n2000, Relief Ari 64M, Taylor Wind\n500, Vidette 1200, Whitewater 1000,\nYmlr Y Olrl 1000.\nNEW YORK, Feb. 8 (CP)-Ster-\nllng exchange itrong at $6.02% for\nM-day bills and at M.03% for demand. Cuadian dollars: today tt\nprtmium, Saturday Vt premium.\nweek tgo % premium. France 6.69%\ncents, Italy 8.05 cents, Uruguay 80.00\ncents.\n-PAOI NINI\nNEWYORKHAS\nA UTE RALLY\nNEW YORK, Feb. 9 (API-Optimistic traders touched ipure to the\nstock mirket todiy in tht final\nhalf hour of deaUngi.\nBuying spread rapidly tn U assortment ot mining, ittel and Industrial epecialty shtrea, But the\nmove came too late to leave a broad\nimprint on the list as a whole, where\ndeclines slightly outnumbered advances,\nNevertheleu, the Associated Preu\navenge ot 60 stocki, up .5 of a point\nat 59.9, was at the best level llnce\nSeptember 1, 1931, and there were\nnumeroui individual new topi for\nfive yeari or longer.\nTrading was in good volume toward tha finiih, but, durlnl the\nearly proceedings, buiineu wu re-\nitrlcted is Wall street awaited a\ndecision on the TVA by the Supreme\ncourt, which was not forthcoming.\nTotal turnover tn the itock exchuge wai 2,318,527 sharei,\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAl Chem  166%\nAm Cu -  124tt\nAm For Power ttt\nAm Mch & Fdy 27%\nAm Smelt a. Re 66tt\nAm Ttl 162tt\nAm Tobacco .... 103\nAnaconda  31tt\nAtchison   75tt\nAuburn Moton 43%\nAvlition Corp.. ttt\nBaldwin Loco . ttt\nBait k Ohio ... lttt\nBendixAv.  Mtt\nBeth Steel  M\nCan Dry  15tt\nCPR. -  Utt\nCerro de Patoo Mtt\nChu k Ohio . 51%\nChrysler  Mtt\nCon Gas NY... SStt\nCorn Prod  70tt\nC Wright Pfd _ ttt\nDupont   141tt\nlutmtn Kodik 151 tt\nElee Pow k Lite 10%\nErie    13tt\nFord English ... ttt\nFord of Cuada 2ttt\nFlrtt Nat Storei 46 \u2022\nFrteport Texta M\nGen Elee  40tt\nGen Foodi  Mtt\nGen Moton  Mtt\nGold Duit  lttt\nGoodrich  lttt\nGranby   9%\nGrt North Pfd Mtt\nGrt Wut Bugir 82%\nHowt.Sound ... Mtt\nHudion Motors 15%\nInt Nickel .  .. Mtt\nInt Tel fc Tel.... 17%\nJewel Tea  M\nKenn Copper - Mtt\nKresge SS  24\nKroegger G  26%\nMick Truck .... Mtt\nMilwaukee Pfd \"Itt\nMont Ward   39%\nNuh Moton ... 18%\nNat Dairy Prod 23\nN Pow fc Lite., lltt\nN Y Central .... Mtt\nPic Gu fc Elee 36\nLOW Cloie\nlMtt 166%\nIM 124%\nItt Itt\nII 17\nMtt 65%\n161% 162%\n102 108\n29tt 31%\n11% 15%\nMtt Mtt\nOtt 6%\nI 1\n11% 18%\nMtt Utt\nSltt 61\n15 15\nUtt Utt\nMtt Mtt\nM Mtt\n91% M\nMtt Mtt\nM 10%\n4% 4tt\n145% 147\n151 157\nOtt 9%\nUtt Utt\nItt Itt\nMtt 25%\n45% 45%\nMtt M\nMtt 40%\nMtt Mtt\nM Ntt\nlttt Utt\nlltt Utt\n9% 9tt\nMtt M\nMtt Mtt\nSltt Mtt\n15% 15%\nMtt 48%\nWtt Htt\n61 68\nMtt Mtt\nMtt 24\n26% 26%\nMtt 28%\n2% 2tt\n37% 39%\n17% 18%\n22% 21%\n11% 12%\n33>. 34%\n34 35\nPackard Molon I\nPennRR.   ... Mtt\nPhillips Pita Mtt.\nPure Oil - 19%\nRCA  IS\nR K 0  7tt\nRem Rmd  M\nSafeway Storu 38%\nShell Union .... Utt\nS Ctl Ed  lltt\nSouth Piclfic .... Mtt\nStm Oil of Cil Mtt\nStan Oil of Ind Mtt\nStan Oil of N J Mtt\nStewart Warner 20\",\nStudebaker .... 10%\nTexas Corp   Mtt\nTexu Gulf Sul Mtt\nTlmkm Roller.. M\nUnder Type  M\nUn Carbide  15%\nUn Oil of Cal.... Mtt\nUn Aircraft ..... Mtt\nUn Biicult  17\nUn Pacific  121%\nUS Pipe..  Mtt\nUS Rubber... Utt\nUS Steel  51%\nVanadium Steel -Vii\nWarner Bros .... 12%\nWest Elee  119%\nWut Union   17%\nWoolworth  Mtt\nWrigley   18\nYellow Truck .. Utt\n1% 9\nMtt M\nMtt Mtt\nUtt Utt\nUtt u\nItt Itt\nlltt lltt\nM Mtt\nlltt U\n21tt 21tt\nMtt 30%\nMtt 44\nMtt Mtt\nMtt Mtt\nM 20%\n9% 10%\nMtt Mtt\nM Mtt\nMtt \u00ab7tt\n92 92\n73tt\n25%\n27% 28\nMtt 27\n121% 122%\nMtt 34%\nUtt Utt\n49% 61%\n21 M\n12% lltt\n112% 116%\n15% Mtt\n51% Mtt\n17tt Htt\n15% Utt\nGOLD BELT\nMINING GO. LTD.\n(SHEEP CREEK DISTRICT)\nW\u00ab racommand purchase ef iharei In Hll abov* company, is offering an outstanding mining speculation.\nCircular covering the Company'i position ind development is available.\nP. E. POULIN\nSTOCKS and BONDS\nP.O. lox 752        Ticker Service Fhone 70\n\u2014The \u2014\nConsolidated Mining&Smeltlng\nCompany oi Canada, Limited\nTRAIL - BRITIIH  COLUMBIA\nManufacturers of\nELEPHANT Brand\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Phosphites \u2014 Sulphite of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates \u2014 Complete Fertiliser*\nPRODUCERS AND REFINERS OF\nTadanac Brand Metals\nCOLD\nSILVER\nLEAD\nELECTROLYTIC\nZINC CADMIUM\nBISMUTH\nToronto Stock Quotations\n.01%\nJO\n.14tt\n.05\n.04%\n.01%\n.Mtt\n.08\n.08\n_25\n.Utt\nThe Minerals of British Columbia\nThis Province hn produced minerals of an aggregate valut\nof SI.424,248.000.00.\nt\nThe value of Mineral production for the yeer 1935 is estimated at $47,810,612.00\nbeing an increase of 13% over the production for 1934. The high light of mining\nin British Columbia during the year has been the substantial increase in gold and\nIllver production.\ntor authoritative Information regarding mining development ln tha Province, apply to\nTHE DEPARTMENT OF MINES\nVICTORIA, B. C.\nBanktield  38\nBarry Hollinger        .04%\nBase Metals  14\nBear Exploration  35\nBig Missouri 11%\nBobjo        11\nBralome       6.10\nBRX      .11\nBut Ankerite    ,  5.50\nCanadian Malartic     1.15\nCirbloo Oold Q\nCastle Treth\nCentral Man\nCentral Pat\nChlbougamou\t\n1.10\n1.M\n.18\n3.40\n.OOtt\nCoast Copper     1.15\nConiagas        3.05\nConarlum           1.01\nCons Mln ._ Smalt 216.00\nDome .     49.75\nDominion Explor      .OOtt\nEldorado .^^^^^^^\nFalconbrldge\t\nGod's Lake -\t\nGold Bait  \t\nGranada      \t\nHardrock    \t\nHollinger     \u2014....\nHoway      \t\nHudson Bay \t\nInternat Nickel .   -\t\nJ M Consolidated\t\nKlrkland Lake\t\nLake Maron     \t\nLake Shore      \t\nLittle Long Lac\t\nMacassa  \t\nMalrobic  , ....\nMcUod Cockshutt \t\nMclntyre \t\nMcVlttie Or\t\nMcWatten Oold\t\nMining Corp -\t\nNipissing \u2014\t\nNoranda     \t\nParkhlll       \t\nPaymaster      -~\t\nPeml Oreille ._\t\nPickle Crow  _____\t\nPioneer \t\nPremier Gold\t\nReno  m\t\nMl\ntM\n1.26\n.40\n.26\n.50\n15.75\n.60tt\n28.00\n48.75\n.53\n.52%\n.05%\n58.00\n7.80\n4 55\n.OStt\n.05%\n47.12\nit\n1.46\nIM\nsoo\n48.00\n.25\nJO\n1.00\n411\n11.06\n1.90\n1.15\nSan Antonio\t\nSheep Creek \t\nSherritt Gordon \t\nSlscoe       \t\nSmelters G\t\nStadacona \t\nSt Anthony\t\nSudbury Basin \t\nSylvanite \t\nTeck Hughes\t\nToburn  .....\nTowagamac    -\t\nTreadwell  ....\nVentures  ~\nWaite Amulet \t\nWayside \t\nWhite Eagle\nWright Hargreaves .\nOILS\nAJax  \t\nBrit Amer Oil\t\nC k E Corp\nChemical Research...\nDsitousie  '\t\nHome Oil        -\nImperial Oil\nInternational Pete ...\nMerland . \t\nNordon \t\nRoyalite\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty 'Bros     \t\nBell Telephone ....\nBratilian\nBrew and Dist\t\nCanada Bread   \t\nCan Car k Fdy \t\nCanada Cement\t\nCanada Dredge \t\nCan Malting .....\nCPR       \t\nCona Smelters\t\nDominion Bridge\t\nDominion Storei\nDistillers Seatrams\nFord Canada A\nGoodyear Tire\nHiram Wrtker\n-oblaw A\nMaiey Han-\nSteel of Canada \t\nWalker Brew\t\n1.19\n.08\n1.10\nJ.30\n.05%\n.28\n.36\n4.20\n2.80\n5.10\n1.31\n3\n\u00bb\nw\n1.15\n.17\n.03%\n1.40\n.66\n22.62\n.12\n1.41\n.49\n.16\n1S.61\n18.15\n.16\n.11\n11.15\nHtt\nMtt\n14\n1.10\n....    6%\n.... 6%\n.... Itt\n.... 41tt\n...  H\n....   12%\n... w\n.... lltt\n...   10%\n.... ntt\n..   SStt\ntt'l\n..    81\u00ab\nIt'i\n...     Itt\n....   13\n....    2% I\nCANADIANS  AND THEIR  INDUSTRIES-AND THEIR BANK\n\u2022  GRAIN   GROWING  .\nHENRY: \"James, I an remember Dad tell\nlog us that, in his dajr, they used to thresh\ntheir gtain with a flail. We couldn't get\nalong that way nowadays; there's too much.\"\nJAMIS: \"You're right, Henry. We must have\nmechanical help to produce grain at a profit\nin these days. But I'm in favour of employing\nas many men as we can.\"\nHlNRY; \"That's every sensible Canadian's\npoint of view. Our local Bank of Montreal\nmanager tells me that, if tha security is all\nright, his Bank is willing to lend money for\nnecessary modern implements. By the way,\nour loan at the Bank hss been paid off in\nfull and the manager hu promised to ad\nvance money against the sale of out wheat\nto pay for harvest labour. We couldn't get\nalong without the Bank's co-operation. It\nwill be helping us, as usual, when we need\nmoney in the spring for seeding\u2014snd for\nthat new bun we'll hsve to build one of\nthese days.\"\ntee\nSome of the Bank's services to Gtain Growers: Business chequing accounts; savings accounts; money orders and travellers cheques;\nthe cashing of grain tickets and cheques;\nbanking by mail; safekeeping of securities;\nloans for planting, hstvesting snd farm\nequipment.\nBANK   OF   MONTREAL\nISTABLISHED   1111  \u2022 HEAD OFFICE, MONTRIAL\nNtlton anmh. 8. t L   OSWDNEY. Minim\nTr.il er.-i.hi A H. CARSON __U_i.ni\n_to.\u00abl.ad ti.i-.hi J   N   ( RAN M.natri\nNr* Dtnvrr Br     ' F. M. PRADV, M.n-?rr\nr..'o a,,-,,!,. v. n Firm n..-,..\nMODiSN. EFFICIENT BANKING SESVICS THE OUTCOME OF IIS YEARS' SUCCESSFUL OF.RATtQN\n PAOI TEN \u2022\n:\nSTOCK TAKING\nCLEARANCE SALE\n$1.60 Weither\nThermometer!\nSOo Weither\nThtrmomtttn\n25o Writing Pidi\nfor \t\n20o Writing Pidi 1 \u00abj \u201e\nfor    m-0\\-\n10o Writing Pidi H\nfor      \u2022 ->\n18e Envelope!,   1) ftr 1 C\u201e\n10c blue-lined Envelopes, box of 20 pkgs,\n88c  Pipttrlei\nfor     ,\n60c Pipetrlei\nfor     \t\n78o Pipetrlu\nfor \t\nMS Pipetrlei\nfor      \t\n55c Correipondence\nCirdi\n86c Correipondence\nCirdi \t\n98c\n24c\n47c\n55c\n89c\n24c\n48c\n43c\n78o Hot Wiltr CO\/.\nBottlei       OQK.\n82.00 Hot Witer     (PI   AE\nBottlei \u00ab_-Vtf\n60c  Syringe\nFitting!  \t\n81.76 Fountain       Cl   1 Q\nSyrlngei   VlilO\n25c  Mlnty'i Tooth      10.\n26c Nyieptol Tooth     IC.\n35c  Futetth OC\u00ab\nfor --Dt\n25c Tooth Bruthw 1 Q.\nfor   10t-\n36c Tooth Bruihei OOa\n26c   Mlnty   Shivlng Creim,\n60c Segal Ruor, A Q\/\u00bb\nthe two for _OC\n60c Aqut Vtlvt A*im\n26c Aqui Vtlvt 10.\nMann, Rutherford Co.\nDRUGGISTS and STATIONERS     ,\nPHONE 81 BOX 410\nHarry Brown Gels Four Goals as\nKlmberley Beats Rossland I lo 3\nDynamiters Complete\nPlay in Kootenay\nPuck League\nBy A. R. JOY\nROSSLAND, B.C., Feb. 3,-Kim-\nberley bynamiters completed their\nparticipaUon in the West Kootenay\nCommercial league series in a terrific scoring spree, downing Rossland Miners 8-3 here Monday night.\nRossland plays one more game at\nTnll Friday.\nBeing held to in even contest by\nthe miners up to the end of the\nsecond period, Dynamiters blasted\ntheir wiy through to score five goals\nin the third period.\nThe tint stanza wat of similar\nhockey as when Kimberley played\nTrail Saturday night. Dynamiters\nscoring two goals in the first period.\nKeiver figured in both scoru, pass-\nJ. A. C. Laughton,\nOptometrist-Optician\nlulte 206 Medlcil Arti Bldg.\nFURNACES\nSOLD, INSTALLED AND\nREPAIRED\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 086     610 Kooteniy St.\nEYE SIGHT\nTESTINC\nBy long experience and\nModern Methods we test\nvour eves.\nRetsonible   Prion\nEfficient Service\nJ. B. GRAY\nOPTOMETRIST\n407 BAKER ST. PH. 333\ning to Kemp and Brown, who tal\nlied. For three minutei of the sec-v\nond ctnto Rossland had the game\ntied after breaking up i Kimberley\ncombination and making a leries\nof. attacks on Campbell. Hmson\nscored on a double assist by Spencer\npnd Marshall and Spencer taUied in\nsimilar falhion assisted by Marshall\nand Walmsley. Three minutei after\nthe icore wis made 2-2, Kemp rifled\nthe rubber put Milne on Reiver's\npass.\nHarry Brown, who chalked up\nhalf the team's total count, three of\nwhich he tallied ln the third period,\nthrust in one of the prettiest goals\nseen ln,Kootenay hockey. Redding\nskated down left wing with Brown\nclose on his trail. He dropped the\ndisk and sped on around the ntt\nwhile Brown darted in to lift It\nfrom the ice to score from a sharp\nangle. He scored his other two in\nthe third period assisted by Burnett\non one and Redding on the other.\nMoore and Kemp were responsible for the other two in the period,\nMoore being aided hy Hugo Mackie\nDame got Rosslind's lut goil.\nSUMMARY\nFint period: 1\u2014Kimberley, Kemp\nfrom Keiver, 18:00; 2\u2014Kimberley.\nBrown from Keiver, 18:00. Penalties\n\u2014Kemp (1), Thompson (1).\nSecond period: 3\u2014Rouland, Hanion from Spencer ind ManhaU,\n13:00; 4\u2014Rossland, Spencer from\nMarshall and Walmsley, 14:00; 5-\nKlmberley, Kemp from Keiver.\n17:00.   Penalty-Kemp (1).\nThird period: 6\u2014 Brown from Redding and Moore, 2:00; 7\u2014Kimberley,\nMoore from Hugo Mickie, 4:00; 8\u2014\nKimberley, Brown from Burnet!,\n6:00; 8-Kimberley. Kemp, 7:30; IC\n\u2014Rossland, Dame from Wade, 9:00;\n11\u2014Kimberley, Brown from Redding, 9:45. Penalties\u2014None.\nShots on goal:\nCampbeU  10    4    2-16\nMilne  12    7   17-36\nTeams were:\nKimberley \u2014 Campbell, Burnett,\nKozak and Brown; Redding, Huge\nMackie and Moore; Keiver, Art\nMackie and Kemp.\nRossland\u2014Milne: Walmsley, Davies and Thompson; Dame, Reinikka\nand Wide; Marshall, Hanson and\nSpencer.\nJim Hanson refereed.\nMORE ABOUT\nII Duce Prepares\n(Continued From Pigi Ont)\nthit \"thli embargo would of itself\nminifeit I itep from economic to\nmilitary unctioni.\"\nA blockidt, ht wirned, would\nprecipitate t genenl wtr: Qtyda,\nchltr editorial writer of tht newipaper Glornale.D'ltella, Is coniidered often to expreu Muuollni'l\nviewpoint\nThe dtily wtr communique, uld\nthe \"lyttemlzlng\" of occupied southern territory is proceeding tnd thtt\nnatives there are \"cooperating actively with our forcu against the\nnucleus of the Ethiopians in the region. There it nothing to nott on the\nEritretn front.\"\nThe defence commission is 12\nyeara old but African wirfire md\nEuropean lancUona caused II Duce\nto increase ita membenhlp and\nwiden its scope.\nOne ot the newer speciil bodiu\nof the commission is the committee\nfor civilian mobilization, charged\nwith the evacuation of uaport towns\nin case of bombardment ind protection of citizen! againit aerial attack and gu.\nBy JOSEPH E. SHARKEY\n(Auecltttd Prtu Foreign Staff).\nGENEVA, Feb. 3 (AP).\u2014A committee of expert! ot the Leigue ot\nNations todty began.the work ot\ndeciding whether an oil embargo\nagainit Italy is workable.\nA leading member of Uie committee aaid prviately thit he favored drafting two reporti to the league\ncouncil,\nOne would ihow the pncUciblUty\nof an oil sanction it the United\nStatei Imposed an oil embargo\nagainit Italy; the secpnd would\nshow what effect the sanction would\nhave If Washington did not declare\nsuch a boycott\n(Vlrginio Gayda, Italian editorial\nwriter and friend of Premier Mussolini, warned ln an article in Rome\ntoday that an oil embargo would\nmean a blockade and a blockade\nwould precipitate a world war).\nOil tinkeri  loomed  up In to-\ndiy'i dltcunioni it t potent problem In view of the belief thtt tn\noil embargo, to bt effective, muit\nembrace tinkeri is will li oil.     _\nThe expert! want to know how\nmany tankers of non-league states\nwould be available tor Italy In cue\nthe embargo li applied. Some memben trgued that not-leigue coun\ntriei, such as tht TJnlted States,\ncould  lease  tankers to  Italy and\nthen charter veuels from unction-\niit countries for their own usage.\nA sub-committee was appointed\nto study poulble aubsUtutu for oil\nwhile a transport committee wiU\ninvesUgate the quettlon ot oil ports\nto determine poulble leakage pointa\ntnd meant ot plugging them up.\nSKATING TODAY\n3:30 to 5 15 P.M.\nFor Children and\nADULT BEGINNERS ONLY\nWednesday Afternoon\nSKATING 2 to 4 P.M.\nwmth SOLEX LAMPS\nTak* homa a carton ef thai* today.\nFor a vtry imall coat you can bring\nbrightness to every part of your hom*.\nFill up thot* empty socket! with Solex\nLampi.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nWHOLESALE RETAIL\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. FEBRUARY 4, 1836\nKenya Colony, were made today in\na report dispatched to Uie Ethiopian\ngovernment at Addia Ababa.\nThe report, \u00bbent by the external\naffain department of this British\ncolony, mtde the foUowing ipecific\ncomplaint!:\n1. Ru Desta Demtu, Ethioplin\nwar commander on tht louthern\nfront, rewarded numerous tribesmen\nwho led nidi icrois tht Kenya\nColony border by promoting them\nin rank.\n2. In defiance of repeated demand! Iuued here, Ethioplin iu-\nthoritiei refuted to cooperate in\nterminaUng fronUer disorders.\n3. A British official who made an\nair flight along Uie ill-defined 290-\nmile border between Ethiopia and\nKenya Colony found flagrant violation of a pledge made by the Addis\nAbaba government that lt would\ndisarm its Gelabba frontier tribesmen.\n4. Ethiopian troops frequently\nhave crossed into Kenya territory.\n8. In the lut year Ethiopian raiders have organized repeated forays\nacrou the border, stealing large\nquantities ot livestock and other\nproperty.\nANGLO-FRENCH RIFT\nLONDON, Feb. 3 (CP Cablt).-A\nrift between the British ind Frtncn\ndelegations over Germany's prospective ptrticipition ln treity dii-\ncusslons darkened tonight the future of the four-power naval conference.\nFrance hu not yet replied to a\nnew British suggestion that she\nagree thit outiide nivil powen,\nparticularly Germiny, be invited to\n\u2022end delegation! here but informed\nquirten felt the reply would be\nnegative.\nThis issue goes back to Germany's\n.crapping of military clauses of the\nVenaUles treaty last spring. France,\nnervous over German naval rearmament, contend! that participation\nby BerUn in negotiation! here\nwould constitute open approval by\n.the poweri of Germany, violation\nof the treaty.\nAnother outstanding development\ntoday waa the acceptance by a technical sub-coninilttee of the United\nStatea proposal for the extension\nof the official age of battleships\nfrom 20 to 88 yean. The conference\nmuit ipprove the committee's action, but it was believed certain\nthat the American plan wiU be\nadopted, thereby saving the tax-\npayen considerable money.\nThe sub-committee also defined\nmost types of ships and the conference will take up their definitions\nprior to the drafting of a treaty.\nDefinitions largely follow those of\nexisting treaties. Battleships ire\nthose ships of more than 10,000 tons;\ncruisen ire vessels of 10,000 tons\nor less, with eight-tach guns or\nleu; lighter rerfice enft ire those\nveeseli below 10,000 torn hiving\n8.1-inch gum or leu.\nETHIOPIA CHARGED\n(Copyright, 1888,\nBy Thi Hivu Newt Agency).\nNAIROBI, Kenya Colony, Feb. 8\n(CP-Havu).\u2014Charges that Ethiopia\nhad perpetrated a series of misdeeds tlong tht northern fronUer ot\nTOO UTE TO CLASSIFY\nSPIRELLA CORSETIERE FOR\nNelton tnd district, Mn. D. Bennett, 814 Kootenay St. Write for\nappointment. Maternity corsets.\n(5454)\nWORK   WANTED   BY   DAY   OR\nhour. Phone 418L. (5456)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nUied Radios, 830 up. Euy termi.\nMcKay St Stretton, 607 Ward St.\n(5383)\nBUY  CRYSTAL  BUTTER  AND\nYOU GET FIRST GRADE.     (6373)\nReheirsal Gondoliers tonight. Action starts. All come. (5458)\nElectrical   wiring. Git our tstl\nmitei. JARVIS ELECTRIC. Ph. 844.\n(5378)\nWtde'i Shoe Shop is fully equipped to sharpen skatei either for\nartificial or natural ice. (5452)\nAik your dealer for McDonald'!\nHigh Hat .greaieleu potato chips\nFinest made. (5394)\nRUSH REPEAL OF\nTHREE AAA LAWS\nWASHINGTON, Teh. 3 <AP>-\nCongreislonal leaders moved quickly tonight to carry out President\nRootevtlt't recommendation for removal from Uie atatute books of\nthree of the four remaining phases\nof AAA crop control.\nAi new firm legislation advanced\non leveral front), the executive forwarded an tight-Une special nwi-\nsage to congresi urging \"prompt\nrepeal\" of the Bankhead cotton control, Kerr-Smitti tobacco and crop\ncontrol lawi. He did not menUon\nthe Jones-Costigan Sugar Contr.\nact.\n\"This recommendation is made,\"\nMr. Roosevelt said, \"becauie of the\ntermination of the program ot agricultural production adjustment under the act of May 12, 1933, u\namended, known u the 'Agricultural\nAdjustment .act.' to which the three\nacta mentioned were auxiliary.\"\nMORE ABOUT\nSOVIET ARMY\n(Continued From Ptgt Ont)\nthree Ruisiins were klUed tnd seven wounded in t hand-to-hand fight\nwith Japaneie-Manchoukuans Jan.\n30. The latter were driven back\nFeb. 1, the Soviet account iaid, ind\ntwo companiei of Japanese-Manchoukuan troops assumed a position\non the fronUer on that date.\nThe communique asserted' a company of Manchoukuan soldiers rebelled and after slaying four Japanese officers crossed the border\nand were Interned by Soviets Jan. _!\u00bb.\nThe Soviet communique denied\none reportedly iuued by t'-t Jipanese army itaff asserting the revolt of the Manchoukuins wu inspired by Soviets and that Uie clash\nof Jan. 30 wu on Manchoukuo territory.\nFRANCE WORKING\nPARIS, Feb. 3 (AP)-Unwritten\nagreements were sought by France\nln further diplomitic conversations\ntodiy to aid in keeping Germany's\nreinforced army from itepping over\nher frontiers, particulirly towird\nAustria,\nPlerre-Itienne Flandln, foreign\nminister, talked to King Boris of\nBulgaria and the foreign minister\nof Turkey, Lithuania and Albania.\nPrince Paul, regent of Yugoalavia,\nand Vice-chancellor Emit von Starhemberg of Austria are on his calling lilt tomorrow.\n\u2022 Economic reinforcement of Balkan and Danubian countries to keep\nthem politically stable against Nazi\nInfluence apparently is an important\nitem in the talks ot the diplomats,\nalthough a definite plan of action\nis lacking.\nTurkey, informed quarters said,\nhas dropped the idea of fortifying\nthe DardaneUu, which would constitute e treaty violation, to avoid\nsetting s precedent for Germany's\nrumored ambition to refortify the\nRhineland. ,\nKing Boris was understood to\nhave assured Flandln that Bulgaria\nwill follow the league ln whatever\nit does to protect its members.\nThe question of defining \"coUec-\ntive security\" obligatons by fixing\nsanctions procedure for the future\nin the light of the league's experience with Italy was said to have\nbeen railed in the talks but with\nlittle likelihood of Ita advancing.\nA promised Danubian pact, tt was\nreliably reported, was shelved again\nuntil Italy, one ot the key nations\nin ita framework, can turn her attention from the Ethiopian w\u00a7r back\nto Europe. '   i\nAttacks Britain's\nIndian Policy\nLONDON, Feb. 3 (AP)-Jiwahar-\nlal Nehru, preiident-elect of the Indian NaUonal congress, attacked\nGreat Britain's Indian policy in a\nspeech tonight at Caxton haU.\nNebru recently wu temporarily\nreleased from jiil in India, where\nhe was serving a two-year sentence\ntor making seditious speeches, ln\norder to viiit hii sick wife.\nHe told a luge audience that Bri-\ntan wu over-stressing Italy'i bombing in Ethiopia while henelf retorting to bombing on Indii's northweit frontier.\nMORE ABOUT\nWEATHER\n(Continued From Pige One)\n6n the prairlei it wai officially\n42 below it Saskatoon. At Edmonton\nit wu 18 below, Winnipeg 42 below,\nend not much warmer at Lethbridge.\nRegina and other points. It wu Just\nas bitter in northwest parti of Ontario.\nA northweit gale that brought\nzero temperatures to Canada's maritime provincei blew itself out list\nnight but the cold remained unabated. A 13-year-old boy was dud\nln Saint John, half a doien persons\nwere Injured and railways and\nhighways were blocked by drifted\nsnow.\nCOMMONER AS\nHIGH COMMISSIONER\nLONDON. Feb. 3 (CP cablel-\nOwing to court mourning, King\nGeorge's wish that the Duke of\nGlouceiter follow hit brother the\nDuke of Kent as lord* high com-\nmiuioner ot the Church of Scotland will probably not be carried\nout.\nA commoner will likely be selected for the post which was filled\nin 1928 by the Duke of York and in\n1933-34 by Lord Tweedsmuir, presently governor-general of Canidi.\nBOVA APPEAL REVIEWED\nVICTORIA, Feb. 3 (CP). - The\nappeil from sentence of one yeir\non a chirge of manslaughter im\nposed upon John Bova at the Vancouver assizes by Mr. Justice Mur\nphy was before the court of appeal\nfor review today. The appul 11 by\nthe crown which objects to the\nterm as being top short for one to\nimpose upon the iccused who killed\nhis wife. Judgment was reserved.\nVANCOUVER FEELS IT\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 3 (CP)-Klng\nWinter left his first definite signs\non Vancouver Island ind the lower\nmainland of British Columbia today.\nSnow began to fall in Vancouver at 6\na.m. and within a few houn the\ncity was covered wiUi i white mantle.\nThe temperature fell to 21 degrees\nSunday, the loweit thii year md\nonly 1 degree ibove the record low\nof the winter, set November 2.\nSnow was reported today 'on pari!\nof Vancouver lilmd. The lowest\ntemperiture recorded in Victoria\nwas 32 degrees yesterday.\nS.V. Toll, Trail Old\nTimer, Passes On\nLeaves Wife and a\nDaughter in\nTrail\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 3-Settlmo Vincent ToU, 7], died at TraU-Tadanac\nhoipital Mondiy it 4 un.\nMr ToU wu t pioneer ruldent\nof Trill, hiving come to the city 39\nyetn tgo. In 1909 he wu employed\nby the C. M. k S. company, working\non tht \"hUl\" for 15 yun, tfttr\nwhich he wu pentioned, to live In\nretirement for nine yean.\nMr. ToU wu born tn Italy March\n31, 1864, taking Out naturalisation\npapen after coming to Trail.\nHe ii lurvived by hii widow and\na daughter, Lane,'in TralL   '\nIn the early dayi he operated \u25a0\nbirber ihop here.\nMORE ABOUT\nMAKALE\n(Continued From Pige Ont)\ncampaign, ranging through the adjacent Tembien mountalni and\nswooping down on the Fascists\nwhenever opportunity afforded.\nBoth Italian and Ethiopian forcu\nhive claimed iweeping victories in\nthit irei.\nTRAIL CURLING\nDRAWS,\nTRAIL.  B.C..  Feb. 3 - Curling\ndnws for Tuesday night follow:'\nPatron's cup:\nAt 6:30 p.m.\np. Forrest vs. J. E. Cirter.\nJ. Campbell vs. W. P. SomervUle.\nR. C. McGerrlgle vs. A. M. Chet-\nA. R. Buehan vs. W. Brown.\nAt 8:30 p.m.:\nW. F. Truiwell vs. G. J. Klnnls.\nPresident's competition: .\nG. C. McKay vs. C. Dodimead.\nJ. H. Leckie vs. W. Brady.\nJ. A. Wadaworth 'vs. G. W. Weir.\nCASGRAIN TO\nBE SPEAKER?\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL\nThis column ls tn charge of Mrs Glenn (juiyle of Trill. All\neventi of \u2022 tucfal nature ot intereit in 11uit and tadanac will appear\nin thil column.  Mn  (juayle will be glad to havt any such news\n- lit\ntelephoned to ber tt her home in Trail\nFor Sox that ippeil to tht mott\nptrtlcultr mtn go to JACK\nBOYCE'S, Excluilvt Men'i Shop.\n(5385)\nAnnuel Scout association meeting,\nBosrd of Trade building, Thursday,\nFebruary 6, 8 p.m. Election of officeri. (5453)\nAre you all set for the Klnimen\nclub'i 49'er Night it tht Etglt htll\nFrldiy night 7 Get your ticktt from\ntny of tht club mtmbtn.      (8467)\nThe annual meeting of the Neiaon\nLiberal association will be held in\nGelinu' hall tonight, at 8 o'clock.\nEverybody welcome. Election ol\nofficen. '     (5392)\nC. P. R. FIRST AID CLASSES\nCOMMENCE FEBRUARY 6 FOR\nMEN, FEBRUARY 7 FOR LADIES,\nAT 6 P.M. TO BE HELD THIS\nYEAR IN THE GENERAL OFFICES\nAT THE C. P. R. DEPOT.      (8393)\nThe annual genenl meeting of\nthe ihinholden of the Nelion Golf\ntnd Country Club Limited, wlU be\nheld In the oouncll chimber of the\ncity htll, Nelton, B. C. toplght it 8\npm. John Prdaer, secretary. (5413)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nTerry\u2014Joseph, pissed twty tt\nSlocin Community Hoipital, New\nDenver, B. .. on Feb. lit. Funeral\nservice will be held in Knox United\nChurch. Slocan City on Wed. Feb.\n3th at 2 p.m. (5419)\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 3\u2014Approximately 300 guests attended the banquet in Colombo hall this evening\nwhen members of the Sisters of Colombo entertained at their twelfth\ninnual banquet. Included among\nthe guesti were members of the\nCristoforo Colombo society and\nDaughter! ot Colombo. The long\nbanquet tablei were effectively appointed with vases of daisies, roses\nand fernery. Pastel tinted petals\nwere used to form delicate snades\nfor the ceiling lights. Presiding at\nthe speakers' table was Mrs. Mary\nColompo, preiident of the Sisters of\nColombo. At the conclusion of the\nbanquet, where t few short speeches\nwere heard, ah excellent program\nwai offered, the event drawing to a\ncloie with a dance. Featured on the\nentertainment program were: Mrs.\nE. Pisapio, Miu Irma SaliiccioU, A.\nDelia Lam ind S. Romano, short\npity; Lilliam Sammirtlno tnd Inez\nPisipio, vocil numbers; Charles Cat-\ntlino and A. Fabbl, vocal selections;\nAlfred Tonesshi, Miu Lena Cere-\nmeil! thd Miu Annie Bigglo, ihort\ncomedy. The concluding item wis\n\u2022 comedy number, directed by Miu\nRent Ttvaroli and led by Miu Inez\nBigglo, with piano iccompiniment\nby Jimes Orlando. \"The Five Quintuplets,\" wai acted by Miu Lent\nCeremelli, Miu Angeline Merlo,\nMiu Helen Vellutini, Miu Eda\nMonsldl tnd Mlu Maggie SaliiccioU. A highlight of the evening wu\nthe diitrlbution of Uie birthdiy cike,\nwhich with ita twelve lighted cand-\nlei, held \u2022 place of honor In the\nhall. Mri. Miry Colombo hid chirge\ndf the entertainment md Mrs. Bruno\nLerose wu convener ot the refreshment committee. Assisting Mn. Lerose were Mrs. A. Deitefino, Mn.\nG Geronazzo, Mrs. A. Lazaretto,\nMri. S. Romtno, Mrs Joe Gerace,\nMil. A. Vannucchl, Mrt. M. Demeo,\nMn. A. Mirtlnelli, Mrs. Frank Vel\nlutini, Mrs. A. Masci, Mrs. Joe Lerose and Mrs. Orlando.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMembers of Uie C. G. 1. T. Girls\nof St. Andrew's Anglican church,\nunder the direction of Miss K.\nCairns, leader, held memorial services to the lite King George at\ntheir recent meeting in the chapel.\nA ihort prayer was read, the girls\njoining in singing \"Abide iWth Me.\"\nThere were nine members in attendance.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. Soren Bock were\nvisitors .to Rossland during Uie\nweek-end.\n.   .   .\nMn. John Millen was hosteu at\nher home thli evening to memberi\nof the Ladies' service luxiliiry to\nKnox United church. Dainty refreshments were served it the concluilon ot business.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nDr. W. C. Bradshiw md Mn.\nBradshaw htvt rtturntd to TraU\nfrom Nelton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. tnd fttt. Irving Trembath of\nRoulind visited today in TnU.\nt   \u2022   \u2022\nMn. J. Brothen, mother of Mr. L.\nBrothen, Is \u2022 pttlent ln the Trail-\nTadanac hoipital.\n.   m   .\nMr. md Mn. E. B. Quayle of Roulmd were guests ot Trail friendi\ntodty.\n\u2022 t  i\nMrs Herbert Johniton held t well\n\u2022tttnded meeting ot Teen Age Girlt\not Eut Trail Anglican mluion it \u2022\nmeeting at her home. Those preient\nwere Barbara Johnston, Gwen Hermon, Eliza Ftndley, Edith Crombie.\nConnie Green, Elsie Haywood, Mary\nWation, Allct Leduc, Berthi Mar-\ngodt, Kiy Witson and Betty Monypenny.\nOTTAWA, Feb. 8 (CP)-Appolnt-\nment of Pierre F. Cugrayi as speaker ot the house of commoni wis generally expected todty at peraontl\nfiles from hii former office were\nmoved to Uie quarten of the ipuk-\ner. It wu expected he would be\nelected Thursday.\nF. G. Sanderson wu believed\ntilted for Uie poit of deputy ipeaker\nu hll filet were moved Into the\noffice of the deputy.\nThe influx of memberi to the\ncapital ipeeded up todiy with tht\nopening of the session two diyi distant Coniervttivt Leader Bennett\nreturned from Calgary and appeared eirly In hit qlflct in Uie central\nblock of parliament buildings.\nCooper Testifies\nREGINA, Feb. 3 (CP)\u2014Still suffering effects of a broken clavicle\nof hli shoulder, suffered ln tie Regina Dominion day riot, Inspector\nArthur S. Cooper, M.C., in chirge\nof mounted royal Canadim mour-__l\npolice forcu July 1. testified today\nat the riot inquiry. He told of ictlvi-\nties of mounted men in during\nstreets md dispersing rioters.\nOther witneisei were Sergt.-Major\nG. H. Griffin, Constable R. C. Tor-\nreni, Saikatoon; Constable John\nMallow; ind Constable Alex Greene,\nStrasbourg. Indicating R.C.M.P. evidence is nearly finished, Chief Constable Martin Brutrn of Regina\ncity police, wa6 waiting to testify.\nSPRING 8IGN8 AT OUESNEL\nRUSH MOBILIZATION\nCopyright, 1936, by tha Havu News\nAgency\nHARAR, Feb. 3 (CP-Htvu) -\n\u25a0Ethiopian authoriUa here puihed\nforwird mobilization meaturtt tonight under a new decree which wu\nbelieved ln iome quartan to foreshadow in imminent offeniive\nagilnst the right flank of Gen. Ro-\ndolfo Grazlani'i touthern Itelltn\n\u2022rmiei.\nThe move followed \u25a0 demind for\nmore troops by Ru Nislbu, commander ot Emperor Haile Selassie's\nforcu ln thli sector. Most ot Nasibu's\ntroops already are hastening southward to Join the badly-disorganized\nforces under Ras Desta Demtu,\nwho has fallen back into the Sidemo\nmountalni in the pith of General\nGriziini'i lustained drive.\nSITUATION  RELIEVED\nADDIS ABABA, Feb. 3 (API-\nEthiopian officials uld today i din-\ngiroui lituition on Uie southern\nfront beciuae of ItaUan advancu\nhu been relieved.\nItaly'i army of Aiktrl (nitive)\ntighten, they snorted, has been\ndriven back to the plains around\nNeghelll alter penetrating more\nthm 40 milu north of that point\nQUESNEL, B. C, Feb. 3 (CP)-^\nSrhall boyi playing mirblu qn Uie\nsidewalks, influx of commercial\ntravellen and increased activity\namong placer minen are signs of an\nearly spring here.\nUnion Fight Rages on\nWASHINGTON, Feb, 3 <AP)-\nIntemiptlng with boot t plea by\nWilliam Gram for peace within tht\nranks of organlied labor, Uie United\nMine Worken today climaxed this\nwith an enthusiastic endonement\nof the fight by their officen for In-\nduitn-1 u againit craft unionism.\nThe acUon ln effect repudiated\ntha stand of one of their own members. Green, pretident of the Amerlcm Federation of Ubor, rou to\nthis post ii \u2022 member of the united\nMine Workers\nAlmoit to i man, the mlnen rose\nto support John L. Lewli, UMW\npresident, u he ciUed for a vote\non induitriil versus craft unlonitm\nu Green finished his impassioned\nplea that Uie icrap be dropped.\nNightgowni which look Uke evening gowni ire mide of wuhable\nvelvet, in Jewel tonu is well u\nwhite ind pink. Plain dark utln Is\nuied for other model* u weU u\nsheer chiffon.\nDr. R. B.\nSHAW\nWlshei to announce Uie removal of his office from the\nMedical Arte Building to\nSuite 2\nAberdeen Block\nover Andrew'i Shoe Store\nwhere he will be auoclited\nwith\nDr.\nB. T. Dunham\nPHONE 92 .\nBurn BURNS' Coala\nUA Fuel for Every Purpose\"\nGALT LUMP Per ton $10.50\nGALT STOVE .' Per ton   $9.00\nWILDFIRE LUMP  Per ton $10.00\nWILDFIRE STOVE  Per ton  $9.00\nGREENHILL'WASHED\nFURNACE LUMP ... Per ton$10.00\nGREENHILL STOKER .... Per ton  $9.00.\nSPECIAL PRICES ON QUANTITIES\nDRY FIR, BIRCH AND CEDAR WOOD\nBurns Coal & Cartage Co.\nPhona 53\n518 Ward\n25% OFF\nALL HEAVY\nCOAT'S\nMere, men, is a chance tc\nsave. 25% off any Wiiv\nter Overcoat in the stors\n$35.00 COATS 926.21\n$30.00 COATS 922.51\n$25.00 COATS f 18.71\nEMORY'S\nLimited\niSI3ZHSi::i223S\nStarts\nTomorrow\nThe world's great*\nmotion picture of hei\nism, love, duty, reb\nlion and adventure\n\"MUTINY\nOil\nTHE\nBOUNTY\"\nwith\nCharles Laughton\nClark Gable\nFranchot Tone\nAND CAST OP\nTHOUSANDS\n,.. Took 2 years to makt\nat a cost of $2,000,000\n,.. tnd worth it!\nSHOWN AT\nREGULAR PRICE8I\nCdPITQi\nTODAY\nVina Delmar's\n\"HANDS ACROSS\nTHE TABLE\"\nwith\nPRED MacMURRAY\nCAROLE LOMBARD\nThe laughs, lives, and lov\nof the amateurs of the air\n\"MILLIONS\nIN THE AIR\"\n\u2022;\nJ...P..I-H - !>sat*Fj\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. 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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. 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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. 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