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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":" \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n\u2014\nBoard of Trade Backs Proposal\nfor New City Hall\nPage Eight\nthw.\niffmimwmmrmjwfnatm^r-\nPROVINCIAL\nUB$A\nWar Economy May Brin& Gas\nRationing to Canada\nPag* Ten\nVOLUME  38\nFIVF CENT8 PER COPY\nNUMBER 252\ni(-. U'  t |*ffg?**0 ^NELSON. BRITISH COLUMIIA, CANADA\u2014FRIDAY MORNINC*. FEB, 9,\nNEW CANADiA,, CONTINGENT AT ALDERSHOT\nTroops Billette\nAfter Uneventful\nReds Penetrate First Forts\nof Mannerheim; Forced Back\nViolent Fighting Gives\nReds Temporary Victory\nTweedsmuir Has\nRestful Afternoon\nFierce   Finnish  Counter-Attack   Drives  Out\nInvaders; Four Soviet Divisions Are\nConcentrated in Sector\nHELSINGFORS, Feb. 9 (Friday) (CP Havas).\u2014Finnish\nmilitary authorities early today admitted that Soviet troops\nhad penetrated the first breastwork of the Mannerheim Line\nafter violent fighting but said they were forced to withdraw\nin the face of a Finnish counter attack.\nReports reaching here from the Karelian Isthmus said\nfour Soviet divisions \u2014 approximately 60,000 men \u2014 were\nconcentrated in this sector.\nIn heavy fighting lasting several hours yesterday the\nRussians were said by the Finns to have battled their way up\nto the first lines of the Man- -\nnerheim    fortifications,    and\neven to have occupied the first\nline at several points, before\nthey were obliged to fall back.\nMOSCOW, Feb. 8 (AP). \u2014 The\nLeningrad   Military  Headquarters]\nreported tonight that  Red  Army\ntroopi   had   occupied   eight   Iron j\nind  concrete   tort.  In   Finland's |\nMannerheim Line and (Ive others\non the flank.\nA Headquarters communique sa,d\nthe eight torts taken in the Mannerheim Line were in the Hotinen area\no( the Summa district, near the\nWestern terminus of the line and\nsome 20 miles South of Viborg\ntViipuri), immediate objective of\nIhe Russians on the Karelian\nIsthmus.\nThe   other   positions  were   re-\nDorted to be in the sector between\nLike Ladoga and Suvasijaervi, on\nthe Eastern  end of the Finnish\ndefence line.\nIn both actions, the Russians said\nthe Finns suffered \"great losses.\"\nThe communique:\n\"Feb. 8: Hostilities restricted\nchiefly to activities of scouts.\nClashes of advanced infantry units\nwhich took place Ihe last few days\non the Karelian Isthmus, resulted\nin the occupation by Soviet troops\nof the fortified area of Hotinen\nin the Summa district with eigiit\niron and concrete artillery forts.\n\"In the sector between Ladoga\nLake and Suvasijaervi Soviet troops\ncaptured five defensive iron and\nconcrete artillery forts. In both\ncases the enemy suffered great\nlosses.\n\"Soviet aviation bombed military\nobjectives\"\nLIFT QUARANTINE\nON 111th AFTER\n21 DAYS\nEDMONTON, Feb. 8 (CP). -\nMilitary officials announced tonight the quarantine of the\n111th Battery R. C. A. in the\nFane Building here was lifted\nlate yesterday after the soldiers\nwere confined to barracks for\n21 days.\nThe quarantine, the second\nin two months, followed discovery of one chicken pox case.\nScarlet fever caused the previous one late last year,\nEast Trail Family\nIs Evicted by a\nMidnight Fire\nTRAIL, B. CH Feb. 8-Flre which\nbroke out in the home of William\nZonialo, 1864 Fifth Avenue, East\nTrail, early Thursday morning, sent\nhis family scurrying into the street\nin night attire, and did considerable\ndamage to the roof before being\nexiinguished.\nAlthough the fire had gained considerable headway when the Fire\nDepartment was called at 12:40 a.m,\nit was quickly extinguished. The\nfire was ascribed tn spontaneous\nignition of combustible materials\nstored in the attic.\nFiremen confined the fire to the\nupper   story,   damage   being   done\nLABOR DECLARES\nAGAINST PEACE\nWITH THE NAZIS\nFreedom    for    Polish\nand Czechoslovaks\nDemanded\nCONDEMN RUSSIAN\nATTACK ON FINNS\nLONDON, Feb. 8 (CP).\u2014Labor\nthrough the National Executive uf\nthe Labor Party, declared tonignt\nunequivocally against peace negotiations with any Nazi Government in Germany.\nA document giving the war purposes and peace aims of the chief\nOpposition Party demanded ai a\ncondition for ending the war actual acts of restitution and freedom for Poles and Czecho-Slo-\nvaks. Austria should be allowed\nto choose for herself whether to\nbe in or outside the Reich.\nThe statement, drafted by the\ngoverning body of the party, gave\nthe most explicit definition  yet\nof the party's war and peace aims.\nIt is to be submitted to the party s\nNational  Conference in  May  for\ndebate and adoption as the definite Uibor policy.\nThe   Labor  pronouncement   condemned   Russia's  \"unprovoked   attack on  Finland in shameless imitation  of N|zi technique.\"  It said\n\"we should regard extinction of the\nto^e r^f'and  reVr haiiVthe !\u2122 Finnish democracy a- an  in-\nupstairs ceiling.\nThe upper story was unoccupied\ntolerable   disaster  for  civilization.\nHugh Dalton, M, P., party spokes*\nlilt    11 uua.1     .ilLJlT      wu,l     aaiiuttaii'ia-u, ,, ,.\nthe  family   living  on   the  ground man; ,r> commenting on the state-\neloor        ' 6 ments, said it was more specific on\nDamage  was   estimated   at  $150 war and Pcace aims ,han .defi\"!!io\"\nEarthquake Hits\nCalifornia Towns\nLORD TWEEDSMUIR\nOTTAWA, Feb. 8 (CP)-Gov-\nernor General Lord Tweedsmuir\n\"has spent a restful afternoon and\nthere is no essential change m\nh'.s condition,\" it wa.s announced\nin a bulletin frcm Government\nUou.se tonight.\nThe buhetin was signed by\nHis Excellency's three physicians,\nDr. Jonathan Meakins cf Montreal, Dr. Gordon Gunn of Ottawa\nand Lieut,-Col. Colin Russell,\nR.C.A.M.C.\nAt noon an announcement said\nincreasing weakness of the Governor-General gave rise to grave anxiety. He fainted and fell in his\nrom while dressing last Tuesday\nmorning, suffering a concussion.\nOther signs of concern were '\u25a0.(*\nbe seen at Government House\nwhere constant watch was kept\nuver thc King's representative\nAr   .ngerr.enti   were   made   for\nthe     Government     Houie     telephone switchboard to be manned I\naround the clock and an aide-de- j\ncamp wai to be on constant duty, j\nWhen H:s Excellency was injured\nPlan Provincial\nBank lor Alberta\nEDMONTON, Feb, 8 fCP) .-Legislation providing for expansion of\nthe Alberta Government's interim\nprogram and for establishment of a\nProvincial Rank was forecast in the\nspeech from thc Throne read here\nof policy hy the Chamberlain Government. The latter, he said, never\nhad Rone so far in declaring againat\npeace negotiations with any leaders of the Nazi regime.\nExplaining the absence of any\nreference to the Russian-occupied part of Poland, Dalton said\nBritain is not at war with Russia\nand the party decided against trying to define now post-war territorial adjustments.\nOn the future of Germany the\nstatement said:\n\"We are opposed to any attempt\ntoday by Lieut,-Gov, J. C. Bowen I fr\u00b0m \u2122ts,ide tn breal< UP Germany.\"\nat the opening of the Provincial! LMr- Da1Unn stressed the choice of\nLegislature session. i ^e  w\"rd   '\u2122tslde-   ,sa-vinK that  if\n\u2122 . ,, , -. . ,,, ,. ! the German people themselves\nThe bill, described as further, vnme sonie form of decentralization\nprogressive steps toward the ap- that was a matler fnr lhem\nplication of Social Credit prm- \u00bbWe do nol SPPk the humiliatJon\nciples in Alberta, will be mm.- nf dismemberment of vour conn-\nriuccd at the present session the, t .. said the s,atempn; addressed\nInst gathering before the Gov- dlrectly to the Grrman people\neminent calls for a general elec-1\nGerman Propaganda Obviously fatted\nPassed by the German censor ond released by the German Bureau\nof Propaganda and Enlightenment, this picture, according to the German caption, shows a cloud of smoke rising from a British trawler\nthat has just been directly hit by the bomber, shown upper left. Aa\ncan be seen by the lines around this picture the photograph of the\nbomber has been super-imposed and the resulting picture rephoto-\ngraphed and then released as a genuine camera record of the bombing\nof a British trawler.\nGRASS VALLEY, Calif., Feb R\n* AP).\u2014 Brief alarm spread over 'he\nSierra side of the Sacramento Val-!\n\\ey shortly after midnight last night!\nas a iharp earthquake frightened!\nhouseholders out of their beds and i\ninto the streets.\nThe quake, felt throughout the\nNorth Sierra country and far irwu\nthe Sacramento Valley, was de* I\nscribed by Prof. Perry Byerly, Uni-1\nversity   of   Cahfornia   seismologist, j\nis 'he most severe in this section I Dr, Meakins and Dr. Wilder Pen-\nof the country in the last 15 years, I field, both noted specialists, were\nIt occurred on a geologic fault ex-1 summoned frcm Montreal and re-\nlending from Grass Valley North, I mained several hours. They return-\nBetween 1B60 and 1690. several se* ed to Montreal but Dr, Meakins\nvere ihocks occurred along the line.' came back to Ottawa yesterday.\nThere was no report of damage, j Callers at Government House\n\u25a0 nd after the momentary fear caused tod-ay included J, H R Cromwell,\nby being shaken out of sleep, the United Stales Minister to Canada\nresidents of communities in the cir \u25a0 uho mqu.red about Lord Tweeds-\nele of the qua> found the disturb- muir ar.d conveyed his wishes for\nonce had done Tittle morn than stop  a speedy recovery.\nclock*   nnd   shake   windows,   cup-  \"\nboards and furniture. I\n\u2014\u2014         Some Merchants Fail\nJunior Chamber Sends Pay Exchange on U. S.1\nOutl 75 Copies Nelson-Money Chamber Told\nNeWl     Pictorial     ISSUe Complaints  had   been  made  that'\nTotal  of   175   copies  of  the   Pie- *<jmo   merchants   were   not   giving\ntnrial F,d,tion of The Nelson Dailv American visitors the exchange pre- j\nNew* had  been  distributed amnn* mmm dur ,lhf'm' and to encourage\ntion, the speech said\nThe Throne speech contained a\ncomprehensive survey of the Government's actions since elected in\n1935 and plans for the future, and\n'ed \"we  will continue our un\n\"If you establish a Government\nsincerely willing tha! Germany\nshall be a good neighbor and a\ngood European there shall be no\nhumiliation or revenge,\"\nAny peace treaty which will bring\nU.i-Cl li la,        v> I       Hill    LUIIUIIHt'    IHII      HII\"       I        , ,        ,- ,\nrelenting fight for monetary reform  Iastl\"\u00ab P''ace ,a( Europe   that state-\nand social security with the de-1 m,en' s(a'd- \"\",st. *UCTW1 in reC\u00b0n'\nI ciling the French elaim to secunh\n| with the German claim to equality,'\ntermination to relieve unemployment and banish poverty from\nAlberta.\"\nOther legislation forecast in the\nspeech would protect farms and\nurban homes from tax sales; gran!\nlax concessions, debt protection and\nassistance for administration of af- MOSCOW, Feb fl .AP) - The\nfairs of persons who have enlisted; Government newspaper ' Izveitia\nand establish cancer clinics and ex-; warnPd thp Balkan nationa tnni h,\ntend assistance to cancer sufferers i ,nat ;ne present situation on the\nof limited means. Western front cannot last long and\nRegarding   debt   adjustment,   the [ advised   them   h\nspeech   said   the   Alberta   Govern\nBALKANS WARNED\nOF  INVOLVEMENT\nment is determined \"tn pursue the\npolicy of providing an effective\nbasis for the settlement of long-outstanding obligations, and while this\nis being accomplished, to protect\nlhe firms and homes nf the people\nof Alberta\"\nJunior Chambers in We United\nStates, on the Prairies and in Fa.*-t-\nern Canada, stated Clare Jewi It,\nTublinty Chair man, reporting to\nthe Chamber at its meeting Thursday night\nUtter of thanks from thr Bo:se\nJunior Chamber nf Commerce for\nHi copy of the Pictorial F-dition was\ntourist trade it was essential that\nthis business courtesy must be extended, stated a letter from J\nGordon Smith of the B. C. Government Travel Bureau received by\nIhe Nelson Junior Chamber vt\nCnmmerre  Thursday  night.\nln view of publicity in the United\nStairs   that   tourists   would   not   be\nreceived by  the  Chamber, the  let-1 hindered   by  the  foreign  exchange\nter expressing admiration for ti\ndistrict semes depicted in it and\nfir the workmanship of the edit.on\nThe Chamber has received LSfl\ncopies of the B C Government\nTravel Bureau \"Visit B C\" folders\nfor distribution in the United States\ncontrol  orders,  it   was  even   m\nimportant that the premium should\nbe paid, the letter said.\nMINE   SINKS  TANKER\nLONDON Fob R (API -- Trie\n-inker British Councilor. 704fl tons,\n-snk in the North Sea Sunday after\nstriking a mine It was di-rl^vrl today af'rr th* vmspI's entire rrew nf\n4.1 men hid landed nt a S<>uthcas1\nENGINEERING COUNCILLOR\nRETIREMENT OF JUSTICE\nMAY MARK WIC PASSING\nVANCOUVER,   Feb   ft   <CT>    -\nA sitting of Admiralty Court in\nVancouver today may mark the\npassing of the wig from the British\nColumbia Judical scene.\nWearing of wigs in British Columbia Courts was aboli.shed in\n1905 bv n Provincial Act. but the\nlaw did no! extend to Die Admiralty\nCourt, a Federal Tribunal However, it is though! unlikelv the\nsuccessor to Chief Justice Archer\nTORONTO, Frb a (CP) - Dis- Martin, who Is on the eve of retire\nI net Councillors named May at ment, will maintain Ihe custom\nlhe annual meet-ne of lhe F.ngin- ' Chief Justice Martin is hearing\nc-ring Inst it m!* \"f fhmada included. | several unfinished rases before his\nA   I* Cirruthns. Victoria, retirement from the bench,\nEnumerator's Mistake\nBrings Condemnation\nFrom   Mayor   Telford\nVANCOUVER, Feb ft <CV) -\nAn enumerator's error placed Mayor\nl-vle Telford's name nn the Federal\nvoters' list twice \u2014 once ns a housewife  and   once   as  a   doctor.\n\"An obvious error and obvious\ncarelessness.\" the Mayor declared,\ndisplaying the faultv enumerator-;'\n\u25a0\u2022lips. \"Things like this are opening\n\u25a0 hr wav for one of the biggest\nvoting swindles of the age. There is\nno protection  for voters.\n\"I may look and act, at times,\nlike hii old woman,\" the Mayor add-\ned with a grin, \"but I don'! think\nI should lie expected to vote as a\nhousewife. Enumerators simplv\nomitted to put the 'Mrs.' in front\nof the aecond  name\n\"Through such mistakes there\ncould l>e unlimited plugging in\nVancouver centre, 'a downtown district) where pfoplr are n>d so\nwell known by their neighbors\nThere seems to be no mean.-* of\nidentifying voters and it doesn't\nlook as though our hallot Is very\nsacred \"\nCIVIC AUDITORIUM\nPROPOSED. PORT ALBERNI\nPORT AI.BWINI. R-. C, Feb fi\nfCP) Port Alberni Iras organized\na full committee to press for construction of \u2022*, cjvie auditorium here,\nCost of the pro ice ted structure is\nMO.OOO.\nprcnaro \"for a '\ngreat battle to defend themselves;\nagainst the danger of being involved I\nin a perilous adventure for the sake |\nof others'  interests \"\nThe paper said that although the\nAllies have been unable to involve.\nIhe Balkans thus far in the war'\nagainst Germany they do n >! in-;\ntend to lc| the matter rest and are '\nready to \"exert any and all forms\nof  pressure.\"\nPremier Charged With Betrayal\nof Britain, Canadian Industry,\nWorkers by Conservative Leader\nBROCKVILLE, Ont, Feb 8 (CP)\u2014Prime Minister Mackenzie\nKing tonight was charged by Conservative Leader R. J. Manion with\nhaving made \"the supreme betrayal\"\u2014not only of Britain but also o(\nCanadian industry and Canadian workers\u2014when Britain was refused\nthe right to establish her own a:r training schools in Canada two years ago.\n\"King made his refusal at a time when Britain was facing a life\nand death struggle for existence,\" v '\nDr. Manion declared here aa he fir- d(,r5lan(jingi not .\u201e disrupt the\ned the first salvo in the Conserva- country and to cause serious dis-\ntive election campaign. harmony and disunity, resulting in\nIn fighting mood, Dr. Manion tnc ;Mipa;rrnent or our war effort\nflayed the Prime Minister time and \u25a0 at this very critical time in the\nagain over that event, dismissing as i ;,;c 0e our nation, when an cnthu-\na \"useless gesture1\" the Prime Mm- j 51a5tiC war off rt i.s so essential,\nister's crunter-offer lo train Brit-1 'While opposing conscription then\nish pilots in Canadian establish-1 a, ] (j0 lmw [ aetvocate-d complete\nments at that time, in 11*37 c 1938 . (.r,<rrrali< n, short of c nscription,\nThe simple truth, hc snd. was that; btjtdc Britain in case cf war.\"\nCanada had no such establishments j jjr Manion reiterated that a\nthen, practically no fighting planes. National Government would be\nand no teaching air personnel. | composed of utslanding leaders,\nSpeaking to a party rally in a , rogardles,a of politics. Such a gov-\ntheatrc in this Eastern Ontario rrnmcnt would be set up with the\ntown, Dr. Manion was joined on lhe I pr:rT>e object 'I carrying out Cana-\npla'.form by members < f the Ontar- j (tas war ef(,,rt \u25a0efficiently and\n10 legislature and candidates in the ^ economically\u2014s mething which has\nappr aching Federal election, head- j nol \u00a3>\u00ab,\u201e d.ine in the past\"\ned by Hon. II. A. Stewart, mem-| -\\\\ wr,ujd stop the extravagance\nber for Ueds in the Parliament which is all taxi prevalent at '.his\njust dissolved. | time; it would put an end to pat-\nRegarding hla own proposal to' i r.age and favoritism; it would\norganize a National C. vernment ensure that rur military, naval and\nto administer Canadas wsr ef- [ air services a:e properly strength-\nfort, the Conservative leader as- ] ened anal maintained, it would care\nsorted \"the usual whispering cam- justly for the interests of our en-\npaign\" had been started against i listed men and their dependents It\nIt. In s me parts it was being would aim at utilizing the service*\nrumored a National Government of that splendid body of men. the\nwould mean conscription; in oth- veterans of the last war. it would\ners that it would lead lo railway eiKouragc voluntary recruiting; it\namalgamation. \u00bb' uld \u00ab\"<* 'hat plans were laid for\nDr. Manion denied both suggest- \u25a0 *' \"'j\"\u2122' *he\" \"?a.ln wc ta\u00ab\nn.s  emphatically. On  the railway   thl'  problems of peace\t\n.in and tiul\nSea, Train Voyage\nBy EDWIN JOHNSON \u2014 Canadian Press Staff Writer\nALDERSHOT, England, Feb. 8 (CP Cable).\u2014A further'\ncontingent of the fighting men Canada has sent to aid the\nAllies in the war against Germany settled down in their billets\nof this training camp tonight after a long but uneventful sea\nand train trip from their homeland.\nThe troops quickly entrained for the First Division\ncamp here after being greeted at the point of disembarkation\nby Major-Ceneral A. C. L. McNaughton, General Officer Commanding the Canadian Active Service Corps, the Duke of\nDevonshire, Under-Secretary at the Dominions Office, and a\ni'group of staff officers of the\nMORE BRITISH\nAID FOR FIHUS\nIS ON IHE WAY\nChamberlain Says Aid\nGiven Has Been of\nReal Value\nLONDON, Feb. 8 (CP)\u2014Prime\nMinister Chamberlain told the\nHouse of Commons today that further British aid for Finland was\non the way and that \"the help\ngiven from this country has been\nof real value to Finland.\"\nThe sources attending Finnish\narms, Mr. Chamberlain said, \"has\nevoked the admiration of the\nworld.\" ,   ,\nThis statement drew loud cheers\nfrom the House.\nThe Prime Minister voiced satisfaction over the results of the\nrecent Balkan Entente conference\nin Belgrade.\nHe asserted e the seven-year renewal of the Balkan Entente pact\n\"Indicates the determination ret the\ngovernments of those countries to\ndo everything In their power to\nmaintain stability and security in\nSoutheastern  Europe.\"\nHe expressed the belief that other\nstates of Southeastern Europe had\n\"this important object equally at\nheart.\"\nOf the Russian-Finnish conflict,\nMr. Chamberlain said; \"The Finnish people continue their heroic\nstruggle against an enemy who is\nusing his huge air fleets in a vain\nendeavor to shake their spirit by\nburning tbe homes of the poor,\nshattering with high explosives hospitals full of wounded men and\npursuing defenceless citizens with\nmachine guns.\"\nOf the Allied conflict with Germany, the Prime Minister said\nWinter weather had halted war\noperations in recent weeks and\neven interfered with normal activities so that there were few\nevents of importance to record.\nFirst Division.\nThey heard the enthusiastic\npopulace of a seaport shout:\n\"Well Done Canada.'\nThe G. O. C. preceded the\ntroops from the port and personally inspected a number of\ntheir billets to ensure their\ncomfort.\nFor further details see\n\"Third Contingent\" on page\nthree.\nOld Trapper Dead\nOver a Month Is\nCoroner Finding\nThat William Drinnan, 85-vear-\nold trapper of the Little Slocan\nRiver country had di-ed of natural\ncauses in early part of Januarv,\nand had been dead about a month,\nwas the finding of Dr. H. H. MacKenzie, District Coroner, after ex-\namini. the body at Clark's Funeral Chape], Nelson.\nThe man was found dead in bed\nin his shack last Sunday.\nEvidence of Irvine Anderson,\nneighbor of the aged man, regarding finding the body in bed in the\nDrinnan cabin, and of Constable\nC. W. House of the provincial Police in bringing the body out of\nlhe hills, was heard at an inquiry\nWednesday.\nFuneral services will be held Saturday   morning.   A  slater   of  Mr. ,\nDrinnan's    in    Saskatchewan    has\nbeen    notified    of    her    brother's\ndeath.\nm-pl\nquestion, his own pi\nof his party was tlic same as it, had\nbeen, opposition lo unificati n.\n\"I advocated full cooperation under a non-political board which\nw uld have the power !> we Wn'.\ncooperation was actually entered\ninto,\" he said, 'and, at the same\nlime,  there must be protectiun of\nCommittee Preparing\nReport Civil Service\nReform Chamber Told\nCivic\nAffair*   C'lmmitlce   nl   the\nChamber of Commerce was\nTO ENCOURAGE\nCREDIT UNIONS\nVICTORIA, Feb. 8 'CP), - As\nan encouragement to Credit Unions,\nthe British Columbia Government\nannounced today that legislation\nreducing incorporation expenses\nand regislration i>-es of Credit\nUnions, ratified at the last session.\nwould now be implemented. Flate\nrate charges of $2.M will lake lhe\nplare of costs that formerly ran to\n$16 50 for the launching of Credit\nUnions.\nH G. Garrett, Registrar of Companies, explained that under the\nnew regulations, now going into\neffect, the incorporation fee for\nCredit Unions would be cut from '\nSIO to $1; and that other costs, I\nincluding advertising in the British \\\nColumbia Gazette, scaled down to j\nSUV) Notices in the Gazette are to;\nbe dispensed with, it wa.s intimated.\nAir Schools in\nCanada Tolal 78\nOTTAWA. Feb. 8 (CP)-Estab-\nlishment of an aircraft inspection\ndivision inspectors school under the\nBritish Commonwealth Air Training plan, bringing total schools\nin Canada under the project to 78,\nwas announced tonight by Royal\nCanadian Air  Force  headquarters.\nLocation of the school was not\ngiven, It also was announced that\nin the four training divisions established under the plan there\nwould be 26 recruiting units.\nThese units will be divided ai\nfollows: No, 1 training group\u2014British Columbia-Alberta, four; No. 2\n--Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Western\nOntario, five; No. 3\u2014Central Ontario, nine; No. 4\u2014Eastern Ontario,\nQuebec and the Maritime Province*\nnine.\nefn\nC. P. R. Freighter\nSurvivors Part in\nLondon for Homes\nLONDON. Feb r (CP), - Singing \"Auld Linn Syne\" with gui!o, |\nmore like a cnup of New Year!\nrelebrnnls than shipwrecked man-;\nncr.s, 7fi 5urv,vnrs of ihe torpedoed \\\nCanadian Pacific freighter Beaver- I\nhum parted :n L\"nd >n tonight for\nhomes and n bit of rr$\\ before seek-1\ning new brrih*.\nThey held ;i*e;r last gathering in'\na dim, drerry London station after'\nIheir tram ride from lhe port i\nwhere they landed. Many are going\n!o Scotland and they enlivened the\nlong journey tn L-mdnn with such\nsongs .ts \"Tearing Up the Clyde,\"\nCountess Denies She\nSet Wedding Date\nPALM BEACH. Fla. Feb fl\n(APi, Countess Barbara Hutton\nHaugwilz \u2022 Revrntlow     expressed\nresentment Unlay at report* she\nplanned In marry Feb 17 or 18.\nShe issued hv telegraph \"ne of\nher rare public ut.crnnres denyiiiR\nstories that she had determined\nupQn a da'e for marriage to Ruber: '\nSw-eenv, handsome voimg golfrr\nand her companion on many recent .\nncrasior.s\nThe reports said she would wed\n\u2022 hortly after receiving her Danish.\ndivorce derrre, for which she has\nbeen   waiting.\nin as  requested by the Cana- j\ndi.m  Chamber, but il was a highly!\nrontrntious   subject   ar.d   required\nmuch   study,  stated  Thomas  John-\nstone,   Committee   Chairman,   at   a'\nChamber meeting Thursday night.  I\nA    circular   from   the   Canadian\nChamber stated a number of Gov\nernmrnts  had  admitted  lhe necessity of civil service reform It added\nlhat   c'Vil   services   fire   of   politics\nand   patronage   were   essential   Hurler   preset*'   conditions   nnd   would\nhe equally essential during lhe pe- '\nrh'd    of    readjustment    after    the'\nthe men whose em-plnyment  might   preparing a report on civil service]\n1m>   interfered   with  through   <-v P\"\ncrative measures\n'That, in brief, was nrd is the\npehcy which I have advocated\nthroughout the railway matters and\nit is the only practicable policy\nthat has been advocated That is.\nit could make great ravings for\nboth fads and would, at lhe same\nt ime. n ot be u np< ipula r w ith 1 he\npe-nplc f Canada geneiallv, so\nlong a.s it cHred justly and fairly\nfor the men. whose employment\nmight be nffected through a-v-rr-\native   measures\"\nDr    Mann n   claimed   that   \"x\nevery   yection   of  Canada   where\nconscription is imp pular.\" it was\nbeing rumored lhat National Government meant conscription as n\nUnion Government did In  1917\n\"I   note that rven  Mr   Kin;;  in\nhis broadcast last night made an\nimplied   reference   to   tho   same\nthing,\" he said. r\n\"No  one  knows hotter  than   Mr\nKing my position against conscription because he was prerent in the\nHouse   on   March  yi  last   when   I\nmade  my   position  quite  clear   In ,\nthat speech I very frankly opp-sM j\nconscription, a.s I d>  now. on  the i\ngrounds   among   others   that   it   Is i\nRECORD EMPLOYMENT\nFOR  PLANE COMPANIES\nSAN DT-GO Calif. Feb R\ni A!'* Three aircraft companies\nworking ?4-hnur shifts on orders totalling $43,000,000. said today thev have reached a high\nrecord f o r employment. The\nplants, Consolidated. Ryan and\nSolar, have H.lli.'t employees with\na  monthly payroll of W7.Vf)00.\nWRITER  FINED $12\nNF.W YORK. Feb R (AP) -Adele\nunnecessary under present-day con- i Rogers   St    .John,   the   writer,   was\ndltionn of  warfare  M!  has  proved   fined $12 when she pleaded guilt\nini*'   since   this  war   began);   lhat , today\nIn the lo.tl war its chief result was ! lights\nNational   disunity   and   m:sim !r*r  I renre\nstanding while i! raised  very  fe\\s   were ,\nmen   for   our  armies,   at>d    finally,   said <-he was \"terribly  nervous and\nlhat the first duty nf n public man   exhausted\"   when   she   borrowed   a\nii ti hold this country together, to ! taxicab   in  her  haste  tn get  home\nmaintain   National  unity   and   un-   January 31.\nlo   charges   of   passing   red\nand   driving   without   --,    h\nDrunken    driving    charges\nlismissed   when   ihe   novel's!\nVeterans Appointed\nScrutineers for\nOverseas Voting\nOTTAWA, Feh, 8 (OP.-Andrew\nI,. Hall of Regina and Thomas C\nUrquhart of Toronto, both Great\nWar veterans, have been appointed Lrberal scrutineers for the over-\nseas soldiers' vote m lhe coming\ngeneral eleotinn, it was announced\nfrom the Prime Minister's office\ntoday\nUnder the active service v'ting\nregulation* six scrutineers are to\nserve in the office of each divisional special returning officer when\nthe soldiers' vote is taken between\nMarch 14 and March 2.1, Two of lhe\nscrutineers are lo be appointed by\nthe remaining parties in oppositl n\nin tiie House oi Commons\nNEW COMMITTEE TO\nUNIFY ECONOMIC WORK\nOF LEACUE OF NATIONS\nTHE HA CUE. Feb r ,AP\u00bb --\nThe nucleus of a new International\nCommittee to coordinate economic\nand social work of the league of, Calgary\nNations and enlist the cooperation \\v\nnf non-member states wa.s formed\ntoday at a  ten-nallon conference.\nDetails of the form at i tin of the\nCommittee were withheld pending\nlhe issuance of a eommun'riue\nTiie  conference   which   convened ,\nyesterday   to   study   means   of   en   j\nnrdinating  the   League's   non-politi-\nral activities  with  the assistance of |\noutsiders, adjourned  tonight.\nFREEMAN  IS WELCOMED\nBY THE JUNIOR CHAMBER\nN. R, Freeman, recently named\nrepresentative of the Nelson Board\nnf Trade to the Junior Chamber of\nCommerce, was welcomed to tho\nChamber when it met at thc Hume\nThursday night.\nMayor N. C. Stibbs was welcomed\nas a guest.\nWeatft\n$r\nMin\nMax.\nWI.SON           34\n39\nVictoria                    42\n47\nNanaimo           3H\n4fi\nVannnivrr            4!\n44\nKumlnupa               .  .   .   ?n\n3R\nI'nr.cp  Go'Tele                   -*\n3fi\nEslrvan   Point        4.'!\n49\nPrince Rupert        ?tl\n47\nLingara                 42\n47\nAllan            1\n17\nDawann       14*\n4*\nScatUr        41\nsn\nPortland                  4S\n51\nSan  Francisco      311\nM\nSnok.inc         :14\n42\nPenticton                             32\nVernon                                3.1\nKelowna                  32\n40\nGrand  Forks     2fl\n37\nKaslo                                ..    3il\nCranbrook             12\n39\nCalvary             .1\n39\nEdmonton                      7\n30\nSwift Current                   1\"\n21\nMonae J;i\\v              .. ..          4\n21\nPrince  Albert                     21*\nId*\nW nnuiei-                             17'\nV\nForce ,i   fur   K ' teinv\nFteah\nio slronc Sou1!) to Southwest\nwinds,\ncloudy    and    comparatively\nwarm\nas ith   rain\nWaler  level  al   Nelson   111\nirsilay\nnoon \u2014 2 93 feet above zero\n '\u25a0w.11\nBWWBPWKWaa\nftor two \t\nParcels of Food\nSent Weekly lo\nBritish Prisoners\nLONDON, Feb. 8 (CP). - The\nIfftr Prisoners Department of the\n(ted Cross and St. John Ambulance\niV.ir Relief organization is sending\n,wo 10-pound parcels of food weekly\no each British prisoner of war in\njermany, officials report.\nThe parcels costing about 10\nshilling ($2.22) each are carefully\n\u2022elected by a dietician. As soon\nlis the name of a prisoner is received he is sent a parcel containing warm underclothing, a\npullover, boots or shoes. Whenever possible, these articles are\nobtained from the prisoner's own\nhome.\nEvery three months the prisoner's\nlext of kin may send him through\nLhe Red Cross a \"personal parcel\"\n:oniisting of such things as knitted\ngoods and other articles of clothing,\nchocolate and tobacco. Prisoners\nnay not receive money from home.\nRelatives in Great Britain may\nlend books and games direct from\nihopg which hold a permit to send\nprinted matter abroad.\nThe department is organizing\nan educational book scheme for\nprisoners of war studying specific\nsubjects. A section of the department sends medical supplies to\nany prisoner known to be\nwounded or ill.\nBritish officers held by thc Germans are allowed to send home\nthree letters and four postcards a\ntnonth. Other ranks are allowed two\nletters and four postcards. All correspondence sent or received by\nprisoners of war goes post-free. Of-\n NELSON DAILY  NEWS, NILSON, B.C.-FRIDAY  MORNINQ. FEB. 9.  1940.-\n(icials said they understood the\nGerman authorities were applying\nto civilian internees as well as prisoners of war the Geneva International Convention regarding the\ntreatment of war prisoners.\nDimoch, Price,\nKoehle Trail's\n\"Rid\" Scorers\nTRAIL, B,C\u201e Feb. 8-Barss Dimock of the Trail Meat Market,\nDick Price of the Young Liberals\nand R. Koehle oi the Odd Fellows,\nare leading scorers in the Juvenile,\nMidget and Bantam Boys' Hockey\nLeagues, respectively, according to\nstatistics compiled by Lloyd \"Doc\"\nMurdoch,  league  statistician.\nLeading 10 scorers ot the respective divisions follow:\nJUVENILE LEAGUE\nGP G A Pt. P\nBarss Dimoch, TM 5 3 11 14 2\nE. Dwyer, TM  ...      4   7   \u00ab 13   0\nA.   Balano,   TM    4   8   2 10   0\nI. McLeod, Y Smk. 4 5 5 10 4\nJ. Krowvesky, TM . 4 5 2 7 0\nL. Tognotti, TM    4   3   3   0   2\nA. Tognotti, TM   4   3   2   5   0\nJ. Page, Y Smk     4   5   0   5   4\nK. Devlin. Y Smk ... 4   1   4   5   2\nB. Rae, YC  4   4   15   0\nMIDGET LEAGUE\nD.  Price,  YL    6 18\nD. McKinnon, Col 6 12\nF. Turik, Col  6' 5\nB. Milne, YL       5   7\nT. Magliani, Col   6   5\nA.  Allen,  YL   8   4\nF. Jones, C. Pt  6   5\nL.   DePaolis,  YL  ....   8   3\nR. Asplund, Cres 6   2\nM.   Ferres, Cres  6   3\n5 23 8\n2 14 2\n8 13 2\n5 12 6\n4   9 6\n3 7 8\n2   7 2\nBANTAM   LEAGUE\nR. Koehle, IOOF   6 12   3 15   2\nF. Koehle, IOOF  6   3   6   9   0\nS. Sammartino, Col.   6   4   5   9   0\nM.   Nolan, IOOF    6   5   3   8   2\nJ. O'Brien, IOOF   6   6   2   8   2\nL. Secco, IOOF   5   4   2   6   0\nI. Delia Lana, KP  4   5   0   5   0\nK. Broman, IOOF   6   3   14   4\nK. Catalano. IOOF .... 6   3   14   2\nJ.   Raine,  Tad    6   4   0   4   2\nTM stands for Trail Meat Mar\nket, Y Smk for Young Smoke Eaters, Cres for Crescents, C. Pt, for\nCrown Point. YL for Young Liberals, Tad for Tadanac, Col. {or\nColombos and Cal. for Caledonians.\nTHE BOOTERY\natf?l-Z\nCLEAN\nReductions on\nShoes for the\nEntire Family\nA CLEANUP on all BROKEN LINES from THIS SEASON SELLING\nMEN'S\nBlack, brown calf oxfords and a limited quantity of black boots in\nsixes 6 to 11. Reg. to\n$7.00.\nSale \t\n*3-w\nWOMEN'S\nDress, street and sport shoes. Black\nand brown. Ties, oxfords, sandals.\nLow to high\nheels. Sizes\n3 to 8. Reg.\nto $3. Sale .\nYouths'\nLeckie Boots\n(Red stretch.) Heavy\nleather boots that will\nstand the gaff. Sizes 11\nto 13'\/;*. Reg. $5.50.\nSale\n$3.98\nMEN'S\nBlack and brown solid leather oxfords. Wing tips, pant crease\nvamps. Perforation trims, etc., in\nsizes 6 to 11. Sale\t\n$2-79\n$139\nCHILDREN'S\nOxfords and straps. Black or patent. Sturdy shoes for\nrough wear.\nSizes 5 to V\/i.    Sizes 8 to lOVi.    Sizes\nto V\/i.\nSale\nPrice\n$1.09    Price  .!pl.lt7    Price .   \\\\\\.UJ\nOVERSHOES\nWomen's 2 dome fltjece\nlining broken lines QeQt*'\nPrice _ ***\nTHE BOOTERY\nHOSIERY\n(Phantom)\nChiffon,    Crepe,    Service\nweights. Values to   CQa*\ntl.lH. Sale >\u00bb\u2022\u2666\u25a0>\nBoys'\nLeather Boots\nBlack only. Panco soles.\nAlso black leather oxfords. Rubber heels in\nsizes to 5'\/2. Sale\n$1.79\n.03 Inch Rain Falls\nAs the weather in Nelson continued mild to remove snow almost entirely from the lower sections of the City, a drizzle of rain\nThursday afternoon amounted to .03\ninch. Rain continued to fall after\nthe readings closed at 5 p.m. The\nmercury varied between 34 and 39\ndegrees.\nDr. David Cowen\nOf Spokane, Wash.\nWants to tell his Canadian friends here\nabout  his  ncw   radio  program   evenings\n\"People and Places\"\nWith Captain Robin Flynn\nThis program tells you about the latest news from\nthe war front, and about the people and the places\nin this news.\nCaptain Flynn went through the first World War in\nthe Imperial Forces; he has been a world traveller,\nand he is well qualified as a news analyst and\ncommentator.\nEvery Evening Monday Through Friday\n7:30 p.m., KGA, 1470 kc, Spokane.\nChicago Beats\nAmericans M\nCHICAGO, Feb. 8 (CP). \u2014 Chicago Black Hawks retained their\nhold on fourth place in the National\nHockey League standings tonight,\nedging out New York Americans\n3-2.\nFirst period: 1, Chicago, Seibert,\n(Allen)  2:21.\nPenalties: Anderson.\nSecond period: 2, Chicago, R.\nCarse,   15:31.\nPenalties: Demarco.\nThird period: 3, Americans, Conacher <Carr, Stewart) :46; 4, Chicago, Hergeshelmer (Thorns, Gott-\nseligi 17:36; 5, Americans, Shore\n(Sorrell)   19:33.\nPenalties: Shore.\nHockey Standings\nRangers\nBoston\nToronto\nChicago\nDetroit\nAmericans\nCanadiens\nLEGION BOWLING\nFrank Sims' bowlers took a decisive 180-pin victory in a Canadian Legion bowling tournament\nmatch on the Legion Alleys Thursday night from a team skipped by\nVic Graves.\nScores follow:\nGRAVES:\n1    2   Ttls.\nMrs. Robert Kirkland .. 108   97   205\nJoe Longdon    112 138   2o0\nA.  Romano     123 129   252\nVic   Graves    HO 138 _278\nTotals    483 502   985\nKIMBERLEY Social...\n6IM9.\nMrs. Jack Annable   143 141 284\nBarney   Erickson    163 131 294\nIrvin   Black     138 154 290\nFrank  Sims     159 138 297\nTotals               601 564 1165\nHigh individual, Erickson, 163.\nHigh aggregate, Sims, 297.\nFlGiimns\n(By The Associated Press)\nNATIONAL I    Tale principles \u2014 Joe Louis, De-\nP W L D F    A Pts  troit, champion, vs Arturo Godoy,\n35 22   6   7 112   56 51 | Chile.\n34 22   8   4 116   69 481    The bout-For the world heavy-\n35 17 14   4   92   76 36  weight championship; scheduled 15\n34 14 16   4    71    96 32   rounds.\n34 12 18   6   59   79 30     The place-Madiewn Square Gar-\n37 11 24   2    76 109 24   den.\nThe time\u20147 p.m. PST.\nEstimated crowd and gate\u20141B.0OO;\n$110,000.\nThe fighters' estimated sbaare \u2014\nLouis (40 per cent) $40,000; Godoy\n117V4 per cent) $17,500.\nBetting odds\u2014Louis 1 to 7 to\nwin.\nKIMBERLEY, B. C., - Mrs. D.\nHarrison left for Vlctorai to attend\nthe funeral of her father, J. R.\nHartley.\nArchie Tait ls a patient in the\nMcDougall Hospital.\nMr. and Mrs. Cahoon have arrived in town. Mr. Cahoon will fill\nthe vacancy left by Constable\nDoree.\nThe Senior Group of C.G.I.T. girls\ngave a surprise birthday party for\nMrs. C. Dakln.\nMrs.  A.  Peterson   of McDougall\nTownsite recently purchased a\nfarm at Langley Prairie and will\nleave Kimberley late in February\nMyrtle Sweeney and Louis Poore.\nboth of Wycllffe, were married at\nBonner's Ferry, January 17.\nMrs, O. Carlstrom was a luncheon\nhostess In her new home. Guests\nwere Mrs. Shields of Marysville and\nMrs. Veltzel of McDougal Townsite.\nMrs. George Logan entertained at\nluncheon, guests were Mrs, R, Scott,\nMrs. J. Wikman. Mrs. Don Dakin\nand Mrs. LefevTe.\nExtra Precautions Taken as Third\nContingent Embarked From Canada\nafford to take chances, as he summoned a burly seaman to toss the\nAN EASTERN CANADIAN PORT, reporters  oft.  On  other ships  the\nFeb. 8 (CP)-When the Third Con-|welc0me  was a  bit more enthusi-\nBy JOHN LEBLANC\n(Canadian Press 8tiff Writer).\ntingent of Canada's fighting men\nstarted off for Britain, precautions\ntaken to ensure the safety of the\nmen were, if anything, more rigid\nthan measures adopted in the firs!\ntwo movements.\nAs before, secrecy shrouded the\nsailing date for the troops whose arrival in the United Kingdom was\nannounced today.\nEven the soldiers themselves did-\n33   8 22   3   64 105 19\nResults of last night's games:\nToronto   1,  Rangers 2.\nDetroit 2. Canadiens 1.\nAmericans 2, Chicago 3\nCurling Sweepings\nResults of Wednesday night's Nelson Curling Club's U. D. L. Competition follow: C H. Marshall 11,\nW. R. Dunwoody 7; F. R. Pritchard\n10, John Dingwall 8; A. B. Gilker\nwon from J B Gray on default:\nT, A Wallace 8. Martin Robichaud\n7: K. C. Hunt 13, R. D. Wallace 11;\nAid. A. G. Ritchie 9, A. J. Choquette 7; R. E. Horton 7, J. 13.\nGray 5.\nWOOD WORKING\nMILL WORK\nCRANBROOK Social...\nCRANBROOK,   B.   C.   -   Miss i 0f   Calgary   were   here   to   attend\nPhyllis  Wallace  of  Nelson  was  a , the  hockey  game  in   which   their! ...\"\u00a3*\" \u2122\"i\u00a3;\"ih,V eonvov of five\nillioU\u00b0H.hrerisCOUSln!' * \"* M\"'' \"U ^7^1 !*, \"\"'\"\"\"' \u00ab\u2122 due S CaV.'of\nMill    Mn I lv     Ineaaa.tear,     whe,    e,..   \u00b0'   S\u00b0Uthern  C\u00bbl|(ornl\u00bb   ttam- this port with its escorting warships\nbe\u2122\"\u201eSsceJnt.t\u00b0tnheWhomeh^ VM\"' \"  AM B^ \"\u00ab \u00bbJfi*\u00ab\" \u00b0!!   \u2122, '\/oops departed on the after-\nher parents,  Mr.  and  Mrs. W.  S.  Mr'   *\",a   Mr5'\nJohnston,    has    returned     to\nVancouver.\nMiss Lily Belecky of Fernie visited her sistasr. Miss Olgi Belecky.\nted hBereSWbley \u00b0' ^^^ ^I'mE &  WUton  ci  Crqtoa^^ *\u00bb\u00bb\u25a0 at * \u00bb\u00ab\u2122i* \"\"*\u2022 \u00ab\"\n                 I..i-i.^ vTO-U*. Hen*.                 lp\u00able4W\u00abdOAibleefiorUtodod8rn.ltraMporL(.   ha\u00a3lcd  aw\u00bby  (rom  ^\npier one by one and steamed away.\nBaltlMhlps, cruisers and destroyers\nT.   N.   Wier   at noon of Jan. 30.\n]   Military   authorities   said   others\nwere    to    strengthen    precautions\nastic, but the general attitude of\nthose entrusted with charge of the\nmen was one of careful scrutiny\nof anyone not connected with the\nembarkation.\nThe spacious holds of the ship-\nwere loaded down with war materials \u2014 artillery pieces, sturdy\ntrucks, and  great stores of food,\nespecially flour. The great freight\nsheds  at  the   piers  were choked\nwith cargo when the ships came\nin;   they   were  virtually  cleaned\nout at sailing time.\nFighting   ships   of   the  Canadian\nand  the  Royal  Navy escorted  thc\nsquadron  of  liners across the Atlantic. Before they sailed, ships first\nInvermere.\nCRANBROOK. B.C.-Athol Lloyd i -\u2022\u00bb\u2022*\u2022     -    -;\u2022-- \u25a0\u25a0   ,*\u25a0--\u2014        ,  ----\u201e\nhas returned from Vancouver. against any leakage of information. spea out of this harbor to search\n--\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 -   - ----lperhaps  because  the  Nazis,  failing:the  Atlantic  approach to  the port\ntn get a shot at the first two con-  for enemy submarines or mines,\nof Canadians, might be ex-'\nColonel   Mallandaine   of   Creston\nsited here.\nMrs. N.  Lenox  of  Calgary  was\nhere  to see   her  son  play  in   the i    \"*\u2022\u25a0 \u00a5\u2022*\u00bb\u2022;- \":\u25a0'\u00ab; ~5 it       -\u25a0. j\nhockey game on the Southern Call-1    Mr* >nd Mn. J. W. -Bellamy and\nvisited her parent nere-\nBill Hughes visited fethbrldge.\nana ~~ \"\"  \"\nage to this convoy.\nThe sentries ringing the embarka-\n..,,..  . .\/_ .,, ., \u201e K planes or  the  Royal Lanadl\nWay\nand\nMr.  and  Mrs. R\nBattersby  and\n,       ..    ,,       planes ol  me  rauyai u.nauian Air\nalong tne line. fone i2rM back and (orlh over.\nMiss Patsy _B\u00bblltmy here\/wcre ,, h|ened up ,\nAn  illustration of how   tough  it f,ead. simc Ro:ng far out to sea tn\nfornia   team.   With  her  were   her' another two sons, A. W. Lenox and . Ted an\nLancc-Corporal C. L. Lenox. I , Mr,   u--   \u201e-    ,\u201e ,, _. ,,  .\nDonald Duff of Was. visited here,  daughter, Jul,., of Bul! River vailed unauthorized person to \"'---;-.     .*;,   ?econn.1!5.n,.   ,or\nHarold Anderson of Jaffray vis-' \"\"<\" \u25a0 .... nose around in afforded in the easel \u00bb\"*\u2022', \"   'h\u00ab   ^\u00b0n\u2122'\u00aba'>\u00ab   lor\nited here. ,    A Hopkins of Ta Ta Creek visited \u25a0 Q( (w0 n\u201e,8m(,\u201e_inc,ud]nf! ,hl, re. .German craft\nF. DesChamps of Kimberley vis-1 Cranbrook .porter-who were gently but firmly     On th- ships, soldiers packed the\nited here. |    Stephen UF eur .student at Gon- i(scorle<1 o(( thc bigBcsl o( ,h   jh       shore-side   rails,   chunng,   waving\nD.  H.  White  of  Bonner's Ferry  \"\u00aba   University,   Spokane.   M...ed ^     h   ,h      carntd   a   fjIlft|) \u00a3, \u201eld .\u201e\u201e\u201e\u201e,\u201e  Some had climbed the\nvisited here. : his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles t (rom ernbarl(ation and 0(h\u201e rigging halfway to the crow's nes:\nI-iiii... \u201eeeiei.i. ih. ii,,, .net ,v.n '.o s!v .it their farewells to Canada.\nIT'S HOOP PLAYOFF\nTIME AT CRESTON\nCRESTON, B. C. - The playoffs I ^*yn\nin the Creston Commercial Basket- \u25a0    Car,    uragila,    who   has    been\nball League commence Friday night stud j     a, ,hf Unlver,lt> 0, Mlch..\nat   Park   Pavilion,   opening   with ;        >t Ann Arbor received hls dc.\nsudden death gremes W\u00ab\u00ab ^he | gre( ,gJt w\u201ekend ar)d ,ccr.p,cd ,\nteaching position* in l school 150\nmiles from Chicago, where he and\nMrs. Dragila will make their home\nGiants and Review in the Pee Wee\nsection, followed by Creston Motors\nvs   Co-Eds. in the ladies' division,   ^^ \u201e,..,\u201e\nand   the   Canadians   vs.   Imperial ;       \u25a0 \u201e    |s    h    hm(r  \u201e\nthe men s department : Bow]py\nMiss Helen Reid of Kimberley\nwas a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Eric\nMacKinnon.\nMrs. A. J, Ironside of Weyburn,:.\u2022-\u2022\u2022. ;\u00ab_--, .        ,   w  .\nSask.,  is visiting  her  sister,   Mrs.: Mur;tl a**'\"' \u2022\"<* JP*\"1'. VVcd.n\"\nasy were Mrs. W. D. Gilroy. Mrs\nWalter Laurie, Mrs Harold S'.,*>\nMrs. Stanley McNeil, Mrs. Angus\nMcPherson. Mrs. W R C. Anderson, Mrs. Ed Churrh. Mr.a. Benny\nMurgatroyd, Mrs. S. E Briard and\nMrs D. W. Dow. Thursday thc\nprize-winners were Mrs  M   Wallin\n~.Y~~c   , r.-\u201e             ..   j     v.   . limitary officials, the Navy and even\nMrs. Carl Gill was a bridge host- ljlc v- Force\ness on  two occasions   Prizes wrre pj ' ,k   Der \u201e;d h, .   . couldn.,\n--   by Mr.a, John Ellis and MisJ ln   \u2122'PP\" --\"<\u2022 ne I\"*1 cou,(\"1 -\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\n| Groceteria in the\nI    The first round of the ffnals wi!\nbe Tuesday night when the C. Y O.\nj lake on the Friday winner in thr\nF.xpert workmanship at reasonable   midget  class   The Grads meet  live\nprices , winner   of   the   Motnrs-Co-Ed.   en-\nKootenav ^atW tt rWr Wn-.Lt  WEement, .and   High   School   will\nMl Ward St. Qpp. City Hall   ditn Jnnpr   The fin(l]s will  te a\na^tkmaMmm^m   two-game affair with the last gamt.1\nof the season carded for February\n16th.\nThe regular season has been abbreviated this year owing to thc\nwithdrawal of Wynndel and the\nBombers in the men's section. Attendances have been poor from the\nstart in spfte of a season that has\nproduced a large number of one\nand two-point victories.\nMichael Prust has returned to Columbia L-ake.\nMiss Peggy Blinco, who visited\nMr. and Mrs, Mackenrot has returned to Creston,\nMr, and Mrs. Jack Genest of Yel\nlnwknife. N, W. T\u201e are guests of\nMr. and Mrs   A   J. Genest.\nButorac Cup Final\nof Ladies' Curling\nClub at Trail Today\nTRAIL. PC. Feb 8\u2014 Final of the\nr      ... Butorac   Cup   r. mp-etitlon   of   the\nger and Mra Reg. Turner, and guests Trail I.ad;rs' Curling Club will be\nwere Mri. George Pimm. Mrs F:;- played between rinits s-kipped by\nMarKmnon. Mrs Robert Tavlor, Mrs DonaM M.T-I>r.ald and Mm\nMrs R. E. Sang. Mrs G M Argue, -W (' Aston Friday.\nMrs. W A Fergie, Mrs A J Schel!. Other games icheduled for Fr;-\nMrs. H. E Wheeler. Mrs James day afterno n f How:\nDavidson and Miu Muriel Reade. Marshall Trophy Competition-\nJoe   Genes'.,   who   was   called  to      Section 9   Mrs  Dav.-d Forrest vs\n\u25a0  the death of hu iLi-    Mrs   J    A   Millar\nJ    Meredith\nWatchers on thc dock were restricted to a handful. Only three or\nfour women and a couple of dozen\nmnn were on hnnd when this con-\ntingent of the First Division sever-\ned its lait link with homt*.\nwas\nCranbnuk by the drath of hu lis\nter. has returned to Vancouver\nMrs,   Orphir   B-nirgroia    waj\nMr. and Mrs.  F.ric freeman and   --ruf-iTof her son, Bruno Hourg\nMrs   J   A. Millar\nSection   li>-Mn   S\nvi   Mrs   W   Barchard\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSunditrand   Adding   Machines\nOFFICE   SUPPLIES\nUnderwood Elliot Fither Ltd.\n536 Ward St. Phone M\nHarold Sinclair visited Calgary\nand   daughter,   Mrs,   Norman   C^s\nMr.  and   Mrs.   Ted   Passmore   of quette at Nelion.\nBlairmore visited Mr and Mn. Mai-1    Mr    and   Mrs    Herbert   Fleming\ncolm Bellinger. arrived here after being \u2022umrrnne-d\nC    F.   Hayes   of   Creston   visited hy the drath nf Mri Fleming\"! fith-\nhere er. Frederick Baynea,\nF K  Stewart of Fernie md C, D Mi\u00ab   Mary   Louiae  Attridge  and\nMrN'abb of Wildn visited here her  c miln,  Mri   I^mon,  have re-\nMr. and Mrs. S   G   McNaughton turned from Spokane\njohnny Gagnon One\nof Good Little Men\nHume Hotel Nelson, B. c.\nGEORGE  BENWELL.  Peoprletoe.\nSAMPLE ROOMS      EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan. 5! .50 Up\nHUME-J  Cr\ntil.  W   I.   R' I\"\nr   i ib   '\nJ..hn    Itn\nM\nII      M\nIV'ev, Spoknnf; Mr anrl Mrs. T.\nr ]l \u25a0\u25a0* e Winnipeg J 11 Le-wii\nI' M W\u00bbrel\u00ab Ma-dirmr llnl. Mra\nT I. (lark. ('. T F.vlnn. Tornnln.\nI.   I.   Kartle-.  Caljiry\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\nI \"YOUR  VANCOUVER HOME\"\nDufEerin Hotel\nWO Seymour St.\nVancouvnr, fl   C\nNtwly rtnovat\u00bbd thrtjuflh-\nout. Phonti and elevator,\nA rATTT.RSON. IV** nf\n[*n|pn\u00abn, Al'.a, Proprtetor,\nTRANSPORTATION\u2014FREIGHT LINES\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 i.m. snd 10.30 jm \u2014Eiccpt Sunday\nTrail Livery Co.\nTrail\u2014Phone 135 Nelson\u2014Phone 35\nM   H    MflVOII.  Prep.\nLOW FARES\nFrom\nNELSON\nTo\nVANCOUVER, VICTORIA, NANAIMO\nCoach Clan\nIntcrmrdia'a*   Clan\nFirst Clan\nOm Way\n$12.75\n12.85\n17.10\nReturn\n$22.99\n23.15\n25.65\nOne way tickets have 30-day limit. Return tickets have\n60 day limit   All  tickets permit stop over en route.\nDaily service leaving Nelson 10 05 am. arriving at\nVancouver 10 00 a m. next day Direct connections to\nVictoria and Nanaimo.\nSTANDARD   SLEEPINC   CAR.    DININC   SERVICE.\nMODERN AIR-CONDITIONED DAY COACH\nMr\nApply  tn nrarrat  agent  fte further rlela.La nr to\nN.  |.  Lowti,  City Tick*.* Agent,  Ntlion,  B.\nPhena   20J.\nCRESTON Soci.il...\nc   c\n,-mte-d hrre\nMrs    A    I.\nlillv,   ii   viiit\nIlarnhardt   of  Glen-\nr.g   her   parr:.''.   Mr\nar.d   Mrs   F   Kuntt.\nMrs   K   Martin  nf Sirdar  wai a\nand    Mrs,   Georg*\nSine\ni*-st    of   Mr\nCRF-STON, DC- Mrs Fn.ser\nof Blairmore. Alta. n a guest of\nher son and daughter-in-law, [)r\nand Mri. W   N. Fraaer\nMr. nnd Mn. R. M. Chandler\nh.ive left for Yahk where they will\nreside   tn   future\nMr. and Mrs. R G Penson have\nreturned (mm \u25a0 six weeks' holiday\nnt  North  Rend.  Wash,  where  Ihcy       Mr   and  Mrs   F   Knott\nwere fueitj  of  Mr. and Mrs   Jeff   from a visit tn their s^n and daugh'\nKnott, ter-:n-law, Mr and Mrs  Jeff Knott\nMrs  R, Hopwood visited Mrs   A    North Henri   Wash\nMackie at Hnswell Mr    and   Mn    J    1.    Walker   of   *K\nW  A   Shngley visited Ntlaon Vahk   have arnv\u00bbM  t> make  their   f;8\nMin Sadie- Thompaon is  visiting   h^m* at Crests n aod huve taken up\nHt  Vancouver. resid-Tic* on Pnnre\u00ab Avenue\nExperts Survey ^^.e^^^'l^t\nMilitary Terrain ^^^ T^Xt\nOTTAWA. Frb fl iCPJ-Topo- -,-jr Canadian f.-rrsts, o6*U\\ieting a\ngraphical detuli of the terrain up*\u00bbn view of lhe ground betxa'.h ihrm,\nwhich military forcrs ire operating wnild prevtnt Ihi pVoHina] rt te-\nare of vital impcrtanc-s. and utrv* curat* contours hT aerial phit.'g-\nicea of the fi#ln lurveyor. lhe aer- raphy and complicated pi itirg\nlal piiotngrapher and the expert rruictilnf.*\nmapper are united tn giv\u00bb \u25a0 trust\nwi rthy nlrturt of lhe land cnn-\nrernod. R II Pavidann of the Geographical section of the general\nstaff at national rWenr-e head*\nquarters told the Canadian Inati*\ntute of Surwying in convert inn\nhrre (May\nJohnny   Gagnon,  rrccnt  acquisi-\n'.\\rn of New Ycrk Americans, was f\nonce-   a component part of a gr*at\nnational   h-xkey   league   line,   the !\nMorenz-Joliat - Gagnon  trio.  Now >\nhe :i with a tram lhat ir.rlud-fj. iwo ,\nuntil ot t great rival trio, thr Tnr- '\nnnto   I -if  Kid   lin*  of  much  the |\nsame era. thai cnmpr;*-r-d Primeau. '\nFrench   nf   W\u00abt   Crrston   ('har!;*> Cnracher ihd Huih-er Jackaon   Thp l*o latter are now  with\nAmericana.\nGaxn^n.   '.he   Chicoutimi   \"Black\nCat,\" was t^rn in 190V and btik*1\nnto   organiied  hockey   in   Quebec\nand  Thrr-e  Rivers.  Hr  turned  pro\nwilh  Canadiem  in   192A-27.  spending   We   next   thrft   seasons   with\nreturned   Providence in thp Canadian Amer*\n;ran   Lcag-.ir   In  We   Fall   of  1930,\nhe wai brought up to rr-mplel* the\nHowe   .Morem-Aurel   Join    lire, .\nwhich had worn out several otnrr\nngcrs  :n  thp  course nf ita\nng career   Mr was tradr** v Boi-\nn.   rs\u00bb-purchaspd  by  Carade-s\nGagnor   is  - ne  '>f  hi.'kry <  mid\n''<.    ofily    five    foot    f v*    wrighs\nW p '.rd* but li * fr)  fa.^1\nChase Colds\nthis Easy Way\nHtn i\u00ab qultk, itire relief (ir coUli;\nJuit tx:a%t ih\u00bb! mitetv witK Dominion\n(.' H (J the l\u00bbmoL\u00ab tnplc-tctioa\ntablet* thit light colili quickly ind\ntlfccUvtt)-.     !!<\u2022    lure   io   look   lor\n. the lr\u00ab((i(   policemin on iht\nKlTpa)      little red bgi.\n\u2666 DOMINION\nC.B.O.\nTAB LETS\nITCH\nSTOPPED\nim a Jifftf\nOP Money Back\nt* ftitk rWif f Um ii4t\u00abc et <w\u00ab. limpW tlS-\nkt*'i f-aol, etalex eeats-rt, rubw **4 oloet aaamat'if\nmmM trt-4 lf**\u00bbfctW nm \u00ab\u00abtd hmmsa, etekmt, *\u2022'-\nm$*: I -,. ) I' n D rVwtnpboa. Otm>\u00bbl-**\u00bb.\n\u25a0**\u25a0-.-\u25a0. >-\u00ablh\u00abin>t\u00bbtM' n*4 qwktr (*t\u00bbi-iUr*<\nll-*** -s-     H-1.- .ll.4'J.r\u00bbm-*Jll,.f Me*m*rHaa.   A'l\nitmirmMtw* tmWr Im  P.O.a PlttaXMPTION.\nPlumbing\nREPAIRS and ALTERATIONS\nB. C. Plumbing O Hoting Co.\n\"Topographical detail eaienlial tn\nIhe iddier must !>\u2666 claarly delln-\nrated and co-nbuir linei rnitat gfv*\na tru* pieturt of the co\u00bbnformalM\u00bbn\n>f the trrrain.\" he said\nEuropean countries w\u00abrt con\nemed with extremely d-r 1* lleM\nmapping of restricted areas Our\nproblem.\" said Mr Davidson, * to\nmap largr arfas lo a <Jnmp\u00bbrativp|y\nemail scalp atid needlpsi ^> \u00abay, as\neconomically as posaiblr   Wp have\nnot attempted lo apply th\u00ab mechan-   defence.\nLumberfon Hockeyists\nStar With Cranbrook\nU'MHF.RTON. II C - Usi W-d\nnptday rventng thr ho-rkry bo.\u00bb.\nKeith   Thompaon   and   thp   fv-wnti\nbro'hrre. J\"p at'd Vine* travelled\nto Kimb*rlry with We Crar*br.v-,<\nHana*-r1k tn plat an eih'bi.i-n game\nwith the mining Ud** Al 1-nPare <>|\nKimb\u00ab-rlPT playeti a finp game of\ngo*I to put Ihr Rangen on thp\n!op of a 7.1 erorp\nJr*-*** IVwnpy **\u00bb\u00ab lhe big man \u25a0 t\nlhe pvrnrig. \u00ab*i**ru.g \"*re*r g-wl*\nind  grttmg an  aeeiet   Kr'\"'   Thnmp\n, son    plated   a   Mai\u00abart   game   on\nHAVE ENOUGH COAL?\nWest Transfer Co.\n -^__\n\u2014___\n 1-\n-NEL80N  DAILY  NIW8. NELSON.  B.C.-FRIDAY  MORNINQ,  FEB. \u00bb, 1940.-\nM\n \"\"\nTODAYS News Pictures\nBritish Nurses Off to Finland Red Trail of Destruction\nIff    a -  r   <*.)*      e   < \u2666 .\nPrincess Alice, lhc Countess of Athlone, centre, reviews 'the first\ncontingent ot nurses in the First Aid Nursing Yeomanry as they prepare to leave London to take up nursing duties in Finland.\nA group of homes in a residential district \"somewhere in Finland\" go up in flames after Russian bombing planes dropped their\n\"eggs.\" Perhaps to compensate for their reported losses on the battle-\nfronts, the Reds have increased the intensity of their air raids.\nQuarantine of IIIMi Battery Members at Edmonton Is Lifted\nMembers of the llllh 'Kelson) Field Battery\nwho are in quarantine in the Fane Building, their\nquarters at Edmonton, are pictured above as they\nlined up in units facing the building. Quarantine\nwu lifted Wednesday. The men are wearing the\nnew \"battle dress\", recently issued to them.-During the quarantine other members of the Battery\nwere quartered at the Prince of Wales Armories.\nTwo New Officers Join Lieutenant Glllott In Quarantine\nWith Troops\nThe attractive drawing of the\nproposed Nelson City Hall in\nThursday's paper was by W. F.\nWilliams, Nelson architect.\nSentenced to\nPrison\nLIEUT.  D. C. CORBOULO LIEUT. E.\nWhen the 11 Ith men were placed In qu.irar.tlne\nthree offictra. pictured above. w?nt into quarantine\nvoluntarily wi'h them in order tn carry on training\nLieutenant O rhould. Wt, and l,.eul-enant W.ilkem.\nTight, are former Vancouver officer.*; who recently\njoined the .Battery Lieutenant Glllott, centre, waj\none of the originals of th? peace-time 111th who\nM. GILLOTT LIEUT. R. WALKEM\na short time before the outbreak of hostilities was\npromoted from the ranks. Lieutenant Corbould,\nformerly of Nelaon. waj \"in the rank*\" of the\n111th previous to hij transfer to Vancouver, obtaining h;.i commission on recommendation of Major\nA. F, DalgDi, MC, formerly Officer Commanding\nWe Nelson Battery.\nGerman Naval Base Photographed by R. A. F.\nEesrl Browder, General Secretary of the Communist party in\nthe United States, has been sentenced to four years in prison on\ncharges nf fsis.lyinx a pa.ssport._\nplane\nfir,' a\nhelm.\n]..-\u00bb'\nTt a'\n,i,\u00ab   ph-tngraph\n\u25a0 i\ne\nhv   a   r\u00bbconnal\u00bbianc#\n\u25a0 f  'hr  K .val  A.i\nY\nrr\ne  a:*,d  rr>a\u00abcd  hv   We\ni   M n.strv   of   Inf\nirmal\non, it a v.rw M Wil-\nlave!-    mighty  C,\nrrrt\na*\n\".aval   base    Lettered\n\\r*   arr   \\t\\rnUtiet\n\u2022\n!*\u2022   British  rar-*'OTi    A\n'5  !**\u00bbrh-r   'entra\n-<\u25a0\na*\nd  lvkgatec    R   Cnn-\nHal ship; C New mole: D Entrance lo harbor\nto hr cut here, F New |orV\u00ab bt-ing birlt; F North\nharbor, (*. Coffer dam. H Dredge. I pipe line, .1\nBirrrcks. K   New dr* dor\\> h-nld.i*,:. L Cauteway\nwith liRhl railway. M Area being reclaimed; N\nBarrnck\"\nSir Andrew Rae Duncan, abovt.\nshown at hit post as Presldant\nof the Board of Trade for Britain.\nHe replaces Oliver Stanley, who\nsucceeded I^.<lir Hore-Belisha, resigned British Mlniatrr nf War,\nM year-, old. Sir Andrew has held\nimportant pf Ms in the government   and  p.ivate  industry\nPlCi*   THREE\n3rd Contingent Canadian\nTroops Reaches G. Britain\nMcNaughton Greeted\n\"Good Old Andy\" as\nTroops Embark\nBy   EDWIN   JOKMSON\nCanadian Preaa Staff Wrltar\nSOMEWHERE IN BRITAIN, Feb.\n6 (CD Cable)\u2014Under the guardian\nwin^ of the Royal Navy, a third\ncontingent of active .service force\nhaa cro-ssed the Atlantic and landed\nsafely ln Britain.\nLike the two contingents that arrived before it, the latest khaki\nwave of Canadian youth came unheralded. During the night, grey\ntroopships glided silently into harbor under cover of darkness and\nrode at anchor until morning.\nCrowds thronging docks and promenades overlooking the harbor\nwaved and cheered without knowing from what part of the Empire\nthe convoy came. They were kept\nin suspense until the first tender\nbrought a&hore its cargo of singing,\nwhistling Canadians.\nIt did not take the crowd long\nto recognize the khaki clad men.\n\"Why, it's more Canadians,\" some\none shouted.\nThe roar of greeting that followed\nrolled across the water and through\nthe welcoming din came the chorus: \"Well done, Canada\" and\n\"Bravo Bravo\"\nNot until the entire force had\ndisembarked and dispersed to its\nallotted training camps was word\nflashed to the Empire at large that\na further contingent of Canadians\nhad arrived.\nToday the boys are busy settling\ndown i. their billets, sorting out\ntheir kit and equipment and trying\nto find their land legs after a bit\nof tossing on the way across.\nCROSSING UNEVENTFUL\nTh\u00ab voyage which was without\nincident, was described, however,\nby veteran sailors as a \"ride on a\nduck pond.\"\nThe newcomers who have crossed\nthe Atlantic to swell the growing\nforce of Canadian fighters already\nin training at Aldershot represent\nevery part of the Dominion. Among\nthe contingent were many specialists skilled in the technical\nbranches essential to the efficient\noperation of a modern, mechanized\narmy.\nThere also was a handful of men\nln air force blue, several artillery\nunits, mechanical maintenance detachments, ambulance corps, and\nother units whose function and\ncomposition cannot be disclosed.\nApart frcm the informal reception of the enthusiastic townspeople\nof the port of debarkation, there\nwas no official ceremony of greeting. They marched off the transport\nsinging and rollicking the tunes\nheard whenever soldiers are on the\nmove.\nThey came ashore In the same\nhigh spirits, cheering and shouting\na mixture of warm greetings to native* of the port.\nBefore debarkation began, Major\nGeneral A. G. L. McNaughton, general officer commanding them, accompanied by the Duke of Devonshire, Under-Secfetary of State for\nthe Dominions, and a group cf Senior staff officers, paid a personal\ncall to each troopship.\nThe party set off on its unique\ntour in a naval pinnace belonging\nto one of the warships which escorted the transports across the Atlantic. As the chugging craft approached the first ship, the troops\nlining the guard rail recognized\ntheir commander, who stood at the\nprow of the pinnace, and sent up a\nroar of cheers. There were cries of\n\"Good old Andy\" and \"Now we'll\nget ashore\"\nStanding on the top of a Jacob's\nladder hanging over the side of a\nluxury liner, General McNaughton\nrecognized the ship's captain who\nbrought him overseas frcm Canada\nnearly eight weeks ago.\n\"Hello Captain,\" the General\nshouted. \"So you've brought us over\nanother good  packet.\"\n\"We've that, and a fine lot of\nboys they are,\" the Captain shouted back.\nLed by the General, one after the\nother of the party climbed up the\nwobbly ladder to the promenade\ndeck where the men lined up to\npay a further tribute to their popular commander.\nThere were brief conferences in\nthe ship's lounges between th smil-\nIna G.u.C. an-a the equally happy\nunit commanders. On deck, squads\nwere going through routine drills\nof physical training or otherwise\nlimbering up. This continued until buglers called the officers and\nmen to lunch and it was a farewell\nmeal fit fcr a king.\nAs he departed. General McNaughton once again was surrounded by a throng of cheering troops.\nThen, as the pinnace pulled away,\nthe strains of \"Hail, hail, the gang's\nall here,\" and shouts of \"Don't\nkeep us here too long,\" drifted\nthrough the curtain rf silvery fog.\nThe General spent a full, eventful day among his men. Each ship'.1'\ncompany tried to outdo the others\nin tne warmth and volume of its\ngreeting and all showed the same\neagerness to get ashore and down\nto serious business.\nBefore the G.O.C. and his party\nleft for the training camp he was\nthe guest of honor at a dinner given By the civic chief and councillors of the p< rt of debarkation.\nAs a remembrance of the landing\nand in tribute lo a \"great military\nleader and scientist,\" General McNaughton was presented with a\nrare edition of a collection of the\nletters of James Watt.\nThe volume will be especially\nvalued by th? General as his grandfather was clcgely associated with\nthe researches and cngmeei ing\nachivements of the famous Scot.\nDies at 82\nMost Rev. J. C. Roper, former\nAnglican Archbishop of Ottawa,\ndied in Toronto at the- age of 81.\nA. Mackie Heads.\nFarmers Institute\nBoswell District\nBOSWELL. B.C. - The Boswell\nand District Farmers' Institute held\nthe annual meeting Saturday. President C. H. Bcbbington was in the\nchair.\nThe annual report said 1939 had\nbeen a record year in two respects:\nmembership had reached 34, highest\nsince inception; and the general\naccount turnover had reached the\nall-time high of $848.\nThere was a balance on hand of\n$32.\nThe retiring President refused to\naccept renomination, and the ballot\nreturned: A. Mackie, President; K.\nWallace, Vice-President; B. H.\nSmith, Secretary-Treasurer; J. Wilson and Edwin Bainbridge, Directors. A. Hepher was reelected auditor.\nIt was agreed to donate 10 sacks\nof cement to the Memorial Hall for\nuse in the basement.\nApplication of the University Extension offer of short courses was\nexpressed. Dan Johnstone was accepted for the course.\nI The matter of the road bridge at\nI Goat Creek and the widening of\n| the road at that point is to be taken\n! up with Hon, C, S. Leary, Minister\nI of Public Works.\n0, G. Gallaher. Assistant District\nEngineer at Nelson, will be approached with regard to thc cemetery rosd.\nRUBBER FOOTWEAR\nFor the Whole Family\nMen's plain  rubbers,\nRid Sole \t\n$1.00\nUoyi' medium weight,       7Qr*\nplain rubbers I*T\nWomen's and girls'\nrubbers. \t\nm\nMen's   Railroad   rubbers,   good\ngrip sole, a*af ^p\nPrloe     <7*\"*3\nMen's rubber boots,      efV* Qtt\ncrepe sole     9**}\nWomen's >\/t overshoes, \u00abJ| QC\nilpper style V*\u00bb73\nMri. Ida Clark of tht Coiiard Corset Co., will be in the\nitore Friday for personal fittings.\nPolitical Leaders Urged to Submit\nWar Regulations lo Parliament Body\nOTTAWA, Feb. 8 <:CP)\u2014Identical\nletters signed by 47 Toronto citizens urging that steps be taken to\nsubmit the defence of Canada and\ncensorship regulations for systematic revision to cotnmlttee of parliament have been received by\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King\nand the Conservative Leader, Dr\nR. J. Manion.\nA copy of the letter as handed\nout at Toronto by William C. Grant\nsaid that while emergency powers\nand regulations are necessary ni\nwartime, \"regulations should not,\nby vagueness cf expression and unwise application, become a means\nto the unnecessary curtailment of\ndemocratic rights.'\nThe letter said this has been most\nclearly recognized in Great Britain where emergency regulations\ncame before parliament and were\nsubmitted by the government to a\ncommittee of all parties. Canada\nshould follow the British example\nThe good will of the United States\ntowards the British Empire may be\nTwo Officers of\ntilth in East for\nSpecial Training\nLieut. C. S. Price and Lieut. A.\nM, Parker of thc 111th iNelson)\nField Battery, have left Edmonton\nfor Kingston. Ont,, where they will\nreceive special training, writes\nLieut. E. M. Gjllott from Edmonton,\nwhere the 111th is in training.\nWhile part of the battery was in\nquarantine in the Fane \"Building,\nthe remainder has been quartered\nat the Prince of Wales Armories,\nand training there. In the past few\nweeks marked progress has been\nmade. Quarantine was lifted on\nWednesday.\n\"The boys are eagerly looking\nforward to the trip across the\n'pond',\" Lieutenant Glllott writes,\n\"and are hoping it will be soon.\"\nBattle dress, Wc new army uniform of the \"ski suit\" style, has\nbeen issued to thc 111th.\nOrators at High\nSchool Compete,\nHawthorne Shield\n\\ Eliminations begin today In the\nj annual Nelson High School Inter- I\nHouse Oratorical contest in which |\n! houses contend annually for the i\nI Hawthorne Shield of the I.O.D.E.\n' The shield was formerly for inter- j\n' house debating, but has been j\n, changed over for oratorical compe- i\nI titicn.\nI From each house, two senior and J\nI two junior speakers will be chosen |\n. to enter the semi-finals, speaking ;\n, before the school assembly. The '\nI contest will carry on through the j\n1 next few weeks, with one speaker [\nI from each of the four houses apeak-\n; ing each Friday. Out of the 18 semi-\nfinalists, two final winners will be |\nchosen, a senior and a Junior.\nBesides   the   Hawthorne, Shield,\nwhich goes to the house with the\nhighest number* of points, speakers   will   compete   for   Individual\nmedals. Last y-ear's winners, Geor- i\ngina Williscroft and Earl Jorgensen,\nreceived  medals  frcm  the Nelson ]\nRotary Club and from Principal L. J\nV. Rogers and-Robert Smillie,\nThe   speakers   may   choose   any j\ntopic, subject to approval by their\nteachers.  Speaking  time  limit   for\nthe seniors  is  from  five to seven\nminutes, and for the juniors from ,\nfour to five minutes.\nprejudiced,  the letter said,  \"if it\nappears   that  the     totalitarianism,-*\nwe  are   combatting   in   Europe   lij**.\nmaking  inroads in  Canada.'\n\"Wc  therefore  respectively  urge-\nthat you, as the leader of one otto\nCanada's   political   parlies,   should\npublicly  undertake that,  upon election, you will take steps to have--*\nall defence oi Canada and censor- .\nship regulations submitted for sys- rj\ntematic revision to a committee of\nparliament as soon as possible.\"\nThe letter was signed by Mr.\nGrant and 4-6 other Toronto citizens\nincluding Sir Robert Falconer, Clifford Sifton, Prof. G, M. A. Grube,\nJ. C, McRuer, B, K. Sandwell, Morley Callaghan, Brian Doherty, J.\nM. Macdon-nell and J. B. Qricker-\nsteth,\nMr. Grant said a copy of the let- -\nter also weis sent J. S. Woodsworth,\nC. C. F, leader, at Winnipeg.\nAcknowledging the letter, Dr.\nManion wrote Mr. Grant as follows:\nI have read with interest your\nletter to me of the 5th instant, \u00ab\nwell tt the letter enclosed therewith signed by yourself and *\nnumbr oi other prominent citizens.\nI have no hesitation whatever in\nsetting forth to you and to your\nfriends my view that in wartime\nthere should be no infringement of\nindividual liberty or of our traditional freedom of press, of speech\nor of assembly, which is not absolutely essential in the public interest.\nFurther, It is my belief that parliament, not the government is the\nproper body to determine what is\nor is not essential in the public interest. In my opinion any regulations made by the government that\ninfringe in any way upon the riphta\nto which I have referred should be\nsubmitted for parliamentary review at the earliest possible time.\nSummed up, my attitude is this:\nWhat value can be attached to our\nfighting abroad for liberty, freedom and justice, if at the same\ntime those principles perish at\nhome1\nElection Date Not\nto Alter Dates for\nRevises; Advance Poll\n!    OTTAWA,  Feb. 8  (CP). -  The\nChief Electoral Officer, Jules Cas-\nI tongtiay, announced today that the\nI necessity   of   holding   the   general\nelection on March 26, a Tuesday,\nI instead of the statutory Monday.\n] because of Uie Easter holiday, will\nnot alter statutory dates for revis-\nI ing lists and  holding  the advance\npoll.\n| He said he had, before, Instructed\n! his election officers that the sit-\nj lings of the revising officers in ur-\n1 ban polling divisions shall be held\nIon the llth, 12th and 13th days of\nj March, and that the sitting of the\nrural enumerators to revise the list\nI for his polling division shall be held\non the 12th day of March.\nj Therefore instructions wrre given\nI election officers to npen the ad-\ni vanre polls on the 21st. 22nd and\n; 23rd days nf March, notwithstand-\nj ing the fact the 22nd falls on Good\n1 Friday.\ni    Advance polls are only open from\ni 2 to in p m.\nFormer Cranbrook\n! Resident Bequeathed\nI Scholarship to U.B.C.\n' CRANBROOK, B, C. - The will\nof Mrs. Nancy Ryckman who died\n! recently at  Hamilton  disclosed .in\n'interest   in   Cranbrook,   where  she,\nmade her home for many years.\nThe sum of $7200 was willed to\n] the University of British Columbia.\nI for the establishment of the Nancy !\n[ Ryckman   Scholarship   or   Scholar-]\nsriios to be awarded to the boy or \\\nj girl who has passed Senior Matriculation and who has attended school\nin  East Kootenay  for three years, |\n| of which two must have been Im-\nmediately prior to entrance to Uni- I\nversity   It was her desire that the]\nscholarship  or   scholarships  should I\nbe   awarded    to    young    men\nwomen who require aid in obtain- !\n1 ing a University education and re-\n; gard should be i;ad in making the\n'award to character and intellectual\npromise,\n1 Further bequests of interest to\nher friends here were:\n\u25a0    To thc Women's  Missionary 'So-\n1 ciety of the United Church, Cranbrook. $5^0.\nI To the United Church of Canada.\nCranbrook, $1000.\nI    To the Missionary Society, Ham-\nj ilton. $300.\n1    To  the United  Church,  Burlington, $300.\nTo  the  Temperance  Union,  $500\nTo the United Church, Hamilton,\n$500.\nThese bequests were in addition\nto a number of personal bequests,\nKISS YOUR\nTIRED FEELING\nGOODBYE!\nPi pi en Many Suffer Low Blood\nCount\u2014And Don't Know It.\nThe bafflllmz thlnr about low hlood court\nti that you ean weigh about ai much aa you\niver did \u2014 etfii look hfaUhy and itronf. jet\n\u2014 you can feel aa if you had lead ln youj\n!'.'\u2022. dopey, tired and peplm.\nLow blood count meani you ha**en't got\nenough .-fl blood corpuscle*. It ia their vital\njob to carry lifa-iitinj oiyrtn from yom\nIunr\u00bb throughout your body. And juit aa il\ntake* oxygen to txplod* ruolina In your car\nand make the power to turn the wheeli. \u00bb*>\nyou mu\u00bbt hata plenty of oxygen to uploda\nth* energy in your body and givt you going\npowrr.\nGet Dr. William Pink Pilli today. Tbe?\nart world-famoui for (he help they fWt in\nincreaiing the numher and etrength of red\ncorpuidee. Then with your blood count up,\nyou'll feel ! -.* bounding up tht itajra aa l(\nyou were floating on air. Aik your dniggial\nfor Dr. William* Pink Pilli today. (AdVt >\nMagnificent Quality       \u00abUHUt\nConsistently Maintained\nPLANE CATCHES FIRE\nAFTER HITTING EAGLE\nMELBOURNE. Australia. Feb\n8 (CP;\u2014 A collision between an\neagle and t plane carrying U\npersons today cjused the plan*1\nto tike fire ind make a forced\nlanding No one. except the eagle,\nwis hurt. The bird struck one of\nthe moton. knocking i loose and\ncausing a fire to break out.\n3 CHILDREN DIE IN FIRE\nBATTERSEA.   England,   Feb    8\n(CPi\u2014Three children died in a fire\nat  their   home  early   today.  They\nwer* Pat 12, Sylvia seven, and Rob- I\nrrt Walker, a baby Of six months '\nThe father was away on war work. I\nPOLISH VOLUNTEERS\nLEAVE FOR FINLAND\nPARIS,   Feb   8   fAP>-An  rx*\npetitionary  force  of  Polish\nuijtrers left for Finland todiy  to\nbolster Finnish manpower again,-.!\nttie  Russian  invasion.\nThe tize of the force  was n t\ndiidosf-d.\nTHE OLDEST NAME\nIN -SCOTCH\nMTTUID. HINDID AND tOIUID\nIN ICOTIAND\nrials sdvrrllinnent Is nel piUilislird or di.aplsyrd h\u00bb Hip Liquor Control\nnoard nr by Ihr tlnvrrnmenl ot Rnlia'i Cedim-ina\n W\"IW^\n *\u2014     \u25a0     \u25a0\n :\n|PAOJ \u00bb01l\u00bb   ..      -\u25a0\u25a0       \u25a0\nLONDON (CP)--ftn mlUloi. dli.\nrlw wen printed in England tor\nIMO. The Stationer! Company reveals. It li the 125th year in which\ndiaries with space ior recording\nnotes, have been printed.\nYou'll Enjoy the Finer Flavour\nBRODER'S\nBEST BRAND\nCut Green Beans\nSelf...\nEgotists Don't Go\nOver With Girls\nDear Miss ChaUleld:\nMy principal fault Is a sort ol\naltruism which, with my gradual\nmental development, has become\nan obsession with me. I don't think\nit haa made me abnormal. It has\nrather given me a purpose in lite\n\u2014that of service in the more elevated senee. A life that does not\nresult in some tangible good to\nhumanity had sooner not be lived.\nWith this bit of guiding philosophy off my chest, I can tell you\nmy problem, I am fondly in love\nwith the only girl I ever cared for.\nIN  THE  WINTER\nwhen  the stove is always  alight.\nJet Stove Polish\ncleana your stove any time it is hot\nAT ALL B.C. STORES to\n\u2022Prove it by the dating test! *\n\"j( To prove how little Old Dutch costs to use, put the date on the pack-\nare \u2022when you open it. The length of time it lasts plui the great amount\nofcleaning It gives, will surpri sc you. In addition, Old Dutch saves money\n\u2022because It helps keep things new longer. It doesn't scratch. It is made\n(with modern Setsmotite.\n[ To save you time, energy and steps as wen as money, keep a can of\n[Old Dutch in kitchen, bathroom, laundry, .garage. Then you have Old\nDutch handy lor porcelain, tile, woodwork, pota and paiis or linoleum.\niSave by ualng Old Dutch.\nf Ott a full ae-Trlc* of the*.* atti-t-etfTt \"Croydon\" rut-\n\"    n teitpoofii et thii Siri\u00abin! Made by Oaarida, Ltd.\n\u00bb, good only ia Canada, expiree Dec. 31,\nIQ-IO\nWU. A. ROGERS A'l\nQuality Bttrerwtr* with ao\norerUy of pun niter et\npoint of i\nDUTCH CLEANSEH. Dept  A   1 32\nM MeV-auUy AreoiM, Toronto\nI am enclotlwfl   wtndmffl plctveet fro***. Old DveoS\nlabtti (tv c-wnplit. Icbt.il) and ( f\u00bbr wMcJ, plttm .tnd\nWn. A. log\u00abf I Teoipooni and circular Utllnf about\nother pi.t.i. WO If. Send 60t and 3 label, for oog*. m\u00bb of\n6 leoiacora you detirt.\n-NELSON  DAILY NEWS. NELSON   B.C.-FRIDAY  MORNINQ.  FEB. t,  1940.-\nW\u00ab did right well until I went to\ncollege; then we drifted apart.\nThere were other inlatuatlwu for\nher but 1 took no part ln social\nlife, devoting mysell to the devel-\nXent of my mental powers, egg-\n\u00ab by my persistent philosophy.\nI won honors and came home with\ntwo purposes ln mind: to win the\ngirl I loved and settle down to\nthe career I had planned.\nIn two years I have made several\nsignificant strides toward the perfection of my life's ambition. Now\nI need her. Deep down the hu a\nfondness for me, I think, but ihe\ndoesn't understand me. She avoids\nme when we are with frlenda.\nWhen we are alone she ia usually\ncordial.\nI'm at a loss to know what to do.\nShe knows now dearly 1 love her\nbut she doesn't give me the opportunity to tell her. She seema afraid\nshe will fall for me. Pleaae tell\nme how to make her understand-\nhow to break the wall ahe has built\nbetween ut.\nPerplexed.\nAnswer:\nWhen a needle full of serum la\nthruat Into the thigh to ward off\nlockjaw, the patient aays to himself \"I'd rather have taken the\nrisk of that rusty nail I stuck in\nmy foot.\" When you've read this\nreply to your letter you will say\n\"I wish I hadn't expressed my deep\nthoughts to another dame who\ndoesn't undlretand me.\" Nevertheless here goes the needle, thrust\nin with sympathy and honestly\nmeant for your good.\nYou are too much in love with\nyourself to make a gal love you.\nYou are too obsessed with your\naltruism, your lofty philosophy of\nlife to get down to earth with an\nhe>nest-to-goodness courtship. Only\na gal who is hard up for a beau\nwill bother with a boy who's forever giving himself a big hand and\nexpecting her to follow suit.\nFurthermore, this particular gal\nIsn't shutting you out because she's\nafraid of falling for you. She shuts\nyou out because she's bored with\nbig l's; egotism spelled with capajal\nletters.\nBrother, amhition is admirable,\nlove of one's fellows laudable and\nthe wish to lead a useful, productive life is grand and glorious. But\nvou can't go far, nor win a gal's\nlove, nor leave the world a better\nplace until you have forgot yourself.\nLONDON (CP)-The London zoo\nhas just finished its busiest fortnight of the year\u2014the time of stock\ntaking. Felix, the rhinoceros, heads\nthe list with an assessment of \u00a32000\n($8900).\nDanger.. .\nPain Accents Ihe\nMeaning of \"No\"\nBy QARRY C. MYERS, Ph.D.\nPtyche 'did not hear the word no\nfrom her parents until ahe began\nto climb and creep. The flrat time\nshe heard it was at the moment\nwhen her hands were flapped as\nshe wu about to aelze the handle\nof the gu jet. It wat no accident\nthat her mother wu preient. The\nfather and mother had forteen that\nPsyche would examine thit alluring object They together had planned exactly what wu to be done\nby the parent who would be nearest to the child.\nLittle Psyche's heart wu almost\nbroken. So wu her mother's, but\nshe wu calm, and she began at once\nto talk about the little elephant\nwhich the lifted to the child's wagon. Immediately Psyche turned to\nthe wagon ana elephant, and the\nmother to her work. When the\nmother had occasion to spend tome\ntime upstairs, the father went to\nthe kitchen with Psyche. Pretty soon\nthe child reached again for the gu\njet, and Immediately her hand wu\nslapped by the father's right hand\nas he held hers in his left. At the\nsame time he uttered NO just once.\nSHE WA8 CURED\nPsyche cried, but only for a moment, and then turned to her toys,\nwhile Dad moved tome dishes from\nthe table to the cupboard, u if\nnothing at all unusual had happened. From that time on through the\nnext several weeks Psyche never\nwu alone In the kitchen. But she\nhas never touched the gu jet since,\nand she is now five.\nFrom other dangerous things\nPtyche merely had been kept. The\nnext thing the parents agreed to\nteach this baby to avoid wu reaching above her for things on the\nkitchen table or work shelf.\nThe program was launched on\nSaturday noon, so that Father would\nbe home, with Sunday also ahead,\n,for the constant presence of one or\nboth parents. Their slogan wu, \"Immediate pain on the first offense,\nand no exceptions.\"\nLET HER CH008E\nDuring the day Psyche reached\nabove her in the kitchen for objects\non the table or work shelf just four\ntimes, and four times she got immediate pain as she heard NO clearly\ndfojUAWWIlA\nBy  BETSY NEWMAN\nand distinctly. They had planned\ndeliberately to let her choose and\nbear  the  consequence).\nNever were they concerned about\nimmediate prevention only, else the\nwould have just been gently seized\nand pulled away or dittracted from\nthe dangerous object, or the danger,\nous object would have been puthed\nbeyond her reach. They wanted\nPtyche to desist from reaching\nabove herself in the kitchen to that\nshe would acquire the habit permanently.\nThe purpose wu to connect pain,\ncertainly In her nervout tyttem,\nwith the act to be avoided automatically. They had let out to teach\nPtyche to keep herself from reaching up In the kitchen. In like manner they later taught her to keep\nheraelf from running Into the atreet.\nAnd eventually NO alone sufficed\nu a deterrent and served as a foundation in Psyche's nervous tyttem\nfor regard for constituted authority.\nSOLVING PARENT PROBLEMS\nQ. Would you ever try to force\nthe child to confeu after you had all\nthe facts neceuary to prove hit\nguilt?\nA. I thould count myself a bully\nIf I did. While a voluntary confession might be good for the toul, a\nforced confession It bad for the\nforcer and force*.\nQ. What do you think of the advice: \"Spank only after everything\nelse hu failed?\"\nA. I consider it silly advice. When\neverything else hu filled, you are\nhardly fit emotionally to spank the\nchild, ani he Is hardly fit then emotionally to profit from the spanking.\nPearl Haddon jailed\n6 Months, Fined $200\nPearl Haddon was sentenced to\nserve six months with hard labor\nin the Provincial Jail at Nelson, and\nwu fined {200, or in default an\nadditional two months in Jail, when\nshe appeared before Police Magistrate William Brown in City Police\nCourt Thursday morning for sentencing on a charge of unlawful\npossession of a drug.\nH. C. Irving, defence counsel, ask-\ned His Worship for suspended sentence, but the Magistrate replied it\nwas not within his Jurisdiction to\ngive suspended sentence in such a\ncase.\nW. W. Ferguson prosecuted.\nJOINT WINNERS OF\nPOMEROY STORK DERBY\nPOMEROY, Wash., Feb. 8 (AP)-\nA winner finally has appeared ln\nPomeroy's stork derby\u2014in fact two\nof them.\nA son born to Mr. and Mrs. Orval\nPorter and a daughter born to Mr.\nand Mrt. Berton Long were declared\nyesterday to be joint winners of the\nlong delayed derby, which held\nprizes for the first baby born ln 1940,\nTODAY'S MENU\nCream of Spinach Soup\nToast Strips\nHam Sandwiches Tickles\nBaked   Apples Cookies\nCoffee or Tea\nHURTS\nONLY\nDIRT\"\nCleini   Porcelain,   Paint\nor Dirty Handi\nAT YOUR GROCERS\nCREAM OF SPINACH SOUP\nOne pound spinach, wash well\nand cook without water, put Into\nstrainer. Two tablespoon* butter,\ntwo tablespoons flour, on\u00ab quart\nmilk, seasonings, melt butter, add\nflour and mix .-smooth, then gradually add milk, stirring constantly\nuntil all is smooth and slightly\nthick en ed.\nSeason with one teaspoon salt and\none eighth teaspoon pepper or paprika, add spinach, boil up and\nserve very hot with toast strips or\ncrisp crackers. It is an excellent\nidea to mfcke a cream soup in the\ndouble bciler.\nPEANUT   MACAROONS\nOne cup chopped or ground peanuts, two thirds cup sugar, 1 tablespoon flour, pinch of salt, whites\nof two eggs, beaten stiff. Mix ai in\nurder given, drop on buttered baking sheet and take in moderate\noven,\nBAKED SPAGHETTI, OYSTERS\nMix canned spaghetti with chopped raw oysters (12), a dash of\ncayenne, one half teaspoon of garlic salt Place in caswrole, lop with\nbread crumbs dotted with butter\nand sprinkled with grated Parmesan che-eat and fresh black pepper. Bake 20 minutes in hot oven.\nWhen ckne, garnish with parsley\nsprig.\nSHRIMP CREOLE\nCook a chopped onion and tomatoes in hnt lard slowly for 10 minutes. Add boiled, medium-sized\nshrimps and a small amount of\nflour mixed with cold water for a\nslight thickening. Season with salt\nand chili powder to taste. Cook for\n10 to  15 minutes.  Serve with rice\nIDEA FOR SMELTS\nPlace well-seu:ned smelts in an\noiled baking dish. Cook four chopped mushrooms, one small clove,\nminced garlic, two tablespoons of\ngreen pepper and a small pinch of\nthyme, in one and one half cup*\ntomato  sauce for   three minutes.\nPour sauce over fish. Bake, basting twice. Serve wilh pan liquor\nover smelts.\nDEATH ENDS B. C.'i\nOLDEST MARRIAGE\nVANCOUVER. Fr* R (CP)-The\noldes marriage in British Columbia\nwas broken today by the death of\nMrs Henry Cranswick. M. She and\nher husband had been married nearly 73 yean\nMr, and Mrs: Cranswick came to\nCanada from England ln lMfl and\nsettled near Brandon. Man Tney\ncame to Vancouver M yean ago\nI       AUNT HET\nI By ROBERT QUILLEN\n\u2666 \u2014 \u2014 \u2666\n'The Md part is look In' nld\u00bbr\nthan you feel No matter hnw\nold nnd wniikl*d a woman gels.\nher heart still *che* tor somebody tn pet her like she was\ntwenty \"\nHabit...\nHow to Refrain\nFrom Nail Biting\nBy DONNA GRACE\nThere is no use trying to scare\nor scold nail-tilers. They just listen\nwhile they placidly munch on every\nlittle hangnail, even the pall Itself.\nWe might feel annoyed with\nthem, but knowing them as we do,\nIt'i really sympathy they need.\nThey Just can't help this habit. It\ncan be corrected, we know, but\nIt takes time and patience. The\nfingertips are sensitive and any\nform of nervousness may have some\nreaction at these delicate points.\nIt is a well-known fact that few\nnormal, healthy persons indulge\nln this devastating practice.\nPlenty of fresh air, along with\nregular exercise and good long restful sleep, is the first consideration.\nThen one must practice self-control.\nThe hands should be made to behave and be put on probation so to\n\u2022peak. They should be kept in the\nlap when not occupied with special\nwork or play, and any Indication of\nreaching toward the mouth should\nbe a signal to stop and concentrate\non something else.\nWe believe the best and moa?t\nagreeable training is to put the\nhands and nails through a thorough beauty course. This course\nmeans a dally visit to the beauty\nshop. When there, look at the cards\nof beautiful nail polish and the perfect long nail tips and select the\none you would like to emulate. A\ndaily manicure may seem ridiculous, but the discipline of going to\nthe same operator every day for\nmerely smoothing off the dry cuticle and the thorough oiling will\nt Cosfs(etf,\nHUNTERS\nCHEESE\nr,,S.rr,l Crisp Craenctai\nHUNTERS POTATO CHIPS\nbe sure to make one plus* when\nthe urge to bite comes on.\nMake a practice of massaging and\nbuffing your nails every day and\nkeep them oiled frequently. Heat\nthe manicure or olive oil and soak\nthe tips a few moments every day.\nScrub thoroufhly with a soap lather and warm water and be sdre\nto rinse well. This simple method\nwill prove successful, resulting in\na glorious set of fine nails.\nSEE  PAGE   FIVE   FOR   OTHER\nFEATURE8\nWEYCAND INSPECTS\nEASTERN FORCES\nCAIRO, Feb. 8 (CP-Havas) -\nGeneral Maxima Weygand, commander-in-chief of the French\nforces In the near East, today Inspected British, Egyptian and Indian motorized units ln the desert\nnear Cairo.\nGeneral Weygand arrived here\nyesterday with members of his staff\nfollowing a visit to Turkey. He il\nconferring with General Wavell\nand Egyptian military leaders.\nOVER\n500,000\nCOPIES SOLD\nof Dr. .Jackson's famous 438-\npogt book \"How fo So Afwayi\nWali\" Sorvd $3.00 for (till\nl-rta\u00bburt homo of vital facts\n\u25a0bovt bodybuilding.\nFREE!,0:\n. Jatkion'i booklot\nDr, Jackion Foods\nDONT fear caffeine when you.\ndrink Kofy-Sub. This stimulating beverage la delicious and\naromatic as any coffee, but contains no caffeine or anything else\nthat can upset your nerves or\ndigestion. Enjoy all the cups you\nlike. Give it to the children.\n.Drink it freely as water. Cannot\npossibly harm. Make as your make\nreal coffee.  -Delicious 1\nRicher in Iron than anything\nknown to me . . .\nKofy-Sub is made entirely from\nCanadian grains, soya beans and\nhoney. Rich in body-building\nminerals of the alkaline or acid-\nneutrallilng type\u2014especially rich\nin iron newea by the blood. Buy\nthe big package of Kofy-Sub today\n\u2014note the low cost.\nin food and Haatth. Address ratamsts\nLlmhod,392 Vina Avinvt, Toronto.\naU$\n% Delicious, yet wirpfisingly inn-\npensive\u2014Libby'i Cooked Spaghetti\nand Libby'i Cooked Macaroni are\nperfect Lenten dishes.\nEasy to Serve\nOnly three cents for a generous helping--\nthat's all It co\u00abts to servo Llbbv's Looked\nSpaghetti of Llhby's Cooked Macaroni\u2014\ntnd there's no fuos or bothtT to preparing\nIt. Juit heat It right In the can or in a\nsaucepan, and It's ready to whisk tn lhe\ntabic piping hot and ready to eat.\nSERVED \"tn Ctmarole\"\nOr, aantd \"en cats-emit\" either UbbVi\ni -viral Spaghetti (v Ub-by's Cooked\nMacaroni Is a dish that will brin* tho\nthreat gueet hack for a inond helping.\nNotti Now \u2014 many ol tho tmarteot\n!.,\u00ab\u2022(-'\u2022\u25a0'i art serving Ubby'i Cooked\nSpaghetti is i lata evening anack. Ineipen-\ntlvt, ready In a ftw minutea and easy\ntn dig**, It's a hlg hit with both the\ntiinia and (he h ott tot.\nSpaghetti \"en Casserole\"\nInto a baking dlih put required amount of\nLlbby's Spaghetti. Too wilh huttered\ncracker crumbi and grated cheese. Bake\nat 375* P. until brown and hot Serve\nalonct.\nMacaroni \"tn Casserole\"\nIn \u25a0 buttered baking dlih arrange a laver\nof Libby'i Cooked Macaroni, then a\nlayer of flaked canned latmon and \u25a0\nlittle Llbby'i \"Gentle Preta\" Tomato\nSou pi cover with buttered crumb** or\nfitted cheese. Heat In a modtratrlv\nhot oven, 37 V, Just long enough to male\nvery hot and brown nicely on the top.\nA Lenten Menu\nIf you have not already discovered hnw\nrx>d Ubby's Cooked Spaghetti and\nIbby'i Cooked Macaroni ire\u2014try ihem\nboth now\u2014they'll help you to solve your\nLenten menu problemi on moatleoa dav*.\n(Libby'i Cooked Spaghetti Is made with\nchetot and tomato tauce). You'll And they'll\npro-vt so popular with your family, and\neconomical too, that you'll make thetw\ntwo delicious dishes a regular weekly\nevent.\nDOUBLE YOUR MONEY BACK\nOrder several tint of each from your grocer and\nserve for dinner or lunch to-morrow, Llhby's\n\u2022 ill pay you double your money back If you\ndon't agree that Libby'i Cooke*) Spaghetti and\nLibby'i Cooked Macaroni are the beat you'va\nUited. Juit tend the labeli to Llbbv's, Chatham,\nOntario, with your name ind iddrt-ta, mating tha\namount you paid. Accept this friendly challrngt\n\u2014serve a trial meal of Ubby'i Cooked J-ptfhetti\nand one of Llbby's Cooked  Macaroni thit week.\nMAM IN CANADA gY \u00abr:\u00abip\nLIBBY, MCNEILL A LIBBY OF CANADA, LIMITED - CHATHAM, ONTARIO\nChildren  Ask   lor  an  Encore\nAnd theft's no more lubstantial, nourishing\nmeal for lively, trowing rmint*a<rrt than a\nheaping plateful of I ibby'i Spathetil oe Macaroni for I tint, h or nipper. Made from (he hneit r4\nIhinim Wheat and luscious rr-d tomato mii - -\nt-ratonr-d with whole *\u2022 mi e aromatic ipit ea and\nI mad lan chrr\u00ab\u00ab*. It'* a iil\u00bbh that appeal* to iht\neve and rouses the appe-tifn of children.\nh_\n mmmu\n\u2022\n\t\n\u2014\u2014\u25a0\t\na.'\n \u2014\nr\nTremendous Bargains\nIn Our February\nSHOE\nSALE\nGet Your Share\nof the Savings\nR. Andrew <& Co.\nLeaders in Footfashiot\\\n1\n-NELSON   DAILY   NEWS,   NELSON.   B.C.-FRIDAY   MORNINQ.   fits.   >,   mu.-\nAfternoon Dresses\nSpring styles and colors, frrr Ckf\nSizes 18'4 to 2414    iSI ,U0\nBETTY ANN SHOP\nOpp. Capitol Theatre       Phone 1047\n++-\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2014 *f\u2014\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2022->+--.\u00ab * \u2666\u2014..-\u00bb e\nAT ITS BEST\nRavf and Pasteurized\nKOOTENAY VALLEY DAIRY\nPHONE 116\nMRS. CRELLIN HOSTESS\nNEW DENVER AUXILIARY\nNEW DENVER, B. C. - The St\nStephens Women's Auxiliary met at\nthe home of Mrs. R. W. Crellin\nAfter routine business the hostess\nserved dainty refreshments, assisted by Mrs. H. H. Pendry.\nMembers present were Mrs. F.\nBrowne, Mrs. H. H. Pendry, Mrs, J\nBurman, Mrs. S. Burgess, Mrs. C.\nWhite. Mrs. C. Thring, Miss B.\nBell, Miss M. H. Butlin, and Mrs\nR. W. Crellin.\nMrs. O'Riley and Miss Meinardus\nwere welcomed as visitors. The nexl\nmeeting will be held at the home\nof Mrs. C. White.\nEFFECTIVE FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nWAX BEANS ttfiV': 10c\nEGGS, Grade A Med. 2 doz. 45c\nSunny Boy Cereal Large Pkt. 25c\nPure Plum Jam M.D,n.w. 41b. tin 35c\nCheese, Golden Loaf 2 Ib. box 49c\nDoughnuts, Fresh Daily, Doz. 20c\n\u2014 LENTEN SUGGESTIONS\t\nHeinz Spaghetti:\n18 oi., 2 tins ..\nCreamettei:\n3 pkti\t\nPancake Flour:\nVito 3Vi't, pkt. .\nSockcyc    Salmon:\nSeal IVi,\ntin   \t\nOysters:  Clover\nLeaf, 4 oi. tin  . ,\n27c\n25c\n25c\nCold\n19c\n17c\nAylmer Soup: Clam   Q\nor Oyiter, tin \u00ab\/v\nSandwich Spread:\n8 ox. jar \t\nKraft Dinner:\nPkt\t\nShrimp: Birk's,\nDry Pack, tin ...\nLobster Paste:\nTin    \t\n19c\n19c\n15c\n10c\nPitted Dates, Fresh, 2 lbs. 22c\nINSTANT TAPIOCA . . Pkt. 10c\nSUNLIGHT SOAP .... Bar 5c\nAPRICOTS, K\"ch 2 tins 25c\nCorn Flakes, Kellocjg's, 3 pkls. 23c\nCEREAL BOWL FREE\nFresh Fruit and Vegetables\nAPPLES, 6 lbs. 25c   BOX $1.55\nExtra  Fancy  Delicious, Wrapped,\nApples: Wagencri, ff 1   *j A Broccoli: 1 1\nhousehold, box     . $1,111  Lb  1 1 C\nOranges:                       fT New Cabbage: *j F\nLarge siie, 2 dox.  . . JjC 2 lbs  IOC\nLemons:                       1 Q Carrots: 1C\nDox    1 J\\j  2 bunches     Ut\nGRAPEFRUIT, Arizona, Doz. 39c\nall      Shamrock   Sausage:    OO\n'   16 ox. tin   LJl\n25c\nCoffee: Airway.\nFresh ground, Ib.     ..flV 16 ox. tin\nButte,: Highway 1st Crade. c(icrub Mi|k.\n,?'\u25a0 $1.10 \u2122, 3 ....\nPrunes: Ubby's OO- ^alley's Syrup: OQ\nrunes: Ubby's OO.  N*,l,e> ' *\"'\nIb. cartons   LJt  44 ox. jar\n\u2014 QUALITY MEATS \u2014\nTURKEYS, Grade A, LB. 24c\nPRIME   RIB\nROlLED-lb.\nPOT   RO*>9T\u2014\nLb.\nRIB  ROILING  BEtF-\nLb.\nSHOULDER   VEAL\nSTEAKS   .'  Ibl.\nPIGS FEET\u2014\nI b\n25<\nWHITt   FISH-\nLb.\nSMOKID  flLLETS\nCOO   FISH-Frrah-\nJ5V   SAU8\/\nCA   PO.\nJT    Frfah:   Lb\nHAMBURGER   OR\nSAU8AGE-2  lbi.\nPORK   HOCK9--\nw\nw\n20?\n25<\nlOrJ\n**\\r   nrirnvr    t\u00bbif   mini    to\nL (Mil    OU ANTiTi|\u00bb\nr !W\u00bbt     ft TORE <l\nl  IMITf [1\nDirections for\nSoldiers Sock\nPlease make a wearable sock,\nwashing and pressing, or wash and\nuse stretcher. Pre-shrink all wool\n)y pouring on boiling waiter, let\nitand two minutes, wring out and\nIry.\nLength of foot when finished, 11\nnches, Four and three-quarter oun-\n:es of 4 ply fingering. Needles\u2014No\n11 by Bell Gauge.\nCast on 60 stitches, rib 4 inches, 2\nplain, 2 purl. Knit 8 inches. (12 in\nill).  (Knit heel double).\nHeel\u2014Knit plain 28 stitches on to\none needle, turn, purl back these 28\nstitches, turn, knit plain. Repeat\nthese two rows (always slipping the\nfirst stitch) 11 times (12 in all) or\n24 rows.\nWith the inside of the heel towards you, purl 15 stitches, slip 1,\npurl 1, pull slipped stitch over,\npurl 1.\nTurn, knit 4 .stitches, slip 1, knit 1,\npull slipped stitch over, knit 1, turn,\npurl 5 stitches, slip 1, purl 1 ,pull\nslipped stitch over purl I.\nTurn, knit 6 stitches, slip 1, knit\n1, pull slipped stitch over, knit 1,\nturn, purl 7 stitches, slip 1, purl 1,\npull slipped stitch over, purl 1.\nTurn, knit 8 stitches, slip 1, knit\n1, pull slipped stitch over, knit 1,\nturn, purl 9 stitches, slip 1, purl 1,\npull slipncd stitch over, purl 1.\nTurn, knit 1(1 stitches, slip 1, knit\n1, pull slipped stitch over, knit 1,\nturn, purl 11 stitches, slip 1, purl 1,\npull slipped stitch over, purl 1.\nTurn, knit 12 stitches, slip 1, knit\n1, pull slipped stitch over, knit 1,\nturn, purl 13 stitches, slip 1. purl 1,\npull slipped stitch over, purl 1,\nTurn, knit 14 stitches, slip 1, knit\n1, pull slipped stitch over, knit 1.\nPick up and knit the 12 stitches\ndown the side of the heel pieces\nand knit three stitches off the front\nneedle.\nKnit the 28 stitches of the front\nneedles on tn one needle; the last\n2 stitches knit on to the 3rd needle,\non which pick up and knit the 12\nstitches at the other side of the\nheel piece. Divicb the heel stitches\non to the 2 .side needles and knit\nright round again to the centre\nheel. First needle, knit to within 3\nstitches of the front end of side\nneedle, slip 1. knit 1, pull slipped\n-titer, over, knit 1.\nFront needle plain. Third needle,\nknit 1, slip  1, knit  I, pull slipped\nstitch  over,  knit  plain   to\nneedle.\nThis reducing to be done every\nother row until there are 56 stitches\non the needles (front needle 28,\nside needles 14 each). Knit plain\nuntil the foot from the back of the\nheel measures 9 inches.\nKitchener tue\u2014Decrease for toe-\nknit 6 stitches, then slip 1 knit 1, pull\nslipped stitch over, knit fi stitcnes,\nslip 1, knit 1, pull slipped stitch\nover.    Repeat    this    round    the    3\nNELSON SOCIAL\nBy MRS. M. J. VIUNEUX\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Nelson\not New Denver announce the engagement ot their daughter, Florence Mildred Picard, to Cyril Alt-\nred Mayot of Nakusp, the wedding\nto take place in New Denver February 16.\n\u2022 William Forrest ot Trail visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. Mulr, merchant ot South\nSlocan, shopped In Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 T. E. Higginbotham, who has\nspent a few days visiting hjs son-\nin-law and daughter, Mr, and Mrs.\nL. 0. Walton, 1813 Stanley Street,\nleft by bus yesterday for his home\nin Calgary.\n\u2022 Mrs. E. H. Latham of Kaslo\nwas a Cily visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 H. E. Docile, Superintendent\nof the Sheep Creek mine, visited\nNelson yesterday,\n\u2022 William Fraser of Kootenay\nBay shopped in Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Miss Tina McLean, who was\noperated on at Kootenay Lake General Hospital a couple of weeks ago\nfor appendicitis, has returned to her\nhome on Latimer Street.\n\u2022 A. W. Lymbery was In town\nfrom Gray Creek yesterday.\n\u2022 C. W. Webster of Kaslo visited\nNelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Alex Cheyne of Erie visited\nNelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Captain P. Hartrldee of Balfour visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 F. Albo of Rossland visited\nNelson yesterday.\nt Oscar H. Burden of Port\nCrawford visited the City yesterday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. Horace Whlt-\naker, Terrace Apartments, have as\ntheir guests, Mr. and Mrs. C. N.\nCompton of Vancouver, who are\nspending a few days ln Nelson and\ndistrict.\n\u2022 W. M. Leuthold, Deer Park\nlumberman, was in the City\nyesterday.\n\u2022 George Porteous of Queen's\nBay shopped in Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. L. Mitchell and infant\nson left Kootenay Lake General\nHospital for their home at 1310\nFront Street\nTired . . .\nFatigue Causes\nAre Numerous\nBy  LOGAN  CLENDENING,   M.  D.\nWhat 13 fatigue? Whence comes\nit? Where is It located? What is its\nseat? While it is a general body\nfeeling, from what structures cf the\nbody or from what derangements\ndoes it arise?\nWe know the answers to these\nquestions only approximately. It\nmay be part of an organic disease,\nit may be due to bad habits, or it\n*-+'-\u2666\u2666 \u2666\u2022\u2022;.-}.-\u2666\u2666\u2666\u2014:\u2014\u2666 \u2666\u2666.->.>..\nCLEARANCE SALE\nOF DRESSES\nFashion First Shop\n436 Baker SL Nelson. B C.\nLINEN AND '\nCHIFFON HANKIES\nGINGHAM SHOPPE\nPhone 953 Opp. Daily New:\nneedles. Then knit 6 rows plain,\nthen knit 5 stitches, slip 1, knit 1,\npull slipped stitch over, and repeat\nround the 3 needles. Then 4 plain\nrows, then knit 3. slip 1, knit 1, pull\nslipped stitch over, repeat to end\nof 3 needles, then 3 plain rows. Then\nknit 2, slip 1, .knit 1, pull slipped\nstitch over, r6peat to end of 3\nneedles, then 2 plain, then knit 1,\nslip 1, knit 1, pull slipped stitch\nend of j over, repeat to end of 3 needles\nThen 1 plain row, then 1 row decreasing, if necessary, so as to\nleave 7 stitches nn front needle ami\n4 on each of the back needles. Knit\nthe back stitches on to 1 needle.\nBreak off the wool, leaving about\n10 Inches. Thread this into a dim-\nin? needle, put through the 1st stitch\non front needle as if for purling,\nbut do not take the stitch off. Then\nput the darning needle through thr'\n1st stitch on the back needle, as if\ntor purling, and take off.\n'Then through next stitch on hack\nneedle, as if for knitting and do,\nnot take off. Then through the 1st I\nstitch on front needle, again knit-1\nting and slip off. Through the 2nd\nstitch on front needle purling and\ndo not take off. Through the 1st\nstitch on back needle purling and J\ntake off. Repeat from \u2022 until ail!\nstitches are worked off.\nNB\u2014Each stitch  must be gon^\nthrough twice, except Jhe firtf and]\nlast on back needles. Always keep1\nthe wool under the knitting needles\nWhen reducing, !t is better to slip1\n1  and pull the slipped stitch over,\nins'ead of taking 2 together. In finishing  off  end of yarn,  run  yarn '\nonce down the toe so as not to make\na ridge or lump.\nmay occur In people who are \"Just\nnaturally tired.\" It is the common\nsymptom which the physician encounters,\nAnalyzing the nature of fatigue,\nit may be any one or a combination\nof the following feelings: A tendency to yawn or spells of actual\nyawning. No inclination to move\nthe muscles. Feeling of drowsiness.\nPerspiration without adequate exercise. Wobbliness of the feet. A\nslouching in sitting or standing.\nTendency to close the eyes from\ntime to time. Difficulty in remembering just what has been said,\nDifficulty in relaxing. Unusual effort needed to start anything to\nread, write or work. Impatience or\neasy irritation.\nCAUSES  OF  FATIGUE\nThe causes of fatigue are:\n(1) PHYSICAL   EXERTION   -\nThis, of course, is natural fatigue\nand is healthy. When the muscles\nare used, there is an accumulation\nof lactic acid and it has been supposed that other fatigue substances\nare accumulated in the body, this,\nhowever, has not been proved.\nPrevention of exertion fatigue can\nbe accomplished by rest pauses. Industry on a wide scale is adopting\nthis method.\n(2) NUTRITION-A great many\npeople are on an inadequate total\nfood intake or on the verge of semi\nstarvation without knowing it. In\nthese people fatigue occurs and creates a vicious circle. Lack of adequate food intake induces fatigue,\nfatigue destroys appetite. Therefore, there is recurrenc of lack of\nadequate food intake.\nLENTEN REDUCING DIET FOR\nFRIDAY   (FAST   DAY)\nBREAKFAST - Glass orange\njuice, (ine portion breakfast cereal, with milk, coffee, one piece\nsugar and teaspoonful of cream.\nLUNCH\u2014 Vegetable plate, one\nslice bread or toast with butter,\ncoffee or tea with lemon.\nDINNER\u2014Medium serving any\nfish, cal if Ui wer. average helping\none sJiced banana and milk, coffee or tea with lemon,\nDAY'S  CALORIES:   10O0\npagf rivt\n76 Survivors ol C.P.R. Freighter\nBeaverburn Did Not Have'Wind Up'\nBy HAROLD FAIR\nCanadian Pren Staff Writer\nA PORT IN THE SOUTH OF\nENGLAND, Feb. 8 (CP.-Cable)-\nSeventy-slx survivors of the torpedoed Canadian Pacific freighter\nBeaverburn, mostly clothed scant\nLearmonth Tells\nBoard oi Trade\nof Road Request\nDistrict Board of Trade Delegates\nwho met at Nelson Wednesday\ndrafted a resolution urging Hon.\nC. S. Leary, Minister of Public\nWorks, to Institute an aggressive\nprogram to standardize a road\nroute from Nelway to Vernon via\nthe Slocan and the Monashee Pass,\nJohn Learmonth reported to the\nNelson Board of Trade at its luncheon meeting at the Hume Thursday, The Board had previously indorsed such a plan of action. The\nresolution read by W. G. C. Lanskail, Secretary, was placed on record.\nMr. Learmonth reported that the\nmeeting, attended by delegates from\nthe Edgewood, Nakusp, Slocan District, Salmo Valley, Kaslo and Nelson Boards, as well as representatives of Gray Creek, Kootenay Bay\nand Crawford Bay, did not deal with\na resolution from the latter points\nasking for road 'Improvement from\nYahk to Gray Creek and Gray\nCreek to Crawford Bay, together\nwith additional ferry service during\nthe Summer season because the\nmeeting was primarily concerned\nwith the other route.\nThe Nelson Board indorsed the\nGray Creek District proposal, however, at a later stage.\nDELEGATES\nDelegates at the district meeting were E. A. Mann. John Learmonth, George A. Hoover and W.\nG. C. Lanskail, Nelson; J. N. McLeod and John Egloff, Edgewood;\nFrank Rushton and A, M. Barrow.\nNakusp; Dr. Arnold Francis and\nJohn Tier. New Denver; A. M.\nHam. Silverton; A. L. McPhee, J.\nR. Tinkess and Roy Green, Kaslo;\nRobert Sheraden, Ainsworth; H E.\nDoelle. Donald C. Aldis. M. C. Donaldson, S. W. Ellis and Frank R.\nRotter. Salmo; William Fraser, of\nKootenay Bay; O. II Burden, of\nCrawford Ray; and A. W. Lymbery,\nGray Creek.\nMOYIE\nand Mrs\n\"Scotty\"\nmotored\n12)  INADEQUATE SLEEP-\nresults in frequent yawning during\nthe day, difficulty in thinking\nalong one line for any length of\ntame, dream-like ideas,\nMOYIE,  D. C, - Mr.\nStan Whi'taker and Mrs.\nFraser, all of Kimberley\nto Moyie.\nMrs. Phil Conrad is convalescing\nafter a week's confinement with\nthe flu.\nDon Revie and Walter Slye flew\nin from Cranbrook Sunday,\nA.   Bridges   and  party  of Cranbrook enjoyed  skating  here,\nj    Tim Farrell Is about town again\nI after   a   lengthly   illness.\nI    Robert P:ccn. Aldredgi.e suffered\nThis I * week's illness.\n\u25a0.\u2022v.-;*'s*>^ mf\\\\MM \\m\\   M mar\n^\u25a0^^ \\.\\MITEoj ^Wi\nSpecials, Friday and Saturday\nCHEESE: Colden Loaf, 2 Ib. box  , -if)-*\nSYRUP: Rogers, 2 Ib. tin   10<*\nPANCAKE FLOUR: Aunt |emima, pkt 18**\nCREEN SPLIT PEAS: 2 lbi. for 15<*\nSALMON: Fancy Red, 1 Ib. tin   2S(\nCORNED BEEF: 2 tint for 3.V\nDATES: Pitted, 2 lbi. for  27<*\nniTfTirii  F,r,t Gr*d\u00ab.\nU\\J X a\\Klt\\    Overwaitea   Brand\n3 lbs. $1.10\nCHLORIDE LIME: Tin        1><*\nOXYDOL, LUX, CHIPSO, RINSO: Large pkt 22c\nHERRINC IN TOMATO SAUCE: 2 tins for 2.V\nLISTERINE: Large bottle   7.V\nENO'S FRUIT SALTS: Large bottle 71><*\nKRUSCHEN SALTS; Giant siie    60<*\nLARD-Swift's        10 lb. pail $1.15\nALL BRAN: Kellogg'*, large pkt 20<*\nPEANUT BUTTER: \u00abVi, tin    \u00bb7<*\n|AM: Pure Plum, 4 Ib. tin     -lie\nI AM: Pure Strawberry, 4 Ib. tin \u00abOf\nPEAS: Site 5's. 20 oi. tins. 3 tins for       :!.%<*\nMATCHES-Red Bird        Pkt. 24c\nCREEN BEANS: 17 oi.. 2 tins for 2r><-\nCINCER SNAPS: 2 lbs. for 25.**\nCINCER ALE: Canada Dry, qt. bottle plus 5c deposit 22c\nCHOCOLATE BARS:  Lowncy'i,  regular inc. 6 for 2.'><\"\nWAX PAPER: 100 feet 17**\nSOAP: Ivory, large ban, 2 for 1!>\u00ab*\nFLOUR-Pastry B O K; 7 lb. sk. 29c\nONIONS: Okanagan Dry. 10 lbi. for 25-?\nTURNIPS: Nakuip, none better, 10 lbi. for     2.1<\nCELERY: Utah freih, Ib     H<>\nCRAPEFRUIT: Large. 7 for 2,'x*\nLETTUCE: Large, solid headi, 2 for  lit-*\nPARSNIPS: 4 lbi. for   15-*\nSUGAR 100 lb. sack $6.95\nWW Avm     Oailvr'i tan  il . \u2014\u25a0_  -A -   \u2014 -\nFLOUR\nClf'TS\n98 lb. sack $2.75\nFREE: All Day Saturday \u2014 HOT CHOCOLATE. Made fht\nCarnation Milk way. 6 tall tint Carnation Milk for   (!><*\nFACTORS IN ENVIRONMENT\n<4i ENVIRONMENTAL FAC-\nTORS\u2014Light, no:se, vibration and\nventilation are the outstanding environmental factors of fatigue. Insufficient light or glaring light are\nj potent fatigue-breeders. Noise and\n* vibration are the culprits in industry. One insurance company has\nshown that when rooms used in\nclerical work were quieted, output\nincreased by more than 10 per cent.\nBad ventilation causes fatigue as\nmuch by the \\a:'n of movement of\nthe air as by thc temperature and\nhumidity.\nPsychological causes of fatigue\nare legion, Monotonous work, domestic unhappinc&s and many other\ncauses operate.\nThe \u00bbbove may he called natural\nnr functional causes \u00ab f fatigue\nAmong nrganic causes uf fatigue\nare anemia, focal infections, heart\nri.w-as-e. tuberculosa twd disturbance of the ductlew glandj.\nRENATA\nRENATA, BC Mrs Julius Dyck\nii spending a \"A'eek with Mr and\nMrs  J  A  Hamm in Castlegar.\nMr nnd Mrs G. D Fr.esen visited Nelson at the weekend Mr.\nKnescn is a patient in K1 otenay\nIjike General Hospital.\nPeter Dyck left fnr Slocan Park\nt     resume  teaching school\nA A Hamm is visiting his brother an) sister-in-law. Mr. and Mrs\nJ   A   \"In mm of Castlegar.\nMrs G P Fr.esen returned tr\nRe-nti. af'c a visit t\"  Nelson,\nMr and Mrs John Hamm hav\n'aken up residence at the home of\nMrs   P   Dyck\nA pleasant evening of cards was\nspen' rt'. We home \u00ab>f Mr and Mrs\nJ I'lnv Thiie pre\u00aben'. were Victor\nFast. .1 J Reimrr. Julius Dvck\nMr- Friesen. Mr and Mr< Half\nArthur Koch. Marv Wiebe, Mr and\nMrs I.itkeminn. M Rohn, A Molr,\nIke Wiebe. Jean Hr wne and Mr\nand Mrs   J   Clmt\nFrank Gossen nf Deer Park veiled Renata arcmpan.ed hv John\nn..r|\nPRIZE FOR BALFOUR\nRED CROSS OUT AGAIN\nn.M.FOCR. R C The Guild mr'\nh' Mrs WalkTs flume Those pros\nen', were Mrs Sea;. Mrs. Mavnard.\nMus N akr-., Mrs Shrieves, Mn\nBowIm. Mrs Hudson, Mrs ColHson\nand   Mr*   RrrntUnn\nThe box fnr the Red Cm*, fund. ,\nwV.rh was won hy Mri. P Har- i\n(ridge   wai  dnnted  again   W  help'\nWalt Dnucette, Andv Johnson\nRoy Wellnff, and other friends\nspent Sunday with Mrs. J. Whitehead,\nMr. and Mr?. George Whitehead\nand Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Danielson\nmotored  to  Kings-gate.\nMiss Margaret Hutchison, Mr*\nBert Scott, Mrs, B. Beck and R\nBraiden were dinner guests of Mr\nand Mrs, Hutchison, Cranbrook.\nMATERIAL SUPPLIED TO\nSUNSHINE BAY RED CROSS\nSUNSHINE BAY, B. C.-The\nWest Ann Auxiliary of the Nelson\nBranch of the Red Cross met at\nWe home of Mrs. J, Ferguson. Mrs.\nOscar Appleton  was co-hostess.\nPneumonia Jackets, bed jackets,\nand pillow cases were given cut by\nMrs. Thomas Neale, to the members to he sewn. The sum of ^,13\nwas realized at the meeting. The\ndonation by Mrs, T, Ne*le was won\nby Mrs  Nick Dosenberger, *\nRefreshments were served,\n'I'll give\nyou tastier\nbread...\nfree from\nholes,\ndoughy spots,\nsour taste\nli\nund\nThere has heen an purr.lcnt re-\nsnnrvse for wo d from resid\u00abnls nf\ntrie d's'nrt in payment fnr the hall\nt t We card parties fnr the Red\nCiv-m\nF-I.RA, Alabama iCPt-A mourning d -vt hearing a Ug hand dated 10.1.1 and thn addresi nf Jack\nMin\u00abr. Kingsvillf, Ont. naturalist,\nwas shot here by John 1.   Crowley\nR. & R. Grocery\nThe  Homi ol   Better   I oorti\nQCAITn   GR.HT.RIF.S   Al\nSAVING PRICES\nPhone 161    Free Delivery\nHy but Milling through a three'\nday stubble of beard were brought\nto this port In safety today Insisting they had not had their\n\"wdnd up\" at any time.\nThe men said the 9874-ton Beaverburn sank quickly but that\ntime was left for launching of all\nthe boats and for getting off all\nthe crew except a cook, who was\nlost.\nMembers of the crew fell over\nlike tenpins when the blast of the\ntorpedo struck the ship, but none\nwere in any way seriously Injured.\nNo one knew positively how the\nlone fatality, Cook Alf Hockley,\nan Englishman, died. He was seen\non the deck as the ship sank, and\nit was believed he leaped overboard and was drowned.\nBert Coxen of Montreal, one of\nfour Canadians aboard, was most\nanxious that \"the missus should\nknow that I'm fine.\" The other Canadians were Albert Kelly of Ottawa, Jack Foley of Montreal and\nEddie Chambers of Wynyard, Sask.\nCaptain Tom Jones, a rotund, bald\nlittle Welshman, had little to say\nabout the sinking of his ship. He\nwould not even admit he got a\nducking when he was the last man\naboard and had to Jump.\nThe Beaverburn survivors were\npicked up and brought here by a\ntanker whose crew believed the\ntorpedo was meant for their ship,\nfor it \"missed our stern by only a\ncouple of yards.\"\nWhen the survivors landed most\nof them were clad in overalls, A\ncouple who were bathing when\nthe torpedo shattered the freighter\nescaped   wearing   towels  in   the\nsarong manner and with blankets\nover their shoulders.\nA   dingy   clothing    store   hero\npromptly became the most popular\nplace in town, after which the nun\nwent to the Seamen's Hospital for\na feed of ham and eggs and Cornish pastry, which is a small meat\nand rice pie,\nThe hospital is In charge of two\nformer residents of Canada, Rev. T.\nV. Elkington and his wife, who used\nto work ln the Seamen's Mission\nin Vancouver.\nAfter the blast, the lost Cook\nHockley directed Cook's Boy John\nBurns how to save his life.\n\"Take your time, you'll be all\nright,\" the cook told the boy.\nBurns, 20, was so affected by the\nloss of Hockley that he did not cat\nfor three days. As he sat in hospital receiving treatment for an\narm scalded; when the explosion\nthrew him against a boiler, the\ncook's boy said \"the last time I saw\nthe cook he was standing at the\nside of the ship and I think be\njumped.\"\nThird Engineer Harry Teale of\nSouthampton, stayed under the\ndecks to switch off the engines and\nprevented explosions which might\nhave killed many. Teale relied\ndeck and jumped to safety just before the Beaverburn dived under.\nAnother hero was Joe McNeal,\nable seaman from Newfoundland.\nOne of the lifeboats might have\nbeen dragged under if he had not\ncut the davit ropes with the chopper.\nHATS'\nCay Veils\nBright  Flowers\nStraws and Felts\nNew dressy models in\nflowered and veiled hats.\nCasual sport types in\nfelts. Young, saucy turbans in striiong and dramatic colors, \"Cone With\nthe Wind\" styles.\nYOU'LL LOVE THEM\n|j fioTmanTfimt (\u00a7)\nPhone 200\nBaker St.\n\"\u00ab\u00abSS\u00bb**\u00ab\u00abSS\u00bb***\u00ab3*\u00bb4-W\u00ab^^\nSend Flowers for\nValentines\nMac's Greenhouses\nTelephone Night and Day\u2014910\nRadio and Appliance\nSERVICE\nNelson Electric Co.\n574 Baker St Phone 280\nNEW SPRING\nMILLINERY\nMilady's Fashion Slmppe\n449 Baker St. Phone 874\nNew Shipment of\nSPRING DRESSES\n\u00a3ditk Ci. CctMothsAL\nFink Blk. Phone 970\n53S\u00bbKSWaK\u00abS\u00ab\u00ab\u00abSS!S$\u00ab>\u00bbK*\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab*i\n4X\nPlace Your Order for\nSPECIAL   VALENTINE   CAKf\nat Your Grocers.\nFOUREX  BAKERY\nPALM'S February\nBrick of the Month\nA FROZEN\nCUSTARD Brick\nHere's a New Combination You'll Like\nOutside Layers of Custard. Centre Layer\nof Maple Walnut\n25c at All Palm Dealers\nSlightly hlghtr it lomt country polnti.\nPALM   DAIRIES   LIMITED\n- I SSKS\u00ab*\u00ab\u00bbW\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab5\u00ab-\u00bb*K\u00abM'-?\n mmmmm\n\u2014\u2014*\u2014\n 1\n>*\u00bbtiS    SIX\nJMamt lath; Newa\nEstablished April 22   I9U2.\nRntish Colttmbta's Mont Interesting Newspaper\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\nJtifi Baker Street Nelson British Columbia\nMKMHtH OB I'HB, CANADIAN I'HESS AND\nTHE   AUnil    nunFAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS\nFRIDAY, FERRUARY 9, 1940.\nSPRING BREAK-UP LIKELY TO HALT\nHEAVY TRAFFIC ON ROADS\nIt is inevitable that when the Spring thaw occurs it\nshould be necessary nearly every year under existing road\nconditions in Kootenay that some highways should be\nclosed to heavy traffic. It is only by doing this that the\nPublic Works Department can save the surface for traffic\nduring the rest of the year.\nThose who depend in various parts of the district\nupon the highways for securing supplies will be well advised to arrange Jhat all hauling of heavy loads be done as\nsoon this winter as possible, and that wherever possible\nmerchants and others should stock up now in order to avoid\nhardship through shortage of supplies when the Spring\nbreakup occurs.\nOwing to heavy rainfall early this Winter the sub-\ngrades of all of our roads have become water soaked and\nthe subsequent light snowfall permitted frost action to\ntake its full effect, especially under black-topped roads. In\nsome places black-topped roads are badly heaved now and\nwhen the weather becomes warm and the sub-grade becomes thawed, it is extremely likely that it will be necessary to close these roads to all heavy traffic.\nThese road surfaces are expensive and the Public\nWorks Department, is naturally not only anxious to keep\nthem in as good condition as possible, but also to add to\nthe mileage of good surface for the general convenience\nand comfort of the public.\nAMERICAN PROTESTS ARE NOT\nUNFRIENDLY\nA good deal of the protesting by neutral nations over\nthe operation of the blockade against Germany, in which\nof course Britain's sea power is the main factor, is for purposes of the record, and not to be interpreted as unfriendly\nin intention.\nThc United States protests with great solemnity over\nthe detention of American ships for examination of cargo\nand of mails for contraband, for instance. The British explain that the reason an Italian ship may be detained for\nonly one-fourth the time of an American ship may be the\ndifference in cargoes, a cargo of, one commodity, for instance, lending itself to easy examination as compared with\na general cargo of many different classifications.\nFrank R. Knit, thc well known American political\ncommentator, points out that the American notes, and the\ndifferences of opinion in regard to examination nf American cargoes and mails for neutral countries, arc not matters\nto get excited about, th\" searching and necessary delaying\nbeing quite legal.\n\"The sympathies and interests of this country are\nbound up with thc slice,\\-s uf the Alliis,\" .Mr. Kent states\nin one of his dailv syndicat d articles, in a recent issue of\nthe Spokane Spokesman-Review.\n\"By no one has this been made plainer than by the\nPresident, aril his Secrrtary of Stete, Mr. Hull,\" he continue-.\n\"Our neutrality is a surface neutrality, and virtually\nwc arc in the war on thi' Allied side, with ev< rything 'short\nnf soldiers.' Under the circumstances, great indignation\nover the opening of mail and the searching of ships by the\nEnglish in th ir effort to make the blockade complete is\nslightly ridicullous. I: is all right for the record, to make\nthe prole.-', and thc British might, |icrh,vs, to do these\ntilings with more thought of our surface position. But to\nmagnify them into an important incident is not n^'sible\nwithout a great deal of strain. . . .\n\"The-e slat\" departmi nt notes ere normal, natural,\nand necessary for the record. But there is no real heat behind them. In effort, thev notify the British to give rise to\na.s littl\" complaint as po.'sib!\" from American shipowners\nand pa^cgers bound to n utral ports. And the British\nwill i'n that, but th v will not stop -.'arching these vessels\nfor c. \u25a0ntr.-d cd th'' ce'i.ge' into ''\"rn'eny. No:- should\nthey.\"\nCASHING IN ON THE TOURIST BUSINESS\nKootenay centres which have used advertising to increase tourist LiKjnrs i have y,,[ cood result-'. Various form*\nof advertising have lien used, but chief';. IroklMs and\nii\"W-pa]ier >pae '   Both ha\\e paid well.\nNew Yor\\ Staio la-t vear <;i. nt one and a half rents\np>T cili'in in t\"iir;-l advTtisiny and received ^'JT.fiii per\nritiz.'ii in t\"uris( oxpenditur' -, according to estimates made\nbv tie Empire State Travel A asocial ion. On an advertising\ninvest'!',, nt of J'joii.nno, tin State itself reaped a profit of\nmore than ?l,-l1lV>ol', ur several hiindrid per eent. in the\nf'nn of g\u201e dine taxes paid bv out-of-state motorists;\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0hue an add.: \u2022 nal * pio.uuoino from tuiiri-ts \u00aba circulated in .werv avenue of trade, the report states.\nT\"un-t adverti-ing is a sure winner. It alway has\ni.' n \" in Ureal Britain, in France, in the United States,\nin Canada. In Kootenay, even though our advertising has\nI'-! bi'on .tuaiilv i nough maintained to produce the best\niv.nit  , we al-o lone found it profitable.\nWAR - 25 Years    tm persons hurt\n\/~o7\"-Vv IN COAST ACCIDENTS\n'     * , VANl orVF.lt,   Fa*    fl    iC'l'i    -\nM P-   '\\'y''        r''\"   ''\u25a0  ''''',  '!'r   Foe  |\u00bb.\". i'. are  oi h.aspilal   |ul;iv\nr' r':      o:\"1^'  ii-   r,< o-r ,rM]|t ,,e Uure irnffir acei-\ne,   0    1(0    \u25a0\u2022   i-    ,\" i   '  -     \\      \"     (,. 1\n'\u201e   ,    !\u25a0\u2022\u25a0   \u2022 ! '     \u25a0     11 ;k\"\u00ab   i.s\n-Vt\" \u00ab0N  DAILY NIW8   NELSON   B.C.-FRIDAY  MORNINQ.  FEB. \u00bb.  1940.-\nTHE (F)UTIUTY MAN\n\u00bb*J**5**iW\u00ab*\u00bbS!\u00bbKS5e\u00abSWSS*e^^\nU Questions ??\nANSWERS\nOpen to an*\/  reader   Names ot\npersons ajklng questions will not\nbs  published\n?.M\u201e ^elson  -  1   haw a  trickle\ncharging element and I would like\nto know what liquids or acids arc\nused ln the glass container.\nSulphuric acid, specific gravity ol\n1100, is the electrolyte used in most\ntrickle chargers.\nW. E\u201e Kaslo \u2014 How many people\nwere killed and  injured in the\nearthquake   at   Managua,   Nicaragua In 1931?\nOver 750 bodies were recovered\nand  buried,   and   more   than  6000\nwere treated tor Injuries.\nS  T., Rossland has kindly suplied\nthe wcerds to \"Blue Ribbon Band.\"\nThere's   something   that's  so   dear\nto me\nIt's  something  I  wish  you  could\nsee\nIt's covered with tears, some I vc\nshed through the years\nSince the treasure was given to me.\nShe called me to her bedside\nAnd  whispered her last words o!\nlove\nThen  darkness  came  on, my\nsweetheart had gone\nTo  thc angels in heaven above.\nIt's  a   picture   that  hangs  on   the\nwall,\nIn a frame that I made by hand\nOf Ihe sweetest of girls with her\nhair laid in curls\nAnd tied wilh a blue ribbon band\nThis picture is old and has faded\nLike the flowers she holds in her\nhand\nShe's   in   heaven   above,   but   her\nletters of love\nAre tied with a blue ribbon band.\nApropos Inquiry from \"J. R. C.\"\nof Trail on books oi art wc would\nlike to add \"A Treasury of Art\nMasterpieces\" edited by Thomas\nCraven   (Simon  It  Schuster).\nStop, Look, Listen\nROAD APPROACH IN CUT - SKEW CROSSINS\nMANCHESTER (CP)-'The atmosphere was too morbid,\" pleaded\nWilliam Chatlertcn, charged with\nscraping the paint off a darkened\nlight bulb in a railway carriage in\nthe blackout. He was fined \u00a31\n($4.43).\nSERIAL STORY.\nBy MARIE BLIZARD\nTell Bill Goodbye\nw\n'\u25a0    !\npar's  \"f   ll.o   niy\n\u25a0iitl!..   Nor-' \u2022,*,\u2022*,*. Hurl     *i ;i.'i*.,y\nv    \"x      \"\"   HMO INJURIES CAUSE\nOc COAST MANS DEATH\n\u25a0   vi- -  I \u25a0\u25a0   <;\u25a0-, VANCOrVFH    Teh    R    i(T>   -\n\u00ab. '...-.\u25a0 \\ , r .... , ].lM vei-enlflV found\nv \u25a0 .-...., i,.,v , , ,., r.,,iV Mn| |1% ,f\nfl     \u25a0 \u25a0*\u2022'-\u25a0\u2022; \u25a0    H        t-o     \"     war    ,|ui      W\n: - .,:   I        \u2022 nr, \u25a0\u25a0    ^eAe I \u25a0\u2022.j.,,1 -.'ruck In hii\nir - :<r   1 ,.       g   \\ ..,      s. '''   '\u25a0\"\"\u25a0' r'rd aui-mob.>, Dec   J3\nCONCLUSION\nFabienne    heard    the   telephone\nring and came out of a deep, peacc-\ni ful sleep to hear Prunella's muffled\nI voice in the other room.\nShe called: \"Prunella! I'm awake\n\u25a0 and I'm starving:\"\nPnincila, with a broad .smile en\nher face, opened the bedrocm dour.\n\"Mah goodness, you still hungry,\nchile? After all lhat food you et\nlas' ni-sfht? I'll have you brekfuss\nj in a minute.\"\n!    \"Run the tub first, Prunella,\"\n\"You ain't g nna git up, Miz Fa-\nI bienne? Miz Ellen sez you is tn\nI stey abed this mawnin\". She had to\n1 go to the settlcmen' house fo' a little while, but she's com in' home\nanv minute.\"\n\"I can't stay in bed. I've got\nthings t> do. Get the pcrter and\nhave him bring my trunk un here.\"\n\"You goin' away'1\" Prunella asked, her smile disappearing into the\n:!r t.  of her far >\nFabienne nedded. \"Go along.\nPrunella Hath first, trunk nr.d then\nbrckfast.\"\n\"All mawnin' the telephone's bin\nringin' end pople a.-kin' for you,\nMiz Fabienne \" <\n\"I don't want to talk W anyone,\nPrunella,\"\n\"Doctor Mallory, hc say you is to\nca1!  him when you wakes up\"\nFibier-p.c's hesrt turned cvor with\ni h'tter-sv\/fet pa;n\n\"He sez vou kin git him at hi?\noff.--1 v,n \u25a0 - rr'DEs' trn Hr'.? nocr*\natin' at St. Jo.fech's -lv spital at\n'1 *':\":\u2022. o'clock. You b<-Ft hurry,\nhei.rv Its nigh onto ten o'clock\niv w \"\n\"Prunella! Will yuu plerse do ai\n\"Yes. m.i'am.\" she scid s\"dly\nFabienne bathed hasitly, gulped\nher breakf.ist \".::d b; -:?.n nq-kin^\nthe trunk the puter brought !nt:\nthe living mot,. Irvinj; nM to think,\nnot to remember Bill's voice savin:,\n\"Yci *\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 it's '^:s wav, Fab- -I'm in\nlev- with v u\"\nthr --h.iuM l.;ve known it 1 ng\n3Ro pre vnled it's tver happen-\nin*? \"\nIt ats n->1 ton I,*!;**- now, she\n1 h-nu F\u00bbht. ui'.'ir.\" sweaters in .t\ndr?-> \"\u25a0 in ir r trunk She'd go awav\nnv.d Bill u\"uld .snuii f rj;p; her .md\nturn   bark   *o Fllen\nHrr (hr at wa*, beginnir.g tn ,\\<;hr\nwi'h the prntfure nf th*- van in\nher hei\\r'. It \\<:<nud he be'ter for\nNt W have Inn', uain than for\nEllen, who was the best friend she\nrv?r h?d. the finest pnrson she had\never  kr< wu,\nSiie heard ,n b^ll ringing again\n'Prunella >f ihat'n the d r'or tell\nhim I'm still .islrep. I d -n't want\nto  talk   t'i  him.\"\n\"Thai ain't n lel-phnrc That's\n:he dnorbell \"\nFabienne locked nbout hor wildly, reeking escape. If that was\nBll! -\nS!i\"   r-uildti't   ^ee   lum   agiin'\nIt was Film Ellen, dumb with\nsurprise when she saw Fabienne\nkneeling before the trunk with her\narms   filled   with   rlnthr*\n\"I'm all '.veil thii m rnmg, dar*\nline \" Fnbirnno <a:d br gh:Iv \"Will\nvou ever f irr.ve mr f<>: what I've\ndone t > vou\"\"\n\"I   -hniuh!   we'd  not   thai   all   *et-\n\u25a0 tied last night  What are vou doing,\nFnh1   Where  are  you  going'\"\n\"Parin\"\n'Paris'*\" Fllen rrpentrd, sitting\ndown ^suddenly\n\"I'm   hum\"  She   put   nh< et   m   a\ndrawer    with    ber    sweaters      'It\n; ought lo be p\u00bbiv to get passage? for\n!  morrow   Thr bont.-i aren't crowded nt  this limt* of vear\"\n|    \"But,  r,il*- \"\n\"Will you hand me thnt silk neg-\nliceo. darling* i can roll some b' t-\ntles un In it \"\n\"Fab, what arr you going In\nParis   tor''\"\nFablrnnp Ml bark on hrr heel'.\n\"A rbnngp, Fllen D n't vou think\n1 need one* I've due enough harm\naround  hrre \"\n' Yi ii haven't done anv harm at\nall' Chrm explained everything\nYnu couldn't havo done anvthniE\nel.tr\"\n1 n.-iV   what   Bill   had   to  d<C\n'Tlintv .ill r:Kht with Bill and\nwhat anvtclv else th\"iki of it\nmakfeS   no   difference,   He'i   g-ing\nI away soon anyway. And even if he '\nj were not, he's big enougli to yet\naway with it.\"\nI    \" You think a lot of Bill, don't\nI you. Ellen?\"\n,    \"Of course,\"\nj Fa.tj'enne smiled at her, \"He '\n| thinks a lot of yru, too, Ellen. Dcn'l.\nj ever forget that.\"\nEllen gave her a perplexed ,\nI glance. She said, \"Will you be gone I\ni long:\"'\n\"Some time.\"\n|    \"But   you'll   be  coming  back   to .\n... to me and to the settlerr.cn'.\n, house?\"\n; Fabienne shcok her h^ad and\n: smiled at her brightly, with a hard\n1 smile. \"No, Ellen, no more charity\nwork for me. I'm fed up with being\nI a humanitarian. There's nothing in\nit. Look where it landed me.'\nAfter a long minute, Ellen said,\n, \"I don't believe yai, Fab, I know\n-ou to j well.\"\n\"This is thc real me you're seeing\nnow. The other was a girl playing\na g^me.  Well, tho game's finished,\nJillen. Ynu and I are of a different\ncaliber. I'm a butterfly.'\n\"That's not true!''\n\"Oh,   yes   it   is,\"   Fabienne   said.\ni tossing her head, \"You'll soon find\n< ut \"\n\"Win*, do y:u mean-1 This isn't\nlike y *u, darling.\"\n\"But is L-'! The old Fab.enne' I'm\ngoing to lT.ru\". s:ce mother and lots\nof my old friends Have a whirl\nand buy a trousseau and ceme\nb:.c.:-\"\n\"A troi'Lscau?\" Ellen's eyes lighted   up  with  pleasure  and  she  gut\nup and went to sit be.s:de Fabienne\nn  the floor.\nFabienne   nodded   and   finished\n\"And come back and marry Nicky.\"\nThe   light   went   out   of   Ellen's\ney?s   She wss absolutely still as it\nshe were cast m marble,\n\"Nicky h'.sn't proposed to mo for\na long time, but he s always wanted to marry me.\" Fabienne said\ngaily, and laughed a little uncertainly.\nEllen g ;t up very slowly In a\ntoneless   v ice, she said.    I   see.\"\n\"I haven't told him yet. I'm go*\ning ! i ring lum in a little while and\ntell him. He'll still make a respectable woman of me Don't you think\nso\"\"\nFllen d:d not turn from the window where she was lo*. king ut.\n\"Of course, Fab. Nicky'd never,\nnever let you down.\" Her voice\ncaught in her throat.\nFr.bienne   was   hanging   a   diess\non her trunk rack, while Fllen was\nspeahing.   She   arranged   its   f. Ids\nand then, quite suddenly, her ryes\nturned  to Ellen's back as shocked\nj realization   spread   over   her   face\n' She g '. up hurriedly -.ind  went to\nthe w.ndow, turning Ellen  to face\nj tier.   \"Fllen.  you  and  Nicky  are  in\ni love with each other*'' Fllen dropped her eyes   \"You are' Why was 1\nio blind:   It  was because  of YOU\nthat Nicky went to work' You beau-\nmatcher1 Where's my cat and mv\nhat\" '\nFllen ran after her   \"Please, Fab,\nLet me explain \"\n\"Explain'\"    Fabienne   cried   J y-\nuily,  \"I   haven't  got   tune   for  rt-\nplanatlons   I've got a da'e  with  a\ndream' Would you mind unpacking\nthat trunk' No! I'll be taking it to\nColorado'\"   She   kissed   Fllen   hurriedly,   gave  hrr a gieat  hug and\nwa.t gone,\n\u2022    She was breathless when she g\"t\nI \u25a0 St  Joseph's hospital and nw that\nit wat six minutes t > eleven\nA nurse at the desk asked her if\nHla\" wished to see anyone\nFi.jlennr said, \"Yes. bul I ran\nwait I've been waiting a long time\nI can wait a little longer IV. you\nknow   when   Pr    Mallory   will   b-\niiowtr\"\n\"About an hour \"\n\"Thanlev\"   An  hour   wasn't   long\nh stand at lhe gaten    f heaven\nFINIS\nVETERAN IS CALCARY\nCONSERVATIVE CAND,\nCALGARY. Feb R iCP) - Hugh\nC, Earthing. K C . returned inldier\nnnd '.irmer member of the AlVi'a\nlegislature, wss nnnvnated (m\n\u00bberva'tve nndidn'e for Ci'gary\nE*st rederal RidlPg iait night.\nSTAMP CORNER\nBy JAMES MONTAGNE8\nTrance Lssued recently two stamps lo lhc Province of Languedoc\ntop right and the City ol Lyons top right. The new United States\nstamp to poet Longfellow, bottom left. Is to be issued thLs month, along\nwilh poet slamps showing Whiltier, Lowell, Whitman and Riiey.\nThc fourth diagram, above, in the Daily News' series designed\nto halt the menace of the level crossing, depicts a type of crossing\nat which many a careless motorist has come to grief. Here the brief\nstop demanded by the most elementary rules of human safety may\navert death or horrible injury. Thc track in this instance runs In a\ncutting and .so the train i.s partially obscured from thc motorist's view.\nLow rolling hills add to the lack of long-range vision, together with\nthe probability that, owing to the contour of the land, the trick Is\nwinding in its approach to the road crossing. In spite of these hazards,\nthe motorist, approaching the track on a slight rise, has a perfect\nopportunity to see that all i.s clear if he will spend a moment for the\nhalt which may save his life and thc lives of his passengers.\nCONTRACT\nA OOOD CONVENTIOa.\nMANY advanced players use a\nbusiness double of 3-No Trumpi\nln an artificial tense to compel a\nlead of the dummy's suit, failure\nto double Indicating negatively\nthat the partner must pick what\nlooks naturally to him like the\nbeat lead. Some employ thla convention only when In rubber play,\nor total-point duplicates, but not\nIn match-point events. The distinction It becauee, in any form of\ntotal-point play, the importance\nof doing; everything possible to\nprevent the big acore for a game\nis much greater than the illght\ntncreaie ln the value of a trick or\ntwo doubled,\nAJ7433\nVQ<\n4) A101\n4 A J 10\n\u2666 83\nV J 10 0 4\n'lit\n*,K8 Ci 2\n-V.\ns.\n4AKQ\n10\nf 7\u00abt2\n'Kl\n4879\n181\n**>AKB\na\u00bbQ J 8*3\n\u2666 Q\u00ab4\n.Dealer: South. Both ildei vulnerable.)  ,\nSouth began thli rubber bridge\ndeal with 1-Diamond. North an-\nawerid with 1-Spade, and South\nbid 1-No Trump. North forced\nthen with a jump rebld of }\u2022\nSpadei, and South called 3-No\nBy Shepard Barclay\nTrump, which Eaat doubled.\nWeit read Haifa double aa conventional, asking for a lead of\ndummy'! spade ault. He led hli\nhighest card of it, the 9. No matter what the declarer tried to do\nthen, he had to lose four spade\ntrlcki. Furthermore, he had no\nway to pick up nine trickj except\nby trying hli diamonds, and when\nhe did that East took the (letting\ntrick with hli diamond K.\nLook thli deal over and you will\nsee that any lead by West except\na ipade would give the declarer\nhla contract. Weet could never get\nln the lead later to puah a ipade\nthrough. Coniequently, East could\ntake nothing but three ipadei and\none diamond.\n\u2022  \u2022   \u2022\nTomorrow*! Probien\n\u2666 04\nVKStS\na>AKQ\u00bb3\n432\nAAQ83\nS\n\u00a5703\n\u2666 978\nall 10 3\nN.\nS.\n\u2666 J62\n\u00bbA\n\u2666 10 4\nalK J 0\n784\n\u2666 K107\n\u2666 Q J 10 \u00bb \u00ab\n\u2666 J 8 2\n*A*5\n(Dealer: East. Both aides vulnerable.) ;\nWhat ll the belt defeme on thli\ndeal agalnit Weat'e 4-Spade eao-\nriflce bldr\nDistributed by Klnc feiturti Syndicate, Inc.\nOn. JIul QJjl\nFRIDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1940\nThe zoological stamp collector\nne'-d not ro beyond the stamps of\n:hv Bnli5rv Empire to obtain spec-1\nmens of most animals tn the world\nwhich have been portrayed on postage stamps. W.th British colonial,\nj.amps in recent years changm? to\npictorial stamp.*; ihiwing scenes in\nt'.ir-e rjlnnies, ih'- a:; mil tnd bird\nstamps of ;he Empire haw ain in-'\ncreased in numbers.\nElephants will be found on ihr\nitamp5 o( North Borneo > 190fli.\nNorthern Rhodesia '1926, 1938',\nSierra Leone <1933>, Southern Rhodesia (1935'. Malay States '1900',\nJaipur '19.11', Gambia < 1922. 193B*\nBurma \u00ab193fl., and Ceylon (1935,\nI.J3J.I Camels are duplaved on the\n(\u2022amps of India (19.17V Iran * 19231,\nAden '1939.. Sudan * 1898. 1921)\nYou w.ll f.nd rams, whales, pen-\ngu.ns, swans, sheep, Reese and *ea-\nl.o-s .\u00bbn Falkland Minds stamps f\n103.1. 193R. On the stamps nf North\nBorne-) are nxrn. wild bnan. or.Ti,-*\nout.ing. tap.r. a rh.noceros. corka*\n[.\u25a0rs. cassowary, hornbill. leopard,\nmir.kf.v and water buffalo The tor-\nt-vse appears on the 1^38 Seychelles\ns'amps. the turtle on the 1935 and\n1031 Cavman Islands stamps Thr\nId >kiburra bird, 1) :e bird, klw .\nhu.i bird, k.ingar.io. parson b.rd,\nkoala, platypus, p:ed faniail, tua'.ura\nl.iard and emu a;*\" birds a:,d nn;*\nmnls nat.ve t> Australia and New\nZealand and will he f und on the\nst,imp.* of W \\se rountr'es a< well rs\nthe hrmer stamp-issuing Aus'ral.in\nStale*;, New Zealand n!s\") sh^ws We\nmsrlir, nwordf^h A'.i-tral a Wr\n\u00abw\u00abn, merino sheep, hrr.se iwi'.h\nKing Grn[ge  V mounled'.\nThere are flaming.>es on We 193?\nand 1938 Bahamas stamps, and tropical fish on the 1P38 ;\u00abue. the rr to-\nd \\f is o'l We Hfli'i'-'.and s'amps ot\n1M3    in.1    m*.   ro',vt    .-.re    on    W-\nstamps of Bechuanaland; the brush\nturkey is on thc current stamps of\nthe   British   Solomon   Islands;   the\npeacock is d-splayed on the current '\nBurma ar.d the 1E>31 Jaipur stampj;\nthc early issues of Canada featured\nthe beaver; Canada has also shown .\nthe   horse,   with   Royal   Canadian\nMounted Police in  1935, and Eskimo   dogs   on   the   special   delivery ,\nstamp  ol   1927.   Newfoundland  has]\nfeatured codfish, the Newfoundland j\ndog. seals, ptarmigan, caribou, sal-1\nmon. oxen; the booby bird and thc\n(,'ar.bbean dolphin are featured nn '\nthe current Cayman Islands stamps. |\nThe tvryblll Is a bird shown on i\n1893 Co-jk Island stamp, the frigate\nb.rd ls another from the Sou'h Seu\noil tre current Gilbert and Elhce.\nIsland stamps There arc lions on\n'he -.ia-rips of Soruth, Kenya and\nSouthern Rhodesia The giraffe :s\non the stamps of Northern and\n%\u2022 ,1'hem Rhodesia The an'elope is\nmi the current Somahland. xebra\nind gom panviw are on the stamps\n' South Afr.ca and .South-.ve.it\nAfrica There is a bird of paradise\nin the 1933 Papua and 1931 New\nGuinea j tamps, a parrot on the\ns'amps f T >nga, a rrtv.f on the\n(tampi of Kenya\nNEW ISSUES\nPltcairn lilindt ran b* added ' i\nI'.r.ti'h roton.et issuing postal***\nI'amp* A-^ eight valw set is now\nin preparation bv the Cnwn Agent*;\nit tendon, showing v.ewi of this\nr','rfu'. colonv founded hv the mu\n: \"\"e:s   of   \"-e   Bvjn'y Atbtnls\nis  issuing  four   pictorials  featuring\nruin* :-i We now Italian dependent\nEitonii his isiued a four-value\n-*h;H wrlfar** set Fnree has is-\ni\"*-1 two pirtorial stjmm featuring\nthe an-,ent Province nf I^niuedi'\nmd   the   c-'.r   of   I.v ins Yugo-\ni iv i   -m   .MUt\u00bbd  *   five-value char\nCKLN AND\nCBC PROGRAMMES\nMORNINC\n7 00\u2014O Canada\n7:03\u2014Tout snd Coffee (CKLN)\nJsaL yoiUiAsd^\nONE-MINUTE   TEST\n!    What   is   unusual   about   the\nancient Egyptian representation of\nthe human eye*\n2 Whit is a  febrile disease'\n3 Who wrote  tbe play. \"Abie's\nIrLah  Rose?''\nIf\nput\nout\nseve\nand\nlo a\nthat\nllmr\n[ind\npart\nWORDS OF WISDOM\nany young man expects with-\nfaith. without thought, with-\nstudy, without patient, per-\nring labor, in the midst oi\nin spite of discouragement\n'.tain   anything   in   this  world\nil worth attaining, he will\nIv wake up. by and by, and\nthat he has been playing the\nof a (oa-l.-M   J. Savage.\n8t00\u2014The News\n8:15\u2014Singers  and   Songs\n8-30-Wayne Van Dyne\u2014Tenoi\n8:45-Rakov's Orch.\n9;00-The Balladecr\n9:15\u2014The Vass Family\n9*0\u2014li. C. Radio School\n10;00-Musical Roundup (CKLN .\n10:3O\u2014Cavalcade of Drama (CKLN)\n11:00\u2014NBC Music Appreciation\nHour\n11:30\u2014Listen to the Lyrics\nAFTERNOON\n. 1:00\u2014Luncheon Music\n1:00\u2014The News\n1:15\u2014Talk\n1:30\u2014Club Matinee\n1.45-BBC News\n2:15\u2014Pinkie   Tomlin'i     Orch.\ni CKLN I\n2:30-Virginia Fair Entertains\n!:45-Closing Stock Quotations\n3:00\u2014Jerry Livingston's Orch.\n315\u2014Glenn  Garr'a  Orch.\n3:30\u2014The Three Cheers\n3:45\u2014Lucio's Ensemble\n4:00-New World Ballads\n4:30\u2014Clvde Lucas' Orch.\n4.45-1 Knew Edison\n5.C) -\"Cily Dese;'\nEVENING\nLOOKING BACKWARD\nTEN YEARS AGO\nFiom Oa;ly Newi of Yrh 9. |<W\nKimberley High School basket\nhalt fum \u00abqu-*eT\u00bb*d out \u25a0 IfVli v r.\nt \u25a0 v over Nel\u00bb\u00bb-Ki la^'. night Sv\nnrttvr m;\"**.^ hnve r\\ v\u00bb*\"'d d i vi\nWhitewater. Lucky Jim f-Tk-Pr^v.\niot. Yanke**- Girl, Kootrrwy Fl \u2022! \u25a0\nrrirr and Galena F\u00abrm*ll*--,v,!-\nr-lonel \\ Mallandaine has h*ev\nrurlert^d Tre-.,dec.. \u00abf We Crn'oi\nIV.ud nf Trade G I. Und \u00bbn. Dis-\ntr.rt Pniiltry Injpectnr, tins been\nir.insferred from Nel\u00bb\"n '.n Grand\nF.-ki -Thar^s F McHardy ha\u00ab\nlef; on  a  biyneas  tr.p '.\u00bb Siv*ka\".f\n25 YEARS AGO\nFrom in.lv News of F--t* P iPt.l\nVV;!h headquarters a' S**ith S\\n-\nrat*. Bp anffl rr * at\u00abfv- alion he* t*-rivi\nformed with T Wh\u00ab Hon Pren-dent\nC C\u00bban\u00abner \\'-<*- president nnd Tt\nfl fl Hennlo SerT\"\u00abtarr. Trenure-\nWW Bradlrv Pm-'nehl An\u00bbaitnr\nha* left  foi   r-Mley-Borr. on  Teh\nr-ia-y .1 \u00bb.. Mr .ml Mr? John Bell\nir r r-T K'* V\"av a**^ Core\nS'r<\"-U a s \"\u2022. Mayor J .1 Malonc\nhev\u00ab returned '\"' N-*l\u00bb.*n followinf t\n\\< r**k> vis ' !.\u25a0>('**\u2022'. r:';p< and Sp>*-\nk.i*ie Th-* egh'eenih annual Win*\nir* r**:**, val at Rns^lind, \"f one\nweek's d <rV'*n, ha*, np-'-n'-d\n\u25a0ifl   YEARS   AGO\nFr>m ;i,i.lr Tribune of Feb p 1*T\nD McArthur A Co fmishfd its\nrrrtract for pil'-ns a' the (' V R\ni rks vre'rrdav the dnlphins have\nr---**** c\\r vet a' the rnd; of ,*\\>> p;eri\ni*H var-'-MH rep-s'rs rtteruted -- F.d-\n,>v I F-v;n \u25a0\u2022' Fr.o *fi\\r\\ a third m-\n\u00bb**-\u25a0<\u25a0\u25a0.- \u2022\u2022 the GiMen Rod m'neral\nr,s m on the mr:\\ f->rk >f the\nSalm -\"\u25a0 R'vr to A-Mv.r riemen's -'\nTr.e fn *3Vi THe pMice off e'als\nK-i* -\\ *.v In-aled \" \"\u00bbe;r riew ' 'f \u25a0 \u2022\u25a0\n\u25a0\u25a0 K^-'-'-nr,'. ('re-; F r<*mi,. Alf\nIrff; 'I- in hr^ke 1 lej W<*>H-<\u00bb - d 1y\n:\u2022 f'i1      t   * * :*iet|   esfdy   %\\   Wf   %'T\\\nlenl n'ttp.'al\nHINTS ON ETIQUETTE\nNever  sip  coffee,   water  nr  any\noiher beverage while there ls led\nIn y ur mouth,\nTODAY'S HORO5C0PE\nBusiness ftnd prrfes.r:nnnl nff.urs\nwill pr sper riunnR the next ye.ir\n(or thme whose birthday u on this \u25a0\ndn'e Thev should lake every nd-\nv-inttRe of the fic-Ki fortune await-\nmi them in this year ar.d spare no\nefforts t1 further their fortunes\nThe child born today will he an\nWule, itudmu*. resourceful and m-\nlelleetual person, but kmd-hear'ed\nind gor,H natured. \\ro. alUiouflh a\nhit short tempered at times He or\nnhe would meet awrcrss in p lilies\nnr irientiflf  research\nONE-MINUTE   TSST   ANSWERS\n1 In pr fie drawings 'tie eye\nt represmtrd  as  in a  full  face\n2 On*  ace. .np-inied  bv  fever\n}   Anne Nichols\nVIF.NNA >CV> Gas mask\/ is\nsue.) \\< civ.hans In Vienna hnve\nhern c*ollerted t\\nr\\ *en! lo other\npart' of lhe Fetch Pi\" people have\nbeen told muski are needed In places mort eipoied to a;r attack than\nVienna\n[lv \u00abet fnr \\y\\s'\u00bb] employees \u25a0>;i<\">w.nS\nwork of the prat and lelegiaph de-\npartment A'grrta   it   inulng   a\nrharitT  atamp   for  the  the  brn-afi* ,\nof  ihe  wives  and children  M mc-\nb !-i\u00abd s-ild rr* Italian East  Af\nriea and L'by* a;e isiuing \u00abh'rt set\/\nfor the Tr'e-inial Overseas F.xVh1-\nl:on at Nap'.r*; h Mav . Ireland\n\u25a0t issuing a new pictorial set\nPc-rtuaai \u00ab 'i l*sue a r *mmrnior,t\n\u00abive \u00abe( of the P->r1ugue\u00abr F\"-e,gn I\nI.\"B   n Spain   ra\u00abf   n\\ rt;*- *>tM |\nferti'n stamp* lo ntark the fir'\ninniver\u00abar\u00bb of Franc -',*, ei.'rinc*\nInto Barcelona,\n5'45\u2014Organ Recital\n6;0O\u2014Concert Master (CKLN)\n6 30-Tango  Time\n6:4.V-Just   Relax   iCKLN)\n7:00\u2014Woodhouse and Uawkini\n7 ,10-Questions in the Air (CKLN)\nBOO-News\n8:15\u2014Star Dust\nRW -H ckev   Umidcast -Kimber\nley at Trail\n9 30-Jark Aviaon'i Concert Orch.\nW 00 -Jan Garbers Orch.\n10 3>-Ray Noble's Orch.\nWW   The News\n11.15-Garv  Nottingham'i Orch\n11 .10- Bill Sabiansky\n12 00   God Save  the  King.\nOAT \u2014 TRAIL\nMORNINC\n7 0(1 nre-aklast Club\nA 1.1 Home  Folk.  Frolic\n9 00 Slara ei( Ihar  Wrrk\nIIP.* Woman's   Jnurnal\n11 Jn Tommy   D'TSfj's Orch\n\"TERNOON\n1 J0-Toelay's Music\n.1 to- In Town Timijht\na IP    'I'* e.llrp  Nrava\n\u00bb.1\u00bb\u2014The Ranch B-ys\n'\u25a0'I'l   Tsnlalinng Rhrllims\nJ is   H\",iel',lnfi of Ih* Fail\nv \u2022\u2022\u2022r:c\n12 no - sun nil\nOther prnocli- CBC   I'lunrammii\nU.S. NETS' BEST\nn on   I'rnf   (}iii;i  wilh   llnb Trnui\n'CHSi\nB :i\"   Firal Nuihler   eirniin  it'liSl\n7 (VI   (Iraiiel Canlral Slain.n HIIS)\na PP - Frf.l WaniiB In I'lraiurej Tim\u00bb\n11 \"\"     Can     N  nnefham's    Orrlv\n'NBC Hed'\n10 00\u2014 Dancer Orchfslra iNBC-Rcd*\n\u25a0\u25a0\n \u2014*\u2022*\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2014*\u2014\n-\u2014\u2014\n.&\nFinland Needs 30,000 Troops, 2qp Planes and Supplies, Say Experts\nMilitary experts, observing the Soviet-Finnish campaign, are of\nHie opinion that the decisive phase of the war in Finland will come\nnext May, when King Winter starts to unloose his hold on the frozen\ncountryside. In the opinion of these experts, 30,000 soldiers, 200 airplanes and generous supply of military equipment will enable the\nFinns to continue their magnificent struggle and defeat the Red hordes\nef Stalin. In the meantime the intrepid Finns are battling on amid\ntheir native snow and ice. A Finnish soldier, his fightin? days over for\nEstimate Allies' Assets $10,000,0(10,000\nIn U.S. May Be Used as Wat Reserve\nthe time being, is shown, upper right, being treated in a first aid base\nafter having fallen on the Salla battlefront. Clad in the white shrouds\nwhich, In the pest weeks, have made them famous, two Finnish soldiers, upper left, man a heavy calibre machine-gun in a cold windswept outpost, A captured Russian field gun is loaded on a truck,\nlower right, for tr.*nsportation to a part of the front where it may be\nused against its former owners. A patrol of Finnish ski troops are\nshown In action, lower left, their skis lying on the snow behind them.\nBy LLOYD LEHRHAS\n(Auoeiated Pren Staff Writer)\nL WASHINGTON. Teh. 8 (AP) -\nhe Allies and Germany are spend-\nn| so many millions of dollars\n\u25a0very day that they are forced to\n|uy supplies from other sources de-\ncite their tremendously increased\n\u25a0reduction of war materials.\n1 Germany, blockaded by sea and\n\u25a0ckfng cash to make purchase, is\nfcrced to depend on the Scant..n-\nIvlan and Balkan nations and the\n\u25a0rrltorlei it has seized \u2014 Austria,\nwcho-Slovakia and part of Poland.\nI The Allies can buy some of the\nIroducts they need from the Dominions and colonies and from neu-\n\u25a0tl countries, but the United States\ni a logical market in which to buy\nllanes and other war accessories\n\\ A survey of informed Federal de-\nirtments reveals that\u2014as a con-\nkrvative estimate\u2014the Allies have\nlets in the United States totalling\n|l0.000,000,000 which may be used\nI t \"war chest.\" Those assets are:\n[l. An estimated $\u00ab,5OO.0O0,0O0 tn\n7,000,000,000 in gold, with shipments\nJpntinuing we-eitly from Britain,\nfrance. Canada, .South Africa, In-\nlia and Hong Kong Besides its\nItored gold reaerves. the British Fm-\nLire produces WOO.000,000 in newly\npined gold annually.\nJ 2. An estimated $1,000,000,000 in\nItocki, bonds and other securities in\nJ.9. corporations and companies.\nJS. An estimated $1.0OX).uO0.OO0 in\nlirect investments in US. industrial\nIlants, factories, mines and other\nInterpriies\nI 4.  An  estimated  $1,000,000,000   in\nlollar balances in U.S. banks.\n] 5. The favorable balance of trade\nphich  Britain   wants  to  ob.aln  by\n\u25a0creasing its exports from $1,7W,-\n0,000   m   1939   to   approximately\n1400.000,000 in IMO\nJin the first grea'. war the United\nItatei loaned W,800.000.u00 tn Great\n\u00a7rttain and France to pay for 111.-\n10,000,000 worth of jjoo-cLs purchased\nere.\nJ In this war the Johnson Bill has\njlde it possible for war deb'.nr\n|ations to obtain loans or credui\ni the United States and the neu-\n.ility law provides Tr \"cash-and-\njirry\" sales of war materials to\n\u2022atlligeronis\nI To   insurr   payment   in   cash   for\nvital supplies, the Allies\u2014especially\nduring the crisis in 1938 ana 1930\u2014\nbegan shipping gold to the United\nStates until on last Jan, 1 this\ncountry held $17,700,000,000 of the\nworld's total of ^8,500,000,000 in\nthat precious metal.\nWith such a percentage of the\nworld's golden wealth here, many\neconomists doubt the advisability\nof the United States accepting more\ngold Uo be buried and serve no\nuseful service).They advocate the\nuse of persuasive efforts to obtain\npayment for American goods in\nsome other  manner.\nAt   the   moment,   however,   the\nAllies and other nations have  $1,-\n100.000.000 in earmarked gold in the\nNew York   Federal  Reserve  Bank\nThe incoming shipments and fluctuation  in   the   earmarked  account\nfrom week to week show they are\nselling  it,   when  necessary,   tn   the\ni U. S. Treasury at W5 an ounce to\npay for purchases.\nj    If the United States should use\n] pressure   to  obtain   payment   other\ni than gnld, it would force the Allies\n! to utilize their other resources by:\ni     1  Sale \"f some or all of their estimated  $1000.000,000   in  securities,\nwith possible effects on Wall Street\n; prices.\n2. S-ile by Anglo-French interests\nof some or all of the $1,000,000,000\nshare they have in direct investment,\nreturning the properties to American ri'A'nership. British investments\nin Canada and Latin America also\nmight be sold to Americans for\ndollars\n3 Sale by Anglo-French interests\nnf some or all the oil. rubber, t;n\nand other raw materials producing\nproprrtiei which they own in the\nnear East, far East and Latin America\nOne helpful alternative would be\nMle to the United States of greater\namounts    nf    British    and    French\n| goods, no that woollens, whisky, per-\ni fume, win** and other specialty prod-\nI ucts could  be made  to  pay  for  at\n\u25a0 least some  of the  war  implements\n! required   lo   combat   the  Germans.\n! Concentration by U. S. purchasers\non tin. rubber and other non-com-\nprti'ivc  products  wnuld  lessen   the\nimpart   of   increased   imports   from\nthe   belligerent    countries   on    the\n1 American market.\nAlstad Fined $300\nFor Keeping Liquor\nPltadlng guilty before Magistrate\nWilliam Brown In City Police Court\nThursday morning to a charge of\nunlawfully keeping liquor for uie,\nEgil Alstad, Nelson taximan, was\nsentenced to pay a fine of $300 or\nin default to serve three months\nwith hard labor in the Provincial\nJail at.Nelson. A quantity of whisky,\nrum, gin, gin cocktail and beer was\nfound by City Police tn a raid on\nAlstad's premises, 630 Baker street,\nearly Sunday morning.\n)ukc of Devonshire Extends Message of\nWelcome to Newly-Arrived Newfoundlanders\nBy   EDWIN   JOHNSON\nCanadian  Prtii  Staff Writer\nISOMEWHFHF. IN BRITAIN. Feb\n(CP Cable) \u2014From a mobile rec-\nIrding unit on the dock-side of this\n(Test Coast port, the Duke of Dev-\nishire, Dnmt-nioni under-wcretary\n\u2022 addressed a message  \"f wel-\nto a  group of Newfoundland\ncial I its  who  have   Just   arrived\n|   England   to  do   work   <t  \"vital\national   Importance'\n| The aon of Canada's former gov-\ngeneral,   had   hoprd   to   ex-\nknd a personal greeting tn the men\nthe  oldest   colony   whn  crossed\n|     Atlantic as convoy c rr. pan:-ins\n1 Canada's third contingent\nI Tie   Dulce   was   prevented   from\nleetmg them when their boat was\nhverted tn another port a! the last\nfinutf  P.j.app\"i:.'rd  he drr.d<\"fl\n\u2022nd Ins message in  rec  rdr-d  form\nlot only to th   men but also to their\npuntrymen al home\n\"I am aorry irxleed it is Impon*\nI fnr me to meet you as I had\npped but on behalf of His Majes\n\" Government nf the United\nlln^diTn nnd Uie Secre'\u00abry f State\npr Dominion affairs < Anthony\nideni I send you t message of\nl-flcome and hegrty greeting\" the\nfuke Mid\n\"You will he working under new\nI strange condition! out vou will\namong f      ds wh1  will  a;*pir*\nlate   greitW   the   way    v.>u    have\nfmi to our  help  in    ur  hour  of\nJ\"I am net greeting yc-u is nn In*\nfvMuil  bul  \u00bb*.  the  represen'a-ttive\nI government which thank* vou\nthe way  yon have c\u00abme  I\" ii<\nI Never'!,''' \u00ab'     ild like lo add\nword of persn-nal greriing f r\npt over tt yetn ago ! xm or-\npying tren-fien in Ci IItpr.li i exl\nOF to  your  <plendid   Ni\u00bbwfoond-\npl-tl b a 11 r '       ,    \\Sjfe of U* Who    '.ere\n.   11   e\\rr   forget   thcue   men\n, or their helpfulness and kindness,\n1     \"Once   more,   Newfoundland   has\n\u25a0 comr t\u00bb .'' \u00bb help < f the Old Country We \u2022'. for you; we thank you;\nwe bid >   u hearty  welcome.\"\n19 Births, 9 Deaths,\n6 Marriages During\nJanuary in Nelson\n' Nineteen births, nine deaths and\n1 six marriage* in Nelsn were recorded at the Court Howe. Nelson, in\n1 January In \"he district 'here were\n! five birth<, three deaths arxi no\n; mai n.iges\nCreston Creamery\nPurchases Churn\n|    CRESTON   H   ('   - Directors of\nthe   (>\u25a0-*..-n    Valley   Co-Operative\n'Creamery   Association   were   fortvi-\n1 rial'- in harvesting a supply of 82\n1 tom of ne prior to the mud spell\nat   the   end   of   the   week    The   oh\n\u25a0 Jeetive v. as ]oO tons, hut it is hoped\nthe quantity   in  *to;k  will  be  sul-\n1 ficient f >r the first year of\n'npeMl.nns\nTho niBnagfnient announre the\n| purchase nf a rhurn of 800 pound*\nj capacity    They   hnvr   also   secured\n\u25a0 Ihe neressary pasteuniing plant.\nJ and some other  needed equipment\nExcavation for the concrete footings is completed nnd it is expected\ni the rarTrn'rrs wl\" hi* nt wnrk next\n| week, under the snpeivistPn nf W\nJ Criig. on 'he nectlon of the\nIbu.lding w house the huttermakinj\nplant\nI A big 'urnout nf dairymen and\n| thnge backing the creamery project i= expected when the annual\nI merdrg of the Assofia'ion is hrlil\n;Cnl Fieri I.is'er. D K Archibald\nC B Twigg. U A Rngtri and (' (\"\nFrench are 'he piestnt Board of\nMitiagement\nFrance Has 115,000\nTroops in East\nPARIS, Feb. 8 (AP).-Authorl*.ed\nFrench sources disclosed today that\nFranca- hss SftS.OOO troops concentrated in the neir East under the\ncommand ot General Maxlme Wey.\nI gand.\nThese sources said this figure\nI compared with a German estimate\nof 130,000 and a Russian of 400,000.\nWeygand, 72-year-old former\n'Chief of the French General Staff\nand Marshal Faxh's right hand in\nlater stages of the lut war, is in\nEgypt inspecting British and Egyptian defences. Lieut. Gen. Sir Archibald P. Wavell ls the British Commander in Chief of \"middle Eastern\"\nforces.\nPrevious French statements have\nmade it clear that should the war\nspread to the near' East Weygand\nwould command the Allied Forces.\nGeneral Weygand arrived at\nCairo yesterday by air from Syria,\nwhere most of his command la concentrated. He was accompanied by\nAdmiral Jean Esteva, Commander-\nin-Chief of the French Mediterranean fleet,\nThc French asserted their visit\nhad no other significance since the\noutbreak of war Egypt broke diplomatic relations with Germany and\nhu intensified training an army\nbegun three years ago with the aid\nof a British military mission.\nConfirmation France and Britain\nwere preparing a powerful army\nin the near East was given semiofficially in Paris lut Jan. 28, In\n! terming Ruuian \"guesses\" that 400,.\n000 men were concentrated In Syria\nunder Gen. Weygand \"manifestly\nexaggerations.\" a statement said:\n\"The Allies will have in the near\nEast at the necessary moment sufficient men to face any eventuality-\nFrench asserted the armv was\ndesigned to cope with any German\nI thrust Southeast Into the Balkans.\nI\nCuthbert and Oldham\nto Represent Board\nTrade on Fair Body\nGordon Cuthbert and S P. Oldham wore named Thursday by E\nA Mann, Nelson Board of Trade\nPreaident. tn represent ihe Board\non the Directorate nf the Nelson\nAgricultural and Industrial Association, now in process of reorganization The appointments were made\nin rcapon.se to a request for\nrcpreaentatives tn be named\n$2.20 Found Outside\nOil Company Office\nTwo dollin and V) centi in iil-\nver, believed hy City Police to be\npart of the $10 taken from the office of the She-*.! Oil Company of\nBr.ti.sh Columbii Ltd., last week.\nwa.s located hv Constable Jack\nWhitfield beneath a fence niUlde\nHie office d\"or early Thursday\nmorning Constable Whltii*ld found\nthe money about 5:10 A M.. while\non   his  rounds\nA total of |](1 In raih and $10\nin .stamp* was taken hv.' week\nwhen the Oil Comp\u00abny'i office wai\nentered\n\"Premier's Action\nInsult lo People\"\nEDMONTON, Feb. 8 (CP) .-Prime\nMinister Mackenzie King's \"unprecedented action ln summarily dismissing Parliament after a four-\nhour session,\" hu shocked the whole\nof Canada, N, B. James (S.C.-Aca-\ndia) declared in the Alberta Legislature today.\n\"At present it looks like an unwarranted act of dictatorship that\nout-Hitlers Hitler and bodes ill for\nthe future it his party is returned\nto power,\" said Mr. Jame* ln moving the reply to the throne speech.\nTo bring members, stenographers,\ncleriu and others from all parts of\nCanada to \"hear a speech that said\nnothing and then dismiss them ls\ntoo heinous an offence to go without explanation,\" the Member for\nAcadia charged.\n\"It is an Insult to the people,\" he\ncontinued. \"Ugly rumors of unpre-\nparedness, inefficiency, patronage\nand even worse are floating around\nand Mr. King would be wise to clear\nthe matter up by a rank statement\nif It is possible for him to do so.\"\nMr. James said the reuon given\nby the Prime Minister\u2014criticisms\nby Premier Hepburn of Ontario and\nCol. George Drew, Ontario Conservative leader\u2014wu \"too utterly\nchildish to be taken seriously.\"\nMr. James asserted Prime Minister\nMackenzie King had promised to\nanswer all criticisms when Parliament met but the criticisms ware\nnot answered when Parliament met\nand \"the whole attitude of the Government leaves a nuty tute in the\nmouth.\"\nThe member for Acadia said thc\nAlberta Government's record in the\nput five years wu assurance it\nwould go ahead with plana to introduce Social Credit.\nHe declared the \"root cause of\nthis war\" and of \"maniacs like totalitarian dictators\" ts the economic\nsystem and added the world never\nwould have peace until \"this stupid,\nInsane financial system is abolished\nand a simple Christian system takes\nIts place.\"\n\"Blue rufn, moral, spiritual and\nmaterial disintegration were predicted when the Social Credit Government came to power in 1935 but\nthe Government had improved\nhighways, educational methods,\nhealth policies and\" the Province's\ndebt had been reduced and finances\nrut on a sound foundation, Mr.\nJames added.\n'The farmer and home owner\nhave been given as much protection\nu we were allowed by Dominion\nlaw to give them,\" he continued,\n\"and are beginning to feel a measure of security,\"\nBut. Mr. James added, \"all thc\nbeneficial legislation that has been\npassed ... are but temporary measures to ease the almost unbearable\nburden from Ihe shoulders ol the\npeople until we can win our final\nobjective of the economic and financial freedom for which we are\nfighting.\"\nFLIER WINS TROPHY\nLONDON. Feb B K'Pl - lhe\nR.iyal Arr i Club's Bnljinula trophy\nfnr tiie moal merilous performance\nby n flier in ifllfl waa swarded todiy to 27 yr: .ild Alex Mentha*\nfor hla rrrord fligh! from Lnprlon\ntn faf* T'wn. South Africa, and\nreturn\nURCESCOVT. TO CONSIDER\nDOMINION MARKET\nLONDON. Feb. 8 (CP Cable) -\nLionel Andrewi, Preiident of the\nCanadian Chamber tt Commerce of\nGreat RritaUi. today urged United\nKingdom manufacturers to give.\nreal attention to the specif requirements of the Dominion market\n'\"Canadians have a definite desire\nto buy British,\" he aaid. It was an\nenr< uragtng sign that the Government had appointed a committee\nwhose responsibility would be to\nfurther the Interest* of the United\nKingdom export trade.\nRt. Hon R B Bennett, fnrrner\nPrime Minister of Canada, wn a\ngued of honor at the meeting.\nKING PLANS ADDRESS\nIN PRINCE ALBERT FEB. 28\nOTTAWA. Feb. R (CP) - Prime\nMinister Mackenzie King is considering plans lo address public meetings In Winnipeg Fe>b. 27 and in\nPrince Albert. Sask , his own constituency, Feb 2ft, It was learned\ntodny by the National Liberal Federation.\nSo far no plans have been announced for election campaign\nI meetings firth\/pr West than Prince\nAlbert.\nRECIPROCAL TRADE BILL\nRENEWAL APPROVED\nWASHINGTON, Feb, 8 (AP)-The\nWays and Means Committee today\napproved a bill renewing authority\nfor the United Statei administration to negotiate reciprocal trade\nagreements.\nMemhers said the vote to report\nthe bill favorably to the H<mse of\nRepresentatives was 14 to in, with\none member voting \"present\"\nNAKUSP RED CROSS TO\nSEND DELECATE TO COAST\nNAKUSP. B.C-An executive\nmeeting of lhe Red Croa.a Society\nwas hold In the Inland Hotel Monday. It was decided that the Hotel\nwould be u.wt for cutting out materials and work also would be\ndistributed fr'-m there eveiy Fridav A special meeiing is to be\nrailed to appoint a delegate to attend a convention in Vancouver.\n-NELSON  DAILY NIWI, NELSON.  B.C.-FRIDAY   MORNINQ. Fll. I.  1840.\nNo 20-Mile Hour\nZone Suggested\non Thrums Flat\nLow Speed Zones East\nand West of Nelson\nto Be Maintained\nProvincial Polka had no Intention of Instituting a JO-mile-par-\nhour speed limit along tht Thrums\nflat, since there waa clear vision\nand the roadbed was in good condition, but they did not approve of\nrelaxing speed regulations in the\n20-mlle-an-hour tones on the highways Immediately Weat and Eaat of\nNelson, stated Frank Putnam, M.\nL. A. for Nelaon-Creaton, in a letter received by the Nelaon Board\nof Trade at Ita luncheon Thursday,\nThe Board recently protested\nagainst a suggestion that a speed\nlimit might be recommended for\nthe Thrums flat. It alio requested\nthat the 20-mile speed limit from\nthe Nelson Terry to \"Qreen'i\nCorner\" Eastward on the Nelson-\nKaslo road ahould be raised, and\nthat faster speeds should be permitted ln the 20-mlle-an-hour zone\nimmediately West of the City on\nthe Nelson-TraTl road.\nMr. Putnam's letter atated the Police believed the 20-mile zones were\nadvisable because of the heavy\ntraffic within them and the large\nnumber of pedestrians on the roada,\nIncluding mother! with baby carriages. The zones were too short to\nmake any material difference to the\ntravelling public, it was suggested.\nThe letter added that those who\nwere maintaining a fair speed wero\nnot being prosecuted.\n\"Premier Afraid\nof Something\"\nLADYSMITH, B.C., Feb. 8 (CP)-\nFrank S. Cunliffe, Conservative\ncandidate for Nanaimo riding in tha\nforthcoming general election,\nlaunched his party's campaign in\nBritish Columbia last night with a\nspeech criticizing both Liberals and\nCo-Operative Commonwealth Federation for their part in Canada's\nwar effort.\nHe asserted the election should\nbe fought on the basis of the war\neffort, adding that he supported\nfuily the plan of the national Conservative leader, Dr. R. J. Manion.\nto form a national government of\nthe best brains in Canada irrespective of party affiliation.\nMr. Cunliffe declared this plan\nmeant the sinking of party interests\nfor the general welfare of the country during a period of national emergency.\nHe accused Prime Minister Mackenzie King of being \"afraid of\nsomething\" In dissolving parliament\nsuddenly without giving the opposition a chance to ask questions.\nMr. Cunliffe went on to criticize\nvarious provisions of Government\ncontracts let in recent years, charging many of the contracts had been\nlet on a cost plus basis.\nAnother serious feature of the exclusive rights for the manufacture\nof particular types in Canada for a\nperiod of seven years, which probably would exceed the period of\nthe war, Mr. Cunliffe said.\nThis meant, he continued, that If\ncontractors were not making deliveries as fast as expected the Government was powerless to let the\nmanufacture of more planes to other contractors without breaking\ncontracts already made,\nHe asserted there was one in-\nrtance of contracts having been let\nin 1937 for a type of airplane now\nconsidered obsolete, although the\ncontract calls for deliveries next\nyear.\nADDITIONAL MAIN\nLAKE FERRY FOR\nTOURISTS IS URGED\nResolution of Gray Creek-Koote-\nnay Bay-Crawford Bay district residents urging the Provincial Department of Public Works to provide\nan additional trip dally by the main\nlake ferry during the height of the\ntourist season; to improve the road\nfrom Yahk to Gray Creek and to\nImprove the road from Gray Creek\nto Crawford Bay with a view ultimately to providing a shorter ferry\nrun, was indorsed by the Nelson\nBoard of Trade at its luncheon\nmeeting at the Hume Thursday.\nThe resolution was presented to\na meeting of District Boards of\nTrade delegates Wednesday afternoon, but lackiryt Instructions, Nelson delegates could not deal with it\nthen, explained John Learmonth.\nOne West Kootenay\nStudent Is Taking\nRural Course U.B.C.\nOne West Kootenay student Is attending the special eight weeks\ncourse in rural problems offered\nby the University of British Columbia. W. G. C. Lanskail reported\nto the Nelson Board of Trade at its\nluncheon at the Hume Thursday.\nHe was Daniel Johnston, who was\nnominated through the Boswell\nFarmers' Institute.\nFour other \"prospects\" failed lo\nfill In their application rXana.\nThe Board was recently requested\nby the University to nominate candidates for the course and consulted\nthe High and Junior High Schools\nat Nelson. Women's Institutes and\nFarmers' Institutes, Mr. Lanskail\nstated.\n\u25a0\"At*!   IIVIN\nFREEMAN \u00ab& LEE\\y\neagle block    FURNITURE COMPANY      PH0NE )15\nBAKER IT. \"Th. Home of Furniture StyUi\" NELSON, B. C.\nFEBRUARY SALE\nBUY NOW AND SAVE\nBuilt by\nBrtrfHIfm\nSAVI\n$7-50\nBETTER GRADE SLEEPING UNIT\nInner Spring Mattress filled with deep resilient springs, covered with thick\nlayers of cotton felt. Has fine quality ticking, t mattress made to give you\ncomfort and years of service.\nBox spring base, made with deep coil spring set in frame, so that there is\nno sway or sag. You will only find this style of spring used where better\nbedding is found.\nMattress, regular $22.50\nBox Spring, regular ..'.    17.50   Ae*^,t|m    ml ana.\nUnit Complete     40.00   V ^^a**\"\nSALE PRICE          mW*9*\nYour Dollars Buy More at Our Store\nimm\nPress Reports on\nNew Nazi Planes\nLONDON, Feb. 8 (CP). \u2014 The\nNews Chronicle's aviation correspondent today discussed details of\n[wo new German fighting planes\ncapable ot 400 and 380 miles an\nhour respectively.\nOne u the Focke Wulf FW-NM,\na single seater attack: ship in which\nthe pilot sits forward of the engine.\nThe airscrew pushes instead of pulling the machine through the air.\nThe tallplane and rudders are carried on two tapering booms extending back from the wings. It has a\nreputed top speed of about 400 m.p.h.\nThe second plane is the Dornier\nDO-26, with twin engines. It follows the general lines of the DO-17,\nthe bomber-reconnaissance type\nwhich has proved such easy prey to\nthe British eight-gun fighters, the\ncorrespondent said.\nNazis Continue\nHorror in Poland\nMANCHESTER, En\u00a3, 7eb. 8 (CP)\n\u2014The Manchester Guardian, declaring \"there Ls not the slightest\nsign that the terror Ls coming to an\nend.\" today published new report^\nof Nazi atrocities in Poland.\"\n\"All indications are.\" it declared,\n\"that the Gwma\u2122 mean to stamp\nout all Polish civil, cultural, and\nreligious life.\n\"At Burxo, near Gdynia, unknown\nparsons bro-ke a window In the police station. The Germans arrested\n50 Polish schoolboys and ordered\ntheir parents to flog them publicly.\nTen of tbe boy\u00ab were shot and the\nbodies expo-sad for IK hours.\n\"At Inowroclaw a number of Gar-\nman officers who had been drinking heflvily entered the prison and\nshot 70 PolL\u00bbh prisoners.\n\"There are thousands of Polish\nmen and women in concentration\ncamps, where they endurt fearful\ntreatment. It Ls estimated that\nthere are 3000 in the camp at Gdynia, 5000 at Torun and 3000 at Por-\nnan. Many Poles have been sent to\nc-c-ncentration camps in Germany.\n\"Deportations are claiming eveji\nmore victims than executions. Tens\nof thousands of families have had\nto leave their native towns and villages and moved into what the Germans regard u 'Poland proper.'\n\".Some observer-s put the total of\npersons who have perished in Poland at several millions but It is\nimpossible to arrive at any sure\nestimate.\"\nSoutheastern Neutrals Prepare lo\nHave Forces Strengthened by Spring\n# ,\t\nRumania Requisitions\nScrap Iron and Cotton\nfor Munitions\nMUSICAL  PROGRAM\nCIVEN AT CRKTON\nLADIES AID \"AT HOME\"\nCRESTON. B. C. - Ladles of the\nTrinity United Church congregation were out In large numbers\nTueiday afternoon at the Church\nHall for an \"At Home'' tendered\nthem by Trinity Ladles' Aid Society,\nfollowing a meeting of the Aid,\nwhich was In charge of the President, Mrs. Wightmann. who, with\nMrs. Armitage. received the guests.\nThe afternoon was featured by a\nprogram mostly of musical numbers. In charge of Mrs. W. S. Weir\nVocal solo*, were contributed hy\nMrs R. Ci fenson and Mrs A\nDodd and there were duets by Mrs\nW, H. Knlthammer and Mrs. Ten-\nson, and Utile Misses Roope.\nMrs. W. Fraser directed a musical contest at which the prim\nwent to Mrs. H. A. Dodd and Mrs.\nP. R. Truscott A monologue was\ncontributed by Mrs. McCallum.\nRefreshments were served at tha\nrl\"*e nf proceedings\nTo assure the maaimum of efficiency in Red Cross work both\nTrlnitv and the Presbyterian Lad\nies' Aids have shifted their regular\nmeetings tn the first Tiimday in\neach month, which la also thc\nmealing day for the Anglic\u00bbn\nW. M   S \u2022\nBy   DANIEL   DE  LUCE\nBUDAPEST. Feb. 8 (AP) \u2014Tbe\nlittle neutrals of Southeastern Europe, fearful of a springtime crisis\nimperilling their peace, will have\ntheir conscript armies on a war\nfooting by mtd-March,\nA survey showed today that Defence measures repeating the military concentration of 1836 are ready\nto be put into force in Rumania,\nYugoslavia, Hungary, Turkey, Bulgaria  and  Greece.\nSome of theae small powers already have announced the calling\nof certain classes for 'additional\ntraining\" but none permits use of\nthe word mobilisation to describe\nits plans.\nRumania, holding about 700.000 to\n1.000.000 men under arms through\nthe Winter, will increase the total\nduring Spring exercises\nA 900-mile defence lnie ii being built along Rumania's frontiers\nmost open to Invasion and King\nCarol's army chiefs today began\nrequisitioning scrap iron and cotton for munitions factories. Private\nstocks of more than W0 pounds is\nto be turned over to the Government under penalty of a heavy fine.\nHungary also has made scrap\niron a state monopoly\nThe defence efforts of Rumania,\nat the moment the most exposed\nof the southeastern states, will decrease her productive capacity for\nan indefinite period, British and\nFrench observers believe, and adversely affect deliveries of oil and\nother .supplies to Germany.\nThe abeence from farms of tum-\ndreds of thousands of peasants called for military service already nas\ncut down Winter wheat planting\nRumania, like her ro-member.a of\nthe Balkan Entente-Yugoslavia.\nGreece and Turkey\u2014is making her\neffort to stay out of war independently as a result of the entente conferees' decision last week against\ncollective measures.\nYugoslavia is expected to have\nan army of about Sofl.OOO by Spring\n\u2014more than double her normal\nstrength\nRegent Prince Paul has been asked to take full command to Iron\nout confusion such u marked Yugoslav mobiliiation last year when\nthe army supply system broke up\nand, it is acknowledged, a Croat\nregiment  mutinied. ,\nTurkev. officially \"not neutral\nbut non-belligerent,' has kept 2O0.-\nflOO aoldiers on her frontier with\nSoviet Russia despite an urgent\nneed f^r manpower fnr reconstruction nf the large areas recently devastated by  flood and a-aarthrjvmkr\nGreat Britain and Franre have\nprepared to coordinate tho Turkish army with the strategy of\nGeneral Maxime Wpygand if the\nwea apread.a tn the Near Eait\nGeneral Weygand, Commander-\nin-chief ''t French fnrcea in the\nEastern Mediterranean arrived in\nCairo yesterday to observe Egyptian rr.'anoeuvrea He conferred in\nAnkara two wea-ks ago on Turkish\ncollaboration  with  the   Allies.\nIn Hungary, latest conscript clan\nei will report to eight corp-. a-eaa\nInto which the army recently divided the rntinrv-\nBolh Hungary and Bulgaria constantly are training groups of men\nwho rerrhed maturity during the\nyeara of enforced demilianration\nunder terma of  1P19 pence treaties\nLittle has been made known of\nthe Greek army's Spring manoeuvres bul the recall <>f reserve officers nf certain claiaae* has been\nannounced\nThroughout   the   Southeast,   civil\nprotective measures are accom-\npanying the military safeguards. In\nHungarian cities, for instance, no\nbuilding permits are lasued unlets\nplans for structures provida for\nair raid shelter.\nNazis Announce\nShipping Losses\nBERLIN, Feb. 8 (AP)\u2014 Otrmanj\nacknowledged today the lot* of\n236.957 tons of shipping since the\nbeginning of the war and clabned\nthe Allies and neutrals had loat\n1,483.431 tons.\nGermany's losaet were given a$\n42 ships and Allied and neutral\nlosses as 409 ships sunk up to the\nend of January.\nIn London an admiralty tabula-\n.ion was issued announcing that\n274 allied and neutral merchantmen\nwere loft up to midnight Feb. 4. A\nBritLah spokesman commented:\n\"These are the correct figures.\nThe othen (the Germans) are not\"\n(The Admiralty tabulation gave\nthe total Allied and neutral tonnage lost as 925,044. broken down\nthus: British. 143 ships. 505,998 tow,\nAllied (French and Poliah) 14 shtoa,\n76.1189 tons, neutral. 117 shlpa, Ml,-\n357\nThe German statement put Germany's louee at 13,198 tons of shipping confiscated at the outbreak of\nwar in Allied ports; 83.238 tons\nseired and 141,525 tons acuttleal to\navoid  seizure.\nNijinsky Returns\nAfter 20 Yrs. Silenea\nPALM SPRINGS, Calif.. Feb. I\n(APi - Once the greateart of the\ngreat Russian ballet dancers, Vaslav\nNijinsky, who has been confined for\n20 years in a Switzerland institution\nfor the insane, now is \"practically\nwell.\" .<\u2022>\u2022> his close friend, (ol\nHuruk, Ru.aaian-born ballet producer\n\"We hope to brlruj Nijinsky tattle United States \" said Hurok, irtao\nis direrling the Ballet Russe here.\nHurok said he had been in touch\nwith Nijin.aky's wife, Romola, up\nuntil 30 dayi ago, but was unaware\nthe once famous ballet dancer had\nto leave Switzerland today\n\"Nijinsky. despite hli long Illness,\nwill be able to take up the work of\nthe ballet in this country, that Is,\ncertain pha.aej of It,\" aaid Hurok.\n\"Doctor., here will be able to administer the insulin shock treatment\nnecessary to clear up his mind. He\nhaa made rapid prngreaa In recent\nyears, and the void in his mind has\nbeen bridged by his wife, who has\nbeen acquainting him with world\nwide developments of recent years\"\nNilmskv is now ,V) years old. Hii\nmind failed him in 1919 a: the height\nof a triumphal tour of America.\nU   B. C. UNDERGRADUATES\nAPPROVE  SUSPENSION\nVANCOUVER.   Feb    8   (CP)   -\nThe Students' Council of University\nof British Columbia today had the\nsupport nf the Undergraduate Body\n(.* ita auspensions of Canadian\nStudents' Awembly Activities al\n(he University\nCanadian Manufacturers\nAitor to Meet May 29-11\nTORONTO, Fe!> 8 (CP)- Dr. R.\nTurnbull of Halifax. Preiident of\nIhe Canadian Manufacturer*' A\u00bb-\naoriati r announced t\"day Ihe Wlh\nannual ireeimg ct the Association will he held al Winnipeg May\n28-31 Inclusive.\n mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm\nmmmmmmmmmmmm\u2014\n\u2014\u2014^\u2014\u2014\n\t\n\u2014,\u2014I\n'ACJE   E\nPAdB   EIGHT\n-NELSON  DAILV  NEWS, NELSON.  B.C.-FRIDAY   MORNINQ,  FEB. I,  1940.\nOne City Valuation Is (hanged\nCourt of Revision; 30 Appeals\nC. P. R. Has Appeal\nfor    Increase;\nInspect Rest\nA reduction of $400 In the assessment of property within the Nelson\ncity limits was made by the Civic\nCourt of Revision Thursday morning while a reduction of $6600 in\nthe School District to conform with\nProvincial assessment was made. Of\n30 appeals, 17 were decided, 10 held\n\u25a0 over for viewing of the properties\nconcerned by the Court' and three\nruled out because they were filed\nafter the statutory date.\nOnly three appellants appeared\nbefore  the Court.\nThe Canadian Pacific Railway\nsuggested that a higher assessment\nwould be in order in one case, asking for a $52 increase in assessment,\nbut on another properly sought a\n$5168 reduction.\nDISPOSITIONS MADE\nIn the only adjustment within the\ncity, granted at this session, the\nimprovement assessment of $2200 on\nLots 1C, 17 and half of 18, Mill Street,\nthe property Mrs. Margaret L.\nClements, was reduced $400 to $1800.\nEight assessments on properties\noutside the City were reduced to\nconform with assessments by J. A.\nStewart, Provincial Assessor; while\non the request of the City Office,\none property was added to the\nassessment roll; an $800 improvement assessment, incorrectly placed,\n-was transferred to another property,\nand four changes were recorded in\nthe assessed owners, where properly had been transferred.\nIn two cases valuations on properties by the City Assessor that\n\u25a0were appealed, were confirmed by\nthe Court.\nJViO  CONFIRMED\nThose appellants whose property\nassessment as established by the\nCitv Assessor was confirmed were:\nMrs. E. C. McBride, for Lot 5,\nStanley Street, who claimed the\ntotal valuation of $1190 loo high.\nC. Lipinski for Lots 11, 12, 13 and\n34, Observatory Street, who claimed the total valuation of $2500 too\nhigh,\nTO BE INSPECTED\nIt was decided to defer action on\nthe following appeals, so as to inspect the properties affected:\nR. H. Provis, for Lots 21 and 22.\nLatimer Street, claiming $1260 valuation of land and improvements;\nMrs. A. E. Winlaw, for Lots 13, 14.\n15. 16 and 17, Carbonate Street, land\nvaluation S1B00;\nRoman Catholic Bishop of Nelson and Congregation of the Most\nHoly Redeemer for land and improvements on Lots 3, 4, 5, and 6,\nFourth Street, claiming exemption\nfor a portion of the property, used\nas a Chapel.\nLawrence and Margaret Annie\nExton for Lou 23 and 24, Carbonate Street, valuation $3350 land and\nimprovements;\nJ. E. Annable for Lois 2 and 3.\nSixth Street, valuation $2500 for\nimprovements, claimed to be $6ou\nor S700 too high\nCmadian Pacific Railway for a\nst-.'t.on of main line track, claim-\nn.it tlie assessment should be for\n2:1 miles of track or $11668, in-\ns' ..il of for 2.20 miles of track oi\n$1! 616.\nCanadian Pacific Railway for\nbunch line track, claiming the\nassessment should be $26 227 for 8 07\nmiles of track, instead of $31,395 for\ny.C6 miles of track.\nK. A. Johnson and II. Johnson of\nYmir for I\/its 10. II and 12. Union\nS ! r e e t, improvement assessment\nSKi'i;\nH. Thorpe for two lots on Railway Street improvement assessment,  $4000;\nWilliam A. Triggs for the Congregation of the Church of the Re\nd.\nuary 29, the deadline tor them to be\nin the hands of the City Assessor,\nwere not dealt with by the Court\nThey were from J. A. Craig for Mrs\nTheresa Craig, 818 Mill Street;\nPeter Nahlrney, 104 High Street,\nboth of, whom appeared before the\nCourt; and Mrs. Matilda McCaslin.\nLots 1 and 2, Second Street.\nMayor N. C. Stibbs was appointed\nChairman, and Acting City Clerk\nFred L. Irwin, Secretary of the\nCourt.\nTrail Assessment\nRoll Is Reduced\nby Total of $8950\nReductions Granted\non 16 Appeals to\nCourt Revision\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 8-The tolal\nreduction in improvements granted\nby the City Council sitting as a\ncourt of revision on the assessment\nroll at the City Hall Thursday flight\namounted to $8950, reductions being\ngranted on 16 appeals.\nOn recommendation of J. P\nCoates, Assessor, the assessment of\nthe Columbia Apartments, Tamarac Avenue, was reduced from $49,-\n000 to $45,600.\nOther reductions were: J. R\nWoods, 1648 Second Avenue. $1700\nto $4500; Jnhan Anderson. 2103 Daniel Street, $2800 to $2500; Mrs. Frances Teahan, 1269 Cedar Avenue,\ntwo assessments, $1600 to $1000 and\n$150 to $50; F. R. Freeman, 1468\nSecond Avenue, $2200 to $2050; A.\nGuglielmin, 275 Dockerill Slroe>,\n$2500 to $2000; W. E. Page. 1693\nBailey Street. $2800 to $2700; Frank\nQuaglia. f08 Glover Road, $3000 to\n$2800; Edmund Besler, 1971 Columbia Avenue, $1000 to $700; Mr.s.\nMargaret C. Martin, 1*308 Second\nAvenue, $3000 to $2500; G. Pasin,\n948 Glover Road. $2200 to $2100;\nEnrico Bern*. 194 Re.ssland Avenue.\nM200 to $4000; W. A. Curran, 135-5\nBirch Avenue, $320(1 to $2900.\nReadjustment in the assessment\non the property of W. Dembicki.\n1470 Third Avenue, was from $2500\nlo $500 as tiie hou.se? was not completed as anticipated by the assessor.\nJunior Chamber of\nCommerce Applauds\nWork on Playground\nThat the K. P.-D. O. K. K. Playground Association was doing a\nfine'job of making a playground on\nthe former skating rink site, Hall\nMines Road, and that it should be\ncongratulated on it was a resolution passed by the Nelson Junior\nChamber of Commerce Thursday\nnight.\nCurling Sweepings\nIht'\nPresbyterial Has\nSplendid Reports;\nElects Delegates\nMrs. Harold Wilson of Fernie was\nelected delegate of the Kootenay\nPresbyterial of the United Women's\nMissionary Society to the British\nColumbia Branch Conference to be\nheld later at Vancouver, at a\nmeeting of the sub-executive at the\nhome of Mrs. J. A. Donnell last\nSaturday. Mrs. David Maloney,\nPresident of the Kootenay Presbyterial, will also attend the conference, with Mrs. Foster Hilliard, of\nNelson acting as alternate if necessary.\nThe Presbyterial accepted the in-\nviation of Mrs. D. Fortealh and\nMrs. W. C. McKenzie of Trail to\nhold the 1941 session at the Smeller\nCily.\nEXECUTIVE CHANGES\nThe resignations of Mrs. T. E.\nHigginbotham cf Nelson and Mrs.\nJ. H. Blumenauer of Cranbrook\nwere regretfully accepted, both\nladies having left the district. Mrs.\nHarold Emery of Nelson was elected Second-Vice-President to succeed Mrs. Higginbotham, and Mrs.\nJ. H. Clerihue ot East Trail will\nreplace Mrs. Blumenauer on the\nexecutive. Mrs. G. C. Cobb of South\nSlocan resigned as Corresponding\nSecretary on account of ill health,\nbut was requested to carry on for\nthis year at least.\nSplendid reports were received\nfrom all departments of the Presbyterial over the previous year,\nCranbrook had 30 members, Creston 15, Fernie 15, Nebon 61, Trail\n14. Rossland 23 and Nakusp 19.\nMrs. Forteath, Treasurer, reported\nthat thc Presbyterial had taken in\na total of $1397 during the yea:\ncomprising receipts from the various member W. M. S Societies at\nCranbrook. Creston, Fernie, Grand\nForks. Nakusp, Nelson, Rossland\nnnd Trail, Mission Bands and C. (\nI.  T. groups.\nMUCH  VISITATION\nMrs. J. R. McLennan's Community Friendship report showed that\n963 visits were made to homes and\n1348 to hospitals. Mrs. Peter Gordon of Fernie in her report showed\nResults   of   Thursday\ngames in the U. D. L. Competition j J1^', \"\\hV'Associate \"Helpers'\" had\nin Curling Club follow: I rajscd g to,a, of $123   ^^ were\n85    Associated    Helpers    in    the\nof lhe Nelso:\nR. E Horton 7. A. B. Gilker 6\nT. R. Wilson 12, Alfred Jeffs 9; IV.\nT. Fotheringham 8. II. M. Whimster\n7; J. II. Ling 9; C. E. Jorgenson 9,\nG. S. Godfrey 7. J. H. Allen 7, R\nI). Wallace 13, William Brown 10;\nH. W Robertson. 9. J. G. Bennett 8;\nJ. P. McLaren 12, A. G. Harvey 11:\nS. P. Bos'ock 8. Aid Rov Sharp 6;\nJ. J. McEwen 6. J. A. Smith 5.\nRadu\nchedulcd. Reeve Harper, Chair\nman of the Radio and Public Speaking Committee of the Chamber, reported Thursday night. A broadcast dealing w.th vehicular driving, in which Constable .R, A. Lees\nof the Provincial Police Highway\nPatrol occupied a key position, was\nner,  claiming $2000 assessment I given shortly before the meeting.\nKootenay\nIn 1MB, Cranbrook and Nelson\nSt. Paul's Mission Bands qualified\nfor Standard of Recognition certificates requiring prayer at every\nmeeting for peace, temperance and\nmissionaries, use of the study book,\nhandwork, games and band members taking part in worship services. They again qualified last\nyear, and have been awarded green\nstars to be placed on their certificates. The Creston Mission Band\nreported that it was striving for a\ncertificate this year.\nNEW MISSION BAND\nAlso contained in Mrs H. D. Wil-\nNelson   were   continuing   as I son's  report of the   mission bands\nDriving Subject of\nRadio Broadcast by\nthe Junior Chamber\nBroadcasts of the  Nelson Junior\nChamber of Commerce over CKLN\nfor  the  Fairview  Parish  Hall   too\nhigh.\nADJUST TRANSFERS\nFour appeals of thc City Office\nto have the assessed owners, where\nownership of properties had been\ntransferred, changed, were granted\nTiie requests were for the change ol\nassessment on Lots il, in, 11 and 12.\nUnion Street from John .Mack to\nAndrew Kornelius Olsen; on Lots\n13 and 11 and half of 15. Union\nStreet from Andrew O. Noise, to\nJohn Mack; on I\/it 16, Fall Street\nfrom Paul Drozda to Rudolph Olson; and on Lots 29 and 30. Anderson Sired, from Mis, J.ir.e Weaver\nto Mrs. Jane  Leaver.\nTwo other requests of the. C:ty\nOffice gran'ed resulted in the insertion of Nelson Morberg rn the\nassessment roll fir Tare.] A of\nBlock 2l'v Ymir Road, valued at\nJll'al: and the transfer of an $!!<\u00bb>\nimprovement assessment froni L t\n32, Douglas Ron.I to U.t 33. Douglas Road.\nSCHOOL  SECTION\nADJUSTMENTS\nThose wilh properly oul.ajde nf\ntl.\" City, whose assessment was lowered lo conform with that of ihe.\nPiov.iicial   A.s.osor.   wrre\nMr;. Emily Grei'nwav, Lis 3 and\nhair  of   l,.o   2.   Hoover   Strrel.   of\nwhich th..' C.'v improvement valua-   b\nt  n   . f   51710   was   re.lured   \u2022\u201e   the I si;\nProvincial assessment of $1100 . pr.\nHours' and Afke DeJong. for Lots   r 1\n262  nud  266.  Fall  Street, on   which   *'\"\nthe   Cily   land  assessment   of  J.175.1 ; \u25a0\"'\nwas  reduced  to lhc Provincial  asses .m.-nt   of  $;ir>no.\n(Irorrc. .-ud H..--<\u2022 Hornett for Ld\n1. Sell.',- Street, on which Ihe im-\nI \u25a0   '. em.nt  assessment  of  $900   was\nA   motion   of   congratulation\nthe committee and to Stanley Penny\nwas recorded.\nSpring and Fall\nAssizes Announced\nVICTORIA. Frb 8 ICP' -Spring\nand Fall Ass.res at Provincial\n(.'.'litres were announced by the At-\n: irney-Genera'.'s Department : iday\nafter cabinet action. Dates included\nlhe f llnwir.g:\nNew Wcs'minstfr, Mav 8 and\nNovember 12. Prince Rupert, May\nH an 1 September 25; Prince ttc~ rge\nMay 13 and Oct tier 2, Williams\nLike. Mav 16, oii'.v. Nelson. May\n6 art October R Cranbrook May\n9 and (art .'ner 14: Fern e. May 13\naid (V'nbrr in, Kaml.ops, Mav 27\na-;l N ivember 4. Revelstoke, June\nin and N .voir, hrr 11. a\".d Vernon\nJune 3  and   N vember  12\nFarewell Given to\nNakusp K.P. Member\nBC\u2014The  Kr. gh'.e \"t\nNakusp   Lodge   li  cored\nrrllor ('.T'oia: .ler. Frank\na farewell parts' in thc\nNAKl'SI\nPythia\ntheir (\nllorr.\"\nKing\nI;\nof   Pstli a.s   Hall   prior  to\nleasung  Niiku. p\n\"' e evening was .aper.t  i'i  cards\nv'.il'g    a:   1    g ores     A    del c;  us\n>ticr   wis   reive,',   afler   which   a\nsen'.!':\"\"    of   a   ph. '\"k'rapn   in\nrs .-f Nakusp was given   In pre-\neru'U'.g    thr    gift    Mr     Jones    sad\nhow  serv s..rrv  they  were to l.aae\nso valuable a Hr tl.er of ihe lodge\nII   W   llenidne. F   Mum snd C\nII   Hstnlvii  flbaai  spoke\nMrNabh,\n11. id.\n:  Ire\n.:   Ki\nland    .issessu-e\nred   lo   lhe   I'm\nI SHS1 and  'hi\nf T\nparrel\nwinch\nrf   J150\nal n \u25a0\nuprose-\nr'rurk\ns'asvn   f\nIIo.h!   ,\n\u2022d\n111 .\nk 260. Sll-\ni which the (Vv\nf $l'e\u00abl and m-\nuncut of H'MLI\nI',.- Provincial\nmen! of $7.Vt and Pro\nlovetnent.s assessment ol\nSAFETY COMMITTEE\nOF JUNIOR CHAMBER\nWILL STUDY BYLAW\nPublic Saff'y (' '.r.m.'.cr r*f the\nNrhon Junior ChAmber \"f Commerce wa*. awa'ting receipt of copies < f the i'.'v Traffic Bylaw m\nni !\u2022\u25a0, \u25a0 \u25a0 *.' irlv \u25a0' and pirpare a re*\np.',,:. (i'T-b.-i William*. Chairman.\nt ild tho Chamber at ...\u00bb tr.rrii.ig a,\nIhr   Mnmr  Tl 'ir-u.-iv\nQUESTION OF CHANNEL\nTUNNEL UNANSWERED\nwas an interesting review of the\nwork of the Kimberley band. In\nNelson at Trinity Churrh. a new\nband named \"Carol\" has been formed under ihe leadership of Mri, J.\nA. Donnell. lis membership has\ndoubled already in one month of\noperation. The band was named\nafter its organizer, Miss Mabel Carroll, M:s.s Carroll, Secretary for\nYounger Group.*! for the Dominion\nBoard of the W M.S.. has now organized a Canadian Girls in Training Ki-oup ;it Kas*. Trail.\nOther rcpor.5 were received from\nMrs. Frank Maidment of Cranbrook\nregard in g Chrjt.an Stewardship,\nMri. c; A, Burton regarding Library\nand Literature, and Mrs, Donnell\nregarding Press  Work.\nRev. J A Donnell, Pastor of\nTrinity, was in rharge of the devotional period. He said that this was\nnot the firit time that the world\nh,(d fa'-cd rnt.cal times, and reminded his LsVners that \"the Word\nof Cv'ti h.u remained, more powerful than all the guru in the world.\"\nQuo'.:r.g from ihe Scr.ptures he\nurgc-d ::i<' Presbyterial to \"proclaim\nthe word ef ihe Lord, for it is\nstronger thin swords; it can accomplish   greater   things.\"\nAttending We Presbvterial were\nMrs I) W. Forteath and Mrs W C\nMcKenzie nf Trail. Mr* David Moloney. Mrs Faster Milliard, Mrs\n.Limes Armstrong, Mrs .1 It. Mc-\nUmnan and Mrs J A Donnell nf\nNoLsor.. and Mrs G C. Cobb ot\nSouth Slocan. Luncheon and tea\nwai served at .Mrs. Donnel.'s residence.\nWILLIAMS AND PENNEY\nTO REPRESENT JUNIOR\nCHAMBER,   FAIR   BOARD\nCordon Willums and Stanley\nPrnne.ee were ::ame*d Thursday night\nby Walter A Hot.aon. Junior Cham-\nhrr of Commerce- Prraidrnl. lo top.\nrreem! the Clumber in the rtorajan-\ni,-ati.in of the Nelaon Agricultural\nand  Io-biatrial  AMexuition.\nCASTLECAR LADIES TO\nHAVE VALENTINE TEA\nCASTI.K1AR, II C-Thr Ud:es\nof lhe foiled Church met at lhe\nhome of Mrs   W   Houton   Mra   11\nHud lies!.ui, 1're.de:,'. iva.a I'i the\nchair, and 12 members vaere pre,.,-:,:\nArrang;rrnr:,ts wore made f ,r t.\nVale:'uie tea >nd aalr ,,f randy to\nbe held \u00ab! tiie home ,.f Mis  II John-\nAt the rlivaf of ihe mcet.ng re-\nfreashmetnts were serve I hy Ihe hostess.\n;k i a. for Sub 1\nit   N irihern   It.i,\nf,:r   M,le   ard\n-it\nIt   ll   (In\n.uv Ib  1.1\n f S.ii\"\nir :al \u25a0 ,i!\nMi. h.u\n. d S'-.o i\n. o of an\ned'l.'.'d   I  '\n'   aiea**!\nTl.ire ,;\nf Silo\nrial :,'\u25a0\nIV, s  (,\nI LONDON'. Fe\ni question of Hn:\na poalavsr ['1 ']cct lo construct a\nt-ane-chftrne] tunnrl between Hr,:\nam and France wa.e left unan.su ercd\n, ::: ihe H .use of Commons '..day\nhv Prime M ; atpr Chamberla.n.\nI A member, referrna- to a ajieerh\nin *' li lhe French public works\n\u25a0I'i'l's'ers aa.d lhe projevl |'r hablv\nwould he one of 'he All ea first\nSer p a'vaar u-.ler'a's ngs, ass.' 1 w'lelh- j\ntvsalua .r Hnli.ah cooperation had hero\n1 \"'- o aa   pro-i. <e 1\nlaliiat.-ui       \u25a0 N,   x.u-jure   of   Mr \u2022 i'i   r>-per.\n| a' \"n   oi   'his   rr.',M-.''   lias  been   g.y.\niter Jan-  i;.' tee Pi ine Minister replied       I\n1. above\nav   tiacls\nAnderson\n.- Cii> Land Ao\nwaa ledlicrd to\nsoi'.r'i! ot $r,.l!l\n111 .k 272. Ceiiie-\ni Ihe (' 'v valua\nI'll.' I In Ihe Pro\nI S.'IOO\nlilt\n\u00bb KT>      Th*1 FRUITVALE AID TO\npar tic: rwt Inn    \"\nMAKE UP QUILT\nrnriTVAi f. n c, -  Mr, a\nR HeaVaiirn entertained niemoera of\nS' Pauls Coiled Church U.liea\nAd  \u00ab1  h.r home   T'.selve meanbera\nid\nTh.\n1''.\nrlml.   Mr.    W    Vriicn   wai   in\ntie\ni \"nr\n11\nwa.i  drridrd   tn   |i   Id   '* \u00bb   mrft-\nl\"t\nq   m -nth.   \u25a0\u25a0r.f   f.T   Rod   Cro-ii\ntea\nn(    M.s'r;;al   for   blrKki   f ,r   a\ni;-\n!   f>'   1\"*  madf   wm   g vrn  nu!   A\n\u2022v  v*  w a*  -rr\\r 1  a'  :l*.p rl >**\nof\n'*r    uirr''*!**'   by    We    h'Mtf\u00ab|,   t|-\n.a|rd   by   Mis    \u00bb'.  ilal.fax\nNelson Shuttlers\nStart Club Play,\nIS Championships\nThe Third Annual Nelson Badminton Club championships got off\nto an impressive start on the opening night's play Thursday at the\nCivic Centre when games of the\nfirst rounds of all 15 competitions\nwere played and in some cases\nplay proceeded well into the second\nround.\nThere are two adult sections, in\neach of which there are men's and\nladies' singles, men's and ladies'\ndoubles and mixed doubles. There\nare like even's in the junior section. Play will continue Saturday\nand will wind up on Sunday.\nThere was a good deal of close,\nexciting play, but the Jesuits ran\nfairly true to form, there being few\nmatches following the nature of\nupsets.\nDetailed results of the opening\nday's play:\n\"A\" MEN'S 8INGLE8\nRound 1\u2014Stuart Macintosh beat\nMonte Morley 15-8, 12-15, 15-6.\nHound 2\u2014G. Parker beat Bill Taylor 15-2, 15-8; Art Godfrey beat\nKoy Mann 15-4, 15-1; Monte Morley beat Ross Fleming 15-6, 15-11.\n\"A\"  LADIES' SINGLES\nRound 1\u2014Isobel Dawson beat\nMuriel Smith 11-5, 11-7.\nRound 2\u2014Priscilla Gelinas beat\nMuriel Whimster 11-6, 11-1; Barbara Haylock beat bsobel Dawson\n4-11, 11-4, 11-3; Mrs. Les McEachern beat Betty McDonald 11-6, 11-6;\nMollie Murray beat Thelma Bird\n11-3, 11-2.\n\"A\"   MEN'S   DOUBLES\nRound 2\u2014I,es McEachern and\nJohn Money beat Roy Mann and\nDoug Male 15-13, 15-8.\n\"A\" LADIES'  DOUBLES\nRound 1\u2014Mrs. E. W. Base\/ft and\nMrs. Douglas Male beat Miss Lillian Bennett and Mrs. George\nSimpson 15-7, 15-8.\n\"A\" MIXED DOUBLES\nRound 1\u2014Ross Fleming and Mar-\ncelle Nedelec beat William Brown\nand Mrs. L. J. Manrer 9-15, 15-5,\n18-13; Bob Cornwall and Priscilla\nGelinas beat Mr. and Mrs. Monte\nMorley 8-15, 15-12, 15-13; J. Parker\nand Mrs. E. W. Bassett beat Mollie\nMurray and Derek Tye 13-11, 15-12;\nMr.' and Mrs. Les McEachern beat\nStuart Macintosh and Murielle\nWhimster 15-5, 15-3; Hector Mackenzie and Muriel Smith beat Bill\nTaylor and Mrs. Ceeorge Simpson\n15-5. 15-6; Norman Ashley and Mr.s.\nDouglas Male beat Roy Mann and\nEvelyn Hammer 15-12, 15-11; Arthur Godfrey and Barbara Haylock beat Rav Hunt and Thelma\nBird 15-1, 15-4; Bill Ramsay and\nIsobel Dawson beat John Morey\nand Betty McDonald 18-15, 15-18,\n1,5-12.\n\"B\" MEN'S SINGLES\nRound 1 \u2014 F. McDonald beat\nG, Stewart 15-12, 14-17, 15-5: Ray\nHunt beat Dr. Sidney Chodorcoff\n15-4, 11-5, 15-9: Dave Fairbank beat\nR. J. Cornfield 15-5. 15-10.\nRound 2\u2014Danny Barry beat Ron\nAndrews 15-3. 15-5; Eugene Muraro beat Frank Wells 15-11, 15-12;\nF. McDonald beat Norman Bradley\n15-8,   15-12.\n\"B\"  LADIES SINGLES\nRound 1\u2014Blanche Beattv bent\nStella Paterson 11-3. 11-2: \"Evrlvn\nHammer beat Pat Murray 11-7, 11-2.\n\"B\"  LADIES   DOUBLES\nRound 1 \u2014 Evelyn Hammer and\nBlanche Beattv beat Jean Ballard\nand Rota Jones 15-11, 9-15. 15-1;\nMrs. Monte Morley and Elizabeth\nCarrie beat Stella Patterson and\nMarcelle Nedelec 15-12, 15-11.\n\"B\"  MIXED  DOUBLES\nRound 1 \u2014 Eugene Muraro and\nReta Jones beat Margery Fraser and\nBob Fraser 15-6. 15-9; Jean Ballard\nand Ron Andrews beat Cal Cameron and Pat Murray 15-4. 15-4.\nRound 2 \u2014 Dave Fairbank and\nSusan Berrv beat Norman Bradley\nand Miss Graham 15-11, 10-15. 15-13;\nStella Paterson and Dr. Sidney\nChodorcoff beat John Teague and\nLillian Bennett 3-15. 15-11. 15-10:\nEugene Muraro and Rota Jnnes beat\nGeorge Stewart and Bet'.v Freeman 15-12. 15-10: Danny Barry and\nIlanche Beattv beat Ron Andrews\nand Jean Ballard 15-18, 15-8, 15-1.\nBOYS'  SINGLES\nRound 1 \u2014 Jimmy Fx-cles beat\nArvid Moen U-3 15-9: Robert Thain\nheat Walter Nisbet 15-4. 15-7; Bill\nPurge beat Paul Hlookoff 15-9.\n15-4; Raymond Rutherglen beat lan\nCarne   15-5,   15-5\nGIRLS'  SINGLES\nRound 1 \u2014 Eleanor Simpson beat\nT. Hodg.son 15-3. 15-1. Willa McClement beat Leatrice Smiley 15-0\n15-4; Daphne RhueV beat Dorothy\nTodd 15-1. 15-6; Phyllis Thompson\nbeal Susan  Berry  15-5,  15-14\nRound 2 -- Eleanor Simpson beal\nW.lla  McClement  11-2,  11-6.\nBOYS'   DOUBLES\nRound 1 \u2014 Arv.c! Moen and Jerry\nJerram beat Wal'er N she: and Bill\nAffleck   17-1R   1510.   15-8.\nGIRLS'   DOUBLES\nRound 1 .- Bessie and Marv McLeod Ilea' Pegi[v a'ld Joan Coates\n15-6. 15-2. Willa McClement and\nMargery Fraser beal Lea'ricr Smiley nnd Phyllis Tli impson 1,1-2\n15-4.\nJUNIOI  MIXED  D0UBLE8\nRound 1 -- Margery Fraaer and\nBll Burge beat L.,.a Gamble and\nWal'er Nisbet 1511. 1V7. I\/>alr:re\nSmiley and Paul Hlookoff brat\nWilla MrCIemetit and Robert Thain\n1315. 15-7. 15-3, Susan Merry an!\nla'i Came loat Arvid M'-cn aid\nPeggy  Coates   15 9   1814\nNORTHPORT TEAMS AT\nROSSLAND 5ATURDAY\nROSSI.AND II C. Fob 8 -\nSi'urday night will he ' Northpor!\nNight'' i\", Roe-aland in the haakel-\nball t.r-'les. when the Northp ott\nSenior team will plav the Rossland\nIt vala at 'he Armory, and lhe\nNorthporl High School will battle\n:t out with lhe Rouland Higl\nSchool Ren team ,:i the Hign\nSchn d  Auditorium.\nYOLLANDS FINALISTS\nIN   ROSSLAND   BRIDGE\nROSSLAND, II (.' Feb. - The\nfinals in Hie f.rst flighl of the\nRoaaland bridge toumamenl will be\nplaved off between Mr. and Mra\nT II Yolland and Mi and Mrs\nF I' liana on In lhe aenu-finala\nf.rst flighl. Mr and Mrs Yolland\nheat Mi an.l Mrs I' (1 Palmer\nand Mr and Mra Rans -ni beal Mr.\nhvin Gurevitch and Mis llenrv\nChem -If\nPlay in the second flight semi-\nfinals baa no', laeeii completed\nRossland Social \u2666 \u2666\nROSSLAND, B. C, Feb. 8-The\nregular meeting of the Catholio\nWomen's League waa held ln the\nCatholic Parish Hall Tuesday evening with seventeen in attendance.\nFollowing a short business meeting\na social hour was passed.\nThe Holy Cross Study Group\nwere guests ot Miss Eda Vetere, on\nTuesday evening. Present were Miss\nIrene Besso, Miss Florence Cor-\nrado, Miss Evelyn Bourchier, Miss\nJean Evans, Miss pelphlne Vetere\nand the hostess.\nThe Evening Guild of St. George's\nChurch met at the home of Mrs. W.\nH. Blair Wednesday evening. Nine\nmembers were present.\nLadies of the S.t. George's W. A.\nheld a social afternoon at the home\nof Mrs. R. J. Berry Tuesday. Those\npresent were Mrs. Mark Storie, Mrs\nArthur Slater, Mrs. S. E. Thomas,\nMrs. Thomas Moorecroft, Mrs. S\nE. Wilson, Mrs. Thomas Tongue, Mrs\nElizabeth Jewell, Mrs, J. A. Butcher and Mn. R. J. Berry.\nMrs. Raymond Whittick was hostess to Mrs. Marions' Circle at her\nhome Tuesday evening. Those present included Mrs. King Comesot'i,\nMrs.. Robert Saare, Mrs. Edward\nKamblck and Mrs. Russell Jones.\n23 Rossland Assessments Referred\nto Special Committee; Two Confirmed\nNew City Hall Proposal Is Approved\nIn Principle by Board of Trade; No\nCommittal on Plan, Site, Financing\nROSSLAND, B. C, Feb. 8\u2014Two\nassessments were confirmed, and 23\nothers were referred to a special\ncommittee consisting of the whole\nCouncil, when the Court of Revision respecting the civic assessment roll held lis first session this\nevening. The Court was composed\nof the City Council, Mayor J. E.\nGordon being chosen as its\nChairman.\nAssessments of $150 on Hi acres\nbelonging to John Sardonovich,\nand of $1300 on the residence and\n$450 on the land of Dominic Rossi,\nwere confirmed.\nAppeals referred to the special\ncommittee involved the following\npersons and properties:\nMr.   and   Mrs.   Edward   Tozich,\nresidence; Carl Loff, residence; Max\nSlubowsky, residence; the United\nChurch, manse; George Jorgenson.\nresidence; I. O. O. F. Hall; J. V.\nBonde, residence; Mrs. Mary Viola\nMellett, residence; Mrs. Etta C.\nYoung, residence and store; Alfred\nH. Holm, residence; W. D. McColl,\nresidence; Mrs. Rose H. Hackney,\napartment block; K. P. Hall; Erwin\nD. Matthews, residence; Carl Bru-\nneski, residence; Mr. and Mrs. G\nE. Palmer, residence; David Crawford, residence; Gunnar Erickson,\nresidence; A. C. Towner. Allan Hotel Annex; A. H. Freeman and D\nW. Hertig, subdivided land; H. M,\nMurdoch, residence; Adolf Nyberg.\nresidence;, Edward, Johnson,\nresidence.\nMrs. Aston Winner\nTrail Curling Cup\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 8\u2014Mrs. W C.\nAston's rink of the Trail Ladies'\nCurling Club on Thursday won the\nButorac cup by defeating Mrs. Donald MacDonald 9-7 at the Trail rink.\nR. ults of other games which\nwere in the Marshall trophy competition, follow:\nSection 9\u2014Mrs. David Forrest 6,\nMrs. J. A. Millar 11.\nSection 10-Mrs. S. J. Meredith\n12, Mrs. William Barchard 14.\nMrs. Millar and Mrs. Barchard\nmeet in the final of the Marshall\ncompetition Friday.\nBucs Head League\nPORTLAND, Ore., Feb. 8 (AP).\n\u2014 Portland's Buckaroos climbed\nback into the Pacific Coast Ice\nHockey League lead tonight by defeating Seattle 5-4.\nFirst period: 1, Portland, Holmes\n(Olson, Scharfe) 5:55; 2, Portland,\nMartin (McCartney) 8:26; 3, Seattle,\nTabor (Kenny) 9:21; 4, Seattle,\nDaley (King) 13:07.\nPenalties: Vickers, Ouelette (5\nminutes), Blyth (5 minutes).\nSecond perind: 5, Seattle. Vickers\n(Downic, Tabor) 10:12; 6, Portland,\nHolmes (Olson) 14:28; 7, Seattle,\nTabor, 15:38.\nPenalties: Sutherland.\nThird period: 8. Portland, Ouelette Martin. (McCartney) 7:25; 3,\nPortland, Martin (Ouelette) 19:47.\nPenalties: Kenny.\nNelson Girls Compile\nHigh Marks in Music\nWritten Examinations\nCompiling high marks, Evelyn\nGunn nnd Hazel Nelson, talented\nyouthful Nelson musicians, received\nword Thursday afternoon that they\nwere successful in Theory of Musi?\nexaminations of the Royal School\nof Music. London. England, which\nthey wrote in November. They\nwere the only Nelsonites to take\nthose examinations,\nEvelyn Gunn received 87 marks\nout of a possible 99 in Grade 4,\nwhere a 6fi was required for a pass.\nHazel Nehon, writing a Grade 1\nexamination, was  given  81   marks.\nRussian Is Ordered\nOut of Switzerland\nBERNE. Feb 8 <AP). \u2014 Switzerland today ordered Soviet Russia's\nI-eague of Nations expert, Vladimir\nS\">knhne, to leave the country\nwithin two week.-;.\nTho ordor was issued by both\nthe Swiss Foderal and Geneva Cantonal Government, rejecting Mos-\nnw's explanation for wanting to\nkeop Sokohne in Switzerland.\nSokohne was dismissed as an\nUndersecretary of the league of\nNations af'or Soviet Russia's expul-\ns: 'ii and Moscow had tried to oh-\ntain authorization for him ti remain in Geneva as \" liaison officer\"\nt.* the International Red Cross Committee.\nRegional Meeting\nChambers Commerce\nat Trail Approved\nProposal of the Trail Junior\nChamber of Commerce to hold a regional meeting at Trail March 2\nwas indorsed by the Nelson Junior\nChamber Thursday night.\nRevised Hockey\nSchedule\nNekon's \"rep\" hockey teams,\nfrom Bantam to Juvenile, are given\nthe right of way Friday and Saturday in a new N.A.H.A. schedule\nwhich cancels that published Monday, the new line-up being as follows:\nFriday\u2014\n4:00-5:30 p.m-Bantam Reps.\nSaturday\u2014\n9:00-10:00 a.m.\u2014Midget Reps',\n10:00-11:00 a.m.\u2014Juvenile Reps.\n11:00-12:00 a.m.\u2014Bantam Pool.\nSunday\u2014\n10:00-11:00 a.m.-Juniors.\nJunior Chamber to\nQuery Members on\nMilitary Training\nNelson Junior Chamber of Commerce members declined at their\nmeeting Thursday night to give\nsnap decisions on questions aslted\nby the Canadian Juftior Chamber\non military training. It decided instead to give each member a questionnaire and to compiU the result\nof the poll so obtained.\nQuestions concerned voluntary or\ncompulsory military training in\nschools, registration of manpower\nin the Dominion and conscription,\n... ,.     ...             ,.,.           (\nGELINAS BOWLING\nBy 204 pins, the Millionaires took\na City tournament\nvictory on. the\nGelinas  Bowling  Alleys Thursday\nnight  from  Nelson\nSash  tz Door.\nSASH & DOOR\u2014\n1\n2      3    Tot.\nF. Morris     88\n112   158     :i:.ii\nJ. Livesey     149\n140   106    395\nJ,   Cherrington   156\n123   176     455\nF. F. Becker ....   162\n166   152     480\nS. T. Oldham ..   124\n105   132     361\nTotals   ....'    679\n646   724   2049\nMILLIONAIRES\u2014\nJ. Anderson ....   159\n137   131     427\nO. Robertson ..   173\n158   120     451\nF. Defoe     161.\n146   141     448\nC. Robertson ..   133\n129   120     382\nW. Anderson ..   173\n154   210     537\nTotals     799\n724   722   2245\nHigh individual\u2014W, Anderson,\n210. High aggregate\u2014W. Anderson,\n537.\nScorer\u2014F. Misuraca.\nMeans to Hold\nTourists Theme\nJunior Chamber\nMeans of holding tourists' after\nthey had been attracted to British\nColumbia were discussed by Junior\nChamber of Commerce members at\ntheir meeting at the Hume Thursday night. Robert Foxall. reporting\non a proposed widespread campaign outlined by the Vancouver\nJunior Board of Trade to prepare\nfor tourist trade, stated the program\nproposed was beyond the capacities of the Nelson Junior Chamber\nat this time, but it might be undertaken in part at least if the cooperation of other bodies were obtained.\nEstablishment of a fishing and\nhunting register to direct tourists\nto the best fishing and hunting spots\nand listing of guides and camps\nwere among suggestion offered\nErection of \"Welcome\" signs at\neach entrance to the City was proposed.\nMr. Foxall state?! that while considerable work was done to bring\ntourists to the district, little was\ndone once they arrived to hold\nthem or to bring them back. It\nwas a thoroughly worthwhile objective, he believed, but to be\ntaken up on any scale the cooperation of other organizations and of\nthose particularly interested in the\ntourist trade was necessary.\nThe outlined campaign was referred bbfk to the snecia! committee headed by Mr. Foxall for further study\nGonzaga Bull Pups\nat Rossland Tonight\nROSSLAND. B. C. Feb 8-The\nRossland High School Rep hockey\nteam plan to take on the Gonzaga\nBullpups from Spokane at the Rossland rink Friday night. The Rossland lineup will include Jim Douglas, or Allison Martin, goal; John\nClarke, Ear! Martin. Don,ild Cam-\nozzi, defence; Jack Cox, Ira Page,\nJoe Blelli, first string; George Lu-\ncien, Allan Hutton, Henry Fourt,\nsecond string,\nTRAIL CURLING\nTRAIL B   C. Feb   8 - Resul'.j\n!\u25a0'.   Tr.a;l   C'nrlme  Club   President's\n1'ip games played Thursday mghi\n<\u25a0\u2022 lliax:\nK J. Glover 8 J. A Wadsworth\n7; W F. Doubt 11. C, F. He.mann\n1.1. P. J Pmvnst fl. A I) Turn-\nbull 7: William Rae 9 H. T. Berk-\ne\". II, S R. Walli-y 9. B. J WaWh\nin; G. .1 Kinnia 9, Frank Sirarh'n\n1\"; A F Allien 8, W. I,. Wnnrl 10,\nP   J. r'.ea'.rr \u00ab, Jack Camjibell 6\nLUMBERTON\nLUMBERTON, R C - Mr. nnd\nMrs 'Bud 1'iper accompanied by it\nPiper of Spokane, visited Mr. tnd\nMri   H   G   Piper.\nMiss  Fdith  Pnrr nnd C. Knline*-;\nnf Crnnbrook visited Mr. and Mn\nJ   Price.\nH   Thompson   visited   Cranbrook.\n.1   Wardropr  nnd   sister.   Mrs.   A\nWilkinson v,<,lrd Ynhk.\nMis V V. Downey visited In\nCranbrook.\nArt Hinton of Cranbrook visited\nIho  Parent f,.milv\nMri D. J Downey visited In\nKimhrrlry.\n1 H Williston has been biuy conv\nI p-ling 'he loral voters' 1st.\n- LUMBERTON, H C. * Ronnie\nj Ben.oon of Cranbrook visited Mr\n! and  Mrs   W   Johnson\nfloyd   Fleet   visited   Moyio\n'     George Huntrr \u25a0 f Kimberl**v via-\nj iter!   hit  mother,   Mr<   G    Hunter,\ni and sister. Miss Je-mir Huntrr\nHn\\   and Ibid OUon  have mover!\ni to  l.umbv\ni     Mr.  and   Mri,  Slr\u00abn   visited   Nel-\nI loll.\nChimney Fire in\nRossland Home\nROSSLAND. B C. Feb 8 - The\nRossland Fire Department was\ncalled out to a chimney fire at the\nhome of Hume Pollock. Second\nAvenue West, about 10:!W Thursday morning. No damage was reported.\nEnumerating Methods\nDiffer in Urban and\nRural Districts\nTRAJU B C. Feb 8-J. A. Wadsworth, Returning Officer for Kootenay West Electoral District,\npointed out Thursday that then-\nwas a difference between the\nmethod of enumerating in rural districts and in urban districts.\nIn the urban district, the enumerators have books containing enumerator's notice-* to electors, which\nare made out in triplicate, sheet A\nbeing left at the eler'or's residence\nOne duplicate is for tho purpose <<f\nthe enumerators placing them in\norder of street numbers to mik\"\nnut urban preliminary lists of electors. The other is for filing\nIn the rural district, tho enumero-\n, tors enter the elector's name in an\nindex book and notices are not left\nI at  the elector's  residen.ro.  The   ur-\nI ban  enumerators   Inve  budges  and\nthe rural enumerators do not.\n\"I! is according to the Dominion\nElec'iors Ac?.\" Mr  Wadsworth said.\nHe pointed out 'hat there ha'i\nbeen several complaints from niral\n.-doctors that they did not receive\nIh\" notice ai did electors in the\nurban riis'ncts.\nStibbs,   Waters   Tell\nBoard and Junior\nChamber of Plan\nPropo.M.1 to build a new city hall\nin Nelson was approved in principle\nby the Board of Trade, Thursday,\nbut without committing the Board\nor ita members to indorsation of\nthe proposed building plans, its site,\ntr method of financing. This ap-\nroval of the need for a new city\nall was given following a talk by\nMayor N. C. Stibbs on plans for the\nbuilding and for financing it, and\nby Aid. T. H, Waters on his reason*\nfor supporting the proposal.\nSketches and floor plans were used\nto illustrate the proposed building\nA revised plan adding 10 feet to\nthe width of the building would\nadd approximately $10,000 to the\nestimated cost, His Worship said\nmaking it about $52,000. This figur*\nmight vary between $50,000 an<\n$55,000 according to the cost o:\nstone.\nIn the evening Mayor Stibbs out*\nlined thc proposals to the Junioi\nChamber of Commerce, which ask'\ned its Civic Affairs Committee t(\nprepare a report.\nPRESENT  HALL  INADEQUATE\nHis Worship explained that thi\npresent City Hall was inadequate\nthat there was not sufficient spaci\nfor the staff to work efficiently ir\nit: that it offered no protection fron\nfire to records which, if they wen\ndestroyed would cost more than i\nnew hall to replace; and that th\njail cells were neither safe\nproperly arranged. The cost of re\nmodelling the present hall woul<\nbe in the neighborhood of $13,00\nand still would not give the Cit;\nwhat it needed.\nHe stated the Council proposei\nto build the hall out of revenue\nand so to avoid paying for it twio\nover as it would if debentures wer\nissued. The natural increase o\nrevenue for several years past-\nexcept in 1938. when electric ligh\nrates were reduced\u2014would pay fo\na new hall in four years, he saic\nThis increase was about $14,000 i\nyear; $15,000 in 1939.\nIn answer to the suggestion tha\na better site might be found thai\nat the foot of Ward Street, Hi\nWorship stated the Council hat\nconsidered other available grouni\nand had reached the conclusion thi\nthis site waj best. The hall woul<\nbe visible from Baker Street. Th\nuse of native stone and the desig:\noffered by W F, Williams. Archi\ntect, would give it a striking ap\npearance.\nPREFER TO  USE  8TONE\nBy using pressed brick It rnigl\nbe possible to build such a ha\nabout $7000 less than stone, sal\nHis Worship, but the final effe<\nwould not -be nearly as good a\nnative stone, nor would it be dis\ntinctive.\nEquipment purchased in 193\nwould make it possible to carry <\nas extensive a road improvemer\nprogram aa in the past, while diveri\ning relief labor to construction\nthe building, he said. It would t\nmore advantageous to use sue\nlabor on a building than on roads\nAlderman Waters stated that if h\nthought the project would interfer\nwith street work, he would r\nfavor it. He believed it could\n'cirried through without affectin\n1 this work,\ni The present building was a fir\ni trap, he declared. N it only wer\n! the City's extersive records endan|\ni Ted. but any prisoners held in th\nI Jail would also bo in a procarlou\n| position in the event of fire, sine\nI their only protection was the U\non  the walls.\nElder Is Member of\nNelson Board Tradi\nN. G Elder, representing Can!\ni d;an Bakrrirs Ltd, wai electe\nI without ballot tn m\"mb\"rihip in th\n1 Nelion Boari of TraJe Thursday,\nAMERICAN YOUTH\nCONGRESS ACCUSED OF\nCOMMUNISTIC LEANINCS\nWASHINGTON.   Feb.   8   (AP) -\nThe    American     Youth    Congress,\nwhich President Roosevelt u scheduled to address Saturday, was accused of \"communist leanings\" in\na statement tonight signed with the\nnames of Gene Tunney ar.d four\nother prominent persons,\nMurray Plavner, who identified\nhimself as a founder nf the Congress\n'and an org.mi7.ation of an \"anti-\nI Communistic bloc\" which walkt d\nout of the Congress last Summer,\ndistributed the statement. ]\\e announced that the former heavyweight champion sigurd it, along\nwith H^mer L Chaillaux, I>av. t\nHinshnw. Victor F. R.elder and Juli.i\nM.  Scbiff.\nBOSWELL LADY LEARNS OF\nBIRTH OF  FOURTEENTH\nGREAT CRANDCHILD\nnoswEt.L, n C - M;\nhas received news . f\nhrr fourteenth great-grandchild   We\ni is  the  son  , f  Mr   and   Mrs,   J.-nn\nDolan   of   Runners   Fern\nMrs   Di'lan ;s well known in lb \u00bb\nwell, as, hef.ire hrr mar: lagr .cir\n| often spent Die .-ninimer hrrrr * \\W\n| her graiKimoiher. Mr* Spence. and\n; her uncle and nur.t, Mr ani Mrs\ni (' H- Iden, and she and her hu\u00abb.in*d-\n1 have been frequent weeke\n| it  in sirve.\nTHIEVES SCARED BY\nPOLICE GET  DRUCS\nVANCOUVER.   Fob   H   <<T>   -\nIlrug-\u00abrr>ing tuirglait were put to\nflight carl* today wit-rn Patrolman\nJame*; Walker surprise-! them in a\nKmgjway drug't'T* The men escaped witli a small quantity of c->\ndr-nr\nClothing, cash and jewelrr   *er*p\nttolrn from a number of lx*mrs  by\nI hou<p-break ers, tnd nohre atrrtied\nj f'ur  men,   two   of   if*em   juvr1 ilea.\n| in   connect!.m   with   the   thr ft   of\nthree aulom-ubilei\nA Better Picobac\n-AND HERE'S WHY!\nThat richer, rarer fragrance, th.it extra satisfying gnotlnru\nyou now find in Pin-hac b definite pnv\u00bbf nf the great\nadvances nude in tiie cultivation and curing of gosnl\nCanadian Hurley.\nHats tiff to the grower*, of southern Ontario who have\npri-duccd thii finer, milder, richer lr.if! And a -salute to\nthe Government experts v*ho have ahlv assisted (hem in tht\nselection of improved weds year after year, in the n* of\nbetter plant fivd-., in the newer, better cultural methodj\nthat have made p*o<.\u00ab.iMr this meltoHrr, tattler Piaiba>c-\nI ry it.   Picobac really it better!\nIt   DOES   taste   good in   a   pipcl\n \u2014\n_\u2022\u2022\u2022_.*_\n\u2014\n>PORTS\n&NGFRJ CLIMB\nAS BEAT LEAFS\nEW YORK, Feb. 8 (CP)-Ott\nler scored late In the third pe-\n| tonight to give New York Ran-\nI a 2-1 victory over Toronto\npie Leafs and increase their Natal Hockey League lead to three\nits.\nplay started by Bryan Hextall,\n3 spent 15 minutes of the vicious-\n'ought game in the penalty box\ntwo fights, wound up with Hel-\ni converting Phil Watson's pass\n1 a short, rising shot pasl Turk\nda at 16:55 of the third,\nangers had taken the lead in the\nind period on Neil Colville's\nI, only  to have  Bob  Davidson\nhome Nick Metz's rebound to\nthe score in the final period,\neferee Ted Graham handed out\n>enalties altogether, ruling with\niron-clad   hand   whenever   the\nlerous minor tussles threatened\nlare Into open fighting.\nIrst  period\u2014Scoring\u2014None,\nmalties\u2014Kampman (2), M. Pat-\n,    Chamberlain,    (misconduct),\ntall (misconduct).\n:cond   period\u20141.   Rangers,   N.\ndlle    (M.   Colville,   Shibicky)\ntnaltles\u2014Church, Coulter,\nlird period\u20142. Toronto, David-\n(Metz)  :21; 3. Rangers, Heller\nxtall, Watson)  16:55.\nmalties\u2014Hextall  (major), Dav-\nn (major), Church, McDonald,\nings Stretch\nUnbeaten Streak\nONTREAL, Feb. 8 (CP)-De-\nt Red Wings stretched their un-\nlen streak to eight straight\nea tonight, defeating Montreal\nIdjens 2-1 in a National Hockey\ngut contest before 5000 fans.\nIdle Wares and Joe Fisher scor-\n,for Wing* and Hector (Toe)\nte for Canadiens assisted by\ny Demers, an amateur with\ney-Field Braves of the Provin-\nSenior League who was signed\nIng the day by the Habitants'\nagement.\nr\u00abt  period\u2014Scoring\u2014None,\n\u2022naltles\u2014None.\nicond period\u20141. Detroit, Wares\nodfellow)   18:45.\nmalties\u2014None.\nlird   period\u20142,   Detroit,   Fisher\n>wn)  8:08; 3. Canadiens, Blake\nTiers, Mantha)  14:55.\nmalties\u2014Howe, Abel.\n\"Pitching\" for\nCongress\nWalter Johnson, the \"big train,\"\nerstwhile big-leaguer who gained\nhis greatest fame as o speedballei\nwith the Washington Senators, has\nannounced his candidacy for the\nU.S. Congress. Since giving up baseball. Johnson has devoted most of\nhis time to farming and fox hunting.\nTale of Ihe Tape\non Louis, Godoy\nNEW YORK, Feb. 8 (AP)-The\ntale of the tape en Joe Louis and\nArturo Godo; in their heavyweight\nchampionship fight t' morrow nignl:\nLouis Godoy\n26 Age 27\n202 Weight 203\n6 ft. iy( In. Height 6ft. Va in.\n78 inches Reach 74 inches\n41 in. Chest (normal) 43'i in.\n44 in. Chest (expanded) 46 in.\n16'\/4 Inches Neck 17\", inches\n34 inches Waist 35 inches\n14 inches Biceps 15'-i inches\n12 inches Forearm 12 inches\n8 Inches Wrist 7*>, inches\n11% inches Fist 12 inches\n22 inches        Thigh 24 inches\n15 Inches Calf 17 inches\n10 inches         Ankle 11 inches\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-FRIDAY  MORNINQ, PH. I.\nROYALS DOWN\nTRAIL SHEIKS\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 8.\u2014Rossland\nRoyals downed Sheiks whom they\nmeet next Wednesday In the first\nof the West Kootenay Men's Senior\nB basketball playdowns a week\nhence. 24-20 in an exhibition; Young\nTories beat Buddies 41-20 ln a Ladies' League game and Red Wings\nbeat Spiders 26-14 in a Boys' Junior\ngame, at Memorial Hall Wednesday\nnight.\nTeams and scores follow:\nRossland Royals\u2014Scott 5. Saun-\ndry 6, Ncal 8,  Carkner  3  and J.\nRoss 2.\nSheiks-Nick Turik 7, Bill Turik,\nSambrook, Kirby 4, Baillie, Strachan 5, Bremner and Pagnan 4.\nYoung Tories\u2014Nellie Minton 12,\nLily Sapronoft 6, Mary Cronie 7,\nDixie Edwards 14, and Pat Loblick 2.\nBuddies\u2014Edie Kennedy 2, Jean\nSmith 8, Margaret Smith 2, Hazel\nMawdsley, Hazel Weir 2, Lily Grip-\nich 4, Margaret Mathews and Ellen\nBaillie 2.\nRed Wings\u2014Borsalo 8, Underwood, McAulay 2, Fowler 8, Murdoch 7, and Wilson.\nSpiders\u2014Sammartino 1, Martin 3,\nGeorgette 2, Fanini 2, Toffolo 6 and\nMonaldt.\nJohn Balano refereed.\nckey Doesn't\nike Pressure\nBy JUD80N BAILEY\nUtoclated Press Sports Writer\nNEW YORK, Feb. 8 (AP) -\nanch Rickey, master mind of\n. Louis Cardinals, is yelping\nout the rest of the National\niseball League making his club\nWinter book pennant favorite.\nl's a conspiracy, that's what it\nhe complained during a  visit\nthis week. 'These other clubs\nJust trying to get the pressure\nthemselves and on us. Why we\nIt be the biggest surprise of the\nOn\u2014in the wrong way, I mean.\n\"We haven't settled that infield\noblem. Yes, we're counting on\nartin Marion for shortstop and\n\u25a0at will free Jimmy Brown for\nme other spot. But we don't\nlow yet whether he'll play sec-\ni or third and we can't expect\ni  to  keep   moving   back   and\nth.\"\nht In the midst of Rickey's ex-\nof the Cardinal weaknesses\njralked Bill McKechnie, Man-\n' of Cincinnati's champion Reds.\n\u00a5hat are you fellows all pick-\nIon us for . . . why should.\"\nley started to inquire of Mc-\ntmle\nfou've    got    me    all     wrong\n|ich.\" retorted the deacon. \"I'm\nmy own team.\"\nDNDON (CP)- Ten thousand\natures. including the thumb-\nof African native linesmen\nt presented to Sir Edward Willy, chairman of lhe Cable and\nJeless Company, when 10.000 em-\nfrees gave him the insignia of his\nK.C.MG.\nBus Accident Falls to Slow Vp Gonzaga Hockey Squad\nVfki\n!\n!\nT w*, ^\nmk             .IB'\n[wr\npRJh\ni-\nW^Mty\n\u25a0 I\ni^H'**:,',\"'fH   \u25a0 laaW*i \u25a0\"v*fw'   ST xuiijb'iL*\u25a0 \"A*\n11'     a-sfliB  '      J     \u25a0                          \u25a0\nML*.*  la^saaaaaaaa.       J^^\n:\u00ae V*fr n\n\u25a0ml\\          saaaaaaaaafl                   \u2122\n*\"\"                 \"'\u201e',- m*'\n\u00abz \u25a0\u25a0                     \u25a0\t\nEdmonton Flyers\nProtest Ruling\nEDMONTON, Feb, 8 (CP) -\nGeorge Mackintosh, President ot\nthe Alberta Amateur Hockey Assoc-1\niation, announced tonight he has j\nturned over IJdmonton Flyers protest against the Alberta Senior\nHockey League replay ruling to\nPresident W. G. Hardy nf the Canadian Amateur Hockey Associa- [\ntion.\nEarlier this week D. P, McDon- :\naid of Calgary, President of the i\nsenior league, sliced three points .\noff Flyers' fourth-place standing nt- ,\nter Olds and Drumheller protest- j\ned Flyers had used too many play-'\ners in games played Dec. 30 and\nJan. 20, respectively.\nThe games were ordered to be\nreplayed, unless they would havo\nno effect on the ultimate playnff j\nstanding, with the Flyers vs Olds\nbattle for ont* point and the Flyers\nvs Drumheller for two point*. Olds\nhad held Edmonton to a 2-2 draw\nDec. 30. i\nMidget Finals of\nProvince Will Be\nin Ihe Kootenay\nThe final playoffi for th\u00ab Brltlih Columbii midget hockey\nchamplonihlp will be played at\nthe home of the Kootenay win-\nnor, and the Juvenile final* will\nbe held at Vernon, A. 8. (Pat)\nAitken, .Secretary-Treasurer of\nthe Brltlih Columbia Amateur\nHockey Auociatlon, announced\nThuriday,\nThe midget playoffs cf the Kootenay for the Bruce Ritchie Memorial Trophy, now held by Nelson,\nthe finals of which will be held on\nKimberley ice in alternating with\narrangements of last year, have to\nbe over by February 21. Then the\nfinals with the winner of the Okanagan and surrounding districts will\nbe conducted cm the ice of the Kootenay champion. Vernon won the\ntitle last year, beating Nelson in\nthe Okanagan.\nThe Kootenay juvenile finals are\nto be completed by the 24th, and\nwill be played at the home of the\nWest Kootenay winner. Rossland\nwill play off with Trail for tho\nright to meet Nelson and then the\nwinner of this series will play Kimberley, Rossland has not entered\na team in the midget division, leaving Trail, Kimberley and Nelson\nto contest the Kootenay title. The\nprovincial finals will be played at\nVernon in a best two-out-of-three\nseries, the fir&t two games of which\nare scheduled for the 27th and 29th.\nOnly three teams will play for\nthe provincial junior title, held almost perennially by tthe Trail Tigers. Vernon will play at Trail m\nthe semi-finals, and the winner will\ncontinue on to Fernie where the ;\nfinals will be played, if ice is avail- j\nable. If Fernie has no ice, other ar- ;\nrange-men ts will be made as cir- '\ncumstances permit. The dates for ,\nthis final series a best ol three af- ,\nfair are February 29, March 2 and\n4.\nThis shot of the Gonwgi Hockey team waa\ntaken in their dressing room at the Trail rink just\nbefore they went on the ice Tuesday night. Despite\ntheir harrowing experience the same afternoon ln\na bus accident, all were able to play. They are:\nFront row, left to right\u2014Dick Burgess, late of Nel\naon; Lome Moffatt, \"Cheddy\" Thompson and Curly\nHunt. Back row\u2014Jack Lindwy* Don Emery, Pat\nMurphy, Bob Polley, John Shumski, Ad Safian, Hon\nGardner, Jerry Pettigrew, Trainer Hank Reid and\nCoach Denny Edge. \u2014Daily News Photo.\nWtih two Gonzaga players chasing him and Dick Burgess, goal-\ntender, pointing a digit in the diiection of the Spokane net on which\nthe goal was declared, Referee \"Curly\" Wheatley dashes to the\ntimekeepers' box to tell officials a disputed goal in the Trail-Gon-\nnga game was good. This photo w-u taken from the Press box,\ndirectly above the timpkeep-ers' box at the Trail rink Tuesday night\nduring the argument over Morris' goal. \u2014Daily News Photo.\nTRAIL CURLING\nDRAWS\nTRAIT., PC. Feb. 8-Drawa of\nthe Trail Curling Club President's\nCup competition fur Friday nitir.\nfoi! \u00bb\u25a0:\n6:30 pm-J H Wcodburn vs\nWilliam McLeary; W. H Slaldrcy\nvs. Robert Somerville; A. E. Calvert\nvs. Andy Crichlon; H. C. Caldie.lt\nvs. T. li. Weldon\nThe names scheduled for 8 30\np m. have been postponed owir.K to\nthe seni.r hockey game be:wren\nKimberley and Trail.\n[Burgess Batteries\nBattery  you   can  depend   on\nWholesale Distributors\nie Automotive\nBaker St Supply Ph  1040\nTrail Curling\nTRAIL, B C. Feb   8-Results nf\n|Trail Curling Club President's Cup\nI competition games plavetl Wednesday night foil iw: F. W Harlowcd\n10. I, G. Mew.it 10; II (' Caldlcott 8, R. C M.GirngT 5, W 0\nCarrie H.J H Woodburn 15; Walter\nRradv (i. William McLeary 8; Hamilton Currie o G W. Weir 8; Alex\nBalfour 7. K A Margeson 9, A M\nChesser 9 P F Mrlfityre 8. W I!\nHunter 8, T.m  Brown fl\nrr i\u00bb\u00abw\u00bbaNT ao\nu   kino 0* .~l:n\u201e\n69\n%fo*urt. SCOTCH WHISKY\nBOTTLED IN SCOTLAND\nVVm. Sandenon & Son Ud. Wilh\n| advert,-.enirnt is not published nr displayed by thr Liquor l<\nBoird or by the Government of British Columbia\nN. H. L. Records\nIRON MAN RECORDS\nCreated by Murray Murdoch,\nNew York Rangers, Murd.ch played in 600 straight games, league, exhibition and playoff starting with\nthe original Rangers in 1926, and\ncovering eleven seasons.\n! A'.L-TIME  SCORING   MARK   FOR\n; A  FORWARD LINE\nj Compiled by the line of Frankle\nBoucher, centre. Dill Cook, right\nwing, Bun Cook, left wing, Ncw\nYork   Bangers    Over   1100 -points,\ni Got 1000 points on January 29. 193,\"..\nplaying against Toronto Leafy, 525\n' goals, 475 assists.\nRECORD GOALS-AGAIN8T\nIN  A SEASON\n1939-40-IV.ts-burgh 164 goal* in 44\n1 gaimcs;    1930-31- Philadelph.a    IM\ngoals in 44 games.\nALL TIME INDIVIDUAL\nSCORING RECORD\nCompiled by Neis Stewart, with\nMaroons, Boston Bruins and New\nY rk Americans, from 1925 tn 193S\nj Sr ,red   317   goals,   184   assists.   501\n[ .v*..r;ng   point.*;   in   Irague   play.   14\ngoals, 11 aunts In Cup play. Total,\nto md of 19.1R-39 season, J31 goals\n195 assists, bX points\nMOST   TEAM   POINTS\nIN  SEASON\nHuston   Bruins.   77   points   in   4-4\ngames, w n 38. 1-vst 5, '..ed < ne, sea-\nson  1929-30.\nMOST  ASSISTS   IN   SEASON\nJoe Pnmrau, Toronto Leafs, .37\namis'* in 4fl games, season 19.31-32\nFIRST   AFTERNOON   GAME\nPlaved at Chicago March 19 19.13\nRed  Wings vt  Black  Hawks\nOLDEST CLUB  IN  NATIONAL\nLEAGUE\nMontreal Canadiens   Played their\nfirst game it Montreal, -lan  5. 1910\nNATIONAL HOCKEY\nLEAGUES   BIRTHDAY\nTh* N..',oral Hockey League waj\nhnrn \u00ab n Nov. 26, 1917, at a meet*\ning in M nirral Canndicni, Wanderers. Ottawa and Quebec were\n'he original t'-am* Q\\irl\u00bbe*c At once\ndropped  cut  to be  replaced  by  a\nRACINC DAYS FOR\nDAUBER ARE OVER\nI.OS ANGELES. Frb a (AP) -\nWhen thr llOO.nOO Santa Anita Handicap ii run March 2. I).iul>er, the\n113fl Prrakness winner and run\nner-up \u2022ii I-awnn in the Kentucky\nDerby thr -...mc year, w.ll not be .\\\nmmpe'itor\nP.a'ilwr < 'Being d\u00abvs are over.\nin Orl. nnd next Sunday T. E\nFogeUnn \u2022\u2022\u25a0-'ill ihip the fiv*-year-oM\nson nf Pennant to his TeiAs breeding ranrh tn utand in stud\nDauber failed to make n n y\nprogress in training\nCLEVELAND FARMS OUT\nROOKIES AGAR. |OHNSON\nCI.F.VFI AMI. Frl, n , A I''. -\nC'loa-rUnd Marcus '.f International\nAniaricsn HockrT I^aauf tnaiay\nfarmed out (ifpitrr1 Afl-ar sni Hiaaa\n.lohnami rook if fnrwarrta. \"i\ni Minnrapnlis m (hr Am' i n Bll\nAssociation.\nj Cranbrook-Shuttiers\nHold Annual Tourney\nCRANBROOK, B. C.-Thc Cranbrook Ladies' Badminton Club had\nits annual tournament Tuesday a!-\nternoon on the style of an Amen-\n! can tournament which resulted in\na tie, with Mrs. ft. N. Wood and\nMrs 'Sorters, and Mrs C. V. Edwards and Mrs. Marshall MasPher-\n\u25a0aon emerging from their seven\ngames with six wins and ona loss\nRESULTS\n1 Mrs. J R Atchison and Mrs W.\nO. Scott lost to Mrs. A, D Budges\nand Mrs R. L. McBurney. 11-15,\nbeat Mrs W. B. Johnstone and Mrs.\nG. C. Wilton 15-5. lost to Mrs. Wood\nand Mra  Surtees 10-15, lost to Mrs.\n! Marshall Mad'hcrson 9-15, beat Mrs\nF. V. Harrison and Mrs. Mackenrot\n15-3, and lost  to Mrs. II. A.  Mc-\n, Kowan 2-15. Their total was three\nI wins and four losses.\nMrs. Bridges and Mrs McBurney\nemerged wilh five wins and two\nlosses, consisting of their win from\nMrs. Atchison and Mri Scott, their\nloss in Mrs Johnstone anil Mrs. Wil-\nIon MS, their win from Mrs. Gil-\nmv and Mrs   Norgrove 15-5. their\n\u25a0 win from Mrs Wood and Mrs, Surtees 15-11. their loss to Mrs MacPherson and Mrs Edwards 12-15,\ntheir win fr -m Mrs Harr.son and\nMrs Mackenrot 15-M, and their win\nfrom Mrs McKowan and Mrs\nSpence   15-11.\nMrs Wilton played part of the\ntournament in partnership with\nMisi Woodland and part with Mrs\nW n Johnstone. The team had two\nwins and five losses, losing to Mrs.\n' Atchison and Mrs Scott 5-15. beating Mrs Bridges and Mrs McBurney 15-7. losing to Mrs Gilroy nnd\nMrs Norgrove 5-15. losing; to Mrs\nWood and Mrs Surtees 0-15, losing\nto Mrs MacPherson and Mrs. PA-\nwards 5-15, beating Mrs Harrison\n\u2022 nd Mrs Mackenrot 15-12. and losing to Mrs McKowan and Mrs\nSpence 115.\nMrs   Gilroy   and   Mrs   Norgrove\n1 loit to Mrs Atchison and Mrs\nScott 1(1-15 lost to Mrs Bridges and\nMrs McBurney 5-15, beat Mrs\nJohnatone and Mrs Wiltnn 15-5\nInn i i Mra Wood and Mrs Surtees B-IS. loat t ' Mrs MnrPhers hi\nand Ml! F.dwarda 915, lost to Mrs\nHarriaon and Mis *>t\u00bbrkrnrot 10-15.\nand beat Mrs Moore \u00bbnd Mrs\nSpence  15-5   Result was two wins\n' and five losses\nMrs Wood and Mra Surtees beat\nMrs At.-hnon and Mrs Sarott 15-10\nlost to Mrs Bridges and Mrs, M''-\nBurner 11-15. heat Mm Johnstone\nand Mrs Wilton 15-0. beat Mis\nGllrev and Mra, Norgrove 15-B,\nben' Mrs MacPherson and Mrs. F.d-\nwards 15 fl. beat Mn Hnrivon and\nMr; Mackenrot 15.13, and won from\nMrs Moore and Mrs. Spence 1S-V\nTV.rv had alt wins and one Inns\nMrs Harriaon and Mrs Macken-\nlot loat tn Mrs Atrhiaon and Mrs\nSo.'t 3-15. loat tn Mrs. Bridges and\nMts M'-Hurner H-15. lout to Miaa\nWn.Mland and Mri Wilson IMS.\nhea' Mra C.ilrov and Mrs Norgrove 15-10. lost lo Mn Wood and\nMra Surtees B-15. and loat to Mrs\nMa. I'heraon and Mrs Fdwarda 13-13\nThev had five wins and a loss\nMia Spence playing in pair\nnerihip with Mn   Monrr and Mis\nMcKowan. beat Mrs. Scott and Mrs.\nAtchison 15-2, lost to Mrs. Bridges\nand Mrs. McBurney 11-15, beat Mrs\nJohnstone and Mrs. Wilton 15-1.\nbeat Mrs. Gilroy and Mrs. Norgrove 5-15. lost to Mrs. Wood and\nMrs Surtees 11-15, lost to Mrs.\nMacPherson and Mrs. Edwards 4-15,\nand their game with Mrs. McKowan\nand Mrs. Spence is still to be played.\nAt present they have four losses\nand two wins.\nAll games were 15 points. Tea\nwas served during the afternoon by\nMrs W. O. Scott. The committee\nin charge of arrangements for the\ntournament were Mrs. Wood. Mrs.\nHarrison, Mrs. Scott, Mrs. Moors\nand Mrs. Atchison.\nIN N.H.L TONIGHT\nChicago at Detroit.\nChuck Conacher Can\nStill Drill Them in\nOnce a scorer, always a scorer, ls\nindicated by the feats of several\nnational hockey league veterans\nBtill performing brilliantly for their\nvarious clubs.\nOne of the most notable examples of this ii big Charlie Conacher,\nthe plnyer who drills the cannon-\nball pucks. As a right winger on\nToronto Maple I-eafs, Conacher accumulated exactly 200 goals in tunc\njeB.ions of play. Twice he led the\nleague in scoring, with 32 and 36\ngoals, respectively, in 1933-34 and\n1954-35.\nFor the first time in hu career,\nConacher was shifted back to a\ndefence position this season, with\nthe New York Americans. But he\ncan still score goals, even from\nthat range, for his booming shot\nhas Wt none of Its power, accuracy\nor potency.\nConacher did nomething on\nChristmas F.ve that hadn't been seeci\non New York's Madison Square\nGarden ice for at least two years.\nHe scored a penalty shot, beating\nF. Bnmsek, the great Dot ton Bruin\ngoalie.\nConacher is one of the great\nrnmr-bnrks of hockey, \u2014injured\nvery frequently ai a result of his\ngroat spe-cd, backed by over 200\npounds of bulk, Conacher quit hockey In the middle nf the season of\nl!W-3R. determined to play no more\n|ji-.t winter he came back with Detroit Red Wmgs but a recurrence\nof the injuries to \u25a0 which he lias\nbeen subject kept him out much of\nthe time. This year, moved back to\na defence post with Americans, he\nhas turned in a succession of smashing efforts, becoming one of the\nmost important individuals on the\nteam. His shot is generally rated\nthe hardest in the league When it\nis on the nets it gives the onlookers\na thrill lhat few other snipers have\nbeen able to equal.\nKimberley Plays\nal Trail Tonight\nThree games are acheduled for\nas many nights in the West Kootenay Hockey League, starting tonight, when Kimberley Dynamiters\ngo to Trail, It may be their laat\ntrip to the West Kootenay before\nthe playoffs. Kimberley is scheduled to make another trip to Trail\nand Nelson before the end of the\nmonth, but it may be cancelled.\nThis will be the Dynamiters' third\njourney to this section of the league, and they haven't picked up a\nvictory on Trail or Nelson Ice yet\nthis season. This time they will be\nunder the direction of their new\nPlaying Coach, Bill Burnett. Since\nhe took over the team has split\ntwo games with Gonzaga.\nArt Forrest has returned to the\nfold of the Dynamiters, and his\npresence alone will make things\ntough for the high-flying Smokies\ntonight and the second-place Leafs\ntomorrow.\nThe ax will be over Trail's string\nof 16 cc-^ecutive unbeaten games\ntonight, but with only one road\ngame at Spokane out of their four\ngames remaining they stand a\ngood chance of finishing the league\nschedule with a stretch of 19 games\nwithout a loss.\nIf Kimberley loses both games\non this trip, and Nelson wins in\nSpokane Sunday, second place will\nbe clinched for the Maple Leafs.\nCranbrook Hockey\nTeam Is Beaten at\nLumberton by 10-5\nLUMBERTON, B.C.\u2014Last Sunday\nwas a big day for Lumberton hockey. In the morning a good sheet of\nice welcomed the Cranbrook and\nLumberton teams. Bert Erickson's\nteam from Cranbrook was turned\nback by a 10-5 score.\nBert Jansen scored a neat goal\non the Lumberton goalie, Roland,\nby picking a corner of the net.\nJim Gourlie played hard for Cranbrook.\nLineups follow:\nCranbrook\u2014Harrison, Cavanaugh,\nBarrett, Curie, Erickson, Gourlie,\nJansen and Bakken.\nLumberton\u2014T. Roland, A. Jones.\nD. Roland, Joe Downey, P. Parent,\nK. Thompson, R. Mitchell, H. Revans and E. South.\nIn the afternoon the Lumberton\nJcids entertained the Kimberley\nMidgets and played a good game of\nhockey for a 5-0 victory. Clifton\nBardford, Richard Joyce, Harold\nJansen and Bobbie Mitchell were\nthe goal getters while Lawrence\nKlinestiver was credited with two\nassists. K. McKenzie of Kimberley\nrefereed while Dickie Jones handled the watch.\nLater In thc afternoon the Lumberton men defeated the Mission\nIndians in a one-sided fixture on\nsoft ice. Bob Mitchell refereed.\nBOSTON SELLS AUKER\nI BOSTON. Feb. 8 (AP)-Boston\n[Meet Sox of the American Baseball\nILcague announced the outright sale\nI tonight of Elden Auker. right\n| handed pitcher, tn St. Louis Browns\nfor an undisclosed amount of cash\nAuker. chiefly famed for his sub-\n' marine delivery, came to the Sox\nlast season in a trade with Detroit.\nHe won nine games and lost 10 for\nBoston In ISM.\nPAQI   NINI\nm\nNOBODY READY TO ADMIT 60D0Y\nWILL TAKE TITLE FROM LOUIS\nBy (ID FEDER\n(Anoclated Press Sports Writer)\nNEW YORK, Feb. S (AP)\u2014Joe\nLouis makes the ninth defence In\nhie reoord-breaklng run as world's\nheavyweight boxing champion In\nMadlaon Square Garden tomorrow night At thla writing not a\noroaturo Is stirring who will predict Arturo Godoy of Chile oan\nUke the title away from him.\nA crowd of between 18,000 and\n19,000 customers Is expected to alt\nln on the proceedings, contribute\nto a gate ot more than $100,000, and\nthereby make the fifth straight appearance for Louis in the Garden\nwith a \"pot\" running into six figures. The lint preliminary ls slated for 5:30 p.m. PST and the big\ndoings at 7 p.m.\nThe Brown Bcjnfcer is 1 to 7 to\ncontinue bombing against the\nChilean fisherman where he left off\nagainst Bob Pastor in Detroit last\nSeptember, and most betting is on\njust how long the rough, tough\nSouth American can last before becoming the dusky destroyer's\neighth   straight   knockout   victim.\nSince Jo* won the championship\nfrom old Jim Braddock ln 37, only\nTommy Farr, the durable Welshman, has gone the 15-round derby\ndistance against Louis.\nGodoy, as long as he stays in\nhis crouch, will b\u00ab fully conscious of the evening's proceedings. Tony Galento showed that\na crouching, bobbing fellow can\nenjoy hlmeelf with Jo*. However,\nthe first time Tony \"came to the\nsurface\" last June, the roof fell\nln on him. So with Arturo\u2014and\nthis department picks him to\nstay submerged\u2014and on hand\u2014\nfor one-third of the rout*, with\nLouis flattening him any time\nalter th* fifth.\nThere was a possibility Louis\nmight be heavier than he naa ever\nbeen. When he wound up his boxing work yesterday, he scaled 204:\npounds and was not expected to\ntake off any of that before he turns\nup for the official poundage-taking.\nHe weighed an even 200 for Pastor\nand 200y, for Galento in his most\nrecent starts. Godoy figures to\nscale between 202 and 203.\nThe fight will be broadcast.\nRUGGED TRAINING\nAdvice to coaches: Take your\nteam for a ride, give them a good\nshaking up but don't hurt litem,\nso they will realize that it feels\ngood to be alive after all. Do this\nonce before every game.\nMaybe  there's some psychology\nto going through such an experience. It's something like an army\nputting on an exhibition before the\ngrandstands   after   being   through\nthe real thing.\nAt any rate, whether their shaking up had anything to do with It\nor not, the Gonzaga Bulldogs were\ngiven a great ovation for the way\nthey held the Smokies through two\nperiods in Trail Tuesday night.\nPROOF\nWhen word reached here that\nthey had defeated the Nelson Leafs\n3-1 Wednesday night, the sceptics'\neyes popped, for then they knew\nthe Smokies were not lying back.\nI can't figure it out. Leafs hold\nthe league leading Smokies to a\n5-5 tie and then the Gonzagans put\ndown the Leafs. Which all makes a\nfellow wonder ? ? ?\nElmer Piper, that ordinary-look1-\ning lad who took the Smokies to\nthe Allan Cup, admits a team make*\nor breaks a coach. Of course, he\nsaid, a coach must have on* man\non a team who will go out and express his ideas, show th* other fellows what he wants. Then the rert\nof the team, after seeing what they\nhave been told, soon fall in line.\nBut Elmer was a good salesman, a\ngood orator. When he talked to his\nboys he held their inturest, and if\nanyone said something he'd carry\nright on as though he hadn't noticed.\nIf Nelson waa on top of th* league\nPat Aitken would have been tope.\nIf the Dynamiters had b\u00aben leading\nPratt would have been likewls*.\nAfter losing umpty-ump games, th*\nSpokane boys beat Nelson. If Denny Edge, Spokane coach had been\nfired before the game, and a new\ncoach had been In the box, the moguls would have thought he had instilled something into the boys to\nbring about the win. Bicknell wu\nlooked on with favor after the Leaf\nteam held the Smokies to that 5-5\ntie. Nelson never lost to Gonzagans\nwhile Aitken was coaching. Which\nall proves nothing.\nLADIES'CURLING\nResults of Thursday afternoon's\ngames of the Nelson Ladies' Curling\nClub play for the Esling Basket\nfollow: Miss Grace Laughton 8,\nMrs. S. N. May 6; Mrs. Andrew\nKraft 9, Mrs. H. M. Whimster 7;\nMrs. A. H. Whitehead 12, Mrs.\nGeorge Cady 7.\nThree games are scheduled for\nthis afternoon, Involving rinks\nskipped by Miss Grace Laughton\nand Mrs. H. M. Whimster. Mrs. L.\nMaddin and Mrs. A. H. Whitehead,\nMrs. J. C. Hooker and Mrs. George\nCady. and Mrs. Andrew Kraft and\nMrs. T. A. Wallace.\nSports Roundup\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nAnoclated Press 8portl Writer\nNEW YORK, Feb. 8 (AP). -\nLarry White wants Fred Apostoli\nto visit the Mayo Clinic for a\nthorough check-up. but Fred ls\nbeing stubborn. . . . Bill Kern is on\na 10-day safari through West Virginia and is the toast of every town\nhe hits . . . You'd be surprised at\nthe number of fight men who give\nArturo Godoy a chance to go the\ndistance with Joe Louis tomorrow\nnight. This bureau picks Louis in\nfive or six . . . Tampa probably will\nbe selected for the All-Star Major\nleague game for the Finnish Relief\nFund. March 17.\nOne mintue interview:\nJack Ryder. Boston track coach \"1\nstill think Cunningham Is the most\nlikely 'four minute miler' of the\npresent crop . . . His difficulty lies\nwith lack of work, not his age.\"\nTalsto Maki, the Finnish runner,\nis nuts about orange juice and\nswing music. . . Walter St. Denis,\nace press agent for Mike Jacobs\nwasn't in Miami 48 hours until he\nhad talked the dog tracks Into clos-\nina up shop for the Conn-Lesnevich\nfisti-cuffs. Feb. 28.\nFOR GAS, OIL,\nLUBRICATION\nShorty's  Repair  Shop\n71\u00ab Ilakrr St Phone 171\nVANCOUVER. B. C, Feb. a (CP).\n\u2014Mrs. Mary Ferris McLarnin. 60,\nmother of Jimmy McLarnin, former\nworld's welterweight boxing champion, died here today, She Is survived by her husband. Samuel Mc-\nI^rnin. six daughters and five sons.\nHoop Finals Are\nlo Open al Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 8\u2014The battle\nfor West Kootenay Senior B, basketball supremacy will commence\nat Memorial Hall Wednesday whe-n\nRossland Royals and Trail Sheiks\nclash in the first of a two-game,\ntotal points series. The subsequent\ngame will be staged in the Rossland Armoury on the following\nSaturday.\nThe West Kootenay champions\nwill meet those of the East Kootenay February 23 and 24, either In\nTrail or Rossland.\nREMEMBER   WHEN?\nBy The Canadian Pre**\nLess than 2000 persons saw\nthe Heavyweight Champion Jack\nDempsey drop Dutch Selfert to the\nmat In 45 seconds at Memphis 18\nyears ago tonight. The Manassa\nMauler Tost his boxing crown to\nGene Tunnev two years later, and\nin a return bout In 1927 lost again\n\u2014before a crowd of 120,757.\nrV\nlondenV.ty\nThLs advertisement (j not pubUihe-4\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard   or   by   the   Government   ot\nBritish Columbia.\nAAA     AGE GOVERNMENT\nA M M    GUARANTEED y.\n3 STRR RYE\nA  special   quality  old  ry\u00ab   o!   fin*\nflavor,  thoroughly   matured   In   oak.\nnou.\n9125\nwir\u00bbi\n\u20223\n13 OZ.\nJ5 0L\n40 OZ.\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed hy the Liquor Control Board or hy\nThc Government of British Colttmhia.\n \u2014\u2014\u2014\n\u2014\u25a0\u25a0\u2014\u2014\n 1    ''llW>W;ljJ'l\u00bbieA1'1'^\n\u00ab   \"*\n>AGE   TEN\n-NEISON  DAILY NEW8   NELSON   B C-FRIDAY  MORNING.  FEB. 9. 1940.-\nWar May Bring Oil, Gas Rationing lo\nCanada, Engineers Hear; Unable Fill\nOwn Needs; Exchange Vital Necessity\nHuae Debt to U. S. May Have Far-Reaching\nEffect on War Economy; Britain Needs\nAmerican Funds for Purchases\nTORONTO, Feb. 8 (CP).\u2014Householders with oll-burnlng furnaces\nmay have to go back to coal If the war lasts long enough. OU-burnlng\nlocomotives may be replaced by coal burnera and other oil-burning\ndevices may likewise be affected. Gas for motor fuel may be rationed,\nand some buses and trucks stop running.\nThese radical change* were envisioned in a paper by G. A. Gaherty,\nM.E.I.C., President of the Montreal Engineering Company, dealing\nwith the Dominion's economic wartime front, and presented before\nthe Engineering Initltute of Caneda assembled In convention here.\n'he  need uf exchange  for war'\"\npurposes may make it desirable tn\ncurtail domestic consumption of\npetroleum products as the war\nproceed?,\" staled Mr. Gaherty. \"Canadian coal might well be substituted fnr oil and gasoline wherever this is practicable. The oil-\nburning locomotive operating\nthrough the mountains could be\nconverted to coal, as also household furnaces.\nRATIONING  MIGHT  BE\nNECESSARY\n\"As we become adjusted to a\nwar basis gasoline for private automobiles may have to be rationed as\nIn England, and the use of buses\nand trucks may have to bo .stopped\naltogether where passengers and\ngoods can br transported by rail,\nThis all would reduce thc pressure\nnn the sources of supply and release tanker capacity fnr transport\nof oil from North and South American ports to thc theatre of war, and\nso  make  available  additional  sup\ndrastically  our imports from  neutrals.\nU. S. MUST SEE IT\n\"The Americans on their part\nshould recognize that it is only by\nthis means that we can honor our\ndebts to them, that for every dollar\nby which their exports to us are\nsn reduced their exports to Britain\nand France will correspondingly\nincrease, and that every dollar they\nspent in Canada helps their own\ntrade.\"\nMr. Gaherty felt \u25a0 that exchange,\nthrough its command of the resources of neutral countries, might\nwell be the decisive factor in winning this war. In the matter of\nexchange, fortunately, Canada held\na key position and in world export trade was already fourth. Exports to neutrals should be further\nstepped up, new markets should be\ndeveloped, \"but it is in the curtailing of our imports from neutrals\nhy   substituting our own   products\nFor Valuable Information Daily, Look Down the Personal*\nNtaUum Eathi Htm\nTelephone 144\nClassified Advertising Rates\nlie per Hue- per Insertion.\n44c per line per week (fl consecutive inaertioriaS for cost ot 4).\n$1.43 per line a month (26 tlmea)\n(Minimum 2 lines per insertion)\nBox numbers He extra. Thia\ncovers any number of times.\nLEGAL NOTICE\nlBc per line, first Insertion and\n14c  each  subsequent Insertion.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT.\nSPECIAL LOW RATE8*\nSituations Wanted 25c for any\nrequired number of lines for\nsix  daya,  payable  in advance.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nSingle copy  $   -05\nBy carrier, per week 25\nBy carrier, per yea\/    1300\nBy Mail*\nOne month   $ .73\nThree months    2.00\nSix months    4.00\nOne year    8.00\nAbove rates apply in Canada,\nUnited States, and United Kingdom, to subscribers living outside regular carrier areas.\nElsewhere and in Canada where\nextra postage is required, one\nmonth $1.50. three months $4 00.\nsix months $8 00, one year $15.00.\nplies of nil and gasoline vital to the I and those of our Allies that we can\nsuccessful  conduct  of   mechanized   '\nwarfare.\"\nThe Allies were dependent upon\nneutrals for certain commodities\nnnd crude oil, to a notable degree, is\none of them, Mr. Gaherty proceeded. Mercury and antimony wore\namong the others. But after thc defaults following the last war. the\nfinancing of purchases of these\ncommodities was a different matter.\n\"To make the resources of neutrals available to the Allies their\n\u2022exchange is indispensable, particularly American exchange, and this\nis only obtainable in sufficient\namount through exports and the\ncurtailing of non-essential imports,\"\nhe said in explanation.\n\"On account of Canada's favorable balance of trade with Britain\nand our debt to the United Slates\ndo our most effective work\nSHOULD ATTRACT TOURISTS\nAmong the measures suggested\nwere to improve Canadian tourist\nfacilities so that more Americans\nwould be induced to spend their\nmoney in Canada; to increase\nCanada's gold production; to do\nwhat we could to increase other\nexports, and to cut down imports from neutrals so far as\npossible. \"Our prewar imports\nfrom neutrals so far 'a\nfrom neutrals ran lo half a billion dollars per year,\" said Mr.\nGaherty, \"of which at least a\nthird we could either do without\nor obtain satisfactory substitutes\nfnr, either locally or from our\nAllies, at little inconvenience or\nincrease in cost.\" Among the last\nmentioned are agricultural products that might be supplanted by\ntes,   and\nnur non-efsential imports from the j Canadian-grown substitu\nUnited State*: are sure to be cut\" agricultural machinery,\ndrastically Thc sooner we grasp \\ Crude petroleum and petroleum\nthis and take steps to meet the products occupied a place at the\nsituation, the less we will suffer in I top of the list of Canada's imports\nth\" process. j and deserved special consideration\nmire npfiT Tn n  e Thf> speaker dealt with the Turner\nHUGE DttiT TO U. S. Va]lev UqU> \u25a0\u201e Alberta and the pos-\n\"We entered Die war with a huge Nihilities of stepping un production\nd-'bt tn the Tjn.ted S'.ates that is; fur the benefit of all Canada. \"The\nlikely tn hive far-reaching effrcts , utmost we can hone to do in step-\non nur war economy. Our Gov- -jjn.-\u00bb un ,,ur cril(*jP n,i production\ncrnmi'iits had financed their ex- -.vill fall far short of supplying our\ntravagan: projects m money bor- domestic rcauirements,\" he said.\ned directly m New York or in- j BRITISH  COAL\nNazi Shipyards\nOccupied by Turks\n,    ISTANBUL, Feb. 8 (AP)-Turk-\n1 ish marine today occupied the German-owned Krupp shipyards on the\nGolden Horn at Istanbul,\nAt the same time it was annrxic-\ned the Turkish Government is dismissing Genman naval engineers\nand technicians who had been\nequipping Turkish submarines for\ntbe Turkish navy at the seized\nyards.\nThe Golden Horn, where the yard\nis located, is an inlet of the strategic Bosphorus, straits which separate Asia Minor from Europe.\nOfficial quarters confirmed that\nGerman residents of Turkey, particularly businessmen, have departed in large numbers during thc\nlast few days.\nWhile some sources attributed\nthis to Germany's desire to have all\navailable manpower in the Reich,\nI others connected it with the feel-\n\\ ing that war may sprad to South'\nj eastern Europe and the Near East\nI in   the   Spring.\nI Another factor in the picture was\nj the arrival in Egypt yesterday of\n' General Maxime Weygand. Com-\nI mander of France's Near Eastern\nforces.\nBIRTHS\nCOOPER - To Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cooper, 818 Cedir Street, it\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nFebruary B, IMP, a ion.\t\nK1LLOUGH - To Mr. and Mis.\nJohn Klllounh ot Castlegar. at thu\nMater Mlscicordlac Hospital, Ross-\nland, February 3, a daughter,\nWALTON - To Mr. and\" Mrs\/ U\nP. Walton, 324 Nelson Avenue, at\nKootenay Lake General Hospital,\nFebruary 8, 1340, a daughter, Grace\nLouise.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED - GIRL TO DO HOUSE\nwork on dairy farm. State age,\nwages expected, etc., to Box 55,\nTrail, B. C.\nEXP. WILLING FARM HAND,\nMust be able to milk. State wages.\nF. Forch, Erie, B. C.\nAGENT8 AND SALESMEN\nWE HAVE AN OPENING IN OUR\nSales Department for an aggressive young salesman and arc prepared to offer an attractive proposition to anyone who is willing\nto work hard for a real future m\nthis growing and profitable field\nBox 543 Daily Ncws._\nLOST AND FOUND\nPERSONAL\nFOR SALE MISCELLANEOUS!\nTo Finders\nIf you find anything, telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ad.\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from tho\nowner.\nLOST - CLAW BROOCH. KEEP-\nsake. Phone 375L.\t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nSpecial Low Rates for advertisements under this classification\nto assist people seeking employment. Only 25c for one week\n(6 days) covers any number\nof required lines. Payable in\nadvance\nYOUNG CANADIAN MAN, GOOD\nall around ranch or dairy hand\nwants work. Box 584 Daily News.\nCAPABLE\" GIRL.\" WANTS' MORN-\ning or afternoon work^Ph. 571K\nWANTED MISCELLANEOUS\nI SHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nI or iron. Any quantity. Top prices\nI paid. Active Trading Company.\nI    916 Powell St., Vancouver, B. C.\nU. S. Plans Fish\nHatchery in B. C.\ndirectly by diverting Canadian\nmoney from our own industries.\nAs i result it takes severel hundred\nmillion dollars a year to service\nour American debts. Our export and\nimport tr;:de with the United\nS'a'<*s were about in balance, but\nwe had n favorable balance in our\ntrade with Britain large enough to [ tra-dc\"\ns\/ryice our deb'.s to Ihe United I Regarding the setting up of pure-\n.,,_ : ly wartime industries, Mr, Gaherty\nthought  Canada  might follow cut\nCoal, one of Canada's chief imports, would have to be Canadi;n\ncoal 50 far as possible or imported\nfrom Allied countries, \"We should\nalways bear in mind that Welsh\nanthacite is the very best and\nmakes an excellent return cargo\nfor   ships   used   in   the   overseas\n\"Thus, it was our trade with\nBritain that was providing us with\nthe wherewithal to lnlar.ee our\naccounts w.th the United States,\nand Br.tain was obtaining this, in\nport at lenst, fmm American tourists and from carrying American\nRoods Jn her ships, sources of income in American funds now dra\nJapanese Report\nCapture of Wuming\nI HONG KONG, Feb. 8 fAP) -\n; Japanese reported today that their\nI force* had captured the walled city\nI of Wuming, about 30 miles North cf\nI Nanning in Kwangsi Province, as\nI beleaguered China celebrated the\n\u25a0 advent of the Chinese New  Year.\nBritain's \"shadow factory\" plan but\n\"we should realize that in some\ncases it will be more eccnomical\nto draw on the United States for\nour peak lead requirements than\nto build factories to be operated\nfor  a short  period only,  and   this\nticallv  curtailed'   But   Britain   he-   [\"^cs it all the mere important lo\nelf, wi'h her income in American   builfJ up a stron*; exchange position\nfunds   Sai diy   n duced   now,   need\nhese   in   greatly   increased   volum\nthe  meantime.\"\n\"When thc war starts in earnest,\"\nto purchase crude oil, .vrplanes and ' ne 5aid in cc,nclusion. \"we may be\nraw materials for her muniticn.s unpleasantly surprised. Our war ef-\nindustry. *rr' cannot be overdone, as better\n\".She\" propose? paving us with! t;fiuip-vient for our armed forces\nCanadian securities for repatriation, i nr-ans correspondingly fewer cas-\nhut this dnrs no: nnvide u; with unities. Per capita, Britain is cur-\nthe needed American exchange; lenlly spending < ver four times\nwherewith to nice: our obligation* m*r anticipated expenditure for the\nto the United State*:. Under present fi^l year of the war. Even to ap-\nrrcumstnnccs we have\" not a hope ! proach thc British figure, we must\nof petting tiie necessary American ' first put our house in order. Apart\nfunds fn-m Britain, and we. there- from their excessive cost, our mill-\nfore, have nn alternative but to tiplicity of governments breed sec-\ns'ep up our exports where possible ti nal jeal my and discontent. A\n'o the United States and o'.vt better understanding between thc\nnou'ral-. to encourage American various sections rf the country is\n' u'r.sts to visit Canada while spend- ' badly needed. We should also coning as little ;,s we can on travelling ' tinue to cultivate the friendship\nn We United States, and to curtail' of our neighbors to the South\"\nVOLUNTEERS MAY CO TO\nFINLAND NEXT WEEK\nI LONDON, Feb. 8 (CP)-The first\ni contingent   of    British   volunteers\nmay be eff to Finland next veek.\ni    Unofficial reports said 'hundreds'\ncf applicants  were being  enrolled\n1 by   the   Finnish  legation   to  leave\nas soon as possible.\n1    Only   men   over  27  years   old\u2014\n\u25a0 outside the classes likely to be called this year for the British army\u2014\n, are free \\-> go. The government has\nj taken no fcrmal part in th-\" w< rk\n, which is being supervised by Finns\n\u25a0 here.\nGRAND COULEE. Wash, Feb. 8\n(AP)\u2014Thc United States wants to\ngo into the fish raising business in\nBritish Columbia. Frank A. Banks,\nBureau of Reclamation Engineer in\ncharge cf Grand Coulee Dam, disclosed here today.\nBanks s-aid it had been found desirable to install a hatchery for\n, Blueback Salmon at the South end\n. of Shaha, or Dog Lake, 25 miles\nNorth of the Canadian Boundary\non the Okanagan River, which runs\ninto thc Columbia downstream\nfrom the Dam,\nTiie hatchery, he said, would operate for about 10 vears as an auxiliary to thc $1,000,000 plant the\nBureau is building at Leavenworth\nto care for thc propagation of salmon blocked from their usual\nspawning grounds by thc Coulee\nDam.\nAn appropriation from thc United\nStates Congress t r tne British Columbia hatchery and consent of\nthe Dominion Government for th*\nleasing of the site will be sought.\nSALVATION ARMY - IF YOU\nhave old clothing, footwear or fur*\nniture to spare please Ph. us, filfiL\nCLARES HOLM' BUTTER USD\nbread is delicious. Freah. Direct\nfrom Creamery. Exclsv. Star Croc.\n$20.50 POST CARD SIZE KOD'ATrT,\nstock taking special (12,00. Mann,\nRutherford Company.\t\nHAVE YOU ANY ANTIQUES?\nTop prices paid  for antiques at\nThe Home Furn iturc, A13 Hall-St.\nA PORTRAIT BY McGREGOR Fs\na Portrait of Distinction. Phone\n224, !W7 Ward Street.\nFOR ANY SECOND HAND GOODS\nbe sure to see J. Chess, Second\nHand Store, Vernon Street.\nSANITARY  PERSONAL RUBBER\nGoods, 24 latex $1. Free price list\nJ. Jensen, Box 324, Vancouver.\t\nIF YOU'RE \"IN A ^HURRY-CALL\n990. If you have far to go\u2014cull\n990,Jn anycase call 990. City Taxi\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP At\nAimer Hotel, Opp. C. P. H. Deput,\nCHOQUETTE BROS. \"MOTHER'S\nBread\" helps build healthier buys\n_and girls. Ph. 258 for daily dlvry.\nMEN - DR. KRUSS* PRESCRIP-\ntion restores vigor. A medicine\nthat gives results. $1 pstpd. Imperial Laboratories. Gunton, Manituoa\nGENUINE\"LATEX\" SPECIAL GTD.\n25 for $1.00 or jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00 (free catalogue) National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton.\nAN OFFER TO EVERY IN-\nventor, list of wanted inventions\nand full information sent free. Thc\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys,^ 273 Bank St., Ottawa.\nANY^SIZE ROLL\" FILM .DEVEL-\noped and printed 25c. The most\nmodern Pholo Finishing Plant in\nthc West. Established over 30 yrs.\nKrystal Photos, Wilkie, Sask. __\nMEN'S'SANITARY RUBBER\ngoods, send $1 for 12 samples tested, guaranteed, prepaid. Free Novelty price list..Princeton Dlstnbu-\n_tors,_Jiox 61,_Princeton,_B._C.\nMEN! WANT VIM? TRY , RAW\nOyster Tonic. OSTREX Tablets,\nto pep up whole body quick! If\nnot delighted with results first\npackage, maker refunds its low\nprice. You don't risk a penny.\nCall, write Mann, Rutherford Oo.,\nand all_ other good druggists.\nWOMEN HAVE \"USED THE ENG~-\nlish Remedy, Dr. Woods Steel\nPill's, with wonderful success in\nstubborn delays and painful periods. Price in Canada now $2 per\nbox, postpaid, Canadian agents,\nImperial Laboratories, Box 22,\nGunton, Manitoba.\nTHE\" GREATEST BOOK'BARGAIN\nof all times, \"Gone With the\nWind,\" by Margaret Mitchell,\nSI.00 postpaid. This special edition measures 7 inches by y'-j\ninches with 12 full page color illustrations from the motion picture. The text is complete, unaltered from thc original edition,\nLimited supply. Rush your order\nto Roddy's Book Shop, 355A,\nYonge Street, Toronto, Ontario.\npkams\"and FOLDING* CARRI-\nages. Haskins & Elliott feature\nthe celebrated Pedigreed Prams\nand Lloyd Folding Sulkies; there\nare none better. Good used prams\nfrom $6 50 up Used folding sulkies at ]'i the price new goods.\nComplete stock of parts and our\nService Department pays particular attention to mail orders.\nWe repair anything. Don't discard broken valuables \u2014 write\nto us for an estimate. Haskins &\n; Elliott, 18 West Hastings Street,\nVancouver. B   C.\nBUILDING MATERIALS\nLet us know your requirement! covering your works\nprogram. Our first objective\nwill be to quote you the\nlowest price, consistent with\nquality.\nNelson  Sash & Door\nCo., Ltd.\n701 Front Street        Phone 292\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTING\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock-for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE VARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, B. C.\nNEARLY NEW ELECTROLUX\nVacuum Cleaner complete. Apply\nR. C. Mackinnon, Crescent Valley\nFOR SALE, 2 BEDS, BED-CHSTFD.\ncrib and high chair, table and 2\nchairs. 711 Nelson Avenue.\nFOR SALE-REMINGTON TYPE\nwriter, like new. 524 Hoover St.\nAUTOMOTIVE\nMOTORCYCLES, BICYCLES\nCITY AUTO WRECKERS ARE\nnow situated at 180 Baker Street.\nPhone 447.\nSACRIFICE SALE\n1935 International Panel Delivery\n1936 Ford Light Delivery\nCITY AUTO WRECKERS\nPhone 447 180 Baker St.\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nFOR SALE!\nIn best residential district, FAIR-\nVIEW, Modern six room house.\nFireplace. Electric Range. Piped\nFurnace, Oak Floors in living and\ndining room. Three bedrooms. Double plumbin?. Numerous built-ins.\n! Nicely finished throughout. Garage\nin  basement.\nAlso\nWell built four room house, near\ncompletion.   Fireplace,   Piped   furnace, Insulation. Easy walking dis\nUnce from town.\nPhone 745R1 or Write to\n707 Cottonwood St., Nelson\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY\nAND SUPPLIES. ETC.\nThis year-Raise\nThe Chicks\nWhich Give\nResults\"\nUnsexed   Pullets\n100 1000   100  500\nLeghorns   J13 $120   $27 $125\nRock, Reds\nand N. Hamps. ... $15 $140   $26 $120\nL.. Sussex     $16 \u2014   $28 \u2014\nPullet Chicks Guaranteed\n97% Accurate\nWrite for our special anniversary\nbook.\u2014Free on request,\nRutttDftSendatl\nBox N, Langley Prairie, B C.\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL   DIRECTOI\nASSAYER8\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCI.\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgl\nEngineer. Sampling Agents\nTrail  Smelter.  304-305 Joseph\nStreet, Nelson, B. C.\nGRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOI\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist.\nFall Street. P. O. Box 9, Nels\nB. C. Representing shippi\ninterest at Trail, B. C.\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAI\nB. C. Provincial Assaye:, Chem\nIndividual representatives\nshippers at Trail Smelter.\nCHIROPRACTORS\nj. r McMillan, d. c, neui\ncalomcter. X-ray. McCullock I\nDlf WlLBERT BROCK, D.\n542 Baker StreetJPhone 969.\nCORSETIERES\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\ni    on   easy   terms   in   Alberta  and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full in-\ni    formation to 908, Dept. of Natural\nResources, C. P.R., Calgary, Alta.\nFOR~SIALE EXCEPTION AL\" PROP-\nerty value in Fairview Dist. Ap-\nprox. one acre with 3 rm. house.\nCity light and water. Low taxes.\n_$750._App_ly_D. L. Kerr. Ndson.\nwanted to buy Rouse wtTh\n4 lots or more Box 568 Dally News\nFOR SALE 4 CLEARED LOTS AT\nsacrifice on Houston St. Ph. 1095L\nROOM AND  BOARD\nGOOD ROOM AND  BOARD. AP-\nply 419 Silica Street. Phone 226R\nPETS, CANARIES, BEES. ETC.\nA   SPRINGER  SPANIEL  BROOD\nbitch  R S. Scars, Kamloops, B C.\nFOR AND WANTED TO RENT\nMODERN HEATED ROOMS. LOW\nWinter rates. Roysl Hotel. Ph. 686\nNEWLY DECORATEDHSKP RMS.\n_ 904_SJanley_Street, PhoneJ58L. _\nFURNISHED HOUSE  KEEPING\nrooms for rent. Annable Block.\nTERRACE\"APTsT\"Beau\"tiful modem\nfrigidaire ^quipped suites.\nTWO ROOM FURNISHED  SUITE\nforj^nt. Stirling Hotel.\n\u2014SEE KERR APARTMENTS\nWANT TO BUY A CARLOAD, 20\nhead of fresh and coming  milk\ncows. Must be Jersey. Give full\ninformation and price to No. 12,\nQueens Hotel, Nelson.\nFor Quality and Performance\nBURNSIDE CHICKS\nAre Dependable\nLeghorns, Hampshires, Rocks, Reds,\nRed X Leghorns, 27 years breeding\nand   hatching   behind   them.   All\nstock   Government  Approved   and\nbloodtested. AU hens of all  breed\nmated to males individually\npedigreed\nBURNSIDE POULTRY FARM\nA. E. Powell Hammond, B. C.\nNelson District Representative:\nMr. H. Tschauner, Blewctt, B. C.\n10 FREE CHICKS PER 100 ADDED\nto all early orders with 25% deposit. Unsexed Leghorns $11.75.\nRocks, Reds, Hampshires $13.75.\n97% pullets $21, Leghorns $25\nper 100 March delivery. Write\nfor FREE catalogue and reduced\nrate on large orders. Alberta\nElectric Hatcheries, 2417E-1A St.\nS. E.Calgary, Alberta.\nBABY CHICKS, SEXED PULLETS\nand Cockerels. Now hatching and\nsexing. 10 free chicks with ea.-h\n100 on all early orders. Send\nfor our new colored poultry boon\nand prices. Now ready. Provincial\nHatcheries, 10633, 101st Street,\nEdmonton, Alberta.\nHORSES\" FORSALE~-^78~HEAD,\nin Nelson. In barn Cady Lumber\nyard. 3 well-matched teams and\nsingle. Good gentle work horses\nfrom 1400 to 1800 at reasonable\nprices. Fred Hlookoff, Robson.\nBABY CHICKSTRHObE\" ISLAND\nReds, bloodtested approved stock.\n$10 per 100. John Goodman, 1635\nGilley  Ave..  New  Westminster.\nPULLETS,\"R.~I.\"R.,\" and HAMP-\nshires. August hatched. Starting\nto lay. $1.25 each. R. O. P. Sired\nB. T. stk, Tom Neaie; R R. 1 Nelson\nFOR SALE\" 1 \"COW.\"FRESHENED\nJan. 22; 1 work horse, 1 logging\nwagon. A. R. Johnston, Procter.\nreds7suss\"ex7leghorns\"mat-\ned pens. Cockerels, L. Pullets $1.25\n_Settlng ^ggs^'Cedardalc\", R. R. 1\nWANTED.  12  YOUNG  LEGHORN\nhens.  Box 557 Daily  News.\nSPENCER CORSETS, MRS. V.\nCampbell, 370 Baker St. Ph. I\nFARM, GARDEN & NURSERY\nPRODUCTS, FERTILIZER\nOIL EMULSION FOR FRUIT\ntrees should be ordered now, as\nwe will only bring In the exact\namount ordered in advance. Thc\nBrackman-Ker Milling Co. Ltd.\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\n'ROOMING ft BOARDING HOUSE\nbusiness   for sale.  Centrally   io-\n| cated Standard water tank electric heater for sale. Write 751\nFarweil   St.,   Trail.   Phone   915Y\nENGINEERS AND 8URVEYOF\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, I\nSurveyor and Engineer. Pho\n\"Beaver  Falls.\"\nHOMES FOR THE AGED\nCONDUCTED BY THE S 1 S T E\nof the Love of Jesus for eld1\nladies. The Priory Guest Hous\nnew residence with every rr\nern comfort. St. Anthony's G'\nHouse, a lovely home with v\nmoderate rates. St. Raphael's W\nfor invalids and convalesce\nSt. Jude's House of Rest for\nerly couples. For prospectus aj\nMother Superior. 949 W.\nAvenue, Vancouver, B. C.\nINSURANCE AND REAL EST\/\nC. D. BLACKWOOD. Insuranct\nevery description. Real_Est. Pt\nJ. E. ANNABLE REAL EST7\nRentals, Insurance. Annable\nCHAS, F. McHARDYTlNSUHAI\n_Real Estate. PhoneJ35.\nR. W. DAWSON, Rcaf Esfate,\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hippel\nHardware, Baker St. Phone\nMACHINISTS\nBENNETTS LIMITED\nMachine shop, acetylene and elec\nwelding, motor rewinding\ncommercial refrigeration\nPhone 593 324 Vernon\nMEMORIALS\nSAME AS USED ON GRAVES\nForest Lawn Memorial Park,\nprice list from Bronze Memof\nLtd, Box  726. Vancouver.  B\nNOTARIES\nD. J   ROBERTSON. Notary Pu\n305  Victoria Street.\nPATENT ATTORNEYS\nW. ST. J. MILLER, A. M. E. I\nRegistered Patent Attorney,\nada and U. S  A. 703-2nd St.\nCalgary Advice free, confiden\nSASH FACTORIE8\nLAV\/SON'S SASH FACTf\n^Hardwood merchant 273_Bake\nSECOND   HAND  STORES\nWE   BUY.   SELL   tt   EXCHA1\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph.\nYOU SAW IT IN THE DAILY NEWr\nWATCH  REPAIRING\nWhen SUTHERLAND repair's :\nI    watch it is on time all the t\n345 Baker Street. Nelson. B.\nFOR WANT AD SERVICE\nPHONE 144\nGREAT SCOTT. IS WHAT AWAY TO\nTALK  TO YOUBHELR^\nYOU DIDN'T TALK\nManion to Speak\nMonday at 7:30 p.m.\nOTTAWA. Feb 8 (rP)-Con-\nservative leader Mnnion will\ntirnade,i5' over a national h -ok-\nnp of Canadian st-itions nn Monday from 7.\u2122 !o 8 00 P. M, PST\nM nday will be n hu. -,- day for\ni1-.\" Con.crvai.ve National Leader\nUc will speak at a lunch.e n a! Pit!\nArthur at n. on, address a ir.as*\nmert.r.g in Fori W.lliam in the rv-\n(\u25a0:\u25a0..:iC ar.d no direr! from there tn\nthe broadcasting studio Dr. Man-\n;-'n is candidate in Fort W.ll.am.\n'.'io c ns'itucncv he represented m\nli o C. irmons hot :o 1935.\nHave You a\nUsed\n\"HIGH (HAIR\"\ni\ni\nWhy Not Turn   It\nInto Cosh?\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTai   >2    line* fl tlmiM W)c  net\nTwo  i ?i  lines oner 20c net\nh 'clson Dr lv Mews\nPHONE   \".\nShrimps Withstand\nRough Treatment\nPALO ALTO, Cal , Fob, 8 (AV>-\nIbw tough  is n shrimp?\nProf. Douglas M Whittnker, Stanford University biologist, put em-\nbryofi of the artemia shrimp\nthrmirh a 24-h ur bath in liquid\nn.r, 310 degrees below zero Fahrenheit, and didn't get hii answer tn\nthe question, They came out alive.\nHe ;.!.-. . put some of the em-\nhryos into a high vacuum for six\nmonths.\u2014si th.it they had no fmd,\nwater, or air. Again they continued\nto  hve\nI':of. Whitakfr didn't give up He\nput some more shrimp embryo**, in\nincutim chambers and ret them\non shelves to stay a while- one\n11 tw- opened in a year, an ther in\nfive \\eaio. still another in 10 years,\nand  so nn.\nThe artemia shrimp, about the\nM7P of the thumb nail, is found in\nextremely rait waters, such a-, the\n[lead Sea, the Great Salt Lake in\nt'tih  and Mono Lake,  in Califor-\nLABOR BLAMES LEWIS\nFOR BLOCKINC PEACE\nMIAMI, Fla, Feb 8 'AP'- The\nAmerican Federation rf L.ibor today directly charged John I- Lewis\nCongress for Industrial Organization chieftain, with blocking peace\nbetween the organiiatirns and\nasked President Roosevelt to make\npublic what each of the two labor factions had agreed to do \"so\nthat responsibility for failure to\nresume neare negotiations sha\"\nbe placed where it properly belongs.\"\nTHAIN TO STAND TRIAL\nON   MURDER   CHARGE\nBELLEVILLE, Ont, Fr*b. 8 'CP'\n\u2014 Fred   Thain   t day   was   committed to stand trial on charges of the !\nmurder   of   Mr.   and   Mr.'.   Arnold j\nWelman, aged firm c uple rf Har- i\nold,  Ont. 22 miles North  of here,\nlast Thursday.\nKELOWNA IAPANESE\nCIVE TO WAR EFFORT\nKELOWNA, I! C, Frh  8 ICP)   - ,\nA donation of $70 from thr Kel'vana\nJ,ap,inc.e<> Wnme-n'.e Asirvfiatnn wss\n1:1 thc hsnrla of Mayor G A MKiv\ntradly for forwarding In Ot:\u00ab',a,i a<\na contribution to Canada.a war effort\nKJCW-OEWEMBEB-VOU\nCAM TAKB  A  STPOLL\nAS PA\u00bb AS B SCAY>^\nP4Y-9E SLICE TO GET\nPACK TO THE MOTEL\nWiTWXI  AM l-OJV-\nDEATHS\nCALLANDER, Scotland - Tiie\nd wager Viscounteu Either, widow\nf We statesman ot first Great War\nf,.n.*\nVANCOUVER- Major Mmtagur\nFurtx-r. () I! E. 67, late of ihe R.,yal\n!\u2022 :-h logimen! and attached to thr\nl.r;ti-h lu'adi|uar!er*; staff during\nlhe fir>l ('.real W.ir. Major Furber\nwa*. bom ;n London ]\\e .\u2022*.\u00bbrved in\nIndia (mm 1900 lo IMS, then wu\ntransferred to the regimental depot\nnt CTnnmel, Ireland, where he met\nhis wife She is a daughter of the\nlite Forbes Vernon, one-time Mjn-\nis'.er of Land.- for British Columbia\nin thr MrEride Government\nQUAKE FELT, CALIFORNIA\nSACRAMENTO. Feb 8 (AIM -\nAn earthquake today shook win-\nfl-iv.<; .ind arou?ed sleepers in r.or*\n'liein Californin. but apparently nc\nd;im i'f  was i mii-rd\nlhe shock .\u25a0n*. felt throughout\nlhc bacrnni'.nty Valley.\nNew Oil Turbine\nProduces Electricity\nUnder the Ground\nBy HOWARD BIAKESLEE\n(Asiorlated Pren Science Editor)\nNEW YORK. Feb fl <AI'i --\nScience has t new turbine which\npromises to rob bombing plarrs of\none of their most potent tnrea's '\u25a0\u25a0\nbig eity life- destruction of elec'.rir\npower plant*.\nThe turbine is a power plan\nprating  on   a  new prmespip  o\nrectly    generating   eler'rinty    fr 'in\nfuel   |* is easily placed ;r jri under\ngrornd bombproof chamber *nd  is\ncnpabl*\"   of  starling  ilme.it   mean\ntaneoui generation of elfrtritVy to\nreplace regular power plan's\n!     Newi of the turbine and its war\ntime  pos-slbllltles wis made  public\nhere today by the American Srcielv\nof Meehanicat Engineer* in t report\nhy Adolphe Meyer of Zurich   Rw t-\nler land.  In  the Journal  Mechanical\nEnffinrrring.\nWartime ndvaniagr-, da'med arr\nchrannes'. light weight, small nMilling: .space, freed >rn from rrerl of\nanv connection with a wa'er supplv\nand installatli n right it '.tie p >.:\u2022'\nif consumption.\n -\nmm\ntv\n\u2014\u2014\n\t\n\t\n\\<6\n-NELSON  DAILY  NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-FRIDAY  MORNINQ. TEB. 9, 1940\nII SI. Leaders\naoe Big Rally\nin Final Hour\nf YORK, Feb. 8 (AP). - A\nliylng wave today swept stock\nit leaders up 1 to 3 points. It\n'Me third consecutive rising\n\u00bb and volume, in the final\npicked up appreciably. Tran.s-\n'I around 800,000 shares were\nSst in several weeks.\ni runup came after consider-\nUMltancy during the early part\n| proceedings. Short covering,\nrs said, had much to do with\nit-minute spurt. Aircrafts were\nnt throughout. Steels, motors\nher industrial specialties join-\n1 procession after midday, and\nwere around peak prices at\nwe.\nre were few outstanding de-\nnents in business, the United\nCongress, politics or war, but\native contingents thought the\nppeared more responsive to\nl inspiration than otherwise.\n' highs for the past year were\ned for Studebaker and Dres-\nfg., among others. Prominent\nt upside were Douglas Air-\nBoeing, Glenn Martin, Chrys-\nteneral Motors, U. S. Steel,\n;hem, Sloss-Sheffield, Mont-\ny Ward, N. Y. Central, Pull-\n(Vestinghouse, American Can,\nMorris, Homes take Mining.\nmia Packing and Consolidated\nr Mines.\non Several Small\n)ld Properties at\nYmir Is Suggested\ntovement is on foot to amalga-\nMveral smaller gold proper-\nthe Ymir district with a view\nling all ore at a central mill,\ni reported in Nelson Thurs-\n{ mill already in the district\nbe used, It was said.\n)ils Unchanged\n.-GARY,   Feb.   8   (CP).\u2014Oils\nto establish a definite trend\nt the close prices were prac-\nunchanged from yesterday\nlgary Stock Exchange today,\nfcrs 9970 shares.\nIta and Mercury wert the\ntpots, picking up a point and\npectively, and West Flank add-\nlet lost Vt to 33*4 and Royal\n,ian on an odd-lot sale dropped\nHT DECLINE IN\nOST OF LIVING INDEX\n:AWA. Feb. 8 (CP). - The\nlion Bureau of Statistics re-\ntoday moderate recessions\n)ods were responsible for a\ndecline in the cost of living\nto 85.3 in January from 85.5\ncember. Last year it was 83,3.\nindex for foods fell from\nO 78.5 due principally to de-\nin eggs, creamery butter,\nsalmon and codfish. These\nof greater consequence than\nises in meats, canned vege-\npotatoes, tea and coffee.\nDIVIDENDS\nvn Oil Corporation, preferred\n\u2022ol Oil and Gas Company, Llm-\n,wo cents.\nIvie    Flour   Mills   Company\nquarterly preferred, $1.75\nhare.\nrwin Williams Company of\nLimited, preferred, $3.50\n\u00bbare, on account of arrears*\nadian In'ernati.nal Invest-\nTrust Limited, cumulative\nrred, half of one per cent.\n'wn 0:1 Corporation preferred,\nrol Oil & Gas Company, two\nmetal markets      Nelson Architect Wins Recognition oy City of New York\nLONDON, Feb. 8 (API- Bar silver 2140, unchanged. (Equivalent\n38.99 cents on the dollar basis $4.03)\nBar gold in London 168s unchanged.\nTin spot \u00a3238 5s bid. \u00a3238 10 s\nasked; future \u00a3238 bid, \u00a3238 5s\nasked\nMONTREAL\u2014Bar gold ln London was inchanged at $37.54 an\nounce in Canadian funds; 168s in\nBritish, representing the Bank of\nEngland's buying price. The fixed\n$35 Washington price amounted to\n$38.50 in Canadian.\nSpot; copper, Electrolytic, 12.50;\ntin 61.25; lead 5.50, zinc 5.56, antimony 15.25.\nSilver futures closed unchanged\ntcday. bid: Fab. 37.75.\nNEW YORK - Copper barely\nsteady; electrolytic s<pot 11.25; export fas NY 11.20.\nTin 6tcady; spot and nearby 45 12\n4; forward 44.37%.\nLead steady, spot, New York 5.00-\n5.05; East St. Louis 4.85.\nZinc steady, East St, Louis spot\nand forward 5-50.\nBar silver 34s\/a, unchanged.\nChicago Wheat High,\nDue Weather Reports\nCHICAGO, Feb. 8 (AP) .-Wheat\nprices reached their highest level in\ntwo weeks today as the market advanced two cents a bushel due to\nbuying inspired partly by forecast\nof cold weather over the grain belt.\nEastern interests were ln the\nmarket for oats and rye on rumors\nthat Finland may be a purchaser.\nSome Canadian wheat was sold to\nGreat Britain and the continent and\nFinland took quantities of U. S.\nlard.\nWheat closed IH\u20141% cents higher than yesterday, May 99%\u20147\/,,\nJuly 97\u201497%; corn Vi\u2014% up, Mav\n56s,' \u2014%, July 56%;  oats one cent\nhigher.\nEXCHANCE MARKETS\nMONTREAL, Feb. 8 (CP)-Brit-\nish and foreign exchange, nominal\nrates between banks only:\nArgentina, peso, .2570\nBelgium,  belga,  .1869\nFrance, franc, .25072\nItaly, lire, .0561\nJapan, yen, .2609\nSwitzerland, franc, .2490\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal: Pound: buying 4.43,\nselling 4.47; U.S. dlr buying 1.10,\nselling 1.11; franc 2.50 23-32.\nAt New York: Pound 3.98; Cdn\ndlr .87; franc 2.2554.\nIn gold: Pound 10s ld; U.S. dlr\n61.06 cents; Cdn dlr 55.06 cents.\nNEW YORK, Feb. 8 (CP)-Ma-\njor European currencies showed\nsmall losses in relation to the\nUnited States dollar in the Foreign\nExchange Market today.\nThe pcur.d sterling closed uiv\nchanged at $3.98 while the French\nfranc 1 st .004 cent to 2.25*., and\nthe Belgian belga .02 cent. The\nSwiss franc was off .00% cent and\nthc Netherlands guilder .02 cent.\nThe Canadian dollar gained 1-16\ncent of a discount of 13 per cent.\nClosing rates, Great Britain in\ndollars, others in cents:\nOfficial Canadian Control Board\nbuying rate for U. S. dollar* 110.00,\nselling rate 111.00. Open market\nrates. Montreal in New York 87.00,\nNew York in Montreal 115.00.\nGreat Britain, demand 3.974,\nrabies 3 98; 60-day bills 3 96; 90-day\nbills 394'., Belgium 16.83, Denmark\n1933. Finland 1 80N; France 2.251k;\nGermany 40 20N, benevolent 16.50,\nGreece ,734N, Hungary 19.50N. Italy 505, Netherlands 53.20, Norway\n2273, Portugal 2.70N, Rumania ,63N,\nSweden 2383, Switzerland 22.4214,\nYugoslavia 2 35N, Argentina official\n2977, free 23.25, Brazil official 6.05,\nfree 5 10, Mexico 18.75N, Japan\n23 49, Hong Kong 24.79, Shanghai\n7.45.\nHates in spot cables unless\notherwise indicated   N\u2014Nominal.\nIn recognition of his work as\ndesigner of the Canada pavilion\nat the New York World Fair,\nthe City of New York made\nW. F. Williams of Nelson, noted\narchitect, an honorary citizen\nand presented him with a certificate and with a silver -medal\n\"for distinguished service\"\nPictured above is the certificate, and to right and'left the\nmedal, showing its two faces.\nOn one face is thc familiar try-\nbn and perisphere of the Fair\nand on the other the coat of\narms of the City of New York,\nMr. Williams' design for the\nCanada pavilion wras accepted\nby thc Federal Government in\na Dominion-wide competition\namong architects. He has also\nwon several important architects' competitions for modern\nhouse designs.\nPeat to Bring New\nWealth lo Canada\nas Result of War\nUoited States Uoable\ntoObtaio Supplies\nFrom Europe\nEditor's note: The article following, dealing with the peat Industry at the Coast and probable\ndevelopment of exports to the\nUnited States as a result of the\nwar cutting off German and\nSwedish supplies, ls of particular\nInterest in West Kootenay because of peat bogs in this district,\nhitherto undeveloped. S. P. Pond\nhas a quantity of peat on his\nland at Queen's Bay, and It is ie-\nported that there Is a considerable\nquantity on Mrs. M. M. Lane's\nland above Ainsworth. Some of\nthe latter has been used for fuel,\nit is understood.\nBy   8TUART   UNDERHILL\nCarladlan  Press Staff Writer\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, Feb.\n8 (CP). \u2014 There's a million dollars waiting to be dug up from the\nrich soil of the Fraser Rtver delta\n\u2014but don't grab your shovel and\nstart off on a prospecting expedition.\nOnly established companies arc\nexpected to enjoy the current demand for North American peat\nproducts brought about by the fact\nthe United States' main sources of\nsupply in Europe have been cut\noff by the war.\nAmerican peat imports In 1938\nexceeded $1,000,000 in value, about\n50 per cent of which came from\nGermany. Now local peat companies are expanding production in\nhopes of cornering this rich marker.\nPeat moss is greatly in demand\nin United States agriculture as a\nsoil conditioner, poultry litter and\nas a packing for plants and vegetables. It's capable of absorbing 20\ntimes its own weight in water\u2014a\nvirtue in the finished product but\na handicap in its raw state.\nDRYING 18 PROBLEM\nBefore it is processed, peat Is\nsodden and the extraction of this\nmoisture provides the biggest problem for producers. Most companies\nhereabouts rely on the tried method\nof spading by hand and drying in\nthe open. Digging takes place in\nlate Winter and a wet Spring and\nPAQE  ELEVEN\nAlpine Mill Will\nResume Operations\nWhen Parts Arrive\nOperation of the Alpine Mill on\nSitkum Creek will resume as soon\nas parts to replace those damaged\nin a recent breakdown arrive from\nthe Coast, it was stated Thursday.\nWhile the mill is closed, active\ndevelopment work is being carried\non by a full crew In the mine.\nOils Gain, Golds\nFirm at Vancouver\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 8 (CP)-Oil\nprices were sent up fractions to\na few cents in lr'.c trading on Vancouver Stock Exchange today.\nGolds were firm and base melals\nunchanged as transfers totalled\n48,480 shares.\nVulcan Oil finished at 57, i%\ncents above Wednesday'* closing\nbid while Southwest Petroleum at\n52-A was 2>A cents higher. Okalta\na. 1 'j r,nd Calgary & Edmonton at\n2.10 were each up 2 and National\nPetroleum i rmed a cent at 20.\nHome added 3 to the previous closing bid at 2.78, Anglo Canadian\neased 2 to 95 while Anaconda slipped 1\" to 6K.\nOi.:-rcnt g^ins were recorded in\nCariboo Gold Quartz at 2,55, Hedley Mascot at 51, Sheep Creek at\n1.18 and Silbak Premier at\nGrull Wihksne was up ' at 4\nPrivateer eased a cent to 76.\nnnd\nLARGE  INFLOW OF\nCAPITAL TO CANADA\nTRADE FICURES SHOW\nOTTAWA, Feb. 8 (CP). \u2014 An\nunusually large inflow of capital\nto Canada was reflected in statistics of the international trade in\nsecurities in 1939, the Dominion Bureau of Statistics reported today.\nTotal sales of securities amounting to $311,000,000 exceeded total\npurchases of $238,900,000 by $72.-\n100,000 in 1939. This was the larg-\neast balance of sales recorded in\nany of the seven years for which\nrecords are available.\nSales by securities in 1938 totalled $369,200,000 compared with\npurchases of $340,300,000, leaving a\nnet balance of $28,900,000.\nMost of the inflow of capita! In\n1939  was  recorded  in trade\nthe United States.\nWinnipeg Wheat\nPrices Held Firm\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 8 (CP).-Minor\nexport business supplied the only\naction on Winnipeg Grain Exchange\ntoday but prices held firm, following a stronger tone at Chicago. At\nthe close values were H\u2014% cent\nhigher, May at 85%, July m* and\nOctober 87%.\nTraders displayed little interest\nwith a scarcity of offerings in evidence again. Southern houses were\ncredited with odd-lot transactions in\nthe brief opening flurry.\nOverseas purchases of Canadian\nwheat continued light with only\nabout 300,000 bushels reported sold\nto Norway and thc continent. The\nUnited Kingdom wa.s also reported\nbuying but only in small lots.\nTrade in the coarse grains pit was\nlively for a time with a small investment business in oats and barley. Cash wheat trade was flat.\nLeasers Keep Mining\nLively in the District;\nWork Old Prospects\nActive work on a large number\nof new and old claims is being carried on by leasers in the district,\nkeeping the mining industry quietly\non the hum, mining men said in\nNelson Thursday. Though few l'trge\nshipments arc being made by these\nsmall groups of men, there is every\npossibility of expansion. Many of\nthe big moneymaking properties of\nthe early days are among those being worked over.\nMontreal Prices\nHold Strong Trend\nMONTREAL, Feb, 8 (CP).\u2014Stock\nprices held their strong trend in late\ndealings on thc Stock Exchange today.\nFractional gains were chalked up\nfor Canadian Car common and preferred, C. P. R\u201e and National Steel\nCar. Also showing small additions\nwere Price Brothers, St. Lawrence\nCorporation, St. Lawrence Paper\npreferred and Bathurst. Fractional\ngainers also included Smelters, Hud-\nwlthlson Bay Mining, Brazilian, Seagrams, and Gurd.\nQUOTATIONS ON WALL STREET\nOpen\na. American Can   113-aa\nSummer is just one of the hazards' Amer for power ....   :.     IV,\nof the business.\nBritish Columbia probably has\ngone farther than any other Province toward development of its\npeat moss industry. There are lai'4e\ndeposits on the Prairies and in thc\nMaritime Provinces but as yet little headway has been made in their\ndevelopment.\nDomestic consumption in British\nColumbia takes about 30.000 to 40,\nAm Smelt ft Ref   493i\nAmer Telephone   171\nAmerican Tobacco   883i\nAnaconda   27Vt\nBaldwin  _... 15V,\nBait tt Ohio  54\nBendix   Aviation     304\nBeth Steel  _... 754\nBorden   23'a\nCanada Dry   21\nColumbia taie.es bdoui ju.uuu io '\".-'Canadian Pacific 5\n000 bale* annually, all of which \" | Cerro de Pasco        371'\nlooked after locally. Figures are not' Chrysler \"   82',\n82 \u25a0\nHVi\n31't\nIO14\n1814\n1938. , I Eastman Kodak   158\nStatistics Issued by the Bureau cf General Electric    384\nForeign and Domestic Commerce a. [ Qenerai foods     ...     .   474\nWashington show the United States' Gencral Molor3  _   534\npeat   Imports   from   Germany   thit | Goodrich     174\n1 Chrysler\navailable, but British Columbia  \"Commercial Invest\nbelieved to have supplied most of Con Qas ncw y0rk\nthe   3200   tons   which   the   United, c Wright pfd\nStates   imported   from   Canada   in I rjupont\nTORONTO STOCK QUOTATIONS\nt:\n135\nMines          \t\n.01\nPowell Rouvn Gold   \t\n..     137\nmac Copper \t\n.32\nPreston East  Dome \t\n.     2.17\nGold\nOt\nQuebec   Gold              \t\n.37\n\u2022Huronian            \t\n2 35\nReno Gold  Mines     \t\n.39\neld Gold\n.ll'a\nRoche   Long   I.ac      \t\n.05\na Rouyn  M.nes\n.02*,\nSan  Antonio  Gold  \t\n2 43\nr Gold\n2 47\nShawkey  Gold        \t\n.03\nnae Rouyn\n07\nSheep Creek Gold  \t\n1.18\nield Gold\n.20'1\nSherritt  Gordon     \t\n101\nMetals Mining\n.23\nSisroc   Gold             \t\n.8H\nt Gold  Mines\n1 11\nSladen Malartic   \t\n.48\nod Kirkland\n.154\nSt Anthony    .\t\n.16\ndissoun\n.111\nSudbury Hasin\n190\nMines         \t\n.08',\nSullivan Consolidated\n.91\nme   Mines        \t\n10 50\nSvlvamtc\n.     3 45\nTrcthcwcv           \t\n01\nTeck-Hughes  Gold\n4 00\n10 Ankerite\n7 25\nToburn  Gold   Myies\n1 70\ner Hill Extension   .\n024\nTowagmac                   \t\n.22\nlan Malartic\n74\nVentures                    \t\n..     415\n00 Gold Quarli\n2 50\nWaite Amulet            \t\n5 80\n\u2022TreMhewcy\n68\nWright Hargreaves\n7 90\nal Patricia          \t\n2 33\nYmir Yankee Girl  \t\n.041',\nuganiau\n.13',\nOILS:\n5H\n20\nCopper\n1 65\n\u25a0 British American    \t\n.   2300\numm  Mines\n1 80\nChemical  Research\n4(1\nllda'.rd M & S\n48 IX)\nImpcr.al                    \t\n150O\nMines\n27 00\nInter Petroleum\n2360\n1-Sisooe\n03\nTexas Canadian    \t\n.60\nMalartic\n3 911\nINDUSTRIALS:\n|dn Gold\n07\nAbitibi Power A\n1 40\nnbridgr   Nirkel\n4 20\nHell   Telephone\n168\nll  Kirkland\n034\nBrazilian T I. tt P\n8'.\ntaeur   Gold\n52\nBrewers ft Distillers\n41,\ns   l^akr\n.064\nBrewing  Corporation\n160\nLake  Gold      ..\n55\n11 c Power A\n27 4\nBelt\n.25\nII (' Power B\n2',\nlorn  Minei\n.05',\nBuilding   Products\n16\n\u2022 r   Gold\nV.i,\nCanada Bread\n54\nRrxk did\n1 23\nCan Hud Malting\n44\ntr  Geld\n06\nCon Cur tt Foundry\n14'.\nt\u00aber\n15 00\nCnn Cement\n7'a\ny   Gold\n37'a\nCan  Dredge\n24\nan ll.iv  M  ft  S\n31 00\nCnn   Malting\n38'1\nlation.il   Nia-nel\n41 25\nCan l'.i,' Kailwav\n6\u00bba\nkonsealidated      ......\nn.i\"i\nCan Ind Alcohol A\n2>a\nW\u00ablle\n21\nCan   Wineries\n4\n\u25a0   Gold\n1144\nCms  Bakrncs\n171,\nAddison\n2 48\nCosmos\n29'1\nfend  Lake\n1 .17\nDominion  Bridge\n3D',\nShore   Mlnea\n2 no\nDominion  Stores\n5\n1 Gold\n79\nll in Tar ft Chem\n6>a\nOrn   Mines\nDislillera   Sragiams\n24\nWiner  lar\n3 05\nFannv Farmer\n26'!\nIM   Mines\n4 55\nF'rd of Canada  A\nIS'a\nind   Cockshutt\n2 30\nGen   Sire]   Wines\nKHa\n\u25a0n Red Uke Gold\n48\nGondvrar   Tire\n85 h\nIII\nGviis'im  1, tt   A\n.v.\nyre Porcupine-\na,,1 11,1\nHamilton  Budge\n7'.\nniie   Red   like\n1   \"1\nll:n le  Diuirhe\n15\nIte-dnaham\nII\nHiram   Walker\n42\nitlrre   Gold\n17\ntill   Sklals\n13*.\ng   Corporation\n1 16\nIlium lal  Tobni rn\n15'a\nta   Porcupine\n...\nUnlaw    A\n271.\nl-Kirkland\n074\nl'.hlaw   B\n28',\nliner   Mininl\n1 25\nKelvmator\nII\nIda\nMaple Unf Milling\n1 ',\nMai\nVI\nMa'.ev    Hnrr.e\n5S\nen   CM\n1 52\nMot'lrrnl    Power\n30',\nL    Gold\n244\nMo. re   ('o,p\n45',\nlet\/   Pore-up re\n2 ?n\nNal   SVel   Car\n64'.\naster   Com\nll'a\nPace   Mersey\n: 181,\n|Oreille\n1 11H\nI'oaarr   Cup\nIK ,\nh G.'ld\n1 on\nI'le.ard    Metals\n0\nCroaa    Gold\n1 \u2022';.\nSleel of Can\n79'a\nit Oold \t\n2 11\n1 Standard Paving   \t\nI'i\nBrit. Rails Advance\nLONDON, Feb. 8 (AP).-Domes'.ic\nraiLs advanced sharply today in the\nstock market following overnight\nannouncement of Government payment plans to thc carriers for war\nservices. Despite profit-taking closing prices were near lhc bes'. Other\ndivisions of the market lost early\ngains and ended with little variation. British Government bonds\nnever did get ahead and persistent\npressure caused a sharp drop. Ba.se\nmetals tended lower while industrials, kaftirs and oils moved idly\nLONDON CLOSE\nLONDON. Feb.  8   (AP).\u2014British\nstork closings, in sterling: Babcock\ni Wilcox 45s 6d; Celanese Corp of\nAm \u00a36'.; Cent Min tUH: Cn\">ol\nGold Fields 45s; Crown \u00a313H; East\nGeduld \u00a311; Metal Rov 78.S 9d;\nMex Eagle 5s 7Mid: Mm Trust 2d,\nRand   \u00a37V Springs 25s 7ijd.\nBonds: British 2'i per cent Con-\nsols \u00a372*,; British 34 per cent War\nloan \u00a39.7\"-,; British funding 4s 1900-\n90  \u00a3110*1.\nCALCARY LIVESTOCK\nCALGARY. Feb 8 ICP) - Receipts: Cattle 29: calves 12; hoy\n637,  sheep nil\nInsufficient sales to establish quotations.\nLast bacons R 45\nSHERWIN-WILLIAMS\nDECLARES DIVIDEND\nMONTREAL, Feb. 8 (CP) \u2014 A\ndividend of $3 50 a share, including\nthe regular quarterly payment of\n$1.75 and a sun,lar amount on account of arrears, was declared today on the preferred stock of the\nSherwin-Williams Company of Canada.\nThe dividend reduces arrears to\n$10 50 a share.\nBLEWETT AUXILIARY\nGETS SUPPLY OF MATERIAL\nI BLEWETT. B C\u2014Mrs. D, Wilson\nard Mrs. J E. Riley were joint hostesses at the home of thc former,\nwhen thev entertained the members\nof the Blewett and Citv Plant auxiliary. The President, Mrs. A Nel-\n:on, wa.-  .:i  tile chair,\nMr.- S E Karr, convener of the\nsewing committee, turned in a quan-\n, titv of finished articles which, in\nturn, wire sent in tn Nelson workrooms and a further supply of material obtained.\nRefreshments were served at the\nconclusion of tiie meeting\nLONDON 'CPi- Two German\nseamen, aged 16 and 15, who escaped from an internment camp in the\nNorth of England, tried the wrong\nman win n they thumbed a lift\nfrom a passing mo'.nr.st who happened to lie a policeman\nWINNIPEC CRAIN\nWINNIPEG.  Feb. 8   (CP).-Quotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Close\nWHEAT:\nMav ,   ...   85'a\n85',\n85'i\nESS\nJuly            86\n86',\n86\nB6S\nOct              87',\n87\\\n87\n87',\nOATS.\nMay .   ...   404\n4fl\u00bb,\n401,\n40H\nJuly     38',\n39\n38\",\n38',\nOct.             34S\n34H\n34',\n34 \"f.\ni    HARLEY\nMav           534\n54>'\nM''\nM4\nJuly        .   51',\n52'i\n51\u00bb,\n52'-,\nOct.        .   50S\n50S\n50H\n504\nFLAX:\nMay .     . lM't\nUS'i\nI94\u00bb,\n195%\nJulv        . 193S\n193',\n193\n193's\nOct    -\n\u2014\n\u2014\n191\nRYE;\nMav .    ,.   74',\n74'.\n74',\n74'i\nJuly .   ...   73\n73i,\n73\n734\nOct              70',\n71*1\n70'1\nDOW   |ONE5  AVERAGES\n30   Industrials\n20   rails\n15   utilities\nH.gh\nI AW\nCl's'\nChange\n148 50\n146 32\nl\u00ab4<i\nup    1 77\n31 48\n30 95\n3! 46\nup      63\n24 25\n24 71\n24 95\nup     .16\nVANCOUVER STOCK EXCHANGE\nBig Missouri\nBralorne\nBridge River Con\nCarib.il  Gold\nDentonia\nFairview Amal\nFederal G '! I\nGolronda\nGold Brit\nGrandview\nGnill-W.hk.sr.e\nHedley Mascot\nHome  Gol I\nIndian   Mines\nInter Coal tt C kr\nIsland   Mi'lliiUiti\nKootenay  Belle\nLurks' Jim\nMcC.llivrav\nMinto   G ild\nNiro'a  M   *.\u25a0\nNoble   F.ve\nPond   Oreille\nP.lot   Gold\nP.nnecr Cold\nPorte.    Idaho\nI'reni rr  Bo\nOualsmai\nPm-ateer\nBed Hawk Gold\nBeev.\" M.i'D.ii\nRelief   Arlington\nReno Gold\nRufus   Aigcntfl\nSally   Mmre\nSalmon Gold\nSheep  Creek\nS lliak   1'rein er\nSilver    Ctrsl\nTavlu   ll   11\nVidellr   Cold\nWelling'oi'\nWesko M era\nWhitewater   .\nin 75\nnl'\n10   \"\nAsk       Yo- r V  Gill\nII OILS\nA   P   Consolidated\nAmalgamated\n01'a   A-.a   m la\nJ 8\"      A' :'. 1 Canadian\n014   Lil'ar\nP;;\\sh   Dominion\n004   Brown    Corporation\nCalgary   tt   Flnvm\n26      Commonwealth\n'\u25a0I       Dues    Pele\nIII pis'   ('rest\nV      y ... \u25a0   \u25a0 .\u25a0   Pete\n\"14   Fir'e'iol.1   Corp\nH.rga'i\nII n\u00bb\nM,i I sot,\nMa: Jon\nM. Dougall-Segur\nno',\n116'\n95\n16\n!(I9\nc.'i\nrs *,\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT\u2014Nos. 1 hard and 1 Nor.\n824; No, 2 Nor 80',; No. 3 Nor.\n784; No 4 Nor. 754; No 5. 68V\nNo 6. 654; feed MS; No. 1 Garnet\n744; No 2 Garnet 734; No 3 Garnet\n714. No, 1 Durum 714; No. 4 special 744: No 5 special 654; No. 8\nspecial 634; No. 1 mixed 694: track\n824;   screenings   $3   per   ton\nOATS No 2 C. W 424; Ex. 3\nC W 394: No 3 C. W and Ex. 1\nfeed 384. No. 1 feed 364. No. 2\nleed  314;   No.  3  feed 324.   Hack\nBARLEY\u2014Mailing grades 6-row\nNo; 1 an I 2 C W 55, 2-: iw N .5 1\nand 2 C W. 56; 8-row No 3 C W\n524. Others: No. 1 feed 504. N 1. 2\nfeed 50, Ni   3 feed 494; track 554\nFLAX No 1 C W and track\n1924' No 2 C W 1884. Nn. 3\nC   W   1754.   No   If   W   1704.\nRYE   No   2  C   W. 714\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL. Feb 8 (CPI \u2014Spot;\nButter. Que 27\u2014274; fresh 20 264\nEggs. Eastern A-medium buyers-\ninspection 214\nButter futures: Feb 274; March\n27 4\nyear totalled 32.483 tons valued at\n$525,564. Sweden was the next larg-\n1 est source, shipping 13,500 tons val-\nI lied at $282,000\nBOGS AT COAST\nj The most valuable peat bogs In\nBritish Columbia are located around\nNew Westminster, either close to\nthe banks nf the Fraser River or\non the flat islands at thc river\nmouth.\nI A Dominion Department of Mines,\nsurvey of the local peat industry\nseveral years ago laid special stress\non the value of peat litter as a substitute  fnr  straw  in  poultry  runs.\n1 The report said chickens are cleaner\nand more vigorous and lay more\neggs when using this litter, partly\nI because of its absorbent and disinfectant qualities.\nBecause it absorbs so much moisture the peat moss is particularly\n, valuable for wrapping horticultural\nproducts which need water while\nbeing shipped. In its dried state it\nran als 1 he used a.s an insulator.\nEstablished    firms   nn   the   lower\n1 mainland are increasing production to natural capacity as far ts\npossible tn meet the new demand\nin the United States. The problem\nconfronting new companies is to\nget into production before reaction\nsets in and the war-born market\ncollapses. It takes months or even\ny\u00bb\u00abrs tn obtain a substantial\ncommercial yield.\nGranby    _    7!>\nGreat Nor pfd  24\nHowe Sound _._ 49V,\nHudson  Motors      54\nInternational Nickel .... 364\nInter Tel tt Tel  _     3'i\nKenn Copper  ..- 36\nMontgomery Ward   52Tea\nNash   Motors         614\nNew York Central 164\nClose\n1144\nl7,i\n5(14\n171*',\n887s\n28\n164\n5%\n314\n78\n23'\/a\n21\n5\n3714\n824\n514\n31'eS\n104\n182\n160\n39V,\n474\n54%\n184\n7.\u00ab\n25\n49 V,\n54\n3W\n4\nsen\n534\n6J,\n17*-,\nPackard Motors \t\n3V*\n3\u00abi\nPenn R R \t\n224\n224\nPhillips Pete\t\n39 Mi\n40\nPullman \t\n27%\n29\nRadio Corporation \t\n5]i\n5%\nRem Rand  _\n9\"i\n9 4\nSafeway  Stores \t\n484\n50\nShell Union  \u201e\n11H\n29 V,\nIH,\nS Cal Edison \t\n294\nStan Oil of N J\t\n434\n44\nTexas Corporation \t\n43*,\n43%\nTexas Gulf Sul \t\n:u:4\n35\nTimken Roller \t\n48*,\n-111\nUnion Carbide\t\nB0\n81\nUnion Oil of Cal\t\n16 V,\n104\n48Vi\n934\n49\nUnion Pacific \t\n93 lei\nU S Rubber \t\n3<i4\n38 Vs\nU S Steel  __\nSB 4\n61\nWarner Brothers\t\n34\n3%\nWest Electric _\t\n1104\n1124\nWest Union  _ _\n241,\n243,\nWoolworth _\n404\n41\nYellow Truck _\t\n174\n17>,\nELECTROPLATING\n\u2022   CHROMIUM\n\u2022   COPPER\nL.C.M. Electroplating\nLaurlti Bldg.        704 Nelson Ave.\nThey Sang and Played\nTheir Way to Stardoml\nU.S. Govts. Higher\nNEW YORK. Feb 8 'AP' -United States Government bonds today\nwere l-32nd point higher to 2-32nd.s j\nlower Canada 4.s and Peru 6\u00ab tilt-1\nel up a little while Belgium fi.a and\nJapanese 64> retreated slightly.\nU. S. RUBBER COMPANY\nINCOME $10 MILLION t\nNEW YORK. Feb. 8 'API -\nUnited States Rubber Company re-\nported lodav income for 1939 for\nJ',n;in\u00bb49. or i3 18 \u00ab common share\nif'er preferred dividends, eom-\n\u2022d   with  U 885.888.  or 43  cents\npared\n1938.\nMONTREAL STOCK EXCHANCE\nne\n\u2022.'\nN\ni li r\nri\nMld-Wsl   Pe'e\n014   Mil   C tv   Pe'e\n2\"!       N'aii oi.il   I'. >c\nN .riloii Corp\n11 ::, \u2022 1   ('. 01\n02 4   (Iknl'.i    Plil\nI .ill       14  .1'   1\nI ;   R  va'.' ea\n7fi       H< i .1 v\nI'I        Simi\"i F'ld Pe'e\nS .'.ll' \".H'sl    Pee\n,111\n03'\n13'\nI 17\nIW 4\n.11\noer\nI Crr.\nI\n1174 V.i\",il'i\n113'- Vulcan\nI IH Wo.'  Flank\nI HI INtlUSTniAlS\n1114 H-a wees ,<.'  II'.1 11.\n\u2022   ,,,',:   F.s'alrs\nI'i l'   :i '   H e\\a, r.ea\nnl'\nno '\u25a0\n.03\nI\nI'i.' f c   Covle\nI'nilcd Uistillcis\nel  .\n55\n04\nl -i\nI 72\n1 76\nI I'i\n18\n.75\n58\nn<4\n; iai\nI 111\nP75\n,'.l\n100\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Par (Irani\nA.a.aoc Brew of Cnn .\nlUthur.a: P .'.- P A\nCanadian Bi   '\u2022\u25a0'''\nCan  111.-..-.-  | M\nCan Car tt Fdy pfd\nI'.,::   Celanear\nCan   Celanese   pfd\nCan  North  Power\nCan Sleinvship\nCan Steamship pf 1\nOvkahut!   Plow\nCon Mm tt Smellmj\nI*..m,iuon Coal pfd\nHorn Steel 8a Coal R\nTlomminn  Textile\nIlrvden Paper\nFondation  C  nf C\nCi'iiea i   P iwer\nC.atinrau  P i*er pfd\nCurd Charles\nHoward Smith Paper\nH Smith Paper pfd\nImperial   Oil\nInter   Petroleum\nInter Nickel of Can\nLake of lhe Woods\nMcColl Fronlenar\nNltlonal Brew !,H\nNal lltew pfd\nOgilvie'  Flour  new\nI'll--   Pros\npurrvc   I' '*er\nShawmiian W tt P\nSI Lawrence Corp\n74\n16\n154\n45\n1 16 4\n!44\n38\n1264\n17\n74\n184\nao\n104\n17*4\n964\n94\n204\n101\n15\n2.3 4\n45\non ,\n40\n3.1\n-Ji\nI e, a\n.',\"\ni St Ijiw Corp pfd \t\nSouth Can Power \t\nSteel of Can pfd\nWestern  Grocers   \t\nBANKS\nC mimrrce \t\nI)omi\"ion\nImperial\nMontreal\nNova  Srnha\nRoval\nToronto\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 rM\nRations'. P Si P R\nReauharnois Corp\nBritish American Oil ..\n11 C Paa-krrs\nCan Industries 11\nVin  Marconi\nCan Vickers\nCons Paper Corp\nDonnacona Paper A\nDonnarona Paper n\nFairclnld  Aircraft\nrra.aer Co 1,1.1\nInter Utilities A\nInler Utilities R\nLake Sulphite\nMael.aren P ft P\nMcColl   Fronlenar   pfd\nMitrhell Robl\nPower Corn pfd\nRoval.le   0,1\nUnited  II .at  nf Can\nWalker Oood  *v W\nWalker Gcx.d pfd\n194\n13\nin\n55\n170\n2il5 4\n217\n203\n3111\n182\n26.1\n164\n44\n54.\n134\n194\n2 31\n1 (all\n64\n204\n14\n4.1\n24\n20     j\n97\n\u00bb     I\n34     i\n424   a\u00bb-\n20 4 \u00bbJ-\nFour carefree youngsters, singing \"just for\nfun\"\u2014yet three are destined to make a\nname in radio, and one of them, lovely\nRomany Hai lo, takes the rocky road to\nfame and fortune. You'll laugh and cheer\nat this swift-paced slory with its modern\nsetting . . . you'll adore this soaring\nromance of young Americans who do\nthings!\nA Serial by Alma Sioux Scarberry\nAbout  Youth on  the  Airwaves\nBegins Tomorrow in the\nNrlmnt Hatly fcfi\n \u25a0\n-\t\n\u2014\n\u2014, , ,\t\nemaaa&aenazas&sssssf\nMOI TWILVI \t\nTODAY AND\nSATURDAY\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 AND 8:51\nTHE YEAR'S THRILl-SHOCKERI\n^MONTGOMERY i>\nThe Eatl oF Chkai(o\n.Ml BJW\u00bb\u00abD ININA1D BMIMO\nUbnold-owen-gwenn\nAT 2:43, 7:23, 9:34.\nNITE 15\u00ab* 35\u00ab*\nEducation Great\nNeed ol Farmer\nTORONTO, Feb. 8 (CP). - M.\nA. Campbell, Secretary ol the Ontario School Trustees' and Ratepayers' Association told the Ontario\nAgricultural Council today that the\nfarmer needs a better and more extensive education than any other\ncitizen.\n\"Foreign-born children are receiving vocational education, medical ond dental inspection in city\nschools which Canadian-born farm\nchildren are denied,\" he claimed.\n\"Greater state support Is needed\nto assist low assessed areas in providing and retaining good teachers\" he continued. The school age\nshould be (rom 6 to 14 instead of\n5 to 14 as it is better to spend\nefforts on the mature child rather\nthan \"nurse the infant.\"\nADDED - MARCH OF TIME, NOVELTY, NEWS\nMovies Hard Hit\nin Nazi Berlin\nBERLIN, Feb. 8 (CP)\u2014Behind\nwindows and doors lined with\nblack paper Berlin's stage lights are\nstill shining. But pictures and plays\narc old and dreary. The war seems\nto have hit movies harder than the\nlegitimate stage owing to labor\nshortage. However, the stage has\nits troubles in providing costumes\nwhich, due to textile rationing,\nhave caused the working over of\nfaded old materials.\nRevivals are the order of the day\nin movie houses where no foreign\nfilms, except a few American productions, have been thrown on the\nscreen since the outbreak of wat,\nAuthorities have seen to it the\nmusical comedy houses did not fail\nthe entertainment-seeking public,\nfor through this medium propaganda opportunities are best. On the\nstage are such old standby.-; as\nGoethe and Gerhart Hauptmann.\nFrench Ship Lost-\nBritish Freighter\nFeared Total Loss\nLONDON, Feb. 8 (CP). - The\nFrench ship Marie Dawn, 2156 tons,\nsank in the North Sea after striking\na mine, and her 25 crewmen, mostly\nSenegalese, were landed at a British\nport tonight.\nThe 3647-ton British freighter\nifighcliffe was reported ashore tonight on the Northern coast oi\nEngland and it was feared she\nwould be a total loss. A lifeboat\ntook oft her crew.\n1929 FORD\nModel A 8ed\u00bbn. A bargain\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelson) Ltd. Phone 117\nCottonwood and\nRobson Streets\n.Best, Sleighing\nThat Cottonwood and Robson\nStreets appeared to most easily applicable to safer sleigh riding for\nchildren, since they offered least\nhazard both to sleigh riders and\nmotorists, was the crux of a report lo the Junior Chamber of\nCommerce by Thomas Johnstone\nand Alex Leew Thursday night.\nThe report was tabled, pending inquiry as to the practice in other\ncities.\nThe report was prepared at the\nrequest of W. A. Hotson, President,\nafter he had joined a delegation\nrepresenting Boy Scouts, Cubs and\nthe Nelson Gyro Club in wailing on\nthe City Council.\nRobson Street, from Cedar to\nStanley, would provide a good run\nand there were few houses on thc\nupper end of it. the report stated.\nCottonwood from Fifth Avenue to\nNelson Avenue had only two\nthrough   intersections.\nMayor N. C. Stibbs staled the\nCouncil could not set aside any\nstreets for sleighing since it would\nbecome responsible in case Of accident, but the City would cooperate\nin finding hills of minimum hazard\nand putting on guards ir advisable.\nSuggestion that a road at the rear\nof the fish hatchery, on the hill\nalongside Cottonwood Creek, might\nbe opened up to provide a sharp\nrun with a flat at the bottom, was\nmade  by  Gordon  Williams,\nNELSON  DAILY  NEWS.  NELSON. B\nEngineers Urged to\nShow More Interest\nin Social Structure\nC-FRIDAY MORNINQ.  FEB. 9, 1940.-\nTORONTO, Feb. 8 (CP)\u2014Dean\nH. W. McKlel of Mount Allison\nUniversity, Sackvllle, N.B., said in j\nan address today that many persons\nbelieve democracy will experience\n\"hard and perhaps even desperate\"\ndays unless engineers of the future\nshow a keener interest in the social\nand  political structure of Canada.\nRetiring President of the Engineering Institute of Canada, Mr. Mc-\nKiel told thc 54th annual meeting\nhe believed some of the most pressing problems today if not actually\ndue to the engineer's activities are\ndirectly associated with them, such\nan unemployment as the result of\ntechnological advances, and slum\nconditions arising from centralization of industry.\nInduction of the new President,\nDr. T. H. Hogg of Toronto. Chief\nEngineer and member of the Ontario Hydro-Electric Power Commission, took place tonight it the\nannual  banquet.\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. H. Maber\nPhone 655    610 Kootenay St.\nFrench Increase\nPatrol Activity\nPARIS, Feb. 8 (AP). - Steadily\nincreasing French patrol activity on\nthe Western front was reported in\nmilitary dispatches today.\nThe French command was said\nto have taken advantage of improving weather conditions to spread\nout a network of scouts, particularly on the Northern flank of the\nfront between the Moselle and Saar\nRivers.\nToday's French communique reported \"increased activity of our\npatrols at various points on the\nfront at the end of yesterday and\nduring the night.\"\nMilitary advices said three patrols filtered \"deep\" within the\nGerman lines and returned intact\nwith \"important\" information,\nThe German communique today\nreported \"somewhat livelier artillery and patrol activity'' on the\nSaar front.\nAir activity was limited to the\nflight of one German observation\npatrol which crossed the French\nfines for a short distance, then turned back over Germany.\nST. MARY'S, Eng. fCD-Trcscn\nAbbey, residence of Major A. A.\nDorrien Smith, Lord Proprietor of\nthe Scilly Isles, was partially destroyed by lire recently. The isles\nwere leased to the major's grandfather in  1834.\nHockey Results\nQuebeo Provincial Senior\nShawinigan Falls 3, Sherbrooke 9,\nCape -Breton Senior\nSydney 6, Glace Bay 3,\nThunder  Bay Senior\nFort William 7, Geraldton 3.\nManitoba Junior\nKenora 7  Winnipeg Rangers 1,\nAmerican Aisociation\nSt. Paul 5, Kansas City 3.\nOmaha 4, Tulsa 0.\nGANSNER AND WALLACE\nNEW MEMBERS JUNIOR\nCHAMBER OF COMMERCE\nLeo S, Gansner and H, F. Wallace were welcomed as new members of the Nelson Junior Chamber\nof Commerce when the Chamber\nmet at the Hume Thursday night.\nBoys'\nFinal Clearance\nContinued Thii Week\nGodfreys9 Limited\nTHE WORLD OVER\nTire ij a great destroyer. Nothing\ncan withstand it, but sound Fire\nInsurance    provides    against    it,\nfinancially.\nH. E. DILL\nFIRE INSURANCE AGENCY\nCrty and Country properties for sail\nBEVERLEY, Eng. fCPl\u2014 Randolph Churchill, recently-married\nson of the First Lord of the Admiralty, was fined in this Yorkshire\nvillage for leaving his car in a public-\nroad without lights. He pleaded\nbattery trouble.\nLambert's\nfor\nLUMBER\nPMONE 82\nTry \u2022 Loaf of HOODS\nCheese, Improved Rye or\nLong French Bread.\nYour Home Bakery\nAUCTION\n410 Core Street,  Saturday,\nFebruary 10th, 2 p.m.\nActing under Initructloni from\nD. R. Hlnton, 1 will offer the\nfollowing:\nB-ealen, garden tooli, hoie, lawn\nmower, kitchen table and chair,\nelectric Ironen, cabinet, McClnry\nwhite enamel range, fender and\nand.rom, fire baiket with icreen,\ndrop leaf table, ndf board, rugi,'\ncarpeti, fern itand, occaiional\nchain, heater, booki. picturei.\nfloor I am pi, chesterfield, porch\nfurniture, bedroom furniture,\nvanity drener, vacuum cleaner,\ndeik,  electric  itove,  etc.,  etc.\nGoodi en view morning cf tale\nTarmi: Caih.        G. HOR3TEAD.\nAuctioneer\nUSED CARS\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker SL      Limited      Phone 119\nKootenay No-Odor\nDry Cleaning Co.\nPhone 128\nFOR PROMPT SERVICE\nBURGLARY INSURANCE\nDoesn't cost much\u2014You may ba:\nnext\u2014We write it.\nRobertson   Realty  Co.,  Ltd.\n347 Baker St.\n1938 Chevrolet\nDelivery      aJDjJ\nTh..s is a buy\nNelson Transfer\nCo.  Ltd.\nProtect Your\nFLOORS and TSB^SV]\nFURNITURE    \\g25^\nJohntoni  Wax   . . . \u00ab.V    I      \u00bb   *SiJP^M\nChan  Wax    .Ml<*    ' -***\nJohnson's  Clo  Coat <f*5<\nHandy   O'Cedar   Applicr   and   1   quart   O'Cedar   Self\nPolishinn  Wax    5>H<*\nNo Rub Furniture Cream Poliih   10<*\nO'Cedar Polish.  From    25\u00ab**\nAlio Dusting Mopi of Every Type\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Limited\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\n10 OR\nDeal at the Star\u2014the store of greater\nservice and satisfaction.\nFRUITS and VEGETABLES\nNEW POTATOES\nFrom Florida, 3 lbs.  \t\n25c\nGRAPEFRUIT-Texai\nPinks; 4 for \t\nORANGES\u2014 Sunkiit,\nExtra  large; 2 dor.\n25<\n75<\nBROCCOLI\u2014Fresh, Imported; 2  lbi\t\nLETTUCE\u2014 Large solid\nheads; 2 for \t\n25U\nW\nSUNKIST ORANGES\nIn  Mesh  Bags, 36 for  -\t\n69c\nONIONS\u2014Spanish,\nand mild; 4 lbs.\nCARROTS\u2014Large\nCalifornia;\n3   for    \t\nlarge\n25<\nNEW   CABBAGE-Solld\ngreen  heads;  Lb\t\nbunches from   Tomatoes, radishes, green\n7<\n<yCA   parsley, Utah Celery, White eel*\n\u25a0\"Jr   cry, etc.\nRHUBARB\nCherry 'Barb from Cali'ornla, 2 lba.\n19c\nQUALITY GROCERIES\n3 pkts. Kellogg'i Corn Flakej and 1  new ityle OC-\nglass cereal bowl: All for *1JL\nI5<\nEXTRACTS\u2014Nabob,   pure   vanilla   cr   irmen;\noz, bottle\nOATS\u2014Robin  Hood\nQuick cooking;  Large pkt\nCAKE   FLOUR\u2014Swam      \u2022)\u00ab>   2\nDown;   Pkt. *~V   COCONUT\u2014Baker's\nCOOKING   CHOCOLATE-FryV,   Medium;   Lb.\nPremium;\n1 i   Ib.   carton\nPITTED   DATES\u2014Fresh     fltd,   PICKLES\u2014Heinr Cucu\nItock;  2   lba. *Jr   ber; 20\nMINUTE   TAPIOCA\n2 pkti. *\u25a0?>   Snowdrop;   Lb.   cello   pkt\n|Q\u00abJ   MOLASSES-Sugar-\nJt    house; 20 or. tin\n20 oi.  jar\nIQaji   MARSHMALLOWS-\nI9<\nW\nw\nClaresholm Butter: First Grade, fresh dircc\nfrom Creamery,  3  lbs\t\n*$1.10\nMARMALADE\u2014Suntipt      tanA   PINEAPPLE   JUICE\u2014        \u00bb>faM\nVST   Libby'i, tall tins; 2 lor        OV\ntall tins; 2 lo\nAPRICOTS\u2014Fraier  Gold;\nOranoe;  4   Ib.   tin\nHONEY-Clov-r,    pure; 1Qg4 APRICOTS-Fraier  Gold;  uA\n2 Ib. tin *\u2022*> 2 tins                                        *\u2022*>\nPEACHES\u2014 Deighton'l Choice. PEPPER-Bl.-.ck  or  white   pack-\npacked .at Oliver>; 3Ct*t *c< in handy glaai ihakers;   m gA\n2   tins JJ> 2   lor                                             *\u00bb3V\n1 bottle Johnson's Furniture Polish, (!)<*; 1 tube of\nJohnson's Blcm, removes blemishes, etc., from Af\\\u201e\nfurniture, il.\"i<*; both for    Ta7v\nrg j   TODDY-Chocolate   M\n05V    Food  Drink;  Lb. t\nTEA\u2014Star Special,\nOrange  Pekoe:  Lb.\nBACON \u2014Swilt'i   Emp\nr Special,       A?A   Dy   pipcri   ,\u201e,\n0 order; Lb. tJe\nCOFFEE-Star Special\nIreah ground t\nSMred\nSAUSAGE\u20146wift'i      Brooklield,   Ll>-\npure  pork; -JCt*   TOILET   SOAP-Wood-\nLb. carton\nyC(4   TOILET   SOAP-Wooi\nJr   bury'a. Facial; 4 ban\n29<\n25(?\nPoliflor Floor WAX\nTIN ...... . 49c\nCanada Was Well\nPrepared as War\nBroke Out-Howe\nOTTAWA, Feb. 8 (CP)\u2014In many\nrespects Canada was better prepared than any other country involved\nwhen the war broke out but September, Hon. C. D. Howe, Transport Minister, declared at a political\nmeeting   here  tonight.\nIt was true that for the first\n' two or three months  there was\na scarcity of uniforms, the minister said. \"But I think the government would have been severely criticized if it had kept constantly   on   hand   uniforms   and\nequipment for 80,000 men.\"\nCanada had the men when they\nwere   needed   and   the   productive\ncapacity to equip them. Within four\nmonths of the outbreak of  war a\nfully-equipped   division   was   overseas,  the minister said, and  today\nthe Defence Department had caught\nup with equipment needs.\nPreparations started four years\nago in the face of opposition In\nParliament had equipped Canada\nwith naval and air defence* which\nnow rendered both coasts immune\nfrom attack, Mr. Howe said,\nOn the economic side Canada was\nwell-prepared  with   vast  resources\nof food, a surplus of transportation\nfacilities, harbors that had doubled\ntheir   business  without   congestion,\nmining,   fishing   and   lumber   resources, and  an  efficient  financial\nsystem.\nMr. Howe spoke at the convention\nwhich chose George Mcllraith as\nLiberal candidate in Ottawa  West.\nWomen Want to\nRegister Under\nTheir Own Names\nVANCOUVER,   Feb.   8   (CP).  \u2014\nVancouver returning officers for\nthe forthcoming general election\nwere given a headache today as\nan increasing number of women\nvoters insisted on registering under\ntheir own Christian names and not\n'.heir husband's.\nThe Dominion Elections Act instructs enumerators to register \"the\nname of a married woman or widow\nunder the name or surname of her\nhusband or deceased husband,\"\n\"The   wording  of  the  section   is\nironclad and I won't take anything\nelse.\" declared Charles A. Donovan.\nReturning   Officer   for   Vancouver\nj East, \"Otherwise the Court of Re-\n; vision might throw them out.\"\nR.   M.   Edgar,  Returning   Officer\nfor Vancouver Centre,  took a dif-\ni fcrent view, maintaining:  \"If they\nithe women)  refuse to register in\n1 their husband's name, the enumer-\n1 ators   should   most   certainly   take\ntheir own names. Those  are  legal\nnames  and   no   judge   is   going   to\ni throw them out,\"\nHauffc Appears in\nRossland Court on\n\"Defence\" Charges\nROSSLAND, B. C, Feb. 8 -\nWolfgang Alexunder Hauffe appeared before Magistrate R. E\nPlewman, tn Rosslftid Police\nCourt, today, on a charge of\n\"having ln his possession a letter addressed to the German\nConsul in Seattle and containing\nInformation likely to be useful\nto the enemy,\" and on a charge\nof attempting to mail the letter.\nHe was remanded to next Wed\nnesday, when the hearing will\nproceed.\nRangers Practically\nClinch Regional by\nBeating Southampton\nLONDON, Feb. 8 (CP Cable).-\nQueen's Park Rangers practically\nclinched the championship of South\nB Regional Soccer Group today by\ndefeating Southampton 4-1 at Shepherd's Bush. With 26 points thc\nRangers lead Bournemouth by two\npoints and have a much superior\ngoal average. The teams each have\nono game to play.\nArsenal, champion of South A\nDivision, drew 2-2 with Watford in\nLondon and West, Ham United\ntrounced Charlton Athletics 5-2 on\nthe latter's ground.\nLEARY TO SPEAK\nJUNIOR CHAMBER\nHon. C. S. Leary, Minister of\nPublic Works, will meet the Nelson\nJunior Chamber of Commerce when\nhe next comes to the Kootenay dis\ntrict, possibly in the Spring.\nReplying to a -recent invitation,\nthe Minister in a letter received by\nthe Chamber at its meeting Thursday night at the Hume, stated he\nwould indicate when he was corning\nand would be glad to address lhe\nChamber. He asserted he was keenly\ninterested in young men's organizations and their work.\n8EE  US FOR YOUR\nValentine's\nCardi 1 \u2022* to 25\u00ab*\nServiettes, Tablecloths. Valentine\nCandles.\nEverything to make your Valentine party a success.\nYour Rexall Store\nCity Drug Co.\nBox 460\nPhone 34\nORT\nICHLICH1\nBantam \"Rep\" Team\nIs Being Formed\nFred Romano, Panther Coach, has\nbeen entrusted by the Nelson Amateur Hockey Association with the\ntask of getting together, a Bantam\n[\"Rep\" team, to take care of district\ncompetition, and the first practice\nof the squad will be held this afternoon from 4 to 5:30, on a revised\nschedule issued Thursday night.\nThe Bantam players asked by\nMr. Romano to turn out for the\nsquad this afternoon are W. Waldie,\nW. Benwell. B. Arneson, J. Breeze.\nL. Appel, G. MacDonald, J. Ball,\nR. Nash, J. Lang, R. McMordie, R.\nWassick. A. Dea Champs, J. Gausdal. G. Avis, D. Ross, R. Crayford,\nR. Sahara, J. Morris. J, Prestlev,\nJ. Mclvor, S Duffy. E. Duffy, S,\nFisher,  W,  Ludlow,  R. Felty.\nSocial Crediters\nCross Ihe Floor\nEDMONTON.   Feb.  8   (CP)-The\nAlberta government's determination\nto continue its efforts to establish\nSocial Credit principles in the Province was keynoted as the ninth and\nlast session of the eighth legislature\nbegan here today.\nThe throne speech debate proceeded contrary to usual practice qf\nwaiting until the following day, four\nnon-caucus Social Crediters crossed\nthe floor of the House and became\nIndependent Progressives and nine\nminor bills were given first reading.\nE. L. Gray, Liberal leader, adjourned the debate until tomorrow after N. B. James iSC Acadia) had moved the reply and\nMr.s, Edith Gostick (SC Calgary)\nseconded it.\nHon, Lucien Maynard, Minister\nof Municipal Affairs, gave notice\nhe would introduce tomorrow a\nmotion suspending the rules of the\nHouse to allow Wednesday night\nand   Saturday  sittings.\nWednesday night sittings would\npave the way for night sessions five\ntimes a week which would open\nthe way for completion of the legislature's business quickly and put\nthc government in a position to call\nan election either before or after\nthe Dominion\u00abvote March 26.\nLA CHOS-St, AU WCHAM \u00abAM*\\ >\npi*rto w n-i cxd datV wrm t\nOtrtH 800 STH0U6 AMD *QUAV\nURaeo D,J ** M*N BV BIATW\n$l-a-Year Men Keep\nDown Allowances\nOTTAWA,   Feb,   8   (CP)\u2014Living\nallowances and other expenses\ndrawn by 33 $l-a-year-men in the\nservice of the Federal government\nhave totalled only some $11,000 in\nthe first five months of the war,\nauthoritative sources said today.\nIt was said that these men who\nhave taken on wartime duties, had\nthey been pa.d on the .scale of the\nsalaries they had been drawing in\nprivate industry ar.;! business,\nwould have received upwards of\n$75,000.\nSeveral of them, it was stated,\nare not drawing from the government for living allowances or expenses. Several are taking only\nactual living and other expense\ncosts  fmm  the government.\nCOAST TOURIST BOOM\n. VANCOUVER. Feb fi (CP). -\n; Br.tish C'dumb.a is experiencing a\nm.nor tourist b >om un.quc for this\ntime of year. R Baker, an official\no( the Vancouver Tourist bureau,\nreported today.\nHe released figures showing that\ntourist traff-c f \u25a0:\u25a0 'he months nt\nNovember. LVcemb-rr and January\nincreased 20 per eent when c >m-\npared with the corresponding\nmonths of the previ us W.r.ter sea-\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nStamina Necessary\nfor Auto Speedster\nCLEARWATER, Fla, Feb. 8 (AP)\n\u2014Not much muscular development\nis required to drive one of thc new\ndeluxe models being turned out by\nautomobile manufacturers these\ndays, but take it from Wilbur Shaw.\nIt's a different matter p.lot ing a\nstripped down speedster at better\nthan 100 miles an hour.\nThe lacing driver, like the prize\nfighter, must be in top physical\ncondition to stand thr punishment\nof his profession. Said the dapper\nking   of   automobile   racers,\n\"Vou know race drivers have to\ntrain for their sport just like any\nother professional athlete,'' hc\nexplained.\nShaw, who won the 500-mile spee,I\nclassic at Indianapolis in 1937 and\nagain last year, declared no spo't\nputs more stress on physical fitness\nand stamina.\nFreight Tariff on\nB.C. Appfes for East\nIs to Be Reduced\nOTTAWA, Feb. 8 (CP), - The\nBoard of Transport Commissioners\nannounced late today it had received notice that the railway\nfreight tariff on shipment of British Columbia apples to Eastern\nCanada points has been reduced 25\ncents per hundredweight.\nThe new rate of $125 per 100\npounds will be effective Feb, 12.\nThe notice was received from the\nCanadian Freight Association at\nWinnipeg, acting on behalf of the\nrailways.\nFIELD TO BREAK FROM\nBOXED-IN STALLS IN\n1940 KENTUCKY DERBY\nLOUISVILLE. Ky\u201e Feb 8 fAP)\n-The field for the 1940 Kentucky\nDerby will break from boxed-in\ni stalls for the first time in history,\n1 Churchill Downs officials said to-\n1 day,\nI the new gate is similar to ones in\n. use at Hialeah Park and Santa\nI Anita. After a horse once enters its\nH stall it is locked in with a bar and\n1 a V-shaped barrier in front.\nPlay safe by dealing\nhere where, you can\nget the combination\nof thrift plus quality\nVcBhiiee\nMEN'S  FURNISHINC\nPhone il        sriBaJkt\nTWO (AILED, ROBBE\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 8 <C1\nReg and Frank Kavanaugh\npleaded guilty to five char,\nrobbery with violence of city\nwere sentenced to five yei\npenitentiary each today by I\ntrate H. S. Wood in Police Cot\n'There has been an epidei\nholdups,\"   the   Magistrate   si\npassing   sentence   \"but   the\nappear to have the matter h\nhand now\"\n1933 FOBD\nDELUXE   SEDAN\nMechanically First Clasi\nGood\" Tires\nQueen City Mot\nPh. 43     Limited      661 Joiei\nDry Slab Woo<\n12\" ?4.00; 16\" f3.75\n4 Feet $3.00 Cord\nPhone  163 or 434R\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSUITE 205. MEDICAL ARTS BLDG\nSEE ~\nVIC GHAVEfl\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor ill your needs In plur\nIng   repairs,   alterations,   i\ninstallation!.\nPh. 815 301 Victoria\nFISH and\nCHIPS\nTo Take Out, 25\u00bb\u00bb\nThe PERCOLAH\nMUSICAL   INSTRUMENTS   AND\nREPAIR WORK. WEBBS 808 Baker\nRadio servire, 5 mon. unconditional'\ngrntec. A  D. McKim. tech , Ph. W\n1941  RCA. VICTOR  Ridiol.  Mantle\nlets $24.95 up McKAY i STRETTON\nDon't forget the Kootenay Zone\nSki Tournament at Nelaon February  17 and 18. Racing and  Jumping\nTOMORROW ia the TENTH! Are\nyour JANUARY  BILLS  PAID?\nEnemy Mine Sank\nIrish Channel Ship\nLONDON, Frb. 8 <CP1. - Til-\nAdmiralty attributed today to an\n\"enemy mine\" the sinking of Ih*'\n4i05-toi] Irish Channel steamei\nMunster which was announced\nyeaterday All those aboard thc\nvessel  wrre reported rescued       '\n26 BELCIAN MINERS\nBELIEVED TO HAVE DIED\nBRUSSELS, Feb. 8 'AP* -Twen- '\nty-.i.x minors were brhovrd ..\"> have j\npcn*:htv) today In fumr.<! rrlra^rd in |\n;. olliery at Marchirnne -an Pont \u25a0\nwhen a short-circuited rlertr.c mo-j\ntor raiLM'H a amoulderinK (.rr\nFour miners  wrre  injured   Mar-\nch:?nn*4? an Pont ^s near Ch.ir'.n\u25a0\u25a0;.\nBUILD  YOUR  NEW  DWEL\nunder the National Houain,\nbefore labour and build\nmaterial prices rise. Con.\nT. D. Roslini\n3 Royal Bank Bldg. Pho\nNEW COIFFURES\nA STYLE TO SUIT YOU\nHai\u00a3h Tru-Art\nBEAUTY  SALON\nPhone 327\nJohnstone Blk\ntool Nioirrs call for\nCOMFORTERS\nU^vc Tiieni Filter Cleaned\ntymslla. \u00a3kcuu!A\u00a3.\nPhone 1042\nPriced  Right\n'33 CHEVROL1\nMASTER SEDAN\nSKY CHIEF Al\ntO\u00ab Baker St   SERVICE   Pho\nI\nFleury's Pharmacy\nr; o       PHONE 25\n!7'1\\S>**-     Pr\"lc,iP,i\u00b0n'\nCompoun led\nArr.iM'riv\nHed  Arts B'.k\nT. H. Waters & Co.\nBuildTa       Limited       Contractors\nMIRRORS\u2014Plate and Sheet\nANY SIZE.  ANY SHAPE\nMIRRORS RESILVERED\nUSED CAR\nClearance Sale\nCIVM\nLast Times Tonight]\nComplete at 7:00 \u2022\nauqhtei\nRichard Arlen - Rochelle Hud\nMarian Marsh - Isabel lev\nipital Aux.!\non at .1 o'cl\nry meets this gf-\n\u25a0k   Norses'  Home\nPi<rkl   anr!   rhirK Sowerby-Cuthbert Ltd.\nNMI     dllU     Vllipj      opp  Po.toftce.nd Hume Hotel\nEDISON   MAZDA   LAMPS.   F   H\nSMITH,  PHONE  666, 351   Baktr  St.\nAdult Ikatina tonight. 8 to   10.\nCIVIC   ARENA\nCORRECTION\nPlrnae note - I O 11 E OencrAl\nMertmE \u00bb on TUESDAY. FehruaiY\nnth nt .1 p in legion Hall. Elec\".:.in\nnt officers\nMURESCO. the Superior Kslao-\nmine for walla and ceilings. Eighteen\nbeautiful color, to choose from 70c\nper   5   II).   package.   HIPPERSONS.\nDon't forget the Nelaon Ski Club\nDance Saturday night. February 17\nat  Eagle  Hall.\nQrenfell's Cafe\nCream-0 Milk\nTRY  A  PINT TODAY\nPALM DAIRIES LIMITED\n**><>\u2022\u00bb\u00ab \u2666\u25a0 + \u25a0\u2666 \u2022\u2022-++-\u2022 \u2022 \u00bb- + -a\nWhy Be Afraid to Die\nWV:i i amall estate when you ran\nbuv J.VW1  insurance for only 5)7\ny.-ar. a\u00ab' *V\nP:i me 9fta>  for  infirmat.on\nStu.irt'*   'niuran-- Offi'r\n577 Bakrr St. Nelaon, B. C.\nv at. B -J !\u25a0\nttnunun\nPlus\nThe  Man  Who Dan\nwith\n,'ane   Bryan\u2014Chai.   Grape\nSATURDAY\n\"The FIyin- Deuces\nand\n\"Everybody! Hobby\nThe power and light will he off\nhotwren fi am and 7 am Sunday.\nFeh II. next for the purpoae ot\nmaking certain necessary altera-j\nlions   - Citv of Nelson\nCURLERS ATTENTION\nThirda will draw'ninks for Jctd\nrun tonight 9 n'rlock All Thirds\nmust he present or appoint a rep-\nresentative   to   rhoa.se   your   rink\nFUNERAL   NOTICE\nDRINNAN    William Funeral\nservice In hr held al (Tark'i Funeral\nChapel Saturday, Feh in at in a m,\nRev   J   A. Donnell off aa latmg.\nFINANCIAL    SECURITY\nINVESTORS SYNDICATE\nMonthly   Savlnga   Plan\nIt. W. DAWSON\nnondr.1   Rrprr-i'-nUliv\"\nlot 81        Hlpperton  H - Ph,   197\n1939 Chevrolet\nDe 1oso Coupt\nI ike New \u2014 See tins r.v\nNelson Transfer\nCo   Ltd\nLEAGUE\nHOCKEY GAM1\nNFKO-'  T'VIC ARFNA\nSATURDAY NIGHT: FEB. 10th\nNelsonvs- Kimberle;\nMaple  Leafi\nDynamiters\nDoors Open at 8:30. Came at 9:15\nAdmission: Reserved Seats \".'>(*. Adult Rush !aO<*.\nChildren Un-* -  15  U.'a-*.\nReaerved   Seati   now  avaOahle  at   Nelaon   Civic  Centre   Offlt\nPHONE   119\nPLEASE NOTE: Reaerved ifat ticket holdera mint uie Ticks\nfor Performance No. 12. No other numbered Ticket will be ace\ned  hy  the   Ooorkeenera.\nM\n","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"oc:AnnotationContainer"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Genre":[{"label":"Genre","value":"Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"edm:hasType"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; This property relates a resource with the concepts it belongs to in a suitable type system such as MIME or any thesaurus that captures categories of objects in a given field. It does NOT capture aboutness"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"label":"Geographic Location ","value":"Nelson (B.C.)","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:spatial"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Spatial characteristics of the resource."}],"Identifier":[{"label":"Identifier","value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1940_02_09","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:identifier"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context.; Recommended best practice is to identify the resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"IsShownAt":[{"label":"DOI","value":"10.14288\/1.0407432","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"edm:isShownAt"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; An unambiguous URL reference to the digital object on the provider\u2019s website in its full information context."}],"Language":[{"label":"Language","value":"English","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:language"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A language of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as RFC 4646 [RFC4646]."}],"Latitude":[{"label":"Latitude","value":"49.493333","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:lat"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03c6) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Longitude":[{"label":"Longitude","value":"-117.295833","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","classmap":"edm:Place","property":"wgs84_pos:long"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","explain":"Basic Geo (WGS84 Lat\/Long) Property; Longitude (\u03bb) - Specified in Decimal Degrees"}],"Notes":[{"label":"Notes","value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:rights"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Information about rights held in and over the resource.; Typically, rights information includes a statement about various property rights associated with the resource, including intellectual property rights."}],"SortDate":[{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1940-02-09 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."},{"label":"Sort Date","value":"1940-02-09 AD","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","classmap":"oc:InternalResource","property":"dcterms:date"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF].; A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource.; Date may be used to express temporal information at any level of granularity. Recommended best practice is to use an encoding scheme, such as the W3CDTF profile of ISO 8601 [W3CDTF]."}],"Source":[{"label":"Source","value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:source"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource from which the described resource is derived.; The described resource may be derived from the related resource in whole or in part. Recommended best practice is to identify the related resource by means of a string conforming to a formal identification system."}],"Title":[{"label":"Title ","value":"The Daily News","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:title"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The name given to the resource."}],"Type":[{"label":"Type","value":"Text","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:type"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; The nature or genre of the resource.; Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the DCMI Type Vocabulary [DCMITYPE]. To describe the file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource, use the Format element."}],"Translation":[{"property":"Translation","language":"en","label":"Translation","value":""}]}