{"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"label":"Aggregated Source Repository","value":"CONTENTdm","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:dataProvider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who contributes data indirectly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Collection":[{"label":"Collection","value":"BC Historical Newspapers","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:isPartOf"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included."}],"DateAvailable":[{"label":"Date Available","value":"2022-04-08","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DateIssued":[{"label":"Date Issued","value":"1937-01-25","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","classmap":"oc:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:issued"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; Date of formal issuance (e.g., publication) of the resource."}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"label":"Digital Resource Original Record","value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0412538\/source.json","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:aggregatedCHO"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The identifier of the source object, e.g. the Mona Lisa itself. This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Aberdeen Beats Celts; Charlton\nand Arsenal Both Win\n\u2014Pa$e Seven\nshml\nVICTORIA,\nVOLUME 35\nFIVE CENT8 PER COPY\na\u00bbHArV3T\nliQVtNCIAL   LI CHAM\n\u25a0- >   - fclCTORI A  B  C\n\u2014\nNELSON. BRITISH\n\u00b0{\\\nProfits Are Taken in Coast Oils;\nBingay Heads Mining Assoc.\n\u2014Pa&e Nine\nAY MORNING, JAN. 25, 1937.\nNUMBER 240\nFLAMING FLOODS HIT CINCINNATI\nArmy\nJapan;\nMILITARY HEADS\nREFUSE SUPPORT\nGENERAL UGAKI\nBitter Attacks Bring\nAbout Downfall of\nPremier Hirota\nPOLITICAL CRISIS\nGRIPS COUNTRY\nMilitarists, Liberals\nBattle for Power\nin Diet\nCopyright, 1937,\nBy the Havas New.; Agency\nTOKYO, Monday, Jan. 25 (Monday). (CP-Hava\u00ab)\u2014Army opposition today blocked Emperor Hlr-\nohlto's efforts to Install a new government in the Japanese political\ncrisis, which broke when Premier\nKokl Hirota resigned Saturday In\na showdown struggle between militarists and Liberal parliamentarians.\nMilitary authorities refused to\ncooperate with General Kaiuhlge\nUgakl, selected at the next premier.\nUgakf It unpopular with  the\narmy, having abolished four divisions while war minister In 1925\nand taken other restrictive steps.\nEmperor   Hirohito   Sunday   had\nsummoned General Kazushige Ogaki\nformer governor of Korea, to tarn\na government to solve the crisis between parliament and ihe army.\nBitter attacks in parliament,\ncharging militarists with attempting\nto force a Fascist type of government on Japan, brought the downfall of Premier Koki Hirota's government and suspension of the diet\n(parliament!. Hirota handed his resignation to the emperor Saturday\namid deepening tension.\nObservers believed the crisis entered a new critical phase. The emperor sought the advice of Prince\nSaionjl, last of Japan's \"elder statesmen\" and former premier, while\nparty members and the army struggled for control of thc next government\nAt the Imperial command, Hirota carries on until a new government is formed, a task complicated\nby the army's veto power over any\ncabinet through acceptance or refusal to furnish a war minister for\nthe cabinet.\nBlocks\nHirota\n\"If mnter\nComes...\"\nFIVE REEVES ARE\nREELECTED\nReeves were back in the saddle\ntoday in 23 of British Columbia's\n26 municipalities.\nFive municipal heads were reelected Saturday joining 18 of their\nnumber who received acclamations\nlast Monday. One other reeve, William Ayres Jones, a newcomer, also\nreceived  an  acclamation   in  Kent.\nOf the seven municipalities which\nrequired elections today the five\nreturning their reeve* for another\nterm were;\nCoquitlam, Reeve R. C. MacDonald: Esquimau, Reeve Alexander\nLockey; Maple Ridge, Reeve S. Mus-\nsallem; Matsqui, Reeve G. A. Cruik-\nshanks, Surrey; Joseph T, M. Brown, j\nTwo newcomers joining Jones ot\nKent were W. G. Wilkins who defeated Reeve H. B. Morley in Penticton and M. S. Noble who won\nover Reeve James McCallan in Spal-\nlumchMa.\n'If winter comes, can spring be\nfar behind?\"\nKootenays' Winter not only has\ncome,\" with a capital \"W,\" but in\nthe opinion of many has overstayed\nits invitation, and the above picture\nof Miss Gay Hayden of New York\nCity, \"resort colonist'' at Miami.\nFla., is just to remind them that\nboth spring and summer are expected along as usual in due time.\nMiss Hayden's suit is of white las-\ntex, with side insets of mesh and a\nhaltar top. expected to be popular\nthe coming season. Rope sandals\nand white bandanna are the trimmings.\nReno Shift Boss\nDead in Tunnel;\nCause Not Known\nSeverln Olson, aged 49 years,\nmet his death in a tunnel of the\nReno mints Saturday night,\nwhether from a natural cause or\nfrom a fall Is not known here,\nOlson was the shift boss at the\nReno where he had been employed for about five years. He\nwas unmarried,\nThe body was brought In to the\nSomers Funeral Home here Sunday night by fellow miners.\nPope Is in Good Spirits Despite\nSuffering as Receives Visitors\n5evere Pain Is Eased\nSlightly by New\nSedative\nBy ANDRUE  6ERDING\n(Associated Press Foreign Staff)\nVATICAN CITY, Jan. 24 (AP),\n\u2014 Pope  Plus passed  his eighth\nSunday of Illness today, his severs\npain eased only slightly by a new\ntype of sedative.\nA medicinal drop taken through\nIhe mouth was given the pontiff and\niL was said to have lessened somewhat the suffering, caused by  his\nswollen  legs. Other sedatives have\nbeen without avail  in  combatting\nthe pain which threatened to overtax his already weakened heart.\nLifted onto his portable divan and\nwheeled into the salon of his private\napartment, the pope received briefly\nCardinal Pacelli, Vatican secretary\nof state, the bishops of Merlin and\nMunster, Germany; Vatican City\nGovernor Camillo Serafini, and thc\nArchbishop Borgongini-Duca, papal\nnuncio to Italy.\nThe pontiff appeared in good\nspirits despite his suffering. His\ncondition was reported officially\nto be \"satisfactory.''\nLowering skies, cold and penetrating humidity, however, forced\nhim to leave the portable divan and\nbe carried back to bed tho moment\nhis short audiences were over. He\nate lightly and sought resl.\nNew Cabinet for WATER CARRIES BLAZING OIL\nand Aides Quit OVER 31-2 MILE FRONT IN THE\nWORST FLOOD EVER IN OHIO\nSeven Curling Trophies at\nTrail Spiel Are Won by the\nCoast Rinks; Avery Has Four\nMartin of Kimberley\nIs Beaten in Final\nGrand Challenge\nHOEFER OF TRAIL\nWINS NELSON CUP\nMcGerrigle, Trail Is\nWinner of the\nKimberley Cup\nBONSPIEL WINNERS\nBritish Consoli\u2014Frank Avery,\nVancouver\nGrand aggregate\u2014Frank Avery,\nVancouver.\nRunner-up \u2014 Joe Dundai, Vancouver.\nRunner-up\u2014Billy Whalen, Vancouver.\nGrand challenge\u2014Frank Avery,\nVancouver\nRunner-up \u2014 D. Martin, Cranbrook.\nCammell-Laird \u2014Billy Whalen,\nVancouver.\nRunner-up\u2014W. L. Wood, Tr\u00bbll.\nRowland cup \u2014 Frank Averjf^J.\n\u2014V-meouv-r.\nRunner-up\u2014A, B. Ritchie, Kimberley.\nTrail cup\u2014Bob Scobie, Vancouver.\nRunner-up\u2014Lea Jamee, Chapman Camp.\nNelton cup \u2014 Charlei Hoefer,\nTrail.\nRunner-up \u2014 W. M. Archibald,\nKimberley.\nKimberley cup\u2014R. C. McGerrigle, Trail.\nRunner-up Billy Whalen, Vancouver.\nConsolation \u2014 T. H, Weldon,\nTrail.\nRunner-up\u2014H. T. Beckett, Trail.\nAll-comere\u2014Vancouver (represented by Billy Whalen).\nRunner-up \u2014 Rotiland (represented by J. C. Urquhart).\nPoints \u2014 Bill Somervllle and\nFred Wendel, first; E. J. Provost,\nsecond; A. M. Chesser and W, H,\nBaldrey, third; all of Trail.\nTRAIL, B.C; Jan. 24.\u2014Seven\nBritish Columbia Curling association cup trophies, Including the\nB.C. championship, are in Vancouver, and three are In Trail,\nThree seconds are at the coast\nand three in Kimberley, two In\nTrail, one In Chapman Camp and\none In Rossland. In additon five\nprizes in the points are all held\nin Trail. A solid week of curling\nlasting each day from 7 a.m. to\n3 and 4 the following morning\nconcluded In the sma' hours of\nSunday with two Trait rinks battling It out In the Consolations\nfinal.\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nLegion Executive\nMeets Tuesday\nOTTAWA, Jan. 24 <CP).-Con-\nfronted with an agenda that has\naccumulated since the last Dominion convention at Vancouver 10\nmonths ago, the Dominion government executive council of the Canadian Legion will assemble here\nTuesday morning. Brig. General\nAlex Ross of Yorkton, Sask., will\npreside.\nAttention of the council will be\ndirected to such matters as unemployment among ex-service men. to\nprobe which a commission under\nthe direction of Col. J. G. Rattray\nhas been operating since last .Tune.\nLegion policy relating to that matter\nwill be propounded and representations of the organization based on\nfacts already obtained will be formulated.\nThe council will be asked to discuss possibilities of a tour to the\nUnited Kingdom to synchronize\nwith the coronation of King George\nVI and Queen Elizabeth. It has been\ndefinitely announced, however, no\nspecial privileges are being accorded to ex-service men's organizations\nin connection with this event.\nCanada in the\nSouth\nNo wonder the birds go south\nwith a treat for the eyes like this\nawaiting their arrival. Thc beauty\nis Miss Kathleen Nolan, who is win*\ntering in Miami Beach, far from\nthe snows and winter winds of her\nnative Montreal. Note the nifty\nprint beach ensemble she's wearing.\n\u2014Central Press Canadian photo.\nMARIE PREVOST\nFOUND DEAD\nHOLLYWOOD, Calif., (API-\nDeath in a small Hollywood apartment ended Marie Prevost's futile\nfight to retrieve her faded screen\nglory.\nThe body of the one-time Mack\n8ennett bathing beauty, who went\non to leading roles, lay today In\nthe county morgue.\nDr. Frank R. Webb, assistant\ncounty autopsy surgeon, said a\npost-mortem examination Indicated acute alcoholism. Face down\non her bed the silk pajama*clad\nbody of Miss Prevost was found\nSaturday by a negro houseboy,\nWilliam Bogle.\nCRANBROOK TO\nHAVE RADIO\nBEAM\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 24 'CP)\n\u2014 Four radio beam stations to\nguide aircraft on the transcanada airway, scheduled to be in\noperation by July 1, wilt be established in British Columbia\nit was announced hero by J. R.\nRobertson, district airways inspector of Regina, Sask.\nRobertson has been looking\nover locations for the station\nwitli G. L. McGeer, airways engineer of Ottawa.\nVancouver, Princeton a n d\nCranbrook have been chosen as\nsites for three of the stations\nwhile the fourth may be built\nnear Grand Forks or Trail.\niit*-i mmmmMM \u2022-*\u00bb** t*mm\u00bb*MM*M\nFATHER AND HIS\nFOUR CHILDREN\nBURN TO DEATH\nMother, at Church, Is\nOnly Survivor in\nHull Tragedy\nTHREE KIDDIES\nDEAD IN BEDS\nFather Dies in Vain\nAttempt to Save\nHis Son\nHULL, Que., Jan. 24 (CP)\u2014Five\npersons were burned to death\nearly today and eight others escaped when fire broke out In a\nrow of four frame houses on Le-\ndue street here, destroying the\nhome of George Fournler, 30, killing him and his four small children. Mrs. Fournier was at church\nwhen the fire started.\nThe four dead Fournler children\nwere; Roland, six; Rita, four, Pierrette, two; Marcel, two months.\nMrs. Wilfrid Charron, who lived next door to the Fournler's In\na house separted from theirs by a\nthin wood wall, smelled smoke,\nawakened her husband and father-\nin-law, J. B. Charron, and made\nvain efforts to arouse the Fournler family.\nThe Charron's' carried five children In their home to the street,\nrushing them to neighbors homes\nas they had no time to dress them.\nMrs. Charron sought to enter\nFournier's home by the front door\nbut was driven back by flames. She\nsr*tshed a window at the rear of\nthe house, cut her hand and suffered slight burns before she realized her efforts were hopeless.\nWhen firemen entered the ruins\nof Fournier's home they found the\nbodies of Rita, Pierrette and Marcel\nlying in their cribs. Fournier's body\nwas lying across a trunk in a front\nroom, that of Roland nearby.\nFiremen said it appeared to\nthem Fournier had seized Roland,\ncarried him to the front of the\nhouse and attempted to smash a\nwindow, only to be overcome by\nsmoke and collapse across the\ntrunk.\nDirector Emlle Bond of the fire\ndepartment said overheated stovepipes caused the blaze.\nFRANCE OFFERS\nAID TO HITLER\nLYON, France, Jan. 24 (AP)\u2014\nFrance offered today to help Germany out of her economic difficulties If the reich will \"manifest her will to cooperate\" for\nworld peace.\nPremier Leon Blum, \"In full accord with Great Britain\" extended the offer and put the whole\nquestion of Franco-German relations and world peace frankly up\nto Reichschancellor Adolf Hitler.\nThe Premier Issued a warning\nIn th<* form of a question. What\nnation, he asked, would cooperate\nwith another nation \"If there remains the slightest apprehension\nthe help given might one day be\nturned against her?\"\nFlames Over Eight-storys High; 350,000 Are\nLeft Homeless in Valley; Millions of\nDollars Worth of Property Lost\n\"STATE OF EMERGENCY\" DECLARED IN\nCINCINNATI; TO SHOOT ALL LOOTERS\nFlood Still Rising and Worst Is Yet to Come;\nMartial Law in Southern Indiana; Pres.\nRoosevelt Calls Emergency Meeting\n(By The Associated Press)\nHuman misery, property damage and horror mounted today along the overflowing Ohio and Mississippi riven.\nFire, darkness, cold, disease and hunger last night multiplied the flood-born terror.\nThe homeless numbered at least 400,000, and the total\ngrew with every hour. At least 50 were dead. Property loss\nwas incalculable.\nPresident Roosevelt summoned heads of five federal\nagencies and the. Red Cross to a disaster releif conference.\n\">    Troops, supplies, boats and\nworkers were rushed to strategic points.\nFire raged on a three-mile\nindustrial front in flood-crippled Cincinnati. Thirty-two\nbuildings fell before flames. At\nleast 18 firemen were injured.\nDamage was set at $1,500,000.\nThe city's transportation was crippled, its power virtually gone. A\nKOOTENAY MEN\nGET AWARDS\nFOR RESCUES\nHAMILTON, Ont., .Ian. 24 (CPL-\nThe bronze medal of the Royal Canadian Humane association has been\nawarded to W. D'Arcy, C. P. R.\nstationmaster at Calgary, in recognition of his heroism in saving a young\nlad from death, Sept. 7, 1936.\nMr. D'Arcy noticed tlie youngster\nstep backwards on to the main track\nin the face of an eastbotind passenger train. Although the train was\nonly a few feet away, the station-\nmaster jumped to the track, seized\nthe boy and threw him back to the\nplatform. D'Arcy managed to hurl\nhimself to safety. A Labor day holiday crowd of nearly 600 saw the\nofficial's heroic act.\nParchment  certificates  were\nawarded for rescuing or assisting to\nrescue persons from drowning, to:\nJ. C. Clarence, Peachland, B.C.,\nSept. 6, 1936, Okanagan lake, near\nPeachland.\nJohn    A.   Scanland,   Wardner,\nB.C., and  Wilfred  White, Waldo,\nB.C.,   April   2,   1936,    Kootenay\nriver, near Wardner.\nARGUMENTS DUE\nIN HOUSE\nExpect Disagreement\nof Four Issues\nOTTAWA, Jan. 24 (CP). - Four\ncontentious discussions loom on the\nskyline as parliament moves into its\nsecond actual business week of thc\nsession. Unusual unanimity characterized last week with the exception of the debates on Social Credit\nresolutions, but a different atmosphere may be expected when the\ncommons begins to discuss defence\nestimates, wheat marketing, reduction in the capitalization of the Canadian National Railways and demands for a commission to investigate financial claims of western\nprovinces.\nSuggsesion has been made that instead of a probe of the claims of the\nwest along the lines of the Duncan\ncommission which some years ago\ninvestigated maritime rights, the government may decide to have a commission study the whole set-up of\nprovincial and Dominion taxation,\nsubsidies and credits, covering all\nprovinces.\nUnder house rules Mondays, Wednesdays and Thursdays are reserved\nfor private members' motions for\nthe first four weeks of the session,\nafter which Thursdays pass over to\nthe use of the government. Generally thc debate on the address, having right of way, steals a number ot\ndays set aside for private members\nbut this session it only took one,\nTherefore, it is contended, private\nmembers could give up Thursdays\nand still have time to debate the 19\nresolutions they have on thc order\npaper.\nN\nRINGS AND CASH\nCOAST HAULS\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 24 (CTM-Ten\nrings, valued at more than $250. and\n$200 in cash were obtained by\nsmash-and-grab thieves and strong-\narm men here over the week-end.\nThe rings were taken from a\ndowntown jewelry store window\nearly today.\ndrinking.waUr, famine threatened.| aiaht-*y\u00abeir-o1d    fardther   of   th\u00ab\nDo'vVn thfe Ohio, Louisville was\nin critical plight. The mayor urged\nresidents to leave. Stoppage of power threatened the city. There was\nno transportation or drinking water,\nGovernor Chandler called for army\nenforcements to support civilian\nforces.\n(Continued  on  Page Ten)\nNEW ATTACK ON\nMADRID\nMADRID, Jan. 24 (CP-Havas) \u2014\nAnother insurgent artillery attack\nblasted Madrid today killing at least\neight persons and wounding 30\nothers,\nInsurgent batteries, which blasted\nthe city with the heaviest bombardment of the siege on Saturday, opened up again this afternoon, giving\nthe stricken population no respite.\nThe heavy calibre shell sent new\nTWO YOUTHS DIE\nIN VAIN EFFORTS\nTO SAVE A THIRD\nBrothers, 16 and 14,\nDrown in Rescue\nAttempt\nEIGHT-YEAR-OLD\nIS OTHER VICTIM\nAir Hole in Lake Erie\nIce Proves to Be\nDeath-trap\nKINGSVILIE, Ont., Jan. 24\n(CP).\u2014A tale of tragic herolim\nwai unfolded in thli South Etsex\ndistrict tonight aa preparation!\nwere made for burial of three\nfarm lads drowned In frigid Lake\nErie waters Saturday, Two of the\nboys perished attempting to save\nthe other.\nVictims were:\nBill Grill, eight, son of Mr, and\nMrs. Frank Grill.\nTom Meyer, 16, and his 14-year-\nold brother, Nick, sont of Mr.\nand Mrs. Matthew Meyer.\nThe   trio,   along   with    Peter,\nMeyer boys, were playing on the\nIce with a small fled. Young Grill\ntook a run and coasted several\nyards before the sled hit an obstruction, throwing him off. He\nhit an air-hole and plunged\nthrough Into nine feet of water.\nICE GIVES WAY\n\"When Bill fell in,\" Peter, remaining child in the Meyer family, said,\n\"Tommy grabbed a long pole with\na nail on the end and tried to reach\nhim. As he crept closer to the hole,\nthe ice gave way and he fell in too.\nNick tried to save both of them\nwith another stick and he fell in.\"\nThe lad then told how Nick shouted\nfrom the paralyzing waters, \"Peter,\nrun for help,\" as the three grasped\nvainly at crumbling ice around the\nrim of the hole.\nThat was the last time he saw his\nbrothers and the Grill boy alive for\nhe turned and ran the 200 yards to\nshore across the treacherous ice,\nscrambled up a muddy, 150-foot embankment and across snow-covered\nfields to the homo of Andrew Jackson, middle-aged farmer, across the\nhighway  from  the modest Meyer\npiles of wreckage crumbling  into : home,\nthe streets, adding to thc devastation     He  panted out to Jackson that\ncaused yesterday, | \"Tom, Nick and Billy fell in the\nGovernment forces struck hard I lake\" and thc farmer hurried to the\nagainst insurgent troops driving to- i scene, slipping and sliding across the\nward Malaga and other contingents f ice. There was no sign of them\noperating in northwestern Jaen '\u2022 when he reached the hole,\nprovince, thc Madrid command an-1 After 15 minutes of grappling the\npounced today. ! bodies were recovered.\nSlocan lake Freezes Over for the\nThird Time in While Man's History\nOther Occasions Were Winters 1929 and 1930\nWhen Severe Weather Was Prolonged; C. P. R.\nCancels Steamer Service for Present\nNelson  \t\nVictoria .\nVancouver\nKamloops\nPrince Georg\nEstevan Point\nPrince Rupert\nAtlin \t\nDawson, Y.T. .\nSeattle \t\nPortland. Ore  28\nSan Francisco   42\nSpokane     10\nLos Angeles 36\nPenticton    8\nVernon       2\nCalgary   10'\nEdmonton   20'\n  20'\n  16'\n  22*\n20*\n    0\n  10'\nSwift Current \t\nPrince Albert ....\nSaskatoon \t\nQu'Appelle \t\nWinnipeg   \t\nMoose Jaw \t\n\u2022\u2014Below zero.\nYielding to the longest continuous\nstretch of zero and near-zero\nweather for a number of years, the\nonly kind of weather that can subdue it, Slocan lake has frozen over\nin the last few days, for the third\ntime in recorded history, all three\ntimes in Ihe last eight years,\nA week ago the Canadian Pacific\nsteamer Rosebery was able to make\nits round of Slocan lake points, going and returning.\nBut Wednesday saw a sheet of ice\ncover the lower end of the lake,\nfrom Slocan City for 10 miles, while\nthe upper end was also reported\niced over. Witli the air almost lifeless, the whole lake later became\ncovered, and at the end of the week\nthe sheet was very thick, incidentally scaling the Rosebery and her\nbarge up at their berth at Slocan\nCity.\nSailing of Ihe Rosebery Monday\nhas been cancelled, and some other\nway will he found to give the Slocan lake towns freight service while\nthere is no navigation. If desired\nfreight can go around by the Kaslo-\nNakusp branch.\nThe only parallels for lhe recent\nprolonged dip were In 1929 and\n1930, as many Kootenay residents\nhave, recalled, and in both of those\nwinters Slocan lake made history by\nfreezing over.\nUSED ICE-BREAKERS\nIn 1929 is was possible for the\nCanadian Pacific to maintain service\nby arduous ice-breaking, hut in 1930\nthe ice, after being battled for days,\nwon a complete victory.\nConditions were very similar on\ntho Lower Arrow lake, but in 1929\nis was possible to serve the points\nbetween Robson and Edgewood,\nwhile in 1930 the lake froze almost\ndown to Robson, and there waa\ntraffic on the frozen surface with\nsleighs. The C.P.R. use barges for\nice breakers on both the Upper and\nLower Arrow lakes.\nOf the two winters. 1929 had ai\nmany dips, and they started earlier,\nbut 1930 had Ihe longest periods oi\ncontinuous zero or near-zero\nweather, and produced the more\ndifficult conditions.\nFrom the earliest days of the\nwhite man in this district, Ihe early\n'90s so far as Slocan lake was con-\ncerned, Slocan lake never froze\nuntil eight years ago.\n \t\n\t\n1)1, \u00ab\u25a0--------#\nPAGE TWO-\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-MONDAY MORNING, JAN, 25, 1837,\nDEAD PILOT'S\nWIFE IH B.C.\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 24 (CD-\nCaptain G. S. (Barney) Jones-Evans,\nwho, with his wireless operator\nJames Walker, was found dead Friday night in the wreckage of an\nairplane at Titsey Hill, Surrey, England, was well-known in British\nColumbia and lived here from 1919\nto 1932.\nJones-Evans, a veteran of the\ngreat war and winner of the distinguished Flying Cross, settled in the\nOkanagan valley, in the southern interior of the province, alter the war.\nA few years later he took up flying\nagain and became instructor for Dominion Airways, Ltd, at Vancouver.\nWAKE UP LIKE\nA CAVE MAN!\nJump out of bed full of life. Say\ngood-bye to dull, tired mornings.\nHelp yourself to glowing health.\nBanish the p-!iaalllas of modem llalaaft. Do\n\u25a0any with tired, sluggish, bid-taute, headachy maarnlnfts. Wake up peppy and full of\nenergy, lt'aeaey, you'll think lt mlraculoua.\nFellow In tbe footsteps of thousands who\nhate regained full health and energy with\nFrult-a-tl-ea. The prescription ot a famoua\nCanltaHan doctor, FruK-a-tla-eaa contain\nextracts of frulta and herba and act to\n\u25a0tlmulate five of the rltal organs of the\nbody, cleanse the elimination tract oaf\nwastes and pouaona, tend to purify tha\nblood of harmful poisons and acids. Frult-\naVtlTea' unique tonic efla-cta bring new\nenergy, new health. So try Fnalt-a-tl.ee\ntoday. For aale everywhere. Coat la low-*\n25c, Mc. For your own pfotectlon refuse\nany substitutes. Intlst on \"Frult-s-tlTee.\"\nNelsort-Nokusp\nService\nOn account of ice conditions on Slocan Lake, service Slocan City-Nakusp\nis cancelled. Train will be\noperated from Nelson at\n8:25 a.m. Monday, January 25 and every alternate\nMonday thereafter to Slocan City and return. There\nwill be no Wednesday\ntrain from Slocan City to\nNelson.\nN. J. LOWES\nCity Ticket Agent\nNELSON, B.C,\n(&4*\nGRAND CHALLENGE\n(PRIMARY EVENT)\nJ A.\n... Wadsworth, T-\nAl Jeffs, N Jeffs \t\nW. F. Truswell, T .\nJ, Scott, K \t\nP. R. McDonald, T...\nW. G. Carrie, T\t\nJohn McGowan, K...\nTruswell\nW. H. Baldrey, T\t\nDave Garnham, V...\nW. E. Newton, T....\nJ. B. Gray, N \t\nA. M. Chesser, T...\nFrank Avery, V ...\nG. W. Weir, T .\nSyd Crowe, V .\nJack Balfour, T _  \u00bb.i,.,\u201e\nBob Scobie, V , BaUour\nMcDonald .\nMcDonald\t\n~\nCarrie .\nMcDonald .\n...\nCarrie\nBaldrey\t\nNewton _.\t\nAvery\nAvery \t\nS'\nWeir  \t\n.....\nBalfour \t\nAvery ,\nChas. Dodimead, T....\nH. M. Whimster, N....\nH. E. Wade, T\t\nT. R. Wilson, N ....\nG. J. Kinnis, T\t\nJ, W. Burden, R ....\nDodimead ,\nWade\nWade\nKinnis\nKinnis\nA. G. Harvey, T ..... \u201e\u201e_,\u201e\nJoe Dundas, V   *\u2022*\"\"*\nKinnis\n11\nCharles Hoefer, T...\nA. S. Horswill, N .\nHoefer\nMcGerrigle .\nKimberley lady\nIs laid le Rest\nChurch Is Crowded for\nFuneral of Mrs. E.\nLundberg\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. - The United\nchurch was crowded to capacity\nTuesday afternoon by those who had\ncome to pay their last respect to a\nfriend and neighbor, Mrs. E. Lundberg, who died at Calgary.\nServices were conducted by Rev.\nS. T. Galbraith. Interment took\nplace in the local cemetery.\nPallbearers were: E'Peterson, A\nDellert, 0, Llndquist, v. Auguston,\nJ. 0. Pearson and K Sahlin.\nKimberley Is having the coldest weak of the winter, the temperature dropping to Its lowest\non Wednesday. Reports range\nfrom 29 to 34 degrees below zero.\nA few cases of flu are reported in\ntown. Measles have completely covered this territory, apparently missing only those who were immune\nthrough a former attack.\nJ, H. Harrison is confined to his\nhome by illness.\nMiss Peggy Johnston of the Mc\nDougall  hospital  staff,   spent\nR. C. McGerrigle, T- w^.-aj,.\nJ. Finney, R  McGerrltfe ...\nMcGerrigle\nWm.\nWm\nForrest, T  -\u201e_...\nMarr, N _  rorrejt\nMcGerrigle\nW. L. Wood, T\t\nJ. C. Urquhart, R ._\nWood\nJ. Wright, R\t\nW. H. Gates, F \u2014 Gates ...\nWilliam Rae, T\t\nSam Paterson, R .. Rae\nWood\nGates\nAVERY\nBowyer\nL. F. Tyson, T\t\nHarry Bowyer, V .\nT. H. Weldon, T\t\nC. D. Blackwood, N. Blackwood _\nRobert Somerville, T\nHoward Bush, N  SomerviMe ...\nJ. R. Craig, T\t\nW. M. Archibald, K. Archibald .._\nW. Griffith, R\t\nBilly Whalen, V .\nGates\nBlackwood ...\nWhalen .\nArchibald\nWhalen\n.. Whalen -\nGeorge McKay, T ...\nE. James, K   McKay\t\nRobert Andrew, N...\nH. R. Banks, K\t\nBanks \t\nP. F. Mclntyre, T ..\nL. James, K\t\nMclntyre\nH. T. Beckett, T  _   .  ,.\nW. Pollock, R  Beckett \u201e_\nJ. H. Woodburn, T... \u201e\nRoily David, V David \t\nA. J. McDonelL T... \u201e \u201e     \u201e\nJoe Rochon, K McDonell ..\nA. Browne, N ,\t\nA. B. Ritchie, K Browne ....\nWhalen\nMclntyn\nDavid\nMartin\nDavid\nMartin\nBrowne\nDr. C. A. Mittun, T...\nFrank Ellis, R\t\nD. Martin, K\t\nRoy Stephens, R ..\nMartin\nMittun\nMartin\nMartin\nBUY OR 8ELL WITH A WANT AD,\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest In the Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nFree Bus Service\nGeo. Benwell, Prop,\nBREAKFAST Mc and LP\nLunches 40c to 50c Dinner 40c to 65o\nROTARY AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787 NELSON, B.C.        422 VERNON 8T.\nHUME\u2014Mrs. A. Woods, p. Ar-\nI lidge, Calgary; H- W. Power, L. A.\nKeele, J. T. Burrows, S. B. Barber,\nW. C- Cowell, A. E. Ormslcy, K. Mc-\nRory, K. G. Ward, Vancouver; p.\nWilliams, G. W. Eaglesham, Trail;\nMil! N. McRobb, Creston; Miss E.\nBlair, Canyon; Mr. and Mrs. W. E-\nMacGinnis, Ymir; Mr. and Mrs. F\nH. Abey, Kaslo; Mr. and Mrs. S. S.\nFowler, Riondei; H. N. Coursey, P.\nM- Wards, Medicine Hal; Mr. and\nMrs. P. W. Ham, Silverton; G. H\nMorton, G. W. Roberts, Penticton;\nJ. W, Samuel, Montreal.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest is King\"\nMODERN  SAMPLE  ROOMS\nFully Licenced\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.        Nelson, B. C.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nP. L. KAPAK, Proprietor\nCommercial, Tourist and Family Trade Solicited.\nFree Parking NELSON, B.C. Phona 234\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon St. Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nFully  Licenced\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Aivaits You\nJAS. E. MADDEN, Prop.\nCompletely  Remodelled\nHot   and   Cold   Water\nIn the HEART of the City\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\nTrail-Phone 135       Nelson-Phone 35\nTrail Livery Co.\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\n\"IP\nBaskelballersFace Suspension;\nInterior Players Are \"Offenders\"\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 24 (CP)-\nOfflclali of the British Columbia\nAmateur Basketball association\nwere suspended from associating\nIn all sports under Jurisdiction of\nthe Amateur Ath'letlc Union of\nCanada. The suspension wai ordered after a meeting here today of\nthe British Columbia branch of\nthe A. A. U. of c. and announced\nby Norman Porter, branch president.\nThe amateur executive alio declared all other league and team\nofficials and all players taking\npart in games since Nov. 1 at\nwhich gate recelpti or collections\nwere taken and in which players\ncompeted without having taken\nout amateur registration cards\ntechnically disqualified.\nThe disqualification would\nmean, Porter said, none of those\naffected could participate In any\nsport under A, A, U> of C. control\nuntil they applied for amateur\ncards and the application accepted,\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 23  (CP).\nSuspension ot all British Columbia\nbasektball officials and team executives unless senior basketball players take out amateur cards immediately, was threatened today by\nNorman Porter, president of the B.C.\nsection of the Amateur Athletic\nUnion of Canada in an ultimatum\nthrown into the already red-hot\n\"amateur\" controversy.\nDeclaring he had solicited members of his organization by telephone\nand had been given full authority\nto take action, Porter said:\n\"Unless all senior basketball players Immediately take out amateur\ncards, B.C. hoop officials and team\nexecutives will be suspended from\norganized sport.\n\"And,\" he added, \"if that does no\ngood the players' heads will be\nplaced on the official block.\"\nMinor leagues here and In the Interior of the province are said to be\nthe biggest offenders. Senior \"A\"\nsquads here and on Vancouver\nIsland have already registered, it\nwas said.\nTOO MANY YOUNG SUICIDES\nFLEETWOOD, England (CP) -\nReturning a verdict of suicide in\nthe case of a 20-year-old boy who\nhanged himself. Coroner H. Parker\nsaid he was \"getting rather disturbed at these young suicides-\nthere are too many of them.\"\nGIVE SALARY TO CHARITY\nLONDON (Cp)-Charles Laughton, noted English screen actor, and\nhis wife, Elsa Lanchester, are donating the entire salaries they receive for acting in \"Peter Pan\" to\nGreat Ormond Street Hospital for\nChildren.\n(ripp\/ed\nIf you are hobbling around with\nlumbago, sciatica, stiff joints or\ntightened muscles, just pat Sloan's\nLiniment on the sore, crippled parts.\nIn a few seconds, a glowing, soothing warmth will b\u00abgin to penetrate\nand help to relieve the trouble that\nis crippling you. Blessed relief\nfollows. With Sloan't Liniment,\nrubbing or massaging is unnecessary.\nUK\nSLOANS\n% \"4 LINIMENT\nweek-end with her parenta at Cranbrook.\nMrs. L. J. Desaulniers and ion,\nNeil, spent week with friends In\nTrail.\nCHAPMAN CURLING\nChapman cup curling was won by\nStan Gray, who defeated Tom\nMathieson in the final afler an extra\nend.\nIn the Blaylock cup, Leaman and\nMathieson, in the finals, will play\nafter the Trail 'spiel.\nIn the Oughtred competition,\nLome Thompson is in the finals, He\nwill meet either La James or Gerry\nDunkerley in the finals. James and\nDunkerley have yet to play their\n: tnl-flnal game.\nWith many players at Trail a \"Stay\nat Home\" event was run oft with 13\nrinks taking part.\nCITY GARDEN FOR 8HEFFIELD\nSHEFFIELD, England (CP)-AI-\nderman J. G. Graves, well known\nSheffield benefactor, has given a\nplot of 400 square yards of vacant\nland in the heart of the city to be\ntransformed into a garden.\nRAILWAYS EXTEND\nDERBY, England (CP) \u2014 More\nthan $5,000,000 will be spent on\npassenger vehicles by the London\nMidland and Scottish railway which\nhas completed its rolling stock and\nthe works program for the year.\n .\t\nNelson Hockey\nLeague Standings\nJUNIOR LEAGUE\nTeam: W. L. D. Pt.\nFairview A. C. 4  0   18\nN.G.H.Tlgen 2  2   15\nHawki  0   4   0   0\nJUVENILE LEAGUE\nTeam: W. L. Pt.\nPanthers   5  0 10\nNelton Transfer 2  2   4\nFairview A. C    0   5   0\nMIDGET LEAGUE\nTeam: W. L. Pt.\nPanthers    3  0   6\nFairview A. C. 12   2\nGyros        1   2   2\nM. R. K. club        1   2   2\nBANTAM LEAGUE\nTeam: W. L. Pt.\nM. R. K. club   3   0   6\nPanthers   1   1   2\nScouts   1   1   2\nFairview A. C  0   3   0\nINTERMEDIATE LEAGUE\nTeam: W. L. Pt.\nFairview      1   0   2\nHume-Wolves  0   1   0\nTo give Hawaii's native ferns a\nchance to come back, the areas\nwhere they grew are being cleared\nof the exotic primrose.\nFINK'S\nJanuary\nClearance\nContinues\n409 Baker Street\nBuy or Sell With a Want Ad.\nHelp Kidneys\nIf you suffer from Getting Up nTiMi,\nNervouaneis. Leg Paine, Swollen Ankles\nDliilnesa, H\u00abadach\u00bba, Loin of Pep, Burning, Smarting, Itching Acidity, Kidney or\nBladder troubles, try thft Doctor'! prescription Cyetex (81si-tex). IncrsuM vitality In 41 hours, and ends thoie troubles\nin I days or money back. Cfltn costs\nonly 3c a dose \u00bbt druggists.\nZERO\nIn the pale light of dawn I step out of the chilly\nhouse into the cold of the outside air to look at the\nthermometer. The shrivelled piece of mercury that cowers\nat the bottom of the glass looks quite apologetic as it\ninforms me that once again the temperature is below\nzero. So this is \"Glorious Kootenay\", think I, as I rush\ninside to stoke the fires and carry out ashes.\nWhat a world of contrasts! This very day hundreds\nof people surf-ride at Waikiki Beach, millions swelter on\nthe dusty plains of India\u2014most of the white sahibs and\ntheir ladies have, of course, migrated to the hill stations\nto escape the \"Hot Weather\"\u2014and the Australians and\nSouth Africans play tennis and cricket and pick the fruits\nof midsummer under a blazing sky. We\u2014what do we\ndo? We buy coal and more coal and grimly shovel day\nand night in a desperate effort to keep ourselves and our\ndear ones from freezing to death. What a life!\nBut\u2014did you notice what an appetite that keen air\ngives you and how the sunshine sparkles on the snow\ncrystals and what a wonderful moon there was last night?\nAnd, oh yes! Aren't you enjoying the curling and skating?\n\"Glorious Kootenay\" isn't so bad after all . . . Darn it, I\nmust put some more coal on that fire.\nJ. C. INGRAM ROGERS.\nNelson, B.C., January 20, 1937.\nFor\nCOAL\nPhone 33\nRELIABLE\nSERVICE\nAll Grade*\nof Good\nCoal\nWEST TRANSFER\nCOMPANY\nEstablished 1899\nMohawk\nSteam Coal\nThe perfect fuel fer\nthe heating plant\nLump, ton  $9.50\nMine Run, ton  ft8,50\nWot W-ih, ton  ?7.00\nStoker, ton   $7.00\nFAIRVIEW\nFUEL CO.\nPhone701\nKEEP YOUR HOME WARM\nWith\nHillcrest \"Natural\"\nCROW'S NEST COKING COAL\nNELSON TRANSFER Co., Ltd.\nVERNON ST.\nNELSON AGENTS\nPHONE 35\n|\n P\u00abP\u00ab\u00bbW\n|PiPp->--\u00ab-IIIMI\u00abllllri-K   I\n1(50\nJoseph Forster\nBuried al Fernie\nFERNIE,   B.C.\u2014The   funeral   of\nJoseph Forster was held from the\nwith Rev. M. C. T. Percivall officiating. Pallbearers were A. Mark-\nland, F. Kennedy, H. Wheeler, J.\nPhillips, W. Hilton and J. Hartley.\nThe Ancient Order of Foresters had\ncharge of the service at the grave.\nIn the death bf Mr;. Forster Fernie\nloses a well-known and highly respected citizen of many yesrs star.d-\ning. He came to Fernie from Eng-\nChrist church (Anglican) Saturday  land over 30 years ago. In the early\n        NE\ndays he waa employed In the express department by the C. P. R\nDuring more recent times he was a\nfamiliar figure in the local business\ncircles.\nMr. Forster is survived by his\nwidow, by two daughters, Mrs. J.\nMcGladrey and Mrs. A. Sherwcod\nalso by a sister Mrs. Pearson and a\nbrother and sister in England.\n.SON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.\u2014MONDAY MORNING, JAN. 25, 1937.\nCONSOLATION\nOpen to Any Failing to Reach Prize Series in Open Competitions\nA. G. Harvey, T   '\nG. W. Weir, T  Weir\nJ. Scott, K\t\nH. M. Whimster, N...\nScott\nScott\nT. R. Wilson, N \t\nRoy Stephens, R  Wilson\nW. F. Truswell, T ....\nJ. R. Craig, T  Truswell\nH. R. Banks, K \t\nT. H. Weldon, T  Weldon  ..\nL. F. Tyson, T\t\nE. James, K   Tyson \t\nRobert Andrew, N...\nDr. C. A. Mittun, T.... Mittun ..\nWilliam Forrest, T....\nJ, Burden, R   Forrest ....\nTruswell\nTruswell\nWeldon\nWeldon\nWeldon\nForrest\nJ. C. Urquhart, R ...\nJ. A. Wadsworth, T..\nWeldon\nWadsworth\nJ. B. Gray, N \t\nA. J. McDonell, T..\u201e McDonell\nH. E. Wade, T\t\nP, F. Mclntyre, T  Mclntyre ..\nSam Paterson, R\t\nWilliam Rae, T  Rae\nWadsworth\nWadsworth ....\nMclntyre\nW. Griffith, R  \u201e \u201e\nW. H. Baldrey, T Baldrey\nJack Balfour. T  \u201e\nSyd Crowe, V   Crowe  ..\nCrowe\nCrowe\nCrowe\nWELDON\nFrank Ellis, R  _.,,\nJames Wright, R   mk\nWilliam Pollock, R..\nJ. H. Woodburn, T...\nWoodburn\nHarry Bowyer, V\nA. M. Chesser, T ...\nChesser\nChesser\nAl Jeffs, N \t\nP. R. McDonald, T...\nMcDonald .\nMcDonald\nJ. Finney, R   \u25a0*;\u201e\u201e.,\u201e\nHoward Bush, N   *lnney\nR. Somerville, T   e\u201e\u201e.\u201e,aa..\nA. S. Horswill, N  Someiville\nMcDonald\nBeckett\nW. H. Gates, F .\nA. Browne, N .\nSomerville\nGates\nJoe Dundas, V  _    .\nW. G. Carrie, T  Carrle \u2022\nDave Garnham. V .... _   ,  ,,\nH. T. Beckett, T  Beckett\nBeckett\nBeckett\nPROCTER LADIES\nELECT OFFICERS\nPROCTER, B.C.\u2014Ladies Aid of\nthe United church met Thursday at\nthe home of Mrs. Oscar Johnson.\nAlthough a number of the ladies\nwere unable to attend owing to illness in their homes, there were 12\npresent. ,\nMrs. Jack MacLeod, who had\ntaken over the position of secretary-\ntreasurer since the resignation of\nMrs. A. C. Pound, was elected to\nhold the position, for the coming\nyear.\nMrs. MacLeod read the annual\nreport which showed that there is\na balance on hand of $79.45 after\n$143.74 was paid out to make necessary improvements in the church\nand the manse.\nAt tne beginning of 1938 there\nwas $21.90 in thc treasury and at\nthe close of the year by sales of\nwork, teas, a social evening, a con-,\ncert put on by a number of Nelson\nladies and a church supper. The\ntotal brought in amounted to $223.18.\nThe idea of each lady paying\n10 cents at each meeting for her\ntea has proved successful and in\na year raised the funds by $25.50.\nMrs. MacLeod read a letter received from Mrs. T. Mair, a member\nwho was absent, thanking the ladies\nfor a baby quilt which they gave\nto her infant son.\nThe election resulted in Mrs. O.\nJohnson being reelected president,\nMrs. W. Mulrhead, vice-president,\nMrs. L. Bullock, head of the work\ncommittee, with Mrs. C. M. Lancaster and Mrs. W. Farmer as assistants. .\nThose attending were Mrs. J. Sew-\nell, Mrs. J. McLeod, Mrs. N. McLeod, Mrs. C. M. Lancaster, Mrs.\nW. Mulrhead, Mrs. L. Bullock, Mrs.\nW. Farmer, Mrs. W. Smellie, Mrs. A.\nCrpsby, Mrs. I. Jansen, Mrs. A. R.\nJohnston and Mrs. O. Johnson.\nTrail and Nelson for a month, have |\nreturned.\nprairie, has purchased the Maurer\nranch at Mirro.- Lake and will op-\neate it during the summer.\nH. W. POWER IS A Inter.-Amer. League\nKASLO VISITOR    \"-\"\u2022\u00bb\"\u2022\u00bb\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014J. Taylor of Cranbrook was a business visitor in the\ncity Wednesday.\nMiss Elsie Rouleau is a patient at\nVictorian hospital.\nH. W. Power, formerly of Kaslo,\nnow resident in Vancouver, was a\ncity visitor Thursday en route to\nWhitewater to look over his mining\ninterests.\nMrs. Eric Atwood and two sons\nleft Thursday for their home at\nGrand Forks after spending a few\nweeks in town, guests of Mrs. At-\nwood's mother, Mrs. John Cadden.\nMrs. B. Paul has returned to her\nhome at Trail after spending a few\nweeks visiting her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. William Roberts.\nMrs. A. Glenn Smith has returned\nto her home at Seattle after being\na guest of her mother, Mrs. M.\nMcQueen, for three weeks.\nAlfred Roberts has returned to\nTrail after a short visit to his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Roberts.\nJoe Gallo of Nelson, prominent\ndistrict mining man, was in the city\nThursday, leaving Friday for a visit\nto his mining interests near Retal-\nlack.\nMss Vera Coombs has as her guest\nfor a few weeks, her mother, Mrs.\nAlfred Coombs of New Denver.\nMr. and Mrs. S. H. Green left\nThursday for a two months' holiday\nto be spent visiting relatives and\nfriends at coast points.\nEric Quainton has returned to his\nduties as assistant high school teacher after having been confined to his\nhome by illness for a few days.\nOwing to the extremely cold weather and the present poor lighting\nfacilities (due to the unprecedented\ncold snap) the Canadian Legion\nWomen's Auxiliary indefinitely\npostponed  a  concert planned  tor\nNEW HAVEN, Conn., Jan. 24 -\n(AP).\u2014Maurice Podoloff, secretary\nof the International-American Hork-\ney league said tonight division playoffs in the league will begin on\nMarch 23.\nFinal details, he said, await meetings ot the eastern and western divisions of the league, expected to\nbe held within a day or two. However, he said the playoffs will continue on alternate dates after March\n23 until an eastern and western\nchampion is selected.\nThen these two teams will meet\nfor the league title.\nNEW YORK, Jan. 24 (CP) -Roy\nWorters, little gamecock who has\nbeen goaltender for New York\nAmericans of the National Horkey\nleague during the last decade, entered St. Luke's hospital tonight and\nwill be operated on tomorrow to\ncorrect a hernia ailment.\n-PAOE THR**: I\n)\u00a3 lirtwufy'Bag dompann.Hl\n\u25a0aanen-tMATit an \u00aba\u00bb at\/a\nSALE OF\nOVERCOATS\n$1195\nCONTINUES TODAY-MONDAY\nThey're exceptional values at this price.\u2014Act Quickly\n\u2014\u2014*^\u2014 **\u25a0\u2014*\u25a0\nSEATTLE WINS\nOAKaLAND, Jan. 24 (AP)-Seat-\ntle downed the Oakland club 3-2 in\na Pacific Coast Hockey league game\nhere today.\nSeattle's win kept Oakland in <\ntie with Vancouver for second plan\nin the league standings. Last nighl\nOakland trounced Seattle 6-2.\nNELSON CUP\nRoy Stephens, R\nWm. Rae, T\nCapt. and Mrs. Alan Lean who | January 22.\nhave been visiting with relatives at     H. Maki, a recent arrival from the\nALL COMERS\nRae .......... McDonald\nP. R. McDonald, T ..\nDr. C. A. Mittun, T..\nWm. Forrest, T Mittun \t\nJ. W. Burden, R \t\nW. Griffith, R   Griffith\nJoe Rochon, K \t\nAl Jeffs, N   Rochon .\nW. II. Gates, F\t\nWm. Pollock, R   Pollock\nH. R. Banks, K \t\nG. J. Kinnis, T   Kinnis  .\nD. Martin, K\t\nG. W. Weir, T  Martin\nSam Paterson, R\t\nChas. Hoefer, T  Hoefer .\nMcDonald\nINTERCLUB PLAYOFF\nJ. C. Urquhart, R...\nA, B. Ritchie, K...\nUrquhart .\nUrquhart\nHoward Bush, N..\nBilly Whalen, V..\nWHALEN\nH. R. Banks, K .\nW. H. Gates, F .\nWhalen\nGates\nCAMMELL-LAIRD CUP\nSECONDARY TO GRAND CHALLENGE\nDave Garnham, V ... tT.n1,i,.,.\nJ. C. Urquhart, R  Urquhart\nT. R. Wilson, N\t\nH. M. Whimster, N...\nWhimster\nUrquhart .\nBob Scobie, V   s\u201ebi.\nA. M. Chesser, T  5coWe\n^KTa^McGowan\n'w-SlkTH\u2014 \u00bb*-  \t\nUrquhart .\nJ. Finney, R  mnn,v\nJ. B. Gray, N  Fmney  \"\nJames Wright, R  wnrsaxin\nA. S. Horswill, N .... Horswiu\nSyd Crowe, V  Dundas\nJoe Dundas, V  \"\u2122<\">\"  ..\nj: W. Burden, R  Jame.\nE. James, K  Jame'\t\nRobert Andrew, N...  \\nAr.m\nJ. R. Craig, T  Andrew\nL. F. Tyson, T ..  th,^,,\nT. H. Wheldon, T ....    T       \"'\nHoward Bush, N  Bush\nSam Paterson, R\t\nLes James, CC  Griffith\nW. Griffith, R\t\nJoe Rochon, K  Rochon\nRoy Stephens, R\t\nFrank Ellis, R   Pollock\nWm. Pollock, R  \u2122iock\nJ. H. Woodburn, T.... -m.hi.\nA. B. Ritchie, K  Rltchl<! \"\nScobie\nFinney\nDundas\nJames\nBush\nRochoi,\nPollock\nFinney\nFinney\nFinney\nBush\nPollock\nPollock\nFinney\nAl Jeffs, N \t\nGeorge McKay, T .\n- Jeffs \t\nW. F. Truswell, T ..\nW. H. Baldrey, T ...\nW. E. Newton, T\t\nJeffs\nG. W. Weir, T\t\nChas. Dodimead, T...\nBaldrey\nWeir \t\nChas, Hoefer, T\t\nWm. Forrest, T   Forrest\nWm. Rae, T  iorrest\nHarry Bowyer, V ...\nRobt. Somerville, T.\nBaldrey\nHoefer\nBowyer\nHoefer\nHoefer\nWood\nA. S. Horswill, N ...\nP. F. Mclntyre, T .\nHorswill\nJ. Scott, K   _,,\nFrank Ellis, R   Ellis  \t\nHoward Bush, N\t\nA. B. Ritchie, K  Bush \t\nL. James, CC   _,\nA. M. Chesser, T  Chesser\nJ. B. Gray, N   ,   .....\nW. M. Archibald, K. Archibald\nRochon\nRochon\nKinnis\nHoefer \t\nHoefer\nHorswill\n....\nBush \t\nBush \t\nHoefer\nHOEFEf\nArchibald\nJames Wright, R\t\nJ. C. Urquhart, R .\nArchibald\nWright\nT. R. Wilson, N \t\nJohn McGowan, CC.\nMcGowan\nArchibald\nW. H. Baldrey, T .\nRoily David, V\t\nMcGowan\nDavid\nROSSLAND CUP\nDave Garnham, V\nR. C. McGerrigle, T.. McGerrigle\nBowyer\nBowyer\nH. R. Banks, K    \u201e...,\nH. T. Beckett, T  BanKS\nP. R. McDonald, T ..\nDr. C. A. Mittun, T..\nMittun\nMittun\nW. Carrie, T  _ ,.\nJ. Balfour, T   Balfour\nH. E. Wade, T  _,    .\nW, L. Wood, T   Wood  \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nC. D. Blackwood, N.. _.   ,        .\nW. M. Archibald, K.. Blackwood\nP. F. Mclntyre, T .... _\u201e\u201e\u201e.\nA. Browne, N  Browne \t\nWood\nBrowne\nWHALEN\nWood\nP. R. McDonald, T...\nG. J. Kinnis, T  Kinnis\nW. H. Gates, F  _ ,\nRoily David, V  Gates -\nKinnis\nWhalen\nR. C. McGerrigle, TV  whBi-n\nB. Whalen, V   Wnalen\nW. M. Archibald, K\nMcGerrigle\nWm. Forrest, T\nAlt Jeffs, N \t\nW. L. Wood, T\nJ. B. Gray,\" N\t\nForrest\t\nMcGerrigaa.\nAvery ..\nWm. Rae, T\t\nFrank Avery, V ...\nAver}\nJ. W. Burden, R\nW. H. Gates, F\nJ. H. Wadsworth, T\nWm. Pollock, R\nFrank Ellis, R\nSyd Crowe, V \t\nPollock\nPollock\nW. F. Truswell, T ..\nWm. Marr, N\nH. M. Whimster, N.\nL. F. Tyson, T\t\nBob Scobie, V    , '\nRoy Stephens, R ....\nMarr\nScobie\nT. H. Wheldon, T ..\nJ. Finney, R \t\nMcDonalc\nP. R. McDonald, T ..\nJ. C. Urquhart, R ....\nMcDonald\nJoe Dundas, V\t\nC. D. Blackwood, N.\nW. G. Carrie, T\nJames Wright, R ....\nCarrie\nT. R, Wilson, N\t\nRobt. Somerville, T.\nSomervllle .\nCarrie  \t\nW. H. Baldrey, T    .\nHarry Bowyer, V ...\nJohn McGowan, CC.\nJ. R. Craig, T\t\nMcGowan ....\nW. E. Newton, T\t\nSam Paterson, R\t\nNewtoii\nA. M. Chesser, T\t\nChesser \t\nMcKay\t\nA. S. Horswill, N\t\nGeorge McKay, T ...\nMcKay\nG. W. Weir, T .... ...\nH. R. Banks, CC \t\nBanks\t\nChas. Dodimead, T...\nBilly Whalen, V \t\nWhalen \t\nBanks ..\nHamish Scott, K\t\nJames\nJack Balfour, T\t\nJoe Rochon, K\t\nJames\nGeorge Kinnis, T , ..\nRoily David, V \t\nHoward Bush, N\t\nH. E. Wade, T\t\nKinnis\nA. B, Ritchie, K\nA. G. Harvey, T\t\nRitchie \t\nChas. Hoefer, T\t\nD. Martin, K \t\nMartin \t\nRitchie\nJ. H. Woodburn, T....\nW. Griffith, R\t\nWoodburn  ...\nP. F. Mclntyre, T , ..\nRobert Andrew, N ....\nWoodburn   .\nH. T. Beckett, T ,\nWoodburn  ..\nA. J. McDonell, T ....\nDr. C. A. Mittun, T...\nMcDonell _\u25a0\nBrowne\nAvery .-i\u2014\nCarrie .\nAVERY\nMcKaj\nRitchie\nRitchie\n\u201e___^_\nHUH\n *ar row\nntermediate amd junior hockey\n:lubs of b. c. are registering\nis the final date, feb. 1, nears\nFive Intermediate and Five Junior Teams\nSigned Up to Date; Several More\nExpected at the \"Zero Hour\"\n(frail juniors primed to enter west\nKootenay with rossland, nelson\nKimberley and Cranbrook Are New Entries\nin Junior Race for Province\nTitle and Mowat Cup\nBY ART JOV\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 24.\u2014With West Kootenay senior hockey much\n.\u00ab tha (era, Intermediate and Junior divisions of the sport have been\npushed Into obicurlty as far as followers of the major winter attraction hive been concerned.\nPerhaps tha actual reason for their apparent obscurity Is that\nIn spite of there being a number of clubs of each division In the\nprovince, their Inability to organize mere than one team of each elass\nIn a city er town does not enable them to engage In any competition\nof which much notice Is taken until they embark on tht \"big drive\"\n, for supremacy.\n\"INAL REGISTRATION FEBRUARY 1\nTeams have until February 1 to forward their amateur cards to J. A.\nadsworth, Trail, secretary of the B.C. Amateur Hockey association,\nly are forwarded to the national*\n\u00bb\u2014I\u2014PPPPPPH-IPPi\nt^t^mmmmw\nfmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmfmmmmmmm\nvfs^mi\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-MONDAY MORNING, JAN. 25, 1917.\n\"Truth\" Subject\nLesson-Sermon\n\"Truth- was th* subject of the\nlesson-sermon in first Church of\nChrist, Scientist, on Sunday.    \u25a0\nThe Golden Tat mc The Lord\nis good; bit mercy is everlasting;\nand bis truth endureth to sil generations\" (Psalm* 100: 5).\nAmong the citations which comprised the lesson-sermon was tht\nfollowing from the Bible \"He is\nthe Rock, His work is perfect: for\nall Bis ways are judgement: a God\nof truth and without iniquity, just\nand right is He\" (DeuL 12: 4).\nThe lesson-sermon also Included\ntbe following passage from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science and Health with Key to tbe\n-Scriptures\" by Mary Baker Sddy;\n\"Spirit, Life, Truth, Love, combine\nas one,\u2014and are the scriptural\nnames for God. All substance, Intelligence, wisdom, being, immortality, cause, and effect belong to\nGod. These arc His attributes, the\neternal manifestations of the infinite divine Principle, Love.\"\nTheatre Packed\nfor Community\nSinging Here\ngistrar at Toronto and apparently\nall is okay  intermediates  and\njuniors step into the limelight.\nLast year Merrit defeated Ross-\nid to take possession of the Coy\nip, emblematic of intermediate supremacy  of the province.  Unfor-\nlinately, intermediates have to be\natlsficd with that tor their quest\ntoes not extend outside British Colombia's boundaries.\nAlbo,   Rossland  Intermediates'\nmentor, figures his squad have the\nBoy mug \"in the bag.\"\n(IORE EXPECTED\nLast season, although more reg-\nItered, 13 clubs figured in the intermediate playoffs. To date only\nnve have forwarded their cards but\nMr. Wadsworth Informs us that last\nWatt t great number of registrations\n(sere made \"at the last minute\" so to\njpeak.\n, The five clubs ready to go to\nKttle are Nelson, Rossland, Pioneer\naies, Blakebum and Merrit. Noth-\nig has been heard from Summer-\nind, Salmon Arm, Lumby, Green\nfood, Grand Forks, Detonia, oi\nIralome, which were other clubs in\nhe running last season. It is ex-\nlected that announcement of inten-\nlon to enter the race will be forth-\nnming from Vernon and Penticton\nwell.\nFrom the coast, neither has there\nJicen any word.\nOOD ICE SEASON\nThis season has been an ideal one\nlor natural ice which is essential for\nBase clubs to organize and although\npit five have to date registered, it\nanticipated there shall be even j\ngreater number seeking the Coy cup\nban last year.\nWith  the  Memorial  cup looked\n|ipon by juniors in much the same\night as the Holy Grail by the legen-\nary king's knights of the round\nable, a deal more interest is taken\n[l the junior division of amateur\nOckey.\n.Although there Is no Intermediate\n:lub functioning in Trail, \"Scotty\"\n|toss' juniors have become as prom\ninent and gained almost as enthusiastic a following as cither of the\nsenior teams.\nThere being no competitive Junior\nteam in the city, Ross has taken his\nteam afield to get practice and experience for he has great hopes, no\ndoubt, of his crew taking greater\nspoils than the championships of\nBritish Columbia and Alberta which\nthey garnered last season.\nTRAIL JUNIORS TRIED\nThey entered In the Trail city preseason senior league and although\ncame out on the cellar and no doubt\nlearned a few more tricks of the\ngame as well as gained valuable\npractice. Keeping them hard at lt,\nRoss next took his boys on a trip!\nthrough the East Kootenay where\nthey were victorious over every\nteam encountered, which Included\nintermediate and senior clubs. Their\nlatest game was with Rossland Intermediates whom they defeated 8-6\nin a gruelling battle.\nNO COAST COMPETITION?\nAlthough there has always been\nkeen rivalry between the Trail\njuniors and a Vancouver squad of\nthe same division, it is not known\nwhether there will be competition\nbetween these' two in the 1937 playoffs as none of last year's Vancouver clubs, Ex-King George, Vicks\nor Bumaby Rangers have this year\nregistered to date. Princeton and\nVernon sponsored junior teams last\nseason but have not been heard\nfrom so far this season.\nNew to the 1937 junior ranks are\nRossland, Nelson, Kimberley and\nCranbrook which will enter the race\nfor the Mowat cup and B.C. championship. Trail, Rossland and Nelson will first play off for the West\nKootenay title and the McLean cup.\nNeither of the district junior\nsquads have met in exhibition games\ntut it is understood that the league\nwhich embraces the three West\nKootenay cities, will get away soon\nSecond community sing song presented by the Canadian Legion at\nthe Capitol Theatre Sunday night\nwas a decided success. Practically\nevery seat was occupied. Ross Fleming, conductor ot the Nelson Symphony orchestra, led the orchestra\nand the singers and Dr. H. H. McKenzie was chairman.\nMiss Rose Hartwig, Nelson Ball, A.\nW. Parker appeared on the program\nIn solo numbers and L. H. Choquette\nled a chorus in French-Canadian\nfolk songs. The orchestra presented\na selection from Faust. The next\ncommunity sing song will take\nplace early in February.\nHockey Lineup\nfor This Week\nBUY OR SELL WITH A WANT AD,\nKeeping Track of the News\nReporter at the Bonspiel\nTasty Bits of News Gleamed by the Roving\nDaily News Staff Writer at the 42nd.\nAnnual Spiel of the B. C. Ass'n., Trail\nBy ERIC RAMSDEN, Staff Reporter\nBONSPIEL CITY, Jan. 24.\u2014Ram-1 by   ...  had  a swell  dance with\nlallnns , . . there's a monophone in   Mrs. Murdo Morrison . . . wife of\ntoe bonspiel \"office\" . . . and fully | Murdo of the squared ring . . . and\nfound Miss Edith Jewell's matlie-\nPb per cent of those who come in\nuse  it  get   in  difficulties   . . .\n(pondering which end to speak into\n, . and which to put to their ear.\nThe David rink . . . Consols win-\nBier . . . consists entirely of Canadian born curlers . . . Roily Black,\npic Brown and George Norgan    . .\nind they seemed much surprised at\n(he heavy percentage of Scotchmen\nwho are curling in Trail . . .\n\u25a0tome of the coast boys don't think I started curling 50 years ago\nPavid's is the best rink ... and ad-, does he work in , bonspiel\nance the names Frank Avery and\nmatics are terrible . . . borrowed\nErnie Cook's knife and still have\nit . . . must ask Cliff who was that\ngal ... in the red dress .. . who\ndemonstrated there are lines . . .\nand lings . . .\nBilly Whalen, one of the leading\nVancouver skipi . . . and ceria'nly\n(he most energetic and lasting and\nlong-lunged director of rocks    . .\nand\nAt a meeting ot tbe Ice committee\nof the Nelson Amateur Hockey association Sunday afternoon at\nwhich the four members, Fritz Far-\nenholtz, Russ French, N. C. Stibbs\nand Gilbert Rowling, attended, the\npractice schedule for the coming\nweek was drawn up. A decision was\nmade to feature intercity games as\noften as possible with the exception\nof Saturday morning's game. The\nschedule for games Tuesday and\nSaturday evening was not set because Information as to what intercity games will be played was not\navailable.\nThe Scouts vs. panthers bantam\ngame, postponed Saturday morning\nis scheduled for Thursday from 4\nto 5:15.\nManagers of the Junior hockey\nclubs requested a practice, aa no\npractices had been allotted to them\nsince the league season started. The\nF. A. C- team ajnd New Grand Tigers\nwere given practice time Thursday\nand the Hawks will likely be accommodated next week,\nThc Junior rep team practises tonight and Friday from 8 to 7 p.m.\nProvision is also made for a practice of the Pee-Wees on Friday from\n1-5:45 pjn.\nThe week's schedule as Issued by\nthe ice committee is.\nMONDAY\n7-8 a.m.\u2014Panthers midgets and\nbantams.\n4-4:'.J pjn\u2014F. A. C. midgets and\nbantams.\n4:45-5:43 p.m.\u2014F. A. C- juveniles.\n8-7 p.m.\u2014Junior rep team.\nTUE8DAY\n7-8 am.\u2014Scout bantams and Gyro\nmidgets.\n7-11:30 pm.\u2014Three games featuring Nelson and intercity teams, the\nfirst game featuring Nelson Transfer\nand F. A. C Juveniles.\nWEDNESDAY\n7-8 a.m.\u2014M. R. K bantams and\nmidgets.\n5:30-6:15 p.m.\u2014F. A. C. juniors.\n6:15-7 p.m.\u2014New Grand Tigers.\nTHURSDAY\n7-8 a.m.\u2014Nelson Transfer juveniles.\n4-5:15 p.m. p.m.\u2014Scouts vs. Panther  bantams   (league  game  positioned from last Saturday).\nFRIDAY\n7-8 a.m.\u2014Panther midgets.\n4-5:45 p.m.\u2014Pee-Wee practice.\n6-7 p.m.\u2014Junior rep practice.\nSATURDAY\n7:45-8:45 ajn.\u2014Panthers vs. M. R |\nSmoke Eaters to\nMeet Canucks In\nFixture Tonight\nBoth to Have Changed\nLineups Since Last\nGame\nTRAIL, B. C, .Tan. 24 \u2014 For tbe\nsecond time during the Weat Kootenay hockey league, Smoke Eaten\nand Canucks, two senior teams entered in the loop, come together.\nThey meet here Monday night\nChristmas day Canucks bad tbe\nsituation pretty well in band with a\nthree goal lead when the old boys\ncame back in tbe last period to win\n8-5. It was a great game and the\nfans thoroughly enjoyed it\nUnfortunately, due to many Injuries\u2014neither team will present the\nsame lineup when they meet Monday.\nFEEL COOK'S LOSS\nCanucks lost Cook when be suffered t bad cut on his arm at Rossland last Thursday. He was a hard-\nplugging centerman whose loss Is\nkeenly felt by his team. But Cook\nclaims he will be okay before tbe\nloop Is completed and anticipates\nbeing back as soon aa he possibly\ncan.\nFans thrill to the antcis of Scodellaro (the -Duke) when he plays\ngoal. \"TCiey were very much surprised one night to see him on defence. He appeared so anxious to\nget up into action that Morin is giving him a chance on Cook's line. He\nwill alternate with Len Wade who\nwill also play defence. Kaleta will\nbe at left wing as usual, but flanking Wade or Scodellaro on the right\nwill be M. Petrosky, who appeared\non the Rossland lineup a tew times.\nIn goal will be Alt Dupuis v-ho\nhas been practicing diligently with\nCanucks. He has turned in two\nperformances with them to date and\nlooked pretty fair in both.\nBENOIT OKAY\nBenoit's knee Injury sustairaed at\nRossland the same night Cook was\nhurt seems to be healed and the\nKinnear-Benoit-Marshall line will\nnot be altered.\nParkhurst, Thompson and Kendall will complete the rear bulwark\nforce.\nSmoke Eaters will produce the\nsame team that recently lost to Rossland. Art Forrest is still recuperating\nfrom an injured ankle and the jaw\not Morris is not ready for rough\nusage, so Stan Smith and Johnnie\nHughes, two juniors, will again be\nout at centre and left wing, respectively, with Mickey Brennan\nplaying right wing. The other line\nwill comprise Cronie, Andreashuk\nand Dame.\nBoth teams engaged in an hour\nof greulling practice Sunday night\nand   feel  fully   prepared  for   thc\nstruggle.\nBlack Always\ntaps\nm\nTrail Sheiks Win\nOver Hotelmen in\nSenior Hoop Till\nWinners of First Half\nof LeaaueFail\nW Rally\nTRML, B.C., Jan. 24.\u2014So faar in\nsecond half play of the Trail City\nSenior Men's Basketball league,\nover Meakin boys for their second\nwin over hotelmen in a row.\nAlter takiiig the first half without any difficulty hotelmen have\nbeen unable to defeat the same two\nteams that they successfully took\ninto camp prior to the yuletide sea-\nn.\nSaturday night, at Memorial hall,\nSheiks won a decisive 25-16 victory\nMeakin boys for their second win\nover hotelmen in a row.\nAs in the previous fixture, it was\na margin piled up In the first half\nthat won for Sheiks the tilt. Second\nhalf play was equal, each scoring 11\npoints.\nIt was direct scoring that gave\nSheiks their nine point margin before the interval, seven field baskets\nmeaning 14 points. However the\nlatter only mode good one of the\nfree throws.\nIn an effort to gain control of the\nsituation hotelmen became rougher\nafter the Interval and were meted\nout eight penalties, no one player\nreceiving more than three. Sheiks\nwere more accurate on their free\nthrows occasioned by their adversaries' fouls and caged five tosses\nfor five points.\nTeems and scores follow:\nMeakin hotel\u2014H. Miller 2, Bob\nScott 6, L. Wilson 3, D. McDonald\nSambrook, Phil Smith 4, LeRoy 1\nand Simms.\nSh-'ks\u2014W. Strachan 9, G. Pagnan\n3, B. Turik 1, B. Kirby 7, J. Burrows 1, P. Salsiccioli 2 and Battls-\ntella 2.\nMoran Quite Hospital,\nJohnston Is Admitted\nTRAIL, B.C, Jan. J4.-Mlke Moran, who started the hockey season\nwith Trail Canucks sod sustained a\nbroken leg in His first game here\nagainst Nelson on December 18, hat\nbeen released from tbe Trail-Tad-\nic hospital and Is new at his\nTommy Johnston, defenceman on\nRossland team, was admitted to hospital Sunday with \u25a0 severe cold. It\nis expected he will be released from\nthe Institution within a few days.\nJohan Nyman Dies\nin Hospital Here;\nYankee Girl Miner\nJohan Slngfrld Nyman, aged 33,\ndied in Kootenay Lake General\nhospital Saturday after a two\nmonth's illness.\nMr. Nyman was employed as a\nminer at the Yankee Girl mine,\nYmir. He came to Canada from Sweden about eight years ago.\nSurviving him is a cousin, A\nLarson of Salmo.\nThe funeral will be held in Nelson.\nPtO BANTAMS\nSHUT OUT HERE\nAVENUE CLUB\nIS BADMINTON\nVICTOR, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan, 23.\u2014Keen competition, with many close sets, was\nenjoyed In a session ot the Trail\ncity badminton league when Avenue\nclub def eated Memorial shuttlers 7-3\nthis week-end.\nResult* of matches with Avenue\nclub members being first named follow:\nMen's singles \u2014 Howard Bayley\nbeat Alex Ntsbet 18-16, 15-5,\nLadles' singles-Miss M. Wilkie\nbeat Miss M. Sandercock 11-1,11-4.\nMen's doubles\u2014Ben Coon and W.\n0. Williams beat Alex Nisbet and\nLloyd Williams 15-1 ItH: Howard\nBayley and Ronald Kllnk beat Ben\nFarrar and Basil Hunt 15-6,15-7\nLadies' doubles\u2014Miss Cara Ring-\nwood and Miss Agnes Rovmsn beat\nMrs. H. P. Kingwell and Miss Irene\nSavard 15-6, 15-12; Miss M. Wi'Vie\nand Mrs. R. M. Hoyland lost to Mrs.\nB. Farrar and Miss M. Sandercock\n16-17, 15-7, 3-15.\nMixed doubles\u2014Ben Coon and\nMrs. R. M. Hoyland beat Basil Hunt\nand Miss Dixie Edwards 19-6,17-16;\nW. 0. Williams and Miss Agnes\nRossman lost to Ben Farrar and\nMrs. H. P. Kingwell 6-15.15-8. 8-15;\nHoward Bayley and Miss M. Wilkie\nbeat St. John Madeley and Mrs B.\nFarrar 15-7, 18-15; Ronald Klmk\nand Miss Cara Ringwood lost to\n\"Patch\" Evans and Miss Irene Savard 11-15, 8-15.\nMrs. E. Miller\nAnswers (all\nNelson Resident for\n37 Years; Widely\nKnown\nMrs. Eleanor Miller, widow of thc\nlate Charles J. Miller, died in Kootenay Lake General hospital Saturday,\naged 87 years, having lived in Nelson nearly 37 years.\nBorn in Halifax, November 16,\n1849, Mrs. Miller spent her girlhood\nthere, and was married there.\nIn 1900 Mr. and Mrs. Miller moved\nto Nelson where their only child,\nyouthful Harry was employed by\nthe Dominion Express company.\nHarry died nearly 30 years ago, aged\n21, Mrs. Miller's mother, Mrs. Anne\nJames, died here in 1911.\nMr. Miller, who was foreman carpenter at the C. P. R. shipyards here\nfor a number of years, predeceased\nhis wife by 13 years. Mrs. Miller was\nthe oldest of six children, her five\nbrothers all  pre-deceasing her.\nFor the last seven years Mrs,\nMiller has resided with the late J.\nA. Irving and Mrs, Irving, at 716\nHoover street. She was a member of\n3t. Saviour's Anglican church, and\nhad a wide circle of friends.\nThis gown, of silk jersey, Paris'\nfavorite fabric for evening wear\nthis seaeon, is worn by Diana Gibson, a comparative newcomer to the\nranks of screen celebrities. It is\nmade with a halter neckline and a\nlow-cut V in front, ornamented\nwith a carved jade clip. The skirt\nis fitted down to the hips, from\nwhere it flares gracefully to the\nfloor by means of cleverly placed\ngodets.\nA tiny modified bolero Jacket,\nwith short sleeves, lined in Jade,\ncomes with the gown.\nIlly Whalen as being two which\nPould beat David ... on the nvei-\n;ge . . \u25a0 still and all, David's boys\n-on the competition . . ,\nOne of the best things that ever\nhappened  for  Nelson   ...  in   the\nipinion of a whole lot of Trail and\nlossland people . . . was the Nel-\non representation in the bonspiel\n. . even if they didn't register so\n\/ell In the list of prize winners . . .\nnd it was freely commented that if\nBnore  Nelson  people did  more  of\nhat sort of thing . . . there'd be a\nHnuch more cordial feeling toward\nHhat city . . . and more peop'e wanting to week-end and holiday there\n.. . you  see, Trail  and  Rossland\nleople figure Nelson has been siting back . . . waiting for people\n0 visit them . . . and not getting\niut   and   around   sufficiently   . . .\nReselling was how one man described it . . .\nThe Nelson fellows ... by their\nirticipation in the week's 'spiel. , .\n|uve done a lot toward a larce coast\nepresentallon  when  the bonspiel\next goes to Nelson . . .\nWandered into a dance and found\nt was put on by the \"125\" club\n. . of which 'Chuck\" Lendrum is\n\u2022resident, Donald Gunn, vlce-presi-\n|ent, snd Ken King secretary . . .\nBic lads and lasses have a grand\nne at their fortnightly dances . . .\nthat one was anything to judge\nThe B. C. Curling association pro-' K. midget*.\nvided 11 dozen ... 132 brooms\nfor visiting rinks. . .and used them\nall . . . had a lot of broken hanoles\n... the grain being far from the\nbest in the world , . .\nFunny the phces some people\nturn up . . . and how often you'll\nrun into the same gang ... at a\nflock of different places ... of\nwhich enough said . . .\nOne of the Pollock boys ... of\nthe Rossland family rink . . . stating George Kinnis and his rink\nwere fine curlers . . . and that they\nhad a dandy game . . . lots of draw\nshots . . . \"The kind of curling I\nlike,\" he said . . .\nHarry Bowyer, Vancouver veteran, and Dave Garnham, Van-ouver's\nbe-wigged lcespert ... in a qu*n-\ndary as to who should def nit to\n| whom . . . and how . . . and proposing to toss a coin . . . and being\ntold the officials couldn't give permission for such a method of arriving at a decision . . . be-ause it was\ndefinitely outside the rules . . .\nThis Mitlun rink . . . should have\na prize for having had . . . and having provided ... the most (un for\nthe week ... as a result of their\nexhibitions, special curling nicknames have been attached to them\n... as T-Wel-ht\" Hlnt\"'\u00bbitner\n\"Ho5(-T.ine\" Mars'iall, \"Da I: Hot-e\"\nDevito, \"Sweep\" Pisapio, and \"Shot-\nRock Doc\" Mittun.\n8:45-9:45 a.m.\u2014Gyros vs. F. A. C.\nmidgets.\n10-11 a.m.\u2014Scouts vs. F. A. C.\nbantams,\n11-12 noon\u2014Panthers vs. M, R. K.\nmidgets.\nEvening, 7-12 midnight\u2014Three\nleague games featuring one intercity game, first game featuring Nelson Transfer and Panther juveniles.\nLegion Band Has\nProgram at Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 24\u2014A Burns\nanniversary program sponsored by\nthe Canadian Legion band under\nE. W. Halsey's baton was held In\nthe Liberty theatre Sunday night\nPresident ot the Trail Canadian Legion, R. T. Simpson, opened the\nprogram with a lew remarks. The\nmusical program was as follows:\n\"O Canada\", march; \"Lochnagar\",\nby Hood; overture, \"Raymond\", by\nThomas; choral prelude, \"Deep Harmony\", by Wright; selection, \"A\nDay with Robbie Burns\", by Hume;\nHumcrcsqiie, \"Buy a Broom\" by\nTrenchard (dedicated to the Trail\nCurling club); march, \"Jessie's\nnrer-m\", by Faule; A. Phillips, Mrs.\nR. Cook and W. Ramsay, vocal solos.\n-\/\n ^_\nCut Down Visils\nlo Die Hospital\nMiss Eidt Appeals to\nPublic for Its\nCooperation\nWith thc wards of Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital crowded witli\npatients, the usual winter congestion, one way that friends of the\npatients can help the general situation is by refraining from visiting\nthem.\nMiss Vera B. Eidt, superintendent,\nlast night addressed the following\nstatement to the citizens:\n\"The public is asked to cooperate\n!n the matter of reducing visits to\nthe hospital, except in the case of\nthose seriously ill and in cases of\nnecessity.\n\"Your assistance to the hsopital\nstaff in helping to control tha spread\nof infection from over-crowding the\nalready crowded wards, will be\ngreatly appreciated.\n\"Please make your inquiries at\nthe business office.\"\n(ranbrook Ladies\nBring Two Rinks\nCurl Nelson Ladies\nMonday; Be Guests\nof Club\nOwing to sickness amongst the\nCranbrook lady curlers only two\nrinks from the Cranbrook Ladles'\ncurling club will curl against the\nNelson ladles this afternoon. Only\ntwo games will be played in this\nevent, and the Nelson ladies will\nplay the concluding games of their\nLedingham competition. After the\ngames the Cranbrook curlers will\nbe the guests of the Nelson club at a\nsupper in the clubroom.\nDraws for this afternoon are:\n1 p.m.\u2014Mrs. L Maddin vs. Mrs.\nAndy Kraft and Mrs. George Cady\nvs. Mrs. John Gansner In competition games.\nMrs. Charles Cook, Cranbrook, vs.\nMrs. T. A. Wallace, and Miss Isa-\nbelle Frame, Cranbrook vs. Mrs.\nTom Bishop in bonspiel games.\n3 p.m.\u2014Mrs. W. Kline vs. Mrs.\nAlex Dingwall, Ledingham competition.\nlocal Curlers\nResume Tonight\nFour Nights Curling\nin City Schedule\nThis Week\nCity schedule of the Nelson Curling club, after a wee'.i's interruption while some of the Nelson curlers were in Trril at the bonspiel,\nwill be resumed with seven games\ntonisht.\nBecause of the Canucks vs. Maple\nLeafs hockey game billet for Thursday night, there were will be no\ncurling in scheduled competition\nthat night.\nDraws for the week are:\nMonday, 7 p.m.\u2014C. F M'Hardy\nvs. J. B. Gray; R. D, Barnes vs. J.\nG. Bunyan, C. E. Man field vs. H. S.\nWatson; 9 p.m.\u2014S. P. Bostock vs. J\nMcPhail, E. E. L. Dewdney vs. W.\nMarr, R. E. Horton vs. J. M. Gordon,\nW. Brown vs. H. S. Walson.\nTuesday, 7 p.m.\u2014Roy Po'lard vs.\nJohn Dinv.-ali, J. Bunyan vs. Al\nJeffs, H M. Whimster vs. J. G. Bennett, Dr. H. H. MacKenz e vs. Alderman A. G. Ritchie; 9 p.m.\u2014W.\nE, Wasson vs. Wilfrid Allan, J. Bell\nvs. T. R. Wilson, Syd Haydon vs. A.\nB. Gilker. John Teague vs. P. T. Andrews, Leo McKinnon vs. R. D Hall.\nWednesday, 7 p.m.\u2014R. D. Ha'l vs.\nG. H. Ferguson, P. T. Andrews vs.\nJ. H. Long, Roy Pollard vs. W. Kline,\nE. H. Woolls vs. M. Michelson, Andy\nKraft vs. Hugh Robertson; 9 p.m.- j Rangers 2.\nA. Baird vs. J. B. Gray, Syd Hay- j Edmonton City Junior Hockey\ndon vs J. A. Smith, R. D. Barnes vs.! (Sunday)\nT. W. Fothcringham, J. W. Smiley,    E.A.C 2, Rangers 2 (overtime)\nvs. W. K. Clark. ! E,,t u-8-A-\nFriday, 7 p.m.-E. E. L. Dewdney I Pittsburgh 3, N.Y. Rovers 1.\nvs. T.W. Ledingham, A. B. G Ikcr\nvs. G. H. Ferguson, John Tca;.,ue vs.\nJ. A. Smith, J. J. McEwan vs. J.\nMcPhail, A. Baird vs. William Marr.\n9 p.m.\u2014C. F. McHardy vs. Al Jeffs:\nA. Browne vs. W. J. E. B'ker. J .hn\nDingwall vs. W. T. Eothcringiiam,\nLeo McKinnon vs. J. H. Lon-\\ Alderman Roy Sharp vs. P. E. Pouiin.\nAmateur Hockey\nScores\nBy the Canadian Press\nMontreal Senior Group\nOttawa 3, Victorias 5.\nVerdun 1, Canadiens 2.\nRoyals 5, Aces 4 (at Quebec).\nInternational Senior\nPort Arthur 3, Duluth 2.\nAlberta Senior'\nCalgrry Bronks 2, Edmonton Superiors 4.\nM.A.M.A.  North. Division Junior\nSt. James 5, Brandon 5.\nM.A.M.A. South Division Junior\nWinnipeg Falcons 5, Portage la\nPrairie 6.\nS.A.H.A. Senior (Northern)\nNorth Battlefeid 4, Flin Flon 0.\nO.M.A. Junior A\nSt. Michael's 8, Toronto Lions 1\nUniversity of Toronto 3, Toronto\nNative Sons 2.\nOshawa 4, Toronto Young Rang\ners 1.\nN.T.H.A. Junior\nHaileybury 3, K.     Uskeard 1.\nAlta. Senior-Six.\nEdmonton Dominions 3, Calgary\nTaking the ice for their first game\nof the season, the visiting Kaslo\nbantam hockey team fought hard\nell the way, but were no match for\nthe Nelson Scouts bantam squad\nwho scored a 3-0 shutout over the\nvisitors in an exhibition game\nplayed at the local arena on Saturday morning.\nThe Kaslo team was only organized this season. All but one ot the\nplayers Is under 14 years of age,\nwith young Gilbert Hartin being\nonly nine years of age. With a few\nmore games under their belts the\nyoung Kaslo team will make other\ndistrict clubs step fast to win over\nthem.\nYoung Hartin, who broke his note 11\u2122'\"\"\u2122?.'?.\"T*\nIn Nelson last season while playing |awu   subdivision.\nfor  the Nelson   Panther  midgets.,\nplayed an outstanding game in goal\nfor the visitors, and it was his smart\nwork that saved the Kaslo club from\na worse defeat. Ted Homer and\nDavid Hartin also showed up well\nfor the visitors.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period: Nelson Scouts, Ferguson (Gibbon) 10:11; 2\u2014Nelson\nScouts, Whaley (McLellan) 13:24\nNo penalties.\nSecond period: Mo score. Penal-\ntire-Wilson, Pickard.\nThird period: 3\u2014Nelson Scouts,\nPrestley.   No penalties.\nStops by goalies:\nJack Hartin    9   5  7-21\nBob Ludlow     2   0  8\u20145\nThe teams were:\nKaslo bantams\u2014Jack Hartin, Dave\nHartin, Mike McLandera, Ted Horner, Roy Lackart, Bob Strachan,\nGilbert Hartin, Hedlye Dunn, Jimmie Tinkess, Jimmie Strachan.\nNelson Scout bantams\u2014Bob Ludlow, John Bradley, George La-\npointe, Mike Prestley, Doug Whaley,\nJack Ludlow, Martin McLellan.\nJohn Hornett, Gordon Pickard, Bob\nWilson, Warren Ferguson, Don Gibbon.\nJimmy Ringrose and Russell\nFrench refereed the game.\nMrs. UMn Dies\nGold Hill Heme\nResident of Lardeau\n33 Years; to Be\nBuried Here\nDeath ot Mrs. John Ulvin, aged 78\nyears, occurred ia her home In Gold\nHill or Poplar Friday.\nMrs. Ulvin and her husband are\nold-timers ot Gold Hill, on the Lardeau subdivision, having resided\nthere 33 years, after having lived in\nSpokane 13 years and in Minneapolis five years.\nShe waa born In Sweden in 1858.\nHer husbond and two daughters,\nMrs. E. Rear in Gold Hill and Mrs.\nAmy Robins In Portland, Ore., survive her.\nThe funeral will be held In Nelson.\nTrail Curling\nBack lo Normal\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 24.-Now that\nthe annual British Columbia Curl-\n'ng assoc'ation bonspiel has been\ncompleted curling at the rink will\nreturn to a degree of normality as\nclub competitions are resumed.\nDraws follow:\nMonday, 6:30 p.m.\u2014Patron's contention:\nSheet 1\u2014D. Forrest vs. D. MacDonald.\nSheet 2\u2014R. C. McGerrigle vs. A.\nR. Buchan.\nSheet 3-J. Campbell vs. W. F.\nTruswell.\nSheet 4-W. G. Carrie vs. W.\nDoubt.\nVardeen Boxers\nGoing lo Ymir\nShow Is Billed for\nSaturday With\nStrong Card\nJack Vardeen's Nelson Sports club\nboxen, submitting to an attack of\n\"wander itch,\" will wander to Ymir\nSaturday to put on a show there.\nGeorge Barnett of Ymir will do\nbattle with Lawrence Selinger In the\nfeature bout of the card. Barnett\nhas won and drawn with the Nelson lad in two previous bouts.\nA good supporting card will hive\nBill Breen mix it up with Henry\nHartridge In one ot the preliminaries.\nTbe two mit-slinging crowd-pleas-\ners \"Dynamite\" Swain and \"Tanan\"\nMilburn, midget battlers, will be\nthere to do some more crowd-pleasing in Ymir. Allan Kalstrum is elated to meet Jackie Knott in another\nmidget battle, while Gordon Nelson\nand John Jones will provide the\nfinishing touches for a fine card.\nFruitvale Residents\nHave Electric Light\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. J4.-A total of\n53 electric service connections have\nbeen made at Fruitvale since the\nnew line to that center was put in\nby the West Kootenay Power it\nLight Co., Ltd.\nIt Is expected that the number\nwill increase within a short time.\nTRAIL HALL CEILING REPAIRED\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 24\u2014Sheet zinc\nend V-joint have been used to make\nnew ceilin* surfaces in basement\nrooms of Memorial hall. Heavy\nhump'ng on the gymnasium floor\n\"bov3 hed caused severe damage to\nIhe plaster.\n \u25a0\nHome Bonspiel\nSemis Tonight\nSemi-finals in the stay-at-home\ncompetition of the K.!son Curling j\nclub will be run off at the rink this\nevening. The 'spielers will curl on\nsheets 3 and 4, the others being used\nby the city schedule curlers.\nAt 7 p.m.\u2014Leo McKinnon meets\nT. W. Ledingham and John Teague\nmeets J. A. Smith. At 9 p.m. the\nwinner of the Teague-Smith game\nmeets J. J. McEwan.\nTuesday evening the final game of\nthe 'spiel will be curled.   ,t\nKinnear in Second\nPlace Tie for the\nScoring Leadership\nIn the scoring statistics of the\nWest Kootenay Hockey league issued in Saturday's Daily News, the\nname of Guy Kinnear was om'tted.\nKinnear, first string centre of the\nTrail Canucks, Is tied for seeond\nplace in scoring with Andreashuk,\nDame and Forrest of the Smoke\nEaters, and Marshall, of the Canucks, eaeh having 12 scoring points.\nKinnear has scored five goals, and\nhas been credited with seven assists.\nTRAIL CARPETBOWLING\nTRAIL, B.C, Jan. 24.-During the\nweek, City Carpet Bowling league\nwill play as follows:\nJanuary 26\u2014Slks No. 2 vs. Legion\nNo. 2 at Elks' halL\nJanuary 28\u2014Legion No. 1 vs. Oddfellows' No. 2 at Legion rooms.\nJanuary 29\u2014Oddfellows No. 1 vs.\nElks No. 1 at Oddfellows' halL\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL\nThis column Is in charge ot Mrs Glenn Quayle of Trail All\nevents of a social nature of interest in Trail and Tadanac will appear\nin this column Mrs Quayle will be glad io have any such news\ntelephoned to her at her borne in TralL\nTRAIL, B.C, Jan. 24\u2014Miss Marguerite Horwell, member of the\nteaching staff of Central school,\nTrail for several years, who leaves\nat the end of the month for Agas-\nsiz where she will be married, was\nguest of honor Saturday evening\nat a delightful bridge party at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Rutledge\nMiss Florence Rutledge and Miss\nGertrude Rutledge entertaining.\nDuring the evening Miss Horwell\nwas the recipient of a gift from the\nassembled guests.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nThomas Medlicott, who has been\nvisiting at Calgary for about a\nmonth returned Saturday to Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nCorinne Lynes, daughter of Mr.\nand Mrs. William Lynes, Riverside,\nis a patient in the Trail-Tadanac\nhospital,\n9     *      \u2022\nMrs. G. McLecn has been removed to her home from thc Trail-Tadanac hospital.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHarry Twells, who during the bonspiel has been the guests of rela\ntives In Trail, has returned to Kimberley.\naa    .     \u2022\nMrs. C. H. Burgess is a patient In\nthe Trail-Tadanac hospital\n\u2022 \u2666   .\nEd Trembley, who was the guest\nof relatlvei at Ross Spur for a few\ndays has returned to Trail.\naa    .    *\nPage McPhee returned during the\nweek-end to Creston after spending\na holiday in Trail.\n\u2022 .     aa\nMrs. James Jones left Friday for\nthe coast, called there by the illness of her mother.\n\u2022 .   <\nMax Goldstein has returned to\nTrail from a business trip to coast\ncities.\naa    \u2022    aa\nMrs. C. Kelly has been removed\nto her home from the Trail-Tadanac hospital.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nDick Erno returns Monday from\nLethbridge where he was called\n10 days ago owing to the illness of\nhis mother.\n \"  \"\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022-\n1' i. wwm\nmm\nwpwiiymmwswmmm-wiwmswm\nwui.ii.ij muomp\n101\nRROW CREEK\nMBS IS WED\nACROSS LINE\nIna Walkey Is Bride\nof 0. Braumbaugh\n\u25a0BROW CREEK, B.C.\u2014A wed-\n| ot Interest to the residents ot\nrow Creek took place January 16\nen   Edna  Walkey,  eldest  twin\nlghter of H. Walkey, became the\nte of Orville Braumbaugh of\nrthern Saskatchewan.\nOn Virgine Bohmer and John\nohel vere bridesmaid and best-\ntt teapectlvely.\n\u25a0he wedding took place at Bon-\n\u00bb Ferry, Idaho.\n\"ne bride was one of the most\npular   young   ladles   of   Arrow\n\"ne couple have taken up resl-\nice on the ranch of the brides'\nher, H. Walkey.\n\"ne ladle* of the Arrow Creek\n\u2022side club met January 16 at the\nlOol house and discussed the de-\nlency on the Christmas entertain-\nnt. They will try new ways to\noc out the unfavorable balance.\nUr. and Mrs. I. Weyer entertained\na surprise party, the occp- \"n belt*. Weyer's birthday. Miss L.\nf presented him with an immense\nthday cake and the 40 guests\nSent wished him all happiness.\n)ancing lasted till daylight,\nfr. and Mrs. Braumbaugh, nee\naa Walkey, were treated to an\nI tine chivari. Cow-bells, cans\n1 numerous other non-musical in-\numents went to celebrate the oc-\nilon.\nSanton Jorde left for Greenwood\nere he and his brother, Melvin,\nM secured an ore contract.\nKrs. M. Jorde and son, Bryce,\n\u00bb were visiting Mrs. C. Jorde\npect to leave shortly to join Mr\nrde at Greenwood.\nthe weather has been very cold\ntiie valley the last tew days,\nt so far has done no damage to\ns .strawberries as they  have  a\nod blenket of snow.\nGus Oberg has taken J. Jackod-\n:ks place at the mill. Jack being\nnder the weather\".\nint Wedding of\nYear at Slocan Park\nSLOCAN PARK, B.C.-The first\nidding in Slocan Park tor 1937\nok place Jan. 17 at the home of\nand Mrs. George Padowinhofl\njen their second daughter, Polly,\ngiven in marriage to Sam S.\nonidin. It was a Doukhobor wed-\nng, with all the old styles and\nstoma.\nA large crowd of relatives and\nlends attended.\nMrs. Stanley Reid has gone to\nend.reoutft ot weeks'at Valli-\nn, a (nest of Mrs. Innes. Miss\nane Smith of Crescent Valley Is\nking charge of her home here,\niring her absence.\nThe Doukhobor school was re-\nlened here Monday with Mrs.\nIckerberg as teacher.\nALL KINDS OF\nTEMPERATURES\nAT PROCTER\nPROCTER, B.C \u2014 Procter has\nbeen experiencing what might be\nknown as a \"stream lined\" cold\nwave. Almost every home owns a*\nthermometer but no two thermometers register the same.\nWednesday evening one man said\nit was 4 degrees below zero while\nhis next door neighbor found it 20\ndegrees above zero. However, by a\ntested thermometer, it was found\nthe mercury went down to 14 degrees below xero, the coldest this\nyear.\nCranbrook Library\nMembership Is\nDoubled\nCRANBROOK, B. C- \u2014 The annual meeting ot the Cranbrook Library association showed that the\nmembership has more than doubled\nin the past year, with 94 members\nenrolled at the close of 1935 and 223\nat the close ot 1936. The number ot\nvolumes now on the shelves is 3192,\nwith 299 ol them books ordered in\n1936.\nThe treasurer's report, given by\nH. S. Haynes, showed a balance ot\n$73.41, with total receipts ol $799.65\nand expenditures of $726.24. Ot the\nreceipts, $351.35 came lrom membership lees, and the city grant\namounted to $250.\n01 the disbursements, $484.09\nwent toward new books and periodicals, $180 as salary to the librarian,\n$2S\",0 for advertising, and $36.85 lor\nsundries. For books an additional\n$242 was spent in the last two\nmonths ol 1935, making a total of\n$726 tor the 14 months.\nThe auditor's report, submitted by\nM. A. Beale, confirmed the treasurer's report, and was accepted by\nthe meeting.\nThe librarian's report, given by\nMiss Rumsey, showed that volumes\nof fiction had circulated to the\nnumber of 4300, and non-fiction.\n380. Some 955 non-members during\nthe year visited the library to read\nthe periodicals.\nRev. R. W. Hardy acted as chairman in the absence of the president, Alan Graham. The following\nofficers were reelected to the executive: President, Alan Graham; secretary-treasurer, H. S. Haynes, librarian and ex officio exascutive\nmember, Miss Rumsey; committee.\nG. C Barclay, A. Steele, Rev. R. W.\nHardy, Mrs. Miles, Mrs. McKowan.\nMrs. A. B. Smith and Miss E. B.\nPaterson. The committee was authorized to choose two more members for the executive.\nVotes of thanks were extend*d to\nthe president and secretary for their\nefforts during the year, to the committee for selecting the volumes to\nbe purchased, and to the auditor.\nMiss Rumsey was given a special\nvote of appreciation for her work\nin making the library both efficient\nand pleasant\nThe president and secretary were\nauthorized to request the usual $300\ngrant from the city council.\nHow Would You\nLike to Win $500\nthis Is the first prize In the Dr.\nbase Paradol contest. Total value\n! prize* $4,000.00 The contest Is\nsrr Interesting and you will enjoy\nforking It out\nParadol, you know, is the new,\ndentlfic treatment tor the quick-\nand more effective relief ot\neadache,   periodic   pains,   rheu\nmatism, lumbago, and other pains.\nThere are no disagreeable after\neffects.\nFor full particulars about this\ncontest turn to page 27 of your\nDr. Chase Almanac or write for\nentry form to the Dr. A. W. Chase\nMedicine Co., Limited, Box 1002,\nOakville, Ont. (Advt.)\nNILION DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.O-MONDAY MORNING. JAN. B. 1937.\nCrawford Bay\nChurch Helpers\nlo Aid Parish\nCRAWFORD BAY, B.C.-James\nRichardson visited Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. Whltely have left\ntor Vancouver.\nMiss H. May has returned to her\nhome at Newgate after spending a\nmonth here.\nThe Church Helpers met at tbe\nhome ot Mrs. Hincks Wednesday.\nMrs. Gooch, president, waa in the\nChair. As Mrs. Francis is away, Mrs.\nH. Richardson took her place as\nsecretary.\nA letter was read from Mr. Holiday-Smith of Boswell, also one from\ntbe Bishop of Calgary, in answer to\nan enquiry about assisting a parish. The bishop sent the name ot\na clergyman at Byemoor, Alta., to\nwhom the secretary will write for\nfurther information.\nArrangements were made In regards to a parchlal meeting.\nMrs. Hincks served tea. Those\npresent were Mrs. Hincks, Miss\nWorkman, Miss Lytle, Mrs. Gooch\nand Mrs. H. Richardson.\nTuesday was the coldest night to\ndate, the thermometer varying between two and eight degrees below\nzero.\nPresbyterians al\nCreston Reeled\nCRESTON, B.C.\u2014Despite the Inclement weather that prevailed\nthere was a representative turnout\nof members and adherents of St.\nStephen's Presbyterian church for\nthe annual congregational meeting\nMonday which was in chwge of M.\nJ. Boyd, chairman of session, with\nH. H. Taylor taking the minutes.\nAlthough the church has been\nwithout the services of a settled\npastor since the death ol Rev. J. A.\nT, McLagan in September, the various reports submitted indicated that\nthe work in all branches had been\ncarried on successfully, every organization having attained its objective and all showed balances on\nthe right side of the ledger.\nH. H. Taylor, treasurer, submitted\ntho financial statement which showed all liabilities fully paid and a\nbalance carried forward. For the\nSunday school Miss Jean Henderson reported the attendance well\nmaintained and the offerings well\nup to standard. For the ladies' aid\nthe treasurer, Mrs. R. J. Forbes,\nread a report that indicated 1936\nhad been well up to the standard\nof previous years.\nMiss Annaretta McDonald read\nthe report of the Girls' W. A., W\norganization ol young ladles that\ncame Into being early in the year,\nand has carried on successfully since\norganization. The Ellen Dow Mission band report was read by Mrs.\nForbes. Mrs. S. A. Speers reported\nfor St. Stephen's W. M. S., and Miss\nHelen Moore, advisor to the C.G.I.T.,\nread the report ol that organization,\nwhich haid been active all year.\nDr. Henderson and H. H. Taylor\nwere reelected to fill vacancies on\nthe board ot management and a\nvacancy on the board was tilled by\nthe election ot J. P. Ross.\nA hearty vote of thanks was accorded Miss Ruby Blyth, who has\nbeen acting pastor for three months,\nand she was Invited to continue\nthe work until such time as a new\nminister arrives or until she is transferred by the church authorities.\nVotes of thanks were also tendered\nthe choir, Sunday school staff and\nall the organizations for services\nrendered the past year.\nBUT AND SAVE AT OUR JANUARY\nSALE of SHOES\nYou'll find that practically our entire stock is on sale at really\nBargain Prices\nMEN'S\nOxfords\u2014High  Shoes\n$2.95\n$6.15\nWOMEN'S\nTiei\u2014Pumps\u2014Straps\n$1.15\n$6.35\nSKATING\nOUTFITS\nMens snd Women's\n*3-*f  \u00bb3\n.10\nUP\nFELT\nSLIPPERS\nMen's __..\n... 80c\nto $2.05\nWomen's.\n... 35c\nto $1.20\nChildren's\n...35c\nto $1.30\nMEN'S HEAVY\nRUBBERS\n$1.95  $4-65\nExta Special\nBoys'\nBoots\n$2.15\nNo Goods on Approval\nGASH ONLY AT THIS GREAT\nSAVING SALE\ns\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaden in Footfashion\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nTliis column if conducted by Mrs M A. Vlgneux All news ot a\nsocial nature including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, eta, will appeal in this column. Telephone Mrs.\nVigneux at her home, til Silica street.\nMost Rev. Martin M. Johnson,\nbishop ot Nelson, cele-tated solemn\nhigh mass yesterday at South Slocan. He also visited Castlegar and\nwas accompanied by Rev. J. Cheev\ners of the Slocan missions.\n...\nMr. and Mn. S. S. Fowler were\nweek-end visitors In the city en\nroute to the coasL\n'\u2022   \u2666   \u2022\nMiss Irene McGillvary ot Kaslo\nwas a Nelson visitor Saturday.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. R. McDonald of South\nSlocan spent Saturday In town.\n...\nE. Paul ot Rossland visited the\ncity Saturday.\n,   ,   .\nVerne McDowell of !3almo was in\nNelson Saturday en route to the\ncoast\n\u00ab   \u2022   *\nA shopper in the city .Saturday\nwas Mrs. D. McKay of Ymir.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. J. E. Riley of Upper\nBonnington were visitors in Nelson\nSaturday.\n...\nMiss Sadie McCreight, who has\nbeen taking a course in Spokane,\nis recuperating from an attack of\nflu at the home of her parents, Mr.\nand Mrs. B. McCreight, Second\nstreet, and will be in Nelson for a\nlew weeks.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nA. B. Stanley of Nakusp spent\nSaturday in Nelson.\n...\nA. J. Watson of Kootenay Bay\nwas a city visitor at the week end\nen route to the coast where he\nwill join Mrs. Watson.\n\u2022 \u2022   .\nCarl Mohr ol Ainsworth spent\nSaturday in town.\n\u2022 .  \u2022\nMrs. Russell Tinkess ot Kaslo was\na city shopper Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nShoppers in the city .Saturday ln-\ncluded William Black ot Crescent\na7 alley.\n,  .   .\nClarence Shannon and his daughter of Willow Point were city shoppers Saturday.\n...\nW. J. Tindale of South Slocan\nspent Saturday in Nelson.\n.   .   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Gunner Anderson\nof the Queen mine were city shoppers Saturday.\n\u00ab   *   .\nAlan Gilroy of the staff ot the\nCanadian  Bank  ot  Commerce  at\nCreston was a city visitor Friday\nevening.\n\u2022 ,  \u2022\nT. H. Russel of South Slocan spent\nSaturday In Nelson.\n\u2022 .   .\nHarold Lindman ot Ymir was a\ncity visitor aSaturday.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. C. H. King of Port\nCrawford spent Saturday in town\nshopping.\n.  \u2022  .\nVisitors in Nelson Saturday included Mr. and Mrs, P. O. Biru of\nSouth Slocan.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss Hazel Hulls, who teaches at\nBrilliant, was a guest ot her father,\nT. Hulls, Cottonwood street, Fair-\nview, over the week-end.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. W. McGinnis ol Ymir\nwere tn the city Friday to attend\nthe Silver Slipper dance.\n...\nH. D. Dawson, Stanley street, left\nby bus Friday tor Kaslo.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Helen Bruce-Warden of Trail\nwas a week-end guest at the home\not Mr. and Mrs. R. L. McBnde,\nHoover street\nMrs. L.\nguest  of\nFairview.\nMitchell of Oliver is a\nher lather,  A.  Balcom,\nR. Billsborough\nPasses al Fernie\nWas Active in Work\nfor Returned Men;\nWrote a Column\nFERNIE, B. C\u2014The ranks of the\nold-timers In Fernie were reduced\nagain on Friday night when Robert Billsborough died after a short\nillness from pneumonia.\nMr. Billsborough came to this district from Preston, Lancashire, in\n1908 and took up residence in Coal\nCreek where he was employed. On\nthe outbreak of the war he joined\nthe 225th and later went to the 2nd\nCM.R. He served two years overseas, was wounded twice and was\ndischarged with the rank of corporal.\nEver since the war Mr. BlU'bor-\nough has lived in Fernie. He was\none of the first to form the Canadian Legion and has been very active in regard to returned soldiers'\nproblems. He has been president of\nthe local branch of the Canadian\nLegion and every year since the\nwar has been chairman ot the committee in charge of the Remembrance Day parade and service. He\nhas been the presiding officer at all\nthe Remembrance services in Fernie. He has served on several soldiers'\nMiss Phyllis Watson of Castlegar\nvisited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022  *\nMr. and Mrs. J. Bird, Victoria\nstreet, had as their week-end guest\ntheir uaughter, Mrs. J. Vallance ol\nYmir.\n...\nGrant Hall was In town from\nBonnington Saturday.\n\u2022 *   \u00ab\nMrs. C. C Rhodes has as her\nguest her son, Ned Rhodes of TralL\n...\nF. C. Doelle of Salmo was a visitor in town at the week-end.\n...\nT. W. Smith of Crescent Bay spent\nSaturday in Nelson.\n...\nMrs. J. W. Hamilton of Creston\nwas a visitor in the city at the\nweek-end.\n...\nMiss Peggy Barclay, who teaches\nat Brilliant visited her mother Mrs.\nA. Barclay, Fall street, over the\nweek-end.\n...\nMr. and Mrs. H. Stewart ol Ymir\nvisited Nelson Saturday.\n...\nWalter B. Johnstone of Silverton\nwas in town at the week-end.\ndelegations both provincial and Dominion.\nIn civil life Mr. Billsborough has\nbeen an active lodge man, being a\nmember of the L.O.O.M., K.P. and\nD.O.K.K. In recent years be has\nbeen editor of the Seen and Heard\ncolumn in the local press.\nMr. Billsborough Is survived by\nhis widow, who has been an Invalid\nfor several years, by one daughter,\nMrs. Phil Broster of Fernie, two\nsisters -in England, two sisters in\nVancouver, Mrs. James Low and\nMrs. Dan Markland, and a brother,\nttarry. The time of the funeral,\nwhich will be semi-military, has not\nyet been set.\nPIONEER PRIEST\nOF B.(. DIES\nVICTORIA, Jan. 24 (CP) -With\nthe death of Rev. Father Francis\nR. Verbeke in St. Joseph's hospital\nFriday night, British Columbia lost\none ot its earliest pioneer priests\nand connecting links with the pnst\nin the province. He had lived in\nBritish Columbia 52 years, and for\n20 years was parish priest at Kelowna.\nBorn In St. Eloi, Belgium In 1860,\nFather Verbeke was 77 years old.\nSurviving him are one nephew\nRev. Father R. Tanghe. S. J. Ranchl\nIndia and other relatives In Harle-\nbeke, Belgium.\nCranbrook I.O.O.F.\nInstall\nCRANBROOK, B.C. - Key City\nLodge No. 42, I.O.O.F., and the\nMaple Leaf Rebekah Lodge No. It\nhad a joint install-Uon ceremony In\ntheir lodge nom Monday evening,\nwhen officers for the present term\nwere formally inducted.\nInstalling officers were District\nDeputy Grand Master A. D. Oakes\not Kimberley and District Deputy\nPresident Mrs. Grave McNeil,\nCranbrook, assisted by W. S. Johnston and Mrs. L. DeLuca as grand\nmarshals.\nThe Key City lodge offices will\nbe filled as follows: Oscar Jostad,\njunior past grand; John Dixon,\nnoble grand; A. C. Hayden, vice-\ngrand; E. G. Dingley, recording\nsecretary; F. Wooley, financial secretary; A. E. Bowley, treasurer; L.\nLundy, right supporter, noble\ngrand; William Hewson, right supporter vice-grand; F. Woods, left\nsupporter vice-grand; S. R. Gehrke,\nwarden; S. DeLuca, conductor; W.\nSoden, inside guardian; Ted Shaw,\noutside guardian; George Reece,\nright scene supporter; Carl Spence,\nleft scene supporter; F. J. Smyth,\nchaplain.\nREBEKAHS\nThe Maple Leaf Rebekah lodge\nwill have the following officers:\nMrs. F. Pantling, junior past grand;\nMrs. M. Hewson, noble grand; Miss\nMay Cox, vica5-grand; Mrs. A. Lid-\ndlcoat, recording secretary; Mrs.\nGrace McNeil, financial secretary;\nMrs. L. DeLuca, treasurer; Mrs. G.\nLeonard, right supporting noble\ngrand; Mrs. L. V. Wilson, left tup-\nporting noble grand; Mrs. H. Dingley, right supporting vice-grand;\nMrs. W. Marsden, left supporting\nvice-grand; Mrs. R. Haley, warden;\nMiss Grace McLure, conductor;\nMrs. R. Thompson, inside guard'an;\nMrs. A. Brown, outside guardian;\nMrs. H. Wooley, chaplain.\nAfter the Installation ceremony,\ncommunity singing and a luncheon\nwere enjoyed. Three members ol\nSullivan Lodge No. 35 were guests,\nA. D. Oakes, t. Nesbitt and Roy\nHiton, all of Kimberley.\nHOSPITAL LADIES\nREELECTED\nWhen the Ladles' aid of St Eugene hospital had Its annual meeting Tuesday at the nurses' home,\nthe executive was reelected in its\nentirety as follows:\nPresident, Mrs. G. M. Argue; first\nvice-president, Mrs. F. B. Miles;\nsecond vice-president, Mrs. C. J.\nLittle; secretary, Mrs. W. F. Doran;\ntreasurer, Mrs. A. J. Ironside. Mrs.\nG. H. Thompson was appointed as\nchairman of the committee to distribute sewing of hospital garments\nas Lenten work.\nThe treasurer's report showed a\nbalance of $125.72, earmarked for 10\nsmall and one large bedside screens\nfor use in the hospital. Assets for\nthe year were (659.58, of which $22\nCame from membership fees, $35.30\nfrom the tea given at a fashion and\nfurniture show last spring, 8160.25\nfrom tbe Easter ball, $232.44 from a\ntag day last fall, and $84.25 from\nthe tea and bread sale.\nBills during the year amounted\nto $533.86.\nThe annual report, given by the\nsecretary, showed the aid's work\nfor the hospital during the year.\nAmong the gifts were a first aid\nkit tor the ambulance, a binocular\nmicroscope tor the hospital laboratory, a wheel chair and oxygen\ntank. In addition to these, an amount\nof Lenten sewing was completed\nlast year, and a preserves and pickle\nshower was successful.\nThe secretary's report showed In\nthe past 10 years the Ladles' aid\nhad raised $8649 on behalf of St.\nEugene hospital.\nCommittees were formed and tentative plans made for the Easter\nball.\nA motion was passed that the\nhospital aid should meet the first\nTuesday of each quarter, instead of\nat the call of the president.\nMrs. G. H. Thompson entertained\nat luncheon and bridge Thursday\nafternoon at her apartment in the\nItanson block, when invited guests\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 paoi mvs\nwere Mrs. W. H. Wilson, Mrs. H. A.\nMcKowan, Mrs. F. B. Miles, Mrs.\nG. E. L. MacKinnon, Mrs. F. V.\nHarrison, Mrs. M. A. Beale, Mrs, E.\nS. Jones and Mrs. W. A. Fergie.\nAlan Graham left Monday morning for Vancouver to spend a week\non business.\nW. G. Galliford of the tie and\ntimber department of the C. P. R.\nwas a business visitor here.\nMrs. C. V. Edwards was tea hostess Tuesday afternoon at the parish\nhall when the Cranbrook Badminton club met.\nFAREWELL TO\nBACKACHE!\nHer b^ a-hed-sh-\nMl miserable\u2014no pep\n\u2014she couldn't be\n\"botaWd\"tO|OOlat-\nloit contact with ha\nMen mkI wu lonet*.\nHer tiller advised\nher to take Dodd'i _\nKidnej Pills. Her backache ma tu\n\u2014enthntiiim and energy returned -her\nejei sparkled - - -her Step \u00abu sprightly\u2014and\nonce again she was her \"old seil.\"       lis\nfey MODirC TO BACKACHE wlf *\nDoddsKidneyPills\nRECIPES\nMENUS\nand\nHINTS\nGood\nHousekeeping\nMENU HINT\nLamb Chops        Steward Tomatoes\nBaked Potatoes\nCabbage or Lettuce Salad\nButterscotch  Pecan  Pie\nTea or Coffee\nConcentrate on the dessert in\nthis meal. It is what may be described as \"hearty', so serve small\nportions of the rest of the meal and\nthoroughly enjoy the delicious dessert You can omit the nuts, If\nyou prefer. Butterscotch pie is better if served cold.\nTODAY'S RECIPE\nBUTTERSCOTCH PECAN PIE.-\nBake crust and stand aside to cool.\nMelt one cup brown sugar and one\nteaspoon butter in deep trying pain\nand let get brown, but not scorched.\nMix two egg yollcs with one tablespoon flour, add one cup milk and\npinch of salt, and stir smooth. Add\nthis mixture to sugar and butter\nand cook, stirring constantly, until\nthick. Add teaspoon vanilla and\none cup pecan meats, coarsely\nchopped. Pour into baked crust and\ntop with meringue made with the\negg  whites  and  powdered\nBrown in slow oven.\nsugar.\nChinese Chewt\nOne-hall cup confectioners'\ngar, one-half pound butter, one and\none-halt cups chopped nuts (line),\none and one-half cups flour, silted\nwith one and one-Iourth teaspoons\nbaking powder, one teaspoon lemon\nextract, one teaspoon vanilla, one\nhalt teaspoon salt Cream butter\nand sugar until very sott. Add\nother Ingredients. Chill tor an\nhour (over night if not in a hurry)\nthen roll in tiny balls and bake in\nmoderate oven until done, about\neight minutes. When baked, roll in\npowdered sugar. These are quickly made and improve with time\u2014it\nthey have a chance. Nice for that\nbox of goodies for the college boy\nor girl.\nHelps END A COLD Quicker\n76 3-Mctuite VafiofiuS IflaMeq*\nMassage VapoRub briskly on the\nthroat, chest and back (between and\nbelow the shoulder blades). Then\nspread It thick over tbe chest and\ncover with wanned cloth.\nAlmost before you finish rubbing,\nVapoRub starts to bring relief two\nways at once\u2014two direct ways:\n1. Through the Skin. VapoRub\nacts direct through the skin like a\npoultice or plaster.\n2. Medicated Vapori. At the\nsame time, Its medicated vapors, released by body heat, arc breathed In\nfor hours\u2014about 18 times a minute\n\u2014direct to the Irritated air-passages\nof the nose, throat and chest.\nThis combined poulticc-and-vapor\naction loosens phlegm\u2014relieves\nirritation\u2014helps break congestion.\nWhile the little patient relaxes into\ncomfortable sleep, VapoRub keepe\nright on working. Often, by morning\nthe worst of the cold is over.\nAvoids Risk of Stomach Uptett\nThis safe, external treatment cannot possibly upset the stomach, aj\nconstant internal \"dosing\" is so apt\nto do. It can be used freely, as often\nas needed, even on thc youngest child.\nNow White-Stainless\nThanks to a new process, VapoRub\nnow comes to you In white stainless\nform. Only the color is removed; it\nis the same VapoRub\u2014the same\nformula and the same effective double action.\n\"\"\u25bc vapor ue~~\nMothers! Look In your VapoRub\npacks*! for full details of Vicka\nPlan\u2014a practical home guide to\n\u25a0Stealer freedom from colds. In clinic\nteats among 17,353 people, this Plan\ncut sickness from colds more loan half.\/\/\nFollow Vicks Plan for\nBetter Control ot Colds\nChoosing Brush\nWhen buying i\nono with fairly\ncause they will\nhair   strands   to\nhair brush, get\nlong bristles beget through the\nthe   scalp.    The\nfriction of the brush will stimulate the blood streams, help to remove epidermal debris Md keep\nthe scalp inj a healthy condition.\nNourishing\nSustaining\nEnergizing\nFOR promoting the health of your family . . .\nfor brightening your meals with its fine and\nvaried tastiness , . . there's no better food than\nCanadian Fish and Shellfish. Eat more of them.\nYou'll benefit in health because Fish and Shellfish\ngive you abundant proteins for strength and energy\n.., precious vitamins for health maintenance .. .\nmineral salts, iodine, copper aand other elements.\nAnd you will relish the variety of flavour in Fish\nFoods that gives almost limitless scope to your\ncooking talent. Here is flavour that will tempt\nevery appetite . . . delicate, easily digested meat\nthat delights as it satisfies.. . provides the utmost\nin healthful nourishment for every cent spent.\nDEPARTMENT of FISHERIES, OTTAWA\nQj&\nDepartment of Fl ih erl m, Ottawa\nPlease sent! me your free Si-page Booklet,\n\"Any Dty a Ftib Diy\", containing 100\ndelightful and economical Fisli Recipes.\n...-SD-6\nH     DAY'\n_\n^___\n__\naaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa^HaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaM\n mmmf^\nPAGE SIX-\nNclsmt lailtj Nf\u00abi0\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED.\n216   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbia.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C.-MONDAY MORNING, JAN. 25. 1937.\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMember   of   the   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulations   and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased    Wire   News   Service.\nMONDAY MORNING, JAN. 25, 1937.\nADVERTISING FRUIT IN THE\nUNITED STATES\nIt will be remembered that the B.C. tree fruit board\na year ago had a survey made of fruit salesmanship\nmethods generally by one of the most outstanding Canadian advertising agencies, and thereafter planned an extensive advertising campaign, but an abrupt end to the\nplan was put by the adverse opinion of the supreme court\nof Canada upon the constitutionality of the Natural Products Marketing act. Strengthened by recent provincial\nlegislation, however, the board proposes to go ahead this\nyear with its advertising program, an outline of which\nwill probably be given out ere long, says the Kelowna\nCourier.\nMeantime, it is interesting to note the vast sums that\nare being expended in the United States on publicity for\nfruit, the latest phase being a merry war of advertising\nbetween California and Florida, rivals in the supply of\ncitrus fruits, in regard to which \"Business Week\" has\nthis to tell:\n\"Much as they may publicly deplore the violence\ndone professional ethics, advertising men privately relish\nnothing more than a juicy competitive copy fight. And\nthey are getting just that now with the California Fruit\nGrowers1 Exchange and the Florida Citrus Commission\ngoing at it hammer and tongs.\n\"The copy appeal, '25 per cent more juice,' long exploited on behalf of Florida oranges, is regarded as the\ncause celebre. That appeal has been featured intermittently in advertising for Florida oranges for more than a\ndecade. More recently, Ruthrauff & Ryan advertising\nagency, which handles the $160,000 account for the State\nCitrus Commission, has been hammering the 'more juice'\ntheme with a vengeance.\n\"That got W. B. Geissinger's dander up. Mr. Geis-\nsinger is the man who administers the near $2,000,000\nappropriation which the California Fruit Growers' Exchange is spending this year through Lord & Thomas\nagency to promote Sunkist oranges. Last month, to its\nconventional Christmas gift appeal, Sunkist added a new\nhealth claim: '22 per cent more vitamin C than Florida\noranges.'\n\"Of the 65 newspapers on Sunkist's original list, 35\nran the first advertisement exactly as was (Mr. Geissinger\nstoutly resisted all efforts to modify his copy) and 30\nturned it down,\n\"At that juncture, the Florida Commission entered\nthe fray, circularizing all of the hundred newspapers it\nuses and 90 others with a demand that they refuse to\naccept the California copy. The Commission claims that\nall but nine papers have<acceded to its wishes, but Sunkist\nsays its copy is still appearing in 13 of the original 35\npapers and that 16 others have been added to the list,\nmaking a total of 29, with a combined circulation of three\nmillions.\n\"In addition, Mr. Geissinger asserts that several magazines have solicited the disputed copy, Magazines are\nSunkist's favorite medium; newspapers were used in thc\ncurrent drive.\n\"An early return to more decorous behavior on the part\nof both combatants is indicated. Meanwhile, the Florida\nCommission is confident that it will move its record crop\nof I6V2 million boxes at prices which again will e>qual those\nfor California oranges\u2014a feat not accomplished up to\nlast season in a good many years. And out on the other\ncoast there's no great worry about trouble marketing\nCalifornia's big production, which is usually more than\ndouble the Florida output.\"\nSo, while the rival orange producing areas of the\nUnited States hurl millions of dollars into the clash of\nadvertising claims, to publicize their yellow globes of\nsweetened and flavored water, a few growers in Canada\ngag at the idea of allocating a modest sum to bring\nbefore the consumers the superior advantages from a food\npoint of view of the meaty and wholesome Canadian apple,\nthe names of the best varieties and their seasons, and\nrecipes for their many and varied uses. Canada lags far\nbehind as an apple-eating country, and judicious use of\nadvertising space should ha^ve a marked effect in stimulating the domestic market for the fruit.\n10 YEARS AGO   I\nFrom Nation Dally Newi Files I\n . *\nHERE'S THE REASON FOR OUR\nPROLONGED COLD SPELL\nT0.-J.B.C.\nDear Sir\u2014When I heard of the\nalliance between Germany and Japan I was sure there would be trouble and it has struck B.C. First Germany has evidently traduced Japan\nto shut off the Japan current and we\nare already feeling the effect. Eventually, B.C. will be as cold as Manitoba. Someone should write to the\n\"Times\" about it.\nYours truly,\nA. MOSSBACK.\nProcter B.C.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u00ab\nBACK TO NORMAL\nWell the curlers have drifted back.\nBob Wallace of Nelson reports an\nexcellent week. He called it a holi'\nday. Bob had the distinction of\ncurling for Nelson and Vancouver\nas well. He filled in on Dave Gam\nham's Vancouver rink when Dave's\ncohorts took sick after appearing on\nthe ice in dress suits and pith helmets. A lot of the Nelson boys declare the coast rinks are commercializing the bonspiels. It is said the\nrinks are hired.and the men paid, to\ncurl. A trainer is carried and there\nwere strict regulations for time\nmen. Vancouver came.to the Kootenay as pot hunters and they were\ncertainly successful. Of course you\ncan't blame curlers looking for silverware but it has been said a lot\nof the sociability usually accompanying a bonspiel was lost this\nwinter just because the boys were\ntoo serious.\nROUND TOWN\nHere and there \u2014 Jack StDenis\ncounting up the money he won on\nthe last hockey game\u2014Jack Palmer\nexpressing his views on the events\nof the day\u2014Steve Malahofl visiting in the city over the week-end-\nBud Quin week-ending in the city\u2014\nJ. B. Gray reporting an excellent\ntime at the bonspiel\u2014Tom Wilson\nmaking plans for capturing seme\nsilverware at the next bonspiel\u2014\n\"Staff\" Stephenson reporting a\ngreat time at Trail banquet nignt\u2014\nAl Horswill will likely get a little\nmore sleep now that the weather\nhas broken\u2014He has been night lire-\nman for his pace of business since\nthc cold spell developed\u2014Horace\nSmith receiving congratulations\nupon arrival of a baby daughter\u2014\nHagcr Renwick wondering about a\ntorn $2 bill\u2014Joe Dundas of Vancouver visiting in Nelson on Saturday\u2014 \"Scotty\" Marr looking well\nand fit after a week of strenuous\ncurling\u2014\nPRISON RIOT\nObserver on the ground says cause\nof Guelph reformatory riots arose\nwhen inmates were refused right to\nget Christmas presents.\nIt's probably useless to tell the\nhard-boiled rioters that, in the final\nanalysis, there isn't any Santa Claus.\nDenied the right to hang up their\nsocks, the boys handed them out.\n'Twas the month after Christmas\nAnd, all through the pen,\nThe inmates staged riots\nAgain and again,\n...\nON THE WABASH\nFlood report from South says,\n\"Banks of the Wabash are Awash.\"\nO, i.ie moonlight's fair tonight along\nthe Wabash,\nFrom the fields there comes a steady\ncloud of spray,\nThrough the sycamores the scales of\nfish are gleaming\nC.i the banks of the Wabash far\naway.\nTHE TALK PART\nISNT 80 VITAL\n\"Passably attractive, maybe inter-\n-\u00bb>\nJanuary 25, 1927\nTOLEDO\u2014Seven were killed In\na gas explosion here which demolished a two-storey building.\nFour others were injured.\n\u2022 -\u2022   *\nVICTORIA-The  tow\u00bb  of Bella\nCoola is to be moved across the\nriver, owing to the fact that the\nriver threatens to waah it out on\nits present site; according to Hon.\nT. D. Pattullo. Residents will be\ngiven land free by the lot on the\nnew site. It will be cheaper to\nmove the town then to build works\nagainst the inroads of the river.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u00bb\n\"Dutch\" Singer, forward of the\nRossland hockey team, had to be\ncarried from the special train to the\nSisters hospital there.because of an\ninjured ankle, received while in\nplay in the game here Saturday\nnight.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022  \u25a0\nMr. and Mrs. Nelson Ball, Stanley\nstreet, have as their guests, Mrs.\nRay Ball and daughter, Margaret,\not Windermere.\n...\nPercy P. J. Coats and Allan Gilroy\nhave left via Great Northern for\nSyracuse, N. Y.\n\u2022 \u2022. \u25a0\nTy Cobb, former manager of the\nDetroit American league club, has\nbeen ottered a contract ot $ 25,000 a\nyear to play with the Baltimore\nclub of the International league.\n.   \u2022   .\nNEW YORK-Erwin Rudolph of\nChicago won the world championship pocket billiard title here January 23 by surging ahead and defeating the champion, Ralph' Green\nleaf, 450-383.\naa     \u2666     \u2022 \"\nBorn to Mr. and Mrs.. James\nMichel of Appledale at the Kootenay Lake General hospital, Jan\nuary 22, a daughter.\n| \"20 YEARS AGO\n| From Nelton Dally News Files\n*, \u00ab*\n(January 25, 1917)\nROME. Jan. 16\u2014Petrograd definitely stated the Teutonic army\nhas been defeated on both wings in\nRumania. The battle still continues\non the center front. The German\nand Austrian armies are evacuating\nBraila.\n\u2022 aa     \u2022\nVICTORIA, Jan. 18 - Eugene\nSyrc Topping, on of the most widely\nknown pioneers of the upper\ncountry and known throughout the\ncountry as the \"Father of Trail,\"\ndied here yesterday at the age ot\n73 years. He came to Victoria in\n1888 and undertook the task of laying out and building the town of\nTrail. He married in September\n1906, Mrs. Mary Jane Hanna of\nTrail, who survives him.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Ethel Allison was elected\npresident of the Robson's Woman's\ninstitute at the annual meeting\nhere.\na    a    a\nTORONTO\u2014The Imperial government has purchased nine and a\nhalf acres of land on the west side\nof Dufferiil street for a large aviation plant.\n\u2022 .   \u2022\nNEW YORK-Warnlng to shipping of the entente allies that the\ncaptured British merchantman, St.\nTheodora, has been armed by the\nGermans and is scouting in the\nsteamship lanes, was flashed tonight by wireless from a British\ncruiser off Sandy Hook.\nAUNTHET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"It takes judgement to handle a\nman. If you don't praise him enough\nhe quits tryin', and if you praise\nhim too much he starts actin' superior.\"\nALPHABETICAL\nIMPRESSIONS\nOF NELSON\n.    TO A\nPRAIRIE VISITOR\nBy M. HARH80N MANEY\nof La Fleehe, S\u00abik.\nW\u201418 FOR WIND8\nGone \"from\" the wind and not\n\"Gone with the Wind\" as written\nby Margaret Mitchell, should, on\n95 or more per cent of the days\nspent in Nelson, be the expression\nof a prairie visitor, in happy contrast to the winds of his home\nprovince.\nAway from the howling wintry\nblast, away from the dust-laden\nwinds! What a delightl\nThen too\u2014fevy storm windows,\nrarely a storm door and not a\nbanked home to be seen! Why?\nNot needed.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\nTeacher of Teachers'\nCONSIDERING PARTNER'S\nABILITY\nWhile it may hot be flattering\nto partner, his ability as both bid\nder and player must be considered\nin deciding which of you should become declarer. We have today an\ninferior partner. It proved to\nexpensive.\nbe\nAJ12\nf965\n\u00bb 10 7 \u00ab i 2\n+ 97\nAKS74\n\u2022 3*\n\u2666 AQJ8\n+ A84\nBidding went: South, i-Dia-\nmond; West, 2-CIubs; North, 2-\nDiamonds, without Justification\nEast, 4-Spades, instead of supporting partner's hearts, or even bidding only 3-Spades, to see if West\nwould rebid. One cannot severely\nbltjme West for passing the jumped\ncall for game.\nThe opening lead was the Ace of\ndiamonds, due to partner's immediate support. Then a low diamond\nput dummy in. The lone spade was\nled from dummy. When North\nplayed low, declarer should have\ntaken the double finesse of the 9\nbut instead he finessed the Q, losing to the K.\nBack came the Q of diamonds,\nforcing declarer to ruff. Then he\nled his Ace of trumps, which left\nNorth with the good J and South\nwith two trumps. East was in bad.\nHe took two rounds of winning\nhearts. A third round was led,\nwhich South ruffed. At the ninth\ntrick South led his last diamond,\ntaking next to the last trump from\ndeclarer. East led his last heart,\nwhich South ruffed with his last\ntrump. That defender had no more\ndiamonds to lead, so he led his Ace\nof clubs at the eleventh trick.\nCLAN CALEDON\nBy G. S. REES\nFor many Januarys, it has been\nthe custom ot this Sassenach 'chief\naround the Burns fiesta to pay tribute\u2014not in bawbees, but in words\nto the greatness of the Scot, and his\npowerful influence in our planetary\naffairs, of which there are such examples as the appointment ot a\ntalented Scottish man of letters to\nthe Viceroyalty of Canada, and ot\na more recent elevation to the Empire's throne of a bonnle lassie of\nGlamis, a worthy descendent of Robert II, King of the Scots. That such\ntestimony is eulogic Is because the\nwriter feels that way about them\ngenerally, and there seems no reason, if editorially permitted, why\nthe custom should be abrogated, as\nlong as the Scots behave themselves! No serious deterioration is\nnoticeable in the fine type of Scotland's clansmen and clanswomen\nresident in the Kootenays. Like\ntheir fellow exiles from the land\nof grit and grandeur in other parts\nof the Empire, they are as notorious in their fondness tor Auld Scotia as for their desertion from it,\nthe habit of exile being an inheritance from the days when their ancestors went forth to the Low Country wars. The exodus began many\ncenturies ago when Hadrian's legions tailed to keep the Picts and\nthe Scots north of the Tweed. The\nJocks have been running excursions\nat a penny a mile ever since from\nEdinburgh and all points north to\nthe uttermost edges of the Seven\nSeas.\nSCOTLAND'S  GATEWAY\nOR GET-AWAY\nAs a belated restitution for demolishing the historic barrier between Celt and Saxon, Scotland\nhas erected a great northern chain\nof universities and other keeps ot\nlearning with a basic foundation of\nfreedom, authority and responsibility, where generation after generation of students have been equipped\nand trained as leaders of men, as\nwarriors and colonial and dependency administrators for the greater\nRlory of Scotland in particular, and\nthe world In general. The exiled\nNortherner suffers an imperishable\nnostalgia: the longer he remains\nabroad, the more poignant becomes\nhis desire to seek \"The Road to the\nIsles\"!\nBRITHER8 IN EXILE\nAnnually, Scotland's sons and\ndaughters foregather here, there and\neverywhere to celebrate with great\neclat in song, supper and dance the\n-tellar achievements of their ploughman poet, the authentic folk-singer\nof the race who, I am informed,\nwas, and still is, one of her great\nown, my native land.\" The Scot\nviews it with pride from various\ntar-flung centers of the Empire!\nThe Scot cu be considered as\nwarm-hearted and generous within\nlimits: his alleged meanness is a\nlibel, though no one can deny him\nhis exact sense ot money. It is possibly a sheer coincidence that most\nol the \"thrippenny\" pieces coined at\nthe Royal Mint find their way across\nthe border; it is a very small coin.\nWere it larger, maybe ihere would\nbe more less tooth marked for the\nSassenach. The Scot is pleasantly\npredatory and can be resolutely\nruthless; he is shrewd and persistent, aye, very persistent, but none\nthe less gangs warily. There was a\ntime in .Scottish history when a\nword meant a blow, a blow a battle\nand a battle a blood-feud, even unto\nthe third and fourth generation.\nThey used the claymore first and\nexplained it afterwards! A Scot still\nguards his tongue, but not to the\ninarticulate extent of the Southerner. No one can ever accuse him of\nbeing dumb!\nAn expression of national pride\nby the Caledonian, oddly enough,\narouses no resentment; it seems\nnatural, but let a Spaniard or a\nDane, a Chinaman or a Swede, or\neven an Englishman, declaim in\nlike degree, and his audience will\nmanifest a distinct annoyance.\nThe constant harping on a hand-\nhammered romantic past has not\nmade the \u00a7cotch folk a nation of\nAuld Lang Syners, though they\ndearly love to community-sing this\nheart-warming ballad, if they know\nit! They labor under no lethal spell\nof their storied\u2014if legendary\u2014past,\nbut sublimate their imaginative\nqualities strictly to the business at\nhand, and make the most of themselves in every direction. In the\ndim past, they fought England and\nlost; they have since finally subjugated the Sassentchs without\nfighting, and without their knowledge, at least, so they say. This\nis a harmless delusion that pleases\nthem and hurts no one else.\n\"STAND8 8C0TLAND !\"\nIt would seem too splendid if some\nof Scotland's successful sons bought\na one-way homing ticket for the\nClyde, and put their national, house\nin order. Sad to relate, Scotland\nseems to be on the down grade,\nand shouting \"Home Rule for\nScotland\" will not save the day. A\nnation can only survive through\nthe vigor of its national life. The\nland is its lifeblood (This is equally\ntrue tor Canada). The highland\nglens.are empty and silent, and the\npassing of Scotland's sons to greener\nest sons, indeed, one of the world's} and more distant fields of endeavor\ngreatest men. One considers, how-  ' ~~ *\"'~J \"' \"UI1- \"\"- \"       *--'*\never, that the Feast of Burns is not\nso much a desire to perpetuate the\ncult of Bobbie the Bard as to provide adequate excuse lor a gathering of the clans so that well remembered and intimate contacts may\nonce again be recaptured, also shining memories ot the Highlands and\nthe Lowlands where their forefathers sleep recalled lor the days\nof Auld Lang Syne.\nThe luminous years between slip\naway to a pin point ol memory:\nfamiliar and beloved scenes oi the\nyester-years rise up to claim them ]\nin halcyon remembrance ol an old\nland beyond the border and beyond\nthe seas. . . .\nROVING ADVENTURER8\nhas bled it white. The northern half\nof Britain is steadily becoming less\nSclttish in blood, in traditions and\nreligious   attachment.   A   pity   'tis\ntrue.\nPIBROCH, MARCH\nAND DIRGE\nBe all this as it may, the flag\nof romance still waves over Auld\nScotia, even in this cynical and\nwar-threatened age; its bannerets\nare the Bagpipes, its music an alchemy of sound that can turn a\nScotsman's bones to water.\n\"Pipes of the misty moorlands.\"\n\"Voice of the glens and hills.\"\nIt's pulse-quickening skirls have\na softening effect too on others.\nWitness   a   Cockney's   remark   in\nVANCOUVER\nSouth   had   nothing   left  in   his\nhand but two losing clubs. Dummy I the blue\"of the sea, which the Eng-\nheld tow high clubs, but North had I lish regcrd as a personal possession!)\ndiscarded one of his clubs when his j the Scot ig established, firmly es\nWherever the m.p'.S\" 'colored red | ,\u00a3\u00ab  ^\"fwanter^cry\n(You will note more  British red !,ears .tne   P\u00abes' . '. *?\"'\"  ,cry'\nthan any other color,  apart from J *\u00a3*& '\"\/   \u00b0\u2122 ls (ln Wh techap-\n'\u00bbv. L-\u201eo. I el!' The deepest emotions of a Sco\nTHE DOCTOR\n\\jt\\ 13 \u2022 \u2666 \u2022\nLOGAN   CLENDENING,   M-1NJ\nWHY DOES THE BODY SHRINK\nA reader asks for an explanati\nof a picture in a new magazinl\nIt shows an elderly gentleman wbT\nhas shrunk in height ten inchej\nHe  made  a  mark  on   the  clpi\ndoor when he thought he was '\nginning to shrink several years agl\nand he has gone down ten and |\nhalf inches since then. He lock* f\nbe a man past middle age.\nThe cause of such shrinking ,\nusually   a   change   in   the   bond\ncalled   Paget's   disease.   It   is  nf\nat all common and  probably\nto twenty per cent of people aft^\nmiddle life have it in some fori\nMost  often   these  are   very   mil\nand hardly noticeable except to tl|\nalert eye.\nIn  a complete  case,  the  bonl\nof the skull, of the legs;, arms aif\nbackbone   are   affected.   They\nget thicker and heavier, due to 1\ndeposit of an extra supply of\ncium. The forehead becomes hlgf\nand bulging. The leg bones becon\nheavy and bowed and correspond\ningly shorter. Similar changes\ncur in the arm bones. The boni\ncan be seen in the X-ray plate f\nvery dense and thick.\nThe real cause of tlie shrinkli\nin height, however, is the chanj\nin the backbone. Between ea<\nbone in the vertebral column i;;\nlayer of softer cartilaginous U\nsue known as the inter-vertebr\ndisk. There are about twenty-tv\nof these disks, some of them a\nmost an inch wide, so it can !\nseen if they began to decrease I\nthickness, it would easily accoui\nfor the ten and a half inch shrinf\nage of this striking case.\nCAU8E  DISCOVERED\nThe cause of Padget*s diseaJ\nwas a complete mystery untillT\nfew years ago when the influenl\nof the parathyroid glands in trj\nneck on calcium formation,\ndiscovered. This activity has bet\nrelated to the excessive calciu\ndeposit of Padget's. In a few h\nstances, overgrowth uf the pan\nthyroids has been found in the:\ncases, and their removal hi\nchecked the course of the diseas\nIt appears this was so in the caj\npictured for the caption reads, \"TI\ndoctors checked his parathyro:\ntrouble.\"\nMild degrees of the conditio!\nas I have said, occur in many, eld\nerly people. It is common fifl\nthose over seventy to shrink. Til\nproffessor of anatomy in one of ou|\nbest medical \/schools says that T\nskeleton which can be dissectJ\nand put together again must coma\nfrom a man under thirty. Thef\nchanges do no harm, although thj\nare frequently associated wij\nrheumatic pains.\nAdolescents are used to findin\nthemselves outgrowing things, b\\\n| after a person has been mature ft\n| a score or more years, it com*\n' as a distinct shock to him to fta\ni that his hat or his gloves or h\nI shoes arc too small ur that h\n| coat is too long.\nI But those things happen aiil\nneedn't be alarming. The condl\ni tion where the hands and feet gf\nlarger is called acromegaly.\nyounger life it would result\ngiantism. But in the middle-agel\nthere is just an enlargement of th|\nhands, feet and face.\nBank of Canada has purchased for\n$130,000 or at the rate of $2000 a\nfoot a site on the corner of Hastings and Homer streets for a new\nbank headquarters.\n* \u2022   \u00bb\nDuring December, four cars of\nsilver-lead ore shipped from the\nUtica mine to Trail netted $30,000,\none care bringing in over $8,000.\n* *   \u2022\nV. Yolen Williams, prominent\nSpokane mining man, is visiting\nin Nelson.\nI   30 YEARS AGO   I\n| From Nelson Dally News Fllei !\n.   , partner rutted declarer's last heart.\nThe  Imperial, When   South   !ed  a  club|   North\ntablished. The world is his oyster,\nits pearls a permanent keepsake,\nand success is computed in terms\nof a mathematical certainty rather\nruffed with his J and led his last\ndiamond,   which   declarer   ruffed\nwith   his   last   spade.   East   went j tnan , problematical equation. Men\ndown three tricks on ins contract.1 -      ._....-     \u25a0 *\u2022\u2014\nHad declarer taken the double\nfinesse in spades when he first led\nthe suit, he would have saved\nSomething, as when he ruffed his\nAce and Q would have picked up\nall but one of South's trumps, but\neven then he could not have gone\ndeepest emotions ol a Scot\nare expressed through this ancient\ninstrument of wind in peace and\nin war. He is able thereby to commune with his dead chieftains, and\nsee the mists rolling across the face\nof the Grampians. Never can I listen to their droning but a sleeping\nmemory is re-awakened of tlie tragic aftermath of war.\nSUCH IMPUDENCE\n; MONCTON, N.B., (CP)-An ep\n, demic of thefts from cars was ba\nenough, and then someone had th\n! nerve to steal a policeman's rt\nj volver left in a car parked at tt\nI officer's door.\n(JANUARY 26, 1907)\n3. G. Blaylock of Trail, new superintendent of the Hall Mines smelter,\nis visiting in Nelson.\n...\nA. Peck of New York is a guest at\nthe Royal.\n...\nThe Farrel block in Moyie was\ndestroyed and over $5000 dollars\ndamage resulted when the block\ncaught fire. The fire is said to have\ntion the British Empire to an Englishman: he will look solemn and, .\u201e...\u201e\u201e\u201e.,\u201e.,\nmay raise his hat, but will rarely! GHOSTS OF ARMAGEDDON\nlook posse-sive, but mention \"Eng-! The eve of dedication of tlie\nland\" and his face lights up; he,Menin Memorial by the Eighth\nwill even become humanly loqua-. Edward of England at the Ypres\ncious. Likewise the name \"Scotland\" ramparts. The sun is flooding the\ngame. The deal was played at the brines a Positive Kleam of a\"ecti\u2122 I !?T.lyingJ plal\" \"'* T,armtn a?d\nwrong call. to the eye of a Scot, and if you can ' light,  and  Sabbath bells  call  the\nHad West been allowed to ulay I ro\" nim some reverberating Doric | Yprians to Mass. A memorial service\nthe call, either 4-Hearts 5-Hearts I R's in a few well-chosen phrases i is being held in a British war cem-\n' anent heathery moors, peat-brown etery just off the Menln road; it\nstreams and mist-clad hills, he will! stands almost within the shadow of\nlay his head on your shoulder and i the massive monument. Five nun-\nweep like a baby! I dred Scottish pilgrims, mostly old\nFISHERIES DO WELL\nGRAND HARBOR, N.B., (CP>-\nThe lobster fishing season for Gran\nMauan island opened auspiciousl\nMore than 20,000 traps wen? set an\nsome 35,000 lobsters taken.\ncsting, eminently respectable lemale,\n25, craves unusual legitimate position; can talk, write and cook; geography not important, Z, 2036 Times\nAnnex.\"\u2014N.Y. Times.\nCome  at once,  and bring your\nfrying pan and eggs for two!\nor 5-Clubs, he would have lost\nnothing except to the Aces of diamonds and clubs, as his trumps\ncould not have been exheused by\nruffing him with diamond leads.\nWest's excuse for not taking the\ncall away from his partner was:\n\"I know him. He probably would\nhave bid 5-Spades.\" I question if\nthat could have been so.\nstarted at the rear of W. H. Crosby's\nstore.\n...\n\"The Makers of Modern Rome\"\nby Mrs. Oliphant and the \"The Doctor\" by Ralph Conor have been\nadded to the books at the Nelson\nlibrary.\n...\nPat Daly, A. Hu^a.as and J. Ryan,\nowners of the Yukon-Kitten group\nof claims have bonded the property\nto A. H. Stiles and brother of Spokane. The consideration named was\n$35,000.\nABANDON8  SCOTLAND  TO   ITS\nOWN TEMPERATURE\nAt no time has life been easy lor\nthe Scot in his homeland. A stub- j\nborn soil, a braw and bleak climate\nwith a winter in August and January, and limited chances lor sell-\nadvancement, apart lrom the Romany strain, have all turned his\nsteps towards the setting sun. He\ncarries into a gregarious exile something of the grand simplicity pf the\nrugged faith of his forefathers, in\nwhich he was nurtured and educated\nand a measure of the stern discipline inspired by the granite\nstrength and beauty, majesty and\ngrandeur of the towering hills o'\nHome. Scott well knew the Scot\nwhen he queried: \"Breathes there\na man with soul so dead who never\nto himself hath said, This is my\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Gee. McManui\nREfAEM6EB WHEN SOUR DAD'S. COUSIN\nFOUND OUT HIS MEDICINE HAD A KICK\nIN IT- HE OiDNT WANT TO GET WELL-\nNOUR FACTHER V*-S SO ILLHE 6ENT\nFOR DOCTOR PHIL LA\u00a7C?rTLE-aUT\nWHEN 1-6 SAW THE DOCTOR HE DECIDED HED -.JUST Aft SOON QE SICK-\n-<OUR QRAMDrAOTHER WANTED\nMDUR COUSIN \"SINNY'TO BE A\nLAWYER-SO HE WENT TO NEV,\nYORK- YEARS LATER HE WROTE\nTHAT HE WAS \/-TTHE BAR-\nand poor, from their little white\nhouses amid the hollows ol the\nHighlands have crossed England's\nnarrow sea lor the first\u2014and the\nlast\u2014time to glimpse the burial spot\nof their beloved lads whose Odyssey\nended in the Hare ol battle within\nthe lire-ringed Salient far beyond\nthe seas of Home, and who now lie\nin soil that is for ever Scotland.\nThey lay bunches of heather and\nflowers lrom home gardens on the\nmounded graves, and hold up bravely enough till the pipers in scarlet\nand tartan pour lourth the ancient\nBorder Lament\u2014\"The Flo'ers o' the\nForest\"\u2014the mourning song ol a\npeople inconsolable after the disaster of Flodden. Then the pain\nof loss overcomes the pride of race,\nand the old women weep softly,\nclinging to each other like little\nchildren, while the old men stand\nerect and the tears unchecked run\ndown their cheeks, as the haunting\nlament goes sobbing, sobbing its\ngrand way into every dip and hollow of that land of phantom bivouacs where the corn now grows\ngolden, and the scarlet poppies hang\ntheir silken heads in the fields of\nFlanders.\n\"Still   your   requiem   rolls\nFrom east to west yet calls\nYour mournful clarion\nWhile the hour grows late\nAt Menin Gate . . .\"\nOh, the years lhat the locust iiath\neaten! For me, it was a poignant\nmoment, and found my heart \"more\nmoved than with a trumpet.\" It\ndid more to make me a convert to\nan uncompromising pacificism than\nany ha\/rowing experience of war\nitself.\nBLUE BONNETS\nOVER THE BORDER\nThis memory is a living link with\none other\u2014a war time memory, in\nancient Edinburgh. The glory of a\nLowland sunset with a red tumu\ntous sky over the far slopes of th\nLammermuirs; the hour \"'twixt ti\ngloaming and the mirk,\" and tl\nkhaki-clad pipers of the Roy\nScots-Pontius Pilate's body guard-\nin swinging kilts skirl a mart!\nretreat from the higli battlemen\nof the Argyle Battery atop tl\nbattle-scarred and sharp sidi\nCastle Rock. The music melts mut\nly away in a quiet benidiction ov\nthe grim and battered roofs of tl\n\"Royal Mile\" below, and loses\nsell in the corridors of the sky,\nthe friendly stars shine do\\J\nthrough the thin veil of grey ml\nthat creeps at dusk through evel\nI nook and corner of thc rocky C0|\nI tours of Auld Reekie.\nTHE SOUL OF SCOTLAND\nj    Castle Rock with its sense of e\nduring permanence symbolizes tl\n| very  spirit  of  Scotland's  histoi\ni On this craggy bastion with its iro\ncolored   fortress   and   grey   gau\nI buildings has been erected one\nthe world's finest war memoria\nI cosmic in conception and person\nin appeal, a memorial to Scotlam\nwarrior dead\u2014one hundred thot\nand of them\u2014who carried their lo\nof native land with a fine gallant\ninto the Valley of Death on all t\nscattered battlefronts of the gre\nwar, and gave their lives lor\nregimental glory and a work\nstupidity.\nTHEIR NAME\nLIVETH FOR EVERMORE\nTheir names ate enrolled in 1<\nlers uf gold within a steel cask\nlined witli cedar wood set in virg\nrock. A Lament in stone, Scotlam\nown shrine, a requiem and a hyn\nof praise for ever.\nBut my space is over-run. It\nfitting that I lay down my pen i\nthis note of Scotland's shining he:\ntage of valor and splendid se\nsacrifice, and join with others\npaying tribute on the night tl\nbelongs to Robert Burns , lo all h\nsons and daughters who in volu\ntary exile in the far places of t\nBritish Realms ever strive to mai\ntain the fine traditions of the Han\nland they love so well.\nA guid guid nicht tae ane a' iQ\n J1   .-wi'i-n\nw*\nP|f4pwppipsi|JlM.Jl^\nall Times (age\ninners in Game\nWith Pats, 28-15\nnquished Make Fine\nRally After the\nInterval\nAIL, B. C, Jan. 23 - While\nsqueezed in a lone field basket\nB first half, Trail Times smoth-\ntheir opponents' hoop for 19\nI which meant a 28-15 victory\n, men's intermediate league\nstball fixture at Memorial Sat-\nf night.\nlerging from the first half with\nlone basket, Pats must have\nrthed during the interval ..ot\ntheir own weaknesses but some\n!gy that enabled them to turn\nable and establish a five-point\nin* in the second half, which\n\u25a0tunately for them was insuf-\nit to effectively weaken Trail\na' tight grip on the lead,\nuns and scores follow:\nla\u2014Ed Groves 2, Desmond\ni 4, Harold Covcrdale 1, Clyde\nledy, Clark Graham 8 and M.\nik.\nill Times\u2014D. Mandeville 2, C.\ni 4, S. McLeod, G. Longe 2,\nreir, A. Bremner 6, S. Lewis 7\nJalph Temple 7.\n10 Pagnan refereed.\n(resloniles\nHere lor Games\ner 50 players and sports en-\nasls from Creston were in Nel-\non Friday and (Saturday to\nIn or attend the basketball and\ney games here over the week-\nfeaturing Creston and Nelson\nis. Four of the girls playing\netball Friday stayed over for\nrday's hockey game, returning\ni Sunday morning,\nnong Crestonites in Nelson dur-\nthe two days were: Mrs. A.\nenson, David Armitage, Mr. and\nJ. Apolizer, Mrs. H. McLaren,\nand Mrs. G. Messinger, Fred\n1, Mrs. H. Langston, Miss Nissie\nobb, Miss Falenor Blair, Miss\n1 Van Ackeran, Miss Grace\nlamley, Miss Elizabeth Arml-\nMiss June Browell, Miss Beryle\nler, Miss Ruby Palmer, Miss\nana McCreath, Doug Corrie,\n\u2022 Morabito, C. Wilson, Mr.\n:pe, Mr. Gauche, Mr. March-\nc, Morley Anderson, Allan Gil-\nJimmy McMahon, Wilfred La-\nB, Marion Cooper, Helen Staples,\ny Speers,  Opal  LaBelle,  Dot\n\u2022 BYRD WINS O.OLF TITLE\nSARASOTA, Fla., Jan. 24 (AP>-\nSaimmy Byrd, one-time'New York\nYankee and Cincinnati Reds outfielder, won the National Baseball\nPlayers Golf tournament here. His\nscore was 284, even par for the 72\nholes.\nSPECIALAGENT\nWINS EASILY\nLOS ANGELES, Jan. 24 (CP>-\nSpecial Agent, owned by Major A.\nC. Taylor of Vancouver, equalled\nthe track record Saturday to conquer a field of candidates for the\ncoming $100,000 Santa Anita handicap and win the $3500 added San\nPasqual handicap over a mile and\none-sixteenth in 1:42.2. This record\nwas set Feb.' 2, 1935, by Jabot.\nSpecial Agent won by four len-ths\nover W. Flanagan's Chanceview,\nSangreal of the Milky Way farms\nwas third.\nWith Jockey Basil James in the\nsaddle, the five-year-old son of Sir\nGalahad forged into the lead soon\nafter the start and was never headed, leaving such capable handicap\ncandidates as E. F. Seagram's Waterloo, Ont., champion, Stand Pat, Accolade, Star Shadow and Sobriety\nfar behind.\nStand Pat, a favorite packing 122\npounds against the Taylor entry's\n114, finished 11th in the field of 12\nhorses.\nNELSON DAILY NEW8, NELSON. B. C\u2014MONOAY MORNING, JAN. 28, 1937.\nKimberley to\nSend Juvenile\nTeam to Nelson\nGame Scheduled at\nLocal Rink for\nFebruary 13\nN. C. Stibbs, sponsor of teams in\nthe Nelson Bantam, Midget and Juvenile hockey leagues, announced\nSunday evening that the strong\nKimberley juvenile aggregation of\nhockey stars would play the Nelson Panthers juveniles in Nelson on\nSaturday, February 13.\nThe local juvenile Panthers have\nscored five consecutive wins in the\nNelson league, and also copped one\nexhibition game, having scored 25\ngoals against 11 goals in the five\nleague games.\nBacked up by a strong defence in\nVictor Delpuppo, Frank Raukets\nand Roy Breeze, the forwards of\nthe team have proved a strong\ncombination, the Albert Hooker,\nJim Niven, Keith Younger line having scored 17 goals and being credited with eight assists.\nLes Trainor. Art Guscott, Frank\nSwerydo and Ken Vere are all capable substitutes.\nBUY OR SELL WITH A WANT AD.\nAll Five Prizes in Points Play Go\nto Trail Rinks at End of Bonspiel\n-a*\nPalmer, Dot Wightman, J. Young,\nHerb Couling, L. Maddiss, B. Bourdon, J. Dale, B. Nastasi, D. Trus-\ncotte, B. Crawford, Jake Fritz, Gordon Young, Walter Rowan, Homer\nEddy, Jim Brown, Bob Currie, Bud\nFowelie, and R. Clark. (Names were\navailable, through thc courtesy of\nMiss June Browell.)\nCUNNINGHAM WINS\nNEW YORK, Jan. 24 (AP) \u2014\nGlenn Cunningham, former aKnsas\nFlyer running his first race in the\ncolors of the New York Curb Exchange, raced to an easy victory in\nthe three quarter mile handicap invitation, feature event of the Osceola\nclub games Saturday night. Cunningham, had a 10-yard margin over\nLou Burns, Manhattan college's intercollegiate indoor 1500 and outdoor 800 metre champion who started also from the scratch mark with\nWilliam Ray, of the New York Curb\nExchange in third place. The time\nwas 3:09.7.\nsenal and Charlton Both Win\nlo Take Unchallenged Top Rung\nree Points Ahead of\nBrentford in the\nEnglish\nDNDON, Jan. 24 (CP Cable).-\nr a close struggle between sev-\nclubs since the start of the\npaign, Arsenal and Charlton\nletlc have finally cut loose from\npack in the race for the Eng-\nFootball league championship,\neek-end victories put the Lon-\nrivals at the top of the league\nding with 34 points each, three\na than Brentford, the nearest\nlender.\niturday's matches were played\nypical English football weather,\ni was general and many grounds\nconverted into quagmires.\nsome parts of the pitch the\nI was ankle-deep at Highbury\nre Wolverhampton Wanderers\nup a great fight before going un-\n8-0 to Arsenal. Jones, a Wolver-\npton forward, was off the field\not the game through injury,\nthe rest of the squad kept the\nners at bay until 10 minutes\nthe end. Then the Londoners\nrmed round the Wolves goal,\nBastin, Drake and Bowden scoring.\nA great second-half rally gave\nCharlton a 2-1 victory at Birmingham. White put the home team in\nthe lead before the interval but\nafter the change of ends John Oakes\nequalized from a penalty and Wilkinson put the game on ice two\nminutes later.\nCharlton's players combined cleverly while the midlandcrs presented\na scrappy attack.\nScott rammed home three goals\nto give Brentford a draw with Sunderland, champions last season.\nDuns, Carter and Gurney were Sunderland's marksmen. The northerners had a great chance to pull out\nwith((,a victory near the close but\nMathieson saved Carter's penalty\nkick.\nForty thousand, the biggest crowd\nof the day, saw Liverpool defeat\nEverton 3-2 in a thrilling game on\nthe latter's ground. Play was fast\nand clever throughout. In the first\n16 minntes Howe and Taylor tallied\nfor the home team, Stevenson reducing the margin. In the second\nperiod Balmer put Liverpool further ahead, Stevenson getting his\nsecond for Everton shortly before\nthe close.\nSomerville and Fred\nWendel Tie for\nTop Honors\nTRAIL, B. C., Jan. 24 \u2014 Prizes in\nthe points competition, the only individuals event of the entire Trail\nbonspiel, are held in Trail. Five\nprizes were posted, and three scores\nwon them\u2014William Somerville and\nFred Wendel tieing with 36 each;\nE. J. Provost ranking next with 34:\nand W. H. Baldrey and A. M. Chesser all even at 32 for the last two\nplaces.\nBaldrey holds the previous high\nscore for this competition\u201459.\nFollowing are the points scored,\nwith the five wirniers first and thc\nremainder in the order in which\nthey were listed on the score sheets:\nI.T.O.T.Tot.\nWilliam Somerville 20   16   36\nFred Wendel   16  20   36\nE. J. Provost   13   21   34\nA. M. Chesser .. 16   17   32\nW. H. Baldrey  16   17   32.\nIan Somerville      17   10   27\nDoug Wetmorc ....     13    4   17\nDan   McLeod  12\nJ. E. Craig  12\nJ. p. Schofield     7\nW. G. Carrie     4\nDr. W. R. Williamson ..:.. 10\nW. H. Shepherd   10\nW. Robertson .       12\nR. Anderson   12\nDavie Smart   10\nRoily Wickstrom    15\nH. R. Christie     7\nJ. Shannon 15\nG. Harvey    11\nH. L. Hunter         5\nR. Donaldson  15\nW. E. Newton     5\nJack Kitehin   10\nAlex Laurie  -... 10\nGerry Ortner   13\nM. Morrisson   13\nJ. D. Hartley     6\nS. H. Hopkins    8\nJack Balfour    6   11   17\nG. H- Kilburn     10   18   28\nGordon Balfour    7   17   24\nAlex Kerr   \u201e   10   10   20\nWilliam McLeary  10   12   22\nP. F. Mclntyre   11   10   21\nJames Atwell    9\nDoug Turnbull  ..    9\nWalter Barber     8\nW. J. Rosenbloom 18\nJoe Rochon     7\nW. Turnbull     7\nR. P. Dockerill     8\nLes Mowat  11\nWalter Brown  10\nColin Forrest  12\nBob McGerrigle .\nBOWLING THEM OVER\nHead Pin Hot Key to Success\nBy MORT LIND8EY\nA.B.C.   Star   and   Instructor   and\nCentral Press Canadian Writer\nNow, with some idea of the\nfundamentals iri mind, it ia about\ntime to start knocking down some\npins. After all, that is the main\nidea.\nAs you know, the first ball you\nroll in each frame is your \"strike\nball.\" Dropping that first ball\ninto the \"one-three\" pocket consistently will give you your share\nof strikes and a high score.\nDONT \"CR088 OVER\"\nOne of the problems of all\nbowlers, veterans as well as novices, is to keep your ball from\nstriking the head pin too full or,\nworse yet, from \"crossing over.\"\nA cross-over ball, which strikes\nthe pins on the left of the headpin,\nleaves spares on the right side of\nthe alley which are more difficult\nthan on the left side. Keep that first\nball at right center of the head\npin, in the one-three pocket. Then\nif you don't get a strike, your remaining spares are a more natural\ntarget.\nToo many young bowlers make\nthe mistake of thinking that the\nhead pin is the key pin. That isn't\ntrue. As a matter of fact, the No.\n5 pin, which is the middle pin in\nthe third row, is the most important. When your ball crashes\nthrough to spill that No. 5 pin, the\nchances are good that you'll get\nall of them.\nFind your spot and then, with\nenough but not too much speed, fire\naway at that one-three ' pocket\ncatching the head pin to right\ncenter. Slow motion pictures have\nproved how the ball is deflected,\nand if you do not hit that head\npin quite full enough, the chances\nare that your ball will glance off,\nfail to penetrate to the No. 5 pin\nand you'll be left a bad spare. But\nhit that pocket directly enough and\nyour chances for a strike are good.\nYes, there are many angles to\nbe considered, which makes more\nremarkable an exhibition of bowling that I witnessed a few months\nago. In New York, an association\nof blind boys have bowling as one\nof their sports. These courageous\nchaps face handicaps that seem almost insuperable. But the way they\nbowl is surprising.\nAn iron railing on thc left of the\nMort Llndsey shows Jack Dempsey the \"one-three pocket.\"\napproach lo the foul line helps them\nto find direction and learn to judge\nthe spot on tho alley at which to\nput down their ball. The pin boy\ncalls back what pins are left standing and the boys go after the spare\nwith uncanny ability. Often they\nare able to tell from thc crash of\nthe pins just how many were\nkno-ked. down. Invariably they can\ntell whether or not a strike has\nresulted.\nThe leaders among these boys\nof the New York Guild for the\nJewish Blind average from 125 to\n150 and have competed often on\neven te.rms with opponents who\ncan see, They deserve the plaudits\nof howlers everywhere for their\ncourage and I, for one, would be\ninterested in seeing arrangements\nmade for them to bowl during the\nA.B.C. tournament in New York in\nMarch. Perhaps it can be arranged.\nTRACK STARS TO\nBE AT SPOKANE\nand field meet scheduled for lhe\nSpokane armory the last week In\nMarch said today three of the na-\nSPOKANE, Jan. 24 (AP).\u2014Direc-1 lion's outstanding performers would\ntors of the A. A. U. Indoor track  participate.\nThe three arc Glenn Cunningham,\nworld record holder in the mile;\nArchie Sanluomanl, one of Cunningham's greatest rivals, and Cornelius Johnson, national high jump\nchampion.\nioa\n-PAGE SEVEN\nWARNOCK GIVES ABERDEEN 1-0\nVICTORY OVER THE CELTIC SQUAD\nRugby League\nLONDON, Jan. 24 (CP Cable)-\nEngliah rugby league games played\nSaturday resulted as follows:\nBarrow 14, Broughton Rangers 13.\nBatley 10, Bradford Northern B.\nBramley 16, Newcastle 14.\nFeatherstone 6, St. Helen's 11.\nHuddersfield 11, Leeds 3.\nHull Kingston 17, Castleford 6.\nHunslet 19, Dewsbury 5.\nKeighley 16, Swinton 3.\nRochdale Hornets 2, Halifax 6.\nSalford 33, Strcatham and Mit-\ncham 0.\nSt. Helen's Rees 0, Liverpool Stanley 7.\n\u25a0 Wakefield Trinity 17, Oldham 7.\nWarrington 41, Leigh 2.\nWidnes 8, Hull 10:\nYork 4, Wigan 15.\nScores Seven in\nSoccer Gome\nMANSFIELD, England, Jan. 24-\n(CP cable)\u2014Netting seven of his\nteam's goals, E. Harston, Mansfield\nTown center-forward, had the best\nIndividual scoring feat in English\nleague football Saturday. The northern section, third division club\nswamped Hartlepools United 8-2 before a home crowd.\nWhile Harston's achievement is\nthe best this season, the record was\nset last year by J. Payne of Luton\nTown. Payne scored 10 of the goals\nin Luton's 12-0 victory over Bristol\nRovers, April 13, 1936, In another\nthird division fixture.\nRUGBY UNION\nLONDON, Jan. 24 (CP Cable)-\nEngllsh Rugby Union games played\nSaturday resulted as follows:\nBlackheath 8, Headingley 3.\nPolice Union 8, The Army 21.\nRichmond 11, Leicester 12\nRosslyn Park 10, Old Merchant\nTaylors 7.\nAbertillery 5, Cross Keys 5.\nBedford 16, Aldershot Services 0.\nCambridge University 6, Harlequins 11,\nCardiff 3, Swansea 0.\nDevonport Services 3, Redruth 6.\nGloucester 0, Bristol 0.\nHalifax 6, Bradford 4.\nMoseley 0, Bath 0.\nNeath S.-Aberavon 3.\nNewport 3, Llanelly 0.\nOxford University 17, Scottish 15.\nWaterloo 6, North of Ireland 7.\nWeston-Super-Mare 17, Plymouth\n3.\nHeriotonlans 10, Gala 6.\nWalsonians 30, Jedforest 0.\n10-year-jinx Is Laid\nLow; Rangers Also\nVictors\nGLASGOW, Jan. 24 (CP Cable) .-\nCeltic's 10-year jinx at Pittodrle, lair\nof the league-leading Aberdeen was\nlaid low this week-end. Crashing\nthrough the Glasgow team's defence\nfor a 1-0 triumph Saturday, the\nDons atraddled a formidable obstacle in their drive to a Scottish\nFootball league title. Fully aware\nof Glasgow Rangers' power and their\ntwo games in hand, the Aberdonians\nare driving ahead in high gear.\nD. Warnock, sturdy winger, was\nthe toast of the town after his game-\nwinning goal. The opening period\nended without a score and after two-\nminutes ot the final Warnock sizzled\na shot that Kennaway, in the Celtic\ngoal, failed to hold. The Parkhead\nteam tried hard to equalize but the\nDons laid a barrier that defied all\nthe strategy of the visiting forwards.\nThe loss shunted Celtic to fourth\nposition, one point behind Hearts,\nwho disposed of Partick Thistle 5-1.\nThird Lanark follows up, five points\nin the rear, and Motherwell replaced\nFalkirk on the sixth rung of the\nladder with a 1-0 verdict over Kilmarnock. Falkirk tied with Clyde\n2-2.\nRangers and St. Mlrren also went\nthrough a goal-less first half but the\ncupholders drew away from the\nPaisley team with two goals in the\nfinal period. Venters and Smith were\nthe marksmen.\nPaced by A, Black and J. Walsh,\nboth of whom put in two-goal performances, Hearts sent Partick\nhome a badly-beaten team. Warren\ngot thc final goal for the victors,\nWallace averting the shutout.\nThird Lanark and St. Johnstone\nput up a great battle before the\nCathkin Park squad won 3-2. The\ncount was 2-2 in the first half and\nCraig eased through In the final\nhalf to give the visitors the win.\nKinnaird and Mason were third Lanark's other scorers with Beattie and\nMcLaren netting for the Saints.\nBirthday Greeting\nBy the Canadian Press\nTo Marvin (Cyclone) Wentworth,\nslocky defenceman ot Montreal\nMaroons in the National Hockey\nleague. Born at Grimsby. Ont., 32\nyears ago yesterday, Wentworth\nbroke into the major league with\nChicago Black Hawks. He is regarded as one of the best defence-\nmen in hockey.\n12\n24\n9\n21\n4\n11\n4\n8\n8\n18\n7\n17\n11\n23\n11\n23\n10\n20\n13\n28\n11\n15\n16\n31\nII\n19\n9\n14\n16\n21\n14\n19\n11\n21\nb\n15\n8\n21\n(i\n19\n8\n14\n12\n20\nTRAIL CUP\nSECONDARY TO ROSSLAND CUP\nP. F. Mclntyre, T .... *,\u201e.\u201e,\u201e\u201e\nJames Scott, K McIntyre\nChas. Hoefer. T  u\u201e\u201e,\u201e\nA. S. Horswill, N ..... Hoef\u00ab \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nG. W. Weir, T  ,,\u201e,,\u201e\u201e\u201e\nSam Paterson, R  Paterson\nJ. R. Craig, T   .\nE. James, K  James  -\nM*1\nHocfe\nPaterson\nPaterson\nRochon .\n9 18\n7 16\n3 11\n8 24\n12 10\n12 19\n12 20\n12 23\n10 20\n14 26\n8   19 27\nKIMBERLEY CUP\nT, H. Wheldon, T\t\nW, G. Carrie, T - Carrie ...\nA. Browne, N\t\nC. D. Blackwood, N.. Browne\nJ. A. Wadsworth, T..\n8yd Crowe, V Crowe .\nBrowne\n:#\u25a0\nMcGerrigle\nn.\nR. C. McGerrigle, T..\nJ. R. Craig, T  McGerrigle\nW. E. Newton, T ....\nGeorge McKay, T ..\nA. J. McDonell, T ...\nFrank Avery, V \t\nBob Scobie, V\nWm. Marr, N ,...\nNewton\nAvery .\nMcGerrigle\nNewton\nMcGerrigle\nMarr .\nH. M. Whimster, N....\nHugh Beckett, T Beckett \t\nJ. H. Woodburn, T...\nW. L. Wood, T Woodburn\nBilly Whalen, V\nBeckett\nBilly Whalen, V\t\nI. F. Tyson, T Whalen\nR. Somerville, T ....\nJack Balfour, T  Somervllle\nJoe Dundas, V\t\nRobert Andrew, N.... Dundas\t\nJ. Finney, R\t\nW. F. Truswell, T .... Finney \u201e\t\nWhalen\nNewton\nMcGERRIGLE\nWhalen\nSomerville\nfc*\nWhalen\nhas. Dodimead, T..\u201e\nE. Wade, T  Dodimead\nI\n\u00ab. S. Harvey, T\n1\nDodimead\nDodimead\nGarnham .\n.James, K .\nGarnham .\n \u2014 i\t\nW. H. Baldrey, T .... \u201e.,.,_\u201e\nDave Garnham, V... BaMrey \u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\nA. G. Harvey, T  \u201e\nW. M. Archibald, K.. Harvey  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\nH. E. Wade, T  \u201e   ,\nJoe Rochon, K Rochon  -\nChas. Dodimead, T.... _ ..\nT. R. Wilson, N Dodimead\nW. F. Truswell, T .... ,\u201e , , .\nJames Wright, R  Wright   ....\nJ. A. Wadsworth, T. _ .\nC. D. Blackwood, N\u201e Wadsworth .\nH. T. Beckett, T  ,,    ..  \u2022\nJ. C. Urquhart, R ... Urquhart  ...\nRoily David, V  _\nH. M. Whimster, N.... Davl<i \t\nBaldrey\nRochon\nWadsworth\nRochon\nDavid\nDavid\nDavid\nAl Jeffs, N , \u201e\nRoy Stephens, T JeHs\nJ. B. Gray, N  .\nFrank Ellis, R   Gray\nJ. W. Burden. R  - .,,..,\nW. Griffith, R  GrliIlth\nWilliam Rae, T  _\nT. H. Wheldon, T .... Rac \t\nDavid\nGray\nRae\nRae\nDavid\nDt. C. A. Mittun, T.\nJe- Dundas, V  Dundas ,\n\u2022 \"      W. L. Wood, T ...\nW. H. Gates, F .\nJ, Finney, R\t\nR. Somervllle, T\t\nJohn McGowan, CC.\nHoward Bush, N\t\nSyd Crowe, V\t\nJack Balfour, T\t\nRobert Andrew, N..\nL. F. Tyson, T .\nit, T .\nW. Forrest,\nA. M. Chesser, T ..\nW. Whalen, V\t\nD. Martin, K\t\nA. J. McDonell, T .\nWood \t\nGates \t\nMcGowan\nCrowe  \t\nBalfour ....\nForrest\t\nWhalen ....\nMcDonell\nGates\nMcGowan\nMcGowan\nMcGowan\nScobie \u201e\t\nBalfour\nWhalen\nWhalen\nH. R. Banks, K .\nB. .Scobie, V\t\nScobie\nW. E. Newton, T.\nA. Browne, N ....\nW. Marr, N\t\nH. Bowyer, V .\n  Browne\nBowyer  ....\u201e._._\nR. McGerrigle, T .\nG. J. Kinnis, T\t\nScobie\nKinnis\nSCOBIE\nScobie\nKinnis\nW. Pollock. R McDonald\nP. R. McDonald, T... Mcuon,m \u2022\u2022-\nL. James, K  Tnr,.Pr\n-* Ha Woodburn, T... James\t\nL. James .\n 1 '\nGeo. McKay, T .\nW. G. Carrie. T .\nCarrie\nL. James .\n CHAPTER 37\n\"It battles me. . . .\" Graham kept\non repeating to Selden as he went\nalong the dim corridor of the Severinge crypt wherein the lights had\nnot been turned on. He seemed a\nbroken man, and had no more tight\nleft In him after the bloodhounds\nhad followed the scent of Sylvia's\ncoat to the crypt.\n\"Where Is Lady Severinge?\" he\nasked of James at the gateway.\n'This place is like a house ol the\ndead.\"\n\"Her ladyship has not yet returned\u2014she went out this morning.\"\n\"She's either gone to see that\nfellow Colindale, or she knows\nmore about this affair than we\nthink,\" Graham grumbled. \"You'll\nfollow this up, Selden?\"\n\"I shall do so at once,\" the detective replied. \"We are to have\nHucks here as a night watchman\nshortly.\"\nGraham wrinkled his brows,\npuzzling out what the connection\ncould be, but shrugged his shoulders and made for the door.\n\"Will you take the car, sir?\"\naTames asked Graham politely. \"I\nwill phone the chauffeur.\"\n\"I think 1 will. Ton my soul,\nthis Incident has upset me. I suppose It's that damned crypt.\"\nJames had gone to the phone,\nfor the garage was with the\nstables on the other side of the\nlake.\n\"I suppose it is no good asking\nyou, Colonel, to tell me who killed\nSir Henry Severinge?\" Selden said\nvary quietly.\n\"Asking me? What the devil\ndo you mean\u2014how should I\nknow? I thought it was the job of\nthe police to find that out. What\na piece of impertinence!\"\nSelden was undisturbed by  the\noutburst. \"Why did you want to\nkeep Heid at your house last\nnight? Please don't tell me the\ntale of his being nervous\u2014he's not\nthat type. Believe me, it is\nserious.\"\nThe Colonel remained silent, and\nSelden saw that an inward struggle was going on in his mind. Perhaps he might have spoken, but\nthe sound of the car coming round\nthe drive by the lakeside for him\nand the bright beams ol the headlights seemed to influence his decision. He laughed harshly, and\nheld out his hand quite unexpectedly.\n\"I'll think it over-it I can I'll\ntell you. I believe you are trying\nto do your best; I only hope you\nare successful.\"\nSelden stood and watched him\nga, heaving a sigh. \"What a tool!\"\nhe said, not bitterly, but with regret.\nIn the meantime James had returned, \"I! you don't mind, sir, I'll\nclose the doors\u2014I generally do at\nsundown.\" James stood beside\nSelden, deferential as ever, bul\nwith an uneasy expression that did\nnot escape Selden.\n\"Do so by all means,\"\nThe doors were drawn across,\nbolted with heavy iron bars, and\nthe James turned a huge key in\ntlie lock and put it in his pocket\nwith an air of satisfaction.\n\"Keel safer now, eh?\"\n\"Wily yes, sir\u2014there are a number of valuables m the house. II\nyou will excuse me, sir, I'll just go\nround as I always do to see that\nthe shutters are properly fastened.\"\n\"Quite so. James, but before you\ndo that, will you telj me where I\ncan find Miss Lawrence and the\nchildren, or must 1 investigate the\nlibrary and the way from there to\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspaper  Association\nTELEPHONE  144\nPrivate Exchange connecting te\nall  Departments\t\nSupscription Rates\nSingle copy % M\nBy carnei per week \u2014 .25\nBy carrier per year    13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living qutside regular\ncarrier areas per month 60c;\nthree months $160. six months,\n$3.00. one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month \/5c. six months,\n$4.00 one year $7.60.\nForeign countries, other than\nU. S. same as above plus eny\nextra postage.\nPERSONAL\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN  BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION  NETWORK\n910k\nTrail, B.C.\nCJAT\n319.6\nlOOw\nCKOV CJCJ CJCA CHWK CFQC\n630       690       730       780       840\nCPJC\n880\nCJAT CFAC CJOC   CKY   CKCK\n910      930      950      960      1010\nCRCV\n1100\n5r30 News reporter iB. C. Net.);\n5:45 Hitmaker's orchestra., Toronto;\n6:00 Melodic Strings, dir, Alexander\nChuhaldin, Toronto;  6:30  Rendezvous, modern symphony and chorus\nfrom Montreal; 7:00 Strike up the\nBand  from   Toronto;  7:30  Gilbert\nDarisse's orch, Quebec; 7:45 Canadian Press News and weather, Toronto; 8:00 Time signal; Youngbloods\nof Beaver  Bend,  dramatic  serial,\nWinnipeg;    8:30    Adventuring    in\naPoetry, Win'peg; 8:45 Book Review\nJames Stuart Wood, Prince Albert;\n9:00 Rhythm Rebels, Winnipeg; 9:30\nTo an Evening Star, orch., Edmonton (not CRCV); 10 30 News, Vancouver.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO\n590 620 640 680 920\n5:00 Jack Meakln's muiic; 5:30\nThe children's corner; 5:45 Junior\nvarieties; 6.00 20,000 years in Sing\nSing; 630 Swingcopators, dir. Jack\nMeakin; 6:45 The sports forum, KPO\n7:00 Quartet, or.; 7:30 Hawthorne\nHouse dr.; 8:00 Amos 'n' Andy, comedians; 8:15 Uncle Ezra's radio st'n;\n8:30 Margaret Speaks, soprano, guest\nstar, symphonic orch\u00abtra; 900 Fibber McGee and Molly, comedy; 8:30\nRichard Himber and his orch.; 10:00\nNews flashes, Sam Hayes; 10:15\nStringin' Along, guitar violin; 10 30\nGriff WiUiaun's orch; 11:00 Ben\nBemie's orch; 11:30 Reveries, instrumentalists.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA KGA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n5:00 Sunset Melodies; 5:30 Piano\nduo; 6:00 Bishop and the Gargoyle,\ncrime drams; 6:30 Baron Munchausen and Sharlie, Tommy Dorsey's or;\n7:00 Good Times society, revue;\n7:30 National Radio forum; 8:00\nMario Braggiotti's orch.; 8:15 Lum\nand Abner; 8:30 Stanlord U. Program; 8:45 Earl Hines' orch.; 9:00\nHouse ol Melody, narrator, orch.,\nKGO; 9:30 Bambl, dr. serial with\nHelen Hayes; 10:00 Ran Wilde's\norch.; 10:30 Jimmy Grier's orchestra;\n11:00 Paul Carson, organist\n7:00 Devotional music; 7:15 Musical clock; 8:00 Request program;\nC:30 Concert recordings; 9:00 Organ\nmelodies; 9:30 The Old Timers; 9:45\nKeepsakes, 10:00 What's new?; 10:30\nRadio Chel; 10:45 Melodic pipes;\n11:00 Home Sweet Home; 11:15 Kootenay Echoes; 11:30 Monitor views\nthe news; ll:45 Growin' Up; 12:00\nThe Hughesreel; 12:15 Concert melodies; 12:30 Whispering strings;\n12:45 Musical masters; 1:00 Melodies\nof Today; 2:0 Concert hour; 2:30 Seal\nof the Don; 3:00 Black Magic; 3:15\nSymphony Time; 3:30 Cecil and\nSally; 4:00 Concert Melodies; 4:45\nHon. Archie. E.T.; 5:00 Melodic\nmemories; 5:15 Eb and Zeb, E.T.;\n5:30 See C.B.C. Network except;\n5:45 Pinto Pete, E.T.; 7:30 Gratton\nO'laeary, comments; 9 00 Hockey\nbroadcast\n600 k CJOR 499.7 tn\nVancouver 500 w\n5:10 News flashes; 6:15 News report; 7:00 Stock quotations; 7:15\nGratton O'Leary, comments; 7:3C\nFinancial talk, 8:15 Canadian Mine\nromance, 830 Sports broadcast;\n10:15 News flashes; 10:30 Pete Cowan's old timers; 1100 Cariboo Cow\nboys, 11 30 Winifred Renworth, organ.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1  m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n5:15 Ei'entide echoes; 5:30 In the\ncrimelight; 6,00 Peacock court; 6:30\nRedhead family; 7:00 CKUA program; 7:30 Cub reporter; 7:45 Let's\ndance; 8:00 The Right that Nailed;\n8:15 Paul Lamkoff, baritone; 8:80\nHouse ol Peter McGregor; 8:45 The\nGaieties; 9:00 News; 9:30 Peacock\ncourt; 10:05 Garden ot Melody.\nHIGHEST CLASS RUBBER\ngoods. Our quality and service\nwill amaze you. 27 latex tor $100.\nGoods shipped same day as ordered. Packed plain. Free catalogue tor men or women on request Imperial Distributors, 152\nBurrows Ave., Winnipeg, Man.\n (4512)\nMEN! GET VIGOR AT ONCE! NEW\nOstrex Tonic Tablets contain raw\noyster invigorates and other\nstimulants One dose peps up organs, glands. If not delighted\nmaker refunds few cents paid.\nCall, write, Mann-Rutherford Co,\n4291\nthe organ in tlie chapel myself?\"\nJames was struck all of a heap,\nas thc saying goes. He shrank\nback against lhe wall and stared\nat Selden.\n\"I'm not a thought-reader or a\nSherlock Holmes, but I saw your\nlace when we passed the library\ndoor, and it gave the show away.\nAlso, Mrs. Holden told me about\nthat curious organ loft without an\nentrance, and the hollow panels at\nthe end of the library.\"\nTlie staring eyes of tlie butler\nleft the face of tlie detective, and\na queer smile came to him.\n\"I've been puzzling ever since\nthe day of the tuneral where I had\nseen the lady belore, and heard her\nvoice\u2014it was clever, sir, it I may\nsay so.\"\n\"Then you will tell me\u2014it's\nquite sate with me, you know.\n\"I intended doing so, sir, but\nwaited until Colonel Graham had\ngone. You see, Mr. Selden, we\nwere expecting Mr. Reid to come\nback and I was waiting up, but\nthe car sent a message to say that\nhe was staying at Colonel Gra\nham's house, and that frightened\nme \"\n\"Why, James\u2014why were you\nfrightened?\" Selden asked insistently.\nThe butler showed signs of confusion, \"I don't quite know\u2014it\nwas a very dark and cruel night\nI told Miss Lawrence, and she was\nscared at being alone. I left her\nin her room, but later on she rang\nlor me, and told me she could not\nbe there with the children. aShe\nwas very much aitaijd something\nwould happen, and seemed convinced that Mr. Reid would come\nback, and that something had\ngone wrong. She put a light in\nthe window and asked where they\ncould hide for the night. I took\nthem to the old organ loft\u2014there\nis a room behind the organ, as\nyou guessed.\n\"It is a fairly large room, but\nwhen the Inspector had gone I in\ntended letting Miss Lawrence have\nthe key ol the library, and they\ncould go in there.\" He paused\nsuddenly and a look of horror grew\non his lace \"But the bloodhounds'   They  passed  the  library\nWOULD LIKE TO HEAR FROM\nMechanically inclined men in this\ncommunity who would like to\nbetter themselves by training\nspare time for Installation and\nservicing work on all types AIR\nCONDITIONING and ELECTRIC\nREFRIGERATING equipment.\nOnly reliable men with fair education should reply. Utilities Engineering Institute, 4570 News.\n(4570)\nWANTED\nWANTED \u2014 COMPLETE SET OF\nsecond hand carpenter tools. Cast\noffer. Write Box 790, Nelson,\n(4587)\nHELP WANTED\nON POULTRY FARM, STEADY\nall round farm hand. Must handle\nteam, milk 3 cows. $15 month and\nfound, year round. Full particulars to J. H. Dolman, Nakusp.\n(4559)\nEXPERIENCED GIRL FOR HOUSE\nwork. W. A. Duncan, Waneta,\nB.C. (45S5)\nUSED CARS\nMUST SACRIFICE MY 1936 DE-\nluxe Ford Coach. Mileage 6000\u2014\nequipped wiih heater and defros-\naer, $675. Could arrange terms\nBox 4586 Daily News or Phone\n720L. (4586)\nLIVESTOCK FOR SALE\nPAIR   OF   WEati   MATCHED\nyoung   mares,   about   1200.   Un-\nbroken. J. Graham, Perry Siding,\n(4511)\n\"CHICKS\nWHICH\n\u2022 GIVE\nRESULTS\"\nLEGHORNS\nUnsexed Pullet Chicks\n$ 12 per   100 $ 26 per 100\n$110 per 1000 $125 per 500\nROCKS AND REDS\n$ 14 per   100 $ 28 per 100\n$130 per 1000 $135 per 500\nLIGHT SUSSEX\n$ 16 per   100 $ 32 per 100\nGovernment approved. Blood-tested\nstock. It will pay you to see our\nillustrated booklet. Write now. It's\nfree.\nRUMP 4 SENDALL LTD.\nLangley Prairie, B.C.\n(4287)\nBABY CHICKS AND SEXED PUL-\nlet Chicks, White Leghorns exclusively. All breeding stock on\nour farm mated to pedigreed\nmales. Government approved and\nblood tested. Price list on request.\nPlace orders early to insure date\npreferred. M. H. Ruttledge, Der-\nveen Poultry Farm, Sardis, B.C.\n(4492)\nDOCS\nREGISTERED CHESAPEAKES;\nSpringer Spaniels; Airedales; for\nwork or exhibition. Whatshan\nKennels, Needles. (4507)\nW1REHAIRED TERRIER PUPPIES.\nRegistered stock. Males $16. H.\nHarding, Nelson. (45471\nHOUSES FOR SALE\ndoor, and went to that place.\"\n\"i aim afiaild I staged lhat,\" Selden said with a grin at the astonished butler, \"When I heard that\nColonel Graham was going to employ the hounds again, I knew\nthat a refusal would be suspicious.\nSo I took the precaution ot getting a coat ol Miss Lawrence's,\nwhich lortunately she had left behind, and trailed it all along the\nwhole way to give a scent so fresh\nthat the hounds could not fail to\nfollow. But the difficulty was thai\nit had to end somewhere, and the\ngates would not do, for, ol course,\nthe scent would go on over the\nbridge. I had to devise, on the\nspur ol the moment, something co\ndramatic that the Colonel would\nhave no further ideas of following.\n1 chose this method, and it was\nsuccessful. I wanted to shake the\nColonel into telling me something;\nbut that,\" he added sadly, \"I failed\nto do.\"\n\"Well, I never,\" James said,\nnearly saying something \"stronger\nand unsuited to a butler.\n\"Now the question is the next\nmove,\" Selden remarked briskly.\n\"The children can't remain here\u2014\nthat's quite certain.\"\n\"You think there is still danger\neven here in this hiding-place?\"\n\"There's danger everywhere. A\nreal getaway to London or elsewhere is impossible, because our\nIrlend Hutchins has taken steps and\nevery etlort is being made to trace\nthem. I must think it out, but for\ntonight they had better remain\nwhere they are. I shall stay here lor\nthe present.\"\n\"Yes sir; but you will want some\nlood.\"\n\"I think I will waiit for Lady\nSeveringe\u2014she can't be long, and\nI want to talk to her.\"\n\"Very good\u2014I'll lay lor two, then.\nYou'll excuse me, sir, but I must\ngo and see about getting some food\nlor Miss Lawrence snd the children.\"\nSelden watched him go, and then\nWILL SACRIFICE MY 7 ROOM\nbungalow tor cash. What offers?\nJ. R Ramsden. (4540)\nFARM PRODUCE\nCHOICE YOUNG BEEF BY THE\nquarter. Also cabbage, carrots,\nturnips, and parsnips. J. Graham,\nPerry Siding. (45101\nFOR RINT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nARE RENTED TO\nPAYING ROOMERS\nHomes having spare rooms to\nrent are getting an extra income, They keep the spare\nrooms rented by advertising\nthem through the NELSON\nDAILY NEWS Classified Advertising Columns.\nPHONE 144\nSINGLE LADY, CASHIER, TYP-\ning and sales clerk. Experience,\nsmall remuneration to start. References. Miss N. Roy, Kingsgate.\n(4555)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR I\non  easy  terms  in  Alterta!\nSaskatchewan. Write for full\nlorinatlon to 908 Dept. of NaT\nResources.  C.P.R.   Calgary, I\nBusiness and Professional\nDirectory\nAssayert\nE. W. W1DDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst, Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents St\nTrail Smelter. 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson. B.C. (4343)\nGRENVILLE H GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 618\nBaker street. Nelson. B.C   P.O\nBox No. 726.   Representing Ship-\npers Interest at Trail, B.C.    (4344)\nAutomobile Radiator Repairs\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent.   .Annable Block\n(4341)\nHOUSE, 3 ROOMS AND BATH.\nRedecorated. Phone 784R2.   (45731\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modern\nfrigidaire equipped suites.   (4342)\nFOR SALE\nWe carry largest stock reconditioned\npipe and fittings suitable for all\npurposes. Write Swartz Pipe Yard\n220 St, E. Vancouver, B.C. (4338)\nwalked into the central court,\nwhere he sat down on the old seat\nby thc chapel wall.\n.   *   .\nColonel Graham's guess was correct. Lady Severinge, distracted\nat the disappearance of the children, apparently with the connivance ol their governess, and by\nthe lact that Reid on whom she\nhad leant lor support was in bed\nwith fever, had sought the help of\nthe one man whom she thought\nshe could trust. She phoned Eric\nColindale and arranged to meet\nhim at the market town of Grin-\nfold. She would not take the car,\nfor .even the chauffeur might talk.\nShe boarded a bus, and waited at\nthe \"Wheatsheaf\" in the square.\nColindale already showed signs\nof his altered conditions and unrestricted lite. His face had a\nbloated appearance, which the\nhard life in the open air had kept\npleased at being summoned back\npleased at ebing summoned back\nfrom London, as Hilda bad been\nafraid to tell him the reason on\nthe telephone.\nThey sat in a small room facing\nthe market square, while he\nlistened to her story at first with\nbored impatience, but later with\ninterest. His vanity was flattered\nby her obvious trust in his judgment, and her distress. The pose\nof a strong man suited him admirably. Hilda had lound that she\ncould not manage without him,\nand when in trouble depended on\nhis sound advice and his good\nstrong arm.'Such thoughts coursed\ntheir way through his mind as he\nlistened.\n\"What do you want me to do'\"\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd.\n250 Prior St, Vancouver, B.C\n     _    (4339)\nCEDAR CORDWOOD, $5-A~CORD\ndelivered.. Phone orders 163.\n _(4i272\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B.C. (4340)\nPACIFIC CAFE. TERMS REASON;\nable. J. Lew, Box 487, Greenwood.\n(4558)\nYOU TOO CAN SAVE AT THE\nARK STORE. (4325)\nELECTRICAL\nHOIST MOTORS\nWound rotor motors In stock\nfrom 10 h.p. to 250 h.p. at various speeds.   Enquire\u2014\nCROSSMAN MACHINERY COMPANY, LIMITED\n59 Alexander St., Vancouver, B.C.\n(4336)\nhe asked at the conclusion of the\nrecital\n\"I want to get out of it all, Eric,\"\nshe said imploringly. \"That house\nwill kill mo, I'm certain, and now\nthat the children are gone I don't\nknow what to do, because il something has really happened to them\nthe allowance will, of course, stop,\nand we shan't have anything to\nlive on.\"\nHe hadn't thought of that\u2014this\nwas serious. Already he was in\nlack of funds and had meant to\nask Hilda for money.\n\"It would be madness to leave\njust now, Hilda. In any case, the\nchildren can't have gone lar; we\ndon't live in a kidnapping country,\nand who in the world is going to\nmurder them? It's stupid \u2014 like\nthe babes in the wood with a\nwicked uncle thrown in.\"\n\"The detectives seem quite useless, Eric, and what is worse, they\ndon't seem to be making any effort to discover the murderer.\"\n(To Be Continued)\nNELSON RADIATOR WORKS\nExpert Repairs\nNew Cores Installed\nCapitol Motors Building\n(43451\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk., Nelson\n(4346)\nW. J. BROCK   D.C. 15 Years'\nExperience, Gilker, Blk., Nelson,\n(43,111\nElectrical\nJ. F. COATES, The Electric Store\nSupplies and Installations\nPhone 766. P.O. Box 1065\n(43471\nEngineers and Surveyors\nH. D.DAWSON Nelson, B.C.\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(43481\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, FrultvalelTC'\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(4349)\nFlorists\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP\nPhone 215. All kinds of cut flowers,\nwreaths, sprays & etc. Phone 215\nMrs, Hagarty, Box 29. (4350)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert. Mortician.      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(4351)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD.\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rentals.\nBaker St. (4352)\nR. W DAWSON, Real Estate. Insurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St. (4353)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99.\n(4354)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 508 Ward St.\n(4355)\nJ   E. ANNABLE, REAL ESTATE.\nRentals, Insurance. Annable Blk\n(4356)\nLIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nsnee. P. E. Poulin, Ph. 70.   (4357)\nCHAS F McHARDY. INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Ph. 135. (4358)\nMAKE IT A DAILY\nHABIT\u2014READING\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITTO\nFor all Classes of Metal Work. I\nWork, Drilling, Boring and '\nteg.  Motor  Rewinding.   Aceti\nWelding\nTelephone 593     324 Vernon Si\nNotaries\nD.    J.    ROBERTSON,    NOfl\nPublic. 305 Victoria St., Ntl\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INV|\nor, list of wanted invention*!\nfull information sent free.\nRamsay Company, World Pi\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St., Oil\nPhotography\nFILMS DEVELOPED AND M\ned. any size, 25c. Reprints, T\nfor 25c. Deckled edge prints.!\nuable coupon. \"Better prinl\nlower cost.\" KRYSTAL PHOl\nWilkie, Sask. (f\nSanitariums\nLOIS BRANDON\nPRIVATE SANlTARIUMl\nWOMEN ONLY\nE1216 Newark Ave. Phone II\nview 2870, SPOKANE, WAM\nDR. ALDRICH, SPOKANE, W,\nHeart, Stomach, Kidney, Bll\nDiseases treated. X-ray work\n(\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACT6I\nHardwood merchant 217 Blk)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,  SELL Si  EXChA:\nfurniture, etc. The Ark Store.\n('\nNICE RANGE, DRESSER, HI\ners, etc, at MRS. RADCLI1\"\nWatch Repairing\nH. H. SUTHERLAND\nWatchmaker and Jeweller\nRutledge block, Baker St., Ne\n\"When   Sutherland   repairs\nwatch it is on time all the tt\n^  1\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE i\nguaranteed.  P. Boyle, Vernoj\nClassifiei\nAdvertising Rate:\nHe a Line\nMinimum 2 Lines\n2 lines, once - 4\n3 lines, once _ -\t\n4 lines, once _____.-\n2 lines, 6 times \u2014\u2014\n3 lines, 6 times  J\n4 lines, 6 times...._. \u2014 1\n2 lines, 1 month \u2014 3\n3 lines, 1 month \u2014 4\n4 lines, 1 month I\nAll above less 10% for pron\n\u2022 ~ payment.\nBox numbers 11c extra (less\nfor cash). This covers any nui\nof insertions.\nTHE GUMPS\nly Cut ids\nCOLUMBIA   NETWORK\nKVI   KOIN   KNX   KSL   KOL\n670     940      1060    1130    1270\n6:00 Radio Theatre, dir. Cecil de-\nMille; 7:00 Wayne King's orchestra;\n8:00 Poetic melodies, poems, tenor;\n8:15 Renfrew of the Mounted; 8:30\nPick and Pat; 9:00 Horace Heidt's\nBrigadiers; 10:00 Nick Stuart's orch.;\n10:30 Wrestling matches; 11:00 Tommy Tucker's orch.; 11:15 Ted Fio-\nRlto's   orch.;   11:45   Black   Chapel,\nmystery drama.\nSHORT WAVE PROGRAMS\nPacific Standard Time\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTransmission 6\nThe following frequencies will be\nused: GSD 11.75 mcs (26.53 m.)\nGSC 9.58 mcs. (31.32 m.)\nGSB 9.51 mcs. (31.55 m.)\n6:00 p.m\u2014 Big Ben. The Cellini\nTrio, 6:25\u2014\"Tam o' Shanter,\" dramatisation,  based  on  the  Robert\nBums poem, 7:10\u2014\"Memories of the\nLondon  Theatre.\" 7:40\u2014News and\nanouncements.\nINTERNATIONAL\nBerlin 2 pm.\u2014Hello, New York!\nDJD, 254 m., 11.77 meg.\nRome 3\u2014News in English. Tuscan\nsongs. Opera \"Mignoir by Thomas-\none act. 2RO's mail bag. 2RO, 81.1 m.,\n9.63 meg.\nMoscow 4\u2014Review of the week.\nRussian lesson. Laugh with usl RAN,\n31.2 m, 9.6 meg.\nBoston 4:30\u2014Course in Modern\nRadio. W1XAL, 49.6 m., 6.04 meg.\nBerlin 5:45-Art of song: Elisabeth\nHallstein. DJD. 254 m., 11.77 meg.\nParis 8:20\u2014Theatrical Broadcast.\nTPA-4, 25.6 m\u201e 11.72 meg.\nCONSTRUCTION  INDUSTRY\nIN 1936\nA preliminary survey of the con-\nstuctlon industry for 1935. shows a\ndrastic aind decided increase in all\nphases In comparison with 1934. The\ntotal value of work performed, as\nreported to the dominion bureau\nof statistics by construction and\ntrade contractors (including subcontractors), cities, towns, counties\nand other municipal governments,\nharbour commissions, provincial\nand dominion government depart-,\nments, amounted to $212,908,306,\nwhich Is an increase of $26,709,416 or\napproximately 14 per cent over the\nvalue reported for 1934.\nThe increase was general throughout the dominion. The value of\nwork performed by contractors,\nbuilders, etc., showed an increase\nof $48,149,289, while that performed\nby cities, towns, municipalities, etc.,\nshowed a decrease In 1935 of $21,-\n438,873. Work performed by provincial and dominion gavernment\ndepartmens in 1935 amounted to ail-\nmost $44,000,000, which Is a decrease\nhowever, of some $10,000,000 from\ntheir 1934 figures.\nTILUE THE TOILER\nBy Run Weitot\nI'M SO <SLAD TO SEG MDU\n, MAC -DO ttXJ fcEALLyl\nALL ElgHT AdAIM?!\nSUKE-I'M\nOKA\/\nCapr 19\". rani Poaaam Saaadaoa* a*., wand ratha. a^ar-i\n\" '     '      '\nUSTEM.HAC\u2014AB-E YOU SUF>\u00ab=\nYOU FEEL VJELL ENOU6H TO\n\u2022STAND   A   SHOCK Ij\t\n\\-JELL, I   UJAMT TO  READ YOU\nA   LETTEE   I   TuST (leCE.MeD-\nI   WATS  -5U\u00a3PR.I.^ED VMHEM I FIRST\nRe*\u00a9 it, but vuhem -too HeAfe \u00bbT\n^ull be shocked;\n_____\naVMMi\n^\nM^u^\n \u2014-*-\u2014\n.\nwtrnt\n\u25a0MR\nmmmmmammm*\nOFITSTAKENIN\n(OAST OILS\n132,570 Traded in\ntecord Saturday\nShort Session\n(COJJVER, Jan. 24 (CP)-Oll\ncontinued to hold the centre\nerest In record heavy trading\n* abort Saturday session ot\nVancouver stock exchange\nprofit-taking forced a num-\n! the issues down while golds\nne metala were mixed. Trani-\nI totalled 1,432,570 shares.\nsousie waa the heaviest loser,\n38 cents at 2.50. Calgary Si\nnton waa off 10 at 3.40 while\nConsolidated at 60 and Com-\n\u25a0ealth at 43 each dropped 6.\nmier Gold slipped 8 at 4.22\nPioneer lost 5 at 6.25. Gold\nt waa down 1 at 38 and Bra-\nunchanged at 8.80.\n'Missouri gained 3 at 63, Hed-\nmalgamated 1 at 44V4 and Nic\nola a cent at 11, Other golds were\nunchanged to mixed.\nWaverley and United Empire featured heavy trading in tbe base metals and doied fractionally higher\nPend Oreille was up 2 it 3.50, Reeves\nMacDonald 1 at 68 and Noble Five\nwas unchanged at 10%.\nWinnipeg Rallies\nWINNIPEG, Jan. H (CP) .-Confidence returned te the wheat market Saturday after prices bad declined to 11 cents a bushel under\nthe seasonal highs established last\nmonth.\nOff sharply It the opening, values\nrallied briskly on the Winnipeg\ngrain exchange to dose \"4 cent\nhigher to as much lower, May at\n$1.21\",, July $1.17>A and October\n$1,06%.\nHelping to rally prices were export sales of 300,000 bushels and\nconfirmation of the recent purchase\nby Germany of a cargo ot Canadian\nand one of Argentine wheats.\nCash grains spreads held about\nunchanged. Coarse grains prices\nrallied with wheat. Rye was a\nstandout, up nearly 3 cents a bushel,\nnet.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nBrew  12%\nTelephone  161\n1  21%\nPower A  37Vi\nProd  61Vi\nla Bronze  58V4\n3ar Fdy  mv,\n!ement  16\n\"ement Pfd  106\nChinese  26\u00a5,\n:nd Al A ,  8\nndAlB \u201e  74\nB.  ,i _  15%\nBteamers   3%\n\u25a0butt   16H\nits 8  77%\nnlon Bridge  55Vj\nnlon Textile   79V4\ntn Paper  15\nra! Steel Wares  15\nIton Br  16%\nImperial Tobacco  14%\nInternational Nickel  (4\nMassey Harris      8H\nMcColl Frontenac  13%\nMontreal Power   35\nNational Steel Car  65\nNat Brewing  41%\nOgilvie      270\nPower Corp  27%\nQuebec  22%\nShawinigan   81%\nSouth Can Power  16%\nSteel ot Can  83\nBANKS\nCanada   58%\nCanadien  _  154\nCommerce  204\nMontreal   2M\nNova Scotia   830\nRoyal   224\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nID\n2oh....\nI O ....\nHas....\nirae ..\nDom\nBid\n.60\n.08\n.63\n8.80\n.26%\n.05\u00bbi\n13.00\n.43\n.18\n4.00\n.22%\n1.07\n.82\n.06%\n[e R Con\nXGold  09\nloo Gold ..:     1.63\nI Corp      3.40\nI Brew\t\nnonwealth\nonla  ...\t\n' Belt ...:\t\nal O \t\n0 \t\n\u25a0 Coal\t\nfount \t\nBelle \t\nSiccar \t\nSegur Ex 33'.\nB6d O (new)       \u2014\nI Gold      .22\n\\i O  65\nl Star  03%\nMr Gold      6.25\nller Gold      4.22\nlier Border 03Vi\naino       ,04y\u00ab\ni.Oold      1.17\nr Mines  10\nion Gold  10\nip Creek  65\nik Prem     3.40\nmer       .38\nor Bridge\ndta\nttte Gold\ntide    \t\nIngton ....\n:b\nuuidria   ..\neonda \t\nIC   \t\n-lew \t\n-er Sil\t\nsblrd\t\nNickel ....\nMount ..\nRand\t\nnont\n.071 i\n.16%\n.95\n.06\n.12\n.18\n.10%\n.01\n.02%\n.04\n.28\n.12\n.03%\n.75\nlit! Estates      7.8\nfnis Gold .\nProv\t\non Belt\t\n: Nest\t\nlousie M\t\nlousie O     2.50\nmiati    \t\n\u2022tor Gold ..\nwell \t\nCrest\t\nview Amal\n.11\n.01%\n.04\n.08\n.01\n.03 Ji\n.03\n.22\n.1211\nil Gold\nibold O ....\nMil \t\n.04 V,\n.20\nAsk\n.62\n.09\n.64\n8.90\n.27\n.06\n.10\n1.65 \u2022\n4.50\n.46\n.14%\n.18\n.29\n405\n1.10\n.83\n.07\n.34\n.74\n.23\n.67\n.03%\n6.40\n4.30\n.03%\n.04%\n1.18\n.12\n.10%\n.66\n3.50\n.40   \u25a0\n.08\n.16%\n1.00\n.06%\n.04%\n.19\n.11\n.01%\n.03\n.04\n.29\n.14\n8.00\n.11%\n.01%\n.04%\n.08%\n.01%\n2.60\n.16\n.04\n.26\n.65\n.04%\n.20%\n3.00\nLISTED Bid\nGeorge Copper       \u2014\nGeo Enter 03%\nGeo River        .03%\nGlacier Creek 01%\nGolconda    12\nGold Mount 38\nGrandvlew    13\nGrange        X)2%\nGrull Wihksne _ 16%\nHaida  Gold    01%\nHedley Amal  ,      .44%\nHedley Sterl  08\nHlghwood Sarcee ..     .30\nHome Gold       .02%\nIndian        \u2014\nInter Gold        \u2014\nIndependence        .02%\nKoot Flor  02\nKoot King        \u2014\nLakeview ' 01\nLowery Pete  55\nLucky Jim 08\nMadison O  08%\nMar Jon        \u2014\nMercury 31\nMeriiiian        .03%\nMerland 23\nMcGillivray  _     .19\nMid-West         \u2014\nMill City       30\nMorton Woolsey 02%'\nMarmot  00%\nNicola'       12\nNoble Five  10%\nNordon        39\n.Okalta O Com       1.45\nPacalta O         18\nPacific Coyle Pfd ..   14.00\nPend Oreille      3.50\nPilot. Gold\nPorter Idaho\nQuesnelle Q\nRanchmen's ..\nRed Hawk ....\nReliance  \t\nRelief Arl\t\nReward\n.05\n.10\n.153i\n.03%\n.31\n.09%\nRoyalite    49.00\nRufus Arg        .03%\nRuth Hope  04%\nSilvercrest .: 05\nSilversmith         .04\nSnowflake         .01\nSouthwest Pet        .83\nSunloch        \u2014\nUDL     1.10\nUnited Empire 01%\nUnited 0     31\nViking Gold  04\nVulcan        1.48\nWaterloo    02%\nWaverley Tang       .03%\nWellington  07%\nWesko         33\nWhitewater  21%\nYmir Yank G 35\nAsk\n.65\n.04\n.04\n.13\nXI\n.14\n.02%\n.18%\n.01%\n.45\n.09\n.32\n.03\n.02%\n.06\n.02%\n.02%\n.01%\nJB1H\n.65\n.08%\n.10\n.21%\n.33\n.25\n.20\n.20\n.32\n.03\n.01\n.12%\n.11\n.40\n1.46\n.20\n20.00\n3.60\n.05%\n.11\n.16\n.92\n.04\n.04\n.32\n.09%\n49.50\n.04\n.05\n.04%\n.01%\n.90\n.45\n1.15\n.01%\n.33\n.04%\n1.50\n.02%\n.02%\n.07%\n.34%\n.22\n.37\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-MONDAY MORNING, JAN. tt, MP.\nMining and Market News\nSOMEPRICESAT\nTORONTO HIGH\nTOROOTO, Jan. 24 (CP)-A number of new high prices were scored\non tbe stock market Saturday but\nadvances were narrow and little\nchange was effected in the general\nprice level. Volume was 32,100\nshares.\nCanadian Car & Foundry common\ntraded 2000 shares and registered\na minor gain. Gains were posted\nfor Steel of Canada pfd. and Hamilton Bridge. Page-Hersey took a\nnurow loas.\nAbitlbl stocks went higher and\nCanada Bread sold at 9%, a new\nhigh. Other issues registering new\nhighs were Mercury Mills pfd., Alberta Pacific Grain pfd., Maple Leaf\nMilling pfd, and Bell Telephone.\nMONTREAL UP\nMONTREAL, Jan. 24 (CP).-In a\nmixed price movement on the stock\nexchange Saturday, the majority of\nlistings edged forward. Buying remained selective.\nGypsum, Cement and General\nSteel Warea were up %. Hamilton\nBridge gained %. Dominion Steel &\nCoal lost that much.\nIndustrial Acceptance Jumped to\n37%, up 1%, while National Breweries, at 41%, and Brack Silk, at\n11, improved a point eaoh. Canadian\nIndustrial Alcohol went to 8, up %.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Jan, 24 (CP). -\nVancouver wheat cub prices:\nStraight    Tough\nNo. 1 hard  122%\nNo. 1 nor 121%\nNo. 2 nor  116%\nNo. 3 nor 112%\nNo. 4 nor 110%\nNo. 5 wheat 106%\nNo. 6 wheat 101%\nFeed    90%\n120%\n119%\n116%\n110%\n107%\n104%\n98%\n87%\nKIRKLAND LAKE AVERAGE\nTORONTO, Jan. 24 (CP) -Kirk-\nland Lake Gold mines 1936 production was $746,188, the company reported, obtained from milling of\n84,879 tons of pre for an average\nvalue of $10.05. The 1935 average\nwas $6.37.\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, Jan. 24 (CP).\u2014Silver futures closed steady and un'\nchanged Saturday.   Sales: 7 January contracts.\n30 industrials\n20 utilities \t\nDow-Jones\nOpen      High\n44.70B       44.73\nAverages\nHigh       Low\n187.28      185.85\n56.31       55.78\n37.18       36.83\nLow      Close\n44.75       44.70B\nClose  Change\n186.68\u2014up   .16\n56.06\u2014off   .02\n37.02\u2014up   .08\n105.56   off   .09\nGermany Offers\nMachines for\nWheal\nBERLIN, Jan. 24 (CP).-Germany,\nfaced with a wheat shortage some\nestimate will be 1.000,000 tons, offered today to trade machinery for\ngrain.\nCanada and Yugoslavia have provided some grain, it is said, and\nofficials hoped to make a deal with\nArgentina.\nA new arrangement with Canada, the Associated Press reported,\nprovides 35 per cent of all proceeds\nfrom Canadian purchases in Germany to be used for buying Canadian wheat.\nThe amount Germany takes from\nCanada therefore, the news agency\nsaid, will depend upon how much\nCanada buys in Germany. This is\nexpected to mean Germany will get\nat least 100,000, tons of wheat from\nCanada, the Associated Press\nlearned. a\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Jan. 24 (CP)-Brlt-\nish and foreign exchanged closed\neasier Saturday. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nFrance, franc, .0467,\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.9068.\nSwitzerland, franc, .2292.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nBAR  GOLD  DOWN\nMONTREAL, Jan. 24 (CP).-Bar\ngold in London down one cent at\n$34.79 an ounce in Canadian funds,\n141s lOd in British. The fixed $35\nWashington price amounted to $35.02\nin Canadian.\nQuotations on Wall Street\nHigh\nAl Chem    \u2014\nAm Can    114%\nAm For Pow       13%\nAm Mac & Fdy  \u2014\nAm Smel & Ret 96%\nAm Tel   183%\nAm Tob      98%\nAnaconda     55%\nAtchison      75%\nAuburn   Motors   32%\nAviation Corp ..   \u2014\nBaldwin          9%\nBait Si Ohio    22%\n27%\n69\u00bb,\n31%\n15%\n67%\n7ss\n175\nBendix Av\nBeth Steel\nCanada Dry\nCan Pacific\nChes Si Ohio\nChrysler\nCon Gas N.\nCorn Prods\nC Wright pfd\nDupont\nEast Kodak 173\nErie    ...a    -\nFord English \u25a0 \u25a0 \u2014\nFord of Canada \u2014\nFirst Nat Stores\nFreeport Texas\nGen Electric\nGen Foods    \u2014\nGen Motors     67\nGoodrich    \u2014\nGranby    11%\nGreat Nor Pfd     43\nGreat West Sug  \u2014\nHecker Prods\nHowe Sound\nHudson Motors\nInter Nickel\nInter Tel & Tel\nKenn Copper \u25a0\nKresge S S\nKroegger Gro\nMack Truck\nMilwaukee   pfd\nLow\n112%\n13%\n95%\n183%\n97%\n54%\n74 n\n32\n9%\n22%\n27%\n68%\n80%\n15%\n66%\n122%121\n49%    48%\nClose\n237%\n112%\n13%\n23%\n95^\n183%\n97\u00bb:,\n\u25a054%\n75%\n32\n8%\n9%\n22%\n27%\n78 li\n31\n15%\nNash Motors .\nNot Dairy Prods\nN Powei\\.& Lt.\nN. Y. Central\nPacific Gas & El\nPackard Motors\nPenn R R\nPhillips Pete .\nPure Oil \t\nRadio Corp .  .\nRadio Keith Or\nRem Rand\nSafeway   Stores\nShell Un\nS Cal Edison .\nSouth Pacific\nStan Oil of Cal\nStan Oil of Ind\n66.% 1 Stan Oil of N. J.\n69%\n7%\n174%\n172%\n49\",\n29%\n63%\n72\n21\n64%\n13%\n60%\n28%\n23%\n48\"s\n2%\nMont Ward     57%\n40%\n29\n63%\n66%\n11%\n42,i\n71\n20%\n63%\n13%\n60\n27%\n23%\n47%\n2'i\n57\n122%\n49%\n69%\n7%\n175\n173\n15%\n15%\n28\n49%\n29%\n63%\n42%\n66%\n33\n11%\n42%\n37%\n15\n71%\n20%\n64%\n13%\n60%\n28'',\n23>i\n47%\n2%\n57\n21%\n23%\n13%\n43\n11%\n42%\n52'i\n22%\n12\n8%\n25%\n43\n28%\n31    ,\n49%'\n46%\n48%\n71\n19%\nStew Warner\nStudebaker   16%\nTexas Corp 52%\nTexas Gulf Sul 40%-\nTimken Roller 71%\nUnder Type . \u2014\nUn Carbide . 105%\nUn Oil of Cal.... -\nUn Aircraft    31\nUn Biscuit   \u2014\nUn Pacific  130%\nU S Rubber  53%\nU S Steel       88\nVanadium Steel 31%\nWarner Bros\nWest Electric\nWestern Un .\nWoolworth\nYellow Truck\n16\n164%\n82%\n63%\n28%\n20%\n23%\n13%\n42%\n11%\n42\n51\n22\n11%\n8%\n25\n42 %\n28%\n30%\n48'\n45%\n18%\n16%\n51%\n4fl%\n71%\n105%\n30%\n130\n52%\n87\n31\n15%\n163\n81%\n63%\n27%\n21%\n2?%\n13%\n\u25a042%\n37\n11%\n42%\n52%\n22%\n11%\n8%\n25%\n43\n28%\n31\n49\n46\n48%\n71\n19\n16%\n51%\n40%\n71%\n93\n105%\n25%\n31\n29%\n130%\n53%\n87%\n31%\n15%\n164%\n'82\n63%\n28%\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Jan. 24 (AP).-Copper firm; electrolytic spot and future 13.00; export 12.70.\nTin barely steady; spot and nearby 50.40; future 60.70.\nOther metals nominally unchanged.\nBar silver nominal, no quotation.\nThe London stock exchange was\nclosed Saturday.\nBar silver barely steady, 1-16\nlower at 20%d.\nCHICAGO GAINS\nCHICAGO, Jan. 24 (AP)-Largely\nowing to reported purchases of 9000\ntons of Canadian wheat and 5000\ntons of Argentine wheat, Chicago\ngrain prices ruled higher.\nCL08ING STATU8\nAt the close, wheat was % to %\nof a cent above Friday's finish,\nMay $1.28% to $1.28%, July $1,12%\nto $1.12%, Spet. $1.08% to $1.09, corn\nalso % to % cent up, May $1.08% to\n$1.08%,-July $1.04% to $1.04%, Sept.\n$1.00%, oats unchanged to % cent\nadvneed, May 49% cents, and rye\nshowing % to % cent bulge, May\n$1,08 to $1.08%. The-provisions put-\ncome was unchanged to a decline\nof 2 cents.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 23 (CP) .-Grain\nfutures quotations:\nOpen  High   Low   Close\nWHEAT:\nMay      . 120%   121%   119%   121%\nJuly        116%   117%   115%   117%\nOct. 105%   106%   105%   106%\nOATS:\nMay     52%    54%    52       54%\nJuly.....    50       51%    50       51%\nBARLEY:\nMay    79%    80%    79       80%\nJuly    69%    70%    69%    70%\nFLAX:\nMay 167      167%   166%   167%\nJuly   ...    165      166%   165      166%\nRYE:\nMay ..\nJuly ...\nOct\t\n101%\n97%\n104%\n101%\n105 101%\n101% 97%\n88 86% 88\nCASH WHEAT: No. 1 Hard and\nNo. 1 Nor. 121%; No. 2 Nor. 119%;\nNo. 3 Nor. 116%; No. 4 Nor. 110%;\nNo. 5, 107%; No. 6,106%; feed 88%;\nNo. 1 Garnet 116%; No. 2 Garnet\n115%; No. 1 Durum 147%; No. 1\nA. R. W. 111%; No. 4 special 107%;\nNo. 5 special 101%; No. 6 special\n96%; track 120%; screenings $16 per\nton.\nBANK OF NOVA\nSCOTIA PROFITS\nDOWN LAST YEAR\nTORONTO, Jan. 24 (CP). - Net\nprofits of the Bank of Nova Scotia\nin 1936 were $1,926,687, compared\nwith $2,334,637 in the previous year,\nthe 105th annual report showed.\nSurplus for the year of $61,688\nbrought profit and loss balance to\n$803,316.\nTaxes amounted to $474,268 Dividend payments were $1,440,000.\nTotal deposits of $238,511,561 were\n$7,301,473 higher than in 1935. Total\nassets were reported at $296,959,267\nan increase of $8,136,379. Asseta included Dominion and provincial\ngovernment securities valued at\nmore than $90,000,000 and Canadian\nmunicipal securities, not exceeding\nmarket value, worth $12,702,696.\nToronto Stock Quotations\nFrom\nEast to West...\nOf the Southern Interior of British Columbia come pictures and stories\u2014The twain\nshall meet in the best yet, 36 page\nPictorial Edition\nOF THE\nNelson Daily News\nSaturday, January 30th\n^\u25a0\u00bb._..\t\nSEND YOUR FRIENDS AN D RELATIVES A COPY\nAldcrmac    1.62\nBankfield         1.70\nBase Metals  29\nBobjo 23\nBralorne        8.90\nBRX  09%\nBuf Ankerite     11.75\nCan Malartic     1.98\nCariboo Gold      1.60\nCastle Treth      1.35\nCentral Man  18\nChibougamou     2.28\nConiagas        3.40\nConiaurum       2.05\nCons M & S     77.00\nDome    50.00\nDom Explor 08>\/4\nEldorado      2.48\nFalconbridge    11.50\nGod's Lake  90\nGold Belt  18\nGranada  38%\nHardrock      2.95\nHollinger     15.15\nHowey    61\nHudson Bay    34.00\nInter Nickel     64.25\nJ M Con  45\nKirkland L     1.26\nLake Maron  08\nLakeshore      56.90\nLittle Long Lac     8.00\nMacassa       7.88\nMadsen Red Lake     1.48\nMalroblc ..       .03%\nMCeod Cockshutt     4.00\nMcK R L Gold     1J>2\nMcWatter Gold  90\nMining Corp     3.70\nNipissing      3.20\nNoranda     76.75\nParkhill  22%\nPaymaster      1.18\nPend Oreille     3.50\nPickle Crow      8.60\nPioneer      6.45\nPremier Gold      4.20\nRed lake Gold Shore     1.29\nReno        1.21\nSan Antonio ,.     2.25\nSheer. Creek .\u201e\u201e.,.\u201e..    .67\nSherr Gordon     8.15\nSiscoe     6.30\nSmelter G 08\nStadacoria       1.35\nSt. Anthony       .29\nSud Basin     5.75\nSullivan      2.13\nSylvanite      4.25\nTeck Hughes      5.65\nToburn      4.10\nTowagamac      1.49\nTreadwell  : 60\nVentures       2.90\nWaite Amulet     3.50\nWayside  06%\nWhite Eagle 04%\nWright Hargreaves      8.00\nOIL8\nB A Oil    24.90\nC Si E Corp       3.60\nChem   Research        1.25\nDalhousie     2.75\nHome     4.00\nImperial       21.60\nInter  Pete     85.50\nMerland        .24\nNordon    40\nRoyalite     49.50\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Bros    20\nBell Telephone   161\nBrazilian    21%\nBrew Si Dist     8%\nCanada Bread     9\nCan Car & Fdy    20%\nCan Cement     16\nCanada Dredge    44%\nCanada Malting     86%\nCan Pac Rail    15%\nCons Smelters    75\nDominion Bridge    55\nDom Stores .'....   11\nDist Seagrams    28%\nFord Canada A    37%\nGoodyear Tire    W\nHiram Walker     46%\nLoblaw A    23%\nMassey Harris      8%\nSteel of Can     82\nWalker Brew ..i.     2%\nT'l Ml .     in      StJ\nMILD BUYING AT\nNEW YORK\nNEW YORK, Jan. 24 (AP).-MIld\nbut persistent buying centered on\na few oils, utilities and specialties\nin Saturday's stock market.\nRecovery tor the list as a whole,\nhowever, was sluggish and, of 823\nissues changing hands, 319 declined,\n301 advanced and 205 were unchanged.\nSobering to Wall street sentiment\nwas strike and flood n\u00abws, both\nfactors tending to keep many traders on the sidelines, besides inducing selling from nervous sources.\nTransfers amounted to 1,115,840\nshares compared with 1,705,240 last\nSaturday. The Associated Press\naverage of 60 stocks was unchanged\nat 72.5.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 34 (CP), -\nMining shares sold on the Vancouver stock exchange Saturday:\nListed: Big Miss 1250; Bralorne\n300; Br Con 1500; B R X 1000; Dentonia 6000; Gold Belt 1500; Island\nMount 500; Koot Belle 800; Mak\nSiccar 7500; Minto 6700: Morn Star\n8000, Pioneer 300; Premier Bord\n24,000; Premier Gold 1100; Quatsino\n700: Reeves MacD 4180; Reno 3000;\nSally 200; Salmon 1500; Sheep Creek\n1600; Silbak Premier 598; Tvlor\nBr 500; Vidette 600; Wayside 200.\nCurb: Bayview 6500: BC Nickel\n1500; Bluebird 9600; Br Mount 1000;\nCongress 6000; Fairview 6616; Federal 3000; Geo Riv 4500; Golconda\n2500; Gold Mount 12,200; Grand-\nview 3300; Grange 10,000; Grull\nWlhk 9750; Hedley Amal 23,400:\nHedley Sterl 1500: Home 3000; Inter\nGold 3000; Koot Flor 17,000; Lake-\nview 1000; Lucky Jim 14,500; M\nMetals 8000; Morton W 9000: Nieola\n16,000; Noble Five 14,000; Porte-\nIdaho 3000; Quesnelle Q 500; Relief\nArl 1700; Reward 179,950; Rufus Arg\n4000; Ruth Hope 2000; Silvercrest\n9000; Silver Smith 8000; Snowflake\n8000; United Emp 192,000; Viking\n17,000; Waverly 122,250; Wellington\n2200; Wesko 10,900; Whitewater 21,-\n400; Ymir Y Girl 1500.\nEastern Sales\nTORONTO, Jan. 24 (CP)-Sale* of\n100 or more shares on Toronto stock\nexchange Saturday were: 3865 Ablti-\nbi; 126 Alta P G; 835 Brazil; 555\nBrew Corp; 170 Brew Corp Pfd; 515\nB A Oil; 7509 Can Bd; 1980 Canadian\nC St Fdy; 155 C C St F Pfd; 1885 Can\nI. A.; 380 CPR; 140 Dist C S; 135 Dom\nStores; 1656 Ford A; 365 G S Wares;\n815 Imp Oil; 985 Int Nickel; 630 Int\nPete; 920 M L Mill; 565 Mass Har;\n240 Mass Har Pfd; 202 McC Front;\n7:50 Pantepec O; 980 Union Gas; 245\nH Walkers, 225 H Walkers Pfd.\nMONTREAL, Jan. 24 (CP)-Mes\nof 100 or more shares on Montreal\nstock exchange Saturday were: 1166\nBrazilian; 525 Bruck; 3421 Can Car;\n930 Can Car Pfd; 230 Cel; 575 CPR;\n380 Cockshutt; 110 D Seagram; 220\nDominion Bridge; 436 Dom Coal Pfd;\n820 G Stl Wares; 1165 Gypsum; 310\nIm Tob; 2693 Ind Accept; 1218\nNickel; 625 Massey; 210 McColl; 490\nShawinigan.\nDividends\nLake of the Woods Milling, preferred, 1% per cent, payable March\n1 to shareholders of record Feb. 15.\nMINING PRICE INDEX UP\nOTTAWA, Jan. 24 (CP)-The mining price index for 24 issues averaged 177.9 for the week ending Jan.\n21 compared with 175.2 the previous week and 143.3 the corresponding week last year, the Dominion\nbureau of statistics reported today.\nThe index is computed on the bue\n1926 equals 100. The average index\nfor 21 gold stocks was 139.6 against\n137.1 the preceding weak and 125.7\nb year ago. The average index for\nthree base metala 337.6 compared\nwith 332.4 the previous week and\n215.6 the same week in 1938.\nU.S. DOLLAR 'FIRM\nMONTREAL, Jan. 24 (CP). -\nPound sterling declined 3-32 cent\non Montreal foreign exchanges, Saturday, to 4.90 11-16. The French\nfranc at 4.67 cents and the United\nStates dollar at 3-32 premium remained unchanged.\nSILVERS STEADY\nMONTREAL, Jan. 24 (CP).-In\nmoderate trading on Canadian commodity exchange, aSaturday, silver\nfutures held steady and unchanged.\nSeven January contracts were\ntraded at 44.75 and the closing bid\non January futures was 44.70.\nFREE MEALS FOR CHILDREN\nCOLOMBO, Ceylon (CP)\u2014That\nthey may grow into healthy adults,\nchildren unable to get nourishing\nfood at home will be given free\nmeals at school. The government\nhas made a large grant for this\npurpose.\nFAT WOMAN DIES AT FAIR\nLONDON (CP)-Ona of the fat\ntest women in the world, Hilda Wil\nSon, died at a fun fair in Haynur-\nket. Germu by birth, she married\nan Englishman and at the time of\nher death weighed 560 pounds.\n\"CONEY ISLAND\" FOR RAND\nJOHANNESBURG (CP) - Victoria lake, Germiston, Is to be turned into the \"Coney Island\" of the\nReef if a $1,250,000 development\nscheme at present under consideration by the Germiston council is\nadopted.\nS. C. Thorpe Gains\nPromotion, Coast\nOf Interest to his many friends in\nKootenays is the announcement that\n8. C Thorpe of Vancouver has\nbeen appointed British 'Columbia\nmanager for the William Wrislcy\nCo. Ltd., succeeding C, E. C. Thomas who has been recalled to the\nToronto head office.\nMr. Thorpe has been with the\ncompany for the past four years\nand has many friends in the wholesale and retail grocery and confectionery trade In British Columbia\nCRESTON UNITED\nCHURCH REELECTS\nCRESTON, B.C. \u2014 The annual\ncongregational meeting of Trinity\nUnited church was held in the hall\nTuesday. A new feature that proved\npopular this year was a dinner served at 6:30 by the Ladies' aid.\nMiss E. F. Arrowsmith was elected as secretary pro tern, in the absence of Mrs. W. Fraser, and the\nmeeting was presided over by the\npastor, Rev. Andrew H. Walker.\nThe first report was by Mrs. Gib\nSinclair for the cradle roll, which\nshowed 16 new members for 1936,\nwhile eight were promoted, leaving\na membership of 81, The Mission\nBand report was submitted by Frank\nBunt, for Mrs. Bunt Twelve members were reported. Mrs. W. J. Avery\nreported for the Women's Missionary society.\nMiss Hazel Sinclair, secretary for\nthe Sunday school, reported as follows: Enrolment increased to 108\nwith 10 teachen. W. J. Truscott,\nsuperintendent also presented a report. The adult bible class report\nwaa submitted by Mrs. T. Dickson\nand showed an increased membership.\nGib Sinclair presented a statement\nfrom the trustee board. Tha Young\nPeople's society reported through\nR. G. Penson. Mrs. M. R. Joyce was\nspeaker for the Ladles' aid, and her\nreport showed the best year ever.\nIn addition to their other activities\nthe aid had made a payment to reduce the debt on the church.\nTha reports from the two branches\nof tha C. G. I. T. were presented\nby Lorna Caughey and Mrs. W. S.\nWeir.1 Rev. A. Walker presented two\nreports as follows: The M. & M.\nfund oversubscribed; services had\nbean held at Canyon, Wynndel and\nCraaton every Sunday; there were\nfour communion services, six baptisms, five funerals and three weddings.\nBoard of stewards statement was\nread by Vic Mawson. J. A. Avery reported that there were two new activities in process of formation-\nTrinity Dramatic society, which is\nplanning a number of plays to be\npresented in the near future, and\nthe Boy Scouts. A troop is being\nformed which will be known as the\nFirst Creston troop of Trinity United church.\nJ. W. H. Gobbett and J. A. Avery\nwere reelected to the board of stewards. The other members of this\nboard are R. Currle, V. Mawson. A.\nComfort and Frank Bunt. The trustee board remains the same, Gib\nSinclair, E. E. Cartwrlght and W.\nJ. Craig, while the session is made\nup of A. Comfort, T. Goodwin and\nJ. W. H. Gobbett,\nRev. A. Walker was asked to remain as pastor for another year. He\ngave his motto for 1937, \"I serve\".\nNEW YORK, Jan.* 24 (AP). -\nFrench francs were unchanged in\nthe foreign exchange market at\n4.66%, Swiss franc, Netherlands\nguilder and Canadian dollar at 3-32\ncent discount.\nMONTREAL, Jan. 24 (CP).-Butter spot, Que. regraded 25% to 25%.\nEggs spot, Ont. A-large 24%A.\nWheat, No. 2 nor. 1.32; barley, No.\n3 C.W. .60; oats No. 1 feed .60.\nNEW YORK (CP)-Newer riding\ncostumes for hunting are four-piece,\nsweater, Jacket, riding pants and\nskirt, the latter unbuttoning down\nthe front, and may be discarded in\nwarm weather.\n\u2014 PARE  NINE\nB1NGAY HEAP OF\nMINING ASSOC.\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 24 (CP)-T.\nW. Bingay of Consolidated Mining\nat Smelting Company, Ltd., is the\nnew president of the Mining Association of British Columbia,\nHe was elected at the association's\nannual meeting here with Lieut.-\nCol. C. W. Villlera and C. P. Browning named vice-presidents. H. Mortimer-Lamb ia secretary-treasurer.\nDirectors are: A. S. Baillie, F. M.\nBlack, R. Bosustow, A. W. Davis, H.\nE. Doelle, W. C. Douglas, F. W.\nGuernsey; A. M. Ham, H. T. James,\nW. R. Lindsay, D. Campbell Mackenzie, C. B. North, R. R. Rose, B.\nF. Smith, R. H. Stewart and W. R.\nWilson.\nMINES STEADY\nTORONTO, Jan. 24 (CP) .-Mining shares maintained a fairly even\nkeel Saturday, Turnover reached\n1,641,000 shares.\nHome Oil was a heavy trader on a\nrise of 35 cents to $4. Gains of about\n10 cents were boarded for Calmont, Calgary-Edmonton, Hargal,\nNordon and Dalhousie and smaller\ngains appeared for Pacalta, Homestead, Merland, Acme, Hlghwood-\nSarcee and East Crest. Bankfield\npushed up 13 cents to 1.71.\nLosses of 5 to 10 cents were posted\nfor Toburn, Cariboo Gold Quartz,\nO'Brien, Paymaster, Read-Authier,\nend Airways.\nA drop of a half point for Hudson\nBay was the main loss In the base\nmetals.   Eldorado firmed slightly.\nSynopsis of Land Act\nPRE-EMPTIONS\nVACANT, unreserved, surveyed Crown\nlands may be pre-empted by Brit lib\nsubjects over 18 years of age. ind by\naliens on declaring Intention to become\nBritish subjects, conditional upon residence, occupation and Improvement.\nFull Information concerning .Pre-emptions Is given In Bulletin No. 1, Land\nSeries, \"How to Pre-empt Lind,\" copies of\nwhleh can be obtained free of charge by\naddressing the Department of Lands, Victoria, B.C. Bureau of Provincial Information, Victoria, or any Government Agent\nRecords wm bo (ranted covering only\nbad suitable for agricultural purpoMt\nwithin reasonable distant* of rota, school\nand marketing facllltlM nnd which it not\ntlmberland, I.e., carrying over 8,000 board\nfeet per acre out of the Coast Range and\n1,000 feet per acre west of that Range.\nApplications for pre-emptions are to M\naddressed to the Land Commtesloner of\nthe Land Recording Division In which the\nland applied for li situated, on printed\nforms obtained from the Commissioner.\nPre-emptions must be occupied tor fin\nyears ana Improvements made to value of\n110 per acre, including clearing and cultivating at least five acres, before a Crown\nGrunt can be received.\nPre-emptions carrying part time oondl*\ntlons of occupation are also granted.\nPURCHASE OB UAM\nApplications are received for purchase\nof vacant and unreserved Crown lands,\nnot being tlmberland, for agricultural\npurposes. Minimum price of first-class\n(archie) land is 19 per acre, and second-\nclass (graxing) land, 12.50 per' acre.\nFurther information Is given tn Bulletin\nHo. 10, Land Series, \"Purchase and Lease\nof Crown Lands.\"\nAs a partial relief measure, reverted\nlands may be acquired by purchase tn ten\nequal instalments, with the first payment\nsuspended for two years, provided taxes\nare paid when due and improvements are\nmade during the first two years of not\nless than 10* of the appraised value.\nMill, factory or Industrial sites on\ntimber land, not exceeding 40 acres, mar\nbo purchased or leased, the conditions\nincluding payment of stumpega.\nUpsurveyed areas, not exceeding 20\nacres, may be leased as homesltea, conditional upon a dwelling being erected in\ntbe first year,-title.being obtained after\nresidence and improvement conditions a\u00bb\nfulfilled and land has been surveyed.\nPer rasing and Industrial purposes\nareas not exceeding 040 acres .may bs\nleased by one person or a company.\nUnder the Grasing Act the Province la\ndivided into grazing districts and th*\nranse administered under grasing regulations amended from time to time to meet\nvarying conditions. Annual grating permits are issued based on certain monthly\nrates pir bead of stock, Priority in grasing privileges is given' to resident stock\nowners. Stock-owners may form usociL-\ntlons for range management. Free oj\npartially free permits available for settlers,\ncampers and travellers, up to tan bead.\nTHB\nENGINEERING PROFESSION\nIN BRITISH COLUMBIA\nTha aeml-annual examinations for non-university applicants\nfor admission to the profession will take place in Vancouver.\nVictoria!, Prince Rupert, Kamloops and Nelson, on February\n22, 1937, and following days, in' the following branches of\nengineering: Civil, Chemical, Electrical, Forest, Mining,\nMechanical and Structural.\nQUALIFICATIONS\nPRELIMINARY EXAMINATION: Status, \"Engineering Pupil\";\nQualifications, JUNIOR MATRICULATION and sponsorship\nby senior engineers.\nINTERMEDIATE EXAMINATION: Status \"Englneer-ln-'Traln-\ning'; Qualification, JUNIOR MATRICULATION\\ and Engineering Pupil status or SENIOR MATRICULATION. Sponsorship by two senior engineers.\nPINAL PROFESSIONAL EXAMINATION FOR LICENSE TO\nPRACTISE: Qualifications, Engineer-in-Tralnlng status or\nthe equivalent and ten years' practical experience.\nEXAMINATION\nFOR UNIVERSITY APPLICANT*\nGraduate's final professional examination takes'place throughout the year, being an engineering thesis or extended engineering report on professional experience enjoyed subsequent tc\ngraduation. '\nQUALIFICATIONS: Graduation from an approved faculty of\napplied science, four years' practical experience and enrolment\nfor this period as an Engineer-in-Tralning.\nInformation Can Be Obtained From:\nTHE REGISTRAR\nTHE   ASSOCIATION   OF   PROFESSIONAL\nENGINEERS OF THE PROVINCE OF B.C.\n\u00bbJ0 Blrks Bldg. VANCOUVER, B.C. Seymour 1827\n PAGE TtN \u2014\t\nCRESTON LOSES\nTO NELSONITES\nScore Is 11-6 in an\nIntermediate Puck\nTilt in Nelson\nBecause their goalie, C. &hade,\nwas unable to make the trip to Nelson, and their pickup goalie was\nabsolutely out of condition, the\nopening period of the exhibition intermediate hockey game Saturday\nevening was a walkaway for the local F.A.C.-Hume, Wolves team,\nwhich scored nine goals without a\nreply in the first period. But when\nGeorge Bishop, Nelson junior goalie,\ntook his place in goal for the Creston intermediates In the last two\nperiods, the game took on a different complexion. The visitors out-\nscored the Nelson team, but lost\n11-6. The game was played before\na fair turnout of fans, many of\nthem being visitors from Creston.\nand former Crestonites.\nIn the first period Reg Taylor\nscored five goals, with the local\nboys scoring on nine of their 14\nshots. The visitors, who were playing their first game of the season,\nwere having their share of the play,\nbut Tommy Bishop in front of the\nNelson goal was playing in unbeatable form.\nWhen George Bishop was recruited for goal duty for the Creston\nteam In the second session, the visitors gained confidence behind his\nsmart blocking, and had more than\ntheir share of the play, with the local boys apparently willing to rest\non the big lead for awhile, but\nwhen the Creston boys scored four\ngoals in the second period the Nel-\nson team opened up again, but\nfound George Bishop a stumbling\nblock, being only able to score once.\nYoung, Eddy and Friti were form-\nIng a strong defence once they found\ntheir feet on the fast ice surface.\nIn the last session both teams set\na fast pace, and the Creston players\nrepeatedly got a big hand from the\ncrowd as they tried valiantly to cut\ndown the F.A.C.-Wolves lead. Creston scored two goals in the last\nperiod against one for the locals\nThe fifth goal by Creston, Rowan\n'SEE\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all yeur needs In plumbing repairs, alterations, and\nInstallations.\nPh. S16        301 VICTORIA St.\nJ.A.C, Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bids.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-MONDAY MORNINQ, JAN. 29, 1937,\non Brown's assist, was one of the\nbest pieces of combination displayed\nin the game.\nWalter Rowan scored two of the\nCreston goals, Jake Fritz, Gordon\nYoung, Doug Corrie and Jim Brown\ngetting the others. Jim Brown was\ncredited with two assists.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period:\n(1) F.A.C. Wolves \u2014 Reg Taylor\n(Leeming). 2:11.\n(2) F.A.C. Wolve*-Wa\u00ab, 4:36.\n(3) F.A.C. Wolvea-Aurella, 7:39.\n(4) F.A.C. Wolves \u2014 Reg Taylor\n10:11.\n(5) F.A.C. Wolves - Whitfield,\n10:59.\n(6) F.A.C. Wolves-Aurelia (Anderson). 13:23.\n(7) F.A.C. Wolves- Reg Taylor\n15:34.\n(8) F.A.C. Wolves - Reg Taylor\n(Leeming), 16:56.\n(9) F.A.C. Wolves - Reg Taylor,\n18:57.\nPenalties\u2014Wait.\nSecond period:\n(10) Creston \u2014 Rowan (Brown),\n3:16.\n(11) Creston\u2014Young, 5:52.\n(12) F.A.C. Wolves \u2014 Anderson,\n9:56.\n(13) Creston\u2014Fritz, 12:34.\nPenalties\u2014Wait.\nThird period:\n(15) Creston \u2014 Rowan (Brown),\n3:11.\n(16) F.A.C. Wolves-Aurelia (Anderson), 8:49.\n(17) Creston. Brown, 15:43.\nPenalties\u2014Wait and Lennon.\nStops by goalies:\nThe Unknown\"   5 \u2014 \u2014    5\nTommy Bishop  13   11   14   38\nGeorge Bishop   -  16  15  31\nTeams were:\nFairview A.C.-Hume Wolves Intermediates\u2014Tommy Bishop, goal;\nTommy Lennon, Walter Wait, Gordon Richardson, Jerry Whitfield,\ndefence; Reg Taylor, Jimmy Leeming, Roy Anderson, Johnny Aure-\nlia, Ron Lowe and Robertson, forwards.\nCreston Intermediates\u2014\"The Mysterious Unknown\" and George Bi\nshop, goal; Jake Fritz, Gordon Young\nand Homer Eddy, defence; Walter\nRowan, Jim Brown, Doug Corrie,\nBob Currle, Bud Fawelie, R. Clark\nand Tony Morabito.\nStewie Paterson refereed the\ngame.\nVINES IS WINNER\nBALTIMORE, Jan. 24 (API-Ellsworth Vines, United States tennis\nstar, defeated Fred Perry 6-1, 7-5,\nin their exhibition match here last\nnight. Perry wai badly off form in\nthe first set, loaring six games after\nwinning the first.\nHe waa afflicted by double-faults\nand lost the last game of the second\nset in this manner.\nBruce   Barnes   defeated  George\nLott in a subsidiary match, 6-1, 2'\n6-2.\nSkating Schedule\n(Week January 25th to 30th Inclusive)\nMONDAY\u20141:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. Parent and children.\n8 to 10 p.m. Adult skating.\nTUESDAY\u20144:15 to 5:45 p.m. Children skating.\nWEDNESDAY\u20142 to 4 p.m. General skating.\nTHURSDAY\u20141:30 to 3 p.m. P\u00abirent and children.\nFRIDAY\u20148 to 10 p.m.\u2014Adult skating.\nSATURDAY\u20142 to 4 p.m. Children skating.\nAll the above subject to any major attraction\nthat may offer during the week.\nNOTICE: In future, anyone not observing the rules ai to\nspeed skating, skating backwards, playing tag on the ice,\nor doing anything that will annoy any other skater on the\nice, will be removed from the rink, and not be admitted to\nany future skating period.\nWILDFIRE\nTRADEMARKED COAL\nHOT\u2014CLEAN\u2014SOOTLESS\nLump $10.50        Egg $9.50\nNelson Agents\nBurns Coal & Cartage\nMORE ABOUT\nCURLING\n(Continued Prom Pag* One)\nGrand aggregate cup\u2014until the\nadvent ot the British, Consols the\nB. C. championship trophy, went to\nFrank Avery of Vancouver with a\npercentage of .929, gained on 13\nwins and one loss In the regular\ncompetitions. In addition Avery won\ntwo and lost one in the Consols and\nhad another game In the All Comers.\nBilly Whalen's \"iron man\" rink of\nVancouver, finishing the 'spiel with\neight games on Saturday\u201419 hours\nstraight on the ice\u2014chalked up a\npercentage of .833, gained on 15\nwins and three losses. In addition\nthis rink recorded a win and a loss\nin the Consols, played In the opening All Comers, and won two more\nas the Vancouver representative\nrink in the All Comers Inter-dub\nplayoff. The coast entries in the\n'spiel will play off between them\nselves for this cup.\nFinal results in the B.C. bonsniel\nat Trail concluding Saturday follow:\nBRITISH CONSOL8\nB.C. championship:\nRoily David, Vancouver 12; Joe\nDundas, Vancouver, 9.\nGRAND AGGREGATE\nFrank Avery, Vancouver, .929; 13\nwins, 1 loss.\nBilly Whalen, Vancouver, .833; 15\nwins, 3 losses.\nGRAND CHALLENGE\nFinal:\nD. Martin, Kimberley, 9; Frank\nAvery, Vancouver. 10.\nCAMMELL-LAIRD\nSecondary to Grand Challenge:\nBilly Whalen, Vancouver, 9; W.\nL. Wood, Trail, 8.\nR088LAND CUP\nFinal:\nFrank Avery, Vancouver, 10; A.\nB. Ritchie, Kimberley, 8.\nTRAIL CUP\nSecondary to Rossland cup;\nBob  Scobie,   Vancouver,  9;  Les\nJames. Chapman Camp, 7.\nNELSON CUP\nW. M. Archibald, Kimberley, 6;\nCharles Hoefer, Trail, 9.\nKIMBERLEY CUP\nR. C. McGerrigle, Trail, 8; Billy\nWhalen, Vancouver, 6.\nCONSOLATION\nT. H. Weldon, Trail,  11; H. T.\nBeckett, Trail, 10.\nALL COMERS PLAYOFF\nBilly Whalen, Vancouver, 7; J. C.\nUrquhart, Rossland, 3.\nC0N80LATI0N\nWilliam Rae, Trail, 9; P. F. Mclntyre, Trail, 10.\nA. J. McDonell, Trail, 11; J. A.\nWadsworth, Trail, 12.\nDave Garnham, Vancouver, defaulted to H. T. Beckett, Trail.\nSyd Crowe. Vancouver, 14; W. H.\nBaldrey, Trail, 8.\nA. M. Chesser, Trail, 10; J. H.\nWoodburn, Trail, 7.\nW. H. Baldrey, Trail, 14; W. Griffith, Rossland, 8.\nWilliam Rae, Trail 13, Sam Paterson, Rossland 11.\nJack Balfour, Trail, defaulted to\nSyd CroWe, Vancouver.\nG. W. Weir, Trail, 8; J. Scott, Kimberley, 9.\nT. H. Weldon, Trail, 8; L. F. Tyson,\nTrail, 3.\nC. A. Mittun, Trail, 5; William\nForrest, Trail, 6.\nT. H. Weldon, Trail, 12; William\nForrest, Trail, 10.\nJ. A. Wadsworth, Trail, 11; P. F.\nMclntyre, Trail, 6.\nH. T. Beckett, Trail, 11; W. G.\nCarrie, Trail, 6.\nW. F. Truswell, Trail 9, J. Scott,\nKimberley. 8.\nW. F. Truswell, Trail, 5; T. H.\nWeldon, Trail, 8.\nSyd Crowe, Vancouver, 7; J. A.\nWadsworth, Trail, 6.\nA. M. Chesser, Trail, 5; P. R. McDonald, Trail, 7.\nH. T. Beckett, Trail, 10; Robert\nSomerville, Trail, 8.\nSemi-finals:\nH. T. Beckett, Trail, 10; P. R.\nMcDonald, Trail, 4.\nT.   H.   Welden,   Trail,   7;   Syd\nCrowe, Vancouver, 6.\nKIMBERLEY CUP\nR. C. McGerrigle, Trail, 10; A.\nBrowne, Nelson, 6.\nJ. Finney, Rossland, 4; Charles\nDodimead, Trail, 8.\nBilly Whalen, Vancouver, 13; Robert Somerville, Trail, 11.\nJoe Dundas, Vancouver, 7; Robert\nSomerville, Trail, 8.\nGuard Against the Flu\nWhy endanger your health washing at home, fatigue\ncaused by overwork lowers your resistance, making\nyour more susceptible to colds, which is the forerunner\nof the flu.\nSEND IT TO THE LAUNDRY\nWhere experienced help sterilizes with live steam and\nup-to-date machinery.\nFinished Flat Work, per dox 40ft\nWearing Apparel, rough dry, per doz  50<*\nDry Cleaning Suits  $1.25\nDress Suits s) 1.25 and $1.50\nKootenay Steam Laundry\nand\nKootenay No-Odor Dry\nCleaning Company\nCall 128. We Call and Deliver Free\nW. G. Carrie, Trail, 8; A. Browne,\nNelson, 9.\nCharles Dodimead, Trail, 13; Dave\nGarnham, Vancouver, 10.\nW. E. Newton, Trail, 10; H. T.\nBeckett, Trail, 9.\nSeml-flnalt:\nR. C. McGerrigle, Trail, 10; W,\nE. Newton, Trail, 6.\nBilly   Whalen,   Vancouver,   9;\nCharles Dodimead, Trail, 8.\nTRAIL CUP\nLea James, Chapman Camp, 9; P.\nR. McDonald, Trail, 7.\nJohn McGowan, Chapman Camp,\ndefaulted to Roily David, Vancouver.\nJoe Rochon, Kimberley, 9; Charles\nHoefer, Trail, 1.\nLes James. Chapman Camp, 9; W\nG. Carrie, Trail, 5.\nBob Scobie, Vancouver, II; G. J.\nKinnis, Trail, 9.\nJoe Rochon, Kimberley, 9; Roily\nDavid, Vancouver, 13.\nBilly Whalen, Vancouver, 7; John\nMcGowan, Chapman Camp, 8.\nSemi-finals:\nRoily David, Vancouver, 6; Bob\nScobie, Vancouver, 8.\nLetajamea, Chapman Camp, 9;\nW. G. Carrie, Trail, 5.\nNELSON CUP\nA. M. Chesser, Trail, 4; Howard\nBush, Nelson, 10.\nG. J. Kinnis, Trail, 11; Charles\nHoefer, Trail, 13.\nRoily David, Vancouver, defaulted\nto John McGowan, Chapman Camp.\nJoe  Rochon,  Kimberley,   11;   P.\nR. McDonald, Trail, 10.\nA. S. Horswill, Nelson, 5; Howard\nBush, Nelson, 12.\nW. M. Archibald, Kimberley, 8;\nJohn McGowan, Chapman Camp, 6.\nSemi-finals:\nJoe    Rochon,    Kimberley,    8;\nCharles Hoefer, Trail, 9.\nW. M .Archibald, Kimberley, 8;\nHoward Bush, Nelson, 7.\nCAMMELL-LAIRD\nBilly Whalen, Vancouver, 11; R.\nC. McGerrigle, Trail, 10.\nG. J. Kinnis, Trail, 13; W. H. Gates,\nFernie, 8.\nSemi-finals:\nJ.  Finney,  Rossland,  5;  W.  L.\nWood, Trail, 9.\nG.  J.   Kinnis, Trail,  10;  Billy\nWhalen, Vancouver, 11.\nALL COMERS (Club Playoff)\nSemi-finals:\nJ.  C.   Urquhart,   Rossland,   10;\nHoward Bush, Nelson, 5.\nBilly Whalen, Vancouver, 9; W.\nH. Gates, Fernie, 8,\nMORE ABOUT\nFLOOD\n(Continued From Page One)\nMARTIAL LAW\nA fourth ot Indiana\u2014 28 counties\nand parts of seven others in the flood\narea\u2014waa put under martial law by\nGovernor Clifford Townsend, who\ncalled out 1400 National guardsmen. .   .    .\nTrainloads of supplies were prepared at Indianapolis to ship to\nsuffering points. A telephone call\nto Memphis reported 14 dead and\n300 stranded at Caruthersville, Mo.,\nalong the Mississippi river. Many\ncommunities were out of touch with\nthe rest of the world.\nEngineers cut a \"fuse plug\" in the\nMississippi levee above Memphis\nin an effort to take the pressure\noff the dike at Cairo, 111. The plan\nwas to open a 131,000-acre basin to\nthe river water.\nOfficials started evacuating the\nreformatory at Frankfort, Ky. All\nthe women and some of the men\nwere moved as water rose in lower\ntier cells. Twelve prisoners were\nreported dead.\nWOR8T YET TO COME\nEverywhere it was feared the worst\nwas yet to come, as over a wide\narea punishing rain continued.\nThe whole trans-Mississippi area,\na wide productive strip at the heart\nof the nation was in one way or another struck or threatened.\nStates directly affected Included\nWest  Virginia,   Ohio,   Kentucky,\nTennessee, India, Illinois, Missouri\nArkansas, Mississippi, and Loulsl-\nanna.\nAngry,   shot-gun  toting farmers\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nLOST\u2014Valued brilliant bracelet,\nFrl, Night. Jean Lee-Warner, 650-R.\n(4591)\nNEW! OF THE DAY\nPythian Sisters' whist drive Wed.,\nJan. 27, in the K.P. hall. Adms. 25c.\n(4590)\nApprehend Car\nThieves, Trail\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 24\u2014Two local\nyouths received suspended sentence\nof one year in juvenile court here\nSaturday.\nThe boys were apprehendeded by\npolice in connection with the thefts\nof two cars, one on New Year's eve\nand one on the night of January 20.\nCar owned by Charles Brett was\ntaken from in front of his home on\nColumbia avenue and later discovered abandoned in the vicinity of\nGyro park. The other, stolen recently was taken from outside the rink\nwhile the owner, S. H. Hopkins, was\ncurling. His was located about an\nhour afterwards abandoned and off\nthe road a short distance towards\nTrail, from Fruitvale.\nElectrical   supplies  and  repairs.\nF. H. Smith, 313 Baker St. Ph. 666.\n(4282)\nfirst turned back tbe engineers seeking to cut a Mississippi levee to relieve pressure on Cairo, but eventually an opening waa made..\nEvery form of relief was sent\ninto stricken areas. The red cross\nhad hundreds of its disaster experts\non the spot; the federal administration in Washington hurriedly laid\nplans to coordinate its relief and rehabilitation activities.\n56,000 HOMELESS IN CITY\nAt least 56,000 Cincinnati residents\nwere homeless; so were 200,000 LoU'\nisville residents.\nAt Memphis, flood waters spread\nthree miles wide and at least 400\nfamilies were reported stranded on\nMississippi river islands.\nElsewhere on the flood front:\nEvansvllle, Ind\u2014U.S. army engineers reported last night 36,810\npersons have been evacuated from\nflood  threatened   homes  In tha\nEvansvllle area alone,\nPadueah, Ky.\u2014Fully 10,000 evacuate city before Ohio flood waters,\ntown Isolated.\nPortsmouth, Ohio \u2014 Acuta food\nfood shortage faees 26,000 refugees,\nShawneetewn, III.\u2014 More than\n600 WPA workers rush by boats\nto aid volunteers as leak appears\nIn levee. Practically entire town\nevacuated.\nHarrliburg, III,\u2014Power shortage feared In wide southern Illinois areaa Many towns Isolated In\nat least seven counties.\nAurora, Ind.\u2014Radio operator reports city had no water supply;\ncompletely Isolated. About 4000\nrefugees.\nWheeling, W. Va.\u2014Fully 22,000\nhomeless In state damage estimates\nrange from $2,000,000 to $5,000,000.\nNashville, T-nn.-Ejtlmatc 10,-\n000 refugees In state. Four dead.\nProperty damage about $10,000,000.\nFlood damage In Cincinnati\nalone had been estimated previously by Meteorologist W. C.\nDevereaux at $6,000,000.\nAt least 15 firemen were injured.\nSTILL RISING\nThe flood was still rising and Devereaux indicated the worst lay\nahead. The stage hovered near 75-\nfeet here, far surpassing all previously recorded high marks.\nCity officials conservatively estimated at least 56,000 persons homeless in the Cincinnati district.\nA terrific explosion started tha\nfire. Chief Houston said an electric arc from trolley wires to tha\nflood   waters   a   short   distance\nDETROIT BEATS\nMAROONS, 2-1\nDETROIT, Jan. 24 (AP) - The\nchampion Detroit Red Wings finally broke their Montreal Jinx tonight, scoring a 2-1 victory over\nMaroons before 12,000 fans. Three\nprevious encounters this season have\nended in ties, the latest in Montreal\nlast night.\nAfter a scoreless first period in\nwhich three minor penalties, and\ntwo majors were called, Maroons\ntook the lead on Gus Marker's goal.\nTaking the'puck from Bob Gracie,\nMarker skated down alone to drive\na high shot past Normie Smith.\nTAYLOR OFFERS\nHIS LOT FOR\nSALE\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 24 (CP)-\"Lot\n191, Hastings Townslte,\" probably\nthe most famous small parcel of\nland in Vanconver, has been put\nup for sale.\nIt Is the property on which ex-\nmayor Louis D. Taylor qualified to\nrun in 18 civic elections.\n\"I guess this ends my running for\nmunicipal office In Vancouver,\"\nTaylor said in announcing the lot\nwas for sale.\nThe lot contains a small garage\nand is assessed at $1180.\nK.C. Military Whist and dance.\nYoung, Troubadours. Catholic Hall,\nWed., January 27. (4581)\nTRY GRENFELL'S CAFE EVENING SPECIAL FRIED OYSTER\n8ANOWICH. (4661)\nSaturday Hockey\nNATIONAL   LEAGUE\nToronto 4, New York Rangers 0.\nMontreal  Maroons   1,  Detroit  1\n(overtime).\nINTERNATIONAL-AMERICAN\nLEAGUE\nPhiladelphia 4, Syracuse 2.\nSpringfield 2, New Haven 1.\nProvidence 2, Cleveland 2 (overtime).\nINTERNATIONAL\nINTERCOLLEGIATE\nMcGill 11, Queens 2.\nYale 5, Princeton 3.\nU.8.E.A.H.L.\nNew York Rovers 3, Pittsburgh 2.\nBaltimore 5, Hershey 4 (overtime).\nEXHIBITION\nAtlantic  City  8,   Sherbrooke,\nQue., 2.\nUniversity  of Manitoba  5,  University of Minnesota 0.\nPACIFIC COAST\nOakland 6. Seattle 2.\nALBERTA SENIOR AMATEUR\nEdmonton   Superiors  4,   Calgary\nBronks 2.\nChesser Presents Medallions and\n(rests to David Rink, B.C. Champs\nCoast Team Will Go\nto Toronto for the\nMacdonald Brier\nGold medallions and the sweater\ncrests won by Roily David's Vancouver rink, winners of the British\nConsols competition, were present-\nCANADIENS WIN\nCHICAGO, Jan. 24 (AP)\u2014Montreal's fast sapping Canadiens tightened their hold on first place ir\nthe Canadian division of thev Na\ntional Hockey league tonight by\ned to the champions by A. M. Ches-1 handing Chicago Black Hawks a\n4-1 defeat before 11,000 fans.\nThe veteran line of Morenz, Gagnon and Joliat picked, up two of the\nMontreal goals and although the\nChicagoans matched the visitors in\nspeed and fight they could not keep\npace in smooth passing and accurate\nshooting.\nGenuine  Kenyon  Patter Snow-\nshoes. Priced right, Hipperson Hdwe\n(4556)\nHERE YOU ARE! Just the SERVICE you've been looking for . . .\nTHE CLASSIFIED ADS, Phone 144.\nOn demonstration five leading\nradio manufacturers' products at\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE.\n(4309)\naway Ignited oil and gasoline spilled on the surface by the wreckage\nof flood-stricken storage tanks.\nWitnesses said the first blast was\nfollowed by a series of others as the\nflames swept like wildfire.\nFire shot over the eight-story\nCrosley Radio Corp. building.\n\"It is a God-send that the windows were closed,\" said William B.\nGriese, chief inspector of the Crosley plant.\n\"About 200 of us In the plant\ncrawled through every available\nexit as the telehpone operator\nshouted into the public address system, 'everybody get out.'\"\nEmployees of radio station WLW\nran down eight flights of stairs and\nescaped as the station went off the\nair. Elevators were not running,\nBroadcasting was resumed later at\nremote studios.\nYour Last Choi\nFree\nPanfc\nOnly one more weelcj\ntake   advantage  of\nFREE PANTS offered!\nFashioned-Craft On tl|\nmade to measure\nDon't pass up this c\nof saving 20 to 25%.\nand Satisfaction absolu\nly guaranteed.\nEMORY':\n***     Limited\nHarry Brown Breaks Collarbone\nas His Team Wins K. 0. Tourney\nBURNS' ANNIVERSARY, Tonight,\n8. P.M. Eagle Hall. Tickets $1.25 St\nLedinghtyn's, Koot. Music House,\nA. Wallach.  Only a few left.   (4542)\nIf you want to SHAKE WITH\nLAUGHTER see \"Are You a Mason?\" at Fa'rview Parish Hall \u2014\nFebruary 4th and 6th. 8 p.m. (4641)\nI. 0. 0. F.\nJoint Installation of officers Kootenay Lodge No. 16 and Queen City\nRebekah Lodge No. 16, Monday, Jan.\n25th at 8:30 p.m. Visiting Brothers\nand Sisters urged to attend.   (4583)\nAnnual meeting of the Chamber\nof Mines will be held on Thursday,\nJanuary 28 at 8 P.M. In Chamber of\nMines Office. Everybody welcome.\n(4592)\nNELSON BOARD OF TRADE\nBoard of Trade members, Radio\nDealers and others interested, are\nrequested to attend a dinner at\nHume Hotel, January 27 at 6:30\np.m., in honor of Hon. G. M. Weir,\nProvincial Minister of Education,\nMajor W. E. Gladstone Murray,\ngeneral manager of Canadian\nBroadcasting Corporation and Mr.\nFrank Putnam, M.L.A. Tickets 75c,\nwill be available at Hotel January 27. (4584)\nEarlscourt  Rangers\nTake Series by\n5to3\nMAY MEET THE\nKIMBERLEY BOYS\nLONDON, Jan. 24 (CP Cable)-\nEarlscourt Rangers won the British\nIce Hockey association trophy for\nthe \"knockout\" tournament when\nthey defeated Manchester Rapids 3-1\n'#,t night. The win gave them thi\ntotal-goal series by 5-3, the teams\nhaving played a 2-2 tie in their first\nmeeting.\nThe tournament had nothing to do\nwith the regular national league\nschedule, but by winning it Rangers\nimproved their chances of being selected as England's representatives\nin the world tournament here next\nmonth, in which Kimberley Dyna'\nmiters will represent Canada.\nThe victory was costly for Rangers\nbecause Harry Brown from Kimberley, B. C-, star defenceman, broke a\ncollar bone when he crashed into\nthe boards.\nHarringay Racers held their two-\npoint lead at the top of the National\nleague standing by defeating Southampton Viking 5-1.\nWembley Lions kept right behind\nthe leaders by defeating Wembley\nMonarchs 5-2.\nBert Peer of Oakvllle, Ont., was\n<\u2022>-\nthe bright star of the Racer win\nwith three goals. Fan Hexlmer of\nNiagara Falls got the other and\nHugh Farquharson of Montreal scored for Vlltings.\nAlbert Lemay of St. Bonifac, Man.,\nscored twice for Lions and Jo Jo\nGraboski of Oshawa, Ont, Bobby\nWalton of Ottawa and Alex Archer\nof Winnipeg tallied the others. Jack\nWilkinson of Ottawa and Smith\nscored for Monarchs.\nIn the final knockout game Johnny Acheson of Toronto scored twice\nfor Rangers. Jack Forsey of Calgary\nand Kimberley also chalked one up\nand Larry Laframboise of Montreal\nscored for Manchester.\nSix Goals in L\nPeriod Gel (\nTie for Bruin\nBOSTON, Jan. 24 (CP)-A\nperiod rally.that netted tha\ngoals gave Boston Bruins\novertime tie with New Yori\nerlcans  In   a  thrilling  Ni\nhockey league battle hera\nbefore 15,000 fans. Art Ross, B\nmanager, yanked his goaler I\nlast minute of play and Va\nHooley   Smith   snatched  vl\nfrom Amerks by scoring tha\ngoal with only 12 seconds to\nThe Bruins' tying tally, by\naccording to a hasty check'\navailable records, has never\nmatched. Trailing 5-6, with\nonds to play,  Manager Art\nyanked Tiny Thompson, his\nto throw six forwards into th\nscramble for thc tying goa\nbefore the goalie's substitute\nleave   the   Boston   bench,\nwhacked the puck home.\nWA8 INGENIOUS THIEI\nBOMBAY (CP)-RanchodlsI\nji's ingenlousness in thefts fn\ntemple here earned him a Jail\nfence. It was said he waxed om\nof a stick, and, pushing it thl\nthe bars of a coffer, removed <\nBuy or Sell With a Want\nSMYTHE'S\nU-Need-a-Gargle\nAi a  Preventive Against I\nand  Influenza\nSMYTHE'S PHARMAC\nPHONE 1\nCIVIC\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nThe body of Mrs. Ellen Miller will\nrest in the Davis Funeral Service\nuntil 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, 26th. inst.,\nthence to St. Saviour's Pro-Cathedral where service will be conducted by Rev. J. G. Holmes.      (4593)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nser, immediate past president of\nthe B. C, Curling association, in a\nquiet ceremony in the bonspiel \"office\". He congratulated the team\nand wished it success in the Macdonald Brier playdowns in Toronto\nfor the Canadian title.\nGeorge Norgan, chairman of the\nVancouver Bonspiel association snd\na member of the rink, recalled that\nhe and Mr. David were members\nof the first Consols championship\nfour two years ago.\nThe coast boys had enjoyed their\nvisit and were greatly pleased to\nhave won the Consols, though they\nwere not aiming particularly at it\nwhen they entered the 'spiel, but\nwere seeking rather to promote fellowship and to interest the interior\nmen in the coast bonspiel, he said.\nThe publicity received by visiting\nrinks in the B. C. bonspiel was \"a\ngreat incentive\" to them.\nSilver medallions were received\nby Joe Dundas, 'Spike\" Kinney, Mac\nBraden and \"Baldy\" Baldersion,\nrunners-up.\nH FOR RANGERS\nNEW YORK, Jan. 24 (CP)-New\nYork Rangers defeated Toronto\nMaple Leafs 4-2 in a National hockey\nJeague match before 13,000 spectators here tonight. The triumph gave\nRangers undisputed possession of\nsecond place In the United States\ndivision, one point in the van of\nBoston Bruins.\nExceptional leniency by the officials enabled the players to deal\nout lusty body checks almost at\nwill and several times the games\nthreatened to break out Into a free-\nfor-all.\nULIVIN-Mrs. John of Gold Hill,\npassed away Friday. Body rests at\nSomer's Funeral Home, Nelson,\nwhere service will be conducted\nWednesday at 2 p.m., Rev. Earl\nLindgren officiating. (4589)\nFUNERAL NOTICE\nNYMAN\u2014Johan Singfrid passed\naway Saturday. Body rests at Somer's Funeral Home, where service\nwill be held Tuesday at 1:30 p.m.,\nRev. Earl Lindgren officiating.\n(4588)\nThe Highways of the District\nhave never been in better shape.\nOur coaches are comfortably\nheated, equipped with storm windows and reclining seats.\nGREYHOUND LINES\nPhone 800\nNelson Depot \u2014 205 Baker St.\n(4304)\nCIVIC CENTRE BUILDING\nTWO FEATURE\nATTRACTIONS\nTONIGHT, TUESDAY AND\nWEDNESDAY\nMatinee Wednesday at 2 p.m.\nEvenings at 7 p.m. and\n8:30 p.m.\nDOUCLASS  MONTGOMERY\nADRIENNE AMES\nEVELYN VENABLE\nin\n\"Harmony\nLane\"\nBased on the  Life of\n8TEPHEN  COLLIN8  FOSTER\n\"Private\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"The Home of Good Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stanley Si\n99\nFeaturing\nEdward Everett Horton\nEVENING   PRICES\nAdults 30f, Children 15<\nWEDNESDAY MATINEE\nAdults 251, Children 10<\n, 2 at 3:19\nRalph Bellamy\u2014 Katherine Locke\nDavid Holt \u2014 Andy Clyde\nin\n\"STRAIGHT FROM\nTHE SHOULDER\"\nS\u00bbS\u00ab\u00ab$S\u00ab-\u00ab\u00ab*\u00abSa\u00bbfM\u00abS^^\nNEW LOW ADMISSION PRICES\nEVENINGS\u2014Adults: Balcony 25c; Orchestra 35c.\nChildren 15c.\nMATINEES-Adulti 25c; Children 10c.\n:\u00a3fc\u00ab*A*\u00a3fteaSaia\u00ab*yi**ACa\u00abM*-jM*s*A4a>eaa*\u00ab^\n __^^\u2014\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_1937_01_25","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\/1.0412538","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":"1937-01-25 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":"1937-01-25 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":""}]}