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This could be a full linked open date URI or an internal identifier"}],"FileFormat":[{"label":"File Format","value":"application\/pdf","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","classmap":"edm:WebResource","property":"dc:format"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","explain":"A Dublin Core Elements Property; The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource.; Examples of dimensions include size and duration. Recommended best practice is to use a controlled vocabulary such as the list of Internet Media Types [MIME]."}],"FullText":[{"label":"Full Text","value":" Coleman Takes Rossland 2-0 to\nGo Into 4th. Place Tie\n\u2014Pa&e Ei&ht\n5$\nBase Metal Exports From Canada',\nSet New Record in Year -\n\u2014.Page Eleven\nVOLUME 36\nFIVE CENTS PER COPY\nNELSON, BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-SATURDAY MORNING, JAN. 15,1938\nNUMBER 259\nChinese Again E^pture\nrr*   \u2666    \u2666\nWall Street Amazed as U. S\/f^x\u00a3:|lnt\nUrges Abolition of Holding Companies\nMORE THAN HALF\nNew Nelson City Fathers Assume Off Ice\ngie lsining\nTROOPS RETAKE\nOF BIG FIRMS IN\nII. S. CONCERNED\nEXPERTS ASSERT\nRoosevelt Hits at \u2022All\nLines of Industry\nand Finance\n?AILS SAY HOW\nTO STOP THEM\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 4 (API-\nPresident Roosevelt startled the\nUnited States business world today with an emphatic call for the\nabolition of holding companies in\nall lines of Industry and finance.\nHe told his semi-weekly press\nconference In unmistakable terms\nthat his ultimate aim was the\nelimination of such concerns not\nonly among the power utilities, as\nnow partially provided by law,\nbut In banking and other business and Industrial fields.\nWall Street frankly was amazed. Experts on corporation finance were quick to say that more\nthan half the companies whose securities are widely held are holding companies, In some degree at\nleast\nOf the latter, they said, many actually are operating companies\nowning outright control of subsid-\ni-ries, and thus differ from the pyramided type of holding company to\nwhich Mr. Roosevelt has objected\nin the past in the utilities field.\nSo complex was the question posed by the president, in fact, that\nmany financial men said they\nthought there might be qualiiica-\ntibBswhteh Mrfr'RcWevHt htP_Wi\nmentioned at his press conference.\nRegarding the president's criticism of holding companies in the\nbanking field, and his attack upon\n\"remote control\" of local banks,\nthey estimated that four compan-\nTH0MA8 MacDONALD\nNelson ,old timer, who died in\nVictoria Thursday night following a fall. This snapshot was\ntaken after the Ypres Day parade in Nelson last spring.\nVancouver to Be\nTrans-Pacific Air\nTerminus He Says\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 14  (CP)  -\nles control banks having assets of day aboard the liner Niagara, in-\nnearly $3,000,000,000. ,    | bound from New Zealand. While at\nWhen or how Mr. Roosevelt pro-  Wellington, N. Z,, he attended a\nposed to carry out his idea was left conference which organized collec-\nBIGGAR ASSAILS\nTHE RELEVANCY\nOFARGUMENTSIN\nSUPREME COURT\nJustice   Agrees  That\n'Speeches' Not to\nBe Influence\nALBERTA HEARING\nGOES ON MONDAY\nOTTAWA, Jan.' 14 (CP)- Assailing approximately two-thirds\nof the arguments advanced by\ncounsel for the Dominion government, the banks and the newspapers against the validity of\nthree Alberta bills, Col. O. M. Big-\ngar, chief counsel for Alberta,\ntoday began his argument before\nthe supreme court of Canada In\ndefence of the measures.\nThe bills, designed to Impose a\ntax on the paid-up capital, reserve funds and undivided profits\nof banks, to regulate credit and\nto \"ensure the publication of accurate' news and Information,\"\nwere passed by the Alberta legislature but assent to them was reserved by the lieutenant-governor.\nThey were referred to the court\nfor an opinion on their validity by\nthe Dominion government and Col.\nBiggar said the reference was by\nthe same authority, the governor-\nUniess\"prescnt Ph\"\" ot Imperial general-in-council, which would\nAirways are \"radically\" changed, have to decide whether they should^\nVancouver will become eastern ter- j ever become laws. They could nof>\nminus of the company's trans-Pa- become law until the governor-\ncific .air _jute._fc.the Antipodes- ffS^gS^&mtU\nto the court would Have been more\nsatisfactory il it had asked whether\nthe bills would be v*lld if they received the royal assent instead of\nwhether they were \"intra vires of\nthe legislature.\"\n(Continued on Page Eight)\nwft\u00abn-'t_-rt\/s*rvle_*%'\u00abW.ed,,:Cap'\ntain Frank EntwistlJ-said here tonight.\nHead of the overseas division ol\nthe British air ministry's meteorological office, Captain Entwistle\narrived at Vancouver earlier in the\nto conjecture.\nDefence Rests\nin Slaying Case\nSPOKANE, Wash, Jan. 14 (AP)-\nIn a surprise move late today the\nUnited States government rested its\ncase against Reese Bailey, Alcatraz\nconvict charged with murder in connection with the 1935 Rosalie bank\nrobbery, and Frank Baird, Spangle\nfarmer charged with being an accomplice.\nWithout previous indication U.S.\nDistrict Attorney Sam Driver announced his case was complete while\neight federal witnesses were to be\ncalled, including Guy Metcalf, Rosalie district farmer who is under a\nstare charge in the same case and\nwho was expected to be one of the\nprosecution's principal witnesses.\nTestimony designed to complete\nthe government's charge that Baird\nwas the secret agent for Bailey before the robbery and murder of\nMarshsal Bert Lemley and then removed evidence at the farm where\nBailey had lived, occupied most of\nthe day.\nFOUR DROWN IN\nA CAR IN LAKE\nSUTTON, Ont., Jan. 14 (CP) -\nFour members of a fishing party,\nthree men and a woman, were\ndrowned In Lake Simcoe late today when an automobile plunged\nthrough soft ice into 50 feet of\nwater two miles off this fishing village. Two others, a man and a\nboy.escaped death.\nThe bodies were trapped in the\ncar at the bottom of the lake, J-\nNelson, the driver, broke the glass\nof a window and swam to the surface. Jack Wilkinson, 14, being pulled on the sleigh behind the machine,\nwas not drawn into the water.\nThe dead, all from nearby Bel-\nhaven.\nJack Bird; Mrs. aJck Wilkinson;\nEmmanuel Nelson and William\nJones.\ntion of weather data in preparation for the trans-Pacific Imperial\nAirways service.\nCaptain Entwistle said he had no\nidea when the first trial flights over\nthe Pacific from Vancouver to New\nZealand would be made. He only\nknew that Vancouver was \"definitely\" terminus at the Canadian end\nof the route.\nAt Vancouver the Imperial Airways trans-Pacific service will connect with trans-Canada airlines.\nFrom Montreal the Imperial Airways trans-Atlantic service will operate.\nPouce Coupe Power\nPlant Fire Damaged\nVICTORIA, Jan. 14 (CP)-Radio\nadvices reaching British Columbia\npolice headuarters here today told\nof a fire which did $350 damage to\nthe new plant of the Pouce Coupe\nPower & Light company at the\nPeace River centre.\nThe blaze started when oil scum\nIgnited as a worker warmed up a\ndiesel engine with a hlowtorch.\nHand extinguishers loaned by the\nprovincial police were used to extinguish the Are.\nZero weather prevailed at the\ntime of the fire.\nCHINESE NEW\nYEAR'S TO BE\nQUIET, JAN. 31\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 14 (CP) -\nJanuary 31, Chinese New Year's,\nwill be observed quietly in Vancouver's Chinatown this year.\nInstead of the usual holiday .eastings, fire crackers ind entertainment the Chinese population will\nspend the day in prayer end mourning for the plight of countrymen in\ntheir homeland.\nProminent Chinese will gather\nSunday to discuss problems connected with the Oriental conflict\nand to formulate plans to help further the defence of their country.\nRadical-Socialist Bonel Decides\nToday If Will Form French Gov't.\nPARI8, Jan. 14 (CP-Havas)-\nTaik of solving the grave French\npolitical crisis was offered to\nGeorges Bonnet, Radical-Socialist statesman and finance minister\nIn the Camilla Chautempts cabinet which fell early today over\nthe Issue of monetary control.\nFuture of the Popular Front, Leftist Coalition, which has ruled France\nsince the spring of 1936, appeared\nlo be at stake. It' was doubtful\nwhether the Socialists and Com\nmunists, who brought about collapse of the Chautemps regime after an all-night chamber of deputies\nsession, would support Bonnet.\nSocialists, Communists and Radical-Socialists make up the great majority of the Popular Front.\nSummoned to the helm by President Albert Lebrun, after a day\nfilled with consultations among the\npresident and leading statesmen,\nBonnet deferred until tomorrow the\ndecision on whether he would attempt to form a cabinet.\nF.B.C. HITS AT\nMAE WEST SKIT\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 14 (API-\nMae West's recent \"Adam and Eve\"\nradio skit drew formal condemnation today from the federal communications commission.\nThe commission said the feature\nby Miss West and Don Amecr\/e,\nand the dialogue between the actress and Charlie McCarthy, Edgar\nBergen's dummy, \"were far below\neven the minimum standards which\nshould control any selection and\nproduction of a broadcast programs\".\nChairman Frank R. McNinch\nwrote Lenox R. Lohr, president of\nNational Broadcasting Company,\nInc., that \"in' view of your recognition of the objectionable character of the program in question and\nof your assurance that greater care\nand caution will be exercised in\nthe future, the commission has decided to take no further action at\nthis time than the writing of this\nletter in condemnation.\"\nNAVAL; MILITARY, AIR\nMANEUVERS FOR SINGAPORE\nLONDON, Jan. 14 (CP Cable)-\nSingapore, Britain's formidable naval base in the war-troubled far\neast, will be the focal point early\nin February of combined naval, military and air maneuvers preceding\nthe opening of the huge new dry-\ndock there February 14. An impressive array of warships and airplanes, in addition to army detachments, will participate in the exercises. The joint defence services'\nannouncement issued tonight described the maneuvers as \"a combined operations exercise\" and added it was expected they would be\n\"oh the same scale as last year\".\nST\u00bbRT FIR8T TOWER,\n\u25a0L FIR8T NARROWS BRIDGE\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 14 (CP)-The\nfirst of two steel towers to support\nthe Inain span 'ofcihe new First\nNarrows bridge-'Wll be started on\nMonday, the main pier at the south\nend of the bridge has been completed by Stuart, Cameron St Co., Ltd.,\nand Dominion Bridge Co., Ltd. will\nerect the superstructure. The tower,\n350 feet high, will be built in six\nweeks.\nSPANI8H INSURGENTS\nDESTROY  A  TRAIN\nHENDAYE, France, at the Spanish Frontier, Jan. 14 (AP)\u2014Insurgent bombing planes today were\nreported to have destroyed an entire train bringing up government\nreinforcements to the Teruel front\nin Eastern Spain. The insurgent\ndispatches said the government was\nmoving new troops into the hotly-\ncontested sector in anticipation of\na new insurgent offensive. Teruel\nwas' captured by the government\nlate in December in a drive that\ncaught the insurgent garrison by\nsurprise.\nFIND 3 CANADIAN\nMAGAZINES NOT\nOBSCENE\nTORONTO, Jan. 14 (CD-\nCharges of manufacturing and\ndistributing or offering for sale\nobscene magazines were dismissed today by Magistrate James\nCowan against Stephen S. Clow\nand Morris Rubin.\nE. J. Murphy, K, C, defence\ncounsel, said the magazines in\nquestion, Broadway Brevities,\nCanadian Tattler and Garter\nGirls were not only not obscene \"but could not hold a\ncandle to other magazines sold\neverywhere.\"\n'TOM' Mcdonald\nDIES SUDDENLY\nAS RESULT OF A\nFALL, VICTORIA\nCame  to  Nelson 31\nYears Ago; Was\nWith 54th\nWIDELY KNOWN  \u2022\nFISH ENTHUSIAST\nSuffering a fall Tuesday night In\nVictoria, his winter home, Thomas\nMcDonald, old time Nelson resident\nand war veteran, died late Thursday\nnight at the home ol his youngest\nson, Thomas McDonald, Jr., according to a message received here early\nFriday eveninsUBM-fclitthave been\n!_>\n..day evei_\nSAILOR AT\nBom'at Isla. near Keith, Banff'\nshire, Scotland,,he went to sea at 13\nin a sailing ship, and after spending\nseveral years at the sheep station\nof his uncle, at Willimaroo, returned to the sea, which he followed for many years, both sail and\nsteam, finally becoming chief steward of the Titanic, of the West Indian Direct Packet line out of Glasgow.\nLeaving the sea, he was with\nLowden Bros., electrical engineers,\nat Dundee from 1900 to 1904, and\nsuperinteded the overhead installation for the City of Ayr Trams-\nways. He then joined the Paisley\nDistrict Tramway company, as foreman of overhead work. Before leaving the sea he married at Dundee\nin 1892, Miss Mary Mtiir Rae, whom\nhe had met in'Australia.\nBringing his family to Canada,\nMr. McDonald came direct to Nelson, where he arrived April 6, 1907.\nHe was an electrician at the Hall\nMines smelter, and after the shutdown, was successively with a\nCP.R. bridge crew, on the steamer\nKuskanook with Captain William\nSeaman, caretaker of the. Y.M.C.A.,\nand then of the Central school, and\nfinally messenger of the Royal bank\nHe enlisted in the 54th Koqtenay\nbattalion in the summer of 1915,\nwhen \"A\" company was training\nat Nelson, and served with the zat-\ntalion overseas till invalided home\nin March, 1917, going to a military\nhospital near Victoria.\nMAIL CLERK\nAFTER THE WAR\nAfter returning to Nelson, he became a railway mail clerk on the\n(Continued on Page Eight)\nAt 10:30 o'clock Friday morning, Nelson's new mayor, aldermen and police commissioner unitedly took\ntheir oaths of office at the city hall, the ceremony\nbeing staged in the office of W. E. Wasson, city\nclerk, who administered the oaths. Left to right, the\npicture shows Alderman T. H. Waters, Alderman\nG. M. Benwell, Mayor N. C. Stibbs, Police Commissioner Frank Sims, Alderman C. W. Tyler, and\nCity Clerk W. E. Wasson.\u2014Daily News Photo.\nCanadian and U* S. Qov'ment\nLeaders Confer With Labor\nW. R. MacDonald,\nKYearsWithWesI\nKootenay, Passes\nWilliam R. MacDonald, .master-\nmechanic tor the West? Kootenay;\nTower: * Llgftt.-ompany at South\nSlocan for if years, died in Kootenay Lake General hospital Friday\nafternoon' after an-illness of about a\nyear. He was 53 years of age.\nBefore joining the .employ of the\ncompany he was interested In mining at Phoenix, and was with the\nGranby Smelting company at Grand\nForks. Born in Prince Edward\nIsland, Mr. MacDonald came to\nBritish Columbia about 30 year,\nago, and was well known throughout the district.\nHe is survived by his wife, lour\nsons, Roy in eastern Canada, David,\nAllan and Gordon at home, one\ndaughter, Betty, at home, one brother, Gordon MacDonald at Coleman,\nAlta., and one sister, Mrs. Herdman\nMcLeod at Mercole, Alta.\nCANADA'S ONLY\nADMIRAL DEAD\nMONTREAL, Jan. 14 (CP)-Death\ncame today to Canada's only admiral, William Oswald Story, a square-\njawed Irishman whose gallantry\nwas noted through the scores of\nyears he sailed the seas.\nSeventy-eight years old and an\ninvalid, Admiral Story had been in\nill health several weeks prior to his\ndeath which occurred as he slept.\nIt brought to a close a long naval\ncareer which began when Story left\nhis birthplace near Crossdoney, in\nnorthern Ireland, to join the royal\nnavy in 1871.\nJUSTICE, CLINGS  TO   GAIN\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 14 (API-\nSupreme Court Justice Benjamin\nN. Cardozo, seriously ill with heart\ndisease, clung tonight to a gain he\nachieved more than 24 hours ago.\nHis' physicians said they viewed this\nas a \"hopeful sign\".\nFIFTH SLIDE AT DREWRY BLOCKS\nTRAIN; NOT KNOWN WHEN (LEAR\nFifth slide of the winter season, coming down at mileage 106\nIn the vicinity of Drewry early\nFriday night, blocked the C. P. R.\n\u25a0.tracks east of here. A work train,\nunder the supervision of E. 8.\nMcCracken, divisional superintendent, left Friday night to clear\nthe obstruction, the size of which\nwas undetermined at a late hour.\nIt was not known when the east\nbound   passenger,  arriving   here\nfrom the coast, would be able to\nproceed east.\nThe avalanche was the fifth to\ncome down in that area since December 28, the opening day of a five-\nday battle waged against snow\nblockades which tumbled down on\nthe C. P. R. tracks in four giant\nslides.\nU.S. Citizens Have Free Speech\nHull Replies lo Berlin Protest\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 14 (API-\nSecretary Hull met an official German protest against a bitter anti-\nHitler speech by former Ambassador William E. Dodd today with an\nexplanation that United States citizens enjoy the right of free speech.\nHans Heinrlch Dieckhoff, German\nambassador, visited the state department to tell Hull that Dodd, who\nrecently resigned from the diplomatic corps after five years as the\nAmerican envoy at Berlin, had insulted Hitler in an address in New\nYork last night,\nHull replied that Dodd had resigned his ambassadorship, was now\na private citizen and therefore en\njoyed the freedom ol speech guan-\nteed him by the constitution.\nBERLIN, Jan. 14 (AP)-A three-\nline reference to the, protest of the\nGerman ambassador, Hans Heinrlch\nDIeckhoff, to Secretary of State\nCordell Hull was all that was permitted to be printed here today\nconcerning the anti-Hitler speech\nof William E. Dodd, former ambassador to Germany.\nThe item carried by the semi-official news agency, the Deutsches\nNachrlchtenburo, merely stated the\nGerman ambassador had protested\nagainst Dodd's ''insulting references\nto Germany and der fuehrer\" in\nNew York last night\nIndustry, Finance and Labor In Conference\nWith Roosevelt; Labor Presents Plans\nto Premier King and Cabinet\nOTTAWA, Jan. 14 (CP)-Prlmef\nMinister Mackenzie King and his\ncolleagues received suggestions\ntoday from representatives of\n\u2022ome 175,000 Canadian workers,\nwhich, If adopted, would radically alter, the. whole employment\nplot^'Md-'femoyt completely\n'tnYdr-'atof a permMes. old \u00bb_\u00bb'.\nOfficers of the Trades and Labor Congress of Canada with\nthose of the combined railroad\nbrotherhoods made their annual\npilgrimage to Parliament Hill\nwhere the prime minister and the\nmajority of his colleagues heard\nextensive briefs outlining the\nkind of legislation the workers\nwould like to see adopted.\nNot attempting to deal with the\nrecommendations in detail, the\nprime minister assured the 50 delegates his government would give\nthem serious consideration.\nP. M. Draper of Ottawa, president of the Trades and Labor congress, chief spokesman of the delegation, proposed the government\nprovide an adequate retiring allowance for every person desiring\nto withdraw from industry or commerce at the age of 60 years, thus\nopening the way for younger men\nto find employment. There was no\ncomment from the government on\nthis scheme.\nOther recommendations, many included in the brief presented by the\nrailway brotherhoods, called for\namendments to the British North\nAmerica act, so the federal government could legislate lor hours of\nwork, unemployment, social and\nhealth insurance, regulation of highway traffic and other matters in\nwhich jurisdiction is divided as between Dominion and provinces.\nW. L. Bes, secretary of the railway brotherhood delegation, urged imposition of canal tolls, more\nequitable taxation and regulation of\ncommercial transportation on the\nhighways and amendments to the\nincome war tax act.\nNew Reorganization\nof B. C. Nickel Mines\nPlanned, Says Spencer\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 14 (CP)-Col.\nVictor Spencer, member of the\nthree-man syndicate financing development at British Columbia Nickel mines today told members of\nVancouver stock exchange a new\nreorganization plan for, the company was being considered.\nCol. Spencer said the syndicate\nwould receive 300,000 shares of\nstock in the reorganized company.\nOther members of the syndicate are\nBenjamin Smith and C. D. Kaeding.\n\"Our chief idea is to get the mine\nin operation,\" Col. Spencer told the\nstock exchange members at a luncheon meeting. He said the Syndicate planned to install a 250-ton\nmill at first, and that it would later\nbe increased to 500-ton capacity.\nSues for Five Cents\nfor Attempt on Life\nCAIRO, Egypt, Jan. 14 (AP)-\nFormer Premier Mustapha Nahas\nPasha of Egypt today claimed damages of five cents\u2014one piastre\u2014\nfrom a youth who attempted to\nassassinate him last November. Nahas, intervening as a \"civil party\",\nclaimed the damages from Abd el\nKader, the confessed asssailant,\nawaiting criminal trial for the attack.\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 14 (AP)-\nLeaders of United States government, Industry, finance and labor, joined hands today In a common search for some means pf\nbringing the current business\nslump.is an abrupt and mutually\nwelcome ,end.-,' - ,\n' Shortly after neon; the office\ne\u00bb President ~fl_c.ev.riy war the\nGathered there were the chief\nexecutive, Thomas W. Lamont,\nsenior Morgan partner, Owen D.\nYoung of General Electric, Charles W. Taussig of American Molasses, A. A. Berle, a former administration advisor, and John L.\nLewis and Philip Murray of the\nC. I. O.\nFor an hour and a quarter they\ntalked ol the business situation,\nand of ways to imrove it. When\nthe president's visitors emerged\nfrom the white house it was the\nlabor leader, Lewis, who was their\nspokesman to reporters.\n\"We attended this conference\nwith the president,\" he said\u2014while\nthe industrialists stood about nodding agreement\u2014, \"and discussed\nwith him the gravity of the existing economic and industrial situation in the country.\n\"This group had had some preliminary discussions and were impressed with the desirability, if at\nall possible, of working out with\nthe president and the administration some_definite program of action by government, business and\nlabor,\nued at the president's discretion.\"\n\"The discussions will be contin-\nscene   of  an   unusual   spectacle,\nLearn Identity of\nMan Coming Back\nto Pay Old Debts\nREGINA, Jan. 14 (CP) \u2014 That\nmysterious Englishman who, came\ninto' a fortune and cabled -Attorney\nGeneral T. C. Davis ol Saskatchewan a lew weeks ago that he was\ncoming back to pay off !?11 .his\ndebts accumulated in the province\nfive years ago was revealed today\nas Leonard John Hitt, now ol Portsmouth, England.\nMr. Hitt spent $20 of his $10,000\nlegacy to cable that he was returning soon to pay a number ol debts\nresulting Irom failure ol a business\nhe operated in Prince Albert district.\nCITY BY STORM,\nDRIVE JAPANESE\n3 MILES AWAY\nJapan to Send China's\nAmbassador Home\nImmediately\nNIPPONESE CLOSE\nIN ON SUCHO\\\nTOKYO, Jan. 16 (Saturday).\n(CP-Havas)\u2014The newspaper Yo-\niniurl predicted this morning that\nHsu Shih-Ylng, Chinese ambassador to Japan, would be handed\nhis passport today and would\nleave for China Immediately.\nThe Yomiuri did not state the\nsource of Its Information. The report, observers said, apparently\nmeant the); a statement of policy\npresented by the cabinet to Emperor Hirohlto for aproval would\nannounce severance of relations\nwith the Chinese National government headed by General Chiang\nKai-Shek.\nCHINE8E RETAKE '\nCITY OF TSINING\nSHANGHAI, Jan. 15 (Saturday).\n(AP)\u2014A reinforced Chinese army,\nfighting savagely to stave off Japanese conquest of the nation's bread\nbasket, was-reported today to have ,\nrecaptured stategic Tsining by\nstorm.\nChinese dispatches said the Jap*\nanese captors of the southern Shantung \u2022 province city were taken by\nsurprise by a furious counter-attack\nover the frozen surface ol the historic grand canal and driven three\nmiles Irom the city. ' 1\nThe tide ol bkttle In the great\nagricultural region of Central China '\napparently still was in the balance\nas the Japanese claimed slow but\nsteady advances toward the vital .\nLunghai railway despite determined\nresistance of a Chinese army estl- .\nmated at 400,000.\nIndependent reports Indicated\nGeneralissimo Chiang Kai-Shek, In\npersonal command on the Lunghai front, was concentrating his ul\u00ab\nmost strength along the tailroad.\n'Tiyo Japanese columns were clos? ,\nIng oh strategic Suchow like relentless pincers from the north and\nsouth.\nTsining has changed hands time\nand again in the lighting ot the last\nlew days.\n>In the lar northwest, report!\nthrough Chinese channels said, 40,-\n000 outer Mongolian troops had\nmoved into gosition along the border of Suiyuan province, which\nfell to the Japanese in the early\nmonths ol the war.\nThese troops, considered under\nRussian Influence, were said to\nbe establishing a line to prevent\nJapan from cutting communications between China and outer\nMongolia, the route for any support from Russia.\nNothing Unexpected\nin Report From the\nChurch,   He   Asserts\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 14 (CP) \u2014'\nArchbishop\" A. U. de Pencier, of the\nAnglican diocese ol New Westminster today said the report of the\nAnglican commission on Christian\ndoctrine, released on London Thursday was \"just about what everyone expected.\"\n\"There is nothing in the report\nto which anyone can take exception,\" he said. \"The theory of evolution has. been accepted by educated Anglicans lor a long time.\n\"Regarding the virgin birth and\nthe resurrection, the report shows\na marked difference ol opinion. The\nquestions have been argued many\ntimes. One side ol the question is\nset lorth by the Archbishop of\nYork and I agree with him.\"\n(The Archbishop of York accepts\nas an historical fact both the virgin birth and the resurrection of\nthe physical body ol Jesus, but recognized that other hCristians in the\nchurch may accept neither event as\nhistorically true.)\nPlan to Place (oast Defence Guns\nin Stanley Park Recalls War Scare\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 14 (CP) -\nThe department of national defence\ntoday moved to protect Vancouver\nfrom attack by enemy warships and\nVancouver residents recalled a\n\"scare\" which resulted in establishment of a coastal defence battery\nhere, early in the Great war.\nIn a memorandus issued at Ottawa today, the defence department\nsaid \"plans have now been completed and instructions to proceed\nhave been issued\" for erection of\na battery lor the close defence of\nVancouver, In Stanley park.\nThe Vancouver Daily Province\nsaid \"a similar battery would be\nestablished somewhere on the Point\nGrey headland, a long promontory\nwhich forms one shore of English\nbay, the entrance to Vancouver\nharbor. The paper said construction of the Point Grey battery\nmight not begin immediately.\nThe Daily Province said two six-\nInch guns would be set up at Fergusons Point, on the west side of\nStanley park looking toward the\nGulf of Georgia which separates\nVancouver Island from the mainland.\nIt said the defence department\nalso planned to organize \"militia\nunits of coast artillery for training\nol personnel to man heavy guns\nand searchlight batteries. .\nGREAT WAR SCARES\nEarly in the Great war, when the\nGerman Asiatic fleet steamed out\nol Tsingtao, apparently bound\nacross the Paclllo ocean, the only\nCanadian warship on the British\nColumbia coast was the old cruiser Rainbow, stationed at Esquimau.\nHer complement was mainly naval\nvolunteers.\nThe British sloops-ol-war Alger-\nine and Shearwater were in southern waters. They managed to make\ntheir way up the coast, dodging\nthe German cruiser Leipzig, ana\nreached Esquimau.\nFrom Coburg, Ont, a heavy battery was dispatched and these guns\nwere installed at the western end\nol Point Grey. Two naval guns\nwere sent to Vancouver from the\nShearwater, and they were mounted in Stanley park, some distance\nirom Fergusons point where the\nnew battery will be installed,\n*\n___\u00a3_-_-__,a\n. .   - ; v.v.^aJ--iitM-*^^ \u25a0     \u25a0    \u25a0'\u25a0 -...-\n\t\n-\u00ab\u00bb\u00ab\"\u2014timiMii\n<;-,:.. .L^_A.^-....:.,.\n PAGE -TWO\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELION, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING, JAN, 15, 1M\n\u2022 ' . I  . .  _______ _\nConsolidated Avoids Loss\nTime, Tonnage by Meeting\nObligations to Employees\n[Management   Duties [company had, completely escaped\nC..k:\u201e\u00bb_. Dl_.,l--.|, tor years loss of time and loss of\nOUDjeCT tSIOyiOCK production due to labor trouble, it\nAddress 'Board       was Mt out by s' G' ^layl-0-c-'\nTAX BURDEN\nIS PRECIPICE\n._     By meeting \"The Obligations of\nI Management\"   tb   employees,   the\nConsolidated  Mining  St   Smelting\nSTIFFNESS\nrites\nCh\u00able swelling Jolntt\u2014Kt relief from pain and\netiflneu of ttrtiiritis with Templeton's T-R-CV,\nthe medicine ipedally made to fiiht rheumatic\ntroublea. Then persist la the treatment\u2014keep\nright al Mr your trouble\u2014until you have it beaten. AtdruaihU\u201460oandll. 612\n(Advt.)\nSPECIAL\nBARGAIN\nFARES\nNelson and\nGrand Forks\nto TRAIL\nand Return\nGoing Feb. 4 and 5\nReturning Up to Feb. 7\nCOACH CLASS\nReturn Fares to Trail\nFrom\nGrand Forks ... $2.25\nCascade     1.05\nSouth Slocan ...      .00\nBonnington 05\nNelson        1.20\nCorrespondingly low fares\nfrom Intermediate points. Minimum fare 76 cents.\nChildren 6 and Under 12\nHalf Fare\nNo Baggage Checking\nprivileges\nGtaJUt\n.was \u00bb\u00abt uu. ui k.. -\u25a0 _.-\u2014.\u2014\nvice-president and general mana\nger of the company, in an address\nto the Nelson board of trade at its\nannual meeting. James Buchanan,\ngeneral superintendent ot the company, presented the address in the\nabsence of Mr. Blaylock.\n\"Obligations of Management\" was\nthe subject of the address, and it\nwas divided into executive and operating management, the latter being subdivided into three sections:\nDuty to investors, duty to employees, and duty to the nation.\nURGES TAX\nEDUCATION\nMr. Blaylock urged that public\nopinion be educated to protest\nagainst extravagant governmental\nexpenditure and needless legislation, and suggested that the establishment of the proper relationship\nbetween employers and employees\nwould bring the development of a\ncommercial-industrial party which\nwould force its demands upon governments unless remedial steps\nwere first taken to put government\non a sane, sound basis.\nThe present tax burden \"confiscated\" approximately \"50 per cent\nof tfhe profits made by a company\nlike the Consolidated\", he said. This\nmeant half of the 7000 employees of\nthe company were working for the\ngovernments and that \"over 50 per\ncent of all assets of the company\nare expropriated in. the same way.\"\nMr, Blaylock also urged the development of standards of citizenship, and the training of statesmen\nby well-to-do houses and business\nhouses able to divert funds in this\ndirection.\nThe address follows:\nOBLIGATIONS\nCOMPLETED\n\"The obligations are so many and\nso complicated that possibly it would\nbe well tb divide management into\ntwo classes; first, the executive, to\nwhich class would belong boards of\ndirectors, executive committees,\nchairmen, presidents, vice-presidents, secretaries, treasurers and so\nforth; and second, the operating\nmanagement. This class would cover\ngeneral managers, operating managers, superintendents, and right\ndown to straw bosses. There is\nbound to be some interlocking between some members of the two\nclasses and between the obligations\nof the two classes, and I am inclined\nto think that the more interlocking\nthere is the better.\n\"The obligations of the operating\nmanagement . . . come under three\nmain divisions: The duty to Investors; the duty to the employees; and\nto the nation.     .\n\"There is, of course, no intention\nto attempt to decide which of these\nduties Is the most Important. They\nare mutually interdependent since\nnone of Ihem can be carried out\nsuccessfully without full attention\nbeing given to the other two.\n\"The duty to the investors Is comparatively simple to state. It is to\noperate the property in such a manner as to give them the greatest return on the capital invested, together with the greatest security ior\ntha capital, which cannot be done\nthat capital, which cannot be done\nplementlng its duty to its workers\nand its duty to the nation.\nDUTY TO EMPLOYEES\n'-The duty to tha employees Is\nvery much more involved and, 1\nthink, very much less, understood.\nWorld thought has undergone a\ntremendous change In the last 25\nor 30 years and is continuing to\nchange at a cumulative and accelerating speed. There is decided evl-\n\u00bb-_,   ...,l.i;\u201e   ..fnlnn    |_   llOufW\ndence that public opinion is slowly\nbut surely coming to the idea that\n.1 surely  -_\u201e\u201e,,_.  ,_   \u00ab.,_ \u25a0_,__  \t\na workman for wages should in\nld<   J '- c\u2014\na   wu-i-iu-u  _..   ,._.___   ,     \t\nsbme way be considered to have\nsome financial Interest in the company for which he works. I, for\none, believe that it is In the best\nInterest of the Investors to give the\nworkmen some tangible Interest In\ntheir profits. As in most cases 50\nper cent or more ot the direct operating cost Is labor, It must be to\nthe company's advantage to have\nthat labor as satisfied and as efficient\nas possible.\n\"There is no doubt that operating\nmanagers and many of the executives are becoming firmly convinced\nthat more and more attention must\nbe paid to the security, comfort and\nwelfare of the workmen, and that\nIn general everything wisely done\nin this connection wlllbe paid tor In\nthe increased efficiency and good\nwill of the employees.\n\"Unless Industry does something\nof its own accord to bring about\nthese  better  conditions,  which  lt\nals, and which, in high priced periods, cannot be full\" absorbed.\n\"This is no', theory or speculation\nhut has actually been in orce for\n\"the last 19 years. During that period\nthere has developed the greatest\nfriendship between the men and the\nmanagement of the company, and\nnot one minute of time or one ton\nof production has been lost through\nlabor trouble.\n\"It is not rtiy Intention for one\nmoment to suggest that everything\nwhich my own corporation has do e\ncan be and should be done by all\nothers. I have quoted our own experience and its satisfactory results\npurely for illustr.'.ive purposes,\nEach industry ' vast modify Its practice to Suit its special conditions.\n\"When one looks around at the\nwcrU'. ,to*ay I am sure you will\nagree that the obligations of management to the Investors cannot very\nwell be fulfilled without iirst fulfilling the obligations to the employees. It is absolutely essential\nthat the men should at all times\nhave implicit confidence In the honesty and fair dealing ot the mnn\u201e;;_-\nment. In general this coi.fidence can\nonly be gained by being 100 per cent\nfair 100 per cent of the time. The\nway to this confidence can be made\nmuch easier by permitting the\nworkers to elect a works committee\nby secret ballot and without interference or pressure from the management. This committee should\nrepresent them in all dealings with\nthe management and be at ail times\ntnese   Deue.   .uu-,\u201e..._,   ,\t\ncan easily do without any real out\nof-pocket cost, I am sure that the\nvarious governments will feel called\nupon to pass legislation of one kind\nand another in an effort to secure\nmore advantage for the working\nclasses. 1 am satisfied that legislation would be one of the poorest and\nmost wasteful attempts to accomplish the desired effect.\n20 GIRLS WANTED\nTo Learn Hairdressing\nAlso Boys to Learn Barbering\nBoth these professions provide profitable employment with pleasant sur-\nsonndlngs and an opportunity for Independence by opening your own\nshop. Tuition Reasonable. TOOLS\nFBBB.   Terms Arranged.\nWhile In the city visit\nMolor Hairdressing\nBhop, 311 W. Hastings\nMoler Hairdressing School\n303 West Hastings\nVancouver, B.C.\nSey. 7789\nGuide for Travellers\ni it\nliSUSs*\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel..\nNelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nW. C. Gordon, E. G. Butterfield,\nG. 0. Stratton, D. A. Bremncr,\nCharles Cliffc, F. E. Sloan, Van-\nouver; S. W. Marson, Winnipeg; P.\nM. Wards, T. A. Burns, Medicine\nHat; Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Timmons\nSanca; F. C. Banks, Penticton.\nOccidental Hotel\n70S Vernon 8t. Phone 897\nH. WASSICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY  RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaits You\nJA8. E. MADDEN, Prop,\nCompletely Remodelled,\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART ot the City\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n[\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"    Newly Renovated Throughout\nDufferin Hotel A. Mm^sT..\n900 Seymour 8t      Van.ouvcr, B.C.   Coleman. Alta., Proprietor\nI     TRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nCRESTON Freight Truck\n2 ROUND TRIPS WEEKLY\nLEAVE NELSON TUESDAY AND FRIDAY\nLEAVE CRESTON WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY\nPHONE 342 NELSON or 16 CRESTON\nASK THE RED TRUCK FOR SERVICE\nGLEN'S TRANSFER\nP. 0. Box 539 Nelson, B. C.\nIL...\nWAGE BASES\n\"Wages should be based on three\nthings; First, the base wage should\nbe such that a workman can provide for his family and keep them\nin comfort, varying with the cost\nof living, the standard of comfort\nbeing that in general acceptance in\nthe community at the moment, since\nno industry can be economically\nsuccessful or useful to the community which can only exist by undue\nexploitation of labor. To this should\nbe added a payment based on the\nefficiency of his labor. This payment\nwill give himvan incentive to do\nmore and better work. Any savings\nhe may make by eliminating waste\nshould also be counted as efficiency,\nthat is to say, his efficiency, bonus\nshould be based on the savings in\nthe gross cost of his work, In our\ncase we have found that giving the\nworkmen one-half of the amount\nthey can cut the costs by their own\neffort has been very satisfactory to\nboth sides.\n\"Thirdly I believe there should be\na profit-sharing bonus. The correct\namount of this bonus is, of^course,\nopen to a great deal of argument. I\nwould suggest as a yardstick for\nconsideration that the total investment in the industry should be con\nsidered as the shareholders' interest,\nand one year's payroll as the workers'. As the workmen have already\nhad a living wage as a first charge\nagainst the company's earnings, I\nthink the second charge should be\na living wage for capital, which\ncould probably be defined as interest and sinking funds or other\nreturns that would have to be paid\nto keep the industry in healthy\nexistence. Undoubtedly, this rule\nwould not apply -in all cases, and\nprobably lt is dangerous to even\nsuggest any general rule. The giving\nof a profit-sharing bonus will mean\nhigher wages for the men when a\ncompany can best afford tq give\nthem. It will make the men realize\nthat the company is not unmindful\nof their interest. Over a period of\nyears 1 am satisfied that this bonus\nwill be entirely repaid by increased\nand more efficient production,\nTRANSFER 8Y8TEM\n\"Once a workman has established\nhimself with a company his position\nshould be made as secure as possible.\nEmployment regulations should be\nsuch that he cannot be discharged\nwithout cause. He should not be\nforced to make good with any one\nparticular foreman, because unquestionably few men can work satisfactorily for every boss. It is essential to see that you are not trying to\nfit a square peg into a round hole,\nA workman therefore should have\nmore than one chance to give satisfaction. This can be handled very\nsatisfactorily by a system which\nenables a boss to turn any employee\nhe is not satisfied with back to the\nemployment office with an open\ntransfer. If the offence is not really\nserious the employment manager\ncan then give the man a second\nchance with a second boss, and even\na third chance. Three chances, however, should be'sufficient, and a man\nshould be automatically discharged\nwhen he has had three transfers. As\nmost men steady down as they\ngrow older, th<re should be a limit\nto the time a transfer is held against\na man. Probably a two-year limit\nwould be quite satisfactory,\n\"Workmen should be encouraged\nto take out insurance for protection\nagainst sickness and accident for\nthemselves and their families. They\nshould be encouraged to build good\nhomes. It is hard to conceive of a\nhappy wprkman without happy and\npleasant living conditions.\n\"Possibly you will think I have\nstressed the obligations of management to the workmen too much, but\nI would like to state that in the\ncase of our own company we have\ndone all the things which I have\nsuggested. In addition to that we\nhave established a non-contributory\npension scheme which when he becomes eligible, gives a man 1 per\ncent of his last 10 years' average\npay for each vear he has worked\nwith the company. On top of all\nother bonuses we have given them\na share interest after certain service.\nWe have provided $5:1 life insurance\nfor each man as soon as he has\nserved three months, and added $100\nto that amount each six months until the man is insured for $1500, all\nat no cost whatever to the man. We\nhave advanced money to build\nhomes at 5 per cent interest, spread-\nirt the repayments of the loan over\neight years.\nMORE THAN\nREPAID\n\"Our experience has been that the\nbetter work turned in by the men\nhas more than repaid the cost ot\nevery bonus with the exception of\nthe profit-sharing bonus, which is\nbased on the sales price of the met-\n1110  iri-Il__.-lll.il. a..-  --_  -. \t\nI free to convey to the management\n[any suggestions concerning the operation of the plant. It will be found\nthat such a committee will be of\nreal assistance to the management,\nespecially in matters concerning\nsafety-practice, but also In bringing\nout suggestions tor increased efficiency In every way, and that in any\nevent this committee provides the\nonly thoroughly practical method of\nInterchanging Ideas between management and workers,\nOBLIGATIONS\nTO NATION\n\"When 'I come to discuss the obligations of an industrial undertaking\nto the nation I am discussing the\nmost complex of the three problems,\nand the one most difficult to reduce\nto a formula. It must be obvious\nlhat the first duty of every industry\nfrom the national standpoint is to\nproduce the maximum of output\nwith the minimum expenditure ot\ncapital, labor ahd materials. In short,\nthe first duty ot any industry to the\nnaiion is to operate for the maximum of profit In the best sense of\nthat word. It is unquestionably in\nthe national interest that each corporation should at all times consider\nTHE HOCKEY GAMES-THE MUSIC-\nTHE DBAMAS-L0N6 or SHORT WAVE\nYou Get Perfect  Reception On\nThem All With 1938 s Great Radio\n  \u25a0  ____________________________^^^^^^^^^\nNorthern \u00a71 Electric\n, \u25a0 n m i - A N 1 \\L3\/        LIMITED\nLOOK AT THIS WONDERFUL VALUE\nOne of the 1938 Commonwealth Series\nporauon snuuiu _, _\u201e \u201e...__ \u2014\t\nevery possible new activity in which\nit could engage at the profit, since\nit is only by the enterprise of industry that the annual production\nof the nation's wealth can be increased.\n\"There should be particular\nthought given to the question of\nimproving the standards of our citizenship, and I suggest that one of\nthe most fertile fields is In the education and training of the sons of\nworkmen to become useful citizens,\n\"Our company is running apprenticeship schools which not only\nteach the sons of our workmen their\ntrades, but carry them on past the\nhigh-school standards in the mathematics and sciences required to make\nthem still more efficient. In this\nway we will be from now on practically self-supporting In all the\nbranches of labor.\n\"It is the duty of industry to the\nnation to endeavor to bring the contentment of its workers to a maxiJ\nmum, and for this reason one of the\nmost important considerations in\nbuilding up any industrial organization is to develop in your superintendents and bosses a sense of respect, friendship, fairness, firmness\nand consideration for the laboring\nman, and, probably no one thing will\ngive as great returns.\nEXECUTIVE\nOBLIGATIONS '\n\"It is with much trepidation that I\nventure to comment on the obligations of the executive part of the\nmanagement, However, no picture\nof the obligations of management\ncan be drawn without a great deal\nof attention being given to the obligations of the executive end of the\ngame. In the past generation the\noperating end of industry has progressed beyond all expectations. The\nquantity and variety of production\nhas eclipsed even the wildest ideas\not 25 years ago. Operating costs in\nmost cases have been very greatly\nreduced.\n'On the other hand the Indirect\ncosts, particularly that of government, have increased to the breaking point. Twenty-five years ago In\nTHE BOMBAY\nAn all-wave nine-tube five-bind A.C.-opirated\nconsole model equipped with these outstanding\nfeatures. The Mlrrophonle Tone Chamber, Mag-\nna-Dlal tuning, Increased noise-free sensitivity\nand Improved selectivity, fidelity control, automatic volume oontrol, continuous tone control,\nradio frequency stage of amplification, tuning\nIndicator, push-pull output stage using beam\npower tubes, a Mlrrophonle tlectrodynamlc\nspeaker, screened chassis compartment and 1\nspecially designed and tested cabinet,\n$182\n.50\nPhone 553 and let Us Give a Demonstration\nSEI OUR DISPLAY OF\nELECTRICAL\nAPPLIANCES\nTOASTERS\nIRONS\nWAFFLE IRONS\nPERCOLATORS\nMAZDA LAMPS IN\nALL SIZES\nHERE IS THE GREATEST WASHING MACHINE\nVALUE ON THE MARKET\u2014THE\nModel One*\nSeventeen\nABC\nTHE FINEST LOW PRICED\nPRECISION BUILT WASHER\nEYER OFFERED.\n\u00bb8_-<s\u00b0\nLIBERAL ALLOWANCE ON YOUR OLD WASHER\nLET US ARRANGE FOR A DEMONSTRATION IN\nYOUR OWN HOME AT NO COST OR OBLIGATION\nPhone 553\nmg^ft^m  -FINlm 2.1    phono 553   ^       m      i\n^\u00a7\u00a7P      FURNITURE 09Bk s   \u00a5       9      \\\nbut, to take a single example, today\na company operating in British Columbia pays, in direct income taxes\namounts up Jo 25 per cent of its\nentire profits. On top of this there\nare sales and other taxes which\nbring this item to well over 30 per\nct-ht. Depreciation and amortization\nallowances have been curtailed in'\na manner which increases income\ntaxes by approximately 2 per cent.\nEven this does not cover the whole\npicture. The remainder of the income eventually is paid as dividends, and when paid as dividends\nbecomes subject again to a Dominion income tax on the individual\nholding the stock, and any other\nprovincial tax which may be levied,\nAs many of the shareholders are in\nthe higher brackets of the income\ntax, paying frequently 30 or 40 per\ncent, it is easy to see that approximately 50 per cent of the profits\nmade by a company like the Consolidated is confiscated for taxes, or\nir. other words, om of 7000 men\nworking for the Consolidated, 3500\nof them can be considered as working .for the government, and over\nany are expropriated In the same\nway.\n\"Very little has been accomplished\nby anyone in cutting down this ex-\nSense which is bound to ruin the\nominlon of Canada unless something can be done to convince the\ngovernments that the country must\nbe run on a business basis. I feel\nconfident this will not be accomplished until public opinion has first\nbeen educated to the futility and\ndanger of continuing the program\nof reckless expenditure and unnec-\nmg point. Twenty-nve years ago m-- ing,...  _,,,   ,, , \t\ncome taxes had not been invented 50 or cent of all assets of the com\n- \u2014 i \u2014\nor recKieas _j.u_,i_.._.._ _.._ _\t\nessary legislation, all of which costs\nmoney. No change Is likely to occur\nuntil the demand of'public opinion\nfor rigid economy offsets the vote-\ncatching urge to over-spend,\nMU8T FACE FACTS\n' \"Governments must be brought to\nface facts. It is doubtful if five\nper cent of the population of Canada realize the cost of government\nin Canada today. The Canadian\nChamber of Commerce, of which\nyour board is a member, has probably done more than any other organization to educate Canadians in\nthis line, but I doubt very much if\nmany of the members of the Chamb\ner of Commerce realize yet the pre\nciplce we are being pushed toward.\nThe next generation will blame the\n-il.   11--..   _,_.,_........\t\nexecutive managements of our industries of today for failing to develop some kind- of control over\nthis expenditure. What type of control can be developed I am not\nable to say, but I am satisfied that\nwhen the executive management of\nIndustry In this country, or, let us\nsay, the Canadian chamber of commerce, has found a solution that,\nif by that time we have created\nthe proper relationship in our Industries with our workmen, a united\ncommercial and industrial party\nwill form an irresistible power\nwhich no government could refuse\nfor long to consider.\n\"In the past I am afraid that executives, where they have considered it at all, have thought that if\nthey did not interfere with politics,\nor if they kept lr. good standing with\nthe political parties in power, that\nwas all that was required ot them.\nUnfortunately, this has not been the\ncase. The whole world has been\nupset, and it is not going to ge'\nover its Indigestion until one tjj\none governments come to reason,\nstop spending money they have no'\ngot, balance their budgets an4\nstrain every effort to cut out all\nunnecessary expense,\n\"There seems to be decided feeling among governments that the;-\nmust get Into business and Industry in one way or another, and that\nthey must order and control ou\nvery 'goings in and comings out'.\nI am inclined to think that w\"\nare very much overgovemed, an-1\nthat it is going to be necessary b\nthrow a lot of things overboaH\nwhich the governments have beer,\ndoing lest we sink the ship of Canadian industry. While lt Is hard t->\nbelieve it possible, much recen;\nlegislation In the North America-\ncontinent seems to have been designed with the idea of driving ,-.\nwedge between capital and labor,\nrather than to help them to ge.\ntogether, and certainly the effec:\nof lt will be to do so whether thai\nwas the intention or not,\n(Continued en Page Three)\nI\nIF HE REALLY LOVES ME...HOW k\n\u25a0 -      -\u2022---_!-_---\n....aBi-ak-si.\nI\nBILL TIPS OFF TED it does old man..\nBUT,BI.L,IDIDNT LIFEBUOY STOPS'B.O*\nREALIZE THE KINO\nOF SOAP A FELLOW\nUSES COULD MAKE\nSUCH A DIFFERENCE\nBECAUSE IT CONTAINS A\nSPECIAL PURIFYING       I\nINGREDIENT NOT IN      I\nOTHER WELL-KNOWN SOAPS I\nAND WHY\nSHOULDN'T IT BE?\nI USE LIFEBUOY I\nMillions of women wilh alluring skin credit\nLifebuoy I Its refreshing, penetrating lather\ngently removes every trace of impurity ... Leaves\nthe skin dear, smooth, fine of texture, (Lifebuoy is\nby test more than 20% milder than many so-called\n\"beauty\" and \"baby soaps,\")\nMote Canadian tnd\nAmerican women\u2014men and\nchildren\u2014bathe with it than\nany other >oap. Eleven leading magazines found this\nout when they questioned \u2014\n125,000 women I \u201e , \u201e       Affrmih\nGood HoMititipint Burt**\n \u2014-\n\u2014\nefrittttij llttttfh\nGtl.urrli\nJosephine and Silica streets\nRev. J, A. Donnell, minister\nMr. C. C. Halleran,\nChoirmaster and Organist\nChurch Schoql at 10 a.m.\nPublic Worship at U a.m. and\n7:30 p.m.\nSermon subjects:\nMorning\u2014\"An Important Pronouncement Concerning the\nBible\".\nEvening\u2014\"Freedom of Press and\nPulpit\".\t\nYoung People's Society on Monday at 8 p.m., Church Hall.\nZeteo Club on Monday at 8 p.m.\nat residence of Mrs. Jack\nMcDonald, 407 Nelson Avenue.\nThe United W.M.S. in St. Paul's\non Tuesday at 3 p.m.\nStanley and Silica Streets\nRev. V. L. Meyer, Pastor\n9:45 a.m.\u2014Service in German.\n11:00 a.m.\u2014Sunday Sphool and\nService in English: \"If Thou\nWilt, Thou Canst Make Me\nClean\".\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Service In English:\n\"God's Gracious Will Concerning You\".\nA CORDIAL WELCOME\nTO  ALL\nThree Pay Penally\nfor (rimes in U.S.\nSTATE PRISON, Florence, Ariz.,\nJan. 14 (AP) \u2014' Elvin Jack Odom,\n28, of Corsicanna, Tex., confessed\nmurderer of Charles E. Goade, 55,\nfellow-farm worker, died in the\nArizona lethal gas chamber before\ndawn today after muttering a condemnation, of the justice that decreed his fate.\nMICHIGAN CITY, Ind., - Willis\nFuller, 29, was electrocuted at Indiana state prison early today for\n6laying Deputy Sherriff Paul Man-\nkin in Terre Haute July 17,1936.\nHUNTSVILLE, Tex. - Albert Lee\nHemphill, 23, negro, was electrocuted at state prison early today\nfor the holdup slaying of F. P.\nGandolfo, Dallas grocer.\n$t. Jpaui'a\nluttrt QUturrlj\nREV. T. J- S. FEftGUSON,\nMinister\n10 a.m.\u2014Sunday School.\n11 a.m.\u2014Communion Service.\n\"Do This in Remembrance of\nMe\".\n7:30 _p.m. Theme\u2014\"My Peace I\nGive Unto You\".\nTueiday,   3   p.m.\u2014The   United\nW.M.S. in St. Paul's School\nRoom.\nTuesday, 8 p.m.\u2014Young People's\nSociety;\nWednesday,  8  p.m. \u2014 The  adjourned meeting of the Official\nBoard.\nThursday, 3 p.m.\u2014The Women's\nAssociation request all the\ncircles to-be present.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING. JAN. 15. 193S\ntoo\nPAGE THRU\nfirst (Ulturri) nf\nGHjriat &rm\u00bbttBt\n209 BAKER STREET\nA Branch of The Mother Church\nThe  First  Church   of  Christ,\nScientist in Boston, Mass.\nSunday   School   9:45   a.m,\nSunday Service 11 a.m.\nSubject   Lesson-Sermon\n\"LIFE\"\nWednesday Testimonial Meeting\n8 p.m.\nFREE   READING   ROOM   IN\nCHURCH   BUILDING-\nAM Cordially Welcome\nMrs. H.H.Pitts\nNew President of\nNelson Institute\nMrs. H. H. Pitts was elected president of the Nelson Women's institute at the annual meeting, held\nin the institute rooms Friday afternoon. Mrs. H, E. Thain declined to\nstand for office and automatically\nbecame past president. Other officers elected were, Mrs. W. Calbick,\nfirst vice-president; Mrs. H. Mackenzie, treasurer and Mrs. R. Eun-\nson, secretary and'Mrs. T, W. Glades\ndirector. i\nAnnual reports of the various\ncommittees were read and showed\na busy, year and great progress\nmade. Two demonstrations and seven addresses were enjoyed at the\nmeetings and the institute exhibit\nat the Nelson fall fair took third\nprize. An entry in a sweater exhibit at the Edgewood Fair took\nsecond prize. A number of needy\nfamilies were assisted by donations\nof iood, clothing and fuel and eight\nlayettes were given to needy mothers.\nDonations to worthy causes included $25 toward defraying expenses of a Nelson student to the\nCoronation of King George VI, $10\nto the Salvation Army, $10 to ihe\nChristmas cheer fund, and $5 to the\nHospital auxiliary.\nIn August the institute quarters\nwere moved to the Civic Centre.\nA fund, to be known as the Mary\nE, Davidson Fund and to be administered by a committee of Institute members was started during\n\u2022the year with a donation of $1000\nfrom an unnamed benefactor. This\nfund is to be used for the benefit\nof children with defective vision.\nCROUP USED GERMS\nTO KILL \"TRAITORS\"\nPARIS, Jan. 14 (API-Police Investigators of the secret French\nrevolutionary organization, Scar,\nsaid today they had discovered an\nexecution group which used germs\nto kill \"traitors.\"\nPeace Depends on Unify of Ireland;\nDe Valera and Chamberlain fo Confer\nU. S. CONSUL PROTESTS\nLOOTING AT NANKING\nBY JAPANESE SOLDIERS\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 14 (AP) -\nUnited States embassy in Nanking\nhas made a new protest to Japanese authorities over continued footing of American property there by\nJapanese soldiers.\nFORMER U. S. SOCCER\nSTAR KILLED, LONGVIEW\nLONGVIEW, Wash., Jan. 14 (AP)\n\u2014Manuel Walters, 37, a longshoreman, one of greatest soccer players\nin the United States northwest was\nkilled today when struck by a timber at the Long-Bell dock.\nFormerly of Abbotsford, B: C,\nWalters played with the Longview\nTimber Barons in the Portland\nleague between 1926 and 1933. His\nwidow survives. '    .\nWEEK-END RADIO\nSaturday\nCANADIAN   BROADCA8TING\nCORPORATION NETWORK\nCJAT CKY CFAC CJOC CKCK CBR\n910 910 930 950 1010 1100\n5:00 Reflections; 5:30 Music Hall;\n6:00 N. H. L, Hockey Broadcast;\n7:30 Symphony; 8:30 News, weather;\n8:45 Joe de Courcy's orch.; 9:00\nFarmer Fiddlers; 9:30 On,Parade;\n10:00 Did You Hear?; 10:15 News,\nweather; 10:30 Mart Kenney's orch.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\n5:00 Orch\u2014Fletcher Henderson,\nJosef Hornik, Al Roth; 6:30 Special\nDelivery; 7:00 Symphony; 8:30 Al\nDonahue's orch.; 9:00 Believe It or\nNot; 9:30 Log Cabin Show; 10:00\nOrch\u2014Harry Lewis, Jack Winston,\nArchie Loveland, Fletcher Henderson.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\n5:00 N.B.C. Spelling Bee; 6:30 Ray\nHarrington, saxophone; 6:45 Three\nPals; 7:00 N.B.C. Symphony; 8:00\nNational Barn Dance; 9:00 Orch \u2014\nEddie Rogers; Joe Reichman; Freddie Nagel; Jimmy Grier; Paul Carson, organist; 11:45 News,\nCOLUMBIA  NETWORK\n5:00 Swing Session; 5:45 Marshall\nGrant; 6:00 When Twilight Comes;\nNight Serenade; 7:00 Hit Parade;\n7:45 Patti Chapin, songs; 8:00\nSterling Young's orch.; 8:30 Johnny\npresents; 9:00 Prof. Quizz; 9:30 Jan\nGarber's orch.; 10:00 Hollywood\nBarn Dance; 10:45 Del Courtney's\norch.;' 11:00 Pasadena Civic Auditorium; 11:30 Henry King's orch.\nMUTUAL DON LEE NETWORK\nKOL, Seattle, 1270 k, 236.1 m, 6000 w\n5:00 Barn's Barnstormers; 5:30\nContinental Revue; 6:00 Stringtime;\n6:30 Sports; 6:45 News; 7:00 Symphony; 8:00 .Horace Heidt's orch.;\n9:00 News; 9:30 Orch\u2014Shep Field,\nEverett Hoaglund, Kay Kayser and\nFrank Sortino.\nSunday\nCANADIAN   BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION   NETWORK\n2:00 Tudor Manor; 3:00 Biblical dra.\n3:30 News review; 3:45 Jean de\nRimanoczy; 4:00 Jack Benny; 4:30\nCanadian Mosaic; 5:00 Don Ameche;\n6:00 Music Hour; 7:00 Housing problems; 7:30 Along the Danube; 8:00\nNews, Weather; 8:15 Singers; 8:30\nSweet and Low; 9:00 String Orch.;\n9:30 Dream Boat, Cyril Hampshire;\n10:00 In Recital; 10:15 News, Weather; 10:30 Chamber Music.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\n5:00 Don Ameche, 8:00 Manhattan\nMerry-Go-Round; 6:30 Album of\nFamiliar Music; 7:00 Drama; 7:30\nTyrone Power; 8:00 Walter Winchel;\n8:151 Want a Divorce, dr.; 6:30 Jack\nBenny; 9:00 Nigh. Editor; 9:15 Cliff\nEngle, Voice of Exposition; 9:30 One\nMan's Family; 10:00 News Flashes;\n10:15 Bridge to Dreamland, Pan\nCarson; 11M Reveries; 11:30 Harry\nLewis' orch.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLuF NETWORK\n5:00 Detective Series; 5:30 California Concent; 6:00 Harry Lewis'\norch.; 7:15 Marek Weber's orch.;\n8:00 News; 8:05 Blue Baron's orch.;\n8:15- Irene. Rich; 9:00 California\nTales; 9:00 Orch. \u2014 Eddie Varzo,\nDon Ricardo; 9:45 Talk; 10:00\nSouvenirs; 10:30 Jacck Wiston's or.\n11:00 Charles Runyan, organist.\nCOLUMBIA NETWORK\n5:00 People's Choice; 5:30 1938\nEaraches; 6:00 Symphony Hour; Zenith Foundation; 7:30 Good Afternoon; 8:00 Joe Penner; 8:30 Orch \u2014\nCab Calloway, Buddy Rogers, Sterling Young; 10:00 Clem Kennedy,\nPiano Moods (Pacific); 10:15 Hollywood Melody Shop; 10:45 Jan Garber's orch., (Pacific); 11:00 Door to\nthe Moon; 11:30 Les Parker's orch.,\n(Pacific.\nDON LEE NETWORK\n5:00 Epic of America; 5:30 Hancock Ensemble; 6:00 Who Is Jt?,\n6:30 News; 7:00 Playhouse; 7:30 Old\nFashioned Revival; 8:30 Presentation of Honor Plaque; 9:00 Newspaper of the Air; 9:30 Orch.\u2014Shep\nField, Dick Jurgen, Kay Kayser;\n11:00 Theatre Digest.\nWAR CLOUDS ENSHROUD\nMONTREAL BYELECTION\nMONTREAL, Jan. 14 (CP)\u2014War\nclouds enshrouded the St. Henry\nDominion by-election campaign\nmore grimly than ever today.\nCamillien Houde, former mayor of\nMontreal, running as an Independent against four Liberal candidates\nof various hues, has made armaments the issue in the campaign\nclosing Jan. 17 when voters will\nelect a successor to Paul Mercier,\nLiberal member elevated to the\nbench,\n\"The government has no mandate\nfrom the people to spend money on\narmaments,\" Houde shouted last\nnight.\nDrambuie\nfV__---.L_._--   it It __ __IJ      i\nBONNIE\nPRINCE\nCHARLIE'S\nLIQUEUR\nDrambuie, the liqueur of old romance, has been\nmade in tho Isle of Skye since 1745. It II now the leading\nliqueur of the Empire. A small Drambuie rounds off a\nwell-served meal.   Adds zest to a cocktail.\nThis advertisement is not published or dispjayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbia\nBy GEORGE HAMBLETON\n(Associated Press Staff Writer)\nLONDON, Jan. 14 (CP cable) -\nHopes of peace with Eire hang by a\nslender thread. When Prime Minister Chamberlain and Eamon De\nValera sit down at 10 Downing\nstreet Monday afternoon they will\nhave with them the support of overwhelming majorities in both countries in an effort to end the economic war. British public opinion desires nothing more than a settlement fair to both sides.\nPrime Minister De Valera Is reported determined to make no firm\npolitical agreement unless the British government is prepared to take\nsome step towards Irish unity.\nAgreement with Britain over defence and common action in external affairs will, It is understood, be\nconditioned on a forward move to\nend the partition.\nNorthern Ireland is equally determined to have nothing to do with\nDublin.\nMORE ABOUT\nCONSOLIDATED\n( Continued From Page Two)\n\"Industry simply canot possibly\nafford to keep one-half of the men\nin the industries of the Dominion\nworking to govern us. This undoubtedly is a problem for the executive\nmanagements of industry in this\ncountry. It must be taken up and\nmust be fought with determination\nto carry it through to a success.\nVictory will not be easy to obtain\nbecause a very large percentage of\npoliticians and members of the civil\n^service have convinced themselves\nthat they and they only know what\nis good for industry and the country,\nand have adopted the firm belief\nthat the country exists to provide\ncomforts for the government and\ncivil servants rather than the old\nidea that the government exists to\ndo the will of the c.untry. As I\nhave already mentioned, I believe\nthe education of public opinion is\nessential and lt is only through\nsuch organizations as the Chamber\nof Commerce, boards of trade,\njunior boards of trade and service\nclubs that this education can be\ncarried on quickly enough to secure\nthe desired result, and every member of these organizations should\nfirst of all study the question himself and as soon as he is convinced\nof what should be done, he should\nconsider it his duty to help in the\ngeneral education.\n\"A very short study of the Canadian railway situation and the unemployment relief problem \u2014 I\nmight almost say 'racket' \u2014 to say\nnothing of all the hard laws, will\nsoon convince a marr that coldblooded sanity must be brought back\nto the country.\n\"To return to taxation for a minute: Surely our taxes are not properly balanced.\n\"1 believe in a graduated tax but\nthink everyone should pay some\nsmall tax, and unless they do so\nthere are not enough people in the\nhigher brackets in Canada to supply\nthe needed money, no matter how\nhigh their taxes are.\n\"Canadians in the higher brackets pay higher taxes than are paid\nanywhere in the world. That this is\nso is largely due to the astounding\nfact that the Dominion government\nrefuses to allow the provincial tax\nto be deducted as a charge against\nthe profits or income, and also that\nthe provinces generally do the same\nregarding the Dominion taxes.\nUNJUST RATES\n\"While this is not serious In small\nprofits and incomes where the taxation rate is only one or two per\ncent, it is most unjust when these\ncombined rates become 25, 50, 80,\nand even higher percentages. Saskatchewan had a tax which, added\nto the Dominion, made 110 per cent\nof a man's income as a maximum\nThis has lately been reduced to\n95.6 per cent. British Columbia has\n86.1 per cent. It should be comparatively simple to get this ridiculous situation rectified.\n\"It is interesting to know that 91\nper cent of the population of Canada paid no personal income tax\nwhatever, and that 1 per cent of the\nSTORE-WIDE BARGAINS\nSALE OF ALL\nWOMEN'S\nFUR TRIMMED\nCOATS\nAstounding values\u2014all\nfully lined and interlined. Only a limited\nquantity of these popular priced coats to\nclear. Regular values to\n$.19.95. Each\u2014\n$11-95\n13\nUse the Convenient\n\" BAY BUDCET PLAN\nCLEARANCE OF\nWomen's Afternoon\nDresses\nBe down early. There are only 24 of\nthese dresses from which to choose.\nSilk crepe in smart styles. tfO QC\nRegular values to $5.98. . \u2022fu.Vd\nTeaspoon\nSPECIAL\n6 well finishedteaspoons in handy\nhardwood'Stand. Just a limit- IP\ned quantity in this lot. Set ..  Iwt\nHAND PAINTED TRAYS\nBeautiful serving trays in unique\nshapes. These are decorative as well\nas useful. 6 doz. only at this 9Q-,\nprice. Each il\u00ab7v\nMen's Heavy\nUnderwear\nStanfield's shirts\nand drawers in heavy\nknit rib style\u2014gold\nand grey label\nbrands. Sizes 36 to\n44. *1 \"7C\nGarment . \u00ab4\u00bbI\u00bb< if\nMen's Wool\nSweaters\nCoat style flat knit cardigans in new\nheather shades. Just the right weight\nto wear under your suit $1 \"QC\ncoat. Sizes 36 to 44 tpl.jd\nCLEARING LINES\nand ODDMENTS\nMEN'S WINDBREAKERS and\nMACKINAW COATS\nIn all the popular colors and wanted        fljyl AP\nstyles. Values to $7.95, Sizes 36 to 44, ,. i|ri-\u00ab\/J\nMEN'S FUR FELT HATS\nSilk lined fur felts\u2014snap and roll brims.   fl\u00bb1 -AP\nSizes 6% to 7'\/.. Each! \u00ab|>l.tJJ\nSHOPPING BAGS\nCovert cloth bags with zipper\ntops or open tops. Cqlors grey\nand fawn. Regular to 4Q_\n79c. Each W\u00bb\nPERSONAL NEEDS\nPond's or D & R Vanish- iQ\ning Cream, Economy Jar ^v v\nFace El le Aids: (200     IQ\nsheets in box)   \"v\nCHILDREN'S WINTER HOSE\nJust right for school wear\u2014a sturdy lxl rib hose for boys and girls.\nIrregulars of real quality lines in silk and wool or all QA\nWool. Sizes 6V_ to 9,\/i. Pair JjC\nCHILDREN'S\nSWEATERS\nCardigan and pullovers. A\nwide range of colors. Sizes\n8 to 14. Regular fjl\\n\n$1.00. Each     lVK\nCHILDREN'S\nWOOLLIES\nPanties and knickers of\nfine all-wool. Sizes 2 to 16.\nRegular 79c. PA,-,\nEach  QUC\nBLOUSES\nGood quality angelskin\u2014\nshort sleeves. White ahd\ncolors. Regular 89c. CA\u00ab\nTOWEL \"SECONDS\"\nSmart absorbent towels in a\nwide range of pastels. Size 20\nby 40 and 22x42. OP\nEach   LdVi\nBED JACKETS\nAll-wool,in tailored styles.\nBlue and pink, with J Q\nlong sleeves. Each.. *_.t7l\/\nCOTTON HUCK\nTOWELS\nAll while  in a  size   18x36.\nHeavy durable quality, QQ\nEach   LdZ\nIRONING BOARD SETS\nHeavy hair pad in standard size and unbleached cotton\ncover to lace on. Complete\t\nPerfect Silk\nHOSIERY\n360 pairs of perfect\nsilk hose \u2014 all new\n1938 shades \u2014full\nfashioned cradle foot\nin a sheer silk-to-\nthe-top chiffon or a (\nmedium weight.\nSemi-service. Sizes\n8V2 to lOVi. Pair\n69c\nCELANESE\nHOSE\nA special that will\nsave your better\nstockings. All perfect quality and neat\nfitting celanese hose\n\u2014look like silk yet\nserve for morning\nwear. Smart shades\nin sizes 8 Vz t09Q\/\u00bb\nPair    u*>\\> I\nWOMEN'S LINED\nCAPESKIN GLOVES\nFur trimmed, fleece lined through- \u25a0\nout, with dome fastener or elastic\nshirring at wrist\u2014a cozy glove for\nthese winter days. Colors brown or\nblack. Sizes 6 Vi to 8.\nPair \t\n$129\n59c\nCUT GLASS TUMBLERS\nOptic tumblers with smart cut designs. A rock bottom price for these useful glasses. OA.,\n6for \u00ab*\"*>\nCOT MATTRESSES\nWell filled mattresses in a 30\" size. Very <PO QC\ncomfortable and long wearing. Each .... \u00abP-'\u2022\u2022','\nHOT WATER BOTTLES\nAll new stock! A well made bottle of generous size in blue CQ\/\u00bb\nand red. Special, each u\u00ab\/C\nWOMEN'S VELVET\nOVERSHOES\nFUR TRIMMED\nBlack or brown,\nlow and medium\nhigh heels. Sizes\n3V-.-9. Pair.,.\n$2-95\nA SPECIAL IN\nWHITE FLANNELETTE\n27\" flannelette in a soft, downy\nquality. 200 yards in this       1 O-\nsale. Yard\nmcORPOMtEID erf MAY WrO.\npopulation paid 97 per cent of the\ntotal personal income tax collected.\nI believe everyone should pay some\nsmall income tax. A very small tax\npaid by this 98 per cent would probably enable the governments to\nbalance their budgets.\n\"On this same subject, the hidden\ntaxes should be made clear in order\nthat every man would know what\ntaxes he was paying and what percentage of his income his contribution cost him. Theses things would\ngive the average citizen an incentive to refrain from demanding unnecessary expenditure and tend to\nbuild public opinion to a point\nwhere help instead of criticism\ncould be expected by the government that tried to wipe out abuses\nsuch as the present relief expenditure. I am quite sure that the ordinary individual hasn't the slightest\nidea of the tremendous contribution he is making, by what might\nbe called hidden taxes, toward the\ngovernment of the country. 1 don't\nfor one moment suggest, that taxes\ncan be out\u2014in fact I believe that\nthey have to be raised. The year\n1937 has been one of the most prosperous years ever experienced by\nthe Dominion of Canada as a whole.\nThe proportion of employment has\nprobably been as great or greater\nthan any time in our history, and\nyet we have not paid our running\nexpenses by a very long way.\n\"I cannot conceive of Canada re\npudiating its obligations. We are a\nborrowing nation and anything in\nthe way of repudiation would not\nonly be dishonest, but suicidal.\nRAILWAY PROBLEM\n\"Great relief can be had by settling the railway situation in some\nmanner which will prevent all the\nunnecessary duplication, and by\ntightening down as nearly as possible to the vanishing point on unemployment relief\u2014certainly on all\nclasses of relief which do not call\nfor work on the part of the recipient\nwhere the recipient is able to work,\nThe wages paid on relief work\nshould'certainly not be higher than\nthose enjoyed by the rest of the\ncountry per unit of work.  '\n\"The thought has often come to\nme that in Canada we have no class\nof men whose elementary training\nhas fitted them to become statesmen. Our statesmen have nearly always had to work their way in the\ncommercial world until they had\npicked up their state-craft as a side\nissue. For this reason our statesmen have been largely limited to\nlawyers, and to lawyers, who were\nwell on in years before they really\ngot started in state-craft; nor have\nwe sufficient numbers of families\nof wealth who can afford to train\none or two sons per family with\nthe hope of rectifying this situation\nin future.\n\"Many of our larger companies\nspend hundreds of thousands ot dollars in developing processes and\nways and means to improve their\noperating costs, and many of them\nalready give scholarships to young\nmen wishing to take technical courses connected with their own industry. There is no dearth of such\ntechnical graduates. It would seem\nadvisable that these companies\nmight better afford to give aid to\nyoung men who are willing to take\ntraining which would eventually\ntend to fit them for civil service and\ngeneral statesmanship. It has been\npointed out that only a few of these\nmen would ever amount to anything,\nbut even so I believe that If the\nbig companies of Canada would undertake to spend a small proportion\nof their research allowance on such\nscholarships, training the holder in\nthe industrial side in their own\nplants concurrent with the scholarship, many of these men would make\nexcellent members of the civil service, and even if only 2 or 3 per\ncent of them made first class statesmen, much would be done to help\nto provide suitable material for our\ngovernments which would be available while these men had still their\nprime of life before them....    ,\n\"If families of means would deliberately undertake to educate one\nson along the above lines wilh the\nidea of letting him go into politics,\nand  provide  him  with  sufficient\ncapital that he could be as independent as he liked, this, in my mind,\nwould provide the greatest contribution such a family could make..,.\nNEED NEW LIGHT\n\"The whole question of industry\nand the state requires to be examined in a new light. The tendency\nin recent years has been to suggest\nthat the state exists to prevent some\nmonster known as industry from\noppressing individuals known as the\npeople. The folly of this must be\napparent. The industries of Canada\nbelong to the people. To no small\nextent their capital belongs to insurance companies and other fiduciary institutions which directly represent masses of the people. On their\noperations depends the livelihood\nof a large percentage of our citizens. Their production is essential\nto the use of all the people, and to\nthe increase of the national wealth.\nWe suffer today, and not without\njustice, for a, certain failure of industry in past generations to realize that the profits of capital cannot safely be considered without\nfull consideration of the profits of\nlabor and of the natin.\n\"Canadian organizations can play\nno greater part in this country's affairs than to bring home to the mass\nof the people that in the main Canadian industry fully appreciates the\nimportance of these facts, rod that it\nis today largely in the hands of men\nwho understand entirely the mutual\ninterest which must exist between\ninvestor, worker and the nation at\nlarge; men who desire to cooperate\nto the fullest extent possible with\nthe governments of the country, but\nwho will not hesitate to fight to the\nlimit for the changes they think\nnecessary.\"\nHome Comfort E\n|| IS OBTAINED g\nBy Calling 701\n!! FOR\nI DRUMHELLER I\nlor LETHBRIDGE'\n|       COAL       |\nI FAIRVIEW J\nI  FUEL CO.\nJ]     8UPPLY AND TEAMING     fl\n ! !\t\n-      -      -\n PAGE FOUR\nBROUGHT UP IN\nMonotone . . .\nBad For Child lo\nStop Him Singing\nWhen Others Do So\nI Pathetic is the late ot the child\nat school who is a monotone. Often\nhe is told he must,not sing with\n\u25a0 the other children of the class, since\nhe   \"spoils  the   music.\"    A  cer-\n' tain girl of nine is such a sufferer.\nAt school she has.been so humiliated over her dlificulty\u2014-forbidden\n' to sing, though she really wishes\n. to do so \u2014 that when music is re-\n' ierred to at home she will say, \"I\n' hate music.\"\n01 course that teacher did not\n' purpose to injure the child. She\ndoubtless has tried conscientiously\nto bring her class up to expected\nmusic standards. She just has a\nwrong philosophy. Only her ear\nthat is annoyed by this monotone.\nThe other children singing do not\nhear it or, if they, do, need not be\ndisturbed thereby.\nI do wish I might persuade\nteachers never to ask the child not\nto sing with his class nor to mag-\nFOR THE SERIAL\nSEE PAGE SIX\nnfiy his dlificulty. Perhaps she\ncould do most tor this child by encouraging a lew other children,\npreferably of one or two grades\nhigher, to sing with him. Most\n\u25a0monotones, can be helped, though\nan occasional one is tone-deaf, in\nwhich event he should be allowed\nto sing anyway, of course.\nWHEN VI00E8 CHANGE\nThen there's the lad who at puberty is over-sensitive of his' changing voice, which may cut up curious capers when he tries the hardest to control it. Painfully do I\nrecall the time when in the country\n\u25a0school the teacher dropped an indiscreet remark about my changing\nvoice. Up to that time I was interested in singing. In my home\nthere was much family singing in\nwhich I joined happily. I had a\nsister who was eager to help me\nlearn music. But that school experience so discouraged me that I\nnever sang at school thereafter, and\nrarely at home.\nWith so much needless suffering\nin children and youth, I wish\nteachers would always strive to do\ntheir utmost to avoid causing more\nof it.\nWwbL JoJl\ndioUMWWSLL\nBy  MRS.  MARY  MORTON\nj Little balls about the size of\ncrab apples, cut from large, firm\ntart apples with a French ball\ncutter, stuck ,with cloves and cooked until tender and clear in a\nsyrup of fruit juices and sugar\nspiced with stick cinnamon, supply something new for the relish\nplatter. They are easily prepared\nby the following tested recipes .\nSPICED APPLE BALLS - Four\nlirm, tart apples, cut in balls with\na French ball cutter; three-fourths\nCup orange juice, one-fourth cup of\nlemon juice, one cup granulated sugar, one. cup water, whole cloves,\ntwo sticks cinnamon. Stick each\nball with three whole cloves. Make\na syrup of the fruit juices, sugar\nand water, add the stick cinnamon\nand boil gently for five minutes.\nAdd the apple balls and simmer\ngently .turning balls frequently, until apples are clear and tender.\nSkim out balls, place in a bowl,\nadd the syrup and chill before\nserving.\nCanapes are very popular served\nbefore the formal dinner. A plate\nof them is an always.welcome addition to any buffet Sunday eve-\n. ning supper, too. Following are\nsome suggestions for canapes:\nPork sausages broiled with salt-\n, ed almonds at each end s,erved as\ngarnish to canape platter. Roque-\n- fort cheese,  creamed with butter,\nspread on bread, rolled and toasted, Potato chips, spread with anchovy paste. Sardines creamed with\nmayonnaise, grated onion and lemon  juice   served  on   mclba  toast.\n.    Ground chicken and almonds, seasoned with new onions and moist-\ni   ened. with mayonnaise. Spread on\nI    melba toast strips. Small circles of\n1   white bread with chopped water-'\n!    cress and slice of cucumber.\nDURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKE8 BETTER BREAD\nDISHE8 FOR SUNDAY\nNIGHT SUPPER\nCorn, tomato and macaroni casserole is one answer to the problem of what to serve for Sunday\nnight suppe rfor guests. Top It off\nwith chocolate fruit pudding, and\nyou can't go wrong. Following are\nthe recipes:\nCORN, TOMATO AND MACARONI CASSEROLE - Two cups of\ncorn, canned or fresh; one onion,\nminced; two eggs, two tablespoons\nbutter, four sliced tomatoes, one\npound ground beef, one-half cup\ncrumbs, one green pepper, minced;,\none-half teaspoon salt, one-eighth\nteaspoon pepper, macaroni (or\nmashed potatoes.) Add eggs, crumbs,\nonion, green pepper, butter, salt and\npepper to meat and mix well. Pack\nmeat on bottom of well-greased casserole. Put one-half of the corn over\nthe meat. Place sliced tomatoes over\ncorn and then more com oh top of\nthe tomatoes. Top with mashed potatoes or cooked macaroni. Bake in\nmoderate oven, 375 degrees F\u201e 45\nminutes to one hour. Strips of bacon\nmay be placed over the top if desired. This may be prepared in advance and stored in refrigerator\nfood compartment until ready to\nbake.        .       , .        ...\nCHOCOLATE FRUIT PUDDING\n\u2014Two tablespoons gelatin, one cup\ncold water, one pint milk, one and\none-half squares chocolate, one:\nhalf teaspoon vanilla, one cup of\nraisins, one-half cup currants, three\negg whites, one cup sugar, three-\nfourths cup dates, one-half cup of\nnuts, salt. Soak gelatin in cold wat\nter about five minutes. Put milk\nwith fruit in sauce pan. When hot,\nadd chocolate which has been melt,\ncd with part of the sugar and\na little ot the milk added to make\na smooth paste. Add soaked gelatin, sugar and salt. When mixture\nbegins to thicken, add vanilla and\nnut meats. Fold in beaten whites of\neggs T.urn into a wet mold decor\nated with nut meats and raisins.\nChill in food compartment of refrigerator. Unmold and garnish with\nwhipped cream or currant jelly\nsauce.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, \u00bb.C.-8ATUr.DAY MORNINfl. JAN. 15. 1W\u00bb\nCHINA YOUTH RETURNS TO NATIVE LAND\nA BASIC BLACK FROCK\nBRIGHTENED BY JEWELRY\nCOLORFUL PIECES ARE ACCENTS\nk.ve4i Vernon, ballroom dancer, wears black drew dressed- up with'\nRussian Gamayun Talisman Jewelry of carved catalln.\nBy LISBETH\nmus\nwoman\nwith fashion\nIt is\nWe lave been hearing so much\nthis season about the \"basic\" frock.\nIt has been the one garment that Is\n|\" in the wardrobe of every\nwho pretends to\" keep up\ninevitably black, and from\nthere the owner can go as far as\nshe likes\u2014the sky's the limit.\nOne such dress is illustrated, to\n\"point he moral and adorn the tale.\"\nIt is, a good illustration, as it is a\ndistinc ive dress with a high collar\nthat is fastened with a colorful clip\n\u2014a mate to the one that is attached\nto the slit in the bodice. The dress\nis conservative and yet very smart.\nThe rrodel is Evelyn Vernon, featured ballroom dancpr at one of the\nleadini; New York hotels.\nJEWE.RY UNUSUAL\nThe jewelry she is wearing is also\nunusual. It is the exotic Gamayun\nTalisirans of carved catalin, which\nwas irtroduced by ballerinas of the\nMonte Carlo Russian ballet, upon\ntheir arrival in the United States\nfrom Paris. Miss Vernon is testing\nout the charm of the legend of\nGamayun, mythical Russian goddess\nof marriage, who, according to leg\nend, brings romance to those who\nwear it. The goddess has the head\nand bosom of a girl, the body and\nwings of a bird.        ,    ,\nMiss Vernon is given to posing\nin exotic costumes. One she wore recently was a mink jacket, composed\nof 700 matched' skins. It was fastened by two large carved medallions\nof this same synthetic material, catalin, joined by four strands of silver chains. This rich wrap was worn\nover a Nile green evening gown,\ntrimmed with mink tails, and to\nadd the last bit of fantasy, her shoes\ncontrasted, one being brown and one\ngreen.\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\nGOLD POPULAR\nReferring again to the basic dress,\ngold jewelry is a favorite method\nof brightening it up. Gold ball jewelry makes a striking contrast to\nblack\u2014several chains of balls on\neach wrist and a necklace of the\nsame,\nPearls are always good, and es-\necially so this year. And colored\njewelry, in all sorts of bright colors, is very popular. Did I neglect to\nsay that the Gamayun is in red and\nyellow, principally?\nSMALLEST BABY\nTWO YEARS OLD\nCHICAGO, Jan. 14 (AP) -\nBrown-eyed Jacqueline Jean Benson, \"the world's smillest baby\nto live,\" celebrated her second\nbirthday anniversary today. .\nThe first child of a young\ncouple, Mr. and Mrs. Lester Benson, \"Jackie\" weighed an estimated 12 ounces at birth ahd\ndoctors said medical history contained no record of a tinier baby\nto live. She now weighs 24 pounds,\nnormal lor her height.\nIn 1842. ..\nTells Story of\nDoclorWhoFirst\nUsed Anesthetic\nBy LOGAN CLENDENINQ, M-D.\nNot long ago the governor of\nGeorgia made the front pages of\nthe newspapers by banning a textbook which gave ths credit for\nthe first administration ol ether\nfor a surgical operation to a Boston dentist, Dr. W. T, G. Morton.\nHe said that it should go to Dr.\nCrawford W. Long of Georgia.\nHe was entirely correct. That\nhas been acknowledged by medical historians lor a long time. But\nwhen I arrived in New York a lew\ndays ago I lound that a heated\ncqntroversy on the subject was\nbeing carried on in the correspondence pages ol one of the leading\npapers. So I decided to make a\nsentimental journey, and today I\niind myself in Jelferson, Ga.\nI mo.tored over Irom Augusta, passing through Athens, the\ncity where Dr. Long lived during\nthe latted part of his life, and\nwhere he died.\nJefferson is centered around a\ntown suare, or, rather, .a town circle. In the center is a grass plot\non which stand two monuments,\none to the soldier dead and the\nother In memory of Dr. Long.\nOn one lace ol the shaft is this\ninscription:\n\"In memory of Dr. Crawford W.\nLong, the first discoverer of anesthesia. The great benefactor to\nthe human race. Born Daniels-\nville, Madison county, Georgia, November 1, 1815. Died Athens, Geo-\ngia, June 18, 1878.\"\n. On another lace is this Inscription:\n\"Sulphur ether anesthesia was\ndiscovered by Dr. Crawford W.\nLong on March 30, 1842, at Jefferson, .Georgia, and administered\nto James M. Venable for the re-\n\u25a0moval of a tumour.\"\nThe story Is that Dr. Long settled in Jefferson as a young practitioner and, also opened a drug\nstore. One day a traveling show\ncame along, the principal feature\nol entertainment being the Administration of laughins gases to volunteers from the audience. The\nshowman would invite the young\nfellows up on the stage and then\nhave them inhale nitrous oxide,\nand the audience laughed at their\ncapers under its influence.\nWANTED TO REPEAT\nEXPERIMENT\nAlter the show had gone Its way,\nthe gay blades ol the town wanted\nto repeat the experiment, and applied to Dr. Long for the gas. He\nsaid he would give them something\nbetter, and lurnished them with\nether. They had regular ether\nirolics, and while under the influence of this intoxication, Dr. Long\nnoticed, they would bump their\nshins and otherwise bruise themselves without experiencing pain.\nHe conceived the idea that here\nwas a method ot preventing the\npain oi a surgical operation, and\npersuaded Mr. Venable, who had\nsome small tumors on his. neck, to\ntryit. The tumors were removed\nunder the influence oi ether and\nno pain was felt.      \/\nThe Boston dentist discovered\nthe anesthetic properties of ether\nindependently and gave it first in\n1846, in Boston. To his credit is\nthe fact that this event marked the\nbeginning c_ its general use\nthroughout the world.\nSonnysayings\n\"It's your flbe cents. Baby, oh\ncourse, but remember it 11 only buy\none ob those chockolick mice! If you\nlays it out on jelly beans er lemon\ndrops they'll last lots longer an' you\ncould eben jK5 a part)\/\/\"\nLatest Fashion . . .\nWaves and Curls\nNot as Smart as\nIs\nBy GLADYS GLAD\nWaves and curls, it seems, will\nnot be as much in evidence as\nthey formerly were. Straight hair,\ndesigners claim, is far more youthful, and they, are giving this fact\na great deal of consideration in designing the latest coiffure fashions.\nOf course waves and curls are\nnot out of the fashion picture en\ntirely, but partially straight hair is\nhaving an important place in many\nof the new hair styles.\nAs- a matter of fact, perfectly\nstraight hair often presents a more\nattractive appearance than too cur-\nTHE NEW IMPROVED RINSO IS EVEN\nBETTERTHAN EVER. IT GIVES 25TO 50%\nMORE SUDS, SAYWOMEN EVERYWHERE.\nIT SOAKS CLOTHES AT LEAST 5\nSHADES WHITER THAN ORDINARY\nSOAPS - NO WONDER THE MAKERS\nOF 26 FAMOUS CANADIAN\nWASHERS SAY tt USE RINSO\"\n\"White Boy ol Mam Hoi\" Returns to\nU.S.; Adopted by Chinese Merchant\nSEATTLE, Jan. 14 (AP) - It is\nwritten in the analects that men's\nnatures are alike; lt is their habits\nthat carry them apart\u2014\"\nLiving proof of the Confucian\nproverb, Fung Kwok Keung stood\nin the Immigration station here today, en route to New York city and\nthe secret oi his birth \u2014 \"Chinese\"\nin mannerisms, language, education and everything but blood.\nFor the story oi \"The White Boy\noi Nam Hoi\" (A Kwantung village\nupriver irom Canton) is one oi the\nstrangest in the immigration records\nhere and that story, is still but\npartly known.\nFung Kwok Keung was born\nJoseph Rinehart in Naw York city\n19 years ago. But he didn't know\nthat. All he knew was his fair\nskin and a strange restlessness set\nhim apart from his friends and\nneighbors in Nam Hoi.\nHe speaks no English, understands no English and his face\nsheds its habitual oriental gravity\nonly when an interpreter mentions\nautomobiles. He saw his first in\nHong Kong where he got his first\nwestern clothes en route to America.\nThe  wrinkled  Chinese  woman,\nLee Kwong's husband\nLee Kwong, had been his mother\nsince he could remember, though\nhe knew dimly they were not oi\nthe same blood.\nImmigration records Indicate Lee\nKwong's husband, Lee Quong, Far\nRockaway, N.Y., merchant, now\nnearly 70 years old, never was\nblessed with children, and to remedy that defect somehow found\nthe orphsned Joseph Rinehart,\nadopted him and took him to his\nwife some 15 years-ago. There Joseph Rinehart became Fung Kwok\nKeung and subsconsclously assimilated the mannerisms and habits of\nhis friends and neighbors in Nam\nHoi.\nBut always he had that strange\nrestlessness and always he ponded-\ned the secret of his birth.. Finally,\ntwo months ago, Fung Kwok Keung\ncould contain himseli no longer.\nWith difficulty he located his foster\nlather In New York, wrote ol his\ndesires and the journey money was\nsent. , ,\nFung Kwok Keung \u25a0 returned to\nthe land ol his forefathers today,\nin strange-feeling clothes, eating\nstrange-tasting dishes, seeing\nstrange-apearlngp sights ol which\nhe'd never dreamed.\nIt was all wonderful, but Fung\nKwok Keung, recalling that \"gravr\nIty is only the bark of wisdom's\ntree, but it preserves it,\" kept his\nface stoical and his hands limp.\nJOAN FONTAINE\nHas Smooth, Pretty Hair\nly hair, because it can be neatly\narranged and appear well groomed, while kindly hair has a most\ndiscouraging habit of looking untidy and uncared for.\nThe best procedure for softening\nand smoothing out kinky hair and\nn.aking the waves appear soft and\neven is first to submit the hair to\na hot oil treatment. Ot course,\nhowever, th\u00a3 hair should be brushed thoroughly with a flexible-bristled brush before the -oil treatment\nis administered. This brushing will\nremove any accumulated dirt, dust\nand grime that may have accumu-\niated on the hair and sealp.\nVINEGAR RINSE HELPS\nAfter the hair has been given the\noil treatment, it should be thoroughly shampooed and given a\nvinegar rinse as the last rinse. This\nrinse should be composed of half a\nglass of vinegar and a pint of clear\nwater. The vinegar tends to soften\nthe hair and overcome, to some extent, its wiriness.\n, After giving your hair the hot\noil treatment and subsequent shampoo, remove most of the moisture\nfrom your locks with a warm, lint-\nless towel, and apply a heavy waving lotion. Then finger wave your\nhair in wide, loose waves and pin\nthe waves securely in places.\nPermit the hair to dry thoroughly and then-remove the pins and\ngently comb out the hair, pushing\nthe waves back into place with\nyour fingertips, as you comb it.\nIt is a good idea, too, if your\nhair is very kinky, to spray it with\na bit of fine brilliantine after your\nwave has dried. A really good brilliantine will not only give your\nhair added luster and brilliance,\nbut will also lubricate it and help\nto keep your waves smoothly in\nplace.\nDoctor Attentive . .\nShould She Wreck\nHome Because He\nSays Hice Things!\nBy VIRGINIA  LEE\nWORRIED MOTHER: Yes, I think\nyou should change' doctors. You\nare playing with fire, my dear.\nOf course any woman likes to be\ntold they are sweet and attractive\nto men, but you cannot afford to\nwreck your happy home because a\nman says nice things to you.\nYou know how you would leel ii\nyou thought-ior a moment your\nhusband would act to another woman as this man has to you, So be\na loyal wile and discourage the\nman's attentions, II he was a good\nman he wouldn't make love to another's wile, would he? You can't\ntrust him. .\nIt would be nice il your husband\nwould say pretty things to you, too,\nbut if he is true and kind and good,\nyou can afford to let the pretty\nspeeches go. Men who use them\neasily usually don't mean much by\nthem,\n*   *   *\nLONELY BROWN EYES is an\n1-kyear-old girl who, of i course, has\na boy friend who \"is always very\nnice\" to her. She has been going\nwith him for five months, but lately'her family has objected to him\nand \"given him the air,\" as she\ngraphically states. She ioves him\nand has- promised she will go out\nwith no one but him, and wants to\nknow if I don't agree that a \"de\ncent\" girl of 18 who loves a \"decent\" boy, should be allowed to go\nwith him.\nThe only trouble with your idea\nis that I don't know the boy and\nhow \"decent\" he is, and your parents seem to- I think a girl of 18\nshould be allowed to choose her\nboy friends if there Is nothing\nwrong with him ,to make him undesirable. If you are sure he is all\nright, both of you work to convince\nyour parents that he Is.\n...\nWondering Dot's problem Is that\nher boy friend works for his dad\nand never gets a salary but just\n\"charges\" what he needs. She wonders how it will work out, providing they marry.\nI don't believe it would be a very\nsatisfactory arrangement. Even a\nsmall salary would be better. If you\ndon't have some regular income, you\nwill always be subject to criticism\nfrom the in-laws that you are extravagant, or something, I am afraid.\nA salary or some understanding of\nthe amount you are allowed to draw\nis necessary, It seems to me, to plan\nan intelligent budget. Money is a\nserious source of discord in any\nfamily, and unless your fiance's people are unusually intelligent and\nbroadminded, it may create a very\nunhappy problem.\nIf Doth families\u2014you and he, and\nhis parents\u2014are very tolerant and\ncooperative, it might work out\u2014but\nI have my doubts of the arrangement. It leaves too much room ior\nargument.\nPlanting Bulbs for\nBlooming in House\nBy Central Press\nWhen bulbs are potted ior indoor window gardens, failure lo\nbloom usually may be attributed to\ntwo conditions; the length of time\ngiven for the root growth and the\nfinal forcing in too much light and\nheat. The time required for making roots depends upon, the character of the bulbs, so keep this table\nas a guide: Paper-white narcissus,\nfour weeks; Roman hyacinths, eight\nweeks; Dutch hyacinths, 10 weeks;\ntulips, 10 weeks; daffodils, jonquils,\n10 weeks crocus, eight weeks; small\nhyacinths, eight weeks; snowdrops,\nsix weeks; scillas, six weeks.\nPlant hyacinths and daffodils so\nthat the nose just protrudes when,\nthe pot is. filled with soil to within\nhalf an Inch of the top, and cover\nother kinds entirely with the tops\nbarely below the. surface. When\nthe roots are well grown take the\npots from storage and start forcing\nin a temperature of about 50 degrees without any direct sunlight.\nIncrease heat and light gradually>\nbut do not take into a warm room\nuntil the flowers are fully expanded,\nIf using water alone, place the blubs\nin the container so that the water\njust touches the base oi the bulbs,\nadding more as it evaporates. If\nclear glass is used ior the dish,\nshut out the light from the roots\n.by paperr, cloth or paint. Should\nthe flower stem not keep pace\nwith the leaves, put a cone papefc\nover the plant, which will give it a.\nchance to catch up-\u2014From House\nBeautiful.\nWINDSOR, England (CP) \u2014 The\npolice are looking for a woman who,\ndressed as a nurse, victimized trade--\nsmen by representing she was preparing Fort Belvedere for arrival\nof the Duke and Duchess ot Windsor.\nLONDON (CP) \u2014 Seven million\ngallons of milk are sold In a year.\nfrom the 1000 milk bars operating\nin Great Britain and Ireland.\nGrand (or tub washing, too,,\nsoaks clothe* show\/, bright\nIF you have no washer\u2014then just wnij until\nyou use the new Rinso in your tub I You'll\nbe sstonished to see how Rinso's richer,\nactive suds letk out dirt\u2014get clothe! snowy\nand bright without scrapping or boiling.\nClothes last 2 or 3 times longer washed this\n\"no-scrub\" w\u00aby. Rinso gives thick, lasting\nsuds\u2014-ff\u00ab in hard-,\ntit water. Tested and\napproved by Good\nHousekeeping^\nInstitute.\nTUN- IN RINSO'S \"BIO TOWN\"-STARIllNO\nEDVV. S. HOnlNSON WITH CUIUS TREVOR.'\n-      T-MDA.   _V\u00abNIN__. C. \u25a0- C. NETWORK.\nThe upward tendency of small\nhats continues, and they are inclined to tip slightly backward from\nthe face.\nOrange blends well with pumpkin, say\ndietitians, so add a little orange Juice or\ngrated orange rind to your next pumpkin\npie for a change. Quarter ot s teaspoon\n(ss-Ment, i    '-\u25a0\nYouf Grocer Sells It\nI       W        W\" BRAND\nEVAPORATED\nMILK\nPure as the\nSnow on\nMountain\nPeaks.\nAT ALL\nGrocers\nArthur Nelson, Ltd., Vanouver, B.C., Wholesale Distributors\n. \u25a0       .... :, ',i \u25a0  -..\n ________\n ,.-,-.. \u201ev.,...-,\nwaamm\n\u00bb*v*ie\u00bbvxm\n......\nW'l\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NEL80N, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING, JAN. 15, 193S\nAdmiral Storey\nDies, Montreal\nMONTREAL, Jan. 14 (CP) - Admiral William Oswald Story, C.B.E..\nwho served 41 years in the Royal\nNavy before retiring, died here today. He was 78. He was born at\nBingfield, Ireland.\nA navy man from the day of sailing ships, Admiral Story retired on\npromotion to rear-admiral in 1912.\nHe returned to duty during the war\nas admiral-superintendent at Esquimau, B.C., naval dockyards until\n1918 and for another year at the\nHalifax dockyards.\nWhen he went on the retired list,\nhe was the only full admiral residing in Canada.\nAdmiral Story Joined the navy at\nthe age of 12.\nHe commanded in the China station, the Australia station and the\nEast Indies station. He was in the\nEgyptian campaign of 1882.\nENTERS U. S. ILLEGALLY\nFOR THE THIRD TIME\nSEATTLE, Jan. 14 (API-Weeping frequently, Mrs. Eleanor Jackson, 38, domestic, pleaded guilty\nyesterday to a federal charge of\nreentering the United States illegally from Canada after two previous deportations for the same offense. Unable to post $1000 bond,\nshe was jailed after being bound\nover to the federal grand jury.\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS, M. J. VIQNEUX\n\u2022 Of interest in Nelson and the\nSlocan was the wedding at_ San\nFrancisco January 7 of Ada Elizabeth, youngest daughter of Mr. and\nMrs. Thomas Brown, Hoover street,\nto Pringle Stewart of Portland, Ore.\nThe wedding was performed by\nRev. Herman G. Porter. Mr. and\nMrs. Walter Erwin of Oakland,\nCalif., were the only attendants.\nThe bride chose a navy moire taffeta dress, navy blue finger-tip\ncoat, trimmed with grey Persian\nlamb, navy hat and accessories. Gar-\ndenlas formed her shoulder corsage.\nMr. and Mrs. Stewart will reside\nat San Francisco.\n\u2022 W. Winchcombe of Procter\nvisited town Thursday.\ne Mrs. Joseph Janni; who spent\na month in Nelson, a guest of her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. Julius Ries-\nterer, Robson street, left yesterday\nfor her home at Wenatchee, Wash.\nHer husband, who accompanied her\nhere for the holiday, left some\ntime ago.\n\" \u2022 A. J. Watson of Kotenay Bay\nvisited town yesterday..\n\u2022 Mrs- Arnold Carlson and infant daughter are expected to leave\nKootenay Lake General hospital\ntoday for their home on Richard\nstreet.\n\u2022 Mr. Mackie, sr., of Boswell,\nspent yesterday in Nelson.\ne Mrs. H. H. Currie, Baker\nstreet, left yesterday morning for\nVictoria to attend the funeral of\nher father, Thomas McDonald, a\npioneer resident of Nelson.\n\u2022' A surprise party was held at\n*. t&&~\nLUMBERMAN'S RUBBERS\nSIX HOLE TOP    $1 #85\nSIX HOLE TOP\u2014White, Cleated          $4.65\nSIX HOLE TOP\u2014Brown, Cleared         $3.65\nSIX HOLE TOP\u2014Black, Cleated    $2.75\nSIX HOLE TOP-Blaek, Blucher      _          $3.25\nSIXTEEN INCH TOP\u2014Brown, Cleated _  $5.45\nSKI BOOTS FOR MEN $4,85\nSKI BOOTS FOR LADIES . . . $435\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLEADERS IN FOOTFASHION\nthe home of Mrs. Margaret Morrow,\nLatimer street, Thursday in honor\nof Ms. Morrow's mother, Mrs. Sarah\nHeinz. It was her birthday. Tea was\nserved and the guest of honor was\nthe recipient of many gifts. Others\ninvited were Mrs. E. H. Arlt, Mrs.\nJ. V. Meyer, Mrs. Zubick, Mrs. J.\nM. Broden, Mrs. Hermann, Mrs. E.\nW; Somers, Mrs. Charlton, Mrs. W.\nR. Campion, Mrs- D. A. McPhersdn,\nMrs. H. Kitchener, Mrs. Adolphe\nLimacher, Mrs. H. H. McCandlish\nand Mrs. Morrow.\ne Mrs. J. Brundrit of Crawford\nBay visited the city yesterday.\ne George Porteous of Queen's\nBay visited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Carl M. Mohr, mining man\nof Ainsworth was among city visitors yesterday. -\n\u2022 Mrs. Atkinson, who visited her\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMrs. G. H. Lynch, Vernon street,\nfor three months, has returned to\nher home at Calgary. She was accompanied by her daughter-\n\u2022 M. C- Donaldson of Salmo\nvisited town yesterday.\n\u2022 Shoppers in the city yesterday included Mrs. K. Popoff of\nSlocan City.\n\u2022 A- H. Noakes,, Balfour, was In\ntown having come to attend the\nboards of trade banquet and meet\nThursday night.\n\u2022 Recent shoppers in the city\nincluded Mrs. G. F. Chapman of\nSouth Slocan.\ne Captain P. Hartridge of Balfour was in town Thursday to attend the boards of trade meeting.\ne Mrs. L. G. Morrell of Ymir\nvisited town yesterday.\ne Miss Jacqueline Waters is a\npatient at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital.\n\u2022 0. A. Haglund of Erie spent\nyesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Oscar H. Burden of Port\nCrawford was a Nelson visitor yesterday.\nI \u2022 Captain Sharmah of Boswell\nvisited the city yesterday.\n\u2022 Young Jeanne McKay, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.. J. Gordon McKay, Hendryx street, who has been\na patient at Kootenay Lake General\nhospital for ten days, Is improving.\n\u2022 M. Downie of ,South Slocan\nwas among Nelson shoppers yesterday.\n\u2022 Visitors In the city yesterday\nincluded J. D. Donaldson of Salmo.\n\u2022 ' E. F. Swanson, Great Northern\nauditor with office at Spokane,\nspent yesterday in town.\n\u2022 C. V. Meggitt of Grand Forks\nvisited the city yesterday.\n\u2022 D. J. McLean of Ymir spent\nyesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 W, Kerr and his sister, Miss\nFlorence Kerr, who spent a few\ndays in town, plan lo leave for their\nhome at Makinson near Nakusp.\n\u2022 Mrs. F. H. Russell of South\nSlocan is a guest of her daughter In\nFairview.   \u25a0\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. William Fraser\nof Kootenay Bay are city visitors.\n\u2022 Matthew Aylmer of Queen's\nBay was a city visitor yesterday.\n\u2022 George Porteous and his\ndaughter Betty, of Queen's Bay\nwere Friday visitors In town.\n\u2022 John McKay of Balfour was\na Nelson visitor on Friday.\nSTOLE HIS HEART IS\nACCUSED OF LARCENY\nTOLEDO, 0\u201e Jan, 14 <A_*> -\nJoe Rhinefort, assistant prosecutor, had to advise the disconsolate\nyoung man he couldn't be of\nmuch help unless be D.Y.M\nchanged hit mind, about the\ncharge to be field.    -\nThe young lady, said the disconsolate young man, \"stole my\nheart.\"\nHe wanted to prosecute her for\nlarceny.\nHORNER'S\nGROCERY\nNELSON\nPHONE 121\nSALMO\nPHONE 5\nGrocery prices the same at Salmo\nexcept on fruits and vegetables.\n39c\nSPECIALS\n8ATURDAY   AND   MONDAY\nCOFFEE: Blue\nRibbon, tin ...\nCOCOMALT: Eft\nA. C. FLOOR WAX: Quality guaranteed, 40.\nHome's Dessert  Puddings,\n5 pintt to package,    OC\n2 pks  LO\\t\nTUNA FISH: Large     OQ\ntin, 2 tins L\\7\\t\nHONEY: Finest Al-    OQ\nberta, 2 lb. tin ..... \u00abwl\nSUPER SUDS: Best value in\npkg. Soap Flakes,    (1Q\nOUR OWN BAKING 00\nPOWDER: Lb. tin .. LOX,\nIDEAL KETCHUP:\n14 ox. bottle, each\nTOMATO JUICE: Clarke's,\nlarge size, 21 ox.,\n3 tins\t\nDE LUXE JELLY\nPOWDERS: 4 pkgs.\nFRY'S COCOA:\u2014\n'\/_.'\u2022 .. 230 Lb.\nGRAPEFRUIT:\n6 for\t\nAPPLES: Wagener,\n7 Ibs\t\nCELERY:\n2 Ibs.\t\nLETTUCE: Large\nheads, 2 for \t\nORANGES: Navels\u2014\n2 doz. 350     2 dox. JUW\nTURNIPS and OP\nCARROTStlOlbi. .. LOi\n17c\narke's,\n29c\n19c\n. 420\n25c\n25c\n23c\n25c\nSeventy Years Old\nNever Lost Day's Work\nAs the years creep on little sicknesses and ailments become harder\nto shake off than formerly, and\nevidences of a breakdown appear.\nNow is the time when aged people\nneell a tonic, such as Milburn's\nHealth and Nerve Fills to help them\nmaintain their health, vigor \u00abnd\nenergy, and to brace up and invigorate the nervous system.\nMr. A. C. Bra-AH, Palermo, Ont.,\nmites:\u2014\"I am seventy years of age;\nnever lost a day's work, missed a\nmeal, or took any medicine in my\nlife, but last year I had a nervous\nbreakdown; had headaches; no appetite; hid from people; and was in\nfear and anxiety; had to have someone sit beside my bed at night until\nI went to sleep. Hell could not be\nworse. I began taking Milburn's\nHealth and Nerve Pills, and from\nthe first I became calm and collected,\nand to-day I feel the same as I did\nyears ago.\"\nPut up by The T. Mllbura Co., Ltd.\n(Advt.)\nLowery's\nGroceteria\nImporters of Peek Frean English\nBiscuits\nSATURDAY and MONDAY\nSPECIALS\nSYRUP\u2014Rogers' Golden, 1QA\n2's; per tin **>\nCOCOA\u2014Fry's, i\/.-lb. tins; 2Q(J\nCRI8C0- <yCt*\n1-lb. tin  \"*T\nTABLE SALT\u2014 f (W.\n3'\/_-lb. sack   *WV\nFLOUR\u2014Maple Leaf, No. 1 Hard\nWheat; M _\u00bb__\n49-lb. sack 9-\u00bb0_\u00bb\nMINCEMEAT\u2014Dutch        |Qf*\nMaid; per jar **f>\nHONEY\u2014Beeklst, 2>\/_'s;     J_!>\neach   *3>\nSPAGHETTI   AND   CHEESE \u2014\nHeinz, medium tins; \\A&\neach  - *\u2022\u00bb*\nPICKLES\u2014Llbby's, Sweet \u25a0%\u25a0%\u00a3\nMixed; jar **>\u25a0\nSOAP FLAKES\u2014Ivory;   _\u00bb\u00bb\u00ab_\nlarge pkt m*T\nWith Royal Blue Occasional\nDish Free\n0RANGE8 ARE CHEAP-Doz.\n19* 2\u00ab 35*\nRHUBARB\u2014New Crop;-\n2 Ibs\t\nAPPLES\u2014Delicious;\n6 Ibs.\t\nCAULIFLOWER\u2014Fresh,\nWhite; per lb\t\nLETTUCE\u2014Large, firm\nheads: each \t\nCELERY\u2014Well bleached;\n2 lbs\t\nPhone 406 for\nFor Free Reliable Delivery\nm\n25*\n10*\n12*\n19*\nR. & R. Grocery\nPHONE 161        EFFECTIVE SATURDAY and MONDAY\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Tall tins,    1 Q_\n\u25a0Heed, Barco; 2 tins  X<7l\/\nPINEAPPLE\u2014Cubes;\nlarge tin\t\nlie\nPEACHES-Tree Ripe;     QK\u00ab\n2 large tins  00\\>\nSALMON\u2014Fancy pink;\n12c\ntall tin .\nTOMATO JUICE\u2014Large, -)f\u00bb\n14!<_-oz.; 3 tins  _S-H-\nCASH and CARRY\nSPECIALS\nMILK\u2014Borden's or\nNettle's; 3 tint \t\nONIONS-Firm snd\ndry; 9 lbs\t\n26c\n25c\n16c\nTOILET SOAP\u2014Colgate's, Coleo; 5 bars..\nFLOUR \u2014 First Grade Hard\nWheat; (PO OK\n49-lb. sack  *Sii,uO\nWAX-Old  Windsor;        it\\n\nPaste; 1 lb    *H7L\nFRUITS and VEGETABLES\nQRAPEFRUIT-Texas,     nP\nPink Centres; 2 for  __i\u00abJv\nORANGES\u2014Medium;       OP\nAPPLES\u2014Delicious;\nS Ibs\t\nGRAPEFRUIT-Large;     nn\n3 for   __lOv\n25c\nLAYER FIGS- To     <)J\u00bb\nClear, 2 Ibs.  UVK>\nSOCIETY CAKES-    <)(\u00bb\nEach   .SOL-\nORANGES\u2014Mandarines;\nbox \t\nLEMONS\u2014Large;\n4 for -\t\nRHUBARB\u2014\nNew; 2 lb\t\nTURNIPS\u2014Best In\ntown; 10 Ibt\t\nCAULIFLOWER-\nWrapped; per lb\t\nCELERY\u2014Perfect;\n2 lbs.\t\n8QUASH\u2014Hubbard;\nper lb..,...'.\t\nLettuce, Sweet Spuds, Radishes,\nCabbage,  Carrots, Cranberries.\n': 49c\n15c\n19c\n25c\n12c\n19c\n 7c\nPhone orders in early please.     Don't min these specials\n13 LUCKY AND\nUNLUCKY FOR\n2 CANPI DATES\nDUNCAN, Jan. 14 (CP) -\nAlderman E. W. Lee of Duncan\ndecided today 13 just wasn't\nhis lucky number.\nYesterday, Jan. 13, Alderman\nLee was elected to the city\ncouncil for his 13th cooseccutive\nyear.\nBut James Marsh doesn't feel\nthe same way about it. The\nelection yesterday ended his\ncouncil service at. the end of\nhis 13th successive term. He was\ndefeated.\nPAGE   FIVE\nSpinach Preferred\nNEW YORK, Jan. 14 (AP) - A\nsurvey of 22,418 children between\nthe ages of six and IS showed\nspinach, with 24 p_er cent of all the\nvotes, led the list of favorite vegetables on the boys' side of the table,\nThe girls put spinach second to\ncorn, which topped 30 per cent ot\nthe lists.\nThere was a surprise in the meat\ntabulations too. Both boys and girls\nwere true to tradition in voting\nturkey the tops, but the lowly hash-\nwas second on the boys' list, outstripping chicken, and third in the\ngirls opinion.\nNews\nT. S. SHORTHOUSE\nPHONES 527-528 FREE DELIVERY\nSATURDAY and M0NDAY~\nPORK SPECIALS\nSHOULDER on\nROASTS: Lb \u00a3UC\nLEG ROASTS: or\nLOIN ROASTS: OO\n 15c\nFRESH SIDE PORK\nLb\t\nPIGS HEAD:\nLb\t\n8c\nMILK FED VEAL\n15c\n18c\n15c\n10c\n30c\n25c\n$1.10\n25c\n65c\nOVEN ROASTS:\nLb\t\nRUMP ROASTS:\nLb\t\nVEAL STEAKS:\nLb\t\nVEAL STEW:\nLb\t\nBACON: Sliced,\nLb.\t\nSAUERKRAUT:\n2 Ibi\t\nSUTTER: lit\ngrade, 3 Ibs. ..\nNIPPY CHEESE:\nLb\t\nA-MEDIUM ECGS:\n2 doien \t\nPURE LARD: 10   1 J\nIbs. or over. Lb. .. 14C\nGOOD STEER BEEF\niOc 12c\nPOT ROASTS\nLb.  ...\nROASTS: Lb. 20C   22c\nRUMP ROASTS:\nLb\t\nBOILING BEEF:\n3 lbs\t\nSIRLOIN STEAKS:\nLb\t\n18c\n25c\n25c\nGOOD LAMB\nLEAN SHOULDERS:\nLb\t\n,   Rolled on request\nLAMB STEW: 10\nLAMB CHOPS:\nLb\t\n18c\n25c\nPORK SPARE-\nRIBS: 2 Ibs\t\nPORK TENDERLOIN:\nLb\t\nPIGS FEET:\n3 Ibs\t\nMINCED STEAK:\n2 lbs\t\nBONELESS STEW:\n2 ibs. ...:..:\t\n25c\n28c\n25c\n25c\n25c\nPURE LARD: Lb.\ncartons: Each  ..\n15c\nSpecials at Horswill's\nTEA\u2014Braid's Blue Label, lb  490\n4 Cakes Ivory Soap; 1 pkg. Oxydol, all for 210\nMATCHES-Owl pkg 250\nStrawberry or Raspberry JAM\u2014Empress, 4 lb. tin 620\nTOILET TISSUE\u2014Purex, 3 for  220\nSLICED PINEAPPLE\u2014Black Label, 2 for 310\nSHELLED WALNUTS\u2014Lb 330\nTOFFEE\u2014Wrapped, lb 250\nTOILET SOAP\u2014Many Flowers, 5 for 210\nHolgraih Wheat or Rye Wafers\u20142 pkgs 450\nLETTUCE\u2014Extra\nLarue; 2 for \t\nSWEET SPUDS\u2014\n4 Ibs\t\nCELERY\u2014\nPer lb\t\nCARROTS AND\nBEETS\u2014Bunch\t\nGRAPEFRUIT-Texat,\nTexas, pink flesh; Ea,..\n250\n25<\nm\n10(\nlot\nORANGES-2   eO_\u00ab   7_l__\nsizes; 3 doz  Xfy   i9\\\nRHUBARB\u2014\n3 Ibs\t\nTURNIPS\u2014\n2 bunches \t\nCAULIFLOWER\u2014\nLb\t\nSPINACH\u2014\n_ lbs\t\nm\nISO\nm\nHorswill Bros.\nPHONE 235\nFREE DELIVERY\nWE\nDELIVER\nFREE\nPHONES\n831\n832\nVASSARS'\nCASH MEAT MARKET\nGood Buying for Saturday and Monday\nChoice Steer Beef\nRump Roasts, lb. ... 170\nSirloin Steaks, lb. ... 250\nPot Roasts, lb. 100 & 120\nBoil Beef, lb     70\nRoll Rib Roast, lb. .. 180\nBlade Roast, lb 120\nVeal Fillet Roast, lb. . 23c\nVeal Oven Roast, lb. . 15c\nVeal Steaks, 2 Ibs.... 250\nLegs Real Lamb lb. .. 250\nShoulders Lamb, lb. . 160\nPork Leg Roast, lb. . 230\nPork Oven Roast, lb. . 180\nRed Salmon, fresh, lb. 350\nLing Cod, sliced, lb. . 200\nDill Pickles, 3 for ... 100\nHamburger, fresh made,\n3 Ibs  250\nSausage Meat, seasoned,\n3 Ibs  250\nRoasting Chicken, lb. 300\nBoiling Fowl, lb  200\nCreamery Butter, Thistle\n3rd grade, 2 Ibs 630'\nFresh Eggs, local A, medium, 2 doz  650\nMushrooms, from Vancouver, lb 400\nBreakfast Bacon, fresh,\nsliced, lb  300\nOysters, fresh eastern,\nPint     600\nCash and Carry\nOnly\nCreamery Butter, lb. 300\nEggs, C, processed,\nDozen      250\nPot Roasts Beef, lb. 80\nBoiling Beef, 4 Ibs. 250\nSmoked Bacon Ends,\nLb  15c\nPork Neck Bones,\n5 Ibs 250\nPure Lard, 2 Ibs.\n\t\n\u25a0^I^^^^MeWt\n\t\n mmimmm\n*\u201e,-,..._, \u201e..\nPAGE SIX\n1\nStorm Sathj Stae,\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting 'Newspaper,\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n266   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments,\nMembers  of  the  Audit  Bureau  ot  Circulations  and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nSATURDAY, JANUARY 15,1938\nNORTH-SOUTH AIR ROUTE VIA\nKOOTENAY\nSpokane's business organizations and representatives\nin the national legislature are behind an air route from\nI Spokane to Alaska that would pass through Nelson, Trail\n| and Grand Forks\u2014a route claimed to be an all-year all-\nweather route.\nMonday's Spokesman-Review of Spokane had the following editorial on this subject, which certainly should be\nof interest to. this district, if only for the reduction of\nmail time between Spokane and Nelson and Trail:\n\"FLYING TO ALASKA;\n\"An aviation conference between Canadian and United\nStates officials, which will open in Washington, D. C., today, has potentialities that stir the imagination. The objective is an international Alaskan air mail route. The question before the conference is the geography of that route.\nCongressman Charles H. Leavy and the Spokane Chamber\nof Commerce have urged the advantages of a route by way\nof Spokane, through Nelson, Trail, Grand Forks, Vernon\nand other Okanagan valley towns in British Columbia,\nand thence on through Kamloops and Prince George. Senator Bone has presented the plea to Assistant Secretary\nof Commerce Johnson for, presentation to the committee\nthat will confer with the Canadian committee. It emphasizes the all-year, all-weather advantages of this route,\nclaiming that it will have less fog, higher ceiling and\nthe advantage of shelter between the Cascades and the\nRockies.\n\"This route would serve many fine towns and a diversity of important industries\u2014mining, forestry, agriculture, fruit growing and general manufacturing. It would\nknit in closer bonds many fine, progressive communities of\nthe Inland Empire of Washington and Idaho and the Inland\nEmpire of British Columbia and more distant Alaska.\"\nAmbition has Us disappointments to sour us, but never\nI the good furtune to-satisfy us.\u2014B. Franklin.\nA REBEL MAY BE RICH OR POOR\nWhen the word \"rebel\" is used, for some reason most\nof us take it as designating poor people in revolt against\nwealthy powers that be.\nYet, actually a revolution against established institutions occurs just about as frequently and dangerously,\nthough not always so spectacularly, by the rich.\nIn Spain at the present time there is an extraordinary\nmixture of rich and poor on both sides. Mass economic considerations, in spite of the fact that the government is supposed to be socialistic and the insurgents capitalistic, appear to have far less to do with the civil war than to growing pains natural to a monarchy-oligarchy which has suddenly attempted to adopt democracy as its form of government.\nMussolini's revolution in Italy was, on the face of it,\na revolt by mildly socialistic capitalism against the eruption\nof communism which was threatening to destroy the country. It has grown into a tyranny against which there will\nultimately be a democratic revolt.\nIn Germany, the Hitler coup d'etat was a revolution.\nIn this case there was much talk of protecting the country\nagainst communism but it is a matter of record that Hitler's\ncampaign for power was financed by big interests.\nA rebel, therefore, is just as likely to be rich as poor\nand be equally destructive-of democratic institutions. We\nhave our Hitlers as well as our Stalins.\nignorance is a blank sheet on which we may write; but\nerror is a scribbled one on which we must first erase \u2014\nCotton.\nEXCUSE IT, PLEASE!\n\u20227U.\/AVA-\nj]Delivery Boy\u2014(who has forgotten where to deliver the ice\n(cream)^___Qh, yeah, now I remember, to Mi's. Klotz's bridge\nclub.'.\"\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING, JAN. 18, 1938\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nby\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nBE SUB.. TO SET IT\nWHEN YOU HAVE an absolutely certain way to beat the declarer's contract, it la highly foolhardy\nto gallivant around with efforts to\nset him more than one trick, at the\npossible risk of enabling him to\nmake IL Your all Important Job\nat such a juncture ia to head off\nthe danger of his making the game\nand then do your gambling for\nother tricks later.\n\u2666 \u00bb\nV J 10 8 6 8\n4AKQJ8-.\n*Q\ntRQJlO\n\u00a5Q7 4\n\u2666 8704\n+ 65\n498754\n3\n\u00abAK2\n\u2666 10\n*J 7 .1\nt)A8\ntf-95\n. *32\njsAK 109842\n(Dealer; South. East-West vulnerable.)\nHere South bid 1-Club, North 1-\nDiamond, South 3-Clubs, North 3-\nHearts, South 4-Cluba, North t-\nDlamonds and South 5-Clubs.\nThe spade K was West's opening\nlead, which South won with the A.\nThe spade 6 was ruffed with\ndummy's singleton trump. The declarer felt he had a chance to make\nthe contract If the club would fall\nIn two leads and he could confine\nhis losses to two hearts,\nWith  the  fear  that  diamonds\nmlgH be ruft-__ the declarer led i\nheart from dummy, which East\nwon with the K, Knowing that ha\nwas sure of a trump trick and having won one heart trick, East had\nnothing to lose by trying a second\nheart, but he switched to a spade,\nwhich South ruffed.\nWhen two rounds of trumps disclosed a loser In that suit, declarer\nled a diamond with the hope that\nthe holder of the trump held three\ndiamonds. East fell down again In\nthe defense by not ruffing the second diamond. On the diamond Q,\nSouth tossed his losing heart, making his game. <\nEast's excuse for not cashing hi*\ntwo hearts was that he felt from\nSouth's play that only one was\nheld, but It would have been better\nto try lt than give up hope,\n-   \u00ab   \u00ab\nTomorrow's Problem\nAA J74\n4) A 10 9 < 8\n+K._\n*6 8\n\u2022SA84      I\n4>KQJ8   S\n5 I\n+ QJ7\nA\/.\n&.\n\u2666 QB2\nVQ852\n\u2666 742\n410 8.\n* K 10 9 8\nf K 10978\n\u2666 None\n*A085\n(Dealer: East. North-South vulnerable.)\nWhat Is the' correct bidding on\nthis deal?\nSerial Story ...\nPeacock Feathers\nCHAPTER  38\nMimi and I were to leave Denver\nthe next morning for the ranch.\nI made arrangements for a hired car\nand went up to our rooms to find\nMimi dressing for dinner. I told\nher about the cherry orchards\u2014\nof the bloom of them, of the trees\ndripping red.\n\"Could anything be more beautiful?\" I demanded.\n\"I like it much better than\ncows,\" she said. \"I hale to think\nthat   things   have   to   be   killed.\"\nWe lingered, talking about it.\nThen she said,\"You aren't dressed,\nJerry, and I'm simply ravenous,\nIs it romantic to be hungry, dearest?\"\n\"Fairy princesses can be anything,\" I assured her, \"and get\naway with it.\"\nShe was to me, indeed, a fairy\nprincess surrounded as she was at\nthe moment by belongings which\nseemed to my crude, country-boy\nexperience almost too exquisite for\nuse. There were brushes of silver\nand bottles of crystal, a travelling\ncase of .fine leather, delicate laces,\nclinging silks and satins, little shoes\nwhich matched her gowns.\nOn everything, where it could be\nengraved or stamped or embroidered, was a peacock's feather.\nI had asked her how it happened\nthat she had chosen it. \"One of\nmy great-grandmothers had peacock feathers on her linen and on\nher silver. She owned an estate In\nFrance, and there were peacocks\non the terrace, and she was so\nproud that she refused to marry a\nmember of Hie royal family because he had plebeian blood in his\nveins-\n\"I am glad,\" I said to her, \"that\nyou are not like that.\"\n\"Why?\"\n\"You wouldn't have married me.'\n\"Perhaps she wasn't in love with\nhim\u2014\" her blush was charming.\n\"You have an air, Jerry, as if\nyou owned the world,\" she told\nme later, \"and you are so awfully\ngood-looking. Everybody stares _ti\nyou in the dining room.\"\nBut it was Mimi who drew their\nglances. There was one man who\nrecognized her and came to our\ntabic. \"I left St. Louis yesterday,\"\nhe said. \"Your elopement is creating a great sensation.\"\nWe had seen the papers. And\nI told him so. Mimi's manner of\ncarrying it. off was charming. \"It\nwas my fault. I have always\nwanted to do something different.\nJerry doesn't like clandestine things.\nBut it was eashier than the othciv\nbridesmaids and a trouseau\u2014and\nall the rest of it.\"\nHe laughed. \"Andy is in mourning, I saw him just before I left.\nHe was like a thundercloud\"\nWhen the man went on a few\nminutes later, neither he nor Mimi\nhad mentioned Mrs. Le Brun. But\nthe paper had said that Mimi's\nmother had treated the matter as\nthe whim of a spoiled child; It\nwas ,we thought, rather sporting\nof her to put it as she did.\nThe effect was ol there being\nno reason why Mimi should have\nrun away. She might have been\nmarried at home. There would\nhave been no opposition. I was my\nuncle's heir, and in every way\neligible.\nWe had told her of my inheritance in a letter which we had\nmailed to her on the moment of\ndeparture. It had been a hard\nletter to write. We had left her,\nas it were, stranded on the shores\nof her ambitions. Yet tho small\nIncome which, she had from her\nhusband's estate would be sufficient for her own needs when she\nhad no daughter to launch on the\nsocial seas. While I could not fee]\nsorry for her, I promised myself\nthat as soon as I knew something\nof my own finances I would make\nher on allowance.\nMimi's mind was not at rest. \"I\nfeel positively brutal, Jerry. Mother\nloves luxury, and I was her last\nhope.\"\nI had no sympathy lo spare. \"Perhaps, she'll have time to think of\nsome of the finer things,\" I said\nwith a touch of smugness.\n\"What are the finer things?\"\n\"Well, the love of money deadens people's souls.\"\n\"But one can't be civilized without it\"\n\"It depends on what you mean\nby civilization, Mimi.\"\n\"Oh, having servants to keep\nthings in order, and dressing for\ndinner, and plenty of bathtubs.\"\nWe laughed at that. \"Some day,\"\nI promised her, \"I'll tako you into\ntho mountains, miles away from\nbathtubs and dinner gowns, and\nI'll teach you the charms of the\nwild.\"\nShe shook her head.   \"I should\nBy TEMPLE BAILEY\nlove it,\" she said, \"for a little while.\nBut we couldn't live like that always, could we, Jerry?\"\nIt was towards noon of the next\nday that we came to the great\nhills which rose higher and higher\nas we proceeded on our way.\nNeither Mimi nor I had ever\nbeen among those western mountains, so that our first view of the\ntowering battlements of pink sand\nstone which guard the valleys gave\nus the feelings ot entering\nchanted ground. The man who\ndrove our car told us the names\nof the various formations, but we\nknew them only as magic gateways to those higher peaks, silver-\ntopped and touching the sky.\nThe roads as we left the highway were rough and narrow\u2014little traveled. We passed through\nsmall setlements which were hud\ndies of unlovely houses. Here and\nthere we came upon crude hotels,\nwhere we stopped for meals, finding the food, as a rule, well-cooked\nand hearty, but served with a lack\nof formality which shocked Mimi's\nfastidiousness.\nYet she took it all rather easily\n\"It is like something in a book,\nJerry. But I am glad our house\nwill be different.\"\nLooking back upon it, I wonder\nwhy doubts did not then assail me\nBut they did not. The splendor of\nthe hills and of those shining peaks\nhad woven a spell about me; I felt\nthat I could ride on forever, with\nMimi by my side.\nFlowers were everywhere; pale\ncolumbines; faint mauve and white;\nharebells, trembling in the breeze;\nthe exquisite and mystical Mariposa lily on its single stalk. Mimi\nexclaimed and I stopped the car and\nloaded her arms with them, and\nfelt that not even the lilies were\nlovelier than my young wife In her\nbridal happiness.\nAnd now the shadows began to\nfall on the mountains, the valleys\nwere dim \u2014 but the light stuck in\na golden shaft across the great\npeak which towered ahead of us,\n\"About half way up that moun\ntain is your house,\" the driver told\nus, \"there aint a better' view anywhere.\"\nMy hand went over Mimi's. Her\nfingers curled themselves about\nmine in a quick understanding\nclasp. We leaned a little forward,\ntrying to pierce the gloom,\nThe golden light faded, the\nmountain peak grew dark against\na sea of silver sky on which floated\na galleon of rosy cloud. Then the\ncloud sailed on, and the sky was\nfaint amethyst with one breathless\nstar.\n(To Be Continued)\nTho trouble with most people today is- that they don't listen to\nthemselves enough. They listen too\nmuch to others,\u2014Henry Ford.\nIt is obvious that dictatorship\nis not prospering, that fundamentally it is already confounded.\u2014\nThomas Mann,\nGape Cod House Charming\n*5KH?;iHKS:K;s::ss;:*;;g;;s;;:;!:;;s:=5:5;o;::\nDmign MS;A, National flan Service, Inc., Chicago\nFive-room house In the Cape Cod tradition, containing 19,000 cubic feet of space.\nWo need not go abroad for our\nhouse designs. This early American type of home is as charming as\nthe country, Cape Cod, where it\noriginated.\nThere is a delightful entrance,\ntwo dormer windows for the bedrooms, and a porch on the side of\nthe house  that may be made as\nBy Central Press\npleasant as any outdoor room.\nThe dining room might be furnished as a combination library and\ndining room, as there'is a breakfast\nnook in the kitchen. It also Is possible to rearrange the kitchen to\nsuit individual tastes.\nThe living room is delightfully\nlarge, light and airy, with windows\non three sides and the porch opening from it. Both bedrooms ore\nfront rooms, and the bathroom and\na useful dressing room are situated\nat the back of the house upstairs.\nThe house is frame, and contains\n19,000 cubic feet of space, the porch\n950, total, 19,950. Size of main building, 30 by 28 feet; size over all,\n30 feet by 38 feet 6 inches.\nJ? Questions 11\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers is open to a\u00aby reader oi\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\ncase will the name of the person\nssking the question be published.\nG. B., Nelson \u2014 If canned\nhave frozen so that the can is\nbulged is the fod safe to eat?\nNo.\nF. R. T., Salmo\u2014What does \"calendar week\" mean?\nAny consecutive seven days.\nMary, Nelson\u2014Which boils more\nquickly, milk or water, and why'.1\nMilk, because of a difference in\nspecific gravity, milk being heavier-\nGertie, Trail\u2014Can you give mc a\nhome remedy for dandruff, and\nwhat will help the hair to grow\nback again?\nApply a mixture of equal parts\ncastor and olive oil, massage the\nscalp well. Next day shampo witli\na liquid made of three ounces of\ngreen soap added to a pint of warm\nwater. Massage the scalp daily and\nbrush the hair well. Keep brush\nand comb clean by frequent washing.\nToday the mind, more than ever,\nis an instrument to be kept bright\nand keen by continuous; careful\nusage.\u2014Joseph jastrow.\n\"I would abolish a wage scale below a decent standard of living,\njust as I would abolish slavery.\"\n\u2014Senator Borah.\n\"As an intellectual fashion fascism can already be considered antiquated.\"\u2014Thomas Mann.\n'THE POPULATION FELL\nLONDON - A. P. Herbert, M, P.,\nauthor-humorist, read the following\nverses in the British House of Commons during the debate on the\nPopulation (Statistics) Bill;\nIn 1937 there was a rumor going\nround\nThat  income-tax  was soon 'to be\n6s, in the \u00a3,\nThe cost ot education every session\nseemed to swell,\nAnd to everyone's astonishment the\npopulation fell.\nThey pulled down all the houses\nwhore the children used to crowd,\nAnd built expensive blocks of flats\nwhere children weren't allowed.\nAnd If father got a job there wasn't\nanywhere to dwell,\nAnd everybody wondered why the\npopulation fell.\nFive hundred brand new motor cars\neach morning rode the roads,\nAnd flashed about like comets or sat\nmotionless as toads.\nWhichever course they took they\nmade the public highway hell.\nAnd everybody wondered why the\npopulation fell.\nThe laws were very comical, to bet\nwas voted lax,\nBut your betting was the only thing\nthat nobody would tax.\nYou couldn't have a wine unless\nyou'd sandwiches as well,\nAnd everybody wondered why the\npopulation fell.\nGreat science' nobly labored to increase the people's joys,\nBut every new invention seemed\nto add another noise.\nOne was always on the telephone or\nanswering the bell,\nAnd everybody wondered why the\npopulation fell.\nThe taverns wore controlled by men\nwho didn't want to drink,\nThe newspapers were run by men\nwho hadn't time to think.\nThe cinema was managed by a man\nwho couldn't spell.\nAnd everybody wondered why the\npopulation fell.\nAbroad, to show that everyone was\npassionate for peace,\nAll  children  under  seven  joined\nthe army or police.\nThe babies studied musketry while\nmother filled a shell,\nAnd everybody wondered why the\npopulation fell.\nThe world, in short, which never\nwas extravagantly Baric,\nDeveloped all the signs of Inflammation of the brain.\nThe past was not encoura-ging, the\nfuture none could tell,\nBut the Minister still wonders why\nthe population fell.   \"\nLooking Backward a..\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(Jan. 15, 1928)\nJack Sharkey gained a 12-round\ndecision over Tom Hconey in New\nYork January 13\u2014 Duke Waiman\nscored four of tlie six goals for Nelson when the Kokanees beat Rossland 0-3 on Trail ice January 14.\u2014\nW. K. Esling of Rossland was a\nvisitor to Trail before leaving for\nOttawa.\u2014Miss Grace Newman left\nRossland for Vinsulla, near Kamloops, where she will teach the\ncoming term\u2014Mrs. T. H. Negus of\nTrail was a Nelson visitor.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. Alex Thompson of Riondel\nhave moved across the lake to\nAinsworth.\u2014Mr. and Mrs. Edward\nBrown, who were married recently\nat Glenbank, have taken up residence at Slocan City.\u2014David Kerr\nleft yesterday for a business trip\nto Winnipeg.\nAUNTHET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"It don't look fair when a woman's weight changes and her\nnature don't. When she gets\nso her man can't reach around\nher, she ought to quit longln'\nto be held in his arms.\"\n\"Get rid of fear and I believe the\nworld would be a safer ploce.\"\u2014Sir\nPhilip GIbbs. ,\n\"\"MINING CAMPS\nUnsandcd Cottonwood\npanels are suitable for\nall mining and other\ncamp buildings. They\nare strong, water-\nproof, light and very\neasy to handle.\nDistrict Distributors\nWood, Vallaneo\nHardware Co., Ltd.\nTWENTY  YEARS  AGO\n(Jan. 15, 1918.)\nWork on the erection of two\npavilions for the Balfour military\nsanitarium will be started next\nweek, slates Capt. Olson, officer in\ncharge.\u2014Mrs. D. T. McClintock and\nchildren arrived in town to join\nRev. D. T. McClintock, pastor of\nSt. Paul's Presbyterian church.\u2014\nMrs. D. R. Anderson, Sintaluta,\nSask., is in town visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. G. McCallum\nof Fairview, and her sister, Mrs. A.\nJ. Dill.-R. Fred Shuttleworth, of\nthe Royal Flying corps, a former\nhigh school student of Nelson, who\nis here on five days leave, was presented with a wrist watch on behalf of the teachers, pupils and ex-\npupils of tho high school,\u2014E. W.\nMonk, a former Nelsonite who left\nhere in 1908, was in the city looking up old acquaintances,\nTHIRTY YEARS AGO\n(Jan. 15, 19011.)'\nArchdeacon Beer of Kaslo was a\nNelson visitor\u2014Mrs. Dudgeon and\ndaughter returned to Arrowhead\nlast night\u2014H. M. Stevenson and\nwife of Ainsworth left yesterday\nfor Philadelphia.\u2014Miss Agnes Macdonald of elson and Hugh MacMil-\nlan of Waldo were married at Nelson January 14 by Rev. John Al-\nthoff. The newlyweds left for Waldo, where they will make their\nhome,\u2014The Krao mine at Ainsworth has been closed down owing\nto the amount of water being encountered in the sinking of the\nshaft.\u2014Harry Ferguson left this\nmorning for Columbia college, New\nWestminster.\u2014A. B. W. Hodges of\nGrand Forks is in town to attend\nthe meeting of the Canadian Institute of Mining Engineers.\n\"Positive governmental action is\nnecessary if we are to correct basic\nabuses in our industrial life.\" \u2014\nJohn L. Lewis.\nModernize\nYour Home\nThrough the\nHOME\nIMPROVEMENT\nPLAN\nRemodel your present\nbathroom\u2014install an extra bathroom. Remodel\nthe kitchen sink with a\nnew pattern fixture.\nIt will pay you to call 666\nbefore doing any remodelling.\nPhone 666\nKOOTENAY\nPLUMBINC & HEATING\nCOMPANY, LIMITED\nP.O. Box 641      313 Baker St.\n\"BUILD B.C. PAYROLL8\"\nWe know a home where Pacific Milk found a place in\ncooking through the \"man\nof the house.\"\nHe insisted, at first, upon\nhaving Pacific for his coffee\nand for fresh fruit.\nFrom this beginning most of\n' the cooking is now done\nwith our milk.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, of Course\n\u2014\"-iar\"*MMaiaaiMaaa\n1938 PICTORIAL EDITION\nTO BE THE BEST YET!\nPictures and Stories From All Sections\nof Southern Interior of British Columbia\nBE SURE TO GET YOUR COPY!\nTO BE PUBLISHED ON OR ABOUT JANUARY 29th\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n\u25a0tati._!_\u00ab.. \u00bb\u2022_._ .___*_.______\u201e.\n-^^^^^_ ___.__.__\n ,.W.LfPI|^PJlHI^I)B^^\nfoe?\nMrs. R. Stevens\nHead of Creston\nValley Institute\nCRESTON, B.C.-At the annual\nmeeting of Creston and. District\nWomen's Institut Saturday afternoon Mrs. R. Ibbitson, a former\npresident, took charge for the election,\nOfficers for 1938 are: President,\nMrs, R. Stevens; vice-president, Mrs.\nC. F. Hayes; secretary-treasurer,\nMrs. A. R. Lynn; executive, Mrs.\nFrank Nadon. Mrs. P. C. Rodgers\nand Mrs Godfrey Vigne.\nMrs. H. W. MacLaren. retiring\nsecretary-treasurer, gave a review\nof the year's work, the outstanding\nieature being work by the relief\ncommittee in supplying clothing and\nfootwear to unfortunate families.\nAlong with the goods donated, $33\nhad been spent in the purchase of\nboots and overshoes.\nCommencing this week, similar\nwork will be inaugurated with the\nserving of hot soup at noon at\nCreston public school.\nDuring 1937 the institute spon-\nsired the schol lair, which was a\ngreater success than ever. Some\nchildren had been provided with\nmeans to consult the eye clinic at\nNelson. The institute had sponsored\na child at the school ior the deal\nand blind at Vancouver, and had\nlooked after replenishing some first\naid kits at valley schools.\nChief source of revenue was talent\nmoney turned in by members,, accounting for over $50.\nOn her departure for the coast to\nreside, Mrs. J. E. Johnston, a former seorctary, was given a farewell\nreception and presented with a floor\nlamp.\n5 WIN-PRIZES AT\nN.DENVER WHIST\nNEW DENVE R, B. C,-A whist\ndrive sponsored by the hospital\naid in New Denver, was held January 8, the hostesses being Mrs. A.\nL. Harris arid Mrs. J. Greer. Those\nreceiving prizes were, Ladies first,\nMiss May Meers; consolation, Mrs.\nCharlie Vandergrift; men's first,\nF. Brady and consolation. Joe McPhee; special prize Frank Crosby.\nAmount taken in- was $18.40.\nSORE THROAT\nWITH COLDS\nGIVEN FAST RELIEF\nToko 1 \"Aspirin\" Tablets\nwith a full glass of water.\nThe speed with which \"Aspirin\"\ntablets act in relieving the distressing symptoms of colds and\naccompanying sore throat is\nutterly amazing . . . and the\ntreatment is simple and\npleasant. This is all you do.\nCrush and dissolve three\n\"Aspirin\" tablets in one-third\nglass of water. Then gargle with\nthis mixture twice, holding your\nhead well back.\nThis medicinal gargle will act\nalmost like a local anesthetic\nDEMAND AND GET-\nASPIRIN\nCrush 3 \"Aspirin\" Tablets\nin y$ glass of water\u2014gargle\ntwice every few'hours.\non the sore, irritated membrane\nof your throat. Pain eases\npromptly; rawness is relieved.\nYou will say it is remarkable.\n\u2022 \"Aspirin\" tablets are made in\nCanada. \"Aspirin\" is the registered trade-mark of the Bayer\nCompany, Limited, of Windsor,\nOntario. Look for the name\nBayer in the form of a cross on\nevery tablet.\n-     NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-8ATURDAY MORNING, JAN, 15, 1938\nMrs. Ironside Is\nHead Cranbrook\nHospital Aid\nAnnual meeting ot the St. Eugene\nHospital Ladles' aid Was held in\nthe council chambers Tuesday afternoon with Mrs. Argue, last year's\npresident in the chair.\nThe report of the secretary showed an increased membership and\ngood interest in the work. The annual Easter ball had been an enjoyable and successful affair. The annual jam and pickle shower, with\nMrs. Miles as convenor, was the\nmost successful held to date, large\nstores of these articles being donated, in view of the fact that the\nhospital was in receipt of benefit\nfunds from the public it was decided to suspend the annual tag\nday for 1938.\nGET EQUIPMENT\nDuring the year a second wheel\nchair had been purchased, also bed\nscreens to the value of $128.21.\nThree dozen hot water bottles was\nanother of the donations to the institution.\nReporting for the Lenten sewing\ncommittee, Mrs. Thompson's list\nshowed that 948 articles had been\nmade. These included shirts, sheets,\npillow cases, draw sheets and so\nforth.\nThe report of the treasurer, Mrs.\nA. J. Ironside, showed receipts\namounting to $820, which included\na balance from the previous year\nof $125.72. Proceeds from the Easter\nball, $191.65, membership fees, $15,\nproceeds from the tea at the Mercantile company's fashion show,\n$37.05, and a donation check turned over to the organization by the\nhospital of $250.55.\nExpenditures included the orchestra and various items for the dance,\nbed screens, wheel chair, hot water\nbottles.for the hospital and some\nsmall items, for freight and running expenses. The balance on hand\nis $264,67.\nAfter thanking the members for\ncooperation in all the various enterprises and bespeaking the same for\nthe next president, Mrs. Argue vacated the chair, and Mrs. Miles was\nappointed -temporary chairman. Mrs.\nArgue was renominated! but declined to act, whereupon Mrs. Ironside was unanimously elected to fill\nthe chair. Mrs. Miles and Mrs, Little\nwere unanimously reelected as vice\npresidents, and Mrs. Doran, who\nhas held office since the beginning\nof the organization in a most ef-\nficinet manner was reelected by acclamation. The office of the treasurer, vacated by Mrs. Ironside, when\nshe became president, was filled by\nMrs. Argue.\nAfter some discussion it was decided to order for the hospital a\nnew sterilizer for the maternity\nroom, to cost between six and seven\nhundred dollars. Financing this purchase will be the immediate project of the organization.\nDinner for New\nDenver Bachelors\nNEW DENVER, B.C.-Mr. and\nMrs. H. H. Pendry entertained at\na turkey dinner for their bachelor\nfriends Jan. 5. Invited guests were\nJ. R. Porter, Jack Mclnnis, M,\nDowney, W. Coulter, Bob Harrod,\nDanny Deano, B. Artiss, Joe McPhee, Mickey McFarland and Ed\nShannon.\nMrs. M. C. Vandergrift and Miss\nGladys Reynolds assisted Mrs. Pen-\ndry.\nRossland Social..\nBy MRS. B. B. FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, Jan. 14 \u2014 Government Square Circle of St. Andrew's United church met Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs.\nHarold Clegg. Mrs. A. H. Freeman\nwas elected'as president and Mn.\nE. E. Perkins reelected secretary-\ntreasurer.    '\nPlans were discussed for a Valentine Silver Tea in February at\nthe home of Mrs. J. D. Hanson. The\nnext meeting will be at the home\nof Mrs. F. Palmquist. Members were\ninformed that a joint meeting of all\nthe circles of St. Andrew's United\nchurch will be held.\nRefreshments were served by the\nhostess. Those present included\nMrs. J. C. Urquhart, Mrs. Ingle;!,\nMrs. T. Wood, Mrs. H. Bathie, Mrs.\nJ. D. Hanson, Mrs. V. Bonde, Mrs.\nF. Palmquist, Mrs. T. W. Reed, Mrs.\nE. E. Perkins and Mrs. A. H. Freeman.\nMrs. J. Phillips was hostess recently at her home to members of\nthe L.O.B.A. Whist was featured.\nWinners oi the iirst prizes were Mrs.\nR. Donaldson and T. Wood, and consolation was awarded to Mrs. 1.\nHall and O. Hendrickson.\nWilfred Pitt has returned from\nVancouver where he attended the\nwedding oi his sister.\nRobert Lee has returned to Greenwood alter a short visit in Rossland. -\nA. Bowman of Salmo is spending\na few days in Rossland.\nD. D. McDonald of Glcnsidc, Sask.,\nwas a Rossland visitor Wednesday.\nMembers of the Trail Red Mountain Ski club celebrated the opening of their fine new cabin situated on Red Mountain by entertaining members of the Rossland Ski\nclub Wednesday evening. After skiing the young people gathered in\nthe cabin where a dance was held.\nMany of the old dances were favored, S heel and toe polka and scot-\ntische being the highlights ol the\nevening. A sing song was enjoyed\nby all and refreshments served. At\nthe close of the evening's entertainment, Magistrate R. E. Plewman\non behalf of members of the Rossland club thanked the Trail club\nlor their hospitality and a delightful\nevening, and extended an invitation\nto them for next Wednesday evening to be present at the Rossland\nSki cabin where a- skiing party\nand dance is planned.\nCRANBROOK Social...\nCRANBROOK, B.C. \u2014 Honoring\nMiss Helen Dennison of Nelson and\nMiss Jean Burns of Denver, who\nare their house guests, Mr. and\nMrs. J. A. Schell entertained at a\nmidnight turkey supper at their\nhome on Fenwick avenue following\nthe hockey game at Kimberley.\nTripli was played. Guests were Mr.\nand Mrs. Garnet Blaine of Kimberley, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Hanna,\nMr. and Mrs. A. Fournier, Miss Delia\nBaxter, Miss Muriel Reade, Miss\nEnid Shankland, Miss Muriel Little,\nDr. R. S. Geddes, Melville Reade,\nArt Carlson, Calvin McLeod of Nelson, Arnold McGrath, and Jack\nBurns.\nA wedding of much Interest In\nCranbrook was solemnized at St.\nMary's church at 10:30 a.m. Saturday when Ina Lillian College,\ndaughter ol Mr. and Mrs, C. A. College of Cranbrook, became the\nbride of Edward Anthony Shypitka,\nson of Mrs. Kennedy, of Cranbrook,\nformer Mrs. Shypitka, and the late\nMr. Shypitka. Rt. Rev. J. C. MacKenzie officiated. The bride, given\nin marriage by her father, wore a\nshort dress of turquois blue crepe.\nThe long sleeves of the dress were\ntight fitting and the plain neck\nline was fastened at the throat wilh\na matching sash which tied at the\nbuckle. The dress was belted with\na matching sash with tied at the\nside. Her black velvet turban was\ntrimmed with a silver bow and hud\na nose veil. Her accessories were of\nblack and she carried a bouquet of\nwhite carnations and fern. The\nbridesmaides were Miss Delia College, who wore a rust crepe afternoon dress, with long tight fitting\nsleeves, and a belt of matching\nmaterial buckled at the front, and\na corsage of white carnations, her\nhat being a brown velvet turban\nand her accessories were of brown,\nand Miss Anne Shypitka, who wore\nan afternoon dress' of dark brown\ncrepe with gold insets' at the top\nand gold sleeves. Her hat was a\nblack velvet turban, her accessories\nwere of black and she wore a corsage of white carnations. Arthur\nGodderis was groomsman. Following the ceremony a dinner was held\nfor the bridal party at Ihe home of\nMr. and Mrs. College and in the\nevening a reception was held when\nsome 35 guests were present. A buf\nfet supper was served. The rooms\nwere decorated with carnations,\nand the table centered with a three-\ntier wedding cake topped with a\nsilver bell. The bride and groom\nwere assisted in receiving by Mrs.\nCollege, who wore a blue flowered\ncrepe afternoon dross, and Mrs.\nKennedy, who was gowned in a\nlight blue afternoon dress. The\nbride was born in North Dakota,\ncoming to Cranbrook from Saskatchewan 15 years ago. She attended\nthe schools here. Mr. Shypitka came\nto the city from Saskatchewan a\nfew years ago. They will reside at\nCranbrook.\nThe annual election ol officers\nof the Ladies Aid of Knox Presbyterian church took place at the home\nof Mrs. E. Jones as follows: Hon-\npresident, Mrs, Hunters president,\nMrs. Liddicoat; first vice-president,\nMrs. A. Steele; second vice-president, Mrs. C. J. Little; secretary,\nMrs. Balment; treasurer, Mrs. Wor-\nden; press secretary, Mrs. McCallum.\nTea was served by Mrs. Jones, assisted by Mrs. Kemball.\nThe annual election of officers of\nthe Ladies Aid of the United church\nresulted as follows: President, Mrs.\nMcKowan; vice-president, Mrs. J,\nSarvis; secretary, Mrs. McBurney,\ntreasurer, Mrs. Ratcliffe. The tea\nhostesses were Mrs. E. H. McPhee\nand Mrs. R. Moffatt.\nMrs. Pickard Heads\nthe Band Auxiliary\nMrs. L. Pickard was elected president for the fourth consecutive\nterm when the Mother's Auxiliary\nto the Boy's Band met at the home\nof Mrs. W. A. Harrison, Mill street,\nWednesday night for their first\nmeeting 'of the year. Mrs. C. Romano was elected vice-president\nand Mrs. F. C. Robinson, secretary-\ntreasurer. Mrs, W. Graham and Mrs.\nW. A. Harrison were elected to the\nexecutive. Charles Morris and W.\nA. Harrison were appointed managers for the band's outside engagements.\nFollowing her election, Mrs. Pickard was presented with a leather\ndiary by Mrs. Harrison. Refreshments were served by the hostesses,\nMrs. Harrison and Mrs. Graham.\nNelson Gets Him\nWilh First Sight\nHoover,  New  Boss\nNational Fruit\nFalls Hard\n\"We're going to like Nelson. We\nhaven't seen much oi It yet, and\nwhat we have seen has been in the\ndepths ol winter, but-the Hoover\nfamily is already 'sold' on this city.\"\nGeorge A. Hoover, newcomer to\nNelson from Medicine Hat to take\nover management of the National\nFruit company, branch oi the Consolidated Fruit company, siad Wednesday that his new home town already had impressed him.\nMr. Hoover entered the Irult\nbusiness in Medicine Hat in 1919\nafter his return from overseas,\nwhere he served with the Princess\nPats Light infantry. Starting as a\nsalesman, he became credit manager\nunder A. Browne, formerly of Nelson, and succeeded Mr.' Brown as\nmanager of the Alberta fruit house\nwhen the latter came (b Nelson.\nLIVE WIRE IN\nMEDICINE HAT\nThe newcomer is a past president\nof the Medicine Hat chamber of\ncommerce, and was a director of\nthis body when he left lor Nelson.\nHe was also a director ol the city's\nhospital board, and oi the Medicine\nHat Rotary club, and was colonel\nol the First battalion, Southern Alberta regiment.\nMr. and Mrs. Hoover and their\ntwo sons are residing at 511 Nelson\navenue.\nGuy Farron of\nEdmonton Honor\nGuest, N. Denver\nNEW DENVER, BC.-Mr. and\nMrs. J. W. Tarron entertained at a\nparty Jan. 7 ,in honor of their\nnephew, Guy Tarron, of Edmonton, who is their guest for the\nwinter and who was celebrating his\nbirthday, \u2022   \u2022\nThe evening was spent in dancing\nand games. R. S. White and Frank\nMeers sang, and several recited, including R, Mills, who is a guest\nthere also.\nThe hostess served refreshments\nassisted by Miss Helena Tarron and\nMrs. J. Black. Those invited were\nMrs. Joe Laundreville, Mrs. W. Bal-\nbirnie, Mrs. J. Black and young\ndaughter, Janice, Hilda Crellin\u201eLiz-\nzie Meers, Lessels Balbirnie, Ruth\nAlywin, Violet Gunn, Edna Shannon, Dorothy Sells, Hellena Tarron,\nWalter and Charlie Thring, Oliver\nand Barney Johnson, who supplied\nmusic for dancing, Frank MSers,\nBob White, Murdie and Colin\nCampbell, Billy and Leslie Balbirnie, Lance Emerson of Trail, R\nMills, Ivor Tarron, Frank and Sidney Tarron, Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Tarron, Ellison Crellin and the guest\nol honor, Guy Tarron.\nPAGE SEVEN\nRixen, Robertson\nGet I. O.O. F.Long\nMembership Badges\nW. M. Rixen was presented with\na 50-year I.O.O.F. membership\nbadge and James .Robertson with\na 25-year I.O.O.F. membership\nbadge at the annual installation oi\nofficers.\nThere are more than 5500 Islands\nin the British Isles, 5000 of them being situated around Ireland.\nMrs. Williams\nIs President of\nEdgewood's W. I.\nEDGEWOOD, B. C\u2014The Womens\nInstitute held its annual meeting\nFriday. Mrs. Niedermann and Mrs.\nYeld being hostesses.\nMrs. Jordan Williams was elected\npresident tor 1938; Mrs. L. J. deGans,\nvice-president; Mrs. W. Daly, secretary-treasurer; and the following\non the committee: Mrs. 'Yeld, Mrs.\nNiedermsnn, Mrs. Cassldy and Mrs.\nThomson.\nOne Vacancy on\nCreston Council\nCRESTON, B.C. \u2014 Members oi\nCreston village council met In the\nlinal session of their fiscal year\nMonday night. Reeve Mallandaine\npresided, with Councillors Craig\nand Nichols in attendance.\nThe most Important item of business was the arranging ior nomination and polling days for this\nyear's municipal contest. Due to insufficient time to prepare the necessary by-law the vote on the loan to\ninstall a sewer system in the village\nwill not take place on January 27,\non which date a poll will be held to\nfill one vacancy on the board.\nCouncillor Craig's term has expired.\nNominations will be taken January 24, with the village clerk, Miss\nE. F. Arrowsmith, as returning officer.\nThe council approved a letter\nfrom the local Knights of Pythias\nlodge asking that the council allocate certain streets in the village\non which the Pythlans may plant\nshade trees by way of commemorating past chancellor commanders\nof Wild Rose Lodge.\nThe tennis club was given permission to erect a pavilion in the\nvicinity of the tennis court which\nis situated in Exhibition Park,\nowned by the village, on the understanding the structure must be removed on order by the corporation.\nA committee of the council will\ninterview landowneds interested\nwith a view to opening up a lane\nbetween the Andy Anderson, Romano brothers and Charles 0. Rod\ngers properties, to provide an outlet lor C Wies onto Canyon street.\nMr. Wiles' place is along the CP.R.\nright of way and he has no access\nto a village street other than by\ntrespass.\nThe village treasury is low and\nit was with regret the council declined a grant to the Women's Institute to help that organization\nfinance the daily serving of soup\nto deserving pupils at the public\nschool. Due the financial stringency\nthe usual $10 grant to the Salvation\nArmy was withheld. The council\nalso declined to make a one per cent\nper annum reduction on the assessment of the Midland & Pacific\nelevator, as per request from the\ncompany's head office.\nAxel Anderson was granted a\nbuilding permit for a new residence\non his lot on Hillside Road, opposite\nHoly Cross church. The clerk is\nto notify certain householders that\ntheir chimneys do not comply with\nthe building by-law and request\nthat the necessary rebuilding be\nundertaken at once. The Curling\nclub is to be asked to provide the\nvillage with a quit claim to their\nrink, which has reverted to the\nmunicipality for non-payment of\ntaxes.\nDecember accpunts passed for\npayment totalled $326, and after\nthese cheques are liquidated the\ntreasury will boast a balance of\nabout $115.\nDoukhobors1 Rush\nlo Register Births\nGives Year Boost\nThis  Explains  Jump\nFrom 47 to 703 '\nfor Year\nRanging in ages from 27 years to\nnew born babies, 703 births were\nregistered in Nelson for the district\nin the year 1937 as compared with\n47 births registered in 1936. Some\nof the \"babies\" were born in 1911,\nbut most of them were born from\n1915 up until the end ol 1937.\nSince the provincial police and\nother public departments started\nto clamp down on the Doukhobon\nand to enforce the Vital Statistic\nact early In the year, court house\nofficials report large number of\nDoukhobors rushing to register\ntheir births.\nIn the month of December alone,\nout of 300 births registered for the\ndistrict, only two were not Doukhobors.\nSome Doukhobors, born in Saskatchewan or other provinces, who\nare attempting to register their\nbirths in Nelson, are told that they\nmust apply for registration in their\nown provinces. .\nDeaths in the district in 1937 were\nup 13 over 1936, while marriages\nwere up two.\nIn Nelson city births were up two\nand deaths down three.\nMarriages showed the greatest\nchange, an increase of 21 being\nshown over the previous year.\nIn the month of  December in -\nNelson district, deaths increased by\nfive. No marriages were recorded\nin either December 1937 or Decem-\nbr 1936.\nBirths In Nelson city In 1937 were\ndown 21, while deaths were even\nwith nine each year. Marriages\ndoubled, four being recorded In\n1936 and eight in 1937.\nYear's figures for Nelson and district and Nelson city for the years\n1936 and 1937 follow:\nNelson district 1936  1937\nBirths      47     703\nDeaths       19      32  .\nMarriages      10      12\nNelson City:\nBirths       208     210\nDeaths     102      99\nMarriages      83     10*\nFigures for the months ol December 1936 and 1937 follow:\nNelson and district:\nBirths       2     300\nDeaths        1        6\nMarriages        0        0\nNelson city:\nDeaths        9        9\nBirths       31       10\nMarriages        4        8\nFine Year for\nNew Denver's\nChurch Ladies\nNEW DENVER, B.C.\u2014Mrs. H. S.\nNelson entertained the Presbyterian\nLadies' Aid January 6 at their annual meeting. Reports showed a\nsuccessful year financially and the\nwork undertaken by the Aid was\naccomplished.\nTea was served by the hostess, assisted by Mrs. A. Nesmith. Those\npresent were Mrs. J. Taylor, Miss\nDora Clever, Mrs. G. Williamson,\nMrs.. George, Mrs. J. C. Harris, Mrs,\nJ. Nyman, Mrs. R. B. McKay, Mrs.\nO. Enockson, Mrs, L. D. Irwin and\nMts. J. Greer. \t\nThe February meeting will be held\nat the home of Mrs. J. Nyman.\nThe Boy Who Couldn't Fight\nINSTALLMENT I\nPhilip Benning was standing at\nthe exit door of the trolley car for\nalmost a full block before it reached Tygart street. As soon as the door\nopened he jumped down the steps,\nhurried to the curb, and started up\nthe street at a half run.\nThe next half hour, Philip knew,\nwas to be the most important in his\nwhole life. Professor Frank, the\ngreatest piano teacher in the city,\nhad consented to hear him play. If\nPhilip convinced him that he had\nexceptional talent, that he mieht\nsome day be a concert pianist, the\nProfessor would accept him as a\npupil.\nPhilip took a tighter grip on the\nleather case that contained his music. He'd show Professor Frank!.\nHe'd play as he had never played\nbefore. Ever since his mother had\ntold him, three days previously,\nthat the Professor had given him\nan appointment, he had hardly left\nthe piano long enough to go to\nhigh school, where he was a Freshman. He had practiced morning,\nafternoon, and night, until he knew\nthat he could play the music in his\ncase perfectly.\nAs he hurried along Tygart\nstreet, he glanced around him with\ngrowing interest. A funny neighborhood for a great piano teacher\n.to live In. Almost shabby, in fact.\nBut Professor Frank didn't care\nanything about where he lived,\nPhilip decided\u2014or about anything\nelse, except music. That was probably why he was so good.\nPhilip glanced at a house which\nwas sorely in need of paint, searching for the number. There it was\u2014\nhe had at least four more blocks\nto go. Well, no matter, He had\nplenty of time.\nAlmost to the next corner, however, he suddenly became aware of\na group of boys lounging on the\nsidewalk in front of him. There\nwere a half dozen of them, and\nthey seemed to be playing some\nsort of a game with three sticks.\nAs he aprpoached. he saw one of\nthe boys pick up one of the sticks\nwith the other two and loss it into\nthe air. The stick flew straight at\nPhilip's face. Instinctively lie flung\nup his hand and caught it in the\nair. Then he stopped, holding the\nslick uncertainly, not knowing\nquite what to do with it.\nTlie boy who had tossed it uttered an angry cry and ran toward\nhim.\n\"What's the idea?\" he demanded.\n\"You spoiled my toss, you clumsy\ngaloot!\"\nPhilip's pale, sensitive face went\na shade paler. He extended his\nhand, offering the stick to the boy.\n\"I\u2014I'm sorry,\" he faltered. \"I\ndidn't mean to spoil anything. I\njust saw it flying at me and caught\nit without thinking.\"\n\"Yeah?\" The other boy reached\nforward and slapcd the stick viciously to tho sidewalk. Then, with\nfists clenched, he planted himself\nsquarely in front of Philip, and\nlooked him up and down scornfully.\n\"What you got there?\" he de-\nBy\nW.  BOYCE  MORGAN\nTHE BOYS AND GIRLS PAGE\nHe swung his music case wildly, and hit the boy across the face.\nmanded, pointing to the leather\ncase in Philip's hand.\n\"My\u2014my music,\" Philip replied.\n\"Your music!\" the other boy\nmocked. \"Well, well! Is the big sissy\ngoing to  take a music lesson?\"\nPhilip swallowed hard. He looked at the other boy's challenging,\nmocking face Then his eyes dropped lo the sidewalk, but not before\nhe had seen the faces of the other\nboys, grinning expectantly,\nPhilip's heart sank, and he felt\nhis muscles trembling. He knew he\nwas in a bad situation. This other\nboy was tough\u2014his face and his\nactions proved that. And evidently he was looking for trouble.\nPhilip was frightened\u2014thorough\nly frightened. Fighting was something he knew absolutely nothing\nabout, and for the last few years,\nsince he had started Studying music, he had taken part in no sports\nof any kind. A sissy? That's what\nthe other boy had called him. The\nother boy was probably right, but\nPhilip had no time to think about\nthat. All he knew was that he had\nto get past this boy some way-\nget to Professor Frank's.\nHe stepped toward the outer edge\nof the sidewalk. The boy stepped\nwith him. blocking his way.\n\"Please let me by,\" said Philip\npleadingly. \"I'm going to be late.\n(To Be Continued)\nRiddles\nThe Riddle Man hopes you won't\nforget your New Year's resolution\nto send him all your favorite riddles.\nIt may be a long time before you see\nthem here, but if you will be patient, your riddles will be printed.\nAnd the Riddle Man is very anxious\nto receive them.\n1. Why is a dog's tail like the\nheart of a tree?\u2014Benny Hough.\n2. When does a ship tell a falsehood?\u2014Eddie Mae Graves.\n3. Never leaves but often sticks,\npeople daily give it licks.\u2014Jane\nPratt.\n4. What seasoning since roasts\nbegan, best designates a wise old\nman?\u2014Milo Jacks.\n5. Why is life the greatest of\nriddles\u2014Mary Paul.\nTry Novel Plans for\nChoosing Partners at\nYour Next Big Party\nHave you ever been to a party\nwhere the hostess had a bad time\npairing the boys and girls eff for\nrefreshments? Well, here are some\namusing ways lor you to choose\npartners at your next party.\nHang a sheet in a double doorway\njust high enough to show the girls'\nfeet below. Stand the girls behind\nthe sheet and have the boys walk\nin front and choose their partners\nfrom the shoes, which are all they\ncan see.\nAnother way is to write the names\nof famous lovers on slips of paper,\ngiving the names of the girls to the\nboys and the names of the boys to\nthe girls. Then the guests hunt\ntheir mates for partners. Examples\nof names which might be used are\nRomeo and Juliet, Antony and Cleopatra, Ivanhoe and Rebecca, King\nArthur and Queen Guinevere, Pa\nolo and Francesca, etc.\nIf you are giving a large party\nand want everyone to know everyone else, have a progressive partner supper. At 'the end of the first\ncourse, have the boys get up and\nmove one place to the right. Continue to have them move at the end\nof each course, and by the end of\nthe dinner you will have a jolly\nfriendly group.\nANSWERS TO WEDNESDAY'S\nPUZZLES\n1.  The square is lace, away, cane\nTHESE SNOWSHOES ARE SIMPLE TO MAKE\nA&memade o? ttfo\n\u25a0wHlort switches\ny'H66'2on?\n.7 \u00a5tt iff- \u00bb,.\nf PootJboard\n'REAR\nBRACE\nFRONT\nBRACE\n7%seli(jhtvi>eight\ndord rope ior\nmfibing. Waterpmoi\nwithpamtshellac'\nor i>a.misJL.\nPERSONAL STATIONERY\nIts just ordinary stationery, but\nyou give it your own personal touch\nby adding a design which expresses your hobby, your desires, your\nideals!\nIf you're interested in sports use\na skating or skiing design; if your\nambition is to travel use an airplane or boat; if you love gardening use flower designs, and so on.\nIt will be much more personal than\nanything you can buy, and you'll\nenjoy \"designing\" it for your friends\nand members of the family.\nEven if you have no talent lor\nand eyes.\n2. The diamond is P, dub, dazed,\npuzzles, below, dew, S.\n3. C-Iimb. T-rust.\n4. Pours, pores. Preyed, prayed.\n5. Crossword Puzzle Solution.\nBy RAY J. MARRAN\nThe making ol a pair ol snow-\nshoes for use in hiking across a\ncountry covered with deep snow Is\na very complicated and painstaking project. The steaming and the\nbending of the frame wood calls\nfor special equipment, and the weaving or webbing is a job only for\nexperts. But if you want to make a\npair of snowshoes for play around\nhome, here is a satisfactory way to\ndo it.\nFor each shoe, select two long willow switches, about one inch thick.\nSplice these switches together with\nheavy cord, then bend them into the\nshape of a snowshoe frame. Fasten\nthe ends of these switches together with heavy cord threaded\nthrough holes drilled In the ends\nof the switches as shown. Across\nthe wide part of the shoe, willow\nbraces must be attached with cord,\nas shown. Four braces will be sufficient to hold the shoe in shape.\nTHE WEBBING\nFrom the sides oi the irame,\nacross, up and down, the webbing\nis threaded. Use heavy cord for the\nwebbing, looping it around the sides\nof the frame and around the braces.\nWeave. this webbing so the cords\nwill run above and then below each\nother, as in a basket weave. Take\nplenty of time weaving the web,\nand make it as neat appearing and as\nwell spaced as possible.\nFor a footrest, nail a light weight\nboard between the second and third\nbraces. To this footboard, the boot\nharness is attached. Make the harness from old book straps and adjust them so the toe of your shoe\nextends slightly over the footrest\nbetween the open space between\nthe first and second cross brace.\nThis method makes snowshoes\nsturdy enough for short hikes and\nfor play around home. In warm climates you can experiment with the\nshoes on a stretch of sand.\nTo make the webbing waterproof,\npaint the cord webbing with several\ncoats of shellac, varnish or common house paint.\nTo walk with snowshoes, the shoe\nis not lifted completely off the surface; only the toe end is lifted.\nThe heel end is dragged and the\nwalker moves along at a shuffling\ngait. A little practice will be required before you get on to the\nregular snowshoe stride.\nKAY'S CORNER\nBy KATHERINE HOUISON\ndrawing, don't pass this up. Go\nthtough the magazines 'round the\nhouse and pick out pictures you\nlike. Trace these onto tissue paper\nand then transfer them to the stationery with carbon paper. You'll\nfind designs for'every subject under the sun, once you begin looking.\nWhen your design is on the note\npaper, decide whether you want a\nsilhouette or a colored effect, You\ncan use either India ink or poster\ncolors to fill in the designs but be\nsure to use a fine pen.\nAnother clever idea is to use\nyour monogram, cutting the letters\nout carefully and fastening a piece\nof colored cellophane behind it.\nYour school emblem or letters can\nbe used just as easily, either filled\nin or cut out.\nThere are dozens of ways In which\nyour stationery can be made to express you and your ideas, and they\nare all easy, interesting to do, and\nwonderfully effective.\nRIDDLE ANSWERS\n1. Both are as far as possible from\nthe bark. 2. When she lies at the\nwharf.   3. Stamp.   4. Sage.   5.   Because we must all give it up.\n :      . :1\t\n^^MMmd&mm :    -jit-fti^^\n PAGE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-8ATURDAY MORNING, JAN.: 15. 1938\nSTIBBS SIGN.\n(HECKS, FIRST\nACT AS MAYOR\n' ' A. -irst act as chief magistrate of\n,the city, Mayor N. C. Stibbs Fri-\n'day just a few hours after he was\n\u25a0aworn m signed his name to a\n.number of salary .checks of cily\nemployees.\n. Following \u25a0 this, his worship accompanied R. E. Fotter, city engineer'oh a tour Of the city. The retaining wall being constructed be-\n'hind tie Nelson Civic Centre curling rink, and the streets of the business section, Fairview and the hill\nsection, where plowing was under\n,Way, were inspected and other\npoints, where city projects were\n. being carried on, visited.\nHockey Schedule\n| Hockey schedule for Monday and\nTuesday as announced by P. C.\nRichards, secretary of. the Nelson\nAiriateur Hockey association, follows:\nMONDAY\n4-4:30 p.m.\u2014C.B.C. midgets.\n4:30-5 p.m.\u2014C.B.C. juveniles.\n'    5-6 p.m.\u2014Westerners vs. M.R.K.\nbantams.\n6-7 p.m. \u2014 M.R.K.'s vs. Panther\nmidgets\nTUESDAY\n6:30-7:30 p.m.\u2014Scouts vs. C.B.C.\nmidgets.\n7:30-8:30 p.m.\u2014F.A.C. vs, transfer\n.' Juveniles.\n8:30-8:40 p.m.\u2014Clean ice.\n8:40-10 p.m.\u2014F.A.C. intermediates\nMs. Tigers.\nVote for Vingo Was\n172 Instead of 72\nBy a typographical error the vote\nreceived by Stephen Vingo, candi-\n- date for Alderman in the Nelson\ncivic election, was published Friday\nmorning as 72, instead of 172. Mr.\nVingo entered the field only three\n.days before official nomination.\nConnoisseurs\nWill Tell You\nthat the richest\nwine of all is Port\nand they will add\nCONVIDO\nPORT\nis the- noblest of\nPort of all. There\nis a reason. Bottled\nby the same firm\nin Oporto (Warre\n& Co) since 1670\nand always aged\n30 years in wood\nbefore bottling.\nIn bottles only. Never\nsold In bulk.\nAsk for Convido.\nThis advertisement is not published\nor'displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard pr by the Government ol\nBritish Columbia.\n614 Phone Calls\nAnswered at News\non Election Night\nAn almost continuous ringing and\nbuzzing of phones in the Nelson\nDally News- editorial room Thursday night gave ample testimony to\nthe interest of Nelson citizens in\nthe civic, elections.\nCommencing with a few scattered calls before the polls closed, but\ngrowing inwolume as the evening\nwore on, some 614 calls, pertaining\nto the elections results were received. On the night of Ihe 1937 civic\ncle.tions-494 calls were answered.\nTRAIL CURLING\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 14-ResuUs of\nTrail Curling club Patrons cup competition- matches played here tonight follow:\nDonald McDonald 12, R. Somerville 10.\nD, Balfour 8, A. E. Calvert 12.\nB. J. Walsh 6, H. Currie 8.\nJ. P. Schofield 8, C-Hoefer 10.\nW. Somerville 11, W. G. Carrie 10.\nDr. W. A, Coghlin 10, R. C. Crowe\n12.\nG. C. McKay 10, W.F. Doubt 11.\nC. Dodimead 9, A. E. Allison 8.\nPOLICE MOVE TO AVOID\nFURTHER JAIL BREAKS\nVICTORIA, Jan.' 14 (CP)-Vic-\ntoria's police commission moved\nquickly today to.avoid recurrence\nof Wednesday's jailbreak by Theodore Carveth and Tiiomas Schaef-\nler, alias Anthony Schlosser.\nTlie police commissionorederd:\nThat a close mesh .creen ol wire\nbe placed across windows in\nground-flbof jail cells, in addition\nto the present bars.\nThat all visitors must sign their\nnames in a special book.\nThat hourly check-up of the cell\nblock by the police sergeant on\nduty be \"tightened up.\"\nThe commission fined Sergeant\nThomas Hall, on duty when the\nmen escaped, three days pay.\nDR. LEES WISHES\nCONSIDER PLEA\nTO STAY, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 14\u2014A year of\nsuccessful and progressive work\nwas.shown in reports read at the\nannual congregational meeting of\nKnox United church held last evening, comment being frequent on\nthe enriched religious life and deeper spirituality of the church. Rev.\nDr. M. W.- Lees presided.\nIn response to a request to continue in the pastorate of the church.\nDr. Lees asked permis-Ion to postpone his decision.\nJohn (ice) YOung and W. C.\nAston were appointed delegates to\nthe annual conference of the United church.'\nDr. W. A. Coghlin, J. E: Twells,\nW. J. Wagstaff, J. G. Calder and F.\nWilby were elected to the board of\nstewards.\nFINANCIAL REPORTS\nChurch membership was now 411\nah increase oi 26, it was reported.\nFigures revealed the memberships\nof the various church organizations\nwere: Women's societies 125; young\npeople's club, 61; Sunday schools,\n440; boys' groups, 55; girls' groups,\n85-     '\nFinancial reports showing satisfactory balances on hand, were\nread by officers of the various departments which included: Board\nof Stewards, presented by J. E.\nTwells, treasurer, and Dr. W. A.\nCoghlin; trustees' account read by\nB. A. stimmel; women's association\nMr6. W. H. Morton; Tadanac W.A.\nMrs. E. M. Stiles; Women's missionary society, Mrs. W. C. Aston; Excelsior Young People's club: Ladies' service, Mrs. W. M. Cameron;\nKnox Sunday school, R. E. Hawkes;\nEast Trail Sunday school, A, E.\nJones; Senior choir, Canadian Girls\nin Training, Miss Isobel Crowe;\nmisisonary and maintenance fund\nW. C. Aston.\nConsidersReporton Christian\nDoctrine \"Addled Ostrich Egg\"\nLONDON, Jan. 14 (AP) - To an\nAnglican Church commission's 292-\npage report on Christian doctrine,\nwhich sets forth that one may reconcile the Biblical account of the\nworld's crealion with evolutionary\ntheories, and that the Bible need\nnot be- taken as prejudging historical or scientific investigation in\nany field, reaction came first from\nthe Church association,\nIts secretary, Rev. E. C. Bowring,\nsaid: \"The commission . has incubated a report which is merely an\naddled ostrich egg. for'they disclaim\nthe idea of defining what doctrine\nis permissible in the Church of\nEngland. According to the archbishop's commission, you can think\nwhat you like and still be Christian.\"\nHere are some of the comments\nof the commission:\nPapal claims\u2014The Church of\nEngland still is bound to resist the\nclaims of the papacy but \"some of\nus\" envisage a reunion of Christendom under leadership such as \"a\npapacy which has renounced some\nof its present claims.\" Other members of the commission hoped for\na reunion \"by more federal type\nof constitution which would have\nno need\" for such leadership.\nMiracles \u2014 The commission was\ndivided on whether they occur but\nagreed that God \"could do\" them\nif he \"would.\" Some held he would\nnot wish to perform them.\nAngels and demons \u2014 \"It is legitimate to suspend judgment\" or treat\ntherm \"symbolically.\"\nHessurection \u2014 Jesus' rising from\nthe dead \"however explained is to\nbe understood to have been an\nevent as real and concrete as the\ncrucifixion itself and an \"act by\nGod\u00bbwholely unique in human history.\".\nBaptism \u2014 A vital ordinance of\nthe New Testament.\nThe future \u2014 \"We shall have\nmeans of recognizing each other\nIn future life.\"\nThe Bible \u2014 \"Its authority must\nnot be.taken as prejudging conclusions of historical, critical or\nscientific investigation in any field.\nVirgin birth \u2014 Historical evidence is \"inconclusive,\" but this\nwas ope of the many things the\nmembers split on, with the Archbishop of York, who headed the\ncommission, reporting that he accepted as historical fact the Lord's\nbirth from a virgin mother and his\nphysical resurrection from the\ntomb.\nEvolution \u2014 The Christian doctrine of creation \"loaves abundant\nroom for a variety of theories as to\nthe evolution of the world.\" and\nthe universe \"depends upon the\ncreative will of God.\"\nReturn Sacred Rain\n, Bundle to Indians\nNEW YORK, Jan. 14 (AP)-The\nGros Ventres Indians ended successfully today their quest for a\nsacred \"rain bundle\" upon whose\n31 years absence they blamed prolonged drought on the tribe's North\nDakota reservation.\nOlder tribe members said a tribal\ngod promised rain would fall as\nneeded so long as the tribe retained\nthe sacred skulls of two thunder\nbirds.\nTribesmen came east to claim the\nrelic. In exchange, they brought\nthe foundation a 200-year-old buffalo medicine-horn, and an ancient\nstone club.\nHarry Clements,\nCity Accountant,\nPasses, Hospital\nHarry- Clements, 717 Mill street,\na resident of Nelson for nearly three\nyears, died in Kootenay Lake General hospital Thursday night, after\nbeing in ill health for some time.\nFor about 2V_ years he was bookkeeper for the Williams Transfer.\nMr, Clements was born in England 61 years ago. He was the eldest\nson of Robert J, Clements, manager\nof the Paris bank, St. Helens Lanes,\nEngland. Coming to Canada in May,\n1907. he settled first at Regina, later\nmoving to Pincher Creek, where he\nlived for many years. In Pincher\nCreek,, he took a keen interest in\ncommunity affairs, having served\nas president of the board of trade\nfor three years, and as public health\nofficer for three years.- An active\nmember of the Odd Fellows lodge,\nhe was D.D.G.M. for Pincher Creek\nand the Pass towns. By profession\nhe was an accountant and auditor.\n. Surviving him are his wife, Margaret, one son, John Carlton of Nelson, two daughters. Marjorie in Nelson and Mrs. David Link of Hartell,\nAlta.; four brothers, Robert of Vancouver, Mort, of Regina. Reginald\nin South Africa and Waldo of Pres-\ncott Lanes, England; and seven sisters, Charlotte, late secretary to\nGovernor Munroe at Regina, Nellie.\nConnie, Carrie and Winnie at Pen-\nryhn Bay, North Wales. M'ldrerl at\nRegina and Mrs. Frank Fenwick,\nRocky Bay, New Zealand.\nLevinsky Uses\nRoundhouse as\nWins Wrestling\nCHICAGO, Jan. 14 (AP)\u2014 King\nLevinsky's \"roundhouse right.\" the\nhay-maker punch which earned\nhim about $300,000 as a prize fighter, served him well as he made his\nChicago debut as a wrestler tonight.\nBefore a throng of 2000 yelling\nfans Levinsky defeated Pat Murphy\nof Chicago ir. one minute, eight seconds of a half-hour time limit at\nfair.\nLevinsky, irked by Murphy's hair\npulling tactics, suddenly let go with\na right hand punch which knocked\nMurphy out of the ring.\nMurphy stumbled back into the\nsquared circle, only to meet another punch the King started from the\nfloor. Then it was a simple matter\nfor the former Maxwell street fish\npeddler to pin Murphy's shoulders\nto the canvas in orthodox manner.\nHave You Read the Classified?\nStyling \u00abt different oi il\nIt beautiful, for this\nbigger-looking, better-\nlooking Chevrolet.\nSmooth\u2014powerful\u2014positive . . . the lafe, i\u00bblf-\n\u2022norgiiing brakes for\nmodern travel .. . giving\nmaximum protection.\nSo jafe \u2014 io eomfortablt\n\u2014\"the world's finest ride\".\nOn Master De Luxo\nModels.\ne\nGiving the moit efficient\ncombination of power,\neconomy, dependability.\ne\nLarger interiors\u2014 lighter,\nbrighter colors\u2014and Uni-\nsteel construction with\nSafety glass for safety.\nEliminating drafts, smoke,\nwindshield clouding and\nAssuring each paswnger\nindividually controlled\nventilation.\nEasier,, tiptoe-pressure\nclutch operation. Wear is\ngreatly reduced. No lubrication required.\nMODERN MODE\nSTYLING\nPERFECTED\nHYDRAULIC\nBRAKES\nGENUINE\nKNEE-ACTION\nVALVE-IN-HEAD\nENGINE\nROOMIER\nALL-SILENT\nALL-STEEL BODIES\nFISHER NO-DRAFT\nVENTILATION\nNEW\nTIPT0E-MATIC\nCLUTCH\nYou'll be ahead with a\nCHEVROLET!\nBuy it Now, and Put Yourself Ahead in Style and Savings\n... in Winter-driving Safety and Dependability\nTO check the exclusive features listed to the left is\nlo know that Chevrolet leads because Chevrolet\ngives more for the money. To check the advantages\nof buying your new 1938 Chevrolet now, is lo know\nwhy you see so many on the streets already. For\nexample ... You can face bad weather conditions\nconfidently\u2014no starting troubles, no repair expense, no worry about weak, smooth tires. You'll\nenjoy the priceless safety of perfected Hydraulic\nBrakes, always equalized, quirk-acting\u2014the protection of an. All-Steel Body by Fisher, and Safety glass\nall around you. And don't forget you'll be saving\ncostly depreciation on your present car.\nChevrolet puts you ahead in everything... in style,\nsafety \u2014 in the little it costs you to buy and run!\n~Illuitraled\u2014M*ilir Spttul yfm. StiM wih trunk.\nTHE CAR THAT IS COMPLETE\nMICID MOM\n*820\n(2-Pats. Mtittr Buiinttt Coupe)\nMASTER DELUXE MODELS\nFROM %m\nDelivered it factory, Oshrwi, On'.\nGovernment ux, freight tnd licence\nextri. (Price, subject to change without notice.) Monthly payments to\nsuit your purse on the General\nMotors Instalment Plan.\nIHE SYMBOL  Of SAVIN9S\nc-m\nNELSON TRANSFER CO., LTD.\n323 VERNON ST.      General Motors Dealers.for Nelson and District NELSON,  B. C.\nManly & Miller\nGrand Forks, B.C.1\nDominion Garage & Sales Co.\nTrail, B.C.\nCreston Motors\nCreston, B.C.\nWheeler Motors\nCranbrook, B.C.\nWomen lo Attend\nOttawa Heeling\nNelson will be represented by\ntwo' women, prominent in the Woman's Liberal association here when\nthe meeting of the National Federation of Liberal Women of Canada is held at Ottawa May 20-21.\nMrs.-R. L. Oliver, president of\nthe Nelson association, was appointed one of the general chairmen,\nalong-with Senator Cairihe Wilson,\nMrs. H, C fhorburn, O. B. E\u201e Madame P. F. Cdsgrain, wife of the\nspeaker of the house of commons,\nMrs. W. H.-Fox'and Mrs. L. G. Ferguson.\nMrs.'L.'L. Boomer, also active in\nthe Nelson body, was chosen-for the\nnominations committee .of the federation when the Nelson association\nwas asked to appoint another dele-\ngate.\nMORE ABOUT\n'tom'Mcdonald\n(Continued From Page One)\nNelson-Midway run, retiring on superannuation In 1929.\nMr. McDonald was one of the five\nfounders of Clan Johnstone, which\nafter the war became Clan Mc-\nLeary. A couple of years after his\nretirement he and Mrs. McDonald\nmoved to Victoria. After the death\nof Mrs. McDonald in 1934, he alternated between Nelson and Victoria, spending his summers here,\nwhere he was widely known as a\nfisherman, and his winters at Victoria.. \"It was his intention to vary\nhis program' next summer with a\nvisit to Scotland, which he had not\nseen since 1907, going by the Panama canal.\nLINK BETWEEN LEGION\nHe was a member of the Canadian\nLegion branches of both Nelson and\nVictoria, and timed his removal to\ntlie capital last fall so that he attended the 54th banquet here November 18, \u25a0 anniversary of the taking' of Desire trench on the Somme.\nand the 54th banquet in Vancouver\nNovember 20, taking a message from\nthe former to the latter.\nHis four; children all survive him\n-Mrs. H. H. Currie. of Nelson, Sidney J. McDonald and Thomas McDonald, Jr., both of Victoria, and\nIan McDonald of Michigan Bluff,\nCal.- He is also survived by three\ngrandsons, by his. only brother, John\nMcDonald of Glasgow, and by relatives in Dundee.\nMrs.. Currie left. Nelson for Victoria Friday morning, to attend the\nfuneral.. \u25a0 \u2022. . .\nLighting on Pattullo\nBridge Boon in Fog\nVICTORIA, Jan. 14 (CP)-Pre-\nmier Pattullo returned to Victoria\ntoday from Vancouver, where he\ninspected the sodium vapor lighting\nsystem on the Pattullo bridge at\nNew Westminster last night. The\npremier said the lighting scheme\nhad proved a boon during recent\nheavy fogs over the Fraser river.\nAfter a three -weeks holiday : in\nChandler, Arizona, Finance Minister\nHart returned to Victoria today.\nNOTED ITALIAN\nPRIEST VISITS\nHERE AND TRIAL\nRev. Father Bortignon of Vancouver, well known Italian missionary\not the Stigmetino order, will be in\nNelson Sunday for the mass at the\nCathedral of Mary Immaculate. He\nwill preach an Italian sermon.\nFather Bortignon, at the invitation of Bishop Martin M. Johnson\nof Nelson, is visiting in the district\nto visit Italians of Nelson and Trail.\nMORE ABOUT\nBIGGAR\n(Continued From Page One)-\nThe govemor-general-in;council\nhowever had yet to pass on whether tha bills were against the general interest of Canada and it was\nnot necessary for the court to look\ninto that question.\nMuch of the argument advanced\naginst the bills he said, was to the\neffect they were contrary to the\npublic welfare and that the legislature in enacting them was actuated\nby some improper motive. He submitted these arguments might be\nentertained if they were addressed\nto the governor-general-in-council\nbut not when addressed to the\ncourt.\n\"DUTY OF THE\nCOURT\"\nDuty of the court, he continued,\nwas simply to say whether the bills\nwere within the competence of the\nlegislature. To do this it need only\nlook at the bills themselves. Other\nbills passed by the legislature, speeches by various people extracts from\nbooks and other publications referred to by the other counsel had\nno bearing on the question.\nChief Justice Sir Lyman Duff\nagreed with Col. Biggar about\nspeeches but uld the court had to\nget at the \"pith and substance\"\nof the bills and to do this might\nlook at other legislation and at\nthe circumstance, surrounding\nenactment of the legislation.\nThe court, he said, could not be\nignorant of all the economic development in the last 20 years but neither should it soak its mind in a\nmass of extraneous material and\nthen look at the bills.\nCol. Biggar began his argument\nat noon and followed Hon. J. L.\nRalston, counsel for the Alberta\ndaily and weekly newspaper, last\nof four lawyers to address the court\nin opposition to the bills.\nCol, Biggar will continue his argument on Monday and it is expected the hearing will end some\ntime Tuesday. His argument today\nwas devoted only to the general\nquestion of the relevancy of material advanced by the other side\nand he did not get down to a defence of the bills individually.\nPROTEST8 CONTENTION\nOF OPPONENTS\nHe protested the contention of opposing counsel that because the bills\nformed part of a group of enactment\nthe general purpose of which might\nbe unconstitutional, the bills themselves were unconstitutional. Each\nmeasure, he claimed, should be re*\nCOLEMAN GOES INTO HE WITH\nNELSON IN FOURTH PLACE BY A\n2-0 VICTORY OVER ROSSLAND\ngarded as standing on its own merits.        . ' \u25a0   '\u25a0  .'    '.\"\nMuch criticism of opposing counsel had Been directed against the\nSocial Credit act which.was not before the court at all, he claimed, It\nhad been assented to only last April and , the governor-general-in-\ncouncil still had three, months within which to disallow it',\nHad the. governor-general, wished\nan opinion on this measure he would\nhave asked for it, he continued. The\nfact it was-net in the reference indicated it had been deliberately left\nout.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nBy MRS. H. S. ALLEN\nTRAIL, B.C., Jan. 14 \u2014 Mrs. B. S.\nThurber was hostess to \"B\" branch\nof the Women's auxiliary to St.\nAndrew's church Tuesday evening\nwhen the members met for the\nfirst time since the holiday recess,\nRev. L. A. Morrant being present.\nOfficers were elected for the ensuing year, as follows: Honorary\npresident, Mrs. L. A. Morrant; president, Mrs. Frank Pennoyer; vice-\npresident, Mrs, B. S. Thurber; secretary-treasurer, Miss Nora Cairns;\nsupplies convener, Miss Joy Kemp,\nfines secretary, Miss Connie Cain;\nThe annual reports were read and\nview with satisfaction. After the\nbusiness meeting the hostess served, dainty refreshments.\nRev. G. J. Gardner of Kaslo, who\nis attending the deanery meeting\nhere, is the house guest of Mr. and\nMrs. L. S. Doubleday, McAnnaly\nstreet.\nOn Wednesday evening, the Canadian Girls in Training of Knox\nUnited church met in the church\nhall. Miss Ellis directed folk dancing the first hour, which was much\nenjoyed, after which the members\ndivided into two groups. The senior members, under the leadership\nof Mrs. M. V. B. Newton, planned\na party, which is to be held at\nMrs.. Newton's home the coming\nWednesday and the junior group\nmembers were introduced to their\nnew leader, Miss Audrey Double-\nday, who succeeds Miss Betty Bowman, who is teaching at Johnson's Landing.\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Jukich have\nhad as their guest, Mrs. Eli Jukich,\nfor the past week, Mrs. Jukich\nleaving for her home in Sandpoint,\nIdaho, Thursday morning.\nThe Altar guild of St. Andrew's\nchurch met recently in the rectory,\nwhen the annual report read by\nMrs. R. Bainbridge proved satisfactory. At the election of officers,\nMrs. L. A. Morrant was elected honorary president; Mrs. Bainbridge,\npresident; Mrs. W. V. Dynes, secretary-treasurer.\nWhen members of the Trail Ski\nclub opened their new cabin on Red\nmountain Wednesday evening, they\nentertained about 60 members oi\nthe Rossland and Trail clubs. Skiing was first enjoyed, after which\nall were entertained with dancing\nand community singing in the cab-\nIn. During the evening R. E. Plew-\nman, on behalf of the members of\nthe Rossland club, thanked the Trail\nclub for its hospitality and extend-.\ned an invitation to its members to\nattend a social evening which the\nRossland club is plarining for next\nWednesday evening. The president\nand vice-president of the Trail Red\nMountain Ski club, Walter Scott\nand Bob' Smith respectively, were\nresponsible for the arrangements\nof the very pleasant evening. Among\nhose from Trail who attended were\nMiss Janet Rlgby, Miss Mary Webster. Miss Yvonne Guillaume. Miss\nHelen Talbot. Miss Bernice Easter-\nbrook, Miss Ellen Baillle, Miss Kay\nAUnquist, Miss Pauline Crowe, Del-\nmar M. Bush, ,W. P. McDonald. Tim\nJenkins. 0, C. Oliver, Claude Olson,\nHarry GrMwood.'Jack Carter. A.\nBrown, Jim Talbot, George Hanson\nGeorge Page, Richard T. Blyth, E.\nGroves, D. Williamson, W. Scott,\nBob Smith and M. Craig.\nHqnoring her daughter, Miss Nina\nKemp, who leaves January 30 to\nenter Vancouver General hospital\nto take a nurses' training course.\nMrs. Jesse Kemp was a charming tea hostess Wednesday afternoon at her home on Birch avenue.\nThe tea table, covered with a beautiful hand worked cloth with a\ncenterpiece of shaded carnations\nand illuminated with tall red tapers, was presided over by Mrs. Horatio Cherrington and Mrs. J. H.\nBeley, both of Rossland. Mrs. W.\nW. Emsley, Mrs. W. V. Dynes and\nMiss Joy Kemp acted as serviteurs,\nand Miss Irene Kemp attended the\ndoor. During the afternoon about\n60 guests attended, among those\npresent being members of the different- organizations of which Miss\nKemp is a popular member.\nThe East Trail branch of the Women's Auxiliary to St. Andrew's\nchurch met Thursday afternoon at\nthe home of Mrs. J. Rintoul. Election of officers resulted in the\nchoice of Mrs. J. T. Wilkinson as\npresident; Mrs. A. Yates, vice-president; Mrs. R. H. Scott, secretary;\nMrs. C. A. Conry, treasurer; Mrs.\nW. Simmonds, united thank-offering\nsecretary; Mrs. T. Hinton, Living\nMessage secretary; Mrs. -A. Stain-\nton, thrift secretary. Rev. L. A. Morrant attended. Mrs. H. Eperson.\nMrs. A. Dawson, Mrs. Casey Jones\nand Mrs. J. S. Brant, who is visiting in the city from Vancouver,\nwere among those present.\nMrs. A. E, Tweedale, who underwent an operation in Trail-Tadanac\nhospital recently, is improving.\nMrs. Irene Condy presided at the\nfirst meeting of the new year when\nthe Women a Missionary society of\nthe First Presbyterian church met\nTuesday afternoon. After a scriptural program, Rev. F. G. St. Denis\ngave a brief address.\nThe Ladies' aid of the East Trail\nUnited church met Thursday afternoon in weekly session, when Mrs.\nG. F. Cullen, Mrs. G. Palmer, Mrs.\nW- Houston, Mrs. Ira Minion, Mrs.\nR. E. Davis, Mrs. C. Howe, Mrs. J,\nS. Ross, Mrs. J. McNeil, and Mrs.\nS. Lennox were among the members present, At the close of a successful meeting, Mrs. James Chambers and Mrs. W. E. Benton were\ntea hostesses.\nMrs. Cecil Frere have had as\ntheir house guest Miss Mary Chiv-\ners, of Weyburn, Sask., who left\nThursday morning for Berkeley,\nCalif.\nThe Ladies of the Royal Purple\nheld another of their enjoyable\nweekly partner whist drives Tuesday evening In Elks' hall. The high\nscore of 182 points was won by\nMrs. R. Crockford and William\nScott, while Mrs. William Scott and\nL. D. Scott held second place with\n175 points.\nRev. and Mrs. L- A. Morrant have\nhad as their guest Rev. Thomas\nScott of Grand Forks, who wes in\nTrail to attend the deanery meet-\nins.\nDraw Made lor\nMiners Bonspiel\nForty-nine members of. the Nelson Curling, club were\u25a0 drawn in\n12 groups Friday night, to join forces with the visiting \"Miners\" of\nthe Nelson district, Saturday night\nin the novel - \"Miners' Bonspiel\"\nthat has been arranged..\nThe Miners will be combined with\nthe Nelson groups so that on each\nsheet two mixed rinks, each com\nposed Of both Miners.and Nelson\nmen, will face each other. Ten\ngames will be curled before the\nsupper at which the Nelson curlers\nwill be hosts, after which two more\ngames will follow.\nFollowing is the \"draw\" of the\nNelson cutlers:\n7 p.m.^-Sheet .1, S. Haydon, H.\nRonmark, D Laughton,' T. Dolphin;\nsheet 2, A. G. Ritchie, R. A. Grimes,\nA. Jeffs, J, Riesterer; sheet 3, William Marr, A. P. Hills, T. A. Wallace,\nF. H. Smith; sheet 4, J. R. McLennan.\nJ. Dingwall, R. Hickey, A. D. Bruce;\nsheet 5, T. R. .Wilson, George Ron-\nmark, D. Cummings, P. E. Poulin.\n9 p.m.\u2014Sheet 1, Roy Sharp, N. C.\nStibbs, Dr. C. M. Bennett, W. Kline;\nsheet. 2, S. Bostock, D, Smith, C.\nMcKinnon, E. ,C. Wragge; sheet 3,\nJ. B. Gray, E. C. Brown.A. J. Cho-\nquette, A. B. Gilker; sheet 4, W. R.\nDunwoody, J. P. McLaren, Dr. H. H.\nMacKenzie, C. D. Pearson; sheet 5,\nG. Godfrey,.Dr. John Gansner, Dr.\nT. H. Bqurque, R. Wallace.\nAfter supper \u2014 Sheet, 1, George\nDill. Walter Hendricks, C. H. Marshall, P. Boresto; sheet .2, J. Thorn,\nAlex Fleming, K. McRory, S. R.\nBrown, George Fleury.\nCITY SCHEDULE\nCURLING RESULTS\nFriday night curling games in the\nCity Schedule tournament resulted as follows;       -\u25a0 ->   \u25a0\nW. R. Dunwoody 9, H. M. Whimster 8.\nJohn Teague 9, A. E. Murphy 8.\nG. Pickering 12, A. G. Ritchie 10.\nJ. R. McLennan 10, Hugh Robertson 6.\nL. S. McKinnon 10, S. P. Bostock 6\nTHURSDAY\nResults in the City Schedul. competition games curled Thursday\nnight follow. \t\nS. P. Bostock 11, Robert Smillie 4.\nC. E. Mansfield 9, L. S. McKinnon\n7.\nRoy Sharp 6, J. W. Smiley 5.\nWilliam Kline 11, Syd Haydon 8.\nM. Michelson 7, R. D. Hal! 6.\nG. S. Godfrey 8, John Tea_ue 6.\n$350,000   FIRE   FROM\nCIGARETTE  BUTT\nTORONTO, Jan.. 14 (CP)- Fire\nMarshal W. J. Scott reported today the $350,000 fire that destroyed Loretto Abbey at Niagara Falls\nMonday night, was started by a\nburning cigarett but, thrown by a\ngirl student into a waste-paper\nchute. \"Our office is concerned only\nwith cases of incendiarism and we\nare not interested in finding the individual who dropped the cigarette,\" Mr. Scott said.\nThird Straight Win is\nScored on Goals in\nSecond Period\nSOFT ICE MAKES\nTHE PLAY SLOW\nWESTERN  DIVISION\nW L D   F APt*.\nTrail   .....   9  2  0  57  19   18\nNelson   3  6  2  27 38    8\nRossland    3  8  0  29  47    6\nEA8TERN  DIVISION\nLethbridge    7  5  0  44  41 14\nKimberley     4  3  2  37  33 10\nColeman     3  7  2  31  49 8\n' COLEMAN, Alta., Jan. 14 (CP)\n\u2014Coleman Canadians won their\nthird straight game here tonight\nwhen they defeated the Rossland\nMiners 2-0 In a Kootenay hockey\nleague fixture, both goals being\nscored In the second session with\na apace of little over a minute\nseparating them. Coleman Is now\ntied with Nelson for fourth spot\nIn the league. Bill Fraser and\nMike Lopichuk got the two\ncounters for Canadian*.\nPlay was rather slow due to\nsoft Ice and the disc was hard\nto control. Both teams found combination play difficult as passes\nfrequently rolled astray.\nBilly Fraser opened the scoring\nin the second session on a pass from\nMike Lopichuk for Can-dlans. The\nsecond marker was registered by\nLopichuk when he stickhandled his\nway through about a minute later.\nMiners tried hard to overcome the\ntwo-goal lead but couldn't Jet one\npast Kemp.\nThe final session found, both\nteams tiring due to the tough ice\nand play was rather ragged although occasional combination\nplays caused goalies some anxious\nmoments. Neither team could-register and the period ended with a\nshutout marked up for Kemp.\nLineups:\nColeman: Kemp; Joyce, Hill;\nJenkins; Jempson, Ainsworth. \u25a0  \u2022\nSubs\u2014J. Fraser, W. Fraser, Lopichuk, Landiak, gchnef.\nRossland: Laface; Jones, Wynn;\nLa Cree; Forsey, Cowland.\nSubs: Smith, Weaver, Walker,\nHughes, Wade.\nReferees: W. Johnston, Blairmore\nand Henry Viney, Lethbridge.\nSummary:\nFirst period: Scorning\u2014None.\nPennlties-Hill, Wynn.\nSecond period: 1, Coleman, W.\nFraser (Lopichuk) 5:05; 2, Coleman, Lopichuk, 6:10..\nPenalties:. Ainsworth, Hill, Forsey.\nThird period: Scoring\u2014None.\nPenalties\u2014Walker, Joyce.\nVancouver Bruins\nBeat Westminster\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 14 (CP) \u2014\nVancouver Brums came from behind in the. final period tonight to\ndefeat the New 'Westminster Cubs\n5-3 and take over undisputed second place In the standings of the\nVancouver. Senior Amateur Hockey, league.\nWILKIN8 ON MOONLIGHT\n,. 8EARCH FOR RU8SIAN8\nFAIRBANKS, Alaska, Jan. 14\n(AP)\u2014Russian representative M\nB. Beliakov announced Sir Hubert\nWilkins left Aklavik, N. W. T., at\u00ab\np. m. (P. S. T.) on a moonlight\noolar flight to search for six Soviet\nairmen missing since August 13.\nWilkins was accompanied by Air\nCommodore Herbert Hollick-Ken-\nyon of Winnipeg, who piloted the\nski-equipped plane.\nFRENCH   FRANC   IMPR0VE8  \u2022\nLONDON, Jan. 14 (AP)-United\nStates dollars were raised % cent\nin foreign exchange trading today.\nFinal rate for the unit was $4.99y.\nto the pound compared with 54.99V4\nfor sterling in New York last night.\nFrench francs pointed upward.\nTlie close was 151.00 to the pound\nagainst 151.12 yesterday. Ninety-day\nforwards were at a discount of 8(_\n.francs,\nTRAIL JUNIORS AND GONZAGA\nBULLDOGS BATTLE TO (-(TIE\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 14\u2014Duplicat- -\ning their struggle at Spokane last\nweek, Trail juniors and the Gon-1\nzaga university hockey clubs battled\nto a 6-6 draw at the rink here be-,\nfore a handful of fans. The score\nwas lied five t'mes and each squad\nenjoyed being in the lead at differ- j\nent stages of the geme. There were\ntwo fights which broke out of a\nragged game. Church of Trail and |\nCarstens   of  Spokane  tangled   in\nthe second period, Church battling\nwith Lindsay in the final stanza,\neach receiving a five minute penalty, Church being in the box ten\nminutes.\nTrail took the lead helf way\nthrough the first period, Gonzaga\ntying the game, seven minutes later i\nwhen Ken Hall beat Pickell. ]\nJack Lindsay and Cheddy Thomson, two former Rossland recruits.\ngave the visitors a good lead when\nthey scored two goals in the first\nthree minutes of the second stanza,\nbut AppletoH and Martinson bulged\ntlie Spokane net to again tie up ihe\nfixture by the end of the second\nperiod. Ken Hall gave the Gonzaga\nboys the lead in the third period,\nbut Kendall scored the equalizer to\nmake the score 5-5 after 60 minutes\nof play.. In the first five nr'nutes of\novertime each team added another\ngoal to their count and repeated\nin the second five minutes.\nLINEUPS:\nVisitors \u2014 Frieney; Zarowny,\nPedigrew and Gelinas, Lindsay, Hall\nand Thomson; Sunderland, Cars-\ntens and M;Grath.\nTrail \u2014 Pickel; Casey, Church and\nSmith; Martinson, Collis and Buchanan; Appleton, Petrosky and\nKendall, and Devlin and Cornish.\nMike Welykochy, referee.\nChronic Fatigue\nTells of exhausted Nerves\nIn health, rest soon overcomes\nfatigue. When you become chronically tired there is ail underlying\ncause.        :\nPerhaps you cannot rest or sleep\nbecause of the irritability of the\nnerves.- Memory . and power of\nattention soon weaken when tho\nnervous system is exhausted. It is\ndifficult to concentrate tlie mind\nand the daily task becomes a worry\nand a burden., Indigestion and\nsleeplessness ruin your temper, and\nyou become depressed snd discouraged.\nWhatever may have been the\ncause there is a\nway in which to\nregain health\nand that is by\ntho use of Dr.\nChase's Nerve\nFood. New\nNerve Force is\ncreated to restore the functions to the bodily machinery\nand ensure the healthful working of the mental and physical\norgans.\n_,-..._._.,, .:.;;.\u25a0,.   ':   , . \u25a0,., \t\n \u2014 1\t\n__\u00ab________\n-\n mmimmmwM\n&\nModern Baseball Immortal\nby BURNLEY\n_\u00a3______ *<&\u25a0\nOut OJ the By Eric Ramsden\nPRESS BOX\nCHALLENGE CUP FOR\nTHE CURLERS\nFrank Putnam, M.L.A., has posted\na challenge trophy for interclub\ncompetition between curlers. The\nonly thing that's lacking is a set\nof rules to govern play for it, and\nthey are in process of compilation.\nThe suggestion has been offered\nthat the rules call for rinks playing for the trophy to be constituted according to home club classifications; this to avoid packed\nrinks, and to assure that the fellows classified as leads and seconds\nhave the opportunity to shoot at it.\nWhether it will work out this way\nis still to be seen.\nOver in the Crow's Nest they have\na curling challenge trophy \u2014 the\nBowness cup, I believe \u2014 that is\nin play all winter, every Winter.\nIt is the \"cause celebre\" of a deal\nof good curling and a whole lot\nmore entertainment and real curling fun.\nThis non-curling but bean-feed-\nattendins reporter anticipates district curlers will have a lot of fun\nwhen the c(ip is put into play.\n... - '\nTRAIL DEFENCEMAN\nIS BRIDEGROOM\nJack. \"Duke\".Kwasnie, member\nof last year's Blairmore Bearcats,\npatrolled the Trail blue line Friday night in spite of the fact that\nthree hours before he and his girl\nsaid \"I do\" before the officiating\nclergyman in Coleman. ...\nThe Duke sneaked into Blairmore\nfrom Lethbridge and when no one\nwas looking, grabbed Miss N. McDonald of the Alberta Government\nTelephone exchange staff and fled\nto Coleman . . . Hunted up the Rev,\nPartington , . . pledged their troth\n. . .sped away to a wedding supper . - . down to the rink . . .\n\"Duke\" placed his bride in a reserved seat . . . climbed into his\nhockey togs . . . went out on the\nice and played a bang-up game . - .\nAfter the game the bus sped Kim-\nberlywards . . . with Mr. and Mrs.\nJack \"Duke\" Kwansie . . . Congratulations to both of them and\nmay all their troubles ... be little\nones. \u2014 J, V. McDougall in Lethbridge Herald.\n.   *   *\nBORROWING FROM\nHOCKEY\nEvery sport borrows an idea, it\nseems, from the National Hockey\nleague. Canadian college and Union\nfootball, minor league hockey and\nthe International league and American Association Class A.A. baseball organizations and 20 minor\nbaseball leagues in all have adopted\nthe -play-off plan. Every other\nhockey league in the world has\nadopted the playing rules of the\nNational league, eliminating the\nconfusion of varied sets of rules\nthat once prevailed. Now the Michigan State basketball league has\nadopted red lights to denote goals,\nthe system used for years in National league hockey for years in Michigan, the lighting will be-automatic.\nTriple-Header Hockey Program Is\nScheduled for This Evening\nMidget, Juvenile and\n' Junior Games Are\non Tap\nA triple-header hockey program,\n, featuring midget, juvenile and junior games, will take place at the\nCivic Centre arena this evening\nstarting at 7:15, when the M. R. K.\nmidgets will play the Catholic\nBoys' club in a league game. Transfer and Panther juveniles will\nmake their first start in this division at Jl:25, and at 9:35 the fast\nstepping Tigers and F. A. C. jun-'\niors will take the ice for the opening game of the Nelson commercial\nleague, which in addition to taking\nin the two junior teams includes\nF. A. C. intermediates and Ymir intermediates.\nThe teams In the opener appear\nevenly matched, with the C. B. C.\nsquad, at present holding second\nplace and the M. R. K. team third,\nwith the former club having played one more game.\nBoth the Panthers and Transfer\n\" clubs have lined up strong juvenile\nclubs, and the second game of the\nevening promises plenty of action,\nwith the Transfer boys being given\na slight edge.\nThe juniors displayed plenty of\nclass  in  an  exhibition  game   on\nTuesday, and although the Tigers\nhad an edge on the play in all\nthree periods, they expect plenty\nof trouble this evening, as with\nGeorge Bishop displaying fine form\nin goal, the F. A. C. team may\ntighten up and surprise their opponents.\nAlbert Hooker, Keith Younger\nand Jim Niven, the Tigers juvenile\nforward line, are showing up well,\nwith the Freddy Romano, Joe Gallicano and Don Beattie line also\ndisplaying fine form. George Rus-\nscl, Syd Horswill, Roy Breeze and\nHoward Campbell, comprise the\nTigers defence; John 'Pro' Dingwall will start in goal, with Ross\nCassan, formerly of Brandon, as\nreserve.\nThe Fairview team will comprise\nthe following: George Bishop, goal;\nFrank Jones, A. Powers and R.\nClark, defence;-H. Mayo, Dick Wallace, Stan Morris, Fred Graves,\nRay BurgeSs. Ed Jacques, Art Hill\nand Bob Andrew, forwards.\nLONDON, Jan. 14 (CP) - By\nwinning two games in the. past\nweek Harringay Racers lengthened\ntheir lead in the National Hockey\nleague from two to five points.\nTheir principal opposition, the second place Harringay Greyhounds,\nplayed only one game, picking up\na point in a tie,\nInsist on Grant's Best Procurable\u2014The Original\nFor Sale at Vendors or Direct From \"Mail Order Dept.',\nLiquor Control  Board, 847. Beatty 8t., Vancouver, B.C.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING, JAN. IB, 1938\nPROCIJRflBL\nSCOTCH\nWHISKY\nOLDTIME HOCKEY\nSTARS TO BE SEEN\nIN BENEFIT GAME\nPromise of one of the outstanding\nnovelty hockey attractions of the\nseason is given in the plans for a\nbattle royal between the Tiger juniors and an all-star, old timers'\nteam some time in the next two\nweeks. Proceeds from the game will\ngo to the benefit fund for Vito Kos-\nki, Nelson youth who suffered severe injuries in an auto accident\nsome time ago.\nArrangements for the program\nhave been slow due to a holdup in\nsecuring a referee, but at a conference Friday Bill Freno was chosen\nfor the post. Billy Moliski, Alderman George Benwell and Pete Kapak of the executive behind the\nmove, will handle the sale of tickets.\nPossibles for the old-time team\nare Billy Molisky, Frank O'Genski,\nNorman (Dutch) Richardson, Johnny O'Genski, Ed Murphy, Claude\nMiller, Leo Desireau, Rev. E. A.\nBrophy, Bill McLean, Johnny Marquis, Sid Desireau, Wilf Marquis,\nGeorge Dill and Jim Curran.\nRossland and Trail players may be\nadded to the old timers' lineup.\nThree Trail Hoop\nTeams Here Today\nThree Trail basketball teams invade Nelson this evening to play\nNelson intermediate boys, girls\nand senior mens squads. The opening game is scheduled for 7:30 and\nwill bring the Trail Pats and Nelson intermediates together. At 8:30\nthe Trail Amazons ladies five which\nfeatures many girls well known to\nNelson softball and hoop fans, play\na Nelson girls team, and one hour\nlater Trail's fast stepping Colombos\nmeet a Nelson senior mens team.\nTrail Amazons ladies line-up includes the following players: Isabel\n(Wright) Morris, Mary (Gripich)\nCronie, B. Bogstie, Mary Adam-\nchuck and Tina Manderville, all\nwell known to Nelson softball fans.\nOther lineups are:\nTrail Colombos: Mino Angerilli,\nBponey Sammartino, Bruno Merlo,\nPrimo Christante and Carl Baillie.\nTrail Pats:. D. Komesh, Phil\nSmith, M. Burroughs, D. Hood, Ed\nGroves, M. Cusick, M. Smith and H.\nCloverdale,\nNelson Intermediates: Bill Towns-\nend, Bob Crerar, George Russell,\nFrank Jones, Jimmy Allan, Ken\nMcBride, Howard-Campbell, George\nBishop and Victor DelPuppo.\nNelson Girl: Deanie Wallace, Hazel Spiers, Phyllis Wallace, Iris\nJohansson, Doreen Long, Eva Hen-\nrickson, Mary McDougall, Elvera\nMatheson, Mary Read, Margaret\nThompson, Carmella DelPuppo and\nIsabel Donovan.\nNelson Senior men: Bud Greenwood, Det McQuaig,, Foster Mills,\nFred Graves, Colin Baker, Les\nBicknell, Jim Cherrington, Bob Paterson, Jack Bishop and Steve Smith.\nSabin Wins Place\nin Final Nautilus\nTennis Tournament\nMIAMI BEACH, Fla., Jan. 14 (AP)\n\u2014Wayne Sabin of Hollywood, Calif,\nstroked his way into the final\nround of the Nautilus Tennis tournament today with a four-set victory over Frank Kovacs of Oakland,\nCalif., as officials here for the United States Lawn Tennis association's\nannual meeting tomorrow looked\non.\nThe score were 6-3, 3-6, 6-0, 6-4.\nBudge, Mako Lose\nto Australian Team\nADELAIDE, Australia, Jan. 14\n(AP) \u2014 Don Budge and Gene\nMako of California, holders of the\nWimbledon doubles tennis title, today were defeated by Australia's\nAdrian Quist and Jack Bromwich,\n6-0, 2-6, 7-5, 6-2. The victory gave\nthe Australians a 2-0 lead in the informal match being conducted along\nDavis cup lines, Bromwich having\nwhipped Mako yesterday in straight\nsets.\nSPORTS ROUNDUP...\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nNEW YORK, Jan. 14 (AP) -\nBoxing: Enrico Venturi, who looked like a coming lightweight, is\ndone as a big time performer in\nNew York .. . local sheets gave\nthe cold shoulder to his claim he\nwas badly hurt by that low blow\nHenry Armstrong landed the other\nnight ... If Tommy Farr licks\nJames J. Braddock next Friday\nnight, chances are Jersey Jim will\nhang up the mittens for keeps . . .\nJackie (Kid) Berg, the British\nfighter, and his easy-to-look-at\nwife are here en route for -Hollywood where the Mrs. will bet a\nscreen test.\n. -., Pedro Montanez, the Puerto\nRlcan lightweight, is going on tour\nwith Pittsburg the first stop, Feb.\n7 . , . Fred Apostoli, unorowned\nking of the . middlewelghts, takes\nIn two movies daily .. . Lou Brix\nsailed for Puerto Rico yesterday to\nget Sixto Escobar in shape for his\nbantamweight title bout with Larry\nJeffra of Baltimore, Feb. 20 ..,\nEnzo Flermonte (remember him?)\nwas at the ringside Wednesday\nnight with a good-looking blonde\n. . he was much annoyed when\nphotogs tried to snap his picture\n, . . we can remember when Enzo\nmore than welcomed such attention\n.. . the baby needs shoes so Max\nBaer is definitely returning to the\nring, against, the Farr-Braddock\nwinner In March.\nBaseball: Hollywood scouts, say\nLou Gehrig is doing all right in\nthe movies .. . The Yankees wish\nthe Lefty Gomezs would patch up\ntheir differences and so do all the\nfriends of both parties.... we\ndrew a laugh six months ago when\nwe- chronicled Mickey Cochrane\nwas the, highest paid manager in\nbaseball . .. government figures\ntell the true story .. . Cochrane got\n$45,000 in 1936 . . . Bill Terry drew\n$30,000 and Joe McCarthy $27,000.\nDEAN TURNS BACK CARD'S $10,000\nCONTRACT, DECLARES CUT TOO BIG\n \u00ab>\nPoor   Showing    Last\nSeason   Brings\n$13,500 Cut\n\"Ducky\" Draws a\nCracked Jawbone\nThis advertisement is not published'or displayed by the Liquor\nControl Board or by the Government ot British Columbia.\nPRIMULUS WINS\nLOS ANGELES, Jan. 14 (AP)-\nPrimulus, a five-year-old eligible\nfor the Santa Anita handicap which\nfailed to win in four trips to the\npost during 1937, returned today to\nher forrh of two years ago and won\nthe one-mile Emperor of Norfolk\nhandicap at Santa Anita park as a\n7 to 1 shot, in 1:38.\nCANADIAN   PARTY\nAT SYDNEY FOR\nGAMES\nSYDNEY, Australia, JanE 14\n(Saturday) (CP Cable)\u2014The\nCanadian team to the British\nEmpire games here next month\narrived early today, completing a voyage that started from\nVancouver, B. C, Dec. 22.\nAs the transpacific liner Aor-\nangi warped to her berth in\nSydney harbor the 78 Canadian\nathletes, coaches, Canadian Empires Games association officials and,the lone entry from\nBermuda, crowded the vessel's\nrail for a welcoming view of\nthe sister Dominion where they\nhope for Empire athletic laurels.\nAfter debarking the athletes\nand officials proceeded by motorcar to the Empire Games village where they joined the British and South African teams\nwho arrived, recently.\nHon. Mr. Dunningham. minister of home affairs, officially\nwelcomed the new arrivals on\nbehalf of the Australian government.\nTaking \"Red\" Carr's backhand\nshot full on the mouth during\npractice Friday evening, Walter\n(Ducky) Duckworth of the Nelson Maple Leafs, found himself\nshort two of his front teeth.\nLater an X-ray photo showed\nhis jawbone had been cracked,\nand several more teeth were\nloose. It is thought the loose\nteeth have a chance to knit solid\nagain.\nBRADENTON, Fla., Jan. 14 (AP)\n\u2014The St. Louis Cardinals baseball\nclub opened its annual salary sideshow featuring the one and only\nDizzy Dean today.\nThis year, for the first time'in a\nnumber ot seasons, there was a note\nof seriousness in the spielers' ballyhoo. \"Ole Diz\" wasn't so hot last\nseason\u2014winning only 13 games and\nlosing 10\u2014So the Cards would cut\nhis pay more than 50 per cent.\nBranch Rickey, vice-president of\nthe Cubs, said at St. Louis the Cards\nhad mailed Dean a contract calling\nfor $10,000 for one season on the\nmound. He said this was a cut of\n$13,500,\n\"Ole Diz\", receiving the contract\nhere and immediately declaring he\nwould return it.unsigned, insisted\nthe $10,000 offer represented a cut\nof $15,500.\n''We made Dizzy a straight unqualified offer of $10,000 for his'\nservices for 1938\", said Rickey.\n\"There are no clauses providing for\na bonus based on victories or anything else. It is what we thought\nwe ought to offer him in view of\ncircumstances.\"\nThe big pitcher\u2014voted the major\ndisappointment of the 1937 sports\nworld\u2014said:\n\"I expected a cut\u2014but not such a\nbig one. When I was winning 20 or\nmore games a season for the Cardinals they didn't raise my pay by\n$13,500, so why should they cut me\nthat much when I happened to have\na bad season through no fault of\nmy own.\n\"I think I am entitled to at least\n$20,000 this year.\" .\nDean, who smiled and agreed\nwith the sports writers when they\ndubbed him 1937's star disappointment, claimed a broken big toe and\na sore arm caused his poor showing\nlast season.\nSudbury Wolves\nBeal Berne, 5-2\nBerne, Switzerland, Jan. 14 (CP\nCable) \u2014 The Canadian hockey\nteam touring Europe under the\nname of Sudbury Wolves tonight\nwon their second game, defeating\nBerne 5-2.\nCanada's scorers were: Jimmy\nRusell, Sudbury juniors; Gordie\nBruce, Ottawa, two; Archie Burnie,\nToronto, two.\nThe tour opened last night at\nDusseldorf with the Canadians defeating the Dusseldorf team 3-0.\nWallace, Whimster,\nCady Rinks Victors\nin Ladies' Curling\nVictors In the Sharp cup competition games ,curled Friday afternoon were Mrs. T. A. Wallace's,\nMrs. George Cady's and Mrs. H.\nM. Whimster's rinks of tha Nelson\nLadies' Curling club.\nThe results for Friday's and\nThursday's games follow:\nFriday\u2014Mrs. Wallage 9, Mrs. B.\nWhitehead 7.\nMrs. George Cady 9, Mrs. L. Maddin 7.\nMrs. H. M. Whimster 10, Mrs.\nWilliam Kline 6.\nThursday\u2014Mrs. Alex Dingwall 9,\nMrs. J. Gansner 5.\nMrs. Andy Kraft 10, Mrs. T. A,\nWallace 7.\nFriday, tea hostesses were Mrs.\nKraft, Mrs. John Teague, Mrs. W.\nHeffe and Miss Grace Laughton.\nNext week's schedule follows:\nMonday\u2014Mrs. G. Cady vs Mrs.\nA. Kraft, Mrs. J. Gansner vs Mrs.\nW. Kline and Mrs. H. M. Whimster\nvs Mrs. L. Maddin.\nTuesday\u2014Mrs. A. Dingwall vs\nMrs. Whimster, Mrs- Gansner vs\nMrs. Maddin, and Mrs. B. Whitehead vs Mrs. Cady.\nFIGHTS\nNEW HAVEN, Conp. \u2014 Al Gainer, 175?., New Haven, outpointed\nJim Howell, 203, New York, (10).\n(The Associated Press erroneously reported last Tuesday night's\nfight at New York between Maxie\nB e r ge r, Canadian lightweight\nchampion from Montreal and Tommy Rawson of Boston as a draw\nwhereas the correct result was a\ndecision in favor of Berger.)\nBROOKLYN, N. Y\u201e Jan. 14 (AP)\n\u2014Chicago Cubs have made a new\noffer of $75,000 and four players to\nthe Dodgers for Van Llngle Mungo,\nbut the Brooklyn club is not satisfied with the playing material it\nwould receive in the transaction,\nit was learned from a reliable\nsource today.\nThe Cubs offered, In addition lo\ncash, First Baseman Rip Collins,\nInfielder Lonnie Frey, (an ex-\nDodger), Outfielder Joe Marty and\nPitcher Clyde Shoun.\nThe Dodger reply, in effect, was\n\"we want better players and less\ncash.\"\nLINE UP GRAND\nFORKS HOCKEY\nGRAND FORKS, B.C. - Tryouts\nfor players for the newly organized\nComet hockey team have been taking place at the rink for th past\nweek and manager H. 0. Patton1\nsays he has an excellent line-up\nthis year. It is expected, weather\nconditions permitting, there will be\na couple of games next week.\nThe midget league, which was\nso successful last year, is also being\nprepared and the young players\ncan be seen at almost any time\n\"working out\" at the rink and on\nall available sloughs in the district.\nU.S. RINKS WIN IN\nGORDON MEDAL\nCURLING\nMONTREAL, Jan. 14 (CP) - The\nGordon International Medal, first\ncompeted for in. 1884, returned today to the United States after a\nyear's stay in Canada. The visitors, led by John Anderson, Grand\nNational Curling club president,\nscored a decisive 228-145 win over\nrinks representing the Canadian\nbranch.of the Royal'Caledonia Curling club.\nOf 16 matches played, the V. S.\nplayers won 11, Canada four, and\nthe other ended in a draw.\nPanthers Beat\nScout Midgets\nby (-0 Score\nPanther midgets scored their first\nwin in the Nelson Midget Hockey\nleague, when they handed Scouts a\n6-0 shutout Thursday afternoon, The\nwinners scored three goals in the\nopening session, one in the second,\nahd two In the third. Bud Emery\nscored four ot the Panthers' goals,\nDean Sheppard and Stewie Mcintosh getting one each. Johnny Wade\ngot the only assist, and Emery the\nonly penalty,\nTeams were:\nPanthers\u2014Stewie Mcintosh, Johnny Wade, Gordon Pickard, Ernie\nWilson, D. Scott, A. Moon, Dean\nSheppard, D. Anderson, H. Robinson, Bud Emery.\nScouts\u2014Earle Jorgenson, Allan\nFrisby, Dick Hornett, Martin McLennan, Warren Ferguson, Victor\nGraves, Dalton Irvine.\nToday's Hockey\nSchedule\nSix games and four practices are\nlisted in the hockey schedule issued\nby the Nelson Amateur Hockey association for today, as follows:\n7-8 a.m.\u2014Scouts vs. F.A.C. mldg-\n8-4 a.m. \u2014 M.R.K.'s vs. Panther\nbantams\n8-9:30 a.m.\u2014Panther midgets.\n9:30-9:40 a.m.\u2014Clean ice.\n9:40-10:40 a.m. \u2014 Westerners vs.\nF.A.C. bantams.\n10:40711:20 a.m.\u2014F.A.C. juveniles.\n11:20-12 noon\u2014C.B.C. juveniles.\n5:30-6:30 p.m.\u2014Panther club.\n6:30-7:15 p.m.\u2014Flood ice.\n7:15-8:15 p.m.\u2014C.B.C. vs. Panther\nmidgets.\n8:15-8:25 p.m.\u2014Clean ice.\n8:25-9:25 p.m.\u2014Transfer vs. Panther juveniles.\n9:25-9:35 p.m.\u2014Clean Ice.\n9:35-11 p.m.\u2014N.G.H. Tigers vs.\nF.A.C. juniors.\nRossland Meets\nGonzaga Tonight\nSPOKANE, Wash.\u2014A month ago\nGonzaga university here launched\ncollegiate hockey in Spokane. Today the Inland Empire metropolis\nis convinced that it is going to like\ncollegiate hockey, and the university's venture already appears headed\nfor outstanding success.\nFrom Canada, where hockey\nreigns as the national pastime, and\nwhere it is conceded the best hockey\nplayers grow, Gonzaga found nine\nskaters who are \"selling\" the game\nto sports-minded fans in this area.\nThe tenth member of the s.uad\nhails from Portland, Ore.\nTHOU8AND HOAR8E\nNearly a thousand Bulldog supporters, who shouted themselves\nhoarse during the Trail-Gonzaga\n5-5 tie battle, left the Spokane ice\narena convinced they had seen the\nmost thrilling exhibition of hockey\never staged here.\nInvading Canada for the first\ntime, the Gonzagans will engage\nRossland Saturday, for their first\nencounter with that team. Large\ncrowds are epected to see the Bulldog skaters as they are well known\nto fans in western province hockey\nin a spectacular game at goalie in\ncircles. John Freeney, who turned\nthe Trail contest, will be playing\nbefore fans from his Rossland home\ntown.\nSince Denny Edge, ex-Pacific\nCoast league star, picked up coaching reins of Gonzaga's newest athletic team, brilliant passing and defensive play has characterized play\nof its members. Scrimmages with\nthe Spokane Clippers have been invaluable in perfecting their attack.\nThe Gonzaga roster follows:\nMike Zarowny, George Gelinas,\nJerry Pettigrew, defence; Jack\nLindsay, Charles Sutherland, Ken\nHall,- Abie Carsten, Cheddy Thompson and Jack. MtOrath, forwards;\nand John Freeney, goal.\nSTART SHIELD-MATCH\nBRISBANE, Jan. 14 (CP Cable)-\nVictoria and Queensland started a\nSheffield shield match here today,\n.the former hitting up 289 for six\nwickets before play closed for the\nday. I. S. Lee, high scorer, made 108\nIn a shade less than four hours, obtaining 13 fours.\nPAOE NINt\nIn Happier Days for June and \"lefty\"\nRight now Vernon \"Lefty\" Gomez, of the New York Yankees, and\nhis. super-beautiful wife, who was once June O'Dea, of the Ziegfleld\nFollies, are busy issuing statements and counter-statements affirming\nand denying that they are headed for the divorce courts. But this\npicture was taken in happier days, before baseball's \"classic romance\"\nwas wandering near the matrimonial rocks. The talented southpaw\nhurler is giving June a few pointers on how to throw In that hard\nhigh one that won him over 20 games last season.\nWHICHCEE HAY BE RATED ABOVE\nINDIAN BROOM IN RICH HANDICAP\n8ANTA ANITA, Calif., Jan. 14\n(CP)\u2014Major Austin C. Taylor,\u2014\nthe Vancouver, B. C, sportsman\nwho.says he wants to breed a\nKentucky    derby    winner,    but\ndoesnt know when he'll be able\nto  do  It\u2014looked  over the two\nbrightest stars of his stables today and hoped they'd bring him\na goodly share of $100,000 March 5.\nFour-year-old    Whichcee    and\nfive-year-old Indian Broom were\nthe principal Taylor hopes for the\nrichest United States racing stake\nthe Santa Anita handicap.\nMajor Taylor himself hai declined comment on which he thinks the\nbetter of the two. He's always been\npartial to the Broom, which, ran\nthird in the Kentucky Derby two\nyears  ago  to Bold Venture   and\nBrevity.\nThe Broom later set a world's\nrecord, which still stands, when he\nmarked up a time of 1:47 2-5 for a\nmile and an eighth.\nBut while the owner remains sll*\nent, stablehands and other employees from the Taylor farm at Langley\nPrairie, in British Columbia's Fraser valley farming district, are willing-to speculate.. They tell Inter*\nviewers\u2014If the interviewers ar\u00bb\npersonal friends\u2014that even Major\nTaylor is beginning to think that\nWhichcee has the Broom skinned\na mile for speed. ,\nOdds against Whichcee In the\nSanta Anita handicap have taken s\nbig cut since he beat the famous\nAmor Brujo from the Argentine\nand his own stablemate, the Broom,\nto win the $10,000 added San Francisco handicap at Tanforan early\nlast month.\nQuoted at 200-1 when futurity\nbooks were first issued for the'San-\nta Anita event, Whiohcee Is now\nlisted at 30-1. He's back in first\nclass fettle after a case of shippin_!\nfever contracted in a car en route\nhere from San Francisco.\nFebruary a Big\nMonth for Skiers\nTRAIL, B-C, Jan. 14\u2014February\nisSo be a gala month for skiers, according to announcements for the\nlarge number of tournaments that\nare to be staged that month.\nSunday, January 30, Trail ski\nclub will stage a tournament for\njunior members only at \u25a0 its hill\noutside of Rossland.\nThe senior tournaments will require two days to complete. Rossland club will stage the jumping\nevents on February 6 and the races\nand other events on February 13.\nThe Trail senior club will be host\nthe following two Sundays of the\nmonth, dividing events in a similar\nmanner over February 20 and 27.\nHeavy snows in the last few days\nwill provide a perfect setting for\nthe tourneys, the main complaint\nof skiers to date being that the\nsnow surface was to hard on which\nto fall.\nCALDER TROPHY FOR FIRST\nYEAR ONLY.\nMONTREAL, Jan. 14 (CP)-Eli-\ngible for the Calder trophy, awarded to the best rookie of the National Hockey league season, are\nplayers who made their bows.in the\nbig league company this season.\nPresident Frank Calder of-the N. H.\nL. clarified the eligibility clause\ntoday, announcing no players who\nappeared in one game or more last\nseason or in any previous season\ncould win the trophy, awarded the\nwinner of a Canadian press poll of\nsports writers in N. H. L. cities,\n]. McEWAN, A. WALLACE\nC.  DILL  NAMED  FOR\nCURLERS' COMMITTEE\nA three-man ice committee to\ndeal with suggestions and written\ncomplaints regarding the use of the\nIce has been appointed for the Nelson Curling club. The group, comprises T. A. Wallace, J. J. (Mickey)\nMcEwan and George Dill.\n\u00abss_Bsasss_sas_is_-S_s\nA GOOD HABIT!\nEAT WHERE GOOD FOOD\nIS PARAMOUNT\nG.\nOLDEN\nATE CAFE\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control Board\nor by the Government of British Columbia.. '\nvSj;\";w:,w;:::-.i\n. .\"        _^'ifa_____________\u00bbJ_ik_^^  _-_L  \u25a0-  -- \u25a0\u25a0'- \u25a0 ^^Juto-Wltl^ -.--v.     '\u25a0    :.:\t\n , *\n mppmsp\nPfPP|ff>|l\u00ab\u00ab!\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-8ATURDAY MORNING, JAN. 15.\n__-.-   _-_.         *\" n_L.Vn    Uftll.1    nsmrO.   I.CO-MI,   B.V. Bniwn-.nl     muiinii,-,   vn.-.    .-,    ,-w\nPAGE TEN \u25a0\u25a0_--*\u2022_-> . -  - -__r^^\nRent the Spare Room Make It Help Pay Expenses Ph, 144\nHas Anyone Seen\n0. A. Mitchell In\nKootenay lately!\nAlex Stewart, chief of police, has\nreceived a letter from Mrs. Ross\nPeers of Vancouver, seeking information concerning a relative of\nhers, George Alfred Mitchel, who\nis believed to be in this district.\nMrs. Peers received a letter from\nMr. Mitchell's family in River John,\nN.S., asking if she could possibly\nget in contact with him. Mrs. Peers\nsent the letter on to Chief Stewart\nas he was an old friend of the\nMitchel family, having been born\nand raised in River John.\nThe wanted man left Nova Scotia\nin 1897 and was last seen by one\nof the family in Spokane In 1905.\nHe was next seen by a woman, a\nresident of Nelson, in Kimberley\nin 1937. Later the woman wrote to\nMrs. Peers at Vancouver, stating\nshe had seen him.\nMitchell is described as about 58\nor 59 years of age, six feet or over,\nblue-grey eyes, a rather flat face\nand a slow, droll accent.\nAnyone having any information\nconcerning the man is Requested\nto communicate with Mr. Mitchell's\nsister, Miss Pauline Mitchell, River\nJohn, N.S., or with the Nelson city\npolice.\nAlberta Plans\nWork and Wages\nior Single Men\nCALGARY, Jan. 14 (CP)-Plans\nfor a work and wages program to\ncare for all single transient unemployed in Alberta are being\nconsidered by the provincial gov-\n.eminent it was learned at the annual convention of the Alberta Social Credit league here today.\nThe men it was understood, would\nbe placed in forestry employment,\nsimilar to a scheme now in operation for married unemployed settlers.\nN. E- Tanner, minister of lands\nand mines, in discussing the work of\nhis department, also confirmed reports the government would introduce legislation at the session opening Feb. 10 to halt waste gas in the\nTurner Valley oil field.\nDays of Schooners\nNumbered He Says\nPortland, Me., Jan. 14 (AP) \u2014\nDoom of the schooner as a coastwise lumber carrier is at hand, declared the skipper of one of four\nCanadian three-masters in port today for shelter.\nHob-nobbing with brother captains in a ship Chandler's office,\nyouthful Capt. Douglas Smith of\nthe Minas Prince, out of Parrsboro,\nN.S., asserted:\n\"We just can't afford to continue\nrunning much longer in the face of\nincreased cargo handling costs.\"\nCapt. Smith blamed the troubles\nof the \"down east\" fleet on recent\ninsistence by longshoremen on\nhandling discharge in American\nports, formerly done by the crews.\n\"In my case,\" he said, \"the extra\ncost for this trip will be about $500\nand that is more than we'll clear\non this freight.\"\nTELEPHONE SERVICE AT\n66 CENTS MONTHLY IS\nCASTOR, ALTA. RECORD\nCASTOR, Alta., Jan. 14 (CP) -\nOperating a service which extends\n20 miles out of town, the South\nCastor Mutual Telephone company gave a 24-hour service at a\ncost of 66 cents per month to its\nfarmer members and had a surplus of $15.40 for the year's operations.\nPrison Sails NptttH\nMembar ot the Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE  144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nall Departments\nSubscription Ratal\nSingle copy \u00bb \u00ab\nBy carrier per week \u2014.    Si\nBy carrier per year 13.00\nBy mall tn Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month 60c;\nthree months *1.80; six months\n|3.00; one year (6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year (7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nU.S. same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\n11c aim*\n(Minimum _ lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions  .\u2014\t\n(6 for the price ot 4)\n3 lines, per Insertion\t\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions _.\u201e.____\u201e\u201e\n2 lines, l month ,,., \u2014\n3 lines, 1 month\t\nFor\n..( 22\n.88\n32\n 1.82\n 2.86\n 4.29\nadvertisements   of   more\nthan three lines, calculate on\nthe above basis\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATES LESS 10%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS,\nETC., FOR SALE\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewan. Write tor full information to 008 Dept of Natural\nResources. C.P.R, Calgary.. Alta\n(4324)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANGE\n1929 FORD TRUCK. WILL TRADE\nfor heavy horse and harness. Box\n4443, Daily News, (4443)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nIN THE MATTER OF THE BANKRUPTCY OF ROY LEASK. CARRYING ON BUSINESS AT SALMO,\nB. C, AS LEASK DRY GOODS.\nNOTICE TO CREDITORS OF\nFIRST MEETING\nBIRTHS\nSOSTAD\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Ralph\nSostad of Erie, at Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital, January 14, a\ndaughter.\nERICKSON \u2014 To Mr. and Mrs.\nHans Erickson of Salmo, at Kootenay Lake General hospital, January 13, a son. '\t\nHELP WANTED\nRELIABLE MAN TAKE CARE OF\nstore route. Distribute, collect.\nNew Products. No selling. Earn\nexcellent weekly income. B. & W.\nNut Co., St. Paul, Minn.     (4510)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nDIESEL ENGINEER DESIRES PER-\nmanent position with well established firm. Box 4449, Daily News.\n(4449)\nEXP. MECHANIC AND WELDER\nwants work. Box 4504, Daily News\n(4504)\nPERSONAL\nMARRY\u2014WOULD YOU MAR-\nry if suited? Hundreds to choose\nfrom. Some with means. Many\nfarmers' daughters and widows\nwith property. Particulars, 10c.\nConfidential, Canadian Corres-\npanderice Club, Box 128, Calgary, Alta. (4509)\nWE HAVE HELPED HUNDREDS\nto obtain positions as Letter Carriers, Postal Clerks, Customs Examiners, Clerks and Stenographers, etc., and can help you. Write\nus for proof and free information\nM. C. C. Schools Ltd., Winnipeg\nOldest in Canada. (4267)\nMEN'S SUPERFINE QUALITY\nsanitary rubbers. Send $1.00 for 15\nunexcelled. Also LATEX at 25 for\n$1.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co., 18 Hastings St.,\nW. Vancouver. (4328)\nWOMEN\u2014 YOU CAN BE FINAN\ncially independent. We have\nhelped hundreds of Canadian women earn a living by operating\nkindergartens in their own homes.\nIllustrated booklet free. The Can.\nKindergarten Institute, Winnipeg.\n (4266)\nCOATS, DRESSES AND SUITS\nthoroughly dry cleaned and \"pressed $1.00. Pants, sweaters, skirts,\n50c. One of the largest firms on\nCoast. Phone 981L for particulars.\n(4428)\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.\nFrench Commander\nWarns Japanese\nSAIGON, French Indo-China, Jan.\n14 (AP)\u2014A recent Japanese air\nraid on the Chinese island of Hainan, facing French Indo-China across\nthe narrow gulf of Tongking, pro->\nvoked a warning by the French\nmilitary commander of this colony';;\ngarrison today against any invasion\non French soil.\n\"Our forces are capable of kicking out anyone who attempts to\nInvade Indo-China, no matter from\nwhere he comes,\" declared Gen.\nJules Buhrer.\nPrairie Farmers\nAre Optimistic\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 14 (CP)-While\ndust clouds raise fears of crop failure in southwestern United States,\nCanadian prairie farmers . today\nlooked for an average return from\nthe land in 1938. Increased moisture\ncompared with this period last\nyear injected the optimistic note\ninto the prairie picture.\nTWO FLIERS KILLED\nWEYMOUTH, England, Jan. 14\n(CP-Havas)\u2014Two fliers were killed\ntoday when a Royal Air Force plare\ncrashed near here.\u2014Flying officer\nGeoffrey Burr Andrews and first\nclass Private Neol Everard Boot.\nHELD BY POLICE\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 14 (CP)~\nRyozo Kamitono, Japanese, was\nheld by city police on a burglary\ncharge today after his capture last\nnight by Leslie Hogarth. Hogarth\ntold investigating officers he saw\nKamitono climbing out of a window in the home of John Shaw,\nwho is visiting in Seattle.\nBefore  ordering\nyour chicks\n(SfW\nV^V      write for our\n^Oig>\\**     book about \"The\nChicks Which Give Results\".\nLeghorns,  Reds,  Rocks,  Light\nSussex  and  New Hampshires.\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nLANGLEY PRAIRIE, B.C.\n(4433)\nFOR SALE\nNEW AND USED GALVANIZED\nPipe and Fittings, all sizes\u2014Extra\n\u2022heavy slate surface Roofing with\nNails St Cement, about 80 Ibs. per\nroll, $2.75. \u2022\u2014 Light ply Roofing\n(without Nails and Cement) 125\nfeet by 12 lnch\u00abs wide, 70c per\nroll.\u20142%\" Nails $3.50 per 100 lbs.\n\u2014Wire Rope; Belt; \"'ulleys; Galvanized Iron Roofing; Grain and\nPotato Sacks; Canvas; Doors and\nWindows; Hose\u2014Merchandise and\nequipment of all descriptions.\u2014\nHundreds of our customers without exception testify to our $2:50\nper gallon guaranteed Paint for\nall purposes; Colors, Grey,\nGreen, White and Cream.\nB. C. JUNK CO.\n125 Powell St.    Vancouver, B. C.\n(4269)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company Ltd\n250 Prior SL        Vancouver. BC\n\u25a0 \u25a0   (4325)\nPIPE TUBES   FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for Immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St\nVancouver, B.C.\n(4326)\nMILK BOTTLES; BOTTLE CAPS;\nBottle Brushes; Milk Can Brushes; Veterinary Vaseline; Bag\nOintment; Disinfectants. The\nBrackman-Ker Millg. Co. Ltd.\n(45.08)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd.. Nelson, B, C,       (4327)\nCORONA PORTABLE TYPEWRIT-\ner, $45. Box 4514, Daily News.\n(4514)\n2 SINGLE IRON BEDS. 1 CHILD'S\nCrib. One small heater. Ph. 326R3,\n(4507)\nNotice is hereby given that Roy\nLeask, carrying on business at\nSalmo, B. C\u201e as Leask Dry Goods,\nmade an assignment on the 11th day\nof January, 1938, and that the first\nmeeting of Creditors will be held\non the 25th day of January 1938, at\nthe hour of TWO o'clock (n the\nafternoon, at the Court House, City\nof Nelson, British Columbia.\nTo vote thereat, proofs of claims\nand proxies must be lodged with\nme prior thereto.\nThose having claims against the\nEstate must file the same with the\nCustodian or with the Trustee when\nappointed, before distribution is\nmade, otherwise the proceeds of\nthe Estate will be distributed among\nthe parties entitled thereto without regard to such claims.\nDated at Nelson, B. C, this 12th\nday of January 1938.\nD. StDenis,\nCustodian.\nAddress of Custodian;\nCivic Centre Building,\nBox 596\u2014Nelson, B. C.\n(4493)\nCHSTRFLD., BDRM. SUITES, ORI-\nental rug. Mrs, Harry Ferguson.\n(4511)\n1ST AND 2ND COT ALFALFA, CAR\nlots. Box 4445, Daily News. (4445)\nNETTED GEM POTATOES. BOX\n4446, Daily News. (4446)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find a rat or dog, pocket-\nbook, Jewelry or fur, or anything else of value, telephone\nthe Daily News. A \"Found\" Ad\nwill be inserted without cost to\nyou. We will collect from the\nowner.\nLOST ON BAKER ST. THURS.\nafternoon 4:30, one tire chain.\nFinder please return to Vernon\nSt. Grocery. (4494)\nBABY CHICKS AND SEXED PUL-\nlets, White Leghorns exclusively.\nAll breeding stock on our own\nfarm, mated to R. O. P. Approved\nmales. Government approved,\nbloodtested, and certified Free\nfrom Pullorum Disease. Price list\non request. M. H. Ruttledge, Der-\nreen Poultry Farm, Sardis, B. C.\n(4488)\nBREEDG.   COCKERELS.   RHODE\nIsland Red. $2 each. Ph. 326R3.\n,      (4506)\nAUTOMOTIVE\n1930 FORD SEDAN\nGood Condition\n$85\nWill Handle\nBUTORAC MOTORS\n1225 PINE AVE,\nTRAIL, B.C.\n(4264)\nCONSIDERS EVIDENCE\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 14 (CP) -\nPolice Magistrate H. S. Wood today\nconsidered evidence taken yesterday in the trial of J. H. Rankine,\ncharged with conducting a lottery,\npreparatory to handing down judgment Monday.\nMOTORCYCLES\nIndian offers the most advanced\nPrinciples  in  motorcycle  design\nand achievements for 1938.\nIndian Twins, (327.50 and up\nVilliers Singles, $165 and up\nFrancis Barnetts Singles, $190 and up\nB.S.A. Singles, (250 and up\nPALMER RWTLEDGE\nTRAIL, B.C.\nStart paying now- for Spring Delivery. We pay you interest.\n(4265)\nFOUND, PAIR OF LADIES' KID\nGloves near Trinity church. Call\nat Daily News. (4512)\nFOR SALE OR REN.\nLOVELY HOME, 7 ROOMS AND\nbath. 3 lots. Nice garden, Ph. 793R.\n(4416)\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE NUMBEti\nMINERAL ACT\n(Form F.)     \u25a0\nCERTIFICATE OF\nImprovements\nNOTICE\nInez Frac, Andy Frac, Chief Frac,\nKvist Frac, Amos, Laura, Rhodes\nFrac, Dolly, Rand Frac, Eva Frac,\nGus Frac, Dale, Winnie, Lucy, Lee,\nPitt Mineral Claim, situate in the\nNelson Mining Division of Kootenay\nDistrict.\nWhere located:\u2014 At Relief-Arlington Mine. Erie, B. C.\nTAKE NOTICE that I, A. L. Purdy,\nacting as Agent for the Relief-Arlington Mines Limited, N. P. L\u201e\nFree Miner's Certificate No. 20633E,\nintend, sixty days from the date\nhereof, to apply to the Mining Recorder for a Certificate of Improvements for the purpose of obtaining a\nCrown Grant of the above claim.\nAnd further take notice that ac\ntion, under section 85, must be commenced before the issuance of such\nCertificate of Improvements.\nDated this 30th day of December,\n1937.\nA. L, PURDY,\n(4415)\n. NO NEED TO\nSHOUT IT\nFROM HOUSE TOPS\nJust Use an\nAdvertisement on this\nPage\nThe best and most economical way to get results\nPHONE 144\nMAIL ORDERS CIVEN PROMPT ATTENTION\nNELSON DAILY NEWS\n\"CLASSIFIED\"\nUSED MORE      \"Largest in the Interior\"      READ MORE\nLEGAL NOTICES\n(Continued)\nTIMBER SALE X20070\nSealed tenders will be received\nby the District Forester, Nelson,\nB. C\u201e not later than noon on the\n26th day of January, 1938, for the\npurchase of Licence X20070 between Blueberry and China Creeks,\n3 miles North-west of Poupore, to\ncut 1738 M. B. feet of sawlogs; and\n2700 Lin. Ft. Cedar Poles; also\nCordwood, Fir and Larch Hewn\nTies, Cedar Fence Posts, Pipe Timber, Fir Piling, and Cedar Cribbing,\n\u2014If any cut.\nTHREE (3) years will be allowed\nfor removal of timber.\nFurther particulars of\nTHE CHIEF FORESTER,\nVictoria, B. C.\nTHE DISTRICT FORESTER,\nNelson, B. C.\n(4505)\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS.\nETC., FOR SALE\nSOUTHERN B. C. STOCK RANCH\nfor sale. 313 Acres. 80 cultivated.\n.Produces heavy crops grain and\nalfalfa hay. Splendid stand pine\ntimber, easily logged. Fine pasture, creeks, all fenced. Approx.\n64 head beefstock. Black team.\nSaddle horse. Implements. Cosy 4\nroom house, Barns, corrals. 4 miles\nfrom school, store, highway and\nrailroad. Large summer range.\nAbundance of water for stock,\njoins home ranch. Widow wishes\nto sell. No trade. Substantial cash\npayment, bal. on easy terms. Possession Mar. 1st. (Mrs.) V. Martin,\nKettle Valley P. O., B. C.    (4480)\nCLASSIFIED MAILORDERS\nfrom out-of-town residents given\nprompt attention.\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms (or rent   Annabie Block\n(4331)\nMODERN NEW BUNGALOW, FUL-\nly furnished, in Rosemont, Apply\n904 Victoria St. (4467)\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst Assayer. Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter   301-305 JoseDhlne\nSt., Nelson, B. C. (4332)\nGRENVILLE H GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist 420\nFall Street. Nelson. B C P O\nBox No. t. Representing shipr\nper's interest, Trail, B. C.   (4333)\nHAROLD S. ELMES. ROSSLAND,\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual Representative for\nshippers at Trail Smelter,    (4334)\nChiropractor.\nj. r. McMillan, d. c_ neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk\n(4335)\nW. J. BROCK, D. C, 16 years' Experience Ph. 969 Gilker Bk, Nelson\n(4336)\nCorsets\nSpencer corsets. Sample sale. M. W.\nMitchell. 370 Baker St., Ph. 668.\n(4337)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYD C. AFFLECK Fruitvale. B.C,\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg7 Professional Civil Engineer.\n(4338)\nH. D. BAWSON\n912 Kootenay St. Nelson, B. C.\n(4339)\nLT. HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS, 918\nKootenay Street. (No children.)\n(4095)\nFULLY EQUIPPED POOL ROOM.\nApply D. Maglio, Phone 808L.\n(4212)\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert Mortician     Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\n(4340)\nSEE KERR APTS FIRST.\n(4329)\n5 ROOM HOUSE CLOSE TO -BAR.\ner St, Ph. Whitehead, 691L, (4498)\nAPARTMENTS.   ADULTS   ONLY.\n,Ap. 75 High St.. Ph. 835Y.     (4367)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigidalre equipped suites.   (4330)\n2~TURNr_-SKPG7^00MSTPRI-\nvate home. Ph. 969. (4478)\nELECTRICAL   MACHINERY\nFOR SALE\nFOR SALE 32 H. P. GAS ENGINE.\nCheap for quick sale. Apply Box\n4447, Daily News. (4447)\nDOCS, PETS, FOR SALE\nFOR  SALE,  REGISTERED  ENG-\nlish Bulldog (Male) \"Billie 3rd.\"\nApply M. H. Ashby, Creston, B. C,\n(4481)\nWANTED\nWANTED HAY AND STRAW, CAR\nlots. J. Graham, Perry Siding.\n(4430)\nAn Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\nFuneral Directors\nAMBULANCE\nA modernly equipped, warm and\ncomfortable CADILLAC Ambulance\nis at your service day and night.\nPhone 95, Nelson, B. C.\nDAVIS FUNERAL SERVICE\n(4280)\nInsurance and Real Estate\n(Continued)\nPHONE 980, STUART AND WAR-\nburton. Mutual Benefit, H. & A.\nA. First and All Classes Fire and\nAutomobile Insurance. 577 Baker\nStreet.' (4348)\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes ot Metal Work, Lathe\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grind* I\nIng, Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593      324 Vernon Street\n(4349)\nH E. STEVENSON, Machinists,\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylene\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satisfaction guaranteed. Mine & Mill work a\nspecialty. Fully eauipned shop Ph.\n98, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson. (4350)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nE. L. WARBURTON, Representing\nC. C. Snowdon, Oils, Greases,\nPaints, etc. Agt: Mine Mchnry. &\nequipt, rails, steels, piping, sheet\niron, etc. Steam coals. Phone 980,\nBox 28, Nelson. (4351)\nNotaries\nD.   J.   ROBERTSON.     NOTARY\nPublic, Nelson, Phone 157L. (4352)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted Inventions and\nfull Information sent tree. The\nRamsay Company. World Patent\nAttorneys. 273 Bank St, Ottawa.\n(4353)\nPhotography\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LTD.\nReal Estate. Insurance. Rentals\n347 Baker St., Phone 68.     (4341)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD.   Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est Ph. 99.\n(4342)\nH, E. DILL. AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance, Real Estate. 532 Ward St\n(4343)\nSEE D.  L.  KERR,  AGENT  FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(4344)\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE,\nRentals, Insurance.  Annabie Blk\n(4345)\nCHAS. F. McHARDY, INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.      (4346)\nR W. DAWSON, Real Estate, Insurance.  Rentals Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St Phone 197\n(4347)\nREALLY PERSONAL CHRISTMAS\nGreeting Cards from your own\nsnapshots. Ten cards, Including\nenvelopes (1.00. Send negative\nand 10c for sample. Krystal Pho-\ntos, Wilkie, Sask. (4354)\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S     SASH     FACTORY,\nHardwood merchant 273 Baker St.\n(4355)\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE  BUY,  SELL  St  EXCHANGE\nfurniture, etc   The Ark Store.\n(4356)\nTypewriters\nH. R. KITTO, Cleaning, Repairing.\nAgt Royal Typewriter. Ph. 904.\n(4357)\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs' your\nwatch It Is on time all the time.\n345, Baker St, Nelson.       (4358)\nBoost for the Kootenay District - It Pays!\nIn O t hi .....\no\u2122ri_-L t*t\u00ab. by Chk>c\u00ab   ,\nTr\u00a3_\u201e.-N. Y kin S. ndiflM, tin.\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Russ Westover\nOH, PIFFLE, POOF.'\nYOU NEEDED A NEW\nHAT, ANYvVAY.AMD\n.'U. HELP YOU PICK.\nONE\n-TEE!-HEE-THERE YOU ARE-HOVJ\nYOU LOO* UtCB NAPOLEON \/\"\"\nROOM AND BOARD\nFOR GENTLEMEN. APPLY SUITE\n1, Kootenay Apt, 713, Baker SI.\n(4464)\n.       ...\nYES-YES-YES-\nAN1 SEE THAT VOL)\nDON'T GIT LOST--\n1 HAVE GOT\nTHE. ADDRESS\nHURRY- DONT LOSE\nct\nIN MY HAWD-\nA SECOND- THEY\nI\nh-\n<\nu-\n0.\n3\nLl WON'T )\nCLOSE IN ABOUT   '\n) LOSE' IT- y       \\\n<=_.\nMNUTES- --J\n\/\n1\nO\nLjr$fj\n>M|,\nz\niM -A\nU\nW' r______\nz\n)C-      \/!!______\nc_\nCO\nAX\u00ab  ^i\/flfc^Kg\ntf\n.. *- \t\n_*_\u00ab_______.\nmi\n \u2014\nipppw-\/\n>!^?rrr^\nt#\nGOLDS EASIER\nAT VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 14 (CI*) -\nLight profit-taking foroed a soften-\ning trend over base metal issues on\nVancouver stock exchange today\nwhile oils moved generally higher\ntnd golds eased. Trading continued\nactive in mining stocks-at transactions totalled 265,441 shares.\n'. B.C. Nickel with a turnover oi\n36,300 shares dipped 3 V.' cents at\n20Vi, Reeves MacDonald 3 at 48 and1\nAnd Oreille _ at 2,35. Lucky Jim at\nS%, Whitewater at 7% and Noble\nFive at 4 slipped fractions. Nicola\ncame into the spotlight in late trading and advanced 2% cents at 7%\nafter 43,300 shares had changed\nhinds. i\nBralorne Gold declined 10 at 8.60\nwhile Pioneer at 3.10 and. Reno at\n60 each lost 5. Premier at 1.96 and\nCariboo Gold Quart- at 1,80 were\n. both off 4 and Sheep Creek a cent\nat 1,00 Big Missouri added ltt 60.\nVancouver Unlisted\nBid Ask-\n  -. .10 .11\nColumbia Oil    \u2014 .10'.\nDurango ...... ...\u2014    .06 .08.\nBuphrgtei\u2014_-_-_.    \u2014 .04\nRoyal Can 14 .15%\nSunshine .._....>. _   .02 .03\nTo Spend Mora\n,'   on Advertising\nSeventy-five per cent of Canadian national advertisers participating In a poll just concluded by\nMarketing will spend on advertising in 1036 as much as, or more than\nthey spent In 1937. A similar poll in\nthe United States reveal, the \"more\nor same\" proportion as 77 per cent\nSpecifically, the figures are as\nfellows'. 42 per cent will spend\nmore; 33 per, cent will spend the\nsame;- 6 per cent, will spend less;\nahd 19 per cent are as yet undecided.\nNEL80N DAIUV NEWS, NELSON. B.C.-4.ATUr.DAY MORNINO, JAN. 15, 1938\n\u25a0 PAGE ELEVEN\nMarket and\nNews\nBayonne\nm\nMelals, Utilities\nGain al Montreal\nMONTREAL, Jan. 14 (CP)- Favored metals and utilities came out of\nan early slump and gains of %-%\npoint were marked up for Nickel\nand Smelters,\nThe common and'C. P. U. backed\nfractionally, Oils ran into conflict\ning paths.', , \/\nConstructions were weak to the\nfinish. Off fractions to a point were\nDominion Tar, Dominion Bridge,\nUnited Steel and Steel ol Canada.\nDow-Jones Averages\n30 industrials\n20 rails\t\n30 utilities\t\n40 bonds \t\nHigh\n. 132.37\n. 33,03\n.   22.05\nLow\n130.29\n81.48\n21.45\nClose Change\n131.84\u2014up .24\n, 81.96\u2014up .15\n21.80\u2014up .07\n82.06\u2014oil   .24\nMINING MARKET\nSKIDS, TORONTO\nTORONTO. Jan. 14 (CP)- The\nmining share market skidded this\nafternoon and declining about three\npoints in both index groupings.\nDome was nicked lor a two-point\nlose.\n. Volume of 879,000 shares was the\nlightest ol the week, and was chiefly in medium-price and Junior\ngolds.   *\nSelling of Pickle Crow speeded\nup in the afternoon and about 16,-\n000. shares changed hands with the\nprice dropping 60 cents to close at\n4.50, the day's low. Nothing was\nmade public explaining the decline.,\nDome was weakest ol the big\ngolds. Hollinger and Lake Shore\ndropped small tractions and Mcln-\ntyre had a minor gain. \u25a0\u25a0'\nLeading base metals displayed\nbest form in the final minutes\nwhen Nickel came up to post a frac\ntlonal gain. Noranda held a Bar-\nrow early gain and Smelters was\nup %. Falconbridge, Coast' Copper,\nPend Oreille, Wnitc-Amulct, Sudbury Basin, and Ventures lost\nground.  v      , \". \u25a0\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINE8! ..     __\u201e\nAlton Mine. Ltd      .02%\nAldermac Copper      .57\nAlexandria Gold -  .02%\nAmm Gold      M\nAnglo-Huronian ...: _.    8.55\nArntfield Gold :      .20\nAshley Oold Mining ..........      .07%\nAstoria Rouyn Mines 03%\nAltec Mining Co '_ \u2014.     .08\nBagamac Rouyn , 24\nBankfield Gold'     -*-..*.-,     .65\nBase-Metals Mining        .35 -:\nBeattie Gold Mines _     1.31\nBldgood Ktrkl&nd      .30\nBig Missouri  ..- 50\nBobjo Mines ttd '.....'.       .11\nBralrone Mines,     8.85\nBrett Trethewey  '.      .08%\nBuffalo Ankerlte   ...'   14.65\nBunker Hill Extension .. ....     .18\nCanadian Malartic     1-08\nCariboo Gold Quart- _    1.82\nCastle-Trethewey    ,....      .65\nCentral- Patricia .....     2.16 \u2022\nChibougamau     - 29\n. Chromium M & S v 60\n\u2022Coast Copper      .: :..,_    3.30 '.\nConiagas Mine.     2.00\nConiaurum Mines    -    1.77\n. Consolidated M   StS ....     62.00\nDarkwater   ...:...:       -12\nDome Mines Ltd    56-\u00b0\u00b0\n\"Dominion Explorers ._     .04\nDorvali-H-.ee'tGeld' \u2022_.-_.-_.     .15\n'*a\"Est Malartic ...     1.36\nEldorado .Gold .... '     2.34\nFalconbridge Kickel     6.40\nFederal Kirkland  11\nFrancoeur  Gold       .44\nGillies Lake       .18%\nGod's Lake Gold      .60\nGold'Belt  .       =33\nGranadada Gold Mines    ...      .05V.\n, Grandord Mines     .    .08\nI Gunnar Gold Mines 80\nHard J.6-1. Gold !  1.21\nHarker Gold \u201e.       .13\nHolllnget-..   .... ...............     13.00\ni Howey Gold   _.     .33\n!-Hudson Bay M&S    26.26\n-.-International Nickel   49.75\n^\u25a0J-M Consolidated  ...............      .15'., -\n'.Jack Waite   -'   .49 '\nBatolaJ.Croia.*. .    -.20\nvferr-Addlson    .'...    1.90\n\\ Kirkland  Lake '     1.35\nMake Shore Mines      5.25\n. -t-imaque Contact .....    ..04\nLapa cadill... .40\nI Leitch Gold ,    ....    .-97\n\"Lebel Or*-Mines   ;      ,12Vi\nI Little Long Lac - :....    5.40 ..\nMacassa Mines     4.90\n\u25a0 MacLeod Cockshutt     1.40\nMadsetv Red Lake Oold .....     Si:.'\nManitoba... Eastern      .03\n; Mandy    ... .....\u201e: - 20\nMalroblc Mines 01%\nMclntyre-Porcuplne    42.35\nMcKenzie Red Lake 86\nMcVittie-Graham   <      .13%\nMcWatters Gold       .35 \u2022\nMining Corporation  _.    2.25 -\nMoneta Porcupine     2.25\nMorris-Kirkland  \/       .15,%\nNiplaslng Mining  _    1.95\nNoranda    60.00\nNormetal .__    1.04\nO'Brien Gold  \u201e     3.80\nPowell Rouyn Gold     2.00\nPreston East Dome     1.17\nQuebec Gold\nRead-Authler\nRed Lake. Gold Shore.\nReeves MacDonald ....\nReno Gold Mines\n.61\n4.30\n,23\n1 \"BO\n.54\nOmega Gold\nPamour Porcupine\n.Paulore M ....\nPaymaster Cons \t\nPend Oreille .........\nPerron Gold\t\nPickle Crow Gold...\nPioneer Oold\n.38\n3.60 v.\n-.17%\n.60\n2.33\n1.20\n4.30\n1.10\nPremier Gold,  ......    1-65\nHave You A\nUsed\nCOOK STOVE\nJ     ,\nWhy Not Turn\nIt Into Cash?\nA WANT AD\nWilt Find a\nPurchaser,\nTwo (2) lines 8 limps 80c net\nTwo (2)  lines onco 20c net\n'    PHONE 144\nNelson Doily News\nRitchie Gold Mines       .02V.\nRoche Long lie ..........\nSan Antonio Gold ......\nShawkey Gold\t\nSheep Creek Gold _\t\ni Sherritt Gordofi j\njSlscoe Gold     -   -\nj Smelters Gold\nSladen Malartic \t\nStadacona Rouyn ..,  ...\nSt Anthony ..,..,..\nSudbury Basin ... ....\nSullivan Consolidated\nSylvanlte - .     \t\nToshota Goldfields .....\nTeckjHughes  Gold  ....\nToburn Gold Mines ....\nTowagmac,  ,-\u00ab ..-....-..\nVentures Limited ........\nWaite Amulet .....\nWhite Eagle Silver ...._i.._.\nWhitewater \u2022\t\nWright Hargreaves\t\nYmir Yankee Girl.-..,.....!.'.;,\nOil.8:   \u2022\nA]ilX .... M ..-....\u2022\u2022\u2022\u25a0 ...s...\"\nA. P Consolidated '    \t\nBritish American 'Olbii'.,...\nBritish Dominion    ...\t\nBrown Oil.\nCalmont      , ............\nCalgary & Edmonton\t\nChem Research\t\nCommonwealth   ,\t\nDalhousie      -\t\nEastcrest    .....'.\t\nFoundation       , .._\nFoothills \u25a0   .._\u201e., , ,...\nHighwood    ... \t\nHome     ...   \u201e.\u201e\u201e.......,_,\t\nImperial\t\nInter, Petroleum , \u00ab\t\nLowery Pete'   ..   _..\u201e.._:..\nMcColl   Frontenac -...\u00ab^..:';,\nMerland    i_SJi\nModel, . \u2022   .. ,.\u201e__. ,'.\nMonarch Roy   .\" ..,...\u201e..\u201e\u201e\u25a0_..\nNordon    ...........\nOkalta     \t\nPacalta       \t\nPantepec      * ,-..._:.\nRoyalite _,;.... ....\nSouthwest: Pete :\t\nTexas Canadian  \u2014\nUnited ..; .'. ......;\nVulcan   \u201e\nINDUSTRIALS:   ;\nAbitibi Power  .......,...\u201e\u201e..\nBeatty Bros ., '\nBell Telephone -.-,.\u201e.\nBrazilian T L & P\t\nBrewers & Distillers  \u201e\nBrewing Corp\nBrewing Corp Pfd -.\t\nB C Power A\t\nB C Power B\t\nBuilding Products\t\nBurt F N Co\t\nCan Bakeries A\t\nCan Bakeries Fid ...._. ...\nCanada Bread Co\t\nCan Bud Malting ...\nCan Car It Fdy\t\nCan Cement\t\nCan Cement Pid  \u201e\nCan Dredge .....\t\nCan  Malting   ..'\t\nCan Pacific Railway\t\nCan Ind Ale A :........'....\nCan Ind Ale B  .-__\u00a3__,\nCan Wineries \u2014....\nCarnation pid ..\nCons Bakeries ,.\u00ab____-_.\u2014\nCosmos    .'......._-\u00bb...\u00bb__\u00ab_\nDominion Bridge .'. _\nDominion Stores .\u201e._.,....._..\nDom Tar & Chem\t\nD Tar & Chem Pid _....\u201e...\nDistillers Seagrams\t\nFanny  Farmer\n.12V.\n\"1.37\n.21%\n, 1.0.1\n1.00\n3.25\nJllVi\n\u25a01.03\n.80\n.12V4\n3.30\n1.02\n3.10\n.08\n5.40\n2.50\n,57\n-6.75.\nV1J\u00bb\n\u25a0 \u25a0' avh\n. .07V4\n.    ,75\n' 36\n.24\n.33V4\n21.25 !\n..\u00ab '\n.54V4\n.60\n3.00\n.39\n.40\n. .65\n.13V4\n.18V4\n.65\n.19\n1.38\n18.75\n30.00\n.20\n11.00\n1.07V.\n.36\n.18\n.14\n2.20\n.13V4\n6.50\n46.00\nJ50\n1.50\n.25\n1.18\n'\u2022IK\nIS\n164\n'    11V4\n7%\n1.55\n16\n' 33Vi\nWt\nmt\n21%\n3\n40\n3%\n8\nlOtt\nHH\n104\n32\n35V\u00ab\n7%\n- '4\n2 ,\n98 V.\n15\n21\n31\n6V.\n9 :\n81\nWA\n21Y4\nHAS RICH ORE\nON MOYIE CLAIM\nAn interesting sample \u25a0 ot copper\nore hat been sent to the Nelson\nDally News by W. Stillar ol Moyie.\nHe states that the claims irom\nwhich the sample was taken are on\na highway and that a recent assay\nran as fellows: Gold, $175; copper,\n5.9 per centi Another sample is said\nto run to a total value ol $1860 per\nton.\nThese values are from picked\nsamples.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, J\u00bbn. 14 (CP)-Brlt-\nlsh and foreign exchange closed\neasier today. Nominal- rates ior large\namounts:.'.\nArgentina, peso, .2934.\nAustralia, pound, 3.9886.\nDenmark, krone, .2231.   .\nFinland, iinmftrk, .0221.\nFrance, franc, .0334.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.9950.\nHolland, florin, .5565.\nJapan, yen, .2910.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.9708.\nSwitzerland, franc, .2308.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank oi\nCanada).    . -\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Jan. M (AP)-Clo.lng:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a341 10s, off\n13s 9d; future \u00a342 15s, off 12s 6d;\nelectrolytic spot, bid \u00a346 5s, oft\n\u00a31 5s; asked \u00a347 5s, oil 18s.    v\nTin spot and iuture \u00a3185 15s, olf\n\u00a31 15s. _,\u25a0._,\u00ab_._\nBids: Lead spot \u00a316 16s 3d, future \u00a317, both oit 8s 6d; zinc spot\n\u00a315 8s 3d, future \u00a315 12s 6d, both\noff Is 3d,'\nBar gold 139s 7tt d, Up \u00bb,_. (equivalent $34.87.)\nBar silver 19 H-l\u00abd, o\u00ab W6.\nNEW YORK\nCopper steady; electrolytlo spot\nand future 10.87-11.00; export 10,52.-\nTin barely steady; spot 41.76; Iuture 41,87 V.. \u25a0-.'\u25a0'\u25a0\nLead steady; New York spot 4.90-\n95; East St. Louis 4,75.\n.. Zinc steady: East St. Louis spot\nand Iuture 5.00. Quicksilver 19.00-\n81.00.\nMONTREAL\n' Bar gold in London 892, lour cents\nat $34.84 an ounce In Canadian\nfunds; 139s 7V4d in British. The\nfixed $35 Washington price amounted to $35 in Canadian.\nSilver futures closed steady and\nunchanged today. No sales. Only\nbid: March 43.90, v\nSelected Slocks\nin New York Gain\nNEW YORK, Jan. 14 (AP)-Sel-\nected stocks enjoyed a mild upward\nreversal in today's market, but numerous issues were in the losing\ncolumn at the close.\nUtilities, rails, motors, steels and\naircraft! took turns at rallies and\nfavorites eventually converted early\nlosses running to a point or so into\nadvances ol as much. Profit realizing at the finish, however, chipped\noil top marks in most cases,    -.\nDealings were slow throughout,\ntransfers totalling. 845,900 shares as\ncompared with 971,570 yesterday. It\nwas the smallest five-hour volume\nsince December 31. The Associated\nPress average ol 80 stocks was unchanged at 47.\nLessening ol tension over the\nFrench political and financial crisis\ncontributed to the cheerier boardroom ieeling and the French franc\nrecovered substantially in terms ol\nthe dollar. .\nKootenay Belle\nOutput $51,000\nFive Faces Are\nBeing Worked al\nGold Bell Mine\n\"Currently developing five laces\non three drift levels, recent progress reports from Make O'Donnell,\nsuperintendent at the Gold Beit\nmine in the Sheep Creek camp indicate that an excellent supply 61\nhigh grade mill ieed is being blocked out,\" the Vancouver Suh reports.\n\"Although the mine was clos_d\ndown during the Chirstmas holidays, the large crew has returned\nto the mine and work is again being pushed ahead at top speed.\n\"Attention at present is being directed tp advancing east and west\nlaces in the 1725 foot level the\n1850 and 2100 loot levels. And St\nthe same time .the main \"crosscut\non the 2100 foot level has been ad-,\nvanced to 1382 ieet from the portal.\nChannel assays reported by Mr.\nO'Donnell from the various ore-\nshoots that ore being exposed indicated an average substantially\nabbve the half-ounce mark. .\n\"The west drift on the 680 vein\n11 advanced ior 227 feet and the\nshoot, varying from two to lour\nieet in Width, is developing an excellent block of ore. The 8200 sub-\nlevel west drift vein is in good\nore and averaging three to four\nfeet, while the drift to the east is\nmaintaining an average width of\nfour feet. The 8000 vein on the sub-\nlevel west has been pushed ahead\nover 100 feet and.channel samples\nat regular intervals are well above\nthe average oi the mine over good\nWidths. \t\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWHEAT:\nNew Record Export ol Base Melals\nFrom Canada During the Past Year\nDecember production oi Kootenay Belle Gold Mines limited was\n$51,000 from 3468 tons oi ore, com\npared with $62,976 from 3644 tons\nin November, states a Vancouver\nbroker's report\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nBid\nFord of Canada A       17%\nGen Steel Wares\nGoodyear Tire \u00bb.\nGypsum L & A -..-.\t\nHarding Carpet .........\nHamilton Bridge ...\u201e,.\nHamilton Bridge Pfd .\nHlnde Dauche \u2022.....\u201e..,...\nHiram Walker\t\nIntl Metals\n7%\n70\n7%\n3%\n8V4\n56\n18\n43\n8Vi\nIntl Milling Pid     100\n13%\n23\n20V.\n13%\n2V4\nImperial Tobacco\nLoblaw A \u2014\nLoblaw B  -.\nKelvlnator     ....\nMaple Leal Milling .\nMassey Harris   8%\nMontreal Power .....*. _ 29%\nMoore Corp .   33V4\nNat Steel Car ......:  88%\nOnt Steel Prods ,  10\nOnt Silk Net  6\nPage Hersey  92\nPower Corp   13%\nPressed Metals  '.  18V4\nSteel oi Can ; 68\nStandard Paving .\u201e,.  3\n* -.07\n1.47\n-.07\n.50\n.14\n8.90\n7.25\n.03\n3.00\n.60\n1,80\n13.25\nWt\n.48\n.11%\n.19%\n.34\n.17\n.25\n.19\nLISTED:\nA P Con .:... ......\nAmal Oil CII-i-i\nAnglo Canadian ...\nAztec Min Co .\t\nBig Missouri \t\nBrit Dbm Oil \t\nBralorne\nBrew & Dist \t\nBridge Riv Con ...\nC & E Corp  \t\nCalmont  Oil  ..'.\t\nCariboo Gold \t\nCoast Brew  ....\nCom'wealth Oil ..\nDavies Pete\t\nDentonia ......\nFirestone Pete   \t\nGold Belt Mines ...\nFoundation Pete ..\nHargal Oil\nFour Star .Pete .....\nHome  Oil   .-\nInter Coal\t\nIsland Mount       .75\nKoot Belle  :..      .93\nMak  Slccar     ...\u00bb     .02\nMcDoug Seg EX' St',\nMcLeod Oil        .25\nMinto   \".' 03%\nModel Oil        .37 :\nMonarch Roy 17\nPioneer Gold      3.10\nPrairie-Hoy-       .32%\nPremier Gold ..\u201e...,    1,66\nPremier Border ,.- :   ,02\nQuatsino    ...:       \u2014 \" \u25a0\nRel Arlington......      .19\nReno  Gold   ..........      .50\nReeves MacD       .48\nSally            .08\nSalmon Gold 06%\nSheep Creek       1.00\nSilbak-Premier    ..    2.00\nSpooner Oil      .19%\nTaylor B Riv        .04%\nAsk\n.88\n.08\n1.50\n.08\n.54\n9.00\n.04\n3.05\n,62\n1.91\n13.59\n.40\n.51\n.12%\n23\n.36\nl_ttP   1.40\n.81 -\nVanalta Ltd\nVidette  \t\nWesko    \t\nWest Flank  \t\nYmir Yank Girl \u201e\nCURB;\nAnaconda    .:\t\nAssociated Oil .....\nBaltac Oil ....\nBeaver Silver '....\n.07\n.13\n37\n_.5\n.13\n.06\n.00%\n1.00\n.02%\n26\n.18%\n3.20\n.33\n1.98\n.02%\n.05\n.54\n1.01\n2.10\nL .25\n.05'\n.10%\n.29\n\u202227'\n.13%\n.06%\n.01%\nBluebird'\t\nB. C Nickel\t\nB R Mount ,\nCapital Estates ..\nCongress ...:....-...\nCrows Nest new ...\nDalhousie Oils ....\nDunwell  Min  ......\nEast Crest Oil \t\nFairview Amal\t\nFederal Gold \t\nFreehold Oil\t\nGeo Copper  ~.\nGeo Enterprise ......\nGeo River\t\nOolconda     ....-\nGold Mountal n\t\nGrandview\nGrull-Wihksne    .....\nHaida :...\nHedley St ..............\nHighwood Strcee ..\nHome Gold -\t\nIndian Mines \t\nKoot Florence ....\nLakeview Mine\n-        .04%\n20%\n2.75\n.02%\n.05\n.06\n.02\n.07%\n.03\n.00%\n.02%\n.10\n09.\n.05%\n.03%\n.18%\n.01%\n.02%\n.01%\n.00%\nLowery Pete      Si\n.03%\n.08%\n..10%\n.18\n.01\nim\n.il\n.07%\n.04\n.13\n2.22\n.13-\nPend Oreille      2.35\nLucky Jim,\nMadison  OH  \t\nMar Jon OH \t\nMercury Oil ....\nMeridian new ...\nMetaline M St M .\nMid-West Pete ...\nMill City Oil \t\nNicola\t\nNoble Five ;\t\nNordon OH \t\nOkalta com\t\nPacalta\nPorter Idaho\nQuesnelle Q\t\nReward Min ........\nRoyalite  Oil\t\nRuiOs Argenta ....\nRuth\" Hope ...\nSilver  Crest  \t\nSouthwest Pete\t\nSunloch Mines .....\nTexas Canadian ....\nUnited Distillers '..\nUnited Oil ....'.....:..\nVulcan Qil \t\nWaverly T new ..\nWellington Mines...'\nWhitewater   - _\u00bb.._--.\n.03\n.06\n.06\n45.00\n.03 '\n.03\n.60\n.15\n1.50'\n1.03\n23\n1.17\n.00%\n.0.1\n.07%\n.04%\n8.25\n.02%\n.05\n.14\n.06%\n.02%\n.08%\n.40\n.03%\n10%\n.09%\n.06%\n.04\n.20\n.01%\n.03%\n.02%\n.01%\n.25\n.03%\n.08%\n.11%\n.19\n.71\n.17\n.04%\n.14%\n2.25\n.13%\n2.40\n.04\n.07%\n.07\n46.60\n- .03%\n,04%\n1,05\n.24\ni.18\n.01\n.08%\n.07%\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAm Can\t\nAm For Pow ..\nAm Smt St Rel\nAm \"Tel ..'.\t\nAm Tobacco ...\nAnaconda\nHigh\n80%\n,  \u00ab7\u00ab\n54\n148%\n71%\n38%\nLow Close\n79%    89\nAvi Corp        4%\n9%\n10%\n14%\n63%\n19%\n19%\n7%\n44%\n59%\n25%\n6\nBaldwin\nBait & Ohio ...\nBeHdix Avi ...\nBeth Steel\t\nBorden\nCan Dry.\t\nQan  Pac \t\nCerro de Pasco\nChrysler   ......\nCon Gas NY..\nC Wright Kd..\nDupont-  118\nEast Kodak ....' 164%\nFord Eng :..,    5%\nFord ot Can .... 17%\nFrpt Texas ....    24%\nGen Elec      44V.\nGen  Foods ...    38\nGen Mot      88%\nGoodrich   ........    18%\nGranby     6\nGrt Nor Pfd .. .24%\nHowe Sound .. 51%\nHud Mot       9%\n4%\n52%\n147%\n71\n34\n4%\n8%\n9%\n13%\n62\n19%-\n18%\n7%\n43\n58\n24%'\n4%\n116\n163%\n5%\n17%\n24%\"\n43%\n33 .\n35%\n17%\n8\n23%\n51\n4%\n53%\n147%\n71\n34%\n4%\n9%\n10%\n14%\n63%\n19%\n19\n7%\n44%\n\u00bb'..\n26%\n5\n118\n163%\n6%\n17%\n24%\n44%\n33\n38%\n17%\n6\n24%\n51%\n9%\nInter Nickel ..\nInter Tel & Tel\nKenn Copper ..\nMack Truck ....\nMont Ward ....\nNash Mot \t\nN Y Central....\nPack Mot \t\nPenn R R ..\nPhillips Pete ..\nHad Corp\nHigh i Low\n60%    48%\n6%\n41%\n23%\n35\n11%\n19\n5%\n23%\n40\n4%\nRem Rand      19%\nSfty Strs ...\nSheS -tffcdon ...\nS Clt ,'vfeon ..\nStan ia # N J\nTex Corp ....\nTex Gull Sul.\nTim Roller ...\nUnder Type ....\nUn Carbide ....\nUn Oil ol Cal\nUnited Air ....\nUn Pacific ....\nU S Rubber ..\nU S Steel ....\nWarner Bros ..\nWest Elec ....\nWest Union '....\nWoolworth ....\nYellow   Truck.\n22%\n17%\n24\n49%\n42%\n32%\n46\n66%\n76%\n20%\n'25%\n86%\n28%\n69%l-\n7%\n107\n26%\n4 0\n13%\n6%\n40%\n22%\n34%\n11%\n18%\n5%\n22%\n39%\n4%\n19\n22%\n17%\n23%\n48%\n42\n31%\n44%\n56%\n?5%\n20%\n24%\n86%\n27%\n57%\n\"7.~\n104%\n29%\n89%\n12%\nClose\n49%\n6%\n49%\n23%\n34%\n11%\n19 .\n\"5%\n23%\n40\n4%\n.19%\n22%\n17%\n24\n49%\n42%\n32%\n46\n56%\n78\n20%\n26%\n86%\n'28%\n69%\n7%\n198%\n26%\n40\n13%\nMay    ...\nOpen\n,.m%\nJuly \t\n119%\nDot.   ....\n102\nOATS:\nMay '....\n48%\nJuly  ....\n46%\nDct\t\n__\nBARLEY:\nMay  ...\n64\nJuly  ....\n61\nELAXi\nMay   ....\n181\nJuly  ....\n. .\u2014\nRYE:\nMay  ...\n84%\nJuly  ....\n83%\nHigh\n127%\n119%\n102%\n49%'\n46%\n64%\n61\nLow\n125%\n117%\n100%\n48%-\n46%\n63%\n60%\n181,     180\n84%\n84\n83%\n83%\nClose\n126%\n117%\n190%\n48%\n46%\n43%\n83%\n60%\n179%\n179%\n,  88%\n83%\nCASH PRICES-\nWHEAT: No. 1 nor, 149%; No. 8\nnor. 138%; No. 3 nor. 118%; No. 4\nnor, 109%; No, 5, 97%; No. 6, 88%;\nFeed 78%; No, 1 Garnet 120%; No. 2\nGarnet 117%; No. 1 durum 86%; No,\n1 A, R. W. 108%; No. 4 speclal,-05%;\nNo. 5 special 93%; No. 6 special\n84%; track 148%; screenings $8\nper ton,     , , ,\nOATS: No. 2 C. W, 56%; No. 3 C.\nW. 50; Ex. 1 ieed 50%; No! 1 leed\n46%;. No. 2 iecd-41V_; No. 3 leed\n86%; track 59%.\nBARLEY: Malting grades: 6-and\n2-row Ex. 3 C. W. 82%. Others: No.\n3 C, W. 81%; No, 4 C. W. 60%; No. 5\nC. W. 69%; No. 6 C. W. 58%; track\n62%.     ,.\nFLAX;   No, 2 C. W. and track\n177%; NO. 2 C. W. 173%; No. 3 C. W.\n152%; No. 4 C.W. 147%.    '\u25a0        \u00bb,\nRYE: No. 2 C. W. 81%.\nBright Spots\nof the Week\nBy The Canadian Press\nTORONTO \u2014; Dividend distributions by Canadian corporations In\nJanuary will total $2,080,000 compared with $22,400,000 in January\n1037, a gain ol about three per cent.\nVICTORIA\u2014Four primary industries ol B. C, lorestry, mining, fisheries and-agriculture, had estimated production ol $223,676,090 In 1937,\na gain ol 18 per cent over the previous year. , -\nOTTAWA -- Department ol labor\nreports a drop ol 40 per cent, between November, 1936 and November, 1937 in the number of fully\nemployable persons in Canada receiving reliei.'\nSAINT JOHN, N. B. - Cargo'tonnage'handled In port ot Saint John\nIn 1987 was greatest in the last 10\nyears, port manager Alex Gray announces.   !\nFORT ERIE, Ont. - Fleet Aircraft company ol Canada is working at capacity on $260,000 in orders lor planes and parts,\nPORT ARTHUR - Close to 1000\nmen are. now employed In building\nthe million dollar sulphite plant at\nRed Rock,\n\u25a0VANCOUVER- Highest percentage of current tax collections in 1937\nsince 1929, reported.\nWheal Continues\nlower al Chicago\nCHICAGO, Jam }4-Late reports\nthat Kansas dust storms were blowing again proved insufficient today\nto overcome downturns of prices,\nSellers predominated in the wheat\npit, notwithstanding reports indicating that the condition oi the do-\nmestic crop southwest was lower\nthan, im December 1. Crop specialists said it was still some weeks to\nthe growing period, and until that\ntime it was unlikely weather conditions would rule tho market, unless they became exceptionally adverse.\nAt the close, Chicago wheat future's were- %-% under yesterday's\nflnlsn, May-97%-%, July 91%-%,\ncom -%-i?4 down, May 60%-%, July\n60%-% and oats %-% oil.\nWHEAT: \u25a0\nOpen  High  Low  Close\nMay    137%   127%   125%   125%\nJuly     92%'   92%    91%\nSept .:..., 90%    91%    90%\nOTTAWA, Jan, 14. (CP)-A new\nrecord for base metal exports was\nmade by Canadian mines In 1937,\nproviding .one ol the leatures of\nthe mining industry during the\nyear, the department ol mines and\nresources reports.\nSales ot nickel, copper, lead and\nzinc In foreign countries reached\na total ol $146,914,000 in the twelve\nmonths ending November 31, 1937,\noompared with $98,632,000 a year\nbefore. Shipments ot the lour metals to the United Kingdom were\nvalued at $76,813,000, a gain ol $27,-\n067,000.     .\nThe increase In exports can b\u00bb\ntraced chiefly to the marked increase over 1936 average prices lor\ncopper; lead and zinc but the tonnage also was to reopen several\nproperties that had been Idle lor\nyears. Most ot them have ore deposits sufficient ior continuous operations for years.\nCanada now exports most base\nmetals In the refined form. In 1920,\nproduction ol refined nickel, copper, lead ahd zinc was 44,000 tons,\nbut in 1936 it had Increased to\n575,000 tons.\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Jan, 14 (AP)-?Trading\nin today's stock market was restricted with prices improving hear the\nclose. Speculative French lavorites.\nespecially the oil .and, mining\ngroups, rallied sharply and transatlantic Issue's were in better demand. Gilt edged securities moved\nfractionally higher and aircraft issues advanced. Chinese liens improved 3 to 4 points and Japanese\nbonds were firmer.\nClosing: Brazilian $11%; C. P. R.\n$7%; .Chrysler $53%; Eastman\n$164%;, Gen Motors $36%; Hydro\nElec $5%; Int. Nick $49; U. S. Steel\n$58%; Angol Dutch 291 9d; Brit Am\nTob 100s 3d; Brit Celanese 3s 9d;\nH. B. C. 25s; Imp Airways 23s 9d;\nWoolworth 68s 9a.    \u25a0       ,\nBonds: Brit 2% per .cent-Consols \u00a376%; 3% pet cent War Loan\n\u00a3102%; Funding 4s 1960-90 \u00a3103.\n91%\n90%\nOkalta Leadj Oil\nGains at Calgary\nCalgary, Jan. 14 <cp)\u2014 011\nshares, iolbwing - reports of the\nincreased, proration schedul* lor\nthe Turner Valley field, surged upward on the Calgary stock exchange .today. - ...\n.Practically every stock showed\nan advance, Okalta leading With a\n.10 point gain to 2.24. Calmont was\nUp two at 20; Commonwealth 2 at\n40; Commoil 1% at 36 and Vulcan up\ni at 1.16. Sunset advanced a frac\nU0nat41.\n131%\n112%\n102\n94%\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER,. Jan. 14 (CP) -\nVancouver wheat cash prices:\n\u00bb '\u2022'. .v  7- st..Sht Toush\n\u25a0No,- 1 'hard   143%     141%\nNo. 1 nor.     143% .    141%\nNo. 2 nor   133%      \t\nNo; 3 nor ' 115%\nNo. 4 nor    104%\nNo. 5 wheat     97%\nNo. 6 wheat ..,:.     88%\nFeed     78%       73%\nTO RETURN TO WORK\nDETROIT, Jan. 14 (AP) \u2014 The\nFord Motor. Co. today anounced 10,-\n000 employes laid of! Dec 23 will\nbe returned to work Monday. During the lay-oil period lewer than\n25,000 ot the 87,000 normally employed at the Dearborn plant were\nidle.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\n 9%\n.... 165-\n....   11%\n....   33\n....    4%\n....   50\n....   11%\n.... 104   \u25a0\n....   18%\n3%\nINDUSTRIALS ,'        \"\nAlta Pac Grain :.'\u201e  2\nAssoc Brew ol C \u2022\u25a0  12%\nAssoc Tel St Tel\t\nBath E & P\t\nBell  Tel  \t\nBraz T L St P\t\nB C Power A .-.\nB C Pewer B\t\nBuild Prods-\t\nCan Cement\t\nCan Cement Pid \t\nCan North-Power ....\nVia. Steamships-.\t\nCaff Steamships Pfd   10%\nCan Brortte  ,  39\nCan Bronze Pid ...:  105 \u25a0\nCan Car & Fdy  10%\nCan Car-__;Fdy Pid  20%\nCan Celanese .......;...........\u201e,  IB\nCan Celanese Pid  ,  107\nCan\u00bbInd Ale A' J\u2014\u25a0  4\nCan'Ind Alb B -  3%\nC Jp  R                   ,.,\u201e;      ,  .7%\nCockshutt\" Plow' ,\u201e\u201e\u201e... \u201e.\u201e;,. 10V.\nC M St S \u25a0\u25a0-\u2022  62%\nDist Seagrams  15\nDom  Bridge, \u00ab  31%\nDom Coal Pfd ..'. 10%\nDom Steel St Coal B  15%\nDom Textile   -.  67 .\nDryden Paper  ' ,7%\nFound C of C   14%\nGat Power _, ._     8\nGat Power Pid .\u2122*__U.:  79\nGen Steel W-M\u00bb -\u00ab\u00bb__-  7%\nCurd Charles _.,_,,,._..'   -  8\nGyp Lime & AM -_\u00bb-w.  8\nHamilton Bridge  \u201e_.  . 8\nHamilton Bridge Pfd   50\nHolt Renfrew    20\nH Smith Paper  13%\nH Smith Paper Pid\nImp Tob ot C ...\nInt Nickel oi C\nLake of Woods ....\nLake Sulphite\n13%\n49%\n17\n12%\nMassey Harris  __..._.. - 7.\nMcColl Front .'.    11\nMont L H & P  \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0:\u25a0 -29%-\nNat Brew Ltd  .: .-.  40 .\nNat Steel Car    36%\nOgilvie Flour Mills .; 230.\nOgilvie Flour. New ...'.    29%\nOnt. Steel Prods     11 '\nPower Corp ol C \u2014\u2022\u25a0 *'\nQuebec Power   16\nSt Law Corp Pid   15%\nSt Law Corp  ' _\u2022%\nSt Law Paper Pid  42\nSouth Can Power  12%\nShaw.W St P i.  19%\nSteel, oi Can  ..'.  65\nSteel of c Pfd  63\nWest Grocers ,  50\nBANKS\nBank of Canada   59\nCanadien Nationale  160\nCommerce  :.'.. '\u25a0  175\nDominion  201\nImperial \u25a0 .....I  \u201e .'...\u201e 210\nMontreal    .\u201e_,_\u201e  ; 204\nNova Scotia 297\nRoyal, :......-.. 187\nToronto    , .'.\u201e\u201e... 245\nCURB\nAbitibi P & P Co .';..,...   1.95\nAbitibi 9 Pfd ...\/.....   16%\nAcadia Syg Refin .....'.     2%\nBeauharnois Corp     5.\nBathurst P & p B -     3%\nBrew & Dist Van .:     6\nBrew Corp of Can      1%\nBrew Corp of Can Pid   16\nBrit Am Oil - -   21%\nB C Packers    10\nCan Malting Ltd     35\nCan Dredge St Dock    32\nCan Marconi -  1.20\nCan Vickers  .'.     6%\nCan \"Wineries   62\nCons Paper Corp      6%\nDominion Stores  '6%\nDonnacona Paper A     6\nDonacona Paper B      5%\nFairchild Aircraft     5%\nFord Motor A  \u2022'\u25a0 - -17%\nFraser Co Ltd ' 14%\nImperial Oil _....-.  18%\nInt Petroleum   29%\nInt Utilities A \u2022'\u25a0\u2022--    8%\nIht Utilities B' ......' '    .80\nMcColl Front Pid, j...  87\nMacLaren P &.-P    14 '\nMitchell, Robt \u25a0    14 ,\nPage Hersey Tubes \u2014    91%\nPower Corp Pid   93%\nRoyalite Oil 1    45 '\nThrift Stores :      M\nUnited Dist of Can     1\nWalker-Good and W    43 ,\nWalker-Good Pid     18%\nPend Oreille Ships     '\n20 Cars Zinc and 11\nof Lead Concentrates\nPend Oreille Mines & Metals\ncompany shipped 29 cars ot zinc\nconcentrates and 11 oi lead concentrates in December despite a holiday shutdown and interruption oi\nseveral days mill operation ior installation, ot a new crushing plant,\nstates a broker's bulletin.\nMARKETSAT\nA GLANCE\nBy tha Canadian Press\nNew York \u2014 Stocks closed unchanged, r':\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\nToronto and' Montreal \u2014 Stocks\nclosed lower.\nWinnipeg-Wheat down _%-l%\ncents.\nLondon\u2014Bar silver and other metals -lower.\nNew York\u2014Silver and other metals unchanged.,\nMontreal-'Sllver unchanged.\nNew York\u2014Cotton, rubber, col-\nlee and sugar lower,\n.New York\u2014Canadian dollar un-\nchanged at 99 63-64,\nCanadian Dollar\nStill Below Par\nNEW YORK, Jan, 14 (AP)- The\nFrench franc moved up sharply in\nlorelgn exchange dealings today,\nactuated largely by short covering\nin light volume. At the close the\nunit had added .05% oi a cent St\n3.34, but the discount on 90-day\nfrancs remained at yesterday's figure oi ,18 ol a cent.\nSterling likewise was a little\nhigher, advancing % of a cent to\n$4.99%. Other European currencies\npointed downward, the Netherlands\nguilder losing .03 of a cent, the cGr-\nman mark .05 ol a cent and the\nSwiss franc .01% ol a cent, Canadian dollars were unchanged at\n0B 63-64.   \u2022\nCalgary Livestock\nCATLGARY, Jan, 14 (CP)- Receipts today: cattle 298; calves 31;\nhogs 6; no sheep.\nCattle market was not established. The bulk of receipts were on\nthrough billing.\nNo hogs sales: Thursday's prices:\nselects 8.35; bacons 7.86; butchers\n7.85 Off trucks,\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Jan. 14 (CP)-But-\nter. spot\u2014Quebec grass regraded\n31%-3i!.\nButter futures\u2014Steady and unchanged; January 3l%-32; February\n32-32%. -\n'Wheat, No. 1 northern 1.67%; barley, c.w; No. 3 .76%; oats, c.w, No. 2\n.64; leed .56; flour 8.39; bran 29.25;\nshorts 31.25; middlings 3625; hay,\nNo. 2, ton. 10.50.     .        .    _; ,\nLabor Minister    ,\nWon't Be Rushed\nVICTORIA, Jan. 1'4 (GP)-Prep'-\n-ration ol forms for complaints and\nestablishment oi machinery lor carrying out provisions of the new\nBritish Columbia industrial disputes conciliation and arbitration\nact is going ahead but he has no\nintention ol being \"rushed\" Labor\nMinister Pearson said today.\nWheat Is Lower\nWinnipeg Market\nWINNIPEG. Jan. 14 (CP)-Wheat\nfutures closed 2%-l% cents lower\non Winnipeg grain exchange today.\nTrading was dull with spreading\noperations providing bulk ol busi-.\nness, May future ending at $1,25%.\nJuly $1.17% and October $1.00%.\nThough futures met moderate resistance after declining a cent, buying power irom both outside and\noverseas interests. proved iniufllc-\nient to cope with offerings.\nSales of Canadian wheat ior ax-\nport were estimated at not mora\nthan 100,000 bushels. Overseas buying was on a light scale compared\nwith previous sessions, since the\nstart ol- 1938.\nLiverpool closed l-l%d higher.\nBuenos Aires cut yesterday's advance ' in Jiall.:. :Itt mid-afternoon\ntrade values were off %-% cent.\nCash wheat demand was slow.\nCoarse grains futures - eased fractionally in sym_\u00bbthy with whea*-_\nMcTavish Heads\nAgriculturists\nVICTORIA, Jan. 14 (GPl-Dunx\ncan D. McTavish was elected president of the British Columbia agricultural association at the annual\nmeeting here. Other officers elected\nwere;.\nDr. J. D. Hunter, M__,A\u201e first\nvice-president; Ralph Rendle, second vice-president; A. D. Patterson,\nthird vice-president; George Malcolm, lourth vice-president; and\nEdward M. Whyte, filth vice-president.\nWorld Exchanges\nNEW YORK, Jan. 14 (AP)-ClOs- .\ning rates (Great. Britain in dollars, othprs in cents):\nGreat Britain, demand 4,-_%', cables 4.99%, 60-day bills 4.99; France,\ndemand 3.34, cables 3.34; Italy, demand 5.26%. cables 5.26%.\nDemands \u2014 Belgium 16.90; Germany free 40.23, registered . 21.45,\ntravel 25.75; Holland 55.64; Norwayl\n25.10; Sweden 26,75; Denmark 22.30;\nFinland 2.22; Switzerland 28.08%;\nPortugal 4,64%; Greece .92%; Poland 19.00; Czechoslovakia 3,51%;\nJugoslavia' 2.35; Austria 18.91N;\nHungary 19.90; Rumania .75; Argentine 83.27N; Brazil (free) 5.30N;\nTokyo 29.10; Shanghai 29.62; Hong\nKong 81.30; Mexico City 27.86; Montreal, in New York 99.98 7-16; New,\nYork In Montreal 100.01 \u00bb\u2022-\u00ab,\n.(N)\u2014Nominal.\nTO FORTIFY ENTRANCE\nTO VANCOUVER HARBOR\nOTTAWA, Jan. 14 (CP)-The d\u00ab-\nience department today confirmed\nintentions to establish a gun battery,\nin Stanley Park, Vancouver, as a\ndeience of the entrance to Vancouver harbor.       \u25a0  ;\nTO SALVAGE MOTORSHIP!\n-, VICTORIA, Jan. 14 (CP)\u2014Pacllld\nSalvage company officials today,\nsaid pumping of water from tha,\nholds of the sunken south seas\nmotorship Beulah would, begin to-,\nnight. ' \u25a0      ._!\nC. M. & S. Use Tractor Train to Haul\n30 Tons Freight Noflheni Operations\nEDMONTON, Jan. 14, (CP) -\nHauling 30 tons of freight for Consolidated Mining & Smelting company operations at Gordon lake,\nfirst tractor train to operate in the\nNorthwest Territories recently completed a return trip over the 80-\nmile road from Yellowknife bay,\n750 miles north of Edmonton.\nUnder command of A. M. Dunc\nan, the train consisted ol the tractors hauling seven sleighs, with a\ncrew ol seven men.       .\nThe-tractor haul-method ol heavy-\nfreight transport has; been used\nwith success In Northern Ontario\nand Quebec .to link supply centres\nwith Inland mining areas but this\nis the first test in. northwestern\nmining areas.\nTax Motor and (anal Traffic More\nHeavily Railway Brotherhoods Urge\nOTTAWA, Jan. 14 (CP)-Deslr-\nability oi more strict regulation oi\nhighway transport with a larger\nmeasure of taxation revenue from\nthat traffic coupled with.a recommendation ior 'imposition of- canal\ntolls featured submissions, to the\nDominion government today by the\nrailway transportation brotherhoods.   .\nThe brotherhoods recommended\nparticularly translerence' to the\nDominion of powel to enact social\nlegislation and regulate all transport agencies.\nCapital expenditures and maintenance costs ior highways In Can\nada had brought, at the end oi 1933,\na debt of $492,000,000; the brief\nstated. Total expenditures in new\nworks, maintenance and Interest\ncharges in 1935 had amounted to\n$92,000,000 and revenues irom car\nregistrations and gasoline tax $54,-\n000,000.\nAmendments to the Income war\ntax act were urged to increase exemption for non-householders to\n$1500 and to householders to $3000;\nto make the $400 cxemptibn ior dependent children applicable to all\ndependent children regardless of\nage and to exempt that part oi the-\nincome used in paying provincial\nand municipal taxes.\nTen Million Pound Dominion Loan\nUnderwritten By London Bankers\nOTTAWA, Jan. 14 (CP) - Finance Minister Dunning today announced a new \u00a310,000,000 Dominion loan had been underwritten in\nLondon by a banking group.\nPurpose oi the loan, the minister\nsaid, was to refund a \u00a37,000,658\nmaturity of Dominion oi Canada\nthree per cent stock and bonds due\nnext\" July 1 and \u00a33,000,000 in Dominion of Canada Canadian- Pacific\nrailway land-grant 3% per cent\nstock also due July 1.\n\t\n PAGE  TWELVE\nSPECIAL\n60c Italian Balm\n25c Fitch's Shampoo\nBoth for 594\nMann, Rutherford\n.Drug Go.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nFor all your needs In plumbing repairs, alterations, and\nInstallations. .\nPh. 815        301 VICTORIA St\nJ. A. C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arte Bldi\nJust Arrived\n!\nAnother shipment of Cal-\nart Artificial Flowers, recognized as the best artificial flowers made in America.\nWe have Roses, Asters,\nPom Pom Mums, Geums,\nBachelor Buttons, African\nDaisies, Oriental Poppies,\nand others. Also Violet and\nGardenia Corsages.\nAllen's Art Shoppe\n- A Greeting Card for Every\nOccasion\nCanadians Pay Taxes on Everything\nThey Wear, Consume or User Esling\nDeclares; Per Capita Debt Is $560\n\u2014 \" NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-SATURDAY MORNING. JAN. 11, 1938\nPaying on C. N. Debt\nNever Likely to\nBe Repaid     -\nTaxation as lt affected every individual in the Dominion was the\ntheme pj W. K. Esling ot Rossland,\nM.P. for Kootenay West, in an address at the Nelson board ot trade\nannual dinner as he urged the board\nto Inaugurate a campaign designed\nto make the public realize H paid\ntaxes on everything used, consumed\nor worn.\nDealing with federal taxes alone,\nand ignoring provincial Imposts, Mr,\nEsling brought taxation home to\nevery Canadian.\nEnlarging on his theme afterward\nhe said: . .\n\"On practically everything we use\nor consume or wear, there Is an 8\nper cent sales tax, and on things not\nof domestic manufacture, an additional 3 per cent excise, so that a\nman with a wife and three children\ncan readily reckon the tax he pays\non a year s household and clothing\nexpenditures and utilities. ,\n\"Every  family   which  uses   20\npounds of sugar per month pays\n$2.40 per year by way of tax,\nTAX ON CAR8\n\"On a low-priced automobile the\ngovernment takes $85 to $70; and\noh a car the wholesale price of\nwhich is over $1000, the tax is from\n$100 to $125, so that the sales tax\nand excise on his car average from\n9 to 10 per cent. On an ordinary tire\nhe pays the federal government an\naverage of $1.50, according to weight.\n\"The cigarette smoker pays the\ngovernment 4 cents to 11 cents on\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR.H. MABER\nPhono 655        610 Kootenay St.\nTRIPLE-HEADER HOCKEY GAMES\nNelson Civic Arena\u2014Tonight\n7:15\u2014C.B.C. vs. M.R. K. Bantams\n8:25\u2014Nelson Transfer vi. Panther Juveniles.    \\\n9:35\u2014Now Grand Tigers vs. F. A. C. Juniors.\nWest end Vernon Street door open at 7 p.m.\nADMISSION:    Adults\u201425c Children\u201410c\n________H__nt\u00abt\u00abVH_MHM-_-B\nYOUNG PEOPLE ENJOY THE L. D. BECAUSE OF ITS\nCHEERFUL SMARTNESS\nL\neach package, and 11 he 'rolls his\nown', the government takes 2 cents\non a package of cigarette papers. On\nhis smoking tobacco he pays approi-\nmately 25 cents per pound. For sales\ntax and excise on every 10-cent cigar he smokes, he pays H_ cents with\nincreases accordingly. To light his\nsmokes he pays in excise and sales\ntax, 2V* cents on a box ot 300\nmatches, and If he seeks to economize by using a lighter, he pays 5\ncents on a 25 cent lighter.\n\"For every quart of beer he drinks\nhe contributes to the federal exchequer &% cents over and above\nany profit or licence-the provincial\ngovernment may exact\nWhen he goes to the liquor store.\nhe pays to the federal government\nby way ot tax $1.50 to $2 per bottle\naccording to proof.     ,\n\"For th. playing cards which he\nuses, the government takes 15 cents\nper deck.\n18 PER CENT ON\nCOSMETIC8\n\"Nor are the ladies exempt, because on Cosmetics the tax alone is\n18 per cent and on toilet soaps 13\nper cent. .    ,     i      ,\n\"On every check there is a 3 cent\nstamp with 6 cents for everything\nover $100. The same applies on a\npromissory note or any other evidence of indebtedness.\n\"If you send a telegram or< make\na long distance telephone call, you\npay 5 cents on the wire and a graduated tax on the telephone call. If\nyou are tavelllng and use a sleeper\nor a chair, the railway adds 10 cents\nfor the federal government.  ,\n\"If a man builds. a house costing\n$3000, he pays from $125 to $150 by\nway of sales tax and excise on\nmaterial.\n\"Corporations pay 17 Tier cent profits and on every dividend or interest payment sent to an investor\noutside of Canada, the government deducts an additional 5 per\ncent. '. -!    ....\n\"Thus the people of Canada paid\nlast year by way of sales tax $115,-\n000,000; by way of excise, $83,-\n000,000: and other means of taxation\nbrought the total to $384,000,000.\nCustoms duties and other sources\nmade the Dominion's total revenue\n$452,000,000, notwithstanding which\nthe minister, of finance estimated a\ndeficit of $87,000,000 on the basis of\nthe last budget. Fortunately receipts improved and the deficit will\n\u2022be materially reduced.\"\nFEDERAL DEBT\nThe federal dabt prior to 1914\nwas $350,000,000, while at the end\nof 1937 lt was 10 times greater at\n$3,500,000,000, Mr. Esling stated. The\nCanadian National railway debt to\nthe government and the public totalled $2,652,000,000. .  , \u25a0 ...     ,\u201e;\n\"Thus Canada's eleven, million\npeople owe $6,152,000,000,\" he stid.\n\"The United State has approximately, 120,000,000 people with an indebtedness of $35,000,000,000 or only\nthree billions to eleven million\npeople, as against Canada's six billions tp her eleven million people.\nThis makes Canada's per capita\n\u25a0debt $560 as against the United\nStates $291. ' \u2022\n\"Neither the principal of $1,-\n468,000,000 nor the accumulated interest amounting to $536,000,000\nwill ever be, repaid by the National\nrailways to the consolidated revenue fund, but the public will pay\nand Is paying it by increased taxes.\"\nWILL DEFEND RECORD\nSAN FRANCISCO, Jan. 14 (AP)\n\u2014Frank W. Fuller, jr., 1937 Bendix\nair trophy winner, said he would defend his record of 4 hours and 54\nminutes flying time between Vancouver, B.C., and Agua Caliente,\nMexico, should Speed Flier Earl\nOrtman, former Canada-Mexico\nrecord holder, succeed in breaking\nit, Ortman may try ior the record\nnext month,       \u2014 . \u2022\n$5000 TO BOOTBLACK\nPHILADELPHIA, Jan. 14- (API-\nFrederick McOwen left $5000 to\nJoseph Gonelli, the bootblack who\nhad shined McOwen's shoes every\nday for nearly.50 years. :.\nBIC PROBLEM\nP_TTSBURGH,-Jan. 14 (AP) -\n' The Pitt \"News , canipus newspaper of the university of Pittsburgh, offered readers a new service: free ads \"to help you solve\nyour problem.\"\nCame this problem in reply:\n\"Do you have a date for the\nJunior prom? ... Would like to\nescort Pitt woman to dance. Friday.    Will    spend    reasonable\namount on incidentals.\"\nCapt. J, Jeffs waa named \"control inspector of air traffic\" by British government hi an effort 'to Improve British! and international air\nnavigation.\nMcClary\nRanges\nBurn\nFuel\nGives splendid heat with hard coil, soft coal, coke or\nwood. Burns Canadian coal with utmost economy and\nefficiency. *\nMcClary coal and wood ranges bring you new beauty\nas well as efficiency and economy. Finished completely\nin smooth, hard, durable porcelain enamel. Your choice\nof color combinations. Easily cleaned-\u2014no parts that\nrequire constant polishing\u2014as modern as a gas or electric stove.\nA splendid, roomy oven\u2014a wonderful baker. Large\nwarming closet. This range combines more labor-saving\nfeatures than ever before offered on one range.\nBE SURE AND GET A McCLARY    '\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd,\nNELSON, B. C.\nROBT.NOLTE\nMASTER TAILOR\nClothes Made on the Premises\nfor the Man Who Cares\n.-____-____-__.\nThe\nSugar Bowl\n(Grocery\nSPECIALS\nFor Jan. 15 and 17\nFarrow's  Marrowfat Peas\u2014Delicious quality; fZA\n2 pktfc  **r\nFresh Pork Sausage\u2014    fAA\n1-lb. pkts.     **r\nSliced Premium Bacon\u2014 3fi(_\nIn cello pkts.; per lb. . (BJ*T\nOrange Special\u20143 doz.,    ACA\nlarge, Juicy, for \"Jr\nLynn Valley Peaches\u2014     *mA\n2 tins for **T\nTomato Juice\u2014Large        _)-\u00bb_*\ntins} 8 for **r\nPeas, Corn or Tomatoqt\u2014 Q,\u00a3A\n8 tins for **Y\nPurex Tissue\u2014 ACA\n6 rolls for tJr\nCreamery Butter\u2014Fin- *>i in\nest Grade A; 3 lb 9*\u00ab*\u00ab\nNu-Jell Jelly\u20143 pkts. and _\u00bbS__\n1 mould for  **\u00bbr\nFresh Grapefruit Special\u2014 ttA\nt for  Or\nFancy Free Dessert\u2014        )]<(\n3 for *Vr\nDried Apricots\u2014 <1___4\nPer lb \"*\u00bbr\nLarge Prunes\u2014 tCA\n2_lb\u00ab. for - *W\nFresh Local Eggs\u2014Grade AftA\nA-Large; doz  W*Y\nPork {ind Beans\u2014Large     ]M\nsize tins; 3 for **T\nPHONE 110\nfor the new PRINCE Ice Cream\nBrick. Delivered free at your\n0W1( \"\"\"'\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR SALE 1931 BUICK A-l SHAPE\nlicence. Reasonable. Box 4519\nDaily News. . (4519)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nCHILDREN   SKATING  TODAY,\n2 TO 4.\n(4450)\nKaslo-Nelson Mail Bus* will not\nrun Sunday, 16th.. (4515)\nReserve  Friday,  Feb. 4,  Neison\nGyro 3rd Annual Ice Carnival.\nLadles' Grenfoll-Cloth Ski Mitts, $2\nSPORT SHOP\n(4516)\n8tltchcraft and  Good  Needlework\nBISHOP'S  NEWS STAND\n(4279)\nBreakfast, Lunch and Dinner\nGOLDEN GATE CAFE\n(4462)\nMilitary whist drive,- Friday,\nJanuary 21, Canadian Legion Hall.\nL. A. to B. of R- T. (4525)\nWHIZZ-BY SLEIGHS, FLIER\nSLEDS, SKI SLEDS. HIPPER-\nSON'S. (4468)\nGraduate Nurses' Annual Dance.\nProceeds for hospital equipment. Friday, Jan. 28. Refreshments.   (4461)\nTo all my supporters, old and\nnew, my sincere thanks.\nH. B. LINDSAY.\n(4513)\nNELSON MUST SEEK PROSPERITY\nAND DEVELOPMENT OF DISTRICT\nF0R0WNG00D BISHOP ASSERTS\nWe carry a full line of Musical\nInstruments.\nKOOTENAY MUSIC HOUSE\n(4435)\n8CARF SPECIAL-SEE OUR\nWINDOW.\nJACK BOYCE\n(4310)\nWoman, 23, available for night\nwork, part, full-time or occasional.\nP.O. Box 407. (\u00ab29)\nSEE A. TERRILL FOR UPHOLSTERING AND DRAPERIES. 120,\nHIGH STREET. (4271)\nMcKAY _> STRETTON now have\na complete display of all PH1LCO\nRadios from $44.96 to $310.00. Come\nIn and look them over,        ((4423)\nTripleheader basketball program\nat the Civic Centre TONIGHT, 7:30.\nTrail Pats vs. Nelson intermediates.\n9:30 Colombos vs. Seniors. 25c and\n40c. (4521)\nDANCE \u2014 TONIGHT \u2014 DANCE\nIn Eagle Hall, Music by\nThe TROUBADOUR8\nGents 50c \u25a0:\u2022 Ladles 26c\nj   .,     . (4402)\n' Ph. 116 for^KOOTENAY VALLEY\nmilk. Order pasteurized or Grade\nA raw milk. It's rich In butterfat.\n(4407)\nMills, Applewhaite\nAre Made Life\nMembers\nMILLS RECALLS\nTHE OLD DAYS\nOffering the silver of the Slocan\nand the sands of Kootenay rivers\nas material for research and development and suggesting that if\nNelson was looking to its future it\nmust put forth every endeavor to\nsecure development of the natural\nresources in the district Most Rev.\nMartin M. Johnson, D.D., bishop of\nKootenay, urged the Nelson board\nof trade at its annual dinner to\n\"start on a quest.\" The prosperity of\nthe district made the prosperity of\nthe city, he declared. >\nThe bishop suggested, since\nsilver was a'chief mineral of the\ndistrict to the north, everything possible should be done to promote\nits use. Eastern Canada did not\nknow the importance of the silver\ndollar. He proposed that church organization be requested to demand\nsilver dollars to popularize them\nand proposed study clubs through\nthe interior to take up silver and\nits uses as a step toward future\nprosperity, possibly,' he suggested,\nstudy.of silver could be substituted\nfor \u25a0 unpractical .school subjects\nwhich were being cut out by authorities. \u00bb   .\nThe province might be Induced\nto include silver in its presentations\nto the Dominion-provincial commission.\nRESEARCH BUREAUS\nHe proposed research bureaus,\nand suggested sand In district rivers\nmight make fine glass, with lime\nat band to treat it. Stainless silver\nwas not beyond the realm of possibility.\n\"We have tb go on a quest,\"\nBishop Johnson declared. \"We may\nnot find what we go after,\" he\nadded, \"but the discoveries result\ning, like Columbus' discovery of\nAmerica when he sought the country of spices, might result in much\nwider benefits.\" \u25a0 .,-,\u25a0\nLIFE MEMBERS\nE. H. Applewhaite and T. A.MiUs\nof Willow Point, only surviving\nmembers of the original board of\ntrade of Nelson, were elected honorary life members. C. F. McHardy's\nmotion being carried In a burst of\napplause* as he described them as\npioneers who helped to build the\ncity and district\nE. A. Mann, vice-president, paid\ntribute to the two old timers as\nmen who had followed the more\nromantic trail-blazers and who had\nraised the standards of their day\nby undeviating pursuit of what they\nbelieved to be right He traced Mr.\nMill's life \u2014 born in Manchester\nnearly 82 years ago, trained as an\nartist, coming to Canada as a young\nman and arriving at Port Moody\nthe day after.the great Vancttuver\nfire, and-then arriving in Nelson\nIn 1890 by cayuse, alternately to\nprospect In the hills and serve as\nthe town sign painter, and to take\nan active part in the early build-\n!ng up of Nelson.\nMr. Mann presented a photo of\na district beauty spot to Mr. Mills;\nand handed to the secretary a letter\nannouncing his election to honorary membership, together with a\nphoto- for Mr. Applewhaite.\nRECALLS OLD DAYS\nMr. Mills expressed deep gratitude for himself and Mr. Applewhaite, not only for the member\nship and! photos, but Store'\"for remembering the old timers.\" He suggested, since the only two \"originals\" ot the board lived at Willow\nPoint that possibly the \"fountain of\nyouth? might be in the hills there.\nHe wondered whether Consolidated\nofficials had chosen Willow Point\nfor their summer residences with\nthat thought in mind.\nThe old timer recalled the early\nhistory ot the late W. J. Blake\nWilson In Nelson under the title if\n\"Nelson Boy Makes Good.\" He told\nanother story of \"Bob\" Lemmon.\ngiving this the title, \"Why Isn't\nYour Foresight as Good as Your\nHindsight.\" Mr. Mills lost the -opportunity,, for $700 to become owner of either the Leroi, War Eagle\nor Centre Star claims at Rossland\nwhich afterward became the hub\not the Consolidated.\nTRADE TREATIES :\nW. K. Esling of Rossland, M. P.\nfor Kootenay West, congratulated\nthe board of trade on its fine booklet and the City of Nelson for its\ncivic pride.    \u2022\nDealing briefly with British-American-Canadian trade negotiations,\nMrs. Esling outlined the growth of\ntrade barriers, followed by the Ottawa agreements, stating these had\ngiven Canada first place.in Britain's\nimports. Canadian exports to the\nUnited Klngdim had- increased 100\nper cent while United States exports had dropped 100 per cent,\nBritish Columbia was. particularly interested in apples, which not\nonly were given an advantage in\nBritain but were also protected,\nfrom United. Stetes surplus dumn-\ning. The growers' interests must, he\nsaid, be tsrotected.\nMr, Esling urged a campaign by\nthe board \"to make people tax-\nconscious.\"\nWelcoming the visitors, Mayor J.\nP. Morgan declared he was exterme-\nly proud to speak for a, city in as\nsound condition as Nelson. He congratulated the-board on its splendid membership.\nMUST BALANCE BUDGETS\nThat although conditions generally were Improved, \"no real prosperity could be expected- in Canada until governments ceased piling\nup debt was asserted by President\nBamford in his president's address.\nCost of government was Increasing\nand taxation was, climbing, he said,\nand governments must balance their\nbudgets. ,  \u2022   ..\nMembership of the board was\nover 190 and was likely to increase\nin 1938, he. thought \u2022\nMr. Bamford welcomed the advent of the Nelson Junior board of\ntrade, organized during 1937, and\nthe opportunity of cooperating with\nit.\nW. G. C. Lanskail, secretary, reviewed board activities of-the past\nyear and lister the forthcoming\nconvention of the Union of B. C.\nevent of importance for 1938. An\ninvitation had been extended to\nthe, grand lodge, Independent Order of Odd Fellows, to meet in Nelson this year, he stated.\nC. B. Garland expressed thanks\nto the speakers. '      \u25a0'        -\nDuring the dinner musical entertainment was given by E. A. Haller-\nan's orchestra.\nATTACKED AND ROBBED\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 14 (CP)-At-\ntacked by two men in a downtown\nlane Edward Mitchel was robbed\nof $4, _\t\nTOLEDO, 0\u201e Jan. 14 (AP)\u2014An\nunusually large hole in the nipple\nof a nursing bottle caused the death\ntoday of Glenda Sue Boeker, three-\nmonth daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nGlen Boeker.\nBurns Anniversary, Tues., Jan. 26,\nEagle Hall, tickets $1.25 each on\nsale, Ledlngham's Bakery, Smythe's\nDrug Store and A. Wallach. No reserve tickets. (4617)\n- ROYAL   HOTEL -\n(Formerly Allen Hotel)\nALL ROOM8 NEWLY DECORATED   AND   FURNISHED.   MODERATE RATES. WEEKLY RATES.\n'   - (4308)\nFREE> MORRIS CAR\nHave the Vancouver Sun delivered and watch for information of\nsplendid prizes given by Sol Saline\",\nthat grand rheumatism remedy: on\nsale at all Drug Stores. First prize,\nMorris Car. -   (4518)\nKootenay lodge No. 16 members\nand sojourning brothers ,are requested to meet at the I. O. 0. F.\nhall Sunday, January 16 at 1:30 to\nattend the iuneral of our late brother, Harry Clements-,' of Pincher\nCreek lodge, No.' 5.      \u2022       (4.23)\nFUNERAL NOTICE   '.,.\n.MacDONALD, William Jtussett\u2014\nOf South Slocan. Passed Sway Friday. Body rests at Somers Funeral\nHome until konday, thence, to trinity United church where service\nwill be-held it 2 p.m., Rev. J, A.\nDonnell officiating. (4522)\nFUNERAL NOTICE    , *'   -\nCLEMENTS, Harry\u2014Died Thursday. jSody rests at parlors of Davis\nFuneral Service until 2 p,m. Sunday, thence to Trinity United church\nwhere service will be conducted by\nRev. J. A..Donnell. (4524)\nGREYHOUND AGENTS\nBalfour\u2014 C. Holt\nKaslo\u2014J. R. Tlnken\nWynndel\u2014Mrs. A. W. Burgh .\nCreston\u2014George Sinclair\nLet your local agent plan your\nnext trip.\nGreyhound Lines\n221 Baker St\nPhone 800\n(4296)\nww^w-nn^wv-'imMi\nUrge Retiring Allowance After Age\n60 to Create Work for Young People\nOTTAWA. Jan. 14 (CP)\u2014An adequate allowance tor all who retire\nfrom. Industry or commerce after\nthe age of 60 was urged upon the\nDominion government in the annual legislative program of the\nTrades and Labor Congress of\nCanada and affiliate bodies submitted today to Prime Minister Mckenzie King and his colleagues.\n- By this means, It was stated,\ngreater opportunity for employment would be created and cost of\nmaintaining those young enough\nto work; would be lessened. The\ndelegation was headed by P. M.\nDraper of Ottawa.\nFurther amendments should be\nmade, the submission urged to empower the federal authorities to\nregulate highway transport, to restrict power of the senate to- veto\nany bill passed at three separate\nsessions of the House of Commons,\nand to abolish appeals to the privy\ncouncil. >\nFurther .programs of planned\npublic works to provide work not\nonly for those completely idle but\ntor those only, partially unemployed\nwere urged; ;\nThe congress recommended enlargement of the housing legislation\nto Include slum clearances and to\nreduce the mortgage interest Cost\nto low wage employees to IVi per\ncent. . . , ' '. ,\n. The congress urged the Dominion\nto obtain constitutional power to\nlegislature for'a six-hour five-day\nweek without reduction in earning\npower. \u25a0\n.. Health insurance and  a health\npolicy were urged.\nOther recommendations included:\nExemption under the old age pensions act ot estates up to $5000.\nFair wage act clause in contracts\nwith subsidized shipping, and increased salaries for letter carriers.\nMaintenance of the rights of wage\nearners to organize for their mutual\nprotection particularly In respect\nto obstacles placed in theirway by\nemployers.\nWidening of the scope ofHhe industrial disputes investigation act to\ninclude distribution of bread, milk,\nand'coal and motor transportation.\nNationalization of the production\nand export of nickel as a peace\nmeasure and nationalization of the\nmanufacture of armaments.\nCreation ot a government monopoly of Canadian deposits of radium bearing minerals.\nEstablishment of a federal transportation system.\nCompulsory use of wireless on\nall great lakes and coastal vessels\nand other safety measures for protection ot sailors. '\nNelson Business\nCollege\nINDIVIDUAL TUITION\nCommence Any Time\nRoyal Export\nBEER\nWhat   Nelson\nmakes, makes\nNelson.' ,\nBuy Kootenay\nProducts\nKootenay\nBreweries\nLimited\nThis advertisement Is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government of\n\u2022 British Columbia.-\nDOCTOR TO AFRICAN\nLEPER COLONY DIES\nLONDON, Jan. 14 (CP cable) \u2014\nDeath was reported here today of\nDr. Raymond Jotcham, 23, who left\nCanada a year ago to take charge\nof an African leper colony. He\ndied at Katzina, Northern Rhodesia.\nHe was joined In Africa last\nAugust by his fiancee, Ruth Baxter, a Canadian, now a teacher at\nthe school of languages near tha\ncolony. They bad planned to marry\nIn July. \u25a0  ,\nDEATHS\nMONTREAL \u2014 Antonio Braga,\n67-, ex consul-general for Brazil in\nMontreal,    \u25a0   . .,,*.; i\nARLINGTON, Mass. \u2014 Rev.\nFrederick Cecil Powell, 73, St,\nJohns. Episcopal church, Boston,\nfor many years head of Cowley\nfathers in U. S.    .\nMONTREAL \u2014 Dr.'WBliam Ernest Nelson, 58, prominent Montreal\nphysician. -\nNEW*YORK \u2014 Albert Ottinger,\n59, former attorney-general ot New\nYork State.\nPRINCE. ALBERT, Sask. - Lt\nCol. R. P, Laurie, former Prince\nAlbert newspaper publisher and\npostmaster.    ,.\u2022*._\u25a0\nFLORA, Ont-Wllliam D. Samp-:\nson, 66, editor, and publisher Flora\nExpress, independent weekly newspaper.\n> OTTAWA \u2014 Rotaert J. \"Taylor,\n76, veteran of Northwest Rebellion.\nPORTLAND - George P. Berk-\ney, 54, vice' president Crown Zell-\nerbacch. Corp. in. charge ot .th*\nfirm's Pacific northwest operations.\nWATERDOWN, Ont \u2014 JoTSn\nHouston, 89. a high school teachT\nfor m ore than 60 years, served in\nschools, of Ontario; Manitoba. Saskatchewan and British Columbia.\n\u2022MYTHE8\nBaby Cough Syrup\nPREPARED\nSpecially for Children of all ages\n\".'\u2022- yAf \u25a0':;.\u25a0\u2022\u25a0:'\u25a0.\nSiqythe's Pharmacy\nPHONE 1\nSweater\n25$, m\n\\ Brushed* wool, zipper\ncoats, i brushed pullovers\nand pullovers, all styles,\n. sizes' and colors, to clear\nat 25% discount.\nLimited\nWar.t Ads Get Results\n- YOUR OWN-\nCIVIC\nLAST TIMES TODAt\nCOMPLETE AT\n1:30, 2:30, 7:00 and 9:10\nADULTS 25c\nAfternoon or Evening\nms*\u00bbj*&-\n>\u00ab'\u2022-:\n\u2022    \u2022\n| with\nits Ml\nm*?*&\nctterttia\n\u2022tt'tietet\nbefore!\nTHE OUTSTANDING MUSICAL\n- \u25a0-.:   QFTHEYEAR\nTCOS\"\n(DflLTDlSNElf'S\nACADEMY\ny^p Taw v* W^fr BTl_eV WawaW\nMAYROJSON   In    \"WOMEN in DISTRESS\"\nand BARBARA STANWYCK   and   PRESTON FOSTER   In\n\u2022 \"THE PLOUGH,  and the  STARS\"\n5S3_\u00ab\u00ab_3SS\u00ab34&S\u00abS\u00abS$\u00abWSa^^\nLAST\nTIMES\nToday\nCONTINUOUS SHOW FROM 1:00\nCOLBERT\nHA'RUS\nBOYER\nTOVARICH\nMSIL MTNI-H\nAHITH LOUISE\nM-LVI..- CO.PIK\nIIIIU \u00bb\u00ab\u00bbN\u00bb\n.... _,._-\u00bb\u25a0**\u2022\u25a0 s\u00bbmuuiw**m*tmit*emmm!\u00bb*mtititfee\nU*MM* _,|_,l,_\u00bb^ _\u00ab-.-*-\u00bbI*-*.IIl---1tl_--l_l.-\u00ab_)S\u00abS__\u00bb\nFeature Starts at 2:E2, 6:22, 9:52\ni pr -_\u2014\u2014\u2014 ,\t\nYesterdqy-^-\nTHE BIC SHOT Of CRIME\nTODAYS-      \".'\u25a0; '\u25a0'.'<:\nJUST A NUMBER ON 'THE ROCK*\n\"AUatraz Island\"\nThe Most Mysterious Prison in the World\nSPECIAL MATINEE FOR CHILDREN AT 1:00\nSerial\u2014ROBINSON CRUSOE\n.OUR GANG COMEDY and CARTOON\nNabob Coupons Accepted Up tb 5:00 '\nMonday\nTuesday\nHave You. Read the ClaulfledT   iM^KXSXZSX&txa^^\n\"BOMBING OF THE PANAY\"\nPlus \"MERRY-CO-ROUND OF 1938\"\n-_-_----_\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_1938_01_15","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\/1.0413444","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":"1938-01-15 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":"1938-01-15 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":""}]}