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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":" \u2014^\u2014\nBlake, Apps, Schriner in Tie With\nGottselig in N.H.L\nPage Seven\nH\nMarket Dealers Cautious; Watch\nWorld Developments\nPage Nine\nNELSON. BRITISH COLUMBIA. CANADA-TUESDAY MORNING, FEB. 14, 1889\nNUMBER 266\nn of Franco Is\nTolmie Cabinet Minister,\nS. L. Howe Dies at Coast\nI Was Instrumental in\nI Formation of Point\nGrey Municipality\nP' VANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP).-\nSamuel Lyness Howe, who left his\nI    native Ontario 43 years ago to\nI carve a political and business career In British Columbia, died at\nhis home here tonight\nI A member of the cabinet of the\nlate Hon. S. F. Tolrole's Conservative, government of 1928-33, Mr.\nHowe was 74 years old.\nBorn In St Vincent township,\nGrey county, he came to Vancouver In 1897 and entered real estate and mining. His first mining\nventure had little success, but a\n$20,000 investment In downtown\n:y real estate brought him close to\n$1,000,000 In 1928.\nIn 1928 he was elected Conservative member of the provincial legislature for the old Richmond-Point\n;. Grey .riding and was sworn in as\nprovincial secretary and minister ot\nfisheries under Dr. Tolmie. Later\nhe assumed the portfolio of mines,\nI succeeding W. A. MacKenzie.\nI  Mr. Howe was born in 1884, the\ni son of Andrew Howe and Margaret\nLyness Howe. After education in\nOntario public school he joined the\npost office staff at Meaford, Ont.,\nin 1881, remaining in that post for a\nvear before being apprenticed to a\ndruggist in Meaford.\nAltera year in Detroit as a druggist Mr. Howe returned to Canada, purchasing a drug store in\nThornoury, Ont, where ne remain\ned until 1896. During that time he\nserved as town councillor for eight\nyears and reeve for three.\nTOOK UP MINING\nThen Mr. Howe moved to Toronto\nto study metallurgy and geology at\nthe School of Science. He moved to\n-British Columbia in 1897, taking up\na mining claim at Shoal Bay, with\na group of Vancouver men.\n(Continued on Page Two.)\nSAMUEL  HOWE\nSPOKANE FLIER\nSTILL MISSING\n\u2022WKAner rtH. 1V '(fcpj'; ?t\u00a3\nScant hope of finding RoyShreck,\nSpokane weather pilot missing\nj slnoe he messaged his plane was\nleaded with Ice and he waa descending \"blind\" In a heavy fog\nearly Sunday, remained tonight\n\u25a0A. short but blinding snowstorm,\njwirllng over the region where\nShreck is believed down, put an\nabrupt halt to the second day's\nsearch which passed without development of a single definite clue\nto tne pilot's whereabouts.\nSixteen planes, most of them from\nthe 116th observation squadron,\nWashington national guard, which\ntook part in the search today remained grounded after the storm\n' ad passed.\n\"We haven't a single trace of\n\" the pilot's brother, Roy\n*k, said this afternoon. \"There\ni no encouraging reports but we\nl running down everything.\"\nA ground crew was working\nhrough the flat heavily timbered\narea south of Sandpoint, Idaho.\nwhere several persons believed\nthey had heard a plane sometime\nbetween 2 a.m. and 4 a.m. Sunday.\nloyalite Output\nWill Equal 1938\nAlta. Probe Told\n; CALGARY, Feb. 13 (CP) - F. G.\nCottle, member of the Alberta Pe-\ntroleum and Natural Gas Conservation board, in evidence before the\nMcGillivray royal commission to-\n'day Indicated that Royalite Oil\n'\u2022'Company pipeline output in 1939\n' will at least equal 1938 figures of\nM65,627 barrels of crude.\nHe told the commission, charged\nwith determining a fair and equitable riipeline rate for moving oil\n\u25a0trom Turner Valley to Calgary, that\nhe did not think any conservation\nboard orders in 1939 will lessen\ncrude output of Royalite pipelines.\nThe witness who Is also a chartered accountant assisting the commission, said that 68 oil wells are\nnow producing In Turner Valley, 32\nmiles southwest of Calgary. Conservation board permits for 1939\nnew wells number 29 including 19\nwells already started and three\nwhich will be spudded soon, Mr.\nCottle said.\nMURDER CHARGE\nLAID IN DEATH\nOF \"BUTTERFLY\"\nScotland  Yard . Tries\nto Find Link With\nOutlawed I.R.A.\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (AP). - A\n23-year-old Irishman was charged\nformally today with murdering the\n\"black butterfly\" as Scotland Yard\nsought to establish whether she had\nany connection with the outlawed\nIrish Republican Army.\nThe accused man, Arthur James\nMahoney, paled as he stood in the\ndock at Bow street and heard police\ntell the court he confessed stabbing \"the black butterfly\"\u201426-year-\nold Georgina Hoffman \u2014 \"because\nshe tricked me' out of all my\nmoney;':-.'-- - '.--'  \u2022'     - ' Vr ;:\u2022\nPolice testified he pleaded with\nthem not tb tell his mother and\nshowed them a long knife, saying:\n\"This is whit I did it with.\"\n.While the tenor of Mahoney's reputed confession, as disclosed in\ncourt, failed to bear out an earlier\ntheory the. case might be linked\nwith the recent terroristic campaign attributed to the I. R. A.,\npolice were known to be checking such possibilities.\nMiss Hoffman, variously known\nas \"the black butterfly\" for her\nfluttering manner and raven hair\nand as \"the girl in red\" for her\ntaste in dress, was killed Sunday\nmorning.\nStarved Dogs Kill\nand Eat Weak Dog\nJdAILLARDYILLE, B. C, Feb.\n13 (CP). \u2014 Provincial Constable\nB. W. Jones told Stipendiary Magistrate K C. Walker and L. E. Mar-\nmont today John Vsiech's dogs were\nkept \"in such a starved condition\"\nthat they killed and ate the weakest dog in the pack.\nVsiech was found guilty pnd\nfined $5 and costs of $10.50, on a\ncharge of cruelty to animals. The\nmagistrate also ordered Vsiech to\nsell 20 of his dogs within a month.\nConstable Jones said Vsiech kept\n40 dogs \"under the most appalling\nconditions I.have ever seen.\" ,\n\"They were kept in one peri, 30\nfeet square. There was shelter only\nfor 10 dogs.\"\nDried Apples Finished\nin Sales to Germany\nHALIFAX, Feb. 13 CP) \u2014 F. W.\nWalsh, director of marketing in\nNova Scotia's department of agriculture, said tonight sale of Canadian dried apples to Germany would\n\"pretty well clean up\" last fall's\npack.' He reported that in a \"recent\nsale\" 8000 boxes had been sold to\nGermany.\nAbout 5000 boxes involved in the\nrecent sale came from Nova Scotia\nand the remainder from British Columbia, Walsh said. A sale to Germany a month ago had not been\n\"quite as large.\"\nHunter Faces Manslaughter Charge\nas Jury Finds His Rifle Killed Boy\nPRINCE GEORGE, B. C, Feb. 13\n1CP).\u2014Arthur Damms was charged\nwith manslaughter today after an\ninquest Into the hunting death of\nhis 14-year-old nephew, George\nCampbell. Damms was released on\nhis own recognizance In the sum of\n$500.\n. Young Campbell was fatally shot\nlast Wednesday after he disregarded\na parental order not to follow his\nuncle who was hunting moose.\nDamms told the coroner's Jury he\nhad followed the tracks of three\nmoose from his farm toward the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. W. Ramage,\nthe boy's stepfather and mother.\n' After enquiring If Ramage had\nseen any trace of the animals.\nDamms said he continued his search\nfor an hour. On returning toward\nthe Ramage house he said he saw a\nmovement 80 feet distant in a clump\nof bushes bordering a trail, and\nshot at the spot. When he went to\ninvestigate he found the boy shot\nthrough the chest.\nDamms said he then went to the\nRamage house and said:\n\"What did you send that boy out\nthere for? I thought he was a moose\nand I guess I've kilted him.\"\nMr. and Mrs. Ramage said they\nboth told George not to follow his\nuncle when the boy said he was going out to set some rabbit snares,\nbut he had gone out without their\nknowledge.\nThe jury returned a verdict that\n\"we find that George Campbell died\non Wednesday, Feb. 8, near Tabor\ncreek In the County of Cariboo as\nthe result of a gunshot wound from\na rifle by Arthur Damms who stated he mistook the deceased for a\nmoose.\"\nDamms was remanded to Feb. 17\nby Stipendiary Magistrate G. Mil-\nburn.\nllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllli.\nCupid Rules Today\nas Valentines\nAre Given\nCupid is on the rampage today! Bachelors beware!\nSt Valentine's day, dedicated\nto Cupid and all lovers is here\nand blushing school girls will\nreceive valentines from school\nboys, youths will give their lady\nfriends chocolates, while older,\nfolks will maybe hold hands\nand think of days gone by.\nTrue, too, the humorist will\ntake advantage of this day of\ndays, and distribute the comic\nvalentine, but the old fashioned,\nfrilly lace valentine will mainly\nhold sway.\niiiiiiMiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii\nSKIERS IN HUNT\nFOR LOST (OAST\nPLANE; STORMS\nFORCE PILOT IN\nSixth   Man   Believed\nto Have Joined\nLost Ship\nALASKA GOVERNOR\nJOINS    SEARCHERS\nJUNEAU, Alaska, Feb. 13 (AP).\n\u2014Snow squalls forced one searching plane back today but a party\nof skiers, receiving reports of a\nplane was heard over the south\nem end of Douglas Island yester\nday afternoon, left here to Join\nthe search for a missing Marine\nAirways ship, with five and possibly six persons aboard.\nThe time of Pilot Lon Cope's\nlast message that his plane was\nIcing up off Grand Island, 15 miles\nsouth of here, was 2:16 p.m. yesterday. The unconfirmed reports\nwere that a plane was heard about\n15 minutes later over Douglas\nIsland, west of here.\nThe area waa that In -which\nCorndr. N. G. Rlcketta ef the coast\nguard cutter, Halda directed that\nsea,rehto,m*de,* \u25a0)\u25a0 > '\".- '.\nThose on the plane were: Pilot\nLon Cope, John Chnpell, E. E. Eck,\nand Earl Clifford, all of Juneau and\nGeorge Chamberlain, Anchorage.\n(Continued on Page Two.)\n600 Arrested in\nReligious Riots\nCAWNPORE, India, Feb. 13 (CP.\nHavas)\u2014Police arrested 800 persons here today as religious rioting\nbetween Hindus and Moslems,\nwhich has taken a toll of 40 dead\nand 400 Injured since It began\nSaturday, flared anew.\nA British police Inspector was\nwounded in today's rioting. Police\nfired upon two crowds of demonstrators, wounding 35.\nThe disorders were precipitated\nby Hindus who played music in\nfront of a Mohammedan house.\nBritish troops went to the aid of\npolice in restoring order between\nthe conflicting religious groups.\nRANGOON, Burma, Feb. 13 (AP)\n\u2014Police used tear gas today to\ndisperse unruly crowds as a bomb\nblast signalled the spread of Man-\ndalay disturbances to the Burmese\ncapital.\nTwo persons were wounded by\nthe bomb which exploded while\nthe house of representatives discussed Mandalay riots in which 24\nwere killed yesterday. Police concentrated on the Surtee Bazaar,\nRangoon's chief market, where\npickets endeavored to halt business.     , ,\nTHEFTS IN CALOARY\nCALGARY, Feb. 13 (CP)-Three\nburglaries and six thefts in Calgary during the week-end resulted\nin losses of $1187 in goods and cash,\npolice said today. M. D. Smith's\nautomobile valued at $500 was the\nlargest single theft.\nIIIIIIIIMIsillllllllllllllMllllllllsillllllll\nBones of Aged Man\nTurn to \"Mush;\"\nLittle Hope\nREGINA, Feb. 13 (CP)-Phy-\nsicians here held little hope today for an aged man In hospital\nfor months, whose bones gradually have been turning to\n\"mush\".\nVainly doctors have sought to\nbuild up the stamina of their\n70-year-old patient for a delicate\noperation that might save his\nbones and his life. But age has\nbeen on the side of death.\nHis case is described as a disturbance a of the parathyroid\nCid, His body has been robot calcium, the bone-making material. The gland, one of\nthe smallest of several located\nnear the base of the skull, has\nbeen \"running wild\".\nIf the gland could have been\nremoved some time ago, surgeons believe, the disintegration\nmight hdvc been halted. But the\npatient's general condition did\nnot warrant such a gamble and\nefforts to build up his general\nhealth did riot meet with success.\niiiiiiiiiimsismiiiiiiiimiimiiiiiiiiiiiii\nI SPENDING\nIS OBSTACLE TO\nPROSPERITY, U.S.\nASSERTS HOOVER\nProclaims   Resurgent\nRepublican Party in\nLincoln Day Speech..\nTASK TO RESTORE\n10,000,000 TO JOBS\nNEW YORK, Feb. 13 (CP) -\nHerbert Hoover tonight declared\nthat \"hallucination\" spending was\nthe obstacle to prosperity In tht\nUnited States and proclaimed, a\nrejuvenated, resurgent Republican party dedicated to avertlni\n\"a rendeivous with -Inflation ani\na full-sized dictator.\"\nIn the keynote, speech of thi\nparty's Lincoln Day celebration,\nthe last Republican president asserted: ,\n\"To restore lobs and agriculture, the fear of men of their government and the shackles upon,\ntheir energies must be removed,\nIn order that free men may have\nhope and confidence In the future.\"\nECONOMIC MAKE BELIEVE\nHoover ascribed to \"a high school\nof economic romance\u2014a sohool of\nbudgetary magic\u2014economic make\nbelieve\" the ideas that government\nspending could balance the bur\nthat government loans and pi\nworks are a monetary asset\nthat the combined public and prl*\nvate debt is no larger than in 1929.\nThe country's \"great humanitarian\ntask,\" he said, is to \"restore 10,000,'\n\u25a0000 to jobs, revive a paralyzed agriculture; and thereby relieve 20,000,-\n000 destitute.\u2014\n(Continued on Page Two)\nBurial ol Pope\nlo Be Broadcast\niV'''\"V\" \"i.t\\*I''\"-'**\"- \u25a0''''    j\n- VATICAN CITY,.TeVi3 CA>.w-\nAncient grottoes under, St Peter's\nCathedral werd made ready tonight\nto receive the body of Pope Pius\nXI in a triple coffin.\nThousands on thousands of faithful passed reverently before the\npontiff's bier in the vast cathedral\nwhile workmen cleared an underground space for the burial tomorrow evening.\nThe stream ot humanity that came\nIn the rain to venerate the Pope was\nsmaller than yesterday's great\nthrong, but worshippers shuffled\nthrough the Basilica throughout the\nday.\nThe burial ceremony tomorrow\nwill be broadcast to the world by\nradio, but the public will be excluded, only Cardinals and other\nprelates, the papal court, the diplomatic corps, Roman patricians and\nother Invited dignitaries will see\nthe ceremony.\nThe ceremony will begin at 4\np.m. (7 a.m. P.S.T.).\nGerman Battleship\nLaunching Today\nHAMBURG, Germany, Feb. 13\n(AP)\u2014Adolf Hitler, surrounded by\nhigh Nazi leaders, arrived today for\nthe launching of Germany's largest\nman-o'-war, the 38,000-ton battleship \"F\".\nMany of the 50,000 persons expected to watch the new armored giant\nslide down the ways tomorrow gave\nthe fuhrer a rousing welcome.\nHitler stopped en route from Berlin at Frledrichsruh to pay tribute\nto Otto von Bismarck. He placed a\nwreath at the tomb of the \"Iron\nChancellor\" for whom the new battleship was expected to be named.\nOne Catspaw, Two \"Iron Hands\" in Mexican Nazi Colony\n^^yT^^1 \\\nPV\n'-\u25a0\u2022\u25a0 .\u25a0 ''iwi\nfci\n\"*    Jl       mmmm\\\n^Hny\n\u2022    *  j \u25a0 '\n\u25a0V.\/-y yyy   '^H\nkv'IWI&y\nHENRICH NORTHE\nW1LHELM WIRTZ\nBAR?N VON QOLLENBERG\nOne of the paraoxes of present day Mexico,\nIs the Increasing power ot the Nazi despite the power\not i the Cardenas government, which is 'the most\ndemocratic that Mexico has ever seen. Germany\ncontrols about 6500 Germans in Mexico through the\n\"Centro Alman\", which in turn is controlled by\nabout 400 Berlin-supported, highly organized Nazi\nparty members. Baron Ruedt von Collenb'erg, German minister, although a conservative at heart, is\nforced to kow-tow to the Nazi. Wilhelm Wirtz is\ntop man of the Nazi organization in Mexico and\nis head of. the German legation, while Dr. Henrich\nNorthe, councillor of the Gerrhan legation, leads\nthe Centro Alman.\nCahan Ash Resignation of\nMacKenzie; Bren Debate Over\nCountries Offer\nto Take in Jews\nLONDON, Feb. 1 (AP).-Preel-\ndent Manuel Quezon of the Philippines offered lake-dotted Mindanao island as a haven for \"several\nthousand\" refugees today as the intergovernmental committee received\nAdolf Hitler's latest plan for getting\nJews out of Germany.\nThe offer was made, at a session\not the refugee committee to which\nGeorge Eublcc, American director,\nsented his resignation, He was\ne\u00bbed\u00bb*-bf SirJJarisji.Kmerioi.\nLeague of Nations assistant high\ncommissioner for refugees.  ,\u00bb\nThe Dominican republic repre\nsentative. Dr. Max Henriques Drena,\nestimated his government could take\n100,000 refugees under certain conditions.\nAustralia offered to take 15,000\nover a period of three years.\nIn addition, Earl Winterton, com\nmittee chairman, reported on the\ngissiblllties of settling-refugees in\nritlsh Guiana, South America, and\nRhodesia in Africa.\nFAMED TRAVELER\nCROSSING OCEAN\nIN JUNK TO FAIR\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 18 (CP). -\nRichard Halliburton, author and\ntraveler, and a crew of 12 men\nare somewhere in the Pacific ocean,\nen route to the San Francisco\nworld's fair aboard the Sea Dragon,\na Chinese junk.\nThe Sea Dragon, 75 feet In length\nand 20 feet wide, was built in a\nChinese shipyard at Chlkiwan, Hong\nKong. Its largest mast is 66 feet\nhigh and, in addition to regular\nChinese junk sails with bamboo\ncross-spars, it Is equipped with a\n100 horsepower Diesel engine.\nIn the main living quarters of the\nvessel is a Chinese shrine and the\nwalls of the crew's quarters are decorated in Oriental fashion. Two walls\nare carved In Chinese teakwood,\nothers being painted with Chinese\njunks and rickshaws.\nCaptain Welch believes It will\ntake the Sea Dragon at least three\nmonths to, complete the journey.\nCeremonial Reception Body of\nPeter Verigin at Brilliant Today;\nFuneral Plans in Hands of Family\nPilot Brings In\nSick Cree Indian\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 13 (CP).\u2014Pilot\nCliff Anderson of Canadian Airways\nmade a 350-mlle mercy flight to\nWinnipeg from God's Lake, northern Manitoba, during the weekend\nto bring Able Yellowback, Cree Indian, to hospital here. The Indian's\ncondition today was described as\nfairly good.\nSearch for Brothers\nAbandoned at Coast\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 18 (CP), -\nVajor J. A. Motherwell, supervisor\not fisheries here, said today search\nby Dominion fisheries patrol boats\nfor Hsns and Lars Frederickson,\nbrothers missing from Cape Scott,\nB. C, since Feb. 1, has been abandoned.\nThe .brothers left Cape Scott, at\nthe northern tin of Vancouver\nIsland, for a fishing trip to the\nScott Islands, some miles offshore.\nResidents at Cape Scott fear their\nboat capsized in a storm or dangerous tldepwhlch run between the\nScott islands and Vancouver Island.\nCasket to Be Opened\nfor Doukhobors to'\nGaze on Leader\nDoukhobors are flocklna te\nBrilliant, where this morning they\nwill receive the body of their spiritual leader, Peter Petrovloh Verl-\nSin, who died at Saskatoon Satur-\nay. The body Is due to arrive on\nthe morning train from the east.\naccompanied by the mother, wife\nand grandson of the dead leader.\nA special train of 10 passenger\ncoaches and several baggage cars\nwill bring the Grand Forks contingent, 660 strong, to Brilliant,\narriving about 8:30 this morning\nA fleet of special buses Is scheduled tt> leave Nelson at 6:16 a.m.\nand to operate on an hourly basis\nbetween South Slocan, Brilliant,\nRobson, Castlegar and Poupore,\noarrylng Doukhobors from various\npoints to Brilliant They were\nalready on the move Monday, a\nlarge number from Slocan Valley\npoints wending their way toward\nBrilliant by car and bus. Trains\nand cars brought members ef the\nsect from other district points and\nIt least one family arrived by ear\nfrom Cowley, Alta., scene of a\nDoukhobor colony.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nUnanimous   Decision\nto Refer Contract\nto Committee\nOTTAWA, Feb. 18 (CP).-An\nunqualified demand for the resignation of. Defence Minister Mackenzie by Hon, C. H. Cahan (Con.,\nMontreal St, Lawrence-St. George)\ntonight preceded a unanimous decision by the house of commons\nto refer the Bren gun contract to\nthe public accounts committee.\nEarlier by a vote of 149 to 26\nthe house rejected a Conservative\nmotion to refer the contract for\nthe purchase, of 7000 light machine guns from John Inglls Co.,\nim.\" if Toronto to committee of\nthe whole With Instructions to\nconsider cancellation. '.\nConservatives were alone In supporting the latter proposal. Liberal,\nSocial Credit and C. C. F. members\nvoted against it. All groups, however, supported the motion to refer the contract to Ihe- public accounts committee which originated\nwith Grant MacNeil (C. C. F.; Vancouver North) hut had the support\nof the government throughout\n(Continued on Page Ten)\nPhotos May Give\nClue, Que. Death\nJOLIETTE, Que., Feb. 13 (CP)\u2014\nProvincial detectives tonight seized\na collection of candid camera photographs taken by George Roberts, 55,\ncaretaker, whose battered body was\nfound lying near the furnace in the\nEnglish school here early this morning.\nIt was thought police hoped to\nfind among these pictures clues to\na man or men who last saw Rob-\nberts and who, they claim, murdered him.\nThe caretaker's body was found\nin a pool of blood by teachers of\nthe English school a few minutes\nbefore classes began this morning.\nDetectives said the man had been\nbattered apparently by a crow bar\nand reported there was a neck\nwound.\nR.A.F. LEAVES BARRAGE\nBALLOON TO ITS FATE\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (CP). \u2014 The\nRoyal Air Force abandoned a chase\ntoday for a London barrage balloon which broke from its moorings yesterday and headed over the\nNorth Sea toward Germany, trailing more than 100 feet of steel\ncable.\nWea^ngr\nMin. Max.\nNelson   29 38\nVictoria    41 43\nNanalmo  ..__....\u201e 31 42\nVancouver \u201e  30 40\nKamloops  \u201e  12 30\nPrince  George  _ 12 32\nEstevan Point   38 42\nPrince Rupert _. 34 40\nLangara   ~ 36 42\nAtlin    - 20* 6*\nDawson  40* 20*\nSeattle    - - 42 44\nPortland    _   40 44\nSan Francisco   46 58\nSpokane _ 30 36\nLos Angeles    46 68\nPenticton     27 \u2014\nVernon   19 -\nKelowna     27 38\nGrand Forks   8 28\nKaslo    23 -\nCranbrook ,.  18 37\nCalgary     14' 12\nEdmonton   _.-  12* 8*\nSwift Current  16* 2*\nMoose Jaw   18* 2'\nPrince Albert  16' 6'\nSaskatoon    22' 8*\nQu'Appelle    22' 7'\nWinnipeg   18' 10'\n\u2022\u2014Below zero.\nForecast for Kootenay\u2014Moderate\nto fresh southerly winds, comparatively mild with some light sleet.\nFamily ol Five\nDies in Killings\nFear Husband Would\nKill All Thought\nHallucinations\nCLE ELUM, Wash., Feb; 13 (AP)\n\u2014Mrs. Mary Jacobs, 44, whose fears\nof such a rate authorities said had\nbeen dismissed as \"hallucinations,\"\nwas found dead today, one of five\nvictims, of a multiple killing that\nwiped out the Stove JacobsTartilly.\nCoroner Phil Davidson said Jacobs, 57-year-old crippled miner,\nshot his wife and their three children to death in their beds early\ntoday, and then took his own life\nafter setting' a fire in the basement.\nFiremen, answering an alarm,\nbroke into the house and discovered the tragedy.\nDavidson said Mrs. Jacobs returned home two weeks ago from\nthe Kittitas County hospital, where\nshe had been under observation\nas a mental patient The coroner\nsaid attendants at the hospital reported Mrs. Jacobs was admitted\nin a state of \"hysteria\", asserting\nshe was afraid her husband intended to kill her and the children. Her\nfears were believed to be hallucinations, Davidson said, and were not\nreported to peace officers.\nThe children were Albin, 11;\nLouise, 10, and Stephanie, 9.\nJacobs was disabled in a coal\nmine accident 12 years ago.\nBritish Gov't, to\nBuild Shelters for\nChildren During War\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (CP.-Havas)-\nSir John Anderson, lord privy seal,\nannounced in the house of commons\ntoday that the government has decided to construct shelter camps for\nchildren of large cities in the event\nof war. In peacetime the camps will\nbe used for educational purposes,\nhe added.\nFifty camps, each capable of sheltering 360 children, will be constructed soon at a cost of \u00a31,000,000\n($4,686,250).\nPROMISE HOUSI\nWOULD BE TOLD\nFIRST IS REFUSED\nBY CHAMBERLAIN\nExplains    Devonshire\nMovements at\nMinorca\nSIMON TAKES UP\nMUNICH CHARGES\nLOMDON.-Feb. 13 (AP)\u2014Prlme\nMinister Chamberlain Indicated\ntoday that British and French recognition of the Insurgent regime\nas the sole authority In Spain Is\npossible, and defended British assistance to the Insurgents In negotiations for the surrender of\nMinorca.\nReplying to opposition questions In the house of commons,\nMr. Chamberlain refused to premise that the house would be consulted before recognition of Gen.\neral Franco, asserting \"the gov-1\neminent must take the responsibility.\"\nGreat Britain, he said, is in dose-\ntouch with France and, with tha.,\nsituation in Spain changing so rap-;\nidly, he could not give assurance to-'\nconsider and perhaps decide on ree.\nognltlon tomorrow. The British cab-,\ninet may decide Wednesday.\nMr. Chamberlain said Great Britain put the cruiser Devonshire at\nthe service of the Insurgents last\nweek to establish communication,\nbetween Mallorca and Minorca and.\nto avert an insurgent attack on th\u00ab.\nlatter, a Balearic island.\nThe prime minister said the In\u00ab-\nsurgents had threatened attack un-a.\nless means for communication for.-\nsurrender negotiations were made;'\navailable.\n, Mr. Chamberlain said the Brltlsnr.\ngovernment took no part in thafv\nMinorca negotiations and has T)jB\nresponsibility tor them.\"\nSir Henry Page Croft, Conservan.\nlive, asked:\n(Continued en Page Two)\nGermany Slated\nBartering in U.S.\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 18 (AP)-1\nGermany was reported tonight to\nbe offering farm machinery, poultry\nnetting and barbed wire in ex*\nchange for wheat and lard in extensive pure barter deals with mid-,\nwestern farmers' and packers' co-*:\noperative organizations. i\nThat barter negotiations are being I\ncarried on was confirmed by German sources here and by informed\nquarters in Berlin.\nDr. Wilhlem Tannehberg, first\nsecretary of the German embassy'\nhere, and. Dr. Horst Fricke, German\ncommercial attache-' in Chicago,\nsaid to be representing the relch In\nthe negotiations. Informed persons\nhere would give no hint, however,\nof what American groups were in\",\nvolved.\n(In \"Chicago, representatives or\nthe large packing companies said',\nthey knew nothing of the negotiations).\nColorful Alberta\nCharacter DieS\nLETHBRIDGE, Feb. 13 (CP). \u25a0\nJames \"Jimmy\" Whitford, 86, for,\nmany  years  a  colorful  character\nIn the foothills  country, died atj\nPincher Creek Sunday.\nBorn at St. Boniface, near Fort\nGarry, Man., he it was who brought\nRev. Father Lacombe, famous Cath-1\nolic priest and missionary to tha'\nIndians, fo this country, also L BVj\nHunter, who opened the first Hud- :\nson's Bay trading post at Pincher]\nCreek.\nFORGOTTEN SPANISH CORPS MOVES\nINTO FRANCE AFTER LITTLE SHOW\nPERPIONAN, France, Feb. 13\n(AP)\u2014Lieutenant Colonel Marques, commander of the Spanish\ngovernment's 11th army corps of\n\"forgotten men\", crossed Into\nFrance today and announced his\nfollowers had evacuated the\nSpanish town of Mollo and headed for the French border.\nThese men had dramatically seized the town from Insurgents yesterday in a final gesture of defiance,\nmaking it the last bit of government-held territory in Catalonia.\nToday they left it in orderly fashion,\nmarching out of their own will.\nWhile insurgent guns shelled Madrid again, 4000 former government\nmilitiamen moved across the\nFrench-Spanish frontier into insurgent territory to Hendaye. The insurgents agreed to reopen the frontier after arrangements were made\nto transport the former soldiers in\nfreighters from San Sebastian to\na concentration camp at Cadiz.\nThe group brought the number\nof militiamen going into insurgent\nterritory to 53,500 since the fall of\nBarcelona, Jan, 26.\nMarquez and his aides said they\nhad \"enough ammunition and guns\nleft to put on a little show last\nnight.\"\nWith 300 volunteers, all well armed, Marquez suddenly attacked Mollo, which had been occupied by Insurgent troops yesterday morning.\n\"They were certainly surprised,'\nMarquez said. \"They didn't think\nthere was any tight left in us. There\nwere only about 200 of them in tha'\ntown, and they went out In a hut*\nFRANCO ISSUES\nDECREES\nBURGOS. Spain, Feb. 13 (AP)-;\nAnticipating a complete insurgent\nvictory in the near future, General\nFranco today promulgated a de*\ncree imposing penalties on persons\nIn conquered Spanish territory\ndeemed hostile to the Insurgent\ncause.    .\nExile and loss of citizenship\nare two of the penalties provided\nIn the decree, which covers activities of Spaniards for nearly\ntwo years before outbreak of thi\ncivil war. Insurgent officials her)\nssld these two punishments werl\nthe molt severe Imposed.\nThe decree provided for dissolu,\ntion of all parties of the pro-gow\neminent popular front and contest\nHon of their property, and set ttt\nspecial tribunals to determine taj\ncivil status ot persons in conquer\ned territory.\nThe decree is called the \"law o:\npolitical responsibilities.\" insurgen\nauthorities said it was designed t<\nassure - that persons innocent a\n\"subversive activities\" against flu\ninsurgents will have the same clvl\nrights as have been accorded tin\npeople of Insurgent Spain.\nThe law was published on. whl\nGeneral Franco termed the eve o\nthe \"total liberation of Spain.\"\nJ\n \u25a0\n\t\n SQR TWO\nebon Gyros Are\n| Visited by Their\nDistrict Governor\njvic Centre Amazing\n| W. B. Cromarty of\nCalgary Says\nK \"Your Civic Centre is amazing for\n'_ town of this size, and I am certainly delighted with Nelson,\" W. B.\nCromarty, of Calgary, district gov-\n' irnor of Gyro district No. 8, told\nihe Nelson club at its supper meeting In the Hume hotel Monday eve-\nling, when he paid the club his official visit.\nfe \"I even found out the kind of\nrSoal used in the Civic Centre, I\nmade such a thorough tour of the\nMace,\" Mr. Cromarty said. Nelson\nI Gyros were looked up to by international clubs, and were honored\nfin having three former district governors In the club. They were doing\nHeat work. The former governors\nvwere E. H. Hanley, R. E. Crerar\n\/and R. B. Morris.\nJ  District No. 8 consisted of 11 clubs,\n\u25a0 extending from Edmonton to Spo-\n, Jtane, Wash., and Kellogg and Wai-\nMlace, Idaho. The district was carved\n\"out of District ...o. 4, a coast district, Ih 1924.\nI   \"Our clubs  in this district  are\nI 1 of a very high calibre and they compare favorably with  any  in  the\nGyro organization,\" Mr. Cromarty\n'\u25a0Stated.\nI Gyro was really worthwhile, the\nspeaker believed. Thousands of men\n-had made lifelong friends through\n\u2022.weekly contacts made at meetings.\n\"Men, especially young men, make\n'\u00bb good start in life when they join\n.Gyro,\" he said.\n\u00bb A Founders' fund, to form new\nil. ubs, had been established in 1937,\nnd now totalled about $1800. Con-\nributions from different clubs were\neceived for it.\nR. B. Morris thanked Mr. Cro-\nnarty for his talk, on behalf of the\nBub.\nE. A. Mann moved a vote of\nhanks to Mr. Morris for address-\nng\" the Rotary club at noon. Mr.\ntfann said he had heard from different Rotarians of Mr. Morris' fine\nalk on \"friendship.\"\nG. C. Shapter of Calgary and E.\nt, Kanaly of Vancouver were\nVests.\nCHURCH ROBBED\nWINNIPEG,   Feb.   13    (CP). -\npracksmen broke into St. Nicholas\nainian church here early today\ni stole about $6 from a safe.\nUNDERWOOD\nTYPEWRITERS\nSundstrand Adding Machines\nOFPIPE SUPPLIES\nI Underwood Elliott Fisher Ltd.\n636 Ward St., Phone 99\nMillar Is Ontario\nRep, Macdonald Brier\nSUDBURY, Ont, Feb. 13 (CP).-\nD. Millar's Haileybury rink today\nwon the right to represent Northern\nOntario at the Macdonald Brier\nchampionship bonspiel next month\nat Toronto.\nThe Millar four, Consols champions of the Temiskamlng and\nNorthern Ontario Curling association, today in a best-two-of-three\nmeet at Copper Cliff won two\nstraight games from Bill Duncan's\nSudbury crew, champions of the\nNorthern Ontario Curling association. Scores were 14-8 and 14-10.\nTRAIL CURLING\nRESULTS\nTRAIL, B. C., Fek 13 - Results of\nPresidents' competition games played at the Trail Curling club tonight\nfollow: W. H. Baldrey 8, W. P. Somerville 9; A. E. Calvert 8, W. G.\nCarrie 9; D. Forrest 9, F. J. Glover 7,\nH. C. Caldicott 8, P. F. Mclntyre 9;\nG. Bumfrey 14, C. Hoefer 12; H.\nCurrie 7, J. Campbell 6; A. M. Chesser 8, J. B. Twaddle 9; G. C. McKay\n8, D. Balfour 9.\nResults of Lauener cup competition games played by the Ladies\nclub tonight follow: Mrs. W. Simpson 1, Mrs. A. A. Davidson 13; Mrs.\nDonald MacDonald 6, Mrs. W. Brady\n10; Mrs. M. Devlin 5. Mrs. D. Forrest 7; Mrs. J. A. Millar 9, Mrs. W.\nBarchard 5.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON, B.C-.TUEBDAY MORNINO, VEB. 14,1939\nMORE ABOUT\nLOST PLANE\n(Continued From Page One)\nA sixth person, tentatively Identified as Jack Lennon, 18, of Craig,\nwas reported to have boarded the\nplane at Wrangell, between Ketchikan and Juneau, to fly here.\nThe snow squalls and poor visibility forced Pilot Alex Holden,\nwho took off in a wheel-equipped\nplane soon after daybreak, to return in mid-forenoon. The weather\nremained cold, with a low this\nmorning of 16 above.\nWith Gov. John W. Troy aiding\nin directing the search, several small\nboats left hete to search the coves\nand bays along Stephens Passage in\nthe event Pilot Cope had landed\nin safe waters.\nThe cutter Haida and the bureau\nof fisheries boat Brant' bothpushed\ntheir search efforts today. The Canadian Pacific steamship Princess\nNorah, which left its course on the\nway north from Petersburg late\nyesterday to join in the search, said\ngale weather, with snow, swept the\narea yesterday.\nThe plane, a pontoon ship, left\nKetchikan at 11 a.m. yesterday, flying over the 276-mile \"inside passage\" route north.\nTheMtnirgAfterTakingGrt^bWebverPilh\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON'S LEADING HOTELS\nHume Hotel..Nelson, b.g\n.    GEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 Up\n' HUME-F. Ross, W. H. Walker,\ntA. W. Bisson, W. Bentham, W. J.\n[Crooks, W. G. Norrie-Loewenthal,\nli, Morris, J. Shepherd. R. Leiter-\nman,   Vancouver;   J.   J.   Fanshaw,\nW. B. Cromarty, A. H. Soley, Cal-\nGary; A. Anderson, Medicine Hat;\nDr. J. G. Cunningham, J, A. Cunningham,  Spokane.\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR   VANCOUVER   HOME\"\nDuf Serin Hotel\n900 Seymour St.,  Vancouver, B.C.\nNewly Renovated Throughout. Phones and Elevator.\nA. PATERSON, late of\nColeman. Alta., Proprietor\nThe World Is\nA STAGE\nAnd the People Are Its\nACTORS\nFun for Everyone-Every Day!\nYes-and there's tragedy too!\nThe complete show is brought\nto you daily in the\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper\nMiss Eldt Offers\nTribute Hospital\nWing al Rossland\nRossland had a fine addition to\nhospital facilities in the new wing\nopened at Mater Miserloordlae hospital Sunday afternoon, stated Mln\nVera B. Eidt, superintendent of Kootenay Lake General hospital, at a\nmeeting of the Nelson hospital directorate Monday night\nShe described the electrical equipment as \"superb\". The nuns In\ncharge of the hospital, Miss Eidt\nsaid, extended every courtesy to\nvisitors. They invited Nelson hospital board members to visit and\ninspect the Institution at any time.\nA total of 1500 visitors registered\nat the hospital on the day the wing\nwas opened, Miss Eidt said. She described briefly the opening ceremony.\nTODAY'S MENU\nCHAMBERLAIN\n(Continued From Page One)\n\"If the prime minister even gets\nan application from the republican\ngovernment in Madrid or elsewhere\nfor an emissary of peace will he\ngrant facilities for that emissary to\ngo?\"\nMr. Chamberlain replied: \"We\nwill do whatever we can to assist\nin avoiding bloodshed.\"\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (CP.-Cable) -\nSir John Simon, chancellor of the\nexchequer, today told the house of\ncommons the government takes a\nserious view ot charges that the\nso-called \"option clause\" of the\nMunich agreement Is not being observed.\nThe option -clause concerned the\nright of non-Nazis to leave the Sudeten territory of Czecho-Slovakia\nafter Germany took it over.\nThe chancellor of the exchequer\nsaid British representatives have\nbeen asked to ascertain the govern'\nment's position in the matter.\nSir John's statement came near\nthe end of the debate in the committee stage of the Czecho-Slovaklan\nfinancial assistance bill, after Wedg<\nwood Benn, Labor, moved an\namendment to the subsection dealing with the government's powers\nto guarantee the principal and inter\nest of a loan of \u00a310,000,000 (approximately $50,000,000) to be.raised\nby the Czech government.\nThe amendment, which later was\nquashed without division, demand'\ned the treasury must be satisfied\n\"that full opportunity Is being afforded for exercise of the right of\noption at the outset in section seven\nof the Munich agreement.\"\nMORE ABOUT\nHOOVER\n(Continued From Page One)\nThe president1* solution of this\nproblem la that the government\nspend on a still largo scale \u2022\u2022\u2022\nthat Inasmuch as our present Income Is only $60,000,000, we only\nhave to spend as If we had $80,-\n000,000 In order tp lift ourselves\nup to the Republican level.\n\"As the ancient prospector said,\n\"There ain't no gold in them rainbows.\"\nPEOPLE'S MONEY\n\"That $80,000,000,000 national Income under Republican administration was due to the people spending\ntheir own money, not in taxes but\non reproductive enterprises, creating new jobs for new men. \u2022\u2022*\n\"Public works and public buildings have social value. But as assets with which to relieve taxpayers,\nthey are about as useful as liabilities on a balance sheet. On the\nbasis of this hallucination, my administration would have shown a\nsurplus of $2,000,000,000. ,M\"\n\"And I trust,\" Hoover added sarcastically, \"that the time oft for\nprecinct work (election campaigning) by the Works Progress administration is not included as an\noffset to the national debt.\"\nUnder the new deal, he said, \"extravagance with other people's\nmoney is shifted from a sin to a\nvirtue. \u2022\u2022\u2022\n\"Mr. Roosevelt says 'this generation has a rendezvous with destiny'.\nThe most probable spot for the rendezvous today Is inflation.\n\"When this generation has gone\nup that alley, It will find freedom\nhas gone and our rendezvous will\nbe with a full-sized dictator.\"\nHoover listed the Republican\n\"mission\" as:\nPreservation ef the principles of\n\"tha dignity and personality of\nIndividual men and women **\ntruth, justice, tolerance and\nmercy;\" economic restoration;\nInsuring \"peace for America\".\nSuspension of 3\ners Makes\nStreatham Quit\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (CP Cable).--\nEleven Canadian hockey players\nwill be out of jobs as a result of\ntoday's decision of the Streatham\nclub of the National league to withdraw from the circuit in protest\nagainst suspension of three players\nby the British Ice Hockey association.\nStreatham is tied with Earls\nCourt Rangers in sceond-last place\nin the league standing. In announcing the team's withdrawal, Managing Director A. E. Warman said\nthe club was meeting all Its financial obligations to players and\nadded that the team might tour\nthe continent before disbanding.\nPolice Seek 3\nVancouver Men\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP) -\nBritish Columbia police today were\nasked to look for three men, missing since they left Vancouver Feb.\n6 in the seine boat Detta to prospect\non Texada island In the Strait of\nGeorgia. They are five dayB overdue.\nWives of the men \u2014 \\1. R. Cault-\ner, William Spackman, and a third\nwhose name was not known to of-\nasked police to begin a\nfleers\nsearch\nPlaye\nHOW IS YOUR\nDIGESTION?\nIF you ire troubled\nwith gai, iour Horn*\nftcht or heartburn,\nyour digeition prob*\nably needi asaiatance.\nA tonic that tends to\nImprove the digestion\nts Dr. Pierce's Golden\nMedical Discovery. It\nKtlmulatoa the appe*\ntite too, and as a re*\n\u2022ull T\u00abt feel mon \u00bbl|oroui, Lome Touut, W\nBerkley St., Toronto, Ont,, any*; \"Dr. Plerce'i\nGoldon Modleil DUcom. helped le itlnuUte\nFii. appetite tail toned np bit \u00bblam*\u00abti In greet\n\u2022hape. After r-.ii.it I would belafc get. aloe M\ntout itonnrli, nii.t the 'Dlicovery' rwlered ne of\ntliU condition end tnede Die.feel better In tnau\nirayi.\" lu<\/ Dr. -Pieree'i Golden Medleel Di,.\nrovetjr In liquid or ublelo at your drug itoi*\nHospital I j lo\nApply Again for\nGlfT'lron Lung\"\nAnother application will be made\nby Kootenay Lake General Hospital\nsociety to share In the Empire-wide\ndistribution of \"iron lungs1' offered\nby Lord Nuffield, British motor\nmillionaire. Application was previously made directly, but advice was\nreceived the application should be\nmade later through an appointed\noffice In order to facilitate organize-\ntion for distribution of the gifts to\nevery non-private hospital In the\nEmpire.\nAt Monday night's faeeting the\nboard received a letter from Dr. H.\nE. Young, provincial health officer\noutlining how the application should\nbe made, and decided to proceed\non this basis. Cost of transportation\nof the respiratory apparatus from\nEngland must be guaranteed.\nMORE ABOUT\nBREN DEBATE\n(Continued From Page One)\nSo ended the Bren gun debate\nwhich began more than a week ago\nand which marked a new high in\nbitterness for recent sessions of parliament.\nSeldom in Canadian parliament\nary history has such a direct attack been made on a single minister as was made by Mr. Cahan on\nMr. Mackenzie tonight and seldom\ndoes the house vote all one way\non a formal division.\nThe veteran member called Mr,\nMackenzie a \"recalcitrant, defiant\nand incompetent minister\" and\nbased his demand that the prime\nminister call for Mr. Mackenzie's\nresignation on the minister's alleged failure to keep himself and\nthe government Informed of the\nviews of the interdepartmental committee set up to control profits 911\narmament contracts.\nG. C. McGeer (lib., Vancouver-\nBurrard) promptly came to defence\nof Mr. Mackenzie and declared the\nminister had kept the government\nfully Informed. In an effort to prove\nthis he read Into the record reports\nfrom the interdepartmental committee to the minister and from the\nminister to the cabinet covering\nthe steps leading up to the contract.\nThese reports, he added, were filed\nas exhibits'with Mr. JystlM H. H>\nDavis who investigated the contract\nas a royal commissioner.\nMr. McGeer said the debate had\ntaken a strange turn when lt culminated In an \"appeal to parliament to\nJudge the outcome of proceedings\nthat are now about to be started in\nthe public accounts committee.\"\nMORE ABOUT\n.. t. HOWE\n(Continued Prom Pane One)\nThat venture had little success,\nbut Mr. Howe In the meantime\nploked up other Interests. He came\nto Vancouver where he purchased\nthree downtown business lots for\n(20,000.\nIn March, 1028, he sold the same\nlots, at the corner of Georgia\nand Granville streets, for about\n$1,000,000.\nMeanwhile, Mr. Howe was instrumental in formation of Point\nGrey municipality, now a part of\nVancouver city, and was elected\nits first reeve in 1908.\nHis business held him out of poll-\ntics for the most part from then until 1920 when he was elected president of Vancouver Conservative association, a post he held four years.\nGIVE8 HOR8E8 TO GOVT.\nIn private life he was an ardent\nsportsman, and owned and exhibited\na number ot imported Hackney\nhorses which won championships\nthrough the Pacific Northwest.\nWhen the Great War broke out he\npresented two of them to the Dominion government, and one of Uie\ntwo\u2014Brocklebank\u2014was ridden by\nGeneral Sir Arthur Currie throughout his campaigns.\nHe also turned over the government his 70-foot power yacht,\nEpaullne, which was used as a floating base for airplane spruce operations in the Queen Charlotte islands.\nMr. Howe was appointed honorary\nlieut-colonel of the first battalion\n(16th C. E. F.) of the Canadian\nScottish regiment.\nIn 1935 he presented a series of\nfour historic panels for the actogan-\nal rotunda In the legislative buildings at Victoria. George H. Southwell, British artist, was commissioned to do the work.\nMr. Howe was predeceased by his\nwife in 1933 and by his only daughter. Edna Pauline, some years previously.\nUNWIN DEFENDS\nSOCRED POLICY\nEDMONTON, Feb. 13 (CP)-De-\nfence of the Social Credit government's policy was voiced today by\nJ. W. Unwin (S.C. Edson) in continuing debate on the speech from\nthe throne after criticisms had been\nlevelled at the administration by E.\nL. Gray, Liberal leader. Debate was\nadjourijed by Dr. Walter Morrison\n(Lib. Edmonton). Mr. Gray declared the federal wheat price of 80\ncents a bushel for No. 1 northern\nat Fort William had put (22,800,000\ninto Alberta; urged action to bring\n\"order out of chaos\" in the debt situation; declared the time long past\nwhen something progressive should\nbe done about unemployment and\nclaimed the throne speech Indicated new taxation.\n __,:.._______   ___\nVETERAN   OIE8\nWINNIPEG, \u2022 Feb, 13 (CP). -\nFuneral services will be held here\ntomorrow for Major William F.\nBurnham, 72, who died Saturday, a\nveteran of the Kiel rebellion, and\nthe South African war. ,\nFriendship Is\nBasis of Gyro\nRotarians Toll\nMorris Exploit\nPrincipled\n, Gyro Be\nPower, poise and pi\nthe three bywords, or\nof Gyro, and friendship wai,\nthe club worked consistently for,\nR. B. (Jack) Morris, past Gyro district governor, told the Rotary club\nat its meeting in the Hume hotel\nMonday, '    > \u201e\n\"Someone hu said that the greatest of all goods Is friendship, and\nthe one we think the least of when\nacquiring,\" Mr. Morris said. \"There\nis a lot of truth In that statement\nand it should not be, for we should\ngive a great deal of time and consideration to the choosing of our\nreal friends. For there Is nothing\nin the wide world so greatly to be\nenjoyed as true friendship. With\none who takes an interest In your\nwelfare, who will not flatter you\nto your face, and who will defend\nyour good name and your actions\non all occasions.\"\nA definition bt \"friend\", given In\nan English newspaper was simple\nbut true, the speaker stated. The\ndefinition was \"one who comes in\nwhen all the world goes out.\"\nFew words In the English langu\nage were so misunderstood, so\nwrongly defined and so inappropriately used as the word \"frlendsh\u25a0\u25a0>.\"\nMere acquaintance did not constitute friendship, neither did benevolence, which consisted of good\nwill to mankind In general, Mr.\nMorris believed.\n\"A friend Is one who Is for you\nalways. Whatever kind of coat you\nare wearing suits him, whether you\nhave on a dress suit or a torn working shirt, it is fine with him. He\nlikes your moods, he enjoys your\npessimism just as much as your\noptimism. He likes your success\nand your failures endear you to\nhim the more. He wants nothing\nfrom you except that you be your-\nself.\nWhen you are vigorous and spirited, you like to take your pleasure\nwith him. When you are in trouble\nyou want to tell him. Whenyou\nare sick you want to see him. When\nyoli are dying you want him near\nyou,\" Mr. Morris said.\nGyro was not really a service\nclub, as lt was not organised for\nsuch, but Gyros as good citizens are\nalways doing something in the way\nof community service.\nW. J. McLean thanked Mr. Morris\nfor his talk, on behalf of the club.\nDr. Nell E. Morrison was initiated\nas a new member. S. A. Speers of\nCreston and C. F. Domoney of Nelson were geusts.\nHOCKEY\nHERE   and   THERE\nBy The Canadian Press\nSATURDAY\nNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nMontreal 3, Toronto 3, overtime\ntie.\nINTER-AMERICAN\nProvidence 2, Philadelphia 4.\nSpringfield 2   Pittsburgh 8.\nSyracuse 2, Hershey 3.\nNew Haven 1, Cleveland 5, overtime.\nEAST U.8. AMATEUR\nConcordia (Montreal) 5, Atlantic\nCity 3.\nNew   York  Rovers   4,   Hershey\nCubs 0.\nINTER INTERCOLLEGIATE\nUniversity of Toronto 3, McGill\nUniversity 5.\nU. of Manitoba 3, U. of Minnesota 0.\nJUNIOR ONT. \"A\"\nSt Mithael's 5 Native Sons 4.\nMANITOBA JUNIOR\nPortage 1, Kenora 0.\nEDMONTON JUNIOR\nMaple Leafs 3, Canadiens 2 (1st\nof best-of-three semi-finals),\nINTERNATIONAL\nDuluth 5, Hlbbing 0.\n8UNDAY\nAMERICAN ASSOCN.\nSt. Louis 10, Kansas City ft\nMinneapolis 5, Tulsa 4 (overtime)\nINTER. AMERICAN\nCleveland Barons 2, Syracuse 2\n(tie).\nPhiladelphia Ramblers t, Springfield Indians 1.\nProvidence 7, New Haven 1.\nEASTERN   AMATEUR\nBaltimore 6, Hershey 4\nTHUNDER BAY SR.\nGeraldtown 3, Port Arthur 2.\n(Through unavoidable circumstances, the week-end hockey scores\nwere not published yesterday).\nMONDAY\nALBERTA SENIOR\nEdmonton 6, Turner Valley 2\nCalgary 8, Drumheller 2.\nLethbridge 10, Olds 4\nEdmonton 1, Lethbridge 3.\nTurner Valley 4, Calgary 3.\nAMERICAN ASSN.\nTulsa 1, St. Paul 4.\nSASKATCHEWAN SENIOR\nRegina 3, Saskatoon 1.\nWeyburn 10, Yorkton 8.\nTrail School Rate\nIs Up Three Mills\nTRAIL, B. C Feb. 13-An in.\ncrease of about three mills for\nschools taxation for this year was\nindicated by an Increase over last\nyear of about (20,000 in the estimates of ordinary expenditures of\nthe Trail-Tadanac and District\nschool board, accepted by a meeting of the city council tonight.\nTotal estimates are (139,032.48,\nof which (102,108.58 Is to be raised,\nthe balance being received In the\nform of government grants, rentals.\netc.\nOf the (102,105, 51.2 per cent of\n(52,278.06 Is to be provided by\nTadanac and 48.8 per cent or (49,-\n827.52 by Trail. .\nAlderman .Charles Catalano, who\nIs also a school trustee, pointed out\nthat the district's school population\nhas Increased 15 per cent over last\nyear.\nFollowing receipt ot a latter from\nClegg A Clegg, City solicitors, regarding tho agreement between Trail\nand Tadanac on school taxes, Mayor\nE. I-. Groutage explained that Tadanac wished to deduct from the\ntotal, taxes to be paid bathe newly\nadded districts, before the split was\nmade between the two municipalities.\nThe matter was referred to the I\nnext meeting of the council.\nResults\nMrs. Wallace and\nMra. Kraft Win\nCurling Games\npf Esling cup competition\nid by the Nelson Ladles\nr .ifternoon fol-\nntulace 11, Mrs. A.\nAndy Kraft 10, Mrs.\nare:  Mrs.  John\n_S. M. Whimster,\nline     !__frs. Lou Maddin\nitehead vs. Mrs.\nSpokane Figure\nSkaling Stars at\nGyro Ice Carnival\nGyro officials In charge oi the\ncoming Ice carnival which will be\nheld in the Nelson Civic Centre\narena Friday evening are not overlooking any opportunities to make\ntms event, fourth of their history,\noutstanding.\nNine starts of the Spokane Figure\nSkating club. Including Hans John-\nsen, the club's professional, of\nworld-wide fame, will te a special\nattraction and the 13 various skating numbers in which they will perform will undoubtedly prove to be\neye-openers to local sport enthusiasts. Two local numbers will be\nalso put on to add to the fine program to be afforded the audience.\nThe visiting acts will consist ot a\nRussian Goucho, a 14 step dance,\n\"Wave Ballet\", \"Orthdox\", \"Rhythm\nTango Dance, \"Octette\", \"Rhythm\non Ice\" and \"The Sailor Man\", most\nof the' above being picturesque\ngroup performances, and several\nsolo numbers, Jacqueline Hesse of\nNelson will give a solo skating display while the other number put\non by local girls will be a duet by\nIsabelle Young and Claire Hughes.\nThe fancy skating program will take\nup nearly an hour.\nThe visiting skating troupe com-\nKrises Mr. and Mrs. Hans Johnsen,\nIt. and Mrs. Warren Throop, Betty\nLaberee, Bill Wade, Gloria Sherwood, Dr. C. Hale Kimbale, and\nMary Ruth Barnes.\nOther sections of the program,\nbesides the fancy skating, will be\nmasquerade costume skating corn-\ntest, races and a moccasin dance.\nMORE ABOUT\nPETER VERIGIN\n(Continued From Page One)\nUp to Monday evening, 300 bus\nreservations had been made at\nShoreacres and Glade.\nFEW FROM PRAIRIE\nIt was not expected the prairie\nDoukhobors would be represented\nin large numbers at this time. Most\nof them paid their final tribute to\nthe leader before his body left Saskatoon for Brilliant, where it is to\nbe laid beside that of his father, the\nelder Verigin, who since his death\nhas been called \"Peter Lordly\" by\nhis followers. Difficult times will\nreduce the number able to travel\nto Brilliant for the funeral. They\nwill be largely represented later,\nhowever, when a new leader Is\nchosen.\nFuneral arrangements are not\nyet known, Officials of the Christian Community of Universal\nBrotherhood, Limited, the Doukhobor business organization, stated\nMonday these arrangements were\nin the hands of the members of the\nfamily, with whom also rests for\nthe present at least the spiritual\nleadership of the sect.\nElaborate ceremonies for the reception of the body at Brilliant\nhave been arranged. When the\nbody la removed from the train\nthe casket Is to be placed on the\nground and opened, so that mourners may look upon their erstwhile\nleader. Thence it will be carried to\nPeter's house in slow procession,\nand mourning ceremonies will continue there, leading up to the burial\non a high point overlooking Brilliant.\nUntil the funeral the business ot\nthe Community will be tt a standstill, and only those things which\nare necessary will be done In the\nsix-week mourning oeriod to follow. The mourning period will be\nterminated by a memorial service\nat the tomb, and will be followed\nby the election of a new leader.\nIt Is anticipated the leader will\nbe chosen informally during the\nmemorial service at the tomb, and\nthat he will be formally confirmed\nat a business meeting shortly afterward. When Peter Verigin succeeded his father, killed in a train explosion 15 years ago, 10,000 Doukhobors gathered at Brilliant for\nthe memorial service and election\nof the first Peter's successor.\nSPOKANE WINS\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP)-\nVancouver Lions sank deeper Into\nthe mire of the Pacific Coast Hockey league cellar tonight when they\nwere set back 3-2 by the former\ncellar occupants, Spokane Clippers,\nIn a close-fought game here.\nAlaska Shipping\nStrike Is Ended\nSEATTLE, Feb. 13 (API-Members ot the local masters, mates and\nAllots union voted tonight to return\nb Work tomorrow morning, ending\nthe strike that has tied up all Alaska\nshipping here the last 10 days.\nCOMMITTEE TO ACT ON\nREPAIR WORK HOSPITAL\nRepair' of a dumb waiter and a\nrefrigerator at Kootenay Lake General hospital was ref;rred by the\nsociety directors Monday night to\nthe house committee and executive,\nwith power to act.\nFink's Furniture\n\u2022'..\u25a0   y   '        y; \"   1\nSTUDIO\nLOUNGES\nOne Carload of new money-saving values\nThe new Modern Lounges with Chesterfield arms.\nDistinctly different. Decidedly new. Coverings\nbrocaded. Velours and home spuns.\nStudio Lounge\nStudio Lounge and Chair\n$39.75 $7950\nBuy the Best\u2014BUY SIMMONS\nFURNITURE\nRossland Council Will Thaw Pipes\non (ily Property; Private Charges\nRoad   Between   Two\nCemeteries Is\nDiscussed\nROSSLAND, B. C, Feb. 13 \u2014 During the winter months when Rossland citizens are faced with the\nproblem of frozen water pipes, the\nRossland city council took it upon\nitself at its meeting tonight to thaw\nout free of charge, those lines which\nare on city property, but If the\n'\u2022freeze\" Is on private property a\nfee of $2.50 will be charged.\nApplication of residents living in\nthe vicinity of Fourth and Monte\nCristo streets for a street light near\nthe railway crossing was referred\nto the fire, water and light committee.\nASK8 LICENCE REDUCTION\nA letter ot complaint from J. L.\nLooney, manager of the local theatre,\nasking for a decrease in the trade\nlicence fee from $75 for six months,\nto $50 for the same period, was read.\nPrior to the reassessment of city\nproperty this licence had cost $10 for\nthe same term.\nA letter from the B. C. Fire Chiefs\nassociation. Vancouver, asking for\nrepresentatives from the Rossland\nfire department and the city council to attend a fire college at Vancouver next summer, was read to\nthe council. This invitation was referred to the fire, water and light\ncommittee.\nAn expenditure of $911 was reported by the board of public works\ncommittee. This sum was distributed as follows: Water works maintenance, $91; street maintenance,\n$302.50; sidewalks, $20; schools, $114;\nskating rink $87.50; and hydrants,\n$16.\nThe relief committee reported an\nexpenditure of $532.\nNEW  ROAD  TALKED\nPossibility of constructing a road\nfrom the city cemetery to the Mountain View cemetery, and to Scho-\nfield Highway, was discussed. This\nroute would connect the Happy Valley section of the city wi'' theScho-\nfield highway, and would be a\ngreat convenience in the winter.\nA discussion regarding the clearing of the snow around the city hall\nfollowed. A motion was adopted to\nthe effect that the fire department\nshould be held responsible for clearing the snow on the sidewalk around\nthe hall, and that the front\" of the\nhall should be left to the discretion\nof the fire chief.\nThe fire, water and light committee reported 25 work days of\nwhich 21 were taken up by water\nworks, and four for hydrants.\nPEDENS FIFTH\nCHICAGO, Feb. 13 (AP)-The\nGerman-American team of Heinz\nVopel and Cecil Yates maintained\n.its lap lead at 9 p.m. P.S.T. in the\ncity's 41st annual six-day bicycle\nrace.\nThe Canadian brother combination of Doug and Torchy Peden of\nVictoria, B.C., rode in fifth place.\nPrevent m health with\nrich, rod blood   thr\ngreatest gerrnjeide, use\nDr. Chase's Nerve Food\nCONTAINS   VIT1MIN   Bl\n%> HEAT YOU WANT\nHot IMx**. --Tlot j&*l\nTHERE'S everyday comfort and\neconomy In Michel Coal because .\nIt burns Just aa you want It regardless ef weather conditions. Michel\nla a choice coking coal and a small\namount Is easily kindled and regulated for economical heat In mild\nweather.\njftwR^a Ani) th\u00abr\u00bb'\u00ab b|00er savings on real\neold days, because Michel Coal\nburns aa required, la easily con.\ntrolled, and glvea lasting Intense\nheat\nCOBBLE AND STOKER SIZES-ORDER A TON TODAY!\nMICHEL COAL\nVIKIIMGIZED   , ^LAUNDERED\na\nCLEAN       M,\nPURE\nNELSON MICHEL AND FERNIE COAL DEALERS\nWest Transfer\nCompany\nie33\nMacDonald Ctg.\nOr Fuel Co.\nPtyne\n I '     ''\n-mmmmmm\nNILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNING. FEB. 14, 1939\nCommon Idea of\nHell Is False.\nSays C.C. Weis\na Evangelist C. C. Weis declared\nthat the conception of hell as forever belching forth destruction with\nthe devil as superintending Its fires\nwas not based on Scripture, the\nspeaker denying the existence of\neither, in his Sunday night lecture\n\u25a0t Silica hall.\n..'\u25a0 Mr. Weis said that such a conception was designed to frighten\npeople into'being Christian, \"and\nGod pity the man or woman whose\nChristianity is motivated by ,fear.\"\nNor did a burning hell and a devil\nwith a .pitchfork agree with his\nown conception ot a God, he added.\nNevertheless, a destruction of the\nwicked was taught in the Bible,\nand was known as the second death,\ntaking place after the 1000 years\nwhen the hosts of evil surrounded\nthe New Jerusalem and the fire\n\"comes down from heaven and devours them.\"\n! Scriptures were read as the evan-\nfelist explained that this fire would\ne unquenchable till it had done its\nwork, and then it would go out of\nIts own accord. It would be eternal\nJn its effect, but not eternal in the\nduration of time lt took to burn up\nthe wicked. After having devoured\nthe wicked as stubble till they were\nreduced to ashes, this fire would\ngo out, and even Its place and the\nfact that it ever existed would be\nforgotten. The purpose of this fire\nwas to destroy sin completely, not\nfo keep lt ever in existence, not\neven in hell, he contended.\nMr. Weisxconcluded with the re-\nBark that however real this file\nwould be, it was never prepared for\nhumanity, \"for God loves the sinner.\" Rather it was \"prepared for\nthe devil and his angels,\" and only\n\u2022Jhose who refused to forsake sin\nwould perish with it.\nMcKinnon Is Head\nof Selkirk Curlers\nfor Ihe 1939 Season\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.. Feb. 12-An-\nnual meeting and banquet ot the\nSelkirk Curling association was\nheld here Friday evening with some\n150 attending. President Ben Luck\nof Canal Flats was In the chair.\nAfter the opening ceremonies, President Luck turned over the meeting to Harry Twells, secretary of\nthe Kimberley club. The Kimberley Pipe band presented several\nwell received selections. The toast\nlist Included \"That roarin' game\",\nproposed by H. R. Banks. Chapman Camp, and responded to by\nEric McKinnon of Cranbrook. The\ntoast to the visitors was proposed\nby J. B. Giegerich, Kimberley, and\nresponded to by Mr. Twigg of Creston and Mr. Roscoe of Cranbrook.\nThe entire assembly stood for a\nminute's silence in respect to the\nmemory of D- A. Sutherland, who\ndied here last week.\nElection of officers for the en-\nauing year resulted as follows: Hon.\nF. M. MacPherson and Hon. H. H.\nStevens, honorary presidents; Dr.\nMcKinnon, A. C. Bowness and H. A.\nMcKowan, Cranbrook, honorary\nvice-presidents; C. E. McKinnon,\nCranbrook, president; Harry Twells,\nKimberley, vice-president; James\nMartin, Cranbrook, secretary-treasurer; Rev. F. V. Harrison, Cranbrook,\nchaplain. The executive, consisting\nof a member from each club, will\nbe named by the clubs at a later\ndate.\nHigh light of the evening was a\npresentation to J. D. Burnyeat,\" manager of the Bank of Montreal, and\na valued member of the Kimberley\nclub, who leaves shortly for Nanai-\n\u2022 mo, where he has been transferred.\nThe presentation was made by C. T.\nOughtred.\nLUMSDEN, Sask. (CP).-W.-Chat-\nterton, Lumsden pioneer, Is 90 years\nold but says \"I feel like 80.\" To\nprove it he walks to the Lumsden\nschool where he \"chins\" the acro-\n> batic bar a few times \"just to show\n\"em.\"\nLONDON, (CP) - Mrs. Hannah\nHatt was refused admission to'Chippenham police court because she\nwas hatless, though a defendant and\nshe had to go out and buy a hat to\nbe admitted.\nA Hacking, Racking\nPersistent Cough\nThe   constant hacking,  racking,\nrslstent cough that sticks to you\nspite of everything yon do to get\nrid of it is the kind that is dangerous to neglect.\nThe longer till cough sticks, the\nmore serious, menace it becomes to\nyour health.\nBut, there is a remedy to relieve\ntoughs\u2014coughs that won't let go.\nDr. Wood's Korway Pine Syrup is\nthat remedy.\nIt has a healing and soothing\naction on the air passages, and acts\nas a disinfectant of the respiratory\norgans, destroying the germs that\nmay produce serious complications.\nBin I. MUbnrn Oo., Ltd., Toronto, Out,\n\u25a0 (Advt)\nGLO - COAL\nDrumheller's   BEST\nThis li positively\nHis bail eoil wo\nhave ever handled\nTry a ten today\nand you twill bo\nCONVINCED\nSTOVE, Ton      $9.00\nLUMP, Ton     $10.50\nPHONE 701 TODAY\nFairview\nFuel Co.\nGay Costumes at El fiesta\nThese are just a few of the dashing costumes\ndisplayed at the Nelson junior board of trade's\nFiesta at the Civic Centre hall Friday night. Ranged\non tha shelves ol El Chlco bar behind the group are\nextract of pure loco weed, cactus water, etc., etc.,\nLeft to right the senors, senoras and senorltas are\nJ. J. (Mickey) McEwen, Fred Leno, Mrs. Kerby\nGrenfell, Miss Minnie Wetterhuus, Miss Shirley\nReid, Mrs. Jack Connlck and William rtobison.\nCURLERS HAVE \"HIGH OLD TIME\"\nIN ROSSLAND-TRAIL BONSPIEL\nLeighton, Miss Horn\nWin Skating Titles\nLAKE PLACID, N. Y., Feb. 13\n(AP). \u2014 Chuck Leighton of Minneapolis and Maddy Horn of Beaver\nDam, Wis., today won the men's\nand women's senior North American\nspeed skating championship.\nLeighton was nosed out by Kenneth Bartholomew, also of Minneapolis, the United States title-\nholder, in the half mile, final event\non the; program, but the second\nplace was enough to give him the\ntitle with 110 points.\nDelbert Lamb of Milwaukee, Wis.,\nwho like Leighton, is a member\nof the 1040 United States Olympic\nin\nympl!\npolni\nteam,   finished   second\nstandings with 80.\nA victory in the 440 and a second\nplace in the half-mile gave Miss\nHorn the women's title with 130\npoints. Mary Dolan of Minneapolis\ngarnered 120 points for runner-up\nhonors.\nJohnny Quigg, of Saint John.\nN. B\u201e only Canadian competitor,\nmade his best showing when, in a\ntrial heat of the senior men's 440,\nhe was second to Bartholomew.\nIndians Take\nPrbcfer Again\nby Score of 4-3\nHandicapped in not having the\nservices of the high-scoring Morris\nMajor and J. Crosby,' the Procter\nStars were forced to bow 'to the\nNorth Shore Indians to the tune\nof 4-3 in an exhibition game played\nat Cherry Bay Sunday afternoon.\nPlay was extremely fast until the\nfinal period when the ice became\nsoft due to the mild weather.\nThe Dayman brother combination led the Indians' attack with a\ngoal apiece, followed by Kenneth\nCampbell and B. Thompson with\na counter each. Scoring was also\nevenly divided among the Stars,\nColin Major, Geoff Hartridge, and\nB. Noakes each denting the twine\nonce. This was Noakes' first game\nwith the Stars and he turned in a\ngood performance.\nJ. Houston handled the whistle\nand I. McKinnon was timekeeper.\nBefore the game lunch was served\nto the visiting Willow point boys,\nthe refreshment committee consisting of Miss I. McKinnon, Miss Joy\nDeDpert Lamb of Milwaukee, Wis.,\nand Miss Mary Campbell.\nRed Rock Lady\nDies in Nelson\nMrs. May Patterson, 47-year-old\nwife of Milton Patterson of Red\nRock, B, C, died in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital early Monday\nmorning following an Illness of\nseveral months. She was admitted\nto the Nelson hospital Dec. 24.\nMts. Patterson was born in New\nBrunswick in 1892, coming out west\nsome 30 years ago. Four years later\nshe was married to Mr. Patterson,\nthen making her home with him\nat Red Rock. On last Dec. 24, she\narrived In Perry1 Siding to visit her\nparents, Mr, and Mrs. James Sco-\nvil, and her sister, Mrs. Leonard\nWood, all ot Perry Siding. She was\nill when she arrived and the next\nday was sent to the Nelson hospital.\nBesides her parents and sister at\nPerry Siding and her husband at\nRed Rock, she is survived by one\nson, James, three daughters, Dora,\nFrances and Vera, all of Red Rock;\nand another sister, Mrs. Ada Cummings of Vancouver. She will be\nburled In Nelson in the latter part\nof the week.\nHer home at Red Rock is a few\nmiles trom Prince George.\nClassifications, Rinks\nMixed; Trail Is\nWinner\nTRAIL, _. C. \u2014 With curlers playing under every classification but\ntheir own, with curlers'of Rossland\nand of Trail playing on rinks of the\nother, it was a merry 'spiel at the\nTrail Curling club Saturday.\nIt was a points competition and\nalong about midnight Trail beat\nRossland 219 to 139.\nPlay got under way at 2 p.m. At\n5 o'clock clam chowder, \"a la Alex\"\nBuchan\" was served and there was\nlots on hand for a bowl between\ngames.\nResults, with Rossland rinks given first In each case, follow:\nR. Donaldson 9, David Forrest 10.\nJ. Gordon 5, W. McLeary 14.\nR. W. Timms 6, D. MacDonald 9.\nR. G. Boyle 9,W. G. Carrie 9.\nA. Pollock 6, F. Strachan 11.\nR. Anderson 9, W. L. Wood 3.\nT. Yolland 10, A. M. Chesser 9.\nTucker Stevens 11, W. Brown 7.\nA. Younie 10, G. Bumfrey 6.\nR. Donaldson 9, R. Somerville S.\nJ. Gordon 4, S. R. Walley 16.\nK. Martin 9, G. W. Weir 10.\nW. Blair 6, D. McLeod 17.\nT. Yolland 9, J. H. Woodburn 7.\nR. G. Boyle 10, Dave Balfour 13.\nR. W. Timms 3, W. H. Baldrey 17.\nT. Stevens 13, W. Brown 3.\nA. Pollock 9, W. F. Doubt 17.\nR. G. Boyle 6, G. F. Reimann 19.\nR. Anderson 2, H. McLaren 21.\nPersonnel of the rinks follows:\nROSSLAND-\nR. Donaldson, T. Demour, F. N.\nSawyer and Don Sutherland.\nJ. Gordon, Ralph Berry, Al Abbot and M. Stinson.\nR, W. Timms, Bob Crawford, Abbot and W. Pollock.      ,     .   .\nR, G. Boyle, Murray Gibson, Jimmy Robertson and Don Venture.\nA. Pollock, W. Pollock, R. Richardson and A. Peebles.\nR. Anderson, Frank Ellis, Jim\nGeorgeson and Bruce Prosperver-\nrnere.\nT. Yolland, W. Knight, Joe Mc-\nDonnel and H. Donaldson.\nTucker Stevens, Jim Hansen, Jack\nMolyneux and Don Venture.\nA. Younie, Lou Crowe, Joe Mc-\nDonnel and E. Perkins.\nR. Donaldson, T. Damour, F. N.\nSawyer and Don Sutherland.\nK. Martin, BUI Blair, Bill Yawney\nand Ken Martin jr.\nW. Blair, K. Martin, Bill Yawney\nand Ken Martin jr.\nTRAIL\u2014\nDave Forrest, Bert Wolfe, Charlie\nDuncan and Tom Kenny.\nW. McLeary, Alex Laurie, Bill\nBurgess and Lloyd Huston.\nDonald MacDonald, A. L McCal-\nllster, Boh Dockerlll and Les Baker.\nW. G. \u2022Carrie, Sam Biagioni, Dr.\nR. W. Williamson and R. W. Wilson.\nFrank Strachan, J. McAllister,\nJohnny Niven and Hugh Miller.\nW. L. Wood, Jack Schofield, Gerry Service and P. F. Mclntyre.\nA. M. Chesser, Charlie Thomson,\nHarold Doyle and Les Baker.\nWalter Brown, Jim Atwell, J. D.\nHartley and Lock Knowles.\nG. Bumfrey, Mike Butorac, Char-\nHe Stewart and A. B. Ross.\nR. Somerville, R. Somerville jr.,\nDan McLeod and Norman Robertson.\nS. R. Walley, W. G. Carrie,. Ham\nCurrie and Dr. W. R. Williamson.\nG. W.'Weir, Freddie Wendel, Tom\nNixon and Herb Martin (Rossland).\nD. McLeod, Johnny McNiven,\nFred Scott and Walter Brown.\nJ. H. Woodburn, A. M. Chesser,\nAlex Balfour and Jim Thorndale.\nDave Balfour, Charlie Strachan,\nWilliam Taylor and Vic Ferguson.\nW. H. Baldrey, Jim Leckie, Char-\nHe Stewart and A. W. Harrod.\nW. F. Doubt, H. T. Beckett, Chuck\nTyson and Lloyd Eustis.\nG. F. Reimann, A. M. Chesser, C.\nM. Thomson and Jack Craig.\nH. A. McLaren, J. Mark, A. G.\nCheyne and \"Brick\" Kenny.\nTESSIER, Sask. (CP). \u2014 Birds\nof a feather don't always flock together. A blackbird in full plumage\nan unusual sight in winter, is wintering with a flock of sparrows\nhere.\n37 Fined In Trail Night Court\nAfler Raids Upon Five Places\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 13-Wlfliln a\nlittle more than three hours, from\nabout midnight Sunday to 3 o'clock\nMonday morning, -Trail police raided five establishments, seized gambling paraphernalia in four and\nliquor in the other, and arraigned\n37 men before Magistrate Donald\nMacDonald. who imposed fines totalling 11690.\nIt was the first night court convened in the city In many years.\nEmillo Gallo, Rossland avenue,\ncharred, with keeping liquor for\nsale was fined (400.\nWilliam Graham charged with\nmaintaining, a common gaming\nhouse )h a pool room in the basement of' the Doukhobor block was\nfined (100, and  12 Inmates each\nJ25; the Ifimates were Lee Ogilvie,\noe Demotion, Howard Johnson,\nPete Postnitoft, John Graham, Carl\nChristlanson, Eric Skauge, William\nAnderson, John Vallance, Roy McLaren, Virgil Myers and Alex Gri-\npich.\nFor maintaining a common gaming house, In premises at the rear\nof Canada Billiards, Rossland avenue, Giordano Zanier was fined\n$100, and inmates, Giacomo Nonis,\nMark Tajnon, Alonso Meros, George\nGallon and Nicholas Sacas were\nfined each $25.\nJohn Morrison was fined $100 for\nmaintaining a common gaming\nhouse, on premises at the rear of\nthe Nugget Confectionery and Cigar store, Bay avenue, and inmates Samuel Miller, Gordon Nelson, Fred Leschert, George Waldo,\nKenneth Hayward, Pete Kovich,\nArthur Dafoe and Walter Morrlce,\nwere each fined (25.\nFor maintaining a common gaming house, in Bird's pool room, Bay\navenue, Bert Morrison was fined\n(100 and'inmates, Hans. Christian-\nson, Cecil Grlmwood, Claire Mc-\nGowan, Herbert Comrle, Jack Ra-\njala and Philip Wless,' paid the\ncourt (29 each.\nThaw Continues\nWith .02 Sleet\nA steady thaw continued in Nelson Monday to turn snow in much-\ntravelled places into a mass of\nslush, especially in the lower levels. The mercury rose to only 36 ie-\ngrees, three lower than on Sunday.\nThe minimum of 29 degrees was recorded Sunday night when the wet\nsnow on sidewalks froze and made\nwalking difficult. A trace of snow\nfell before 5 o clock yesterday afternoon when the readings for the\nday closed but In the evening wet\nsnow fell quite steadily. Sleet during the day was measured at .02\ninch of moisture.\"\nFormer Resident\nof Trail Passes\nat Mission (Ily\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 13-The death\noJ Mrs. J. H. Owen, 72, a former\nresident of this city, occurred in\nMission Saturday.\nSurviving are her husband, two\nsons, Reginald and Finch; and a\ndaughter-in-law, Mrs. Finch Owen,\nall of Mission.\nMrs. Owen, who was bom In\nEngland, left Trail'with her husband and family about eight years\nago. She was well known here and\nwas an active worker in the Angii\ncan church. She was a former president of the Women's auxiliary to\nthe East Trail Anglican mission and\nwas a member of the Eastern Star\nlodge.\nMrs. Owen and her husband were\nkeen horticulturists, having fine\ngardens at Columbia Gardens. They\nlived in Trail for more than 10\nyears.\nEnglish Cup Draw\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (CP Cable).-\nFavorites in the current tournament, Wolverhampton Wanderers\nand Everton, may meet in the\nsixth round for the English cup to\nbe played March 4. The 'teams\nwere drawn together today but\nthe meeting is contingent on Everton defeating Birmingham in a\nreplayed fifth-round game this\nweek.\nThe toffee-makers drew 2-2 at\nBirmingham Saturday, but based\non their showing thli season they\nshould win the replay at Goodison\nPark. Wolverhampton will be the\nvenue for the sixth-round match\nand in the event the league-leading Everton is visiting a record\ncrowd is anticipated.\nPreston North End, the cupholder,\nwill make a long journey to Portsmouth, Huddersfield Town meets\nSunderland or Blackburn Rovers\nand four clubs are still in the hunt\nfor the remaining match. The winner of the Chelsea-Sheffield Wednesday fifth-round contest is drawn\nat home against Sheffield United or\nGrimsby Town.\nThe sixth-round draw:\nChelsea or Sheffield Wednesday\nvs. Sheffield United or Grimsby\nTown.\nWolverhampton Wanderers vs.\nBirmingham or Everton.\nHuddersfield Town vs. Sunderland or Blackburn Rovers.\nPortsmouth vs. Preston North\nEnd.\n-PAGE THREt\nT$ul$ii\\f$%qi (&t!tjmtt\u00a3.\nWeOBPORATgQ   2W Mi-W 1670\nDresses \u2014 With a Hint of Spring\nBrilliant and gay, these new prints make you look and feel like a new person. The patterns are different, and the styles are advanced. Spring fashion leaders. Sizes 14 to 44.\n\u2022 PRINTED SILKS ,\n\u2022 PLAIN CREPE at\n\u2022 LOVELY DESIGNS -. T.\n\u2022 NEW COLORINGS. Priced at\t\n3*9$\nNEW SPRING BLOUSES\nSmart, carefully tailored blouses in the\never-popular shirtwaist style. Good qual-\nity satin, tucked and pleated with short \u00a7*_% ,29\nsleeves.   Eggshel\nSizes 14 to 30 .\nWhite   and   colors.\nBIAS-STRAIGHT SUPS\nFigure-flattering slips to wear under you new spring\nfrocks. Tailored, embroidered or lace-trimmed in soft\nBemberg satin. Perfect fitting with the ^ ^    __\nBi-Kay feature. Tearose and white in $ \u25a0 *59\nsizes 32 to 44       J_b\t\nKAYSER LINGERIE\nThe trade-mark of good lingerie. Tailor-made cuff\npanties, bloomers, and vests in fine quality\nrayon. Good fitting garments in colors n.&j n yo\ntearose and white. lar\u2122\nSmall, medium and large .........\n69\nTailored\nSkirts\n$2.95\n\\ Gored, swing, and pleated\nstyles in soft woolen materials, plain wool faille\nand tweeds. So wearable\nfor early spring, they are\na \"must\" in your wardrobe. Sizes are 14 to 30.\n_*__Nb-*b_&\u00a3<_<*__\n\/wsMWVaWvwr^\n\u00ab\u00ab\u00abs\u00absaws\nAM\u00ab\u00abfii.>\n\u00ab7\u00bb9\u00abH\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb>\nH B C GROCERY SPECIALS\nON SALE TODAY \u2014 WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY. 193 PHONES 194\nLARD\u2014Shamrock,\n11b. cartons, 2 for...\nCHEESE-Ohateau,\n1 Ib. cartons \t\nHONEY-Llndcn,\n4 Ib. tins\t\nCOFFEE\u2014Port York,\n1 Ib. tins \t\nOXO CUBES-Large\ntins, each \t\nPA8TRY FUOUR-\nMonarch, S lb. sacks\nMARMALADE\u2014McDonald's,\n%g&H m\nw\n29*\n59*\nm\n220\n23U\nm\nBULK GOODS OFFER MANY SAVINGS\nm\nPRUNES-Large else,\n10-BO's, 2 lbs.\t\nDATES-Pitted, _\\A\n2 lbs. ***\nAUSTRALIAN     SEEDLESS\nRAISINS- _<**\n2 Ibs **Y\nWALNUT PIECES-\nLb\t\n29U\nCOCONUT-8nowdrlft,\nLb\t\nICING SUGAR-\n2 Ibi\t\nMACARONI-Cut,\n2 lbs. \t\nSMALL WHITE\nBEANS-3 Ibs. .\n221\nW\nm\nm\nSTART TODAY TO SAVE \u2014 BUY IN BULK\nm\n29*\n25*\nCLAMS-Saanlch,\nwhole, Vs, 2 tins\t\nTUNA FI8H-Craw.\nford's, Yt'l, 2 tins ....\nCORN\u2014Aylmer, whole kernel,\n?4?J^ 23*\nPEACHES-Aylmer,      __\\_-\n26 ca. tins, eaeh \"Tr\nORANGES-Cnllfornln, _>\u00abA\n2  do i*r\nNEW CABBAGE\u2014\nLb :\t\nNEW CARR0T8-\n2 bunches \t\n8*\nm\nEl Fiesta's Rhumba QMs\nTRAIL CURLING!\nDRAWS\nTRAIL B. C., Feb. IS \u2014 Draws'.*\nthe President's competition of thf\nTrail Curling club for Tuesdaj\nnight's play, follow:\n6:30 p.m.\u2014\nE. W. Hazlewood vs. E. Shannon\nP. R. McDonald vs. R. C. Mc-\nGerrigle.\nE. J. Provost vs. W. F. Doubt\nA. J. McDonell vs. L. F. Tyson.\n8:30 p.m.\u2014\nW. Weir vs. W. E. Newton.\nW. McLeary vs. Prank Strachan\nB. J. Walsh vs. Andy Crichton.\nJ. H. Woodburn vs. W. B. HunteJ\nSeven lovely senorltas of sunny Spain sway\nthrough the rhumba in the floor show finale of\nEl Fiesta Friday night at the Civic Centre hall. The\nlasses from the land of olives and castanets, from\nleft to right are Miss Mnizie Grimes, Miss Stella\nPaterson, Miss Catherine Argyle, Miss Mae Fotos,\nMiss Clara Talberg, Miss Hilda Talberg and Miss\nDora Fotos.\nMonarchs Trip Their\nStablemates by 4-1\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (CP Cable).\n\u2014Wembley Monarchs drew out of\na third-place tie with Lions, their\nstablemates In the National Hockey\nleague, by defeating the other\nWembley outfit 4-1 tonight.\nREGINA (CP). - Mrs. Frank\nHulse's dog was too friendly. He\ngreeted her at the top of a flight\nof stairs, knocking his 61-year-old\nmistress down. She fell to the bottom, fracturing both legs.\nVANCOUVER HORSE\nWINS $1500 RACE\nAT  SANTA  ANITA\nLOS ANGELES, Feb. 13 <AP).-\nPomkee, owned by Major A. C.\nTaylor of Vancouver, B. C,,won\nthe one-mile $1900 American Red\nCross feature race of the charity\nday program before 20,000 persons\nat Santa Anita today. Count D'Or\nwas second and Ezcchins third.\nPomkee was the favorite and\npaid $3.80, $2.80 and $2.40 across\nthe board.\nChelsea and the\nWednesday Draw;\nBarrow Wins 2-0\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (CP Cable).\n-Chelsea and Sheffield Wednesday battled to a scoreless draw on\nthe latter's ground in a replayed\nfifth-round English cup match today. In the first' contest at Stamford Bridge Saturday, the teams\ndrew 1-1.\nBarrow, playing at home, defeated Darlington 2-0 in an English\nleague, third division fixture.\nMONTREAL GRAPPLER\nTIES, FRENCH BOUT\nPARIS, Feb. 13 (CP Havas). \u00a3\nYvon Robert, Montreal wrestler\nmanaged a draw tonight In _'\ncatch-as-catch-can bout here wtt)\nCharles Rigoulot, French champk\nPLUMBINi\nREPAIRS - INSTALLATION!\nPhone 181 j\nB, C. Plumbing & Heating I\nFOR\nFUEL\nWilliams Transfer\n613 Ward St. Phone\n*\nA LAW YOU CANNOT\nESCAPE!\nEven in out new and\nchanging world one law is\nconstant:\u2014-A man must work\nor he must have dollars to\nput to Work for him or there\nwill be no income. And if\nthere is no income there will\nbe hardship.\nToday you are at work.\nThe time will come when\nyou will quit work. Will\nyou then have an income?\nNot unless you have dollars\nto work for you.\nOrdinary saving is\nprecarious. You know that;\nAll men try to save, but most\nfail. The Imperial Life offers\na method of saving that works\n\u2014a method that provides for\nyour family in case of your\ndeath\u2014provides for your\nown future income after your\nretirement.\n\"FUMNOIM, SEOUWTY THROUGH\nIII FE Insurance,\" by Paul Speicher,\nan international authority, is an\nInteresting book which should be\nread by everyone who plsns to\nprovide financial security tor himself\nand family. Your local Imperial Life\nrepresentative will make a copy\n.available to you without cost\n'\/'\u25a0 . \u25a0 \u201e_   v ^^\nItl ttfitl\n\u25a0\u25a0 Head Office, Toronto,\n iC   POUR-\nNIUON DAILY NlWt, NIUON, Baft-TUESDAY MORNINO. FEB. 14, 1939\nENGLAND'S WOMEM ARMY LED BY GREAT WAR VETERANS\nNew Members Enroll and Force Now\nGrowing to Gigantic Proportions\nan'l Check Man's\nLove by the Way\nle Gives Presents\nBy CAROLINE CHATFIELD\nBAR MISS CHATFIELD:\nThe boy friend swears he loves\nie and gets mad with me for doubt-\nig him but the little things dont\nJd up to my way of calculating,\nor instance, on my birthday he\nime by to say he hadn't had a\nloment to buy me a gift and so he\n'anted me to take five dollars and\nuy my own. Of course I refused\n) accept it, which made him furi-\nus. You know he could have found\nime in a whole year to select a\n1ft for me, if he had had me on\nIs mind. What do you think?\nI AKRON.\n; ANSWER \u2014 It was fine that you\nad the delicacy to refuse the five\nnd of course the boy friend showed\n*d taste in offering it. But you\nan't check a man's love by his tal\nent for selecting gifts and you can't\nmake feminine sentimentality and\nmasculine matter-of-factness tally.\nSo long as the boy friend remembers the birthday he's doing\npassably well and when he ponies\nup he's making the grade. Unfair\nto charge him with Indifference\nuntil he forgets the big day. Stupid\nto fall out with him over a nit\nof bad taste when he's trying to\nplease.\nListen girlie* there has been\nmore conjugal bliss destroyed, more\nbitter tears shed, more hair pulling\nand shirt tearing staged over anniversaries remembered not, than\nover any other subject that husbands and wives disagree on. Every\none of you should learn now that\nthere's not one man in a million\nb.rn knowing what every woman\nknows; that a foolish female puts\nmore of a premium on a trifle selected for her and bestowed upon\nher by the man she loves, than she\nputs on \"one grand\" given her to\nbuy her own.\nOne of two things you must do\nif you are to live happily ever after: train the boy friend to buy\ntrinkets; or accept the masculine\npoint of view; namely, the,t money\ntalks and those who have the cash\nin hand can swap it for what they\nwant.\n>erial Story ...\n)EATH AT THE MANOR\nBy M. E. CORNE\nCHAPTER  28\n'\"Personally,\" Phil said, lighting\ntoother  cigaret,   \"I'm   betting   on\njour Richard. He looks guilty to\nBe. And I think Daphne knows it\nmd is shielding him.\" Phil, Mac\niclntyre and I were waiting for\nJr. Horace to appear.\n\"Do you mean to say,\" I demand-\nKL trying to remain cool and col-\nicted, \"that you seriously believe\nhose two kids, one or both, would\nlave the brains and the cunning\n# carry out the murders?\"\nS'l seriously think so.\"\n\"But the motive?\"\n\"A million dollars  is  a lot of\nhoney.\"\n,; \"A million dollars?\" I stared at\nim, wide-eyed. \"What has a mil-\non dollars got to do with it?\"\n\u2022\u2666'Guess that's another item we\neglected to mention, Elsie,\" Mc-\nityre said, apologetically. \"Tell\n(fr about the will Benson.\"\n,,\"Gladly. He blew a cloud of\n\u25a0nioke into the air. \"I dropped in at\niddlewaite's office early this\nlrning and had a peek at the old\nly's will. Mrs. Witherspoon left\neach of her grandchildren one\n\"lon dollars, cold cash, and nu-\nrous securities.\"\n_Oh'\" That was all I could say.\nW\nfin Daphne's case,\" he went on,\nlere was a string attached. She\nto  inherit providing at  the\nime of her grandmother's  death\njhe was engaged to marry or had\nIready married Count Orsini. Er\u2014\n'hat did you say Elsie?\"\n\"Nothing, nothing at all!\" I tried\nsmile, but my lips were stiff.\nIe motive! I had the motive! Far\nack in a corner of my mind a voice\nis shouting! Daphne's voice! \"I\n,1 you I won't go through with\n-1 won't! I'll do something aw-\nUl! You'll see!\"\n\u00bb\"And so,\" said Mac, his eyes bor-\n: into mine, \"and so we have at\neast one person in the house who\nltd reason to wish Mrs. Wither-\nIjpon dead and out of the way.\"\nT opened my mouth to protest,\nt nothing came out of it My\nIgue was like cotton; it clung to\ns roof of my mouth.\n\"Say!\" Phil had been wandering\ntorn shelf to shelf examining the\nlooks. \"Here's a volume on toxl-\nology!\" He pointed to a thick\nXeefi book wedged tightly between\nwo smaller ones. And as his hand\nrorked to remove it, the book\nlipped from his grasp and fell,\nace up and open, to the floor.\n\u25a0Good Lord!1' he exclaimed. \"Good\n*rd.\"\n\"Well?\" Mclntyre spoke sharp-\ny, \"Find something, Benson?\"\n\"Did I find something!\" He\nftshed to us and placed the vol-\nlme into the detective's lap \"Take\ni look at that!\"\n\"Whafr-iwtiat Is it?\" I atam-\nnered.\n'So!\" Mac sounded grim. I jump-\nid up and ran around behind him.\nthe print of the page was small\nbd dim; the words danced before\nBy-eyes.\n\"What Is it?\" I cried again, and\nlis finger moved slowly to the cen-\nrc of the page and paused.\n\"Cyanider I whispered. \"Cyan-\ndel In bold, black type! And in\nhe margin, lightly penciled, there\nvas a small check mark! All at\nmce my legs gave way at the\nsnees.\n.''Easy, kid!\" Phil caught me in\nlis arms.\" He carried me to the\ninn chair I had occupied.\n''You see Elsie,\" Mac said softly,\n.someone in this house knows all\nibout cyanide. I think maybe that\nomeone had been studying up on\nt- for a long, long time.\"\n\"I see,\" I said, and suddenly I\nas incredibly  weary.   I  did   not\nant to hear any more about poi-\nns or murders. I wanted to rise\nid to go away from the Manor,\nhousands of miles away. I closed\nay eyes.\n\"Brace up, baby!\" Phil implored.\nVe have work to do!\" He slapped\nne  on  the  shoulder  and  moved\nickward. There was a crash and\nchair tottered on its legs and fell\nldcways. A firecracker exploded in\n* brain.\n\"Phil! Mac!\" I cried. \"I have it!\"\n..\"Huh?\" They stared at me. \"Have\nrhat?\"\n.\"That chair crashing\u2014remember\n^old you\u2014the chair in the salon\u2014\n;ht   before    Mrs.    Witherspoon\n\" I was so excited I could not\nalt to finish my sentences.\n'The one that changed posi-\nons?\" Phil questioned.\n\"Yes. Don't you get it? It was\nmurderer who upset the chair!\ne was pasting the poison to the\nlood!\"\n\u25a0J'So as to kill off anyone who\nappened to .want a shampoo and a\n\u25a0fcve, I suppose?\" ^hil said nastily.\n\u25a0What! Oh!\" My excitement oozed\nnd  died. \"Oh, I did  think-\" I\ni too diappointed to continue.\n\"Don't   feel   badly,\"   Mac   said\nIpdly. 'There's something in what\n\" i say. I can't, at the moment,\nne th reason for the murderer's\nisence in the salon that night\u2014\n1 I'm convinced that it was the\nJjurderer\u2014but I do know that he\ntasn't baiting his trap then. Ac-\nlording to your account ol Sun-\n. s clients, you used all four of\ni driers without fatal results un-\naU,,\u201e     aVHk\u00bbaaannaa   aaaOMUSH   au,\u00bbV.\"\n\"Yes, that's true,\" I admitted,\nfeeling very much like a deflated\ninner tube.\n\"Therefore X knew to the second when the old lady was to have\nher beauty treatment\"\n\"Yes.\"\n\"Let's reconstruct this thing!\"\nHe became brisk and businesslike.\n\"For a reason unknown X visits\nthe salon in the middle of the night\nprevious to the ball. You interrupt;\nlater X steals away. In the morning you open the beauty parlor; all\ndav long you work on first one\nthen another of the women in the\nhouse. And all day long the driers\nare In perfect and harmless condition. No one is overcome by\ncyanide fumes.\n\"At eight o'clock you shampoo\nMrs. Witherspoon's hair and set the\nWave and carry her to the first\ndrier. You turn the switch; you discover that the drier is out of order.\nAnd you remove the old lady to\nthe second drier. O.K. so far?\"\nI nodded.\n\"When during the day were you\nabsent from the salon?\"\n\"Let me see\u2014I went to my room\nfor lunch. I was there about an\nhour. In the evening I dined below\nstairs.   That   took   another  hour.\"\n\"Below stairs for dinner, eh? So\nthat gives X sixty good minutes to\njimmy the driers and attach the\npoison. Sure you weren't out at\nany other time?\"\n\"Well\u2014\" I lowered my lashes.\nThat fatal half-hour I had spent\nin the pantry with Phil. I had\nomitted this Incident in my story\nof the murder and the events leading up to it. And lt was too late now\nto admit my guilt and besides had\nI not promised Mr. Horace to say\nnothing of my lapse? I plunged on:\n\"No\u2014no, I wasn't out of the room\nat any other time.\"\n\"So!\" Mac shifted in his clfalr\nand I shot a quick glance at Phil.\nHe was frowning. I shook my head\nslightly. He must not give me\naway! His right eye closed briefly.\nI breathed a sigh of relief. I was\nsate!\n(To Be Continued)\nImportant Features..\nBeauty Depends\nMostly on Lovely\nEyes and Mouth\nBy  DONNA  GRACE\nWhen you analyse the beauty\nand facial expression ot any ot\nthe famous motion picture stars,\nyou are impressed with what? The\nmouth and eyes, of course. The face\nitself, no matter whether it Is long\nor round, will be Attractive when\nthere Is a lovely mouth and beautiful eyes.\nThe comfort in this to us Is that\nthe eyes and mouth lend themselves to changes In a most satisfactory way. So it would seem the\nImportant thing is to know a lot\nabout these special features and\njust what one must do to give the\nface the most flattering expression\npossible.\nIf you will observe the mouths\nof the average girl \u2014 we mean\nthose who have not thought much\nabout make-up and what it can\ndo for us \u2014 you will notice most\nmouths are too thin.\nThere are no thin mouths In\nHollywood. Any girl who appears\nbefore the camera will have full\nexpressive lips, either nature's gift\nor that of the make-up man. The\nonly thin lips are for character\nparts and never to express feminine\nbeauty.\nWe could name several of the\nprominent stars whose natural lips\nare not the full contour so desirable, but when you see them on\nthe street or in pictures, the mouth\noutline will be perfect.\nWhen you begin to take your\n*V1\nOlivia De Havllland has beautiful\nNose\nmouth make-up seriously, you will\nfirst study the general outline.\nNote whether or not it Is the shape\nthat gives a pleasing, lively expression to the face. Or, is It just\na mediocre mouth?\nSit before your mirror and with\nyour outline brush or pencil (use\nthe lipstick it you do not have the\npencil or brush), make a square\nover the centre of the lips.\nLet it extend about an eighth ot\ndUniL fob\ndfauMwivSLL\nBy BETSY NEWMAN\nTODAY'S MENU\nLamb a la King\nRiced or Hashed Brown Potatoes\nPeas and Carrots\nApple and Kumquat Salad\nCrushed Pineapple Sherbet\nTea\nLamb a la King\nTake two cups of cold cooked\nlamb, cut into cubes. Melt four\ntablespoons butter and combine\nfour tablespoons flour with it Gradually add one cup of milk ahd one\ncup lamb stock or hot water, and\nstir until the sauce Is thickened.\nThen add the diced lamb, one-half\ncup celery, diced, one small can of\nbutton mushrooms, one-half cup of\npeas, one pimiento sliced, one green\npepper, diced, and season with salt\nand pepper. Serve In patty shells or\nOver toast Place a cube of currant jelly on top of each.\nCrushed Pineapple Sherbet\nIngredients are one can crushed pineapple, one-half cup pineapple juice, one and one-half cups\nof orange Juice, one tablespoon of\nlemon juice, three egg whites, one\nhalf pint cream, one cup sugar,\nthree-quarters cup water and one-\nhalf teaspoon salt\nDissolve sugar and salt In water by heating slightly. Add this to\nfruit and Juices, put Into refrigerator trays and freeze te a mush.\nRemove to a bowl and beat well.\nFinally, beat egg whites stiffly,\nthen whip the cream and add these\nto the fruit mixture. Freese, stirring several times. This Is enough\nto serve 12 to 15 persons.\nKitchen hints contributed by kind\nreade\" are presented by this department with the hope that many\nitems will prove ot service.\nIf you want hard-boiled eggs to\nlooked their best when shelled, boil\nthem from 10 to 12 minutes, then\ndouse into very cold water. The\nsudden shock prevents the white\nfrom discoloring.\nIt Is a good plan to cook soups\nand stews a day before they are\nrequired. Then, betore reheating\nremove the cake of fat congealed\non top. When this method ts followed, soups and stews will not upset\nthe weakest digestion.\nLIVER PASTE\nLiver may be potted and used as\na spread. Boil eight ounoes of the\nbest cslfs liver with inree slices of\nlean bacon and a small onion stuck\nwith cloves. Put through a food\nchoniwr than Dound welL Mix_ 1\ntogether with pepper, salt and a\ntablespoon of melted butter. Put\ninto small jars, pour on enough\nbutter to cover, seal. It will keep Indefinitely.\nTASTY CHANGE\nAs a change from the ordinary\nrissoles or croquettes, spread some\nminced, seasoned and moistened\nmeat on squares of plain pastry.\nRoll these up and press the dampened ed\"es together. Dip in eggs\nand bread crumbs, fry a golden\nbrown, and there you have a nice\ndish.\nMustard, if riot made with vine\negar, is improved by a pinch each\nof very finely-powdered or confectioners' sugar and' salt Mix the\nmustard with, boiling water instead of with cold to keep it moist\nlonger.\nTo avoid breaking an omelet do\nnot turn, but simply put the pan\nunder the hot broiler for a few sec\nonds. Not only is the omelet beautifully browned, but it is much\nlighter and finer, to that it can be\neasily rolled.\nThose recipes that call for the\nwhite of an egg only are rather expensive. One woman .suggests that\ninstead of breaking the shell as\nusual, make a hole with a large\nneedle at one end to drain away the\nwhite. Then cover the hole with a\ntiny piece of gummed paper or\nclose it by smearing a little Of the\nwhite over it The yolk will keep\nfresh until wanted.\nUSE LEMON JUICE\nJellies will set more quickly If a\nlittle lemon juice is squeezed into\nthe liquid and stirred before set\nting the liquid aside to cool. This\ntreatment also improves the flavor.\nSausages are guaranteed not to\nb-rst if they are placed in hot\nwater before being tried.\nA teaspoon of lard added to the\nwater Into which it is boiled will\nsoften and sweeten cabbage.\nBeefsteak  pies 'and   puddings\nfenefally appeal to the menfolk,\no greatly improve the flavor,\nadd a little dry mustard as well as\nsalt and pepper to the seasoned\nflour In which the meat Is dip-\nThen there's that other favorite, apple dumplings. Before covering apples with the pastry, dip\nthe fruit in a basin of cold water,\ncompletely submerging lt The\npaste will then stick to the applet\narid not slip away as sometimes\nhappens.\nsot Inch above and below tha natural outlines of the mouth just as\nit you were going to have a perfect square instead of a tapered one.\nThe square will not extend beyond\na point about a half-inch from the\ncorners.\nFill in tha square with rouge or\nuse your lipstick and you will see\nImmediately now important the\nmouth can be.\nWe are not going to wear square\nmouths though so the next step is\nto draw a light line of lipstick from\nthe outside corners ot the square\nto the corners of the mouth. It will\nslant definitely from the full centre\nangle. The curve in a soft line will\ngive the outline a natural effect\nYou will have to practice this for\na while and it will soon be your\naccepted make-up. You may Ignore\nthe cupld's bow. Hollywood has\nfound it la not suitable for all types\nof beauty, and they do not accent\nit A soft curve will give the face\nmore sophistication than the deep\ncupld's bow.\nHappy Families...\nFather's Aid Is\nNeeded lo Train\nThe Children\nBy GARRY C. MYER8, Ph.D.\nMost who read this column are\nwomen \u2014 mothers. Recently I have\nbeen delighted at the number ot\nletters which begin with, \"My\nhusband and I have been reading\nyour column regularly.\" More\nletters, too, are coming from fathers\nand more letters by mothers are\nreferring to the eager efforts of\nthe mother and father to work together to guide the children; and\nto the many ways in which the\nfather is sharing the mother's load,\ncaring for the young children. More\nletters, furthermore, are telling of\nfather-son companionship. Truly,\nsuch letters encourage me very\nmuch.\nThere still come, of course, tragic\naccounts of families in which the\nfather leaves all responsibility for\ncare and training of the children\nto the mother or of families in\nwhich the parents widely disagree\nabout the children, even in these\nchildren's presence. While such letters depress me, I always am glad\nto write the discouraged mother\nany note of cheer or suggestion for\nwinning the father's cooperation I\ncan think of.\nWRITE YOUR IDEA8\nI do not expect all my readers to agree with what I write. Indeed, I gain many new ideas from\nthose who write me disagreeing.\nBut I am eager that If one parent\nreads my column the other also\nwill; that both also read and study\ntogether other articles and books\nfor parents; that they, moreover,\nenter parent study groups together\nand together attend lectures for\nparents.\nWhen only the mother reads or\nhears such matters and attempts to\napply some of the suggestions, she\nsoon meets with conflicts it her\nenthusiasm for the Idea is not shared by the father, especially it he\nshould ridicule it or treat it with\ncontempt It sometimes happens,\nIndeed, that the father will resist\na new idea about guiding the children just because the mother was\nover-enthusiastic about lt No matter how workable the idea, if the\nmother's enthusiasm about it sug-\nfiests to the father that his wife\n> trying to correct his short-comings ana educate him, he will unconsciously build up resistance to it\nNo husband welcomes being told\neven by Implication, by his wife\nthat he is Inferior to her or that he\nis being educated by her. Nevertheless, if she can adroitly make\nhim want to read an article or\nbook to her while she is busy mending or ironing, say how graciously\nhe will strive to help to educate his\nwife. Incidentally, while he is so\nhelping her he might absorb a little of what he reads himself.\nBlessed Is the child whose psr-\nents together read and plan and\nstudy, seeking ways and means of\nbeing better parents, furthering a\nhappier family.\nRent that room with a Want Ad.\nCommunity,.... -\nDrinking Glass\nSpreads Disease\nBy LOGAN CLENDENINQ, M. D.\nIt Is within my own memory\nthat lt began to be preached that a\n\u00a7ublic drinking glass could spread\nisease, and I remember the caustic\ndiatribe on the subject preached by\nour family doctor. The idea, he said,\nthat any flibberty-gibbet with a microscope could prove to him that\nsuch a thing as diphtheria was\nspread by a nice clean drinking\nglass standing on a nice clean marble\nStandi He had drunk out of such\nf[lasses thousands of times, and\nook at him\u2014perfectly healthy.\nWell, he went the way of the\ndodo and the plesiosaurus, and the\ndoctrine of the spread of disease\nby infected glasses, plates, knives\nand forks and spoons has prevailed.\nThere has been, indeed,- much\nscientific work done on the subject and much improvement in methods. With the development of the\nsanitary examination of foods, it is\nrealized that all the elaborate procedure, the entire system, breaks\ndown if these foods are placed and\nserved tn dishee, glasses and utensils that have not been properly\ncleansed and sanitized. Health de-\npartments have connected the transmission of outbreaks of disease occurring in their jurisdiction to infected dishes and glasses.\nMETHODS OP CLEANING\nHome methods of sterilizing\ndishes and glasses need not be as efficient as those required at soft\ndrink and lunch counters or in\nrestaurants. The heat of the cleansing water used, the use of lye, or\nchlorine, or among newer developments, the use of specially designed\nlamps, are all to be considered.\nThe hotter the water used, the\nbetter the results. The longer the\nutensils are in contact with hot water, the better.\nFor the housewife's information,\nshe should know that sanitarians\nbelieve that the temperature of\nwash water should not be less than\n120 degrees F. I doubt if many house\nholds or soft drink counters come\nup to .this standard.\nThorough washing Is the most\nimportant step in drinking glass\nsanitation. Unless the glass is\nthoroughly clean and free of grease-\nfilm, lipstick, milk fat, the action\nof heat or any other disinfecting\npreparation is rendered ineffective.\nYet it is a familiar sight at soda\nwater fountains and cocktail bars\nto see the attendants sloshing a\nglass around a few times in a basin\nof lukeivarm dirty water, drying it\nwith a towel of questionable cleanliness and using that glass to serve\nthe next customer.\n\"RIM COUNT\"\nThe \"rim count\" is the standard\nmethod of testing the sanitation of\nthe drinking glass. This means the\ncount of bacteria made from swabbing the rims of drinking glasses.\nHere is another hint for house-\n\"Nordic Beauty\"\nAbove is pictured Karln Marion, the beautiful 7-year-old\ndaughter of Mr. and Mrs. K.\nFranklin. 119 Morgan street,\nNelson. Karin was born in Norway, and is quite a seasoned\nlittle traveller now, having\ncrossed the Atlantic ocean 3\ntimes by the age of 8.\nwives and glass-washers generally\n\u2014how to hold the glass after cleaning lt. Glasses should be set rim\ndown on a clean surface in an inverted position. The glass should\nnot be handled from the rim. The\nhand of the glass-washer or food\nhandler should not touch the rim of\nthe glass at any time. Glasses that\nare set down inverted are more\neasily handled without touching the\nQUESTIONS and ANSWER8\nI. R.: \"Is there any danger of a\nstroke if there is no high blood\npressure?\"\nAnswer\u2014A stroke means a para\nlysis due to hemorrhage in the brain\nor blocking of an artery in the\nbrain. While a stroke often is associated with high- blood pressure,\nit is not always so and it Is just as\nserious with or without.\nIce Carnival at\nKaslo Is Success\nKASLO. B. C. \u2014 There was a\ngood crowd at the Ice carnival recently sponsored by the Kaslo and\nDistrict Women's institute.\nThe judges were Mrs. H. T. Hart'\nin, Mrs. T. H. Horner, Mrs. George\nMorton and Douglas deWolff, the\nfollowing being the prize winners:\nBest dressed lady, Miss Pat Andrews, gipsy maiden; best dressed\nboy, Avery Gunterman, Indian\nchief; ladies comic, Margaret Sutcllffe, Mandy;- boys comic, Charlie\nSutherland, Chinese laundryman.\nA \"hot dog\" stand where Mrs.\nAngus MacGillivray and John Stra'\nchan were in charge, was well patronized. Receipts will be used in\nconnection wilh operation of the\nrink.\nRossland Social. \u2666\nBy MRS. B. B. FERGUSON\nROSSLAND, B. C. - When the\nWomen's Benefit association, Review No. 5, met at the home of Mrs.\nT. Smith, LeRoi avenue, fifteen\nmembers were present Mrs. Phyllis Beckman presided. At the conclusion of business dainty refreshments were served.\nThose present included Mrs. Scott\nMrs. H. Henry, Mrs. A. McNaven,\nMrs. T. Riley, Mrs. Schearer, Mrs.\nJ. McCullough, Mrs. G. Gippman,\nMrs. W. Cunningham, Mrs. J. Long-\nstaff, Mrs. E. E. Turner, Mrs. Jessie Rutherford, Mrs. Henry, Mrs.\nFertlche, Mrs. E. King, and Mrs.\nA. Powell. Hostesses were Mrs,\nScott Mrs. Henry, and Mrs. Mc-\nNsven. The next meeting will be\nheld at the home of Mrs. Thomas\nSmith.\nThe Catholic Women's league met\nin the parish hall Tuesday evening\nwhen plans were made to hold a\nValentine tea. Mrs. J. Mllligan was\nnamed convener and it was decided\nto raffle a lamp in aid of the hospital.\nRefreshments were served, Mrs.\nT. Corrado being assisted by Mrs. T.\nKnight, Mrs. A. O'Reilly and Mrs.\nE. L'Ecluse.\nLadles of the Hospital Hill circle\nof the Sacred Heart church were\nguests of Mrs. Frank Leeson Thursday evening. The next meeting will\nbe held at the home ot Mrs. W. G.\nMara.\nMiss Margaret Pollock of Bralorne\nis visiting in the city.\nMrs. Alice Borkas has returned\nfrom a few days in Spokane.\nMiss Rita Fourt is visiting with\nfriends at Burchbank.\nMrs. S. Wurzburg, of Marcus,\nWash., attended the funeral of the\nlate W. H. Reid in Rossland on\nWednesday.\nHans Lingoy hu returned from\na five months holiday at his former\nhome in Norway.\nMrs. Fraser Mitchell entertained\nthe Martha circle of St. Andrew's\nUnited church Wednesday afternoon.\nA social afternoon was spent and\nrefreshments served. Present were\nMrs. E. Morrison, Mrs. G. Urquhart,\nMrs. F. M. Erskine, Mrs. G. Bos-\nworth. Miss Oorgina Martin, Mrs.\nJohn Melville and Mrs. A. E. Wright\nThe next meeting will be held at\nthe manse.\nBy MOLLIE McGEE\nLONDON (CP). - Quietly and\nsteadily England's new great army\nof women is fusing into a gigantic\nforce organized, trained and equipped to take over the various non-\ncombatant military duties entrusted\nto it by the War Office.\n. There are no parades In uniform,\nbecause no uniforms have as yet\nbeen issued to the members \u2014\nthough the already active Women's\nArmy Transport have their own.\nThere is no publicity because the\nwomen themselves have requested\nthat this be withheld. Yet soon in\nvarious parts of the country from\nLand's End to John 0' Groats 100,-\n000 women will be drilling in Territorial Army halls.\nEach woman will be giving up\nhours of leisure work and accept-\nin. $2.50 per year in exchange. The\nmajority are employed clerks,\ncooks, housewive-motor-drivers.\nAll have full knowledge of some\nbranch of work\" required by members .of the women's army.\nThe authorities emphasize it is\nnot sufficiently realized that the\nAuxiliary Territorial Service, as\nthe Women's Army is called, is not\na group of raw recruits but an assemblage of trained women ready\nto take on their jobs tomorrow. No\ntraining is given to the women in\ntheir actual professions and the immediate appointment of women executives was also only made possible by drawing from the voluntary women's organizations those\nwho have kept actively interested\nin army affairs ever since the war.\nLEADERS ARE VETERAN8\nThe officers of the Auxiliary Territorial Army are competent women who have taken the War Office examinations, and thereby\nhangs a story of foresight and self-\nsacrifice that as yet has received\nlittle notice in the press.\nIn 1932 a group of prominent women who had served In the \"W. A.\nA. C.'s\" during the.Great War held\na meeting. They realized they were\ngetting too old to serve in another\nemergency and that the hard work\nthey had put in training was being\nrendered useless, also that women\nwould again be called upon to fill\nnon-combatant jobs in the army\nbut they would lack women officers.\nThey sent a delegation to the War\nOlfice with the request that they\nbe permitted to take officers' examinations to bring their qualifications up-to-date so that they in\nturn could train younger women.\nThis offer was accepted. For\nmonths women well known in society, in intellectual circles and in\npolitics attended lectures day after day, then sat for the stiff exams\ngiven to prospective lieutenants,\ncaptains, majors and colonels of his\nMajesty's forces. Among them was\nDame Helen Gwynne-Vaughan, the\nCommandant of the W. A. C.'s in\nFrance, now. in her sixties and a\nprofessor of Botany at London university; Lady Trenchard, wife ot the\nformer head of London Metropolitan police; Mrs. Edward Harnett\nwife of an Air Force commander.\nEquipped with the necessary diplomas, the ex-service women then\nheld their own classes and trained\n400 younger women recruits from\ndifferent parts of the country.\nWhen the War Office decided to\norganize the Women Territorials\nthese women officers were ready to\nserve. Officials in Whitehall could\nalso depend on the trained and uniformed Women's Transport Corps\n(F. A. N. Y.'s) that had voluntarily\nserved the army continuously slnca\nthe war and whose members pass\narmy mechanics' exams and get officers' training. . j .-\u2022\u25a0\nDEPENDABLE UNIT8\nThe Women's Legion, organized\nby Lady Londonderry in war time\nto provide cooks, clerks and driven\nfor the army, had kept an active nucleus and expanded magically at a\nword frpm headquarters.\nNow as the Auxiliary Territorial\nArmy stands the officers come from\nthe ex-service women's \"Emergency'\nService\", the drivers for the army\nare enrolled from the Women'a\nTransport (F. A. N. Y.'s), the drivers\nfor the Air Force are enrolled from\nthe Women's Legion which also\nprovides instructors in army cookery and bookkeeping. The members\nare recruits with sufficient qualifications to prove their usefulness in\nthe army jobs now given over to\nwomen.\nEach country in England will\nhave its own women's territorial\ncompany to stand side by side with\nits regiments of men. They will\nuse the same drill halls, be drilled\nby the same sergeant majors. Tho\nwomen will have their own officers,\nthough as in the territorials there is\nno higher command and each county\ngroup comes as an individual unit\nunder the War Office commandant\nThere will be no women generals,\nLike the men's territorial army\nthe women's ,army will come directly under the War Office. Tho\nonly big difference is actually that\nthe women are enrolled\u2014names on\na list to be called on\u2014while tho\nmen are enlisted. Also the women\ncan join -td serve locally or away\nfrom home in an emergency.\nWORKERS ON LAND\nThe Women's Land Army is rapidly organizing along similar lines.\nWomen who served on the agricultural front between 1914 and -\n1918 came forward In 1988 with\nsuggestions for the establishment\nof an association ot women land\nworkers.\nLady Denman, D. B. E., was asked\nby the minister of agriculture to\nbecome honorary director of a\nspecial women's branch to be set\nup In his department if the occasion\narose. She selected a committee and\nthe present arrangements are that\nwomen will be enrolled in two categories; those willing to serve anywhere with a mobile force and those\nwho will be able to -work only In\ntheir own localities. It is not tho\npresent intention to provide for\nthe training of volunteers, but tho\nWomen's Farm and Garden association are making arrangements to\nmeet the needs of women who\nwish to take short courses on farms\nat their own'expense. The membership already includes a large number of trained women engaged In\nagriculture.\nSo England's Womens Army\ngrows!\nMRS. APPLEWHAITE TELLS\nWILLOW POINT AUXIL'Y\nABOUT DIOCESAN MEET\nWILLOW POINT, B.C.\u2014Mrs. J.\nWorsfold was hostess to the members of the Woman's auxiliary, Mrs.\nE. H. H. Applewhaite entertaining\nwith a talk about the Domihlon diocesan meeting.\nThe members presented a layette\nto a member to whom a son wai\nborn recently.\nOrange Pekoe Blend\nTEA\nMRS.\ncharminfl\nfA.S\nDAVIS,\nadvises\nOdkPa\ngirls'\nirkHostessj\nind women:\nWHERE PERSONAL NEATNESS COUNTS J\nDON'T DEPEND ON ORDINARY SOAP'\n\"I can't feel complete confidence without Lifebuoy...\nNo ordinary soap stops 'B. O.' as Lifebuoy does,\" says Mrs. Davis\n\"ORIOINALIY FROM THE SOUTH, I -\nLEARNED EARLY THAT TO BE\nCHARMING A WOMAN MUST PROTECT\nHER LOVELINESS AT Aa TIMES....\n't6 MY DAUGHTER I MAKE IT A\nPOINT TO STRESS THE IMPORTANCE\nOf ALWAYS PLAYING SAFE WITH\nA DAILY LIFEBUOY HATH\t\n\"WE NEVER RUN SHORT OF LIFEBUOY..\nIT IS ALWAYS IMPERATIVE TO CHOOSE\nTHE PROPER SOAP AND LIFEBUOY\nIS OURS!\"\nNOT only charming women like Mrs. Davis\u2014but famous\nbeauty experts, etiquette authorities, teachers of poise\nand personality-all say \"match yout daintintisl\" It counts\nfor so much in daily life. It's really very foolish for anyone\nto risk offending.\nAnd it's doubly foolish to depend on ordinary soaps! They\ndo not protect you as a daily bath with Lifebuoy does. For\nLifebuoy contains an exclusive purifying ingredient not\nfound in any other popular bath or toilet soapt You can tell\nby the lively, refreshing Isther-rLifebuoy is diffmnt.\nGrand for the complexion, too \u2014\nhelps keep it healthy, radiant. Yet\nLifebuoy is over 20% milder by list\nthan many leading \"beauty\" and\n\"baby\" soaps. Try it for a week) your\nwhole family will be enthusiastic\/        tmrna^a^BPBla.\n \"\u2014\u2014\nSATURDAY\nFebruary 18th\nLast Day of Our\nMIDWINTER\nSALE\nOF\nMen's, Women's,\nChildren's Shoes\nAvail yourself of this opportunity of buying your SHOES\nNOW, and save money\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nNEW YORK, (CP) - A fleet of\nspring hats that rest securely on\nheads, being designed on less dizzy\nangles than the winter's crop, has\nbeen launched by the fashion world.\nSSTSaSsTwiSE.\n-PROVED WAY\nTO TREAT COLDS\n\u25a0DouWtf jiro\u00bbe<l~in world's largest\ncolds-clinic and by everyday use in.\nmore homes than any other medl-\n\u25a0 \u00a3\\ r\\ cation of Its kind. No\n<Ffl L 1 \"dosing.\" Just mas-\nJ^9LJt\u20acJ sage VapoRub on\nft' \\Vt . 'vl throat, chest, and\nII JIV \/llwicfc at bedtime. Rest r 11 t-'-l I lief begins almost at\nonce. And long after sleep comes,\nVapoRub keeps right on working. Its\npoultlce-and-vapor action loosens\nphlegm, relieves irritation and\ncoughing, helps break local congestion. Often, by _. h__i_m\nmorning tho WICKS\nworst of tho If l,VI\\\u00ab#\ncold is over.       W VapoRub\nFEBRUARY 15th\nSECOND\nANNIVERSARY\nSola\nOf House Frocks\nWide  range.   New patterns.\nCrisp, colorful and smart as\na whip. Priced down for\nanniversary sale.\n$1.69 $1.98 $2.69\nSMOCKS\nClever new style print smocks.\n|ust what you have wanted for\noffice and home wear. See the\nnew Beer Jacket smocks.\nGuaranteed fast till QR\ncolors. Priced at ipl.jO\nSkoppSL\nOpp. Daily News   Phone 953\nTownsend Tells\nA.C.T. Financial\nHistory Hospital\nAn interesting talk on the financial history of Kootenay Lake General hospital and an outline of the\npresent Hospitalization scheme offered by the hospital, was given the\nAssociated Canadian Travellers by\nD. D. Townsend, hospital board ahd\nTravellers member, at the Travellers' luncheon in the Hume hotel\nSaturday.\nAbout 60 per cent of the patients\nin the hospital were from outside the city. Mr. Townsend said,\nand collection in the past few years\nhad been just over 50 per cent of\nthe debts contracted. The hospital\nwas originally built for 75 beds, but\n100 beds had been crowded into\nit.\n8-HOUR DAY COMING\nThe nurses training school conducted by the hospital for some\nyears had been discontinued because there were more nurses being\ntrained in British Columbia than\ncould be absorbed into the nursing\nprofession.' The eight-hour day for.\nnurses would \"soon be here\", Mr.\nTownsend stated, but .it was not\nwidely practiced by hospitals because so many of them were too\nfinancially backward to afford it.\nAfter years of struggling along\nand getting into debt, and out of\nit, the hospital society hit upon the\nhospitalization idea to finance the\ninstitution. Kamloops, Vernon and\nKelowna were already practicing\nthe scheme satisfactorily. The\nmonthly sum of $1.26 was decided\nupon because the Kamloops hospital had told the hospital society it\nwas not taking in enough money\nat the $1.15 rate the Kamloops hospital charged.\nA. S. (Pat) Aitken had been\nengaged to sell the hospitalization\nplan, Mr. Townsend said, and considerable success had already been\nmet with.\nArchdeacon Fred H. Graham,\nmoved a vote of thanks to Mr.\nTownsend.\nOn the program were two vocal\nsolos by C. B. Huyck, accompanied\nby Roy Pollard. A. C. Virtue moved\na vote of thanks to the two entertainers. F. R. Pritchard was program chairman.\nMYSTERY BULLET MISSES\nCHICAGO, Feb. 13 (AP).-Louis\nKnoopaka thinks he's lucky.\nAs he sat reading in a chair in\nhis hotel room a bullet crashed\nthrough the window. It missed him\nby inches, richocheted against a\ndoor, passed within six inches of\nhis chest and hit another walL\nKonopaka dropped to the floor then.\nPolice couldn't find the mystery\ngunman.\nd SpsudaL ShkL\nFOR A VERY\nSpecial Oummqil\nA Delicious Vanilla Brick with a HEART CENTRE in\nthat ever popular favorite Strawberry Flavor.\nAlso at your dealers you'll find many other\ndelightful bricks in a combination of flavors\n25c AT ALL PALM DEALERS\nScJltfjWWL\nManufactured By\nPALM DAIRIES LIMITED\nGay Music, Gay\nMood al Fiesta;\nFun Is Supreme\nColorful Costumes in\nSpanish-Mexican\nSetting\nTo gay music that emphasized a\ngay mood, the Nelson Junior board\nof trade played host Friday night at\nthe Civic Centre arena at \"El Fiesta\",\na Spanish extravaganza, Attendance\nwas somewhat disappointing, but\nthe 500 present made a grand evening of it with dancing, floor show,\ncafe, bar and games. Mexican ta-\nmales and so on, heading the cafe\nbill of tare, were Indicative of the\nSpanish-Mexican note throughout.\nContributing to the fun were five\nsinging waiters, Kenneth McRory,\nElias Fisher, Arnold Leew, Alec\nLeew and Victor Owen; while three\ntroiibadors, David Dyck, Peter Lut-\nkovich and Carl Gallicano played\nimpromptu number* in the cafe, at\nthe bar and on the floor. A colored\nspotlight was used effectively to\nlight up these two groups and the\nfloor show.\nDirected by Mrs. Clarence Wilson, the floor show included the\nfollowing dance and comedy numbers: Mexican beggar gypsy, Miss\nAnnie Laakso; Mexican doll dance,\nMiss Rose Ramsden; Spanish chorus,\nMiss Maisie Grimes, Miss Stella Patterson, Miss Hilda Tallberg and Miss\nDora Fotos; Mexican solo, Miss\nCatherine Argyle; tango, Miss Clara\nTalberg and Miss Mae Fotos; Mexican gypsy, Dolores Smith; Spanish\nwaltz, Miss Stella Patterson; toreador, Miss Hilda. Talberg; peon and\ndonkey comedy number, Miss Maisie\nGrimes; Kinkajou, Miss Dolores\nSmith; Ferdinand the bull comedy\nnumber, Miss Maisie Grimes. The\n\"donkey\" and \"bull\" were anonymous.\nC08TUME WINNERS\nCostume prizes, all for Spanish\ndress, were won by: Miss Josephine\nLandry, ladies' first; Miss Monica\nBrewer, ladies' second; Gilbert\nGoucher, men's first; J. Fletcher,\nmen's second.\nThe committees directing the fiesta included:\nGeneral chairman\u2014Douglas Cret-\nEntertainment \u2014 Bernard Fetter-\nley, Stanley Nordqulst, Frank Defoe, Charles Swan and William\nBurns.\nPublicity\u2014Stanley Penney, Arnold Leew, Alex Leew, Elias Fisher\nand Henry Stephenson.\nBonnington and\nSouth Slocan W.I.\nCommittees Set\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C.-The\nmonthly meeting of the Bonnington\nand South Slocan Women's institute was held Wednesday. Mrs.\nHarry Nixon, president, was in the\nchair. Letters of thanks from Mrs.\nWhitele; for the surprise pastry\nand handkerchief shower were read.\nThe report of the committee for\nthe military whist showed $16.75\nhad been realized. The secretary\nreported seven new card tables had\nbeen purchased.\nThe chief business of the meeting was the appointment of committees as follows: home economics, Mrs. M. Kelsey; public health\nand child welfare, Mra. John Murray; education and better schools,\nMrs. W. Whiteley and Miss E. Burgess; legislation, Mrs. O. W. Humphrey; immigration, Mrs. Turner\nLee; social work and settlement,\nMrs. J. D. Yeatman and Mrs. W.\nT. Jones; community betterment,\nMrs. H. Strand; agriculture, Mra. E.\nAnderson; home industries, Mrs. P.\n0. Bird, Miss G. Tirhaeus; publicity, and national events, Mrs. 0.\nW. Humphry, Mrs. M. Downie, Mrs.\nE. J. Bowkett; Institute work and\nmethod, Mrs. W. A, MacCabe, Mrs.\nW. E. Motley; girl guides-representatives, Mrs. W. C. Motley, Mrs. 0.\nW. Humphrey; hall committee representatives, Mrs. Bowkett, Mrs.\nNixon; auditors, Mrs. W. A. MacCabe, Mrs. E. J. Bowkett.\nMrs. Murray, convenor of public\nhealth and child welfare, reported\neight cases had been attended to\nduring the month.\nA report for the year of the girl\nguides association was given by\nMrs. W. A. MacCabe, district commissioner. Mrs. H. Nixon gave the\nannual report of the Brownies.\nIt was decided that a social fund\nbe started to be used as a gift fund\nfor sick members or anniversaries\nwith Mrs.  Yeatman as  convenor.\nMrs. Humphry of the committee\nfor legislation gave a talk on Laws\nfor Women referring,to the Alberta\nDonor Act and the necessity of\nlegislation being passed on the\nlines of this act regarding the wifes\nshare in the home for which a resolution was passed at the provincial\nconfemce.\nMrs. E. J. Bowkett and Mrs. M.\nDownie served tea at the close of\nthe meeting.\nPENSIONS PAID\nFREDERICTON, (CP) \u2014 During\nthe fiscal year of 1938 old age pensions paid in New Brunswick by the\nDominion and province amounted\nto $1,870,422. Blind persons in New\nBrunswick received $75,377 in pensions.\n\u25a0i Mr. and Mrs. John Burns, who\nhave been spending several weeks\nin Vancouver and Spokane, have\nreturned. Their son, Jack Burns,\nME., of Kimberley has returned to\nKimberley after spending the weekend in Nelson wilh them.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. H. J. McLean,\nLatimer street, had.as their weekend guest their son and daughter-\nin-law, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. McLean\nof Trail ,    .\n\u2022 Dr. A. Francis of New Denver\nvisited Nelson at the week-end.\n\u2022 H. Hansen of Salmo was\namong week-end visitors in the\ncity.\n\u2022 E. V. Morel of Marblehead in\nthe Lardeau is a city visitor.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs Oscar Johnson\nof the Kootenay Belle mine were\nNelson shoppers at the week-end.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Linville,\nFairview, had as their week-end\nguest their son, Richard, of the Relief Arlington mine.\n\u2022 S. Little of Slocan City was a\nNelson shopper yesterday.\n\u2022 Miss Vera B. Eidt, Miss Betty\nJohnson, Miss Helen Holmes and\nMiss Helen Tompkins motored to\nRossland Sunday to attend the formal opening of the new wing of\nMater Misericordiae hospital.\n\u2022 Victor Pearson of the Relief\nArlington mine visited Nelson at\nthe week-end.\ni Mrs. W. A. Harrison,. Mill\nstreet, is a patient in Kootenay\nLake General hospital.\n\u2022 Mrs. O'Neill of Slocan City\nvisited at the home of her parents,\nMr. and Mrs. Harry Hulls, Fair-\nview, at the week-end.\ni Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Hall\nwere week-end guests at Sheep\nCreek at the home of Mr. and Mrs,\nJ. Lodder.\n\u2022 J.' M. Gordon is confined to\nhis home at 903 Josephine street^\nwith a spraini^d leg.\ne N. J. Lowes, C.P.R. city ticket\nagent, spent yesterday In Grand\n\u25a0forks.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Whimster were among those from Nelson attending the opening of Mater\nGive the Children a Glass of\nHOT MILK\nAFTER SCHOOL\nKOOTJENAY VALLEY DAIRY\n!fifift\u00abftflfifi!\u00bbfl!6\n--^M^^WWKlN^^\nSSSSSSSSft\nWakk fispaihhup\nExpertly Taken Care of at\nMODERATE PRICES\n497 Baker St.'\nNelson, B.C.\nNew Arrivals in\nALL SILK PRINTS\nMilady's Fashion\nShoppe\n449\nBaker\nPhone\n874\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON, B.C.-TUESDAY MORNINO, FEB. 14. IMS\nNELSON Social.*\nBy MRS. M. J. VIGNEUX\nMlsericordiae hospital In Rossland\nSunday.\n\u2022 ft. G. Warner was in town\nfrom Slocan City yesterday en route\nhome from the coast.\n\u2022 Gunnar Johnson of the Relief Arlington mine visited town\nat the week-end.\n\u2022 Miss Winnifred Coleman, who\nteaches at Brilliant, was the weekend guest of Miss Peggy Barclay of\nTrail who was in the city spending\nthe week-end at the home of her\nmother, Mra. A. Barclay, Kootenay\nstreet ' . ' '\n\u2022 J. P. Sutherland of Slocan\nCity visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. A. Hewith was In town\nfrom Shoreacres yesterday..\/   \u25a0\n\u2022 J. Griffin of Creston spent\nyesterday in Nelson.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. C. T. McHardy.\nwho spent the week-end In Tra'l at\nthe homes of their daughters, Mrs.\nKay MacLean and Mrs. J. 0. Dolphin, were among those from Nelson attending the opening of Mater\nMisericordiae hospital in Rossland\nSunday.\n\u2022 Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Weaver left\nyesterday for Toronto.\n\u2022 G. D. Friesen is In the city\nfrom Renata.\n\u2022 F. M. Barnet was in town\nfrom Slocan City yesterday.\n\u2022 Mrs. Woods of Perry Siding is\nin the city to visit her sister, Mrs.\nPaterson, who is a patient1 in Kootenay Lake General hospital\n\u2022 J. Ferguson of Procter visited\nNelson at the week-end.\n\u2022 F. Miller was in town from\nYmir yesterday.\n\u2022 A. M. Ham, mining man of\nSilverton, was in.the city at the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 Mrs. W. A. Hufty, Silica street,\nis visiting- in Trail her son-in-law\nand daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Earl\nFitzpa trick.\n\u2022 M. Qlson of the Relief Arlisg-\nton mine is visiting In Nelson.\n\u2022 S. A. Speers was in town from\nCreston at the week-end.\n\u2022 Mra. J. Irving of Shoreacres\nvisited the city at the week-end.\n\u2022 Andrew Grudale of the Relief\nArlngton mine is a Nelson visitor.\nBuy Home Goods\nMrs. Pitts Urges\nRobson Institute\nROBSON, B. C. \u2014 A regular meeting of the Robson Women's institute was held at the home of Mrs.\nC. S. .Squires with the president,\nMrs. Duncan Carter, in the chair and\n21 members present.\nAn invitation to join the Farmers'\ninstitute in jutting on a combined\nbanquet was accepted. Mrs. Stanley\nHumphries reported that the education committee had visited the\nschool and the institute decided to\nagain give the children a year s subscription to a geographical maga-\nTlie home economics committee\nhave arranged four contests to be\nheld at the meetings during, the\nyear, and under the supervision of\nthe convener, Mrs. 0. B. Ballard,\nheld their first, a cookie competition. There were 20 entries.\nThe visiting committee, Mrs. C.\nS. Squires and Mrs. E. H. Pierce,\nreported 17 calls were made during\nthe month and plans were made to\nsend greetings on St. Valentines\nday to some of the shut-ins.\nMrs. Duncan Carter read the\ngreetings to the institute from Mrs,\nH. McGregor, president ot the Federated Women's Institutes of Canada, and members learned of the\npublication of the first Women s\ninstitute magazine \"Home and Country\". Many subscriptions were sold\nafter the. meeting.\nEntertainment for the afternoon\nwas songs sung by the members, accompanied at the piano by Mrs. D.\nThe' president then introduced\nMrs. H. H. Pitts, Nelson, treasurer\nof the advisory board, whb gave a\nvery interesting talk on Canadian\nIndustries.\nMra Pitts, who was convener oi\nCanadian Industries for the Federated Women's Institutes of Canada\nfor two and a half years, told of interesting enterprises of the women\nthroughout Canada. Quebec women\nparticularly, she said, had many\nlovely home crafts and found a\nready market for their goods to\ntourists. ,      '   _     _,\nShe found that each year Canadian women were takirfg more mterest\nin competitions and exhibits.\nIn speaking ot British Columbia s\nindustries, she particularly mentioned the Consolidated Mining &\nSmelting Co. at Trail which is the\nlargest of its kind in the world and\nwhich has not only brought prosperity to the district but made the\nKootenays known throughout the\nworld. Members also learned that\nDouglas fir doors were shipped to\nall parts of the United Kingdom,\nand that Canadian hosiery was preferred in England.\nBritish Columbia has many interesting and profitable cottage industries, she said, and told ot one woman knitting wool suits, another\nwho made Maraschino cherries.\nMrs. Pitts then treated the members to candied peel she had made\nfrom grapefruit rind, and showed\nmarmalade to which she had added\nsvrup left from the grapefruit\nAll through her talk, Mrs. Pitts\nurged buying British Columbia products, then Canadian and Empire\ngoods. She said to encourage grocers\nto stock their shelves with British\nColumbia products. Many institutes sponsored a buy B. C. products week, she added.\nA hearty vote of thanks was accorded Mrs. Pitts after which tea\nwas served by the hostesses, Mrs.\nC. S. Squires, Mrs. C. F. Duplat and\nMrs. Robert Waldie.\t\n\u2022ROUTE 36' IS HIS JINX\nDECATUR, 111., Feb. 13 (AP).\u2014\nFrank Batchelder of Harristown\nfigures his special jinx has headquarters along state route 36 west\nof here. , \u201e .\nOne day recently his car stalled\non the road. His brother Ed drove\nto the rescue and began towing the\ndisabled machine. Frank's car was\nhit and badly wrecked by a truck\nduring the journey.\nFrank purchased a new car. It\nwas hit by another auto as Frank\ndrove homeward on 38.\nBRANTFORD, Ont (CP)\u2014A. T.\nWhitaker, newspaperman, has started his third successive term as\nchairman of Brantford Parks board.\nHe is also president of the Ontario-\nParks association and a member\not the Niagara Parks commission.\nJONAH MINNION LIVES\nIN GOLDFISH BOWL\nSMITHFIELD, N. C\u201e Feb. 13 (AP);\n\u2014Otis L. Duncan,has a Jonah fish\nin his goldfish howl.\nDuncan, an attorney, said a minnow\u2014now residing happily among\nthe goldfish\u2014was used by a.neighbor several days ago as bait to catch\na jack fish. When Duncan cut into\nthe fish, out wiggled the minnow.\nI.0.D.L Dance at\nCastlegar Scores\nCASTLEGAR, B.C.-A lovely\nValentine dance sponsored by the\nLillian Killough chapter, I.O.D.E.,\nin the Castlegar Coronation hall\nFriday was the high light of the\nsocial season here.\nThe decorations, which were arranged under the convenership of\nMrs. J. Holden were done in Valentine motif. A novelty dance program was designed by Mrs. 0. N.\nAskew.\nPrizes for the spot waltz were\nwon by Miss Hope McGauley and\nR. Whittacker. The prize for the\nballoon dance was won by B. Martin. The door prizes were won by\nF. Parent and Mrs. F. Berger.\nAt midnight lunch was served\nunder the convenership of Mrs. C.\nPleasance.\nHospitalization Plan\nTheme Willow Point\nInstitute Discussion\nWILLOW POINT, B. C.-NIneteen\nmembers and three visitors attended\nthe meeting of the Willow Point\nWomen's institute Thursday in the\ninstitute house, Mrs. T. H. H. Applewhaite presiding.\nMrs. L. deCocq, secretary, read a\nletter. from the provincial board\npresident, Mra. MacGregor, emphasizing the Importance of committee\nwork.' It was reported that the new\nW. I. magazine would be available\nin March.\nMrs. J. Learmonth and Mrs. J. C.\nCampbell were appointed representatives to the Willow Point Girl\nGuides. This company, Mrs.- Learmonth reports, had won a large\nnumber of badges.\nThe members discussed fully the\nhospitalization scheme of the Kootenay Lake General hospital.\nThe program consisted of a demonstration of uncooked candy by Mrs.\nH. L. Howe. Samples were tasted\nby the members and found delicious\nand a box of assorted candles was\ndonated to the sale table. Mrs. Howe\nwas tendered a vote of thanks.\nMrs. Applewhaite and Mrs. Barnes\nwere tea hostesses.\nCAPE TOWN, (CP) - Five-day\ntrip by sea, the South Atlantic island\nof St. Helena, immortalized for the\nexile of Napoleon, is being developed as a holiday resort for tourists\nfrom South Africa.\nValudw'A (Daif,\nSend Us Her Address\nOur Flowers will tell your story\nKootenay Flower Shop\n364 Baker St\nJ. H. Coventry, Prop.      Phone 962\nEXCLUSIVE LINE OF\nLADIES' WEAR\n669 Ward St.\nPhone 970\nOiS&m&MS&SS&SS!MStoSS3&&\u00bb\nRADIO OWNERS\nSave now, Improve reception ahd\ntone as much as 30 per cent by\nfactory method and an oscilloscope.\nYour radio picked up and thoroughly overhauled at lowest prices.\nNelson Electric Co.\n674-Baker St.. Phone 2(0\nWASHING MACHINES\nREPAIRED\nFull line of repairs and wringer\nrolls In stock. Prompt and efficient work guaranteed. Free\nestimates-given.\nBEATTY BROS. LTD.\nNELSON FACTORY BRANCH\nPhone 91 321 Biker St\nSoroptimlsls\nPresent Gift\nMrs. Lambert\nA special meeting was held recently by the Soroptomist club in\nhonor of their charter member, Mrs.\nCecil Lambert nee Lois Sheffield,\nwho was married last December.\nPresident'\u00bbJean Gilker presented\nMrs, Lambert with a beautiful silver service tray. The presentation\nwas augmented by a miscellaneous\nshower.\nAt- the dinner meeting held last\nFriday a' talk on life insurance was\ngiven by Lois Lambert. The speaker dated the beginning' of insurance\nfrom the days of piracy when policies were taken out by travellers\nto provide for ransom money in\nthe event of their being taken captive by pirates. The first actual\ninsurance company provided for ah\nincome for a man after retirement\nand for his iamily after his death.\nContrary to general opinion, 65 per\ncent of policies issued In the present\nday are paid out while the insured\nis still living. As well as having insurance protection one should be\nequipped with a proper will to\navoid unnecessary expenses in the\nadministering ot the estate she said.\nThe business meeting was followed by a discussion of ways and\nmeans of raising money for the\nSoroptomist ward in Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital. The welfare committee was given power to make\narrangements fer a bridge and contest\ntt More Fined\nOn Radio Counts;\nt Case Adjourned\nEleven   more   persons   pleaded\nlilty to charges of operating ra-\nos without licences, and paid fines\ntotalling $50 when they appeared\nbefore William Brown, police magistrate, in police, court Monday.\nJ. -O.'Patenaude, 302 Carbonate\nstreet before pleading guilty,, told\nthe-magistrate he had not-bought a\nlicence because interference was so\ngreat-in his neighborhood he could\nnot use his radio. Several inspections\nof the neighborhood had been made\nand the trouble had been located at\nhis corner, but nothing had ever\nbeen done. He pleaded guilty and\nwas fined $5.\nOthers paying fines were H. D.\nFoster, 415 Latimer street; Leland\nW. Bates, 406 Latimer street; Andrew Kraft represented by Mrs.\nKraft, 420 Latimer street; David\nW. Gibbons, 521 Carbonate street;\nCarl E. Lykegard, 518 Carbonate\nstreet; W. J. McLean, 404 Latimer\nstreet; William Graham, represented by Mrs, Graham, 601 Latimer\nstreet; -Mrs. Helga Saare, 416 Silica\nstreet; Mrs. Margaret MacRae, 313A\nLatimer street; ahd Mrs. Harriet\nRobertson, represented by her husband, W. J. Robertson, 416 Mill\nstreet. \u25a0\nMrs. Thomas Johnston, who appeared to answer for her husband\non Friday, but did not have his written consent, still did not have it\nMonday, so the case was adjourned\ntill Thursday. Mr. Johnston, a com-\nCotton,\nBright cotton print dresses.\nNipped in waists, stand out\nskirts. Zipper and  button\ntrims. Sizes 14 to 48.\n$1.00to\n$2.98\nfZWM\ni\nREADY-TO-WEAR and DRYCOODS\nPHONE 200 BAKER ST.\nmereial traveller, was still out of\ntown.\nMra. Graham had obtained her\nhusband's written consent to appear for him, and Mrs. Saare, whose\nson, Atos, appeared without her\nwritten consent on Friday, answered\nher own charge.\nMrs. MacRae.pleaded guilty and\npaid her fine, after telling his worship on Friday that she thought it\n\"hardly fair\" that she should plead\nguilty to the charge. She said she\nhad only just unpacked the radio\nand connected it to the power feed,\nafter having it in storage for a long\ntime.\nAt the morning session, W. J.\nRobertson appeared for his wife,\nMra. Harriet Robertson, with her\nwritten consent, but the consent was\nnot given on the proper form provided by the police, so the case was\nadjourned until the afternoon. Then,\nMr. Robertson pleaded guilty and\npaid his fine.\nSochi ...\nSLOCAN CITY\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C.-Neil Tattrie, Sr., of New Denver, was a\nrecent visitor to town.\nMr. and Mrs. B. E. O'Neail visited\nMrs. O'Neail in Nelson.\nMiss Ruby Wilson was a visitor\nto Nelson.\nThe monthly meeting of the board\nof stewards of the United church\nwas held at the home of Mr. and\nMrs. R. E. MacMillan. Members\npresent. were W. Clough, Mrs. J.\nP. Sutherland, Mrs: A. Ewing, P.\nAdams, Mrs. MacMillan and Mrs.\nAdams who was a visitor. At conclusion, a social hour was spent.\nRent that room with a Want Ad.\n$34.25 COLLECTED IN\nFINES AT CRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, B. C. \u2014 Four prosecutions were made at the provincial police court in Cranbrook^\nJanuary, when $34.25 was collecteA'\nin fines and costs. The approximate'\nvalue of property lost or stolen dur\u00bb,,\ning the month was $20, of which;\nnone was recovered.\nSix petty complaints were recelv\ned, 14 transients were checked a\"\nwarned to leave town and 18 In\ndents were checked during patrol\n'  No serious crimes were reported;\nHow Women\nin Their 40's\nCan Attract Men\nHere's good advice for \u2022 woman during her- j\nchange (usually from 88 to 62), who feara\nshe'll lose her appeal to men, who worrlea\nabout hot Duties, loss of pep, dizzy spoils,\nupset nerves and moody spells. J.. -jS\nJust get more fresh air, 8 hrs. sleep and if\nyou need s reliable \"WOMAN'S\" tonic Cult*\nLydla E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound,\nmade especially for women. It helps Nature\nbuild up physical resistance, thus helps'giro\nmore vivacity to enjoy life and assist C3um\u00bb\nlog jittery nerves and those disturbing eymp*\ntoms that often accompany change of lift,,\nPinkham'B is WELL WORTH try\u00ae?\n (AgvU\nWE DELIVER\nANY 8IZE ORDER FREE ... I\nANY.WHERE IN THE OITVv I\nHILLYARD'S\nFairway Grocery\nPhone 264 Vic Crawford, Mar.\ni Some People Have a Way...\n, MO.\nLET ME TEU YOU A\"SECRET. I EAT\nKELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN EVERY MORNING.\nIT HELPS FORMTHE SOFT \"BULK\" THE\nBOWELS NEED TO KEEP REGULAR.     \u2022_\nIW\nYOU MEAN TO SAY, READY-\nT0-EAT__CEREALCANDO\nWHAT\ncathartics\ndon't?\nSAY! YOU CAN PUT MY NAME AND ADDRESS\nrjMA BOWL OF THIS EVERY MORNING^\nWELL, IF IT ISN'T JOHN. I HARDLY,\nKNEWYOU, YOU LOOK SODIFFa-RENT.^^\n(AND I FEEL SO DIFFERENT, SINCE\nIiVe BEEN EATING ALL-BRAN\ni\"EVERY DAY\/MY BAG FEELS\n\"LIGHTER AND'MYROUTE SEEMS\nONLY HALF\nAS LONG, _\n.^____,\nEat Kellogg's ALU!\nBRAN every day.\naa a cereal ot in delicious muffins, drink\nplenty of water?'\nForm those regular\nhabits that make.\nlife worth living. IlJ*\ntwo convenient sixes\npackages. Made by\nKellogg in London*-.\nCanada. At all grow\ncers and restaurants.-\n \u00ab.W,|.M..uy,   ..\n^^\n'\u00ab\"r\"w'wl^\nPAGE   SIX-\nNtlfimt latlg Jfwtw.\nEstablished April 22, 1902\nflWfr'sfc Columbia's Most Interesting Netospaper\nPublished every morning tacept Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY LIMITED,\n256  Baker  Street,  Nelson, British   Columbia.\ni       i    ' \u25a0 i   '\nPhone 144. Private Exchange Connecting All Departments\nMEMBER OF THE CANADIAN PRESS AND\nTHE .'AUDIT   BUREAU   OF   CIRCULATIONS\nTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14,1939\nWILD RICE\nWild rice appears to have other uses than putting succulent flesh on the frames of living ducks, though to most\n\\ people the heads of rice are thought of chiefly in cpnnec-\n;tion with wild fowl. The canvasback duck is said to owe\nKg repute for sweet and delicate flesh to the great rice\n.beds of the Chesapeake Bay area. In areas that have no\nwild rice it is just another duck. To the Nelson Rod and\nGun club, which many years ago planted wild rice on the\nKootenay Flats in the hope of making life there attractive\n' to more ducks, wild rice was a lure or bait.\nBut it seems this cereal has commercial uses, and as\nhuman food.\nConsideration is being given to the development of a\nwild rice industry for the Indians of the prairie provinces,\naccording to information disclosed by the Indian affairs\ni branch, department of mines and resources. Officers of the\nIndian affairs branch in Manitoba, Saskatchewan and Al-\n1 berta have been directed to survey the possibilities of the\ncultivation of wild rice by Indians in their respective prov-\ninc3s, and to report on the rf.ost suitable areas for the pur-\n\u25a0 pose. Wild rice is the oldest cereal crop harvested in Can-\nl ada, having been grown by the Indians hundreds of years\n[ago, and is an important item in the food supplies of the\nnative population.\nPresent information indicates that there is a shortage\nof wild rice in the United States, and very high prices-are\nbeing paid for the threshed and hulled rice. A band of In-\n'dians of the Fort Alexander reserve, situated on the southern part of Lake Winnipeg, had successful results in the\n:harvesting of wild rice. They sold 20,000 pounds, for which\n\u2022 they got 18 to 25 cents a pound; one Indian alone took 100\n\u25a0pounds of rice to Winnipeg and sold it for $25. Fields near\nLac du Bois, Manitoba, have been under lease to a commercial enterprise which has been successfully developed in\nthe district. a\nRice is difficult to seed, and in deciding upon locations\nseveral contributing factors will have to be kept in mind.\nThe best growth is obtained in bodies of water which do\n.not rise to too high a level in the spring. It thrives best\n.along muds flats, and rivers and nature have their own\nway of ploughing the mud, which should be of a certain\n-texture for best results. The stalks of the plant freeze in\nthe ice, and in the sp\/ing stalks and roots, together with\nsome of the soil, are lifted up, and the ice in this way \"cultivates\" the mud.\nIn spite of the fact that wild rice has been distributed\n[to various people for the purpose of sowing it in different\nlocalities, very little of it has been gitown successfully. In\nthe province of Manitoba certain areas have been suggested\nwhere a start might be made.\nTo know how to hide one's ability is great skill*\nlLa Rochefoucauld.\nNEL80N DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-TUESDAY MORNING. FEB. 14. 1939\nSALLY'S SALLIES\n_a_____0__j,\u00ab<\u00ab cett.\nMary was content with a little lamb in the old days\n\u2022now she isn't satisfied until she gets your goat\n&$sssii&e$&&ssexws&&xsts&s>\nfianoJiamcL\nl*W\u00ab*S$tt>\nPOLITICAL SCREWBALLS\nOur neighbors to the south have a new and exceedingly\ndescriptive title which they apply to eccentric characters.\n'It is \"screwball.\" This strange blossom blooms forth in all\nsorts'of fields, but seems to reach its fullest flowering in\nthe political arena.\nThe species is not indigenous to any one part of the\nrepublic, but seems to do best in the south. The late Huey\nLong, of Louisiana, was a prize specimen.\nBut the neighboring state of Texas carries off honors\n\u25a0at present with its new governor, W. Lee O'Daniel This\n'remarkable character is a native son, but he overcame this\nthandicap by having a striking radio personality. He built\nflip a big business in flour, largely through his radio tech-\n| nique. Last year, when the gubernatorial nomination lists\n|were crowded with ambitious Democrats, he decided his\nf'talents could extend beyond the flour business. He set out\nI with a hillbilly band to canvass the huge state, financing\n[his campaign by contributions collected in a cracker-box\nI at each meeting. Originally the campaign appears to have\n[been a publicity stunt but to everybody's surprise, including his own, he won.\nHis platform was unique, including promises of economy, reduced taxes, pensions of $30 a month for everyone\n[over 65 who did not have that much income, and similar in-\nLtongruous items. Whenever any heckler became annoying\n[by pointing out how these promises contradicted*one another, O'Daniel would order the band to strike up.\n* At his inauguration, which was staged in the state\nluijiversity football arena to the accompaniment of massed\n[bands, the new governor called for a policy of simplicity\n[and dignity in administration.\nHe has only been in office two weeks, but is already in\n[hot water over his unorthodox policies. However he is only\n(repeating an old Texas custom.\nFor Governor \"Jim\" Ferguson, who got into serious\nrouble, and his wife MMa\" who succeeded him in office,\nad somewhat similar records. Then there was \"Alfalfa\nBill\" Murray in the neighboring State of Okalhoma. North\nCarolina boasts Senator \"Bob\" Reynolds who has given\nhe venerable Hon. C. H. Cahan a nightmare by suggesting\nthat Britain Cede a section of Canada linking Alaska with\n|the U. S. border to pay war debts.\nOf course, when we contemplate the *\"screwballs\" of\n[American politics we might remember that in the eyes of\nlour neighbors the actions of Alberta's premier seern a bit\n\u25a0strange, and those of some of his colleagues only slightly\nBess so. Perhaps a good deal depends on what one is used\nno, in politics as in everything else.\nlii.i nmtlHsiiUminssiil  ^ilisilMsllsilirii^^\nMarch of tho\nWooden Columnists\nFeaturing this charge of the lightheaded brigade bent upo.. \"saving\"\nthe Constitution despite the tact\nthat no danger threa'ened it, was\nthe march ot the Wooden soldiers\nof the newspaper columns. To the\ncredit of the fraternity let it be recorded that three famous writers,\nWalter Lippmann, Arthur Krock,\nand Heywood Broun, did refuse\nto tilt their lances at straw men\nand did struggle valiantly, even\nif vainly, to deflect with facts the\nmad march of some of their misinformed and misinforming fellow\ncolumnists.\nFacts were as nothing before the\nmad march of the wooden columnists. Theirs was not to reason why,\ntheirs was to' stop Rossevelt\nor die. They performed prodigies\nof Don Quixote valor. General Hugh\nS. Johnson, who can fight for or\nagainst the New Deal with equal\nfervor ahd apparently equal confusion, let loose floods of uncontrollable tears.\nWhile Mark Sullivan, David\nLawrence, Paul Mallon, 'Croak'\nCarter and others could not put\non as diverting a show as the Spaniard of old, they equalled and in\nsome instances excelled him in\nother respects\u2014Mark Sullivan in\npontlficlal gloomings and the others\nIn gross misstatements as to the objects and effects of the bill in\nquestion; Dorothy Thompson, beholding her 'manly' colleagues,\nworking the tear ducts so successfully, pursued resolutely the starry-eyed Jeanne d'Arc role that she\nso capably affects. Like 'Croak'\nCarter, she might not know any too\naccurately, on. account of lack of\nintimate acquaintance with them,\njust what our institutions were all\nabout, but she was prepared to\n'save' them somehow.\nBut Frank Gannett, colieking\nwithin his wooden horse, and the\nother Jeremiahs of the dally press,\nbraying on their wind instruments,\nwould not have won their objective if Father Coughlin had not\ngallantly dashed to the front to assume command. Organizing a Klu\nKlux Kuan of the air he proceeded\nto mob members of Congress with\nthe greatest number of letters, telegrams and telephone calls that history records. As in practically all\ninstances of mob violence, those\nwho composed the mob were puppets In the hands of cleverer and\nless scrupulous men. Of those who\ncooked this witch's mess of Klu\nKluxlsm, it may be said that Frank\nGannett, the rap-Roosevelt columnists and Father Coughlin ate jointly arid severally quite worthy of\neach other.\n\u2014Sec. Ickes in Colliers.\nVocational Guidance\nFactors\nIn conclusion it may be said thot\na successful program of vocational ' guidance involves at least four\nmain factors:\n1. Human Analysis of the abilities,\naptitudes, tastes, etc., of the individuals to be guided.\n2. Occupation Analysis\u2014an inventory of the ingredients of industry, trade, agriculture, the professions, with a view of ascertaining\noccupational needs, opportunities\nand goals.\n3. Placement Bureaus under ex\npert guidance, to bring together\nthe individual and the job for which\nhe is best fitted.\n4. A FollowUp Servlce-Hittach-\ned to the placement Bureaus, to\nsupervise their human output, keep\nin close touch with industry, agriculture, trade and the professions\nwith a view to correcting faulty\nplacements and to serve, in general,\nas a coordinating agency in the\nvocational guidance programme.\nFederal initiative, at least of an\nadvisory character, with provincial\ncooperation, appears necessary for\nsuccess. Direct administration\nshould probably be under provin.\ncial jurisdiction. Indeed, such an\norganization may well prove to be\nan Integral factor In the successful\nworking out of the national unemployment insurance plan which,\nit is hoped, will soon be in, operation.\n\u2014Adult Learning.\nBenighted and\nProud of It\nThere is no foundation what-.\nsoever for current press reports\nthat elimination of posters on British Columbia highways is being\nasked by the Vancouver Automobile club, Marketing is informed.\nIn denying such action by his club,\nthe secretary stated there was not\neven any anticipation of the move.\n\u2014Marketing, Toronto.\nS5SS\u00ab$\u00abS \u00abStt\u00ab53!S$\u00bbWSSS\u00abS\u00abS*\nJ&M youMsdfr\nNWVVWaMV\nHsRiNWms\nONE-MINUTE TEST\n1. Who was the Polish general\nwho fought for the colonists in the\nAmerican War of Independence, and\nwas killed?\n2. What is the meaning of the\nword \"lachrymose\"?'\n3. In boxing circles which is the\nlightest weight classification?\nTODAY'8 HOROSCOPE\nPersons whose birthday is today\nwill enjoy a successful and happy\nyear. A great and unexpected piece\nof good fortune will come to them.\nChildren born today also will enjoy\nsuccess in life. They will be fortu-\nnute in speculations, and will make\nhappy marriages.\nONE-MINUTE TEST  ANSWERS\n1. Casimlr Pulaski, who was killed at the seige of Savannah in 1779.\n2. Tearful.\n3. Flyweight.\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nBREN  GUN  REPORT\nThe vast majority of Canadians\nwill experience genuine satisfaction that the Bren gun inquiry did\nshow that nothing had been done\nby Hon. Ian .Mackenzie, minister\nof defence, and his advisers, which\nwould call for any criticism, while\nthe Mackenzie King government are\nto hi congratulated upon bringing\nin a measure which will have purchases of armament and runltions\nhandled by a special commission.\nEvery precaution must be taken to\nsee that there is no profiteering in\nthe manufacturing of armament\nmunitions.\n\u2014Drumheller Review\nfojd\/iadL\nShepard Barclay\nTells  How  to  Bid\n'and Play\nCHARITY APPRECIATED\nTODAY BHBNO THE day of\n\u25a0America's Cud Party\" held In\nmany puis of the country under\ntho auspices of. the American Contract Bridge League for the benefit\nof under-privileged children, it Is\nfitting to show a hand on which the\ndeclarer received a most appreciated gift. It so happens that ability\nto recognise a gift, when one la\noffered, end then figuring out how\nto accept it, Is one of the attributes\nit a successful bridge player.\nWKS812\n. a j 7 r.\n*A8\nA 0 8 8\nV 10\n\u2666 Q932\n4 107542\nA 3 10 7 3\n\u2022\u00bb QJ875\n. 10 8 8 i\ns|s None\nA AK5 1\n5 A 3\n\u2666 K\nA ICQ J963\n(Dealer: South. East-West vulnerable.)\nSeldom .are there very many\nrounds of bidding when your opponents do not Interrupt with bids of\ntheir own, but this deal brought\neight of them. South began with\n1-Club, North bid 1-Heart, South\n3-Clubs, North. 3-Dlamonda, South\n3-Spades, North -t-Clubs since his\npartner's two bids of that suit before showing the spades indicated\na six-four distribution. South then\nused the Blackwood   convention,\nbidding 4-No tramp to ask about\nhis partner's aces. North showed\ntwo with 5-Hearta. South nut\nasked about kings with 0-No trump.\nNorth showed one with S-Dia-\nmonds. South then hopped to\n7-Chfbs.\nWest saw fit to .double this,\nwhereupon North went to 7-No\ntrump, and West also doubled that.\nWhen the heart 10 waa led. South\ntook stock. There was absolutel;\nno doubling material tn the defenders' hands exoept the missing five\nclubs, in South's estimation. So ht\nwon the heart trick in hla dosed\nhand, finessed the club ,8, and so\nmade hla contract. He would have\nbeen defeated positively if West\nhad not doubled.\nTomorrow's Problem\n48863\n.  J 73 2\n\u2666 K'\n4 K\u00bb 8 3\n.  AKQ\n10 5\ns> 10 9 5 3\nA 10 7 4\nt        c\ns\nA    . 1U.U 7\nV 0 8 4\nA QJ84\nA. 2\nA AK42\n\u2666 A7 8\nAAQJ 8 5\n(Dealer: West Neither side via\nnerable.)\nIf   South   bids   1-Club,   West\n1-Heart and North 2-Clubs on this\ndeal, East passing, what should\nSouth do next?\nCopyright 1939, a. King Features Syndics!. Im\n1000 PEOPLE ATTEND OPENING OF\nROSSLAND HOSPITAL WING SUNDAY\n11 Questions tl\nANSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers is open to any reader ol\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\ncase Will the name of the person\nasking the question be published.\nW. L. Trail\u2014Would you please tell\nme the population of Zeballos,\nBamfield and Gordon River, B.C.?\nZeballos 800; Bamfield 250  and\npresume you mean Jordan River\nwhich has a population of 101, according to Canadian Press.\nB. J. Kitchener\u2014Would you please\ntell the greatest number of eggs a\nhen has laid during a year?.\nThe official records of eggs that\nany one hen has laid in 365 days\nwas established in 1930 by a b rd\nowned by W. Whiting of Port Kells,\nB. C. and equalled again in 1933 by a\nbird owned by M. H. Rutledge of\nSardis, B. C. The number of eggs\nlaid was 357. Our authority is the\nAgassiz Experimental Farm.\nW. G. J-, Jaffray\u2014In your Monday\npaper you printed an article about\nthe sinking of the Japanese submarine 1-63. How was it possible\nto save six of the crew and not\nthe other 81?\nAlthough Japanese authorities refused to give out information on\nthis disaster, it is known that modern submarines have an air-lock or\nair-chamber by which one may\nleave or escape if equipped with\ndiving dress. The submarine is in\nabout 330 leet of water.\nT. K., Nelson\u2014Con you tell me how\nold William Wilberforce was when\nhe died?\nHe was 74.\nR. R\u201e New Denver\u2014Who is the Canadian minister of national revenue?\nHon. James Lorimer Ilsley.\nA. E. R.! Creston\u2014Will you please\ntell me how long a frame building will last?\nThis depends upon a great many\nfactors, including climate, kind of\nwood used, and care taken; but it\nmay be stated that if veil cared for\na frame building may last for centuries.\nE. R., Nelson\u2014Which is heavier, a\nquart of milk or a quart of cream?\nA quart of milk is the heavier\nThis is explained by the fact that\nthere is more fat in cream than in\nmilk, and that fat is lighter than\nskin milk.\nACTIVE IN ...\nKOOTENAY LIFE\njack Mcdowell\n. . : member of the Nelson junior board of trade\u2014one of the\n\"workers-at-large\" drafted by\nvarious committees.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nLooking Backward.. *\nTEN YEAR8 AGO\n(From Daily News of Fib. 14,1929).\nTrail Smoke Eaters defeated Rossland Miners 6-2 in Trail as Clarence\nReddick scored three goals.\u2014Kimberley defeated Lumberton 9-2 to\nearn the right to advance in the\nprovincial intermediate playdowns.\n\u2014An entire gypsy band of 34 persons were frozen to death at Warsaw, Poland, as result of the intense\ncold; sixteen children and six others were killed by a pack of 100\nwolves near Vienna.\u2014The C. P. R.\ncontinues to use the Kettle Valley\nfor freight trains, ahd the C. N. R.\nlines for passenger trains, pending\nrepairs to the main line following\na slide near Revelstoke.\u2014The total\ncost of the Hudson's Bay railroad\nline from Port Nelson o Churchill\nfor the past 17 years has been $23.-\nCMOOO. \u00ab- Last year the Nelson\nI. O. D. E. spent $227 on child welfare.\u2014Mri. Nelson Murphy was\nelected regent ot the I.O.D.E. <\nTWENTY-FIVE YEAR8 AGO\nFront O'lly News of Feb. 14, 1914.\nViscount Gladstone resigned yesterday as governor general of the\nUnion of South Africa.\u2014Frank\nDeacon, resident of Nelson for 18\nyears died yesterday.\u2014Many workmen and passengers were killed\nand seriously Injured when a train\nwas blown' up near Mexico City.\u2014\nAid. A. J. Bell and H. G. Neelands\nwere appointed police commissioners in Nelson yesterday. Nelsoh Tigers defeated Kaslo yesterday In a\nhockey game 5-3, O'Genski scoring\ntwice for the winners.\u2014Rev.' D.\nDonaldson of Ymir visited Nelson\nyesterday.\u2014Several vessels have\ngrounded on the Virginian co.'st\nduring severe storms.\u2014Damage\namounting to $40,000 occurred when\na St. Thomas, Ont., hotel was destroyed by fire.\nFORTY YEAR8 AGO\n(From Dally Miner of Feb. 14,1899),\nFire gutted en entire business\nblock at Albany, N.Y., yesterday\ncausing the death of one person and\n$70,000 damage to property.\u2014General CallxtO Garcia was burled at\nHavana yesterday, with the city's\nentire population in' attendance.\u2014\nThe new opera house was opened\nhere last night.\u2014The Sandon curling bonspiel has been postponed for\na week, owing to mild weather.\u2014\nOne fireman was killed i.nd another\nseriously Injured when a fire gutted\na building In Montreal,, damage\namounting to $40,000.\u2014An undetermined number of lives have been\nlost as result of furious storms raging over eastern American Btates \u2014\nS. J. Mil. ilon returned to Nelson\nlast night trom a business trip\nthrough the east Kootenay.\n\"I know them smart young fell\ners in Washington are havin' a won\nderful time. Think of tellin' other\npeople how to run their business,\nand havin' power to make 'em do\nit.\"\nMgr. Mclntyre Chief\nRole; 12 Quests\nUse \"Mike\"\nROSSLAND, B.C.-With nearly\n1000 sp.ctators In attendance, the\n$90,000 wing of the Mater Mlsericordiae hospital; Rossland, was\nformerly opened by Monsignor A.\nK. Maclntyre, V.G., on the third\nor top floor of the wing Sunday afternoon. Twelve guest speakers\ntrom Nelson, Trill and Rossland\nspoke through a microphone, and\nwere heard on all floors by means\nof loud-speakers. \/\nEntering the wing by the Georgia\nstreet entrance, the guests were\nregistered, and were then conveyed\nby elevator to the top floor, where\nthe ceremony was held.\nThe music was supplied by the\nRossland City band.\nVICAR-GENERAL\nOFFICIATES\nFollowing a brief address of\nMayor W. A. Turner of Rossland,\nMgr. Maclntyre delivered the opening address, declaring the wing officially opened. The band played\n\"The Conqueror\", an overture by\nKing.\nR. R, Burns, M.P.P, represented\nthe provincial government, and\ntendered the greetings of G. M.\nWeir, minister of health and education.\nRev. T. W. Reed pastor of St.\nAndrew's United church, Rossland,\nassociated the caring of the sick\nwith spreading the word of God\namong uncivilized nations in a brief\ntalk.\nThe band played \"Ave Marie\"\nby Schubert with Roland Hill in\nthe cornet solo part.\nDr. E. E. Topliff of C. S. Williams\nclinic, Rossland, gave a short history of the wing from the time the\nidea for its construction was conceived three years ago. He commended the efforts of Mother Fla-\nvia and Sister Leihla.\nW. G. Ternan, president of the\nRossland board of trade, extended\ncongratulations to Sister Leihla.\nL. A. Campbell spoke of the generosity of the late J. J. Warren\nand of the part he played in the\nconstruction of the wing. He spoke\nhighly of Mr. Burns, F. M. MacPherson, minister of public works,\nH. Whlttaker, Archibald Sullivan,\nthe general contractor, and Herbert\n(Curly) Cunliffe, construction sup\nerlntendent.\nH. Whittaker, government chief\narchitect, who designed the wing\nand the new nurses' residence, spoke\nbriefly. Other speakers were Dr.\nJ. B. Thorn, of Trail, and C. F.\nMcHardy of Kootenay Lake General\nhospital, Nelson.\nVISITORS ENTERTAINED\nThe reception committee which\nconsisted of the ladles of the hospital board was busily occupied\nregistering the visitors as they\ncame in.\nUnder the convenershlp of Mrs.\nGeorge Townsend, the committee\nconsisted of Mrs. H. J. Bowej Mrs,\nJ. A. Cullinane, Mrs. J. J. Cullinane, Mrs. J. N. Cran, Mrs. J. A.\nButcher, Mrs. Emil Leduc and, Mrs\nW. M. Anderson.\nWhen the crowd started to assemble on the third floor, the ushers\nwere kept busy hurrying about In\nsearch of room. The third floor was\nin charge of Alderman W. G. Mara,\nwho was assisted by Emil Leduc and\nBruce McAulay. Mr. Leduc had\ncharge of platform arrangements\nand decorations.\nH. L. Christian had charge of the\nfirst floor and H. D. Brown of the\nsecond floor.\nFollowing the program, the ladies\nof the hospital auxiliary served\nrefreshments to the visitors in the\nsolarium on the second floor.\nA tour ot the wing was permitted. More visitors Inspected the\ncompleted   extension in  the  eve-\nTtie first baby to be born in the\nnew wing was Martin Michael, son\nof Mr. and Mrs. O. F. O'Neill of\nRossland, who arrived Sunday\nmorning at 5-30. ,   ,\nRev. R J. McKenna, Ph. D. of\nNelson, drew the sympathy of the\naudience toward the ever-laboring\nNuns, who, he said, have given up\nthose activities which make life\nworth living and who have pledged\nthemselves to one task, namely, to\nrelieve the sufferers and work with\nGod for the physical and spiritual\nbetterment of mankind.\nJitterbugs Battle\nto 3-3 Draw With\nWildcats at Trail\nTRAIL B. C.\u2014 Jitterbugs and\nWildcats fought to a 3-3 draw in\na high school girls' hockey game\nat thi Trail rink Saturday morning. Isobel Crowe scored all three\nof the Jitterbug's counters unassisted. Mary Alty finally beat goalie Irene Kemp after Isobel Crowe's I\ncounters had given the Jitterbugs\nthe lead through most of the game,\nand . then with Mary McGregor,\nscored two more to tie it up.\nThe team's were:\nJitterbugs\u2014Irene Kemp, goal; Isobel Crowe, Evelyn Davies, Vi. Catalan.., Betty Morrant, Eileen Crow*\nand Elaine Minto.\nWILDCATS\u2014 Kathleen Lennon,\ngoal; Mary McGregor, Ruth Palmer, Doreen Curran, Evelyn Dwyer,\nMary Alty, Gladys Owens and Olga\nBilesky.\nBig Guns Used in\nTarget Practices\nby 109th Battery\nROSSLAND, B.C.,-Milltiamen ot\nthe 109th (Rossland-Trall) field battery, practiced miniature target\nshooting at their weekly parade In\nthe Armory here Thursday night.\nBig Guns equipped to fire 22 bullets were used for firing. Morris\ntubes were fitted into the 18-pound-\ner barrels and the shots were on \u00bb\npar with actual big shells.\nAdditional practice of this nature\nwill take place. The battery will\nhave a landscape painting for future practices. t\nArchibald Rink\nWins in School\nCurling, Trail\nTRAIL, B. C.,-Pat Archibald's\nrink was declared winner of the\nTrail high school curling club's\nfirst rouhd robin series as it edged\nout Jan Beetstra's rink 8-7 at the '\nTrail rink Saturday morning. An\nextra game was necessary when\nthe two rinks were tied for first\nplace at the end of the series last\nweek. There was little to choose\nbetween the two rinks which were\ntied four times during the match\nand had to play an extra end before Archibald got an odd rock into\nthe house.\nPersonnel of the rinks was:\nPat Archibald, Bob Lepsoe, Harry\nDemblki and Jim McLeod.\nJan Beetstra, Gerald Simpson,\nBill Johnson and Art Waldie.\nResults of the second round robin\nseries which commenced Saturday\nmorning were: Dodimead 9, Harvey\n8; Archibald 3, Somerville 12;\nLunde 11, Beetstra 7; and Mawdsley 8, Kerr 8.\nNakusp Women's\nInstitute Elect 1939\nPres. Mrs. F. Rushton\nNAKUSP, B. C.\u2014At a meeting of\nthe Nakusp Woman's institute held\nhere this week the following officers were elected for the 1939\nterm: president, Mrs. F. Rushton;\nfirst vice-president, Mrs. G. Elder;\nsecond vice-president, Mrs. E. 'C.\nJohnson; secretary, Mrs. 0. Sals-\ntrom; treasurer, Mrs. A. N. Cowan;\ndirectors, Mrs. M. Baird, Mrs. E. A.\nFowler; pianist, Mrs. P. Jupp; publicity converor, Mrs. E. C. Johnson.\nThe Standing Committees were\nchosen as follows: education and\nbetter schools, Mrs. G. H. Gardner,\nJr., Miss M. Kirk; Canadianization,\nMrs. E. Oxenham, child welfare,\nMrs. G. Elder; industries, Mrs. A.\nB. S. Stanley; legislation, Mrs. C.\nS.a Leary; agriculture, Mrs. E. C.\nJohnson; community ' betterment,\nMrs. A. E. Fowler; home economics.\nMrs. O. Harper; peace and international relations, Mrs. W. Maxwell; buying committee, Mrs. 0.\nSalstrom and Mrs. A. Cowan Christmas program, Mrs. E. Oxenham;\ncemetery committee, Mrs. T. Steenhoff, Mrs. F. Horrdy, Mrs. E. Oxenham, Mrs. J. Parent, Sr.; bathing\nbeach, MrB. A. E. Fowler, Mrs. A.\nB. S. Stanley, Mrs. C. S. Leary;\nvisiting committee, Mrs. A. Berling, Mrs. A. Turner, Mrs. T. Steenhoff; hospital committee, Mrs. M.\nBaird, Mrs. G. Gill and Mrs. J.\nNorrlB.\n.Tea hostesses for the day were\nMrs. t. Oxenham, Mrs. A. Stanley and Mrs. M. Baird.\nSt. Eugene Extension\nComoany Is Reported\non $25,000 Program\nMOYIE, B.C., Feb. 13.\u2014St. Eugene Extension company, operating\nhere, is reported to have a $25,000\nprogram outlined for completion by\nApril 1.   . '\nKASLO HOSPITAL AID\nMEMBERSHIP DRIVE ON\nKASLO, B. C. - The Kaslo Ladies\nHospital aid met Tuesday afternoon\nat the home of Mrs. Walter Wright.\nThe secretary, Mrs. F. S. Rouleau, read a letter from Miss Beatrice\nBrown, R. N., of Creston, formerly\nof Victoria hospital nursing staff,\nexpressing thanks for a gift presented to her by the Aid and for.\nmer patients.\nThe chairman of the house committee. Mrs. Frank Helme, presented\nthe list of hospital needs for the\ncurrent month ahd, with her co-\nbuyer, Mrs. E. A. Hendricks, was\ninstructed to make the required purchases.\nThe \"Sunshine\" secretary, Mrs.\nGeorge Morton, reported a busy\nmonth.\nMrs. Mary White, Mrs. J. F. Shaw,\nMiss A. Hodges, Mrs. Leona Lock-\naid and Mrs. William Whlttaker,\nrespective representatives of the\nCatholic, United and the Anglican\nchurch aids, the.Women's institute\nand the Canadian Legion auxiliary,\ngave reports. Mrs. F. S. Chandler,\npresident for the board of directors,\nalso gave a short report.   \u2022\nThe membership canvass is to\nget under way at once. Mrs\u00bb Hendricks volunteered to canvass the\nhill and Miss Hodges to canvass the\ndown town. The secretary was instructed to write the usual out-of-\ntown canvassers.    '    '\nThe next meeting will be held at\nthe home of Mrs. E. M. Sandilands\nwith Mrs. J. N.' Murphy as co-\nhostess. Mrs. Wright was tendered\na vote of thanks for the use of her\nhome for the meeting and to the tea\nhostesses, Mrs. R. A. Chester and\nMrs. -Wright, for dainty refreshments served.\nCOVENTRY, England, (CP) -On\nher way to church to be married a\nbride, found she had on bedroom\nslippers. Returning home she found\nher mother, at church, had the key\nOff again to the church, back to the\nhouse and back again to church\nwith shoes on, she was married to\nGeorge Godwin.\nWildcats Win 6-0\nFrom High School\nBeavers at Trail\nTRAIL, B. C.\u2014Wildcats handed\nthe Beavers a 6-0 drubbing in a\nhigh school hockey game at the\nTrail rink Saturday morning. Fred\nWoods netted three, and George\nPatterson, Tulllo Dardi, and Pete\nZug one each for the winners.\nWoods and Bill Brownlee were the\npick of the Wildcat squad, and Stan\nJukich kept a well-guarded net.\nJim McLoed, \"Yates\" Simpson, and\nIrvin Robinson made some nice\nplays for the losers, but just could\nnot make them count. The teams\nwere: i\nBeavers\u2014Muzz Morris, goal; Jim\nMcLoed, \"Yates\" Simpson, Irvin\nRobinson, Ernie Robinson, Oscar\nLazarotto. Genari Fabbi, John Stcf-\nanelli, and Euo De Bagio.\nWildcats\u2014Stan Jukich, goal; F.\nWoods, George Patterson. Tulllo\nDardi, Pete Zuk, Bill Maitland,\nBUI Brownlee and George Walton.\nFOR\nMINING CAMPS\nUnsanded Cottonwood\npanels are suitable for\nall mining and other\ncamp buildings. They\nare strong, waterproof,\nlight and very easy to\nhandle.\nDistrict Distributors\nWood. Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0rimun\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nIts Cream,\nFlavor and\nEconomy\n\"For four years the only milk\nI have used is Pacific. I am so\nfond of its cream and flavor, I\nnever think of change. When\nsatisfied you get lixed and if\neconomy presses, that's your\nchoice and you won't change.\nI was born in 1865 and the\nbloom on my cheeks suggests\nI may not be wrong.\"\u2014From a\nletter by a man who cooks lor\nhimself.\nPacificMilk\nIrradiated of Course\nSmokies, Bulldogs\nDraw 1-1 in Trail\nSchool Puck Game\nTRAIL, B. C, \u2014 The East Trail\nSmokies and the Gulch Bulldogs\nbattled to a 1-1 draw In a public\nschool hockey game at the Trail\nrink Saturday mornln.. Ivo Dalla\nLanna scored for the Smokies and\nthen Lome Zinio climaxed a\nsparkling performance on tho Bulldog forward line with the tying\ngoal.\nRichard Loughery combined wilh\nLanna to pBce the Smokies while\nSergio Sammartino and Lome\nBuchanan stood out on the Bulldog\nsquad.\n' The teams were:\nSmokies \u2014 Otello Nocenle. goal:\nBill Turner, Ivo Dalla Lanna, Bill\nRobertson, Yug MoLim, George\nOwens, and Richard Loughery.\nBulldogs - Albert Rella, goal;\nSergio Sammartino, Lome Zinio.\nLome Buchanan, John Palmer, Ted\nBrothers, Remo' Mornndini, Joe\nSandrin, and Dart Dardi, coach.\nHave You Any\nUsed\nSKATES\n!\nWhy Not Turn\nThem Into Cash\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (2) lines 6 times 80c net\nTwo  (2)  lines once 20c net\nNelson Dailv News\nPHONE  144\n WJ.IJ.I1JUH.11U.IIUILL  -J.   I.llll ,.J Jl IIIJ.iliJIJIWIJUIalHpi\nI Mis in an nunpi>\nHP\nAll\nIE DESJARD1NS\nAPTURES \"BEST\nTROPHY\nu\nielson   Miss,   Third\nin Slalom, Is\nCity's Best\nWhile i Sunday's big crowd\nthrilled to tha speed and spills\nof slalom and downhill racing\nl comely Nelson Miss was topping\niff a first season's performance\nthat was to net her the much-\ncoveted Nelson Ladles Challenge\ncup, trophy for the Nelson club's\nbest lady skier.\nShe was Miss Dee Desjardine,\nwho Sunday culminated her first\nlull season ef skiing by brushing aside experienced opposition to place third In ladles' slalom race at the Nelson ski tourney. Her time for the double run\nof the difficult course was Just\nsix seconds under that of Peggy\nBall, experienced Rosslandlte, who\ncarried off top awards; while her\nfirst run was done In 24 seconds,\nthe fastest time for the course.\nClub officials, who Monday\nmade tha announcement of her\naward, saw Miss Deijardlns aa\none of Nelson's most promising\nlady sklet*   \t\n.elombos Snatch\nfirst Trail Hoop\nPlayoff by 36-33\nTRAIL, B. C. \u2014 Although the\nolombos relinquished top spot of\nie Trail senior B hoop league to\nie Sheiks and decided only at the\nat minute to enter the {.layoffs,\nley demonstrated at the Memorial\nill that they still have plenty of\nJOd basketball left in them when\nley vanquished the Sheiks 38-33 in\nla first game of a two out ot\niree series for the right to meet\ndssland for the Intercity champion-\nlip.\nBrandolinl and Merlo paced the\nolombo onslaught Id the first half\n1th eight and seven points re-\n>ectively but Geno Pagnan's nine\ntints kept the Sheiks in the pic-\nire as the half ended at 23-19 in\nivor ot the Colombos.\nMOERELLI COMES BACK\nPagnan opened the scoring after\nie breather with a field goal and\n; converted foul throw. Baillie was\ninished with four personals and\nolombos called time out while\n[ino Angerelll got into his strip to\nYe Colombos five players. From\nten on the Sheiks began to lose\nght of their checks and-Colombos\nulled ahead with Merlo and Anger-\nII combining on two baskets and\nammartino adding a basket and\nfree throw.\nStrachan tossed In Pagnan's pass\nit Sammartino lopped in another\nmake the score 30-25, Colombos\nading. The Sheiks staged a rally\nKirby made good on a brace of\nul throws and the smooth-work-\n[ Strachan sniped another basket.\nrby polished off a Pagnan-Turik\nr_ to put the Sheiks in front for\ne first time in the second half\n\u25a0thin a slim one-point margin.\nIN BY FREE THROWS\nSammartino laced In two baskets\nOffset Pagnan's neat toss and the\nilombos again took possession of\nNILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON, B.C-TUESDAY MORNINO. FEB. 14. 1939\n-PAGE SEVEN\nIn Kootenay\nHockey\nCARL SORENSON\nIn his second year with the\nKimberley Dynamiters, East\nKootenay entrant In the Kootenay puck circuit, Carl Is the\nelder of the hockey-playing 8or.\nenson brothers, Chris and Carl,\nboth wlngmen.\nCarl began his hockey In Calgary, later turning pro. He was\nreinstated as an amateur before\nhe Joined the Dynamiters.\nthe play. Strachan and Smith Just\ncouldn't get the ball In as the Sheiks\npeppered the Colombo hoop. Mino\nAngerelll completed the scoring\nwith two free throws for the Colombos.\nAsh Baillie refereed and John\nBolano was Judge of play.\nThe teams and scorers were:\nSheiks: Bill Turik 3, Geno Pagnan 15, Pete Salsiccloll, Bob Kirby\n9, Phil Smith, Willy Strachan 6,\nand Wish Milburn, coach,\nColombos: Carl Baillie 2, Booney\nSammartino 13, Bruno Merlo 13, F.\nBrandolini 8, \"Shorts\" Christante,\nand Mino Angerelll 2.\nHockey Schedule\nSchedule for Nelson city league\nteams during the week follows:\nTUESDAY\n4:15\u20145:15 p.m.\u2014Panther bantams\nvs M.R.K. bantams.\n5:15\u20145:45 p.m.\u2014Midget rep practice.\n8:00-10:00 p.m.\u2014Trail vs Nelson,\nJunior playoff.\nWEDNESDAY\n8:00-10:00 p.m.\u2014Trail vs Nelson,\nmidget playoff.\n8ATURDAY\n9:00-10:00 ajn.\u2014Westerners bantams vs F.A.C.  bantams  (No.  2.)\n10:00-11:00 a.m.\u2014Panther bantams\nvs F.A.C. bantams (No. 3).\n11:00-12:00 a.m.\u2014M.R.K. midgets\nvs F.A.C. midgets (No. 2.)\nitish  Soccer  League  Standings\nENQLISH   LEAGUE\nFirst Division\nGoals\nW. L. D.  F.A.Pt.\n\u00abrton 18  7 2 55 28 38\n*by CounV .... 16   7 8 53 20 38\nUptn. Wnd. .... IS.,6 8 48 21 34\nlaltn Athlts  15   9 4 52 38 34\nOke   City    12   9 7 51 49 31\nIdWbrgh.    12 10 7 60 48 31\nverpool   11   9 8 46 44 30\n\u25a0jenal  , 10   8 9 32 24 29\nilton Wndrs 10   8 9 48 39 29\nlion Villa   11 11 5 48 41 27\nsds  United   .... 10 10 7 43 47 27\ntoisby Town .... 10 10 7 39 46 27\nInderland        9 10 8 34 40 26\n(ichstr. Utd    8 10 10 39 43 26\non N. End.   9 10 7 38 40 25\nool       7 II 9 33 46 23\nJord        8 13 6 38 57 22\nstar City ....    7 13 8 34 54 22\n*              8 13 5 46 55 21\n..south'     6 11 9 24 44 21\n(Ield. Town ..   8 14 5 37 42 21\nilingham       7 16 4 44 58 18\nSecond  Division\nfid. United  ..\nIbrn. Rovers\nUtry. City   ...\n\"field Wed. ..\n4 11\n9   3\nBrmch. Albn.\n[iton Town \t\niley  \t\n'   United ...\nisterlield \t\n_n. Htsprs. ...\nInchstr. City  ...\nHm. Untd. ...\nadford   \t\nUwall\t\nhmptn\t\n_J. Argyle  ..\nuransea Town .\nMts Forest \t\n\u25a0orwich City ...\nnmere Rovers\n13\n17\n15\n14\n13 7\n14 9\n14 10\n12 10\n13\n12\n11\n13 10 3\n10 9 7\n9 12 8\n8 10 9\n8 12 9\n9 13 6\n9 13 5\n4 12 10\n5 15 7\n7 18 1\n4 21 4\n9 5\n47 29 37\n71 44 37\n48 29 35\n65 43 33\n46 33 33\n68 53 33\n53 45 32\n39 39 32\n44 32 31\n44 38 30\n44 39 30\n68 54 29\n47 36 27\n49 62 26\n42 39 25\n44 50 25\n39 52 24\n33 40 23\n28 52 18\n33 64 17\n30 64 15\n32 76 12\nthird Division\u2014Southern Section\nport County . 18\n\u25a0ystal Palace .... 13\nIghton A H. A.. 14\njading  II\niieen's Pk. R 11   8\nlldershot   .*    ... 11   8\nVrthampton T. . 13 11\nJotts County  12  9\nUrdiff City _ II   9\npistol City 11 19\nJwindon Town .... 11 19\nlatford\t\nTorquay United\nbuthend U ,.\nJjwlch Town -\nittter City\t\nJtasfleld\t\n|fet Vale\t\n\u25a0 .apton O _\nBournemouth   7 12\nIrlstol Rovers   6 13\n6 6\n7 7\n9 5\n7 11\n11 11\n. 10 11\n9 9\n. 6 10\n. 7 10\n. 8 12\n8 13\n7 12\n44 29 41\n47 3B 33\n48 33 33\n47 36 33\n56 36 30\n32 37 30\n42 38 30\n37 30 29\n40 38 29\n43 43 29\n50 45 28\n42 38 28\n35 40 25\n42 44 24\n32 35 23\n42 58 23\n31 50 23\n82 36 21\n32 37 21\n30 43 21\n32 35 20\nJutta Percha Tires\nbr Perfect Grip and Safe Driving\n[horty's Repair, Shop\nR\u00bbic\u00bbr Nelson. B.C\nWalsall   5 15 6 26 41 16\nThird Division\u2014Northern Section\nBarnsley   21   4 4 69 26 46\nDoncaster R 14  4 9 51 31 37\nSouthport  14   5 7 58 32 35\nOldham Ath 16 10 2 54 44 34\nBradford City  15 10 3 60 38 33\nCrewe Alexandra 16 11 1 68 44 33\nHull City - 13   9 5 64 52 31\nStockport C - 11   8 7 59 47 29\nNew Brighton ...... 12 12 5 48 49 29\nChester  11   8 6 58 48 28\nHalifax Town .....   9 10 \"B 28 33 27\nRochdale  11 13 5 64 55 27\nRotherham U  11 13 5 48 50 27\nLincoln City     9 11 8 51 62 26\nBarrow  11 14 4 44 51 26\nWrexham \u201e 11 14 4 44 64 26\nDarlington     9 13 6 49 67 24\nGateshead    8 12 7 48 51 23\nCarlisle U    9 13 5 42 67 23\nYork City    7 15 6 40 82 20\nHartlepools W ....   7 17 4 42 70 20\nAccrington S    2 22 4 28 74  8\nSC0TTI8H  LEAGUE\nFirst Division\nRangers    - 21  3 5 96 46 47\nHearts  ~. 16   9 4 77 51 36\nCeltic  14   7 7 80 42 33\nAberdeen  15  9 5 73 48 35\nFalkirk    14 10 5 58 52 33\nHmltn Acdmlcs . 14 10 5 53 52 33\nQueen of South -_ 13 10 6 50 49 82\nKilmornock    12  9 7 64 56 31\nMotherwell     13 11 5 67 62 31\nSt. Johnstone   13 13 4 64 72 30\nClyde    13 13 2 59 57 28\nPatrick Thistle .... 12 12 4 50 61 28\nHibernians    12 13 4 60 55 28\nThird  Lanark  ...,   9 12 7 64 72 25\nAyr  United       8 13 8 54 65 24\nSt.   Mirren       8 15 6 43 59 22\nQueens Park      8 15 5 42 61 21\nArbroath     7 16 7 41 66 21\nRaith Rovers .....     8 19 2 54 79 18\nAlbion Rovers ...   7 18 4 46 77 18\nSecond   Division\nCowdenbeath    20  2 3 82 33 43\nAlloa     19   5 3 79 34 41\nEast Fife    17   5 4 77 48 38\nAirdns  14   6 5 65 47 33\nDnfrmln. Ath.     .12   8 4 70.52 28\nBrechin City       9  9 8 66 74 26\nDundee United .... 11 11 3 45 40 25\nDumbarton       8   8 9 51 56 25\nSt   Bernards     10 10 4 58 59 24\nMorton    9 10 6 53 55 24\nDundee        9 12 4 66 52 22\nStenhousemuir .     9 12 4 44 52 22\nKings Park        9 14 1 66 62 19\nForfar Ath    8 13 3 53 91 19\nLeith Ath       7 15 2 41 67 16\nEast  Stirling    ' 6 14 4 66 92 16\nMontrose   .       ...   6 15 4 57 75 16\nEdinburgh City      3 17 3 37 88  9\nIRISH   LEAGUE\nBelfast City Cup\nDistillery        3  0 0\nPortadown       2   0 0\nGentoran             2  0 0\nBallymena Utd. ..200\nLame               1   0 1\nBelfast Celtic     1  1 1\nNewry Town     110\nLinfield       110   6  9\nGlenavon       0   112   3\nDerry City    0   113   4\nArds       0   2 0   4 10\nBangord    __..  0 2 0   18\nCliftonville      0   2 0   17\n6\n4\n13   2   4\n3 1   4\n8   6\n7   7\n4 1\nJ Jul CvrtttL Oosjl\nON TOP OF THE WORLD\nTrail Smoke Eaters achieved the lofty perch here pictured by A. R. Joy, Daily News TraU representative, when Sunday they emerged\nthe only undefeated team in the final pool of the world amateur hockey championships at Basle, Switzerland, retaining for Canada the honors\nwon for it by the Kimberley Dynamiters In 1987 and by the Sudbury Wolves in 1938.\nPats Obtain Bye\nin Intermediate\nPlayoffs, Trail\nTRAIL, B. C. \u2014 Pats snatched a\nbye in the forthcoming Intermediate hoop playoffs as they edged out\nthe Times quintet 34-31 in a rather\nweird basketball game at the Memorial hall Saturday night. The\nTimeB led, 13-0 in the first quarter\nas the Pats' zone defence proved ineffective against the fssl-breaklng\nTimes cagers. Then In the last quarter of the game the Pats played six\nminutes with only four players and\npunched in six points during that\ntime to take the game with a three-\npoint margin.\nThe Times squad all tossed in\nbaskets as they rode rough shod\nover the Pats in the first quarter\nwith Chuck Wyatt engineering the\nplays. It was Ed Groves who Injected a little fire Into the listless Pats\nas they garnered nine points In the\nsecond quarter to void being blanked in the first half, which the Times\nled 16-9.\nPEP TALK HELPS\nA half-time pep talk by Coach\nPhil Smith Induced the Pats to out-\nscore the Times 13-4 in the first\nquarter of the second half to give\nthem a two-point lead. Wyatt, Angus McDonald and Bilesky kept the\nTimes close on the Pats' heels while\nCusick, Coverdale and Hood began\nto find the basket ,\nPats were left a man short with\nsix minutes to go as Marcus Smith\nand Groves were banished from the\nfame with four personals. Doug\nlnnle passed to Cusick to score for\nthe Pats before the Times could get\norganized. Then Hood bagged another basket and the Pats led 30-23.\nBolano scored three and Bilesky one\nbasket to raise the Times total to 31\nbut Hood and Cuslc added four\npoints to keep the Pats Just ahead\not the over-anxious Times five.\nAsh Baillie refereed and John\nBolano was Judge of play. Bruno\nBaldassi was scorer and Nick Turik\ntimekeeper.\nThe teams and scorers were:\nTimes-Chuck Wyatt 7, Tony Borsato 2, George Leng 2, Alex Bolano\n8,\" Angus McDonald 4, Julie Bilesky\n8, and Willy Strachan, coach,\nPats\u2014Mervyn Cusick 6, Doug Fin-\nnie, Harold Coverdale 6, Ed GroveB\n6, Marcus Smith 5, Des Hood 10,\nand Phil Smith, coach.\nHistorians Defeat\nKillers 7-5, Trail\nSchool Puck Game\nTRAIL, B. C \u2014 Historians\ndowned the Killers 7-5 In a public\nschool hockey game at the Trail\nrink Saturday morning. Ivo Toffolo was high man for the winners\nwith three markers and Geo\/ge\nWebster was next with two. Malcolm Serres and Ian McLeod netted one each.\nFor the Killers Dick Trice led the\nscoring with three goals and Rollie\nAsplund and Tino Magliani bagged\nAs the Nelson Shi Club Introduced Slalom\nand Downhill Racing at Us Annual Tourney\nDanny McKay, Nelson skiing ace who carried off top honort In the men's slalom and seoond prize\nof the men's downhill racing, Is seen here, the centre of attention, after his spectacular 28-scoond run\ndown the slalom course at the annual ski tourney.: A small portion of the crowd of 200 or more who\nSunday witnessed the Introduction of slalom and downhill racing to the annual competition, la shown.\nn-a, u\u201e.at .nnthaai- Nelion contestant la aaan in  ths foreground, at the right.\niiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiimmiiiiiimiiii\nDays When It Took\n5 Hours to Win\nGame Recalled\nPHILADELPHIA Feb. 18\n(AP)\u2014If any modern pitcher\nthinks he works hard, let him\nbend an ear to this tale of a\nman who once was 13 runs behind\u2014and won his gama fiv*\nhours later.\nIts the story of 89-year-old\nCharles (Chick) Fultner, ona ot\nbaseball's pioneer players.\nFulmer, whose hardy exploits\nhelped make baseball history of\n50 and 60 years ago, broke Into\nthe major leagues back in 1896\nby pitching -Philadelphia Athletics to a 51-49 victory over\nBrooklyn Atlanta.\n\" \"I started at two o'clock In\nthe afternoom\" said Fulmer,\n\"and pitched the whole gen*,\nfinishing about seven.\n\"I was a pretty good pitcher,\nbut the Atlantics scored 13 runs\noff me In the first Inning. Tha\nAthletics got 14 runs and four\nhomers In our turn, and we\nwon.\"\nThe veteran of the diamonds,\nwho managed the old Cincinnati\nBed Stockings and reorganized\nPhiladelphia Athletics in 1873,\nplayed his first ball only a few\nyears after the present sport\nmade its appearance in Philadelphia.\nn bub i \u25a0 11 in i i \u25a0 \u25a0 t \u25a0 i m \u25a0 tsisi 11 \u25a0 i \u25a0 sin risia I\none apiece. Although he dldnt\nscore, Frank Turik turned in a\nfine game for the Killers.\nThe teams were:\nKillers \u2014 Lloyd Murdoch, goal!\nFrank Turik, Dick Price, John\nGail, Rollie Asplund, Don Ham-\nmel, Tino Magliani, and Dart Dardi,\ncoach.\nHistorians \u2014 Jim Mayzes, goal;\nRoy Castler, Malcolm Serres, Ian\nMcLeod, George Webster, Deac\nRusteh, Ivo Toffolo, and Albls Em-\nacora:   \u2022\nCAIRO, Egypt, (CP) \u2014 The\nQueen's Own Hussars won the\nArmy Command Rugby cup for the\nsecond year in succession, beating the 3rd Regiment, Royal Horfe\nArtillery, 14-3,\nPYJAMAS\nby B.V D.. Tooke. Arrow\nJACK BOYCE ,\n514 Baker    Style Shop   Phone 160\nN.H.L. SCORING RACE DEVELOPS\nINTO REAL SCRAP; FOUR-WAY HE\nBlake, Apps, Schriner\nClimb Into Lead\nWith Gottselig\nIn Tie for N.H. I.\nSeating Load\nS. 8CHRINER\nT. BLAKB\nWhen official Individual stand'\nInge' for the National Hookey\nleague were released Monday,\nthese men were tied for tha top\nspot with 32 points apiece. They\nare Johnny Gottsellg, Chicago;\nSweeny Schrlner, Americans; Syl\nApps, Toronto) and Toe Blake,\nCanadians.\nTrail High Girls\nBeat Juniors In\nHoop Game, 35-13\nTrail, a C \u2014 The senior high\nschool girls walloped the Junior\nhigh girls 35-13 In an exhibition\nbasketball game at the Memorial\nhall Saturday night Frances Zuk\nled the winners with 18 points and\nFrances Thompson was next with\n10. Mary Alty waa top scorer for\nLloyd Murdoch's Junior students\nwith nine points. Mary McGregor\nand Vi Catalano turned in good\ngames tor the seniors and Eileen\nPowell for the Juniori.\nJohn Bolano refereed and Nick\nTurik was judge of play. \"Dart\"\nDardi was timekeeper and Bruno\nBaldassi scorer.\nThe teams and scorers were;\nJunior High: Eileen Powell 2, Annie Wolfe, Mary Alty 9, Mary\nBrownlee, Elaine Minto, Helen\nMerry and Maggie Malley. Lloyd\nMurdoch, coach, and Mr. Parker,\nmanager.\nSenior high\u2014Frances Zuk 16,\nBetty Balkovic, Mary McGregor 3,\nVI Catalano 4, Gladys Owens 3,\nFrances Thompson 10, Dorothy\nBourne 1. Miss Munton, coach.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\nBy Ths Canadian Prase\nHeavyweight boxer Ernie Schaaf,\nafter taking a merciless beating\nfrom giant Primo Camera, died in\nhospital six years ago today. Twenty\nthousand fans yelled \"Fake\" four\ndays previously as Schaaf collapsed\nIn the 13th round of the 15-round\nfight, but the youthful boxer failed\nto regain consciousness.\nLefty Flynn Wins\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (CP Ceble)-\nHard-punching Lefty Flynn, 14644,\nof Jamaica, tonight completely outclassed Bert Chambers, UiVt, of\nWidnes, In a boxing match at the\nNational Sporting club. Chambers\nretired at the end of the fifth round\nafter having been floored five times.\nMONTREAL, Feb. 13 (CP). -\nThe race for Individual scoring\nhonors In the National Hoekay\nleague has turned Into a real\ndogfight with four leaders battling It out In a bunoh for tha\ntop spot held almost all season\nby Chicago's Johnny Gottsellg,\nThree contenders, the league's\nweekly statistics show tonight,\nhave moved up Into a quadruple\ntie with the Chloagoan at 32\npoints apiece. Toe Blake of Mon-\n' treal Canadlens, Syl Apps of To- \u25a0\ni ronto Maple Leafs and Sweeney\nSchrlner of New York American!\nare up there with Gottsellg.\nThe energetic Blake, whose four-\ngoal performance against Americans\nhere Thursday with the league's\nfeat-of-thc-weck, has 25 .goals. Apps\nand Gottsellg have 13 apiece, and\nSchriner has 10, his 22 assists giving him leadership In that division.\nTop man tn goals Is Alex Shibicky of New York Rangers with\n17, two up on Blake and Toronto's\nGordie Drillon, who's quickly making up for several games missed\nthrough injury.\nAnother Leaf\u2014burly Bed Homer\n\u2014is still heading the penalty parade. He has spent 65 minutes In\ndurance against 56 for Rangers'\nArt Coulter.\nTHE STANDINGS\nGottsellg, Chicago\t\nSchrlner, Americans -\nApps, Toronto      .\nBlake, Canadiens \u201e\nAnderson, Americans\nBarry, Detroit ___\nHextall, Rangers \u2014\nC. Smith, Rangera _ VI\nWatson, Rangers 10\nDrillon, Toronto  15\nStewart, Americans . 12\nHowe, Detroit     10\nCarr, Americana  12\nHaynes, Canadians _ 4\nShibicky, Rangers _ 17\nN. Colville, Rangers . 11\nWiseman, Americans . 10\nDesilets, Chicago _ 11\nGagnon, Canadiens _  7\nCain, Canadlens  11\nBauer, Boston    8\nHiller, Rangers      9\nJackson, Toronto   7\nSchmidt, Boston .......... 10\nChamberlain, Toronto 8\nJackson, Americans _ 11\nDumart, Boston 10\nM Colville, Rangers .  8\nDillon, Rangers   7\nChapman, Americans .  2\nCowley, Boston   3\nPettinger, Boston   7\nSorrell, Americana __ 9\nKelly, Toronto  10\nThorns, Tor-Chl ___ 5\nMarch, Chicago ...__  9\nRomnes, Chl-Tor    4\nHollett, Boston    8\nR. Conacher, Boston - 12\nLiscombe, Detroit     5\n\u2014Match Misconduct\nAP Pn\nJ9 32 II*\n22 32 14\n10 32 4\n16 82   S\n19 29 12\n18 27 2\n12 26 12\n15 26 2\n16 26 40\n1126 15\n13 25 27*\n14 24 11\n12 2414\n20 24 17\n8 28 18\n12 23 10\n12 22 S\n1122 19\n15 22 8\n10 2133\n13 21 4\n1120 10\n13 20 2\n10 20 13\n11 19 23\n8 19 11\n9 19 3\n14 19 18\n1118 8\n18 18 3\n15 18 3\n10 17 8\n8 17 8\n7 17 10\n12 17 18\n8 17 29\n13 17 0\n11 17 14\u00bb\n5 17 12\n11 16 8\nAUSTRALIA PICKS\nDAVIS CUP TEAM\nSYDNEY, Australia, Feb. 13 (AP)\n\u2014The Australian Lawn Tennis association announced today John\nBromwlch, two-hand back-bander;\nAdrian Quiet, and the veteran Jack\nCrawford, with Harry Hopman\nagain aa captain and manager\nwould cany Australia's challenge\nInto tha 1930 Davis cup play. Tha\nteam Is th* same one that lost to\nth* United States last year.\nCANADIENS GOALIE SOLD\nKAN.9AS CITY, Feb. 18 (AP)-\nGoalle Glaude Bourquo, property of\nMontreal Canadians, was acquired\nby Kansas City of the American\nHockey association, It wu announced today.\n15*\nytCorned in a\nFine, ripe tobacco, mellowed to smoking perfection, cut extra\nline to snuggle neatly down on the paper, to roll smoother,\nMtt cigarette!\u2014every time\u2014that's Old Virginia!\nAnd the handy rubber-lined, teal-tight pouch is a great\nconvenience\u2014a \"pocket humidor\" that keeps your Old\nVirginia Fine Cut tlavourful and just right (or economical\nrolling.\nOLD VIRGINIA\n:\u25a0>\nNATIONAL HOCKEY LEAGUE\nW L D F A Pt\nBoston , 26   8  2 97 46 52\nRangers 20  9  4 98 64 44\nAmericans  ___... 15 13   9 8810139\nToronto   13 17  7 87 82 S3\nChicago 11 18  8 88 84 28\nDetroit  _ 11 18  5 89 91 27\nCanadlens    8 20  7 7511223\n\u2014\nFine Cut\n=\n=\n*\u25a0\u25a0\n PAGE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELION, B.C-TUESDAY MORNING, FEB. 14, 1931\nWould You Rather Have Cash or Discarded Furniture in the Cellar^\nON THE AIR\nJ\/ul fisui Jodaij,\nP.M.\u2014\n5:30\u2014Information,   Please;   Quiz\nProgram\n6:00\u2014We, the People\n6:30\u2014Benny Goodman's Swing or.\n6:30\u2014Fibber McGee, Donald Novis,\n7:00\u2014Dr. Christian; with Jean Her-\nsholt\n7:00\u2014Bob Hope, comedian, singer\n7:30\u2014Jimmie Fidler; Movie gossip\n7:45\u2014Night  Editor.\n8:30\u2014Edward   G.   Robinson   and\na Claire Trevor: Drama\n8:30-Johnny    Presents;    Johnny\nGreen's orchestra\n9:00\u2014Al Jolson's show\n.   9:30\u2014Grouch club\n9:30\u2014Carnival; Variety\nP.M.-\n5:00\u2014\nNBC\u2014Music of all Countries\nCBS\u2014Ross and Yeo\nCBS\u2014\"Big Town\" newspaper drama\nEdward G. Robinson; Claire\nTrevor\nNBC\u2014Gilbert A Sullivan music\n6:16 P. 8. T.-\nCBS\u2014Howie Wing sketch\nNBC\u2014Music by Cugat\n8:30 P. 8. T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014Information Please\nCBaS\u2014Dick Aurandt's orch.\nNBC\u2014Three Cheers\nCBS\u2014Al Jolson Show\nDL-Dick Tracy, sketch\n6:45 P. S. T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014Ricardo and his Violm\nDL\u2014Little Orphan A^inie, sketch\nNBO\u2014World on Parade\n6:00 P. B. T,.-.\nNBC\u2014Battle of the Sexes\nNBC\u2014Music With Finesse\nNBC\u2014What's the Big Idea?\nCBS\u2014We, the People\nMBS\u2014Don't You Believe It\nDL\u2014Jack Armstrong, sketch\n6:15 P. 8..T.-\nDL\u2014Adventures   of  Gen.  Shatter\nParker.\n6:30 P. 8. T,-\nNBC\u2014Fibber McGee, Don Novis\nCBS\u2014Benny Goodman's orch.\nNBC\u2014Eugene Conley, tenor, orch.\n7:00 P. S. T,-\nMBS\u2014True Detective Mysteries\nNBC\u2014Bob Hope\nCBS\u2014Dr.  Christian,  drama,  with\nJean Hersholt\nNBO-If I Had the Chance\nDL\u2014Phantom Pilot, drama\n7:15 P. S. T.\u2014\nME?,\u2014Iuside of Sports\n7:30 P. S. T<-\nNBC\u2014Uncle Ezra, sketch\nCBS\u2014Jimmie  Fidlert   Hollywood\nGossip\nNBC\u2014Sons of the Lone Star\nMBS\u2014Green Hornet, drama\n7:45 P. 8. T.-.\nNBC\u2014Jimmy Kemper it Co.\nNBC\u2014Night Iditor\nCBS\u2014Boy Scout Annlv., Prgrm.\n8:00 P. 8. T.\u2014\nNBC\u2014Amos 'n' Andy\nCBS\u2014Red Norvo's orch.\nNBC-^Jack Jenney's orch.\n8:15 P. 8. Ti-\nNBC\u2014Jerry Cooper's vocal varieties\nNBC\u2014Bertny Walker's Amateur Hr.\nDL-Don't You Believe It\n8:30 P. 8. T.\nNBC\u2014Johnny presents  Johnny\nGreen's orch.\nNBC\u2014Joe Rine's orch..\nCBS\u2014\"Big Town\" newspaper drama\nEdward G. Robinson; Claire\nTrevor\nMBS\u2014Van Alexander's orch.\n9:00 P. 8. T\u2014\nCBS\u2014Al Jolson Show\nNBC\u2014Good Morning Tonight\nNBC\u2014Joe Sudy's orch.\nMBS\u2014Ship Fields' orch.\nDL\u2014News\n9:15 P. 8. T\u2014\nNBC\u2014On with' the dance\nDL\u2014Frank and Archie\n9:30 P. 8. T\u2014\nNBC\u2014Freddy Martin'a orch.\nNBC\u2014Carnival\nMBS\u2014Skinnay Ennis' orch.\nCBS\u2014The Grouch Club\n9:46 P. S. T\u2014\nNBC\u2014University Explorer\nCBS\u2014Dick Barrie's orch.'\n10:00 P. 8. Tame\u2014News Reporter\nNBC\u2014Emil Baffa's orch.\nNBC\u2014Charlie Agnew's orch.\nMBS\u2014Airliners' orch.\nDL\u2014Phil Harris' orch.\n10:15 P. 8. T\u2014\nCBS\u2014Nightcap Yarns\n10:30 P. 8. T--\nNBC\u2014Gary Nottingham's orch.\nNBC\u2014Shep Fields' orch. ,\nMBS\u2014Lou Fidlcr's orch.\nDL\u2014Jirtmy Grier's orch.\nCBS\u2014Harry Owen's orch.\nIHOO P. S. Ta-a\nNBC\u2014Buddy Roger's orch.\nNBC\u2014Paul Carson, organist\nCBS-Clyde McCoy's orch.\nNBC\u2014World on Parade: News\nMBS\u2014Jose Manzanares' orch.\nDL\u2014Jack McLean's orch.\nDuty to Maintain\nDefence, Says Hull\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 13 (AP) <*\nAn assertion by United States Secretary Hull America would meet\nany foreign challenge with \"determined defence and resistance\" served today as a prelude to the first\ncongressional debate over the $52,-\n000,000 armament program.\nHull told a radio audience last\nnight as long as there was any possibility of attack it was \"the sacred\nduty of any government worthy of\nthe name to maintain adequate defensive forces.\"\nThe definition of \"adequate\nforces\" will become an issue when\nthe house takes up tomorrow a bill\nto authorize $300,000,000 for new\narmy planes, $23,000,000 for Panama\ncanal defence, and. $32,500,000 for\ncivilian pilot training.\nSecretary Hull's speech said that\nas important as national defence is\nevery country's obligation to prevent war \"by perfecting the machinery of peace and by eliminating\nthe causes of conflict.\"\nCBC NETWORK\nCJCA       CFCN       CJAT\n730        1030 910\nCBR\n1100\nP.M.-\n4:00\u2014G. R. Markowskl and orch.\n4:15-Major BUI\n4:30\u2014Magical Voyage\n4:45\u2014Chatting with People\n5:00\u2014Big Town\n5:30\u2014Al Jolson show\n6:00\u2014Appointment with Agostinl\n6:30\u2014Toronto Symphony orch.\n7:30\u2014Uncle Ezra\n7:45\u2014Race Problems\n8:00\u2014News and weather\n8:15\u2014Clement Q. Williams, bari.\n8:30\u2014Minstrel Jamboree\n8:30\u2014Big Town\n9:00\u2014Al Jolson Show\n9:00\u2014Artie Shaw's orch.\n9:30\u2014How Farming Began, talk\n9:45\u2014News and weather\n10:00\u2014Musical Mirror\n10:30\u2014Epilogue\nSea-Going Traffic\nCop Is Put to Test\nBOSTON, Feb. 13 (AP)\u2014A seagoing radio traffic \"cop\" was put\nto work today in Boston harbor in\nan experiment to eliminate hazards to fog-bound vessels.\nThe United States lighthouse service placed in the main ship channel off Deer island an ordinary\nbuoy, containing a miniature radio\ntransmitter, designed to guide the\ntransit of shippmg regardless of\nweather. .\n. Captain George Eaton,' district superintendent of the lighthouse service, said the new signalling unit,\npowered by batteries was placed\nin a watertight container and sealed\ninto the buoy. A small aerial extends from the buoy, radiating code\nslinals on frequencies assigned to\nthe lighthouse service.\n' Incoming ships, creeping through\nfog would be able to pick up the\nSignal and trace the position of the\nguide buoy on a chart, he explained, adding: ,\n\"But before predictions can be\nmade, we'll have to work out the\nhugs in the apparatus. Its value\nwill lie in its being able to operate\ncontinuously.\"\nBounty on Wolves\nUp Five Dollars\nVICTORIA, Feb. 13 (CP). - The\nBritish Columbia government today\nannounced an increase in the bounty on timber wolves from $10 to\n\u25a015\nThe higher bounty is intended to\ninduce hunters to go after the forest\nravagers who have become a steadily increasing menace.\nWolves, the game commission is\ninformed, are particularly plentiful\nin the northern and, far eastern sections of the province.\nDuring the last session several of\ntho up-country members complained about their depredations among\ngame. One member asserted there\nwere 100,000 in his riding alone.\nRecords of the game department\nshow bounties were paid on 828\nwolves in 1937, the largest total on\nrecord.\nThe Skeena division reported a\ngreat toll of young moose, caribou\nand deer, especially the latter, was\ntaken, although the hope was expressed that an increase in rabbits\nwould provide them with easier\nfood in the future.\nAt Telegraph Creek alone 226\nbounties were paid. At Pouce Coupe\nin the Peace River 142 were killed,\nat Prince George 96 and Prince Rupert 84 and Atlin 67.\nSENATE MOVES AGAINST\nLABOR SPIES, POLICING\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 13 (AP).-\nThe United States senate civil liberties committee recommended legislation today to stop labor spying\nand to restrict the activities of company police.\nThe committee, headed by Senator La Follette '(Prog., Wisconsin),\nwas sharply critical of activities by.\npolice employed by the Republic\nSteel Corporation and the Harlan\nCounty, Ky\u201e Coal Operators' associations.\nJews Await Sailing\nat Vancouver Homes\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP) -\nForty-three Jewish refugees from\nAustria and Germany were billeted in private homes here today,\nawaiting departure Wednesday of\nthe Canadian-Australasian liner Niagara on which they wjll sail for\nAustralia.\n\"We are sorry, we have nothing\nto say, only that we are glad to be\nfree,\" a spokesman for the group\ntold interviewers.\n\"We cannot tell you about the\nconditions under Hitler,\" they said.\n\"We have relatives back in Germany.\"\nIncluded in. the group were doctors and lawyers with their wives\nand children. Twenty-five members of the party came from Vienna\nwhile the rest were from Berlin\nand other German cities.\nPICKET WORKER WHO\nREFUSES TO SIGN\nST. LOUIS, Feb. 13 (AP).-Dis-\ngruntled union workmen here used\npicketing for a new purpose.\nThey stalked up and down before the home of a worker who re-\n\u2022fused to sign up. police said.\nDEATHS\nBy The Canadian Press\nSHERBROOKE, Que.\u2014John H.\nWalsh, 79, former general manager\nand vice president, Quebec Central\nRailway and pioneer of railroading in the province.\nHALIFAX\u2014Mrs. John M. Fitzgerald, 94, mother of late Inspector\nFrank Fitzgerald who died as leader of the old North West Mounted\nPolice's ill-fated \"lost patrol.\"\nDULUTH, Minn.\u2014Gwin A. Whitney, 45, prominent marine engineer,\nNew York and Duluth.\nREGINA\u2014Charles Edwards, 97,\nin 1881 coach driver for Hon. C. H.\nMcintosh, mayor of Ottawa and\nlater lieutenant-governor, North\nWest Territories.\nTORONTO\u2014Victor Stanley Jones,\n52, prominent in Toronto brokerage\ncircles\nMONTREAL-William Leslie Armour Brodie, 48, president Brodie\nand Harvie, Ltd.\nWINDSOR, Ont.-Frank W. Beg-\nley, controller, worked as newspaperman Detroit and Windsor papers\nfor a quarter century.\nJERUSALEM\u2014Archbishop Thor-\ngom Kouskakin, 65, Armenian patriarch of Jerusalem. ,\nPARIS \u2014 Fernand Chapsal, 76,\nthree times cabinet minister and 18\nyears member French senate.\nMONTREAL\u2014Mrs. Fannie Banks\nBrown, 76, widow of William H.\nBrown, first mayor of Montcalm.\nTORONTO-Major Ebenezer His-\ncock, 69, field officer Salvation\nArmy for nearly 50 years.\nLONDON-Godfrey Isaac Howard\nLloyd, associate professor political\neconomy University of \"oronto 1909\nto 1915.\nMISSION\u2014James Kelly, 46, chief\nof Deroche-Nichomen Indian tribe.\nWINNIPEG - Stanley L. Wilkinson, 47, vice-consul of United States\nhere.\nVICTORIA-John Absalon Snell,\n85, native of Constance, Huron\nCounty, Ont., 17 years resident of\nBritish Columbia and Victoria.\nRUBBER PLANT CLOSED\nAS 500 WORKERS STRIKE\nKITCHENER, Ont, Feb. 13 (CP).\n\u2014Merchants' Rubber company plant\nhere closed today after 500 employees struck for a signed agreement\nwith the Kitchener local of the\nUnited Rubber Workers of America, increased wages ahd changes in\nworking hours.\nThey swelled to more than 600\nthe number of rubber workers on\nstrike here, 400 employees of the\nDominion Rubber company having\ngone on strike Wednesday for the\nsame objectives. The strike is the\nfirst 1939 major Industrial disturbance in Ontario,\nWORK BEGINS ON\nLATE KING'S TOMB\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (CP.-Havas)-\nWork began today in St. George's\nchapel, Windsor, on construction of\nthe sarcophagus to which the coffin of the late King George V. Ib to\nbe moved from the royal vault beneath the chapel, where it has remained since the funeral three\nyears ago.\nThe site of the tomb, which was\nselected by King George VI. and\nQueen.Mary, is In the nave. It is\nimmediately opposite the memorial\nto the Duke of Kent, father of\nQueen. Victoria.\nSir Edward Luytens, president of\nthe Royal Academy, has prepared to\ndesign the tomb, and the recumbent figure is the work of Sli\nWilliam Reid Dick.\nThe nave is open to the public\nwhen the chapel is not being used\nfor services, and it is in order that\nthe public may have access to a\nview of the tomb that the site in the\nnave has been selected. The work is\nexpected to take about a month.\nFIREMAN KILLED\nIN 'FRISCO FIRE\nSAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 13 (AP).\n\u2014One fireman was killed and two\nothers injured early today fighting\na fire which swept through the two\ntop stories of a six-story brick building In the heart of San Francisco's\nwholesale merchandising district.\nAn hour and a half after the fire\nwas discovered firemen from 37 engine companies had It under control.\nFrank Malley, fireman, was killed\nwhen he fell over some hose and\nstruck his head on the pavement\nThe other men were overcome by\nsmoke.\nThe fire started on the sixth floor\nof the building in a clothing manufacturing plant.\nHighly inflammable materials sent\nthe flames shooting through the roof\nand high into the air.\nPRINCETON STORES\nNEW REGULATIONS\nVICTORIA, Feb. 13 (CP).\u2014Stores\nof Princeton will c!-se at 5:30 p.m.\nweek-days, 1:00 p.m. on Thursday\nand 9 p.m. Saturday nights under\ngovernment regulations approved\ntoday. They ppen at 8:30 a.m.\nTeachers' Increases\nMay Not Be Paid\nMURRAYVILLE, B.C., Feb. 13\n(CP).\u2014Although 31 Langley municipality teachers were awarded salary increases totalling $2975 by an\narbitration board Saturday, it is\nuncertain whether they will actually receive them.\nJohn W. Berry, chairman of Langley schoolboard, on receipts of the\naward said:\n\"I'would forecast that the board\nwill reject the arbitration award.\nWe have made up our estimates\nbased on the old salaries, for submission to the municipal council.\n\"It is impossible for Langley to\npay any additional amount. Our\nestimates, amounting to about $30,-\n000, for 1939, are slightly lower than\nlast year's.\n\"I will not agree to increasing the\ntax on land in order to pay any additional salaries.\"\nMmn latlg Hems\nMember ot tha Canadian Dally\nNewspapers Association\nTelephone 144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll Departments\nSubscription  Rates\nSingle copy\nt .05\n.25\n13.00\nBy carrier, per week\nBy carrier, per year .\nBy mail In Canada to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month. 60c;\nthree months S1.80; six months\n$3,00; one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Brit-' '\naln, one.month 76c; six months\n$4,00; one year $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nUnited States, same as above\nplus any extra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie a Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per Insertion \u2014\u2014 $ 32\n2 lines. 6 consecutive\nInsertions\n(8 for the price a;f 4)\n3 lines, per insertion \t\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\nInsertions \u25a0\t\n2 lines, 1 month',\n3 lines, 1 month \t\n23\n1.32\n2.86\n4.29\nFor advertisements of more than\nthree lines, calculate on\nthe above basis\nBox numbers 11c extra. This\ncovers any number of\nInsertions\nALL ABOVE RATES ^LESS\n10% FOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSPECIAL LOW RATE\nSituations Wanted, 26c for any\nrequired number of lines for\nsix days, payable In advance.\nHELP WANTED\nWANTED GOOD RELIABLE MAN\nfor farm, all year around Job,\ngood milker. Max Ralloft, Grand\nForks, B. C.     '\t\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nINSTRUMENT MAN AND DRAFTS\nman, experienced, includes railroad, highways and mine surveys.\nAlso mine hoistman, etc. Age 33,\nmarried, desires work now. A. C.\nMcClelland, Kimberley, B. C.\nEXP.\nMECHANIC, TRUCK AND\ntractor driver, willing, honest and\nreliable. Box 5147 Daily News,\nCash Box Stolen\nFrom Island Bus\nNANAIMO, B.C. Feb. 13 (CP).-\nA cash box containing $10 in change\nwas stolen from the bus of the Vancouver Island Cpadh Lines here\nearly today. The box was taken from\nthe coach as Arthur Manson, driver,\nreturned to the bus line office prior\nto departing for Victoria.\nHotel, Stores Are\nDestroyed by Fire\nAMOS, Que., Feb. 13 (CP).-An\nhotel and seven stores were destroy^\ned today by fire that raged for five\nhours in the heart of this northwestern Quebec mining centre's\nbusiness section. Early estimates\nplaced damage at close to $200,000.\nFiremen, hampered by low water\npressure and 35 below zero weather,\nbattled for five hours before bringing under control the third fire of\nmajor proportions in this district in\ntwo weeks.\nStarting in the kitchen of the\nAmos hotel, the fire spread rapidly\nthrough the two-storey frame build'\ning and jumped to adjoining build'\nings. No injuries were reported but\n20 guests at the hotel were forced\ninto the bitter cold in night attire.\nOther establishments destroyed\nincluded Dr. Andre Bigue's drug\nstore, a Quebec liquor commission\nstore, H. Arcand's pool room, the\nLacroix bakery and a haberdashery.\nThe Radio cafe also suffered heavy\ndamage from smoke and water.\nEXTORTIONISTS FOILED\nST. PAUL, Feb. 13 (AP).-An attempt to extort $15,000 from Charles\nA. ward, president of Brown and\nBigelow, one of the largest advertising specialty houses in the United\nStates, was frustrated when Ward\nand St. Paul police trapped the conspirators today.\nHeld on charges of attempted extortion are Matthew W. f> tegbauer,\n31, ex-convict, and Harold McAvoy,\n29, both of St. Paul. Police salt' Paul\nContreras, 40, also was held tor a\ntime but was released after it was\ndiscovered he. was an Innocent bystander.\nEXPERIENCED GIRL WANTS\nwork. Good with children. Sleep\nin. Box 5146 Daily News.\nSTOWAWAY LASS\nMAY BE JAILED\nNEW YORK, Feb. 13 (CP)-Lor-\netta Eccleston, footloose 20-year-\nold Hamilton, Ont., girl, found as\na stowaway aboard the liner Queen\nMary, may wind up In a British\nworkhouse when the ship reaches\nSouthampton, officials of the Cun-\nard While Star line said here today.\nLine officials said that beyond\na report the Canadian girl had\nconfronted ship's officers several\nhours gut of New York Saturday,\nthey had no further details. The,\nQueen Mary is due in Southampton\nWednesday.\nUsual procedure In the case of\nstowaways is to request their parents to make good the round-way\npassage and if it is paid the stowaway, is granted passenger status\nand return is facilitated.\nIn the event the passage money\nIs not made good, the stowaway Is\nturned over to British civil , authorities, who have begun to look on\nstowaways as a \"serious nuisance.\"\nRecently two United States girk\nstowaways were sentenced to two\nweeks in the WorkhouSe before\nbeing returned.\nNo word has been received from\nthe Harqilton girl's parents as to\nwhether they will pay the return\ntrip fare, Cunard officials said.\nTom Mooney Rests\nBefore Operation\nLOS ANGELES, Feb. 13 (AP). -\nTom Mooney rested at the home of\nfriends today preparatory to undergoing an operation for gall stones\nin a fortnight\nThe labor leader, recently pardoned by Governor Culbert Olson after\nserving 22 years in San Quentin\nprison for the San Francisco Preparedness day bombing of 1916, called off a speaking tour during which\nfriends disclosed he was near collapse at times.\nPERSONAL\nLARGEST ASSORTMENT OF SAN-\nUary Rubber Goods in Canada.\nSend 25c for six sample Supreme\nBrand Latex. 8 page catalogue\nof Drug Sundries and Sex Books\nFREE on request. Adults only.\nSUPREME SPECIALTY CO.\nDept. N-D, 169 Yonge St, Toronto.\nMEN OF 30, 40, 50! WANT VIM,\nVigor, for rundown body? Try\nOSTREX Tablets of raw oyster\nstimulants and general body builders. If not delighted with results\nof first package, maker refunds\nits low price. Call, write, Mann,\nRutherford and all good druggists\nHALOETTES (REGISTERED) OUR\nnew method ot 'enlarging single\n. figures from groups. Unwanted\nbackgrounds removed. Write for\nlow prices on this work. Krystal\nPhotos, Wilkie, Sask,\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor, list of wanted inventions and\nfull information sent free. The\nRamsay Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St, Ottawa.\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL GTD'.\n25 for $1.00 or Jiffy prepared 18\nfor $1.00. (free catalogue) National\nImporters. Box 244, Edmonton,\nWHEN IN VANCOUVER STOP AT\nAimer Hotel, Opp. C. P. R. depot\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find a cat or dog, pocket-\nbook, Jewelry or fur, or anything else of value, telephone the\nDaily News. A \"Found\" Ad will\nbe inserted without cost to you.\nWe will collect from the owner\nLOST, SILVER CANDLESTICK ON\nSaturday. Phone 340L.\nLIVESTOCK, POULTRY,\nSUPPLIES, DOCS, PETS, ETC.\nYOU Make 1939 a Good Year\njtOf_}^.        3y Raising\n49     m   \"THE CHICKS\n\\W___f   WHICH   GIVE\n^\/r        RESULTS\"\nRead this extract trom a letter\nfrom one of your neighbours.\n\"Thrums, B. C, Jan. 13th., 1839.\n\"Dear Sirs\u2014I never had better layers and I have been keeping poultry\nhere for the past 27 years. I hope\nto send my order for 500 early in\nFebruary and will expect as good\nas I had last season, I made money\non your birds.\n(Signed) R. K. Wallace.\"\nBefore placing your order write\nfor our book \"The Door to Success.\"\nLeghorns, Reds, Rocks, New\nHampshlres and Light Sussex.\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nBox N Langley Prairie, B. C\nBOLIVAR  EMBRYO  FED\nVITALIZED CHICKS\nPossess that extra SIZE A VIGOR\nwhich makes them easier to raise\nand  that  extra  BREEDING  thai\nmakes them more profitable.\n. Unsexed    Pullets\n100   1000   100    500\nLeghorns $13  $120  $27  $125\nNew Hampshlres\nRocks  -  Reds $13  $140   $28  $120\nBook of \"FACTS\" mailed on request\nBOLIVAR HATCHERIES LTD.\nPac. Hi-way, New Westminster, B. C.\nThere are more Bolivar chicks sold\nthan any strain in B. C.\nTHERE MUST BE A REASON\nFOR SALE\nDURNS I UMBER & (\"OAL Q0\n\"Everything for the Builder\"\nComplete stocks to serve you, high\ngrade finish, common lumber,\ndoor jamb, casing, mouldings,\nshingles, lath, veneer, cement,\nroofings, building papers, wall-\nboards, etc. Send us your requirements. .\nPhone 53 Nelson, B. C.\nPIPE, TUBES, FITTINGS\n-   NEW AND. USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\n\u25a0 SWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St\nVancouver, B.C.\nFOR SALE, GLASS SHOWCASES,\n1-5 ft 3-6 tt, 3-8 ft Also Library\nconsisting of about two thousand\ncopies fiction books, Knowledge,\netc. Scheers Ltd., Trail, B, C.\n$80 ROYAL OAK COAL~HEATER,\nlike new $35. Guaranteed Thor\nWasher $55. Ph. 619R, 502 Innes St.\nPIPE AND FITTING\nCANADIAN JUNK Company, Ltd.\n250 Prior St.       Vancouver, B. C.\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS.\nSugar sacks, liners McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Nelson, B. C.\nWrite for Our free illustrated book-\nlet before buying BABY CHICKS.\nIt shows years of breeding by trap-\nnest and selection resulting in stock\nof the highest standards so'necessary to the poultryman today.\nGenerations ot known breeding\nbehindv\nBURNSIDE CHICKS\nLeghorns, Hampshires, Rocks, Reds,\nRed-Leghorn Cross.\nFarm A Hatchery under R. O. P.\nInspection\nBURNSIDE POULTRY FARM\nA, E. Powell, Hammond, B. C,\nR. O. P. SIRED WHITE LEGHORN\nBaby Chicks and Sexed Pullet\nChicks. All breeding stock on\nour own farm, mated to R O. P.\napproved males. Government approved, bloodtested, and certified\nfree from Pullorum disease. Price\nlist on request M. H. Ruttledge,\nDerreen Poultry Farm, Sardis, B.C.\nR. I. RED CHICKS R. O. P. SHIED.\nSexed pullets and cockerels 97 per\ncent guarantee. Catalogue and\nprices on request Arnould Breed-\ner Hatchery, Sardis, B. C.\nGOOD RHODE ISLAND RED\nbreeding cockerels at reasonable\nprices. Booking orders now for\nspring delivery of baby chicks.\nTriangle Poultry Farm, Armstrong\nCLIP THIS AD FOR FREE SAM-\npie copy. Read of best breeders,\nhatcheries. Address Canada Poul-\ntryman, 618 Homer St., Vancouver\n3 MONTHS OLD CATTLE PUPS,\nCollie, born holler, male $6. John\nEgloff, Edgewood, B. C.\nSEVERAL DK. SILKY BRED MINK\nYukon type. B. Rabb, Fauquier.\nhorse, W. Nipkow, Fruitvale, B. C.\nFilm Distributors\nViolate Trust Law\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 13' (AP). -\nThe United States supreme court-\ndecided today a group ot leading\nmotion picture distributors and\nTexas exhibitors had violated the   _ _\nanti-trust law, through film licensing WANTED\u2014SOUND YOUNG FARM\nagreements.   ,\nIn a decision by Justice Stone, the\ntribunal affirmed a decree by the\nnorthern Texas federal district court\nenjoining further agreements.\nThe department oil Justice, which\nInstituted the proceedings, contended eight leading distributors violated the Sherman anti-trust law by\nagreeing with Interstate Circuit,\nInc., which operates theatres in Texas, to place restrictions on the use\nof films licenced to the competitors of Interstate.\nMotion picture distributors involved were Columbia, Fox, Metro,\nParamount, RKO, United Artists,\nUniversal and Vltagraph.\nGARDEN AND NURSERY\nPRODUCTS\nFRUIT TREES, EVERGREENS,\nJunipers, boxus, yews, cypress,\nhedge plants and flowering shrubs\nT. Roynon, Nelson agent Layritz\nNurseries.\t\nWant to buy or sell? Try a Want Ad.\nFOR\nSALE OR EXCHANCE\nWILL SWAP 10 ACRE FARM IN\nSlocan Valley. Storey and half log\nhouse with out buildings. Water\nand timber, clear title \u2014 for small\nhouse in Yahk or vicinity of Nelson. Box 5145 Dally NeWs.\nFOR SALE, NO. 1 TIMOTHY AND\nAlfalfa, $20 per ton. J. Murray.\nSouth Slocan.\nWORLD BOOK ENCYCLOPEDIA.\nA-l con. Wshbl. covers. Ph. 591R1.\nWANTED  MISCELLANEOUS\nSHIP US YOUR SCRAP METALS\nor Iron, any quantity. Top prices\npaid. Active Trading Company,\n916 Powell St, Vancouver, B. C.\nOUTBOARD   OR   MARINE   Motor. 2d hd. Sam Holuboff Castlegar\nPROPERTY, HOUSES, FARMS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SAL\non easy terms In Alberta a]\nSaskatchewan. Write tor full Ii\nformation to 908 Dept of NatUB\nResources, C. P. R-, Calgary, Afl\nFOR SALE, THAT BEAUTIFU\nhome beside the lake. No. jS\nMaple at Fairview Dlst, Nelsq\nB. C. Apply on the premises\nW. R. Blanchard.\nSMALL HOUSE ON 2 LOTS\nstreet south for immediate sal\nCash or terms. Apply 409 Sixth \u00a3\nWANTED TO RENT FURN. HOUJ\nor suite with garden plot B\n3102 Daily News. ,\nWANTED 4 OR 5 RM. MODES\nhouse. 2 bedrooms. Ph. 374R3,\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, ROOM\nAND APARTMENTS\nHOUSE, QUITE CENTRALLY U\ncated. Unfurnished, $22 a mont\nC. W. Appleyard A Co., Ltd.\nMARSDEN APTS. UNDER W\nmanagement Furn. or unfur\nrooms. Vernon St., Phone 853X,\nFIVE ROOM HOUSE WITH Ftfl\nnace, garage. Ph. 806R after 4 p.\nCLEAN,   BRIGHT   ROOM   WE\ngood board. 704 Railway street,\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPIN\nrooms for rent Annable Block.\nTERRACE APTS Beautiful modo.\nfrigidaire equipped suites.\nVACANT NOW, A FURNISH*\nsuite. Kerr Apartments.\nFRONT HOUSKPG. ROOM HEAI\ned. Central. Ph. 716L evenings.\nWant to Sell Something?\"\nPHONE\n144\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nC. R. HIGGENS, Bookkeeping, Accounts, Correspondence, Income\nTax Returns. No accounts too\nsmall. Reasonable. Phone 980.\nAssayors\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer. Sampling Agents for\nTrail Smelter, 301-305 Josephine\nSt., Nelson, B. C.\t\n\" GRENVILLE H. GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist, 420\nFall Street, Nelson, B. C. P. O.\nBox  No.  9.  Representing  ship-\nper's interest, Trail, B. C,\nHAROLD S. ELMES, ROSSLAND,\nB. C Provincial Assayer, Chemist,\nIndividual Representatives for\nshippers at Trail Smelter.\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. a, neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk\nDR. WILBERT BROCK. PALMER\nGraduate. X-ray. 16 years experience. 542 Baker St. Phone 969.\nCorsets\nSPENCER CORSETS, MRS. V.\nCampbell, 370 Baker St. Ph. 66\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYD C AFFLECK, Fruitvale, B. C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer.\na D. DAWSON. Nelson. B. C.\n Engineer & Surveyor\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St Phone 252\nCert. Mortician       Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance Service\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO, LT\nReal Estate, Insurance, Rent!\n347 Baker St. Phone 68.\nC. D. BLACKWOOD, Insurance\nevery description. Real Est. Pit\nSEE  D.  L.  KHRR,  AGENT TO\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rat\nJ. E, ANNABLE, REAL ESTA1\nRentals. Insurance. Annable Bl\nCHAS. F. McHARDY. INSURANC\nReal Estate. Phone 135.\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, h\nsurance, Rentals. Next HlpperK\nHardware. Baker St. Phone 197.\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lat\nWork, Drilling, Boring and Grinc\ning. Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 393     324 Vernon Stro\nH. E. STEVENSON, Machlntsl\nBlacksmiths, Electric and Acetylei\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satlsfai\ntion guaranteed Mine & Mill work\nspecialty. Fully equipped shop. B\n98, 708-12, Vernon St., Nelson.\nNotaries\nD. J. ROBERTSON, NOTARY\nPUBLIC. 305 Victoria St, Ni\"\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S SASH FACTO!\nHardwood merchant, 273 Baker\nJames E. Holiiday now in charj\nSecond Hand Stores\nWE BUY, SELL A EXCHANC\nfurniture, etc. Ark Store. Ph. 8i\nHOME FURNITURE, BUY, SEL\nExch., Rpr\u201e Upholster. 413 Hail I\nWatch Repairing\n144 IS THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE NUMBER\n| When SUTHERLAND repairs yoi\nwatch it is on time all the tim\n345 Baker St, Nelson..\n600D EVENIN6,\nMRS.aTONES.OS\nTIU.IE RESTED\nUP NOW?\nWELL.MAC DID ASK ME FI WANTED TO\nSO TO THE CHARITY DANCE\/BUT I TOtD\nHIM I WAS TOO TIRED AT THE TIME AND\nHE SAID HE'D COME OUTJANYVWW\nrv\n.... '.....\u2022ifata.iiJaMa.,\n\u25a0MMB\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0MM\n wsnmms^Mpipnp\naia\niberta Securities Interest Act Is\nDeclared Ultra Vires, I.O.F. Action\nJAIX3ARY, Feb. 18 (CP). - The\nivlncial Securities Interest Act.\ntucing interest on Alberta bonds\nper cent, was declared ultra vires\nthe Alberta legislature in a judg-\n\u00abit handed down today by Mr.\nnice S. J. Shepherd after a hear-\nI In supreme court ol Alberta\npruary2.\nThe act in question Is ultra vires\nt only for the reason that It is\ncrest legislation, but for the fur-\n(r reason that the suppliant's\nht is a civil, right outside the\nwince and the legislature caa-\nt legislate validly in derogation of\nit right,\" declared his lordship.\nChe action was taken by the Indc-\nBdent Order of Foresters, with\nad offices in Toronto, which held\nberta bonds. '.'The suppliant seeks\n\u00bb a declaration that the Provln-\nII Interest Act,\u00ab1937, Is ultra vires\nthe legislature of Alberta, and I\n1 of the opinion that such a dec-\naUon must be granted,\" said Mr.\nnice Shepherd in his judgment.\nActing for the.I. 0. F\u201e George H.\nJNsr, K. C, Edmonton, obtained\n\u25ba -right to challenge validity of\ne Provincial Securities Interest\n{upon which the judgment was\nten today. The attorney-general's\noartment was presented by W.\nCray, K. C, and H. J. Wilson, K. C.\nBte I. 0. F. owned debentures\nof the province totalling $373,000.\nThe debentures bore Interest at different rates and his lordship's Judgment declared that since June 1,1936\nthe government had tendered only\nhalf Interest rates on the debentures.\nfor the attorney-general's department had contended that previous\njudgments on interest rates could\nnot apply in the present instance\nand that the Federal Interest Act did\nnot apply to the crown.\n\"Under section 01 of the British\nNorth America act, the exclusive\nlegislative authority of the parliament of Canada extends to all matters coming within the classes of\nsubjects hereinafter enumerated and\nthe classes of subjects so enumerated Includes Interest, sub-section\n19,\" said the Judgment.\nIt had been repeatedly hold by\nthe courts that In respect of Interest, the field was occupied by the\nparliament of Canada and the provincial legislature had no right in\nthat field, said Mr. Justice Shepherd.\nThe crown In the right of the\nprovince was bound by the terms of\nthe British North America act,\nwhich, said his lordship, \"explicitly\nassigns to parliament the exclusive\nauthority in respect of Interest.\"\nxporls Causes\nWheat lo\nSteady\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 13 (CP)-A firm\nIverpool market and an export\nlslncss in Canadian wheat of\ntound 400,000 bushels gave wheat\nitures prices a steady trend at Win-\nipeg today. Prices moved narrowly\nSB at the close were Vs cent higher\nI unchanged, May at 62 Vt, July\n!\u2022 end October 63tt cents.\nfTradlng was quiet throughout and\npart from minor support by.export-\n\u2022s and overseas Interests, together\nith a few purchases by mills, little\nWrest was shown. ,\n[Liverpool closed unchanged to Hd\n\u25a0her. Buenos Aires continued unhanged while United States mar-\nIts were holidaying.\nCountry marketings totalled 111,-\n0 bushels Saturday against 102,000\nlibels for the same day a year ago.\npit-trade in coarse grains brought\nIt a little barley buying credited\n> exporters. Cash wheat Seals were\nfgligible.\naustralian Lumber\nMen Plan B.C. Trip\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP).-A\nimber of Australian timber im-\nirters will visit British Columbia\nlis year to study sources of supply\nr their markets, according to 3.\n'.Jackson of Brisbane.\nJackson said considerable reforest-\nlon work had been done in Queens-\nAd and other parts of Australia\nit that there would be need for a\n(ge quantity of imported lumber\nall kinds before the new growth\nready for use.\n'le said he believed there would\na growing demand for British Co-\nktibia lumber and logs as the\nfflply of native Australian wood,\neluding \"hoop\" pine, used for\neking butter boxes and also for\nHiding, diminishes.\nAddison Urges Back-\nto Land Movement to\nSolve Farm Problem\nWINCHESTER,'England, Feb. 13\n(AP).\u2014A sweeping land development program to solve Britain's\nfarming problems is advocated by\nLord Addison, a former tabor minister of agriculture.\nHe told a meeting of the Hampshire branch of the National Farm'\ners Union that during the past seven\nyears more land had gone out of\nactive cultivation in Great Britain\nthan all the land under crops and\ngrass in the whole of Hampshire\nand the Isle of Wight And In that\ntime 100,000 workers had left the\nland.\nCalling this situation \"a terrible\nnational danger,\" Lord Addison outlined a land development policy\nembracing these points:\nArable cultivation should be railed from 12,000,000 to 17,000,000\nacres;\nWheat production should be\ndoubled;\nAt least 7,500,000 acres of grass\nland should be restored by modern\nmethods to double Its meat and milk\nproduction;\nMilk production should be doubled for liquid consumption and for\nbutter making combined;\nProduction ot eggs, vegetables\nand fruit should each be increased\nby at least 60 per cent, and\nProduction of meat should be Increased by at least 29 per cent\nC.P.R. PROPERTIES\nAT YAHK ARE SOLD\nYAHK, B.C, Feb. ia.HSalw of\nC. P. R. property here are reported\nto be numerous. Deals for several\nof the smaller homes have been\ncompleted. Among the buildings\ndisposed of Is the largest hall used\nas a Community hall for church,\nspirt and social affairs.\nThe building purchased by the\nKnights of Pythias lodge of Creston\nhas been dismantled and the material removed to Creston.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NILSON, B.C.-TUE8DAY MORNINO, FEB, 14, 1939\nMarket and Mining News\nMetal Markets\nToronto Stock Quotations\nIINE8\n\u25a0ton Mines  - 02y\u00ab\n\u25a0dermac Copper 40\nInm Gold     .14\niglo-Huronlan    3.05\nntfield Gold  17V4\nitoria Rouyn Mines 04 Vx\nigamac Rouyn     .17^\ninkfield Gold     .27\n.sc Metals Mining  _    .20\nattic Gold Mines \u2014   1.33\ndgood Kirkland 22\n'  Missouri  _\u2022   .24\nJo Mines  -    .17^4\n__\u00bblorne Mines 10.75\nKstt Trethewey  03\nffalo Ankerite  - 14.25\nnker Hill Extension  \u201e .09\nnadian Malartlc  \u201e    .98\nriboo Gold Quartz _   2.21\nItle-Trethewey    90\nKrai Patricia     2.52\nlibougamau    _    .22\npemium M A S - -    -80\nrt Copper \u2014   2.00\nkntagas Mines \u201e   1.60\nmlaurum Mines     1.44\njbsolidated    55.00\nrkwater       .07%\n[sjne Mines 32.25\n.union Explorers  03\nBtval-Slscoe    06Vi\n[it Malartic    2.40\nlorado Gold    1.97\n[conbridge Nickel     5.40\n'sral Kirkland     .65>_\nicoeur Gold      .24\nlies Lake    .Wt\nTs Lake Gold  2H4\nlid Belt  56\nIda Gold Mines 12%\nndoro Mines  '\u2014 04%\nJjnnar Gold  48\nCdRock Gold    1.62\n.rker Gold      .08%\nfcllinger    14.75\n>wey Gold 27\nJldson Bay M & S 34.50\nItemational Nickel  51.75\n|M. Consolidated _ 07\nIck Waite  _ 30\n|cola Gold 09\n\u2022r-Addlson       1.99\nMcland Lake    1.44\nke Shore Mines 47.50\naque Contact 02H\nJm Cadillac  44\ntch Gold 71\n' iel Oro Mines     .OSVt\ntie Long Lac     3.20\nftcassa Mines     5.50\nMLeod Cockshutt    2.75\nadsen Red Lake Gold     .53\nndy   13\ntlntyre-Porcuoine  53.75\nTCenzie Red Lake    1.23\nIcVittle-Graham    WVi\nItWatters Gold      57\nBlng Corporation    1.70\nJito Gold       .02\nloncln Porcupine  ._   1.33\n(brris-Kirkland         .16%\npissing Mining   1.75\nIpranda   80.00\nnetal  50\nBrien Gold    2.75\nhega Gold 40\nnour Porcupine     425\nIJJlore   05W\nnaster Cons 52\nnd Oreille     160\n(jon Gold  \u201e   1.78\n((tie Crow Gold   5.25\noneer Gold   2.60\ntmler Gold     2.12\nwell Rouyn Gold \u201e.,..._)...  2.05\nLONDON, Feb. 18 (AP).-*Cloilng:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a342 7s 6d, up\n... \u2014a\u2122\u2014..\u201e. r- 8\u00bb6;wture \u00a342 12s6,up 1\u00ab3d; elec-\nHls lordship recalled that oqunael Ijrolyttc spot bid \u00a348, aaked \u00a349,\nr the attornev.general's depart- P>oth up 5s. Tin snot \u00a3214 Si. ofljs;\nfuture \u00a3215 2a Od, up 2s 6d. Bids:\nLead-spot \u00a314 7s lid, up 2s 6d; future \u00a314 10s, up Is 3d, Zinc spot\n\u00a313 12s 6d, up 3s 9d; future \u00a313\n17s Od, up 2s 6d.\nBar gold 148s 4<_d, off % penny.\n(Equivalent (34.76).\nBar silver 20 7-lBd, up 1-16.\nMONTREAL\nBar gold In London down one\ncent at $34.94 an ounce in Canadian\nfunds; 148s 4>,id In British. The fixed\n{35 Washington price amounted to\n$35.16 In Canadian:\nSilver futures closed steady and\nunchanged today. Bid: Feb. 41.50.\nSilver Ridge Is\nDriving Tunnel\nalio Feel a Day\nGranville  Vein   First\nObjective; Expect\nShip in Summer\nAdvancing at the rate of 10 feet\na day, a low level tunnel at the\nSilver Ridge Mining Co. Ltd. property, Sandon, Is in 500 feet from the\nportal, it was reported In Nelson\nMonday by R. A. Grimes, president\nand managing director, and E. K.\nKanaly of Vancouver, a director.\nThe property, largely Nelson-1\nowned, Is said to be the only base\nmetal mine under development in\nBritish Columbia at this time. It\nIs in the heart of the Slocan country which produced rich silver-lead\nore in the early days.\nThe silver Ridge made mining\nHistory In this district with the\nintroduction of bulldozer prospecting. A tractor and bulldozer were\nused to remove heavy overburden\nand three main veins, the Bell,\nGranville and Jan, were discovered.\nOther veins have since been revealed on the surface and an entirely unexpected vein waa opened\nup In driving the development tunnel, 230 feet from the portal. A second vein indicated on the surface\nis expected 600 feet from the portal.\n100 feet beyond the present point\nof development.\nEXPECTED SHIP SOON\nProduction from the Silver Ridge\nii expected early this year, the\n\u2022liver and lead content of the ore\nbeing sufficiently high for profitable shipment even at current low\nprices, Mr. Grimes and Mr. Kanaly\nstated.\nFirst objective Is the Granville\nproperty, will begin shipping from\nvein, and when this is reached the\nthe veins encountered up to that\npoint Continuation of the tunnel\nto get beneath the Bell and Jan\nveins will follow.\nAssays averaging 60 per cent lead\n\u20141200 pounds of lead to the ton\nof ore \u2014 and 100 ounces of silver,\nare reported by Mr. Grimes. The\nproperty shipped 21 tons, largely\nfrom the Bell vein, last summer, on\nwhich net smelter returns were\n$30 a ton. This was with lead\nworth around two cents.\nA comparatively short tramway,\n3000 feet from the mouth of the\ntunnel to the railway, will facilitate shipping.\nMARKETS AT A\nGLANCE\nBy The Canadian Pren\nToronto: Industrial and gold\nshares firmer; base metals and oils\ndown. '   :\nMontreal: Stocks closed higher.\nNew York: Stocks and commodity markets closed,\ni  Winnipeg: Wheat % of a cent\nhigher to unchanged.\nToronto: Bacon hogs off truck up\n15 cents to $9 to $9.15.\nLondon: Bar silver and other met\nals higher.\nMontreal: Silver unchanged.\nCalgary Oils OH\nCALGARY, Feb. 13 (CP).-Oils\neased slightly in dull trading on Calgary stock exchange. Transfers totalled 12,900,\nPhilips Pete at 9, Model at 33;\nClamont at 37 and Anglo-Canadian\nat 1.22 were each off a point. Lethbridge, with 6000 shares traded, eased % at 2%.\n.55\n.25\n.28%\n1.39\n.03\n1.01\n1.16\nQuebec Gold \t\nReeves MacDonald ...\nReno Gold Mines\t\nRoche Long Lac \t\nSan Antonio Gold\t\nShawkey Gold \t\nSheep Creek Gold\t\nSherritt Gordon \u201e\t\nSiscoe Gold     1.38\nSladen Malartlc     .65\nStadacona Rouyn     .95\nSt. Anthony  15\nSudbury Basin   \u00ab.    2.49\nSullivan Consolidated  85\nSylvanite    3.50\nTeck-Hughes Gold   4.35\nToburn Gold Mines    2.00\nTowagmac         .32\nVentures    5.50 *\nWaite Amulet    7.10\nWhitewater   \u201e    .03\nWright Hargreaves    8.75\nYmir Yankee Girl  06\nOIL8\nAjax     .18\nBritish American      22.25\nChemical Research  54\nImperial      16.60\nInter Petroleum  26.50\nTexas Canadian     1.13\nINDUSTRIALS\nAbitibi Power A     2Vt\nBell Telephone   170%\nBrazilian T L A P      8%\nBrewers A Distillers     4%\nBrewing   Corp 1.55\nBrewing Corp pfd    21%\nB c Power A     23\nB c Power B     2%\nBuilding Products    16%\nCanada Bread        4\nCan Bud Malting     4%\nCan Car A Foundry    15%\nCan Cement      8''\nCan Cement pfd    97\nCan Dredge     20\nCan Malting   34'\nCan Pacific Rly     5%\nCan Ind Alcohol A     2\nCan Ind Alcohol B     2%\nCan  Wineries       3%\nCarnation pfd   106\nCons Bakeries  ' 15\nCosmos    19\nDominion Bridge     33%\nDominion Stores     6\nDom Tar & Chem      3%\nDom Tar & Chem pfd     73\nDistillers Seagrams     18\nFanny  Farmer     21%\nFord of Canada A    21%\nGen  Steel Wares      6%\nGoodyear Tire    74\nGypsum L & A     5%\nHarding Carpet       2%\nHamilton Bridge       4'\/\u00bb\nHamilton Bridge pfd    30\nHlnde Dauche -   13\nHiram   Walker   _   47\nIntl Metals      6%\nIntl Milling pfd  _ 104\nImperial Tobacco   1<3%\nLoblaw A  -. ~   23%\nLoblaw B   _.\u201e   21%\nKolvinator     10%\nMaple Leaf Milling 1.10\nStocks Steady But\nDeals Small Due\nWorld Situations\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (AP).-Motorj\ngained in the London stock exchange today under leadership of\nRolls Royce and Austin Motors, but\nthe entire session was decidedly a\ntraders' market.\nDealings were small, with the big\nihterests holding off pending develt\nopments in the International situation.\nBritish government bonds and investment securities, including foreign obligations, held steady\nthroughout the day. Transut uitie\nstocks reflected the improvement in\nWall Street in early dealings, but\nthe Lincoln's birthday holiday in the\nUnited States checked any form of\nexpansion.\nPrices dropped somewhat as the\nday's trade grew to an end, although\nmotors were joined in their gain by\nIron, steel and aircraft.\nGold mines and oil shares slipped\non South Africa and Paris selling.\nRubber shares were quiet and uncertain pending the International\nregulation committee's decision on\nquotas, expected Tuesday,\nPrices at the close were uneven,\ncompared with Friday's close.\nThe sole feature of a quiet foreign exchange market was a series\nof offerings in the afternoon of\nDutch guilders, weakening the price\nto 8.74 to the pound sterling, com'\npared with Saturday's quotation at\n8.71%.\nAbout \u00a3531,000 ($2,490,390) worth\nof gold was sold at 148 shillings, 4%\npence an ounce, a decline of %\npenny from the Saturday's quotation.\nClosing-Brazil $9%; C.P.R. IK;\nInter Nickel $54%; U. S. Steel \u00a362%;\nCelanese Corp of Am \u00a34%; Cent\nMining \u00a3101.; Consol Gold Fields\n62s 6d; Courtaulds 25s; Crown\n\u00a315%; East Geduld \u00a311; H. B. C.\n22s 4%d; Mining Trust 2s 3d; Rand\n\u00a38%; Springs 28s I'M\nBonds\u2014British 2% per cent Consols \u00a370 3-16; 3% per cent war loan\n\u00a397%; 4s 1960-90 \u00a3108%.\nA.F.L. and C.I.O. in\nCoal, Auto Dispute\nMIAMI, Feb. 13 (AP)- The American federation of labor leadership gave notice today the United\nStates' coal fields and automobile industry may be the spring\ntesting grounds for the A. F. L.'s\nstruggle with the congress of Industrial organizations unlets a peace\nsettlement terminates the rivalry.\nAfter two weeks of conferences\nwith his executive council, President William Green disclosed the\nA. F. L. strategy in the war with\nJohn L. Lewis' C. I. O. was shaping\nup along these lines:\n1. The progressive miners of America, an A. F. L. chartered union in\nthe coal fields, will demand collective bargaining recognition from\nsome 250 coal operators as soon as\nthe industry's contract with Lewis'\nunited mine workers expires March\n31.\n2. The A. F. L. council is \"speculating\" on the possibilities that Homer Martin and his antl-C. I, O.\nfaction in the automobile Industry\nwill not be able to maintain an independent union status after splitting off from C, I. O.'i united auto\nworkers union.\nMoney\nGoodyear Earnings Off\nAKRON, 0\u201e Feb. 13 (AP)-Oood-\nyear Tire A Rubber Company reported consolidated net operating\nearnings tor 1938 were $6,012,423,\nagainst $7,257,207 tor 1937. Sales for\n1938 were reported at $165,928,944,\ncompared with $216,174,813,\nHeavy Turnover\nIn Junior Golds\nTORONTO, Feb. 18 (CP).-In ihe\nabsence of leadership from .New\nYork where Lincoln's birthday-was\nobserved, Toronto stock market\nconcerned Itself today with a group\nof the cheaper golds. Heavy turnover of some of the Juniors lifted\naggregate volume to around 650,000\nshares.\nStadacona gold traded about 05,000\nshares and advanced to a new high\nat 1.03 but profit-taking practically\nwiped out the gain. Augite traded\nabout 85,000 shares on a gain of a\ncent or two, Slave Lake Improved\nabout the same amount on turnover\nof around 100,000 shares.\nThe close was up 5 or more for\nSylvanite, Pamour, O'Brien, Macassa, Wrlght-Hargreaves, Pickle Crow,\nLamaque and Premier.\nInternational Nickel was comparatively dormant while Noranda and\nSmelters turned over at narrow\ngains. The close was down moderately for Walte-Amulet and Pend\nOreille.\nSteel and utilities improved while\nthe close was firm to strong for senior oils, foods and building issues.\nBrazilian dropped a minor fraction.     . .\nIn the western oil list narrow\nlosses appeared for Home, Anglo-\nCanadian, Dalhousie\" and Okalta\nagainst small gains for Calgary-Edmonton, East Crest and Pacalta.\nConflicting Prices\nIn Dull Session\nMONTREAL, Feb. IS (CP).-Con-\nfllcting price trends marked dull\nstock market trading today.\nSmelten firmed a point to 56.\nNickel never rallied trom a loss of\n%, closing at 51%.\nMcColl Frontenac OU Improved to\n7 but International Pete sold off,\nGatineau and Montreal Power improved narrowly while Shawinigan\nand Brazilian gave up fractions.\nSmall gains showed for Price\nBros, and Building Products. Off a\ntrifle were C. P. R. and National\nSteel Car.\nHodge and Tyler\nCourt Appointees\nVICTORIA, Feb. 13 (CP).-Edgar\nLionel Hodge of Trail was appointed\na stipendiary magistrate and magistrate of the small debts court\nby government order today. C. W.\nTyler of Nelson was appointed as\nofficial stenographer for West Kootenay.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG. Feb. 13 (CP).-Grain\nfutures quotations:\nOpen High Low Close\nWHEAT:\n6\n80%\n38\n65%\n10\n5\n100\n10%\nPressed Metals     10%\nSteel of Can     72\nCaarfaaa-rf  P,a,i.aa 1U.\nMassey Harris\nMontreal Power \t\nMoore Corp \t\nNat  Steel Car \t\nOnt  Steel  Prods ......\nOnt Silk Net\t\nPage Hersey .\nPower   Corp\nBy The. Canadian Prett\nClosing exchange rates:\nAt Montreal: Pound 4.70%; U. S.\ndollar 1.00 15-32; franc 2.66%.\nAt New York: Closed.\nAt Paris: Pound 176.96 fr; U. S.\ndollar 37.765 fr; Canadian dollar\n37.59 fr. \"\nIn gold: Pound lis 5d; U. S. dollar 69.46 cents; Canadian dollar\n59,16 cents.\nFIRE DAMACE IS $1800\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13, (CP) \u2014\nDamage, estimated today at $1800\nwas caused by a blaze which broke\nout yesterday in the Johnson Lumber Company yard at Marpole, B.\nC, several miles south of here near\nthe mouth of the Fraser river.\nA. A. Johnson, company manager, said he believed the fire was\neither of incendiary origin or had\nbeen started by-tramps.\nFiremen managed to save the\ncompany's main office after a two-\nhour battle.\nMay\nJuly  \t\nOct\t\nOATS;\nMay\t\nJuly\t\nOct   \u25a0\nBARLEY:\nMay\t\nJuly\t\nFLAX:\nMay _\nJuly ~\nSYE:\nMay -\nJuly\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nMINES Bid\nBig Missouri  24\nBluebird  01%\nBralorne     10.60\nB R Con  02%\nCariboo Gold     2,20\nDentonia  05\nFairview Amal      .03%\nFederal Gold        .01\nGeorge Copper        \u2014\nGolconda         .04%\nGold Belt  tOVt\nGold Mountain 0214\nGrandview  05%\nGrull-Wlhksne        MVt\nHedley Mascot       1.41\nHedley Sterling\nHome Gold \t\nIndian Mines   \t\nInter Coal A Coke\nIsland Mountain ..\nKootenay Belle ....\nLucky Jim\t\nMak Siccar Gold ..\nMcGillivray  -\nMinto Gold\t\nNicola Hill\t\nNoble Five\n.00%\n.00%\n.01%\n.29\n1.30\n1.38\n.01%\n.01%\n,23\nmvt\nM\n.02%\nPend Oreille  1.56\nPilot Gold  .'...- .00%\nPioneer Gold .  2.W\nPorter Idaho   \/\u00bb%\nPremier Border _ .01\nPr#tfl\u00ab Gold \u2014 2.W\n(Juatslno     .02%\nQuesnelle Quartz .. .04%\nPrivateer    1.18\nReeves-MacDonald .26\nRelief Arlington .. .10%\nReno Oold       .27\nReward   .04M>\nRufus Argenta  .01\nSally Mines    .02\nSalmon Gold  .09%\nSheep Creek  ........ 1.01\nSllbak Premier .... 1.70\nSilver Crest  :.. .01%\nTaylor B R   .04\nAtk\n.25\n10.75\n.03\n2.27\n.05V*\n.04%\nS*\n.58\n.02%\n.07\n.03\n1.50\n.01\n.02\n.36\n1.35\n1.43\n.02\n.01%\n.02%\n.04%\n.03\n1.65\n.01\n2.60\n.03%\n.01%\n2.20\n.03\n.05\n1.16\n.80\n.12\n.20\n.04%\n.01%\n\u2022i?\n1.02\n1.80\nWaverly-Tangier ..      \u2014\nWellington       .01%\nWesko Mines      ,00%\nWhitewater 03%\nYmir Yankee Girl     .05\nOILS\nA P Con  18%\nAmalgamated  00%\nAnaconda  10%\nAnglo Canadian ....    1.25\nBaltac          .02\nCal & Ed      2.15\nCalmont   38\nCommonwealth  ....     .25\nCrow's Nest 00%\nDalhousie  45\nDavies Pete  36\nEast Crest       .OBVi\nFirestone Pete  09%\nFoothills   72\nFour Star Pete 09\nFreehold Corp       .03%\nHargal       \u2014\nHighwood Sarcee ..      .18\nHome      2.36\nMadison          .04\nMar-Jon         .04%\nMcDougall-Segur ..      .14%\nMercury          .07%\nModel    31\nMonarch Royal      .07%\nNordon Corp        \u2014\nOkilta com      1.13\n.00%\n.01%\n.01\n.04\n.07\n1.27\nPacalta\nPralrte Royal ...\nRoyalite\t\nSouth End Pete\nSbuthwest Pete\nRoyal Canadian\nUnited  \t\nVanalta \t\nVulcan\t\nTurner \t\nINDUSTRIALS\nBrewers A Dlst\nCapital Estates.......    1.30\nCoast Breweries ..    1.16\nPacific Coyle  IB\n\u201e\u25a0,,..,\u25a0 rutin*.\n40.00\n.05\n.35\n.17%\n.09%\n.06%\n.36\n.05\n-       5.25\n.11\n.04%\n.20\n2.40\n.20%\n.18\n.10\n1.18\n62% 62% 62 62%\n62% 62% 62% 62%\n63%    63%    63%    63%\n28% 28% 28% 28%\n28%    28%    28       28\n- -       -       28\n37% 37% 37% 37%\n36%    36%    36%    36%\n_ _ _ 148%\n.-       -       -      145%\n- - - 42%\n43       -      -       43\nC5ASH PRICES:\nWHEAT-No. 1 hard 61%; No. 1\nNor. and track 59%; No. 2 Nor. 56%;\nNo. 3 Nor. 51%r No. 4 Nor. 46%;\nNo. 5, 40%; No. 6, 39%; feed 37%;\nNo. 1 Garnet 52%; No. 2 Garnet 49%;\nNo. 3 Garnet 43%; No. 1 Durum\n48%; No. 4 special 41%; No. 5 special\n40%; No. 6 special 38%; No. 1 mixed\n42%.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 28%; No. 3\nC. W. and Ex. 1 feed 25%; No. 1\nfeed 25%; No. 2 feed 24%; No. 3\nfeed 21%; track 27%.\nBARLEY\u2014Malting grades: 6- and\n2-row Ex. 3 C. W. 39%. Others: No. 3\nC. W. 33%; Nd. 4 C. W. 35%; No. 5\nC. W. 34%; No. 6 C. W. 33%; track\n38%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 146%; No. 2\nC. W. 142%; No. 3 C. W.' 130%; No. 4\nC. W. 125%; track 147%.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 40%.\nWINNIPEG BUILDINGS\nGUTTED BY FIRE\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 13 (CP). -\nFlames gutted three separate buildings here early today and paused\nsmoke and water damage to several stores. Estimate of the damage\nwas not available.\nCranbrook Direct\nReliel Issued Is\nDown in January\nCRANBROOK, B. C. - Three fire\nalarms were turned in in January\nin the city of Cranbrook. A fire in\nthe wall of the Queen's hotel was\nextinguished with chemical, no damage, caused by a defective chimney.\nA chimney fire at a Kootenay\nstreet residence was extinguished\nwith chemical, no damage, and a\nchimney fire at an Armstrong avenue residence was extinguished with\nchemical, no damage.\nThere was no tire loss. All hotels and rooming houses were inspected early in the month relative\nto the applications for licences, and\nreport of these submitted to the licence committee.\nAll public buildings were inspected and found satisfactory.\nThe electrical department reported 32 street lights were renewed;\nll services were connected and 6\ncut off, leaving a net gain of 5 active\nservices for the month; 3 poles were\nerected and additional ,15 K. V. A.\ntransformers installed on Armstrong.\nRepairs were made to the burled\ncable serving the ornamental street\nlights on Baker street. Further investigations will be made in the\nspring to ascertain the extent of deterioration and repairs or replacements required. A total of 68 man\nhours were spent on radio interference work. Consumption was 121,-\n160 K. W. H. against 111,120 K W. II.\nfor January, 1938.\nThe works department reported\nnine service orders were attended\nto and two thaws made by elec-\ntrictly on private services. Hydrants\nwere checked regularly in the severe weather. Due to colder weather\nthe surplus run off at the reservoir\nhas decreased from last month, being at this time approximately 1,-\n000.000 gallons per day.\nPlowing and sanding of sidewalks\nand sanding of dangerous intersections on streets has been carried out\nSnow levelling with the tractor\nand rail drag was carried out at the\nairport. There were three arrivals\nand departures at the airport.\nOne building permit was issued,\nthe estimated value being $1200. The\nconstruction of two new bungalows at the tourist' camp is under\nway. .\nThe relief department reported\n42 married persons with 131 dependents, 24 single persons and seven\nChinese were issued with city direct\nrelief totalling $1448.40 of which\nthe city's share Is $289.69 against a\ntotal ot $1611.05 (city's share $322.-\n21) for December.\nIn the D. P. and S. section 12 persons with three dependents received city aid totalling $131.60 of\nwhich the city's share Is $81.80,\nagainst a total of $152 for December.\nOILS TAKE LEAD\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP) -\nOU prices switched to the advancing side in the final hour ot Vancouver stock exchange today while\ngolds closed with a mixed trend,\nase metals were quiet and transactions totalled 75,649 shares.\nMar Jon headed the active oil\nlist with a turnover of 22.500 shares\nand closed fractionally higher at 5.\nCalgary & Edmonton at 2.13, Okalta\nat 1.15 and Home at 2.35 each gained\nthree cents while Vulcan finished\nat 65, five cents above Saturday's\nclosing bid. East Crest was up % at\n8% in fair trading and other leading\nissues posted fractional gains.\nIsland Mountain Gold was up 3\nat 1.33, Sheep Creek added 2 at 1.01\nand Reno firmed a cent at 28. Bralorne wai 15 cents above Saturday's\nclosing bid at 10.75 and Pioneer at\n2.60, Privateer at 1.15 and Dentonia\nat 5 remained unchanged. Cariboo\nGold Quartz slipped 3 at 2.22 and\nOold Belt was off 1% at 56%.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Feb. 13 (CP).-Week-\nend receipts; Cattle eight; calves\nnine; hogs 85; sheep nil.\nReceipts today: Cattle 84; calves\nfour; hogs and sheep nil.\nCattle market active; prices\nstrong. Good butcher steers 6.50\u20146;\ngood .heifers 5.25; good to choice\nveal calves 6\u20146.50; good cows 3.50\u2014\n4; good to choice veal calves 6.50\u2014\n8.50.\nFriday's selects 8.85; bacons 8.35;\nbutchers 7.35.\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Feb. 13 (CP)-Brlt-\nish and foreign exchange closed\neasier today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nAustralia, _ound, 8.7596.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .2928.\nFrance, franc, .026819.\nGreat Britain, pound, 4.7098.\nHolland, florin, .5396.\nIndia, rupee, .3525.\nNew Zealand, pound, 3.7899.\nSouth Africa, pound 4.6854.\nUnited States dollar, 31-64 per\ncent premium.\n(Complied by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nSeniority Rights in\nEffect Michel Mines\nUnder New Agreem't\nNATAL, B. C-Michol mliics have\nbeen working fair time since the\nfirst ot the year, although, due to\nmild weather, volume ot orders has\nbeen low.\nThe coke-ovens too have slackened off, dropping trom six days a\nweek to four and five, Jter working steady tor some time. A number\nof ovens that had not been in operations for years were re-opened recently but only last week some of\nthese have been closed. At present\nover 200 ovens are still In operation\nwith some six cars of coke moving\nout daily.\nWith the seniority coming Into\neffect with the new agreement a\nfew have already claimed seniority rights.\nTimber Company\nHolding Bought\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 13 (CP).-H.\nR. MacMillan, lumber exporter, announced today companies with\nwhich he is connected have acquired the timber, railroad and logging\nequipment of Campbell River Timber company on the east coast of\nVancouver Island. The price paid\nwas about $950,000. The MacMillan\npurchase ended litigation before Mr.\nJustice A. M. Manson in supreme\ncourt. Competitors of the MacMillan\ngroup In seeking the Campbell River\nholdings were Bloedel, Stewart and\nWelch, one of the province's biggest\nlogging organizations, who had\nmade a deal for the timber through\nDetroit Trust company, agents tor\nthe bondholders.\nA court order issued at the weekend by Mr. Justice Manson permitting the mortgagor company a few\ndays in which to pay up arrears of\ninterest and sinking fund enabled\nthe MacMillan group, represented\nby a new subsidiary, Vanisle Log-\ning company, to close the deal Van-\nIsle provided the necessary funds\ntor putting the mortgage in good\nshape so that Campbell River Timber company, as mortgagor, could\nredeem the property and then turn\nit over to the MacMillan group,\nAdvises Inspection\nStock Price Values\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 13 (CP)-Close\ninspection of stock companies to\nsee the price at which they sell\nstock compares favorably with its\nactual value was advocated last\nnight by Senator R. B. Homer, of\nBlaine Lake, Sask, Senator Horner\nstopped here en route to Ottawa.\nMany companies sell stock to a\n\"sicker list,\" dissolve the company\nand then buy back the stock at reduced prices, he said.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Feb. 13 (CP).-Spot:\nButter, Que. 22%\u2014%. Cheese, Ont\ncolored 11%.\nButter futures: Feb. 22%\u2014%;\nMarch 22%-23; Nov. 23%-24%,\nDividends\nMacassa Mines Limited, S cents\nplus 2% cents.\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS\nAlta Pac Grain      2\nAssoc Brew of Can  16%\nBathurst P A P A     7%\nCanadian Bronze   37\nCan Bronze pfd  104\nCan Car A Fdy pfd  33\nCan Celanese   ........ 13%\nCan Celanese pfd  100\nCan North Power  15\nCan Steamship -    2%\nCan Steamship pfd     9%\nCockshutt Plow     7%\nCon Mln A Smelting  55\nDominion Coal pfd  16\nDom Steel A Coal B  10\nDominion Textile   58\nDryden Paper     5\nFoundation C of C ;     9\nGatineau Power ....;  13%\nGatirteiu Pbwer pfd   80%\nGurd Charles  , 5%\nHoward Smith Paper  11%\nH Smith Paper pfd  93%\nImperial Oil  16%\nInter Petroleum   26%\nInter Nickel of Can  51%\nLake of the Woods  14%\nMcColl Frontenac       7\nNational Brew Ltd  42%\nNat Brew Ltd   44%\nOgilvie Flour new ....:.  27\nPrice Bros    15V4\nQ...WPnm.v  | ||\nShawinigan W A P   20%\nSt Lawrence Corp      3%\nSt Law Corp pfd   12%\nSouth Can Power    12\nSteel of Can pfd    71%\nBANK8\nCommerce  170\nDominion  201\nImperial  -.  205\nMontreal  207\nNova Scotia 304\nRoyal   185\nToronto  245\nCURB\nAbitibi 6 pfd    16%\nBathurst P 4t P B     2%\nBeauharnois Corp      3%\nBritish American Oil    22%\nB C Packers   12\nCah Marconi 100\nCan Vicktrs     7%\nCons Paper Corp,    5%\nI  13%\nFalrchilf Aircraft .\u201e...\nFraser Co Ltd ...\nInter Utilities A\nInter Utilities B ...'. 55\nLake Sulphite     1%\nMacLaren PiF ,    13%\nMcColl Frontenac nfd    90\nMitchell Robt    13%\nRoyalite Oil         40\nUnited Dlst of Can -.\u00bb-\nWalker Good A W    47\n11      ...  l>AQ\u00ab NINE\nCranbrook Board\nTo Gel Letter on\nMajesties'Visit\nCRANBROOK, B. C. \u2014 Accounts\namounting to $15,973.53 were approved for payment at the regular\nmeeting of the Cranbrook city council in the chamber room.    \\\nLetters trom the Cranbrook Public library and the Cranbrook City\nLegion band applying for grants ot\n$300 and $500 respectively, also enclosing their financial statements for\nthe year were read, and referred to\nthe finance committee for consideration.\nA Utter from the Canadian Legion of Cretton, In connection\nwith arranging a caravan trip to\nGolden on the occasion of Their\nMajesties patting through that\ntown on their visit to Canada,\nwat read and referred to the Cranbrook board of trade.\nThe purchase of $8000 province\not B. C. guaranteeing P. G. E. Railway Co. 4% per cent bonds due\nJuly 15(h, 1942 at $97.94 and accrued interest from A. E. Ames A\nCo., was confirmed.\nThe sale of $2000 Province ot\nBritish Columbia 5% per cent bonds\ndue March 5th. 1939, to Mills, Spewo\nSt Co. for a flat price of $2065.00\nincluding accrued interest was confirmed.\nThe tender of.H. S. McLoughlln at\n$235 was accepted for supply ant\ninstallation of plumbing fixtures st\nthe new bungalows at the City tourist camp.\nL. Matassa Given 7\nWork Certificates\nL. Matassa was awarded seven\ncertificates for work on' mineral\nclaims on the Salmo river, at the\nNelson mining recorder's office.\nThe claims wete the Gold Hill, Gold\nHill No. 1, Gold Hill No, 2, Gold\nHill No. 3, Grace, Louise, and Fra*.\nture.\nC. P. R. Preference\nDividend Dropped\nMONTREAL, Feb. 13 (CP) - Directors of Canadian Pacific Railway\nCompany decided at a meeting today not to pay a dividend on the\npreferred 1938 stock. The company\nmade public the following announcement:\n\"While earnings for the year were\nsufficient to meet all expenses and\nfixed charges, including provisions\nfor depredation and taxes\u2014with a\nmodest surplus\u2014the directors of the\ncompany have decided that, in view\nof tne serious decline in the net\nresults as -compared with 1937, it\nwas inadvisable to declare any\ndividend on the preference stock\nin respect of the year 1938,\"\nU.S. Dollar Steady\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (AP). - The\nUnited States dollar finished at\n$4.68 9-18 to the pound, net unchanged, In foreign exchange trading today. Thit compared with sterling at $5.68% In New York over\nthe week-end. French francs also\nwere unchanged at 176.94 to the\npound.\n4END\nWE OFFER AND RECOMMEND\nTHE SHARES OF\nSILVER RIDGE\nMining Co., Limited\nAT 25. PER SHARE\nA local enterprise backed by local men. Write\nor call at our office for further particulars,    fr\nI\nPHOI\nP. E. POULIN\nSTOCKS \u2014 BONDS \u2014 INSURANCE\nPHONE 70 582 WARD ST.\nIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIimill\n.lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll\nTO EVERY\nPRINTING PROBLEM\nTHERE IS A\nSENSIBLE ANSWER\nWE MAKE IT OUR BUSINESS TO KNOW\n,THAT ANSWER WITH\n\u2022 DESIGN, COPY AND LAYOUT\nASSISTANCE\nO    SKILLED  and  TRAINED  CRAFTSMEN\n\u2022 MODERN, EFFICIENT EQUIPMENT\n\u2022 ORIGINALITY IN PRINTING IDEAS\n\u2022 EXCLUSIVE ILLUSTRATION\nSERVICE\n\u2022 ATTRACTIVE and EFFECTIVE\nDISPLAY\nAll work is done in our own modern\nplant.\nPHONE 144\nOur Representative Will Call\nMmw Mjj New*\nCOMMERCIAL PRINTING DEPARTMENT\n'iliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiini^\nnilHUaUIIIIIIUIIIIlUlllllllHtllllUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIllll\n PAGE   TEN.\n$ttOMA&eMMSMS0*tM**S*mm*th^^\nToday and\nWednesday\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 AND 8:23\nPICTURE THAT TURNS THE SUNSHINE ON!\n*-\u00ab-sgggpsag-\nAT 2:14,7:14, 9:45\nNITE 15* 35*\nAnother Rip-Snorting Comedy\nTHE JONES FAMILY In\nDOWN ON THE FARM\nVttV\nLONDON, (CP)\u2014One of Britain's\ngreatest treasures the British Museum library of nearly 5,000,000 vol-\nPHONE 815\nfor better and prompter service In plumbing repairs and\nalterations.\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER PLUMBER\nsMMSMSSKSSMSSS&KSSSM!\nU.S.L BATTERIES\nPOWER TO SPARE\nPEEBLES MOTORS\nBaker St.     Limited     Phone 119\nCOMPLETE BEAUTY SERVICE\nHaircuts, shampoos, tinting, manicures, massage, waving.\nBEAUTY\nPARLOR\n817 BAKER ST.      PHONE 244\nTMadijii\nPHONE 128 FOR COMPLETE\nLaundry Service\nKOOTENAY\nSTEAM LAUNDRY\numes, will have to remain In London and run the risk of air bombardment n the event of war, A. R.\nP. officials say.\nRepairing \u2014 Remodelling\nand Relining\nMalcolm's Furs\n699 BAKER STREET\nPHONE 25\nPrescriptions\nCompounded\nAccurately\nFleury's Pharmacy\nMEDICAL ARTS BLOCK\nBOYS' NEW TWEED\nTROUSERS  \t\n$1.95\nCharles Morris\nMy Business: Helping\nPeople Save Money\nFrank A. Stuart\nOVER ANLREW'S SHOE STORE\nNelson, B. C. Phone 980\nJUNIOR HOCKEY PLAYOFFS\nNELSON CIVIC ARENA\nTONIGHT\u2014(Feb. 14)\u20148:15\nNELSON vs. TRAIL\nAdmission: ADULTS 25^, CHILDREN 1Q.\nThis Is the first of the best 2 out of 3 games\u2014For the Junior West\nKootenay Hockey Championship.\nA Gift They All Like\nGive Perfume\nAt our Perfume Bar you'll find a selection\nof perfumes that is sure to Include her fav-\norite odor. Get it today for sure so that you\nwon't be lata\nFleury's Pharmacy\nPHONE 25\nMEDICAL ARTS BLOCK\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHardware Company, Limited\nWHOLESALE RETAIL\nSHELF\u2014HEAVY HARDWARE\u2014MINE SUPPLIES\nMILL SUPPLIES\u2014SPORTING GOODS\u2014BUILDING\nMATERIALS\u2014ZONOLITE INSULATION\nDISTRIBUTORS FOR BAPCO PAINTS\nNILSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C-TUE8DAY MORNINO. FEB. 14.\nThe Pharmal\nHOT WATER\nBOTTLE\nThe belt value we have ever\nhad. Special QAA\nrt  ...OjC\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.   . ,   I\nPhOne 81 Nelson, B. C.\nBLACK'S HARBOR, N. B. (CP)-\nJames Phillips, retired fisherman\nnow 103 years old, has finally decided to abandon a summer practice ot rowing 15 miles to visit his\nson, Douglas, 70, at Lubec, Me, .\nMR. DICK SMITH\nIs now In charge of our service\ndepartment and would be pleased to see any of his friends.\nKootenay Motors\n(Nelson) Ltd.        Phone 117\nI\nLamberts1\nFOR\nLUMBER\nPHONE 82\nI\nTRY OUR\nHome Made Bread\nAT YOUR DEALERS\nHOOD BAKING CO., LTD.\n1930 Studebaker\nSix   (6)  COUPE\nA-1 oondition. '39 licence, heater,\nchains, antl-freese, good rubber.\n$250\nSowerby Cuthbert Ltd.\n503 Vernon St. Phone 75\n&tMtmeG&tAwsmewim$*9st\nFISH and CHIPS\nTAKE SOME HOME \u2666>__.\nTODAY - \"3r\nQrenfell's Cafe\nOpp. Civic Theatre\nON THESE\n1929\nOldsmobile\nSEDAN\n$5000\n1930\nFord Coupe\n\u00bb150t0\u00b0\n'33FordV-8\nSedan\n'34 Ford V-8\nDeluxe Sedan\n$125.oo\nIf It's a Kootenay Motors Used\nCar It'* a Good Used Car\nKootenay\nMotors\n(Nelson) Ltd.\nPhone 117        Nelion, B. C.\nPope Phis' Memory Honored\nCathedral of Mary Immaculate\nSolemn Requiem Mass Celebrated; Dr.\nMcKeflna in Sermon Gives Late\nPontiff High Place in History    .\nAdherents of the Catholic faith\npaid reverent homage in simple but\nfitting ceremony in the Cathedral\nof Mary Immaculate Monday morning to their late beloved world head\nPius XI, who died in Vatican City\nFriday morning. The cathedral was\npacked to the doors to hear Rev.\nRadey J. McKenna, p.D., celebrate\nsolemn requiem mass for His Holiness, the theme which was chosen\nbeing' \"Thou art Peter, and upon\nthis rock I will build my church.\"\nDr, McKenna was assisted by Rev.\nJames J. Morelli, secretary to Bishop Johnson, who acted as deacon,\nand Rev. Charles Hugh Steben as\nsub-deacon. Dr. McKenna was celebrant in the absence of the bishop.\nDr. McKenna began by stating\nthat the divine commission given to\nPeter to \"feed my lambs, feed my\nsheep\" was nobly fulfilled by one\nof tne greatest shepherds of all\ntime, Pius XI, in describing the\ngreat work of the late pontiff. In\nthe latter part of his address, Dr.\nMcKenna dealt with the fact that\nthe office of pope Involved the duty\nand power of teaching, ruling, and\nsanctifying the faithful throughout\nthe world. The great pontiff vas as\nconscious of his duty as he was of\nthe power resident in his person.;\nPIU8 TAUGHT\nThe Nelson priest spoke first on\nthe teachings ot the pope. Pius\nmade Leo XIII's famous encylicals\nlive again by a constant and fearless reiteration of the Catholic 'social principles codified almost naif\na century ago by the celebrated\nPope of the Workingman. Fearlessly and unswervingly he met the onslaughts of tyranny, bigotry, hatred, and betrayal of faith, with the\nrigid principles, of Catholic doctrine and practice. Over and again\nhe made the entire world conscious of the church's mission in\nthe world. More than any other he\nbrought Christianity into that unity\nand cohesian which has so far\nchecked the viciousness of Com-\nTnunism and kindred unnatural excesses.\nHis encyclicals on education and\nChristian marriage clearly and\nwithout compromise reaffirmed the\nage-old position of the church, crys-\ntalized Catholic thought, and exposed man-made innovations in\nthese matters for what they were.\nHis constant concern for increasingly high standards in ecclesiastical\nand secular science led him, like his\nmost famous predecessors, to reform\neducational circles by stringent enactments where lofty standards already obtained. His fostering of\nlearned institutions, his many\nfoundations, his personal over-seeing of such affairs through the Congregation of Studies, the Pontifical\nAcademy of Science, and the vast\nlearning that was his own, gave\nan impetus to profund study and\nbrilliant teaching efforts throughout the world.\nHis work for organized Catholic\naction, another of his brain-children\nnow nearing maturity, had resulted\nin an educated, loyal laity everywhere.\n\"P1U8 REALLY RULED\"\n\"Pius really ruled\", Dr. McKenna\nemphasized. To those who were fortunate to have lived In the shadow\nof the Vatican for even such a short\ntime as two years, the knowledge of\nthe venerable pontiff's singleness\nof vision and rigidity of purpose\nwas not better known than the absolute unselfishness of his life. Pius\nhad no personal friends in the\nsense of partial distinction.\nNor did he want them. No pope\never understood his position and\nhis power better. No pope ever carried his shepherd's staff in firmer\ngrasp. Every ready to grant favors\nas long as they involved no concession of principles or justice, he\nasked none for himself.\nA Milanese, he added to that nat\nurally solid character the discipline\nof thought and action contained in\nthe ecclesiastical training he received in his beloved Lombardy\nand In his arduous duties previous\nto his election as pope. A stern\ndisciplinarian, he was never guilty\nof excess and always left the door\najar for reconciliation.\nPIUS SANCTIFIED\nIt was his duty to sanctify. Pius\nbegan with himself, the speaker\nsaid. It was to the eternal credit\nof the papacy that of the 261 popes\nthat history had known, a mere\nhalf dozen were accounted unworthy of praise for their private\nconduct. Not one failed in his duty\nto sanctify others, \"to feed my\nlambs\". Both in his personal and in\nhis official life, Pius XI truly earned his reputation for holiness.\n\"I'saw him often during my two\nyears in the Eternal City\", Dr.\nMcKenna stated. \"The first time\nwas when he came back from the\ndoors of death in 1936. Even then\nhe still appeared full-faced, strong-\njawed, stocky, and vigorous. He\nwas unwell. But with priest-students from all over the world before\nhim, he seized the opportunity to\n'stir up the grace' that was in us,\nto demand personal holiness and\nzeal from everyone present, and to\npoint the way to that sanctity. On\nthat occasion he spoke for an hour.\nTo us it seemed like 10 minutes.\n\"I saw him for the last time last\nJune. There were further oocasions\nwhen I might have gone to Castel\nGondolfo for an audience before\nreturning to Canada, But thai last\nvisit was enough. It was martyrdom tor the shrunken old pontiff.\nHe had fainted before they brought\nhim into the audience chamber on\nthe sedia gestatoria. They had tried\nto persuade him to cancel the visit,\nbut His Highness was adamant. I\nshall never forget his hollow cheeks\nhis quavering voice, his evident suffering, his feeble gestures, his powerful words. The strong body had\nfailed him, but the luminous mind\nand iron will were his stilL The end\nwas then In sight. ,\n\"This morning we are chanting .a\nsolemn mass for the repose of the\nsoul of our great leader. Over in\nRome they cannot do more for him\nthan what we in Nelson do at this\nmoment. The pomp and ceremonial\nwith which Peter's City moruns\nPlus' passing will be far more impressive. It can be no' more effective than Christ's own sacrifice\ncontinued at our altar.\n\"Nor do we do this thing today\nout of simple sense of duty. We\nhave lost a friend who knew us.\nIn 1936 Nelson and the parishes\nwhich form the diocese came under the pope's notice. He sent his\napostolic delegate to visit this part\nof our country. He read the reports, formed the diocese, gave us\nMost Rev. Martin Michael Johnson\nas our bishop. We were In his mind\nand in his heart We do not forget.\n\"A great shepherd, I daresay one\nof the greatest who ever ruled the\nChrist's church, has laid aside his\nstaff, Beyond the portals of time\nhe prays for us that the new\nJeter whom we shall have very\nsoon, may have the consolation-\none of the few Plus himself enjoyed\u2014of a loyal, loving faithful foi'\nlowing here and everywhere\nthroughout the world.\n\"'Where Peter is, there is the\nchurch' is as true today as when\nthe early church heard the adage.\nSomewhere among the valiant men\nwho form the Sacred College of\nCardinals, Peter prays for strength.\nAn election will soon send him\nforth to the loggia of St. Peter's to\nbless the city and the world. We\nbid Pius XI a sorrowful farewell\nthis morning. Even before we know\nhim we offer the new pontiff,\nPeter's successor, our love and our\nspiritual loyalty.\nDR. TERRY APPOINTED\nTO STAFF OF HOSPITAL\nAppointment of Dr. kingsley Ter-\nS' to the staff of Kootenay Lake\neneral hospital was approved by\nthe hospital board Monday night\nDr. Terry is in charge of the pro-\nvincial government travelling tuberculosis clinic in eastern British\nColumbia, Nelson being his headquarters,.\n8EEJACKHOOGERWERF\nStandard Electric\nFOR\nElectrical   Contracting\nPHONE 838   617 VERNON 8T.\nAcross From New Grand Hotel\nINVESTIGATE\nInvestors Syndicate\nMonthly Savings Plan\nr W. DAWSON\nBonded Representative\nP. O. Box 61 Hlpperson Blk. Ph. 197\nFUEL BARGAINS\nMILLENDS-Falrly dry, load  J3.75\n3 loads  10.00\nCORD WOOD-Per cord     6.50\nSAWDUST-Per unit 4.00\nHard Wood    6.50\n2 cords for 12.00\nPHONE 973 OR 431111\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nCupid loads his dart with Home-\nmade Chocolates from GRAY'8.\nVasa Lodge Military Whist, Wednesday.    \t\nHosp. Aux. Dessert Bridge, Thurs\n2:30 sharp. Nurses' Home.\n8PECIAL ATTENTION PAID TO\nLADY CU8TOMER8.\u2014BU8H'8.\nCostumes for Gyro Ice Carnival.\nPrices from $1. Phone 155L.\nWHIST-DANCE, CATHEDRAL\nHALL, TONIGHT, 8:15 P. M.\nMilitary whist at Masonic Temple\nWed., 8 o'clock sharp. Members and\nvisitors please note.\nMade-to-measuro Suits. Fit Guaran\nteed. Spring samples now In.\nJACK BOYCE STYLE 8H0P\nNelson Ski club members wish to\nthank everyone who helped at their\ntournament.\nSee and hear the New WILLIS Lowboy Piano, Canada's Best, at our\nShowrooms, 316 Baker SL\nKOOTENAY MU8IC HOU8E\nJust think\u2014a 70 degree temperature during the whole 24 hours. Call\nMcKAY & STRETTON\nabout a COLEMAN Oil  Heater,\nNEW LOCATION \u2014 The Halgh\nTru-Art Beauty Salon are now In\nthe Johnson Block (over The Nel\nson Electric). Phone 327.\nWomen's Canadian Club, Thurs.,\nFeb. 16, Canadian Lesion Hall, 8 p.\nm. Speaker: Miss Alice C. Johnston, M. A., Oxon. Members and\nguest meeting. Refreshments, 35c.\nKOKANE CHAPTER, I. O. D. E,\nAnnual Meeting, TODAY, at Canadian Legion. Executive 2:30 p.m.\nGeneral meeting for election of\nofficers, 3 p.m.\nNelson Midgets vs. Trail Midgets\nWest Kootenay final, Wed., 8 p.m.\nGet your .tickets to the midget playoff games from kid hockey players\nor at Wait's News Depot\nTypewriter repairs. Our mechanic\nknows his stuff and charges most\nreasonable. D. W.  McDerby \"\"\nTypewriter Man\nNelson.\n j   \"The\n654 Baker Street\nIT WAS NO\nMISTAKE!\nIn yesterday's paper we advertised the round trip fare to >an\nFrancisco as $40.50 with \u2022 return\nlimit of 180 days.\nMany readers amazed by such a\nlow figure, came to the conclusion that someone had made a\nmistake.\nTo those who Inquired may we\n\u2022gain say that the ad was absolutely correct.\u2014To those who\nwere doubtful but did net phone\nmay we say, give us a call and allow us to snow you how can\nvisit the Fair at the lowest possible cost by Bus.\nPHONE 800\nRET^HOUN\nHans Johnsen, Ace Figure Shater\nfor Nelson Gyro Carnival\nNEW\nSPRING\nHATS\nThe new Spring Hats j\nare here. See the new\nwider shapes and new\ncolors\n\u2022 BILTMORE\n\u2022 KENSINGTON\n\u2022 BROCK\n\u2022 STETSON      \"\nr'M\nLimited\n\"The Man's Store\"\nJohnsen, who is \"pro\" of the Spokane Figure Skating club, and\nwho has appeared in Norway, Sweden, Germany, England, Canada\nand the United States will have with him nine stars from the Spokane\nclub, Friay night, for a figure-skating program of 45 minutes in the\nmiddle of the Gyro carnival program.\nNelson Juniors Enter Playoffs\nAgainst Trail Puckmen Tonight\nHospital President\nAnticipates Annual\nDrive for Membei\nJ. R. McLennan and W. M. Walk\nwere named Monday night by H.!\nWhimster, president of Kootttf\nLake General Hospital society,\nhead a membership commlttj*;:\nanticipation ot the forthamiiqf 1|\nnual meeting of the,society.\nNelson's Junior pucksters rounded out their preparation for their\nengagement   here   tonight   with\nTrail juniors In a light workout\nwith the senior Maple Leafs. The\nyoung Leafs are raring to meet\nthe smelter city contenders.\nWhile the newly composed line of\nGallicano, Nlven and Morris promise\nto give a good account of themselves, the line of Bergstrom, Emery\nand Mayo were In fine trim and\nreally going places.\nA little strange to one another\nat the outset, the Galllcano-Morris-\nNiven line were going better toward\nthe end of the warm-up.\nWILL BE RED BATTLE\nThe accomplishments of Trail\njuniors in recent years are known\nto most hockey fans. They have a\nfine record and the Nelson club\nwill have its hands full. Sport followers give the lake city lads the\nedge\u2014but Trail will surely put up\na real battle before they surrender\nthe West Kootenay title.\nCrippled by sickness in their two\nexhibition matches with the Trallltes, the young Leafs took the.first\nmatch in Nelson 5-4 in overtime\nbut lost the second in Trail, 7-2. In\nboth instances the home clubs took\na commanding lead at the outset\nonly'to have their guests hammer\nthem viciously In the last period.\nThe lakesiders will have George\nBishop of the goal-tending Bishop\nfamily between the pipes tonight\nA three-man defence composed of\nRussell, Campbell and Delpuppo\nwill be the big men out in front of\nGeorge. They are working well together,   '\nHazen Powers will be utility man\nfor Maple Leafs.\nAlbert Euerby and Mike Welykochy will likely be the officials\nin charge.\nTonight's engagement is the first\nof a. best-of-three playoff series for\nthe West Kootenay title. Nelsop\ntravels to Trail Thursday, and\n\u00abhould a third game be necessary, it\nwill be played in Nelson next Tuesday.\nDANNY PAUL WINS\nSECOND IN 2 DAYS\nLONDON, Feb. 13 (CP Cable).-\nDanny Paul of Richdale, Alta., who\nlast night knocked out Johnny Fltz-\npatrick, tonight stepped into the\nring at the National Sporting club\nand outpointed Don McCorkindale\nof South Africa in 12 rounds. Paul\nweighed 194 to 198% for his opponent\nPaul, who used to fight out of\nVancouver, B. C, signed today to\nfight McCorkindale after the latter's original opponent, Bill Moin-\nwright champion of the English\nMidlands, became ill with influenza.\nPaul, whose brother Packy fought\nlast night on the same card with\nhim and drew with Bernard Cook,\nwas never in danger, tonight although he seemed tired toward the\nend. McCorkindale obviously suffered from lack of training.\nMillionaire Was\nto Be Extortion\nVictim, St. Paul\nST. PAUL, Feb. 13 (AP).-Charles\nA. Ward, millionaire manufacturer\nand political figure here, tonight\nwas described by police as the intended victim of a $15,000 extortion\nplot whose authors threatened to\nlink him with the unsolved murder\nof Walter Liggett, Minneapolis\nweekly publisher.\nPolice Chief Clinton Hackert said\nconfessions from two men \"corn-1\npletely smashed\" the attack on the\nworld-adventurer who once worked\nwith, Pancho Villa in a Mexican\nrevolution, served a sentence In\nLeavenworth penitentiary for narcotics possession and rose to be a\nrespected citizen here as an advertising specialty manufacturer.\nChief Hackert said he had confessions from Athew W. Stegbauer,\n31, released from Leavenworth six\nmonths ago after serving for hijacking, and Harold McAvory, 29,\nformer law student turned whiskey\nsalesman.\nCrime Is More\nDangerous Than\nFoe, Flanagan\nWINDSOR, Ont, Feb. 13 (CP>-\nRt. Rev. Edward J. Flanagan, head\nof Boystown, the Nebraska corrective Institute whose activities were\nthe theme of a recent motion picture, believes the cure of youthful lawbreakers is more important\nthan the building of armies and\nnavies. \u00bb\nThe internal army of crime that\ncosts the United States $1,000,000,000\na year Is more dangerous than any\noutside foe, Father Flanagan told a\nWindsor audience today. He Is on a\nlecture tour of the midwest stales\nand Canada.\nFather Flanagan called for cooperation of citizens to solve the problems of juvenile delinquency in\ntheir.own municipalities. \u25a0\nLook Years Younger and be\nmore beautiful with a\npermanent from\nHai&h Tru-Art\n. Beauty Salon\nPhone 327        .425 Baker St.\nFOR YOUR PARTIES\nThe Percolator\nE. W. KOPECK1    \u00ab0\u00bb .BAKEK ST.\nBetween the Pipes\nfor Nelson\nGEORGE  BISHOP\n... defender of Nelson's net In\nthe junior playoff game with\nTrail juniors here tonight.\nPanther Bantams\nWin by a Default\nOnly game on Monday's schedule\nof the Nelson Amateur Hockey association turned into an exhibition,\nas the Fairview No. 2 bantams were\nshort-handed, and defaulted to the\nPanther bantams.\nThe boys picked up sides, and\nwith Tommy Griffiths as referee\nthey enjoyed a fine game.\nWant to buy or sell? Try a Want Ad.\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR. HL MABER\nPhone 655   510 Kootenay St.\nJ. A. C. Laughtci\nOptometrist\nSUITE 205. MEDICAL ARTS BUS\n44 TAXI\nCON. CUMMINS\n50* Up to 5 Passenger!\nAny Place in the City .'\nzs$$si&\u00abzz&ss!&x\u00bbi&#\u00bbs&t\nYou'll Like\nLUNCHEON\nat the\nStar Cafe\nMANY FIRES OCCUR\nat this season of the year. See i\nat once if you are not fully pn\ntected against fire loss.\nH.E.DILL\n532 Ward St.     Opp. Madden Ho\nCIVIC\nLAST TIMES TODAY\nSHOW TIMES: 7:00-8:35\nPRICES\n_\u00bb___'\u2022\nM\n1 aWiaa \u2014\nPLUS\nl DAVK\nPETER LORRE\n'MR. MOTO'S GAMBLE*\nCartoon\u2014Weekly News\nstarts Tomorrow\nMATINEE AT 2 P.M.\nPrices: Matinee 25e-1\nEvening 35c-15o\nHoiadeofltd \u00ab\nIh* asos \u00abi>i\nssodo love ts\nhsar.wntate\nM<\npolkal\nWAITER WANGER pr.l.nts\nFREDRIC JOAN\nMARCH \u2022 BENNETT\nmmwm\nRALPH BEuW.ANN S01HEM\nswtn iuckki -ii\u00ab\u00ab mitiui-MiaT tmir\n\u2022 A Valentine Day Gift\n\\\nYour car is one of your best pals. Give it\na thorough fender and body reconditioning\njob for Valentine's Day\nBODY DEPARTMENT\nNELSON TRANSFER\nCompany. Limited\n35-PHONES-36\n^^Af'\n      -  \u25a0      \u2022\u25a0 -\u25a0\t\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. 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Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","classmap":"skos:Concept","property":"skos:note"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","explain":"Simple Knowledge Organisation System; Notes are used to provide information relating to SKOS concepts. There is no restriction on the nature of this information, e.g., it could be plain text, hypertext, or an image; it could be a definition, information about the scope of a concept, editorial information, or any other type of information."}],"Provider":[{"label":"Provider","value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","classmap":"ore:Aggregation","property":"edm:provider"},"iri":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","explain":"A Europeana Data Model Property; The name or identifier of the organization who delivers data directly to an aggregation service (e.g. Europeana)"}],"Publisher":[{"label":"Publisher","value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","attrs":{"lang":"en","ns":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","classmap":"dpla:SourceResource","property":"dcterms:publisher"},"iri":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","explain":"A Dublin Core Terms Property; An entity responsible for making the resource available.; Examples of a Publisher include a person, an organization, or a service."}],"Rights":[{"label":"Rights","value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. 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":"1939-02-14 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":"1939-02-14 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]. 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