{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-07-19","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1924-01-22","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0400684\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Housewives Look\nFOR \"MONEY AT WORK\"\nSee Page 8\n11\nIRAKI AN\nVol. 22\nNELSON, B. C,  TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 22, 1924\nNo. 236\nAMI     IAMI\nMOV  11 MAI\nRossland Senior*\nTRIM TRAIL SEXTET\nSee Page 9\nLIBERALS VOTE OUT BALDWIN\nMINE WORKERS TURN DOWN FORTNIGHTS TRUCE\n[CHECKS DRAWN\nFOR FALL HEARS\nA ROOSEVELT\niBrodMr,  in  Navy   Depart-\nmttt, Corroborates His\nStatement of Tale\nRESIGNS HIS OFFICE\nWHEN SCANDAL BROKE\nFormer Cabinet Officer Denies Story He Got Money\nfor Oil Transfer\nWASHINGTON,     Jan.     21.\u2014Archie\nRoosevelt,   son   of   Theodore   Roose-\nTelt   and   former   vice-president   of\nthe   Union    Petroleum   company,    a\nbranch   of   the   Sinclair   Consolidated\nOil   corporation   which   Is   implicated\nin  the  Teapot  Dome  oil   lease navy\n\u25a0candnl,   testified   before   the   senate\nInvestigating commiaslon  today.    Hq\ni that *ie had severed all  con-\nm with -the Sinclair oil interests\nhearing the \"amazing testimony\"\nloped  by the committee.\nMr.    Roosevelt   testified,   and   was\ncorroborated *by his brother Theodore,\nassistant secretary of the navy, thalt\n|(\u00bb. D. Wahlberg, private secretarv to\niHarry   F.    Sinclair,    had    told    him\n|that   he   had   concluded   checks   for\n$18,000   drawn   by   Mr.   Sinclair   to\nIthe   order   of   the   foreman   of   the\nDfew Mexico ranch of Albert B. Fell,\n(former secretary of the Interior, who\nleased   Ihe   Teapot   Dome   naval   oil\n-eserve  to  the  Sinclair interests.\nEx-Secretary Denies\nNEW ORLEANS, Jan. 21.\u2014A. B.\n\u25a0Fall, former secretary of the interior,\nllr-day flatly denied that he bad ever\nleceived aay money from Harry F.\nI Sinclair as a loan or gift in con-\n\u25a0 wctton with the leuing cf the\nHpeepot Dome naval oil reserve to\nhe  Sinclair oil Interests.\nFORTY-MILLIONS HEIRESS\nMARRIES AUSTRIAN ON SLY\nn\nMISS MARY MILLICENT ROGERS\nTwenty years old, and heiress to the $40,000,000 estate left by her grandfather, the late H. H. Rogers, one of the organizers of the Standard Oil\ncompany, handed New York society a shock when she was quietly married\nto Count Ludwig aim von Hoogstraeten, about 40 years old, and the head\nof the Austrian noble he use hearing his name. The parents of Miss\nRogers were stunned at their daughter's announcement. They had planned\nto soil for Europe, but following the marriage all bookings were canceled.\nPLEAD GUILTY\nTO STEALING\nELECTRICITY\n\t\nVkree Men Are Fined in\nTrail on Conviction on\nNovel Charges\nTRAIL. B.C., Jan. 21.\u2014The theft\n\\ electricity was the unusual cliarge\nild against three men In Trail po-\n\u25a0\u2022e court today by R. C. Crowe,\nrosecuting for the West Kootenay\nower & Light company\nThe three accused, Arnold Kreuger,\nriu Mueller and J. Merlino, all\needed guilty, and were fined $26\nich by Magistrate Noble Blnns.\nThe offences were committced In\ntie city.\nFEDERALS WIN\nGUADALAJARA\nFROMREBELS\nLatter Attempt to Divert\nObregon Advance by Attack on Morelia\nTAMPICO,  Jan.  21^-Announce-\nInent of the en pt tire of the federal troops of Guadalajara, capital of Jalisco, was made here\nlate tonight.\nBattle in Michoacan\nMEXICO CITY. Jan. 21.\u2014Rebels are\nalttatlaing Morelie, capital of the\nstate of Michoacan, as part of a\nplan to hinder Obregon's advance\nagainst Guadalajara, In the western\nstate of Jalisco, according to press\ndiapatches   received   here.\nIt Is believed that men under General Dleguex previously reported to\nhave left the vlclnhy of Morelia\nfor Vale de Stanlago are attacking\nMorelia, which Is defended by 1500\nmen under tho federal General Ortis\nreinforced   by   about   BOO   volunteers.\nSafe Extracted\nThrough a Watt;\nRifled in Yard\nTOUT WIXLIAJK, Jan. SI. \u2014 A\nnovel form of robbery occurred\nhere during ths wook-snd, whin a\nlarge hols was out in the \u25a0!<*\u2022 of\nthe offloe of ths Mount McKay\nFlour and 7Md company, and ths\n\u25a0af* taksn out of the building,\ntransported to a woodyard naarby,\nand tftw.ii rifled, the combination\nbeing taken out of ths door,\nwhich was thus opened. About\n$500 In caefe was taken.\nMICHIGAN BANK IS\nFORCIBLY CLOSED\nOKANAGAN WINS\nSUIT AGAINST\nCRESTON UNION\nIf Counsel Cannot Agree on\nAmount, Registrar Will\nDetermine It\n1 LANSING, Mich., Jan. 21.\u2014The\nEvart State bank, of Evart. Mich-\nwas ordered closed by State Bunking\nCommissioner   Hu-jh   McPherson   to-\n| day. The bank had deposits of\n$40,OOft, and had a surplus of $4000\n$421,000 and was capitalized at $40,000.\nand   had   a   surplus   of   $4000.     Bad\n, loans, according to the commissioner,\n. made   the  bank  unable   to   meet   its\nI obligations.\nVANCOUVER Jan. 21.\u2014Judgment\nfor the plaintiffs was given by\nJustice Murphy today at the con\nelusion of the trial of the sui*. b!\nMatthew Wilson, as receiver, of tho\nOkanagan United Growers, limited,\nagainst the Cronlon Fruit Growers'\nassociaHlon. limited, for return of\napproximately $10,000 alleged to have\nbeen overpaid to the defendant in\nsettlement of accounts for ivnrket-\n1ns the Cre\u00abton union's crop.\nHis lordship did not specify the\namount of the judgment, out In the\nevent of counsel being unable\nagree directed u reference to the\nregistrar.\n\\R1TISH COMMONS VOTES\n\"NO CONFIDENCE\" IN HIM\nWoman in Bath\nShocked, Burned\nFrom a Heater\nRT.   HON.   8TANLEY   BALDWIN\nChancellor of the exchequer In  the Bonar Law government, and  since\npt spring premier of Britain,  was laat  night defeated  by a combination\nthe Labor and Liberal parties as foreseen.   In his speech prior to tits\n\u25a0te,   h\u00ab  declared   tho   Conservatives,   on   becoming  the   opposition,   would\nffer no factious opposition to measures of tho Labor government,  which\n\u00aby MacDonald will be summoned today by the King to form.\nOALT, Ont., Jan. 21\u2014While\ntaking a bath Mrt. Albert Simmons attempted to move a small\nelectric heater closer to her, and\n\u2022he received an electric shock\nwhich caused her to fall back\ninto the tub, pulling the heater,\nwith the current still on, upon\nher, burning her chest and limbs.\nWhile badly burned she is ex*\npected  to  recover.\nLONDON CROWDS,WIRE PREMIER\nFIGHT TO BOARD ARMSTRONG ASK\nLIMITED TRAINS NO MEDIATOR\nPiteous Scenes Are Part of\nInconvenience From\nRailway Tieup\nSERVICES OPERATE\nFIFTY PER CENT\nAirplanes Are Put into Serv-\nRival Unions Wage\nWordy War\nice:\nLONDON, Jan. 21\u2014Although the\nsrtrike inaugurated at midnight -last\nnight by the members of the Associated Societies of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen has failed thus\nfar to tie up the country's mil communication, enormous Inconvenience\nhas been caused to all classes of the\ncommunity thrcugjhout the- country,\nthough In London the situation was\naggravated this afternoon and tonight by a steady downpour of rain.\nTerrible   Crushing\nPiteous scenes were witnessed after\nthe close of business hours. At the\nrnllway statlona where the greatest\namount of suburban traffic is handled,\nthe restricted train services necessitated long and tedflous waiting and\nterrible crushing, when the ccm-\nmtitors endeavored to board a few\ntrains which deported. Likewise the\nbus end tube services were badly\ncongested.\nrt ls difficult at present to ascertain to what extent the strike Ib\naffecting the general train services,\nbut apparently only abou *>0 per cent\nof   the   usual   trains  are   being   run.\nThe railway managers claim, however, that- the. st-'MtfUoa la improving\nhourly.\nDuring the day almost nil the rail\nways were able to maintain fairly\ngood skeleton service, despite the\nfact that a great majority cf the\nengine men belonging to the association had ceased work.\nOwing to the Interruption In the\nrail services to the continent, there\nhas been a runh for accommodations\nby airplane. The bad weather today,\nhowever, kept all the machines in\nthe  airdromes.\nMusic Halls Full\nThe London theaters and music\nhalls reported tonight that there was\nscarcely any falling off In their audiences. This was dye to the fact\nthat the underground railways are\nnot   affected   by   the   Htrike.\nMeanwhile wordy warfare la being\nexchanged between J. Bromley, secretary of tht Associated Society of\nLocomotive Engineers and Firemen,\nflnf J. H. Thomas, general secretary\nnf the National Union of Railway\nMen, of their respective appreciation\nof the situation and the motives\nleading up to the strike. Eiu*h side\nof the controversy Is issuing circulars   explaining   its   viewpoints.\nMr. Bromley claimed tonight that\nhundreds of men of the National\nUnion of Hallway Men were joining\nthe strikers.\nWish Onlv Direct Negotiations With the Steel\nCorporation\nSTILL STAND ON OLD\nTHREE-MONTHS OFFER\nConditions in Strike Field Unchanged; Coal Carefully Rationed\nSYDNEY, NS.. Jan. 21. \u2014 Acting.\nIt ls understood, upon the instructions of President John L. Lewis, of\nthe United Mine Workers of America,\nthe provincial board of the union In\nNova Scotia has rejected the suggestion of Premier Armstrong for a 15-\nday truce In their dispute with the\nPrltlsh Empire Steel corporation for\nthe purpose of reopening wage negotiations with the services of a mediator.\nA telegram to this effect was dispatched to the Nova Scotia premier\ntills afternoon. In this the executive\ndeclared that the original request of\nthe men that the company postpone\nthe wage cut for a period of 90 days\nwhile negotiations for a satisfactory\nworking contract might be pursued,\nwas   still   pending.\nfceady to H\u00abgotlaU\nTh\u00a9 miners' reply stated that \"we\nare ready to enter negotiations with\nthe company's representatives at an\nearly date, and If they are sincere,\nand dealre an agreement wtth the\nnine workers, and will go Into conference with one though tn view, of\nmaking a contract that tha miners\nand their families oan live under, they\nhav* to but propose a ec-nfo-rencw.'*\nTlie miners expressed ihemnelvee as\nopposed to the suggestion of a third\nparty In the conferences, pointing out\nthe better effect It would have on all\nparties concerned If the opposing\nbodies could agree without mediation\nof a third party.\nConditions in the mainland and In\nthe Island collieries are unchanged\nCoal for consumption is being rationed\ncarefully from the various dumps.\nTo Take Shenandoah\nto the North Pole\nREAR-ADMIRAL A. MOFFETT\n\"Will command the giant United\nStates airship Shenandoah and Its\nauxiliaries, consisting of six seaplanes\nand several supply ships as floating\nbases, ln a dash to the north pole\nas soon after April 1 as the weather\nwill permit. Tho Involuntary cruise\nof the monster airship last week in\nthe gale Is considered to have proven\nher \"airworthy\"  in  every respect.\nHARBllOARD\nCHARGES GRAIN\nDISCRIMINATION\nWires Grain Commissioners\nGovernment I n s p e c tors\nWon't Grade Cars\nCONSERVATIVES\nIN A MINORITY\nOF SEVENTY-TWO\nNine Liberals Bolt and a Few\nLaborites    Fail    to\nFollow Leaders\nBALDWIN TO GIVE KING\nHIS RESIGNATION TODAY\nRuler Will Then Send lor\nRamsay MacDonald to\nForm a Government\nFOUR TRACK-BLOWERS\nARE DECLARED GUILTY\nAct   of   'Former   Traction    Employees\nI       Derails  Excursion Train,  injuring   Thirty-five\nBUFFALO, Jan. 21.\u2014A verdlot of\ni guilty was returned tonight ln the\nI Pases of four former International\n| railway traction car men, indicted\ni for b'owing up trolley car tracks\n| near  here  August   17,   1922.\nThe opnvicted men are Francis\nReilly and Henley Breeze of Buffalo and W. H. Smith and W. L.\nVandell of Lockport. Thirty-five persons were Injured when a three-\ncar train of excursionists ran into\ntho  damaged   tracks.\nCUT-THROAT EUCHRE\nPOLITICS NOWADAYS\nVERMONT TOWN\nIS FIRE-SWEPT\nST. JOHNSBURY, Vt., Jan. 22.\u2014\nFire that broke out shortly before\nmidnight swept through the town\nof Lyndon vll!e, 7 miles north of\nhere, last night, razing five blocks\nand taking a toll of at least one\ndead and one injured. Early today\nthe town  was  st.ilI   burning.\nMUSSOLINI TO TAKE\nTHE PLUNGE SUNDAY\nItalian Premier at  Last Sets a Date-\nSign    Fiume    T treaty    on\nSaturday\nROME, Jan. 21.\u2014Tho agreement between Italy and Jugo-Slavia will be\nsigned on January 26; the chamber\not deputies will be disfolved on\nJanuary 27. according to foreign\noffice circles, and Premier Mussolini\nwill make his keenly awaited political (address before the grand council of the Fascist 1 party.\nWtth the address Willi begin the\nelectoral campaign, which is expected\nto continue until April 13, the date\ntentatively mentioned for the balot-\ning to occur. _^V\nsteamer'arrivals\nPittsburgh ,at New York, from\nMamburg.\nMegantlc, at New Tork, from Liverpool.\nAdriatic, at Naples, from New\nYork.\nMotherwell    Uses   Expressive   Phrase\nWhen   Speaking   Before   a\nWomen's  Organization\nOTTAWA. Jan. 21.\u2014Tn Canada at\npresent politics \"has descended to\n\"cut-throat euchre\" tactics, wltti the\ngovernment* In the position of the\ndealer, according to Hen. W, R,\nMotherwell, minister of agriculture,\nin speaking before the \"Women's Liberal asportation here toniffht. It was\nregrettable, at a time when the country needed strong legislation, that the\ntjovernment's bauds should bo tied,\nho said. \"Yet tfhe people, ln their\nwisdom,   placed   M in   thasf   position.\"\nMr. Motherwell enlarged on the\nreduction made jn the natlonnl debt,\nand announced that the government\n-hoped to break even on the deht\nthis year; also that the C.N.R. deht,\nincluding fixed charges, would be\nreduced   to   $300,000,000.\nGuarantee   Deposits\nThe time had come when there\nshould bo a system guaranteeing\nsafety to bank depositors. Hon. Mr.\nMotherwell said. Application of the\n\"rtrrulatdon fund redemption prln- T\nclple\" to deposits might accomplish i\nthis.\nFor the rest. Mr. Motherwell denounced Mr. Mefffhen for \"mean\"\ntactics when he knew the government was In a condition thought 1m-\nIHnsslble, goverr'fng wlthcut a majority. Mr. Meighen waa trying to\ncover up by noise the success of the\ngrain commission for rates on the\nGreat Lakes.\nSASKATCHEWAN POOL\nASKS A SPECIAL ACT\nAlready     Incorporated     Under    Joint\nStock Companies Act, It Wants\nto   Be   Doubly   Sure\nREO'NA, Jan. 21.\u2014Although already\nIncorporated under the Joint Stock\nCom pit riles act, the Saskatchewan\nwheat i*ool ts asking the provincial\nlegislature at the coming session for\nIncorporation under a special charter,\na petition for a private bill tc Incorporate tine Saskatchewan Cooperative Wlhent Producers, limited, having\nbeen filed today with O. A. Mantle,\nclerk   to   the   legislative   assembly.\nIihe object of seeking a special\ncharter ls to make absolutely certain the legal poult ion of tihe pool\nas a trading venture, according fee\n(leorge Robertson, the wheat pool\nsecretery. Mr. Robertson said that\nwhile there was no doubt In the\nminds of officials t'hat tntxrrpo ration\nunder the Joint Stock Companies\nact placed the pocl In a perfectly\nvalid potation, they were deelrouH of\nmaking Its legal right to exist and\noperate unsssa liable.\nToronto-to-Victoria\nVoyage Is Completed\nby a Kirkwood Liner\nVICTORIA, Jan. 21.\u2014Completing\nher first trip In the tntercoastal\nservice between Toronto and Victoria\nthe Kirkwood line steamer J. H.\nPlummer   has   docked   here.\nThree thousand tons of cargo will\nbe 'discharged, 300 tons here and\n2700 tons In Vancouver. A big\nconsignment vfi\\\\ be transshipped\nat the mainland port fur Alberta\npoints. K\nSTATE DEPARTMENT\nOFFICIALS QUIZZED\nStnate   Foreign   Relations   Committee\nOpens    Probe    Into   Soviet    Relations*   in   United   States\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 21.\u2014A senate\nforeign relations subcommittee began\nan Investigation today to determine\nwhether it should recommend recognition of the Russian Sovilet government. State department officials\nwere the first to be examined, having\nbeen Invited by Chnlrmnn Borah,\nauthor of the resolution proposing a\nsenate declaration In favor of recognition of the Russian government,\nto explain the administration's policy\nof   n on recognition.\nThe committee will later examine\nofficials of the department of Justice\nwho have- furnished the state department evidence upon which Secretary of State Hughes has based\nhis conclusions that the Soviet gov\nernment ts responsible for revolu\nt binary propaganda ln the United\nStates.\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 21.\u2014Deflnte\ncharges that discrimination Is being\npracticed against the port of Vancouver In the hondllng of grain,\nand an ufficial request for a sitting\nof the board of grain commlssioners\nhere at an early date, has been\nwired to the secretary of the grain\nboard in Fort William by the Vancouver harbor commissioners,\n\"Discrimination against the port by\nthe refusal of the inspection department to place grade tickets on\ncars penalizes the movement ot grain\nthrough Vancouver. resulting In\nserious losses to tho producer, port\nof Vancouver, grain trade and the\nloading of ships now waiting for\ncargoes.\" the message to the grain\nboard   states.\nA formal demand for this service\n\"which.\" it is declared, \"is well\npaid for and Is performed at F\\>rt\nWilliam and  Port  Arthur,\"  is made.\nSeven Die in\nPittsburgh fire\nFrom Gasoline\nPITTBBUROH, Jan. 2. \u2014 Zero\nweather, H hlch caused a higth-\npressure pasollne pipe to burst, setting fire to an oil tank ami ft number\nof buildings of the Atlantic Refining\ncompany here tcday, wns believed to\nhave been responsible for the blaze\nwhich   t< ':  a  toll   of  seven   Uvea.\nThs> \u2022 | arty damage wns estimated\nat Mo.uuO.\nAIR COMMANDER\nTO TAKE COURSE\nOTTAWA, Jan. 21.\u2014Wing Commander J Lindsay Cordon, D.K.C.,\nacting director of the Canadian Air\nforce, leaves shortly for England to\ntake ft two-year course at the staff\ncollege of tin* Royal Air force ut\nAflSovar. Ht will he succeeded by\nWing Commander W. O, Barker, V.C.,\nformerly 'In charge uf the air station\nat  Camp   Borden.\nKM Gimlet Eye\" Is\nCleaning Them Up\nNonconfidence Vote\nLaboritea and Liberate    328\nConservatives  2M\nMajority       72\nVote  to   Amend   Address\nLaborites and Liberals    328\nConservatives     251\nMajority       77\nLONDON, Jan. 21.\u2014The Conservative government headed by\nStanley Baldwin met defeat in\nand for the first time tn the\nhistory of Kngland a Labor government will probably take office.\nThe Labor amendment to th'\"*\naddress tn reply to the speech\nfrom the throne Introduced ln the\nhouse by J. R. Clynes, deputy\nleader ln the parliamentary Labor\nparty, on January 17, was adopted\ntonight by a vote of 328 to 256,\nJ. Ramsay MacDonald, Labor\nleader, himself movilng closure,\nwhich was agreed to.\nThe amendment reads:\n\"That it Is onr duty reepect-\nfuly to submit to your majesty\nthat your majesty's present advisers have not the confidence of\nthe house.\"\nThe Labor party had the support of Herbert H* As<iulth. former nrime minister, and leader of\nthe United Liberals.\nOnly nine Liberals voted with\nthe government against the Clynes\namendment.\nThe final scene had been made exciting by the energetic attempts of\na small majority, chief y on the\nConservative side, to get the debate\ncAn \u00ab! on in pursuance of Winston\nChurchill's suggestion that the bouse\nrecord it opposition to Socialist's-\ntenets; but clearly the great body\nof members was against this course.\nGalleries Are Filled\nSeldom has a political event of\nforemost importance been enacted\nwith so little excitement, the only\ntense moments being those when tlie\ngalleries filled with peers, d p'omats\nand ladles; they had not come expecting any surprise or conflict, but\nmerely to see the obsequies performed according to previous ar-\nrnngemertts. The chief figures In the\ndebate were Premier Baldwin and\nRamsay MacDonnld. but the speeches\nwere not emotional and lacked bitterness.\nAll that could be said had already\nbeen said in the eleventh hour nnd\nhad furnished no new interest in\nthe cihange of government. Foremost In all minds wns the fact that\nthe Labor party takes up the responsibility of government for the\nfirst time with a far-reaching nttil-\nway strike  on  its hands.\nChange Administration Today\nPremier Baldwin will present his\nresignation to the King tomorrow, nnd the King will summon\nJ. Ramsay MacDonald to form a\nnew   government.\nBoth the prime minister and Urn\nprospective prime minister wero\nCheered by their supporters. Mr Baldwin. In his speech, took the sole hlnmo\nfor the protectionist policy, which h\u00ab\nbelieved would solve the unemployment problem. He paid his respect*\nts. termer Premier Ast-ulth, leader of\nthe United Liberals, who had turned\nthe support of that party to the\nLaborites. by comparing Mr Asquith\nto \"an obstetrician\" about to bring ft\nchild Into the w.trld with the Intention\nto smother it .should It fall to meet\nhis expectations, and declared: \"I\nthink Infanticide Is worse than suicide.**\nHIj\u00bb  government,   he   said,   had   been\naccused  ef  committing suicide,   but,  he\n(Continued on  Page Two)\nThe Weather\nBRIG. GEN.   S.    D.    BUTLER\nNew   hwul  of   Philadelphia',  pollc\nhaa  stopped  the  crime  wave,  closed\nthe saloons,  and   sent  all  vice under\ncover ln the city of brotherly love.\nThe temperature, below are for th.\n14 hours ending yesterday afternoon\nat b o'clock,\nVICTORIA. Jan. 31.\u2014Nelaon and\nvicinity: Mostly cloudy and with occasional   snow.                     Mln. Max.\nNBLSON        15 21\nVictoria     36 43\nVancouver        34 48\nKamloops    -     18 26\nIlarkervllle      14 10\nPrince   Rupert       li 18\nEstevan       40 62\nf'Hliwry       18 J4\nWlnnlpe*  -    16\u00bb 12\nTortland         32 42\nSan   Frandaco       44 (2\nSeattle          88 48\nPentioton    1\u00bb 31\nVernon  .\u2014      II\nGrand   Forks       10 II\nKaslo    18 25\nOranbrock  \u201e \u2014     4 14\nEdmonton    \u201e \u2014   II 14\nTrlnce  Albert _     6* 28\n\u2022Below aero.\n pm\nm^wmmm\n-\u25a0\n\u00bb\u2022\nPage Two\n*>.. \u25a0  \u00bbi\n*THE*4|L80N D^ILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 22, 1924\nllll II 1113-\nSIFTON URGES\nA SETTLEMENT\nPLAN All OVER\nWould People Ontario Clay\nBelt and Vacant Lands of\nthe West Soon\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 21.\u2014(By Canadian\nPrcss.l\u2014A systematic policy for the\nsettlement of the clay belt of Ontario and the vacant lands In Manl-\n___\\*i and Saskatchewan was urged\n\"^jr Clifford Sifton in an address\nCanadian club hero today.\n^We* asserted that tens of thousands\n\"\u25a0\u2014'Tjif -^Vtflers could be obtained from\n\u25a0\u2022jraiii'^Dritish Isles, Scandinavia and\n-hjlttra] Europe, and suggested that\nthe bringing out under contract as\n(arm help of English farm laborers\nwho would later settle Jn the country\n\u25a0was  a' bettor   system   than   to   flood\nAM>eys\n\" EFFERVE5CCHT SALT\nfor Indigestion.\nMAGLIO DAIRY\nHighest Quality Milk\nEarly Delivery\nPHONE 582L1\n\u2022A*    ftouaOry    with    transients    who.\nworked out their time sjnd left.\nHe advocated ahe operation of small\nfarme by thrifty Intensive farmers.\nExport Market Now Open\nSpeaking of marketing conditions\nSir Clifford drew attention to tho\nfact that the United States had, by\ndiverting her wheat and flour to\ndomestic markets, removed Canada'*\ngreatest compositor in the export\nmarkets; and to wide fields which\nshould be made accessible to the\nfarmers of western Canada hy adjustment <rf lake rates on whealt and\nocean   rates   on   cattle.\nWith so many tramp steamers on\nthe Atlantic, he said, those having\nknowledge asserted a $10 rate could\nbe   obtained   for  cattle.\nDiscussing banking conditions he\ndeclared that the secure functioning\nand at the same time fair supervision of Canadian banks could be\nhandily secured by a central board\nof audit\nHAUL UP SKIRTS\nTO GET AT GUNS\nGeneral    Cutler   Calls   Hie   Inspection\nof Philadelphia  Police  \"Pathetic;**\nAutomatic  Pistols   Now\nPHILADELPHIA, -ian. ll.\u2014Arming\nof all policemen with .45 caliber\nautomatic pistols, to do away with\ntho present lack of uniformity in\nweapons on the force, was announced by Brlg.-Gen. 8. D. Butler,\ndirector of public safety, following\nan inspection at which policemen\ndisplayed every size, shape and make\nof weapon. This, it is explained,\nvas due to the system of having:\neach policeman purchase bis own\nrevolver.\n\"Pathetic,\" said the director today.\n\"From the way those policemen\nhauled up their skirts you'd have\nthought they were looking for a\nbox of matches. It waa tragic. A\nbandit could have riddled those men\nwhile they were trying to find their\nguns. One man had the muzzle of\nhis revolver plugged\u2014to keep it plean.\nIf he had fired he'd probably have\nkilled   himself.\"\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtained\n'ime.\nGeorge Benwell, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel ol the Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAN RATES $3.50 TO  $5.00\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths\nHeadquarters for all  Travelling  Men,  Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists\nSPECIAL SUNDAY D1XXER $1.00\nTHE   MOST   COMFORTABLE    ROTUNDA   IN   THE   CITY\nAND S.C.R: TOO,\nBimRJNDERSj\nBoth Are Reappealing All\nDecisions in Favor\nol Veterans\nezioZ congress GERMAN BANKER\np\nFULL APPEAL BOARD\nON FIRST REAPPEALS\nBoth Board and Department\nAre Reversed on Their\nOpening Oases\nOTTAWA, Jan. 21.\u2014UeappeaJs by\nthe pensions board of the department\nof soldiers' civil reestab.ishment of\ncasCM In which their adverse decisions bad been reversed came before\nthe federal appeal board here today\nfor the first time. In the morning\na pension rase was heard, and in\nthe afternoon the famous Herbert S,\nI\/ddell ease was argued. Decisions\nwere- reversed In both cases. The\nchairman, Col. C. W, Helton, M.D.,\npresided.\nLost   Mind   and   Was   Deported\nConsiderable interest is centered\naround the Liddell case ad a result\nof the deportation -uf this ex-soldier\nlast summer following the alleged\nrefusal of the department of soldiers' civil reoNtab isliment to recognize bCa mental disability a.** having\nbeen related to service. When the\nfacts were placed before the department of Immigration and colonization\nLfiddcll's widowed mother was given\ntht* option or having her son returned to Canada, or going to England at the expense of the department   to  look  after  him.\nThe claim (or treatment ns a\nwar disability was presented before\n;l memlier or the appeal board sit -\nttng at Winnipeg recently, and the\ndecision was thnt IJddell was entitled t,\u00bb treatment with pay and\nallowances, w-hicb the department immediately  reappeciled.\n'First   Before  -Quorum\nThe canes heard today were the\nfirst reappea'is to come before a\nquorum ot' tho appeal board. In\nneither Instance was tbe member\npresent who made tlie decision appealed a-T&lnjt, it being a legal\nrequirement   that   members   may   not\nHi;Ml\" J-   T.   VeQTjeett,   Hi*   Mc- i Denver;    C    K.    Harnhnrt.    Appl--dnl\u00bb*\n>ti,-< * N-w Glasgow. NH,: P. Mc- \u25a0 E. J. Walker. D. R Praaer. It. Watt,\nfeeteon C K MePheraon, Winnipeg; . H. Moor.-. E. Daly. Vancouver; J E.\nilin  .1    Campbell, Alan Campbell, New    Lore man.   Shelby,   Mont.\nQueen's Hotel\nSteam  Heated Throughout.\nIn   center   of   business   district.\nMining.     Lumber.    Traveling    Men\nand   Family   trade   invited.\nJ. A. Kerr,\nManager.\nTHE LAKEVIEW HOTEL\nMrs. Mellette 4- Son, Proprietors.\nNice. warm, comfortable rooms at\nreasonable   rates,     open   day   and\nnight,     *\nCorner   Hall   and   Vernon   Streets.\nQUEEN'M   \u2014  Oeorn  P.   OraTi   De-\nLn tt; l: Taylor l,anham. Mrs. R, T.\nLashan Hi, Louis, Mo.; leak Mans-\nHeld, Cnlcaro; I, Slstl, M Moryllo, A.\nCurrldeu,   Coleman;    L.   Camplan,    D.\nHchmldl    I'.in Iibi.nk:   W.  D.   Leu,  Sis-can\nCity; M. '*. Yivin. Seattle; (J. L, KkH-\nton. T. Takoc, Salmo; Mrs. R. Kldd,\nKniti \\ ;i !<\u25a0\u25a0; J. Torguasn, Oarmwood,\n\u25a0ask . W. Liini's-rt. Fruitvale; K. Mc-\nL-onald,   Blrchbaik.\nH\nMm\nOCCIDENTAL  HOTEL\nA. C TOWNER,  Proprietor\nThe  home  of   plenty.\nFifty rooms of solid  comforL\nWe   serve   the   best   meals   In   Nelson.\nIt's   the  cool*.\n'     MADDEN HOTEL     \"\"\nT. MADDEN, Prop.\nSteam-H.aS.d   Room,  by  th.  Day,\nW..k or  Month.\nEvery Con.id.ration Shown ta\nGui.ta.\nCor.\" Bak.r and Ward St..7N.l.on.\nMADDEN ii    McKlnnon,   J.   Mc-\nI* titrall.       S'.i!i.uv,r;      \\V.      Lambert,\nPruitvale.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\n616  Vernon St., East\n(tnly  brick   hotel  In  city.    Steam\nheated, hot and cold water.   European and American plans.\nNEW (J HAND \u2014 IVrcy Johanson,\n1'nrkn: I*\". C. HannnrniHii, Hpokane;\nMrs. A. T <tnrland, Ka*k>: Mrs. Hilda\nTalent, Slocan; J. J. Collins, Halmo;\n.1 tSwaiiHon. KlocaJi; J. Tunibull,\nl.rrvs; C. Llndow, Halmo; D. Ealll-\nfeno and wn, HeveUtoke; Mra. J. C.\nUtirgt'-n**,   Salmo.\nClassified Advts.\nBring Results\nLAKEVIEW\u2014D. Campbell, T. Smith,\nItltchbank.\nSHERBROOKE HOTEL\nN.ar  C.P.R.  Station\nRoom, nt Reasonable  Kites.\nH. DUNK,  Proprietor.\nINDIGESTION\nGAS ON STOMACH\nPAINS AFTER MEALS\nMany people suffer terribly from\nKjls anil pains in the stomach after\nevery meal, and are kept in constant   misery.\nFur the past 44 years Burdock\nHlood Hitters has been uringinK hope\nand Joy So thousands suffering from\nvarious forms of stomach trouble,\nhelping them to eat three square\nmeals a dav; .helping them to eat\nanything they wish, without having\nto  suffer for It after.\nMr. Fred Nielson, Moose Jaw.\nSask, writes: \"All last summer 1\nwas troubled wjtli stomach trouble\nand indigestion, and also gns on the\nstomach. I could not wit anything\nexcept some light food, and even\nthen I would be butt.erod with pains\nafter each meal. 1 could not work\na whola day without being done out.\nI had tried everything, doctors, medicines and pills, until I lead about\nButtock Hlood Hitters. I have taken\nfuur bottles and it has nearly. B\nnot  completely, restored mo to health\n\u00b0gManufaeturcd  only  hy The T. Mil-\nburn   Co..   Limited,   Toronto,   Ont.\nSUPERLATIVE   Advertisement.\nDO  not  always mean even\nCOMMONPLACE    Values,    but\nWE  consider  our   Popultf  Trice*!\nMEN'S and Boya'  Wear\nMERIT8 your Comiiarlson.\nNelson s Best Cafes\nPhon. 6?1\n313 Bak.r St.\nTHE GRILL\nTHE PLACE TO EAT\nJo,. S.ndert, Prop,      Nelson. B.C.\nROYAL CAFE\nCt.Mic   Rc.t.ur.nt\nRef\nnement   and   Delic.cy   Pr.vaila\nOPEN DAY AND NIGHT\nLull\ncheon.  11:S0 to  2      35o\n0pe\nlal Dinners. 5:30  to S      3Sc\nWe Specialize  In  ('Imp Suey\nand  Noodles\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n320    Baker   Strut.    Nelaon,    B.C.\nOPEN   DAY  AND   NIQHT\n11:30 to 2:30, Special Lunch  .. 35c\n5:30 to 8:00 p.m, Supp.r     35c\nPhon.  154\nTHE L D. CAFE      |\nFinest-equipped   restaurant   In   the\ncity.     OPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT.\nSPECIAL*\u2014l<:e   cream,   soda   water\nl imd  hot drinks.    Nice,  clean,  fur-\nI nlshed rooms;  hot Hud cold water.\nI       We cater  to private  parties.        j\nELECTRIC CAFE\n607 Bsksr St.. Nelson, B.C.\nOpen Day and Night\nExcellent Meals, Quirk Service.\nEverything cooked by electricity,\nLuncheon, 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., 85c.\nSupper, 5:00 p.m. to 8 p.m., 8Rc.\nSpecial Sunday Turkey Dinner, fiOo\nplate. Phone   450.\n[FACES EXPERTS\n1REEJI0URS\nj Gives   \"First\"   Committee,\nHeaded by Dawes, Voluminous Data\n'SECOND\" COMMITTEE\nSTARTS   SESSIONS\nDR.   CHAIM    WE12MANN\nPresident    ot    ihe    World    Zionist\nmovement was p figure at the Canadian  Zionist   congress  tlut   was   held\nrecently at Toronto.\nart on reappeals affecting thu'.r  own\ndecisions.\nOfficials of the Great War Veteran's association stated tonight that\nthe pension board and tho department of soldiers' civil reestablish-\nment had sntwed\/feftppeals In practically all omen where their opinion\nhad been reversed by members of\nthe   appeal   board.\nST. LAWRENCE A\nCABINETJOPSC?\nOttawa Believes Government's Po-icy Toward\nStates' Scheme Is Settled\nOTTAWA. Jan. LM.\u2014i-Iiy Canadian\nPress.)-\u2014Although PHmler King hud\nr<.thing to RjtDcunee for pubiica-\n(ion tonight, fallowing a lengthy session of tho cabinet coi>ncil. it Is believed that the St. Liw-rence water\npower j Inns. prepared by tbe Ontario government, were under consideration, and that a di.spatcb in\nconnectis>n with the project will be\nforwarded to Washi.-^ton abf. ut the\nmiddle  of   the  week.\nWhat uttttnds the Domtoion government will ^s.sunie in connection\nwith the proposals-to generate pOWar\nuiwn tbe St. Lawrenev ls a matter\nof conjecture which will be made\nclear within the Alapttcb to \"Wo*Gi-\nii'gton. It In thought |x>sslble that\nthe aKlvisability *;f having a Cunaillan-\nAmtrican board of engineers drtiw\nup ft report o:i the 8_*heme, may be\nsuggested.\nMany   Interests   Involved\nVarious IntetsMtfl are Involved in\nany plan for utilking the water\n[xiwer of the St. Lawn nee river.\nThe federal government at Canada\nand the ITni-t eil Btatea govemment\nam directly intent-ted for o-bviious\nreasoiiM. The pioylnce of Ontorio\nand the stale ff Mew York would be\np:-im\u00abry 'be 'eficimies under the enterprise, and the province of Quel*c\nIs ke. ping a d me Match upon the\nsituntioit beCftUsM of the apprehension\nthat it might ftftect navigation on\nthe river below Monii'eal, or might\nInjure the power reeoareea of Qnebao,\nrnmii'V Ferguson, tn discus-sing\nthe pn leet, gave RafUftttOM that I\npower dam M Morrisliurg would net\nadversely  affet  Queheofg  Interosls.\nMcKenna and Barthou Deliver Addresses;  Will\nHear Schacht Today\nPARIS, Jan. 21.\u2014I>r. Schacht, president of the \"\"Relehsbank, gave a long\nfirst-hand explanation of the German finances before the first committee of experts under Brigadier-\nGeneral Dnwes this afternoon. I>..\nSchacht was accompanied by Dr.\nMayer, heart of th\u00a9 German reparation delegation in Paris, and remained\nthree hours answeiilng a list of\niiuestions which had previously been\ngiven to him and replying to the\ninquiries of various membors. Dr.\nSchacht went over the entire currency problem, and gave all available\nstatistics. He explained the different kinds of money In Germany and\nekibjrated bis Vilews on bow new\ncurrency could be put on a sound\nbasis.\nTomorrow he will appear before\nthe second committee to give information regarding German exported\ncapital.\nCan   Keep  a  Secret\nDr.    Schacht    was-   pledged    to\nsecrecy, by the committee.    When\nbe came out he was asked  if he\nbad any Impression regarding the\nproceedings.\n\"Yes,\"   he replied;   \"I  have nn\nimpression,   but   I   am   going   to\nkeep lit  to myself.\"\nThe hearing accorded to Dr. Schacht\nby the committee took pjace In a\nmost favorable atmosphere, and the\nhead of tho Kelchsbank answered\nmost willingly nil questions contained in the written memorandum\nho bad been studying .since Saturday.\nShort exchanges of vlewn toUowad\nsome of the answors, artd the whole\nsubject of stabilization of a German\ncurrency was gone over during the\n\u2022.hree-bour   .session.\nTo Trail  Exported Capital\nThe second committee of experts,\nwhich has been given the tank of\nendeaVLring to find German capital\n\u2022xported abroad and to determine\nhow this capital may be brought\nback to Germany, held its inaugural\nleeslen  at  'the  Hotel   Astoria today.\nlyiuls Rarthou, president of thu\nreparations commission, and Reginald\nMcKenna. former chancellor of the\nHrltish exchequer whj will bo chairman of the committee, delivered \u00abul-\ndreaaee. Mr. McKenna expressed his\ndetermination to do everything possible to malte tbe work of the\nCommittee  a  success.\nEXCRUCIATING\nPAINS, CRAMPS\nEntirely Remedied by Lydia\nE. Pinkham's Vegetable\nCompound\nEbert\u00ab,Ont. \u2014 \" I started with crampi\nand bearing down pains at the age of\neleven vears, and I would get so nervous\nI could hardly stay in bed, and 1 bad\nsuch pains that I would scream, and my\nmother would call the doctor to give me\nsomething to take. At eighteen I married, and I have four healthy children,\nbut I still have pains in my right Hide.\nI am a farmer's wife with more work\nthan I am able to do. I have taken three\nbottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I feel that it is\nhelping me every day. My sister-in-law,\nwho has been taking your medicine for\n\u2022ome time and uses your Sanative Wash,\ntold me about it and I recommend it\nnow, ai I have received great relief\nfrom it\"\u2014Mra. Nelson Yott, R. R. 1.\nEberts, Ont.\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound is a medicine for ailments common to women. It has been used for\nsuch troubles for nearly fifty years, and\nthousands of women have found relief\naa did Mrs. Yott, by taking thia splendid\nmedicine.\nIf vou are suffering from irregularity,\npainful times, nervousnesa, headache,\nbackache or melancholia, you should at\nonce begin to take Lydia E. Pink ham *i\nVegetable Compound. It is excellent ta\nstrengthen the system and help to perform Itl function 1 with ease and regularity. 0\nBRIEFS FROM THE WIRE\nItaly   Recognizes   Greece\nATHENE,   Jan.   21.\u2014Italy   has   decided   to   resume diplomatic  relations\nwith  Greece.\nBelgium Blockading Britis'i?\nLONDON, Jan. 21.\u2014It is reported\nthat the franco -Belgian railroad administration has issued orders prohibit Ing traffic between tbe Hrltish\nand other allied zones in the Khine-\nland. This, If put into effect, wll!\nbe tantamount to a blockade of the\nCologne are* and will create a very\n\u25a0erioUa    situation.\nFive Firemen Killed in Pittsburgh\nPITTSBURGH, Jan. 21.\u2014Fire broke\nout in the Butler street plant of\nthe Atlantis' Refining company today\nand spread lapldly, At least five\nfiremen  were  killed.\nSecond Committee Meets\nPARIS, Jan. l\"! .\u2014The second committee of expects organized for the\npurpose of fiinling German capital\nabroml and determining means for\nIts return to tbe retcS met today\nfor the  first  time.\nCape   Breton   Still   Idle\nSYDNEY, N.B.. Jan. ll.\u2014There are\nno  signs of a resumptl m of   work  at\nthe   Capo   Breton   mines today.     No\nreply  haa  been   made  by the   minor**'\nto   i'rvinfer   Armatrahff.\nFive Years, Ten Lashes\nfor Crime of luces'\nCONSERVATIVES\nIN A MINORITY\nOF SEVENTYT1\n(Continued from Page One)\nOWEN BOUND, Ont, Jan. 21 \u2014\nFive years in KUngiton penitentiary\nand 10 laFhes wfi i the sentence imposed today on is-year-old John Hetu\nof Mealord, who pleaded guilty to\na charge  of  Inceei\nexclaim* il.    There    are    worse    crimes\nthan   suiciilc\"\nJacobins or Qlrondinea\nHe bad little to wiy of thf* laborites, b.'cuusc, U lis' expressed it, he did\nrot know Whether Jacobins or <!lron-\ndlms wjre cunlng In. but he was cm-\nt:iin that Mr. KanDoflftM would nothe\nnl'le to build up a Socialistic state'on\nthe    shifting    nnd    of    about   one-fifth\nof the national vote.\nin his leneral reuaffei about Labor's policy, Mr. MacDonald declared\nthat Socialism had no hard and fuM\n('oetrlne.\nThe ninti or nation that found an\neasy w:ty to lay h.mde on capita! to\nspend for any purposo except specific\neconomic purpos.s. In his belief, Wftfl\nnoing   into  bankruptey,\nAadrcis le  Amended\nAfter tho Labor amendment had\nbeen carried, a motion that the ad-\ndrrsH In nply to tho speech from the\nthrone with tha onnndnnnt added, be\nagreed   to,   was   carried,   328   lo   251.\nPremier Haldwln tried to get a\nmotion voted thai the house adjourn\nuntil Kubrutiry ]2. but objections were\nruined, and after renewed excitement\n'he speaker said be was compelled to\n1 out tho motion that the house ad\n1 (owl!     until     tomorrow,     which     was\nI agreed to.\nI     Thy   vote   on   the   Labor   amendment\nI was    about     what     til     expected;\n1   hewed   that   the   e-inip-titiu   to   induce\nthe    Lib Tals   to   Join    with    the   Coa\nj   icrvatives    In    keeping    L-abor   out   of\n) office  bad   falbnl.\nj     A   handful   of   Labor   members   failed\nI 10 follow  their lenders.    None of them\n.nd ranked long as Important members\n;    I'  tho house.\nClcrmra Ia   *0eed\n1 Define the vote was taken Mr. Mac-\nlil moved closure, which paswed\n-vithoui dlvUlon. This swept aside the\nthreatened complication that the dle-\nnuhskn might fo on tomorrow^ In\nfteferenoe to tha wtehee of fiome mem-\nbus whsi had not., had a chance to ex-\nubund   their poelklona\nCOLD WEATHER SPECIALS\nSWEATERS\u2014All-Wool and Silk-and-Wool, in Pullover and Cardigan styles. Good assortment of\ncolors.    Prices   ?4.50  to a*-2-\u00a90\nGAUNTLET  GLOVES\u2014Warm  Wool,   for   winter\nsports, skiing or skating.    Assorted colors.\nPrice  IjU.OO and Up\nAlso  long-wristed   Mitts;  real  comfort.\nUNDERWEAR\u2014Watson's Knitted. Vests, Bloomers, and Combinations, all styles. Strongly reduced in price.\nWINTER HATS\u2014You can afford a third hat at\npresent prices.   Good styles.   A table at ....$3.95\nEven the Patterns are Half Price\nNelson Dry Goods Co.\nLADIES'  WEAR SPECIALISTS\ndone the creation of a Saskatchewan\nwheat pool to operate In HI24 and\nto cooperate with the Alberta and\nManitoba pools in a Joint selling\nagency. '\nThe executive committee mot h*\u00bbre\ntcday to prepare the report, and the\nboard of directors meets in Moose\nJaw tomorrow. Retorts' will show\na drop ln membership, though not\nso great, it la said, as the decreases\nIn the other western provinces. The\nconvention continues three dnya. and\nat the name time 'the women's branch\nwill hold  its annua!.\ni\nHelp for Hdby\nl^tjnjj\ni\\    5fCTTr\nP EMill*; 101'\nPi\nA       Buiias\n~\\   Strong Bones\nBOND IN SAY !\nSHOULD MAKE\nTIC\nIn Spite of Recent Flotations,\nCanadian Savings Still In\ncrease\nTORONTO. Jan. 21.\u2014In connection with the Dominion of Canad'i\nrailway $50,000,0(10 loan, for whiiti\ntenders are to b*1 reeivcl   soon,  'there\nis   reported   to   be  eciwldetmola  tSte-\neussioii in lo.al financial urcles with\nrerpect to selling theat bonds In Canada,  as against   c'-jtainlng   the  money\nfrom  the  TnitiNi  Btatea.\nUses   Industrial   Money?\nTbe argument has been \u25a0 Ivtltoed\nthat tin sab' of so inut'h gi>vern-\nment bomls In Ibis country t.'nds to\nmake WWtWf Marat for the development of private industry, and thereby impede the return cf more prosperous times.\nAmong the bond houp.es. It is\nclaimed, however, thnt one reason\nfor believing that t'anada is fully\n:iblp to absorb IfeoM htiuds, lies in\nthe fat'l that. nntwilhsHii.'lir.g tbe\n1300,000,006 loan lute In September\nand earlv in October, wbitb mi im-\nnuiliately followed by a I40.0M.COOj\nt niario loan, sivings defKMlta in\nCanada increased by more than\n11,000,000   hetween   September   .10   and\nNovember so.\nNow that the vast \"bulk of the\n\"bumper*1   Crop   has   been   moved,   nnd\nproceeds \u2022\u00ab hlng distributed unau\nfirming ronimunitb'.s. it Is believed\nthat Canada should be in a period\nof accumulation. Intofar ns savinsrs\ndopoalia are concerned, nnd slum!d\nnow be ln even a better million to\nfinance Internally the $60.000,000I*asu0\nthan was the MM last Hoptembeer\nbefore     the      IX minion      loan       was\nlaunched.\nBank   Call    Loans   Abroad    Large)\nIt   has   also   been   pointed   out    that\ncall  loans nhroad  by  Canadian   bunks\nwere  considerablv   larger  at   tbe   time\nthe November M bank atatetne-nt wns|\nIssued  than  on  September  3D,   tin- In-l\nerense    amounting    to    approximately!\n$-*s,ooo.ooo.     This   is   Interpreted   to [\nmean   thnt   the   banks   nre   unnblo   to\nnw>    their    sui]>l:is    funds    nt     home,\nand   have   beeis   eompelled   -to   send   a\np< rtlon  of them to New  York,  where i\ninterest  rates are extremely low.\nHeal Skin Troubles\nWith Cuticura\nIf you are troubled with pimpleSi\nblackheads, redness, roughness,\nitching and burning, which disfigure your complexion and skin, Cuticura Soap and Ointment will do\nmuch to help you, Always include\nthe Cuticura Talcum In your toilet\npreparations.\nS-.M2S* 0.\u00bbia-i.l?S..fJ\"4(. T*.kw*-St. Sold\nIhmiijihoutthi*nonunion. CanadianDrpot:\nlp\u00bb-*-. 1-i-ii-J, 344 Si rial St.. W., MnuhI.\n3*^^W**Cmirur> Soap \u25a0*ti*t*\/f\u00ab %ritho*'i imii.\nWhen the Children Cous^h,\nRub Musterole on Throats\nand Chests\nNo telling how %on the symptoms\nmay develop into -roup, or worst'. And\nthtn's when you're glad you have a\njar of Musterole at hand to give\nprompt relief. It does not blister.\nAs first aid, Musterole is excellent.\nThousands of mothers know it. You\nshould keep a jar ready for instant use.\nIt is the remedy for adults, too. Relieves sore throat, bronchitis, tonsilitis,\ncrocp, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia,\nheadache, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and aches of\nback or joints, sprains, fiore muscles,\nchilblains, frosted feet and colds of the\nchest (it may prevent pneumonia).\n40c and 75c, at all druggists.\nThe Musterole Co. of Canada. Ltd.,\nMontreal.\nBetter than a mustard plaster\nALBERTA SHOOTER\nGETS FIVE YEARS\nEDMONTON. Jj.ii. 21. \u2014 Five yeara\nat Prince Albert penitentiary *\u00bban th*\n\u25a0tntettM handed out In the district\ncourt tOday to Andrew Hiezotio of\nHrudtThehn for shoot I hit with Intent\nlast October, at John Wotntuk und\nwife,   near   RedwataT,   Alta.\nGOOD PLANS MOTION\nAGAINST RACE BETS\nOTTAWA, Jan. 21.\u2014A resolution\nproviding thut raee traek Rambllni;\nbe abolished as \"de-trlmental to the\nbest interests of Canada\" will again\nhe mored by W. C. Gooxl, l-TogreaM-\nlve. Brant, at the coming Bsiwsion of\nparliament. Last session a aimilar\nresolution  waa voted  down,  06  to   7C.\nM p, I rood will a!no move fcr the\nanmndment of tho Kleotlon act to\npro\\ltb* for the u\u00abe of the trnnsfer-\nable vote to se<nire as fir M poa-\nslble proportional repreaentatlon in\nauch mu!'tlmKmb*>red conatltuewies\naj may be provided for in the next\nrediatrlb union.\n; 2XECUT1VE ADVISES\nI        DROPPING P0UTICS\n; Saskatchewan   Grain  Growers at Convention Opening Tomorrow  May\nRescind   Old   Resolution\nBEfJlNA,  Jan.   ill.\u2014The   recommendation    of    the    executive    committee\nthat the Saakatchovrap Orain Growers\nabandon provincial polltlcn] action la\nexpected l A provoke one of the\nkeene-it debatee ol the anotlal meeting of thu' oi-Kani\"catiisn which opena\nat Moose Jaw Wedne-tdity afternoon. The ' executive propone* the\nrescinding; of the resolution paaeed\ntwo years an\" by which the ne\u00bbo-\nciatlon formally announced Its Intention to aeek Us oojfltVes ln fb*-\n\u2022provincial polltlca.1 .Veld. Since thut\ntime tHVfi hits not been a general\nelection tn Ka*katch< 'WiTn, and the\noasociar^on baa luul Uttl\" i pportunlty\nto give practical e.'feet to lta n-iolu\ntlon. Thero was a cnslderaljle \u00aben\ntiment in the ooAventlon m 11122\nwhich oppoBed the action taken, and\nthe prediction ls mndo in \u00abome quarter! that .this opinion Is likely now\nto   carry   th*   day.\nQuestion  of  Pools\nI    The convention la expected to In-\nSimply Wonderful\nSays Mrs. Mitchell Who\nEscapes Surgeon's Knife\nMRS. H. W. MITCHELL\n1245 East Ash Street\nThe Dr   Allddlcton  Food Products Co.\n.LlrnKed\nVancouver, b c.\nVttu t,  **\"Ift-. \u2014 A  ifcw   \u00bb seki  u&o  i ou\nseni a *a\u00bbmple of year wtiuikrful preparation, Jo-To, lu Jue Woods fur trial,\nund I have tanen It and t.uiA it a\ntm*t beoefll lo me.\nI hav* been troubled with my stomach for years and have never found\nanything that gave me such relief as\nJo-To. I have been examined by atom-\nach upeciallsts and tliey have pronounced my trouble cancer of ths\nsly mac li and have advised an operation\nnt once, but since I have been taking\nthia wonderful remedy J have bad no\ntrouble at all, no pains and no gas, and\nI have been able to eat mure than I have\nfor yeari with perfect satisfaction, so\nI can't say too much for Jo-To. I hope \u25a0\neveryone who is troubled with stomaoh\ntrouble will give it a trial, for I am\nsure If it will help mi It will everyone\nwho tries It.\nRespectfully, yours for\nJo-To\nMKS. IL W. MITCHELL,\n1246 East Ash Street.\nJo-To li truly e. wonder worker In relieving itomach suffering aa Indicated\nby (ias Pains. Acid Htomacli, Sour\nBurning Stomach, Hluating, Belching\nund After Eating Distress. Jo-To is\nguaranteed positively harmless ttnd\nsold at sll drug stores under a money\nback guaiantee of satisfaction, loo\nand fl cartons, all druggists.\n...\n\u25a0^^^^\n_,^__\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 22, 1924\nPage TEre*T\nSKIMOS WILL\nPAY PENALTIES\nFEBRUARY ONE\nMurderers in Arctic Shadows\nAre at Last to Expiate\nCrimes\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 21.\u2014(By Canadian\nPress.)\u2014The final chapter ln an arctic\nfeud, resulting from ithe deelre of a\nwhite man to possess an Eskimo\nmaiden, is due to be called at the\nlittle barracks of the Royal Canadian Mounted police at Herachell\nusland on February 1. when Alik\n(Omiak   and  Eskimo   Tetamangma of\nithe uncivilized Copper Eskimo tribe\nof Pi'Ince Albert sound hang for\nthe killing of Corporal Doak of the\nRoyal   Canadian   Mounted   rfoklce  and\n\"*Otto Binder, a white trader of Coronation gulf.\nAccording to the story, Otto Binder's\nraney for a y-dung Eskimo girl, desired   in   marriage   by  a  member  o#\nfcher tribe, was the basic cause for\nthe feud which culminated in the\nkilling of the two white men, several\nEskimo men and women and tbe\nstrangling  to  death   of a 4-year-old\n.Eskimo girl whose parents -had been\nmurdered. The girl was killed rather\nthan have her left a charge on tin-\ntribe. Corporal Doak was the victim\nof   Omiak,   whom   he   had   arrested\n,for his part ln the feud.\nTrail in Arctic Sea\nWitnessed by only half a dozei\ninterested Eskimo men and Bishop\nLucas of Chlppewyan, Church of England bishop for the territories whose\ncharge reaches out from the Indians\nerf Chippewyan to the furthest Eskimo tribes in the north and north-\ncast, Orralak and his fellow tribesman\nwere tried before Judge Dubus of\nthe Alberta cQurta and a stipendiary\nmagistrate for the Northwest Terriv\ntoriee and a Jury composed of steam-\nboatmen, trappers and trailers. The\ntrtate, ,a.mtd the unique setting of\nthe  Arctic-Island  post  of  the Royal\n* Canadian Jfounted police, > commenced\nMonday, July 16, and concluded flw\ndays later. Irving B.' Howett. an\nEdmonton .- barrister, \u2022 conducted ' the\nproaecutioft,   wttlle    T.    L.    C6ry'   of\nI Winnipeg, defended the:accused.    Mr:\ni Cory, did \u25a0 not deny the charge Qf\nmurder,'but contended*that the time\nwns not yet. ripe to try , Esklrtto\nprisoners in ,the same, mariner as:\nwhite men, Bince theunclvlliaed-Eski-\n>*n-| iB'inthe same cor*diti!i6n as the\nearly  Rritop of 20QO  years ago.\n^Bishop Luctis, p cOttirfientlng, on \u2022 thd\ntrials,;   declared  'the.' prisoners   were\n:>--.\nBRITISH HARVESTERS STRANDED IN TORONTO\n\u25a0 These are n  few of hundreds  said to be jobless In the Queen  City,\nmore of winter jobs for the British harvesters who desired to stay In Can\nThe government   employment   agencies   Ust   fall   rustled   many   thousand!\nada than the total number of men.\nDROWNING OF\nBOAT WORKER\nACODENTAL\nJury Probe Death of T. V.\nSparkes at Procter; Lights\non Barge Recommended\nThe death of Thomas Victor Sparkes\nof Nelson, drowned at Procter while\nengaged as a deckhand on ., the\nsteamer Moyle,;was declared by: a\nJury, before Dr! H. H.\u25a0. Ma-cKenale,\noorqner, yesteWtay, to hava been .accidental. .  *' \\\nThe Jury added .to. the ve**llct>a\nrider to. the effect IJiat It strongly\nre-com-per-da that lights be,placed\non the \"barge.and .espsecially on- each\nof ; its,, comers\/\n\u2022 The1 evidence showed that no' one\nhad l>e*-n wtih tha deceased when\nhe had gone Into '.the, water. 'He\nhad only beep employed'on, the boat'\nfor a \"week, abd it wo* strongly indicated that as it was daVk and thiare\nwas vapor rising from the water at\nthe, side of the boat he had, i in\ngoing   to  assist; in   placing; ar Btern\nno^\"fmpk\"th\"at~ea\"ch \" maji,rpracticaliy^ r?De   \u00b0n    the ..barge .from ; the: tug.\nconvicted;ihlmBeV.\" , atepped   or   slipped .off>,\u2022 tbe .end   of,\n..Thre\u00abi  other \"members of the trlbe\\ fho b;\"?rn and had met*death'in the'\nwere,* also 'tried.     Found   guiHy   of flcy wulerfl*      p ' -    '- \u25a0 '\u25a0 ,\nmanslaughter,  .*   Kl-ootuk,      medicine    , \"Lifebuoy   Thrtrwn   Out      V\nwoman   and   sorceress   of   the   tribe. | 'Capt.    W.  . Hitig-Bmellle;\": mate    of\nthe Jtfoyj.e, indicated, by \"sheets of\npaper.' the -positions of ...the, Moyie\nand of the tugs, and how '-.Sparkes\nbad 'fallen off. It',had beftn -his\nduty to place- a rope at .'the fhont\nentl of',tlie-;b*arj?e frOpi the Moyie1\nand Vthepv.go to ,'the* endVof -the\nbargfe; artd\\ cross over to the oflpo-.\n**Ue   comer\", to . assist .another, deck-;\nls serving one.year lmprlso^rment at\nthe HiersChell,' Island post, while\nllllpsl -and Amoruk, males.-, chafsed\n*wlth 'the killing- of Apapkla,, described , as the', \"bad EsKIrtio,\" were\nfo*und not- guilty and .released. \u2022 ;\n' Long Trek With' Wen-ante .\nAfter', the court's'finding hrid>been\nsent to\", Ottawa nnd approved ^Ser-\ngeant -TJorw*.' a- veteran van'-ticr officer of Ihe' Royal Canadian'Mounted\npolice, left Vanoouver early sin September on his lone trek to Herschell\nhearing the death warrants. His\n2000-mile    Journey     involved     many\n,h-and \u25a0 pla\"*-e- another rope.\nAt about 7 o'clock Sparkes had\nperformed the (first duty, and the\ncall came that the second rope had\nalso been placed. Fred McGregor,\na stevedore, suddenly heard a yell,\n,modea of transportation ranging from i at   what   he   thought   was   about   14\nthe commodious ocean-going steamers\nn the Alaskan service to the primitive   dogsled   and  canoe.\nThe  death   sentence aroused   indig-\nLtion   (in   certain   quarters   and   led\n'   the   submission   of   petitions   ask-\n:g   for    the   postponement   of    the\n:utions to  the Justice department.\n'he  Dominion   cabinet  reviewed   the\nie In the first Instance on October\nand    declined    to    interfere    with\nthe    sentence   ilmposed.      This    sen-\n:et\\CB set the execution for December\n7,   and   the  decision  of  the  government confirmed this -date.\nPopular Indignation was aroused,\niparticularly in the city of Toronto,\njy a number of statements which\nere later denied by the justice de-\nirtment It was alleged that one\njf the prisoners was a young boy\nif 16 years and also that graves\nwere dug for the condemned Eski-\nnos before the sentence of death\n-\/as pronounced. The justice department denied both these allegations.\n;leclaring that -the consensus of reliable opinion from the north placed\nhe age of the prisoner referred to\nit between 20 and 15 years. The\n\u25a0raves referred to were dug. according  to  the department,  for the  rein-\nfeet away, and the cry, \"Man overboard,\" went up. A lifebuoy whs\nthrown, and prompt efforts to locate\nSparkes were made, but to no avail.\nFinally a lifeboat was lowered, and\nunsuccessful grappling for two hours\nfollowed.\nCould   Not   Reach   Him\n\"\u2022\u2022Text morning Alfred Hayden, employed on the ship nt Procter, saw\na dark object under the barge. It\nproved to be the body of the unfortunate  deckhand.\nFrom the position where McGregor\nhad been when he heard the yell\nhe could not have reached the deceased, even though he wns only 14\nfeet away. There had been considerable vapor arising from the\nwater alongside the boat nnd there\nwas a  little snow  on  the  barge.\nFred McGregor testified that It\nhad been Impossible to see anyone\non the barge. Deckhands could\ncarry lanterns at their work, but\nthese would be in their way in\nworking.\nIn answer to a question by Alderman J. P. Morgan, one of the jury.\nCaptain Halg-Smellie explained that\nWoolgar, the deckhand who had\nplaced  the  stern rope on   the  corner\ntorment    of    the    body   of   the   late1 of   ihe   barge   and*   whom    Sparkea\nSergeant Belig and the late Corp1\nDoak, both members of the Royal\nCanadian    Mounted    police.\nFollowing Ihe recoipt of some of\nfche petitions the cahlnet a^raln took\nthe case under consideration, and\nagain came to the conclusion that\nthere should be no interference. This\ndecision was arrived at November 8,\nand a messenger was dispatched from\nVancouver to Herschell Inland bearing the news to the law officers\nat   that   point.\nThe demands for a stay of execution continued, however, and finally\nthe cabinet took up tsfta case tfor\nthe third and last tlma This resulted in a decision to postpone the\nflay of execution until February 1.\nThe member of the Royal Canadian Mounted police who, In the\n-apaclty of messen\u00aber, was bearing\nthe decision made at the previous\nablnet meeting to Herschell Inland\nras communicated with and in-\nitrucied to change the day of execution tin accordance with the final\ndecision of  the  cabinet\nRATKIVAN HEADS\nGREEK ASSEMBLY\nATHENS, Jan- 21\u2014M. Ratvikui,\nwho was mlAUlter of Justice In the\nVenlielos cabinet ot 1915. waa elected\nresident of the national assembly tonight  In  succession  to  veniielos.\nLONDON, Jan. 21 .\u2014Accord In* &\nthf headquarter* of the striking locomotive engineers and firemen the\nmen.' are coming out solidly. Only\na   skeleton    passenger   train    service   ... _\nIn being maintained by the railroads,  his  sons had  been drowned.\nwas going to asalst, would not meet\nthe latter in returning to the front\nof the barge, as he would return\nby the opposite side. There had\nbeen no oars on the barge, which\nwas about 40 feet wide.\nThe Daily News was First .\nA discussion ns to whether or not\nthere bod been footprint* In the\nsnow on the barge. Indicating that\nthe deceased had slipped, brought\nfrom E. Gammon, chief of the provincial police, the statement that,\nthough the drowning had occurred a*\n7 p.m., It had not been reported to\nthe 'provincial police until 1 o'clock\nnext day and too late to have a\nprompt Investigation made. The newn\nof the drowning, however, had appeared   next   morning   In   The  Dally\nDr. MacKenale, coroner, asserted\nthat he also had not been notified\nnf the tragedy until 1 o'clock next\nday, though he had rgad of It in\nThe Dally Newa (The Information\nIn The Daily News was secured from\na visitor to Nelson who had been\nin Procter at the tune of the\ndrowning.)\nJuit Walked  Off\n\"What puzzles me,\" stated Dr. MacKenzle, \"Is how 'this man went overboard. If it was dark and vapor\nrlning from the water, he ttunt have\nwalked off the end of the barge.\nHe would be wearing hob-nadled\nboots and would not be likely to\nslip.\"\nRobert Sparkes, father of ithe deceased, ntated that he would have\nbeen 18 years of age next month.\nHe could not swim. The first he\nheard of the tragedy had been when\na friend had met him at work the\nnext morning and, having read the\nmorning   paper,   asked   him   which   of\n.. N IN I    AD\nV, f\nBAKING\nPOWDER\nProminent Ontario\nStock Man Is Dead\nDR.   GEORGE   A.   ROUTLEDGE\nOf \u25a0 Laroljeth, - former, MiP.P.*. for\nEast -Middlesex, and prorhfhent physU\"\nclan,' hcrsfllman ajid: live;stock judge,\nhas dled.>.' ...\nMABEL'S ILLNESS-\nWAS IT ALL FAKE?\nBALDWIN'S UST\nSPEECH TEEMS\nWITH VIRILITY\nPremier Suffering Extinction\nReviews Debt Funding,\nTurkey, Tangier Work\nTHRUSTS AT LIBERALS;\nWILL NOT BE FACTIOUS\nMacDonald Appeals Against\nChurchill Program; WiU\nInstitute Reforms,\nLabor cheers were heard when the\nLabor leader entered. Beginning his\naddress Mr. MacDonald wondered\nwhere Labor came ln. Then, expressing sorrow that the inquest on\nthe Baldwin administration had\nwasted so much time, he proceeded\nironically to refer to Mr. Baldwin's\nstatement that he had left only the\nreparatione  question unsolved.\nThat, \u25a0 said Mr. MacDonald, was\nprecisely the problem which baffled\nthe prime minister, while his- efflort\nto deal with unemployment smashed\nhte government. Yet Mr. Baldwin\nmaintained that no outstanding problems  had   been   left   behind   him.\nAlluding to the suggestions for continuing the debate he exclaimed in\nnigld tones: \"May I appeal to the\nhouse, if this amendment is to be\ncarried in decisive fashion, let ya\nhave the debute on the nddress\nended so that we may meet the\nnew government\nNo. I and Division No. III. The\nlatter, upholding the affirmative, wa\u00ab\nadjudged the winner, the debaters\nrepreaentfnf the division being Margaret MrCleod, Genevieve Gorman and\nLorna McOIean.\nDivision No. II. was represented by\nKric Ramnden, William Lee and\nRichard Renwick. The judges were\nS. Edwards, T. Lynch and Albert\nDando. Miss Gorman and Miss Mc-\nCleod were highly complimented by\nMr. Lynch for the manner in which\nthey  delivered   their  addresses.\nEnjpyable nonga were rendered by\nHive boys, Fred Weir, Cecil King,\nArthur Stringer, Farran Archibald,\nAllan Gilroy, assisted by Gladys\nLambert.\nA vote of thanks was adopted to\nMiss Mathenon for her assistance to\nthe debating society.\nBANFF ORCHESTRA\nDRAWS LARGE CROWD\nELECTRIC LIGHT    \\\nNOWINBALFOOK\nResidences   Were    Linked    Up   WH^\nNelson   Power   Line   Extension\nYesterday Afternoon        ..    ^\nBalfour was en fete rant night*\nfor   it   was   making  history.\nThe civic electric power line reached\nthat stage yesterday where many of\nthe residences were connected *jjk\nand enjoyed for the first time th\u00ab\nconvenience  of  electric light.\nConnections wtth the system art\nbeing made from Harrop to Proct-gp\nami   from  Balfour to Longbeach.\nEagle hall was again the scene\nof a merry crowd last night when\nover 125 persons mjoyed a treat\u2014\ndancing to .the music . supplied ; by\ntho Banff \u25a0orchestra.'.-\u25a0\nRefreshments were served at midnight. Tho hffil was-beautifully decorated for thfj occasion in a color\nscheme of   pink.\nTREAT HEAD COLDS\nWITH VICKS\nManitoba  Lady Says It ia\n\"A Great Remedy\"\ngivo the members opposite a chance\nof trudging into,the lo'Vjy ind Bup-\nportthg' these   measiirf-n.\nHe asserted that the position abroad\nwns  already   improving  nn   tho  proponed   change  of   government, v  1'os-\nwns .beyond the Llheral party ,\u2022 to. do ' slbly, as.sonn- of hia i>;>m>nftnts had\n'-'\u25a0'\" \u25a0 said,   reparation*-'.wo'.*: Id    break *\u25a0 the\nI-a-bor   government,'   but    they     .vr.uld\nX.on Angeles Does .Hot Belit-re Appen-\n-   flicttii Story; Fr-ws A*j-\u00abmt Idea to\n(lain   Sympathy\n\u25a0 LOS ANdKLES, -Jan. 81.\u2014Information fgl^apedi^from^con^hJentlftl -sof\u00abbcsefl :\nand rVeih^ntlvely.MnVesllgatcd, ^yields\nthe\/ collusion thnt Mabel-, Normatid's\n1'IiieSh ,' was one gigantic fake .out,-of\n\u25a0tbe-.whole-'cloth. . \u2022\u25a0\n\u2022it {b-trtllng.. as this statement may\/ap-\nsywir, it is authentic. *\n' After the Dines shooting, whpn the\nNormand managers realized what the\ncertain publicity would mean in view\nof what had transpired in former film\nscandals, the nltck idea was formulated\nof having Mabol ruehed to a hospital.\nThere Interviewers would be barred,\nand the reports of her serious UIn*W\nwould get her thnt gallant sympathy\nwhich mlnrht save tho situation.\nHan Hot  Had Attack\nThere are a hundred poople here\nwho know authoritatively that Miss\nNormand has not suffered any appen\n(Ileitis attack.\nThere had been no advance suspicion  of any appendicitis nttack.\nAny reasonable person, putting two\nand two together, will at least fmrmlse\nthat the sudden attack, occurring Immediately after the Pines scandal, was\na   remarkable   coincidence,\nTho facts are that it was no coincidence at all. Miss Ncrmand Is healthy\nIn every respect except in spirit. She\nis heartsick only.\nUnder  A\u00abrent'i  Orders\nThe opinion of those who should be\n\"In -th\u00a9 know\" ls that Dines wa.s more\nclosely associated with Edna Purviance than with Mabel But it was\nMabel's chauffeur who fired the shots,\nnnd therefore thp burden of the publicity was doomed to fall on her. In\nprospect of her booked releases. It waa\ndeemed good film politics to hide Mlsa\nNormand behind the wort of barriers\nthat cannot ordinarily be violated even\nby reporters, and to surround her with\nthat cloak of seclunion which even\nnewspapers   recognize,   serious   Illness.\nSOMTIME-\nNEW MEMBERS\nThirteen Admitted to Sons of England\nOrganziation;  Enjoy English\nDinner\nThirteen new members were Initiated into the SonB of England\nBenefit society last night, the Initiation being ln charge of the following officers: President A.. Woods,\nVice-President E, Wools, Chaplain R.\nOollinson, past President A. Cuthbert-\nson and First Guide J. Hampson\nTwenty new applications for member*\nship  were received.\nAfter the cerehtony the members\npartook of an old English dinner,\nwhloh was greatly enjoyed by all\npresent.\nPALATINATE BONE\nOF CONTENTION\n\u2022British   Diplomat   JUportn   the   People\nAre Against Aatonomonn State;\nth*   \"Trench   Deny   XI\nPARIS, Jan. 21.\u2014The exchanges between tho French and Hrltish governments concerning the situation in the\nBavarian palatinate are continuing.\nThe marquis of Crewe, the Hrltish am-\ntasnador, confe.rred this morning with\nPremier  Poincare.\nNotwithstanding the report made by\nPobert Cllvo, British consul-general at\nMunich, that his Investigation In the\npalatinate had shown him a great\nmajority of the people thero were opposed to the no-called autonomous\ngovernment, French official circle*\nmaintain that the Separatist movement Is quite spontaneous This, it\nln asserted. Is proved by the fact that\nmore than 400 of the 600 mayors have\nadhered   to  tho  movement.\nIt Is reported that there ts a dlnpo-\nfltion on the part of certain Influential British politicians to propose to\nTrance that the whole controversy be\nreferred to the International court at\n\u2022The Hague. It Is said to be doubtful,\nhowever, that the French would accept\nuueb s proposal.        ,_      ,    .. i\u201e __.\nLONDON, .Jan. 21.\u2014Premier Baldwin drew loUd lHbftftter at the.open-\nilhe'of his speech, prior to, the vote\n.that defeated the governiheht, by\nrehiinfllng the hopse that, among all\nthe charges of impotence artd pusillanimity brought against the- government, . nobody ' remembered 'the ; great\nW|Prk he, h,ad wroilght In '.bringing\nAbout the reconciliation between Ae-\nqulth rand   Lloyd   fieorge.    J'What   it\nf.*dld,\" he.remarked\nLiberals Progress Backward\n.For a.prermfcr about to siilyfer-ex-\ntlnctioh Mr. Baldwin was inrexfcellent\nvein. , Remarking that Labor .was\nnbout to be put Into, office ^by tho\nvotes of'a progressive party? which\nelicited .Liberal .cheers,- he .created\nlaughter, by .turning the table*,, thus,\n\"Progress is not neceaaarily forward,\"\nand then' quoted figures shoviing the;\ngradual diminution of strength of the\nLiberals* In' the commons ' from ' 378\nin,W906*|to. 115 in 1922. adding, .\"Yes,\nand you' only got bigger numbers at\nthe late elections by appealing to\nthe voters to keep the Socialist\nparty   out.\"\nForeign   Settlements\nProceeding to revlow the government's achievements he alluded to\nthe funding of the British debt to\nthe United States, the only alterna-\ntive to which would have been a\ncontinuance of the payment of interest nt 5 per cent or repudiation.\nHe also referred to the settlement\nof the Turkish and Tangier ques\ntions and the bootlegging difficulty\nwith the United States which, by\ncommon consent on both sidee of\nthe Atlantic, had left the relations\nof the two oountries better than\never. He claimed the government\nwas leaving its successors no out-\nsta ndlng problem except reparations\nand  unemployment.\nMr. Baldwin en'nrged uport the\nreasons which had led him to advocate protection, and declared that\nho had not been driven to the adoption of that policy by anyone but\nwas himself solely responsible.\nWon't  Oppose  Unreasonably\nComing to the personal* question\nthe prepiler mid h\u00a3 had no regretn\nand when his party wns in opposition It would offer no factious opposition   to   the   new   ministers.\nAfter Mr. Baldwin had spoken the\nhouse adjourned for dinner. When\nit reassembled, the galleries filled\nrapidly, the prince of Wales and the\nduke of York being among the early\narrivals In the peers* gallery. Diplomatic representatives and men distinguished iln all ranks were present, and hundreds hod to be turned\naway, the demand for tickets to\nwitness the historic scene being un\nprecedent ed.\nWhen resumed the debates among\nthe minor members turned upon the\nquestion whether after the vote on\nthe Clynes amendment the house\nshould be permitted to continue the\ndebate to record its opposition to a\nSocialist policy as recommended by\nWinston Spencer Churchill.\nMacDonald  Is Cheered\nWith the approach of the hour for\nRamsay MacDonald's speech the house\nbecame     more     excited.       Prolonged\nAt   the   first   sign , of   a   cold . In\nthe  head,   melt   a  littlo'Vicks  VapoRub  In  a  spoon. -, Inhale'the  vapors.\nThen   insert   some   in   nostrils,' snuff-\n\u201e,.,-.. ,   , \u25a0  , ,    \u25a0  , ing;it   well   back.     You .will   be.de-\nThls being met by min oterlnl cries i \u201e M d   ,     a(?e   how.nulc|<iv   lt   h\u00abps\nof  \"Ho,   ho,\"   tho Labor  leader Again.   * \u25a0\nappealed   to   the   government   not. to   WA^rJ^>\",?\u00bb'    ,3 \u25a0 t0    heat    a    tin\n\u25a0display Incapacity \u25a0 to govern.\nHopes for Support for Reforms\nPassing to the general policy Mr.\nMacDona'.d expressed the hope. that}a,1>* aUu_ \u2122h\n*hen the LatK>r government came, to i Mrs. J. > Briai\npropose -- some, social reforms .- men-' itoba, saj-a-.v *uckn \\apoRub.is a\nttoned -In the speech from the throne ' great remedy .-for *;colds. ;I inhaled\nfpe ' Conservative . party . would' , not j ifrjfor a li^ffd .cold,- which.had troubled\n.oppose them simply Uffftause \u25a0 tabor me. for Sometime..'and- received great\nBponsoi*e*d them. .'He Intended to un- ] relief from It. -I shall make sure\nIrs* as mU<T*h of Ahe st>oe>:h from the| to t always *vhav* \", Vibfcs . on \u25a0 hand in\n\"throne   as    he    belie v id . ln   apd'  to | case   of   need'*\nHnd    inhale ,-the * vapors    that way.\nAs - fast . as ' the , vapors l lose their\nstrength.'.'throw out. the melted Vicks\nfresh.   ;,        ...   .\n\u25a0 Briars,   of   Plumas. Man-\ndo their\/best nnd, if thev failed, be\nthought tho members of the Baldwin\ngovernment liiHt>e*.d of criticizing\nthem ought; to sit by their side and\nconsole them by a \u00abreona]< of tho\nspolossaknalure ofUhnr own failings.'\nPEN IS MIGHTIER\nTHAN THE SWORD\nDivision     Number    Three     of     High\nSchool    Wins    in    Debating\nCompetition\n^ Vicks \u2022, VapoRub. the \u25a0 discovery of\na Sduthern dr'ugtjist, \u2022 Is a . coihbina-\ntlon - in ' salve form', of , Camphor,\nMenthol;,Eucnlytftus, Thyme, Turpen-\n-tine, etc. , It is good-, for, all cold\n'troubles. ' _ -\u00abl\nApplied externn'Uy over - throat' and\npheflt, as in the' case of \u2022 a chest\ncold,', sore throat. , etc.,', Vicks' acts\nlike a liniment or poultice, .in\naddition, the \u25a0 ingredients, are vapor-\nIxed'by the ^body, heat and are In-\nhali-d .d1rerjt.lv - into the -inflamed air\n\u2022passages. Thisr double action quickly\nloosens   a   cold.\nVicks is the Ideal treatment for\ncolds, both, for grownups and for\nchildren\u2014because it. avoids . so much\n\"internal dosing. -Just as -good. *'}oo,\nIforjCUts, burns., bruises, soTes,^ sitings\nI and skin ltchings.*''\nI At all drug stores, Eioe a Jar. For\n| a free test size package, write Vick\n| Chemical   Co..   344   St.   Paul   St.,   W.,\nE\nWa have Just received a\nshipmemt of all that's newest\nand best  in  silverware.\nTea Sets, Flower Baskets,\nCasseroles,  Cake Platea.\nSeo tho new Old Dutch pattern Candlesticks, Vases and\nBon-Bon Dishes.\nJ. B. GRAY\nJawsl.r W.tchm.k.r A Optician\n407 BAKER 8TREET\n\"Good   Good,  at   Gray'.\"\nFLOUR\nAt Reduced Price\n' Now 1*1 your opportunity to\nbuy a stock of flour at the right\nprice, ind s ive monf-y. When\nplacing >ittr orders, please eon-\nsider (hut this opportunity\n.would not have presented itself\nif    the    N ELBOW    k    DISTBICT\nitrniTrD FABHS-as- coop, had\nknot led the way.    Phone  174.\nTea   tbe  pen  is  mightier   than  the, Montreal,   P.Q.\nswonj_ |     Though   Vicks   is   new   In   Canada\nThis fact was emphasized In a I It has a remarkable sale in the\nkeen debate between the two dlvi- I States. Over 17 million jars used\nslons   of   tho   high   school,   Division j yearly,\nRestores suet.\/\nquscHU, -\nbuila up or\nSCOTTS\nEMUL5IC.\n1\/\nTo Stop\nA Cold\nin Ono Day\nBROMO QUININE Tablets belli* \u25a0\nimmediately to counteract tne * *\nactivity of Cold, Grip.and Influenza Germs and bring to a sud-.'\nden stop the dangerous. wo*> of -.\nthese dreaded disease genfti ta \\\nIhe human body.   ,    .''\u25a0.   -\\ \u25a0\nBROMO QUININE Tabtets'qild*-\nly render these gwrns powerless\nand ' completely destroy their\norganic existence.\nThe Totiic and taxlstiva Effect\nof Laxative BROMO QUININE\nTablets is very beneficial to tha\nsystem at all times.     ,,\nThe box bears this signatora\n<\u00a3#j&\nPrice 30c.\nMade in Canada\n,\\. ^'v \u25a0\u25a0-?:%\n*.\u00bb\u25a0\nThe music of all the world is in\nthis new \"His Maker's Voice\"\nVictor Record Catalogue\nIf all the performances of great\nmusic given throughout the world\nwere combined in one mammoth\nprogarm, they would not even\nthen approximate the music\nlisted for your enjoyment in\n\"His Master's Voice\"-Vlctor\nRecord Catalogue. \\\nYou may obtain a copy of this\nNew Catalogue from any dealer\nin \"His Master's Voice\" products.\nIt contains the double-sided Red\nSeal Records as well.\nNew \"His Master's Voice\"-\nVictor Records on sale by all\ndealers on the first of each month.\nVictrolas $37.50 to $615.00\n*.0>' HIS MASTER'S VOirF. LIMITED, MONTREAL\niP\nHis Masters Voice\nrs*\n Fage Fuur'\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 22, 1924\nTHE  DAILY NEWS ,\nPublishes-] cvory morning except;\n\u25a0unday by The News Publishing oom- l\npany,  limited.  Nelson, B.C.\nBusiness letters should ba ad-1\ntressed and checks and money orders\nmade payable to The News Publishing company, limited, and ln no rase\nto  Individual  members of the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards and A. B. C.\nStatements of circulation mailed on\nrequest, or may be seen at the of f ip*'\nof any advertising agency recognized\nby the Canadian Press Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES\nBy mall  (country), per month  $ .80\nPer year     .._ _ j.qo\nOutside Canada, per month      .76\nPer   year       _ 7.50\n\"Delivered,  per month     .75'\n.   Per   six   months    , 4 00\nPar  year __A _ 7.CO,\nANSWERS D LETTERS\nPayable In Advance\nMember   Ai\n\u25a0UA\/t   Bureau   of   Circulation\nTUESDAY.    J AA* I * A It Y\niVSt I\nSquandermania  by  Government Must Stop j\nSome striking figures on the\nunnecessary and wasteful in-'\ncrease in overhead and unpro- j\nductive government expendi-1\ntures'at Ottawa are given by j\nGrattan O'Leary in the first i\nof a series of article in Mac-!\nlean's Magazine.\nWhat he calls the \"stagger-j\ning growth and cost\" of the]\ninside civil service is. given by I\nthe following table:\nFiscal\nYear.\n1M3-14   ....\n1915-ltJ 10,2fiT\n1918-11)*   _ 12,742\n1921-22 '. 1-1,733\n\u2022Armistice   year.\n\"These figures are for the inwide\nrlvil service alone; ihey do not Include the thousands cf employoe.*-\npf the, outside service, where, especially during tho past year, political\npatronnge  has been rampant.\n\"Separate figures for the inside\ncivil service for the year 1921 are\nnot available as yet. Hut according\nto a return tabled In parliament toward tho close of Inwt session, the\ntotal number of employees In both\nthe inside and outside services for\n1923 was: Empkyees, 3!\u00bb,204; total\nsalaries.   $50,355,721.\"\nNumber Total\nEmployees.    Ba la ries.\n    8700        $ K,l(i3,3f.l\n11.113,59(1\n23.1411.511\nj game miay be rontlnued indefinitely,\n! each player having several turns,\n; if desired). The contestant who\nI shouts out first the name of a bird,\nfamous man. nnlmal, fish, etc., be-\nt ginning with the letter turned up.\ni is given sine letter. And the person\nj who gets the most letters In this\n: way  wins the game.\nMrs. A.\u2014\"I have draw curtains between my dining room and living\n; room, but am troubled by their not\nsliding smoothly on the pole. What\nj is the caiine of this? They slid\nI smoothly when r first put them up.\"\nAnswer\u2014The moisture in the air.\ncombined with the natural accumula-\ntum of dust, forms a deposit on the\npole which prevents Ihe curtains sliding smoothly. To overcome this\ncondition rub your pole. If Is brass,\nonce every two weeks with a cloth\nslightly moistened with sewing ma-\nohine oil. taking care not to leave\nenough oil on the surface to give\na greasy feeling when your fingers\nare passed over It. If your pole Is\nof wou>d. however, rub it once a\nmonth with a waxy paste (or any\nkind of softened wax), polishing it\nthoroughly after the application.\nMother-Housekeeper\u2014\"How ls jav-\nelle  water  made?\"\nAnswer: .lavelle Wafer\u2014Dissolve\none pound of washing soda In erne\nQUaii of bolUng water. Also dissolve\none-half of a pound of chloride of\nlime in two quarts of cold water,\nfour the clear portion of the lime\nsolution into the soda solution and\nlet it stand to settle. Bottle and\nkeep   in   a   dark   place.\nTomorrow\u2014Some flood Italian\nDishes.\nAll Inquiries addressed to Miss Kirk-\nman tn care of the \"Efficient Housekeeping\" department will be answered\nIn these columns in their turn. This\nrequires considerable time, however.\ntarn* UP the letter need not.necea- I owing to the great number received,\nsarfly be limited to birds. Other] so if a personal or quicker reply is\nrlnssifii-ations siwh as famous men, | desired, a stamped and tfrif-ftddfUMd\nanimals, fish, cities, or any others, i envelope must be enclosed with the\nmay be rsed. Ktudti player haa a: question. Be sure to use your full\nturn at Meeting ft letter nnd an- 1 name, street numV-*\u00bbT, and the name of\nnouneing a classification  (indeed, this   your city and province.\u2014The Editor.\nTOMORROWS  MENU\nBreakfast\nOmpefnM\nCereal\nCoffee S;i>is.igps nnd Bacon\nPop-Overs\nLuncheon\nApple Slump\nWhole Wheat Bread\nTea Peanut   Butter\nDinner\nCorned Heef\nBoiled Potatoes Cabbage\nBeet Salad\nCoffee Tapioca   Pudding\nNewtywed\u2014\"I am giving a party\nto aome of our married friends. I\nhave planned to introduce two new\ngames I have heard of, but I want\na third game. Could you sURgest\none played with a pack of cards\nor with the fsld-ftislitoned 'annpntm'?\nI do not want to buy new materials\nto   piny  it\u201ewith   but   have  these.\"\nAnswer\u2014People are now playing a\nnew game with the o'd-fashioned anagrams. Here are the tfrectttna. The\nplayers sit around a table on which\nthe small bloeks ior cards) containing the letters of the alphabet, are\nturned fare down. Tho lender turns\nu n one of these letters and says,\n\"Birds.\" All the other players must\nImmediately try to think of the name\nof some bird whirl* begins with the\ntotter the leader has turned up. For\ninstance. If the turned-lip letter happens to be the \"O,\" someone will\n(bout \"Oriole\" m- \u2022\u2022 Ostrich,\" or\n\"Osproy.\" The general e'assificn.-\nH'ons    announced    by    the    one   who\nramidi\nin\nAmfrK'.'in\nHt'ul\n \u00bb 40\n     SO\nXII\n111.7!\n  IN\nTIM\nHe takes the customs department as one example of \"squandermania.\"    In  1000  this  department had  1572 employees,\ncosting $958,494.02.    By  i914,\nthe first year of the war, this\nhad  grown to 8885 employees\nand a payroll of $3,224,o:,6.GG. i\nBy  1918 there were 3592 em-j\nployees and a payroll of $:S,G86,-\n824.25.   That was the last year!\nof the war.   Now no'e the in-'\nciease since the war ended.  By |\n1921 the total number of em-,\nployees had risen to 4075 and i\nthe cost to $6,646,816.29.\nTo drive home his point of i\nthe effect  of these  high  costs\nupon income tax, he quotes the j\nfollowing figures, showing the\n\u2022mount payable under the Cana- i\ndian scale on the one haiisl and\nunder the American scale on the.\nother:\nIncome.\n.000\n5000\nfiOOO\n7000      2T0 9H.O0\nBut income tax is only one\nfeature of taxation. Every unnecessary dollar which is spent\nby government becomes increased sometimes as much as\nthree and four fold by the time\nit reaches the finished article,\non account of the taxation of\nnecessity having to be pyramided at every stage of the\nhandling of an article. Every\ndollar wasted by government\nmakes it more difficult for\nCanada to do business with the\noutside world and to keep its\npeople employed satisfactorily\nwithin the borders of the Dominion.\t\nStatesmanship Superseded\nby Demagoguism\nNow that Lloyd George, after\na long career of pacifism before the war, of war leader\nduring the war, and of complete abandonment to chauvinism in the khaki election and\nthe Versailles conference which\nfollowed the war, has returned\nto his old position with the left\nwing Liberals and has gone so\nfar in that direction that he\nis promising support to Labor\nsocial measures, it is interesting to recall a paragraph or\ntwo from the diary of Col. C.\nC. Kepington written during\nthe war.\nCol. Repington was military\ncorrespondent on the Times and\ntasily the best-informed student of military affairs in\nGreat Britain at the time.\nUnder date of November 19,\n1917,  he writes:\n\"Monday, Nov. 19.\u2014I went\nto the house of commons in the\nafternoon to hear the great debate on the Kapallo agreement\nand Lloyd George's Paris\nspeech. Asquith opened in a\nspeech of great moderation,\nasking many pertinent questions. L. G. replied at once.\nThe house was crammed. I sat\nin the sergeant-at-arms' box and\nhad a good view.   L. G. at his\nbest. He began slowly and\neither answered or skilfully\nevaded Asquith's questions.\nThen he stocked up and began\nto lay about him, using every\nartifice of the demagogue and\nthe play-actor. He played on\nthe whole gamut of human\nemotions, cajoling, threatening\nwith fierce gestures and rising\nto a great height of simulated\npassion. He was humorous,\ntoo, and the whole house rose\nto him anil rocked with joy.\nWhat an assembly! . . . ,\nIt is too delicious to compare\nthe Paris speech and this one\nwith L. G.'s past speeches at\nthe Albert hall. Carnarvon, etc.\nThey are absolutely contradictory, and everything that he\nsaid was true then he now says\nis untrue. What a game of\nhanky-panky  politics are!\n\"Dined with Lord Haldane,\nand we bemoaned . . . the\nsupetsession of statesmanship\nby demagoguism at home. . .\nI liked his dictum that L. G.'s\nmind fastened on images and\nbanned concepts.\"\n\"The supersession of states-\n! manship   by  demagoguism\"   is\na complaint  from which many\ncountries  are  suffering.     Perhaps  it   is  a  disease,   like  influenza   in   the    human   body,\nwhich  is  destined  periodically\n: to infect the body politic. W,tjat\nis lacked by so many politicians\n| of the Lloyd Oeorge stamp is\n! basic guiding principles.    Op-\n1 portunism  may  win   elections,\nbut the country pays for it in\n1 the long run.\nThe Lighter Side\nIntelllKenSsia.: \u2014PtQfJl* wlio li\nthe same fool ideas yon have.\nFrance  has  no onranie  trouble,\nts limply a Napoleonic complex.\n o\t\nMan never seems so mortal\nwhen he appears in a idvoree salt\npajamas.\nKxerrlee may bo a pood thine,\nbut nobody ever saw a \\ill.ipe loafer\nwho  wan  nnhttilthy.\nWild animals are not really\nmora healthful tlutn men. Th.y\nalio  die  early  in captivity.\nBY LENOXX\nEDISON AND THE PASSION PLAYERS\n\"Button*,\"    says    the    arbltara    of\nfashion. So an up-to-date dress\nbull-da Jtself around a reffiment of\nbutton! with tindeninblv happv results.\nAs this dross was meant to be\nparked Into a trunk for the sunny\nsouthlands ii is made of white cashmere, but It Is easy to see that it\ncould ba eqimlly effective in any\nother color. The square neck and\nthe buttonholes are bound in red\noire ribbon. The little circular cape,\ntoo, lis an important style point,\nas it nppears again in many of the\nadvance models.\nTbe smart separate coat to wear\nOVW the one-piece dress Is .almost\nInvariably of three-quarter length. It\nis often made of Rodior's lovely-\nnovelty materials and in knitted materials   with   clipped   yarn   collars.\nWhat the Press Is Saying\nWhile Brltlab Columbia  la eonfrata-\ni lr.tiiiff   hrr^elf   i.n   lh*i   st.\u25a0inly   devolop-\nj nn-nt  of her natural   resources,  aad  on\nihe mcoaaa which attaadad buatnaaa in\nthe provlnc* taring the past year, she\nshould not fatal to take account of\nthe liter;iry aad nrtistlc nchi.'vements\nof some of h.*r citizens. Of nine novels\ngiven   apaaial  mention   la   last  waafc*a\nPoole aaottm review of the New York\nTimes, three \u00ab**\u00bb by Brltlab Columbia author-. Fn-derlrk Niven of \\el-\nar-n, Bert rand Sinclair of Ponder Har-\nhor nnd H.irwood MMfa formerly of\n\\anouvir.  ;tnil   now  of Montreal.\nMr. Vlvan'a 'Muni ice of the Pence,\"\nfirst puh!lsli.-d In tfftl, nnd now rt-\nlaaual WRb n liiudatury Introduction\nI y HuRli W.ilpole and Chris tojili.-r Mor-\n1. y, is pniised for thtf 'worthy, dis-\nerimlnatitiR and astonishingly fine\ntalent Htiotvn, a ltd for Its careful and\nVivid portraiture. Mr. Sinclalrs \"The\nInverted Pyramid,\" a story of Vancouver and tha Hrltish Columbia forests,\nIh deBerih.il as an epic of family honor\n\u00bbnd ls daolsWad to contain enough in-\nHpt ration and material for many\ni.ovelH. Mr. Steele's story of the\nmounted police, \"Splrit-of-Iron.\" Is\nfavorably reviewed, nnd the author's\nantbualaam for the Royal mounted is\npronounced, well-sustained and contagious.\nWe have n number of writers In our\nprovince whose work the big reviews\nconsider Worth noticing, but It is unusual 'for three to find a place In a\nsingle   Issue.\u2014Vancouver   Province.\nFresh Air and Health\nIf all the precautions laid down by\nthe doctors and sanitarians against\nthe spread of Infection could be observed, tha health records of the\ncommunity would be vastly better\nthan they are. one of these, upon\nwhich especial stress is being laid\nat this aaaaofl Is directed against\nthe spread of \"eo'ds\". Not every'\none enn follow tho advice to Btny In\nbsBd to tide over the worst stages\nof n cold, but ventilation of workrooms nnd offices Is one precaution for tbe neglect of which thero\ncan be no reasonable excuse\u2014Phila-\ndalphla   Public   L-edgor.\nunless the other fellow has a well-\ntrained  left,\nA physical culture man says rolling makes one happy. This is especially  true of the  bankroll  .\nOf the 32\u00ab,fi42 British Columbia\nhousewives who resolved on January\n1 to keep a record of expenditure*\nIt la estimated that 731 are at\nIt   yet.\nGirl   friends   nre   those   who   com-\ni pare   their   diamonds   when   engaged\nand pan their husbands when married.\nj An old-timer la one who can re-\n! mom her when the woman who used\ni powder on her neck was considered\n: daring.\nCorrect this sentence: \"There, the\nlittle \u2022 thtniT is crying,\" said the\nbachelor:   '\"let   me   hold   it   a   while.\"\nTHOMAS   EDI60N I 'm\\*\\\nThe electrical  wianrd.  la here  aeen  receiving the  Oberammorgau  Passion Players at his  Orange,  N.J., plant.\nLeft to right, Anton Lftnfi Edison. Guido Mayr, who plays the part of Jbdas. and Andreaa Lang, who takea tha\nrole of St. Peter.\nIBobp\nof\n\u00a7oura\nfl\u201e Umn W. Barfn. M.D.\nTen Years Ago\nYou never rally know a man\nuntil you have slept on the same\npool table with hint during \u25a0 convention.\n o\t\nA    dress   suit   is   like   a    pistol\nyou   have   one   jrou   keep   looking   t*X\na  chance  to  use   it.\nAbout the only thing in tho\nworld more inefficient than government  is a tonsil.\n(The  Dally  News,  January  22,  1914)\nMrs.    X.   ll,   Cummins,    president;\nIf ; Mrs.    W.   J.    Holmes,    vice-president;\nI th.\nr.    were\nNelson\nWard, secretary-treos-\nthe officers named by\n\u25a0hurlty  organization.\nThe    first    sleel   barge   for   Kootenay   lake   service   was   completed   nt\n| the   Fairview shipyards  yesterday.     A\nthem! eont  of paint, and  this new addition\npoor i to   the   lak<\n\u25a0 launched.\nThe man who first called\neasy payments was a darned\nJudge   of   adj. c! Ives.\n o  \u2022    \u25a0    *\nTbe   world's   supply   of  horse   sense |     Robert     Hendricks     and\nls   divided   as  foihms:     Men.   2.8   per; Burgess   at   Kaslo   are   city\ncent;   the horse, 97.2  per cent.\ntransfer    fleet    will    be\nvr.   n.\nvisitors.\nSleeping Sickness\n(Registered    in   accordance   wi'th    the\nCopyright Act)\n*\u25a0\u00bb\nAlthough    I    dislike    talking    about\nconditions thnt are mro;  nevertheless,\nthere    has    been    such   a    widespread\npublic  interest  in  this  condition  that\nperhaps    a    l>-w    thoughts    about    it\nmight   be   in   order.\nThere are a number of symptoms,\nbut tho three outstanding points\nabout it are the extreme sleepiness,\nthe absolute weakness of all the\nmuscles and a paralysis of certain\nparts of the body mfiVcting the eyes\nand voice most  frequently.\nThere a re ot her nympt oms often\npresent, Including headachy, dizziness and double  vision.\nIt luti from _\\ few days to a\nnumber 6J weeks. The longer it\nlasts tbe better Is tbe chunce of\nrecovery.\nThe outstanding symptom, of\ncourse, lis the extreme drowsiness or\nsleepiness.\nThe patiuet can usually be wakened; will actually talk o)ii.to sensibly\nabout bis condition and symptoms\nfor a while, but will drop off to\nsleep  again  at   once.\nNow, what is the cause of this\ntrouble?\nIt in not definite'y known at the\npresent.\nA number of theories have been\nset forth? in. -hiding the liilc-i that\nit might be a form of food poisoning or perhaps due to tho same\npoison that causes infantile i>aralysis.\nHowever, one thing has been noted\nby investigiits.rs. The extreme prostration of sleeping sickness is very\nmuch liko that seen in .Influenza\nor   grippe.\nYou've bad the grippe, or have seen\npeople with it, and you remember\nhow weak and tired they appeared.\nAnother thing: when you were getting better from the grippe you will\nalso remember how depressed you\nf'-lt. This depression lasted a long\nwhile, considering that short time,\nyou   were  sick.\nAlso, these cases of sleeping sickness come about the same t.me of\nyear   as    grippe    or    flu,    as    it    is\nIf he hat mads frantic effort\nto get money and failed, be calll\nthis a sordid and commercial\nage.\nj     Mr.    and    Mrs.    A.    L.    McCulloch\nhave   gone to  Los  Angeles,  Cal.,   for\n: a  winter  trip.\n*    .    .\nt Miss Crtitlwell and her young vlo'in\n1 pupil, Miss C. Notman. last night\nwon    much    praise    at    the    Baptist\neh    concert.\ncalled, and the number of caae*\nseems to be In direct jyoportlon to\nthe cases of flu.    What is my point?\nThat may investigators are forming\nthe opinion 'that tbe cause of flu\nand of seeping sickness is the\nsome  thing.\nHowever, absolute rest, clearing the\nIntestine and light nourishing food\nform   the   basis   of   tbe   treatment.\nTwenty Years Ago\n(The  Daily   News.   January   22,   1904)\nA new pnssenger steamer and two\nnew fraCffht barges are to built here\nthis year by tho Cana-dlan Pacific\nrailway, annoUnc.Hl Richard Marpole\nof Vancouver, general superintendent\nof the Pax-ific division, who was in\nthe   city   yesterday.\n*    \u2022    \u2022\nHarry Allen, bnj,koman on the\nNelson & Fort RhepPjird road, was\nkilled yesterday between Nelson and\nNorthport     Allen    was   well   known\nj locally   as   phortstlop   on   the   Nelson\nI ball   nine.\n\u2022    *    \u2022\nPreparations have commenced at\nI the Nelson armory for the at-home\n1 to be given on the occasion ot tho\n\u25a0 formal opening of the building.\n   g\u00bb\nFarmers' Institute\nat Crawford Bay\nHas Big Turnover\n|     CRAWFORD   BAY,   B.C..   Jan.   21.  \u2014\nj The   farmers'   Institute   held   Its  annual\n! meeting,   Friday   evening,   in  the  public\n[ ball,     A.   Millar,   the   secretary,   gave a\n! financial   report,   the   turnover   for  1928\nbeing   $1,1,000.     There   were   five   car-\n| toads \u00abf mixed  feed  sold  to the mem-\n; bora   during   the   year.\ni      \\V.   Fraser   was    reelected   presldsMt,\n1 and   A.   Miliar  reelected   secretary.    Dl-\ni r-etors   elect-d    were    M.    Johnson,   D.\nj Fisher   and   R.   Bayllss.     The   auditors\nI are   K   tflmpson   and   W.   Kidman.\n|     A hall  meeting followed  Immediately\n1 after   tbe   farmers'   institute,   and   last\nyear's   trustees   were    unanimously   reelected,   being   R.    Bayllss,   R.   McGregor and   S   Webb.\nYou KNOW\nTheir Quality!\nWhen Buying\nANY Biscuit*\u2014\nask for \"Christie*\"\nLet ua figure your bills of\nBuilding Material. Coast Lumber a specialty.\nBuilding\nMaterial  John Burns & Son\n1 Pig iron broke\nI The Industry ha\n1 should  be called  hog  iron\n1*1   records   In   1923.\ngrown    \u00a30    big    It\nTbe  right  wiill  triumph  tn tho end\nThe demand for locomotives Is Increasing. Why don't auto drivers look\nand   listen at tbe crossings?\nEverybody Skate\nNow that we have skating on the Lake, there is\nno excuse, as there in room for all.\nIf you have the desire we have the equipment\nfor Sport.\nSKATES\nA Few Pairs Left at BARGAIN PRICES\n50< TO 84.50 PER PAIR\nSee our complete line ol STARR Skates. Nothing\nto equal them; they will not break.\nAlio   \u2022   Full   Stock  of\nQUALITY HOCKEY STICKS\n30< TO $1.75 EACH\nSKIS,  All  Sizes,  82.00 to 88.00 Pair\nShin Pads, Knee and Elbow Pads, Hockey Gloves,\nGoal Pads, etc., etc.\nFinest Stock in the Interior\nNelson Hardware Co*\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardware   \u25a0\nNELSON B.C,\nn I poison\nyourself\nFoods that lie in the colon putrefy\nand poison the blood stream\u2014that\nmeans auto-intoxication and early\ndeath. Keep the colon clean and\nthe bowels healthy and active by\neating Shredded Wheat. In addition to the.body-building elements\nof the whole wheat grain it contains\nthe bran\u2014all the bran you need to\ninsure regular bowel movement.\nDelicious for any meal with hot\nmilk or fruits  of\nany kind.\nTh. Cinadian Shredded Wheat Company, UA\nNS\u00bb.r. F.IU, Qatar!.\nJJ\nShrc\nWheat\ned\naa_a_\n \u25a0\u00bb..-'    \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 =\nPage Six*\nfH*5 NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 22, 1924\n\u25a0\nIs It Worth While\nTelephone to\nSave a Few Cents\nOf course no one enjoys\nhaving to use a neighbor's\ntelephone. Yet the phone\nhas become such a neces-\nity that, if one hasn't a\nphorte, it, can't be helped\nnow and then.\nGsod neighbors don't say\nanything,) but it must\nannoy tjiem. Naturally\nyour neighbor says she\n\u25a0 doesn't cafe, but she does.\nIt Would annoy you if the\nconditions were reversed.\nA party line is $1.50 net\na month. It's a popular\nservice. Get particulars at\nthe office.\nCHILEAN NITRATE\nIN GREAT DEMAND\nSailings\nToEurope\nSOUTHAMPTON\u2014CHERBOURG\nr-ANTWERP\nn. SI,  Apr.  2 \u2014, Mlnnedosa\nb. 14, Mch. 19, Apr. 16   Mellta\nTO  LIVERPOOL\nb. 16, Mch. 14, Apr. 11 .....JWntroae\nn. 25, Mch. 21, Apr. 18....Montlaurlar\nb. 29, Mch. 28, Apr. 25 .-...Montclare\nb. 8, Apr. 4  _ Montcalm\n\u25a0b. 22   Marburn\nb,   t, Mch.  7   Marloch\nTO   GLASGOW\nfh. 8. Apr. 6  _ ...Metagama\nb. 22, Mch. 22, Apr. 12  Marburn\nb.   1, Mch.  7, Apr. 12  Marloch\nDetail*, rates, reaervatlont, from\ny Afent.\nJ. S. Carter\n\u2022triot PuMngtr Agent. Nelaon. B.C.\nRead the Advertisements\n.KNOW WHERE TO SHOP\nMum   te   Seoape   Tnm   -Thumb   ef\nOeutrr'e Keaopoly U lonffet\nby uatted ItttH\nWASHINGTON. DC, Jan. 21.\u2014The\n\u2022*,orld demand for Chilean nitrate has\nbeen Increasing at a high rate, and\nunless Influence* growing out of the\n\u2022 ar or which became effective during\nthe war period have permanently altered the situation, still heavier drafts\nmust be made on the supply of nitrate\navailable In Chile.\nThis le declared In a report on \"the\ncost of Chilean nitrate\" prepared as\nthe result of a survey authorised by\ncongress last year for a study of ways\nand means of assuring commercial independence to American consumers ln\nthe procurement of certain essential\nraw materials now largely produced\ni'broad  under monopoly control.\nThese products Included not only\nnitrate, but also rubber and sisal, and\nInvestigating commissions were selected by the departments of commerce and) * agriculture to conduct\nthese otudle*. The present report on\nthe ccst of Chilean nitrate, made\npublic here, ls the first of a series\nin the nitrate survey, and was pre\npared by Foster Balm, director of\nthe bureau of mines, and H. S. Mul\nliken, special agent, who went to\nChile to gather much of their Information.\nThe export tax on nitrate is the\nChilean government's chief source\nof income; the supply of the raw\nmaterial ia vast, \"sufficient tc meet\nthe probable demand for one or\nmore centuries,\" amd while it would\nbe possible for the Chilean gov\neminent to abandon the whole or\npart of the nitrate tax, thus reducing the cost to the consumer,\n'It !\u00ab not probable, says the report,\n\"that any such complete change ln\ntaxation would ever be made up\nless It la necessary to retain a mar\nket for the natural nitrate.\"\nIn spMe of the fact that Chile\npossesses a natural monopoly of\nthis raw produce, nitrate ls obtained from other sources, fcr example, aa a by-product ln the manufacture of coke and coal and gas\nand by the process of fixation by\ntaking the free nitrogen from the\nair; and the United States, although\nthe largest user of Chilean nitrate,\nreceives less than half of its supply\nof fixed nitrogen from* Chilean\nsources.\nRed-Breasted Thrush\nIs Seen at Creston\nby Reliable Observers\nCRESTON, RC., Jan. 21.\u2014The\nfirst robin of the season was\nseen by two reliable eye-witnesses ln the orchard on the\nDow ranch, Wednesday, which\nconstitutes a new early record\nfor the redbreast's return to\nCreston valley. The preceding\nweek-end cold snap, which produced another touch of 17 below,\nprobably hastened the return\nsouth of the daring cherry\npicker.\nCould Not Work\na Whole Day\nBut Now He Praises Dodd's\nKidney Pills\nAlfred   Nadsau   is   enthusiastic   over\nthe remedy  that brought him  relief\n\u2014Dodd's  Kidney  Pills.\nALRBRTVILLE, Que.. Jan. 21 (Special.)\u2014\"It gives me great pie-mure\nto tell you that I am feeling very\nwell, smce I started taking your\nDodd's Kidney Pills. I waa not able\nto work a whole day without severe\npains in my kidneys.\nYour Dodd's Kidney Pills are a\nwonderful remedy for weak kidneys.\nKindly publish my testimonial, so\nthat all those who suffer may kniow\nabout   Dodd's   Kidney  Pills,\"\nMr. Alfred Nadeau, who lives here,\nmakes the above statement. He feels\nthat he owes it to other sufferers\nwith sore kidneys, to tell them how\nhe found relief from his suffering.\nAU Mr. Nadeau's troubles came\nfrom diseased kidneys. They speedily\nceased when he commenced to use\nthe one sure help for diseased kidneys\u2014Dodd's Kidney Pills. There is\nno reason why anyone should continue to suffer when Dodd's Kidney\nPills can be obtained from druggists\neverywhere, or The Dodds Medicine\nCo.,   Ltd.,   Toronto.\nNo Question of\nPreferred Position in\nClassifiedAdvertising\nThe   classification of   your   want   ad   gives   It\nthe best  position   ln the  paper\u2014makes  it  easy   to\nfind as your  house, when  street  and  number are\nknown.\nClassification reduces to a minimum all trouble\nln looking for your ad. Anyone to whom It would\nappeal can find It quickly.\nAnd in placing your Classified Ad in The Dally\nNews you are appealing to a circulation of readers\nfrom which you are sure to achieve results satisfactory to' you. Dally evidence of the result-\nproducing power of The Dally News Classified\nPage is received. Tha following ad appeared once\nln our columns:\nLOST\u2014Barrel of lady's fountain pen,\nbetween C. P. R. station and High\nschool. Reward. Return to Dally\nNews. (2700)\nOne Insertion waa enough to return the lost\npen to Its owner, who was pleased and satisfied\nwith the prompt response.\nSee what classified advertising can accomplish\nfor you ln that task which labels Itself \"Impossible.\"\nClassified advertising ' affords your market\u2014If\nyou have anything of value to sell.\nPHONE 144 (Two  Lines)\nGIANT SHARKS\nRANGED PACIFIC\nINTHEMIOCENE\nGreat Teeth Are Found in\nLimestone Quarry Near\nLot Angeles\nSa'd the little eohippus,\n\"I'm going to be a horse\nAnd on my middle toenail\nTo run my earthly course.\"\nLOS ANGELES, Jan. 21.\u2014How\nCharlotte Perkins Oilman came to\nknow this Inasmuch as it murt h.ive\nhappened 600,000 years or so before\nshe began to write about economics\nsociology, the feminist movement,\nthe blythesome eohippus and other\nlyric subjects, never has been, ox-\nplained, but so it Is, and thus stands\nthe recorded racial determination\nof the primitive progenitor of the\ndomestic   horse.\nHaving thus whickered his wild\nresolve, eohippus galloped off Into\nthe geologic night, also without 'explanations, but we know from the\nhooves of hia. descendants that he\nsucceeded ln hlB determination and\nto this day he is an object of respect to all the progeny of Tubal\nCain and their collateral relatives, the\nSmiths.\nFind   No   Eohippus\nSearching a recent Saturday In\nLimestone canyon, 7 miles east\nof Orange, for vestlglary remains\nof eohippus, Samuel Maus Purple,\nwell-known geologic explorer, and\nDr. A. J. Tlege, geologist of the Los\nAngeles museum, found not a single\ntoenail. Instead, they found sharks'\nteeth.\nGeology ls like that\u2014chancey\u2014\nThose addicted to it take what they\nfind  and  are  thankful.\nThey were not the largest sharks'\nteeth known to science. The longest,\nmeasuring five Inches, was found last\nyear by Mr. Purple In the Palos\nVerdea hills near Los Angeles harbor. But they were formidable weapons, for all that. By their length,\ncompared with teeth extracted from\nsharks caught In these plndling times,\none estimates the dimensions of the\nmonsters of the past.\nThe largest shark known today\nMr. Purple said, measures 35 feet.\nHis teeth are an inch long, never\nmore. Some of those found that Saturday were more than two Inches\nlong. Proportionately, the estimated\nlength of their possessors was from\nfrom -66 to 70 feet. The tooth found\nln the Palos Verdes hills was more\nthan five inches long, and must have\nbelonged to the great-grandfather of\nalt sharks. Mr. Purple believes he\nwas more than 150 feet in length.\nUpturned   Sea   Bed\nAs   nearly   as   a   cursory   first   examination    could    determine,     these\ngiant    Bharks    ranged    the    Pacific\ncoast   of  North   America   in   the   Mi\nocene   age,   from   1,500,000   to   3,000,\n000   years   ago.      To   repeat   the   ob\nservatlon of the reporter complimented by  Dr. David Starr Jordan in the\nTimes of a recent  Saturday,  what  Is\nnow   dry   land   must then   have  been\nunder  water.\nSharks' Tooth hill, as Mr. Purpl*\nnamed the knolt on the slopes of\nwhich the teeth were found, rises\nan estimated 700 feet above the sea\nand now lies 20 miles inland. The\nsoil consists of sand and fossil shells.\nOriginally a portion of the sea\nfloor, it was upturned in some seismic convulsions and subsequently\nscoured bare by tlie winds and the\nrains of ages until the remains of\npast life with which it was interladed\nwere laid bare. Approximately an\nInch and a half of rain fell in that\nportion of Orange Saturday and must\nhave washed away many specimens.\nwhile perhaps s\/un<>overing others.\nThe party Intend to return for another visit of exploration at some\nfuture date.\nI 'Not    Coincident\nDr. Tlege particularly hoped to\nfind osseous remnants of the eohippus, sharks and horses\u2014the con-\nJunction stirred the reporter's lmag\ninatlon, but Mr. Purp'e cast doubt\non his conjecture that the eoppi\nmight have been devoured by am\nphlblous sharks. A matter of i\nmillion years or more between the\ntime of eohippus and that of the\nsharks-seemed to preclude this other\nwise plausible explanation. His be\nbelief was that little eohippus died\nwith his toenails on. and that his remains were subsequently washed out\nto sea by terrestrial dreams, silted\ndown in the sea bed, subsequently\nunheaved like the ground on which\nLos Angeles stands, and then bared\nhundreds of thousands of years later\nby   erosion   of   the   elements.\nWith the sharks' teeth were found\nnumerous shells, vertebrae of prehls\ntorlc whales, and one tooth of (\nmammal. All the fossils will be\nsent to David Starr Jordan for clas\nslflcation and later will be added to\nthe Purple collection In the Los Angeles museum. Accompanying the\ntwo scientists were George D. Ament\nand Robert Northcross, two old-timers\nwho know every foot of the coun\ntry  around about.\nAGRICULTURE HEAD\nIS BETTER MILKER\nWins  Contest  to  Which  ftenator  Johnson,  \"Dirt \"Farmer,*'   Challenged\nKim;    Baoksaw    atext\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 21. \u2014 Magnus\nJohnson, the \"dirt farmer\" senator\nfrom Minnesota, and Secretary of Ag\nrlculture Wallace attempted recently to\nMttle their feud with a milking contest, but the result wan so inconclusive that Senator Johnson challenged\nthe secretary to a further contest with\na bucksaw.\nTwo of the heaviest milking aristocrats of the celebrated Soldiers' home\ntu.rd were selected for the contest\nSecretary Wallace took Concordia De-\nVol and Senator Johnson took Cora\nJohanna Frenesta Dekol. Both are\ncelebrated advnncrd registry matron*\nof the Hol-rteln-Frleslan family. Anti-\nkickers and Ull holders were barred,\np nd the rules called for dry hand\nmilking, two quarters at a time, three\ngtillon   palls  between   the  knees.\nMajor-Gen.   Tusker   A.   Bliss,   retired.\nDODD'S\nKIDNEY\nk PILLS J\nLL K.IDNE1\n'\"\u25a0 ^\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.'\u25a0> ;\n\"REV* RYAN AND HIS CAPTOR\nmjDBTTItT, Ont., Jan. 21.\u2014VilV\nsevere cold has struck <thla MCtlon\nof Ontario, White River experiehcll|\n63 below zero during the nigh*.\nChapleau reached 42 below, and 8u#-\nbury was 34 below. Railways af*\nmaintaining their schedule* ln splla\nof  the  oo Id.\nSimple Way to\nTake Oft Prt\n\"there can be nothing simpler than\ntaking a ccr-venient little tablet ftfiir\ntimes each dtay until your weight Is\nreduced to normal. That's ail\u2014JtfjK\npurchase a box of Marmola Prescription Tablets from your druggist pr\none do War, the aame price the world\nover. Follow directions\u2014no starvation dieting or tire-seme exerctsinf.\nEat Bubstantia-1 food\u2014be as lacy aa\nyou Iikc .snd keep o.i getting slimmer.\nAnd the best part of Marmola Prescription Tablets Is they are hnrnt-\nlese. That is your absolute safeguard. Purchase them from your\ndruggist, or send direct to Mlarmote\nCo, 4612 Woodward avenue, Detroit.\nMich. \u201e\nDetectives took no chances with the elusive bank robber when he returned to Toronto, as seen by this picture.\nHere are shown, from left to right, Chief of Detectives George Guthrie, Ryan in arm and leg bracelets, and\n'.nspector Walter Duncan of the federal secret service, who  ran  Ryan   down.\ncommandant of the Soldiers' home,\nhi Id the watch, and when he said \"Go\"\nthe senator and the secretary put the\ntops of their heads Into the cows'\nflanks and went to work in the old-\nfashioned way which became extinct\nwith the advent of the modern farmland  and the milking machine.\nFor five minutes there was no\nsound except the steady streams of\nmilk pouring into the buckets. When\nboth cows were reported clean, the\ntime was given as five mlnutess, and\nwhen the milk was measured it wan\nannounced that Secretary Wallace had\nwon  by a half-pint.\nSenator Johnson protested that his\nccw, which was on test with four\n('ally mllklngs, evidently had been\nmilked Just before the contest; that\nhis hand was a little off since coming to the senate, and that, anyway,\nhis wife and children were the real\nmilking experts on his farm in Minnesota.\nSecretary Wallace heard the protest\nwithout emotion, but at Its conclusion\nremarked with a specially selected\nemphasis:\n\"Huh!    Us dirt  farmers.\"\nSenator Johnson replied wtth his\nproposal of a return match with buck-\nsnws and a woodpile Secretary Wallace took it under advisement.\nDiligent Inquiry at the Soldiers'\nhome barns failed to disclose anybody\nwho would take the responsibility for\nstating how much milk Senator Johnson or Secretary Wallace actually got\nId the five minutes of effort. One\nherdsman, bolder than the rest, said\nhe   thought  it  was about  a quart.\nALLEGE YOUNG\nWOOD IN MANY\nOIL CONCERNS\nChicago Investigations Indicate His Soldier Pals Lost\nMuch Money\nCHICAGO, Jan. 21.\u2014Four oil companies ln which Leonard Wood Jr.\nwas an officer and each of which\nIs alleged to have taken a heavy\ntoll from ex-service men and then\n\"gone out of business\" have been\nunder investigation by Assistant\nState's Attorney Milton D. Smith\nand    Barthold   Cronson.\nOne Vx-servlce man laid literally\na bushel basket full of evidence, Including some fancy yellow-backed\nstock certificates in several companies\non Assistant State's Attorney Smith's\ndesk, and the prosecutor announced\nthat regardless of state action against\nGeneral Wood's son the post office\ninspectors will be asked to go Into\nhis activities.\nBale of  Evidence\nWilliam F. Pahl. 4132 Potomac\navenue, who was battalion supply\nsergeant with the 5Jrd engineers in\nFfance, was the man who brought\nin the large bate of evidence. It\nincluded many letters and telegrams\nurging the purchase of stock, advertisements In oil papers, and literature alleged to have been written\nby Leonard Wood Jr.\n\"They got $550 of the pay I earned\nin France and saved,\" said Pahl. \"I\nwent Into it because of the connection of Leonard Wood Jr with It. I\nfigured It must be right lf he were\nIn it. Also the address I read in\nStars and Stripes, the official publication of the American expeditionary\nforce,  Inspired  my  confidence.\"\nAmong the companies with which\nthe general's son Is now known to\nhave been connected are the Craven\nOil & Refining company, the Mexla-\nBonded Oil syndicate and the Brock-\nBrazos OU syndicate. All these had\ntheir offices, according to the literature, In the same suite. 722 Nell\nP. Anderson building. Fort Worth,\nTexas.\nInquiry  Demanded\nLater young Wood became president\nof the Acme Production corporation.\nA post office and war department\ninvestigation of this company has\nbeen demanded in Washington, where\nSenntor Caraway, Democrat, Arkansas, said he had information that\nIts stock had been sold to ex-service\nmen nnd that the company had then,\nlike   the   others,   fulled.\nNot only, according to the evidence\ngiven Prosecutors Smitb and Cronson.\ndid Leonard Wood Jr, make capital\nof his napne through the name of\nhis father but he appears to have\nlent hia name for advertising purposes to other concerns of the same\nstripe  as his  companies.\nThus, ln May. 1922, ls an advertisement In the Oil Digest, his nnme is\nused as an advertisement by R. R.\nEdson, listed as the trustee of tin\nGdson Royalty & Production company\n\"Come On\" Talk\nLeonard Wood Jr. recognizee the\nvalue of scientific methods In selecting locations for monster gushers for\nhis successful company,\" says the advertisement.\n\"Mr. Wood ls satisfied with my\nwork,\" its states, \"and believes that\nhe and his associates have made a\nfortune ln Mexia-Donded Oil syndicate.\"\n\"And   then   comes   tho   'come   on'\ntalk,\" said Mr. Smith, as he read\nfrom  the advertisement:\n\" 'Now Is the time for you to Join\nforces with me and grasp the one big\nchance of a lifetime to become rich\nfrom a small Investment. Sign the\ncoupon and send in your check today.* \"\nPahl and other ex-service men from\nwhom Prosecutors Smith and Cronson say they have heard will be\ncalled in to tell their stories to the\nstate's attorney tomorrow.\nDrunken Turkeys\nand Chickens a\nClue to the Still\nPASADENA, Jan. 21.\u2014A flock of\ndrunken turkeys and chickens resulted in a raid on asserted bootleg establishments at Pasadena. At\nan early hour officers entered a\nresidence In Lamanda park where a\nyoung couple were placed under arrest. They gave their names as Don\nStevenson,    27    years    of    age,     and\nSusie  Bolimann,   25.    Both  wore  expensive clothing,\nIn   the couple's \"heme officers  said\nthey     found    an     elaborate     bootleg\nmanufacturing plant.    A  large  quantity  of  whisky   also   waa  confiscated.\nOfficers were directed to the \"moonshine  plant\"  by  the queer  actions of\na flock of turkeys and chickens which\nate  the mash  after it had  heen  used\nin   making  whisky,   It  is  said.\n!     When    officers    entered    the    resl-\nj dence   only    Miss   Bellman    was   arrested.    Officers Beal,  Thomas,  Hay-\nI den at-d Cropsey then laid in wait for\nthe    girl's    companion    who    showed\nup  at   4  a.   m.    As  the  young   man\ndrove    up    the    officers    commanded\nhim   to   surrender.     Instead   of   com-\ni plying,    Stevenson    Is   said    to    have\nI put the car into reverse, and swung\ninto  the street,  knocking  two of \"the\nofficers   to   the   ground.\nl.efore Stevenson had proceeded far\nOfficer Beal fired a shot shrough the\ncar window which missed Stevenson's\nhead by a few inches. He then\nstopped, officers declare.\nIn Police court the pair pleaded\nguilty to the charges. Stevenson was\nfined $.'00 for illegal possesslcn of\nliquor, and $200 for transportation.\nMiss Rollman was fined $300 for illegal   possession   of   UquOr.\nFoot Saved ,\nin 4 Days!\n\" Nothing hot Zam-Buk could have\ndons it,\" says Mm, A. Berryman, 190.\nJohn Street, North, Hamilton,\u2014m\ndescribing how her right fool\", 'crashed\nby a waggon wheel, waa healed. \"Tbe\nflesh was terribly bruised, blackened and\ninflamed, and I fainted away with pain.\nWhen it was quite impossible for ine to\nmove about, my husband's mother got\nme to try Zam-Buk.    It was surprising I\n\"Within TWO DAYS all swelling\nand discoloration had disappeared aafl\npain waa banished. In FOUR DAYS,\nthrough this timely use of 2am-Hul.t'l\ncould get about as usual; the iujurajl\nfoot was thoroughly healed.\"\n\/'am Unit is the power.ul amitotic\nhealer which quickly frees the akin of\ncorruption and disease and grows new\nhealthy tissue. No common ointment\nor salve can possibly campare \u2022\u25a0 irh\nZam-Buk. Get a box to-dav! 50c ah\ndealers or FREE SAMPLE for It\noostage from Zam-Buk Co.. Toronto. t\nZANBUK\nFor Healing!\nTRAD. MARK REGISTERED\nDRY FLEECY MEDICATED WOOL\n\"It's So Warm and\nComfy Mummie\"\nTV\/TANY old-fashioned remedies were effect-\n*\u00bb* ive because they recognized that warmth\nis the first human necessity. Warmth is the\nessence of life itself. Warmth relieves pain\nand prevents sickness.\nTHERMOGENE is warmth in convenient\nform. When THERMOGENE is applied to\nthe human body it generates a flood of soothing, energizing heat that penetrates through tissues and blood\nvessels directly to the affected spot\u2014giving speedy\nrelief and comfort. '\nAlways keep a package of THERMOGENE on hand.\nThis dry, convenient medicated wool is applied in a\nminute\u2014and is always ready for emergencies day or\nnight.\nRecommended by physicians and used by hospitals\ntht world ovtr.\n\u2022*\u00ab\n*+%*\n\u25a0m\nTHE THERMOGENE\nCOMPANY LIMITED\nHiywird'i HnUi   .    Enftind\nUtt Tktnufm\nMstJicftid\nWtddfng fir\nLumbago\nRK.um.tiam\nNeuralgia\nNeuriti.\nGrippe\n3ore Throat\nChut Cold.\nBronchitis\nSole Aims, hr Can\u00bb<ia: HAROLD F. RITCHIE 4 CO. Ualtad. 10 McCASJL ST, TORONTO.\nMA\n - ^a.________\n__\n Ptp\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 22,1924\nFa^e \"Rva\"\nJust the thing for house\nwear.\nChild's, 7 to 10 $1.15\nMisses', 11 to 2 ....$1.35\nWomen's, 3 to 7 .....f'l.65\nR. ANDREW & CO.\nLeaders in FootfaMon\nPING-PONG STRONG\nAT CRAWFORD BAY\nCRAWFORD BAY, Jan. 21. \u2014 The\nPing-pong elufb is golnR stronfi with\nSO members, meeting every week for\ntract ice.\nMrs. Frank Pitch of Ainsworth Is\nvisiting   Mrs.   A.   Founder.\nJ. Moore of Kaslo was in on Friday\nInspecting the reconstruction of the\nBurden bridge.\nMrs M, M. Fraser and Mrs. D.\nFisher spent a couple of days ln Nelson  recently.\nHurden & Watson are busy hauling\nlogs to their sawmill.\nConstable C. F. Olnnd of Kaslo paid\nn visit  to   the  Hay,  Friday.\nMrs. Woods of N.lson was the guest\not Mr and Mrs. A, Houghton for the\nweek-end.\t\nA Manufacturer's\nWife Who\nCooks\nA woman, whose husband is a\nrnanu*-v*turer |i n Vanoouver,\nwrites a letter of congratulation\nto us because. eh\u00ab says, we are\nproducing canned milk that is\n\"far and away the best In Canada.''\nWe know, of rouise, that Pacific\nls higher quality, but most of\nthe credit is due to the good\nmilk supplied by British Columbia dairy herds.\nPACIFIC MILK CO.\nLIMITED\nFactories   at   Ladner   and\nAbbotsford,   B.C.\nf,       I   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0! I 'I I    \\\u2014=\u2014\u2014mmmtt\u2014mmW\u2014m**azssa\u2014SMi=\u00b1\nI Kootenay and Boundary!\n*\u25a0\u25a0' '\u25a0''\u25a0'      \u2014B-\u2014\u2014\u2014m^\u2014\u2014\u2014^, ,. ,\u201e, ,\u2014..\u2014,_\nProvincial Party\nReorganizes for\nthe Windermere\nINVERMERE, B.C.. Jan. 21\u2014A public meeting was held last week to hear\nthe report of the -convention from\nJ times S. Johnston, local delegate to\nthe Provincial party convention, held\nRome time ago in Vancouver. Mr\nJohnston outlined the Conditions under which the farmers are at present\nworking,  according   to his ideas.\nThe ohalrman of the meeting strongly urged for a betterment of educational conditions and the administration of the  liquor control  aot.\nThe party was reorganised as the\nLake Windermere District association\nof the Provincial party, when the following officers were chosen: President, James 8. Johnson; vice-presidents, Peter Mitchell Stodflnrt, Humid\nR, Forster, Norman M. Marples; Secretary-treasurer, Mlsa Helen R. Pratt;\nexecutive committer\u2014James Sims of\nInvfermere. A. A. Bremner of Athalmer,\nMrs. Colin C. MacKay of Wilmer,\nHarold   E.   Forster  as  outside man.\nDRAFT PLANS FOR\nCANYON CITY HALL\nLadles'    Community    Clnb   and   United\nFarmers  Have Joint Committee;\nHoped Ready Coming rail\nCRESTON. B.C., Jan. 21\u2014At Canyon\nCity a committee of the Ladles' Community club, consisting of Mrs. T.\nHickey, Mrs. Glen Messenger and Mrs.\nt'uy Browell, has bearfl selected to act\nwith Q. E. VanAckerman, T. Hewitt\nand John Cook of the Canyon United\nfarmers, to draft plans and Ret approximate prices on the cost of building their community hall, which it is\nhoped  to have opened early next fall.\nThey have the offer of a centrally\nlocated lot nt a fair price, and the\nladles have quite an accumulation of\ncash on hand to defray the cost of\nerection.\nAt the united farmer meeting, election \u00bbof officers was deferred pending\nthe securing of certain information\nfrom the British Columbia United\nFarmers' headquarters, which will\nprobably result in Canyon local going\ni ntirel yon Its own and using its funds\nfor purely community progress, which\nwould considerably* expedite financing\nthe erection  of  the new hall.\nBOSWELL FARMERS\nDISCUSS LIBRARY\nInstitute Will  Get Quotation!  on reed\nand ^-Fertilisers;   ConpLand\nAgain President\nROKWELL. H.r. Jan. 21.\u2014The annual meeting of the Benwell Farmers'\nInstitute was held In the Memorial\nball, January 12, tho chair being taken\nby President James Coupland, when\ntbe directors* review of the last year's\noperations,    and    the    financial    state-\n! ti ent shi>wintf a small balance In hand\nj wen*   adopted.\nDirectors   appointed   for   192*   were\nI Janie* Coupland,   H.  H. Smith, K. W*l-\n1 lace, C   R.  Higgens and C. H. Bebbing-\n! ton,   and   th*   auditors   appointed   were\nj A.  Heptier and (\\  S.  Bourne.\nIt was decided to go forward with\nan   attempt    to   form   a   local   library.\nI ihe   matter  to   be   further discussed  at\n| the next   meeting.\nj     The  purchase   of  feed  and   fertilizers\n! through the institute was also Considered, and th\" secretary was in-\nstruoted  to obtain  quotations.\nFollowing tbe clo.se of the meeting,\ntho newly appointed directors held a\nmeet! ng. \u25a0 nd .1 a mee Coup la nd was reel it ted president, K. Wallace vice-\npresident, and H. H. Smith secretary-\ntreasurer.\nDouglU Sherman has left on a\nbusiness   visit   to   the   coast.\nRobert West of Btrathmore, Alta., is\na guest at .Mrs. James Counland'a\nw. V. Jackson of Creston paid a\nbusiness  visit   here   recently.\n^^Vrw dandiest\n^fdng in ike Jute\/ten.\nOU Fdlha GitM man, t.\n. th. cMdrtn.\nSmSf-rOXOCdlii\u2014*\nft) Ai, Hi ia. CuiiSa.\nOXO LIMITED\n232 Ltnolnt SL,\nOxo Beef Cubes put flavor,\nnourishment and economy\ninto your cooking. With Oxo\nCubes, yesterday's left-overs\ncan be served up in a hundred\ndelightful ways tpday.\nAs well as adding flavor, Oxo\nCubes bring the meat element\nto vegetables, strength and\nnutriment to the dish.\nWhen you buy Oxo Cubes you buy\nlb* flavor, strength, and su.ten.nc.\nol the be.t beef. All ol the ta.le\u2014\nBone of the waste of meat\nTims ol 4,1*. 50 ana IN.\nOXO\nC7oi\nCUBES\nOx* CfcecM g\u2014nwlchf\nSoften t.ti Oxo cube in witser, mix in \u25a0 little\nbutter, spread the mixture on thin ilices of\nbread, \u2022prinkle with grated cheese, add\npepper to taut, aad piece other slices ol\nbreed oa top.\nCHRIST CHURCH\nAT CRESTON HAS\nA GROWING YEAR\nAll Parish Organizations\nShow Growth; Officers\nElected\nCRESTON, B.C., Jan. 11. \u2014 At the\nannual meeting of Christ ohurOh, Creston, whloh wah held in the parish hall,\nThursday night, with the rector, Rev,\nH. Varley, in the chair, reports presented by the Junior and ladW RUllds\nshowed that both thPse organisations\nbad experienced successful years,\nwhilst the parish hall had been in\ngreater demand than ever before. The\nreport of ihe Sunday school showed an\nIncreased enrollment for the year, and\nvery satisfactory attendance at all the\ni.chool   sessions.\nChrist church finances were shown\nIn splendid condition by the treasurer,\n0. O. Bennett, while the rector's review of the year's work waa equally\nI ratifying.\nTho officers chosen for 1924 were as\nfollows: People's warden, Charles\nMoore; rector's warden, W. E. McAl-\nptnej auditor, W. S. Watson; treasurer,\nC. G. Bennett; church oommtttee \u2014\nMra H Lyne, Mrs. John W. Hamilton, Mrs. C. G. Bennett. A. A. J. Col-\nlts, Major E MaUandatne. C. B. Garland, C. B. Twig*, John W. Hamilton,\nC. G. Bennett. The lay delegates to\nsynod are Charles Moore and James\nCook.\nVotes of thanks were tendered the\norganists, Sunday school staff and the\nretiring officials.\nThe meeting was preceded by the\nusual congregational dinner, served by\nthe ladies' guild, and at the close of\ntho meeting there were a couple of\nhours of music and social  features.\nGIRLS BEAT BOYS\nIN CRESTON AREA\nIn    .411,    \"forty-three    Babies    Arrive;\nTrees Hava a Oood Moisture\n\u25a0uppl-f\nCRESTON, B.C., Jnn, 21.\u2014A total ot\n43 newcomers was reported in Creston valley during 111), according to\nthe yearly vital statistics, which have\njust been given out, and of these 24\nWere girls and 19 boys. Deaths during the year were 10, and there were\nseven marriages.\nThe weather ' report for tho year\nshows that Creston valley had one of\nits old-time moisture supplies for\n1923. The total snowfall was \u00ab6\ninches, nnd a rainfall of almost 13\ninches, accounting for a total moisture\nsupply of 20 inches. The hottest day\nof the whole year was on July 23,\nwhen the mercury hit 93 in the shade,\nand last year's coldest touch was 21\nbelow zero on New Year's eve.\nJust what a sufficiency of moisture\nnt the right time- means to small\ntrults is revealed In the export trade\nstatement for the Erlckson-Canyon\narea, where, as compared with dry\n1S22, shipping of 426 crates, the 1923\noutgo of strawberries at the some\npoint was 2474 crates. With already\nmore than a foot of snow on the\nlevel, and hardly more than nn mch of\nfrost in the ground, this district has\nlittlo to worry nbout in connection\nwith   early-season   moisture.\nKASLO HOSPITAL\nELECTS OFFICERS\nI Social Happenings\np\" In Nelson ^\n\u25a0wicky   Is   President   of   Victorian   Institution;   Year's   Work   Is\nReviewed\nKASLO. BC, Jan. 21\u2014Tbe annual\nmeeting of the Kaslo Victorian hospital was held Wednesday afternoon.\nWork of the past year ml reviewed\nand officers for the ensuing yenr were\nelected as follows: President, W. E.\nZwlcky; first vice-president. JamosAn-\nderson; second vice-president, Charles\nK. Iherwla. Rlondel; directors \u2014 H.\nOUftrlch, J. A. RlddHl. E. H. Latham,\nR.   W.   Lord,   P,   M.   Eider.\nW. II. Burgess wns appointed sec-*\nietary-treasurer   pro   tern.\nIt. Hewat | nil Ma yer-elect D. P.\nKane nre the government directors for\nthe year.\nCRESTON MASONS\nENJOY THE RADIO\nCRESTON. BC. Jan. 21. \u2014 The\nJanuary Masonic at-home was held,\nFriday night, at the home of Mr. and\nMrs S. A. Ipegta, with Mrs. James\nCompton and Mrs. W. H. Watcher assisting the hostess The scores at\nwhist were very close. Mrs. C. O.\nLodgers carrying off the ladies' prixe,\nwhile Major E. Malta nitainc made the\ngentlemen's high score. The radio\nWM working in splendid fashion, and\nnfter cards nnd refreshments, the\nIndies enjoyed an hour's listening In\nou musical programs from various\nbroadcast stations along the Pacific\ncoast.\nJ, P. Coates. electrical superintendent with the Columbia River Lumber\ncompany at Golden, is a visitor here,\nthe guest of Mr and Mrs. W. B. Martin.\nMrs. II. Lyne left at the end of the\nweek for Victoria, when' she Is attending the session of tho advisory\nboard of the provincial women's institutes, of which she ls the Kootenay-\nBoundarv   representative.\nMrs. Munro, who hns spent the past\nsix weeks in Creston, the guest of\nMr. and Mrs. W. K. Brown, left for\nher  home   In   Winnipeg,   Thursday.\nWord has just come of the birth of\na son to Mr. and Mrs. William J.\nTruscott, who nre spending the winter\nwith   the   latter's   parents   in   Vancou-\nThis column is Ming conducted\nby Miss Helen Glgot. All news of\na social nature, Including receptions, private entertainments, personal Heme, marriages, etc., will\nappear ln this column. Telephone\nMiss Glgot.\nMrs. 8. J. Towgood, 311 Silica street,\nleft yesterday morning to spend a\nweek in  Sandon.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. W. J. IS, Biker of the north\nshore entertained informally at- tea,\nSunday afternoon. The guests were\nMr. and Mrs. P. G. Morey, Master\nGuy Morey, Master John Morey, Mr.\nand Mrs. John Cartmel, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. E. Allen, Miss Doreen Allen, Mrs.\nV. B. Hawthorne and Master Bob Hawthorne.\nsee\nT* Cornell   of  Willow  Point  was   a\nshopper in town yesterday;\nsee\nGeorge   Geo   of  Crescent   Bay   spent\nyesterday in  the city,\ntet\nMrs.  J,  D.  Yeatman of Slocan City\nwas a visitor in  the city yesterday.\nMrs. L, V. Rogers' circle, Church\nBelpers of St. Saviour's church, met\nyesterday afternoon at the home of\nMrs. James McGregor, 724 Mill street.\nThose attending were Mrs. E. G.\nSmyth. Mrs. F. C. Whltehouse, Mrs.\nJ. G. Bunyan, Mrs. C. Dudley Black-\nTvood, Mrs Harold Lakes, Mrs, G. B.\nRennle, Miss Toots Miller, Miss Jean\nHunter, Miss Mary Cameron, Mtss\nJean Cameron, Miss Marguerite Adams\nand Mrs. L. V. Rogers,\nat*\nH. 8 Arnold of Montreal was a\nweek-end  guest  ln  the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nM. H. Doble of New Westminster\nwas a recent visitor In the city.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nJ. W. Traves of Cranbrook spent\nyesterday in town\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMiss J. Sandness left yesterday on\na month's holiday. While away she\nwill visit Spokane, Seattle and Portland, Ore.\n\u2022 I    \u25a0\nMrs. W. C. Mottley of Bonnington\nwas a shopper ln the city yesteiduy.\n\u2022 #   \u2022\nMiss Grace Brett of Rossland ls\n.spending a few days .in the city, the\nguest cf Mr. and Mrs. Guy Wright,\n713 Stanley street.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nL. Sawyer Hope,' assistant district\nforester, left yesterday morning on a\nbusiness  trip   to   Nakusp.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThe home of Mr. .and Mrs. A. Campbell, 824 Silica street, was the scene\nof a very merry gathering Saturday\nafternoon, when a number of little\npeople celebrated the fifth anniversary\nof the birthday of Miss Mary Duncan\nCampbell The afternoon was spent\nIr games, after which supper was\nserved. The guests were Miss Freda\nWilliamson. Miss Doreen Allen, Miss\nBelle Ramsay, Mlaa Jean Ramsay,\nMiss Margaret Myers, Miss Effle Morris, Miss Marjorie Graham. Miss Mary\nCampbell, the Misses Nellie, Agnes\nnnd Gertrude Smith, Miss Elsie Raugh.\nAllen McArthur, Davie Croy, Jack\nArgyle, Bobby Morris and Hilly Myers.\nWhie Miles were used most effectively   ln   decorating  the supper  table.\nG. O. Scarfe, geologist from Berkley,\nCal., was a week-end visitor in the\ncity, and left yesterday morning for\nSllverton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nHarry Gamble of Trail left yesterday morning via' the Great Northern\nfor Requbiic. Mich., where he was\ncalled by the serious illness of his\nfather,\n\u2022 . a   e\nC. Romano left Saturday morning\nvia tho Great Northern on a business\ntrip to Spokane.\nsen\nW. H. Steel of San Francisco is\nspending a few days ln the city.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nC. P. Ballentine of Vancouver spent\na few days  in   town  recently.\nCharles Brett of Rossland spent yesterday In the city.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nThe members of St Agnes' sodality\nof St Joseph's academy held a most\nenjoyable reception Sunday afternoon,\nin the parish hnll in honor of the new\nmembers of thnt society. Those pres-\nont were the Misses Annie Jones, Florence Jones, Florence Hufty, Theodora\nRhodes. Verna Dunbar, Grace Dunbar,\nHelen Sennlan. Marguerite Good, Mildred Wool Is. Margaret Gagnon, Grace\nBuckley, Priscilla Gelinas, Claudia\nMcLean. Kathleen Ball. Isabel Rahal,\nMargaret RahaJ. Annie Jones, Margaret Woclls, Mary MacGuire, *.'an\nBurns, Catherine Rahal. Mary Hunden,\nMona Maclean, Ruby King, Mary King,\nJune      King,     Eva     Hunden,     Frances\nVeraaveld,    Lucille    Donovan,    Marie\nNosnn, Annabelle Dunk. Keysie Doffll,\nStephanie Korolak. Sophie Maxinook.\nAnnie Murroro, Mary Arcure. Those\ninitiated into the. soiadity were Catherine Rnhal, Mary MacOulre, Mary\nHunden, Eva Hunden. Frances Varse-\nveki. Stephanie Korclnk, Ruby King,\nLucille Donovan. Marie Noxon, Jean\nRelsterer, Annnbelle Dunk, Keysie\nDoyll, Josephine Varseveld, Florence\nJones, Annie Jones, Odette Brennan.\nJean Burns, Millie Arnot, Theodora\nRhodes, Margaret Good. Grace Buckley,\nClaudia  McLean   and   Margaret  Woolls.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nM. J. Flanagan Of Montreal spent\nyesterday   ln   the  city.\nCRESTON UNION\nDEFENDS ACTION\nWOOL FABRICS\/;...\n\u25a0soari cur.* .\nfor Coatings, Suitings\nand Presses\nAlso other STAPLE GOODS at S ALE PRICES. Sales offerings of decided interest and importance, to home sewers and professional dreessmakers\nalike. \u00ab\u2022'.\"'! i'\n!\ni\n\u20ac11 Baker Street.\nI t s iw\u00bb\u00bb I\nNOVELTY HOMESPUN at $2.79\nA wonderful material for Sports\nwear. Made of pure wool yarns,\nin new plaid effeects. All 54 inches\nwide. Regular values to $4.50 yard.\nTo Clear at  $2.79\nPlain HOMESPUNS at $1.59\nPure wool goods, in the new Log\nCabin shades. Full 54 inches wide.\nRegular price $2.00 yard. January\nSale Price  S1.59\nri-VEED SUITING at $1.79\nNeat Checks and variety Tweeds,\nmade of pure wool, 54 inches wide.\nValues to $3.00 yard. - To Clear\nat ! 91.79\nWool DRESSG00DS at 98c\nAn assortment of plain Serges,\nLustres and Cashmeres, as well as\nnovelty plaids; 42 inches wide.\nRegular values to $2.00 yard. On\nSale at  98<\nTRIC0LETTE at $1.95 Yard\nBest quality, Tricolette, 36 inches\nwide. Regular price $3.50 yard.\nJanuary Sale Price  $1.95\nFRENCH SATIN at $2.98\nFull 40 inches wide, in shades of\nBlue only. Regular price $4.95 a\nyard.    Clearing at, yard ....$2.98\nSILK GABARDINE at $2.98\nExcellent-wearing pure silk Gabardine, in shades of Brown and Taupe.\nRegular price $6.50 yard. To Clear\nat S2.98\nFlannel SHIRTING at 45c Yard\nFifty yards striped Flannel Shirt:\ning, 28 inches wide. All smart patterns. January Sale Price, per\nyard 45^\nLARGE FLANNELETTE\nBLANKETS at $3.95\nExtra large Blankets, made of good\nFlannelette. Pink or blue borders.\nJanuary Sale Price, pair ....S3.95\nFancy PLAID BLANKETS\nat $6.95\nThese sold regularly at nearly double\nthis price. Good full sizes, in a\nvariety of plaids. January Sale\nPrice  _.,$6.95\nPotter's ENGLISH PRINT\nThree Yards for 98c\nBest quality English Print, in a\nrange of good patterns. Full 81\ninches wide. Sale Price, 3 yards\nfor :...._. _ OSst\nBATH ROBE CLOTH at $1.39\nYard-wide material, in pretty designs. Good weight and soft finish.\nExcellent for Dressing Gowns or\nBath Robes. January Sale Price,\nyard S1.39\nROLLER TOWELLING\nFour Yards for 98c\nGood wearing, heavy weight Roller\nTowelling. Sale Price, 4 yards\nfor  i, .\" .....98f\nDAMASK TABLE CLOTHS\nat $3.95 Each\nA real bargain in Table Cloths.\nThese come in extra heavy weight,\ntwo yards square. Very neat designs. Regular values to $7.00.\nSale Price  1 $3.95\nTurkish BATH TOWELS\nat $1.10 Pair\nHeavy quality pure white Bath\nTowels, size 20x36. Worth $1.50\npair.   Sale Price, pair $1.10\nUnbleached TOWELS\nat $1.59 Pair\nExtra heavy, large Towels, half\nbleached^with colored stripes. Splen\ndid wearing quality.\n$2.00.   To Clear at\nRegular value\n$1.59\nTABLE DAMASK at $1.79\nHeavy Table Damask, with permanent finish. Full 72 inches, wide.\nRegular $3.50. Sale Price, per\nyard J. $1.79\nMcCUNTOCK'S\nDOWN COMFORTERS\nRecognized as the best brand of\nDown Comforters. Splendidly made\nwith several qualities* of coverings.\nGood large sizes.\nRegular $15.00 Quilts at ....$12.00\nRegular $22.50 Quilts at ...$18.00\nRegular $27.50 Quilts at ...$22.00\nPhone 200\nfor\ntake\nver.\nAlgot Anderson left. Friday,\nliochostor, Minn., where h<* will\ntreatment   for a   crippled  arm.\nMrs. C. B. Twigg Ih at preaent in\ncharge of the CreMon high school.\nPrincipal Broiwson being confined to\nhis home with an Illness that may\ni-.eep him off duty until at least the\nfore   part   of   February.\nT. Harris wns a vlfdtor In Nelson\nlast molt, being called to that city by\nthe   illness of   Mrs.   Harris.\nMrs. W. S. MrAlplne pot back, Saturday, from a thr^e-weeks' visit with\nfriends In Edmonton and other Alberta\npoints, being called to the Alberta\ncr.pltal early In tho year by the death\nof  her brother.\nKaslo Board Elects\nGiegerich as Head\nfor the New Year\nsTAM-LO. B.C., Jan. ai. - At i\nwtll-att*nd*d meeilaf of the board\nof trsds, Thonday evening, ths\nfollowing offiocn wer* stMtsd for\n1M4! Pr\u00bb\u00abld\u00abm, H. OUgm-ioli;\nvfew-preildent, E, B. Latham; ho-\nr*tnrv-tr*\u00bbfiiuTl-er,  Frenk, S    Koalwrm.\nThe execntlvc Inelndra Frank V.\nAbey, Junw Anderson, D. T.\nKane and. D. T. Coifriil,     ._.__.\nOrganixatten   Bsclsts   Claim   of   Okan-\nagan   United  Growers  for Ten\nThousand  Overpayment\nCRESTON. BC. Jnn. 2t.-^-Ouy Con-\nitable, president of Creston Fruit\n(\"\u25a0rowers' union, limited, and C. B.\narland. local barrister, are at Vancouver, where the supreme court is\nhearing tho ca\u00abe of the Okanagnn\n\"\u25a0lilted Growers against the Creston\nunion? en a claim of 110.200 which it\nIs alleged was paid the Creston union\nby the O.U.O., In the sWIing of the\nunion's fruit tonnage in 1822. Decision in the case Is anxiously\nnwaited, as fn cane the Judgment is\nagainst the local growers, it will mean\nan avsessment of almost 20 cents a\nbox cm the apples shipped through the\nunion thnt year, to repay the amount\ndemanded, to say nothing of the court\ncosts,   which   will be quite expensive\nMr. Constable left a few days earlier than necessary in order to be al\nthe annunl session of tho British Columbia Fruit Cirowen*' association at\ni 'is ill in.irk, of which organization he\nis  the  Kootenay director. i\nJ. S. Clark of Cnlgary, a former\nmember of the B.C.M.P. force here, is\nrenewing acquaintance ln Creston for\na month, recuperating after an operation in a Caljrary hospital.\nMr. and Mrs Asa Flerson left,\nThursday, for CalgJiry, where they\nwill make their home. They have resided here about two years, whilst Mr.\nri-irron was in the employ of tho\nPevan jjarage, and later a member of\nthe  garage  firm  of  Staples A   Plerson\nMr. and Mra. (Corp.) Smith got bnck\na few days ajro from a short holiday\nvisit with friends at Lethbridge and\nsouthern   Alberta points.\nClifford Vance has gone to Spokane,\nwhere ho has a position, and will remain  for the next few months.\nOrln Haydan hns goge to Cranbrook, where ho takes on work as\nbrokers an on   the run  to (row's Nest\nMri     John     Rpralt..    Thursday,    had\nword   from   Ireland   of   the   unexpected\npassing of her mother.\ni    ft OomXprt-oX Hw Crsjij.o-1 dairy .wau\na    visitor    with    Ni Inn    friends    last\nweek,   returning  nn   Saturday.\n\u2014\u2014i ->\u2022- \u2014\u2014\nBoswett-Sanca\nWomen's Institute\nElects Officers\nBOSWELL, B.C.. Jan. 21. \u2014 The\nBosweU-Sanca Women's institute held\nIts annual meeting in the Memorial\nhall, Wednesday afternoon, with the\npresident, Mrs. A. Kennedy, ln the\nchair, when directors for 1924 were\nelected. They were Mrs. A. Kennedy,\nMrs. A. Mackle, Mrs. A Hepher. Mrs.\nJ. Coupland and Mrs. C. H, Bebbington.\nMrs. A. Kennedv was reelected president, Mrs. J. Coupland was elected\nvice-president, artd Mrs. A. Mackle\nwas   reelected   n-'cretHry-trcasurer,\nThe   Social   cttih   dance   In   the   hall,\nFINE CLOTHING\nWe launder fine clothing In\nthe most modern way so as to\npreserve tho material as far a*\nhumanly possible. And when\nIt Is delivered to you you'll be\ndelighted with the quality of\nIhe   work.\nPhons 1-2-8 and Ws'll CalL\nKootenay Steam Laundry\nC. A. Larson, Mgr, Nslson, B.C.\nJanuary 12, was well attended, and\ndancing was enjoyed up to midnight,\ni H. Smith carried out the dutieH of\nmaster of   ceremonies   for   tho evening.\n .\u00ab\u00ab\u2022\u2022\u2022*.\t\nBosweU Auxiliary\nHas Satisfactory\nFinancial Showing\nBOSWELL, B.C., Jan. 21. \u2014 The\nBosweU Woman's auxiliary met,\nWednesday afternoon, at the home of\nMrs. W. L. Hepher, with a good attendance. Mra K. Wallace, the president,  being in  the chair.\nThe balance sheet for the past year\nwas submitted,  showing a satisfactory\nbalance in hand, and was adopted.\nThe vice-president, Miss Holiday\nSmith, was appointed delegate to ths\nKhnual convention to be held at Trail,\nMrs. James Coupland being appointed\nas; deputy.       -\nMARION LEITCH\nTeacher   of   Piano\nTwo Lessons per week, 91,50\nSpecial   Classes   for   Beginners.\nRoom   8,   Qilker   Building\n\"The Milk With AU\nthe Cream Left In\"\nIs   not  an   Idle   boast   tout  an\nactual fact with  Milk from\nKOOTENAY   VALLKY t\nMILK CO-OP.\nOp.n I a.m. to 5 p.m.  Phon. fll\n\t\n I *\u25a0\"\"\u25a0\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 22, 1924\nAt Niagara Falls they install the\nvorld'H largest water wheel generator\nt electricity. , It everts as much\nower constantly as 319,368 men\u2014each\nftlng 100 pounds. Gradually the in-\nentors rescue man from slavery. As\nset ae machinery frees them, men'\ncm to new kinds of work\u2014steadily\n'eking a greater variety of things;\ni. other words, steadily raising the\nlandartt   of   living.\nAt 80 Years of Age\nWas Troubled With\nShortness oi Breath\nPalpitation of the Heart ,\nAnd Fainting Spells\nMrs. M. O'Connor, Whitestone,\n|>nt., writes: \"I have been troubled,\nkost of my life, with shortness of\nreath, palpitation of the heart nnd\n\u25a0tinting spells. I was advised by a\nfiend to try Milburn's Heart and\n\u25a0Jerve Pills, Irvhich I did, and at once\npund relief,\" and I have never \u25a0 had\nI really bad spell since.\nI \"I am 80 years of age and always\n;eep them In the house, and when\nfeel any symptoms of my old\nrouble coming; on all I have to do\na to take a few doses. With the\nelp of your Pills I expect to see\nnany years yet. I always recom-\nnerid them to anyone who ia suf-\nering   from   heart   trouble.\"\nMilburn's Heart and Nerve Pills\nire 60c a box at all dealers, or mailed\nllrect on receipt of price, by The\nr. Mllburn Co., Limited, Toronto,\nont.\nWOOD FAMINE\nIN TEN YEARS,\nSAYS BARNJUM\nIng only 26 per cent of the amount\nestimated, t?Consequently I have snld,\nand I repeat, that one Is obliged to\nignore these statistics If one wishes\nto arrive at an accurate understanding of Just how little timber, commercially   available,   remains   tn   Canada.\ntho law but the practice In Sweden\nand other Scandinavian countries.\nPartially Manufacture Anyway\nThere is no \"confiscation\" involved in the proposal to require\nall pulpwood grown In Canada Ho be\nput through at least one process of\nmanufacture before being exported.\nSuch a regulation would not dispossess any fc>rest owner of his holdings;    It   would   only   regulate   their\nTimber,    un'ike    minerals,    Is    all\nabove ground.    There  is  no  mystery\n; or secret  about it.    It does  not  re-      \u201e , \u201e\t\n. quire an expert to determine betweenj uiiii-jation,   and   any   owner   of   tlm\nj burned over, scrub, muskeg and stump j per   lands   in   Canada   today   who   la\nland and green pulpwood areas.   Take' not   willing   to   utilize   the   wood   in\na  trip  along  any  railway  ln   Canada,: Cantftfa'   could   dispose   of   his   hold-\n\u201e!flnd   t^vel   any   river   as   far   as   ltsl'ings   at   a   handsome   profit.\nMlllt KMtrirt fllHinir Aft WpiI ' l,I>pPr   rpa(,heR.   th^n   plot   in   on   your!      Now   that   th*   erection   of   a   suffl-\nIUUS1 MBiriCl V Ull 111 If d\u00bb TTWl|map   (he   iand  devold   of  anv   timber ; dent   number   of   new   ptilp   mills   ls\nTAKES LIFE ON\nGRAVE OF MATE\nas Practicing Conservation Otherwise\nDanvar     Woman      Whoaa      Husband\nBurned  Himself on   Pyre  Follows     .\nHim  After Seven   Years\nDENVER, ..\\tn. 17.\u2014Mrs. Oni-fle\nSawyer. 54 years of age, shot herself to death in Crown Hill cemetery on the grave of her husband,\nThomas   Sawyer,   who   burned    hlm-\nSawyer, and a sister, Mrs. Sawyer j m the hcspftal in danger ot lading\nwas born in Marshalltown, Iowa, and j both legs, and certain to lose all her\nhad been tt resident of Colorado; toes, and her husband Is held by ths\nfor   35   years. j police   on   a   charge   of   ill-treating   her\n  \u2014  ; bv   forcing her   to  flee   Into  the  wood*\non New Year's Eve, and remain there,\nshoeless and half-clothed, for hours,\nuntil  both feet were  frown.\nMrs. Kumond Routtn, aged 33, wife ,\nof * a farmer living near Hherbrooke, i\nQue.,   und   mother of  thrt'e  children,   is i\nALL PULPWOOD SHOULD\nBE MANUFACTURED HERE\n\"Vetted Interests\" of States\nCome Second to Canadian Interests\nMakei\nYour\nMind\nI Ts*%      t0 Preserve\nUp your health\n\u2014your best\nasset for\nmaking life\nsuccessful.\nGood digestion is all-\nimportant. The best\nway to insure it is\niTo Take\nBeecham's Pills. When the\ndigestive organs fail, nutrition is interfered with;\nblood is tainted, nerves\nsuffer, headaches and\nminor ailments multiply.\nA reliable cleansing,\ncorrective agent that acts\nquickly and with highly\nsatisfactory results is\nand see what you have left. Then | assured to provide a market for atf' self to death seven years ago\nfigure %p the total cut for home con-' available pulpwood In Canada, the \"sacrifice to the Lord\"\nsumption, not of five years ago but people will demand the reason for;, Tin going the same way Tom\nof today; then take your exports, not any further delay by the government did Be K^d to Vera m< Lta\"\nfor a year ago but for 1923. Next* in compelling the manufacture of air Mrs &wver said t<T he? nother\ntake your Insect, fungi and fire 0f this, the most rapidly disappear-. J}\u2122\" Sie WarHck 1% W&tS\nlosses and offset your annual growth ing mater.al supply In Canada, so that Eh, \u2122Q\u00ab tvZ L,t 7.L l\\,'B\"\nwith the loss from wind, and you I the Canadian peop e may at last \u25a0 str\u00abt- ?*\u2022\" 8he left the house\nwill be appalled at the result. Bear \\ derive the full benefit of their own:[fa \" ef, u * \u25a0_ the, \"H .,\nIn   mind   ,ln   f gurlng,   how   long   the i devastation IMr8-     Warrick    had    heard     similar\nremaining stnnd will last.    You  must! wilt  Affect   Agriculture I her  daughter,  and   paid   no   attention\na'so add  the average annual   Increase.     As   1   have   repeatedly   stated   and!t0   them.\nln consumption, as well as the av- | now reiterate, the loss of our forestR Mrs. Sawyer procured a revolver\nerage Increase In destruction, for, will not only involve the practical'an(-* went to the cemetery. She\njust so long as we continue present [ stoppage of our pulp and paper and I seated herself on the grave of her\nmethods   of   operating   nnd   exploiting jail   other   wood-using   industries   but   husband.      From    a    small    handbag\nour forests just so long will our\nalarming losses continue to increase\nin an adverse ratio.\nPulp  Consumption\nIn a statement, \"Canada's Pulpwood Resources,\" Issued by the\nCanadian Pulp & Paper association,\nit la estimated that the annual overage Increase In consumption of\npulpwood in Canada ls lf>.4 per cent,\nwhich in 10 years' t'me will mean\nan annual consumption of 3,000,000\ncords, or three times the quantity\nconsumed ln 1922, without taking the\nvolume exported Into account.\nThe rldlculous'y childish prattle\nconcerning interference with \"vested\nrights\" in connection with making\nthe beet use of our forest resources\nIs pure balderdash. The time Is not\nonly here but ls long since past when\nwe should have limited the cutting\nto the amount of the net annual Increment even for our own Industry.\nThis policy Is being practiced in\npractically every other country dependent in any measure on forest\nresources except Canada. Even In\nthe United States, which is notoriously\nprofligate in the use of its forests,\ncutting on all publicly owned lands\nls under government regulation, while\nin New York state cutting for any\npurpose whatever in state forests has\nbeen   totally   prohibited.        >\nPILLS\nSold evsrtrrv-here la\n\u25a0IflsBalaal\u2014T Me die in, in\u00ab'ncV,V.-* \u25a0>.\nTo  the  Editor of The Dally News:\/*\nSt\u2014Despite   the   great   amount   of\npublicity   devoted   by   the   press   the\npast   year  or   two   to   the   subject   of\nforestry   and   forest    depletion,    very\nfew yet fully realize how critical the\nsituation really is that ls confronting   Canada   today.     Even   were   the\ngovernment to adopt every wise .measure    that    has    been    suggested    for\nforest conservation, which,  of course.\nls    entirely   Improbable,    Canada    will\nstill   be   faced   with   a   wood   famine\nwithin 10 years, regardless of whether\nfire   Is   kept   out   of the   remaining\nyoung growth  and regardless of  how\nmany  seedlings we  may  plant ln  the\nmeantime.     A   new   crop   cannot   be\nproduced   In  time  to  provide  for   the\nenormous and Increasingly heavy demand   that   is   being   made   on   our\nsmall   remaining   wooded   area.     Our\nforest   fire   losses   are   away   beyond\nany   figures  given   to  the  public.\nIt   Is   useless   for   propagandists   for\nAmerican    interests    to   endeavor    to\nhoodw'nk  the people.    The cold facta\nare   perfectly   apparent   to   everyone\nwho travels across Canada, either  by\ntrain,    steamer    or    automobile.      As\nfar as the eye can reach the devastation   and   lack  of  forest   growth\nIs    perfectly    obvious    to    the    most\ncusual   observer.    As   for   the  remote\nsections, where railroads do not penetrate,   the   fact   that   mere' poles   are\nbeing   cut   in   these   areas   at   such\ngrent distances that it takes two and\nthree   years   to   make   the   drive   to\nthe    mills    proves    cone usively    that\nwe  are   now   largely   operating  along\nthe  very  fringe of our  last  stand  of\nwood.\nResources Overestimated\nThe   fact    that   governmental    statistics  in regard to the forest wealth\nof   Canada   compile   in   the   past   are\npractically   worthless,   being   at   beat\nlittle more than guesses, is frankly\nconceded by the government officials\nthemselves. A set of such statistics,\nIssued this year by the forestry\nbranch  of the department  of  the  in- . -\nterlor for the information of the Em-j was grown in the Interests of the\npire forestry conference, differs ma- I whole people is not confiscation but\ntertally from a similar set of sta- | merely sound regulation which is\ntistics Issued only two years earlier j amply justified by Canadian prece-\nby the officials ot the conserva- i dent and by universal practice, Any-\ntlon commission of Canada. Neither one acquiring property realizes that\nof thaw statements is based, except I as an owner he must submit to\nto a small degree, upon actual In-1 such laws and regulations as may\nventorles nf the standing timber, and, he deemed necessary for the public\nneither takes sufficient account of we fare. There arc American court\nthe wood lost through fires and! decisions to the effect that the state\nother destructive agencies. Many, may prescribe that a landowner can-\npast estimates have fallen down very j not cut any tree on his privately\nmaterially when the areas have been\nactually cut out. some\nseriously affect our agriculture\nwell, since crops cannot be grown\nin a country devoid of trees. Wheat\ncannot be raised In a desert, a truth\nemphasized by the fact that some of\nthe world's greatest deserts today\nwere once richly forested areas and\nyielded crops but are now incapable\nof bearing crops of any kind, a con.\ndition toward which Canada la ln-\nev.tably heading as rapidly as possible. Due to tho same cause the\nloo rapid depletion of our forests,\nour water powers are also decreas.ng\nin efficiency from year to year,\nwhile the navigation of our rivers\nIs becoming more difficult every\nseason.\nThe entire great pulp and paper\nIndustry ef Canada is based on the\nembargo on crown land wood. If\nsuch wonderful results followed from\nthki wise legislation, why such hesl-\ntat.on on the part of the government\nto go a step further and prohibit the\nexport   of   fee   land   wood,\nI  ask  the reader to pause when  he\nreads these incontrovertible facts.    Of\nwhat   use   is   a   for   our   best   forest\nauthorities to  keep calling the attention  of  the  public   to  these  alarming\nfacts if It results in no action?   Pages\nof   written   warnings   do   not    plant\n| one   tree   nor   extinguish   one   forest\nj fire.     What   Canada   needs   today   is\nI action,    and    no    action    is    possible\nI until those In authority can be  made\nNo cry of \"vested  rights\"   ls  heard i to  realize  their  responsibility   and   to\nexcept where American mnnied in\nterests are concerned. Apparently no\none ln our government fs constrained\nto speak for the \"vested rights\" of\nthe Canadian people. The government of the province of Nova Scotia\ntook over all water powers belonging to the people of that province\nwithout any compensation. No cry\nof confiscation or the Invasion of\n\"vested rights\" was raised in their\nbeha f, even by those Nova Scotians\nwho nre now so vociferous in their\nappeals for protection for the so-\nrailed interests of foreign despoilers\nof  our forests.\nStipulating that wood must be manufactured   in   the   country   where   it\ngive the countrv the lead it now lacks\nFRANK J   D.  BARNJUM.\nMontrea', Que., January 14,  1924.\nWOODCLASSES\nOPPONENTS AS\nJUNGLEPEOPLE\nPolitical Bossism Rising From\nMiasmal Swamps to Attack Farmer Government\nshe removed the revolver and the\nsmall Bible which he mounted his funeral   pyre.\nBible In Hand\nA few minutes later, as a funeral\nprocession passed near by Mrs.\nSawyer put the muzzle of the revolver to her temple and fired. She\nfell lifeless upen the grave, the revolver in one hand and tho Bihle\nclutched  In the  other.\nMrs. Sawyer, It was said, had\nnever recovered from the shock of\nher husband's tragic death. He had\nbeen an atheist, according to friends,\nbut In 1918 he was converted, and\nshortly after he burned him\u00ab\"'f ta\ndeath 11 miles east of Castle Rock.\nUnderlined verses In Chapter XXHt of\nGenesis in his Bible Indicated the\ncause of his sacrifice.    These verses:\n\"And Abraham took tho wood rf\nthe burnt offering and laid It upon\nIsaac, his son. and be took the fire\ntn his hand and a knife; and they\nwent both of them together.\n\"And Isaac spake unto Abraham,\nhis father, and said, 'My father,\" and\nhe said, 'Here am I, my son.' and\nhe said 'Behold the fire and the\nwood, but where is the lamb for\na    burnt    offering?'\nMother    of    Hero\n\"And Ahraham said, 'My son. Cod\nwill provide himself a lamb for a\nburnt offering,' so they went, both\nof them together.\n\"And they came to the place\nwhich Ood had told of. and Abraham built and altar there and laid\nhe wood In order and bound lnau'\\\nhis son, and laid him upon the\naltar,   upen   the   wood.\"\nMrs. Sawyer was tbe mother of\nPatrolman Leslie Sawyer, who was\ndecorated in February, 1921. for\nbravery und*|r fire, Sawyer was\nattacked near his home by two\nhighwaymen. He shot one of them\nto death and the other was captured. Sawyer incurred a slight\nwound. .\nBesides her son and mother, Mrs.\nSawyer    lcftves    a    daughter,     Vera\nJANUARY\nClearance Sale\nI owned   land  except  by  permission   of\nproduc- the  state, and  that, too.  Its  not  only\nA New Ford Body Type\n-The \u00a3u30?\u00ab Sedan\nThe Ford Motor Company ol Canada, Limited, announces a new\ntwo-door type closed car which will be known as the Tudcr Sedan.\nIt diSers materially in seating arrangement from the four-door tyspe\nrecently announced.   It is also lower in price.\nAmong the other noteworthy features of this latest Ford model is\nthe coach type body\u2014never before available in a low priced car.\nThe Ford Motor Compan y of Canada, Limited, is considerably\nbehind in its manufacturing schedule on this type of body. Consequently we are not able to state definitely when this model will\nbe on display in our showrooms.   Watch for its appearance.\nNew Ford Price*\nFordor, $895\nCoupe, $665 Tudor, $755\nElectric SJirl'ng and I..fhUng Equipment SjirularJ or, Ummmockm.\nTouring Car, $445       Runabout, $405        Truck, $495\nEhcttic Stort.nf dnd Lighting Equlpmrrt $85.00 vriid.\nAllPriCT.1. o b. Ford, Ontario.   CovCTnroml Tatt. eim.\nA ll Ford models may be obtained through\nihe Ford Weekly Purchase Plan.\n-CARS \u2022 TRUCKS \u2022 TRACTORS-\nNELSON AUTO CO.\n113 Baker Street, Nelson, B.C\nFORD    MOTOR   COMPANY   OF    CANADA,    LIMITED,    FORD.    ONTAMO\n.Congoleum and Linoleum Rugs\nCongoleam Rags\n6' x 9', for  88.50\nT 6\" x 9', for 810.50\n9' x 9', for  813.50\n9' x 10' 6\", for 816.50\n9' x 12', for  817.50\nOne    slightly    damaged,\n'   9' x 10' 6\", for... 812.50\nlinoleum Rugs\n6' x 9', for  89.85;\n7' 6\" x 9', for ....813.T5\n9' x 10' 6\", for aie.25\nInlaid Rugs, suitable for,\noffice floor coverings:\n6' x 8' 2\", for ....818.501\n6' 6\" x 9' 10\", for....824.50!\nMats and Rugs\nAXMINSTER RUG\u201426\" x 63\". d\u00bbr QP.,\nRegular $7.00.    For  $D\u00bb*jO\nAXMINSTER RUNNER\u2014Suitable for hall; 3' x 9\".\nRegular price $30.00. (\u00a390 7P\",\nFor   ...  fPsUsitt I tl\nREVERSIBLE MAT\u201427\" x 54\". <J\u00bbQ H\u00a3\nRegular $4.25.   For  \u00abPO. I O\nWILTON RUGS\u201427\" x 54\". <PQ JTA\nRegular   $10.00.    For    \u00abpO.\u00abIU\nWILTON RUGS\u201436\" x 63\". <\u00a31 0 7f-\"\nRegular $15.00.    For  *4>1^.I\u00abJ\nBIG  ASSORTMENT OF  LARGE RUGS\u2014Axminster,\nWilton, Brussels and Tapestry  Discount of 15%\nWe have them in all sizes.\nStandard Furniture Co.\nCOMPLETE SOUSE FURNISHERS - NELSON, B.C.\nEDMONTON, Jan. 18.\u2014In hlB ad-\ndri-sn to the AHhTta T'nlted Farmers*\noonvantlon horf J'rcnldent H. W. Wood\nfriarte   some   f m'it i' ;i 1   rpf err noes.\nHo dacUrad that during the Post\nyear \"polltioal Ii'issIhui haa reared\nUr head from the miasmal swamplands of political partyism and issued\na plead.ng call to the free citizenship of Alberta to return to the\ninfest \u00abm] domain.\" Little heed had\nbeen paid to 'the call. The host\nof Alberta citizens who in 1921\nbroke away ftom \"the thraldom of\nparty bossism\" that for generations\nhad \"herded tho massoa of citizena\nin party slave pens\" had no intention of voluntarily returning to party\nservitude. \"Leadership was scarce,\nand shyor than it was scarce,\" he\ncontinued. \"The mighty uprising collapsed, and about all that is left is\na blind drummer or two.\" In the\nvicious assault that had been launched\nagainst the Oreenfield government\nfacts had been perverted, difficulties\ndefined as wrong-doing and \"criticism prostituted to vicious Indictment.\" No effurt had been spared\nto discredit the government In tho\nminds   of   the   people.\n\"The whole attempt,\" continued Mr.\nWood, \"waa evidently staged because\nthe present government does not represent the reactionary forces that\nhave controlled the political party\n\u25a0Patau from the beginning. No sane\nperson would claim that tho present\ngovernment Js perffM-t, or that it has\nnot made mlstnk.es; and no sane\nperson expected perfection. This government represi-nts the effort of the\npeople In the coiutrol of thedr own\npolitical activities and it la the\ngovernment's first experience. While\nthis is true, tho government haa no\ncause to be ashamed of honest comparison with any which has preceded\nit, and the peop'e have much cause\nto be encouraged by their effort.\n* \u2022 \u2022 Ha who criticizes for the\npurpose of creating confusion in the\nminds of the people and to retard\nthe r efforts in the development of\nhigher and more efficient citizenship\nis an enemy to the people. He is\ntrying to confuse, and unworthy of\nthe rights of citizenship. He is a\nspiritual cmfusionist and a social reactionary.\"\nln reality tho reactionaries were\nwagfnt* war against tho new system\nas represented in the Alberta government, saiid Mr. Wood. The organized farmers had built a syt*tem\nwhereby they believed they could\nelimln.'ite poltlcal control by profess ona 1 po kUclans; nnd this, they\nbelieved, would remove ono of the\ngreatest barriers to real social progress. Democracy could never hope to\nsucceed so ong as its forces were\nled and controlled \"by the servants\nand emissaries of autocracy.\" He be-\nlJov\u00abd that both the new system and\nthe people would stand the test of\na   hustalned   democratic   fefort.\n\"The United Farmws of Alberta,\"\nMr. Wood concluded, \"are trying to\ncontribute to the great work of social\nreorganization. They have moved ln\npolitical reorganization and they are\nmoving in economic reorganlation.\"\n\"Are  You   Sick of Jungle Chatttr?\"\n\"So far they have aucce-edod as\nwell as they had njiy reason to\nhope. They have demonstrated what\ncan be done ln the vigor of their\nyouth, bu't not what oan be accomplished by the strength of developed\nmaturity. Will they go on In that\ndevelopment guided by sanity and\nwisdom, working, achieving, until\ntheir efforts are rewarded with success; or will they retire from the\nfield exhausted by 'their first effort,\ngrumbllngly but submissively to resume the burdens of servitude, hoping that eventually some philanthropic autocracy will lift the burdens from their shoulders and set\nthem  free?\n\"If you cannot withstand the jungle\nchatter of the Jungle people you\nwill turn  back to the jungle and add\n?our chatter to the Jungle confusion.\nf your souls have slacked at that\nchatter and are filled with a sincere desire for harmony a nd order\nyou will keep steadfastly to your\ncourse.     Tha   choice   ia   youxa.\"\n~Jlnd in Life i Evening Time\nIf a lamp could vvrile its story, what a story that would be.\n\"I came when tlie home was young,\" it would say, \"1'nder my\nrays he and she made their lirst family budget.\n\"I helped the youngsters with their lessons, smiling down at them;\nin a corner I twinkled oxer wedding gilts, and shed my blessing on the\nmarriage of the daughter of the house.\n\"And now, when the children are gone, and the home is quiet once\nmore I still am here. There are no regrets where books, and light and\nlove abide.\n\"The afternoon of life has its own great compensations.\n\"And at evening time it shall be light.\"\nGo to the F.cli.nn Mazda Lamp Agent in your neighborhood. Ho know, just which lamp, will give the be.t lighting effect with atery fixture in your horn*\u2014and at tha\nlowe.t co.t.\n\"Mads in Canada\"'\nYOUR MAZDA AGENT\nHowe Electric Co.\nPHONE 630\nOPERA HOUSE BLOCK\nP.O. BOX\n 1\nPsge Eigfif\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS. TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 22, 1923\nMarkets h* Finance\nINDUSTRIALS ARE\nMUCH IN FAVOR\nMlfe-Maed     atooks     Ar*     \"Thorite!\nWith   B\u00abT*n;   Oils   Strong,   Bat\nMoto-n   Weak\nKKW YORK, Jan. 21\u2014Special buv-\nIng of high-priced industrial speeial-\nlles featured today's irregular Frtock\nmarket. Most of the standard industrial shares moved within narrow limits, strength of the domestic oil share****\nbeing counteracted hv t*\u00bb weakness of l\nthe  motors and   chemicals.\nCom Products was nu\u00bbhed up 10\npoints, to 170%. the highest nrice ever\nrecorded, on what was wldelv rep-resented a\u00bb a \"run In\" of the short interest. General \"Electric Jumped nearly\nR points, to 211V on buying at-\ntnlntted to a well-known Wall street\nspeculator, snd said to be bnsed on expectation of an extra disbursement.\nTop prices were shaded st the close.\nBear traders were again nctlve In the\nstock market, entering th*dr attacks\non Studebaker. Baldwin and the Pnn-\nAmertcan Issues. Paldwln was hammered down to 121*4, but It snanpfd\nback later to 183. a net git In of H\non   the   dav.     Studebaker   broke   below\nRar    for    the    first    tlmp    since    \\mM\n\"nvember,   and   then   rallied   to  100*4,\noff 1%.\nCall money ruled unchanged at 4 p**-r\ncent Time loans were made at 4K\nper cent.\nTotal stock sales were 8 9 S, SOO\nshares.\ndollar   Qnrtatlone\nHigh    Low    Close\nf\". P. R      147%\nChlno              17 V\".\nc u. * fit p. ..    ^*%    I'm    i\u00abx.\nr\u201en.   Motors          IS 14% 14 Ti\nInt.    Marine     ...      SI 30*4 30%\nInt.    Nickel      IS\nMo.   Pac.          11%     11% 11%\nMo.   Pac.   pfd.    ..      31%      31% 31%\nM'ami      22%\nTierce   Arrow    ..      10%      10% 10%\n10*%\n100%\n13%      12% 12%\nFARMERS HOLDING\nCORN FOR A RISE\n*baek of Keoelpts  Makes Cora Karket\nTarn Up; Steadies Wheat\nCHICAGO, Jan. 21. \u2014 Evidence multiplied today that farmers are holding\nout for higher prices on com. Largely\nas a result, something of an upturn\nIr. the corn market took place, and had\na steadying effect on wheat and oats.\nCorn closed firm at the same aa Saturday's finish to %o to %c higher,\nMay 78Hc to 78%c to 78%c, with\nwheat unchanged to %o to %c lower,\nMay 31-08 to 3108; to $1.08%, July\n$1.06%. Oats varied from %c off to\n%c up: and provisions unchanged to\n10c higher. <J\nSterling Exchange\nNEW YORK. Jan. 21. \u2014 Sterling exchange easy at $4.18% for 60-day bills\n\u25a1 nd   $4.20%   for demand.\nBar stiver\u2014Foreign, 63c.\nCanadian dollars\u2014 97 7-16c.\nFrance\u2014Demand.   4.40c.\nLire\u2014Demand,    4.33 %c.\nMarks -- I>mand, .000000000023c;\ncobles. .000000000023c.\nNelson\n$4-31%.\ncounter    rate    on    sterling,\nCanada Bonds\nStudebaker        104%     95'*    lOOtt\nV.   S.   Su-el         100%      99%    lOOVt\nWilly.      -\nMontreal List\nMONTREAL. Jan. 21. \u2014 Trading on\nthe local stock market today continued\nactive, but there was generally a\nsofter tone. Montreal Power led In\nactivity, and closed at 146%. a loss\nof %. after selling at the new high\nof 148%. Laurentide was down U, at\n\u2022\u00ab%.\nOntario Steel was the strong feature\nof the list, closing at 45. n net gain\nof 2 points. The greatest loss was in\nSt. Maurice Psper. which was off 1%\npoints, at 110%.\nOther price changes took in Abitlbl,\noff %: Canada Cement, off %; National Breweries, off %: Shawinlgnn,\noff a point; Tucketts. off 1; and Win-\nripeg  Railway,   off   1%.\ninion Live Stock\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 21, \u2014 Receipts In\nthe yards today totalled 1000 cattle,\n1100  hogs and   20  sheep.\nSteers\u2014Choice. $5.50 to $6; fair to\ngood,   $4.50   to   $5.25.\nButcher heifers\u2014Choice, $5 to $5.25;\nfair  to  good.   $3.50   to  $4.75.\nButcher cows \u2014 Choice, $3.75 to $4;\nfair  to go-d.   $3   to $3.50.\nBulls\u2014Good.   $2   to   $2.25.\nOxen\u2014Good.   $3  to   $*! 50.\nStocker steers \u2014 Choice. $3 50 to\n$\u00bb.75;   fair  to  good,   $2 50  to  $\".25.\nStocker heifer*\u2014Choice, $?75 t|-\n11.25;   fair   to good,   $2   to $2.50.\nFe**der steers \u2014 Choice, $4 to $4.25;\nfair to good.   $3   to  $3.75.\nCalves\u2014Choice. $7 to $8.\nHogs \u2014 Selects. $7.86'-i; heavies,\n$115;   light*   and   feeders,   $6.65.\nLambs-\u2014Fair   to   go-cd,   $9   to   $11.\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, Jan. 21.\u2014Toronto jobbing\nfresh specials, 60c to 65c; extras, 55c:\nfirsts, 50c: storage extras, 42c; firsts,\nMc\nMontreal \u2014 Fresh extras. 59c to 60c;\nfirsts, 48c to 50c; pullet extras, 40c\nalorage extras.   40c;   firsts.   45c.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Lower; dealers quoting\ncountry shippers, delivered extras. 45c\nto  50c;   firsts.   40c.\nSaskatchewan\u2014Receipts light, dealers quoting delivered extras, 50c;\nfirsts 40c.\nCalgary dealers quoting delivered extras,   37c;   f'rsts.   35c.\nBritish Columbia \u2014 Firm; extras,\nI5c:   firsts,   33*   country   points.\nNew   York\u2014Unchanged.\nChicago \u2014 Fresh firmer, spot. 40%;\nfutures   unchanged.\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 21. \u2014 Dominion\nwar bond prices:\nWar loans \u2014 1925, $100.25 bid; 1931,\n$100.50   bid;   1937,   $102.80  bid.\nWar loan renewals \u2014 1927, $101.50\nbid;   1982,   $102.40 bid,   $102.50  aaked.\nVictory loans \u2014 1.924, $100.55 bid,\nX100.60 asked; 1927, $102.80 bid; 1933.\n$105 50 bid. $105.60 asked; 1934. $102.70\nbid. $102.80 asked; 1937, $107.75 bid,\n$108 asked.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YORK, Jan. 21. \u2014 Foreign\nbar   silver,   63a\nCopper quiet; electrolytic, spot and\nnearby,   12Hc;   futures.  12%c  to   12%c.\nTin \u2014 Firmer; spot and nearby,\n$49 50;   futures.   $49.\nIron \u2014 Steady; Nn.- 1 northern,'$24\nt.> $24.50; No. 2 .northern, $23.50, to\n$23; No.  2 southern, $21   to $22.'\nLead\u2014Steady;  spot,  $8  to $M5.-\nZinc\u2014Quiet; But St. \/ Loriis, ..spot\nand   nearbv,   $6.50.\nAntimony\u2014Spot.   $10.25. \u2022'_\u2022, ,.\nAt Lond.cn \u2014 Standard copper, spot,\n\u00a361 10s; futures. \u00a362 im] electrolytic,\nspot,   \u00a367   Ml   future-*.   \u00a367  15s.\nTin   \u2014   Spot.   \u00a3252   5s;   futures,   \u00a3253\n10s.\nLead\n2s 6d.\nSpot.  \u00a332\n6d; futures, \u00a332\n-Spot,   \u00a335   12s  6d;   futures,   \u00a334\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS. Jan. 21. \u2014 Flour\nunchanged. Family patents, $6.20 to\nIC 50  per barrel.\nHran\u2014$2.- 50  to $27.\nWheat \u2014 No. I ncrthern, $1.12% to\n$i 16%.\nCorn\u2014No.   3   white,   TO^c  to  70%c.\nO-its\u2014 No.   3   white,   42%c  to 42%c.\nFlax \u2014No.   1,   $2.r,5  to $2.57\n -\u2022\u00bb.\t\nVancouver Stocks\nKASLO HOSTESSES\nENTERTAIN FRIENDS\nKASLO. B.C, Jan. 21\u2014Mrs. Ernest\nBacking entertnlned Wednesday and\nThursday afternoons at the tea hour\npi her ccssy n*-w bungalow 0\" erlook-\ning the lake front, the guest of honor\nbeing Mrs. Hacking Sr., of Llstowel,\nOnt. Among the invited guests were\nMrs. H. Glegerlch, Mrs. Goldsmith,\nMra. D. B. Htubbs. Mrs. Power, Mrs.\nAllen AnderAn. Mrs. English, Mrs.\nLobert Hendricks, Mrs. Kirk, Mrs. D.\nBarclay. Mra. Hunter. Mr*. G. Rtott,\nMrs. Milne, Mrs. Exter, Mrs. D. P.\nKane. Mra. O. 8tra.thw.rn. Mrs. W. H.\nKurgess. Mrs W. E. Zwlcky, Mrs.\nCampbell, Mm. R. Hewat. Mrs. Klrk-\npatrick of Ne'fton, Mrs. Hlllman, Mrs.\nBead, Mlsa Agnes Cockle, Miss Kathleen Strathearn. Mlas Glegerlch and\nMiss Laura   Gfegerich.\nMrs. H. Exter was a hridge tea hostess, Friday afternoon, a* her home on\nOescent road. Tbe guests were Mrs.\nWilliam Cockle, Mrs. Chester, Mrs.\nHunter, Mrs. William Dunn, Mrs.\nKirkpatrlck of Nelson Mrs. E. Hacking. Mrs. Hacking Sr., Mrs. J. W.\nPower. Mrs. H. Glegerlch. Mrs D. B.\nStuhbs, Mrs. W. E. Zwlcky. Mrs. O.\nStrathearn, Mra W. H. Burgess, Mrs,\nAllen Anderson, Mrs. M. C. Campbell,\nMrs. William Engltah, Mrs. Kirk, Mrs.\nDouglas Barclay, Mrs. Goldsmith, Mrs.\nRobert Hendricks, Miss Betty Whitman, Mlse Ijaura Glegerlch, Miss Margaret Glegerlch, Miss 1. ihleen Strathearn. Miss Haael Whittaker, Miss\nLos\/lse Hendricks, Miss Agnes Cockle\nand Miss Rose Exter.\nKASLO NOTES\nKASLO. B.C., Jan. 21. \u2014 Col. H. H.\nArmstead returned to the city after\nspending a few days In Spokane and\nl'orthill, Idaho.\nW. B. Strathearn of Kootenay Bay\nBpent the week-end in Kaslo visiting\nwith  friends and  relatives.\nMrs. H. Hartin and Master David\nHartln spent a few days ln Nelson,\nthe guests of Mrs.  Gilbert  Hartin.\nRev. W. Simpson, B.A., of Calgary,\nheld services in St. Mark's churoh.\nSunday. While in the citv Mr. Simpson wns the guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nRonald   Hewnt.\nAfter skatin-f, Saturday evening.\nMiss Margaret Glegerlch entertained\na  few young folk  at her studio.\nF. A. Barberls of Nelson was a\nvisitor,  Wednesday.\nA. Tapinella of Princess Creek Is\nspending a few days here.\nLawrence Cody left, Tuesday, for\nTrail,   where he will  spend  the winter.\nMr* A. T. Garland spent a few days\nin Nelson, the guest of her mother,\nMrs. Jennie  Harris.\nThomns Bond has left for the coast\nand will sttend the remaining winter\nmonths with  his son.\nMr. and Mrs. John McQueen of New\nGlasgow, N.S. nre the guests cf Mr.\nond  Mrs.   A.   McQueen.\nW. J. E, Biker of Nelson was a\nKaslo   visitor   during  the  week.\nW. MacDonald nnd A Hanson Vere\nNelson visitors  last week.\nMiss Elinor Hr.v'ley of Grand Forks\nIs the guest of her slater, Mrs. Wallach.\nMrs. Jean Rrochicr left for Calgary\nlast week * She w\"t visit her daughter,   Mrs.  H.  J.  Barbet.\nPresbyterian Boys in\nCreston Elect Officers\n'\u2022&\nCRESTON. B.C, Jan. 21.\u2014The Stand-\nfust Boya* club, In connection wtth\nIrerbyterlan church work, had Its\nrnnual meeting on Saturday afternoon,\nal which the following officers were\nselected for 1924: President, Als-xan-\nder Henderson; vice-president, Eric\nMartin; secretary, Harold Spears;\ntreasurer, James Cherrlngton Jr.\npe rintendent, Mrs, J. W, Dow,\nclub had a membership, of 14 last\nyear, but an iacrease ls assured for\n1924j The boys have two Saturday\nirieetlngs each month; the first for\nstudy, and the second for work; some\nvery satisfactory contributions being\nmade in   1923  to good  causes.\nFollowing a week of prayer preparatory for a two-weeks' evnngellstlc\ncampaign, Creston MethodIsta- and\nPresbyterians united in worship at the\nb its>r church yesterday, and will continue united effort, week nights and\nSabbaths, until February 3. This\nweek Rev. B. C. Freeman, Methodist\npastor at Cranbrook. and chairman of\nthe East Kootenay district, will be the\nspecial speaker each evening, and\nthroughout next week, commencing\nwith the Sunday night Besslon. Rev.\nW, E. McKay. Presbyterian \u00abpastor at\nCreston,   will   be   the  special   preacher.\nTWENTY-THREE SHOE\nMANUFACTURERS FAIL\nPast Year a  Difficult One for Trade,\nDeclaro   Head   of  Shoe   Manufacturers  of  Canada\nMONTREAL, Jan. 21.\u2014Conditions\n1n the shoe trade during the year\n1923 involved a number of serious\ndifficulties for all branches of *he\ntrnde, J. E. Warrington of Quebec,\npresident cf the Shoe Manufacturers'\nAssociation of Canada, declared, at\nthe annual  convention here today.\nDelegates from all parts of the Dominion   were   present.\nThe president said that the industry experienced 23 casualties during\nthe year, which waa a very largo\npercentage out of a total of 180\nmanufacturers in the country. Wholesale distributors were also affected\nby  the  same  conditions,\n _m-\t\nSing le Transferable\nVote Measure Moved\nin Manitoba House\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 31.\u2014Claiminp\ntfhat tho present system of election\nIn single*member constitttei'Cios often\nresulted in minority candidates toolng\nelected, and urging the house to \u25a0tR-ke\nthe lead in tho Dominion in p:u*sii.g\na well-considered juiecc of eJmMornl\nreform. Hon. R. W. Craig, attnrrtcy-\ngenoral, moved seconding readitig- of\nthe.' single transferable vote','hill -lithe  legislature tonight.\nMr. Craig quoted many autlhori-\ntles  In   favor  of fhe  single,  transfer -\n'       I able   vrte,   and   pointed   out   that, the\nMONTREAL. Jan. 21.^Egg offerings ' Canadian and British parliaments.haM\nlight, butter and cheet-e business at a I adopted reports .recnmmcnditigj^it\nstandstill. though    Uiey...had \\ failed\n:No quotations. . ..the,   reports in. legttilatIon.\"\n\u25a0\u201e,   -   \u2014\u2014^      '\u25a0\u25a0\"\u2022\u25a0ii . *     *\u25a0     i..'\nMontreal Produce\nemttscdy\nMoney\nAT WORK\n\u25a0rl.f     bnt     Important     Z....OD.     la\nFliim   Mark.ta,   Btook.,  Bond,   ud\nI*TMtn\u00abata\nBid   .   Asked\nPork    Province      .10\nDunflaa   Chnnnel      .S>2\nInt    Conl     12 .17\nMcGllllvray       58\nSheep   Creek     00%\nRllwcreat      -05\nSfug  Cove   Copper  .03\nStandard    Silver    Lead      .12\nBurl   Inlet    Gold     \"9.4 ,11V\nBoundary   Bay   Oil   ..      00 1-H .00%\nKitiprre    Oil      iWJ-lt .001,\nTrojan     Oil      01% ,0.\u00bb.\n. -\u00ab-\t\n,   Toronto Board\nTORONTO. Jan. 31.\u2014A moderate degree <>f improvement was noticed in\nthe Htock market today. There was\nnot a great deal of nctivlty outside\nthe mining group, but there was a\nbetter tone noticeable in connection\nwith trading in the industrial and\nutility   stock*.\nMnple    Leaf   preferred   was   up   3%.\n91.     Rogers   common   moved   up   to\n54   on   mrnlei-Bte   buying.\nConsolidated Smelters continued U\nthe most active stock. The mlnlnff\nslocks came In for a considerable\n..mount of attention, and Kelley was\nthe outstanding performer. This Issue\nsold a* high as $2.29% during tbe\nn.ornlng and eased off to $2.24 at the\nclose.\n\u2014 -\u00bb-\t\nVfDfMIPEO   Q-CAIM   QUOTATIONS\nCONSIDER\nTHE POSSIBLE\nSPOILAGE LOSS\nBEFORE BUYING\nIN QUANTITY\nClone\n100%\n102*\n43;.\n\u00ab3%\n\u00ab1H\n222 U\n221%\n71\n71%\nVANCOUVEB. Jan. 21. \u2014 Cloalng\nprice, lor wheat, ba.l. No. 1 northern,\ndelivered f.o.b. cars Vancouver, for ex-\nport! ' Bid   MhM\nIr   .tore        100(4    100%\nEn   rout.        10014    100K\nWheat-\nMay   \t\nJuly    \t\nOata\u2014\nMay   \t\nJuly   \t\nBarley\u2014\n.May    \t\nJuly    \t\nFlax-\nMay    \t\nJuly   \t\nRye\u2014\nMay   \t\nJuly   \t\nOpen\n101\n102\n.3*\n.1%\nM14\nlilv.\n22H4\n221H\n7114\n72\nHlfth\n10114\n10214\n.3%\nus*\n\u2022nt\n22214\n22214\n7114\n72*\nLow\n10014\n102\n.314\n4314\n6314\n6114\n22114\n22114\n71\n7114\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nOffic.   Smelting   and    Refining   Department\nTRAIL,   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and-Zinc\nTADANAC,   TRAIL\nCANADIAN\nPacific\nKootenay River Closed by\nIce, Rail Service Substituted\nBetween\nNelson and Procter\n, Temporary Service \u2014 Every Day\nRead  Up. Read  Down.\n7:35 P.M. 9:35 A.M. Ar. Nelaon  Lv. 7:00 A.M. 6:00 P.M.\n7:40 P.M. 0:20 A.M. Lv. Troup  Lv. 7:15 A.M. 5:15 P.M.\n6:55 P.M. 8:58 A.M. Lv. Harrop  Lv. 7:40 A.M. 5:40 P.M.\n6:47 P.M. 8:47 A.M. Lv. S.  Bay   Lv. 7:47 A.M. 5:47 P.M.\n8:40 T.M. 8:40 A.M.-Lv. Procter  Ar. 7:56 A.M. 5:55 P.M.\nDirect connections at Procter with steamers to and\nfrom Kootenay Landing daily; Kaslo, excepting Sunday;\nCrawford Bay, Monday and Thursday. See agents for\ndetails.\nJ. S. CARTER,\nD.P.A., Nelson.\nUsed Articles\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and\nAutomobiles\nClassified\nHelp Wanted\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\n'$ Fann Produce\n\"Timber and Mines\nClassified Advertising Ratet\nZrfMMl \"Us,*\"'**.* ' HotlcM\u20143c per word\neach Insertion. In blackfaoe or machine capital! 4c per word. Blackfaoe\ncapitals 6c a word; 25 per cent discount If run dally without change, of\ncopy for one month or more. Where\nadvertisement Is set out In short lines\nthe charge is 12%c a line for Roman\ntype, 16c for blackfaoe, and 20c for\nblackface capitals. Minimum J6o. If\ncharged  60c.\nWant and Classified Advertlslnf \u2014\nOne and a half cents per word per Insertion. 81z cents per word per week,\nor 22'40 per word per month, cash In\nadvance. Transient ads, accepted only\non a oaah-ln-advance basis. Each\nInitial, figure, dollar sign, etc, counts\nas one word. Minimum 25a Ifl\ncharged   60c.\nLists of Wedding Present! aad\nfloral tributes a* fnneraU\u2014iOo par\nline.\nBirths\nURIE \u2014 To Mr. nrfl| .Mrs. E. Urte, of\nKot'f-Ol), I1C, on January ?.0. at tho\nTjo.nc 1 vlvato Hospital, a son.  (2-.(H)\nMale Help Wanted\nLEARN BARBER TRADE\u2014Big wagea,\neasy work, we teach you ln a few\nweeks. Positions assured. Write\ntoday for our Catalogue. Hemphill\nBarber College, 228 9th Avenue, Calgary, Alta. (2652)\nLEARN Auto Gas Tractor Engineering, vulcanlilng. welding and battery work. We want men right now.\nWrite for full particulars and special offer. Hemphill Trade Schoola\nLtd., 228 8th Avenue E., Calgary,\nAlta.  (2551)\nWANTED \u2014 Men to \"learn auto tractor, battery, I tart Ing and lighting\nbtUlntM; practlctil courses In aeroplane engines; classes starting every\nday; practical school; low rates;\nday or evening; free catalogue Nn.\n102. or call Modern Auto, and Tractor Bonobl, W 13.02 Heo-und, Spokane (2568)\nMEN. women to iwn baxbering: pAM\nwhile learning: tools supplied, rata\nlogue free Mo!\u00bbr Collet:*. Vrtnrim\nver. \u25a0*.   . f2r\u00bb89)\n.-\u25a0ifji1.'\nSituations Wanted Male\nWOOp'T'll'E-'-Woul'l like to make\nwood 'pi|'i' anyw.h'-re in B. C. where\ntherV would be- a -.paying quantity to\nbe' t*5\u00bbde. ami tJrnl'rr, available.' What\nolfhra-f   T. .\u00abRli*roy,,Colenlan,i.Alta.\n\u25a0L V.V- \u25a0  ._ :.:-..v,,', , ..\u25a0\u25a0j2776>\nFfclVPER   winii: pos>Klon,   tni}ri\u00bb*ighly\ne\\fcerieitj'\"1 >'  find      ii*rjnciionI .y'.Rp.i*tdor.\nWeatBril    Tine     nukV       Box!   -2777.\nI i , ilv ' \\j.-v~ *.-.      .    \u2022 \".. \u2022 V\/17771\nFemale Helo Wanted\nWANTKD \u2014 A girl or woman for\nhousework. Apply Mrs. T. W. Bln-\ngay.   Trail.   B.C. (279C)\nSituations Wanted Female\nwork,\nBox !Ut,  Daily Ni\u00abi  (1110)\nWANTED  --   Any   kind   of  plain   sew-\n*   Ing,   such   ns   ladle?;'   nnd   chiMren's\nClothes.        Prices      moderate.        Mth.\nCharles   Hall,   423,   corner  Waril   and\nVictoria    streets.  (274 0)\nCity Property for Sale\nJust   to   remind   you   about   that\nLIFE INSURANCE POLICY\nyou   Intend   to   take   out.\nSUN LIFE ASSURANCE\nCOMPANY OF CANADA.\nCall   In   and   talk   It   over.\nInsurance of every  class.\nC. W. APPLEYARD\nPhone 268 or Writ*\n(2739)\nSMALL INVESTMENT\n$1400\u2014A 5-roomed Bungalow,\nmodern, fireplace; 2 lots; 6\nfruit trees.   Terms, $600 cash.\na. t. McMillan\nPHONE   601        610   BAKER   ST.\n(2791)\nFruit; and Vegetables\nWINTER AFPLES for sale\u2014Wegener\nand Delicious; good quality. Wrlta\nto the grower. K. Lamont, Creston,\nB.C. (2574)\nMiscellaneous\nUOK'T   forg*t1     rolk   Sano*   Class   to-\n\u2022morrow.     I'hone  1H^ (2801)\nRoom and Boaiti\nROOM   and   board   from   1st   February,\nfor young lady.    Close to the  Publio\nand  the  High  School,   508   Latimer.\n (2760\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Rags suitable for wlplnj\nmachinery; Be per pound. The Daily\nNews. | (2765)\nInsurance\naro. oftfMi caused', by overheated.\nBtoves,.. furnaces .\" and :,defectlv*eV\nflues.\nThorough'' Insurance    protection\nnot only relives*, you of,the Worry, .\nbut fina'nt'jal.y'atftliinaesVyour in-j\nvestment.        *   .. ,\"      \u25a0;* . *\n.   ;>r:.w.;DAWsQn. 'M\\\n',''   ..' ;Arii%G,bS,e i-UlocV-' .\u25a0      '\u25a0'-.\nPHONE'lS?'   X    ....'\u2022 ,'t\\; BOX>718\n\u25a0 ' '.  ,     ' \u25a0      \"   '.\u00bb .   ..'.   ',   \u25a0'.      C2788).\nCLASSIFIED a>la:?*>fSnfr resflta quick-\nly  anil  pronomiriilly.    1 jsj.  a   word.\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\n DIRECTORS\nHA. MAITnS, Waterfroni\u2014Boat\n\u2022 building, gasoline engine repairs,\nelectric light outfits. Ford marine engines,   upholstering (2676)\nCall a Taxi\nN\"\n\u25a0now  Tsajraraa  oo.\nOomfortaDl.  Oars   .\nO.r.fnl DrlT.n\nMeet   all   trains   and   boats;   Garaf.,\nMcLaughlin  and  Ch.Trolet   Service.\nrmoa. 35 Dar oi :\nr YlrM\n'(t<7S) >\nPrinting\nrr\\tn dallt miws\u2014quality Printim.\na  Hullnc.    Loose Leaf S\/orn...    L\"df*l\nSheei.H and Binders alway. ln stock.\nPiano Tuners    <\n\u2014.a \u2014,        .fr.\u00ab s\nHBDLET  W,  BBirDOI.1,, Sxpirrt.'   ''\nPtrtlica. Player I'lanos, Orga-ria.'\nl'h.ne   \u00bb\u00bb1. Vt2751)\nInsurance and Real Etftate\nD     W.   DAWSON\u2014       ,\n*V* Real \u2022 Estate, \u2022 Znaarano., . X.atala. '\nAnnable Blk.    P.O'. Boi 733.   Phone 1\u00bb7.'\nMonuments\nGawi-seu.    *   aiTCHia   txotro.\nKSjITAl  OO.o-P.   O,   BOl '886,   Nel-\ns^i. '!;(.\u25a0      ^\u25a0l.'pljhnp   16..     . jg&77)\ny&\n4S\nPalihtcrs and Decorators\nM\"\nDININO   ROOM   and   kitchen    to   rent.\nApply  Victoria   Hotel,   Rox   27,   Trail.\n(2778)\nbUlTfc,   VAUAINT.   Anhmaii   Apartmunia,\n716   BaktT  street. (2571)\n\u00bbt)R   HKNT \u2014 Three-roomad fumlsheo\nsutlo,  Annable   Illock. (2572)\nURPHT   BROS \u2014\nAntos  Painted\nDealeri ln Wall Paper.\nStore\u2014 Auto   Shop^\u2014\n411  Josephine  St.. 411  Hall  St\nAccounting\nROOMS   nt   nMOfiabla   rntep.   near   station.     Victoria   Hotel.   Trail. (2779)\nNursery Products\nSWEET   PKA  SEED\nFINEST   in   the   WORLD\nQuality      and       varieties      unsurpassed.     Wrtte    for   our   1924    ILLUSTRATED   CATALOGUE.\nCR08LAND BROS.\nDuncan,   Vancouver  Island\n(2759)\nSWEET PKA, Flower nnd Vegetable\nHeed direct from the famous Chilli-\nwnck Swei'f l'ea Spec*iallsts. Price\nlists free. Mlchaud & Company. 433,\nChitliwack.  B.C. (2780)\nLive Stock for Sale\nSILVER   palCh   and   red   foxes.       T.   R.\nLyn.1,   Watervtlle.   XS (^K03)\nFOR   SALE\u2014One   sorrel   horse,   age   9.\nweight   1300.     Any   reasonable   offer\naccepted.    Apply 309  Richards street.\n(2750)\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nFOR SALE* \u2014 Pone cutter, nearly\nnew, HO.00, or aiaOtny-i for Rone-\ncomb Wyandot tea Pullet\u00bb. J. I IfUl\nPoplar Craek,  H.C. (2S09)\nI-OR S A LI**\u2014 Delivery rig team harness, i.e'v, prewar, what offers Box\n2S07.  Daily  News. ,.2807)\nNEW soprano Saxophone silver gold\nhell case, extras, $95. Box 2783,\nDaily   News. (2763)\nFOR SALE \u2014 Month old pure-bred\nAyrshire bull calf, combination Wells\n& Shannon blood; or would exchange\nfor pure-bred heifer. Registration\napplication forthwith. Hugo Du\nMont, Bridesville ,B.C. (Oreat North-\n.     ern line).         (2748)\nHIGH-CLASS registered Airedales of\nI the best blood obtainable, Whatshan\n|      Kennels.   Needles.   B C. (2712)\nLARGE    Tavlor    safe,    perfect    condition.    Willis  Piano Store. (2770)\nPoultry and Eaxs\nPOULTRY   wanted   \u2014   Highest   prices.\nCraig, Poultry  Speclallm, Kamloops.\n(2762)\nHOW nbout the leghorn baby chicks\nfor April delivery? Usual quality.\nAppleton   Rros..   Procter. (2615)\nMachinery Wanted\nWANTED   \u2014   Six   h.p.   engine.       Give\nparticulars,  Box   2H08,   Daily  News.\n(230S)\nLost and Found\nLOST\u2014Large earring on Baker or\nStanley street.    J. G. Bunyan.   (2817j\nTARTY who took brown boots from\nRowing Club by mistake, kindlv\nphone 271R  for exchange. (2812)\nFor Adoption\nROY\u2014Three   months   old.     Apply   Box\n2811,  Daily   Newo. (2\u00bbllt\nUsed\nCars\nDo you want to sell\nyours?\nIf so, tell about it in a\nCLASSIFIED AD.\nIn\nThe Daily Newt\n1'\/2   Cant   \u2022   Word\nCHARLES  F. HDNTBH\u2014\nAuditor, atcDoa.ld Jam BnSldlnr.\nBoi 1191. N.lson, B.O.\n  (2579)\nFlorists\nGKIZZELLB'S    OREENHOUSB,    jms.\n.on. Cut Flower, and floral design*\n  (2880)\nnm. s. jonraoir\u2014\n\u00ab    Phone   342.     Cut   Flowara,   PottM\nrinnt\"  and   VIoriil   Kmblems. (2488)\nWholesale\nA      HACDOKALS   fe   CO.\u2014\n\u25a0**\u2022 Wllnlpsnle C.rorers and Provision\nMerohantR. Importers of Teas, Coffee*\nSpires. Pried Fruits, Staple and Fancy\nrirorcrlrs.     Nflson.   TIC.  (2581)\nEngineers\n&tee0 Broi., Burde,, q,\nnum, b.o.\ndm ABD  MINING BHOOTMa\nB.  C,   Albert,  aad  Domlaloa\nItand  Surv.yora.\nCrown Grant Ay .nt..       Bin. VtinSdag,\n258*7\n(2581\nAssayers\nE\nW. WIDDOWSOK, Box A1108, N.l.\nson, B.C.   Standard western chargM,\nAuctioneer!\nWCCTTLIK\u2014\n* Good. Sold Friratclj and nt Anottoa,\nOpera House Blk.    Phon. 71.   Boi 717.\n (258.)\nFuneral Director!\nrt J. KOBERTSOH, F. D. D. k B^.\n\u2022L..801 Victoria street Phon. 2tL\nNight  Phone  157L, (2585)\nStandard Vnmltnr*\nCo.'     Undertaker*\nFuneral    Director*\nAuto hearse, up-to.\n..,    date   chapel.    Best\nVj     service.      P r 1 0 . \u25a0\nreasonabl..      (258.)\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy George McMawu\nTh\u00abr\u00ab It a happy medium for th*\nhotiMwifa to follow batwaan costly\n\"hand-to-mouth\" buying and wasteful   quantity   purchaaing.\nFor a anmll family, or lf atoraJT*\napare la not of th* beat, it ls poor\npolicy to buy foort productii .n large\nqu\u00abntrtl**\u00ab. The loaa in wnatage ti\nfraqut-rtUy more than the aavlntf ln\nthe   purchase   price.\nNlot only will there be apoilaf*\nbut there may be more recklesa uaa\nwhen a quantity of any product la\nat band. When there ia a large\namount of auajar, why aave half a\ncupful?\nOf course, for the f.ajnily which\nhaa efficient storage apace, a sale\nor other opportunity to buy produce\nchtfiply at reduced pricea U an opportunity to nave money.\nlQmrrigkL_JfrAm*m-mWmt*l\n.._.\n \u25a0B\n\u25a0a=E=a\nm*\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWa TUESDAY MINING, JANUARY 22,1924\n\t\nNews of Sport\nss\n:$KIM0S FAU ~\nBEFORESHEIKS\nidmonton Outplays and Out-\nscores Opponents Until\nAfter Mid-Game\n\u2014\nY BEATS NINE TO ONE\nBpMONTON, Alta.. Jan. 21.\u2014Edraian-\non  Eskimos  took  the short  end  of  a\nto 4 score In their game against the\naskatoon Crescents at the arena hero\nonight Up till the last minute of\n,he second period, the Eskimos outplayed and outsoored the Crescents,\nvt that moment Keats left the ide. for\n| rapt, and ln that last minute of the\niertod the Crescents ran ln two, count-\n<rs. ,\n\u25a0\u2022M*oioe\u00bb  Q-oalU  Off  Color    .\nHal Wlnkl.tr, usually one of the\ngreatest bulwarks on the Eskimos'\ntefence, had a very decided off night.\n,n   the   form   that   Hal   usually   dls-\n-f.yn, he would probably have stopped\n11 six of the Sheiks' goals, and eer-\ni.inly .four of them. He let ln long\nlackhanders and soft forehandera. The\n\"Irst Sholk 'goal waa a beauty. Stevens went down tho left boards and\n^thot. Winkler caught the puck. Ete-\nons skated round behind the nets,\nWinkler threw th\u00a3 puck out. It struck\n\"\u2022Stevens' sfclc*., \"bounced back, h(lt.\n\".Inkier'e stick and rolled Into the\nlet.    *.\nThe play an a whole was raggedeand\nncllned to be listless. The Sheiks\nvependeft atn.qet .(ntirely 'tin Indtvldufef\n(fonts, and occasionally a two-man\n\u25a0ush. \u2022\nWhile tho Eskimos had the best ot\n'he play In the first two sessions, the\n-\u2022Sheika had tho edge in the third.\nKor the winners. Bill Cook starred.\nEvery   time   he  got   the   puck   he   was\nJangerous, while both his goals were t forward ~ ranks. He engineered sev\n[the moot earned of the round halfjerai dangerous rushes and In general\ntiozen garnered by hfu team. Hains- covered his lengthy farm with glory.\nh*orth   waa  close  beh'.nd.    Ho  stopped i     Harry  Oliver,  on  the  forward  line,\nwhs closely watched and did not\nbreak away often. His goal in the\nthird  period,   however,  when  he  bent\nMAROONS AFTER\nSHIFTING GAME\nP-rairU Team Leads, Then\nVancouver, Then Prairie\nRepresentatives Again\nVANCOUVER, Jan. II.\u2014Calgary\nTigers lifted themselves up a coup'e\nof points ln their league standiing\nwhen they came from behind in the\nthird period of tonight's hockey\nfixture with the Vancouver Maroons\nto win a groat game, 4 to 3.\nIt was one of the most sensational hockey duels fought here this\nseason. Calgaj*y led at the end of\nthe first period by 2 to 0 only to\nsee their lead vanish in the second,\nand nt the start of the third th\u00a9\nMaroons were one up* on the visitors. Two snappy goals from the\nsticks, of Oliver and Wilson shonlly\nafter the start af the laBt period,\nhowever, gave the prairie stars the\nbulge that won them the game. More\nthan 8000 watched the game.\nMany  Stars\nBobby Benson, the diminutive defence player, carried off a good many\nof the ladrels of tonight's game.\nParticularly in the first pertod, when\nhe broke through tho Vancouver defence twice for goals, did the ex-\nFa'con star show to advantage.\nRed Dutton was another luminary.\nDutton played a particularly fine defensive game, his bodychecking caus-\n*ng a lot of grief among the Maroon\nmany that seemed sure goals, and his\nclearing was miraculouis ln its accuracy    and     speed.     Berlinquette    and\nScott-shewed  up to advantage on  the   Lehman    and    tied\nforward  line, whllo Cameron  w\u00abr good I tbe    most    brilliant\npn   the  defence.                                                I *>* *\u00bb &am'*-\n;   Arbour was the star of the Eskimos, I     Charlie Reld played a. much stead'er\ngetting   two   fine   goals.     Joe   Hlrifpson j \u00ab\u00a3\u2122 J? J\u00b0ul '.!?!? J!ZJ\u00a3-dlnJi\u00a3li\nplayed   a brilliant   defensive   game   a.nd' *\"\t\nthe   score,   was\nindividual   effort\nbrought the crowd up cheering time\ntnd again with his sparkling rushes.\nKeats worked like a trojan up to the\nthird period.\nTh* Summary\nFirst period \u2014 1, Edmonton, Morrl-\nlon, :45; 2, Edmonton, Arbour, 2:20; S,\nSaskatoon,   Stevens,   &*07.\nSecond period \u2014 4, Saskatoon. Ber-\nliTuiuette, 19:14; 5, .Saskatoon, Cooke,\n:2ii.\nTlt^rd period \u2014 \"G, Saskatoon, Cooke,\n43;,,7, Edmonton, Scott, 7:07; 8, Ed-\nnonton, Arbour from Sparrow, 1:01;\n}, Saskatoon, Ckmeron, 2:02; 10, Ed-\nnonton,  Trapp  from   Sparrow,   4:84.\nLineup\nEdmonton Saskatoon\nGoal\nWinkler    -    H&msworth\nDefence\n\"impson   \u2022    Cameron\nrapp         Stevens\n.its Awards Headley| Matte       Reason\nbour     'Berlinquette   Bostrom\nSubstitute*\nparrow       Scott\n[eCormslck       Matz\nheppard    Elmer\n..;...'...     Reise\noccasion of his laat appearance here.\nReld particularly distinguished himself in the final period, when a\nmultitude ol Maroon shots were all\nturned  oelde.\n8ummary\nFirst    period\u20141,    Calgary,    Benson,\n2:10;   2, Calgary, Benson, 6:87.\nSecond period\u20143, Vancouver, McKay, 6:16; 4, Vancouver, Matte from\nCook, 3:28; 6, Vancouver, McKay,\n8:27.\nThird period\u20146. Calgary, Oliver,\n3:30;  7. Calgary. Wilson,  :07.\nLineup\nVancouver Calgary\nGoal\nLehman       Held\nDefence\nCook         Dutton\nDuncan         Gardiner\nForwards\nRoucher       Morris\nSkinner       Oliver\nMcKay        Anderson\nSubstitutes\nWilson\nONTARIO AMATEUR\nHOCKEY RESULTS\nfuldoon, Dictator\nIdea Not Popular\nLOUISVILLE, Ky.. Jan 21.\u2014Indl-\naitiona today are that members of\nio . national boxing commission, 4n :\nnnuel convention here, are not In'\nlvot of the selection of William\nMuldoon, former chairman of the\new York boxing commiaslon, as\nle .Judge Landis of the pugilistic\n\u2022orld. Several of the delegates declared they were opposed to tiro\nlOVement.\nTORONTO,    Jan,    11.\u2014Ontario    amateur hockey mottl tonight were:\nSenior   O.   H.   A.\nPrestxn,   4;  Kitchener,   3.\nInUtmedlat*   O.   K.   A.\nVictoria's.   3;   United   Colleges,   1. '\nBelleville,   3;   Queen's,   2.\nPort   Hope,   6;   Oshawa,   4.\n(Juelph,   7;   Georgetown,   1,\nLondon,   10;   Glencoe,   2. , \u2022\nSt.  Thomas,   S;  Woodstock,   4.\nJunior  O.   X. A.\nHumberslone,   4;   Wei land,   2.\nIngersoll,   4:   London,   1.\nEarrle,  10; Bradford, 3.\nU.   T.   8.,   3;   Upper  Canada,   2.\nREGINATALLY\nCapitals' Return to Form Is\nDriven Home in Defeat to\nSeattle    \u2022*\nREGINA, Jan. 21.\u2014Any suspicion\nthat Reglna's return to form was\na faiiry tale, and their win over the\nCrescents Saturday a mistake, was\ndispelled when the Capitals skated\nthe Seattle Mets absolutely dls-ey to-\nnight, and equalled the high-scoring\nrecord for tbe league in registering\ntheir 9 to 1 trium-m.\nAfter th* first 10 minutes, in which\nthe Capital's netted cne goal. It was\nnot on argument; It was a proces\nsion, with all roads leading to the\ncitadel guarded by tlhe unhappy\n\"Happy'1 Holmes. The only relief\nfrom the monotony of Reglna scores\ncame in the second period, when\nSmoky Harris acepted Jim Riley's\npass from t.he wing and rushed It into\nthe cocp where Red McCusker stood\nat   ease   most   of   the   evening.\nGeorge Hay and Dick Irvin, who\nled the Champ aggregation to their\nvictory over the Saskatoon Sheiks,\nwere again very much to Ihe fore.\nBut they did rot have tbe whole\nnhow to t*iemselve3, fcr Barney Stan\nley horned in to take his shir** in\n.the goal-getting orgy, and both Dut\nkowski   nnd   Trnub  collected  a   point.\nDisorganizing Abe usually systematic\nMets when they got away to a commanding lead in tho opening chapter,\nthe Capitals introduced more nnd\nmore combination as the affair\nprogressed, and at th? finish they\nhad their team work down to perfection. In tiheir three seasons as\nentries for professional honors, they\nhave never looked as good, and Pete\n\"VTuIdoon's Americana were corre-'\nspondingly wetiker than tn any, previous appearance here.\nStops   Forty-siflht   Shots\nThe nine Regina tallies wera equally\ndivided over the -*hree periods, 'but\nthey had more of the play after tin'\nMets wilted dn the second. Happy\nH\\>lmos turned ln another wonderful\n\u2666performance, turning off no less than\n48 drives, more than twice the number McCusker was called upon to\nhandle.\nHhy. figuring In seven goals, boosted hia' average among the scorers\nby WW pein*j*, while iTrvln added\nfour to his total and Stanley a like\nnumber.\n.Summary\nFirst period\u20141, Rettina, Irvin from\nStanley, 1:27; 2. Itewlne, Hav, 11:13;\n3,   Regina.   Stanley   from   Hay,   3:28.\nBecond period\u20144, Begins. Irvin\nfrom H.iv. 1:25; 6. Reglna. Diitko***-\nBkl fro-n Hay. 4:32: 6. Seattle, Harris\nfrom Riley. MO: 7, Regina, Stanley\nfrom   Trnub.   7:*SlS.\nThird period\u20148, Reclna, Hav from\nStanlev. 7:16: 9, Regina, Irvin from\nHay, 9:4S; 10, Regina, Hay from\nIrvin,  :C9.\nLineup\nSeattle Reglna\nGoal\nHolmes         McCusker\nDefence\nKraser     - \u2022 \u2022    Trnub\nRowe           Newell\nforwards\nfovston      !      Irvin\nHarris     \u25a0    Hay\nWalker       Stanley\nSubstituted\nI'Uey      -   Moran\nMcl-Wlan*        Dutkowskl\nArbour    ..    Aseltlne\nTRAIL NOT BRINGING '\nA SPECIAL TRAIN\nWord received from Trail ln-Rt night\nwas to the effect that the Trail teem\nwill appear here in their regular league\ngame Boheduled fcr Friday night.\nTrail, by their loss last night, cannot\nv. in out In the West Kootenay lewguo\nthis year, aad therefore there will be\nno special from the smelter city on\nFriday.\nMACDONALD'S\nElite Git\nii\nFor those Smokers\nwho like their tobacco\nCut Fine or who\nroll their own\nMACDONALD'S Fine Oil\nMb.\ntin80*\n'SMOIONG0 ^\nrS0Ak_u\u00b0 '4 >\nl\/a Lb. _I5^\nCONDENSED'WANT'ADS ORDER FORM\nUaa thla blank on whloh to writ, your oondanaad  ad^  ono  word   In   aaoh  apaco.   Cneloaa  monay\n, ordor or ohook ond  mail  diroct to Tho  Daily  Nawa, N.l.on, 8. C.\nRoto.   Ona and -a   half  cant a  word  aaoh  Inaction, oix oonaooutivo  insertion, for prioo of four\n'   wbon   paah    accompaniea    ordor.   Minimum,   28o,    Each initial, figuro, dollar aigna, .to., count oo ono\nword.   No ch.ro. looo than  60 oonto.\nPloaaa publlah tho odvartiaam.nt Mow \u2022>!.. tim... far whloh 1 onolooa f.._\t\n*\n\u00ab\n\u2022\n,(-.,\u25a0\u2022\n.\nIf doalrad, rapllao may bo addraaood to box numboro  at  Tha   Dally   Nawa  Cffloo.   If  roplloo  aro\nlo bo mollod  .n.looo loo oxtro to oovor ooot of pooUgo and allow fivo wordo oxtra far box numbor.\n\u25a0\u25a0**--\u2014ati\nPITS\nIT OVER TRAIL\nTHREE J ONE\nGolden City Seniors Employ\nCombination Tactici to\nGood Advantage\nTRAIL, B.C.. Jan. 21.\u2014In a dashing;\ngame. Rossland seniors tonight dun\nfeated Trail here. 8-1. Splendid com*\nbination through the ciitlrw game feat-'\nured   the work of thn vlnltors.\nTrail started the scoring When Patton handled a pass from Melntyn*- lfl\\\n1C minutes. This was the smelter\ncity's only appearance ln the goal\ncolumn, though the boys worked hard\n(i nd doggedly. Norris, for Kosttland,\noQualiated. and tha first period \/ended\nwith  a tie, 1-1.\nItossland started with a rush In the\nsecond period, and Singer and Nelson\nscored  on Individual  rushes.\nThe third period was scoreless. Trail\nhere being the aggressors, with Ross-,\nIf'iiU protecting their lead by a defensive  game.\nF. Lauriente, Garland and Pasquale\nWere Trail's stars, PasqUstle in particular showing a great turn of speed.\nFirst period\u20141, Trail, Patton off\nMclntyre, 10 mins.; 2, Rossland, Norris,  15 mins.\nSecond   perkri\u20143,   Roscland,   Singer;\ni,   Rossland,  Nelson.\nThird  period\u2014No  scoring.\nLineup\nRossland Trail\nOoal   \u25a0 \u2022\nJohnston       Garland\nDefence\nMonsters       Whltmore\nNelson     ,'..    Mclntyre\nForwards\nHuffman         Patton\nMollskl       A.  W.   McDonald\nSinger    F.   Lauriente\nSpares\nJewell       F.   O'Oenski\nNorris       W,  Pasquale\nCavanagh      H.    Laurlen te\nReferee\u2014Al. fceatlric.      *\nSENATORS TAKE\nANOTHERJMCH\nWin Postponed Game From\nCanadicns at Montreal\nThree to Two\nMONTREAL, Jan. 21.\u2014In the most\nexciting hockey game seen locally\nin \"National Hotkey league series\nthis Mama, Ottawa Senators defeated Oa'.'xdtens 3 to 2 here tonight.\nIt was a game postponed from De-\ncein-ber 22. Canac'dens nJudo a great\nrally in the aecond period from Ottawa's 2 to 0 load, and forced & i tot\ndeadlock, hut Clancy's Individual effort in the final session beat Vezina\nand gavo the Be \u25a0 a tors an Increased\nnhrgln at the head ut tshe league.\nIt was n gripping battle., despite\nMime lapses from good hockry in the\nflMN nn.l fln;i! periods. The Senator-\nhtartfd \u25a0trow and were leading 2 tn *)\na'hen th': second period start\u00abd. Then\nthe locals took the Scnatjrs off their\nfeet for a time, and In that time\nMorenz evened tl.e count.\nIt was from the last period that\nHaney, Senator, emer^est the hcr*j of\nihe night. Clancy rosa to ihe hsjlgli;*\nin the final s\u00ab;wion, .vhen he to\" c a\npi.ss from Broa.'sbent and swept In m\nVeilna. Watinir lilm with a irlck-.\" s^ot\nthat proved tha winning counter\nThe Summary\nFirst period\u2014I, Ottawa, Clancy,\n3:40-. 2,   Ottawa,  G.   Boucher,   8:20.\nSecond peri-jd\u20143, Canadien**, Morenz, 9:30; 4, Canadlens, Morenz,\n4:20.\nThird period\u20145, Ottawa, Clancy,\n11:05. ...\nFANS WILL GO\nONASPECIAL\nLocals Play Crucial Game\nin Rossland Tomorrow\nNight    \t\nRowland's 3 to 2 win over Trail last\nn'ght put the Golden City to the head\nol the West Kootenay with a one-game\nlead over Nelson. Nelson plays In\nRossland on Wednesday night next,\nand In order that the locals may have\nall the support necessary a special\ntrain has been chartered to carry Nelson  fann   to Rossland.\nAocordlng to present plans the train\nwill leave Nelson at 4;30 Wednesday-\nafternoon for Rossland; returning,\nleaving  Rossland about  11:30 o'clock,\nThe locals will work out again this\nevening and are In excellent shape.\nNelson, to stay In the running, must\nwin   Wednesday's   game.\nREDDICK OF WINNiFeG\nBEATS P1TTSBURGHER\nCfc-Ukdlan Light Heavy  Looks  ft Cham-\ni Dion; Pats Man Oat la\nSixth   Bound\nTORONTO, Jan. 21.\u2014Jack Reddlck\nof Winnipeg knocked out Homer Rob-\nit son of Pittsburgh in the sixth round\nof their bout here tonight, scheduled\nto go 10 rounds. Rcddick weighed 168,\nand   Robinson   1(0ti.\nHeddkk looked a champion in every\nI urt, and from the second round on\nhad a lead which he steadily increased, and In the fourth and fifth\nhe had Robinson on the vcrgo t-f\ndreamland,\nIn tne sixth, after being cautioned\nby Refei-en Marsh to stop holding,\nRobinson went to the floor, but was\nordered to get up. Immediately afterward Reddlck landed a right over the\nheart, and  the battle was  over.\nAnnouncing\nthe New\nBlue Bird\nBeautiful in\nDesign\nS.turdy\nin Construction\nAn examination of the Interior construction of the 1924 Blue Bird Washer\nImpresses thoBe who understand machinery with th*& extreme simplicity of\ndesign.\nThe Blue Bird principle of washing Is recogniited as the quickest most\nthorough and most gentle method of washing clothes ever devised. In fact,\ncomparative tests constantly demonstrate that Blue Bird washes quicker,\noleaner and more economically than any other clothes washer on the market.\nHousewives who investigate before they buy show by their choice of\nBlue Bird that they do appreciate the thoroughness with which it does Its\nwork   and   tho  many   exclusive   conveniences  which   it\n. Every Bhie Bird Is now, as ln the past, guaranteed under a brood and\nliberal guarantee. The Blue Bird gives more for the money than any other\nwasher. Obstrve the washing principle; see how really clean vevery garment  ls washed.   No need  far doing  parts of  the garment  by  hand.\nA SMALL CASH   PAYMENT WILL PUT A BLUE  BIRD  IN  YOUR  HOME\nWe will gladly give you a free demonstration in tho store, or in your\nhome; and then stand behind every statement we make. A phone message\nand oui   representative  will  gladly   call on  you.\n\"jHudsdn's Ifiat*. (Jampany J\nthe former at Detroit on June 5 .and\n9 and the latte*- at Hoy Lake be- j\nginning June  23.'-\nWANDERlSlIN\nOVERjAIRVIEW,\nJunior Teams Put Up Fast\nGame; League Is Now\nTied Up\t\nNelson Wanderers tied with Pair-\nview In the league race for junlov\nhonors when, last night, they defeated the Fairview aggregation to the\ntune of 4 goals to 2. The game .waa\nfast from the start, and the Wanderers, If any, had the better of the game.\nScoring started early, when Madden\nscored in id seconds for the winners.\nKitchle added another in 3 minutes.\nKinnrose scored first for Fairview or\nii   long bhot  from  center.\nIn the second period the Wanderers\ntallied twice through Bradshuw, wh<<\ntulged the hemp In 14 minutes, and\nagain   in   4   minutes.\nII.iy waa fast in the last period, and\nRobert Waldie. who wan playing on\nthe forward line for the winners,\nturned in a brilliant game. Roynon\n.--(orcd Kalrvlew's Pecond and l;i.-;t goal\nin   3  minutes of   play.\nPanama featherwelgiht champion, j Dundee is matched to fight Pal\nDundee's 130-pound title will be (tit- Munin of New Orleans at MadlScn\nonly  one  at  stake. Square,  gardens   February   1.\nCURLING RESULTS\nRight games took place In \"B\" division and two in '*A\" division at the\n. .irlltig rink last night, the results being as follows: t\n\"B\"  Games\nBladworth,   5;   Myers,   9.\nLaughton,   7;   Barnes,   11.\nDill,   13;   Walley,   6.\nVincent,   10;   Bush,   I,\nRitchie defaults to Townsend.\nMcOulgan,   8;   Graham,   IS.\nJeffs,  7;\nRitchie,\nLeith,   15.\nAndrew, 7.\n\"A\"   Oft meg\nBunyan, 5;  Sharp,  12.\nKeith,  \u00ab;   Ferguson,   7.\nHUME SCHOOL BOYS\nWIN OVER CONVENT\nAustralian Golfer\nSigns Professional\nWith New York Club\nNEW YORK, Jan. 21,\u2014Joe Kirkwood, Australian trick golfer, today\nsigned a contract as golf professional of Rock wood Ha.l, the new\ncountry chib which .has acquired the\nestate of tbe late William Rockefeller near Tarrytown. N.Y. Kirkwood\nwill compete in both United titates\nund Brltlab open $-lt championships,\nOn Saturday afternoon the Hume\nschool hockey team administered a\nbetting to the Sisters of St. Joseph's\naggregation   to   the   tune   of   4   to   1.\n -\u00ab^\t\nRichard Offers Firpo\nFifth of a Million\nto Fight Harry Wills\nBUENOS AYRRS, Jan. 2l.\u2014LuIb\nFirpo, the .Argentine heavyweight,\nreceived a cablegram from Tex Rickard today offering $200,000 for a fight\nbetween him and Harry Wills In July,\nand proposing another fight between\nFlrpo   and   Dempsey   In   September.\nFirpo said he would not decide\nuntil the arrival of bis New York\nrepresentative.\nDUNDEE TONIGHT\nFANAMA CHAMPION\nPrinted\nButter Wrappers\nEither With Your Name\nor with the words\nDairy Butter\nNEW   YORK.    Jan.    21.-James   J. j\nJohnston, manager cf Johnny Dundee,\nfeatiherweight   and   Junior   lightweight |\nchampion,  today stated   he had cloaed\ni<egottations   for  a   match   ln   Panama'\non February 22 with Jose Lombardo,\nAMordlB* la tha Oomlataa\nforsmmest reguiationa aU\nfarmers who sell butter\neither lm stores or privately\nara required to have It properly covered ln a wrapper oa\nwhich MUST appear la\nprominent  lettere the  wards\n\u2022DAIRY BUTTER*\nThe fact la also emphaalaed\nthat all butter In ouch\npackages must be of tha full\nbet weight of sixteen ounces\nand In default of same a tine\nof from $10 to $30 for each\noffense le Imposed. Whey\nbutter must be ao labelled,\neven when mixed with darly\nbutter sand dairy butter retains its laibel even though It\nbe missed with the creamery\nPrices\nPRINTED   WITH    NAM!   OP\nFARMER   OR   BRAND   NAM!\nU you hava Tour own\nbrand oa your wrapp\u00abra you gala\nvaluable  advertising  for  your  But-\ntar.    It  cau.ea  p*opl.  to aak far\ntbe same brand affalu.\n800.   Paper  and \u00bb1  (IF\nPrinting  uWl.^O\n1000, Paper and iprr \/\\A\nPrinting      ff I .UU\nPRINTED   WITH   WORM\n\"DAIRY    BUTTER\"\nue\nfor\t\n110\nfor\t\n100\nfor\t\n1000\nfor   \t\n_ $1.00\n_$1.50\n.......      $2.50\n___$4.50\ni\nWl CAN SHIP IMMEDIATELY ON RECEIPT OP ORDU\n(\nIf mappers me to be mailed include postage mhsm\ntending money orders\nDaily News Job Department\nTHE HOME OF OOOD PRINTING\nbaker rrirr nelson. & o.'\n___\n k\n'fcw'fcf\nIHI NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 22,1824\nTHE ARK\n_yr* *_n received our stock of M.n'a\nP**>7 Wool Stocks. 30c to 750 pair;\nJ\"*. Heavy Weight Underwear. tl.OO|\nLadles' Black Cashmere Ho.e.aoo pair:\nH\u00abevy Weight Wool Serge, double fold.\n|S.W per yard; Ladle.* Winter Combinations. 113.00 suit: Tabl. Oilcloth. 46\n. Inches 63a, 64 Inches 75c yard. Second-\nband Furniture and Range, bought and\n\u2022old.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nMow 334 (03 Tamoa It.\nAre you taking\nadvantage of our\nNew Fiction\nLending\nLibrary\nWe are always adding the\nnewest 'hooks, so as to keep\ncur selection right up to date.\nOur terms ax\u00a9 very reaaon-\nable\u2014$1,00 <o Join and %04\nfor  spach   book   loaned.\nNo claim having been made\nby previous winning numbers,\nfor the GRAMOPHONE; wo\nare listing below balance of\nnumbers hi winning order:\ni* ~ 9416\n\u00abnd  5587\nw  - 9415\nCanada Drug &\nBook Co.\nLlmKed\nItBLSON,   B.C..\n-HAS IT-\nTUBERCULOSIS\nACQUIRED; NOT\nHEREDITARY\nProvincial Health Department Expert Delivers Address to Rotary Gab\nTuberculosis la not hereditary, but\nis acquired, In the main, either from\ntuberculosis-Infected milk or through\nbaccllll from 'Infected persons, stated\nDr. A. S. Lamb, who had been appointed by the provincial government to aaalst ln the work of\nhtamping out the \"white plague\" and\nwho yesterday addressed the Nelson\nRotary club.\nAbout 25 per cent of the cases,\nhe aaid, came from milk from Infected cows. There were several\nmethod* of prevention. One, of\ncourse, 'was to slaughter Infected\ncattle. Another was the pasteurization of milk, and another waa botl-\nling.     Pasteurization waa  not a  com-\nFATIGUE\nFew realize that their Eyes\nare responsible for a lot of\nthat constant tired-out feeling.\nWhen accurately fitted with\nEYE GLASSES they are relieved at once.\nIt Is indeed a pleasure to\nhave folks volunteer that since\nobtaining EYE GLASSES from\nus, there has been a pro-\nnounced Improvement ln their\nhealth. The completeness cf\nthis Institution ls an assurance\nto accurate optical service ln\nitself.\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTI8T AND OPTICIAN\nTHAT SHABBY LOOK\nof your dark clothes can roost\nlikely be remedied by Dyeing\nor   Cleaning.\nH. K. FOOT\nHigh-Cla.s   Dyar   and   Clwn.r\nFAIRVIEW\nNELSON, B.C.\nBUY ADVERTISED GOODS\nBast, Safest, Chaaptst\nAnVuona 0! any of lh* followitil p.rU\ni, b. eauMd by NERVES i\u00bbi*i|ri\nthe aaln* by . aubluiiwd vvrubra:\nMAM\nS.i Chiropractic\n\u25a0}, (fMIAU\nJfe? Adjustments\nWSSSs.   vvui\nKir?.   Rtmovethe\nOtnn *i. OKAtU\nTtifGn\u00bb AM) Ltd*\nDr. Chevalier\nChiropractor\n\u00ab\u2022)   VICTORIA   8T.     Ona   blook\nsouth  of  Bank  of  Montreal\nRUBBERS\nHALF PRICE \u2014 y2\nBalance   must   go.     Get   yours.\nFLEMING'S STORE, Fairview\nVx\nFURS\nQ. GLA8ER\nManufacturing  Furrier\nGuaranteed High-Class Furs.   A\nNice Selection kept In stock and\nMade   to   Order   from   Selected\nSkina.\nCuatomera' Furs Made Up,\nRemodelled and Hepaired. Sklna\nDressed and Mounted at Reasonable Prlcea.\n416 WARD ST.. NELSON. B.C.\nPhone 106.\nTHEY ARE NOW INSTALLED IN LONDON\nHON.  FRANK   B.  KELLOGG\nUnited  States  ambassador  to  Great  Britain, and   his  wife,  have  taken\nover their duties,  departmental  and social.   Ambassador Kellogg presented\nhis credentials to  the King a day or two ago.\nplete guarantee that there was not\nInfection ln the milk, but It at\nleaat retarded and weakened the activity of  tuberculosis germs.\nAdvises  Early  Diagnosis\nHe emphasized the -point that early\ndiagnosis was eaaentlal if_ victims\nof the diseases were to b*e cured,\nand suggested that one of the reasons\nfor the high death rate from the\ndisease waa that the average man\nor woman feared to be Informed\ndefinitely that his or her disease was\ntuberculosis. One of the chief activities of sanatofllums, such as that\nut Tranqullle, waa ,to educate patients into how to care for themselves and to prevent their sputum\nfrom Infecting others. It was not\nsufficient to take care of the sputum\nonly. When anyone coughed a handkerchief or gauze should be held in\nfront of the mouth to prevent spray-\ncarrying baccilll being carried Into\nthe air. As a result of the education which they received the tuberculosis patient who had been to a\nsanatorium was actually lea's likely\nt.j spread infection than one leaa\nseverely seized by the disease who\nhad not been taught show to pro*\ntect   others   from   infection.\nNo   Need   for   Fsar\nHence there waa no reason for\nwhat the medical men used to call\nthlaophqbla, fear of tuberculosis, in-\nHofiir as partially cured patients were\nconcerned. There waa no reason why\nthey should not be given employment,\nand If possible they should be given\nany easy Jobs which migbt be available aa once a lesion had developed\nin a lung it took some years for\ncomplete   healing.\nDr. Lamb was thank-ed for his ad\ndress and invited tii> attend the next\nRotary tuberculosis clinic,   \u2022\n\\V. S. King attended the meeting\nand asked the Rotajians to do every\nthing in their power to support the\nperformance of a Gilbert & Sullivan\nopera which ia to be presented by the\nNelaon Amateur Operatic society next\nmonth. Tha Banff orchestra rendered\nsome  musical selections.\nRUTTLEDGE HENS LEAD\nE*GG-LAYING CONTEST\n$m&)MUJM\nI\nCapitol\nkivlertainmeiil\nHOUSE\nPETERS\nHeld to\nAnswer\nSHORT SUBJECTS\nCorned \"DOG SENSE\"\n\"MY COUNTRY\"\nThis wonderful scenic\nwill make you proud that\nyou live in British Columbia.\nTOPICS OF THE DAY\nFor Today Only\nSUGAR\n10-lb.\nsacks \t\n20-lb.\nsacks \t\n$1.25\n$2.40\nFLOUR\nRobin   Hood,   Royal   Household\n\u25a0nd' Purity\nThese prices are fcr cash only,\nand for one day.\nsacks  - ~ a\/tJV\n4Mb. 4*1   OK\nsacks  \u2014 tDlaOt?\n38-lb. <\u00a3Q \u00a3jr\nsacks  \u00abDO\u00bbOU\nSt. Charles Cream, family size:\nsg $1.00\nSt. Charles Cream, tails Ufloz);\n_i_ $1.00\nJ. A. IRVING & CO.\nTha Graat Supply  Houia\n613   BAKER   ST. NELSON\nREMEMBER\n83 1-3 Per Cent Saved on\nSpectacles.   See\nHIGGINB0THAM\nHeating Stoves\nWe have a splendid assortment of McCIary and Stewart\nHeaters that for service, appearance and price cannot\nbe beaten.\nAlso four sizes of Queen Heaters, our own make.\nIt will pay you to look over our stock before you buy.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co.. Ltd.,\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON.  BA\nRETAIL\nQuality First\nEconomy Along With\nService\nPHONE 235\nINDIAN TEA\u2014Oood quality. No\nfancy  package.  Per lb (JOf*\nCOFFEE\u2014Fresh ground. We\nhave an up-to-date mi!1 a.id\nofan grind it to suit you.\n,P\u00ab   lb 50*?   and   40*?\nDELIVERIES   TWICE   DAILV\nKootsnay    Entries   Continue   to    Be\nProminent  in Competition at\nAgassis      *\nThe hens of M. H. Ruttledffe of\nSardls are leading ln the British\nColumbia egg-laying contest at Agas-\n.ilz, the latest standing being:\nW.\n2*\n24\nOwner and address\u2014\nAneonas\nOrant.  \"W.   H.,  Edmonds   .\nPuflen, F. B.,  Whonnock   .\nI White Leghorns\nA mould,   J..   Sardis        85\nBloviar W.L. Farm, Cloverdale        21\nBrown, Ruth, Pitt Meadows 3ft\nBruce, W. D., Pitt Meadows 85\nDominion   Experimental\nFarm,  Invermere        28\nFarrlngton   BroB.,   Central\nPark         48\nFlower dew,    E.    S.,    Cogh-\nlan        28\nOrahame.   It.   H.,   Langley\nPrairie        11\nHuman & Tweovlow, Cogh-\nlan        28\nKennedy Bros., New Westminster         28\nKershaw, J. H., Port Haney    17\nMai tin,    Alex,    New    Westminster        88\nMetoidfe, C. P., Hammond 2T\nMufford,    J.    H.    &    Sons,\nMilner    \t\nRtilne's     Poultry,      Farm,\nSurrey  \t\nReadey, J. W\u201e Chilllwack 28\nHump & Sendall, Sperling 35\nRuttletWre, M. H., Sardls . 50\nSchofte-'d.     A.     W.,     New\nWestminster    .<* ir-1.    47\nSimpson   &   Holland,   Port\nHaney      *    80\nToaer.  W.   &  F.  M..   Milner    23\nUniversity   of   British   Columbia,   Vancouver   .....    42\n1'nsworth,  A.. Sardls    s    20\nWebster, J.  T., Robson  ...    13\nWhite Wysndottss\nBridge,  T.,  Vancouver   ...  5*51\nDominion   Experimental\nFarm,  Summerland        40\nCurrie,  T. W.,  New Westminster         46\nDominion   Experiments*!\nDominion  Experimental\nFarm.  Summeri\u00abnd        45\nUB.ERAL PARTY\nLOSES IDENTITY\nHENCEFORWARD\nAusten   Chamberlain   Says\nAsquith Last Liberal Pre-\nof Britain\nmier\nSIMON FOR LIBERALS\nATTACKS CHyRCHIH\nAmery   Commends   Cruiser\nProgram to the Coming Government\n21\n26\n818\n166\n288\n345\n413\n382\n478\n898\n326\n402\n884\n878\n392\n431\n264\n254\n86-3\n488\n\u2022678\n470\n466\n420\n632\n889\n869\n360\n472\n463\n489\nSingle   Comb   Rhode   Island   Reds\nRussell.   D.   Juhllee        14       333\nSweatman,  H., Agaaaiz   ...    18       186\n, Barred   Rocks\nMcAlpine. W. S., Creston 32 290\nWilklnBon, H, Jubilee ... 12 256\nDominion   Experimental\nFarm,   Agassi-;        38       432\nDominion   Experimental\nFarm,   Agamic        88       465\nLONDON, Jan. 21.\u2014The discussion ln the house cf commons today\nrose to no great helghta, the speeches\nbeing confined to making and debating points of Justlficntion for the\npolicies followed by the opposing\nparti 68.\nSir John Simon, for the Liberals,\n.had little to add tc former Premier\nAaqulth'a previous arguments, but\ncontended that Winston Spencer\nChurchill's Idea of a fusion of the\nConservatives and Liberals to exclude Labor from the government\nwould only tend to strengthen the\nvery force* Churchill d-eslred tc circumvent.\nAusten Chamberlain, who was chancellor of the exchequer under Lloyd\nOeorge, devoted hie main argument\nto attempts to show that the Liberals, by helping Labor Into power,\nwould Inevitably be drawn Into supporting them there, and thus would\nbe assisting a government and policy\nthey affected to distrust, rather than\ntake a middle ocurse which would\ngive the country what It wanted-\nLeber er Conservative  In   Future\nThe public, voting he It did ln the\nlast election, he said, had never\nthought that It waa going to put a\nSocialist government Into power. Asquith, he declared. In consequence of\nhis attitude In the situation, would\ngo down ln history as the last Liberal premier, The country would\nhenceforth vote Labor or Conservative, as it would never again elect\nthose who had betttiyed lta trust.\nMiss Margaret Bond-field, Labor,\nin her maiden speech, devoted herself to the shortcomings of the Baldwin government tn legislating for\nwomen nnd unemployment. She waa\nwarmly   cheered.\nLleut.-Col. L. C. Amery, flrat Iprd\nof the admiralty, gave further explanations of the government's program of cruiser construction for the\nrelief of the unemployed. He said\nthat practically aW of Britain's light\ncruisers would become worn out or\nobsolete within the next 12 ysnrs:\nhence the necessity cf expediting\nconstruction In ordwr to maintain\neffective strength, and for this purpose the country would need to lay\ndown about 26 cruisers within the\ncoming decade.\nBuild   Cruisers,   Give   W\u00abrk\nWhat the government proposed\nwaa to lay down immediately eight\ncruisers of 10,000 tons each, with\neight-inch gvma In addition, the\ngovernment proposed to build some\nauxiliary vessels, The program would\nKlve direct employment to 38,000 persona and Involve a special addition\nof \u00a35,000,000 to the navy estimates\nfor the coming year. He hoped the\nsucceeding government Would give\nsympathetic consideration to this\nprogram.\nT. P. O'Connor, the veteran Nationalist, confesa-ed he was glad that a\nLabor government was coming Into\npower.     He   believed   the   Laborites\nwould propose large measures of\n.social refcrm which no consistent\nLiberal could oppose, and It waa\nreasonable to suppose that they could\nnot pass extreme measurea. He\n\/favored a Labor government because\nof the foreign policy he hoped It\nwould pursue.\nFOR LAUGH PURPOSES ONLY\nA comedy program you will remember for months.\nHAROLD LLOYD\nIn His Latest Feature-Length Comedy\n'Why Woffy-\nLLOYD  HAMILTON   in  a   2-Reel  Comedy,   \"NO\nLUCK\"; and for good measure, \"FELIX THE CAT\"\nin an Animated Cartoon. ^\nADVANCED PRICES\u2014Nights: Adults 50c, Children 25c. Saturday Matinee: Adults 85c,\nChildren 10c.\nTHURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nGEM THEATRE\nFor Rent   *\n6-Roomed House, corner Mines road find Koot-    \u2022\u00bb\nenay street S25-00\n6-Roomed   House,   corner   Latimer   and   Cedar\nstreets .\u00bb13.00\n5-Roomed House, Water street    f 14.00\nCHAS. F. McHARDY\nRIAL  ESTATE BONDS .\nINSURANCE   Flra, Aooldant,  Lift PHONI  M\nBring your friends to th. Court\nWhist Drive, K. C Hall tonlaht. \u00bb\no'clock. Refreshments. Admission 25\ncents. (2811)\nLent you forget\u2014Turkey supper at\nMemorial hull. First seating I p.m.;\nsecond .entlng. fi:46 pm. Tickets for\neate. Standard Furniture Co.; 8. J.\nOrldley; A. 9. Horswlll and tne Ark.\nCM14)\n\u25a0ones\nAll Pylhlan Platers are requested to\nr.e.t nt K. P Hall at 2;30 thla aftec-\nncon So attend the service, of our late\ntiro. Kenny. (2115)\nClan McLthry No 1 Burns connerl.\nvupner ond dance. Eagle Hall, Friday.\np6th. Tickets now on sale at Ledlng-\nhum's Bakery. R. Wallace. I. Spier,\nand A Wallach. No on. admitted\nwithout a ticket. (2816)\nA. S. Horswifl & Co.\nPhone 121\nDruniwlck Sardines, 3 tins 25e\u00a3\nPutland Sardines, tin  lOtf\nKing Oscar Sardine., tln....20\u00abJ\nRye   Crisp,   per   pkt 45e*>\nNavel Oranges. 28\u00abs, doi. 3Q\u00a3\nNavel Orange*, 288s, 1 doi. _Q^\nNavel Oranges, 252s, dox. 35\u00a3\nor 3 do\u00bb. lor     S1.00\nRoyal Oxford Cheese, lb _\\_4\nKraft Cream Cheese, lb. 4M\nTomatoes,  large ting.\n\u00ab tor ._ .....*1.00\nQuaker Corn, t for  $1.00\nStandard Peas, per tin _Os}\nSweet Pototces, large tin 25^\nDIM Pickles,   Urge tin     40^\nSaurkraut. large tin _^n\nOur Best Flour, 98 lbs....$3,75\nPROMPT   DELIVERY\nPROPERTY NEAR KASLO\nIS BEING DEVELOPED\nExitenslvs work ls being carried\non In the T.C.F. property, near Kaslo,\nthe owners of whloh are E. Tinunu,\nE. J. Cooke and M. Jesty and associates,  of   England.\nThe work at preaent Is being carried on In two of the smaller veins,\none being about 4 feet wide snd the\nother about 8.\nSUGAR LAKE PROPERTY\nREPORTED PROMISING\nPhillip Billings of Sheep Creek,\nwho holds several mining claims\nthere and In the Bayonne, and who\nsome months ago went to develop\nanother property at Sugar lake, ne*r\nChase, haa written friends in Nelaon\nthat the showing on the property\nhap been much better than was\nexpected; gives fine Indications, and\nthat he expects to eatabllph a good\nmine.\nAre You\nCurling or\nSkating?   ,\nIT'S rather niw to have ;\na big, warm, comfortable Sweater. You will\nlike the \"feel of It.\" The\nanug way it buttons up\nud the way it allows full 3\nfreedom of the arms.\nCome in and see our assortment of both Pullovers and Coat styles. .\nThey're all wool.\n$5.50 to $10.50\nFLORENCE MINE ROAD\nTO BE BUILT SOON\nMinlrter of Publlo Works AniwuntM\nThat  W-ork en Out  off Will  \u2022\u00bb\nJtertxl Early in February\nTh. announcement Is made by Htm.\nDr. Sutherland, provincial minister of\npubUc works, that a cutoff from the\nKaslo-Spokane road to t*\u00bb Florence\nmine ls Ua be constructed and thsU\nwork will be started emly tn February.\nThe message was sent to the Kaslo\nboard ot trade, which has been\nactively seeking to have this road\nuullt for some time.\nGOOD STRIKE REPORTEp\nON THE CORK-PROVINCE\nA strike of good ore fs reported\nfrom th* Cork-Province mine.\nIt Is now being proved up, and hM\nmost  encouraging  expectations.\nSpecial Train, to\nRossland Tomorrow\nFor Hockey Game\nROSSLAND vs. NELSON\nTrain Leave* Nelson 4:30 p.m.\nTICKETS\u201413.75\nThis is a crucial game.   Do not misa ii      .\nAX. LAMBERT CO., Ltd.\nManufacturers   of  and   Dealers i In\nALL     KINDS     OF     LUMBER     AND     BUILDING     MATERIAL*,\n8HINGLE8,    LATH,    MOULDINGS,   WINDOWS,    DOORS,    COAST\nEDGE  GRAINED   FLOORING   AND  FINISH,  AND   BEAVER   AND\nWALL   BOARDS\nDrawer 1086\nPhone No. 82\nNel.on, B.C.\nSS\nsmm\t\nmotn ot mmi\nAU Enlffct. of rrttlaa r.-\niww te stead fuaral ef ow\nlet. broth.r. Put OkaaeaUw X.\nS. Z.aay. XirUe to b. held\nfrom Oartl. Ball, aoo Tu.ad.y\nafwrnoon. D. Laurhton, at. of m.\naad >. (t7\u00bb|)\nTun.ral lat. H. V. Kenny from\nKnlsht. of rvthui. Hall. Bak.r atrMt,\nV.l\u00bbon. Tuesday. January f2, 2:90 p.m..\n'n rhitrs. Knlant. of Pvthlas and In-\n'tependent Order Odd Fellows.      (27171\nMra J. R Curler. 510 Hoover street\nwill receive for the first time since\n'ier marriage. Wednesday afternoon\nlanunry 22. 1124, from 1 till \u00ab.  (27M)\nI. O. O. V.\nAll member. Kootenay Lodge, No\nl\u00ab. Nelaon Knrampment, No. 7. IO\nO F.- and aojournlns brothers n.aembt.\nit I OO F. Hall. 2 p m. Tuesday. !\u2022\nattend  funeral  late Bro.  H.  P.  Kenny\nApples wanted.   McDonald Jam Co\nSUM\nPhon. SIORt.\n(ISM\nJ. Burge... Carpenter.\nNelson Operatic Society performsnoe\nof Gilbert snd fsulllvsn's world-wide\nfamed opera 'Th. Slondollers.\" at Nelson, Wednesday and Thursday, sNbru-\nnry 27 .nd 28. Keep these date, open\n(l>02)\nRose City Chapter. O. E. S., tonight\n  '-IM)\ndiet\nOABD \u00abT WtUMMM\nMrs. M. r. McAndrew desire, to .*-\np.... her sincere thanks to lh. nf-\nteen Hundred t'lub of K*i*to and Pts-\ntr'ct for the prompt payment of the\nfull amount (11600.00! du. for Insurance following the death of her hua-\nl.i.nd. (1101)\nBOTIOB\nTh. eighteenth annual meeting of\nshareholder, of th. N.lson Brewing\ncompany, limited, will be held at the\neffica of th. company, 510 Latimer\nafreet, on Thursday, January 24 th,\n1(24, at I o'clock. Oeorg. 8. Hawthorne. Secretary, N.lson, B.C., Jsnu-\nsry  10th,  lilt. (IITO)\n-M_MH****\u00ab-.--*****MV\nI Tonight   STARLAND   Tonight!\nMyrtle Stedman\nMary Philbin\nand William Collier\nForm the STAR CAST in\n4 The Age of Desire'\n' sSSTN.\nSVBaby Pegg*\/\nmsrn\n_\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1924_01_22","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0400684","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"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","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1924-01-22 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1924-01-22 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0400684"}