{"@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":"2021-11-17","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1930-02-10","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0403896\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" MIKES CLOSED\nSee Page 6\n__ml.\n______________m\nrrtrrs  >R\nOld Country\nSOCCER NEWS\nSee Page 7\nNELSON, B. C.  MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 10, 1930\nNO. 254.\n?17  GANGSTERS  ARRESTED\n-.attle Looms for Securing of  Wheat Price |\nANADAAND\nIHE STATES\nMY HE\n[mild Battle the Continent\nto Secure Fair Price\nfor Wheat\nItlTlSH   PARLIAMENT\nEMBERS ARE ACTIVE\nWheat\nKernels\nTO RELIEVE\nB. C. FARMERS\nI\nLegislation Introduced Relieve Farmers of Excessive School Tax\n[guest Creation of Grain\nImport Board; Canadians silent\ntAaj-UNOTON,   peb.  \u00bb.\u2014A   battle   of\n[tn American wheat against the reet\nworld le presaged.   Hie chain of\nbte   here   inevitably   leads   towards\nconclusion that the Canadian wheat\nIi and the .National  Oram corporar\n*, mane up of cooperatives of the\n.Becked by the governments of the\nprairie provinces, tlie bauka, farmers\naad publio opinion, the Canadian\nwheat pool euuids by its declared\npolicy oi orderly marketing, thus ma-\ni\u00abiu_lly'reUevu-g a situation wuicii last\nwees, bruugnt about a condition of\nnear crisis.\nWhUe uus reassurance came from the\nwtftL, week-end developments in eastern\nCanada* ___ tne ttriuen ituo. and the\nOiu-\u00abd bt&tee, produced angles ot new\nbiginiiCsance.\nln a statement Issued ln Toronto,\nby c. jj. Watt, tenter member ox the\nCanadian wheat board, it was charged\nthat certain reetaurauturers in London\nwue displaying placards to tbe effect\nthat they were not using Canadian\nHour and theie was otner evidence of\nnuyuttung of Canadian wheat.\nBritish pmpws editorially charged\ntbat the Canadian wheat spool had\nuiougut the crisis upon itself and \"that\nthe   economic   crisis   in   Canada   was\ncaused   by   the  most  giganUo   gamble,    ,\u201e---_.\u201e\u25a0.   ___.\u00bb_   \u2022    \u201e-_.    \u2014_.______ \t\nin  wheat  ever  known\" \u25a0    VICTORIA. Peb. 9\u2014The Tolmie gov\nirom Washington came a statement' wnment's scheme for relieving farmers\nthat the uniLed btaies regarded the j (ro\u2122 *\"?*!_? w5110?* taxuUon was represent impasse in tbe grain trade *_*\u00ab* Saturday as the most important\njw   a   fight   of   the   whole   continent I o***1** Jn\u201e Proviiidal taxation in many\nSUBSTANTIAL FUND\nWILL BE PROVIDED\nDetailed Scientific Method\nof Applying Relief Has\nBeen   Devised\n'against Kurope and stood ready through\n\u25a0_____   _,___\u25a0\u25a0_. _    i i\u00bb f*rm board  to back the Canadian\n\\-a&  States  and   luncuoning   under I iw0l\nmJP9!* i_5m-i0<U. J*0*^' ^ ^ I J\u00abbn A- Stoneman, Dominion railway\nfcKH in concert, along rtmUw m* coinuussiouer, cnaiwteruwL as \"pro-\nPMof tici lines in a great effort> ^UMtai.. ^ 0_ caiamlty in con-\nlobtaln for the producers of the ^.^ wim ^ wheat 8.tliWoilt\n|UMU w rt they consider a fair -j^ wtWftt wkat. the actual refle*\nlot wheat 0l uonditions, was moderately steady\nlv ADIAN VIBWS ! yeeterday, wltb Indications that traders\nIflWMXW-O, Peb, 9.\u2014Developments of I n\u00bbd adopted a waiting attitude,\ngrnatlonai significance, following this | .,      \t\n* week of -important and far-reach-\ndecislons, by government and pri-\ni  Interests,  to  the grain trade  of\ntada. may come from oversea* this\nInd, as in the put week, the Con-\n|tn wheat pool, the cooperative sell-\nassociation with a membership of\nLooo western agriculturist*, may be\n[the spotlight along with plana of\nkish   parliamentarians  for  a  HUbUH^^^g^^^g^^^^^M\nfee on tiie markets of Oreat Britain, : \t\ni it* *J\u00abt of orderly \"uk*ttiv slides Freeze. Causing Grief to\na guaranteed value per bushel _^M^-^-^-^^^L...^m^m^m^m^m^mm\nfarmers of the old land.\n|ablee Tram l-podon forecast lmpor-\ndevelopments^-the purchase of\nItadlan  wheat  by  the British gov-\nit gm also the bringing before\n\u25a0lament, on MfrOAk't, suggestions for\nI ortiWon of a grain impon board\nthe obJcotr of stabilisation of\n\u00a7es and genral suprvlBion of wheat\nFOUR SERVICES\nARE TODAY OUT\nOF COMMISSION\nPlow Crews; Progress on\nSlocan Lake\nyears, following the Introduction of\nlegislation for the purpose into the\nlegislature   late   Friday.\nIn brief, the plan provides that the\ngovernment shall create a sustanthtl\nfund every year, and out of lt, make\nrebates to all formers on their school\ntaxes. About $300,000 will be allocated\nto the man on the land through thli\narrangement during the first year of\noperations commencing April l, 1931.\nA detailed scientific method of applying this relief has been devised, covered\npartly by legislation and partly by regulations.\nHon. Joshua Hinchliffe. minister of\neducation, who Introduced the new\npolicy, as an amendment to the School\nact, outlined It in detail as the full\nIntent of the scheme is barely Indicated by the legislation.    He explained\nKOMOTKI)\nCROWN\nPROSECUTOR\nRoscoe W, Ball, general superintendent of the western lines, Canadian\nNatlonal Telegraphs, who appointment\nas chief of the newly formed commercial\ndepartment of the telegraph cempan.\nhas been announced, lfr. Ball will\nhave jurisdiction throughout the system\nln regard to commercial uffftirv..\nTERM CANADIAN\nWHEAT POOL HUGE\nCANUCK GAMBLE\n(hai'Kied   with   Storing   (ii-ain\nki to Squeeze Money\" Out\nuf Britishers1. Pockets\nLANDON. 90b. -.--'The People.'\nweekly itcws.pH.pei:, devoted two column\"\nof Its front page ye_tctd.fi y to an exposition   01   what   lt   calls   the   \"Truth\nit.  Hon. J.  H.  Thomas,  lord  privy\nand minister ot unemployment in\nBritish  cabinet,   has  had   coiufer-\n1 with members of the Canadian\n\u25ba\u2014A. j. McPhail, president, N.  A.\npublicity   reprsentatlve,    and\nItt. Mclntyre, eastern Bales manager.\niry   phase  of   the   -Wheat  Importing\njation hts been discussed, and from,\nJ confernees may Come the announce-\nlit of a policy of great importance\njthe farmers and  business interests\nIthe Dominion.\nOfficials of the pools in Winnipeg\n( the west tonight, however, refuse\nxxmment on the week-end forecasts\ntamed tn the London cables.\n1 SDPPOUT\nI he policy of \"orderly marketing\"\noh hag be*n maintained by the pool\nthe face of criticism from overseas\nin the Dominion, today has the\nort of governments, business in-\n\u25a0to and farmers, as shown by dei\natlons of tbe P*st fey days,\nbe action of the provincial gov-\nmento in the prairie provinces\nranteelng the 15 per cent loan,\ngin required by the banks from the\n__ has won instant approval from\naorities and private interests both\nsea-tern. and western Canada. Sup-\ntor the belief that the world sttu-\nj shows the wisdom of the pool\njalniag ftom dumping Canadian exri\nsurplus on the market comes from\n[it quarters. Stock market col-\nlee, liquidation Of speculative groin\nIjjanles, and dumping of large quan-\nof wheat oa the market are\nUM for the prise-fit unsatisfactory\n[reding was exttnoely * dull on' the\nLnlpeg grain m*rk\u00abt Saturday, but\n|ies held firm, olwing y4c per bushel\nto Vio higher.. Pew purchases\njs repeftbd from overseas, and trad-.\nTemperatures comprising many\ndegree, of frost, obtaining In. the\nSlocan last night and some earlier\nnights, have clamped to the rail***\nthe remaining snow'slldes between\nZlncton and Parapet ou tbe Kaslo\n& Nakusp branch. The snowplows\nand crews are having now great\ndifficulty.\nAt midnight last night the\ntrain sent up to the Lardeau Saturday had failed to get past the\nseries of slide* that came down\ntwo or three days ago a couple of\nmiles   beyond   Lardo.\nThe temporary  train  service be.\ntween sandon and Nakusp will be\nrepeated   today.\nHOSKItF.KY    STILL   GOING\nIn the warfare with the lake ice,\nthe steamer Rosebery ls making steady,\nlf Blow progress on Slocan lake, and\nyeflterday afternoon she had got as far\nnorth as seven mile above Slocan Ctty,\nShe Is now within three miles or so\nof the open water ln mid-lake, and\nln two or three days, excluding accidents, should reopen this route, which\nhas been closed since January 36.\nOn the Lower Arrow lake the steamer\nColumbia Is now within a mile or so\nof Deer Park. Softer Ice, and therefore greater speed of ice-breaking, is\nexpected from now on. Benata will\nbe  visited  next.\nThe steamer Minto continues its\nservice on the Upper Arrow lake between Arrowhead and Nakusp.\nTomorrow Sees\nStart of War\non\nLONDON,    Feb.    9.\u2014The    submarine\ngoes  on  trial   for  Its  life before the\n___.._       _,____\u25a0 .tribunal   of   the   London   naval   con-\ngenerally  continued  to  await  de.  ference at next Tuesday's plenary ses-\n\u25a0pments.   The May future registered   8ion\n\"\u2022actional loss, closing at 11.26ft per     -nie chief delegates to the conference\niri;\n_\u25a0.\n\u25a0died\nJuly   wae   unchanged   to   ftc\n.  $1-38U   t\nat \u2666156%, up\nSTAHT LONG FLIGHT\nCROYDON,   Cft\u00abfc*d.   Feb.   99.\u2014\nan attempt to Mt a new record\nthe   flight   from   England   to\n\u25a0ustrallu, Flying Officers ll   Piper\ni5   C.   Karf-iU   Royal   \\\\r\ntoofc off from Croydon this\norning.\nBarren Denies Any\nPlan of Split in\nSmelter Stocks\nTORONTO,  Feb. 9.  -\n\u25a0ameg J. Warren, presi-\nent of Consolidated Min-\n& Smelting1 company,\nimited, denied here Satur-\nay that there was a split\nending in\u00bb the shares of\nKhe company. Reports of\nhe split had Come from\nlontreal. The stock made\nstrong showing on the\n^Toronto stock exchange\nSaturday, rising to a high\ni $28Q and closing at\n&70. This was an advance\ntf seven points in addition\nio that uf 18 points made\n'riday.\ntoday reviewed and rearranged their\narguments for one of the most important of all the public sessions of\nthe disarmament  negotiations  so far.\nBarister John Bull supported by the\nUnited States, and perhaps by Itlaly,\nwill Jead the prosecution. Prance will\ndefend the prisoner as no worse than\nany other war criminal, and will demand that he be only \"humanized.\"\nFor the defense, there will he a new\nalliance. The Japanese wlU support\nthe French though advocating dimlta-\n[ttioh of the size and of the numbers of\nsubmarines.\nAs the submarine question will probably ocupy the conference most of\nthe week, tomorrow's program wilt\nconsist merely of a continuation of\nthe technical work on the compromising tonnage limitation plans.\nthat iht government desired to grant I about the wheat crista.\" The paper\nrelief from school taxes to the man ^ ^ th^ c^i^ whe(a p^ hwl\nou .the   land   who   is   suffering  most 1 ,.;,.. \/\nfrom excessive levies. It was vital, he stored lt8 Braln t0 atiueeze money out\nsaid, that this relief should actually! ol our pockets,\" and declared the\nreach the farmer, and not be absorbed ' economic crisis la Canada wae caused\nby the general  body of  taxpayers,\nAttorneys-General or Their\nDeputies Get Busy in\nToronto\nSEEKING UNIFORM\nTRADE REGULATIONS\nWill Discuss Means Tightening Up; Wish to End\nBucketing\nTORONTO. Feb. 9.\u2014With the object\nof securing uniform stock trading regulations and especially to put an end\nco bucketing and Illegal short nelling\nof securities on the part of broken:,\nrepresentatives of six of the provincial\nattorneys-general of Canada will meet\nin conference here tomorrow. The\ngovernments of British Columbia, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec will be represented\nwith the possibility that plther or both\nNova Scotia and New Brunswick delegates will  be present. ,\nW. H. Price, uttorney-getieral for\nOntario., at whose invitation the conference waw iirnuiKed, (.aid the whole\nsubject of stock trading in all its\nramification*, would be discussed. Efforts wtll be made to plug the loopholes In tht> provincial security frauds\nprevention acts and to tighten up\nsenerally on the government control\nof Block trading. Each delegate will\nreport back to bla government as the\nconference will be purely advisory.\nOTTAWA   NOT   KEPKESKNTED\nON CROOKS IN\nHUGE DRIVE\n10 Special Squads of Policemen Assail Hangouts\nof Gangland\nORDERS ARE TO\nCLEAN THE CITY\nGeorge EdA'ard, who with G. T.\nClark_on has been retained by the\ncrown ln the case cf accused stock\nbrokers to scrutinize cheques and to\nrelease money for payment of cheques\nup  to the day  befjre  the arrest.\nIRRIGATIONISTS\nWILL GET MORE\nTIME^PROVINCE\nWill Repay Loans as Are Able\nUnder   New   Irrigation\nLegislation\nVICTORIA. Feb. D-Interior trr<_u-\ntlonlats will be required by the provincial government to repay its provincial  loans,   but   they   will   he  given\nBails Set High; No Notorious Leaders Taken; to\nContinue Warfare\nThe, Ide* of fixing assessment^ *i*i\nfarm lands, or interfering with mill\nratw. While st_jce_ted. had proved tin,-\nworkable, the minister said, instead,\nlt has been decided to fix the allocation of relief on the basis of the total\nvalue of farm lands within municipalities, ahd rural school districts, and\nupon the amounts paid for teachers'\nsalaries.\nTeachers' salaries are taken ' as tho\nunit of relief as they constitute most\nof the working expense of all school\nareas. No attempt wlllbe made under\nthe scheme to aid municipal I ties to pay\nthe capital cost of schools.\nU. S. Agriculture\nIndustry Fights\nTariff Changes\nWASHINGTON, r-eb. 9.\u2014Organised\nagriculture ls ln rebellion against the\npending tariff bill.\nRepresentatives of seven of the Iwul*\ning farm organizations of the country,\nln an open-- letter addressed to the\nmembers of the senate today, asserted\nthe present state of the senate measure\nwould \"prVent.a reytomtion of a balanced  agriculture,\"\nTaking, e-tceptlon particularly to senate votes against \"hicienees in duties\non sugar, blackstrap molassee, fats\naud oils, tho failure to place a duty\non, hides, now free, and the hicreasc\ngrunted casein, the letter continued:\n\"In recent weeks representatives of\ngeneral' farm organizations and co-\nopertivetf who have been called here\nby the situation whtch has arisen have\nnoticed that the objective for which\ntariff adjustment has begun appears\nto have been forgotten. In our estima^\nton this objective ls the placing of\nAmericap farmers, who must meet\ncompetition from low coat, low living\nstandard producers abroad, in a posl-\nsttion to enable them to supply the\ndomestic market as completely as possible and to enjoy the benefits of bo\ndoing.\"\nALEXANDER TALKS\nON   ANY   FUTURE\nBRITISH REDUCTION\nnot be represented, it was sam tonight\nthei* was more than a possibility that\ncertain recommendations would bo\nmade to the minister of Justice,   These\n  would   deal   with   the   ov.r1_MMj._ig   of\nby \"the most gi(fantt\u00abj^mbJe in wheat   the right* of compwUea operating un-\ncver  known.'\" ! <ter Dominion\"c'hartere and selling their\nReferring to rumors hi London that   stock   within   a   province   under   pro-\nrtp^e^fiiitfttlves of * Uir wheat pool 'now   vtnclal  regulations, ^^^^\nTTnglE\nAlthough the federal government wjll | more   time   to   meet   them,   will   be\ni iiu-\\t.t.. 111., Feb. !>.\u2014Arouted\nh> the ri'Urn of hoodlum savagery\nthat has been marked by nearly a\ndozen murders, numerous bomb-\nUisgsS, shooting* and robberies during the post 10 days, poller swooped\ndown on gangland haunt* early\ntoday und l>> nightfall nearly 1009\nsu.-pee ted thugs were behind prison\nhar*.\nThe dri\\&, one of the most ambitious In the history of the local\ndepartment, was Instituted by\nPolice < onuni-slnner William Russell and (htef of Detective. John\nKuan, whit ordered their lieutenants to continue the campaign until thr city has been \"purged'* of\ncriminal**.\nForty -p\"<'t*il squads agisted b>\nprnlnct police made \u25a0 a thorough\n-iiiiYUs of the city. Jamming poller\nstations with their prisoners. The\nixmp and near Noithftlde district,\nreputed territory of thfc Al Capone-\n\u2022lack Ciisick clan, were the first\nsect ion.- visited. Next came the\nnorth side where Rugs Moran, the\nAMUo brothers arat Ted Newberry\nhold sway and then the bailiwick..\nof U Wlnge. Matt KUb. Danny\n\u2022-Uniton, Frank Moerlane, Red Bolton, Klandike O'Donnell and a host\not others.\nAlthough none of the reputed leaders\nwere taken In the flret stage of the\ndrive a total of 917 men, many of\nthem described, \"hired killers,' had been\narrested by early evening. They were\nrwihtd   to   headquarters   for   \"showup\"'\nIn TJngiand were hoping to* enlist the\nBritish government's .support for \"the\npoor Canadian farmer,\" the correspondent of The People declared: ''I\ncannot a jnoment imagine such a possibility. For the Canadian wheat spool\nbrought this ortaia upon itself. It mHy\nbe very bjtrd lines on the tgpnem,\nbut it ia unthlnkabe that thc British\npublic should ever be--called upon to\nfoot the bill for the huge Canadian\nsamble which could never have been\nsuccessful   except   at   our  expense.\"\nMr.  Price,  who  will  preside,  will   be\nth*   only   attorney-general   presemt.    It\ncharged for water according to their\nability to pay. and will be allowed a\nreduction in the total bill of about\n25 per cent.\nThis  will  be   Uie  foundation  of  the       _______________________________________\nIrrigation -policy to be lntrodue*d- into {tonight, to be paraded before victims\nthe legislature fflbrtly on the advice of recent crimes,\nof Sanford Evans, special Investigator, | About half of thy total were said\nIt was learned today. Mrs. Evans, re- i to have local police records and t_hrr\\-\nport will be ready for presentation to I eruus others were suspected of belne\nthe holl\u00ab within a few days, and while f terrorists   imported   here   from   oth\u00ab*\n:\u2122 *_jrre_f_,.t_Ttt___r,o,ih.1i. IS_^\u00a3siJ,-\u00bb S\u00bb?\u00bb!\u00a3*\"\u00a3 \"i__rMW,,__**^\nTORONTO LEAFS\nBEAT AMERICANS\nhere because of the sitting* of their\nlegislatures. British Columbia will be\nrepresented by H. G. Garrett, registrar\nof companies; Albertii by Oeorge Hen-\nwood, K. C\u201e deputy attorney-general,\nand by \"J. J. Prawley. solicitor in the\ndepartment; Saskatchewan, by R, W.\nShannon, K. C\u201e legislative counsel;\nManitoba by W. R. Cottlngham, K. C,\nchairman of the municipal and public*\nj utilities board, and Quebec by Chartee\n| I.ancott, K. C., deputy attorney-general.\nYoungsters    Have    Share\nToronto   Win   at   New\nVork Arena\nin\nNEW YORK. Feb. 9.\u2014Toronto's Maple\nLeafs turned back the New York\nAmerican threat tonight with u three\nto two victory ln a fest and hard\nfought National League game here.\nThe brilliant play of Toronto'B young\nforwiird line was tht* feature of the\ngame and was more than' enough to\noffset the experiences of the Americans.\nThe kids scored two of the three Toronto goals after t he Americans had\ntaken mi curly lead. The guine wuh\nrough at inrns nnd sit of the 12\npenalties were handed out in pairs on\nroughing dharges.\nsl MMAKY\nF'lrst period; I\u2014Americans, Boyd,\n2:32; 2\u2014Toronto, PrimeaU, (C. Conacher),   11:34.\nSecond period: 3\u2014Toronto, C. Conacher, (Smith), 8:08; 4\u2014Toronto,\nBailey,   (Blair).   8:37.\nThird period: 5\u2014Americans, Shephard,   (Simpson),   18:59.    .\nPilot and Passenger\nKilled in Crash\nNEW YORK, \u2022 Peb. 9.\u2014A commercial\npilot and a friend who was enjoying\nhis flrA air ride were killed today as\ntheir plane crashed Into a wooded section of Jamaica, Long Island. The\nbodies, badly burned, were identified\nseveral hours after the crush as those\nof Edwin KCagrudQr, 26, pilot for the\nRussel Lobe parachute company, and\nRichard H. Gillette, about 20, both of\nNew York.\nLone Gunman Makes\nSmall Haul, London\nLONDON, Ont., Fib. 9.\u2014A lone gunman walked into the manager's office\nat Loews theatre last night while 1800\npeople were watching the evening's\npertonnsbnoe,   and  escaped   with  1270.\nLONDON, Peb. 9.\u2014First Lord ol tho\nAdmiralty,' Rt. Hon. A. V. Alexander\nsai# yesterday that any further reductions the British empire mlnht hare\nto make In future naval disarmament\nconferences would liave to b vern\ned entirely by the contrlbutk-.i I I tin-\nmilitany and not the naval powers. He\ndeclared tljat Oreat Britain cculd not\nmake further reductions at sea until\nshe knew how far otner powers would\nmeet her by reducing their armaments\nin the air and on the land.\nAIR MAIL PILOT IS\nLOST IN MINNESOTA\nBAUDOT!--, Minn.. Feb. 9. Maurice\nMiller, airplane pilot who can-fed mall\nand emergency supplies to thc scattered\nsettlements in this north country, tonight was reported lost In Uie- wilder-\nnese between here and Notrthwest\nAngle.\nMiller left here late Saturday Tor\nNorthwest Angle. He hud not reached\nthere lat\u00a3 today and a search has\nbeen started for him.\nMiller waa last reported over Oak\nIsland ln Lake of the Woods, 75 miles\nnorth of here.. He is believed to\nhave been forced down after leaving\nhere and may have landed on the Ice\non the lake.\nPOPULAR VANCOUVER\nMISS IS QUEEN OF\nTHE BANFF CARNIVAL\nCALGARY. Feb. 9\u2014Mlss Doris Parkes,\npopular Vancouver sport* enthusla.t,\nwas crowned queen of the Banff cart\nnival   Saturday.\nIn the final hockey evens, D.. S.\nPaterson's team ot Calgary defeated\nWe*teer_ of Calgary 4-3, monarchs of\nEdmonton won the ladies hockey final\n1-0 over University of Alberta sextette\nWinning the 220 yards dash, Stuart.\nMorrison of Vancouver copped the speed\nskating championship, wth Tom pen-\naluna of Butte,  Mont.,  second.\nCOUGAR  TRACKS  ARE\nFOUND AROUND HOME\nTrack--    Unit    Here    Identified    as \u2022\nthose of u large  <uiiir.ii*  were discovered  recent 1)   around the Fleury\nheme un  Ouvis  street  in  Fairview.\nThe animal hnd evidently been\nprowling around the bouse In\nsi-arch et food aud the tracks left\nevldem-ed the fact lhat. U had\nsearched thoroughly before going\nfurther   afield.\nHOCKEY STANDING\nAmerican association hockey standings,   including Sund_**|^^^^^^^\nTeam\nP\n\\V\nL\nT\nOh Oh Pts\nKaiuas City\nU\n14\nIU\n9\n46   \u00ab   37\nTulsa\n19\n11\n9\n11\nsa 4i  as\nSt. Paul\nH\nia\n12\n'.I\n03    61    33\nDuluth   ..\n\u25a0J 4\n10\n11\n13\nM   61    33\n8t. . Loula .\n31\n10\n11\n10\nei as ao\nMl_i_apol_\n33\n11\ntu\n0\nii- m -in\nCONSOLIDATED\nNET PROFITS\nAREOFF SOME\nBut   Gross  Is  Up   tor   1929;\nPlant Expenditures Bring\nDown Net Profits\nMONTHKAL, Feb. it\u2014The preliminary earning* st at einenl of the\nConsolidated Mining und Smelting\n< ninuaiu of Canada, limited. Just\nreleased, re teals e**i Inutted gross\nprirfltt for m\u00bb as -4O2.K3S.O0O tt\u00bb\neuinwtred with \u00bbU,-3'.,fll\u00ab la 10S8.\nNd pr-oflt*- for 1020 are estimated\nat 17,870,000, us ufHlnst 18,188*10\nIn 10J8. Heavy e\\m*ridlturf-* ua\nnl.int account brought down the\nnet -profits In spite of the increased ttaaa.\nIt is understood to be bused ou these\nfindings:\nl.\u2014That the government I.s not justified' morally or financial.y lu writing\noff it.s lottnt* of (2.100,000 to the interior irrigation district** of the Okanagan and adjoining a-rean.\n2.\u2014Tliat this amount cannot be repaid  as  originally   provided,   but  must\ntlons,    \t\nCabarets, hotels, soft drink, parlors\nand speakeasies un well as all known\nrendezvous of gaiiKsteiis were raided\nand thoee unable to give a -satisfactory\naccount of themselves were taken Iu\nc as tody.\nTonight    ,i    swarm    of    profes-sional\n-   \u25a0   tuKOliTlnir     i\\aa\/)mifirt_iiti     in     ten      urT^mnt\nso that the annual char^** on capital\n|*nay be reduced.\n3.--Tliat the charges tor water in\nthese district* must be based on. ability\nto pay aJid not on the present arbltrary\narangement.\nI,\u2014That the reduction of 25 pr cent\nof thc total amount due to the government, reoonunehded by the Hwutx\nconimisfiion of 1927 but never carried\nout,   .should   bl   Bruited   forthwith.\ni). Tnat provision be made whereby\nland reverting for teles :n irigated districts shall not Increase the taxation\nburden of the remaining lands.\nCouple Charged\nWith Abandoning\nBabe on a Train\nTULSA TAKES SECOND\nPLACE BY BEATING\nKANSAS. ROUGH GAME\nTULSA. Okla., Feb. 0. TMw slipcd\nInto undisputed \u00abrip of second place\nand only two points out of first place\nin tlie American association raee by defeating the league-leading Kansas City\nPla-Mors 1 to 0 here today. It was the\nsecond itTalgtlt triumph for Tulsa over\nthe Kansas City team. Burr Williams,\nhusky\"'Tulbu defence star, tallied tho\nonly goat (tf the game wheu he\nsoored on a rifle shot, Waist high,\nfrom the bltu line early in tlte third\nperiod.\nA free-for-all flgh' took plane iut-i\nM tbe name ended between Wakrford\naud UoOuakei of TulMs nnd si. John\nand Campbell of Kaneaa Cltyi Bach\nvytis fined *1B.\nCHARGED WITH THE\nTHEFT   OF   $151,312\nTORONTO.   Out..   P\u00bbb    9.    Oeor^   A\nBtephanson, load tnistee vmder the\nBunkruptcy act ,m arrestetl 3atur-\nday night on two charges of theft involving $151,312 und three ch-^rgw*\nof criminal breach of trust in connection with the handling of the estates of two banknipt cxmoerns.\nWINNIPEO. Pob. 9. -.Police believed\ntonight they had solved the mystery\nsurrounding  ownership  of a baby,  ah-\nj andoned last New Year's day on u Om-\n', adian Pacific railway train near Kenora\nwith the arrest in Toronto yesterday of\nI a man and \"woman alleged to be the\nchild's parents. The infant, taken care\nof   by   railway   and   police   officials   at\nj Kenora. died a taw days after being\nabandoned by  its parents.\nviiidi-s Kmtitaualtai and ins orlto will\nbe brought her* tor trial on clmrges\nOf   iteDdOBlflg   Uie    iui'an'.\nVANCOUVER MAN\nSUICIDES IN BOSTON\nBOSTON. Feb. 9.-Arthur H. hfeLUah,\n25, graduate student and part time\nInstructor in mathematics at Brown\nuniversity was found dead ln hi* liome\nat the Hott'l Staatlrr baU yc^MTd.A, |\nauiclde. Melltsh had cut lils left um\nabove the elbow, then, falling to find\ndeath    quick    enough    that    wny.    had\nbanged hlmnll *>\\ a towel lo the run\nof ii --hower bath. Hc registered ut\nthe hotel Friday. Authorities attributed his act to discouragement.\nThey notified his father, A\nMelltsh   of  Vancouver,   B.   C.\nbeseigln-g headquarters In an attempt\nto obtain release of suspects, but In\nmost Instances, bolt was being set\nso high that there was little likelihood\nof the suspects obtaining their freedom\nfor the. time being.\nMeantime, any poaelblllty of a letup\nin the drive was precluded by one of\nthe heaviest week-end crime logs in\nmontlis.\nTwo youth. Herbert Oers, 19, and\nAnthony KUburg, 20, motoring home\nI from a party, were shot to death by\nu group of negroes In an automobile\nduring a tralfmc dispute at a street\nintersection.    The  negroes eecaped.\nA quartet of robbers, trapped by\npolice, while attempting to hold up\nthe fashionable Orrlngton hotel, fired\non a police squad. The shots wero\nwild and the men were overpowered\nand arrested.\nJames Riley and Thomas Sayer, alfuw\nCarl Han_on, said to he Detroit (extortionists, were shot, and probably\nfatally wotmded when they attempted\nto kidnap Herman Meyers, a local\npolice men.\nMOTORIST KILIJED\nWHEN CAR SKIDS\nJ.   B.\nSeriously Injured in\nAuto-Train Crash\nIiE_J_SVILI__;. Onl... F*b 9.\u2014J. Den-\nJamln Wllkle. u commercial traveller\nresiding at 400 Camden place, Winnipeg, lies in Belleville general hospital\nIn a critical condition after a railway\n<*.rush at the George street Canadian\nPacific crossing here. Wllkloa oar was\nstruck broadside, carried up the tracks\nand completely wrecked. Wllkle was\ntaken from the wreckage unconscious.\nHe is suffering from several fractured\nribs, a punctured lung and several\nbruisee and wounds about the body.\nPope Cries Out\nAgainst   Religious\nPersecutions, Russia\nVATICAN CITY, Peb. 9 -Pope Ptu**,\nin an open letter to Cardinal Pomplli,\nyesterday .cried out against religious\npereecutlons in Russia aud deploml\nwhat     he   described     oa   the     neglect\nof the nations to take concerted action __^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__^__-\nin representing to tha-. country the i <**v;i- bowlers were defeated here to-\nenormity  of  its  sacrilege day  by  Southland  Center,  143   to 90.\nCANADIAN   l.AWN\nBOWLERS   DEFKATKIt\nlNVitf-CAROlIX,   New   Bealand,   Feb.\n10.   (Monday >\u2014The   Tisltlnt   Canadian\nCALGARY. Peb. 0.\u2014Wallace W. Linton, '20 years old. was killed at 9\noclook Saturday evening when htf\nautomobile sktddetl on an icy stretch\nof road and turned over, about thcei*\nmile.-, west, of Morley on the Calgary-\nW.Banfr highway. Miss Rosella Baiter.\nConvmerei-u block, the other occupant\nol the oar who was driving at tho\ntime was   unlii.turKl\nLinton and Miss linker hud been at*\ntending the Banff winter c.-trwval and\nleft, Banff for Calgary, at 7 o'clock ln\n.he evening.\nONTARIO INDIANS\nSUFFERING BADLY\nFOR    LACK    FOOD\nFORI ARTHUR. Ont., Pel) .1.\n\u2014J. G. Hurk returned from a\ntwo weeks tour of the Luke\nNtplgon region where he visited\nabout 20 settlements with ft\ntotal population of some 300,\nwill report to the department at\nOttawa and al.so to the Ontario\n: >venunenl tliat he found the\nIndians generally i.ufferlng greatly\nfrom destitution ajid hunger.\nIndian* at almost every place\ntold hlm their usual means of\nlivelihood had practically disappeared in the destruction by\nwhite men of fur bearing animals. The Indians have no furs\nto trade In aud about their only\nmeans of livelihood Is lh fishing which gives meagre results.\nLack of (ood wae found In many\nfamilies, a Uttle fish being all\nthey had to live on, flour being\noff their list of supplies and\nother foods and delleftoies of civilization being practically unknown. There Is, as a result,\nmuch sickness and suffering in\nextreme casee Mr. Burke Issued\nwarrant* good for exchange ftt\nHudson Bay company posts.\nmm_m_mm_mmm_9m\n Two\n\u25a0MM   With   Bub____\nfttnM bmu* iaeu\u00ab\u00ab\nThe Hume\nGEO. BENWELL, Prop.\nThe Premier Hotel of the\nInterior\n\u25a0 i \u25a0 i h-bim\nHUME\u2014W. H, Laird, New Denver; J.\nD. Nv-den, A. Grant. W. R Headers,\nH. 8. Carter. J McRae, H. Thompson,\nS. Hclland, P. B. Rice, G. F, Lldder, C.\nWebster, A, Martin, H. McLean, F D\nBremer, F, G. Fermer. i. Entwisle.\nVancouver, H. F. Wallace, J. P. Coates.\nP. Lincoln, K. Fi_h. G. Oerman, Nelson;\nC. P, Martin, Pctcrbiro; G. C. Chapter\nCalgary; H. Lauriente, G. Renaldl, Trall;\n1.. A. Page, Minneapolis; J. \u00a3. Brown\nG. Nicskebs. Spokane; W. Freno, Hong\nKong; W. Month, Silverton; L. Bren-\nM n, Edmonton; C. V. Jewlts, Rossland,\nMi. and Mrs. G. O. Clay, and family,\nSlocan  City,   C.   Luck,   Winnipeg.\nWhere the Guest Is Kin&\nThe Savoy\nKELSON'S    NEWEST    AND   FINEST   HOTEL\nMANY  BOOMS WITH PRIVATE\nBATBS   OB   SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,    MONDAY MORNJNG, FEBRUARY 10, 1930\n_-__----_-----_----_-^^^------------_-----_-----_-----__-----___-\nSalt Water\nBy GERALD S. REES\n\"One road  lead  to London\n\"One road  leads to Wales\n\"Uy   road   leads   me  seawards\n\"To the white dipping sells.\nIf the fascination of the sea could\nbe expressed at all, surely our poets\ncan do it for us. Yet lt ls pointed\nout that there ate but a few good\npoems about the sea ln the whole\nmagnificent library of English literature; I say \"English\" not with any\ndisregard for American literature, but\nbecause an island race must necessarily\ninterpret the sea feeling more successfully. Though at tunes one seeks\ntbe tea for reet or recreation, and\nloves tt ao much, yet one never teems\nable to suitably express one's feelings\nas to what lt really means.\nA country 'girl seeing the sea for\nthe first time remarked \"it is like a\ncauliflower\". Her Image was praised\nby o. K. Chesterton because it suggested \"the wave breaking as well as\ncurling, and the efflorescent of the\nbranching foam, blind, bubbling and\nopague\"; which is juat the kind of\nremark the rotund G. K. C. would\nmak?: one is not greatly impressed\nwith his philosophies, though he is\na brilliant writer, Another country\nman took his spcuse for the first\ntime to salt water: she gazed ln be\nwllderment and exclaimed, \"What i\nlot of water.\" \"Yes\", said Jarge, \"and\nyet you only see the surface of it!\"\n\"THE HKH.IIT   BLAME  OF  THE   MA\"\nSummer by the sea\u2014how much Inlanders mlss! For the call of the\nocean is clear and insistent; lt booms\nlike tlie sound of the waves ln the\nmagic sea shell held to one's ear in\nchildhood- There is brine in the blood\ntliat never washes out.\nOne writer has aptly said, \"He\nonly who knows many seas begins to\nknow the ocean ... at the first.,\none sea looks to us Just like another.\nas  do the goats  in  a  herd,\nboon however, we learn to know them\napart\". The globe-trotter, if attuned\nto the purpose of his travels, comes\nto distinguish between the passionate    Atlantic    and    the\nMATERIAL\nWITNESS\nGordon Draper, Toronto, chief ac\ncountant ot, the Stobie, Forlong Co.\nwho is held, as a material witness\nfor the hearing of charges against\nToronto   stock   brokers,\ndreaminess   of  the   Indian   ocean,  the\nbrooding secrecy of   the  East  African\nseas,  and the unpeopled  haze  of  the\nPacific.\nITON A PEAK IN DAMN\nAnd the discoveries in olden __x\\m\nat new oceans! Stout Cortez and\nhis first glance of the Pacific as Immortalized by the poet Keats In lines\nimmortal as the achievement Itself,\nUnfortunately, more precise historians\nln prose announce that Balboa with\nhis small party oi Spaniards was the\nreal discoverer- He climbed the bare\npeak alone . to see sliming like\nburnished shield In the summer sun\na glistening surface stretching to far\nlimits of the horizon\u2014the Southern\nscintillating   Sea)    And bis companions awaited hit.\n?s- j F.  A.  Davill.  Castlesar,   Murtle  Fisher\n\u2022\u2022 ' Grand    Forks;    J,   C,    Vlpond,    J.    A\nSAVOY\u2014T. -J. McNeill. Dorothy Nee-\nXer    W* \u25a0*\"-___   -___'_   M* \u00bbnd lather, \u00a3jjfc *******\niirgssret Whebell. Jnn s2__>*a_. _._-   Victoria.    \u00b0-\u2122:\u00bb*\\\"*H_^_J$:\nla PaUence. Kimberley; Murjs.rk-Fisher.   Km.   Miss   Keclci,  P.  Hume.   Calgarj,\n1 J. S.Bardven, Vancouver.\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nHut uid cold water In every room\nSteam   Healed\nA. Lapointe, Prop.\nCjl.->s-_NB -C. Hrldse. Alneworilr, H.\n. Hayes Crescent s3.iv; 1. Pears; in, Yahk;\n?~P. \\v. Steed, Winnipeg: L. K Me-\nI. Kenzis-, J. Mcntrel. V. Johnson. Nelson;\nf P. Une, M. Morrison, Trail; W. A.\n';:HuIty. Brilliant; Mr. and Mr. A\n_r_achmttmi. Csjlfe.sry;   C.  Pipe, Cal\nMadden Hotel\nsteam Heated Rooma by the Day\nWeek or Month\nEvery consideration shown to\nguests\nCor Baker and Ward sta., Kelson\nMADEEN\u2014W. Blair, New Wi. tminster; H. Burns. Bonnington; E. McNeill.\nSpermine;   A.   Bllton,   Parks   Siding,   A\nE. Smith, Nelaon;  J.\ncouver.\nA. Edwards,  Van-\n\u25a0\n\\% OUGLA {J\nHOTEL\nRooms and Baths\nE. L.    Ud A. OBOCT.1GE, Prow.\nSteam Heated Bot and Cold\nThrotirhoul Water\nBoi 608   Phone 2(13   TraU, a C.\nNew Grand Hotel\nA  Modern Brick Building\n61G Vernon street.  Nelson, B <C\nHot   and   Cold   Water  and  Telephone   tn   all   Rooms   Steam\nHeated  Throughout\nRooms   h'j   Weekly   Rat*\nor by the Month\nMrs.  P.   Kapnk.  Fro*.\nEuropean Plan\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n705 Vernon 8t. Phone 587L\nII. WASSICK\nFifty  Roonu of (Solid Comfort\nsBeadqnartert    for    Loggers    and\nMiner*\nThe Standard Cate\nS20 Baker Street, Nelson, B. C.\nOPEN   PAY   AND   NIGHT\n11;30 to 2:30 Special Lunch SGo\n6:W to 8 pjn. sapper ....._-_,\nPHONE 154\nNEW GRAND\u2014P. Hanaghan, South\nSlocan; C. J. Johnson, Trail; R. O.\nHanley, Tug hum; S. E. Raynur, Vaft-\ncci.ver; F. Zigick. Ca.gar;,: C. Enge, W.\nSodindm. Procter; G. Ogden, C. Gun_\ntinle, P. Ncrberg. Nelson; G. Y. Powell,\nBator Wae; J- M. Owen, Robson; Y.\nBarkuep, Black Bluff; .7. Vlchak, Kaslo;\nAna lUilpiiincul, ftuimn Norway; A.\nBMgi n. BovMB; N. Fedorak, Kimberley,\nThe Royal CaSe\nCLASSIC KKSTLKANT\nRefinement and Delicacy Prevail\nOPEN   DAY   AND   MOBT\nSpecl:_ Dinner 11:30 to -:30 350\nSapper  fi:30   to  S  ..._  830\n.330 | We b|>ccr_lUe In Chop Suey and Noodles)\n****** l'hone 18S\nProtect\nYourself and Your\nDependents\nAgainst All Hazards\nLife insurance is essential to safeguarding the interests   of your   dependents in the event of anything\n.  happening to you.   Make sure that\nyou are adequately covered.\nAgainst fire, accident, sickness and\nautomobile dangers insurance is also\nabsolutely essential.\nFor FIRE Insurance\nSEE ANY OF THE FOLLOWING\nAutomobile Life, Accident and Sickness, Plate Glass and All Other Forms of\nInsurance.\nreturn   lite t*-**_^_\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\_mm^_m________mm_m\ning    in   the   distance    the   returning\nmeseengen  whom   'hey   had   eent   for\ntiding*  Into the land   of  \"*jtagn\n\"WHO   II -III   htMKUl   THE   HEAT\"\nThe salinity of eea and Mood\nanlmaU is so cloee that natural\n\u2022scientist* tell ue that when vertebrates wtth a cloeed circulatory system took to the land from their teem*\ning salty cradle, they took with them\na blood of the same composition ln\nregard to salt as the eea water left\nbehind; on this plane, therefore, lt is\nunderstandable why the sea poeseese*\na profound and fascinating link Jor\nall human* and in a eenw w\u00ab may\nall claim to have the eea in our\nblood and our noetrtls crave the emell\nof  brine.\nThc great encompassing waters of\nthe oceans waft peculiar charm to m*ny\nsectors of the planet; to Hawaiian\nbeaches, sunburnt Indian shores, hazy\nMm terra n ean * harbors, blue fjords of\nthe North and the piney rocky ahorcs\ncf the New World, and. egch hee hts\nfavorite seascape ever held ln the\nbooke of memorle.\nHACK   TO   SALT   WATER\nStrange how the sea ever calls thc\nseaman back to his first love, even\nafter he may have \"swallowed thc anchor\" and settled down maybe on a\nrocky fruit ranch in the Okanagan\nor   the   Kootenays.\nOne hears of sailors packing up\ntheir duds and going ashore, dummm;\nthe sea, their ship and all her works\na nd ways, but back sooner or latet\nthey go again, back to the foscle and\nthe bridge with the binnacle as a t\nhigh altar of shining brass, with altar\nlamps in their screens, one emerald,\nthe other ruby, and the diamond\nof the steaming light on tlie foremast\nas a guiding star. Odd how the sea\nhold- them all.\n- And in writing of the sea, one inevitably thinks of that Island race to\nwhom the sea has meant everything ln\nthe  past;   as one  writer  haa  written,\n\"Not on that small damp impounded\n^sland Is the Britain that is great.\nIts prairies are Uie sea; the horizon,\nthe cliinutc, the mind of the people,\ntlie policy of the rulers, are those of\na merchant mariner whose world ls\na place of ports and regular .sailings,\nlike the poet whose dust turns English\nthe dust beside the oldest Roman road,\nthe name of the Empire Is writ\nin salt water.\"\nKOI.I.INU   DOWN   TO   RIO\nThese not so very profound reflections are induced by reading recently\nof the successful sea festival held in\nVictoria, sponsored by the music department of a great transportation\nBystem (fancy such a company having\na music department, but why not?\nIt necessarily reaches forth into all\nplanes of human activity, and accomplishes much of benefit to thc nation\nat large that is quite remote from\nanything resembling dollars nnd cents*\nAlter the festival, I expect everyone\nIn attendance wanted either to 'go and\nloin the navy right away, or the mercantile marine, or at least have a\nswim in salt water. The program\ncreated great enthusiasm, and with all\nmy lack of musical appreciation, 1\nshould have liked to hear it! Though\nthey do not appear to havc Included\nthereon that romantic ballad which\nhas something to do with \"Six live\nmen on a dead man's chest, Yo. ho,\nand  a bottle  of  rum.\"\nSAILS FOR  AFRICA\nLord Byng of Vimy, wlio; with Lady\nBynn, titvs i_11l4 ftc Africa (pr hi,\nhealth. f*^**\nMrs. Townshend\nHeads Point\nAuxiliary\nYMIR'S GUILD\nSENDS FLOWERS\nTO THE SICK\nWILLOW POINT. Feb. 8\u2014The annual\nmeeting of thc Willow Point Women'*\nAuxiliary was held in the Institute\nhouse,   Thursday   afternoon.\n)i\u00a3\u00bb-  P- Townshend,   president,   stfb\nmitted the toll\/Wing report:\n\"To raise funds a tea and bake sale\nwas arranged for June but was postponed on account of illness in the\ndistrict. A food shower g*.ve a contribution to the Sunday school mission\nvan. The annual tea and bake sals\nwas held in November in the Insti -\ntut\u00bb rooms,\n\"The church has been taken care ol\nby   a   member   each   month.   For   the\nEaster apd  Christmas services,  flowers        \t\nwrre purchased for the altar and later' ki^v\ngiven to anyone i\u00bb in tho district. *-\u2022*\u2022\u2022*'\nThe contributions for the harvest\nthanksgiving -were .taken to the hospital. The society has been able to\ngive a donation, to the church wardens\nand has ^purchased material to cover\nbaize doors ln the church.\n\"Pledges t\u00abid fees have been fully\nmot.\n\"Orent credit is duo Miss K. Jackson for her work as secretary of the\nauxiliary.\"\nThe officers, -for  1930 are:\nHonorary president. Mrs. J. J. Campbell; president, Mrs. P. Townshend;\nvie--president. Mr*. T., A. Airey; secretary-treasurer, Mlss K. Jackson: \u25a0 su-\nrerintendent, Junior W. A,, Mrs, E. H:\nApplewhaite, secretary Little Helpers,\nMrs. I. C. Campbell; Auditor, Mrs. C.\nHoisfield.\nIt was decided to take up mission\nstudy during the year, the members\nto read the study books at home and\ndiscuss It  at  the meetings.\nOF HIGH CALIBER]\nHELD. PROCTq\nFamily Album and Movlw j\nRev. Ueorg* Kiauy Pro-J\nvide Entertainment\nPROCTOR,   >.    C.    F\u00bbb.    9\u2014A\nevening   under   the   auspices   of\nLaldlee Aid wss held, la fiftlnt\nUnited   Church   on   Wednesday\nIng. The flret Item on the peogtam\nthe   form   of   a   family   aib\\xm-\nstage   wa*   tastefully   decorated\nhuge    doorways    and    curtains.    T|\ndoorways,    on     being     opened.    s!^_\ned  the  different  living cl_ert\u00abUrM\nthe   album.   Mrs    J.   Hurst   actln\n'-c*T.fle!d. The hostess ln a very\ntertalning manner Introduced tfec\nU r; nt characters under a ' aoatl\nnarrative    of    * musing    descriptlo  |\nThe family album consisted of \u25a0\nmother, Mrs. P. Ferg. Sr.; grandfa\nJ Mat-Stein; The belle of the vi\nMlse Pearl Olson; The beftu of thi\nlage. Cecil Mulrhead; Bride, May 1\nhead; Groom, Angus MaoKlnn^ri; I\n(rter, Miss T. Whittaker; Bachelor,\nton Mulrhead; soldier, Harold \\\nfield;   school   Master,   John   Peac\nEach picture when shown was (\nsd with much laughter and app\nfrom the audience especially thc g\nfather who 'was the oldest plone\nProctor. \u2022 *\nThe main feature of tlie ev\nwas the up-to-date {navies ope\nby Rev O. Kinney, Pictures consist\nmany beautiful scenes* of tootf\nIreland. Paris, VersaUlee, Holland,|\nHawaii.\nThe Orand National Staple __\nMoose In the Wilds of New Brunei\n0urf Riding in Hftwali and VolJ\nPictures were shown. Movies take!\nMr. Kinney on hie travels alool\nP. R. line of Contructlon, and pm\nof great Interest to people living ot%\nhere. Some popular corned lee\nshown which amused the llttip\nespecially.\nDuring the Intervals of the #rc\nMlss Annie MacKinnon played a\nold favorite songs on tho organ.\nThree hearty cheers were ren*\nto Mr Kinney, afterwhich a Caf\u00ab\nSupper was served in the base\nto the crowd which attended the e\ntainment by Mrs. M. Mad Klnhoii\nJ.  Sewell, Mrs C. Carne  and Mn\nPROCTERNOTFA\nPBOCTOB, 8, C. Teh. 9\u2014Mlss AflL\nPaget daughter of Mr. and. Ifffl\nE. P>-.et. granddaughter and \u00a3ir _^\new White Ridley celebrated her |\nanniversary of her birthday on ,'\nday afternoon. The afternoon wtn \\\nIn playing gninep. A dainty ai,\nwaa served by Mrs. Paget. Those .rsxt\n\u00bbere:_Mary Merrrfleld, Claudlno Lj\nPat orant, Rose Mary Pagst,' ]\nRitchie. Lots Hurst, Barbara Rlt\nMtiHent Payet, Oilve MacLean, \\\n.forte .Paget. Annette Paget. Dick Caj\nWilliam Sharp. Bliss Kinney, 01\nGlpson, Thomas Sharp, Sandy Rl\nand jlsslni Oipson. _\nMr   .and   Mrs.   R.   E.   Paget' lfl\nJ. E. ANNABLE.\nC. D. BLACKWOOD.\nK. W. DAWSON.\nH. E. DILL.\nI*.  E. POULIN.\nC. F. McHARDY.\nI\n\\\nI\nHotel ARL1NGT0N\nCentrally Located\nTrail B. C.\nA   P. LEVLSQIE. sTroP.\nLift\nFor LIFE Insurance\nC.    D.    BLACKWOOD,    Tha Great    West\nAssurance.\nR. W. DAWSON, Manufacturer's Life Assurance\nCompany.\nP. E. POULIN, North American Life Assurance\nCompany.\nC. F. McHARDY, Monarch Life Assurance Co.\nYMIR. B C. The Ymlr Ladles Guild\nheld their regular meeting at the home\nof Mrs. Hugh Jones on Thursday after- j YOUTHS'   PAfV\nnoon with Mrs. A. B. Clark.wcond vice' * *JKJ ***'*\u25a0    * -c*^\"*\npresident presiding. Others present were\nMrss. M. Peters, Mrs. W. Clio*, Mrs.\nN Peterson, Mrs 8. A. Curwen, Mrs,\nJ. H. Clarke, Mrs. J. M. Ollle, Mrs.\nE .Ollle, Mrs. W. B Mclssaac and Mrs.\nHugh Jones\nThe flower commute reported lt had\nTOO FAST FOR\nHUMDRUM CITY\nWednesday  In Nelson. . H\nMra.  J.  MacKinnon  left for  I.M\non Wednesday. ~\nM__. C. MacLeod left for Nelsoi\nTuesday  evening,\nMtss  K.   Galas   and   sister   Mrs.\u2014\nColter   of   Creston' left*   for   Cre|\non where they will remain for a\nweeks.\nYMIR NOTES\nhO&   ANGELES,   Peb.    B. -Overtaken I ^^^^\n\u201e hy motorcycle officers  in a  round-up      VMIB, B. C, Feb. 9\u2014Mr. and Url\nsent flowers to two members who were   cf  speeders,  four  youth*  were  placed   * Ollle have^taken up residence U_|\n111. mult the loat meeting,\nArrangements for a St. Patricks entertainment was left for a later meeting, Refreshments were served at the\nclose of thc meeting by the ho3tess.\nHER DAD HER\nunder arrest In different parts of the   Vaucouw   Hotel. ..   ,\ncity and turned over to Juvenile au- .    J- H. Kublski moved down from j\nthorltles    booked    on    reckless-driving' Horse   camp   on   Thursday, L\ncharges. I    Wp- E. Daly, has left the Ifootl\nRobert Forbes, 16 years of age, was Lake General haspital, Nelson, tot J\napprehended at Bico street and La I days before returning to her homl\nCienuega boulevard after a chase that i Ymir.\nI began at Beverly and San Vicente boule-1\nSCHOOLMASTER, \u00a3*-*_, SidSTSf, mS_?___!iCRANBROOK NOT\\\nEugene   Hlrsch,   17.   was  caught   at |\nLOS ANGELES. Feb. 9\u2014Fulher faced\ndaughter recently at graduating\nexercises, when Dr. Frank c. Touton.\nvice-president of the University of\nSouthern     California,     addressed     the\nTemple   street   and  Beverly   ijoulevard |    CRANBftDOK B. C, F^l>   9\u2014uJ\nafter    as\u00abrtedly     traveling    fifty-five j H. Thompson left Ba__iti,**,v tr*-- vM\nissertedly traveling    fifty-\nmiles an hour.\nEdward Weeks. 17,  ls charged wtth\n\"stepping on  it\" at  the rate of fifty\nwinter graduating class of Los Angeles' miles an hour through  a twenty-mile\nHigh School, of which  Harriet  Loutw  zone,\nTouton   was   a   member.   Dr.   Touton\nwas   the    principal    speaker\nNext day the daughter with 200\nothers, took English classification test\nrequired of all freshman entering the\nUniversity of Southern California. The\nexamination in Bovard Auditorium WM\npnllniiii:try to tlie upciiiiu: in the \u25a0PflOg\ntemester.\nProcter Guild lo\nHold a Tea Soon\nPROCTOR, B. C- Feb. 9\u2014A business\nmeeting of AU Souls Anglican church\nwas held at thc home of Mrs. - Rluhie\non Wednesday afternoon. Various items\nof interest were discussed. An afternoon tea and Rummage sale wu decided to be held in a short tinn*.\nTea was served by Mrs. Ritchie\nassisted by Miss J. Kemp.\nThose present were: Mrs. J. White.\nMrs, W, Soles. Mrs. A.Heighton. Mrs\nC. Grant. Mrs H. Cairns, Mrs A. Ritchie, Mrs. A, Merrifield and Miss J. Kemp.\nBelieving that the city of Detroit\n.should use any of its extra funds to\naid the unemployed of the city, a committee cf fireman will ask thc Board\nof Fire Commissioners to revoke the\nsalary   increase   recently   voted   them\nLouis Fuller. 17, was stopped on\nGU'hdide boulevard after assertedly\ncrossing a ffteeu-mile-speed-limit ln-\nter.ection at forty-eight miles an hour.\nWIFE OBJECTS\nTO COLD BATHS\n... __- __- ,., -*r- \u2022*-\"___\n| H. Thompson left Saturday for M\nwhere she will visit for several I\nwhile his honor Judge Thompson ll\ncourt in that city.\nMrs. McQuaid    vas   tea    hostess|\nthc Women's Badminton club\nday    afternoon. i\nMrs.   Swim   entertained   at   the]\nhour   on   Friday   afternoon..      - I\nAlati MacPherson left on Friday!\nVictoria where he wlU visit with!\nfather F. M. MacPherson MJP.P. wti\nln attendance at the session of]\nhouse now lu progress. He will t\nto  tho  clt*  in about  a  week.\nLOS ANGELES, Feb. 9. \u2014 After M.\nMcElhoe had an altercation with his\nwile, and knocked her unconscious,\nit was his custom to throw her in\na bathtub full of cold water to revive\nher, Mrs McElhoe testified in Superior\nJudge    Keetcli's    court.\nAt another -time, Mrs. Elhoe said,\nher husband pushed her out of the\nhouse while she dressed only in night\nclothes. And when tlie oouple went\non what are referred to as \"wild parties\" the plaintiff said, her husband\nwaxed wroth when she refused to\nsubmit herself to thc \"petting of\nother  men.\nMrs. Mabel Manks. sister of the\nplaintiff, corroborated hee testimony\nMrs. McElhoe was awarded custody\ncf her four-year-oW child and $10 a\nmonth  alimony.\nAfter wearing a beard 154 years, Sheridan (Ind.), man had it shaved,off recently.\ni\ni\n..     ...    _^**v    a.     WW\nWord has been received by friend\nDr. King that he aud Mrs. King wil\nin the city for a short vlsltl\nthe cqui*\"* \u2022*-* -  **\u2014\"\nBev, John D. EUla, D.D\u201e promt\ntfi. the United church, alter 40 .\nip thc ministry, is now a .atuden\nthe auto mechanics night class at\nhigh school of comJiiprcc at Kitigi\nBladder Weakn\u00a3\nIf Bladder Weakness, Geltlng\nNights, Bachache, Burning or Itt\n(Sensation, leg or groin pains make\nfeel ojd, tired, pe^lees, and w\u00b0\u2122\n[ why not make the Cystex 48 I\nTest? Don't give up. Oet Cystex I\nat wy drug store. Put it to a\nhour leBt. Money hock lt you d\nloon feel like new, full of pep, \u25a0\nwell, with pains alleviate*. Try Os\ntoduy. only eoc.\n__-,i\u00bb,., f' '\u25a0\u2022,-_-_:\nWHEN you are in need\nof efficient workers,\nskilled or unskilled . . .\nthe quickest, surest and\nleast costly method of\nsecuring them u through\nthe Classified columns\nof\nThe\nDaily News\nI   day,   10c a line.\n(i ilato, 40c a line.\nNo   e .int   cost   If   the   advertisement  is charged.\n___________________mm\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 10, 1930\n_U\nFERNIE COUNCIL\nFAVORS PLAN OF\nSCHOOL TAXES\nMorses I. fc \u20ac. M. Resolution; to A* Amendment;\nCourt of Revision\nPBBNIE, B. C, Feb. 9\u2014At the last\nregular matting of the city council\nMayor J. L, Gates and Aldermen Gee,\nShorthcuee, Rutedge, Caraeelia, McCallum and Milton were  present\nMr. Bretten of the Queen'* hotel\nappeared before the council oa behalf\nof a Wind man who waa staying at\nthis' hotel. He had been lh the hospital her* from December till January\n13 and waa now without fund*. It\n\u25a0wai pointed out by the mayor that\nhe waa not a permanent resident of\nPernle. His ease waa referred to the\nhealth and relief cdmmlttee for Investigation.\nTha Royal Financial Corporation\nwrote offering ln sell to the ctty\n\u2022aooo. worth of Fernie 5 per cent city\nHonda on a 600 basis; and also offering to buy 010,000 worth of 0 per cent\n30-year airport bonds at 101. Both\nof fere   were  accepted.\nThe pnlon of British Columbia municipalities wrote asking Fernie to\n.support by resolution its appeal to\nthe British Columbia government to\ndevise some system of taxation other\nthan land in order to raise an equall-\nratlon fund to assist districts that\nhave heavy school taxes. It was\npointed out that the mill rate for\nechool taxes varies very greatly ln\ndifferent sections and a more equitable distribution of school taxation\nwould be sought. The council went\non record as favoring this move.\nANOTHER   NOT   INDORSED\nChilllwack council wrote asking Fernie\nto beck It up in a request to the\ngovernment to bring In an amendment\nduring the present sitting of parliament to make lt optional with municipalities to elect councillors for either\none or two years. Fernie aldermen\nexpress wl themselves as quite satisfied\nwith the present act which makes\nthe two-year term compulsory. They\nconsidered that this was an advantage.\nTemporary loan By-law 309 was\nfinally   passed.    This   was   to   enable\nthe city to borrow up to $00,000 uatU\ntaxes were collected.\nFt rule hospital board wrote thanking\nthe council fpr Its cooperation tiurln-g\nthe year ln Improving boulevards and\nbuild.ntc cement sidewalks around the\nhospital   buiMing.\nThe matter of the Crow* Nest Pass\nmotors being allowed to -0x000 their\ngasoline pump and tank was again\nlaid    over\nThe Underwriters' association wrote\nre-commending the placing of thr;**\nnew hydrants and alarm boxes along\nthe northern end of the town. Alderman McCallum suggested m amendment that they could be more af! -\nvantagcously placed in a slightly different location, namely at the corner\nof Victoria avenue aad Rosa atreet;\nMason avenue and Rogers street; and\nVictoria  avenue  an*  Wright  street.\nAccounts were passed ln the amount\nof \u00bb7843 90 for the month.\nThe following number ot complaints\nagainst this year's assessment as compared  with last  year were lodged:\n1.W    1930\nIn  Time     90     89\nLate    ., \u201e    40 7\nTotals 144        46\nAT   ('Ol'RT   OF   REVISION\nIt was decided not to have these\nproperties examined before the sitting\ncf the court of revision on Saturday,\nFebruary 8,  at 8   p.m.\nOn account of this date being fixed\narbitrarily by law and hence falling\non a Saturday lt was anticipated that\nthe court would be immediately adjourned until the following Monday\nat  the same hour.\nThe council decided to send a letter\nto Attorney Oeneral R. H. Fooley with\ncopy to Thomas Uphill, local member\nof parliament, requesting that the\nlegislature amend the act so. that\n-protests against municipal assessments\nwould have to be lodged not later\nthan January 31 and that the oourt\nof revision Bit on the second Monday\nof Fepruary instead of on a variable\nday of the week which fell this year\non Saturday.\nThe Imperial Oil company donated\nto the city a wind indicator to be\nerectecj on the Fernie airport.\nH. ft. Huntington tendered his report in connection with auditing ths\ncity's books for 1939. The aldermen\nwere very pleased with -this report and\nordered   it   published   forthwith.\nMr. Huntington requested reappointment as auditor for the year 1930\nat a salary of $700. This is 0300 In\nadvance of what he has received previously but his contention was that\nthe work had Increased. This matter\nwas laid over till  next meeting.\nMAP SHOWS OUTRADEft FALLS\nWHBBE DIVEB MET HIS DEATH\ns-s,iAKi*\n\\   ^aXtJOMH\nChicout\/mi\nThe layout here shows MAP shewing location of OutiadM Fells, Que. where\nPeter Trans, diver, altm nearly three days Imprisoned on river bottom by crib\nDeam, wu finally brought to the surface by divers mashed trom Quebec by aeroplane dead.\nSTEWART FIRST\nTO BE APPOINTED\nUNDERNEW ACT\nLaw Society Protested Strongly to  Appointment as\nNotary Public\nT.H. WATERS Co. Ltd\nBuilders and\nContractors\nPhone 1S6 P. O. Box 839\nNELSON,  B.   ('.\nIf It Is Building\nMaterial You\nRequire\u2014See Us\nA. Cameron Hangs\nSelf From Rafter\nin Bam, Wilmer\nINVERMERE. B. C, Peb. 9.\u2014Alexander Cameron, aged 48, a native of\nOlasgow, Scotland, was found hanging\nfrom a rafter of his barn at Wilmer\nFriday night. After viewing the body,\nthe coroner decided that an inquest\nwas not neceesary. it being a clear\ncase of suicide during a fit of melancholia.\nIt is suposed he had a brother, a\ndoctor In Glasgow.\nTRUSWELl\/S RINK\nWINS BEAN FEAST\nBONSPIEL, TRAIL\nBeats W. H. Baldrey'e Rink 4-3\nin   Final;   Big   Crowds\non  Hand    \u2022\nbeat Wadsworth; Mclaren beat Ritchie:\nTruswell beat Mclntyre; Kerr best\nMacDonald.\n\u25a0fourth round\u2014Woodburn beat Tyson;\nSaldr.y beat Willis; McLaren beat\nCralg; Truswell beat Kerr.*\nSemi-finals\u2014 Baldrey beat Woodburn:\nTruswell    beat   McLaren.\nFinal\u2014Truswell, 4,  Baldrey  3\nEXPERIENCES OF\nENGINEER   TOLD\nTRAIL CHURCHMEN\nTRAIL, B. C Peb. 9-r-St. Andrew'ii\nchurchmen heard a talk on the \"Ix-\npcrien__a of a B. C. Engineer,** by\nJ. R. Abraham, tonight. Mr. Abraham\ngave many interesting anecdotes culled\nfrom the experience.**, of 30 years.\nArrangements were flWffe rw a meeting of those Interested In the club's\nproposed football team.\nLEGION ATTENDS\nFUNERAL, TRAIL\nR_____'3a_53__:\nBarmr. n r:*._,tm-mxrr- ::r:::ii.zr\nPetroleum Coke\nIt   is   Crude   Oil   with   the   gasoline   removed.\nIt contains no ash    or other waste.\nIt ls Clean\u2014No Smoke;  No Soot; No Dirt.\nIt Is easy to fire and easy zo .earn how to fire.\nIt ls burned in any stove or furnace.\nIt absolutely will not burn out grates\nAsk for Petroleum Coke.   We have it.\nWEST TRANSFER CO.\nPhone 33\nP. o. Bon 118\ntt_t__lt_E*****l**fa^\nTHE\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nYour Spokane Home\n\"Where Canadians Are Among Friends\nWhen in Spokane.\"\nThe only hotel in  Spokane with  FREE\nBUS service and our own garage adjoining.\nBarber Shop,  Cigar Store and Cafe.    Complete  service  under  one   roof.\nJOE PEDICORD, Manager\n.09 TO  219  RIVERSIDE     , 208  TO  218  SPRAGIE\nSPOKANE, U. S A.\nBlank Books, Binders\nMade to Order\nGold Lettering\nand tlie\nVery Best Printing\nThese jobs are every-day routine in our\nmodern printing plant. When in need of\nany of these items, it isn't necessary for you\nto be held up on your order by sending them\nto the larger centres\u2014when you can get\nunexcelled service, price, quality and workmanship\u2014and immediate delivery at home.\n\"May We Serve You\"\nThe Daily News\nJob Department\n143       \u2014 \u25a0     \u2014        PHONE       \u2014       \u2014       144\nFERNIE, B. C, Feb. 9.\u2014The recent\nissuance of a commission as notary\npublic of J- A. BtewnrJ*, provincial assessor of Cranbrook, rernte and Nelson districts, is the first commission\nIssued since \"the amended Notaries\nact became a statute. Mr. Stewart a*\na civil servant therefore holds the\nunique distinction of belnR thc onl*.\nholder of such a commission in this\nprovince. The achievement is rea'l\na much greater accomplishment th*1\nthe mire announcement cf the srant\nIng of the commission would ordinar\ntly   mean.\nThe amended act was passed dur\ning thc 1926-1927 session of the leg\nislature which liftposed very stric\nqualifications upon the applicants fo>\nnotarial seals and the policy of thi\nLaw society as evidenced by its c\"*>\njiosltion to ' Mr. Stewart is held to\nshow Its policy to have been to dl*\ncourage any laymen from securin-\nappointments o._ notaries public.\nThe    Law    society    during    1926    har)\ndrafted into the bill mp.klng an obllg\natory requirement for an applicant  t '\napply   to   the    court    and    upon    tiw\ncourt  finding   thit  such  anpHcint  wa\na fit and proper peron, and that t^er-\nwas need for a notary In the district\nwhere he destrr-d  to practice,  an  DTdr\nwould   be  made   that  he  be  examined\nin  the  duties  of  a. notary,  and   tf  h\npassed    thts    examination    he    would\nthereupon    be    enrolled    a.s   a    notar-\npublic.   During   the   debate   upon   thr\nbill   lt  was  alleged   in   order  to  eff^c*\nthe   desired   change,   that   there   were\nmany notaries whose appointments had\nbeen made largely of a political nature\nand   to   the   utter   disregard   of   bow\nunaqualnted   the   applicants  were   with\nnotarial   duties    or   how   scant   their\nknowledge wa. as to the law.\nSOME   CIRCtMSTAVCEH\nPeculair and interesting circumstances surrounding* the case of Mr\nStewart are as follows: Following the\npublication of thc statutory advertisements In order to facilitate in connection with his dutios as aspeswor.\nhe sought to comply wtth the act and\nsecure a notarial commission, Ha applied to the local Judge of the supreme court at Cranbrook and received an order entitling him to sit\nfor the examination. The examination\npaper was set by three leading lawyers of Victoria and substantial knowledge was required of legal question-\nrelating to real and personal nroperty,\ntrusts and trustees, mercantile law,\nwills and Dominion and provincial\nstatutes relating thereto. A percentage\nof 66 had to be obtained before a\npass could be registered. Mr. Stewart\nwas successful In passing the elimination, but wlthtn six davs fallow-in*\nthis announcement he received notice\nof appeal instituted by the secretary\n^f the Law socletv. the grounds upsn\nWhich reversal or annulment of the ex-\n\u25a0\u25a0tmtmtinn wre hosed were that the\nlocal Judge of the supreme court, had\npo iurivitction to issue the original\nctrder. The oourt of anp\u00bbal. upon re-\n'.-\u00bbe*tvJtng th*> ca\u00abe, de-MdM in favor of\n**\u00bbe Law sn\"(*\u00bbtv*s contention that the\n!n*-ai tudge had no authority, the Jtir-\nMte*tfofc being aonfinod palely to\n\u2022tn'sne ludgps of the sunreme court.\nNot dismayed, Mr. Sitewart pursued\nthe matter by reapplying in the su-\nrireme court at Vancouver. The Law\nsociety lodged notice of obtection on\nthis occasion, the ground being there\n\u25a0vers already a sufficient number of\nnotaries In the province. There were\n\"everal hearings on the application,\nand finally Chief Justice Morrison\ndecided,in favor of Mr. Stewart, ordering the granting of the commission\no him as notary public. Counsel appearing for the respective parties were:\nP. R. Leighton for the Lnw society,\nboth in the appeal court and the\n\u2022supreme court, whilst Oscar Bru_s, K.\nO- represented Mr, Stewart in the\ncourt of appeal and Mr. Kerr, of MacKenzie, Kerr & Boyd In the supreme\ncourt.\nGLEE SINGERS\nSCORE, TRAIL\nC, M, & S. Gathering Takes in\n$96.85; to Come to Festival  Here\nTRAIL,   B.   C,   Feb.   9.\u2014C.   M.   &   8. ,\nGlee   Singers   gave   their   \/tret   concert j Jj\"v*y:    I\nlon.g.j .   They    tuok    in    \u00bb96.85,1 Walsl\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. fr\u2014Defeating\nW. Boldrey. 4-3, in the final, W. F.\nTrusweir. vice-president of the Trail\nCurling club, and hie three fellow-\ncurlers, emerged victorious lu the annual bean feast competition of the\nclub   Saturday.\nOeorge Kinnis took the special prize\nfor the rlnk scorjn., the highest points\nln any one game when he deleaved\nDr. Palmer's rink,  10-O.\nThere were the usual bean* and\nvarious other things. It was a continual round or fun from 1 p.m. Saturday until after 2 a.m. today. There\nwas one of the largest crowds in the\nhistory of the local bean bonspiel.\nEven after play got Into the third\nround and the seml-flnals, and most\nof the rinks wsro out. there was still\na big crowd of spectators.\nThe vice-president's curlers, having\nlost the season opening competition\nto the president's rlnks, paid for the\nbean-feed.\nTHE KESIITS\nComplete results were:\nFirst round\u2014P. McArthur beat W, E.\nWilson; L. F. Tyson beat J, Willtum-\nson: R. Sommervllle beat H. C. Caldlcott; J. Balfour beat F. W. Stacey;\nO. C. McKav beat E. W. Hazlewood;\nJ. H. Woodburn beat J. Leckie; O.\nMurray beat G. Shaw: J. Campbell\nbeat P. R. McDonald; K. A. Margeson\nbeat A. M. Chesser; G. C. Robertson\nbeat A. Buchan; Dr. J. B. Thorn beat\nL. H. Jackson; W. H. Baldrey beat\nW. F. Doubt: G. Kinnis beat J. H.\nPalmer; F. S. Willis beat J. B. Twaddle;\nW. B. Hunter beat Dr. C. S. Williams;\nS. G. Blaylock beat C. Dodimead: J. A.\nWads won h beat A. A. Mllllgan; A. J.\nMacDonnslt beat J. J. Fingland.\nSECOND    ROINO\nSecond round \u2014 (following having\ndrawn a bye Into this round)\u2014J.\nCrtlj beat H, E. Wads; A. B. Richie\nN-tf Dr. W. A. Cou?hIin; H. A. Mc-\nTaren beat J. B. Carter; W. F. Truswell\n'tat J, Frrre=t; P. F. Mclntyre beat\nJ. A. M.reod; A. Kerr beat A. O.\nMacDomld    beat   B.    J.\nLiterary High\nHats Put on\nFlaming Bugs\nBERKELEY. Feb. B\u2014The first of a\nseries of studies ol the Heating microscopic life of the' sea, which has\ntaken a quarter of a century to complete, ha. been published by Prof. Charles A. Refold, chairman of the department of \/oology. University of California, and Dr Tage Skogsberg of the\nHarvard University Press,\nThe studies are based on collections\nmade ln 1904 and 1906 by Pro, Ko-\nfold while a memtxr of the Alexander Agassiz expedition on beard the\nUnited States Fish Commission steamer\nAlbutio-.-;.\nThe first publication deals wtth thc\nDinophysoidae, a tribe of the Dlno-\nflagellata subclass. These minute organisms usually arc not visible to the\nnaked eye, but help to produce the\nphoeophorescent gleam which lights\nocean waters In the wake of steamers\nat night and to cause the red coloration cf the ocean water in certain\nspots.\nOf the 198 accepted species. 87 were\nfound during tne cruise of the Albatross in its voyage of thousands of\nmiles through the eastern tropical\nPacific. The mlcroscrplc life of the\nocean, aside from ite Interest from a\npurely scientific point of view, la of\neconomic slgnlfcance because it forms\nthe ultimate food scurce for the fishes\non which human kind ls partly dependent for sustenance. The Dlnophy-\nphyslodae, in addition, are of Interest because of thc-lr jwwer to produce\nphosphorescent light, a phenomenon\nwhich science has not as yet explained.\nTRAIL, B. C. Feb. \u2022\u2014Funecal eer-\nvieea for Max ReHnaan, whoa* deatfr\noccurred Wednesday morning were coo-\nduct-d this afternoon from St. An*\ndrew's church under the auspteetf at\nthe Trail branch of the neiiaiW\u2014\nLegion Rev. N. D. B. l_anaouth officiated. The coffin wae drapped with\nthe British flag and at the graveside,\n\"The Last Poet\" was sounded.\nMr Reimann. who la survived by hia\nmother, a sister Selnu. and two brothers, George and Herman, wu well\nknown in Trail, having resided heeu\nf_r several year* He wae a member\nof the office staff of the Consolidated\nMining \u00ab*V Smelting company. He had\nbeen decorated with the Military Medal\nfcr gallantry in the late war.\nBeautiful floral tributes were sent\nfrcm   friends   and   relatives.\nPallbearers were J. W. McKay, H. P.\nKingwell and D. Porteath. repreeenta-\ntives of the Canadian Legion, and J.\nWebster, L. Maddlson and R. Gordon,\nmembers of the Consolidated ofTlca\nstaff.\noat of which will be used ln defray-\nSecond   round\u2014 (following   havlns\ne -xncp.Ta of t*e sin.-rs to the T0\" ln \u00ab\"t roundi-Tysoti. beat Mc-\nkectenay Music Festival to be held LAJ h\"r; Balfour heat Sommervllle;\ntn  Nelson   in   May. | J^**1\"1   '>esit   \u00ab?*\u00a3    Murray   beat\nIt was a wonderful enter'alnm-nt.' SSJeW L-^.IT wu\u2122 ?2?t\u00a3,?,i:\nwith quartets, trios duets and stfos, \u25a0 ^ff-.S H?Ja,TS?\u00b0 iSSs^i\"\nID   addition   to   the   ensemble   singing   |&  M^Cnrll '   Wwta*orth\n\u00abf its kind here indecent year. Third ^.un'-^on    beat    Balfour;\n.    r  \u00abaa    Liudamus,    Wrt|l.lirn  ^  Munay.   Bald       beat\nI h  nV'n\u25a0    \u201e-       ,?r0KranJ , an''   \"\"i Margeson:   Willis   beat   Blaylock;   Cralg\n\u25a0ad  at   the cose by special  reamst. \u25a0\nThU    Bella    at   S.   Mar T,\"    and   \"Thr*\nUtVe Church\" were outstanding chorus numbers\n\"Out of  the  Dusk to  You,\" a quar-\n\u2022ivmt  accompaniment,   won   unstinted  applauue.\nWITH A FOOT\nON THE TABLE\nLUTHERANS OF\nPROVINCE   TO\nGATHER, TRAIL\nTRAIL. B. C. Feb. B.\u2014A conlerence\nof a li Lu;. heran church pastors In\nBritish Columbia will be held In Tyall\nfrom February 28 to March 3 next.\nThere are expected to be some 18 at\nthe conference, which will meet it-\nElks' hall. Announcement to thla effect wa\u00ab made Saturday morning by\nRev.  E.  W.   Hlnrlchs.\nMr, Hlnrlchs also stated that an\neffort would be made this year to he-\nit in tc the local church building program.\nYMIR, B. C, Feb. 9\u2014A member of\nthe Ymlr Badminton club went to\nSalmo on Thursday evening to play\nwith the Salmo club. Those playing\nfrom the Ymir club were: Mr. and\nMrs. L. M. Prochnow, Mra. J. 9.\nClarke. Miss Q. Rendall, N. Peterson-\nJot- Dunn. A. B. Clark, P. H. Watson\nand 8. A, Curwen.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Clark, Mrs. W. 1.\nMclsp-ac, A. B. Clark and Carl Nya-\ntram were Nelson visitors on Friday.\nW. Clark went in for medical attention. Mrs. Clark and Mrs. MMeaac\ndoing some shopping for the Ymlr\nWomens institute and the Ymir Ladiee\nGuild.\nMrs. S. Virigin has as her gueete\nher parents from   Brilliant.\nMiss Mary Rankin left for Salmo\nFriday where she has taken a position.\nMlss Margaret Rankin of Wallace,\nIdaho, is the guest of her mother,\nMrs.   E.  Emilson,  and   her aunt,  stro.\nLOS ANGELES, Feb. 9.\u2014Nicholas W,\nThcmure thought he was being the\nlife of the party when he took his shoes\noff and put his feet on the table it\nappeared from Mrs. Thelma Thom-\nure's   divorce   suit   on   file   yesterday.\nThese demonstratirns of familiarity which often were not appreciated,\nhumiliated Mrs. Thcmure, she said,\nand  when she  protested  her  husband I Grace   Grant.\nused    unseemly    language.    On    other      Mr.   and   Mrs.   S.   A.   Curwen   were\noccasions,   she   said,   he   criticised   her   Salmo visitors on Friday,\nreligion   and   her   church   affiliations. I    E.   Dalv   has  returned  from- Nelaon.\nNICKEL CROWD\nMOBS THEATER\nNEW YORK. Feb.9\u2014Broadway theater\nseats at 5 cents each!\nAttracted by thc foregoing announcement thousands of persona flocked\nto the Republic TheateT cautlng a\njam that required battering-ram tactics by ten policeman to untangle The\nseats were for the second balcony and\nwhen the dror was opened the crowd\nln   Its   rush   carried   It  off   ltg   hinges.\nAfter the available quota of seats\nwas filled the rest of the crowd was\ndispersed.\nThe show is a murder mystery that\nhas  been  enjoying a  long  run.\nWilliam \"Barney\" Herring-Cooper,\nRoyal North West Mounted Polic? veteran died at McMurray, Alta.\nKamsack Board of Trade urges that\nsugar beets be experimented with on\nthe experimental  farm there.\nAlex.   McCharles,   former     alderman\nand pioneer police officer of Winnipeg,\nItPutsintheBeetr\n\"OXO\" Cubes save time and\ntrouble for the cook and are\nwonderfully economical. With\n\"OXO\" Cubes yesterday's left\novers can be made into dainty\nappetizing dishes and ordinary\nfare made more nourishing and\ntasty. Soups, sauces and gravies\ncan be made in a few minutes\nby adding a few \"OXO\" Cube.3.\nOXO LIMITED, 1910 St. Antoine Street\nMontres^l\n\/\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL, B, C, Feb. 9.\u2014William Moore\nof Grand Forks was a visitor to TraJJ\nthis   week.\n\u00bb   *   *\nR. Hendricks spent Friday ln Nelson.\ne   a  e\nReeve   Harper,   clerk   ln   the   Trail\npost  office  for  some  time,   left   Saturday night for Nelson, where he will\nstudy.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nTRAIL   HOUSES   AND  .LOTS.     Insurance. Notary.    J. D. Anderson, TraU.\n. . .               <12\u00ab\u00bb\nL. Morris was a visitor to Nelaon\nFriday.\n\u2022 * *\nS. Harris has returned from a short\nvisit in Nelson.\nOther Branches   at   Winnipeg,   Yorkton,   Saskatoon,   Edmonton   Calgary,   Lethbrldge,   Vancouver,   Kamloops   Vernon   and   Victoria\nSHEIKS WIN BY\n5-2 AT TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. ft, Feb. \u00bb,\u2014Four games\nwere played in Trail hockey leagues\nat the rlnk  Saturday morning.\nIn the senior .high school game\nSheiks defeated the Cubs 5-2 and ln\nthe junior division, Maroons went\ndown io a 4-1 defeat at the hands of\nthe   Buckarooa\nRangers beet the Kokanees 1-0 In\nthe senior trabllc' school battle, and\nCrystals repeated their score ln their\nJunior ffOOrp wltb the Buckarooe,\nDry Goods\nBARGAINS IN LINEN TOWELLINGS\nlG-inch Linen  Towellings.    Colored  borders  of ro.;c\nred ro blue.    Yard  .' 25(\n22-inch extra heavy, plain weave linen towelling, with\ncolored borders of rose, orchid, green  or gold\nPer  yard    30*\n18-inch Linen  Huck Towellings at\nyard 35^, 75p, and 79\u00a3\n22-inch Linen Huck Toweling, per yard 88?\n16-inch cotton Towelling, suitable for kitchen cloth*\nor Roller Towels   Special, per yard  1G?\n27-inch Twill Roller Towelling   Extra heavy quality\nSpecial,   per   yard    25--\n\u2014Main Hour\u201411 11 ('\u2014\nShoe Department\nCALF SKIN OXFORDS,\nGENT'S BLACK OR TAN\nwith Goodyear welted soles,\nrubber heels, plain, fancy\nstitched and saddle Etrap,\nPriced nt . $7.95, SS.50\nGENTS' BLACK KID OXFORD  of neat  and  smart\nappearance1. Weltped soles, rubber heels. An idea!\nshoe for dress occasions. Half sizes. Widths A and\nC.   Price 910.50\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014II n C\u2014\nLadies5 Wear\nSpun Silk Wai ts.   Plain and waist, coat styles, sleeveless or long sleeves.    In  shades  of fawn,  green,\nmauve and white   Sizes 34 to '12.   Prices range\nfrom ?2.95   to   $5.50\nSk'rts of serge and f'annel, wrap around styles and\nfinely pleated.    In shades of navy, sand, new blue,\ngreen and French beige.   Sizes 14 to 20 yean.\nPrices $3.85 to $6.50\nSpecial line in Corselettes, Inner Belt, well made garments.    Non slip straps.    Sizes 34 to 44.\nSpecial     $2.SO\n\u2014Secnn.t   Floor\u2014H   B   C\u2014\nBoys1 Hose\nBoys' Hose in new colorings, with fancy turn down\ntops All wool in medium and light weight, that will\nstand hard wear   Pair  85\u00a3\n\u2014Mali. Floor\u2014II U ( \u2014\nSocks\nMen's .   <gj\nEarly showing of New jt. .   . I ZJ*\nSeason   Fancy   Socks, _-m__________I\nin silk and wool, silk\nand lisle- and fancy\neuhmenes featuring\nthe newest styles in\ncolor and desisgn\nPair 50<.\\ 75<, $1.\n\u2014Main Floor-H B C-\n-\n\t\n ao Four\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nevert-    raprnns    etcspt\nby The News Publishing Com-\nUmited, Nelson. B. C.\nletters should be -iddreseed\nicks   and   money   orders   made\nto The News  Publisuinc Com-\nlimned.   and   In  no  cue   to  In-\nrs of the staff.\nLaLnf rate cards and  A. B   C,\nante   of   circulation   mailed   on\nor may be seen at the office\nadvertising   agency   recognized\n\u00bb    Canadian    Daily     Newspaper\n'tation.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES\n1   t country,  pen  month)   \u00bb   .60\nCOO\n(city i, per year . 13.00\nCaii__da.   per   month ,76\n760\nweek 36\n13.00\nPa > Ml tie   In   Advance\nAudit   liiireau   of   Clrfiilailon\nMONDAY.   PEBRUARY   10.   1930\nTHT NEISON DAILY NEWS,\" MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUA'RY'flS, T9S5\nNew Lib Candidate for North York\nCHANGES TO\nMOTOR ACT\n(iOOI)  BUSINESS\nA11 o r n e y-Gcneral Pooley's\nproposed    iimendment    to   the\notor   Vehicle   act.   as   intro-\ninto    the    legislature,\naid  meet with favor on all\nHowever, the section barring\nreports   of   minor   motor\nOccidents may result in  sonic\ndifficulty. The average motor-\nfist will find all his accidents\n*tj__ a minor nature, and thc\n:*fpolice will no doubt be kept\n-busy on this particular section\n\u25a0~tif the act.\nI The measure providing for\nisrthe grading of licences to\nchauffeurs is an important one.\n, There are three classes, divided as follows:\nClass A, entitling the holder\nto drive and operate every kind\n\u25a0hf motor vehicle. j the winter encampment in 1805\nC___B, entitling th holder to  and   1806   of   the   Lewis   and\n.drive   and  operate   any  motor' Clark expedition:\nvehicle   having   a   seating   ca-|    Grow old along with me;\nWhat the Press\nIs Saying\nA Noith Vork Liberal party convention\nwaa he'd at Newmarket, Or.t, to nominate a\nCandida;? to contest the riding ut the next federal election. The tradition of the North York\nliberals in so!: c ing statesman of ability to\nrepresent the party in the election created\ncomldorable interest in the meeting The photographs here show:  (1) Sir William Murdock,\nchief justice of Ontaria and former postmast.\ner-general of Canada, who represented North\nYork during the Laurier regime. (2) William\nP. Mulock, grandson of Sir William, who was\nnominated candidate and (3), Rt. Hon. Mackenzie King, prime minister cf Canada, who\nrepresented North York 1921 to 1925, during\nthe first four years he was premier of tbe\nDominion.\niiumraunt   of | tent  -with\ndollars,   a\ninterested finding of the  I'nit-\ned States government.\nA paraphrase of Browning's\nlines on youth and age is applicable to the settlement and\ndevelopment of the United\nStates, from the landings at\nJamestown   and   Plymouth   to\npacity not exceeding seven pas-1\nscngers, inclusive ai the driver, and any motor vehicle used\nexclusively in the transporting of perssonal property.\nClass C. entitling the holder\nto drive and operate any motor\nvehicle used exclusively in the\ntransporting of personal  property.\nThe captain of a ship and the\ndriver of a railway train must\nsserve a strenuous apprenticeship before they arc permitted\nto accept the responsibility for\n. human lives, says the Victoria\nTimes. A mistake on their part\noften ends their career. With\nthe progress of the motor car\nage there are untold dangers\nfor the driver, the passenger\nand the pedestrian. Hence, it\nis reasonable to demand that\nthose who are in charge of\nthe vehicle should be as proficient as it is humanly possible\nto make them.\nThe Class A chauffeur is entitled to drive any kind of\nmotor vehicle, which may range\n\u2022 all the way from the small\ntwo-seater to the large passenger bus. At times as many\n\u2022as \">0 or '10 lives are in his\ncharge, dependent for their\nsafety upon his mental and\nphysical alertness, in this classification, of course, the highest\ngrade of proficiency must be\nahown in every respect. The\nother two classes explain themselves.\nThe best is yet to be;\nThe last of growth fov which\nthe first was made.\ncAunt Het\n\"Fnr us 1 know I've never done no-\nthin' to desecrate \u25a0 church, except once\n\u25a0when I was young I cleaned my finger\nnails during prayer,\"\nTEN YEARS AGO\nI Prom   The   Doily   News   of   February\n10.   1920>\nFour were killed in ft riot at Lexington when, a mob tried to lynch a\nnegro who confessed to killing a 10-\n;;car-old girl. Martial law was declared\nand the state troops were called to\nquell   the   riots.\n\u2022    \u2022   \u2022\nA representation to the Dominion\nto tlie end that oriental immigration\nshould be stopped was urged by J. w.\nJones in ft recent speech delivered to\nthe houBe at Victoria.\nAn unemployment  of  1373   returned  jam\nsoldiers was reported at Winnipeg last\nweek by the rc?stabllshment committee\nthere.\nTwo bowliing teams, skipped by men\nfrom the government offices and by\nthe druggists, played a friendly game\non the Legion alleys last night, tha\ngovernment   team   taking   the   honors' xiiia   year   th\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy   I..U'!U   A.   KIRKHAM\nTOMORROW'S    MENU\nBmbMM\nApple   Sauce\nCereal\nSausages Muffins\nMarmalade Coffee\nLuncheon\nCelery\nRice-Che3R3   Croquettes\nRaisin   Bread\nCookies Tea\nDinner\nCream   of   Corn   Soup\nCorn Beef\nwith   Cabbage\nSpiced Beet Salad\nOrange   cream   Custard\nCoffee\nfriends   by    the\ncrops of  large oranges\nare more plentiful than, they were\nlast season, and therefore more reasonable in price\u2014so we housewives\nmay   servs   planty   of   oranges  on  our\nlatter part of February.\nThe\nLighter Side\nAnd of i-oiit-t* JHfaUN and Kve,\nafter eat Inn BtSfea lot }'*\u25a0\u2022***,\npioii\u00abl-t warned the kid- not to\nil*k   It.\n OK-\nYes, tliere is n little $mut iri Shakespeare, but it wasn't smut that made\nthe   bard   immortal.  ,\nIt's quite  all   right,  son,   to  drink  a\nlittL-  as  Washington  did,   if  you   first\nprove  yourself   a   Washington,\n\u2014o\u2014\u25a0\nIf !('\u2022< nilU-tl an niia\\oldal>le accident, that means the member*\nof ihe coroner'* Jury have cnr**. too.\nfrom  their   druggist\nm-u-gln  of   22   pins.\n\u2022 \u2022    #\nThe Nelson Curling club played the\nfirst matches in Its bonspiel here last, home tables! sele'cting the \"sizes which\nnight. best fit our needs, For that new and\n\u2022 \u2022    * I popular  -party    dish\u2014Fruit    Cocktails\nThe   emragement   of   Percy   R.   Ttus-   in    Oranne    Baskets\u2014we    choose    the\ncott of Creston io Miss E. Waldie of largest sized orange scoop out its ln-\nFairvlew, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. terlor (after cutting the skin into\nRobert Waldie, has be:n announced, basket shape, with handle) and. then\nihe   wedding   to   take   place   in   the   fill   the'   lower   part   with   a   mixture\nof orange pulp, sliced banana halved Maraschino cherries, etcetera whatever fruit mixture you wish). This\nrppetizer is especially approprlte as a\nflral course of such a bridge luncheon\nas l described ln my article last\nWednesday (February fifth), in which\nihe culor sceme was yellow, and brown\n\u2014for the orange baskets would add\nto the yellow note. However, If this\nfirst co*nr_e is added, use Rice Cakes\nii.stead of the Puffs. Topped with\nEtiffly whipped cream, the fruit filled orange baskets make a pretty dessert in a menu of light refreshments\nserved on the card\" tables after art\nafternoon or evening of play.\nWhen we pack our little ones' school\n\u00aeljat lufttj\nof fflurfi\nBr    IM,   W.   BARTON,    M.D.\nAS STRAIGHT AS AN ARAB\ntraveller   in   North   Africa   some\n\"?\u2122 *!*0.*\" ?^icJ4lflrly .i\"1***\"-\"*1   lunch\" b-_*\u00abt_,*hiwTw!\"i\u00bb'raa^\"\u00ab_a\nvalue of the small orange, don't we?\nIt fits into that cranny not filled\nby the sandwiches, celery and stuffed\negg\nwith   the   erect   carriage   of   the   native\nArabs  at  all   ages  and   under   all  circumstances,\nWhether   swaying   back    and    forth\nPROSPF.CTS    LOOK    BBHlHT\nIt must be admitted that the British\nKing acquitted himself with dignity\nin welcoming the delegate* to tbe five\npower naval conference and waving a\nbenign hand over their initial proceedings.\nHis address was a model of good\ntaste, good sense, and sound international counsel. It is eapeelally to\nbe noted that he didn't feel called upon to hand out any imposing copybook maxims, but addressed himself\nsimply and directly to the great business which, had celled the distinguished\nconfreres together. The most png-\nnant sentence in his address ls worth\nreproducing and remembering:\n\"I believe that you to whom your\ngovernment have entrusted tbe high\noffice of continuing the task started\nat Washington, have lh* single-minded\nIntention of proceeding not with any\nselfish and exclusively nation! illstic\npurpose, but with the noble inspiration and resolve to remove once and\nfor all this particular obstacle from\nthe path of order and civilized progress.\"\nIf the royal speaker's commence ui\nthe disinterested intention of the naval\nconferees shall be justified by the result of their deliberations, then Indeed\nwill \"a great and lasting benefit' be\nwhich is entitled to the peace tliat\nconferred not only on their own countries, but \"on mankind generally\",\ncan only come through a reduction\nof the present vast machinery of waar-\nfarc to  a  world police footing.\n11 se ems to us that ot the other\nprincipal addresses made at the opening of the naval conference only two-\nthoee of Premier Ramsay MacDonald\nand Secretary of State Stlmson of\nthe United States\u2014compared In im-\npressiveness and decisiveness to the\ndeliverance of the King. While Tardieu\nof France, Grand! of Italy, and Wakat-\nsukl of Japan spoke approvingly qf the\ngeneral aspiration for peace and thc\nremoval of the competition of armaments, none of them sounded the note\nof pragmatic earnestness which characterized the addresses of the Brltiah\nand American spokesmen. Although\nboth of them carefully avoided any\nreference to tonnage, they nevertheless \"expressed the hope that the\nmeeting would contribute to disarmament on the land and In the air as\nwell as on the 'seas\"\u2014points which\nwere studiously ignored by the chler\nrepresentatives of the other three lead-\nlnfc naval powers. In his straightforward address. Pxretary ' fitjmson\npledged the loyal co-operation of the\nUnited States in behalf of disarmament\nfor \"land, sea and air.\" and Premier\nMacDonald, after calling attention to\nthe traditional reliance of his own\ncountry on its naval force, asserted\nthe British willingness to accept a substantial reduction of this arm of Its\ndefense, concluding this part of his address with the following striking statement:\n\"The w.ioie world expects that we\nshall deliberate and negotiate on the\nassumption that having put our name\nto pacts of peace we mean to respect our signatures.\"\nIt was not necessary for the British\npremier to make the declaration that,\nhe will sign no naval agreement with\nhis fingers crossed, but it cannot fall\nto serve a useful purpose. Speaking\nnot only for the greatest naval power,\nbut for the greatest federation of nations the world has ever seen, his\nwords carry an authority and weight\nthat assuredly will have a bracing\neffect on the half-hearted representatives of the other nations, and perhaps constrain them to act with the\nsoberness and resolution befitting the\ngreat task on which they are engaged.\nAnd this, when you come to think\nof it, ls the groat, the pre-eminent\nservice that will be rendered by Ramsay MacDonald at the conference. He\nis probably the only man In lt whose\nwhole career attests the unchallenge-\nablllty of his pacifist convictiorj and\npurposes. Somewhere ln his writings\nGalsworthy has paid a fine tribute\nto courage without hope, and that\nwas the kind of courag_* which Mac\nDonald exhibited during the war, when\nhe waa both socially and politically\nostracized. He Bays himself that the\nanxiety of these years has made him\nan old man\nBut somehow, he has maanged to\nretain his buoyant energy, his sincerity of vision, his brave faith in good\nBritish   Empire  w\nforte is disappearing. He ban accordingly assiduously devoted himself to\ntbe task of making England aa great\ntn moral leadership as she one* was\nln  imperial power.\nHts presence at tbe conference ls a\nalgn to all the nations that the wrong\npeople are no longer running the world.\nTbe peoples everywhere have come\nto know and believe tn him\u2014believe ln\nhtm as the American people believe ln\nWashington and Lincoln. And the beat\nthing about It all Is that every one of\nhia conferees ls acutely aware of this\nattitude of the public mind toward\nhim, and ls fearful of the psychological\natmosphere which It has created. This\nIs why we think the problem of finding\nan accomodation between the conflicting interests at tbe naval conference\nIs not going to be as bard as is\ngenerally anticipated. Fortunately Ramsay MacDonald Is not only an ardent\nIdealist, but he ls a politician after\nthe manner of Burke, insisting that\none should always do the best thina\npossible, though It may no. be the best\nImaginable. He plainly Indicated this\nin his address by candidly recognizing\nthe peculiar geographical ad economic\nneeds of each nation and the duty\nof taking them into sympathetic consideration.\nIt has been well said of the English\npremier that his quick understanding\nand boundless sympathy give hlm a\n(treat capacity for friendships and co-\nooeratlve work. We on oonfidmt\nthese qualities will make for splendid\nresults at London. All history shows\nthat, \"the emotionalizatlon of human\nInstitutions, their transformation from\nit community of bare ideas Into beliefs and motives can only be done\nby a great personality, a genius. There\nare the strongest reasons for believing\nthat Ramsay MacDonald is going to\nshow himself to be lust that kind\nof a genius.\u2014Detroit N\u00bbws\ni turnover of a million\nmonth Residents of lh*\nprovince admit without argument\nthat they are taxed \"plenty,\" and\nin   ways  which   are  also  plenty.\nYet tbe finance ministers of British Columbia have not had an enviable time trying to make the income keep pace with the outgo, and\nthere are numerous precedents on\nthe record for laat year's failure to\nbalance   tht   budget.\nThere   la   a   moral   in   this   for   the\nlegislature  and   the  people of  Alberta\nMme when  this province Is also\nassuming   the   task   of   administering\nthe   reaour\u00ab.\nThe turning over of these reaoources\nto provincial control does not open\nup any perennial source from which\nenormous revenues can be drawn.\nWhether the fees which can be collected without paralyzing development can\nbe made for a time to even mer.\nthe coats of admlnstrfitlon la an\nopen  question:\nCertainly any dlspos.aon to exploit\nthe resources for a vaatly lncreaaed\n-nresent expenditure would be a costly\nmis-calculation. Uoney does not come\nout of land or coal mlnas. but out\nnf pockets. The resources should be\n\u2022rested aa capital, put in charge for\nthe present generation aa trustees for\n\u2666hose who are\nBulletin.\nfollow.\u2014Ed monton\nDr  Prsncls M.  Turner,\nBrockvllle  died  at Laray,\na  native  of\nVirginia.\nFor the l*\u00ab ending last March,\nBritish Columbia had a deficit\namounting to nearly three and a half\nmillion   dollars\nBritish   Columbia   has   had   control\nof the natural resources since the creation   of   the   province,   and   has   administered there for revenue purposes. |\nIt   lias   a  provincial  liquor  sales  sys- I\nSTAGE\nNELSON\u2014TRAIL\nWeek Days\nLv. Nelson 10:30 a. m.\nLv. Trail 6:00 p. m.\nSundays\nLv. Nelson 5:00 p. m.\nLv. Trail 8:00 p. m.\nC. G. C., Ltd.\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet ua figure your bills of\nBuilding Material Coast Lumber a specialty.\nJohn Burns & Son\nLadies' Sport Dresses\n#\nIn a lovely range of dresses that\nare jujst a little different. Smart\nand novelty Tweeds, Silk Tweeds,\nSilk and Wools, Jerseys, Silk Jerseys, also Jersey and Tweed mixtures. Half sizes, tall tizes and\nsizes for the Missie.\nTHREE RACKS SPECIALLY\nSELECTED AT THREE\nVERY   SPECIAL   PRICES\nIncluding our entire stock of the\nabove dresses reduced to\n$3.95, $7.95 AND $11.95\nOur 85^-Specials continue this\nmorning only long enough to give\nus time to change our windows and\nrearrange interior of store.\nV \/-\\X'\/-, r-.r\u00bb    I   . rm   iiTucm.      INTUITION    IS    WHAT    A    WOMAN\nLOViKR    LIFE   WEST I HAS    WHEN     SHE    IS    RIGHT     AND\n\/ai-   mill-.    rttxrti-TT-ci    I Y00R   PHIDE   W0NT   ADMIT   8HE\nOr [ll'j     \u00ab()(   KIKS        OOT RESULTS  AS   VOU DO   MERELY\n! BV   THTNKINO\nthe      As a lj,fit altott to keep the boy on\nI the larm,   you  mtghl  call  him   Vice\non a camel's back, running along be.\nside a tram of camels or laden donkeys, ,rlllt does not matter. Try the follow\nor  sitting    uopn   a   rock    fating,    the ,       delicious   recipe:\nArab   always   holds   his   trunk   erect.      oran^   cream   Custard:   Beat   the\nas strlght as a pine. yollls _, \u25a0tM0 cg8s and   _  them atld\nDr   J.  H.  Kellogg    the   traveller  in cnc-f0urth   cup   of   granulated   sugar,\nquestion   was naturally of the opinion t.vo  teaspoon,  ot   nour  and  a  pinch\nI ii,-.        erectness   of   carriage   wns ot mU   now stir ,n two cups 0( ,vtt,\n,\u201e   -ll'.,-    ., ,.\u201e . m'k   \u00bbn<l   co\u00b0k   the   mixture   ln   the\nwho \u201e..??,.__    \u201e\u2122'\"V\" ._1!en?\" loo \u00b0r \u00ab **<\u25a0''*>\u2022<\u25a0 \"oiler till thick enough\nwho had  lived   among  the  Arabs  for ,\u201e  .\u201e,   \u201e   .  _. n   ,\u201e,_   cool   a,  .\u201e\u201e\nSr^?_2S hC W\"S l\"'0-\u2122*!\u2122 &ft\u00a3  it  Xw.   AdS  o\u00b0neh,\" \u00b0,\u00aba-\nthe  erect  carriage   was  the  result  of\ntho  most  cnretiu   trnlnlne   from   eany\nze of the   ln  the use oC BOOd standflrdB-*ln the\n'e   triumph  of  good  causes.    He was  one\nof the first to,see that the World War\nwas not only foolish, but victoryless.\nand  that the old  vulgar view of  the\nSmart Shoppe for Smart Women\nspoon    vanilla    and    divide    between\nindividual   serving   dishes   lined   with\nchildhood.    In   tents  one   may   often   mc_d   oangea   (mbakes   about   Blx   por.\nhear a father or mother exclaiming,\n\"Sit up Abraham, sit up; you look\nlike a fool doubled up so; sit up.\"\nThe   erect   carriage   ls   actually   acquired   by   sitting   tall   and   standing\ntall.    That  ls   that   whether   sou  are\nsitting or standing you should natur- i\nally tiike the poise lhat  increases your|\nheight to the utmost.\nlust see what happens; the head'\nbecomes erect, the chin is drawn\nbackward, the chest stands out in\nfront,  and   the   abdomen   Is   drawn   in.\nWhat happens to the interior of the\nbody?\nThe lungs get more room, the heart\ntlons top witli two stiffly whipped\negg whites sweetened to taste with\nsugar\nTWENTY YEARS\nAGO\n_________        *\n(Prom   Tlie   Dally   News   of   February\n10, 1010)\nA   heated   discussion   on  naval   protection   took   place   ln   the   Dominion\n_   house yesterdav, in which Martin Bur-\nalso,   the  abdominal   organs   are   held   \u201e\u201e_    Yale-Cariboo   member,   took   an\nMODERNISM: Male simpletons feel-\nina important and successful because\nthey make money enough to keep\nseme woman In til and wasteful\nidleness\n\"Ten par cent of those who buy on\ncredit never pay.\" But they usually\ntell the dealer where the wrecked\ncar is.\nIf Uu gooti reauy t-.e young,\ncf old kill-Joys evidently hnv?\ndefinitions badly  mixed.\n. lot\ntheir\nFor   health   ami   vigor,\nRocky   mountain   and   Pacific   p\ncoa.st   states  surpass  the  rest\nof   the   country.   The   United\nStates   public   heaKh   service,'\nin   a   statement   January   30,\nBHports   that  the   death   rate\namong  insured   persons   living\njNett of the Rocky mountain;.\n9p\u00bb   considerably   lower   than\nthe rate for the remainder of\n'.||U United States for the first\n.11 months of last year. These j\n{figures are based on reports on j\n1&,000,000   insured   persons   in j\nShe United States and Canada, i\nB'The    national    death    rate I\n4junoi_\u00a3  these  insured   persons I\n[Jo* 9.2 per 1000 persons, and\nWke  rate  among  those  living\nJBMt of the Rocky mountains;\n6.7,  compared   with j\nainder of the i ocrebct this sentience*  -yes, i\nBUH   WITH   A   FAST   CROWD.\"   SAID\ni THE SOCIAL LION. \"BUT I'VE NEVER\n.a    _.    Hia- ' ACCEP-XD    A   COCKTAIL    UNLESS    I\n1    *    ni*~    REALLY   WANT   IT.\"\n'high' ln their proper positions so\nthat the stomach empties Itself properly, the small Intestine gets its best\nchance to absorb the food, and the\nlarge    intestine   cannot    get    'kinked'\nactive    putt,\naddress.\ndel i vering    an   Inspiring\nA   plan   to   relieve   Chicago's   Con\nor form loops that cause gas forma- gested traffic system _\u00bby the construction   and   constipation. tlon  of a 90-mile snbway  Is believed\nThe difference between  your height to be furthered by  the announcement\nin a careless attitude and that which that J. Arnold has been appointed the\nis correct  and  can  easily  be  over an city's    subway    engineer    to    prepare\ninch. plans.\nJust stand against a door frame in \u2022   \u2022   #\nJSttMdS, 'aTncS,anner- M*rt  ^ M'\u00bb *'*\"\u00bb **-*** <*\u2122\u00b0\u00ab- \u00ab ta\nThen    simply    stand\nabdomen,  throw out chest,  and draw\nin chin. If you mark this height you\nwill find it about an inch hiore.          I _      ,            *    *    *    _,\nNow   in   addition   to   standing   and' Th*  American  Geographic society  Is\nsitting tall there is one set of muscles making    Plans    to    send    Commander\nthat  tf  developed,   wilt   give   you   the p*nry   \u00b0n   an   Antarctic   expedition   in\n... . .     half of the Canadian government, has\nin  opened a series of  lectures on 'Canada.\"   in   London,  England.\nSOI NO \\V\\\\\\I> AUK INHNG\nl*HD TO START AND STOP \\l \\-\ntlllM'HY. NOW | OK A I I IVW.K\nHORN* THAT WIU. iWT THI\nMUKB9   ON    A   UMOMOTIVK.\n\u2014o\u2014\nThe   next   boom   will   be   easier   to\nstart!   The smart bovs saved the finest\nsucker   lists    ever   collected.\nerectness  of the  Arab.\nThese are the front abdominal muscles..\nWhether you bend over and try\nto touch toes with the knees straight,\nor lie on back and raise legs with\nknees straight, a number of times,\ntwice dally, either exercise will bring\nresults.\nYou'll find that yoti will get nearer your toes every week, or be able\nto raise your \"heavy' feet a number\nof  times  more  by  pen*istance.\nRemember the Arab got his erectness\nby training; he wasn't born that way-\nHal. H. Creswicks, reeve o# Barrie,\nwas elected warden of Slmcoe county\nfor 1B30, over Reeve Oeorge W. Glover,\nof Nottawaysaga township. Mr, Cres-\nwlcke Is the youngest warden the\ncounty has ever had. being only 29\nyean ot age.\n\u2014Thirty-Second\u2014\nAnniversary Sale\nShow Qreat Saving Values\nOUR\nBARGAIN COUNTERS\nAre Full of'Everyday Necessities at Prices You Cannot Afford to Miss\nTHIS WEEK We Are Placing on Sale a Line of\nWOODENWARE\nINClL'DING:\nBread Boards  Ifjp  to  50cWood   SP\u00b00^3    __C\nBake Boards _.\nTowel   Racks\nKnife Boards\n$1-00 t0 $1.25 Butter Moulds    25c\n30C Knife Boxes\n__   Bu'.lter Ladles\n25c\nthe   interests   of  the  society.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nThe first draw In Winnipeg's 22nd\nannual bospiel was made tonight in\nwnicn 190 rinkR will be entered, including eight American rinks from\nButte, Duluth. Minneapolis and St.\nPaul.\n\u2022 *    *\nOas fumes which filled the Stoney\nCreek scbQolhouse almost caused the\ndeath of 26  pupils.\n\u2022 *    *\nYesterday was the Chinese New Year,\nthe day being spent with much merriment by the local Chinese. Today is\nthe   day   set   aside   for   fireworks.\n\u2022 *    *\nMovie   and   Nelson   took   the   flrBt\ngames ln the ' interior hockey championship yesterday held at the Ross\nland carnival. \"Nelson defeated Phoenix\n9-6  and  Moyie  defeated  Rowland  7-6,\nRolling   Pins gQcf01**0  MaSherS\nWHITE ENAMELLED WARE\nASSORTMENT AT 1 C\u00ab EACH   FOOD CHOPPERS $^50 EACH\nSOMETHING NEW EACH DAY\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\nWholesale and Retail\u2014Quality Hardware\nNELSON :-: B.C.\n\t\n-_-_----------_____________\u25a0\n-________\u25a0\n___\n S^rihg\nIn Use wiifc a definitely\ndetermined poHcy of \u2022**_*\u25a0\u00bb\nwe areckaringoot hroken\nlines of merchandise and\nwinter.\/tods. to Make\nroam     for Spriiig Stock.\nTwo' ?*i<na. Jxx\n* WOMEN'S SL1PPEBS\nAND PIJMPS\nNot* every siz* in each\nline! but all sites fre^ineeht-\n\"$305\"*\n$4.35\n20\nPER CENT\n.P.\nI    All Hockey Shoes\nS\nC   Al! Overshoes\nO\nU   All Felt\nN   Footwear\nR, Andrew\n&Co.,\nLeaders   m   Footf.ashion\niioha,  prirtSe entet_____n__it*1B*pJf\neona)   Items,   n_srrftge\u00bb.   etc..   wu\nm thte column\n.Jgp'\nApartmen\nMrs.  Vlgneejua\nTelephone\nATTENDANCE HIGH\nAT YMIR  SCHOOL\nYMIR, B. C, Feb. 9\u2014January report\naf   the   Ymir   public   school   showed:\nNumber of pupils in attendance\u201430.\nAverage actual  attendance\u201428.16.\n' ,, Pfipi.* attending regularly and punc-\ni tually\u2014Norman   Burgess,   Betty   Clark,\n?ileen Ollle, Jim Grant, Jack Grant,\nera Orton, Ronald Orton, Jennie\nRankin, Harry Stevens, Leo Stevenson,\nJohn Bteveneoh, Helen Verlgln, Sam\nVerlgln, Annie Pognikoff, Mike Pogni-\nkoff, Annie Kalesnlkoff, Olga Haakon-\nten, Hjilmar Hoakensen.\n< Standing:\nGradft* 6\u2014Vera Orton, 73.3 per cent;\nOeorge Greene, M.i.\nGURde*   7*-HWen    Veregln    67.(1   per\npent;   Eileen Ollle,  64.9  per cent.\nOrade   fc\u2014N<*rt.*n   Burgees   71    per\n-Sent; Ronald  Orton 70 per cent.\nGrtitte   5\u2014Woodrow  Andeison  71   per\n\u25a0fcnt.\nGrade 4\u2014Annie Pojnlkoff, 82 per\n*ent; Aiyiie -taleenikoff, 74 per cent;\n'\u2022Jllmer Peterson, TO per cent.\n_A Gradd.^SflpW'Wevens. 81 per cent;\ntarn VerigW- .6 per cent; Betty Clark,\nTO  per  cent.\n' Orado   2A\u2014Mike   Pojnfkoff,   85   per\ndent.\nOrade   lA---\u00a9lga  Haakons?n,   88   per\ncent.\ns* Orade   IB\u2014retry  Anderson.\nGreatest improvement during _nont_^\nf~Perry   Anderson.\nWARDENS REELECTED\nAT   HARROP   CHURCH\n\u2022 HARROP. B. C. Feb. 9.\u2014The annual\nvestry meeting was held at the close\not the Anglican service here on Sunday evening. Rev. C. Harvey, vicar for\nUie parish ol Kokanee, presiding. C. S.\n\u25a0 Price and W. 8. Ashby, retiring wardens, wore reelected to serve again\ntills year.\nAt a previous meeting, the financial\nStatement wns given by Mr. Price sand\n, approved.\nAn expression of appreciation was\ntil\u2014tea to- Mrs. A-hby . fer her services  as  organist.\n,, Air passsenger lines ta thr United\n^tcs htfoe set 30 pounds tsa the nua-\nlmura weight of bas_fs_ge wUlch can be\ncarried' with  out  cost  to  iwsscngcre.\ntt. 8. Arthur of Wirner, AIM., is\nthe meet ot ur< bi-xhet Or E c.\nArthur, aaiea s_re\u00abt\n. -\u2022 \u25a0 e\n-*\u25a0 Ud MM wmtmt fseaer and\nthsslr children of KooSenny Bay paid a\nv_lt  to   tpwtl  fntay\na     \u2022     a\n' Mrs W. i. Utsrmet ot Oaetlt~*r event\nSaturday ln thr ctty sftovpinf\n* * .*\nMr. and Un. Co. of Sbuth Slocsui\nwere visitors 1_ Veloon S^urday.\n* *   * .\nRov. 8. J. Mahood of Queens F__ wa.s\nln the ctty yesterday et* foote to conduct Anglican services In Rossland.\n* * -*\nMr. and Mra. Heddle of Cedar Point\npaid a visit to (own  Saturday.\ntt    tr    *\nMlu   O.   Randall   who   teaches   at\nTmir spent the week-end ln town.\nsea\nlira. Coleman of \"Deanshaven was a\nCity   visitor  Saturday.\n**   \u2022'   . a     \u2666     -\nMrs P. Kins of Alnsworth spent Saturday ln Selson to attend tho funeral\nof the late Mrs. Thomee Hawes.\n* e   a\nMisa Batty Benwell. who has been\nconfined to the Kootenay Lake General hospital ha. returned to her home\nat the Husiae hotel.\n* .   *\nMn. Frlsby of South Slocan paid a\nvisit to town Saturday.\n* \u2022   *\nLate   McLennan   of   Kashton   spent\nSaturday  ln the  city.\n.   *   *\nPJOtlnclal Constable Henley of Salmo was a week-end visitor in Nelson\n9      *      *\nKokanee Chapter I.O.D& held a most\nsuccessful series at bsrtdge !\u00ab\"\u2022_*\u2022\noently which resulted in Mrs. \u00ab\"\u00bb\u00ab\nThompson, winning the prize for high\nscore 'A -umbel of members contributed to the sjffah- while those\nplaying at the various homes included\nMrs. A. A. O. Williams. Mrs. A. L.\nPutnam. Mre. W. M. Catron. Mrs. H.\nMcArthur, Mrs. A. J. Cornish, Mrs. R.\nW. Dawson, Mrs. T. E. Maddock, Mra.\nBruce Orady. Mcs. Oerald Bees. Mrs.\np C. Siaith. Mis. f. Persguscsn. Mra.\nHarry oore, Mre. A. J. Dunnett. Mra.\nJ. 8 C. Clowes. Mm. William Waldie.\nMra. P. O. Morey, Mra, Herbert Thorpe.\nMrs. Pred Curtis, Mra. S. R. McDouglal\nMrs \u00a9serge Horstead, Mrs. W. 8. King.\nMra. J. A. McDons_d. Mrs. J. 8. Carter.\nMrs. Roy Hood, Mra. Harold H. Hlnitt.\nMrs. Palmer Unlfcay, Mrs. N. Murphy,\nMra. Robert Thompson, Mrs. W. C. P.\nHoMhcote, Mrs. W. W. Bell. Mre. t.\nGammon. Mis. Oeorge Kemerling. Mrs.\nHarry Maundrell. Mre. M. V. Allen. Mr\nand Mre. Charles P. McHardy, W. L.\nAffleck. Mra. Howard Bush. Mrs. Jack\nLnog   Mra.  E.  Y.  Brake.  Mrs.  Joseph\nSoltand, Mrs. w. M. Cunliffe. Mrs.\n\u25a0imam Watdie. Mrs. C. B. Garland,\nMra. D. A. Menu-land, Mrs. H. H. MacKenzie, Ml*. J. A. Olbson. Miss M.\nCameron, Mrs. O. B. Matthews, Mrs.\nRobert Thompson. Mra. W. R. Hlnton.\nMrs. R. A. Peebles, Mrs. R. Hoggarty.\nMrs. W ,H. Smedley, Mrs. A .T. Noxon.\nMrs. W. A. Thurman, Mrs. George\nMotion, Mrs. P. C. Rowley, Mre. Gtfy\nBrowell. Mrs. Robert Bell. Mrs. Jack\nBell. Mrs. James Johnstone. Mrs. O, P.\nMelrose. Mrs. A. Morton Richmond,\nMrs. George A. Hunter, Mrs. J.JftA.\nGUkcr, Mrs. C. P. Sedgwicsfe, Mrs n. I\nLandon, Mrs. Charles F. Hunter, _h>.\nW. A. Bennett. Mrs. Benjamin Hamann, Mrs. Charles Darrough. Mrs\nEddy,' Mrs. Iawrerice McPhail. Mrs.\nWilliam. Taylor. Mrs. Waldo W. ftt-\ngi\u2014on, Mlss Connie Smith, Miss Agnes\nJeroin_ Mrs. James Davidson. Mrs.\nJomee B. Curran. Mra. A. Jeffs. Mrs.\nL. Veal. Mrs. J. Notman. Mrs. R. R.\nBrown, Mrs. Perssruson Wilson, Mlrs.\nDouglas Cummins. Mrs. George Fleury,\nMra. Jack Morris, Mrs. Charles Kelman.\nMiss Helen Murphy, Mrs. Stanley Jeph-\nson, Mre. W. West. Mr... G. C. Arnc-\nsjon. Mre. H. A. Nicholson. Mrs. William\nBrown, Miss Maud Elliott. Mlas Helen\nSloan. Mlss Gladys Ewlng. Mr. and\nMrs. John Cartmel, Mr. and Mis. R.\nL. McBrlde, Mr. nnd Mra. A. E Murphy, Mr. sand Mi's. A. L. Putnam, Mrs.\nH. Rosllng, Mr. and Mrs. P. G. Morey,\nMr. and Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson. Mrs,\nJames Johnstone, Mrs. Palmer Lindsay, Mrs. O. W. Humphry, Mrs. H. L.\nOenest. Mrs. ffi. R. Redpath. Mrs. H. H.\nPitts, Mra. Gcorw A. Hunter, Mra. N.\nMurphy, Mrs. W. T. Fotheringham.\nMrs. C. G. Matthew. Mrs. O. H. Praser\nMrs. J. T. Andrews. Mrs. W. R. Smythe\nMlss I. Worthlngton, Mlss E. Ross\nMiss Lcona Boss. Mlas Moxlue Mc-\nSwenye. Mre. W. B. Steed, Mrs. 11. A\nNicholson. Mrs. G. B. Russell, Mrs\nL.  L.  Boomer,  Mra   W.  J.  Grove,   Mrs\nr-\nShe Suffered with Painful Lame Back\nNo*. Stotia Ltkiy Used Dodd's Kidney Pills\n\"I havc used Dodd's Kidney Pills on several occasions\" writes\nMrt. Amos J. Wcntzell, a resident of Bares' Corners,        \u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014-\nN.S.  \"Last summer 1 used three hoses, my back:\nwas lame and very painful at times,  jinking\nit was caused through my kidneys I tooVsome\nDodd's Kidney Pills and found they did me a\nwhole lot of good\"\n\"Bocfcjch* is generally Kidney Achs. This pain\nusuam indicates some disorder of, the kidneys.\nE_dd t KWney Pills relieve Backache by toning up the kidneys to do their wdrk of straining all the impurities, all the poisons, out of\n. the blood. Pure blood means good h_dth.\nCh. At All Dealers, er by Ms'J (ran The\nUVC Dodds Medicine Cs.UA, Toronto 2, Out\nFAWCETT'S\n-RANGES-\ntawcett's ranges are the cook's ideal in modern\nkitchen ranges. A real high* class range at a moderate price.\nUnrivalled in performance ano> beauty. Made in a\nwide range of si-zes   to salt all modem homes.'\nHipperson Hardware Co.\nLook for the Red Hardware Store\nPhone 497 Box 414\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, *  MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 10, 1930\nPageFlvt;\n! Cranbrook School\nBoard to Assist\nBig Spirts Day\nMtuvarrt Bftnncrimm, w*U-kx*_Dwn to\nEnglUh and Canadian play-goera, who\nhas been selected as \"the pr_W\u2014t\non iht BrtUsh- stue.\"\nHarold Lake*. Mrs A. I. Murphy, Mrs.\nWilliam Taylor. Mn. Lawrence McPhail, Mr. ajid Mr*. J. T, Andtews,\nMr. and Mrs. Douglas Ilolman, Mr. and\nMra. T. E. Hlgglnbotham, Mr*, and\nMn. WiLiam Rutherford, Utva. Thomas\nHome-wham. Mn. H. D. Paterson, Ml\u00bb.\nIda Pleury, Mn. Jf-Qoes H. Lawrence\nMl\u00ab Jean Waldie. Mlss Eileen Dill. M:.~\nCarmen Horton, Miss Jean Gllfcer, Mis:\nMhora McDonald, Mlas Myra Humphry,\nMlas Margaret McLeod, Mn. A. Dolphin,\nMn. Euddlck. Mr. and Mrs. Pred Curtis,\nMn. Harry Bishop, Mrs. Oeorge Wharton, Mr. and Mn. W. Colblck. \"Mrs\nBall, Mn. A. Joluason. Mrs. Melneczuk,\nand Mra. M. Mlchelson.\n\u2022 at\nL. Miles spent the week-end tu Rossland.\n* *   *\nMrs, L, StepUeusou has returned\nfrom Spokane.\na   * ., M\nWilfred,'ttevlin of Boundray spent the\nweek-end   to   the   ctty   .\nMr. and Mrs. C. P. Sedgwick, Carbonate street, had as their house\nguest ovsr the week-end Mrs. J .D.\nYeatman and her son Julian of South\nSlocan.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. P. P. Payne have returned from a week spent at the\ncoast.\n\u2022 *   *\nRev J C. McKenzie. pastor of the\nchurch of Mary Immaculate expeet.s\nto leave Wednesday night for Vancouver after which he will go to Bel-\nIlngham, Wash., to attend the profession of Rev. Sr. Bernadette. nee\nJean Mnlvenna, daughter of Mr. and\nMre. Philip Lon:,'. Silica street, an ox\npupil of St. Josephs academy, which\ntakes place at St. Josephs Novetlatc\nin Bellingham.\n*    \u2022    *\nAmong these attending the thin', cf\na narks of four dinner dances, being\ngiven at the Hume hotel during the\nWinter season and which took place\nSaturday night were: H. L. Robinson\nMr Mid Mrs. Charles II. Hamilton, Mr'\nand MT3..C. W. Appleyard, Mr. and Mre\nKric P. DaWson, Mr .and Mrs. W. J\nGrove. Mr, and Mn. a. L. McBride\nMr. and Mrs. Hugh W. Robertson, Mr'\n\u25a0and Mrs. E C. Matthew. Mr. ond Mis\nA. Morton Richmond, Mr. arid Mrs\nG. P. Melrose. Mr. and Mrrs P c\nWhitehouse, M'\\ and Mrs1 Guy W\nDnvitv Dr.* ancl. Mre. John Gnnsher\nMr. and Mre. w. L. Sheeler, Galeoa\nPnrms mine. Mr. antl Mre, P. ft. Sadd\nMr. and Mrs. Paid Lincoln. Mr. and\nMre, Harold Lakes, Mr. and Mts p\nE. Doncaster, Mr. nnd Mrs, J. H D\nBenson, Mr, and Mrs. t. c, Wragge\nCaptain and Mra. W. A. ftichwdSc-n\nMr. and Mrs. B. Townae^d, Mr. and\nMrs. L. V. Rogers. Mfc* Marlon Blackwood, Mlss Jean Lambert, Miss Marcia\nTowgocd. Miss Mary Doncastpr the\nMisses Lsabelle and Margery Benson,\nJ\u00abs_ Crauford, Mlss Annable Dunk\nMlss Dorothea Graham, Miss Betty\nHorstead, Mlss Eve Dewdney. Miss Mar-\ngar* t Jarvis, Mlss Crelna Horstead _____\nPtolU* Sheffield. Mfr. lfaoktoBIaSS\nwood. Miss BlizBbeth BoMen. Miss Ot-\ntiille Wragge, w. McB. Brown. Arthur\nLambert, B. Jones. A. Smvtfte T West\ni lUhKL_5- Is Thorb^- W. Blone.'\na    \\ C(St*'   \u00b0*   U*   Warner.   H    \\\n?fnrJ0n,Oe1'7nart.  Edwin  Cartme.,  JfIck\nStark,   Leslie   Pielcji\u201ef:>   Harry   Horton\nT.  R.  Wilson,  L.  B.  De  Vtber\n\u00ab    \u00ab    *\nR.   Hayes   or   Crescent   Bay   paid   a\nvisit   to   town   Saturday.\n* *   \u2022\nMre. John Murray fo South Slocan\nwas anions Saturday shoppers in Nelson.\nVincent Hughes' of the Yankee Olrl\nmine at Ymlr spent Suturduy in Nelson\non  bueme*.\n* *   *\nClimrle* P. McHardy left Saturday\nmorning for a business trip to Sookane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00a5\nA. Bailey of Den&haven wu among\nvisitors to town Saturday.\n* \u2022   \u2022   '\nMrs. J. McCalum and her niece Mit\"\nMarjorie Brown, of Alnsworth were in\nthe city Saturday guests of Mrs Mc-\nCtfluns son-in-law and daughter Mr\nand    Mrs.    George    McPherson,   'ocre'\n* *   \u00bb\nMrs. c. Lind of Riondel came to\ntown Saturday to attend tjie funeral\nof t\\_o late Mrs. Tliomas Hawes, which\ntook  place  that  afternoon.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nD. Chisholm of Deanshaven was\namong  visitors  to  the  city   Saturday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nE. McLellan of Kimberley 14 a olty\nvisitor.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\np. Grant of Alnsworth spent Saturday\nin   Nelson.\n\u2022   *   *   *\nMre. C. Lind of Kaslo Is the guest\nof her daughter Mis* Ruth Lind.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. C. D. Blackwood. Hall\nmines road had as .their guest recently\nMrs, T, A. WheUdon of South Slocan\n* \u00ab   *\nStanley McLellan of Ainsworth paid\na visit to town Saturday.\nDonates   $200  for   Staging  of\nKootMey School Sports,\nMay 24\nCRANBROOK    B.   C.   Peb.   9\u2014At   a\nmeeting of the Cranbrook achool board\nin tfie council chamber Thursday evening, P. U. Be\/all was reelected, .ctialr-\nifu-.ii tor th* coming year. '71* report\nef ibe returning offU*r announcing\nthe election of Mn Miles and, A. D.\nBridges by acclamation, wa* adopted.\nF. W. Burtl\u00abMB was reappointed secretary\nfor the year l\u00bb30 at the #ame salary\nas la*t year.\nThs secretary was instructed to write\nto Mn. MBe* conveying tha sympathy\nat the bo.--_rd in her illness and to\nexprecn tJwir hope that she would\nsood be restored to her inroad health.\nTb* request of Mlss U. Flett for\nan increase in salary wa* r*ad. The\ndectstab of the board was- that, while\nn. -ippreeiflted the app.lcM_*s services\nlt wm not able to grant Increases at\nthe pr_**at time.\nG, T. Molr and E. Ballard, president\nand swretairy of the Kootenay Boundary School AWtletks association, were\npresent tp ,lay before th* board plana\nfor the forthcoming scltoAl 'aports meet\nof that association to b* h*M In this\ncity on May 24, and applying for ft\ngran, from the board to h*lp meet\nthe expense* of the meat. A grant\nof  $-00  vas  made  toward,  thes*  \u00ab-\nThe matter of th* acquisition of the\nChristian property for the enlargement\nof the present public school grounds\nagain cam* up for discussion. The\nsecretary reported that Mn. Christian\nhad declined to accept; less than the\n>3000, originally demanded by her.\nThe olfer of the board of 11800 for\nthe property was not considered. The\nsecretary was instructed to notify Mrs.\nChristian that unless the board heard\nfrom her by February 16 proceedings\nwould be Instituted under Section 143\nto 140 of the School act for the valuing and acquisition of property by\narbitration.\nReports of Inspector V. Z. Manning\nond the various teachera ot the public\nschool were received and filed. The\nresquest of Mlss Woodland, principal\nof the public school, for supplies was\napproved and the secretary Instructed\nto order them. The request of the\nhigh school tor a grant of *50 toward\nthe high school library was granted.\nThe matter of the flag presented to\nthe city by tlie Young Australian's\nleague of Cranbrook, West Australia,\ncame up. Some time ago, on the\nvisit of members of the league to\nBritish Columbia, an exchange of flags\nbetween the two Cranbrook was arranged. A flag wns sent to the city\nof Cranbrook In Australia and one received by Mayor Roberts from that\ncity. The flag has been presented by\nmayors to the Cranbrook schools and\nlt ls the Intention of the board to\nhang it in the main hall of the central school, wtth an inscription printed\non lineri setttn gforth the particulars\nof the  transaction.\nTrustee A. D. Bridges was appointed\nbv thc board to h. the school board\nmembers on the executive of the\nKootenay Boundary School Athletic\naaaociatlon throughout th* coming year.\nAccounts for the month of January\naowiuntlnn to $8,724.43 were passed.\nThe chairman announced that th;\nappointment of\" committees would he\nthe same us' last year:\nFinance\u2014Mrs Miles, W. Henderson\nand A. D. Bridge's.\nBuildings\u2014entire board.\nSupplies\u2014Mrs. Miles, Mre. Jackson\nand   A.   D.   Bridges.\nSchool management\u2014-entire board.\nChief of Police Halcrow was reappointed truant officer at the same\nremuneration as for the preceding year.\n611 Ba\\-T Street.    -Pho-nrtOO\nFebruary Final Clean*Up\nWomen's, Misses and Children's\nReady^tcvWear at 1-3 to 1-2 Off\nThis is one time when the original cost has been lost sight of. Otar \u00abne\neffort is to clear all racks and. cases to make room for spring merchandise. This is .your opportunity to get quality merchandise for very\nlittle money.\nChildren's Dresses\nHalf Price\nDresses of pure wool Jersey in assorted style* and colors. Sizes 8 to 10 years.\nRegular values $5.75 fo $7.95 ewh.\nClearing at, Each  $2.90 to f4.00\nMisses* (Joats\nait 87.95'teach\nCoats of all wool Velour with trimming\nof Thibitine   Assorted colors.   Sizes 14\nand 1&.   Kegulat values $17.50.\nSale Price, Each $7.05\nChildren's Coats\nHalf Price\nAll wool Tweed or chinchilla in plain\ntailored or fur trimmed.    Colors 'and\nand navy.    Ilegalar $15.00  lo $20.00\neach.\nSale Price, Each ... ?7.50 tb ?10.e\u00bb\nMillinery\nat Half Price\nModel hats of felt or silk velvet. Assorted stvles and headsizes.   Regular $7.50\nto $15.00 each.\nSale Price, Each  $3.75 ib $7.50\nM ALLANDINE IS\nAGAIN HEAD OF\nCRESTON BOARD\nBoard of Trade Hears Fine Re-\nport of Year's Activities\nin Vasley\nMany Pass Civil\nService Tests\nin the Kootenay\nThe successful candidates for Nelson\nand district -points, sitting for the\nBritish Columbia civil m*vlcc examin-\natlcns for stenographer*** at Netaon.\nCrmibrook, Fernie and RevelBtolce. on\nDecember 7, 19.19, announced from\nVictorias   were   rs   follows:\nNelson\u2014Junior: Estelle 8. Stewart,\nYvonne G. Lapointe. William A. Oilll-\ncano, Velma I. Mclntyre. ^Evelyn A.\nWood, Gwendoline M. Lowery, Mary A\nRauket, Mildred Bergstrom, Beryl M.\nJohnson, Rose H, Jeffreys, Mary Sopho\nWilfretJ E. Bush.  Maud  M.  J.  Dahl.\nCranbrook\u2014Junior: Laura A. Hall,\nKathleen E. K. Edmondson, Jowphlnc\nL. Paacuzeo.\nFernie\u2014   Junior:   Mwjorie   J.   Peake,\nRevelBtoke\u2014Junior: Dora Bum.\nMrs. T. Hawes Is\nBuried in the\n.ity Cemetery\nBOSWELL NOTES\nBOSSWELL. B. C., Feb. S---On Wednesday afternoon. Mrs. F. Kunst entertained at a delightful tea. honoring\nher mother, Mrs. Charles Allen, who\nIs her guest for a time. Those Invited were. Mrs. Donald West, Mrs.\nSchelle. Mrs. Allen, Mrs. J. R. Higgens,\nMrs. W. Lawson Hepher. Mrs. A, H.\nAscott, Mrs. A. Kennedy, Mrs. D.\nHughes, Miss E. Holiday-Smith and\nMrs. J. Holiday-8m 1th. The tea cup\nfortunes, read hy Mrs. Hughes, gavo\nrise to  much merriment.\nORANBROCac, p. C. Feb. 9\u2014Meeting\nof the Ladles aid of Knox church\nWas held at the home .of Mrs. Hunter,\nwith Mrs. Hunter and Mrs. Little as\nhostesses. Committees were apponited\nfor the annual bazaar to be held next\nautumn and! arrangements made for\nthe Shamrock tea to be held on March\nlit fcflQfesr \u00a7__\u00bb___! eyofit,  \u2014\u201e_\nFuneral of Mri T. E. Hawes was held\nat the Howell funeral home Saturday,\nRev. W. C. Mawhinney officiating. Mrs.\nE*rneet Marsden sang \"Beautiful Isle\nof  Somewhere.\"\nThe funeral was attended by a large\nm|_nber of Ainsworth and Nelson\nfriends, and many beautiful floral\ntributes   wcrti   received.\nPall belarerB were: D. Grant. M. B.\nSmith, L. Williams, C. Bridge, J.\nPoulds, and P, Williams.\nG.l Landon\nTransferred\nGrand Forks\nG. L. Landon, district poultry inspector, intimated last nirht that he\nhad received word from his headquarters at the coast that he w.is to\nbe transferred from Kelson to Grand\nForks in the nrar future.\nMr. Landon had no information as\nto when he who expected to take the\nmove, but was of the opinion that he\nwould receive word within a day or\ntwo.\nRev. G. A. Sutherland, M. K\u201e principal o fthe Battleford School. Hotne\nfor the past nine yean, and prominent\nln United church affairs,  ls dead.\n )\nSir Philip Game, air vice-marshal,\nhas been appointed governor of New\nSouth Wales, Australia. Sir Phillip\nwill succeed Admiral Sir Dudley De\nChair, whose term as governor expires\ntikor&T,\nCKE-TrON. B. C, Feh. 9.\u2014If any\nconsiderable portion of the plans dis\ncussed at the annual meeting of the\nCreston board of trade on Friday night\nare acted upon, that organization's\n1930 should prove to be about the\nmost useful year in the board's history.\nThe meeting was in charge of the\npresident. Colonel Mallandaine. and\nwas preceded by a dineer at the newly\nreopened King George hotel, which is\nnow in charge of Mrs. J. A. Bell.\nThere was a representative turnout of\nmembers, and the new year is entered upon with considerable enthusiasm.\nThe retiring president submitted a\ncarefully prepared statement of shipments of fruU. vegetable and forest\nproducts from points in Creston district during 1699, along with much\nother valuable information covering\nactivities in the ''district or the pest\nyear. WhUe apple shipments, particularly, were bdow thoee of. 10118, yet,\nconsidering tht very dry year, the\noutgo of apples waa surprisingly large\naud the grades much ttfctter than the\ny^ar  previous.\nLaat year saw Creston shipping cherries by the carlc*d lot for the first\ntime in history. The shipping of strawberries was somewhat lighter than the\nprevious yenr, but raspberries held\ntheir own, as did most other lines,\nexcept potatoes. Instead or shipping\nout these valley dealers were compelled\nto import four carloads to supply the\ndemand.\nomCEKS   ELLCTU)\nOfficers chosen for 1830 were.Presi-\ndent, Col. E. Mallandaine: vice-president, R. J. Forbes; secretary and\ntreasurer, C. F. Hayes: executive, Frank\nPutnam, W. J. Truscott. 8. A. Speers,\nGeorge H, Keliy, George Johnson and\nC.  O.  Rodgers.\nHighways are to receive first consideration, and a vigorous effort will\nbe made to get needed Improvement\ncompleted early tn the year on the\nCreston-Porthill. Idaho, link of the\nNorth and South highway. Creston has\nbeen urged to supply an airport for\nthe air mail line which is expected\nto be via the Crows Nest pass. On\nhts visit here Major J. H. Tudhope\nstressed the necessity of a landing\nfield at Creston, as a break between\nCranbrook and Trail,\nThere is a strong demand for a\nliospltal at Creston aud the board will\nliave a strong committee named to go\nthoroughly Into this question, as it\nla felt the Women's Institute wlU\nlend plenty of support ln such an\neffort.\ni Backing was pledged to the effort\nto give Creston a baatball team to\nenter the proposed International league\nwith Ubby, Montana, and Bonners\nFerry and Sandpolnt, Idaho, on which\nproject a, committee of citizens composed of Frank Putnam, M. J. Beninger aud R. Walmsl*y &ro canvassing  the village and district.\nThe usual votes of thanks were\ntendered the retiring officers for their\nefforts during the pftst WW,' and particularly to President Mallandaine, for\nthe compilation of the yearly export\ntrade statement, and the careful attention he haa given various board\nmatters the past two  years,\nDr. Orton Irwin Grain, 86, pioneer\nphysician, former member of the Manitoba legislature, and for a number of\nyears chief inspector^ of Indians for\nthe Dominion government, died at\nWinnipeg,\nHarrop Horse Is\nSaved After Three\nHours, Icy Water\nHARROP, Hi C, Feb. 9\u2014An,\nunusual accident to a horse\n' i hy F, Andrews occurred\nWednesday afternoon. The horse,\nwith others, started to cross the\nice abfcve Harrop in an attempt\nto Join other horses on the\nL<;.!gbeach shore, when the loe\ngave way trapping the animals\nfn deep water and surrounded\nby  ice.\nW. W. Britton, C. S. Price. D.\nKcnneway and I. Shlekoff work-\n\u00abd heroically along with Mr.\nA*\"*r*wa and his son, Louis,\ncltttaf a- channel through which\nti i animai\u00bb swam to shore after\nhaving been in the icy water\nmere htan three hours. \u2022\nKIMBERLEY NOTES\nKI.TT-ERLEY. B. C, Feb. 9\u2014J. D.\nEurmi' at, accompanied by his family\nleft of California this Week, where\nthey will spend the balance of thc\nwlntf*.-.\nMrs. William Lindsay entertained\nrecently at six tables of bridge at her\nhome on McDougall heights in honor of\nMrs* Joe Geigrlch. Thc prize winners\nwere Mr.*.. York, first. Mrs. Edmonds.\nSr.. consolation. Mrs. Gcigrtck wafl\npresented   with   thc   guests   prize.\nLen Hellied who has been away for\nthe just three months, is beginning\nto   >egt_tn  his  health.\nfhU Conrad, whose lumily is still\nat Moyie, was called home this, ffvek\nbecause of sickness there.\nA. Pfeiffer, OU\nTimer of Nelson,\nIs Laid at Rest\nMembers    of    Uniform    Rank\nWhich    Mr. Pfeiffer Organized Honorary Pall Bearers\nFuneral of Anton Pfeiffer. old time\nresident of Nelson, was held at the\nHowell home yesterday. Knights of\nPythias  conducted  serilces.\nMr. Pfeiffer hid bean a resident of\nNclion for nearly 36 years, living in\nFail-view ever since he  moved   here.\nHe was a charter member of the\n\".nights of Pythias, and organized the\nuniform  rank  in  Nelson,\nHcnorarv pall beaiers, members- of\nthe uniform rank, were: H. Logan.\nW. McCandllsh, H. Hayden. F. Ooucher,\nL   McCandllsh  and P. Jeffrey.\nPall bearers were: P. -Phillips, O.\nJoy. J. Tate, J. Riley, J, Relsterer. P.\nDeacon.\nMOYIE NOTES\nSki Club Stages\nWeekend Run on\nTaghum Slopes\nYesterday at noon about 20 members\nor thf Nelaon Ski club travelled from\nNelson, by bus, to Gansner's ranch\nnear Taghum, For a\u00abbout three hours\nthe members of the club enjoyed the\nexcellent skiing that the hills in that\nvicinity   afforded.\nTho Nelson Ski club, which is Nelson's newest athletic organization, has.\nnumbered on its roster, not only hardy\nathletes from the male sex, but also\na number of ladles who find the long\nrush down snow-clad slopes an ex-\nhllartlng sport.\nFor the remainder of the season\ntM dub will carry out a number of\ninteresting week-end programs that\ntake them to statable hills in various\nparts of tlie district.\nMOYIE. B, C, Feb. 9.\u2014Mrp, J.. W.\nPitch is recovering from her recent\nillness, and has now returned from\nvisiting her sister. Mrs. E. A. Hill, o*\nCranbrook, Mr. Fitch returned to Chap-\nniaj. Camp ufter spending the wed.;-\nend   M   home,\nMrs Philip N. Conrad has been suffering *\u2022$:>\u201e_ an infected foot, but..is\nimproving. Her husband came down\nirom Kimberley for a week, and returned   Friday   afternoon.\nW. W. Parker has been convaTe\u00abcth\u00ab\nat home after his illness aW McDougall\nHeights hospital. Kimberley.\nWhile altendiu* Uie Kootenay district W. M. a. presbyterlal of the\nUnited church in Nelson, Mrs. A. C.\nFound was the house guest of Mrs.\nJohn Speer. Carbonate street, who was\na former resident of Vernon for many\nyears.\nMrs. G. A, Smith Is visiting \u25a0_&&,\nLouis Desaulniers, at Kimberley, thla\nwetk-emf.\nPUPILS ENJOY\nPARTY, MOYIE\nREVISION COURT\nASSESSMENT ROLL\nTO MEET TONIGHT\nConvening at 10 o'clock Saturday\nmorning only to immediately adjourn\nas previously agreed upon, the numbers of the city counclll will hold an\nadjourned sitting at 8 o'clock tonight,\naa a court of revision on the civic\nassessment roll. Those turning up\nSaturday to go through the formality\nof adjourning were Mayor R. D. Barnes,\nand Aldermen W. M.. Walker, J. P.\nMorgan and J. B. Gray. - The full\ncouncil constitutes the codrt, but four\ncompose a quorum.\nE. P. Dawson was* present Saturday\nwhen the court adjournefl will act\ntonight on behalf of an appellanrt.\nMOYIE. B. C. Feb. 9\u2014On Friday\nevening the senior division of the\nschool enjoyed a party given by\nTeam It to the Team I as the result\nof a contest last term.\nAf;er playing games at the schooJ-\nhouse, the pupils went to the home\nof Mrs. George Parker, where they\nwere served baked beans, and other\ngoodies, Miss Jean Ward assisted the\nbos-teas, and G. B. D'Arey had charge\nof the games'.\nBaptists of western Canada will. take\nimmediate stem ta raise \u202210&OCP\nfor Brandon theological college by\nJune next and qualify to receive\n$700,000 conditionally pledged fo* the\nestablishment of an endowment scheme\nfor    that    institution.\nColumbia Electric,\nLtd.\nThe Home ol\nHot Point\nElectrical Appliances\nGainaday and Easy\nWashing Machines\nFrigidaire\nRogers and Marconi Radiophone 695\nNelson and Kimberley\nI\n Hfi-ix'\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 10, 19$\nMarket and Mining\nSHORTS SCURRY\nTO COVER ON\nWALL STREET\nOoalnt Prices Generally High-\n* er; Rails Active With Renewed Bidding\nAustralia Claims\nHer Trade Situation\nFundamentally  Sound\nOTTAWA, Feb. 0.\u2014Th* marked de-\nln earnings ot all Um state-\nowned ratlwaya. Urge lntereet payment*\non loam raised ln London, and a comparatively poor wheat crop, oombined\nwith drastic induction In wool valuer\nwere the chief contributing factors for\nthe unfavorable financial and trading\nconditions of Australia in 1939, aays\nan official report received here from\nD. H. Rosa, Canadian trade commis-*\nat    Melbourne.     Despite    the\nWW TORK, peb. 9\u2014Renewed bidding ,\nIp   df   foe   rails,   tobacco   shares   and , 'loner\nEnu   of   the   utilities   sent   shorts   to   stringent financial position, and much\n\u25a0cpvir throughout the  list ln  the  last   unemployment, lt le claimed Australian\nSlf hour of trading ln the stock *--**o \u2022* fundamentally sound. There\ndfcet Saturday, and closing prices \"\u2022 no Indications of large failures, nor\ntt'\ngfeerally higher, although the\nwee unsettled during most of\nTrading was ln moderate\nfor Saturday, transfers aggre-\n1A67.000 shares\nrtth the exception of a few advances\nat t^ree to nearly 10 points, gains were\nffcosar limited to a point or two in Uie\nmio\/as *tocks\nUnion pacific rose more than eight\n\"\" i tb a new high for the move-\n\u2022236, and such shares as\nHew York Central, Can\nPacific, Chesapeake and Ohio,\naware and Hudson. Lackawana, Norfolk and Western. Atchison and South-\nPacific mounted two to seven\nto the beet levels of tbe year,\ni and Webster waa a strong feature\n'\u25a0 utilities, rising eight points, but\na Uttle before the cloee.\n. .Amerlotn Can was a firm spot in the\nany serious reductions ln the values\nof investment* stocks, and generally\nthe large Importing houses are not der\npendejnt on the assistance of banks.\n\"It ls expected that depressed trading\nconditions will continue\u2014with a, curtailment of profits\u2014throughout 1930.\nbut lf normal seasonal conditions are\nexperienced and with fair prlcee realised, the pessimism under which the\nyear opened will disappear under an\nimproved trade situation,\" aays tho\nreport.\nSTRONGER PRICE\nTONE AT TORONTO\n\u00a35Ttam,_^^*?r.\u00bb,r ___t t\u2122\"\"* v\u00b0,um\u00ab sm\u00bbM*List*\nCheese and National Dairy\nducts were firm in response to. are-\n*i a merger is being negotiated\nTobacco, pacific Lightning,\namount. Warner Brothers, and\nlltefl Aircraft were among' Issues\ntwo to four points. Weatern\nmounted about four points in\n_ _ jse to a fresh split up rumor,\n|lt lost practically all of its gain ber\n|pre the cloee.\n! Pox pllm again turned heavy,  drop-\nless Trading in Inter-\nListed Group\nTORONTO, PW\u00bb. fl.\u2014Stronger price\ntone featured the two-hour trading\nsession on the Standard stock and\nmining exchange on Saturday with\ntrading volume holding at a comparatively small level. Business was restricted  to  a  small  group  of  stocks\nftb^V^^^Tn^tn^'ralfymg;   J\u2122   **   *\u00bb2\u00abI   \u00ab*   recelvin*   but\nBank    Note.    Atlantic    Gulf,\npowder,   and   National   Lead\n[Among   a   handful   of  shares   to\ntoo to four points lower.\nkEW'\nlimited attention.\nListless trading held In the inter-\nllsted group with nominal changes ln\nprlcee. While International Nickel re-\n| malned unchanged, Noranda fell 35\n\u2022oj\/wtowj- crrrrxry is __\u25a0** I Cents t0 M2.50. Hudson Bay gained 25\nlUKK OI l\/tAO cents, closing at 113.00. B-ltlsh-Anv\nI erlcan again moved down In price,\nnam. dosing off 75 cents to 943.25; Imperial\n31% ol1 fel1 15 c*ntfl *\u00b0 W-IO and Inter-\nw?7 natlonal Petroleum dropped 10 cents\nlasu -\u00b0 2\u00b0 Home oil gained 10 cents,\n94U I closing  at  $10.30.\n100 A   couPle   \u00b0'   fa!r   8ains   went   into\n^q ia I effect  in the Non-Perorus group with\n70B?   Walte-Ackerman-Montgomery\nnfv. In aw      tk_      l\/UD       _vf      .tin      hrATrllMl\nHigh\n11%\nLow\n3014\n134%\nB3V4\na\\lleglKs\u00bbjr   .\n___\u00bb       \u2014\nfmerUttt Ou    138-4\ntan  ntMgn  Power   MY*\nAmerican   Loco   ....   \u2014 \u2014\nAm SUM Pdy      48 Vi it.\nAm SalWlt A Refill    76ft 78%\nAm Telephone  330 228'i\nAm   TftiwSco      330% 337%\ntimers--          TS 7\u00ab%\nAtt-lXm      240V4 236\",\nfi_d\u00ab_\u00bb        34V< 33Y,\nhalt  A Ohio    118% 117%\nBen41t,. Aviation  ..   \u2014 \u2014\nBethlehem steel  .. 101% 9\u00bb%\nCanadian Pacific   .  336% 319\nOetro de Pasco ....   64    \u2022  63%\nChes JT Ohio'   235% 330\nChrysler       40       39%\ntKnOMHV   113% 110\",\nCoo,   _ft*uc\u00abs       *\u00ab% 97\nCurtis   Wight    _ \u2014        \u2014\nDupont\nFOTtl\n63 V,\n(_ngHeh)    .... \u2014\nFora of Canada .... \u2014\nFVst Nat stores .... \u2014\ns*reet*ort  Texaa   .... \u2014\nGeneral  Motors   ... 43%\nOeneral   Electric   .. 75%\nOreo*   West   Sugar 29%\nHowe,  Bound     41%\nHudson  Motors   .... 59%\nInspiration   Copper 30%\nJnt \u2022 Bapld   Transit \u2014\nlot   UK*el      39%\ntwX..n*\\- It   Ttrl   .... 65%\nKelly Springfield ..   \u2014\n_a_q_trtt   Copper..   81%\nXreage s S 31 .\n\u25a0ftoemer  and   Toll   30%\nMiami       33\nNerttttrn Bad-Tic  ..   91%\nfafshasel  atrsiora   ....   \u2014\nfhl_St   Pete       33%\nRadio. Oorp        \u00ab0\nBocai \u25a0 Island      131\nBohutfe       ll\nShell Cnlon OU ....   33\nSinclair Con 24V4\ns|sBu1Mhi Pacific  .. 135\nan Oil of Cal ....   59%\n\u2022tfOU of K J    ..   62%\nWarner  ....   41%\nbaker        47\n'Cbh>       53%\nGulf   Sulph   64 >\/,\nUnion OU of Cal ..   \u2014\nUnion Pacific   326%\nIT S  Rubber       36%\nttntlmt Aircraft -\nV S Steel          1821,\n#est  Bectrlc     163%\nWillys Overland  ....    \u2014\nfellow Truck      19%\n61%\n48\n74%\n29%\n41\n57%\n30\n38%\n64%\n61\n33%\n30\n32%\n91\n33%\n38\n119%\n9%\n22%\n33%\n123\n59\n61%\n46%\n46 y.\n53\n63%\n338%\n36\n111%\n181%\n19%\n230%\n78%\n240%\n33% '\n118%\n39%\n100%\n335%\n63%\n335 V.\n40\n111%\n97%\n190% i\n137%\n63%\n13%\n29%\n87\n41%\n48%\n76%\n39%\n41\n68\n30%\n31\n39%\n66%\n4%\n61\n33%\n\u00bb\"'<,\n33%\n81%\n16%\n33%\n40\n121\n10%\n23\n24%\n126\n69 V.\n62%\n41%\n47\n63%\n63%\n42%\n226%\n36%\n47%\n183%\n163%\n10%\n19%\nrecover-\nIng the loss of the previous day and\nclosing at 64-65 for a sain ot 55 cents.\nAmulet lost a point to 81.68.\nMclntyre moved up 36 cents to\n61860; Dome advanced 16 cents\n67.76; Nipisslng Rained nine cents\n$1.69 and Sylvanlte seven cents to 75\ncents.\nThe western oils were divided as to\ngains and losses and much of the\nformer trading Interest has disappeared\nSterling Pacific at 40 cents, and Alberta\nPacific at 63.30 each gained.\nC. P. R., SMELTERS\nMASSEY, ACM\nTRADERS IN EAST\nAll   Make  Gains  at   Toronto;\nSmelters Goes to $280\nbut Closes at $270\nTORONTO, Peb. 9*\u2014Continued Interest ln Canadian facilic Railway (rid\nand new, a moderate gain in Consolidated Smelters and a firmer tone In\nMaasey Harris were Uie features of the\nToronto stock exchange Saturday. In\nall, 87 issues accounted for sales aggregating 30,600 while losses outnumbered gains 31-30.\nThe announcement Friday concerning the four for one split set up tn\nthe common stock of Canadian Pacific\naccounted for the upward movement\ndisplayed by that issue. Opening the\nday at #222, It fluctuated in an eight-.\npoint zone and ended the day at |228.\nThe new stock followed suit. With\nsalea^ almost reaching the 5000 mark,\nit recorded a 1% point gain to $41%.\nConsolidated Smelters, which ls ln\nthe hands of the Canadian Pacific, also\ncontinued on the upward trend, It\nsoared to higher levels, reaching a new\nhigh for the year at 1280 but during\nthe last hour topered off to a close of\n$270,   up seven.\nMassey Harris showed a reversal of\nform and moved forward a',_ points to\n$38% on a comparatively heavy turnover. On the other hand, Cockshutt\nPlow accounted for a new 1930 low at\n20, Shd ckwtng Ht *20V dropped half.\nThe nMnlng- group was somewhat\nsofter than of late. International\nNl.ckel with \"only atyg aharea traded,\ngained. V. to \u00bb39',_. Proftvtaking caused\na slight reaction following a strong\nupward movement and Noranda receded half a point to $42' '. after a\nbrisk, week's trading.\nBeverage stocks were fairly steady.\nOils were weaker. McColl common\ndropped a full point to 23 and Service\nStations slipped half that amount to\n\u202247Va- Imperial Oil and International\nPetroleum eased li and '8 to respective\nclosing prices of $25 and $20. AJax\nat $1-20 was off eight cents per share.\nA firmer tone was prominent In\nthe utility section. Brazilian, still la\nthe throes of the coffee maelstrom,\nImproved its position ^ of a point to\n138^. Bell Telephone, Consumers\nOas and International U til lies \"A\" were\neach carried forward a fraction on odd\nlots. The common stock, after a brief\nabsence from the local board, was\nquoted at $260, down five, while the\npreferred Issues a 159V_ was off *)*..\nRecent Shutdown of\nSix Active Mines Is\nBelieved Temporary\nU, tl\nr \u00ab_\nGalena Farm, Lucky Jim and Whitewater Are\nInfluenced by Metals, Cork-Province by Injunction\nACTION AGAINST STOBIE, FORLONG TIES\nUP YANKEE GIRL, KOOTENAY FLORENCE\nAll Programs Suspended Are Development Purely; Resumption Expected as Soon\nas Conditions Stabilized\ntn*  cnaki  rlfht   t___wlTM\n. _- serin* I* * certainty.\n\u25a0Sp*  for  the Krmo,  plans nisi*.\ntauTwhloh b\u00bbrl not Use, _______\n\u00a3,__!\u00ab,-_ _r opostlon wl\u00ab.  Vh. \u00ab-\nrival of wrlM U \"^J\".^^\n)of Umm  various ftooerttte raced  to\nIsmpormrllr cnt-twlnt*.\nCUST\u00abNK~\nTOTAL, TRAIL,\n1173J0NSN0W\nNoble Five Lead* AH With 24\u00ab\nTons Since Opening of\nthe Year\nPRICES SUGHTLY\nSOFTERAT COAST\nA. P. C. and Calmont Among\nLeaders in OU Stocks;\nMines Quiet\nTORONTO STOCKS\nlie\n\u2022i\nNERVOUS ADVANCES\n4   IN   CHICAGO   PIT\nI H1CAOO, Peb. 9.\u2014Paced by pros-\npeCW* immediate setting up of a\nnewly-\/nianced government agency to\nhandle wheat surplus supplies, wheat\nvalue*, here scored nervous advances\nlate Saturday. The gains, however,\nfailed to hold well. Commission house\nbuyifl* which developed during down-\nturnsTin the market appeared to flicker\nout when prlees bulged.\n. Whe^t closed Irregular, at y_ cent\nn*t' defcllne to \u25a0\/_ cent decline, com-\npfcred with yesterday's finish.\nOat* a shade lower to % higher,\nand' provision* showing two centa to\n\u2022even, cents galn>\t\nLogan \u00abc Bryan\n\u2014S_a\nSTOCKS,   BONDS,   COTTON\nMEHB-BS:\nHew  Tort,   Montra.   \u00bbno   Vuoranr\nBtoem.   Eichaucs,   CUomo   Bow*   ot\ntt\u2014te, fsTlnnlpei Oioln  Eichmnf* nn*\nother trading exchange*\nPBIV-TB win\nOFFICES:\n'    ruawavfT.  Spoksuw u\nAbana     \t\nAeonda     \t\nAJax     ...\nAmulet    - -..\nAmity   \t\nA. P. Consolidated\nAssociated   \t\nBaltic  Oil   ..\t\nBedford -\t\nBarry   Holllnger   \t\nBwana     _\t\nBig Missouri  \t\nC. and E. Lands \t\nCentrs\u2014   Manitoba   ..\nDome     *\t\nDalhousle  _\u25a0\nPalconsbridge   Nickel\nHome  OU   \t\nHowey     \t\nHolllnger _...\nHudson Bay   \t\nInternational Nickel\nKirkland Lake \t\nKootenay  Florence .\nMacassa    -\t\nMandy     \u2014\nMalartic \t\nMcDougall    \t\nMclntyre   -\nMining   Oornoratlon\nMayland      \u2014\nNewbec _ ~\nNew Imperial OU\nNipisslng   ...\u201e ......\nNoranda     -.\nPend  Oreille\t\nPremier   Gold   \t\n8.   W.   Pete   \t\nSherrlt Gordon  .   .\nSudbury   Basin   _,.\nSterling   Pacific\n>31acoe\t\nStadacona   \t\nTech   Hughes\nThompson Cadillac\nVlpond         lb\nVentures        2.40\nWright Hargreaves      1.90\n1.18\n1.68\n._.\nl.ra\n.95\n.15\n.14\n6 25\n\u25a0W\/,\n325\n1600\n7.75\n190\n6.25\n1030\n1.00\n6.25\n13.10\n39 40\n.77\n.04 Vi\n.05\n.30\n.03\n.25\n1860\n297\n.. llO\n33\n.      23\n168\n4250\n3.30\n.   1.43\n1.05\n294\n.   4.40\n.     .40\n.     .46\n.     .04\n.   6.35\nMONTREAL LIST\nIS IRREGULAR\nLeaders Continue Firm Display;\nC. P. R. Continues Its\nUp Trend\nMONTREAL, Peb. 9.\u2014The local market wm extremely Irregular at the\nweek-end, but with the leading issues\nsJUtt  SHIT DOWN\nWlill.s\u00bb\u00bbtrr,  metal  psrtcrs,\nLucky Jim, metal prlees.\nCork-Province, Kaslo Injunction.\nYankee  Olrl,  Stobie,   iiirlom.\nKootenay  Florence, Stol.le, Furlong.\nUtiletui   Farm-Hewitt,   Metal   prioes.\nClosing practically almultaneouMy ot\nsix metaUlferous mlnea of West Kootenay, though causa* diverse ln their\nnature were responsible for the result, has been the unwelcome conjunction of circumstances, for thla\ndistrict, accompanying the legal proceedings taken by provincial govern-\nments ln connection with a number of\nbrokerage houses.\nShutdown some 10' days ago of the\nOalena Farm Consolldated's work at\nthe Oalena Farm and Hewitt, completed the series, which began two or\nthree days earlier with the paying off\nof crews at the Whitewater, Lucky\nJim and Cork-Province, while immediately after the announced proceedings\nagainst Malcolm Stobie and C. J. Forlong, of Stobie, Forlong & Co., wired\norders suspended the programs at the\nYankee Olrl and Kootenay Florence,\nwhose recent development funds have\nbeen supplied throusgh that firm.\nPRODLt'TION   NOT   AFFECTED\nWhile lour of the properties\u2014Oalena\nFarm, Whitewater, Lucky Jim and\nCork Province\u2014were producing the past\nseason, sending practically 8000 tons\nof concentrates. to the Consolidated\nsmelter at TriMl, they all concluded\nmilling toward the end of the year,\nthe last to cease being the Oalena\nFarm, which operated its mill Into\nDecember. Since then they have been\nemploying only development crews. As\nthe Yankee Olrl and . Kootenay Florence also were engaged only on development, the shutdowns do not af\nfeet current production. In nearly all\noases the recent operation was limited\nto one shift per day, and lt is estimated that the manner of men laid\nolf has probably not exceeded 125,\nlf indeed It would be that, the largest displacement being on the Oalena\nFarm.\nConcentration   of   these   discontinuances  of  operation,   practically all  regarded   as   only   suspensions,   into   a\nsingle week was pure coincidence.\nPRICES  AFFECT  SOME\nOeneral conditions, prominent nmoug\nls more than half way with *_>_\u00bb\u25a0\nfoot   tunnel   which   will   give   _\nCustom ore shipment* to the -idr\nanac smelter of the Consolidated Mining _ Smelting Co. IM., mounted to\n1173 tons with the receipt of 303 tons\nfrom 'four mines during the week of\nFebruary 1 to February 1, lncluilw,\naccording to a statement Juat Issued\nfrom the company's offlscea at Tadanac.\nThis total la 2197 tons lass than had\nbeen received up to the aame date last\nyear. The total from customs mines\nfrom January 1 to February 7, 1929,\nwaa 3370 tons.\nCOMPANY SHIPMENTS DOWN\nxCompany mines total, which went to\n44.122  tons with the receipt of 9O07\nVANCOCV-H. Feb. 0\u2014There warn\nUttle doing on the Vancouver atock\nexchange yesterday, but prison of 1__-\nlng IsssausM were slightly tsofter. Among\nthe oils, A. P Consolidated and t\u2014i.\nmont were among the mare prominent\nlesaee. with the former dropping thre\u00ab\ncents to $2.12 and Calmont casing four\ncents to 91.74. Sterling Pacific dropped\nsix to 46, whUe Hargal went contrary\nto the day's feneral trend and gained\ntwo at ai_9. Home OU wm umhansgaj\nat 91016.\nThe mines were also quiet. Big Mis.\nsoarl dropped four to 72c and Noblfs\nFive was up two at 24c. Bnowflalu)\nwas fairly active but tht doelng bid\nwaa   unchanged  at  140.\nVANCOUVER LIST\ntn   the   tunnel.   Deep  development   on\ntons during the week, Is more than\n5000 tons short of the total at the end\nof the same period last year.   The total\nthe Kootenay Florence has located and\ndefined substantial ore on two levels.\nof both flssuaes en|d rep|ao\u00abment\norigin,    and    exploration    toward\nthe\nat thla time last year was 49,716.\nDuthie mine at Smlthers, with 78\ntons during the week, Its laigeet since\nthe new year, boosted Its total to 250\norigin,    and    exploration    *\"\".-_   \u2014   __.    _^oa_    only    to    Noble    Five,\nrszrs Ttt-Torfjriz ja^jj*\u00ab._--,\u00ab. _.l5\nBayvlew   \u2014-.\u2014\nBig   Missouri   .\nBluebird    \t\nCork  Province  .\nDuthie   \t\nGeorgia   Copper\nOeorge River ...\nOolconda    \t\nOrandvlew    \t\nIndependence    \t\nInt C. _ C\t\nKootenay Florence\nKootenay King .\nMarmot   River\nthe mine to production whenever\naulred. Extension from the deep Rambler tunnel Into virgin ground has\ngiven the Slocan Rambler Important\nore with sjreat poslbllltlee. while substantial ote ' has \u00bb_o been struck ln\nthe Iflwer' levels while giving the new\narea otbta .connections. The ?>U1 con\nbe remodelled at small expedse. When\nthe .Utlca shut down, It had lust located the vein from No. 6 level, and\ndevelopment of this ore wUl be Its\nnext step, with a power development\nand a mill when required.\nObviously the development programs\non these properties are making good\nthus far, and continuation to eventual\nproduction Is clearly in order.\nSo far as the four recent producers\nare concerned, only one, the Cork-\nProvince, ls apparently not ln a favorable position for resuming operation\nany time It likes. It haa entered into\nan obligation not to operate Ita mills\nbefore the Nelson sassizes, at which the\nsupreme court will decide whether to\nsgrant the petition of Kaslo for a\npermanent Injunction against tailings\nbeing deposited ln Kaslo creek. It\nwould not be surprising if it waited\nuntil sure of the future, before prosecuting further development work.\nLIKELY   RESt.ME   SOON\nBoth the Lucky Jim and the Whitewater, however, have ln hand development prosgrams that are not at aU\ncomplete, and that must be carried\nfurther if they are to resume pro-\nductlon and maintain it. The Luoky\nJim opened  important ore in the fall,\nconi.nulng   to   give   firm   display,   the , which was the low level of the metal\nundertone of the market was dedcedly   market,  including  the  silver, lead and\ntotal to 34.\" tons by\" shipping \u00ab. National   I\nBounty and Wellington, both at be*- \u201eoble   _\nverdeU.   broke   into   the. shipping   list __,_.   -\u201e\u00bb-,,\nfor the flrat time thl\u00bbyear, the former __*2!\"__ _*_\nwith 18 tons and the other with 47,\nCut Daffodils \u25a0\nand Pot Plants\non Market List\nMarket   Is   Stocked   With   an\nAbundant Supply of Honey\nand Apples\nwhile   the   Whitewater   has   also   v_-  ;\nploratlons    under    way.    Whenever    a'Potatoes, per  100 lbs \t\nbetter metal market is indicated, there Apples, per box -~\u2014\u2014-\nwill be nothing to prevent these two Apptais \u00ab\u00bb\\_\u00bb- l*'****\u201e\nwell   known   producers   from   resuming  Dellctous  apples,  per  box\nPot planta, ferns and cut daffodils\nwere on sale at the Nelson weekly\nmarket held on Vernon stret Saturday.\nCooking apples and eating apples of\nall llnds were plentiful, cooking apples\nseUlng at tl and eating a $1.26 a box.\nA considerable quantity of honey, eggs\nand meat was on sale, but fowl was\nstill scarce.\nPrices were:\nPotted  plants  30c to 91.75.\nCarrots, per 6 lbs       -8\nOnions,   per   lb        ,08\nEggs, pulletSj per dozen       _0\nEggs, flrssta, per dozen       ,85\nEggs, extras, per dozen  -     ,68\nButter, per pound  - BO\nHoney,   per   Jar      ,28\nBeets,  per 6  lbs        .35\n    3.75\n    1.25\nPremier Gold\nPend OreUle\nPorter Idaho\nReeves   McDonald\nRufus Argenta \t\nRuth   Hope\nBUver\u00abreat\nSUver   COP\nSnowfiake\nSlocan   Rambler\nTopley Richfield\nEXCHANGE RATE\nNEW    YORK,   Feb.   9.\u2014Sterling   eX-\nbills and at $4.86 1-16, for demand.\nForeign bar silver 44c.\nCanadian   dollars   1&\u00ab16C   discount.\nFrancs 3.91  13-16c.\nLire 6.23c.\nchange easier at 14.83 7-16 for 60 day\ndevelopment where they lelt ott. In\nanticipation of a return to production when sufficient ore Is blocked\nout.\nGalena Farm Consolidated, with a\nnewly enlarged mill, permanent camp,\nextended   development   ln   the   Galena\nTurnips, 6 for\n.76\n1.25\n.25\nCALGARY OIL\nstrong and such losses as were suffered were mostly confined to fractions.\nAgain Saturday's chief trading lntereet\nlay In the shares of Canadian Pacific\nwith the new stocks dealt ln, when\nas and lf Issues basis leading the entire list In point of activity and after\nmaking Its first appearance at $57\u00bb*\u2666\nadvanced to close at the morning's\nhigh, $57%. The old stock was gain\nin strong demand and gained another\nseven points to close at $237, a net advance for the two days of 27 points.\nMuch of the irregularity in the\nbalance of the list was undoubtedly\ndue to switching into Canadian Pacific,\nInternational Nickel and Brazilian were\nboth firm features, however, the former\nclosing fractionally higher and the\nlatter holding unchanged. A good recovery in Massey-Harris was one of\nthe morning's features, while another\nspurt In smelters to 380 provided the\nspectacular element. A much stronger\ntone was noted in the leadlttg papers,\nCanada Power and Paper, advancing\n1 V_ to 2\\_ and Abltlbl advancing\nnearly  a   point.\nModerately active stocks Included:\nDominion Bridge, l<\/a higher at $78\nCockshutt ofl hair at $30; Players, a\npoint lower at $52; Smelters unchanged\nat $370, after selling at $280; Montreal\nPo**c*\"T leader of a strong utility group\n1% nlgher at $134%; Power Corporation, half higher at $78V_: Shawlnlgan\nup l\\_ at $80 and St. Lawrence\nPaper, a point higher at $1114.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nFeb.   0.\u2014Grain   quota,-,\nHigh    low    Close\nWINNIPEG,\ntlons:\nOpen\nWheat\u2014\nMay      135',i\nJuly    \u2014 137\nOct  13514\nOata\u2014\nM..v        66%\nJuly   .- -   66%\nOet _   63%\nBarley\u2014\nMay   \u201e    64%\nJuly    -   66%\nOct     \u2014\nFlax\u2014\nMay    -   \u2014\nJuly    _   \u2014\nRyes-\nMay        78H\nJuly    80%\nOct.    _ \u2014   \u2014 \u2014\nCash wheat-No. 1 hard 131%\nnorthern 131%; No. 3 northern 118V,;\nNo. 8 northern 113%: No. 4 106%; No.\n5 101%: No. 6 81%; feed 70%; track\n131%: screenings 88 per ton.\n136%\n138%\n137%\n68%\n67%\n6-1%\n55%\n58%\n78%\n83\n135%\n137\n138%\n66%\n85%\n53%\n64%\n68%\n77%\n80%\n136%\n138%\n136%\n68%\n67\n53%\n66%\n58\n60\n367%\n367\n79%\n83\n83%\nNo. 1\nNew law asks curb on radloe and\nphonographs that disturb the quiet of\nthe public peace ln New York City\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSfnelting Company of Canada, Ltd.\nOffice, Smelting aad Refining Department\nTRAIL.   BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nHb\u00abfa_\u00bberB of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ore\nproducers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTAD-MAO,  TBAIL\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nClose\nBank   of   Commwce     364\nImperial  Bank  231\nBank of Montreal  3UVi\nBank of Nova Sootla   830\nRoyal Bank _  310\nBank of Toronto  -  ... 210\nAbitibi Power & Paper  -... 26%\nAsbestos Corporation           2\\_\nAtlantic Sugar        8\nBell Telephone _  156%\nBrazilian T L * Power   37y4\nBritish American Oil _ - 43&\nBrompton   Paper    26\nCanada Bronze   0-\u00a5t\nCan Oar & Foundry  .._  27%\nCanada   Cement     16%\nCanada  Cement   (pfd)     03%\nCanada Converters    _  76\nCanada Industrial  Alcohol         9%\nCan  Oen  Electric   (pfd)     286\nCanada  Power    \u2014.-  12%\nCanada  Steamship Lines _.  18\nCons Mining & Smelting   369%\nDominion Bridge  -  78\nDominion   Glass   ...-  133%\nDom Steel Corpn (pfd)   40\nDominion   Textile  -  77%\nA. P. Oraln  - \u2014- 33\nHlllcreet  Colliers   - -  60\nLake  of  the  Woods   _  46\nMassey   Harris     39\nMontreal   Power    - - 184\nMontreal   Telegraph      48%\nzinc that are the products of the\nSlocan and Kootenay lake areas, dictated the decision to &u_>peiid activity\nthe Whitewater ana the Lucky\nJim. In the case of the Cork-Province\nwaa the further factor of injunction\nproceedings by the city of Kaslo to\nprevent pollution of Kaslo creek as\na source of water supply.\nThe course of the metal market i_\napparently the governing reason for\nthe course taken by Oalena Farm Consolidated, whose big equipment and\ndevelopment program has been based\non expectation of large production with\nore derived from both Oalena Farm\nand Hewitt.\nIn the case of the Stobie Forlong\nproperties, the shutdown order Is pre\nsumably dictated by a desire to conserve development funds until the sit\nuatlon has been clarified, Mr. Stobie\nhaving generally been understood to be\nadvancing the funds these companies\nneeded for their development pro-\ngrairiB after Bales of stock failed to\nprovide the capital needed.\nAFFECTKD   BY   BROKER   CASE\nAt the time the shutdown orders\ncame through, tlie Yankee Olrl was\nassembling it\u00ab crew for resumption\nafter a tem|\u00bbrary shutdown had been\nforced by freezing of its domestic\nwater supply. The resumption move\nwas cancelled. The Kootenay Florence,\nhowever, was actually operating, The\nother stobie, Forlong companies had\nrecently been forced Into quiescence\nby operating difficulties, the Utlca\nbeing closed in December when freezing or the creeks out off the power\nfor its drills, and the Slocan Rambler\nshutting down in mid-January for\nsimilar reasons, leaving a slide crew\nin charge. The small program of work\non the Enterprise, a Slocan operation\nunder Yankee Olrl Consolidated, waa\nsuspended with the advent of winter.\nThere la no reason -Whatever for\nany 6ne of the four Stobie, Forlong\nproperties named to close except financial ones, mining circles here consider. While ultimately of course they\nhave to consider the metal markets.\nImmediate production has not been\non the program of any of them, __\ntheir objective haa been to continue\nthe deep development for which the\npresent operations have been projected.\nAnd if the necessary capital li forthcoming prosecution  of  these  programs\nAdvance    -  , -09\nA. P. Consolidated   2.20\nFarm, and a deep tunnel in the Hew-  ^^Lf*   LandS  '\"\"  igg\nitt developing the big ore, shoot from  {JJjrJSr      20\na   new   angle,   and   \u00ab   9000-foot   train, J^oS 80\nconnecting  the   Hewitt with  the   mill,  Suiaj       \" -M\nhas every reason to reopen on an ex-  HoT^ft   q^            \u201e ioao\ntensive\nmarket\nthC;\nscale   the   moment   that\ngives    indications    to    evoke JgESSgglT Begur:'\u00ab\"\u2122'_IL\u201e\"--.     34\nIllinois  Alberta\nconfidence in approaching higher price  jfcDougall  Segur new       .74\nlevelb.   During   the   height   of   ita   ac-1 ^j^ury     _ 68\nMcLeod    3-05\nttvlty ln November, with development\ntram building, and milling ot tall- jjm C1ty\nings and development ore in progress simultaneously, lt had crews aggregating 90 men. There has been dls-\ncuslon of a suggestion to eventually\nlocate the mill on the lake shore and\nthus eliminate haulage to the Silver-\nton wharf.\nFEW   SUSPENSIONS\nEven with the six shutdowns Juet\nrecorded, the number of winter suspensions in West Kootenay la probably,\nfewer than usual, and the winter for\nactual activity is probably exceeded\nonly by that of a year ago.\nApart  from   the  six referrd  to,  and\nthe   Slocan   Rambler   and   Utlca,   victims   of   water   shortage,   suspensions\nstnee the freezeup have Included\nMcAllister, winter shutdown.\nRiverside,   slides.\nWhite Eagle, slides. ,\nHoward, winter shutdown.\nl_rao,   W.  E.   Zwicky's  death.\nCarnation,  water shortage.\nAfter   making   one   of   the   heaviest\ncontrtbutloons    to   thc    Trail    smelter\nore  table  of  any  custom shipper,  the\nulcAlllster   of   Three   Forks   was   shut\ndown   ln   November,   by   Slocan   Sliver\nMines. It is credited ln the ore table\nwith  6612   tons,   the  ore  having  fluxing  qualities.   While  the  McAllister  1b\nequipped   for   winter  operation,  lt has\nseldom- been active in, the winter.\nBoth the Riverside and White Eagle\noperations would have been continued\ntnrough the winter had the weather\nfacilitated. There was water in the\nlace, suggesting proximity of ore, of\nthe tunnel crosscutting to the big\nRiverside ledge ln the Duncan when\nslides forced Omo Investment company of Spokane to temporarily shut\ndown the work. The White Eagle-\nPocket Lake operation ls being prosecuted by Keen Mountain, limited, of\nCalgary. It now goes over to the spring,\nas a result of slides.\nHOWARD READY FOR 'CAPITAL\nIn the Ymir area the Howard, after\ncouple   of   seasons'   active   develop-\n.84\nMayland         1-60\nOkalta New     1-26\nRegent    36\nRoyallte         .44\nSterling Pacific  .*.      .42\nWhen baking pancakes use two\ntablespoons of salt wrapped in a piece\nof cloth and tied securely with cord,\nfor rubbing the griddle, Instead of\ngrease, and you will not have smoke\nln  your house.\nGARDNER-DENVER\nROCK   DRILLS   and\nCOMPRESSORS, etc\nDRIFTERS\nST0PERS\nCONCRETE\nBREAKERS\nCLAY DIGGERS\nSHARPENERS\nOIL FORGES\nPORTABLE\nCOMPRESSORS\nPOWER PUMPS\nHOLE PUNCHERS'\nETC.\nSales Agents\nB.C. EQUIPMENT\nCO. LTD.\n614 Baker\nNelson\n561 Howe\nVancouver\nwould certainly seem to he their cue\n\u2014ln the caae of the three silver-lead. ment under the Duthie Interests ol\nElnc properties to have the exploration s_ea.ttle It shut down for the winter,\ncontinued, ore blocked out, and plant | The property, whtch ls very hlgnly\nln shape to enter production  as soon  spoken of  In raining circles, has been\nMontreal Tramways\nNatlonal Breweries\nNatlonal Steel Car\nOgilvie   Milling\nOntario Steel Product.\nOttawa Lit Power ...\nPenmans,   Ltd    -\t\nPower Corporation  \t\nPrice Bros \t\nQuebec   Power    \u2014\nSeagrams\n30%\n72\n460\n20\nB7\n78\n77M,\n80\n66 Vi\n78%\n37\n34\n**\u25a0*\nSherwln  Williams   \t\nSo Canada Power  -\t\nSteel  of  Canada \t\nSt. Lawrence Flour Mills  -    i\nWabasao   cotton         33\nWestern   Orocers        21\nWinnipeg   RaUway       100\nWinnipeg  Railway   (J>fd>    -.     4\u00bbi4\nas the market Improves and ln the\ncase of the Yankee Olrl to complete\nthe deep adit and get Into gold production as soon  as possible.\nThat these four properties will resume activity as soon as conditions\nbeoome clarified, or ln the case of the\nSlocan when spring makes 'operatlhg\nconditions normal, is generally assumed, while the Toronto brokerage house\nhas assigned, comment of financial\npapers is that Its financial ability is\nnot questioned, and It is generally believed that pressing of the British\nColumbia mining projects with which\nthe house Is associated, Including the\nLorne Oold of the Bridge river district, will be a major object as soon\naa events make it possible.\nSTOBIE, FORLONO\nMINES   NTKOMi\nProm a physloal standpoint these\nproperties are recognized to be In excellent shape. The Yankee Olrl, after\nblocking  out  ore   of  generous  widths\ndeveloped to the point where for its\nfull destiny to be realised It must\nbe taken over by Isirger capital. En\nlisting of this capital ls the next step\nln the program as usually followed\nby these Interests.\nThe death of W. E. Zwlcky ln November ted ultimately to suspension\nof the development program which\nhe waa directing on the Krao, on behalf of a syndicate which he formed\nof Spokane and Coeur d'Alene capital\nThis early day Ainsworth property\nwss ln production when overtaken by\na rush of water 30 years or more ago,\nand deep work which he waa directing was designed to drain away the\nwater and permit mining In the old\nworkings.\nCARNATION SHORT OF WATER\nWhen Slooan creeks start to shrink\nfew properties, particularly lf situated\non the sky-line, can hold out against\nNature. Oeorge Clark, who has aa Blk\nfinancial   associate   A.   E.   Mann,   the\nand persistence on several levels of b'g Vancouver contractor, hated to\nboth veins down to the 1365 level, I\"\"\u00bb' d\u00b0wn even temporarily the car-\nhab moved it-j base to the Wild Horse I nation, which looks down upon Ban-\naide ot the mountain and wtth per-  don, but had to yield to water short-\nDepartment of Commerce states that\nlSngwll-^-\"\u00abve\u00abi1,__\u00bb_etw \u25a0\u00a3\u00a3-_. --t~-> <anari__i~'\u00abnv_rrciii~j\u00ab\u00ab|I\u00ab\u00ab\u00ab.' Resumptioi \"o.\" tieni^'mmj^MlpgR CONTROL BOARD pr'fcy the Government of B, C,\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the LIQ-\n\u00abhAm\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,     MONDAY MORNING. FEBRUARY 10, 1930\n\"Page Seviff\nSPORTS\nLOTS QF GOALS\nIN OLD COUNTRY\nSOCCERTANGLES\nVeather   Bad;   Leaders   Hold\nTheir Pisces; Blackburn\nBeats Huddersfield\nLONDON, Feb. 9\u2014The hart, fast\nWind ln England on Saturday when\ninter returned with a sharp fall in\nmperature brought out a large crop\ngoals ln soccer matches.\nSeveral first Mid second division\nlite got five tallies, while tn the\nlrd division. Northern section, a\nUple of teams notched seven counters,\nubs setting the pace in the various\nvisions held their positions after yes-\nrday's games. The Wednesday lead\na first division, Oldham Athletic\na second, Brentford the Southern\nctlon of the third division and Port\nde the Northern section.\nJ. Been, inside right for the Wed-\n\u2022day, was the star player In their\nme vlth Burnley, which the Bhef-\nilders won by 4 goals to I. Their\nft tally came when McCuggage\nit the *t>all through his own goal.\nien Seed and Rummer, the latter\nice scored in quick succession folded by Page and Burnley.\nAt Highbury Arsenal's light burned\nllllantly In flashes, but faded out\nthe second half. However, their\n111 ln first half enabled them to\neep Everton off their feet and to\nle up a safe lead. The Londoners\nm by _ to 0,\n,000  FANS\nManchester United triumphed over\nsir fellow citizens by the one goal\nored. It was obtained by Reid in\na fourteenth minute of play. There\nis plenty of scoring at Newcastle\ntare Sheffield United, won out by\nfa goala to three. Thirty-two thou-\nnd attended.\nlUddlesborough's fine won over Blrm-\ngham by five goals to one, was\nilnly due to the great work of\naae, t heir left winger, w ho mad e\nenlhgs for Hall, Williams, Bruce\n,d McKay to score and finally headed\n,e  ln  himself.\n[Blackburn  Rovers defeated  Hudders-\nild Town' by a score of 6-1. Cunliffe\nId   Pudderfool   added   goals   for  the\n|>vers   after  the   interval.\n\u25a0Chflsea scored a fine win over West\nfomwlch Albion ln a second division\nIme.     Thsr    went    ahead    in    the\nTrel-th   h-taute   through   Mills,   who\n[eked   Into   the  goal   when   Ashmore-\nU.   Several promising Albion attacks\njrfow  half  time  finished   poorly  and\n'\u2022ought  no score.    Chelsea's  forwards\nbd   halves   coiftblned   cleverly   after\nV re-start and the Albion goal had\n': number   of   narrow   escapes.     The\n(ills scored again and  until  the end\nlelsea   easily   kept  the   Albion   away\nbom their goal.\nft_ACKPOOI_   WINS\nBlackpool  won from Burnsley by  2\n. 1 In an even match.   Downs scored\nrat for Blackpool,  but  Eaton  equaled   from   a   penalty.     Ten   minutes\nLorn   the   end   Hampson.   Blackpool's\nh\u00bbt   forward,   netted   on   a   penalty\nick.\nfPortvale and Nelson battled on\ny even terms, until near the end,\na Pyne Oar of the former club\nths winning goal. Smith scored\nfor Portvale and after some stlr-\njog play Oarmody equalized. The\njams were deadlocked at half time.\ninnings of Portvale, broke away and\nored brllliantl after a lqng run.\n,_en Nelson came back and Weddell\nuallzed. The finish was exciting,\nLth Portvale being slightly the better.\nPlaying for Carlisle against Barrow,\ncConnell scored four of his team's\nven   goals.\nSWIMMER MAKES\nDOUBLE   WIN   IN\nOTTAWA MEETING\nOTTAWA,   eb.  B\u2014A  double  win  by\nJames \"Slim Jim\" Thompson of Toronto, and a record-equalling performance\nby another amall parcel of aquatic\ndynamite named Eleanor Holm of New\nYork, featured the Canadian swimming\nchampionship meet here Saturday\nnight. The victory of the 16-year-old\nNew York girl, which came ln the\ntitular 230-yard breast stroke race,\ncrowned her aa the only twin-title winner of the meet, held ln connection\nwith Ottawa's winter carnival. Friday\nnight she won the back stroke championship at 100-yards and eclipsed the\nworld's record in doing so.\nThompson's triumphant ways resulted in his lifting the Canadian\nchampionship at 500 yards, free-style,\nand the winning of the 230-yard free\nstyle non-title  event.\nFINAL JUNIOR\nHOCKEY GAME\nHERE TONIGHT\n u\nTrail and Nelson Meet at 7:30;\nNelson Squad Has Two-\nPoint Lead\nw\n_\nP\n1\n4\n1\n2\n1\n 1\nThe Nelson Cubs and the Trail\nJuniors meet here in a hockey game\nthat will decide the West Kpotenay\nJunior homkey league. The game is\nscheduled at 7:30.\nWith two wins and a loss to its\ncredit the Nelson squad goes into\naction tonight with a two point lead\non the Trail Rossland  teams.\nAppearing on the lineup tonight will\nbe: Bishop, goal; Kirby and W. Gillette,\ndefense; Cecil Ramsden, Carl Ramsden,\nG. Hood. Stormstead, Campion, McLean, forwards.\nGeorge Benwell will handle the game.\nRANGERS BLANK\nKILMARNOCK AND\nGET FOUR GOALS\nAyr and Falkirk Divide Points;\nDundee and Celtics\nDraw\nGLASGOW, Scotland. Feb. 9\u2014Rangers showed their class on Saturday\nwhen they defeated Kilmarnock In\na Scottish first division soccer match\nat Ibrox Park by four, goals to nil.\nAfter yesterday's performance it looked\nas if Rangers scores were: Morton,\nfrom a penalty. Fleming. McPhail and\nBrown. Kilmarnock were poor ln every\ndepartment.\nAyr United and Falkirk divided the\npoints at Ayr ln a level scoreless game.\nHibernians, through the goals of\nScatter and McOU, won their first\nleague game away from home against\nClyde.\nSt. Mirren were just good enough\nto beat Cowdenbeath, getting the odd\ngoal out of five. Oebbie, Stewart and\nConnor netter for the Paisley club\nand Lindsay, from a penalty, and\npullar for Cowdenbeath.\nDundee and Celtic battled to a two\nall draw at Dundee, scorers being\nCampbell and Milne for Dundee and\nNaper   and   McGrory   for   Celtic.\nHamilton Academicals had an easy\nwin over St. Johnstone by three goals\nto nil. Moffatt and D. Wilson, the\nlatter scoring twice, were the \"successful\nmarksmen .n\nHearts and Partlck Thistle were involved in a good draw, no goals being\ncounted.\nAberdeen nosed out Morton by two\ngoals to one at Cappielow. Yorstone\n,scoi*d both of the winners' tallies,\nwhile McCartney netted for Morton.\nRACE TRACK GANG\nGOES WILD, FRANCE\n\\I(1.\\M>. France, Feb. tU\u00a3n-\nraged because five Imrws were left\nat the post In the first trotting\nrace on Ihr program here toda>,\nan Immense croud burned thr\npari in ii t url bartuicks, wrecked t he\njmirulfcUmK raided the barr*, and\nmntlnited rioting until lofturrd\nthat entrance mono*, und ull bet*\nwere to be refunded. Many wen-\nInjured.\nDETROIT ROUTES\nPIRATE CREW\nScore Is 8-1; Lewis Has Share\nin Detroit Scoring Honors\nat  Home\nDFTTROIT, Feb. 9\u2014The Detroit Coti-\ngars routed the Pittsburgh Pirates 8\nto 1 in a National Hockey league gam.*\nhere tonight and. made a scoring record\nby piling up seven of their goals ln\none   period.\nAfter two periods of ragged playing\nat the end of which the score stood\n1 -all. the Cougars turned loose an\nunbeatable offensive crumbling the\nPirate line tor seven goals, three of\nthem   by   Herbie   Lewis,   Cougar   wing\n[IAMILTON RUNNER\nDOES WELL IN U. S,\nGrade Nine and\nTeam \"B\" Take\nBasket Honors\nJunior hljh school \"A\" and \"B\"\nteams played a fast and interesting\ngame of basketball Friday afternoon,\nthe honors falling to \"B\" tsam who\ndefeated \"A\" team 13 to two, Even\nBates scored eight points, M, Dolphin\ntwo; and O. Gibbons, S. Wilson and E.\nBebblngton each one, for the winning\nside. J. Massey won two points for\nthe losing team.\nTeams were \"A\": E. Vance, J. Smith,\nM. Coffey, J. Massey, H. Dcnnlson, E.\nSpiers   and   M.   Williams.\n\"B\" team: E. Bates, S. Crease, K.\nMartin. S. Wilson, W. Bebblngton, and\nO. Oibbon.\nIn a second match between grade\neight and nine, grade nine won by\n25 to six. Clarence McDougal was high\nscorer for the winning team, scoring\n12 points, D. McCuaig scored eight,\nand  Ouy Money four.\nA. Rlchee, N. Hucal and I. Kraft\neach  scored  two  for  the   losers.\nGrade 9 team: D. McCuaig, G. Money,\nC, McDougal, O. Melneczuk, A. Gordski,\nE.  Wheeler,  and  B.  Horstead.\nGrade 8 team: N. Huckle, A. Rlchee,\nA. McLeod, J. Teague, J. Weaser, I.\nKraft,   G.   Steed.\nNEW YORK. Feb. 9.\u2014Leigh Miller of\ne Hamilton, Ont., Olympic club,\n.rned athletic laurels for himself\nId Canada at Madison Square Garden\nst night when he won the final of\n,e international 60 yard sprl n t, the\nattire event of the 23rd annual Mill-\nas Athletic association's games. Miller\nbrx from one of the greatest fields\ner seen in. competition, made up of\na famous Jack Elder of Notre Dame,\nnmy Daley of Holy Cross and his\niblemate, Johnny Fitzpatrick, as 17,-\nD race mad enthusiasts thundered a\nafening cheer which lasted several\ninutwr.   .\nThe united States took the 880\nrds International race, won last year\n1 Canada, bad pickups being response for the second position placing\nthe Dominion team, composed of\n-Kpatrick. Adams, Dare and Miller.\nBUFFALO VICTOR\nBUFFALO, tf. Y., Feto. 9.\u2014Buffalo\ntoed into second place last night\n[the International Hockey League by\nseating Hamilton in a fast and well\nkyed game by three goals to nothing.\nU Bisons showed greatly improved\n-m and counted once in each period.\nSUDBURY RINK\nWINS AT TORONTO\nSUDBURY, Ont,, Feb. 9\u2014The A. H.\nTobey rlnk of Sudbury, earned the\nright to represent Northern Ontario\nin the McDonald Brier Dominion curling competition, In Toronto, by winning 11 games ln the Northern Ontario Curlers association, which was\nheld at Sudbury last week.\nLONDON   WINS\nCLEVELAND, Ohio, Feb. 9.\u2014Slbe\nHowe, 18-year_old youngster from Ottawa, scored the lone goal last night\nthat gave London Panthers their\nthird victory of the winter over Cleveland's Indians, leaders of the International league, one to nothing.\nSOCCER RESULTS\nIN OLD COUNTRY\nr.Mii.isii i,R.\\nir,\nMUST     DIVISION\nArsenal   4.  Everton   0.\nAston   Villa   2,   Bolton   0.\nBlackburn 4, Huddersfield 2.\nLeeds United 5, Sunderland 0\nLiverpool   1,   Leicester   1,\nManchester City  0,   Manchester  United   1\nMlddlesbourgh 5, Birmingham 1 .\nNew CMtle United  3. Sheffield Un_\nIted   5.\nPortsmouth 3. Derby City I .\nSheffield 4, Burnley 1.\nWestham 2, Grimsby Town 0.\nSECOND   DIVISION\nBlackpool  2.  Barnsley   1.\nBradford   City   I,   Preaton   I,\nBury   6,   Bradford    I.\nCharlton Athletics  1. Millwall 1.\nChelsea 2.  West  Bromwlcn 0.\nHull City 4, Reading 2.\nNottingham   0,   Tottenham   0.\nOldham 3, Southampton  2.\nStoke City \u00bb, Notts  County  1.\nSwansea  1, Cardiff City 0.\nWolverhampton   1,    Bristol   City   0.\nTHIRD   DIVI.-ION\nSl.l  I11KKN    SUCTION\nBournemouth nnd Boscombe 1, Wall-\nsail   1.\nBrentford 5, Hartford 0.\nBrgihton and Hove 5. Torquay 0.\nBristol  Rovers 2.  Newport  City 3.\nClapton   3,   Coventry   City   1.\nExeter  City  3,Norwlch  City     0,\n'   Ollllngham 0,  Plymouth  0\nLuton   2,   Queenspark   1.\nNorthampton Town 2. Crystal Palace\n0.\nSouthend  1. Fulham 2  .\nSwindon 3, Merthyr 3.\nTHIRD    DIVISION\nNORTHERN   SECTION\nCarlisle United 7. Barrow 1.\nChesterfield 3. York City 0.\nCrewe  Alexandra   1,   Stockport   City\n1.\nHalifax   3,   Darlington   1.\nLincoln City 3, Doncaster Rovers  1.\nNelson  2.  Portvale  3.\nRochdale 2, South Shields 0.\nRotherham United 2. Accrlnsgton 4.\nSouth Port 2, New Brighton 1.\nTranmere   7.   Hartlepools   United   1.\nVlgan' 2,   Wrexham   1.\nScottish UsMOVE\nAirdrionlans 1, Motherwell 0.\nAyr 0. Falkirk 0.\nClyde  0,   Hibernians   2.\nCowdenbeath 2, St. Mirren 3.\nDundee 2. Celtic 2,\nHamilton 3. St. Johnstone 0.\nHearts  0.  Patrick   Thistle  0.\nMorton   1.   Aberdeen   2.\nRangers 4, Kilmarnock 0.\nQueen's Park\u2014Dundee, not played.\nSECOND    DIVISION\nAlloa I. Dumfermllne 3.\nBo'ness 4, Armadale 0.\nClydebank 1, Queen Soutlj 3.\nEast Fife 3, St. Bernards 1.\nEast  Stirlingshire _ -Albion 6.\nForfar Athletics 2, Brechin City 0.\nKings Psu-k 1. Dumbarton 3.\nLeith Athletics .4, Ralth Rovers 1.\nMontrose 2, Arbroath 2.\nStenhousemuir 0, Third Lanark 2.\nman.    Lewis previously  scored\nearly   In   the   first   period.\nSummary:\nFirst period \u2014 (is Detroit,\nlAurlel, 13:20. (21 Pittsburgh,\n(Darragh..   17:33.\nSecond   period\u2014No  score.\nThird period \u2014 (3) Detroit,\n1:19. (4. Detroit. Hay 2:40. (5) Detroit.\nLewis, 7:22. (6) Detroit. Lewis, idood-\nfellow) 10:04. (7) Detroit, Aurle. (McCabe) 11:06' (\u00bb)- Detroit. Cooper,\n(Matte), 19:10. (0) Detroit. Lewis,\n(Cooper).   19:21.\ngoal\nLewis,\nFras?r.\nAurle\nCURLERS GET\nINTO JEWELLERY\nSTAGE, WINNIPEG\nAll   of   167   Contenders   Have\nTasted Defeat but Several\nOnly Once\nWINNIPEO, Peb. 9\u2014Jewellery stage\nol t he main trophy events of the\nManitoba curling bonspiel will be\nreached Monday with about a dozen\nrlnks still in the running for Orand\nAggregate honors. Not one of the\n167 contenders that started play last\nTuesday could look back on a perfect\nfive days of  play last night.\nThey had all tasted defeat, but\nseveral only once. A. S. Hames, Glen-\nboro, Man,, veteran, last of the outstanding skips to rei,;'in a perfect sheet,\nwas beaten Saturday in , the Purity\nFlour trophy event by Pete McDiarmid,\noi Strathcona. Later in the day he\nl__t again, this time to Watson of\nVarsity.\nThree rinks went into the semi-finals\ncf the Ganong event Saturday. All\nw.re from Winnipeg. J. D. McGregor\nand J. T. Haig piloted their Strathcona\nfours into the price class with victories over Manitoba varsity and Caledonian rlnks, while R. P. Henderson,\nof the Grain Excange club, won from\nR. McLean, of Heather. Howard Wood,\nGranite club ace, who haa been defeated only once, will meet Campbell\nof Reston. Man., for the other semifinal  berth.\nC. W, McEwen. of Port William. Ont.,\nentered the jewellry stage of the Free\nPress competition by beating D. Bur-\nges_, of Cypress river, Man., 9 to 8.\nCANADIANS DEFEAT\nAUSTRIAN TEAM\nIN VIENNA HOCKEY\nVIENNA. Feb. 9.\u2014The Canadian\nhockey team had revenge on their\nAustrian rivals here tonight, defeating\na team comprised of leading Austrian\n\u25a0playeia, alx to one. Loot night the\nAuatriana beat the Canadians two to\none.\nSENATORS BATTLE\nRANGERS TO TIE\nNew  Yorkers Climb  Into Tie\nWith Chicago for Second\nPlace in Hockey Race\nHOCKEY RESULTS\nEAST AND WEST\nSATTBDAY   HOi'KKV   RKttli.TS\nNATIONAL   LEAOl'E\nAt  Montreal\u2014Montreal  2,  Canadiens\n3.   (Overtime)\nA*^   Ottawa\u2014New   York   Rangers   2.\nOttawa   Senators   2.    (Overtime).\nCANADIAN-AMERICAN   LEAGIE\nAt  Boston  \u2014 Springfield   0,   Boston\nTigers  4.\nINTERNATIONAL    LEAGl-E\nAt Cleveland\u2014London 1, Cleveland 0.\nAt  Buffalo\u2014Hamilton 0,  Buffalo 3.\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nAt Duluth\u2014St. Paul 2, Duluth 4.\nSI NO AY    GA.IKS\nToronto 3, Americans 2.\nDetroit  8,  Pittsburgh   1.\nTulsa  1,  Kansas City  0.\n[NTREMBDIATE\nO.H.A.   scores   for   Saturday\nParis 3,  Elora 2.\nJUNIOR\nVarsity 3, Parkdale 2. (Varsity won\ngroup).\nLondon 5. Brantford Lyons 5. (London won group 10-5).\nKIMBERLEY GIRLS\nTAKE HOOP GAME\nBY SCORE 16-15\n i\nBeat Nelson High School Girls\nin   Fast   Game  Played\nHere\nOTTAWA, Feb. 9\u2014Tiny John Rov\nRoach staged one of the greatest goal\ntending exhibitions of his career Saturday night to hold off a determined\npack of Ottawa Senators and win for\nthe New York Rangers a 2-3 tie with\nthe  fast-travelling  locals.\nThe point enabled the New Yorkers\nto climb Into a tie for second place\nwith Chicago ln the American section\nof the National Hockey league while\nthe Ottawa's split allowed them to\nkeep pace with Canadlens and Maroons,  who also tied.\nThe game was marked by the cleanest\nand most Intelligent hockey seen ln\nOttawa this season. Only two penalties\nwere given by officials Hewltson and\nMaillaon and both were for tripping\nthat   looked   unintentional.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u2014 <l .Ottawa, Lamb, (KU-\nrea, Flnnegan) 6:10. (2) Rangers, Keeling,  11:60.\nSecond period\u2014(3) Rangers, Murdock,\n(Keeling),   18:40.\nThird period\u2014 (4) Ottawa, H. Kilrea,\n(Flnnegan),   3:00.\nOvertime  period\u2014No  score.\nDARTMOUTH    SECOND\nHANOWER. N. H.t Peb. 9\u2014The Uni\nversity of North Hampshire today won\nits fourth consecutive Dartmouth winter carnival sports meet  by gathering\n44,_  points out of a possible 88.\nDartmouth was second with 25 Vi,\nMcGill third with 17, and Massachusetts Aggies fourth with one.\nE. Gagg, pioneer of Winnipeg and\nproprietor of the Dufferin hotel there,\nis dead.\nAn estate of nearly 82.500,000 was left\nby Cyrus A. Birge, resident of Hamilton\nand Oakville, Ont., who died on December   14,  1929.\nHeadquarters of the  English Oblate\nOrder in Canada will, it ls understood,\nbe   moved  from  New   Westminster  to\nI Ottawa   during  the   coming   summer.\nDULUTH SCORES\nFOUR - TWO WIN\nIn a fast, clean game played here\non Saturday night the Kimberley high\nschool girl basketballers squeezed the\nNelson high school team out by one\npoint to win by a score of 16-15.\nThroughout the game the play was\nfairly evenly divided between the two\ntsams with the Kimberley girls slightly\nln  the  lead  all   the  way through.\nAt half time the score stood at 8-5\nafter which the Nelson girls settled\ndown and slowly closed up the lead.\nHowever, the final effort was just a\nfew minutes slow and the final whistle\nblew with the Kimberley squad up\none   point.\nThe teams were:\nKimberley\u2014K. Anderson, D, Nesbitt,\nP. .Holt, L. Blayney, D. Oliver, S.\nPatience,  M.  Whebell.\nNelson\u2014D. Dunnett, I. Oughtred, W.\nThomson, E. Oliver. P. Barclay, J.\nMalneczuk,  J.  Young.\nReferees\u2014K. Rees. w. Vance.\nDULUTH, Minn,, Feb. 9.\u2014Duluth\nsccjjfjl a four to two victory over St.\nPaul in a rough and pxcltlng American\nAssociation game here last night. Two\nfist fights, one that nearly caused a\nriot, were staged. Duluth got two\ngoals in the second period after St.\nPaul tallied at the opening, while the\nother two Duluth goals came near the\nmiddle of the third session . St. Pauls\nfinal marker was made near the cloee\nof the game.\nPour $25< fines, two 10-minutP and\nthree fivr*mlnute penalties were given\nto the principals in the fist fights.\nSASKATCHEWAN WINS\nFROM THE STUDENTS\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 9\u2014Saskatchewan's\nGreen and White ice warriors increased\ntheir lead ln the hockey race here\nSaturday night with a 3 to 0 win over\nUniversity of Manitoba. It was the\nsecond triumph of the Oreen Shirts\nover   Manitoba.\nScoring one in each period, they had\nin a fair margin on the play and\nEvans turned In a spectacular performance ln the nets. He warded off\nan aggressive third-period rally that\nthreatened to bring the Manltobans\ninto the scoring column.\nDempster scored for Saskatchewan In\nthe first stanza, poking hlB own re-\nbount past Puttee and Dickinson's\nbrilliant solo rush late in the second\nperiod resulted in a goal. Anderson\ncounted  in the third.\nCANAWENSAND\nMAROON DRAW\nThree   Overtime   Periods   Fail\nBreak  Two-AD   Score;\nFaatCwiteat\nMONTREAL. Feb. 9\u2014Montreal's two\n*\u2022 spirants to the Stanley cup, emblema-\ntlme of National Hockey league supremacy Maroons and Canadiens. played another of thetr faat and exciting\nnamee before a reoord crowd here im*\nnight. The game ended IP a fewO-_.II\ndraw ln spite at three periods and-\nan overtime session of some at tha\nfastest hockey seen on ths local lc*\ntnts year.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u2014(1) Canadlens, Lerine,\n\u2022 Larochelle)   10:10.\nSecond  period\u2014Wo soon.\nThird period\u2014(2) Canadiens, Leplne,\n4:10. (3) Maroon*, Stewart, (Setbert).\n:40. (4 Maroons, Northcott, (Boucher)\n8:20.\nOvertime period\u2014No soon.\nREGINA PATS BEAT\nEDMONTON POOLERS\nEDMONTON, Feb. 9\u2014Regina Pats, a\nhustling Junior hockey crowd, whipped\nthe Edmonton Poolers here this afternoon ln the last of a two game exhibition series, the arena fairly bulging\nwith its crowd of close to six thousand\n: ms and although the beat Junior\nhockey club in thla city went dowp\nunder the neat performing Pats by\n6 to 3, the fans were satisfied with\nthe day's game.\n\u00ab ELE3CT\nThe choice or those men\nwho appreciate good\nScotch Whisky\nBOSTON TIGERS\nBEAT SPRINGFIELD\nPROVIDENCE   VICTOR\nNEW HAVEN, Conn., Feb, 9\u2014The\nProvidence Reds Increased their lead\nin the Canadian-American Hockey\nleague here tonight by defeating the\nNew  Haven Eagles   2   to   1,\nWisconsin   potato   growers   hope\nobtain  U. S.  loan.\nBOSTON,  Mass., Feb. 9\u2014The Boston\nTigers gave the Springfield Indians\na white-washing here last night 4 to\n0 in a Canadian-Amerl can Hockey\nleague game. The Tigers started their\nscoring In the first period and ended\nlt with a rush in the last period\nthat added  three to their total.\nCANADIENS   WIN\nVIENNA, Austria, Feb. 9\u2014The Canada's Hockey club of Toronto defeated\nthc Vienna Skating club by six goals\nto none this  afternoon.\n\"Thts adveui-emi ;n ts not piitnfahed\nor displayed by the I km ok CONTROL\nHOARD or b> the. GOVERNMENT or\nDKITISH  COLtMBFV.\nDEFEND NT;*  TKLES\nKINGSTON, Ont., Feb. 9,\u2014Jack Pur-\ncell was not seriously threatened when\nhe defended his title in the province\nof Ontario badminton champ lon ships,\nwhich were decided at Kingston last\nnight. He defeated Elnar Rechnitz.er\nof Toronto in the finals in straight\nsets.   15-4,   15-10.\nIn the men's doubles Col. G. G.\nBlackstock and C. K. F. Andrews of\nthe badminton and racquets club. Toronto, also successfully defended their\nlast year's title as provincial 'doubles\nchampions, defeating Jack Cameron\nand W. M. Stewart of Ottawa 15-8,\n15-8.\nWhen packing to go away for a trip\nput all your lingerie and small things\nin the bottom of the suitcase and\nthen fold dresses and blouses over\npieces of cardboard cut to fit the\nsize of the suitcase.\nNo Shoes But Every\nFoot a Ballplayer\n1\nKEEP\nHENNESSY\nBRANDY\nHANDY\nBOTTLED   AT   COGNAC,   FRANCE\n'mmtmrn-h-mm _______ T\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or by the Government of B. Q.\nwhits 3ox star\nof other onrs,\n, PItchcp in His Barc-\n1 FE\u20acT BUr-OR-  HIS\nMAilOR U!A_ue PAY'S-\nBy   AL   i.i;.rvRKK ;.\n(Former   Pitcher   New   Yorg   olants)\nSpeaking of \"Shoeless\" Joe Jackson,\nthe old White Sox slugger, who used\nto pitch ln his bare teet ln his \"bush\"\nleague dart .remind., Kughey CrIU\nof the Beds, of a b\u00bbw-foot yam.\n\"When I was about hne* high to a\ngrashoppah.\" began Crita, who halls\nfrom the s3outh, \"my wolks llv\/ed ln\nold Arkansas, in a town which waa\njiothin'  but a wide spot ln th'  rond.\n\"One mornln' there waa great' excitement when stranee traota were\ndlaklvered In th' duat of the road.\nThey were seemln'ly those of aome\nunknown wild monstah. The alahm\nwaa rung on the cotehouae hall and\nout piles all the folks ahmed with\nnoes* \u00bbtwtgiin#, pistols' and axes, There\nwen about (oalt hundred folks in tha\npost*. They followed those trucks foh\nmllea and miles an' finally tha). ovnh-\nVX* I SH TO j \u00bb pa* ol Sh-t, jn,,';\nModern Printing\nWith\nModern Methods\nLook Over the List of Items Below and Check Over Your\nStock. We Pride Ourselves Up on Giving the Best of Service\nand Upon Reasonable Prices.\nt\nFor the Bookkeeping\nDepartment\nRECEIPT BOOKS\nBILLHEADS\nSTATEMENTS\nLEDGER LEAVES\nSYNOPTIC FORMS\nLOOSE LEAF BINDERS\nVOUCHERS\nCHECKS\nFor Direct Mail\nAdvertising\nCIRCULARS\nPRICE  LISTS\nANNOUNCEMENT CARDS\nBLOTTERS\nENVELOPE STUFFERS\nFor General Use\nPAMPHLETS\nBOOKLETS\nPOSTERS\nDODGERS\nWINDOW CARDS\nFor the General\nOffice\nLETTERHEADS\nENVELOPES\nSPECIAL FORMS\nBUSINESS CARDS\nPOST CARDS\nCIRCULAR LETTERS  .\nINDEX CARDS\nLABELS\nFor Mining\nCompanies\nOFFICE STATIONERY\nLOOSE  LEAF  BINDERS\nSTOCK CERTIFICATES\nSYNOPTIC DISTRIBUTION FORMS\nCOMPANY SEALS\nSocial Stationery\nNOTEHEADS AND ENVELOPES\nVISITING CARDS\nINVITATION CARDS\nANNOUNCEMENTS\nWEDDING STATIONERY\nThe\nDAILY NEWS\n\u2014Job Department\u2014\nPhone 144 Nelson, B. 0.\n__\n ^PageEig-i\"\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,\" MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 10, 1830\n_____\u00bbt\nBarberry Bush\nKathleen Norris\nBy\ni^iuw .i*ii Mm iiirr*-\nThe  story thiu far;\nBarbar Bush Atherton and her lift-\ntar Amy, live with their father, Prof.\nAtherton. la o mod*** Uttle bun___tow\nla Oottoowood, Cal. Lincoln Macken-\n_ne. the richest boy In town and one\nof the nicest, ie interested ln Barb***!-*,\nhut she, much to Amy's dlsbuat, shows\na preference for Barry du Spain, poet\n*ad dreamer. Mariann eScott, pretty\nuvd \u25a0ophitlscated, come a to Cottonwood to visit her cousin. Inez Wilson,\nlink's wealth attracts her and ahe\nuses her wiles to bring hm ito her\nfeet. Almost agalsnt his will be f**ll_.\nla love with har. And at the thought\nof Marianne Sdott becoming tiro.\nLincoln Mackenzie Barbara finds herself  unaccountably   dlstreesed.    On  an\nMill i-''M U-I\nWOMEN SWELL\nRANBff LABOR\nRepresentatives    ef    Women's\nFederal  Trades  Union\nSeated at Halifax\nCHARGED THEFT\nwhen tt comes to bis eomlni down\nhere tn the ftnt few weeks of my marriage I think I have a right to kick,\nand I think ninety-nine men out of o\nhundred  would  kick.\"\n\"But you didn't say that before we\nwere   married f\"\n\"I dldnt know lt before we were\nmarried. I dldnt know how I'd feel\nabout tt. I do know now, and I feel\nvery strongly. If yma disregard my politely and quietly expressed wishes, lf\nyou go into town at 4:30 ln a winter\nmorning with Tomas Bettanoourt, perhaps catching your death of cold, arriving at Mrs. Pheland's before 0, arousing every one and causing a lot of talk,\nevery one probably saying that your\nhusband couldn't afford  to get a  taxi\nHALIFAX, N. 8. Peb. 9.\u2014A new chanter was written ln the annals ot the\nInternational Trades Union movement\niu the Maritime Provinces recently when\ntook their places by the sides of their\nbrother labor folk in carrying on the\nstruggle for living wages, better working conditions and advanced social and\nlabor   legislation.\nTne occasion was the January meeting of the Halifax District Trades and\nLabor Council, which was marked by\nthe Women's Federal Trades Union\nrecently organised here under charter\nfrom the Trades Labor Congress of\nCanada, affiliating with the Council,\nparent body of the International movement in this ctty. Never before in the\nhistory of the movement, has a woman\nsat tn the Council of such a represents-\n\u00abHWtoe\"BirTy'and Bart\u00bbV marr\"y\"and ' to take you in to Your sister's -wedding J ^\"^J ^\"^gwlSd\"\\loo7'in~ the\n.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014SaltV    a Tin     tr>f___lt-    thnt.\ngo to his old r**nch to live. Resolutely\nBarbara adapts herself to the varying\nmoods of the temperamental little\nboy wh Is her husband and ls rewarded   by  his ardent  ive.\nINSTALMENT    ELI\"VIA\nClassified Advertising\nCLASSIFIED   DIRECTORY\nBIRTHS\nDEATHS\nMABK1AUES\nIN   MLMOklAM\nI'KKMIMI.\nHELP   WANTED      __.\nSITIATIIINS   WANTED\nAll, NTS    WANTsEP\nIIVCIIIHS   WANTED\nNl RglNU\n(1)\n(tl\n(3)\n(4)\n(5)\n(1*1\n,1!)\n.1.1.\n(II)\nOrlando Heron, charged on many\ntheft count*, offered is. plead guilty\nIn the assls\/e court at Toronlc. The\narrest of Mr. Heron caused a  country-\n______________________________________     In   bPokern^s    sslrcles    last\nand seated as members of the Council   spring\nwere   Gladys   Wood,   president   ot   the\nlf you court publicity sand gossip that' w*^..,**^\nway and make my name a Joke\u2014 The drieiatm   who   after nresentlna\nI  went  in  with  Tomas on  the  milk ^^^^^^^^^^\n_T*1.L\u201eJ^'__Jh'i\/Wi_,n*'Jl\u201e8!!.?   WomeM umon\",_r\u00bb'. f \u25a0_*___, Mr.\nBarbara and Barry had ment loned\nmore than once the time \"when Amy's\nm**rrid and dad comes to us for\nwhile.\" It has been tacitly understood.\nBarbara really believed that such was\nto   be   the   arrangement.\nB*Ut  when  the  first  weeks  of  their\ninto Amy's room at Mrs. Pheland's\nbefore any one in the place was up.\nA taxi  would   cost (4  and   It  simply\n8.  McClusky, Mrs.  O.  Horne  and  Mrs.\nO.  Spinney.\nP. J. Healey, president of the Trades\n5& IE!1 l^'TaTa^y.*^' *^' &fiT'3\u00abT_5___r_.*_S\nmen delegates, stressing the importance\nof their entry into the ranks of organized labor and stating that lt had\nlong been realized that labor in Halifax\ndon't  let   your  imagination  run  away\nwith  you.\"\n\"And dont call me darling!    You're ,__^^^^___^^^_^_^_^___^_^_^_\u2014__\ngoing directlyagalnst my wishes, you're J\u00a3J\u00bbd   ^v^V eachThe*\"hTghe_t\"^lnt\nand the holidays were over Barry ap- \u25a0 *\u201e *\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab\u201e_\u00ab\u00bb__*_\u00bb.\u00ab \u201e*nr*_-. iw.-n.-fit   ann   tTOlt  their Places  \"-1  tne sme  OI  tne\npeared   to teel  differently  about lt,\nThe  oold  and  the  constant,  if  exhil\narating,   struggle   to   keep   themselves\nwarm   and   fed   had   made   this   first\nIrian seem not quite so simple. What\nwould   he   do  at   the  rnnch,   a   gentle\nold   professor   who   liked   his   morning   _____________________________________________\nbath. Barry asked thoughtfully one' biHI-lr'tha room seemed damp and\nafternoon about the week before Amy's cooi ftnd WM heavily scented with wood\nwedding. smoke.    Both   lamps   were   lighted.\nBarbara's   hrair   gave   a   plunge   of      \"Barry, you cant think that I coukl\nsheer.   Unreasoning   terror      Nm   have   stny away from Amy's wedding?\"\ni men.\nBarber Shop Is\nNo Longer Man's\nOwn Rendezvous\nTliat the barber shop ^*_._!!!*___*\nITKMSIIKD    ROOMS\u2014Fnr   Bent\u2014US)\nli unimi: 1.   room.*\u2014Wanted dti)\n11.KIM    AM)    HOARD (I'll\nII.IOMS    WAN 11 I. (1H>\nlu.OMs\u2014-To   Rem (I'll\n\u25a0i wanted a*,\\\nllol BBS   I'OK   RENT till\nKill  BALI   OR  REM (41!)\nIIMM...K    IOR   SAL! HXl\n1 IVIflli. h   WANTED s il,\nRABBITS   t'OK HALE (21)\nI ssl I I 111    AND   El.(IS liOl\nMIS( l.l.l.tNEOI S   t'UK   \u00abALE (Mi\nMIS( i;l,I.ANEOI N   WANTED 'Ml\nMISCELLANEOUS (Ml\nIII MNISN    OPPORTUNITIES (10)\nLOST AND FOUND llll\nSCHOOLS (J-i)\nINSl RANCE .:_>\n1-IKM-l.ltTV  FOR SALE (34)\nI'ROI'EHTV   WANTED lltol\nFARM    I'KOl'LRTV\u2014For   Sale (IS)\nI l.ll   \"Al.i:   OR   I.M'II \\NI1E (51)\nMINING,   TIMBER   AND   LIMBER (M)\nFARM   AND   DAIRY   PRODUCE <39l\nVI TOMOBILF.H   FOR   RALE I 111)\nAl Him.Illll.Es   FOR   HIRE .III\nM  I..MOI1III.S   WANTED llll\nBOATS and LAiTHEs\u2014(or rent\u2014(I'll\nLAUNCHES anil BOATS\u2014tor sale\u2014 (411\nI. .INCHES AND BOATS WANTED  (4.1)\nFIKNITIKE   FOR   HALB (40)\nNl USURY   PRODUCTS (47)\nSTORES   FOR  RENT (11)\nCATS   AND   IIOOS   FOB   SALE (!M>\nSl^t-AJIONS  WAjftED -   --_t-l> | **CIlA-mt-*>*n\\\u00a5^.C\nAI-IKRTA FARMER \u2014 4\u00ab. marr(ed,\nDanish birth, wants position ot trust\nln B. C. Have done aome secretarial\nwork such as keeping school booka,\netc. Have al_> been a councillor ol a\nrurel Munteatflty (or sswesal teems\nand am uesto to handling tnen. Can\nlurnlfh excellent referenda w to reliability, .etc., and will work to em-\nnloyefs   (Merest.     Box    125t0   Dally\nPOR 8AI_t\u2014Cook stove.\n<*__\nABP\",5_.3|\nrtewe.\n(iawe>\nROOMS\u2014To\nRem\n,   ,*\u00bb\nSUtTt JOR RENT-\n-K\nW\nC.\nf>'\u00b0c-_\nhmsh\nHOI KES ro>,g$NT\nBUNOALOW TO RENT\u2014Close in.    Apply J. H. Wallace. Mill  St.      < 12621)\nSIX ROOIflBD BUNGALOW \u2014 Nelson\nAve, Furnace tvented. Apply H.\nOrchard, The Ark. Cor. Josephine\nand  Vernon, 02854)\nl i v bstock JB_\\__vm _\niM)\nWANTED\u2014One\none year old.\ndale, B. C.\n\"Mwntah \"Giant\"   buck\nJohn Paterson, AppUv\n112-r)Rft>\nPOll-TRV _ AND   EGOS\n(88)\nPOR SAl\/fS\u2014Orthophonic Cabinet pho\nno-graph cost \u00ab165-00. Price MA\nwith choice selection records As\nPhone 758U U\nFOR SAUt\u2014Ga* lamp Bystem, 7 tami\nguaraofcsd  A-I  cortditlon. \u00bbb6u\u00bb \u00bb_.\nft.   copper   wir\u00ab.     \u202276,00 -less   tanM\nJ. P. Downey, creston. B. 0.    M_-.l|\nULTRA    VIOUn:    (Artificial   *Ul^J|Wj\n*B_nd fl\ntlustratod pamphlet. Empire\ncles LUL. 649 Granville W-.\ncouver. diii\nMIW'fHI.JUANE\u00abH_\\\nHELP   WANTED..\n\u2022*__?)\nWANTED-Good reliable maid,    gjgnj\ndad   at   ihe  ranch\u2014!\n\"And where would he Meey''\" Barry\npursued ccnsiderately. \"He'd be fearfully   uncomfortable   here.\"\n\"He's a terribly good sport\u2014you\ndon't Itnow how wondeful he is! He'll\nfit into our arrangements here, an well\naa  you  do.\"\n\"He'd probably be fnr happier at\nMrs.   Pheland's.\"\n\"At twenty dollars a week. It would\nbe a ridiculous waste!\"\n\"WeU, he ha_ the rent; of the\nhouse. It would be much fhe most\nsensible arrangement, even lf you are\ntoo much afraid of hurting his feelings to make lt. He corner down here\n\u2014he has nothing to do\u2014he breaks\nln on the most important pun of my\nwork\u2014\"\nBarbara opened the stove lid to put\na dustpan full oi -small .sweepings\ninto the fire.\n\"Barry, isn't it senseless to talk eo?\nNothing on earth would persuade me\nto write my lather that it wasn't convenient to have him here. I simply\ncouldn't   do   it.\"\n\"You   wouldu't   have   to  do   it.    All\nyou'd   have  to  say   is   thnt   the   roads\nare   simply   awful   between   here   nnd\n. Cottonwood    and    that    we    hnve    no\nbathroom*'.\"\n\"He knows that, He was down here\nwith Amy on my birthday\u2014on Christ-\nmaw eve. Dcn't you remember they\nbrought me a book from Link?\"\n\"Other women can be perfectly\nsimple and natural with thefr fathers.\"\nBlurry muttered, beginning carefully\nto replace the scattered parts of thc\nclock he was repairing, and squinting\nat a small cog threateningly. \"You\ncan't. You're always imagining he's\ngetting hurt feelings. Whereas he\nprobably would be actually relieved\u2014\"\n\"Don't talk nonsense!\" Barbara requested   shortly.\n. \"There is no mistake in the world,\"\nBarry said fiolenuily, \"like the mistake of things-in-law living together.\nIt never works.\"\n\"Well, it'll work in this rase!\" Barbara prophesied lightly. But she was\ntrembling.\n\"If your father waa needy.\" Barry\npursued, searching on the floor with\nnarrowed eyes for an escaped wheel,\n\"if he couldn't do anything else, even\nthen\u2014\"\n\"Oh, B***rr\\', please don't rag about\nlt so! My father expects to come out\nhere with me after Amy is married\u2014\nshe and Ward are going to drive south\nIn his ca rand send the tunks by\nrail\u2014and I want him to come here, and\nthat's   all   there   is   about   it.\"\n\"Will you write your father and\nput the case to him simply,\" Barry\npersisted, \"and explain that we know\nhe'd be wretchedly uncomfortable here?\nIf you'll do that and he still decides to come, then I promise you I'll\nbe as agreeable as I can to him.\"\n\"Why, but that's nonsense! He'd be\nperfectly amazed and terribly hurt.\"\n\"Very well, then, don't complain of\nthe way I treat him,\" Barry said, instantly at white heat. \"This is mi-\nhouse and I intend to be master of it.\nI've always liked your father and I've\nalways been kind to your father, but\nin defiance of my express request, and    __^\t\nJT iSSJrU.CaM\u00abnJ.ake  H aH  rlshM\" A*'rather unique  feature  about  the' us^\"toTe is developed in dlscuseions\noy caimig me uarimg                               seating of the women delegates wae that, attending a. meeting   of    the National\nrfnVl,   T_n,_f^ mtt-tZtt-   \u201e.\u201e ^T, T. \"   *\u00b0r the first time in the history of or- Barber   association   recently.       It   has\nfil *\u00a3_^S w\u00abS ?,?\u2022 \u2122m~  .\",\u00a3\u00a3:' \u00ab\u00ab\u00bbto\u00ab\u00bb 1&bor ln thls dlstrlct- not onlV ^ undergoing a period of renaissance\ning down in wildly blown grayi sheets \u25a0 lathe_ Rnd daUghtWi but also hU8band mended by distinct  relinements  .\n\u00a3X_L   ?1        * \u00ab     ,\"*'         Although   and wife, sat side by side in the coun- | The old fashioned wallnok with the\nSh.,.Bt0VI \"\".L!!'6**.! *er,e b\"nilnS i cita   ^  organized  labor.                             I sharing   mugs   of   individuate   lettered\nThese   were  James  Wood,   chairman in gold and ornately decorated has pas-\nfo the Trades Council, and hts daughter sed   to   oblivion.        The     pink-tinted\nGladys,   nad  George   Horne  a   irtember sporting paper which  lent color to the\nof the same committee nnd  his wife, atmosphere has      been    replaced by ;i\nMr. Wood,  who had always been  one illicit class magazine,\nof the strongest agitators for a women's DOEWf ,U\u00a3M   '\u2022\u25a0\u2022*    sAMK\nunion,   is,   like   his   daughter,   also   a The old free-and-easy Saturday night\n__-T __*_,- ___*__,_, ._ _,   __*  _^_ ____,     Union president, being president of the forum for men only is no more.    He-\near and setting it down on the table   international   Brotherhood   of   Boiler- man talk wtth embellishments of col-\nbefore   him   to   watch   iU   operation. I makers>  Iron  shipbuilders and  Helpers orful   profanity   no   longer   Is   heard.\nHis  face  wah frowning and dark.             of  j^^.^ Barber   shop   afternoons   have   the   at-\nIf   it   was   a   question   of   causing |     Belng   the   Jlnt   woman   to   8peak mcKphere of a brlc,Ke party.   Mere rnen\nin the meetings of the Trades and Labor sit  dour and sullen and utter never a\nCouncil,  Mrs. S.  McCluskey,  during  a word while mother gets her hair bob-\ndlacua-jsions of the poll tax on women ln bed,  or struggle  In   the   half-light  of ,\nHalifax, declared she wanted personally bathrooms   with   a   new-fangled   razor   W>1\u00a3\u00a3\na graduated tax and more study of the to   make   themselver,   presentable,   with   w.NTFr>___puniisj1ed house near .Public\nquestion   of   whether   women   without more or less of  blood  letting.                 |    Bchocl   by   March   1st.     Applv   152\u2014\nSilence. He had completed the tinkering with the clock now and shook\nit  gently,  afterward  holding  It  to  his\ntalk,\" Barbara added, \"that would\ncause more talk than anything etee!\nEvery one would think that I had gone\nout of my senses!\"\n(To   Be  Continued) '\nBlack Appointed\nAssistant Crop\nCommissioner, 6. C.\nFormer   District   Agrlcrlturist\nat Grand Forks Is\nPromoted\nPKKMO.NAL\n<A_\nTRUSS TORTURES Eliminated by\nwearing our supports. Thirty days\nfree trial. Write for booklet. A.\nLundberg Co., 938 Pender W., Vancouver (13476)\nWANTED -To hear rrom uromlsint?\nyoung saxophone player. Apply P. O.\nBos 608. (12510)\nWANTED\u2014 Yount* or middle-aged girl\nfnr light general housework. Family\nof thiee, one child, six years. Modern home. Apply Robert Hendricks,\nKaslo. (12547)\n$4 A DAY paid Christian man or wcr\nman for distributing religious litera-*\nture. For particulars write utatlng\nage and church connection *****\nConrad,    ToWffi\nBUFF      OPRINGTON      COCKERELS\nShoemaker strain.   Good birds.   $5.0.\nMrs.  A. G.  Watson,  Appledale  ,B. C\n(12587)\nPIANO TUNING\nREPAIRING\nGerard Hoekstra|\nHeintzman & Co., Lta\nPbon* 199 Nelson. B.\nui sunesi  oryo\u00bbTimiiT_i\n'Shoemaker' itnln. Jooof\/Wrd*.\\\u00bbS.0p ' BAKERY  AND  STORB\u2014F<* rent,\n3. Nelsoi,, r   **._\nMAKE a t\u00abrt and prove to your \u00bbtls-\nfactlon that most eg* for least money\nproduced oy Karswood poultry spice.\nCoat* only one cent dully for twelve\nhena. Obtainable from nil dealers.\n112586)\nTrail' Apply C.\n1054. TreH.\n(12551\nMIHCMXANKOl'S   WANTED\n__?i\nWANTEI>_2000 ft. of 2 Inch galvanized\npipes. Must be lh sood condition.\nApply box 12556 Dally News. (12558)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nNOTICE    TO    ( RBIIITORR    OF    FIRST\nMDFTINC       WIIUHl:       RKl'F.IVIXU\nORDFR OR   ASMK1NMKNT  M\\I)F\nThe  [lankrliplry   Act\nBids.,\nMr.\nToronto.\n(12499)\nWAN rtD.\nt_l\nproperty should be taxed at all.\nPREMIER SENDS BOY\nBIRTHDAY GREETINGS\nB.   C.\nBusiness has never been better with [    a6th W.  Vancouver.\nthe  barber.       Financial   returns  have\t\nbeen  greater.  He  is  ^\t\nan  artist  than an  artisan,  skilled   in      _. ~*.        '\u25a0\"  __ ___. ___ ____. ,,*._\u25a0______._,\n-__-.\u201e_  *..  \u00bbv,\u201e  \u201ev,.\u00ab,_  t,t  mti\u00abrt\u00ab  atari   SEVEN-ACRE ranch     *,_.*^__M-_\\\u00a3]$\nbecome   more   of   '^i\u00bbL>!:,R-TY-Z.'?-?_ ^V_f-.-\nGRGAND FORKS, B. C, Feb. 9\u2014Announcement is made of the appointment of Paul C. Black, district agriculturist at Grand Forks, to the position of assistant crop commissioner\nat Victoria, ior which city he will\nleave in the course or a iortnight.\nMr. Black will be in charge of the\nfertiliaer branch of the crop commissioner's department and has undoubtedly been selected for this position\nbecause of the keen interest he has\ntaken here ln fertilizer experimental\nwork, where numerous tests have been \\*\nmade on local ranches.\nMr. Black was raised on a farm In\nthe Maritime provinces and ls a\npractical farmer as well as agriculturist.\nDuring his ten years as government\nagriculturist here he has given a great\nassistance to the ranchers ln helping\nto solve their problems. His departure\nfrom the community is therefore one\nof Keneral regret, and at a meeting\nof the Farmer's institute on Wednesday, occasion was taken by President\nD. C. Manly to express the deep regret\nof himself personally and also of the\ninstitute in the removal of Mr. Black\nfrom the community. Other speakers\nat the gathering also paid splendid\ntribute to the valuable work which had\nbeen done by Mr. Black.\nM f>\\\\    TROIBLESOME,   BOSWELL\ncatering to the whims of milady and\nmoving  in ft sort of ,ialon atmosphere\n  I which he graces.\nSMITH'S FALLS Ont,, Feb. 0\u2014The A delicately balanced and decorated\nthrill of receiving personal birthday \u25a0 uh truy replaced the old high rock-\nHM-tJagl from Canada's prime minis-: bottom, brass cuspidor. Women may\nter has been experienced by 10 year- ' smoke If they desire, but the best of\nold ateuart Jones. The birthdays of our artist barbers will sniff and cough\nHun. William Lyon MacKenzie King distressingly if some man light a\nand little Stewart fell on the same fragrantly smelly West Virginia stogie.\nday \u2014 December 17 \u2014 and thereby I womankind has descended upon\nhangs   this  tale, the  barber  shop  that  was  as  one   of\nWhen Stewart learned, in the course its most profitable patrons. Refine-\nof his school lessens, that the prem-1 ments were inevitable, but a men's\nler too had first seen the light on 1 club long cherished by passing gener-\nDeceinber  17, he wrote a letter to Mr. \\ ations hits been stripped of much of its\nmy limits. 800 lruit trees, shack,\nbarb wire fence and city water.\nWrite box 704, Nelson, B. C. Easy\n(12S48)\nterms.\nFOR SALE\u20147 acre!\" 6 roomed house,\nItKlu and water, chicken houses 300\nchickens, garage. Ciose to town.\nWrite for part culars. Bo\\246J58;\nCranbrook,  B.   C. iliwn)\nTalking About\nHouses\nIn the estate of IDA AUOt^TA\nPITNER anitt JOHN PAUL PITNER\nauthorized us.=ignor*s.\nNo* loe is hTehy given that IDA\nAUGUSTA PITNER and JOHN PAUL\nPiTNER of Nelson In the Province of\nBritish'Columbia did on th- n a* \u25a0\nof February, 1930. make an authorized\nassignment of all their property for\nthe benefit of their creditors, and that\nH. R. Townsend, Official Receiver has\napuolnted rae to be custodian of the\nestate of the debtors until the first\nmet-tir-g  of creditors.\nNotice is further glvnn that the first\nmpetlng of creditors in the above estate\nwill te held at Court House, Nelson,\nB. C. cn the 21st day of February, 1930,\nat 2:30 o'clock in tho afternoon.\nTo entitle you to vote thereat, proof\nof your claim must be lodged with me\nbefore  the meeting  ls held.\nProxies to be used at the meeting\nmust be lodged with m: prior thereto.\nAnd further take ncticp that at\nsuch meeting the creditors will\nelect the permanent trustee and\nfurther take notice that \\r vn.\nhave anv claim against the debtors for\nwhich you are entitled to rank, proof\nof t-uch claim must be filed with me.\nor with the trustee when appointed:\notherwise1 the proceeds cf the debtors'\nestate will be distributed among the\nparties entitled thereto without regard\nto vour claim.\nDoted at Nelson, B'. C. this 3rd day\nof   February,   1930.\nR.  W.  DAWSON,\nCustodian.\n(13590)\nWANTED\u2014Parties vlth 8500 00 ar md\navailable to join local Syndicate\ndealing     In     Agreements    of     P\nEquities.    Good   profits  assured.    _,\ninterested  reply  to  Box  12678 Dal\n(lf*T\nBUSINESS,   **ROFESS10NA|\nDIRECTORY\nAccountlig\nE. NORMAN\n4CCOVNTING,    AUDITING\nGOVEttNMKNT   REPORTS\nBox  864.  Nelson        (13!\nCHAS.  F.  HUNTER\nUIHTINQ        INCOME TAX RETT\nlOOKKEEPINfl fNVECTWMU)\nBox   U91.  Nelson, B. o.\nt    (taa\nAsmyers\nW.   WIDDOWSON,   Box  A11G8 Nell\nB.  c.    Standard  western charge*. J\nIII II.      E.      CKOSHLEY. ProvhM\nAasayer.    Address  Reno Oold  Mln\nLtd., SaimorB. c uaic\nand expressing best birthday wishes\nA return letter t-tvxn came to Master\nJones, lu the Premier's own hand\nwriting, congratulating him on his\nInitiative and conveying personal greetings   for   many   happy   birthdays.\nROSSLAND NOTES\nBCSSLAND, B. 0., Feb. 9\u2014Discovering ln some way that Thursday was\nthe natal day of Mrs. Cook. A crowd\nof  her  friends gathered  in her  home\nthat  evening,   and   proceeded   to  take,\t\npossession   of   the   house.   Games  and ' men Teachers,  held  at Canterbury  re\nvery line for the barber. It exalts\nhim in p.usc and person. But It\nwill bring is pnnu est retrret to many a\nman for whom the barber shop was an\nInstitution.\nSEX   EQI U.iTV,\nutssrsisuss,   a,,  tmt   .s_  a,  \u201evtc*   \u00bb_   m.-iations nas oemu s_riui\u00bbeu ui  us\u2014its *jl .w> s -.lo-mintf  HlirinQ-\nKing pointing out their common bond1 Mtnotlmuaa ssnd democracy.   It ls all, Have ypU Decn piHiUiuiB uu.\">\u00bb\n^^^^^ \"* \" the winter months to buy a\nhou.-e J\nNOW IS THR TIME TO BUY\nWe have a SIX ROOM HOUSE\nthat is A BARGAIN AT\nTHE PRICE.\nThere is a larpe Living Room,\nDining Room, Kitchen, Summer Kitchen, Concrete Foundation, Good Cellar. Has\nbeen papered and renovated\nthroughout. On a 50 foot\nLot, Fruit Trees, good view\nof the Lake, close to Street\nCar.\nS2500.00-*500*00 Cash\nWATER   NOTICE\nAuctioneer and Bailiff\nXNIES   H.   DOVI.E\u2014Bsjlllff,   Aoctloi\nNtlson. B   C.   <1J\u00bb\n Chiropractors,\n\u2022 K     MITTUN,    X-BAV,   CRANBHOCl\n__\\\n\u25a0I-    (1RAV,   RILKER   s_tH.,   NELW\nur\nDentists\n.11.   (1.   A.   C.   WALLEY\u2014Orlffln   Biol\nX-Ityy.    N\u00ablson,  B.  0, (19_|\nEngineers\nLONDON, Peb. 9.\u2014A demand for ab-\n.sohisss MX equssllty in the teaching\nprofession and in all spheres of Industry and public life was. made by\nMlss 6. M. Burie (West Ham. in her\npresidential address at the annual conference   of  the   Nation   Union   of   Wo-\nBOSW_L_, B. C\u201e Feb. S\u2014Recent\nheavy snowfalls have caused a good\ndeal of trouble on the CP.R. telegraph\nlines, and O. Murphy, district ll_eman,\nls sbelng kept busy.\nmusic filled up a very plesisant eve\nnlng, and time to go home came all\ntoo soon. Just before refreshments\nwere served, a large number ot daintily\nwrapped parcels were presents to\nMrs. Cook, which when opened, presented an array of pretty china and\nlinen. Those present were Mrs. W.\nCook, Mr. and Mrs. R. Oay, Mr. and\nMrs. O. R. Mason, Mr. and Mrs.\nThomas Wood, Mr. and Mrs. John.\nPhillips, Mrs. J. Herman and Baby\nHerman, sMrs. R. H. Mason nnd Baby\nMason. Mrs. E. R. Bray, Mrs. V. M.\nMcDonald. Mlss Leah Rowe. Mtss Annie\nRowe, Mrs. H. Ferguson, Mlss Jean\nHerman. Miss Patricia Herman, Mlss\nOlive PhllliPB. Miss Hilda Phillips.\nDavid   Wood,   Bruce  Mason.\ncently.     The   conference   marked   the\n'21    aisnivci-iiory   of   the   formation\nthr  union.\nMl LOCK   IIE.MIO\nJohn A. McKellar, mantiger of the\nBank of Montreal at Aylmer. Ont.,\ndied recently.\nTORONTO. Ont., Feb. 8. \u2014 \"Leave\nsome of the walks of life to men,\nSir William Mulock suggested to the\nmembers of the University Women's\nClub, as he declared formally open\nthe new clubhouse recently acquired\nand remodelled at 162 St. George St.\n\"I am not sugsjesting what you may\ndo; you must decide that for yourselves; but leave some to the men.\"\nVALLICAN NOTES\nVALLICAN. B. c. Feb. 9\u2014Mr. and\nMre. O G. Harrison of Trail arrived\nFriday and will spend . few days\nvisiting  frlenda.\n    balance arranged\nRobertson\nRealty Co., Ltd.\n414 Ward Street\nAll Canadian stone will be used ln\nthe construction of the new Toronto\ncustoms house to cost several million\nI Diversion   ui.,1   1 -e,\nTAKE NOTICE that the Selkirk Power Co. Ltd. whose address is 604 standard Bank Building, Vancouver, B. C.\nwill apply for a licence to take and\nuse 350 cubic feet per second of water\nout of s3almo River which flows southwesterly ond drains Into the Pend\nd'Oreille River about 2 miles north of\nthe International Boundary. The\nwater will be diverted from the stream\nat a point near Junction of its north\nand south forks and will be used for\nPower purposes upon the land de-\nscrisbed as Lot 9182 Kootenay DlstTlct,\nB. C. Powers with respect to the\nundertaking to h**- exercised within the\nNelson Mining Division of Kootenay\nDistrict. B. C.\nThis notlca was posted on the ground\non the 31st day of January, 1930. A\ncopy of this notice and an applications pursuant thereto and to the\n\"Water Act\" will be filed in the office\nof the Water Recorder at Nelson, B. C.\nObjections to the application may\nbe tiled with the said water Recorder\nor with the Comptroller of Water\nRights. Parliament Buildings. Victoria,\nB. C. within thirty days after the first\nappearance of this notice ln a local\nnewspaper.\nThe date of Ihe first publication of\nI this notice  Ib February  10,  1930.\nThe petition for approval of the undertaking will be heard in the office\nof the Water Boom at a date to be\nPhone 68 ' fi*ed with the Comptroller, and any\n\" Interested person may file art objection\ntheieto ln the office of the Comptroller\nor of the Water Recorder.\nSELXIRK POWER OO. LTD.\nApplicant.\nH.  E. WHYTE,\nAgent.\n(12S92)\n(12582)\n\u2022I. I>. DAWSON\u2014Lam] surveyors, iri\ning ssnd Civil Engineers, Kaslo, B\n(H3I\nP.   W.  RACEY,  MININO ENOINEEI\n516 Ward St., Nelson, B. C.\n(189'\nV.    II.    OREEN    CO\u201e\u2014OONTRACTOI\nFormerly Gren Bros., Burden, Nels.\nCivil   and   Mining   Engineers,   B.\nAlberta   and   Dominion   Lend   _\nveyors. (129\nFlorists\nORIZZELLE'S..   OR_ENHOU8E.-   Nelsl\nCut flowers and floral designs.     I\n. (wa|\n.V.M.   8,  JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone 343 Cut flowers, Potted Plsi\nand Floral Emblems. (li_\n\u00ab~   W.   DAWSON\u2014Renl   Estate,\nance, Rentals. Next Hlppersons .\nware. Baker St. (1\nPhotographers\nOEOROE  A.  MEEREfl\u2014Artist and 1\ntographer.    715 Baker St.       (IS\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS' TRANSFERl\n3AOOAGE, COAL AND WOOD I\n Phone  10\u00ab (laof\nWood Working Factoiry7\nLAWSON\u2014Baker     St.    Carpenter     -U\nJoiner.    Bash   and   Hardwood.      f\n <__\\\nFACES MURDER\nCHARGE\nM\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nOH,    HELLO,   MR,    CliAMEft - VA)My\nMB.   UIHUSPLE   HA,_W'r   _>ECID_r> '\nFollowing the Doctor's Orders.\nBy Westov|\n JiECIDED\nTO TAIC6 OOT INSURANCE Vet\nxou -Ay He DIDN'T PASS THE\nDOCTOR'S    EX-AMlNATION   YET *\nUMAT'5    THE   MATTEK, \\WITH   HW\nl_OW   BLOOD  pi_ES-Sup.BT   WHAT ]\nCAM  tOO?   TELL   HIM   T_   TAKE\n\u2022=YE[_Ci-3E?\nALL.\nK.K3HTIE\nVtJ- DO\nTHAT-\nTOODLEOO\nHERE'S A LI^T OF PROSPScT\\l\/\u00a3-\nCLlENTS, MR. VAiHIPPi-E - I VM*Sx\\\nVOU   TO   GO  AMO   SEE     THEM\nv\nr\nA_E yoo CRA-*\/\n\"TILLIEZ THOSE '\nC\u00a3*H B_ TAKEN\neARE OF BV\nMA<LIN<3 -THEM ,\nOUR. ADVEE.T.*jSIM\u00abJ\nCiP-COi-AR-B.\n*y__    NEED   T^E   Ey-=|i.ClSE|\nAMD    BESIDES     -sMfc'LL      BE\nISAViNQ   -ST\/A MP-S.\nVJE    eOTH    N&ED    E.yi_l_ClSE\nM\\*S*S   EL1_\\S -  v.ET'3   CfO To   '\nA   PLACE   VMHERE  \\Al-_  CAM\n1HAVS LUWCH AMD\n, DANCE   APTEfc-\nVUARD^J \u25a0\t\nBKJjNUINU UP FATHER\nBy George McAU-.]\nNorthern Murder Drama. Joe Normsan\nchm-ged with the murder of Mrs. Ever-\nta -Wither, Bear Lake, Hallburtcn\ncounty, when the woman's body wae\nburned ln the ruins of the blazing\nhouse, Is seen here at Lindsay. Ont.\nIn custody of Provincial Officer Warren,\nwho carflts the blood stained axe\nflletea to have been uewl ln tbe crime. I\nI tlOW eO__.HT tOP\"E PROPHfiLT^\nWrTHOUT \"bEEIMC IT F^OM  -**l**t-\nNCWRI<_HHfc<i A SOCIAL -.EAO-^- *-*E   -AlO I\nIT WA_> IM THE MO<bT EXCUJ5WE Os^RT\nOP TOWN   I WAMT TftO     (\u2014\nTO GO AMO u_OK AT IT- )    _%,\nHE EV\/.OEMTl_-( DIOMT\ntell mer about the\nRoads soothim to\nremimo him op a road\n\u2022 Ills,htl sftstun tanks,__0_stMtss_ (*\u00bb\u00bb_\u00ab\u2022\u2022*     *__*J-_\n \u2014m\n-^\nSUNSHINE INTO\n'   BOME EXPLAINED\nArtificial   Sunlight   for  Those\n,        Working and Playing\nIndoors\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,    MONDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 10,1930\nSPARE\nNEW YORK, Peb. u. \u2014 A new limp\ndescribed   aa   tbe   first   step   toward\n.bringing artificial sunlight (ndoort for\n.office   workers   wa*   explained   to   the\nAmenesan   iceutuu   of   Electrical   ln-\n.jsglnaers today.\nI   Th\u00ab lynp is  at combination of ths*\n\u2022Xsamillar tungsten filament and a pool\n,of mercuy. The hot filament vaporizes the merchry almost UtftanUy and\nproduces   a  glowing  vapor  arc,  giving\n,light   from   three   sources,   seven   per\n;\u00ab__ from the filament.  25 from the\nsmerrury vapor and oa from the tutut-\nisten electrodes.\n\"This   light,\"   said   Dr.   M.   Luckieah\n,of the Natlonal Lamp Works of the\nGeneral Electric company, Cleveland,\n\"ls the first practical step toward pro-\niduclng sunlight.   Other new light eour-\n.eee are likely  to     bt developed- he\n, aald.     \"before   the   dream   of   Indoor\ni.daylight  comes   true\/'\nv   The new era saims at \"simulate sunlight,   adequate and  proper for vision\ni And in addition supplying health benefits of sunlight  to those  who work\n,\/and   play   Indoors,\"     Tbe   now   fash-\n: .enable   ultra-violet  light   will  he  pan\n\u25a0fit tlhs Indoor Illumination, but a secondary part.\nB   He   forecast      a   new   Tlew\u00bbint'  In Photograph  here shows the Muspratt twins, the elder of which   (left i.\nbuilding which would require walls l\"ed' lcav\">g his brcther heir to the baronetcy held by their grandfather, Sir\nHU! ceilings of materials reflecting M?\" MurprMt, Bart. The twins were born shortly after tlie death of their father\n\"W *'.\u00b0let Hght. Some substances Ifadaliih Muspratt. and have been living at tht home of their maternal grand-\nalready are known to possess thl\u00bb qual-  parents,   Mr.   and   Mrs.   Meurlg   Davlee,   Toronto\nity.  including   chromium,    aluminum,\t\nand sortie white Wkments ond planer.\nSTRANGER Af\nTORONTO WAS\nNOT   BYRD\nTOROMTO. Teh. O.-Ouests ln the\nlobby of the Royal York *>tel \u00abre\nstartled. \\*y ths appearance at the\nreservation desk of a young man wearing a heavy fleece-lined leather coat\nand carrying Under his arm a pair of\n\"8hakleton\" boots. Inquiry proved that\nthe story of the arrival of Rear-Admlral Byrd  was erroneous.\nThe   young   man   who   attractsed   so\nmuoa attention was Plot Byron Warner of the Scout Aid corporation, Detroit.    He  had   brought  a monoplane   movement   to   popularize   folks   songs\nfrom Detroit with an official of an cn-   !n an elf on lo stem the rapid sprea'\nglne company as a passenger.   In spite   of  Jasra from the  cities to the farms\nor nad snowstorms tho trip wee made   The  \"tne  civilization\"  of  the  city   ls\n\u201eJ-*ne \u2022*om \u2014\u2014 66 minutes. bound  to  have  a   bad  effect  on  the\nI had  quite  a  1__c  to find  your\nPRINCE OF WALES\nIS FINE ORATOR\nAuthor of His Own Speeches;\nImparts the Human\nTouch\nPREMJEK OF .SPAIN\nMissionaries\nAttempt Stop\nJazz in Japan\nTOKYO. Feb. 9.^Poreign missionaries ln Japan hare found a new task\nfcr themselve*\u2014 the elimination of\njaz7 from the song books of boys and\ngirls   In   the   country   districts.\nThe Young Women's Missionary association, with the support of the\nministry   of   education,   has  started\nSOLE SURVIVOR\nTALE BRINGS A\nFLOCK OF MAIL\nyouth ol rural Japan, declare the missionaries.\n\"We will not have members of our\norganization ln tho country slnglnr\nsensual Jazz songs which are sung in\nthe city\" sasserted K. Kaeeda, genera\nBccrctary of the Federation of Yotmg\nWeimn's associations \"The effect le\nbeund to havs a demoralizing effect\non the simple rural lite.- The mind of\nyouth ls susceptible and the lure of\nthe city is strong. You can well imagine what effect Jazz songs such as\nthe Tokyo March, the maiden at the\nBenin and the Night Life of Doton-\ncmo life\ng P<\n;*U M. Jones planned to \"build a'h-h   ?aV*   ?h\"r   own   amuMm<!ot<1   \u2122   the\nbarbed-wire  fence   on   which   his   ad-   -*\"\"*       *\u00b0  0TO \u00b0' folk s<m*5 what u\nmiters would tear their clotlilrig wiien\nthey ' came  to am*  her,  Mrs.  Cornelia\nHeld. If lt wasn't tor the fact th\nseveral planes were out on the field\nI don't think I would have been able\nto -locate lt.\n\"You would think that at a point\nssuoh as Toronto, where they have a\nregular mall route that they would\n;n_lntatn a lighted field.\n\u25a0 \"There were a lot of visiting planes\nup there and lt Was some time before\nI could get my plane looked after \"\nBarbed Wire as Trap\n*__ iar:f\u00ab>     a j    \u2022 lnc H'8nt tttie\nIOr   Wile 8   AdmirerS ben m'\"l ha\u2122 >*on the wholMis::...\nL06 ANGELES.  Calif.,  Feb 9.\u2014Fran- ?' the,h'J';'J1 Deopl\u00ab- Wbea tosmt P\u00abS\u00bbe\nJones charged In her divorce complaint\non   file    here.\n, Her husband hoped, Mrs. Jones sjs-\neertod, to Identify her callers by the\nrips  left   ln   their   clothes.\nShe asked $36,000 rttoneey's fata\nand appropriate alimony, she faM\nlier  husband   was   worth   $750,000.\nChildren Coughed\nlay and Right\nUrs. G-nde Eenvsard, Kenyan], Soak,\nwrites.-\u2014\"The children were coughing\nimj ud night.\n\"A find told me she had used\nDr. Wood's\nNorway\nPine\nSyrup\n\u2014\u20141 had received good results, its I\nl<c_g-t a bottle of it, and in a short\nSptai the kiddies were all over their\n\u00bbeU and eonghing.\n\u00a51 tax-\u2014 no hesitation in saying it\ntr ihe best I have ever used, and I\nWjJ always keep a bottle of it oa haul\n|a__oof ___\"\nPrice, 35c a bottle; large family\nSu 60c.; at all drugsgiats and deal.-rsf\nmajrafaotored tVhly by The T. Mi] ban\n4k., limited, Toronto, OaL\nthe um of distracting their attention\nwith a song which aayB 'Dance to Jasz;\nkeep midnight vlfll over boosze\u2014aome-\nthlus  unknown  to their community?'\nSHOTGUN BANDIT\nTAKES CLOCK\nLGS ANGELES, Feb. 9.\u2014Entering a\ncafe ,nt Butler and Lnthrop streets',\nSanta Pe Springs, early in the morning, two men covered Norma Roberts,\nwaitress, with a revolver and double-\nbarreled shotgun and robbed the establishment of $50 in cash and a novelty clock valued at *22.50, according\nto a report made to the Sheriff's office\nThe   men   escaped   ln   an   automobile.\nWhile his companion pointed a\nrevolver at the waitress the man\nwith thc shotgun leaped over thc\ncounter and took the contents of\nthe caj-.h register and the clock, and\ndemanded that the victim product\nmoney   which   ahe   had   hidden.\nLOS ANGELES, Peb. 9.\u2014D. W. Tom-\nliniion, once leader o* the Navy's famous trio of stunt flyrs, \"the Sea Hawks\"\nand now operations manager for the\nwestern division of a transcontinental air line here, hopes this story will\nbe printed He has two reasons; first,\nIt may reduce his mall, and. second,\nit may free him froni further \"kidding\" by hia two  \"buddies,\"\nTomllnson says aome one referred\nto him as the \"surviving member\"\n)f the \"Sea Hawks.\" As a matter of\n!act, Tomllnson declares all of thc\n'Sea  Hawks\"  are   alive.\nOne of them, Lieut. A. P, Starrs, Is\nchief test pilot at the naval air station, Anacoslia, Washington, and tlie\nother, Lieut ,W. B. Davis. Jr.. Is an\nInstructor at the naval air base at\nPtnsacola, Ha.\n\"Golly,\" he protest*. \"I'm getting\nletters On it from lot3 of folks, not\nto mention what storrs and Davis\nhave written me.''\nLONDON, Feb. 9. \u2014 The prince ot\nWales who for many years had an\nacute dislike for speaking in public,\nhas now become one of the beet\norators in the country both ln the\nmatter of hie discourses and in the\nmanner of his delivering them. His\nspeech on November 10 at the dinner\nto members of \"The Most Enviable\nOrder of the Victoria Cross,\" to use\nhie own phi*we. wos. in particular.\nhailed throufhout the country ae a\nremarkably fine performance and\nEnglishmen, are especially happy to\nthink that, unlike many of their leading personalities, the Prince ls usually\nthe chief\u2014\u00abnd often the sol*\u2014author\nof  his  own  orations.\nNaturally he seeks Information from\nthe secretariat on some of the thousand and one topics on which he Is\ncontinually called upon to speak; and\nv eloonus suggestions as to how the\nsubjects may be best approached; but\non a majority of occasions on which a\ndirect human utterance on a nontechnical subject is required, lt ls the\nPrince himself who is responsible for\none composition of the speech which\nhe delivers.\nEven, too, where a technical or local\nIssue ls Involved\u2014an address to a\ngathering of electricians, medical men.\nprinters or members of some other profession, or at the opening of some local\nexhibition or agricultural show\u2014tho\nPrince does not merely repeat, parrot-\nlike, information that has been supplied him by his advisers, but makes\nsure he himself is thoroughly conversant with at any rate the elements\nof whatever subject is ln Question, and\nnever falls to Impart some wholly individual and human touch to his discourse that is the product of his mind\nand   his  alone.\nA further Illustration or his individual methods in speech-ma king is\ngiven by the fact that even when\nreading a prepared address he will\noften throw down his manuscript on\nthc table half-way through an oration\nand proceed to give the rest of it\nextemporaneously, a practice which.\nIncidentally, causes a certain amount\nof anguish to newspapermen, who are\nliable to find that some important address as actually delivered, differs\nwidely from the advance copies of the\nspeech that have been sent them.\nDinner Speaker\nExplains Art\nof Writing Ads\nPage Nine\n #*\nw\nAnother Political\nProblem Is Facing\nJapan at Present\nfuneral D'Ama.o Berenguer. fcrmer\nmilitary fimrnor ol Morocco, 'who be-\ncpme premier of \"Spain, succeeding\nPrimo dc fUjrert, who r^ned\ncenty\nLos Angeles Man Tells How\nto Beard Newpaper Editors ,\nand Lions in Their Oum Dens\nFreedom of the\nPress in South\nGLENDALE, Feb. 9.\u2014Actions for contempt of court shouid only be Initiated when tt can be clearly shown that\ncontempt and not merely criticism,\nls intended, Judge Ramond I Turney,\npresiding Judge of the Los Angeles\nMunicipal Court, told the \"United\nChruch Brotherhood in an address\nat the Y. M. C. A. Turney is a candidate for fiction, opposing Judge Carlos\n8. Hardy.\nThe speaker contended that the\nright, of free speech and free press\nshould be sustafned by the courts,\ndeciding that the condition of the\ngovernment and of the nation will\nalways be healthy if public officials\nrefrain from attempting to curtail\ntho right of the citizen to express\nhimself   freely.\nTho recent reorganization of the\nMunicipal Court. Turney said, wae\ncarried out largely with the Idea of\nrestoring the confidence of the people   In   the  courts.\nThe old licensing ay-stem of fines\nby which bottleggers, gamblers and\nother offenders were arrested at ln-\ntrvals and fined a nominal amount,\nlias been changed, and such offenders receive heavy fines and Jail sentences. The buslnesss of ths \"fixer\"\nhas been curtalld through the system\nLOS  ANGELES,  Feb,  9.\u2014Four  fund- I of assigning  cases by  the  master cal-\nL06 ANGELES. Feb. 9\u2014Could you\nlook a peevish lion ln the face and,\nah, be nonchalant?\nThan, you are well an tbe road to\nbeing a successful aalmsJ trainer\u2014\nalthough what lt would get you is\nanother   matter.\nAl Prlddy, who learned by he.pU-7\nout ss an animal trainer, how to\nbeard editors as a press agent for\n\"the greatest show on -earth.\" offered\nthis advlc: to Los Angeles Klwanlans\nat a  meeting  of ths  elub  here.\nOf course, admitted Prlddy. there\nls a little more to lt. For instance,\nhe said, one must make friends or\nthe animals; he mn\u00bbt be patient and\nat the same time firm; he must hold\nto a determination and he must keep\nhis head.\nAs to the last. Prlddy assured his\nlisteners, he spoke from experience,\nrelating that once he was in a cage\nwith a number of lions or tigers, when\nthe electric lights went out. When\nthe lights came back on. Prlddy heard\nthe trainer with whom he wss working\ncompliment him on his conduct. \"I\nwas afraid vou would move,\" the\ntrainer tcld VtAi... \"I couldn't move,\nPrlddy replied.\nPrlddy's fubject was \"Man and Other\nAnimals.\" He declared that men and\nanimals are vety much alike, being\nsubject to the same emotions. One\ndifference, however, he continued, is\nthat ths animals' mttllecu often are\nsuperior  to men's\nExtracted Tooth\nInhaled into His\nsm\nHe Almost Thought\nHe Wag a Chandelier\nNBW HAVEK, Conn., Feb. 9.\u2014Frsd\nStone has kept his promise to dance\nagain, and astounded science.\nWhen the famous stage star broke\nboth his legs and half the ether bones\nin his body in a airplane crash at\nNew London 18 months ago, surgeons\n\u25a0hook their head and said:\n\"You may live; you never wtll dance\nagain.\"\nBut Fred Stone glared up through\nthe bandages that covered all but one\neye   and   whispered;\nTORONTO. PVb t.\u2014flev Yletor T.\n-Mwaey. of Chalmers United Church,\nWoodstock, In in Toronto OenseM\n\"Hocpital in a se-ioue condition the\nisault of an unfortunate mishap while\nhaving a tooth extracted In London.\nOnt. In some manner ths tooth, or\ni large portion of lt, was inhaled into\nthe lungs, where It still rtmalns. pr\u00bb-\n-tentlng   a   difficult   surgical   problem.\nMr. Mooney went to London\nto pemoh at Km pre* Avenue United\nChurctj. He visited a dentist who had\ndone work for him before, and had\nfour teeth sxtractsd. One, it Is reported, was broken and a large piece\nwas inhaled into the lung.\nF-ollowtng the dental \"accident, Xray\nphotos were at once taken In London,\nbut it was later deemed advisable to\nhsve Mr. Mooney brought to Toronto\nto have the tooth removed, An effort\nwas made ci a late hour but owing\nto the location of the tooth, results\nwere  negative.\nThe tooth at present Is located at\nthe   base  of  the  lung.\nBANDITS IMPRISON\nFAMILY IN CLOSBT\nLPS ANOELES, Feb. 9 \u2014Alter !_*-\nIng tlielr victim- Into a clooet at tla\npclnt of a sjun and then locking tho\ndoor two bandits rifled the apartment\nof James A. Koehl, attorney, and ea-\ncaped In an automobile wltb \u00bb40 ln\ncash uid three diamond rings valued\nat   11300.\nKoehl wa, at dinner with hia wife,\nhia son. Frederick, and hia brother,\nWilliam, when the robbers knocked on\nthe door, and announced thejf wlahed\nto talk  to Mrs   Koehl.    The attorney\n\"I   don't   want   to   live   If   I   can't   admitted them, whereupon they whlp-\namcntals In the art ot wrllin\u00ab advertising copy, or turning words and\nphrases Into dollars and cents, were\nrevealed by W. A. Holt, advartising\n.manager of Bullock's, in a discussion\nbefore the Los Angeles Advertising\nAssociation.\nHe wsas the guest ol honor at a\ndinner attended by representatives of\nmore than a d(\u00abten of the city's leading business concerns given ftt the\nMary   Louise   Tea   Room.\nThe first ewentlal of every advertisement, lf lt la to produce the desired results, Holt said, Is to trap the\neye. With that accomplished, the\nthat   the   text\nPEIPINO, Feb. 9.\u2014Abolition of exta-\nterritoriality, or foreign control over\ncertain stctlons of Chinese treaty ports,\nsuch as the Nsukjng government pro- ' second requirement\nP03es to bring about nddl another muat arouse the interest of the reader;\nxital political problem to those al- third, it must create a desire to buy\nready   encompassing   China. . and.   finally,   lt   must   crystallze   that\nThe   movement   against   extra-territ-   buying   Impulse     If   lt   meets   all   of\norlality, while lt originated some time   those    requirements,    any    advertlsilng\nls good, the speaker said.    J\nago, Is the climax of a year of Dol't\nleal unrest throughout the coun'\/\/.\nTho bright hopes of Chinese leaders,\nexpressed at the end of 1920, that \"the\nml tltry pwlod\" had ended, have not\nbeen realized aa one military group\nafter another has attempted to overthrow the government cf Nanking.\nI.IN..I II     f.MI.VS. KU\nlt  ls  merely  a   lot  of  wasted   words,\ntime and space.\nAdvertising methods mid theories\nhave undergone vast changes within\nthe last two decades. Holt said, and\nthe moderns who produce them are\na great deal smarter, since they understand the psydhology of salesmanship\nThe uuee^ng threat of renewed J*-\"-\u00a3g *_1T___ZZ2.\ncivil   war  within  China,  breaking  out   \u00a3'-_\u00a3,\n\u25a0nt      ltHiivimt_      ln*n     \u00ab.,.(in,l      -flnfHn.        lint       \"L    MH1U\nendar, by which not even the Judge\nknows what cases he Is to hear until\nthey are called In court according to\nJudge Turney.\nWILL PROVIDES\nRING LOTTERY\nNEW YORK. Feb. 9.\u2014Confronted by\na dilemma somewhat similar to the\nramous one ln which Solomon\nfound himself when two women claimed the same child, Mrs.\nHannah Cohen cf Brooklyn, who died\nOctober, last, deeded to let the blind\ngoddess of chance settle it.\nShe directed in her wtll, that her\nproperty be equally divided among\nher twelve children, but the property\nincluded a prize diamond ring, which\ncould not very well be partitioned. So\nshe specified that eleven of the twelve\nshould draw lots for it. the twelfth\nbeing excluded because shs had been\nRiven a  diamond brooch.\ndance\u2014but I'm going  to  dance\nHe danced again here, and gave\nthe wcrld another of those rare exhibitions of the curative powers of a\nbrtvve heart and the will  to win.\nHe danced with a youthful abandon\nthat belled the grey that has sifted\ninto his curly locks tn nearly 40\nyears  of  the footlight.\nNear the end of the play, Fred Stone\ntook the audience into his confidence.\n\"You can't learn another man's Job\nin 40 hours,\" he said. \"I thought I\ncould. I was stunting too near the\nground\u2014cockey, you know. When I\nwoke up I was In a plaster cast up to\nmy chest. I've been in come tough\ncasts before but this was the toughest.\nMy legs were hung from the ceilny\nso long I almost thought I was a\nchandelier.\n\"Don't think I'm knocking aviation.\nIt's here to stay\u2014so long as It stays\nup. I'd love to fly again (he stepped\nback and peered Into the wings) but\nthere are four good reasons why I\nshan't\u2014three of them on this stage\ntonight.\nThe \"reasons\" were Mrs. Stone and\nhis daughters, Dorothy, Paula and\nCarola.\nProbably the highlight of the evening came when Stone Introduced \"two\nnew dancing partners with whom I've\nbeen working in the hospital,\" With\nthe aid cf a pair of crutchei he did\na crutch tap dance, one of th? mc\u00ab\nrermarkable exhibitions of his dancinp\noareer.\nped out revolvers and commanded the\nfamily to step Into a closet. Turning\nthe key, they then ransacked the apart'\nment, found the money and rings and\nfled.\nThrowing his weight against tha\ndoor, Koehl later broke through lt\nand notified police. Detective Lieutenant Sauter of Wllshlre division le\ninvestigating,\nIn another hold-up a lone bandit\nobtained *W from a Clarence Saunders\nstoi-e at 1800 South Vermont avenue.\nWhile the dozen customers stood ln lin#\nbehind him waiting to pay for their\npurchasee, the robber leveled a gun\nat Theodore Ittner. cashier, and with\nhis other hand reached for the cash\ndrawer. He, too, escaped In a waiting\nautomobils.\nHigh  wind bkw   125-foot  eucalyptus\nT^e through Las Angeles house.\nRev. O. A. Dickson, poster of Kn^y.\nUnited church, Caltr.rv, has been.\nasked to take thc p-istotate of Dominion  United  chmrrt   Of*\u00abw\u00ab\nSimple Glycerin Mix\nStops Constipation\nThp gimnlc mixture of gllcerln, buck*\nt^nrn bark saline, etc., (Adlerika)\n--ts on BOTH upper and lower bowel,\n-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\"ieving constipation ln 2 hours,\nBr'irjs out nolsons you never thought\nw*\u00b0re in your system. Don't waste\ntime w'th pills or remedies that clean\n\u2022Bly PART of the bowels, but let\nAdJerfkn Rive your stomaoh and bow-\n\"ls a RFAL cleaning and see how good\nvou feel! Adlerika stops OAS bloutiof\nn   10  minutea!\u2014Mann  Rutherford  Co\u201e\nMrs. Helen Cooper, advertising manager of Van De Ramp's, and editor\nof  Advocation,   preceded   Holt  with\nCANARY BUYER'S\nat   intervals   into  actual   conflict.   ha<s\nbeen   enhanced   by   thc   danger   of   u\ndisastrous   International   conflict   with\nSoviet Russia since last July over the   history ofThe*'co^an7~with which'she\nChinese Eastern Railway ln Manchuria.   la   appelated\nThree n_aJor revolts against the Na- Mliid j^M Taylor, household spe-\ntlonaJM Government during the past cittii8t of the Uw Angeles Gas Company,\nyear 1 ave compelled leaders at Nan- also Bave lL urtef talk, polntlftg out\nking to spend  mest of their revenues   t!uit   her   company   has   increased   Its\n| on  warfare  which  they  had   intended   business     tremendously     by     helping\nWINGS   CLIPPER   for rtcoftetruotkm of the country. housewives   with   their   cooking   and\n*-.*j   vwu x __i__f      -^  additioo  l0  tUese  nVdiiX  revolts.   otner domestic problems.\nI there have been a dozen lesser anti-\ngovernmental movements In China, the\nmost berlous being the Communist\nmenace in the southern provinces and\nthe    Moslem    revolt    in   Kansu.\nIn spite of this constant battle fcr\nexistence, the Nationalist government,\nthrough the ministry of fcretgn affaire\nLOS ANGELES, Feb. 9. \u2014 Frank A.\nHaden, 44 years oi age wus lodged in\nthe city jail on suspicious of passing fictitious checks, following his offer of an acccrtedly worthless check\nin payment of four canary birds.\nHe   was   arrested   by   Detective-Lieutenants Wilson and Bketchley of West   -*t Nanking, has persisted in its deter\nlos Angeles division in an uviary op-   mlnatlon to abolish the unequal treat\ncrated by H. W. Mcintosh. According\nto the officers, Haden ha_ victimized proprietors of a number of bird\nrtoros by purchusinif leathered pets\nwith bogus checks. They assert he has\nused the names of A L. Manning and\nA.   Kirby.\nON WITH THE DANCE\nTHE   Friday   evening   dancing Junior shoot, his head:\nparty  was   the  week',  high \"Mechanical   musi*   is  fine   at\n.pot for the young folks of ii0me buf |, htl(n*t t|.e right kick\na certain \u2022mall country club.    A for a tlancc.\"\nfour-piece orchestra always sup- .T.L      . r. i i __-_i\nii   i   .      \u25a0    _i           _-i   u What ia true ol dancing must\nplied the rhythm until older mem- ,    \"imi.,    ,          ,    ,      _k\u201e,\u201e\n\u2022     i    _v       -j        _l  . be   caually   true   or   the   theatre.\nbcra    conceived    the    idea    that V*.!.\"'             LIID\nmechanical   muaic   would   serve Arc YOU getting YUUK money \u2022\nthe youngsters just as well\u2014and worth in thc theatre?\ncoat less. *\u25a0*\u25a0--\u25a0_\u00ab._\u2022*\u2022->.\u2022-\u2022\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u25a0-\u2022\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nAccordingly, a music machine AMERICAN FEDERATION OF MU-\n\u25a0wa. installed.     The plan worked SlClANS of th. U. S- and CANADA\nonce,   but   the   neat   Friday   the <,8tt *D\u00ab\u00ab.port Ri, Toronto, C.n_\u00abU\nlittle band triumphantly returned Cfii\u00abemcu:    Weaw   enroll   my\n... ,            r         * name in the Music Defense J-eagun\nte, the job. ,.., ime Wh(, d<>p1orr_ the elimination\n\u25a0'What's wrong wilh your new uf Wvlnc Music from the theatre\nl     \u25a0_\u00bb          r .l           i   j i*rogram,\nmuwc    box?      -a    lather   asked.\n\"Wouldn't ydu   rather danee   to     \u00ab0\"'\u00ab   \t\nWhite-man   aad   V\u00bbllee   records     aiAirfoa\t\n.haii to a tin-pan band?\" cit-j   atate\t\ni THE AMERICAN FEDERATION OF MUSICIANS\nOF THE UNITED STATES AND CANApA\nG. B. HENDERSON, Extcutiv- Oftinr fur C-nuda\n\\489 Davenport Road, Toronto, Can.d*.\nJOSEPH N. WEBER, Pr.ild.nt, 1440 Bro.-lw.y, Ntw York. N. Y.\nles, continuing the campaign begun\nln 1928. Early ln 1929 the Nationalist\ngt-vernment took over control of the\nChinese customs administration, which\nhad been dominated by foreigners since\nthe middle of  the  last  centurv\nMISSING BANK\nEiMPLOYEE HELD\nON BOARD SHIP\nNEW PREMIER\nHAS HOBBIES\nMADRID, Feb. 9.\u2014aen. Damoso Berenguer, new Spanish Premier, has two\nrecreational Interests, horses and music\nOne of his fln+t acts on becoming\nchief of the royal household military\nstaff, which post he relinquished to\nbecome Premier, was to reorganize the\nroyal   band.\nThe music of this organization previously had been that of brass instruments entirely, but Gen. Berenguer\nconvinced the King his method was\nmuch better ,so now it uses numy\nstringed   Instruments.\n 1 (\nLOS ANGELES, Feb. 9.\u2014Word was fl\nceived by As.st. U.8.-Atty. Layng that\nClaude Daniels, 24 years of sue, once\na book-keeper for the First National\nBank of Fresno, is under arrest on beard\na steamer bound Ior Liverpool. Eng. He\nis accused of embezzlement of abou'\n97000 of bank funds.\nAfter Dnnlels's disappearance on November 30, 1929, bank officials checnet'\nup and fcund, it le reported, a -lioitagc\nin his btoks. He was traced to Galveston, Tex. where he is said to have\nboarded the steamer for Liverpool. He\nls the son of a police officer at Fresno.\nTO BACK CLUB\nIN STATE LOOP\nStop Train to Hunt\nEngineer's Lost Specs\nMOBERLEY, Mo.. Feb 9.\u2014A last pair\nof spectacles caused V* abash rauroad'\nofficials to think they had lost a\ntrain, and caused thc train to lose\n35   minutes. I\nWhen his glasses fell off his nose\nD. W. McGlnuis, engineer of Wabash No. 3, thought he knew where\nthey had fallen. The train was re-j\nversed, and the engine crew aided (\nthe skipper in his search. They were,\njoined by the rest of thc crew and\nthe passengsrs.\nPattonsburg officials of the road,\nworried over their lost train, dispatched  searching parties.\nEngineer McOinnls succeeded in getting the train Into town without his\nglasses, 36 minutes late.\nLOS ANGELES, Feb. 9.\u2014J. Cal Ew.\nlug former owner of the Oakland club\nand candidate tot the Const League\npresidency ut the oemlng fall meeting,\nand Bob Miller, present prexy of the j\nOaks, stopped eff in Los Angeles to\npay a visit to Bill Lane. Hollywood\nboss. EwIiik and Miller anounced that\nthe Oaks had made arrangements tc\nhelp back the Phoenix club in the\nArizona Stute League during thc 1930\ncampaign.\nThe Acorns wUl turn over several,\nCf their young players to the Phoenix\noutfit, which is to be munugt'd by\nLouie Guisto, fcrmer Oakland first\nsacker. The Hollyood Stars will again\nback the Tucson Arizona State League\nteam, while the Angels will send their\nyoungsters*to the Blsbee club of the\nsame   circuit.\nSYDNEY. Australia, Feb. 9.\u2014A needle,\ntwo inches long, was ex_maed from\nthe body of Mlss Beryl Burt, aged 19,\na dressmaker, the* other day. Miss\nBurt collapsed at work. Doctors found\nthe needlo between the skin and the\nbreastbone about three Inches below\nthe throat. It had been floating ln\nher body for months.\nWOMAN   RLECTfJD\nLONDON. Feb. 9.\u2014\"Por tlie first time\nlu its history, a woman has been elect-,\nfid president this year of the Union'\nof University Liberal Societies. She\nis Miss Nan Rogers, of Glasgow University. The daughter of a banker,\nMiss Rogero was bom in Olasgow 33\nyears ago. She graduated M. A. In\nSeptember last year, end gained honors\nln economics. She also wou the Gladstone prize for distinction in economics\nthis being the first time the prize\nhnd  been  won  by  a woman.\n8t. Luke's Anglican church, ut Buy\nand St. Joseph streets, Toronto, i\u00bb\nto be demolished and the parish transferred to last York town-shin.\nA tip \u2666 a \u2666 from\nAndrew Carnegie\nAsked lo explain his phenomenal success, Andrew Carnegie\nblandly attributed it to his ability to get men to work for him\nwho knew more than he did.\nAnd that's a formula for success. Nobody who is really\nsuccessful does all the work himseif. He employs other people's\nminds and efforts.\nDo you do the same in the intricate business of running\nyour home and taking care of your family? You can, quite\neasily.\n...\nYou can employ specialists in diet; you can seTve the\nmaster dishes of famous chefs; you can have the advice of\nstyle authorities in selecting your clothes, of whole electrical\nlaboratories in buying household appliances, by reading thc\nadvertisements.\nAll the newest knowledge\u2014knowledge millions of dollars\nand years of effort have won\u2014is contained in the advertisements.\nIf you will use the advertisements in this paper as Andrew\nCarnegie used men who knew more than he did, every dollar\nyou spend will be spent wisely, economically, and will return\nfull measure of satisfaction. That's the way to be a success |n\nthe greatest business in the world\u2014making a home.\nIt pays to read the advertisements\n_\n __\u00a3\n_W\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   MONDAY MORNING, PEBRUARY 10, IMP\nKEENO\nA Splendid  Medicine\nStomach,   liver  and\n,   Bowels\n$1.25 PER B0TTLE\nMann. Rutherford\nCo.\nr\nElks Taxi Transfer\n_    \u00ab-T    UMattal    M-UU    In    N*_OD\n\u25a0Mar \u00bbnd NifM Mnlo\nBID   STEV-NS\nPhone 77\nVIC. GRAVES\nMaster Plumber\nIt years rracUtml Experience\nNELSON,  B.   C\nP. O, Bot Ut Phone ill\n0\nNIT the ten htet\n\u25a0alms-te ut sjwrt \u00abHik tar\nrow mm. \u2022_---_ Ute. in\nkeep emnettee _-\u00bb!_-\u00ab \u00ab nery\n_UR anal MMUilIt in ts-e\noptical prefesulea. ___,new Idea\nla last** and Hi s_KrtU teterm-\nIne*.\nJ. O. Patepuade\nOptometrM  and  Optician\nExpert   optical   nt-lt.\n'Weeks*\nBRIAK-UP-A-COLD  TABLETS\nrot G0M1. Cooetipatlon e\u2014t \u25a0aarlarha.\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription SpecUUtto\nWl Bakat Pb_M 1\n\"BOY BUILDING\"\nSUBJECT ADDRESS,\nP. H. SHEFFIED\nInspector of School* Speaks on\nFather and Son Program\nat Trinity\n44 TAXI AND\nTRANSFER\nPlneai Moan Cart m the Cltr\nOpen Day and Night\none 44 Box\nJunior HockeyTAn;*u\nLeague Game 10mie\nROSSLAND vs Nelson\nDoors Open 7 o'Clock Game Called 7:30\nAdmission Adults 40c Children 20c\nBRING YOUR SKATES \u2014 SKATING  AFTER GAME\nNOTICE.\u2014Tlrk\u00abB  from  Your  Nl_.tln\u00bb   Ticket  Book\nWill He (Itod at Thl- (_\u00bb\nr_j u\u00bbiiiu_______xti__\":::::.:\nNelson Business College\n|   Again Leads in Civil\nService Examinations\n921*3 Pass List\n|i\u00abi4...i.i i i3snng:g_-;*-ix*^^\n:::\nM\nI\ns__e:.-..\u00abn\nWe Sell\nFir, Larch, Cedar, Hemlock and White Pine\nLumber.\nWhite Pine Lath\u2014Red Cedar Shingles, Fir Moul.l-\ninfis, Roofing Felt, Tar Paper and Building Paper.\nWe Give Service\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\nTha Home of Good Lumber\nPhone 176 Stanley. St\n. _\nImpeotor P. H. Bbemeid. i*e\u00bbklin. lu\nconjunction with Ted Chsce. Kooteimy's\nrepreeent*tlve at the seventh annual\nolder boy's parliament, on the father\nand aon program at sTrt_Uty United\nchurch last night, chose as hto topic.\n\"The Romance ot Bui-din,: Boyhood*.\nSpeaking after Ted Chaoe had glr.\nen hl\u00bb report for the boy's parliament.\nMr Sheffield was emphatic that boy's\nwork was a valuable phase of education  tliat  should  not  be   neglected.\nTurning directly to his subject thc\nspeaker explained that he did not wish\nhis hearers to construe romance as\nsomething fantastic but rather something fascinating. Actually the matter\nof building boyhood could not be\nreckoned in dollars and cents but resulted in something Infinitely more\nsatisfying, ln addition \"good builders\"\nstay young fur they Invariably contract\na good deal of the spontanlety of the\nyouth tliat they are in contact with.\nI l  .mil-.   NOT  VNI.IKK  AKTIrtTK\nThe boy leader Is not unlike the\nartist who weawe Into his work something of his own personally. Tlie reward,  therefore  Is  In   tlie  product.\nMan U primarily a builder and down\nthrough the ages to the preeeut day\nhe lias been -struggling to conquer the\nforces of native- bending them to do\nhia wlH. As a result, we have modern\nadvancement in nil it* many phase*.\nThis ts actually the heritage of the\nrising (feneration of boys and girls.\nHence, these rULng youths must be\nequipped both physically, mentally and\nspiritually to bear the burden of a\ncomplicated and highly technical civilization.\nSocial growth.' It is admitted by so-\ncialoglsta .bt considerably behind industry ,ln Its advance, and thruogh education and proper education, wily,\ncan society oame Into'Its proper position\nKDLTATfOV l>EftM'l>\nEducation, for which various definitions have been devised, should not\nbe a mere amassing of facte but\nrather the gaining of an intelligent\ncontrol of conduct which has its ba__u\nln   elemental   education\nHabitual Ideals which controls con,\nduct can, and should be, developed\nthrough the medium of such org t*\\\nlzation*. as Canadian Standard Efficiency Training which subjects the\nboy or girl to training during the\nformative ported T.his training is\nentirely outsidp the organized school\nsystem.\nTot the same reason, athletics are\nbeing recognised as a decided asset In\nthe molding of character and conduct\nthat Is not derived within schoolroom\nwalls.\nDEVKLOP  SOCIAL\nrONscioi'HNKhS\nThe development of a social con-\nbclousne\u00ab, ln tlie rising generation\nwill oajry IU members a long way\ntlirough life. To make this consciousness possible loyaliUes must be developed, tint, to- the small group, and\nthen to tb* Iwg* group that may be\nclub, or country\nMr. Sheffield thought it would be a\nsplendid idea If all the children in\nthe Doml^on could be enrolled iu\nBorne sort of extra oarrlcular organization auoh ae the Tuxls or c O I T\ngroups. '.~~m,  a,\nIn conclualim Mr. She\/field was em-\nphattc that the clt___ri did not give,\nnearly enough support to the gw*__p\nleaders who were actually \"-woton \u00ab\nsociety\". This nwet certainly ahould\nbe done In order that when the ruing\ngeneration takes over the helm of the\nnation-i affairs they will be ably equipped to handle tha work that must\nnecessarily  fall  tbelr  lot\nSavoy Team Wins\nHoop Game From\nEx-Students Here\nIn a fast game of basketball played\nat the high school on Saturday night\nthe Savoy team defeated the eir-hlgfa\nsquad by a score of 86-25\nThe play was fast from the first\nwhlstl* to the last vlth the Savoy\nteam lust able to nose out the ex-\nstudents.\nThe teams were:\nSavoy\u2014W. Vance, L. Vance. H. Far-^\nenholtz, R. Burns, R. McLeod, A.\nKrenholta.\nHigh school\u2014R Horewili, l. Stewart.\nR Kirby, O, WaUaCh, C McLean, 8,\nMartin. \u00bb\nReferee\u2014T.  Arc ture.\nOntario Apples\nCheer Normandy\nChildren, Christinas\nTED CHASE GIVES\nADDRESS ON BOITS\nPARLIAMENT HERE\nKootenay Member Summarizes\nWork at Session; Speaks1'\nat Trinity\nTed Chaw Kootenay dletrlct repce.\nten-tin to the Older Boy. PMll\u00bb__nt\n?_d   at Victoria  earlier   I*  the  w\u00ab.\n\"n a ___ fluent *Mnm *w[mt\\\\\\-t\nS. eeeelooi- ot the parliament, before\nthJ Wregatloo ot Trinity United\nchurch  laat night.\nJIT pointed out that with thla yemfe\nslogan \"every parila-ientartan a ms\u00bb-\ntor\" neither th\u00bb form nor the sum of\nthe aeeslone wae ln any manner a\nmock   parliament.\nTurning directly to the aeialooa he\nexplained that after parliaments pro-\nceedure l\u00bbd been explained .the opening aeaalona of the Houae w\u00abe attended after the reply to the apeech\nfrom the throne, delivered by tlie Hon.\nW C Shelly, each representative made\nhis \"maiden speech\" In thla manner\neach mems-er became mote Intimate\nwith the fourfold development ot\nTuxls and Trail lunger worK ln other\ngroups.\nMICH   BIHINE8S   TRANSACTED\nThe buslnees seeslon of tbe houae\nIncluded the reaming ol ceruin new\nbills and the paaalng of sarowidmeM-\nto   bills   of   previous   yeara   .\n\"The Parliament act', given Ita flret\nand second reading, waa to detensnine\nthe various constituencies and also the\nrequirement* for votere and candidates for parliament. A new method at\nselecting the premier waa IntfOdu\/a\nIn the bill .In future three cpntldtte*\nwlU   be   elected   at   the   fin*)   caucus\nTORONTO, Ont., reb. 9. Delightful\nful tale of Ontsarto apples a.s id. found\ntheir way at Christmas Into the .good\ngraces of Normandy schrcl-chlldren Is\ntold by Mra Oeorge Hambleton. formerly of Ottawa, now of Arromanchee of the house and when the next peril* -\nwho wrttss back to the Ontario send-   ment convenes the members vote    for\nlight!\nOveralls\noutwear\no\u00abtfci*_cy\n8\nHeadlight work clothes are made for work and built\nfor wear. Absolutely guaranteed\u2014and you pay.no\nmore    than for the ordinary kind.\nOVERALLS AND\nJUMPERS\nfZ.75\nKHAKI   PANTS\nSnag   Proof\nf2.50 and f3.50\nGREY   FLANNEL\nSHIRTS, HEAVY\n?3.75\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nKHAKI FLANNEL\nSHIRTS\n83.50\nCHECK FLANNEL\nSHIRTS\n-93.75\nPlasterers' and\nCarpenters'\nOVERALLS\nf2.50  and *3.5\u00a9\ner  aa  follows:\n\"You have done quite a crusading\nwork here. My Uttle daughter told\nme 1 here were about 20 children\nln her school and t thought considering\nthe occasion we 'could spare that number from your box, alt hough even\nthen my niggardly aoul began to repent my promise, when I looked at\nthem.    But   when   we   got   to   school\nthe candidate who has done tbe beat\nwork   throughout   the   year.\nAn important bill brought before the\nhouse waa the Supply act. Tblp \u00bbU1\nset forth that lt waa neceeaary to ralee\nthe Bum of\u00bb4300 in the provtno-j, The\nobjective of the boy's work from*\nthrough the province for the year waa\nset at 13600 of which-West Kootenay\nis  to raise  |160.    The  speaker  tntlm\n37 red-cheeked  children  claimed   their | at\u20ac(] that to do this a bond campaign\nshare; the teacher and her daughter\ncounted no a child; 30 apples! Those\nIn the school went home and told\ntheir parents that they never had tasted such good apples.\n\"The enraged fathers and mothers,\ntouched to the quick, demanded to see\nthese marvelous fruits which came\nfrom beyond the seas. They also tasted and were convinced. Then I took\nsome to the Compte du Manoir, who ls\n\u25a0 delightful person and docs tapestry.\nHe was unwaed, but far from being\ndiscouraged claims that he is going\nto send for some shoots to graft on\nhis trees, I will tell you the progress\nof ycrur campaign to send sweetness\nand light In Normandy when I write\nagain. Some of the eaters are sullen,\naome are envious and some are filled\nwith a high resolve to outstrip us.\nI am still convinced that Canadian\napples are  the best   in  thc  world.\"\nhPMIAL\nACTON'S   REAL-TV--PARIAH.'Rtt\nKE8P  APRIL  10TII  FOK   Hull* Ill's\nHALE   Or  WORK. (IM*_)\nSHE'S 90 AND SHE'S\nACTIVE IN OSHAWA\nFloral dealgna. Plants, Flowers.   Qrlz-\ntelle'B and Kandyland. (12485)\nFOR    REWT-JTwo    room    furnished\nsuite.    Apply Ke^T apartments.    (12486)\nDaughters of England will meet  tonight at S o'o\u00abck.   initiation.    (12589)\nPiano   Instruction.    H.   Walpert,   of\nStutWwt, Oermany.    Gen Del,, Nelson.\n(12591)\nOTTAWA. Ont.. Feb. 9.\u2014To be 90\nyears old and stlii posstss all those\npowers ' of mind aad body, with\nwhich we are gifted in youth, is something that very few of us even dare\nto hope fur. but Mrs. Robert McLaughlin has attained this age and retained\nalong with It that something which\nfortunate people possess, of making\nthemselves everybody'^ friend. Every\nSunday morning sees her ln her pew\nat St. Andrew's church. She does\nher -own shopping down town, and ls\nver? fond of taking drives in her auto-\nUtobile..and.still goeti out to visit at\nthe home of her friends. She remembers anyone who is 1H or unfortunate and takes a great deal of\npleasure out of doln$ helpful things.\nIn the spring and summer anyone\npassing in the morning would find\nher In her garden, one of the best In\nthe  city.\nwould  be  Inaugurated.\n\"The World Brotherhood act'' ga-ve\nrise to some lively discussion and the\nKootenay representative had the honor\nor serving on the World Brotherhood\nhouse committee.\nLast but not least, in the eatlmatlo-\nof the speaker, was the \"Bible Stu^y\nand Test act\" which was, ln sub\nstance, that since the devotional sldi\nof the fourfold program was being\nmore or less neglected a standard ooum\nof bible study with bible study tests\nbe Issued to groups concerned\nRESOLVTIONH  ARE  ADOPTKD\nCertain resolutions adopted by th**\nhouse dealt with various phases of\nthe boy's wark A national athletic\nmeet in the spring was favpred and\nthe range of events decided upon. The\nmembers of parliament will, ln th\u00ab near\nfuture, approach ex-membei*s w*ho are\nnow in college and determine waether,\nor not these individuals wish to maintain connections with the Tuxls wont.\nTral Rangers. Tuxls and leader's camp-;\nwill be held at various points in the\nprovince during the coming seaaon.\nj For the information of the congregation the youthful speaker statad that a\nfull time secretary of boy's work had\n\u25a0 been Installed and would In future\nbe at the service groups and indtvld-\nI  Hi) Is.\nKF.l.ATM   INTKKKSTINO   FACTS\n| Among the other interesting facts\nthat he related were, that: 333 boya\nhad competed  In the national athletic\n' meet ;four district and provincial\ncamps were held last year with 150\nboys In attendance; a provincial supply\ndepot of books and literature is main.\nLulned on a non-profit basis for boys\nand leaders; 45 boys from all parts\nof the province met In thjC seventh\nannual   boy's   parliament;   3680   Trail\nRangers and Tuxls boys ln 233 organised groups are Joined ln a fellowship\nof christian youth . throughout the\nprovince.\nTad paid tribute to the hospitality\ntendered the various representatives\nby the people of Victoria, and ln conclusion solicited the support of the\ncongregation in the work of \"building\nboya\".\nIn conclusion Rev. W. C. Mawhinney\nextended the appreciation of tbe congregation to the youthful parliamentarian who had delivered his address in\nsuch an impressive manner.\nCity Drug Co.\nNBmON'S      DISPENSING      CHEMISTS\nr*\/hn\u00ab,   \u25a0____   Drop,   sutlomn\nMali orden spromttu dl_____4\n'Come I. mn\u00ab \u00abH J\u00bb _35tSi.\nBWX  10SS   NELSON,  ft  (J.   PHONI  M\nPRESBHER1AN     '\nC. G. L T. GROUP\nHOLBOANQUET\nRecognizes  Tenth  Anniversary\nof the C. G. I. T.\nMovement\nTtoot markers for the guidance ol\naviators have been provided by more\nthan 8000 towns ot between 1000 and\n10,000 population ln the United States.\nFree  shampoo  with   every   cut   and'\nmarcal   or   finger   wave   each   Mondav\nMA Tuep\u00abUjr during February.   <is_586)\nSPECIAL    MEETIM.     OF    WOMEN'S\nAUXILIARY   TO   SCOUTS    AND   CUBS\nftah\nw\nToMOHHOW, TITS-\n(ION)\nCARD   OF   THANKS\nGAS\none in\nNelson\nLSUiU    I\n_-\nCan enjoy the advantages of gas for cooking but IF\nYOU ARE ON A STREET EQUIPPED WITH GAS\nMAINS phone 87, the City Gas Works, and learn how\neasily you can have a new style gas range installed\n_nd Uspon what eaay terms   of payment.\nMrs. A. Pfeiffer and family wish to\nth__c inftr frlendh for kindness and\nsympathy 10 tlwlr recent bereavement\nand tot lite flaw tribute-.       (lam)\nt'AW>   OF   THANKS\nWe wish to than- sail our friends for\nkindness and sympathy during the\nIllness and death of our wife and\nmother. Also for the beautiful floral\ntributes.    T.  B.  Hawes  and  family.\n(1.600)\n-COMING-\nTHURSDAY\n(Positively the most joy-\neous spectacle ever filmed.\n23ST-AJ55    #\nAND CHORUS OF\nThe C.O.I.T. group of the First\nPresbyterian church entertained their\nmothers at the celebration of the s tenth\nanniversary of C.O.I.T., on Friday night.\nBetty Olmes welcomed the guests\nln an apt speech sifter wwen dinner\nws\u00ab  servea.\nMrs. W. O. Mills, who acted as\ntoasts-mistrals called for toasts. The\ntoast to the king was proposed by\nMn. B. -\u2022 Oliver and on* \"to the\ntenth   sannlvereary\"   by   Mlss   Florence\nKaona.\n_l the Impressive cerenwny which\nloUowed Mn. R. L. Oliver who presented tbe Christian flag, enfolded ln\nthe Union Jack, to the girls stresssed\nthe ttuee saalient points, purity, cour-\nage and loyalty. The girls rose to the\nsalute pledging tbelr allegiance.\nThe candle lighting ceremony was\ncarried out by Mrs. Mills, assisted by\nfour sglrls, Mary Wlnlaw, Betty Orlmes,\nPhyllis Crray, Mary Heddle. \"Follow\nthe Gleam'* and \"Just as I Am\", sung\ntn the low candlelight, the benediction\npronounoed by Rev. J. Sutherland,\nthen  \"tape\",   concluded  the   ceremony.\nCataract\nNeglect of the eyes is\none of the chief causes.\nHave   your  eyes   attended to regularly, during life, that you might\nretain good clear vi\u00bbion   \u2022\nin old age.\nJ.A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nQrlffm Block phone  us\nHunter Electric\n& Plumbing\nPlumbing and electrical\nwork in all its branches.\nAsk about the SIMPLICITY DISH WASHER,\nPrice $36.00. The greatest boom to housewives\never invented.\nPhone sso\n4NOTHEB OOO l.TIME\nMilitary Whltt and danee at tbe\nCatholic Hall, auspices of K. of c.\nTuesday, FebnUtry ll. 8:16. Dancing\nat 10. Kootenay Melodlan Orchestra.\nRefreehnwoU.    Tickets 60c.        (125_)\nCIII'HCH   OK   BEOEEMER,   FAIRVIEW\nThe Rural Deanery of Nelson will meet\nin F_rvtew on Tueeday and Wtxtosefriay.\nHoly communion on Tuesday and Wed-\nusday h o-efock. Choral evensong\nand sermon Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Preacher\nRev. n7u. B. Larmonth. Rural Dean.\nALL WIU. BE CORWALLY WELCOME\nAT   THE_fc   SBWICES. (12H\u00bb3l\n\u2014The City of Nelson\non   I\nPYREX\nTransparent \u2014 \u2014\nmm \u2014 Oven Dishes\nPYREX is the most lasting baking dish ever\nmade. It never chips, flakes or rusts after years\nof use.\nPYREX saves fuel, food and labor.\nTry a piece or two and be convinced.\nWood; Vallance Hardware\nCompany.     United\nWHOLESALE    Nelson. B. C    RETAIL\nMercury\nThe   Wonder  Coal\nLumps and Stove Size\nWood All Lengths\nat reasonable prices\nCall 797\nRen wicks\nTransfer Go.\nB. C. Plumbing &\n' Heating Co.\nAgents for\n4LBKBTA  CLAY PRODUCTS\nIIWU inix  DBAIN  TILE\nm Baker St Nelson, a C.\n?*Mprta.ir\\tnervt\n-i_^rtaii\\iu\ntONIGHt\n7 AMD 9\nT_^rte.ii\\niei\\1\nDaveyLee\nSonny Boy, the wonder child of \"The Singing Fool,\" in his first\nbig starring picture.\n\"Sonny\nHeading the supporting cast   are  EDWARD EVERETT H0R-\nTON and BETTY BR0NS0N.-\n\"Sonny Boy\" is a comedy-dra ma, lots of laughs and no tears.\nExtra Attractions\u2014Tw o Knockout Comedies\nLAUREL AND HARDY\nYou Know 'Em, Folks, Thi s Is Their Funniest Comedy\n\"The Night Owls\"\nHere's Another Riot\n\"The Dancing Gob\"\nYou Have a Treat in Stow for You.    Get Down Tonight Sure.\nComing Thursday, Friday and\nSaturday, 'The Hollywood Revue\";\nmost gorgeous spectacle, greatest\nvaudeville, ever filmed.\nTwo Matinee Shows Wednesday,\n2:30 and 4 p.m. to enable .school\nchildren to attend.      '\ns\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1930_02_10","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0403896","@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":"1930-02-10 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1930-02-10 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\/1.0403896"}