{"@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":"2021-11-19","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1931-03-06","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404078\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Camera Gains lO-RoundDecision\nOver Jim Maloney\n\u2014Page Seven\nthm M&ilu Ifapg\nVancouver Regains First Plaa\nin Coast League\n\u2014Page Seven\nVOL. 29.\nNELSON, B. Cs,  FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1931.\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNo. 271\nINCOME 7\nf\u00bbo>,_<\u00bb\u00bba,\n*rsl,'\nFOR EVERYONE\nSmelter Fumes Damage Placed at $350,000,JONES BUDGET HAS\nSURPRISING FACTS\nJOINT COMMISSION|Killed in Machine, Bonnington\nGIVES A DECISION\n.Recommends  Consolidated Continue  Fume\nElimination\nREPORT GIVEN\nUNANIMOUSLY\nfirst Question of Kind to\nBe Put Before the\nCommission\nOTTAWA, Ont., March 5. \u2014\n<CP)\u2014 The International Joint\ncommission has fixed (350,000\naa the amount of compensation\nto he psild for damage caused\nbr fumes from the Trail sraelt-\ner of the Consolidated Mining\ntb Smelting company. This\namonnt ls to cover damage\ncaused during the paat years,\nand   up  to the  close of  1931.\nIn addition, the commission\nrecommends that the company\ncarry out the project entered\nInto two years ago for the elimination at sulphur dioxide from\nthe atmosphere so as to prevent damage south of tbe Internationa)   line.\n\"Thla project, which la nearlng\nsompletlon.\" stated a summary of\nthe commission's report handed out\nby the department of external affairs today, \"Involves the uae of\nsulphur dioxide conversion into stil-\nphuric acid and its utilization ln\nthe manufacture of fertiliser. The\nplants that ark at present nearlng\ncompletion involve an expenditure\nof approximately (10.000,000, and\nthla action by the company has\nmet with the approval, not only of\nthe experts wbo investigated the\nmatter, but* also of the commission.\"\nRECOMMENDS\nSUPERVISION\nThe report also recommends supervision by the two governments,\nand measures providing for compensation If any damage ls occasioned   in   the   future.\nThe report, which has been filed\nwith the Canadian and the United\nStates governments, ls unanimous.\nReference of the Trail smelter difficulty was made under Article 9\nof the boundary waters treaty,\nwhich provided for a reference by\ncither government of any question\nor matter of difference arising along\nthe common boundary. This la the\nfirst question which has ever been\nsubmitted to the commission that\ndoes not deal with boundary witters.\nTbe TraU smelter difficulty is\none of years* standing. An increase\nIn the operations of this smelter\nsome years ago resulted in the\nemission of larger amounts of sulphur dioxide fumes. \"These fumes.\"\naccording to the official summary,\n\"owing to the peculiar formation\nof the Columbia river valley, drifted\ndown   the   river   across   the   boun-\nDamage   Assessment   of\n$350,000 Is a Big Surprise\nS. G. BLAYLOCK HAS\nNOTHING TO SAY\nMany Thousands Already\nSpent in Settling of\nClaims\n8. O. Blaylock, vice-president\nand general manager of the\nConsolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, when\ncalled up at Trail by long distance telephone Thursday evening and nude acquainted with\nthe finding of the International Joint commission. In the\nmatter of smoke damage from\nTrail smelter, was much Interested In the news, but declined\nto   make   any   comment.\nSo far as this district goes,\nthere will be general surprise\nat the large assessment of the\ndamage, S350,00fl, as It Is no\nsecret that the experts appointed by the commission Itself, one Canadian and one\nAmerican, found that ttie damage sustained In Stevens county,\nWashington, was of a very minor character. The claimants In\nthat area have been generally\nregarded aa \"smoke farmers,\"\nrealize ' from damage claims\nwtuttr Hhetr Impoverished lands\nfailed to yield. The Northport,\nWash., preliminary hearing a\ncouple of years ago was featured\nby many bizarre claims, such as\nthat live stock would not breed,\nand that the general health or\ntbe inhabitants had been Impaired, one individual describing\nhow he had attempted to do\nhis plowing while wearing a\nga<j   mask.\nThe   records   show   that   as   soon\nas there were complaints from 8tev-\n(Continned   on . Page   Five)\nBEATEN WITH A\nREVOLVER, GIVES\nUP $51 IN CASH\nVANCOUVER, March 6\u2014Bludgeoned into submission by blows from a\nrevolver butt, Dr. J. E. Spaniel-..\nphysician, of 1360 Mint Crescent,\nyielded 151 in cash, a gold watch\nand a valuable ring to a thug who\nattack him ln hts consulting room\nMain  street,   tonight.\nDr. Spankie told police officers\nthat from the excited manner in\nwhloh his ass.ilant acted, he believed htm to be a dope fiend. He\nWas able to give a fairly complete\ndescription  of   the  man.\nLONDONERS WILL\nCAST TWO VOTES\nLONDON, March S   (AP)\u2014Business\nI men ot the city of London, wlll\ncontinue to cast two votes per man\nIn recognition of their work and\ntraditions.\nThe house of commons In committee today continued discussion\nat the electoral reform bill, after\napproving the alternative vote principle lsst night and settled clauses\ndesigned to eliminate double voting\nby business men in residence and\nbusiness   constituencies.\nA clause was adopted which shear-\nled that right from all constituencies\nexoept the city, hence the financiers\nWho Inhabit tbat area will continue\nto vote both here and in their\nhome districts. Two - members of\nparliament are  elected  by  the  city,\nI CAPTAIN   COPPER  IS\nCONSERVATIVE   CHOICE   TO    RUN\ni,ONDON.. March 6 (O P cable)\nCaptain Alfred Duff Copper, well\nknown ln society and a prominent\nyoung Conservative, wu today nominated as official Conservative can\ndtdate ln the approaching by-election In fashionable St. George')\n\u25a0Westminster. A\n(Continued  on  Page   10)\nBLACK'S PLAN\nWOULD SAVE A\nHALF MILLION\nChairman  of  Committee  ot\nDirection Gives Salient\nFeatures  of  Scheme\nOAKALLA JAIL\nBREAK BISGEST\nSENSATION YET\nPair of Holdup Men Cow\nGuards With Their\nRevolvers\nSTILL AT LARGE\nLATE AT NIGHT\nUse Two Automobiles to\nMake Good Their\nEscape\nVANCOUVER, March  S\u2014Fraser\nMcDougall, 25, diminutive holdup   man,  and   Ellis   Wilcox,   21,\na lanky youth who Is also facing trial In the assize court on\nhold-up    charges,    made    their\nescape from Oakalla prison farm\ntonight   after   the   most   sensational Jell break In  the history\nof   Vancouver   criminal   annals.\nMcTXagall    and    Wilcox,    returned  to Oakalla  shortly  after\n7 p.m., after having appeared In\nassize  oourt  in  Vancouver  during  the day,  suddenly  whipped\nrevolvers from  their  pockets as\nthey    were    being    escorted    to\ntheir    cells.    They    cowed    two\nguards    fn    the    prison    office,\ncompelled   them   to  lie   on   the\nfloor   while    they    held    up   a\nVictoria   pMce   officer,   an   Incoming  prisoner  and   a  taxlcab\ndriver, and  then  compelled  the\ntaxi    driver,    under    tbreat    of\ntheir   revolvers,   to   drive   them\nback into Vancouver.\nBack  ln  the city,  McDougall and\nWilcox quitted the taxlcab ln which\nthey had escaped In the vicinity of\nFirst    avenue    and    Semi In    drive,\nvanishing ln another machine. And,\ndespite the cordon of police thrown\nabout the district,   the   two daring\nthugs were still  at large  at a late\nhour tonight.\nPOLICE   COMBING   CITV\nPolice posses are still combing the\ncity   for   tte   desperate   pair,   while\nVICTORIA, March 6\u2014Half a mil\nlion dollars annually would be\nsaved to t:e orchardists and vegetable growers of \"British Columbia\nby inauguration of central selling,\nP. M. Black, chairman of the com*\nrnlttee of direction under the Produce Marketing act, today assured\nthe agriculture committee of the\nlegislature, when explaining the\nterms of the new scheme to aid the\nfarmers of the interior in marketing\ntheir crops. While the Marketing\nact had been of some aid no progress had been made under its\nterms toward settlement of problems. Overhead charges borne by\nthe fruit Industry tad been staggering tn the aggregate, he said,\nthe cost being estimated last year\nat   1878.310.\nHe presented a chart of shipments made ln 1929, which showed\n3650 carloads of fruit end vegetables to have been handled by the\nAssociated Orowera, while independents between them bid slightly less.\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nCERRO RETURNED\nTO OLD POSITION\nAT HEAD OF PERU\nLoyal Troops Dispose Military\nJunto at Lima and Reestablish -Leader\nEXTRAVAGANCE\nIN AUSTRALIA\nILLUSTRATED\nCANBERRA, Australia, March 6.\n(0. P. Cable via Reuters)\u2014The fact\nthat Australia has motor cars worth\n$1,000,000,000. and that 643 race\nmeetings were held ln Victoria state\nalone last year, were cited as examples of national extravagance in\nthe report of the auditor-general\ntoday. Stating that a million workers do not pay Income tax. the\nreport suggests a reduction ln the\nexemption  figures.\nAPPROVE ENQUIRY\nINTO ECONOMICS\nWESTERN CANADA\nREGINA, Sask., March 6\u2014Unanimous approval was given by the\nSaskatchewan leglslture, today, to\nan amended resolution urging the\ngovernment to ask Ottawa to establish without delay a commission\nto investigate conditions ln western\nCanada, and that meanwhile the\ngovernment should call a further\ndebtor and creditor conference for\nthe purpose of finding some way of\nreadjusting indebtedness in this\nprovince. ^^^^^\nLIMA, Peru, March 5. (AP)\u2014\nLleut.-CoL Lois M. Sanchez\nCerro returned to the government house tonight after troops\nloyal to him deposed a military\nJunta that forced Sanchez or-\nro   out   of   office   Sunday.\nApparently all troops In the\nLima garrison supported this\ncoup by Lteut.-CoI. Tlustavo\nJiminez, a. loyal follower of\nHanchez Cerro. Jlntlnez returned\ntoday with a division of troops\nwhich started southward last\nweek to crush a rebellion at\nArequipa but were held back by\nthe navy which forced Sanchez\nCerro  out.\nJiminez and his men landed at\nCallao this morning from the\nsteamers Rlmao and Apurtmac and\nmarched to the capital by the high\nroad   connecting   the   two   cities.\nAt first there wae no sign that\na coup impended, but when the\ntroops reached their barracks In\nLima they began to occupy strategic points, and at 7:10 p. m.\nJiminez took over the government\nhouse, forcing out the three-man\nJunta, which had ruled only five\ndays.\nVANCOUVER M. P.\nSAVES HIMSELF\nA JAIL TERM\nVANCOUVER, B. C, March B.\nSettlement hae been made by Wilfrid P. Hanbury, M. P. for Burrard,\nof a $217 Judgment obtained against\nhim in county court by John Greed,\nhouse decorator, it ls announced.\nNo steps wlll, therefore, be taken\nunder \u00bbn order by Judge H. D.\nRuggles committing the defendant\nto  jail  for  10  days.\nAlthough tbe order was made, It\nhad not been executed, and the\ndefendant's parliamentary immunity\nprotected him from the process for\na considerable time before and after the approaching session of the\nhouse of  commons.\nMARY PICKPOJRD LENDS A HAND\nAID!) RED  (BOSS  TO  Kill H,\\ 1.   HI H FK1M,\nMary Plckford, Canada's best known representative at Hollywood,\nCalif., la seen here packing a box of oranges to be sent with a donation\nof six caaes of the fruit of tht sunny south made by California grower.-.\nto the Red Cross for relief in the drought regions of the United States.\n0. B. GODFREY\nA PIT WORKER\nDIES ON SHAFT\nIs Drawn Into Machinery\nWhen Coat Catches\non Set-Screw\nBODY UPON SHAFT\nSTOPS THE PLANT\nAccident Not Witnessed;\nJury Finds Death Is\nAccidental\nMOSUVS NEW PARTY LAUNCHED BY\nLADY CYNTHIA MOSLEY IN A STORM\nOF VICIOUS SOCIALIST HECKLING\nBURKE PLANE\nMISSING FOR\nSECOND TIME\nBURNS LAKE, B. C, March\n5.\u2014No word has been received\nof the tliree Vancouver airmen,\nR. I. Van der Byl, W. A. Joerss\nand Emit Kadlng, who left Telegraph Creek on Saturday for\nBurns Lake in I he w I vagtri\nplane of the late Captain i J.\nA,   Burke.\nWord from Telegraph Creek\nIndicates that their lat>t word*\nbefore taking off were: \"Don't\nworry tf we are two or three\ndayg  overdue.\"\nPaul Peen of Ha\/el ton reported that late Saturday afternoon\nhe saw a plane eroding Mne-\nMtle mountain, north of that\ncity.\nThe airmen, who are on thetr\nway to Vancouver, expected to\nmake the flight from Telegraph\nCreek to Burns Lake In three\nor four hours.\nINDIA RESTING\nON HER OARS\nFOR NEXT MOVE\nNEW DELHI, India, March 5\u2014\n(AP)\u2014Terms on which lt ls hoped\nto bring peace to India's restless\nmillions were made pubitc today,\nbut the way to this goal was still\nfraught with by-paths of dissension.\nMahatma Oandhl, Nationalist\nleader, ordered the termination of\nthe civil disobedience campaign and\nLord Irwin, viceroy, moved to revoke the statutes against those who\nwaged It, pending the next turn of\nthe   wheel   of  India's fate. ,\nResults of tedious negotiations\nformed a basis upon which leaders\nln India hope ln the future to\nreach #\u00bba accord, definitely ending\nthe restlessness which has surged\nlike   a  scourge   through   India.\nLady Mosley Makes Spirited\nAddress in Absence of\nSick Husband\nMOSLEY'S ACCUSED\nOF BEING TRAITORS\nSpeech Sounds Danger to the\nEnglish of \"Going Under\"\nUnless Change Made\nItfA body wrapped around the\nthaft In the separator plant\nof the Went Kootenay Power &\nLight rmniHiuVt, gravel pit at\nUpper Bonnlngton, In consequence of his macktnaw clothing catching In a set-screw on\nthe collar of the revolving shaft,\nOliver Baker Uodfrey, aged 10\nyears, of the company's con-\nKtructton force In connection\nwith the Corra Llun power development, was killed Thursday\nmorning about 3:45 o'clock, and\nundoubtedly his death was In-\"\nMitiihtneous. (.ravel won being\nM-reeni'd for an early morning\niraiiilii.nl for the concrete mixing  plant at  Corra  Linn.\nA workman shovelling gravel\nhi a bin below observed amnke\nturning irom ,i mot**., and In-\n.ttatlgaijJo.i revealed that tbe\nmotor Wets smoking because tbe\nniai'hlnery had stopped- A pair\nor less sticklnr up from the\nmachinery gave the clue to the\ntragedy, and the body was\nfound wedged, head downward,\nbetween the machinery and a\ntimber. \\ fractured skull, In\n.iiiiftiiimi to crushed cheat, was\nevidence that death h*w HHlck.\nPKOBABLV (.REAMING\nHAFT\nNear the body was I can of\ngrease on the platform, and it ts\nconjectured  that  young  Qodfrey was\nLONDON, March .T (By George\nHum hip Inn, Canad Ian Pre** staff\ncorrespondent) \u2014 \u00abir Oswald\nMoslry'H new parly was launcli-\nrd tonight in a storm. The\n.Meny<rlul hall, of many traditions, was jammed. There was\nan overflow meeting In another\nhall. The crowd waited in Far-\nrlngton street outside. But\nneither sir Oswalt, himself, nor\nW. J. Brown, M. P., a follower,\nwho was billed as one of the\nprincipal speaker.*, uu* their.\nBoth were down with plcurl>j.\nAnd lt was l.arl> Cynthia\nMosley, daughter of a marquis\n\u2014the able and haughty CmcQ\n\u2014who played Jlier husband's\ntitle role and faced a flood of\nhocialtst heckling, which, in the\nwords of the chairman, threatened to turn the meeting Into\na   beer   garden.\nAgainst it all I>*cly Cynthia made\na gallant fight and at the end, waa\nwarmly cheered. But some of the\nshots from tho audience struck\nhard.\n\"How- dare you?\" sho shouted\nback as one heckler called out \"sob\n(Continued  on Page   10)\nOTTAWA, Ont., March 8.\u2014(CP)\u2014\nExpenditures totalling $26,365,000\nwere made by the department of\npublic works ln the fiscal year end.\ning March 31, 1930, it was revealed ln the annual report issued\ntoday. This was an Increase of\n16,674.000 over the previous vear.\nAt the same time, the departmental\nrevenue was 1663,600, an increase ot\n$23,100.\nReiwdies    Arc    Drasticf Every Citizen Must Pay\nEconomy,  More Tax of One Per\nTaxation Cent\nPENETRATING\nREVIEW GIVEN\nARE BUT FEW\nEXEMPTIONS\nDepartment Expenses to1 No   Allowance   for   De-\nBe Cut But Not the   j     pendents or Other\nSalaries Expense\nVICTORIA, March 3.\u2014British |\nColumbia sluce tlie wat lias i\nbeen living far beyond lis Income, piling on deficit., and\nborrowing to pay running Mb*\npensex, until the time haft come\nwhen It must, rebuild Its financial structure from the ground\nup.\nThis was lhe blunt and bold\nwarning given to the people of\nthe province by lion. J. V,.\nJones, minister of finance, In\nhis budget speech here today.\nAfter showing the legislature\nthe facts of the situation\u2014\nfacta which will startle every\nBritish Columbian\u2014Mr. Jones\nprescribed two remedies both\nunpleasant, which must be\ntaken. These are drastic economy with no expenditures hut\nthose absolutely necessary; and,\nsecond, an Increase In revenue\nwhich he proposes to gft by\nnew  taxation.\nT0 support the verdict which he\nhas reached since he took over the\nfinance portfolio, Mr. Jones gave\nthe house the most penetrating review of provincial financing which\nIt hae heard In recent 'times\u2014a,\nstory of constantly increasing ex.\npenditure without any correspond,\nlng increase ln revenue; of des>\nperate borrowing* to make up rur-\nrent   shortages    and    of    resulting\n(Continued    on   Page   Two)\n(Continued   on   Page  Three >\nTRAIL THEATER\nFIGURES IN THE\nMOVILENQUIRY\nCopy of Telegram    Advising\nDistribution Films to Be\nSubmitted, East\nVICTOBIA, B. C March 5.\u2014\nBvery rltizen or Bullish Columbia wM! be required lu future\nto pay i per cent of bis or\nher total Income Into the provincial treasury, in addition to\nall existing taxes, so tbat this\nprovince may meet its bills as\nIt goes. Instead or borrowing,\nii nd m I hat land may be relieved of an intolerable l\u00abx-\niition   burden.\nThis, In brief, ts the Tolmlo\ngovernment's .solution of the\npresent acute provincial taxation problem, as revealed to the\nli-SfMiitur? today by Hon. .1. W.\nJones, ml nisi ter of finance. In\nhis first budget, the most Important budget by far of reoent\ntimes. It provides by 1 he new\nuniversal (Income tax an extra\nrevenue of 12,300,000 * year, of\nwhich gMO.Oftfl wlU be used to\nreduce land taxation for school\npurposes In all parts or the\nprovinoe. This latter amount\nmill be applied to Increasing\nlhe government's prewnt grants\ntoward teachers' salaries both I*\nmunicipalities and In rural\nschool district*. It will be for\nthe municipalities and school\ndistricts to see that it l.s not\nsquandered, but artnallv used\nto relieve land owners.\nThe remainder of the tux. estimated for tbe next fiscal year at.\n$2,000,000, ls needed   to  close   up a\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nRESIGNATION OF\nFIVE M.P.P\/S IN\nVANCOUVER ASKED\nINVESTIGATION\nINTO NEWSPRINT\nINDUSTRY WANTED\nTORONTO, Ont., March 5. (CP)\u2014\nDemanding government investigation\nInto the constitution and activities\nof the Newsprint Institute of Canada, Major-Oeneral Donald M. Hogarth, Conservative, Port Arthur, today In the legislature charged $25,-\n000,000 worth ot newsprint business\nhad been lost to Ontario and could\nbe regained. He urged immediate\nKtepe to regain this business and\nto divide tt equally among the\nmills of northern Ontario ln order\nto give  employment.\nOPTION ON PIER\nGRANTED, COAST\nVANCOUVER. B. C. March 5.\u2014A\n90-day option tor the erection of\na pleasure pier at the east end of\nEnglish Bay beach was granted by\nthe park board this afternoon to\nWilliam Lyon MacKeniile and associates,   of   Vancouver.\nWhether a pier will be built, depends on whether the park board\nlu satisfied with the plans of the\npier company. At the regular board\nmeeting, next Thursday, Mr. MacKenzie will submit preliminary\nplana, and ln the meantime he and\nhis engineers wlll confer with the\nmembers of tbe board and the\nboard's experts,\nBudget Highlights\nUniversal   tax  of   1   per   cent,  on?1\nall incomes In addition to alt exist.\nlng   taxes   is   Imposed.\nNew levy will aid municipalities\nand   relieve   land   holders.\nBritish Columbia expects to spend\n$28,080,030 ln the next flcal year\nand \u2022 take in $28,086,686. leaving\nan  estimated  surplua of  $8665.\nWhile estimates for the next\nyear are $7815 greater than ihoee\nfor tho last year, they are about\n$2,000,000 below actual current expenditures.\nNew loana in tbe next fiscal year\nwill total only $6,000,000, the small- I\nest amount ln recent years of which\nbut $2,650,000 wlll be for road\nconstruction and $2,000,000 to repay\nthe pgssent years deficits, largely\non  unemployment relief. ,\nThe provincial public debt at-\nNovember last wae $130,274,161 and\nincreased at the rate of more\nthan $1,000,000 a month in the\nlast  year.\nIn six years British Columbia has\nIncreased Its annual expenditures\nby $6,320,000 or 81.3 'per cent,\nAnnual fixed charges on the\nPaclflo Oreat Eastern railway now\namount to $1,040,789.\nIn tbe last year the government\nhad no control whatever over 76.7\nper oent of he expenditures.\nThe present revenues of the province can not yield. more than\n$24,750,000 but the province has\nto pay $22,070,000 ln fixed charges\nand $6,000,000 for ordinary running expenses. Hence Increased\ntaxation to close up thc gap.\nThe    coet    of    the    government\nwas $40.34 . per capita last year\nas against $21.17 in 1916, an increase of 90.4 per cent, while the\npopulation increased only 38 per\ncent.\nReflecting general economic conditions, revenues of the government dropped to the amount of\n$872,000 In the first nine months\nof the present fiscal year below\nthe income of a similar period a\nyear  ago.\nThe last budget of the former\nLiberal government is alleged to\nhave misinformed the public to tho\namount of $4,000,000 by padding\nrevenue estimates and reducing\nexpenditure   estimates,\nAssets of the province Increased\n$12,967,889 In the last year and\nwere worth $169,205,069 at the end\nof   March   1930. ^^-u\nTORONTO, Ont., March 5. (CP)\u2014\nSubmission of a copy of a telegram advising thc distribution manager of Fox Films to offer pictures to thc Rlalto theater, Trail\nB. 0.i as \"It would be good evidence 1n case of a government Investigation.\" was the highlight of\ntoday's hearing of the motion plc-\nUjm Investigation conducted by\nPeter White, K.C, commissioner.\nThe telegram was Introduced by\nB. H. L. Symes, counsel for thc\nregistrar under the Combines Investigation act, while J. P. O'Lough-\nlln, Canadian distribution manager\nof Fox Films corporation, was on\ntho stand. O'Loughlln admitted\nthe manager of the Rialto had\ncomplained lie was being rlismrn-\nInated against.\nOPTRA IS GOOD\nEVIDRNCE\n\"Col. Cooper (Col, John A. Cooper, president of the Motion Plr-\nturo Distributors of Canada) says\nthat the offer would be good evidence In case of a government, investigation,\" tlie telegram concluded.\nMr. O'Loughlln commehted that the\ntelegram was from his secretary. He\ndid not know, he said, how the\nreference to Col. Cooper had happened   to  be  made.\nProtection is absolutely essential to the iii in industry, for the\nproper conduct and the future of\nthe business,\" stated O'Loughlln.\nFlat rental was preferred by small\ntheaters, he said, pointing out that\nunder an equal rent first class\ntheaters would get their pictures\ncheaper at the expense uf small\nhouses.\nKING CARROL IS\nCentral Conservative Executive Pass Resolution Naming  Members\nI VANCOUVER. B. C. March 5.--\n[ The Vancouver Province publishes\nthe following ln Us news columns\ntoday:\nJ A resolution demanding tlie reelg-\n; nation of the six Vancouver members of the provincial legislature\n| was passed at a meeting of the\n[ rentral Conservative executive of\n| Vancouver on Wednesday night, according to reports m party circles.\n' The motion came as the climax\nI of severe critictsm of the Conserva-\nj live government, and followed one\n! tlpftntng non-confidence in the\ngovernment,\nThe six Vancouver member* are;\nHon. R L. Maitlftnd, minister\nwithout portfolio: Hon. W. 0. Shelly.\npresident of the executive council; Willi.Mii Dick, Thomas H, Kirk,\nCol Nelson Spencer snA O. A.\nWalkrm.\nFIRE RESULTS\nIN DEATH TO\nTWO CHILDREN\nHAMILTON. Ont., March 5. (CP)\n\u2014 Fire- tonight brought death to two\nchildren, Kathleen and James (Henri ic. 5 and 2 years of age, respectively. A gasoline lamp exploded in the home of the Olennles. a\nsmall fishing tbaok, tad m% fire\nto the dwelling, wmYh was soon a\nseething   mass   of   flames\nFiremen arriving at ihe MtB$ of\nthe blaze were compelled t.o fcf\nhose down a. 150-foot embankment\nand tunnel under four lines of railway   tracks.\nINTERESTED IN     ,   _.      \u201e\nART OF FLYING!    Ahe VVeafiier\nPARIS. March 5 (Wireless lo tihe\nCanadian Press via Central News)-\nNewspaper Excelsior states that the\ngreat Interests In aviation shown\nby the Prince of Wales has been\nrecognized by King Carol of Rou-\nmanla who has conferred upon the\nprince the Roumanian cross of\naeronautical   merit. *\nKing Carol has conferred the\nsame decoration on the king and\nqueen of the Belgians who have\nundertaken   numerous   flights.\nSALMON   TKW.LKK.\nDfc.p   IN   IfllllllM.   BOAT\nJUNEAU, Alaska, March 5\u2014 (AP)\nPeter Johnson. 60. a salmon trailer.\nwas found dead In his drifting\nfishing boat near Douglas island\ntoday. His body was slumped over\nthe engine. The boat was towed\nhere and at an Inquest It wae\ndtcidel death was from heart\ntrouble. Johnson lived alone on\nDouglas    u-land.\nForecast.    Nelson    an i     t\npartly   cloudy   with    sftltl p    Ira\nnight.\n411\nNatnatniu\n:l\u00ab\n44\n48\nui\"\n.8\n4(1\nit\nPrince Rupert\n38\nM\nAtlln\n.11)\nM\n18\nSeattle\nM\n48\nPaartland\n.   4a\n54\nSan   Francisco\n     52\n88\n44\nLos Angeles\n88\n   17\n84\nCranbrook\n     15\n38\nCalgary    \t\n16\n18\nEdmonton   ..\n.    18\n38\nSwift  Current\n6\nHV\nPrince   Albert   \t\na    10\n81)\nQu'Apnelle\nI\"4\nn\nWinnipeg\nae\n .Pace Two\nTHE   .NELSON   DAILY   NEWS       FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1931.\nTo Lay Publicity\nNeeds Before the\nFinance Committee\nthe recommendation\ncf tb* publicity oommittee tha* the\nettg be tAked to make Its 1931\npublicity grant \u00bb1000, instead of\n\u2022800, sm was tbe case laat mar, the\noouncil erf the hoard of trade, at lta\n\u2014nl mimthly session Thursday, ap.\npointed .4. Browne, Ven. Archdeacon\nPred H. Graham, and President H.\nM. Whlmster to lay the board's request before the finance committee\nof the city oouncil, which Is preparing the civic estimates for the\nnext  council meeting.\nThe .Saskatchewan livestock por*\nls considering the ettabUahment of\nan abattoir and proc seeing plant at\nSaskatoon Oovcmnient financial\nassistance, to the eitont of putting\nIn the first unit, coating between\n$85,000 and $70,000, ts sought, the\nmoney to *e repaid over s> period\nof  five  years. ,   ,J\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson,B.C. Hotels\n^^i^N\\^^4A^\u25baA^w\nNELSON, B. C.\nTbe best hotel and dining accommodation\nin the city.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nHBa_-H. Butler, P. J. Moot..\nJ. Campbell. <3al\u00ab-ary; J. Annartt,\nproctan, J. Buchanan, Marcus; A.\nL Bromley, C. B. Elnnlnj, D. W.\nRlns   J. W. Venney, H. V. Dawson,\nH. W. King, vancoarfer; K. ,C.\nGibson. H. 8. Thompson, J. Arthur,\nro\u2014 rontia; c. p. Knight, Hamilton;\nT. A. Bums, R. Brought. Medicine\nHat;    R.   E.   Doughty,   Windsor.\nIF\nWhere the Gue&Is King\nC(5he Savo^\n_r__atTB HXWatST AND FINEST HOTEL\nMANY ROOMS WITH PRIVATa.\nBATHS OR SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERB, Prop.\nSAVOY\u2014 Miss M. Aaallaln, P\nHafen, Nelson; Mr. ami Mrs. A.\nJohnson. Oarbrldge. 8. D.; A. *\nInnes, Robson; J. J.mesen. Passman.; A. Po\u00ab. J. O.llo Calgary. G.\nMorris.  Kamloops;   W.  Waraell.  Spo-\nCAR OWNERS MAY\nORGANIZE A NEW\nCLUB FORJELSON\nJoint Committee Will Go Into\nMotor Organization\nof Future\nLines on which the car owners\nof Nelson and district may organise\nIn the early future were under discussion at the board of trade council luncheon Thursday, when H. W.\nRoberteon, representing the Nelson\nbranch of the Automobile Club of\nBritish Columbia; read a letter from\nthe headquarters of the organisation ln Vancouver, giving various\nsuggestions.\nOne of the suggestions of the\nhead office was that one secretary\nmight handle the information bureaus of both the Nelson and Trail\nbranches.\nMr. Robertson read his letter of\ncomment, wherein he expressed the\nopinion that it would be futile\nfor a lady secretary suggested by\nthe Vancouver office to attempt to\nbuild up these two branches to\nthe point where they could support bureaus\nThe statement was concurred ln\nby several of the former club members present, that the organization,\nexcept in the one regard of giving\nroad service to members, was seemingly operated ln the Interests of\nVancouver, without a thought to\nthe needs of the  upper country,\nIt was suggested that a Nelson\nAutomobile club, giving road service, and also advertising the district\non the lines of publicity desired,\ncould probably get a large membership where a branch of the provincial   organization   would   fall.\nA   committee   consisting   of   Paul\nU. S. EXPORTS TO\nCANADA DOWN IN\nMONTH JANUARY\nWASHINGTON, D. C. Uaroh \u00bb.\u2014\nUnited Stat*, export, to Canada\nfell ln January to \u00bb33,\u00ab87.ao3, as\nagainst .53,997,755 last year, the\ntt.partiaa.nt ol oommercs announced\ntoday. Import* from Canada were\n(23.534.139 ln January, against $97,-\n936,673.\nLEGION STANDS\nBACK OF BOTH\nRETURNED MEN\nManahan and Bourke Endorsed for Postmastership at\nNelson\nNelson branch of the Canadian\nLegion, ln monthly session Thursday night, Instructed Its executive\nto endorse the applications of both\nMajor R. M. Manahan, of Nelson,\nand Lieut. - Commander Rowland\nBourke, V.C, D.S.O., of Crescent\nBay, for the Nelson poetmaitershlp,\nnow   vacant.\nMajor Manahan, a railway mail\nclerk out of Nelson, and a member\nof the Nelson branch, ls ln his\n33rd   year   ln   the   postal   service.\nLieut.-Commander Bourke, who\nwon his coveted decorations in the\nBritish naval raids on the German\nbases of the English channel, has\nhad a ranch on the West Ann\nsince 1900. He wu made an honorary member of the Nelson O. W.\nV. A. immediately after the war.\nthe G.W.VA later becoming the\nLegion.\nMessrs. Manahan  and  Bourke are\nLincoln, George Dill, A. Browne and  the only ex-service men seeking the\nGeorge Dvorjetz was appointed by\nPresident H. M. Whimster, to meet\na similar committee from the Automobile  club,   to  discuss  the  future\npossibilities.\nPATENT GRANTED\nTO STANAWAY FOR\nMOTOR MPORIZER\nWaits Four Years; Combined\nVaporizer,   Economizer;\nManufactured, Trail\nkane; A. Palfrey, Waneta; B. ParloW,\nWinnipeg; Mr. and Mrs. W. Moore.\nGrand Forks; H. Beale, J. H, Greenwood. G. Russell, W. McPlaiden.\nJ.    McRae,    Vancouver.\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapolnte, Prop.\nHot .nd cold arater In eyery room\nSteam heated.\najtTBaWB\u2014K   Hayes,   Corra   Man;\nC.  Kalian.   Taooma,\nMadden Hotel\nD. A. MCDONALD\nSteam  Haaated Boom, lay Ua*\nDay  Watt or Month.\najrery  consideration ahoavn\nto aruaast*.\nCar. Batter and Ward Street*\nNelaon\nNew Qrand\nHotel\nT.  L.   KAPAK,   Prop.\nWeekly or monthly rates.\nHot and cold Rater ln all  rooms.\nPhone &03       p. O. BOX 1001\nNEW GRAND\u2014R. Hackaton, J.\nBeghhln, Trail; J. Johrtion, E.\nBrekke, E. Johnson, B. Lines, A,\nLee, A. Astrlna, Nelson; Mrs. Slater,\nWaneta; H. Burrows, Procter; V\nAnderson, Corra Linn; B. Johnson,\nCranbrook; H. Amundsen. Poulder;\nMr. and Mrs. G. Harden, Vancouver.\npost.\nINTERNATIONAL\nMEET TO ADJUST\nSILVER, URGED\nTacoma City Passes Resolution Asking for Meeting\nWith Canada\nWA6HINOTON, March 6.\u2014After a\nwait of more than four yeans, during which time he engaged ln litigation within tho patent office, William Edgar Stan away, of Kaslo, has\nbeen granted a patent for a combined vaporizer and economieer for\nInternal   combustion  engines.\nHe filed his application November\n18, 1926, hut because of a dispute\nover his claims to new ideas he\nwas forced to file a second application December 19 last. It brought\nthe patent, ond several claims eventually   were   granted.\nHoward Day Dawson and William\nVidler Papworth, both of Kaslo,\neach wa* granted a one-fourth interest ln the Patent, while Alexander Grant, of the Whitewater\nmine, near Retallack, B. C, and\nDonald Grant of Ainsworth, B. C,\neach were assigned a one-eighth\ninterest.\nMr. Stanaway has been making\nthe vaporizer ln Trail, having\nequipped a number of cars with lt.\nTHOMAS EDISON IS 84\nFELICITATIONS FOR INVENTIVE GENIUS ,\nThomas A. Edison, famous Inventor, ls congratulated by Mrs. Edison\non his 84th birthday, which h\u00ab celebrated at his winter home ln Fort\nMyers, Fla. Mr. Edison ls at present spending a great deal ot hi* time\ntrying to discover a substitute for rubber.\nOAKALLA JAIL\nBREAK BIGGEST\nSENSATION YET\n(Continued  Ftom  Pat. One)\nORAL HYGIENE IS\nDOCTOR'S THEME\nBEF0REL0.D.E.\nDr. Eaton Speaks to Arthur\nChapman  Chapter;  Vote\n$31 to School Libraries\nA resolution recently adopted by\nthe oouncil of the city of Tacoma,\nWash., regarding the stabilization of\nthe silver market, haa been received\nby Fred A. Starkey, commissioner\nof the Associated Boards of Trade\nof Eastern British Columbia, from\nthe   city  clerk  of  that  city.\nThe resolution urges that ln the\ninterest of lumber, shipping, manufacturing and other industries engaged ln production and transportation, the representatives of the\nprincipal chambers of commerce tn\nWashington, Oregon, Idaho, British\nColumbia and California ln a Joint\nconference assembled at? this Pacific coaat sliver economic conference, request the congress of the\nUnited States and the premier of\nthe Dominion of Canada to Investigate the cause of the depression.\nOne of, the features of the resolution was the urge for an international monetary conference to be\nspeedily assembled to recommend\nsuch action as might appear proper\nand possible, to stabilize silver ln\nthe  world's monetary  system.\nFebruary, 1931, will go down aa\nthe lowest February for the collections of national revenue ln Montreal since the war. Only one other\nmonth, January, 1935, had lower\ncollections than did February of\nthis year. The collections for the\nmonth just past amounted to *5,\n811,406, oompared with (6,302.860\nf-r the corresponding period of last\nyear.\nMADDEN\u2014A. Danlelaon, S. _-W-\nberg. Oorra Unn: R. Veeoe. Salmo;\nB.   MoKlnrory,   Taghum.\t\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n700 Vernon st Phone\nH. W\u00bb\u00ab\"lck\nFifty Rooms  of  Solid  Comfort.\nHeadquarters   for   Loggers   and\nMiners.\nTrail, B.C. Hotels\nHotel Arlington\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. P. LEVESQUE, Prop.\n$600,000 will be spent on an addition to the Royal Connaught\nhotel  at  Hamilton.\nTRAIT* B. C. March G\u2014Dr. P. S.\nEaton gave an address on the Oral\nHygiene campaign being conducted\nthroughout Canada as the feature of\na meeting of Arthur Chapman chapter I. O. D. E. In the Memorial\nhall yesterday. He urged the members to attend the meetings ln\nTrail.\nOne hundred dollars was voted to\nthe Community chest.\nMis. R. R. Burns read a report on\neducational work aud reported that\nfinal arrangements for the Empire\nShopping week contest had been\ncompleted. Thirty-one dollars was\nvoted to the educational secretary\nto  be  used  for  school   libraries.\nFurther arrangements were made\nfor a booth at the Veteran's carnival, final plana to be made at the\nApril   meeting.\nIt was decided that the chapter\nwould again sponsor the University\nplayers'   appearance  here.\nMiss Mary Coupland wa* welcomed into the order. Mrs. Finch Owen\nwas  elected   to  membership.\nLuncheon   preceded   the   meeting.\nTRAIL MAN WILL\nATTEND MINING\nINSTITUTE MEET\nJewitt to Talk on Aerial Exploration; Galloway B. C.\nDelegate\nDOUGLAS\nHOTEL    *W\nHOTEL\nRooms aad Bath\nE. L. aand A   C1BOETAOE\nSteam Healed\nThroughout\nHot and  raid\nHater\nMi Phone 261\nTRAIL, B. C.\nThe House You\nWant\nIl\/FIETHEK   you're   a   pros-\nre peettve   buyer   or   owner\nat   a   house,   you'll   find   ths\nClaawlfled  Cotnnans  worth\nwhile.\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nNow He Can Enjoy\nMeal\nIndigestion   Stopped\u2014Health\nBmproved   by   TANLAC\n\"I don't believe I will ever be\nwell again.\" thought Mr. Aime\nBelisle, 1830 Chateaubriand Street,\nMontreal. Por he went through\nagonies with Indigestion for over a\nyear.\nAnd then someone told him about\ngrand old Tanlac. He tried it--\nand fio rapid was his gain ln health\nand strength that Mr. Bellale wrote.\n\"I think Tanlac is more wonderful\nthan any claim made for it. I now\ncat what I want without fear of\nafter-troubles; and Tanlac also helped me to get rid of constipation of\nlong standing.\"\nGrand old Tanlac! Wonderful old\nTanlac! After 20 years, it has the\nendorsement of over 100,000 people\n\u2014and 55 million bottles have been\nMid. Tanlac can always be depended\nupon to give prompt relief from\nindigestion, gas, heartburn, sour\nstomach, dizziness, headaches, sleep-\npssness, and that feeling of weakness that so often accompanies\nstomach   trouble.\nGet a bottle at your druggist's\ntoday. Money back If lt doesn't\nhelp you.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nHGPE PARLIAMENT\nWILL BE BRIEF\nAH   Members  of  Opposition\nWish to Air Grievances at\nEarliest Moment\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e March 5.\u2014John D.\nGalloway, provincial mineralogist,\nwlll be the only official representative of the B. C. branch of the\nCanadian Institute of Mining and\nMetallurgy at the annual meeting\nof the Institute in Ottawa, March\n4.  6  and   6.\nG. S. Eldrtdge, of Vancouver, now\nin the east on private business,\nplanned to go to Ottawa for the\nconvention and W. O. Jewltt, of\nTrail, who is to give a paper on\n\"Aerial Exploration,\" is a third\nBritish   Columbian   to   be   present.\nThe convention Is expected to\ngive special attention to the question of quicker development of gold\nproduction in Canada. Hon. George\nBlack, speaker of the house of commons, ls slated as a luncheon\nspeaker.\u2014Vancouver   Province.\nNelson, B. C. Cafes\nTHE  tOYAL CAFE\nILAaalt   BEUIAtKANT\n\u25a0eflna-narnt   and   HtUoat)    Prefall\nOKN   DAV   AND   MOHT\naiaaeetal Dinner. 11.30 I.  '\u25a0 10    *_\na \u25a0\u2022niafar     fi 30._)   K .i.>C\nUfBfkH't in |li\u00abP Slag .nd   Noodle.\nKOOTENAY CAFE\nVLK.NO.N   MKM  1\nDinner.  11.4a) to  2.30      35t\nMinper, O.SO to 8  p.m     B8c\nshort order, a .penalty.\n(Illicit   Service\nXext Kootenay Hotel. Nelaon\nWHO KILLED\nTack Thay\ner?\nDON'T MISS\nOne Instalment\nof\n'Manhattan\nNight1\nThe Sensational New\nSerial Story That Begins Next Week in\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nBARLEY    FOR    MVESTOCfc\n\"Barley should be regarded as\npractically the equal of corn with\nall classes of live stock ln the feeding of wblch tihe latter grain has\nplayed an important part. It is\na Canadian product admirably suited to widespread production under\nCanadian conditions, climatic and\ncultural. It ls equally well qualified for a place in the growing\nand finishing ration of Canadian\nlive stock.\" This Is the foreward\nof a pamphlet Just Issued by the\nanimal husbandry division 137\u2014\nNew Series) to assets farmers In\nmaking greater use of Canadian\ngrown feeds for beef and dairy\ncattle, sheep and swine. It Is alao\nan Ideal grain for the horse when\nfed in balanced ration. Every farmer should have a copy ol this pamphlet.\u2014Publication branch, department of agriculture, Ottawa.\nOTTAWA, Ont.. March 5.~(CP>\u2014\nOpposition members of parliament\narriving for the opening of porlia-\nment expect that three weeks will\nbe occiTpled with the debate on the\naddress in reply t0 'he speech from\nthe throne. During the past two\nregular sessions this debate has been\nvery brief, concluding early in the\nweek   following   the   opening.\nIt waa not ever thus, in the\nturbulent 1926 session the house\nopened on January 7 and the debate on the address extended until\nMarch 2. almoet eight weeks. The\nforthcoming session wlll be very\ndifferent from that of 1928 in that\nthe present government bas a substantial   majority   behind   lt.\nParty caucuses will be held soon\nafter the opening which ls on\nMarch 12, when the tactics of\neach will be decided upon. The\nReneral lmpreesion ls that the\nConservatives will decide to put\nup* speakers only occasionally, leaving the opposition members. Liberal, Farmer, Labor and Independent, to furnish most of the discussion.\nDEMAND   EARLY   HEARING\n\"Bvery member ot the opposition\nwill want to speak at the earliest\npossible moment,\" was the opinion\nexpressed by one Liberal member\nfrom the west. \"Our constituents\ndemand that we protest against conditions as they exist in our ridings.\"\nMembers of the government side\nspoken to were of the opinion that\nthe party caucus would favor prettv\nfull scope for any members who\nwished to Join In the debate on the\naddress. Debate on the budget\nwill probably be leng+hy with a re.\nvision of *the tariff under consideration but the other nrnt*ers. with\nthe exception of the estimates, mav\n\u2022not   take   very  long.\nThe substantial majority of the\ngovernment and the distance another election is away, are pointed\nto bv some so potent factors lu\nlimiting  the length  of the  session.\nTRAIL, B. C, March 6\u2014Mra. H. L.\nHey entertained a number of friends\nat luncheon, Wednesday, at her\nhome, Third avenue. Her guests\nwere Mrs. Fred Bell, Urs. J. Mc-\nGovern. Mrs. P. Flynn, Miss Isabel\nLeckle, Miss Jean McOovern and\nMiss  Carol  Bell.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. Milne entertained at a\nluncheon party recently at her\nhome, Binns street, honoring her\nlittle son Billy, the occasion being\nhis third birthday. A birthday cake\nwith three candles formed the center of the table.\n\u2022, e \u25a0 o\nMrs. A. Altken, Tamarao avenue,\nwas hostess at an enjoyable luncheon party yesterday ln honor of her\ndaughter Sandra, who wa\u00ab celebrating her ninth birthday. Mrs. w.\nMilne assisted Mrs. Altken in aervlng. The table was centered by a\nlarge birthday cake surmounted by\nnine lighted oandlca. Spring flowers were tastefully arranged in the\nliving   rooms.\n\u2022 \u2022    e\nMembers of Arthur Chapman\nchapter I. O. D. E. enjoyed their\nfirst chapter luncheon at the Crown\nPoint yesterday preceding their\nmeeting. The Union Jack was\nplaced at the head of the table,\nwhich was beautifully arranged.\nDaffodils In silver vases and tall\ncandies In flllves sconces completed\nLhe decoration. Those attending\nwere Mrs. Mary Chapman, guest of\nthe chapter, Mrs. F. E. Dockerill,\nMrs. E. M. Stiles, Mrs. B. H. Devltt,\nMrs. R. R. Burns, Mrs. E. M. Le-\nFleury, Mra. C. W Olllaume, Mrs J.\nCtupland. Mrs. E. L. Hodge, Mrs. M.\nEmsley, Mrs. J. T. Newman, Mra. O.\nH. Marlatt, Mrs. J. Msrrls, Mrs. P.\nMeArthur, Mrs. A. Annand. le, Mrs.\nF, A. Newell, Mra. Q. F. Weir, Mrs.\nJ, E. Carter, Mra. F. Fraser, Mrs. TJ.\nMcLeod, Mra. J. H. Ow.n Mrs. H.\nClark, Mrs. J. B. Thom. Mrs. C. 8.\nWilliams, Mrs. O. A. Rendell, Mra.\nJ. J. Flng.and, Mrs. S. H. Hopkins,\nMrs. W. F. Truswell. Mrs. H, De-\nauespee, Mrs. T. Jenkins, Mrs. W. O.\nKennedy, Mrs. S. S. McDiarmld, Mrs.\nO. R. Famish, Mrs. D. C. Irwin,\nMiss Helen Blaylock. Mias O. Wheeler, Miss Dorothy Dock.rill and Mlas\nMary Coupland.\npolice In all centers on the lover\nmainland are keeping a lookout\nfor them.\nPolice officers voiced the opinion\nThursday night that - the guns,\nflashed by Wilcox and McDougall\ninside the prison at Oakalla, were\nsmuggled to the two prisoners by\nfriends in the oourt house Thursday\nMCDOUGALL CONVICTEp\nIN    ASSIZE    COURT\nMcDougall was convicted ln the\nassize oourt Wednesday on a charge\nof robbery while armed. A peculiar\nangle ln connection with Wilcox\nwas the fact that, Juat about tihe\ntime he was blasting hia way out\nof Oakalla, a petit Jury in tbe\nassize court was acquitting him on\ntwo charges of robbery with violence. Wilcox, however, was echea-\nuled to make his bow again in the\nassize court on a similar charge\nlater   _  the   sittings.\nHow Wilcox and McDougall obtained en automobile near ' the\ncorner of Semlin drive and Flrat\navenue, waa revealed late tonight\nby   polloe,\nA. E. Welch, Alma rcw*. waa\nseated ln an automobile parked in\nthe 2000 black. Gravely street,\nwhich ls close to Semlin drive and\nFirst  avenue.\nHELD   UP   DRIVER\nHe told police that a Uttle before\n8 p.m., a young man corresponding\nto the description of Mc_tuj.il\nJumped In the car and, at the point\nof a revolver, ordered him to drive\nahead. Mr. Welch said he could\nnot drive.\nRie thug then stepped out of\nthe \"car ond ran to an autor iblle\nparked behind lt. Into thla car\nhe stepped, police were told, and\ndrove   away.\nIt was reported stolen by C. Hill,\nTwenty-Fifth avenue E., who wu\nvisiting   friends   in  the  vicinity.\nSurro | ding police forces were\nnotified ot its nurrfber and aU roads\nwere closed. Constables Parsons\nand Gregson found the car shortly\nbefore 11 p.m., abandoned ln the\nUnit   block,   Sixth   avenue   E.\nD\nI   at*\n\u25a0  Ba\nIMPlEf\nfea-niilfelckWqrm\nPtaa_a\u00aba4a4\u00bb.ial4*br4t4>i>tlaavT^\nSal..\" mta***; ts astoaJeM. A 1\naaaaia'f saaataat. alswrsar. at\"\nclaars ltt. aaafba. OsS \"Sootta.\n8*1.*\" ttern drag(ist t\u00ab**r.\nJONES' BUDGET\nHAS SURPRISING\nFACISjaUDED\n(Continued   From  fate On.)\nOLIVER GODFREY\nGRAVEL WORKER\nDIES ON SHAH\n\"I  Was  So Skinny\u2014Now\nFeel Like New Woman\"\nMcCOY'S\nCod   Uver   Extract   Tablets\nAfter the flu and nervous breakdown\u2014I was skinny\u2014only weighed\n00 pounds\u2014McCoy's helped me\u2014I\nnow weigh 130 and feel like a new\nwoman.\" This from a Utter\u2014millions of rundown, scrawny women\nneed McCoy's\u2014rich In health and\nweight buildlne- elememte\u2014\u00ab0 tablets 00 oents at any druggist any>\nwhere\u2014lust aak for McCoy's.\nMrs. S. Hopkins, who has been\nvisiting in Toronto for the *>ftat\nthree montha, returned to her home,\nBirch   avenue,   Monday   evening.\nMrs. H. ci-irk and  daughter Con\nnle   left  this   morning   to  spend   i\nfew days in Spokane.\n\u2022   *   \u2022\nMra. H. Van Busklrk of Calgary\nis the house guest of her brother-\nin-law and sister, Mr. and Mn. M.\nMlchealy,    Mllllgan    avenue.\n(Continued  From  Page One)\neither preparing to do some greasing, or possibly waa reaching over\nto screw the grease cup, when hia\nclothing made the fetal contact\nwith the set-screw, ,as a result of\nwhich he waa drawn into the machinery.\nAbout 7 i. m. Dr. H. H. MacKenzie, district coroner, arrived\nfrom Nelaon, and empanelled a Jury,\nwhich viewed the body, and in the\nafternoon a coroner's Jurf, composed of Robert H. McConnell, foreman, Norman W. Ashley, Elmer\nGustafson, Harold Towgood, William\nC. Vance, and Chisholm Maodonald,\nheld an inquest at Oorra Linn. The\nverdict of the Jury waa that death\nwas accidental, and that Godfrey\nwas \"cruahed to death by be^ng\nwrapped around the shaft at the\nseparator plant at the West Kootenay Power & Light company's\ngravel   pit   oi   Upper   Bonnlngton.\"\nThe young man had been on the\nmech.nical staff of the company's\nconstr ction force ln connection\nwith the Corra Unn development,\nfrom   November   last,\nHia mother resides at plncher\nCreek, Alta., and a sister, Mrs. Jack\nGllker, whose husband ls on the\ncompany's operating staff, resides at\nBonnlngton.\nyawning gap in tha government\nbudget, due to falling revenues and\nto Mr. Jones' policy of paying as\nhe goes.\nPEW  EXEMPTIONS\nThere are few exemptions from\ntbe new tax. It will be levied on\nthe citizens' total income, with no\nallowance off for dependents or for\nany other expense. And lt will apply to all persons making an Income in the province, excepting\nonly those who receive not more\nthan $13 a week, those receiving\nmothers' pensions, old age pensions, war disability pensions and\nallowances, and thoee whose income\nls derived from actual farming.\nThe other change ln provincial\ntaxation ts a 20 per cent increase\nin  the   licence   fees  of  banks.\nWith his reconstruction of provincial taxation designed , to collect .\nrevenue from thousands who pay\nnothing toward the public service,\nMr. Jones brought down a budget\nruthlessly pruned of unnecessary\nexpenditures in every department\u2014\nthe m>st drastic economy which\nthe present members of the bouse\nremember.   .\nIt is a balanced budget, with no\nestimates padded, providing for an\nexpenditure of \u00ab38,080.030. revenues\nof 138,068,690, and an estimated\nsurplus of 88668. While this exceeds the current year's expenditure estimate by 17318, lt ls aome\n$3,000,000 below the amount actually being apent In tbe fiscal year\nnow ending.\nLOANS ASKED FOE\nARE   SMALL\nIn line with hia policy of economy, Mr. Jones asked for loana\nthis year totalling the relatively\nsmall sum of $8,000,000, of which\nroad construction will ba allowed\nonly $3,860,000. the smallest amount\nIn  recent   yeara.\nFor improvement and building\nloans on B. c university lands at\nPoint Grey there will ba $300,000,\nfor irrigation works ln the interior,\nthrough the conservation fund,\n$150,000; for the partial coat ot a\nbadly-needed court house at Victoria, $100,000, and to make up the\ndeficits of the present year on current account\u2014contracted largely to\nrelieve   unemployment\u2014$3,000,000.\nWhile thus economizing on current and capital account, Mr. Jones\nrefused to impair efficiency in the\npublic service by reducing any salaries, as had been urged ln some\nquarters. He baa likewise declined\nto make any reduction In the maintenance appropriation for roads,\nholding that existing roads must be\nkept in good condition, even if no\ngreat mileage of new roads can be\nbuilt  at   this  time.\nLawrence. Mass.. polloe raided th\nheadquarters of the National'Textile Workers' unl' n, removed posters, pictures and communis lc lit\ncrature to the polce station and\np-idlocked the place Two men and\na womaii found on the premises\nwere taken to police headquarters\nfor   questioning.\nEarthquake shocks in New Zealand last month, beginning with\nthe major dtsturMnc\u00ab on February\n3, numbered 658, records of the\ngovemment    obeervp.to~y'   show.\nfO*\n^m^Z-m^ftSs.^\n5^\nTONES\nBLOOD.\na-*\u00ae\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL HOUSES AND LOTS, insurance. Notary, J. D. Anderson.  TraU. ($319)\nA   YEAR   OF   NEW   VALFEK\nThe year 1931 will go d'vwn in\nthe history of Canadian agriculture\nas a year of new values, of reconstruction and readjustment. The\nprices of farm products have not\nonly felt the effect of the general\ndepression but have been forced to\nnew low Ifvels through important\nmarket changes forcing a huge volume of products on to the domestic\nmarket. But feed stuffs are equally\nlow, and other commodities falling\nin Una make the fanner's dollar\ntoday worth considerably more than\na year ago. There ls no year in\nrecent times on which to base a\ncohaparlaon of conditions and the\nchange forced on agriculture la so\ngreat that ln the opinion of market\nexperts the figures of production\ncost and values of recent years are\nuseless for purposes of comparison.\nTht net returns to farmers during\n1931 may prove financially quite aa\nsatisfactory as any in recent years-\nDepartment  of  Agriculture,   Ottawa.\nJUNIOR HOCKEY\nGAMES MAY BE\nON PRAIRIE ICF\nTRAIL. B. C., March 6.\u2014Sharper\nweather on the prairies and the\npossibility that Ice may be made\nfor the Vancouver-Alberta playoff\ngames hae led to he postponement\nof the series to March 9 and 11, according to a wu e received by E\nC Crowe today from Jack Hamilton,\nReglna.\nShould It be possible to make ice\non the prairies for the series Trail\nwill not see any of the Junior\nplaydowns.\nThe   wire   follows:\nVan couver- Alberta Junior series\npostponed   till   9th   and    11th.\nWlll   advise   re   location   later.\nJack Hamilton.\nThe effec's of depression, generally and th^ee arising from the\nsmall movement ln the grain crop\nparticularly are conspicuous factors\nln the very unharjpy financial showing of the O. N. R. system in tha\npast year. The deficit wlll be\nheavy. At Ottawa, in authoritative\ncircles, is heard the report that It\n\u00bbt\u00bbv   be   $50,000,000\na   TheWoman'sTonic\nDr PIERCES\nFavorite Prescription\nAt Ml llUUlr ilOVIt\nThe Battle of\nWaterloo was fought\nin 1815\nbut that's not\nNEWS\nIsn't it a lot more Interesting to find out\nthat someone you know has been elected to\noffice, or that strawberries have just come\non the market?\nOf course it is. Your friend's good fortune,\nthe new strawberries, are NEWS.\nAnyone is interested in news; everyone\nreads the newspapers every day.\nIf you have something to sell, the best\nway to tell people about it is to treat it as\nnews\u2014advertise it in The Nelson Daily\nNews, the advertising medium that everyone reads.\nNelson Daily News\n THE NELSON DAILY .VEWS       FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1931.\nPaw Thre.\nBaan Inf. of St. Paul'., London,\nlln a Lenten sermon enjolnaad his\nI flock to teal fasting. \"Eschew th.\nI miserable  sham  of daintily cooked\n\u25a0 fish dinners, and try the effect of\n\u25a0 either going without food or eating\nI something you don't Ilk.,\" h. said.\nbetween\ndances\nuse\navers\nthey\nweeten\nthe heath...\nCRESTON ENJOYS\nCASH BALANCE OF\nS2629F0R YEAR\nIs Increase Over the Previous\nYear; Tax Collections Not\nSo Good\nSURPLUS ASSETS\n'    AMOUNTS TO S9086\nCouncil Gave Out $227 in Donations; More Sidewalks\nBuilt\n* 1ST\nLife Saver\ntime is any time\nCL-O-VE\nVI-O-UT\nUC-O-RICE\nICINNO-MON,\n|wiNT-0-\u00ab\u00a3EN\nKP-o-Mirr\nmm,!\nJ\nEVERY LOAD OF\nOUR COAL\ndumped into your cellar or bin-\nmeans solid comfort and fuel\neconomy, for our coal throws\nout a fine, even heat and doc\nIt with far lees coal than Is required when ordinary coal lb\nused. Try a ton or so and keep\na record of how long It lasts.\nThat wlll prove the economy of\nordering   your   coal   here.\nWest Transfer Co.\nPHONE   33\nCRESTON, B C, March 8.\u2014Vallate\nauditor A. Spencer has completed\nbis audit of the 1930 business operations of the municipality, and\nthe end of the year finds the villages with practically all the years\naccounts paid and a cash balance of\n$3629, as compared with a 1939 surplus of 91569. Accounts unpaid are\nshown under the liabilities as 1131.\nReceipts from all sources lsst year\nwere 17583 as compared with -$3302\nIn 1929, but the decrease ls Wholly\nattributable to the falling off In the\ngrant on account of liquor profits\nwhich shrunk Just a little over\n\u2022700. For the two years the motor\nlicense grant Ls up (2, but the grant\nfrom the pari mutuel race track\nbetting fell away 940.\nTax collections were not quite\nas good as the year previous, the\n1930 Intake from this source running\nto $3060, whereas ln 1939 a total of\n93203 was realised from ordinary\ntaxation. 1930 witnessed a rise on\ntrade license revenues, from 9730 a\nyear ago to 9794 ln 1930, but there\nwas a drop ln poll tax collected,\nfrom 9196 to 9142. The dog population has been well maintained\nJudging by the Intake from licenses\nIssued for village canines. In 1929\nthere was sn ingathering of $37 from\nthis quarter, and ln 1930 the grand\ntotal was 938.\nLIQUOR  FEES\nProm liquor profits, motor license\nand pari mutuel the 1929 Intake\nwas 93917, whereas in 1930 these\ngrants fell away to 93222. The drop\nln liquor revenues is partly attributable to the fact that the government has recently cut the share\npaid the municipalities by about 10\nper   cent.    Total   Income   for   1930,\nDR(\nAt bedtime rub the throat and\nchest thoroughly with\u2014\nVICKS\n\u25bc    VAPORUB\nOem SlWme.Jmelhe4remtf\nDr. F. Rose\nPlmldan snd Star\ntes u. Specialist In\nrav al und Intestinal\nill    sn only.\nWILES\nlu.su   ...uiout operation.   Constipation Buccessluliy treated.    Write for\n4th floor Ztegler Bid*..\n\"   ft.\nincluding the balance carried from\n1930, was 99144.\nOn the expenditure aide the past\nyear went light on highway ex-\npenses, maintenance and gravelling\ntn 1930 costing 92002. where as 1929\nhad an outlay ln this respect of\n94483. Better work was done, however ln new sidewalks which cost\n9381 in 1930, as compared with 9104\nin 1939.\nDonations for 1930 were 9337, the\ncouncil showing consideration for\nthe newly-formed tennis'club to the\nextent of 936, while Creston was assisted in the matter of Introducing\ninternational league baseball to the\namount of 950. The fall fair got\nlte usual quota of 9100. and there\nwas 920 for the Salvation Army, and\n99.80 for the hospital. In 1929\ndonations totalled 9204.\nFor salaries the expenditure for\nthe two yean ls precisely the same,\n$476, but there is a new entry tn\nthis year's accounts to take care\nof street lighting which totalled\n9711. Clean up week garbage collection coat was cut from 956 In\n1939 to 428 in 1980. Municipal hall\nmaintenance ls placed at 9147 for\n1939. and at 4136 for 1930. Advertising, printing and supplies cost\n9163 ln 1930, as against 9135 ln\n1939. Under the head of general administration there le a raise of\nabout 9350 In 1930.\nThe village assets are placed at\n910,318, made up of 93939, surplus;\ntax arrears, 8795; town hall, 91300;\nfire fighting equipment, 91050, and\nreal estate to a total of 93923, ln\nwhich ls reckoned the fall fair\nbuilding   and  grounds  at  92600.\nThe surplus of assets over liabilities is 99086. There ls still giooo\nowing on the fall fair grounds, and\nthere are vouchers payable of 9131.\nIn a letter to the council the auditor\nexplains that this latter amount Is\ndue the hospital, and would have\nbeen paid in 1930 had the hospital\nboard account reached tbe council\nprior to December 31st.\nIn the usual statement by the\nauditor that the balance sheet \"correctly portrays the position of tht\naccounts of the village as shown by\nthe books and records,\" the auditor\ngoes on to say, \"I have received alt\nthe explanations and information\nthat I have required, and I beg to\nexpress my appreciation of the courtesy of your officers during thc\naudit.\"\nDESIGNS NEW TYPE AEROPLANE\n\u25a0 free booklet, vt\n..-,   626  Riverside  Ave..  Spokane, Waal\nMiss Ethel Shaw Ig\nSouth Slocan Guest\nSOUTH SLOCAlv, B. c, Mar. 6,\n\u2014Mrs. J. D. Yeatman and Mrs.\nJ. Murray were hostesses at the\nmonthly social of the Badminton\nclub. Among those attending were\nMr. and Mrs. E. Bowkett, Mr. and\nMrs. J. D. Yeatman, Colonel and\nMrs. J. Murray, Mrs w. Tindaie,\nMrs O. V. Hunt, Mra. J. corner,\nMtss Kathleen Edwards Miss Anise\nBradshaw, Mrs. J. Thompson, Misses\nEliza and Dixie Edwards, Miss Mary\nBradshaw, Oliver Godfrey R. Bennett, E. Marsden and Jim McPadden.\nMtss Ethel Shaw of Brilliant was\nthe week-end guest of Mrs. M. Ed'\nwards,\nBert Marshall of Silverton motored through at the week-end.\nMrs. B. McWllliams was a Nelaon\nvisitor during the week.\nA party consisting of O. V. Hunt-\nThomas Hunt, Fred end Ronald\nEdwards and Jack Edwards motored Trail on Saturday night to attend the boxing match.\nMOUTH HEALTH\nIS SUBJECT OF\n[    HEALTH ESSAY\nOpen to All School Children;\n15 Prizes and One\nGrand One\nLandlnj tils aeroplane at a rat. ot only 30 miles per\nhour ls a int which Earl McClary has accomplished\nsev.nl time.. This Los Angeles aviator believes this\nwlll mean a great deal to aviation.   McClary during the\npast two months has completed a p.an. ln whtcii she\nengine haa been located In the rear of tha airship\nInstead of at th. front as with th. ordinary plane. It\nhas a four-passenger cabin and Is of the monoplane\ntype.\nPUBLICITY CALLS\nFOR $1000 GRANT\nDrive Planned to Attract the\nPrairie Motorists to\nNew Highway\nMAXINE UNDOW IS\nBIRTHDAY    HOSTESS\nFOR SALMO PEOPLE\nSALAIO, B. C. March. 5.\u2014Mr.\nand Mrs. W. L. Shell! apent Tuesday tn Nelson the guest of Mrs.\nshelll's mother Mrs. Leahy.\nMr.    and    Mre.   L.   M.    Prochnow\nhave left on a holiday t0 he spent\n[ ln Wisconsin and Washington where\nWhether the advertising for prairie   tn{* wl\u00bb visit relatives.\ne. a .. __. _ _ e iAX9- Fre<* Llndstrom has arrived\ntourists that the Nelaon board of | nome Jrom gpokane where she has\ntrade plans Is assisted by grants | been a patient in the Sacred Heart\nfrom other centers on the southern I hospital for the past two months,\nroute, or otherwise, the publicity \u00bb- *6\u00ab.V sP*nt Tuesday ln Nelson\ncommittee of the Nelson board fig- M1^ Maxine Undow entertained\nurea that the city's grant this year U number of her young friends re-\ntoward the board's heavy publicity! cently thc occasion being her\nwork should be not less than 11000.1 seventh birthday anniversary Her\nThis is 43000 more than the city \u00abUCTt= included, Miss Shirley Und-\ncontrtbuted  ln  1930. Utrom, Mlaa Mona Miller, Mtss Joyce\nLest year the publicity committee I Bremner,     Miss     Neorni  Ltndstrom.\nexpended about gaooo, concentrating   [#?.^.a>^[-1*tubS,\non Spokane and the Inland Empire.\nIf four or five other leading\ncenters contribute $160 each, thc\ncampaign to attract prairie tourists\nto West Kootenay and the Kootenay lake highway, can be con-\nblderabty extended,\nAt a meeting of the committee\nyesterday, under Chairman A.\nBrowne, It was decided to report\nto the board's council in favor of\nasking   a  $1000   grant.\nRepairs Made to\nSchools in Trail\nTRAIL, B. Ca. March 5~Report\nof School Engineer D. H. Bayley\nto the Trall-Tadanac school board\nWednesday night showed that at\nthe high school ventilators were\nfixed In tbe storm windows of\ntwo rooms.\nAt the Central school storm windows were recoved from the stucco\nbuilding and the t-lephone removed\nto the doctor's office.\nAt East Trail a sash was repaired\nin the basketball room and wire\nframes strengthened, batteries renewed for the fire alarm, and tin\nrelay switch of the stoker adjusted\nAt Tadanac a tank was repaired.\n\u00a9_________\nCOMING!\na \u00bbi a k is m\ncManhattan cWightft)\nBy William Almon Wolff\nJ\n\u00a7\ni\ni\ni\nj\nt\ne\ni\nt\nOne of the Most Sensational and Gripping\nSerial Stories You Have Ever Read\nDon't Miss One Instalment\nIT BEGINS NEXT WEEK IN\nThe Nelson Daily News\n\"5\n$\n9\n9\nI\nt\nI\n>\n9\nI\ni\n\u00bb\nt\nt\nt\n\u2022\nt\n9\nt\nMiss Francis\nKnbak. Mlckl. John Edward, John\nOerald Hansen and Carl Llndow\nand Miss June Fair.\nOtis Hawkins was a business visitor to Nelson Tuesday.\nMrs. R. C. Rush lias returned\nhome after (spending a lew ata*.\nat FrulMale, the guest ol Mr. and\nMrs. L.  Bush.\nThe Women's Institute recently gave a very successful carcl party\nIn the Community hall. Mrs. W.\nMiller was the convenor assisted by\nMrs. Noel Harrop. High scores were\nwon by Mr,. O. Fair and Fred\nLlndstrom Consolation* went lo\nMrs. A. Bremner and' and James\nFr;ser. Among those present were\nMr. and Mrs. O. T. Mnthcws, Mr.\nand Mrs. R. C. Bush, Mr. sncl Mrs.\nA Bremner. Mrs. W. Miller. Mrs. CI.\nO. Fair, Mrs. W. H. Cawley .Mrs.\nWilliam Clrutchfleld Mrs. .1. Hearn.\nMrs. A. Oray. Mr. and Mrs. Noel\nHarrop. Mis* Kay Leahy, Herbert\nOrutchtleld. Miss Flo Happies, Chester Bush. Miss Kathleen Sapptes,\nMiss Muriel Undow. Mr. and Mrs.\nC. A. Cawley, William Wilde, sr.,\nWilliam Wilde Jr., Fred Ltndstrom\nFred Johnson,\nPROVINCE HAS\nLIVED BEYOND\nIIS OWN INCOME\n(Continued  Prom Page  One)\nMOYIE SCHOOL HAS\nLARGE NUMBER WHO\nDO NOT MISS A DAY\nMOYIE, B. C, March 5\u2014Report\nof standing of the Moyie public\nschool for the month of February\n.s as follows:\nOrade 8\u2014Thora Andrew?. Chivies\nSanders, Alice Whitehead, Harold\nSanders.\nOrade   7\u2014Prances   Whitehead.\nOrade ti\u2014 Margaret Whitehead,\nMichael   Joy,   Oferla   Whitehead.\nc.r;de    5\u2014Yvonne    Sanders.\nGrade 4\u2014Josle Whitehead, JUia-\nsell   Conrad,   Jessie   Walker.\nGrade 3\u2014Philip Conrad, Tom\nHealy,  Johnnie  Joy.\nGrade 2\u2014Jessie Jane Whitehead.\nOladys Henley, Robert Walker, Tony\nJoy.\nFrade IA\u2014Vincent Conrad. Henry\nWatowskl, Nichols Watowskl, La\nVaune\\ Conrad.\nGrade  IA\u2014Vincent Conrad,  Henry\nAverage    daily    attendance    23 45.\nR.   W.  French,  teacher.\nHenry W. Hayiwen, self-announced\npresidential candidate on a .platform\ncalling for public \"beer fountains.\"\nawaited a sanity hearing In a bare\ncell of the Jacksonville, Fla- city\nJail after he had fired his padded\ncell  and  thereby caused  one death.\nHEALTH FORCED\nHER TO RESIGN\n\"I'd gotten so nervous and run-\nlown from stomach trouble [had\n,o give up my  position  u i  .-ten-\ndebt which makes the public repay\nS3  for  every  dollar spent.\nftlM.UARIZHS   REVENUES\nHe finally summarized the present situation by announcing that\nexisting revenues could not. produce\nmore than (24,760,000 per year, as\nagainst fixed charges of $22,070,000\nund thc general cost of government\namounting to $6,000,000. In the\nlace of this appalling legacy left,\nby the Liberal government, which\nhad failed utterly to control the\nlinancjal situation, new revenue\nwas essential, Mr.  Jones asserted.\n\"Uw time has come,\" he said,\n\"when thc economic condition of\ntho province compels the exercising\nnt uttermost caution and rigid\neconomy; a time when deaf ears\nmust be turned to all demands for\nexpenditures except those absolutely\nnecessary to the maintenance of\nan   efficient   admlmstrattm..\"\nMr. Jones analyzed In detail the\nanticipated decreases in revenue\nthroughout the government service,\ndue to business depression. 'By de-\npar tmen ts, he f ou nd tho position\n;t\u00ab follows:\nAttorney-general's department\u2014A\ndecrease is anticipated ln profits by\nthe liquor board amounting to\n$250,000.\nTAX   YIELD   WILL   DROP\nFinance   department\u2014The proposed    new   tax   on   income   N\nexpected   to  yield  some  $2,500,-\n000.    However, the tax yield on\nnet   Income  wtll  suffer  an   appreciable   drop,   thus   the   In -\ncrease shown under Income  tux\namounts    to   $1,500,000.     It    Is\nariit< timted  that  there  wlll  occur a heavy falling off In  revenue from such sources as OOBl\nand  coke taxes   ($60,000);  gat>o-\nllne   tax   ($50,00(1);   wild   lands,\ncoal pnd timber lands <$3r>,00i)>,\nsuccession     duties      ($100,000);\nmiscellaneous    ($60,000).\nLands  department\u2014Owing  to  the\nnon-realization   of   anticipated   rev\ncnues from the railway belt and Tne\ndepressed  conditions  in  the  lumber\nindustry,  shows  a drop at $525 000.\nMines    department\u2014The   decrease\nIs   attributable   *o   $10000   in   free\nminers'   certificates   and   $40,000   in\nKenernl   mining   receipts.\nPublic works\u2014The non-realization\nin traffic control revenue has neces-\nsita-.cd the cutting down 0f this estimate by  $80,000.\nAn essay contest open to school\nchildren tn British Columbia .from\nOrad\u00ab VII up is being conducted\nln connection with tho province-\nwide mouth health campaign under\nthe' auspices of the Canadian Dental\nHygiene council, working lh cooperation with the provincial departments of public health, and education, and the British Columbia\nDental   association.\nPor the purposes of this essay\ncontest the province has been divided into 15 districts and a prize\nof $10 wlll be awarded for the\nbeat essay in each district. These\nprize winning essays will then be\nsubmitted to th* central committee\nat Vancouver, and the one adjudged\nto be the best in the province will\nbe awarded  a further prize of $25.\nThe subject of the essay is\n\"Mouth Health,\" and a knowledge\nof the subject may be acquired\nthrough reading the books which\nare being distributed during the\ncampaign to all school children in\nthe province, by the provincial\ndepartments of health and education. Essays must not exceed 750\nwords tn length.\n\"I see no future for opera, a\ndon't think lt has even a -rresen\nJohn BEsktne.\nBring* ease and comfort to\nirritated and inflamed membranes ... quickly breaks up\ncoughs and colds.\nThere Lt onle ona OmbrtdWs.\n Your Hrustist has tt.\nSeven Hole Golf\nCourse at Wardner\nIs Being Enlarged\nWARDNER. B. C. March 8\u2014A\nsuccessful whist drive and dance\nwas held ln the Employees club\nhall on Friday evening under the\nauspices of the Athletic association.\nThere were 14 tables of whist, a\nnumber coming In later to dance.\nThe music for dancing waa supplied,\nby the new orchestra, the \"Kootenay\nKanadlans\". Prize winners at whist\nwere: Ladies' first prize, Mrs. F\nThompson; ladles' consolation, Mrs.\nHerman   Renstrom.\nGentlemen's first. August Daye.\nOfntlemen's   consolation,   Ben   Daye.\nMrs. A. Fletcher returned on\nSunday evening from the coast\nwhere he lias spent the winter\nvisiting friends. Mrs. Roland returned on Sunday from a visit\nto  Calgary.\nGust Edwarlson and J. Hafctad\nleft  on  Monday   for  Castlegar.\nA number of men have been working on the golf course. They have\nchanged it from a seven to a nine\nholo course and are building a\nsmall   club   house.\nThe orchestra has secured some\nnew instruments, a .saxophone and\n,i trumpet and are busy practising\nI MM days. They have also sent\ntor drums which should arrive in\nthe course of a few days. This will\ncomplete their equipment at present\nand they wlll then be able to go\nahead    with    thetr    practices.\nMANY PUPILS AT\nWARDNER SCHOOL\n.ATTEND EVERY DAY\nWARDNER. B. C, March' 5\u2014Report of Division II. Wardner public\nschool  for   February:\nPerfect attendance - Catherine\nCoffay. Myrtle Coffay, Willmm Daye\nTom Halgh. Donald Hamrln. Robert\nHarrison, Elsie Holmes, Florence\nHolmes, Christine Harris Roy\nHolmes. B.ina Johnson, Eddie Kamo\nHarry Kamo. Geneva Lovlck, George\nMoberg, Louise Moberg. Puml\nMlyasakl. Anthony McOrath, Annie\nRader. Edith ftader, Robert Rader.\nIrwz Renick, Mar Renlck. Marie\nRenlck, Isabella Renstrom. Sicinev\nRenstrom, Joseph Rodger*, Josle\nSakat;\u00bb, funM Scanland. Jinn\nThompson. Vivian Thompson, Beverley Haney, Edlt-h Powers RMM\nPowers.\nGrade     IVA\u2014Roy     Holme?-,     Ine:;\nRenlck,   Harrv  Kamo.   Annie   Rader.\nLouise   Moberg,   William   D.v i\nerta    Harrison.    Catherine    < \"1 Is \u25a0\nFlorence    Holmes.\nGrade IVB~Puml MlRasakt. .June\nThompson. Edna Johnson. Vivian\nThompson.\nGraiif III - Beverley Hancj1. Altrec!\nDaye, Sidney Renstrom, Hazen Powers, Bddt; Kamo, Robert Rldtf,\nEdith  Powers.\nGrade IIA\u2014Donald Hamrln, Marie\nRenlck, George Moberg. Anthony\nMcGrath. Jamc* Scunhmd. Francis\nLewis, Geneva,  Lotlck,\nGrade I A\u2014 Jome Sakata, Tom\nHalgh, Mae Renlck. Isabella Renstrom, Christine Harris, Edith Rsd r\nJoseph  Rodgers.\nGrade    IB\u2014Myrtle    Cotfiy,    Bale\nHolmes  Edmond  Rodgers.\nAnnie   Livingstone,    $mb*Mi\nTHUNDERSTORM IN\nYMIR  DISTRICT\nYMIR. B. C. Mar, I..\u2014Mra. J,\nM. Ollle had as her guests on Tuesday. Mrs. B. A. Curwen, Mrs, A.\nMcLeod, Mis. Stevens. Mrs. W. B-\nMrlsam; nnd Mrs Curl Nystrom of\nHall\nMrs C. Robinson was g Nelson\nvisitor  on  Tuesday.\nYmir had quite \u25a0 bad iliundrr\nstorm on Tuesday afternoon. The\nthunder was iuiusu;illy loud for\nthis time of the year.\nSomething new\nabout Shaving,..\nTRY this one: Spread a thin\nfilm of \"Vaseline\" Petroleum\nJelly over the face before lathering. Vou wilt be pleasantly surprised at thc smoothness of your\nshave. Leaves the skin thoroughly comfortable. For \"Vaseline\"\nJelly is healing and soothing...\nrecommended by doctors for\nskin irritations and abrasions.\nThis is especially good for men\nWtth tender skin.\nGet a tube or jar today and try\nthis new kind of .shave in the\nmorning. And remember when\nyo_ buy that the trade-mark\nVaseline on the label is your\nassurance that you are getting\nthe genuine product of the\nChesebrough Manufacturing\nCompany, Consolidated, 5520\nChabot Avenue, Montreal, Can.\nagrapher.\" declared Mrs. R, K Johnstone, 2187 Robson 8t\u201e Vancouver,\nwho formerly lived at Woodi\nB. \"I had frequent dizzy spells;\nhands and feet felt cold from poor\ncirculation and my complexion became pale.\n\"Since taking four bottles of Sargon, all these troubles have disappeared and I haven't looked or felt\nu well In years. It has 'pepped me\nup' so I feel like going back to work,\n\"I also used the Sargon Pills and\nthey're the best thing I've ever\ntaken to keep the system well regulated.''\nSold by Mann-Ruth erf ord Co.,\nNelson.  B.   C.\nAttendance for\nFebruary, Newgate\nSchool Is High\nNEWOATE. B. C, March 5\u2014Following Is the report of the Newgate\npublio school for the month of\nFebruary.\nOrade 7\u2014Hazel! n Puller, Adrian\nBattler, Betty Spence, John MacDonald.\nGrade 6\u2014Josephine Brulotte. Una-\nBelie Sattler.  Aeneas MacDonald.\nGrade   5\u2014Delphls   Brulotte.\nGrade 3\u2014Verne Sattler, Clarlna\nBrulotte,   Ada  Puller.\nGrade   2\u2014Percy   Puller.\nGrade    1\u2014Clare    MacDonald.\nThose wltih perfect attendance\nwere Clarlna Brulotte Delphls Bru-\n'.ftte, Josephine Bgulotte, Olve\nMacDonald. Aeneas MacDonald,\nRoderick MacDonald. Adrian- Sattler, Verne Battler and Betty Spence.\nAttendance\u2014\u00ab8.3   per   cent.\nTeacher,   Miss  Armstrong.\nTho Egyptian government raised\nsugar duties to 900 piastres a ton\nfor refined other than candled; OftO\npiastres for candled; 800 piastres\nfor raw sugar destined for refineries, and 900 piastres a ton for all\nother kinds. The piastre is worth\nnearly   five   cents.\nThere la almost nothing you can't\nfind In Shakespeare except pyjamas,\n\u2014Sir Philip Ben Greet.   L\nOld\nDutch\nfloes All cleaning\nQuicker\nOld Dutch hos many distinctly* advantages., .it's lira\n\u2022ureit way to keep things clean and healthful; it's\nsafe for all cleaning; it's easy on the hands; it's\neconomical to use, and to top it all, Old Dutch cleans\nquicker ond easier than anything you can use.\nOld Dutch removes all dirt and impurities\u2014with\none quick, smooth, clean sweep. Its tiny, flat-shaped\nparticles are natural cleansers and Healthful Cleanliness is achieved\u2014quickly and easily.\nOld Dutch does all your household cleaning. It it\nnot necessary to use several styles and kinds of\ncleansers. Use Old Dutch on any surface where\nwater may be used, on porcelain, enamel, tile, marble, floors, windows, kitchen utensils,\nrefrigerators, etc. Old Dutch doesn't\nscratch\u2014it contains no harsh, scratchy\ngrit. Old Dutch is the modern perfect\ncleanser. You'll save yourself many\nsteps if you keep a can handy in the\nbathroom, kitchen ond laundry.\nOW Dutch assures Healthful Cksnimtu\n.   This Is most i-portent in your nonra\nCLEANS QUICKER\n.Old Dutch,\n Pate Four\nTHE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS      FRIDAY, MARCH 6, 1981.\n^Llxe Ganun.\/c5\n^By (Robert ^Terry Shannon\n1 \u25a0* JJLM_-l:i1 f .T.i* k d'M\nCHAPTER FIFTY-SIX\nAlone   with   Justin   Kent   In\nColumbia Electric\nLtd.\nThe home of\nHotpoint\nElectrical Appliances\nGainaday and Easy\nWashing Machines\nFrigidaire\nAgents for Neon Signs\nPhone 695\nNelson and Kimberley\nJest for Fun\nListen In\nTonight '*\n., darkened room. Connie felt ft sudden\ni wall rise up between them aa be at\nthe  last save voice  to hia definite de-\n-   cislon that her faith In Eddie Costello must show fruit by noon.\n\"The tim* la too abort Juatin,\"\nshe told him. \"Tor Ood's sake Rive\nme a chance: give Eddie a chancel\"\n\"By noon tomorrow I'm going to\nsurrender to the nearest police\nman!\" Juatin old her firmly. '\"That\ndoesn't mean that I bave lost faith\nln you, Connie, or ever will. It\nmeans I'm doing the right thing by\nyou. After alt you're a woman;\nyou're hyiterlcal. You haven't tbe\ncool well-psised brain under these\nconditions that you have normally.\nYou sec dear, neither of us ls fitted\nfor th Is sort of thing. We get\ndisorganized,\"\nThis time there was a final Quality\nln his voice that Connie realized\nshe could not sway by further arjir\nments. Por a moment she stood\nlooking at him, and then sbe went\nswiftly to him, sat on tho arm ot\nhis chair and threw bet arms around\nhim.\n\"Very well. Justin. ,you have the\nfinal word always. I have tried to\ndo what I thought was best, and If\nI failed I couldn't help it. IT you\nKo to prison I'll be waiting for ten\n\u2014flftoen\u2014twenty years; as long as\nr  live   ...\"\nHis arms went around ber and\nie pressed her close.\nWithout   warning,   suddenly,   tbe\naloor bwung open and  May Costello\n:ok.e  ln upon them.\n\"My God I How can you twoplc\npull that stuff at a time like this!\"\n. e demanded, with a strained anguish of her\" own. \"X couldn't shake\n1fu Blue Ribbon Malt\nJe\u00a7ter\nHiduf Craiff Jr.\nA aaawMaaaHy \u00abAVmat Ra_ Paaa.\npan eawr Tnrmlay niaait atvaar\nCalaaabl* Braaadcasalai taaaaaaa\n8:15 Pacific Time\nKFPY\nBlue Ribbon\nMalt\n\u2022dbscrteff'f\nJfeffctf\nS*ttt*tT\nFine Food Products\nIf you're at all particular, patron l\/-c t his nearby atom-it . All\nyour favorite foot! products are\nhere\u2014In tins, jars, package* anil\nin bulk. Jnm for the kldtVhs;\nrrofe-pacfert preMTved fruits for\nijsly desserts; fancy groceries\u2014\nplus prompt, roiirteous service\nand low prices.\nELITE GROCERY\nCOMPANY, LTD.\n023   Baker   Street\nPh.naa Ui       Nelson, It. C.\nBeautiful Girls Entertain'Royal Brothers\nEfficient Housekeeping\nBy   LAURA   E.   RIRJtMAN\nThe farther south tho Prince of Wales nnd his\nbrother. Prince George, go on thetr good-will tour to\nthe Argentina exposition, the prettier the girls seem to\nget. The photographs above show six Brazilian beauties\nwho entertained the royal brothers during their stay there.\n(1)' Vera Alves de Lima of Sao Paulo; (3) Isabel Paes\nLeme, Rio de Janeiro; iZ) Helena da Bllva Oulmaraes\nRiso; (4) Ollda da Rocha Miranda of Rio; (8) Clcope\nPortocarrero and (6) Luctta Bernardoa, both of Rto.\u2014\nCopyright by Acme Newspictures.\nthe worry loose from my mind\u2014ao\nuse trying to sleep.\"\nInstlnotlve courtesy, tho good\nbreeding that would have made impossible such an intrusion, was so\nutterly foreign to May Costello'?\nenvironment, that she had no realization whatever of the social\nenormity of her offense. Connie\nand Justin drew apart, their faoes\nreddening.\nMay looked at them wtth eyes\nthat lacked realisation, of the scene\nehe had interrupted.\n\"Maybe if my boy friend was here\nhe might take my mind oft my\nworry, but I doubt lt,\" she remarked,\ndropping into a chair. \"Oonnle,\nwhere do vou think Eddie could\nhave gone? Where do you think he\nis right at this minute, say?\"\nA momentary spasm of anger had\npassed over Connie, but a swift\nappreciation of May Oostello's worry\nbrought a sympathetic calmness.\n\"He's gone on his mission, May,\"\nConnie told her soothingly. \"This\nis no time for you to worry, child.\nOf all the nights that Bddle has\ngone out alone, on this night least\nof all you should worry. Tonight\nEddie Is walking on a straight path.'\n\"I know it,\" May responded ln\na low voice, \"It's a strange path\nfor Eddie, too.\"\n\"Eddie is like a traveler who lost\nhit way ln the dark,\" Connie said\ngently. \"He has taken the rough\nand stormy road; he fell Into pitfalls,   May,    but    be   climbed   out\nagain and went on* Whatever nap-\npens to him now, I don't fear for\nEddie any more. He has found his\nway  ...  he  is on  the  path  . . .\"\n\"But I don't know where that\npath is going to lead him, Connie\u2014\nthat's what worries me. Maybe it\nwlll lead hin\u00bb to . . . his death.\"\nSilence, deep yet somehow soothing, fell on the three of them as\nthey rested their weary bodies on\nthe rickety chairs in the room.\nSlowly, outride, the haggard and\ndreary dawn began ,0 -arshen the\nsoft outlines of night. Justin Kent\nsat by tbe window looking out.\nThere was the clatter of tha milk\nwagon going down the street, the\nracket of someone rolling a galvanized garbage can to the curb. On\nthe other side of the street, a solitary policeman strolled along swinging hts ntght stick.\n\"What can Eddie Costello do\nalone, single-handed. In this situation,\" Kent murmured. \"To expet\nhim, sick and hunted by the polloe,\nto accomplish the impossible\u2014for\nme\u2014 I cannot believe anything wlll\ncome of it. It's too romanio\u2014the\nI facte themselves, are too horrid and\ncold.\"\nSilence again fell upon them until one by one, they became conscious that from the hall, two\nflights below, was the Incongruous\nclamor   of   a   telephone   bell.    The\nloueuft\nECONOMIZE\nandkbvrtlmbdoit!.\nINSTEAD of expensive desserts,\nserve this delicious Corn Syrup \u2022 -\nyou'll save money and add greater\nnourishment to the meals because it\nis famous for its energy producing\nvalue, and is extremely economical,\ndelicious and wholesome. Doctors\nendorse its food value.\nMake It a daily habit - - eat more of this\nCorn Syrup with your meals - \u2022 eat it with\nbread and butter, pancakes or waffles, or\nserve it with baked apples.\nAsk your grocer\nThe CAIS'ADA STARCH CO. Limited\nMONTREAL\nEDWARDSBURG \t\nCROWN BRAND\nCORN g_8__\nfend for our Famous Recip. Book.   It contain, fn.. CANADA STARCH CO.. Limited, Montreal 1\n\u25a0early JM economical Recipes chosen flora 75,\u00bbS# | Plana, avand me oopr of \"Canada's Prise   I\nreceifed  from  housewives thro\u00bb\u00abhoBt   Canada, j   Recipes.\"   I endow ISc.for mailing costi.\nThi. book took many mmaths t*)*npar* and every J      \t\nrecipe ha. been approved and i\"ied by a famous | \t\nCanadian dietitian.     Majl coupon.    !'n<*_ Wc | Addrsss_ - I\ni\u201e ,i \\p, to cover cost of mailinft. ^______________________________________s\nsound grew la importance until It\nmastered each individual attention\n. th. telephone ringing at da-ana!\nOld Mother Murphy'U n.ver hear\nIt.\"  May  said  In a  hushed  voice.\nI wonder lt it could bo\u2014\"\n\"No, lt couldn't be,\" Justin Kent\n.aid.\n\"It mlfht!\" Connls contradicted\nswiftly.\nMay Co\u00bbt*Ilo got to her feet. \"I'll\nsee.\"\nAlone together again, Conni. and\nJustin war. silent; faintly, from\nbelow stairs, they oould hear Maya\nvoloe, but th.y wer. unaba. to distinguish h.r words. Then, after a\ntime, ber footsteps ascending the\nstairs.\n\"If. for  you Connie,\"  she  aald.\n\"It's Eddi. on th. wire.\"\n(To be continued)\nTOMORROWS MENU\nBreakfast\nOrange  Juice\nOrat.1\nOwned Dried  Beef\nKaaelaa Bolls Coffee\nLnncheon\nBanana Fritter. _\nLemon  Sauce\npreserve. Biscuit\nTata\nDinner\nBaakd Bam with  Apple.\nBaked Sweet Potatoes\nLeft Over Col. Slaw\nOottag*    Pudding,    Vanilla    Sauoe\nCoffe.\na nary paper towllng or white saaper\nnapkin*. Sprtnatle with more of\nth. powdered sugar and serve *\u00ab\none whll. very hot, wttta the fot-\nlowtnfi\n\"Lemon  Bauoe  for Banana  Fritter.: In a small aaucepaja,  oft the\nmage, aaalx tog.\u2014r, taarw-o.u\nof a dtp of granulated sugar, threel\ntablepaaoon. of flour, and oaaav|\neighth teaaapoaa of salt then\nan two cup. ot boiling water. Bold\ntin minute., tak* item fire, add!\nfour tablespoons oaf butter and one]\ntablespoon of lemon Jaate.,\nserve hot, on tb* hot frttttaml\n(Thi. aaauce 1* Intended to ba\ntart, but If liked sweeter, merely!\nadd more eugar .to it.\")\nHABD    COMPONITION    FLOORS\nHard composition floors may be\nwaxed snd polished. Those, however\nthat have a base of some soft composition, suoh as asphalt, mineral\nraibber or mineral bltiunen are soluble in gasoline, In oils and In carbon tetra-chlorlde. They cannot;\nsays New York Sam, therefore be\nwaxed' or treated with any preparation   containing   those   solvents.\nOff tones of pink and red are to\nbo Important.\nShould Girls Propose?\nDecidedly Not!\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nAn Authority  on Problem* of Love  and Marriage\n\"What   do   rou   think   of    srlrla., devious approach to a proposal\u2014why\nproposing?\" wrltea Etta T., and then\ngoes on: \"I'm strongly tempted\nto; the man in the caae needs\nsomeone to take car\u00bb of him\u2014he's\nmorbidly shy and never seems quite\nable to come to the point. Don't\nyou think it should be an act of\ncharity to ask him point-blank?\"\nNo. Etta; really r think you'd better not. Tou know thut old one\nabout   leading   a   horse   to   water\n\u25a0well, sometimes men are like\nUhat, And in spite of your courage\nand veyy genuine devotion, it's only\nwisdom for you to confine yourself\nto those Indirect and roundabout\nmethods that have landed so many\nmen at the altar without their\nactually realizing how lt all happened.\nAnd please bear in mind this is\nsaid without any attempt to discredit. Providence having endowed\nwomen with way and means of\nknowing   how   to   bring   about   s\nFor the Clean Mouth\nTOOTH BRUSHES\nAND PASTES\nThe Oanadlan Dental Hygiene\nOouncil hav. d.voted thi. week\nto th. care of children's teeth.\nThi* oan only be done If they\nar. supplied with proper tooth\nbruaahee .nd pastes. We bav.\na full  Una for  your selection.\nProphylactic Tooth\nBrush, 50a*\nTek Tooth Brush,\n351 and 50*?\nHutax Tooth Brush 50t*\nPepsodent paste, 50a*\nPorham's Paste, 5\u00a9*>\nListerine Paste, 20i*\nMer Paste, 351\nKlenzo Paste, 35*>\nand SOi*\nColgate's Paste, 25ap\nHutax Paste, 35*?\nSPECIAL\n1 68c Milk Magnesia Tooth\nPaste, 1 50c Tooth Brush,\nfor 58at>\nPoole Drug Co.\nPhone 25\nMedical Arts Building\nREAPERS'  RECIPES\nMre. It's Sootoh Shortbread: \"Into a mixing bowl put tw0 cup.\nof pastry flour; add a pinch ol\nground naace and one-half cup of\nlight brown sugar. Mix thoroughly than wtth a e.poon work Into\nthis dry mixture one generous oup\nof butter. (Shortbread require, no\nliquid.) Pack this stiff dough ln\na shallow pan lined with greaaed\npapar. Pat down the mixture\napreadlng lt \u00bb0 that lt I* about\none-hair Inch In thloluaeaat. Baa.\ntn a moderate oven, at about 850\ndegrees P., for 30 minutes, or till\nthoroughly oold. (Note: Sootoh\nShortbread will be called for ln th.\nSunday  Might  Supper, menu.\nMiss W.'s Banana Fritter.: \"Sift\non. cup of pastry flour with one\nteaspoon of biking powder, one-\nfourth teaspoon of salt, and one\ntablespoon of granulated sugar;\nint0 thla dry blxture stir one-third\ncup of cold, sweet milk previously\nmixed with two beaten egg yolks.\nThen add one tablespoon of butter,\nmeasured before melting. Last fol..\nln two stiffly whipped egg whites.\nRemove skin* from five or six ripe\nbananas, lacnap. off th* whit. cell,\nulosc, cut ln halves lengthwise and\ncut halves In two piece, croas-\nwlaas. Sprinkle with powdered sug-\nitr, lemon Juice and orange rind;\ncover and let stand 20 minutes,\nthen dip Into sbe mixed batter, fry\nin deep hot fat and dr.ln on\ncrumpled brown paper  or on  .an-\n(The Beauty Boxj\nBY Helen Fallen\n\"\u25a0\u2022'\u2022\"r'mnmnmth'wnmumw.tmv\nSomething more than a lipstick\nIs neoassry to tint the rosebud\nmouth. Several somethings ln fact;\na strong light, a good mirror, a\nbteady hand snd discretion, A brim,\nette can get away with more make-\nup than the blonde, whose fair\nskin offers too strong a contrast\nto purple eyeshadows, or orange-\ntinted cheeks or carmlned lips, 'lhe\nbrunette is made vivid by the application of factory blushes, but the\nblonde all too often looks cheap and\ngarish when she dips too deeply\ninto Lhe color pots.\nIf fat has settled on ankles that\nshould be svelte and slender, the\nafflicted one can buy rubber anklets\nwhloh, by producing perspiration,\nbreak down adipose tissue. Mas-\nsago is of help.' It must be vigor*\nous, and treatments should be given dally. Lifting up on the toes and\noomtajt down slowly on ths hooli,\nis an exercise that tightens slack\nmuscles and drives extra inches\naway.\nfly  ln  the  face  of  Providence?\nNo man wants to be tu_ed by a\ngirl to marry her. Ho may be shy,\nbashful and tongue- tied\u2014but h\u00bb\nhas enough masculine vanity left, to\nfeel that he's capable of the proposing himself.\nIt Jars hts sense of the fitness ef\nthings to realize that his for moat\nmasculine privilege has been taken\nway from him. It's entirely tea\nmudh like having mother pick out\nlittle son's pair erf \"long, pants.\"\nMother does It, et - \u2022\u25a0\u25a0__. but she's\ntoo wise to let sonny know.\nThe only women safe in taking\nths risk of proposing are queens,\nlike the late Victoria, who proposed to the Prince Consort (no\nman \"being considered worthy\nenough to ask the head of the\nstate to marry htm), and the\nheroines of modern fiction.\nOther ladles would do well to\nfallow that Innate wisdom which\nhas oome down to them through\nthe ages, from some remote cave-\nwoman ancestress who managed to\nsurvive because she was clever aad\ndidn't show  her hand.\nThere must be no suggestion of\nhigh-powered salesmanship about\ngetting a proposal. No \"open conventions openly arrived at.\" Ths\nconventions\u2014those customary agreed\nupon arrangements\u2014must bs taken\nlntp acount absolutely. Whsn ft\ngirl Is serious she can't pursue hsr\nquarry frankly or she'll lose It. AH\nher little stratagems must be camouflaged when she's really driving\na man into a corner; ths pleasant\nfiction must be maintained that shs\nls  eluding   him.\nDoubtless, under thr stress of\npresent economic conditions, and\ntbe amazingly frank answers to\nquestionnaires that come from college girls and boys, taeao convention may ln time be broken down,\nbut at present lt isn't wise to\ntamper with  them.\nMen are the dyed-in-the-wool\nsex; tbey may cross all the bridges,\ncut, aU the cables., but whsn It\ncomes to picking out a lady to\nbear their names and mother htelr\nfamilies they do not differ very\nmuch from their great-grandfathers.\nSo please don't propose openly\nand frankly if you want to land\nyour man. Tou may delicately hint\nthat you hold the key to all those\nthings he's looking for\u2014 domesticity, feminity, making a dollar\n.ncresse and multiply, love to oook,\nind listen (that's a great advantage), and there's the tried and\nIrue   recipe   cf   feeding   him.\nBut whatever course you elect\nto take, there must be no proposal of marriage that can be recognia-\nPostpontng tho visit to ths den*\ntlst is poor policy. Every.six months\nths teeth should havs a thorough\ncleansing to remove tartar that\nforms at the base and sets up an\nirritation of the gums. Ths uss of\nan antlseptlo mouth wash should\nfollow the brushing which some*\ntimes falls to remove debris accumulations of a destructive nature.\nRound shoulders aro ths result of\nlaziness; the woman who has them\nIs too Inert to carry herself prop*\nerly. When the spinal column ll\nheld erect and. hips ars thrown\nback, the ltns of the back le smooth\nand straight. Round shoulders not\nonly depress the walla of the chsit,\nbut plunge ths head forward and\nfurrow in deep lines around ths\nneck, ,\nThst woman who has corns on\nher little toes, and big toss with\nIngrowing nails should buy a pair\nof wfde, low-heeled sports shoes and\nwear them ln ths house. They wlll\ngive the foot a chance to unhuddle\nItself and, as a pressure la relieved,\nfoot ills will pack up and dspert.\nHer feet will have a happy holiday,\nROWNTREE'S\nRely on Kotex for\nreal comfort\nin sanitary protection\n*\"\u00ab%!\nYOU never know old-time fears\ntuid worries when-Kotex is\nyour sanitary protection. You can\n\u00a7o right on enjoying tbe activities\nia t mean so much to you... wear\nlovely frocks with no hint of self-\nconsciousness.\nBecause Kotex Is shaped to fit\nInconspicuously. It deodorizes. Ic\nis soft\u2014and it stays soft. Every\ndetail has been scientifically\nworked out for your comfort.\nAnd it is disposed of like tissue,\nyon know. This is the feature\nwomen appreciate most of all.\nKotex Company of Canada, Limited, Toronto, Ont,\n_\u00a3_\nSafe... Secure\n1. Keeps row mind \u00abt casta.\n2.F\u00abar\u00bbrf\u00bbavM...t4,eii|Ooftrue\ndaintiness.\n3. \/\u00bb*.\u00bb>_&... Kotex It th.\nidentical material used br\nsitcom in Canada's leading\nhospitals.\n4. ** ndtrittt, aafelj-.tioioaagh-\nlr, by a special poena.\n5. D\u00ab\/>oa*aaV(t\u00bb...intt\u00bbntl7,CO_\nplettlv.\nMADE IN CANADA\nKOT6XI\n\u2022tat New SssUsxt atad araalca aeodoctsa I\na grand total of flavor,]\n. pep and health\nTASTE TH EM I Only Kellogg's Pep Bran Flakes have\nthat matchless flavor\u2014that good-to-the-last-spoonful\ncrispness.\nBrimful of vim and zest. Full of crunchy wheat. All\nthe nourishment of the whole grain.\nPlus extra bran for extra health. Just enough added\nfiber to be mildly laxative.\nFlavor, pep and health \u2014 all combined. That's why\nKellogg's Pep Bran Flakes are bettAT brAtt Hakes.\nGreat for breakfast. Fine for lunch. A special treat\nfor children at every meal. Serve with fruits or honey\n\u2014 with milk or cream.'\nLook for the red-and-green package at your gro*\near's. Made by Kellogg In London, Ontario,\nIIIPOaTAMT-^Ca.f.iaT's I'm Ir** \/fates are mlHIr laaatrea. AU,\nBRAN\u2014aaetav Kelleat tretuet\u2014it all bees ao* tsaraateed ta t.ltem\nbet* tamaararr eat teeerrias ceastifatiae.\nPEP\nBRAN   FLAKESU\n THE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS       FP.IDAY, MARCH 6, 198l.\nPag* Fivs)\nSpring\nFootwear\nBaby Calf\nLIZZARD TRIM TIE\n$8\nI Just one example of\nscores of new ideas in\n.-footwear for the\nSPRING SEASON.\ni R. Andrew\n&Co.\nLeaders in Footf ashion\nSociety\nTbls coluiian la oooductta) bj\naba. M. J. Vlfocux. AU tsssn\nbt a social n\u00bbture. Including r\u00bb-\ncepuons, private entertaHanaMit*.\npersonal ltena*, maartataa, aatc.,\nwill astasar Ua thla column. Taa*-\n>_Ura Vltnuux \u00bbt her horn*.\nphon.\nSit)   SUlca\n.treat.\n|B I aver, not a witter I myseii\nbe   .   very   capable   crlmmal.\nIt would be vary easy for me\n\u00abarn money by .wlndllng.\u2014Edgar\nJallaoe.\nI We bav* had no rood comic operas\nlate  because tbe  real world  has\nmora oomlc than, any possible\n>. K. Chestertam.\n.\">\" *\nWe   have\nr.Tl \u00bb . varied\nlohns sis.\ntor all\nntats   and   Pgpib.      Hallo,\nrtntt*,  aThln Rests, E  Adjusters,\n\u25a0tat.  Pads,  etc  Quality   Price*.\n[KOOTENAY MUSIC\nHOUSE\n[MM   Baker   St.,   Nelson,   B.   C.\nPhone   580\nUn.   Oudetto   Braaanan   laaft   tor\nth. coast last nlfht where lh. will\nbs the truest cat Mr. and Mn. Tboas-\na*   Brennan,   Vancouver.\n.   ,   \u2022\nH. P. Cotton ha* lett the Koote.\nnay Lake Oeneral hospital when\nhe has been confined for th. put\nwa\u00bbk.\n.   .   .\nYesterday Mn. C. B. Garland,\nentertained at a .mart bridle\nluncheon at her home can Mill street\nwhen ath. chose mauve tulip, and\ndaffodil, for her table oenter. Mrs.\nGarland's invited guest* Included\nMn. John Cartmel, Mn. B. E. L.\nDewdney. Mr*. H. H. McKenile.\nMn. P. C. Wnltebouse. Mrs. Javmes\nO'Shea, Mn. A. L. McCulloch, Mn.\nC. W. Appleyard, Mn. Peten, Mn.\nA. D. McLeod, Mn. Alex Leltta,\nMn. William Waldle, Mrs.' L. V.\niiodgers and Mra W. M. Walker.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. A. Morton Richmond, Iter-\nnoe apartment*, has left for Van.\ncouver. where ahe wlll spend a few\nweeks at the home ol her parent*,\nDr. and Mr*. Welch.\n...\n1 Mn. W. J. Green of Kaalo haa\nbeen the gueet at' Mr. and Mn.\nW. T. Smedley, Observatory street,\nIor the past month ts now visiting\nMr. and Mra. B. Norman, cedar\natreet.\n\u2022 \u00ab*...\nMn. M. Blnlsh of Slocan city is\na Nelson visitor.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nSenator and Mn. R. P. Gram of\nVictoria expect to spend today ln\nKiaslo where Mr. Green', brother\nresides. They are en route to\nOttawa, when the senator will attend   the   session.\n...\n' The Misses Mary and Millie Potosky of South Slocan were city vlslt-\n4.n yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. J. B. Curran, Vernon street,\nand her two little daughters have\nleft for Grand Porks whes they\nwill visit Mn. Curran's parent*,\nMr. and Mn. Gordon.\n,.   .   ,\nW. A. Elletson of Rossland spent\nyesteday ln town and leaves tbls\nl taming on a business trip to\nCalgary.\n.' .   .\nMn. W. E. Bell entertained a lew\nfriends at her home on Falls street\nrecently. Mn. H. Inland and Mn.\n0. A. Moir wer* th* wlnnaan of the\nprlaae. for cands, .Iter which games,\nmuslo and refreshment* were en-\nJoyed.   The United glaaast* were Mn.\n0. Tbompaon. Mrs. S. HUlyard. Mrs.\n1. Johnaaon, Mn. C. A. Moir, Mrs\nB. Inland, Mn. W. Hampshire.\nMn. R. C. Howard and Miss Agnes\nBall.\n...\nWarren Crow, Terra*, apartments,\nha*   left   for   Golden   where   he   ls\nrelieving   ln   the  custom,  offloe.\n...\nE. Monl of Marblehead ln th.\nLardo   ls   a,  city  vUltor.\nW. K. Esling of Rossland .nd his\nsister. Mn. Davidson, wttre ln the\ndty yesterday. Mr. Ming will\nleave this morning to attend th*\nsession ln Ottawa.\n\u2022 .   ,\nMn. P. Russell Sadd entertained\nrecently at her home on Innes\nstreet at'a .mall brldg. when her\nguest. Included Mn. B L. Reld.\nMn. E. E. L. Dewdney, Mlaa Jean\nHunter, Mn. P. P. Payne, Mn. H*rry\nH. B. Horton, Mrs. R. W. Dawson.\nMn. J Percy Coates, Ms Charles\nH. Hamilton and Mrs. A. Morton\nRichmond.\n\u2022 .   .\nMr. and Mn. Daniel Lynch of\nSeattle are spending a few weeks In\nthe dty, guest* at- the horn, of their\nson-in-law and daughter, Mr. and\nMn. W. H. Blnair, Latimer street.\n...\nMlas Jean Waldle, Stanley street,\nIs spending tbe wmt end ln Trail\nat the horn, of Mr. snd Mra. C W.\nMacBey. She will attend the Cinderella  dance.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. Charle* Norris, Plfth street.\nFalrvlew, ha* returned from a vtalt\nto Calgary and Fernie. In the\nlatter place she visited at the home\nof her brother and \u00bblater-in-law,\nMr. and Mre. Guy R. Johnstone\n...\nMlaa. Mildred Martin entertained\nWedneaday evening at a delightfully\narranged bridge at h\u00abr hom. on\nDelbruck street, when the honors\nof the game were won by Miss\nPeggy McLeod and Miss Lillian\nFleet. Mlas Martin's Invited guesta\nwere Mlaa Prenoes Wheeler, Miss\nJessie McLeod, Miss Iris Robertson\nMiss Helen V\u00bbnce. Miss Eleanor\nSquires, Mlu Louis. Peebles, Mlsa\nEileen Dill, Mid Graoe McDonald\nMlaa Winona Rouleau, Miss Edna\nChapman, Mtss Lillian Fleet, Miss\nJulia Potosky, Miss Oladys McLeod.\nMlas Peggy McLeod. and Miss Edna\nEarl*   Buchanan.\nTRAILS SCHOOL\nPUPILS MAY SEE\nDENTAL PICTURES\nCan Attend Lectures;   Hold\nUp Decision to Allow Teeth\nExaminations\nKuskanax Society\nat Nakusp Hears\nAddress and Skit\n:MTs,__s_.mtrTe-m_,_.^_s_.m.mesmm.rtmmtAs\\^^^rmnwn~e\nNAKUSP,    B.    C.   March   8.\u2014Th.\n\u2022Kuakanai\"   young   Peoples   Kackrty\nmet ln Leary's hall Tuesday evening, Miss Nellie Johnaaon presiding.\nAfter the usual baulnee* routine an\nextemmely lnterastliag program was\nglvsn under th* supervision of C.\nSharp* the topic being \"Socialism.\"\nAn amusing skit on \"A Woanen'%\nMeeting\" was presented by Messrs.\nJack Benton. Rlch.rd Blyth., Cecil\nSharp., oeorg. Dodds, Jack Harrte\nand  Pred  Harrison.\nTRAIL. B. C, Maroh S\u2014Request\nof the Trail oral hygiene committee for permlssU.n of pupils to Attend mouth health lectures, and\nfor dentists t* enter schools to\nexamine children's teeth was reoelved by the Trell-Tadanac school\nbosrd  Wtadnaasd.y  night.\nTrustees . felt that the lectures\nand tllms would be excellent educative measures, but questioned\nwhether medical record* on file \u00bbt\nthe school would not prortde the\nInformation required aa shown on\nsample  ohart*.\nSchool   Inspector   p.   H.   Sheffield\nexplained the plan and \u00bbt*t\u00abd lie Less Sunshine This Month;\nhad  been asked by the minister ot u.  .   _         \"             '\" \u201e      '\neducation   to   further   the   prograS). *   \"'Ral  temperature 4o De-\nMsdloal   health  officer.   Dr.  P.   S. -,__   l-\u201e, *ji_.   au _\nEaton stated his record would show greeS, I4OW IN tne Above\nhow   man;   children   had   defective\nPRECIPITATION IS\nLOW AND WEATHER\nWARM, FEBRUARY\nteeth   at   the   time   of   tbe   annual\n--?t_r\u00b1m*Z _ hES* \"*(\u00ab___ \u00abr-~. **\u25a0\u00a3\u25a0 wS\u00bb?\nshow the extent of the detect.\nInspector Sheffield stated the Canadian Oral Health association was\nnot an organization of dentists but\nof  Drive te  citizens.\nThe * trustees felt that if only\nsuperficial examination was to be\nmade the dentists' examination\nwould hot be of any more value\nthan the ordinary medical examination.\nThe board acceded to the request that pupils be permitted to\nattend lectures and showlngB of\nfilms.\nIt wae decided to withhold per\nmlsalon far the examinations until\nfurther details were arranged with\nOr. H. 8. Thompson of the dental\nsurvey.\nThe   lowest   precipitation   for   an\nMeat Prices Away Down\nLOOK OVER OUR\nWINDOWS FOR SPECIALS\nI All No. 1 Government Inspected Meats.\n[Try a nice, juicy roast of young Steer\nBeef, prime young Pork, fresh killed\nlocal Veal, or Lamb.\nI We suggest our Shamrock Ham or Bacon\nj for breakfast. It is also down in price.\nCHICKEN       TURKEY       FOWL\nBurns & Co., Ltd.\nQuality \u2014 Cleanliness \u2014 Service\nUphill Dellwry 8:30 a. m.\u201410:00 a. m^\u20143 p. m.\u20144 p. m.\nPalrvlew, lfl a, m.\u20143:30 p.  rn.\nPHONI  60 BAKER ST\nWest Kootenay Butcher\nPHONI  I WARD  ST.\nBaby\nCarriages\nand\nSulkies\nUoyd Loom Baby Carriages $23.05 to 834.50\nSulkies  _.. SS.50, S6.50 and $7.50\nOne Sulky with hood  1 916.50\n(\u2022Baby Walker _ $8.50\nKiddie Kara $2.75, $3.25 and $4.50\nScooters .... $2.50 to $6.00\nSTANDARD\nFURNITURE CO.\n[Complete House Furnishers, Nelson, B.C.\nThe Store of Service and Satisfaction\nOLD TIMERS PLAN\nTO BANQDET HERE\nPioneers of District to Have\na Get Together; Large Af.\ntendance Expected\nPreparations tor the Old Timers'\nbanquet to be held1 toere next week,\nare nearlng completion. Membera\nol tbe Nelson and DtetTtct old\nTimer*' association Irom all over\nth* West Kootenay will be present.\nPioneers of the district drawn from\na membership list ol ower 90, will\nrelate tales o( -the earl; days of\nNelson, when Baker street wa* sur\nfaoed with travel and cut down the\ncenter by a deep \u00bbully. Talea ol\nthe picturesque mining camp life\nwill be the order of tbe evening.\nWith the large number already\nenrolled on the lists of the organ.\nlaaatkjn, prospect* of a larg* gathering I* bright.\nSPRING SEEDING\nHAS COMMENCED\nAT GRAND FORKS\nI.RaM) loKKS. B. C, March\n5.\u2014.Spring seeding commenced\nhere yesterday when (leortrr\nMerahal sowed eight acres of\nspring wheat on new ground\nbroken this spring. This Is\nthe earliest date for the starting\nof   seeding.\nBRIGHT DAY IS\nENJOYED, NELSON\nCOMMISSION HAS\nSMETER FUMES\nREPORT READY\n(Continued From Pete One)\nOne of the'brightest days of the\nMann was enjoyed here Thursday,\nwhen, al thought the temperatures\nwere slightly lover, the sun shone\nunobscured by clouds, throughout\nthe day, and set with a rosy glow\nin   thc   late , afternoon.\nTbe temperatures ranged between]Dubois died In 1930, and Hon. A\n10 and 40 degrees for the maximum O. Stanley was appointed in his\nand   minimum, stead.\ndary and caused damage to the\nfarms and property ln the state of\nWashington. Owing to\/the rule ln\nthe constitution of the state of\nWashington that prevented aliens\nor alien corporation tipm obtaining any Interest ln land, it waa\nImpossible for the company to purchase smoke easements or to provide adequately for the settlement\nof the damages claimed.\"\nAOREK ON\nJOINT   fOMMJSSION\nAccordingly, when complaints were\nmade by the United States government in 1928, the two governments\nagreed to a reference to the international joint commission. The\ncommission was asked to determine\nthe extent to which property in\nthe state of Washington had been\ndamaged by the smelter fumes; the\namount of indemnity which would\ncompensate the United states Interests for the damage; the probable effect on Washington of future operations of the smelter; the\nmethod of providing adequate indemnity for damage caused by future operatlona; and any other matters arising from the drifting fumes\nwhich the commission considered\npertinent.\nExtensive Investigations were made\nby groups of scientists representing\nthe two governments, In 1928, 1929\nand 1930, and also by Independent\ngroups of experts acting on behalf\nof the Consolidated Mining tt\nSmelling company. The commission\nheld hearings at Northport, Washington; at Nelson, B. C, and at\nWashington. D. C.\nThe International Joint commission consists of three Canadian\nmembers and three appointed hy\nthe United States. The Canadian\nmembers throughout this investigation were Charles A. Magrath, Sir\nWilliam Hearst and George W. Kyte,\nThe United States members of the |\ncommission for this investigation,\nat the outset, were Hon. C. D.\nClark, Hon. F. T. Dubois, and Hon\nT. J. McCua**>er. Hon. C. D. Clark\nretired, and ln his place was appointed    Hon.   J.   H.    Bartlett,    Mr,\ntebiperature for an average of 20,\nyears, featured the weather condition! here dining February. During the month 58 hours at sunshine\nas compared with 79 hours of sun\nshine during February, 1930, was\nrecorded.\nTha precipitation durtng the\nmonth was 1.84 mbhea whleh was\nmade up of 11.1 inches of snow and\n.73 Inch ratn. Rain fell on four\ndays and snow on seven. The greatest rainfall was on the eighteenth\nol the month when .47 inch wes\nrecorded and the maximum snow\nfall for the month was on the fifth\nwhen  3.7 Inches fell.\nThe highest temperature was 45\ndegrees recorded on the eighteenth\nof the month, the same day during\nwhich the greatest rainfall occurred,\nand the minimum was nine degrees\nabove aero on the ninth of the\nmonth.\nThe highest barometer reading of\n30.60 was taken on February 3,\nand the lowest of 18\" was taken on\nthe eighteenth. The mean temperature for the month was 31 degrees,\nA wind velocity of 22 miles an\nhour, blowing from the south waa\nalso recorded on tho eighteenth of\nthe  month.\nMRS. GRAVES' AND\nMRS. WALLACE'S\nMOTHER DIES HERE\nMrs. Speirs Was Resident of\nNelson 16 Years; Leaves\nTwo Sons Here\nMrs. Marian Spelrs, age 76 yeara,\nmother of Mrs. R. D. Wallace and\nMrs: V. A. Graves ol Nelaon. died\nh\u00abre Thursday afternoon after an\nIllness of about two weeks' dura\ntion.\nMrs. Spelrs came to Nelaon about\n16 years ago Irom Scotland.\nShe ls survived by her husband,\nJames Spelrs. in Scotland, two sons,\nIvle and Andrew Spelrs and three\ndaughters, Mrs. B. D. Wallace and\nMrs. V. A. Craves all of Nelson\nand Mrs. James Hunter of Troon,\nScotland. Slu' ls also survived by\none brother, David Caldwell of Harrogate. England, two sisters, Mrs. P\nBoyle ol Glasgow, Scotland, and\nMiss M. Caldwell of Glrvan, Scot-\nIjnd,   and   12   grand  children.\n\u25a0ClMea^hers^O\n607 Baker St.\nPhone 200\nNew Spring Coats\nin Most Attractive Styles\nModels that are ideal for travel and\ndressy street wear. Smart women will\nlove these coats, for they have a refreshingly new silhouette and great\ndistinction. There are various models\nin the new materials, featuring all\nthe important new colors. Misses' and\nwomen's sizes.\nNew Tweed Coats\na\nCoats of imported tweeds in new designs. Made with self or fur collars.\nHigh belt lines, novelty sleeves and\nflaring skirts. Richly lined with heavy\nsilk crepe. Sizes for misses or women.\nThe price is much less than you would\nexpect to pay for such beautiful garments.\nEACH  \u201e  815.00 TO 850.00\nWomen's\nDressy Coats\nA wonderful range of dressy coats\nIn all the new cloths. Chonga cloths,\nChongellas, silk and wool French\ncrepe, or chiffon broadcloths. All the\nnew bright colors and Black. Collars\nof fur or self. Linings of heavy silk.\nSizes 15 to 44.\nEACH $33.50, $27.50 TO 869.50\nSOLE AGENTS FOR\nGolfex\nDresses\nSOLE AGENTS FOR\nDel Monte\nHickey Coats\nTO ORGANIZE SEA\nSCOUJaiNELSON\nNelson Ball to Be in Charge\nof  New  Organization;\nSeamen to Aid\nDr. Wood's\nDry, Hacking Cough\nCaused By a Neglected Cold\nMr*. James A. Btwwari, Stellarton, N.R, write. !-\n\"For annul tiane I was troubled with a dry, hackiaa|\nooojjh, caused br a haaavr cold I had, at ftrat, near\naaaetaad. A friend told me If I would take Dr. Wood*\nNorway Pino Syrup it would help mc, ao 1 got a\nbottle aaaad it did relieve my eongh,\n\"I am th* mother ot ass, children and T nae it 1*.\naartary oat. of them when tbey have colds, and find t.\n*lw.yi gin. relief, auad I would not be without it W\nthe honae for anything.''\nPrie. 35c a bottle; barge family site 65c, at *B\ndmggia*. and dealers; paat tap only by Th. T. afilbnn\nOav, Ltd, Toronto, Cant.\nALABASTINE\nWhen Spring cleaning, freshen up your\nwalls and ceilings with Alabastine. Color\nmakes the home cheerful. A wide range\nof colors to choose from in Alabastine.\nThe safe, sanitary and economical\nwall finish.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\nCO., LTD.\nLook Sor tbe Red Hardware Store\nPHONE499 BOX 414\nPreliminary arrangement* were\ncomp.et*d for the organisation of a\nSou Scout patrol lure, the first\nLrganized of Its kind to operate ln\nthe district, Thursday evening at a\nmeeting held in the Armory, with\nNelson Ball organizer, presiding. A\niong list of naval and merchant\nmarine officers and nun, resident*\nof Nelaon, are fostering the new\nmove, and will aid in training the\nhoys   when   they   are   organized.\nTwo patrons were named, B, A.\nSmith, commander and Rowland\nBurke. V.C. D.S.O. lieutenant-commander. Organization will start\nat once, and training will go on\nit.hroufihout the summer. Plana\nfor the purchasing of uniform., was\nalto discussed at  the meeting.\nMuch interest is being shown by\nthe parents of the boys who are\nplanning to Join.\nSAYS INSTITUTE\nFOR THE BLIND\nIS MISMANAGED\nWXNNIPBG, March 5\u2014Bad management and nou-inf>l]igent direction on the part of the Canadian\nNational institute for the blind waa\ncharged today by representatives of\nthe Canadian federation of the\nblind, Manitoba division. At a\nmeeting w i th Hon. R. A. Hoey,\nminister ot education, representatives of the sightless presented the\nminister with resolutions urging\nthe Manitoba government to take\nImmediate steps to protect the blind\nworkers.\nMr. Hoey wss told that low wages\nwere paid to blind workers and\nthat in some cases fenmle employees\nwere receiving $9 per week. It was\nalso charged by thc represenatlves\nthat stocks of brooms, reeds and\nbasket* had been destroyed to cover\nup mismanagement.\nA. B. Howe, president of the Canadian federation, left tonight for\nHalifax to attend a conference of\nagencies working on behalf of the\nblind, called by Premier Harrington\nof Nova Scotia sessions start Maroh\n10. It in expected the meeting\nwill decide on tbe appointment cf\na central advisory board to oo*\nordinate work of the different organizations.\nWOULD RELIEVE\nHOSPITAL LOAD\nMUNICIPALITIES\nUnion   B.   C.   Municipalities\nPresents 45 Proposals to\nCommittee\nLEVEL OF LAKE f\nUNCHANGED HERE\nsp*rv*   nogs\nBeing recorded at .16 below low\nwater mark, the level of tbe West\nArm of Kootenay Lake is still at\nthe same level recorded four days\nago.\nVICTORIA, B. C, March 6.\u2014\nRecommendations of the Union of\nBritish Columbia Municipalities\nmra again considered by the municipal committee of the legislature\ntoday, all of the 45 proposals of the\nunion having now been before the\ncommittee. In most lnsunoea the\ncommittee took thc recommendations under advisement. A nonpartisan discussion on the floor of\nthe house was advocated by delegates to proposals that tno government relieve municipalities of the\ncost of hospital maintenance and\nthat legislation be enacted to relieve land of some of the burden\nof school taxation.\nAttwell King, solicitor for the\nB. C- Electric Railway company,\nafter discussion had taken place on\nthe subject, was asked to write\nhit. comments on the proposals that\nthe powers of the board under the\nwater act were not sufficient to\nprotect the municipalities in connection with hydro electric companies and that a public utilities\ncommission should be created, The\nneed of finality In rulings was\nstressed with municipal delegates\nadvocating that an appeal to the\nBritish Columbia court of appeal\nshould be final.\nRecommendations regarding residence In municipalities and care of\nindigents will b\u00ab taken up with the\ninspector of municipalities, A recommendation that the age for oM\nage pensions should be reduced to\n65 was held over for a year, A\npica for financial help from the\nprovincial government for municipalities who spent money outs'de\nof their budgets for unemployment\nbefore the federal unemployment\nrelief act came into force was considered. A plea for double the\ngruit to municipalities for teachers'\nsalaries was also taken under consideration.\n\"I believe in grumbling; it Is the\npolitest form of fighting known.\"\u2014\n\\.. W. Howe.\nRelieve\nOf all domestic animals the cat is\nthe closest to man In mental and\nmoral makeup.- -Ambassador Am.\u00bbnil\nof  Brazil.\noonns\nKIDNEY\nPILLS\n&?&J*ft <\nProposed establishment of an agricultural products export board for\nCanada to handle shipment of au\nsurpluses, apart from grain, was endorsed by the B. c. egg pool members at  their  annual  meeting.\nOne and two piece daytime dim-ac.,\nmade of wool or silk or oottr 11\nare going to be atar style number.-, for spring. Woollen gauze, woo!\nwith a lace effect tn the weaves\nwool marquisette, and linen will be-\nsmart lone dress materials. \u00bbj]k-.\nwithout an atom of sheen to them\nand in either plain or tlnieet printed patterns wtll be successful fabric*\nfor the frock. Cottons that are\nwoven like woollens\u2014like serge, like\nflannfl, like crepe de chine, and\nlike tweed-- will have a special\nchic.\nShredded Whstwi\n^W%C*mMdUn\nVein, E*t TWO\nShredded Whe*t\nBiscuits   a   dty\nHow did you\nget breakfast\nso quickly?1'\n\"Why, I'm servm*- Shredded\nWheat, of course. I juat take\nthe biscuits from the package\nand serve them with cream or\nmilk; sometimes I add fresh or\nstewed fruits. If you'd like \u2022\nhot breakfast I can prepare it\nin a jiffy: Shredded Wheat\ncrisped in the oven while I heat\naome milk to pour over it. Oh,\nI'm a friend of Shredded\nWheat! It's ready cooked,\nready to serve; and it's just as\ndelicious and nourishing for\nlunch as for breakfast.\"\nTO CANADIAN SHREDDED MtKT\nCOAU*KY.LTn\nSHREDDED\nWHEAT\nWITH All THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT\ne\nV\n .-\u2022agi\nTUB NELSON   IM1LX   NfiWS\nFKUMY, MAKCH 8, 1TO1.\n\u25a0% Nglamt flatUj *N,ttt0\nPublication aaawy aMRaltat naatrjt Baaaadan by Its. Hm putallah-\nttat   Company,   limited.   MaiMta.   B.   O.\nBiaaalnaaaa latter. ibould bs atadnaawd and *h*elt* and mtataarf\naardaan aaaad. payabl. to Th. Hams FaatHWaln. Oompanx. UataatasaL\nand In no aaa*. to uxundaaai maaaaaba*. ot tha etstt.\naVdatattaalaaf rate oard* and A. B. 0. stetemtmt. of olrtaulatton\nmalltad on raqaaaa*. or may be ara at th. otrio. of any adavrtlallaf\nwax* mtmao by ua. Oanadlan Dally Nmpapatn AMOolaUon.\nSUBSCRIPTION  BATES\nBy maul  taoawtry), par month \u2014...... ..\nBy  mall   (olty).   patr   yaar\nPar\nCm\u2014das.  paar   raoajth\nDrtlvarad.   par\nPar   yaw\t\nPayabl.   tn  ad.anos.\nKtambrr Audit Bunau of ciroaal.ttcaa.\nFRIDAY, MARCH 6, 193L\nGet on the Voters' List\nTim\u00ab for a^sgTBttMing on tha BritUh Columbia voters'\nlists is drawing to a cloee. The lists close on March\n31 next Every resident of the province entitled to a\nvote should register before the end of the month. There\nire some 70 commissioners stationed in Nelson and\nlittle trouble should be experienced in getting information regarding the list.\nTraU Keeps Kootenays to the Fore\nTrail's hockey aggregation is keeping the Kootenay district on the map by their performance at Vancouver. Just when hope had about fled and Trail was\ntrailing on the series, the Smokeaters, on Wednesday\nnight, came through with a decisive victory that pulled\nthem from the cellar, and brought them into the\nfavorite position for winning the British Columbia\ntitle.\nThat Vanoouver is strong opposition is shown in the\nseries to date and anything may happen in the final\ngame on Friday. However, should Trail win the\nKootenays will be able to enjoy an Allan cup play-\ndown between the British Columbia champions and the\nAlberta titleholders, for a Trail victory will earn the\nteam the right to defend the provincial honors against\nAlberta's invasion, Although spring is in the air\nhockey followers are still on their toes and an inter,\nprovincial series between Trail and the Alberta champions should pay, and well\nBe Careful With Your Health\nWith the breaking up of the wintry weather and the\narrival of less frigid days there comes a certain amount\nof sickness. Colds are common and will be for some\nweeks. Numerous people are under the weather and\nhave been ordered to bed for several days. There Is\ntalk of much influenza being about. Headaches, backaches and stomach flu seems to be prevalent. But with\nall this there is no reason for pessimism. It is a\nnatural occurrence for the season of the year. With\nc< ailments can be prevented.\nore than the ordinary effort to increase your\nwc.. ._> when influenza, colds, and upper-respiratory\ninfections are prevalent.\n\"Do's and Don'ts\" useful in guarding against the\ndisease follow:\n1. Securing adequate sleep and rest (eight to ten\nhours' sleep every night, with windows open, but under enough covering to keep warm.)\n2. Eat a moderate mixed diet, and partake freely, at\nregular periods, of pure water (six to eight glasses\ndaily.)\n8. Wear clothing to suit the environment, particularly clothing which prevents chilling of the body surfaces,\nand which keeps the body dry.\n4. Avoid people with colds, especially those who are\nsneezing or coughing. There is more danger from con-\ntact with those juat beginning to feel sick than from\nthose ill enough to be confined to bed.\n5- Keep out of crowds so far as possible, especially\ncrowds in closed places.\n6. Avoid the use'of common towels, wash-basins,\nglasses, eating utensils, and toilet articles.\n7. Wash the hands thoroughly before eating.\n8. Avoid the use of any so-called preventives.\nIf the disease should be contracted, the following\nprecautions may prevent serious illness:\n1. If you have a cold, feel badly, or are feverish, go\nto bed at once, cover up warmly, and have the windows\nopen; send for a physician and follow his instructions.\n2. Do not take a\/iy so-called cures. There Is no\nspecific cure for this disease.\n8. If you can not get a doctor, remain in bed, eat\na simple diet, take plenty of fluids, such as water, fruit\njuices, milk, bouillon, hot soups, at frequent intervals.\nUse a mild cathartic, if constipated.\n4. Remember that the most important measure of\npreventing pneumonia or other serious complications\nis to remain in bed until ail symptoms have disappeared,\nand then, under the physicians advice, to return very\ngradually to your usual physcal activities, being sure\nto rest before you get tired.\nAwards of the McKee trophy for the most meritous\nservice in the advancement of flying in Canada to\nSquadron Leader Tudhope, M.C. will be received with\nfavor in the Kootenay and Boundary districts. Major\nTudhope has been a frequent caller at airports in the\neast Kootenay and at Grand Forks, while lining up\na trancontinental route.\nThe amount subscribed towards establishing a pathological laboratory in Nelson has reached $1600 Numerous Kootenay centers are still considering the proposal. The sum of $2500 is necessary to see the lab\nestablished in Nelson.\nR. B. Morris has been elected head of the Nelson\nGyro club. A charter member of the organization\nin Nelson, secretary for a number of years and a member of the directorate for some time Mr. Morris is\nwell qualified to fill thc highest poet in the local organization, a\nCrawford Bay old timers, at a recent meeting, had\nbaby, picture contest. What a difference a few years\nand swadling t\\otr-'- \u25a0 make.\nBobby Jones T that golf means everything to\nMm. There it no doubt about that It will mean o\nnew movie contract.\nw\n_\u00bb .to\n_ AM\n_ 13.00\n_      .7S\n. im\n.     M\n.. UM\nSeen and Heard in\nNELSON\n^M (Br J   a C.)\nHare's a little note i got in the\nmail:\nDear 6lr: ^^^_\nWould you solfe tha endoeed\nconundrum for me I think by tout\ncolumn vou should be good at this\naort of thing. I nave puraeled orer\nthla, try to find out the correct\naoore, but it hat me beaten. I would\nlike you to explain Uie pame and\nscore. Tou may be able to get soma\nInformation from your sport ad-tor,\nA HOCKEY PAN\nNelaon, B. 0.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nTha enclosed was the following\nrbockey story from tha 5els onDaily\nNewa of March 24.\naaa\nPORTLAND    BEATS\nVANCOITVB*.   %~l\nThird   Period   Rally   (lives   Portland\nVictory;   May   Make\nPlay-offs\nVANCOUVER, March 8.\u2014A third\nperiod rally gave Portland Buckarooa\na 4 to 9 victory over Vancouver\nLions in a Pacific Coast Hookey\nleague game here tonight. Tha\nUons lad a to 4 going into the final\nframe but tbe Buce outicored the\nlocals three to one ln that period\nto take tke verdict. By their victory tba vial ton retained their\nchance to reach the play-offs.\nrUMMARY\nFirst   perlod\u2014l.   Portland.   Rouiston.  (Maher)   18:07.\nI    Penaltlea-\u2014Conn.\nj    Beoond   period-\u20143,   Vanoourer*   Ar-\ninott,   8.08;   9.   Vancouver,   R*edpath\n: (Pettlnger)    8:30.\nPehaltlee-McOoldrick 3, Conn,\nCoups*.\nThird period\u20144. Portland, Evans,\n(MeOoldrlck 5:20; fi, Portland,\nDownie, (Coupe) 7:05; fl Portland, Conn (McGoldrlck), 3:03; 7.\nVancouver, Osmund son. (Brennan)\n8:34.\nPenalties\u2014Osmundson, Redpath,\nTeel,   Brennan,  McGoldrlck.\nwell Mr. Hockey fan, but I am\nInclined to believe you are a fenette,\nor lady fan, tbe solution is simply\nthis: Portland get a goal In the\nfirst period (1); Vanccuver got\ntwo In the second (3), They stand\n3-1 for Vancouver at the end of\nthe second. In the third Portland comes back strong to soore\nVr.ree making the Portland total\nfour, while Vancouver la held to\none to a total of three goals. Game\nends  4-t.\n\u2022   \u2022    \u2022\nI will admit the story is confusing. It is Just one of a scries\nof mistakes that sometimes creep\nInto a paper to make lt seem ridiculous to the reader. In tbe first\nplace the Linotype operator bungled\nthings when he said \"The Lions\nred 3-4 going Into the final frame\".\nThe original ccpy said \"3-1\". But\nthen the proofreader erred ln not\ncatching the mistake. With that\nUttle change the story becomea\nquite sensible. All but the head.\nIt aaid \"Portland beats Vancouver\n3-lM. I can't account for that. But\nthe fact that the head writer\nwrote \"3-1'* goes to prove that the\nLinotype operator made a mistake\nas the editor had bis eye on \"3-1\"\nwhen he wrote the head. He should\nbave bean looking at \"4-8\".\nsee\nTbe above ls just another case\nof the tougness of tha newspaper\nracket. If the business man makes\na mistake in his accounts, hs finds\nit. His bookkeeper may get bawled\nout, but no one else knows. If\na newspaper man makes a mistake\nlt comes out ln black and white\nls circulated far and wide and the\nwhole darned world knows. The\nboys will likely check over these\ngames more closely in the future.\nMany thanks.\nt   *   \u2022\nLaat night seemed to be my mall\nnight. Got another letter. This\ntime from Wardner. Someone up\nthere hae a native draw, that secmn\nto peter out as ahe writes. The\nletter  says:\nMr.   J.  B.  C.   (Better   offer   thanks\nfor   that.)\nWhen you-alls rumblln' around\u2014\nIn and out of the town\u2014will youse\nget ma the address of Aunt Het.\nI'd sure admire to hsve ber for\na   neighbor.\nMADAMS   H.\nWardner, B   C-\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nWall that's a big order. Aunt Het\nas far as I can figure out, ls the\nfirst lady of the land, aad the\neighth wonder of the world. She\nhas along history. If my memory\nserves me right she is an offspring\nof one Robert Qulllen, a newe-\npapre and columnist, editorial writer\nand wlss cracker who publishes 'a\npaper In Fountain Inn in tha eastern states. As far as I can learn\nahe tit everybody's aunt. That la\nanyone she has become acquainted\nwtth. She la a a\"\u2122-' ft*d soul. She\nla not a btt nob nab. and does\nnot cars where or how aha meets\nyou. She la an e\u00abrly riser and\ngenerally meet* folks early every\nmorning, and her gossip is awfully\ngood and to ths point. It would\nbe hard to say Just where ane calls\nhome. So figure it out for yourself Madame H\u201e she's everybody'*\nneighbor. Borne day we may Introduce you to her old eldekicker wbo\ngoes by the name of \"Pa\".\ngas\nAt present Aunt Het U about\nthe cloaest neighbor I have on thla\npage\nThat Body of Yours\nBy JAB. W.  BARTON. M. D.\nWHAT CAUSE DECAY\nOF TEETH\no_er tihe, gr*i*eet of modern\nphysicians. es-cTthat mora troub.a,\n\u00a3or\u00bb allme-ta began ln tha mouth\n<*** in any otfcer part ot\ntha body. To have a good healthy\nmouth waa a big aaaat Worn *\nhe: 1th standpoint.\nUnfortunately h ia while we ara\nyoung t_at we, build up or taar\ndoro our tmtshi tba ages from 1\nto 30 are considered the moat important yearn ln development of\nhealthy teeth, or in tba starting of\ndecay.\nNow what causae daogy\nAa   you   know   there   have   been\nTEN YEARS AGO\nDoing the fitting thing\n\"Fold up the kitchen table, Sally, so I can let down the Murphy bed.\"\nWhat Do You Think?\nWould a Big War\nHelp Is Question\nof New Denver Man\nTha Editor:\nThe Nelson  Dally Newa.\nSir: It waa my good fortune to\nattend a meeting of tbe Presbytery\nof the united church at Nelaon\nand enjoy the good-fellowship of\nabout, 30 ministers of that church\nand a few laymen and lay women\nas we discussed for two days,\nchurch problems and national problems and world problems\nThere is no lack of lntereet In\na modern Presbytery meeting. Moat\nof tha ministers are wide awake\nmen wi h broad human Interests\nand the debates were keen and\ngood natured. An old Irishman\npresided, with twinkling Irish eyes\nand the serious nature of the\ndiscussions by no means shut ou.\nthe  humorous  side   of  Ufa.\nOf course wa discussed War and\nPeace, and several bore witness to\na giowlng feeling that they had\ndiscovered that a Big War ls needed\nto clear things up and put everybody to work. I myself have\noften heard this opinion expressed\nand no doubt MT. Editor you have\nheard the same.\nNow the amassing thing la that\nthere is a very great deal of\ntruth in this Idea. For a time\nan least war would straighten up\nmany of our problems and it la\nnot difficult to see why this\nshould  be so. \\\nWar ia about the most crazy and\nstupid thing possible, yet strange\nto aay, any nation that gees to\nwar with another nation, wlll go\nabout the business of fighting In\nthe most practical manner possible; we actually learn how to\nlive when we set out to kill.\nIn times of peace we tolerate all\n* sorts of muddle and ooafualon that\ntte Immediately discarded when\nwar Is declared. Tha nation sets to\nwork to organise itself for tha\nstruggle and private Interests and\nfancies are to a very large extent\nswept away ln the emergency. Not\nonly Is the individual told that ha\nmust \"do his bit.\" but hs is alao\ntold \"tha bit.\" that hs, or ahe,\nmust do.\nIn short, ws organise tha nation\nso as to direct its reaourcea against\nthe enemy and Incidentally we\ntake pretty good cars of the individuals who compose the nation\nand do not allow them to starve\n.and s.-ajggle amongst themselves as\nwe do in times af supposed pesos,\nWhy should we act *0 sensibly\nln times of war and so stupidly\nin times of peace? Way not begin\nto organize the naticn now, and\ndirect our energies to seeing tbat\neach Individual ln Canada ls decently fed and clothed and sheltered\nas ths vary first duty of ths nation.\nThan we oould alao tackle our forest problem ln real earnest and\nsave and extend our forests whloh\nars ln great danger at present.\nThere is simply no limit *\u00b0 our\ndenvnd for good roads and better\naccommodation ln many ways.\nPins openings for the energies of\nyoung Canadians and far better for\nthem and ua, then driving them to\nbootlegging, or peddling real estate\nor insurance, or law, or running\nlittle competitive stores, or trying\n\"the holdup game\" as they now\nsrs almost, compelled to do.\nCompetition is said, to ba tba\nlife of trade. It ls too often\nhe death of the trader. Many\nCanadian soldiers have found themselves to have been more secure and\ncarefree whilst ln the trenches than\nthey are on Oanadlan farms.\nYours for a batter Oanada,\nJ.   C.   Harris,\nNew  Denver,  B   C.  March  S.\nAunt Het\nWhat the Press Says\nTHIRTY   FEARS  AGO\n(Fr m the Tribune of March 6 1001)\nEdward Mace of Nelson has bonded the Belfast, Armagh, Winnipeg\nand Brandon claims on Five-Mile\ncreek, the consideration being $15,-\n000.\nsea\nTha first atep in moving the\nlocal C. P. R shipyards to their\nnew location on the lake front at\ntbs rear af Honey mans foundry,\nwaa undertaken yesterday.\na  e, \u25a0\nBorn on March 4 to Mr. and\nMra. J. Carton of Hall street a aon.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nO. H. Wilklns wli0 wsnt to South\nAfrica with the first contingent,\narrived in Nslson on Mondsy sod\nleft for his home Ln Kaslo yesterday.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nJohn Bull, justios of tha peace\nof Slocan City was a vlaltor in\nNalson   yesterday,\nBeatrice: \"I think Amy Smith is\nthe ma oast creature I ever met.\nI showed her my engagement ring\nand she said it was always too\nught for  her.\"\nRoaaJis: \"Tst, she aald axatlv\ntbs earns to ms last year when X\nhad  it\"\nA   FORWARD   POLICY\n*more of them ara being provided\nall ths time to meet the rapidly\ngrowing needs of motoring traffic\nMr, Bruhn, with lucidity and emphasis, has told ths Legislature of\nths amounts spent on roadi. With\nths construction of 1100 miles of\nnsw roads and tba reconstruction of\n1300 miles of existing roads mors\nsettlement has been attracted to the\nMr.  R. W.  Bruhn,  the  Provincial\nMinister   of   Public   Works,   has   ln\nthe brief period he  haa held offloe\nproved   himself   a   man   of   action,\nability  and  with  full  knowledge  of\nconditions. Recently, ln speaking  ln\nthe  debate  on  the  Address  in   ths\nLegislature,  hs showed  both  virility._____________________________________________\nand logic in describing  the  policies I province, there is a growing flow of\nof his department. The minister is\na politician who ls not afraid; who\nis sure of himself He has a wide\nvision and a well balanced Judgment. The mantis of the Publio\nWorks Department could not have\nfillen on more capable shoulders\namong the supporters of Premier\nTolmle.\nThose who criticize expenditures\non roads during the paat few years\ndo so far political purposes. Suoh\ncriticism ls usually coupled with\ncomplaints because mors money was\nnot spent ln ons or other district.\nThis indicates the illogical character of ths criticism. Mr. Bruhn\nasks ln what district any particular\nundertaking should not have bean\ncarried out. There waa no answer\nto his question In ths Legislature,\nand there will be none In ths provinoe. Ths government has sat itself\nto ths task of keeping pac* with\ntraffic requirements. It accelerated work tn many directions during\ntbs past year wtth ths laudable object ln view of providing work for\nths unemployed. In doing this It\nhu earned ths gratitude of ths\npeople ss a whole for proving such\na factor ln preventing unemployment from becoming more accentuated than lt hai been. Thsrs U a\ntribute to the administration of the\nPublic Works Department in the\nknowledge that ths roads of British\ntourists and a great saving has been\neffected ln ths operating costs of\nmotor vehicles. These ara three\nconsiderations which, from any progressive viewpoint, would warrant\nthe character of the road work on\nwhich tha Department ot Public\nWorks is engaged. Due to ths careful manner ln which engineers of\nthe department have mapped out\nImprovements, with every cars taken in such policy to make certain\nthst good traffic results ensue, lt\nIs safe to aay that there hss been\nno undertaking which was not necessary and which haa not Justified\ntte construction. It ts exactly for\nauch a policy that ths department\nprssldsd over by Mr. Bruhn exists\nThat minister Is, therefore, safe in\nallowing the course pursued by the\ndepartment to Justify itaalf, as It\nhas ln the eyas of ths public. The\nminister, in what be had to sa-..\npaid a well-deserved tribute to the\ncapability and loyalty of hli deputy\nand the other officials of the de-\npjurtment, both engineering and\nsrcl s.ecrturai, and those ln all\nbranches of ths service.\nMr. Bruhn deselves congratula-\ntlons on the manner in whloh h;\nhandled his task tn tbe Legislature\nIt was fe fighting speech, dsllvere\nwith thorough conviction of th\ncause which ha espoused. In th\nnew Minister of Public  Works thi\nColumbia as a whole ars batter and I Government hu an undoubted  as\nsafer  than  ever  ln  tha  past,  and list.   Hs  ls capable,  straightforward\n\"Nona of our folks wu agnos-\ntlca or athslsts, but Cousin Ben\nused to aay ha wouldn't believe\na preacher no qulokar'n ha would\nanybody else.\"\nLighter Side\nDonald (to wlf. at Knfilah rail-\nwar st,.tion): \"Wb.'t T. oaaana ft\n.   porter   ta.   tak'   oor   laagajaaja-\"\nWife: \"la\"., na. Y. try. Donal';\n7>'r* atcouata quit, sa* uotloe-\n\u2022Mat,\"\nALSO  RAM\n\"Ar. yon tbe a-room?\" sated\nba-wlldtrsd old ftmttrnaan at a\nvary  elaborate  wedding.\n\"No, sir,\" was* the reply of\nth. embarrassed young man;\n' I av \u25a0 eliminated In in. pre-\nllnalnary  tryoatts.\"\nFlint Scalar \"What an you\nlauthtnar  at?\"\nBeoond Skater: \"Tbat (allow at\nth. other \u00abnd of the pond whom\nWe   oouldn't   bear.\"\n\"Bait wh.t about him?\"\n\"Wall, th. loe oouldn't bear him,\nelUaatr.'\nAlceamon: \"Eurobla, what a. lt\nyoaar father aw* tn me to object?\"\nBurebai.: \"He doesn't se. anythlns\nIn you. AHornon. that', why ht\nobjaactaa.\"\n\"Dont marry a paasalv. - guv\nftdaises an expert on m\u00bbtr:moral;u\nmattars ln a contemporary. Thla la\ngood advlc*. The pensive girl be-\ncomes. In th. natural coun* of\nuveutaa, tab. expensive avlf..\nThe American scientist* who\naraatat to Africa to look for the low-\ntut form a human Uf. might r.\nturn horn* and tak* a look at th.\nN.w York policeman and lawyers,\nwho !.:*\u2022. been \"framing\" innocent\naromen on vios chargaas for th. money they could mak. out of It.\u2014\nMacon Telegraph.\nProftasaor Einstein declare* (bat\nIt I* hotter at th. polta. aahaoat\nth. taouator on th. sun, and w.\nJefy  you to prove It Isn't so    *\nHe hat. not Lamed th. lesson\nof Ufa wh0 do*, not every d.y surmount  .  few.\"\u2014Cmnaon.\nhis policies ars tho*. which th.\nand efgraae.lv. becau*. b. know,\npeople demand. There la no auaaa-\ntlon wh.Mver of th. vital need of\nadditional road faeiutt*. tn th.\nprovince. Then waa. never an;\ndoubt that tbe antiquated roadways which came under th* aagla\nof the present administration aa a\nlegacy from its predecessors In offlo.\ncalled \u00abloud for . n.w policy of Improvement* and maintenance. It Is\nauch a policy that ls being pursued.\nis aMr. Bruhn bas mad. very apparent tc ths Legislature. All Brit-\nh Columbia will b. content If h.\n.-Ul carry on ln tha Department of\nubllc Works in a manner which\nill continue to provld. up-to-date\n.ransportatlon facilities for th. province.\u2014Victoria Colonist.\n(From the Dally new.\nMarch \u00ab, SMI)\nTh. Royal Mounted polle. patrol\nwhloh left returned from Fort MacPherson to Dawson city stated that*\noU le flowing from tha MacKenzie\noil fields at tn. rata ot 190a barr.1.\ndally.  .\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBrig.-Oeneral Cummlnm. commander of th. Kerry militia area,\nwu one of th. twQ ofiiosrs klLed\nin ambuah of a military convoy In\nClonb-jun,  Ireland,  Maroh, 6.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nWearing   his   famou.   nil,   snd\nth. new honor of third vice-president of th. Associated Board* of\nTrad* ln Eastern British Columbia,\nMayor O. *\\ MoHaidy letunaeci irom\nthe coast yesterday after having\nparticipated In Ua. affair, of four\norganization* of provincial scop*.\n. 4#   a\nAbout too basketball fan. aaw\nKelson defeat oranbrook In two\ngame* her. last night. Th* men'.\nteam beat th* Cranbrook boy. *T*a.\nund th. looal girl* won 26-18. The\nteama were: Nelaon\u2014I, C. Runt, H.\nFerguson, D, Moddrell, R. Maure.\nand A. Simon.. Cranbrook\u2014<3. A. K.\nOiU, O. McTeer, M. Araju., A. Crowe,\na. Bamford, w. Bponoer arsd O.\nam.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nA large audience of flower lovers.\nwer. present ln th* city council\nchambers yesterday for R. V. Ramsden'. lecture on \"Msm'nli Sweet\nPea,\" given under th. auspices of)\nth. Nelaon and District Hortlcultu\nral society.\n.many different causes given for i\ncay of the teeth-add digestive Mid\nIn   th*  mouth,  glandular   dlsturtl\n.no*, so oommon In yoaaaag paaopll\nharmful       organism*    from    fa\"\ncfaanges of temperature, ahd ao fa.\natoanvaar It la generally aareed I\ncu\nth* graataast aingl. cauu. of d\u00ab\nof th. taaaath a, lack of the 1 .,\nklnata of food Dr*. Bunting, ttadlaa|\nJar anal Bard mad* a short\nvs.tKa.lon and found that da.\ndid not occur so often Jn oh\nwho wan eating otrtaln food..\nThey then mad. an aattenarlvt\nvestlgaeion in which several g\nof   ablldrsn   war.   eareaitlraaart.\ngiven   certain   treatment,   end\nyear later wer. examined, again.\nFollowing one Una of treatanaf\nin on* group th. dental d*cay\npreaaant and aettva in only J pen\n.hat Is on. ln twenty. In enott\nrroup SO percent showed aactlvo i\ncay; In another group 49 percent.]\nWhat treatment we. found to\nmo.t effective  In preventing\nThe   diet   tre.tmaant.   *   diet\nwhloh , milk, fruit., .nd grtaaan '\nlabia* avaare  uaaad dally  In  addltl\n.o other  autntlou*  food*.\nIt wa. .1*0 pointed out that 1\nahlldren  aw.   ln   eloelient   gal\nhealth at the end oi  th. Inn.\ngatlon.\nAnd whsn w. launember that 1\nvalue,  th*  mineral   salt*,  and\nvitamlna. mound la milk, fruit, i\n_,.....  .cgci4.4Mais. w* can readily\n.ersrand  how  not only  tne   vftet]\n\"J   \"!' the tavMuea of th. body .\nbuilt up.\nBee that your youngrtar. gat I\n...   ~.4   4_-at  oa   tueaa.  lood  .tu\ndaily.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\nFrom the Dally News of\nMarch 6  1911)\nThe alarl ol* Crswe, government\nleader ln the house of Lords, London, England, was removed from\nsn hotel to his home yesterday\nfollowing  a serlons illness.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMayor Robinson of Kamloops\nstates that negotiations are being\ncarried on by the city With the\nCanadian Northern Railway Company which will result shortly in an\nannouncement concerning ths entrance of the railway Into Kamloops.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThat good progress ls belbg made\non the development of the Neepa-\nwa mine on Tan-Mile creek and\nthat the Van Roi mill his installed\na mill with the exoept.on of a\ncrusher was the Information given\nby E. Shannon, superintendent of\nthe Enterprise mine which Is under\nlease to 8. 8. Fowler.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nFUUy   80   ladies   were   present   at\nthe Women's Institute meeting yesterday   when  Mrs.  William Rutherford spoke on bulb culture.\ns   \u2022   \u2022\nTbat track laying will start on\ntha Coast-to-Kootenay railway link,\nnorthwest of Princeton as eoon as\nths weather Is sui able was the announcement made at Vancouver\nyesterday.\nI   heard   an   amualng   story\nother     day     oonoarnlng     Win.\nChurohiu and M_s Maud Allan, ttj\nold-time famous dancer.\nIt appears that when aha\n.he height of hsr <ams in Lond\nMr.  Churchill took her Into\nt a house of a certain weH-i\nsociety   lsdy,   but   mutual   lntsre|\nand    oonversstlon    were    sotnsw\n-mited. ^^^^^^^\nAs thsy rose from the table, tl\ndancer remarked;\n\"Well, . Mr.   Churchill,   ws   dod]\nseem to havs bad much in ,\n.onlght.   In fact,  I  think  thtra\nut ons thing we do have in\n.non.   We wsre both 'turned out'\nlanchester.\"\nThis   was  shortly   alter   .Wlnslv.\nChurohlU    had    been    defeated\nManchester and Miss Allah's\nhad b:en banned by the city fathsf\n\"Just Candy\"\nCandy Is always a gracious __\nbut when you select Rapp's Finei\nand Fresher Chocolates yon evM\ndence Special discrimination be-|\ntween \"Just candy\" and dellclon)\nconfections. Rapp's Chooolatei\nare original In thetr variety\u2014in-,\nd'vldual In their piquant fla*.\nPlace a standing order with anyj\none of the Candy Dealers listed!\nbelow to hare a box sent to yoiin\nhome once every week.\nOBTAINABLE\nAT:\nPoole Drag Co.\nNelsoi\nHunt   Bros.\nTral\n11. Cherrlngton\nKosilant\nCranbrook Drug On.\nCranbrool\nMinion's Pharmacy\nFernli\n*\nWho Killed\nTack Thayer?\nHe was found at 3:30 a. m. . . . miles\nuptown ... murdered.\n'Manhattan Night1\nBy WILLIAM ALM0N WOLFF\nWill prove itself the most sensational,\ngripping and interesting serial story\nyou have ever read.   Don't miss one\ninstallment.\nBegins soon in\nThe Nelson Daily News\nSpray\nPumps\nNow is the time to\nget busy with your\nspraying.\nWe have all kinds\nof Pumps and spray\nmaterial. Prices right.\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.,\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardwart\nNELSON, & C.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS      FRIDAY. JIARCH 6, 1931\no^i~\\\nPas* svrn\nARSENAL FAVORED\nTO RETAIN LEAD\n[ENGLISH   SOCClvR\n(Second Division Lead Cinched\nby Everton; Notts County\nOut in Front\nLOUDON, Maroh 5.\u2014(C. P. cable)\nMnal, pace-setters ln tb\u00ab first\nIdlvlwon of the English soccer\n\u25a0league, ahould bold their lead of\n\u25a0three points over As.an Vllls on\n\u25a0Saturday. Arsenal hav0 the great\n\u25a0advantage of playtno at borne\n\u25a0against Huddersfleld Town, while\n\u25a0Aston' VlUa must travel to Black-\nTburn.\nIn ths second division the race\n|for  first  plaoe   ls   over.\nEverton are 11 polnte ahead of\n\u25a0Tottenham Hotspurs, who are run-\nIners up. Kverton entertain Read-\nling, next to last In the championship standing, and should pick up\ncouple more points. Mill wall.\nIwho g\u00b0 to West Bromwlch, who\nfare ln third place, may help the\nISpurs as tbs Albion, wltb tbe\nI semi-finals of the English cup the\n\u25a0 following Saturday, will not likely\nIpliiv s strenuous game.\nI NOTTS COI'NTV OCT IN FRONT\nlb   the   third   division,   southern\nI section,    Notts    County    are    also\n\u25a0way out ln front and headed for\n[promo lon.    On Saturday they take\nRon Exeter City, who have Just come\n[through two tough cup ties,   Notts\nho are also  st home, should win\nfly.    The battle tn lhe northern\nnotion Is closer. Lincoln City, Tran.\nmere      Rovers,      Chesterfield      ind\n(Stockport Oounty lead in the order\nDarned.    Lincoln  Cl'y  meet one ft\n[the   poorer   clubs,   Rochdale,   snd\n\u25a0anmere Rovers hook up with Nel-\nthe bottom club. Their relative\n[positions    ar*    not    likely    to    be\nUtered.    Stockport and Cnererfleld\n|Ue drawn together and the former\nIII   hsve   a   chance   to   close   up\nome of the gap between them.\nIn Scotlsnd Motherwell are going\ni be hard put to tt to retain their\nLr-potnt lead over Ransters.    They\naw-t play a,t Partlck Thistle while\n'*na\u00bbrs   have   the   e*s.er   task   tn\nng Aberdeen.* Celtic, whi meet\n|th\u00bb   lowly  placed   Avr  UhltM,   and\nho hove (ramee ln hand on Mo'hcr-\n'e!l  and R^nrers, ar- ln the nin-\nUng for both the lsaeue champion-\nfolo  and   the   Scottish   cun.    They\nnn   certainly   pick   up   points   on\n\u25a0Saturday.\npffOi-rCTTOV rVCRKA\u00abKa\nA marked increase in the ornduo*\nJnon of creamery butter I* Indicated\nIn  the  current   news  letter   of  ths\nlateral    dairy    and    cold    storage\ntnoh.      Preliminary    reports    revived    from    six    provinces    show\n\u00bboductton   for   the   calendar   year\n\u25a0830,  as  follows:\nprovince 1930 192!.\nlbs. lbs.\nNOVS   Scotia   ....    4.734,118     4.3F?fl,531\n(Jew  Brunswick   3.032.178     1,860.173\nQtarlo          02.000.000    59,185,194\nihltoba          16.786.808    15.472,109\nSaskatchewan      13.750.000    14.786,205\nUberta         17,fl00,000   18.004.183\nBig League\nBOWLING\nDONT be afraid lb iisft\nfor ADVtOE-THeoy-'En\nfeLLOW MAYfiOTtCe $6M&\nWuir 7fr\\>r Wo ed\/re mr\neowc\/ous\nof* \u2014\nsrt. ^,_*r^\/e_t-\/*.-\nBy  AL  DEMAREE\n(Fonder Pitcher, New  Vork  Giant* >\nNever be afraid to aak or accept\ndvloe from a good bowler. An experienced bowler can often detect\nsome Uttle f >ult or mannerism ln\nyour delivery of whloh you are not\nconscious and wht ch ls hurting\nyour  scoring  ability.\n\u2022Mihuc*t\" Coi.tei, a really great\nstudent of the game, was telling\nme recently how a little tip from\nblm put Frank Ksxthelsar, one of\nthe topnotohera, back on bis game.\n\"Karthelaer was bowling a aeries\nof games for a big side bet,\" aaid\nChuck, \"but he didn't look natural\nand ths Pins were not dropping for\nhim. I watched him roll a few\nballs and noticed that he flinched\nat the foul line and l\u00abt the ball\ngo with an awkward motion. It\n.\u201eems tnat he had been roiling on\na sticky floor earlier ln tbe evening and was now rolling on i\nfoul line that was as slippery ss\nglass. In order to keep from fouling he had to stop himself and let\nehe ball go unnaturally. I advised\nhim to start his approach 8 or 10\nlnche farther back. He did and\nlooked like himself from then' on.\nAs I remember he rolled ten S mes\nwithout an open frame.\"\nAl Demaree has prepared an Illustrated bowling leaflet on \"Spares\nwhla-h be wljl gladly send to any\nreader requesting lt. Address AI\nDemaree In care of this paper and\nbe snre to enclose a self-addreeaed.\nTEACHERS TAKE\nBADMINTON GAME\nJunior High School Club Wins\nOver Legion \"B\" Team\n8-4 Here\nROUTLEGE MAY\nGET WRESTLING\nBOffMNELSON\nSpokane Promoter Plans Open\nGame Both Here and in\nTrail City\nSPOKANE, Wash., Marah 5\u2014British Columbis's growing yen for\nwrestling bouts wlll bs rewarded ln\nthe near future, aooordlng to Jack\nRoutledge. Spokane promoter, who\nrecently returned from a tour of\ninspection   over   the   province.\nRoutledge expects to open the\nmat game both in Nelson and TraU\nwithin the next few weeks.\nRANGERS DEFEAT\nCANAWENS, 2-1\nNew York Team Breaks Run\nof Seven Montreal\nVictories\n_. Duo, luau^u, _ih., w.i,n tne\na ahot from his gun, and wblch he\ndropped to tbe ground. The owl ls\nBird's   home.\nMONTREAL, Que., March 5.\u2014(CP)\n\u2014The speedy New York Rangers\nbroke * string of seven Canadlens\nvictories by edging out a two to one.\nvictory over the flying Frenchmen\nhere tonight. The score was tied\nIn the flnt period, but the Rangers\nforged ahead on Paul Thompson's\ngoal ln the seoond. and fought off\na ternf'c Canadlens onslaught ln\nthe third.\nThe game was fast at the start\nbut slowed down till ths last period,\nwhen tho Canucks made their last\nstand. Smart defensive work of ths\nRangers nrjj passes that wtnt\nwrong contributed to the defeat of\ntbe world champions\nSUMMARY\nPlrst period\u201411) Canadlens. Mor-\netus, 6:23; (2) Rangers, Boucher CW.\nOook,   _.   Cook)    8:07.\nPenalties: Johnson (2), Wasnie,\nO.   Mantha.\nSecond     period \u2014 (8)\nThompson,    3:20.\npenalties:    Bill   Cook.\nThtrd period\u2014No score.\nPenalties:     Peters,   T.   Cook\npine,   Burke.\nRangers\nLe-\nBINGAY IS HEAD\nTRAIL-ROSSLAND\nGOLFER'S CLUB\nPlan  Commercial  Traveller's\nTournament; Fairways Is\nCause Discussion\nWith ths receipt of a Spokane\npaper here Wednesday night, a Nelaon howling team found tbat Its\nscore of 2762 pine, bowled on\nOellnas* alleys Wednesday evening,\nwas 124 pins below that of an opposing team made up of Coeur\nd'AIene hotel bowlers who bowled\n9 plus Tuesday evening ln\nSpokane.\nJ. Allen, Nelson's crack bowler,\nled the individual honors with an\naggregate of 684 pins, two up on\nhis nearest opponent Nick Casslos\nsnd three pins up on the Coeur\nd'AIene hotel team's high man,\nQehrlng. Oehrlng soored high single\nof 213 pins.\nALSO IN  IMPERIAL\nGALLON JARS +2\u00abP t_Vf\nM>* FOR CONTAINER {PtTWmit.\n| MATURED and BOTTLED BY\nVICTORIA WNfci\u00a3$\nWISH CCtlMlU*)UMnT_ WOCI-I\/l vx\nWished   or   displayed   by   the   Liquor\nl^ntrol   Board   or   hy   the   Govern-\nI nt   of   British   Columbia.\nWHO KILLED\nTack Thayer?\nDON'T MISS\nOne Instalment\nof\n'Manhattan\nNight'\nThe Sensational New\nSerial Story Tbat Begins Next W\u00abek in\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nJunior High School Teachers'\nBadminton club defeated a Legion\n\"B\" dub team 8-4 on Tuesday night.\nScores with the Teachers' club\nplayers   mentioned   first   were:\nLadles' doubles\u2014Miss E. Hamson\nnnd Miss C. Martin beat Miss F.\nMcFho: and Miss R. Und, 12-15,\n15-11, 15-4; Miss D. Gilchrist and\nMrs. E. Sowerby beat Miss F. McPhee and Miss T. Heddle, 16-3,\n10-15, 15-13, Miss Kg. Etter and\nMl\u00a33 D. Gilchrist lost to Miss B.\nLlnd and Ml&s T. Heddle, 4-15,\n15-4,     10-17.\nMen's doubles\u2014c. W. Tyler and\nJ.  Fraser loat to  A.  W.  Idlens  and\n0. Hamilton, 9-16, 13-15; Dr. T.\nBourque and1 B. Martin beat C.\nHamilton and C. Miller 10-12, 15-10;\nW. Bush and L, Simpson beat J. T.\nMoon  and   N.  Bradley,   15-3,   15-10.\nMixed doubles\u2014J. Fraser and Mlsa\nE. Hamson lost to C. Hamilton\nand Miss B. Und. 13-15, 8-13; C.\nW. Tyler and Mlsa C. Martin loat\nto A. W. Idlens and Miss F. McPbee,\n8-15, 11-15; B. Martin and Mlu\nGilchrist   beat   C.   MUer   and   Miss\nF. McPhee 15-10, 14-8,-15-9; Dr. T.\nBourque  and  Mrs.  E.  Sowerby  beat\n1. T. Moon and Mlsa T. Hoddle,\n15-5, 15-0; W. Bush and Miss E.\nEtter beat N. Bradley and Mlas B.\nLlnd, 15-3, 15-0; Dr. T. Bourque\nand Mrs. E. Bowerby beat C. Miller\nand Miss F. MoPhte 13-18, 15-12,\n15-8.\nTBAIL, K C, Marc.1 5.\u2014With 4u\ntn attendance, the Trail-Bossland\nGolf and Country club met at tbe\nMemorial hall tonight. Arrangements were made for a commerciel\ntravellers' tournament Ln 1932. Fees\nwlll remain the same, and finances\nare tn good condition. There wo*\nmuch discussion on the fairways,\nthe opinion being that If they\nwere kept with a closer out, play\nwould   be   much   easier.\nDecision was made to try to interest city visitors ln the course\nOfficers of the club for the\nyear are: O. B. Murray, honorary\npresident; T. W. Blngay, preeident;\nT. j. Flngland. vlce-prealdent; R.\nAnderson, B. Jandrell, W. B. Wilson,\nI. C. Crowe and ft F. Mclntyre,\ndirectors; H. B. Fuller, honorary\nauditor: W. P. Dunbar, secretary-\ntreasurer.\nClarence Reynolds, managing director of the Betiding Cortlcelll, Ltd.,\ndied et Monirc . He waa a native\nof   Stratford,   Ont.\nThorny William DwdTeon, hu\ni;d-time nswspsperman, former publisher of \"Once a Week\" and The\nWest Tork Herald\", died at Toronto.\nOUR SMOKERS\nSUPPLIES ARE\nCOMPLETE\nPiped\nLighters\nPOUCHES\nHolders\nCases\nAU brands of cigars and\ncigarettes\nWRIGHTS CIGAR\nSTORE\nBLACKHAWKS BEAT\nAMERICANS, 1-0\nBristling Game and Victory\nSpoils New York's Playoff Chances\nCHICAGO, Til.. March 5.\u2014Chicago's Black Hawks clung to their\nthree-point margin over the N'*\nYork Rangers for second Place in\nthe American division of the National hockey league tonight, nnd\nvirtually ruined the New York\nAmericans' chance for getting Intn\nthe playoff't by a bristling one to\nnothing victory\nFrankie Ingram took a pass from\nArt Somers early In the necond\nperiod to beat Roy Worters for tho\nonly score of the contest. Th*\nmargin was ]ust about sufficient\nfor the Americans played Inspired\nhockey In the f'nal period and did\neverything but tte It up.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u2014No score.\nPenalties \u2014 Emms., Wentworth,\nAdams, Carson.\nSecond nerlod\u2014dl Chicago, Ingram   (Somen)   5:30.\nPenalties\u2014Dutton. Graham, Emms\nThird   period\u2014No   score.\nPenalties\u2014fiheppsrd.  Dutton.\nJUNIOR HOCKEY\nPLAYDOWNS ARE\nSHIFTED AHEAD\nRECINA, Sask., March 5.\u2014A* \u2022\nTaaaaaalt of oomnlloatloo. that hsv.\ndaav.loped Ua Alberta, It haa* been\nfound ntaoawary to mak* a g\u00abn\u00abr*l\npc.tponavna.rat of data,* tn th. vast.\n\u00abrn Oanada Jaanlor hodtsy puiydown\nthi. month, J. W. Hamilton, pre.1-\nd*nt of 1h\u00ab Canadian Amateur\nHook*? association announoad today\nOrlllnaUly sohedulaad for Maroh\n7 and B, the British Columbia v..\nAlbert* playoff ha. baaan aawttohad\nto Maroh  9   and   11.\nTb. winner, will paarform to 8...\nIcatchewavn against th. champion,\nof till. provlnoB on Saturday. March\n14. and Monday. Maroh 18. Pre-\nvloualv. this aerie. h\u00bbd bean Uattaad\ntor March   19  aad   14.\nTh* v\/Mtaarn Junior final* for poaa-\nMaston of th. Abbott cup will lata\nVises In Winnipeg on Marah 18 and\nao, lnitead of on March 11 and 10.\nm originally planned.\nArctic owl which was blinded by\nfinally captured alive after lt had\nconfined In a closed porch *t Mr.\nALLEN HIGH MAN\nIN SPOKANE AND\nNELSON BOWLING\nNelson Bowlers Lose to Coeur\nd'AIene Pin Men by Score\nof 124 Pins\nScores were:\nC. d'AIene Hotel\nlit\n3d\nSrd Tot.\nOehrlng    ....\n313\n198\n170   681\nWhite    \t\nan\n188\n180   679\nFussy   \t\naia\n187\n304   603\nMurphy   \t\n193\n3O0\n177   569\nMullen  \t\n185\n183\n307   664\nTotals\t\n993\n955\n938 3886\nNelson\nlat\n3d\n3rd Tot\nNick    Casslos\n198\n197\n189   585\nR.   Brown\n188\n183\n153   633\nJ.   Allen   \t\n183\n303\n199   684\nJ.  Bell  _  .\n178\n157\n189   534\n167\n198\n186   550\nTotals    \t\n913\n938\n914 3783\nMISS E. EDWARDS,\nLEONARD PURDY\nWIN BADMINTON\nSOUTH SLOGAN, B. C, Mar. 5.\u2014\nThe Junior Badminton club hare\nJust concluded a very Interesting\ntournament which wss held at No.\n3 hall. As a wind up to the play,\na delicious supper provided by the\ngirls and boys was served by Mrs.\nF. B. ItflJdln, Mr. and Mrs. P. O.\nBird, Mrs. J. Thompson. Mtss K.\nEdwards, Miss M. Bradshaw Misses\nffllza and Dixie Edwards, c. Fisher\nand A. Murray. The prize winners\nIn the tournament were Edith Edwards and Leonard Purdy.\nMIXED   DOUBLES\nMolly Murray and Jim Thompson\nbeat Rtts Jones and R*?ld Gardner.\n15-6. Edith Edwards and Leonard\nPurdy beat lone Klngsley end B.l\nMulr, 15-19. Agnes Eliason \u00bbnd\nWilliam Ramsay beat Meg Bradshaw\nand Sibley Ramsay, 15-9. Grace Williams and Irvln Klngsley beat Betty\nBird and Jack Tindaie, 15-12, Irene\nFrisby and Jesse Ridge beat Edrw\nEdwards and David McDonald.\n16-11. Betty McDonald and Tommy\nHunt lost to Molly Murray and\nJulian Yeatman M-15. Edith Edwards snd Leonard Purdy beat Mn**\nly Murray and Jim Thompson. 15-5.\nGrace McWllllams and Irvln Klngsley beat Agnes Eliason and Will-\nlam Ramsay 15-6. Irene Frisby snd\nJesee Ridge beat Molly Mvirra\nand Julian Yeatman. 15-6. Edith\nEdwards and Leonard Purdy beat\nGrace McWiUaine and Irvln King-*\nley. 15-13. Edith Edwirds and Leonard Purdy boat Irene Frisby and\nJesse Ridge 15-9.\nGIRL'S   DOUBLES\nAgnes Eliason and Rita .innes beat\nBetty Bird \u00ab.nd Meg Bradshaw, 15-13.\nions Klngsley and Edith Edwards,\nbeat Irene Frisby and Betty McDonald, 16-9. Edith Edwards and\nlone Klngsley beat Bita Jones find\nAgnea Eliason, 15-1. Edith Edwards\nand tone Klngsley heat Edna Edwards ftnd Grace McWllllams, 15-12.\nBOY'S   DOUBLES\nJim Thompson and Leonard Purdy\nlost to Irvln Klngsley and Raid\nGardner 14-15. Tommy Hunt and\nReld Qardenar lost to Jack Tin-\ndale and William Ramsay ?-l5.\njmsc Ridge and Sibley Ramsay beat\njullan Y\u201eti.uu aud Mvld *.i0_oi_-\naid  16-1.\nA REAL COST FINDER\nIn tahese asys when e\u00bb*.cioncy in\nproduction Is so seaentisl to success\nIn fanning, whether on a large or\nsmall ecale, cow testing U pro-ing\nIts worth. Daily weighings of milk\narouse a tanner's interest in his\ndairy herd and encourage him to\ngive attention to those little details\nso essential to suecesa. Supplement*\ned by periodical vtalta by tho dairy\npromoters and \"tat\" teats dally\nweighings provide s reliable guide to\nintelligent fedlng and increased production. The \"boardsr\" cow who\nwlU not earn hsr keep even with\ntht best of teed* oan be weeded out\n,\u201e.i .h. oroduction from good oowi\nincreased.\u2014_\u00abI>artment ot Agrlcul-\nvuie,  -nawa.\nBig George Maloney\nIs Defeated by the\nFormer Trail Man\nSPOKANE, Wash., March 5\u2014Ernie\nArthur of Trail, claimant of ths\nCanadian middleweight mat belt,\ntossed his way to vtotory In a\ngruesome match with Big George\nMalonty, looal grappler, here Wed\nnesdsy   night.\nA body slam in the final few\nminutes of tht third canto won\nMm the nwirbles.\nLast week *_i-bur battled to a\nthree-round draw with Iron Cham-\njerlatn.\nSENIOR HOCKEY\nRESlllTS AT COAST\nIS UNCERTAIN\nTrail Sribkeaters Have Slight\nAdvantage in Favor to\nWin\nPRENTICE HEADS\nTHE ROD AND GUN\nCLDB AT FERNIE\nVANCOUVER h. C, March \u00bb.-\n(CP)\u2014Senior amateur hookey supremacy ln British Columbia and\nthe right to represent the province\nln tbe Allan cup playdivwns Is due\nto be settled ''\u00bbre tomorrow night.\nTrail Smokeaters. defending -Upholders, and Vancouver Amateur\nHockey club, coast challengers, tied\naf one game apiece In the current\ntitular aerie meet tn the deciding\ncontest of what, so far, has been\na closely-fought and exciting batth.\nThe visiting SmokeaOrs ru.e\n\u25a0light favorite*) to tsa\u00ab tomorrow\nnight's gam; snd along with tt,\ntitular honors. Trail tied up t.i*\nseries Wednesday night at one\ngame all w'th a .'asL-ptoting display which aaw them In command\nfor more than two-thuds of the\ngame. While it lt true they scorni\nthree goals at the \"soft\" or \"flukey'\nvariety, they m.'Med more than twice\nthat number by the nsirowest of\nmargins.\nOn the other hand, the Van-\ncouverites figur. they are far from\nout of it. They won the first\ngame three to two after overtime,\nand then came from behind to tie\nup the seonij] contest st three-all\nafter Trail ned W .ce taken the\nlead, the visitors' ltrst advantage\nbeing two goals in-il looked gooo\nln both these games Lut could no:\novercome the fighting displays ol\nthe coast team led by thetr stellw\ndefenceman, Jack Cranstoun, vir.\nstarred both defensively and of.\nfenslvely, Cranstoun did hot look\nw good tu the third game and\nTrail   won,   3-0.\nDepartment    to    Investigate\nDiseased  Fish  on   thc\nElk River\nFERNIE, B. C. March 6.\u2014The\nannual meeting of the District Rod\nand Gun Club was held on Tuesday\nevening for the election of officers\nfor the coming year. The following\nofficers were elected: Hon.-president, T. H. Oox; hon. vice-president,\nHartley P. Wilson; president. T\nPrentice; vice-president, Harry Page;\nsecretary,  R.  G.  Nolan.\nThe society drew tho attention o'\nthe fisheries department to thf\nfinding of some diseased fish In the\n&.\u00a3 river Use year. A.-, a resin,\nof this one of the officials from\nOttawa wlll spend two months this\nyesr in the vslley investigating the\ncauses ofthe trouble.\nAfter trie election of officers the\nmeeting had a general discussion\non game and fish matter relating\nto this district.\nFINALIST DOPE\nIS UPSET IN\nWOMEN'S GOLF\nST. AUOTJSTIN!., Fla., March 5.\u2014\n< AP i\u2014 Two great upsets today eliminated from the Florida East, Ccast\ngolf championship the pair that\nhad been counted as finalists,\nDiana Flshwlck, British champion,\nand Virginia  van Wle, Chicago.\nMrs. Stewart Hanley, Detroit,\nbrought defeat to Miss van Wle\nwhen she laid the Chicago girl a\ndead stymie an the iHth hole, pre-\nv\" t'ng her from squaring the\nmatch.\nMrs. H. D. Sterrett, Hutchinson,\nKaiwafl, took the match from Miss\ni-'ishwlck, four and two. Mrs. Sterrett waa out ln 3R, to be on\u00ab up\nat the turn. Bhe piled up her\nadded advantage when Miss Flshwlck three-putted two holes and\nwas   short   on   another,\nMaureen Orcutt, Bnglewood, N. J.,\nhad a tough battle with Kathleen\nOaniham, thc other English quart\u00ab-\nfinalist, winning one up. Miss\nGarnham had her opponent four\ndown on tbe 10th hole. It was\nthen that Miss Orcutt began shooting even fours to square the mateh\non tbe 10th and win tt with a\ns'rdle three on the 18th where\nshe sent a second Iron dead to\nthe cup for a two-foot putt.\nST.   FRANCOIS   XAVIEB  MOVE   UP\nMONTREAL. Que., March 5.\u2014iCP-\n-St. Francois Xsvler, ch.amp.ons ot\nthe Mount Royal league, tonight\ntook a long step in defence of their\nintermediate provincial hockey title\nby defeating Canadlens of Sher-\norooke, three to one, ln the first\n-r a trj-gstne series. Second game\nIs   scheduled   Saturday.\nThe winner will meet He Malifno\ntor the intermediate title and the\nright to battle McGill university for\nthe Quebec  amateur cnampionsmp.\nNp\npmtmwjo\n4ft\n\/\/nffpaif\nikhiihiiioa\n(13.111\nhfuodswdof. pm]\nvm sdifninpoddo\nsnohiifltQ yym\nKELOWNA WINS\nINTERIOR TITLE\nIN BADMINTON\nVERNON. B. C. March 6\u2014KVloavna\nmad. a clean saveaep of tbe Interior\nbadminton toumamant completed\nla*re today. A. J, Poolay, defeated\nA I. Hill to win tb. singles H-7,\n15.0. And paired avlth Hill ln de-\nleattng Dodv\/ell and Webb of Slam,\nmerland to win tbe double* title\n5-4.    15-13.\nMl*. ' Margaret   Taylor   won   from\n\u2022    <\"sse   to   take   the   ladles\nsingles   after   a   hard   fought   11-0.\n.4...e    and    th.    same    two\nidles   won   from   Mrs.   Nolan   and\nMrs.  Whltmore oa vernon, by  15-11\n!>-t  ln   th*  doubles.\nThe mixed doubles ai-ent to Mas.\nraylor and Pooley who defeated\nUss Pease and  Hill by  15-10,  15-3\nCARNERA GAINS\nDECISION OVER\nJIMMY MALONEY\nMADl.ON \u00abQ1 ART, GARDEN\nr. i Aim m. MIAMI, Fl*.. Marfb\nH\u2014 (AF)\u2014rrtmo Ctrtsett, ate-\n\u25a0plte hi* celebrated craaaaMal rib.\nrrrelvrd the decision of Referee\nElmer (Slim) McUUaual of Detroit tonight axier a etaaaa* 10-\nroonal match tvath Jlmaaaa\nMaloney of Boaatoa. Tber. were\nno knockdown,.\nVANCOUVER BEATS\nPORTUND, 3-1\nWin Puts Lions ln First Place\nin   the  Coast   Hockey\nLeague\nPORTLAND. Ol\u00bb, March 5\u2014Vancouver Lions went Into first place\niu th. Paclflo Coaat Hockey league\nstandings here tonight br defeating\nPortland Bucs. three to on*. The\nloss shoved ths Buc. still furthc\ninto Ui* cellar and dimmed, their\nplayoff   prospects. \u25a0\nnTMMARY\nFirst psrlod\u2014No scoTe.\nPrnaltles: Doavmle. Rouiston, Armstrong,  Otamundson.\nSeconal period \u2014 (1) Portland\nCoupe*.   (Downle*   l:0C.\nPamaltlest Redpath 3. McGoldrlck\njerwa.  Armstrong.  Arnott.\nThird period\u2014(3) Vancouver\nPettlnger (Arnott) 3:>9; iSl Vancouver, Redpath, 10:81: (4) Van.\ncomer.   Brennsn,  5:41.\nPonaltlaas: Ted. Blyth. Redpaih.\nOsmundson.\nCURLING TROPHY\nAGAIN GOES TO\nWINNIPEG CLUB\nTORONTO. Ont., March 5\u2014(CP)\n\u2014Por the fourth year ln succession\nthe MacDonald Brier- trophy, em-\nbelmatlo of the single rink curling\nchampionship of Canada, will rest\non a Winnipeg shelf. DUaplaylng\nperfect form, and seldom In daauor\nof defeat, R. J. Courier's gallant\nlittle Manitoba band tonight cinched the taaakard hy roundly trouncing W. Brown'* Montreal quartette\n23-6. running up thalr record to\n\u00ablgbt straight victor!.*, and are\nperched In first place, out of reach\not  the next heart team.\nMAROONS DEFEAT\nluWIiJEAFS,M\nCotton  Flgitres ta Fo_   of\nToronto's Goals; Maroons\nTop Americans\nTCaROMTO, Out., March 5<\u2014(CaT)\n\u2014An irresistible attack La th. <v*n-\nlng frame avhiua netted tavern \u2014aaa\ngoals, enablaat. MoOtrul ataroota. to\ngsln * flying artaart on Tottanto\nMaple Laaaas 1= a fr*.-<aiatvrtaag lf\u00bb-\ntlon.1 hookey Uagu. match laaat.\ntonight  and   emerged   victoria.   6-4.\nTh. wall-eaarnaad triumph paataa.il\nth* fighting Maioon* ahead of Narw\nTurk American* in th. fight for tb.\nthird place ln thc canaaalaan aase-\ntlon wllla big Lionel Otsaaaahaw\nshowing old-tlm* form on th. rearguard and Davaay Kerr performing\nsplendidly In the nets. The alaarocaa\nforward opened wide th. Ouajttl*\nand   gave   4   brilliant   display.\nHarold Cotton. La\u00bbf wlngmao. fix.\nured ln four of Toroaatt. s fire goad.\n\u2022I-MMARY\nFirst p.rtod\u2014al) atontraaal, L.\nConacher. 0:05: (2) Montreal, Ward\n(TrotUaar) lltH: (\u00bb Monl**\u00bbl.\nNortheott    1 Smith)    6:07.\nPenalties: Btewart, jackaon and\nPhillips. _ .\nSecond narnod\u2014(4) aaabnlrral.\nSmith iStarwart) . 13:00: (5) Toronto, Cotton (Day) :4\u00bb; <\u00ab) Mon-\ntiaal. Stewart (Sartbaart) !\u00bb2: (li\nToronto. C Conacher (Prlmeau) 1.13\nPenalties:    Stewart.\nThird pavrlo\u2014dl\u00ab) Toronto. Baallev\n'Cotton) :34: (\u00bb) Montreal. I\u00bbort.i\n-ott (Trottli\u00bb> *:1\u00ab: (im Toronto\nlotton (B1.1D 12:01; ill) Toron!.i.\ntctton   (Blatr)   13:33.\nPenalties: I fwraaachaar. Hortri-\nr-ou   (major),  and  Cbttcra.\nBAN JOHNSON  SINKING\nBT. LOUIS, March 5-(AK\u2014Ban\nJohnson, formaar head of th* Amer:-\ncan league, was sinking slowly and\nhis condition v\/aa. daaacrlbed aa \"loa.\"\ntonight. Johnaaon waa wetter flair\nmorning than he had laeaan at any\ntime  previous.\nJACK DEMPSEY TO RETEREF,\nLOB ANGELES. March \u00bb.\u2014(API-\nJack Dempaaey sgreed today to referee the Paollno irwnadun-Les Hennery heavyweight 10-round bout\nhere next Tuesday night, n t\u00bb understood he wlll r*c*ive 13000 10\nwork the fight. Dempsey .rrived\nhere eaarly toaUy from the ewt.\nToday-Saturday -Only!\nCLUB CIGAR STORE\n^Closing Out Sale\u2014\nof High Grade Pipes-in the Well\nKnown Makes\u2014B.B.B. and H.B.B.\nt o Clear\nat Drastic Reductions\n$6.Q0-PIPES~B.B.B.\nClose Out Price\n$2.50\n$5.00-PIPES-B__.\nClose Out Price\n$1.95\nTOBACCO\nPOUCHES\nBest English Makes\nWHILE THEY\nLAST\n25c. 50i_75c,\n$m\nSome $4.00 Pouches\nin this bunch\nMANY OTHER WELL KNOWN MAKES\nTO GO AT 250 and 50c\nGet Here Early and Get Tour Pick\nCLUB CIGAR STORE\n\"OPPOSITE IMPERIAL BANK\"\n.\n '    44KC       1.1UHI\nAAA isu-ovis uasus   is_sM,        FRIDAY, MAKCH 6, 1981.\n^S&tWant Ad Pa^fe,____-\nUGHT MATTERS,\nDREDGING ARE\nTMHUAKUSP\nBoard of Trade Decides Back\nHoi   Springs   Park   to\nLimit\nNAKUSP, B. C.. March 5.\u2014The\nteeular monthly meeting of the\nArrow Lakes District board of trade\nwa* held In Abriel'* hall, Tuesday\nnight, and, what promised at the\noutset, to be a flat affair, finally\nfinished with being the moat interesting for some time past. About\n35 were present with Dr. Kelso\nof Edgewood the only down-the-lake\nrepreeet_tlV4 Matters of much importance to the town and district\nwere discussed and Included: Acquisition of Picard'a wood lot for\na recreation pmrk; the submission\nand reading of Bngincer P. E.\nDoncaater's report on dredging the\nNarrows, near Burton, whloh proved\nto ba very interesting and enlightening; the matter otf the town refuse ground; an appeal for financial\nassistance from the Nakusp Hot\nSprings provincial park board which\nls going to b* backed to the limit\nby the board of trade, who also\nhope to gain assistance from the\nWomen's Institute (the latter having helped very materially in the\npast); tree-planting on the street*\u2014\nthis matter unfortunately went begging, for very few present gave the\nmatter any serious thought.\nThe final discussion was that\nof electric lights, charges, services\netc., and this was no doubt prompted by the fact that the system was\ntemporarily out of commission during the meeting through an accident   to   the   flume.\nSecretary J. W. Butlln wa* in-\n\u2022tructed to write Chairman C. B.\nl>ary of the Citizen Electric Light\noommittee to ascertain what measure* were being taken to safeguard\nthe interests of the users of power.\nMr. Leary made the statement that\npending the renewal of agreement\naa between the town and Nakusp\nElectric Light and Power company\nthe latter had definitely promised to\ntake full charge of the street lights.\nWHARF CREW DOING\nWORK SLOCAN  CITY\n* SLOGAN CITY. B. C, Mar. 8~\nMlas Jean Popoff left on Friday to\nTlatt for a Ume with friends ln\nSpokane.\nK, Popoff wa* a business visitor\nto Nelson. Thrum*, Castlegar and\ntall Monday and Tuesday.\nMfcs* Christen*, Morrison who has\nbeen ln Nelaon for some time arrived  horns  en  Monday.\nMm. 8, Bridge and young son\nname home from Nelson on Monday\nMrs, Bridge and baby was accompanied  by  her  husband.\nMias H. Sherwood was * visitor\nto Nelson during the week-end.\nOeorge McLennan of the Steamer\nJtassbery who had been holidaying\nIn Nelaon for the past three weeks\nreturned on Monday to resume his\ndntla* on the boat.\nMiss D. Sherwood who ha* been\nIn Nelson for several months armed home on Saturday.\nMrs. D. McKay and daughter Miss\nM. Morrison were visitors to New\nDenver on Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. A. Swing and eon\nwho have been staying at Crescent\nValley for sometime arrived home\non Saturday.\nThe McPherson wharf crew arrived on Monday1* train to do the\nnee*\u2014ary repair work here at ths\nwharf.\nMEN'S SOX\nFOR WORK\n6 pair $1.00\n3 pair $1.00\nand other price ranges.\nFOR DRESS\n3 pair $1.00\n2 pair $1.00\nFancy Cotton Sox\u2014\n5 pair $1.00\nCharles Morris\nLimited\nMr. and Mrs. H. Rose\nReturn to Sandon\nWith Baby Daughter\nNAKUSP. B. C. Maroh t.\u2014*it.\nMyhrwold of Sandon wa* a Nakusp\nvlaltor this vest. *\nMr. and Mrs. Hedley (Bud) Roaa\nand Infant daughter returned to\nSandon   on    Monday*    train.\nJ.' Treaser returned to hia bona*\nat Burton Monday, having been\nan Inmate of toe Arrow Lakes ho.,\npltal for th* past few days.\nNAKUSP LADIES\nBACK PROPOSAL\nFOR LABORATORY\nNAXOTP,     B.  O,     Mar.  8.\u2014The\nregular monthly meeting of the\nWoman'* Institute was held In\nI* ry'a hall, Tuesday afternoon,\nMarch 3, Mra. O. Hunter Gardner\npresiding, with 38 member* present.\nConsiderable correspondence wa*\ndealt with. Including letter* from\nthe provincial park* board, Provincial Home Craft fund, alao, a\nresolution endorsing a laboratory\nIdea for Nelson  and district.\nAn interesting talk wa* given\nby Dr. H. F. Tyrenwm, his subject being rheumatism. It wa* followed by a discussion. Final arrangements were concluded for the\nannual banquet to be given to\nhusbands of the members. Afternoon tea was served by Mrs. R.\nIslip, Mrs. Battershall, Mrs. E. C.\nJohnson  and  Mrs.  W.  Alpsen.\nMr. and Mrs. Tinkess\nof Kaslo on Visit\nto Saskatchewan\nKASLO, B. C, March 5.\u2014Mr*. Rudkln and son of Sandon apent Tuesday in the city.\nMiss McPhall of the public school\nteaching staff, spent the week-end\nwith  her  parents  in  Nelson,\nMr. and Mrs. 8. R. \u25a0Thomas, who\nhave been the guests of the latter's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. J. T. Burkltt,\nleft Wednesday for their home at\nLhe Florence mine.\nH. L. Gray of Vancouver wa* a\nMonday visitor in the city.\nMrs. V. TraU of Mirror Lake has\nreturned from a visit to her son-\nin-law and daughter, Capt. and Mrs.\nHenry Htncks of Crawford Bay.\nWinds from the north, south and\neast, snow, sleet, rain, thunder and\nbrilliant sunshine gave Kaalo a most\nvaried  weather program Tuesday.\nTo expedite the work on the new\npower dam a night crew wa* put\nto work Tuesday.\nIt. Mills of Nelson visited Kaslo\nMonday.\nMr. and Mm R. L. Tinkess and\nson James ' -'. W'duesday for a\nvisit with relatives in Saskatchewan\nMr. and Mrs. John Burns of Nelson were vlaltor* In the city Tuesday.\nA. McQualg of Nelson was a Kaslo\nvisitor on Monday.\nProvincial Constable White wa* a\nvisitor ln Nelaon early ln the wtrk.\nJ. F. ooates of Nelson was a Monday visitor ln the city.\nF. Ouatafson of Sandon wu a\nvisitor in town Monday and Tuesday\nDavid Sutcllffe of Hlonde] was a\nvisitor in the city Wednesday. *\nMrs. Alice Perkins left Monday\nfor Rossland and Trail where she\nwill visit her son and daughter-in-\nlaw, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Perkins\nand her son Howard Perkln*. in\nRossland, and her son-in-law and\ndaughter, Mr. and Mr*. A. Lythgoe\nin TraU.\nMrs. C. Fraser of Nelson arrived in\nthe city Wednesday.\nH. Olegerlch, wflo has been taking treatments at Mayo brothers tor\nthe past few weeks, returned home\nWednesday, much Improved in\nhealth.\nMr. and Mrs. R. T. Deane of\nDeanshaven were Wednesday visitors\nIn town.\nVen. Archdeacon H. Beer who has\nspent the past few months visiting\nfriends and relative* In the east,\nreturned  home  Wednesday.\nMr. and Mrs. Oraham-Brown of\nDeanshaven were vlaltor* ln the city\nWednesday.\nDan McLeod of Ainsworth visited\nKaslo Wednesday.\nJames Burge, jr., of Oray Creek,\narrived ln the city Wednesday.\nMr*. 8. R. Gable returned Wednesday from a visit with relatives\nln the United  State*.\nGOLDEN-EYES ON\nMIGRATION HERE\nFlock  of   100  to  200  Near\nPar; Western Grebes\nCome in May\nStopping at Nelaon ta mt during their spring migration to point*\nfurther north, a flock of 100 to 300\nAmerican Golden-Bye duck* appeared on the West Arm downstream\nfrom Lakeside park, Tuesday morning, looking like a solid raft.\nWednesday the flock had divided.\none section being at ttme* near the\ncity wharf. The bird*, which are\nof a gray or white color, being identified by Game Warden H. H. Creese,\nWeldon Reld, and other bird lovers.\nThis is slightly earlier than the usual\nGolden-Eye  migration,\nLast year in May the main lake\nfrom Procter to Kootenay Bay end\nfor miles up and down, as far a*\none could see from a boat, was\ncovered with immense number* of\nthe Western Grebe, one of the\ndivers, there being with the grebes\nthousands of the White-Winged\nScoters, though the latter were not\nnearly *o numerous a* the grebe*.\nGame Warden Creese paased\nthrough the flock on May 10, going\nfrom Procter to Kootenay Bay with\nan outboard motor boat.\nMOYIE RESIDENTS\nUNDERGO HOSPITAL\nCARE IN CRANBROOK\nMOYIE, B. C., Mar. 6.\u2014Philip\nConrad returned to hi* horn* on\nSunday from the Klmberley hospital where he went under an operation  for appendicitis.\nMrs. Louis J. Desaulnlers of Chapman Camp spent Sunday at the\nhome of her parents, Mr. and Mrs-\nR. T. Bralden.\nMlas Mary Andrew* of Chapman\n(damp was guest *t th* horn* of her\nparents Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Andrews.\nWilUmm Corry is home after\nspending a week in the St. Eugene\nhospital at Cranbrook.\nW. P. Casey left on Sunday by\ntrain for Cranbrook, Mr. Casey expects to be back here In a couple\nof weeks.\nOscar Buroh of Chapman Camp\nspent Sunday at the home of his\nmother Mrs. B. Burch.\nW. Desaulnlers, man'ger, of the\nCentral hotel wa* a business vlaltor  to  Cranbrook  on  Saturday.\nJ. M. Fisher of Cranbrook arrived here on Sunday. He Is employed as cook for the government road  crew.\nWANT   AND   CLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nOne   insertion   10  cent* a  line\nSix  Insertion* 40  centa a line\nOne   month   11.30   a   lln*\nMinimum    two   lln**\nNn axtta  charge  If  chargsd.\nBirth  notice* free of charge\nDeath*,    marriage*    and    cards    or\nthank*. _\u00bb  cent* per line\nFuneral   fl&wer*   15   cent*  per   line\nNew*   of   the   Day   Items  30   cen_\n'TBA COST IF CHARGED\nws m\nLEGAL NOTICES\nMINERAL  ACT\n(Form r.)\nCertifleat.  of  lanprovemraatt\nNOTicB\nLarUaaU and Caaslar Frac. Mlntr-\n.1 Claim* situate In the Nelso.a\nalining   Division   of   Kootenai   Dl*-\n'rlrt- _ u\u00bb\nWhore located:\u2014On Fawn CreeK\ntributary to Sheen Creek.\nTAKE NOTICE that 1 A. H.\nGreen, acting as Aaramt tor tare\nRENO OOLD MINES. LIT.. NPX..\nFree Miner's Certificate No 31646-D.\nIntend, sixty days from th* date\nhereof, to atao'y to he Mlnlns Re-\noorder for a Certificate of Imnrove-\nment* or the purpose of ootalnlng\na Crown Orant of the above claims.\nAnd further taa> notlos '.hatactlcn\nunder section 86. must be commenced before tne Issuance of such\nCertifleat*  of  Improvements.\nDated thla 8tti day ot January.\nA. D. 1931.\nA. H.  OREEN.\n-     (Mil)\n(1)\nBIRTHS\nSCORGIE\u2014At th* Kootenay Lake\nOener.i hospital. 1o Mr. and Mrs.\nWalter Scorgle, March 4. a daughter\nI1KATIIS\n12)\nGODFREY\u2014Oliver Baker, age 19\nyears, passed away suddenly Thursday. Remains will be forwarded by\nthe Howell Funeral Home to Plncher Creek. Alta., this morning for\nInterment. (4339)\nSPE1RS\u2014Marian, age 76 years,\npassed away Thursday. The body\nwill re*t at the Howell Funeral\nHome until 2:15 Saturday afternocn\nwhen lt wlll be taken to the Flrat\nPresbyterian church. Victoria and\nKootenay street*, where services wlll\nbe held at. 3:30 o'clock. Pastor T R.\nJohnston    officiating. (4238)\nR. H. Flnley of Spokane Wash,\narrived ln Moyle durtng the week\nand ls at work on his mining cl 1ms\nfive miles west of here.\nMrs. Algot Johnson of Sunny\nSide Ranch spent Saturday ln town\ncalling on Mrs. C. James, Mrs. W.\nE. Andrews, also Mrs. R. A. Smith.\nMrs. Albert Pearson of Cranbrook\n\u2022pent Wednesday In town the guest\nof Mrs. O. Gulndon.\nMrs. A. Dorthey has moved In\nto  Mrs. T.  Crlstlan's  little  cottage.\nJohn Anderson spent several days\nln Cranbrook having some dentistry work done.\nMrs. Alex Fraaer of Klmberley, ha*\narrived here and will spend a few\ndays   with   het   father   D.   Dupont.\nPERSONAL\n__\nA     TESTED     OI4AIRVOYANT\u2014 MA-\ndame Samml,  1510 Port St., Victoria.\u2014Three questions by mall $1\n(4180)\n\"LUNG   BALSAM\"\nFOR     CATARRHAL     BRONCHITIS.\nChronic Pulmonary Disorders, Tub.\nerculosis. Spitting of Blood, alao\nnutritious for weak h*aart and\nother Infections, weaknesses and\ndiseases of the lungs. Price 81.50\nper bottle prepaid. Alao Remedies\nfor every sickness and diawaa**.\nMrs Anna Penner, 75 Hallett St..\nWinnipeg. (4144)\nHELP    WANTED\n(10)\nWILL GIVE OOOD HOME. ETC,\non ranch, to boy or girl, eleven\nor over ln return for light ser-\nv.ces. Public school. Apply Box\n4330.   Dally Newa (4330)\nSITUATIONS  WANTTB\n(Ul\nSTENOGRAPHER. EXPERIENCED,\ndesires position. Oood references.\nPhone 353R. or P. O. Box SW4.\n(4159)\nAGENTS WANTED\n(HI\nRELIGIOUS LITERATURE \u2014 Distribution guaranteed contract giv\nen and good pay to earnest ChrU\ntlan workers, either sex. Wrl:\n\u2022nd give Ph:ne Number. Bo\n4127   Nelson   Duly   News.     (4127\nFURNISHED  ROOMS  roi   Rent   (18)\nFURNISHED   SUITE   TO   RENT\u2014716\nBaker St. (413(i\nROOMS\u2014To   Rent rlD>\nAPARTMENTS   FOR   RENT.\u2014K.W.C.\nBlock. (4198)\nAPARTMENTS IN THE MEDICA:,\nArt* Block for rent. Apply chas.\nF. McH-rdy. (41611\nFOR RENT\u2014ROOMS BY WEEK OR\nby mon.h\u2014Hot and co'd water,\nHotel Service . Apply Box 4222\nDally    News. (42221\nHOUSES  WANTED\n(20)\noMALL   FOUR-    OR   FIVE-ROOMED|\nhouse   with   at    least   two   lo s\nGive   full   particulars.    Price   for\ncash or terms, also location.    Boat;\n4116 Dally News. (411(1)\n(tl)\n1 IVESTOt'K    FOR   SALE\nFOR    SALE\u2014THREE    REGISTEwIE J\nAyrshire cows.   Clark, Gray Creek.\n(4189)\nFOR SALE\u2014YORKSHIRE PIGS,\nsix weeks old. 86 each. A R.\nJohnson, R. R.  1, Nelson.    (4198)\nGOOD DURHAM GUERNSEY COW\nfor sale, freshens end of March\nG. G. Clyde. Robson. B   C.    i4233\nTWO PURE BRED TOOGENBERG\nOoita\u2014Horned but gentle. Good\nmilkers, due. to kid early ln\nMarch to a pure bred Toggenoerti\nbuck. 835.00 f.o.b. Renata. W J\nDoherty.  Renata.   B.  C.        (4146)\nIIVFSTOCK   WANTED\n(24)\nWANTED\u2014 YOUNO  PIOS   H. BOUR-\nareols cwacent Valley, B. c. (4231)\nHOUSES   FOR  RENT\n(It)\nFOR RENT\u2014THE BIG JOHN 6EC-\nond Hand Store building. Ward\nSt. Apply W. T. Choate, Nelaaon.\nB.   C. (4221)\nFOR RENT 4 ROOM HOUSE FUR-\nnUhed. Complete with bath and\ngaa. Apply D. Maglio. Phone\n483R. t\u00ab044)\nPROPERTY   FOB  SALE\n(Sll\nFor Sale\nTen acres home, Orchard, two\nacres ln alfalfa, one sen for\nsmall fruits and vegetables\nGood irrigating system. Will\nsell at a bargain, a* I am\ntoo   old   to   work   lt.\nALFRED   BUNKER\nBalfour,   B.   C.\nPOULTRY  AND EGOS\u2014(Continued)\n8. 0 W. LEGHORN BABY CHICKS\nfrom trap-naasud h*ns mated to\nR. O. P advanced and (Ugistered\ncockerela wh.ch hav* three generation* of 100 etgers on femal*\n.Id. and four on mala side. Oet\nour mating and Pro. Hit and\nknow what breeding I* behind\nyour chick. A Deverson, Port\nCrawford. (\u00bb\u00bb.0>\nMMCtLLANEOCS  fOR BALE      (IT)\noEND   61.00   AND   RECEIVE   POST-\npald  on*  pound our apectal  fine\nor   coarse   cut   smoking   tobacco.\nCalgary Tobacco Ca, Calgary. Alt*.\n(4148)\n.(4168)   I\nFairview Lots\nWe have for sale some ot the\nfinest building lots ln this\npart of the city. If lnter-\nisted ln \u00bb home-sit. ln F.lr-\nvlow,  see  us  at   once.\nH. E. DILL\nSOS   Ward   St.\nPhone   180\n(4223)\n' !\u00bbB\nPOULTRY   AND   E3GS\n(16)\nWHITE WYANDOTTE COCKERELS.\n85.00 Pullets 12.00. Ha.chliw\nEggs 62.50 for 15. Rutherford,\nR.   R.   1.   Nelson. (4077)\nBABY CHICKS, QUEEN QUALITY.\nWhite Leghorns. Barred Rocks,\nRhode Island Reds, from record\nlaying sto:k. Write for catalogue\nQueen Hatchery, 86 Cordova St..\nW. Vancouver. B, C. (8962)\nWYANDOTTE RED FIRST. CROS\nday-old pullets, bred-to-lay, late\nApril 35c each, early May 32f\\\nDay-old cockerels 12c each. W.\nA. B Paul. Wedeene Poultry\nFarm,   Comox.   B.   C. <4200)\nFOR SALE\u2014A FEW WELL GROWN\nJersey B'.ack Giant Cockerels at\n85 each and several two year old\nhens at 63 each. Theee are First\nclass     stock,     he-.vy.       Ricardo\nRanch. Vernon, B. C.\n(4230)\nPRODUCTION BRED S. C. W. LEO-\nhorn Trapnested R O, P Stock.\nBaby chicks 615 per 100, Hatching eggs 86 per 100. ' Barred\nRock Chicks 610 per 100; eggs 87\nper 100. Ten per cent deposit\nwith order. F. C Fahr. Vem-n,\nB   C. (4168)\nRUPTURE TRUSSES COMPLETE\nSingle 62. Double 83. Mailed anywhere State belt length J.\nStephenson, 113 Columbia Ave,\nVancouver.  B.  o. (39681\nHIGHEST .QUALITY WOOD PIPE\nfrom two to e.ght inch 'tor various\npressures. Writ* us for full Information and special spring\nPrices. The A. P. Harms, wood\nlpe Co.. Doer Park. B. C.    (4056)\nSECOND HAND PIPES AND Parting, for sale. When you are In\nne*d of used Pipes and Fittings\nany size, Black or Galvanized,\nwrl e to Swartz Pipe Yard. 23,\nFirst Ave. East. V-ncouver, B. C.\nThe largest exclusive ttawVefs i\nreconditioned Pipe* and Fittings.\n(41tO)\nMISCELLANEOUS rOB SALE\u2014 (CfjaJ\nFOR SALE\u2014BARRELS, KBOS, BUR]\nlap aaveka. white sugar sacks.   Mel\n-Donald Jam Co.\nLOST   AND  FOUND\nLOST\u2014GIRL'S  BROWN   AND BLL,\nallk dress.    Leave at Daily Namal\n<4a40|\nLOST\u2014 WHITE OOLD ...\nwatch tn lavatory of Junior !\nschool.      WUl    finder    Ple**e    1\nf,9emaed__\nturn to Dally New*.\nFOB  SALE  OB  EXCHANGE\n<\u00bb\u00bbJ\nFOR SALE OR WILL EXCHAMOal\nfor pigs or chickens, three Togl\ngenberg goats, one nanny, oral\ndoe, on* billy. M. H Vsrdonal\nBoswell. 14180]\nFURNITURE   FOB   SAL!\n<_\nFOR SALE\u2014HOUSEHOLD FURNIi\nture. O.rden Tool*, etc. Apcall\n431   Carbonate.  (4lM|\n\u2022 IRSERY  PRODUCTS\nBRITISH  SOVEREIGN   BTRAWBE\nry   plants,  while  they  lut,   66.6\nper   thousand.     Monrad   Wlgefll\nWynndel.   B.   C (41891\nLAYRITZ NURSERIES, FOR FRUM\ntrees, ah.de and Conftera. Azellaa.\nRoaes. etc. For price 11*,. writ**\nT. Roynon. Agen;, Nelson.    (4184f\nbusiness' and profession al directory\nAccounting\nAuctioneer\nMercantile   auctioneer.    A.   Rayniei\noWra  Hall St.    Box  1176.    siiO.\nAssayers\nE. W. WI. iowson. Box A1108. Nelson,\nB.  C.    Standard  western charges\n(4202)\nEngineers\nCHAS.   MOORE\u2014LAND   SURVEYOR.\nArchitect     Ilevt'.stoke.   B.   c.\n(4203)\nH   D.  DAWSON\u2014LAND SURVEYOk,\nMining and Civil Engineer. Kaalc.\n(4204)\nDentists\nDR. G. A. C   WALLEY\u2014205 Medici\nAria   Bu.ldlng.     X-Ray.     Nelson.\n(4*08)\nDressmaking and Designing\nDRESSMAKING AND DESIGNING\ntaught\u2014Academy of Useful Arts\nNo. 4. Write to Mary E. Rodgers\nBox   352.   Roaaland. (4096)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR, W. DAWSON\u2014Real Estate. In\nsurance. Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware. Baker St. (4207)\nWood Working factory\nCHAS. F. HUNTER\nPubi'c    Accountant,   Nelson\nMunicipal   and   Commercial   Audit!\n(4MU\nBeauty Parlors\nSociety Beauty Shop.    Gllker Block]\nMrs   _ Halgh. Phon* 171.  (42J0^\nChiropractors\nDR. ORAY. GILKER BLK.. NELSON\n(4211]\nDR. MITTUN. X-RAY. CRANBROOK]\n(filial\nSecond  Hand Stores\nTha   Ark.   dealers   In   second   hand\ngoods.    Phon*. 634. (42181)\nFlorists\nGrlzxelle's Greenhouse. Nelson.    Cut]\nflowers and floral designs.    i42141|\nNELSON FLOWER SHOPPE. Full\n11ns cut flowers at all tlmesi\nfloral designs.    Phone  283.   (4218)\/\nJOHNSON'S GREENHOUSE\u2014PhOta\n342. Cut flowers. Potted PlantL\nand    Floral    Designs. (4216)1\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS' TRANSFER\nBAGGAGE, COAL AND WOOD     .\nPhone 106 (43I7)|\nLAWSOS\u2014Baker St.. Carpenter and I ATKINSON    TRANSFER\u2014Coal    and\nJoiner.     Sash   and   Hardwood Wood.    Long distance hauling.\n(4208) (t2iS)|\nMartin Howard, retired manager\nof the Royel Bank at Sydney Mines,\nN. 8.. and father of Mra. F. B. Connor*, of Edmonton, ls dead.\nWho Killed\nTack Thayer?\nHe was found at 3:30 a. m. . ,\nuptown ... murdered.\n'Manhattan Night1\nBy WILLIAM ALMON WOLFF\nWill prove itself the most sensational,\ngripping and interesting serial story\nyou have ever read.   Don't miss one\ninstallment.\nBegins soon in\nThe Nelson Daily News\nmiles\nRJM6T UP  THE   FREIGHT   STATION\nAND *Er5   IF   THAT   DAMAGED\nXAaAjSHIaaag-M\/dCHIMB    ,S  \"THERE\nV\nt im. King FeMtim Sr-WksH. Uc Grai \u25a0\nr\nll*     (SONMA   \"STRIKE    \"THC   BOSS\nFOtf,   A  EAIStT -   I    DIDN'T RaTAUZtT\nHOsKl    VALUABLE   I   VWS   TO   THE\nFIR.M   UNTIL  VaESTEIiJDAy  VA1HEN\nHt  ASKED  VOU   >.AlHy   VOU fclDN'Y\n<5IUE  ME   THAT    TELE6R.AM\nvou have^i\nthe cutest\nMb.\n TUB   NELSON   DML.   NEWS       FRIDAY, Ma_CH 8, 1931.\nPage Nlnr\narket and Mining News\nGiant American Liner to Be Launched\nIEYV YORK UST\nCOMES BACK IN\nVIGOROUS RALLY\nfet Gains of One to Four\nPoints Sprinkled Through\nLeaders\nI NEW TORK, March o. <AP)\u2014Af-\nr v wssk ot decline the stock\nsrket felt entitled to a rally to-\n9, and came back vigorously.\nTbe new short interest created\n-tring tha recent weakness of ths\nUs and Industrials was prodded\nto covering by bullish operations\nthe steels snd utilities, and with\na exception of the first hour or\nthe market waa higher aU day.\nit gains of 1 to 4 points were lib-\nilly sprinkled through the prom-\ntnt leaders. Trading, however, was\natlvely quiet, and the turnover\n[ 2,700,000 shares was the smallest\na fortnight,\nindustrials made a tirdy response\nA yesterday's steel trade news, whll\nIs utilities more emphatically ex-\nthelr relief at tbe ad-\n__nment of -congress.\nlAmerican Can stood out with' lta\n\u25a0t gain of 4%. Important stocks\np at least three Included Amer-\nan Telephone, Internstlon Tele-\nbone, consolldaied Gaa, Public\nIrvice of New Jersey and Atch-\nTbe gains of TJ. S. Steel,\ndto, Bethlehem, Westlnghouse,\nlontgomery Ward, Sears-Roebuck,\nTpneTal Electric, New York Central,\nnion Pacific and Electric power\n|d Light ranging from 1% to\nthan   3.    Coppers    and    oils\n       a out In  crude  petroleum\npees   by   one   leading   unit   fore-\n-dowed   similar  action  by  others.\nI brisk demand for foreign bonds\nss tbe group bas seldom en-\nbed   in  recent  months  carried  a\n|wide list of European and South\nnertcan  obligations   to  new  highs\nthe  current  recovery.  Domestics\nslightly  improved.\ntHICAGO CORN\nSWINGS UPWARD\nitward Sweep of Blizzards\nPatched With Uneasiness\nby Traders\nlOHICAGO, 111., March 6. (By John\nBoughan,   Associated   Press  mar-\neditor)\u2014New   upswings   of   the\nmarket  gave relative poise  to\nihar   cereals   today.   Attention   toon   tha   corn   visible   supply\nllch   so   far.  this   year   showed\n|tt     2,600,000     bushels     Increase,\n1st    19,000,000    in    1930.    With\nird  weather sweeping eastward,\n^^^^were  uneasy   about  possible\n|terruption   of   the   movement   of\nto   distributing   centers.\n|Corn closed firm,  V*  to  i\\. cents\nher;   wheat at   %  decline to  V.\n(vance;   oats   %   off   to   a   shade\nand  provisions  wers  unchanged\n0  cents  down,\nWINNIPEG   GRAIN\narley:\n3,   Man.,   Mar.   8.\u2014Oraln\nOpen High Low Close\n69V. bt\\ 58H    58',\neova \u00abivi eov\u00bb   SO*.\n(13% 83V, 81       82V,\n80H S0% \u00bb\u00b0K    30'4\n80', 31% 30'.i    30V,\n32% 32 H 82       32\n28 a,      !\u00ab%\n27%    27y4\n27\n 'sen\n    28\",    28V\n     80V,    30a,    29'i\n30\n!\u2022'. - 108      108      I04.V,  104V,\n.    ' 107     107     105*4 108\nI     ;.\u201e.. 107V4 107K 10714 IOTA\nS*' 34       34%    33r*    34H\nIt         \u25a0   ,.- ,8\u00abVs    8\u00abH    35'A    381,\n ' 37%    38%    37%    37%\nbash  Price.:\naeat: No. 1 hard. 68%; No. 1\n.., 58%; No. 3 Nor.. 54V4: No. 3\nJt, 50; No. 4, 45'\/,; No. 5, 43%;\n|. \u00ab, 48%; Peed, 30%; Track, 58%;\nlreenlngs per ton, $1.00.\nlyire eaused heavy damage to the\nplltary hospital at Work Point\narracks, Esquimau, B C hut 13\natient* ln the nulldln* were safely\noaovaad ahortly ofter the blaze waa\n\u2022covered  In  the  basement.\nMETAL MjVRKETS\nNEW YORK. March 5\u2014C\u00bbpp\u00ab\neasier; electrolytic spot and futur.\n10%    to    10%.\nIron quiet,  unchanged.\nTin easy, spot and nearby 30.75;\nfuture   27.00.\nLead ateaady; spot Naaw Tork 480;\nBast   St    Loan*   4.35.\nZlno steady. But Bt Louis spot\nand   future   4.05.\nAn lnaony 7.00.\nForeign  b..r  stiver VTh  cent*.\nAt   London\u2014\nStandard c-pper. spot \u00a340 2s 6d;\nfuutn \u00a348 12s 6d; electrolytic spot\n\u00a318   5.    future   \u00a350\nTin, spot \u00a3131 5.: futur. \u00a3123\n17.   8d.\nLead, spot E14 2s 8d: fuure \u00a314 5s\nZinc, .pot \u00a312 8s; future \u00a313 5a\nTORONTO MINES\nDOMINATED BY\nPRICE DECLINES\nVANCOUVER LIST\nSEES ONLY FEW\nISStla. ACTIYE\nMajority of Stocks Cross the\nBoards at Even Quotations;\nHome Declines\nPrecious Metal Group Mixed;\nOil Stocks Are Reactionary\nTORONTO, Ont., March 5. (CP)\u2014\nPrice recessions again dominated\nthe movement of stocks on the\nStandard mining exchange today.\nWhile trade volume was active ln\nin penny issues, leaders among the\nhigher-priced Issues moved ln a\nlugglsh manner. Total aales were\n553.289     hr.res.\nWith s.Ies of 1385 shares, Nickel\nopened at 318 and advanced steadily to close at 118.60 for a net gain\nof 80c. Noranda also in comparatively light trading dropped 25c\nto 117.50. Pend Oreille moved up\n10c to $1.15 and Sherritt-Oordon\ngained five points to $1.18. Other\nbase  metals  Usues  were  featureless.\nThe precious metal group was\nsomewhat mixed ln trend, and\nshowed no particular activity on\nthe market. Mining Corporation\nwas the most prominent tn the\nlist, moving up 12 points to $3.50,\nwtth 9175 shares changing hands.\nDome developed some strength, dosing up 15c to $10.75. Sylvanlte\ngained four points to 60c, respectively. Lake Shore dropped 35c to\n$35.80, with no board lots traded,\nand Wright Hargreaves lost a point\nto   $2.14.\nOil stocks ss a whole turned re-\nactlonary during the day, hut\nchanges were held to small range.\nChemical Research proved sn exception and recovered 35c to close\nst $4. Cities .Service dropped 50c to\n$18. Imperial down 10c to $16.40,\nBritish American at $14, and International Petroleum st $13.50 closed\nunchanged.\nVANCOUVER. B. C-. March 5.\u2014\nAlthough trading on the Vancouver\nstock market today was rather a\ndreggy affair, ths few Issues that\nparticipated In the action displayed\na firm undertone' The dismal session was somewhat enlivened ln\nths dosing hour by a comparatively\nbrisk buying movement ln Snow-\nflake, which accounted for 32,000\nshares of the day's turnover of\n58,005   shares.\nAt ths outset the market fell\nInto s rut, and with the exception\nof Home, which sold down slightly,\nstocks crossed, ths board at even\nquotations. In the lata transactions, stimulated by moderate accumulation, prloea stiffened narrowly, and the limited list registered   fractional   advances.\nHome opened steady st $1.10 and\ndrifted off to $1.08 and hdd that\nprice to cloae unchanged. Minor\nincreases appeared in C & C, Mercury, Sterling Pacific and Fabyan.\nEast Crest sagged 3 cents to a new\nlow   for   the   year   at   43   oent*.\nBoth the golds and the base\nmetals groups rallied ln light trading, pend Oreille dosed with a net\ngain of 15 cents at $v,.20, while\nOolconda rose 3 oents to 38 cents.\nPioneer Oold advanced 4 cents to\n$1.55, while Premier Oold softened\n1 cent on the final bid at 70 cents.\nSnowflake rose from an opening at\n3 Vi cents to 8% cents but eased\nto end the day unchanged st the\nInitial  quotation.\nBANK CLEARINGS\nFor week ending March 5:\n1031 1930\nHalifax     \u2022   8,188,784   8   3,577\nSaint    John 3.587450 3.716\nMoncton   .... 894,835 992\nimerbrooke 952,394 1.067.\nQuebec      6,481,436 8,063,\nMontreal    - 123.028.435 261.477,\nO tawa     .._ 6.458.026 8.501\nKingston    . 657,664 000\nPetCTb ro   . 799.392 016,\nToronto    .... 126,698,299 130.833\nHam.Hon    . 5.289,122 7.888,\nKitchener   - 1,333,880 1.619,\nBrantford   .. 880.034 1.170\nLondon     8,353,888 3,732\nChatham    . 654.722 583,\nS rn a  574,264 \u2022 788,\nSudbury   _ 603,510 1,173,\nWindsor     ... 8.543.675 4.703,\nPt    Wi:llam 750,277 870,\nWinnipeg    .. 85.223.177 -61.475\nBrandon    ... 421230 459\n-wae    Jaw 865.917 1.070\ni i<aatO\u00b0n 1,863 953 3,836,\n- nee   Albt 4-4.389 507,\n\u25a0na      S.7'>2.384         \t\n7-f'Taonon 5.162.069 6.835,\n' -nrv      ... 5.3-1.211 10,130\nM-rt   Hat  .... 265,1167 403,\nl\u00abthbrld\u00ab* 457,449 651\nVancouver .. 16.874,808 23.410,\nVlct-rla     .... 2.045 270 2,504\nNaw    Weet. 726,009   ,     \t\nMONTREAL FHODUCE\nMONTREAL, March 5\u2014Eggs and\ncheese   lower,  butter  unchanged.\nctieese, finest white 12.\nCheese, finest colord H'A to 14,*4.\nButter. No. 1 Quebec and western\n3H4  to 31%.\nBajgs.  storage extras 24  to  25.\nEjgs. storage firsts 21 to 22.\nEggs, storage seconds 19 to 20.\nKara*, fresh specials 36 to 87.\nEggs,   fresh   extraa   34   to   85.\nEgga.   fresh firsts  30   to  31.\nBanking by Mail\nYOU may safely send your deposits\n*\u25a0 to this bank by mail. Every deposit\nby mail will be given careful and\nprompt attention, and you will reoeive\nan acknowledgment by return post. ,\u201e\nIMPERIAL BANK OF CANADA\nHEAD OFFICE\nNELSON\nCRESTON\nTORONTO\nW. R. GRUBBE, Matnafaar\nJ. S. W. CLOWES, Manaf\u2014\nBraaaach.. at Revelstoke, Cranbrook, Feral*\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Co. of Canada. Ltd.\nTSlL\u2014 BKIT1M1   COLUMBIA\nManufacturers   of\nELEPHANT\nBrand\nCHEMICAL  FERTILIZERS\nProducers  and  Refiners of\nTADANAC\nBrand\nBLECTatOLTTtC\nAmmonium Phosphate\nSulphate of Ammonia\nTriple   Superphosphate\nLead-Zinc\nCadmium-Bismuth\nNEW   YORK  STOCKS\nAllegheny      10 SH 10\nAmerican  Can  .. 124V\u00ab 11\u00bb!4 124\nAllied   chemical 182 158 182\nAmer Por Powsr 46H 43V* 45%\nAm Smelt tt Re 53% 61% 63%\nAmer   Tel     199\", 194 198%\nAmerlo   Tobacco 119% 117% 119%\nAnaconda  41Vaa- 39% 40%\nAtchison       198 188% 193\nBaldwin     35% 34 35%\nBait.   6c   Ohio  .. 79 76V* 79\nBendtx   Aviation 22% 30% 32%\nBeth   Steel     65% 63% 66%\nCanadian    Paclf 43% 43% 43%\nCerro   de   Pasco 36% 35% 36%\nChe*  St   Ohio  .. 43 43% 43%\nChrysler     22% 31% 22%\nCon Oaas N 7 .... 102 98% 102\nCorn  Products... 82 81% 83\nC  WTlght pld .. 7%\nDupont  97% 96% 97%\nEastman   Kodak 172 187% 172\nErie      33% 31% 32%\nPord  English  .... 17%\nFord  of Canada 27\nFirst Nat Storea   63V, 63 63%\nFreeport    Texas.. 87% 86 37%\nOeneral   Motors- 43% 42% 43%\nOeneral   Electric 61% 49% 51%\nOeneral   Foods.... 63% 53% 63\nOold    Dust    ..... 88% 37% 38%\nOranby   31 30% 31\nOreat North n'd 67 67\nGreat   W   Sugar     9% 9% 9%\nHowe   Sound   .... 37% 27% 27%\nHudson   Motors.. 22. 31% 23\nIns  Copper    10% 9% 10%\nInter  Rap  Tran 3%\nInternet    Nickel 18% , 18 18%\nInter Tel It Tel 35% 82% 35%\nKelly   Spring   ....     3% 2 2%\nKenn   Copper   .. 29% 38% 28%\nKresge   S   S   ... 28% 26%\nKroegg    6c    Toll 26 26% 36\nMack   Truck      .40 38% 40\nNash   Motora   .... 36% 34*,\u00ab 35%\nNat   Dairy   Prod 45% 44% 46%\nN Power tt Lt 41%\nNew York Centr 119% 116% 118%\nPaclf Oas &  El 50% 49 Vi 60%\nPackard    Motors 10% 10% 10%\nPenn   R.   B  82 69% 62\nPhillips  Pet*  .... 13% 13 12%\nRadio Corpora .. 24 22% 23 I,\nRadio  Keith   Or 21% 19% 21%\nRem Rand    14% 14% 14%\nRock   Island   .... 80 58 69%\nSafeway    Stores 68% 57    ' 58%\n8  Louis  sir tl 88% 41\nShell   Union  OU.   8% 8% 8%\nSinclair    Co   n.. 13% 12% 13%\nSo    Cal    Edison 61% 49% 61%\nSouth   Pacific   .. 104% 101% 104%\nStan OU ot Cal 47% 47% 47%\nStan Oil ot Ind 33%\nStan Oil ol N J 48 47 47%\nStewart    Warner   20% 18% 19%\nStudebaker     23% 23% 23%\nTexas Corpora .. 33% 32% 33%\nTexas   Oulf   Sul 61% 61% 51%\nOnion Carbide . 67% 68% 87%\nUnion   Oil    cal 23 23% 23\nUnion Paclflo .. 197 194% 107\nUnited    Aircraft 33%\nU. S. Rubber .... 16% 16% 15%\nU. S. Steel    147 144 143%\nWest   Electric   .. 98% 96% 98\nWillys   Overland     6% 6% 5%\nYellow Truck .... 13% 12% 13%\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW YORK, Maroh 6.\u2014Sterling\nexchange firm at 4.83% for 60-day\nbills and at 64.85% for demand.\nMarks   23.75%    cent*.\nKronen   36.77%   oent*.\nCanadian dollars  1-84  cent prem.\nFrancs   3.91%   cent..\nLire 5.23%  cents.\nNelson approximate sterling exchange rate 64.87\",.\nBANKERS'   l.iltvs   DECREASE\nWASHINOTON, March 5. (API-\nLoans to brokers and dealers held\nby New York federal reserve member banks for the week ending\nMarch 4 were announced by the\nfederal reserve board today as 11,-\n790,000.000, representing a decrease\nof 68.000,000 aa compared to the\npreceding   week.\nThe loans for the week ending\nMuch   6,   1930,   war.   63,588,000,000.\nLOGAN de BRYAN\nGRAIN\nSTOCKS.   BONDS,   COTTON\nMEMBERS:\nNew York,  Montreal  and  Vancouver\nStock  Exchanges,  Chicago   Board  of\nTrade,   Winnipeg   oraln   Exchange\nand  other  trading  exchanges.\nPRIVATE    WISE\nOFFICES:\nVancouver. Spokane .nd  Swttl.\nC^ADA BONDS\nWINNIPEG. March 5\u2014ajuotttlont\non Victory bond* per 61000 ar* as\nfollows:\n1631,   5   per   eent,   100.70.\n1937,   5   par   cent,   106.00.\nVictory   lo.n:\n1933. 5%   per   cent,   108.60.\n1934, 6% per cent. 103.60.\n1937, 6% per cent, 109X10.\nWar .oan renewal:\n1933, 6%  per cent. 101S0;  103.00.\nRefunding   loan:\n1943, 6 per csnt, 103.90.\n1940,  4%   par  cant,   99.T8.\n1944. 4% per cent, 100.26.\n1946,  4%   par  cent.  100.26.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nSHOW A FIRMER\nTRADE TENDENCY\nAtlantic Sugar Hits a New\nHigh for the Year; Smelters Go Up\nWINNIPEG WHEAT\nDROPS HALF CENT\nRye Feature  Coarse  Grain\nTrading; Good Quantity\nrtirehastd for Export\nwnmiPftO. Men., lurch I. (CP >\n\u2014A dull snd uninteresting seeettm\noccurred on tbs grain exchange W-\ndty. Whsst prices dropped % to\nVi eent under yesterdsr*s figures\ndus  to very light buying.\nA decline of S csnt um-uus*\nln ths Msy whsst futurs which\nclosed st 68 % cents bsr bushel.\nJuly fell % to ao*i snd Ootober\nto   60ft.\nRye featured coarss grsln trading. A good quantity of this commodity wss purchsssd for export\nat ..lightly stronger prloss. Other\ncoarse grains and the cash wheat\nmarket   were   unchanged   la   vehie.\nTORONTO, Ont., March 5. (CP)\u2014\nFirmer tendency was ln evidence on\nthe Toronto stock exchange today,\nand a number of stocks recovered\nlosses Incurred during the reoent\nweak spell. Among those to show\nappreciation were the leading base\nmetal mine issues, Brazilian Traction, a few of the oils and several\nln   the   gold   group.\nAtlantic Sugar continued Its upward trend, snd cloeed at a new\nhigh for the year at 37ft, with a\nnet gain of two points. Its preferred   was  off  five  points  to   100.\nIn the base metals section Consolidated Mining _ Smelting Rained\n2ft to close at $189. International\nNickel gained ft closing at 18ft.\nNoranda slso gained 25 centa, closing at  $17.70.\nIn ths oils, McColl-Frontenac\ngained ft, and Supertest ft, International Petroleum was unchanged,\nand the remainder were off small\nfractions.\nBrszillsn Traction was the market feature, both as to volume snd\nprice appreciation, cloning at Its\nhigh for the day, at 28, with a net\ngain of 3ft. C. P. ft. was unchanged\nand Bell  Telephone gained  ft.\nSteel of Canada wss unchanged,\nthe preferred, however, dropping to\na new low Ior the year at 38, off\none point. Ford of Canada at 27\nwas   up   ft.\nTotal   volume   was   18.686   shares.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAbana     \",      ,,\t\nAconda      \t\nArno   \t\nAJax      -\t\nAmulet      -\nAnal;y    \t\nA   P   Consolidated\t\nAssociated    \t\nBaldwin    \t\nBaltic  Oil    \u00ab...\t\nB   A   OU    \t\nBase   Metal*   \t\nBldiood    -..- \u2014\nBarry   Holllnger   \t\nBig  Mlasourl   \t\nBwana    \t\nCentral   Manitoba    .....\nchemical   Research   \t\nClerlcy _ _._\nDome    \t\nEastcrest   \t\nPoo.hllls     \t\nFalconbrldge     \t\nHome    Oil\nHarker   Oold   \t\nHowey     \t\nHolllnger     \t\nHudson   \u00bbay   \t\nInternational   Nickel   ....\nKeelly     \t\nLake    Shore ,\t\nKlrkland    LaaJte\t\nKootenay   Florence   \t\nMacaaaa      ..\u2014\nMandy      .\t\nManitoba   Basin. ...- \u2014\nMalartlc     \u2014 \u201e...__\nMclntyre      .\u2014\nMining   Con,   \t\nMurphy      -\nNev\/bec     \t\nNew   American  Oil  \t\nNipisslng      \u2022-\nNoranda      \u2014\nOld   Colony\nPeteraon   dobalt  \t\nPend   Oreille   \t\nPremier    Gold    \t\nShemt Gordon\t\nSudbury   Baaln\t\nSlscoe     .\u2014\nSt  Anthony     \t\nStadacona      '.\t\nTech   Hughea   \t\nVlpond \t\nventures   ...-  .-..\nWright   Haargreavea   \u2014\nWalte   Ackennan _    1\".64\n.14\n.01 Va\n.03\n1.90\n.37\n\u2022OHi\n.34\n..      .12\n..      .OiHi\n.      .02\n.07\n14.00\n..    1.28\n..      .07\n.      .16\",4\n.      .41\n_. 1.25\n.      MV,\n.    4.00\n.      .04 Vi\n. 10.60\n.      .40\n.      .49\n.    1.38\n.    1.08\n.      .01V,\n.     .30\n.    7.10\n.    B.10\n. 18.75\n.    1.26\n28.6.a\n.      .61\n.      .01%\n21\n\u25a0     .HVi\n.     .03\n..     .08\n. 21.00\n.   2.4'.l\n.      .06%\n..     .06 Vi\n. 16.40\n.   U0\n. 17.60\n.      .01%\n.    1.30\n.    1.06\n.     .70\n-    1.17\n: %\n. .12\n. -03 Vi\n. 6110\n. 1.08\n. .63\n3.14\nCSaW&m^'l\nHere Is reproduced an artist's drawing o\u00a3 tne Unst\nPresident Coolldge, which was launched at Newport,\nNews, Va., February 21, and which Is the second ot the\ntwo largest merchant marine vessels ever  constructed\n...   .....a,,.....a   >mui.     int)   o>.ner  amp.   launched   some\ntime ago, wiv, the President Hoover, Both ships,\n\u20228,000,000 turbo-electric liners, are 63 feet long.\u2014Associated Press Photo.\nEGti  MARKETS\nMONTREAL STOCKS!    EG(^]\nADVANCE  HIGHER\nOTTAWA, March 8\u2014Egg markets\nIn the marltlmes continue ln a\nsteady to firm position but In central Canada the situation Is still\nweak.\nToronto:  Sales  of  graded   Ontario\nMuch Improved Tone at New, m m ^ ^ to whol(Mleni\nYork  Has  Affect;  B.  C.      I at extras 27; firsts^;  pullet extras\nPower Is Up\nseconds  20.    Por  country  shipments   dealers   are   quoting   produc\ners and shippers extras 24; firsts\n22;  pullet extras 20.\nHalifax: Quotations to oountry\nshippers and producers for eggs\nare unchanged at extra* 28 to 28;\nfirsts  24   to   20;   seconds   18   to   30.\nSaint John: Wholesale prices of\nfresh etws to retailers sre extras\n34 to 36; firsts 32 to 33; seconds\n28   to   28.\nChicago: Spot 19; April storage\npacked futures 22 %, November refrigerators   25H.\nCOPPER BUYING\nDROPS OFF ON\nNEW YORK MART\nNEW YORK. March 8. (AP)\u2014Copper buying diminished In volume\ntoday in both the domestic and foreign  markets.\nThe trsde pointed out the reduction in purchasing wss a natuni\ndevelopment if ter the heavy buying of the lut two weeks, when\nthe immediate needs of consumers\nwere   well   supplied,\nAlthough no decline In price ,e\nexpected, it was felt that buying\nwould be on a rather restricted\nbale until late April or Msy, when\nheavy buying on domestic account,\nts   expected.\nTrsde circles expressed tbe belief\nthat whsn ths situation develops\ncopper st 14 cents a pound would\nnot  bs suprprising.\nPrices remained unchanged today at 101. cents for domestic\ncopper and 10.80 cents C. I. F.\nEuropean base ports for export\nmetal.\nMONTREAL, Que., March B. -\nAft>r two days of Irregularly lower\nmovements on the Montreal sfax_\nexchange, prices turned higher today.\nOpening barely steady, stocks gen-\nersliy developed s much better tone\nln the late forenoon. Atlantic Sugar,\nwhich established a new high for\nthe year at 37^. where it closed,\nsnd Montreal power and International Nickel were strong leaders.\nA much improved feeling ln New\nYork, where numerous gains were\nrecorded, was an important factor\nln thc more confident attitude of\nthe   market  here.\nAmong closing prices of the more\nactive issues were: B. 0, Power, up\nt4 at (Hli Canadian Car, 7i-a st\n18; Canada Cement, unchanged at\n17; Canadian Pacific, up *% st\n42%; Consolidated smelters, three\nhigher at 186; a new high for the\nyear, and the best level since September 23; Dominion Bridge, off \\k\nat 60; Dominion Textile, IH higher at 77^; International Nickel,\n% higher at i$%\\ Manney-Harris,\nup V, at 8Va; McColl-Frontenao, 14\nhigher at 19 UI National Breweries, \\_ higher at 34; Montreal\nPower, % higher at, 67%; Powrr\nCorporation, unchanged at S4; and\nShawlnlgan Power, unchanged st\n66. Viau Biscuit gained a point to\n22li, and Winnipeg Electric \\*\\ to\n16. Bruck Silk was a soft spot,\neasing 1 Vi to 6, a new low for the\nyear.\nBrazil Ian closed 2 % higher at\n27%, after wiling at 28, a new\nhigh level for the year, snd the\nhighest since October 18.' Atlantic\nSugar closed at 371,*.. a new high\nlevel, and a net gain of I'i points.\nTotal sales were 24,925 shave?;\nbonds,   468.200.\nMore than\n73.000 miles in a\nNew Ford\nVANCOUVER LIST\nMINIS:\nBid       Ask\nBig   Mlseoiart    .41      .43\nCork  Piovlnc*      \u2014      .01\nDutlale -     .10       \u2014\nOeorgs Copper      \u2014     1.00\nOeorgla   River 03       .03 Vi\nOolconda   - .    .38       .40\nOrandvloW     06!',    .08\nInt C It C 15       .20\nKootenay Florence      \u2014      .01%\nNational    Silver     03(4    \u2014\nNoble   Flv*    .'. 07       .08\nOregon Copper 07V,   \u2014\nPremier       70      .73\nPorter   Idaho    - 07      .08\nPend   OTelllo        1.20     1.25\nReeves   McDonald    35      \u2014\nSUyercraart   02 V,   .03\nSnowflake       03'\/a   .04\nTopley   Rlchlleld     .011,    \u2014\nOILS:\nA P Consolidated   20\nAaasoclataad        14\nCommonwealth    _v-      -23\nDalhousle       46   .\nEastcrest  .  \u2014\u2014. 46\nFreehold   0814\nHargal             .10\nIllinois   Alt.     0414\nMcDougall Segaar Ex .*- 07\nMavcury        JO\nMcLeod    ,  - 45\nCakalta   Near   \".._...       .15\nRegent      04%\nRoyallte      -      IB-\nMINNEAPOLIS, Minn., March 5 \u2014\nFlour   unchanged.     Shipment*   30,-\n713.    Bran  15.00 to 16.50.\nairtaeat:   No.   r   norJaem   7214   to\n7714; No.  1 Red Durum 8314;  May\n7814; July 8014; Saptember 83%.\nOwn:   Na. S yellow 5114 to 6314.\nOat.:   No. 8 white 271\/4 to 37V\nFlaa:    \"No.  1   1.62%   to  157%.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBunk   of   Commerce     .. 226\nDominion   Bank    221^\nImperial   Bank     \u2014 220\nBank of Montreal    298\nBank  of  Nova  Scotia    321\nRoyal   Bank          287   '\nBank  of  Toronto   .       ..-  236\nAbltlbl Power & Paper   11\nAsbestos   Corporation     '4\nAtlantic Sugar  \u2014 3(H4\nBell  Telephone      145'^\nBrazilian   T   L   _   Power   .... 27%\nBrit.   American   Oil     13.75\nCanada   Bronze      3.1-\nCan.   Car   _   Foundry     17%\nCanadian   Cement      16%\nCanadian Cement pfd   94%\nCanadian Converters  _- 60\nCan.  Industrial   Alcohol    4(4\nCanadian   Cottons  40\nCan.   Gen.   Electric   pfd     230\nCanadian   Power        2%\nCan.   Steamship    Lines  7\nCons.  Mining  & Smelting  ... 185%\nDominion   Bridge     -  50\nDmolnlou  Glass              . 123\nDom.  Steel  & CoaJ  \"B\" ....... 7\nDominion. Textile  76*^\nA  p  Oraln    _  *\\\\_\nLake of the Woods    16!4j\njMuraey   Harris    \u2014  8!3\n'Montreal   Power.  _  61%\ni Montreal   Telegraph      48\n(Montreal   Tramways     171\nNational   Breweries    -  33%\nNational  Steel   Car     37%\nOgilvie  Milling    _  273\nOntario  Steel   Products     15\nOttawa   L   H   &   Power     93 \\,\nPenmans   Ltd.     _  63\nPower Corporation  -  54^\nPrice    Broe -   _... 38^\nQuebec Power   \u2014  46'\/*\nShawlnlgan       -  60\nSherwln Williams  - -.\u201e.. 29'i\nSo  Canada   Power     30\nSteel   of  Canada    38\nSt, Lawrence Flour Mills   19\nw a basso  Cotton        30\nWestern  Grocers   -  15\nWinnipeg  Railway    15%\nWinnipeg Railway pfd  _ 73^\nBrlg.-Oen. Alexander w. F. Balrd,\nsecretary of the Carlton club, famous ln Conservative annals, and\nbrother of Lord Stonehaven, former\nBover nor- general ol Australia, was\nkilled Instantly r. a highway collision   near   London.\nASSAf SUPPLIES\nCHEMICALS\ncrashers,    Funi-ans, crucibles\nUliasswaare,   Porcelain,   Arid*.\nQaalrksllver.  Etc\nCave and Company\nLfMITED\n,87    H.rnsby    8a\u201e\nVftaacoover.   H    c.\nFormerly\nTHE   II.   I.   ASSAY   at\nCHEMICal. BUri'LY CO., LID.\nTlTE laiilaMaantial worth of tbe nem\nFord is rcflectfad in it* good performance, economy and reliability. Ita\n(lamina anal endnrance are partieii-\nlarlv apparent in seajtiona where bad\nroad, and aerere weather put a heavy\nextra burden on the automobile.\nIn lea* than a year a Hew Kuril\nTudor Sedan waa driven more than\n73,000 miles over a difficult route.\nThe operating cost per mile was\nvery low and practically the only\nexpense for repairs was for new\npiston rings and a new bearing for\nthe generator.\nThe car carried an as,iaa|s aaraaatf car\n1200 pounds of matfl and \u2014ma ib-tron\n230 miles daily. \"The Ford baa hot\u2014\nfailed to go when I waa ready,\" writ\u2014\none of the three mail <aaiii\u00ab\u00abs auaaat\ning tbe ear. \"The starter did _\u2022 t_*\nlast winter even at 34 degree* basViav\nmto. The gaa runs aboot 24 mile*\nper gallon. At tiroes I pufl \u25a0 trailer\nwhenever I hare a bully load.\"\nMany other Ford owners report tfcaa\nsame satisfactory performance. Every\npart baa been made to endure\u2014ta\nserve rou faithfully and well Cor I\nthousands of miles.\n585\nTHE   NEW   FOB!   TUBOI    S E \u00bb A W\nF. O. B. Eest  Windsor. Ontario.   Bumpart. spore tiro and\ntaxes extra.   Easy time payments eon be mwomged throssgk\nyour Ford deader.\nMany features combine to make tho neve Fori e veiue fee oboee tke pries. They ore .\nfive lines and colors, rich, long-wearing upholstery, sturdy steel body construction, ehetteriooo\ngloss windshield, fully enclosed four-wheel brakes, four Houdtdlle double+cting hydraulic shock\nabsorbers, aluminum pistons, chrome silicon alloy oalvos. torquo-tubo drive, three queries footing rear sude, more them tieenty ball and rotter bearings, and bright, enduring Rustless Steel\nfor many exterior metal parts. You save many dollars bmcemse of the low fret root of the _m\u00bb\nFord, low,cost of op**ration and up-kerp ond low yearly depreciation.\nFOBD MOTOR \u00ab O>lP \\\\V OF CANADA, LIMITED\n\"Titr. C\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab.niA* Cab**\n e*ey\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      FRIDAY, MiVRCH 6, 1981.\nNYAL\nPINAL\nEXPECTORANT\nA  prompt   relief  for\nCoughs, Colds and\nBronchitis.\nQ0C  BOTTLE\nMana-Ruthertord\nCo.\nL. B. Electric\nPhone 8 for a Demonstration  of the\nBOSCH RADIO\nClear Tone\u2014Good Volume\nBeautiful Cabinet\nDesigns\n\"Say It With Flowers\"\nSEND FLOWERS\u2014\nA gift of flowen Is one\nof tbe most appropriate, pleasing guts for\naU occasions. A beautiful dlaplay for your\nchoice.\nRosea,   Carnations,   Daffodils,   Sweet   Peas,   Tulips,   Snapdragons,\nNarcissus,   etc.\nBeautiful    Azalea?\n92.35  each\nNELSON FLOWER\nSHOPPE\nPhone 233\nPrompt Delivery\nTHE EYES, AND THE\nNERVES OF THE EYES\nare responsible for a great manv\nills, most of which can bo relieved end cured by wearing the\nproper glasses for sight and nerve\ndisorder.\nWe are specialists tn applying\nthe moat up-to-date methods for\naye   treatment.\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nOptometrist   and   Optician\nExpert  Optical   Service\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNELSON'S   DISPENSING   CHEMISTS\nSEND  VS   YOUR   MAIL  ORDERS\nWs  bit*  rou  Immediate anal Intelligent   servloe.\nPHONE    34 .      BOX    108*\nPhone\n35\nTAXI\nThe Best of,Service\nCareful, Courteous\nDrivers\nNelson Transfer Ce\u201e Ltd.\nElectrical\nWork\nWe  install  and  repair  all  lends\nnf    Electrical    Equipment.       Bell\nwork,    house     wiring,    electrical\nfans,   motors,   and   other\nappliances.\nPrices    ntght.    Work    guaranteed.\nKtvtlmata*)   cheerfully   given.\nHunter Electric\n6c Plumbing\nPhone 530 Box 191\nMERGER OF FOUR\nRAIL SYSTEMS\nURGED, ENGLAND\nBlanket Wage Reductions Decreed Will Affect a Million\nWorkers\nPITNER'S\nSPECIAL\nCome In TODAY\nfor a real treat.\nBID Swain's Olde English FISH and CHIPS\nSpecial\nTONIGHT\nDrop   around   after   the\nshow and enjoy a delicious cup of hot chocolate\nand cinnamon toast.\nMany other tempting\nsuggestions to choose\nfrom\nAny Night\n\"The Brightest Place in Town\"\nWEEK-END SPECIA\nSODA BISCUITS-\nRed .Arrow or Ramsey's. Pkt. ..\nSNAP Hand Cleaner, 2 for \t\nMAPLE SYRUP. Pure.\nLS\n.$ .19\n.45\n.75\n1.35\n.85\nORANGES\u2014\nSweet and juicy. 50 for \t\nPHONE 235\nHORSWILL BROS.\nPERFECT COOKING RESULTS\nCan Always Be\nEasily Achieved It You Cook\nWith a\nGAS RANGE\nJoin the hundreds of happy satisfied housewives\nwho do their cooking with a Gas Range. Then you\nwill know how easy it is to achieve perfect cooking\nresults at all times. Then you will know how the Gas\n.Range saves time, money and cookery labor. How a\ndish or a whole meal cooked in its oven for hours\nwithout watching is always perfect\u2014always delicious.\nIf you're not using gas phone 37, the City Gas\nWorks and learn how easily you can have a new\nstyle gas range installed and upon what easy terms\nof payment.\n\u2014The City of Nelson\nLONDON. March 5\u2014(AP>\u2014The\nrailway national wage board favors\nmerger of the tour great Brit Ish\nrailroad   system*.\nThe board today decreed blanket\nreductions for railroad worker* and\nat the same time recommended\nthat means be sought for an amalgamation of th*. lines ln the Inter-\neats of economy.\nThe wage reductions will affect\nupward of l.000.000 railroad workers ln the British Isles, Arguments\nhad been heard from both the\ncarriers   and   the   men.\nEmployers had sought a reduction\nbut the unionized worker* countered, with a demand for Increases\nwhich would bring ths basic average\nwags to \u00a33   (about $18)  a week.\nThe   reduct lon    decreed,   roughly\napproximate* 3.5 per cent. In all\nclasses of railway clerks end workmen an additional equal reduction\napplied to those drawing more than\n40 shillings a week (.about 19.00)\nor, ln the case of clerks, \u00a3100 a\nyear   (about   WOO).\nThe board waa the court of last\nappeal and. the sole escape from the\nreduction lies ln the possibility of\na strike. This ls regarded as\nhighly   Improbable.\nBoth the carriers and th* workers\n'Will be asked to accept, tbe agreement, and lt is believed they wlU\ndo ao since their representatives\nsigned   the   recommendation.\nReductions will be effeqtlve from\nMarch   28   until   March  ae.   1932\nOPENS OFFICES IN\nTHIS CITY\nPRINCES ARRIVE\nBUENOS AIRES\nPRUNING TIME Is Here\nWe Have in Stock:\nReiser and California Pruning Shears\nBishop Pruning Saws\nPruning and Budding  Knives\nTree Pruners. 6 ft.. 8 ft. and 10 ft.\nGrafting Wax, etc.\nLet lis Supply Your Wants\nWood*Vallance Hardware\nCo., Ltd*\nWholesale \u2014  NELSON.B.C. - Retail\n L-\t\nA. D. PAPAZIAN\nWATCHMAKER\nJEWELER,\nand Graduate Optician\n413 HALL STREET\nPhone Taxi\n77\nFreight Schedole\nDally  to Rowland\nand Trsll, 10 a.m.\nBUI)    STEVENS\nProp.\nTrail  Phone  139\nGLASSES\nJ. A. O Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST   and   OPTICIAN\nsuit. JjaW-806,  Medical  Art* Bid..\n44 Taxi and 44\nTRANSFER\nTBAIL  aill]   ROSSLAND\nFREIGHT  and   EXPRESS\nSchedule\nDallj  to   TraU,  leaves   10  A.  M.\nTAXIS   DAY   AND  MOHT\nshop avtth us br Mall\nBUEN06 AIRES, March 6.\u2014(AP) \u2014\nThe Prlnoe of Wales and his brother. Prince Oeorge, reached the\nprincipal objective of their South\nAmerican tour this afternoon. A\nflag draped special train brought\nthem into the clt; from El Polomar\nflying   field.\nAn hour before the princes, accompanied by an eeoort of 2d\nArgentine army planes, had landed\nat El Palomar from Mar del Plata,\na uarge crowd waited ln a scorching sun to greet them.\nThousands of persons who lined\nthe decorated streets of this city\nobtained only a fleeting glimpse of\nthe prinoes a* they were whlskea\nfrom   the   station.\nNews of the Day\nDANCE DANCE      DANCE\nTtoubadcmr  Grrheftra at  Gelinas'\nDance   Hall,   Saturday   night.     The\nSmartest   hall   and   the   snappiest\nOrchestra ln the Interior (42.46)\nCI-AN     McLEARY~ MEETS     TONIGHT   AT   8   O'CLOCK. (4252)\nSunday evening next after church\nDr. Harry Thompson will (rive a\nlecture on \"Oral Health.\" Music\nby Mrs. Gladys Webb Poster's orchestra. Vocal selection* by Mr*.\nJ. T.  Andrews. (4231)\nLADIES!!\nNew stock Silk Hosiery. Pull\nFashioned (1 and $1.50. Charlee\nMorris   Ltd. (4241;)\nCOMING!\n\"MANHATTAN NIGHT.\" by William Almon Wolff One of the\nmost interesting and sensational of\nserial storiea. Plan now to read\nevery instalment. It begin* on\nThursday. March 12. ln Tlie Nelson\nDally News nnd wlll appear every\nday. (4241)\nLEGION  HOWi*ERS   WHIST DRIVE\nAND   DANCE.   REFRESHMENTS,   AT\nWOMEN'S   INSTITUTE   ROOMS   TONIGHT.     ADMISSION   35   CENTH.\n(424S)\nAS USUAL. B1G1.E BAND DANTE\nAT EAGLE HALL SATURDAY\nNICHT. MUSIC BY THE RAMBLER   DANCE   BAND. (4244)\nPolk that dwell among Kootenay\nU-kes and mountains are filled with\nlovs of music. Come to the Nelson\nsymphony concert tonlght, at St.\nPaul's. Hear Miss MARV Jarvis\nand MISS DOROTHEA GRAHAM.\nwell known Nelson favorites. Also\nthe FLEMING TWINS ftt the piano.\nPopular pTlces. Adults 35 cents,\nstudents IB cents, any on* familv\n75 cents. (423S)\nKOOTENAY   LAKE   GENERAL\nHOSPITAL   SOCIETY\nNOTICE  OF ANNIAL MEETINO\nIn accordance with the bylaw* of\ntru> society, the annual general\nmeetiniT will be held lu the City\nHall on Ward Street, Tuesday. March\n10th,   1931.   ar   7:30   p.m.\nMembership conditions: All an-\nnui.il subscribers for the sum of\n$2.50 ar\u00ab members of the society,\neligible io take part ln the election\nof directors for the ensuing year.\nJAMES C. FORBfcS, Secretary.\n(4143i\nGREAT GROCERY\nBARGAINS\nFOR CASH\nat\nIrving Grocery\nEVERY SATURDAY NIGHT\nFrom 6 to 9\nStarting This Saturday\nGoods bought will be delivered\nMonday Morning\n\"Where Body and Fender Work is an Art\"\nTime for-*\nSPRING\nGLEANING\nWe all know that unless\na car can be made to look\nlike new it is not a satisfactory\njob to the owner, but don't forget that your car was painted by\nthe same methods as we employ in\n>ur body and fender department Thus\nit can be done again in any color or combination you wish, just like new.\nHundreds of car owners are taking advantage of Duco refinishing and are just as satisfied\nas the fellow who drives a new one, but the job\nmust be done right, and we know we can do it. Come\nand see us. Phone or write. Estimates cheerfully given.\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nPhone S5\nff.   E.   NEFF\nwho was recently promoted to the\nposition of Inspector for th* West\nKootenays of the Manufacturers\nLife Insurance company, wa* transferred from Chinook, Alta. He\nhas offices In Nelson.\nFUMES DAMAGE\nASSESSMENT IS\nBIG SURPRISE\n(Continued  From Page One)\nens county, of crop damage from\nthe Trail fumes, the consolidated\nsent specialists to Investigate the\nQuestion, and wherever damage\nseemed to be indicated, the company paid compensation. A year or\nmore ago the Consolidated was credited with having spent over $125.-\n000 up to that time ln Its studies\nIn the alleged damage area. The\nconstitution of the state of Washington has prevented the otherwise possible solution of the matter of the Consolidated acquiring\nthe lands allegedly -affected.\nPROPOSAL  ANNOUNCED\nIn the summer of 1029 the International joint commission gave\nout that the Consolidated, with the\nobject of removing the deleterious\nsulphur dioxide gas from the smelter fume, proposed to manufacture\nsulphuric acid ln large volume for\nuse ln the manufacture of chemical fertilizers, and It waa then\ndisclosed that the board of directors of the Consolidated had appropriated the money for a $7,000,000\nfirst unit of a chemical fertilizer\nplant. This outlay, by the time lt\nwas completed, was $10,000,000, and\ntoday the huge plant stand* on\nWarfield flat ln partial operation,\nand by midsummer wlll be in full\nswing. Thus the Consolidated ha*\nanticipated the Joint commission,\nwhich expresses hope that the corporation will expedite works to remove the deleterious quality from\nthe  fumes.     0\nOf the many processes employed\nat Warfield, which wlll produce\nvariou* fertilizers for the western\nmarket, the one connected with\nclarifying of the smelter fume will\nproduce by the \"contact process'\n336 tons of 100 per cent sulphuric\nacid dally which, with the 35 tons\nproduced dally by a plant built a\nyear earlier, wlll utilize 38 per cent\nof the suphpur dioxide carried ln\nthe Trail furnace gases.\nPRODUCER MOST\nMETAL\nWhile the great Consolidated metallurgical plant produces the most\nmetal of any plant on thi* continent outside the Iron Industry,\nlt 1* only a minor producer of sulphur  dioxide  gas.\nSlnoe 1920 there has been constant expansion of the plant, based\non the mighty Sullivan mine at\nKlmberley, B. C., claimed to be the\ngreatest zinc mine ln the world,\nand the company's electrolytic re*\nfineries can turn out 420 tons of\nlead per day and 400 tons of zinc,\nbeside substantial volume of other\nmetals. It supplies a tenth ot the\nworld's lead requirements and an\neighth  of  Its zinc  requirements.\nFISHER GIVEN\nASSURANCE OF\nFLATHEAD ROAD\nRoad  Building  Would  Give\nEmployment Relief to the\nFernie Men\nThat a Canadian road would be\nbuilt into the Flathead as early as\nweather conditions would permit.\nthereby opening up a vast store of\nmineral, oil wad timber wealth contained in the valley and thus keeping the money expended on taking\nout the products, ln Canada, wa*\nthe assurance recently received by\nJames Fisher of tha Flathead oil\nfields, ln the  form of  a letter.\nThe proposed road wlll be built\nfrom Corbin to Sage creek. Durtng\nthe past, all product* which were\ntaken from the valley, atnt\nthrough Montana, where the only'\nmeans of transporatlon or access to\nthe valley has existed. In this\nway much money was expended out\nof Canada. Not only does the\nUnited States profit by the.lack of\nBritish Columbia transportation, but\noperations are curtailed due to the\nheavy expense by the southern route\nWhile in town yesterday, Mr.\nFisher pointed out that Its construction would give employment\nto the large numbsr of Idle men\naround Fernie and lt* completion\nwould open up opportunities for\nemployment when the resources\nwould be developed. Coal fields,\noil fields and timber limit* would\nbe exploited, giving employment to\nmany, he thought.\nMOSLEY'S NEW\nPARTY LAUNCHED\nBY JUS WIFE\n(Continued  From  Page  One)\nstuff\". \"It ls not sob stuff,\" Lady\nCynthia repeated and the heckler\nagain shouted that lt was. Interrupters asked why her husband had\nleft the Conservative party and then\nleft the Laborltes in turn. One\nshouted that the Mosleys had betrayed Socialism.\nPOINTS   TO   LABOR   BENCHES\n\"You know nothing about Socialism\" was Lady Cynthia'* return and the lrrepressi ble heckl I r\ncame back with: \"You know less.\"\nSir Oswald's wife then charged:\n\"If you want an example of the\nbetrayal of Socialism go to the\nLabor   front   benah-e*.''\nAt one time Lady Cynthia pleaded with her hecklers, \"Aren't you\ngoing  to  give  me  a   chance?\"\nWhen the storm had quieted\nsomewhat the fair speaker continued :\n\"I stood In the last election, for\na policy of action and change. 1\nwent to the house of commons and\nthen came disillusionment. My Ood.\nIf you had sat there, as I have,\nfor 18 month* you woukd be with\nme   on   the   platform.\"\nIn the galleries, a heckler had a\nfight with an usher. After a series\nof interruptions the usher seized\nthe heckler by the collar and tried\nto throw him out. A* the two\nstruggled a man below arose, pointed to the struggle, and asked Lady\nCynthia, \"How do you like your\nFascism   now?\"\nPeace  was  eventually   restored   ln\nthe   gallery.     The   (heckler   retained\nhis seat and  his silence.\nMOSLEY'S   LETTER\nA letter from Sir Oswald Mosley\nwas distributed to the meeting\nsummarizing the new party's policy\nunder four  heads:\n1. Reform of parliament. \"We\nmust make a workshop out of what\nis now  a talk shop.\"\n2. Rebuilding of trade. \"We must\nplan out our Industries and agriculture on a national basis so that\nemployment can be given to our\npopulation.\"\n3. Control of import*. \"We must\nhave control of the .Import of goods\nInto this country for we cannot\nkeep up wage* and maintain working conditions unless we have this\ncontrol.\"\n4. Cooperation with the dominions\n\"We   need   to   secure   an   export\nDOMINION  LIVESTOCK\nWINNIPEG, Maroh 5\u2014Receipts\nCattle 1655; calves 15; hoge 165;\ns.ecp   400.\nSteers, up to 1050 lbs.\u2014Oood and\nchoice  $5.50  to $5.75.\nSteers, over 1050 lbs.\u2014<3ood and\nchoice   $5.25   to   $6.00.\nHeifers\u2014Good and choice $4.75\nto  $5.50.\nFed calves\u2014Good and choice $5.50\nto   $6.60.\nCows\u2014Good, $3.50 to $4.00; can-\nners and cutters $1.00 to $1.75.\nBulls\u2014Good   $2.75   to   $3.00.\nStocker and feeder sfeers\u2014Oood\n$4.00   to  $4.50.\nStock en-- nnd heifers\u2014Oood\n3.00   to   $4.00.\nMilkers       springer*\u2014$40.00    to\n565.00.\nVeal calves\u2014Good and choice\n$8.00 to $10.00.\nHogs\u2014Select bacon $1.00 per head\nprem.; bacon $6.50; butchers $1.00\nper head disc.; lights and feeders\n$6.75  to  $7.00.\nLamb*\u2014Good hair' _ 'it $7.00\nto $7.50; good h( \u2014 J6.00 to\n$6.50;   bucks  $5.00   to   , ..~<Z.\nSheep\u2014Good heavies $3.50 to\n$3.50;  good  handyweight  $4.00.\nWHO KILLED\nTack Thayer?\nDON'T MISS\nOne Instalment\nof\n'Manhattan\nNight'\nThe Sensational New\nSerial Story That B<\ngins Next Week in\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nCONCERT\nTONIGHT\n. Nelson   Symphony    orchestra\nSt. .Paul's   Church   at   8   o'clock\nPROGRAM\n\"O  Canada\"\ni.  March\u2014\"Our  Starry  Flag\"\nA.  J.  Schofield\n2. Overture\u2014\"Light Cavalry\"\nF.  V.  Suppi\n3. Vocal   solo*.\n(a) \"He;ir My Prayer\"\nMendelssohn\n(b) \"Lullaby-\nCarrie    Jacobs    Bond\nMISS MARY JARVIS\n4.  Waltz,  Carmen   Sylva,\"\nInanovlci\n5. Piano  Group.\nNo. l solo\u2014\"Dolly's Funeral.\"\nP.   Tachaikowsky\nARTHUR   FLEMING\nNo. a solo\u2014\"Allegro in  C\"\nHummel\nWALLACE FLEMING\nNo.   3   duet\u2014\"March   of   the\nGuards.\"\nFreeman\nARTHUR   and    WALLACE\nFLEMING\n6. Operatic selection\u2014\"La Trav-\nlata\"\nG.   Verdi\n7. Vocal   solos.\n(a) \"My  Lover  Is  a  Fisherman.\"\nLily  Strickland\n(b) \"A  Song  of  Sleep.\"\nLord   Henry   Somerset\nMISS  DOROTHEA   GRAHAM\n8   \"Three  Dances  From   Henry\nVIII    Edward   Gervan\nNo.  1\u2014Morris, Dance.\nNo. 2\u2014Shepherds' Dance.\nNo.  3\u2014Torch   Dance.\n\"God   Save   the   King.\"\nSmart Shades and Correct\n^^       Colors in\njHL.    Spring Hats\nwV\nJ\nQuality\nService\nSatisfaction\nJust about this time of year I\nyou begin to want a new I\nhat. And this is a splendid I\ntime tb drop in and see our j\nmost recent arrivals. The]\nnew hats are ready any time!\nyou are. Newest ideas. Very|\nfine values at\n$5.00 and $6.50\nSpring Millinery\nWe have received a wonderful te-l\nlection of Spring Millinery, gath-l\nered from the east and west Included amongst these are same of ]\nthe famous Roberta and -Gains-]\nborough models, also a display of]\nother makes, ranging in price]\nfrom S2.05 to $12.95\nDRESSES\nfor Spring wear. Printed crepes, ]\nplain Cantons, georgettes, etc I\nPriced from ? 10.95 to ?35.00\ntrade safe from outside interference. This we oan secure by making bargalna with the great dominion* and with all other* who are\nwilling, by which we buy their raw\nmaterial if they wlll buy our manufactured  good*.\"\nLady Cynthia presented a striking\npicture as she stood upon the Platform shouting defiance to Conservatives,  Liberals and Labor alike.\nTall, allm and good looking,\ngowned ln her accustomed black\nand with her cheeks flushed with\nexcitement, Lady Cynthia used gestures freely as ehe drove home her\njoints.\nShe pictured the country as facing\nan \"abnormal, dangerous and des-\np rate crisis,\" and she spoke of the\n2,500,000 unemployed, oi Industries\n.ilmost paralyzed and of '{he good\nold   days   of   Merrle   England   gone.\nand   nobody   doing   anything   abo|\nit.\"\nThe  speaker elucidated   the\nof  her  husband's plan  for  the\nform   of   parliament,   the   rebuild**)\nof   Britain's   trade,   control   of   :\nports and cooperation with the\nminions.\n\"As   my   husband   says,\"   sh*\nsisted,   \"lt   ls  no  longer  a  case\nEngland    being    able    to    'mudd]\nthrough',   If   the   present   crisis\nnot   solved   England   goes   undei\nFOB THAT STUBBORN COUGHl\nTake VENOI COUGH CUBE \\\nImmediate relief In most\nSMY-HE'SPHARMAC\nPrescription    Speuaalaat\nPhon.   1\nShop   avtth   us   by   anaall\nTwo Shows\nNightly\n7 and 9 p.m.\nMatinee\nat\n2 p. m.\nv\\\\Ultf_7\/_.\nTheatre\nMORNING\nSHOW\nSATURDAY|\nat\n10:30\nTODAY AMD SATURDAY\nA ROARING COMEDY  ROMANCE  THAT SKIMfel\nTHE CLOUDS FOR ONE OF THE MERRIEST JOY-MOMENTS YOU'VE\nEVER\t\nIF  A  LAUGH  A  DAY  KEEPS\nRtepplfl'\nTHE   DOCTOR   AWAY\u2014\nEven tb.\non   lt\u2014\nYOU'RE   IN   FOR   A   WHOLE\nsea-rulls\n\"FEET\nLIFETIME    OF    HEALTH\nfind Mama-\nFIRST\"\nWHEN    YOU    8EE\nthing to\nHarold\nAND   HEAR\nlaugh at\nLloyd\nwhen\nlands\nln\nHarold\nUoyd\nplunges\nlaughom.nl. '\nLloyd\nInto th.\nwith  a\nIn\nocean\nload   of\n\"FEET\nlaiixh-mod\n\"FEET\nFIRST.\"\nluggage.\nThrlllsome,\nFIRST\"\nWhat a\nbreest,\nliuixhsome,\nwholesome\nA Jo\/ Excursion\nfor the ^ntire\nsparkling,\nhilarious\nFUN.\nFamily\nCOMEDY.\nSerial\u2014\"THE INDIANS ARE COR\n1ING\"\nFOX NEWS\nDON'T FORGET\u2014To send the chil r\n\"n to the\nSatur ay Mcr. i     S*-o    a\n'rs\nMIS   8TONI      |\nMonday\u2014Tuesday:   DOROTHY   MMKAILL   ud   1\nIn   \"THE   OFFICE   WIFE\"\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1931_03_06","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0404078","@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":"1931-03-06 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1931-03-06 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\/1.0404078"}