{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-11-17","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1930-01-02","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404090\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" \"\nAdditional\nSPORT NEWS\nSee Page 10\n*\n\u00bb\n\/\n.   f    \"'Draws Made\nFOR CURLING\nSee Page 7\n)L28.\nNELSON, B. C. THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2, 1930\nNO. 221\nCRITICALLY ILL\nIDDIES' DEATH LIST  72\nit Snows in Ontario, Too ^THIRTY SEVEN\nAREPATIENTS\nrning Film Was Flun^\nrom Window Shortly\nAfter Caught Fire\ndSLEY COUNCIL\nTO BURY THE DEAD\n>me Office Starts Rigid\nInquiry Into Movie\nHouse Disaster\nMcdonald will\nseek mayoral\nseat, nelson\nAnnounces Candidature;     Haa\nServed  Four Terms  as\nMayor\nPAISLEY,  Scotland, Jan  1.\u2014The\nI \/.agedy of  Paisley  theatre  disaster\n' v'-* bringing demands Ior wider sup-\n\",.' rvnuon    among     motion    picture\n^'iituiern.    .uieuu)   tue  iiume omce\n'.' -i\u00aba    UvgUU    U    IUUMU    lliijUji.V     ill.I)\nFlLue cause in tut* MMUMf m-ie mat\nr\\ tu.--   iuni   in**   -UVW   oi    \u2022'-   CiiuuieiL,\nI   'l   -kuUlUMIf     all t       :-lt     nlllt'l     111      I.Milll-'li,\nslnb is RUivtU, Uml Hut'il U (l_ntinL\u00abrr\nEU'uuiUii i iiu>t* IWIWMHMf M-i i.tm-\nP' 4UU *a itikKsjt lo it6jiail n\u00bb rcfciuu-\nsUu.hn auu inure.\nR iuuu; o 111-tc-M.iuutiun revealed\nliiat. iwu lum v oivn UU i'.ui ic\nu imve ut-i-n iu> i.i>-\ntiutic.-), i in*   uuillniK   nun   hiiil-II\niumi tue nan wun -sjii.thf vvaM\niuug iniuuKii tt itiuuoiv mi ill ll tt\nu-n  M-ioiiu\u00bb.    in ine  wonts \u00ab<i  one\nnt*      CiiiiUifll     mn-     Kiiirtl\n\\i>iat_ yt i-Mttp^ irviti a uitujcer nine\nUiU      Ht'l      tAl.it. 11      lit     UuMIUII,\nUt*H*>*tt9ti Iwttt lH ttUtWawtM Wl fie-'\nlueui tM umifter HI a lufuit-r lined\nH.ui tiiuuit it, i nr u.iij itr.jii> ,-.ue\niuui,,i; ts ut i riid i iv i tiii i il (*ii i ttl\nUV   \u00ab.n,-ii|'jniv.i   uy   U  iMMVllh   gUilT-\n\u25a0 t_...ii  ut*  u.*u*iK-r,\nULu.uun    vi    i in*   Paisley    (own\nivu.n.i   \u00abue    vtsiwng    iui    ine    ue-\nUus-ttstm   tininix    K\u00bb    pay\n'    lUi.tlUl      t ACllllL*, ,\n\"Mother\" Jones, famed United\nStates Labor leader, la critically ill\nnear Washington, DC. II she Uvea\nshe will be 100 years old on May 1\nnext.\nTARDY PRESENT\nEXPLODES; ONE\nWOMAN KILLED\nSeven    Injured as    Christmas\nPackage Turns Oua to\nBe Bomb\nA battle for mayoralty honors in\nNelson loomed last night when J. A,\nMcDonald announced he would be n\ncandidate. Mayor Barnes is already Ln\nthe field. Mr. McDonald hiu hail\nfour terma in tne office of mayor\nln the city. He nerved during 1919.\n1920,    1926   and    1937.\nIn addition to this Mr. McDonald\nhas served several terms as alderman\n\u00b0nd pil'ce commissioner. In u\u00bb27 he\nwaa elected to the British Columbia\nlegislature as member for Nelson.\nSUPERINTENDENT\nFOR C Pa HFRE\nIN FROM COAST\nJ.   Ivan   McKay   f kes   Over\nPosition Vacated by K.\nArmstrong Here\nV 'S- \"S\nJ. Ivan McKay, newly appointed\nsuperintendent for the Canadian Pacific\nRailway here, arrived ln the city on\nNew Year's eve from the coast. He\ntook over his duties yesterday, succeeding R. Armstrong, retiring super-\ns.n'emlent.\nMr. MacKay declared upon his arrival   that   he   was.   Indeed,   triad   to\nme   to   Nelaon   as   It   was   his   old\nSEAT  PLEASANT.   Mr..   Jan.   1.\u2014The\nexplosion ot a tardy Christmas l\u00bb<*age,\nleft a young wife. Mrs. Namoi Hal hom(J tQWn Hc iUm<_* Khool here\nBrady of Seat Pleasant, dead today . B_d ^ . ,arge number ot (riends\nand seven others Including her mother, ^ ..   th     c,      a       (,lsmct.\nMany Ontario citizen found that giCnn-.- ye terytar to cany them over the heavy snow\nback to the oid 'home for Christmas was no which impeded tntfy&t traffic. The photo\neasy proposition when they hit the highways above shows a motor bus being shovelled out\non Christmas eve. Despite the comforts and : of the snew on the way to King City, Ont.,\nefficiency ci modern transportation, many when the snowplow had proved ineffective\ndoubtless  yearned   tor  the speed  cutters  ut ' in clearing the road.\nThree   Tots,   Victims   of\nMovie House Panic, in\nSerious Condition\nJAMMED DOOR WAS\nCAUSE OF TRAGEDY\nPaisley Is Center of Sorrow\nand Gloom on New\nYear's Day\nSOCCER RESULTS\nIN OLD COUNTRY\ninjured,  three seriously.\nThe Identity of the sender rf the I\npackage, which was left on the porch\nof a neighbor last Saturday nlgnt ad-\nMr. MacKay stated that his family\nwould be along probably within i\nweek  or  so.\nQuestioned    regarding   his    appolnt-\ndrosaed to the young woman wh.. was ment to tue neiMm division Mr. Mac-\nklllcd, remained a mystery to police Kay _eciRrt,_ mot It had come to\nseverM hours after the explosion, shen- ; nlm   8S   a   blg   jurpru,,.    He   was   at\nthe time ln California on a holiday\ntrip and came to Nelson almost direct\nfrom  the  south.\nrORONTO PUTS\nMAJOR WEMP IN\nMAYORAL CHAIR\n\"iwn   1'lanning   Bylaw   'Lost;\nI Heaviest Municipal Vote\non Record\nTORONTO, Jan. 1.\u2014Major Bert S.\n>mp, a member of the city's Board of\n\u201ertrol * for the past three years, Is\nronto's new mayor for 1930. He\n:ceeds  Mayor  Samuel  McBride,  who\nly after breakfast this morning.\nBesides Mrs. Brady and her mother,!\nMrs. Hall who suffered Injuries, b,it\nIs expected to recover, four children\nof Mrs. Hall were Injured, Mrs Margaret Bromley, mother of Mrs. Hall,\nis sutfeimg irom severe shock and a\nneighborhood boy who helped dcuvcr\nthe dead|y package was cut about the \u25a0\nface. _    .   ._\n1 A\u00bb the family .gathered about thc\ndeiayed package and pulled off the\nwrappings, the explosives, believed to\nbe dynamite and powder packed with\nnails, were discharged. Tlie occupant* of the home were thrown to all\noorners ot the room, furniture was\nbroken and plastering stripped from\nthe  walls. \t\nFAILUWI\"\nI    BUSINESS OFF\nIN THE U. S. A.\nNATIONALIST\nWAN PARTY\nRANKS SPLIT\n.'SO Members of Congress Walk\nOut With Cry \"Hail the\nMotherland\"\nLAHORE, India, Jan. 1.\u2014A serious\nsplit aroee ln the ranks in the All-\nIndia Nationalist congress today as\nthe gathering concluded amidst cries\nof \"Ba-ndematram\" (Hall the Motherland..\nUnder the leadership of Srinlvasa\nAiyengar and Subash Bosc, 30 members of the congress walked  out  and.\nr loKllifios   I\u00ab   ln a.  protest meeting formed a\nLlduiuucs*   *\u00b0   nnmt.tr. nartv\" within the congress\nneeded  his  opponent's election  with i But   Increase   in   Liabilities   IS   ocratlc puny'' wltnln the congress,\nuna   reported   from   722   sub-polls . Found   bv   Bradstreet's |    The minority  had  demanded repot t-\nt of a total  of 786.    A third can- j .   i        . s ing   on   the   new   working   committee\nlate,   Albert   Hacker,   ls   ln   danger i Journal   Inquiry I and   when   the  congress   adopted   the\nlosing his deposit.      With 58 sub- j   list as ts. whole, the disgrunteld mem-\n11a to  hear   from the  figures were:'     ,,,-\u201e    YOEK     Jan     1 \u2014Bradstreet's   bers   walked   out.    one    delegate   re-\nl Hacker   2907. ',     \",\"_  &naounce_   today  that  figures  marking  that  the  congress.onai   could\nj McBrlde 46,541. complied from telegraphic reports from  scarcely   complain   since   the   congress\nWemp 50,828. ' pjj fj, offices ln the United States re-   had   sanctioned   such   walk-outs   from\nDefeat of the \u00bb19,000,000 town-plan- : veais   that   during   the   full   calendar   the   legislative  councils,\nng   by-law   also   was   conceded.   Ap-   year of 1929 there were 19.703 failures      The dlssentlon group announced that\noxlmately   700   polls   showed   25,287   m    the   country,    with    liabilities   of   the   work   of   thc  congress   would   be\nfavor   and   27,488   against. (628.990.833.    This  was  a  decrease  ot   carried on by them in principal.\nIt  was  estimated  that  the   heaviest   3,2   per cent  in  failures,  but  an   ln-      The   congress,   however,   elected   thc\n.       J . .        . . .. ... ... ~ ~.      .    *. (\u00ab Il    ,1     , 1   . t   S,      -\n\u00a3 unicipal vote in the hinton' of the\n.y had been polled, despite Inclement\n'\u25a0athar conditions.\n^Results erf contests for the board of\nrntrol and aldermanic and other\njvll  officers,  were  undecided  at  8:15\nCING AND QUEEN\nEXPRESS SORROW,\nMOVIE TRAGEDY\ncrcaac  of   21.4   per   cent   In  liabilities llst  fl8 proposed by Mahatma Gandhi,\nas  compared  to   1928. Notionalist leader, omitting the names\nThe excess ln liabilities ln 1929 over of    8r(niviisa   Aiyengar     and    Subash   -\n1928  was  due  mainly  to heavy  losses Bost?       Gandhi,  in the congress,  had   RUGBY\noccurred   by   banks   suspending.   Brad- urt{ed   the   now   WOrlcing      committee\nstreets   announced.     The   failures    n 6hou]d   m&ude   only   those   who  were\nDecember.   1929.   were   the   largest   in entlrPiy   8ympBtheiic  toward  the   con-\ntne year eince January.       urewlonal   program,   m   nis   final   ad- |\ntolaiiea \u25a0    .     .._ \u201e\u201e\u00bb_*.\u201e,,   *,\nLONDON, Jan. 1\u2014Re.ults of football\ngames played in the British Isles today   were;\nion r.R\nBltfltHt!   Leajtue\u2014 fin*.    Mvktba\nBlackburn   Rovers   7,   Middlcsbotniifih\n0.\nBolton W.tnderei-h 7, lli,drtei*-f>l(l\nTown   1.\nManchester City 3, Bhttt.lAa Wednesday   3.\nSliefilPld United 4. WcsUam United\n2_\nSunderland 3, Burnley 3.\nKnslish  I mum   Wii^ud nivi-iuii\nBarnsley   1.   Chelseti   1.\nBury   0,   Blackpool   1.\nChsrltcil Athletic; 3. Wolveihamp-\nton  wandeurn   0.\nc:dham AthU I -s 5 Wastlwoiairtch\nAlbion   u,\nKustMi    tWlHH -Thlrt   IHiMnn\nNnrl.MTn   *MP*ti.)n\nAccrlngton Stailcv 7. Car!:.-!e United   0.\nOhesWrtttld   2.   Rochdale  0.\nDarimRton   8.   South   Shirks   3.\nHarilrpool Uni.ed 5, Rotherha:n\nUnited  1.\nNewbrifchtnn    1.    Yorkcity   1.\nSouUiport   0,   Bi-rrow   *..\nStockport  County  I,  Line.In  City  1.\nWin\u00abanl)orou*gji 2. Crtlri A.exiiifdra3.\nKhrimi  i^-aKiif\u2014 iiiiru  pirbUon\nsoitfheni   Sf'4-tlmi\nPulham   4,   Swindon   1.\nNew  OastH  United  4,  Coriiuhians  4.   I\nsiotlKh   l.caRMf-\u2014fm   Mlvl-Hion        ,\nAirdrj'ioiuans   4,   Saltkirk   1.\nAir   United   B,   Queens   Pbt.   5.\nCeltic   1,   Ranger.   2.\nCowdenbenrh 4. Dundee Uniietl  I.\nDundee    0,    Aberdeen    a.\nHeurban  0,  Htrbernians  l.\nMotherwell   1,   Academic   1\nPartlck   Thistle   3.   Clyrit   3.\nSt.   Johnciuiie   1,  Morton   1.\nSt.   Mirren   3.   Kilmanuek   I.\nSrf\u00bblt**h  l<eaKiH'\u2014swoiul lihl'-Um\nAlloa   2.   Albion   R0V|M   1,\nBoness   3.   Third   1 unark   :l.\nClydebank    1,   Brc-nin   Clt.r   3.\nDunforline   Athletic   0,   Arbroath    1\nStenhousc   Mulr.   6.\nEast   ttlfUngallir.   2,   Elfl   Fife   2,\nPir'nr AtbleHc 4. Dumbarton  3.\nLeith   Athletic   0,   Arnvidalp   0,\nMontrose   l,  St,  Bernard   I, ; will   likely   recover.\nRaith   Rovers  0.  Queen l.   ine   South\nCanada^ Mining Output\nReaches New Record in\nthe Year Just at an End\nCANADA EXTENDS\nSYMPATHY TO THE\nPAISLEY PEOPLE\nOTTAWA,   Jan.   t    tCPi\u2014 Re-\u2022\nplying  to u inasaaga calrtad yesterday   by   Premier   W.   L.   M\u00bbc-\nken*?ir Ktng, expressing sympathy\nfor  the disaster there New  Year's\nevening, J Crnin Burr, provoat\niff, *icnUnrn\\, ro!l:>v e.iWsd\nthe following: \"Pl-'uso acaapl\ntha il\u00bbM>f thanks oi my col-\naagma aad myaiU ror your kind\n\u2022xpraaaton  ol  srtnpatby.\"\nThe prime minister's message\nviis: \"The citizens of Canada\nuu - l;ern ureatly clistrc-sed to\nread of the toai of so many\nyomuT lives in the tragic disaster at PalMey on this New\nY-ar'.   eve      M;m    I,   on   Ihcir   he-\niinjf, extend to the city aad tu\nthe m-inv homes whloh have\nMan oerfi.ved, our deepest sym-\nmthy '*\nProduction   Amounts to  |S08\u00bb-\ns7fi,0(KI.OO, a (Jain _i\n10.5 Per Cent\nWOMAN   IS   FOUND\nDEAD AFTER TRYST\nWITH HER HUSBAND\nSHERDHOOKE. Jan. 1-Afi-r leaving\nher fath-:*.- homi Wrytttg bet infant\nchild. Topeka trysi with her eatrangad\nhuaband, Un, Antonla Polique, i\\,\nwaa lound daad last night in an out-\nbuRdtnff, her throat cut, Ter child\nWM beslBa tha body nnd unharmed,\nAntuito Pcllque, 23, had .previously\ngene to his iaiher'3 home blaadlns\nfrom   a   deep   Kash   'n  hl\u00ab   throat.   He\nOT1AWA,   .Mn.    I\u2014in    !))!!\u00bb,   ihe\nfn'ii-th jew hi willed thp nilnlnn\niiMu-sii' -i <;hi:hLi rt'ivlird a new\nlilah     r<-< i.rd     nin-ti   .llif    \\alne    of\nprmiiiiiu. \u25a0 amotnited ta s3o.i,-\ns'li.ono ar Hi-.i ikt rent n\u00bb4ire\niikia in tin- hMartina >\u00bbsir be-\nennliiu to tha official t'-tim.ile\nal k. .|. r\u00bb;nk. t-hlei uf (hi- niiuiiu.\nNMtiUlurftCm]   und   ehemlMl   branch\nM  tin'  Dominion  bttnan all  >iai-\ni-IU-.\ninn .n< i be YMt new raeOfftll\nwne eitubllfthed In tht- output ui\nMbfatoa, ii an-nl, ejaj pnnluct\u00ab.\n\u00abtiiiptT. cold, \u00bb>-isiiin, lime, nlikt-l.\npetroIeniU, naJt, -lone, -ami and\n(travel, \/ine and in the *nluf of\nnatural  (Ma,\nThe total increase in the value\nnf   mineral   ontpAl   in   IMI   tnvt\nl\")2X hi- SIK.HHT.OOO, -^ajs the re-\nP'trl.\nMelaK M a fiTOUp showed the\nereale-t nain at a total at \u00bb1W.-\nM;.MMt v. ciiiupan-d with WW,-\n(112,483 '\u25a0\u2022 I9t*\\ F'iek at 9*76.116.-\nNo m compared hHIi |VMU>lil\nIn the preredlnc fWK showed ,i\nnet gain ol three pit cent. Other\nn.in-iiM't ilh. \u25a0\u25a0 had :l value til $'.'!,-\n;ii;,.(hio as acaival #18.8'iB.G9*. In\nnn- p^fcatftni jraaVt\nFather Daughter\nKilled in Auto\nCrash Coas'\nentirely   sympathoiic  toward  the   con-\nFailures ln Canada for 1929 totalled   *\u25a0-\n\u2022J092   with   llabllltie.  ot  \u00bb3J 863,932.  an   J *\u00bb ^    '\u00bb \u2122\u00bb\u00ab\"^Ztod   U\u2122 tall\nIncrease  \u201eJ   ll.a  per  cent   In  number   ^XVtaa, cry from 15,000 throat*\nwhen he declared that Indla'a cry for\nindependence haa already resounded\nthroughout   the  world,   and   that   In- [\nbut   a  decrease   of   12.7   per   cent   in\nliabilities   from   1928.\nSANDKINUIIAM, England, Jan. 1.\n\u2014King George and Queen Mary\nIn a message .made public today\nexpressed their deep sorrow at the\npanic disaster In Paisley, the mes-\nsasge   read:\nThe King and -Queen are greatly\ndistressed to hear af the ap-\npallng disaster at the Glen Cinema\nIn whlrh so man)' poor little children lost their lives and many\nother others were Injured. Their\nmajesties asked that their heartfelt sympathy be conveyed to the\nbereaved relatives In theit overwhelming sorrow and that Their\nMajesties be kept (informed of the\nprogress, of  the Injured.\n.EADER MANITOBA\nLIBERAL PARTY IS\nAPPOINTED JUDGE\nWINNIPEG,   Jan.   I\u2014H.   A.   Robson.\nC, leader of the Manitoba Liberal \u25a0\n-ty,  and   member  of  the  provincial j\n[legislature for Winnipeg, has been ap- !\nolni*d a Judge of the Manitoba court !\nbf asppeals.    word of the appointment i\nI wae  received   from  Ottawa.\nMr.   Robson    succeeds   Hon.    J.    E. 1\n\u25a0prendergast,     newly    appointed    Chief\nlJuatlce of Manitoba.\nERICK C. MIEVILLE\nON HONOR LIST\nThe   Mfhy ^aague\nBarrow 0, Oldham 0.\nHalifax   -V   Leedi,   0.\nRochdale Kornatu i>. Warrington  3.\nSt.  Helen's 0,  8t.  Helenr,  Re       3\nSwlnton ft, Balford ft.\nWlgan  38,  WHkafleld Ti-iuii;.   6\nTilt-   ki <<n\\  1 MO\\\nManchester fl   Wcaetii D\nPortsmouth    Service   M,\nMail Your New Year's\nIssue of Daily News\nto a Distant Friend\ni VANCOUVER. Jan. 1\u2014Frank Ke<\nI clilef clerk for tha Imperial Oil com\nivny here, and Wa- three-year-o'.f\nduui^hter Phyllis, Weta almost instantl\nkilled, and Mrs. Kej wat injured las\nnight, when their automobile w;\nstiuclc by an lintrurban train of th\nBritish Columbia Electric Railway. T\naocldant   happt-ned   two   blocks   fro;,\ntbc   Key   home.\nPAISLEY, Scotland, Jan. 1.\n\u2014New Year's day was one of\n?loom and sorrow for the city\nof Paisley with the shadow of\nTuesday's motion picture panic\n:ragedy affecting everyone.\nThere were few cheery New\nSfear greetings, the people for\n;he most part restricting them-\n(elve,s to quiet observance cut\nthe day, weighed down by the\ntragi-dy which had overtaken\nmany poor homes. In the narrow streets where most of the\nvictims lived, last night and\ntonight were homes of anguish\nand sorrow and lights glimmered fitfully through drawn\nblinds telling of sleepless in-\nI habitants.\nWith the death list definitely\ni fixed at 72, 37 children were\nI confined to hospital, three he-\n' intf in a critical condition.\nSEEK THEIR  DEAD\nThroughout the ni-fht iaint-\n,intf mothers pressed on to\nidentify their dead, carrying\nI little oneu home in their shawls\nI when they could. In the hospital three rooms were filled\n7vith dead.\n' It was the tragedy of \"Tlie door\nmat jammed\". The actual caiuc o*\ntl.es pimlc it. now sold to have laeen\nUie Iruiblllty of the aaaiataht operator\nto open a side door when running\naway wiiu the burning film. Before\nthe door could be oiiened fumes apresjd\n1 thtounh the building and terrified\n| the  children  scrambling  fm-   the  exit.\n\u25a0 Firemen   and   helpers   found   children\nI on   thc   Mage,   lo   the   orchestra   pit,\neverywhere, some ln their terror tried\nI to climb the moving picture screen.\n| \"Tlie scene on the stairway,\" says\n; deputy  fireinaster  Wilson,  \"made even\nseasoned firemen shudder. Por 10\n; feet   tshlldren   were   packed   tightly   to-\n\u25a0 gether in every imaginable position,\ni like  a  wall  of cement bags\"\n1 It la considered doubtful If some\n| of the rescued children will ever fully\nrecover from their experience. One\n'ittle boy was round In a corner witn\nbodies piled above his waist. V\/heu\n.'tremen reached him he was looking\ntpward, gesttcijating. as If trying to\nush some horror back with his hands.\nHe  still  thsiught   he  was fighting   for\nLONDON, Jan. 1,\u2014Ot especial Interest to Canadians in the New Year's\nhonors list ls the rank bestowed upon\nKrlck Charles MJevtlle, secretary to\nHis Excellency Lord willingdon, governor-general of Canada. . He was\ncreated a companion of the order to\nSt. Michael and St. George, which entitles him to the use of the title\nC. M. O. after  his name.\nIS MARRIK1)\nIf   you   arc   not   .keeping   your   New\n\\   ..i        ll   ui'    <\\t   The    Daily    News    tor\nWee,   mall   it,   to   mat   distant\nRampahltt | friend nrhem *. u wish to inform itbout\ndlae beyond the borders of their covin- | public   {.chooln   G. i Aw   .Kootenay,    Extru  eoptaa,   wnipped\ntry nre now enabled to held their heads      Waterloo  :i,   Birkenhead  Part   13.       ' [or   mailing,   may   be   obtained    from\nhigh.    ' '     Stevrtirtcnlan.-i   13,   WaUOnUna   0,        | The  Dally   News at 5 cents ent*h.\nWestern Farmers Sitting Tight And\nHoping for the Best; Considerable\nPortion of 1929 Crop Is in Store\nNEW BUILDING\nRECORD, REGlN.v\nMUTS DECLARES\nTIME OF WORLD\nWARS PASSED\nP.EOINA.   Jail.    1.- X   new   building   \u00aby:i|   np  Sirifp  nnrl  ('onlaantinn\nrecord   was  established   by   OK   ctty  of    \"'\"   lie   MHie   ana  contention,\nRetina  i\"  the  year  IM9. the vai-jf        ue  s<ays;  Savs Empire\nol building permits reaching the total\nof HD.929030. In 1928 the figures were\n$6 619.2nS. Bank clearings for 1929\nwere $337,388,125 ali'i in 1928. M12,-\n089.797.\nWill Hold\nIBENNETT WILL\nTALK AT REGINA\nREGINA, Jan. 1.\u2014Hon. R. B. Ben-\nInett. leader of the Conservative party,\n\u25a0will speak here Tuesday, January 21,\nIthe Armouries will probaly be obtained\npor the occasion.\n j '\t\n(OOK   lll,-TH   HIM\nCANTON, Ohio, Jan. 1\u2014George Cook,\n\u25a0Australian        heavyweight,       defeated\n|_*n.iikie Wine,  of Montana,  ln a tan\n\u25a0ound light her* tonight.\ne_\\u\nWINNIPEG, Jan. I.\u2014Aa 1030 starts,\nthe western farmer is sitting tight -\nand hoping. Hc ls sitting tight because\nhe realizes thrit he will receive between\n\u00bblfii>.000.000 and *200,000,000 less lor\nhis wheel crop than he did ior the\nbumper yield of 1928. He m hoping\nbecause the future gives him i eaeun\nand because the fanner ta bj nature\nun optimist.\nIn  resigning himself  to  t.'     a IvctH\nsituation arising out of the\nreduced   crop,   the   agrarian   i.*.   lliang\nup   beside  the   business  man   ir.   the\nties.    Side   by   side   thc   r ml   went\nand   th\u00a9   urban   went   are   otnvtng   to   fnlr.\nni.iKc  the  best of condltlui\nWhen business generally slowed up\nlast ttdl, unemployment on Uia pvai-\nicn   swelled   from   a   neli\u00bb.b.Q   figure\nmake the coming harvest worth a good Europe's   non-pivferred   eountfiaa   wa.\nprice. rcstiicted   ta  .30   per  rent   of   the  pre-\nNlneteen   twenty   nine,   at   its   close, vions   leWi   total;   and  R  cumplete   rt\u00ab\nbriught   a   smile   to  the   west,   where organttttloa WM effected in the boevd\na   considerable   portion   oi   tbe    1939 of   'ruin    ooatmlarionere.     Both   thes<?\nyield Is still   in ston*. Otmcenelocui    were    re<tueata<|    by    ;il,'i\nOfficial reporU at Christmas tlnn1 ilu-ec provincinl meetinga early in 1929.'\nirom the Argentine indicate that the Beside j tha weatern farmer apprdvta\nsouthern republic's wheat output will .Strongly of tin*- decision \u00bb,o Usi \"Can-\nbe far ijelow the average private esti- adtan\" aa i natlodilltji on census\nmate.    The   wheat  pool   tnemb-e.      .ml sheets.\nthat  is to  60  per cent of t!!fc8  prairie's      Appointment   of   Hon.   T.   A.   Crera, I'\nwheat   producers\u2014developments   ln   the preakUmt  ol   United  (.rain Growers to\nArgentine  appear  ns strong  support  of the    Dominion    cabinet    already    well\nth  pool's   .policy  of  'watchftil   Watting' peopled  with weatern reini'sentntives is\nuntil    prices   lire   what   they   conshier another   19\"J9   ctevtiopment   highly   .-.at-\n, isf-ir'nry   to   thc   f.irmcr.\nIn   tiie   lnterv.il   l>etween   crop   times, |     Promotion   of   Hon,  Charles  A.   Dun- !\nagrarian   attention   la   occupied   to   a mag,   pnii-ic .stalwart, to the portfolio\nmarked extent  by provincial conditicns ot rin.ince, iMTlni tlie ministry ot rall-\nof farmers'  bodies.    Some 50.000  active ways   \u25a0 .pm   for   Mr   (Tern,   meets   with\nuntil  lt reached the highest maik  in  members    are    directly    co.iccnied     n general   .agrarian  approvial\nhalf a dozen years.   But the prov.nces.  Manitoba.  Saskatchewan  ami   Aihort-a -      Ahead   the  farmer sees  tlie  openim:\ncivil OTsgan laatlons and individual com-. Bll   three   to  be   held early  thts  year, of the Hudson Bay railway to Church-\npaniesi joined   In  a concerted  effort  to   probably   1500 delegates will attend tlie ill nnd  of the cheaper wheat-transport-\naid  the Jobless.    Every  Jroject possible   three  annual   meetings,  presenting    he ution  overseas.    He sees  improved con- i\nin   thi  face  of  existing  condition\"   is   re. olutlons   approved   by   vnrlotia   rtts- dltions through the pxiaisum of tele-'\nbeing  pushed   forward to  provide  em-. trlcta in  the  bid to mould  a  -ftaaeml phone, light and power lines.    He sees <\nploy ment.                                                         farm opinion.                                                , better   roads   and   lighter   taxes.     He\nWhile the Wh^it piol Is still Jockey-       At Brandon. United Farmers of Man- dreams of that bigger crop In 1930 and\ning for position with  regard to prices-! ltoba convene next week.    The United thinks  of   the  chances  of   cashing   in\nfor  the  1\u00bb29  yield,  the  iarmer  has an   Farmers   of   Alberta   meet   two   weeks fairly   well  on  the half size  1929 yield.\neye  for the possibilities for next year,  later at  Calgn:\\.    At  Saskatoon  on a At  tho   present,  there ls the work  to\nNEW YORK. Jan. 1\u2014\"Oeneral. are\nwe ever poing to have another world\nwar?1'\nThis was the question put to General Jan Christian Smuts, former\npremier of South Africa, during an\ninterview he granted newspapermen\nshortly  after  his arr'val  here   Tueaday.\nHe did not reply for a utootU., Then\nh\u00ab  spoke   r.lowly   and   thoughtfull\\.\n\"You will be dead, and I ~hall be\ndto ] rod still the.c will be no world\nWM.\" he said. f?IW thc Boer war,\nin which I had s) grtat an Interest.\nwould  be  impossible  today.\n\"Naturally, there will be strife and\ncontention, such as ln China, but\n*he\u00ab*e will not reach out to other\nnatt.n'-..\"\nSomeone asked him If he thought\nthe British Empire would ever brsak\nup.\n\"No,\" he replied with a vigorous\ni shake of  his  head.\nMEXICANS STAGE\nDEMONSTRATION\nBEFORE RUBIO\nDETROIT, Jan. I\u2014\/*, hostile demonstration was staged tonight by about\n3000 Mexicans as Pascusl Orttze Rublo.\npresident-elect of Mexico arrived at\nthe Michigan Central station  here.\nThe Mexicans booed and hissed aa\nthey gathered ,ir.mnd the station.\nPolice reserves were called out as a\nprecautionary    measure,    and    six    of\nHoolev   Smith    star  of  the  Montreal those In thc crowd were arrested. They\nMuler Ush, K. C, prominent Topon- | A\u201e    um,snally   dry   summer,   and   an  date   not   yet   set.   will   be   held   tlie  do aud the . esolutums lo complete tor      \"\"\" -*\u00bb   \u00b0\"\"'n\u201e   ____ \u2122\" r_V___ w\"\u00ab  chargtd  with disorderly   conduct,\nto   flnuneler.   whoee   mart-lage  to  Mlao i autlimn with barely average preclplta-  convention   uf   the  United  Fnrme.is  of  the  annual  conventions.                            \u2122\" \"\"\";\u2022   ' \" \"\u201e,  '\",   __\\ \u2122      ,\u201e, \u2122 The president-elect and membera of\nClarice   \u00ab,   Brodle   took   place   tsday. j tion   have   left   the   sou   deficient   in  Canada.   Saskatchewan   section.              I    So   thc   farmer   In   the   weat   philo-   \"' \u2122    \"\u201e.   \u00bb_T.'-.7 rh\"^\u2122   o,   2 his family, pud no heed to the crowd.\nMiss Brodle, who has been Mr. Lash's ! moisture.    Undoubtedly, however, geu-  oxt ol   AFPKOV AL                             i sophlculiy   forgets the past and, to i  '\"   \"*\"*   f*_*   a\u2022\u00bbMl\u201e!r*0  S1*0* They   were   greeted   by   a   (roup   of\nprivate secretary  for  some tome,  was j erous   spring  reins   can   still   bring   a ]    The past  year has been one of ap-  great extent the worriea lt has brought   f*\u2122  \"     ,\u00b0\".      ,;fc               ,   \"\"j\" Mexican   officials   and   buslnesa   men\nformerlyy the private secretary ol Sir   good   1M0. yield\u2014and   of   course,   the  proval   for  farmer's demands.    During into the present.   He alts tight aad he Victoria   hospital   with   concussion   ol   | and by representatives of tht city. A\nThomaa   While,                                         > tanner U hoping that world conditions ijgu,   th*   (Mw   ol   ImmigraLle   Iron   bop**,                                                       *\u2022     brain. police escort took them to a Hotel,\n _\u2014\u2014-\u2014\u2014\nw Fage Twn\nTHF! NFlaSON DAILY NEWS      THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2, 1980\nRooma With Sunnlni\nWater\nl*rlT,t,    Bathi   FnSulif\nThe Hume\nGEO. BENWELL,  Prop.\nThc\nrmnif-r Hotel nf the\nInterior\nT        AU V\n\\ I wo Uld-limers\n1    of C. P. R. Retire\nFrom the Service\nOne   Ihe   Oldest   Employee   in\nPoint of Service; Other\nStarted  1888\n.1\nHUME\u2014E W. Widdowson. Leicester\nEnOajid: Mrs. R. Widdowson, Stockport, England; Mr. and Mrs Brown\nand family, Willow Point, H R Ach-\nuon, Procter; W. H. Laird. New Denver: Mr. and Mrs. Tlsctale, S. P. Chap\nman. South Slocan; Mr, and Mrs. J.\nO Nelson, L. K. Larvm. Mlnnea,polls;\nC A. Larson and Ruth, St. Paul; Mr\nuid Mm. Weightman. P. C Clark?.\n(Vnevieve Proudfoot, Winnifred Pale-\nthorpe, George Palethorpe. E. Fish.\nVancouver; Mr and Mrs. G A. Fleury.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Davidson. Miss Helen\nMurphy, A. M. Noxon. Mr. and Mrs.\nJ D. Notman, j E. Cartmel. Marlon\nBlackwood.   Miss   Cora   Larson.   Nelson:\nMrs Blnckwood. Johnstown. Penn.; Mr\nand Mrs. W, Archlbold. Creston; W.\nNkkolson, Golden; Mrs. W. J. Meagher. Parts. Ont.; Howard Sam-peon,\n8pokane. H. Lakes. Golden; R O. Leslie, Miss Sa vain-cock, Mr and Mrs. G.\nMam. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. McPhail.\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Vivian. Miss Agnes\nJerome. J. R. Jerome, Mr. and Mrs.\nG. P. Chapman, Maxine Chapman, W.\nRogers. C. Barcott. Mr. and Mrs. Stng-\nerlch, A. B. Ollker. C D. Blackwood,\nMr. nnd Mrs. R. P. Brown, \"Mr. and\nMrs Burns. Bonnlngton; Miss D. Burns,\nsilverton: Dr. W. Gussin, Paris, C.\nf\\4h, Vancouver; V. B. Poole, D. W.\nI McKay. Santa Cruze, Cal,; Orvllle\n1 John William Shugg, Watford, Ontario.\nmilnmiWffW'i'iwtfw'iwttfmn-mwwfwwfttl'i'ir\nWhere the Guest is Kin&\nI\n:\ni\nTheS\navoy\nHUSOiri   BE WEST   AND   FXHBST   BOTB\nIU.WT   BOOMS   WITH   PRIVAT|\n\u2022ATM Ol SBOWIBI\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nNORTH Bn'i. Jim i -Two nri?.\/]pd\nveterans of the mils, one of the oldest\nemployee in \u00a3>olrtt of service on the\nCanadian Pacific Railway, and the\nother man who made his first run\nback  In   1888.  nn  retirtnu  here today.\nWhen the Soo-Montreal flyera stopped in North Bay tonight. Engineer\nJames T. Fallon stepped down from\nthe cab for the list time, ending more\nthan 50 years of service. A few minutes later on tire Chalk River local,\nConductor Linn* O'Coaner checked\nhis orders for the last time and\nstepped from the train Into retirement\nIn 1879, on April 27. Fallon became\na railroader and nine years later,\nwhile an englneeer along the main\nline, took O'cormor, then a rookie\nintiium-n. on hln first trip to tench\nhim the business.\nBEGAN  CARERS A\u00bb  KAVEE\nMr. Fallon began his railroading\ncareer as a navee as the Grnnd Central\nrailway pushed Its way westward\nthrough    the    bush     paM    his    farm\nliome near Chalk River. Two yeai\nlater the road was absor^ec by the\nnewly incorporated Canadian Pacific\nand Fallon became locomotive wlj>er.\nA few months later he became ' a\n| fireman on engine No. 233. the old\nwood-burner, which laid steel Into\nNorth Bay in 1882. Then did Fallon\nflrat see the town, which was to\nbecome his home The only build ing\nhere then was a shanty owned by\na man named McFartane, tnd the\nonly man now living who was here\nwhen railon first arrived, is John\nFerguson, founder of  North  Bay,\nUnder the coaching of Samuel Lee*.,\nlong since dead, Fallon became an\nengineer in 1886 and since has seen\nservice all along tne main line from\nOttawa to White River He has piloted engine* drawing royalty and vice-\nroyalty, presidents of the system and\ncelebrities In every walk of life. He\nwaa at the throttle of the engine\nwhich drew the Prince of Wsles's. spec-\n1r1   across  Canada   in   1919\n_a_i_i^*\u00ab___***\u00bb.M.\u00bb***.***J_.******_L\u00bb*f*\u00ab^>iilmtii\nSAVOT\u2014A. McGlbbon, South Slocan; Dosberg. Procter; W. Birdsong, Bpok-\n\"B. Harris, A. Rettie, F. Grontage, Trail; ane; Mr. and Mrs. R. Bourke, Creavent\nMrs. MacNaughton, D. MacNaughton, . Bay; E. A. Williams. Pentlcton; G. B.\naiverton; Mrs. Topliss, Wlnlaw; A. C. Pay, R. S. Olson, Nelson; R. G. Nelume,\nCoder, Spokane; J. C. Stubbs. Hama; J. I W. P. McGowan, Vancouver; Alleen\nV. MacDonald,  D.  McKay, Sandon:  N. I Walllday.   Salmon  Arm.\nHair Fell Out Terribly.\nHealed by Coticnra.\n\"My little -jirl had ecxema -very\nbadly. It started in small blotches\non tier head and then formed scales\nall over ber scalp. Later it gpraad\nbehind ber ears and formed wet, sort\neruptions. Her hair tell oat terribly.\nShe was bothered about three months.\n\" I tried all kinds of remedies but\nthe trouble kept getting worse. A\nfriend advised Cuticura Soap and\nOintment so I purchased aome, and\nafter using three cakes of Cuticura\nSoap and five bines of Cuticura Ointment ahe was healed.\" (Signed)\nMrs. Lyman Karle, Pleasant Lake,\nN. S., Aug. 13, 1928.\n\u2022* Give Cuticura Sioap and Ointment\nthe care of your skin.\nSoap Or. OintniMit 25 and Wo, Talcum \u00bbc Sold\n\u2022 \u00bbpr-r\"\u00abhnrt. Sample aaih free Adrimt <'evm-\nliiaiilifp.rt* J Ts WfciH*au.panjUmlU4,\u00bbloin_-MJ.\nif Cuticnr-a Sba**in\u00ab Stick 25c.\nMadden Hotel\nt.   MADDEN.   Pro*.\n\u2022tsam Basted Rooms by ths Dai\nWeek  ox  Month\n\u2022very consideration shown to guest*\nana   Wa-d   sta   Nelsos\nMADDEN\u2014A. McDonald, Bulett; J.\n\u2022D. Walker, Nakusp; H. Burns, E. McNeil. Bonnington; A. Bilton, B. Camp;\nJ. Mole, J. A. Clark, Spokane; K. Camp-\nb*ll, Blueberry; A. Madden, Kaslo; A.\nMacDonald, New Vork; L. Cross, R.\nMacDonald. R. Wait, Vancouver; R.\nJohnson, J. P. Moran. G. R. Rlckward.\nJ. Macdonald, Nelson; W. C. Hang.\nCalgary; C. Nelson, Procter; Jim Sing,\nC- Phlllet, creston; B. Nevysl, Trail:\nD. Johnson, North Port; E. A. Chem.\nPruitvale; Dan MacDonald, Grand\nl?orks; G. Buskin, Ymir: Paul Chorchs,\nSpokane; D. MacDonald. Parks Siding.\nNew Grand Hotel\nA Modern Bric_ Building\nH16 Vrrmn  StTfct,  Nelsson, B .C.\nHot nnd cold Water ond Telephone ln all Eoome. Steam\nHertted Throughout.\nMrs.  la,  Kapak, Prop,\nKiiropeim rlan\nThe Royal Cafe\nCLASSIC     BESTAUBANT\nBeflnement  and  Delicacy  Previa\nOfBN    DAT    AND   NIGHT\nSucdal Dinner 11:30 ts 2:30 M\u00bb\nSapper S:Sft t. S      -8&e\n~e .pecl\u00bblle a Chop Not; and Noodle.\nPhona   189\nThe Standard Cafe\nKl)  Baker  Street,  Nelaon,  B.C.\nOPEN   DAY    AND    NIOBI\nUiM to 2:30 Special Lunch SV\n1:10 to I p. m. supper Uo\nPHONE   IM\nNEW GRAND\u2014W. J. Sass, TraU; Mr.\nand Mrs. W. Smith, Miss M. Nlckolleff,\nVancouver; R. E. Lldgate, Bonnlnpon;\nR. D. Hanley. South Slooan: A. Francis, Medley; E. W. Patterson, Kaslo;\nMr. and Mrs. Peterson. Slocan City;\nL. Hlllstrom. Procter; H. N. Skova.\nJ. Sullck. Salmo:   W. Redllck. Ballour.\nQueen's Hotel\nfm     CE'NTEB     Of    CONTEDaNCI\nCot and cold  water In even  roo\u00bb\nSteam   Heated\nA. Lapointe, Prop\nQUEENS\u2014C. Onldal, Lome A. Campbell, Trail; Mr .and Mrs. R. Liscn. 49 1\nCreek; Mrs. Brandon, Slocan City;\nMrs. Brandon, Slocan City; Mrs. H.\nLivingstone, A. G. Holding. Appledale;\nJ. Vyse, Waldo; J. Breau. Ymlr; Mld-\ndleton, Pilot. Bay; Mrs. Kelley, Spokane;   P.   Knabc   Deer   Park.\nTreaiColds\nways\nWith One\nTreatment\n.Rubbed on\n^Z-Z^y^i*throat and\nchest, Vicks does two\nthings at once:\n(1) It is vaporized by\nthe body heat and inhaled\ndirect to the inflamed air\npassages, and\n(2) It stimulates the\nslcin like an old-fashioned\npoultice and \"draws out\"\nthe soreness.\ne&tyg&\u00ab.\nWICKS\n\u25bc\u00ab?\/VAPOR UB\nOrat &MillionJars Uscd YWLr\nNorman McLeod\nGenius Little\nKnown Migration\nStickit   Minister  Led  His   Followers From Scotland on\nLong Trip\nHALIFAX, N. S\u201e Jan. 1\u2014The pilgrimage of Norman MacLeod, tht*\n\"Stickit Minister\" of Stor Point, who\nled the children of 8t. Ann's, Capo\nBreton, to the pleasant hillside., of\nWiiipu, New Zealand, mtiy be likened\nto another quest of the Argonauts ia\nsearch of the Golden Fleece, or perhaps more nearly the journey of the\nIsraelites  to  the  Promised   Land.\nThe central and dominant figures or\nthis little known migration of luoo\nHighlanders from Auld Reekie to\nPictou, from Plctou i\" St. Ann's and\nfrom St. Ann\"s to New Zealand was\nthe gaunt six foot dissenting minister\nwith the thunderln* voice\u2014known as\n\"Norman\" from 1817, when he nav-\nIfftttd Mk wnmlgnuu. sWp from Lnrh-\nl>,ronm to Plctou in defiance of w \u25a0Up-*\nper who wanted to turn hack, until 39\nyears later, when his hmly w:t* interred at Walpu.\nIt was he, on tlie strength ot %\nwritten page, inspired construction of\nsix ships from the home grown timber\nof St. Ann's. It was he whose enthusiasm led a thousand followers of\nhis faith and race to sail them over\nunfamiliar seas to a new world.\nThe Rev. Nornuui MacLeod, M. A., or\nae he was unlver.sitllv known ln Cape\nBreton, and wherever he went M\n\"Norman,\"  was   born   a*   sioir  Point,\nAssynt, Scotland, September 29, 1780,\nand died at Walpu, New Zeiiland. March\n14, 1806, aged 86 years. His was one\nof the most picturesque personalitles\nin the religious history of Scotland.\nNorman was Indeed a \"lad o' palrts.\"\nHe was a graduate ln Arts n Au\u00abrue>-n\nUniveralty and a iruld medallist in\nmoral philo^phy of Edinburgh. Like\nmany other Scotsmen he worked his\nway through college. He studied\ntheology in Edinburgh, and qualified\nfor the ministry. Temperament ally\neccentric, he broke with the Church o*.\nScotland and din to seek licensure. He\nbecame what is called in Scotland tt\n\"Stickit  MlniBter.\"\nHe wae a powerful preacher and ex-\nervlsed a magnetic, sway over those\nwhom he detached from the church,\nTlie  migration  which  Norman MacLeod\nMARKS SUCCESS AT HOLLYWOOD\nMiss Rosalind Harrison, who a short time ago .took a leading part ln the\nPlayers' Guild at the University of Toronto, has met with success in Hollywood, where she has appeared In a numtier of small parts.\n.1.\noperations. He made a chapel of his history approaching it. Por they\nown cabin and began to preach at one1*-' built their own ships, and equipped\nDr. James MacGregor, the great Pictou them. They found most competent\npioneer    missionary-preacher,   said    of, officers   and   crew   among   themselves,\nNorman that he was an \"extraordinar:\nman and an eloquent preacher.\" And\nhe added, \"People would go further\nto hear him than any other minister.\"\nIn his second year in Plctou Norman\nreceived a pressing invitation from a\ncolony of Highlanders In Hamilton.\nOhio, but he declined. But their insistence at last caused him to yield.\nIt was finally apreed that most of his\npeople should migrate to Ohio. For\nthis purpose they built a ship called\n\"The Ark'.' and its designer they\ndubbed \"Noah.\" In April, 1820, \"The\nArk\" was launched. On May 1, 1820,\nshe was ready to sail. Amidst cheers\nand tears they sailed away after a\nmost solemn service, concluding with\nthc singing of Psalm 103 \"O Thou my\nsoul bless God the Lord.\"\nuullvvvvvfwlfl.speaker6daersawhe9   hr   h\nAll went well until they had passed\nthrough the straits of Canso. A\nterrific storm met   them  on  rounding\nand they sailed them successfully\nAs t heae Argonauts wended their\nway, weather and sea were at their\nbest. Morning and evening the entire\nship's company gathered on deck and\nengagd   In   family   worship.\nCalllg at Cape Verde Islands and\nCapetown they reached Adelaide April\nloth, 1852. after a voyage of 164 days,\nand sailing 12,000 miles.\nThey were intensely disappointed\nwith conditions at Adelaide, and soon\ndecided to proceed to Melbourne. Oreat\nexcitement prevailed there on account\nof the recent, discovery of gold. The\nparty found no suitable Bite for settlement, and in the fever of disillusionment was about to break up, when\nNorman had a dream of a gallant\nship coming to their rescue with a\nhand pointing to the rising sun. The\nparty soon concurred ln the proposal\nof Norman to go to New Zealand.\nThey had sold their vessel, the\nMargaret\",   but   they   found   a   small\nOUTPUT FOR\nNEWSPRINT IS\n!       UP FOR YEi\nIn 11 Months of 1929 Outl\nIs 327,305 Tons Above j\nSame Period Last Year |\nt     The   total   newsprint   production\nj North   America   during   11   month\n1929 was 327,305 tone greater\nj the same period in 1928, accord\nstatistics supplied by the News\nService bureau in its bulletin\ncember 12, Statistics on Novm\nnewsprint production were given\nthe bulletin as follows:\nProduction   in   Canada   during .\nvember, 1029. amounted to 252,046 '\nand   shipments   to  253,219   tons\nductlcn   in   the    United    States\n113,739    tons    and    shipment*    \\\\\\\ntons,   making   a   total   United   Sfl\nand   Canadian   news   print   produq\nof   365.775    tons    and    ahipmenti\n369,944  tons.    During  November  3\ntons   of   news    print    were   made]\nNewfoundland nnd  1.652 tons in  M\nco,  bo  that  the  total JJorth  Amen\nproduction   for   the   month   amoul\nto   389.578   tons.\nThe Canadian mills produced 339\ntons more In the first eleven mof\nof 1929 than in the first eleven mol\nof 1928, which was an increase\nper cent.\nThe   United   States   output   tot*\n19,177 tons or 1 per cent less than\nthe first eleven months of   1928. -\nductlon   in   Newfoundland   was   33]\ntons or 11 per cent more in the\neleven months  of   1929  than  ln\nand in Mexico 2,146 tons more, on\nk  total   Increase  of  327,405   tons\n.per cent over the same period of\nDuring November the Canadian\noperated   at   91.2   per   cent   of   1\ncapacity,   United   States  mills  at\nper  cent and  Newfoundland   mills |\n108.1  per cent.    Stock  of news\npaper at Canadian mills totalled :\ntons at the end of November ar\nUnited States mills 23,549 tons, ma\na combined total of 52.440 tons\nwas   equivalent   to   3.2   days*   a'\noutput.\nNew York notes that colored plquq\neffectively   employed    for   blouses\ncomplement   jacket   and   skirts   ofl\nwollen in a darker shade ln the soufl\nern models.\nI    Hotel Arlington\nCentrally  Located\nTrail, B.C\nA.   F.   LEVESQUC,   Trap\nOccidental Hotel\nrhe Home of Plenty\n'OB Vinton tt Flion* 5871\nO.    WASSICK\nIfU    Boom,    ol    Solid    Comfort\nHeadquarter* ror Loggers and inner,\nD OUGLAG\n\u25a0* HOTEL   m\nRooms with Baths\nI.   L.   AND   A.   GBOUTAGE,   Propa\n'team   urate* Bot   and   Cold\nThroughout Water\ntoi  Sue      Phona  261      Trail.  B.  C\nCape  Canso.    They   were  driven   along trading vessel,  \"Thc Gazelle\", going to\nthe southern coa\u00abt of Cape Berton to New   Zealand   and   boerded   her.     In\nthe mouth of the Big Bras D'Or.   They the    meantime    the    \"Highland    Lass\"\ntook shelter in St. Anns Bay and drop- .sailed    from    St.   Anns   for   Adelaide\nped   anchor.    For several  days  all   th* with    183    passengers.     They    arrived\npeople   had  been   battened   under  the in Adelaide Oct. 23rd. 1852, but found\nhatches,     when   they   came   on   deck letters   advising   them   to   proceed   to\nafter   casting   anchor   they   were   en- Melbourne,    which   they   did.     There\namoured    of    the    enchanting    scene they    heard    good   news   from    those\naround the bay.   After sending a party who had gone to New Zealand, and so\nashore  to  reconnoitre,  it was decided the   Highland   Laas   went   forward   in\nto land and  take pos.session the coun- **-s\"*x   hopes   for   the   Promised   Land,\ntry oifered.   So on May 20,  1820, they In  December,  1852,  the Highland  Lass\ndisembarked. with   300   souls   set   sail;   and   earlj\nHere,   too,   settlement   involved   im- ln January reached Auckland Harbour\nmense  labor.   They   took  up   n.oclcs   of In    the    meantime   Norman    and    hit\nland   around   Englishtown   and   up   to ?&nJ liad '0UIld- 10\u00b0 nuIes from Auck\nthe   mouth   of   North   river     Norman Jflnd'  an  ldeal   R1LG  at  Walpu.    Prom\nseected    two   square    miles   at   South\nOut   for   his   home    and   a   spaclou.\nmountain    there    Norman    viewe*.\nhis   land   and   called   the   hlU   \"Mum\ncabin   was   built,   which   he   converted    P,lsealT;    %*\"J?* _*__****__?*\nkit. Then WU deep religious\njoy as the Highland Lass people Jolnec\ntheir comrades and together, led b\ntheir beloved Norman, engaged in family worship.\nThen   for   the   first   time   in   New\ninto a school-house and church. Howled\" had \"its root during the eviction : ev(-'r- *jn 1812 a commodious and corn-\nperiod in Scotland. 1780-1840, calhM' Portable church was built and also a\nin Mr. MacLeod's home shire th*\u00bb 1 \u2022schc>o1 nt Black Cove near his home.\n\"Sutherland  Clearances.\" j     Potatoes,  oats.wheat  and   vegetables\nOwing  to the  troublous  times.  Nor-   ^r-e grown  on  their  land,    of money   ZeManfJ   couk]   be   ft     d Voices  of\nman decided to visit the Golden Wesi. tll(,V had practically none. But th<\u00bb mGre than 30o c vi c-sn^lna nloniP\nHewing that ft ship was about to call \u00ab\u2022\u00bb \u00bb\u00a3 attracted by the glitter of J \u2122 in*J th r v \u00b0.f ^7^\nfrom Lochbroom, with R number of B\u00abW. The blamed the love of money JJ*\"* J \u2122' v'\u00bb\u00ab? '\u2122*J <**} *\u00a3\nScoush OUMMtJ, he determined to *or all their Ills. MMMver, thtlr PC*. | _T^___Trlllliu^ ^SJSi JS\njoin them. The vessel was the ba.w J*00 and ^\"cumstances cultivated in ] fijS^SKSl snrt T\u2122 fi.nl\n\"Frances,\" 400 tons, bound for Pictou thrm fln unusual degree of Christian f ,m^e,__\u2122\/tl_ ' ancI lawR aUow*\nNova Scotia. Norman and 400 men, *on:ilism. Evry one helped his brother\nwomen and children .'ailed on July B-v 1825 a11 wer'1 comfortably settlrU.\n14, 1817, on the \"Frances Ann.\" Few Tne success of the settlement attracted\nof the sad scenes oi history exceed other settlers round about them.\nthe grimness, bltterneea and desoln- At this time the government of Nova\ntion   of   the  Highland   crofters  bidding   s-otfa appointed   Norman  schoolmaster.\nforewell to then  mountain home.    But   postmaster and justice of the peace al   everything they could desire,\n\u2014the  pop'.e  we:,   all  of  one language,   st-   Ann's.     He   became   a   local   hen..      From   here   the   people   wrote   those\none grievance, and  one religion.    Many   His   commands    were    obeyed   without\nOf  tiit! i   knew   \\onnan  personally,  end   \"Tnp   minister   said   it,'-   and   no   one\nthey   knew   him   to   be   an   able   and   Question.     It   mi   sufficient   to   sav.\nbold seaman, as well a.s i  preacher of  dared to question.\nrare fame. Thus he spontaneously Norman was 40 when he settled at\nand naturally dropped into the post- st Ann's, and remained for 33 years.\ntion of leader. He was a well-built. Ti\u2122 congregation prospered temporally\nyoung man over six feet, with a voice ancI spiritually. Under his patriarchal\not thunder. Md a presence that cor.i- rules the people of st. Ann's were distinguished lor intelligence, rectitude\nnnd sobriety.\nThe   weak   point   of   the  settlement\nwas the fact that there was no outlet,\nine them to possess as much land as\nthey required at, a nominal price. They\n\".or poNMtlon of 10.000 acres in all at\nten shillings an acre. Here was a\nchance for all, whether fishermen,\nhuntsmen.     farmers,     or   lumbermen,\nmnnded   respi\"'      The   Celt   an 1    'he\nViking  were eomhlned in  htm.\nIn   -mid-Atlantic  the  ship .spring   a\nleak,   and   tbe   captain   decided   to  re\nturn   to   the   nearest   port   in   Irelan'.l.   io-   the  energies of  the rising genera-\nNorman   convened   a   meeting   of   th\npassengers  and   explained   to  them   al\ntion, or the development of trade.\nIn 3847 Norman received a letter\nthe circumstances. They empowe'td 'rom his son Donald written from\nhim to ask the captain to proceed to Adelaide, South Australia, telling of a\nAmerica, in reply the captain waa eood climate, soil and pots of gold\nabout to place him in Irons when at the foot of the Australian rainbow.\nNorman  informed  him   that from  his   Norman looked  upon thla letter  a.s a\nown reckonings the ship was nearer ceil from God to migrate. Three with 66 passengers for New Zealand.\nAmerica than Ireland. A consultation hundred of his people readily fell ln They arrived in June 1807. While Tlie\nof captain, offiners and Norman was, with his proposal. They built two Spray was on her way letters from the\nheld.    The  chart   was   produced,   the  ship:-, of 300 tons each.   In thc summer   Gertrude arrived In St. Anna creating\nremaining at St. Anns, describing\nWaipu as the \"Land of Goshen\". The\npeople at St. Anns at once decided\nto leave and proc >eded to build a ship.\nEarly in June the \"Gcirude,\" 260\ntons, left St. Anns with 176 souls\non board arriclng in Auckland Dec.\n20, 1856. They proceeded to Waipu\nwhere a block of land of 47,000 acres\nwas declared a special settlement, and\nonly Nova Scotians would he allowed\nto settle within its bounds. There was\nabounding joy in Walpu as they met\ntheir brethren in Golden sunshine\nand green fields.\nNo sooner had tie Gertrude 16ft St.\nAnns when another party of twenty\nfamilies made ready to sail. They built\na ship at Big Bras D'Or. named \"The\nSpray\",  and  on  Jan.   13th,   1807  sailed\nposition of the ship fixed, and it was of    '01    the    ships    \"Margaret\"    nnd\nproved  that  die better course was  to j \"Highland  Lass\"   were   launched.  That\ngo   on.    The  captain   pave ordern  to summer   was  most   memorable   in   St.\nproceed,   but   promised   Norman   that Ann's.   On October 28, 1861, the ships\nif   they ever got to Plctou he would were ready to sail.   But the \"Highland\nfind   himself  in goal.    \"Of that I will Loss\" froze in, and  the \"Margaret\" set\ntake    my    chance,\"    replied    Norman, sail  alone.    And  so after 33  years at\nThey manned the pumps and kept tbe St.  Anns when Norman was 71  years\nship  afloat,  and  in duo time arrived old he and his wife,  with three sons\nsafely in Plctoii.    On their arrival the and   three   daughters   and   136   of   his\ncaptain was .gallant enough to say to\nNorman. \"Well, MacLeod, I must m$\nyou are a better seaman than I am.\"\nThc \"Frances Ann\" people settled on\nthc Middle river, Pictou county, N. 8\u201e\nbetween Alma and Galrloch. The land\nwas heavily wooded, and few if :mj\nneighbors. The winters were long and\nthe .summers short. They built cabins\nof logs. Nornum was an adept with\ntools   and   superintended   all   building\npeople embarked. All would have\ngone had the ships been ready. A\nsimple rural people voluntarily left\ntheir homes in search of a land on thc\nother side of the world of which they\nknew next to nothing, it was to be\nover the quest of the Argonauts in\nsearch of the Golden Fleece. Or perhaps more nearly  the Journey of the\na sensation. New Zealand was ptctur\ned as El Dorado. They were promised\n100 acres per family as a free gift. So\nln 1808 St. Anns -vns feverishly busy\ngathering the remnants of the Scottish\nsettlers, They decided to build another\nship at St. Anns, were, their first ship\nin these wonderful migrations was\nbuilt. In September 1809 the \"Ellen\nLewis\", of 300 tons, waa launched. And\nin December she sailed with 188 passengers, arriving in Auckland, May 14,\ni860.\nIn all about 1000 souls, in six vessels,\nmigrated from Cape Breton to New\nZealand between 1861 and 1860.\nSuch are the bavo bones of a story\nof   truly   romantic   Interest.   And   the\nWas In Bed\nAll Summer\n\"I have to work in the store and\ndo my own housework, too, and 1\ngot nervous and run-down and waa In\nbed nearly all summer. The least noiie\nwould make me nervous. I was told\nto take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I have taken\nseven bottles. It has made me stronger and put more color Into my i\n1 am looking after my store\nhousework and my four children\nand I am getting along nicely now.'*\n\u2014Mrs. J. Malm, R. R. No. 5, Barton\nSt. East, Hamilton. Ontario, Canafa.\nLydia.E. Pinkliam's\nVegetable Compound\nChildren   of   Israel   to   the   Promised  centre  of  it  is the heroic personality\nLand.     There   is   nothing   in   British 1 of Norman MacLeod.\nTHE   GUMPS \u2014 WHY?   TELL  ME   WHY?\n7:\nVNtLA. R0I--ARO-\nWHM  HAVE VOU TO\nSAX ItO* VouRSECP*3\nCAUNE&IE   BELI-e-ED IN GrIVlNb\ntoo-      HE e\u00bbAMEAWft.Y U BR AWES\nBUT iri*JJ>T0V0U Yo \u2022cjt.l\/g YOUR\nATrENYION ^ - AMO YOU\nCER-TAJNUX\n\"iHOTNERED\nYHE\/-AAWA***-\nLAST\nNIGHT\nAND OF AV-L THE WOIAEN  YOU PICKED        ^\"\"\"-i\nOUT'TO SHOWER   THEWvON-    MR'o, BAtlSTER - *\n%HE Thought vou were \u00ab>o -ahyty-\n,-S.WO ) HAD SOtH A CuEvJEfc  HUSBAND -\nV.IEU- IPSHE-EVER CONVEX TO N\\Y N6UiE\nAGAIN- I'LUCALL THE S&UA& CAW -\nAND TEU THEIA THERt IS. ATHIEF,\nTRYING TO BREAK IN *AY\nC* -,\u201e_____. FRONT DOOR\nNW\\    (_<V   'l^-^^-ravrEAaU\n\\HCKLE\n.^EARY,\nI\nWELL-    >Y**j UFE'-i GREATEST \/AYVTERY\nTOME-   WHV?   -\nA   VJIFE-   \\NHo NAiA HU&BANb\nVnIIYH ALL. THE QUAUTlfc^ OF A\nRATTLE. ^VAKt-   VJILL LIE AvwAKE\nTut \\NW0LE NIGHTLONG-   WORRYIN 0,\nBecause 4he-s afraio sqiae other\nV\/OMAN UGOINGj\nTo WALK OFF\n\\WITH N\/M\n**% U. S. Pit, OB ; C\u00abprn|M, \u00bbH bj Tin Chity Tfibunt. f^\nfit ^\nAT THE EMPRESS HOTEL\nVICTORIA, B.C\n*\nSEA-MUSIC FESTIVAL\nJan. 15-18,1930\nSea-Chantey Play \"The Order of Good\nQetar,\" \"At a Lews Fishing,\" together\nwith Olyase Paquin, Herbert Heyner,\nJohn Goss and other fine linger*.\nThe life of Vancouver Island's\ndelightful winter season pivots\naround the Empress Hotel \u00ab . .\nenlarged\u2014remod ell ed\u2014redeco-\nrated. Plan to see these winter\nevents. Yuletide Music Festival, Sea-Music Festival, Mid*\nwinter Golf Tournament February 17 to 22.\nSPECIAL FALL AND WINTER RATES\nOn American Plan, in Effect untff\nApril 30, 1930\nAn% Canadian Pacific Ticket Agtnl dill\ntiddly \u2022.ua'cjares, makf riseroaiiant, vtf\norr ante eotry detail\nCanadian\nPacific\n r^\n\u2014\n, \t\n\u2014\n\u2014\n\\9\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS   THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2, 1930\nPage Three\nWith the Women's Institutes\nof the Kootenay Territory\nHARROPMNS $5\nTAIOTINTO $40\nUnique   Contest   Shows   Many\nIngenious Ways of\nAiding Funds\ntataLd^S^na\"n8\u201ewas the Bl'nipse ob-\nS\u2122 .J? .the Harrop talent m\u00b0ney\ncampaign tn the verbal report mad.\non it at the Nelson conference by\nMrs- A. R. Johnston, Harrop's secretary\nthat a report of it for publication\nwas recently requested for this column\nHere ls Mrs. Johnston's account of if\nThe recent campaign to raise funds\nby talent money, which the Harrop and\nDistrict Women's Institute put on\nduring the year, proved not only\nprofitable, but Interesting and instructive  as  well.\nAt the April meeting $5 was distributed from the general funds, each\nof the SO members receiving 25 cents.\nThis talent was to be Invested and\nIncreased as much as possible and\nthe proceeds returned to the funds\nafter  six  months.\nAccordingly the rather surprising total of over MO has been handed in\nwhich Is a gratifying return for the\noriginal $9. It may be of interest\nto some, to hear of some of the\nmethods used to raise this money\nTURKEY   EGG   INVESTMENT\nOne member invested ln tomato\nseeds and sold early tomato plants.\nAnother sold early rhubarb, while another Invested in a turkey egg and\nraised, and sold the turkey, while\nothers raised baby chicks for sale,\nthe cockerels as broilers. One member raised and sold fresh vegetables,\nand two others sold home made pies\nto bachelor neighbors, and to campers\nln  the district.\nOne or two invested in entry fees\nat the local flower show, which they\nthemselves considered somewhat of a\ngamble, but as they were successful\nin winning prizes, the prize money\nhelped to swell the grand total. One\nmem,ber sold squawker balloons to the\nchildren at local picnics, doubling her\nmoney, pot to mention noise!\nAn  amateur  photographer   took   her\nkodak along on a pleasure trip and\ngot splendid group pictures of the\nmembers, which they were glad to\nbuy from her. the profits being turned\nin. while still another member was\n\u00bb most popular figure whenever she\nappeared with a pall of brandy-^naps\nfor sale. Just why these delicious\nconfections are called 'brondy-snaps'\nby the way, has not been ascertained,\nunless tt la because they contain no\nbrandy.\nSale of home made candy, and also\nof tickets for lucky draws, all helped\nto  swell  the  total.\nA few of the members are keeping\ntheir own counsll. possibly for fear\nof competition if ever another talent\neffort is made, and perhaps they\nare wise.\nAltogether the campaign has not\nonly helped the funds, but caused\nconsiderable fun, and brought out\nsome   rather   good   Ideas.\nNaturally a city institute would use\ndifferent methods than some of the\nones mentioned, but without a doubt,\nsuch a campaign would be worth a\ntrial,   almost   anywhere.\nNEEDLES WIN IN\nCEMETERY MAHER\nNew   Institute   Wins   Spurs;\nMembers Are Full of\nEnthusiasm\nthe\nand\nNeedles Women's institute,\nyoungest of the Kootenay family,\nonly recently organized, ls already\n\"doing things,\" and the members are\nenjoying the satisfaction of things\naccomplished.\nThe largest Individual accomplishment has been in securing from the\ngovernment promise of a cemetery\nsite, after two months work on the\nmatter. For four yeara this subject\nhas been under discussion without result, until the institute was formed\nand brought effective pressure on the\ngovernment. A number of possible\nsites are to be picked out. and the\none considered by the district health\nofficer to be the best for the purpose\nwill   be   set   aside   for   cemetery   pur-\nifri\nHear the New\nVictor Radios at\nMason & Risch\nVictor Radio\nand Blectrcda\ncombined\nComplete\nwith 10 tubes,\n$375\nVictor Radio\nConsole, complete with 10\ntubes\n$255\nA\nA\nA\nJl\nThe new Victor Radio, a. combination of the most\nmodern radio imprvemeuts, Is exclusively microsyn-\nchronous! Before you choose your new radio be sure\nto come to the Mason & Risch Radio Demonstration\nParlors and compare the outstanding quality and value\nof the new Victor.\nDEFERRED TERMS   .\nMASON and RISCH Ltd.\nNelson, B. C. 513 Ward St.\n\"The Home of the Orthophonic Vlctrola.\"\nTel 251\nTHE\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nYour Spokane Home\n\"Where Canadians Are Among Friends\nWhen in Spokane\"\nThe only hotel in Spokane with FREE\nBUS service and our own garage adjoining.\nBarber Shop, Cigar-Store and Cafe. Complete service under one roof.\n.    JOE PEDICORD, Manager\nlOB IO 219 BIVGBSIDE 2(18 TO 218 8PKAGB1\nSPOKANE, U.S. A.\nOur New Schedule\nLeave Rossland\nAUen Hotel\nA. M.\n6.10\t\nB:*10    _\t\nLeave Trail\nElectric Baker;\nA. M.\n    9-66 \t\nOnion Garage\nA. M.\n     ltf.OO\nP. M.\nP. M.\nP. M.\n.   _.     1 -00\na.io\t\n     3*:10\na:fco _\t\n    3:SS \t\n _     3:40\n8:10  \t\n10:10 \"JZZ\t\n  10-55 \t\n-     9:30\n  11.55\t\n     11:10\n8 TKIl'S DAILY\u20148 Tltll-8     .\n01 It I .\\K1.S ABE ONE WAY, HC HI Tl HN, 90C\nBasses wm pick up pummn or tHMi at any hotel In Trail\nor Bosisland upon receipt of u phone call, 20 minutes berore leaving time\nLOOK FOB THE I,BEEN AND OBANUE BUSSES\nRossland-Tadanac-Traal\nTransportation Co.\n\u25a01. E. Keldermnn, II. S. Taylor\nOOOD  MBGTIMJ\nTwo highly successful meetings have\nbeen held Bince the organizing one. '\nAt the Initial meeting, at which the ,\ncemetery campaign was launched and\na dance to ralsa funds was arranged\ntor, the members took to the meeting\narticles   made   fiom   flour   sacks-\nAn early program  will  have a demonstration on  preparing   wool  for   the '\nbenefit of thc Nakusp hospitals  X-ray\nfund.\nAlready Needles has 18 memlwrs with\nUm more assured for January,1 and\naccording to an enthusiastic letter received by Mrs. H. H. Pitta, district |\npresident, who organized thla \"baby,\"\nlt has visions of approaching the\nEdgewood and Fire Valley institute\nIn members before long.\n a  j\nDaughter of Duke\nReceives Nearly\n1000 Weddin? Gifts\nLONDON, Jan. 1\u2014Lady Anne Cavan-\ndish, youngest daughter of the Duke of\nDevonshire, former Govarnor-Oeneral of\nCanada< who was married to Henry\nHunloke at St. Margaret's, Westminster,\nrecently, received almost 1000 weddinf\ngifts, including a diamond brooch with\nthe Crown and Royal Cipher, from the\nKing and Queen. The gifts were viewed by a stream of guests at the Duke\nof Devonshlrea house ln Carlton Oar-\ndens. Exquisite Jewels were displayed\nin a large glass case. In the centre\nwas a diamond brooch from {he King\nand Queen, Beside lt lay enamel and\ndiamond cuff links\u2014their majesties gift\nto the bridegroom. There were Innumerable rings\u2014one, the gift of 20 of\nthe bride's girl friends; a sapphire and\ndiamond bracelet and cross from the\nbridegroom, and a splendid necklace\nand pendant of large diamonds, one of\nthe Duke of Devnshlre's many gifts to\nhis 20-year-old daughter. Prom her\nfather also Lady Anne received a silver\nfox fur; a pony skin coat, lavishly trimmed with beaver and a huge, silver\nrose bowl. The Duchess gave her\ndaughter house linen, and a fitted\nJewel case and a fireguard worked by\nherself in petit point, which Is a copy\nof an historic one at Chatsworth.\nLady Anne, who Is 20 years of age.\nhas lovely chestnut hair She ls slight\nand tall Her four sisters are married\nto army captains.\nCRITICALLY   ILL\nWilliam Phllllmore Praaer. secretarw-\ntreasurer ot the Ontario Jockey Club\nand the Canadian Racing Association,\nls critically 111 with pntutnotla, at his\nhome, Alexandria Palact apartments.\nUniversity   Are.\nKIMBERLEY HOOP\nTEAM TO PLAY\nHERE SATURDAY\nBattle    at     Trail     Tomorrow\nNight;   Close,   Exciting\nGame  Expected\nNew England\nViews Plan\nTrawler Tax\nBOSTON. Jan 1\u2014A fish tax proposition which la under consideration ln\nCanada may give Boston a big share\nof Canada's fresh flab business. In the\nopinion of Tha Boston Evening Transcript. In commenting on the measure, The Transcript aays: The Boston\nfishermen are oot bidding for the\nbusiness but they naturally will not\nreject lt lf lt comes their way, for on\ntop of the growing business relation\nwith the far Western States tbat they\nMipply with fresh fl&h they could tn-\ncrease their efforts and send fish to\nthe North as well.\n\"Pew markets have undergone such\nthorough evolution ln the last few\nyears as tha| of fish In consequence,\nthe demand has increased tremendously and the fish markets have become\nInviting places Instead of the unattractive sights they used to be. The\ngeneral dmand for fresh fish has spread\nto such an extent that the old type\ncf shore fisherman cannot keep the\nsupply up to the present requirements,\neither   here   or   in   Canada.\nIt and pointing to the possibility that\nit will make the fish ao high Im Montreal that It will open tbe gates for\nthe Boston fishermen There ls more\nfear, bowever. thst tbe .tax will load to\nthe Importation of the flab from Boston, on the basis of lower prices, th-m\ntbat It would handicap tbe shore fishermen ln their efforts to bold a corner of the Canadian trade from the\ntrawlers.\"\n 1\t\nWOMEN IN HOUSE\nCOMMONS ASK FOR\nCHANGE  IN  RULE\nTrail News of fee Day\nTRAIL\nante\nHOUSla    AHD   LOTS.      Insuf-\nNotary.    J   D   Anderson. Trap.\nfishing, or trawling, comes into the\npicture with It* great catches. Now\nthe Department of Fisheries ln Canada\nproposes to levy a tax on the fiBh\ncaught by trawlers. The rate Is one\ncent a pound for the round fish, but\nit would be about three cents of the\nfilleted fish, the form ln which most\nof Lt goes to the consumer today.\n\"Shore fishermen ln Canada like the\nLONDON, Jan l.\u2014Women members of\nthe House of Commons have asked the\nspeaker to alter the present rule under\nwhich- womn cannot be admitted to\nthe Distinguished Starnger's Gallery\nIn a letter to him which has been\nsigned by women members of all partis they say:\n\"We are venturing to approach to\nask lf lt would be possible to make\nsome small alterations ln the practice\nnow followed of excluding women from\nthe Distinguished Stranger's Gallery.\nWe feel very keenly the position of\ninequality ln wheh thla places distinguished visitors who come to see us in\nthe British House of Commons. We\nhave had, for example, visitors who\nMachine   themselves are members o* other par\nliaments, and while we have to thank\nyou for your courtesy ln giving them\nadmission to Mr Speaker's gallary you\nwill, I am sure, agree with us that lt\nwould be much pleasanter for them\nto occupy places ln the other gallery,\nand lt would not put us ln the difficult position of having to point out\nto them that while men members of\nparliament  from  other  countries  may\nplan, as they are exempt from the j nax_ admission women members can\ntax on the theory tbat tbey need some [ i^.- The signatures of 13 women\nprotectlop from the competition that { members are appended, only the Duch-\ncomes from the trawlers, but the trawl- | ess of Atholl not having put her\nera are registering strong opposition to   name  to the request.\nTrail Chinese\nWelcome the New\nYear, fireworks\nTRAIL. B C. Jan. 1.\u2014Trail Chinese\ntoday celebrated the arrival of tbe\nNew Year A display of fireworks wss\nheld on Bay avenue, noise and flashes\ntending to add color to the celebration.\nAt one time tbe New Tear celebration here had no significance to\nChinese but some years ago, the\nChinese New Vear was changed to coincide with that of the western world.\nnecklace    ot\nParis\n\"braided'\nfeaturing\ndiamonds.\nT. H. Waters & Co., Lid.\nBuilders and Contactors\nnau IM\nNELSON,\nr. o.\nb. a\nSHIM.LIS, COAST IXMBU,\nSASH    AND    DOORS,    MUX\nLIME,      BRICK,       CEMENT,\nWORE,   DRAIN   TIL|\nAPPEALS FOR\nTREES   FOR\nWINDSOR PARK\nWINDSOR, Ont., Jan. 1.\u2014Trees, trees,\nwho has trees\u2014so sings pork superintendent Timothy Carter of Windsor.\nMr. Carter is facing the task of providing trees for the new Jackson Park\nand he hus made an appeal to the\npeople of the community to give him\ntrees which they feel are ln the way\nor which would ordinarily be cut down\nto make way for garages or other\nbuildings, He asks for elms and\nmaples in particular and would like\nthe trees about six to eight Inches in\ndiameter,\nWhile the city has a nursery the\ntrees there are small as yet and Mr.\nCarter points out that it will be\npossible to beautify the park more\nquickly if larger trees are available.\nHe offers to move the trees to thc\nnew park from any location within\nreasonable distance lf the present\nowners will just cooperate and let him\nknow where trees can .be secured.\nSo now the tree hunt is on a nd\nproperty owners nre looking over then-\nback yards to see what trees they can\n.spare or what ones they will want\ntaken cut when building operations get\nunder way in the spring, Several\noffers have been made already,\nKimberley senior basket ball players, who battle at Trail tomorrom,\nwill play the Nelson seniors here Saturday night.\nThe Kimberley team has a reputation of being Hit, but they will\nprobably meet wltb strong opposition\nin both games, as tha matches between Nelson and Trail this season\nhave beeTV exceedingly close and snap,\n&y. The Nelson, boys are showing fine\nityle lately, a'nd hopes of victory are\nrunning  high.\nTrail took the first game from\nNelson by a margin of two points,\nscoring a basket in the last minute\nTrail nosed out Nelson by only one\npoint   in  a second   game.\nTrail easly beat the Kimberley team\n'.\u25a0St year, for the Blaylock cup. but It\nhas been reported that the Kimberley\ni cam has been considerably strengthened, and a  fine  game  Is  expected\nmDlNGS STAND\nSINCE YEAR 1792\nNEW YEARS DAY\nSERVICES HELD,\nTRAIL CHURCHES be\" rouSd\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e Jan. 1.\u2014Low mass was\ncelebrated this morning at 8:30 o'clock\nat St. Francis Xavier church. High\nmass was celebrated at 10:30 a.m. followed by benediction,\nHaly communion was held at St.\nAndrew's church  at  10  a.m.\nA   new   sleeve   ls   one   that   can\ntied at the elbow.\nbe\nIf Ruptured\nTry This Free\nApply     to    Any     ItujttmT,     OJd     0\nKen-iiI.    I.;h*ki-   or   Small   and    VOU\nAre   on   tlie   Itoiiil   That   Has\nConvinced   Thousands\nSent Free To Prove This\nEvery ruptured man or woman should\nwrite at once to W. S. Rice I270-N\nMain St., Adams, N. Y-, for free trial\nof his wonderful Method. Just put It\non the rupture and the opening closes\nnaturally so the need of a support or\ntruss or appliance is then done away\nwith. Don't neglect to send for the\nfree trial or this Stimulating Application. Even if your rupture doesn't\nbother you, what Is the use of wearing\nsupports all your life? Why suffer this\nnuisance? Why run the risk of gangrene and such dangers from a small\nand innocent little rupture, the kind\nthat has thrown thousands on the\noperating table. A host of men and\nwomen are daily running such risk\nJust because their ruptures do not hurt\nnor prevent them from getting around.\nWrite at once for this free trial, as lt\nis certainly a wonderful thing and has\naided ln healing ruptures that were as\nbig as a man's two fists. Try and write\nat once, using the coupon below\nFREE    FOR    RUPTURE\nW.   S.  Rice,  Inc.,\n1370-N Main St.. Adams, N. Y.\nSlale\nYou may send me, entirely free\na Sample Treatment of your Stimulating  Application   for   Rupture.\nName   -\nAddress   \t\nFirst Building Used by Executive  Council  of  Upper\nCanada Remains\nKINGSTON. Ont., Jan. 1\u2014Ou Queen\nstreet in Kingston still stands the\nfirst Parliament buildings used by\nthe executive council of Upper Canada.\nIt Is a small, wooden structure and\nstands beside St. Paul's Anglican\nchurchyard which contains the tomb\nof Rev. Dr. John Stuart, father of\nthe Church of England in Upper\nCanada. Colonel Sir John Slmcoe presided at the first council session as\nlieutenant-governor on July 8, 1782.\nHon. Richard Oartwrlght. who was a\nmember, founded the Cartwright family in Canada, a family which has\nbeen prominent in political and military circles for more than a century,\nand whose descendants are still to\nIn Vancouver, British Columbia, Winnipeg, Toronto. Kingston\nand Ottawa. Mr. Cartwright son of\nan English father and a Dutch mother,\nand born in Albany, N.Y., remained\ntrue to Great Britain at the close of\nthe American Revolutionary war and\ncame to Canada. His grandson. Richard J. \u25a0'afterwords Sir* took part in\nthe discussions which resulted in Canadian Confederation, and 30 years later\nwas a member of the Liberal cabinet\nof  Sir  Wilfrid  Laurler.\nIt appears the Governor Slmcoe had\nplanned   and   outlined   n   military   road\nfrom   one   end   of   Upper   Canada   to |\nthe    other,    to    which    he    gave    the \u25a0\nname \"Dundus street,'\" supposedly with j\na   view   to   accomplishing   his   idea   of I\nfixing  the capital  on   the   present   ittfl\nof  London.    Hon.  Richard   Cartwright j\nprotested   against   the   employment   of !\n100  men  of   tlie  \"Rangers\"   in   cutting\nt road frcm the head of Lake  Ontario\nto  the  River  Trauche   mow   Thames)\nwhere   there  was   not   I   single   inliuln-\ntuul,   instead   of   employing   them   \"in\nthe  service  for  which   they   are  ostensibly    raised,    of    opening    roads    and\nbuilding   sbfldgsfis   between   the   different\nsettled parts of the country '\n'\u25a0Alwington House\", the home Dl\nthree successive governoi'-Keneniis od\nCanada when Kingston was the wal\nof government of Upppr and Lower\nCanada. 1841-1844, also still standi\nand Is one of the finest residences\nin Ontario. It is owned and occupied\nby Mrs. Richardson, widow of the late\nSenator H, W, Richardson 'Alwington\"\nIs situated on the shore of the harbor\nand was built by Baron De Longusulll,\nthe fourth baron of the distinguished\nfamily of Le Moyne de Longueuill.\nwhich gave two governors to French\nCanada. His ancestor. Charles cu\nMoyne, was a contemporary of the\nChevalier   de   la   Salle\nWhen Lord Sydenham settled at\nKingston, the then \"Alwington\" with\nsome additions, became the net-regal\nresidence. It was near this home that\nLord Sydenham, one of Canada's ablc:;t\ngovernors, was fatally injured when his\nhorse stumbled and fell, and it was\nat the vice-regal residence that bf\ndied on Sept. 19, 1841. two weeks\nafter the accident. Lord Sydenham\nhad expressed a desire to be buried\nbeneath St. George's Cathedral, and\nhis remains repose in a vault under\nthat edifice. Sir Charles Bagot. a\nnephew by marriage of the Duke of\nWellington, was the next vice-regal\noccupant of \"Alwington\". Early ln\nNovember. 1842, Sir Charles was stricken with illness and died the following\nMay, his body being conveyed to England for burial. Sir Charles Metcalfe,\nafterwards. Lord Metcalfe succeeded\nSir Charles Bagot as governor. During\nthe time he occupied the office of (,\ngovernor there was great turmoil in the\nlegislature. The removal of the- seat\nof government to Montreal in 1844\nrelieved Kingston of being the death\nplace of a third governor, for Lord\nMetcalfe did not long survive a malady\nfrom which he had suffered before\ncoming from England.\nBELLEVILLE, Jan. I.\u2014Trustees elected to t he separate school board for\na two-year period were: Baldwin Ward,\nK. P. Hughes, Bleecker Ward. Austin\nDutton, Ketcheeon Ward. T. V. Scanlan, Poster Ward, James Lynch, Samson\nI   Ward,   W.   A.   Dolan,    Murney    Ward.\nI    Charles   Fahv;.    Coleman    Ward.    D.   B\n-1 Huffman,\n!NCO*POPATED   Zt'   MAY 1670.\nT* O-lf UNDRFD'AND'*IXT !\u2022\u2022    VIAXS   IN   CANADA\nFURS   '   LANDS   \u00bb   STORES   *   TRANSPORT\/\nSIR\ns\nCommittee\nCHARLES VINCENT SALE, ESQ Gowrttor\nFREDERICK HENRY RICHMOND, BART.     .   Deputy Goixrmr.\nLEONARD DANEHAM CUNLIFFE, ESQ.        GEORGE WILLIAM ALLAN, ESQ. K.C\nVIVIAN HUGH SMITH, ESQ, T.ORD EBURY, D.S.O., M.C.\n.SIR HEWITT SKINNER, BART. ARCHIBALD KNIGHTLEY GRAHAM, ESQ.\nTHE HON. A-RTHUR JARED PALMER HOWARD\nHUDSON'S BAY HOUSE, LONDON, E.C, i.\nCanadian Committee f\nGLORGE WILLIAM ALLAN*, ESQ. K.C.     .     .     .     CUirindn\nJAMES THOMSON, ESQ. ROBERT JOHN GOURLEY, ESQ.\nI AMI s ARMSTRONG RICHARDSON, ESQ.       CONRAD STEPHENSON RILEY, ESQ.\nHUDSON'S BAY HOUSE, MAIN STREET, WINNIPEG\n\/i\nWINNIPEG \u2022 CALGARY - VANCOUVER * SASKATOON - EDMONTON\nVICTORIA . YORKTON - LETHBRIDGE - NELSON\nVERNON   -   KAMLOOPS\nTrillin.-!! Rjltl tlircmglisjut CiuiiiJii, J-\\eti'\/i>uiitiliitid d>id L,ibrad';r\nA New Year\nSpecial\n29 only,  Ecru Net    Curtain    Panels,\nfringed Htds.    33 inches wide, 2 1-4\nyards  lonjr.       Exceptional offer,\nEach  $1-25\nRayon Silk stripe net. ecru with colored\nstripe, 06 inch     39\u00a3\n\u2014 S.-H    I'uihlil.is..   Srrui.il    ll.ior   II    It   C-*\nDry Goods\nSPECIAL VALUES IN ENGLISH\nFLANNELETTES\nA high quality Flannelette imported\ndirect from the English manufacturers and purchased at a price considerably below the marktt values.\nHere is an opportunity for our customers to secure several yards of\nsplendid quality Flannelette at small\nr:.-t.\nA large range of assorted stripes\ncarried at each price. These come iiy\nblue, pink, grey and fawn grounds\nshowing stripes in contrasting colors.\nSpecial job clearing lines.\nPer Yard 19^, 25\u00bb?, 35?\n36-inch best quality Pyjama Cloths.\nPer yard  55?\n\u2014Mnlu  Floor\u2014II B C\u2014\nLadies' Wear\nSkirts made of flannel, serge and wool\ncrepe. Indestructablo pleats. Wrap\naround styles, suitable for skating. In\nshades of brown, green, fawn, rust\nand navy.   Price $3.50 to 915.00\nPull over Sweaters. Made of fine silk\nand wool and all wool. 100 per cent.\nvalues. Modernistic designs, wonderful shades, beautifully trimmed, in\ncontrasting shades. In shades of\nbrown, fawn, blue, navy and green.\nSize 36 to 42. Prices range\nfrom $3.95 to ?8.50\n\u2014St-urni!  Floor\u2014II B C\u2014\nMen's\nOveralls\nSpecial quality heavy Demin Bib Overalls. High or low backs. Double\npockets    $2.50\nSpecial quality Blue Demin Red Back\nPants. Riveted pockets also with\nelastic top waist band $2.25\nSpecial quality heavy khaki drill combination overalls . Rivited snap fasteners    -.13.75\nExtra heavy khaki drill combination\noverall with zip fasteners      . .$5.00\nSpecial Flannel Shirts in dark checks.\nAll sizes.      Regular $3.50.\nSpecial    $2.96\n\u2014Main  Flow\u2014H  B  C\u2014\u2022\n \u2022 \"Page Four    \u25a0\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS   THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2, 1930\nTHE DAILY NEWS\nPublished every morning except Sun\nmt by The News Publishing Com\ntm. limited.   Nelson.  B   C\nBustnses letters should be addrsses\n\u2022UfA cheeks and monev orders mad-\nPtgable to The News Publishing Coin\namy, limited, and in no eve to is\nfidual members ol the staff.\nAdvertising rate cards snd A. B t\neftatetnenu of circulation mailed ot\nrequest, or may be seen at the offu\nm any advertising agency recogniae-\n*f   the   Canadian  Press  aaaociatlon.\nSUBSCRIPTION   RATES\n\u25a0r mall   (country*, per month \u2014\u2022    *>\n\u2022\u25a0to    year     _..    \u00a7XH\nBy   mail   (cltyi,   per   year    13\/>\nCanada,   per   montb   -..      7'\nmax   __         7 v\nyear    \t\nPayable   In   Advance\n'    Audit    Bureau   at   rirriiiat \u25a0\u25a0\u00bb\nTHURSDAY.   JANUARY   2,   1933\nDAILY NEWSPAPER\n' IS GREAT\nSALESMAN\nA    full-page    advertisemeru\npublised under the auspices of\nthe Canadian Daily Newspapei \u25a0\nassociation, and appearing in a\nrecent issue of The Daily New ,\nc\u00bblls attention most effectively\nto the position occupied by th.\ndaily newspaper as the mediusn\nof  contact  between  the  sell t\nand   buyer.   The   daily   newspaper is more widely read today than in any previous en;\nIt has  become an almost  i.\ndispensable  feature  of  ever,,\nday life and of almost ever;.\nhome  within reasonable  reach\nof the place of publication. Thi\nsteadily   increasing  circulatioi.\nof the leading Canadian dailies\nis a reflex of their necessity\nto the public. As an advertising medium they are in a class\nall by themselves, because the}\nenter   the   home  as   welcome\nguests. They are the sole source\nof  information for the  great\nmajority of buyers, people of\nevery   type,   who  represent   ;:\ntremendous   variety   of   needs\nand desires. They produce immediate results for the advertiser by creating a demand for\nhis  products.  They  sell   most\ngoods because they are read by\nmost buyers.\nTHE LOAFER\nthe steam engine, lf experts\ncan do so much, why did they\noverlook the wireless and leave\nit to a kid? Why did we have\nto depend on a barber for the\nspinning jenny? And why did\nwe have to go to a portrait\npainter for the wheelbarrow?\nPatrick Henry did not have\nmuch prestige ;us a toiler. The\nloafers are often great talkers.\nEven Demosthenes was not\nnuch on deeds. Why did not\nsome nose on a grindstone find\nthe law of the s7\\inging pendulum? Why was it left to a\nfellow who was foolish enough\nto go to church and dream\n.luring the sermon?\nThe loafer may be without\nI loaf; but he has some othei-\nihings to his credit.\nIk\nLighter Side\nWALL    STREET    WOULDN'T    PEEL\nPLATTERED   IP   IT   COULD   SEE   THE\nNEW YEAR RESOLUTIONS THIS TIME.\n\u20140\u2014\nThe   monkey   needn't   feel   offended.\nPeople object to all of their relatives.\n\u2014o\u2014\nSo   the   way   to   preserve   prosperity\nia  to  keep  on   spending  freely!   Like\nthunder   It   la!   We've  tried   it.\n\u2014o\u2014\nTHEBE1 HARDLY        ANYTHING\nIIU FOR HYRD NOW, I M.l.s-i HE\nWANTS TO TRY SLIDING DOWN\nNIAGARA IN  A  PLANE.\nAnd many so-called open mind Just\nseems that way because of the great\nopen spaces between ideas.\n\u25a0\u2014o -\nTlirrcs   no   dnifger  of   revolution\nIn a land Where everbody meekly\nObey* a \"No Parking\" sign without\nAsking  who put  It there.\nSolomon isn't described as howling\nin anguish, bo thc Joint account prob\nably wasn't known ln those days,\nr mry be tr :\u25a0 1: df of \"-e people\nmiss their calling. That would explain\nFIRST AIDERS WHO DEFEATED\nNELSON TEAM RECEIVE CUPS\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nB)    LA IRA     X      KIRKIIAM\nTOMORROW'S   MENU\nBreokfast\nCereal\nBoiled  Eggs Toast\nMarmalade Coffee\nLuncheon\nCorn Fritters\nLettuce French Dressing\nBrown  Bread Stewed  Prune\nTdfc\nDinner\nCasserole  Beef\nwith Onions  and Peppers\nBaked   Potatoes  ,\nCole  Slaw\nCottage Pudding with\nThe photograph here shows t. w7~Beatty, president of the C. P. R\". presenting the open championship revolver cups, the Dominion championship and\nprovincial championship cup to Constable W. E. Tlngman, captain of Ontario\n.\"\u2022To. I, C. P. R. police team, the winner of the Nelson. B. c., team.\n\u00aeliat Iiiitii nf\ntheir superior ability to run the other J about  what   he   did   from  the health\nfellow's   business. -***    j- '-*\u25a0    \u00ab-  >---\u25a0  -\u00bb\u2014  -\nacity.   A  change  in  the man  but no\nchange in thc germ plasm.\nAnd so with various conditions that j\nrender   an    individual   unfit   for   his |\nor her work, not enough exercise, too i\nmuch   food,   .alcohol   or   tobacco,   not!\nenough sleep,  a sluggish liver, a lazy .\nintestine.   Any of these will lower his\nefficiency   or   working  capacity.\n_____________________^^_________^^^_________ No, it is true that you can't change\nC'VN YOU  CHANGE YOUR   'the germ Plasm but vou can certainly\ntt.e--.iw   ommTrfriiDri ' take what your follw **v* you and  by\nBODY   STRUCTURE I . a   little   thought,   can  \u00abee  what  your\n  I actual  condition  of  health  ls.\n.    I    You can  then think of what lt  le\nI  met  a  chop^ Borne  Mine^ agojwho   posslble t0 do with that body of yours.\nIf your efficiency is only 80 per cent,\nyou may bring  tt up to 90 or more,\njmirs\nBy   JAS.   W,   BARTON,   7I.D.\nMid   he   didn't   think   or   care   much\nNot oftTi does anyone speak\n8 good word for the ioafer.\nPrejudice is all against him\nand the success magazines execrate him for not reaching the\nlimit daily. The efficiency expert eliminates him and measures the output by the intake.\nEven Bi-uce Barton recently\ntook a census of 32 passengers\nin a Pullman between Boston\nand New York, to the disadvantage of the loafer. Thirteen\nwere asleep; two were buried\nin  work  and  brief cases;  six j\nModernism: Making a sport ol buy- ' stated that one's life and health de<\nIng    stolen    goods,    wondering    what! pended entirely  on heredity, that no-\ncauses so many  thefts. i thing could  change  the germ 'plasm',\n\u2014o\u2014 . or the body structure, alter you were\nTREACHERY    IS   SHAMEFUL.    AND   born.\nYOU   CAN'T   BLAME   A   CONGRESS- \u2022     Now. lt 1s true that your lolks hand-\n,s.s...    ,- 1.       ......w    m,    ..s.u.s,\u201e.   ed _0Wn red hair, long arm, blue eyes,\nLEAKS   ON   HIM. a fair brain, natural likes and dislikes\n\u2014o\u2014 I    towards  persons  and  foods.  Nothing\nThere's    good    ln    everything.    The   can alter these things.\nJunk you get lor Christmas will Beem      But a flower or seed put Into good\na token of  love  to  sxjme  brldc   next   soil,   kept   free   from   weeds,   looks   a\nJune. whole   lot   different   from   the   same\n\u2014o\u2014 seed  put   Into a poor soil.\nSome    people    don't    recover    from!\nthe   \"holiday   spirit1\nstandpoint  any  more.  He had  read  *. | by   gett|ng  defects   cleared  away,  and\nbook   by   a   college   professor   which   thcn   watChlng   vour   food,   sleen   and\nthen   watching   your   food,  sleep   and\nexercise.\nforget   the   $5   wasted   on   some   relative who sent a mere post card,\nTWENTY YEARS\nAGO\n(Prom The Dally News, Jan, 2, 1909)\nCapt. H. E. Tucker of the Royal\nNorthwest Mounted police, at Calgary\npassed through Nelson yesterday en\nroute  to  the  coast.\n*    *    \u2022\n^^^^^^^^^^^ The  tem_>erature  last  night  dropped\nBoys and  girls given good  food, out i to  two  degrees  below  the  zero  mark,\nuntil   they   can I door air,  and  permitted to play, look \u25a0 The conditions forecast colder weather\nentirely different from children without these things. They are different\nmentally, morally and physically. The\ngerm plasm Isn't changed, but the\nchidren are.\nChildren who are vaccinated against\nsmallpox, diphtheria, and other diseases simply do not die, whilst those\nwho are not vaccinated, show a considerable  proportion  of  deaths.\nIn communities where diphtheria\nhar; wrought terrible havoc, and preventive measures have been Instituted\nthere have been no deaths in the\npast seven  years.\nIn Institutions where hall (he child\nren\" were\"given* the  preventive  treat- j company.\n\u2022here- a^__________________________________-_______-\nBeatrice Mary, infant daughter of\nj Mr. and Mrs. B. C, Travis was chris-\n| tened ln the St. Saviour's church\nI on Friday, John Gibson being thc\nj God-father, Mrs. A. L. McCulloch a,nd\nj   Miss Thorn  being  God-mothers.\n\u2022    *   *\n1      Aid.   George   Hale,   who   le   running j\nf  for mayor, and Aid. George Steed, Aid.\n!  Gus   Matthew,   Aid.   J.   F.   Kirby   and i\n\u25a0  William   Shackelton,   who   are   candl-\ni dates for the council, have opened a\n,  committee room ln the premises formerly  occupied   by   the  Kootenay  Cigar\n\\n|<tlM*t 4>l\u00bbK**tioii to mkUfing\nyour home a barroom for guf-ls\nIn tlutt yuu have no official\nbouncer  .\nwere looking sadly into the to-1 #\u00abJ_L ttQBMS^ TEN  YEARS AGO\nsending   such   tough     J^,    most   benous   h_n   cases!      i &n    I r.\/i.nO   t\\\\I<U\nfollowed   by   death   can   be   traced   to ,  (prom  -h(,   -^   ;   -\nMalting  It  legal to  hunt  deer  with  'tah'u\u2122*_.,s*Se 5\"L^infected   t\u2122h       Mr'   an<*  Mrs'   R'   A   P\u00ab\"les' enter-\nraw  and   arrow   Is  a  bright   Idea.   It!\u201e\u2122tSi. infected   te*stn | talneel_ about 20 friends on New Years\nyou   persist\npeople there.\nwon't   be   difficult   to  pull   an  arrow\nout of a guide.\nCOMK'T , THIS     SBSTENCE:     \"WjE\nWENT    OVEfc   TO   HEAR   HIS    NEW     .. , .  ,..   _ ,,,_   \u201e\u201e.\nHIIIIII.\"   SAIL  THE NEIGHBOR,  --ANO , ot*w ,Ci\"\"*   *here   H\"*   plMm   d0eS   \"0t\n     ontor .titn   thp   matter.\nINSTEAD   OF\nEVERY    TWO\nfilAMHNO   STATIONS\nsMIMTES.\"\nture; five were mooning over\nfiction; one was reading a serious book; two were working\ncross-word puzzles; one was\nplaying solitaire and two were\napplying lipstick.\nNaturally, there is something\nto b\u00ab said. We form flying\nwedges and tackle street cars\n-r-only to sit and stare at the\njwssing show. We roar,\"\\Vomen\nand children first: \"\u2014and then\nrush in and take their seats.\nWe snort at the telephone girl\n\u2014 and gossip for an idle hour.\nWe dress feverishly\u2014and have\nno place lb go!\nNow comes Warwick Deeping in \"Britannia & Eve,\" and\nrecommends loafing. We cannot do our best work with a\nfever. Haste misses the putt\nand scenery. You cannot get\na sunset at 00 per. The way to\nsee stars is to lie flat on your\nback on a mountaintop.f.\nBut we dump out everything\nthat cannot stand up in a col-\nimn of figures and be counted.\nEverything is measured in feet\nven poetry. H\t\n,. ,, ., .       . trmagant cash      \t\n, However, the strange thing . tcrs; n,esc payments should come from\nis, that countries that move\nflowly have the most masterpieces. Tliat fine finish in stat-\nfary and boudoir manners is\nnot gotten in a hurry. Emer-\n\u00bbon says that even good manners  require time.\nor  tonsils.\n\u2022ve, at a birthday pasty, at their home\n113 Bsafeer street. It being Mrs. Peebles'\nbirthday.\nIf Infected teeth or tonsils are re- I\nmoved before rheumatism ensues, then I\nthere are going  to be fewer cases of 1\nheart disease   and   fewer  deaths    An- |     Mlss Mildred Houston left last night\nfor   Victoria   to   resume   her   studies\nau\"uT vtKairr a'fijix woosB*Ml'm*\"_to*'**_.__,'\u2022\u2022,\u2022.   _. .   ,\n' And still further. In ihe cxumni- I\natlon of recruits for overseas service\nwe found sonic young men with chests\ntoo small to pass the required test.\nA few months In a Y.M.C.A. or other !\ngymnasium, and the chest was large l\nenough,  more  muscle,  and  more  cap-\nSays that Good\nProspector Can\nFind a Market\nToday there arc so many active und\nwealthy mining organizations in Canada (it 1& said tliat every important\nmining organisation In tlie world today\nhas a representative or scout ln Canada i\nthat the trained prospector who knows\nhis geology and has a reputation for\ntalking conservatively need not go begging, with claims of promise, providing\nthey are In shape to be examined, says\nThe Financial Post.\nIf anything may be charged against\nCanadian .pnspgOton In the handling of\ntheir claims, It i.-> the luck of organising\nability, and 'their desire to claim too\nmuch for a property before any work\nhas been done to establish its merit.\nThus comes the need for pruKpecttng\norganl-zutiunr, with finds sufficient to\nestablish values and to open up the surface of claims .before offering thc claims\nto brokers or to people who are not initiated In mining.\nProspectors  are  entitled,  l:  ls  pretty\nwell agreed, to substantial but not ex-\n11   cash  pamunti  from  proino-\nat thc  provincir.l   norflHl  school  there.\nA. Gordon WU*on, local manager of\nthc Canadian EKploslv-\") Company, limited, was a guest of honor last night\nat a large gathering, for a banquet\ngiven to him In tho event of his promotion to a higher position in Toronto.\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bill' ol\nBuilding Material. Coast Lumber a specialty.\nJohn Burns & Son\n{ the organizers and directors of a com-\npeny rather than from the public; these\npayments   should   be par tof the vendors'\narrangements    and    not    be    charged\nagainst the treasury of the company.\n' Prospectors should also t>c entitled to\nstock interests.    In lact. too few prospectors are willing to gamble with the\npublic  on  the  properties they  stake.\nPerhaps the greatest need of the pre-\nWilS   Hot ' MIlt   time   in   for   organization   amour,\n__^__m__^__^__^__m__^m _\u2022 I the prosectors of Canada ao that they\ni'k-lielftnKClo   SIX   years   freSCO- | miKht not only give themselves protec-\nSt  Peter's'' The Parthenon 1tlon Irom \"\u25a0n8CruPul0Ua individuals who\nfreqnently victimize the prospectors but\nEti not built One day and ded- ! provide a measure of protection for ihe\n.   j   ., a    rr~_      _.\u201e     a. ipublic    by   subserlblngt   o   a    general\nted the next. The great ca^p^u* that win commend itself to\nrlruU wpi'p rentiirirs riainv ' thoe* wll\u00b0 are wll\u00bbn8 \u00abM1 anxious\narais \\*eie centimes ming., ^ aupport the ploneer Cftnaainftn ln\nA. loafer toasting his shins by  the  field.\nXke  kitchftn   fire  and   listening j     Brown,   dark  green, black and  navy\n^1111^   tanlrnHl.-''.   a\\ntr   invont_iH ' blu\u00ab   are   clt0<1   ^   fashion   authorities\n!tue aing invented, returulna Irom mnoo M important \u25a0\nSleds\nAt Less Than Cost\nWe have a few 1!. C. Selds which we are\nclosing out at just\nHalf Price\nNo. 1 sold at $2.00, now, each  * 1.00\nNo. 2 sold at $2.50, noiw, each  $1.25\nNo. 3 sold at ?3.00, now, each  $1.50\nNo. 4 sold at $3.50, now, each  $1.75\nGet one for your girl or boy while they laat. We\nhave also the genuine Flexible and b ire Fly Sleds.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale\nQuality Hardware\nNelson, B. C.\nRetail\nOrange   Sauce\nCoffee\nThose  among  us  who aerved   Duck,\nTurkey or Chicken for Chrlatmw may\nlike to have Ooose for the New Year's\nMenu.  I suggeat the following\nNEW   YEAR'S   DINNER\nOlives Celery\nRoast Ooose\nPotato .Dressing Apple' Sauce\nSweet Potatoes Peas\nLettuce Russian Dressing\nPeach Sherbet\nCakes Mint* Coffee\nPotato Dressing for Roast Ooose: In\na   bowl   mix   together   three   cups   of\nfreshly  mashed cooked white potatoes,\none grated raw onion, one-half cup of\n! chopped walnut meats, a pinch of pep-\n{ per   one   teaspoon   of   ground   .sage   or\n; the same amount of \"poultry season -\ni Inc.\" one teaspoon of aalt. one tablespoon of melted butter, one-fourth cup\nof cold sweet milk and one beaten egg.\ni Stuff both breast and body of the bird\nwith this mixture, *nd sew up\u2014of\nmerely fasten by insert ing toothpicks\non either aide at the openings and\nlace string back and forth on these\nlike a shoe lace. Bind the bird\n(wings and legs close to body) wth\nclean   string   until   roasted.\nPeach Sherbet: Force one can of\npeaches through a wide meshed sieve\nafter draining them from their juice.\nTo this sifted pulp, add one pint of\napple sauce, the pulp and Juice of\nthree oranges, one cup of the canned\npeach Juice of one lemon, sugar to suit\nIndividual taste, making the mixture a\nUttle sweeter .than lf lt were to be\nserved unfrozen) then turn into your\nfreezer  can,  pack  with  three  parts  or\ncrank till the sherbet la of a mushy\nconsistency; then open can, fold tntwo\nstiffly whipped egg whites, and contnue\nturning the crank tlU well frown.. Un-\nof ice to one part salt, and let stand\nseveral hours before servng.\nHave\nYour Printing Done\nBy Modern Machinery Using Modern\nType the Modern\nWay\nSTYLE changes in practically everything. Style\nhas changed in printing in recent years. While\nthe change is not great, our printing equipment\nenables us to turn out a vastly superior class of\nwork to that of old-time methods of printing.\nProper type, properly arranged, can work\nwonders in creating not only a pleasing appearance, but will mean added dollars and cents to\nyou through its ability to create more attention\nand put over your selling message with greater\nforce.\nLetterheads\nEnvelopes\nStatements\nBooklets\nSynoptics\nCirculars\nTickets\nTags\nEtc.\nDaily News Job Dept\nPhones 143 or 144\nDo you play bridge?\nTHE chap who overbids his hand always loses in the long run.\nNo person can continually bid what he hasn't got and make it.\nBusiness in one way is something like a game of bridge\n. . . with merchants and manufacturers playing for your patronage. You Want furniture and breakfast foods, books and\nclothes, radios cigarettes and toys\u2014they want to sell you theirs.\nThey bid with advertising.\nThe merchant who advertises an unworthy product can't\nwin. He is simply inducing more people to find out in a shorter\ntime how poor it is. He is overbidding his hand, and is bound\nto get set. Losing is too costly . . . depend upon it, products\nthat are advertised MUST BE GOOD!\nThe advertisements in this paper are guides to the finest\nmerchandise of every sort, merchandise carefully and faithfully made, of certain, honest value. You can trust the manufacturers who write them.\nGO\nIt pays to read the advertisements. They\nare bids backed by products that can compete\nin the open . . . and win.\n \t\n-\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\no\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS    THURSDAY MORNING,' JANUARY *?, m(\\\nPage Fivtf\"\nMAY\nPROSPERITY\nAND\nHAPPINESS\nBE YOURS\nDURING THE\nCOMING\nYEAR\nRAndrew\nand Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nrv cXj sXj cXj uCj clX** cX? cX:\n!\nCHILD DEVELOPMENT\nON MODERN LINES\nMontreal Speaker Outlines Requirements Before Big\n8#ster Association\nMONTREAL,   Que.,   Jan.   1.\u2014Alhougb\nln civilized counrles there are no such\ntribal ceremonies as exist among -savage\nraces to mark adolescence, or coming of\nage,   yet thla phase   ls  recognized  by\n\"coming out\" parties, confirmation ceremonies in orthodox religions, legal age\nfor driving a  motor  car.  for  marry in-\nwithout consent of parents, for inherit- j\ning property, and In the Juvenile de'm- i\nquency laws.   So remarked Mrs. W. X. '\nB. Mitchell at a Big Sister Association\nmeeting recently.\nMra. Mitchell discussed the ways in\nwhich parents can prepare their children for adolescence and maturity. She\nfelt thai children should be taught <\nthe art of relinquishment as they pro- i\nceed from birthday to birthday, when ,\nthey might receive some gift that would\nmark a further step in their advancement towards responsibility and indc-\npendente. attachment to protective\nparents, submission to them if they arc\ndominating, the comfort of food antl\nshelter obtained without effort, ail de-\nvelp tn childhood .and hamper development unless parents constantly try to\nfree the Child from such habit bonds,\nthe lecturer said. The handicaps o!\nthe child who haB never had these fet-\ntrs remoted.imre descrired. with the inability to adjust to adult life and its\nresponsibilities.\nHow the. child may be taught self-\nhelp was suggested, .beginning the 14 or\n15-manths' old learning to pull on Its\nstockings, feed itself or climb into lis\nown chair, and as it grows older giving\nlt increasing responsibilities. The cHld,\nbeginning at school age, should be given a regular allowance of money, ten\nor fifteen cents a week, Mrs Mitchell\nadvised, tftitll at adolescence hc should\nnave profited by the training iu spend-\nnig and saving that will enable him.to\nlie responsible for buying of his ordin-\n'ary clothing, paying for recreation,\nlunch and carfare.\nThe question of a choice of vocation\nfor ihe child was dlscusrsed, with the\n\u25a0 mre or the o^cupet'nn beln? suit-\nad to his particular ability, and ol\nteaching him to start with less respon-\nj'ble positions at lower wages. Instead\nof setting hia heart on positions suited\nonly to maturity and experience.\n (_\nSAME  STREET   HAS\nTHREE GOLDEN WEDDINGS\nSociety\nThla column is conducted bt\nlira. Bl. J. Vlgneux. AU news of\na social nature. Including receptions, private entertainments, personal Items, marriages, etc., wiU\nappear ln this column. Telephon*\nMrs. Vlgneux at her borne, Kerr\nApartment!.\nThe Mew Year's dinner dance given\nlast   night   at   th4   Hume   hotel   was,\nas ever, the usual success, under the\nclever management  of  George  Benwell\nand hts staff. The lounye was appropriately  arranged  for  dancing,  as wait\nalso   the   dining   room.   Among   those\nwho attended  the festivity  were Cap.\ntain and  Mrs.  W.  A.   Richardson,  Dr.\nW.  A. Richardson  of  Campbell  River,\nMr. and Mre. Val Clery, Hurry  Robinson,  C.  A.  Larson,   Mr.   and   Mra.   A.\nWelghtman,   Mr.   and   Mrs.   Lawrence\nMcPhail,   Miss   Dorothy   Brown,   Dr.   J.\nP. Oussln, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Gibson,\nthe   Misses   Agnes   and   Jean   Gibson.\nMr. and Mn. J. G. Bunyan, Billy   Bunyan,   Mr.   and   Mrs.   W.   M.   Cunliffe.\nMr. and Mrs.  J.  D.  Kerr,  Mlas  Iren.\nKerr  of   Longbeach,   Miss   Mary   Doncaster, Jim Cunliffe, Ralph Thompson\nof Trail, Philip Trail of Rossland,  Ilr\nand  Mrs. II. Townsend, Mr.  and  Mrs\nPaul    Lincoln,    Mr.    and    Mra.   E.    C\nWragge, Mr, and Mrs. W. E. Keyt, T.\nR.   Wilson,   Mlas   Louise   Cunliffe   of\nVancouver, L.   B.   De   Veber,   Mr.   and\nMrs.   C.' D,   Blackwood,   Miss   Nookie\nBlackwood, MT.   and   Mra.   J.   A.   Gllker,   Miss   Jean   Gllker, .Miss   Louise\nRichardson,   Miss   Marlon    Blackwood,\nGordon German, E. Planta,  Arthur B.\nGilker,    Miss    Wlnnlfred     Palethorpe.\nGeorge    Palethorpe,    Mlsa     Genevieve\nProudfoot, T. A.  Clarke,  R. O. Leslie,\nMr.   and  Mrs.   R.  P.  Brown   of   Bor:.-\nnington, Miss Dorothea Sandercock, Mr.\nand M*s.  W.  J. Meagber,  Miss  Ellzt,-\nbeth  Borden,  Harry  Horton,   Mr.   and\nMTs.   C.   IT.   Sedgwick,    Mlsa    Conn.e\nFrost. C. Cummins, George Pease, Mr.\nand Mm, R.  H. Scott  of Bonnington.\nMr. and Mrs.  A. Grant and party of\nProcter, Mr. and Mrs. Randall of Trail.\nW. B. Poole and party, Mr. and Mrs.\nA. W. Idlens. T.  West,  Mr. nnd  Mrs.\nH.  North  and  MLsa   Marlon  North  of\nI   G.  Nelson,  L,   K.   Inrseir,   Mrs.   w.\nSeattle,  Mi,  and   Mrs? Fred   Chapman\nof   Boon! ngton   and   party,   Lieut-Colonel   S.   Goode   of   Bonnington,   Hurry\nCotton, Miss Ivy Whittaker, Miss Rosie j\nExter of Kioslo, Miss Margery  Benson,\nl.   A.    Kennedy    of    Boswell,    Orvllle I\n\u2022^hugg.  Miss  Eileen   Heap.   Jack   Stark,\nvllss  Isabelle Benson,  Lome   Mansfield,\ntoddy McLeod, Edwin  Cartmel,  K. O.l\nFish,   Miss   Eve   Dewdney,   Miss   Betty 1\n, Horstead,  Jack  Toulson,  Charles  Fish, 1\n! ^eslle  Fielding,  Mr.  Martille  of  Cran-!\ni jrook,   Colonel   and   Mrs.  James  Mun-\n, -ay   of   Bennington,   H.   R.   Atcheson, |\nIff.  and   Itra.   w.   J.   Grove,   Mr.   and i\nj \\lrs. Harold  Lakes. Mr. and. Mrs, Coi-\nI 'lngwood Gray of Bonnlngton,  Mr. aid\nj .Mrs. Junaa Kennedy  of  Praser's  Landing,   W.   J    Sturgeon,   Harvey   Wallace.\n| . i rry   Towgood.   Was   Marcia   Towgcod. t\nI Miss   Violet   TjOWsgood,   Charles   Ander-\n1   on, Miss Dorothy  Sturgess,  Miss  Irene\nildnrtnidsor..    Mr.    and     Mrs,     W.    L.'\n,   ihceler   arid   party   of   Galena   Farm\n\u25a0nine,   Mi. *   Helen   Murphy,    Mr.   and\nIi a.   James   Davidson,    Mr.   and   Mis.:\nr.   D.   Notman.   Mr.   and   Mr;>.   George'\n\u25a0 Fleury, Mr, and Mil, Douglas Cummins,]\nI Alfred   Noton.    Miss   Crelna   Horstead.\nPercy   Cottae,   and   others.\nIN ASSASSINATION PLOT\nA Befglah newspaper reports tfcerunearfhIng,\"or a plot to assas~-.im.te members of tbe Belgian royal family  to pn vent the fortheem\ncess Marie Jose of Belgium and Crown Prince Otoberto of Italy   following  tin\narrest f a young Italian anarchist called ftiernl. who ts alleged  to\nteased.    The plot ls said to not only involve immediate members ol\nfamilies but Italian ministers as well.    The substance of the  pit t   ci n\nbombing the Italian royal train en route to the wadding.   Tin   pi\nshow Princess Marie Jose and Prince Umberto, around whom the plot   i. alleged\nto hang.\nMONTREAL, Que.\u2014Lome, St. Lambert, Que., Is becoming noted for\nthe longevity of its married Couples.\nNo less than three three couples, residing on the pleasant, quiet street.\nthis year have celebrated their golden\nweddings, They are: Mr. und Mrs.\nJ. R. Beatty, Mr. and Mrs. W. B.\nPowell and Mr. and Mrs. J. Edgar\n\"\"\u2022vichanan.\nC. D. Pa.uIson of Spokane ls a business visitor in town.\n* *    \u2022\nMiss Margaret Cotter of Meadows is\nspending :he holidays with her parents.\n* *   *\nJ. A. Kennedy of Boswell spent\nNew  Year's  in   Nelson.\n* t    *\nJames Mannls. who haa spent the\npast few clays in town, has returned\nto  his   home   in   Trail.\nMr.    and    Mrs.    James    Kennedy   of\nEraser's Landing  spent  New  Year's in\nthe   city.\ni \u00ab   \u2022   *\n|     Mr. and Mrs. Alex Attree of Queen's\n' Bay were recent  visitors  to  Nelson.\nI *    *   *\nI     Mrs.   Martin   Kendrick   of   Rossland\nis a city visitor.\n* \u00bb   *\nR. R. Page of Robson paid a visit\nto town yesterday.\n* *    \u2022\nR. Thompson is in the city from\nKimberley.\n* as\nMiss Sylvia Price, Miss Helen Mills.\nJack Boyce and George Hancock motored to Bonnington Tuesday evening\nto attend the dance.\n\u2022\" '\u2022   i\nMr. and Mrs. Alex McDonnell of\nTrail are visitors- to the city, at tho\nhome of the former's parents. Observatory street.\nsee\nMiss   Isabelle    Innes    has    returned\nM.W YEAR'S FASHIONS\nfrom spending the holiday with friends\nin  Trail.\n* *   \u2022\nMiss Anna Payant hM returned from\na visit to her ulster, Mrs. E Word. In\nKimberley\n* \u2022    \u2022\nHarry CoLlim of Procter sprni the\nholiday   in  town.\n* \u2022   *\nW.  J.  Porter of Spokane  is  spending\na  few  days  In  Nelson   and  district.\n\u00bb    \u2022    \u2666\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Armstrong left\nyesterday for I visit to CaUfornU,\nafter which lli\u00bby will m;,ke their\nhome in Winnipeg.\nJ. Gallo of LardO arrived in town\nTuesday  from  CaJfar*]\n* *    *\nMrs. W. H. North and daughter\nMarlon, of Beattie, who have been on\na visit to Mr am) Mrs. J 8. Thompson at Kiisla, art*! veil in the <*)t\\\nyeaterday iiiornin-a to ,itt<nd tbe Hniiu-\nNew   Year's   dinner   dai'.rr   h;.-.t   evening.\nMiss Margery Smillie and Miss Jean\nColes visited at Procter yesterday with\nMiss Smillie's  father,  W.  Haip'- ..milll:-.\nDr.   and   Mi*.   H.   p.   Cum:*.*-.;:,\nSpokane   paid   b   (flail   to   V< ti ui   01 ii\nthe   New   Year\nQUEBEC SESSION\nOPENS ON JAN. 7\nNew   Ministers   to   Appear   in\nLower House; Prospective   Legislation\nQUEBEC, Jnn. 1 -Following on three\nlusty bye-election campaigns 'in which\n'he Quebec 'government, nf Ht>*l\nTaschercau was challenged by the new\nleader of the opposition ('a mil lien\nHoude. and came out victorimi-. the\nprovincial legislature will meet Tor its\niinnual session opening on January 7\nBye-elect Ions were held In Compfon.\nRichelieu and Montcalm.\nThe legislature will see the tin rod n*-\ntlon of two mlniesters new to their\nsurroundings. Hon. J. L. Herron. who\nholds the portfolio of agriculture, resigned his seat in the legislative council\nor upper house and successfully contested Montcalm. Hon. A. R, McMaster succeeds Hon. Jacob Nicol as provincial\ntreasurer, the former minislcr being now\nin the legislative council. He itnrv..r*>\nMr. N.icol's seat of Compton. Hon. J.E.\nOullette, Dorchester, makes lus how as\nminister without portfolio m the lowei\nhouse and Hon Narclsse Perodeau,\nformer lieutenant governor in the nau\ncapacity in the upper chamber. A new-\nspeaker will have to be chosn as Hon\nHector Laferte, incumbent of this rtff'fw\nat the last session, has been appointed\nminister, of colonization and fisheries.\nIt is thought T. D. Buchard. member\nfor S. Hyaclnthe, deputy speaker, will\nget this honor, while Joseph Cohen, who\nrepresent* -si Montreal scot, will be\nchosen as deputy speaker New face\namong the rank and file of member-.\nwill be Edouard Forti-n, who tits for\nBeauce, and J. C. A. Turcotte. Richelieu. Mr, Fort in succeeds J. llutuu**-\nFortter, elevated to the bench, and Mr,.\nTurcotte, J. B Lafrrnlere, who is now\nchairman of tlie farm loans board,\n< -tion will mark Camllllen\nHoude's first appearances in the legislature, as leader of the OppOSlllon, li\"\nsucceeds Arthur Sauve. who resigned\nthe leadership laat ipfinf.\nWhile no announcement on legislation likely to come up have appeared\nit is thought in political circles measures may be Introduced to make minor\namndments to the liquor law and\nchange the automobile law to make insurance hy owners compulsory. A commission has been sitting hearing evidence cm the status of married women\nand legislation may be based on its\nfinding.\nThere will be one vacancy in tN* lower house, .Huntingdon being without\nrepresentation owing to the death of\nAndrew Phllps.\nMISTOOK OWNER\nFOR HIRED MAN\nViolins   to   I'lirm   ol'   [Major\nStrange, Neai   Edmonton.\nAre Slranne  Lot\nJanuary Sales\nCommence This Morning\nFor Particulars See\nYesterday's Paper\nEDMONTON.   Ath.   Dec.   J I\u2014All   Vis |\nitors  Welcome'   'll   thfl   theme   taken   b] j\nKathaleen    Rcdmi n    Strata     In    tell .\ning   of   the   woes   tu   well   nn,   delight! .\nM    farm-wile    and    ,!ivoluiiiar\nat Fenn. She belna shrewd., i\nflattered, puts  all  aim sun- i\ndry tu her test, and extracts informa- ,\ntion   ol   one   kind   or   another   from\neveryone    that    eomee,\n\"Some    people    -.'-phi     lo    I h \u25a0\u25a0..     tH\ncause   we   hate\nin   Winning   prizes   iliai    we   m\u00abSl    tan.i\nin    some'1.in\"     l ..i;n       Lt\nso-caiiet,\"   \u25a0 in'.. man* fai nit\nthe   eld   com l  i\nquite taki i en they find thai \\\nwe arc merely leverage\nwho work h;i.r(i and  liv<   vei\nbut   wiio    t\nuya,\n\u25a0 in    i ..\u25a0     i i  ; I\n.   :'oi*.     #ht)\n.\nI \u25a0   '. ;\u25a0):(!      [tin\n' rat   toinded   \u25a0\n.around   looking   like   noi h*\n..iiie ti. \u25a0 *, \u25a0\u25a0 lei , i borne on the farm\nte*    wi.\n:     fin    MldCil   Bad     -\nin     motl     ihsrepi.: table     pants     and     :\u25a0\nliai thai bad long .since seen ita batter\ndays\nMISTAKI Si   IIHMIIV\n\"1 he    '  iltoi    de   ' nded    from    hli\ncar and   advaijcina   towards   the   ahabb;,\nworker, demai AM Ln b c indescanding\nton*. \"Hey my man! Oo Inside and\nicii  Major Strange that   I   wish  to see\nbilD' I i iv (Mil, -ur. ic-piini.icd mj\n;   \u25a0 \u25a0 ! \u25a0\ni . .\nm a; tlie back door, to emerge b\nmonmanl later fkam the tront, \"You\nwish to-sre me? I am Major strange\nThe i i.,i* \u25a0 ii and '-im',1 'ii o.f Uie\n., \u25a0   i\u00bbe wi U irnagMKfl   w<   have\nil    tip       t.iml.   ])'\"\"iple    Who\n[O   1        to   I\nthins    :- omotimee\n;,!.-     \u25a0 l.'.i\n11; \"n-r.  \u25a0 tM course,   the   nevar-\nol  ^all imen   *.\nt\\t      o flatter and  tl\n\"Tlii - another   ijuUe\ndinc.'-:n   i*.*>e of visitor on\nspend nine!'  time and effort  bin   who,\nl   tely,    :u*e    in    thc    minority.\nI .  pie who know somi thin\nof    tlie    really    wortliv,   ;ie    work    of\nBMd   produci \u25a0 n   w  are   i ryidg   I i  da\nwho   cams   mahil)    to\nUS    tljelr   \u2022'\u25a0\u25a0;'. Ice,    assistance    and    en-\ni oui igi men<      unlvei its\n(^Meagher's\n611 Baker Street,    Phone 200\n\u25a0-eminent officials, and all those\nWho an Interested in the sood of the\nagriculture of Canada. We have many\nwell-treaaurad and ticliRhtful mem-\noriea o fhoun spent in the entertaln-\n. ii n. iind enjoynient of the company\nol btiese people who inii! from different\nparti   of   the   world.\n'dome time ago, for Instance, a  very\nUistlngUllbed     remeseiitl live     of     '.r\\?i\nSoviet   came  to *ee  our  work\nand   made   voluminous   notes   on   our\nOl   piodui mii   sood  seed.  This\noffered  my  husband  a posl-\n:  .1   M   carry   on   the   same   kind   of\nwork   in   Russia.   The   salary,   however\ni bat   that   which   we   pay   to\nIhe humblest of our hired men. and we\nprefer   to   live   in   CM\nKINGSTON LOSES TWO\nHISTORIC BUILDINGS\n197 Kiddies of\nEx-Servicemen\nare Entertained\nNearly 200 kiddie- of ex-.service men\nwi vi- treated to a splendid time hy\n\u25a0 '.x.- Canadian Legion yesterday afternoon. After registering there, the 197\nkidiile-s marched to the Capitol theater\nwh\u00abr\u00ab they were treated to a matinee\nby  the  bagkm.\nFollowing the show, they were ush-\nerod hack to the Legion hall, to\nhave supper. After .Kipper each kiddle\nrt elved B present from a huge Christ-\ninns tree. Bach kiddie \"#aa also gtw-u\na bag of candy. James .Spencer took\nthe roir ot  B 'um  Claus\nFIRE  < \\\\ si> Ha,MM ham \\t.\\:\nBANCOR. Me., Jan. 1.\u2014Fire cf unci '(\u25a0nnined    origin    |ivactic;illy    destroy- t\ns ii   the   ihos   (iiuhngs  faottry   of   w. |\nGoodman   &    Son.    A    member   of    the\n[Irro    estimated    the    low,    including i\nI    machinery,  at  $25,000.\n\\VILUN<;l)<>.\\ IX WEST INDIES\nThis smart frock of transpnrent velverwftfeHlamted lilted and hlgb'wiiist\nrequires a moulded figure beneath lt to carry It smartly. Now that tha sll-\nhouettc no longer gives us entire freedom in our choice at fullneas, waist lines\npsrs become mora important.\nIRFACII   TALKIl:   TO   111;\nTR1F1>   IN    *H \\MU\nMONTREAL. Que.\u2014Quebec will be\nthe testing ground for French language \u25a0 talkie Adolphe Zukor. head of\nthe . Famous Players Company, announced in the course of an interview\nhere recently. Mr. Zukor antic ma ted\nfor it a sticces:-, which lead to the\nproduction of talkies 111 other languages,' SpaniMi pictures being trifd\nout   In, Mexico.\nHollywood,' Mr. Zukor said, will become even more the center ol the\npletufe Industry through the talkies.\nHe admitted that talkies tended to\nmake foreign lands more 1\nproduce their films, but ho stated\nthat no organltH-tion has developed\nanywhere that can compe'e with thnt\nof Hollywood ln the enormously technical matter of making ialkies. and he\npplnted out that, one able teachfctoal\nstaff can produce talkies In anv language simply by changing. the cast\nand  the  playwright.\nHis   Exiolleuoy   Vibcount   Willingtlon\u2122gf-verSoi---general   of   Canada,   photographer at   UominlcR,  Buiish   West   Indies, wiih two girls  In the old   native  cos-\niie island.    On Mi left is Miss Devenport and his right, Miss Chand\nHis excellency and  Lady  Willi oi   Ihe  West  indies  by\nsailing rrom Halifax tn Trinidad on tin* Lad'. Hawkins, visiting Bermuda and\nall the eastern Island* on thc way. 'Ihey -all] return to Canada early in the\nnew year by the Lady Drake from Bermuda, after travelling northward between\nJamaica and that .cloud by the Lady Rodmcy.\nKINGSTON, Ont. Jan. 1\u2014During\n1929 Kingston, the first capital of\nUpper Canada In  1793 and capital ol\nthe United provinces of Upper fUid\nLower Canada, 1841-1844, lost two\nof its oldest buildings, which were\nrazed to make way for gusollne stations, They were situated within\na block of each other on the city's\nportion of the Toronto-Montreal highway close to where old Fort Fron-\nenac wu built in 1673.\nThe oldest of the landmarks was\nan old frame building at the corner\nof Ontario and Princess streets, originally constructed on Carleton Island in the Upper St. Lawrence Rlv\ner. On this island Oen. Sir Richard\nHuldimand. then governor of Canada,\nhad established a shipyard and nevol\nand military station early In the\nAmerican Revolutionary War period\nRobert Macauly settled there and\nsupplied the BrltlBh commlstsarlat and\nHarrison   with   provisions.\nATter the w'ai; Cfarleton l)jland\nwaa ceded by the British to thc American Republic, and Mr. Macauly transferred his business to Kingston where\nhe became one of the original land\nowners. He had erected on Carleton\nIsland in 1870 or thereabouts 0\ndwelling house which structure he\nrafted over to Kingston\u2014a distance\nof 2,-j miles\u2014and rebuilt at the corner of Princess and Ontario streets\nwhere he carried on business and resided for years. This is the relic of\nthose war days which has now disappeared  after standing for  145 years.\nlh. other old Kingston building\nwhich has disappeared is the two-\nstory stone building on the southwest corner of Queen and Ontario\nstreets. On its front wall was a stone\nniviiiK the date of the building's erection in 1792, the same year in which\nSir John Simcoe held tho first Upper Canada Executive Council meet-\nin*-' In Kingston. This stone is being\npreserved. This old structure was a\nfamoua resort of the sailors and marines\nof the Brltlsah naval yard at Point\nFrederick who spent their money\nfreely,    mostly    for    liquors.\nThe old British dockyard, established\nal the time Of the War of 1812-1814\nbetween United States and Canada,\nIs now thc site of the Royal Military\nCollege of Canada. Tlie old store\ntavern saw Kingston established as\nVillage, town and city, and then had\nto give place to a station to supply\ngasoline to propel motor cars that\nrush along the highway over which\nlumbering stage coaches passed more\nthan  a   century   ago.\ni:\\dusn  Rl GOT  OOROW9\nTIIKOIOHOIT   CANADA\nEnglish Rugby appears to be Increasing its hold on the Canadian fans\nand 1930 already promises to be a\nbanner year for the sport which has\na firm grip In the Maritimes and\nBritish Columbia and a good and growing  following in Quebec and  Ontario.\n>-\nU ll\\ I IS A CHARLEY NORSK'.'\nA Charley horse Is a severe pain**\nsuffered by athletes. It may be de-t\nsscrlsbed as a sudden bunching of\nmuscles into a hard knot. The chaHey*-\nhorse is usually caused by the tearing,\napart of some fibers of the muscle t\naa a result of overstrain. A hemorrhaiKt\nln the muscles is produced, and the;\ninjuoy manifests as a swelling, ge-w-'*\nerally  attended  with  great  pain.\nNews from Paris heralds the adve-ni*\nof stripes for spring and done tn\nshirting silk crepes and even conttons,\nthey promise to be exceedingly popular.\nRelievi\n-  DODDS   v\nIKIDNEY^\n\\, PILLS J}\n,      HKlDNtV\n\u00abN_ hSH,,11%^. -***\u25a0\n'^\"ajaj^ajajafajaj\"ajijBjBf^aji|Byg^Bj'^pBja..\n\"BUILD a  C.\"\nPacific\nMilk\nAt\nChristmas\nTime\nThe inference is a fair one that\nPacific Milk is having a part in\nthe forthcoming festivities\nCooking and baking rises to\nenormous proportions in\npreparation for Christmas and\nthe additional demand now for\nthis good milk ie actually considerable.\nPacific Milk\nFactory   at\nAbbotsford,  B.C.\nPasteurization\nWhat a boon to humanity is this wonderful process of pasteurization that\nenables young and old to\nuse freely, with absolute\nconfidence. Milk is Nature's* beat food, drink\nplenty of it.\nL\nCurlew Creamery Co* Ltd.\ntram Buttet Milk\nAll Ptrfcrt PurtMrtWMl Products\n \u25a0\"    ~~\nTSfg$ix~\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS   THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2, 1930\nTOtfiUST BUREAUX\nTO BOOST CANADA\nOr-ffrtiBaiion  Formed  to Coordinate  Canadian   Tourist\n\u25a0 and  Publicity Bodies\nUONTRJEAL, Qua. Jan. 1.\u2014Co-ord-\n'\u25a0f'Virr s\\\\ all activities ot tourist .and\npuHUait? bodies la Canada from onM\nto asms*, a the object of the Canadian\nAaoeltUflb oi Tourist and publicity\nBuretMR which waa organised here recently under toe Presidency of Hon.\nJustice Arsenault, Judge of the Supreme\nCourt ai Prince Edwkrd Island and\nformer premier' of that province. The\n4tV*aia\u00bbtlon, which will seek, a Do-\na charter, was formed during a\nof the anm-al convention of\nconvention and publicity associations of Canada held here. Col R. H.\nWebb, newly elected Mayor of Winnipeg,\nwife chairman of the organisation meet-\nOfchef officers elected Included tho\nfollowing: Oeorge McNomee. Montreal.\nsecretary - treasurer; vice - presidents\u2014\nOeorge I. Warren. Victoria, B. C c. C.\nHele. Toronto and R. H. Webb, Winnipeg; Directors: Charles H. Webeter, Vancouver: X. R. Powell, Toronto: J. L.\nBoulanger, Quebec; J. D. Black, Pred-\nertewn, N. \u00bb.; P. C. C. Lynch. Otuwa;\nC. B. Foster of the Canadian Pacific\nRailways; H. H. Melanson bf the Canadian National Railways; C. c, Bonter\nof tbe Canadian Steamship Lines; A. J.\nCampbell, Halifax: 8. P Challoner, Sydney, N. a.; C. W. Honey. Ste. Agathe,\nQue.:   W.   H.   Oouldlng.   Saint   John,\nLogan & Bryar\nMEMBER*\nPrivate Win\nSTOCKS     BOND*     roTTo\nGRAI>\nHew fork, Montreal ana Vtu\ncouver Stock Exchanges, Chlcag\nBoard of Trade, Winnipeg Oral.\nbohangs and othat laadlne \u2022*\u2666\nchanges\n\u2022IpPICEa\nfeaoouvei    apoKam   tnn   saau.\ntt. B.; U. Col. O. P. C. Pouaette, Win-\nnlpeg; Bruce Mc&elvta, Victoria and\nH. B. Shaw, Winnipeg, also representatives to bo selected In Alberta and Saskatchewan\nIt wm decided to hold tbe next annual convention ln Winnipeg on the invitation of Mayor Webb, at a date to\nbe selected  by the executive.\nResolutions were adopted at the session of the convention oail ing upon\nthe Dominion government to advertise\nCanada more extensively ln Europe and\nthe United State*, urging the various provincial governments to pass uniform legislation against distribution of\nunauthorized tourist Information, and\nasking the Dominion government to\nmake it a national policy to complete\nthe highway west from Saut Ste. Marie\nto Schrleber, Ontario and the Ontario\ngovernment ln conjunction with the\nDominion government to complete the\nhighway from KenOra to Port William,\nthug completing the transcanada highway to the prairies.\nWOULD ESTABLISH\nFAMILY RELATIONS\nCOURT, MONTREAL\nMONTREAL, Que.. Jen. 1.\u2014Before the\nCatholic Women's League R. L. Calder,\nK, C, emphasized tbe advisability of\nintroducing a Pamlly Relations Court\nln this city. Such a court should have\na judge with added conciliatory powers\nwho would hold .sittings ln bis own\nroom without lawyers and without publicity. He Should be able to shame the\nconsort* Into making up their deffer-\nences wherever possible and, where' this\nwas impossible, he should be \u00bbb'*> to\nhelp them effect a decent and dignified\nagreement. This court should be a\nplace where children would be protected\nfrom participating In sordid scenes,\nwhen they would be nurtured ln the\nlove of both parents, and where they\nmight become wards of the court, he\nurged.\nThe Judga who would sit ln the court\nhe proposed, would have to be a combination of Judge Cusson, Blac;kslone\nand St. Francis of Assist. They would\nhave to be consciods of the sacr^iotal\ncharacter of their work and be chosen\nprimarily for getttlemanllness and their\ngentleness. Knowledge of tbe law would\nbe of minor importance for the cases\nthey would bare to deal with would be\nalmost entirely matters of equity, gentlemanly feeling and decent conduct.\n\"If we had such Judges one of the\ngreatest scandals ln the administration\nof our Justice would disappear.\" Mr.\nCalder   affirmed.\nThree Killed in This Crash\nThe Royal Bank of Canada\nGeneral Statement IU__M)   30th November, 1929\nLIABILITIES\nCplnl Stock T*U up\t\nRaum Fun,\t\nBalance of f-rnflta carried forward\nIU.Mt.MIM\n4,974.191.1,\nfK,NMM.W\nIMaUan^a lu.la.mad  \t\nrartdand No. \u00bb\u00bb fat 11 % per annum', payablr lad December,\nw\u00bb r.\t\nIonia mil;, payable Ind December, 1,1*   \t\nSJM74.lM.lt\n14,941.44\nI.M4.179.49\nWI.13J.lt\n      4\u00bb,JM,I1I4\u00bb\nnt rnterra.\nOsapoalu not tearlnt fii'terw             IIM,7\u00abT,mtt\nDafMxatta bssarina lmcrrat. isi, ludlo. In.ereat accrued to\ndate of St...men.         5tl,3W,47t.lll\nTotal Desaoalta  I771.\u00ab7.768.M\nsee of tha tank In circulation  4.I.949.M0.94\nunder the Finance Act     1S.MMM.M\nlaacee due to other Hankn in Canada  1,M9,899.19\nancea due tu Bank, and Hanking (airreapondenta elac-\nMir\u00bb than ln Canada  *U\u201e, J12 J->\nParable      J.H9.M2.1I\nUltra not Included In Ihe foregoing  991,711.4,\nKJ.JJfcET\nttses mt Credit Ouitttandlnjl\n.4M.841.3j\n.648,778.68\nII.MI,442.741.64\nASSETS      e\n<M sad SubsMlsry Coin \u00abn [hand  fU.47l.2M.tt\nAmnion Not- on hand  38,412,271.28\njEEoatt la ttM Central Gold KmrtM  l2,WS,Mt.M\nVht-Md States snd other ForHgn Currencies  II.B36.5I2.7.S\ns \u2022* other Canadian Banks\t\n\u25a0 on other Bank*\t\n\u25a0ncoa du* by other Bank* in Canada\t\nJancee due hy Bank* and Banking <*orrrtpoiidentii elsewhere than In (jtfiada   \t\n_jlnlon   and   fro tin-rial   C;u?ernmeot   Securities    (not\n\u2022seceding market valuei ,\t\nrMlan Municipal Securttlen and BritUh. Ptjrelftn and\n(ablonlal Publk N*c*iritte\u00ab other than Canadian   (not\n\u2022   esreedtnt market valui-      \t\ngbaUwar ana other Bonds.  Drhenturra and   Stocks   (not\n__   esceeditig market *alue)\t\ndill and Short   mn cirrfdlnil thirty days) Loans In Canada\nou Bond*, Debi-nturea and Storks and other Securities\nai a sufficient marketable value lo cover\t\n0|1I aad Short   not eiceedlna thirty days) .Loans elaewherv\nduo la Canada on Bonds. I>ebenturea and Stock, and\nH   other Securities of a auftlcient  marketable value to\nrH,7|4,484.66\n3.832,753.23\n28.,(68,236. tU\n785.*\n33,7ia,.W.M\n%, 563.143.4*\n17.4M,t.H.\u00ab\n15,4*8,621.43\n66,175,557.25\n(hsrraat Loans and Inacounta In Canada  leas rebate of\n\u25a0    Interest   after inaklnii full provlaion for all bad and\nI    doubtful debts  *3*4,e55.3U.t7\nQttraai Loans snd Discount! elsewhere than In Canada\nW (leas rebate of Interest   After making full provision for\n_   all bod and doubtful debts     147,515.411.65\nNfm-Curr\"\" Loans, estimated loss provided for         2,23.1,744.46\nk Premises at not more than cost, less amount* written off .,.\t\nI aetata other tban Bank Premises\t\nigee so Real Estate sold hy the Bank\t\nIll ilea of Customer* under Letters of Credit as per contra\t\n* of snd Loans to Controlled Companies\t\nrit with the Minister for the purposes ol ths Circulation Fund\t\n\" * \u25a0 not Included In the foregoing\t\n8I4.M3.1S\n.407.055.61\nM2.766.5I\n,387.2^8.92\n,648.778.68\n,8l3.ie*.47\n,6M.eoo.*e\n663.J63.67\ntl.AII,442.741.69\nn S. HOLT.\nM. W. WILSON,\n< -metal Manafter\nC B. NKiLL,\nVks-Prosldestt and M\u00abn\u00abtln\u00ab Director.\nAUDITOM' CERTIFICATE _______________________________\n_% tmi Sb*bwouiOs, Tim Royal Bank or Canada:\nWe have examined tbe above statement of Liabilities snd Anaeti at 30tfc Nciv-emto, 19S9, with\ntk* *0\u00b0Ms and Ssccounts of The Hoyal Bank of Canada at Head oflic and with th^ certified returns\nMa the stomnckas. Wa hsve verified the cask snd NCuriUes at Ilesd < ifflee at the cIom of the Bank'*\n\u25a0Ml Mr, and durint the year w* .-.(tinted the cash snd examined tbe aeeuritiea st several of the iro-\n| Ws kav* obtsinad all tb* information aad explanation* thst we .hsve required, and in our opinion\n_tm baaaaction* of the Bank, which have com* under Our notice, have been within tbe powers of tlie\nfiok. The above statement Is in our opinion properly drawn up so ss to dlscluae the true conditioo\naftbs Bonk as st Wh November. 1929. sad it la aa shows by the book* of the Bank.\n, JA8.0. ROSS, GJU_M \t\n\u00ab of P. S. Rosa * Sou. I Auditors.\na, W. GARTH THOMSON. C.A.,      ,\nsbrArsal. Caaada, 24th Dssember. 1928. of Peat. Msrwiek. Mitchell A Co.]\nPROFIT AND LOSS ACCOUNT\nOo.)\nThree persons met instant death on aeeident occurred. It is thought that earner.* No. 3 is Mrs, Hannah Red-\nChristmas Day when the sedan in which Morrison did not hear the warnin, t.e.1 ^f ^SoMX^Ztrfli\nthey were ri.ttng struck a O.P.R. tram as he drove right In front of the speeding ^om w(jre med No - -^ ^\nat the Islington, Ont, crossing. Robert train. Picture No. 1 shows the level | wretkage of the automobile strewn along\nMorrison, 35, of Islington, Had called crossing at Islington, where the accident the right-of-way for 200 yards. No. 6\nfor his mother-in-law, Mrs. Hannah happened. The automobile in the photo- is Edwin, sixteen-year-old son of Mr.\nRedmond, and his brother-in-law John graph is standing where Morrison's car Morrison, whose life was saved because\nRedmond to take them to his home for' was struck. No. 2 shows the Morrison he preferred to stay home and skate\nChristmas dinner They had been on home in Islington where the widow and rather than go with his father, uncle and\ntheir way only twenty minutes when the | five children are left without a wage- grandmother.\t\nBig Strides in\nPower Development\nSite  at  Historic   Chats   Falls\nRapidly Acquiring Changed\nAppearance\nrC\u00ab.i\n71\n:\u2022 of ttoit and Loss Account, 39th November, 1428 .\nfts for (Im ye^r. after deducting chart** of management.\noecruod Interest on deposits, full .provision for all bad\n*hd tfoubtful debt* snd rebate of Interest oa un-\ntaatarorf bill*\t\n\u00ab,3*l,tW,7l\nt9.see.ii3.e6\nAPPROPRIATED A.S FOLLOWSt\nfftfeadsNos. IM. 147, IkX and 1*9 at 12% par aoaam....\nkm of 3 % to .Shareholders\t\nBAi^nHao to Osflk-er*' Pension fund\t\nirlatton for Bank Premises\t\n\u2022 for .Dominion Government Tares, includln* Tax on\n__  \u00abh Note Circulation   \t\nsaawne* of Proit and loe* riurlod forward\t\nt4,tU,9U.7t\n499.IM.J9\nja9.990.fle\nei9.9H.eo\n1.574.151.14\nOTTAWA.  Qnt.  Jan.  5\u2014Outside  the\nconfines of Viotoria Island, a rock-\nbound, and hea.vUy wooded strip of\nthe land In the Ottawa river near\nFitzroy Harbor, there is little idea\nof the . gigantic strides being taken\nIn the development of what Is to\nbe one of the largest power projects\nin Ontario or Quebec. Only the Quebec\nend of the work has been authorized\nbut the Ontario power area has been\naurveyer and guide approved. As a matter of fact the whole power system\nat the Chats rapids is obviously\nanticipated, as evidenced by the stability of the work already done on\nBoth sides of the provincial boundary\nline in Ottawa. The development on\nthe Quebec side of the river is being\napproched from the Ontario side where\nall work is of a permanent character.\nThe loos tion of the poj-ect is\nabout   16   miles  northwest   of   Ottawa.\nTo the people of eastern Ontario\nspecial interest attaches to the pl\u00bbce\n.because of its historical associations,\nleading back to the days when the\nHudson's Bay Company operated the\ntrading post in that vicinity and\nstill further back to the day that Samuel de Champ.|-tn liscended irom\nthe lower reaches of the Ottawa to the\nlevel of the Rapides des Chats, a few\nhundred yards from the site where will\nnow f-iand the spacious power house\nand there erected a red cedar cross\nproclaiming \"the land and the waters\nas the possession of Prahce.'\n'Pour hudred men are now at work;\na right of way has been cut through\nthe- woods for the C. N. R. on the\nOntario side and today the steel is\nlaid to the Quebec boundary; huge\ncranes unload the great pieces of\nBritish Columbia Fir and Cedar; tons\nof rock have been blasted and removed for the right of way, then came\nthe grading gang and immediately\nfollowing them were the men with\nthe steel. The crib work of thc railway la to be utilized ln part as the\ncofferdam and that structure is being constructed for .several hundreds\nof yards, extending almost to Mohr's\nIsland, which le the centre of the river and will ultimately be the centre of the work. With the completion\nof tbe cofferdam construction of the\npermanent concrete dam nearly three\nmiles ln length, and the power house,\nwill be commenced, It is not anticipated the project will be completed\nfor three years.\nTo create a head capable of developing 250,000 horsepower it will\nbe necessary to raise the water from,\nthe basin below _the Chats rapids\nto the level of the lake, a raise of about\n17 feet, but as there ls nothing but\nforests and rocky shores surrounding\nthe area, property damage is not anticipated except on the right-of-way\nof the 0. N. R. on the Ontario side;\nwhether the railway \u25a0 wili ue reconstructed to curve away from the lake\nor a retaining wall built for considerable distance has not yet been decided\nupon.\nCHINESE WILL PAY\nGOOD   PRICE   FOR\nHANDSOME   SOAP\nTORONTO, Ont., Jan. 1\u2014Much Interest was excited by an address recently delivered In this city by Miss\nAlice Brethom of the West China\nUniversity Union, Chengtu, when the\nlady declared thnt 20 years ago Chinese girls had to be bribed by presents\nof fine toilet soap to study the catechism.\n\"Saturday Night\" thinks it would\ntake more than this bribe to induce the Canadian girl of today to\nspend much time or any on catechism. So far as fondness for toilet soap\nis concerned, the Chinese girl is merely keeping pace with her brother in\nthis country. Before the war, a woman\nwho is very fond of the finer varieties of toilet soap went into a\nToronto drug store to buy a cake of\nher favorite soap. Noticing a soap\nbox beautifully lined with yellow satin,\nshe asked the clerk the price. \"Three\ndollars.\"  waa the  reply.\n\"Surely there is no one in Toronto who will pay that price for a\ncake of soap.\" \"Some actress passing\nthrough the city may buy it\u2014or a\nChinese laundryman will come along.\"\nTrie customer expressed curiosity con-,\ncernlng the Chinaman's weakness for\nthis kind of luxury.\n\"Do you know.\" said the clerk,\n\"Chinese laundry-men are the best\ncustomers for the himiest-prlced soaps?\nI'm saving that yellow satin box to\nshow a Chinese customer of mine\nwho will certainly hand over three\ndollar*   for   it.\nCanada Still\nin Midst of\nProsperity\nAs we look ahead into 1930 the following important considerations suggest\nthemselves, .says Tlie Financial Post.\n1. The credit situatiun is less strained\nFinancing by bond Issues will be facilitated by chea.per money rates and\nbuilding programmes will be stimulated.\n2. The trend of prices promises to be\nmoderately downward but, Inventories\nare In good shape and no wholesale\nor enforced liquidation of merchandise\nis called for. The chief frozen inventories in the country are ln used automobiles, where the situation is rapidly\nimproving because of the curtailment\nof production schedules by the automobile companies, and ln grain. The ultimate trend tn grain prices ls likely to\nbe upward but ln tne meantime the\nslow movement is a definite barrier\nto business improvement. *\n4. Prices of most securities seem to\nbe down to a reas;nably yield basis and\nwhile no early resumption of the bull\nmarket is ln sight further breaks should\nbe moderate ln extent and restricted to\nthose securities that have not been\nfully liquidated\n6. Generally speaking, people are prosperous. Companies and individuals have\nconsolidated the major portion of their\ngains made during the long period oi\nForeign Capital\nin Canada Is Now\nOver Six Billions\nWISHES MARRIED\nWOMAN HAVE RIGHT\nFILE   HOMESTEADS\nINTEREST KEN\nDl CANADA NOW\nHas Now Become 'Our  Lady\nof Export1 to Britain's\nPeople\nDuring the pant two months, a new\nauu nuuu.il ui-*i*_*fc u_ t^mimi, iias\n\u2022wuui   up   iii   no__.\u00ab\u00bb__u.     it.vcr   oeiofe\nUrn-a iulic UwOU ou UluCi* ill li_e Of._u**-U\nUtt.\u00bb> iJ.%Mti muuu. .ue iMUasvvi'iby turn\n1am.uum.ci Ui uounutt. . c\u00bbu \u2022*>\u00bb neluwii\nit. 1\/iuoo.i, v^*ikUHun*ij-uvrii tnuwr ui ine\n__.ji_.ci.i-\/  s*m.tmmt~-iiiv, oa uuiiuuu. ___i#., in\nUu    Hi MI.IV    IU    1,110    r UKUIUUU     COo_     1 Uf-\nUUUt\nnt, toe moment, Canada le the most\ntttiA,uu tkuuuk, wu-iw* iu me cuiiuucicttti\nUtlU    IMMMiUiiU    tilUCB   Oi    JlAJUUUU.\n\"j>ua tt-muui* Holt Muuireu irum the\nuuib-cu OMkbcs to txuittu*. iu\u00ab ligurea\nui   piuo^vi.i,\/   u.at  nam)   s-uecu puoi_\u00bbued\n_u u.w. oiimuu riAi*m.>.x utive ueen\nutuiMiMU iitfiut*, uu. -iuieriCtui,\n'_i i um> give a wcmu u> tue wise, I\nwouiu say ..mi, any iittuauiiui company,\nwun lame aBwets out neeuiug more capi-\nUu,    u\/hui    uuuMiii    mt    u\u00bb_si.iu    beveitti\nLiuiuB over uy \u00aboaiiib ior lt in i-uuuon.\n\"ao uie iarm-ii niiuu, Ottuaua is no\nlon-_.tr \\.ur i_uuy oi me sOuu-ws'. Tue\niti,v-.ug imittoe is now uunruwn. Can-\nau\u00bb uwus ucuuuie 'our utuy oi tne kx-\n.puiui. inin in nuw wr tue urst time\na wiu\u00abMtyic\u00bbu upj_i.<. iu nun ui tue earning  **. nvr auu  uu. nig  power  ol   tne\n^UllalUlUll   pv-upie.\"\nMl_;AdUiU-\u00abo liuvi^JN TO\ni1 luii i win iii, i'j__mjfUi4\nQUEBEC, Que., Jan. 1\u2014Measures of a\nnatuie oiiKiiitti va tins coatiuem aimed\nat ine e_.teijnination in tne province\nof Quebec of tne aread wnite piague\niittvu.uveu ueciut-a uyuu by tne provincial government louowing detailed study\nuy nun. AvuHunoe ixiviu, -Tuvmciai bec-\nlenuji, auu tne neaas of tne provincial\nnusuiuu bervice. ine new project aims\nto Ktnue at tne very root of tne.evlf\nuy a pwicy ot removing irom tuoercu-\nmr-niiuten nomas cniiuren not yet at**\niiicwm wun tne disease, aud placing\ntnem in lamuies in tnoue parts ot the\nrurai secnous oi tne province oest suited ior tne weiiare of tne cnnoren.\nTut minister nas been quietly working\nout nis plan, ana mere piauea in 'reue4j\nouuue uuuuviy, tne iana oi tne i_auren*\nuaii muuutuiui., iiitie cniiaren in lo dlf-\nferent lamiues. The results are such\nbuttb wux i_i.e-n,ion in nuw to launcn tne'\np.uu   in a  Dig  way.\nine provincial Health officers, working it.ri.eiy turuugh tue numerous antt-\nouolicuhu- uispensaries scattere^_\nturuuHiiuut the province, will locate famines in wmch tnere is tuberculosis.\niu mei. sucn lamiliea are already largely\nknown, since tree treatment is given\nciiem at tne dispensaries and by the\npuysicians and nurses attached to the\nui&pcnsaries.\nHAND HIU^S, Alta., Jan. 1 .\u2014The\nright of married women to fib ou\nhomesteads was a live topic at the\nrecent gathering of farm women held\nhere. This was brought up because\nseveral  women from this district, were\ndesirous  of  going to  the  Peace  River      ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nj     #      -m,    xh        ti   ctmntry and wished to take up home- I    111  for only a lew days, Mrs. J. W.\nan   estimate   made   for   The   nnanciai   8teads with their husbands.   At present [ Harrltt,   Mill  street,  died   at   about  2\nForeign investmelnts in Canada have\ngone  over  the  $6,000,000,000  mark  for\nivitur.. j. vvaUAAtti-iT\nulcsi LN iXi-l-SON\nPost Business Year Book 1930\nA9 of January 1.-1930, n preliminary i have this right    ^^ hafl been ft mBit:\nonly   unmarried   women   and   widows ' u cioca   this  morning   .\nestimatp  places these  at   $6,146,709,000\ndivided as follows:\nUnited States  $3,645,220,000\nBritish      3,253.156,000\nOther          248,333,000\n$6,146,709,000\nThe total compares with $5,872,343,000\nthe preliminary estimate made by Tlie\nFinancial Post as of January 1, 1929,\nwhich has been revised in the light of\nthe further data secured.\nOne year ago these investments were\ndivided as follows:\nUnited     States     $3,384,736,000\nBritish  2,239,817,000\nOther        247,740,000\nOf   the   total  foreign  Investment   in\nCanada\nter   of   agitation  among   rural   women\nfor   a   long   time,   and   the   president   home\nstates   that  from  letters  she   had  re- j  ___'\ncelved from thc Dominion government,      \t\nshe   had  every  hope  that   this matter\nmight   be  righted  soon.\nBesides her husband, Mrs. Harrltt is\nsurvived by several children away from\nTakes a Rap at\nSharpshooters in\nCanadian Mining\n  John E. Hammell,  one  of the fore-\n59  per cent ls now American   most figures in Canadian mining devel-\n37 per cent British, and four per cent\nfrom other countries.\nTen years ago, January I, 1320, these\n.percentages were: Tjnited Btates, 49;\nGreat Britain, 46; and other countries,\nfive. The total wealth of Canada including our Investments abroad) Is estimated\" at $31,450,000,000 for January\n1. 1930. Foreign Investments in Canada are thus equal to about 19.5 per\ncent of our total wealth.\nTlie rate of foreign Investment has\nbeen greatly acelerated in the last four\nyears The average annual net increase from 1920 to 1926 was $96,000,*\n000. During 1926-1929, it has been\n$208,000,000.\nIn spite of the huge increase in foreign lnv;estments\u2014$833,000,000 in four\nyears\u2014the relative proportion of foreign to domestic capital as a whole has\nnot  increased. \u2022\nCanadians remain the chief Investors\nin this country's development. For every\nthousand dollars of foreign money in\nopment, who has the Flin Flon and\nHowey mines to his credit, and who\nlaunched the first big .aerial exploration\ncompany in Canada, believes that the\ntime has come to drive the \"thieves\nand crooks\" out of Canadian mining.\nIn an interview with the Financial\nPost, Mr, Hammell nays:\n\"I wish to cast no reflection upon\nany member of the brokeraga business\nwho is carrying on a legttlma'.e business, but the time has come when the\ncrooks and thieves ln that profession\nshould be given warning to keep their\nhands off legitimate mining enterprise.\nThe men who are bucketing shares,\nwhatever name they give lt, and killing\nlegitimate enterprises are deserving of\nno conslderfatlon. They are developing the north into a vast flnaclal\ndesert, when I set what has happened\non the market end of mining finance\nI burn up.\"\nSi Mr. Hammell points out that various brokers have gone short of Howey\nfor   shares   eo   a   total   greater   than\nvested  during   1926-29  Canadians  have | ^   landing   capital   of   the   corn-\nput  ln  $2,145\nAt the present time Canadians control\n65 per cent of the capital invested ln\nthis  country,  apart from  land.\nComplete estimates, detailed as to\nclasse of investment, etc., will appear\nIn The Financial Post Business Tear\nBook, 1930, to appear ln about ten\ndays.\nThe   purchase   of  \u00bbgJ'aJOTpt^rt\u00a3j' prosperity that the country has expert\n\u00bb\u00bb,S$\u00bb,.PM\u00ab\nRESERVE FUND\n\u25a0ftkum at cw4it, Jfeh No-r*mb\u00abr, !\u00ab_\u2022\t\nJMMilMaon \u00abw capital atock\t\nWsmsm. et <te*t. Wth Not\u2014bsr, W\u00bb \u201e.\u201e - \"\nMotttnal. Mth DwmU. If*.\niwwao\nS,H\u00ab.*MM\ntw,Mfl, ta.e\n*\t\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company of Canada, Ltd\nOffiot. smelting i_d Btflnlnc DmnaMBt\nXBAIL.   BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\ni ot Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores\nof Gold, Silver. Copper* Pig Lead and Zinc\nfrom private owners, ^^^^^^^^^\nthe development on both. sioe_ oi the\nboundary line and the equipment of\nthe immense power house wi.i mean\nan. expenditure by the Hydro-Electric\ncommission of Ontario and the Royal\nSecurities corporation of Quebec of\nsomewhat between $12,000,000 and\n$15,000,000.\nWould \"Extend Poll\nTax to the Ladies\nVICTORIA, Jan. 1\u2014While he disagrees with the principle of the poll\ntax. Aid. Angus Maclnnis suggest* that\nlf the principle ls right for application\nto men lt is equtally right for women.\nHe offers this as a suggestion in lieu\nof the tax proposed by Hon. Joshua\nHinchliffe as a means of relieving the\nfinancial situation ln regard to education  in British Columbia\/\n\"Women have assumed eo man;\nOf the prf-fYnativig -n men. Why not\nextend to them the poll tax? Tbat is\nwhat the government would like to do,\nI  imagine,  and  it  seems  to  ma  they\nl_M**Tnnt-\nLoss of Lawson\nAdded to Sea\nSuperstitions\nBOSTON. January 1.\u2014Last Friday the\nthirtenth marked the twenty second\nanniversary of the loss of the Thomas\nW. .Lawson, the only seven masted\nschooner ever built. She was designed\n. , by B. B. Crownlnshleld of Boston and\n6. Major plans for the development of 1 DUlIt  by  the  p^ Rlver  shlpbuildnlg\nthe country's natural resources have not' - \u2014 - \t\nbeen altered materially by the recession\nin business and security prices.\n7. There ls a greater inclination to\nwork for rather than gamble for prosperity.\nAll this suggests that Canada is still\nin the midst of the long term upswing in business and that the recent\nrecessions are of a temporary nature.\nNineteen thirty, more than any other\nyear since the war, will be, for business concerns and investors alike, very\nmuch what each one wants to make lt.\nenced.\npany. Howey, he said, is a good\nIs a twice as good proposition as\nhammel suggests that invesors find\nthe money somehow to take up their\nstock. This will, he savs, bring the\nmost efective remedy to b^ar\"\nPetter\nOil Engines\nCan be had in most convenient sizes for any purpose.\nS, 8, 13, and 18 H.P. dingle cylinder engines are suitable for\nblowers, fans, electric lights,\npumps,    holstt,   etc,\nl.n r iter   multi-cylinder   sizes   for\nen m pressors, generators and et\/\\\nWe carry all sizes In atock to\n170 a P.\nDistributors for B. C\nB.C. Equipment Co.,\nLtd.\n611 Baker,\nNelson\n557 Howe St.\nVancouver\nM N     UAIIIl.M-     IN     lUll.AMl\nSun bathing has taken the fancy of\nwater .bathers at coustal resorts near\nlAiblln, Ireland, to such an extent this\nseason that lt is a common sight\nto see hundreds of both sexes and all\naged on the sands enjoying the beneficial rays of Old Sol. Bulls are worn\ndown to the waist by men. but women\nstill conservative in their bathing ault\ntastes, have to be content to let\nilr costume* dry before tbey take\nteia ma titta.\nCompany of Quincy, ln 1901.\nThe Thomas W. Lawson cost about\n$250,000 and Just before her loss her\nowners valued her at $300,000. She\nwas 375 feet long, fifty feet beam and\ndrew twenty three feet. The masts\nwere designated fore, main, mizzen,\nmldle, Jigger, spanker. Total spread\nof sail was 40,617 square feet.\nAfter three years as a coal carrier\nfrom Boston to .Southern ports she\nwas charted by a Philadelphia oil company which unshipped her topmasts\nand used her as an oil barge between\nPort Arthur, Texas, and northern ports.\nFinally her topmasts were replaced and\nshe cleared as a regular cargo vessel\nfrom Philadelphia for London with a\ncargo of gas-oil.\nOff the Scllly Island she encountered\na gale and the capiam, wRn utue or\nno room to manoeuvre, dropped anchor to await a moderation oi ine wind\nand sea. But the gal\u00ab Increased. At\nnight the Lawson's lights disappeared\nand in the morning she wae found bottom up. A Friday the 13th traced?\nthat Mrved to strengthett the super-\n....\u2014 ^ .*-. -~\nHavana\nMoved!\nWe are now in our new Building\nat\n320 VERNON ST.\nNelson, B. C.\nYou are invited to visit us at jour convenience. By January 15th a full parts service will\nbe in operation. \"Caterpillar\" Tractor and Equipment will be on display and an expert mechanic\nwill give you every assistance.\nMORRISON TRACT0R&\"EQUIPMENT EO.,LIMITED\n\u25a0\n _\n_\u2014____\n\u25a0\n\u2014\u2014.-\t\nTHE NEISON DAILY NEWS   THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2, 1930\nPsge Seven\nanchester  City-Sheffield Qame Ends at Three- All\nICKBURN AND\nBOLTON TEAMS\nWIN_BAnLES\ndham Athletics Swamp Brom-\nwich   Albion   by   Five-\nNothing: Score\n1,800 SEE ONE\nBRITISH  CONTEST\n[>liday    Spirit    Prevails    at\nFooter Battles; Weather\nDull\n'NDON, Jan. l\u2014A holiday spirit\nvailed among football clubs in Engirt today and reckless scoring marked\n\/number of soccer games. Blackburn\njvers beat Mlddlesborough by seven\nWis to nothing while Bolton Wan-\nfsrs Piled up seven to Hudderfleld\n.Wn's one. Manchester City and\nteffleld Wednesday, tied for the first\nVision leadership on points, with\nje Sheffielders having the edge on\nial average, split the .points at Man-\nLester before 60,800 spectators, each\n)le getting three goals. In the sec-\nid division, the pace setters. Oldham\nhletic, crushed West Bromwlch Al-\nln, the Athletic getting away with\n\u25a0e  goaU to which  the   Alboln  made\nreply.\n\u2022 Oames were played  ln  dull  weather\nnd  on heavy pitches.\n'There   was   Uttle   between   the   two\n'rst    division   leaders    for    the   first\n\\.\\t    hpur.      Subsequently     Sheffield\nWednesday   pressed   hard   and   Burgess\ncored   from   a   good   center   by   Tait.\nManchester    responded    with    a    goal\nImost  Immediately  but   lt  was called\nack  for off-side,    Allan   scored  Shef-\nield's   second   tally   Just    before   the\n(lterval.     Sheffield    got    their    third\noal, through  Seed  ln   the  fifty-ninth\nInute    of   the   game.      When    Man-\nheater   City   looked    to   be   a   well-\nten   team   they   came   to   life   with\nlllant  suddenness.    Brock  scored  on\npenalty,   Marsh well   added   a  -second\n1, and McMullen equalled all within\nfew minutes near the  end.\nBolton   Wanderers    opened    strongly\ngainst Huddersfield Town, Butler scor-\nwlthin six  minutes   and   fr-llowing\nip   with   second   and    third    counters\nthe   nineteenth   and    twenty-third\nminutes. All Butler's goals were made\non centers by Cook. Soon after the\nturn-round Mangall scored for Huddersfield, but Cook promptly responded.\nThen Blackmore netted twice, while\nOlbson   scored   Bolton's   seventh.\nBlackpool refound their form in\ntheir second division match against\nBury, which they won by the one\ngoal scored. Bury attacked at the\noutset and the Blackpool missed an\neasy chance. There was no scoring ln\nthe first half. Pour minutes after\nresumption Ritchie scored on a beautiful, oblique, lob. Bury rallied towards\nthe end, but ihe Blackpool defence\nprevailed.\nCharlton Athletic won a fine contest\nfrom Wolverhampton Wanderers by 3-0.\nAt the beginning Charlton attacked\nvigorously, but finished badly. The\nWolvftthampton right wing was dangerous but when the ball went to\nthe other end Lennox scored on a\nheader. In the early stages of the\nsecond half the Wolves once more\nlooked like scoring, but lt was not\nto be. Crook netted for Charlton,\nbut lt was declared off-side, Lennox\ngot Charlton's second goal by pass by\nHorton, Darlington, Joined the heavy\nscorers when they registered eight\ngoals agalns South Shields, whom\nthemselves got three. Darlington missed a number of chances before Lay-\ncock scored, a few minutes later Barkus\nequalized and then Hill and Wright\nscored for Darlington. Barkus after\na clever run scored again. Laycock\nnetted then Matthewson for South\nShield then Hopkinson, Laycock and\nHill beat the South Shields goalie in\nquick succession and Hill scored Darlington's elgthth Just as the whistle\nblew. The teams are members of the\nNorthern section of the third division.\nCANADIENS GO\nINTO THE LEAD,\nINTERNATIONAL\n12,000 Fans See Canucks Beat\nHawks in Overtime;\nScore 3-2\nCANADIAN JUMPER TO COMPETE\nIN U. S. A.\nVICTORIA CUBS\nGIVE SEATTLE\nGOOD BEATING\nScore Is 5-1, and Is Seattle's\nFifth defeat in Six\nStarts\nSEATTLE, Wuh.,' Jan 1\u2014Tb* last\nplace Victoria Cuba of tbe Pacific\nCoast Hockey league came up and\nhanded tbe Seattle Eskimo* tbelr worst\ndrubbing of tbe season here today,\nwinning 6-1. It waa Seattle's fifth\ndefeat ln It's last six starts, tbe other\ngame resulting In a Ue.\nLine  ins:\nVictoria \u2014 Robertaon, goal: Kenney,\ndefense; Redpath, defense; P. Runge,\nwing; Evans centre; Kelly, wing.\nSeattle\u2014Winker, goal; Townaend, defense; Benson, defense; Sutherland,\nwing;  Savage, centre;  Anderson, wing.\nVictoria sube\u2014H. Runge, Low, Os-\nmondson,   Leacock.\nSeattle subs\u2014Daly, Brown, Harris,\nRelnlkka.\nReferee\u2014Ion.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u2014<1> Victoria, Osmond-\nson from  Leacock.  8:16.\nPenalties\u2014Harris.   Kenny.\nSecond period\u2014(9) Victoria, Ivans\ntrom Kelly 1:63; (3) Victoria Kenny\nfrom   Low,   17:01,\nPenalties\u2014Kenny.\nThird period\u2014(4) Victoria H. Runge,\nfrom Kelly, 9:61;  (6) TTlctorla, Redpath,\nBOWLING POPULAR\nAMONG WOMEN NOW\nIN   OLD   COUNTRY\npared -wltb tbat of tbe woman ot M\nyears ago. who triad td throw a Mir\nover tbe green Preaent-day abort skirt*\nand sleeveless Jumpers, and tb se\u2014tm.\nof steel and whalebone, enable women\nto get tbelr -wood*' away without sum\nold time pitching and trumping.\nLONDON, Jan \u00ab.\u2014Bowls is Becoming \"Women play not only at the club*,\nso popular among women tliat T. O.; but ln some parks ln London and th*\nBurrows, tbe Mayor of Wimbledon, who Southern Countries greens are il.srvtd\nIs a -well-known championship player, I tor them. There are clubs Im UaUm,\nbaa predicted that before long a wo- I Kingston, Buckhum Hill, Wimbledon\nmen's bowling aaaociatlon would be j and TMaddon, where tbre are aome cap*-\nformed, -wltb, be hope*, Wimbledon as s cially clever women playsers.\"\na championship centre.  . \u25a0 \u2014\nThe fine summer this year seemed I Dusty shade* tsa.ee been particularly\nto bring more women into the gam*. I good for evening frocks In New Yaeat\nWhat Is more, there la much Improve-1 of late, and soft ping shade* ar* also\nment ln the merit ln their play com-   active.\nCanadian Pacific\n'    EUROPE\nFrom  Saint   John\nJan.  10    uuu\"\u00bb    Richmon\nTo  Glasgow-Liverpool\n17    Duchc-is   Yov\nTo Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\n34     MelM\nTo  GlflsBgnw-Liverpool\n81     .bftt&fft'-nr,\nTo Cherbourg-London\n1    Montru \u25a0\nTo Glasgow-Belfast-Liverpool\n7         MlnriPf!  -\nTo  Glasgow-Liverpool\n14   Montca'i.\nTo Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\n20    -    MeltU\nCherbourg-Southampton-H-**-\"' \u25a0\u25a0\n28      Montrose\nTo Glasgow-Belfast-Liverpool\ni&rch   7    *     Metaganv\nTo Cherbourg-Londo**\nlarch 7    Minnedosu\nTo Glasgow-Liverpool\nlarch 14      Montcalm\nTo Glasgow-Belfast-Llverpool\nlarch   14   Duchess Bedford\nTo   Cherbourg-Southampton-Liverpool\nlarch   20 MellU\nTo   Belfast-Glasgow\n\u2022larch 21    Duchess York\nTo Liverpool\nlarch  27     Montrose\nTo    Cherbourg-Southampton-Antwerp\nFull  details  with   rates   ana   p*\u00bb\u00abi>\u00abji -\n\u25a0-formation from srw \u2022.t-t-nt or writp\nJ.  8.  CARTER\n\u00bb!\u00abtrlrt  Pa\"\u00abpn\u00bber   4r<>nt    \u25a0vrtwm. R   f\nCHICAGO, Jan. 1\u2014I^s Canadlens,\nMontreal, went into the lead of the\nInternational group championship race\nof the National Hockey league tonight\nby defeating the Chicago Black Hawks,\nthree to two in an overtime game, in\nChicago Stadium before 12,000 spectators.\nThe victory gave the Flying Frenchmen a grip on first place with 22\npoints.\nA goal by S. Mantha after 20\nseconds of play In the overtime period\ngave the Frenchmen victory after a\nhard fought battle from start to finish.\nThe victors tfcored two goals In the\ninitial period Leplne taking a pass\nfrom Leduc to score after 10:25 of\nplay and Morenz scoring unassisted\n50 seconds before the end of the period. Courtiere scored both of Chicago's goals, one in the second and\none In the third period.\nLINE   ot\nChicago\u2014Gardiner goal; Abel, defence; Dutk-.w-.ki; defence; Ripley, cen*\nter; Marvh, right wing; Arbour, left\nwing.\nCanadiens \u2014 Wainsworth. goal; S.\nMantha, defence; Burke, defence; Morenz, center; Waenie, right wing, Joliat,\nleft   wing.\nChicago subs \u2014 Somers, Coutaire,\nWentworth, Cook. Taylor, Gottesllg,\nIngram,   Burns.\nCanadlens subs\u2014Moundou, Leduc,\nLeplne,  G.  Mantha,  Carson.\nOfficials\u2014Denneny and Goodman.\nSUMMARY\nFirst  period:\n<1) Canadlens, Leplne (Leduc) 1:25;\n(2)  Canadlens, Morenz.  19:10.\nSecond period\u2014(3) Chicago, Coutlere,\n(Otterspy), 17:60.   \"\nThird period\u2014(4) Chicago, Courtle're,\n1:10.\nOvertihie period \u2014 (5) Canadlens,\nMantha,   :20,\nThe holder of the Canadian high jump title, Miss Constance Colston, of the\nCanadian Ladles' A.C.. who has been Invited to compete against the best at\nMadison Square Garden, New York, on Feb. 8. Miss Colston will accompany\nthe Canadian girls' all-star relay team to New York, where the relay girls will\nrun against a picked United States team. Following the New York games, the\nfive Canadian girls will go to Philadelphia for the games there on Feb. 12.\n:3l\n<6>  Beattie.  Anderson,   1:29,\nPenalties\u2014Sutherland (2), Osmonds 1\n\u2022__t0\nRANGERS PLAY\nSENATORS TIE\nNEW YORK, Jan. 1.\u2014The New York\nBangers and Ottawa Senators played\novertime last night to a 1.-1 tie ln\nthe last National Hockey league game\nof 1929. The one point\" added to thc\nBanger total by the deadlock gave\nthem a tie with the Chicago Black\nHawks for second place in the American  group.\nBill Cook and Hector Kilrea, star\nwing men ot tho two teams, scored\nthe only sjoals of the long Md hard\nbattle.\nNELSON CURLERS\nARECLASS1FIED\nExactly   133  Members  Nelson\nClub  Classified;  Many\n.    Are Unattached\nSHIRES' BOUT\nPOSTPONED\nADVERTISE   FOB   SECRETARY\nOTTAWA, Ont., Jan. 1\u2014The civil\nservice commission is advertising for\na secretary for the board of grain commissioners at a minimum salary of\n$3900. The position requires a high\nschool education and experience tn\nsecretarial work, and famlllsarlty with\nthe  Canada  Grain  act.\nDETROIT, January 1.\u2014The Initio!\nappearance here in Michigan prize\nfight ring, ol Arthur (The Orcal.\nShires, pugilistic first baseman of the\nChicago White Sox, scheduled for tonight, hae been postponed. Benn Ray,\npromoter, In making this announcement today said Shlrea had taken\ncold and was confined to his hotel\nroom.\nBilly Jacobs Wins\nTennis Championship\nNEW YYORK. Jan. 1\u2014Blllly Jacobs\nof Baltimore City college, turned beck\nthe dark horse sensation of the tournament, John Richardson of Dan-\nmouth, today by scores of 6-3. 0-2,\n7-9, 6-3, and won the National Junior\nIndoor   tennis  championship.\nHOCKJiiY RESULTS\nEAST   AND   WEST\nINTERNATIONAL    LEAOIE\nTl'ESDAY\nHamilton 4;  London  1.\nWindsor 3; Detroit 3.\nNiagara  2;   Toronto   1.\nLondon   3,   Detroit   1.   Overtime.\nHit First Time Up\nGood Omen for Day\nAHP tr sefrves -rfce*\nf&\\G STIFF fc\/GHT.f&R\nSTRIKING M6 OUT\/\/\nPHILLY OOTFiELDCR\nOF OTHtR PAYS\nANP7H\u00a3 LAST\npoycrTo wear A\nPffOOflNfi MliSlACHC,\n(WAYS HAP A\nT6cfTNPu?K (N Ht$\nMourn WHEN\n*T PAT\t\nima advertisement is not published or displayed by the LIQUOR CONTBOL BOARD or by the Government of B. C.\nBy   AL   IIKMAHKI.\n(Former    Pitcher    New    York    (limits)\nBurleigh Orlmes, \\ pitching star of\nthpve   r%:,*>   i_n \\ \u2022*\u25a0*\u2022*   1*1\ndue to pitch. Possibly he remembers\nthe fate of old 'Samson, who lost\nhis Btrength when some barber work:\nwas done on his hirsute adornments\nby   the   slick   Delilah.\nThe late Christy Mathewson would\nnever trim his finger nails on the\ndays he worked on the mound. Matty\nivp n*t exacnv i\u00abi'\u2022\u25a0\u25a0\u2022\u00ab\u00bb-3..)t.,o\u00bb\" but r**\nbellved lt waa lucky to lay In bed\ntill noon the day he pitched.\nAl Simmons, star outfielder of the\nworld champion \"A's,\" according to my\nold friend, L. H. Aldington, has a\ncomplex tnat governs um uaily work\nIt is Indicated his first time at bat.\nif he sstM a bit the oDOOfi'ntt -Ditcher\nwill have to call out the fire department to put him out the rest of\ntht Hitt- -. Pir-es \"*\u00bb not\nalways the s&t 9I a &a<i gam* Ior Al,\nOne hundred and thirty-three mem-\noerg 01 tne weison Curnng ciuo have\noeen ciaseii.ed and lu leu unauacned.\ninere are aoout 3\/ rinuB m all,\nwmen givus promise of keen contests\nior   tne   conany   reason.\nThere ls pieiuy 01 room for all who\nwisn to cun, \"it nas ueen announced.\nii.._ c.ttas&ii.ciiucn. is not una!, and any\nperson aaued to tne list oe_ore tne\n.Dneuu.cs are ara.wu will be uassiued\nanu included oeiore the first compe*\nuuon  starts.\nroiiowing are the rinks, in order of\nsnips,   tnirds,   seconds   and   leads:\n... M. wiumster, A. ii. Ointer, T.\nwaters,   A.   Waters.\nW. *;. Wasson, P. E. Horton, M. E,\nHarper,   A.   Bnuth.\nAiex Kltchie, J. Ballantyne, R. Cler-\nliiew,   M.   Montgomery.\ni.. H. WooiiB, K. Peebles, O. DJvortz,\nL. E. Reld.\nW. ii, Steed, M. J. Vursevcld, R.\nWallace,   J.   uronslield.\nKev. P. R. G. uredge, J. Lundie, W.\nAl.  WdUer, S. M. Dronsfleld\nJ A. ttinith, J. Gansner, H. H. Logan,\nG.  Mn.- -<'v\nA. D. McLeod, P. Dennlson, J. H.\nBurfield,   W.   C.   Chapman.\nj. b. Gray, W. Marr, E. Welch, J.\nVan  Horne.\nHarry Houston, Dr. McKendle, Ralph\nHaie, W. G. xveunedy.\nR. D. Barnes, j. Ramsden, A. T.\nHorswlll, W. Jeffs.\nDave Laughton, W. H. Smedley, L.\nW.   Oughtred,   R.   S.   Breve ton.\nHoward Bush. It. H. Maoer, E. Jarrett, J. McDonald.\nA.   Jeffs,   P.   Andrews,   J.   McEwan,\nA. W.   Banks.\nR. L. ZwcBnde, J. Dingwall, G. Fleming,  P.  D.  Cummlngs.\nR. Andrew, M. V. Allen, E. L. Buchanan,  Donald  Ure.\nRoy Sharpe, Bruce Orady, Frank\nMurphy, E. A.  Walters,\nRooert Bell. C, Hamilton, H. S. Watson,  C. O.  Lovejoy.\nC. E.   Mansfield,   A.   C.   Emory,   G.\nB. Stevenson.  C.  Deferro.\nT.   W.   Ledinghfim,   Guy   Wright,   W.\nAlstrom,   j;   Wallace.\nRobert Crerar, A. Brown, J. T. Robb,\nC. Jeffs.\nD. St. Denis. J. A. Vance, W. E.\nBrown,   H.   Erickson.\nG Douglas, Truenuui Rock, T. Sowerby,  Guy  Davis.\nJ. H. Long, M. Mlckelson, W. Kline,\nC.  E.   Bradshaw.\nE. Gammon, H McKenzie, G. V.\nCady, J. P. Coates.\nE. E. L. Dewdney, J. G. Bennett,\nL.  8.   MeKinnon,  Roy  Pollard.\nP. E. Pounin, J. Teague, E. Boyce,\nP. Plowman.\nJ. M. Gordon, 8. K. Bostock, E. G.\nSparks. W. FowleB,\nW. Btner, J. Weir, L. McPhail, V.\nA. Sadd.\nG. H. Ferguson, J. McPhail, J. R.\nFleming.  E.   H.  Patterson.\nA. E. Murphy, W. G. Mills, W. Oodi-\nlet, E. Prost.\nPred Whitfield, Alex Dingwall, H. L.\nRobinson,   J.   A.   Kerr.\nDonald McDonald, A. Kraft, W.\nVance,  A.  Choquette.\nMax  Baskin  18  classified as a third.\nUnattached :W. R. Thomson, H. W.\nRobertson,   J.   O'Shea.   c.   B.   Oarland,\nC. P.   McHardy,   K.   D.   Woodworth,   C,\nD. Blackwood, Alex Lelth, W. Fotheringham, Harry Tate, Fred Deacon, and\nG.   Bl ad worth.\nBreakfast to\nShoot Deer\nB06TOW, Jan. 1\u2014Some men tramp\nthe forest for daya In search of the\nelusive deer. Not so, however, MIbb\nEsther Gallop. Miss Gallop, clad In\nher pajamas, was enjoying a Uesjirely\nbreakfast when a commotion ln the\nfront of the house attracted her attention. There ln the front yard was\na 200 pound buck. Bhe Immediately\ngrabbed her father's thrusty shot gun\nand while her mother held the window\nopen for her brought him down with\none well directed shot. Eight other women have reported kills this season but\nnone as yet have reported as favorable conditions as Miss Gallop.\nReports from the Department of\nGame and fisheries for the 1929 deer\nseason indicate a total to date of 2707\nkilled Although the season closed at\nsundown on December 14, belated reports are still coming ln to the department Conditions for the hunters\nwere Ideal this year with an abundance\nof snow making the tracking of deer a\ncomparatively easy task. Two weeks\nof shooting were allowed In all the\ncountries except Plymouth this year.\nTwo men were tied for the honor of\nbringing dwn the largest deer of the\nseason, each reporting a 376 pound\nbuck, while ehts malrtscoeelerddoss-t\n75 pounds\nHENNESSY\nCOGNAC BRANDY h.\nmis advertisement is not puDlished or displayed by the LIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or by the Government of B. C.\nExtra Co pies\nOP\nFRANCE BEATS\nSCOTLAND   7-3\nPARIS, Jan. 1,\u2014Franc* defeated Scotland 7 to 3. in the flrat International\nrugby match of 1930. It was one of\nthe roughest contests in years on a\nParis field. There were 17 knockouts\nIn the course of the game, wcceedlng\nthe number in some boxing sessions\nIn Paris. Many penalties were Inflicted\nand Prance finished the match with\nonly 13 players Instead of the usual\nIS. Scotland had 14 when the match\nended.\nLatest lace and chiffon evening\nfrooks favor capes and apEle length\nfor early spring,\nThe New Year\nIndustrial Edition\nOF\nThe Daily News\nMay Be Obtained at the Office\nMail One to Your Friends\n5c a Cop y\n \u25a0 \"Page JSgfit\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2, 1930\n%5he (Dangerous (Road\nBy o^Cancy 'Barr Q^Mavity\nCLASSIFIED    ADVERTISING   SECTION\nHELP   WANTED\njvh   remsoxAL\n(51\nI WANTED\u2014By   January   8,    experienced\ncook   for   the  Leland   Hotel,   Nakuhp.\n{12051)\nCUATItK   TUlUTY-T-nO\n\"You need not be. Tou did not know\nhim-\"\nThle, wfclle strictly true, wae hardly\nan auspicious opening to her interview. Joyce flushed so deeply wltb\nembarrassment at her own ineptitude that she felt the tears sting\nbehind her eyeballs.\n-Werer mind it\", the deep voice\naattf with astonishing softness. \"I\ndo not. as you aay, suffer fools gladly\nBut to aay a foolish thing la not\ntherefore to be a fool. What la It\nyou  wish  with me?\"\nof  tbe   bed.   drumming   ber   sandelied\nheeto acroea the  footboard.\n\"I've   had   a   wonderful   afternoon ,\"\nahe announced happily.\n\"Yea7\"     Joyce    responded    a    little\nabsently, brushing her haid back from\nher   forehead   with   brisk   strokes   \u25a0**\nf>he sat at the dressing table, her back\nto tlie room\n\"First of all, I called up Mr, Gn*ingi-\non the telephone, aU by myself.\"\nJoyce  whirled  about  on  the  square\nstool.\n\"Jeannie!    You didn't!      How could\nMy name is Joyce Avftry,\" Joyce said ' w>u   \u00abver   do   such   a   thinii?     Dldal\nWith a rush, \"knd t came on buslnesa. ! iou know  that you had  no  right  to\nMr. Orainge of Shreveport and Howe, | bother   Mr.   Grainge?\"   Her   tl\nBent  mt\" i lit with a yellow flame of anger such\n\"Buslneas!\"   The guttural voice, with ; \u00ab*   Jean^f    ***    n\u00abv\u00ab   befo^ , jj\"\nIta surprising range of emotional tone I n **\" *** enoi*h M lt was- *l*-hout\ndropped to a note of melancholy\nsibilant as windswept trees in autumn,\nt- Since the death of Isodore. Max\nRosenblatt had had no reason to\n: view the mention of business ln a\ncheerful  light.\n\"I   have   brought   some  designs   for\nchildren's    dresses.      Flrat,    will    you\nlook   at   them,   please?1\"\nm She held out tbe portfolio, and thc\nold man, reaching out a long and\nclaw-like arm, ruthlessly cleared a\nplace for the drawings by the simple\nmeasure of sweeping a fluttering\n\u2022, storm of papers to the floor. He\nlooked at the designs slowly, and\nln alienee.\n; \"So!\" ba said at last, \"And what ls\nMr.  Oralnge'a proposition-''\n\"It Isn't Mr. Oralnge'a proposition,\nit's mine. And I'm afraid lt may\nba rather\u2014unconventional.\"\nA deep chuckle rippled under the\nlong beard, like the sound of a distant   waterfall.\n\"It would with hardness be more\nunconventional than your proposition\nto make my portrait.\"\n\"I'm sorry. I did not mean to be\nrude.    But it  waa  true\u2014\"\n\"There are worse things than to be\nrude\u2014and to be true. But few things\nleas comfortable. But never mind\nIt.'' This time the voice was an impatient   rumble.   \"Go   on.\"\n\"Well, this is what I're thought\nout. Mr. Grainge thought that lf I\ncould get these design* manufactured\nInto dresses, they would sell. But I\nhave no money to place a regular\norder. '\u2022\n\"In America, the lack of money\nla the root of all evil. But I Interrupt you.\"\n\"I could make a sample from each\nof these  designs,  or   what  you  think\nare the beat ones.   They must be Just\nright,  you  know-\u2014\"\n- \"To   pursue  perfection,   that  is the\nway of all sorrow\u2014\"\nThe little room suddenly eddied with\nan irrepressible gust of laughter.\n\"Please, Mr. Rosenblatt, I do like\nyou ever so much. But I have to\nkeep all this in my head, and It's\nrattier complicated. If you'd Just wait\nand be philosophical all in a lump\nat   t\\,   end- \"\nThe fih.irp little eyes almost disappeared from view as the huge head\nrocked to and fro ln an answering\npeal that stormed the air wtth the\nsound of brazen btlla, Mr. Rosenblatt\nwiped hts eyes with a very grimy\n|      handkerchief.\n\"It ls long since my heart will have\nlet me laugh like that. I stand rebuked.    Go  on\"\n\"I will make the samples, and can\nprovide the materials up to a hundred dollars a month at the very\noutside. You would have the use of\n\u00ab the designs free. But you would have\n- to provide the equipment\u2014machines\nand labor and so on.\"\n\"It is the 'and so on' that eats up\nprofits\u2014but   I   apologize.     That   is   to\n*  \"     be said  in a  lump, if I  do not, un-\nm     happily,   forget,''\n\"Well.   I   thought   you   could   make\ntljese dresses  here,   and  your salesmen\nould   go   out   a nd   pell   them   with\nt  eir    regular    stock.      If    I   provided\nshe    material    and    the    designs,    and\nyou    furnish    t he    workmanship    and\nthe   sales   force.   I   thought   it   would\nabout cancel  out,  and  we could share\n*he   profits   equally.     If   the   dresses\nsell,   you'd   be   out   only   the\n-.' making them, since the sales-\n, i   would   be   traveling   with   your\nown   Ftock   anyway.     And   I   thought\n|      maybe   you'd    be    willing   to   take   u\nchance   on   that.     But   then,   I   don't\nknow   anything   about   business.\nWANTED\u2014Oood   canvasser\nTeague,   Boom   8.   K    W.\nApply    J\nC.   Block.\n(12044)\nWAN TED\u2014 Elderly woman as working\nhousekeeper for faintly of four.\nApply stating age, salary and references. .Box   84.   proctor. <12029)\nl AIUKS   LEAKS   11A1RI>KI>MM;\nEARN while learning all branches\nBeauty Culture, pleasant, refined\nbig pay. Bteadv work. Suits-facte-.1\nguaranteed. Positions sure. Literature frte. Write Marvel Parisian\nHul id reusing Academy, 234A 8th Ave\nW.. Calgary. Branches principal\ncities Coaet to Coast.\nTRUSS    TORTURES      Eliminated\nwearing our   supports,\nfree   trial.     Write   for   booklet.     A.\nLvuidsberg  Co.,  038   Pender  W.,   Vancouver. (11830)\nby \u25a0    DENNETT\u2014Amelia\nItnoM   ANU   IMIlKh\nBelle, loving\nThirty daya mother of M\u00bb. W A Rock-lift. w. W.\n\" and Gordon Bennett, passed away Sunday. The body will Ile in state at\nHowell's funeral borne till \\;H Friday\nafternoon, thence to the St. Saviour's\nchurch where services will be beli at\n1:90. Venerable Archdeacon Graham\nofficiating. (12067)\nLIVESTOCK    FOBSAia\nffl)     MTrATIONS    WANTED\nROOM AND BOARD for two todies, or\ntwo gentlement.   Phone 700L.\nMADDEN\u2014Thomas,     age    S3     yeiirs.\npassed   away   Sunday.     He   leavea   to\nmourn  his  passing  his  wife  and  two\n\u25a0a   passing   in\nin.t\u00abj   children, mother, two sisters and three\nbrothers.    The  body   w dl   \\\\e  \\_, state\nROOM AND BOARD for two ladies, or  at   the   Howell   Funeral   Home until\ntwn   gentlema*.     Apply\nMiller.\nMra.   A.   J.\n(12048J\n'J!'-1.s r0- J*lli -M s T\n,,'-!'>\nIOR   HALE   OR   EXCHANGE\nPOR RENT\u2014Furnished house, close ln.\nApply   Box   11000.        (11990)\nFOR   RENT\u2014Furnished   !10_uS* .p^. &l>:' WILL KXCHANGB\u2014A  residential pro:\nthis evening when lt will be taken\nto tha family home. 302 Victoria\nstreet, where It will remain until 9.45\nThursday morning, thence to the\nChurch of Mary Immaculate wherp tar-\nvices will tie held at 10 o'clock. Hcv.\nFather McKenzie officiating.       (12070)\nfS7)\nmonths. Apply Mrs. Holtby 810 Stiui\nley  St. (12071)\n$70\nerty   South   Vancouver   earning\nmonthly   rental,   property   In   Nelson\nFurther particulars address Box 522.\nNelson, (12C82)\nJeannie making It worse, drawing them\ncloser. Her thoughts rattled with i\nloud confusion like stones tumbling\npellmell down a hillside.\n\"But he wasn't a bid bothered.'\nJeannie   reassured   her   firmly. \"I\n'membered your store number thut\nyou learnt me \u25a0\u2014 teached me \u2014 because If anything ever went wront-.\nut the school, and then I asked for\nMr. Grainge and I got him and 1\nsaid, he'd better make i magic fo:\nyou because he hadn't given you much\nof a talisman to take on your task\u2014\nund you know, mother, because he\ncomes from the blmps he always understands what you say at once. Not\nlike most people, that you always have\nto   be    explanation in!',    to,\"\nJoyce's hands dropped to her sukv\nIn spite of herself, she laughed, and\nJeannie. was quick to sense tlie passing\nof  danger\n\"Well. If he understood al that at\nonce over the telephone. I'll grant he's\npretty   good,\"  she  said.\n\"He's   tha   most   understanding   man\nI ever saw,\" eJannie announced.    \"He j\nsaid   was   I   very   busy   and    I   said '\nAunt Marjorle had  gone  shopping and i\nhe said  he  he was all alone,  too.  .md\nnot so very busy and   lf he  came and '\ngot me and left a note for Aunt Mar- (\njorle   didu't   I   think   it   would   be   a.\ntrood   Idea to go over  to  his  flat  and\nmake   our  magic   together   and   I   said j\nI thought it was a good  Idea.    So he \\\npaid  to wait till he  told  those  people ,\nthat he was going to an outside conference   and   wouldn't   be   back.   .And\nmother, it was ven- perfect.\" she end- \u25a0\ned on a sigh of ecstasy.\n\"What did you do?\" Joyce asked\ncuriously.\n\"Mostly we talked,\" Jeannie said\nJoyce wondered at conversation which\ncould keep a child entranced for a\nwhole afternoon, but Jeannie did not\nelaborate. \"Then he let mc make\ntoast all my own .self, butter and\neverything, and I made cambric ten\nund he drank it. too. I washed all\nthe dishes, and when I broke a saucer\n\u2014It was an actdent, mother, it just\nJumped, out of my hands\u2014he said thc\nhigh gods nlwuys exacted something\nfor happiness and the saucer was n.\nSo that was all right.\"\nJoyce felt shamed by her own agitation. After all, he had merely given\nan afternoon's pleasure to a child. She\noouM not belrudge that to Jeannie. He\nhad an odd gift with children, not\nrequiring the extraneous aids of toys or\n-special entertainments with which most\nadult! sought to bridge the fut_ into\nthe   child   world,\n\"I   wish   daddy   ever  did   things   like\nihat.\"   eJannie   mused   wistfully.\n(Continued Tomorrow\nMARGARET WRONG\nTO SPEND SOME\nTIME IN CANADA\nMIA    l:\\BN   \u00ab.>-*l\u00bb   A   1>\u00ab\\\n60e  and   hour   allowed   men   part   tune\nwhile   irtUntng   for  Big   Pay   Job*  txs\nGara\u00bbe Mechanics. Chauffeur!., En- - \u2014-\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014_-_\u2014_\" _~. _,.\nrlneers Aviation Mechanics. How FIVE POOMID HOUSE. Moderate\nWiring   and   Elecrtiicity.   Bricklaying. I    rent      rtooaun,   near   Ci_tlc\u00abar.      J.\nPlastering.      Also   Bartering.      Liter-       j     .Ituklna,    Robson.              (11997)    FURNISHFI)    R(K>M\u00ab\u2014t*s\\    grnl\u2014 lis\n.\u25a0rur   free.     Write   Dominion   Trad.'   FURNISHED  ROOMS.    Phone   75SL. '\u25a0    '      ' '\"\"'   ' ' '      \"\nFchools     808    Centre    St.    Calgary '                                                            (12010)   FURNISHED   SUITE\u2014507   SlUca.\nBranches coast to Coast. 112075.    \u2014 1 (12061)\n''^____^__mmtm\\W-l\\M\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nTORONTO. Jan. 1.\u2014Word has been\nreceived that Miss Margaret Wront;,\nthe secretary of the newly establishes\ninternational committee on Christian\nliterature for Africa, is planning to\n--.pend about three months in ths\nUnited States and Canada beginning\nwith January I, During this tim?\nMiss Wrong will visit the mission\nboards which are interested in the\nwork of the committee and talk over\nwith them the problems which they\nhave In connection with literature for\ntheir work in Africa. She will be\nshe I present at the foreign mission con-\nended weakly. \"If you -think that isn't , lerence of North America and at the\n|alr\u2014?'' meeting  of the federation of women's\nI \"Young woman, I too have the I boards of foreign missions. Miss\nSitter failing for telling the truth, wrong is a daughter of Prof. George\nI, too, look for my perfection. Mr. \u25a0 m. Wrong, the Canadian historian who\nBum, he was my partner and my | was for many yefirs proressor of mort-\nheloved friend, he was the beautiful. prn history in the University of Tor-\nliar!    But   never    mind    it.\"    A   deep I onto.\ne.gh  stirred   thc  papers  on   the  table ' . ,_\u201e \u201e   .,        __\npefore him. \"After Mr. Stlrn has died, t\nlt   may  be   that   Rosenblatt  and  Stlrn \u25a0\ngo   bankrupt\u2014after   forty   years.     Bul i\nlt   may   be   not!   You   suy   that   Mr. :\nGrainge   have   sent   you.     I   say   that !\nmaybe   God   have   sent   you!   You   believe   In   God?'' |\n\"I-I hnrdly   know\u2014\"\n\"Neither  do  I,''   said   Br.  Rosenbhiti.\nsurprisingly.   \"It    ls    the   manner   of i\napeerh.    I   ihlnk   maybe   we  pull  etch\n\u00abi her out of our holes.    When people\nthink    rf   designs,    it    ls   always   the\ndesigns  for  beautiful  ladles.    But  ycu\n.have   made   the   beauty   for   children.\nIt   ls   not  so   crowded   the  market.   I j\nthnik  we  can  do   as  you   say.    When\ncan the samples be finished?\"\n\"I   can   sew   only   at   night.     In   a\nweek, I think,\n\"So.    Very  good.\"\nJoyce   held   out   her   hand.\n\u2022  \"Thank    you    ever    so    much,    Mr.\nJtosenblatt.    And   I   do  hope\u2014\"\n\"Yees.  we  hope.    The  highways  of\nthe world are strewn  with the shards\nSf  broken   hopes.    But  some  do   not\nreak.     And    for    me,    there    would\nhardly be time to make another hope\n\u2014to   break.''\nJoyce    covered    the    strong,   twisted\nhand   with   both   of   hers.    Her throat\nwas   suddenly   tight   with   tears.\n\"Tut-tut,   be   cheerful,\"   rasped   the\nVoice   of   Mr.   Rosenblatt.   \"And   when\njrou   have   finished   the   samples,   then\nyou   may   make   the   old   man's   par-\ntrait  whenever   lt   is   you  like!''\n\u25a0 \"Oh.   mother!\"    Jeannie   met   Joyce\nlit the door on flying feet.   \"I haven't\napun any flax at all. Aud guess\n| *hy!\"\nJ Joyce   stooped   to   receive   the   catapulting Uttle  figure  with wide-spread\nirms.   then   lifted   the   hat   from   her\nt>*cary  head   and   picked   up  the single\nletter that lay on the  hall  table.\n\"I   couldn't   possibly   guess,   darling.\nCome  Into  the   bedroom,  If  you  like,\n*'h He   I   freshen   up   for   dinner   and\ntell  me about  it.\"\n'   She    longed    above    all    things    at\nihe moment to He down on the bed\nfor   that   half   hour,   with   cloeed   eyes.\nBut being a mother  was a  thing that\nnever stopped.    You must meet eager-\nless   with   eagerness,   no  matter  how\nmuch   you   yearn   for   quiet.   Looking\ntjown at the shining head that bobbed\n\u25a0r   side,   In,   the   depression   that\nfollows   excitement,    Joyce   was   glad\n\u25a0to think that at least ahe had never\nJailed Jeannie. Why had that \"at\n^^H. crept into her thoughts? She\n^^Ht her head impatiently.     She was\nANNOUNCINQ\nChange of Classified\nAdvertising Rates\nWe are changing our rates from the word rate to a lineage hasis.\n**>\u25a0\nThis change will make no difference in thc actual cost of the ads,\nas it works out to about the same c ist in words as it does in lines.\nNEW  HATES\n___\n.'.B\nClassified ads, per line  10c\nNews of the Day, per line ... 20c\nRoman type, per line ...... 20c\nBlack face type, per line .... 20c\nBlack face capitals, per line . 20c\nOLD RATES\nClassified ads, per word \u2014 1' c\nNews of the Day, per word,\nRoman Type  3c\nBlack face   4c\nBlack face capitals  ac\nThere will be no discount for w eckly cash in advance advertise-\nments.\nThese rates will enable the customers to figure out the cost of their\nads before sending them in.\nThis change takes effect January 2nd, 1930.\nThe Daily News\nClassified Advertising\nDepartment\nPHONES 144 and 143\nPtmc   BRED   COOKER   spaniel    Pnp-\n8y   male    make   real   bird   dog.    15.\nouch.   Box   74,   Nel-un. (12022)\nLIVESTOCK   WsMiTEP 7M>\nWANTED\u2014Good tamlly cow, treth, \u00ab\nsoon to treshen.   Apply Box 487 Nelson,   or   phone  24SL4. (I1W)\nWANT1\neversil strong noires.\npound* weight, write to Elusion   Limited,   Boswell. (\nKOI'LTm-J      AND     EOO\u00ab\nNEW LAID  _OOB.    65c dozen-  West-\nways Ranch. Harrop. (11M4)\nWINTER layer* are good payers. Make\nyour hens lay well by using Kara-\nwood Poultry Bplce (containing\nground Insects). Costs only one\ncent dally lor 12 hens. Obtainable\nfrom  all  dealers. (12077.\n(27)\n\u00bbllSrF.I.I.ANEOI'\u00ab   FOR   Ml.fJ\nFOR SALE\u2014Chllds cot.\nVernon   St.\nMrs. Kerr. 817\n(12065)\nBIX horse power gasoline engine In\ngood condition. D. B. Merry, Annable.   B.   C. (12039)\nPRIVATE SALE\u2014Purnltsjre and garden\ntools. Dally Irom the 21st to the\n27th.    314 Gore St. B. Cotter\n(11054)\nULTRA VIOLET (Artificial Sunlight)\nIjimps for Home Use from *39.50.\nAlso violet Ray Machines. Send lor\nlltistrated pamphlet. Empire Agencies Ltd., 643 Granville St.. Vancouver. (120891\nFor success in heating try\nthe CORBIN FURNACE\nCOAL in your FURNACE or\nHEATER.\nWe   stock   good   grades   of\nDrumheller  coals for furnace\nor  kitchen   use.\nSERVICE  AND QUALITY\nPHONE 106\nWilliams\nTransfer\n(12074)\nYIISI I I.I..1M.OIS    WANTRn\nWANTED \u2014 CUTTER   SHAFTS.      Mrs.\nEllis.  R.  R. No.  1. (12020)\nMrs.   Haines.   Harrou.\nApp\n(1204\nWANTED TO BUY\u2014A dairy of about\n15 to 20 cows ln Nelson or Kootenay\ndistrict.    Apply Box 12063.        (12063)\nMISl'ELI.AVEOr*\nr..'!)l\nWANTED\u2014HOME POR a good work\nhorse for the winter months.\nApply Nelson Transfer or to A. D.\nEmory. (12O09)\n130)\nWANTED\u2014General housework. Tie*,\nable wages. Apply Box 12041, C\nNews. (IS\nEXPERIENCED     GIRL    WANTS\nhouaespoek.     One   or   t\u00abo   chll\nunobjectionable.    Sunday*   and\n475,   Kaalo,   B.C. (Ill\nlegal\">jotices\nLAN^J^TACT\nIN  THE   MATTER   of   Lots   19.   30\n21,   B   lock35.  Nelson  City\nof the loss  of  Certificate  of  Title\n19166-A to the abxwe-mentioned  1.81\ntn the name o Duncan Roy McParla\nand    Anna    Vanion    McMriane    \u25a0\nhr-nrlne   dale   the   22nd   May,   19141\nHEREBY  GIVE-NOTICE of  my  totl\ntion at the expiration of one calenl\nmonth from the first publication n\u00ab|\nof to tosue to the said Duncan\nMcParlane    and    Anna    Vardon\nFarlane   a    provisional   CertlflcanJ\nTitle  in  Ueu of \u00abucl\u00bb loot Certtira\nA\u00abv   .pfTson   having   ar     ln,J0'S__j\nwith reference to such lost CerwfW\nof   Title   Is   requeftted   to  communlc\nwith  the undersigned. __\nDATED at  the  Land ReRistry Ofx|\nNelson  B. C this 29th day of Novef\n\"\"'\u25a0   192B* A.. W. IDIW8.\nRegistry of Title*\nDate  of  first   publication   D*ceml\n12th.  1929.\nBUSINESS,    PROFESSIONS\nDIRECTORY\nAccounting\nE. NORMAN\nAfXOI NTINO,    AMHTINO\nUOVEKNMKNT   KIU'OUT.*\nBox 804, Nelson\n\" CHAS. FrHUNTER\"\n.llllIIISO        INCOME TAX RBTJJl\nBox   1191. Nelson, B. C.\nAmbulance Service\nHOWELL FUNERAL HOME\n24 Hour  Ambulance Service I\nPhone  252\nAssayers\n;   w   WIDDOWSON, Box AH08 Nelsolj\nB. C.    Standard western charges\nIII SINI-S     OI'l'()RHNITIK\u00ab\nWANTED-PARTNER to help develop\nsome well located claims. Box 323,\nTrail. (11048)\n_\\_f__$_ffi___W$tt&lWfi&\nWANTED\u2014Some one to take over good\ngarage In down town section, only\nsmall capital required. Box 12078\nDally   News. (12078.\nLOST   AMI   IDINI)\n,,, ,\nLOST\u2014A canvas auto-cover. Between\nSouth Slocan and top of Taghum\nHill. Phider please irrlto or call\nDaily News Box No.  12027.      (12027)\nOECIL     E.      CROSSLEY.       Provincial\nAssayer.     Address  Reno  Gold   Minei\nLtd..   Salmo.   B.   C. .,.,_1M0\nAuctioneer and Bailiff\nJAMES   H.   DOYLE\u2014Bailiff.  Auctlon\u00abjH\nNelson.  B.  C.  (116811\nChiropractors\nDR.    MITTI'N,\nX-RAY.   CRANBROOKl\n. 11683*\n(ill.KER   BIB.,   NsVXSON.I\n [11883f\nDentists\nDR.    A.    G.    WALLEY-Grlffln  ,JMM\nX-Ray.   Nelson. B. C. (11684)|\nEngineers\nl.ssi it.\\\\( i;\n(33)\nIt is TOO LATE to get\nINSURANCE\nwhen the\nFIRE BELL RINGS\nWhy not carry sufficient insurance and have an easy mind.\nDon't put it off. It's no\ntrouble. Just telephone 135 or\ncall at the office.\nChas. F. McHardy\nPhone 135 Nelson, B. C.\nReal Estate and Insurance\nMIXING.   TIMBER  AND   M'MIIKR   HM\nFOR   SALE\nTIMBER AND POLE TRACTS\nLARGE   AND   SMALL\nLOCATION   -COLUMBIA   RIVER\nARROW LAKES-KOOTENAY LAKE\nM    A.   GRAINGER  tt CO..   LTD.\n713   METROPOLITAN   BUILDING\nVANCOUVER,   B.   C.      \t\n(11824)\nROOMS\u2014To   Rent\n(ID)\nBEDROOM FOR RENT, nicely furnished and comfortable, 819 Vernon St.\n(11948)\nII. D. dawson\u2014Una surveyors, mln-l\n.  tag and CivU Engineer. Kal50-(1ffjsfil\nAT~il.    GREEN    CO..\u2014CONTRACTORS.!\nFormerly Green Bros., Murden Nelson!\nCivil and Mining Er dneers, B. CI\nAlberta and Dominion Land Sur-r\nveyors.  (11686 >1\nFlorists\nOaiZZELLE'a    GREENHOUSE,    Nelro\nCut flowers and floral deslen!'llg_,\nWM.   S.  JOHNSON\u2014\nPhone 342 Cut flowers, Potted Pla\nand floral Emblems.  (118\nInsurance and Real Estate\nB    W.   DAWSON\u2014Real   Estate,   Insud\nance. Rentals.    Next Hipperson Ha;\nware,   Baiter   St. (11889]\nPhotographers\nGEORGE  A. MEERES\u2014Artist and  Ph\u00abi\ntographcr.   715 Baxer St. (U891|\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'   TRANSFER\u20148aggage,   Co\nand   wood.    Phone   108. (118\u00bba|\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON-\nJoiner.\n-Baker    St.,    Carpenter\nSash   and   Hardwood.\n(118981\nBy Westover\nT-rTAT\"    Ml*iib   KLINKER..\nUJAS IN  A TRANCE\n\\MHEM   *   \\JEFT   THE OFFICE\nAMD   \u00bb'3   STILL   TV\\ATr\nVUAV -  WHAT'S  upr\nA RAOIC\nFAW\n\\MROT*=\nIA I\u00a3TTlK\n,r' TO   HER\n-_) AMD ^VTE'S\n(\"ALL   HOT\nAND BoTHERH\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy George McManus\n-TME.KE GOE^lTHE PHOiMfc\ni MOE-D-i I HAD BETTER\nAMiWER that it\nMIGHT BE M*,CGIE\nI\nid.\nitt llira  TOO .>.\u00bb',;._'.' WHT OIOMT      1\n~s!*0*^ AM-bWER THE  OOO\" BELL?\nI \"-EMT Ol \"TjAiVj Of WITH A DISH   L_\nOF COHKaEO \u00a9Etr AM CABBAGE..\nBL>T HE COULDMT GIT ICJ- -s-ORRT-\nBUT  '  HAVEN'T   A<slT OME\nTO<\n\u2014I^_.____________i\n__________________\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS   THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2, 1980\n\"Page Nine'\nLet Us Make 1930 The Most\ni      . \"\na\nProsperous Year in the History\nh       ,\nof Nelson\nBy Carrying Out the Policy of\nBuying at Home\nYour Dollar Spent for Purchases in Nelson and District Will Be Turned Over\nEndless and Will Continue to Work for the City and District Until Somebody\nSends it Away. Once it Has Left the City, it is Gone Forever, Benefiting\nthe Recipient in Some Other Part of the Countr y.\nResolve Now\nto  Keep  Your  Dollar  in  Nelson  and   District   During  the   Coming   Year\nMens Furnishings\nEmory's, Ltd.\nOilker's\nFurniture\nStandard Furniture Co.\nKootenay  Steam\nLaundry\nLadies Ready-to-wear\nMeagher & Co.\nJames Weir & Son\nBoots and Shoes\nWatson Shoe Co.\nR. Andrew & Co.\nNorth American Life\nAssurance Co.; R. E.\nCrerar, District Manager.\nPainters and\nDecorators\nMurphy Bros.\nFlour, Feed and Grain\nBrackman-Ker. Milling\nCo., Ltd.\nChildren's Wear\nNotions, Etc.\nD.-C. Art Shop\nWholesale Grocers\nMacDonald's Consolidated, Ltd.\nPlumbers\nB. C. Plumbing & Heating Co.\nDepartment Stores\nHudson's Bay Co.\nfr\nSporting Goods\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nStoves and Ranges\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nIce Cream and Butter\nCurlew Creamery Co.\nDry Goods and\nMeagher & Co.\nBakeries\nCroquette Bros.\n0. K. Bakery\nDrugs and Sundries\nPoole Drug Co., Ltd.\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nThe Beatty Washer\nStore\nJam Manufacturers\nMcDonald Jam Co.\nHardware\nWood, Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nJewelers\nJ. B. Gray\nE. Collinson\nA D. Papazian\nPrinters\nH. M. Whimster\nThe Daily News\nTrunks, Bags and\nLeather Goods\nJ. M. Ludwig.\n__\u25a0\u25a0___<\n______________\n \u25a0\t\n\"Page Ten\"\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS   THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2, 1930\nMann, Rutherford\nCo.\nDispensing\nChemists\nLearn to Earn\nAT\nNelson Business College\nTORONTO LEAFS\nBEAT MAROONS\nHVLTO-THREE\n8000  Fans  Sec  Good Hockey.\nPenalties and  a   Fistic\nDisplay\nJ, Montreal, Northcott  (Stewart), 1:43;\n3, Toronto.  Conacher   (Prtmeau), 2:36\n4, Toronto,   Jackson   .Primeaul,   1:14.\n8econd   period\u20146.   Maroons,   W.   If\nPhillips    (Stewart).   1:48.   \u00ab,   Toronto.\nBailey. 3:33: 7. Maroons. Stewart (Vancouver   Phillips..   0:27\nThird period\u20148. Toronto. Blair, 5:48\nt=-\nNASH\nSixes\nDODGE\nSixes\nWHIPPET\nSixes\nGraham\nTrucks\nAll Sixes\nTONS\nCapitol\nMotors Ltd.\nGEORGE    W.     PEASE,   Manager\nBox 183.   Phone 65.    Nelson, B.C.\nOpposite PoHt Office\nDealers   for   Nelson.   Trail\nRossland  and  District\nTORONTO. Jan. 1.\u2014Uncorking everything that a good hockey team should\nhave, the Toronto Maple Leafs started\nthe new year right by downing Montreal Maroons 6.3. ln a thrilling National  league game here  tonight.\nThe tussle kept more than 8000\nfans in an uroar from start to finish.\nPenalties were numerous toward the\nend and a fight between Petilnger\nof Toronto and Wilcox of Maroons\nalso   contributed   to   the   exeitemet.\nUNFIT\nToronto Montreil\nQOAL\nChabot W*il\u00abh\nDEFENCE\nDuncan       Munro\nSmith       Dutton\n(ENTER\nPrlmeau         Slewtirt\nW1N<;\nJackson         Siebert\nConacher   W, N.  Phillips\nToronto subs\u2014Blair. Bailey. Cotton,\nCox,   Day,   Horner.   Pettlnger.\nMontreal Subft\u2014Wilcox, Ward. W. J.\nPhillips, Northcott. Robinson and Trotter.\nOfficials \u2014 George Mallinson and\nHarry Batstone.\nSI'MMARY\nFirst    period\u2014Toronto.    Bailey   fl:52;\nPITTSBURGH IS\nGIVEN BEATING\nINOLIFORNIA\nHitherto   I ndelcaled   hoot ball\nChamps of Kast Lose to\nSo. California\nROSE BOWL, Pasodenft. Calif.. Jan.\n1\u2014CnwhWig swirling Giants of the\nUniversity of Southern California, who\ntucked no quarter and yielded none,\nripped unci tore a Pittsburgh Panther\ndefense to shreds here today to route\nthe previously underrated football\nchamps oi the eaat 47 to 14. In the\ntOOllUUntBt of rosea clash- Uie most\ndecisive beating taken by a losing\nteam since this classic wm established\n14   years  ago.\nThe great inter-se< tlonal strui^le\nthat annually herald the New Year in\nthis far-off corner of the nation, saw\nI Pittsburgh 11 that placed lour men\non All-Amerlcan teama this pa\u00abt season,\ncompletely outclassed from opening\nkick-off  to closing  gun.\nGLASGOW BEATS\nTHE CELTICS\nTWTO-ONE\nMiserable Weather for Scottish\nLeague (James; Winning\n(ioal in Faiist Minutes\nST. PAUL AND TULSA\nPLAY A TIE GAME\n44 TAXI AND\nTRANSFER\nFinest  3edan  Cars   ln   the  City\nOpen  Day   ana  Night\nWEEKS\n*\u2022\nBREAK-UP-A-OOLD   TABLETS      .\nPor Colds. Constipation and Headachec\nSmythes Pharmacy\nPrescription   Specialists\n407 Baker Phone  1\nSIGHT ls the moBt important\nsense used in school life.\nOur children are forced to use\nthis faculty to excess as the main\nartery of knowledge is the optic\nroad to the brain. Each child's\neyes should be carefully examined by a recognized optometrist before returning to school.\nWe wil! advise you as to whether\nyour child needs glasses.\nJ. O. Patenaude\nOptometrist aud  Optician\nExpert   Opt leal   Sen Ire\nPre-Inventory\nSale\nOdd lines must bo cleared out!\nIn aome cases, cost prices lost sijrht\nof.\nCOATS. Only a few. Individual\nstyles..    At half price.\nDRESSES.    Up to ?22.50\nfor    915.05\nST. PAUL. Mtnn.. Jan. 1.\u2014St. Paul\nand 'I ul.-. i played uu overtime score-\nles\u00ab tie in an American Hockey association iraine   here   today.\nWarm weather mud*' the lee sticky\nand the puck was hard to pass, with\nthe result that there was little combination played. Most or the shots\nwere  from  outside  the  blue  line.\nShires Shows 'Em\nHow It's Done\nGLASGOW. Scotland, Jan 1\u2014Olasgow\nRangers won their New Year day\nsoccer match with Celtic by two goals\nto one and were the lucky team.\nCeltic, who were playing at home,\npredominated throughout, but did not\nget the breaks. The match, as were\nmost of the others in the Socttlsh\nfirst division, was played In miserable\nweather. Napier scored first tor Celtic\nafter four minute* of play, and Morton\nequalized from a .penalty kick Just\nbefore half time. Ninety secondB before the clone of the game. Brown\nscored the winning goal for the\nRangers.\nMicklejohn was the big man of the\nmatch, hia play of the defence for\nthe Rangers being superb. Airdrie\nwere in fine form against Falkirk and\nslammed in goala . through Skinner\nand Burke, each player getting a\ncouple. McGinnIglea scored for Falkirk.\nQueen's Park ran amuck against Ayr\nUnited, the return of McAlplne evidently galvanizing the whole side.\nHe had two of Queens Park goals,\nMcLennn and Clawford and Doods\nhaving the others. Brae netted both\nAyres'    tallies.\nCowden Beath scored an easy victory over Dundee United their scorers\n.being Black, Devlin (two* and Lindsay.\nwhile Kay had the Unlted's goal,\nYlerston gave a fine display for Aberdeen against Dundee, .scoring all their\ngoals. Dundee made no wply. Dundee\nwere nnfortun-ite in having Proctor\nbreak his leu in two placee In the\nfirst   hull.\nIn a keen game at Tyntcastle, Hearts\nand Hibernians, the two Edinburgh\nclubs, tied, one goAl all. Murray\nM'oir-d in the first half for Hibernians,\nand  PrMtoti  equalized.\nMotherwell crushed Hamilton Aca-\n(i.iun.ds hy five goals to one. Dwell.\ntwo Murdoch IWO and Htevenaon were\nthe Motherwell marksmen, While Mof-\nfati  goaied tat the Aacodemlcala.\nAlter leading at Churchill Clyde\nhad to be content with a draw agalnsi\nPartlck Thistle, each -scored three\ntimes through Borland and Cunning\nham, two, for Clyde and Ballatyne\nTorbet and Ness for Thiatle.\nMorton did well to divide thc point:\nwith St. Johnstone at Perth. McCartney scored for Morton and P.iterson\nby   fat.   Johnstone.\nSt. Mirren deserved their win over\nKilmarnock at Paisley. St, Mirren\ngooled through Ste wan and Rankin,\nwhile the cup-holder.s' .goalie gave\nthem the third. Cunningham netted\nfor   Kilmarnock.\nW. R. Campion\nGroceries\nFor Highest Quality\nin High Class\nGroceries\nPhone 110\nYou Are Assured of\nthe Best Prices\nDeliveries   Twice   Daily\nFairview  and  Uphill\nBOSTON GAINS\nITS ELEVENTH\nSTRAIGHT WIN\nScore Is 5-2 When Champions\nDefeat  (he  New  York\nAmerican  Team\nBOSTON. Jan, 1\u2014The Boston Bruins\ngained their 11th consecutive victory,\nequalling the National Hockey league\nrecord, here tonight, by upsetting the\nNew York Americans, 6-2, in - a fast\ngame  filled  with thrilling open plays,\nf he   victory   was   the   world   cham,\nExtra Trousers Free\nFor this month Fit Reform are giving an ex\npair of pants free with any made-to-order suit.   No*\nis your chance to get a suit made to your individu\nmeasure with an extra pair of pants at no extra cost\nPerfect fit absolutely guaranteed.\nQualtiy\nService-\nSatisfaction\nBoxing on\nthe Wan in\nNova Scotia\nHALIFAX,   N  8.,   Jan.   1.\u2014Boning   a\nfew years ago flourished in the Maritime\nProvinces   . Today   lt  ls  Just  about  a\ndead Issue.    One can count the bout*\nvictory   was   mc   wono   cnam,, \u00ab importance at all staged during\npious- sixteenth this season, nnd their \u00b0' **''     \"\"* \u201e\u201e \"    i,\u201e\u201e,i\nQuebec Women\nDemand Vole on\nthat   were   \"fixed    Defore    tne\nI enterd   the  ring  or  the  lack  of  real\nstring   of   consecutive   wins   tied   the \u00ab^\u00a3SLTTt~ *caSTot a lew bouts\nremarkable   streak   which   Les   Canadiens set  up  two years ago,\nBoston U\"W* Americans '5gm~*   \u00a3   T\\T?,*s ?\"., h\"\n,,,.,, , caused this slump In tne ome   iHHu.r\nT.,\u201e,-\u2122n\u201e n\u2122,  ring game, ls not known   Perhaps lt la\nT1,ompson b_\u2122__  \u00bb  \u00ab***\u25a0\"\u25a0'   \u00abt  \u2022\u00bb\"*\u25a0\n'\"\"'\u25a0\"\"-*\u2022 _   _ A few years ago Saint John staged\n_tchman        W*\u2122   Important bout* even- fortnight.    Hall\nShore        Simpson\nCENT-IB\nBarry         Hlne3\nI Roddle McDonald, Jack McKen\nI others He passed as a drawing |\n| springhltl is fast becoming the 1\nj centre ot the Maritime* a n ig-J\n! date, promoters at the mining\nhave staged only preliminary\nI Halifax and Cape Breton fight |\n' are attempting to resurrect the I\ngame and have made some pre\nthis line. But fights ln Maritime I\nnow do not gain half the pub!\nthey did a few years ago.\nJACLaughton, R.(\nSpecializing  ln  Conectlng  Defect\nSight  by  Proper  Glasses\nQuick  Repair Service*\n'.KM 1 IN   BLOCK PHONE\nLET!  WING\nOalbralth        Sheppard\nRIGHT WIMl\nOliver   McVeigh\nBoston spares \u2014 Weiland, Clapper,\nOalnor, Carson, MacKay, Hutton. Owen.\nNew York Spares -Patterson. Bur-\nwe.ster. Holmes, Boyd. Maasecar, Con\nacher, Burch. Reicc.\nOfficial;*--Bell and Ritchie.\nSl'MMARY\nFirst  period\u2014No  scoring.\nSecond period\u20141, Boston, Galbralth,\n(Barry) :47; 2. Boston, Oalnor, 13:03:\n3.   Boston,  Oliver.   18:23.\nThird period -Boston, Oliver (B.arry)\n:ib; 5. Sew York, Holmes. 4:25: 6,\nNew York. Burwelster, (Massecar) 5:25:\n7,   Boston,   Welland,   iClapper)   :25.\nSandwich Boards Describes Breaking\nPermanency of\nConstruction\nDepends Upon\nGood Material\nYou will do well and choose wisely by\nselecting your lumber\nat\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nPhone 176        Foot of Stanley St,\nHv    XL   DEM.XKEE\n(Former   Pltrher   New  York   (Hants)\nThc   Great   Shires,   bad   boy  of  the;\nChicago   While   Sox,   is   getting   more\npublicity   these  days than  Babe  Ruth <\nand   although   still   a   rookie   in   the I\neyes   of   other   players,   he   li  seriously j\nrivaling    the    Bambino    as    the    most\ncolorful    player   in     baseball     today. ,\nIn addition to frankly admitting  that\nhe's    a    good    ball    player,    he    haa\npugilistic  aspirations.\nWhether    his    success    against    hia\nformer   manager, Lena Black burne. Is responsible   for   this   ambition   has   not \u25a0\nbeen  disclosed  by the \"great one,\"\nOeorge Trafton, the Chicago Bear :\nfootball star, took the punch out of 1\nKing Arthur's reputation as a fight- :\ner. but the Great One countered by\nsigning up as a-n actor. There seems\nto bo no end to his versatility.\nNelson News of the Day\nFloral designs. Plants, Flowers. Griz-\nzelle's and  Kandyand, (12052)\nElection of Officers, Nelson Branch,\nCanadian Legion, Thursday, January 2.\nAlt Active members requested to be\npresent   at   8 p.m.  sharp. (12033)\nTOMftlHT\nElection of Officers, Nelson Branch.\nCanadian Legion. All Active Members\nrequested to be present at 8 p.m. sharp\nMONTREAL, Jan, 1 -Olrls bearing\nsandwich boards recently paraded\nMontreal streets to iJraw attention to\nthe fact that women arc allowed to\nvote in Federal elections, but not in\nprovincial, They Wide a tour of the\nmain .street.-. Mid m.irched round the\ncourt house. On their board in French\nand   English   was   this   announcement:\nDo   you   know\nThat Quebec women are supposed\nto have enough intelligence to vote\nIn Federal elections hut not enough\nto  vote   ln   provincial?\nThat Premier Taschercau has .said\nQuebec women .may have tho vote\nwhen  they ask for lt?\nNow that you do know\nWill you ask fcr It through your\ndeputy?\nPublished by the committee of the\nQuebec   Women's   club.\nBy Woman in India\nMONTREAL.  Ouc.  Jan.   1\u2014The  Gaz-\nlmportant .bouts every fortnight,\nfax did the same while the mlnera of\nCape Breton, great lovers of the tfnock-\n'em-dtfn and drag-'em-out affairs, turn- .\ned up regularly for fistic events.\nA few years ago there were some outstanding fighters, not world champions\nby any manner of means, but good\nfighters for this part of the country.\nThere were Roy Chisholm, Nedder Heal-\ney, Johnny Mclntyre, Jack McKenna,\nGordon Paris, Louis Donovan and\nothers. Ail but Jack McKenna have\nquit the game, while McKenna la\nfighting  across the Border,\nLouis Nemis, a really fine welterweight from New Waterford, Cape Breton, waa quite a card around Nova\nScotia clubs, before and after paatim-\ntng with sucess ln New England rings.\nBut Nemis lost many frlendB when he\nfailed to enter the ring, for hia proposed fight with Al Foreman, who lost\nhis Canadian welterweight title only a\nweek or so ago.\nj    Johnny Nemis, brother of Louis, was\nI popular for a  while,  but he  couldn't\nhit  and  fans  soon  tired of  watching\noniy tair  ooxing.    Jr-a_\u00ab  are  t s ;\n. in the Maritimes aa in any part of the\ni world.    They like the hittera.\nRoy Mitchell once held the Canadian\nlight   heavyweight   championship   and   }\npacked  In  the   fans  In  various  bouts   j\nthroughout   the   Maritimes.    Then   he   j\nfigured in a sorry mess with Mike Mc-\nIks Taxl-Tranal\nPhoni  77\nMi\\,\\    ( AKf*\niav   ..ND   NIOHT  SERVICE\n'. >..Mill in<l RXPBE88\nCity Drug C<\nK| -ON'N     UISPI.NBINO    CHEMIfl\nfrtmh.  Kodaks.  Drags,   Station-\n'tall orders promptly dispatch*\n\u2022 >\\   taSC   WIION.   B.   C.   PHON\n'(vitf In and get your weight\n\u2022hone   44 Box \\\nBattery Storage\nfor the Winter\nJust Phone Us\nBennetts Ltd.\nVancouver Oriental\nBattler Is Beaten\nCALGARY. Jan. 1-Elmer Rathwlll,\nMedicine Hat. successfully defended hil\nwestern featherweight title by decisively outpointing O. Hay, a Vancouver\noriental in a 10-roun-i bout here,\nNew Year'B night, \"Nels Ferguson,\nCalgary, outsmarted and out-slugged\nOeo. Griffiths of Regina ln a 10-\nround bout. Ferguson's performance\nwas one of the cleverest in the\nhistory of boxing here. He had Griffith on the verge ot a knockout in\nthe sixth and hit tided out a severe\ntrimming   to the  Reginaian.\nKANSAS   CITY   WINS\nMINNEAPOLIS. Jan. 1\u2014Kansas City\ndefeated Minneapolis 1-0 in an overtime American Hockey association game\nhere   tonight.\nette    under    the    heading    \"Feminine   Tigue   and   dlsapponltlng   fights   with\nRevolt\"   sums   up   the   breaking   away\nof    women    from    old    traditions    In\nIndia.  In   1919  thc Hindu  women   had\nno   vote.     Five   years   later   they   were\naccorded   the   right  to  ballot   for   municipal    and    legislative   council.   Last\nyear  was conferred   the right   to stand\nfoi   Legislative   Assembly   and   Council\nof State. Western education  is  making\nrapid  strides   amongst   women   In  the\nIndian   provinces.   Many   girls   receive\ntuition     at     English     and    American\nseminaries. There ls a woman' univer-\nBit? at Poona. and schools and colleges j\nare   Increasing   throughout    the   pen- \u25a0\ninsula,    along    with    public    Journals f\ndevoted  to the training of women and i\ngirls   along   lines   of   social    freedom :\nand   public   service,  such  as   were   un-'\nknown   by   the   preceding   generations, j\nThe   like   change   la   noticeable   in-'\nChina   where  the   reforming   ordinance\nin  a  modern  sense  begin   the   revolution   of   1912,   and   gradually   spread\nuntil   four   years   ago   the   women   of\nHonan    and    Klangsl    were    politically\nenfranchised,  whilst on  the  educational    side    of    the    movement,    whereas\nln   1906   there   were   only   about   600\ngirls listed in the government schools\ntoday   it   Is  estimated   there  are   millions, keenly interested ln the Women\nStudents'    Association   and    exercising\na   strong   Influence   in   all   social   and\npatriotic    enterprises.   Many   of    them I\nadopt  business  courses,   the  leg si   pro- >.\nfesslon,  and  some even  take up  avl- \\\nlion, showing that the Chinese women\nare    not    behind    their   western   sta-\nters   in   the  spirit of  adventure.\nHEIR TO SWEDISH THRONE\nTONIGHT\nACTON'S   BKAIT   YPARLORS\nAll aids for beauty needs.        (12007)\nAll members of Canadian Legion who\nI can   possibly  do  so,  axe  requested   to\nfmrade   Legion    H.   Q.,   9:15   a.m.   for\nate   Comrade   Thomas   Madden.\n(12083)\n, There will be no meeting of St,\nI Saviour's Women's Auxiliary. Thursday. January 2. The Annual Meeting\nwill  be held Thursday, Januarv 9.\n(12070)\nA.   O.   F-   Court   Star   of   Kootenav\nj meet*   tonight   at   7   p,m\u201e   and   Court\nRoyal Nelson at 8 p.m.    Joint lnstalla-\n| tion   with   Court   Ellen. (12030)\nOrace   Brett's   studio   of   dancing\nclasses  reopens  Friday,  January   10.\n(1208D\nSaw Mill Supplies\nLogging Tools.\nChain\nCant Hooka\nCordage\nPwvisw\nEngine Packing\nSaws\nLubricating Oils\nAxes\nCotton Waste\nRubber Belting \u2014 All Sizes\nPrompt attention to mail orders\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany,    Limited\nWHOLESALE   Kelson, B. C.    RETAIL\n\u2022\u25a0\nRenwicks\nTransfer Go.\nPHONE 797\nCORD WOOD\n12-in. 16-in., 4-ft.\nTry our Mercury Coal\nClear \u2014 Sootless\nEconomical\nA recent portrait study ol Crown Prince Qu\u00bbUt Adolphui, heir to the\nSwedish throne, who u bonony president, will Inaugurate and officiate at the\nimditftrlau arte enhibiUou to be held in Stockholm in 1M0.\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1930_01_02","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0404090","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1930-01-02 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1930-01-02 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\/1.0404090"}