{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-11-19","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1931-02-03","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404308\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Trail Smokeaters Beat Kimberley\nin Second Fixture\n\u2014Pa_e Seven\n0t\\i\n|5\nPetrolle Knocked Out in Opening\nRound by King Tut\n\u2014Page Seven\nVOL. 29.\nNELSON, B. C.   TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1981.\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNo- 245\nHOOVER'S EKT-*.; CASHES. KITCHENER\nrEORGE HUTCHISON, WIFE AND TWO CHILDREN HAVE A REMARKABLE ESCAPE\nNELSON MAN IS\nSLASHED WITH\nKNIFE ABDOMEN\n| William C. Bailey Is Victim of Knifing Affray\nSAM SANSALONE\nARRESTED HERE\nGANDHI HOLDS\nCOMMUNE WITH\nSELF AND GOD\nMust  Stand  Charge  of\nof Attempted Murder\nToday\nAa tbe result 0t a tabbing affray\nln   tbe   residential   portion   of   the\ni O. P. R. Flat Sunday evening, Wll-\nI 11am C. Bailey, C. P. R. laborer, ls\n' ln Kootenay  bake  Oeneral hospital\n. battling   for   life,   while  Sam  San-\ntalone, hie opponent, a road wor_\nI er,   la   ln   tbe   city   lock-up  under\n: errsat, charged with attempted murder.    Benaakme surrendered to the\npolloe   yesterday   afternoon.\nThe ..tabbing tbat sent Bailey to\nthe hospital with a deep gash ln\nthe abdomen that may prove fatal,\ntook place, aa nearly as police can\nnow fix it, about 8 o'clock. None\nof those in close touch with the\naffair drew lt to the attention of\nthe police, who received the first\nintimation of a possible fatal affray\nfrom the hospital late a. night,\ntbe Identity of tbe participants, except Bailey, and particulars of the\noccurrence, having to be traced.\nEugene Stangherlln's store on\nSilica street, west of Falls street,\nwaa tbe scene of the original dispute. It ls stated. There were\nseated at a table in tbe store, Mr.\netangherlin, CMno Teloso, Joe Fierro,\na man named Colombo, and Sansa-\nlone. when Ba.ley, lt is said, appeared a,t the door of the store and\nstarted an argument with Sansalone.\nSANSALONE   LEFT   STORE\nIt is stated tha*. Sansalone left\nlbe store, and tbe two men, wl*h\na third, walked along the street,\nand in the middle of the little\nplank bridge over Cottonwood creek\nmade a few passes at each other.\n( SanJalone was not seen to draw a\nknife or other weapon, but after he\nf presently walked away, Bailey told\ntbe   remaining   man   of   the   trio\n(Continued  on  Page   10)\ninluSJEM\nBROUGHT BEFORE\nSENATE AGAIN\n! President   Hoover  Recommends Arbitration Appropriation Be Extended\nWASHINGTON,  Feb.  3   (AP)\u2014The\nI sinking  by  tbe  coast  guard  of  tbe\n, schooner    \"I'm    Alone\"    was    again\ni brought to the attention of congress\nf today when President Hoover recommended  the unexpended balance of\n[ the  $33,000   appropriation   for   arbl-\ni tratlon of Canadian claims be made\navailable   until   June  30,   1932.\nIn   submitting   the   request,   Di-\n| rector Roop of the budget said:\n\"Although no tea have been ex-\n1 changed fixing the procedure of\nI arbitration of claims submitted by\nCanada on account of thf sinking\nI of the schooner \"I'm Alone\", the\nI Canadian government has not thus\nI far filed lta statement of facts with\n] tbe arbitrators, and it is not pos-\nI slble to forsee Just how much\nI longer this case will continue.\n\"It ls thought, however, that the\n1 American and Canadian arbitrators\nI will not be able to take up this case\nj before June, 1981, in which event it\nj will be necessary to have funds\n[ available for expenditure after July\n1,   1931.\"\nALLAHABAD, India, Feb, t \u2014\n(AP>\u2014After sounding a call to\nbis followers to continue their\ncivil disobedience campaign\nagainst Britain, Mahatma Oandhl, frail 96 pound Nationalist\nleader suddenly went Into trance\nlike silence today lasting 24\nhours.\nNot even his favorite spinning\nwheel, at which he spends so\nmany hours, could draw him\nfrom his 24-hour \"sacrament.\"\nHis friends say It rives him a\nchance to meditate, pray and\ncommune with Ood.\nUNITED EMPIRE\nCANDIDATE OUT\nOF BY-EECTION\nSpringman Withdraws in Favor of Conservative, East\nIslington\nLONDON, Feb. 2 (C P cable)\u2014\nPaul Springman, United Empire crusade candidate, withdrew from the\nEast Islington by-election campaign\nthis afternoon, throwing his support\nto tbe Conservative candidate, Mtss\nThelma   Cazalet.\nThe unexpected action of the\nyoung lawyer, who had the support\nof Lord Beaverbrook, came, lt transpires, following correspondence between Miss Cazalet and himself.\nThe Conservative candidate declared\nshe wishes to see the country approach \"as near as possible\" to\nEmpire free trade and preferences\nfor Empire farmers accompanied by\nequal, or even greater, preferences\nfpr   home   farmers.\nOn receiving word to this effect,\nMr. Springman replied they were\nevidently in complete agreement\nupon essential points of policy and\nhe would, therefore, retire in the\nhope Miss Cazalet would head tbe\npoll wltb  a large majority.\nCHURCHILLSAYS\nBRITISH LION IS\nCHASEDOUT, LAIR\nHas Reference to the British\nSituation in\nIndia\nLIVERPOOL, Feb. 2 (AP)\u2014A picture of the British lion being 'chased\nfrom his lair by rabbits was drawn\ntonight by Rt. Hon. Winston Churchill who, in a speech here, continued his campaign against the part\nplayed by the British government at\nthe   Indian   round  table  conference.\n\"The British lion,\" he said, \"so\nfierce and valiant In bygone days',\nso unconquerable through all the\nglory of Armageddon, can not be\nchased by rabbits from the fields\nand forests of his former glory.\n\"Would France be chased out of\nSyria or Indo-China- Would Italy\nrelinquish her North American possessions- Would the United States\nbe hustled out of the Philippines?\"\nAll these countries, Mr. Churchill\nsaid, had asserted themselves and\ntheir rights with the greatest vigor.\nDR. H. H. THOMAS\nGIVES UP SELF\nTO THE POLICE\nTORONTO, Feb. 2 (CP)\u2014Dr.\nII. H. Thomas, former sales\nmanager of the G. A. Stlmson\nBond company, now In receiver's\nhands, arrived In Toronto late\ntoday in custody of Chief Inspector Jnfin Miller cf the Ontario provincial police. Dr.\nThomas surrendered to the police at Niagara Falls early today, concluding an Intensive\nsearch which had been made\nhy the authorities since his\ndisappearance.\nFISH CARRIER\nBUTLER TO HAVE\nHEARING IN EAST\nON FEBRUARY 16\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 2 (AP)\nPhiladelphia, which has seen\nsmedly O. Batter leading Its\ndrive \u00bbn crime and has heard\nhim as a virile speaker will see\nhim as a defendant tn a court-\nmartial proceedings, and hear\nhim discuss Premier Mussolini\nfor the second thus.\nSecretary Adams today fixed\nMonday, February 16, as the\ndate ter the court martial to\nstart there.\nLOUGHEED BACK\nAT COAST TODAY\nVICTORIA, Feb. 3\u2014Hon. N. S.\nI Lougheed, minister of lands, will\nI return to the city Tuesday from\nI Montreal and Ottawa, where he haa\n[ been on private business. While st\nI the capital Mr. Lougheed acted for\nI the province in negotiations between\nI the federal and provincial govern-\n[ments on several matters. He will\n[report on the result of these negotiations to- Premier folmle on ar-\nI rival.\nBURNS, SINKS\nEUREKA. 0*1., Feb. 3. (AP)\u2014Tbe\nfish carrier \"Vertex\", an 11-ton\ncraft, burned and sank northwest\nof here today. The crew, Captain\nAdolphus Marius Moller and Adolph\nWebstad, tht) mate, escaped In a\nskiff and were picked up by a\ncoast   gusrd   power   boat.\nTbe blaze started from an engine\nbackfire while the men were trying to slear a clogged gasoline line.\nThe fire was seen from shore and\nthe   coast   guard  notified.\nThe \"Vertex\" was of Canadian\nregistry. It left Vancouver far Los\nAngeles in ballast, Captain Moller\nsaid. Moller once captained the vessel \"Twilight\" of Tacoma. Webstad\nIs   from   Vancouver,  B.   C.\nPREMIER'S STOP\nIN NEW YORK IS\nSWATHED, MYSTERY\nNEW YORK, Feb. J\u2014(OP)\u2014Premier R. B. Bennett waa on his way\nto Ottaws tonight. Hehlnd he left\na profound mystery ss to tha purpose of his one day visit here, ar-\nranged while he was en routs home\nfrom his \"unofficial\" visit to Wash-\nUCsMk\nRECALLS CANNIBALISM\nSEVERE QUAKE\nRAZES NAPIER\nNEW ZEALAND\nReport States Huge Number Casualties the\nResult\n_*u*cs ts-um ui uuguuiuit., v-'u-a-o to yett.e ot service ss an employee of the Hudson's Bay 'company won him two medals, recalls\nthe time when cannibalism waa practiced by the Indians in parts of\nnorthern   Ontario.\nFORESEES AT LEAST SIX PARTIES IN\nTHE BRITISH HOUSE OF COMMONS AS\nRESULT ELECTORAL   REFORM   BILL\nFIRES RAGE IN\nCENTER OF CITY\nWarships,   Doctors   and\nNurses Are Rushed\nto Aid\nWreckage of the\nTrade Wind May\nHave Been Seen\nWAflHINOTON,  FBb.  3   (AP)\nPossibility that wreckage of\nthe ill-fated airplane Trade\nWind had been sighted floating in the Atlantic near the\nAzores wsa seen today ln s\nmessage received at the navy\ndepartment from tbe steamship Toungstown.\nThe message said the\nToungstown bad passed gray\ncolored wreckage resembling a\nsection or an airplane wing,\nabout 276 miles northwest of\nHorta, on the island of Payal,\nAaores.\nThe Trade Wind, with Mrs.\nBeryl Hart and Lieut. William\nMacLaren aboard, left Bermuda. January 10. beaded for\nthe Agorae, but never arrived.\nMembers of Labor Ranks Demand to Know Why London\nRetains Privileged Position Regarding\nPdurai Voting\nLONDON, Peb. 2. (CP Cable)\u2014The possibility of there being at\nleast six partlee In the house of commons after the manner of tbe group\nsystem of continental parliaments, wae foreseen tonight as a result of\ntbe electoral reform bill by Robert Morley, Southampton Labor member,  during  the  house  debate on   the  bill.\nThe first challenge came from the Laborltes' own ranks, some\nmembers demanding why the city of London alone retained s privileged\nposition regarding plural voting, which is being abolished elsewhere.\nBt. Hon. J. R. dynes, the home secretary, replied that tbe city of London always had such a determinate Influence not only upon economic\nlife, but upon the political history of the nation that It deserved a\nspecial place ln the house of commons.\nSIR    KAM1TJ.    HOARE    SPEAKS\nSir Samuel Hoare, former air minister, moved the rejection of the\nbill on behalf of the conservative*.. He accused the government of\nhaving wasted weeks and months in preparing a measure for which\ntbe country had given no mandate, mid of ignoring the things whlcb\nreally   mattered,   such   as   unemployment   and   economy.\nFar from protecting minorities, as the bill was supposed to do. tt\ncould be used, said Sir Samuel, to destroy minorities, as had happened\nin the senate election In Australia In 1925. Then the Labor party polled\n1.260,000 votes and the two opposing \"parties, the Country party and\nthe Nationalists, 1.500,000 votes, but the allied parties secured 22 seats,\nand   Labor   not   one.\nFinally, the only real principle behind the bill, said Sir Samuel\nHoare,   was:   \"When   you   see   a   Conservative   head,   hit   it.\"\nSir Herbert Samuel, ln speaking for the Liberals, recalled that the\nConservatives ln 1924 had secured a majority of seats, though possessing only a minority of votes ln the country, and lt was only natural\nthat they should be annoyed with the bill. Sir Herbert thought the\ndice were already loaded ln favor of the Conservatives by the presence\nand attitude of the house of lords, which house was termed \"an Incubus    of    any    progressive    administration.\"\nDO-X IS READY\nTO START FLIGHT\nTo   Leave   Canary    Islands\nThis Morning If Weather\nIs  Favorable\nMADRID, Feb. 2. (AP)\u2014The giant\nOennan eeaplane, DO-X, lay anchored in Oahdo bay near Las Palm-\nas, Canary Islands, tonight, preparing to hop for the Cape Verde\nIslands early Tuesday should weather and ocean conditions be favorable.\nMessages received from Las Palmas\nIndicated, however, a choppy sea\nmight cause difficulties In the takeoff with a heavy load of gasoline,\noil and crew.\nFor the flight to the Cape Verde\nIslands, the second leg of a projected Journey to Rio de Janeiro,\nthe big flying boat was taking on\nan additional 1500 gallons of gasoline, supplementing the supply taken aboard at La* Palmas last night.\n- One unconfirmed report to the\nnewspaper La Naelon declared that\nthe commander was contemplating\na direct hop to the island of Fernando do Noranha, off the Brazilian\ncoast, omitting the halt at Cape\nVerde   islands.\nNEWSPAPER CUTS\nFOR MOVIE ADS\nTO BE CENSORED\nQUEBEC, Que.. Peb. 2.\u2014In future\nall pictures and cuts accompanying\nmot. on picture advertisement* will\nhave first to be passed by the\nboard of censors before they can\nappear in any newspaper, according\nto a proclamation i\u00ab-rued by the\nlieutenant-governor today. The\norder is in , accordance with an\namendment to the press act put\ninto foree last April, It will now\nbe energetically enforced.\nJAMACIANS <\\RE\nREADY WELCOME\nPAIR PRINCES\nKINGSTON. Jamaica, Feb. 2.\u2014\n<Ap)\u2014Thousands of Jamaicans\nflocked into the city tonight tbat\nthey might be on hand with a\ngreat welcome tomorrow as tbe\nPrince of Wales ana prince George\nsteam in aboard the liner Oropesa\nfrom Havana.\nThe city was gaily decorated tonight and the reception to be given\nthe British princes tomorrow will\nbe the gayest held since that of 40\nyears ago when their father, the\nKing,   visited   tbe   lajand.\nThe princes, who are on a trade\ntrip to South .amerlcan, are scheduled to land at noon for an official   welcome  by  the  governor and\nWEUslNGTON, N. Z-, Feb. 8\u2014\n(AP) \u2014 A terrific earthquake\nwhich rooked Napier, a dty of\n14,346 population on the west\ncoast of North Island at 8:51\no'clock this morning caused reports of a great Ices of life.\nMessages    broadcast    by    his\nmajesty's    itoop    Veronica    said\nthat   a   great   toll   was   feared\nand that some deaths were certain, although It gave no figures.\nThe ship's messages added that\nnearly   every   stone   building   In\nthe    town    was    destroyed    and\nthat   fires   were   raging   In   the\ncenter   of   the   city.\nA  man  who witnessed  tbe quake\nIn    Napier    rushed    to    Dannevlrkn,\nan    Inland    town   about   70    miles\nsouthwest of the stricken city, and\ntelephoned   to  Wellington   that   the\ntoes   of   life  must   have   been  considerable.\nHAW   LONG  LINE\"*\nCASUALTIES\nHe said he saw long 11 nee of\ncasualties in the town, which looked\nas if It had undergone a great\nbombardment.\nAll the targs buildings ln the\ncenter of the town were raaed and\nthe post office was largely ln ruins.\nTbe quake was felt orer the\nwhole of ths Hawke bay region, on\nthe west coast of North island, about\n150 miles northeast of Wellington,\nand apparently brought an upheaval\ntn the sea, for steamers which were\nputting out wsre tossed on the\nwaters.\nAs fires began raging in tbe center of Napier, blue jackets were\nlanded from the Veronica to assist\ni n rel let work and the Veron lea\nbroadcast   reports   for   assistance.\nAt this the warships Diomlde and\nDunedln set out from Auckland\nwith doctors, nurses and medical\nsupplies.\nBURNING OF GIRL\nIN AUTO REMAINS\nMYSTERY ENGLAND\nFamous Pilot Runs\nOut of Qas After\nLosing Way in Fog\nWas on Way From Helena, Mont., to Seattle When\nForced Down Yesterday About 2:30 After-\nnoon; Plane Turns Turtle\nPILOT CARRIES PROSPERITY\nDOCUMENT TO STATE GOVERNORS\nHas Flown- 7000 Miles in Past Three Weeks and Has\nVisited 28 States: Landed on N7\nRanch of Chester Paulson\n37 PERSONS ARE\nKILLED, COURSE\nBOGOTA ELECTION\nIn Addition 75 F|ersons Are\nInjured: Incendiary Fires\nOccur Also\nBOGOTA, Colombia, Peb. 2 (AP)\nCasualties ln yesterday's election\ndisorders amounted tonight to 37\nkilled and 75 wounded as additional\nreport* of disturbances ln scattered\nregions   reached   the   capital.\nTbe previous compilations were\nraised by an official government\nannouncement that 10 persons were\nkilled and 60 wounded In the Caribbean coastal village of Monteria,\nbetween Cartagena and Panama\nborder Fire believed to have been\nof Incendiary origin, destroyed the\nbusiness section and telegraph office of the town, delaying official\ncommunications.\nThere were reports of many casualties, particularly in tbe Cartagena\narea, but these were not confirmed.\nMeanwhile the Liberals claim to\nhave won seven of 14 departments\nIn the election while the Conservatives say they were successful in\nnine. Hitherto the Conservatives\nhave   held   the   advantage.\nWHEAT BEING HARVESTED IN ALBERTA\nIS RESULT OF CLIMATIC FREAK THAT\nHAS ASTOUNDED THE WHOLE, CANADA\n_>\u2014\nFarmer   at   Provost,   Alt_.,\nHas Already Cut 55\nAcres of Grain\nWINNIPEG. Feb. Z (CD-\nWestern Canadians will admit\nthat this winter was the freak\nof all climatic freaks In Canada's west and they were ready\nto expert anything from the\nelements. But reports from Provost, Alta., that a farmer \u00bbw\nnutting wheat this winter has\nknocked them back on their\nheels.\nBalmy breams have blown across\nthe prflrlas this winter, spring-like\ntemperatures prevailing over the\nweet.    Iq  Alberta  summer  seemed\nto linger, while the westerners wondered.\nToday M. H- Blelchner, farmer\nnear Provost, declared he has been\ncutting wheat all last week and\nintends to continue operations this\nweek. He said he had cut 56 acres\nand Is now launching an attack on\n120 additional acres. The grain, be\nadds, is cutting fine and the ground\nIs unfroeen and dry. Although\nwheat ls not worth much, Blelchner\nsaid, he can make at least |35 a day\nby cutting at this time of the year.\nBlelchner'a neighbors have Joined\nthe winter wheat harvesting industry and threshing operations are\nunder way on several farms while\nthe old timers try vainly to recall\nsimilar scenes at this time of year\nin   by  tone  days\nCoroner's   Jury   Unable   to\nReach Decision in Foster\nCase\nOTTTEEIBUKN. fjjjortrnunberland.\nPeb. 2 <C P cable)\u2014A coroner's\nJury today began grappling with the\nbaffling problem surrounding tfte\ndeath of Miss Evelyn Poster, 28.\nfrom Injuries received In a blaze\nthat destroyed her motorcar on a\nlonely moor near here on January\nfi.   last.\nThe problem seemed to have two\nexplanations. The first was that\nMiss Poster wae the victim of a\ncriminal who imitated the methods\nsttributfd to Alfred Bouse, now\n[ under sentence 0f death for the\nmurder of an unidentified man\nwhose bodv waa found in the charred\nj ruins of Rouse's motorcar, Tlie\nI other theory was that Miss Poster's\n!mind wis unhinged bv her injuries,\nand that her talo of attack by sn\nunknown man to whom sha had\ngiven a \"lift\" was fabricated.\nSTATED PASSENGER\nATTACKED   HER\nBefore dying Miss Foster stated'\nher passenger attacked her. Set\nfire to her car and left her to \\\ncrawl from the flames to the road\nwhere she was picked up. Exhaustive search failed to produce any\nman likely to be connected with\nthe  incident.\nTbe victim's mother, the principal witness, testified with tears\nfttreaming down her face, that the\ndying girl had informed her she j\nhad been outraged before the man,\nhad sprinkled something out of a\nbottle over her clothes, then she\n\"went  up- In   flames\".\n\"Sbe said. 'Mother. I couldn't\nhelp it. I fought for my life'\" Mrs.\nPoster testified. Evelyn, she added, j\nseemed  perfectly   lucid  at the  time\nThe   Inquest   was   adjourned,\nFIRSfLAPW\nAIRMAIL FLIGHT\nCOMPLETED, EAST\nExperimental Flight Between\nSt. John-Calgary Being\nTried Out\nMONTREAL, Pib. 2 (CP)\u2014The\nfirst lap of an experimental flight\nby which mall will be flown from\nSaint John to Calgary, Alts., was\nsuccessfully completed today when\na Canadian Airways monoplane\nreached St. Hubert airport from the\nIfew  Brunswick   port.\nThe plane did not make a connection wtth the early morning airplane mall service to Toronto and\nthe mail had to be held hero until\ntomorrow   morning.\nThomas Wayllng of Ottawa, who\nherpes to be the first passenger to\nbe flown from the Atlantic to Calgary, arrived on the Saint John\nplane. He hopes to continue his\nflight, via Toronto, Windsor, Detroit,\nChicago, Milwaukee, Minneapolis. St.\nPaul and Winnipeg, linking up with\nthe new St. Paul to Winnipeg survlce\nwhich was to have been Inaugurated\nthis morning but was delayed by |\nweather conditions.\nThe regular Canadian Airways'\nplane left St. Hubert, this morning\nand lt is anticipated will cut more\nthan 24 hours off the time of delivery between Montreal and Calgary\nand   Edmonton.\nGeorge Hutchinson, President Hoover's aerial envoy to the governors of the states. Mrs. Hutchinson,\ntheir two little daughters aged eight and five respectively, and their mascot, a lion cub, made a violent\nlanding at Kitchener or McConnel about 2:30 yesterday afternoon, when their big Stinson monoplane, when\nforced down after straying across the line into Canada\nin a fog, turned turtle, according to facts obtained by\nThe Nelson Daily News from A. Strudwicke by long\ndistance telephone.\nNeither the famous pilot nor any member of his\nfamily was seriously hurt, though all were bruised, one\nof the little girls quite severely, and received treatment from Dr. OHiver of Creston, who motored to the\nscene.\nOn the the other hand the carriage of the plane is\nwrecked though it is believed the wings, though the\nbig machine is lying on its back, escaped injury. It\nis estimated that the damage, amounting to $1000,\ncan be easily and quickly repaired.\nLICENSE FEES\nFOR BEER CLUBS\nIS WORKED OUT\nVICTORIA, Feb. :!\u2014The depute between soldiers clubs and\nthe liquor board over thr\namount of license*, whfrh Ihese\nrlubs BBiO pay for beer privileges has hren satisfactorily\nadjusted, It wa\u00ab stated officially\nat the legislative buildings today. An arrangement MtitfftC-\ntory tm all concerned Is being\nworked   out  by  the   hoard   now,\nTOLMIE, BRUCE\nMADE ATTEND\nJOINT SESSION\nWashington Senate Planning\nto  Talk  Over   Alaskan\nHighway\nOLYMPIA. Wabh.. Feb. St. (API \u2014\nA resolution extending Premier S.\nP, Tolmle and Llent.-Governor H.\nRandolph Bruoe of British Columbia\nan Invitation to attend a .lolnt session of the house and senate Thursday night will be introduced ln the\nsenate tomorrow, Senator W. L. Dim-\nmlck,   Yakima,  said   today.\nTbe occasion, Senator Dtmmlck\nsaid, will be the showing by Asahel\nCurtis, Seattle, of stereoptlcan views\ntaken last June during the golden\ntwilight caravan's tour in the interest of the proposed extension of\nthe Pacific highway from Vancouver,   B.   C,   to   Fairbanks,   Alaska.\nALDERMEN RAISE\nSALMS, COAST\nVancouver Aldermen Vote 7-4\nfor Raise From $1500 to\n$2000 a Year\nHAS   MOWN   :t>nn   MILES\nIn ihe past three weeks Pilot.\nHutch won haa flown about .000\n_Uee, with * prosperity document\nfrom President Hoover to the governors of the var.ous states He\nhas already visited 38 of the A8\nstates in this time, and we* on\nhis way yesterday from Helena, the\ncapital of Montana, to Seattle, when\nho was foraed off Ills course in a\ndense fog, and about 3:30 o'clock\nappeared  over Kitchener.\nHis gasoline gave out. and lie\nhad to make a forced landing on\nthe N7 ranch, belonging to Chester\nPaulson. The landing was fnr\nfrom perfect, owing to the contour,\nand the big machine turned on tfti\nback, of course shalcuig up Its occupants, but rather miraculously\nwl thou',   breajii ng   bonce.\nHarry Redmlle. foreman of the\nN7 ranch, brought Pilot Hut\u00abjh_on\nwith family and nuuscot'tn to Kltchr.\nener by car. and they have put up\nat the Kitchener hotel.\nCONSOI .DATED PHOT AND\nOmCIAL   OWER   ASSISTANCE\nPilot Pago MacPhee, head of the\nConsolidated Mining <fc Smelting\ncompany's flying school, and pilot\nfor w. M. Arctxbald. vice-pnwldent\nin charge of mines, motored up\nfrom Creeton to see If ho could\nassist In any way.\nArrangement* are being made to\nUkn the damaged plane to Spokane\non a flat-car. probably Wedneeday,\nIpr repairs, after which Plteffc\nHutchison will resume his aerial\nmission, to the remaining 30 states.\nFOOD POISONING\nVICTIMS NUMBER\nAN EVEN DOZEN\naRAJTON. N. D, Tea. 2. (AP>\u2014\nA doeen persons were dead tonight,\nvlctmt of botulism, a virulent form\nof food poisoning, which struck\nthem down one by ons over a period  of  four   days.\nTwo of the vlotlms died today af-\nter 10 others had succumbed at Intervals since Isst Thursday when\n17 persons partook of a salad during a party at tbe home ot Edward\nHeln,  near here.\nHome preserved peas, Included in\nthe salad, were blamed by health\nofficials for the fatalities, which\n: included five members of ths Hein\ni family, the parent* and three children.\n\\ WCOUVfiR, Feb. 1_\u2014SnlsHr-.\nof Vancouver aldermen were raised from $1200 in s_.\u00bbrni t\u00bb thr\nrlty council ;il It*, meeting Monday afternoon. The mrrease will\ngo Into atfeet Immedlately.\nThe aldermen wted 7 to 4 in\nfavor of tlir Increase. Aldermen Degrades, Dept ford. Miller,\nDean, Atherton. GI nitons and\nWilson favoring the raise, and\nAldermen Bennett, Orabke, 1-oat\nand Fraser opposing It bitterly.\nAid. 3. 3. McRae was an absentee.\nSWEDISH PRINCE\nPREFERS LOVE TO\nA KINGLY CAREER\nSTOCKHOLM, Feb. 2.\u2014(AP)\u2014.\nYoung Prince Leniuut of Sweden\nchoae today between love In tbe\ncomparatively humble home of a\ngentleman farmer and a bfe of\npomp In a royal palace.\nHit  choice,   wee   fo\/  love.\nHe formally announced his engagement fin Mtss Karln Miesvand'..\na commoner, and daughter of a\nSwedish business man, despite the\ndisapproval of his gnmdfather, Kin*\nGustave.\nTo marry a commoner meant tba-\nhe would lose bis title as print*\nand must renounce succession to\nthe bbrocw for Swedish law prohibits* a marriage between prince\nand commoner wtfchonf tht knowledge  and  consent  of   ehe  king.\nKins Oufftaav? announced toda-v\ntn a mmwage from the palace tha'\n\"after serious consideration a nd\ndeep regret \" he was unable In\nnnnotimi Lennsrf* choloe ot tsh#> g.r\nwho hss been his swwthesj-*, sin i\nchildhood    days.\nPLAN TO DO AWAY\nWITH OVERHEAD\nWIRES, MONTREAL\nMONTREAU Que., Peb. 2.- Pans\nfor the elimination of all Montreal's remaining overhead electric\nwires with the installailon of underground conduits and a request\nfor a special loan of J5.000.000 to\nexecute this project were submitted\nto Premlsr li. A. Taschereau bv\nmembers of the commission on un-\nemptoymercki _,\u201e loosl prrov.nclal\nheadquarters   today.\nThe Weather\nrovetsm      Nplsou   sort    vtc!_tsr-\nOeri^n-ly fa'.r .nd   ra^VK'ely\ncold\nM_L\nM\u00bbk\nNBLSON                                  it\nVictoria    . .                           30\ntt\n48\nKamloops                              M\n34\nPrlnos   aetmte                     n\n40\n60\n48\nSO\nSeattle                                     at\n62\nPortland                               43\ntn\nSan   FraJiclAo     -        -       bs\n\u00abll\nSpoknnr                                   so\n84\nPtntteton             - a\u00bb\nS6\nVernon                   28\n38\nKaslo            aa\n32\nCranbrook    -       21\n28\nCaliwv                                 28\n60\n40\nSwift Ciurwit                       24\nPrtnos  Albsrt,                         \u00ab\n48\n42\nQu'appsll.              -      . 2\u00ab\n4n\n1 'WlnlMBfv    .                 I|\n82\n Page Two\nTHE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS      TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1981.\nHOOP TEAMS IN\n' KIMBERLEY RAISE\nFUNDS BY A PLAY\nKIMBKRUrr. B. C, Feb. 3.\u2014A\ncrowded hall greeted the Ki High\nand Felix basketball teams when\non Friday evening last their repre-\naenenOaUvea staoad a three-act\nplay, \"Tbe Deacon Slips.\" in l-fe\"\nOdd Fellowa' auditorium. The\nyoung actors were trained by Miss\nB. Fraaer of tbe public school\nstaff, and took their parte exceptionally  well.\nFrom * financial standpoint of\nview the evening was a success.\nThe proceed* of the play will be\nused by the teems to meet trawl-\nling and other expenses. The following are thou wh_ took part ln\nthf olay Mlaa Margaret Webell,\nDorothy Nesbltt and Mabel McKay,\nsnd Pat Haseard. Bert Beck, Harry\nShannon, Wally Snider and Oue\nWlk.\nJohn A. Tr*em MP. for Certboc,\nhas certified that to his knowledge\nDr. J. J. OlUis of Memtt, part-time\nphysician to Indians in that distil t\nwu an active .political partisan In\nthe last election and In consequence\nDr  OlllU hM bean dUnrissed.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B.C. Hotels\ngVS\/VV^rVVVwVWWVW^\n5f urn? fntri\nNELSON, B. C. \"\"\"^\nThe best hotel and dining accom...odation\nin the city.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nHUME\u2014c. T. Palmer, Procter; A.\nC. McAdam, F. W Matthew. A. O.\nThompson, H. L. Mullet, D. M. alien, O. H. Jones, Vancouver; H.\nKavan, J. H. Rogers, P. Payne, Creston; S. D. Rogers, Slocan City; J.\nF. Milne, O. F. Wilson. Crawford\nBsy; et. Brauex. Montreal; Mr. and\nMra. W. R. Thomas, London, Eng.;\nO   SlEley,  H.   H.  McBaln,  A.   Man,\nMedicine Hat; A. Dltfpur, T. A. Wallace. O. S. Mcintosh, Mrs. A: J.\nRatcllfls, Mrs. A. K. Oray, Mr. and\nT. G. McKay. Cranbrook; J. o.\nClay, Dr. and Mrs. Yeld, Edgewood;\nMrs. M. L. Morris, W. A. Sterling.\nWinnipeg; W H. Matthews. Toronto; J. A. Broley. Fernie; H. Hownrtt,\nNakusp.\nWhere the Guest Is King\nThe Savoy\nstlLaOlTS NEWEST AND FINEST BOTH,\nMAOT  ROOMS  WITH PRIVAT-\nBATHS OR SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\n|H____wamwwww^^\nMEDICAL HEALTH OFFICER URGES\nCITY TAKE STEPS PROTECT FIVE-\nMILE SYSTEM FROM FIRE RAVAGES\nSuggests  Roads  and  Trails\nand Insurance Scheme\nfor Watershed\nASKS FOB RAISE\nIN  HIS SALARY\nUrges Inspection Sewer Outlets Before Water Level\nRaised Permanently\nSAVOY \u2014 C. B. Johnaton, Corra\nl.mn. C H. Wohlford. A. McLean,\nJ. E. Emsry. Vanootlver; F, c. Han-\nnensan,  Spokane;   H,  Dewls,  Silver-\nton; O. L. Derenny. New York; J.\nDoyle, Creston; Bro. Daata, Sechelt,\nB.  C.\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapolnte, Prop.\nHot ud cold water In every room\nSteam heated\nQUEEirs\u2014D.   8.   Scott,   Thrums;\n\u00ab  ,    ..\u25a0.\u201e_   r\u00bbi. t  n  Nr,vn\u00abkv       NEW ORAND-  W. Jacobson, Craw-\nH. L. Jackaon. Tmlr, T ..   f_d Bay.  _,   R\u201ekovlna  prlnceton.  j.\nNew Qrand\nHotel\nP. 1 \u25a0   KAPAK, Prop.\nW r*klj   or   monthly   rates\nBot and Cold water ln aU rooms\nPhone 50.1     P. O. BOX 1061\nA lengthy report waa read at lest\nnight's meet.ng of the city oouncil\nfrom Dr. E. C. Arthur, medical\nhealth officer. Th, report, he stat,-\ned, was filed so that the council\noould be guided by It In making\nup public health estimates. Among\nrecommendations was one that his\nsalary be raised to $135 per month\nas from January 1. He also urged\nproteoUon ot the Five-mile water\nUie   against   fire   ravages.\nDr. Arthur recommended the purchase of a Babccck tester for milk\ntesting. H\u00ab urged an electrical\nmachine capable of handling 12\nbottles. The cost would be \u00bb60.\nIn addition a .sediment tester oorst-\nlng  910  was urgently  needed.'\nHe recommended payment of >25\nto renew subscriptions to the bulletins of the Matthews Industries.\nPKOTECT    WATERSHED\nProtection of the Five-Mile watershed against fire was urgent. The\nc.ty had an Investment of \u00bb100,000\nln Five-Mile and If a fire swept\nthe watershed, as It did 70 years\nago, the line would be worthless\nat least for the next 40 years. Hts\nreport suggested that the provincial\nforest branch be asked to formulate\na scheme of fire protection, which\nthe city should carry into effect as\nsoon as Is possible. As the present\nsystem stood .t was like owning a\n\u2022 100,000 building and not carrying\nInsurance on lt.\nHe also suggested completion of\nan auto road to *he Five-Mile Intake and a road or trail to the\nvarious forks. This was necessary\nfor protection and he urged that\nthe work bo dome this tfear. He\nalso suggested that the dty secure\ncontrol of tlie aurfaoe and Umber\non the watershed.\nA paralogical laboratory was required !n Nelson. This would cost\nbetween \u00bb1500 and \u00bb3000. A delegation would be waiting upon the\ncounoll in this respect shortly.. He\noutlined the benefits such a laboratory  would  provide ln  the city.\nDr. Arthur declared he wished\nprovision made so that he could attend th\u201e annual meeting of the\nCanadian Public Health assocation.\nWith the WeBt Kootenay Power\n& Light company working upon the\nriver and with a probable chango\nin the water level resulting from\nthis work, Dr. Arthur recommended a thorough examination of alt\nsever outlets so that changes and\nrepairs could be made before low\nwater level Is permanently raised.\nTrall-Tadanac, a community\nabout the same size aa Nelson,\nemployed a full-t me medical health\nofficer at a salary of $3000 per\nyear. This sum was paid for equally\nby the school and health departments. Since 1923, Dr. Arthur\natated, he had been carrying on\na similar work here with a salary\naveraging below \u00bb2000 yearly. This,\nhe claimed to be unfair and suggested an Increase ln salary to\n\u2022125 per month from January 1,\nlast.\nThe report was referred to a com-\nmltAee of the council as a whole.\nROBERTSON GETS\nTENDER SUPPLY\nLINOLEUM, CITY\nPARENTS WITH\nTEACHERS FORM\nASSOCIATION\nRobert Armour, President of\nNewest Organization in\nKimberley\nKIMBERLffY, B. Q. Feb. 3.\u2014On\nthe Invitation of Principal H. D.\nStafford, nearly 100 parents gathered ln the board of trade room on\nFriday evening to discuss the :orrn-\natlon at a Patrent-Teacners association. |\nA. A. Watklns was elected chair\nman and called on Mir. Stafford.\nHe explained that If the school was\nto functon as lt should, ther* must\nbe an adequate and sympathetic\nunderstanding between parents and\nteachers. He believed that the\nParent-Teacher association could\nmake a distinct contribution to\nthat end. Therefore, he had taken\nadvantage of Inspector Manning's\nvisit to have him present to both\nparents and teachers \u00bbhe advantages\nof   such   an   organization.\nMr. Manning reviewed the history\nand place of the Parent-Teachers\nassooatlon, stating that lt stood in\n*he same relationship to the school\nboard as the board of trade did to\ntbe town council. It was non-\npoltticat and nm-e-crartan. It\nwas a medium through which a\nare-it deal of valuable information\ncould be obtained bv both parents\nand teachers. He then listed wa\\s\nIn which the association could h\u00bb\nof practical help to the school\nbord Mr. Mann n\u00abr congratulated\nKlmberley on the remnrVnbl''\ngrowth of the community. A few\nyears ago there were two room*\nand about 40 children. Now the\nschool  population  Is well  over  800\nP^bert Arm-mr of Chapman Cam*i\ncave an IntercMni fr\"i Informlnn:\nrevt#w of the Parent-Teacher association at Anvox. The meetliwt\nunanimously agreed to proceed with\nthe onranlrat'on and elected the\nfnllowlnor officers, Honorarv presidents, H. D. Btattorfl. V. Z. Manning; president. Robert Armour: vlc*-\nnresldent. Mr. Anderson; secretary.\n***** Ward; treasurer, Stanley Norton.\nA nomination committee was ap\npointed to recommend the personnel of the membership and other\ncommittees, and t0 report at the\nnext regular meeting, whloh will be\nheld in the same place on Wednesday,   February   11.\nJ0AL PRODUCERS\nTO ATTEND BIG\nCOAST MEETING\nVICTORIA, B; C. Feb, 2.\u2014Alt coal\nproducing areas of Uw provinoe\nviil be represented at a meeting\n>r the ooal research committee to\n\u201eake place here on Wednesday\nmorn.ng, it wu stated todav by\nHon. W. A. McKenzle, chairman of\nthe comroietee. Examination of the\nresults of recent tests with pulverised ooal In locomotives ln the\nesst, and further tests of the\nbrown-cyclone spark destroyer at\nWinnipeg may be drawn to the attention of the committee.\nChoice of a permanent secretary\nto the group w.U be considered at\nthis meeting. Such an official, It\nwas explained, would require to be\na highly-trained technical man, well\nversed in British Columbia coal\nmining, who would be able to assist ln the educatonal work planned by tbe committee to Inform\nthe public on more efficient methods of using British Columbia soft\nfuel.\nSOVIET ABANDONS\nPROPOCANDA FOR\nFIVE YEAR PLAN\nAppears Content to Utilize\nBest of Capitalism So\nFar as She Benefits\nCRANBRROK MAY\nBE POLICED\nBY PROVINCE\nVICTORIA, lab. 1\u2014Oranbroo* mar\nbt tha latest Britlah Columbia municipality added to the dutlaa ol\nthe provincial polio., tt waa learned\nhere today on reliable authority,\nfollowtni negotiation. be_f owned\non thla week between the civic\nofllclala and Ool. J. C. McMullln.\ncommlaeloner ol the Britlah Columbia force.\nenr council takes first step\nTOWARDS ELIMINATION OF NOISE\nFROM THE CITY STREET CAR LINE\nAIRMAIL FLIGHT\nIS POSTPONED BY\nPOOR VISIBILITY\nVMnnipeg-St. Paul Initial Hop\nWould Hare Completed\n9000-Mile Chain\nSAYS SECESSION\nMOVEMENT NOT TO\nBE SNEERED AT\nrlty\nMadden Hotel\nV.   A.   MCDONALD\nSteam   Heated   Rooms   by   tbe\nDay,    Week    or   Month\nBvery  consideration shown\nto   guests.\nCor. Baker and Ward Street*\nKelson\nUADDBN\u2014M.McLeod. Bonnlngton:\nB.   I   McCain.   Spokane;   T.   Ander-\nO.  Nelson,  city\nPltzrtmmons.\nPoint,\nAt Monday night's meeting of\nthe city council the aldermen, on\nmotion of Alderman J. B. Oray end\nS. H, Smythe accepted the tender\nof D. J. Robertson for class \"A\"\nlinoleum for the new city hall\noffices* The offices are under repair and ln addition to the cashier's case being built, the flooring\nts to be covered with linoleum. -\nThere were three tenderers, th\"\nStandard Purnlture company, the\nHudson's Bay company and D. .1.\nRobertson. The Standard Furniture submitted R price of \u00bb2.60 plus\n46 centa per hour for one man\nlaying the linoleum. Hie Hudson's\nBay tender was $2.40 plus the servloe of a man to cut and lay. D.\n.1 Robertson's figure was $2.25 with\nthe price at laying In cement of\n20c  per  yard.\nMOSCOW, Feb. 8 (AP)\u2014Soviet Russia Is devoting every\nounce of enenrv to the five year\nplan for Industrialisation.\nFor  the   moment   the   project\nor   educating   the   rest   of   the\nworld  to  (vmnuinlsm  has  been\nvirtually  abandoned  and  during\nthe  period  of  truce  the   Soviet\nunion   Is   willing   to   make   the\nbest of capitalism so far as the\ncapitalistic   system   can   be   of\nmaterial benefit to her.\nSignificant of the revised attitude\non propaganda abroad ls the closing\nof the Sun Yat Sen university which\nfrankly was a school .or the training\nrf Communist missionaries to china.\nStalin university, whose purpose was\nthe education of all foreign students\nin   the   tenets   of  Marx   and   Lenin\nalso has been closed, and it is not\nbelieved that the Communist party\nls spending much money on propaganda   abroad.\nIMPROVING   TRADE\nRELATIONS\nSuch propaganda as Is conduced\nls in the interest of Improving\n\u2022trade relations and combating\ncharges of _ore;d labor, and In\nestablishing credits necessary to the\nsuccess of the  five year plan.\nThere are indications that If tbe\n\"world revolution\" should come to\nthe most embarrassed people tn the\nworld, lt would mean disruption of\nthe industrtallBB\/Mon program which\nlt uppermost ln the minds of sll\nthe leaders.\nThe creation of an Empire Arbitration Tribunal is a matter to be\nleft until some lntra-Bmpire dispute unfortunately arises; Rt. Hon.\nJ. H. Thomas secretary for the\nDominions informed a questioner\nIn the British House of Commons.\nWINNIPEG, Man., Teh, fl.\u2014(OT)\u2014\nLow hanging clouds, causing poor\nvisib lity, the bane of aviation, today turned back Pilot A. E. Jarvls\nof Western Canada Airways, an th'.\nIniUal flight of tbe Wlnnipeg-S-\nPaul air mall service. The night\nwas to have forged the last link tn\na 9000-mile ar mall chain, reaching from AJclavik, In the northern\nreaches of Canada's Arctic, to\nBuenos Aires, In'South America.\nStart of the night was scheduled\nfor 8:16 a.m.. from Stevenson field.\nHeavy fog, with a sky celling of\nless than 60 feet, however, held the\nplane to the ground. Despatches\nfrom the south indicated that the\nfog was even worse there, and tbe\nNorthwest Airways machine, whlc\nwas to have connected w-th thr\nWestern Canada Airways plans st\nPembina, N. D.. was reported held\nJust sout*r of Fargo. So far as\nknown, It ^_. not yet taken the\nair.\nSKIES CLEAR SOMEWHAT\nClearing skies this afternoon\nseemed to hold promise of Improved\nflying conditions and at 1:16 pm.\nthe huge mail plane took off for th\"\nsouth. The flight was short lived,\nhowever, and after covering con\nslderable distance Plot Jarvts wa'-\nforced to turn back to t\"oe locel\nairport, due to poor visibility.\nThe weather disrupted air mall\nschedules all over the provinces\nand   to the south, today.\nWeather permitting an effort will\nbe made tomorrow to establish air\nmall service between Wnnlpeg and\nthe twin cities.\nTWO FISHERMEN\nFALL TO DEATH\nSAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 3. (API-\nTwo fishermen fell to their death\nin the Pacific ocean from Mussel\nrooks late yesterday, lt was learned\nhere   tonight.\nThe victims, John Armonlno, 33\nand his cousin, Joseph Armonlno\nr?fj, carrlop lake ranch owners, were\nfishing on the rocks three miles\nsouth of here, when one of them\ndipped. The other. In an effort tc\ndrag him back, lost his balance, and\nhnth   fell   Into the  sea,\nEngineer Evolves Plan to Do\nAway With Radio\nInterference\nAirsing out of tha annual meeting\nof the Nelson Radio club last week.,\nand through a conference between\nR. E. Crerar, president of the club,\nand W. D. Fleet, city electr.cal engineer, the radio situation in Nelson wss thoroughly wired at Monday night's meeting of tba city\ncouncil. Following a lengthy discussion and repeat by the engineer,\nthe council, on moiion of Alderman\nJ. B. Gra. and Alderman H. B\nLindsay, authorised the electrical\ndepartment to make \u00bb start ln\nnoise elimination along Nelson\navenue in Falrvlew. This will be\ncarried on at other points as well.\nMr. Fleet declared that no' doubt\nthere was trouble occurring from\nthe street car lines because of inadequate feeder service. This feed\ner serr.ee was Intended when the\ncity started its power line reconstruction, and be urged that It be\ncompleted as soon as possible. It\nwould not entail a great expenditure, most of tbe money going for\nlabor, as material used would be\nsome secured in the dismantling\nof the old distribution system\nMore taps were necessary every few\nblocks, he declared. The claim of\nthe Radio club that lack of feeders\ncaused rad o noise, was right, ln\nthe opinion of the engineer. Low\nvoltage with street oar motors\nirawlng heavy current caused\n-parking.\nThe engineer expressed himself as\nin favor of an organized scheme of\nnoise elimination. It had been\n~tated at the Radlp club meetln?\nhat there were B00O connections\n_ the new distr button line that\nwere n6t solder d at the Joints.\nThis wee untrue, and between SO\"1\nand 400 pounds of soMer had al-\nre-dv been vsed. There was one\ns ctlon on two alleys where this\n\u25a0vork had not been done so that\nHie department <r.uld balance transformer lends. Th^e Joints would\n\u25a0'Hlmatelv be aoldi\"**d.\nNO   SUBSTATION   TROUBLE\nIn regard to the complaint at the\nsubstation made bv one gentleman\nat the radio meeting, the engineer\ndeclared there was uo trouble at\nthat point. He invited the treat la-\ntaon +m iltempt to find troubl* at\nthat source. If lt were found It\nwould be remeded immediately.\nA rtatement had been made that\nthe city was going to scran tho\nstreet railway. The mere fact that\nthe city had spent 86000 ln 1939,\n$3000 In 1930 and was likely to\nspend a similar amount this year\non the railway, seemed lib show\nthat scrapping was not being contemplated.\nHe declared that citizens did not\n.enerally know that there was a\n-\u25a0vlaw covering radio nstallatlon.\nnnd that as far as he knew no permits necessary by bylaw had ever\nleen sought by aitleens wishing to\n'nstsl sets. There was s penalty\nattached to this bylaw. He ele-\nclared that cooperation and not an-\n'agonlsm was wanted on this redo\nmatter.\nMr.   Fleet   suggeflted   ronlng   the\ncity, noting trouble, the Ume,\nperiod of trouble. Then he rag-\niwed a conference between the\ncity and tht dub to arrive at \u00ab\nmeans at eliminating th* trouble.\nHe told of a case that be* bam\ncleared up recently. Tbe city wee\nbeing blamed, but when the radio\ntrouble. _a*as found tt was ln an\nold fuse base. It was a aueation\nof time before elimination of noise\ncould be cleared up.\nMayor Morgan declared tbat the '\nengineer believed 60 per oent at the\nInterference was through lack erf\nfeeders on the ear Una, A sun, of\n$300 would do the work on Nelson\navenue which hsd to be done at\nany coat. The matter wee referred\nto the engineer for action.\nVANCOUVER HAS\nWARMESTjANCARYl\nHas Mean Temperatnre for ]\nMonth of 43.1 Degrees:\nMuch Rain Abo\nVANCOUVER,  B.  0.,  Feb.  fl.\u2014Tbe\nmonth  Just past was the wannest ;\nJanuary on record In Vancouver,  it\nwas announced today by L. B. Shearman,   official   weather  observer.\nNot only was the mean temperature of 43.1 degrees highest, Its\nnearest competitor being 40.8 degrees In January. 1914, but the\nmaximum of 68 degrees on tbe 38th\nwas the highest thermometer recorded tn the 36 years during which official  records  have been kept.\nThe average temperature for January ln the 36-year period has\nbeen 3V4  degrees.\nJanuary   also  came  cloee   to   est- '\nting a rain record with 11.34 inches\nwhich   was   exceeded   only   in   1936.\nwhen January set a record of 13.18 ,\ninches. The 35--ear average bas been\n108  inches. There wu not even\ntree    of    snow    during    the    past\nmonth.\nJanuary 19 was the coldest day,\nthe thermometer recording 38.1 degrees   in   the   early   morning.\nMORE THAN 300\nAPPLICATIONS TO\nSESSIONAL STAFF |\nVICTORIA, B. C, Fab. \"3.\u2014Over\n300 applications were made for 38\nappointments on the sessional staff\nof the provincial legislature, t^p\npreference being given to returned\nsoldiers badly ln need of employ-\nmnt, it was learned today. With\nthe exoeptlon of stenographers, to\nbe chosen later in the week, most\nof the positions have already been\nfilled, returned soldiers taking all\n13 appointments open to men.\nRev. Canon Oeo. B. Morley, who\nhu been Anglican rector of Mono\nand Bradford and later in charge of\nAnglican parishes In Toronto, U\ndead ln his 80th year.\nJames A. Fariell, president of the\nUnited Statee Steel corporation,\nIn New York there was no foundation for a report that he would\nvisit Premier Bene-t of Canada with\na view of daMtu-lne the extension\nof the United States 8tecl corporation's  plant  st  ullb\u00bbay.  Ont.\nNelson, B.C. Cafes\nTHE ROiAL CAFE\n4.L..00.1.    Hi,!!. A i BANT\nReiliieineiil   aim    Uelmu'y   Prevail\nOPEN    DAY   AND   NIGHT\nSpecial  dinner   11:30  to 2:30   JM\ntapper.   \u00bb:*\u00bb   to  \u00ab     3M\n\u00abpecl\u00ab11iln\u00ab IK Chop \u00bbnr> and Noodlei\nPlume  1S2\nKootenay Cale\n, ..U,,U.4     ..44.444.1\nBlnn,.     11.O0   to   t.il)         35o\nBuuurr    11.30 to II P. m     We\n\u25a0hart order, a  rjprclaltr\nQuick   derrlce\nNext  Kootena;  Hotel,  Nelaos\nTOMORROW'S\nRESULTS\nare based on\nTODAY'S\nACTION\nFor instance you need\na new suit! Why not\nsave some money to use\nfor other needs7\nHere is the Howl\nYou can procure from\nus Navy Blue Suits with\ntwo pants,\nAT THE\nSPECIAI\nPRICE\nNOW NOTE IT\n$25\nSHOP MORRIS\nAND SEE\nCHARLES\nMORRIS LTD.\nWILKIE, Sask., Feb. _. <CP,~The\nrise of the Charter of Liberty movement ln northwest Saskatchewan is\ndue to varied causes, according to\ndivergent opinions expressed here.\nTho charter, which more than 600\nfarmers have signed during a three-\nweek drive, favors formation of a\nwestern free trade commonwealth\nfalling new Dominion government\nmoves for farm aid.\nBusiness men In Wilkle contend\nthat the move arises not from destitution among farmers, but Is due\nto active leadership and campaigning.\nThey say that the area dependent\nmostly on wheat and oats enjoyed\ngood crops, which, however, have\nbeen cut down in grade and value\ndue to early snows and dropping\nprices,\n\"Farmers are In desperate shape,\"\ncontends C. O. Stollker, chairman\nof the district farm body executive and a leader of the Chartist\nmovement. \"They are willing to do\nanything, ready to go the limit, for\nthey feel they are not getting a\nsquare  deal.\"\n\"1 am informed there is a very\nstrong sentiment in favor of the\ncharter among fprmers in adjacent\ndistricts,\" remarks Mayor F. O. At-\nltlnson, of Bsttleford, 40 miles\nnorthwest of Wilkle. \"In some districts the charter has been largely\nsigned.'   '\n\"We cannot close our eyes to\nthe present move toward secession\nln Saskatchewan's northwest,\" comments J. R. MacDonald, for five\nyears mayor of wilkle, and now\ncrown prosecutor for the constituency, \"It ta an outgrowth of a feeling among western agrarians that\nthey are being mistreated by the\neast, and It has come to the fore\nthrough  active leadership.\n\"If, however, the move U to develop beyond an Isolated block of\nsentiment, some of the more radical articles tn the charter must be\ndropped. Moreover, the movement\ncan spread appreciably only through\nenlistment of strong reinforcements\nto the leadership. While I am not\nIn favor of the charter, yet I believe reconciliation can never be attained through ridicule, nor contempt  for  Its  policies.\"\nNow's Your Chance\u2014 ECONOMIZE! \u2014Now's Your Chance\nWhy Pay High Prices For Dental-Work!\n        Drs.   SHAW       \t\nDENTISTS\nAMD\nDENTISTS\nLEDINGHAM\nDAISY DE BOE\nIS REFUSED A\nSECOND TRIAL\nLOS ANGELES, Feb. a.\u2014i\/AP) \u2014\nW>,th a stoic acoeptanee of defeat\nIn a fight for a new trial. Daisy\nde Boe threw herself on the mercy\nof the court today \u00bbt the end of\nher fight to escape a conviction of\nstealing  1835  from Clara Bow.\nA hope she might gain another\nchance to fight tlie grand theft\ncharge filed against her by Uie\nflapper film star, whom she served\ntwo years ss secretary, disappeared\nln a decision h% _ Judge , W Illam\nCoran. denying her a new trial.\nJudge Doran's decision .Mlowed\nrwn hours of argument by her\ncounsel, William Belme, in which\nhe tried unsuccessfully tr, 8how\nthat the verdict was rea\u2022# ed by\n\"lot or chance.\" The defei\u00bb*o, prepared for an advene \"iTTrif, immediately sought permiss on to file an\napplication for probation which was\ngranted and A hearing set for February  10.\nNoW offer you one of the finest appointed, best equipped Dental Offices In the Northwest\nQuaranteed \u2014 Highest Quality \u2014 Dentistry\nAT PRICES\n- ALL CAN AFFORD TO PAY \u25a0\nExtractions\nFillings\nCrowns\nPyorrhea Tr.\n\"We Want ALL Who Need\nDENTAL ATTENTION\nTo Have It.\"\nPlates\nBridges\nInlays\nX-Rays\nWith PLATES-\"The Fit's the Thing!\"\nIt is a shame the way that so many people's appearances are marred by Plates that are made the wrong way.\nFor 10 years we have been perfecting the correction of wrinkles, drooping mouths, unnecessary lines, bulging\nlips and sunken cheeks with Proper Restoration Plates.   We have had wonderful results.   Come in and\nwe will gladly explain this art to you.\nOut-oS-Town Patients\u2014Are assured of prompt accurate service. We operate our own Dental\nLaboratory thereby saving you considerable rime and money.\n-   PHONE   -\n830\nLocated at\n510 Baker Street\nNELSON, B.C.\n(Over Gilker's Clothing\nStore)   ,\nD\nE\nN\nT\nI\nS\nT\nS\nDRS. SHAW\nAND\nLEDINGHAM\nOpen Evenings\nD\nE\nN\nT\nI\nS\nT\nS\n-   PHONE   -\n830\nLocated at\n510 Baker Street\nNELSON, B.C.\n(Over Gilker's Clothing\nStore)\n i\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1981.\nPage raree\nAlderman Anus Martin was nominated by the Conservatives of West\nHamilton to be Uielr candidate ln\ntha provincial by-election to be\nheld on Pebruary 11. Elmore PbU-\npot  Is  the  liberal  candidate.\n\"Nothing Helped\nMe Like Sargon\"\n\"I never had so much good from\nan; medicine ln my life as Ifs bad\nfrom   a   ahort   course   of   thla   new\nMKS. b,llt,M,l   lUhKHIIOl.i.\nI' Sargon treatment. It's gotten me\nr over chronic constipation and bilious\nI headache, that had Just about -worn\nE me out.' The pains used to start\n1 ln my forehead then up over the top\n\"of my head and down tbe back of\n1 my neck; I'd have , a sickening,\nf trembling feeling ln my stomach and\n1 my Umbs often felt cold from poor\nkcirculation, I'd have to take an en.\n1 ema every day. Now, since taking\nt Sargon and Sargon Pills, all of that\nI H a thing of the pant and  I feel\nr stronger   and   'peppier*  all   over\"\t\nf Mre. Barney BJerkhoel, J071, 35th E.\nj Vancouver.\nf Sold by Mann-Bu_erford Drug\nfOo., Nelson, B. 0.\nPRICELESS BOOK\n250 YEARS OLD\nFOUNDJONTREAL\nRare   Historical   Document\nTelia of First French\nSettlers\nMONTREAL,    Feb.   8-_oe*ed   In\na strong box Inside tbe strongest\nan* MLfeat of all aroMvce vaults ln\ntbe court house i_ ft quarto-size\nvolume bound in faded brown linen wrth remnante of deertilde\nobontt tha. kept it tightly closed.\nIt Is tbe first register of the D\u00abu>\nlsh of Lachlne, a veritable news-\n-Mper that tells the story of the\nfort and settlement between 1876\nand  1707, written,  in the main, by\nparish priest whose flair for detail almost Journalistic has made\nhis record unique, rare and priceless  for  historians.\nE. Z. Masslcotte, court house archivist, opened the register and\nirom Ha rag-paper pises, browned\nonly at the edges, took out line\nafter line of Ink script, almost as\nfresh as on the days It waa written around. 350 years ago. By far\nhe _r\u00bb itest number of entries ls\nterminated with the sifcrnture\n\"Remy\". written in bold hand with\na   quill   hand.\n\"Father Pierre Remy\" said Mr.\nMassVjotte, \"the first parish pr.est\nof Lachlne, a BUlplci.__ whose name\nwas given to Fort Remy, in my\nopinion, Is an exceptional figure\namong our priests. Never did he\nforget to givie every detail, never\ndid he overlook points of historical value ln registering acts of clva.\nstatus\u2014births, marriages kind deaths,\nHis register is  unique.\n\"If a person was assassinated,\nFather Remy In the net of burin!\ndescribed the murder, the scene,\nall the details Just as would\nany newspaper today. If a person\ndied of sickness\u2014and one feature of\nthe register lfl, <3 <ngers from Indian* and violent death were auch\nthat thib priest always noted were\na person died of illness\u2014the cause\nof death was started, or ln some\ncases   the   symptoms   preceding   t...e\nJUNIOR PARACHUTE CHAMPION\nWhen You Buy\nPRINTING\nWhat Do You Expect?\nrONOMY In better value for\nyonr money.\nThree outstanding: reasons why you will appreciate our printing. We will add another inducement.\nWe give immediate service with every order.\nJust phone 143 when you have printing problems\nfacing you.\nS*V JMiam latlit Sfams\nHub fopartttWttt\nNelson* B. C.\nCharlie Daly, 19, of Toronto, and until recently a pupil at Hum-\nberslde Collegiate, is at present out of the parachute-Jumping game\nafter having established a Junior record of 10,200 feet. But he says it\nprovides the greatest thrill ln the world, and that if anyone at any\ntime suggests a game of follow-the-leader with a high-flying airplane\nas the starting point, hell  be ready to be the first  man  overboard.\ndeath were described. So faithfully\ndid the parish priest make his descriptions that some ot them hu\/ve\nbeen transcribed from tlie register\nand handed to physicians ln Montreal who today are able to diagnose\nthe fatal disease -ind state the cause\nof death. Father Remy overlooked\nnothing. He was meticulous to ths\nlast degree; one proof ls that I\nhave been able to trace fifteen distinct wills and bequests which he\nmade at various times during his\nlife. Changes In circumstances,\nchanges ln his family, led him not\nto codicils, but to a complete nsw\ntestament of bequest.\"\nBKKATHUS   ATMOSPHERE\nThe ancient tome Hiirly breathes\nthe atmosphere of tbe island of the\n17th century. In covering the years\n1976-1707, bt deals with the passage\nof four spiritual heads of the Lachlne and Tort Remy community,\nThe first entries are signed either\nby Father Etlenne Ouyotte or Father Jean Fremont, but they were\nmissionaries. In 1680, Father Remy\nwent to the parish as Its first actual parish priest and there remained\nuntil 1706, when he wss succeeded\nby ather Michel ds Villermo, who\nserved the  perish  for eleven  years.\nThe register ranks as number\ntihree among parish registers of the\nIsland of Montreal. First comes that\nkept by the Jesuits ln VUle Marie\nmission between 1642 and 1667,\ncarried on by ths Sulplclana who\nSecond Is the register of the parish\nsreotsd tbe parish of VlUe Marie.\nof Points aux Trembles, 1674. After\nthat  ths   liJchlne  register.\nBach page of the Remy register\nholds Its Intrigues for the lover of\nold things and each page ls a revelation of ths daily life of the corn-\ndays clustered .about the old mill\nstlU standing ln ths shadow of\nding lands. The Lachlne ot those\nmunlty of Fort-) Remy and surroun-\nHlghlands bridge and waa In the\nVUle LaSalle ot today.\nMASSACRE OY I.At HIM\nthe masavre of Lachlne, whan, un-\nOutstanding among the interesting entries, are those linked with\nder cover of a storm during the\nnight of August 4-5, 7500 Iroquois\ncrossedr the water picketed the\nhomes of settlers outside Fort Remy\nslaughtered many of the community, tortured them at the stake.\nburned their houses and carried off\nothers for distribution among the\nvarious Indian nations, also to be\ntortured.\nOn October 23 and 29, 1694, Just\nover flvs years later, Father Remy\ndevoted two whole pages of his\nregister to acts he had performed\nln conneotlon with the reburlal of\nremains of massacred settlers, who\nhsd been hastily burled almost\nwhere they lay after the Indian onslaught, \"tn accordance with an order issued by his lordship the bishop of Quebec,\" commences his narrative, he had published from pulpit and dhurch door for three Sundays -the command that the bones\nshould be relmterred In the parish\ncemetery, and he hsd called upon\nhis parishioners to aid ln the location of ths temporary graves. He\nrefers to the massacre by the Iroquois, whom he Invariably terms\n\"our enemies,\" and notes that re-\nburial had been Impossible before\n\"because of the frequency of Indian\nraids and because the flesh hi d not\nbeen entirely consumed.\" On the\n29th hs describes his personal visit\nto eaoh of the temporary graves,\ngives their location and details the\nreburial in the parish cemetery with\nall  the  ritual  of  the   church,\nOns little entry will give an excellent idea of the manner in which\nFather Remy Introduced practical\nnarrative Into his acts of dvU status:\n\"This day, ths first of May, 1689\nwere burled ln the cemetery cf\nthis ohurch the body of ths deceased Jean Barbery, aged two years\nand seven months, and of Anne\nBarbary aged five years, who were\nfound half burned on the twenty-\neighth of April last beside the summer kitchen attatohed to the house\nof    their    father,    Pierre    Barbary,\nwhich lire  omight  by accident.\"\nBut the register Is not merely\nthe repository of signatures of Father Remy and of othsr priests. Marriage ceremonies reveal the writing of the humblast and the highest serving as principals or witnesses. There ls the signature of a\nbride and bridegroom painfully traced with the quill and beside the\nflourish and elegance of some higher placed friend of good education.\nThus. In 1689, one Charles Beloncle\nson of a Norman merchant, and\nPetronlUe Andres, daughter of a\nsergeant in the army of New\nFrance, were wedded. Among ths\nwitnesses who signed the register\nin fins flowing hc-nd was Le Chevalier de Beaurepos, a lieutenant at\neither Fort Reany or Fort Rollond.\nThe marriage entries testify to the\n... ot that few ceremonies of that\nnature, and presumably the festivities which followed were without\na good delegation from the garrison,\nFather Remy knew them all and\nentered their names, their titles and\ntheir ranks. In tribute to tbe moat\nof settlers, never did he forget to\nnote when ta, marriage o. funeral\nwas attended by \"a large representation   of   the   population\"\nRIGHT. HONORABLE\nTITLEIS MISSING\nIN SOUTH AFRICA\nMASQUERADE IS\nGIVEN KIDDIES,\nOTCLOCAN\nLilian McNair as \"Hiawatha\"\nand J. Murray a\u00ab \"Cupid\"\nAre Leading Winners\nSouth .Africa's Premier Not\na Privy Councillor Is\nOnly One\nCAPB TOWN, South Africa. Feb.\n2.\u2014There is no \"Right Honorable\"\ntn the Hertzog government and Hon.\nJames Hertzog prime minister of\nthe Union of South Africa alone\namong the prime ministers of the\nEmpire Is not a privy councillor\nor are any \u201e he members of his\nministry privy councillors. \"When\nthe new premiers of Canada, Aus_\ntr-ilia and New Zealand were created privy councillors at the recent\nimperial Conference ln London.\nGeneral Hereof still stood aloof.\"\nsays a writer of the Cape Argus,\nCape Town. This writer states:\n\"The announcempnt that Rt. Hon,\nJacob ds Vllllers. the chief Justice\nof the Union h-'n heen appointed\na member of the privy council is\ninteresting, because this ls the\nnmt appointment of this sort to\nbe madie during the last years\u2014in\nTact, since the present government\ncame into office, perhaps, however,\nthis appointment of the chief Justice Indicates that n change in\nthis  policy   is  imminent.\n\"Death has reduced the number\nof South African Privy councillors\nbut those entitled to the prefix\n\u2022Right Honcrajble' Includes Sir\nJames Rose-lnnes (former chief Justice of the Union) Oen. Jan, Chrls-\ntlaan Smuts (former prime mlnts^\nter of South Africa). Henry Burton\n(ati\u00bbrney-genenU of the Cape of\nOood Hope). and F. S. Malan\n(member of ths senate of South\nAfrica).\"     -*\nUNEMPLOYED IN\nCITY OF FERNIE\nTO CUT WOOD\nThe Fernie ctly council met on\nWednesday and Thursday to discuss\nthe unemployment problem in the\ncity.\nAfter much discussion it was decided to start a wood cutting camp.\nThe location of A, J. Farquharsons\nold camp near the Fsrnie Elko\nroad about five miles south of\nFernie was chosen as tbs work point\nand logs adjacent to this locality\nwill be cut up into firewood at thlr,\npoint.\nThose wishing for employment will\nbe taken out by the city's trucks\nand brought back again at night.\nThe city will pay for wood cut at\nthis point, at the rate of ons dollar\na rick. A. F. Farquharson Is to be\nemployed as foreman of this work\nat $6 a day. There lias already been\nabout 60 applications for employment on this work.\nThe city will bring this cut wood\nto town and deliver it to purchasers\nat |3 a rick.\nIt ts not expected that tbe city\nwill make enough out of V, to pay\nfor the trucking of men and woou,\nand supervision, etc. Any loss will\nbe charged to direct relief, and the\nGovernment will be asked to bear\ntwo-thirds of lt as In the case of\ndirect payments  of relief.\nBefore deciding on this action the\ncouncil Invited the wood dealers in\ntown to the oouncil meeting bo that\nthey oould make any suggestion*.\nthat they desired.\nThe old electric power house ls to\nbe cleaned out and turned Into a\nstore house by the city.\nMr. Huntington of Vancouver Is\nnow auditing the books of the city.\nHARROP SOCIAL\nCLUB HAS ITS\nANNUAL MEETING\nHARROP, B. C. Feb., 2\u2014The annual meeting of Harrop Social club\nwas held Friday evening, the president,  H.  Falrbank   ln   tbe  chair.\nA oommittee composed of Miss\nHelen Qulnn, Mrs. C. J. Rowley, Miss\nN. Cox, H. Falrbank. B. S. Oreasey\nJ. Berry and C. May was elected,\nand at a subsequent meeting to\nbe held next week, the officers wlLI\nbe   appointed.\nRefreshments wsre served, followed  by  a  dance.\nMiss Muriel Harrop of South Blocan is spending tbe week-end with\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. E- Harrop.\nDr. Wood's\nPneumonia Left Her\nWith a Terrible Cough\nMra A. W. Power, 681 Jane St., Toronto, Ont,\nwrites:\u2014\"Eight years ago I bad a very ssrioos ill\nnesa I had a bad attack of pleurisy and paenmonia\nand waa aii months ia bad. This illness left ms\nwith a terrible oough. I tried sevoral couRh medicines,\nbat they did not seem to haw any effect. Ons day\nmy mother brought ms horns a bottle of I>. Wood'a j\nNorway Pine Syrup, aad after I had taken several\nmore I noticed my eongh gradually leaving maj\nSince that tuns If ever my husband and children or]\nmyself have bad colds I always get 'Dr. Wood's'.\"'\nPrise S6e. a bottle; large family aiss 66e.; ai all\ndraggists or dealers.\n\"FATHER TIME\"\nNOT CORRECT\nTraditional     Expression    Is\nEntirely Wrong Says\nCanon Shatford\nMONTREAL. Feb. 3.\u2014In the old\ndays a kiss without a moustache\nwas considered as dull as an fSS\nwithout salt, but the girls have\nchanged. Canon A. P Shatford said,\naddressing the Kiwani* club and\ntheir wives; the modern girl probably considers moustaches unsanitary\u2014and the beard whose length\nwss once a manifestation of the\nman's vision, is of course utterly\ndemoded.\nThe changing technique of osculation, however, was not the subject\nof Canon Shatford s address. He\nspoke on the rejuvenation of Father\nTime suggesting that the pictorial\nrepresentation of an old gentleman\nwith a scythe and an hour glass was\nfrightfully out of date and depressing. Time ahould be represented by\na youth with flaming eyes tearing a banner flaunting the device,\n\"Excelsior\". Old age and white\nbeards were no longer dignified; today everyone wlsh.d to look ar,\nyoung ss he could contrive to look,\nWe are not given time ln which\nto die,\" the fpeaker objected. \"We\nare given time ln which to live.\nTime is the youngest thing in the\nuniverse. The past Is gone snd the\nfuture ls not yet come. We live\nnot In seconds but !n heart-tvets.\n*I1me te as fresh as th e morn inn\ndew.\"\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C Feb. 3 \u2014\nThe south Slocan hall was on Friday the scene of a gay children's\nmasquerade, given under the auspices oS the Hall society. Mrs. John\nMurray was responsible for the\nr unct-mn.\nBright, red and white streamers\nand Japanese lanterns created ^\ncheery atmosphere. The varied costumes of the children added color\nto  the  picture. -\nThe Judges were Mrs. o. W. Humphrey, Rev. W. J. Crick and Mr. E-\nKeech.\nThe prizes which were given according to ages were distributed by\nMr. crick. Two at the most appealing characters were tiny UHlan McNair as \"Hiawatha\", and Master\nJohn Murray as \"Cupid\", who were\nboth  prize winners.\nPrize oostumes were: Meg Bradshaw, \"Query\"; Rita Jones, \"Day\";\nGrace McWilllams, \"Hula Girl\"; Dol-\nIte Irving and lone Klngsley, \"Dutch\nboy and girl'\"; Tommy Hunt, \"Chinaman\".\nSpecial prlae winners were: Betty\nRuessl, \"Rose\" and Jack Tindaie,\n\"Rajah\".\nOther costumes were: Molly Murray,   \"Night\";   Donnle   Irving,   \"Midshipman\";    Edith   Edwards    \"Page\";\nEva Hendriclcson  \"Martha  Washing   .\nton\"; Thelma Bird, \"Chinese Lady\". |\nBetty    McDonald,    \"Pierrot\";    Siblei\nRamsay.   \"Clown\";   Julian   Yeatman\n\"Doukabor Lady\";   Graham  Tindaie,!\n\"Clown\";   Ralph   Johnson,   \"Golfer\" j\nMrs. F. H. Russei at ths plane\naud Mr. Wllloughby with his violin supplied the music.\nThose assisting in entertaining\nand serving were.  Mr.  and  Mrs.  J.\nD, Yeatman, Mrs. T. A. Whelldon\nMtss A. R. Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. A. I_ Cabe. Miss Mary Brada'iaw,\nMioses Eliza and Dixie Edwards, Mr.\nE. Keech and Col.  L.  Murray.\nSAYS ATLANTIC\nCOVERED LAND\nNEAR MONTREAL\nSCIENCE CLASS\nIS DINNER HOST\nFERNIE SCHOOL\nFERNIE. B. C. TOO. s.-~A de- |\nllfhtful dinner waa served ln the\nhousehold science room of the\nFernie central school at six o'clock\nThursday evening. Principal Pepper\nand the members of the school\nboard were ths guests of the evening. Tbs girls of Grade iX were\nthe hostesses, and adequately demonstrated the great practical value\nof this department ln the school\nprogram.\nAlmost spring weather Is being\nhad through the Crows Nest pass\nGreen blades of grass can be seen\non sunny banks near Crows Nest.\nThere la no snow left east of Hos-\nmer and very Uttle anywhere. Old\ntimers can never remember conditions similar to the present at this\ntime of tbe year.\n. n*tional air tour that wot\nextend from ths Atlantic to the\ntMc.ac and ln which every set\u00a9-\nplane club would participate wee\nproposed at the convention of the\nCansdlan Aeroplane Club's association at Montreal. The tour as outlined by its .proponents would be,\nas much as possible, representative of the advancement mads by\nCanada recently ln the field of\naviation. An armada of planes going from-airport to airport would,\n11 ls though t, have Its beneficial\nresults from ths point of view ot\nthe public.\nhest Colds\nnotation of a large collective loan\nto the Nationalist government of\nChina by Great Britain. United\nStates aad other countries, would\nlead, lt is believed ln diplomatic\ncircles at Ottawa, to the opening\nof a Canadian legation ln Nanking.\nJames K. Watklns, former university of Michigan football star,\nRhodes scholar, army officer and\nleading Detroit attorney, took office as Detroit's new police commissioner. He was the fourth man\nto assume charge of the police department ln a year.\nThe average depth of the ocean is\n14,040  feet.\nRub well over\nthroat and cheat\nW VapoRui\ngpn,tii,'jmbi.Trui'm.iMiip\nO. Clarke Describes the Effect on Glacial Period\non Lakeg Region\nMONTREAL, Feb. 2.\u2014A story\nof the time when the levels of\nthe Great Lakes were 60 feet higher\nthan today and when the northern\noart of North America was covered\nwith Ice a mile deep, was told\nmembers of the Over-Seas Club by\nDr. Thomas H. Clark, professor of\npaJeontholoj-y  at McOlll university\nBefore th? last glacial period.\nthe Great Lakes did not exist, said\nDr. Clark. Niagara Falls was nonexistent and where Lake Ontario lies\nnow was \" river, called by geologists\nthe Laurentian river, which followed\nthe preseni. course of the St, Lawrence river but was longer. The\ncountry then hsd a milder climate\nthsn tod^y,  he said.\nThe gjfccters l.ft threo lakes, one\nnear the lower end of Lake Michigan, one near Lake Superior and\none near the lower end of Lak;\nErie. Later changes filled out the\noutlines of the lake system as we\nknow it today, but .it a hisrher level,\nsaid   Dr   Clark\nThe position of Niagara Falls Is\nchanging rapidly, said Dr. Clark,\nmoving southward up the Niagara\nriver at the rate of five feet a\nvear, as the water breaks down the\nImestone  at  its edge.\nAfter the melting of the glacier,\nthe sea flowed in and covered the\nSt. Lawrence valley, said Dr. Clark.\nProof of this is found on Mount\nRoyal. 600 feet above the present\nsea level, the finding 0f the skeleton of sn Arctic whale at Smith'*\nFalls and th^ finding of marine fossils all throughout tbe area.\nSILVERWARE\nWe   are   showing   a   fine\nselection of the newest\ngoods in Silverware.\nHIOMEST QUALITY,\nBEAUTIFUL DESIGNS\nTea sets, sugar and cream\nsets,  casseroles,  compotes,\nbon-bon dishes, pie plates,\nvases, salt and peppers.\nJ. B. GRAY\n407  Baker  \u00abt.       Nelson,  B.  C.\nsilversmith,  Jeweler,   Watchmaker\nTo gauge th* condition of ths\nheart, there is a simple test which j\nanyons can make. Medical men\nagree that lt Is unrivalled aa a means\nof finding out if the heart is in health\nor doing its work under difficulties.  '\n\"Are you short of breath when <\ngoing up stairs?\"\nThe extent to which you are in-\nconrenienced under this strain will |\ntell you how serious may be the |\ncondition of your heart.\nIn most ewes, the trouble la\ncaused by a weakness of the blood\nand a run down condition of the nervous system. The logical prescription\nla Dr. Chass's Nerve Food because\nthis treatment enriches the blood\nand strengthens the nerves of the\nheart, as well as those of the other\nvital organs.\nThis reconstructive treatment has\nproven effective over auch a long\nperiod that you can use It with the\nfullest confidence that the result!\nwill be most satisfactory.\nDYEING\nWe dye all colon and\ncan match customer's\npatterns.\nPrices reasonable.\nMail Orders Paid\nOne Way\nHa K. FOOT\nDlih Claas oyer and\nCleaner\nFalrvlew, Nelatfn. B. C.\nHOW A BISHOP DOES IT\nOscar Ryan and Thomas McEwan,!\nCommunists, who were arrested a i\nlew weeks ago on charges of ob-1\natructlnR the police, were each sen- j\ntenced   In   Toronto   police   court.\nWards Off Rheumatism and\nConstipation with Kruschen\nA well-known Lord Bishop hsd been\ntroubled with rheumatism and constipation. He tried Kruschen Salts.\nThe results impressed him so much\nthat he wrote to tell us about it.\nCould any testimony he entitled to\ngreater respect than that of this high\ndignitary? He writes:\u2014\n\u2022' I use Kruschen Salts for two purposes -to ward off recurrent attacks of\nrheumatism, and against Constipation.\nI have now no trouble in either direction, since I began your dally doses,\nand I could not do without them.\"\nAsked if he had any objections to his j\nremarks being published, the Bishop!\nreplied : \" Vou may publish the text\nof ray letter -but not my name.\"\nDo you realise what causes then-!\nmatism ? Nothing but sharp-edjred\nUrto acid crystals which form as the\nresult of sluggish eliminating organs. I\nKruschen Salts can always be counted ]\nupon to clear those painful crystals!\nfrom the system. The six salts in\nKruschen are bound to dissolve away\nall traces of uric acid.    And moral!\nThey ensure ,Uch perfect internal\nregularity that no such body poisons\nas uric acid are ever able to accumulate again. Prove this for yourseir by\nbuying a bottle of Kruschen. Think\nwhat a lot, you get. for so little. Not\njust one gait. Kruschen is a perfect\nblend of those six natural salts which\narc vital to your bodilv well-being.\nEvery day you must have these Salta\nor things go wrong inside you.\nKrusrhen Salts Is obtainable at all\nDrug Stores at Kc. and 75c. per bottle.\nSIBERIAN TRIBES*\nUSE MUSHROOMS\nAS INTOXICANT\nMONTREAL. Teh. 3.\u2014Intoxication\nproduced In a novel manner was\ndescribed by Prof. Reginald Buller\nof the University of Manitoba recently ln a lecture at McQill university.\nCertain tribes of eastern Siberia\nchew a species of mushroom from\nwhich ls obtained an alklloid known\nas muscorlnc. The resulting intoxication Is so effective tbat these\nnatives see visions, move as though\ntn a trance and finally end the\n\"binge\" with a period of deep slum-\nber, waking with seemingly no 111\neffects.\nSex life of mushroooms was shown\nby a series of slides by Prof. Buller.\nA million spores a minute are\nthrown out from a mushroom or\ntoadstool, stated the lecturer. Literally pushed from the gills of the\nfungus In such numbers, the apparently inactive plant. is really\nteaming with moving spores, the\nordsrly nature of thflr propulsion\ninto ths world to be carried by the\nwind or fly to some seed plot being\nshown very clearly,\n\"A sexual re-actlon*\" he stated,\ntakes place only between certain\nndlvidual sporltngs ln some kinds\nof toadstools. Fifty per cent of the\nlittle plants are plus insects and tbs\nother 50 per cent minus Insects.\nTwo pauses will not mate; two\nminuses will not mate; but a plus\nwill always mate with a minus\nmate.\n\"Until 1917, nothing was known\nexperWientally of spx in mushrooms,\nbut now lt ls known that like\nother plants and animals, they all\ndisplay lt.\" concluded Prof. Bullet.\n(\u00bb IMCOItPOItATCO WlW MAV\nOther Branches  at  Winnipeg,  Yorkton,   \"saskatoon,   Edmonton,   Calgary,   Vancoutet,\nkamloops,   \\ernon   and   Victoria.\nLadies1 Wear\nSKIRTS\u2014Made of all wool serge,\ncrepe georgette and flannel. Pleated or circular styles. Suitable for\ntuck-in models. Sizes 14 to 20\nyears. Shades are Saxe Blue,\nBrown, Scarlet, Green, Rosewood\nand Naw. Prices 93.50 to S4.95\nBLOUSES\u2014Made of heavy quality\nflat crepe. Long sleeves or sleeveless. Trimmed with frilled fronts,\nbows ami tucks. Suitable for tuck-\nin or outside styles. Shades are\nEggshell, Pink, White and Sand.\nSizes 34 to 40.\nPrices 93.95 to 96.05.\nHATS \u2014 Pelt and velvet, ln all\nshades. Values up to $4.95. Special      91.95\n\u2014Second   Floor\u2014H.B.C.\u2014\nMen _ Underwear\nMERCURY BRA.NI) MERINO UNDERWEAR \u2014 Guaranteed unshrinkable, and undoubtedly the\nbest, wearing underwear oblain-\nable.\nCombinations.  Special  price  $2.75\nShirts or Drawers.      Special price\n91.79.\n\u2014Main   Floor\u2014H. B. C. \u2014\nDRY GOODS\nToday's Specials\nFULL SIZE BED\nCOMFORTERS\nFor $3.50\nIt's an opportunity you cannot afford to miss. Excellent quality\nCretonne coverings n floral designs, and filled with purified\ncotton batting. All fall ?izes.\nEach, special , 93.50\n\u2014Main   1 loor\u2014U.B.C.\u2014\n Page Four\nTHE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS      TUESDAY, FEBRLURY 8, 1981.\nI'l k Fit BT.*\nIll- \u2022.?\u25a0\u00ab * I     Fl \u201e l,'le__3r __.\na _c* s.    iK\u00bb__i in a \u25a0*_?:\u25a0'\"..   i.\nWOMAN S PAGE\n__\\e Gamin^D\n<By (Robert ^Terry Shannon\nf J'1 J^a^*i-*a*F*>*^3gaae\nCXATTOt     TWENTY-NINE\n35 -\nOonnle slept with a light, surface\nslumber that left her nut slightly\nrested tn the morning. Across the\nbreakfast table aha thought Justin\nKent's attitude was notlcea\\.y\nstrained, a trifle aloof. The fact\nthat Bddle Costello, wounded and a\nfugitive, was hiding in tbe garage\u2014\nthat be bad appeared at the culminating moment of her new life wltb\nJustin Kent\u2014had put Connie's every\nnerve on mettle.\nNow. In the full flood of daylight,\nwltb a fresh bowl ot roses ln the\ncentre of the table, she felt she\nwould be better able to handle the\ndifficult situation than she she had\nbeen the night before, when her\nemotions bad been stretched to the\nbreaking point.\nShe had tried to explain to Justin\nKent the terrible shock that caused\nber to break away from bis embrace,\nln her room the night before . .\nmade a plea tbat she was a prey to\nnerves. Hs had accepted the ex*\nplanatlon apparently\u2014she had no\nmeans of knowing Ins real impression.\nNow. facing blm in daylight, none\nof tbe previous night's glamor remained; he was as unromantlc as\never\u2014the same slightly rumpled\nhah*, the same thoughtful, careworn face.\n\"I want to explain about last\nnight\u2014\" she said with a desire to\nbolster up ber original explanation.\nWhatever the outcome of the\nstrange situation, she realized that\nunder no circumstance,, must her\nhusband learn the  truth.    If  there\nCANADIAN CHAMPIONS\nBridge\nTonight?\nWe have all the necessary requirements for a\nsuccessful and enjoyable\nevening.\nOur assortment of tallies, score pads, decks of\ncards, bridge candy, appropriate gift merchandise for prizes, is sure\nto be a pleasure to yourself and to your guests.\nPOOLE DRUG\nCo.\nPhone 25\nMedical Arts Building\nwas deceit In ber attitude, lt was\ncompletely overbalanced by tbe necessity of safeguarding him from the\nmenace of Eddie Costello.\n\"Tour explanation last night seemed sufficient,\" Justin Kent said with\na faint trace of coldness.\nOonnle searched bis face; thought\nshe detected the shadow of a hurt.\n\"My explanation satisfied you?\"\n\"Yes.\"\n\"But the way I left you\u2014lt mnst\nhave seemed strange.\"\n\"Not at all. It ls a lady's privilege\nI believe, to change her mind, isn't\nit?\"\n\"Do you think I merely\u2014changed\nmy mind?\"\nBitterness   wis   so   alien   to   the\nnature of Justin Kent that gentle\nnote colored the tone of bis voice.\nWhat else could I think? At one\nmoment you were In my arms and I\nwas elevated to a pinnacle of happiness beyond anything I had ever\ndreamed. The next instant you tore\nyourself away from me. You pushed\nme from you as though, I had suddenly become repulsive to you. Quite\nevidently there was a change of\nmind. You told me tbat you were\nnervous and unstrung. I accept the\nexplanation. It Is difficult for me,\nhowever, to fathom a state of mind\nthat can be so indecisive.\"\nThe ah<er precision of hts words\nrevealed to Connie's acute mind the\ndeep wound he waa trying to conceal. His conclusion, she was able\nto see, was the only natural one . .\nthat she was flighty . . incurably\nfickle.\n\"Have I ever seemed that kind of\nperson to you\u2014a girl  wbo could\nwould pretend to be ln love?\"\nHis eyes looked at her steadily,\nand for the first time she noticed\nthat there was something of deep\nwin in them; something akin to\n..tubbomness.\nT do not see that we need to\npursue the subject further, my\ndear,\" he said. \"Please understand.\nI do not think tbat you wilfully attempted to play wltb my affections.\nBut love should be whole-hearted\u2014\nnot a game of hide and seek.\"\nSlowly Qonnle's heart began to\nchill.\n'You mean tbat you dont believe\nI love you?\"\nI think you think you do\u2014tf you\nknow what I mean,*\" Justin Kent\nsaid thoughtrullv. \"I want to b\u00ab*\nfair to you, and I want to be fair\nto myself. 1 think since lsst night\nsome kind of a change has come\nover ms\u2014a new door seemed to have\nbeen opened tn my life. Do you re\nmember what you said to me yes\nterdsy?**\nMomentarily Connie's mind wss i\nblank.\n\"I don't know .what you mean\u2014\"\n\"You asid you wanted to make\nyour whole life a prayer of service\nto me\u2014\"\n\"I meant it, too, Justin!\"\n\"I know you did, dear girl, and\nthat's why I want to be so very\ngentle with you. I'm older than you\nConnie and It may be that you have\nmistaken what you, perhaps, think\nof as gratitude for love. Perhaps\nthat accounts for your nervous\nbreakdown lsst night. Connie . . I\nlove you so much that rather than\nhold you to a loveless marriage, I\nwould release you\u2014at ones. I don't\nblame you\u2014I try to understand\nDo you want to be free?\"\n(To be continued >\nMen's Styles MatcK\nWomen's for Color\nEnemnUe \/(tea, Popular Three\nSeasons. Now Missing at\nParis Salons\nThe photograph abov\u00ab shows Miss\nCecil Eustace Smith and Stewart\nReburn, Canadian champion skaters,\nwbo  will  compete  at  tbe  Canadian >\nfancy skating championship* commencing Friday, January 80, at Toronto.\nHousehold Hints\nYou can mend celluloid articles\nvery nloely by moistening the broken\nedges with glacial acetic acid,\nholding them together until tbe acid\ndries.\nNeglected drinking water la\ncause of many ailments of household pets. Vetarlnsrles say that\nand they recommend shallow earthenware dishes because their smooth\nsurface will not harbor germs, tbey\ncan easily be scalded each day and\nthey do not rust.\nDo not use Javelle wster on wool\nor  silk.\nUss a soft paint brush  lor dusting house plants .\nWhen   cutting   patchwork   use\npiece of blotter  for a  pattern.\nA folded envelope will answer\nthe purpose of a shoe horn wtien\ntravelling.\nSave gaa by using kettles with\nlarge bases. Thsy heat more quickly\nthan the smaller ones.\nTo wipe tbe book shelves wltb oil\nof cedar ls said to keep the books\nfrom   moulding.\nTbe guest room on the north\nside of the house can be made\nmuch more cheerful if tbe walls are\npainted or papered a daffodil yel\nlow.\nJF   VOUR   FACE   IS   FAT\nAvoid   large   and   heavy   earrings.\nWear your hair parted on one\naide   rather   than   ln   the   middle.\nAvoid square necklines. The V-\nshaped neckline is far more becoming.\nDo not rouge heavily and what\nis applied ahould be high up on\nthe   cheeks\u2014never   over   the   whole\nTurned-down hat brims are almost always more complimentary to\nthe plump free. A little hair show-\nin  under  the   brim   helps,   too.\nIn Love With Love?\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nAn Authority  on  Problems  nf   Love  and  Marriage\nIfs a wise girl that oan tell the *, tax on   possession   of   tbe   girl   wbo\nPARIS, Feb. 3.\u2014Tbe matching\nensemble Idea which hae been a\nfavorite wltb smart set for the\nlast three seasons, was tossed into\ntbe discard by tha Paris couturiers\ntodag. Coats contrasting with \"dresses ln both color and fabric were\nexhibited as the smartest traveling\nand street costumes for fashionable\nwomen.\nTbe spring costumes Included\ncoata and frocks combining two\nor three colors, one generally somber and tbe other bright, a dark\nbrown rough wool coat to be worn\nover a brick red linen dress, a dark\nL>iue wool wrap lined with bright\ngreen atlk to be accompanied by\nbright green crepella frock and\nblack and white pebbly weave\nwool coat, lined with scarlet crepe\nto worn wtth an oyster white Shantung gown were among tbe models\ndisplayed.\nCoats generally were fitted models designed with a scent flare at\nthe bottom and fairly tight sleeves\nhaving snV'll cuffs and a standard\nrou collar, A few belts marked\nthe models, most of which were\ndouble breasted design, buttoning\nthe left side. Almost no fur\nwas used, frooks were simple ln\ndeslgn wltn K\u00b0red or pleated skirts\nfitting the hips closely. Many square\nnecklines were seen.\nGRAPE   jrit'E   NECTAR\n, nice harmless drink for the\nladles of the needlework guild when\nthey meet at your house. One pint\npure grape Juice, ^ cup sugar, the\njuice of 3 lemons and 1 pint of\nwater. Mix well and garnish each\nglass with thin siloes of lemon or\norange and serve ice cold or with\ncracked les in the glasses. The Ingredients may be Increased proportionately.\n'Host's   Suit\"    With   Sash\nAmong Gay 'Garments for\nMasculine Wear\nprrTSBtmoH,    Feb.    a.\u2014\"What\nthe well dressed man will wear\"\nfor  1831  includes:\nMore, decidedly more, oolor\u2014 especially for sport affairs.\nA wider variety of attire from\nbusiness dress to Informal and\nformal social events designs.\nA special costume, known as tbe\n\"directors Burt,\" recommended for\ntbe  banker   or  business  man.\nTbe \"host's suit,\" Including a\nsash If desired, which allows tbe\nhost to be distinguished from his\nguests.\nThe scarlet costume for hunt\nclub programs, both formal and\ninformal.\nThese were the silent points of\nthe year's fashion decree rendered\ntoday by the national association\nof merchant tailors of America cs\nthe style arbiters of the nation\nopened their four day convention\nhere.\nTbe drees coat emerges triumphantly, still supreme for forma,\nevening wear, but wltb a new\ncolor of \"midnight blue\" introduced, la. teat, there should bo\ntwo suite in the wardrobe, thi.\nstandard   black   garment   Included\nThe \"host suit\" is __lgne_ tc\ntake tlie place of the tuxedo foi\nmen entertaining informally a.\nhome. It win be offered in novelty\ncolored cashmeres, blues, purples,\nbrowns, tans and maroons with fi\nrolling shawl collar, A sash of the\nsame silk uaed in the facing may\nbe worn.\nOX   TAIL  sour\nCut, one medium-atied ox teu ln I\nerven pieces and place in a saucepan\nwith 7 cups water and Mt teaspoon |\nsalt. Simmer until Uie meat is tender, removing any scum that may ]\nrise. Remove tne wu from fee j\nstock and add to the stock 1 cup 1\nchopped celery, 3 whole cloves, 11\nchopped onion, salt* and pepper. I\nSimmer slowly until the vegetables f\nare tender. Return ment to the J\nstook,  reheat  and  serve.\nfest f<\nLAUNDERIVC\nTborough rinsing is as important\nas thorough washing for successful laundering. Soap or soda left\nin clothes yellows them and increases their tendency to scorch\nwhen Ironed-,\nTone In\nITieMIJEBBlWNMAII\nJESIER-Ricbv Craig Jt\nTONIGHT 8:15 PaeMla Time\nColombia Broadcasting\nSystem\u2014over\nKFPY\nPmmleAtj\nBine Ribbon Mak\nAmericas Blagm Seller\nA   CH\/CK-UP\nyon\nNetaon mtlj' >\u00ab\u25a0\u00bb.\nid Taker means lt\n\"111 be tnnsmlttea\nto thousands of read-\ne\u2014 ln th. raurnlnt-.\n(all   143 or   im.\nRBULfS\nare what yo\u00ab want\nA check-up of the medicine cabinet should be msde esch month\nIn order to replenish the necessary\ndrugs and sundries that is should\ncontain. If this ls not done periodically, there Is bound to come\nan emergency when aome medicine\nor dressing )* needed badly and we\nfind lt has sll been used.\nWORN   LINOLEUM\nFinely chopped cork mixed with\nliquid glue is excellent as a filler\nfor holes in linoleum. When lt has\nset hard, rub down wltb emery\npaper and paint to match the linoleum.\nA PROTECTION\nA strip of adYiesTvs tape around\nthe four corners of the bed springs\nis likely to ssve many tears in the\ncorners of tbs sheets.\ndifference between being ln love'\nwith love, or being ln love with an\nindividual whom, for the sake of\nconvenience, we'll call \"John Smith\"\nJohn may have been ln the habit\nof calling two or three time a week\nand the girl, in question, found\nhim dull, Or Mr. Smith may be a\nwidower with six children and no\nmoney. Or he may be a queed fish\nwith no assets but that of borrowing money from his friends, Suddenly any one of theso Smiths may\nbecome endowed with tho radiance\nof Prince Charming, hie cornmon-\nplviceness disappears,, he emerges\na god like creature \"with a rainbow\n'round Ills shoulders.\"\nInvesting a ma^, with splendid\nqualities his own mother never knew\nhe had, etc, are a few of the\nsymptoms of being ln love with\nlove. It's one of those sly tricks\nnature la so fond of putting over\non us poor creatures\u2014especially after the late twenties.\nPanic -that now or never feeling\n\u2014Is back of nature's little prank\non the girl betrinnlng to fall irf\nlove with love. She has seen all her\nfriends get married very likely, \"The\nbunch\" she's trailed round with\nsince they left high school hss\nso. ttered. Interest* have changed\n\u2014husbands, homes, posesslons, babies are the topics of her married\nfriends who quote \"my husband\"\non all occasions; and Its pretty\nhard for the girl survivor not to\nbe able to glKe like for like. And\nwhen it cornea to the cutoness of\nJunior and little Oladys the oaee\nts even worse.\nIfs then alas, that any available\nman creature begins to take on\nthe radiance of a Prince Charming.\nSudden and unaccountable fear is\nback of the J. Smith boom. Panic,\nwith   Its   now   or   never   urge,   has\nEfficient Housekeeping\nB>    I.Ai RA    h.    MKhM \\N\nimagines herself stranded. Open-\neyed she walks into the trap\nplanned by nature and summed up\nin the proverb: \"Marry In haste,\nrepent  at  leisure.\"\nLater, when she sits down to\nthink things over, she wonders why\nshe ever fell for John Smith? And\nhere are fcome of the reasons: Seeing the rest of the bunch get mar.\nried, ha-vlng to listen to them quote\ntheir husbands, seeing displayed the\nmost adorable baby clothes; In leaser degrees admiring the raonc-\ngramnwd guest towels, Initialed\nnapkins, chintz curtaJns, art rugB,\nall of which the newly married\nseem to have.\nThese possessions\u2014 the heart of\nyour truly feminine woman pan-\nteth after\u2014and they have helped to\ngild the non-existent wings of\nmany a John Smith, widower with\n\"encumberances.\" The panicky girl\nwould never have dreamed of marrying him If she hadn't let herself lapbe Into that sole survivor\nfeeling.\nThe first symptoms\u2014 an interest\nln linen sales and furniture\u2014should\nbo enough to put the wise girl on\nher guard.\nAfter you've been bridesmaid\nthree or four times, close your\nears to what \"my husband\" says.\nclose your eyea to the darling baby\nclothes: flee the monogrummed\ntowels, the chintz curtains and tbe\nart rugs.\nSome, at least, of these things\nyou can have. If you l i ve home,\nbuy some chlntc at a bargain sale\nand do the living room over and\nbegin to monogram a few towels\nagainst the day you'll meet the\nright man. But don't, I Implore\nyou rueb off and marry John Smith\nIn a panic because the rest of the\ngirls  are  quoting  \"my   husband.\"\n143\nPhones\n144\nTOMORROWS   MENT |\nBreakfast\nOrange   Juic*\nCereal\nFried  Egg* Bacon\nToast Coffee\nUuKheon\nTomato Cream Soup\nCroutons\nLettuce French Dressing\nStewed Prunes ^Uy- Doughnute\nTea\nDinner\nFruit   Cocktails\nSiloed   Leftover  Beef\nWarmed ln Orevy\nNoodles Una  Beans\nCaramel Tarts   ,\nCoffee'\nANSWWW  TO  INQUIRIES\nMni. S. P.: \"Have you a recipe for\ntJheesei'w Cheese Cake?**\nAnswer: No. I have never heard\nof such a recipe, but If any reader\nof this column knows of it, 1 hope\naba will Jot it down on a postal\nnerd and mall it to me, in care of\nthis newspaper, for publication.\nMb* X: \"I recently went to a\nbridge party where I ate a most\nattractive molded gelatine salad.\nmade of lime JeUo. In the greenish Jelly wars bits of ground raw\ncerrot, snd bits of crushed pineapple. Could you five me any\nIdea about making it?\" *\nAnswer: Buy a package or the\nlime-flavored granulated gelatine and\nafter adding one and one-half cupa\nof boiling water to dissolve It, fold\nln one cup of raw ground carrot\/.\none cup of crushed plnemppls with\nJuloe. a pinch of aalt, and sugar\nto taste (although, aa you probably know, the sugar Is Included\nin some brands of fruit-flavored\ngelatine, ao you may not bav* to\nadd any sweetening). Divide among\neight small individual molds and\nset in a cool apot to become firm,\nbefore   turning   out   onto , lettuce-\nlined salad plates and topping each\nportion with a dab of Mayonnaise\nsalad dressing.\nBride of One Month: **I am making oilcloth tie-backs for mr kitchen\ncurtains. How would you fasten\nthese to tbe casement?\"\nAnswer: I would sew ivory rings to\nthe oilcloth tie-hacks, and into\nthe casement I would screw those\nIttle brass screw-hooks, such as we\nuse In china closets to bang cups\non.\nMother of Six: \"One of my boys\nsaw some children making soap\nbubbles which were more brightly\ncolored than any he can make with\nmere soap snd water. Can you\nexplain why?\"\nAnswer: No doubt the soap bubbles referred to ware msde from\nsoapy water to which a little glycerine had been added. Glycerine\nwll I give brlgh ter color to the\nbubbles\nI I.MirS    r.l.l.VriN\nOne envelope of gelatin (tbe\nmanured-for-lise kind that makes\none pint), ons small cup of augur, one cup boiling water, two\nsmall lemons, whipped cream. DU-\nolve tbe gelatin and sugar tn boiling water. Add to this the Juice\nof two lemons, grated rind of one\nlemon, with enough water to make\n1 pint in sll- Tbe Juice of one\nlemon and one orange makes a\nvery pleasing flavor. Strain Into\ncold wet moulds. When quite firm,\nbreak up lightly with a fork and\narrange dish with a pyramid of\nwhipped   cream   in   centre.\nSTUFFED   BAKED   APPT_H\nPure and core firm large apples.\nMix together i'_ cupa grated pineapple, 2 tablespoons melted butter\nand Vi cup seedless raisins. Pill\nthe centres of the apples with tbe\nmixture and sprinkle with cinnamon and sugar and dot with butter, lace apples tn pan and add a\nlittle water to whloh 1 tablespoon\nof lemon Juice bu been added.\nBaste frequently and. cook slowly\nuntil  apples are  tender.\nRobin 8 Hood\nFLOUR\nMakes Better\nBread, Cakes & Pastry ,\n\\^i(^\n&\n__.\nCu_f__upTest-\nClaudettb Colbert j\nParamount star, \"Lux I\nToiletSoapkeepsaldn I\nsmooth for the dose-1\nup.\" YOU, too, kin a I\nclose-up teal to putt I\ncaw Ifow:\nThere's Witchery in Lovely Skin ... says Hollywood\nHOW people thrill to the charm of a\nbeloved star when the revealing\nclose-up brings her NEAR. A severe\ntest of beauty, 45 Hollywood directors\ndeclare, that only the girl with exquisite\nakin can pass.\nThat is why the famous stars take devoted care of their skin with Lux Toilet\nSoap. \"It takes such beautiful care of\nour skin,\" say 511 of the 521 important\nHollywood actresses who use it regularly.\nYOU will want to try it. For you, too,\nhave a close-up test to pass! Admiring\neyes close to YOUR skin must find it\ntemptingly soft and smooth\u2014alluringly\nlovely in the most trying light.\nUse this fragrant white soap for the\nclose-up complexion every girl wants.\nOrder some and begin today.\n\/d of tbs lovely screen complexions and radt\\\nent complexions everywhere are cared for with\nJosEPHrNB Dunn   Lois Moiun, b*>\npopular M.G.M. star.     lored Fox star \"I si-\n\"It's so refreshing!'.     wtjsuKit.Ifaa.jo*.'.\nLux Toilet Soap-lOr\nled Brettaw United, Toronto em\n 53\nTHE  NELSON   D.AILY   NEWS       TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1931.\nPage FW\u00ab\n$6 VALUES\nFor $L95\nWe have about 200\npairs of Women's\nSlippers, Pumps and\nTies. Their regular\nvalues are $6 and up.\nSPECIAL\nPRICE .. $1\u00bb95\nR. Andrew\n&Co.\nLeaders  in Footfashion\n\\ 3. P. Morgan, Ernest Frost, G. V.\ndy and F. M. Barneut motored to\nlaalo during the week-end to look\nlirer the possibilities of the Lake-\nIlew hotel, whioh was gutted hy a\nlire a week ago.\n\\ Mr. Barnett bought the Lakeview\nFrank   Labelle   a   couple   of\n\u25a0ears  ago.\nSociety\nThis column u coBOuctad M\nMra. IL 1. Tlfneiu. All nam\nof a eoolal natura. Includlni receptions. Private entertainment,\npersonal ltemaT marrlagea. \u00abtc\nwill appaar in thla column. Tale,\nphona Mra. vlgneux al bar noma,\nalt SUlca (tract.\nQUEEN MOTHER,\nILL     \u2022\nMr. and Mn. A. W. Idlene, Carbonate street, hare aa the.r house\nguest Mn. Barbara Richardson of\nCampbell River, V. I.\n\u2022 *   *\nMln Molra McLeod of the nune-\ntn-tralnlng clan of St Luke's hospital, Spokane, la spending her\nvacation in the city the guest of her\nparents, Mr. and Mra. Donald McLeod,  Vernon  street.\nMrs. John Gibson of Trail ls the\nguest of  Mr.  and  Mn. Oeorge W.\nAllen,   SUlca   street.\n\u2022 e   s\nGeorge Campion, son of Mr. and\nMrs, W. R. Camp.on, Latimer street,\nhas left for Vancouver to attend\ntbe British Columbia school of\npharmacy after whloh course ha\nwill try his minor examination.\nsee\n13__e Isabella Walton, Second\nstreet, Falrvlew, has left for Boswell.\ne   \u2022   e\nMn. George Kemmerllng, Observatory street, expects to leav\u00ab tonight for her new home in Pentlcton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMln Grace Randall, who teaches\nat Ymr, spent the week-end at\nthe home of her parents, Mr. and\nMrs. Thoonu Rendall, Nelson avenue\nFairview.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Make, government official of\nVictoria, haa returned to the coast\nafter a brief visit  to town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Margaret Smllile. of the\noperating staff of the British Columbia Telephone company, has left\nthe   Kootenay   Lak\u00bb   Oeneral   has-\nMRS. ROSS HEADS\nPRESBYTERIAN\nLAMES GROUP\nDAISY DEVOE\n. HERSELF\nMrs.   Nelson   Winlaw,   Mrs.\nL. L. Boomer and Mrs.\nJ. B. Gray Officers\nMn. Hugh Ross was chosen presL- \\\nj ent  of  the  Ladles'   Association  of\nthe  First Presbyterian church here ;\nMonday   afternoon,   at   a   meeting\nheld  ih the church  parlors.\nThe new elate of oiuoers includes\nMrs. Nelson Wlnlaw. vice*president.:\nMn. L. L. Boomer, secretary, and\nMrs.  J,  B.   Gray,   treasurer.\nMISS MAOKAY IS\nBRIDGE HOSTESS\nCRANBROOK CLUB\nFEBRUARY\nSALE\nThe Great Event for\nthe Home\nTime Payments % Down. Balance\nCan Be Arranged to Suit\nCustomer\nUnsurpassed Values in\nBEDROOM SUITES\nI BEAUTIFULLY MATCHED WALNUT SUITE of 7\npieces. Dresser, Vanity, Chest Drawers, Bed, Bench,\nCoil Spring and Felt Mattress. Complete for $167.50\n5-PIECE WALNUT VENEER SUITE\u2014Dresser, Vanity, Chest Drawers and Bench. Complete .... $142.50\nI 2-PIECE   SUITE\u2014Vanity,   Dresser  and  Bed.   Wal-\nnut   _ _ -  $87.50\n2-PIECE   SUITE\u2014Vanity,   Dresser  and   Bed.   Wal-\n! nut     \u2014 -     S87-50\nOdd Dressers and Chest of Drawers\nWALNUT VENEER CHEST OF DRAWERS\u2014Three\nDrawers  *\u25a0\u2014  XX\"* &o\nDRESSERS, Walnut fi'nish _  $14.75 to $17.50\nPrices Ave Down on\nDINING ROOM SUITES\n\u25a0\n8-PIECE DINING ROOM SUITE, Walnut, coiunst-\nlng of Buffet, 60-inch China Cabinet, Oblong Ex*,\ntension Table, 6 ft., and 6 Chairs, leather slit; seata.\nComplete for ~- *_\u00bb\u00bb\u2022\u00bb?\n8-PIECE SUITE, Walnut, consisting of Buffet, 60-\ninch Oblong Extension Table, 6 ft, and 6 chaire,\nleather slip seats. Complete for  ._.._  $212.50\n8-PIECE OLD ENGLISH OAK SUITE\u2014Buffet, 60\ninchci Oblong Extension Table, 6 ft, and 6 Chairs.\nLeather slip seats. Complete for   8182.50\n8-PIECE OLD ENGLISH\u2014Oak finish, Buffet with\nMirror; Oblong Extension Table, and 6 Chain, leather slip seats. Complete $llSJiO\nSTANDARD\nFURNITURE CO.\nComplete House Furnishers, Nelson, B. C.\nThe Store of Service and Satisfaction\nmncess i__atrice, 74-year-oiu _unt\nal the Xing, and mother of the\nqueen of Spain, who has developed\nacute bronchitis, physicians reporting that ber condition 1$ \"not\nwithout anxiety.\"\npjital, wttsre she was operated on\nreoently for appendicitis, for her\nhome on Carbonate street.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr and Mrs. H. G. Schultz of\nProcter have taken up residence an\n.22 Edgewood avenue.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nJames O'Shea left yesterday via\nthe  Great  Northern on a business\nHugh   Matatall   of  Salmo  paid   a\nvlart   to   town   yesterday.\ns   e   \u2022\nP. Leftauz of the Cunard steamship line with headquarters ln\nVancouver, wae a week-end visitor\nln Nelson, spent yesterday ln Trail,\nand leave* thie morning for tho\nCrow district.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nG. P. Melrose left last night for\nPenticton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Dorothy Vyse, who teaches\nat Frultvale, spent the week-end\nat the home of her parents, Mr.\nsnd Mrs. Robert Vyse, Falrvlew.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nA.   S.   Homersham   left   Saturday\nnight  for   the coast,\nsee\nMr. and Mra. I. Neff and child,\nrecent arrivals from Hanna. Alta.,\nare taking up residence at 319 Observatory  street.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. O. B. Sharp and\ndaughter Beatrice of Booming ton\nspent yeeterday ln town, guests at\nthe home on Victoria street of Mr\nand  Mrs.  J. P. Ooates.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs, J. McAdam, Terrace\napartments, left for Revelstoke last\nnight where they will spend a few\ndays. While there they will attend\nthe ski Jump.\ne   e   e\nMr. and Mrs. 3. T. Coates, Victoria\nstreet, have as their house guest\nAlex Ollpplngdale of Cranbrook, who\nls visiting in Nelson en route to\nNew Westminster, where he will\nvisit  me daughter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJudge W. A. Nlsbet left last night\non _ business trip to Revelstoke.\ns   e_  o\nLeslie Craufurd, who has been a\npatient in th* Kootenay lAke General hospital for the past few weeks\/\nhas recovered sufficiently to return\nto his home on Hoover street.\nCOMMITTEE OF\nYMIR WOMEN'S\nINSTITUTE MEETS\nCRANBROOK. B. C, Peb. 3.\u2014Miss\nA. MacKay waa hostess at thL\nweeks play of the Wednesday afternoon bridge club. Mrs. J. Marti:.\non high honors.\nMrs. R. M. Argue entertlined th.\nThursday evening bridge, the prize\nwinners being Mrs. Ham and Mil.\nChurch,\nMrs. A. R. Mas Pherson and Mr:\nW. M. Robertson were Joint hostesses on Wednesday evening whei.\nsix tables of bridge were In .plait\nMrs. Large, Mrs. Osborne and Mi.\nDow were the fortunate prize winners. The guests were Mrs. Mir\nPherson, Mrs. Large, Miss MacKu\nMrs Burgess, Mrs, George Tayloc\nMiss Hill, Mrs. Clark, Mrs. Gllro; .\nMrs. Baynes, Mrs. Burgess, Mrs. Mr\nBurney, Mrs. Knickerbocker, Mrs\nMacNeill, Mrs. Osborne, Mrs. Argue.\nMrs. Dow, Mrs. Chester, Mrs. Ellis.\nMra. Wheeler, Mrs. Gray. Mrs. Mc-\nInnis, Miss Paterson, Mrs. Morton\nand   Mrs.   ohurch.\nMrs. W. G. Morton entertained at\nbridge on Thurectiy evening when\nprizes were won by Mrs. Surges.,\nand MrA. Balment. The invited\nguests were Mrs. Balment, Mrs.\nBurce, Mrs. Burgess. Mrs. Clark. Mrs\nDezall, Mrs. Fink, Mrs. Gilroy, Mrs\nHill, Mrs. Large, Mrs. MacKinnon,\nMra. MacPherson, Mrs. McKowan,\nMrs. Moffat, Mrs. Werren, Mrs Wasson,  Mrs. Sinclair  and Mrs.  Harris.\nMrs. Miles was te* hostess at the\nwomen's Badminton club on Friday.\nMiss ivy Dszall, who ls in her\nfourth year at the University of\nBritish Columbia, leaves Vancouver\non Friday for Kamloops whero she\nwin spend two months at the Tran-\nqullle sanitarium. Miss Marlon Miles\nw.-.e to have accompanied her to\nKamloops, was prevented by an attack   of   scarlet   lever, ^rom   which\nSt_ S\u00b0% Tkln\u00ab a B00tl recovery.\n- T\\}\\    I z- \u00a5\u00ab\"\"nu. who ha* been\nS^T^* to h\" home *&\nMr.   and   Mrs.   w   H    wm\u00bb_,   \u2014\nt^nea  at dinner  2**5.  \u201e\n\u25a0\"\"\"_   <\"?\"'n\u00ab.    covert,   bain,    la\u2122\nwa, d_H\u201etablc5 w're \u00ab&\u00ab*\u00a3\n!JL a\u00abrodlla and auasy willow.\nThroughout   the   evening  ,*_\nMS SeVtSe S3_\nMra.    MacPherson,    Mr     ,M     uV.\non^oa?.^,\u2122,1\"\" '\"^Wned\nbirthday .\u00a3_**_ ,1,on\u00b0'' <\" '>\u2022'\norder of Ti' * \u201e___'\"\u00ab \"f \u00ab\"\u2022\nfollowed by n !_? , Thu wa\u00bb\nsupper   Th-  4n,..f      'ou'    w\u2122'day\n\u00a3\u2022\u00ab\u00a3__*__*_&\nDaisy Devoe. inrmer \"It\" girl secretary, as she appears in Los Angeles\ncounty Jail faring a possible term\nof from one to 10 years. She declares she won't ask for probation\nbut will file an appeal for reversal\nof    tJhe    conviction.\nMISS H. TALBOT\nBACK IN FORKS\nFROM EDMONTON\nYMlIt, B. C, Peb. 2.\u2014Mr. and\nMrs. S. A. Curwen had ua the..\ndinner and bridge guest on Thursday,   Miss   O.   Rendall.\nThe ways and means committee\nof the Ymlr Woman's institute held\na meeting at tbe home of Mrs, E.\nDily on Friday afternoon. The com-\nrnlttee, Mrs. E. Daly, convenor, Mrs.\n8. A. Curwen and Mrs. H. Stevens.\nAfter the business meeting refreshments were served by  the  hostess.\nA, McLeod of Granite is spending the week-end at his home here\nPROMPT\nSERVICE\nNo matter how good a\nmeal may be, you cannot enjoy it unless the\nservice that goes wifh\nit is up to the minute.\nWe pride ourselves on\nthe expert service that\nyou receive at the Golden Gate. Once your order is given, it is only\na matter of a few minutes before it is served\nto you, tasty and\nappetizing.\nQolden Qate\nCafe\nBackus.\nT. Du__k~R^ti.r1is\nto Ranch, Creston\nCItESTON, B   c \"fm,   ,    -   \u201e\ndale of Bellvu.   \u201e'.\u201e\u201e_\u25a0  __ Du\u00bb-\na   few   day,   _    m.   .' \" ,Dent\"nu\nSggUmTSH\nu.     y. \"\"\u25a0\"   ve\u00abeu.o.ea\nP>fS   _!_\"\"   \"\"<*\u2022'   returned   on\n4'eS'\"V^o-n.,r'eMS\ni_tus_fSi3ii\ning   on   Cnaton   Me.ula   thTl.tter\npart of the week. Wor\nMra. Albert Nickel and children\nhay. arrived from Edmonton on a\nvlalt with Mr. Nickel'. piSSt, Mr\nand Mrs. Oeorge Nickel *\"\"\"\"'  Mr'\nsa riac om \u00ab*\u00bb\u00ab\u2022\u00ab\nMiss Joan Kemp of Erlckson Is\na town visitor at present, u.e gue t\nof Mr. and Mrs. p. r. uvlr7\nR. B. Staples of Kelowna sales\nmanager for Sales Service, arid also\na director of Creston Growers   spent\nwalk* h\"e at th\u00b0 *nd ** the\nC. R. Dard of Cranbrook was\nrenewing acquaintances in Creston\nthe latter part of the week,\nMrs. McRobb has returned rrom\nKlmberley. where she has spent the\npast month on a visit with her son,\nJack, and her daughter, Mrs. Wilfrid\nHome.\nGRAND PORKS. B. C, Feb. 2\u2014\nE. Hutton of Trail arrived In town\nSaturday morning to spend a few\ncUys with his parents Mr. and Mrs.\nJohn Hutton.\nThe Misses Mac, Joy and Glen-\ndine Sharpe were in the city on\nFriday and attended the Rebekah\ndance.\nMiss Helen Talbot, who has been\nspending a month's holiday at Edmonton, returned to Grand Forks\nFriday morning.\nThe Rebekah dance held In the\nOddfellow's hall ou Friday evening was well attended. Music was\n.supplied by an orchestra consisting\nof Mra. B. Hoogerwerf, pianist, E.\nReld Saxaphone and A. Bickcrtan on\nthe  drums.\nMr. C. Floyd, popular Greenwood\nrancher spent Wednesday in the city,\nDr. W. Truax returned Thursday\nfrom Halcyon where he had accompanied Mrs. Truax who will remain\nthere for treatments.\nConstable and Mrs. H. H. Vlckers\nof Greenwood spent Saturday ln the\ncity.\nMr, and Mrs. C. Nicols of Greenwood were in the city yesterday.\nBen Norrls left Friday lor Nelson.\nD. Matheson left this week for\na business trip to Ymlr.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTBAIL, B. Oh Teh. 2,\u2014-A quiet\nbut pretty wedding was solemnized\nin St. Andrew's churoh Wednesday\nmorning when Hilda Florence,\n>oungest daughter of Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Haywood, waa united in marriage\n.o Sherman Hull, son 0f Mr. and\nMrs. J. Hull of Lethndge. Rev. N.\nki. B. Larmonth performed the oere-\npiony. The bride, who was given in\nmarriage by her farther, was charm-\n-tig tn a dress of pink satin with\npink hat to match. Sand hose and\nshoes) completed her ensemble. She\nwas attended by her stater, Mra.\notanley Altbone. as matron of honor. Mrs. Allone chose pink georgette for her dress w.th hat to tone,\nihe groom was supported by George\nMtllen. Immediately after the oerer\nmony a reception was held at the\nume of tba bride's parents, relatives\nnd friends being present. The\nmeats Included, besides the bride's\n.arents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Haywood, Mr. and Mra. Stanley Alibone,\nMr. and Mrs, Maube of Rossland,\nMr. and Mrs. A. M. Todd, Mr. and\nMrs. W. Douglas, Miss Elsie Doug-\ni las. Miss Ada Douglas, Miss D.\n> Smith, Miss Sylvia Homer, Miss\nLlzaie Homer. Jamee Reld. George\nMUlen and William Moore. Mr.\n..nd Mrs. Hull will reside ln Roes-\n, land.\ne   o   e\nANNOUNCEMENT\n| Mr. and Mrs. F. Eremenko of Cas-\n' tlegar announce the engagement\nof their yovp^est daughter, Lilian,\nto Frederick i-xle, son of Mr. and\nMrs. F. Frle of Los Angeles, the\nmarriage to take place shortly at\nCastlegar.\nMrs. 3. R. WqJl^; and Mrs. B.\nMatthews were joint hostesses at a\ndelightfully arranged tea In aid of\nat. Francis Xavler church, at the\nhome of Mrs. Walley, Columbia\nHeights, Saturday afternoon. Pink\ncarnations and pink candles in silver\n'ivmces were used in deooraUorj.\nAirs. N. Wllmes presided at the\njrna and Mrs. S. Stewart and Miss\nj>orothy Walley assisted the hostesa\nin serving.\na  \u2022   e\nMrs. B. O. Ommanney of Grand\nForks was a visitor in the city yesterday.\n\u2022 a    \u2022\nMrs. F. Eremenko, daughter Mary\nand son John of Castlegar were visiting relatives |n the city Saturday.\nsee\nJ. Balfour was a visitor to Nelson\nSaturday.\n\u25a0    \u2022    \u2022\nW. R. Thomson of Nelson was a\nCity   visitor   Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs. A. Annandale entertained si\nthree tables of bridge at her home\nSaturday evening. Mrs. C. W. Gulllaume won the ladles* first prize and\nMrs. W. P. Dunbar the consolation.\nMrs. Annandale. assisted by Mm. G.\nJ. Klnnls and Miss Audrey Baxen-\ndale served refreshments.\ne   s   \u2022\nH. C. Davis of Frultvale was a\nvisitor to the city today. He was\naccompanied by hia son James, who\nspent the week-end st his home.\nMiss IJ Ulan Hunter was the guest\nof her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. G.\nHunter, ln Nelson for the week-end.\nMrs. W. H. Falding, who has been\nthe house guest of Mr. and Mrs.\nCharles H. Hamilton. Robson street.\nNelson, for the past few days, left\nthis morning for Pasadena, Calif,\nwhen* she will visit Mr, and Mrs.\nC. R. Hamilton of Nelson, who are\nwintering there.\ns   e   e\nw. Barchard. who has been a\npatient at the TraU-Tadanao hospital, following an accident last\nOctober, returned to his home Wednesday much improved ln health.\nPICTURE REMLNDS\nCRESTON PEOPLE\nOF REV. W. G. BLAKE\nCRESTON. B. c. Feb, 2\u2014The woman's page of the Monday's Nelson\nDally News was scanned with great\nInterest locally as the pictorial announcement of the marriage of Miss\nFaith Baxter of Cayuga. Ontario, to\nMr. W. E. Blnko, ivedlie_ the stay\nhere of a former Pm.bytcrtm pastor, Rev. W. G. Blake, now of\nHwnllton, Ontario, lather of the\ngroom. While the groom was not a\nnative ton of Creeton lie spent a\nfew of his pre-teen years In town\nand as \"Teddy\" Blako will be re-\noilled by all residents of 1912-15,\nduring which period his father bad\ncharge of St. Stephen's church, and\nwas an active figure' in Masonic\nolrcles as well as community life\ngenerally.\nAlter leaving here Pastor BlJke\nwas at Nakusp for a coupie of years\nand irom there he went to Cayuga,\nand later to one of the bigger\nI'resbyterlan churches in Hamilton\nwhero  he still Is,\nGOifLEX\nDRAMATIZES\nCREPE LUSETTE\nFOR SOUTHERN\nOR TOWN WEAR\nThe very vcrvt of outdoor chit\n... In \u00ab Jacket and ileevelen\ndrew of lovely Crepe Lusette\n... a sort, \"iponsy\" wool\nweave...created exclusively\nfor in In this city by GolRex ...\nAsain emphaslilns the distinguished detail for which tbh\nhouse Is lustly famous ... from\nthe silk scarf with the wool\nembroidered \"gum-drops\", to\na wide-span skirt of very new\nunpressed plaits... In custard\nyellow, cameo pink, porcelain  blue, dale green, and\nwhite for the Southland...\nand in beige, navy, and black\nfor town   ;   ;   i   $39.50\n\u2022\noMEAGHERSSD\n607 BAKER ST. PHONE 200\nCRESTON H0SIPTAL\nHAS 100TH PATIENT\nTrail News of the Day\nTRATL HOUSES AND LOTS- IN-\nsurancc. Notarv. J. D Anderson.   Trail. <34\u00ab0>\nCRESTON, B. C, Peb. 3.\u2014Creston's new public hospital, which\nwas opened for patients about the\nmiddle of August, on Thursday recorded the reception of Its 100th\nin-patient, ln the yerson of Miss\nEdith Cook, who has undergone an\noperation for tonsUttls. She had a\nclose competitor for the honor in\nPrank Putnam, well known as the\nLiberal candidate ln Creston con-\nstluency in 1938, who wae also I\ntonsilitis patient the **me day. The\nfinance committee report a splendic;\nresponse  for funds to liquidate  the\nInitial debt On the new hospital.\nTwo very welcome contributions\ncheques for $60 each from Wild\ncame to hand this week. These erere\nRose lodge Knights of Pythlea and\nCreston Masonic lodge. At their annual meeting a few days preTious\nthe Creston Farmers* institute made\na donation of 925.\nlApplr st ones to tooths, t\nFhctUng and prevent Infection\nDodd's\nOINTMENT\ntmalorWu the fmsst iocs creama Price 506\nLarge Pimples Over Body. Itched\nand Burned.   Cuticura Healed.\n\"I was bothered with pimples that affected my face, neck, arms and\nlimbe, and spread all over my body. Tbey were very large, and the\nmore I scratched the more they itched and burned. The irritation was\nalmost unbearable, and ray clothing aggravated the breaking out\nI could not sleep night or day.\n\"I read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent\nfor a free sample. I got relief so purchased more, and after using four\ncakes of Cuticura Soap and three and a half boxes of Cuticura Ointment I was healed.\"  (Signed) Mrs. Joseph Polowy, Milliard, Alberti.\nSosp 3Sc. Ointment 25 snd 50c. Tilcum 25c.   Sold every when*.   Sample each free.\nAddress Canadian Depot: J. T. Wilt Company Umlt-d. Montr**!.\nC. H, McMillan, mansger of the\nBank of Commerce at Bassano,\nhas been appointed manager at\nCrossfleld.\nSec the Connor\nThermo Electric\nWasher at\nftlpperaon Hardware Co., Ltd.. Nelaon; Modem Electric Shop, Trail;\nHendricks' (iar\u00abe, Kaalo; S. A.\nSpeern. Creaton; F. Parks A Co.,\nCranbrook; We\u00bbt Kootenay Power A\nLl'llt Oo., Rowland; Klmberley\nHardware   Co..   Ltd.,   Klmberley.\nFarmer's Institute\nat Grand Forks to\nDiscuss the Fair\nGRAND FORKS, B. C, Fob 2.\u2014\nA meeting ot the directors of the\nGrand Fork. Fartnera' Institute waa\nheld In tho office of the district\naurlculturlat on Tuesday afternoon\nJanuary 37. varloiu matters were\ndiscussed and It was decided to call\na public meeting on Wednesday,\nFebruary 4 ln the city ball to discuss tho advisability of holding a\nfall fair in Grand Forks thla year,\n.It waa alao decided to hold one\nor two meetings In the spring, probably ln March, with outside speakers\nfrom the dominion and provincial\ndepartments of agriculture. A motion picture machine with films of\nlntereat to farmers will be brought\nln for one meeting.\nSBED GRAIN\nThe provlncln! department of agriculture Intends lo purchase a\nQuantity of Bite stock seed grain,\nand wll dlatribute It to farmers at\na nominal coat, Elite seed Is' tht\nbest seed obtainable In Canada and\nIs n( a higher grade than ordinary\nregistered seed.\nMrs. IVorman of\nRobson Welcomed\nat W. M. S., Victoria\nVICTORIA. B. C- Feb. 2.\u2014At the\nannual meeting of the Victoria Prei-\nbyteriai of the United church. Mrs.\n<T>r.) Norman of Robson was tendered greeting from that body and\ncordially welcomed Mrs. Hood the\npresident. It was pointed out that\nMr.s. Norman was past president or\none of the largest W. M. societies\nof Canada namely McDougall. Edmonton. Alberta.\nWEIX-KN0WN TRAIN\nCONDUCTOR RETIRES\nREVELSTOKE, B. C, Feb. 2.-Travelling to Trail un the hlatorlacl Colombia river steamer \"Lytton,''\nwhich made Revelstoke n regular\nport of cull 15 years ago, Frank R.\nNewton, well-known C. P. R, conductor running betvtn Nelson and\nMidway, haa hcen ID the south\ncountry ever since. Mr. Newton^has\nJust been superannuated after 27\nyears' sen-ire  with the company.\nFIRST ROBIN IS\nSEEN, S. SLOCAN\nIn keeping with other district\npoints where signs of spring hive\noccurred. South Slooan residents report tbe arrival of the first robin.\nOn Saturday William Muir and .lack\nFrasby reported serins their first\nrobin of the  yrnr\nNOTICE\nFrom February 1 on\nThe\nBEATTY WASHER\nHEADQUARTERS\nwill be located in\nHipperson Hardware\nCompany. Limited\nBaker St.     Nelson, B. C.     Phone 497\nFARMER'S WIFE\nGETS STRENGTH\nTO DO HER WORK\nBy taking: Lydia E. Pink-\nham's Vegetable\nCompound\nSt John, New Bnmnwtek.\u2014'. wu\nall run-down from a pain in my badi\nand my Wt W bothered me so tome\ntimeatjiat I wu unable to do my work.\nI saw your ad in the newspapers and\ndecided'to give your medicine a trial\nI have taken over seven bottles of\nLydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com\npound and am now relieved of thi:\nBuffering. I am a farmer's wife an*\nhave three children. I tell all mj\nfriends of your Vegetable Compoum\nand I am sure that when tt helps me it\nwill help them. I am willing to answei\nletters from women asking about the\nVegetable Compound. All thanks to\nLydia E. Plnkham!\"\u2014Mus. Abthvr\nN. Denniboh, 188 Wentworth St-\nSt. John, N\u00abw Rrmawiri-\n\\ DIRECT CONNECTIONTO\nP\nRESULTS\n01 IK Want-Ad .Service is\nlike a community Switch\nBoard. You transmit your\ndesires to a Nelson Daily\nNews Ad-Taker . . . that ad\nforms the connection between\nyou and a special group of\ninterested partieg . . . the\nquickest and most direct contact with results.\n\\\\0)\\A\\\\ilie Classified\n143 OR 144 FOR AN AD-TAKER\n PtLge   Si*\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       TUESDAY, FEBRUiUtY 8, 193L\n(Sty Sfrtam Battg Jfoma\nPublication men moratag txoept Sunday by Tho News Publish-\nIns   Company,   United,   Nelaon,   B.   C.\nBusiness letter, abould ba eildrssatd aad ebedu tad matter\nucdtn xsie payable to Tbe News Publtshtnt Company, Umlted,\nand ln no cass to individual member, of tb. Mali. \u2022\nAdvertising rate card, and A. B. 0. statements of circulation\nmailed on requ.it. or may be wen at Uw offlM ot any advertising\nagency  recoenlxd  by   th.  Canadian   Daily   Htnnpapaa  Aaooclatlon,\nSUBSCRIPTION  RATES\n3y mad (oountry), per month \t\nI*er  ywr  \u2014   _____\u2014\t\nBy mall   (etty). par  y\u00bb\u00abr\t\noutside  Canada,  ter  month :\t\nPer yssr\ni>e!tversa,   par  maslt\nyew\t\n-I   .so\n- 4.00\n_ 18.00\n_ .7\u00bb\n_ 7.W.\n_ .35\n- W.00\nPayabl.   ln   advance.\nMember Audit Bureau of Circulation.\nTUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1981.\nKootenay Must Press Its Claims\nEconomy in provincial government expenditure in\nBritish Columbia during the present year is neces-\nsarv \"Frills\" and waste have to be cut out or ai\nleast reduced in order that essential expenditure, on\nhighways, etc, may be made.\nIt is time for exceptional activity on the parts of\nboards of trade in Kootenay to press upon the government the completion of obviously necessary highway\nproject*. If we, in Kootenay, remain silent or lacking in energy in calling to the attention of the government our very real needs, there ie grave dangei-that\nwe might be overlooked in favor of other parts which\nare more active in making demands. \t\nEveryone will realise that the present state of provincial finances does not justify any unnecessary expenditures or the spending of any money upon anything in the nature of \"frills.\" But that must not\ndeter us in Kootenay from pushing justifiable claims\nto the limit of our ability. We should ask for nothing that Is unnecessary but we should press with unremitting vigor for the completion of public works\nwhich will produce business for Kootenay and revenue\nfor the province.\nThe Pathological Laboratory\n\"\\Vs a curious thing, but if a horse which stall possesses a financial value to us happens to die, we recognize the loss and it shows in our balance sheet at the\nend of the year. But if a human being, who for lack\nof proper equipment or other reason dies prematurely,\nwe feel very sorry but pay no attention ^to the loss\nof a valuable and productive human life.\"\nThe remark was made in The Daily News office\nvesterday by a visitor who was urging the necessity\nof the establishment in Nelson of the proposed Kootenay pathological laboratory.\nHe wasa touching on the question of cost The\nproposed laboratory, which has been endorsed by the\nmedical men of the district, a number of women's\norganizations and service clubs, will cost $6000 to\nestablish. Of this sum the provincial government will\nput up $2!>00, leaving $2500 to be raised in other\nways. That would be a small amount to pay for saving one life.\nTrail-Tadanac recognizes Nelson as the most central\n.-nd suitable place for the laboratory, but if Nelson\ndoes not go ahead with the project, then TraU will do\nAt present tests which are essential to prompt and\nprecise diagnosis of disease and without which proper\nand effective treatment cannot begin, have to be made\nat the coast or in one of the laboratories in the Okanagan. The result is delay which is costly in life or\nhealth.\nThe \"Josephine K\" Case\nA United States coastguard board of inquiry has upheld the action of Carl Schmidt, in charge of a coast-\nguard cutter, in firing on the Canadian ship \"Josephine K\" with the result that Capt Cluett was killed.\nThe inquiry does not of course, end the matter, but\nthe decision leaves a bad taste in the mouth.\nAmerican customs laws, which are a domestic\nmatter, give jurisdiction within a 12-mile limit of\nshore, but international law does not A British-\nAmerican treaty gives jurisdiction in liquor cases within one hour's sailing of shore, which is a very different matter. The Josephine K. was more than one\nhour's sailing from shore and therefore was not out-\nside of the law insofar as the special treaty is concerned.\nIt would seem that the case was one that should\nhave been governed by international law: otherwise American cutters ostensibly engaged in chasing\nrum-runners might steam around firing off shells with\nthe same calm disregard for humanity and the law as\na drunken American dry agent or the Russian fleet at\nDogger bank, in that historic attack on British trawlers during the Russo-Japanese war.\nWas the shooting necessary? The .American ship was\nfast enough to overhaul and capture the Canadian\nvessel, without trying to blow it out of the water. Opinions will differ, but correct in.the assumption or not,\nmost Britishers would prefer to think that If the\nnationalities of the two ships had been reversed, a\nBritish skipper would not have fired the shot\nThe question i\u00ab not one which should be discussed\nwith passion or in anything but the best of temper,\nbut it is possible to become rather tired of *Tm\nAlone\" and \"Josephine K\" Incidents and to ask that\nthev lie stopped, always providing that the ships\nwhich are victims are not violating international law\nor the British-American treaties.\nThe rebellion in Turkey is for the noble purpose of\nrestoring the fez and the harem. The head trouble\nmaker Is an optimist.\nA French bluejacket is reported to have had five\nmothers in law. It must be true that \"sailors don't\ncare.\"\nOptimistic reports that the salmon Industry at the\nPacific Coast is \"in the pink,\" at least.\nJust to be different from the other small towns.\nPort Hope, Ont., electors voted for daylight saving.\nSeen and Heard in\nNELSON\n(By i, 1  CD\nAWerrmn H. \u00a3. Undiay yeeterdey\ncalled upon me to write something\nabout sprint. He knew spring was\nben, aad be had s?wg\u00bbl friends\nwith him wbo were aleo pretty\n\u25a0ur*. Well I do not know ll\n\u2022prim le hare er not. But tba\nbird* ara appearing, tba butterflies\nara com.ng out, and hud* are beginning to swell. Walking li good,\nwe hav* very little anew, and the\nweather Is not so oold. Bo probably spring Is here.\na       \u2022       \u2022\nAnd I oan tell Alderman Lindsay\nthat 11* there is anything to that old\nhooey about the groundhog seeing\nhis shadow, etc., on February 2,\nspring must be ban. I am sure\ntba old reprobate wbo has been\nsleeping all winter d.d not saa bis\nshadow yesterday when be had a\nlook around. That Is II be got out\nof bis bed. There were too many\nclouds ln ths sky. so I guess be Is\nstUl scouting about and spring ls\nwithin elz weeks of us.\n\u2022,   \u2022   s\nTho groundhog ls more commonly\nknown as a woodohuck. Bs Is\nknown as a fat, obstinate, lazy.\nsleepy, defiant, tough, flabby, placid\nand withal a nulaanoe \u00ab_nd generally\nnot much of a weather prophet.\nHe goes to sleep eaoh winter and\nruns his own heating plant. Tor\nmany months ha curls up with his\nnose ln the paws. Thus hts breathing keeps his feet warm. Now,\nthat ls all I know about the ground\nhog, and as far as spring is con-\nosrned. like many scientists, I am\nstumped.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nWell, well, well. Hope you all\nheard or read about the new variety\nof rose growing; at Blocan Olty. In\nMonday's issue of ths paper the\nfallowing story appeared. Naturallv\nIt would bring comment. I will\nreproduce tbe story and wlU also\npublish for you a letter received\nby tbe editor concerning this extraordinary yarn.   Tha story said:\nSPRING   HAS   COME,   ROSE\nBUDS APPEAR IN SLOCAN CITT\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C, Feb. 1.\n\u2014Mrs. E. f). Boger* has hose\nbads on a rose bu\u00a7h ln her\nyard, something that has never\nbeen known of here before. Tbe\nname of the rose ts the Oeneral\nJack. The very mild weather\nwe have been baring accounts\nfor this.\ns .a   g\nHere's  tha  letter:\nTo the Editor:\u2014This should prove\na  wonderful  advertisement for the\nmakers   of    the    particular   HOSE\nused in watering this rose.\nVerb sap.\ne   a \u2022 \u2022\nMany thanks, kind correspondent\nHose buds on a rose bush. It surely\nis a great chanoe for a new Kootenay industry. We can expect an\ninflux of manufacturers to Slocan\nCity at any time now.\n\u2022 as\nThose people who are inclined to\nbelieve that Friday, the thirteenth.\nIs an unlucky day, wtl have only\nthree oca-Ions to worry about that\nduring ths year 1981, The thlrtenth\nof the month falls on Friday In\nFebruary,  March  and  November.\nB     \u2022      I\nThe more important dates which\nour readers will wish to bear ln\nmind during ths year are:\nValentine's day\u2014Saturday, February  14.\nAsh  Wednesday\u2014February   18.\nFirst   Bunday   ln   Lent\u2014February\naa.\nSt. Patrick's day\u2014Tuesday .March\nlt\npalm Sunday- March 39.\nApril Fool's day \u2014Wednesday,\nApril 1.\nOood Friday\u2014April  8.\nEaster Sunday\u2014 April 6.\nQueen's Birthday\u2014 Monday, May\n38.\nKing's  Birthday\u2014Wednesday  June\na.\nDominion day\u2014July 1.\nLabor  day\u2014   September  7.\nArmistice  day\u2014  Wednesday,  November   11.\nChristmas\u2014  Friday.  December  W.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJudge Vlning Harris of Key West\nFlorids wasn't altogether satisfied\nthat the prisoner before the bar, a\nnegro who called himself \"Piccolo\nPete,1' was telling tbs whole truth\nand   nothing   but   the   trutjfc   Pete\ni charged with  intoxication.\nSo you play uhe piccolo?\" inquired  tha  Judgs.\n\"No. suh. Judge, ths banjo,\" replied  Pete.\n\"Well, let's bear you play \"Home\nSweet Home-.\"\nProducing tha banjo, Pete strummed upon lt so sweetly that tha\nJudge, deeply moved,  declared:\n\"I waa going to give you 80 davs,\nbut 111 vast make it 80. Now give\nme an encore.\nPete gave him the Prisoners Song,\nt   eg\nA backwoods mountaineer one\nday found a mirror whloh a tourist\nhad lost.\n\"Well, if it atnt my old dad,'\" ha\nsaid, ta hs looked In the mirror. ''I\nnever knowed he had his pitcher\ntook.\"\nHa took thr mirror home snd\nstole Into ths attic to hide tt. But\nhis actions didn't escape bis suspicious wife. That night while he\nslept she slipped up to tbe attic and\nfound tbe mirror.\n\"Hum-um.\" she said, looking into\nlt, \"so that's the old hag he's bean\nchasln'.\"\nBBS\nHappiness tn m-uriage u. an elusive thing, but Dr Horneli Hart of\nBryn Mawr college, who went to\nChicago to deliver a lecture, formulated a set of rules embodying his\nphilosophy of lore.\nIf you would have happiness ln\nmarriage, said Doctor Hart, observe\nthese rules:\n1\u2014Marry soma one you love.\na\u2014Pick a mate with a personality to match \\revx own.\n8\u2014Strive for spiritual lntergra\ntion (and learn enough about life\nto know what spiritual integration\nmeans).\n4\u2014Avoid trial marriages \u2014 you\ncan't get married on  probation.\n5\u2014Stick to monogamy\u2014ons mate\nIs plenty.\n6\u2014Have no faith in \"emotional\nvacation\" theories-\n7\u2014Learn tha art of living together.\n8\u2014Many bat-ween tbs age of aa\nand 80.\n\"Good morning I\nComplexities of Modern Life.\nYou remember us.   We were at your party last night.\"\nWhat Do You Think?\nURGES ACTION TO     <\nPUT DOUKHOBORS\nIN PROPER PLACE\nThe lecturer was spotoglfing for\nhaving   talksd   so  long.\n'Tm sorry if I have wearied you\nhe  said,   \"but   I   unfortunately  left\nmy   wateh   behind    and   there   ls\nno clock  m  tnis room.\"\nA voice from tba sudience replied: \"There's a calendar behind\nyou. shM\"\nTo the Editor of\nThe   Nalson   Dally   News.\nSir:\u2014It ls interesting news that\nthe Doukhobors hav* purchased *\nlarge tract of land ln t_i_ Chiahu-\nchua i pronounced Ch.vava, district\nof Mexico. That J. P. \u00abuukm\ndenlss the report ts also very Interesting. Whichever siatemen, la\nihe truth, the time has come when\nUn govemmenta of this country\nshould formulate, and enforce a new\npolicy of dealing with the Doukhobors. We have flattered ourselves\nIn the past that the existing judicial and police mactx.nery was adequate to deal with any s.tuation\nthat might arias. It would be adequate to deal with white peoplo\nand Indians, but lt has failed\nIgnobly ln dealing with thess Slavs\nPeteT Verigin'a murderer, who n0\ndoubt waa a Doukhobor, and the\nmurderer of all the other vlotans\nof the Farron hill tragedy bas not\nbeen found. Not one of the Incendiaries of the 16 schools burned\nln the district and ln Saskatchewan\nhas been apprehended. None of\nthe perpetrators of the numerous\nattempted and successful bombing\noutrages has been arrested and\ntried- Contrary to certain wlahy\nwashy reports to ths press, around\n\u25a0;_ Doukhobor children of school\nage are not Attending school in\nthis Inspectorate. The birth, raar-\nr.age snd death registration laws\nsre continually defied, for reasons\nbest known to members of this sect.\nSo are the divorce laws, of course.\nIf any white people act aa thess\nwily Slavs do, they would be sat\nupon mighty quick.\nDoukhobors owe Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital thousands of dollars and refuse to pay, and the\nhospital has to ask the public for\nassistance to keep up its linen supply, and owes Nelson 'tradesmen\nthousands for supplies. A case is\nreported of a Doukhobor who on,\nentering the hospital for treatment\ndeposited a roll of 8600 for safekeeping. When dlsobarged and\nowing Borne 860 he presented himself at the office, asked for his roll,\nand ths bill, received the money,\nsigned for Its receipt, and walked\noff. lie hu pleaded Inability to\npay ever since. Doukhobors are\nvery fond of this kind of cheap\ntactics.\nI havs not discussed with a\nlawyer the possibility of collsctlng\nthese bills, but as moat Doukhobors are member of the Christian Community of Universal Broth -\nerhood (what a name for tbe\nhabitual law-breakers to adopt)\nthey havs no saleable personal\nproperty. That la where the law\nbreaks down. The community simply\nrefuses  to  pay.\nTha Doukhobors hate this country and everything \"Engl.ah\" most\ncordially. Tbey have been used\nto being ruled with ftn lmn hand\nIn Russia. Like Hindus, they are\nmost unhappy under the gentle\nrule of tbe Britlah. They have\nno respect for any one wbo hsa not\na rough and firm band. They\ncannot understand why any man\nwould not use foroe whan he baa\ntt. Tbey have concluded long ago\ntbat we have not tbe power, and\nthat we an afraid of them. These\nnasty children spoil, when tbe\nbirch la saved. Tba whip is the\nRussian persuader and they mlas\nit terribly In Canada. Certain Ignorant, slushy, eenttmentellste at\ntha coast have rendered the Doukhobors and our country a very poor\nservice, when tbey raised tba ory\nabout un-Britlsh methods when\never slightly firmer methods wen\nused than usual. When the iron\nhand waa not used n Canada when\nthe Doukhobors first arrived bars\nnnd had kissed tbe soil of Canada\nand thanked Ood for their de-\nMveranoe from Russia, tbey, . like\nm-frread, badly brought up brata,\ntried to aae Juat bow far they\ncould go with thalr oommunlstlc\ncheek and crime. Row they have\ntrot aw*a*r with defying about all the\nlaws and instltut.ons that out fore-\nlathers bled to obtain from selfish\nkings snd a narrow-minded aristocracy. And tbey are getting away\neven with arson, bombing and\nmurder.\nOf course, I cheerfully admit that\nthere are good Doukhobors\u2014but\nthey have buried them all, before\nsunrise near* some fruit tree, to\nmake fertilizer. That :s about the\nonly fertiliser they use, and their\nland ts Juat whipped out by tha\nmethods tbat these \"wonderful\nfarmers\"  uae.\nThese people would no doubt feel\nmuch happier ln Mexico. Tbe\nMexican government would not\ncompel them to attend Mexican\nschools. They could have Dousno-\nbor teachers to teach their own\nchildren the holy Russian language. The Mexican government\nwould not worry about registration\nof births, etc, nor about the.r\ndivorce practices. They would find\nthere new fertile soil to whip out.\nHowever, wo do not want them to\nleave Canada\u2014if they will behave.\nThey have turned Immense stretches\nof wilderness into garden. They\nproduced huge quantities of foodstuffs, livestock and lumber. Tbty\nhave created a great deal of business for our railroad*, the automobile bus.ness and storekeepers.\nEven their _.irchas*e of lip stick,\nrouge, powder and perfume must\nrun into big figures. We must Insist, however, tbat they respect and\nobey our laws. Thsee law-breaking,\nburning and bombing practices must\nbe stopped.\nLaw breaking and beating the\nhated \"English\" no doubt addH\nmore \"glory to their Ood.\" but we\nwill stop It, and lti legal ways, too.\nWe must Insist that our provincial\nrepresentatives Col, Lister, Dr.\nBorden and Dr. Kingston, and our\nDominion member, W. K Ealing,\nmust see to it that amendments\nto existing acts are passed, and that\nnew ones are-enacted to effectively\ndeal with these dead beats and lawbreaker*. If tbe government will\nnot act, theae men should havs\nback-bone enough to resign their\nseats and the electors will return\nthem by acclamation. Any party\nwho would nominate a candidate to\noppose these men would be digging\nlta own  grave.\nAmendments to compel the community to pay hospital accommodation for its members must be passed\nThe election act must be amended. In all countries exoept the\nBritish, natlonal.tr of the children\nfollows the father. That Is fair\nand right. Under British law tt\nfollows the flag under which a\nohlld Is born. It is queer logic that\na son of British parents should be\na Chinaman because heisbornitfUer\nthe Ch neae nag. In a oountry\nlike Canada, whloh. owing to an unwise immigration policy, haa to assimilate so many misfits, no one\nwhose parents have not taken out\ncitizens' papers, should be considered a citizen, unices he confirms\nthe requremente of the naturalization act. and swears \"allegiance.\nThe law should be so amended that\nno conscientious objector, even of\nBritlah, nationality, could exercise\nactive otttnenshlp privileges such a*.\nvo ing. etc. No alien should be\nellg'ble to government positions such\nae paetmaster, etc.\nFor refusal to register births,\nmarriages and deaths, for breaking\nthe divorce laws, for not sending\ncMldrejx~_jO school, a six-month term\nln Jail and a fine heavy enough 'o\npay for their keep in Jail should\nbe imposed.\nThat would catch the lnoendlere*\nand bombers, too. Tbe fine oould\nbe collected by the sale of some of\ntheir property. A penal colony tn\nths Paclflo ocean should be established, where they would be a\nminimum of exoense -o the iroetrn-\nment. Clod's mills ermd alowlv. b'i~\nthey grind fine. The Doukhobors\nhave enjoyed our freedom and hav*\n\u00abtjtm<ted u Irme eno,,,Th We <*rv>*'\nhare to resort to Ku Rl\u00abi Klan\nmethod\" ersfl If w\u00ab could. On*\nfetal m*t.hods that th*y detest so\nmuch, will get them yet.\nIverybody  bombard  his  members\nto show them w\u00ab. are in earnest\nTex Teyer.\nft\nAunt Het\nThat Body of Yours\nBy JAS. W.  BAKTOK.  M. D.\n4_RE OUR MEDICAL DIS-,\nCOVERIES   REALLY\nNEW?\nI am wondering It torn, at mr\nreaAera ate thinking, aa I am. ol\naome of the amr discoveries In\nmedlolne aad now some of tha\n\"medlqlno men\" ot Ignorant natlv.\ntribesmen sppenntly tare aomo-\nthlng about thess things hundreds\nand thousands of years ago.\nTou will remember that aom. of\nthat! medlolnee were potions or\naoupa mad. up of one or more of\nth* different anus and gland*\nof th.  body.\nWhat do wa do today?\nThat pernicious anaemia, always\na fatal disease, 1> now cured by tbe\nactual eating of Uver or aoupa or\nextracts made tram ths Uver. To\nthis discovery of Dra. Mlnot and\nMurphy has oome ths Knowledge\nthst th* lining of s hofa stomach\noan b. used tor ths asms purpose\n\u2014blood making\u2014with exoellent results.\nIt wss also found that ths thyroid gland in ths neck manufactured a Jules that mads the pro-\nceases of the body work faster,\nthus soountlng for ths fact that In\nthose Individuals In whom this\nJulos wss too sottve, thalr hearts\nbeat rapidly, snd tbe foodstuffs\nwere burned up so gufoftly. that\nthere was Uttle or no fst left ln\ntbe body, Uiey became very thin,\n\"skinny\" ln fact. In these Individuals where tbe Juice wss not sctlve\nenough, tbs Isot was not burned u\u201e\nrapldlv and overweight was the result. Thus extract ot thyroid gland\nla now uaed safely In this type of\noverweight.\nThen Banting dlsoovered thst a\nJuice, InsuUn from the pancreas\non. of tbs tabdomlnal organs tha.\nmakes the important digestive\nJutoe) regulated tb. use ot sugar\nIn the Mood ana that lt lt were\nnot manufsfltured ln eufflcleni\nquantities, sugar was lost to ths\nsystem and wu thrown out of the\nbody In the urine. B. supplying\nInsulin, secured Horn animate, to\nlndlvlduala whose pancreas did not\nmanufacture enough of It that terrible scourge of m\u00bbn, diabetes, can\nbe cured. ____\u25a0_\nAnd now. Prof. Prey, Berlin, has\ndiscovered another Juice in the pan-\ncress whloh nss the power to dilste\nor open blood vessels more wldels\nwhloh hss been found of great benefit ln some esses of high Wood\npressure. Dllstlng or opening the\nvessels   naturally   lowers   tbe   pres-\nI wonder how muoh the old In-\nTHIRTY   YEARS AGO\nI'm glad I took dlnnsr wlti\nSus. Slnos eatln' her pie crust. It\ndon't make me feel so chssp whsn\n.oe passes  us ln hsr swell  car.\nThe Lighter\nSide\n\u25a0What    makes    you    think    aba\ndoesn't  like  you?\"\n\u2022Mhe told me ahe thought there\nwaa a  fool   In  every   family.\"\n\u2022'Weil,  what of It?\"\n\"I had Juat told her I wae an\nonly  ctukL.\"\nMsjUmistlo: \"The direct lino between laughter and tsars is a very\nsmall   one.\"\nHemlnlsUc: \"Yes, many Is tne\ntime I bavp found mysalf bowUng\nwithin a minute after I Wugbed\nat the teacher.''\n(From  The Tribune of\nFebruary 8, 1901)\nW. R. Clement, C. F. Wlchmann\nand W- B. Worden, all of the Slocan,\nhave bonded the Ottawa group situated on Springer creek, in the\nBlocan, according to word .brought\nto Nelson yesterday by W. I. Ball\nof Nelson. The consideration of\nthe  deal   was  *33,O0O.\n*      \u2022      B\nF. A. Tamblyn defeated Dr. Forln\nIB-IS, and J. ae defeated B. Walley\n13-10. In two curling gamee at tbe\nlocal curling rink laet night.. J.\nRao's rink haa now reached the\nf.nala and will play Richardson's\nrink   tonight.\nEvery organisation ln Nelson will\n\u2022um out to the memorial services\nfor Queen Victoria today. Dr. Quln-\nlan, T. Q. Procter, Oeorge Steele\nand Oeorge . Mhgheson will be\nmarshals and will lead the parade.\nThey will be mounted on black\nhorses.\nsee\nOn Sunday R. F Tolmle, secretary\nof the Silver-lead Mine Owners' association, drove to Orand Forks\nand Oreenwood, aooompan.ed by\nD. A. McFaitand, formerly purchasing scent for the Hall Mines oompany, and now business manager of\nthe Nelson Miner.\ndlan er native medicine nun rail]\npiu know.\nDOES YOUR ROOF\nLEAK?\nAsbestoline\nWATER-PROOF\nFIREPROOF\nB.C. PLUMBING\n&. Heating Ce.\nDistributing- Agents\nNelson, B. C.\n!S^\"jifasa_j_i__}ja_,_ari_T__(a\n\"BUILD   &   C   PAYROLLS\"   1\nPacific\nMilk\nAlways\niV-if.\n\"I always have at least a half!\ndoesn tins ot Pscltlc Milk on mvl\npantry shelf. It ls so handy, sol\npure. I oan honestly say I have!\nnever yet had a failure ln any!\nof my cooking where I have!\nuaed   Pacific  MUk.\"\nThe strength of this endorsement stands out In the\nsentence: \"I never had a\nfailure where I have used\nPacific   alllk.\"\nPacific Mill\nrectory   at\nAJBBOTSFORD, B.C.\n\"100\u00b0\/.   B.c. owned and Con\nmtm\nVW\n1\nAny\ntime\nis life Saver\ntime for Smokers,\n^fat\/make\nthengxt\nsmoke\ntaste better-\nKT-O-MIHT\nCINN0MON\nix-oiua\nVKHtT\nWMT-0-OQN\n0,-0-W\nTEN  YEARS AGO\nOf\nAllen,\nStates\nHsiine,\nto both\nto tbe\nthe  at-\nGrover\n.From The Dally Newa\nFebruary 3,  1031)\nMajor   Oeneral   Henry   T.\ncommander   of   the   United\narmy of occupation on ths\nhas made a formal apology\nthe Berlin  government and\ngovernment  of  Baden   tor\ntempt to take into custody\nBergdoll.  draft Invader.\nK. D. Hall, C P. B. agent, returned laet night from Calgary\nwhere he attended tbe company'..\nconference of telegraphlcal official*.\nSome 300 Doukhobors from points\ndown the Kootenay rlvar, came Into\nNelson yesterday to take advantage\nof sales held by the various merchants.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. M J. Madden left laat night\nfor Trout lake, where ahe has been\ncalled by the sudden Illness of Mrs.\nRobert   Madden.\nBarkis and Edward yeralan, owners of the Morni\\ Star mine at\nHall, who have been visiting In the\ncity for some Urns, returned yeeterday.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(From The Dally News of\nFebrusry 8, 1911)\nFemle residents witnessed the\nworst snow storm ln history yesterday. Storms were also fierce on\nthe pralr.ee and the train system\nwas tied up completely.\nIn tbe opening day of Tbe Dally\nNews subscription contest, Mlas Flossie Edwards of Nakusp easily leads.\nMiss May McVlcar cf Nelaon. candidate for the library, turned ln tbe\nmost votes ln the dty.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBorn to Mr. and Mka. Thomas\nMurray, Delbruck street, a daughter.\nAt a meeting of the new board of\ndirectors of the Nelson street railway J. %. Taylor was reelected\npree dent. O. W. McBride reelected\nvice-president and H. E. Douglas\nagain appointed secretary.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nBorn on February 1 to Mr. and\nMrs. HObert If. McLean, Obscrvaftory\nstreet, a eon.\nREPLACEMENTS\nWe Carry a Large Stock of Genuine\nFactory Hudson-Essex Replacement Parts\nEFFICIENCY IS ECONOMY\nIt Is Dangerous Economy to Operate\na Motor Car With Worn or\nDefective Parts\nWE SOLICIT YOUR BUSINESS\nSmedley Garage Co.\nNext Door to P. a\nNelson\nPhone 711\nNOTHING JUST\nAS NICE ON\nTHE MARKET\nENAMELLED\nSTEEL\nRANGES\nALL PRICES\n-SEE THEM\nNelson Hardware Co. I\n\"Wholesale and Retail Quality Hardware'\nNelaon, B. C.\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS       TUESDAY; FEBRUARY 3, 1931.\nTRAIL SMOKEATERS BEAT KIMBERLEY\n8-2 IN SECOND GAME OF THE SERIES;\nEAST KOOTENAY TEAM SLOW, STAJftT\nWheatley   Is   Big   Scoring\nThreat for Smelter City\nTeam\nTRAIL. B. C, l^b. \u00bb\u2014-Trail defeated Klmberley 6-3 bare tonight\n1 In a game in which Klmberley,\ni' playing a crippled team, collapsed\n. at the opening and failed to let\n1 going sgaln until well on into ths\nj third period. The scoring started 90\n, second* after the opening of the\nj game. Tomllnson  and  Shea  carried\nI the puck to the Trail blue line\n^ from  the  face-off.   Hanson  stole   lt\nI and went down tbe boards to shoot.\n[Brown put the rebound in. O.\n? Jahren. found the puck coming\n| ln from every angle. Wheatley shot\nE from tbe blue  line and  scored  at\n[ 8.05\nKlmberley's combination tried the\n: net  and   Jordon   got  a   minute  for\ntripping   Mellor.      Wbeatley,  Brown\n' and   Hanson   combined   to  make   It\n' 3-0    at    12:33,    Wbeatley    scoring.\nMackie got Klmberley's first goal at\n17:05  ou  Mellor\"s  pass.\nMsllor   opened   tbe   scoring   when\n| he took the puck at the blue line,\n' broke  through   and  scored,  at  1:28.\nI Half a minute later at 1:50 Wheat-\n1 ley scored on Brown's pass. Wheat-\nJ ley   soloed   from   his   own   goal   to\nII score again at 2.44, Mackie gave\nIt Hornqulst one or two hot ones.\n*\u25a0 Reddlck  scored at  12:40 on a long\n' ahot from right center.\nIn tbe third period Trail scored\n: one minute after the opening throuh\nI Wheatley. At 9:50 Reddlck scared\n] an easy one from Kendall.\nJordon accidentally caught Mailer's\n! stick across tbe nose as the first\n[period ended. It opened up an old\n(cut and broke bis nose. The re-\nfmalnder of tbe game, Kendall and\n\\ Brown alternated on defenoe ln _,ls\nj place. Mackie and Mellor were tbe\nI bright lights of the Klmberley team.\n('The visitors found Trail's center loe\nE checking too much for them to\n\\ handle. Solo efforts were useless,\n\\ and combination usually failed for\n| lack of support. Jahren ln goal was\n[ an easy mark. Tbe defence was\n[ practically useless. Klmberley has\n[ lots ol material, but needs a lot\ni of experience.\n| TEAMS\nKlmberley\u2014Jahrens, goal; South\nJ and Shea, defence; Mackie, Mellor\n] and Tomllnson, Summers, Botterlll\nj and Hall, forwards.\n| TraU \u2014 Hornqulst, goal; Reddlck\nI' and Jordon, defence; Hanson, Brown\n[ and Wheatley, Thorarinson, Kendall\ni and   Mollsky,   forwards.\nRrferee\u2014A.   W.   MacDonald.\nTimekeepers\u2014J, Livingstone, KlfP-\n1 berley;   J.  P.  schofleid,  Trail.\nPenalty timekeepers \u2014 R. Jones,\n[ Klmberley;   C. Dodlmead, Trail.\nOoal umpt\u00bbs-_. cook, Klmberley;\nj H. Van Duren,  Trail,\nWANTS BETTING\nON DOG RACES.\nBE MADE LEGAL\nI     OTTAWA,   Ont..   Feb.   2.\u2014(By   the\nT Canadian Press)\u2014Betting on dog\n( racing will be permitted If a meas-\nI urs which E. R. E. Cheyrler, mem-\n[ ber of dual constituency of Ottawa,\n(proposes to Introduce st the com-\nI Ing session of parliament becomes\n[ law.\nParl-mutuel betting on dog rae-\nI Ing ls the proposal of Mr. Chevrler,\n[ Tjlnder the criminal code psrl-\nImutuel betting may take place at\nI horse races, and the bill which Mr.\nIChevrter ls drafting would smsnd\n1 tho code po as to extend the prlvi-'\n[ lege  to  \"whippet\"  racing.\nD. O. Bell,  editor of tbe Stayner\n'\u25a0 Bun, died last week.\nLead Furnaces and\nRinkey Dinks Win\nShift Puck Games\nTRAIL. B. C. Fab. 3\u2014Shift hookey\nleague   results  this  afternoon  were:\nLead Furnaces 3, Wood Butchers 0.\nKlnkeydlnks 0. Zinc Tank Booms 5.\nPETROLLE GIVEN\nBAD BEAK BY\nYOUNG KING TUT\nConqueror of McLarnin Goes\nDown to Ignoble Defeat\nin 24 Seconds\nAUDITORIUM. St Paul, Mln., Fsb.\n3 (AP)\u2014Billy petrolle, surprise conqueror of Jimmy McLarnin and\nTony Canzoneri, met his Waterloo\ntonight.\nJust 34 seconds after hs raised\nhis hands to defend himself agalnat\ntbe rushes of King Tut, wild swinging youngster from Minneapolis,\nPetrolle sat on his haunches in his\nown corner with his bead banging\norer the second rope\u2014a knockout\nvictim.\nA terrific right hand blast to the\nchin delivered almost before Petrolle\nknew what hit him, was ths punch\nthat did the damage. His knees\nbegan to bend and Tut. fighting\nwith the ferociousness of a tiger,\nopened up with a barrage of lefts\nand rights to tbe bead. AU of\nthese blows found their mark and\nPetrolle collapsed. He tried to\nstruggle to his feet at the count\nof nine but his benumbed legs refused to respond and he sat there\nwith his head hanging over the\nropes while the referee counted blm\nout.\nI'NABLF   TO   LAND  A  BLOW\nPetrolle, caught ln Tufa soiaring\nwhirlwind of punches, was unable to\nland a single blow _n hia wild\nswinging for. All be could do was\nclinch In a courageous effort to\nsurvive that first right hand belt\nto the chin.\nThe battle was over almost before\nIt started, and the record-breaking\ncrowd of 9500 sat dumbfounded at\ntbe   startling   finish.\nTbe knockout wss the first time\ntbs battle scarred Petrolle bad even\nbeen counted out although he had\npreviously lost on technical knockout*, once to Tommy Herman and\ntbe last time to Tommy Orogan.\nBoth Petrolle and Tut easily made\nthe required weight, eacb scaling\n1381-.   pounds  at   3   pm.\nSEED    PRODUCTION\nThe objective of the seed production policy of the federal de\npartment of agriculture ls a suitable and continuous supply for\nt*ansdlan farmers through conveniently localized production. Digby\nand Yarmouth counties in Nova\nScotia have produced 1700 pounds\nof registered and 2500 pounds of\ncommercial turnip seed for 1930;\nmany thousands of bushels of registered seed oats have been produced In tbe Martlme provinces, together with considerable quantl-\ntltles of registered seed wheat and\nbarley; while Prince Edward Island\nand New Brunswick have districts\ntn which seed of a particularly\nhigh quality Is available for Marl-\ntime supply during the 1081 crop\nyear.\n\"TRY A NIP TONIGHT-\nBEST PROCURABLE\nionuo * ausiwHTiejjy\n-jHPQnvsfV-\nraoouct   or   ieonxo   \\_\nwcuNnmc.44w eu4.p(tf.4.fwuvtT evenem, i__m.\n\"Big League*'\nBOWLING\ns'o\n0 o\n0 0\n!V\n^re >e\nP\u00bbN6 s\\\nPLMtO    \\\nAifitid      \u2022\nTut Auev |\nForHazahbi\no o o e\n0  O O **\nfi\ni\nI\nOIO\n' Mak\u00a9 tvie:\n'2-7 orj-io\n'sniT SPARE\n_3Y f?EVJiRS(H6\n, EK6USH\"0N\nKIMBERLEY TIE,\nEAST KOOTENAY\nHOCKEYHONORS\nWin 9-8 From Fernie Team:\nI Rough Play and Fights\nAre Plenty\nBy   AL   DEMAREE\n{Former   Pitcher   New   York  Giants)\nCount Qengler of Oermany was\nprobably the greatest bowler that\never lived, wltb tbe possible exception of Jimmy Smith, the genial\nlittle Italian.\nHe wss not only practically un\nbeatable as a \"money bowler\" but\nbe wss a master of trick shots of\nevery  description.\nTwo of these shots I have sketched\nln the above cartoon. In making\nthese shots he delivered* the regulation sixteen pound ball, with a palm\ngrip, being able to Impart much\ngreater  \"English\"  ln   bis  manner.\nIf you think lt easy to control a\nregulation bowling ball delivered\nwith a palm grip, try lt sometime\ntbat ls, tf the alley owner la out\nto lunch.\nAI Demaree has prepared an tllus\ntratfd bowling leaflet on \"Spares'\nwhtrh he will gladly send to any\nreader requesting lt. Address Al\nDemaree tn care of this paper and\nbe sure to enclose a self Addressed,\nstamped envelope.\nHACK WILSON IS\nFINALLY SIGNED\nupwrracHicAGO\nb Not Known Whether He\nReceived the $40,000 He\nWanted\nPittsburgh. Feb. 3\u2014(A. p.i\nWhether Hack Wilson, ths Chicago\nCuba' home run clouter, obtained\nthe MO.OOO a ;sar he was reported\nto have demanded, was unknown\ntonight, but at least the chunky\noutfielder waa satisfied with the\namount he will receive for the 1931\nseason. Wilson snd William Veeck,\npresident of the Cube, met here\ntoday and cams to terms quickly.\nWilson signed a one-year contract. The amount the slugger will\nreceive next season was not re'\nvesled.\nThe outfielder would not com'\nment on tbe reports that be had\nasked for 140.000.\nVesck ssld tbs terms were sstla\nfactory to the club. Asked If WU\nson wss now the highest salaried\nplayer tn the Nstlonal league out.\nside the managerial ranks, Veeck\nssld \"I think he Is.\"\nFOLLOWERS OF\nROABIN' G.\\ME\nAT WINNIPEG\nTh. Original Label \u2014 look (or ll at tlie Vendor's etui iaelet en\nGRANT'S \"BEST PROCURABLE\"\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Province of British\nColumbia.\n\"SEE MOORE for MORE VALUE\"\nA COMPLETE SERVICE\nMoore Fender and Body Works offer you a\ncomplete and up-to-date body and fender repair\nservice. Modern and reliable machinery and skilled workmanship are two of the leading factors\nthat assure you that any job done by Moore\nwill be done promptly and at a reasonable charge.\nMOORE\nFENDER & BODY WORKS\n24 HOUR WRECKING SERVICE\nWDWIPBO, Msb., Peb. 3.\u2014(By\ntbe Canadian Press)\u2014-Curlers from\nesst, west and south arrlvsd ln\nWinnipeg todsy prepared to spin\ntheir stones In tbe 43rd snnusl\nManitoba bonspiel commencing to*\nmorrow. Seventy-one rinks from\noutside of Winnipeg sre Included\nln ths  161  competing  in  ths spiel.\nA Kitchener rink, eistem Canada's entry skipped by R. O. Hall,\nwss one of the first to lsnd In the\ncity. Close on their heels came\nthe noted curler from St. Paul,\nKer Dunlop and his doughty mates.\nPour rinks from Kenora, Ont., will\nenter the fray. Winnipeg will be\nrepresented by 81 rinks, snd Moose\nJaw,  Sask..  by  one.\nTomorrtow the curling addicts\n\u25a0tart the stones rolling In the\nDingwall   trophy   competition.\nSMOKING\nACCESSORIES\nAt our new up-date\nstore we have everything for the smoker.\nPIPE8\nLIGHTERS\nHOLDERS\nPOUCHES\nCIGARS\nCIGARETTES, ETC\nIGHTSClCfAT!\nFT^NIE B. a, Peb. 2\u2014The l\u00bbt\ngame of the east Kooteaiy league\nto be played on Pemie Ice took\nplace Saturday night, between Pernio and Klmberley. After an exhibition of speedy, but very loose\nhockey with many goals, Klmberley came out victorious with a\nscore of 0-8. The monotony of too\nmany goals was relieved twl:e during the game by difference* which\ngrew Into fights. The first resulted ln one man being carried off\nthe ice and the referee knocked out\nfor a few minutes, but the second\nhad no casualties. Timely polce interference prevented either from\ngrowing into a general melee.\nPenalties were handed out aplenty and during the last period five\nmen were rarely seen on the Ice\nat one time for any one side. Kim-\nberely showed a marked superiority in their combination, with Mackie leading their forward line down\ntime and time again ln perfect\nplays. Klmberley ls now tied with\nFernie la the league both having\nfour games while Lumberton has\ntwo.\nKIMBERLEY   TAKES   LEAD.\nBight from the faoeoff Klmberley\ngrabbed the rubber and headed it\ndown the Ice ln a series of combination plays that caught Fernie\nasleep. They pelted tn two goals\nln quick succession on this offensive, Livingstone and Jones doing\n_e scoring.\nFernie soon recovered however and\nthe game began to even up. With\na supreme effort Berkov, of the\nlocal team skated through and got\na tally for bis aide. Mackie of the\nconcentrator town then got Into action and was not stopped before\ntwo more goals were added to the\nvisitors score. The home team was\nnot so slow Itself however for they\nretaliated with two of their own,\noff the sticks of Mllbum and Berkov.\nThe second period started out\nrough, and remained that way. Pen.\naltles were -drawn every few minutes\nby both te>.ms, The score mountsd\nrapidly, Femie tlelng It, and Klmberley breaking the tie twice ln\na row. P. Johnson and Berkov tallied for Fernie and Livingstone\nwith his wicked shot to the corner\nof the net, and Botterll did the\nhonors for Klmberley. Klmberley\nseemed to gain their points with\ncomparative ease after combination\nplays while Fernie got theirs by pure\nhard work.\nFERNIE PLAYERS PUT l_> FIGHT\nIn the last period Fernie players\nfound lt impossible, try as they\nwould, to even up the score The\nvisitors remained one goal up continually and played a fine defensive gume.\nEach team got two goals making\nthe total 0-8 for Klmberley Mackie\nand Botterll scored for ths winners\nand Atkinson and Thompson for the\nhome team.\nThe  lineups   were   as   follows-\nFernie: Qosl; pep Colton, Mil-\nburn and Bmollck, defense- Berkov\nAtkinson. F. Johnstone, J Thompson, F. Johnson and O. peters\nforwards.\nand  J.   Shea  defense;   Maokle   Llv-\nBotterll, forwards.\nLady Houston Ig\nInsulted by the\nLabor Government\nLONDON, Feb. _.\u2014(A. P.)\u2014 Lsdy\nLucy Houston, wealthy philanthropist who recently guaranteed \u00a3100.-\n000 (about 1500,000) to defray expenses for Britain's defense or the\nSchneider seaplane race trophy, announced tonight thst she had been\nInsulted by the government, but\nwould make good bar promise.\nLady Houston, whose offer was\nfollowed by the government's reconsideration of Its decision not to\nparticipate in this year's contest, la\na telegram to the press said:\n\"I have received a telegram saying the government Insisted that\nbankers' guarantee be given by\nThursday for the 1100.000 which I\nhave promised. This is the sort of\ninsult that only the labor government could be guilty of- I have\nInstructed  ray  bankers  to do  this,\"\n\"Previously Lady Houston, known\nas \"Lady Bountiful\" because of her\nhuge gifts to charity, had wired\nPremier Ramsay MacDonald her offer .\"to prevent the labor government from being poor sports.\" She\naald she would make up any expense money which Sir Philip Bassoon, head of the British Royal\nAero club, was unable to raise.\nLint Thursday Mr. MacDonald\ntold the house of commons he had\nbeen told the money to finance\nthe cup race would be raised from\nprivate sources. He said the government was prepared to authorize defense of ths Schneider trophy\nby tbe Royal Air force, provided\nassurance wss given Immediately\nthat the necessary funds would be\navailable from such sources.\nCi_NZONERIHESS\nFIGHT OFF, EAST\nChicago. Feb. a^-(A. P.)\u2014rue\n10-round non-title fight between\nworld lightweight champion Tony\nCanzoneri and Ooldte Hess, of Los\nAngeles, scheduled lor Wednesday\nnight 1Q the Chicago Stadium, today was called off because of illness of both boxers. Hess became\n111 Saturday, and while Matchmaker\nNate Lewis wss seeking another opponent, Canaonerl waa forced to\nwithdraw because of a serious nose\nInfection.\nGRAND NATIONAL\nISmOBLEM\nRestrictions    Upon    Entries\nfor 1931  Remove From\nRunning\nCAMPBELL MAKES\n240 MILES, HOUR,\nDAYTONA BEACH\nIs   Unofficial   Record:   May\nTry for Official  Time\nToday\nBELAMJER-GIROUX    CALLED    OIT\nTORONTO. Ont.. PBb. 2.\u2014(By\ntho Canadian Preua)\u2014The bout\nscheduled for tonight between\n\"Trsnohy\" Belanger, Canadian flyweight champion, and Athur dl-\noux of Montreal, recognized as\nforemost contender for the flyweight   title,   was  called   off  today.\nThe fight was to havs been held\nln a Montreal theater, but when\nBelanger*s manager learned lt would\ncily hold about 800 people, ha declined to allow Belanger to fight as\n\"Trtnchj\" Is working on a per-\nosntage    basis.\nAINTREE. Liverpool, England, Peb.\n\u2022J\u2014(C. P.)\u2014The Orand National\nsteeplechase, greatest event of Its\nkind In the world, remains as purale-\nlng as ever. This year's race will' be\nrun on March 21. Restrictions were\nimposed when It was feared that\nthe popularity of the new Irish hospitals' sweepstake might affect the\nentry list, but entries number 85,\none more than last year.\nThe winners had placed horses ln\nths last two Orand Nationals are\nall back in the contest. They sre\nShaun Oollln, Melleray's Belle, Sir\nLindsay and Glangesla, respectively\nfirst, second, third and fourth In\n1S30; and Oregalach. Easter Hero\nand Richmond II.. first .second and\nthird In 1929. Of this small but\ndistinguished group probably Easter\nHero, owned by tbe United States\nturfman, John Hay Whitney, will\ncommand most attention. He looked like the winner In 1939 until he\nspread a plate near the finish.\nTwo dozen others of this year's\nentry have had experience over the\nremarkably difficult National course\nof four miles and 856 yards. Top\nweight of 175 pounds will be carried for the third time by Easter\nHero. Otb, owned by B. D. Davis, a\nconsistent winner ln the lesser\nknown National Hunt events, can-tag\nsecond highest Impost of 173 pounds.\nShaun Oollln Ls next with 173;\nOregalach and East Oalway ara\nbracketed with 188 and Kakushtn,\nwho ha* shown great promise at\ntimes, gets in  with   167 pounds.\nSir Lindsay ls set to carry 160\npounds. Oyl Lovam, unknown In\nEngland but with a very high\nreputation front Europe ls allotted\n157; Richmond Second, 154; Melleray's Belle 150; and Olangeata\n150. 80 much for the weights.\nThis year the only horses allowed In ths Orand National are those\nwho have, been placed in a steeplechase at three miles or more; or\nelse over any distance at Aln-\ntree; and who have won. a steeplechase worth 82500 to the winner,\nselling events In every case excepted. Of course, had these restrictions\nnot been imposed, the entry would\nprobably have been very much larg\ner.\nOf the 85 entered 33 dropped out\nat the calling of first uon-accept-\nances on Jan. 28. A number of thess\nhad failed to qualify under the new\nrules, however. Among the withdrawals wsre Oberstown Prince,\nFlorin Second. Aulnay, and Image,\nwho had failed to qualify; and East\nOalway,   Brlght's   Boy   and   Bayview.\nProbably 40 horses will start the\nlong grind on March 27. The value\nto the winner will be a Uttle more\nthan 845.000, while the starting\nfee for each horse will again be\n8500. The race wa* worth a good\nbit more two years s_h, when the\nrecord  field  of 66 started.\nThe Orand National was first run\nIn 1830. A syndicate had taken\nover tho lease of the grand stand\nand racecourse at Alntree. Each runner had to pay 8100 and the added\nmoney was 8500. The race was restricted to gentlemen riders, a rule\nwhich was perhaps laxly observed,\nand It was not a handicap, the\nweight for each runner being 167\npounds. The first race had 17 starters and was won by Lottery, ridden\nby Jim Mason, who wss known as\na tremendous dandy. He invariably\nwore white kid gloves when riding.\nIn 1840 It waa Lottery's fate to fall\nat t;.e wall, an obstacle which\nhas long since disappeared from\nAtntree, replaced by others quite\nas formidable. The race became a\nhandicap ln 1848. The minimum\nweight for some years wu 133\npounds, with which light impost\nSunloch won In 1914. Tha minimum\nwas later Increased to 140 pounds,\nand this year tt has been raised to 147. As 175 pounds remains\nthe maximum, the best-cla_n competitors have a more favorable\nchance this year than ever before.\nEntries from Ireland, famed breeding-ground of great steeplechasers.\ndo not appear aa numerous or aa\nstrong in quality as ln previous\nyears. Probably the explanation is\nthat aa soon as tbe Jumpers In Ireland begin to show good form\nnowadays they are quickly unapped\nup for English stables. Among the\nIrish entrants this year Is the clever mare Oeorglnatown, winner of\nthe Valentine steeplechase here lut\nautumn.\nThe Caecho-Siovaklan entrant, oyl\nLovam, Is a source of much Interest. He will be ridden by his owner.\nCaptain ft. Popler, who Is chief\nInstructor of the Ceecho-Slovak army\nriding school. Oyl Lovam. a nine-\nyear-old gelding, comes to Aln tree\nwith the suppprt of a syndicate of\nCaptain Popler's countrymen, including Jan Haaaryk, the Czech minister\nto 'London. The horse ls said to\nbe a fsltless Jumper with great\nstamina. He has just arrived ln\nEngland and Is completing training\nat Banger-on-dee.\nAnother unexpected continental\nentry is M. Olry-Doederer's Aulnay,\na winner at nu and Auteuil but\nnot considered by English experts\nto have much of a chance tn the\ntough Alntree feature.\nEAST AND WEST KOOTENAY HOCKEY\nPLAY-OFFS SCHEDULED BE PLAYED\nIN TRAU ON FEBRUARY 17,19 AND 21\nDAYTONA BEACH, Fla., Feb. >\n(AP)\u2014Having   attained   on   unofficial   speed   or   240   miles  an\nhour    today,     On*.      Malcolm\nCampbell,   veteran   British   race\ncar   driver,   announced    tonight\nhe would make his official trial\nOor    the    world's    land    speed\nreoord   tomorrow,     beacb    and\nweather   conditions    permitting.\nIn   one   tremendous   burst   of\nspeed,  he  drove  his   trim   Blue\nBird   r.trlng  oar over  the  nine-\nmile stretch of beach at a sate\nof   approximately   four   miles   a\nminute, and afterwards declared\nhe was \"tickled  to death\" with\nthe  machine's  performance.\nAs  Campbell  removed   his  goggles\nand climbed out of the huge racing\ncar, a crowd of spectators gathared\nabout and cheered.\nBEST   BBACH   YET\n\"The beach was the best I hsve;\never seen lt snd if lt is still good!\ntomorrow, I shall go for the official\nrecord   then,\"   be  said.\nAlthough Campbell's speed today\nexceeded by approximately nine miles\nan hour the present world's official\nland speed reoord of 381. tt wss\nnot officially recognised as lt wu\nnot officially timed. Furthermore,\nhe made only one run, whereas\nregulations specify a driver must\nmake two trials, one with the wind\nand the other against it.\nCampbell put the 1450 horsepower machine in motion near the\nnorth end of the course, but was\ncompelled to stop suddenly when he\ndiscovered smoke and flames under\nthe hood. A motorcycle policeman\nwith a fire extinguisher ran up and\nextinguished the blaze near the\ncarburetor. Without stopping to\ninspect the motor Campbell started\noff again. When he passed the\ngrandstand several miles down the\nbeach, the machine appeared to be\nfunctioning perfectly. It flashed by\nwith a mighty roar, and ln a few\nseconds had disappeared at tbe south\nend of the beach.\nThe return trip up the beach was\nmsde at a slow pace. Campbell\nexplained tbat he did not care to\npress   his  car  tn   practice.\nTRAIL CURLING\nTRAIL. B. C. rab. i\u2014Baralts ot\nHhs Trail Curllnf club lamsa for\ntonlfbt wars: Mans: J. O. Robertson\n8, R. A. MeLarsn 11; *. R. McDonald 8. P. MeArthur 18: w B.\nHuntsr 8. H O. Csltlloott 11; O.\nShaw  7, A.  Karr 0.\nLadlsa: Mrs. I. Ewart 4. Mrs. R.\nW. Clsrk* 14: Mrs. D. Forrest 10.\nMrs. W. Slropeon 8; Mrs. A. R.\nBuchan -. Mra. D.  McDonald  7.\nC. P. R. BOWLERS\nDEFEAT EKS IN\nA CITKONTEST\nG. Simpson Has High Single\nof 211: Maber Aggregate\nof 548 Pins\nIn Monday's city league bowling\nfixtures, played on Oellnas' alleys,\nthe c \u00ab>. R. bowlers took the Elk\nteam Into cimp to the tunc of 2008-\n1900.\na. Simpson scored high single of\n211 pins and R. 11. Maber hlgb\naggregate of 548 pins.\nScows   were;\nC.  P.  R. 1st   Snd    3rd   Tot.\nMcKlnnon      187   IDS    184   844\nOraham    164    171    1S4   488\nSimpson    139    173    211    S23\nBrake  143    183    148   4M\nTotals\nElks:\nCasslos   .\nDill   .  ...\ntnaher\n... 812 689 707 2008\n1st 2nd 3rd Tot,\n.. 167 187 ISO 474\n203 161 157 630\n. 183 180 183 S48\nMulholland    143 163 151 456\n... 694 661 643 1998\nGELINAS LADIES\nDEFEAT LEGION\nBOWLING SQUAD\nMrs. Levasseur Is High With\nSingle of 168 and Aggregate of 453 Pins\nOellnas Recrestlon club lsdy bowl\ners defeated the Legion ladles 1760-\n1688 on Oellnas' alleys Monday\newnlng.\nMrs. T. E. Levasseur was high\nwith 168 pln-slngle snd 453-pm\naggregste. Mrs. A. Kraft was second\nwith an aggregate of 406 pins and\na single  ot   153   pins.\nScores were:\nGelinas   Recreatlou   ladles\n1st 2nd 3rd Tot.\nMrs. T. Levasseur 136 129 168 453\nMrs. T. Bamford 106 03 94 293\nMrs. C. A. Larson 115 119 99 .133\nMrs. A. Gelinas 134 136 93 343\nMrs.   O.    Wright    112    108    118    335\nTotsls       613 673 573 1760\nLegion ladles:\nMrs.  A.  Kraft    .. 183 101 111 406\nMrs   j. Chapman 130 90 93 302\nMrs.   L.   Plckard 139 133 183 394\nMrs.  R.   Riley 111 188 100 349\nMrs.   J.   Hooker 75 77 86 238\nDr. P. W. puliord of Detroit,\nMich,, died suddenly at the home\nof his daughter, Mrs. W. Harrle, of\nWindsor, Ont, Dr. Pulford, who wis\n78 years of age, was born In Melbourne, Australia. Re practiced ln\nStonewall, Man., for about five yean,\nbut had been practicing ln Detroit\nfor 80 yeara. Er-Ald. A. H Pulford. of Winnipeg. Is t brother.\n\\\nLIONS BEAT THE\nBUCKAROOS, 5-1\nVancouver Team   Drops  Into First Place in Coast\nHockey League\nVANCOUVER, B. C. Teh. 3. (CP)\n\u2014Vancouver wsnt back into first\nplace in the Pacific Coast Hockey\nleague by trouncing Portland Bucka\n5 ta 1 here tonight. The loag left\nPortland in laat place lu the three-\nteam   circuit.\nThe local Llona outplayed the\nvim tint? Bucks from start to finish\nand -Tackaon, In the Vancouver net,\nwas seldom in difficulties. Off to a\nQuick start, Vanoouver took a two\ngoal lead lu the first period, added\nanother ln the eecond frame, and\nfinished up with another brace nf\ncoun ten ln the third. The Bucka'\nlone score came ln the third session, a Conn to Downle effort beating Jackson, Clytb, Pettlnger, Dunn\nand Jerwa were the Vancouver\nmarksmen,   Blyth   getting   two.\nFirst period\u20141, Vancouver, Jerwa,\n;49; 2. Vancouver, Blyth   (Cam, 3:3.\nPenalties\u2014Coupe?,   Jerwa.\nSecond period\u2014J, Vajioouver, Blyth\n(Pettlnger),   13:10.\nPecaltles \u2014 oonn. Arnott, Maher,\nDunn, Armstrong, Brennan.\nThird period\u2014i. Portland. Downle\n(Cop), 1:88; 5, Vancouver, Pettlnger (Arnott), 803; 6. Vancouver,\nDunn.   1:38.\nPenalties \u2014 Routaton, McGoldrlck.\nDtnrale, 110.\nFRISCu I'IGERS\nBEAT HAWKS, 5-2\nSAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 3. (AP)\u2014\nTaking up where they left off. lut\nThursday, the 8an Francisco Tigers\ntrounced tht San Franclaoo Black\nHawks. 5 to a, ln an ice hockey\ngame here tonight. tt ia* Urn\nHawk**   fifth   eonsecutlve   rteJeet\nBOSTON BEATS\nRUMANIA,\n15-0\nKRYNICA, Poland, Peb. 2. (API\u2014\nThe Boston hockey olub. representing the United States, burled Rumania under a 15-0 count in lta\nfirst test ln tha hooks; tournament\nhers  today.\nManitoba' eselly won Its first\nmatch yestsrday. defeating- Prance,\nt-0.\nSweden and Caecho-Slorakla wers\nother winners In the tournament today. Sweden defeated Australia 3-1,\n<vt\u2014* \u00ab_a aasch. conquered 'Poland.\nWISH TO BUILD\nBOWLING, TENNIS\nGllEENSJAKVIEW\nConncU Will Owl With Matter in Committee: Site\nOld Brick Yard\nA lawn tennis and lawn bowling\nclub recently formed In Palnnew has\napproached the Nelson city council\nasking help and a long term lease\non several lots situated ln the old\nbrick yard pit on Second street,\nPalrvlew. The club's communication algned by S. Haydon. acting secretary, declared that the lease would\nbe taken with the Idea of purchase\nat a later time. It was the Intention to turn sn eyesore Into s\nbeauty spot, and to promote sport\nln that eectlon of the city.\nMayor J. P. Morgan declared tbat\nthere were about 60 members In the\nclub and their Idea was to get an\nagreement from the city which\nwould guarantee any outlay that\nthey may make. He suggested that\nthe council reach an agreement\nwith the club aa playgrounds were\nnecessary. Alderman Ross Fleming\nmoved thst the mstter be referred\nto tbe council ln committee. This\nwaa  passed.\nNelson May Play Her Home\n(\u2022ames in Trail: Announcement to Be Made\nTRAIL, B. C. Mb. J.\u2014Bast and\nWest Kootenay playoffs In the provincial hookey title sertaa have been\nannounoed to be held ln TraU Pebruary 17, io and ai, th\u00ab best two\nout of three games to decide the\nwinner.\nThe announcement of the dates\nwas made Saturday by J. C. Uiv\nquhart of HosaUnd. past president,\nof the British Columb.a Hockey association.\nPete of the West Kootenay hookey\nleague le still In abeyance pending\nreceipt of word from Kelson. A\nproposal to hold Jfclaona home\ngamee on Trail Ice, the like dty\nmen having none, was made but so\nfar lt has not beam announced\nwhether tha terms were acceptable\nto Nelson.\nTRAIL   LEADS\nTrail holds a two-came laad In\nthe league, but there are four more\nscheduled gamee in addition to tha\nplayoffs. It is understood the West\nKootenay winner must, If possible\nbe announoed by February lo,\nthough thla data la not absolutely\nbinding.\nEast Kootenay league ls still operating but oould be concluded\nalmost at any time. It Is understood. The winner win coma to\nTrail for tha fliat of the provincial\nPlayoffs.\nThe winner In tne East and West\nKootenay aeries will meat Vancouver in Vancouver Pebruary 2s\nand 37 or March 8 and \u2666. In thla\nseries total goals ln the two games\nwould decide the winner\nINTERMEDIATE   DATES\nShould British Columbia Intermediates desire to challenge the\nprovincial aenlor tltleholders for\nthe right to enter the Alien cup\nPlaydowna, the dates March 4 and\n5 or March 6 and 8 have been re-\nserved.\nlast year'Okanagan intermediates\ndesired to play Trail or Vanoouver\nfor the provincial senior title but\nwere unable to do ao because dates\nhad not been reamed. This difficulty will not, however, lnterferv-\nthis year.\nThere   haa   as   yet   been   no  an\nnourfremenl of a deal]* on the parr\nof   Intermediates   to   challenge   for\nthe   provincial  aenlor  title.\nEdward Oueet, \u201e well known Swift\nCurrent realdent, died In Plorlda.\nDr. F. Rose\nPhysician and Sur\n(coil Specialist la\nn-'UI una lnte<tln.-.l\nleases   only.\nPILES\ncu.ed without oprration. Tonstlpi-\ntion NUrcewafuIlT tlfaterl. Write f\u00abr\nfrre booklet, 4\u00abn floor Zlefler BMr.\n.26   Klver_lde  Ave.,  Spot*or.  WaMt.\nTotals\n698    SQ0    501  1688\nST. GODARD TAKES\nHEAD DOG DERBY\nLeads Mrs.  Kicker  in  First\nLap of  Famous  Event\nat Ottawa\nOTTAWA. Ont, Peb. 3. (CP1\u2014\nEmll St, Godard, who came out qf\nThe Paa to win the first Ottawa\nInternational dog racing derby, bids\nfair to repeat his performance this\nyear. The Manltoban who swept all\nbefore him Inst year captured the\nfirst stage of the second Ottawa\nderby today, nosing out Mrs, E. r.\nRlcker. of Poland Springs. Me., thr\nonly woman entrant In the sweepstake.\nSt. Oodard covered the 33'i-mlle\ncourse ln 3 hours. 64 minute's and\n14 seconds. He trailed In the first\neight miles today, but forged ahead\nln the last two-thirds of the derb:;\nto keep his accustomed place at\nthe  head of the derby entrants.\nMrs. Rlcker, who waa scratched\nfrom last year*! derby, amazed vet-\neran dog riders with her skllful-\nne&s. She showed exceptional generalship In putting her entry Intc\nsecond place before the wlld-ereo\nhuskies   of   \"Shorty''   Ruaslee.\nBusiness Men\nWhen   dining   downtown    come    t_    THE\nGRILL and be sure of\nenjoying   your  meals\nbetter.\nYou    will    like    the\n^ pleasant,   refined  atmo-\n\" sphere   of   our  modern\ncafe.\nTHE GRILL\n\u25a0'The Place to Eat\"\nMEDICO  ARTS\nBUILDING\nBOWL\nTONIGHT\nMake up a party to\nspend a night at\nour alleys. It will\nprovide you with\nplenty of exercise\nand loads of fun.\nGELINAS\nRECREATION\nALSO IN  IMPERIAL\nCAllON JARS *2V HOT\n3\u00a9<K* CONTAINER (UJimilU)\nMATURED AND BOTTLED BY\n-VICTORIA NINERIE$\n\"' tCaMtU)UMITP VtOOftlAB\nItMiiMi   or   tii.s,.u>r'.   by   the   Uqunr\nOini-Tw,    (VK...4    nr   hy    the   <\nment   ot   BrttUb   rn.\u2122b_k.\n a <_e t,l_Ill\nml* iN_t_Uix  UAXLl ftKWS       TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1931..\nyuan*.\nftffl\nWant Ad Page\nT. J. McBRIDE IS\nCANADIAN LEGION\nHEAD, KIMBERLEY\nWill Attempt to Have Membership of 100: Poppy\nFund Supplies $120\nKIMBERLEY, B. C, Fe. 3.\u2014The\nannual meeting of the Klmberley\nbranch of the Canadian Legion was\nheld at the I. O. O. F. hall on January 18, when a large and representative meeting was the result.\nOfficers elected for 1931 were; T.\nJ. Bride, president; L. W. Bonnell,\nvice-president; R. Clements, P. Lye,\nM. P. Anderson, F. Burnn and J.\nE.  Webster, executive.\nTeh election of secretary-treasurer\nwas left over until the next executive meeting as th offlqe has\nbeen held by L. W. Bonnell for\nthe past three years, through whose\ninterest and hard work the Legion\nIs In the position it Is today, and\nlt ls hoped he may try to see his\nway to carry on tor 1931.\nSECRETARY'S   REPORT\nThe   secretary's   report   said:\n\"In presenting my third annual\nreport as secretary, tt gives me\ngreat pleasure to report that the\nKlmberley branch nas marked a\nstage when lt can be called a really\nactive branch. This has been entirely due to efforts or the officers\nand members as a whole. We round\nour membership has Increased 36\nper cent during the past year and\nnow stands at 09 paid members to\ndate and they are really live members with the Interest of the Legion\nat heart and the spirit o! comradeship which has been one of the\nrelics of the Oreat war.\nHOPE  TO  HAVE  100 MEMBERS\n\"One objective for 1931 will be\n100 members in good standing. The\nmonthly meetings whloh were followed by a social hour added considerably to the success attained\nduring the past year, I would suggest to the incoming officers to\nset a monthly date to hold meetings and carry on a similar plan\nof socials and to have Inserted In\ntht press a regular Legion card,\ngiving date, time and place of such\nmeeting*' and also inviting visit;n?\nlegionnaires. All this would be more\nbusinesslike and save confusion.\n\"Regarrdlng the work of the office during the past year, lt has\nbeen more or less routine. We havt\nsix pensions cases pending readjustment under the newly-enacted\npensions leg__datlon passed September 1, 1930. We are now informed that the British Columbia\ntribunal has been formed and hope\ntoon to have every case gone over\nthoroughly and It ls now up to\neach and every veteran of the\nGreat war in Klmberley to Join the\nranks and help in the great work\nwhlc hthls tribunal has to perform.\nMARKMND PREMIER\nADVOCATE\n\"I am glad to inform you that\nan old comrade, D. F. Markland,\nwho for several years had the office of secretary-treasurer. Fernie\nboard, has been appointed a premier advocate for British Columbia\nand a splendid choloe has been\nmade as he knows the veterans\"\nproblems from A to Z. We have\ntwo widow's pension cases to deal\nwith, one having already been refused and under the old pension\nboard, and the other a new applicant. These will be -settled satisfactorily under the new board. It\nmight be well at this time to urge\nevery veteran who ls suffering from\nany cause attributed to war service\nto hand ln thes_ particulars to tlie\nlocal Legion secretary so that w\u00ab*\ncan give these men ever.' assistance\nas this Is the main object of the\nLegion and our branch in Klmberley\nwaa founded to that express purpose.\n\"If a **r veteran cannot afford\nto Join the Legion lt makes no\ndifference and we have to help him.\n*'Durr*g the past year, g 130.83 ha*\nbeen disbursed for relief of distressed veterans and widows frpm\nour local poppy fund. The sale of\npopples at Armistice In 1930 was\n\\ery successful and the people of\nKlmberley and district have our\nwarmest thanks and appreciation\nfor their generosity for supporting\nthis worthy fund, as a considerable\nnumber of d saWed veterans nuke\nthose little popples to help mak**\ntheir life a little more cheerful and\nat the same time making a little\nmoney for themselves and their\nfamilies.\n\"A word of thanks Is due to the\nlocal ladies who volunteered to sell\ntbe popples and their reward Is\npMOS and happiness to some poor\ndisabled men who did their bit In\nFrance or some other theatre cf\nwar In order that Canada might be\ntree. These little emblems of Fland-\nSi*   fields   have   been   bought   in\nmberley each  year  in  memorr  of\nthe  men   who  lie  In   th*?  cemetery\nWANT   AND   CLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nOne insertion 10 cents a lln*\nSix Insertions 40 cents a line\nOns month 1130 a line\nMinlmuui  two  lines\nNo extra cliurge if obargea\nBirth notices  free  ol  charge\nDeaths,    mar-lagea    and    cards    of\nthanks. 2n cents Per line\nFuneral flowers 16 oents pah lint\nNews   of   the   Day   Items   20   oents\nBA  COST If  CH.tUtiED\nffittfa\nLEGAL NOTICES\nhikers who for two and a half years have been touring the world.\nThey will head into northern Ontario on aklls. and after that Intend\nstriking west to Ban Francisco. They expect to take six years to\nencircle   the   globe.\nlittle  white cross  at  their\nwith\nhead.    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\n\"In conclusion I wish to thank our\npresident, Comrade Harry Weaver,\nand ihe other offloers and members for their whole-hearted support\nduring the past fear and a special\nword of thanks to Comrade Stanley\nMcLean Morton for the assistance\nhe gave me at the clerical work,\nalso Comrade C. IT. Phillips for the\nuse of his office which he has\nalways placed at the disposal of the\nLegion.\"\n\"The Legion has been criticized\nfrom time to time by some of our\npublic in respect to the disposition\nof the \"poppy fund,\" says the report.\n\"Let ua state a few facts for the\nbenefit of such critics. The Legion\npoppy fund is solely for the relief\nof veterans and their dependents\nwho are not as fortunate as some,\nhaving been deprived of the facilities  for  making   a  livelihood.\n\"Our books are open for inspection for any reliable citizen who\nwishes to Ben? them as there are nn\nsecrets attached to the Canadian\nLegion poppy fund. We are publish.ng the gross receipts from the\n\u00abale of poppies at each Armistice\nperiod for the past five years. We\nhave heard lt mentioned indirectly\nthat the Legion get the popples\nthrough the government and the\ngross receipts represent the gross\nprofit. An instance will have to\nelucidate this asaumpt on. The\nKlmberley branch cf the Canadian\nLegion last Armistice (1930) purchased 1000 large and 500 small\npoppies from the Vetcraft shops at\nVictoria, British Columbia, throug'i\nthe British Columbia command cf\nthe Canadian Lgelon at Vancouver,\nthe only organization through\nwhich these popples are sold. Thes*1\npopples. together with 10 sma\"'\nwreaths, cost us 1118.40. Referring i\nto the receipts for 1930 of $188.80\nleaves a balance of $70.76 whleh\ngoes to the credit of our local\npoppy  fund.\n\"During the same year (1930)\n$120.88 has been disbursed for\nthe relief of distress, or $50.07 more\nthan  was rece ved  for  1930.\n\"It can readily bo seen that our\npoppy fund is anything but Allad-\nln's   lamp.\n\"The   financial   statement  of  the\nfund  to  date  ls  as follows;\nBalance brought forward November  15.  1930  $1M07\nReceipts from poppies (gross) 188.U0\n$344 .B7\nTMshursement'* to Dec. 1, 1930 130.24\nBalance  in bank  214.83\nI344.R-*\n\"Our gross recetts from  the aa1-\nof  popf.!\"*  for  the  past  five  year-\nIs   as   follows:\n1928       $196.61\n1927         112.80\n1928      _  173.2S\n1929       931 $0\n1980 -   188.an\nAfter the general meetlnc i1\"\ni-rnial light Tefreehments were served\nand a simner. Mr. Stanton put on\na coupU of boxing bouts wh'oh were\nvery much appreciated. The Legion\nIntend putting on a fight ln the\nnear future.\nFERNIE TO SEND\nRINKS TO CURL\nCRANBROOK SPEIL\nFERNIE, B. C. Fob. 2.\u2014The Crows\nNest Pass Curling association's bon-\nspell commen:es on Monday at\nCranbrook, after being postponed a\nweek on account of mild weather.\nDuring the last two days the Ice\nhaa   tightened   up   splendidly.\nFernie is sending three rinks to\n.he spiel. The following Is the personnel of the rinks, first named being the skip; 8herwood Herchmer,\nJames Wilson. Alfred Cummings. J.\nGibson; M. A. Kastner, Guy Johnson. A. Walde T. Allen; E. K. Stewart, Archie corrie, Harold Mlnton.\nCecil Anderson. The Ingram cup\ngames will again be played in the\nlocal  rink  Monday.\nDisposing of a gross estate of\n$543,726, the will of Spencer Cosens\nbetter known as \"Cosens Spencer\"\nowner of Cbilco Ranch, Hancevllle\nB. C, who was drowned ln the\nChilcotln river on September 10 last\nafter he had allegedly killed one\nof his employees, has been filed tv\nprobate.\nCanada\nMAIL   CONTRACT\nSEALED TENDERS, addressed to\nthe Postmaster General, will be received at Ottawa until noon on Friday the 20th February. 1981. lor\nthe conveyance of Ills Majesty's\niviails. on a proposed Contract .or\n~ period not exceeding four years\nsix 16) times per week, on uhe\nivute Kaslo and Nelson (Proposed)\n.rom the Postmaster General's\njle&sure.\nPrinted notices containing further\ninformation as to conditions of pro-\nDosed Contract may bs seen and\notank forms of Tender may be obtained at the Post Of.lces of Kaslo,\nNelson. Balfour. Ainsworth Queen's\nBay, Harrop nnd Mirror Lake, B. C.\nand at the office of the District\nSuperintendent of postal Service,\nDISTRICT 8UPERINTENDEN1\"S\nOFFICE.\nVancouve. B. 0. \u00ab\nJanuary 23rd,  1931.\nJ.   P.   MURRAY.\nDistrict  Superintendent\nof  Postal  Service.     (3087)\nRev. W. J. Crick and\nNelson Boys Go\nto South Slocan\nSOUTH SLOCAN. B. C, Feb. 2.\u2014\nMrs. Edward Watts and  Mrs. L. B.\nCox attended thB Woman's institute\nmeeting  In  Nelson  on  Friday.\nRev. W. J. Crick motored from\nNelson on Friday accompanied by\nsome of the boys who attended the\nchildren's   masquerade   dance.\nO. W, Humphrey has been a Nelson visitor this week and attended\nthe old timers' gathering.\nGrant Tindaie who ts attending\nhigh sohool in Nelson spent the\nweek-end with his parents Mr. and\nMrs.  W.  J. Tindaie.\nColonel and Mrs. J. Murray were\nvi itors in Nelson on Saturday. They\n. #e accompanied by their children,\noily and John and their guests\nfiss Dollie and Miss Donnle Irving\nof Tarry's.\nMiss   Winnie   Russel,   nurse   ln\ntraining et the Kootenay Lake Gen-\ncm l    hospital,    Nelson,    visited    he\n-V    Mr.  and   Mrs.   F.   H.  Ru\u00bb\nsel on Friday.\nHELP  WANTEB\ntm\nWANTED\u2014AN ERRAND BOY FROM\n8 a.m_ to 6 pjn.    Phone 644..L.\n(3774)\ngood\nRot.\nWANTED\u2014MAN FOR FARM WORK,\n;ood milker and good with horses.\n' '   Kldd,  Frultvale. (3767)\nWANTEIX\u20148TROHO YOUTH TO Assist on Poultry Ranch. Wages\n$10 per month *\u00bbnd board. Appl;\nBox   3700   Dally   News. J^*\u2122\nSITUATIONS   WA\/TKT\n(11)\nSCHOOL GIRL WISHES OARE OF\nchildren after school. Phone\n453.R. (3772)\nFIRST CLASS COOK REQUIRES PO-\naiUon in Hotel Clt\\ oi Country.\n.Thoroughly experienced m all\nnotel routine Capable ol taking\nfull charge of kitcntn. etc, Oood\nreferences. Open to*- position\nFebruary 1st. l.<\u00bb1 W i. Swam\nBoot   1300.   Nelson,   B  C.       (3690)\n.JfJBNISHEp  BOOMB  rw \u00abent   (18)\nHOUSEKEEPING     ROOMS     FOR\nrent.    Couple:  no children.    Mrs.\nDuncan Mc->an, Opp. Gas Works.\n(3699)\nTO LET\u2014TWO-ROOMED FURNI3H-\ned housekeeping apartments. Oas\nstove, hot ww.er on tap. Apply\n608    Baker   St. 1.8789)\nKOOM    AND    BOARD\ncm\nROOM      AND\n331.L.2.\nPHONE\n'3728)\nBOARD AND ROOM FOR YOUNG\nman. Private home. 811 Mil\nSt. (3741)\nROOMS\u2014To   Rent\nAPARTMENTS IN THE MEDICAL\nArts Block for rent. Apply Onas.\nF.   McHardy. (3764)\nHOISES   FOR   RENT\n(tl)\nTO LET\u2014SOUTH SLOCAN COT-\ntages. partly furnlslmi. J. Murray. (8770)\nLIVESTOCK   FOR   PALE\n(23)\nFOR SALE\u2014HIGH GRADE SHROP.\nshire ewes, all ln iamb. A few\nsheep are the best insurance\nagainst weeds ln your orchard.\nWill not hurt fruit trees over\nfive years old. M.llar, Kootenay\nBay. v3727)\n(SI)\nLOHT  AM)  FOUSW\nLOST \u2014 GOLD BROOCH WITH\nCarrn Gorn stone. Between Gere\nSt. and Post Office. Finder phone\n245R.     Reward. 1.3768)\nLOST\u2014BLACK PURSE, SATURDAY\nnight, between Hlpperson Hard\nware and Columbia Electric, ton-\ntainlng valuable papers of tme\nonly to owner, and sum of money.\nLlberaV reward to finder.\nDally  News.\nApply\n(3757)\nGeo. W. Schurman, one' of Nev\nYork City's l>est-known lawyers\nand brother of the former U. S\nambassador to Germany, ls dear)\nHe was a native of Prince Edward\nIsland.\nPOULTRY   AND  BOOS\nMINORCA COCKERBA UNBEATEN\nfor utility and exhibition $6\neaoh.    A.   Wallach. (3743)\nFOR SALB-~P\"*_tEN DUCKS, $2\neach. nemlah Giant Rabbits.\n$2.50. Chinchilla Doe. Rhode Island Red Cockerels, Plymouth\nRook Cockerels. Sal* or exchange. Jowett Bros., Edge-\nwood. (8750)\nMISCELLANEOUS  POR BAH       (\u00bbT>\nCANARIES--SINGERS $8. YELLOW\nhens $2. Colored hens $1.60. Mrs.\nJohn Grieve. Frultvale.        (8701)\nFOR SALE\u2014BARRELS. KEGS, BUR-\nlaD sacks, white sugar sacks. McDonald   Jam   Co. (3762)\nFOR SALE\u2014OFFICE FIXTURES.\nincluding Taylor safe. Underwood\ntypewriter, high top accounting\ndesk, office desk, etc. Apply R. P.\nClark offioe.   Ward  St (3749)\nPLATE GLASS SILENT SALESMAN,\nwooden counter, \u2022ietlilc light fixtures, several oak dining chairs\ncheap. On display \u00bb- 613 W.ml\nSt., Nelson, or ohouo 0 J. Currier    739Y. (37>0'\nSECOND HAND PIPES AND FIT-\ntings for sale, When you are tn\nneed of used pipes and Fittings\nany size, Black or Galvanized,\nwrite to Swartz Pipe Yard, 230\nFret Ave. East. Vancouver B. C.\nThe largest exclusive dealers In\nreconditioned Pipes and Fittings.\n(3763)\nBUSINESS   OPPORTUNITIES\n(30)\nPROPERTY FOB RAlAr\n<S*> | INVESTMENTS\nFOR SALE\u2014NEW COTTAGE WITH\nup-stalrs, three bedrooms, three\ncorner lots. Snap for Cash. $1000.\nMre. Lunn, Fell St. v8739)\nfAftM   AND   DAIRY  ntODCCE   (891\nFOR SALE\u2014TIMOTHY AND ALFAL-\nfa Hay by tar. Netted Oem Potatoes. Cabbage and CarroU mixed\noars. \"S. A F. X. Ltd..\" Salmon\nArm. B. C. (8681)\nFURNITURE   ron   nxus,\n(48)\nFOR SALE\u2014AT HM_T CTHOE. AL-\nmoat nsw Singer Sewing Machine;\na.au    portauii.    electric. Apply\nSinger   Sewing   Machine   Co.\n(3720)\nNURSERY   PRODUCTS\n(47)\nLAYRITZ     NURSERIES\npcndable   Fruit    and\ntrees.     Order   now.\nAgent. Nelson. B. C.\nT.   Roynon.\n(3492)\nBANCUES   FOR   RENT\n(49)\n40 ACRES RANCH FOB RENT\u20143\nmiles from Nelson river front,\nbig stone house and other build -\n.uk, water Piped for irrigation,\nwater In the house, ready foi\nrent March 15. Would rent for\nthree to five years. Apply to\nB. Miros, City Power plant. Bonnlngton,   B.  C. (3766)\nINVESTMENTS\n8%\nWe   place   your   funds   on I\nFirst  Mortgages,   Olty  property,   without   expanse   to   you  1\nPlease  call  in  and see  us.   '\nC.W.Appleyard j\nEstablished   18   Years\nNeison, B. C\nBox  628        Phone  268\n(3771)\nAUTOMOBILES  FOB SALE\nCH_VRO[_T  DRIVEN   ONLY   lS.iU_.\nmiles.   Body. Engine and Tires il\ngood condition,   Cash nr barms 1\nresponsible Party. Apply 817 r \"\nCM\nSTORES   FOB   BENT\nFOR     RENT\u2014OFFICE     SFAOE\n,   the   Mason   __   Risch   Store\nnable   Block\u2014813   Ward   St.     .\nply store or local  manager   C.\nCurrier.   Phone   739Y. (37181\nBUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAssayers\nWANTED\u2014CAPABLE MAN WITH\ngood character who can qualify\nfor beer license and manage parlor. Requirements $1000.00 cash.\nAttractive proposition, best location ln town. Write Rocky\nMountain Hotel Companv Limited. Golden, B. C. (8715)\nINSURANCE\nrs8>\nImportant Notice\nHave you plenty of FIRE\nINSURANCE? If you haven't\u2014\nion't delay, but call at the\noffice, telephone, or write, and\nyour requirements will be Immediately   attended   to.\nDelay   is   dangerous.\nChas. F. McHardy\nSl\u00ab   Ward   Bt. Phons   139 {\nNelson,  B.   O.\n\u2022 (3TW\nPROPERTY   WANTFTI\nWANTED\u2014A RANCH OR ACREAGE\nwith option of buying ln th. fall\nMrs   H. Ellis. Harrop. (3708)\nK  W. Wlddowson, Box A1108 Nalson\nB. C     Standard  western  ohsrffes.\n(3463)\nAuctioneer\nMercantile   auctioneer.     A.\nS1SM, Hall Bt.   Bos 117D.\nRarmer\n(34031\nDentists\nDR.  O.  A. C.  WALLET\u2014305  Medical\nArts   Building.     X-Su.     Nelson.\n(3460)\nEngineers\nCHAS.   MOORE\u2014LAND   SURVEYOR,\nArchitect.    Revelstolie,   B.   C.\n(3580)\nH   D.  DAWSON\u2014LAND   SURVEYOR.\nMining and Civil  Engineer   Kaalo.\n(3487)\nA H. OREEN CO.\u2014CONTRACTOR!!\nFormerlv Green Bros.. Burden\nNelson Civil and Mining Engineers B. Cf.. Albert* and Dominion\nLand Surveyors. (34081\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR w. dawsov\u2014Real estate. In-\ndiirsnre. Re*it\"la Next Hliw^on\nHardware. Baiter St. 13470)\nTransfer\nWANTED\u2014MODERN BUNGALOW. 6\nor 7 rooms well located, good\nfinish and plumbing, full oemen*\nbasement, heating a^oas Lake\npreferred. Box 371b Dallw News.\n(3718)\nWILLIAM'S TRANSFER\nBAQOAOE   COAL AND WOOD\n Phona  108 (3473)\nATKINSON     TRAN8PER\u2014Ooal     and\nWood.    Long   distance   hauling.\n(3473\nAccounting\nCHAS. F, HUNTER\nPublic   Accounting  and   Auditor _\nMcDonald Jam Bldg,, Nelaon    J\nBeauty Parlors\nSooletv Beautv Shoo.    Gllker Block!\nMrs. E. Halgh. Phons 171.    (3484*\nChiropractors\nDR. GRAY   OHJCER BLK...\nDR. MITTUN. X-RAY. CRANBROOKl\n     (348811\nFlorists\nOrlzwlles Greenhouse   Nelson    Cui\nflowers and noral designs.    (3475I\nNELSON   FLOWER   SHOPPE      Pull\nUna   cut   flowers   at   all   tlm*\u00bbl\nfloral designs.   Phone 338     (347.I\nJ95,N8\u00b0N'S    QH^HOUS\u00ab---1_0__\n(34771\nand   FlCTal   Designs.\nPhotographer.,\nGEORGE    A.    MEERES\u2014Artla,\nPhotographer     716   Bakerst '\n^^^^^^^^ (S471)|\nSecond Hand Stores\nThe   Ark,   dealers   ln   second   h\u00abnJ\ngoods.    Phone_8S4.     \"\u00b0M ,_$g<j\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON\u2014Baker St..  rartwiter uJ\nJoiner.    Sash  and  RaivJs^od *\"*\n\u2014 ___________m\nTHE  GUMPS-AN  EMBARRASSING  MOMENT\nNotwithstanding that Dome Mines\nwas off production for the first\nmonths of 1830, net profits for\nthe year reached a total of (117,-\n89&.20, before depreciation and depletion, according to an official report.\nREDUCED\nROUND TRIP\nFARES to\nCANADIAN WINTER SPORTS\nRevelstoke\nSki Jumping\nContest\nFEB. 3-6.\nTickets on Sale Feb. 1 to\n5.   Return limit Feb. 9.\nBanff\nWinter\nCarnival\nFEB. 7-14.\nTickets on Sale Feb. 6 to\n14.   Return limit Feb. 16.\nRATE F.4RE AND ONE-THIRD\nFOR ROUND TRIP\nWinter sports program from any. agent or write J.\nS. CARTER, Dist., Passgr., Agent, Nelson, B. C.\n Vo-\nTHE   NELSOK  DMLY   NEWS      TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1931.\nPage .Nina\nMETAL MARKETS\nittonia Mines Capital\nBond Jewell Amalgamation\n9-TON CYANIDE\nMILL IS PIANNED\nfork Starts Next Month;\nJewell Produced\n$600,000\n|>Cotuolldatlni ot tihe former Jewell\nUd  mlna  at  Oreenwood   with  ad>\njrtning   claims   whleh   contain   the\nIntension  of  lta  fwnous  gold  vain\nndln* of tha enlarged property to\nilbralth & company of Calgary, or-\n\u00bbtton   of   tha   Dentonla  Mines,\nilted,  with  Dominion- charter,  to\nfiJce over the bond and operate the\n\u25a0operty   ,and   financing  of  an  im-\n|\u00abdlate  program  of  equipping  and\n\u25a0 BTelopraant,  with  a  view  of early\nhU  production,  waa  disclosed  here\nlaturday.\n{The vendor* are Oeorge White of\n[Teenwood,  and  A.  H.  W.  Croasley\nF. H. Fox of Nelaon, and work\ndue   to   start   early   ln   March,\nthe direction of J. M. Robert-\nof   New   Denver,   well   known\nfining engineer.    Th* new property\nbt known art  t.-.e Dentonla.\n^TENSION   FORMED\n[For   many   yeara   an   active  pro-\nthe  Jewell  mine, owned  by\nJewell   Mlnee,   limited,   turned\nkit over 1600,000 tn gold, from one\nshoot 400 feet long and worked\na depth of 550 feet, lta opera-\nIon closing ln 1016, when also many\npld   mlnee   shut   down   from   the\njUfttlve   depreciation   of   the   yellow\nal.    At that Ume the promising\nolnlng property, consisting of tbe\nInterprlee,     Anchor    and    Ethiopia\ntalma, was owned by Mackenzie &\nf ami.   the  railway  builders.\n1 Oeorge White, well known Green-\nrood   mining   man   and   prospector,\n| ho became the owner oi tbe Jewell\n\u25a0operty,    traced    tbe    Jewel    vein\nI_ro88   these   adjoining   claims   for\nfooo feet, some three years ago, and\nlid considerable development on this\nkteasion, shipping development ore.\n|onsolldatlng the properties   Messrs.\nhit*.   Croasley   and   Fox,   In   view\n|f   the   favorable   position   of   gold,\nable to quickly Interest A. O.\nffalbraltb,  ex-presldent  of  tbe  Cal-\nBtoek exchange,  in the proportion,   and   the   formation   of   the\nntonla Mines, with a capital stock\n\u2022875,000,   comprised   ln   1.500,000\nlo-par  sharea  offered   at  25   oents,\ntrtlowed.\nBpERATINO    PROGRAM\nI T*h\u00bb   equipment   program   Includes\nearly   Installation   of   a  aeven-\nrtU   compressor  operated   by  dleael\nand   other   equipment   rend  for  mining,   while  the  bond\nquires the company to begin con-\nuctlon  of -a  50-ton  cyanide  mill\nSeptember 8. the mill to be corn-\nAd and operating by March, 1933.\n| A first class camp  already served\nproperty, which is in the Long\ni camp  nine miles out of Green-\nIced,   to   the   northeast,   the   camp\nlaving   good   road   connection   with\nkeen wood.\nI Nelaon   8.   Bmlth   of   Olds,   Alta.,\n, preeident of Dentonla Mines, and\nO.  H.  Boholefleld  of  Calgary\nvice-president,    other    directors\nDr.  A.   O.   Scott  ot  Bassano,\n|tta.,  and   Charles   Ingram   of  Cal-\nJ. M  \"^bertson of New Denis engineer.\nLONDON, Feb., fl.\u2014Standard Copper spot \u00a343, 10s; future |48, 7s, 6d,\nelectrolytic \u00a346; futurre \u00a347. Tin,\nspot \u00a3113. 7s, fld; future \u00a3114, 15*.\nUad spot, \u00a313, 17s, 6d; future CIS.\nZinc, spot \u00a311, 17s, 6d; future \u00a313,\n6s, fld.   Foreign Bar silver 38* oents.\nNEW YOhiC\u2014copper unsettled;\nelectrolytic spot and future, fl%; iron\nsteady; No. a F. O. B\u201e eastern Psn-\nnslyvanla 17.00-1840; Buffalo. 1640;\nAlabama. 11.00-11.00. Tin easy; spot\nand nearby 35.36; future 35.61. Lead\nsteady; spot New Tork, 4.75; Bast St.\nLoula, 4.&5. Sine steady; last Bt.\nLoula, apot and future, 446*4.10;\nAntimony.   7.13.   Quicksilver,   106.00.\nNEW YORK LIST\nHAS FEW GAINS\nTOPPING LOSSES\nOils Refuse to Be Disturbed\nby Dividend\nActions\nTORONTO MINES\nHAS SERIES OF\nSMALL LOSSES\nGold  issues  Develops  Price\nWeaknesses:  Dome Is\nBright Spot\nTORONTO. Out., Feb. 3\u2014 (CP)\u2014\niteectlonary prices with propor-\nuona.e.y small losses again dominated the movement of stocks on the\nstandard mining exchange today.\n.otal sales Involved 413,881 shares.\nInternational Nlokel and Noranda\n#ere \u25a0 well represented on sales\nsheets and while the former rose\n10a to close at #14.85, the latter\niropped 10c ta 817.20. Trl-Metals\n.iioved up 10 polnte to 8340 and\niudbury Bas.n fell five polnte to\n68c.\nWhile most of ths gold Issues developed price weakness ln restricted\ndemand. Dome stood out as the\nbright spot end ln a movement of\n1490 shares, closed up 10c to 110.16.\n\u2022iclntyre dropped 350 to 833; Teck-.\nHughes fell 10c to 87.05; Granada\nn a movement of 10 shares sold\noff 7 points to $14.76.\nIn the higher-priced oil group\nprices turned downward, and the\nlower-priced issues were dull to\nfeatureless.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBank of  Commerce\nDominion Bank \u2014\u2014\nImperial Bank\n- 1338\n333\n.   338\nBank  of   Monteal       338\nBank of Nova Scotia \u2014   816\nRoyal   Bank\nBank of Toronto \t\nAbltlbl power ft Paper ...\nAtlantic Sugar  \t\nBell   Telephone   \t\nBrazilian T. L. St Power\nBrit. American Oil \t\nCanada   Bronze    ~\u2014\nCan. Car & Foundry \t\nCan.   Cement   \t\nCan. Cement Pfd. \t\nCan. Converters \t\nCan.  Industrial  Alcohol\nOan.    Cotons\n337\n330\n10 Vs\n36*\n148%\n23*._\nHH\n8*H\nIB\n13\n93\n\u20220%\n4\n40\nNTW TORS, Teh. 3.\u2014(AP)\u2014The\nstock market, Indolent a* the sleepy\nground hog, spent most ol today m\nhibernation. However, It d.d emerge\nfrom its burrow ot* dullness ln the\nfinal hour of trading, sufficiently\nroused to close with small net\ngains.\nThere was scaroelr enough activity to move prices either way until\nmid-afternoon. The day's news although not part.cularly startling,\nwas of a color to please tbe shorts,\nfor two of the Standard Oil companies and * large metal producer\ncut their dividends.\nDROPS   TO   LOWER   LEVEL\nThe market was mostly lower whlls\nthese announcements were being\ndigested, tit so inert d.d the trading become that only 300,000 shares\nchanged hands between noon and\n3:10  o'clock.\nActivity during the lat# improve*\nment was sufficient to bring the\nday's business to approximately 1.-\n200,000  shares.\nOils refused to be much disturbed by th\u00ab dividend action of\nStandards of Indiana and Kansas,\nnor were the metals bothered by\nInternational Nickel's cut. The\nutilities dropped at times, but American Telephone more than made\nup a two-point loss. Steels and\nsome of the speo.altiee came forward with gains of a point or so,\nwhich prevailed at the doe*.\nSTEEL  IS   l_f\nU. 8. Steel, Bethlehem, American\nCan, Westinghouse, Vanadium.\nWorthlngton Pump, Allied Chemical. American Tobacco \"B\", Atchison and Southern Railway war* up\nl to IV Auburn's rise of four\npoints was exceptional, and meant\nonly that nervous shorts had covered. The stook at Its lowest of\nthe  day  was down  three.\nLiquidation lp Peruvian bonds on\ntbe prospect that the republic may\nseek a moratorium on lta external\ndebt shared interest with the downward moment of TJ. S- government* ln the ond market today.\nThe decline was accompanied by\nsympathetic reactions in other\nLat: ln-American issues. The rvtreat\nof TJ. S. governments waa slower and\nselling not as extensive ss ln the\ncloeng days of the previous week.\nAt the day's lows, long term treasury Issue* were off as muoh as %\nof a point but tbe group recovered\nsome ground.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nCan. General  Elec Pfd -, 3110\nCan   Power   ...\nCan. Steamship  Unas  \t\nCons. Mining & Smelting\nDominion Bridge\t\nDominion   disss -\nDom. Steel It Coal \"B\" ..\nt)om. Textile\t\nA. P. Oraln\nHllcreta  Colliers   _\t\nLake  ol  the  Woods   _\nMassey  Harris  \t\nMontresl  Power  __ \u2014\nMont. Telegraph \t\nMontreal   Tramways       IM\ni%\nt\n185 tt\nel*.\n119\nBtt\n73\n\u00ab ,\nBO I\n12\n\u00ab*\n541.\n48\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nlimniSAPOUS, Feb. 2\u2014Flour unhanged.     In   carload   lota   family\netattts   8,38   to   8,46   a   barrel   ln\nMb.   cotton   sacks.\nI Shipments   84,904.\n(Bran  14.00 to  14.80.\nJ Wheat:   Ho.   1   nor.   T3H   to  TT:\nfo. 1 red durum Mtt to 65*; Ma;\nfl  July 72%.\nOom: No. 3 yellow 64 to 68.\nOsts:   No.  3   Whits   28tt   to   38*.\nFlax No.  t  1.461,   to   lJMtt.\n| Fin did  810,000  damage  to  the\nafihford    collegiate    Institute.\nLOGAN \u00abc BRYAN\n.    OaUlN\nfTOCKS,   BONUS,   COTTON\nTalk, Montresl and Vancouver\nExchanges,   Chicago  Board  of\n_     Winnipeg  Oraln  Exchange\nand  other  trading  exchangea\nPBIVATB Willi\norncu\nVancouver, Spokane and Seattle\nNational Breweries ......\nNational   Steel   Car   -\nOgilvie   Milling   \t\nOntario Steel Products\nOttawa L. H. Si Power\nPenmans  Ltd\t\nPower Corporation \u2014\nPrice   Bros _\t\nQuebec  power  .\u2014\nShswlnigan  \u2014..\u2014\nSherfln Williams\nSo. Canada Power\nStel of Canada\t\nWabaeso Cotton   ....\nWestern Grocers\nWinnipeg Railway \t\nWinnipeg Railway Pfd\t\n28tt\n34\n270\n18\n08\n70\n61\n30\n41\n40,i\n27\n80\n30\n33\n16\n18\n74\nHXiU MARKETS\nOTTAWA. Ont.. Fab. 2.\u2014Further\nevidence of declining production Is\nreported from some egg msrketa\npresent time1 appears to be at bot-\nover the week end and prloea at the\ntorn.\nTORONTO: Brokera are making\nsales of graded shipments from Ontario and British Columbia at extras\n20: firsts 26; pullet extras 22, For\nlocal eggs dealers are quoting producers extras 2S-27; firsts 22-23; pullet  extras   18-20;   seconds,   16-18.\nMONTREAL: Local egg dealers ar,\nquoting producers extras 26-27; frlrts\n22-23: pullet extras 18-20; seconds\n17-18.\nWINNIPEO: . Dealers here are\nquoting producers for eggs extras 20:\nfirsts 18; seconds 18- Throughout\nSaskatchewan general paying levels\nare extras 16-18; firsts 14-18: seconds   10-12.\nEDMONTON: Dealers hare are\nquoting producers for eggs extras 16;\nfirsts 14; pulet extras 12; seconds 10.\nVANCOUVER: Wholesale dealers\nhere are paying producers for eggs\nextras 16-10; firsts 15-16: pullet extras  18-14.\nCHICAGO: Spot 16V4; Feb. fresh\n16; April futlrrea, 1\u00bb.\nBuilding\niMdterUlt John Burns & Son\nLet us figure \/our bills on\nBuilding  Material.    Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Co. ot Canada, Ltd.\nOffice. Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIL, BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS and REFINERS\npurchaser, w Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ore\nProducer! \u2022   Gold, Silver, Copper, Fig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC. TBAIL\nAllegheny \t\nAll Chem\t\nAndes   \t\nAm  Oan  \t\nAm For Pow .\nA Smelt & Re\nAm Tel \t\nAm Tob \t\nAnaconda \t\nAtchison \t\nBaldwin\t\nBait It  <X\t\nBsndlv At _..\nBeth    Steel\nO   F   \t\nCerro de\t\nChea A Ohio _\nOhryaler \t\nCon Oas N T..\nCorn Prod   \t\nDupont  \u2014\nEastman K \t\nErie -\t\nFord Eng \t\nOord of C,\t\np N Stores \t\nFteeport T \u2014\nOen Mot \t\nGen   Elec\t\nGen. Food ..\u2014....\nOold   Dust  .....\nGranby  \t\nG W Bug \t\nHowe Sound  ..\nHud Mot \t\nIns  Cop   \t\nInterboro R T-\nIn Nickel\t\nIn T 6s T \u2014\nKelly  Sprint  ..\nKenn  Cop  \t\nKresge   S   S\t\nKroegg T  \u2014\nMack   Truck   ..\nNash   Mot   \t\nN Dairy P. -\nN Pow J> L .\nN T Central ...\np   Gas   tt   E.\nPsck  Mot  \t\nPen R R \t\nPhillips Pete\nRadio Corp \t\nRed Keith Or \u25a0\nRem  Rand   \t\nRock   Island   ..\nSafeway   6   \t\nS Loula It SP\nShell Un QU \u2014\nSinclair Con  ..\nSo Cal Ed -.\nS   P    -\nStan Oil of O. ..\nStan OU N J.\nStew Warner ..\nStudebaker ...-.\"\nTex Corp \t\nTex   Gulf  Sul\nUn Carbide \t\nUn  O  Cal   \t\nU F -\t\nUn Air \t\nU s Rub \t\nUS Steel\t\nWest Elec _\t\nYellow T .\u2014\t\n9%\n167%\n16tt\n110K,\n30\n44 V,\nlestt\n112%\n83 tt\n183 tt\n22\n80\n19 tt\n61tt\n42%\n24\n44\n17\nOO\n81%\n87tt\n\u00bbtt\n164\n15%\n109%\n29\n44%\n186%\n110\n32%\n192\n21%\n70\n19\n49%\n41%\n23%\n42%\n16%\n88%\n80%\n86%\n163%\n80%     \u2014\n.   33%\n.   38%\n44%\n, 51%\n. 35%\n.    10%\n9\n.    33%\n,   21%\n.     7%\n'.   14%\n.   36%\n.     1%\n23%\n26%\n22 V4\n.   38\n.   82\n.   43\n' 135%\n. 48%,\n..   9%\n61%\n,   12%\n15%\n18%\n.    18\n.   60%\n48%\n58\n...   9%\n,   11%\n48%\n104\n47%\n47%\n15\n20%\n32%\n49\n59%\n33%\n198%\n13\n140%\n85%\n10%\n43%\n82\n37%\n43%\n51%\n36%\n16\n13%\n36%\n38 tt\n26%\n21%\n37%\nSI\n42%\n122%\n46\n9%\n60%\n12%\n14%\n18\n15%\n60\n43%\n9%\n11%\n47%\n103\n47\n46%\n14%\n30%\n32%\n48%\n58%\n23%\n195\n12%\n138%\n83%\n10%\n0%\n157%\n16%\n110%\n30\n44%\n187%\n113%\n82%\n193%\n22\n78%\n19%\n61 tt\n42%\n34\n43%\n17\n00\n81%\n87 tt\n157\n30%\n171,\n28%\n44\n83%\n37tt\n44 tt\n81%\n35%\n16\n0\n28%\n31%\n7%\n26%\n14%\n26\n1%\n23%\n26 tt\n22%\n37%\n32\n48\n38%\n124%\n46%\n0%\n61\n12J4\n15%\n18%\n16\n69%\n43%\n58\n0%\n11%\n48\n103%\n47%\n47%\n14%\n20%\n32%\n40\n60%\n33%\n198%\n28%\n13\n140%\n86%\n10%\nMONTREAL HAS\nAN IRREGULAR\nSALES SESSION\nMONTREAL, Que- Peb. 3.\u2014Prices\nwere mixed on the Montreal stock\nexchange today and _i the close net\nlosees hsd * narrow margin over net\ngains.\nCanadian Paqtflo wae a notable\nstrong point, closing a point higher\nst   _M.\nFinal prices, with net changes.\nIncluded: Ueaeey-Harrle, down V.\nat 7; UcOoil-Frontenac, off ft et\n10; Nstlonal Breweries, up V, st\n38H; Quebec Powsr, \u00ab poftit higher\nst ia, and Shswlnigan Power, off\n\\k   et 40%.\nW.nnlpeg Electric preferred dropped six to 74.\nInternational Nickel was active\nleader with aalea ln 4308 sharea.\nand at th# olose wss up % at li_4\nMontreal Power, which was second\nIn volume, with trsdlng In 1830\nsharea, cloaed at MV4, off V, net.\nBrazilian was third tn activity, with\ntrad ng ln 1333 shares, ami at the\nclose was off fi net et 33, ex-\ndllTdnd.       \u2022\nTotal sales 18,083 shares; bonds\nHON.\nCLOSE TO $2500\nASSESSMENT WORK\nACCOUNTED FOR\nOnly   Two   Locations   Filed\nHere During Past Two\nMonths\nAlthough only two claims have\nbeen recorded during the peat two\nmonths a* the min.ng record office\nhere, the prospector* have been\nfairly busy, nevertheless. During\nDecember and January certificates\nof work for approximately 30 claims\nwere filed hare. In one oase, six\nclaims were cleared for a period of\nfour yeara each. The work waa\nregistered by H. p. Brown.\nThis work represents the expenditure of some (3600.\nOerttflcatee   of   work   and   locations  were:\nCERTIFICATES   OF  WORK\nOar1 H Dell\u2014Tryout, December 4.\non fork of Trail and Pass creek\nroads.\nA. L. Purdy\u2014Sundown, December\n8. Sundown Prac, on Dundee\nmountain.\nL. Mattasea\u2014Gold Hli. Oold Hill\nNO. 1. Oold Hill Na 3, Gold Mill\nNo. 3, December a, on Rest creek.\nH. B. Morrlson^Msiwood, Blme-\ntell, December 8, near South Sloc\u201en.\nR. P. Brown\u2014Lassie No. 1. Mercury No .1, JTD No. 1, Jack No. 1,\nBluff Na 1, Oopher No. 1, De-\ncemer   13.   on   Kokanee   creek.\nJohn P. Bell\u2014Old Timer, December   18,  Salmon  river.\nJohn Desireau\u2014Hockey, Hockey\nNo. 3, December  18, near Wynndel.\nE. BalMnger\u2014Sunshine. Minnie M.,\nJanuary  24,  Sheep creek.\nLOCATIONS\nWilliam Moore\u2014Moore No. 1, January 6, on Teed mountain, three\nmiles south of Nelson and ad -\njoining ater of tha West mineral\nClaim.\nRobert Long^-Okenook, January \u00ab,\nabout four miles south-east of\nErlckson  on  Canyon  mountain.\nCONTEMPLATE\nMUCH HIGHWAY\nWORK TO SOUTH\nIone-Metaline  Road   Repairs\nContemplated: Spend\nMoney, Newport Road\nFOR SALE\nD. C. MOTORS AND\nGENERATORS\nELECTRICAL .\nSUPPLIES\nLAMPS\n15 to 60 watt per carton\nof 6 $1.40\n100   watt   inside   frosted\nRer carton of 6   $2.50\n1STALLATI0N8 AND\nREPAIRS GUARAN-\nTEED\nJ. F. COATES\nELECTRICAL ENGINEER\nNelson, B. C,\nB\u00abw   1181 Phone   766\nMETALINE PALLS, Wash.,' Feb. 3\u2014\nThe 1820,000 Item ln the governor's\nbudget for the coming btennlum for\ntne Pend Oreille highway gives the\ncontemplated expenditure and work\nin Pend Oreille county as follows:\nNewport vicinity\u20140.6 miles, location and engineering, $3000; right of\nway, 11000; grading and surfaceing,\n.140,000; bridges 15000; light oiling. 01000.   Total I14B.000.\nJared undercrosslng\u2014grading approaches, 0500; 50 per cent of cost\nof bridge, the other 50 per cent to\nbe borne by Milwaukee railway,\n03500.   Total 07600.\nIone-Metaline\u2014Tbree miles, location and engineering. 01000; grsdlng\nand surfacing, 050,000.   Total 051,000.\nHeavy oiling of new road through\nRogers Pass and from Newport north\nto British Columbia line, 0180.800.\nBetterment and reconstruction, 060,-\n000.    Total 0330,800.\nThe budget proposed Includes all\nof the construction and betterment\nwork that has been discussed and\ndesired by the people of Pend\nOreille county. It calls for a totsl\nexpenditure of 0438,300, exclusive\nof maintenance, within ths county\nduring ths coming btennlum. In\naddition there is a proposed expenditure of 0200,500 on the Pend\nOreille highway within Spokane\ncounty.\nNICKEL LEADS\nTORONTO LIST\nT0OEWL0W\nSmelters  Drop  Two  Points\nto 137: Atlantic Sugar\nRecovers\nTORONTO, Ont.. Fab. 3.\u2014(OP)\u2014\nMajor market Intsrast on tba Toronto stook exchange todav con-\noentrated on InvarnaUonal Nickel.\nTha Issue eold down to a new low\not 181, but recovered and closed\nthe day wltb a oat lain at ti at\n141,.\nLack _ trading Intsrast and toe\ngeneral thinness of the market la\nanown by total salsa of 14,148\nshares.\nConsolidated smelters lost tare tc\n137, and Noranda at 117.30 waa oft\ntire oente. Dome at aio.11 waa oft\n10 osota and tha other folda Bad\nsmall prloe chances ln Indifferent\ntrsdlng.\nAtlsntlo Sugar more than recovered the two points lost In Saturday, by closing strong at 371,,\nup av_. Tha preferred gained eight\npointa to 00. Ball Telephone went\nat  160 at the does, up is,.\nAnnouncement that Waterloo\nM&miaacturlng had deferied payment of the dividend on Its stock\ncaused thla oompany'e oommon la-\nrue to fall to four. ^ net loaa of\none point. Usseey-Harrls lost H\nto  OH.\ntn the steel section Steal of\nCanada at 89 was off H and Hamilton  Bridge  lost  H  to   lttt.\nOils were lingular. Britlah American lost H to 14V Imperial\nwaa  up   V,   to   HV\nIn the notion Walker lost H to\n8 while Dlstlllen-Seagrams st 13 '<,\nwaa up the fraction.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nEXTREMELY QUIET\nVANCOUVER, Teh. 3.\u2014ato<4s moved In nsrrow circles on ths Vancouver Stock Exchange today, and at\nthe does prices generally were un-\nchanged from the levels established\nSaturday.\nApathy ftatured the oils group.\nHome sold In small lots at 01.60 and\nclosed with a net loss of 3 cents at\n01 M hid, C sod B- Corporation at\nOS cents and Commonwealth at 31\ncenta, both recorded net losses of\n3 eenta.\nTrading in the mines division\ndwindled to a low level, and prices\naa a whole were steady. Premier\nOold dropped 1V_ cents on the closing bid to 71 oents siter selling at\n73 Vs cents, whlls Big Missouri eased\nfractionally to 43** cents.\nFRANCE BEGINS\nTO FEEL PINCH\nOF DEPRESSION\nLooks Like a Budget Deficit\nof $40,000,000: Exports\nDecline\nPARIS, Feb., 3.\u2014(By Oeorge Ham-\nbleton, Canadian Press Staff Correspondent)\u2014Pranes is beginning to\nfeel the pinch of tbe world depression. The declining revenues of tba\ncountry sre likely to result in *\nbudget deficit of billion francs, or\nforty million dollsrs.\nPrance's exports show a decline.\nUnemployment ls growing snd what\nparticularly hits the Frenchman of\nmoderate means ts thst the cost of\nliving still climbs.\nAll through the world crisis,\nFranc* has, so far been little affected- While Oermany. England And\nthe united Stateh had armies of unemployed, Francs hsd no unemployment problem worth mentioning.\nBae counted her idle workers ln\nthousands were they counted theirs\nln millions.\nBut tbe present situation ls glv\ning rise to some concern. Tbe unemployed, who In Deoember were estimated to number 104)00, now appear 1q the official returrns as being between 80,000 and 40,000 and\ntbe official figures admittedly do not\ntell the whole story.\nNO KKASON FOR ANXIETY\n\"There ls no reason for anxiety.\"\nlt was stated at Qual D*Oraay today.\n\"But precautions will be taken to\nprotect the French workmen from\nthe conditions which prevail ln\nothsr   countries\" Long-planned\nschemes to increase ths national efficiency by way of building workers\nars, lt Is understood, to bs carried\nout. On this programme, it Is Intimated, polltloal parties are ln agreement no matter how sharply they\ndlifer on other questions.\nFrance also hss an important\nsafety valve in the number of for-1\nelgn workmen within her borders,\nmen sdmttted under contract dur-\ning ths dsys when France was restoring her devastated areas. They\ncan be returned as the contracts expire. These workmen are moetly\nItalians and Polea. The number of\nforeign workmen In France ls said\nto be around 3,000,000.\nWINNIPEG WHEAT\nMAKEStTW GAINS\nInterest in Cash Wheat and\nCoarse Grains la\nNegligible\nwramrao. uu, ret>. i.\u2014(OP)\u2014\nMarked by extreme lethargy wheat\nprloea on the grain exchange today\nsomehow managed to secure fractional gains. Trading was the dull.\neat for-aome time but final quotations mealed gains of % to a,\nosnt. The May future acquired the\n*\u00bb cent rise at mv, cents while\nJuly and Ootoer gained % oent at\n&0H and 81V, oente per bushel.\nThe only foreign newa waa the\nreported Increased ehlpmente from\nnountriea with a surplus wheat supply, laport demand for Canadian\nwheat waa lasting and trading ln\nthe pit rery light. Infereet In\ncaah wheat and coarse grains wss\nnegligible, raloes remaining unchanged.\nDOMINION LIVESTOCK\nBIG SHEAR ZONE \u2022\nOF CALIFORNIA\nTOBEDEVEOPED\nHas Good Showing In Gold\nValues:  Plan  to  Ship\nOre in Spring\nThe derelobpnent Of a Iwge shear\nnone at low grade ore with a showing of gold will be the spring week\not the Hillside Mining oompany,\noperating t-he California m.ne on\nMorning mountain. At present the\ncompany is continuing development\nwork on No. 3 tunnel. Some 00\nfeet hav. been driven atno. the\ncommsnoement of work under tho\nnew management. At tbe present\ntime several companies sre making\nan attempt fco secure the property\nzone.\nThe'shear *one whloh will be developed is a large ore body some\n340 feet wide, 1000 feet long and\nwith depth of approximately 100\nfeet. Assays taken at different\nperiods show a value of \u00bb3.00, although it cannot be set as an\naverage because It has not been\nsufficiently developed to prove lta\nreal value.\nShipping ls io be commenced in\nthe epring, according to word received here from William Moore.\nVr\\NCOUVER LIST\nMHTM\nBayrlew\nBig   Missouri\nBid   Ask\n.01\n..\u00abV4\nOeorge Enlerprles\t\nOeorge   Copper     \u2014\nOolcfmda     .\t\nOrandvlew  \t\nIne. C. * C _.... In\nKootensy Plorenos _ -01\nKootenay   King    .01\nMarmot   River\t\nNational BUrer\t\nWWNIPEO. Man.. Fsb. 3\u2014Domln- *5\u00b0bl\" nn  \u2014 -\u2022\u2014!_#\nto. lire stock receipts;     cattle 1108;  Or**\"\" Covvn  - *,\ncalves 310; hogs. S490; sheep, 43S.     S\"*;1\"\"     h\u201e ~ IL,\nCattle: steers, up to 1060 lbs., good  Por'\"'    _*J\u201e,    \u2022\"\nand choice, WM to 16.39; over 1060  \"'\nlha., *VS0 to 66.80, heifers, good and\noholce.   \u00bbs.35   to   66.00;   fed   calves,\ngood snd obolos. 17.00 to 67.60.\nCows: god. 64.00 to 64-28; csnners\nand cutters. 61.78 to 63.36\nBulla: good. 6>.76 to 6400: stocker\nand f.eder steers, good 64.50 to 66.00:\nstock oowa and heifers, good 63.00 to\n64.38;   milkers  and   springers,   640.00\nto 666; veal calves, good and choice\n610.00 to 612.00;  hogs, select bseon,\n61.00 per head premium. Bacon 66.50\nto  68.50;   butchers,   61.00  per   head\ndiscount.   Lights and  feeders,  68.76\nto 66.50.\nLambs:   good   handyweight,   68.00\nto  68.00;   god  heavies,  66.60  to  67:\nbucks. 65.00 to 66.00.\nSheep: good heavies. 6830 to 64.00;\ngood hanywelght, 6430 to 65.00.\nMONTREAL PRODUCF\nMONTREAL, web. \u00bb\u2014Cheese, finest\nwhite 13.\nCheese,  finest colored   14ft.\nButter, l\u00bbo.  1  Quebec 33  to 33)4\nUrgi. storage firsts 30 to 31.\nEggs, storage seconds  16 to 17.\nBggfl.  fresh  specials  35   to 36.\nEggs  fresh sxtras 33  to 84.\nEggs, fresh firsts 30.\nReeves   McDonald    JO\nRirfus Argenta  01\",\nOtL\u00bb\nA. P. Consolidated -*>\nAseoclsted     IT\nC.   tt   E.   tAnds  66\nCalmont  -  -33\nCommonwealth,    \u201e \u2014  30\nDalhousle       53\nDevenlsh      07\nFabyan     03\"j\nFrehold  \u2014 17\nHome Oil \u2014 M\nIllinois Alta _ 07V\u00ab\nMoDouaall Segur Ex.  10t\u00bb\nMoDougsl Segur Hew  At\nMercury  84\nMcLeod     88\nMill   City     st\n.43\n.08\n.03\n.37'\/,\n.04\n.33\nnl\nm\n07\n71\non\n35\nOkalta New ._\nSterling Pacific\nVulcan \t\n...34.\n_18\n-.14\n_4*NADA BONDS\nwnnnPEO. Man., Feb. 2^\ntatlona on victory bonds for 61000\nsre aa follows:\nWAR LOAM:\n1031. 6 per cent 610O.TO.\n1647, 5 par cent, 6104.60\nVICTORY LOAH:\n1B3S, 6V, per cent. 6108.10.\n1684, 8V, per oent, 6103 10 to 103M.\n1687, 6<,a Per cent 610735.\nWAR LOAN RENEWAL:\n1683, 6_ per cent, 6101.50.\nRBFUNDINQ LOAN:\n1646. 6 per eent. 6103.78.\n1340, sV, per cent, 698.78.\n1*44, 4 _ per cent, 6100.00.\n1946, 4ii per eent, 8100.00.\nCfflCAG^ffiAT\nIS STRENGTHENED\nProspective     Drought     All\nThrough Wheat States,\nResponsible\nCHICAGO, III., tob. 3\u2014i\u00bby John\nP. Boughan. Associated Pre\" market\neditor*.\u2014Disquiet about prospective\ndrought damage to United States\nwlntor wheat, snd concerning lack\nof moisture for spring wheat as\nwell, strengthened all grain prices\ntoday. Bt. Louis reported condlr\ntlons the dryest e:nce 1919. with\nrainfall not half of normal. Every\npart of the domestic winter wheat\nterritory wae reported bsre of snow.\nWheal cloaed Irregular, ranging\nfrom tt oent decline to ltd advance: com Vs to 1 cent up: oats\n\u25a0t It to 1, gain, and provisions\nfive to 12 centa dawn.\nEXCHANGE RATES\nmm YORK, N. Y.. Feb. 2\u2014Stalling Exohsnge firm at 64.83',a for 60-\nday bllla snd at 64.86'^ for demand.\nMark\". 2376V4 6606,\nKronen, 26.76Va  cents.\nCanadian dollars, 3.33 osnts die-\ncqunt.\nFrancs, 3.91ft cents.\nLln. 5.33H  eenta.\nNelson approximate sterling eay\nchange rate 84.87Vs.\nThe United States Steel Corporation reported total earnings for ths\nfinal quarter of 1930 of 613.083.791.\nThis compares with 837,096,299 In\ntine previous three months' period,\nand 656.386,334 In the fourth\nquarter of 1630 amounted to 612,-\n366.088 against 624.195.162 ln Uie\nprevious quarter and 839,972.368 ln\nthe   comparable   period   of   1039.\nTORONTO  STOCKS\nAnaconda\nArno   \t\nAl\nA\n.01 Vi\n.03\n1.47\n... P. Consolidated       .39\nAssociated    08\nArea\nBaldwin   -\nBaltlo   OU   \t\nB   A   Otl\t\nBaae   Metals   -\nBklgood\t\nBsrry   Holllnger\nBig Missouri\t\nCalmont     ......\nC  and E Lands ....\nCentral  Manitoba   10H\nChemical   Research     -   8.75\nClerlcy -      .04\nDome     \u2014 -   10.10\n.01*\n01V1\n08 \u00a5,\n14.75\n105\n.06 V,\n.14\n.43\n.21\n.65\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWDWIFEO, Man., Feb. 2\u2014Oram\nquotations:\nOpen     High     Low     Cloae\nWheat:\nMay        58V>     68V4      57ft      58V,\nJuly   . .      69 60S      60 59',\nOot _   61 eiVi     61 61H\nOats:\nMay        37H     07ft     37Vs     27Vi\nJuly        27Vi     27ft     27ft     27ft\nOct.        37ft     38 17ft     28\nBarlsy:\nMay        ..   33ft     23ft     13ft      23ft\nJuly        34ft     24ft     94ft     34ft\nOot.    .....   37        37ft     37 37ft\nFlax:\nMay        96ft     95ft     96ft     95ft\nJuly    . _   97ft     97ft     97ft     \u00bb7ft\nRye:\nMsy    .....   27ft     27ft     37ft      37H\nJuly        38ft     39ft     38ft      39ft\nOct..       31ft     83 81ft     83    I\nCash   prloes:\nWheat.-No. 1 hard, 66ft; No. 1\nnor, 66; No. 3 83ft: No. 8 nor.\n4\u00bbft; No. 4 45ft; No. 5 4SVi: No.\n\u2022 41ft: feed, 40: track 66ft: screenings per ton 6100.\n1 :\t\nD. O'Connell. postmaster aa Gladstone, Man., for 36 yeara, ta dead\n.53\n.63\n. 01ft\n. 1.48\n. 1.53\n\u2022 .01ft\n. .86\n. 8.0\n. 14.35\n. 25.76\n. .73\n. .01\n.     .13ft\n_ 10\nMunltoba Baaln   06ft\nMalartlo      - 08\nMclntyre     - 11.60\nDalhousle     \t\nEastcrest     \u2014\u2014.\nFalconbrldge    \t\nQoldale  ..-- \u2014 -\nHome OU  ~.\nHarkar   Oold -\nHowey    -  ~\u2014\t\nHolllnger     \t\nInterlnatlonel Nickel _\nLake    Shore     \u2014\nKlrkland Lake  -\nKootenay   Florenoe   ...\nMacassa     :\t\nMandy\nMining Corp \t\nMayland     \t\nNewbec\n1.80\n.76\n.OS',\nNew Imperial Oli  _  17..68\nNlpleilng\nNoranad\n1.46\n1736\n.01\nOld  Colony   ....\nPeterson   Cobalt          ,08ft\n.70\nPend Orlelle\nPremier Oold .\nSherrltt Oordon\nSudbury Baaln .-\nSt\nAnthony    ~\nStadaoona\t\nTech  Hughes\t\nThompson   Cadillac\nVlpond     -\t\nVenturas  \t\nWright Hargreavea .\nWalte   Ackerman\n.70\n.61\n30\n.47\n.10\n.04V4\n730\n\u25a008 ft\n1.10\n34\n2 21\n1.60\nWalter S. Dickey, principal atoek-\nholder ln the Kansaa City Journal-Post, and pioneer business man,\ndied unexpectedly. He was a native\nof Totonto snd a son-in-law of ths\n1st* Hon. Jftmes McMullen on\nMount Forest\nEvery Car Is Guaranteed. Their Prices\nWhich Have Been Set by the Ford\nMotor Company, Are Unusually Low\nBuy Now and Save\nNow is youi\" chancfl to buy a used Ford (.'ar, as wo arc putting on a special\nthis week of a few which we have on hand. When considering the purchase\nof a Used Car, a Ford Used Car will be your best buy, for every Used\nFord Car is absolutely guaranteed. Its price is the lowest possible, because\nit is set by the Ford Motor Company of Canada. You cannot be overcharged, because resale prices of Fonl Cars are advertised continent-wide.\nHundreds of large wholesale companies in Canada trade their cars in every\nyear at a set figure, which makes it possible for you to buy Used ford Cam\nat such low figures, and buy right. And don't forget, with every Used Oar\npurchase from us goes an absolute guarantee.\n1928, FORD TOURING $150.00\n1928 FORD COACH    J..   135.00\n1929 FORD COUPE, with 6 tires, well fenders    500.00\n1929 TOWN SEDAN      500.00\n1929 ESSEX COACH in goocV condition    150.00\nBuy Now and Save\nKootenay Motors\nNelson, B.C. -:- H. Harrop *:* Phone 117\n Page Ten\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS      TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8, 1981.\nClearance Sale\nof Soiled and\nShop Worn\nPapetries\nThe Paper, Correspondence Cards and Envelopes in\nevery instance are in good condition,\nbut the boxes are soiled.\n$6.50 Papetries to clear at   7_\u00ab\u00a3\n6.00 Papetries U> clear at  _ _  75^\n5.00 Papetries to clear at   ,  SOtf\n4.50 Papetries to clear at  _... 5<ty\n3.00 Papetries to clear at     50\u00ab*\n2.50 Papetries to clear at _ _ _  35\u00ab*\n1.75 Papetries to clear at    _5f\n1.00 Papetries to clear at  - _  20\u00bb*\n.65 Papetries to clear at  _ _  15sf\n.85 Papetries to clear at  _ _  10<\nMann-Rutherford Co.\nDRUGGISTS  and  STATIONERS\nROTARIANS SEND\nMEN TO DEBATE\nON SCHOOL MUSIC\nConference  Friday  on  Plan\nfor Training School\nOrrhestraa\nFor\u2014\nSERVICE\nPRICE and\nQUALITY\nGROCERY\nPhones 10 and 11\nEYESTRAIN IN\nHEALTH AND\nDISEASE\nTo counteract the underlying\nfactors of disease is even more\nimportant than to combat disease\nwhen actually developed.\nHave   your   eyes   examined   today\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nOptometrist  and   Optician\nExpert   Optical   Service\nExide Batteries\nInsure your car\nagainst winter driving\nby installing an Exide\nBattery TODAY.\nBennetts Ltd.\nSpring Dresses\nArrived Too Early\nA large order of Spring Dresses\nwas shipped to us too early. We wired\nthe factory we could not accept the\norder, to which they replied by wire,\n\"Accept at your own terms.\" This\nbeing stock-taking month, these dresses\nmust be cleared out within the next\nfew days, and in order to accomplish\nthis we are putting them on at special prices.\nCome in and see these new Spring\nDresses. They are the latest in Spring\nstyles and patterns, and come in sizes\nfrom 16 to 40.\nyfikttfah\nALSO SUPPORT THE\nLABORATORY MOVE\nContribute Toward Salvation\nArmy Sanitation For\nUnemployed\nKelson Rotarians at their weekly\nluncheon meeting Monday accepted\nan Invitation from the high and\npublic schools, to be represented at\na conference with the school beard\nFriday night, when tne possibility\nof Junior orchestras attached to\nthe  schools  will   be  discussed.\nE. P, Dawson and O. A. Brown,\nmembers of the school board, explained that the suggestion originated with Roes Fleming, and that Mr.\nFleming's Idea was tbat musicians\ncould be hired to teach the various\ninstruments, after school hours, the\ninterested pupils making payments\nfrom time to time to cover tuition\nand payment for the Instruments.\nAs these payments came ln, Mr.\nBrown explained, the fund could\nbe used to purohase new instruments\nfor other pupils. Mr. Brown said a\nrelatively substantial fund would be\nneeded at the. start for the purchase\nof instruments, but that after that\nthe fund would become practically\na revolving fund.\nMANY   FAVOR   IDEA\nIt was explained that the school\nboard was ln no way bound by\nthe proposal at this stage, and that\nsending of delegates by the Rotary\nclub would not bind the club, as\nonly discussion was contemplated\nat this conference.\nMany members of the club favored,\nstrongly the idea of developing\nyoung musicians in the schools\nunder some such plan. J. 8. Carter\nrecalled hearing at Spokane the\nCoeur d'Alene school band and suggested that facts regarding lt be\nobtained. R. J. Hewitt and others\nfelt that when the plan was worked\nout\" the Rotary club should assist\nwith   financial   support.\nPresident   C.   B.   Garland   named\nA. T.  Horswlll  and  P. O. Money  as\nthe   Rotary   representatives   for   the\npurpose  of the  conference.\nLABORATORY    URGEJD\nThe club was also Invited, this\ntime by Drs. F. M. Auld and E. C.\nArthur, acting apparently on behalf\nof or pursuant to action by the\nWest Kootenay Medical association,\nto send a representative or representatives to the city council session of\nFebruary 16, to urge a grant toward\nthe proposed Kootenay pathological\nlaboratory at Nelson, and it accepted\nthe  invitation.\nDr. E. L. Reld explained the proposition ln detail, dwelt on the great\n: service such an institution would be\nto the Kootenay, and stated .that\npractically all West Kootenay centers,\nand Grand Forks, had agreed to\ncontribute  toward the  first coat, of\nwhich the department of health i\nwould bear half. While the East\nKootenay centers bad not yet obligated themselves, he said, bs felt\nconfident that as soon as they saw \u25a0\ntb* Institution In operation and |\nfound what a servce lt was perform- j\ntug for them, tbey would Join in\ncontributing.\nDr. John Gansner suggested that I\ntb* club ahould also send a strong j\nresolution to the provincial authorities and to Dr. L. X. Borden, M.\nP. P., urging the proposed provincial\ngrant, and It wsa agreed tbat this\nshould be referred to the board of\ndirectors.\nPresident Garland, at the suggestion of various members, will probably be the delegate on this matter.\nFOR   I'VEMFLOYED\nA communication from Too H\nInvited the Rotary club to share ln\nthe work of providing sanitation for\ntbe Salvation Army citadel for the\nservice of the large number of\ntransient unemployed being fed and\nboused there, with half the needed\nsum rais-d, the latter stated, tbe\nInstallation had been made and put\nInto   servloe.\nMembers spoke approvingly of\nthis suggestion, and it was referred\nto the board of directors for action,\nW. E. Wasson paying the Army the\ngreatest tribute for Its Invaluable\nwork in  this behalf.\nSubsequently the board of directors voted alO, tbe sum understood\nto  be desired,  for this object.\nHugh Wallace, recently elected to\nmembership, was formally welcomed\nwith  the   \"Welcome Song.\"\nRobert Matheson, of Vanoouver,\nwho designed the Terrace apartments, was present ss a guest.\nWIDDOWSON SAYS\nGAS RATES ARE\nEXCESSIVE HERE\nCoundl  Splits   on   Protest:\nCommittee Will Look Into the Matter\n\"Modem Equipment Makes Flat Rate Possible\"\nIS YOUR\nMOTOR\nENJOYING\nHEALTH?\nThe finest machine ever created, the human body,\nrequires tuning up and toning up occassional^ or\nit quickly deteriorates into a weezened, wobbly thing.\nWhy then should you expect your motor car to\nmaintain its efficiency without periodical overhauling?\nWE'RE EXPERT IN EVERY PHASE\nOF AUTOMOBILE REPAIRS FROM BODY\nTO ENGINE TO CHASSIS.\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nPHONE 35\nWATCH FOR OUR\nWEEKEND   SPECIALS\nHORSWILL BROS.\nPHONE 235\nPhone Taxi\n77\nIrelght     SchediiH\nDally to Rossland\nnnd Trail, 10 a-m\nBUD      STEVENS,\nProp.\nTraU  Phona  U\u00bb\nA.D.PAPAZIAN\nWATCHMAKER,\nJEWELER,\nand Graduate Optician\n413 HALL STREET\nWILL DO CRIB\nWORK, VERNON\nSTREET ROAD\nCouncil Authorizes Engineer\nStart Work Keep City\nForces Busy\nIn order that the Jirty gang of\nworkmen may be kept employed,\nAlderman .Roes Fleming, chalrma*\nol the public works committee,\nurged the city council Mondav\nnight to authorize the construction\nof cribbing on Vernon street fronting the old Nelson Laundry, between   Josephine   and   Hall  streets\nThla cribbing will extend over a\nlength of about 90 feet and Poles\ntaken from the rebuilding of the\nc.ty electrical power lines will bo\nused. Pill could be obtained from\nwork to be done on improvement\nat the east end of Baker street.\nEngineer Boyd C. Affleck had no\nestimate as to cost but declared the\nwork waa feasible at present. The\ncouncil  ordered  the  work  done.\nNRSON STREET\nIS SCENE OF A\nSTABBTOAFFRAY\n(Continued  From  Page One)\nDESTROY ROPE OP\nGYRO FLAG POLE\nThe rope of the Gyro park Hag pole\nhaa been destroyed by some person\nthus preventing the hoisting of the\nflag which ls done by the lat Kelson Troop of Boy Scouts Sundays\nand   holidays.\nThe rope  was destroyed  on  Halloween  but was replaced again.\nThe gas oommittee of the Nelaon\ncity oouncil will look Into a complaint lodged with the olty by E- W.\nWlddowson, local assayer. Mr. Wid\ndowson oo Monday night returned\nhis gas bill of $5.90 to ths council.\nHe declared ln a letter that the gas\nhad been charged wrongly and that\nhe wanted the bill corrected. The\ncharges were excessive for gas. If\nthe rate persisted he would have to\ncut off the gas service and substitute other appartus so that he\ncould compete with other firms similar  to his in the province.\nAlderman J. B. Oray informed the\nnew council members that last year\nthe city fixed a new gas rata. Instead of rates for beating, cooking,\netc., one rate covered all branches\nhad been set. The fljures were\n\u20222.22 per 1000 for the first 2000\nfeet used, and $1.25 for each additional  thousand  feet  used.\nMayor Morgan said a consumer\nhad to be a big user of gas to get a\ncheap rate, but that under the existing bylaw the council oould do\nnothing. A change ln the Wlddowson bill would mean changing bills\nfor all consumers. He hinted that\nIf the gas rates were excessive the\ncouncil should deal with the bylaw.\nAldermen Fleming and Gray argued the point, but upon Alderman\nFleming moving that the matter be\nreferred to the gas oommittee for\nperusal the oouncil divided equally\nwith Aldermen Fleming, Lindsay\nand Campion favoring the motion\nand Aldermen Gray, Smythe and\nDawaon opposing it. Mayor Morgan\ncast a vote ln favor, and the matter\nwill be threshed out by the gas\ncommittee.\nSMOKING BRAKE\nBAND DRAWS BIG\nCROWDON BAKER\nJ. Euntz Turns in Fire Alarm\nWhen Hlg Car Brakes\nSmoke\nW. R. CAMPION\nGROCERIES\nOUR PHONE NO. IS 121\nKOOTENAY STREET\nROAD CONDITION IS\nLEFT TO ENGINEER\nMayor J, P. Morgan brought up\nthe question at Monday night's\ncity council meeting of the condition 0f the road fronting the Epperson residence on Kootenay street,\nbetween Baker and Vernon. Thla\nstreet sides on the Terrace aptrt-\nmnts. Mayor Morgan declared that\nthe surface was ln bade shape, and\nthat Mr. Epperson had d fflculty\nln getting to and from his home.\nAlderman H. B. Lindsay declared\nthe condition of the road was\nscandalous. The council referred\nthe matter to Engineer Boyd c.\nAW leek with power to act.\nSmoke issuing from the overheated brake of J. Kunta's car\ncaused no little excitement on\nBaker street Monday afternoon\nabout 4:10, when a large crowd\nJammed the street ln the vicinity\nof the Hudson's Bay store eager\nto find out the cause of a fire\nalarm sent ln from the box on the\ncorner.\nMr. Kuntx was driving a roadster\ncar east down Baker street, when he\nnoticed smoke sailing from the\nunder part of the car. He stopped\nln his tracks opposite the Hudson's\nBay store and Jumped out and\nturned in the alarm. The fire\ntruck and the crew of fighters arrived a few seconds later, but in\nthe meantime the brake had cooled\noff.\nPER CAPITA FIRE\nLOSS IN TRAIL IS\nFOUND, 90 CENTS\nTiptop\nI im.  ne\nt packet!  ChrtaUe.  BMealti  a\u00ab\nMixed CooUas, > Ita. for _ tte\nOat Cakaa, I packet*  He\nSeSUm.  4  for\n6 Chocolate Ban for\nApple  CMar, bottle  ..\nLa\u2014e Jan Flcklee\n. Itc\n. tee\ntte\n4 tine Slice* flneapplee  45c\nMWIlin TWICE  DAILY\ncram, ana fairview\nCITY AUDITOR\nQUESTION GOES\nTO A COMMITTEE\nReid Is Suggested for Position by Alderman of'\nTrail City\nTRAIL, B. O., Peb. 2\u2014The annual\nreport of Fire Chief A. A. McDonald\nwas read at the city council Monday\nnight showing a 90 centa per capita\nloss ln Trail during 1930. Lobs ln\nbuildings and contents involved in\n1930 was (6.288 with value Involved\nover $450,000.\nOne hundred and 40 orders were\nserved under the Fire Marshals act,\nand three cases were taken Into\npolice court. Hose reel houses were\nrepaired and painted, tae hose ln\nthe department tested, all hydrants\nflushed and painted.' Several recommendations were suggested by the\nfire chief far fire hazard Improvements,\nthat he had been stabbed.\nA Nelson Transfer car was called,\nand the wounded man was rushed\nto the hospital, where he was\nshortly af;er operated on by Dr. W\nO. Rose, assisted by Drs. H. H. MaeKenzie and F. M. Auld. It wa*\nfound that the wound, which was\napprox mately  an  inch wide, pene\nSAME PASSENGER\nCOACHES TO GO\nON TO THE COAST\nFrm Wednesday on, the changing\nof trains at Nelson for through\nwestbound passenger traffic will\ncease, and the same passenger\nequ pment that arrives at Nelson\nfrom Medicine Hat will go out on\nthe Kettle Valley trains for the\ncoast, making the round back to\nMedfcine Hat ln due course, J. Ivan\ntrated   through   the   abdomen   into   MacKay,     superintendent    of    the\n\u2022J\u2122 TAXI\n^L^^ rhc   Beat   of   Service\n^B ~_B   Careful,    Courteout\n*s\\W *_F Drivers\nNalson Transte>r Co., Ltd.\nPipe and Pipe Fittings\nBLACK and GALVANIZED\nSizes up to Six Inch\nWe Carry the Largest Stock\nin the Interior of B. C.\nPrompt Shipment\nPrices Right\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCO-LTD.\nWHOLESALE    - Nalson, B. C.  -   RETAIL\nRUBBERS\nTo Clear 90c Pr.\nJust one of the many\nattractive footwear bargain!) at our shoe sale\u2014\nMen's Work Shoes, Dress\nShoes, Slippers, etc., all\nat greatly reduced prices.\nWade _ Shoe\nShop\nD.   WADE\nWard St.   . Nelson\n\"Say It With Flowers\"\nFor That\nSick Friend\nor that friend ln a distant city,\nsend flowers. Our F.T.D. service\nassures you of prompt and satisfactory   delivery.\nthe bowels.\nIt was Just before 10 o'clock\nwKen the police were advised of the\npresence in the hospital of a\nstabbed man. As Bailey wss under\nan anaesthetic at that hour, Sergt.\nAlex. Stewart had to trace the oc\ncurrence  through  o,her channels.\nBIND   Ol'T   tt MINIM.K\nOn the chance that Sansalcne had\nleft town, the police sent warnings\nout to all points in the district to\nwatch for him, and as he was not\nfound in his ubusI haunts yesterday morning, it was thought he was\nprobably  gone.\nIt turned out, however, that the\nman being sought was consulting\ncounsel, and about 2 o'clock E. O.\nMatthew, his counsel, and Sansalone started ln a cat* for the\npolloe station. On Baker street,\nwhile Sansalone was In a tobacco\nstore buying cigarettes, Sergt. Stewart came up, and Mr. Matthew advised him that Sansalone would be\non hgpd to be arrested in a moment or two. He was duly arrested,\nsearched, and locked up.\nUnder ordinary conditions, the nc-\ncuaed man will appear In police\ncourt today, to be charged, but a\nremand will undoubtedly take place.\nDr. Rose stated last night that\nBailey had a fair chance of recovery\nif no  complications occur.\nNews of the Day\nD.  C.  Art Shoppe.    Indian  head.\nplain colors. 45 oents. (3700 >\nHold  Friday.  March 27. for Th-eer\nbytertan   Spring   beeaar. (3777)\nHKAR    HTS    MAJESTY'S   CHAPEL\nCHOIR, February 23 and 24.   t.3781)\nNowrona Cafe. 513 Vernon street.\nopens up today.    E. E. Erlckson.\n(3780)\nKootenay   division,   stated   Monday\nnight.\nThe big passenger locomotives\nfrom Medicine Hat will, however,\nonly operate as far as Nelson for\nsome time to come.\nProcter Church to\nGet Church Rate\nFor Electricity\nNelson city council Monday night\nauthorized the cutting ln of electrical energy .nto the old hospital\nat Procter which ls being used as\nan evangelistic hall. Mrs. C. J.\nJohnson,- Procter, wrote the oouncil\nasking for a special church rate.\nThe request was granted, the Procter cnurch receiving the same rate\nas other churches on the west arm,\nwhich la 11.25 per month with\nreduced charges If the rate runs\nover   15  cents  per  kilowatt hour,\nCITY ARRANGES TO\nCARRY PIPE LINE\nOVER PRIVATE LAND\nBoyd C. .Affleck, city engineer,\nwas Monday night granted the right\nby the city council t0 instal a\nstand pipe on the property of J. J\nMulligan, the old Miles ranch, near\nBonn.ngton. The pipe will come\nfrom the recently Installed Bird\ncreek line which creases the Mulligan property. For use of the property Mr. Mulligan will give the city\nan easement. It will be necessary,\nhowever, to stake a water right for\nthe ranch owner. This will be\nhandled by the city engineer.\nCITY DECLINES .AN\nOFFER OF $300 FOR\nBAKE.'. STREET LOTS\nTRAU*.   B.   C.,   Feb.   2\u2014Alderman\nE. L. Groutage recommended that\nL. A. Reld be given the position of\nauditor for the city of Trail at a\nsalary of W0 per month with\nmonthly statement to be presented\nto tbe counoll. The matter was\npassed on to the finance committee.\nIt was also recommended that suggestions for simplification of city\nbookkeeping be submitted by the\nnew auditor.\nThat no requisitions for supplies\nor work be signed by the city clerk,\nunless either the actual cost, or'an\nestimate of the edit ts shown on\nthe requisition, was another suggestion presented by Alderman Groutage.\nHOLD SUCCESSFUL\nBRIDGE, CRESTON\nSPRING\nCAPS\nAre Here\nThe new spring!\nCaps are here in new!\npatterns\u2014new colon]\n\u2014new prices\u2014 caps]\nthat look so good, fit j\nso well and wear sol\nlong.\n$2.00, $2.25,\n$2.50\nWAMPOLESl\nTaetelaaa  Ood   Llvar  OU\na   Body   Builder\nSmythe's Pharmac\nFrtacrlirtion Speclaliatc\nPhone t\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNELSON'S   DISPENSING   CHEMTSf\nDON'T   COrGH   \u2014   USB   \"801*\nObtainable  at  our  store  only.i\nThe   most   reliable   Cough\nmade.\nPhone   84 Box   1088\nCRESTON, B. C, Feb. 3.\u2014The\nmerged Anglican Ladles Guild ane\nWoman's Auxiliary of Christ church\nmade their first bid for support In\nthe way of entertainment at a\nbridge ln the Pariah haU on .Friday\nnight, which was only fairly well\nattended, less than ten tables of\nplayers making their appearance.\nThe high score prizes were won by\nMrs. James Cook and J. T. Oakley,\nwhile the second prizes fell to Mrs.\nJaa. Cherrlngton, and John Hall oi\nErlckson. T\u00a3e at home was uncjer\nthe direction of the president, Mrs.\nYork and an active oommittee,\nwhich provided a splendid lunch,\nand all present reported a most enjoyable evening. The merged organizations have chosen the first\nThursday in each month for theli\nregular meetings, and with forces\ncombined are looking forward to\nthe most active year ln the history\nof Anglican ladles' organizations.\nOn the motion of Alderman J. B.\nGray and Alderman W. R. Campion\nthe Nelson city council Monday\nnight decided not to accept an offer\nof $300 fcT two lots on Baker street\nowned by the city. They adjoin\nthe Sherbrook hotel. A letter to\nthe oouncil from George F. Stevens\nmade the offer. The aldermen were\nof the opinion that at present the\nlots afforded an outlet for an alley.\nWere they sold it would oost the\ncity much more than $300 to extend\nthe alley.\nCity Will Look Into\nCribbing Complaint\nof Nelson Iron Works\nWHOOPING COUGH\nAND CHICKEN POX\nPREVALENT IN CITY\nNotifiable diseases In Nelson for\nthe week ending January 31 were as\nfollows, according to tho report to\nthe city council of Dr. E. c. Arthur,\ncity medical health officer:\nWhooping cough 1, chicken pox 2\nseptic _ore throat 1, syphilis 1. For\nthe week ending January 24 the\nfigures were: Erysipelas 3, pneumonia 1. chicken pox 11 and whooping cough 4.\nQueen Citv Rebekah Lodge. No. 18,\nI.  O.   O.  F\u201e   meets tonight,   7 30.\n(3776)\nReserve Saturday,  14th, and bring\na friend to the Institute moms for\na cup of tea with the W. C. T. U.\n(3778)\nPresbyterian w. M. fl Valentine\nTea and Bake sale February 14th\nat the home of Mrs. H. H. Curr e.\n822 Baker street. (3773)\nA Joint meeting cf Nelson Liberal\nassociations will be held a: the Canadian Legion on Tuesday evening,\nFebruary 8. at 8 o'clock. A large\nattendance   ia  requested. (3780)\nROSES\nCARNATIONS\nSpecial\u2014Ivy   Balls,   while   they\nlast    91M.\nNelson Flower Shop\n?hone   433        Prompt   Delivery\n,.\u25a0,-\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0\u25a0' \u25a0 .i\nIf the parties who took steel\ntrolling rods from boat house, return same to Acton's beautv parlors there will be no more trouble.\nThey can also get the lady's vanltv\ncase  ther  left  behind. (9776)\nWHIST  DRIVE\nKeep 27th February own for\nCubs Card oartv at Canadian Legion R o'clock sharp. Adm sslon\n35   cents.     Auspices  Cub   cam\u00ab.\n(3779.\nBUILDING PERMITS\nIN TRAIL AMOUNT\nTO $2940 IN MONTH\nTRAIL, B. Oh Feb. 2\u2014Building\npermits for January amounted to\n$2940, City Engineer S. 8. McDiarmld reported to the city council Monday night. During January\nall sewer lines wer; checked and\nwork was done on Third and Fourth\navenues. The rock crusher was\nassembled and crushing commenced\nBYLAWS ARE READ\nBY TRAIL COUNCIL\nTRAIL, B- C, Feb. 2\u2014Esplanade\nclosing bylaw received two readings\nand the poll tax bylaw received its\nsecond reading at the council meeting tonight. Easement bylaw of\nth\u00ab West Kootenay Power and Light\ncompany passed the committee on\na   whole   without  amendment.\nThe public works committee of\nthe cty council will deal with a\ncomplaint from the Nelson Iron\nWorks that cribbing holding up the\nweetern end of the Recreation\ngrounds Is pressing against the\nIron  Works'  office.\nThe matter Had been up before\nlast year's council but no action\nhad been taken. Engineer Boyd C.\nAffleck declared that the only way\nto remedy the trouble was to tear\nout the cribbing and build a wall.\nOn motion of Alderman Ross Fleming was matter was referred to the\ncommittee   for   investigation.\nBoard of Works to\nDeal With Steps,\nWilmes Subdivision\nTRAIL, B. C.,_ Feb. 2.\u2014Request\nfor steps up to W.lmea subdivision,\nmade to the city counoll by W.\nBadgley, was referred tonight to the\nboard of works on the recommendation  of  Mayor  Bruno  LeRose.\nCommunication from Mrs. J.\nDouglas, asking advice about a\nmattress which had been ordered\ndestroyed by the medical health office, was read. The matter was\nreferred   to   Dr.   C.   S.   Eaton.\nit a.mif ____\"\u2022 New  Gelinas'\nDANCING\u2014 Danre Hau\nEvery   Wednesday   and   Saturday\nNights\nMusic by\nTROLBADOR   DANCE   BAND\n\"\"*\u25a0*\"\nComplains  Blocking\nPine Avenue. Trail\nTRAIL, B, C, Feb. 2\u2014Complaint\nthat the end of Pine avenue was\nbeing used for parking cars and\npiling wood was voiced by Alderman\nJ. R. Anderson to the alia council\ntonight. The matter was referred\nto   the   polloe   commission   for  in-\njfHtlgftUML    ,         .   -   \u25a0  jMf-   -\nRELEASED FROM\nJAIL, DEPORTED\nW. Sturgeon has been discharged\nfrom the provincial Jail and Is being deported to Ireland. He will be\naccompanied east by Polloe Officer\nM. D. Altose. He was lodged In the\nJail some time ago after being\nconvicted in Trail on a charge of\ndoing  bodily harm-\nNO QUORUM FOR THE\nFAIR ASSOCIATION\nOwing to aaence ot a Quorum,\nthe annual meeting of the Nelson\nAgricultural and Industrial association, called for last evening at\nthe c.ty hall, was not held. No\ndate was set for the postponed\nmeeting.\n14 TAXI AND 44|\nTRANSFER\nlUAlL AND  ttOSHLAND\nFREIGHT  AM)  EXPRESS\n\u25a0knedula\ni)tllv  tj  Trail. Kavaa  It A. al\nTAXIS DAT AND MOB!\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton. R. i\nOPTOMETRIST  and  OPTICIAN 1\nSuite  305-308.  Medical Arte) Bldl.l\nCOURT OF REVISION\nDATE IS MARCH 16\nNelson dty eounq:l Monday night\nset Monday, March 16, as the date\non which the council will sit aa ..\ncourt of revision to deal with local\nimprovement  assessments,\nITS SOOD FOR YOUI\nTwo  Shows  Nightly\n7 and 9   p. m.\nMatinee at 2   p. m.\nA THRILLING ALL-\nTALKING SOCIETY\nDRAMA IN A REGAL\nSETTING\nAdded\nAttractions\nIT'S   A   MACK   SENNETI\nAndy Clyde\nand\nDAPHNE   POLLARD\nIn\n\"DON'T BITE THE\nDENTIST\"\nYou   can   depend   on   thla\ncomedy   tor   lamh.1   aplenty\nDAVE APOLLON\nand   his  oomvaJiy\nHIGH-CLASS    MUSICAL   ACT\nFOX NEWS\nAlways   entertalnlnt\n'LAST of the LONE WOLF\nwith\nBERT LYTELL\nand\nPATSY RUTH MILLER\nAN   INDISCREET   QUEEN\u2014\nA   SCHEMING   MINISTER\u2014\nA   PRETTY   COUNTESS\u2014\nA    DAREDEVIL\nMASTER  CROOK\nAN   EXCELLENT   STORY\nA   BRILLIANT   PLOT\nBEAUTIFUL   ROMANCE\nELABORATE  SETTINGS\nELECTS TO HAVE\nA SPEEDY TRIAL\nJohn Junes Duffy, who wae recently committed by the Trail\nmagistrate for trial at the assizes\non a statutory charge, appeared before Judge W. A. Nlsbet Monday\nand elected speedy trial.\nHe will be tried before Judge\nNlsbet at Roesrand  February 17.\nRryrEST street light\ntrail, B. C, Feb. 3\u2014A request\nfor a light on Schofleid street,\nmade by Alderman C. Newman, was\nreferred to the fire, water and light\ncoounittet mtb 9HV to *ct.\nWE KNOW WE ARE SAFE IN RECOMMEND-\nING THIS PROGRAMME AS ONE OF\n  SUPREME QUALITY\nTHURSDAY-FRIDAY\nRei Beach's  Great Action  Story\n\"THE SPOILERS\"\nGARY   COOPER,   KAY   JOHNSON,   BETTY   COMPSON, '\n WILLIAM    BOYD   and    HARRY    GREEN   \t\nCOMING\u2014\"Three  Face*   Eaat,\"   \"Madame   Satan,\"   \"Afrh*   Spaalu\"\n\"Follow   Thro,\"  \"Man   Who   Came   Back,\"   \"Check  and   Double\nCheck,\"   \"AU\"\u00bb   Button,\"   \"New   Moon,\"   \"Tom   Sawyer.\"\nDON'T FORGET\u2014The special children's matinee, Sat-\nurday morning at 10:30. ,\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1931_02_03","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0404308","@language":"en"}],"Language":[{"@value":"English","@language":"en"}],"Latitude":[{"@value":"49.493333","@language":"en"}],"Longitude":[{"@value":"-117.295833","@language":"en"}],"Notes":[{"@value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","@language":"en"}],"Provider":[{"@value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","@language":"en"}],"Publisher":[{"@value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","@language":"en"}],"Rights":[{"@value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","@language":"en"}],"SortDate":[{"@value":"1931-02-03 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1931-02-03 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\/1.0404308"}