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B. C THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 24, 1929\nNo. 239\n2SAVED FROM DROWNING\nlosdand Awarded Next Year's 'Spiel\nIS HI\"\nI. CHI\nof Nelson and Oughtred\nKlmberley Are Vice-\nPresidents\nWHALLEY MEMORIAL\nDN   CUP   IS   POSTED\nte Secondary  to  Nelson\n\u2022 ; Improved Method\nDraws Suggested\nTL. B.C,. Jan. js.\u2014Rowland w\u00bb\n* \u00abs the scene of the 19\".-a\nel of vhe British n .1.-W-. Ctrl\n\u2022oeftivlon. when th\" Maoe*.M\u00ab-\n_ Annual meettn. today at th~\nttak. when the 94th 'spiel ls no\nway.\nait named were R. O. _'\"\u00ab'-e'\npatron:   J   K.   Oram.   Ro. la--'\nmt: Alex Lelth. Nelson, fir-t v'c\n*t:   Cllffofd  Oughtred   Klmber\n_0\u00bbd   vlce-oresWent;   Rev.   C.   -\nRoaaland. chaplain: Thomas Oil\nRossland, secretary .reasurer.\nibers   named   on   the   execute\nttee were  Stanley  Oray   Mov-\n_outgomery, Klmberley: H. s. An-\nOhapman Camp:   C.  D   Blic\nKelson:     Oeon.e     Cr\"lc' .sani-\nand W. M Archibald and C\nRoaaland. The Rowland club 1-\nne one additional executive mem\nNELSON CI'P\niw   oup,   the  WhaMev   Me\u2014o-'a\ncup. Is to be posted at the next\nel.   The oup v. II be the trop V-\neriindsry   competition   to   tbe\n!i c. j.\nsuggested tbat ln tha all-\ncontest, should the viaItinr\ndefeat the home iivera on-\n^uld be nafad i > ra^r'se-1'\ntown. The selected rinks\n._ nlav a knocko\"* co~.oe-\nThe wln_in\u00bb rink might then\nthe cud as a club t\"oohv. th-\nrepreeentlng that club In the\n\u2014moetltton nlayl-'g for poaa-s\n, the cup for the year. This\nHtlon would foUow tn.\" annua\nel. being plaved on the Ice of\nInning rtnk. Thla scheme. It was\n_ed. would save much time,\nmethod of drawing was also\nd, the suggestion being made\n01 horns rinks shovld bs plac-d\ne hat and all vlaHlug rinks ln\n\u00bbr. and one drawn from each a .1\ned. In this way two borne rinks\nnot meet each other In the\nbg round. The present meth-xl\n(swing, tt waa pointed out. oft-\n-vented a hom- rink from com-\nf with a visiting quartet.\n|K MUST NOT\nWINTER, ENGLAND\n: Is Order af Physicians\negular Levees Now Being Planned\nIDON, Jan. aa.\u2014Continued Im-\n\u00bbent ln the health of the King\nled the court official,, to begin\nng tbe regular levees and other\ntone of the season. The flrat\nat  which  the  Prince  of  Wales\nreside will be held at St. James\ni on February 26.\nKing's physicians have made It\ni that be must spend no more\n's ln England and that he must\nI warmer cllmo for several months\nyear.\n.hers Fate\nin\nBy Noon Today\nMONTON, Alta., Jan. 33.\u2014Placing\n> the Jury tho statements whloh\nalleged Vernon Booher made to\nunt Stewart In the Port Saskatch-\nJall on August 6, and a confession\ni Booher made to Warden McLean\ne Jail about Sept. 24, the crown\nIta case at 3:16 p. m. Wednesday.\nD. McLean, K. C. defence coun-\nfor an adjournment until\nmorning In order that he\n! procure a witness named on the\nment. This witness* testimony\nbe short and the fate of Vernon\nwill be left lo the hands of\nlury, by noon, lt Is expected.\nIntroduction of Booher *_ al-\nconfesslon to Warden McLean\n\u2022 a bomb ln the court.\nRobert Forke\nMay Be Lieutenant-\nGovernor, Manitoba\n-CTKEAL, Que., Jan. 34.\u2014(Thurs-\n~A special dispatch to the Oa-\nfrom Ottawa says:\nls persistently rumored to Hon.\nj Pork*, minister of Immigration\ncolon lea tion. and member of the\nt of commons for Brandon, Man-\nbe the next lieutenant-governor\ninltoba to succeed the late lion.\nBurrows. In spite of Mr Porke's\n-led denial of tha story Wodnes-\n4ttMMW, It le understood that\nMtootlou li highly prabaMe.\"\nSearchers Find Body of Youthful Coast\nMountain Climber; Is Frozen and the Head\nand Hands Badly Braised and Lacerated\nAndrew     Crawford's     Frozen\nfiody  Found  on  Holly.\nburn Bridge\nVAJTCOUVIR, Jan. 33 \u2014The body of\nndrew Crawford, 31, west Vancouver\noy, who has been missing since he\nent hiking Sunday, was found tods,\nn Hollyburn ridge, where, police and\nnountalneers have starched for him\nInce Monday.\nTha body was found 10 feet from\nrfhere the search endeq last night,\n.ne head was badly damaged and the\n-ody iroaeu. It was iocuLed in tn_\nicunlty oi footsteps which were lound\n.a the snow early Tuesday morning\naiear   Cypress   creed   can,on.\nSearch parties circled tbe district\n.ime and time again without being\n_oie to locate the body. All day they\n.forked in the lact oi snow storms and\n\u25a0old wind and Just as the search seem-\nu to be useless an far as tbat par-\n.cular district was concerned, the\n.lscovcry was made. Sixteen members\ni the Mountaineers' club were in the\niclnlty when the body was found.\nCrawford was fin>_ missed from his\niome Sunday night, when be failed to\neturn ior supper aiter telling his\na. .nt,. that he hoped to be back at\nhat time. When he failed to appear\n>y Monday morning police sent up the\nirat search party Monday night.\nThe body was lyin* face down-v. rd ln\nhe bed of the ear.t fort of Cypress\nJreek at the weatorn extremity oi\nlollyburn Ridge, where the creek separates lt from Black mountain. Mark\nn the bank Indicated that he had\nslipped over Its edg_- and then suc-\n*eede 4 ln creeping hack to the top\ninly to slide hack from exhaustion.\n'-lis hands were badly lacerated. It\ns believed that he died Sunday night.\nThe body will not be brought down until tomorrow morning.\nNO BLAME FOR\nPOLICE FORCE\nWinnipeg Officers  Exonerated\nfor Killing of Holdup Man\nin December\nWINNIPEG. Man.. Jan. 23.\u2014Police officers who partlclp.it'*! In the gun\nbattle with Carl t Gunner) McGee.\nalias Albert Young, In which he was\nkilled December 90. were exonerated\nby a coroner's Jury at police headquarters here tonight.\nMcGee, who shot a druggist to death\nIn a holdup on December 27, wounded\n8ergeant Detective Charles Mclvor\nwhen the officers sought to arrest him.\nTonight Sergeant Mclvor, after several\nweeks in hospital, limped Into court\nand ln a dramatic manner described\n'he shooting of McGee, which occurred\nIn front of a downtown rooming house.\nThe verdict, brought in by the Jury\nafter an hour's deliberation, was one\nof Justifiable cause and confer.tulated\n\u2022he police officers on their unfaltering\nHutv. It also recommended eatab-\n'Nhment. of a pension fund for officers d'tabled ln the performance of\ntheir duty.\nHone Breeders War\nUpon Reckless Auto\nDriving, Saskatchewan\nSASKATOON. Sank., Jan.'23.\u2014Declar-,\nlug that It is becoming Impossible to\ndrive horse drawn vehicles with safety on the highways of Saskatchewan,\nhorse breeders from all parts of th.\nprovince assembled here in convention\ntoday and passed a resolution colling\nupon the provincial government to take\nimmediate action to reduce wrecklc&s\nautomobile driving ln this province.\nMANITOBA BUTTER\nMAKERS WIN PRIZES\nWINNIPEG, Jan. 83.\u2014 Manitoba butter maker- won 66 per cent, of the\nfirst prizes and 46 per cent, of all the\nprizes offered In the Dominion during\nIMS. L. A. Olbson. secretary of the\n_*lry Manufacturer*' association of\nManitoba, told the delegates at tht annual convention ol the Manitoba Butter Makers' association lsst night. With\nonly 68 creameries lu Manitoba, compared to mor? than 300. tn other pror\nvinces. this record waa almost phenom-\nInal, he said.\nIS REELECTED HEAD\nGKItVANCE COMMITTEE\nSA8ICAT00N, Jan. 33.\u2014B. Dykes,\nformerly of Saskatoon and now of Wln-\n. \"?' _\"\" \u2122re'e\u00abed chairman of the\no. N. R. western region general grievance committee of the Canadian\nBrotherhood ot Railway employees al\n-he conference held here this morning.\nO. W. Perry of Prince Oeorge. B.O..\nwas reelected vice-chairman of ths\ncommittee and C. H. Mlnchln, Calgary,\nwaa reelected general secretary.\nRadium Research Gilt\nOffered as Memorial\nto Suiciding Doctors\nEDINBUKOH, Jan. 33.\u2014As a\nmemorial to the twin doctors\nArthur and Sydney Smith, who\ncommitted suicide last week, despondent over tbe lack of public\nsupport for their life work ln examining the development of radium as a treatment for cancer,\nan anonymous donor has offered\nthe University of Edinburgh\n$360,000 for radium purposes.\nThe twins, young men, took\nmorphine and then cut their\nthroats ln front of a mirror at\ntheir flat.\nFRENCH TREASURY\nIN SUGAR SCANDAL\nReparations Sugar Worth  $3,-\n500,000 Disappears; Foreigners Involved\nSeveral    Measure*   Introduced\nWhen Pattullo Moves an\nAdjournment\nWOULD DO AWAY WITH\nCABINET SELECTIONS\nPropose Take Game Act Out of\nJurisdiction of Provincial\nPolice,\nFARIS, Jan. 23.\u2014A financial scandal\nfollowing closely on the heels of the\nGazette Du Franc case has been uncovered with the discovery of a huge fraud\nby which the French treasury ls alleged to have been swindled out of $3,-\n500.000 through the disappearance of\n40 000 tons of sugar.\nThe sugar was part of a consignment\nof reparations ln kind turned over to\nFrsnce by Germany.\nForeign companies are stated to have\nbeen Involved, but thus far only one\narrest hft* been ntHle, that' of the\nFrench Ilnancier Leon Poller. No warrants have been issued for any members\nof the foreign companies.\nPremier Tolmie Is\n\\   Confined to Home;\nSuffering a Cold\nVICTORIA, -an. 23.\u2014Premier\niulml. will be confined to tils\nheme fdr a day or two by a cold\ncontracted yesterday at the opening cf the legislature, when he\nat\/*.'! ah \u2666\u00bb\u00bb*\u2022 step*, of the parliament bulldltuTK bajrehroded to greet\nLieut.-Oovenior Brunei Attorney -\n(leimral Pool}' will lead the home\nIn Ills clilers absence.\nMONTREAL NEWSPAPER\nSPORTS   EDITOR   DIES\nMONTRKAL, Que., Jan. 33.\u2014William\nW. Beverldge. assistant sports editor of\nthe Montreal Oazette, died today In\nHamilton, Bermuda, where he went two\nweeks ago on medical advice following\na break down consequent upon a tuberculosis condition. The newB of his\ndeath was contained in a cable received here from his widow.\nBorn In San Francisco thirty-four\nyears ago and moving at an early age\nto Vanoouver, B. C, Mr. Bevertdgo was\nused and educated there. For a brief\nperiod he was a member of the Vancouver Province staff and after serving\never seas during the war, ho Joined\nthe sports staff of the Oazette, In 1031.\nMr. Beverldge was married tn 1935\nto Mi.-. Ethel Bland, who survives him.\nRusian Communists\nStart War Against\nTrotsky Followers\nMOSCOW, Jan. 23.\u2014The Communist\nparty declared relentless war against\nthe party oi Leon Trotsky, former\nminister of war, who ls now In exile\nIn Ruwilan Turkestan. They arrested\ntodny ISO Trotsky followers here and\nelt-where in Russia and seised a quantity   of   so-called   illegal   literature.\nI', was stated in support of these\nsevere measures that all of the anti-\nSoviet forces in the country were rallying around the Trotsky organization\n_,na preparing .or... new civil war\nagainst   the   present   government.\nThe Trotsky supporters were accused\nof referring to the red arrri_. as their\narmy  of coming  revolution.\nVICTORIA. Jan. 38.\u2014The British Columbia legislature had Its flrat business sitting today when the address in\nreply to that of the lieu tenant-governor was moved and seconded In\nturn by VT. F. Kennedy of North\nOkanagan and Dr. O. K. Mac Nu. ugh ton,\n-omox.\nT__2. Pattullo. leader ot Uie opposition, moved the adjournment of the\nlebate and will be the speaker tomorrow. It Is anticipated that he will\nbe  followed   by  Premier Tolmie.\nThe government took early occasion\nto Introduce government measures, no\nleas than our them being brought\nin  and  given  flnt readings today.\nOne of these doea a way wl th the\nnecessity of holding bvelect'ons for\nministers who have been called to office. Another bill proposed to take the\nOame act out of the Jurisdiction of tbe\nprovincial police and. __Ui'e it in th.\nhands of gsme com_..1 snioner. Tiit\nprovince may be divided by the government into district fpr this matter.\nTrap Une licenses for fur animals\nwill be made more permanent ln\ntheir character and will be for or five\nYears instead of one as at present with\ntbe opportunity of retie\u00abpal f     .\nThere la also provision made for the\nestablishment under license of game\nfarms where farmers may breed pheasants and sell them. The existing game\nboard   will   be   abolished\nHOI-NTIKM A 1 EATl'KE\nVICTORIA, Jan. 23.\u2014Private members\nof the legislature who commented today on the government's intention as\nannounoed ln the speech from the\nthrone yesterday, to introduce legislation to give assistance to establishment of a _teel and iron Industry in\nthis province, expressed the opinion today that bounties on steel manufactured from scrap Iron would be one of\nthe chief features of the projected aid.\nThis, lt was said, foreshadowed the\nestablishment near Vancouver of a\nplant  for   the   purpose.\nIt was_sald among private members\nthat the bounty would amount to\nsomewhere between |1 and $1.50 per\nton.\nWhile the Cceisolldated Mining &\nSmelting company already Is turning\nout steel at Its Trail smelter on a relatively small scale, the government's new\nplan Is expected to lead to operations\nof a different sort on the coast.\nPortland Orders Its\nHew Flayer Via Air\nRoute From Seattle\nPORTLAND, Ore., Jan. 33.\u2014\nPortland needs new players In Its\nPacific Coast league hockey team\nto such an extent that lt has\ntaken to sending airplane* Into\nthe skyways and byways to pick\nthem up.\nPet* Semokowlcs, who plays ln\nan Alberta league, last night accepted tbe offer of Bobby Rowe,\nmanager of the Portland team, to\nJoin the Bucks as center and\nwins man. Rowe wired him to\nstart for Portland immediately\nfrom Calvary.\nThen Row* decided today that\nhe must hav* him tomorrow\nnight for the gam* wtth Beattle. Consultation of train\nschedules showed he would reach\nSeattle at S p.m. tomorrow. What\nto do? Rowe solved the problem by chartering an airplane\nwhich will await Semokowlcz's\narrival ln Seattle tomorrow and\nwill get him Into Portland an\nhour  and  a half  later.\nBOGGS'COMMITTAL\nSET FOR FRIDAY\nNEWSPRINT PRICE\nOF $55 IS REACHED\nSuch Is Rumor Not Confirmed\nIn New York in Regard\nto Price\nNEW YORK. Jan, 23.\u2014Conflrmatior\nwas lacking here tonight on the rumored agreement between newspaper reu-\nresentaUvea and Canadian manufacturers for A55 a tou price on newsprint.\nHoward Davits business manager of the\nHerald Tribune and a member of the\nnewsprint committee of the America\"\nNewsoaper Publisher-' aueociotion which\nha. been nettot^attng for u new price\nwith the manufacturers said no meet-\n'nir was held todav and no agreement\nhid been reached at any previous meeting*\nT\"\u00ab Montreal corrmnondent of th\u00b0\nToronto Star wired Ma oaoer that lf\nwas understood in Montreal t.iat au\naa-eement of the 356 price had been\nreached.\nP\/*RI8. Jan. 23.-\u2014Planning to regain\nhis throne, former King Amanullah,\nof Afghanistan, Is reported en route\nto Kabul, the capital, with a large\nnumber of faithful troops.\nU. II. C. Student Facing Manslaughter Charge Has Committal Withheld\nVANCOUVER. Jan. 33.\u2014Preliminary\nhearing ln police court here of Theodore Boggs, young University of British\nColumbia student, on a charge ot\nmanslaughter In connection with the\ndeath of Edward O. Kaye, killed early\non the morning of January 13 at\nGranville and Pacific streets, was concluded this afternoon, when Magistrate\nH. C. Shaw postponed formal committal of the accused for trial until\nFriday.\nCommittal was deferred at request\nof Boggs' counsel tn order that ball\nmight  be continued.\nBoggs Is alleged, to have been the\ndriver' of an autcmoblio .which witnesses declared to have been travelling\nat a high rate of speed when lt struck\nKaye, killing him Instantly.\nU. S. LINER MAKES OARING\nRESCUE IN IE; SII\nFREII\nEarly Morning Radio\nSays Steamer Left\nOH Coast Portugal\nLONDON, Jan. 24 (Thun-ajr)\u2014A\nradio meeaase lnUrcepte- by tbe\nLands End station thla moral!.\naald that the \u00bb__n_r Penelope was\nabandoned ln a sinking condition\nlate last nitht off tbe ooast of\nPortugal. The message wa* lent\nfrom Monthanto, Portugal. The\nposition was given as 23.13 north\nlatitude and 9.30 west longitude,\nwhich Is a few miles west of Us-\nbon.\n(Flve vessels bearing the name of\nPenelope are registered.)\nCANADIAN RAIL\nFIRMS PROTEST\nAT THE EMBARGO\nKestriction    of    Immigration\nHardship on Both Transportation Systems, Claimed\nBULLETINS\nastbo.no. iist dies\nLONDON,   Jan.   23.\u2014Alexander   Blck-\nerton,   86,  noted   astronomlst.   ls  dead.\nKEVOLTERS  EXECUTED\nGUATEMALA CiT_. Jan. 23.\u2014Revolutionary leader* ln northern Guatemala have been tried and executed. The\nnumber of victims was not announced.\nJAP.-N  < ll \\l l.tAfits\nTOKYO. Jan. 23.\u2014Japan today VQted\nto challenge for the Davis cup.\nTWENTY PERISH\nBOGOTA, Colombia. Jan. 23.\u2014Twenty\npassengers are believed to have perished ln the destruction of the Magda-\nlena river boat Socll. which followed\nupon a boiler explosion. Tbe bodies\nrecovered were badly burned. Some\npersons were rescued and taken to\ndaranaqullle.\nMONTREAL, Jan. 23.\u2014The partial\nembargo placed against central Bu-\nteopean colonists by the l-Wnt-oion\ndepartment of Immigration drew trom\nihe Canadian Pacific and Canadian\nNational railways today a formal protest. The decision, It was claimed,\nln a statement issued by the preslden ta of the companies, will not only\nwork distinct hardship on both transportation s__tems, but will destroy the\nfaith the government, whose people\nare affected, have ln Canada.\nThe companies deny they are Interested in moving colonists from non-\npreferred countries rather than those\nI from Great Britain or other northern\n\"BOropean  or peferred  oountries.\nThe attitude of the transportation\ncompanies was outlined ln a statement\nIssued to the Canadla Press by the\nrailway presidents. E. W. Beatty and\nSir Henry Thornton.\nDfrr ivps    STATEMENT\nOTTAWA. Jan. 23.\u2014Hon. Rob\u00bbrt\nForke. minister of Jmmlgratlon, declined to make anv comment ton'gh\non the Joint statement V-'.ed by Pr***l-\ndent E. W, Beatlv of The C. P. R..\nand Sir Henry Thornton, pr^s'd nt o'\nthe C. N. R.. outlining the attitude\nof the two tran-oortation cnmna\"*e\u00ab\non lmmleratlou. Until he ha1 f'di\nt|n*.e to consider the s**te-umt of th*\nrailway presidents. Mr. Rnntit s*\"ted he\nhad nothing to say ln the matter.\n.hrth Wind Brings\nTemperatures Down\nBelow Zero Mark\nOne degree below zero was regl-t .-red\nis the minimum temperature for the\n24-hour period ending at 6 p.m. yesterday.\nAn ice cold wind from tho north\nprevented the mercury from rising\nhigher than 10 degrees, which was the\nmaximum   of   the   period.\nCrown Closes Case\nand Defence Asks\nDismissal in East\nHAMILTON, Ont.. Jan. 23.\u2014The case\nfor the crown against John Boychuk\nand Steve 8aracutz, charged with the\nmurder of Nick Bomback on December\n7. was concluded today and counsel\nfor the defence did not offer any\nevidence. The Jury was asked to retire and Senator Staunton, acting for\nSaracutz, asked for hla dismissal as no\nevidence had connected his client with\nthe  murder.\nMr. Justlco Kelly said ho would reserve decision on the motion for dismissal.\nTHREE INCHES OF\nSNOW AT VANCOUVER\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 23.\u2014Vancouver's\nfirst snow fall of tbe winter which\nstarted this morning, ended early tonight after three inches had fallen\nLady Astor, Miss Wil-inson and Countess of Inveagh\nPart in Lively Clash On Maternity and\nTake\nChild Welfare Question\nLONDON, Jan. 23.\u2014The placid progress of tho derating bill in committee\nof the whole in the house ot commons\nwrs today interrupted by a livers clash\nuy the two women member. L..Jy Aa*.\ntor, Conservative, Button, n>-d Mlaa El-\njen Wilkinson, Labor, Middles! urough\neast In whloh a third woman member,\nthe Countess of Invegh, conservative,\nwas Involved.\nSeveral Labor members had charged\nthat under the provisions of the bill,\nthe goveraknent was curtailing assistance to maternity and child welfare\nservices. The Countess of Invegh was\nchallenging this view and defending\nthe provisions of the bill, when Miss\nWilkinson referring to Lady Invegh\ndeclared It ill-became a \"lady, who Is\nherself a millionairess and can secure\nfor her children every possible care, to\noppose tn effect, the extension In\nevery possible way of maternity and\nchild  welfare wrvlces.\"\n\t\n\"That ls not whut she did,\" shouted\nthe members on the ministerial benches.\n\"Would it not be ua reasonable to say\nthat because you are not a mother\nyou have no right to talk about children?\" asked Lady Astor and cheers\nfrom the government greeted her sally.\n\"One expects that type of sneer.\" returned Miss Wilkinson amid the applause ot Labor.\n\"What about your sneer at millionairesses?\" came answer from the government benches amid a general hubbub.\nThe chairman of the committee endeavored to close the Incident with\nthe observation that the dleeuslon had\nwandered far from tbe question before\nthe committee. But Miss Wilkinson declined to bo stilled.\n\"The argument would aeein to be,\"\nMiss Wilkinson said, \"that because one\nis not married whether man or woman,\none cannot deal with a matter of this\n___\nkind.\"\n\"You do not need to be poor to havo\na heart. A woman who has got money\nIs Just as much interested In Infant\nwelfare throughotU tho country as any\nother woman,\" said Lady Astor. Bhe\nhoped the minister of health would be\nable to assure the house that maternity and child welfare services would\nnot suffer under the bill which proposed to change the present percentage\nof assistance to local authorities to\naid thorn. If no satisfactory assurance was given \"Borne of us,\" Lady\nAstor said, reserved the right to move\nan amendment to the bill at the report stage.\nRight Hon. Neville Chamberlain, minister of health, urged that the subject\nbe dlstrtVMed quiet apart from the ordinary per'j   controversy.\nHe thought tt was bitter for both\nmaternity and child welfare services\nthat the changes ptoposed ln the bill\nshould be made.\nIndustrial Research\nBody at University Urges\nthe Saskatchewan House\nREOINA, Sask.. Jan. 23.\u2014Establishment of an lnuustrlal researcn council\nal the Lnivei-i.iy of Saskatcnewan to\ninvestigate various prooiems with a\nview to promoting the agricultural\nAtui industrial development oi the province was suggested by D. A. McNiven,\nM- L. A. for negina during the budget\ndebate which was continued la the\nlegislature today.\nOther suggestions advanced by Mr.\nMcNiven included the foregoing: In-\nduBtrallzatlon of prison life along similar llnea to the successful system operated at Stillwater penitentiary, Minnesota-\nProtection of people from hereditary\nmental disease by compulsory examination before marriage.\nAppointment of an agent-general to\nrepresent Saskatchewan interests ln\nLondon, England.\nHon. C. M. Hamilton, minister of agriculture adjourned the debate In which\nthe speakers Included Anton Hunk, Liberal South Qu'Appelle, H. M. Theresa,\nLiberal, Hunibolt. and E. S. Clinch,\nLiberal, Sheltfrooke.\nNO PENALTY FOR\n\"PLUGGING\" OF CARS\nMOOSE JAW, Sask., Jan. 23.\u2014Evl-\ndence submitted to the Saskatchewan\nRoyal Oruin commission today disclosed\nthe fact that there ls no penalty for\n\"plugging\" of grain cars. P. J. Maples,\ngovernment inspector ln charge of this\ndivision testified that there are many\n\"plugged\" cars, or cars of grain ln\nwhich poor quality has been placed at\nthe bottom with a layer of superior\ngrain at the top. The Canada grain act,\nhe said, states that when an Inspector\nis satisfied tbat a car had been deliberately \"plugged\" he shall grade the contents accordingly to poorest quality.\nShelley's Original\n\"Queen Mab\" Sdd lor\n$68,000 at New York\nNEW YORK. Jan. 33.\u2014Blwlley's own\noopy of \"Queen __b\" a copy ruled\nwith murieroua manuscript note, by\nthe author, took the new high record\nfor a slnule Item at the Andrnon\nGalleries' sale, Jerome Kern's library.\nIt brought \u202288,00(1. the highest, price\never paid for a Shelley Item.\nThe .ueen Mab Item waa bought by\nOabrlel Wells.\n75-Mile an Hour Gale Blows\nbat Lifeboat Succef*-\nfully Operates\nBUT BRIEF REPORT\nTELLS OF RESCUE\nBritish Freighter Lost; Am*\nerican Tanker Turns Up;\nLimps to Fort\nNEW YOBK, Jan. 23.\u2014Captain\nOeorge Fr.etl of Uie Liuted suu\u00bb\nititvu .tuiur.-a, um_*ut readied me\nIM meiniMTS of uie orew of tue\nOisabiett iu-iau fre*giiter t'lo.ida iu\na hMi.ug ttesierley gaie lv*\/ uiies\noff me tlrauu* cape*\nNo detau* or w_at mast have\nbeen a -.<__4_ng butue wua tbe sen\nwere given m tne ...come tuesu**\nwu.cn tne captain sent to his Une'a\noff.c_ nt-re, teuing u\u00bb tue rt._>.ua\n\"ti-escue full crew Florida una!\n32, thief im.ccr Harry Manning\nin charge, \\uiole wes^eriey gale.\nLifeboat lost. Proceeding, .-luce\ndetails later,\" MM   m\u00bb  mcssaice.\nUid shipping men. reading those\nwords:     \"i.hole     wester.cy     gale.*\ncould   vlsuaLae   what   must   have\nbeen a terrific job.   A \"wnoie sale\"\nmeans a 76-m.le an hour wiud aud\nmountainous hu which iduk have\nbeen   u_w>..ij:   tbe   little   disabled\nfreighter around IJte a cork.\nHow  Captain  irried   manoeuvred  hit\ngreat   liner   tn   those   seas,   lowered   a\niJeboat   and   got  it  safely  \u2022*\"-._: side\nthe Florida, and then safely book to\nthe America  remains to be told.\nSince Tuesday morning Captau Prteti\nhad been driving his bag liner through\na roaring gale and heavy seas toward.\nthe   foundering   Florida.\nTwo  other  ships  also   had   gone  ta\nthe rescue but were foroed to give up\ntbe   search  this morning.\nOITEN UP\n(r-OK   LOST\nThe fate of one other ship, caught\nIn the gale, the British freighter Tecs*\nbridge, still remains in dour\u00a3. The ve*t\nsal Urn been give* np far- >\u00ab(* \u00ab\u2022 T\u00abt4\n;u. ships failed to find her ln the)\nposition she broadcast Monday after*\nnoon.\nThe grave fears which hod been held]\n'or the American tanker Dennedalk.\nv. re relieved late tonight when a cheerful mesage was received Vf the owner*\nof the vessel from the tanker's oap*\natn: \"Now limping toward Bermuda.\nScore pretty near tied with old Davy*\n'hat time. Regards to all.\" said tho\nnesaage.\nThe Danneda'ko apparently ovnrcanvg\n'.he difficulty that for a time had her\n>t Its mercy when a Jury rig ot sail*\nwas set up.\nUNEIYi PLOYED START\nTREK TO LONDON\nMarch From Glasgow to London Starts; Communists\nAre Active\nLONDON, Jan. 28.\u2014Unemployed men\ndivided Into companies equipped with\n1 -..Hpsacks. field kitchens and am*\nbuiances today began \u00bb march from\nGlasgow to London to demand repeal\nof the unemployment act passed by\nparliament last year, 'thla act, by\nt'^htenlng the regulation- for giving\n\u2022he unemployment dole, reduced tho*}\nentitled to this aid by abo\\tt 30 000.\nCommunist speakers addnwed tho\nmarchers as they started out on thelf\n'ourney, which is expected to oooup?\nfive weeks.\nBritain has an unemployment register\nof about a million and one-halt\nFisheries Body\nAsks Portfolio\nfor Fish Alone\nOTTAWA, Jan. 33\u2014Oreatton of ft\nseparate ministry of fisheries waa urged today upon members of tbe Donun-\nlon cabluet by a delegation r-irf_sent-\ning* the Canadian fisheries .i_socia-\ntlon. The delegation declAKad Itself in\nopposition to the proposed abolition\noi the trawler, on the grounds that\nthis was u recognised method of catch*\nlng fish-\nHon. P. J. Canlin, minister of marina\nand ilsherles, assured the delegation\nthat he pert\u00ab_nally would have no objection to the creation of a separate\nministry of fisheries lf the government\nsaw fit to carry out thla propoa.il.\nEPPINGER MURDER\nTRIAL WEDNESDAY\nW1NNIPKQ, jin. SS.\u2014William Ip.\nptnger, fnrmej- of tbe Molson district,\nwill appear ln the provincial police:\ncourt for preliminary hearing on a\ncharge of murder on January 80, It\nwaa announced today. He la alleg*1\nto have wounded fatally Sergeant W.\nH. Nicholson, R.C.M.P.. when tha lat-\nI ter attempted to make an arrest following a raid on an Illicit MU.\nThe Weather\nmm    the    DoitUpdon    Meteo-ralogloi.\nOffice. Victoria.\nMln. MUa>\nVictoria     M \u00bb\nVancouver \u2014  lt 34\nKamloopa   10* 4\nBarkcrvllle       - 1S> \u2022\n_>tevan Point \u2014 2* 36\nPrince   Rupert      30 34\nMlln  lt J4\nDawaon     _.__-    f I\nSeattle   If at\nPortland     33 3*\nSan  Francisco    -  46 64\nSpokane     f* lt\nVernon   ...    t t\nGrand  Forke      It* \u00bb\nKaalo          4 It\nOranbtook   -   tl 38\nCalgary    - -  3a- tt\nEdmonton      3\u00abe 8\u00ab\nSwift Current   to\u00bb 6\u00ab\nPrince Albeit    30\u00bb _\u2022\nQu'Appelle    tO\u00bb 10.\nWinnipeg     _- tr. It*\nN_WIO_           1* 10\nPorecaat\u2014Nelson  and  vlcinltr: Hn.\nsettled and cold with enow.\n\u2022 Below \u2022__.\n\t\nJ\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY H i\nVAHCOUVE1 EQGS\nMe, Orate sac, pul-\n40c,   Orate   ate,   pul-\n. Ortppe aad Pneumue-\n(tert mtxti . cold *ie ra. -\nou fa* theee warning aetns Mi\n\" old Musterole.\n_\u2022 relieve- ths congestion an<\n\u2022 circulation It hae all th<\nqualities of th* old-Iuhtcnx'\npltster without the blister.\ntou feel a waa tingle ea th.\nheeling ointment penetrates the t_t_\nthen t eeothlng. cooltag Hmmai u.\n.ulck nllcf. Have MuaterAe .hand'\ntor emergency use. It may prevon\nserious   lllnr~\nMet toe Am a maeees-r \u00bbhf\u00ab\u2022\u2022>\nCURLING DOES\nNOT PERMIT OF\nHOCKEY GAME\nDefinite   Announcement   Made\nThat Trail-ReHsIxnd Hodw .\nOK ^\ntf-UL. \u00bb_l.. Jsn. to\u2014The west\n-ootenay Hockey league game which\nha* _mu scheduled to be played this\n\u25a0n-Ut le TraU lias keen postpone*.\nTk. game was to have h_>n ol\u00bbvcj\nm order to Blue the visiting eurlers\nX *_>~WP~1 en opportunity to tea\nhe TN*er t_ys m action, hut the\n'ftnre entrv ln the honsptel makes the\n\u25a0rrengeiT'ent impossible. It has been\n'ouad tint tt will be ne-wary to\n'. . tb* skating tee for curling pretty\nwe\" throughout the week.\nHo *>\u00bb* hex w get beta eet for th.\n\u25a0wetporwd game, kpt lt is expected\n*r-a* r. n W_(_wnn .. West Kootenflv\nleemi. nre\u00ab4rt*nt. will make en an-\nTcunoea-ot  Uwnorrew.\nKAWHIl-O    I) .VK   HECALLED\nThe memorv of ranching deve In\nMhrete l\u00ab B-eeervMI he the \u00bb__*.\nname. Bteeely, De Wlnton, Cochrane\nand Stlmson.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor\nTkt Premier Hotel tf the Irt.rior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS |1.00 UP\nRooms With Running Water.   Private Baths en Suite\nHi\u00bbda__ter8 tor all Travelinif Men. Mining Men, Lumber\nMen and Tourists.\nSpecial Sunday Dinner $1.00. RoUrian Headquarters\nThe Moat Comfortable Rotunda in tbe City\n\u25a0\u25a0\u00bb-\u00bb\u25a0-\u25a0\u25a0-\u25a0 i\nhelmer. 8. Thompson. Tmlr: F. t.\nSpokaaje:   Mr.   and   Mra.   Brtoheen.\nHolmes,   B.   Mclntyre.   Vancouver;\nLambert, Vancouver: L Bhugman. Montreal; j. A. Legree, Toronto; B. W\nPrlngJey. \u2022. Hodge. Vancouver; Mr. aad\nMlaVB. St.  Stewart,  Manitoba.\n>   ti   il\nThe SAVOY\nNeeKm'e Newest and Finest Hotel\nWhere the Quest Is King\n_eai  Rot and Gold Running Water in All Room*\nM_mr booms wit- private baths ea i\nJ. A KERR, PROP., NELSON, B.C\nSAVOY\u2014M. i Uott. Vancouver; Mra.\nC. Baldock Mr. and Mrr Greenlaw. I\nSmith. I*rde: B. Watt. Trail Mr. and\nMra. C. Be*-.. Mra K. Jamleson \u00ab-d\nfamily, Evelyn Forbes, passmore; B. 0.\nBTinner. Oolden; C. B. Ke_ny, 9. H.\nEraan, A. Eluk. Vancouver: 0. T. Holland Halifax; Mary Belter. Benata;\nM. Ortli. Vancouver: Mr. and Mn. Carlson, Orand Porks; I. Rebolken, Welkin\negaeea\nQUEEN'S\u2014lire. C. Cooper. Slocan\nCRT; T. A. Carter. Albert*: M. Anderson.  Tmlr:   P. CoMey, XlinBerley.\nI    aj 1    11 ill    a I mull\nMADDEN HOTEL\ntar\nUamaet %r  the Bag.\nCH.\nMADDEN\u2014A. J. Rlcket, Srwkaae, I\nHutchinson, W. Bamrlck. Vrulr; D.\nCarmlcheal,   Nov   York. \u25a0\nWT\nISSfSS\nD COODS\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nA Modern Brick Building.\n\u2022M Varaon Street, Nelson, B.C\napt and Cold Water and Telephone\nI* All Rooms    Steam Heated\nThroughout\nP.  KAPAK.  Pre*.     European  PU\u00bb\n1   a\u00bb        l|\n-.-\u2014\n-\nPlaying With Fire\nThe Story ol u Socio. Clwioer\nBy LUCILLE VAN SLYKE .\nc IIAPTIH   LXMV.\n\"The looks ef H.\"\nNanaiMe'' father did not really pay\n\u25a0wh heed to his m__er-in-lew<a la-\nnuendo about Rosalie because he was\nthoroughly aware that the elder wom-\naa never missed any opportunity to\nmalign the younger. Ho wf puzzled ot\nhis wife's unexpected return to New\nYork for he had distinctly told hit\nnot to come keck until he let her\nknow when U_- Bralrclilf house wag\nready. He had a very slnoere desire to\nlei this spring \"turn over a new leaf\nfor Roaalle. Be wanted the house In\norder, capable servants li-tallrd and\nuhe way paved for a fair chance for\nhis \"Climbing Rose\" to go climbing.\nTbat once derisive term did not seem\nto him unkind now, for he was secretly very proud of the real progress hts\n.doc gauche little wife had made. Her\npopularity really delighted him.\nBut whatever reason had brought her\nbaok he was not surprised that sbe had\ntot come to Mrs. Perry's apartment and,\nit course, as his sister was out of\n:o-_i, Rosalie would have to find some\ntier Saw.\nQeachtn's information was reassuring.\nWith the easy familiarity of cue long\nemployed on the Qulmby's country\ndace ha called over the wires:\n\"Yesh. I Just pulled ln here about\nhall an hour ago. We come down ln\nrood ttiue all right. I duuno, boas. All\n1 know i\u00bb she got tired of that,burg up\nhere aad you couldn't _am<r Iter.\n\"It's a tank town all-rlghty. She told\nNil Bothered With\nSevere Headaches\nIl ltt Troubled low\nMrs. JamesRoeeiter, Riverside,KB.,\nertftee:\u2014\"I tat) bothered with severe\nheadaches, for years, and tried many\nitX.t^atm^xto.l^\ntat after I had tab- thiee bottles I\nfound it had done sua a world of goad.\nNow I dan t know what a headache il\nUn. I certainly have great faith in\nBurdock Blood Bitters.'r\nMan _Vtared only by Tbe T. Mil-\nbum Co., Ltd., Toronto, Ont.\nNelson's Best Cafes\namxmltmtmmmeittaspitesatxitmtia^^\nTb* STANDARD CAFE\nSt. Baker Street.  Kelson, B.C.\nOPEN DAT AND NIOHT\n1:30 to 2:30   Special Lunch  - 36c\n6:80 to 8_0  p.m..  Supper ...- 36c\nIHOKE  M\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nPlnwt equipped Restaurant In the Olty\nOPEN' DAY AND NIOHT\nWe  Cater to  Private Parties\nBpetial\u2014Ice Cream,' Soda Water and\nHot    Drtalu.      Nloe    clean    furnished\nrooms, bait and cold water.\ntne to take bar to the Brookmore\u2014ta\nThat's Tn* m\/fast\u2014 and then ate\nsaid to take tm monkey op to your\nsister's aad the> saw there tbat ahe\nwas out ot town and Miss Nannette\ndown to her ffrandmav no I left the\noutang ourauff or whatever lt is, with\ntbe ilrl there.\"\nTo hie employer's question, tentatively nut; \"DM Mrs. Quimby't, slater\ncome down wtth bar?\" he replied, \"Nft,\nshe came all alone excepting for that\nmonkey.\"\nNannette's father sighed with relief\naa he turned from tbe telephone.\n\"Stop crying Nannie,\" he co__au.iu.ed\nIlls daughter. \"Tell \"Velve to get ber\nduds packed, please,\" he addressed hla\nmother .In-law etlffly. \"And\u2014er\u2014some\nsort of box please so we can take this\ncarcass away. Rosalie Is quite alone\nover In this smtUl hotel.\"\n\"Tho beat thing for us to do Is to\njoin her aa soon as possible. Nannie,\"\nhe repeated sharply, \"do stop that\ncrying.**\n\"I can't walled Nannette, \"And It's\nso awful, havtns to take poor dead\nOwen to Rosy Lee.\"\n\"We won't take poor dead Owen' to\nfrighten faer, well\u2014er\u2014I'll leave Owen\nwtth the doorman ove. at the club and\nwe'll get her tomorrow morning and\ntake ber up In the country and have\n4 beautiful funeral for her out under\n.he willow tree where you hurled the\n'tltten and the lame squirrel.\" He knelt\n0 comfort hla trembling little daughter\n\/hose siate waa really pitiful after her\n\u25a0*cltlng afternoon. He himself was\n'rambling with Suppressed emotions.\nHe was angry at Mrs. Perry, through\nSd through, aud on many counts. H<-\ntn't doubt tbat the monkey had heeii\n) pest, he rather hated the beast hlm-\n*lf but b\u00ab did feel that Nannette'\"\nmndmotber needn't have had the poor\nitttle thing ahot. .And having had It\n.hot. he felt she ought to have had Its\n\"arcass removed instead of leaving t;\n\u2022 retched out for his impressionable\nhtld to weep over.\nHe didn't know that in Itself had\n''\u00aben a bottle won by the screaming\nlittle girl who had refused to allow\n(bean to touch her pet.\nBut a tremendous amount of satisfaction lt had given him to be able to\nmy. \"Rosalie came down quite alone,\"\n\"What a fool you are about her,\"\nMrs. Perry .1 comment made the situation even worse.\nIn the taxi going toward the club\nhe smiled to himself. After all, he was\nrather a fool about this pretty \"Rosy\nLee\" and very eager to Ret back to her.\nHe had missed her horribly.\nNannette bad stopped and was snug-\nsled against him, recounting her small\nadv. ntures while be was gone.\n''Aunty Dee waa good to me.\" she admitted, \"only but I begged her not to\nmake me go wttb grandmama and\ntcrandmama insisted, you _Tnow how.\nand Aunty Dee 'splat ned It waa a good\ntime for me to (to and have it over\nwith, bub, oh. daddy. I'm glad Its over\nwith. Arid I shall never, never forgive\nher for having *Veive shoot my\u2014\"\n\"Huah Darling!\" he commanded, lifting un the box tbat held all that was\nnv>rtal of Jhe troublesome pet. You alt\nstill while I check this ln the club.\"\nThe box happened to be a florist's box.\nIt gave him a pleasant idea. \"Then we'll\ngo somewhere and buy your Roey lee\nsome posies and all get our dinner and\nfonret our troubles.\nHe chose the flowers with meticulous, care, buying tiny \"sweetheart\"\nroses mintrlM with fonratmenota. and\nvery thougbtfulv, he mirchaned a bunch\nof violets for his small daughter. There\nwas real gavety In his voice as he di-\nwcted to the taxi driver to the address\nthat Oeachin had given h'm. It was\nnearly seven o'clock now. He reflected\nthat li wrw.ld have b*\u00bben more sensible\nto have telephoned Rosalie that they\nwere coming, but getting away from\nMrs. Pwitvw anartm_nt bad been hie\nopiv thought whM. the- had left there.\nThe smill hotel before which they\nstopped waa not exactly unprepossess\ning but it was surely not vera smart\nlooking. Dingy, on.e-wh.ve. grimy brass\nwork and a languid desk clerk did -lot\nmake  it seem eager to wbicuiue   -hem.\n\"to MM. Harrison Qui*** registered\nherar Nannette's lather aakea tbe\n-ierk.\n\"There's a Mrs. Qulmby, room four\nforty-seven,\" he vouchsafed.\nNannette chattered excitedly.\n\"Let's go up in the elevator \u00bbnd surprise ber, daddji\"\nHer eyes were still reddened from\ntears but she was rapidly recovering\nirom ber extravagant grief.\n<Yleaee let her know that Mr, and\nMlea (ilulmby are down here.\"\nBut even before tne man could obey\nhim Nannette ugrted Into a small room\nat tbe side, thrusting aside faded green\nvelour curtains as she cried: \"Oh, my\ndarhngest Ko\u00aby Lee)\"\nRosalie sprang up from a small settee, colour flooding her small, piquant\nface. In the excitement of the moment\nshe forgot everything exagpt tbat sbe\nwas unexpectedly seeing the little step-\ndaughter she loved ao dearly. Her anna\naoout tbe little girl, the two of tbem\nlaughing and crying, HoeaUe looked\nover the child'a shoulder and grew\nsuddenly pale as she saw Qulm standing ln the doorway smiling at bee\n\"Qulm,\" she stammered. \"I thought\nyou were still in Chicago.1'\n\"And who was supposed to be to\ntmsvllle?\" he laughed. But the next\nmoment his laughter died away. Standing beside his wife was a stalwart\nyoung man, very much til at ease, who\nblurted out: \"I guess from ahe looks\nof things. Rose, I'd better be going.\"\n\"Qulm. I\u2014want you to meet Chet\u2014\nChet Fergnsob,\" Rosalie managed to\ngive the situation some vague air of\ndignity. \"He came down from KnavUle\ntoday, he\u20141\u2014\"\nThe two men made no effort to shake\nhands. Qulm's piercing eyes stand\nthrough lila big horn-ripuned apftct-\naclea at the rather good-looking youth\nbut Chefs gaze shifted uneasily. He\nliterally faded out of the picture. Roaalle never knew when he left. All she\nknew was that Qulm stood there look-\nng at her, murmuring stupidly.\nFrom the looks of things, perhaps\nI'd' better be going too\u2014\" only Nannette saved the day.\n''Rosy Leet\" she was crying. \"Ydtt\nan't think what a drefful thing hap-\ni>enedl tut down while I tell you\n.'bout poor Owen.\"\nTomorrow\u2014Nannette     Orders Dinner\nfor Three.\nFORWARD PASS\nFRONT OF GOAL\nSPEEDS HOCKEY\nPacific Coast Experiment Sue-\ncess; More Goals; Play\nMore Opeij\nTHE ROYAL CAFE\nCLASSIC   RESTAURANT\nRefinement and Delicacy Prevail\nOPEN DAY AND NIOHT\nSpecial Dinners 11:30 to 3:80 ........\u201435c\n\u25a0upper 5-0  to B  .\u00ab6c\nWe Specialize tn Chop Sue; and Noodles\nPhone   IM\nNIW ORAND_A Haynuck. C. Jack,\nVanoonw_; M. Pranklih, Calgary; A.\nMedWtfla.   Caattetar.\nOCaDENTAL HOTEL\nT_e Hone oi Plenty\nNt  . \u25a0_\u25a0 W.      Pk\u00abM M7L\n\u25a0. W-MMK AMD a BCAtlt-\nfilty aoona of Solid Comlort.\nmmrtm far Lootn aad Miner.\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nTip MA-AOCMRT or\nWILLIAM  JOKES\nQOOB,  CLEAN  ROOMS.    RRASONABLI\nlis\nTrail Hotels\nstfam Heated\nThroughout\nHot and Cold\nWater\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nB.  L. AND A.  (IROCTAOE, Props.\nBos 60D Plume 2U Trail. B.C.\n__=\u2014\n.=\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B.C.\nA. P. LETB8QCE. Pt\u00bbl.\nCompletely Renovated and Rejiniahed\nHot and Cold Running Water European Plan\n-  Steam Heated Centrally Located\nRotary Sanple Rooms m\nHeadquarters Connection\nas\nS\nVANCOUVER, Jan. W.-The Pacific\nCoast Hockey league appoara to have\nsowed the problem of more goals per.\nsame and faster and more Interest-\nfna play.\nAt a meeting of the league governors\nlast Friday ln Seattle a change In\n'he rule waa made which allows a\nforward player to cross the blue line\ninto the opposition defence' area ahead\nof the player with the puck. Thla allows of a triangular pass Inside the\n_ea. This new rule has been In force\nlor two gamea and has resulted ln\nmore goals being scored and ln speeding up the play by eliminating stoppages and lets the forwards work ln\nthe net with greater speed, ln addition lt makes the game more Interesting far the fans.\nDuring December. 6 685.506 bushels\nof grain were delivered to steamships\nat Saint John.\nALBERTA TAKES\nLIPHARDT TROPHY\nIN FERNIE'S'SPIEL\n__!\u25a0 44 U B. C's 34 Points;\nf'Boyer fteaches Semis in\nTrites-Wood\nfT\u00bb-      \t\nCLOSE GAMES RULE\nIN FERNIE CURLING\nBoy\u00abr Cannot Win Grand Aggregate; Merucry Hovers\nAround 34 Below\nf Jjf I     \u2022\t\n. FERNIE, B. C, Jan. 22.\u2014Continued\nplay in the bonsplel here today resulted ln Alberta winning the Uphardt\nnip with a total ot 44 points against\nBritish  Columbia's 34.\nFollowing Is the detailed play with\nthe Alberta rtnk mentioned firsts ln\neach case. Boyer Mat Johnson, 19 to .7;\nAllison beat Little. IS to 6; Morgan lost\nto Spence. 6 to 19: Leduc beat Kastner, 11 to 3. These Alberta rinks win\nplay off among themselves for possession of the trophy.\nWith the mercury 34 below there Is\nnet question about Ice coptlntung good\nfor the bonsplel here. Skips are to be\nseen directing ths games ln fur costs\nand other players seise every opportunity of sweeping. The competitions have\nbeen keenly contested and the games\nfought out to the thirteenth end t_\nsomo cases. One of these was Herch-\nmer's win against Llphardt by one ln\ntht thirteenth end. Another very eliciting game was that ln which Johnson\nbeat Wallace by an eighth of am Inch\nl_ the thirteenth end.\nTh\u00ab Boyer rink of Medicine Hat\nwhich held the grand aggregate for tbe\nlast two years was the first to reach\nthe semi-finals. This waa in the Trltes-\nWood cup. Boyer has been knocked out\nof three competitions and remalna only\nIn two so the grand aggregate will likely go elsewhere this year.\nTRITKH-WOOD\n]n the Trttes-Wood competition Johnson boat Wallace 11 to 10: Morgan beat\nHerchmer.   10  to  8:   Morgan   lost   to\nBoyer, 7 to 10 in the aeml-finals.\n(IRANI) CHALLENUE\nIn the Orand Challenge Llphardt beat\nSanborn. 19 to 6: Herchmer peat Atll-\nwu.   11   to  10;  Stewart  Mat  Johnson,\n9 to 8:  Littler heat Kastner 9 to 8.\nINTERNATIONAL\nIn the International competition Littler beat Boyer. 11 to 8: Herchmer beat\nUphardt, 10 to 9; Spence beat Johnson\n12 to 4.\nI.ETHHHITKiE\nIn the Lethbrldge Brewery, Kastner\n6\u00bb\u00abt   WMlac*.   ri  to  5,   Morgan  beat\nOatea:  Spence heat Sanborn.  10 to 3-\nstewert. beat Llphardt. 11 to 10.\nMAORATH\nIn the Magrath. Boyer r*\u00abt Kastner;\nemrchmer ne _ Oates and fipence beat\nMorgan, 14 to 5.\nOUR.\nSCHOOL-QMS\nARE\nNEVER-\n.oven.\nMRS. HAYES OF\nTRAIL IS DEAD\nSTRICKEN DO.\nIN PRIME Of Ul\n\"FRWT^-TiVES\" IU Han\nCriHJjagl-enButii-\ni> m \"\\,\n.-tiv\u00ab_i,*\n andatber tranfa|eaaf tfaee\nLirer, Kidneys s_I Bowels tn quid\n_.TO-.tth*\nE. Dn-ohug writs.: \"I hs.vs i\ngreat benefit from \"Frult-a-tr\npecially what I had Rhe-    *\n__Uy some years afo. I1T\n\u00ab\"ss' always in __ .t>\u00ab\"\niy   are   jl   wo_rk\nr more than a quarter Of <\n\"Fn-t-g-tiveg\"   has  tw\u00bbA\ndependable borne remedy.\n60c. a bo_\u2014at ifcaleas '\n \u2014\u2014 %-i-\nPor\niODUM   \u25a0ILPHATt;   DEPOSITS j\nThs   lnreatlgatlon-   of   the   nati\nsrdium sulphate   deposits   1* v\u2014\nCant\u2014  by the department of\nhas   proved   up .tonnage   of   hl'dr\nsodium and magnesium sulphate tn i\ncess   of   100*M.\u00ab0\u00bb   tens.    \u00bb<*\u00bb\nmany other deposits in the prairie I\nvlnces,   which   oould   produce   etfil\nsulphate,   but  while  the markete\nllmlted and the mice to\u00bb. *nl'3l\nolosc to railways can be consldert-l\n'ducers   at  prMgnti -.   -\n ,\u2014.\u2014i .   . \u25a0   i.i 11\nHe Gave Them a Tr\nAlberta   Man   Now   Inctyn\n.    Dodd's Kidney Pills\nMr. David Jnok sulfered Wll\u00bb,\nKidney Trouble\nKttscoby, Alta., Jan. 34.\u2014<S_T,\n\"A1 few years ago I was troubled\n\\f  with   my  kidnsys,\"   writes IL\nJack, a resident of thla plaoe* \"\n\u25a0cad so rnuc*! about Dodd's Kidney r\nthat I thought I would give thai\ntrial.   I used about six boxes and\ndid me heaps of good.   We Use \u2022\nnow   whenever   we   think   we  ro_\nthfm,    *  \u00ab1\u00ab\u00bb*8 iut*  ** *\u00bb\u00bb\u2022\"*\nhandy for futifre use.\"\npodd's   Kidney  Fills  stimulate\nstitngthen weak kidneys,   tou \u2014\niutprlsed   how   sobn   they   bet_.\ncleanse and purify, to soothe and\nthe kidneys, at the same Urns,\nache.   Rheumatism,   Headaches ei_\naUrnents due to faulty Kidneys d_\npeM.\npodd's Kidney Pills have becon_J\nfamily remedy all over the world\nsatise   people   have   tried   them\nfound them good.\nDodd'a Kidney Pills are sold by\nJrugglsts, or The Dodos Medicine r\nLtd. Torosto J, Ont.\nResident There for Six Years\nDies After Short Illness;\nFuneral Friday\n-^\nThe school of experience has\nnever handed out a diploma to\nany man, for our school days\nate never over.\nIf you have vet to learn-hat\nIn this slothing shop you will\ndiscover well tailored, properly\nfitted, dependable suits and top\ncoats, lt ts a lesson that you\nshould learn at once.\nDon't hesitate.\n-H-NS\nWEAR\niMoi\nBOYS\nWEAR\niUST OUTSIDE THE HIGH RENT OJSTWt.\n.,.\nTRAIL B.C., Jan. 23.-~Mrs. Isabel\nHayes, aged 65. passed awav at her\nhome in East Trail vesterday afternoon\nfollowing a short Illness.\nMrs. Hayes, who was born In Glasgow, Scotland, came to Canada a number of years ago with Mr. Hayes, and\nhas tor the last 9 years been residing\nIn Trail, where Mr. Hayes ls employed ft, the Tadgnac smelter. She Is\nsurvived  bv her husband and a sitter\nl_i.i*-l...\u2122_   The   \"\"\"era!   wul  be\nheld Friday afternoon.\nROSSJMrjF\nPLAY STARTS\nf i       \u25a0 _\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 i-\u2014\nNine  Games Played  in  This\nEvent; Cammell-Laird Play\nContinues\nTRAIL, B.C.. Jan. 38\u2014Play started\ntoday at tbe big B. c. Curling association bonsplel ln the Rossland Cup\nevent.   Nine games wet* played.\nPlay also continued ln the Cammel-\nLalrd event.\nRossland Cup\u2014McArthur, 9, beat Mitchell, 7; J. Forrest, s, beat \"ear. S:\nFinney. 7. beat Jeffs. 6; O'Neill. 9,\nbent Dunwoody. 8; Sharpe. 19. beat\nCaldwell, 7: Gray. 11. beit McDonald,\n10:  Tyson. 10. beat. Dred .e.  II.\nCammel-Lalrd\u2014W. Forrest. 8. beat\nMcLeod. 7; Blngay. JO. beat Truswell,\n9; Baker, 8, beat DodTrneed, (.\n\"PRINCESS PATS\" ENOAOED\nWINNIPTO. Man.. Jan. 33.\u2014The\n\"Princess Pats,\" band of Wtntnee, was\nchosen today to play at class \"^\" fair,\n'n Western Canada during the comln.\naeason, winning the preietrmce over a\n'arge number of other bands.    .,\nTHE  GUMPS-THE\ni-\u2014*-\nONE\n,.\u2014.,. \u25a0\u25a0.\u2014\u2014\n'\nBE. OKr  \u00bb LEAME  ^^I_r-T-\u00abMIV-J\nVNt tstOttita TO YNKE  YOUR J\n\u00ab.Nt\\N-R  WW *t f\nY0D HAVE K|aTT ME IM\n\u00abvNM)lt-M   LOW. EMOU_M-\nfcVKRY- YOOMOtY\nOOWMMrr te, ne\n\u2022M*\nLITTLE  WORD\naaW|     II\".       I      I    I  l'||i'  t\nPICTURE   VWHA.T lT \u00abVEAW* IF YOU\nMARRY ME - WJ. TH- MONEY YOU WANT-\nCAB* -   MAID* - JEWEL- -  THE LATEST\n-OWN- -    YOUR  POtlYIOr.  IN   -O-IETY\nA\u00bb\u00bbURED -    WHY - MARY -\nI'LL WAKE  A QUEEN Q.   YOU^\n%AY THE WQRD - SAY- THAT I MAY\nLEAVE   THt* RINMa- ON   YOUR  . INI.ER \u2014\nTHE RIN_ THAT  MEANS\nOUR KN-A-ErAENT^s^-r-*.,   I\nYE--       ^&LL     i\nt>AY YE*-r\nSAY   IT\nMARY\"\nli^lf\ny^Kere w no ^ai|er soul\nabroad tonicjhl <-\u00bb\n.  fEo one more eXuUarrfc,\not spirts - as Henry J. Auss bums\nireacnerous hear- at \"la.l\nbeais in tnumph-\nEyes of Gr\n\u2014to\n.\u00abUI\u00ab\nt are YOUR\n[today\neyee\nsayinjl\nYour ever have\nthey speak \u2014 they show  _\nand temper.   Thsy do more, they |\nshow your phyiicsl conditi\nh\u00abl_-__ itli, ISf. r.\"o-,_ _\u00ab. I\nn th. Mutt   Tbi. yw\u00b0<r-> i-S* I\n_. signal ef lawsriiiil \u201eugfii_ian\n_*___li__ AVeeattUt\nt \u25a0ST** \u25a0-\u00ab*<*\u00ab\ntXstitttattCttncsttt\nTry\nconn.\nIsstB-met\nMm_i\n,n__y\n\u2014-.SB.\nBusiness\nCards\nThere it the simple Business Card, with just the\nname, address aJid business\n\u2022of the user.\nA simple, and ,djgn$eft\nstyle is the t*s't for cardB\nof this type.\nThen _wre is the advertising card. It is set up in\na more pretentious style of\ntypography, and often two\nor more colors of ink are\nused in the work.\nThe extra color of ink\ndoes not cost very much\nand it often increases\nenormously the advertising value of the card.\nThe Daily New.\nJOB\nDEPARTMENT\nPhone 144 (Tw\u00ab L__)\nNELSON, BX.\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u25a0\n\"I\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 24, 1929\njGoIng Upstairs\nto Sit Down\nIreath So Short\na. H.  Bromeeau,  Magog, Que..\n_.\u2022\u2014\"For many yeara I suffered\nthortncM of breath; than (our\nI ago I had palpitation of the heart,\nI wu ao bad 1 had to ait down twe\nI* \"\u00ab\u2022 tin*- when going upstairs,\nteed about\nMUBU'Rlft\ni^   m^\nTOTAL OF $15,727\nRAISED PAST YEAR\nBY ST. SAVIOUR'S\nGreat   Achievement   for   16.1\nFamilies; $17,000 Paid on\nNew Chnreh\nIRVINE AND CRAyFURD\nAGAIN CHURCH WARDENS\n> I got a box, and in no time I felt\n\" tt, to I took three boxes more and\nTt never had skortacu of breath\n.\"\nfce 80c. a box at all druggist* and\n\u00bb, or mailed direct on receipt of\nby Tbe T. Milbura Co., ltd.,\n. Oat.\nNEW\n.ECORDS\nOn Sale Today\n4131\nf   \"HOW ABOUT ME.'\n\"He's Funny That Way\"\nI   test Trot, by Ban Rami, and\nHU Orckaatr.  wtth  Vocal Ch.ru...\n412%\n\"THE M60CHE\"\n\u2022\u25a0\u2022ma. You Went Away\"\nFoa Trots by Duka Elliailon\neat  His   Celts-   Club  Orcbsstrs\n4(W\n\"STAIRWAY OF DREAMS\"\n\"Where is the Seng\nof Songs for Me\"\n(art\nVosal Trio wltb Pi...\nBurtaatf. Wtioar. Trio\n4133\n'ARE  YOU  MAKING  A POOL\nOF ME\"\n\"!'\u2022 Getting Even With Y9u\"\nT\u00ab_r wttb PUao- F_dd\u00bb. Row\n,    I Good SelectloBS OB\n\u25a0van BBUNSWlCg Hacord\nNIW  RELEASE  EVERY  THURSDAY\nLet rour BruQtwIch Dealer\ndenion.ti.ite tha new\n\u2022EtJNSWlCK LIC.HT.SOCKET RADIO\n\u2014built to tha Dish MUSICAL\n.LnJ.nl, ol the PANATROPB\nIrvine   Enters    i wenty-eijrhtri\nYear; Assets Congregation\n\u00a563,022\nThat the con<rre\u00abratlnn of St. Saviour's\nAnglican chm-h raise., during 1038. a\nto\", of S15.727. considered a wonderf\"'\nachievement lor a eftniere_\u00bb_on ot 16.\nfnniUie. was a le.tnr. of the renort of\nrtr-n. Archdeacon tr-el H. Oraham at the\nannual vaatrv meetlrnr of St. Saviour's\niaa\u00bb, pt.Ht..   The  meeting   was  tn the\nMemorlBl  hall.\nThe feature of the year was the drive\nto raise funds for restoration of the\nchurch building. Members of the congregation, expected to subscribe S70O0\nor 48000 had Instead promised \u00ab11,020.\nArrangements were made to pay subscriptions in Installments over three\nyears, but many preferred to make their\ndcn^iona in one amount. As a result\nover half of the promised total was Already ln hand.\nLARCH SUM PAID\nA. D. Allan, reporting on the restoration fund stated that of 111,026.85\npromised. $5,676.60 had been paid, leaving a balance of $6,451.36 to be received.\nThe restoration of the Building was\nestimated to cost $33,500. Of this $17 -\noqp had been paid to the contractors,\nand $6086 was still available before it\nyou'd be necessary to seek additional\nfunds.\nWilliam Irvine stated he was more\nthan pleased with the workmanship\nand materials being used. The contractors, John Bums _ Bon. and the\nA new shipment of fnrn.\nhire bs arrived at the Busy\nBee    Second-Hand   Store.\nCook Stove.   Third Ave.,\nEast Trail.\n.. OH.-SAW. BY\n[ootenay Music House\nNELSON, B. C.\n\"BUILD BaCa\"\nB.C.\nAnd\nThe\nMilk\nIt means a great deal to British Columbia to patronise its\nlocal Industries. It means Its\ncommercial life. But those\nWho use Pacific Mill; bava tho\nasurance. setting aside the help\nthey give the province, that they\nare using tbe beat milk packed.\nPacific Milk\nFactories at\nAbbotsforu ant Ladner\nBUILD B. C.\nTHE\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nYoar Spokane Home \u25a0\u25a0\u2022\n\"Where Canadians Are Among Friends\nWhen in Spokane\"\nThe only hotel in Spokane with FREE\nBUS service and our own garage adjoining.\nBarber Shop, Cigar Store and Cafe. Complete service under one roof.\nJOE PEDICORD, Manager\ntot to tit si-tana\nMt  10 Ut RIVERSIDE\nSPOKANE, U. S. A.\ncontractors' employee* made every effort to coop?n\\W... Aw fault* were 909*1\nrectified.\ntlr- Irvine declared the completed\nbuilding would Be one of the ihoat\nbe\u00bbu_uul  Up the vest.\nArchdeacon Oraham complimented\nthe church committee, building committee and the congregation for Ita\n'abedftitely unanimity m the effort to\nrestore St. Saviour's.\"\nA,.\\(\\ \\\\ AB1H.NS\nit waa Archdeacon Graham's twentr-\ntlghth annual vestry meeting ln Nelson Throughout hla lnmrnoency Fred\nirvine was rector's warden, and lor\nnearly half of this time Leslie Crau-\nfurd waa people's warden. Mr. Irvine\nand Mr. Crufurd vere again selected as\nwardens.\nWilliam Irvine, who aa clerk of works\nwas In constant and close oontact wltb\nUve work of rebuilding, Mrs. Leslie\nCraufurd-, president of the Church Helpers' association for 11 years, and Mrs.\no. A. King, president of the Mother's\nclub, were specially commended for\ntheir work in 1928.\nThe consolidated balance sheet submitted by Mr. Craufurd showed assets\nof \u00bb63,0_2.56, and assets over liabilities.\n143,011.lg. Receipts during the year totalled $36,771.26.\nThe parish guild fund, started some\nyears ago with 1600 had grown to |1151,\nThis money was to be used for furnishing the chancel of the new building.\nFINANCIAL   BEPOKTS\nFinancial reports submitted gave the\nfollowing figures:\nReceipts\nin year\nSunday   School    $ 418.96\nWomans' auxiliary 114.20\nAltar guild       82.67\nChurch   helpers   \u2014 1806.63\nMothers'  club       967.97\nChurchmen's club ....     36.64\nThe   Junior   choir   had    $64   which\nwould be used to buy new' books for\nthe senior apd junior choirs.\n<HIK. II  OFFICCKS\nFollowing the selection of Fred Irvine and Leslie Craufurd, as wardens,\nthe church committee of 1828 was re*\nelected. The committee eonalsted of w.\nT. Fotheringham, L. B. DeVeber, J. H.\nD. Benson, 0. A. King, H. B. Gore, T.\nK. Maddock, F. H. Sheffield, James\nDraper and A. D. Allen-\nLay delegates and substitutes to the\nsynod were named as follows;\nDelctjatfB\u2014Pred Irvine, L. B. DaVeb-\nsr and Col. A. W. Jf. Taylor of Willow\nPoint.\nSubstitute*\u2014J. H. D. Benton, J. T.\nAndrews. P. H. Sheffield and \u00bb 3111 of\nLongbeaeh.\nArchdeacon Graham announced he\nhad received several gifts for the new\nSt. Saviour's.\nBalance\n$  18.45\n32.11\n63.07\n\/    03.96\n374.87\n2&2_\nSome Players\nEnvy Flappers'\nShapely Limbs\nLou6_.Rl<\u00bb  CY WILLIAMS\nPWeRuTH   HwsWasnfk\nirp\u00abr_\u00bbT_ wmi-is t&Oo with hu\nABILITY T*.:\u00abWS\u00abW<_\u20ac TV* rlORstWlDe\nBy  AL DEMARF.K\n(Former   Pitcher   New   York   Giants)\nThe shape. 5\u2014e snd general sltuctur\nof a Ball player's lens apparently neither contributes nor subtracts from a\ngreat hitter's ability .to. .smite the old\nonion.\nWhile on the subject of legs, many\nfans probably do not know that wheth\ner a player has fat legs, skinny legs\nbow legs or is knock-kneed, he always wears two pairs of stockings.   Un-\nT. H. Waters &Co.,Ltd\nBuilders and Contractors\nPhone It. P. O. BOX 835\nNELSON, B.C.\n\u2014___._ ._*\nSubmitted On Any -Ind or\nCONSTRUCTION WORK\nLIME        BMCK CEMENT\nCURLERS FORGET\nROCK AND ltt\nFfflMTllE\nAnnual Banquet of & C. Curling  Association  Attended\nby Over )M_)\nFELLOWSHIP AND GOOD\nSPORTSMANSHIP RULES\nW. Lob John-ton Guest of Honor; Speeches Many, but\nAre Brief\nTRAIL, 9.O., Jan. 23.\u2014over 300 curlers tomgftt gathered at the feetlw\nboard \u00bbn\u201e uie TraU Curung cTub\nwas host at the annual banquet, of the\nBritish Columbia Curling association,\n\u2022ine banquet was served In We I.O.OJ\".\nnail,  two sittings being necessary.\nThe Inherent fellowship and sportsmanship of curling . was never ao\nstrongly manifested as tonight. Gay\nsongs and stories and a round of toasts\ngave every club representation among\n__> speakers.\nW. Loil Johnson of Colvllle, Wash.,\nlioutenant-gnvernor of the stale of\nWashington, wa\u00bb a guest \u00abfno\u00bbor. He\nstated he attended the bonspiel to\ndiscover Just what curling Is.\" He\nsketched the lnendly relations between\nCanada and the United States and ax.\npressed the nape tlu_ this attitude\nwould be maintained. He had enjoyed\nCanadian hospitality.\n-it 111'KIM. (it'GUT\nHarry Ooeta ot Spokane waa the\nmost surprised man ln the room when\nToastmaster W. Forrest called on hint\nto respond to \"The Ladles\". propoSd\nby w. R. Dunwoody. He made a fast\ncomeback, however, and aoored heavily\nwith \"stories.\"\nJ. K. Cnun of Rossland. new aaaoel.\nation president, welcomed the ourlen;\nto Rossland next year. His conewatng\nworts were drowned by the song, \"For\nHe's a Jolly Good Fellow.\"\nOIIII.H'  < I HI IK\nJ. B. Oray of Nelson deelared curium\noriginated In Scotland, because the\nplayers did not have to pay anything\nfor stones or Ice. His remarks were\nccmpleted by W. M. Myers, alto of\nNeison.\nr_ H. H Johnston ot Roaaland laid\nclaim to being tba oldest curler in\nBrush Columbia, Re threw bis first\n\"btane\" In  1883.\nL. A. Campbell extended the greetings of the Roaaland club.\nItey. r. R. Q. Dredge of Nelson spoke\nbriefly on tha \"roarin' game.\"\nTOAST l_8f\nW. porrest, past president of tha association, was toastmaster. He proposed  \"The King,\"\nTbe ttwsts were;\n\"B. C. Curling Association\"\u2014Proposed\nby I. O Montgomery. Klmberley, responded by James Buchanan, Trail.\n\"The Roarn' Game\"\u2014Proposed by\nJ. B. Oray and W. M. Myers, Nelson;\nresponse by R. W. Or Igor, Rossland.\n\"Our Vlsitora\"\u2014Proposed by Mayor\nHerbert Clark of Trail; response by c\no. Blaskwood, Nelaon. and P. S. Peters,\nRosHland.\n\"The Ladles\"\u2014Proposed by W. _.\n\">unwocdy. Nelson; response by Harry\n3o*tz, Spokane. ,\n\"The Hosts\"\u2014Proposed Tjy O. D.\nBl\u00b0 .\"'wood. Nelson.\nEntertainers Included T. A. W.\ntus of Trail, who told a number ol\n\"tfitorlouR stories, and H. McLaren of\nTrail and ~\n'and- who\nm the cl\n\"Loch   Lamond\njsi'sut.  muir^   anu   _.   iv_l_i_i   ui\nand Thoniae Ollmaur of Ross-\nwho sang. The gatherdg Joined\nle   cho-us   of   the   latters   song.\nlust 20 Years Since\nMcKinnon ol TraU Won\nWheelbarrow Wager\nTRAIL. B.C. Jan. 33.\u2014Says the Roes-\n'and Miner of 30 years ago;\n\"Today (Saturday) at high noon\nToseph L. Klomtm, who weighs about\n'40 pounds, will wb\u00a3,;J In a wbeel-\n'larrovy J. A. M^Jinnou. who weighs\n\u25a0 iioui, fmi pounds, from the Bank of\nMontreal to the post Q'f'oe t .ree times.\nThis is because Mr. Kloman bet Mr.\nIcKinuon a wheelbarrow ride that\n?. R. McDonald would beat John\nvlartm for mayor.\n\"The civic election on Thursday was\n\\ sfronvlv contested one. and as a\n-esult of this a large vote was polled,\nhe total being 635 out nf tbe 892 names\nier his regular baseball stockings that\nho fans see e-eri day, he wears a\nialr of white cotton stockings to pre>-\nect himself from bipod poisoning\nrom the colors of his outer stockings\nn case of spike wounds.\nMany of the thrifty players buy\nhese stockings in tbe t and 10-oeut\n\u00abtores and It Is always a mystery to\n.he salesgirls why men are buying\n\u2022dies' cheap cotton sto?i.Uws-\nJakev At\/, the oelo-ful manager of\n\u2022he fort Worth Gate in tbe Texas\neague. tells about, one of those Scotch\nithletes  buying  his  sweat  socks.\n\"This Bird.\" said Jake, \"went ont\nto buy a pair of long, plain white,\ncotton hose, for his sweat socks. The\n,'trl behind the cojinter asked what\nidnd  he wanted.\n\" 'Oh. something for about 16 cents\n-they're for the wife, jou know, and\n1  want something nice.\"\n\"The girl behind tbe counter\nBwooned.\"\n\u00bb    w\n'\nTHE BEST HUMAN\nANTI-FREEZE\n....! HOT\nDAYS\nZERO\n_| io\nto\n\u2022M\n.   . SssUi states'\nKtRiM F. Ritcbls Co.\nUO\\ Tomnto\nIT STIMULATES, GIVES YOU A GLOWING WARMTH,\nREVIVES TOU, AMD GIVES TOU ENERGY AND ZEST\nLI*\nTRAIL CUP\nR. C.  CVtUm   __S_CI .TIQ.N\n'* t\u00bb\u00bb\n__r\u00bbf\n\\Tyton\n\u2022JBuriyan\nMicbaety, UgaJand ...\nL. P. Tyson. Trail .\nift'\u00abm>hf%S--~\n.  !\n\/Bunyan\n. Ftntwst, Trail  -I Jackson\n8. Jackson, Ohapman Olmp |Jwlnon\nJ. Hnnay. Rosdand    .     j\nSo^wsr^\nT.\nC\nJ. X. Carter, Jifoh\nR. D. MltchatT, Bosslsnd\nJ. Baldrey. Trail\ni Trsll\n! Bunyan\nt Saunders\n'\u25a0*\u25a0\n(Caldwell\nCarter ,\nR. Sharp,\nJ J. \u00abn\u00abl\nw.  M.   flyers,  Nelson\nA. W.  Smith, Rossland\nB   Bine*.  Trail      ..\n'Sharp\nJ Carter\n____\u00bb\nPlngland .\n-\u2022Blner\nB. R. McDonald, TraU  (McDonald 1\nRev. F. R. O. Dredge, Nelaon .  f   \u25a0 I\nburn. Trail\nrrblbald. Ros\nrWoodburn\nB. W Hazelwood. Trail\nW. Tmswoll. Trail \t\nH. M. Wade. Trail         \\ Wade        i\nR. Stephens. Rossland  I\nfWad\n_. JftJS-Sd.^Sori:::::::::::::]*'*'\u00ab J\nc.w.iT't^\" -:\u25a0 :\u2022:.::::_:: r'-l\nj Croe\nA. Sent, Nelson _ I Crowe  '\nR  <_ Crowe, Trail  i\n-VHa_elwoo*l\n\u2022 I Binn-, in\n?'  . \u25a0_ftu'H.v'_fr\"11 i  'tMirrray\nJ. J. ONelll, Klmnerlev .\u00bb\n[ MpKay\n?. r_lnVayN,T?_,i'r::.}B'n^ \u25a0\nw. 5: vSSX'isor.80\".!^\"\t\nBurn:\nGray. Moyie I\t\n\u25a0nyent,  Klmberley\nBumyeat\nHarvey. Trail\nMcKay. Trail\nW. Baker. Rossland\nPaige,  Rossland L\t\nPglae...\nl.McKay.\nr\nI, Vance.\n\\palga....\n\u2014\u2014-\non the voters' Hat The result of\nthe election was ss follows: Mayor.\nJohn Martin; aldermen, east ward, J.\n\u2122. Qrcftorv. I, p. James, Hugh R.\nJones; west wall. Thomas Bestwick\nnooert Tees, James Twaddle: school\ntrustees for two vears. Roland Ooose.\nJ. A MaeKlnnc\u2014, W. J Prcat; for one\nyear to till tbe unexpired term Of\nJ. Wood, resigned, f. 8. 11  Winn \"\nTrail Committee\nVisits Nelson on\nFestival Business\nTRAIL. B.O. Jan. 38\u2014Mrs. R S. O\nAnthony, William Donnelly and Ed\nHall have gone to Nelson today to\nmeet Nelson's syllabus committee in\nconnection with the proposed Kootonay\nmusical ftajtlval.\nThe committees have each drawn\nup a prooosed sviiabus whloh has\nbeen tendered to the other oommltte-\ntor scrutiny. From previous work of\nthe two committees it will be the ob-\nfect at the meetlne today to ad oot one\nsyllabus which w_l form the base for\nthe program at tbe fir*!; festival which\nla expec.1 to be held In the spring.\nSeveral flocks of wild geese have\nbean seen lately, flying south above\nScotch Village. N. 8.\nBracing Breakfast fo Bitter Weather\nSHREDDED\nServe with piping hot milk - Doesnt\noverload your stomach \"Makes you\nalert and active. Ttne for youngsters\nMade by Th* Canadian Shredded Wheat Company, Lt*\nt WAN I AO IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TIT II.\nIn tbe \"Spirit\" of France!\nMmertimy\nMeasure\nInvincible\nThrust and parry and (be\nring of steel on steel. Such\nscenes as this were common\nwhen the Musketeers of tKe\nKing roamed the street* of\nParis. Days when every man\nplaced his faith in his glittering sword and his lady's\nfavour. Athos, Porthos and\nAramis ... one for all and\nall for one . . . invincible\nthen as always.\nTHREE STAR\nHENNESSY BRANDY\nBottled at Cognac, franc*\nThis -trv-erttsement is not published or disp layed by the Liquor Control Board or by th*\nUowrameat of British ColumUt\n\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0   -\n_J\n age Four\nlWBLSON DAILY NEW!?, THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 24,1929\nPAfrY  NEWS\nwary _vinirrn aaijuit Sails   Itews   PuwMliBal   ootn-\n-e, iMhon. a 0.\nletters __\u00abild be a\u2014droned\nand   aone.  twtimns   \u2122.ip\n~be Hews Publishing com-\nand tn no ease to unite at its. staff.\nrata   cards   and   AJS.O\nof   dreulstlon   mailed   on\nt. or may be son at tbe strut\n> adieitmni semen racotnlaad In\nCanadian    Press   ssaodatlon\nSTJBSCRfPTIOH   RATBP\nH> month    s    ax\n .\u00bb\n_        tKflf\ni\nMP\nPayablt In Mra no\nfariWr   AuditBureau    of    firm**\"*\nThe\nLighter Side\nAmtBd\ni. ll*tn_IDAY.  JANUARY  24.   IMS\nP Cj   \u00bb\t\nNewfoundland Developing\niy Richard Squires, in a New\nmessage to the magazine\nl;v published In London,\nhe, \"1929 sees Newfoundland\nt die dawn of a great industrial development.\"\nhfturing 1928,\" he proceeds,\nM iron mines witnesses the\n(West production ever known,\nIth assurances through contacts recently concluded that\nserp will be at least a similar\nnnual output during the next\nI years. The paper mills mudt\n[ record in manufacture, and\ni substantial enlargement 01\nnth properties is projected\n.ring the coming year. The\njinfng of the lead-zinc depute of central Newfoundland\nregresses rapidly, and pros-\necting over the adjoining\nreas encourages expectations\nf substantial enlargements in\nlie mining industry shortly.\nho fisheries yielded satisfac-\ntWy results, and the govern-\nbent hopes to inaugurate\nleaaures which will much in-\ntease the value hereof.\" There\ni no more to the same effect.\nTtere is no doubt whatever\nfart the Ancient Colony has en-\nered an era of development\nnd prosperity, proportionately\nI its sphere resembling Can-\nla's present era of business\nbepansion.\n\"Sometimes I wish I waa rich,\nan' then again I'm glad ma an' Pa\nwon't leave our children notbln'\nta hate one another  about.\"\nSamson carried off tba galea of\nOaia.    Blrlurd took with him tha\nmillion-dollar gates.\nApparently tbe great advantage In\nbeing upper class la that you needn't\nact aa people do who wish to seem\nupper class.\nThe office crank Is on a diet and\nboasts of drinking only one saucer of\ncoffee  for  breakfast.\nIf some lady Oodlva should do lt\n\u25a0MB everybody would peek. It Isn't\nivery day you get to see long hair.\nIt's always a matter of sour grapes.\nCanadians in Europe who scold Canada\nmeat are those who can't coma home.\nAnd yet the movie people would\nbe poor, also. If tbey depended\non a collection plate.\nThe sexes aren't equal in one particular. A man can love a dog and\nstill adore hla mate.\nEndowment: A dead man's out-of-\ndate opinions tying up capital while\nmodem needs are unsatisfied.\nIt isn't insulting to advise a man to\ndo   a   thing   you wouldn't   do.     Tbe\neagle might advise the hen to stay In\nthe barnyard.\nModernism: Laughing at people\nwho are awed by a mere king;\nstanding with open month when a\nmult I-millionaire paasea by.\nBig eastern universities will play\nfo-vbali togather again. There's nothing like t mgh experience ln the\noutside world to make you appreciate\ntbe gentle ways of home.\nFABLE: TWO LADY TOURISTS\nTALKED POR AN HOUR, AND NEITHER BRAOOED ABOUT HER TRAVELS. JEWXLERY OR HOUSEHOLD\nCONVENIENCES.\nMuffins\nFruit cocktails\nBaked Fish\nlolled Potato** Tomatoes\nPen-Carrot Salad  \u25a0\nPineapple Oelatlne Dessert\nCoffee\noi a sn.VERW.iKr.\nThe bast thing about sterling silver\n. that lt la eolid\u2014will not wear offend therefore we may use It aa much as\n.a please without causing lu deterlor-\n\u2022tloo. Not long ago I went into a home\nhlcb had a specially built. shutter-\nIke rack right In tbe wallspece be-\n.een kl.chen and dining-room, to hold\nlver platters, dishes and dish covers,\n\"be owner of this house had designed\nhis clever device himself, before he\nullt tbe house. At first glance, n\nrtrarager might believe that he was\nsttslng a ventilator ln that hallway:\nnit. catching sight of a gleam of silver\nedge here and there\u2014meat. platters\nitandlng on their sides, etcetera\u2014he\nwould realise that he was looking at\npleoea of silver tucked Into crevices as\n'ettars are tucked Into their pigeon-\nroles in a desk.\nAa for our flatware, lt is best kept\nn a rack In a dining room drawer and\n'ill tarnish less lf bald ln such a rack.\n_ice a month, lt should receive a\ntulck rubbing wl b a reliable polish to\nestore its brilliancy and lustre. It\n.hould always be washed, after use, lu\n'rot, soapy water and then rinsed thoroughly tn clear hot wster while still\nwarm. Constant use and this washing\nwill prevent tarnishing.\nHowever, when solid silver has been\nstored for a time and has become badly\ntarnished this Is how to clean It: Make\na solution containing one teaspoon of\nsoda and one teaspoon of salt for eaoh\nquart of boiling water used. Pour this\nsolution into an aluminum pan and\nallow tbe silver to remain ln lr. tor a\nfew minutes, entirely covered by the\nliquid. The chemical action which takes\nplace during this Immersion will remove the tarnish. After taking from\nthla bath, wash lt In warm water and\nsuds of a mild soap, then rinse In clear\nwater and rub with a chamois or polishing clotb. Large pieces which can\nnot go into tbe aluminum pan will\nhave to be held ln the hot solution st\ndifferent angles\u2014first one portion and\nthen another\u2014till clean.\nTomorrow\u2014Readers'   Recipes.\nana aide, you might aa weU gat all\nout at once aa tta* drainage la all about\ntba one spot.\nIf after tb* removal of the teeth\nthere is - severe reaction, lt mat-\nthat some pus sockets of pockets were\ndisturbed during tbe extraction, and\ntbey are not draining well. Dont\nneglect to go badk to the dentist at\nthe time be appoints ao that he can\nsee the condition of tbe gum and\nsocket.\nYour dentist will tell you tbat in tbe\ncase of upper teeth, that ss many aa\nsix or eight may be extracted at one\ntime, whereas with lower teeth the\nremoval of two or three would be tbe\nsafe procedure, because the upper\nteeth have a much batter chance of\ndraining than the lower ones.\nIf the gums heal tn a normal manner and you are feeling pretty well,\nit will then be wise and sate to get\nmore   of   the   Infected   teeth   removed.\nRemember, your dentist likely knows\nyour, particular ease beat, and you\nshould follow hla advice, but generally\nspeaking tbe above suggestions should\nbe of help to you.\nWhy Not Goodwill Visits?\nThe time can easily be re-\nttembered when the aspirations\nIf Newfoundland, particular! v\nwder the regime of Sir Robert\nJond, were centered on hopes\nif American favor as to tariff\ntoanierce and capital for development. That time is past.\nFor now a quarter of a (senior, the iron ores of Newfound-\nand have been mined for the\njreat iron and steel industries\nit Nova Scotia.\nfc Canadian capital\u2014that of the\nb__olidated Mining & Smelt-\njg Company of Canada\u2014is de-\neloping Newfoundland's lead-\njnc deposits.\nI Capital, both British and Cauda, is behind the colony's\nItilway development and pulp\n\u00bbd paper industry.\n: Development and commercial\nblations are now so close that\n[is obvious the entire deletion\n_ the artificial boundaries be-\niween Newfoundland and the\n|ominion would be enormously\nthe interests of both.\nQuebec and Ontario exchange\n[will visits.   The president-\nof the United States has\nlit making goodwill visits to\nIts countries of Central and\nbuth America. King Edward\nI a matter of British policy\nlied to make goodwill visits to\nprious countries of Continental\nJOSEPH PLASTINO\nDIES IN SPOKANE\nMan,  Prominent   in   Kootenay\nFlorence and Yankee Girl\nMines Suffers Stroke\nSPOKANE, Wash.. Jan. 22.\u2014Joseph\nPlftstliio, 69, royal consular agent for\nItaly in Washington and Idaho, died\nMonday niRht at his home, after a\n.stroke suffered \"while ln his office in\nthe Rcft.'v buUdlng. He had suffered\nlor some time from high blood pressure.\nNVl'lvi; OF ITALY\nMr Plast'iio was born In It. lv, Mueh\nii. 1864. At the age of 12, Mr, Plast-\n'no. after receiving education ln the\nnnMic srhoi-ls. left his nnUve countrv\n-nd c. me to America, locattnn In New\nv\u00abt\u00bbt. whe'*- he attended school for nine\nmonth* .Worn the family removed to\nTock Hnven. Pa. Later he went to Denver, where he accent** emolovment on\n<. rniiroo., but at the same time fitu-\n\u2022unrt flnrf nt.t. nn>.i *>.hool whenever the\nrtr.Tv-rtnrVtv nrewtted.\nTn 1W7 Mr. P'astino came to Sno-\nvane end f\u00abr 10 \u00bbears was emrasted\nin \u00ab.n\u00abtr\u00bb.\u00bbHlon work for the North-\n\u2022-*i p\u00abr.|fio railway. At the end of\n*h-\u00bbt; tim\u00ab h* h\u00abd aoflii'mi sufficient\n. _..tt_i to mimoi. In real e\u00ab-nte, in-\nsiirnurft   \u00abnd   cmtraH-inir   biiK1\".**.   H*1\nK*M-\u00bb emrtnasft  nf 1t.iHf.lT.~K  _t, WinHn*-\n*..\u2014 on.i Tv\u00abnt; ttrtt* m. q**-\u00ab\u00bb.h street.\n-.inrfT \u00ab   P + g   TO rififvrY\nMr. P>--t\u00bb-.*. _\u25a0>_\u00ab n cmttiWor on\n*h\u00ab   rr>\u2014 \u2022a**.-.*'inn   wvw-m   nf   tn\u00bb   fltv>-\n\u2022\"*\u00ab\u00ab.   Portland & Seattle railroad near\nr<rimiftv.\nW\u00bb wm A (.-W-n+n-. ojn-1 Ianrrm fltnnV-\nVi^l-im.     In     . *_\u2022    f _.\u2666\u2022_\u2022\u00bb    Win.\u00bb\u00bb...\u00bb    rnln-\nnt |i_*mwHi etyyrX the Yankee Olrl mfn.\nit Salmo. B  C.\nCrawford Bay Institute\nPlan Old Time Dance\nCRAWFORD BAT, B.C.. tea. 38 \u2014\nMeeting ot the women- Institute w\u00bb-\n__. in the public hall Saturday alter\nsloa. Mm. A. J. Wilson, president\nrelng  ln  the  chair.\nAn old-time dance waa arranged lo\n*ebr__y. with Mra. a. Mclresor. M-f\n:> rieher and Mrs. E. Woolear te th'\n\u2022ommtttee ln  charae.\nThere waa a good ,\",cri^',\"f.*\",.\nwvenU Invited guests I>om Gray Creer\nis well as Crawlord 1\u00a3_.      .   .  __-.\u25a0\nA social hour was ai-ent at a nov\nKjmpetlUon. the winners b-'ns Mr\n?etei\u00bbon. Mrs. Anderson ot Gray Cree\nin. Miss Kunaton tying lor consila'W\nThe guest nrlre went to Miss B. Burr.\nTea was served ot the oltlce-s Mr-\nWatson. Mra. Prancls Mrs. Kl*\"?r\nMrs. King. Mrs. E. Woolgar and Mra\nGood.\t\nsladies' Aid at Procter\nRaises $250 in Year\nPROCTER. B.C.. Jan. 23\u2014The an.\nnual meeting ol the Procter lad'es ale\not St. Andrew's United chu-ch wa-\nheld at the home ot Mrs. V. Donaldso\"\nThursday altemoon.\nThe    report ot the treasurer shower!\nKotlfylng results, as over \u00bb3S0 han\nen raised during the year.\nAlter the meeting Mrs. w Dona dso'\nserved a dainty tea. Those preset\nwere Mrs. Donaldson. Mrs. G. \u00ablune'\nMrs Malcolm MacKinnon. Mrs. J.\nSewell, Mrs. MacCarthy, Mrs. C. Came\nMrs. A. Heighten. Mrs. A. MacKinnon,\nand  Mrs.  Lans  Applcton.\nPROCTER NOTES\nPROCTER, B. C., Jan. 23\u2014Mrs. H.\nLumb entertained a tew children at\nher home on Friday afternoon in honor\not her daughter Claudine's birthday.\nTho afternoon was spe\u00ab_ ln playing various games, after which a delicious\nsupper waa served. Those present wero\nSandy Ritchie, Barbara Seal, Faith Ritchie, Margaret MacKinnon, Barbara\nRltohie, Mary Merrlfleld, OUve Mac-\nLean, Alma MacMulUn. Hilda Helgh-\nton, Donald MacLean, Billy MacKinnon,\nLily Helghton, Jessie Settle. Isa MacKinnon. Elsie Bennett, K. Bliss, Kinney\nind Esther SchuUze.\nJ. R. Btohan returned to Nelson\nSunday after spending the week-end at\nhis home in Procter.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Foy left for Nelson\nlunday evening.\nMrs. C Cronln left for Nelson Sunday\nevening.\nMiss Ethel Merrlfleld ot Nelson spent\nthe week-end ln Procter visiting her\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. E. Merrlfleld.\nTom Williams of. Nelson spent Sun\nlay ln Procter visiting friends.\nSOUTH SLOCAN NOTES\nThe rich are different. Their teeth\n...e _emoved by a specialist Instead\no_  a motorist.\nIt Isn't charity, however, lf you give\na quarter and demand fifty cents'\nworth   of   gratuude.\nIn the old days you could prove\nculture by talking about books, nobody having yet learned to cover the\niubject with the word \"blah.\"\nTigers killed 10,000 people ln India,\nlast year, but they didn't make lt\nworse by hiring lawyers to prove the\n..cedents    unavoidable.\nThe thief who stole a hearse,\nthinking lt a sedan, probably realized his error when the rear occupant failed to offer any suggestions\nabout driving.\nCorrect thla sentence: \"He's a self-\nmade man.\" said the office gossip,\n\"But he can get rid of agents or\nsalesmen   without   being   discourteous.\"\nMini\n$0bP\nOf\nOuuis\nWD\nRemoving All Bad Teath\nat One Time\nTou have had an X-ray of your\nteeth, and your dentist ln'orms you\nthat about six or eight must be removed.\nNow what about getting all these\nteeth out at the one time?\nYou remember friends or acquaintances, faced with the same problem.\nand after having a number of teeth\nremoved at the one time, have had\nan Increase ln the severity of their\nrheumatic   or   other  symptons.\nNaturally you want to do the wl_st\nthing, and If your dentist has known\nyour particular teeth for some t^ne.\nhe can usually give you the best advice\non this.\nif the dentist d:ea not know you\nsnd your teeth, lt would be well to\nlet your family doctor examine you\nthoroughly as to the condition of your\ntemperature, pulse, blood pressure,\nand blood.\nHowever there are certain common\nsense rules that may help to guide\nyou. If you have teeth on both sides\nof the mouth that must be extracted\nthe sensible thing to do ls to have\nJust the teeth on one aide removed\nfirst. This gives you a chance to chew\nyour food on the other side, and thus\n!teep up your strength.\nFurther, if you have two or three\nteeth   adjoining   one   another   on   the\nTen Years Ago\n(From The Dally News, Jan. 23. 1B19)\nTwo  men  have  died  at  the  Mol'-\n^Tson   mine   and   five   are   seriously\n111 with the Influenza.   Ronald Stonier\nhe mine superintendent, waa one ot\nhose who died. -\n\u2022   \u00bb   \u00ab\nPrivate J. Stewart left St. John, N B\ncsterday for his home here.\n...\nGunner Hughes returned to his hom'\n\"i.    la.t   night   after   spending   si-\nmonths in a military hospital in Van.\nouver.\n.   *   *\nJ. Willis of Orand Firks is spendlnr\nhe week-end with friends ln ths city\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\niFrom The Dally News, Jan. 23. 1909)\nT. H.  Carney  of Kaslo 1* stopping\nhere on mining business.\n...\nA. E. Watts of Sllverton Is a visitor\nhere.\n\u2022   .   \u2022\nH. L. Rogers, manager of the Yankee\nGirl and the the Canadian Olrl mines\nat Ymir, la on a business trip to Nelson.\n...\nHarry   McLeod,   late   land   registrar\nwill  leave fur  Victoria shortly.\n...\nDr.  D.  S.  Morton,  general  secretary\nof  the department  of  temperance  oi\ntha city.\nthe Methodist church. Is a visitor in\n\u00bb   .   \u2022\nA. L. Browning  of. Cranbrook  la  a\nvisitor ln the city.     ^_^\ntoward more intimate relation.-;\nwith Newfoundland. That opportunity passed. But there il\nalways the opportunity for formal goodwill visiting, and this\nmatter should be considered by\nthe Canadian government. An\nannual goodwill visit exchanged\ncould be an agency of the utmost potency in bringing Newfoundland and Canada close to-\n%\nKeep i\nBottle Always'\nHandy\nEviry horns should ban Bach-\nley's Mixture \u2014 ready to afford\ninstant relief when any member\nof the family takes cold. Many\npeople also keep \"Buckley's\" at\ntheir place of work. A stp worte\nwooden in clearing- and healing\nthroat and chest\u2014and warding\noff \"Flu\" and kindred ailments.\nAt sll drUBgliti\u2014and guarantee-1\nW. K. Burkley,  Llstlte*.\n142 Mutual St, Toronto\n___\nMIXTURl\nActs like a ftath\u2014t tingle sip proves It\n.-it ami   -Oc\n'a    Diamond   Jubilee  gether, perhaps to the point of\nhave seen a move union.\nStock-Taking\nBARGAINS\nAs our yearly stock taking proceeds, finds us with\na lot of odds and ends which we close out each January at urcatly reduced prices.\nStarting With Today\nWe Are Offering the Public at\n20 to SO per cent Reductions\nAll our leftover Christmas goods and all odd lines,\neach da' will find seroial lines added to our\nBARGAIN COUNTERS\nCommitting of Heaters, Sleds, Hockey Sticks, Pads,\nBadminton Racquets, Skiis, China, Tinware, Stoves,\nCut Glass, Electric Lamps, Flower Pots, Smokers' Sets,\nBaskets, Brooms, Brushes,\nNow iB the time to load up your home, and for that\nBridge Party\nFir.t Come, First Choice \u2014     \u2014 Watch Our Windows\nNelson Hardware Co.\n' WhotenaU and Retail Quality Hardware\"\nNELSON. BC\nSOUTH SLOCAN. B.C.. Jan. 23\u2014Mrs\nI. J. Hendry wss a visitor In Nelsor\nTonday.\nMr. and Mrs. O. W. Humphry wer\n\u25a0 .son visitors.\nUl serrlce to U\u00bb Uts \u00bb. a. tovt \u20141\nheld Sunday afternoon In tho Units-\nchurch by tta* pastor. Hsr. O. _nt_y\nol Procter.\nA number of evmnathetlc friends of\nHARROP, B. 0., Jan. 32.\u2014A manor-   the family attended.\nMemorial Service Is\nHeld Procter Church\nAnd the first tip will\nconvince you it is best*\n\"SALADA\"\nTEA\n'Fresh from the gardens*\niu\nCANADIAN\nPACIFIC\nKootenay Lake\nService\nOwing to ice conditions, boat service between Nelson\nand Procter discontinued for present and train service\nsubstituted as under:\n8:10    P.M. 8:\u00ab0 A.M. Ar Nelson      LT. 7:00 AM. 8:00 P_I.\n7:15    P.M. 8:48 AM. Lv Procter    _Ar. 7:88 AH. 8-8 tit.\nSLEEPING CAR SERVICE\u2014Sleeper arriving Nelson, No. 12, will be parked for occupancy at Nelson station\nand go on to Procter following morning, connecting with\nsteamer for Kootenay Landing.\nSteamer service between Procter-Kooter.ay Landing-\nCrawford Bay-Ka8lo-Lardo and way ports will continue\non present schedule, with Sunday service to and from\nKaslo.\nJ. S. CARTER, District Passenger Agent, Nelson\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your hills of\n_uil_ing Material Coast\nLumhet a specialty\nJohn Burns& Son\nSimple Rules for a Balanced Diet\nht\n\"**\"\u25a0! ThlaJU-tsstsstsss _\u2014\u25a0_\u2014_\u2014\u2014\u2014\nPerhaps you have\nread ao much about\ncalories and carbohydrates that you think\nthis business of planning well-balanced\nmeals a very difficult one. It really\nisn't at all. Surely you can remember\nthese six simple rules, and if you follow\nthem, you may be sure that your family\nhas a well-rounded, health-giving diet.\n1. A quart of milk for every member of the family each day. ii. Two\nvegetables besides potatoes\u2014one of\nthese to be served raw (as in a salad).\n3. Two servings of fruit, i. One\nserving of meat or meat substitute (fish,\neggs, cheese). 6. Generous use of\neggs (served as egg or in custard or\nother egg dishes). G. An acceptable\ncereal (if white bread is served, include\na cereal like oatmeal). Frequently\nserve whole wheat bread, graham\nbread, and similar breads (as well as\nwhite).\nOf all these foods, milk is the most\nimportant. It is our best source of\ncalcium, the mineral bo necessary for\nbuilding strong, straight bones and\ngood hard teeth, his a good source of\nvitamins, those mysterious substances\nso necessary for health and for growth.\nIt is also a good source of tissue-building material (necessary for growth and\nto replace worn tissues).\nMilk on Whose Purity and\nRichness you can Depend\nI know of no milk supply so completely dependable, so uniform in quality, in purity, in cream content, as Carnation Milk. It is simply the best of\nwlwle milk, produced from selected\nherds under strictest sanitary conditions, evaporated to double creaminess\nand sterilized that you Kiay have an\nentirely dependable and economical\nmilk supply in its most convenient\nform.\nAnother thing that makes Carnation\nMilk so desirable, particularly for cooking, is the fact that it is \"homogenized\"\u2014that is, the cream globules are\nbroken up into minute particles and\ndistributed uniformly throughout the\nmilk, ao that every drop it doubly rich\nin cream. This extra-fineness of the\ncream particles gives an extra-fine, velvety-smooth texture to everything in\nwhich Carnation Milk is used.\nThere are so many important advantages about Carnation, that I am sura\nyou will be interested in having the\nCarnation Cook Book. It is free.\nWon't you send for it? Address Carnation Milk Products Co., Limited,\n134 Abbott Street, Vancouver, B. C.\nCarnation Cream ot.\nMushroom Soup\n1 can of mushrooms (3 oz.). (Get\ncan containing stems and broken\npieces), 2 tbsp. butter, 3 tbep. flour,\nyi tsp. pepper, 1 tsp. salt, 2 cups Carnation Milk, paprika. Drain and\nmeasure liquor from mushrooms and\nadd enough water to make 2 cups of\nliquid. Add chopped mushrooms and\nsimmer 15 minutes. Make white sauce\nof the butter, flour, seasonings and\nCarnation. Add mushrooms with their\nliquid and serve while hot.   Serves c.\nMakes the Creamiest Soups\nPRODUCED\nIN CANADA\nfrom\nCarnation Milk is doubly rich\nin cream. It makes the creamiest of soups and sauces, the\nsmoothest ice cream and\ncandy, the richest puddings,\nthe finest-textured cakes. And\nit keeps. Try it,\n(See recipe above)\nContented Cows\n\u2014 -\n THB NIB-SON DAILY m^B,  tHT^ST>*V MAtWIN*!, JAMTAP\nVsm\nI Semi-Annual\nSALE\nWOMEN'S   SLIPPERS\nAND    OXFORDS\nf3.8\u00bb AND fl.35\nMEN'S -BOOTS\n*-6S AND $7.35\nMEN'S   HEAVY\nRUBBERS\n10-fiJ. Leather Tops'\n?3.e5\nMI_S__r RUBBEfcgi\nSize 11 to 2\n554.\nCHILD'S RUBBSRS'.\n4 to 10V- 45*'\n20% Discount on all Fejts\nand Hockey Shoes\nR Andrew\n&Co.\ntraders in FootfasMon\nHEPHER PRESIDENT\nBOSWELL INSTITUTE\nlne   of  $150   or  to  serve  40  dan   fo.\n\u25a0aving liquor In other than a pitraa\nr.ouse.\nHooert Morel, appearing on a charg.\nof   vagrancy,   Has   remanded   for  etgh\n)NY MACK SENTENCED\nTO TWENTY-ONE DAYS\ntony Mack preferred to serve a 31-\nsentence rather than pay a \u00bb25\nwhen he appeared before Magls-\n_ John Cartmel ln city police court\nterday on a charge of being mtoiti-\n_1 ln a publlo place. He pleaded\nUty.\nAnnual   Reports   Shew   Good\nYear; Turnover lor Year\nBOewm, \u00bb\u00a3. Sam. M.\u2014The an-\nSl_i.___^\"_____Ftf lne Boaweli\nand Dlttote. rt_|MF__ltu_ was held\nto the UemorttfTptt, ,\u00aba\u00bburday, President W. _. Hepher testa In the chair\nTrie annual report showed that the\nmembers were taking roll advantage of\nthe services of the Institute ln the\npurchasing of stumping powder, nursery\n\" .ucts. certified wad potatoes and\nfencing. Tha msmfc-rshlp last\nid one.\nstatement showed a\nMM during the year\nhand of $30.\ncorrespondence was read\ninter, motttu III connection with \u2022\u2022our\nlog resummon of the road work between Ooat creak and Oinol. Particulars of the necessary road work to be\n*>. e thla soring ware also dealt with\nThe report of the fair committee was\nalso presented, together with tbe financial statement, which shows a very\nmall balance ln hand. J. R. Smith\nwe fair secretary, was aooninted a d_p-\ns\"\u00bbt\u00ab to attend the British Columbia\nFairs association meeting ln Nelson. Thp\nfrf-tln. was distinctly onnosed to the\ndoing am? with the 'mailer fairs.\nThar* Were a number of nominations-fdr the new directorate, the ballot i-ri. nln. K. Wallace. B. Jr. mtone.\nA. Mackte. 8. nourse and A. Henher.\nThe two auditors a\u2122.t .ted were A.\nH. Ascott and w. L. Henher.\nThe newiv sleeted board of airectot.\nheld a short ww^.ing and annointed\n**\u00bb fnllov-n\u00ab of. \u00ab-\u00bb: rVeeMent. A\nHsnber. vic.-nrsstd.it. . Johnstone'\nsecretary-treasurer. K. Wallace.\nSix Cases Heard\nOne Say, Police\nCourt Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK. B.C., Jan. 23.\u2014Six persona were arraltrned ln Cranbrook police court by Magistrate John Leask\nMonday. The caaea were various, ranging trom forgery to vagrancy ant) intoxication.\nFred Jaynes, who was arrested recently Ih Nelson and brought back to\nCranbrook bv police of this city waa\nremanded un_H Friday on charges of\ndealing with fonred checks.\nAlex MacDonald. of no fixed abode,\nwas charged with being Intoxicated In\na public nlace. Magistrate Leask sentenced him to 40 days wtth hard labor,\nlt   being   bis   third   offence.\nJoe Shemchuk. being unable to\ngive a sat* .factory account of himself,  was remained for eight days.\nMah  Kong   was sentenced  to pay  a\nMacLean was fined 100 feu\n'..ing drunk ln public, it was his sec-\nind offence.\nMagistrate Leask baa been commendea\nfor his action in sentencing MataoL\nto a term In the Nelson Jell for driving an auto while his license was suspended.\nMrse Murray Again\nIs Head ot South\nSlocan Auxiliary\nSOUTH flLOCAN. \u25a0\u25a0 C, Jan. 28.\u2014the\nannual meeting of the Woman's auxiliary waft Held at the home of Mr*.,trie\nAnderson Tuesday afternoon. Mr*. J.\nMurray,   presiding.\nMrs. D. J. Davis, the retiring secretary- treasurer jove a reewne of the\nyear's work, snowing splendid results\nA total of 23 members enrolled during\nthe   year.\nIn tht wring the auxiliary undertook\nto raise lunde lor necessary repair.\nand Improvement_ on the Vicarage\nMrs. O- K. Ashby was the delegate to\nthe annual Diocesan Conference at\nVernon In May. An autograph quilt\nwas worked and tbe various pledgets\nfully paid up- A life membership wa_\npresented to Mrs. Ashby when she\nleft to nuke her home In Nelson.\nThe financial statement showed re*\ncelpts to be #243.37. Expenditures\nwere: pledges, $10,20: vicarage repalts,\n\u00bb72.76; life membership, 838.87; delegate to conference, $27.06. A satisfactory balance was lsft.\nMrs. J. M-ttray was reelected president, Mrs. B. Anderson, vlce-gresr-\ndent, and Mrs, H. H. James, secretary-treasurer.\nMrs. Anderson served tea, assisted by\nMrs, J. Blason and Mrs. J. Mawer.\nBOSWELL NOTES\nB08WKLL, B. C. Jau. 23.\u2014Mrs. Bow-\nden of Reek Glen, Sask., is the guest of\nMr. and Mm. F. Kunst. Mrs, Bowden\nstated that there was far more snow\nhere than on the prairie.\nMrs. Charles Allen left Tuesday morning for Calgary, en route for the coast\ncities.\nCapt. C. R. Higgins of Yahk spent\nlast Monday ln Boswell visiting hts parents, returning  on Tuesday   morning.\nAnother carload of apples, mostly\nWagner and Spies, was loaded out from\nhere on Thursday the destination being Saskatoon.\nMrs. B, J. Cummlngs, who bas been\nreceiving treatment at the Kootenay\nLake Oeneral hospital, Nelson, during\nthe last week, returned home Monday\nmorning.\nW. Mclnvor of Sunshine Bay is visiting liis brother, J. Mclnvor of Boswell.\n(J($LS0CIEIY\nlti-ft coiutun ts uootiuctvd by\nMrs.  M.  i,  vigneux.   AU news ol\n* a sotuai uttiu.-, iuclutuug receptions, private tuiuerHmuneuts, per-\nttouai iMUiib, uu. iv*e\u00bbue, etc., will\nii,-^t.ar u_ una cui___u_. le.ephuue\nJars.   Vist-eux   at   ner   home   on\n) 6Uica street.\nI Yesterday afternoon at 3 o'clock tht\n' marriage of Laurie Marlon Mcmtyn.\nand Angus Waters Murray, now oi\nNelson, took place at the home or tht\nbride's mother, corner of Latimer anu\ncedar streets. Rev. W- C. Mawhlnney,\npastor of Trinity United church, of-\nilclatlng. Miss Mary K. Murray ana\nDavid A. Murray were tbe witnesses.\n\u2022 *   *\nOeorge Motion has returned from a\nbusiness trip to tbe coast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCharles Grant left for his home tn\nSllverton  yesterday.\nr77 \u2022    *   *\nMrs. De Toe and her daughter,\nTracey, or Ceeuegar spent yesterday ln\ntown shopping-\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. P. Ut tie wood, who has been tbe\nInspiration for aeveral social affairs\nduring her two weeks' stay In Nelson,\nwhere she has been the guest of her\nsister and brother-in-law, Mr. and\nMrs. Harold Lakes, Terrace apartments,\nleft on the noon train for her home\nla Edgewood, yesterday.\nWhitman Brewer, cf North Devon,\nhas been awarded contract to supply\ngravel to Frederlcton Roads and Streets\nDepartment, the figure being ln the\nvicinity of $7000 for 7000 cubic yards.\nW   R. Thompson  haa returned  trom\na business trip to the coast cities.\n...\n0. Wtdinary of Castlegar spent yesterday ln Nelson.\n* .   .\nRev. and Mm. C. D. Catchpole ol\nSouth Slocan paid a visit to Nelson\nyesterday. \t\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Oeorge Learns and her children\nlett yesterday for their home st Waneta.   after   a   visit   to   mends   here.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nC. Cronln, formerly of Procter and\nnow of Trail, was a visitor to Nelson\nyesterday.\n\u00ab   \u2666   \u2022\nMrs. W. Wlnstanley of Crescent Via.\nley  was a city shopper Tuesday.\n...\nMr. and Mra. Howard Dennis and\ntheir son, Garter, are Nelson visitors\nfrom Alnsworth. where Mr. Dennis Is\nsuperintendent of the Kootenay \"lor-\nence mine.\n* *   *\n1. X. Thompson, oreat Northern tele\ngraph official of Bt. Paul, Minn., left\nlast night for the coast cities on the\ncompany's  business.\n...\nMrs. W. H   Hufty and her daughter,\nMlaa   Florence,   of   Brilliant,   were   In\ntown shopping yesterday.\n* *   *\nMiss   Maymc   Burgess   left   tor   her\nhome ln Ymir yesterday, after a brief\nvisit   to  town.\n...\nH. o Holmes of Seattle le ln Nelson.\n...   .\np. Settle of Procter spent yesterday\nln town shopping.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Elsie Jewltt left for New Den.\nver yesterday.   -\nHARVESTERS LAND\nLN NELSON JAIL\ncMeagher's\n611 Baker Street.   Phone 200\nJANUARY\nCLEARANCE SALE\nQenuine Clearance of AU Lines of Dry Qoods\nand Heady'tO'Wear\nNever have we offered better value and never More have offered such a fine\ncollection of merchandise. All lines are new and up-to-date, but w\u00bb muat dean\nthese out before stock taking.\nParty  of   Six   Brought   From\nGolden; Happy to Get\nShelter, Food\n\"It won't be long, now.\" cheerfully\nremarked a~ young lad not more than\n17 yeara of age to Ws sewn companions on the Slocan train last night\nas the train neared Nelson. J?e was referring to the end of the journey for\nhis pals and himself who wore under\npolice escort from Golden. They were\non their way to the Kelson pmvi^c'a'\njail. Two will serve terms ol 30 dnye\nand six terms of 14 days. They were\narrested at Golden on Mn\u00abd iv for trespassing on C. P. R. property.\nOf the fiwht men under charge of\nProvincial Constables F. E. Bradner and\nP, Blckner of Golden, six were Brlt'sb\nharvesters bro,1*'M to _>\u00ab\u00bb'\u25a0<\u25a0 to '\"\u2022v*\nin the grain fields last harvest. Since\nharvest they had become -oennllese\nand had wandered about from town\nto town seeking work. It was while\nr>n their wav west that they were ar-\nwited at Oolden and sentence to\nterms ln Jail. Owing to over-crowding\nryt the Golden ttiil the men wer*\nbrought to Nelson. They were on the\nroad two days making five changes\nof trains and boats between Golden and\nNelson.\nOF -X\u00bb   TO   OBT   SHKHKR\nTo seek re. une from the zero weather\nof tbe oast few dava the immigrant*\nwere glad to tret shelter any \"Ince and\nseveral reouestetl arrest; to scure fo-xi\nand a Dlnce to . leeo. Tbev were not\nhard prisoner* to hartdle They .o*ed\namong themselves, san . songs, snip* ed\nen occasional fan. read C. P. R. folders, commented ^*\u00abn the price of a rull\na^d boat' ticket to old England, and\nseemed quite content upon their arrival ln Nelson. fl\u00ab-\u00bb- were b>\u00bb\u00bbwh-\u00bb.\u00ab\u00bb\nproudly photos of relatives and kiddles\nleft  over tho waters,\nWhile t^e m\u00ab\"1 wr* well &** *\u00bb_\u2022*\nShowed the need of shaves, and they\nwere not lone in waahlnv up when thev\n\u2666oo* the Slocan lake boat at Roseberry\nThere was one ra*or on exhibition\namong the eUht men. On the beat\ntrio and In the train the prisoners were\nallowed almost comnlete freedom and\ntbev watched with interest tbe various\n_ettleme\"t.B nasued en ro\"t?. A'*'-.-^!'-\"\nto one of tbe men, he never had eaten\nor enjoved more tbe d.nner on the\nArrow Lakes boat. The oarty .were\nmostly   Scottish   and   English.\nWhatDoYouThink?\nNotice to Correspondents\ngood\nTbe Dally News welcomes corre-\nnpadence on any matter of public\nInTcreet. but as evidence of in\nfaith, correspondents must\nthslr letters, though not necesaar\nfor publication. A non de plur\nmay be used If the writer doe* not\nwish his name to be publlshsd.\nTba Dally News bas several letters\nwhich arc being withheld becauM\nthey are ononyrflous.\nAUTHORS AND BEADING\nTo the Editor of The Dally N\u00abws.\nSir-\nMay I please add a postscript to my\nletter  to you  of  Tuesday,  under tbe\nabove heading.        ,\nPor an up-to-date enunciation .of life\nunder our present Industrial system 1\nwould choose a. B. Shaw's \"Intelligent\nWoman's Guide to Socialism and Capitalism.\"\nWhether or no you agree with Shaw's\nviews on the reconstruction of society\nthis book Is chock-full of Information\nand debatable subject matter.\nI am, sir.\nYours truly,\nCHARLES   STILES.\nTrail. B. c. Jan. 33, lt_>.\nPostscript arrived too late to be add\ned to Mr. SUle's letter\u2014Editor.\nJIOBE ABOUT BOOKS\nttllor, Dally Raws\nsir\u2014\nI am In no way qualified to advise\n\"Old   Tlillcum\"  what  books  to read.\nHalf the time I dont know what to\nread myself It would be Impertinent to\na\u2014- _\u00bb ______    \u00a3_ u;brw_>. tan\nWomen's\nModel Coats\nat $16.50 to $50 Less\nA  wonderful   saving\non \u2022 first class Coats.\nThese are the smartest models shown this\nseason. Beautifully'\ntailored of finest\nquality  Broadcloth,\nLydia    Cloths    and\nPeachbloom.      Richly\nlined    and    trimmed\nwith best quality Fox\nOpposum,  or  Alaska\nSable.   Mostly shawl\ncollars.   Colors. Navy\nBlack,    Brown    and\nTans.      Sizes  16 tp\n40.     Regular   values\n$50.00 to J145.00.\nSALE PRICE,\n933.50 TO 995.00 EACH.\nAfternoon and Street\nDresses\nat Sale Price\nAll our smartest Dresses are\nincluded in this showing,\nDresses of Satin, Georgette,\nand Canton Crepe, in light\nand dark colors, including\nNavy and Black. Sizes range\nfrom 16 to 44.\nRegular values $27.50\nfor ....:.._.. J22.00\nRegular values $35.00\nfor  ?28.00\nRegular values $45.00\nfor  930,00\nRegular values $59.00\nfor  947.00\nWomen's\nKnitted Suits\nat $10 Each\nWonderful value in three-piece Suits.\nMade of Pure Wool yarns in Heather\nmixed. Assorted colors and in sizes up\nto 42. Regular values to $17.50. SALE\nPRICE, 910.00 EACH.\nWomen's\nKnitted Suits\nat 20 Per Cent Less\nSports Suits of the highest order. Cardigan or Pull-on styles, with plain or\nchecked skirts to match. Sizes 36 to 40.\nRegular values $22.50 to $33.50. SALE\nPRICE, 918.00 TO 927.00 EACH.\nSave 20 Per Cent on\nComforters\nImported Down Comforters. Made of\nfinest of quality Down with covering of\nSatin or Sateen. Assorted colors and\ndesigns. All full sizes. Regular $12.50\nto $39.00. SALE PRICE, 910.00 TO\n931.20 EACH.\nMillinery\nat Half Price\nLook at the\nticket and pay\nhalf. A wonderful collection of\nsmart models\nin medium or\nsmall outlines.\nAssorted colors\nand styles. No\ntwo alike. New\nYork and Imported models.\nRegular values $7.50 to $15.00. CLEAR-\nAT 93.75 TO 97.50 EACH.\nthe library committee are making fine\nselections .for the municipal library, and\ntheir collective experience should be\nvaluable.\nMuch advice 1_ shaken, and seldom\ntaken. A Harvard gentleman recommends a five foot shelf of books, whether long or high, I know not.\nDr. Frank Crane and Glenn Frank,\nsyndicated writers of tbe V. 8. A. advise <'ll and sundry ae to mental welfare. Dr. McCoy approves of a raw carrot for bodily comfort. Mr. Barton ls\na law unto himself, and what lt IB nobody knows, while the futilities of Mr.\nBrisbane make one weep-\nBert ls right about present day literature. Terrible! Here am I waiting for\nEdgar Wallace to write a new detective\nthriller, and lf I want to read Che funnies, X have to wait my turn at home,\nusually finding them under Junior's\npillow. Old Tllltcum says be ls wltb\nAlice In Wonderland just now, presumably a sacrificial urge on his part\nfor his kiddles. Similarly, I am ln Jesso\nJames cowboy wonderland, you know,\ntwo-fisted, red-blooded, son of a gun\nhe-men with hearthrugged legs. Bang,\nBang, stick >m up, stranger. Wltb tbe\nyoung lady, however, X linger with\nHumpty Dumpty on the wall, being severely corrected for even the slightest\nslip. His Victorian favorites are not\nmine. Dickens I find too stodgy, and\nscott I only read\u2014force majeure\u2014at\nschool- Stratton Purler too sentimental,\nand Jerome too stuffy. Service a leatherette imitation (bolstered by sangtn-\nuary language) of tbat great master\nmechanic of words Rudyurd Kipling,\nthe saga man of Empire. I am not even\nouallfled to adjudge the competitive\nmerits of the Funnies and the Comics\n(America v Brltlain) the former more\ncrude and virile in caption and atyle:\ntbe results about tbe same. I spoke to\none man about the atbove authors; tbe\nonly Porter he knew was Porter-Idaho.\nHe thought Kipling wrote tbe Ten Commandments, and tbat some of tbe others were probably listed on tbe Toronto\nboard 1\nI have a few books left. Books are\nlike brollies. Kiss them good-bye and\nwish them a comfy corner tn their\nnew home. One gains the Impression\nnowadays tbat more and more writers\nare determined to write books, and\nmore and more people equally determined not to read tbem. Easy enough\nto write a book, but try and get it\npublished It I do not recommend Bert\nto buy any books at all. Borrow 'em I X\nsuggest a patron Saint for all book\nborrowers, Saint Columba, for It was\nthe borrowing of a book which started\nthe saint on his missionary  labor*  in\nIreland (not yet completed) ln remorse\nat tbe thousands who were slain over\nthe question of the return of that book,\na copy of the Gospels\nTwo sweet young things were debating what to give a mutual friend for\nChristmas, one at them suggested ft\nbook. \"Oh, no\" said Mabel, \"he's got\na book.\"\nGERALD. S.\nJanuary 38, 1928.\nNELSON ASSESSMENT\nDISTRICT\nNotice is hereby given that a\nCourt of Revision and Appeal,\nunder the provisions of the \"Taxation Act\" and tho \"Public\nSchools Act\" for the Nelson Assessment District, respecting the\nassessment Roll for tbe year 1039\nwill be held at the Court House\nIn the City of Nelson on Tuesday,\nFebruary 5th, 1839, at the hour\nof 10 o'clock ln tbe forenoon.\nDated at Nelson, B.C., January\n11,   1938\nI\nE. G. MATTHEW\nJudge of the Court of Revision   and   App*\u00bbal\np\nBUSH S \u00bb2\nETERSONS\nIPES\nAU Sixes\nCoal! Wood! Coal!\nLet tu fin your orders today for Dry Wood\u2014any length.\nGait Lump Coal\nNELSON TRANSFER CO., Ltd.\nCor. Vwnon \u00ab_ 8t\u00abn_.   SU.\nNetaoB. a a\nPHONE 35\nIt's\nPasteurized\nHealth authorities advise the use of pasteurized milk as the safest method of in-\ni\nsuring  absolute  protection   in   your   milk\nsupply.   We guarantee delivery by 6 a.m.\nCURLEW CREAMERY CO., Ltd.\nICE CREAM\nBl'TTEB\nAll Ifi-KIl}' Vilateurlwd Prndnria\nMILS\n\u25a0__.\nJ\n I*_ga SU\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY MOR\n\u00bb\u00bb\u00abw\u00bb~\u2014~\u00ab~~\u2014~\u2014~~\u00bb'\"   * ii\u2014a\u2014ssaaiaai       i \u00bb\u00ab,_i.\nSING, JA'.UARY 94. 1<**>\nOffensive Catarrhal\nConditions Ended by\nFamous Specialist\nSuccessful Home Treatment Originated by Dr.\nW. O. Coffee Which Assures Quick\n* Relief for Nasal Catarrh\nFree Trial Sent to All Sufferers\nTW\u00bb la a generous offer. An offer ot n\nregular, scientific, carefully prepared and\ntested home treatment for catarrh of the\nnose, throat, bead and air passages absolutely tree. No strings to lt in any way-\nIt l.i open to everyone\u2014to every catarrh\nsufferer in the entire United States, livery\nsufferer, everywhere, who reads this announcement, should unhesitatingly accept It.\nThere are sure to be thousands of these\ntreatment* given away. The more th. better ; because It ls certain that all who make\nthis free teet will prove to their satisfaction\nUie _\u00bbrth of Dr. Coffee's famous treatment,\nthnt---Kvcry self-treatment will make a\nvertnuast booster.\nFor no matter how much you are told\nbatlnJT catarrhal conditions, or of tho thousands who have been given complete frce-\ndimi by Ita use\u2014a real test\u2014a chance to\n_-tu_liy try it anil its reactions\u2014in your\nnavicular cue Is better than all expUwa-\n___.\nTliU treatment for catarrh\u2014for freedom\ntrom that condition, relieve* and forestalls\nmany feared and distressing situations. A\nreal teet la hotter even than the real testimonials from those who have been given\nfUet wonderful relief. And when the glft-\ni_>atm__ has been tried, you will wonder\nwhy thl* wonderful method was never\n\"Uric, to your attention before.\nDr. Coflee won national renown as a\nnoted catarrh and deafness specialist. He,\ntoo, suffered wltb catarrh, deafness and\nbead noises and many of Ita complications.\nInnumerable treatments failed to better his\nouUttlou\nb This Your Condition.\nHe experimented until he found a way\ntbat gave blm real and actual relief In a\npermanent way. Fo_r.r_r.ir, this, lie treated\nliterally thousands of sufferers ln tbe same\nmanner. Many have written, after completing the treatment, expressing thank.-* for\ntheir recovery: for their absolute freedom\nfrom colds, nose, bronchial and throat discharges; from poisoned systems, foul\nbreath, bronchial troubles and eveu. rheumatism and Intestinal troubles. All due, as\nthey say, to their catarrhal condition.\nCatarrh Is a Handicap\nDirt and dual, from contaminated sections are deposited in the nose and throat.\nwith every breath. Much of it Duds Its way\nInto the mouth, for uasnl catarrh causes the\ndisgusting, offensive mouth breathing. The\nImpurities In this filth laden air are deposit?- ln the catarrhal fluid\u2014the mucus.\nSoon lt finds its way Into the body\u2014nod It\nls a strong constitution Indeed that ecu\nwithstand tbe light, once It is started.\nThousands Recommend\nOr. Coffee's Treatment\nDon't miss this chance lo make Hie acquaintance of this logical, scientific snd\npurely medical catarrh treatment. A treat-\nnient, the worth of which Is attested by so\nmany who have written of tbclr relief.\nA treatment which has given complete\nfreedom to sufferers everywhere as grate-\nful letters will prove. It Is tbe result cf 43\nyears of active medical preparation aud\npractice. More than fonr decades devoted\nto eye, car, nose and throat work.\nSlowly and carefully lt was developed\u2014\nuntil at last, after many thorough, painstaking tests, Dr. Coffee was convinced that\nhe had the liest treatment, the most tffis?-\ntlve course he bad ever found. Its Buceess\nIn the past proves that it accompUshes its\npurpose. Aud It Is free on trial to you.\nJust send the coupon.\nDeafness Due\nto Catarrh of\nAirPassages\n.uthorities Blame Ear Tubal Catarrh for 90 Per\nCent of Deafness Throughout the World\nFree Trial Offer to All Sufferers\nAccording to avthor.t.M who bast their\nassertions on years of research and actual\nmydical observation and practice, 90 per\ncent of the deafness in tho worl 1 today is\nnut to catarrh\u2014ear tubal catarrh.\nNot only _\u25a0 ear tubal catarrh which Is\nreally a development of nasal catarrh,\nUaniQcl for deafncin, but at its door arc\n)*itl many other dl-case*, auch as ntomarh\n\u2022 jUarrli, poisoned conditions of the body,\n\u2022 ftd a generally diseased condition.\nTl_te May Be Relieved\nTills condition toay be relieved. Dr. W.\n\\ Coffee, a widely known specialist In the\n\"idle West for many years, developed a\nu_ troatment for deafness, head noises\ntta ear tubal catarrh, and catarrh Itself,\ntrough his method, it is possible to rem-\nr the catarrhal condition in many cases\n1 make hearing practically normal once\nt.   It has bean proved thst In many\nitfcli is true.\nGreat Success\nrhtnomenal success has attended the\nCoffee home treatment.   More than\nve.O.o cases of deafness, head noises due\ni ear tubal catarrh and ordinary nasal\nurrh have used this method in all _-_-\u2022\nl_o_ the country and out of this number\na huge r umber !iave reported complete\nsatisfaction.\nMo-t of these sufferers have been pecple\nwhocc hearing wan bad In one ear and was\nrapidly getting bad in the other. With every\ncold, tbe henrtng grew w^orso. This eoudl-\ntion wsb relieved for many; relieve-! net\nonly tor the time but tin catarrhal condition was bettered and in many cuoca all\ntraces of the disease were gone.\nDeafness _tri-.e. at all o^es\u2014and Dr.\nCoffee's home treatment has been used by\npeoplo of sll ngo_. I_y this method many\nwho were apparently dewtined to go\nthrough life wtth the handicap of impaired\nhearing were made normal once more.\nImprovement General\nPhj-Bic.a\u00a33 state, authoritatively,, loo,\nthat In the. c caws doubtlixw ether diseased\nconditions were combated and relieved by\nthe defeat of catarrh; for lt no longer\nPoured its dally portion of poison into the\nhuman (-yateiu and the b .i!y was no longer\nrequired to une a great portion cf its\nstrength ln throwing o_f this poison. Ah a\nresult lt was better able to combat, new\ndisease and the general physical condition\nwas bettered ln addition ut the relief given\nfor deafness.\nFree Trial Treatment\nl\u00bbr. W. O. Coffee, for ninny year* on eminent sitedftlM In the middle west, and ortc-\n\u25a0 iiat..r of this Uome Treatment which has greatly benefited thousand, of sufferers\nSidelights on this Treatment for Ear Tubal\nDeafness, Head Noises and Nasal Catarrh I\nKn__t-_\nl.lterally thousands of people from\ndifferent sections of the t'n.tec. States\nhave ujrrl this -special, original homo\ntreatment. Not only have many found\nrelief from distressing head uots.es but\nrestoration of good or normal hearing\nas well.\nContrary to the general belief, deafness and head noises due to ear tubal\ncatarrh often lend themselves to treatment and rellof very readily. Tho peculiar construction of Ihe ear tn Its relation tc the rtaa_] passages both create.\na condition which results in deafnes.\nand makes puBSdble a ready relief when\nthat is corrected. This was tho basts of\nthe home treatment as perfected by Dr.\n\\V, O. Coffee which has resulted In relief to thousands of sufferers from deaf-\nness and head noises from oar tubal\ncatarrh, and from nasal catarrh itsolf.\nThose who are just beginning to\nnotice that they are losing their hearing In one cur and with the coming of a\ncold find the other ear affected- are\nespecially urged to try Dr. coffee's\nHome Treatment. Many who are now\nstone deaf may have been made to hear\nagain lf their coses had been properly\ncared for at the first showing of dullness of hearing.\nMany cases of deafness are caused by\ndry catarrh\u2014a t ype which gives no\nnoticeable  discharge or symptom.\nInsurance authorities place deafness\nin the list of those defects which add to\nthe risk of the insured life. Many railway accidents, accidents In the street\nwith automobiles and in practically\nevery walk of life are t.ue to deafness\nor dullness cf hearing. This condition In many cases can be corrected\n\u2014 If the condition Is duo to ear\nlubal catarrh. This form of catarrh is\nresponslblo for practically _0 per cent\nof the deafness today, authorities state.\nThere Ii BO 0-.lH.iHon ettnehed to\nthis Heme Treatment plan. It Is simply\na means proving'!.- the world that such\na thinf. ae relief for deafness, dullness\nof hearing and head noises from ear\ntubal catarrh and nasal catarrh itself,\nis possible. There Is little doubt of what\nthis treatment will do; fcdt the sufferer\nis not sure unless it is proven, tho facts\nthat it Is effective and has given relief\nIn thousands of cases will never bo\nknown by vlctlmc of thla terrible affliction.\nDeaf Since Childhood;\nHearing Greatly\nBenefited This Way\n\u00ab___'-'.\u00bb\u2022_\u00bb    s^ntf** t**'\"\njBH__SSK::^':^v                     4-I      W\nw*\nMcBrlde\nChronic and Acute Deafness End*\nMrs. Mona McRride of Illinois, says,\n\"This ls to certify that since having\n\u2022rarlct fever when a llttlo girl, I have\nbeen hard of hearing, and for the past\nfour or five years I have been almost\nentirely deaf. A few months ago my left\near beg..n to discharge. I found it to\nbe abscessed and discharging a foul\nfluid. Nothing seemed to stop lt and\nfinally I tried Dr. Coffee's treatment. To\nmy surprise and delight the hearing In\nthe ear which was partially deaf for\nnearly 20 years has returned and the\nabscess has healod. Now I can hear a\neoitvorsatioa. st* feet away. I didn't\nbelieve tt possible and I certainly advise\nanyone suffering with deafness to try\nthis treatment. X obtained relief ln a\nr-hort time\/*\nDr. Coffee's Home Treatment for Deafness has\nbeen used by over 500,000 persons. It will benefit\nyou likewise provided you are not totally deaf from\ndisease of any kind, or from shock, or from any cause\nwhere the whole hearing apparatus has been entirely\nbroken down.\nEar Tubal Deafness\nSuccessfully Treated by\nSimple Home Method\n25,000 Trial Treatments Given Free for the Next\n30 Days to Sufferers from Deafness, Head\nNoises and Catarrhal Conditions\n________ '\n. ' ,\nDr. W. 0. Code., for many years an eye, ear, nc:e and throat . i___al_)t In th. middle\nwest, developed a treatment for deafness and dullness of bearing from car tubal cn.tnr__\nand for catarrh itself which has resulted In the restoration of hearing to hundreds.\nBasing his treatment on the fact that ln practically 90 i_r eent of the cases, loss or\n-   ta In __..__\nscats-\nhearing Is due to a catarrhal condition. Dr.Coh. \u2022 by concentrating his efforts in that__d'.\nproved thai restoration of hearing Is not a myth. Ulerally thousands of people from all (\nsections of the United Stales have taken this eriglual home treatment and havo been ben- -\nefitcd. letters from hundreds of these people attesting to the effectiveness of (Ms mttho*.\narc en file here.\nDr. Coffee never claimed that his original 1\ntreatment would restore hearing to all cases\nof deafness, but be said if the deafness or\nhead noises are caused from a catarrhal\ncondition and the tissues of the middle ear\nare not damaged, the hearing should be restored to real good or normal. Basing bis\nexperiment.) ln his office en this practical\nrelief of these conditions, be positively demonstrated that the restoration of hearing to\nmany severe cases is au easy, practical\niblng for the sufferer to accomplish for\nhimself at home.\nLiterally thousands of people from different sections of the United HMtes have used\nthis original home treatment snd many\nfound relief from distressing bead noises\nand restoration of good or normal hearing.\nTells of Development\nYears ago. Dr. Coffee, himself, began to\nsuffer with bead noises, dullness of hearing\nand with catarrh. lie was rapidly losing\nhis hearing. It was bad In one ear and with\nevery cold It would get bad iu the other.\nSlowly, but surely his hearing appeared to\nbe leaving him. He naturally tried every\ntreatment that be knew of. as deafness iu\nhis profession would have been fatal to bis\nsuccess. After a great loss of time aud when\ntwo operations had failed to give permanent\nrelief he calmed his fears and began to\nanalyze the cause and effect of the trouble.\nBasing bis treatment on tbe results of\nthis stndy he evolved a system which he\nbelieved would remove the handicap of\ndeafuess lf anything would. There waa\nnothing magical about \\). It was a logical\nscientific treatment, and within a short\ntime be began to Improve. After some time,\nbe was normal again.\nHe did nothing spectacular: all he did\nwas to slowly but surely remove tbe causes\nof the deafness, and when the causes were\nremoved, bo was able to hear again.\nTreatment Srul to Thousands\nAcquaintances and friends of the doctor's\nInquired as to the treatment, and soon ho\nwaa overwhelmed wltb requests for the\nmethod. To treat this number of people in\ntime allotted to office boors would have\nbeen impossible; and so, he started to develop a borne treatment. After careful\nconsideration he effected a course which\nhe believed to bo effective. He allowed a\nnumber to try lt at home.without the assistance of a physician, and found tbat tbey\ncould do the work with almost the efficiency and the good results tbat a doctor\ncould.\nTells of Homo Treatment\nChanging the treatment and developing\nlt\u2014adding here and taking away there,\nafter several years, the \"home treatment\"\nwas perfected. Now It Is possible for- anyone, anywhere, with Just ordinary household surroundings, to treat themselves for\nrelief of deafness, dullness of hearing or\nhead noises from car tubal catarrh.\n500,000 Treated for\nEar Tubal Deafness and\nCatarrh, by Home Method\nA remarkable record waa established\nby Hr. \u00ab. O. Codec, for many years aa\neminent eye, ear, nose and throat specialist at Davenport, Iowa, who original cd this trcaiment for deafness, head\nnoises from car labal catarrh, and for\nordinary nasal catarrh.\nDuring his I.\", years at prac\u2014tag\nphysician, he probably established _\nrecord whloh no other physician ta Met\ncountry can match. The records show\nthat more than \u00a300,000 people sulterM*\nfrom deafness, head noises from oar\ntubal catarrh, and from nasal catarrh,\nhave used this treatment. These peafiSa\nlire in all sections of the country and\nhate been treated, la the majority ot\ncases, at home, using (he home tre*. ,\nment tor this distressing condition, aa.\ndeveloped by Dr, Coffee.\nThe results of these' different\nhave been gone over mm I complied, and.\nthe beneficial effects of th\u2014 home system\nof treatment have been proved. When\ntbe average physician: has treated Sfty\ncases with one definite system of treat,\nment, It Is sufficient to demonsttsta\nwhat It will do. Dr. Coffee treated thou-\nsands of such cases. Letters from people who have used this home treatment\nare on Ale here aa proof of the wonder-\nfid results.\nExplains Free Offer\n;_'\nTo prove that thla treatment la effective\n\u2014that deafness, dullness ot hearing and\nbead noises from ear tubal catarrh, atd\nnasal catarrh can be treated and relieved\nat home, 25,000 trial borne treatments will\nbe given away. These announcements are\nbeing made In newspapers throughout tbe\nentire country and quickly the tree demon-\nstrati'.'u packages will he gone.\nThose who are suffering vlth deafness,\ndullness of hearing or head noises from ear\ntubal catarrh, may try fro\u00bb. at no cost to\nthem whatever, tills original treatment.\nEven tbe parcel post charges are prepaid\nand they arrive at the home of the deafness\nsufferer free ot all cost or obligations.\nIt Is Sent Free\nBo tend the conpon ln today. If yon art ft\nsufferer from deafness or head noises from\near tubal catarrh, or simply nasal catarrh,\nwhich may cause you to become deaf, you\nwill receive a free treatment for this distressing condition.\nDo this now\u2014while this offer is before\nyou.\nFree Trial Treatment Coupon\nDR. W. O. COFFEE CO.\n1021  Bt. James Hotel Bldg, Davenport, Iowa.\nPlease send me your Free Trial Treatment, and your Free Book on \"Deafness,\nHead Noises and Catarrh,\" both by prepaid parcel post. It la understood that this\ndoes not obligate me In any nay.  (Either print your name aud address or write\nplainly.)\nName\nStreet or B. F. D..\n.State\nTown \t\nDo yon want treatment for deafness and tot bead noises, or simply for nasal\ncatarrh? State which.\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\nI\n TOU NttSOM BIOCT !JBWB, TBTTRSB'AV WRWtG, JaTJTTXR? 21, !W0\nootenay Cities Share in the Cwrling Leads So Fai\nROWS IN\nLEAD, TRAIL\nCUP AT BONSPIEL\nHome Rinks Enter the\nhts; Nelson 2, Rossland,\nKlmberley 1 Each\nCE'S FAMILY RINK\n)NG NELSON WINNERS\nat  and Jackson  Rinks\n|om Kimberley Advance\nin Short Day\nB.C.,  Jan. 33\u2014Of  the  corn-\nin   the   Trail   cup  comoetttion\ncurling  'sole,   here who moved\n* eights today, (our are from\nfrom  Nelson  and j_ne eadb\nand and  Klmberley\nls considered a go\"d renreeen-\nae  TraU  rinks  entered  ln   tht\ntion by far outnumbered those\none ottfer city    There were 23\n*es  entered.   S3   Nelaon,   eight\nfour Klmbe*iev and one each\nOman   Camp   and  Movie\nYle rink, skipped by S. Oray,\nid  defeat   ln   its  first  match   at\n..nds erf  Bunryeat  of  Klmb-r'ev\noday  moved   Into  the  eights   hv\nng   S.   W    Razehrood   of  Trail,\nhapman   Camp  rink,  skloped  bv\nJackson,  defeated W.  Format  of\nn tbe Drellmtuarles but fell oe-\n. G.  Bunyan of  Nelson ln the\ntwos    Bunyan   moved   Into   tht\ntodfv \u00bbt Uie expense of Howard\nrlnTr of Nelson.\n'\u25a0 WINS\nIC. Vance, whose rinks consists\nher and three sons, of Nelson\nls way Into the eights by beat-\nW. Blngay of Trail.\n. rinks which moved into the\nwere sklpoed by J. E. Carter, U.\nurzL R. C. Crowe and O. c.\nRossland's rink was skipped\n\"1\n*S  RKAITTS\nplete  results  of today's matches\ncompetition   were;\n2n   T.   beat   Bush   <J:   Carter   9.\nunders  8:  Woodburn  11.  beat\nCrowe 10. beat Wade 8:  Burn-\n0.  beat  Hazelwood   8;   McKay  9.\nurray 8: Vance 8, beat Blngay 8;\n10.  beat   Dodlmead   8.\nDULUTH DEFEATS\nST. PAUL, OVERTIME\nST. PAUL, Minn., Jan. 33\u2014-After Bt.\nPaul had taken a 3-0 lead tn the\nflrat period. Duluth rallied ln the eec-\nond to tie the ecore. winning the\ngame 8 to 3, after four mlnutea of\novertime play -here tonight. In tbe\nAmerican  Hockey  aaaoclatlon.\nHONORS DIVIDED\nEVENLY IN GRAND\nCHALLENGE EVENT\nTrail,   Nelson,   Rossland   and\nKimberley  Rinks Go to\nEights in Bonspiel\nONLY ONE TRAIL\nRINK SURVIVES\nIN NELSON CUP\nWINDSOR VICTOR\nIllARA   PALLS.    Opt..   Jan.   33 \u2014\n11_    Bulldog,   stepped   Into   the\nI la Pall* camp tonight and carried\n5 to 0 victory.\nTRAIL. B.C., Jan. 38\u2014Of the four\nNelaon rlnka which had reached the\nsixteens of the Grand Challenge competition of British Columbia Curling\nbonaplel here, two moved Into thT\neights today. Ho more than threr\ncould have moved aa two were draw,,\nagainst each other. The other tin\nbeing knocked out by E. w. Hazelwood\nof Trail.\nTrail rlnka held  their ground,  foil\nout of seven moving into the eight-.\nOne Trail rink moved Into the eights\nat  the expense  ot  another.\nRossland and Klmberley are represented In the eights by one rink each\nskipped by J. J. O'Neill and R. Stephens respectively.\nNelson rlnka In the eights are A.\nJeffs and W. M. Vance. They reache\nthis stage by defeating O. I. Murray\nof Trail and H. M. Whlmster of Nelson respectively today. Trail rinks\nwhich were successful today were\nskipped by E. w. Hardwood. J. Buchanan, R. Sommervllle and B. Blner\nAfter wining Its first match, Moyle .\nonly entry skipped by 8 Oray, fell by\n,v_ wayside, when It clashed today wtth\nJ. J. O'Neill of Rossland. Chapman's\ncamp's only entry, skipped by A. B.\nTackson, Joined the great majority when\n't lost to J. Baldfrey of Trail In th\"\npreliminaries:\nTHE RESULTS\nOrand Challenge\u2014Jeffs. 7. beat Murray, 3; Crowe, 5, lost to Stephens. \u00ab:\nDouglas 0. lost to Hazelwood, 8: Buchanan. 10, beat Smith. 3; Oray. 6, lost\nto O'Neill. 0: Vance, 17, beet Whlmster. 9: Bumyeat. 0. lost to Sommer-\nvnle, 11, ; Blner 0, beat Woodburn. 8.\nKITCHENER WINS\nKITCHENER. Ont., Jan. 38\u2014-K'teh-\nener Plying Dutchmen chased their\n>lnx by defeating Buffalo Bisons 4 to\n2 ln a Canadian Pro hockey game tonight. Prior to tonight the Bisons\nhad taken three straight games from\nKitchener.\nThree   Nelaon   Rinks   Doing\nWell; Vance Has Yet to\nBe Defeated\nTRAIL. B. Oa Jan. 38\u2014Nelaon la well\nrepresented In the eights of tha Nelaon\ncup competition, three rlnka von their\n-atchea ln the sixteens today. Tbey are\n\u2022_t ..vd hT r. Andrew who defeated R.\nSommervllle of Trail, R. Sharp* who\n.Vat R. r>. Mitchell of Roaaland, and\n\"' W Vance who held up hla record oi\nno losses ao far by beating Paige of\nRoaslsnd. Pour Nelaon rlnka had reached the stxtaena but Howard Bush's\nfell before J. J. Ptngland's of Trail.\nRosaland la represented ln th* eighths\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2022 'wo fnks. aktpped br J. Plnney,\nwho defeated H. I. Wad* of Trail, and\nW. M. Archibald who boat R. Stephens, also of Roaaland.\nChapman campa' only entry, skipped\nby A. B. Jackaon achieved th* eighths\nby defeating J. Baldrey of Trail aad T.\nCaldwell of Klmberley moved in when\ni_. C. Saunders also of Klmberley defaulted.\nOnly one Trail rl_k. skipped by J.\nJ. Plngland succeeded In reaching tha\neights. His rink defeated Bush's of Nelson.\nResults of the 3:30 draw today were:\nNelson cup\u2014Sixteens\u2014 Andrews 7,\nbeat Sommervllle, 6; Vane* 11, beat\nPaige 3; Archibald 9, boat Stephens 7;\nPlngland 11, beat Bush \u00ab Jackaon 13,\nN_- Baldrey *: Sharp* 8, boat Mitchell\n8; Plxiaey 11, beat Wade 10: Caldwell\nwon by default from Saunders.\nIn thirty twoa-Archlbald 11, beat\nBunyan 14.\n<>0kT ARTHUR STAG.3\nCOMEBACK TO GAIN WIN\nPORT ARTHUR, Jan. 33.\u2014Staging a\ngarrison finish in the laat 10 mlnutea\nof a game that had seen Port William\ntake a 8 to 3 lead on two goals of\nthe soft variety. Port Arthur seniors\nran In two counter* to win a Thunder\nBay league fixture here tonight 4 to 8.\nSecond Round\nORE ENTRIES\nIN THE POINTS\nPLAY AT TRAIL\nSaturday  had  reached a total of 83.       Before the Interviewer left. Percy, Ui\nAdditional   entlie*  since  the   laat   list I staid,   cracked   a  joke.   When   \"\nan:     D.  D.   Mitchell,   J.   Anderson.   X. '\nMcQuade.   L.   P.   Tyson.   Donald   ate-\nDraw Is Made\nSixteen Forfeits in\nGrand National; Now\n104 Horses in Field\nLIVERPOOL. Jan. 33 Sixteen forfeits were recorded today whan the\ntlrst weeding out of entrant* for the\nOrand National ateenle chaae waa ha'd\nthis bringing the field down to 104\nThis number will be further reduced\nwhen the second \"accentancea\" are\nrecorded on March 13. Th* race takes\nplaoe March 33 over the famous four-\nmlle course and between 30 and 40\nho-ses will actually start.\nToday's withdrawals were aa follows\nPatron Saint. East Oallo a\" B-mil m\nLlawaddena. 8_node. Arrangemore.\nManlto Maximus Maroon Qua. Athro-\nnian Bov. Oolden Arab*. Ptneyarn\nSS__*r*_?_ OtMaii, Son of Krln and\nTlddley   Bit*.\nTRAIL CURLING\nGRAND CHALLENGE\nR D Michel. Rossland\nA. Jeffa, Nelaon .\n;;;-[ Jeffs ......\n.. Jradge, Nelson - 1 -,\u201e\u201e,,\u201e\nT.  W.  Blngay,  Trail _.\/Bln*\u00bbv\t\n( Murray.\nR*V. t. _. \u25a0 Dredge, Nelson\n\u2022\u2022.\"\"jjelf....\nO. I. Murray, Trail \t\nJ. McArthur, TraU _\t\nW. R. Dunwoody. Nelson\nPaige,   Boealand\t\niJttto..\n(Murray...\nJ. Perreet. Trail i_\nA.,D. McLeod. Nelson  ) Porrert ....]\nI Crowe ...\nR..C. Crowe, Trail _ ; i . | I\nt. B. McDonald, Trail  f Crowe \u2014J\nJ. Baldrey, Trail I\nA. ,B. Jackaon. Chapman Camp (Baldrey..\nR. Stephens,  Rossland  I\nT. Caldwell. Klmberley - _..; Stephens\nw. M. Myer. Nelson\nO. Douglas   Nelson .\n]\nStephens\nI\nStephen*....\nGLASGOW. Jan. 33.\u2014The draw for\nthe second round of the Scottish Poot-\nbaU cup. to be played on February 3,\nare a* followa:\nThird Lanark vs. Bt. Mlrren.\nRanger, va. Partlck Thistle.\nMurrayfleld   Amateurs   va.   Arbroath.\nAberdeen vs. Queen* Park.\nClyde vs. Hamilton.\nBathgate ra. Ralth Rovers.\nAlbion Rovers va. Dunkeld or Clackmannan.\nKilmarnock vs. Bo'ness.\nBredalbane or Brechin City va. Dundee.\nCeltic va. Eaat Stirling.\nCowdenbeath va. Dumbarton.\nQueen of South or .venue* Celedon-\ntana vs. Palktrk.\nBtenhouaemulr vs. Dundee United.\nAyr United vs. Armadale.\nMt, Johnston* vs. Motherwell.\nWilliams and BeU\nEn Pon*e h E\u00ab*\nlor Speed Tests\nFifty-three Curlers Have Now\nEntered;  Draws for\nToday's Play\nB.C.,   Jan.\nposted  up\n38.\u2014Tomo-row's\nto   8.30   tonight\nTORONTO. Jan. 28\u2014Per\u2014 WI'lI.-*\nof Vancouver, Olympic snr'nt h\"ro **_\n.Tames Ball. Winnipeg meter flash,\nreached Toronto foda\" en rowte t\u00bb Indoor t*ata at Bosto .. N*w v_-lc art*\nPhiladelphia. They will stay o er her\nfor  three days.\nTBAIL.\ndraws   aa\nwere:\nAt  7:80 a. m.: _\nKlmberley cup\u20140*N*U1 versu* Dunwoody, Whlmster versu* McLeoS. Haael-\nwood versu* Dredge. Weir Terra*\nMlcha*ly.\nRoaaland cup\u2014Tyson versus Jackaon.\nBald-ey versus Archibald Harvey versus Truswell. Smith versus Shaw. Myera\nveraua Hoefer.\nAt 9:80 a. m.:\nRoaaland _tj\u2014Sommervllle versus\nMlchaely. Weir versus Plngland,\n'\"htmater versus Baker. Andrew venus\nDouglas.   Dredge   versu*   J.  Porrest\nKlmberlev cup\u2014Hoefer venus McArthur, McKay versus Bumyeat, Bunyan versus Jeffs.\nAt  11:80 a.  m.:\nKlmberley cup\u2014Myer* verra* Crowe.\nBaker versus Truswell. Kerr veraua\nwinner Whlmeter-McLeod. Tyson versu* D. Porrest. Blngay versus Carter.\nBlner versus Murray. Dodlmead venus\nDouglas. Smith venus Shaw.\nRoaaland cup\u2014McArthur venus Buchanan.\nAt 3 p.  m.:\nKlmberley cup\u2014W. Porr**t venus\nHarvey, winner OTIeU-Dunwoody versus winner Ony-McDonald. Buchanfi\nversus Woodburn.\nOrand Challenge\u2014Vane* versus\nO'Neill. Sommervllle versus Blner, Jeffs\nversus Stephens.\nTrail cup\u2014Bunyan versus Carter,\n-urnveat   versus   McKay.\nNelson   cud\u2014Jackaon   venus   winner\nharoa-MltcheU.\nAt 8:30 tonight entries In the points\ncompetition   to   be   plavei     .-'da1    o\n,     \u2014\u2022      ss.     \u00bbfa.     .\notald. James Benson. D. Porest. P\nPorast, J. Porre*t. J. Porrest Jr., A. M\nTheseer, J. H. Palmer, E. Cheaham, J.\nPlaner. L. . Jackaon. O. Wetr. W. L\n\u201eooa. R. Varcoe. J J. Plngland. 8. 8\nMcDalrmld. P. P. Mclntyre. R. Sommervllle, W. R. Sommervllle, J. Som\nmervllle. R. M. SonunervlU*. W. R.\nWilliamson. J. D. Twaddle, W. P\nTruswell. J. R. Anderson, W. K. Newton, W. M. Myers. O. Ho_te\"u. O. Pcr-\nron. E. H. MlPhall. 8. P Boatock\nPoulin,, M. Mlcholson and H. Buah\nPERCY WILLIAMS\nWILLING TO TRY\nANYTHING ONC\nwished good luck, he said:  \"Tou cast.\ne\u00ab\u00abr   tell.   Boston   Is   famous   fl^^H\nbeans, but I guess perhaps wall be tt%.\n'haa beens'.\"\nMight  Just  as  Well Run  40\nYards as 100, He States,\non Way New York\nTORONTO. Ont.. Jan. 33.\u2014Porty yard\nrace* ar* an entirely new thing to\nPercy Williams, fleet footed Vancouver\nOnlveralty student, but hs Is going into\nthese short sprints ln the United States\nindoor meet*. \"Just for experience.\"\nW.llams. who won the 100 and 300-\nmetre events at the Olympic game* at\nAmsterdam laat summer and Jimmy\nBail, of Winnipeg, Olympic 400-metre\nstar, arrived today on their way to\nB'-ton where they will open their tour\nFebruary 3.\n\"-hat value la there ln that if lt la\nnot  a   regular   thing?\"   William*   we*\n'Tou can't tell,\" he replied.\n\"Iota of the races down there*are\n40 *nd 60 yards, and there is no harm\nIn trying them, is there?\" Williams\nasked.\nHe said he had kept up his training\n\"ouif. a bit\" sine* be returned from\nAmsterdam but he had found lt a __.\ntt reaome.\"\nNELSON CUP\nB. C  CIRIINO  ASSOCIATION BONSPIEL\n_   Andrew,  Nelaon  -... ...._.)\nRev. P. R. O. Dredge. Nelaon ... <\nO. Weir, TraU\t\nW. it. Dunwoody, Nelaon  _\nR.  Somervllle   Trail\t\nA   Kerr. TraU  \t\nO. C. McKay. TraU\nW.  Baker.\n; [ .\"o-aemilc 1\n| McKay '\nI-Andrew  I\nAndrew..\nSomervUle I\n::)\nf_^u-_r,\\K_\u00ab_;-::zz_:zl~\u00ab'\nW. M. Myers. Nelaon  1bu_,__.\nBurny*at,  Klmberley  [ uurnyeat...\n-f Mlchaely... i\n-1 Vane*... .\/\n\u2022] Archibald\n\u2022 | Bunyan....\nPaige...\nS. Oray. Moyle\nMlchaely.   ~\nW. M. Vane*. Nelson ..\nA D. McLeod, Nelson\nW. M   Archibald. Rossland   _\nH. M. Whlmster. Nelaon \t\nC. Dodlmead. Trail \u2014...,.\t\nJ. O. Bunyan, Nelson  .\t\nVance...\n^Archibald...\nA. W  Smith. Rossland\nR.   Stephen*.   Rossland\n1\nDouglas\n'\"     \"\"\"\" I Douglas\nO. C. Saunden. Klmberley __) I\nW. M. Archibald. Rossland ......\/Archibald...'\n_. W. Hazlewood. TraU _. I\nJ. Finney,  Roeeland   )Ha__woodl\nI H*_elwood.\nW. Porreat, Trail  l\nWi Baker, Rossland  \/Baker.\nIZ-Jwad*..\nHazelwood '\nJ\nH   B. Wade. Trail\nMlchaely. Rossland\nJ. Buchanan, TraU ..\nO. C. McKay. TraU\nO. w*lr. TraU _'.\nR. Andrew. Nelaon .\nJ. O. Bunyan. Nelson\nlanan \/\n| Buchanan...\n:} Buchanan I 1 Buchanan..\ne. \u00ab\u00a3. _ unvan. n*laon  ._ I\nA. W. Smith. Roaaland  \/Smith.\n;;;:.} weir.\u2014a\nV Smith..\nJ\nH. Buth. Nelson......\nC. Dodimaad. TraU\n\"\/Bush\t\n. 8. Oray, Moyle\n'J. J. Oil\nC. Hoefe\nJ  J^l?U-K^nbwtay\n; TraU\n.wh I\nVOray.\u2014 \u00ab.\nloray.......\n-} 0_*U\nW. M. Vane*. Nelaon Irr.^.\n_~ Sharp ...._ }Vano*.\t\n_   M.  Whlmster   Nelaon\nJ. J. Plngland. TnU ......\n[ Whlmster\n}\nBurnyeat.  Klmberley  I\u00ab____,   ,\nJ. K. Carter, TraU ._ J Burnyeat .1\n} Somervllle J\n:!\u25a0\nR. flom*rvl'l\u00ab. Tnll\nW.  Truswell. Trail\nVane*....\nSomervllle.\n ._'\n... TraU \t\nHarvey. TraU\n_:ir\nU F. Tyaon. Trail ....\nH. Woodburn. Tnll\nT_|} Blner\nT\" } Woodburn\n\u00bb\u25a0\u25a0- \u25a0! \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\n\u25a0\u201e' ,un\\m\t\n1 \u00ab  inr-\nALL-COMERS' CUP\nB.   C.  CVrLiNO   ASSOCUTION   BONSPIEL\nIton defeated Trail 338 to 336.    Wlnnen   playing  knockout   oompetl tion for cup and prlees\nO.   Douglas,   Nelaon   \u00bb1 Myera\n.    W. M. Myers, Nelson  f~~\nO. C. 8aund\u00b0n. Klmberley ... I\nR. D. Mitchell. Rowland  I\nW.  Baker.   Rossland I Smith\nA.  W.  Smith,  Rosaland    1\nA. D. McLeod. Nelson Ivanco\nW. M. Vance, Nelson I\nH. M. Whlmster. Nelson  [Archibald\nW.'M. Archibald!. Rossland .1,\nW. R. Dunwoody,'Nelson .... (Buah\nH. Buah. Nelson  )\nA. B. Jackson. Klmberley\nX. Sharp. Nelson  \t\nSharp\nJ. J. O' Nell, Klmberley  [Bunyan\nJ. O. Bunyan, Nelson  I\nR.  Stephens,   Rossland\n8. Oray, Moyle -\t\nT.   Caldwell.   Klmberley\nMlchaely,   Rossland\t\n}\n 1-\nA. Jeffs, Nelson ....\nR. Andrew. NelBon\nRev. P. R. a. Dredge, Nelson ... I\nJ. Plnney, Rossland   1\u00bb\nPaige,  Roaaland    -.\nBurnyeat, Klmberley\n\";_} Burnjaat-.\n.\"\n\u2022;}'iter___s.._'|\nJ. Stephens... )\nE. W. Hazlewood. Trail . 1 h__>i,_v_ J\nJ. J. ONelU. Klmberley _ I) \u25a0\"\"\"*\nI Archibald..\nH. Bush. Nelson _.._.....,\nP. R. McDonald. TraU\nJ. E  Carter. T-all\nB. Blner. Trail .....\nT  w  Blrurav  TraU\nO. Hoefer. TraU\t\nJ. J. Plngland Trail\nW   Porreat, TraU ..\nL. P  Tv*on   T-all ...\nW.   Truswell   Trail\n*.   f*   KarTee   Trail\nI  Bnldry. Trail \t\nJ     '''O'Ta,.\n } Buah...\n\u2022'\u2022\u25a0\u2014 J Carter..\n__. . i Boe*r\n J T '\/son.\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2022\u2014 -\u25a0\u2022 I \u25a0. >.!dr*y\nVPtngland\ngland.J\nFinglund\n^Baldrey\nA   B\nT-nll     ....\nJac>_or-., C'-R-'-nan Camp\nC   Cro^;o,  T_\nf   t   M\"~av\nP.   D  Ml'che\"\nT    McAr'b-\nH. E  Wnr*a\nTr\u00bbl ...;\nwr\"-ev   ..oco'.a.-.f*\nWoodburn    T .'I\nT  CaMw.\"   K'mb-rley\nA. Jeffs  Nelson \t\n;\u2022{    \"che'\n'\u25a0\u25a0;\u25a0;\u2022\u2022-;\u2022\u2022\u2022 }-'.'\u00abde.. .\n______ I  nnn*.'\u2022\u25a0\n- } \"aid' -\u25a0\nPlnney...\nO   Shaw  Trail    ,-.   \u2022_\u201e_,.,\u201e,\nO. C. 8aimd*r\u00ab.  Klnber'ey  , N 3ara,\"r'\ndt-nlareil   by   th*   liquor   Control\ntard er hv tb. <:.\u201e .,\u201e_*\u00ab.. ot nrlttah\nCanadianPacific\nEUROPE\nKKAM   *AII.T-_.OB7.\n?eo.  8    Mftaaam*\nTo   piaagow-Bel fast-Liverpool\n\"eb, 15   Montroyal\nTo  Glpsaow-Llverpool\n?eb.  21      Mellta\nTo Cherbourg-Soutbampton-Ha-mburg\nPeb.   23       Moitroat\nTo  Qhiajjov-B.^lfast-Llverpool '\nMar.  1        Mlnnedoaa\nTo   Glaa^o.v-Llverpool\n\\Ia_-.  8      Montclaf*\nTo    Olas^ow-B^lfaat-Uvenxxkl\nMar. 14   Duchess Bedford\nNew York lo Cherbourg-Liverpool\nMar.  14   Met**ama\nTn Ch?rbo-irK-oodthampton-HaniburB\nMai-.   15     Montroyal\nTo  Glasgow-Liverpool\nriar-  21   MellU\nTo   Belfast-Glasgow\n:v.;.r   22   Montrooe\nTo  Liverpool\nM_r   28       Montcalm\nTo Cherbourg-Southampton, Antwerp\nMar.  29    Duchess  Richmond\nTo Gla^'ow-Liverpool\nApr. S  _ -.. Montclar\u00a9\nTo Chorbourg-Sonthampton-Antwerp\nApr. 4   , .-.   Mlnnedoaa\nTo Bitlliist-GlasBow\nFull   details    with   rates   from   any\na-rent.   or   write.\nJ.   S.  CARTER.\nfHifTir.    p'<*i*>T)\"t.r   As. nt.   Nelson,   B.C.\n.....;\n1\n(\n              \u25a0             \u25a0            \u2022        \u25a0    \u25a0    \u25a0      '\n.-'.:..\nW&m^s\n1\nasZfZSL J\n1v IdaxXWA        PI\n^^^\"^^_________-_.aiw.^^^^^^a.__By\\\\%__rW3_. akW- - _ '*_____!\nSMOKE                                                      1                    A^Ik\/^I\n_____                      *                                                          \/Ei sffihT^^y\nVice\/uni \u2014 cW\nCIGARETTES           \/                           ^!W^\nCORK  TIPS-DO   NOT  STICK  TO   THE   LIPS\n (*____ NEtSON DSILY NEWS,  THURSDAY MORNING, JANUARY 24, 1929\nR1SE IN NICKEL\nIS WIPED AWAY\n\u25a0 \u25a0_.    trtsm   mm m  \u25a0'\u25a0    \u25a0   Mini\nlot  Issue  Features  Montreal\nUnt; Construction Stocks in\nDemand\nUa\nIfONTRKAL. Jan. M\u2014With Inter-\nNlckel providing over halt of\ntotal volume of business todays\nsession of the Uontreal stock exchange\ncontinued to display a highly selective\nnature.\nNickel furnished trading in 160.808\naharea. At the opening a rush of buying orders carried the price up to a\nnew peak at 79, while ln the afternoon\na heeary flood of profit taking waa absorbed with the close at 88_. off %.\nThe feature of the balance of the\nlist was ths heavy demand for the construction stocks. Dominion Bridge'mov.\ned swiftly to 101_ closing at H\\ for\na gain of a_ points.\nThe psper issues failed to maintain\nt-Mr advances of yesterday. Abltibl sold\ndown a point at 61. Canada Power *\nPaper was off _ at 33 _ and Port Alfred sold down 4 to 68.\nCLOSING QliOTATIO.Nli\nAT MONTREAL\nBank of Commerce  834\nBrit. American OU  -   88\nCanada  Bronte    86\nDominion Bank  370\nImperial   Bank   ... ST8\nBank   of   Montreal    -  \u00ab13\nt Bank of Nora Scotia .\n\u2022 Boyal Bank  \t\nBank  of  Toronto  \t\nI AbltlM Power _ Paper .\n. Asbestos   Corpr_\u00bbttsn   .\nAtlantis   Sugar   \t\na Bell   Telephone    \u2014 IJ\n\u2022 Bra\u2014\u2014an T. L.  _ power\nBrompton Paper    \t\nr Can. Car _ Foundry   14S\n' Can. Industrial Alcohol   40H\n\" Canadian Power    SS\nCan. Steamship Unas  _   MH\nCong. Mining _  Smelting    438\nDomlnlon  Bridge'    tfiVt\n. Dominion   Glass     188\nj Dominion Textlls \t\n, A. P. Oraln\t\nI Lake of the Woods \t\n.Massey Harris  \u25a0\t\n. Montreal    Power   ...._,,\nT Mcntreal    Tramways\nNational   Breweries   \t\nNational  steel  Car  .\n{Ontario Steel Products     30\n' Ottawa L. H. _ Power  118\n. Penmans.   Ltd  101\nPower Corporation   108_\nPrice Bros.    _ i _   77\n.Ouebee Power  _   _   00\nShawlnlgan          91%\nBout* Canada Power _   100\n\u2022-Steel   of   Canada   _ _   83\nBt. Uwrenoe.Flour Mills     82\nTuce-tt   ToStoco - 180\n, Wayagamack     _ ..   73\nWestern   Grocers   .    86\nWinnipeg Railway .:  106\nthe estimated  of  values  made  public\nin nsnasnbar.\nSince November the information coming to the department from the prairie\n\u25a0how that the damage waa largel* ln\nquality taUiee than In quantity with\nthe seaagevs .hw\u2014tpe ctenileied and\nmuch of. he wheat alres-T marUied.\nthe bureau la la a position to fairly\naccurately   fix  the  total.\nVancouver Stocks\nBid.\nBeaver Silver  \u00bb    18_\nB. C.  Silver  ..,    1_8\nBig Missouri      188\nCork   Province    36\nDunweU   ....- 16\nOeorge  Copper       \u00bb\u20149\nGladstone    18\nOolconda    ..,    1-03\nGrandview          .81\nIndependence  1|_\nIndian Mines  08\nInternatlonal Coal 86\nKootenay Florence ...   -.36\nKootenay   King   .. . .40\nLucky   Jim,         .....\nLeedamlth  02\nL.   _   L ,.      06\nMarmot   Metals         .(_',\nNational\nNat.  Sll. \u00ab. 8      .31\nPend  Oreille  15.60\nPremier   ..,._...     2.18\nPorter  Idaho        .71\nReeves-McDonald 3.8S\nRuth Hope  81V.\nRufus   Argents         .41V*\nSliver Creat         .08 _\nSilverado        116\nSilversmith      13\nSlocan King. 0714\nSlocan  Rambler        _5_\nSunloch     \t\nWhitewater     _     1.36\nWellington    \t\nAsked\n6   .10\n1-6\n1.71\n-6\n1025\nl_i\n.83\n.18 _\n.10\n30\n.\u00bb_\n.07\n.00\n.22\n16.00\n3.20\n.76\n3.76\n.83\n.44\n1C0\nM\n440\n.18\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\n\"sah :,as.sj*\nOct.      180% Is.\n'.   Oct  12B_ 130'\nOats\u2014\nMay    83 821,\nJuly     ee_ 8jS\nout  u 6(8\nMay- -   8014 80%\nJuly       7\u00bb_ 80V.\n^\u00a3y     30014 aoitj,\nJuly.  1\u00bb_ ll~_\nBye-*\nLATE FAVORITES\nSUFFER.T0R0NT0\nLarue Volume of ProfitaTaking\nat Expense of Popular\nf_\nr\u00bb\nTORONTO, Jan. ._.\u2014-The recent favorites la tbe trading ef the stock e\u00ab-\nchsnge suffered most during the active\ntrading which occurred today. Profit\ntaking developed to aP unusual extent.\nInternational Nickel was very active.\nTbe stock opened stronger at 71\u00abi and\nsold up to a new high level at \u2014 _e\nhut later reacted to 88 \\c and closed\nunchanged at 70c. Mond Nickel continued active at \u00ab7'4c, a gain of 3_\npoints. Noranda was strong at the outlet at 70c but later reacted 3_c to 66c.\nC. P. R. was a strong feature, selling\nup to a new high level for the year\nat. 948. a gain of 5V, points.\nBra-lion Tr\u00bbctlon declined to 7714,\na net loss of H. Alberta Pacific Grain\ncommon was one of the strongest features closing with a net gain of 2:_c at\n86%c. B. C. Fishing pfd., advanced 2c\nto see. Weston common gained 7 points\nto 11.85. Dominion Bridge was tn strong\ndemand and the close ot 9B_c showed\na net gain of 4 _ points.\nSupertest Issues continued to be the\nfirmest feature amongst the oils, the\nordinary advancing Ui. to 4* _c and the\ncommon a point to 40c.\n. i.i       i     i    a\nP1TTSBUR0P PC, Jen ts \u2014Bam\nDreyfus*, treasurer of the Pittsburgh\nNational league Baseball club tonight\nconfirmed reports that the unsigned\ncontracts of Paul snd Llovd Warner,\nstar outfielders, had been recovered at\nthe off_f_ here. Dreyfuss said, however, that the brothers were not Considered by tbe management In th* light\nof bold outs\n200\n197%\nMay    .......  111\"'.    113-    11114    111%\nJuly 1\u00ab8_    lilt,    l(_t.    10SJ.\nOct       104       1W_    104       104_\nCash wheat\u2014No. 1 northern 134V4:\n.o. 3 northern. 120'i; No. 3 northern,\n'15%; No 4. Ul; No. 5, \u00bb\u2022_: !** 6\n\u2022_>i! eed. 7SV4; track. m_: screenings, |4.\nCrow's Nest Bonspiel\nGRAND CHALLENGE COMPETITION\nToronto Mines\nLittler,  Michel   I,\u201e\u201e_\nGates.  Fernie  (Uttler\nKastner.    Fernie.\nWallace.   Fernie..\nJohnson. Fernie  1 ,\u201e\u201e\u201e._-    %\nI Spence.  Cranbrook  J Johnson ...-j ^\nBid.\n  I   .16\n 18\n__B\u00bb     37\nOan.   Lorraine         .04\nnSt   Man.  Mines    ...     .67\nQaplagas       2.00\nCrown  Reserve  11 _\nOamtal     06\nDtinrat     02%\nBorne      10.16\nOold  Dale      .14\n-old Hill     .07\ngrenade    _    34\nOrover Daly            -      _4\n-fellv    935\ntw_ B\u00bby  - 20.90\nK_. -     \"K\ntap Manlon       .32\nIke       lie\nHunton      .0414\nKeora    ..._      .01\nKootenay Florence 36\nLake  Shore    21.00\nBig  Missouri       1.89\nLaval      08\nlaaceese     _ 28\nt.3lcnoua_li '_.__,\u201e.\u201e\u201e     Si\n.Mclntyre     31.J5\nMcKlnley        .34\nMoneta          M\nSpnlng Corp .....   6.IQ\ntfewbec   ..     .86\njriplasing        8.40\n.Noranda     65:00\nPend   OreUle     16.60\n_______ Crown       .02_\nPioneer    _     .35\n.Premier       2.18\n.Potter Doal 02\nRlbago    \t\n:8an   Antonio     .18\nSheTltt-Oordon        7 00\n__sria_ona  09\nW'HW.,-,   BtslD.     8.B0\nSylvanit.       3.06\nTrack Hughes   9.15\nTough   Oakes     ,06_\nTowazaauc  '.  3.10\nVlpond       123\n\"Wrleht   Hanrreaves   .... 320\n-West Dome Lake  08\nAs>ed\n6 16\n.16\n.39\n.06\n.88\n2_0\n.12\n.07\n.08\n10.25\n.17\n_6\n.26\n21_0'\nii.\n.08\n21.25\n1.70\n08%\n.36\n21.76\nStewart, Fernie  1 Rt.w\u00bb-t\nLeduc.   Coleman    (Stewart\nHerchmer.   Pernle  iHorrhmer   f\nMorgan. Blalrmore .. _. IHercnmer     .\nMorgan, Blalrmore\nAllison, Plncher Creek 1 ..,,\u201e._\nBoyer, Medicine Hat .1\"'\u2122\nUphnrdt,  Fernie\nLawe,   Fernie   \t\n\u25a0 Llphardt\nv Herrhrner...\n' Llphardt\nOREGON COPPER\nTAKES UP MOVE\nInternational  Nickel at  New\nPeak; Neranda Cracks\nBadly at Toronto      \u00bb\nmm upiy |   uiiwiii i\nTORONTO\/ Jan. 2a.~Mtl.ough trad*\nlng 1m nme of tbe recent leaders on\nthe -Standard Mining exchange naowea\na tendency to ilow down today, the\nmarkkt  wae  net  without   tt.   feature,.\nOregon Copper appewett on ihe Ijoard\nfor the flrat ..time and with salee\n_I 24,400 shares moved up trom un\nInitial price of 1_8_. to a peak ef\n11.38 and closed at j|l_-0. Total volume\nOf   sales   was   1,538,12?   shares.\nInternational Nickel soured to a new\npeak of 73.- put finished at $70, a\nnet gain of M eents. Mood moved up\nto a top of 169 and finished at\n$68.10, a\u00bb advance of #160. Falcon\nBridge waa the outttandhiK nickel stock\noi the day. Jumping to *\u00ab25 with a\nlatM* rece_sion to 18. 50 cents about the\nprevious  close.\nNoranda opened at $70, but cracked\nbadly under the deluge of liquidation\nWhich fallowed the -announcement of\nright** ta Shareholders.\nSiscoe waa a spectaciTiHi- performer,\nsparing to a now peak of *l6o and finishing right at the top. Uke Shore\nadvanced to $21.50 wtth laat sales at\n$21, the best .quotation for the stock\nsince October laat. .HoUlmer dropped\n3d cents to $9,46.\n81-furrttt-Ooraon Jumped to, $7.10, ft\nlain of 15 cents. Hudson Bay was\nHeady at $21, f$ were Maj.dy at $f j.\nand Central Maaitobu at 68 cenU. San\nAntonio dropped a cent to 18 cents.\nBig Missouri was muci^ less active\nand ranged trom iiJtf'to $.-7<\u00a3 the\nc;!0fle helng at the latter figure, a lose\nof S cents\nPend OreUle was 25 cents weaker\nM $15,M. Kootenay Florence\" waa unchanged   at   2$.\nAjax OU fell baok 31. cents- to 48 V4.\nB. A. OU waa $2 higher nt $69. Pioneer Mining declined 3 ^pt^ Jo . W\ncents. '\nFERNIE BEATS\nCOAL CREEKERS\nScore h 3-1 in Vast Hockey\nGame; \"Chlckic\" Dicken\nInjured\nI'*\"\n3anborne, Fertile...\nTR1TES-W00D COMrETTTION\nBoyer, Medicine Hat -. 1*^-..\nAllison,  Plncher Creek\/80^\nUwe,   Pernle   \t\nSanbornc, Pernio\nJ Lawe. -\nJ- Boyer\nPERNTE, B.C., Jan. 23\u2014One of the\nbest hockey games of the season waa\nplayed between Pernle and Goal Creek\nTuesday evening of the Fernie rink\nresulting ln a 8-1 victory for Fernie.\nPlay waa very fast and honors were\nhotly   contested   from   the   very   start.\nNeither team scored during the first\nperiod. Femie players gained the ascendancy about the middle of the second period when they secured a goal\nby means tjf a beautiful shot from Dip\nsohitiHki. About the middle ot the\nthird period Coal Creek staged a comeback when Mllburn .cored a goal-\n'Chickie\" Pickei. tiulcfcly retaliated\nwith a well placed shot which resulted\nin a goal for perpie. In the fev\nminute* remaining. T)lcken again got\naway and secured another goal for\nFernie In almost the same manner.\nrhe Coal Creek afegretfiit ton played inr-\nion.lv but fortune dehied them a further goal.\n\u25a0ChlciHe\" Dicken \"Kulfered ft rather\nbod accident hear the end. He caught\nhit. hockey Ktlck in a hole in the wall\nof the rink and received a severe\nblow in the abdomen from the other\nend ot the Ktlck. This knocked him\nout an^ rendered him hora-de-comhat\nfor the rest of the same. He was\ntaken home in an automobile.\n'_?\n349\n66 06\n16.16\n.08\n.36\n2.3Q\nT\n\u25a07.10\n8.95\n2.10\n0.20\n.08\n3.16\n1.3.\n2.36\n\u2022oa_\nCanada's Wheat Crop Is\nPlaced at 533,571,000\nBusheis; Is an Increase\nI OTTAWA. J\u00bbn. 33.\u2014The eeUmatt of\n<_,_\u2022_.'\u2022 wheat crop tor the ye\u00bbr 13.8\nmade pubic tociav by the Dominion\n-bureau of statlatTc. Is paced at 533.-\n871 000 tau.hel. This ls an inp\u2014_e of\n-k\u2014u_t 33 000 000 bushel* over the estimate announced In September. The\ntotal value of all field crops aa corn-\nTilled from todav's report shows an Increase of $49,000,000 aa comparsd with\nFLU-GRIP\nCheek before It atarts.\nRub oa\u2014Inhale vtpora\nVICKS\n^szi\nCUd Very Cross aad\nIf.,iri 1   f iT mi  Q_.1\u00bb\n-Wit- my H\u00ab-\u00bb sister ww loot\nmmxaa old ecseaa Wok. ont la a\nrW ml which k_r fc___d olssnort.\nIt take* and tn__4 ceaslni hsr to\n\u00ab__<_, Sbe wta \u2022-\u00bb-\/ crow sod\nfestfoi, and used to lay awake half\nThe trouble lasted t_\n\" A Mend recommended Cuttcara\nSottf aad Ola\u2014atnt ta my toceaet\n\" a___bd some and snarotlaf flat\n_nsa al Coticnts Ointment and\nfetes cakes ol Cuticura Soap sll\n(\u25a0a tt the trouble dlsaopeaied-\nHM healed.\"   (Signed) lira.\ntadaZ Canning. Clerks ville. M. S.\nUsedttocura Soap, Ointment and\nTalcum, for dally tall- ptvpoate.\nLeduc,  Coleman  1 _\u201e\u201e.,,_.,.\nHerchmer.  Fernie   *HCTChmOT   | Moriilm\nUphardt, Fernie  lunrean      I\nMorgan.   Blalrmore   ..JMOTg,n\nSpenoe, Cranbrook  1 t\u201ehn_>n    1\nJohnaon, Fernie  |Jonnson\nV Johnson..\nWallace. Fernie  -1 Wallace\nOates,   Fernie    -...\/wouaw     '\nStewart. Fernie  \\ stewart\nK\u00abtner' **\"\u00bb*  ,8tW'     Stewart...\nLittler, Michel -  J\nl Boyer\nINTERNATIONAL COMPETITION\nAdvertisii\nClwtfad Aiotriiim Rgjtt\n\u00ab^rd^l,y5__r^\u00ab\u00bb\n.r machine eaplMt \u00abe a wa* TaQfc-\nv'thoufolffiit oTet% tor QM\u00b0mJ\u00bbth\n>r more, whert adttrtlsement Is set\nKit In short lines the charse la 15c\ni lint lor Boma_ type. 2uc tor black-\nWtWT tnF ' C_Mtrit\u00ab aStertlslni-\n_>e and a half cents a word per Inter-\nion.   lf paid In advenee, 3c per word\n_r week, er 22Uc per word per month\nrraartftU adt aeoepted ofil\u00bb on, t\n\u25a0ath-In-advance    basis      Etch    Initial\nuss* a__^wr>,,afiwp *\nWrth Nollre_\u2014Frae\ni    '    Mi- t\nHelp Wanted\nWANTID AT OKCI\u2014A first data\nwoman cook, wans 375 Bico Hotel,\nSandon. (6090-5-240)\n\u00b0,p\\!ope'i3l^ \"* general h0lUt?6^)\nWAMTH) \u2014 Btoerlenced atenonraoher.\nhalf days. Aonly WlddoWson's Assay\noffice. (70H-1-33T)\nWANTHV-OIrl for jenetal hoi'tework.\nApply Mrs. % Brown..W2 vl\u00ab^ft'\nfAWTED\u2014chamber    maid    at    once.\nMadden    Hotel. f7029-tf)\nSituaUons Wanted\n8EWIN-,    DBESSMAKINC.    AND    BE-\nsrttlATibJI WAmnjb as experienced\nhoutekeeper, campanlon help, entire\nchaise,  good  rsfarenses.    Box  TOM,\n\u2014.... %,.\u2014\nDally News.\n(7004)\nMiscellaneous\nPiano Tuning\nGerard Boekttra, specially appointed\nby Heintzman  _  Co.  Ltd.\nPhone, write or out.\nPHONE 299 Sll  BAKE*\n(8193)\nViolin\nInstruction\nJack Worthington. violinist Capitol Theater, haa opening for limited number of pupils.   Pttonc 449E.\n(7035)\nFor Rent\nFOR BENT\u2014Apartment over Oallaght!\nSUITES   for   rent     Ashman's\nments.\nit   Apart-\n(8194)\nPUKr_8H_0 housekeeping rooms; alto\nsmall store. Apply Mack's Billiard\nHall. (81331\nMiscellaneous for Sale\n\u00ab_d uakqarfi MHan. leos-\n^FamUy   Um-abu__.'   Bti   mtspaae\n%\n.   3871   ^UOUd^ \u00bbve\nBARRELS.-EOS AND  EMFTY  8ACKS-\nMoDoaald Jam OoBoany. Nslsan\n(81971\n\u25a0^^aTtttPU-srw\n(8888)\nFOR SAL^-Kltchtn esblnet. four rugs,\n~>*5 |L.-\n(7005-341)\nbox writing table, chair, chiffonier.\nPhone 671R et nil at 301 Kmt apartments.\nFOR 8AU--1\u00ab3\u00ab Holt-Best \"Thirty\"\nCatemjUar tractor and two Athay.\nTru-tTJ*. Tretd Traltera, sultaWa f\u00ab\nlogging. Piedmont Mines. Liml's-l.\nNels_TB.O.- ' , 0*08)\nFOR BALE\u2014Shoemaker's sowing ma-\nclilne. linger make, good mechanical\ncondition, seventy dollars. Ca .von\nTrading Co.. Canyon.  BC.        (69M)\nFOR SALE\u2014No. 1 timothy h\u00bby 316 per\nton fob. Lumb..   Oeo. Laviolette.\n(7028-4-242)\nPoultry and Eyp\nDISTANT     Pi\nWhy not buy your\nlook     green.\n:horn baby chlx\nhere at home   *pple__ Bros., Proo\nter.\n280)\nAgents Wanted\nining   ln   the   C\n\\o',Sn\u00ab.'-\nWE J. R.  WATKI1W  OanMfl\nsplendid   opening   In\nRosslsnd   sis.\nfor some one\ndUtrloutian   nf   Its  prodacts.\ndirect  to the conj_(fc*r  und\nhundreds of satlafletl t-_^^^B\nreal   opportunity   for   a   live\nFor   further   Information   \"\nj. B. Watkis. Cunpanr,\nttnet. Vancouver. B.C.     i\nProperty For Sale\nFOR SALE\u2014Globe Hotel. Trail,\nnlshed wltb bedding. Also I.\nnext to tt (ll rooms), partly\nnlshed: 2 lots on corner. 75 feet J\nVictoria St.. and 60 feet oa\" f\navenue near new hospital. Paymel\none third cash, and balance pal\nas Is rent Apply James Harper. Rfl\nland. BC.\nFOR SALE CHgAP-BrldtSVllle\nunfurnished. Believe Malice\nbe obtained lf desired. Alan\nBrldesvllle. (6\nRiiainfM.* OnnortuniHml\nMAN OK WOMAN to travel snd ast\nlocal   representatives.     Posit'on\nmanent:  yearly guarantee. 81093  f|\nlng   821   weekly   average),   and\npenses:   commission   and   cash  3\nuses   besides.    Winston    Co..   TH\nBldg. Toronto.\nPLACE YOUR ORDER lot hatching\neggs, day-old chicks, pullets and\ncockerels from 8. C. W. Leghorn and\nLight Sussex with the Burnside Poultry Farm, We guarantee KHX7, delivery.   Plant under R. O. P. Inspec-\n; tten. Write lr Illustrated catalogue.\nBox   166.   Hammond,   BC\n(7027.10-242)\nFOR SALF\u2014\u00abO0-cgg Incubator. Reason\nfor selling. Installing electrical apparatus.   Fred Fuhr, Vernon, B.C.\n(7010)\nC. A. HOUSeVBHltpr of \"Poultry World\"\/\nLondon, Eng., and famous Poultry\nJudge, tayt: \"After long terttf of\ntest by our chief experts, we have\nfound that no 11) effects could be\ntraced to the use of Karswood Poultry\n.Spice and that nothing hut (mod had\nresulted.\" Karswood does not force,\nbut develops tbe egg cluster In a\nnatural way. Obtainable from all\ndealers. Karswood, 368-382 Adelaide\nSt. West, Toronto Ont.\n(7034)\nFURNISHED SUITE for rent. 607 Silica.\nNelson.   B.C. (6982)\nFURNISHED HOUSE.    Apply 708 Josephine. (7017)\nNEW CN.R. STATION\nOPENED AT THE PAS\nPneumonia Talks\nSeven in Toronto\nTORONTO. Jan; 3r)>t-0>crnight deaths\nfrom pneumonia and Influenza reported\nto the civic health authorities iri Toronto numbered seven. Pneumonia accounted for five of the deaths and influenza complicated with pneumonia\nfor the other two.\nTHE PAS. Man.. Jan. 23\u2014Another\nchapter in the development of northern\nManitoba was written today when the\n\".luadiiiii National railway'* pew 975,-\n000 station was officially onened here.\nA oeremony was held at the new sta-\n\u25a0ton which is situated in the heart of\nthe town. Major J. G. MacChlan, dls\nrlct engineer of the C. N. It., turned\nthe station Key over to V. I. Smart,\n\u25a0ceneral superintendent of transports\ntion. who opened the door of the station to the public.\nCASH\u2014$500.00\u2014PRIZES\nWe are offering 1600.00 ln gold\nto the persons raising the highest\npercentage of Bolivar Quality chicks\nduring 1939. This contest la open\ntfl everyone, whether you raise\ntwenty-five or five thousand chicks.\nRocks, Reds, wyandottes and Leghorns. Write now for illustrated\ncatalogue and prloe list on day-old\nand \"brpoder-tested\" one, two and\nt liree-weeks-old chicks. Also full\nparticulars concerning contest.\nBOLIVAR HATCHERY\n718 Lansaster Sld\u00ab... Calgary and Ed-\n. monton, Alta.\nBolivar Hatchery,\n715 Lancaster Bide.,\nCalgary, Alta.\nPlease send me your catalogue\nand. full particulars concerning\nyou^ ofrer ot 880000 ln gold for\nchick raising contest.\nName   -  \u2014a  _.....\u00ab _\nAddress   \u2014\t\nOlty    _.- \t\n(8880)\nJohnson.  Fernie  1 ,_.___\nMorgan,   Blalrmore   ... J Johnson..\nOates.   Fernie  \t\nSpence. Cranbrook\n} Spence..\nI Spence..\nStewart. Fernie  lo*\u2014\u2122\u2014\nlawe.   Fernie (Stewart...\nWallace, Fernie  l_aiia,~\nLeduc.  Coleman  ) Wallace\nSan borne,  Fernie\nLlphardt. Femie\n} Iiphardt...-1 \t\nl_erchmer..A\nHerchmer, Femie  l__.,.i\u201e__.  J\nKastner,  Fernie  J Herchmer..;\nLittler. Michel  _ \\Tu,,\u201e\nAlllson, Plncher Creek }\"\"ier...\n   -v\nBoyer. Medicine Hat\nL Littler.--.\nStewart...\nLETHBRIDGE BREWERY COMPETITION\n____?' smtmrntS) .\u25a0*\u00ab~V-\\.\nJohnson,   Femie\nLlphardt,  Fernie\nBoyer. Medicine Hs\u00bb .1..\u201e,_,\u201e__\nSanbourn.   Fernie   ,8\u00bbttbou_\u00bb.\ng^5ff_!___:}\u00ab^\n2S_ \u00ab__::::::::} y-\t\nJ\u00abUy, Michel _ 1\nCONDENSED'WANT ADS ORDER FORM\nUse thia blank on which to write your condensed ad., one word in each space.\nEnclose money order or check and mail direct to The Daily News, Nelaon, B.C.\nRate: One and a half eent a word each insertion, six consecutive insertions for\nprice of four when cash accompanies order. Minimum, 25c Each Initial, fifura,\ndollar sign, etc- count as one word.   No charge less than 60 cents.\nI    Please publish the advwtUement below times, for which I enclose !\nKastner,  Penile\nVsllace, Ftrnie .\nJ\nSpence..\n\t\nMorgan...\nKastner...\n,                       t, |i *..<*.tr-i\/m\n\u25a0\n\u25a0\nI\n. ',\n1\nV mmmnkX i*pUat  may\ni aura u eow eort af m(i|i and aDow\nat   Tto   ImUy   hemes.    U  n\u00bbUm\ntMrrra wordi extra for mn\nLast and Found\nFOUND\u2014On Josephine street. T ^_\na ladles's black Parker fountain PI\nOwner may have taroe by calling 1\nThe Dally News and paying for *\u25a0\nad, .\nLive Stock far Sate\n\u2014\u25a0I\n'aa\nSILVER   FOXES\u2014Advertiser   ts\nsome   fine  specimens   (tan  i.\nfew    for    breeding)    to    resnonsf\nparties.   Will'SW on easy term* r\nextended time. Dally )_wb, \u2014\nBUSINESS, PROFESSION\nDIRECTORY\nPhotographers\nOFOROt   *    WFIW\u2014ArtIM   and  Pi\ntcranher.   tltt   Baker   St. (811\nCabinetmaker\nI    H.  CHAPMAN\u2014Baker   St      Cab\nmaker  -   Upholsterer     Phone\nDentists\n.^m*v**sff^tfse\u00bbsr*. ^^\u2022'e'^set^ittmrtat%statetaittatasafatm%\\\ncm    (1    \u00ab    i     w ti.l.KV\u2014Orlffln\nKelson, B.O. _\u25a0\t\nAccounting\n'HARIIi''  f   HtNTRR\u2014\n(I'lilTOR       M.I......1,1   4s\u00bb   Hnllitll\nBo\u00bb 19H. nelson, ac. <#\"\nAssayers\nr   w  nililHiwsoN. Boa AII08  Nets\nB    0    Standard   western   chsrse.\nMonuments\nKOOTKVtV     MARRI.E     _      OltANIl\nWOHK\u00bb\u2014Nelson    B    O       Write\nprices.       .. (81\nTransfer\nW1IIIAMB'   rRtN-PKB\u2014Baggage,\nand  Wood,    phone   106. (8\nWood Working Factory]\nI.AW80N   -   Baker  8t.    Carpsntst\nJoiner      Sat-    and    Hardwood\nInsurance and Real EstaJ\nR. W i>aw\u00abon\u2014Real Fatate. tns\u00abran_\nRentals. Ntgl U.pi_mon fUrtwtf\nBalier Street. je~\"\nH. E. MM\u2014-INarstNCl!\nFARM   AVI1   CITV   PRnPSBTV\n808 Ward Street        <888|\nD.    A.    MrFARI.ANI).      Real\nInsnrance, Coal Board of Trade _\nTelephone    40       P     O     B6l    84\n(080\nChiropractor!\nOR   (1R\u00abV    nlLKKR   BI.K.   NEi.an.\nFlorists\nHRI\/\/.KI.I.K-!.     tlRKKMIOl'HER.    Mill\nOut  flowers  and  nortl  deslgna\nwm.'r. iohnpon\u2014\nFhoar 848    Cut Flowers. Potted Flra\nand Floral -mblents. (881\nWholesale\nt.   MsrlillNAI.il   \u00ab   CO^   ^\nWholesale Orocers and Prottelon Ma\n__ntt     Importers of Test. Ooffn\n-______?\nFruits Staple and Fan\nm.   B.O. (881!\nEngineers\nt.  8.  OREBrJ  CO.\u2014CONTHArTOBS\nFormerls  Oreen  Bros.. Burden.  neW_\nOvtl    \"nd    Mlnlnt    Rnrineers\nB.C. Alberta and nnmlnlon UM .\nSnmyon  (88U\n\u25a0   e.  DAWSON\u2014l_nd   aaneyor.\nMining   and   rttll   Engineer\n.   Kaslo,   B.C. (88M\na^B__aaat .aaa-aaa.\nFuneral Directors\n_Q __T\nStandard Fumltur\nOo \u2014 Undertaken\nAuto Hearte.un-tO\nmV date ohapel Btl\n\u2014 serflres Fries\nressonsble      (8818\nTH_l> 1 a A Fll.  _, MSab - TK*\n-ncacer Boor.C_o out ths.\nSnOMOOW- BOT eVKM IF I HAD\nit- i could Wt go mow-    I\n TH|! NIKON DHL? NIW* THTTRSDAY MOftNTNG, JANUARY 24, .\u2022\u00bb\nPsp Mm\nMarkets and Mining\nSHOW LOSSES\nAT VANCOUVER\nOreille Closes 40e Down\nI Reeves-McDonald 25c;\n'OVER,  Jan.  33.\u2014The leneral\nt the stock market m easier\n^ce? r_!-kS*lf Tt%fUt%\nearly trading, fell away around\nday aM lM\u00abU. MWrhit\nre the close.\n\u2022vea McDonald,  opening at 13SO.\nivemlght loss of IDC. aold down to\nbut rallied to \u00ab3.7t and cloeed\nlover.\nto\nlOM\nof Mc.   Oeorge Copper n\nranged\nbetween 111 and 310 with the cloalng\nbid at W_0. down \u00bb1. Ongna Omar\ncontinual a haa\u2014 trader and closed\nunchanged at $1.24. Big Missouri loat\nthree cents to gl_\u00bb. aad Orandvtew\n4!4 to \u00bbl. Ooloenda waa -Might\nfriely between 11-1 and 31.03, cl_.Ha,\n3c stronger, at 31.03. cotton Kelt\nmoved Up fie, to 65 and Kootenay\nKing  one gent, to 40\nBufus Argents waa off Slip to 4. _c.\nwhile the balance of tail list was\nf ractionaUy eattsr. The oil tames were\nalto sttady.\nCalgary (Kb\nUQU1DAT10N\nnartSriow\nBRITISH GOLD\nAdtanoe    I\n\/UP.   Consol.   \t\nBr*.   Dom.\nir\n_<<i. .-\u2022. t\nSudbury Basin\nSherritt Gordon\nFaleonbridge Nickel\nThe direction and management of this inter-allied\ngroup of properties is moat conservative and highly\ncompetsnt. Ob any' recession for price they present\nattractive; opportunities for purchase.\nR.P.Clark&Co.,(Vanc.)Ltd.\nINVESTMENTI ^AI.K15BS\nrNB*60N, ?.C * PHONE 100\n[Mr !\u25a0\u25a0,   .'\nHP*\nTfle Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company of Canada, Ltd*\n0_M Smelting and aeflntng Departmeat ,-\nTBAIL. BRITISH  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers\" of Gold. Silver, Copper, Lead aad Zinc Ores.\nProducer* of Gold, Silver. Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC   T^IIL\n'--\u2014\u2014\u2022\u2014\u2014\u2014_-_____-_-__-t_____l-__p___i\nBnt Bulls Succeed in Making\nHeadway;    International\nNickel New Peak\nNIW TOBS. Jan. 33.\u2014A powerful\nbull campaign Inspired by further\ntaking of gold from London ran Into\nrather heavy liquidation on the stock\nmarket today. Although a wide assortment of Issues reached new high\nground, the general list made only\nmoderate headway.\nWhile the lnvetetrat* bulls were in-\nBritish gold* to5S_ng 37S0\u00bbM0wl_.\ntoday's taking of 36,000000. opinion\n\u2022s   to   Use   P-*\u00bbb.     vr*B_j   or   tbe\nm\"na'\u00b0fjfm e*>f&.i ~*\u00bb to-\n\u2022\u2022AHPtl\nNortRwest\nMines\nInvestment\nCo.\nMember (Standard Stock miuR\nof Spokane\nSpecialists Is tht underwriting ot\nhigh trade mining aacurtlea affording opportunity for ground-\nfloor participation in successful\nmining enterprises.\nSpokane   \u25a0   -Washington\n\u25a0tap    \u25a0 '\u00ab*   3.-t\u25a0<_\u00ab_\",*    .\u00a5_.,,_\u00ab_P_,\n_.   W__.   *_*.\n. ea-aBM- lie a pu__l uu-\n\u2014\u2014\u2014 east oust niguer p._*> were\n.ai.eu at. A sj\u00bbc_ car.ntiiat asai\n_.,u iar a im record of a__,t_o.\ncn___ai stums same w_,e gains.\nAlUta Chemical and Union Carwuc\n...aue axueoie talus ot 1. aad la\npoiats, wmcu were rtduced to \u00ab and c\nat u_ cleat, tiauonai Caah Beglster\nwas a st_mg feeime, mounuug iietviy\n16 points to a new high at 127.\nSoma of the cnpov-is forgo, ahsad.\ninternational Ml__i touowu a new\npeaa on consummation of Uie merge,\nWith Mond. Bttti; tncounttred proilt-\ntatiug, United States Steal cueing\nmtore  then  a pciaf lower.\nOeneral Hoters, old stock, made an\nettreme sain of aheat flje, but other\nmowra falKd to follow. C f_. led tbe\nrails with a spurt ot more than 1\npoint*, touching 330. Sew Tork 0_<\ntral sold un Dure than lour\nbut cauceltsS most ot Its gain.\nlnghous*' Bectric and Oeneral Bectric made extreme gain, of 6 and 3\npoint*.\nTotal sale*. 4,313,300 shares.\nNEW VON. h'l'oc*   .UH.lTIOM\nAllied   Chemical 331\nAmerican  <-\u00bb\u2022\u2022\u25a0- ?\u00ab_\n*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 3\\a\u00a3r.z A\nNaeh   Motors     MM\nK.  T. C*__al    133\nNorth.   Pacific     T\nPackard    lfr_or_  1\nEfct&T..:.:::: **\nBock  Island  ...\nSchulte   \t\nShell Union OU\nSinclair  Cons.\nSouth.   Pacific\nStand,  oil of Cal\nStand. Oil,  V. ].\nStewart Warner ...\nstudebalter  \t\nTexas Corp -\t\nTeXas   Oulf   Sul\t\nUnion OU of Sal.\nUnion Palclilc   222\nU. 8. Rubber     33%\nU.  s. steel    138(4\n'est.   Electric     1MV{\nIDys Overland ... 31'-\nellow Truck  ...._.   38 _\nAt Belfast, P.B.I, cars and wagons\nwere  running   freely on  Hew   tear's\nBay,   tic   ground   absolutely   bare   ol\nsnow. a\nno   rr  in.\na- \u25a0     ltt.    .  a,, \u2022  ' ft\n$3,000,000 divided into 3,000,000  shares having a par value of $1.00 each.\n..... <    r\nPR&USTINQ OFFERING Qf\ng\n(NONfERSONAL  LIABILITY)\nFormed to take, over the Utica Mine, formerly controlled by Canadian Mines Merger Ltd.\nPreferred shareholders of Canadian Mines Merger Ltd. permitted to exchange their shares on\na basis ef four shares of new Utica for one share of Canadian Mines Merger. Shareholders in\nold Utica Company are also given the privilege of exchanging their shares far new Utica.\n.\n\u2666\nCapitalization\nProperty\nValues\nThe property consists of IS claims 12 utiles from\nKaslo arki 5_ miles from the station ol _dn_u_\non the Srtnsp branch of the C.P.H. A good road\nconne. ts the property with the railroad. Values are\nchiefly sllvcr-lead-zlm. The property haa been\nexamined and reported on favorably by a number of\nwell-knowa tattling engineers, amongst whom are\nArthur  Uke-,   It    w.   W.  MeOongall and W.  O.\nyaraxm.\nDevelopment\nWort un the property consists of 3 tunnels covering\nseveral thousand feet, wttb drifts, crosscuts, raises.\n\u00a3lmes. Mr. Lakes' report states that No. 3 Tunnel\nicks 250 feet of \u00abtilting the downward cxtensiou\nOf the ore bodies from No. 4. 300 teat uho,e. No.\n* Sites a inaxlmimi depth of 1S0II feet, from this\ntufincl several ether veins can be explored.\n, VSI__. oh bre  shinned  from  the  orowrtv  average\naround 3101 per ton. accordlnt to smelter returns.\n__! !. \u00b0_S-_.hM \u00bb \u00bbroduoU_a record oi 3750,000. ol\n!__^_. fL086 .\"fit? fttf J\u00bb7at\u00bbMj_ilt.    Values  run\n, lng thr lower tunnel Iran the are sane spproxiquiaU\n\u00ab?_\u00bb \\\\txxmxxaT   * Wf\u00ae   ^Wl  \u00ab\n... . .\nI'Jquipment consists of camp buildings, small com-\ninstall belter machinery and develop additional\npower and a mm will fee couetructa<1 when sultl-\ncleat sn hn been blocked out.\nManagement\nAdministration of the company's aflair.s *UI b< le\ntbe bands of thoroughly capable and experleiirrrt\nmen, whose aaa_a t\/Ul fee anoaoced Inter.\nWe Recommend Utica at 35 Cents\nAs a mining speculation ef the highest merit. We offer oar participation in this issue at\nthe pre-litting price of SB cents a share with every confidence that the mine will become a\nsuccessful and profitable operation. Application will be made to list the stock on the Vancouver Stock Exchange, Standard Stock and Mining Exofaange of Toronto, Seattle Stock\nExAajige and Spokane Standard Stock Exchange. .     l '\"\ni'\n35 COMIVURCE BLDG. VANCOUVER, B. C\nPhanes Seymour 9114-5-6\n>        (ifI  Head Office, Toronto . ;.\nMembers:   Standard Stock A Mining Exchange. Toronto; Vancouver Stock Kxcbange\nand Other iSxehangea.\nOUS OWN PRIVATE WISE SYSTEM FROM COAST TO COAST\n-\"df * \u25a0 as at. m\nsss  m  t.  as m\nSTOBUS. Pt)R1'0__ a\\ to..\nSt Commerce Building, Vancouver, B. C.\n_lea>e enter my application 'for   shares ot U tico Mines Limited (N.r.L.) at the pre-listing price ot Si cents.\nI enclose herewith cheque, money order or bank draft, tor S  as parmewt In (a\u2014\n._4f*T*R-\u00bb'i*- \u2022\"\u2022-'\u25a0\u2022\u2022 <\u25a0>\na-DREtW   \t\n--.-\u2666., \u00ab... r^A...\n  * .. \u25a0 \u2022*\u2022\u00bb\u2022 \u2022 uraiM \u2022\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0I\"\t\n\u25a0_a_____MMHMHOMi\nnuJONaiiB\nMarket Vatae af Internatienal\n- Nickel $1,(H\u00bb4'__0,(W0 at\nUtest Price\n|F\u00ab       \t\nNKW YORK. Jan. \u00bb.\u2014InUraatlonal\nHstektl company of Canada today Joined\n\u2022he group of corporattooa whoae com-\n-non stock has a market value of In ez-\n-nw ot a billion doikts.\nIn June, 1924. thto oorpofatlon had *\ncommon stock have a market appralet'\n_ tl,004_-fl.ooo. aa compared wtth\n838 3000 ooo for Anaconda's stocks and\nla( an securities of Chi.\napproximately SSSS.OOQ.IX.\n'or Keaaaentt including aU ot Ketads\nCkmsolldated securities.\n(.her corporations appeals** 1\u00bb th\"\nnarket for more than a billion dol-\n'aa are OenerM Motors. Consolidated\n\"Hs of New Tork Canaffian Facific. New\n\u25bcnrk Central. Pennsvlvanla. Standard\nOil of New Jersey, muted States Steel\nind t_\u2014era] Blectric.\nMetal Markets\nNKW YORK. Jan. 33\u2014copper strong;\nelectrolytic spot ao| futures lie.\nIron- Steady:  unchanged.\nTin- Snot 343.30: futures S4S_7.\nLead -Firm; not New Tork 3333;\nBast 8t. \u2014aula 33.30.\nfine -Steady; Bast St. Louis spot and\nure.- seas.\nantl.nony\u2014S3 .So.\nAT _DNTX_I: ,\netnr.'lard copper\u2014Spot \u00a313 3a 3d; futures tit St. T\nBec'folytlc\u2014Bpot   tit    13a;    futures\nSO.\ntin\u2014Spot HSS 10s; futures E3_) tt\nLaad-JSMt and Sutures \u00a333 3s 3d\nItee-J-tJtwt and futures OS ITS 6d.\nLogan A Bryan\nPrivate Wire\nSTOCKS     BONDS     COTTON\n\u25a0MUM\nMEMBERS\nNew York. Montreal and Vancouver Stock Exchanges. Chicago.\nBoard of Trade, Winnipeg Oraln\nExchange and other leading exchanges.\nOFFICES:\nVancouver.  Spokane and   Seattle\nCANADA BONDS\n8Vtr_nP_0, Jan.  38\u2014Dominion war\nissue prices:\nMir loans\u20141881. 3100; 1337. 3108.N\nVictory     loans\u20141833,      8103:      1184.\n3101-0:   1837.  3108.40.\nnewels\u20141083. 3100.50.\nfunding loans\u20141043. 3103 SS;  1843.\nS;  1340; 387:  184S, SSS.\nExchange Rates,\nNtW YORK. Jan. 33\u2014Sterttng e\u00ab-\nhtfae steady at 3480t, for t_-day\nHla and  at 34.84?,   for demand.\n\u2022*a-emn  bar silver\u201456H.\nCanadian  dollars\u2014-U   discount.\nFtancs   3.8p_.\nLire\u20143_3. r      I\nMarks\u2014 23.73;\nKronen\u201428.11.\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, Jan. 33 \u2014\nToronto\u2014Market Is holding firm and\nunchanged ln prices wtth consumption\n.creasing fast. B. C. agga are moving\nfreely  at extras  42c;   firsts  S7C;   pullet\n\u2022xtras 34c: delivered.\nUontreal\u2014Market la steady and ac-\nIve,\nCalgary\u2014Prices to country shippers\nart unchanged at extras SSc to 38c;\nfirsts SSc to SSc; sscond. 18c to 80c,\ndelivered.\nNEW WHEAT MS\nREACBED BUT LOST\n\u25a0\nxMg    TpHtog    That    dH\nHMriRf Is  Followed by\nProfit-Taking Saks\nCHICAGO.  Jan.  38.\u2014In  big tra__n\nheat soared today to new high prtota\n\u25a0ir the eeaaom. but heavy profit taking\n.**.I,\u00bbaaa,,eht    \u00bb-     Ut    f     ~\nlower. w_h com V\u00bb\n-\"glnr  from   %a  \u2014\n-n-\u00bb   \u00bbnd provisions\ntic ea_n.'\nsetback Closing\n.<\u25a0\n.-   ad-\nshowina; 13c to\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL.   Jan.   2S\u2014Batter,   eggs\n-id obeese quiet.\nCheese\u2014Westerns 33c to 33V,C.\nButter\u2014No.  1     pasteurized 40_c  to\n_c\nEggs\u2014Storage extras SSc: firsts 33c to\nWc; seconds 28c; fresh extras 4Sc to\n\u00ab1c;   firsts  40C  to 43c.\n\"CATERPILLAR\"\nTractors\nBIGGER THAN THE WEATHER!\nA Size far Every Use\nA Hundred Uses for Every Sire\n2.T0N, TWENTY, THIRTY, SIXTY\nBETTER QUICKER CHEAPER\nLiterature and Prices on Request\nSOLE   DISTRIBl'TORS   FOB  B.  C.\nMorrison Tractor & Equipment Co., Ltd\nS40  STATION HTBFP.T,  VANCOCVIR\nBRANCH OFFICES: NELSON    BRANCH:\nKelowna Nelson  Traiwter  BMg,\nPrince Oeerte Phones  770 and  2S7B,\nand Nelson. B.C. 'y\nNelson H. DeCrofl, Manas*. \u25a0\nHOLT\nBEST\n^T^uii*o..j.^mi (!Dmpnn{i.^\n INCOW. OSATIB   \u2022\u00ab\u2022  MA*?  !\u2022\u2014\u00bb\nOther Bruuches at Wtanlnes, Vorkton, saskatoon. Edmonton. Calgary, Lethbrldie.\nVancouver, Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria.\n.\nPre-Inventory Oddments\nOffered at Remarkably Low Prices\nLADIES' WEAR\nSPECIAL VALUES IN CORSETS, CORSELETTES AND WRAPS\u2014Gossardand\nD.&A- makes.   All sizes.\nRegular to $1.95 for ...:  75*    Regular to ?2.50 for  J 1.00\nRegular to $2.75 for  ?1.40    Regular to $2.95 for  81.95\nRegular to $3.95 for  \u2014 $2.50\nSPECIAL IN COUTIL BRASSIERS\u2014In Pink.     Assorted   sizes.     Narrow   and\nwide styles.   Regular to 95c for  35* AND 49<\nBRASSIERS\u2014Of Coutil, Silk, Swanny, or lace trimmed..\nRegular values to $2.25 for  95*    Regular values to $1.50 for  75*\nA LARGE AS60RTMENT OF WOOL TOQUES\u2014Por skating at 5\u00a9# AND 75*\n\u2014Second Floor\u2014H B V\u2014\nMEN'S WEAR\nMEN'S ODD TROUSERS\u2014Dark Grey. A good serviceable work Trouser and\njust as cheap aa overalls.   Sizes 38 and 40.   Clearing at, pair  $2.95\nMEN'S BLUE DENIM WORK PANTS\u2014Sizes 38 to 44. Clearing at, pair \u25a0 1.69\nMEN'S .32-OZ. WOOL MACKINAW COATS\u2014Sizes 42 and 44.   Only a few to\nsell.   Clearing at  .: ~  $6.95\nBOYS' 82-OZ. WOOL MACKINAW COATS\u2014Size 24 to 28.   Only a few to sell.\nClearing at _. I -  $4.95\nOddments in Sweaters and Shirts at less than half price.\n\u2014Main Floar\u2014H B C\u2014\n        _:i\nfftrafcm Blarifets\n^\u2014v^    muki Warm Mends\nDRY GOODS\nSpecial Prices on Beacon Blankets\nThe Beacon Blankets are widely known. They posses warmth, softness and durability! These wonderful Blankets are obtainable iu a range of colors that will\nmatch your bedroom furnishings, such as Rose, Blue, Tan and Lavender. Satin\nbound endu.   Size 70x80.   Special   $6.25\n36-INCH TAFFETA AND SATIN DE CHENES\u2014In a range of colors at 95*\n38-INCH CREPE DE CHENE\u2014For Dresses and underwear. Large selection to\nchoose from.   Selling for  $1.25\n36-INCH SQUARE COTTON TABLE COVERS\u2014In Gold design on a Black\nBackground' _    40*\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\n\t\n\u2014\u2014\nNEW TELEPHONE\nAlso a Public Pay Station for use of General Public.\nLadies' Ready-to-Wear 49\nOur Telephones are now as follows:\nDry Goods  , 2   orocery and Crockery  IS\nMen's Furnishings and Boots          Office and House Furnishings 456\nand Shoes _ 29   Ladies' Ready-to-Wear 49\nPlease cut this out and stick on the cover of your Phone book.\n Fag*. Ten\nTm. mt_.. ov t. Art* NT!WS THTTFST>AY MOBNING, JANUARY 24. 16*\n\"CAREFULLY\nrCOMPW'MDED\nOnly One Way\nYou can only judge of the qua'ity of your finished\nprescription by the integrity of the Pharmacy which\nprepares it\nOur Mr. Rutherford, dean of local druggists, has\nserved you honestly and faithfully for over 30 years.\nWith three graduate druggists on our staff, you are\nassured of the services of a qualified dispenser at any\nhour.\nWe use none but the purest chemicals and the\nhighest grade pharmaceuticals in compounding your\nprescription.\nUse our delivery service.\nMANN, RUTHERFORD CO.\nSUCCESSORS TO CANADA DRl'O _ BOOK CO.\nPrescription Druggists\nPHONE 81\nMail Orders Promptly Despatched\n'DRUGS BOOKS STATIONERY\nCOMMISSION OF\nANGLICAN CHURCH\nDUE IN KOOTENAY\nFernie   Tomorrow,   Cranbrook\nFrklay, The* Pour Days at\nNelson and Trail\nSESSIONS NELSON\nTO.COVER FOUR DAYS\nObject of Nation-wide Survey\nIs to Study Problems and\nCoordinate Effort\n_ P. R. IS FIGHTING\nTELEGRAPHIC NOISE\nINTERFERING RADIO\n, G. McLean Reports.to Radio\nj Club That He Has Started Work\nIThat the CJ.R telegraph department\nMa wllttng to do all In Its power to\nktp radio Interference from company\n__\u2022, aad that experiments along\n'   Unas had already ant\u2014a results\n*t Taxi Transfer\nPMONl 77\n\u2022tt-Can\u2014Day and Nlfht Service\nBanaca and IxpreM\nBIT) STEVENB\nwaa the _tate_nent of P. G. McLean.\nC.PR. telegraph* Inspector, at a meeting of Nelson and district radio fans\nlast night under auspice, of the Radio\naaaoclatlon.\nQuoting A. J. Clark, superintendent\nof C.P.R. telegraphs, as stating thaT all\nmeans of checking Interference would\nbe uillleed and that expense was not\nto bt considered, Mr. McLean reported\nthst already two wires, aald to be\nthe main offenders, had been checked.\nThese wires experimented with were\nThe Dally News leased wire and the\neaat traffic wire. Necessity of further\nmaterial from the east haa delayed\niurther  operations,\nB. Irvine of the federal government\nradio department waa also a guest at\nthe meeting.\nHe stated that all work on radio\nexcept that now started by the C.P.R.\nwas financed by the money the government receives from radio licences.\nVarious radio difficulties were discussed and the club considered sending a delegate to \u25a0 a meeting of the\nradio commission In Vancouver next\nmonth.\nI. R. Redpeth, tbe club's president,\nextended to both Mr. McLean and Mr.\nIrvine \"a hearty vote of thanks from\nthe   Nelson   radio   fans.\"\nVISITS GRAY CREEK\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C. Jan. __.\u2014\nMrs. Hlnck spent Thursday at Oray\nCreek  the guest of Mra. Lyonbury.\nAnttmntring!\nA grouping of Canada's leading Fashionable Dresses at sale prices.\nTwo Groups Only.\nHai-am? AruntB\nThese two French Designers are\nproducing Model Dresses for Staples\nFletcher, who are considered Leaders\nof Foehion.\nWe have refrained from cutting the prices of\nthese Dresses very heavily until now, if you wish\nexcluaivenees, your opportunity is here.\n,. DRESSES\nRegularly up to $95.00\nDRESSES\nRegularly up to $50.00\nSale $39*75     Sale $29'75\nWe truthfully state that quite a number of these\neases cost us considerably more than $50.00 each.\nVe are simply following our policy to clean up each\nseason.   We have a number of Dresses imported and\nin France, included.\n-\nSamatott Iroa.\nBlacksmith Supplies\nAlways In Stock\n\u00a5GS PINCERS\n3PS HAMMERS\nHORSE SHOES\nHORSE SHOE NAILS\nBAR IRON AND STEEL\n\"GILBERT* SMITHING COAL\n)MPT SHIPMENT PRICES RIGHT\nrood, Vallance Hardware\nThere will arrive In the Kootenay today the three members of the Anglican\nnational commission, now engaged ln\ncovering the whole of Oannda for the\npurpose of making \"a complete survey\nof all tha* varied problems and needs'\no- the Anglican church.\nEAST KOOTENAY TOR TWO BAYS\nOne entire week will be required for\ntbe commission's visitation of the\nof the commission, Rt. Rev. Derwyn\nKootenay. The dlstngnlshed members\nT. Owen, bishop of Niagara; Rev. Canon\nS. Gould, secretary of the Missionary\nSociety of the Church of England In\nCanada, and Frances H. Gisborne, K.C.\nLX.D, chancellor of the diocese of Ottawa, will divide tfceir East Kootenay\nvisitation between Fernie and Cranbrook, being at Fernie tomorrow, and\nat Cranbrook Friday, arrangements having been made for bringing both clergy\nand representative laity of that portion\nof the diocese Into contact with them.\nThey will reach Nelson Saturday\nnight from the Crow, to enter upon\nul active West Kootenay program of\nsermons, addresses and conference.\ncovering four days.\nWEST   KOOTENAY   PROGKAM\nNelson and Trail, and possibly West\nArm points, will share the honor of\nhearing members of the commission\nfrom their local pulpita Sunday, and\non Monday also the commlsslonerfi\nwill allot themselves between Nelson\nand Trail, for the purpose of the meeting the men and women and church\ncommittees of the parishes in the districts centering at those respective\npoints. Then for the final two days\n*he conference will be held at Nelson.\nTuesday being devoted to discussion\nwith the chapter of the rural deanery\nand with laymen, and Wednesday to\ndiscussions with the Kootenay members of the diocesan executive committee.\n'EVEN   YEAR*   DEVELOPMENT\nThis Anglican survey of national\nscope ls this culmination of a move-\nment of seven years* growth. At the\nrlennlal general synod of 1031, the\nexecutive committee of the Anglican\nforward movement, which was a movement largely financial ln its object\nand tn that respect highly successful,\nrecommends tioned that lf possible the\nefficient lay machinery built uo for\n\u2022he forward movement be retained\", and\nput to further service, ln connection\nwith the laymen's movement. This ln\nfact  developed.\nAt the 16.14 triennial general synod\nIt was recommended that a three-year\nprogram be worked out, for tbe education of laymen as to their duties to\nthe church and aa to their great\nnrlvllege of working for its unbuilding\nand extension. A national laymen's\ncommittee was set up by the synod, to\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON, B.C.\nRETAIL\nNASH\nSixes\nDODGE\nSixes\nWHIPPET\nSixes\nGraham\nTrucks\nVt, Vi, 1ft 2\u00ab\/_\nTONS\nAll Sixes\nCAPITOL MOTOR.\nIOROI   W    PEASE    Msn-D.\nHoi   TU.   theme 65.   Nslson.   B.r\nOpposite Post OHles\n.\u2022mop this preset, ta torn t. field!\n.apartment, tad jo atrrlte m__-_n\nor coordlt-tlnf sll tk* sMorts at t-t\nhurch so ss to secure tb* ms\u2014mun. i\nof result.\nOINT COMMITTM NAMED\nThrse rears of work on these tines ,\n\u00ab_re reported on st the 1927 triennial\nienere.1 synod, and t apodal Joint commutes of both houses me appointed\nby the national laymen', committee\nto consider the reos___sndstlons made.\nTbe result of the deliberations of the\nlolnt committee, snd subsequently of\nthe synod on the ootnmlttee's report,\nwas the appointment of a Joint national\ncommittee of tbe clergy and laity, wltb\ninstructions to make t joint survey of\nell lines of effort of the church, both\nat home and In foreign fields, and to\nwork out a war for the laymen's work\nto develop, the committee to report to\nthe executive council, of the general\nsynod, the Ides, being the eventual\nconsolidation of all church eflbrt.\ntoward which an Inquiry was proposed\nto be held Into the circumstanced snd\nthe needs of the entire church body.\nThis committee did its work and\nreported, and the executive council,\nmeeting last year at Hamilton, appointed the three commissioners now on the\nway to Pernle, to represent the Anglican national commission, and to go\nacquaint themselves with the oondl-\nto every part of the Dominion and\ntlons, problems and needs of the Anglican church ln tbe whole of Canada.\nSo far aa the Anglicans of the West\nKootenay are concerned, lt Is considered of utmost Importance that the\nchurch men and church women of the\nwhole district, so far as possible, should\ntake advantage of the opportunity to\nmeet the commissioners at Nelson or\nat Trail for the purpose of affording\nthe commissioners the largest possible\ninsight Into the status and problems\nof the Anglican church in this district, and for the purpose of bearing\nwhat tbe commissioners have to Impart regarding the welfare of the\nchurch aa brought home to them In\nthis Inquiry.\nWBHT KOOTENAY PKOOBAM\nFollowing   Is   tbe   program   for  the\nWest Kootenay visitation:\nSUNDAY, JANUARY 37\nNelson\u2014\n11:00 a.m.\u2014The Bishop of Niagara at\nSt. Saviour's.\n11:0O a.m.\u2014Chancellor Bisborne at the\nRedeemer.\n7:30 p.m.\u2014Both  commissioners  at  St.\nSaviour's, congregation of The Redeemer Joining congregation ot St.\nSaviour's for this ssrvlce.\nIt   le  hoped  arrangements  may  be\nmade whereby one of the commissioners\nmay be at willow Point and one at\nLongbeach Sunday afternoon.\nTrail-\nCanon Gould at St. Andrew's church\nmorning and evening.\nMONDAY,   JANUARY   20\nNelson\u2014\n\u00ab1:30 pm.\u2014Canon   Gould   and   Chancellor   Olsborne   meet   women   of\nchurch, Nelson and district, ln Memorial hall.\n8:00 p.m.\u2014canon   Gould   and   Chancellor Gisborne meet church committees of 8t. Saviour's and The\nRedeemer ln Memorial hall.\nTrail\u2014\n3:30 p.m.\u2014The Bishop cf Nlsmni\nmeets women of the church, Trait\nand district in basement of St\nAndrew's church,\n8:00 pm.\u2014The Bishop of N!\u00ab~.\nmeets men of the c .urch. T. \u2022'\nand dl-trlot. In basement of St\nAnd**\"'. ceVnroh.\nTUESDAY. JANUARY 20\nNelson-\nMi.dav martins; of the \" .at. cr in tha\nrursl   d-aawery of  Nelson,   ln  Memorial hall.\n'0:00 a.m.\u2014fnmmlsat on.,   meat    \u00ab_*.>\nthe  ch.nter an.   wt*\\\\   what  lav.\nmen   msv  be  abl.  to  be  naaaent\nrenaesen\u00bb(n\u00ab tse v. .*Us nartsljfs\n1:30 inn\u2014f.mmhsloners    meet    laymen onlv.\n8:00 nm\u2014Commissioners  meet  clergy\nonlv.\nw\u2014w\u00bb . -ay    .TSvrAswy    ,n\nAll   dsv   eo\"a\u2014loainne\",   rrtiM.   Kno*. .a.\nnt\"\u00bbK~i of the diocesan executive\ncommittee.\nManitoba's House\nMay Be Delayed\nin\nWINNIPEG. Jan 23--Delay on the\ntart of the Dominion government In\nhe appointment ot t lieutenant-uorsr-\nlor for Manitoba, ln succession to the\nate Hon. T. A. Burrows, may Interfere\n1th the Plans of the provincial government for calling tbe legislature Into\neeclon as soon as possible It WW\ntated here today.\nThe legislature, It has been underload, was to be formally opened on\nTiursday. February 7, but unices a\nteutenant-governor la named In the\nnext few days. It may not be posslb.\n\u25a0o convene the legislature until a later\n-late as members have to be notified\nif the official date eight days ahead.\nThe names of E. D. Martin, prominent Manitoba Liberal and. buslnees-\n\u2022nan: W. L. Psrtlsh. former M LA;\n>. Daniel Mclntyre, former auperln-\nendent of education for the ctty of\nWinnipeg: P. C. Hamilton, defeated\nUberal candidate In Rupertsland in\n'.he last provincial election and B. A.\n.toters, prominent local buslnes man\nire being mentioned as possible successors to Mr. Burrow*.\nKelowna Growers\nDeny Break With\nKELOWNA, B.C., Jan. 23.\u2014At the\nclose of a meeting of members of\nthe Kelowna Growers' exchange here\nMonday, the following resolution was\npsssed unanimously.\n\"Whereas, reports have appeared In\nnewspapers published recently which\nconveyed the impression that Kelowna\nGrowers' exchange Is contemplating severing connections with the Associated\nGrowers of British Columbia, and the\nreports that have been In circulation\nto thla effect have caused much unrest among cooperative growers, In\nmany fruit growing districts:\nBe lt resolved that this special meeting emphatically Indorse the existing\nconnection between the local and cen-\n\u2022rat bodlea. also that we believe that\n-llv through a strong ooooerative bodv\n'tsndllng a large proportion of th'\n'ote! cron can the grower protect B .\niwn interests and have his crop\nhandled at a minimum.\"\nSlocan Park United\nChurch Has Reports\nSLOCAN PARK, B. C. Jan. 23.\u2014At\nhe annua] meeting of the Slocan Park\n\"'nited church the financial report ren-\nTeti by A. T. Nichols waa encouraging.\nMowing Slocan Park to have almost\n\u25a0et Its obligations. The demands made\nn Slocan Park church were heavier\nnan had been expected.\nMajor Gooch President\nof Crawford Bay Tories\nCRAWFORD BAY, B. C, Jan. 23-.\n.Tie Conservative association met In\n-he public hall on Saturday, Major\nJooch being ln the chair.\nOfficers elected for the coming year\nwere:   Major Gooch,   president;   A.  J.\nWatson, secretary; D. Fisher, vlce-pree.\ndent, H. Murray, D. Dale, and O. Bur-\nlea, aa executive committee members.\nW. R. Campion\n-GROCERIES-\nOu Phone No. b Ul\nSpecial\u2014Ripe Tomatoes.\nPer lb  : __>_>\nTiptop Creamery Butter.\na \"\u00bb   96*\nNo. 1 Malkin's Beat Tea ln\nCaddy     864\nDel Monte Spinach 4 tins ..95*\nBread Flour  Special\u2014\n24 lb cotton bag - _1 2.\n4\u00bb-lb. Cottom Bag  (3.30\nWe Guarantee tbe Quality\nDeliveries Twice Dally\nrelrvlew taut Uphill\nOddfellows   and    Rebekahs   opened\nnew  lodge rooms  ln  Fredertcton  last\n44 Taxi & Transfer\nSEDAN CAM FOR HIRE\nDay and Night Service\nReasonable Bates Careful  Driven\nCON   CUMMINS,   MANAGES\nFOR. RENT     Unfurnished\n3-room Suite.\nThis Suite has all outside windows,\nand will be equipped with Electric\nRefrigeration by April 1st.\nKERR APARTMENTS\nEYE STRAIN\nCauses nervous derangement and\nmultitude of other discomforts-\nWhy put up with It? Our examination will reveal promptly\nthe conditions, and our Punktal\nlenses bring prompt relief.\nMake your appointment now.\nExpert  Service\nJ. O. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist and  Optician\nInjured in Fall to\nIce, Slocan River\nLosing his balance while standing\non a bridge crossing the Slocan river\nat Pabsmore, W. R. Perry, ager about\n'_. fell headlong to the frozen river\n30 feet below.\nHe suffered injuries to Ms head and\nright shouldv which necessitated his\nimmediate removal to the Kootenay\nT*ke General hosoltal here. Mr. Perry.\npostmaster at Passmore. was making\nfavorable progress last night;\nDr. D. W. McKay, who was called out\n*o Passmore when th* accident occurred, stated last nitht that Mr.\n\u00b0erry wa. onset\"us and r*_rHng nuiet-\n'v. . Mr. Perry w>H r**nain under treatment', for several days.\nMrs. A P. \"^hitman rendered first\n-Id at Passmore.\nitt^imuita^saimsmmmma^\nCotllnaon  for' Quality\nDIAMOND RINGS.\nWEDDINO RINGS,\nWATCHKS,   ETC.\nE. Collinson\nJEWELER\nEXPECT    WATCHMAKER\n< PR.   and   O.N.R.   Time\nInspector\n^elson New, _< $h> D.\nThe monthly meeting of the Women's\nInstitute will take place on Friday,\nthe 25th. at 3 o'clock. A full at*end-\nance of members and their friends la\nsquested. (701a1\nTbe Annual Oenerel Meeting of thf\nNelson Community Buildings. Mmtt\u00bbd\nwill be held ln the of.'re of the Secretary. 614-816 Ward strict, Nelson.\nB.C.. on Monday. January 28th. 1B20.\nat 4:30 p.m. CHAS. F. McHARDY.\nSecretary.\n<T018\nValentine dance. Eagle Hall. Fehruar\n14.    Brasch's  orchestra.        (700-6-243\nFirst class dressmaking and alterations. Inquire Mrs. Papazlan, Strathcona Hotel. (7026)\nBURNS'   ANNIVER. A\u00abr\nIt's nalr top late\nTo 'nhone  your date\nWei yer   _alr a' st-echt\nHae tt marc .led relcht\nAt\nACTON'S  BEAUTY   PARLORS\nPhone SSS\n(7016)\nthe Mothers' Club will hold a sale\nof aprons Tues., Feb. S. Afternoon\ntea served. Memorial Hall.   (7034-1-338)\nFor rent ln Annable block\u2014One\n4-room furnished suite with bath, outside entrance. One 2-room furnished\nsuite.    One single housekeeping room.\nJ.   E.   Annable.\n(T\nRemember February  8,  W. C. T. IT.\ntea and bake sale. (7032-1-230)\nDance Saturday night In K. P. hall,\nMagllo block. 9 till 12. Oood music\nEverybody  welcome. (7031-2)\nDance ln the Eagle Hall Saturday\nnight.   Music by the Troubadou-s.\n(7030-1-138)\nRADIO PROGRAM\nPrograms for Thursday, January 24\nNB(.  SYSTEM\n11:30 to 12:00 a. m. School broadcast\nthrough KHQ, KOMO, KOW, KOO and\nKPO.\n3:00 to 4:00 p. m. Wanderers, through\nKHQ, KOMO, KOW. KOO, and KPO.\n(1:00 to 6:30 p. m. Concert program,\nthrough KHQ, KOMO, KOW, KOO,\nKPO and KFI.\naf-o-ioweUg is complete program:\nMedley of Scotch Folk Songs \u201e.__\t\n -  arr. by Black\nBecause  - _.._ _ Dartlo\nAnnie Laurie Lady Scott\nFriend ot Mine - _.. Sanderson\nMary of Argyle _  Nelson\nJune\u2014\"Tbe Seasons\"   Tchaikovsky\nOh, Miss Hannah   Doppon\n7:30 to 8:30 p. m. Symphony hour,\nthrough KHQ, KOW, KOMO, KOO and\nKFI.\nDetails of the program follows:\nOperatic Predecessors\nMarch\u2014\"Tannhauaer\"   Wagner\nGavotte\u2014\"Iphigenla\"  \u201e Quick\nMenuett\u2014\"Don Juan Mceart\nHuntsmen's Chorus\u2014\"Der Frelschute\"\n \u2014 -\u00bb.     Weber\nMusic\nSpinning  Chorus\u2014\"Flying  Dutchmen\"\n \u2014 -     Wagner\nMusically Illustrated Talk on Wagner'tt\nMuSiC\nOverture\u2014'Tannhauser\"       Wagner\n0iM-nuii- Contemporaries and Followers\nPoika\u2014\"ihe Bartered Bride\" ...8metana\nCarmen  Ballet    ,   Bliet\nAr.a of jwicaela.\nDanse Boheme.\nh.4*.-..\u2014 ii.un   _ Verdi\ne>j mi\/mi_> urcaetKxa\nauonuet uw i'V\u201ec\u00ab Berlioz\n-j.._,_.._._.-. _\u00bba__.\u2014 -MUM.1 muu ureiei\"\n - \u00ab....:    -.uuipuraincK\nii_u\u201e_.iuii    tKuu^iwuJ,    1*0.    O         1j_SS-\no.uvt to \u00bb--- v. iu.\u2014Memory lane,\nuuvunn _-_.*\u00bb, aim kuv).\n.-..- to ._.__ p. ni.\u2014 Trocaderans,\n-.uoufcii __ur \\.M'U>, and Kri (1U-11J.\nKJB,    gE.AJ.Tla_-.\n6:30 p.  m, _mu\u00ab**i_.\n'\/:uif p.   ui.   ouiuuuuans.\nitem p. in. csuoa iv.-iic-iTa.\n_.-\u00abj p.   ui.   AMue   quartette.\n0.00   p.   IU.   AU.t>i..C   a^tUxtaiUtULe,\n\u00ab...   p.   in.   w-t\"   Luui_\/aliy.\nlU.i\/U   p.   Ill,   OlUO   _*.L.\nin.-.i. p. in. ivuveity piano duet.\n-\u2022- -t,t p. ul oa*at;u->ue quuibet.\nli.-.   y,   in,   uiui.o-itt.\nkr'JtC,   BAA   rihiOiCISCO\n6:00 p. iii. _m.ui rout*!.\n6:30 p. m. '_ neater program.\n7..'U p. m. C-emails.\n6:\\*) p. in.  Adits    irom an Antique\nshop.\n8_\u00bbu p, m. KFRC Concert orchestra,\n-.un p. m. ttvuaio program.\niu:uo p. nt. Ami* 'n  Auuy.\n10:10 p. m. oicnesua.\nli:io p. m. vtsuc\u00abrL orchestra.\nKPO,   SAN   tlCAM. 1..1 O\n6:30 p. iu. v..iid tvtuut ui ine air.\n6:30 p. m. bong recital.\n7:00 p. m. Business taiks, sports.\n7..JU p. in. iuniiiiy Munroe and Boh\nAllen.\n8:ou p. m. Concert hour.\n8:30 p. m. VJoiin recital,\n9:oo p. m. ugut. opera presentation.\nKOIN   PORTLAND\n6:00  p. m. organ.\n7:o0 p. m. Orcnestra.\n8:00 p. m. utuaio program.\n8:50 p. m. Studto program.\n9:00 p. m. Soloists' program.\n10:00 p. m. Biliy's Hawaliana\n10:30 p. m. Theater dance, frolic.\nMagneto\nand Generator\nRepairs\nBENNETTS' LIMITED\nTh*  House ol  Electrical  Goods\no\nOPTOMETRIST\nT\"     Service complete in\nevery branch of the\nprofession,    assur-\n_     inj you exactitude\nt\\J     of   correct   fitted\nT       glasses   and   com-\n1      fort\nA    J. A. C. Laughton\nN\n(irlllill  Bits.,  riioilc  125\nBecause\nISelson Brand\nJAM\nIs made from fresh fruits\nand pure cane sugar. It\nis a healthful food for the\nchildren, as a snack between meals there is (no\nfiner delicacy than Nelson\nBrand Jam, served with\nbread and butter. .\nMcDonald\nJam Co.\nNelson Brand Jams\nNELSON, B.C.\nMatch Block Wood\nClean \u2014 Dry \u2014 Convenient\nW. W. Powell <fc Co., Ltd.\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nPhone 176 Stanley St\nAppledde Man Suffers\nbroken Legs When Horse\nKicks and Tramples Him\nTo suifsr a broken leg when kicked\nby a horse, and then to have his other\nleg broken when the horse tramplsd\nupon him was the eiperlsnos ol\nCharles Hlckey of Appledale, sow a\npatient In the Kootenay Lake Oeneral\nhospital hare.\nProvincial Exhibition Association ot\nPrince Edward Island reported t most\nsuccessful rear,\nCO \u00ab*\u25a0\nFOB THE  BEST  IN\nDOMESTIC      '\nor\nSTEAM  COAL\nand\nD*V WOOD\nAD   1_ _tth\u00bb   at\nRefnlar    Prices\nMacDONALD CARTAGE\nft FUEL CO.\nDM Raker St.\nGLOVES\nUnlined, Silk Lined, Wool\nLined and Wool.\nDon't go around with\nyour hands in your pockets. Buy a nice pair of\ngloves to keep them .warm.\nWe have a large range of\nboth Deer Skin and Picary,\nHog lined or unlined. Also\na large range of wool\ngloves.\nWOOL LINED GLOVES\n$2.25 TO 94-00\nSILK LINED\n$2.50 TO f8.50\nUNLINED\nf 1.50 TO f4.50\nWOOL GLOVES\n75t> $1.00 TO $2.50\nEmorys\nA. D. Papazlan\nWATCHMAKER,    JEWELER\nAND GRADUATE OPTICIAN\n413 HALL STREET\nCity Drug Co.\nHelaon's Dispensing Cb.ml._a\nFilms,   Kodaks,   Drum.   Stationery.\nMall  orders   promptly   despatched.\nIOX  1083    NELSON,  11.1'.    PHONE  14\nCome In and (let Vonr Weight Fret\nLearn to Earn\nSmythe's Bronchitis Remedy\nFavorable for Cougbs, Cold* and Bronchitis. Pneumonia  and  Grippe.\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription Specialist\nOpp. Bank of, Commerce.        Phone 1\nMen's Work &.\nDress Shoes\nA complete Un* of each at a\nprice that Is within your :\nWade's Shoe Shop\nTonigkt\u2014For ihe last\nTime\na-CaW??,\nKATHERKID\nA great picture, one of\nthe best we have ever\nshown.\nCOMING\u2014   THURSDAY,\nJANUARY 31\nThe World Renowned\nIMPERIAL SINGERS\n13   PRIZE   WINNING   SOLOISTS\nSeat Sale Opens at Theater\nMonday, January 28\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1929_01_24","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0404367","@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":"1929-01-24 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1929-01-24 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\/1.0404367"}