{"@context":{"@language":"en","AggregatedSourceRepository":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider","Collection":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf","DateAvailable":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DateIssued":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued","DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO","FileFormat":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format","FullText":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Genre":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType","GeographicLocation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial","Identifier":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier","IsShownAt":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt","Language":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language","Latitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat","Longitude":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long","Notes":"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note","Provider":"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider","Publisher":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher","Rights":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights","SortDate":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/date","Source":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source","Title":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title","Type":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type","Translation":"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description"},"AggregatedSourceRepository":[{"@value":"CONTENTdm","@language":"en"}],"Collection":[{"@value":"BC Historical Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"DateAvailable":[{"@value":"2021-12-05","@language":"en"}],"DateIssued":[{"@value":"1936-03-03","@language":"en"}],"DigitalResourceOriginalRecord":[{"@value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0406712\/source.json","@language":"en"}],"FileFormat":[{"@value":"application\/pdf","@language":"en"}],"FullText":[{"@value":" Tir,\n\/\u2022'\"ov...\nTrail Beats Kimberley {iu\nto Tie Up Series   >\n\u2014Pa_\\e Five\nrsflfKu-\no\u00abia i e \"T\n\u2014\u2014r\nPROVIN'\nLIBI\n3<ba\nvrcT\n_3.C But'\/difnS U Third in\nCanada in February\n\u2014Pa&e Seven\nVOLUME 84\nPIVI CINTS A COPY\nNILION. BRITISH  COLUMBIA. OANADA-TUIIDAY  MORNINO.  MARCH 8. 1888\nNUMBER _-_|\nIS MEN KILLED NEAR REVELSTOKE A!\nRUN >AWAY TENDER CRASHES THE\nCANADAMAYASK\nITALY TO RECALL\nCONSUL-GENERAL\nPremier Agrees That\nMatter Is One of\nImportance\nCONSUL SPOKE\nAGAINST LEAGUE\nForming Secret Body\nto Push Fascism\nin Canada?\nFresh Slides Deluge at Coryell M\nbut Trains Nay Pass Early A. M.\nPEACE OR MORE\nEMBARGOES IS\nLEAGUE EDICT\nNew Gyro.Chief\nTakes Office\nAlternative Put Up to\nMussolini by\nCommittee\nOTTAWA, March 2 (CP)-The\nhouie of commoni tonight decided\non a committee Investigation ot\nfarm-implement prices after spending a considerable part for the day\ntalking of a speech made Saturday\nIn Montreal by Llugi Petruccl, Italian consul-general, ud deciding tbe\ngovernment should request hit recall If he made further ilmilir tit-\nterancei.\nDiscussion of I resolution on Canada 's obligation* under the League\nof Nationa eovenint produced\nchtrget of impropriety agalnit Pe-\ntrucci. J. S. Woodiworth, CCJ*.\nleader, ttticked the Italian consul-\ngeneral's  ipeech which contalnvd\n(Contlnutd on Piqi Eight)\n^Year-Old With\na Wife byes a\nSurprise lo Court\nMagistrate Is Puzzled\nas to What to Do\nTORONTO (CP)\u2014He seemed only\ne child u he stood In the prisoner's dock in police court \"Are you\nture he is old enough lo be tried in\nthis court,\" uked Magistrate R, J.\nBrowne. \"He doesn't look IB.\"\n\"I'm 17,\" said John Jay, \"and I'm\nguilty,\" he added u the charge ot\nreceiving stolen Jewelry wu reid,\n\"I got it from mother boy for fixing hit bike but I wit told to tike\nit back ud I wis going to.\" He\nstopped, hit lipi trembling.\n\"Who told you to tike It back?\"\ninquired the magiitrate kindly.\n\"Your mother?\"\n\"No,\" piped up the ltd. \"My wife.\"\n\"Your whit?\" excltimed Crown\nAttorney F. I. Malone.\n\"Your what?\" echoed Magistrate\nBrown. \"Your ... Grett guni and\nlittle fishes whst is a migistrate to\ndo with t cue like this?\" And titer\nt pause: TU remind you a week\nfor tentence. I've got to think thli\nover. I've got to think thii over\na lot\"\nBRITAIN SEEKS\nAN OIL EMBARGO\nItaly Sticks to Its\nDemands; Protests\nTortures\nGENEVA, March 1 (AP).-The\nalternative of peeee by conciliation\nor renewed' preuure at unctions\nagainst Italy wu placed before\nPremier Muuolini today by the\nLeigue ot Nitloni unctions committee.\nTne committee ipproved e propoul by Foreign Minliter Fludln\nof France thtt the council committee\nof 18 be convoked Immediitely for\none lut survey of the posslbllitiu\nof peice by conciliitlon.\nBut if peace efforti fill, Anthony\nEden,   British   foreign   secretary,\n(Continued on'trtagt Flvi)\nTAKE BLAME FOR\nJAPAN REVOLT\nTOKYO, Much 8 (Tueedty) (CP-\nHtvu),\u2014The newspapen Aubl\nand Ntchl Nlchl said todsy that\nWar Minister Kawashlma and a\ngroup of high officers ot tbe superior nar council accepted fuU responsibility for the army revolt and\nassassinations et lest Wednesday.\nThe reports said important officials of tbt ministry ot wsr ud\nmemben of the genenl staff also\nwere involved. War Miniiter Ka-\nwashima and the other officen will\nresign their commissions ud retire\n(rom public tervice, the newspspers\nsaid.\nAttorneys General\nDiscuss Reforms\nOTTAWA, March 2 (CP)-At-\ntorneyt general from ill the provinces. Including two premiers, todsy\nresumed deliberations here under\nchairmanship of Hon. Ernest Lapointe, minister ot justice, seeking\nto retch igreement on the question\nof constitutional reform.\nLacking uy official confirmation\nu meetings were held ln private, reports were current tonight the proposal to bring within authority of\ntha Dominion parliament wide powen to amend the Brltlih North America act without recourse to the\nBritish parliament wu meeting considerable opposlUon from the Maritime provlncu.\n\u2022Definite progress\"\nOTTAWA, Msrch 2 (CP).-An\nsll-day meeting of provincial attorneys general and officers of the\ndepartment ot justice resulted ln\n\"definite progress towird idjustment of the main difficulties\" involved ln proposed meuures of constitution.! reform, u official announcement itated tonight.\n818,5-2 FOR  FUEL  ENQUIRY\nVICTORIA, March 2 (CP) .-Expeniei of .the Britiih Columbit\nroyil commission on cosl snd petroleum products up to March 31 of\nlut year were $18,822, according to\nfigures submitted to the legislature.\nThese costs cover approximately\nthe flnt tix monthi of the enquiry.\nSince the end of lut Mtrch the investigation hai been continued in\nvarioui parti of the province ud\nTOKYO, Mirch 2 (AP). - The\nlate of t scon of Insurgent officen\nunder the grave charge ot disobedience to the throne, wu the\nsubject of e conference tonight of\narmy memben ot tht lupreme\ncouncil.\nSix ruklng generals ittended the\nptrley, but gave no indication ot\nhow drastically their subordinstu\nwho slew tour memben ot tht government lut week, ud held out\nagalnit loyal troops for four days,\nwill be punished.\nKing Edward oi\nIntermediary in\nEthiopian War?\nLONDON, Mirch 3 (Tuetdty)-\n(AP)\u2014The tuggeitlon thtt Emperor\nHaile Selassie Of Ethiopia wu ready\nto discuss peace terras, provided\nKing Edward of Great Britain\nwould act u intermediary, wu contained in a dispatch to the Dally\nMail today from ita Geneva correspondent, Ward Price.\n\"There is s good reason,\" the dii-\npatch said, \"to believe that a very\nimportant message from the emperor of Ethiopia wu received in\nLondon'yuterday and tru-mitted\nto Eden (Anthony Eden, British\nforeign minister) st Geneva.\n\"It is to the effect Out lhe emperor would be prepared to discuu\nterms ot peace on a buis ol itatus\nquo\u2014Italy retaining portions of\nEthlopli which ihe hid occupied-\nprovided the King of Englud would\nact u lntermediiry.\n\"It it expected thtt Eden will reply to thit overture todty.'*\nDRIVER  KILLED\nAIRDRIE, AIU., Mtrch 2 (CP).\u2014\nThrown from u automobile when\nIt rolled more then SOO teet ud\nlanded in three and a half feet of\nwater in a roadside ditch after\nstriking a toft spot in tht hlghwiy,\nWllliim OUver Smith, 28, of Cilgiry wu killed almost Instantly\nnar here today. Ht wu driving the\ncar. Airdrle ll ibout 20 milei north\nof Cilgiry.\nSENATE RECONVENES TONIGHT\nCHARLES MORRIS\nCharlu Morrii, member tt tht\nNtlton Gyro club llnet UM, wu\ntltcttd pruldent ef tht tlub fer\n1*88 Monday night While net\nholding offl-- btfort, Mr. Morrii\nhtd betn I eommlttit chairman\nen ttvirtl ettuloM ind hu bun\nen ittlvt member of tht Gyro\npark eommlttit fer umt timt.\nMarkets at\na Glance\nBy the Cinidlin Preu\nToronto and Montreal\u2014Induttrlal\nitocki hlghtr.\nToronto mlnee\u2014Steady to itrong.\nNew York\u2014Stocki higher.\nWinnipeg\u2014Whut down I. to Va.\nToronto\u2014Bacon hogi off truck up\n28 centi to 8.50.\nLondon\u2014Bir lilver ud other\nmetali lower.\nNew York\u2014Bar ellver, lud end\nzinc unchanged; export copper\nlower,\nMontreal\u2014SUver lower.\nNew York\u2014Cotton ud rubber\nunchuged; coffee ud sugar lowtr.\nNew York\u2014Canadian dollar unchanged at 1.00 3-S2.\nMARY JOYCE IS AT\nTANANA CROSSING\nWHITEHORSE, Y.T., March 2 -\n(CP)\u2014 Mary Joyce, the comely _**\u2022\nyear-old hunting lodge mlitreu from\nTaku, unheard from for almoit a\nweek while mushing towird Ftlr-\nbuki, todty remained it Tumi\nCrossing, 188 miles south of Fairbanks while ahe considered i report that the Fairbanki ice carnival\ncommittee would tend i pltnt to\nUke her to the Aluka city where\nthe hu been entered in the carnival\ncontest.\nMiu Joyce srrived it Tumi\nCrossing with her Indiu guide,\nJimmy Allen. She hid been loctted\nit Tetling yeiterdiy by Pilot Jot\nCiosson, veteran Aliski filer.\nTo Probe Pricei of\nFarm Implements\nOTTAWA, Mirth 2 (CP)- The\nhome of commoni tonight initructed itt agricultural committee to open\nu investigation ot farm implement\nprlcu, particularly to find out reti-\nont for lncreuu thit yetr.\nThe committee investigation may\nbe only a preliminary one. Agriculture Minister Gardiner luggested it\ncould be decided whether the whole\nsubject should be referred liter to\nthe tariff botrd, tht nitlonil research council or the Combinu act\nfor furtfcer itudy.\nWILD LIFE CONPERINCI\nSASKATOON, Mirch 2 (CP)-\nArrangementt have been completed\nfor a western Canada wUd Ufa conference ln Saskatoon March 23.\nTha interprovlnclil councU, representing Stskitchewu, Manitoba,\nud Alberta, will meet ud the Stt-\nkttcbewan gimt commissioner ls\ninviting tht gime commissioners of\nAlberto, Msnitoba ud British Columbit to ittend.\nTHROUGH TRAIN\nGOES WEST IN\nANTICIPATION\nCoast Train May Be\nHere at 6 a.m., and\nGo East\nEAST OF HERE\nTHINGS NORMAL\nSlide Count in Farron-\nCoryell Area Near\n\u25a040 Total\nWith the continued thaw replacing the partly cleared inowilides in\ntht Firron-Cucade section with\npltnty ot brand ntw onu Thundiy ifternoon, including one ihde\nJust west ot Coryell 1000 feet wide\nsnd 25 feet deep, the Cuidiu Piclfic found iti bittle with the tildes\nthere, which it hu wiged ilnct\nThunday, prolonged into the eirly\nhoun of another day.\nBut the bittle wkt being won, by\nmen ud equipment and at lait\naccounts It wu figured that the\nline would be deer trouod 8:30\nun. Tueidiy, if thtre should be\nno chsnge ln the situstlon, md thet\nthe tint eutbound through pu-\n(Contlnua. en Pigt Eight)\nNON-POOL WHEAT\nGROWERS NOT TO\nBE COMPENSATED\nOTTAWA, Mirth 2 (CP).-The\ngovernment hu refuied to com-\npenute non-pool whett growen\nwho told their 1830 whut it leu\nthu 80 centi (belli No. 1 northern\nFort Willlimi. The tub-committee\nof tht cibinet dealing with whett\nhu telegraphed lti refuul to the\nprairie whut growen who made\ntbe request. Tradei Minister Euler,\nchalrmu of the sub-committee, uld\ntoday.\nLORD ALASTAIR\nINNES-KER DIES\nPROFESSOR ANDERSON DIES\nOTTAWA, March 2 (CP)- Following an adjournment ot almost\ntht ntt of the expensei will be re-  three weeki, the unite will recon-\nported ln Uie next accounts. I vene tomorrow night\nLONDON, March 2 (AP)-Lord\nAlaitolr Innes-Ker, 88, Equerry-in-\nordlntry to the lite King George,\ndied at hii bome yeiterdiy. He wu\nheir pruumptive to the ninth dukedom of Roxburghe ud terved during both the Boer ud- greit wir,\nbeing mentioned several timet in\ndispatchei.\n\"Emergency\" State\nProclaimed in New\nYork at Strike on\nNEW YORK, Mirch 2 (CP)\u2014\nNtw York City operated undtr e\nproclimitlon of emergency tonight et tht ucond dty ef e\nbuilding itrlkt Indonvtnltnotd\nthouundi whs dtptnd en tit-\nviton te rush their offlcei end\nhomts.\nTht itrlkt crippled buiineu and\nruldtntltl ikyicripen end tx-\ntenilon* if It were thraittned fer\ntomorrow.\nThe health committee took control to combat an officially dealt-\nnttid \"itttt of tmirgtney.\" Tht\nhetrth dtptrtment wu cillid upon to maintain urvlcti aaaantlal\nto heilth of tht eltlMiM.\nRUXTON TRIAL\nIS UNDER WAY\nMANCHESTER, March 2 (CP)-\nQuotlng from \"Othello,\" the crown\nprosecutor dectared todty that telltale clues brought to light by modern science had tripped up Dr. Buck\nRuxton, Indlu-blooded phyilcltn,\nln \"tbe perfect crime.\"\nRuxton wut on trial at the Minchester usiiu for the \"devil's beef-\ntub\" itaying of hit wife tnd nune-\nmtld in ont of Britain'! mott gruesome crlmet of modern tlmu.\nWhat the prosecution contends\nire the horribly mutUtted remtini\nof Mn. Iube-la Ruxton, St, and\nthe nursemaid, Mary Jut Rogerson,\n20, ire tn court u evidence.\nJackaon laid ttitt Miss Rogtrson\nsuffered from tonsilitis ud that\nthe remains of oni body thowed\nthey were of t person ,who bed tills\nellment\n\"The murderer extracted Mlu\nRogerson'i teeth after duth, but\nforgot that medicsl science could\ntell when they wera pulled,\" declared the protecutor.\nB.C.MAN KILLED\nIN PHILUPINES\nALBERT AM TO\nPAYMORETAX\nBUDGET SHOWS\nTwo-Per-Cent Tax on\nSales; Income Tax*\nIs Higher\nSOCIAL SERVICE\nTAX ON PROPERTY\nWill Leave Deficit of\n$2,549,044 Is the\nEstimate\nEDMONTON, Much 2 (CP^-CiU-\nsent of Alberta learned today ot\nIncreued taxation when Hon.\nCharlei Cockroft provincial treuurer, before the fint Sociil Credit\nlegltlitpre in the world, delivered\nhis budget speech.\nThtrt will be e new uiu tix\nen the belli of 2 per ctnt ef ell\noommodltlea iold; hlghtr Inostnt\ntax and a aoclal urvlca tax, to\nrapliM tht prtunt luppltmtntary\ntax..\nAutomobile driven* llcencu wiU\nbe pub on u tnnuil fee bull, instead tt-the preunt Ufa certificates and it is ettimitod thli lource\nwlU bring ln increued revenue ef\n(Contlnutd on Ptgt Flvt)\nMixed Marriage\nIs Annulled\nMANILA, PJ, March 3 (AP).-\nJtmu L. Hall, luperlntendent ot\nthe Ipo mine, wu kiUed todty when\nhe feU 150 feet down \u25a0 shaft. A Canadlu, HaU wu I geologist ud\nengineer tor Benguet Gold Mining,\nConiolidited. He wu i veteran of\nthe greet wir and a graduate of\nthe University ot Toronto,\nVANCOUVER, March 2 <CP).-\nJsmei L. Hill, killed todty near\nMuilt, wu born in Brldgewiter,\nNova Scols, in 1803.\nHe cute to BriUih Columbii\nihortly ifter finiihlng I post-grsdu-\nste course in Toronto univenity snd\nwu employed in the Interior of the\nprovince by the Gruby ConsoU-\ndsted Mining & SmelUng Co., Ltd.\nEDITORS MAY CRITICIZE VERDICT\nOF JUDGE, PRIVY COUNCIL STATES\nAllow Appeal of Editor From Fine After He Wrote About\n\"Inequality\" of Sentences for Similar Crimes\n\u2022y THOMAS T. CHAMPION\n(Cenadlsn Preu Staff Writer).\nLONDON, March 2 (CP Cable).-\nJustice is not a cloistered virtue,\nsaid Lord Atkin today et a session\nof tht Judlcil committee of the\nprivy council in which he innounced the declilon of their lordships\nto sllow the ippeil ot Andre Piul\nTtruce Ambtrd, editor ud mu-\nager of the Port of Spain Gazette.\nAmbard appealed against a decision of tbe Trinidad ud Tobsgo\nsupreme court which fined him \u00a328\nor imprisonment for one month for\ncontempt ot court\nThe proceedings arouse out ot Incidents in June, 1834, when the\neditor published comment on what\nhe termed \"the inequality ot sen\ntences\" and \"the hurnu element In\ntwirding punishment\"\nSentences do vary in apparently\nsimilar clrcumsUnces with tht hib-\nit ot mind of t parlciulir Judge,\ntaid Lord Atkin. It is inevitable,\nhe continued, that tome very conscientious judgu have thought it\ntheir duty to visit particular crimes\nwith exemplary sentence.. Othen\nequslly conscientious have thought\nlt their duty to view the ume\ncrimes with leniency.\nWhether the luthority ud poiition of the indlviduil judge or the\ndue tdmlnlstration ot jutUce li concerned, no wrong Is committed by\nuy member ot the public who exercises the ordinary right of criticising in good filth ln private or\nIn pubUc the public act done ln\nthe teit ot justice, slid Lord Atkin.\nC. P. R. TO SPEND $435,692 ON THE\nKETTLE VALLEY DIVISION THIS YEAR\nMADISON, WU., Mirch 2 <AP>-\nRssmus Bjorn Andenon, known u\n\"the father of Norse literature In\nAmerica,\" died here today. He wu\n80 yeart old January 12. Professor\nAnderson wai one of the futl hii-\ntoriint to champion the claim that I prlation ud betterment work for\nUtt Erlcsoa discovered Ameri.a.' 1838,\" fc placed it **435,6M.\nPENTICTON, B. C, March 2 (CP)\n\u2014 TThe Cuadiu Pacific Railway\ncompany it planning the lirgest If\nplicemut program ever to be un-\nderteku on the Kettle Valley dlvlilon, it hu been tnnounced here.\nThe total expenditure on the dlvlilon, it hu bten innounced here.\nThe total expenditure on the diviiion under the heeding of \"appro-\nA large number ot additional men\nwill be employed on tacUon gup,\nextra gtngs, bridgemen ud engine\nud trainmen. It il undentood thtt\nemployment will be given insofar\nu possible to district residents. A\nltrge imount of material wUl be\npurehued ilso.\nLtrgut itemi ln tht program include the renewita, $107,711 ud\nrails ud futonlngs, 1153,832.\nMONTREAL, Msrch 2 (CP).-A\nmixed, marriage celebrated first before e Protestant minister end liter\nbefore \u25a0 Romin CithoUc priest received its final innulment from the\nsuperior court today, when Juitlce\nAlfred Forest dectared the Protestant ceremony invalid.\nAn earlier decree by Justice Louis\nCouilneau had tnnuled the Roman\nCathoUc ceremony. As a result of\nthe decision of the court John Brere-\nton DougeU, Proteitant, wu sept-\nrated from hit wflt Alme MUdred\nHopkini, Roman CathoUc.\nThe couple were married ln 1814\nby a Proteitant mlnitttr. Tm dayi\nafter the ceremony the mother ot\nthe wife Insisted her daughter be\nremarried by a- Roman Catholic\npriest This wit done.\nLut June Justice Cousinesu u-\nnuUed the second marriage on the\ngrounds thst lt could not hsve been\nlegally contracted before the flnt\nhad been dissolved. In unulling\nthe Protestant marriage today Judge\nforest said it was invalid beciuse\nDougall had beUeved the woman\nwai a Proteitant not i Romu Cithollc When he mirried her.\nen Were Attempting Puj\na Derailed Engine Back 01\nTrack in a Snowslide Cu\nHuge Tender, Breaking Away From Anothc\nEngine, Races a Mile Down Grade to\nTrap Men in Narrow Canyon\n15-FOOT WALLS OF SNOW PREVENT\nESCAPE; SIX MEN ARE IN HOSPITA\nMost of Victims Veteran Workers of C. P. R\nMen Probably Thought Roar of Tender\nWas From New Nearby Slides\n1    \u25a0\u25a0    . mm I\u2014 I       I        i.   ,.\nREVELSTOKI, I.C, Msrch 2 (CP).\u2014Fifteen men,\nmott ef thtm veteran railroad workers of this mountain\ndivision of tho Canadisn Pacific Railway, wore tho death\ntoll today of a run-away tender which crashed upon them.\nwith meteor speed in a tnow-ilide cut oast of here.\nSix others are In hospital, all expected to recover.\nA massive, render of mountain typo, as big in itself\nas most locomotives, broke away from ah engine which\nwaa hauling It upgrade to lllecillewaet and careened a\nfull mile down the mountain grade until it struck the\nworking crew attempting to put a derailed engine back on tl\ntrack.\nThe slide Itself, which came down Sunday, was only aba]\n100 yards long and the men could have made an escape if ttj\n(Continued on Ptgt Eight)\nShipwrecked Folk\not Voncourer\nVANCOUVER, Mtrch J (CP).-\nSlx setfiren, including two women,\narrived Here todsy, mtde light of\ntheir thtpwreck experiences on\nboard the American schooner Maid\nof Orleans ud wld tbe SS-yeer-old\nvessel hid not yet come to the end\nof i colorful career thtt Included\ntervicei it ilave trader, rum runner, fiihing boit ud lately general\ntrading vessel.\nThe vessel, bound on t trading\ncrulie of thl Atatkin peniniuli tnd\nUie Aleutlu Itlinds, itruck on the\nrocky ihore of Sarah ittand in\nnorthern Britiih Columbia waten\nduring e heevy snowstorm lut Wedneidiy.\nN.H.L. Teami to Ploy\not Alberto Cities\nTORONTO, Mtrch 2 (CP).\u2014Toronto Miplt Letts ud Chlctgo Blick\nHawks wUl play two gamea ln\nWinnipeg tnd two in Calgary on\nthe wty to their Vucouver exhibition seriei after the NtUontl Hockey\nleigue tenon, lt wu announced today.\nIn Vmcouvtr four gamea wlU be\npliyed by the 18 Toronto ptaytn\nud 10 Chlcigoui who pltn, to\nmtke the trip. Conny Smythe,\nmanager of the Letts, snd Clem\nLoughlln, Hiwk pilot, wlU be in\nchirge of the teams.\nRevelstoke Tetegraph Operator,\nCar Repairer and Seetlonmen,\nGolden Trainman, Among IS Dead\nREVELSTOKE, 1,0, March 2 <CP)<-The Hit of 18 men kllltd\ntnd ilx Injured In today'i cruh ef e run-away tender Into a derailed locomotive tut ef here, It u fellowi:\nKILLED:\nCharltt Job-eon, 87, notion foremin, Twin Buttt,\nt. Sandqulit, 18, itctlon foremen, Twin Butte.\nJehn R. Rtline, 41, telegraph operator, Revelitoke,\nA. Shiphird, 48, eir repairer, Revtlitokt.\nHini Htug, 80, tralnmtn, (.oldie.\nJohn Mlkloa, 43, itctlonmtn, Rtvtlitokt.\nK. Wehllewhkl, SI, teetlonmin, Rtvilttokt.\nB. Sedaltli, SS, itctlonmtn, Revelttokt.\nO. Durdi, S. Htulir, K. Lihtl, 8. Mlttuml, 8. Hldimi, Ta\nYimig-chl ind H. Migimury, laborer.,\nIN|URED:\n0. D. Cettir, divisional muter mechmle, ihock tnd burnt-\nNet tentldired ttrleut.\nQtergt B. Altxtndir, dlvltlonil engineer, tprelned inkle.\nDoing well.\nPtrcy A. Shifer, locomotive uglnttr, eruthtd ind ihock. li\ngood condition.\nV. PleoeeeelH, taction foremen, alight wound.\nL. Wlltali, teetlonmin, compound fracture lift Its.\nJ. Mliuta, libonr, fractured right leg.\nLORD CAVENDISH\nON CALIFORNIA\nSAN PEDRO. Cal., March 2 (CP)\n\u2014 Lord Chirlei Ctvendish. son of\nthe Duke of Devinshire, governor\ngenerel of Cuidt 1918-21, wu\namong 441 passengers who paced\nUie deck of tht strike-docked liner\nCtUtornia todty.\nA wige dispute tied up the liner\nwhose psssengen besides Lord\nChirlei ud hii wife, the former\nAdele Aittire, dancer, Included 1*.\nW. WlgnilL formtr high iherlff of\nCheihire, Englud, ud Captain T,\nH. Lyon, recratly retired marine\nluperlntendent ot the InterniUonil\nMercantile Mirlne compuy.\nCONTIST FOR ARCHITECTS\nOTTAWA, Mirch 2 (CP). - To\nucouragt design of low-cost residential houses to be built under the\nDominion Housing set, Finance Minister Dunning todsy announced a\ncompeUUon open to all architects\nin Cinada \u2014 with 18 cuh prises\nranging from \u00bb500 to SSO.\nThe neeeistry order-in-council\nluthori-ing tht compeUUon hu\nbeen passed ud the contest openi\n\u25a0t once. Drawings mutt be postmarked not later thu April 18,\nSUPREME COURT\nBUIUHNO \"INADEQUATE\"\nOTTAWA, March 2 (CP)\u2014 The\nbuilding ot the supreme court ot\nCuada \"should be condemned as\nbeing injurious to the health ot the\noccuputa ud totally inadequate\nfor the purpoae for which it ls used.\"\nSuch Is tbe conclusion of Dr. J. J.\nHeagerty, chief executive assistant\not the national health department,\nin the report of u inspection of that\nancient  structure.\nNew Zealand and\nMarylebone One*\nAgain in a Dr<\nAUCKLAND, N.Z., March 2\ncable).\u2014The  third  unofficial\nmatch between New Zealand\nlhe Marylebone Cricket club t<\ning team ended in a draw tot\nAgainit the home team's fint\nnlngs totel of 388 the visitors m\n438. Going to bat a second t\nNew Zealud had obtained l-\u00bb\nthree wickets when play conclu<\nThe flnt two tests also en\nwithout e definite result.\nBelfast Celtic\nand Newry Town\nPloy Third Dri\nBELFAST, March 2 (CP Cal\n\u2014Three games hsve felled to |\nduce a winner ln the second re\nIrlih footbtll cup-Ue between\ntut Celtic ud Newry Town.\ndty the tceond replay result*!\na scoreless draw. The two pre.\nencounters etch ended in 1-1 dr\nIn i Belfast cup gamp Gleni\ndefeited Distillery 2-1 on the Iat\nground.\nCABINET APPROVES\nDEFENCE PA\nLONDON, Mirch 2 (CP Ctbl\nThe cabinet tonight placed iti\nproval upon the government'! 4\npiper outlining defence flu\nwUl be tabled in the house oi\nliana tomorrow.\nIt hss been estimated that a\nof approximately \u00a3300,000,000\nbe sought to finance increased\npendlturee on the army, navj\nthe air force.\nI\n \t\nI TWO-\nNILSON DAILY NIWI. NILION.\n!0W HIGHWAY\nS IMPASSABLE\nYAHK-CRESTON\nilajon-Nelway Is Cut\nr Apex Third Time\nBut Reopened\nSUME TRAFFIC\nNELSON-NAKUSP\njd Slide Overcome\njt Queens Boy for\nCar Traffic\nurn-\ncondition\" favorable  to .furl\n-lint.. ^^^^~^\nOn the Crow highway conditions were impassable at tbe end\nof the week between Yahk and\nCreston, and the Fernie bus for\nNelson got no further than Yahk.\nAccordingly Sunday's but from\nNelion was turned back at Fraser's\nLanding. Monday, howtver, a local\nlervice between, Nelton and Cretton\nwat lmtltuted, running on the rag\"\nular ichedule, while the Fernie but\nit operating between Fernie ane)\nCrtiton.\nWhile the going between Nelion\nand TraU hai been heavy, the four\nround trips per day have been\nmaintained, with cloae approximation to schedule.\nTrail Mill Rale\nRemains lhe Same\nIdle highway connection hu\n1 reestablished ln the Slocan\nI lection, recently blocked by\nIT tildes, and While Nelson and\nJo are again in touch pait the\nlen's Bay mud ilide, the Nelson-\nwty connection was cut Mon-\nior the third time in as many\nt, and the through acceis in the\np hat been broken by impar\n|a conditions between Creston\nYahk.\nM Silverton and Cape Horn\nW obstructions wert cleared by\nend of the week, and tha but\nNakusp made its up-trip from\nion Monday.\nord from the Queens Bay mud\nl, which started to run and in-\nIte the grade on the hill three\nI ago, was that it would be beat-\nMonday night, to let traffic\nugh.\n.VY RAINS AT APIX\nonday afternoon brought down\nher snow slide in the Apex\nIon of the Nelson-Nelway high-\n; blocking the road until late\nIght, when It was cleared. This\nfce third successive blockade.\nde at Clearwater Saturday, end\n\u00abt T.ed Bluff Sunday, both near\nx, having been cleared in turn.\n_ Foreman N. MacLeod report-\nmvy rains there Monday night,\nLittle Money to Spend;\nSewer Rental By-low\nIs Read\nDelay Naming of\nHealth Officer\nWill Await Word of\nGrant From Dr.\nYoung\n\\MlUUil\nlOW FARE\nXCURSIONS\nvia Chicago\nto Eastern\nCanada\nFor all classes of travel,\nIfective Daily Until\nMarch 13,1936\nFinal rfturn limit 45\n'days. Stopovers allowed\nin Eastern Canada,\nStandard or new-type\n[Tourist aleepers, or lux-\npry coaches. Superior\naervice. .. Meals in dining cir at extremely low\nprices. Enjoy a fast trip.\nSAFETY'COMFORT\nRIDF THf. A'R-C-NnniDNfO\nMP1RE BUILDER\nMill AND DETAILS AT\ncin ticht ernct\n321 Baktr 8t\nNelion \u2014Phone   I\nTRAIU B.C. Mtrch 1-The tax\nmill rate for 1B36 wat itruck at 37\nmills, the aame as the year previous,\nat tht meeting of the city council\nln regular session Monday night\nThe rate is divided as followa: General rate 11.7 mills; general debenture rate 14.3 mills, school maintenance rati 8.1 mills, school debenture\nrate 2.2 mills.\n\"We have not much money to\nspend, but if we keep within our\nestimates I feel that we can get by,\"\ncommented Mayor Bruno Lerose\nfollowing approval ot the budget.\nAlderman C. Lauriente, chairman\nof the finance committee, wai\ngrtnttd permission to introduce a\nlax-rate bylaw at the next meeting.\nMondiy'i session wat the tint the\n1936 council fully attended, Alderman J. R. Andenon, who had been\nvisiting in the east at election time,\nmaking His first appearance.\nCity Engineer S. S. McDiarmid,\nwho had been convalescing in California, was present for the first\ntime since his abience and appeared\nmuch improved in health, ant stated\nhe was ready to return to hit work,\nalthough it would be tome time before he was again his normal telf.\nApplication of a ilgn company to\ninstall   refute   contalneri   on   the\nstreets, the tides to display advertising, was rejected.\nSEWER BYLAW READ\nThe sewer rentil bylaw to give\nthe city authority to collect annual\nrentals of $3.73 from ownen, lessees\nor occupiers of dwelling! to which\nsewer connection htd been mede\nduring the past yeer, and which\nwhen net charged the tewer frontage ttx, received three readings.\nFire, water ind light committee waa\nauthorized to purchy. cylinder\nlubricating device! for flrt department vehicle apparatus.\nIn committee the council luthorized purchise of a new convertible\ncoupe for Fire Chief A. A. McDonald on tendered trtde-in offer.\nDr. F. S. Eaton, medical health\nofficer, reported one case of measles\nand three of whooping cough for the\npast week.\nDr. F. M. Auld, acting medical\nofficer of health, Informed the city\ncouncil Monday night ba had Interviewed Dr. Young while at the\ncoatt rtcenUv and had been at-\nsurtd that Wit- a month would be\ngiven towird e medical offictr ot\nhealth providing he wtt not cut in\nIlls appropriation when the legislator! brtnti in its estimates at the\nnext tilting.\nIn view of thli, the council decided to poetpoei the nemlng of a\nmedical officer of health until it\nwis definitely known what could\nbe given ln the form a. a grin.\nThe health report at submitted by\nDr. Auld waa accepted and tiled,\nend he wit nimed medicil officer\nof heilth until the appointment\nit mide.\nAccording to tht report there\nwtre 171 caaes ef measltt etace the\nlut report, and of that number 123\nwere in the city and it were outiide points. Moat of the caaea had\nbeen treated et the hornet, but\nsome were taken to the Isolation\nhoipital. There wat alao one case\nof chlcktnpox and ene ot erysipelas.\nDr. Young, obierved Dr. Auld,\nwat quite interested in the growing\nintereit Nelson cltiieni were taking\nin health matten and wu pleated\nto know they were putting the\naccem en preventative medicine\nrather than curative medicine.\nVancouver wu alao placing accent on the same idea and laat year\nall children starting to tchool were\nexamined lor tubtrculoait aad 10\nto 23 per cent were tound to bave\nthe diitaae. On eximlnition et the\nhomes, 33 per cent were found to\nhave active casei in them, and these\ncaaea were isolated. It was estimated, further, that there wei e 50\nntw caaea oi tubareuloali in Vancouver every raonth.\nHe urged that every effort should\nba male ta let a competent man\ntor the laboratory. It, hid received\na good start and if it were to be,\nrun efficiently, a competajnt men\nhad to be named. He asiuiod the\ncouncil ha would give nis Lest effort in filling ln on the medlcil\nhealth offlcer'i work until one wu\nnamed.\nAlderman T. H. Waten expressed\nthe opinion that not enough attention had been paid to inspections\nOt rettiurmte and cafea and tuch\nlike ln Ntlton in the put,\nMOST OF WORK\nIN LABORATORY\nIn reply to this Dr. Auld itated\nthit the greater part of the medical\nofficer of hulth's work, and necei-\nsarily to, wu done in tha laboratory, ao that If most of the time was\nrt there, lt should not be thought\nofficer was not attending tt\nhis duties. He assured the council\nthat inspections of dairies, cafes\nand butcher shops had been done\nregularly in the pait, and he would\ntee that inspections were made until a medical officer wu. named.\nThe council then decided to leave\nover the appointment of the officer\nuntil definite word wu received\naad named Dr. Auld at acting\nheilth officer. B^\n\u25a0.C\u2014TUHDAY MORNINO. MARCH 1 1136\nCEYLON HICH\nKASLO PASTOR\nONTRIPTOCOASI\nFalcons, Wolves\nPlay Wednesday\nWednesday evening's triple-\nheader local hockey program will\nfeature e sudden death game between the F. A. C. Falcons and\nWolvei for the right to meet the\nSavoy Hotel club In the commercial\nlttgue semi-finals, the winner of\nthe semi-finals playing the F. A. C.\nintermediate! for the league title.\nThe semi-finals will probably itart\nSaturday evening.\nTlie other two games Wednesdiy\npit the Panthers against the Rough-\nridtr midgeti, and the Wolvei\nagalnit Comet Juvenilei, both being\nlttgut gamu.\nIn the two leigue garnet bttwten\nthe Falconi and Wolvei, the Falcons\nhave walked off with a double victory, but the Wolvu have displayed\nmuch improvement in recent games\nand will be all out ln an endeavor\nto get into the playoffi.\nKASLO, B.C.-Hev. T. W. Heed\nleft Friday for a ihort visit at Vmcouver. \u2022\n.Bob Patenon ot Trail ipent a few\ndays in town with hit parenta, Alderman and Mrs. John Paterson.\nMra. H. T. Hartin wu a visitor\nin Nelson Thursday.\nMrs. D. J. Barclay entertained at\nbridge Wednesday, Gueiti were\nMn. S. A. Hunter, Mrs. William\nEngllih, Mrs. E. J. Thornberg, Mrt.\nJ, N. Murphy, Mra. W. V. Papworth, Mn. V. 0. Field, Mn. 0. P.\nMerrill, Mri. E. M. Sandilands and\nMiss Elizabeth Giegerlch, Mrs.\nThornburg won high tcore prize,\nsecond going to Mn. Field and consolation to Mra. Sandllandi.\nGeorge Mclnnis, who spent a tew\ndiys in Nelion and Kulo, left\nWednesday for hit home in Howier.\nThe annual meeting ot the Kaslo\nboard of trade did not materialist,\nnot enough memberi being preient\nto form a quorum.\nMiss Elizabeth Giegerlch was\nhostess at a musical hour Wednesday.\nMrt. Andy Jardine Jr. hu returned trom visiting htr parenta,\nMr. and Mn. Jamu Alexander of\nCooper Creak.\nFloyd Garrett waa a visitor to\nNelson Thunday.\nM. Trevethick has left for his\nhome in Chewelah, Wash., alter\nvisiting Mr. and Mrs. Junes Alexander of Cooper Creek and Mr\nand Mrs. Cecil Pangbum ot Kaslo.\n' W. E. Lane of Ainsworth was a\nSaturday visitor in town.\nEd Amell, who spent a week In\nNelson and Kailo, lett Saturdiy for\nhim home in Lardo.\nMr. and Mn. Frank Dumu ot\nAinsworth visited Kulo Saturday.\nWHIST TABLE\nPlaying at table TJtylon, four\nltdles took tint prizes it the Odd\nFellows' whiit drive and dance held\ntn the Odd Fellowi hall Monday\nnight They were Mn. J. Leeming,\nMn. J. Wood, Mn A. Wood and\nMn. H. Stintker.\nA Lane waa muter of ceremoniei and J. Diaper, I_ Moore and\nK. Wtlsh were committee men.\nANSCOMB ASKS\nTOURIST DRIVE\nNurses Planning\nAnnual Dinner\nThree new memben were Introduced it the monthly meeting of\nthe Graduate Nurtes' association in\nthe nurses home Monday night Mrs\nC. E. Glover, Mooie Jaw Provinct\nhospital graduate, Mn. I. Sinclair,\ngraduate of Vancouver General hospital, and a graduate of Kooteniy\nLake General hospital, Miu B. Laldlaw, were the new memben.\nDecisions were made to havi the\nannual dinner tomt time in June,\nand to stage a springtime silver\ntee in the near future.\nMiss Vera Eidt read a report from\nthe Canadian Nursei\" utociation\nbulletin describing the third biennial meeting et Toronto.\nruide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finttt in ihe Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nBus Service Geo. Benwell, Prop.\nBREAKFAST 30c and UP\nJNCHEON 40o to Ue DINNER We to Ht\nROTARY AMD GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nILIPH0N3 7S7 NILION, B.C. 422 VIRNON IT.\n^JME\u2014H. Morrow, J, R. Conlaw,\nlouver; G. B. Lauder, Kimber-\n\u00bb S. Imrie, Victoria; R. Shep-\nSpokane; F. E> Chandler, G.\nTrafton, Calgary; R. Crawford, Medicine Hat; Mn. J. W. Quail, Fernie;\nMri. J. Fred Hume, Nelson.\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Where the Guest It King\"\nNELSON'S NEWEST AND FINEST HOTEL\nFullv Lleinced\n|H Baker St. W. K. Clark, Prop. Nelson. B.C\n\u25baw Grand Hotel\nP. L. KAPAK, Prop.\nHot tnd Celd Wtttr\nlln.li 60. ue: double SOe ue\n[ Monthly ratti 110.00 ue\nr-tM      ll( VIRNON IT\nimi Sailii Nrutfi\n|lor of British Columbia'.\nInteresting Newspaper\nOccidental Hotel\n705 Vernon It Phona H71\nH WAMICK. Pre*.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Hoomi\nFully\n-,\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcome Awaiti You\nJA*. A MAOOIN Prat.\nCompletely Remedelrtd\nHot tnd Cold Wtttr\nIn Iht HEART of Iht City\nPHONE 68      606 WIRD IT\nSOCIAL AND PERSONAL\nNEWS OF TRAIL\nHOCKEY SCORES\nSouthern Satkitchewan Flnili\nWeyburn 1, Regini Acei 1.\nNorthern ttikttehawan Flml\nNorth  Battleford  1, Prince Al\nhert- .\nNelson Has Spring\nWeather\nNELSON SCHOOL BOARD ASKS\n$97,000 FOR COMING YEAR\nWants $7000 More\nThan Last\nYear\nVICTCIA, March 1 (CF)-Con-\nderailing pottpontment of the Omlneca and Burrard by-elections and\ntht propoied health bill, and pltei\nfor pensions tor liquor botrd employeei, better roads, tourist drive,\ni new deal lor Vancouver Iiland\nand taxation of Dominion and provincial government property in Victoria, Herbert Antcomb, Ind., Vlctorlt, continued the debate on the\nthrone speech In the l_gi.lat.uie today.\nThe Victoria member also advocated preservation of Cathedral\ngrove, the itand ot big timber\noa the Alberni highway, no extra\nindemnities for the autumn session\nof the house, issue ot low-interest\nbearing consols and paid a high\ntribute to the ibility ot Hon. John\nHart, miniiter of finance, describing him ai the bett choke lhe government could havt made tor that\nportfolio and -starting that Mr.\nHart could do even a better tob if\nhe were'lett atone,\nA full three houn waa taken up\nby Mr. Antcomb, Mn. D. G. Steevtt,\nCCp. North Vancouver, and Hugh\nSavage, tad. Cowlchan-Newcastle,\nin their contributions to the debete.\nle of Trail AU\nadanac will appear\nnil eolumn le to charge et Mra, Glenn\nevents ot a ucitl nature ol iuterait in Trail and\t\nin thia column. Mra Quayle will be glad to have eny tuch newt\ntelephoned to her at her bony In Trill\nTRAIL, B.C., Mtrch i-^iTeon-\nnection with a tea given by' the\nTrail Girl Guides assodatlonj'Sat-\nurday eft-moon, a meeting of the\nexecutive will be held later ia the\nweek. Mrs. F. E. Dockerili, diitrict\ncommander, and Mn. T. V. Lord,\ndistrict captain, were among those\nactive at the tei, misting in receiving the guuti and generally\naiding the guides.\nMin   Velma   Trembath   visited\nRosslind during tb* week-end.\nMemben of the Mother Goose\nInnovttion cist, an ottering of the\nPhilathea club at Fint Baptist\nchurch, were gueiti Fridiy at an\nInformal ptrty at the home ot Mrs.\nJamei S. Johnion, Columbia apartment!. Adult memben ol th* catt\nasiItUd the hoitess ln entertaining.\nGamtt were playtd and refreihmenti lerved, thote assisting tba\nhottest being Mrt. Gordon Rtd-\ngrtve, Mrs, Theodore Padberg, Mn.\n8. McCatty, Mn. Walter Veitch, ind\nMrs. K. McLein. Guuti were Doctor Imrie of Victoria, Miu Kathleen Glover, Miss Ruth Margeeon.\nMlu Freda Hopkini, Miu Kliie\nFowler, Miu Pimela Hartman, Miu\nJune Hartman, Miu Join Hobbi,\nMiu Louis* McLeu, Min Dorit\nJean Matthewe, Miu Hettie Waldie\nMlu Lorna Meikle. Miu Cbrittobel\nPowell. Adam Waldie, Denis Hobbs.\nHendrik Pidberg, Gordon Redgrave,\nTeddy Fowler, Jimmie Waldie, Ted\nBrothers and Emmaline Piulten.\nMiu Connie Cain hat returned\nto Trail from Nelson, where the\nipent the week-end with her\nmother.\nM L. Brothen returned Saturday\nevening from Calgiry. where he\nviiited for a week,\na a \u2022\nMin Cora Smyth* viiited in Nelton during the week-end, a gueit\nof her parenta.\naee\nMemben ef the Ladies' Service\nauxiliary to Knox United church\nwere  guests   Monday  evening  of\nMn. William Fish, Eut TralL\naaa\nMlu Margaret Burton visited with\nfriends in Rossland during the\nweek-end.\naaa\nMr. and Mrs. P. F. Mclntyre ere\nvisitors to Kimberley.\naaa\nG. G. Cumming has returned frem\nCalgary, where he spent a week.\nTht request of the Salvation\nArmy tor *100. wat referred to tbe\nfinance committee when It \u00bbu\nbrought UP- '\nI 3. Ryan wat appointed conductor\non the street railway to take the\nplace left vacant by tht death of\nGeorge Fletcher.\nA letter of condolence will be\nsent by the council to Mrs. Fletcher.\nThe account for motor repaln to\none of the city'i trucks .mounting\nto S-0_ wu brought to tbe attention\nof the council. An estimate on the\nwork had been given for |1U and\nthe additional cott wu run up without any of the city officiali being\nconsulted. The matter wm referred\nto the finance committee to investigate.\nFlashes From the Wires\n$1\u00ab\\\u00bb71S4\u00bb I*\nMANITOBA EITIMATE\nWINNIPEG-Th* Maintoba government wlU ipend $HJ>.7,M_ in th*\nfiecal ytar ending April 10,11)37, in\nincrease ot >14,48l over the previous\nfiscal year. Hon. E. A McPhenon,\nprovlnclil treaiurtr, tabled hi) utl-\nmates of next year'i expenditures in\nthe legiilature. Lut yetr,. expenditures totalled tUflmjm.\nHOWION APPOINTED\nEDMONTON-W. R. Howton, Liberal leader in tht Alberta legislature, hia received official word of\nhia appointment to the trial division\nof the lupreme court of Alberta in\na telegram trom Premier King.\nNATION* TO CONFIR\nROME-Preaaien ef Italy, Austria and Hungary will review Italy'i\nDanubian commitment* md a poulble llilo-Germin rapprochement\nin talk! to begin in mid-March, It\nwu -tec-toed hare. Th* effect of\nsanctions and th* Ethiopian war\nupon Italy'i Uu with Auitrit ind\nHungary alao will be diKuued,\nDRAW IN BRUSSELS\nBRUSSELS-The United States\nOlympic hockey teim and a sextet\ncompoitd ef Belgian! and Canadieni\nbattled to a 1-1 draw in a hard-\nfought game her*.\nUBIRAL WIN*\nHALIFAX-Hirold Connolly, Liberal cindidate, won a twieping victory over B. J. Rudge, labor, In a\nprovincial byelectien ln Hillftx\nNorth. Final returni give Connolly, I Htlifax newipaper editor, e\nmajority of tttt ovtr hit opponent.\nCONSCRIPTION IN CHINA\nLONDON \u2014 A Keuten newa\nagency dlipatch from Nanking early\nTueiday taid th* central Chinese\ngovernment hid announced military conscription through tbe country.\nGIRMANV DROPI IUIT\nPARIS\u2014Germany Mondiy dropped criminal libel charges against\ntbe newipaper Le Journal for publishing a senutional future article\non 'The Secret Loves of Chancellor\nAdolf Hitler.\" Official word that the\nreich had decided to withdraw the\nsuit, communicated to the Qual\nD'Ortay by the Germin embassy,\nwas regarded u terminating tbe incident\nBRITAIN, GERMANY AND\nFRANCI TO FORM PACT?\nGENEVA\u2014Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden of Great Britain, is represented in unofficial British circles\nu hopeful of negotiating a trl-power\npact among Britain, France and\nGermany. Reports of the projected\nalliance, whleh were not officially\nconfirmed, wld the pact would be\nbated on t deilre by the foreign\nminister to promote Franco-German\nunderstanding.\nITALIAN IUBS AT MAlTO\nOXFORD. Engltnd-Admlril Sir\nRoger Keyes uld In an addreu here\nthat Italian submarines itarted\n\"popping up like corks\" off Malta\nduring British anti-submarine exercises tome time ago. The exercises\nwere held off the British base in\nthe Mediterranean after the fleet\nhad been reinforced ln that tru,\nhe told the Comervatlve club of Oxford univenity.\nWith the mercury varying between M ind 42 digrttt. Nelson\nhad tpring-time weather Monday.\nSnow continued to diuppear rapidly with the mild weather and\nstrums ran in the itreeta at many\npointa.\nWis Old-Time\nKaslo Resident\nCity Shocked by Death\nof Jean Brochier\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014Kulo eitizent were\nshocked to leem of the death of\nanother old time resident of Ihe\ncity, Jean Brochler, at the home of\nhis eldest daughter, Mn. W. West\nof Cilgary, formerly a realdent of\nChilrmin Lulli Cnufurd ind\nPlntnct Chilrmin R. B. (Jick)\nMorrii et th* NttM* aoho.l betrd,\nlubmlttod * tUUmint of recelpti\nend oxptndlt.ru fer th* 1SM-37\nuhtol yur tt the Ntlun tity\ncouncil Mtndty night and th*\n\u25a0tittmint WW referred to tht\nflntnct committee. Both Mr. Cnufurd and Mr. Morrii anurtd the\ncouncil the txptndltum bad beta\ncut w tint u pwlHe without\nha-ir.ln* th* \u2022ffletenty ef the\nichooli. Thty wtrt told that th*\natatemtnt weuld bi glvin every\ncoiwld* ratten.\nTotil expenditure* wer* eitlmated\nat about #1.000 and receipta at **-_.-\n(JOO, leaving \u00bb7_,0OO, roughly, to be\nobtained from the city. Thia is in\nincretse of about 31000.\nMr. Morris deelired there were\nincreutd expenditure! for teachers' salariw, iniurance, ground repain, tuppllu, ind for lerview ol a\ndental clinic and physical culture\ndirector.\nEnlarging on the dental clinic, for\nwhich the tchool board was asking\nSUSS, Mr. Craufurd and Mr. Morris\ninformed the council that a survey\nof tbe teeth ot the Nelion ichool\nchildren had been made recently at\ntbe requeit of the Women's institute\nof the city and that M per cent ot\nthe children had been found to\nneed dental attention. Of the 1533\nichool children in Nelion 1278\nneeded attnatton and only 75 did\nnot Of the 1271 requiring dental\nwork 1229 had tavitiu, one to five\nin some cum. and 211 children\nnteded extraction.,\nWOUID GET 11000\nThe 11390 wked by the botrd wis\nonly for three-quarters of a year'i\nsalary, and $1000 had been promised\nby Dr, Young, provincial health\nofficer, for equipment to install\nsuch a clinic.\nThe pltn suggested wu to hive\na survey mtde end the children\nthen be given tarda ihowing what\nattention  ww  required.  Children\nwhote pirenti could not afford the\nwork would have it done at the expense of the ichool board, otherwise\nthe parenta would be asked to do it\nat thtlr own expense. Th* work\nwould not, however, be compulsory,\nand those plying for th* work could\nchooie their own dentiit Th* boird\nwould hive to decide whether casei\nwere indigent ot not,\nMr. Morrii pointed out that the\npltn et i dentil clinic hid been\ntried with aucceu in Calgary, and\nu alto in practice In Ontario.\nThe itatement wu then referred\nto the finance committee.\nfo, New Pep\nNelson City Council BrieSs\nThe innual report ef th* recelpti ind diabursamont tor tho\ncity of Ntlion ww recolvt- by\nth* Neiaon alty ***Mil Monday\nnight at audited ky C. F. Hunter,\nind pamphlets et th* atatemtnt\nwert ordtred printed and distributed.\nIt wu rtported that 150 thawing\nJobs were made during the cold\nspell and the quution of chargei\nwu railed. At some hive paid, but\nmott have not, the matter wu referred to the council u a whole to\ndecide No delay wu made tn tha\nthawing job*, it wat itated, eech\nJob being done ai toon is requested\nwithout quution u to payment\nA. Tregillut waited on the council\nto ask a grant for the Nelson Symphony orcheitra. He stated the orchestra had always tried to gtt\ntlong without assistance but u\nfunds were depleted, and as expenses were high, it wu necessary\nto seek aid. The memben were not\nreceiving any money for their\naervice.\nMayor. J. P. Morgan inured Mr.\nTregillus the matter would be given\ncareful attention and he was ture\nit would be decided upon favorably\nfor the orchutr*.\nIt wu referred to tb* tinanct\ncommittee.\nTO POUR CEMINT\nTO HALT LEAK\nROCHESTER, N. Y.-With 72 bagi\nof cement tboard, the coait guard\npatrol boat Forward hai moored to\nthe ilde ot tht Cinadiin Nitional\nrallwayi ear ferry, Ontario 11,\nstranded on a rocky ledge five\nmiles west ot here since Wedneiday\nnight. It ia planned to pour the\nquick-drying cement into the hold,\ncovering loosened rivrti which ire\nbelieved the cause of a leakage of\nI gillon of wtter I second.\nThe bill from tbe John MaruviUo\nRoof company tor work on the Nelson curling and skating rink,\namounting to 13950, being approved\nby the superintendent ln charge of\nthe work, was ordered paid on completion of the contract The company guarantees the work tor 10\nyears.\nBylaw 926, dealing with the borrowing of auch sums of muney u\n\u2022re needed to tike cire of current\ncotti of running tht municipality,\nwai given itt tint md ucond raiding by UUe.\nBylaw 927, dealing with the u\nment on the property ot P. H. Buih\non Vernon itreet, where e itone\nwiU li being eonitruettd, wu given\niti fint and lecond reidlng by UUe.\nTht oppllcition ot Mr. Swerydo,\nfor comideration en her light bill,\nwu referred to the tinince committee to report.\nThe application of V. L. Mey*r\nfor a rebate on hii gas bill, warfalso\nreferred to the finance committee.\nFrtd Williami waited on the council regarding a bill ol |75.5t tor the\nbreaking of a hydrant tt the northwest corner ot Silica and Hendricks\nstreets. The matter wu referred to\nthe fire, witer and Ught committee.\nApplications were received from\nHaul and Nan Stout, and also\nPhyllia Guy, tor posiUon of checker\nat Lakeside park this summer. Ttn\nappliciUons were referred to the\nparks committee. An applicaUon was\nalao received from A. Hall for the\njob of caretaker at the Recreation\ngrounds As Oils position now comes\nunder the auditorium commission,\nit wu referred to that body.\nBylaw IK, to enaklt thi council te provide $35,000. for thl conitructlon, eompletwn tnd Installation of furniture In th* Nilion\nluditorlum, wu glvtn In flrtt\nind itcond rtadlngi by title ind\ntht* th* e-_n.ll wtnt Int* urn-\nmitt** of the wh*lt \u25a0 dlwuw It\nKulo tnd Nelion. Mr. Brochier had\nbeen in ill health tor aome Ume and\nlast fall went to Calgary for special\ntreatment Mrs. Brochier Joined him\nthere a few weeks ago, and wu with\nhim at the time of hia death, at\nwere hit two daughter!, Mra. Wut\nand Mn. Btrbet, both ot Cilgary.\nTht* family mad* Kulo thtlr\nhom* for upward at 35 ytan, having irrlved tn Canida about 41\nyean ago, from St AndloL Franoe,\nMr. Brochiers birth pltce.\nH* wu about II yein ot ige.\nMining waa Mr. Br_e~-cr*i chief\ninterest end he wu interested, especially in several promising propertiei in the _-uri\u00ab_u diitrict, the\nmost prominent ot these being the\nSt. Patrick group at ttlver-leid\npropertiei near Argenta,\nBesldu hll widow and two diughten, Mr. -brochier ii turvived hy a\nslater, itill resident in Franc*.\nDHUMHELLSR, Alta., March 2\n(CP)\u2014Coleman Canadian*'captured\nUse eauthcrn Alberta ttnlor hockey\ncharopaoothlp ter the ttcond itraight\nyear by defut_ng Drumheller Mlnen 3-1 here tonight in tht itcond\ngime ol th* best-ot-thre* wrltt. Canadian! won tht tint gun* at Coir\nman 1-0.\n' V\nALL\nthe Benefiti of\nCod Liver Oil\nWITHOUT\nthe Taste\nTh* strength ghrtag VT-\ntaa-ioa A aad D together\nwith the bone and bodybuilding Hypophosphites\nof Lime and Soda ere happily combined In Scott'i\nEmulsion, the easily di-\ngated Cod Liver Ott.\nTo help build up resist-\nance again* cold* aad\notber diseases, so help\nbuild strong Straight\nbones aad aceaad -rati-,\ntake.\nSCOTT'S\nEMULSION\nIHI DW-ST.ILE COD UVU\nOL WITH THI FUU VALUES\nlaiSaUW*AXa_e__\u00ab>__T\nUre Chief M. H. Mnloner reported nine fire calli during the\nmonth of Februiry. During the\nmonth US intpecUoni were mtde\nand 17 orderi were given tor belter\ncondltioni. Inspections were mide\ndally and on February SS, the whole\nsyitem wu tested tnd the boxu\nwere tound te be In good working\norder. No fir* drilli were held at\nth* achooli owing to the cold\nweither.\nThe report wu accepted and filed.\nNORWAY\nPINE\nSYRUP\nFeelChilly-Start to Sneeze\nRose Starts to Rvn\nThen comu tk* told which, if not ittended to\nimmediately, shortly works down into Ikt bronchial\ntubes, aad tht cough ittrti.\nOn thi Int iign of a told or cough go te your\ndruggist1! ud get i betUe et Dr. Wood'i Norway\nPiao Syrup.\nToe will lad It to b* a prompt, pleeaant, reliable ud ifnttul remidy for your trouble.\nIt hu hu* on tht market for tk* put 44 yearn\nDon't e-perimeat with a mbititntt ud hi die-\nappointed.   Get \"Dr. Wood'i\".\n&mi     Fink's Ltd*\nFashion\nDEMANDS A\nSUIT!\nDon't say you arsn't the suit typo. Thorn\nis no such thing this Spring. Stouts will b\u00ab\nsurprised to see what slimming linos thoso\nhave! There are suits and more suits, a stylo\nfor every ago and sixe and typo... so choose\nyours tomorrow!\nDouble Breasted, $Q QC*n\nSingle Breasted,    '\u2022** w\nBelted in Back,\nVents in Back\n*22.50\nMan Tailored Suits! Baby Swaggers!  Formal Suits!   Every\nImportant New Style, Color and Fabric Is Here, Now!\n Stb3\nHelps Prevent\nMany Colds\nEtpeciilly dciigned\naid for note end\nupper throat, where\nII mott coldt itart.\nmn * raw eaon\ntit iach wmii\n\/icksVatronol\n'Rotarians Hosts\n;   to Hockey Club\nName Committee to\nKeep Record of\nActivities\nNELSON DAILV NEWS. NEL80N.  ....-TUESDAY MORNINQ.  MARCH 3.  1938\nHEADQUARTERS\nFOR QUALITY\nFOODS \u2014FRUITS\nMEATS \u2014 VEGETABLES\nPHONES 865\u2014866\n\u25a0 \u25a0    \u25a0\t\nSAFEWAY   STORES   LIMITED\nCHEAP\nCUTS-\/\nMEAT\nbette^y\n\u2014 |F YOU DISSOLVE\nIN THE GRAVY 2 or 3\n6X0 CUBES.\nMembers of the Nelson Mtple\nLeafs Hockey club and Coach Pat\nAitken were visitors at the Rotarian\nluncheon in the Hume hotel silver\nroom Monday. Not all the players\nwere able to be present, Danny\nStack being ill and Len Bicknell\nbeing unable to attend. Those present Included Bill McKay, Leo Atwell, Nick Smith, Walter Duckworth, Ty Culley, Jack Annable,\nStewart Paterson and George Goble.\nThe resignation of F. C. Sharpe\nwas accepted with regret and the\nbest wishes of the club will be extended to him at his new position\nin Port Mann.\nC. W. Tyler was named chairman\nof a new committee consisting of\nDr, L. E. Borden, E, P. Dawson, A.\nBrowne, C. B. Garland and Howard\nBush, the purpose of the committee\nbeing to keep definite records of\nthe activity of the club.\nM. E. Harper, chairman of tlie attendance committee, reported an\nimprovement in the attendance for\nthe past month, and hoped that it\nwould continue to improve.\nA. Browne brought up the subject\nof railing fundi for the crippled\nchildren's work, stating plans ought\nto be made In the Immediate future\nto make money. The matter will be\ngiven consideration by the executive ud members.\nDr. D. W. McKay, a member of\nthe Nelson hockey executive, declared, that although the Kootenay\nschedule was over, the local team\nhoped to have some exhibition\ngames, possibly with Seattle, Kimberley and Vancouver. The past\nseason had been a successful one,\nand had been financially good also.\nDistrict people had supported games\nwell ud they were clamoring for\nmore games. Two special trains\nwere brought from Trail. The money\nthese people had spent in entrance\nfees had almost all stayed in Nelson.\nThe team, therefore, had been a big\nasset to the city. At the start of the\nseason the executive promised the\nsupporters good hockey, and the\nteam had done that, even though\nnot winning the league.\nIt waa hoped the team could be\nSpecial Sale of\nBurbank Ranges\nAdjustable legi. A vary handy feature where rhe\nfloor it not level.\nPatented removable oven lining! and sliding ovtn\nbottom.\nPatented spiral gratai, tht lateit invention in itove\nconitmetion. THE BURBANK IS THE FINAL WORD\nIN RANGE CRAFT.\nLeg Models, Sale Price ... $99.00\nFull Enamel Finish\nPedestal Models         $99.00\nFull Enamel Finish\nSee Our Window\nHIPPERSON\nHARDWARE CO., LIMITED\nPHONI 497 The Friendly Store BOX 414\nkept intact for next year and the\nexecutive wae asking for assistance\nin this respect. The players needed\njobs If they were to be kept here.\nHe had been in touch with Connie Smythe regarding the proposed\ntrip of the Toronto Leafs and the\nChicago Hawks exhibition tour, but\nat present it was not the intention\nof the teams to visit the Kootenays,\nand probably no game could be arranged. He would be advised later\nif it would be possible.\nCoach Aitken expressed the\nthanks of the hockey club for the\ninvitation extended to them. The\nsuccess of the club, he .said, was due\nin no small part to the capable executive in charge of it, especially\nthe finances. It was hard, he added,\nto get players of the caliber needed\nfor this league as It wu of exceptionally high standard, and not only\ndid a player have to excel on the\nice, but to be acceptable he had to\nbe the type that would make a good\ncitizen.\nNext year the Nelion team would\nbe eligible for the Allan cup playoffs, but two or three more players\nwere needed. He believed it was\nadvisable to get them! Had Nelson\nsucceeded in getting to the finals\nof the Kootenay league it would\nhave meant several hundred more\ndollars to the city and thought that\nit was a good investment for the\ncity to get the players.\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nThit column Is conducted by Mrs M. J. Vlgneux. All newt of a\nsocial nature including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, etc.. will appear in this column. Telephone Mrt.\nVigneux at her home. 518 Silica itreet.\nT. E, Peten of Gray Creek visited i    T. A. Mllli of Willow Point ipent\nNelson during the week-end.\naaa\nMrs. Ernest Bowkett of Soutn\nSlocan was among city shoppers\nyesterday.\naaa\nMrs. Ian C. Campbell of Willow\nPoint visited in Nelson yesterday.\n*    a    a\nR. H. Stewart, M.E. of Vancouver,\nvisited ln town during the week-end.\naaa\nJ. Bichan spent the week-end\nwith his family in Procter.\naaa\nShoppers in the city yesterday Included M. A. Ling and hia daughter,\nMiss Ethel Ling, of Erasers Landing.\n% aaa\nMiss Kathleen Hughes ot Queens\nBay spent Saturday in town.\n.   .   .\nFrank Woodrow of Trail is visiting his mother, Mis. Charles Wood-\nrow, Kootenay street.\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\n5:00 From the Green Room, back\nstage,   Montreal   (net   B.C.);   5:30\nNews, BC. Net.; Music for Today,\nBj,C. 5:45; 6:00 No Mournful Hum-i ney's orch.; 11:00 Paul Carson, or-\nbers, Winnipeg; 6:30 This Is Paris,\nsoloists and orch., dir. Andre Dun-\neux, Montreal to M.B.S.; 7:00 Au\nClaire de la Lune, Edmonton; 7:30\nHon. Ian Mackenzie, talk, Ottawa;\n7:\u00ab CP News; 8:00 Tine Signal;\nAcroit the Border, C.B.S.-N.*..; 8:30\nOn the Riviera, Calangls Family\ndlr. Jack Avison, Gerhardt \u2022 Oily.\nVancouver; 8:00 Just S'posin', drama, dlr. W. McQuillan, Winnipeg\n(West. Net); 8:30 Melody Moods,\ndlr. Ina McCartney, Vancouver\n(West. Net.); 10:00 News (B. C.\nNet); 10:15 Jack Williamson's orch.,\nVancouver.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KQW KFI KPO KOMO\n580 820 640 880 820\n5:00 Beaux Arts Trio, instrumental; 5:30 Visiting Capt. Dobbs, Armand Girard; 8:00 Btn Bemie\nand the Lads; 6:30 Donald Novia,\nGloria Grafton, with Eddie Duchin'i\norchestra; 7:00 The Studio Party,\nSigmund Romberg, Deems Taylor,\nHelen Marshall, Morton Bowes; 7:30\nJimmy Fldler, Hollywood gossip;\n7:48 Night Editor, Hal Burdick, KPO;\nTwin City Foursome; 8:00 Amos\n'n' Andy; 8:15 Lum and Abner; 8:80\nLeo Reiiman'i orch., Phil Duey,\nJohnny; Eton Boys, Sully Singer;\n8:00 Death Vtlley Dtyt, Old Ranger,\nnarrator; 9:50 Crime Clues, mystery\ndrama; 10:00 News Flashes, Sara\nHayes; 10:15 Tom Coakley's orch.;\n10:30 Jimmy Grier'i orch.; 11:00\nTo be announced; 11:80 Griff Williami' orch.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKOO KJR KEX KECA KG*\n780 870 1180 1480 1470\n8:00 Barbara Merkley, harpist;\n5:30 Pair of Pianos; 5:45 Jack Armstrong! drama, KGO; 6:00 Crosscut! From the Log o' the Dty, Dr.\nLaurence L. Cross, Southern Harmony Four? 6:18 Popeye the Sailor\nMan, KGO; 6:30 Old World Music,\nvocalist; S. F. Municipal Government interview (KGO); 6:45 Air\nAdventures of Jimmy Allen (KGO);\n7:15 Chester Rowell, KGO; Argentine Trio; 7:30 Meredith Wlliion's\norch.; 8:00 California State Chamber\nof Commerce, KGO; John Teel, bari\ntone; 8:15 Dick Gasparre'i orch.;\n8:30 Veterans of Foreign Wars; 9:30\nVeloz and Yolanda's orch.; 9:30 En-\nric Madriguera't orch.; 10:00 Paul\nPendarvis' orch.; 10:30 Del Court-\nganiat\nC.B.8.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\n670 610 940 1180 1270\n3:00 Tht Harmonettei; 5:15 Eddie\nDunstedter, organiat; 5:30 Lawrence\nTibbett, baritone, Don Voorhees'\norch.; 6:00 Don Lee Workshop, D.L.;\n6:30 Country Church ot Hollywood,\nDX.; Fred Waring's Pennsylvanians,\nKSL; 7:00 Parties at Pickfalr, Mary\nPickford; 7:80 March of Time; 8:00\nMyrt and Marge, serial; 8:15 Male\nChorus Parade, D.L.; 8:80 Caravan,\nWalter O'Keefe, Deane Janls, Glen\nGray's orch.; 9:00 Fred Waring's\nPennsylvanians; 10:00 Eddie Oliver's\norcheitra. Don Lee; 10:30 Larry\nLee'i orch.,- D.L.; 10:45 Sterling\nYoung'i orch., D.L.-KVI; 11:00 Jimmy Dorsey's orch., D.L.; 11:30 Ted\nDawton'i orch., D.L.-KVI.\n600 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVincouver 600 w\n5:18 Cirlboo Cowboyi; 6:15 News\nFlashes; 7:00 Self-Help; 7:15'Volce\nof the Commonwealth; 7:30 Investment Talk; 8:15 Laddie Watkis; 8:30\nGeorge White; 8:45 June Day; 9:00\nLen Chamberlain's orch.; 9:80 Jimmy Morris, singer; 9:45 The Homesteaders; 10:15 Stin Inglis' orch.;\n10:45 Newi.\n1030 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCilgiry 10,000 w\n5:00 Cecil ind Silly. E.T.: 5:15\nBlick ind Blue; 5:45 Wordi ind\nMusic; 6:00 Adventure Bound; 6:15\nThe Rangen; 6:80 Hi-Hilirities;\n6:45 Slicet of Life; 7:00 The\nGrain Forum; 7:30 Song Souvenln;\n7:45 Watanabe and Archie, ET; 8:00\nTomorrow, Dr. Kellaway; 8:45 True\nConfessions; 9:00 News Flashes; 9:15\nThe Serenader.\nBRITISH EMPIRE PROGRAMS\nShort Wave\u2014Pacific Standard Time\nTranimlulon 6\nTwo ef tht following frequencies will bt uied: GSD, 11,750 k.\n(25.63 m.), GSC, 9580 k. (31.32 m.),\nGSL, 6110 k. (49.10 m.).\n7:00 pjn. Big Ben, veriety, \"How'i\nThit?\"; 7:45 Newi; 8:00 Close down.\n\u2022 MENUS\nRECIPES\nand\nHINTS\nGood\nHousekeeping\nBv\nMra.\nMirv\nMorton\nMENU  HINT\nBeef Stew With VegeUbles\nStewed Tomitoei\nSalad\nApple Sauce Meringue Pie\nTea or Coffee\nAs meat ls high in price, we will\nuie as little ot it at we can without\nunbalancing our meals. In a stew of\nthis kind there may be plenty of\nvegetables and little meat, and that\nof a less expensive cut\nBeef Stew\u2014Buy \u2022 pound of think\nmett, cut in imill pieces, or hive\nthe butcher do it for you, tnd brown\nin \u2022 little fit, with in onion. When\nbrown idd hot wtter to cover ind\ncook ilowly until the meet ii tender, adding vegeUbles half in hour\nor to before serving. Get the bone\nwhen you ire buying shank meat\nIt will give flavor and added food\nvalue to your stew.\nApple Sauce Meringue Pie\u2014Four\n\u2022licet bread, two tablespoons butter, two tablespoons powdered sugar, one and one-half teaspoons cinnamon, two and one-half cupi apple\nSuet, whites of two eggs, four ta-\nespoons granulated sugar, one teaspoon lemon juice, one-half teaspoon grated lemon rind. Toast the\nbread and spread with softened\nbutter. Sprinkle with the sugtr mixed with cinnamon. Pltce in the oven\nuntil the sugar melts. Lint the bottom of t shallow baking dish with\ntht cinnamon tout cut tny desired\nshtpe. Fill with slightly sweetened\nipple uuce. Mike \u2022 meringue of\nthe egg whites tnd iugir, idd lemon juice md grited rind. Pile lightly on the apple uuce. Bakt ln t\nilow oven (300 degreei F.) until\nmeringue Is brown. Serve it once.\nPURITY\nFLOUR\nMAKES   BETTER   BREAD\nFACTS AND FANCIES\nGripe Shtrbet\nOne pint grape juice, two egg\nwhites, two tablespoons lemon juice,\none-half cup tugar, one-fourth cup\nwtter, one-sixteenth teupoon salt.\nPour the grape juice, lemon juice\nand ult into freezing tray and\nfreeze until ilmost firm. Boil iugir\ntnd water together tor three minutes and pour ilowly into the beaten\neggi, beating constantly. Cool and\nfold in grape mixture. Freeze until\nfirm. Serves six. Mixing time, 10\nminutes.\nSweet Food\nSweet food should not be eliminated from the diet unless becauie of\na ipecial illness. It li a valuable\nenergy producer and helpful to the\nbody In moderate amounts. Try to\nserve the sweet that carries the\nproper food value with it. Avoid\nfrequent serving of heavy paitrles\nand puddings, but use fruit ln fresh\nor canned form and ice creams,\nlight puddings and frozen dessert!.\nPOSITIVELY\nThe finest coal that we\nhave aver had the privilege to offer\nDRUMHELLER\nREGAL\nLUMP, ton .... $10.50\nNUT, ton     $9.00\nFairview\nFuel Supply Co.\nPHONE 701\nSaturday in Nelson.\naaa\nMr, and Mrs. Milburn ot Salmo\nwere city visitors Sunday.\naaa\nShoppers In town yesterday Included Mrs. J. D. Anderson of Kokanee.\nA. Finlayson of\nNelson yesterday.\nProcter visited\nMn. Walter Davies, View street\nhas returned from two weeks' visit\nin Trail.\naaa\nJ. R. Thompson of New Denver\nwas  among  week-end visitors   in\nMrs. Frank Hawkins ot Bonnington visited in Nelson yesterday,\naaa\nPat Fowler of the office itaff\nof the Reno mine was a week-end\nvisitor in the city.\naaa\nDuncan Carter of Robson spent\nyesterday in Nelson.\naaa\nShoppen in town yesterday included Mias Fairbanks of Harrop.\naaa\nJ. A. Fraser of the Fawn mine\nvisited the city yesterday.\n\u2022 9    \u2022\nMr. and Mn. A* D. Tricked of\nNew Denver were week-end visitors in town.\naaa\nJ. P. Sutherland of Procter visited\nNelson during the week-end.\naaa\nHenry Davis of Riondel spent the\nweek-end in the city visiting at the\nhome of Mr. and Mrs. C. Anderson.\naaa\nG. Kruger of Bonnington visited\nin Nelson yesterday,\naaa\nWilliam Irvine, who hu been i\npatient in the Sisters hoipital in\nChewelah, Wuh., following hii motor accident iome few months ago,\nhaa returned and taken up residence in the Royal Bank bunding.\n\u2022 a   a\nA. Bunter of Balfour visited Nelson yesterday.\naaa\nMrs. H. Leggatt of Longbeach\nspent yesterday in the city.\naaa\nMlu Mary Jarvis ipent the weekend in Procter.\naaa\nMn. H. T. Hartin of Kulo wu i\nrecent viiitor in town.\naaa\nWeek-end visitors In the city included Mrs. H. C. Water-field and\nher diughter, Mils J. Witerficld of\nNakusp.\naaa\nMn. Robert Riesterer and her\ninfant daughter have left the hoipital for their home on Nelion avenue, Filrvlew,\naaa\nJerry   Towgood   of   the   Queen\nmine viiited in Nelion during the\nweek-end tnd wu i gueit of hii\nbrother-in-law and lliter, Mr, and\nMrs. Willlim J.\nipartmenU.\nSturgeon, Terrace\nMr. and Mri. J. A. Andon of\nTrail viiited in Nelion during the\nweek-end.\naaa\nW. Byen of Trail hu returned\nifter i few diys visit it the home\nof his parents, Mr. and Mrs.. W.\nByers, Hall Mines road.\na    .    .\nMr, and Mn, W. R. Jirvii, Annible block, who have been ipendlng the winter in Nelson, have returned to their home in Procter.\naaa\nRecent shoppers in the city included Mrs. Scott Lauder and hei\ndaughter of Queen's Bay.\naaa\nJ. Ferguson of Procter visited in\ntown during the week-end.\n\u2022 .   .\nMr. Jacobion of Crawford Bay,\nwho has beeen visiting his parent.,\npassed through the city en route\nto Trail.\naaa\nW. O. Mulrhead of Sunshine Bay\nvisited the city yesterday.\naaa\nG. W. Hicks of Kamloops visited\nin town yesterday.\naaa\nVisiton in Nelson over the weekend included Archie McDougall of\nthe Queen mine.\naaa\nMr. Fowler of Nakusp wu in the\ncity during the week-end en route\nto Salmo.\naaa\nN. Macleod of Procter visited in\ntown yesterday.\n.   .   .\nYesterday afternoon Mrs. J. G.\nBunyan, Silica street, entertained\nthe members of St Saviour's Church\nHelpers Bridge club when those\nplaying were Mrs. P. G. Morey,\nMrs. John Cartmel, Mrs. E. C.\nWragge, Mrs. E. E. L. Dewdney,\nMrs.. Leslie Craufurd, Mrs. W. M.\nWalker, Mrs. Harold Lakes and Mn.\nBunyan.\n\u2022 a   a .\nJ. M. Sutcliffe ot the Reno mine\nvisited town during the week-end.\naaa\nMr. and Mn. C. M. Donaldson\nand family of Salmo were vislton\nin Nelson Sunday.\n\u2022 a    a\nMlu Andrewi ot Hirrop wu ln\ntown shopping yeiterdty,\n.   .   a\nMn. J. Fred Hume returned lut\nnight vii the Greit Northern from\nBerkley, Calif., where the spent the\nwinter.\nJoseph Stern Is\nBuried al Nelson\nMany Attend Funeral\nfor Fairview\nYouth\nJoieph Stern of Fiirview, who\ndied in Triil Frldty afternoon following a brief illness, was buried in\nthe Nelton cemetery Mondty afternoon. Funeral servicei were conducted from the Somen Funeral\nhome by Ven. Archdeacon Fred H.\nGraham and hymns sung were\n\"Jesus  Lover   of  My   Soul\"   and\n 1 PAQE THRI\n\"Abide With Me.\" A large nutdl\nof friends were in attendance.\nPallbearers were M. Donaugh\nB. Baldrey, J. Baldrey, M. Stevet\nM. Lund and G. Hinterleitner.\nTeam Bolts Ntar\nSirdar\nSIRDAR, B.C.-While engaged\nhauling hay, a team belonging -\nS.  Paucuzzo  and  driven  by  I\nion,  Dominic,  became unmanaj\nable when the lines broke and boi\ned toward Sirdar. After going i\na distance the rack and load\nhay wu thrown clear of the ru\nning gear,  with  which the tea\ncontinued until It wu stopped\nWilion'i place. The hay nek w\nsmashed to pieces but the driv\nand hones were unharmed.\nTemperatures ln Tibet run the\nlength of the thermometer ln one\ndiy. During the winter, tn some\npieces, the mercury rises to 110 degree! at midday and drops to 30 below at .night\nDODDS\nKIDNEY\n&. PILLS 4\nL \\*jc\u00bb'.ciy.'\n\u2022 J*!    MMl\"**,.!\n\"\".\u201e .no\"\"'\nORANGE PEKOE BLEND\n\u2022SA1AM\nTEA\nct-mUfkm\nsoccL\nq,m^\u00a3QAJ)ad.ffHet.mr\n\/M-thakLtoumte\ntne places aJhcn cue\nhoAimtatelzpnmcy''*\nThat's another reason why\nwe have had our telephone\nput back\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nTELEPHONE CO.\nflf \"^tttefltftfl^ d(-t!t|mtt\u00a3\nINCORPORATED   2?T MAY 167a\nSALE OF\nSATIN BOUND\nTHROWS\nPure wool throws In shades of gold, orchid, blue, rose or green. A\nSize   60   Inches   by   80 *\ninches.\nSPECIAL \t\nIJ.95\nGrocery Specials\nON SALI TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY\nAND THURSDAY   .\n193\u2014Phonee\u2014194 Fret Delivery\nCOFFEE\u2014 1 OOc*\nOur Special Blend Ib. vL    ,\nSUCAR\u2014 10 OCe?.\nLimit 20 lbs. Iba. *W\nBEANS\u2014 3 IQ*\nSmall White  Iba. 10\nTEA- 1 CM\nFort Carry Ib. UV\nJELLY POWDERS- 4 O0<*\nH BC pkgi. M\nSALMON\u2014 1 00<*\nFancy Red Cohoe; Tails ..tin *w\nPUMPKIN\u2014 2 OC*\nAylmer; IVu .........m%t **\u00abJ\nTOMATO or VECETAILE 3 OO*\nSOUP\u2014Clark's   Him Lti\nTOILET TISSUE\u2014 3 OO*\nPurex rolla LO\nNEW SPRING \"HOLLYWOOD\"\nSTYLE\nPYJAMAS\nM.9S\nAgain THE BAY leads the way\nin presenting the newest merchandise. '\nPyjamas In the latest styles,\nnovelty fabrics and colorings.\nSe* the new \"square-neck\"\nmodel finished with colored\nglass buttons, and the new\n\"peak lapel\" in the latest\nmatching stripes. All sizes, and\nthey are full cut for comfort.\nBOYS'\nTWEED PANTS\nBoys' wool tweed pants that are\nwell tailored and will stand lots of\nwear. Greys, browns and blues in\nchecks and stripes. PAIR\u2014\n$1*5\nDONEGAL\nTWEED CAPS\nThis popular fabric makes a very\ndressy cap, These come In one>\npiece top style with unbreakable\npeaks. EACH\u2014\n\u00bb1\n.OO\n Ml POUR-\nfotam Sally Jfotua\nEstablished AprU 22, 1802,\nBritish Columbia'! Most Meretting Netotpaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS.\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. UMITED,\nSIS   Biker  Street,   Nelson.  British   Columblt.\nPhont 144, Private Esehange Connecting AU Departments.\nMember  of the  Audit  Bureau  of  Circulations  and\nThe   Canidlu   Press   Letted   Wire   News   Service.\nTUESDAY, MARCH 8,1986.\nEARL STANHOPE'S STATEMENT\nEarl Stanhope's statement in the House of Lords\nwas explanatory of Anglo-Italian relations in two ways.\n\\ Italy, he said, is not negotiating to end the Ethiopian\nwar. Nor was Britain placing its trust in diplomacy. It\nwas supporting the League.\nThat statement disposes of diplomatic gossip, warmongering stories, and tales of secret alliances.\nIn the African war area Italian activity is not lessened by any peace negotiations originating in Rome.\nThat temper has given the Geneva advocates of a further\nextension of sanctions a growing desire io use that instrument. And it is likely to prove in the end the only effective way to bring II Duce to a realization of his unwarranted and wanton violation of Ethiopian sovereignty.\nIn his references to fleet movements in the Mediterranean, Lord Stanhope paid no attention to the various\nprovocative threats made in the official Fascist grand\ncouncil gatherings, in Mussolini's presence, against the\nBritish fleet.\nMalta, too close to Italy, is vulnerable from the air.\nBritish fleet movement from Malta to the east was\nsound naval stategy. It would hardly go west into the narrow waters between Sicily and French Tunis. Eastward\nmovement has given it'a chance to spread out, so as to\nminimize possible air attack; to give the ships the naval\nfacilities of Greece and Turkey particularly, under these\ncountries' agreements, as members of a six-power pact\npledged to uphold extension of sanctions.\nThe movement eastward was protective, not co-\nJ ercive as has been charged. It lessened the menace of\n[Italy's bombing planes.\nEarl Stanhope's words were reassuring to the Bri-\n'tish public. They made clear the admiralty's vigilance\nin adjusting the use of naval power in the Mediterranean to the threat from the air. The statement had the\nexcellent quality of being made without unnecessarily\nadding to the complexities of an already highly critical\nsituation in Europe. It was an apt companion piece to\nFrench naval support of British precautions in the Mediterranean, under Premier Sarraut's new administration.\nThe speech did not, however, touch on the question of\nfurther sanctions\u2014the keystone of future efforts to\nbreak Italy's present strangle hold in Ethiopia.\nllMMUNIZE YOUNGSTERS TO PROTECT\nTHEM\nBy LOGAN CLENDENING. M.D.\nBrhe child that has been well nour-\nied and encouraged to exerclie\nI\n111 in most cases meet the demands\nachool life successfully. But it\nlit be admitted that school Unlet a set of conditions on the or-\nnism which are new in its ex-\nrlence and frequently severely\nring.\nrhe most troublesome of these\nthe increased chuce of contagi-\ndiseases.\niontagious diseases in general are\nf more prevalent in winter time.\nIt the weather factor is not im-\nirtant\u2014it is simply that in the\nlater   time   human   beings   are\ntwded together and contagion is\nire easily spread.\n.hlldren, of course, are notably\nrt susceptible to contagious dikes. For nearly all of these dices the curve of immunity during\nI life of the individual shows that\ni tbe first few months of lite im-\ntnity is high; few infants acquire\ncontagious   disease;  probably\ncause   their  blood  it  saturated\n111 immune iubttan.es from the\nliber's blood. After at leatt the\nIt year of life thli passive im-\nilty disappears, and from one to\nthey are likely to catch any-\n:. After five years, due to ic-\niltion ot some diseases, and con-\n\u25a0t to others, immunity rises; it\n| yeart of age probably half as\nny are susceptible it it five. Thit\neess goet on until it 20 adult\nmunity is established and only\nbut five per cent of tht adult\nItulation wUl com- down with an\niectious diseue ln u epidemic,\n\u25a0tie school ege therefore la u\npecially dugerous period for two\nreasons\u2014at that time the immunity\nis likely to be lowest ud contacts\n(which means exposure) suddenly\nbecome numerous.\nFortunately wi ctn produce artificial immunity to the mott dugerous of the contagious diseases of the\nschool age. We can give protection\nand it behooves every parent and\nguardian to be certain such protection is afforded to the child who\nenters this strange new world for\nthe first Ume.\nFirst, protecUon against thit old\nenemy of mm, amallpox. In in un-\nvaccinated community smallpox\nmight break out any time with terrible* violence. At to when it should\nbe done, it was recommended at\nthe last lession of the\" Americin\nMedical usociation thit the intut\nbe vicclnited on the first dey of\nlife. The result is milder thu it any\nliter period. At leait such i position indicates that vaccination\nshould be done by the end of the\nsixth month.\nTyphoid fever vaccine should alto\nbe given\u2014during about the third or\nfourth year. Typhoid hu bten.reported al early u three months, \"but\nit is not until after five years that\nit becomes common in childhood.\nTyhoid is almost a disappearing\ndisease, but my newspaper this\nweek tells me of u epidemic among\nthe personnel of Ringling Brothers'\ncircus, so the menace is still with ut.\nDiphtherii, mott malignant ot\nchildhood's enemies, can be prevented in a similar way.\nWhooping cough, more dangerous\nthu it sounds, cu alio.\nFor measles, the commonest, we\nheve no protection to offer.\nThe scerlet fever prevenUve hu\nbeen disappointing.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nJ \"I don't ever say anything dc-\n|\n\u25a0S a Jittle too much when I\nlent him lo do somethin'.\"\nWHAT THE PRESS\nIS SAYING\nA SMILE ON THE FACE OF\nTHI TIGER .\nII Duce cu afford a grim smile.\nWithout even accepting the plu u\na basis of negotiations, he hu gain\ned precious time, for the ol unctions hsve been postponed Indefln\nItaly, and his tankers, of which e\nwhole fleet Is report-- on the Texu\ncout, can load at they please, provided they can buy. But the smile\ncu only be fleeting, tor the feet\nthst the smaller ations in the\nleague have shown eourage enough\nto itand up to France ud England\ncm give him smill comfort. It\nmeant thtt lt he expect! to gain\nanything in Ethiopia, ht wUl hive\nto take it by force of arm*, ifter\nwhich Italy will itlll be regarded\nu an outliw by her neighbor!. \u2014\nDetroit News.\nBetween\nYou and\nBy J. B. C\nDREAM\nA robin tmbled down the wtlk,\nA harbinger of spring\nAnd as we watched the bird, our\nclock\nAwoke ut with lti ring.\n\u2022 a   a\nWith the arrest ot two suspects,\npolice believe the local bathtub-\nitetllng racket It all washed up.\na   \u2022   *\nThe pen It mightier than the gun\nChicago thief who entered o les-\ntaurant ud drew a revolver was\ncaught becauie u artist taw him\nud drew a picture.\n\u2022 a   a\nBefore rescuing that lott tvlator\nsaid to be held ln the wilds of Brazil tearch parties ihould find out if\nhe hu to pay uy taxei there.\naaa\nInventor at Fort Wayne, Ind.\nhai produced u electrical mam\ncuring machine. Experts tay its\nonly detect ii Inability to smile.\n\u2022 a   a\nWhen melting snow is heard dropping from the root, all of ua enjoy\nthe musical thaw.\naaa\n\"Did you take any trips thli winter?\"\n\"Quite a few.\"\n\"Where did you got\"\n\"Between the furnace ud the\ncoalbln.\"\naaa *^H^\nFire In a Montreal curling rink\nforced three tenants to skip, too.\naaa\nTime marches on. Poets and ball\nplayen have begun their spring\ntraining.\na   \u2022   \u2022\nEMBARRASSING QUESTIONS\n\"Im't it time to take your sulphur\nand molasses?\"\nNOT IN THE\nNEWS\nBy WORTH CHENEY\nAnother type of scrtpbook is the\ndliry kept by your wife.\nStory-book\nlove:\nhero  describing  his\n\"I feel u If my heart would leap\ntrom my throbbing breast My\nthroat contracts ud then expends.\nThe muscles of my neck leu back\nand forth, my tongue quivdri ud\nmy Upi twitch.\"\nEither love or the hlccou\nNEISON  DAILY NEWS. NELSON.  B.C.-TUE8DAY  MORNING. MARCH 1  1838\nWHAT DO YOU THINK?\nugk\nWhile liw-enforcement officeri ln\nother countriei hive been vetting\nthemselvei with more powerful\nwetpons to combat crime, ln Vienna,\nwe hear, the constabulary hia been\nadvlied to grow the fiercest mustaches possible on the theory that\nhideous-looking upper Hps have a\ntendency to frighten hoodlums.\nIt may work, but we think e\nbeard, bushy enough to secrete a\npistol, would be more effective.\naaa\nFrom conundrums, guess ng\ngernee and mathematical problems,\nparlor entertainment seemi now to\nhave gone athletic. We mean to uy\nthat the lateit parlor activity it the\nlifting trick.\nTo do this trick you must hive a\nsubject, preferably a heavy man. the\nheavier the better ud the more\nastounding. (Ot course, use your\nown discretion if there's a 400-\npounder in the crowd).\nPlace the penon to be lifted on\na backless and armlet, chiir. Then\nhtve four Hftera, men or women, or\nboth, stud by tbe subject, one it\neach ihoulder, one at each knee.\nNext have the four lifters fold their\nhands together like you used to do\nin the grade school; then extend the\nforefingers of both hands while the\nlitter arc clasped Ughtly together.\nThe lifters at the subject's shoulders plice their forefingers under\nthe subject's armpits, whUe Uie other lifters place their forefingers under his knees.\nThen signal the lifters to lift the\nsubject. Chances are they won't be\neble to raise him off the chair, especially if he's over 160.\nNow, have each lifter place one\nAU letten to tbe editor must be signed with the name of tbe\nwriter.  A nom de plume may be uied tor publication If desired.\nLinu in typewritten copy should be double spiced.\nCONSIGNMENT VS.\nNET PRICE TO\nCONSUMER\nThe Editor, Nelton Dtily Newt:\nSir\u2014Muy ittempti have bten\nmide to enable the grower to obtain a living from his industry ud\nto prevent price cutting by his shipper with all the resulting evils.\nIf we go back to the days of the\nCommittee of Direction, we find\nthat the same situaUon was beyond\ntheir control, although a real attempt wu made, which only resulted in a rick harveit for our legal\nfriends and was one of the point!\nwhereby Uie ect wes declared illegal.\nAs time paued on conditioni again\nbecame intolerable and we organised the Cent a Pound campaign. This\ndeal wu the nearest approach the\ngrower ever had to that much desired goal of Grower Control. The\ngrowen supported the Cut a Pound\ndeal to a mu, for the simple reason that this was the fint time thet\nthey were ever offered something\ndefinite, I.e. a price for their fruit\nThis control wu allowed to ilip\nfrom the hmds of the grower but\nu i result of their firm stand we\nobtained % present Marketing act\nand ud to say they find they ere\ngoing down tbe same dreary itreet\nand around tbe ume old corner.\nWhen we examine aU the deals\nhanded us tn the put we find they\nall failed for the same reaeon, i.e..\nThe grower consigning his fruit, ud\nthen trying to control his shipper.\nIt It my opinion that tht shipper or\ni group of shippers have alwayi\nsteered the ship for their own pro-\ntit ud it it mora to now thu ever\nbefore.\nI wonder how much longer will\nthe grower supply the shipper with\nfruit on consignment ud then be\nssked to supply the money to control Uie shipper, Jobber, broker, etc.\n(to tell hie fruit?) No to tell boxes,\npeper, cold storage Ud services.\nThis must be e tact at tbt shipper\nalways protect! hlmulf ud geti the\nlong end regirdlesi to what the\ngrower receives. The Jobber end\nbroker are also protected by the\nshipper u well it the box ftctory.\nWatch the price of shook and paper\nrise this year. The grower as usual\nwill be given anything that might\nbe left.\nAt the present time everything\nhu been nicely arranged to thtt ill\nInterests are being protected\u2014box\nfictories, piper mills, shippers, broken ud Jobbers. All competition in\nselling has been removed ud the\npacking industry now sits with\nfolded arms awaiting for the machine to wire them orden.\nUnder the present deal we have\ncreated a monopoly in the distributing trade. I would like to point out\nhere that the opposlUon st Ottawa\n(now the government) opposed the\nMarketing act on the grounds thit\nthis would happen ud even if the\nMarketing act it upheld by the\ncourts, there it not tht slightest\ndoubt but whit the present government will remove the power to designate agencies from the act\nAfter ill thete yetn of bitter experience is it not about time we\nshould profit by past errors and\nceaie bumping our heeds against the\nume old wall an_ attend to our own\nbusiness and let the other man attend to his.\nOur busineu ls growing fruit ud\nwe should seU to the pickers but\nunUl til growen get together one\nhundred per cent and not only pack\nand sell to the retail trade, we mult\nconUnue it we are.\nYou uk how ire we going to sell\nto the shipper. The last convention\nof the B.C. F.G.A. authorized an in\nvesUgation into the possibility of a\nstandard contract This to be a\ngrower contract and would take the\nplace of all shipper contracts, which\nwithout exception ere ill ln favor\nof the thlpper and Ignore! completely the grower's equity In the fruit\nThis Is not business like or is it Just\nnor do I know of i single Instance of\nhand on top the subject's head, one\nhud on top tbe other, until all four\nhuds ar pressing down on the subject's skull. Hold the preuure for a\nfew seconds, and at a signal have the\nlifters again try to lift him. He will\nbe raised without any apparent effort\nHow come? Don't ask us.\nCAFETERIA SHOULD BE EDUCATOR\nBy GARRY C. MYERS. PH. D.\nHtid Dtetrtmint Ptrtnt Education Clivtlind College, Wtittrn\nRtttrvt Unlvenity\nIt hu long itemed to me that the\ntchool which runt t ctfeterla hu u\nunusual opportunity to effect good\neducition at mui time. Yet in the\niverage school cafeteria there ll\nUtUe to suggest refinement Good\nmanners ire at low ebb. The clatter\nof the dishes encourages loud talking ud rude ud Jumpy movements. Speed tha dty when nolie-\nIcai dishes will be used. Generally\nthe place is crowded, restless students have to wait i line, and the\nlunch period is very short.\nIn the elementary school, teachen should serve is hostesses and\ntrain aome itudents to do so. The\nlunch period should not be considered \u2022 \"teaching\" period when children will be properly Instruct. 1\nud practised ln good table manners\nand the art of euy, gracious table\nconventUon. To miny of the pupils\nthtt would be \u25a0 wholly new experience. Perhips the lunch period\ncould be made the mott highly educative period, insteid of being, u at\npresent in mony \u25a0 tchool, t training\nperiod ln barbarity.\nThe problem of the Junior and\nienlor high schools ii more difficult, especially in the vtry large\ntehool plant. Why should not the\nlunch period be much longer thu\nIt present, ud with more reliyt,\nspreading: over s longer total interval of time?\nAmong junior and senior high\nschool administrators and their\nteachers there ought to be enough\ningenuity to effect a lunch program\nmore nearly resembling an atmosphere of refinement than ls true at\npresent, in most schools. Certainly\nadolescents could be trained to act\nis hosts and hostesses.\nHave you ever taken lunch in the\ncafeteria of your local ichool? Did\nthe whole procedure measure up to\nyour Ideals?\nI should like to pass on ln this\ncolumn accounts ot some junior and\nsenior high schools whose lunch periods seem to cultivate a high degree of refinement.\nA great many boarding schooli\nud colleges might weU give much\nmore attention to the cultivation of\nthe social graces in their dining\nhalls. Some of them seem not far\npast the cave man's level, especially\nat the training table for the athletes.\nWhat have been your observations?\nEvery Saturday morning, at 11\no'clock, Eastern Standard time, Dr.\nFlorence Hale, past president ot the\nNational Education auoclation,\nspeaks over the radio to parenti and\nteachen, under the ausplcu of thli\nissoclstlon. I heartily recommend\nher talks to my readen, and nominate her u the \"Voice ot Common\nSense\".\nwhere busineu is cerrled on ln this\nmanner.\nYour Standard Contract committee have agreed that this condition\nmust be abolished ud consignment\nceue both to Independent shippers\nud also to the co-operative.\nYour committee propose that a\ngrower's standard contract which is\nbeing drafted at the present time,\nshall be the only contract used in\nthe Industry, This contract provides\na meus whereby the net price to\nthe grower on all varieties and\ngrades shall be tet from time to\ntime. Such price shaU be the net\nprice the shipper shall pay tht grower. The thlpper would then tad his\ncosts and thui fix tht teUing price.\nIf the present Marketing act remains, your committee recommends\nthat a single member of the Tree\nFruit board be appointed with the\nGrowen agency, with the sole right\nto regulate the net price structure,\nthus strengthening the grower control.\nAt the present time we find that\na whispering campaign hu been\nstarted in order to defeat this movement for complete grower control\nand continue control by the machine. Let them come out with something better if they have lt end lay\ntheir cards on the table.\nWith a contract of thli kind, the\nnet price being published ud the\n-hippen of necestlty getUng together, we would find that there\nwould be a united effort to obtain\nlower freight rates, not only ln the\nvaUey but aided by the consumer\non the prairies as well.\nThe Standard Contract will be\ndiscuued at Uie B.C. F.G.A. convention on February 28th. at Kelowna aad I urge all growen possible\nto attend.\nR.W. RAMSAY,\nMember of Contract committee.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V. SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nTHE WRONG CALL\nIt might embarrass both North\nsnd South to have their names mentioned, u the former should have\nplayed the hand ud cu make a\nsmall slam at cither clubs or no\ntrumps against sny defence, while\nthe latter wat doubled it 6 Dlimondi. The opening lead wu the Q\nof spades. How many can South win\nagainit tht beet subsequent de-1\nfence?\n\u2666 At\n\u2666 AQ9I\n\u2666 None\n4aA J 91 6 . 2\n.'nnnTitirniiTniiiiiiniimiiiiiriiiiiiiMii\nThe\nHuman Side\n0\/The News \\\nB By EDWIN C. HltL\nr^H I'll'M \"\"'\u25a0\"\"'\u25a0\"\"\"\" \"\u25a0\u25a0'\"\"\"\"\"\u25a0\u2022\u25a0i\n\"I Old Not Betray Edith Civtll,\" Declirei Gtiton Qultn Upon\nHit Rtlttu From Prlion After Serving Seventeen\nYesn of I Twenty-Yur Sentence\n\u2666 QJ 108\n2\ntJ78\n\u2666 Q82\n\u2666 10t\na7,\nU\n488\n110 8 5 4\n2\n\u2666 J974\n\u2666 KQ\nBetter to Pension\nOld Men Than the\nYoung, C.H.B. Soys\nThe editor, Nelton Dilly Newi:\nSir\u2014I noticed thet in the houie\nit Ottawa Uie Rt Hon. R. B. Bennett voted against the 80-year old\nage pensions. Only lut faU it wu\none of his election promises, if returned to power;\nMr. Dunning claims the cott would\nbe too grett Whit ibout the cost\not unemployment? It icems io\n\u25a0trtnge that all the brainy mu cu\nnot see that it it a cue ot choosing\nwhich it would be best to help, beciuse help hu to be given, they ell\nadmit\nI would like to ask what would\nyou do it you had a lot ot hones.\nWould you put the young ones to\nwork ud turn the old ones to suture out of regard for the work they\nhave given, but are now slowing\nup and haven't the snap? That'i\nhorse seme one hears about\nI would Uke to ask Mr. Dunning\nwhy the railways and other large\nfirms superannuate their older employees. Why are our Judges, our\nsrmy ud nsvy men, our clerks, etc.,\npensioned?\nThe class of men Mr, Dunning\nknpws nothing about ls the average\nworking min, say, carpenters,\nplumbers, palnten, not forgetting\nthe miners, lumberjacks, etc. These\nmen cm never uve sufficient, as\nthey depend on seasonal employment, to be ture of the bare necessities of life when they are too slow\nud havt to give way for the\nyounger and taster men.'\nMr. Dunning uys industry wants\nUte older man. This shows his utter\nignorance of things as they are. Let\na man ot 40 try to get on at the\nC. M. tt S. compuy at Trail. The\nreason a lot of old men stick long\nafter they know they are put being\nfit, is because they are keeping sons\nand daughters who should hav,e Jobs\nand homes of their own, but sooner\nthu let these sons go to relief\ncamps or their daughters walk the\nstreets, they struggle to keep a\nhome and to shelter all-\nIt's up to our young men to see\nthat the older men are pensioned\noff and they be given the chuce.\nWhich is the cheaper, to keep the\nyoung or the old? Surely 10 yean\nof leisure Isn't too much for those\nwho have worked hard for a living.\nIt is up to every citizen of Cusda\nto follow the doings st Ottawa more\nthan ever ln the history of Canada.\nIt's your busineu these men are\nconducting; your money tint's being\nspent; and your fault if you don't\nknow what is going on. Don't wait\nuntil next election ud then say: \"1\ndidn't know.\" You cu at leut give\nmoral support ud perhaps better.\nBoswell, B.C., Feb. 28,1988.\nWORK WITHOUT\nHOPE\n       \u2666KJ?*!\t\n\u2666 A K 10 C 4 S\nm*t\nNorth ihowed both clubs ud\nhearts', but gave up when his more\naggressive partner bid 8 Diamonds.\nI South informed me what h. did, but\nhe made no mention ot Just how\nbidding went or how lt happened\nthat North wu not allowed to play\nUie final call,\nThe game contract tt diamonds\nappean dubious to cuutl observers, but try plsying the hud u\ngiven here. Win the Q of tpidet\nlud with South'i K. Take declarer'!\nA end K of diamondi. Dltcard dummy'i lowest heart ud loweat club.\nLead declarer's K of hearti before\nentering dummy. At yet South dou\nnot know whether one defender\nholds aU three missing trumps or\nwill find tbe Q-J-9 of diamonds divided 2-1 between defenders. Probably South had a few very unpleu-\nant moments.\nLead a club. Win with dummy's\nA. One ot the high clubs must drop,\nbut the other high honor snd the 10\nstill mey be held by one defender.\nThings must go remsrksbly well,\nbetter than South hu uy right to\nexpect, to permit him to fulfil his\ndoubled contract\nDiscard declarer's lut club and\none of his spades on dummy's A ud\nQ of hearts. Leed e club. South is\nlucky enough to find both defenden following suit Declarer's ruff\nwiU give him that trick ud establish the remainder of dummy's\nclubs. Letid a trump. Discard dummy'i lowest club. Wut wins the\nfint defensive trick with his Q of\ntrumps, luving only the 3 outstanding. West hu nothing left in hii\nhud except four ipadet. He must\nletd \u25a0 ipide ud dummy hu the A,\nwhile tut mutt follow iuit South\ncertainly is a lucky mui\nLud one of dummy's long clubs.\nWhether or not Eut ruffs declarer\nwill discard his lut spade on dummy's club lead. East may as weU\nruff. All the defenden can win are\ntheir two trump tricks, Just giving\ndeclarer his doubled contract\nNorth ud South have every tult\nstopped it leut twice. To make either 6-odd at no trumps or clubs It\nwould have been neceuary to give\ndefenden a single trick In clubs.\nDeclarer would have *wo spade\ntricki, three heart tricki, two dla-\nmnd tricks ud six club tricks from\nwhich to pick 12 tricks.\nA long, thin Frenchman with\nspine gray hiir ud the pallor of\nprison on hll face sits in the office\not his lawyer in Parii ud sayi:\n\"I did not betray Edith Cavell.\"\nHe hat Jutt come from tht Clair-\nvaux penitentiiry, i rich mm by Inheritance. HU last 17 yean have\nbeen spent behind the ban. He-was\nlet off with three years unserved oi\na 20-year sentence, to which the\nverdict ot death against him had\nbeen commuted.\nGaston Quien Is 88 todsy. He was\n36 and a prisoner ln the Jail at\nSiint-Quentin, lerving two months\nfor swindling, when the Germans,\nin 1914, invaded Belgium and northern France. He was one of the hun-\nAll\nSlugs\nNature seems to work\nleave their lair\u2014\nThe bees are stirring\u2014birds ire on\nthe wing\u2014\nAnd Winter, slumbering ln the\nopen air,\nWears on his smiling face a dream\nof Sprlngl\nAnd I, the while, the sole unbusy\nthing.\nNor  honey  make,  nor  pair, - nor\nbuild, nor sing.\nYet well I ken the buks where\namaranth! blow,\nHave   traced   the   fount   whence\nstreams of nectar flow.\nBloom, O ye amaranths! bloom for\nwhom ye may,\nFor me yc bloom not! Glide, rich\nstreams, away!\nWith Ups unbrlghten'd, wreathlcst\nbrow, I stroll:\nAnd would you learn the spells thet\ndrowse my toul?\nWork without Hope draws nectar\nln i ileve,\nAnd Hope without an object cannot live. *\n\u2014Samuel Taylor Coleridge.\n10 YEARS AGO\nFrom Nelion Dally Newi Fllu I\nMarch 3, 1926\nWardu and Mn. W. R. Jarvis,\nWard street, have u their guest Min\nVera Craig, registered nurse, of\nVucouver who is visiting her parents, Mr, and Mn. Craig of Trail.\naaa\nMr. ud Mrs. II R. Townsend,\nRobson street ,entert-lned at bridge.\naaa\nJ, J. Campbell of Willow Point\nwas a Neiaon visitor.\n,   .  .\nMr. and Mrs. James O'Shea entertained at five tables of bridge at\ntheir home on Silica street.\nI   20 YEARS AGO 1\nFrom Nelion Dallv Ntwt Flltt'\nMirch 3, 1911\nAmong pupils of Central school\nwho had perfect ittendance for Februiry were: Annie Byers, Georgia\nMcKeown, Ben Mirtin, Hazel Maundrell, Ed Stromstead, Cyril Bell,\nBeatrice Campion, Francis Graham,\nDorothy Hill, Will.am Jeffs, Harold\nPond, Arthur Boyce, Dorothy Hip-\npenon, Elmer Reilcy end Myrtle\nMcKeown.\na   a   \u00bb\nBorn, Februiry 29, lo Private and\nMn. John McLeod of Nelson, a son.\naaa\nFrancis Edward Gigot, son of Mr.\nud Mrs. E. F. Gigot of Nelson, wu\nmarried to Mlu Catherine Sadie\nMacMillan. daughter of the late Mr.\nand Mn. D. R. MacMillan of Chrysler, Ont, at Missoula. Mont. They\nwUl reside it Revelstoke where Mr.\nGigot Is manager and editor of the\nMail-Herald.\n 1\nI   30 YEARS AGO\nIFromNelion Dally News Filet I\nMirch 3, 1906\nSilver declined four points ln New\nYork yeiterdiy ud ii now 65?.\ncenta u ounce.\naaa\nWord hu been received in Nelson\not the death at Guelph, Ont, of John\nBunyan, father Ot J. G. Bunyan and\nMiss A. Bunyan ot Nelson. Mr. Bunyan, sr., wu more thtn 70 yean old.\naaa\nAt the residence of Capt. Duncan,\nSilica street the evening of March 1,\nFred Adle of Waneta wu married\nto Miss Loretta Scott ot Northport\nby Rev. J. T. Ferguson.\nTHE LATE EDITH CAVELL\nMerited Death?\ndreds of Frenchmen and Belgians\nwho appealed to the Princesse de\nCrny ud Nurse CtveU to get him\nthrough the Germin lines. They did,\nud therein, according to the verdict of the French court-martial,\nlay the betrayal of the women to the\nGermans.\nEdith Cavell, a woman of 50 in\n1915, was attached to a Red Cross\nunit in Brussels. MUe. Louise Thu-\nlicz, a professor of mathematics at\nLille, was vacationing near Valenciennes when the British retreat\ntrom Mons took place. Six of the\nBriUsh wounded were left behind,\nand this young Frenchwoman tound\nterritory. The marquis said to von\nder Lancken:\n\"Miss Cavell may have sent hundreds of men to the front by means\nof her ambulance, but If you kill her\nshe will send millions against you\nfrom her tomb.\"\nVon der Lancken shrugged his\nshoulders. He did not think the execution would be Immediate although\nthe two othen insisted it wu to takt\nplace in the morning. Tbe baron\ntold them that General von Sauber-\nweig, the acting governor, wu intent on the execution. The marquis\nurged him to telephone to the Kilter\nat field headquarters. The German,\namazed at tuch \u25a0 propoul, exclaimed:\n\"But one cu't telephone tha emperor.\"\nIn his dlery, the marquis inti-\nmates that von der Lancken wished\nthat he had taken the matter up\nwith the emperor, for the latter was\nincensed over the execution. Nu\ndoubt he uw lt in the tame light as\nthe Spuiard, that it would mew,\nas it did, the firing ot the spark of\nindignation which tut hundreds of\nthousands ot men into the ranks of\nthe allies. MUe. Thuliez ud the others were uved by the efforts of\nPresident WUson ud by the very\nbad reaction, trom a German standpoint which the execution brought\nfrom Uae neutral world.\nIn their case against Gaston Qui-\nen, Uie French wanted to know why.\nthe Germans Had not interned him\nwhen they found him in prison.\nThey wuted to know, too, why he\nhad returned to Brussels ifter Edith\nCavell had gotten him through the\nGerman lines into Holland. They did\nnot believe his uiwen ud ordered\nthat he be shot as e traitor. A reprieve saved his life ud now he\nasks vindication, vowing:\n\"I will repeat to my last breaUi:\n'I did not betray Edith CaveUV\n(Copyright 1936)\nGASTON QUIEN\n\"No Betrayer, He\"\nbillets for them, hid them in the\nforests and brought them food at\nnight. This she did in disobedience\nof the German order that all British\nwounded be surrendered.\nOther soldiers found their way to\nthe shelters provided by the daring\nFrenchwoman. One by one she got\nthrough. 200 to Brussels and to\nNurse Cavell, routing them by way\nof the chateau of the Princesse de\nCroy. It was dangerous work, miles\nof travel at night, lack of food ud\nwater and a search for concealment\nby day. With the English soldien\nsafely spirited into Holland, MUe.\nThuliez, Edith Cavell and their litUe band turned their attention to\nthe repatriation of French metal\nworkers.\n\"Suddenly wc were suspected,\"\nsays MUe. Thuliez. \"I was on the\nway to Miss Cavell's home in August, 1915, when I was warned that\nthe Germans knew ot our secrets.\nThat very night 35 of us were taken,\nud as they led us away Miss Cavel\nwhispered to me: 'I hope we won't\nbe shot But If wc are, we have merited if.\"\nThe court-martial was held October 7-8, 1915, and the ringleaders\nwere sentenced to be shot. On the\ncold, gray dawn of October 12, Edith\nCavell and Philllppe Baucq went to\ntheir deaths. Miss Cavell's last\nwords to the Anglican chaplain who\nattended her were:\n\"Patriotism Is not enough.\"\nThe American ambassador to Belgium, Brand Whitlock, moved heaven and earth to save her life. But on\nthe eve of the execution he was\ngrievously ill. In his place, Hugh\nOlbson, thm first secretary of the\nembassy, made a last, desperate appeal. He broke in upon the dinner\nof the Spanish ambassador, the Msr-\nquli de Vlllalobar, and implored\nhim lo go with him to the Germans\nud beg for the life of the Englishwomen. They hutened to Baron von\nder Lancken, then director of polit-\n'cal affairs in the occupied Belgian\nGEMS FROM LIFE'S\nSCRAP BOOK\nTHE GOLDEN RULE\n\"Behavior is a mirror ln which\nevery one shows his image.\u2014Goethe.\naaa\n\"Nothing ls so Indicetlve of deepest culture as a Under consideration\nfor the ignorant\"\u2014Emerson.\n*  *  \u2022\n\"How good ud plessant a thing\nit is to seek not so much thine own\nas another's good, to sow by the\nwayaide for the way-weary and to\ntruit Love'i recompense of love.\"\u2014\nMary Baker Eddy.\na   a   a\n\"The foundation ot ill good mu-\nnera is to think of others end not of\nyounelf.\"\u2014Vicir de Wrexham.\naaa\n\"Love for one's feUowi ud a\nbrave hurt are tbe mott useful\ngifti to go through life with,\"\u2014\nEXCESSIVE GOVERNMENT\n\"My reading of history convinces\nme that most bad government hu\ngrown out of too much government\n... I know of no government which\nhas ever once been strong and then\nfallen, that did not go to its ruin because it had become gradually, even\ninsidiously, cumbersome, topheavy,\nunwieldy, complicated, almost incomprehensible.\"\u2014John Sharp Williams, in a lecture on Thomas Jefferson.\nTO MAKE an extra\n1 room In the attic or\nbawmtnt. To liy unci tr linoleum. For\nitorm doon. etc., wt\nrecommend ' a-lnch C.\ng r a d a Cottonwood\nPantli.\nWood. Vallance\nHardware Co.* Ltd.\nDlitrict Diatrlbutori\n\"BUltD B.C. PAYROLtS\"\nIt Is\nRich\nBecause \t\nPure     l\u00a3P\nIt's the purity of .Ptctfie Milk\nthat permits lti richness to so\nnoticeably stand out.\n\"Some yeara ago,\" writes i\nvalued pttron, \"I opened \u25a0 can\not milk to make my daily pud-\ndine. We liked the pudding so\nwell that I tried several brands\nand found Pacific Milk the richest lira best. I found that by\nusing Pacific Milk and an equal\nquantity of water, a Uttle butter\nand sugar to taste, one does not\nneed cats.\"\nManv good cooks have discovered the richness and economy\not Pacific Milk.\nPacific Milk\nIrradiated, Of Coune\nWont Adi Get Results\n \u2014\u2014-\naw\nUNDER THI BASKIT\nNotrt Dame buketeeri icnmblt for the bill undir tht hoop.\nLEPT to RIQHT, Ireland, Wade and Moir.\nRugby - Skiing - Indoor Swimming - Curling - Bowling\nlath,\nfca\nHockey - Badminton - Soccer - Basketball - Boxing - Wrestling\nPAQf  flVS-\nNILSON DAILY NIWI. NILION. i.C-TUESDAY MORNINQ.  MARCH S. 1936\n-PAQI PIVI\nLIVER\nFrederick Meyer thewt yeu e difficult ont-irm levtr during\nOlympic gymnutlc trial* In New Yark City.\nIEQUEST A LAW\nAGAINST POOLS\nEnglish League Asks\nSimon Take Steps\nAbout Betting\nLONDON, Mtrch 2 (CP Cable) .-\nbe Engllih Football association to-\nay communicated with Sir John\nImon, home secretary, urging that\ntglslation, aimed at the elimination\nt football pool betting, be put into\nfleet by the government as speed-\nly ae possible. A blU dealing gen-\nrally with pool betting is sche-\niuled to come before the house ot\nommons ln the near future.       ,\nThe assoclaUon's move follows\noe English. Football league's acUon\nS cancelling matchei arranged last\nummer and subatituting new lists\nhe day before games ire scheduled\no be pliyed.\nMeanwhile at Leeds, representees of 36 clubs held a meeUng\nMay, 28 voting to ask the league\nnanagement committee to bring\nbout Immediate restoration ot the\nriglnal fixtures. The otheri re-\nlined from voting.\nA special general meeting hai\neen called for Manchester, March\nand lt li expected the outcome\n[ the deliberations of the clubs at\nteds will form the basis ot disunion at this gathering.\nFAVORITES WIN\nINDOORTENNIS\nNEW YORK, March . (AP)\u2014The\nreatest foreign menace to Amer-\n:a's indoor tennis lince the prime\nt Jean Borotra loomed more om-\nvouily than ever todey at all fiv-\nrlte survived second-round tests\nnd the field In the 37th United\ntltes Indoor singles championship\nttt reduced to IS.\nKarle Schroeder of Sweden routed\nlave Geller, New York university\nstm captain. 6-1, 6-3.\nGregory Mangln of New York, the\nefender who Is seeking his fourth\nIctory, Squelched Joe Fiihback of\nlew York, 6-3, 6-1.\nleferee Cleared\nin Soccer Death\nLONDON, March 2 (CP Cablc).-\n*he English Football assoclaUon\nommlsston appointed to Inquire in-\no roughness in the first division\noccer match between Sunderland\nnd Chelsea, Feb. 1, following which\namei Thorpe, the former club'i\noelkeeper died, reported today the\n;ame had been conducted latiific-\norily.\nThorpe wu Injured in making a\nave but apparently recovered and\ninished the game. A tew days later\niii condiUon became serious and he\nlied Feb. I, in a diabetic coma,\nrectors believed this condition wu\nrobably set up by concussion suf-\nered ln the match.\nIn ita report today the commit-\nlon found no fault with the way\nht referee handled the game and\nlao felt nothing could be added to\nhe regulations regarding rough\nday already included in the atso-\nlttlon'i rules for retirees.\n.OUIS TO QUIT\nIF ME WINS IN\nTITLE BATTLE\nBUFFALO, N. Y\u201e Mtrch 2 (AP)\n\u2014Jot Louli, Detroit'! brown\nbomber, uld tonight he will defend thl world'i heivyweight\ntitle only once If he wlm It from\nJamei J, Braddock.\nLoult told ntwipiptrmtn ht expected to lick Mix Schmellng\ntully, take Briddock In hit itridt,\nippetr u e dtftnding ehimplon\nJuit onct, tnd thtn pen out of the\nfight picture forever.\nROSS ARRIVES AT\nCOAST THURSDAY\nVANCOUVER, Mtrch 2 (CP)-\nney Ross, world welterweight\niUeholder, will arrive here Thurs-\nlay to prepare for his non-UUe 10-\nound match with Gordon Wallace,\nancouver's Cinadian welterweight\nhampion, March 11.\nRoss' managers, Sam Pian and\nrt Winch, have agreed to allow\n|ocal Judges for the fight In accortf-\nnce with rules ot the Vmouver\nixlng commission. Tbey continue,\nowever, in their demands an out-\nidt referee be used tnd wUl confer\n'1th the commission it soon it\nay errive here.\nPORT VALE WINS\n[LONDON, March 2 (CP Cable).-\nfort Vale emerged with a 4-0 vie-\nover HuU City in a tecond\nlivlilnn, Engllih Football letgue\nIittch today. Tlie game mjit pliyed\nIn Fort Vtle's ground.\nHockey\nC.H.A-T\/T-E.R\nby W.W.W.\nThtrt mutt htvt bttn lomethlng exceptionally iweet tbout\nTrall'i victory over Ex-King\nGeorge Saturday night when they\noompltted th* route and lift tht\ncoait Invadert hon dt combat.\nTha two-game lerlei ended In t\n15-8 victory for Trill ind thi\nTlgtn wtrt will awart of tht\nfict thit It wu practically tht\numt tttm they hid dtfuttd, it\nput thtm out of the urlei, lut\nyetr it Vincouver. So after milling a yur, Trail Tlgtn are back\nagain at the hud of Junior hockty\nIn tht province.\naaa\nAfter the game Monday night,\nKimberley tnd TraU move to tht\nSmelter city to complete the beit-\nout-of-five leriei.\naaa\nDid you know ... Leo Atwell it\nthe silver-tongued orttor of the\nNelton Maple Leafs. He gave a\nwonderful seven-word ipeech at\nRotary Monday when the Rotarians\nentertained the hockey club. \"0\nthat all speeches could be tt brief\nit that!\" Stewie Paterson, who is so\ntearless he wlU almost climb into\nan opponent's sweater when told to\nwatch him on the ice, broke out ln a\ncold sweat when he thought he was\ngoing to be called to speak. He had\nto keep two handkerchiefs buiy to\njg^ hold the perspiration on hit forehead in check...\njTlny Thompion,\nBoiton Bruin\ngoalie, appean to\nhave the Vezint\ntrophy cinched\n'thii year ....\nKAndy Blair, the\nm man the Leafi\n\u25a0 couldn't give\n\u2022 away lut fall,\nf : \u2022tcored a goal in\nthree successive\ngames, and those\ngoals meant a lot\nto the Leafs. He\nwill undoubtedly\ngrow his Charlie Chaplin moustache\nagain . . . Marty Burke, Iron-man\nof the Chicago Black Hawks' defence, rarely comes to the fore when\npracUce is being distributed but he\ncan always be counted on to give a\ngood performance. .. . Two to one\nGlen Brydson raid, \"Nya ya ya ya\nya ya\" when he icored two goals\nagainst the Rangers when tbe\nHawks beet Patrick's boys Sunday\nnight 2-1. Brydson wu told to\nHawks about the middle of the\nseason and Morenz wu shifted to\nRangers .. . Karakas, Hawk goilie,\nis leading the N, H. L. netmlnders\nin shutouts. Not bad for a rookie\ngoaUe.... Gorman, Maroon mentor,\nand Smythe, Leaf dementor, are\nnever happy unless they are maligning one another. Connie accused\nGorman of putting und In the\nLeafs' dressing room at Montreal a\nfew weeks ago, and Gorman comes\nback against the Leati tUowing\ngames at the Gardens in the afternoon preceding N. H. L. games. He\nsays it leaves the ice pitted and\nhampers the Maroons, who tet\na faster skating club than the Leafs.\n... The race between the Maroons\nand the Leafs continues to be close\nand the fins ire not the only interested spectatort ot the standing. Un-\nMarty   Burke\nder the new tyitem the top teami\nln the two leeguee get a fatter hunk\nof Uie playoffi moneys. Hooley\nSmith and Baldy Northcott have\nalready worn out a set of pencili\nfiguring how much difference first\nand second place meant. It ls about\n$300, they estimate.... Chicago and\nDetroit are ilmost sure to be in the\nplayoffs.... Struck on the nose by\na speeding puck, \"Scotty' Bowman\nof Detroit, needed six stitches to\nclote the wound, tnd brought hit\ntotal stitches for the year up to 23.\nThis it probibly the season's record\nfor corporal sewing.\naaa\nHowie Morenz developed hit remarkable legs by playing hooky\n(admonishing parents would be advised to read \"hooky\" u \"hockey\")\nfrom hit music lessons tnd skaUng\non Uie Avon river et his boyhood\nhome, Stratford, OnL, for miles\nevery diy. (And another thing, thil\nIs not Stratford-on-Avon wt are\nspeaking about, tnd Howie ii not to\nbe confuted with Willyum Shtke-\nmart).\nHector Kilrea. flying left wing of\nDetroit Red Wings, who once established a speed record for hockey\nplayers in the NaUonal Hockey\nleague by circling the Montreel\nForum in 16 2-5 seconds (Bob Grade\not the Marooni hu since equalled\nit but not with a puck), developed\nhit driving power by stealing his\nsitter's skates, u a boy, when he\nwas too young\neven to ween\nboyt'  skates.\n\"Trainers tei\nme that I havi\ncertain muscle\ndeveloped in\nlegs that no othi\nhockey player]\nhas,\" Kilrea explained. \"I was\ntoo small for boys'!\nskates to I would]\nput on a big pair\nof boots add then\nstrap my sitter\nSadie's skatea\nover them. The\nboots and the way\nthe girls' skates were made,\nstrengthened muscles that seldom\nare exercised. The trainers tell me\nthat those particular muscles take\nthe load off the main leg muscles.\"\nKilrea ii i veteran but still young\nin yurt. He joined the Ottawa club\nln the fall of 1925, before his eighteenth birthday, and became the kid\nwonder. The Kilreas are a hockey\nfamily. Besides Hec and Wally, both\nRed Wings, there are Kenny and\nJohn. John is 35 and always remained an amateur. Kenny, just 17,\nis starring this winter at Ottawa\nuniversity and some day may help\nto furnish a new trio of brothers in\nmajor league hockey, equalling the\nteat of the Boucher family of Ottawa.\nKenny, the youngest member of\nthe Kilrea family, a sandy-haired\ncenter ice and left wing player,\nwith the unbeaten and untied Ottawa university sextet, ls leading\nscorer ln the Ottawa Junior City\nHockey league. Kilrea ls in first\npltce with 25 points, mtde up of 18\ngoals and seven assists, aarrying on\nthe family tradition ofe%ally and\nHector.\nHec  Kilrea\nN. H. L.\nCANADIAN lECTIOr-\nW   L\nD\nF\n.   Ptl.\nToronto   19   16\n4 101\n92\n42\nMontreal   .... 17   16\n7\n94\n94\n41\nAmericans  .. 13  20\n7\n95\n99\n33\nCanadians      10   20\n10\n72\n97\n30\nUNITED STATE8 SECTION\nDetroit    ' 21   11\n7\n98\n79\n49\nChicago' 20   15\n6\n80\n74\n46\nRangers  15   16\n10\n78\n88\n40\nBoston   18   19\n1\n76\n71\n39\nScoring leaders:\nCanadian secUon:\n0\nA\nPt.\nV\nSchriner, Ams \t\n18\n23\n41\n2\nChapman, Ami\t\n1\n26\n35\n12\nSmith, MU  _\n17\n10\n33\n70\nNorthcott, Mtl \t\n12\n18\n30\nM\nThorns, Tor  _\n15\n13\n28\n17\nConacher, Tor \t\n15\n13\n28\n68\nWard, Mtl \t\n12\n14\n28\n28\nStewart, Ami\t\n12\n13\n25\n14\nWiseman, Amni\n11\n14\n25\n13\nGoldsworthy, Cdn ..\n13\n10\n23\n8\nJoliat, Cdns \t\n14\n8\n22\n16\nBoU, Tor \t\n13\n9\n22\n10\nOUver, Amns \t\n1\n13\n22\n12\nHaynes, Cdni \t\n4\n18\n22\n12\nMetz, Tor\t\n14\n6\n20\n14\nGracie, MU \t\n9\n11\n20\n29\nH. Jackson, Tor  10 9\nRoblnion. Mtl  6 13\nJerwa. Amni  6 10\nMcGlll, Cdni  12 5\nKelly, Tor ....  10 1\nBlinco, Mtl  I 8\nUnited Statu lection:\nThompion, Chi   16 lt\nRomnes, Chi   11 23\nMtrch, Chi   15 15\nDiUon,  Rngri    18 11\nBarry, Det   18 11\nBeatUe, Bitn   11 15\nBoucher, Rngrs   9 17\nLewis, Det  10 15\nAurle, Det   12 12\nGottselig, Chi _ _ 11 13\nWelland, Bstn  11 12\nHowe, Det   10 13\nBrydson Rngr-Chl 8 14\nPatrick, Rngn 9 13\nSorrell, Det   9 12\nMorenz, Chi-Rngr .. 6 15\nClapper, Bstn   11 i\nH. Kilrea, Det  5 15\nMcFadyen, Chi  4 16\nSiebert, Bttn      11 8\nGoodfellow, Det  5 IS\nShore, Bstn  3 14\nI**\u2014Pentlties in mlnutu.\n19\n17\n19\n27\n18\n67\n17\n24\n17\n20\n17\n10\n35\n15\n34\n\u00ab\n3(1\n30\n29\n10\n26\n14\n26\n27\n26\n2\n25\n23\n24\n1!\n24\n4\n23\n9\n23\n23\n23\n31\n22\n25\n21\na\n21\n24\n20\nfl\n20\n31\n20\n31\n19\n62\n18\n61\n17   55\nARSENAL MEETS GRIMSBY TOWN AND\nHUDDERSFIELD TAKES ON FULHAM IN\nSEMI-FINALS FOR THE ENGLISH CUP\nLONDON, Mtrch 1 (CP ctble).\u2014Grimiby Town and Arientl meet\non the grounds of Hudderafield Town tnd Fulham opposes Sheffield\nUnited at Wolverhampton on March 21 ln temi-finil gimes for the\nEnglish Football cup it was announced today.\nThe drew thui ensures a meeUng between first and second division\nclubs ln the final at Wembley late ln April. Grimsby and Anenal are\nmembera of the premier league and the other semi-finalists represent\nthe second division.\nB. C. RINK WINS\nIN BRIER TEST\nWins in First Round\nOver P.E.I, by\n11-6 Score\nTORONTO, March 2 (CD-Western Canada rinki, every one of\nthem curUng Uke champions, won\nfirst-round matches today as play\nstarted for the Canadian championship Macdonald'i brlc trophy here.\nThe Manitoba quartet fi.m Winnipeg, iklpped by J. K. Witson, led\nthe western entries with a smashing 21-3 victory over Hector Cowan's Sarnia rink representing Ontario.\nA new Canadian champion wiU\nbe crowned probably Thursday to\nsucceed Gordon CampbeU'i Hamilton Thirties who won the trophy\nlut winter but were eUmintted in\npreliminary play to determine Ontario's representative thli year.\nBecause of the outstanding successes in put brier compeUUon and\nbecause of their sparkling play today, the Winnipeg rink was favored\nto carry the title back lo the Manitoba capital for the seventh Ume\nlince the competition wu inaugurated ln 1827.\nOne of the two new provinces to\nenter the spiel this year, British\nColumbit, surprised veteran followers of \"tbe roarin' game\" by\ntrouncing Prince Edward Island's\nrink 11-6. Prince Edward Island is\ntne other province to enter the\n'spiel for the tint time.\nThe British Columbia Tour was\nfrom Vancouver and was skipped\nby veteran W. H. Whalen, while\nPrince Edward Island's entry wu\ntrom Montague with J, A. Mclntyre skipping.\nBREWERS NOSE\nOUT PINE CONES\nWhen Creston tnd Kulo curlen\nfailed to put In an appearance for\nthe Saturday night inter-city play\nat the Nelson curling rink, W. Mirr's\nBrewers ganged up to nose out R.\nE. Horton's Pine Cones 44-41.\nSkips and scores, with the Pine\nConu menUoned flrsL were:\nR. E. Horton 11, W. Marr 10.\nA. B. Gilker 5, T. R. Wilson 7.\nH. M. Whimster 6, R. Andrew 12.\nR. L. McBrldge 4, J. G. Bunyan 9.\nJ. Teague 15, A. Jeffs 6.\nMORE ABOUT\nALBERTA TAXES\n(Continued Prom Page Ont)\n$140,000 annually. Changei in the\nfuel oU tax wlU bring added revenue, Mr. Cockioft eitimated, of\n$200,000.\n\"In Increasing taxation to the extent we propose,\" the provincial\ntreuurer said, \"we are more firmly\nconvinced that the refunding of\nour debenture debt at a low rate of\ninterest must be accomplished... .\nWe are proposing the strictest economy comlitent with efficiency. . . .\nIt would teem evident thtt this\ngovernment will be compelled to\ncill upon bondholders to accept a\nlower rite of intereit.\"\n$-,54\u00ab,044 DEFICIT\nIn outlining the financial potlUon\nof the province, Mr. Cockroft laid\nthe eitimated deficit tor the fiscal\nyear ending March 31, 1836, was\n$3,227,-50.50.\nAfter providing for increased\nrevenue totalling $3,268,618.75 by\nway ot new taxes or increases in\nexisUng taxation, the government\nbudgeted for a total deficit of $2,-\n549,044.69 on both income and capital account for the fiscal year ending March 31, 1817.\nIn announcing Uie new sales tax,\nthe provlnclil treuurer said:\n\"The government has decided to\nimpose \u25a0 tax of 2 per cent on the\nultimate purchasers ot commodities,\nprimarily for the purpoie of meeting the expenditure of unemployment relief. Certain exemptions will\nbe illowed tnd grou revenue is\nestimated at $2,000,000. It wu felt\nthat this method of securing the\nfunds required U) meet relief expenditure! wis preferred to a wage\ntax.\"\nThe new social servict tax will\nbe based on a rate of three mills,\ninstead of two mills under the supplementary tax, and it expected to\nproduce a total revenue of $1,-\n223,000.\nThe govtrnmtnt propone to relievo tht munlolptlltlii of one-\nhilf the chirgei thty new betr\nwith reaped to mother'! allow-\nmen tnd In idditlon will tbollih\nehirgu fer tht cart of tubeereu-\nItr patlenti In tht provlnclil aim-\ntorlum.\nHOCKEY COACH  SUSPENDED\nOTTAWA, Mtrch 2 (CP)-Alex\nSmith, coach ot the Royal Canadian\nAir Force entry ln the Ottawa City\nHockey league and former National\nHockey league player, wu impended Indefinitely todty for assaulting\nPhil St. Armand, one of the officials,\nduring a game here Saturday night.\nHOW TO BOWL\nBy Mn. Floretta\nD. McCutcheon\nWorld Champion\nWoman Bowler\nEditor'i Note: Thit It thl eighth\nIn t lerlei of 10 leiioni on bowling, written especially for Ctntrtl\nPrtu Canadian by Mn, Floretti\nD. McCutcheon, womin champion\nbowltr, tnd Inttrnttlonilly\nknown bowling Imtructor.\nNo. 8\u2014Itrange Allay*\nWe menUoned yuterday Uiat different people put the ball down on\ndifferent spots on the same alley,\nbecause each bowler has his own\nway to bowl.\nAlleys differ, too. They are built\nwith the greatest of care and the\nfinest of hard wood, but the different graining of the wood will cause\na variation ln the way the ball wiU\nroll on adjacent alleys ln the same\nrecreation haU. Hence, it ls a mistake to try to roll the ball from the\ntame spot on every aUey.\nDONT CHANGE DELIVERY\nIf you try that, you will conscloui-\nly or unconsciously try to change\nyour deUver to fit the aUey. Instead\nof doing that, chang- the spot at\nthe foul Une from which you roll\nthe ball.\nYou will find, ei a general rule,\nthe nearer you itart to tht right\ntide of the alley, the faster your\nball Is Inclined to roll to the left.\nIn the first pltce, the angle Into the\n1-3 pocket it sharpest from the extreme right-hand corner. Also, from\nthat extreme right-hand position,\nit will cross the greatest number of\nthe inch-wide boards of which the\nalley Is made, as tt comes up to the\npint. The more ot these boards lt\ncrosses, the futer It seems to turn\nin the direcUon in which it is rolling.\nSuppose you arc itartlng your ball\nfrom about the teventh board from\nthe right aide of the foul line. That's\nabout seven Inches from the edge.\nYou want to hit the right of the\nhead pin, in the 1-3 pocket. Instead,\nyour are crossing over the hitting\nthe head pin on the left Next Ume\nyou're up, instead of rolling from\nthe same place, move in toward the\ncenter of the tlley a trifle. As you\nmove in, you straighten the angle\ninto the 1-3 pocket and your ball\nwill be roUlng a little more parallel\nto the boards. Your ball will roll a\nUtUe stralghter.\nA lot of people make the mistake\nof doing exactly the opposite. The\nmore the ball rolls to the lett, the\n\u2022more they move to the right They\nexaggerate their own error by doing this.\nSHOULDER IN UNE\nNow, if your ball ls not getting up\nto the head pin, but hitting too much\nto the right, instead of trying to\n\"push it up\", move a little closer to\nUie right, point up your ball at a\nslightly greater angle, and you will\nfind you are hitting more Into that\n1-3 pocket\nIt your ball is not rolling where\nyou want it, change your spot. And\nwhen you do, be sure to change\nyour position at the start of delivery\nso that your right shoulder is in\nline with the place where you will\nset your ball down.\nA school' teacher In one of my\nclasses in Chicago was very anxious\nto learn bowling for Its physical\nbenefits. She winted to reduce. 1\noutlined   the   fundimentals.   She\nHit\n>\u20ac\n*\nMRS. MCCUTCHEON\nRudy to Bowl\nswung the bill nicely up to the moment of release, when she gave her\nhand a quick twist which sent the\nbaU into the left-hand gutter 15 feet\ndown the alley. Next time she pointed her thumb correctly ind got t\nnice ball. The third time the repeated the twist of her hand again sent\nthe ball down the gutter.\nBefore I could teU her wHht wu\nwrong 6he rushed down the alley,\nrescued the ball u lt rolled down\nthe gutter, and brought it back. I\nlaughed.\n\"Many's the time I've wanted to\ndo that myself,\" I told her, \"but\nyou're the first bowler I ever saw\ndo it.\"\nNtxt: Sptru\nMORE ABOUT\nLEAGUE EDICT\n(Contlnutd From Page Ont)\nclearly itated Great Britain's readiness and desire to go ahead with an\noil embargo if other league memberi would Join in the move.\nA French spokesman, Flandln,\nemphasised that only Great Britain\nhu proposed an oil sanction, Uiat\nno other state has yet pronounced\nita views and hence it is premature\nto say ari oil embargo will be declared if conciliation falls.\nThe committee of 13\u2014which ii\nreally the council without Italy-\nwill meet at 11 a.m. tomorrow to\ndiscuss conciliation.\nITALY STAND8 PAT\nROME. March 2 (AP).-The action of Uie League of Nations in instructing a committee of 13 to seek\nconciliation of the Italo-Ethioplan\nwar faUed tonight to arouse peace\nhopu in Italy.\nHigh Faicitt sources indicated no\nproposal could be expected from\nthe Geneva committee which this\nnaUon could take seriously In the\nlight of recent victoriet ln Africt.\nThey insisted Italy would not\nmake peace under sanctlonist pressure.\nAn official Italian tource declared tonight complete victory on\nIhe eut African batUetronts Is \"in\nour handt\" and \"we will not be\nutisfled until aU Italian alms are\nachieved.\"\nITALY PROTEIT!\nROME, March 2 (CP-Havu).\u2014\nAnother Italian memorandum\ncharging that Ethiopians emasculated and otherwise tortured Italian\nprisoner! in the war zonei wu tub-\nmitted by Italian representatives to\nthe League of Nations at Geneva today, Rome authorities announced\ntonight.\nThe memorandum, prefaced by a\nletter from Fulvia Suvich, undersecretary for foreign affairs, is 53\npages long and is dated February 28.\nETHIOPIA WORRIED\nADDIS ABABA, March 2 (CP-\nHavas).\u2014Ethiopia, with iti back to\nUie wall, tonight prepared for a determined itruggle to retain its independence ln the face of the latest\ncrushing blows dealt by the Italian\ninvaders.\nTense and anxious as a result of\ninformation reaching here trom the\noutside world which recounted\nItaly'i claims of major victories,\nauthorities admitted the war was\nentering its decisive phase.\nEASTERN CANADA\nBEATS WESTERN IN\nA BERLIN GAME\nBERLIN, March 2 (CP Cable)-\nEastern Canada defeated Western\nCanada 8-7 here tonight at the Dominion's Olympic hockey team wu\ndivided Into two squads for an exhibition encounter.\nThe Easterners led 4-3 in the first\nperiod, improved the advantage to\n6-4 ln the second and both tallied\nthree tlmu ln the final frame.\nREMEMBER WHEN?\n\u25a0y The Canadian Preu\nNaishapur, chestnut colt from\ntho Wllshlre Stable, won the Tia-\njuana Derby and $30,100 at the Lower California racetrack. That wu\naeven yurt ago tomorrow. Under\nthe handling ot Jockey C. E. Allen,\nNaishapur covered the mile and an\neighth ln 1.31 flat, the second fastest time ever recorded. In 1926 Car-\nlarls ran the distance in 1.49 4-5?\nTRAIL DEFEATS DYNAMITERS\u00ab\nTO TIE UP KOOTENAY PLAYOFFS\nGoal in Last Two\nMinutes Does the\nTrick\nKIMBERLEY, B.C., March 2.-\nA fighting craw of Imoke Eaten\nfrom Trail tonight handed the\nDynamiten thtlr uoond defeat\nthli winter, taking the ucond of\na three-out-of-glve game urlu\n4-3 before a packed rink. Klmberley won tht flrtt gimt Saturday night 3-1. Coltmtn Cinidlini\nbut them In in exhibition gime\ni couplt of wteki igo.\nWhllt wtt, the Ice wu not\nttlcky ind tht fini uw \u2022 better\ngime thin on Stturdty night It\nwit t will-ttrntd vlotory for the\nTnll pliyen who battled all tht\nway.\nMoort put Klmbtrlty In tht\nlud 1-0 In tht flnt, Burnett mtdt\nIt 2-0 In tht ucond ind then Tnll\npltytn found Hornqulit Cirr\n\u25a0nd Cranio etch scored one. Forrut ind Burnttt icored to leive\nIt \u2022 tl* igaln. Two minutei to go\nMorrii rimmid homt \u25a0 looit puck\nte give tht tmokt Eaten tht\ngimt, Kemp, pitying on loft Ice,\nwu it hii but tnd pliytd a grut\ngimt.\nR. Boyle, Miu Jane and Miss\nMargaret Tyson gave intermission\nfancy skaUng numbers and were\nwell received.\nFirst period\u2014From the faceoff\nRedding worked right ln but shot\nwide of the net. Brown and Moore\nplayed in on the Trail net and Andreashuk missed a nice chance when\nplay moved to the Kimberley rone.\nBurnett, Forsey and Redding engineered a play to try Dupuis. On\nthe change of line Dupuis had a\nhard Ume to handle a shot from\nKemp. Art Mackie, BotteriU and\nKemp found their way through and\nBrown tested Dupuis on teveral\nnice rushes. Carr, Cronie and Morris\nreversed play and moved in on\nHornquist. Art Mackie tested Dupuis. Burnett followed lt up with a\nfut shot trom the blue line and\nTrail wu forced to shoot up the ice\nto relieve the pressure as Klmberley\nbore down.\nPARK IN TRAIL AREA\nArt Mackie, BotteriU and Kemp\nparked ln the Trail blue line end\nthe pressure on the Trail goalie was\nterrific. Burnett stick-handled\nthrough the entire team and Dupuis\nwu forced to make a great save.\nKlmberley made repeated raida on\nthe Trail net, returning the puck as\nTrail shot up the Ice continuously to\nrelieve. Haight went up and took a\nlong one. Brennan and Andreashuk\ngave Hornquist a few difficult momenta. Forsey took a pus from\nMoore and sent ln a sizzler thtt\nDupuis htd to work hard to nib.\nCronle md Carr played ln clote on\nthe Kimberley net, and play miUed\nfor a time at center Ice,\nDUPUII BUIY\nMoore took a past from Forsey to\ntut Dupuii u Klmberley kept up\nthe barrage of shots on Trail's net.\nSnowdon, Carr and Moore bore in\non the Klmberley net. After the\nchange ot lines, Kemp and BotteriU made a nice raid. Brown made\nanother nice rush. Kemp took a pass\nfrom Brown with only Dupuis to\nbeat but the Trail goalie came out to\nout-guess the Dynamiter. Brennan\nwent up the Ice fast but was stopped\nat the net by Kotak. Kemp got right\nIn on the TraU net end for a time\nthe crowd thought a goal had been\nscored. Morris drew a penalty for\ntripping Brown. Klmberley played\nfive men up. *\nMOORE SCORES FIRST\nMoore* took a pan from Brawn\nto acore tha tint goal with Morrlt\noff, Tht Klmbtrlty mtn wu right\nin on tht ntt when he took tht\npau from thi aide of the rink.\nBrown wu penaUzed for carrying a high itick and Morrii came\nback. Trail played four men up\nwith Kimberley one ihort Snowdon\nwas right in on the Klmberley goal,\nbut wu robbed by Hornquist\nSecond period\u2014Trail played five\nmen up with Brown still off and\nKimberley wu forced to shoot up\nthe let to relieve. Burnett broke\n\u25a0wiy and got ln i nice ihot on Dupuii. Brown came back end Forrest\ngot right in on Hornqulit Forsey,\nMoore and Redding went down and\nForsey pissed out from behind tht\nnet but there wu no one to take the\nput. Forrest drew a penalty when\nhe brought hii knee up at Moore.\nKimberley changed Unit and\nplayed fivt men up. Brown got a\nnice thot in at Dupuii. Morris went\nafter Kemp and the crowd yelled\nfor e penalty but no penalty was\ngiven. Trail shot up the ice to relieve pressure, Cronle and Morris\nskaUng up tut after the puck. After\nForrut returned pity wu hold In\na Ume at center. Brennan moved\nright down and passed out ln front\not the net but there wu uo one\n\u25a0round to take advantage of it\nBurnett drew a penalty for Hoarding\nBrennan. Trail pressed hard, and\nHornquist was called on to make\nseveral wonderful oaves. Kimberley\nshot up the ice to relieve the pressure. Snowdon got ln e nice ahot\non Hornquist. Kozak drew a penalty for high checking ot Cronie, and\nKimberley was two men short.\nBotteriU, H.dding and Brown\nheld Uie Trail team and Redding did\nnice play, stick handUng around the\nTrail blue Une. Kimberley was itill\none short when Burnett camt btck\nand they were forced to shoo\", up\nUie ice again. Forrest got in several\nnice shots and Klmberley had an\nexciting few moments. Refercet\ncaUed play close on offsides and\nTraU players argued the point.\nKozak returned. Art Mackie and\nKemp went in end Dupuii wai\nbrought to the ice to save from\nKemp.\nBURNETT SCOREI\nBurnett tcortd Kimboriey'i tecond gotl on \u25a0 put from Brown.\nHt took tht ptu outiide thl blue\nlint, tkited In ind backhanded \u00ab\nhard one In from about 60 fut\nout Tht pliy again want to center\nIce for \u25a0 while.\nAt fietoff et the tldt of tht\nKlmbtrlty ntt Cronle puitd out\nend  Cirr  banged  It home fer\nTrtll't flnt counter. Brawn drtw\n\u2022  penilty for chicking  Forrtit\nwith hli itick high.\nKimberley thot up thl lea to relieve   pressure.   Brennan   wu   ln\nclose on Hornqulit until Redding\nbroke away.    They broke iway\na  second  time  after  Trail  tent\npity Into the Klmberley zone and\nDupuis skated over to the Trail\nbox  and  uked for  e  towel  to\nwipe the water trom hit face. Kimberley continued to shoot tne puck\nup the Ice until Brown returned.\nBotteriU got ln a nice shot on Dupuis. Kemp was right ln but waa\nstopped by Carr. Carr, Cronle, and\nMorris worked in on the Kimberley\nnet\nCRONIE TIE8 IT UP\nTrail had four men Inside the\nKlmbtrley xone, Cronlt, Cirr,\nMorrii and Height, whan Cronle\n\u2022cored on t put from Cirr to tit\nup the gimt.\nTowtrd thi tnd of tht ptrlod t\nfight wu precipitated Inildt th*\nTrill blut line. Moon, Ridding\ntnd Foney went in ind loit tht\npuck. At Moore itarted to ikitt\nbick Haight flipped him over the\nbick. Moort turntd ind iwung on\nHaight .and thay went down with\nMoort on top. Tht othtr pliytn\ndrtgged them tptrt Both wtrt\nchued for five mlnutei. Haight\nrefuied to urvt hll penalty In\nthi penilty box, ind tfter much\nargument, wit illowed te apend\nthl rait of thl ptrlod in thl drilling room,\nTRAIL FORCING ISSUE\nAs tho period ended TrtU wm\nforcing the issue.\nMoore and Haight itill htd three\nminutes to serve aa the whistle\nwent.\nThird period\u2014Carr, Cronle and\nMorrii went In on Hornqulst at the\nfirst of the period. Burnett stick-\nhandled through the Trail team but\nwu stopped and \u25a0 face-off wu\nmtde at the tide of the TrtU net\nFrom the flee off Foney pasted out\nto BotteriU and skated over ln front\not the net BotteriU passed back to\nhim, and Forsey was right in on the\nTrail goalie. He went down ind wu\nhit but no penilty resulted.\nForrest and Andreashuk combined to put TraU one-up on a nice play,\nForrest icoring. Moore md Haight\nreturned to the ice md had no sooner found their feet thm Haight\nstraight-armed Moore md wu chased. Trail shot up the Ice to relieve\nthe preuure. Burnett, Kozak, BotteriU and Mackie aU got in nice\nshots.\nSCORE ON POWER PLAY\nKimberley players were inside the\nTraU blue Une on \u25a0 power play\nwhen Burnett scored on Kozak'i\npan to tie it up 3-3. Haight returned\nto the ice. Carr, Cronle md Morrii\nbirged in on Hornqulit md pity\nalternated from end to end, forwardi\nshooting the puck ln and following\nit up. Forsey took a pus from Brown\nmd brought Dupuis down to uve.\nKemp drew a penalty, accidentally\ntripping Brennm. Trail played four\nmen up. Borrest's shot was deflected.\n(Continued on Psgt Eight)\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Llquif\nControl Board or by the Covernment of British Columbii\n PAGE SIX -\nNELSON  DAILY  NEWS, NELSON.  B.C-TUESDAY  MORNING.  MARCH S.  11*.\n^A>l\nCLASSIFIED AD U cam, OPPORTUNITY \/\n\\<Xfrr\nJfrlann Datlji Htms\nMember of the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchanqe connecting; to\nIII Departments\nSubscription   Rates\nSlnglt copy S   M\nBv cirrier per week 2i\nBv carrier, per year 13.00\nBy mall to Canada, to subscribers Uvina outside regular\ncsrrier ireas. per month. 60c;\nthree monthi 8180. six months.\n$300 one year $6.00.\nUnited SUtes and Great Britain, one month 75c: six month.,\n$4 00. one vear $7.50.\nForeign countries, other than\nUS., same as above plus any\nextra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlies Lint\nMinimum 2 Llntt\n2 lines, once  $ -B\n3 Unes. once \u2014    J8\n4 lines, once       ,   j    .44\n2 llnu 6 tlmu    St\n3 lines 6 tlmu  132\n4 Unes 6 tlmu  L7S\n2 lines. 1 month _  --\u00bb\n3 lines. 1 month   4_\u00bb\n4 lines, 1 month    8.72\nAll ibove lm 10% lor prompt\noivment\nREAD THIS FIRST\nThora Dahl, who haa left her\nhome in Minnesota and journeyed\neast, obtains a position as housekeeper fov an eccentric gentleman\nnamed Selwyn Marsh who Uves\nin suburban New York. Thora\nmeets Sherman Gordon, a friend\nof Marsh and his daughter, Wilma,\nwho i6 away.\n(Now Go On With the Story)\nCHAPTER  14\nIt was very nearly 3 o'clock when\nThora heard Marsh's mount clattering up the driveway. She waited for\nwhat she considered might be a\ntuitable interval, then presented\nhenelf and her papers at the library\ndoor.\nMarsh gave her offerings a brief\ngluce, tossed them aside.\n\"I dare say they're al' right. I'U\nlet you know. Here . . .\" He indicated a shiny port-ble typewriter\non the end of the long table. \"Pull\nup a chair ud show me how to\nwork that thing, will you? Here's\ntome paper.\" He dragged, his own\nehalr close to the machine.\nThora experimented with the various gadgets for a moment, then\ninserted a sheet of paper. .. paused\nfor further directions.\n\u2022 \"Well, Write something! I want to\ntee what it does.\"\n\"What shall I write?\"\n\"Anything!\" He threw himself\nback in his chair petulantly.\nThora thought for a moment. Her\neyes lighted mischievously, but\nthere was no sign of a smile on her\nlips as she poised her fingers over\nthe keyt for an instant, then began\nwriting rapidly.\n\"Thought you said you couldn't\nwrite fast,\" Marsh growled admiringly, as he watched the process. \"I\ncouldn't do that in 10 years. Let's\ntee what it looks Uke.\"\nWithout a word, Thora handed\nhim the paper. She saw his brows\ndraw down into a purzled scowl u\nKASLO FOLK SEE\nSCHOOL AT WORK\nKASLO, B.C.\u2014One day of Education week was observed in Kaslo\nWednesday.\nOwing to the present serious light\nand water conditions, the program\nwas curtailed. In the afternoon a\nfair number of citizens, the school\nboard, parents and friends of the\npupils visited the schools, directed\nby two high school students.\nThe ordinary routine of school\nwork was carried on during the day.\nThe public school did the major\nportion ot the entertaining. In the\njunior and intermediate grades the\npupils of Miss Moscrop ud Miss\nMargaret McQueen gave interesting\nnumbers. Guests were welocmed by\nWinnie Chandler, who also gave a\ntalk on school work.\nThe choir which will appear at\ntha musical festival sang. This choir\nis under the direction of Miss Moscrop.\nGordon Reed gave a speech on\nEducation week. Hedly Dunn, from\nhis study of world books and his\nown young mind, composed and\nrecited an historical number.\nWinnie Palmer gave a recitation;\nJimmy Strachan a talk on coal and\nLewis Green a description of life\nin Vancouver, his home town.\nA motion picture machine made\nby the children was displayed, being composed of an apple box, various reels, etc. It was shown in operation, historical scenes and bits\nfrom all lands being shown by the\nproducers and manufacturers of\nthis novel machine.\nThe schools have be\u00abn equipped\nWith two new, modern typewriters\nand one pupil was doing his first\nlesson in typing while the visiton\nlooked on.\nIn the senior public school grades,\nwhere T. H. Robson presides, the\nentrance class was writing a history\nexam. Mr. Robson explained to the\nvisitors the new method of conducting this particular exam.\nThe domestic depsrtmen' was visited, dresses and other sewing ln\nvtrious stages of completion were\nmspected.\nIn the manual training department the boys' work wu viewed.\nThere were several posters rd-\nvertislng Education week, which\nwere the work of pupili in Mr.\nRobson's room.\nThe chemistry room ud vtrious\nother parts of the high tchool were\nInspected under the tupervltion of\nMr. Gibson, the principal.\nThe school board has an arrangement whereby every pupil taking\nlunch in the building has hot, nourishing cocoa served, a room In the\nbasement being ipecially fitted up\nfor this purpose and being properly\nsupervised.\nhe read.\nIt was a brief note.\nI    \"Dear Mr. Marsh:\nPlease accept my thanks for\nthe riding things I found in my\nwardrobe. They fit perfectly.\nYours truly,\nTHORA DAHL.\"\n\"What's that?\" he demuded uncertainly. He did not look up, but\nappeared to be studying, the typewritten lines.\n\"I suppose Pat must have told you\nthat I borrowed a pair of his overalls when I went riding the other\nday.\"\n\"Oh, yes ... YesI You see, we had\na guest here last summer. Wilma\ngot her those things ud she never\nused them. I happened to remember\nthem. This girl was . .. about your\nsize, I thought, maybe, you could\nuse them ud had one of the maids\nput them where you could find\nthem . ..\"\n\"I wondered.\"\nMarsh sUU evaded Thora's frank\ngaze. It was not as easy as he had\nanticipated. And he thought he had\nbeen rather clever about it, making\na quick trip to the housekeeper's\nroom when he knew that she was\nin the kitchen with Katie.\n\"It was very kind of you,\" Thora\npersisted.\n\"Oh, that's all right\" Manh met\nher eyes now, and was forced to\nsmile. A trifle sheepishly. \"Overalls are comfortable enough, I guess\nbut not quite ... the thing. Pat tells\nme you gave Ginger a try-out Like\nhim'\"\n\"He's wonderful!\" The blue eyu\nwere shining.\n\"To tricky for my old bones. 1\nwant a steadier mount. It's a wonder he didn't spill you.\"\n\"He liked me\"\n\"So I'm told. And where did you\nlearn to ride?\"\n\"I've always ridden. My father\nliked hones and ... Well, we didn't\nhave any fine saddle horses like\nyours. But I used to practice on the\ncolts.\"   \u2022\nMarsh was studying the typewritten note again.\n\"Dahl . . .\" he uid, under his\nbreath. \"Didn't you tell me that is a\nNorwegiu name?\"\n\"Yes, sir, it is.\"\n\"Donahue insists that you're a\ncompatriot of his. He says that\nyou're too quick to be anything but\nIrish. You've got me guessing, too.\"\n\"He's right,\" Thora laid hesitat'\ningly. \"My father is Norwegian. I\nusually tell people that my mother\nis English. She was born in Belfast\"\n\"Are yo\u00ab ishamed of that?\"\n\"Of course not!\" Thora exclaimed\nimpetuously. Then she explained In\na more composed fashion. \"It's rather unusual for a Norwegian to marry outside of hia own nationality\n... ln our part of the country, at all\nevrats. If I told people that my father married an Irish womu, they\n... they'd think I was msklng it up.\nIt doesn't sound very plausible.\"\n\"Umph. I beUeve you. I've shared\nSIRDAR MAN AT\nCRESTON\nSIRDAR, B.C.-J. S. Wilson was\na business visitor to Creston by\nstage at the week-end.\nMrs. George Cam, who had been\nin Nelson and Treil for'a few days,\nreturned to her home here by train\nThunday.\nSam Bysouth of Kuskanook was\na visitor to Sirdar.\nDick Bevan, in charge of the\nroad camp kitchen, wu at his home\nin Creston for the week-end.\nThe construction of a new road\nat Weasel creek, near Crawford\nBay Js proceeding and it ls hoped\nto have It in operation in a tew\ndays. Stan. Hendenon of Creston\nls in charge of the building work.\nThe water as indicated by guage\nat Slough bridge reads 0.45, a fall\nof 0.01 for the week. Weather indications are that a rise is now to\nbe expected.\nPat Rogen was a week-end guest\nof Mr. and Mn. E. K. Haynu at\ntheir ranch near Kuskuook.\nSteve Malahoff of Tye is now\nofficially appointed postmtster it\nTye.\nJtmet Munirlno wis shipping\nbeef to Nelson list week.\nFrank Ptrento, who li employed\nit Drury, is spending i tew days\nwith his family here.\nGino Bugara hu been employed\non James Mannarino's ranch.\nIt li definitely stated thit i portable raw mill will be Initalled it\nSirdar to uw the Umber in the\nlimits above Sirdar. Operation! are\nto commence ai sopn u the weather\nit fit to make roadi into the limit.\nHudi and fingen are injured\nmore frequently than any other\npart of the body, judging by New\nYork itatei Industrial accidents involving compensation.\nBIRTHS\nBROADFOOT\u2014To Mr. and Mn.\nBruce Broadioot, Kootenay itreet,\nat the Kootenay Lake General hos-\npitel, February 26, a daughter.\nPERSONAL\nFREE TO LADIES, $1 BOX FACE\npowder, 50c perfume, 50c necklace, $1 Horoscope Reading if you\npurchase 3 lbs. Harding Coffee\nfor 99c (postage extra). Money\nback guarantee. Harding Products. 641 Langside, Winnipeg.\n(5576)\nHIGHEST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoods 25 latex assortment for $1\nOrder direct and be sure of best\nPacked plain. Free catalogue. National Importers, 812-Centre St.\nCalgary, Alta, (5711)\nLEARN BASKETRY, INTEREST-\ning, educational, complete instructions 25c. Free catalogue and reed\nwork instructions. Dominion Reed\nSupplies, Dept. N, Toronto. (5716)\nWHY   WORRY?   Consult   \"Madam\nM\". Gifted Clairvoyant 4 questions. Send birth month. Donation\n2531   Woodland  Dr.,  Vancouver.\n(5421)\nHELP WANTED\nIF YOU LIKE TO DRAW, SKETCH\nor paint\u2014Write for Free Talent\nTest and Art Book. Give age and\noccupation. Box 5694 Dally News.\n(5694)\nthe usual Impression that tbe English don't have a keen sense of humor. I supposed the same thing went\ntor the Scandinavians.\" As it he had\nbetrayed too much interest in the\nmatter, Marsh chuged the subject\nwith his usual abruptness. \"That\ntype looks good. Much better than\nmy scrawl.\"\n\"It's a nice machine.\"\n'Tell you what we'll do, Miss\nDahl. I've a few notes here that I'd\nlike put down ... just to get an idea\nwhat they look like. w.\"\n\"I will write them for you, it you\nthink I can.\"\n\"That's what I thought. I don't\nknow exactly how I want them arranged . . . yet. We'U work something out If you'll make me a pattern to start with. Miybe I can\nwrangle out the rest by myself. After you show me how to manipulate\nthe machine.\"\n\"Let me have them.\" Thora inserted a fresh sheet in the typewriter.\n\"You can't make them out! I'll\nread it to you.\"      ,\nBefore an hour was finished. Thora Dahl realized that she had let\nherself in for something of a task.\nManh not only_ had some difficulty\nin deciphering his ojvn notes, but\nchanged his mind a dozen timet as\nto the manner of settfhg them down.\nThe end of the table was littered\nwith his typist's halfacompleted efforts. Her employer f studied each\none, running his fingers through his\nhair and muttering over defects and\nHOUSES WANTED\nWANTED   TO   RENT   SMALL\nhouse. Two, three or four rooms.\nModern or unmodern, careful tenuis. Telephone evenings 364Y2,\n(5708)\nWANTED BY MARCH 20 BY RE-\nliable  tenants,  modern   5  room\nhouse. Prefer lease. Phone 537L2.\n(5723)\nFOR SALE\nWANTED TO RENT - SMALL\nmodern house. Burns Coal & Cartage. (5669)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nEXP.   HOUSEKEEPER   WANTS\nany work. Box 5665 DaUy News.\n(5665)\nFUR ROBES\nSpecial real genuine fur robes.\nStandard size for auto, cutter,\n54x62. Full warm lining. Fancy\nscallop edges. Brand new'.\nPrices $20 a pair mailed parcel\npost prepaid on receipt money\norder to Bulmer Company. 1480\nNotre-Deme Street East, Montreal, Que. (5674)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS, ETC.\nWe carry largest stock reconditioned\npipe and fittings suitable tor all\npurposes. Write Swartz Pipe Yard.\n220 1st E. Vancouver, B.C. (5712)\nTHREE CONTINENTAL 67 HORSE\npower. Power unite. Fair running\ncondition. Price $350. F.O.B. Cranbrook Auto Wrecken.       (5692)\nFOUR ROOM COTTAGE, PARTLY\nfurnished, Apply 521 Vernon St.\n(5724)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms tor rent Annable Block.\n(5709)\nTWO ROOM FURNISHED SUITE.\nK. W. C. Block. (5658)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modem\nfrigidaire equipped suites. (5710)\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVEN-\ntor, list of wuted Inventions and\nfull information sent free. The\nRamity Company, World Patent\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St Ottawa\n(5708)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nSMALL BUNGALOW. 3 BED-\nrooms. Living room. Dining room.\nKitchen. Cement foundation. Price\n$1000 ud terms arranged. C. W.\nAppleyard & Co., Ltd. (5667)\nFARM   LANDS\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\nop easy terms in Alberta and\nSaskatchewu. Write for full information to 906 Dept of Natural\nResources, C.P.R. Calgary. Alta\na (5707)\ndesired changes.\nShadows were lengthening in the\npueled room before the first sheet\nwas done to the author's satisfaction. It wu largely a matter of tabulation, a genealogical chart\n\"Don't take it out of the machine,\"\nMarsh ordered. \"I want to look at\nsomething.\" He lett his seat ud\nleued down to read over Thora's\nshoulder. He was mumbling over\nthe contents of the sheet, his face\nalmost touching Thora's cheek. She\nmoved a trifle as she felt his hair\nbrush against her face.\nA slight sound caused her to look\nup quickly.\n\"Well!'' said a cool young voice\nfrom the doorway. \"And greetings\n... everybody.\"\n(To Be Continued)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company. Ltd\n250 Prior St       Vancouver. B   C\n(5714)\nLOVELY ORIENTAL RUG\u2014NEV-\ner used. Cheap. Apply Geo. A.\nMeeres Studio, Baker St (5653)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonild Jim\nCo., Ltd.. Nelson, B. C.        (5713)\nSMALL   WOOD   HEATER   AND\nrug. 309 Carbonate St. Phone 377L.\n(5659)\nUSED CARS\nFOR SALE, 7 PASSENGER BUICK\nSedan, 1927.30,000 miles. New rubber. Body and motor in A-l con-\ndition. Box 205, Rossland.     (5650)\nFORD 1<4 TON TRUCK $225 OR\ntrade for small caterpillar tractor\nin good condition. Box 5696 Daily\nNews. (5896)\nPOULTRY FOR SALI\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountants\nBETTER CHICKS\nMean Mort Proflti!\nOur Chlcki ire BETTER becauie\nwe continually telect our breeding stock and hatch scientifically\n(Prices quoted per 100)\nPullet\nChlcki     Chicks\nLeghorni $11.00        $25.00\nReds and Rocks $13.00        $27.00\nLight Sussex      $15.00 $30.00\nPullet Chicks guaranteed\n87% accurate.\nGovernment' Approved   ud\nBloodtested.\nBe SAFE ud order from\nRump * Sendall Ud.\nMilner, B. C.\n(5704)\nCHAS. F HUNTER. S.F A.E.\n213 Medica) Arte Building.\nP. O. Box 1091,        Nelion, B. C.\n(5428)\nAitayert\nE. W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL\nAnalyit, Asuyer, Chemlit Chemictl and Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling agenti at Trail ud Ticomi smelters 301-305 Josephine\nSt. Nelton, B. C. (5424)\nGRENVILLE  H   GRIMWOOD\nProvlnclil Auayer ud Chemlit 618\nBaker street, Nelion, B, C P O\nBox No. 276. Representing Ship-\npen' interest at Trail, B.C. (5425)\nWRITE FOR MY 1936 CATALOGUE\ngiving Information on feeding poultry and quoting prices. White Leghorns, also Wyandottes ud Reds.\nOutstanding strains for vigor and\nproduction.\nLAKEVIEW POULTRY FARM\nL. F. SoUy Westholme, B.C.\n(5663)\nSCHOOLS\nCANADIAN DIESEL ENGINEERING SCHOOLS. Travellers Building. Calgary, are now giving complete DAV and HOME STUDY\nCOURSES In DIESEL ENGINEERING under authorized Instructors. Write for particulars. (5705)\nFUEL\nPEERLESS\nEGG COAL\n$9.00 PER TON\nCASH\nWilliams Transfer\nPHONE 106\n(5720)\nUse thl\nDAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS.\nBABY CHICKS AND SEXED PUL-\nlet chicks; White Leghorns and\nBarred Rocks. All breeding stock,\non our own farm. Government\nApproved ud Bloodtested Write\nfor price list M. H. Ruttledge.\nDerreen Poultry Farm, Sardis\n(5626)\nPHOTOCRAPHY\nFILMS DEVELOPED ANY SIZE.\n25c. With 1 print from each negative. Extra prints, 8 for 25c Saskatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon. (5706)\nLOST AND FOUND\nIf you find a cat or dog, a pocketbook, jewelry or fur or uy-\nthing else of value telephone\nThe Daily News. A \"Found\"\nAd will be Inserted without coit\nto you. Wt will coUect from the\nowner.\nLOST-BETWEEN SALMO AND\nDill's Service Station, Nelson, dual\nchain. Phone 606L1. Reward.\n(5700)\nLOST IN DECEMBER, BLACK\nluther key case containing 3\nkeys. Phone  167R1. (5676)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c. palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk, Nelson\n(5426)\nE. M. WARREN, D. C, BOX 872\nFor Canaries. Phone 115 or 755L\n(5427)\nFloriiH\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP.i\nPhone 215. AU kinds of cut flower!\nwreaths, sprayi & etc. Phone -I|\nMrs. Hagarty, Box 28. (5i\nMachinitrt\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work. Latli\nWork, Drilling, Boring ud Grin|\nlng.  Motor  Rewinding,  Acetyl)\nWelding\nPhone 593. 824 Vernon Stretl\n(5441\nMaternity Homta\nELIZABETH  PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Privite. Confidential Phyal\ndm in attendmce. Ph. Broad. 3Q7|\nW-1324 Broadway. Spokine. Wa\n(f\nNotaries\nElectrical\nJ. F. COATES. The Electric Store.\nSupplies and Installations\nPhone 766. P. O. Box 1065\n(5428)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nE. L. WARBURTON. NELSON, B.C.\nOffice 518 Ward St Phone 53, P.O.\nBox 668. Agent: Oils, Greases, Paints\nSpecialties: mining machinery,\nCrow's Nest Pass Steam Coals,\nStructural steel piping, sheet iron.\n(5429)\nH. D, DAWSON. Nelson. B. C\nMine Surveys ud Reports\n(5430)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale, BC\nBrltlih Columbia Land Surveyor\nReg. Profeulonal Civil Engineer.\n(5431)\nA. H GREEN CO.. LTD. 516 WARD\nSt. Phone 264, Nelion, B. C. (5432)\nIniurance and Real Eitate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD\nRetl eitate. insurance, rentals. 217\nBaker SL (5433)\nR. W. DAWSON. Real Estate. Insurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker Street     (5434)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD Insurance ol\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99\n(5435)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance Real Estate, 508 Ward St\n(5436)\nj;~E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE.\nrentals, insurance. Annable Block\n(5437)\nLIFE, FIRE, AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulin, Ph. 70. (5438)\nCHAS F. McHARDY. INSURANCE.\nReal Estate. Phone 135.      (5439)\nD. J. ROBERTSON. NOTARY PUB.\nHe. Office 308 Victoria St. Nelsol\nSanitariumi\nDR. ALDRICH SANITORIUM IN\nTreats all chronic diseases inclu\ning T.B.. cancer, diabetis, liqu\n,  habit and the mind. 30 years pra\ntice.  E-4504  Fredrick,  Spoku\n(544\nSath Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTOR\nHardwood merchut 217 Baker 1\n(544\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST. REASONABLE Wo\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon I\n(844\nWigi and Toupeei\nLADIES AND GENTLEMEN\nwigs and toupees, etc. Free lUu\ntrated Catalogue. Over 20 yei\nin B. C. We buy cut hair. Hua\nHair Gooda Co. P, O. Box A\nVancouver, B. C. (544\nMAKE IT A DAILY\nHABIT-READING\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEW\nCLASSIFIED\nADVERTISEMENTS\nRead Them! U\u00bb Their1\nIT PAYS!\nFor Service Phona\nlean Robertson at\nil 4 4\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nBy Run Wettovai\nTHE CUMPS\nly Cwt EdatR\nBRINGING UP FATHER\nBy Geo. McManus\n\u25a0\"                           \u2014\u2022,\nTVE*_\u00a3*S   A OOP-I      '\nwoNcea ip \\ cchjld\nSET HS \u00abTTEMTON-\n*s_           .             f   .     \u25a0\/\n\u25a0 {M_r\n_-__-JSA\u00bbi3^_ffif \/\n0m\nr\na     \/\"V\"*\ng-\u2014 \\|\nWl  **v\nA\/ WM\n[ \/'I\n_______     **** V\nL^fBT\"\n^^\n^SBI\n\\f ^S^'-rr-\n 3Jh^\n. Canadian\nIne Handbook\nOff the Press\nthe leading mining compules ln\ngreet detail, giving directon ud\noperating officials, execuUve ud\nmine office addresses, property location, development, ere reserves,\nproduction, earnings, dividends,\nfinancial position ud other important facts. It lists 2734 inactive,\nreorganized or defunct corporations\nand Is, therefore, etpecially useful\nto thote who wish to trace ventures\nwhich have passed out of current\nknowledge. Where reorguiiaUona\nhave taken place the share exchange\nbasis is given whenever possible.\nThe book carries a seven-year\nhigh-low ruge of stock exchange\nquotations ud other data such ss\ncommission rates on leading markets ud federal and provincial\ntransfer tax rates.\nThe handbook is edited and published by the Northern Miner Press\nLtd, l_f Richmond St. W., Toronto,\nOnt The price remains unchanged\nat Sl.\nNELION DAILV NIWS. NELSON. B.C.-TUEIDAY MORNINO. MARCH S. 1JS6\ner Than Previous\nies; Covers 3774\nOperations\ntolling a comprehensive re-\n| mining activities from coast\nt, the Canadian Mlnei Hinder 1838, just issyed, covers\npore companies ud is tome-\nIrger thin any previoui edi-\ntotal of 3774 Canadian min-\ntraUons are dealt with, and\nk runt to 867 pages.\nSSO of the companies ud\ntee treated are newly formed\naddition a number of corn-\nformerly lilted it Inactive,\niere<l In greater detail thu International Nickel Company of\nily by reason of re,umpUon Canada Ltd., 8175 on the preferred\naUons. shares, payable May  1  to stock-\nundbook, u usual, analyses holden of record April 1.\nMarket and Mining News\nB.C. BUILDING\nTHIRD IK FEB.\nDIVIDENDS\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nNTREAL, March 2 (CP).\u2014Silver closed weak today, 71 to 180\nr-f. Sales SO contracts: March 10; July 8; September 7; Decern-\n\u2022ebniary 1. *\nOpen\n      43.75\n    44_K>\n 44.85\ner\ny\nHigh\n43.75\n44.80\n44.85\n43.80\n44,12\nLow\n43.80\n43.68\n43.75\n43.65\n44.12\nClose\n43.50B\n43.00B\n43.00B\n42.50B\n42.50B\nancouver  Stock   Exchange\nBid\n  .15%\n.    MV,\n.    .631.\n.   8.70\n1.15\nAi\nM\n1.40\n1.23\n1JJ0\nrew Rts   4.75\nwealth     .08\na\t\n\u25a0it\t\nou\t\n30 \t\nn\t\n0\t\n\u2022ouri ....\nI \t\nDist\t\nft Con .\nGold\t\nGold ....\ni Corp .\n.34\n.34\nI    \t\nMount \t\nOle-\t\ntear      \t\n|al Segur ....\nOil\nOU\t\ng Star\t\nver       \t\nGold\n- Border .,\no\nold\nMicDonild\ndines\nGold\t\nSeek .._\t\non \t\n122\n.17\n1.24\n.44\n.071.\n.32\n.20\n.02\n.02*.\n10.18\nff>\\\n.01%\n1.11\nJ2\n.08\nMV,\n.82\n.28\n.0714\n.1714\nida\n...    .04\n_.    MV,\nSilver      .03\nIckel\nnd   -\t\n* OU    ..\nGold ..\nNest\ntie Mines\nale Oila      .64\n\u25a0sh    03%\nr   ::: *-\n22\nMV,\n.xtv,\n.xtv,\nMV,\n.00*.\nAik\n.16\n.65\n6.75\n.04\n.10\n1.43\n1.25\n13.7S\n5.00\ni\n.35\n.07\n1.25\n.20\n1.25\n.45\n.1014\n.SS\n.25\n-Wa\n.02%\n10.50\n.00%\n.02\n1.12\n.15\nM\n.0914\nM\n.1814\n.04%\n.04\n.03%\n.33\n.87\n.03%\nXH\nDunwell\nEistcrest\n.03%\n.0814\nFairview      .03%\nPawn       \u2014\nFederal Gold _.._    \u2014\nFreehold       \u2014\nGeo Copper      20\nGoleonda      -    2t\nGold Mount      .08%\nGeo Enter      .04%\nGeo River      .01%\nGrandview    -     J02\nGrange  02%\nGrull Wihksne   ,   .     -\nHedley Amal .22\nHighwood  Sarcee       .16%\nHome Gold .02%\nIndian Mines .02\nIndependence .00%\nKoot Florence .   _    .00%\nKoot King       \u2014\nMadison     ,02\nMar Jon     _ 18%\nMercury   _    .13%\nMeridian _    .12%\nMerland       16\nMill City       _    .11\nMinto Gold       .07%\nMorton Wolsey _     .00%\nNicola Mines _    .08%\nNoble Five      .04\nNordon  IS\nOkalta Oill  05\nPend Orelllt    1.10\nPilot Gold       02%\nPorter Idaho  04%\nQuetnelle Q      \u2014\nReward     .02\nRelief Arlington 42%\nRoyalite            . ...     38.00\nRufus Argenta     .00^\nSilvercratt\nSilversmith\nSnowflike\nUnited Oil .\nVidette\nWaterloo\n.00%\nJ-X\nMM\n.08%\n.70\n.01\nWaverley Tang      .00%\nWellington  01%\nYmir Yankee      ...    .40\n.08\n.08\n.53\n.04\n.08\n.25\n23\n.07\n.08%\n.01%\n.OS\n.08\n.14\n.17\n.0314\n.08\n.OO'i\n.OOli\n.02%\n.10\n.08\n.01\n.09\n.04%\n.IS\n.07\nMS\n.03\n.05\n.OS\n.04\n.43\n.01\n.00%\nJ01%\n.79\n.01\n\u202201%\nTORONTO, Mann 2 <CP)-F_b-\nmtry building contracts ln Canada\nihowed a sharp drop from the Januory total and alao from February,\n1935, it was revealed today in figures released by Macleu'i BuUd-\ning Reporti, Ltd.\nThe awards lut month totalled\n18,228,700 compared with 813,610,040\nln January and 110,672,200 ln February of last yttr. Jinuary and February combined, however, had i\ntotal of 821,838,100 compared with\n(28,892,300 in the tame period of\n1938 and 812,388,000 in 1814.\nQuebec led lut month with a total\nof 83,679,300 followed by Ontario\nwith 13,378480, British Columbia\n1395,800 and Manitoba 8394,000.\nU.S. Dollar Steady\nMONTREAL, March 2 (CP). -\nPound stealing ad'ueed % cent to\n$4.98 1-32 aa Montreal foreigr exchuge! today while the United\nStates dollar at 3-32 discount ud\nUie French true at 6.87% cents held\neven.\nGOLDS IMPROVE\nIndustrials Gain\nTORONTO, March 2 (CP).-The\nindustrial share marktt of the Toronto exchange staged a wide rally\ntoday on a small turnover. Nickel\nadvanced to 52%. Consolidated\nSmelten cloeed at 244. up 4 points\nset. C.P.R., Braiillan Traction bnd\nFord \"A\" had gains of % to' %\neach.\nThe oil group closed with gains\nof % to % for InternaUonal Petroleum, B. A. Oil, Imperial and McColl common. In the dlsUUery group,\nDistillers-Seagrams gained % while\nWalken common tost % ud Industrial Alcohol \"A\" %. Brewen *\nDisUUers was unchanged at 1.15.\n81,000,000 INCREASE\nIN EXPENDITURES\nREGINA, March 2 (CP)-Shewing u Increase of more than 81,-\n000,000 ln estimated expenditures\nin the government year that Vill\nend April 30,1937, over the current\nyear. Premier W. J. Patterson, as\nprovincial treuurer, tabled hia estimates In the Saskatchewan legtsla -\nture today. He estimated total expenditures, aU accounts, at $20,-\n189,833 and his total revenu-', all\naccounts at S19.8I8,T5S, or u estimated deficit of 1371,077.\nTORONTO, March 3 (CP).-Min\ning stocks htid their position today\nwith the gold group showing a\nslight improvement\nPremier wu a feature closing\nat 140. Pickle Crow advanced 13\ncentt, Lake Shore %, Dome % ud\nWright Hargreaves 5 cents. Pioneer\nsnd Bralorne dropped 5 to 15 cents\neach and Hollinger cloied at 18. McKenzle, Centnl Patricia, and Carl-\nboo had gains of 1 to 4 cents. Sylvanite, Siscoe, Ssn Antonio, Read-\nAuthier, Omega, and God's Lake\nwere down.\nHudson Bey, Walte-Amulet and\nMining CorporaUon held up side ud\nNoruda recorded a minor lost.\nHomestea featured the oill with\na gain of 6% to 38.\nBAR GOLD DOWN\nMONTREAL, March 2 (CP) -Bar\ngold in London down 1 cent at\n135.20 an ounce in Canadian funds;\n141s l%d in BriUsh funds. Tbe fixed\n135 Washington price amounted to\n134.97 tn Canadian.\nLONDON, March 2 (CP)-Bar\ngold declined %d to Ula l%d (U.S.\nequivalent 3320).\nLiverpool Wheat\nLfvERPOOL, March S (CP).-\nFollowing are today'i per bushel\nwheat quotation!, C. L F. Liverpool,\nln Cuadtan funds at current iterling exchange rite of 1498 u sup-\nnlied   try   Broomhill   (Saturday's\nuotaUons in bracketi):\nNo. 1 Mu. nor. Vincouver March\n59% (1.00%).\nNo. 2 Man. nor. AtlanUc (old)\nMarch 99% (88%).\nNo. 2 Man. nor. Vucouver (new)\nMarch 98% (99%).\nAustralian afloat 90% (91%).\nAustralian March 92 (93%).\nFrench March 80*4 (80%).\nQuotations' on Wall Street\nHigh   Low   Cloie\nAl Chemical\nAm Can\nAm Pr Si Li\nAm Tel It    Tel 173%\n176\n125%\n172      176\n121%   125%\n7%      8\n\u2014The \u2014\nonsolidafed Mining S. SmelN\nCompany of Canada, Limited\nTRAIL - BRITISH COLUMBIA\nMANUFACTURERS OF\nELEPHANT Brand\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nAmmonium Phosphates \u2014 Sulphate of Ammonia\nSuperphosphates \u2014 Complete Fertili.en\nPRODUCERS AND REFINERS OF\nTadanae Brand Metals\nCOLO\nILICTROLYTIC\nZINC CADMIUM\nSILVER\n BISMUTH\nAm Tob\nAnaconda\nAtchison Riy\nAuburn Mo\nAm Pow tt Ll\nAv Corp\nBendi. Av\nBeth Steel\nBait & Ohio\nBohn Alum\nBaldwin Loco .\nBorden Co .\nCan Pac\nCerro de Pasco\nChrysler\nChes Si Ohio\nColumbia Gas\nCons Gas\nCon Oil\nCorn Prod\nCanada Dry .\nCont Can\nCurtis Wright\nDome Mines\nEast Kodak\nElee Pow ft Ll _\nErie Riy\nFreeport Tet .\nFirestone\nOen Foods\nOen Electric\nOen Motors\nGoodyear\nGen Asphalt ...\nGillette      IS\nGoodrich       18%\nOold Dust     21%\nHudson Mo . 18%\nInt Harvester . 88%\nInt Nickel 82%\nInt Tel ft Tel\nKenn Copper\nLambert  .\nLig ft Myers\nMont Ward\nNash Motors\nNat Bii \t\nNat Dilt \t\nN Y Cutral\nNa Dairy\nNorth Am Co\n97%\n33%\n74%\n48 li\n8%\n6%\n24%\n59\n22%\n\u202267%\n6\n29\n14%\n51%\n97%\n69%\n18%\n34%\n36\n78%\n13%\n80%\nB%\n48%\n182%\n10%\n16%\n33%\n31\n34 Vi\n40\n60%\n28%\n32%\n18%\n34%\n24%\n107%\n38%\n20%\n33%\n30%\n88%\n28\n27%\n172%\n86%\n34%\n72%\n46\n8%\n6\n24%\n86\n21%\n57\n5%\n29\n14%\n51 Vi\n94V\u00ab\n58 Vi\n16%\n33%\n35%\n75%\n13%\n78%\n6%\n47%\n161\n10%\n15\n33%\n31\n84\n39%\n88%\n37\n31%\n13%\nXt\n20%\n17%\n68%\n51%\n18\n36%\n24%\n107\n38%\n19%\n33%\n30%\n37\n24%\n27\n173\n97\n35%\n74%\n47%\n9%\n6\n24%\n59\n22%\n97%\n6\n29\n14%\n51%\n97%\n59%\n16%\n34 %\n36\n75%\n13%\n80%\n6H\n48%\n162%\n10%\nIS\n331.\n31\n34\n38%\n60%\n28\n32%\n17%\n19%\n21%\n16%\nSS\n52%\n18%\n37%\n25%\n107\n39%\n20%\n33%\n30%\n38%\n24%\n27%\nNa Pr ft Li\nPennsylvania\nPackard Mo\nRadio Corp\nRadio Keith\nRem Rand\nSafeway Stores\nSears Roebuck\nSouth Pac\nStan OU of Cal\nStan Oil of N 3\nShell Union\nStand Gas\nStan OU of Ind\nTin-ken RoUer\nTex  Corp\nTex Gas Sul .\nVn Carbide  ...\nUn Piciflc .\nUnited Air\nUnited Corp . .\nUnited Gas .   -\nU S Ind Al\nU S Rubber .\nU 3 Steel .\nVan Steel\nWestinghouse\nWoolworth\nWarner Bros\nWrigley        .   .\nYellow Truck\n10%\n35%\n12\n12%\n8%\n23%\n33%\n63%\n86%\n45%\n60%\n18%\n8\n38%\n68\n37%\n37%\n83%\nISO\n28\n714\n17\n43%\n20\n65%\n25%\n117%\n53\n12%\n78\n17%\n10%\n35\n11%\n12%\n8%\n22%\n32%\n82%\n35\n45%\n59%\n17%\n7%\n38%\n68%\n36%\n87%\n83\n1391.\n28%\n7\n16%\n42%\n18%\n63%\n24%\n115%\n52%\n12%\n16%\n35%\n12\n12%\nSVa\n22%\n33%\n83%\n36%\n45%\nfKW\n18%\n8%\n38%\n68%\n37%\n37%\n84%\n129%\n28%\n7%\n17\n43%\n19%\n65%\n25\n116%\n53\n12%\n17%    17%\nNEW OIL AREA IN KOOTINAY\nEDMONTON, March 2 (CP)\u2014\nA new ell erea In the Koottnty\ncountry touth of Morley, Alti_\n\u25a0nd which will extend the proven\ntraaa of Turner valley te thi weit,\nwti reported hlra tvtr the weekend.\nIn the opinion ef ipentert of thl\ndtvilopmtnt the ntw fltld will\nbring in a high erade ef ell at\ndepth! of not mtn thin 1500 fett\nDttp drilling hit bun tht rult In\nAlberta heretofore.\nThe 2400 acru which havi bitn\nflltd on'will bt developed by\nRoxtm Pttreltumt, Ltd. Director! include J, C. Dlllae, AlberU\noil man, and M. A. Van Roggen,\nconsul-general for thl Netherlands In Brltlih Columbii.\nK.B. IS HIGHER\nVANCOUVER, Mirch 3 (CP).-\nHeavy trading in Premier Gold featured today's session of the Vucouver stock exchuge. The issue gained\n19 cuts to clote at 2.40 after transacting 23,000 shares. Total sales\nwere 166,450 shares.\nPioneer at 10.15, Cariboo Gold\nQuartz at 1.40 ud Bralome,at 6.70\neach gained 5 cents. Kootensy Belle\nwas up 1%, st 44, Vldette up 1 at\nTO and Dentonia at 24 and Meridian\nit 12% were fractionally higher.\nOther precloui metals were gener-\nelly unchingtd.\nWinnipeg Groin\nWINNIPEG, Mireh 2 (CP)-Onln\nfuturei quotations:\nOpen  High 'Low Clote\nWheat:\nMey-    84       84%    83%    83%\nJuly ....   SS      SS       64%    84%\nOct  _   64%    84%    83%    84%\nOett:\nMiy.    32%    SS       SSH    SS\nJuly ..      32%    33%    32%    32%\nBarley.\nMay    38%    38%    38%    SS\nJuly     -      -       -       SS%\nFlu:\nMay    .... 157%   157%   157%   157%\nJuly \u2022  184%    -       -      184%\nRyt:\nMty......   43%    44       43%    43%\nJuly     45       46       44%   '44%\nOct ...      -       -       -       48%\nCuh wheat\u2014No. I hard 82%; No.\n1 northern 82%; No. 2 northern\n79%; No 3 northern 75%; No. 4\nnorthern 71%; No. 5, 64%; No. 6,\n54%; feed 45%; No. 1 garnet 77%;\nNo. 2 garnet 74%; No. 1 durum\n75%; No. 1 a.r.vr. 71%; No. 4 ipeciil\n64%; No. S ipeciil 58%; No, S special 52%; track S3; screenings 75\ncenta per too.\nMetal Markets\nNEW YOR-rTMtrch 2 <AP*l-\nCopper quiet; electrolytic spot ud\nfuture 9.25 to 9.50; export 8.85.\nTin barely steidy; spot ud neirby 4SJ0O to 48.12%; future 46.25 to\n46,37%.\nIron quiet, No. 2 f.o.b. eastern\nPennsylvania 20.50-, Buffalo 19.50;\nAlabama 15.50.\nLead steady; spot New York 4.60\nto 4.65; East St Louis 4.45.\nZinc dull; East St. Louis spot\nand future 4.90.\nAluminum 16.06 to 22.00.\nAntimony, spot 13.25.\nQuicksilver 78.00 to 79.00.\nWolframite   16.00.\nBar illver quiet ud unchmged\nit 44%.\nAt London\u2014Copper, studsrd ipot\n\u00a335 10s; future \u00a335 12s 6d; electrolytic, spot \u00a338 18s; future \u00a340 5s\nTin, spot \u00a3208 10s; future \u00a3201 SS,\nLead, spot \u00a315 5s; future \u00a317\n7s 06.\nZinc, spot \u00a315 8s; future  \u00a316\nUN.\nWORK STARTS AT\nTHE BAYONNE\nToronto Stock Quotations\nThe Minerals of British Columbia\nThis Province hat produced minerals \u2022! an agfreiate valus\nof $1,424,248,000.00.\nThe value) of Mineral production for the year 1935 is estimated at $47,810,612.00\nbeing an increase of 13% over the production for 1934. The high light of mining\nIn British Columbia during the year has been the substantial increase in gold and\nSilver production\nFor authoritative Informitlon regarding mining development ln the Province, tpply to\nTHE DEPARTMENT OF MINES\nVICTORIA, I. C.\nMINES\nAnglo-Huroniu      4.55\n.05%\n.17\n.08%\n.04\n1.5S\nM\n.35\n.64\n.18\n6.80\nMV,\nMV,\n8.35\nCu Malartic      1.15\nCariboo Gold  -     1,38\nCattle Trethewey      1.49\nAstoria\nAshley Gold \t\nBagamac\t\nBarry Hollinger\t\nBeattie  . \t\nBase Metals    \t\nBear Exploration ...\nBig Mlstouri _\t\nBobjo\t\nBrilorne \t\nBRX Gold\t\nBuffilo Cm \t\nBuffalo Ank\t\nCentral Manitoba\nCentral Patricia\t\nChlbougamou   \t\nCobalt Contact -_\t\nCoatt Copper\t\nConarium   _ _._.\nDome    ...\nEldorado  \t\nFalconbrldge \t\nGod'i Lake\t\nGranada\nGreen Stabelle\t\nGunner   ... _ _.__\nHoUlnger  \t\nHowey    _-\nHalcrow Swayie \u2014\nHudson Bay\t\nInt Nickel\t\nJ M Con  \t\nKirklind Like\t\nLittle Long Lac \t\nLake Maron \t\nLake Shore \t\nLee Gold \t\nMacassa   \t\nMan * Eastern \t\nMclntyre\nMcKenzle Red Lk ...\nMcWatten Gold _.\nMcMillan        _.\nMining Corp    \t\nNewbec\nNipissing      \t\nNoranda  _.\nMorris Kirkland _\nPerron Gold\nRed Lake Gold\t\nParkhill \t\n,22 %\n3.10\n,53%\n,02%\n3.50\n2.25\n47.75\n1.11\n9.25\n1.29\n.21%\n33\n.92\n1450\n.67\n.03%\n27.00\n322.\n.46\nAl\n7.00\n.07%\n67 37%\n.03%\n4.55\n.18%\n43.37%\n1.52\n1.4S\n.09%\n1.34\n.03\n2.75\n49.35\n.89\n1.42\n.88\n23\nPaymaiter    ,\nPend Oreilli \t\nPickle Crow \t\nPioneer __\t\nPremier Gold \t\nRead Authier\t\nReno Gold - \u2014...\nSan Antonio  \t\nSherritt Gordon ..-.\t\nSiscoe  \t\nStadacona    ...\nSt Anthony\n.73\n1.12\n4.81\n10X13\n2.38\n1.87\n1.12\n2.88\n1.19\n3.12\n.34%\n.30\n4.50\n1)00\n2.62\nSudbury Baain _.\nSullivan Contact\t\nSylvanite  \t\nTeck Hughei _ _     5.00\nVentures       2.38\nToburn        1.35\nWalte Amulet     1.15\nWayside    ' 17%\nWhite Eagle       .03%\nWright Hargreavei _     8.35\nOILS\nAcme   16%\nAJax   60\nC and E Corp      1.21\nCalmont OU  _      .10%\nChemical Research - _    1.23\nCommonwealth ....         .06%\nDalhouile   _ _      S3\nEastcrest   \u201e      .08%\nHome   _.     1.20\nRoyalite  _      38.00\nModel OU  _ 20\nNordon Oil 16\nINDUSTRIAL!\nAbitibl  _......\n     2%\nBeauharnols     S\nBell Telephone .\nBrazilian Traction ..\nBrew e. DUt __\nCin Bread\t\nCu Car 8c Foundry .\nCu Cement ...__ _.\nCu Dredge\t\n147%\n14%\n1.15\n7\n7%\n7\n46%\n14%\n.    S\n.   18\n244\nSS%\nSB\n26%\nS2%\n19%\n7%\nSteel of Can  _     63%\nCu Pacific\nCockshutt\nCons Bakerlea .\nCom Smelteri\nDlstlllen\nDom Bridge\nFord A\nHiram Wiiker\nLoblaw A\nMassey Harris\nSIRDAR, B.C. \u2014 The Bsyonne\nMining and Smelter company, with\nwhich is associated the Grull\nWihksne Mining company, has started work with a crew of 11 men\nend foreman. The mu are mostly\nold employees of the latter company and experienced mining men\nmostly from the Bridge River district.\nThe crew will Xf augmented from\ntime ta time in u endeavor to\nproceed with ictive mining at the\nBayonne at Summit creek.\nTwo can of equipment ud provisions have arrived at Tye.\nThe advent of good weather\nshould see active development at\nthis property.\nWINNIPEG LOSES\nWINNIPEG, March 2 (CP). -\nWith liberal supplies of Australian\ngrain on passage to United Kingdom marketa purchases on the Winnipeg grain exchuge today held to\nmoderate proportions ud wheat\ndrifted fractionally lower.\nPrices at tbe clote were % cent\nlower. May closed at 83%, July at\n84% ud October at 84%.\nWheat purchases over the weekend and early today were placed at\n400,000 bushels some oi which appeared in the nature of short-covering.\nExchanqes\nMONTREAL, Mirch \u00bb (CP). -\nBritish ud foreign exchuge cloied\nsteady.\nBrazil, milrell    XW74\nJapu, Jtn   _   ,29-S\nNew Zealand, pound 4.0244\n(Complied by the Royal Bank of\nCanada).\nExchangt Rates\nNIW YORK. March 2 (CP). -\nSterling exchange study at 84.96%\ntor. 80-day bills ul at $4.99% for\ndemud.\nCanadlu dollars; Today 3-32\nprem, week ago % prem.\nFrance 6.68% cents.\nItaly 8.02 cents.\n---li\nDOLLAR UrfoHANQlP\nNEW YORK, March 1 (CP). -\nLeading currenciei moved in a narrow groove in the foreign exchuge\nmarkets today, and closing prices\nfor the most part were unchanged.\nThe Canadian dollar at a premium\nof 3-32 of 1 per cut, the pound\nsterling at 84.99% and the French\nfranc at 6.68% centa were aU unchuged from Saturday's quotations.\nScrew-tops on bottling jan are\neasily removed by using a warm\ndamp cloth when trying to unscrew.\nHeads International\nHydro-Electric\nNEW YORK, March 2 (AP). -\nIrwin L. Moon today wu elected\npresident ot the International Hydro-Electric system, at a meeting of\nthe board of directors held ln Boston, it wu announced at the offices\nof the parent compuy, the InternaUonal \".per Si Power Co. here.\nAt the same meeting Archibald\nM. Grausteln resigned u president\nsnd director.\nN.Y. IS HIGHER\n. PAOI tf VIN\nLONDON MARKET\nIS CHEERFUL\nNEW YORK. Mtrch 3 (AP)-In-\nduitrlil stocks led a quiet forward\nmovement in today's mirket.\nA lite upturn In the iteels, following official estimate! ot u lncreaie ln current mill operations,\nwaa pleating fodder for the bullish\nforces.\nBut farm implement, motor, sugar,\nmint snd s wldt auortment of\nspecialties gave u exceptionally\ngood account of themtelvet ud\nmuy new five-yeer highs were le-\ncorded.\nTbe only thadows were that trading was relatively dull and some\nbuying wu said to havt Inoicated\nprofessional participation. The interest of the public wu tar from\nfeverish.\nMoney\nBy the Canadian Praia\nCloiing exchuge ratei:\nAt Montreal-Pound 4.99 1-32,\nU S dollar .98 28-32, franc 6.67%.\nAt New York-Pound 4.89%, Canadlu dollar 1.00 3-32, franc 6.88%.\nAt Paris\u2014Pound 74.80 francs, V B\ndollar 14.86%, Cmidlan dollar 14.97\nfrancs.\nIn gold-Pound lit, V 8 dollir'\n58.72 cents, Canadian dollar 58.72\ncente.\nLONDON, Mar.li 2 (AP)\u2014Stock\nexchange trading commenced the\nweek cheerfully, Induitritls, irmt-\nments and oil issues improving\nmostly, although trusaUanUc\nshares were uncertain. Japanese\nbonds recovered and gilt edged securities held steady. The closing\ntone was firmer.\nClosing:\nBrazilian Traction $14%, Brit Am\nTob 124s 4%d, .-dividend. Central\nMining \u00a325%, Mining Truit 4s 9d,\nRsnd Mines \u00a38Vk, Rhodesiu Anglo\nAm 14s, Rhokana Corp \u00a38%, Crown\nMines \u00a313%, Springs 43s 8d, East\nGeduld \u00a39%, Vickers 26s 7%d.\nBonds\u2014British 2% per cent consols \u00a385%, BriUsh 3% per eent\nwar lou \u00a3108%, BriUsh funding\n4s 1960-90 \u00a3116%.\nMONTREAL GAINS\nMONTREAL, March 2 (CP). \u00ab-\nQuiet recoveries were staged in\nmott lectiom ot Montreal itock exchuge today but trading wu at\nItt dullest in weeks.\nPapen provided about the only\nfeature. St. Lawrence preferred\ngained 1% points to 26%. Fractional\ngains were shown for Brazilian,\nMontreal Power, Quebec, Shawln-\nigu, British Columbia ud Power\nCorporation.\nMetals were generally buoyant.\nBONDS HIGHER\nNEW YORK, March J (AP). -\nBond market price trends wtre\nmoderately upward today, although\nbuying demand did not teem urgent.\nUnited Statei government eecurltlei\nbecame e bit mixed after a fairly\nfirm start.\nDow-Jones Averages\nNEW YORK, Mareh I\u2014Dow-Jones closing averages Monday were:\n30 Industrials lHOS-trp LSI\n10 ratle    4S.22\u2014up  .64\n20 utUttiee  \u2014      _2.80-up  .SS\nMontreal Stock Prices\nAneeiited Brevretiee  12%\nA P Grain  S\nBell Telephone  147\nBeeuharaoia  ~_ \u2014....   i\nBrazilian     __._____... 3\nB C Powir A   31%\nBuilding Product!   34\nBrack Silk ._   15\nCuada Cement  7\nCu Malting    83%\nCu Car ud Foundry  7%\nCan Piclfic    14%\nCen Smelten  _ 243%\nCu 8teamshipe  2%\nCockihutt Plow  8%\nDom Bridge     38%\nDom Glass    112%\nDom Tar Chemical  6%\nDom Tir Chem Pfd   76\nGypsum L it A __  7%\nHamUton Bridge  _  5%\nHollinger   15\nInd Alcohol   11%\nInt Nickel    Bl\nInt Uttl A  _ - _.... 10%\nInt WUl B _    U3\nMontreil Power  33%\nMcColl Frontenae _\u2014..  16%\nNat Brewing  \u00ab%\nNat Steel Car 18%\nOgilvie Flour 214\nPower Corp _________  17%\nQuebec Power      17%\nShawinigan     22%\nSherwin Wffllama    IS\nSteel of Cu  , 63%\nCURBS\nB A OU , 22*4\nCan Dredge _____._ At\nDlst Seagrams     29%\nDom Storei  _._    10%\nHiram Walktr . 32\nImperial Oil      23%\nInt Pete  _     37%\nImperial Tob       14%\nSherritt Gordon 1.19\nBANKS\nDominion  219%\nImperial    219%\nMontreal    210%\nNova ScoUa ___  295   ,\nRoyal    180 !_\nToronto     235\nBank of Can     53%\nCANADIANS  AND THEIR INDUSTRIES-AND THEIR  BANK.\n\u2022  FISHERIES  \u2022\nJIM: \"Bill, do you ever gel tiled of kindling fiih,\n-lb, -ib, all the time?\"\nBILL: \"Yei, Jim, but k helps mt to keep goin'\nwhen I think of the thousands ef folks we're\nbelpin' io feed!!'\nJDIl \"That's right-till i Important and we're\nin s fine big biuuneu.''\nBILL'. \"Wasn't ilwiyi big, though. The Chief\nwas tellin' mt the other day tbout how thii company itarted. It sauna funny, now. He ind hii\npinner figured they would do \u2022 whole lot better\nif they could keep their bait fresh for ill-year\nfiihin'. They went ro the Bink of Montretl ind\nborrowed on their penon-l securities to build >\ncold Rotate pltnt. Of course, they soon paid back\nthe loin, becauie a lot of folks lit whit I good\nthing thii buiineu wu goin' to be tnd bought\nttock in the compiny. Now look tt the busineu!\nBut the Chief admitted to me, confidentially, of\ncourse, thit if it hadn't been for the Butt of\nMontreil, they couldn't hive tuccetded, snd ht!\nslid it wsi the sunt wiy with i lot of the other]\nfishery concern!.\"\nJIM: \"A good itory, Bill, md I know it'i true,\nbecauie the Chief told me, too. I reckon he telli\n'most everybody, because he likes to talk tbout\nhis Bink. It'i my Bink, too. 1 have s nvingi\niccount thete.\"\nBILL: \"Hive you, Jim? So hivt LT\nSome of the Bank'i tervicei to the Fishing lnduitry and iti employees: Busi-css chequing accounts;\nfinancing of lhipments; commercial loans; trade\nand credit information; safekeeping of securities;\nsivingi tccounts; money oidcti; traveller!\ncheques-, banking by nuiL\nBANK   OF   MONTREAL\nISTABLISHBD  1117  \u2022  HEAD  OFFIC1.  MONTREAL\nNairn Braac-i E. S. L. DEWDNEY, Maaataa\nTrail _ea_r_i A. H. CAJtSON. Maaataa\nta-alaa- Branchi J. N   CHAN. Mai\u00bb|ae\nNaw Danav 8aaa_ai     I. M. 8BADY, Maa-fae-\nV. a FIELD. Manaiar\nKaala Sraaa-i V. Q. FIELD. Manasaa\n|     MODESN, EFFICIENT BANKING SBR-alC\u00ab THI OUTCOM1 Of 111 YEARS' SUCCESSFUL OPERATION f\n _____--__-_----_-----\u2014\u2014\nPAOI IIOHT-\nNILION DAILY NIWI. NILION. \u25a0Xv-TUMDAY MORNINO, MARCH 1 1936\nNyal\nCREOPHOS\nRelieves deep-seated\ncoughs, bronchitis.\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Co.\nFIRE DAMAGE\nAT TRAIL IS $75\nTRAIL, B.C., Much 2.-Febru-\n\u2022ry report of Fire Chief A. A. McDonild wu submitted to the city\ncouncil Monday night as follows:\nInspections 176; orders served under the Fire Marshall's act 6; appeals, nil; alarms received, four;\nvalue ot building Involved, $71,-\n000\u00bb Insurance on building, $13,300;\nvalue ot contents, $28,000; insurance, $9000; damage to building,\n$75; damage to contents, nil; causes\nof fires, spontaneous Ignition of\nrubbish; imoke scares and depositing hot uhes in combustible containers.\nMILLER WINS\nCORAL GABLES, Fla., March 2\n(AP)\u2014 Freddie Miller of Cincinnati\nsuccessfully defended his NaUonal\nBoxing association featherweight\nchampionship against Petey Sarron\nof Birmingham here tonight in 15\nrounds of fast, furious fighting replete with rough tactics. Both fighters scaled 125 poundi.\nJ.A.C. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST\nOPTICIAN\nSuite 205    Medical Arts Bldg\nFURNACES\nSOLD, INSTALLED AND\nREPAIRED\nR. H. Naber\nPhonl 666     610 Koottnty St.\nWANTED\nGLEAN COTTON\nRAGS\nApply\n0ffto\nB.C. MEN GET\nMEDALS\nHAMILTON, March 2 (CP)-Flve\nbronze medali for life-saving, an\nunusual number in one citation, are\nmnounced by the Royal Canadian\nHumane association today, one each\nfor George B. Gibson, Islay Cartwright, Hugh Petrin, Reginald Stapley and Ray Thagard, all of Winnipeg.\nThe association haa ilso twirded\nfive bronze medals and five parchment certificates to other western\nCanadian people tor heroism and\nmarked presence of mind in emergencies., with lives at stake, during\n1935.\nBritish Columbia men are recipients of two medals. J. L. Thacker\nof Aleza Lake saved a companion\nwho was swamped in Loop lake\nwhile fishing from a leaky boat.\nArthur P. Bunyan, a third member\nof the party was drowned. Raymo-1\nE. Morden of Stillwater Is cited for\nthe medal for rescuing, September\n21, a swimmer who grasped a live\nwire and was helpless till Morden\ncame to his aid. James A. Lee and\nFrederick Paul Cote, both of Stillwater, are given parchment certificates for assisting with the shocked\nswimmer.\nMORE ABOUT\nHOCKEY\n(Continued From Page Five)\nKemp came back and combined\nwith Mackie to get In on the Trail\nnet. Burnett made a nice rush. Kozak was penalized for tripping Morris, Brown waa penalized for tripping Carr and Kimberley was short\ntwo men again. Forsey was working\nhard.\nWith both teams full strength,\nBotteriU, Burnett md Art Mackie\ngot in on the Trail goalie. Kozak\nmade a nice rush but his shot was\nstopped. Play was back and fortii\nCarr, Cronle and Morris Una\nwu right  Inilde the Klmberley\nblue   Inle,   Morrii  icored   In   a\naoramble and no aulit wai given,\nwith leu than two mlnutei to go.\nKlmberley tried hard to even up\nthe icore, Trill keeping them off\nby ihooting up the lee.\nSummary:\nFirst period \u2014 (1) Klmberley,\nMoore from Brown, 18:52.\nPenalties\u2014Morris (2), Brown (2)\nSecond period \u2014 (2) Kimberley,\nBurnett from Brown, 12:38, (3)\nTrail, Carr from Cronie, 14:04; (4)\nTrail, Cronie from Morris, 18:19.\nPenalties\u2014Forrest (2), Burnett\n(2), Kozak (2), Brown (2), Moore\n(5), Haight (5).\nThird period \u2014 (5) Trail, Forres:\nfrom Andreuhuk, 3:26; (6) Klmberley, Burnett from Kozak, 5:03;\n(7) Trail; Morris unassisted, 18:55\nPenalties\u2014Haight (2), Kemp i2),\nKozak (2), Brown (2),\nShorts stopped by Hornqulst 6,\n11,8-25.    '\nShots itopped by Dupuii 13, 10,\n8-33.\nLineups:\nTrail \u2014 Dupuii, Snowdon, Jordan, Haight, Cronie, Carr, Morris.\nForrut, Andreashuk snd Bre-u.an.\nKimberley \u2014 Hornquist, Brown,\nBurnett, Kozak, Forsey, Moore.\nRedding, Art Mackie, Kemp and\nBotteriU.\nReferee\u2014Leo Deslreau.\nJudge of play\u2014Oliver Renikka.\nNO HOT WATER\nIS NEEDED\nWhen Mixh\nALABASTINE\nHave beautift-Uy-tinted walls with just one coat! Goes\non easily, quickly, smoothly\u2014no brush marks. Many\nshades. Beautiful color effects and stencil designs.\nGypsum. Lime aad Alabastine.\n' Canada, limited\nPAWS,   ONTARIO,   CANADA\nALABASTINE SOLD BY\nWOOD, VALLANCE\nHARDWARE COMPANY LIMITED\n521 Baker St. Nelion, B.C.\nMILK BOTTLE\nCAPS\nWITH PULL TABS\nSTERILIZED - - WAXED\n35c per Lb.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nTRAIL BANTAMS\nPUY TO A TIE\nTRAIL, B.C., March 2,-Knightt\nof Pythiu md Curlty't Cubt battled to a two-all draw in tha first ot\na two-game bantam hockey final\nseriei here Monday night.\nYoung- Liberal! beat Colomboi\n2-1 ln'the first of the nldget finals.\nESKIMOS BEAT\nVANCOUVER 3-2\nVANCOUVER, March 2 (CP).-\nEdmonton's battling Eskimos outplayed the Vancouver Lions 3-2 here\ntonight to move Into fourth place\nin the Northwestern Hockey league\nstandings, shoving the Calgary Tigers back into last position.\nCharles Morris'\nGyro President\nDr! H. H. MacKenzie\nIs Named First\nVice\nCharta Morris was elected president of the Nelson Gyro club Monday nicht when the clue- held its\nelection of officers following a\nluncheon in the Hume silver room.\nDr. H. H. M-cKenzie was named\nfirst vice-pfesident and lie. R. B.\nShaw second vice-president.\nOther officers elected were V. C.\nOwen, secretary; Jim Lautie, treasurer; Chief of Police Alex Snwart,\nsergeant-at-arms; A. Baird, R. E.\nHorton, R. D. Barnes ond G. H.\nFerguson, directors.\nGuests of the club wore Max\nSmith of Saskatoon and Mr. Fraser.\nMr. Morris, the new picsident,\nwas born in Hastings, England, and\nafter a time on the coast at Vancouver and Seattle ln the clcthing\nbusiness, he came to the Interior\nMr. Morris was in Nelson in 1906\nmd after several years in fernie\nreturned to the city. He has eben\nin the clothing business heie for\nmmy years.\nADAMS WILLING\nTO SELL BRUINS\n' BOSTON, March 2 (AP> .-Prospective purchasers of Boston Bruins'\nhockey franchise\u2014end severs! ot\nthem are about\u2014will find Charlie\nAdams, Boston's three-ply sports\nmagnate, ready to lend a wllllngaear\nany Ume they have the cash.\n\"I'll sell anything but my family,\" Adams said today when asked\nif he was in a selling mood.\nReports are that Colonel John S.\nHammond, former head of the Madison Square Garden, which owns\nNew York Rangers,- and those Montreal inseparables, Leo Dandurand\nand Joe Cattarlnich, are eager to\ntake over the Bruins.\nMORE ABOUT\nRevelstoke (rash\n(Continued From Page One)'\nhad had any idia of what was\ncoming upon thtem, but as the\ntender bore doWn, the 15-foot\nwalls of snow\/prevented escape.\nBodies of the 15 victims were\nbrought to Revelitoke on special\ntrains. A coroner's! Jury viewed the\nremains and adjodrned until Wednesday when the inquest will be\nheld.\nThe whole rightfof-way from Revelstoke to Glacier is \"pusher-territory\" where extra engines have,to\nbe put on even passenger trains to\nget them over the heavy grades.\nROARS THROUGH  DARKNESS\nThe track of the tender was along\na steep mountain-side with the Columbia river below, through tunnels and under snow sheds. It roared\nthrough the darkness of the early\nmorning and caught the men practically unawaret. If they heard inything they probably thought it another slide.\nThe escape of tht ilx Injurtd\nmen ll regarded it ilmoit mine-\nuloui. None but relitlvei were allowed to itt thtm In hoipital tonight\nA. Shepherd, 49, ctr rtptlrer,\nrodt to death on the ttndtr, Ht\nJumped off tnd ftll ovtr t hill-\ntldt Into tht llleclllewaet ctnyon.\nHli body wit recovered thli ifternoon.\nMoit of the dead died instantly\nin the crash. S. Hauler died while\nbeing taken to hospital on a rescue\ntrain from Revelitoke and S. Mitsumi died after arrival at hospital.\nT. Yamaguchi and H. Magamury\nsurvived the crash briefly but died\nbefore they could be taken trom\nthe scene.\nThe tregedy occurred it 3:20 t.m.\nJust etst of Downie siding, t plice\nwhich takes its names as the spot\nwhere Chief Despatcher Thomas\nDownie of the Revelstoke division\nwas killed by a snowslide In 1905. It\nis three miles from Albert canyon\nwhere transcontinental trains stop\nto give passengers a view of the\ndeep gorge there.\nD. O. Couar, divisional matter\nmechanic, one of the Injured, eicaped with hli Ilte In the ume\nplace where hli Immediate predeceiior, M. W. Boucher, wai killed\nIn a tilde In 1930. Coistr cime\nhere from Brindon, Mln.\nHani  Htug,  ont  of  tht  detd\ntrainmen,   li  turvlved    by    hll\nwidow whott ton .by i former\nmirritge, Orvlllt  W. Thompion,\nwu   killed   netr   Downlt   In   e\nhead-on cotillion In 1929.\nA. Shepherd, who Jumped to hit\ndesth from the tender, was a .iative\nof Scotland and had been with the\nrailway since 1012. He is survived\nby a widow, son and daughter.\nJohn R. Roland, dead telegraph\noperator, was a native of Bellow\nferlng  a compound   fracture  of\nRevelstoke for tome years.\nDRAW BAR BROKEN\nThe roar of another tilde Is believed to have contributed to today's tragedy. The engine wticn\nwas hauling the tender to Illecilla-\nwaet stopped and ths tender bumped into it md then Jerked back to\nsnap the cable by which it was\nbeing hauled, the draw bar having\nbeen broken.\nThe bodies ot the dead wen\ntaken to Revelstoke today and a date\nfor an Inquest will probably be\nset soon.\nPercy W. Shafer, engineer In\nthe cab of the locomotive itruck\nEggs Scarce on\nLocal Market\nGrade A Large Sell at\n45 Cents Per\nDozen\nEggs were scarce on the local Vernon street market Saturday, grade\nA-large telling at 45 cents per dozen. Sales were good as a whole,\nmeat vending readily and there being a fair demand for vegetables.\nPrices were:\nVEGETABLES\nCabbage, lb\t\nCarrot, lb\t\nParsnips, lb\t\nBeets, lb :..\nOnions,  lb.  \t\nTurnips, lb __\nLeeks, bunch\t\nMEATS\nBeef,  lb.  .....\t\nPork, lb \t\nVeal,  lb \t\nLamb,  lb.  \t\nBacon, lb.  \t\nRabbit, lb.\nSmoke Eaters Win\nCheers, Trail\nTRAIL, B.C, March 2.\u2014Cheen\nbunt forth in Trill when Smoke\nEaten' victory wtt heard over the\nridlo Monday night, md th* good\nnewt ipread like wild-fire through\nthe town. Mmy rabid fans passed\nthe opinion thet the win means s\nchance for Trail to cop the series.\nO'Mahoney Loses\nHis Title\nDick Shikat Is New\nWrestling Champ\nSpring chicken, lb.\nLiver, lb \t\nDrippings, lb.\n 07 to 20\n 15 to 23\n.. .08 to .20\n 10 to .25\n, 23 md 30\n_.:..   23\n  _UJ\n, .10 and .12\n _ .08\nHead cheese, lb   10 snd .15\nSausage,  lb  .10 md .20\nHamburger, 3 lb*. _ 23\nEGG8\nGrade A-large, doi. _  . .45\nGrade A-medium, doz. ..... .40\nDAIRY PRODUCTS\nCream\",   pt    _  .15\nMilk, qt _ 10\nCream cheese, lb.   23\nAPPLE8\nMcintosh, box 75'to 1.00\nWinter Bananas, box .73 to 1.00\nOntario., box .75 to 1.00\nby the ttndtr, wti rtscutd, n\nwit D. D. Collar, dlvlalonil muter mechanic, tnd othen, by tht\nheroic action of L. Wlltali, Fin-\nnlah tection foreman. Though iuf-\nFalls, N.H. He managed the Hotel\nhli left leg he dragged hli tallow\nworken  from   tht  cab   cf  tha\nwrecked trtln btfort thty could\nbe seriously bumed.\nThe tint in a chain of mlihapi\nnear Illecillawaet was the blocking\nof a live stock train from Calgary\nwhich stalled in a slide on Saturday.\nThis is still held md probably will\nbe turned back when released.\nJUMP FROM TENDER\nConductor B. Calder and Brake-\nman E. Jones were on the run-away\ntender with A. Shepherd when it\nbroke away, but Calder and Jor.ei\nmanaged to Jump before it, had\ngathered too much ipeed.\nDespite the fact that the mountain slopes ot British Columbl- are\na-quiver with melting snow from a\nwarm Chinook and heavy rains, md\n150 slides which came down over\nCanadian Pacific tracks during the\nweek-end, the railway expected to\nhave both its main and Kettle Valley lines cleared for traffic tonight.\nThe slide danger Is still acute,\nhowever, and another slide east ot\nRevelstoke cut off telegraphic communication with the east over Cs-\nnadlan Pacific lines for a ihort period this afternoon.\nA \u2022ilde at Clanwllllam, thli\n\u25a0Ida) of Revelitoke, itruck ttt'.ri\nNo. 4 from Vincouver thli rrorn-\nIng ind imuhed the windowi en\none tldt of tht flnt-cliu diy\ncoich. A quintlty of mow wu\nprecipitated Into tht cotch, tnd\ntwo pmengert rtcelvtd minor\ncuts on their hindi. They wire\nAlbert Vulgner of Vincouver ind\nA. L. Dty of Binff.\nTRAIL CURLING\nDRAWS\nTRAIL. B.C., Mtrch 2.-Curllng\nclub drtwi for Tueiday night follow:\nDRUDGE COMPETITION\nE. W. Hazlewooc' vt. T. H. Weldon.\nJ. H. Lee: e vt. A. S. McDonald.\nLEADS AND SECONDS\nA. A. McDonald vi. J. R. Mills.\nF. Wendcl vs. W. Monkhouse.\n8:39 P.M.\nDr. M. E. Krause vs. Dr. A. E.\nEllis.\nRev. L. A. Morran', vs. J. A. MontpeUler.\nDodimead or MarDonald vs. D.\nForreit.\nGRUDGE COMPETITION\nR, C. McGerrigle vi. D. S. Moynes.\nJack Portland Taken\nUp by the Bruins\nBOSTON, March 2 (AP) - Jack\nPortland, brawny defenceman regarded as the most likely major\nleaguer on Boston Cubs hockey\nsquad, wat taken up by Boston\nBruins today to fill in for the injured Babe Siebert.\nSlebert, who suffered a severe leg\ncut in last night's game with the\nAmericani at New York, will be out\nof National league ictlon for it lent\na week.\nGROWERSHONOR\nABRIEL MEMORY\nConvention Places on\nRecord Its Sense\nof Loss\nNEW YORK, March 2 (AP)-Dlck\nShikat of Philadelphia tonight became the world heavyweight wreitllng champion when he defeated\nDmno O'Mahoney ot Ireland in a\none-fall match,\nShikat, who weighed 227, two\npoundi more than the Iriihman,\ndowned O'Mahoney with a hammer\nlock ln 18 minutei, 57 seconds before a crowd of 9000.\nShikat had pressed throughout,\nconcentrating his great strength on\npunishing King Dmno't highly prized arms. The blonde teuton suddenly went to work with a series of\ntoe holdi, then Juit ai suddenly\nswitched to i hammerlock.\nHe bent the Irishman's right arm\naround his back and pulled upwards steadily for two minutes.\nThe blood seemed to drain from\nDanno's cherry cheeks. Referee\nGeorge Bothner called a halt md\nthe bauble changed hands.\nftne ot the acta of the British\nColumbia Fruit Growers uioclttion it itt Kelowni convention lut\nweek, at reported by J. 3. Campbell of Willow Point, wat recording of the following appreciation\nof *e late Thomas Abriel of Nakusp:\n\"Resolved that thii convention\nihall place on record In its mlnutei\nitt sorrow for the loss of lti put\npresident, Mr. Thomas Abriel. whose\ndeath terminated a long, faithful\nand efficient service as a member,\ndirector md president of this association, during which he won the\nesteem of its membera by his unselfish devotion to their cause and\nby his fine personal character, and\nthe tolerant and broad minded way\nin which he performed,his official\nduties.\"     '\nThe resolution was adopted by a\nunanimous standing vote.\nIn another resolution the convention paid a tribute to the qualities\nand service ot R. G. L. Clarke, chief\nfruit inspector\u2014who recently retired\non superannuation.\nThe human brain tl over three-\nfourth! water.\nMORE ABOUT\nCP.R. SLIDES\n(Continued From Pige One)\nsenger train to come Into Neison\ntfter iround Fridiy midnight might\nreach here at 8 o'clock thli morning. It will be sent on etst to Calgary.\nIn anticipation of the line being\nthus opened, No. 11, the westbound\npassenger train that came ln from\nthe east Monday morning was billed to lea>ve Nelton for the west tt\nfive minutes ifter midnight. The\ntwo through trains would pass esch\nother in the Farron neighborhood.\n40 SLIDES 80 FAR\nWorken who have been out on\nthe battle-line estimate that something like 40 slides have run ln the\nlast few days, in the Farron-Cor-\nyell area, in some parts only smtll\nintervals separating the various\nslides, and in some placet cleared\nsections being filled again. The Nelson md Grand Forks rotary plows\nhave been working from the two\nendi, md t couple of wing plows\npushed by locomotives tre lome-\nwhere tlong the line, tnd hive done\nparticularly effective work. Sixty\nmen are laid to comprite the crews\non the snow-clearing Job.\nThe Nelson rr'iry plow, disabled\nby <the breaking of an eccentric,\ncame in about 7 o'clock Monday\nnight, for rush repaln at the shops.\nIt wu said lt would be ready for\nduty again in a few houn it there\nshould be need for its service*.\nNEW OFFICIAL COMING\nOn the train from Vancouver expected here thli morning is E. S\nMcCracken, who comes from North\nBend, In the Vmcouver division, to\nsucceed F. C. Shirpe it luperlntendent of the Kootenay division.\nPresumably he hu employed himself in the slide area during his\nenforced detention.\nNo westbound train hai got\nthrough the slide irei ilnce Friday's. One went out from Nelson\nSaturday afternoon, but was\nbrought back from Farron that\nnight, the passengers being taken\ncare of here.\nEut of Nelson conditions sre normal, with fre'Tht and passenger\ntrains making their runs, as there\nhai been no recurrence of the tlidts\nat Tye that were successfully cleared a couple of days ago. Service\nhat also been maintained between\nNelson and Trail and Rossland.\nTRAINS DELAYED\nVANCOUVER, March 2 <CP).-\nDisruption of train schedules by\nslides in the mountains is shown in\nthe following list ol transcontinental train delays issued by the\nCanadian Pacific railway:\nNo. 3, due Vancouver at 9 am.,\nand No. 1, due at 10:30 a.m., have\nbeen consolidated and is at Glacier,\neait of Revelstoke, wsiting for traffic to be cleared.\nNo. 4, which left Vancouver at\n7:13 pm. Sunday, ls at Albert Canyon, east of Revelitoke, waiting for\nthe track to be cleared.\nNo. 2, which left Vancouver at\n10:15 p.m. Sunday, is on time. No. 4,\nwhich left Vancouver February 28,\nleft Field 22 hours and 40 minutes\nlate. No. 2, which left Vancouver\nFebruiry 28, left Field 18 hours and\n50 minutes late.\nNo, 4, leaving Vancouver February 29, pissed Field on time end No.\n2, which left here the lame day, is\nnow lying at Albert Canyon.\nNo. 3, due Vancouver 9 am. Sunday, arrived at 1:30 a.m. today.\nNo. 1. due 10:30 a.m. Sunday, arrived at 2:10 a.m., today. The Kettle\nValley No. 11, due 10:15 a.m. Sunday, operated u a local from Penticton md arrived at midnight.\nNo. 11, due Vancouver 10:30 am.,\nit operating u a local from Grand\nForks tnd it dut at 7:25 p.m.\nLORD  STONEHAVEN   QUITS\nLONDON, March 2 (CP Csble)-\nLord Stonehaven. 61-year-old chairman of the Coniervitive pirty organization, resigned that poit today.\nHe had been chairman tlnce 1931.\none of the moit Important politicil\noffice* ln the United Kingdom. No\nexplinttion ot the resignation wai\nissued.\nMORE ABOUT\nITALIAN CONSUL\nIINCANADA\n(Contlnutd From Pige One)\ncondemnation of league sanctions\nagainst his country growing'out of\nits war with Ethiopia.\n\"QUITE IMPROPER\"\nPrime Minister Mackenzie King\nagreed the speech was \"quite Improper\" md said the government\nwouljd take steps in the event of a\nrepetition. The original resolution\nurging a review ot Canada's obligations, to the League ot Nations wu\nsponsored by T. C. Douglas (CCF\nWeyburn).\nThe   prime   minister   uld   ht\nwould Ukt the lenient view that\nPetraocl made an error of Judgment but If he repeated \"thl govtrnmtnt will htvt no option but\nto   mtke   Immediate   represents-\ntiom to thi country conctrne-i.\"\nEarlier in the day, Mr. Woods-\nworth said he had been Informed\nthat   with   Petruccl's   \"connivance\nthere \"was being built up a secret\norganization called the nationalist\norganization for the suppression of\nanti-Fascism.\" Officials, Mr. Woods-\nworth said he had been told, were\npaid  by   the   Italim   government\nand practiced intimidation over Canadian citizens.\nENLISTED RECRUITS\nAccording to evidence given to\nthe C. C. F. leader by a Montreal\ndelegation tome time igo, Petrucci\nheld \u25a0 meeting at which he enlisted recruits into the Fascist organization. According to the information,\nmembera were uked to take the\nfollowing oath: \"In the name of God\nand Italy I iwear to execute the\norders ot II Duce and to serve with\ngil my itrength tnd, if neceutry,\nWith my blood, the ciuse ot the Fascist revolution.\"\nApprotched ifter the incident In\nthe house, Petrucci iaid he had no\ncomment to make. He hai been' stationed ln Ottawa several yean.\nAUSTRALIA HAS\nAN EDGE\nSEMI-ANNUAL\nSUIT CLEARANC\nOur entire selection of fin* suits and topcoats has bea\nreduced in this great sale!-Leishman, Cook and Fashlor\nCraft garments. Every fabric . . . every color. . . evei\npattern! Siies to fit every man! Don't miss it!\nVALUES TO $27.50 VALUES TO $32.50\n$18.75 $24-75\nVALUES TO $40.00\n$29*75\nALL OUR TOPCOATS including many new spring pt\nterm in om group QOI C\nEmory's Limitee\nQUALITY\u2014SERVICE\u2014SATISFACTION\nDURBAN, South Afrlci, March >\n(CP Cable).\u2014Australia is in a good\nposition to register its fourth victory over South Africa this season\nin the international cricket seriei\nAgainst the Springbok's ilrst-in-\nnlngi total ot 220 the tourists\namassed 459 runs today. Going in\na tecond time the home playen\nmade 110 for two wicketi and require 123 rum to avoid defeat by\nan innings.\nThe preient encounter Ii the fifth\nbetween the two countriei md the\nAussies tlready htve been declared\nwlnnen of the tenet with three\nwins. A fourth mttch ended ln a\ndraw.\nInventor of Hoop\nGome Going to the\n1936 Olympic Games\nMILWAUKEE, March 2 <AP)-\nWilliim Chmdler, chairman of the\nNalsmlth fund committee, iaid today <700 had been contributed to\nsend Dr. and Mn. James A. Nil-\nsmith to the 10S6 Olympic games.\nDr. Nalsmlth, native of Arnprior,\nOnt, and now a professor it Kansas unlvenity, invented basketball\nin 1891 at the Springfield, Mass,\nYM.CA. college.\nCALGARY  RANGERS WIN\nCALGARY, March 2 (CP) .-Calgary Rangen won the southern Alberta Junior hockey championship\nby defeating Medicine Hat Tigers\n4-2 here tonight in the second of a\ntwo-game total-goals series. They\nplayed to a 1-1 tie at Medicine Hat\nSaturday. Rangers will meet Edmonton Canadians, northern titlists,\nih a tworof-three series for the\nprovinclsl championship. The tint\ngime will be pltyed ln Calgary\nWedneiday.\nSWALLOWS TOUGH TOOTHPICK\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nTwo-room furnished suite for rent\nStirling hotel.\n(5871)\nBUY  CRYSTAL   BUTTER  AND\nYOU GET FIRST GRADE. (6718)\nSee the new Connor washer at\nMcKay a. Stretton, Ward St. (5702)\nTry the WHITE SPOT LUNCH.\nBooths and counter all white help.\n(5715)\nTIPPERARY, Ireland (CP) -\nWhile laughing at a movie, Patrick\nRoche, 18, swallowed a two-Inch\nhorse-nail he was using as a toothpick. Ht enjoyed the entertainment\nto the end, but afterward lought 1\nphysician.\nIntttllitloni tnd repaln\nJARVIS ELECTRIC.    PHONE 844.\n(5378)\nOne night only\u2014Brigadier Dalzlel at Salvation Army hall Wednesday at B p.m. Don't misi thii.\n(5722)\nNo other breed cm lurpasi CHOQUETTE BROS. Wholewheat for\nquality an_ flavour. Try IL Ph. 258.\n(5717)\nCorreot Stylet, Smirt Pitttrni,\nPerfect Fit, Fetturtt outitandlng In\nevery gtrmtnt from\u2014\nJACK  BOYCE*8>\n(5721)\nKOOTENAY LAKE GENERAL\nHOSPITAL SOCIETY\nNOTICE OF ANNUL MEETING\nIn accordance with the bylawa of\nthe tociety, the innutl general\nmeeting will be held in the City\nHall on Ward itreet, Tuetdiy, Mirch\n10th, 1938, it 7:45 p.m.\nMembership condltioni \u2014 All annual subscribers for the sum of\n$2.50 are memben of the society,\neligible to* take part In the election\nof directon tor the ensuing year.\nJAMES C. FORBES, Secretary.\n(5719)\nCARD  OP THANKS\nMr. md Mn. W. J. Dunn and\nfamily wlih to thank all friends for\nexpressions of kindness and sympathy during their sad bereavement\nin the loss of their ion Joieph.\n(5725)\nWILDFIRE\nNo Soot or Clinken\nLump      Nut\n$10.00    $9.00\nGALT\n\"Burnt All Night\"\nLump      Nut\n$10.50    $9.00\nGreenhill\nBeat for Furnacei\nLump    Stoker\n$10.00    $9.00\nFIR, BIRCH and\nCEDAR WOOD\nAny Length\nBURNS\nCoal & Cartage\nPhone 53        518 Wird\nWant Ads for Resi\nEYE SIGH1\nTESTING\nBv lone experience it\nModern Methodi we te\nvour eyes.\nReasonable   Pricei\nEfficient Service\nJ. B. GRA1\nOPTOMETRIST\n407 BAKER 8T. PH.\nNow Showing\nspring'\nSAMPLES\nA large aelection of pitta\nin fine materials for\nTOPCOATS or SUIT\nAll styled md tailored I\n\"CAMBRIDGE\"\nGODFREYI\n\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014 LIMITEl\n\"CAMBRIDGE CLOTHE\n318 BAKER      PHONE 2\nTODAY\nKay Francis\n\"I Found\nStella Parish\nPLUS\u2014Warren William\n\"Caae of the Lucky L*|\nTomorrow\nItll.iitrl   C.   UfOfmCC\nAM  P-Vi\n\\f\\[\n'. HALE\nlOHrt   \u2022\niI HI HN\nDAVID\nDOROTHY WILSON\n'-III -I.-'\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1936_03_03","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0406712","@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":"1936-03-03 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1936-03-03 AD","@language":"en"}],"Source":[{"@value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","@language":"en"}],"Title":[{"@value":"The Daily News","@language":"en"}],"Type":[{"@value":"Text","@language":"en"}],"Translation":[{"@value":"","@language":"en"}],"@id":"doi:10.14288\/1.0406712"}