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The position was given as\n72.6 latitude and 19.38 west longitude).\nThe temperature fell from 17 degrees above\nzero (Fahrenheit) to 11 below, raising hopes the\nfragments of the floe, smashed by a storm, would\nfreeze together.\nCRESTON LIKELY TO BE INTERIOR\nB.C. STOP TRANSCANADA AIRMAIL\nCROWE TELLS TRAIL BOARD TRADE\nWilkins Returns\nFrom Air Search\ntoHONTOtr, Teb. 9 \u00ab*Pj '\u00ab* Sir\nHubert Wilkins flew into Edmonton today from McMurray, Alta.,\nbringing with him a damaged engine from the plane which he used\nin searches in the Arctic for the\nlost Russian filers.\nRumored Capone\nBattles Guards\nOAKLAND, Calif., Feb. 9 (AP) -\nThe Oakland Tribune said today that\nAl \"Scarface\" Capone, former Chicago gang leader, fought a vicious\nbattle with Alcatraz Island prison\nguards and finally was tied in a\nstrait Jacket.\n\"An outbreak in the Alcatraz\nprison hospital, in which efforts of\nsix guards were required to subdue\nCapone, put him under the most\ndrastic restraint known to prisons,\"\nthe paper said.\n\"His mind breaking with brain-\ndestroying paresis, the former 'No.\n1 Public Enemy' lashed out at orderlies who have been giving him a\nchild's care In the hospital since last\nweek.\"\nSAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 9 (AP)-\nReports were current today Al Capone, under observation in the hospital ward at Alcatraz Island federal, prison, might be transferred to\nthe federal hospital for insane criminals at Springfield, Mo.\nGerman Generals\nOffer to Resign\nBERLIN, Feb. 9 (AP) - Diplomatic quarters today heard reports\nthree generals offered their resignations in protest against Nazification\nof the German army and puzzled as\nto whether there are many discontented higher officials.\nGrand Forks Asks for\nSupport, Proposed\n. Mail Stations\nCITIES DEPUTY TO\nVISIT WARFIELD\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 9\u2014\"I have lt\nfrom one who should know, that\nCreston is most likely to be the interior stop point of the trans-Canada air mail route,\" declared R. C.\nCrowe, chairman of the aviation\ncommittee of the Trail board of\ntrade, at a meeting of the board tonight following reading of a letter\nfrom the Grand Forks board of trade\nsoliciting the Trail board's support\nfor a station at Grand Forks as\npreviously proposed.\n\"The big transport planes are to\nbe used and Creston apparently is\nthe most feasible place for them to\nland in the interior,\" Mr. Crowe\nadded.\nAdvising that the government\nwas routing its air mail service with\na view to receiving as much business as possible, Mr. Crowe stated\nthat a branch service to Trail from\nCreston would cost $80 a day and\nfelt it would be foolish to ask for\na line from Trail to Creston considering the amount of business Trail\ncould give. He suggested that it\nwas better to wait until time tables\nwere drawn up.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nWARNS NAVY PLAN\nWILL HASTEN WAR\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (AP)-A\ncongressional committee heard a\nwarning today that the $800,000,000\nUnited States naval construction\nprogram would hasten another world\nwar.\nAIDING CHINESE\nPEIPING, Feb. 9 (CP-Havas)- A\nJapanese spokesman said today that\n641 foreigners are serving as volunteers with the Chinese army. He divided them into 50 Britons, 152 Americans (including 70 Negroes), 124\nFrenchmen and 315 Russians.\n\"FULL REMISSION\" OF POWELL-\nUNWIN SENTENCES IS REFUSED\nWould   Be   Thought\nInterference\nby Ottawa\nOTTAWA, Feb. 9 (CP) - Request\nfor \"full remission\" of the sentences\npassed by Alberta courts on G. F.\nPowell and J. H. Unwin, was refused in a telegram sent tonlgh* by\nJustice Minister Lapointe to Premier Aberhart\nSuch action by the government,\n. Mr. Lapointe said, \"would likely be\nconstrued throughout Canada as a\ndirect Interference by the federal\nexecutive with the free and proper\nfunctioning of our courts.\"\nEarlier today a telegram was received from Mr. Aberhart, who Is\nattorney-general for Alberta,, stating the appeals of Mr. Powell and\nMr. Unwm against conviction had\nfailed and urging \"full remission of\nsentences immediately.\" ,\nMr. Powell, British adviser to the\nAlberta Social Credit board, was\nsentenced to six months, and Unwin, member of the legislature for\nEdson, received three months on\nchargeB of publishing defamatory\nlibel arising from circulation of a\npamphlet\nMr. Aberhart's telegram, with the\nsignature confused by some error of\ntype or transmission, was received\ntoday with several others from private citizens urging remission of the\ntwo sentences. Not until publication\nof Mr. Aberhart's message in the\nafternoon newspapers did the department realize the message was\nan official request from the Alberta attorney-general\nTO CONSIDER REFUSAL\nEDMONTON, Feb. 9 (CP) \u2014 The\nAlberta cabinet will give \"full consideration\" tomorrow to refusal of\nJustice Minister Lapointe to grant\nremission of sentences passed on\nG. F. Powell and J. H. Unwin, Premier Aberhart asserted here tonight.v\nBuilding Program\nAnswer to Serious\nHospital Problem\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 9 (CP) - Dr.\nA. K. Haywood, Vancouver General hospital superintendent said\nat the annual meeting of the hospital board tonight an extensive\nbuilding program was the only solution for what he considered \"the\nmost serious and urgent hospital\nproblem in Canada today.\"\ni_.______ia_A_.iafe.___. _____\u25a0_,_,,_ _,_____i_____i\nTO OPEN TODAY\nSixth Session  Begins\nWith Impressive\nCeremonies\nEDMONTON, Feb.' 9 (CP)-Wlth\nsimple but impressive ceremonies,\nthe sixth session of the eighth legislative assembly of Alberta will\nopen here tomorrow afternoon at\n3 o'clock.\nPractically all members are expected to be in their places when the\nhouse swings into action for a session that Is expected to last more\nthan six weeks.\nFor the last two days Social Credit members of the legislature, with\nPremier Aberhart and cabinet members in attendance, have been in\ncaucus discussing the session.\nToday they elected Alfred J.\nHooke (SC-Red Deer) as government whip. Mr. Hooke succeeds\nJoseph H. Unwin, (SC-Edson) who\nis under sentence of three months\nin jail for publishing defamatory\nlibel knowing it to be false.\nLieutenant-Governor J. C. Bowen\nwill read the speech from the throne.\nHe will wear his Windsor uniform.\nAfter the reading of the speech\nfrom the throne, two new members\nwill be introduced. They are E. L.\nGray, Edmonton, leader of the Alberta Liberal party, and Dr. P. M,\nCampbell elected as a Unity candidate for Lethbridge.\nMr. Gray replaces the late George\nvan Allen, Liberal member for Edmonton, and Mr. Carnphell succeeds\nHans Wight Social Credit member\nfor Lethbridge who resigned when\nhe moved to Calgary.\nIntroduction of the first bill, the\nspeech from the throne, and introduction of Dr. Campbell and Mr.\nGray will complete the day's business and adjournment will be taken\nuntil Friday..\nCIO. GETS CONTRACT\nNEW YORK; 'Feb. 9 (AP)\u2014The\nUnited States Steel Corporation today granted the C.I.O. a new union\ncontract replacing the current agreement expiring Feb. 28. Half a million workers are affected.\nRE-ELECTED\nKELOWNA, B. C. Feb. 9 (CP)-\nMax DePfyffer was reelected president of the Kelowna Aquatic association.\nSIMONE RECOVERING\nHOLLYWOOD, Feb. 9 (AP)-Si-\nmone Simon ill with bronchial pneumonia, was pronounced on the road\nto recovery today.\nGreenwood Retires\nLONDON, Feb. 9 (CP Cable) \u2014\nViscount Greenwood, a -native of\nWhitby, Ont, has announced his retirement as treasurer of the Conservative party.\nIN8ECTS CAUSE  DEATHS\nCALCUTTA, India, Feb. 9 (CP-\nReuters)\u2014Insects cause the loss of\nmore than 1,5.0,000 human lives and\ndo damage estimated at \u00a3150,-\n000,000 a year in India.\n i ,\t\ndisorders Begin as Voting in\nNorthern Ireland IS ears Close\nEsling Demands Government Break\n(anadian Radio Holding Monopoly\nWhich Bars importation of Sets\nPublic   Mulcted   to\nPay Royalty If\nImport\nCONCESSIONS\nTO AID BLIND\nOTTAWA, Feb. 9-W. K. Esling,\nmember for Kootenay West told the\nhouse of commons today that the\npeople of Canada were being strangled by a monopoly which controlled not only the manufacture,\nbut the importation of radios. He\nstated that 12 radio manufacturers\nclaiming to own 71 radio patents,\nplaced these patents in the hands\nof a holding company, known as\nCanadian Radio Patents, Limited.\nThis holding company issued to its\nown members, who really owned the\npatents, licences to use them. In\nother words, the holding company\nconfines the manufacture of radios\nto its own circle, and anybody who.\nattempts to make, import, manufacture, use or sell a radio in Canada\nwithout securing a licence from the\nholding company is prosecuted for\ninfringement Thus the 12 favored\nmanufacturers are able to control\nthe output, fix the price and prohibit importations from any other\ncountry.\nCASE FROM NELSON\nMr. Esling said in his Investigations were prompted by the case ot\na resident of Nelson, B.C., who purchased a radio in Spokane, declared\nit at the customs, secured a clearance and thought the radio was his\nproperty, The holding company\nmade him pay royalty or damages,\nas they called it, demanded that he\nsign an undertaking not to again im\nport use or sell a radio which contained jparts: on which they held patents. The Nelson resident was ad\nvised that he really had been most\nleniently dealt with, that had the\ncompany chosen they could have\nexercised their right to require surrender of the set for destruction,\n(Continued en Page Three)\nLiberals Attack\nCCF. Remarks\nSaskatchewan   House\nSuspends Business\nin Noisy Period\nREGINA, Feb. 9 (CP)-In a noisy\nsession. Liberal members of the\nSaskatchewan legislature today attacked statements allegedly made\nby Rev. T. C. Douglas, Cooperative\nCommonwealth member of the\nhous of commons for Weyburn, during debate Monday in the federal\nchamber on relief administration in\nSaskatchewan.\nDespatches from Ottawa quoted\nMr. Douglas saying: \"Relief inspectors (in Saskatchewan) are in\nthe political machine. There is being built up today on the misery of\nour people a political machine that\nmakes Tammany hall look like a\nSunday school.''\nThe legislature's ordinary business\nwas suspended while the members\nattacked the statements. No other\nbusiness was conducted during the\nsitting\u2014by far the noisiest since the\npresent government took office.\nThe statements were cowardly and\nunfair to the field men who had no\nopportunity to speak for themselves,\nsaid Agriculture Minister J. G. Tag-\ngar, in opening the attack.\nH. H. Kemper, (C.C.F., Gull Lake)\nled the opposition answer. The government of Saskatchewan was in\n\"such bad odor\" with Manitoba\nfarmers last fall that farmers who\nhad hay to sell did not want to deal\nwith the Saskatchewan government.\nNo charges had been made, said\nOpposition Leader G. H. Williams.\nHon. J. G. Gardiner, federal minister of agriculture, was afraid to\nhave investigation into statements\nmade by Mr. Bennett he added.\nB.C. Foil Fair\nto Be Held Again\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 9 <CP) -\nThe Vancouver Exhibition association board of control announced today the British Columbia winter\nfair will be held again this year. It\nwill include competition for market cattle, sheep and swine, finishing\nwith an auction of fat stock.\nTelephone Company\nHps $6,112,939 Gain\nMONTREAL, Feb. 9 (CP)- Bell\nTelephone Company of Canada had\na net profit of $6,112,939 in 1937, increase of $657,339 compared with $5,-\n455,600 in the previous year, the annual report today showed. Operating revenue advanced $2,403,651 to\n$40,500,232 from $38,096,581.\nNet profit equalled $7.75 per share\non the average outstanding during\nthe year, against $6.96 in 1936.\nFights Canadian\nRadio Monopoly\nE8LING, M.P.\nTACOMA YOUTH\nARRESTED,SPAIN\nAmerican Consul  at\nBarcelona Wired\nfor News\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (AP)\nThe United States state department\ntelegraphed today to the American\nconsul in Barcelona asking him to\ninquire as to the welfare of Cliff\nHaley of Tacoma, Wash. The department said it acted after being told\nHaley was under arrest by Spanish\nloyalists for trying to leave Spain.\nIt said the telegram was sent at\nthe instance of the boy's father, a\ncandy manufacturer of Tacoma, and\nSenator Bone of Washington.\nBone declared the boy's father\nhad told him that his son, who was\na volunteer machine gunner in the\nSpanish loyalist forces, had tried to\nget on a tanker at Barcelona in\nhopes of getting to Port Arthur,\nTex.\nBarcelona police, however, arrested him, the father -added.\nAt the state department it was\nsaid that there was little that the\nUnited States government could do\nunder the circumstances. It was\npointed out that Americans fighting\nin the Spanish forces had alf been\nwarned they were doing so at their\nown risk and could not expect the\nintervention of their home government\nThere was no definite Information\nhere that young Haley was actually,\nto be shot.\nWould Take Fine\nto Supreme Court\nBURNABY, B.C., Feb. 9 (CD-\nFined $50 in police court here today\nfor driving to the common danger,\nOliver Beaulieu threatened to appeal\nhis case to the supreme court of\nCanada.\nWhen Magistrate David Gillis announced the fine Beaulieu protested:\n\"I won't pay it,\" he declared.\n\"Ten days default,\" the magistrate\ncalmly replied.\n\"I Intend to appeal the case to the\nsupremo court of Canada.\"\n,  'That is your privilege,\" the magistrate said.\nLater the man changed his mind\nabout paying the fine but told officers he still intended to appeal\nUNUSUAL STAMP\nPETERBOROUGH, Ont, Feb. 9\n(CP)\u2014Attention philatelists. Mrs.\nJohn Anderson believes she has a\nstamp received on a letter from\nSydney, New South Wales, which\nshe thinks should be worth more\nthan the twopence paid for it. The\nstamp, in commemoration of Sydney's 150th. anniversary, shows Captain Philip at Sydney cove in 1786\nwearing epaulettes whereas these\nadornments were not worn as part\nof the naval -uniform until 1795.\nCOUNSEL NAMED\nBERLIN, Feb ,9 (AP)-The Nazi\nstate today named counsel of its\nown choice to defend Rev. Martin\nNeimoeller, militant Protestant leader on trial charged with inciting\nto disobedience and other offences\nagainst the Nazi regime.\nWELSH MINERS STRIKE\nCARDIFF, Feb. 9 (CP-Havas)-\nTen thousand Welsh miners in the\nOnllwym, Seven Sisters and'Bryntsg\npits near Neath, decided to strike\ntoday in sympathy with 12 of their\ncomrades who embarked on a \"stay\ndown\" strike Monday and now\nhave spent 39 hours in the mines.\nFive   Injured  When\nPolice Break Up\nCrowd\nBALLOT COUNT\nSTARTS TODAY\nBy GEORGE HAMBLETON\nCanadian Press Staff Writer\nBELFAST, Feb. 9 (CP Cable)-\nSporadlc disorders broke out tonight near the end of the voting\nIn the Northern Ireland general\nelection   which   Prime   Minister\nViscount Craigavon called to back\nhit stand against union with Eire.\nFive persons were Injured when\npolice dispersed  a large crowd\noutside a Belfast polling place.\nThree armed men hatted an automobile carrying supporters of\nSir Wilson Hungerford, Unionist\n(government) candidate In \" the\nBelfast Old Park constituency, ordered, the driver out and burned\nthe machine.\ni An armored car filled with jiolice\nslowly patrolled streets in the Falls\ndistrict as polls closed at 8 p.m. One\nman was Injured in a street scuffle\nthere.\n(Continued on Page Two)\nEight Dead as\nFrench Airliner\nHits Breakwater\nTwo Passengers and\nTwo Crew Members\nEscape\nMARSEILLE, France, Feb. 9 (AP)\n\u2014The bodies of eight victims were\nremoved today from the wreckage\nof a trans-Mediterranean airliner\nwhich raron,_d the Marseille breakwater, while taking off, and exploded In one of France's most serious\ncivilian air accidents.\nSix survivors who succeeded In\nescaping from a trapdoor of the Air\nFrance flying boat were brought to\na Marseille hospital suffering from\nshock and burns.\nThe plane wreckage was pulled\nto the surface and towed to a landing base for investigation by Inspectors. It was considered likely\nfog and mist prevented the pilot\nfrom seeing the breakwater.\nThe accident this morning occurred just as the airliner was taking\noff on her scheduled flight to Ajac-\ncio, Corsica, on the Marseille-Tunis\nline. She hit the breakwater at\nabout 60 miles an hour.\nThe dead were five passengers\nand three crew members, all French.\nTwo other passengers and two of the\ncrew escaped with injuries'. The\ndead included Chief Pilot Pierre\nBurello, veteran at the controls.\n50-Year-Old Romance\nBlooms, Then Buds\nSUPERIOR, Neb.. Feb. 9 (AP)-\nA romance that bloomed in 1887,\nlay dead for half a century, and\nwas rekindled recently finally culminated yesterday in marriage.\nEdward M. Kleven and Miss Pink\nSeydel fell in love at the wedding\nof her brother, Ellsworth, in September 887,. They laid plans for\ntheir marriage that day but later\nquarreled, parted and married\nsomeone else.\nKlaven settled on a farm near\nhere, his boyhood sweetheart moved to California, Last September\n20 Mr. and Mrs. Ellsworth Seydel\ncelebrated their golden wedding\nanniversary. Afnong the guests\nwere the old sweethearts, now widowed. They met, talked and fell In\nlove again. Yesterday they were\nmarried and they'll settle down\non Kleven's farm.\nVeag%\nMin. Max.\nNELSON   _  23\nVictoria    -  39\nNanaimo   38\nVancouver   36\nKamloops  28\nPrince George     4*\nE_tevan Point  38\nPrince Rupert _ 24\nLangara   _ 24\nAtlin    _ 24*\nDawson  50*\nSeattle   40\nPortland  :  38\nSan Francisco  50\nSpokane    26\nLos Angeles ~ 50\nKelowna   20\nPenticton   - 25\nGrand Forks  18\nKaslo  -  21     -\nCranbrook  _  21     29\nCalgary  _  22*      8*\nEdmonton  30*    12*\nSwift Current  24'      4*\nMoose Jaw  28*    10*\nPrince Albert    16*      2'\nSaskatoon   32*      6*\nQu'Appelle   26*      6*\nWinnipeg     4*      4\n-Below Zero.   \u25a0\nForecast \u2014 Kootenay \u2014 Moderate\nwinds   mostly    northeast    partly\ncloudy and moderately cold with\nsnow flurries.\n36\n46\n46\n52\n36\n12\n44\n32\n26\n10*\n42*\n50\n44\n58\n36\n60\n37\n36\nWhite Butterfly\nat South Slocan\nFirst cabbage butterfly of the\nseason was captured at the end of\nthe week at South Slocan, and\nsent In to The Dally News by Mrs.\nH. Foster. The cabbage butterfly\nIs the familiar white butterfly\nwith cream or sulphur shading,\neach of Its four wings, under as\nwell aa upper, being ornamented\nwith a black dot, It Is the mature\nform of the destructive green\ncabbage worm.\nBRITAIN'S FOOD\nPOSITION IS AS\nGOOD AS IN 1.1.\nStorage   Proposal   Is\nVoted Down; Said\nFantastic\nLONDON, Feb. 9 (CP Cable) -\nDeclaring Great Britain is in substantially as good a food position as\nin 1914, Sir Thomas Inskip, minister for coordination of defence, today successfully stood off a sustained attack by the Labor opposition in the house of commons on\nprotection of the countryfe food supply in time of war.\nThe house defeated 195 to 130 a Labor proposal large stocks of food be\nstored in the country, which Sir\nThomas Inskip termed \"fantastic.\"\nA Conservative amendment calling\noh the government to take steps to\nensure adequate maintenance and\ndistribution of food supplies in war\ntime was talked beyond the time\nlimit.\nAnswering critics, who suggested\nhe was \"by temperament\" not the\nmost suitable person to handle the\nfood problem, Sir Thomas declared\nsuggestions sufficient food for two\nyears be kept on hand were ridiculous.\nThe government should periodically, secretly if possible, buy up\nsupplies of food according to the\nneeds of the situation. Large quantities of food, he said, should not be\nkept on. hand in ports liable to attack.\n\"All the food In the world if stored\nIn this country, would not make us\nsafe unless we are in a position to\ndefend ourselves from the air and\nkeep the seas open,\" the minister\nmaintained.\n1000 Safely Led\nFrom Show Blaze\nMONTREAL, Feb. 9 (CP)-Mors\nthan 1000 persons were led to safety\ntonight when fire broke out on the\ntop floor of a four-storey building\nhousing an east-end theatre,\nNo one in the theatre knew of the\nfire until a constable dashed into\nthe building and advised the manager after the first alarm had been\nsounded. The film was stopped immediately and the manager advised,\nthe patrons to march quietly out of\nthe theatre. He warned there was\nno immediate danger.\nThe- main doors and exits were\nopened and the patrons were ushered to the street. There was no panic\nas the 1000 streamed out of the theatre, almost a separate wing of the\nbuilding in which it is located. No\none was injured.\nA 70-MILE WIND\nBENDS A BRIDGE\nOUT OF LINE;\nTWO DROWNEDl\nPredict  Rain  Recorc\nof 15 Days Will\nBe Tied\nSWOLLEN RIVERS\nCONTINUE RISI\nSAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 9 (AP)\n\u2014A hurrlcan hit the Callfornli\ncoast today, climaxing two week;\nof stormy weather* causing tw\ndeaths and widespread damage I\nproperty and communication line\nThe   $35,000,000   Golden   Gat!\nbridge \"bent\" 12i\/2 feet out of Una ]\nunder  the  force  of  the   wind, j\nwhich reached 76 miles an hour In |\nsome places and 70 miles at the)\nGate. The bridge Is built to swa;\nharmlessly as much as 18 feet un\nder wind pressure,\nHURLED INTO SEA\nWaves swamped a coast guai\nlifeboat during a drill off the Sai\nFrancisco shore and Guardsman'!\nFritz Flukenger, 47, drowned as ha<\nand six others were hurled into thai\nsea. Crab fishing boats went to tha*]\nrescue.\nA large chicken house collapsed I\nin the wind at Stockton and killed\nF. Erick Bellqulst 66. Eight other\npersons were injured there as tha\nwind force reached 50 miles an hour*\n(Continued on Page Two)\nDYNAMITE FAILS\nSMASH ICE JAM]\nOntario Government\nAsked for Help\nFrom Floods\nCHATHAM, Ont., Feb. S (CP) \u2014\nThe Ontario government was asked\nfar aid tonight as officials of Dover,\nReleigh and Tilbury east townships,\nfound themselves helpless to control\nthe spread of Thames river flood\nwaters. ,  .\nAn ice jam iVi miles long proved\nimpregnable against discharge ot\ndynamite and the waters continued\nto pour over the wider areas of ther\nthree townships. It was estimated 13\nsquare miles of farm land were un-\nder water.\nThe city itself was free of flood\ndanger as the river level remained\naround 16 feet above normal.\nGIRL TEARS PANTS\nBELONGING TO COP'\nHALIFAX, Feb. 9 (CP)-GladyS\nMiller, 25, pleaded not guilty before\nMagistrate J. L. Bamhill today to a.\ncharge that she \"unlawfully and\nwilfully tore the trousers of Police\nConstable John Bowser, which were\nof a value of $10 or thereabouts.\"\nShe was also charged with illegal\npossession of liquor.\nFURNITURE MAN DIE8\nHANOVER, Ont, Feb. 9 (CP)\u2014\nJ. S. Knechtel, 70, president of the\nNational Furniture company of Hanover and one of Ontario's leading\nmanufacturers, died at his home today after a long illness.\nTRADE MINISTER SAYS FUTILE TO\nPROHIBIT WAR MATERIAL EXPORTS\nFalse   Fears   Roused\nas Trade Treaty\nPushed\nOTTAWA, Feb. 9 (CP) - The\nConservative party is attempting to\nfoster fear in the minds of Canadians that their interests will be\nsacrificed in negotiations for a new\ntrade treaty with the United States,\nTrade Minister Euler charged today in the house of commons.\n\"This government,\" Mr. Euler\nsaid, \"is not so inept, so unwise or\nso unpatriotic that it will sacrifice\nthe interests of the producers of\nthis country, whether they be agriculturalists or manufacturers, for\nthe sake of anyone or for any reason whatsoever.\"\nThe trade minister told the house\nit would be futile for Canada to prohibit export of nickel and other\nwar materials in the hope this\nwould end hostilities in Europe or\n\"If, by the total prohibition of\nthe export of nickel and perhaps\nother commodities,\" he said, it\nwould be possible to stop the wars\nin which certain countries are engaged, I would be entirely in favor of such a prohibition.\"\n10 PER CENT FOR WAR\nOnly 10 per cent of Canada's\nnickel went into war supplies, Mr.\nEuler said, and if Canada prohibited exports it would be possible for\ncombatant nations to get their supplies from Holland or develop substitutes like Germany in the Great\nWar. In addition, it would be useless to prohibit nickel exports to\nJapan  alone  because  the  metal\n0~\nwould land eventually after a __r\u00ab\ncuitous route.\nMr. Euler traced the development\nof Canada's foreign trade in recent\nyears before touching negotiations\nwith Washington.\n\"I regret,\" he said, \"that mora\nparticularly in the Victoria byelec-\ntion, the leader of the opposition\ninoculated the people of this country with a fear that in these negotiations the interests of Canadian\nproducers' would be sacrificed.\"\nHe regretted this attitude because\nit waS groundless and because \"in\nmy opinion, one of the chief reas- .\nons we have had a recession in this\ncountry is that very fear and lack\nof confidence on tha part of the\npeople.\n\"We had the same expressions ot\nalarm when we proposed to make\nthe first agreement with the United\nStates but the result has shown\nthere was no cause for it and the\nconsequences have been mutually\nsatisfactory.\" -\nThe only thine wrong with Saskatchewan drought area was lack of\nrain, said Mr. Thomas Donnelly\n(Lib. Wood Mountain). He protested against statements made in dif- -\nferent circles to the effect conditions in the- dry sections of the\nprairies were due to farming methods. I\nMr. Donnelly said all signs pointed to a further restriction of the\narea next year. It appeared the .\ncountry was gradually coming back\nto conditions of normal rainfall and\nnormal production.\nMr. Donnellyisaid the old settlers,\nhad faith in the land and he shared\nit. There would bo rains there again\nand there would be . good crops\nagain.\nA\n^^^^-\n *\u00ab TW*\nloads Theme of\nB.C. Since 1856\nBurns Declares\nTRAIL, B, C\u201e Feb. \u00bb-\"Ever since\nbe lirst legislature on Vancouver.\nStand In 185., roads have been the\nheme song ot the people of Brit-\njh Columbia.\" aserted R. R. Burnt,\nVI. l; A. tor Ros\u00bbl\u00abnd-Trail, speaking >t a meeting M ihe Trail board\noi trade in the Crown Point palm\nrpote here tonight, On a map ot\nBritish Columbia divided into constituencies, he showed the enorm-\nous territories for which roads had\nto bo provided.\n-\"\"Perhaps It will make some of us\nBore tolerant when we demand so\nBiuch,\" he said. Roads being asked\nlor throughout the province include\n\u2014Red Deer or Jasper west to McBride and Prinoe George; McBride\nto Blue River and to Kamloops;\ncompletion of the Big Bend highway; a road on the west coast of\nVancouver Island; the Alaskan highway; the southern provincial highway, including the Cascade and the\nHope-Princeton sections; the north\nIsland highway from Campbell river\ni_orth; Gibson's Landing up the coast\nto Powell River; roads in the Peace\n-River block; Prince Rupert to Hazle-\n.ton; and many others.\"\n\"l)ROE8 PATIENCE\n'Mr. Burns asked his audience to\nHive patience as there were many\n'Other parti of this vast province\nWhich had to be considered as well\nos \"ourselves.\"\n'  With the aid of a drawing he explained why the cost of construction\n,of the Cascade road Over one of\n.'three routes other than the present\n, \u00abne would be prohibitive and gave\nhis assurance that he would do everything to have th.e present road\nimproved.\nThe board thanked Mr. Burns for\nSays Varicose\nVeins Can Be\nReduced\nIf you or any relative or friend is\nworried because of varicose veins, or\nbunches, as good advice for home\n, treatment as any friend can give-Is\n\u25a0'(to get a bottle of Moone's Emerald\nOil\"\ni'   Simply ask Mann, Rutherford Co.\n\u25a0\u2022\u2022a_r your druggist for an original\n.'bottle of Moone's Emerald Oil and\napply  night and  morning to  the\nswollen, enlarged veins. Soon you\nshould notice that they are growing\n' smaller and the treatment should\nI be continued until the veins are no\nlonger burdensome. So penetrating\n*nd efficient is Emerald Oil that it\n\u25a0also helps simple swellings due to\n. strain to disappear. (Advt.)\n*rm_ \"In li\" Haaii el Spokane\"\nJ^A. ecroaa tha atreat from the\n4*^*5* Cr.ai N-rlh-rn, Union r\u00ab-\n___%\\Tir-. ''tic end Aute-Inler-rb-n\n\u25a0r- ' Depeta. Mre. Harry Geata,\nMir,\n_\n\u2014-     NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. --..-THURSDAY MORNING, FIB. 10, 1938.\nVMMwimw\n$  \u2022\nhis splendid presentation ot, and\nvoiced Appreciation for his Intensive study of the whole problem.\nDies in Explosion\n-VANCOUVER, Feb. 9 (CP) -\nJohn Campbell, 33, died In hospital\ntonight shortly after bblng injured\nby the explosion of an oxygen tank\nhe was filling at Canadian Liquid\nAir Company's plant here.\nPolice said Campbell was alone\nin the plant at the time of the explosion which shattered all windows In the building. \u2022\nCompany officials said little property damage was done by the blast.\nMORE ABOUT\nCreston Air Mall\n(Continued From Page One)\n\"There is a greater loss of time\nin train service from Trail to Grand\nForks than to Creston, so it would\nbe Inadvisable for us to tie our\nhands in supporting the Grand Forks\nboard in the event ot Creston being\nmade the interior stop,\"- he said. A\nmotion to this effect was passed.\nW. A. Curran, chairman of a com-'\nmittee appointed to investigate the\npossibilities of having train tracks\nremoved from the city and a terminal established at Tadanac, reported\nthat the committee had lost none of\nits initial enthusiasm after going\nover the ground that would be affected. He informed the board that\nC. A. Cotterell, assistant general\nmanager for western lines of the\nCanadian Pacific railway, and E. S.\nMcCracken, superintendent of the\nNelson division, would meet the\ncommittee at 10 a.m. Friday at the\ncity hall to further discuss this\nmatter.\nMayor E. L. Groutage, who with\nthe entire council was a guest at\nthe meeting, stated that a member\nof the B.C. committee ot the Dominion Housing Loan scheme would\nbe in Trail at some iuture date provided the city could guarantee the\nbuilding of at least 20 houses under\nthis plan.\nDEPUTY MINI8TER\nCOMING,\nW. A. Porteous, president, announced that Warfield and Annabie\napplicants for establishing a municipality would confer with E. H.\nBridgman, deputy minister of municipalities, Wednesday night, a\nmatter which he considered vitally\nimportant to Trail. He also said that\nfrom R. R. Burns, M.L.A., he had\nlearned that villages have been\ngiven power to borrow from the\ngovernment for sewer and water\nservice installations.\nF. S. Willis, B. K. Farrar, Dominic Dalolse and J. C. Alexander\nwere elected members.\nThe 1938 council was announced\nelected as follows; R. C. Crowe, S.\nS. McDiarmid, W. A. Curran, Alex\nEwing, Mayor E. L. Groutage, H, F.\nTiedje, George Rennison, J. Lloyd\nCrowe, K. A. Margeson, R. G. J.\nRichards, Dr. W, A. Coughlin and\nG. J. Kinnis.\nAnarchy Gains\n.   in North China\nSHANGHAI, Feb. 10 (Thursday)\n(AP)\u2014A grave state of anarchy and\nlawlessness today was reported\nstraining authority of Japanese in\nNorth China while their armies\nstruggled to conquer a vast area of\nCentral China along the Lunghai\nrailroad.\nDispatches from Tientsin said\nthat after the Japanese evicted Chinese officials in captured North China provinces, these areas relapsed\ninto banditry and civic disorder.\nDean Ready to Sign\nBRADENTON, Fla., Feb. 9 (API-\nDizzy Dean broke his unaccustomed\nsilence today to indicate he was\nanxious to smoke the pipe of peace\nwith officials of the St. Louis Cardinals\u2014to the tune of a $20,000 contract.\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\nHume Hotel..\nNelson, B. C.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor.\nSAMPLE ROOMS    :   EXCELLENT DINING ROOM\nEuropean Plan, $1.50 up\nHUME \u2014 W. H. Walker, Charles\nJoy, A. W. Carter, D. C. Garbutt,\n\u25a0'. W. J. Deans, Colin S. Martin, M,\n. Taylor, A. Ross, T. R. MacKenzie,\nVancouver; O. W. Humphry, South\nSlocan; W. A. Freeland, Moose Jaw;\nF. Gates, Portland, Ore.; Mr. and\nMrs. N. F. Brookes, W. S. Ellis, Reno\nMine; W. G. Keyt, New Westminster;\nS. Kohar, Retallack; A. l,. KoDerts,\nSalmon Arm; R. Brought, T. A.\nBums, Medicine Hat; E. S. Jones,\nCranbrook; H. Clever, New Denver.\nOccidental Hotel\n.05 Vernon St. Phone 897\nH. WAS8ICK, Prop.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nLicensed Premises\nMadden Hotel\nA Welcoms Awaits You\nJA8. E. MADDEN. Prop.\nCompletely Remodelled.\nHot and Cold Water.\nIn the HEART ot the'city\nVANCOUVER, B. C, HOTELS\n\"YOUR VANCOUVER HOME\"    Newly Renovated Throughout\nDufferin Hotel a^toson \"._*\n900 8eyroour St.     Vancouver, B.C.   Colom.rt| Alta,, Proprietor\nTRANSPORTATION - Passenger and Freight\nCRESTON Freight Truck\n2 ROUND TRIPS WEEKLY\nLEAVE NELSON TUESDAY AND FRIDAY\nLEAVE CRESTON WEDNESDAY AND SATURDAY\nPHONE 342 NELSON or 316 CRESTON\nASK THE RED TRUCK FOR SERVICE\nGLEN'S  TRANSFER\nP.O. Box 539  New office, 617 Vernon St.   Nelson, B. C.\nTractor Rescues\nSnowbound Folk\nNANAIMO, B. C, Feb. 0 (CP) .\nThree women and a man were safe\nat homes here tonight after a trac\ntor plow was used to rescue them\nfrom Nanaimo lakes district where\nthey h. d been marooned by snow-\nblocked roads since Sunday.\nThe plow was used tb clear the\nroad to first Nanaimo lake where\nMr. and Mrs. T. C. Mills, Mrs. Peter\nMaffeo and Mrs, Alan Hall were\nfound safe at the cabin of Albert\nSutton.\nMORE ABOUT\nDISORDERS\n(Continued From Page One)\nCounting of ballots will begin tomorrow morning and it was expected the 27 single-member constituencies would be decided during the\nday. In the 28th district, Queen's\nuniversity,'six candidates tare seeking four seats and proportional representation is used. The results\nthere were expected by the weekend.\nLITTLE 8I8TER8 VOTE\nBy an election oddity, two little\nsiBters, Lottie and Catherine Fletcher, 10 and 7 years old, respectively,\nvoted. They were cheered by a\ncrowd as they cast their ballots in\nthe Old Park division ot Belfast.\nThrough error their names were\nplaced on the voting: register and\nft was understood their votes would\nbe counted unless a challenge is entered. Under law the voting age is\n21. Women have the vote.\n04 CONTEST 31 8EAT8\nSixty-four candidates contested\nthe 31 seats at Stake. Acclamation\nfilled the remaining 21 in the 52-\nmember house of commons. Lord\nCraigavon's Unionist -government,\nwhich called the election earlier\nthan originally planned In order to\nask a mandate against union with\nSouthern Ireland, obtained 14 acclamations to six for the Nationalist\nand one lor Labor.\nGovernment candidates outnumbered any other group, with 20..\nThere were 11 Progressive Unionists,\neight Independent Unionists, seven\nLabor, three Nationalists and six Independents running under varied\ndesignations.\nArmed constabulary were called\nout in South Down to prevent any\nattempt of interference with the\nvoting. Prime Minister de Valera of\nEire was member for Down in the\nlast parliament although he did not\ntake his seat and, in fact, is banned\nfrom entering Northern Ireland.\nArmed police patrolled the border, especially in the neighborhood\nof Londonderry. There Republican\noutrages were feared similar to those\nwhich occurred during the visit ot\nthe King and Queen to Belfast in\nJuly.\t\nNICKASON K.O.'s\nSONNY BUXTON\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 9 (CP)' \u2014\nChuck Nickason ot Vancouver won\nover Sonny Buxton of Victoria by\na technical knockout in the fourth\nround of a scheduled 10-round main\nevent here tonight.\nTerrace Buildings\nDestroyed in Fire\nTERRACE, B. C, Feb. 9 (CP) \u2014\nFire today destroyed the British\nColumbia government liquor store\nand the dominion government telegraph office in this northern town,\n60 miles east of Prince Rupert.\nLoss was not estimated immediately- ;\nUrges Peace Prize\nfor Cordell Hull\nBUENOS AIRES, Feb. 9 (AP)-Dr.\nCarlos Saavedra Lamas, Argentine\nforeign minister and Nobel peace\nprize winner for 1936 said tonight\nhe had written the Nobel selection\ncommittee urging that the United\nStates secretary of state, Cordell\nHull, be awarded the 1938 peace\nprize.\nTrail Curling Results\nTRAIL, B. C. Feb. 9\u2014Results of\nTrail Curling club President's competition matches played here tonight\nfollow:\nL. G. Mowat,9, W. F. Doubt 9.\nP. H. Weldon\"-, J. P. Schofield 7.\nDonald McDonald 15, L. F. Tyson\n17.\nW. L. Wood 7, Dave Forest 6.\nJack Balfour 9, Walter Brady 13.\nS, R. Walley 10, J. Calvert 7.\nJ. Mark 12, Robert Somerville 8.\nJack Campbell 9, J. A. Wadsworth\n10.\nNorwegian Miss Wins\nSpeed Skating Title\nOSLO, Norway, Feb. 9 (AP)\u2014Lai-\nla Schou Nilsen of Norway won the\n500-metre event of the women's\nworld speed skating championships\ntoday .beating out Madeline Home\nof Beaver Dam, Wis., by five-tenths\nof a second. Glou Donkcr ot Holland\nwas third. Miss Nilsen was timed in\n50.7 seconds.\nSTEAMER IS SAFE\nLONDON, Feb. 9 (AP)\u2014Lloyd's\nagent at Barcelona, Spain, reported\ntoday the safe arrival there of the\nBritish steamer Peckham, which\nhad wirelessed yesterday that a\nplane of undisclosed nationality\nwas hovering over her in the western Mediterranean.\nPUR FREIGHTER DIES\nBISCOTASING, Ont., Feb. 9 (CP)\n\u2014George MacKay believed to be\nmore than, 108 years old and known\nas a fur freighter throughout northern Ontario, is dead. MacKay, whose\nIndian name was Paskoh, meaning\nIndian freighter, died at Mettagam\nreserve Monday.\nIN HOSPITAL\nVANCOUVER, Ftb.9 (CP)-Mah\nIling, junk collector, was in hospital\ntoday with injuries believed to have\nbeen suffered in an affray here last\nnight.\n\t\nSASKATOON (CP) - Taxes here\nwere paid at the rate of $8000 a day\nduring the first tew weeks in January. Civic officials said tax prepayments were heavier than last\ny.ar.    )\n\u25a0\nTen Games Played\nby Nelson Curlers\nTen games in the U. D. L. sectional competition of the Nelson\nCurling club Tuesday night resulted as follows;\nW. T. Fotheringham 7, Sid Haydon 9.\nRobert Smillie 9, William Brown\n7.\nMickey McEwan 6, Al Jeffs 11.\nJ. G. Bennett 9, E. H. Woolls 5.\nWilfrid Allan 9, J. B. Gray 6.\nArt Wallace 10, E. E. L. Dewdney 8.\nH. M. Whimster 1, Leo McKinnon 9.\nGordon Pickering 7, Arthur Baitd\n9 a\n'W. R. Dunwoody 10, David\nLaughton 7. -        '\nJohn Teague 9, John Dingwall 7.\nTrail Tigers at\nNelson Thursday\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 9\u2014Trail Tigers,\nwho have one win of the loop under\ntheir belts, will play their second\ngame of the West Kootenay Junior\nhockey loop at Nelson Thursday\nnight.\nTigers lineup follows;\n\u2022 Pickell, goal; Church, Marcus\nSmith and Casey, defence; Appleton,\nKendall and Petrosky; Markeson,\nCalleys and Devlin; Komesh, MacDonald and Cornwall, forwards.\nMANY FEATURES\nFQR CARNIVAL\nVISITORS CITY\nCarnival visitors to Nelson will be\nwelcomed at each entertainment\ncentre in the city, and a grand variety of specially arranged entertainment will be offered to them.\nSkating,, skiing, curling, hockey,\ntheatres; and the. junior board of\ntrade \"Gold Rush\" will be included\nIn the extensive program planned\nfor'thelweek-end, when- transportation tampanies are.offering special\nlow rate fares from district southern\ninterior points to Nelson.\nCongdon Outplays\nWeather to Take\nFirst Round Golf\nSAN FRANCISCO, Feb.'9 (API-\nHeavy wind, rain and spongy turf\nbanded together today to make a\njoke of the scoring efforts ot the\nfield in the first round of the $5000\nSan Francisco match play open goll\ntournament.\nWhen the firing was over and 183\nstorm-beaten fairway troupers reported with tales of balls blown 75\nyards off line, and hats out of the\ncounty, Charles Congdon, tall young\nprofessional from Tacoma, led the\nparade with a 75.\nOne stroke behind the leader came\nthe pre-tournamertt favorite, Law-\nson Little, winner of the event a\nyear ago. Little, out in 42, produced\na fine 34 on the back nine for a total\nof 76.\nPedens Lead in\n6-Day Bike Race\nSAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 9 (API-\nFour teams were tied in mileage for\nthe lead of San Francisco's six-day\nbicycle race tonight as the leaders\npedalled past the 1139th mile at 9:30\np.m.,the 73rd hour.\nThe Victoria, B.C., brothers team\nof Torchy and Doug Peden led the\nrace by virtue of an edge in sprint\npoints.\nSheiks and Newsmen\nWin Trail Hoop Games\nTRAIL, B. C., Feb. 9\u2014Sheiks walloped Meakin 51-26 in a men's senior B game of the Trail Basketball\nleague at the Memorial hall tonight.\nAmazons defaulted a ladies' division game to Young Tories.\nNewsmen hammered Tailors 45-20\nin a men's intermediate go.\nInsurgent Push Is\nPast First Stage\nHENDAYE, France, Feb. 9 (API-\nSpanish insurgents completed' the\n\"first stage\" of an attempted push\nto the sea through government controlled eastern Spain and halted\ntoday to bury their dead and take\ninventory of captured prisoners and\nsupplies.\nGehrig   Still   Wants\n$41,000 Contract\nNEW YORK, Feb. 9 (AP)-Lou\nGehrig is planted on his front porch\nup at New Rochelle, swearing by\nall that's Hollywood that he wont\nsign with the Yankees for a cent less\nthan $41.000\u2014but you know he will,\neventually.\nFor Lou, who will be 35 next June,\nloves to play baseball, and he still\ncan play it better than almost anybody, including his illustrious young\nteammate, Joe DiMaggio. Also -he\nstill has ahead a few ot those $36,000\nseasons like Colonel Ruppert offered him as a renewal of his 1937\ncontract, and that's good money\nwhen the average bank isn't advertising for a president.\nGUY'S HOSPITAL WINS\nLONDON, Feb. 9 (CP Cable) .\u2014\nGuy's hospital defeated Royal Air\nForce 11-9 in an English Rugby union match played today.\nEvery cold should be tre-ted promptly\nwith-a remedy made expressly for the purpose. When a cold strikes take portiinion\nC.B.Q. Tablets at once. They curb a cold\nquick in three distinct ways; (1) They\nfight the cold germs at their iitcnul\n..retry (2) clear out the poisons; (3) check\nthe. fever. Ask for Dominion CB.Q.\nTablets\u2014the chocolate-coated family\nstandby for colds (25< at all drug stores)\nand insist on the genuine. is\n100K .OR THE T Mm C COP ON TH E UTTU ND HI\n\"0N    r\u2014e,   A\nC.B9;\nRossland Takes\nColeman 5-4\nCOLEMAN, Alta,, Feb. 9\u2014Rowland Miners edged out the Coleman Canadians 5-4 In a Weat Kootenay Hockey league fixture here\n-  tonight, \u2022     \u25a0 ^_L__:_\u00bb  '.,-\nMORE ABOP. ,\n..\u25a0MILE Will\n(Continued From Page One)\nGales levelled buildings, trees,\ntelephone and electric lines in the\nvalley and mountain areas as well\nas along the coast,\nHigh-efficiency telephone circuits\nserving radio stations went out. Electric service halted abruptly in a\ndozen communities,\nSacramento, hospitals reported a\ndozen storm Injuries.\nA'60-mlle gale lifted the root of\na hangar at-Sacramento airport.\nAt Burlingame, south of San Francisco, a tree fell against the side of\na southbound Southern Pacific local train breaking windows in a\ncoach and injuring a woman passenger.\nHANGAR COLLAPSES\nThe wind registered 68 miles an\nhour at Oakland airport. Airplane\nhangars; isolated buildings and\ncountless shacks collapsed under the\nwind force.\nThe hurricane \u25a0apparently struck\nhardest near the Farralon Islands,\n25 miles west of San Francisco. It\nregistered 76 miles an hour at San\nFrancisco airport.\n\u2022 Streams swollen by near record\nbreaking: rain and snow continued to\nrise. Weather Forecaster Thomas R.\nHeed, forecast rain again for tomorrow and by the same token predicted the storm would tie the California record of 15 straight days of\nrain, set February 10 to 24,1936.\nSEAHAWKS DEFEAT\nPORTLAND BY42\nSEATTLE, Feb. 9 (API-Manager\nDanny Cox celebrated \"Danny Cox\nnight\" by figuring In two scoring\nassists and making two trips to the\npenalty pox lor obstreperousness on\nthe ice as his Seattle Seahawks defeated Portland tonight in a Pacific\nCoast Hockey league game, 4-2.\nMrs. Henry Wiebe,\nIs Laid at Rest\nUp at Rossland\n' ROSSLAND, B. C, Feb. 9-The\nfuneral Mrs. Henry Wiebe, formerly Miss Stella Jorgenson, of Nelson and Rossland, took place from\nSt. Andrew's United church Wednesday afternoon, Rev. T. W. Reed\nofficiating. Burial was In Mountain\nView cemetery, the pallbearers being Joseph Jorgenson, Gilbert Jorgenson, David Jorgenson, Martin\nPetersen, Isaac Petersen and Nels\nHansen.\nPresnell's Brass\nBottle Wins Sub\nLOS ANGELES, Cal., Feb. 9 (AP)\n\u2014Rain wrecked the feature part of\ntoday's race program at Santa Anita park, and E. E. Presnell's Brass\nBottle won the substitute sixth race\n\u2014the first substitute required this\nseason at the Arcadia track.\nWih Deline Bank and Berenda\nrunning in place and show to Brass\nBottle in the sixth, attention centered on the fourth race, the $1200\nSausalito purse at a mile and one-\nsixteenth.\nLucien B. Combs' Woodberry\novertook the pace-setting Foxcatch-\ner Farm's Mandingham, making its\ndebut, and won by three-quarters\nof a length, with the Blue Moon\nstable's Warfellow a neck back of\nMandingham,\nTrail Gyros Are\nGuests, Rossland\nROSSLAND, B. C, Feb. 9\u2014Mem-\nbers of the Trail Gyro club were\nguests of the Rossland club at supper at the Allan hotel here tonight\nfollowing which an evening's curling was enjoyed at the rink,\n\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u00a3\nFrom$1 A.00\nto $\u00a30.00\nON THE PURCHASE OF A\nNORTHERN ELECTRIC\nRADIO\nFROM NOW TILL MARCH 1\nWE CAN OFFER YOU THE\nGREATEST TRADE-IN\nALLOWANCE THAT YOU\nHAVE  EVER RECEIVED!\nWe Can Positively Save\nYou Many Dollars\nTHIS IS TRULY AN EXCEPTIONAL\nCHANCE TO BUY A\nNORTHERN\nELECTRIC\n1938'S GREATEST RADIO VALUE\nCARNIVAL VISITORS\u2014WE INVITE YOU TO SEE\nOUR ELECTRICAL DEPARTMENT\nFINK'S FURNITURE\nPHONE 553\nNELSON, B. C.\n\u25a055!\n\u25a0\nGOLD, KIMBERLEY, CARRIES OFF\nTHREE PRIZES OF SELKIRK'SPIEL\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Feb. 9 \u2014\nGold of Kimberley carried back to\nthe mining city the Grand Aggregate, Cameron and Grand Challenge\ncups, won in the finals ot the Selkirk Curling association bonspiel,\nwhich with the exception of one\nfinal match, wound up at this city\ntoday.\nMilne of Cranbrook and Sinclair\nof Creston claimed the remaining\ntrophies, the Cosmopolitan cup and\nVisitors' cup.\nPlay reached into the semi-finals of the Consolation competition\nlate tonight and today McPhee of\nCranbrook and Leaman of Chapman\nCamp will battle it out for final\nhonors.\nTHE RESULTS:\nGold of Kimberley won Grand\nAggregate with Milne of Cranbrook\nrunner-up.\nCameron Cup:\nSemi-finals;  Milne beat Spence,\nGold beat Sanderson.\nFinals: Gold beat Milne.\nGrand Challenge;\nGold beat Home.\nCosmop.litan:\nMilne Beat Andrews.\nVisitors' Competition:\nCleland beat Home, Sinclair beat\nJohnson, Reed beat Staples, Leaman\nbeat Gold.\nSemi-finals: Leaman beat Cleland, Sinclair beat Reed.\nFinals: Sinclair beat Leaman.\nConsolation Cup:\nMcPhee beat Barber, Staples beat\nSneath, Johnson beat Larson, Reed\nbeat McCrindle, Leaman beat MacKinnon, Cleland beat Sanderson.\nSecond round: McPhee beat Staples, Johnson beat Reed, Leaman beat\nCleland, Spence beat Sinclair.\nSemi-finals: McPhee beat Johnson, Leaman beat Spence.\nThis competition is to be completed tomorrow.\n'Zukers' Win Trail\nHoop Game 25-23\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 9\u2014Steve Zuk's\n\"Zukers\" after snatching a three-\npoint lead in the first halt, prevented Speedies from paring off more\nthan one point during the remainder\nof a Central school boys' basketball\nleague game at Central school gymnasium this afternoon, to win by a\n25-23 score.\nTeams and scores follow:\nSpeedies\u2014Nini Forte 11, Warren\nLangille 3, Kenneth Stainton 2, Bob\nMilne, Maldwyn Jones 6, Jimmy\nMandeville, Jack McLeod 1 and\nLoyal Brown.\nZukers\u2014Steve Zuk 9, Angus McDonald 12, Joe Monaldi 2, Archie\nMartin 2, Allister McAuly, Tommy\nScheer and Jimmy Wilson.\nOscar Lazzarotto and \"Brick\" Edmunds refereed.\nMAS0HITE\nLocal Dealer and Installer\nW. H. FOSTER\n810 Victoria St.,\nPhone 89211 Nelson, B.C.\nSS\nHe Would RatherTalk Than Write\n... That's Why He Likes LONG BISTANCE\n\"I suppose I'm like most people. I'd rather\ndo business by talking than writing; and-the\nfellows I do business with would rather tail-\nto me than sit down and write an answer. That's\nwhy I use the long-distance telephone. It's\n. fast and easy, and I get the disoussion fin\nished right away instead of waiting while\nletters are written back and forth.\"\nBRITISH   COLUMBIA   TELEPHONE   COMPANY\na__8_aa\n NELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. (..-THURSDAY MORNING, FEB. 10, 1991,\nMcDonald Guilty\nRetaining Goods;\nGets Six Months\nJoint charges against John McDonald and George Murphy, arrested January 29 and lodged In\nthe city jail on counts of being in\npossession of two silk dresses,\nKnowing them to have been stolen\nfrom the Hudson's Bay company\n\u00bbtore, were withdrawn -when the\ntwo men faced William Brown, po-\ntce magistrate, in city police court\nrednesday morning, and individual charges of the same kind laid\nagainst the \"men,\nTall, heavy-set John McDonald\npleaded guilty to the charge after\na slight hesitation, and was sentenced to serve six months with\nhard labor in the Nelson jail.\n\"That is all the trouble I ever\nhad in my life,\" he said,-when asked by Magistrate Brown about two\ncertified copies of conviction against\nhim, received from David Ritchie,\nthief constable of Calgary. The\nAlberta charges both involved\ntheft cases, with sentences of 30\ndays and four days.\nMcDonald has been in Nelson\nbefore, working 'for a construction\ncompany one summer when the\npole line was put through from\nMidway to Nelson. He had been\nin Nelson for about two months\nprior to his arrest, intending to\nstay here for the winter and go\nback east in the spring to work\nin the mines. He had relatives in\nthe United States, but no immediate family.\nIn the case of George Murphy,\nthe joint charge was withdrawn,\nand an individual charge of the\nsame kind immediately silbstitut-\ned. At the request of Alex Stewart,\nchief of police, Murphy's case was\nremanded for another two days,\nuntil Friday, because certified copies of convictions against Murphy\nhad not been received from Kamloops, where he had been sentenced.\nPOSTPONE GATHERING\nOTTAWA, Feb. 9 (CP)-Gather-\ning of Conservative senators, members of parliament and representatives of provincial organizations,\nscheduled to be held in Ottawa Feb.\n25-26 has been postponed to March\n4-5, owing to the senate adjourning\nuntil March 1.\nWAKE UP YOUR\nLIVER BILE\u2014\nAnd You'll Jump Out of Bed In the\nMorning Ruin' to Go\nTh. liver Bhonld pour out two pounds of\n\" liquid bile Into your bowels daily. If this bile\nla not flowing freely, your food doean'tdtgeat.\nIt juat decays in the bowels. Gaa bloats up\nj your stomach. You get constipated. Harmful\npolaona go into tbe body, and you feel sour.\nsunk and the world looke punk.\nAmerebowelmovementdoesn'tnlwayaget\nnt the cnuse. You need something that works\non the liver aa well. It takes those _-ood, old\nCarter'a Little Liver Pills to get these two\npounds of bile flowing freely and make you\nfeel \"up and up\". Harmless and gentle, they\n,   make the bile flow freely. They do the work\nof calomel bat have no calomel or mercury in\n.. them. Ask for Carlaifa Lltth Uvea-BUla byname I Stubbornly refuse anything else. 25c\n(Advt.)\nFire Hoses Burst\nHome Destroyed\nTOTAWA BOROUGH, N. J.,\nFeb. 9 (AP) \u2014 Surveying the ashes of her home today, Mrs. John\nZajac told a story about three\nfire departments and the hoses\nthat leaked.\nAt the first smell of smoke she\ntelephoned to the Wayne township firehouse and was told to\nsend the alarm to the Totowa\nBorough department Getting .mixed up again in more frantic phoning, she told her story tb the Little Falls firemen who also referred her to the local department.\nShe finally got the right number\nand three companies arrived.\nTheir hoses burst and leaked\u2014\nfrom improper drying, the chief\nexplained \u2014 and the fire burned\nitself out in three hours!\nM.R.K. Bantams\nBeat F.A.C. 4-0\nAfter taking the top honors in\nthe first two rounds of the league,\nM.R.K. bantams handed the Fair-\nview A.C. team a 4-0 shutout in the\nopening third round game that featured eight penalties in the second\nperiod and two penalty shots awarded to the losers. The M.R.K. team\nscored three goals in the second\nperiod and one in the third, when\nthree penalties were given.\nDavid Slader, Jack Whitehead,\n\"Red\" Wassick and Paul Hielscher\nscored, with \"Red\" Wassick getting\nassists on Slader's and Hietscher's\ngoal. Jack Whitehead and Fred Hin-\nnit spent six minutees in the penalty\nbench; Jack Ludlow, four minutes;\nBilly Ludlow, David Slader and Bill\nHolland, two minutes each.\nJack Morrison, Alfred Ball and\nHowie Breeze refereed.\nTeams were:\nM.R.K.\u2014Jim Ritchie, \"Red\" Wassick, Bill Holland, Robert Percival,\nDavid Slader, Paul Hielscher, Jack\nWhitehead, 'Ritchie Wassick, Alex\nAllan, Jerry Jerram, Bernard Mcj\nNicol.\nFairview A.C\u2014Bobby Ludlow,\nBilly Ludlow, Jack Ludlow, Fred\nHinnit, Jack Greer, Mac Norris, Wally Matheson, Charlie Johnson, Joe\nCrosby, Bob Milne, Bill Buchanan.\nBRITAIN READY TO\nSUPPORT AMERICAN\nPOLICY IN CHINA\nLONDON, Feb. 9 (CP-Havas)-\nProfessor Gilbert Murray, chairman of the League of Nations Union, declared today he had \"every\nreason to believe that we have\ngiven the American government assurances that we are ready at once\nto support them in any action they\nmay take in China.\" He urged \"the\ngovernment to say openly to the\nwhole world that they condemned\nthe invasion.\"\nJAPANESE SOLDIERS\n'ARE COURT-MARTIALED\nSHANGHAI, Feb. 9 (AP)-Shin-\nrokuro Hidaka, ranking Japanese\ndiplomat in China, announced today \"mpre than 10 Japanese sol-\ns_l|)_(. hjv\u00bb\u00ab been,, court-mar-ialled\narid punished for breaches of military discipline\" at Nanking.\nC.B.C. Juveniles\nBeat Fairview\nby 9-0 Score\nForced to play the entire game\nwithout a substitute, Fairview juveniles proved no match for the high-\nstepping C. B. C. squad, who handed their rivals- a 9-0 trimming in a\nleague game Tuesday evening. The\nwinners scored four goals in the\nfirst period, three in the second and\ntwo in the last session. Alfred Ball\nscored three goals and was credited\nwith one assist. Elmer Gelinas and\nCharlie Lindsay each scored two\ngoals, with Gelinas getting one assist; Frank Raukets scored one and\nsnared two assists. Johnny Olson\nscored the other counter. Les Trainer received the only penalty of the\ngame.\nHowie Breeze and \"Donks\" Scott\nrefereed.\nTeams were:\nC. B. C. \u2014 Doug Blais, Frank Raukets, Elmer Gelinas, Fred Park, Les\nTrainer, Alfred Ball, Ernie DeGiro-\nlamo, Johnny Olson and Charlie\nLindsay.\nFAIRVIEW A. C. - Tommy Cookson, Robin Clayton, George Ferguson, Emmett Anderson, George\nMilne and Coleman.\nCharged Bank\nRobbery, Langley\nMURRAYVILLE, B. C, Feb. 9\n(CP) \u2014 John and William Wasylzn-\nchuck were in Oakalla jail today\nawaiting trial on charges of robbery\nwith violence, on connection with\nthe holdup of the Royal Bank of\nCanada at Langley Prairie, January\n24, when two masked bandits escaped with about $3000.\nQueen Patsy Opens\nthe Banff Carnival\nBANFF, Alta., Feb. 8\u2014 \"Queen\"\nPatsy O'Connor of Butte, Mont.,\nwith full pomp declared the 22nd\nannual Banff Winter Sports Car-\nnival open, from her ice throne\nin the towns centre. \"Her Majesty\"\nsaid \"I am not unmindful of the\nhonor you have done me in electing\nme your first United States Queen\nto rule over you.\"\nIn his introductory address Major P. J. Jenning, superintendent of\nBanff Nationa.1 Park, pointed out the\nties between Canada and the United States, saying \"we belong to the\ngreatest empire the world has ever\nknown, our Carnival Queen is from\na country which Is the flower of\nthe world democracy.\"\nSurrounded by her ladies-in-waiting, daughters of Butte, Mont, and\nof Banff, \"Queen Patsy\" received\nan enthusiastic -welcome. The most\npretentious parade in recent years\nescorted her to her throne.\nTODAY WE AMHOUHCE\nAMEW\"LOWESTWCEDwCAR\naMNUa-NCUTO\n_____\u25a0\u25a0>\u25a0\u25a0>.\u2022 \"...on \u00bb \u2022\u00ab\"m> \u2022*\nTHE BIGGEST CAR THE LOWEST\nPRICE FIELD HAS EVER SEEN!\nTHE SMOOTHEST RUNNING! THE\nSTURDIEST! THE SAFEST! YET\nONE OF THE MOST ECONOMICAL!\n(\"Yatt It's Biggest end Bes. i\" Soy Owners 'of fhe ''Other Three\"\nLeading Lowesf Priced Cart.)\n12-Inch Whiolb. 6 Cylinder!\n... 83 Horsepower\n'932\nfor 3-paiionger Coupe; $966forBr\u00abugh-\nomj $989 for 4-passenger Victoria Coupe,\nlh* only 4-pastenger coup* In the lowosi\nprice field with all passenger* riding\nInildi; $ 1009 for Sedan\u2014fully equipped,\ndelivered at Tilbury, Ont., Federal taxes\npaid\u2014transportation costs and local\ntaxes,If any.axtm. Attractively low time\npayment terms, with new Hudson Plan.\nWEST KOOTENAY DEALER8\nKootenay Motors (Nelson,) Ltd.\n213 BAKER ST. PHONE 1.7 NELSON, B. C.\nTHE SMEDLEY CARACE CO., Nelson, B. C. BUTORAC MOTORS LTD., Trail, B. C.\nW. Schad, Cranbrook\nLaid to Last Rest\nCRANBROOK, B. C. - The lu-\nneral of the late William Schad was\nheld Wednesday afternoon from the\nMasonic temple in Cranbrook. Mr.\nSchad was a pioneer of the district,\nhaving a garage and stage line at\nBull River and a farm in that district in the early days and recently\na 'garage at Kimberley. He was a\npast master of Ihe North Star lodge\nNo. 30 at Fort Steele and was affiliated with the Selkirk lodge at Kimberley and a memher of the Royal\nArch Masons at Cranbrook.\nThe pallbearers were' T. Allen,\nW. Glanville, E. Heinz, P. Richardson, A. Tracy and E. T. Cooper.\nMany people from Kimberley were\namong those attending the funeral.\nMORE ABOUT\nESLING DEMANDS\n(Continued From Page One)\nMr. Esling cited the case of other\nimporters who were likewise\" required to pay damages and to sign\nundertakings not to repeat the offence. One British Columbia firm\nwas threatened with a damage suit\nin the sum ol $2500 and had to\ncompromise. A Winnipeg firm received a shipment of- radios from\nthe States, paid the duty and received a clearance but before the\nshipment was unpacked they were,\nthreatened by the holding company\nand , compelled to enter into an\nagreement to pay 10 per cent on\nall sets sold, pay all legal fees and\nagree not to further import,\nMr. Esling insisted that the government take immediate \"steps to\nremedy these conditions. He declared that there was no necessity\nto refer the matter to the courts\nbut that the minister, under the patent act, had power to break the monopoly. He told the government that\npractices -such as these were responsible, more than anything else,\nfor an atmosphere of discontent,\nshaking public confidence and undermining the security of responsible government\nMr. Esling also urged that industry across Canada could relieve the\ndistressed condition of youth by\nadopting the npprentice system in\nuse at Trail, and urged that hundreds of youn\u201e men would eagerly\ngrasp the opportunity for training\nas pilots, engineers, surveyors, mechanics, ground men -nd every other\nbranch of aviation.\nOPEN FEDERAL\nBUILDINGS TO BLIND\nThe West Kootenay member also\nurged the government to permit the\nCanadian National institute for the\nblind to establish concession stands\nin federal buildings throughout\nCanada. He said these stands were\nbuilt subject to the approval of the\nDominion architect. They were\nstocked by the Canadian National\ninstitute for the blind with papers,\nperiodicals, tobacco and like, merchandise and placed in charge of a\nblind attendant This attendant was\ngiven all the net profits, with the\nexecption of three per cent, which\nwas deduced for depreciation. and\nfor keeping equipment in shape.\nMr. Esling said there were 200 such\nstands in provincial and private office buildings across Canada, but\nthat the federal government had\nnot granted consent for placing them\nin federal buildings. He said such\nstands would provide employment\nfor hundreds of sightless young\nmen, and that the United States had\nrecently adopted the system inaugurated by the Canadian National\ninstitute for the blind, and had\nemployed the Canadian placement\nofficer,^who is also blind, to supv-\nintend this work. In addition the\nUnited States government had donated a generous grant to get the\nwork under way,\nMr. Esling concluded his address\nby urging the government to accept his bill, which would exempt\nhotels, restaurants, lodge halls,\nstores, skating rinks and other places\nfrom the payment of fees for the\nuse of music in public places. Such\nfees are now collected under the\nCopyright act by the Canadian Performing Rights society.\nGIRLS ESCAPE FROM\nINDUSTRIAL SCHOOL\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 0 (CP) \u2014\nAided by a male accomplice seven\ngirls escaped from the girls' industrial school here last night.\nThe girls shattered a window and\nleaped to freedom at the same time\nas the attendant in charge, Miss M,\nMurray, was answering a knock at\nthe front door, As soon as she opened the door the caller, a man,\nturned, leaped down the stairs and\nfled into the darkness.\nOPPOSES ABNORMAL\nWARSHIP BUILDING\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (AP) -\nJeannette Rankin of Montana, the\nfirst woman member of the United\nStates congress, opposing an $800,-\n000,000 expansion of the navy, told\ncongress, today \"wholly abnormal\"\nwarship' building by the United\nStates would intensify international\ntensions\" and speed the world toward war.\n- PAGE THItn\nHad Indigestion\nGas and Pains\nIn Stomach and Bowels\nThe procets of digestion depends\nlargely on the condition of the\nstomach, and when it is unable to\ndo its work properly there will be i.\nrising and souring of food, a gnawing\nand burning sensation in the stomach,\nbelching and pressure of gas, flatulency, etc.\nBurdock Blood Bitters starts an\nincreased flow of gastric juice so\nessential for the proper digestion of\nfood.\nMiss M. C. Weiss, Mapova, Alta.,\nwrites:\u2014\"For a long fame I was\ntroubled with indigestion. My\nstomach would not digest my food,\nand I would have gas pressure and\nsour stuff coining up in my mouth.\nI used Burdock Blood Bitten, and\nafter taking one bottle I felt a\nchange for the better, so I decided\nto keep on, and -Iter the third bottle\nI could eat anything and not be\nbothered with the rising and souring\nof my food.\"\nPut up by Tbe T. Htlbui-n Co., Ltd.\n\u2022 (Advt.)\nftj^ohV^a| \u20ac(rmp8ttos\nINCORPORATED   3\"? MAV 1070.\nBIG\nEVENT FOR THURSDAY\nSpecial value and bargains in Blankets \u2014- Comforters \u2014 Sheets \u2014 Pillow Cases\nand Bedspreads\u2014A chance to stock up at money saving prices. Limited quantities.\nSO COME EARLY\nENGLISH MAKE\nSUBSTANDARDS\n15 ONLY pure wool blankets\u2014slightly\nimperfect. Plain white Or with blue borders. In two price'groups for quick selling.\n}h or full bed size. \u2014 Each\n$3.49 and $4.49\nFLANNELETTE SHEETS\n30 ONLY full Size plaid sheets I\nIn a size 70x84. Limit tfj|-AA\nof four. Each tJl.UU\nWOOL FILLED\nCOMFORTERS\n12 ONLY rich rayon taffeta comforters\u2014reversible two-tone effects. An, outstanding value for\nthis event. * J TA\nSizes 60x72. Each .... ifl't.DU\n_[!\u00ab_\u00bb\n%t_i\nif\n*\nBIG\n.BLANKET\n^BARGAIN\nThis is the chance of a life\ntime to secure a HBC Point\nBlanket at less than cost.\n20 only 4-point Blankets,\nsire 72x90 in a choice of\ncolors \u2014 slightly soiled\nand water marked as\nresult of the recent robbery.' Regular value\n$21.SO pair. (Limit of\ntwo). To go out\nat each\n$7\nNO PHONE OR C. O. D. ORDERS\nTWO TONE REVERSIBLE\nWOOL THROWS\n12 ONLY two-tone throws in long staple virgin\nwool. Richly bound with matching satin tJC'QC\nribbon. Size 60x80. Each .'. tpD.I\/U\nFEATHER\nCOMFORTERS\nSterilized fine feathers covered with featherproof sateen with panels in contrast.\nBig range of colors. flJP ylfl\nSizes 66x72. Each tfOAV\nBLEACHED SHEETS\nWabasso make\u2014a spfendid quality for\nhousehold use. Plain hem in a siz\n70x90. Special, each\nBIG FLANNELETTE\nSHEETS\nNote the extra sixe of these. 80x90.\nThe heaviest and best quality made\nin Canada. All perfect new goods.\nColored borders\u2014whipped\nsingly. Pa.r\nENGLISH MAKE\n1 $2.95\nWOOL BLANKETS\n6 pairs only big warm blankets\u2014rose or blue borders. Full double\nbed size\u2014-66x86. Specially priced for this event.\nPair\t\nCotton Pillow Slips\nStrong and will give lots of wear. T       *1 AA\nSize40\"   D For tPl.UU\n\u2014Bedding, Second Floor, HBC\nLow Priced Plans\nfor Homes Under\nHousing Scheme\nOTTAWA, Feb. 9 (CP) - Ten\ndesigns for low-cost residences\nwere chosen today as winners ol\nthe architectural contest conducted by the finance department as\na part of the program carried on\nunder the Dominion Housing Act,\nWinners were firms and architects\nin Ontario, Quebec and British Columbia.\nCreators of. the designs for working will receive $250 each. Winners\ninclude Harold Cullerne, Vancouver.\nWorking plans of the chosen designs will be sold to prospective\nbuilders for $10 a set.\nSays Young Folk\nJoining Fascists\nQUEBEC, Feb. 9 (CP)\u2014Before\nthe Quebec legislature today was a\nwarning that the Union Nationale\ngovernment should keep a close\neye on the growth of fascism in\nthe province.\nCleophas Bastien (Lib. Berthier)\nsaid young people were .enrolling\nin fascism \"by the hundreds\" in\nMontreal every week.\nWASHINGTON MINERS\nSAY B. C. COAL IS\nSERIOUS COMPETITOR\nSEATTLE, Feb. 9 (API\u2014Trail\nexaminer M. J. Trolinski of the\nnational bituminous coal commission was told yesterday British Columbia coal is a serious competitor\nwith Washington mines for the\nPuget Sound market.\nNEWSECRETARY OF\nSTATE IS NAMED\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (API-\nPresident Roosevelt today nominated Adolf A. Berle, Jr., of New\nYork, long an administration advisor, to be an assistant secretary of\nstate.\nBerle would replace Hugh Wilson,\nwho has been named ambassador\nto Germany.\nHOLD SAXOPHONIST\nNEW YORK, Feb. 9 (AP) - Mrs.\nHarriet Brown Neilsen, former United States national amateur diving champion, whose bruised body\nwas found yesterday in a furnished\nManhattan room died as the result of \"a homicidal assault\".\nEarlier today, William King Lof-\ntus, 45, saxophone player, who was\nMrs. Nellaen's drinking companion\nand said he spent the night with\nher in the furnished room, was held\nwithout bail in homicide court for\nhearing Mo\u00bbday on a charge of\nsuspicion in connection with 'her\ndeath. .\nCURIOUS COINCIDENCE\nCALEDONIA, Ont,, Feb. 9 (CP)\n\u2014Mrs. J. Hyslop, Greenville, who\ncelebrated her 90th birthday Saturday, has just learned she has a\nnamesake, Mrs. T. Hyslop, on the\nCaledonia highway, who had the\nsame name, Richardson, before\nshe was married. She also has\na family of nine children, seven\nof them living, the same number as in Mrs. J. Hyslop's family. Mrs. J. is going to write to\nMrs. T. to see if the similarities\nrun any farther.\nDEATHS      .\nBy The Canadian Press\nHALIFAX \u2014 Dr. J. N. Mack, 95,\nNova Scotia's oldest physician.\nNEW YORK \u2014 George Daley, 68,\nsports editor of the New York Herald Tribune.\nOTTAWA \u2014 Charles B. Powell,\n79, prominent businessman and\nsportsman.\nPHILADELPHIA - William Turtle, 70, auditor of the Evening Bulletin.\nEDMONTON \u2014 P. G. Thomson,\nK. C\u201e 63, prominent Edmonton barrister.\nBELIEVE BODY THAT\nxOF CAPTAIN BUTT\nCHELTENHAM, England, Feb. 9\n(AP)\u2014Police said today they were\nnearly convinced a dismembered\nbody taken from the River Severn was that of Captain William B.\nButt and it had been cut up at the\nhome of Captain Butt's dead friend,\nthe dancer Brian Sullivan, who\nhas committed suicide.\nB. c. WILY get justice\nMINISTER IS ASSURED\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 9 (CP)-Hon.\nK. C. MacDonald, British Columbia\nMinister of Agriculture,' said on his\nreturn from Ottawa, that he was\n\"quite satisfied that Ottawa will\ndo everything to see that we get\njustice.' in the trade negotiations\ninvolving Great Britain, United\nStates and Canada. \u2022\nALBERTA TO STUDY\nINSURANCE SCHEME\nEDMONTON, Feb. 9 (CP)-Fed-\neral proposals for dominion jurisdiction over unemployment insurance will be placed before the Alberta legislature session opening tomorrow it was announced today\nby Premier Aberhart.\nCaucus of the Soeial Credit members of the Alberta legislature resumed today. '      ,\nTHEFT ATTEMPT FAILS\n.VANCOUVER, Feb. 9 (CP)-Safe-\ncrackers'made ah unsuccessful attempt to open the office strong box\nat Summerfield's Ltd., hpxe last\nnight.\nWallie's Childhood\nHome Is for Rent\nBALTIMORE, Feb. 9 (UP)-\nThe childhood home of the Duchess of Windsor, complete with its\nreputedly lucky bathtub, its red\nwallpaper and its 20-foot mural\nof the duke and duchess, is for\nlease. The house, converted into\na museum, is to be closed because\nit was not earning any money.\nDurban to Have\nNew Air Base\nDURBAN, South Africa, Feb. 9\n(CP-Reuters)\u2014Congella, the industrial area of Durban is to become\nthe terminus of Imperial Airways'\nflying-boat service\u2014the most ambitious airways terminus of jts kind\nin the southern hemisphere. The\nbase will cost between \u00a380,000 and\n\u00a390,000,\nBELIEVES PIRATICAL\nATTACKS ON BRITISH\nSHIPS WILL CEASE\nLONDON, Feb. 9 (CP Cable)-\nAlfred Duff Cooper, first lord of\nthe admiralty, told the House of\nCommons today the government believes measures taken to counteract\nthe renewed outbreak of piratical\nattacks on British shipping in the\nMediterranean'will nave the desired\neffect.\nWOULD MARK ALL\nIMPORTED LUMBER\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (AP)-\nSenator Bone (Dem., Washington)\nurged a senate finance committee\ntoday to approve an amendment\nto the tariff act which would make\nit mandatory that all lumber imported into the United States be marked\nto denote its origin.\nPOPE CONCERNED OVER\nCONDITION OF WORLD\nVATICAN CITY, Feb. 9 (CP-Havas) \u2014 Pope Pius today expressed\nconcern over the international situation. Addressing 300 newly-married couples, the pontiff told them\nthey \u25a0 constituted the hope of the\nchurch and \"of civil society which\nespecially needs you in these terrible, threatening times.\"\nKILLS WOLF WITH AXE\nPLEVNA, Ont., Feb. 8 (CP)-\nLeslio Grant, veteran guide in\nthis north Frontenac country district saw a wolf crossing Fortune\nlake. Grant, on skates, gave chase\nand overtook the animal. A lusty\nswing of his axe, Grant's only wea\npon stunned the wolf and the\nrest was easy.\nSEEK ABOLITION\nOF APPEALS TO\nPRIVY COUNCIL\nOTTAWA, Feb. 9 (CP)-Abolition'\nof appeals to the Imperial privy\ncouncil is proposed in a bill which\nHon. C. H, Cahan (Cons,, Montreal,\nSt. Lawrence-St. George) will Introduce into the house of commons\nthis session.\nWILL INVESTIGATE\nCANCER TREATMENTS\nTORONTO, Feb. 9 (CP)-A third\ncancer treatment\u2014that produced by\nDr. William F. Koch of Detroit and\ndistributed in Ontario-r-was added\ntoday to the list to be investigated\nby a special provincial government-\nappointed committee. Earlier, study\nof treatments by-Dr. J. F. Hett of\nKitchener and Miss R. M. Caisse of .\nBracebridge was announced.\nCurb that\nCough or   ...\nCold       \/Ml\nwith this FASTER!\n2-WAY  TREATMENT)\nTo heed off trouble, to avoid comnlications. I\ngo nfter the cold irom the inside lod'thej\noutside it the state time, with this effective; j\ndouble-action gejjjSegt\nI mid*. Pasmore's Two-Minute-Aid Ilron* -\ndual Mixture goes to work tt once, loosening\nphlegm, during air passages, soothing dry\nthroat membrane.. You feel Pasmore's healing actios from the first sip!\nOutside. Pasmore's __>Purpose Chest-Rob\nrelieves the soreaess, loosens the \"hold\" of\nthe cough, helps break up the congestion.\nAnd thehetlioR vapors, inhaled during sleep,\njive further help.\nA Curb coughs or colds\nquickly. Two Ways\natOnoe. Get Paa-L\nmore'* 2-Minute-Aid\nBronchial Mixture and\nPasmore's 2-Purpose\nChest-Rub from your\ndruggist\u2014today.\nPASMORE'S\n->   WAY  CUI._.\nON  COUGHS AND  COLDS\nadfaajafrjaia*\nitt-1-liwiiilt.i\t\n-^_^_-^__^^ ^mM*.\n;. \u25a0.\u00bb''.',\n.-   *>\u2022\n______________\n IE FOUR\nNELSON DAILY NEW8,NEL80N, B,-.-THURSDAY MORNINO, FEB. 10. 19.8,\nGIBSON GIRL HATS FOR SPRING ARE SHOWN IN NEW YORK\nJHat Pins Are Back in Style But\nDaily Exercise Keeps\nTrim, Improves Circulation\nBy GLADY8 GLAD\nDally exercise is a grand beauti-\nI tier, for it not only moulds the\nbody along harmonious lines, but\nalso gives it firmness and suppleness. It is unfortunate that during\nthe winter months, most-women are\nInclined to neglect their exercise.\nSkating is a most enjoyable sort\not exercise for a girl who wants\nto keep an attractive figure. And\ndaily calisthenics and dancing les-\n. sons, too, stimulate the circulation\nduring these dull, drab winter\nmonths.\nIn summer, a woman usually obtains a fair amount of exercise because ol the sports in which she\nIndulges. But during the winter she\nremains indoors, and, as a result,\nher circulation grows sluggish and\nher beauty loses its freshness and\nsparkle.\nBEST WAY TCI KEEP YOUNQ\nPhysicians claim that exercise is\nthe surest, sanest and least expensive way ot keeping young. If improves the circulation, and when the\ncirculation is good, a swift How ot\nblood courses through the whole\nsystem, and surging through the tissues, it nourishes and purities the\ncells, carrying off all wastes that retard their activity. It beautifies the\nskin, makes the eyes sparkle and\ngives lustre to the hair. It makes the\nbody slender and strong. And it\nmakes a woman teel young and\nalive, regardless of her actual years.-\nIf you desire to remain youthful\nIn appearance and beautiful, do not\nneglect your daily exercises. There\nare plenty of outdoor sports, you\nknow, and you can go to gyms and\ndancing schools, too. However, it\nthis is not possible, you can exercise at1 home.\nAN8WER8 TO~QUERIE8\nHenna\nRuth: The timing determines the\ndepth of the red shade given the\nhair by a henna pack. The operator in a good beauty shop should\nbe able to achieve the shade you\ndesire.\nHenna\nEdythe: Van pure, Egyptian henna, made of the leaves of the henna\nshrub, is not injurious to the hair.\nThe chemical henna, however, con-\nAnn Rutherford\nShe Is an outdoors'girl\ntains metallic salts, and may prove\nharmful to its health.\nMouth Wash\nLillian: An excellent mouth wash\ncan be made by dissolving one-\nfourth teaspoon of borax, one-fourth\nteaspoon of peroxide and one-fourth\nteaspoon of salt in a glass of warm\nwater.\nBromine . . .\nMineral Drugs'\nDiscovery Has\nBeen Valuable\n.By L08AN CLENDENING, M.D.\nAbout 400 years ago there walked\nInto the lecture hall of the ancient\nuniversity of Basel, Switzerland, a\nstrange, even fantastic personage,\nwho proceeded to lecture on medicine and medicines in terms that his\nhearers had never before heard. He\nsaid that all the other physicians\nin the world were ignorant fools and\nknaves. He said that everything in\nthe old textbooks from which other\nprofessors taught was false, and proceeded to burn, in the presence of\nhis audience, the works of Galen\nand Avicennn. He said that Galen\nespecially erred when he advocated\nthe use of plants as medicine, because the only substances that\nwere truly healing were the minerals\u2014suphur, mercury and salt.\nThe new professor's name was\nParacelsus, and while we do not\nagree with all the extreme statements he made, he did us the great\nservice of putting minerals into our\ntheapeutic armamentarium.\nToday we moke no rules about\nwhat we shall use for medicinal\npurposes, except the rule that it has\nthe property of changing the functions of the body in a beneficial\nmanner.\nThe way in which different minerals came to be found useful is a\nfascinating series of stories. Epsom salts, for instance, was so\nnamed because a well on Epsom\nDowns is practically saturated with\nthem. The farmers on the downs\nthought the well was poisonous be\ncause the cattle refused to drink it,\nbut one day a stranger not knowing\nits reputation, drank some and\nfound that it had immediate cathartic actions. Since then it has been\nused throughout the world, probably more than any other drug.\nDI8COVERS BROMINE\nIn 1826 ,a pharmacist in Mont-\npellier, France, discovered a brown\nresidue -in the salt mined there.\nHe experimented with it and found\nit was a new element, bromine,\nwhich had important physiologic\nactions in the body as a nerve sedative.\nEven the desert regions of the\nearth\u2014arid and uninviting as they\nare \u2014 yield us valuable mineral\ndrugs. Iodine, one of the best of\nantiseptics when applied to open\nwounds, is found in the great nir\ntrate beds of northern Chile, and\ncan be found there only because\nthe rainfall is so scanty that they\nare not washed away.\nMany other mineral compounds\njustify the work of the old bom\nbastic doctor, Paracelsus, of long\nago. We may be glad that he did\nnot turn from medicine, as he\nthreatened to do in his young student days. He had determined to\ngive up the study of physic entirely when his eyes fell upon the\nwords of the Gospel, \"They that\nare whole need not a physician, but\nthey that are sick,\"\nQUESTIONS FROM REAREDS\nMRS. F. L.: \"My 17-year-old\nson works in a gas station after\nschool. He has been told that he\ncan get lead poinsoning from having\nthe tctra-ethyl gas come in contact\nwith his pores.\"\nAnswer: I know of no instance\nin which tetra-ethyl has caused\nlead poisoning by absorption from\nthe skin, but it is not impossible,\nand I would advise caution in allowing it to remain on the hands\nfor any length of time. This can\nbe avoided by wearing rubber gloves\nor by'carefully washing the hands\nafter contact.\nKIMBERLEY HIGH\nSCHOOL PARENTS\nGROUP IS FORMED\nKIMBERLEY, B.C. - The High\nschool group of the Parent-Teachers'\nassociation was organized last week\nand the following officers elected:\nhonorary president, Mrs. F, Levire:\npresident, Mrs. C. T. Oughtred; vice-\npresident, A. Patterson; secretary,\nH. I,. Abbott; treasurer. Tysoe; press\ncorrespondent, Miss Theissen.\nTl'.e two delegates appointed to\nattend the Kimberley council were\nMrs. Oughtred and A. Patterson.\ns\nerve health\nave MONEY\n\u2022 \u2022\u2022\nIt\/id\n'   I HEALTH\nBREAKFAST!\nQUICK\nQUAKER OATS.\nQuick\n\"Narru,\ndig,\n, \u00b0\u00aba\n\u2022Vlram\n\u25a0\u2022tins\ncliui\\\nand\n',*_\u2022_,\n'PPet\/le\nY>-h.\n.fo\"j\u00ab.m_:!_u-r\nfconea\narpwth\n\u25a0nd_,\nofirr,\nQuakei\nattaat\n\u00ablr_y\n\u00b0n_\nteen.\nenergy\nWill*\n'\u2022It*.\nOatt\n\u2022liiala\nQf\n30 GENEROUS\nHEALTH BREAKFASTS\nIN EACH PACKAGE.\nLISTEN IN\n\"Mar-got of Cnrttlawo-d\" and \"Cabin  at tho\nCrossroads\". Lovo, Romance, Music and Comodv\n-gl.rtl. M.T,  MONDAY to FRIDAY, NBC   Rod   Notwork,    (KHQ)\nMrs. Harrison Is\nVice-President of\nKimberley Group\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-Fltty ladles\nwere present at the meeting ot the\nChapman Camp group ot the Parent Teachers' association on Friday\nafternoon. A concert was put on by\nmembers of the school. A silver tea\nand a short business meeting followed.\nMrs. J. H. Harrison was appointed\nvice-president of the group, an office not previously filled.\nMrs. T. Anderson of the Kimberley\nParent Teachers' association gave a\nvery interesting talk on activities\nof the groups.\nMill Agnas McGowan and Mrs.\nJ. Shore were appointed delegatei\nto the Kimberley council,'\nSmoking . . .\nEncourage Boys'\nGood Habits by\nlove, Not Force\nBy GARRY C. MYERS, PH. D.\nVIRTUALLY ALL parents wish\ntheir children would'not smoke before reaching maturity. Many of\nus parents wish our children might\nnever smoke. Smoking costs money,\nand can have no scientific defence\nfrom the angle of health. Certainly it is harmful to the growing\nchild.\nSome parents decide lhat their\nchildren SHALL NOT smoke. Then\nwhen these children do anyway\nthere are serious parent-child conflicts, sometimes ending in grave\ntragedies. Indeed, some conscientious parents are so unbending in\nthe matter that they not only lose\nthe battle to keep the child from\nsmoking but, still worse, they lose\nthe child also. It has always seemed to me to be much wiser to keep\nthe child who smokes than to lose\nhim. And once he begins to smoke\nin secret and is found out, no kind\nof coercion is likely to make him\nquit smoking. Why do so many\nparents tail to observe this fact?\nThe hope we have as parents is\nto keep him from his first clandes\ntine smoking. Love and prayers\nwork better to this end than lecturing punishments. As a rule,\nthe child who smokes in secret does\nother undesirable things in secret.\nIt is almost certain evidence of an\nunhealthy parent-child relationship.\nThe problem facing many parents is not the boy or girl in high\nschool but the child, especially the\nboy, from 12 to 14.. In some com\nfortable communities many of these\nyoungsters smoke a great deal without their parents knowing it. And\nwhen, at last, it is discovered by\nthe parents, there is much vain\nlecturing, punishing and other\nwaste of emotion.\nCOMPANIONSHIP NEEDED\nCloser companionship by the parents with the child, especially closer father-son companionship, Scouting and the like are good prevention\nmeasures, floys who have good\ntools and books ahd place for fun at\nhome, whose friends come often to\ntheir home for wholesome good\ntimes; boys who feel very worthy\nin a happy family, are less tempted\nto smoke.\nIf the father who doesn't smoke\nis greatly esteemed by his boy, this\nboy is less likely to smoke early\nor at all. If the father who does\nsmoke also has a strong hold on\nhis boy, he is usually able to induce\nthis lad to delay smoking to later\nyears. Parents will be most sue\ncessful if they make their appeal\nfor delay, waiting till grown up,\nbut who don't command the child\nnot to smoke, Indeed, there is\nnothing much more futile than to\ncommand the child about anything\nwe cannot check personally.\nOnce the child has begun to\nsmoke, the first objective is to win\nhim to choose to quit. Failing in\nthis attempt, the next objective is\nto induce him to set a very low\nlimit to the frequency of his smoking. If you know he will smoke\nanyway, regardless of his age, it\nwere better for nim to do it before\nyour eyes than in a secret place.\nNakusp Institute\nDraw Up Program\nNAKUSP, B.C.\u2014The program of\nthe Nakusp Women's institute until\nSeptember was drawn up at a\nspecial meeting of the committee.\nIt follows:\nFebruary 1. Moto\u2014\"Work apace,\nhonest labour wears a lovely face,\";\ntalk, Colonel Allen of Nelson. Piano\nsolo, Mrs. P. Young. Tea hostess,\nMrs. Cowan.\nMarch 1. Motto\u2014\"Do not hurry,\ndo not worry, nothing good is got\nby worry.\"; talk, indoor photography, A. E, Jones. Musical number, Mrs. S. Leary. Tea hostess, Mrs.\nJ. McQuair.\nApril 5. Motto\u2014\"In an orderly\nhouse, all is soon ready.\"; demonstration on making \"CJow Mein\" by\nMiss Jean Quong; talk on Canadian-\nization by Convenor Mrs. Dolman;\ntea hostess, Mrs. A. E. Fowler.\nMay 3. Motto\u2014\"Nothing worth\nhaving is easily won.\"; talk on\n\"Education and Better Schools\" by\nconvenor Miss M. Kirk; piano solo,\nMrs. G. P. Horsley; tea hostess, Mrs.\nJ. Dolman.\nJune 7. Motto\u2014\"The best physicians are Dr. Diet, Dr. Quiet and Dr.\nMerry Man.\"; talk by Dr. H. F.\nTyreman; talk by child welfare convenor Mrs. Parent, Sr.; piano solo,\nMrs. W- Spiller; tea hostess, Mrs.\nE. Oxenham.\nSeptember 6. Motto\u2014\"Industry is\nfortune's right hand.\"; talk on industries by convenor Mrs. Leary;\npaper on institute work by Mrs. G.\nH. Gardner, Jr.; tea hostess, Mrs. P.\nJupp.\nGraduate Nurses Hear\nAddress by Dr. Sparks\nDr. F .P. Sparks was guest speaker\nat the monthly meeting of the Nelson Graduate Nurses' association,\nMonday evening, taking as his subject \"The Public Health department\nin the Community.\" Following the\nbusiness meeting refreshments were\nserved. ^ ,i\nDo Not Despair . . .\nHealth Worries\nBoy, Should He\nTell His Girl!\nBy VIRGINIA LEE\nA young man by the name of\nLUKE has written me and this is\nhis very unusual problem:\nHe is very much In love with a\ngirl who seems to be an ideal sweetheart and wife. She loves him just\nas much as he loves her, and their\nfuture would, I am sure', be a happy\none lt it were not for his poor\nhealth. She is looking forward to\nit and planning tor their home and\nchildren:\nPoor Luke never yet has been\nable to tell his girl friend that a\nphysician has told him that his\nhealth will never be good, \"The\ndoctor said when she has children\nevery one will be born sickly and\nwill suffer just like me., And he\nalso said it will take up all ot her\ntime caring for a sick husband, and'\nshe will be very much disappointed\nin married life.\"   '\nLuke cannot bear to have any\nother man have his girl, and he\ncan't bear to break this news to\nhis sweet girl friend. He wishes\nhe could die in his sleep because he\nis going through so much, and he\nwonders if there is anyone among\nour readers, who has anything like\nthis to endure.\nOf course you give me no inkling\nof your disease\u2014if you have a particular trouble, Luke. So many ills\nthat once were considered hopeless\nare now being treated and cured,\nthat you should not take one doctor's diagnosis and give up hope.\nI do think the girl ydu love should\nknow about your state of health.\nShe could help you fight tor It, and\njust talking it over with her would\nhelp you and give you peace of\nmind.\nDoctors are human beings, you\nknow, and are sometimes mistaken,\nGo to another, and then another\nand another, tt necessary, and try\nto get all the latest advice on whatever your trouble Is. And keep up\nyour courage. That Is more than\nhall the battle. Of course I do not\nknow about your condition, but Unless you have an incurable and inheritable disease that would be\ntransmitted to your offspring I certainly would not despair.\nHILDA AND FRENCHY: Am I\nright in suspecting that one person\nwrote the two letters which reached\nme at the same time, or that you\ntwo together composed these wonderful epistles?\nHowever It may be, I am no mind\nreader or prophetess So cannot tell\nyou the state of mind of the men\nyou love. And, moreover, I feel\nyou are trying to flimflam me.\nSeems sort of a waste of time for\nyou to write such letters, and for\nme to answer, isn't it?\nA soft anwer turneth away wrath;\nbut grievous words stir up anger-\nProverbs 15:1.\nSonnysaying$\n\"Nuffln' has happened yet on account ob Baby puttin' that safety-\npin tn the collection box, but just\nwait till het spends tho penny ike\nktptr\nSerial Story ....\nA Case for 3 Detectives\nBy LEO BRUCE\nREAD THIS FIRST:\nAlex.Norris.'a writer who objects\nto detective stories, is theorizing on\nthe subject ot crime fiction, during\na week-end party at the home of Dr.\nThurston, near London. Other guests\nare Townsend, the author; Williams,\nthe family lawyer, and Strickland, a\nsportsman. Mrs. Thurston Is the only\nwoman present. Towsend observes\nthat Mrs. Thurston appears strangely\nflushed after a conversation with\nFellowes, the chauffeur. Mr. Rider,\nthe vicar, Is another guest for dinner.\nStrickland begs to be excused, saying he desires to retire early.\nCHAPTER 4\nI did not notice the time when\nStrickland retired, but I have since\ncalculated from later events that it\nwas about half-past 10.\nThe next to get up was Alec\nNorris. He had threatened to break\nup the game at the end of the next\nrubber, He had been playing with\nThurston, Williams and me, while\nthe Vicar and Mary Thurston had\nbeen talking with some intontness\nwhere they sat together on the\nsettee.\n\"You would like to join the\ngame, Mrs. Thurston,\" the Vicar\nsaid, \"and it Is quite time I started\nto walk home.\"\n\"It's not very far, Rider,\" Thurston remarked politely, though I\ndon't think anyone was sorry.\n.\"No. I shall go through the\norchard. Be home in five minutes.\"\nAnd protesting his gratitude for a\npleasant evening, he took himself\noff.\nWe did play one more rubber,\nbut it was not very successful, for\nMary Thurston was a poor'player,\nand Sam Williams, who was her\npartner, was Inclined to take his\nbridge seriously. And we finished\nit just as the clock in the hall\nstruck 11.\n\"No,\". Mary Thurston said, \"no\nmore, really. I'm making poor\nMr. Williams miserable. Besito,\n11 o'clock ij,my bedtime.\"\nTnat was quite true. Like a little child, Mary Thurston had her\nfixed hour for retiring .and if she\nstayed up beyond.lt, did so always\nwith a sense of guilt. I could remember her often enough In the\np_st standing up when she had\nheard that chime, kissing her husband, and bidding us good night\nwith an ingenuous, even rather\nbabyish smile.\nShe left the three ot us, Williams, Thurston and me, to pour\nourselves out a very welcome\nwhiskey.\nLooking back on that night I\nremember with gratitude that from\nthen until the ... until the tragedy,\nI remained with the other two.\nNone of us stirred from the room.\nOur staying there talking-saved us,\nas you will see, from a great deal ot\nInterrogation and unpleasantness.\nOnce I remembered a letter which I\nhad left in my overcoat pocket, and\nthought for a moment of fetching\nit I actually crossed the room and\nopened the door, but fortunately\nat that moment Williams asked me\nsome question which it interested\nme to answer, and I went no farther. I have cause enough to be glad\nof it.\nBefore leaving us, Mary Thurston had turned on the radio, and\nthough none of us was exhilarated\nby the efforts of a popular dance\nband to provide entertainment for\nGreat Britain, we 'did not actually\nturn it off. It made an uninteresting\nundertone to our conversation. Since\nI was on my feet, however, I had\nthought of switching It off, and\nshould have done so before sitting\ndown. But I paused to answer Williams' question, and it was during\nthat pause that we heard the first\nscream.\nSo much of the subsequent Inquiry depended on time, that I\nshould like to have been able to\nfix this precisely, but I can do no\nmore than say that it must have\"!\nbeen at about a quarter past 11.\nI hed closed the door again, and\nwas returning to the other two\nby the fireside.\nNow you must know I have no\nwish to chill your blood or emphasize the gruesome aspects of this\naffair. But I do ask you to imagine\nthe effect of that Interruption. We\nwere In the cozy firelight of an\nautumn evening, quietly sipping\nour whiskey, in a cheerful friendly\nhouse.   We. knew each other and\ndiiniL foJL\ndtoimwwsiL\nBy  MR8.  MARY  MORTON\nMenu Mint\nCrackers\nTomato Juice Cocktail\nButtered Buns.\nBroiled Hamburgers\nSliced Spanish Onions\nCreamed Potatoes\nPickles     Olives     Pickled Pears\nCelery Lettuce\nIce  Cream Cake        Coffee\nCandy Salted Nuts\nThis is a menu I used when 1\nentertained six people I know quite\nwell for an informal dinner. The\ncrackers I served with the tomato\njuice I warmed before serving so\nthat they were crisp. The rolls\nwere also wanned and buttered, and\neach person made his or her own\nhamburger with whatever ingredients they preferred. I had mustard\ntoo, for those who like It with hamburgers. I'm suggesting this menu\nbecause It \" went over big\", and it\nis easy on the hostess who does her\nown cooking. One lot of meat\npatties wtere broiled while the buns\nwere warmed and the potatoes\nbrowned In the oven, then while we\nwere eating the first, the second\nhelpings were broiling. I forgot to\nsay I also had jam on the table. The\nlettuce and onions were, of course,\nall ready to be used in the sandwiches. I did not serve tomato with\nthe meat and buns as the fresh ones\n'are expensive at this time of year,\nand we had. the tomato juice ai\nfirst course. I made a cake tor the\ndessert and also scrvard some of the\nChristmas fruit cake.\nTODAY'8  RECIPE\nPRESTO CAKE \u2014 M\u00bbH one-\nfourth cup butter or oleomargarine\nin a measuring cup. While it is\nmelting, sift one and one-half cups\nflour, one-fourth teaspoon salt, one\nteaspoon baking powder, one-halt\nteaspoon soda, if you use sour\nmilk, otherwise two teaspoons baking powder and no soda; one cup\nsugar. Sift dry ingredients Into\nmixing bowl, m-.ke a hole in the\ncenter and Into this pour the melted butter, on top of which you have\ndropped an unbeaten egg and milk\nto fill the cup, either sweet or sour.\nMix together, flavor with teaspoon\nof vanilla, lemon or almond extract.\nBake in shallow loaf or layers and\nfrost with butter frosting.\nFACT8 AND  FANCIE8\nThose Black Valnt\nThe black vlens in shrimp which\nthe inexperienced housewife doesn't know whether or not to remove,\nand the experienced one hates to\ntake the time to eliminate, need\nnot necessarily be taken out, but\nthey are the shrimp's viscera-\ninternal organs to you \u2014 and so lt\nreally adds to the attractiveness\nand dellclousness of the shrimps to\nremove them.\nDURITY\nFLOUR\nthe household well. There had been\nnothing to arouse even the faintest\npresentiment ot evil or misfortune.\nWe were normal English people In\na very ordinary house. And suddenly, from just over our heads it\nseemed, came that long, horrifying\nwoman's' cry of terror. It was the\nshock ot it which seemed to stun\nme. Not the actual sound o. Its\nImplications, but the sudden shock.\nAlmost before we had jumped to\nour feet there was another, and a\nthird followed it, but the bird was\nthe most hideous of all, for lt died\nslowly out ot our hearing. By that\ntime we had made for the staircase. Thurston was firsi \"Mary!\"\nhe shouted, and in spite of his\nweight he bounded upstairs like a\nfrightened boy.\nI do not know- how many seconds it took us to reach the door\nof Mary Thurston's room. But that\nit was seconds, and not minutes, not\neven one minute, I am certain. At\nthe door stood Alec Norris, the\nwriter. But the door was locked.\nAt first we threw our shoulders\nagainst it. Then Williams, pressing first the top, then the bottom\nof it, shouted, \"Bolted! In two\nplaces. Smash the panel in, Thurston.\"\nThurston \u2022 was still, heaving his\nweight blindly at the door, and it\nwas I who picked up a solid wooden chair which stood on the landing, and drove it through the upper, panel. And through the jagged gap I caught a glimpse ot\nthe room, and of something in it\nwhich was horrible, and yet which\ngave me none of the astounded\nshock which the screams had given\nme. I suppose they had made me\nexpect lt. For what I saw was the\ndim outline of Mary Thurston's face\non a pillow which was more crimson than white, and I knew at once\nthat she had been murdered.\nBefore we could enter, however,\nit was necessary to smash in a\nlower panel as well, for the door\nwas tall, and, as Williams had said,\nbolted at top and bottom. I myself leaned through the broken\nwoodwork and pulled back those\nbolts. And lest it should be doubted\nlater, let me say quite clearly now\nthat each was driven home securely.\nIndeed, it took me several seconds\nto get the lower one back at all.\nWhen I had done that, and while\nI was standing up to turn the handle, Thurston pushed past us into\nthe room. And as he did so I became aware that we had been\njoined by two others. My whole\nconscious attention was concentrated on the room before us, so that\nit was. only as it were from the\ncorner of my mind that I perceived\nStrickland standing there beside us,\nand Fellowes on the staircase which\nrose from beyond Mary Thurston's\ndoor to the second floor. At what\nmoment they had arrived I did not,\ndo not, know, But I am certain that\nneither was there when we had\nfirst reached the landing, and that\nneither had appeared when I\nstepped back to pick up the chair.\nIn other words, neither was on the\nsjene within a . minute of- the\nscreams, though both had arrived\nire Much Fancier Than Formerly\nNEW YORK. Feb. 9 (AP)- Men\nwill think women's hat styles are\nright back where they were last\ngeneration, for behold, the hat pin\nis here again!\nHat pins like those which adorned the American scene In the horse\nand buggy days appeared on some\nnew spring bonnets shown last night\nto 1500 fashion experts.\nThe 19.8 hat pin is a little fan\ncier, however, than the old-time\nball-headed ones, Some of the new\nones are topped with clustered\nrhlnestones or made of carved glass,\nOther hat style notes from tha\nshow, presented under auspices ot\nthe Millinery Stabilization commission:;\n\"Gibson Girl hats are back.\n\"Flowers are fashionable, oS are\nveils. So are chin-straps.\"\nsoon after that.\nAnd now we t ere peering in at\nthat doorway. We stood there, the\nfour ot us, as though we had been\nwarned to respect the room. We\nstood, and saw what Thurston saw,\nand observed his movements.\nThere was only a reading lamp\nalight in the room, but it was not\ntoo heavily shaded tor us to see\nthe whole Interior. Across the bed\nlay Mary Thurston, fully dressed.\nBut it was the pillow on which her\nhead lay which drew our horrified\nstare, the pillow and her throat.\nFor the pillow, as I had already\nseen, was stained hideously with\nscarlet, and across her throat, her\nfat white throat, there was a still\nghastlier scar. But once again I\ndo not wish to be unnecessarily\nharrowing. It is sufficient to say\nthat when Thurston told us in a\nchoking voice that she was dead,\nwe did not speak or move, for we\nhad known what his words must be.\nSam Williams kept his head.\n\"Don't move,\" he said to us who\nstood in the doorway. \"He must\nbe in there.\" And he reached for\nthe light switch, and snapped it\ndown. This, however, had no result, and I was conscious of a slight\nrelief.   Any further light on that\nscene would have been too merciless.\n(To Be Continued)\nlook!\n\\   its a belter\nshine and\n\u25a0 e<M\/er too!\nm\nZEBRA\nLIQUID \u00b0r PASTE\nSTOVE POLISH\ntoiiS\nRECIPE\ngpYruCnY\n ipooM wakef\n1 cup fine dry bread crumb*\n,1m\nPOTATO SURPRISE\n1 oops acaanned maahed potato   1 cfg\n1 cup Royal City Paaa 3 tablaai\nH cap t-ida white mum\nForm potato Into cups, molding them In pal\nof band and patting potato Into an even thick\nnets. Add peaa to white aauce and place a spoonful of mixture into each cup centre and close the\nhand around It, putting a little mashed potato\non .top to covet peas. Roll balls in crumbs, then\nin beaten egg diluted with water rind again in\ncrumbs. Bake until brown. Serve. 6.\n\"Bab;,*S health has been splendid ever since the\ndoctor put her on St. Charles Milk. She's never\nhad a stomach upset since.\"\nPurest of country milk,\nevaporated to double-cream\nricltness a few hours alter\nmilking, St. Charles is always extra fresh ... and\nextra good for you because\nit is irradiated for an added\nsupply of the important\nSunshine Vitamin D. It's\nso easy to digest, and\nsupremely nourishing. Always ask your grocer for\nBorden's St. Charles Milk.\n7?0W_tW\/f   ST. CHARLES TftM\nAa\/V\/Mv7a><#   innaoiATED   evaporated II \u2022-**_'*\n- \u2022 li   -'V-fr'-i. ilinr' M-'t'iil \"-  il? -\u2022[-%! '_tfi\u00bb---MMII\n\"F.Wl r_V6_ about my coffee. My secret is to\ncream it with St. Charles Evaporated Milk. And\nI have found that its rich creamy goodness improves my cooking, tool\"\n vm \u25a0-\u25a0*\u00a5\">.\u00bb\ni<\\3\nKjng George and Queen Elizabeth\nPopular in France as in Own Country\nPeople   Rejoice   at\nImpending Visit\nin June\nPARIS, Feb. 9 (CP-Havas) \u2014\nPolitical significance of the Impending visit of King George and\nQueen  Elizabeth to France was\nCOULDN'T SLEEP\nCOULDN'T WORK\nWilt a relief (o .clticl\ndown to a real night's!\nlest, and awake fully!\nfeireihed, ready!\nbr the day's duties. 11\nwaa tortured by fretful\njri.-ts-t.u--g, tarn-1\ning\u2014 never comlortible. Htlf awile dry s\n\u25a0tired, dri. ing body ami minrl to work\nwhen they needed reat \"Try Dodd'. Kidney\nrills,\" said a Iricnr] \u2014 \"it nijr ba your\nlidnoys\", I'm glad I followed li'u advice as\"\nnowrm sleeping like atop\u2014tlianka to    in\nDodd. Kidney Pills\nTHE\n\"EYE-WAY\"\nTO\nSUCCESS\nQuickest of all your five senses\nto grasp \u2014 to understand \u2014 to\nremember \u2014 are your eyes. That\nis why you \"put it in writing\"\nwhen you want to get an idea\nacross.\nAnd that is why newspaper\nadvertising is the most result-\nlul way to \"put across\" any\nsaleable product or service successfully. Your ad printed in the\nnewspaper captures the eyes of\nthousands. Your message \"clicks\"\nwith tbe understanding because\nit is read. Your illustration sells\n\u2014your package is remembered\n\u2014 because they are seen.\nIt pays to advertise. And it\njays out better when you keep\nin mind two wise old sayings:\n\"In one ear, out the other\" ...\nhut,'\" What you see, you remember\".\nThlt advertisement was prepared for\nthe Canadian Dally Newspapers Association by MacLaren Advertising\nCompany Ltd..\nemphasized by French newspapers\ntoday. ,\n\"This happy news caused the\ndeepest satisfaction In all French\ncircles,\" Luclen Bourgues declared\nIn the Independent Petit Parisian.\n\"King George and Queen Elizabeth are just as popular In France\nas they are In their own country,\"\nLONDON, Feb. 9 (CP Cable. ~\nBritish newspapers, commenting on\nthe announcement the king and\nqueen will make a four-day state\nvisit to France in June, today recalled the memorable visit of King\nEdward VII. in 1903 which resulted\nin the entente cordirMe.\nPrincesses Elizabeth and Margaret will not accompany their father\nand mother, it was authoritatively\nlearned.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-THURSDAY MORNING, FEB, 10. 1938,\nNELSON Social..\nBy MRS. M.J. VIGNEUX\n\u2022 R. S. Chomley of Crawford\nBay visited Nelson yesterday.\na Russell B. MacEwan, Nelson\navenue, Fairview, leaves today for\nVancouver where he will attend a\nconvention.\n\u2022 Rowland Thompson has left\nfor Spokane where fie will spend\na couple of weeks visiting his sister, Miss Isabel (Bluebelle) Thoirg-\nson.\n\u2022 Dick Kleef was in town from\nYmir yesterday.\n\u2022 E. V. Morel of Marblehead\nin the Lardeau who has visited\nhis son and daughter-in-law, Mr.\nand Mrs. Fritz Morel in Trail and\nfriends in Nelson, leaves today for\nhome.\n\u2022 Recent shoppers in town included Mr. and Mrs. Robert McFadden of South Slocan.\n\u2022 F. Eimer of Woodberry Creek,\nnear Ainsworth, spent Monday in\ntown,\n\u2022 Malcolm Heddle of Willow\nPoint visited Nelson yesterday.\nMrs. H. H. Mackenzie Elected Regent\nof Kokanee Chapter ol the I.0.D.L\nMrs. H. H. MacKenzie Was appointed regent of Kokanee chapter,\nI.O.D.E., at the annual meeting held\nin the Nurses' home; Tuesday. Other\nofficers elected were Mrs. E. E. L.\nDewdney, first vice-regent; Mrs. H.\nE. Thain second vice-regent; Mrs.\nM. V. Allen, secretary; Mrs. Macintosh, treasurer; Mrs. G. H. Taylor, standard-bearer; Mrs. George\nScliupe, Echo's secretary; Mrs. R.\nL. Oliver, education secretary; and\nMrs. T. Dawson, immigration secretary. Councillors appointed were\nMrs. H. H. Burns, Mrs. L. Choquette, Mrs. H. E. Dill, Mrs. K.\nGrenfell, Mrs. Walter Kettlewell,\nMrs. A. E. Mann, Mrs. C. F. McHardy, Mrs. Nelson Murphy, Mrs.\nJ. A. McDonald and Mrs. W. 0.\nRose.\nBouquets of spring flowers were\npresented to Mrs. C. F. McHardy,\nretiring regent, and Miss Margaret\nArthur, retiring secretary.\nYEAR'S ACTIVITIES\nReports for the past year showed\nthe sum of $968.92 raised in various ways, including a Coronation\nYour Grocer Sells It\nMl?**\nEVAPORATED\nMILK\nPure as the\nSnow on\nMountain\nPeaks.\npageant, Alexandra Rose Day, a\nRemembrance Day concert, a series of bridges and two teas. The\noutstanding work of the year was\nalong welfare lines. A new mattress was purchased for a bed in\nKootenay Lake General hospital;\nover $494 was expended in supplying milk lo needy children both in\nthe schools and in the homes; clothing was given to many families;\na contribution was made towards\nthe Christmas Cheer fund, as well\nas remembrances given to returned men in hospital at Christmas.\nTwo new members, Mrs. W. H.\nSmedley and Mrs. E. Carrothers,\nwere welcomed Into the order.\nSunday, February 13, being the\nthirty-eighth anniversary of the\nfounding ot the order, members\nwill attend church in a body.\nCommittees were appointed to\nmake arrangements for a spring\ntea and fashion show to take place\nin March.\nCUNLIFFE AND GARLAND\nARE ON LIBRARY BOARD\nAcceptance of library board appointments tendered to W. M. Cunliffe and C. B. Garland by the city\ncouncil were received by the city\ncouncil Tuesday night\nCOUNCIL ACCEPTS BID\nTO OLD TIMERS SOCIAL\nInvitation of the Nelson and Dis-\ntric Old Timers association for members of the city council and their\nwives to attend a social February\n16 was accepted by the council Tuesday night.\nSCOUTS ARE CRANTED\nJULY 1 FOR FLAG DAY\nApplication ol the Second Nelson\nTroop of Boy Scouts to hold Its\nannual flag day July 1 was granted\nby the city council Tuesday night\n\u2022 Yesterday St. Saviour's Mothers club met at the home on Victoria street of Mrs. G. A. King\nwhen those present were Mrs.\nFrank Phillips, Mrs. E. Boyce, Mrs.\nG. A. Fletcher, Mrs. Wagstaff, Mrs.\nLund, Mrs. R. G. Joy, Mrs. G. K.\nAshby, Miss R. Bloomer and Mrs.\nKing..\n\u2022 F, C. Christopherson of Bon-\nners Ferry visited Nelson yesterday.\n\u2022 The diocesian executive of\nthe W. A. met at the home ol Mrs.\nW. J. Silverwood, Second street,\nFairview, the first ot the week,\nwhen those present were Mrs. Turner Lee of Bonnington, Mrs. Wors-\nfield ot Willow Point, Mrs. G. K.\nAshby, Mrs. J. Calbick and Mrs.\nSilverwood.\n... \u2022   F. H. Angrignon ot New Denver visited town yesterday.\nKinsmen Fete City\nCouncil at Dinner\nNelson city council members\nwere' guests of the Kinsmen club\nat a banquet Tuesday night in the\nGolden Gate cafe. Songs, jokes and\nmusic throughout the dinner kept\nspirits at a high tempo, though\nS. B. Stark, president of the Kinsmen, and Mayor N. C. Stibbs who\nwas sick, were missed.\nAlderman Roy Sharp, acting mayor, outlined the city's program to\nthe group, but mentioned that nothing definite could be stated as yet\nbecaOse city, estimates had not been\npassed.\nEach alderman briefly outlined\nhis policy for his term ol office.\nHighlights of the program were\ntwo beautiful violin solos by Miss\nDaisy Norris, accompanied by Mrs.\nGladys Webb Foster.\nP. C. Richards, vice-president and\nchairman of the entertainment committee was chairman for the evening, taking the place of J. B. Stark.\nGeorge Stuart was pianist for the\nevening.\nSt. Paul's Young\nFolks Hear Witty\nSketch, Narration\nA humorous sketch on first aid,\nwritten by her lather, E. H. Paterson, and read by Jean Paterson;\nthe story.ol chewing gum, Irom the\nbeginning until it is chewed, told\nby Hazel Stout; and folk dances,\nfilled In the St. Paul's Young People's meeting period in the church\nparlors Tuesday night. Daisy Croy\nwas chairman for the evening. The\nliterary group was in charge of the\nprogram.\nROWELL COMMISSION\nAT CHARLOTTETOWM\nHALIFAX, Feb. 9 (CP) - The\nRowell Commission on dominion-\nprovincial relations moved to Char-\nlottetown today after President A.\nH. Whitman ol the Halifax board\nof trade had urged the Canadian\nPacific and Canadian National systems be placed under one control\nas a means of reducing the railway deficit which was \"threatening the country's credit.\"\n\"Ihe Duke's Vicar\" Title of Book by\nRev. R. A. Jardine; Preaches in U.S.\nCT^ $\u00a3**&*\/ ^d _%&U&U\nAT THE LOW FARES\nIN NELSON SEE\nCARNIVAL\nTHE\nNEWEST\nWasher\nI With Stainless Steel Tank\nFEATURING--\n\u2022 BEAUTIFUL STREAMLINES\n\u2022 NO OILING\n\u2022 BALL BEARING DRIVE\n\u2022 SPECIAL BEATTY AGITATOR\n\u2022 CAST HEAD WRINGER WITH\nIN!\nSTANT RELEASE\nALL BACKED BY BEATTY SERVICE\nNELSONFACTORY BRANCH\n321 BAKER ST. \\ TELEPH       91\n* NEW YORK, Feb. 9 (AP.\u2014Rev.\nR. Anderson Jardine, former vicar\not. St. Paul's church, Darlington,\nEng\u201e.who performed the marriage\nceremony for the Duke and Duchess of Windsor, arrived here today\nwith his wife.\nChicago-bound to begin a preaching tour next Sunday, Mr. Jardine\nsaid he had written his autobiography, titled \"The Duke's Vicar\",\nand was open lo offers from publishers.\nHe said he had received recently \"a casual communication\" from\nthe Windsors and added they are\n\"sure to come to the United States\"\nbut not until their six-month lease\non a chateau at Versailles expires.\nTold that Lady Astor had remarked she thought the marriage of\nthe Duke and Wallis Warfield\nSimpson was \"a tragedy,\" Mr. Jardine laughed and replied, \"I would\nsay she was talking through her\nhat,\"\nCOUNCIL FILES TENDER    .\nON AUTOMATIC FIRING\nProposal of the Kootenay Plumbing & Heating company to install\nautomatic furnace firing at the city\nhall at a price of $541 was received\nand filed by the city council Tuesday night.\nCOURT OF REVISION\nADJOURNED A WEEK\nCourt of revision of the city of\nNelson, held annually to hear appeals against assessment values\nplaced on city property, was adjourned Tuesday morning for a\nweek.\nTHREE GENERALS RESIGN\nFROM GERMAN ARMY\nBERLIN, Feb.'. (AP)-Three generals reported by reliable sources\ntoday to have asked to be dismissed\nfrom the army in protest against\nReichsfuehrer Hitler's merger of\nthe high command and the Nazi\nparty in the February 4 shakeup.\nTO INTRODUCE BILL\nOTTAWA, Feb. 9 (CP)\u2014A bill\nrequiring the names and addresses\nof owners, editors, publishers and\nstockholder, of Canadian newspapers and periodicals to be filed\nwith the postmaster-general will be\nintroduced into the House of Commons this session by T. \"L. Church\n(Cons., Toronto Broudview).\nFRANCES FARMER SUED\nNEW YORK, Feb. 9 (AP) -\nFrances Farmer, motion picture and\nstage star, has been served with a\nsuit for $75,000 by an actors' agent,\nShepard Traubc, who claims she\nbroke a 1935 contract under which\nhe became her representative.\nBILL APPROVED\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (AP)-The\nhouse of representatives voted approval today of the revised United\nStates crop control bill, speeding it,\nalong to final legislative action in\nthe seaatn\nMontreal Miss Still Yawning After\nFour Days; Physicians Baffled\nMONTREAL, Feb. 9 (CP)\u2014Mabel Patrick entered on her fourth\nday of Incessant yawning In a\nMontreal hospital today while\nbaffled doctors sought a name for\nthe strange malady that hai kept\nher awake.\nTired and sleepy the 20-year-old\ngirl was yawning about every\nhalf minute but her undiagnosed\ncondition kept her from lapsing\nInto the sleep she has been struggling for since early last Saturday.\nLooking back for a possible\ncause of the Illness, physicians\nlearned she had been let out from\nher work at a hotel a few months\nago. Since then, the had been\nlooking for employment, often\n\u2022pending sleepless nights as she\nworried about finding a new Job.\nVICTORIA, Feb. 9 (CP)-Mabel\nPatrick of Montreal who has yawned incessently lor four days may\nlearn something from the case of\nMrs. P. E. Wakelin who yawned for\nmore than 100 days before the\nspasms stopped.\nRecently she suffered facial pains\nand X-ray examination showed decay in the teeth roots'. Doctors are\nnow satisfied that this was the\ncause of the yawning.\nSEEK GOVERNMENT AID\nOTTAWA, Feb. 9 (CP)-Hon. Eric\nCross, Ontario minister of public\nwelfare and municipal affairs, backed by 10\" Ontario mayors, today asked Labor Minister Rogers for an\nincreased grant-in-aid to meet the\ncost of unemployment relief in the\nprovince. '\nJames Beaton Pays\n$75 on Liquor Count\nJames Beaton, operator of Beaton's Cigar store on Hall street, was\nfined $75 when he apppeared before William Brown, police magistrate, in city police court Wednesday morning on a charge of, although not being a druggist, having intoxicating liquor, namely\nrum, in his stock of non-intoxicating beverages at his place of business Tuesday. He pleaded guilty\nto the charge. The fine was paid,\nKING SHOWS DOG\nLONDON, Feb. 9 (AP) - The\nking today exhibited a dog for\nthe first time in a public show.\nHis Labrador retriever \"Sand-\nringham Stream,\" a 3'r_-year-old\nbitch, was entered in four classes\nIn Craft's Dog Show.\nKing George V. was an enthusiastic exhibitor at Craft's. So were\nEdward VII. and Queen Victoria.\n-PAGE FIVB\nFOR RELIEF\nWASHINGTON, Feb. 9 (AP) -\nPresident Roosevelt, it was learned\ntoday, will ask the United States\nCongress within a day or two to\nappropriate between $.00,000,000\nand $300,000,000 for relief during\nthe next five months.\nMEN LOVE GIRLS\nWITH PEP\nIf yon \u00bb\u00bb peppy and fall of fan. men will !n-\nTltfl you to dances and partial. BUT. It you\nare cross, lifeless and tired, men won't ba\ninterested. Men don't like ''quiet\" girls.\nFor three generations one woman has told\nanother how to go ''smiling through\" with\nLydla E. I'inkham a Vegetable Compound. It\nhelps Nature tone up the system, thus lessen*\ning the discomforts from the functional disorder!, which women must endure.\nMake a note NOW to get a bottle of world-\nfamous Plnkham's Compound today WITHOUT FAIL from your druggist\u2014more than a\nittiflttm women have written in letters reporting benefit.\nJI&Mt try LYDIA E. PINKHAM'S\nVEGETABLE COMPOUND!      MAJtt\u00b0\n(Advt.)\nEveryone Is Coming to NELSON\nFM THE GREAT\nLow Fares CARNIVAL\nFRIDAY and SATURDAY-This Week\nTwo Days of Qrand Entertainment\nPLUS\nGold Rush\nThe days of tho glorious 90'.\nbrought back again \u2014 Girls \u2014\nGuns \u2014 Gambling sponsored\nby the Nelson Junior Board of\nTrade.\nSENIOR HOCKEY\u2014BASKETBALL\nCURLING - SKIING - DANCING\nBOTH NELSON THEATRES, THE \"CAPITOL\" AND THE \"CIVIC\" HAVE BOOKED\nEXTRA SPECIAL ATTRACTIONS FOR THESE TWO DAYS\nMAKE UP THE PLANS FOR YOUR PARTY\u2014LET'S ALL HAVE TWO\nGLORIOUS DAYS OF FUN\nRETURN FARES FROM YOUR HOME TO NELSON:\nMcGlllivray \t\nNatal        _\n 6.75\n 5.60\n  8.60\n \u00bb.50\n  6.25\n.... 6.05\n 4,86\nElko\t\n 4.60\nCalthne\u00bb\u00ab\t\n._ _ 4.46\n 4.40\n 4.25\nColvalll\t\n.Gilpin\t\nBilling,\t\nCaicade \t\nFife\t\nLafferty\t\nCoryell.... _\t\n._ 4.16\n.._ 4.00\n $2.40\n 2.20\n 2.10\n  2.06\n.\u201e 1.95\n 1.80\n._ _ 1.70\n 1.60\n 1.46\n..._ 1.40\n  1.30\n $2.10\n \u201e  1.40\n 90\nFraier', _\u201e\t\n 85\n  70\nCrescent Bay ...\nWillow Point   .\n    M\n 35\n,\nVIA C. P. R. FROM THE EAST\nMayook 3.80\nRampart  - 3.70\nCranbrook - 3.45\nFa-slferne  3.35\nLumber-toil       3.25\nJerome     3.10\nMoyie _ 2.95\nAldrldge - 2.90\nTochty 2.70\nRyan 2.60\nYahk\nMcConnell  \t\nCanyon\nGoatfell ....\n2.45\n2.30\n 8.18\n  1.90\nErlck.on  1.86\nCreiton 1.80\nWynndell 1.60\nSirdar  1.45\nKootenay Landing - -  1.40\nT ye 1 -20\nDrewry  - - 1.00\nBlake - -.   .80\nProcter    .75\nSunshine Bay - \u2014   .75\nHarrop - ~  .75\nVIA C. P. R. FROM THE WEST\nCoykendahl   1.10\nShield!   - A  1-00\nLabarthe    86\nRobeon Wert .\nTrail\t\nTadanao ..\nBlrchbank\nGenelle ...\nPoupera\n75\n1.15\n. 1.15\n, 1.00\n.   .90\n.85\nBlueberry _ 80\nVIA THE GREYHOUND LINES\nKlnnalrd\t\nCaitlegar \t\nBrilliant\t\nThrums\t\nTarryi  \u2014\nGlade\t\nShoreacret \t\nSouth Slocan\nBonnington ....\nBeailey \t\nTaghum\t\nNelson \t\n.75\n.75\n.75\n75\n.75\n.75\n.75\n.75\nNakuip _ - 3.75\nNew Denver - 3.10\nSilverton _\nSlocan City\t\nWinlaw\t\nVallican  _\nPa.in.ore  -..- - 1.18\n8locan Park 1.10\nCre-cent Valley  -    -76\n8outh Slocan     .\u00ab\nBonnington\n_______&--__\t\ntL.J_._~-.-*\n_____\n______\n ;.\/*.?-\u25a0 -j;. \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0'..':\u25a0;-.:\";.\nPAGE SIX\nSfotam latltj Jforoa\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper.\nPublished every morning except Sunday by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY, LIMITED,\n266   Baker   Street,   Nelson,   British   Columbia.\nPhone 144, Private Exchange Connecting All Departments.\nMembers  ot  the  Audit  Bureau  ol  Circulations  and\nThe   Canadian   Press   Leased   Wire   News   Service.\nTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1938\nRESUMPTION OF PIRACY NOT\nUNEXPECTED DEVELOPMENT\nResumption of the piracy campaign in the Mediterranean will occasion no surprise. For many months it has been\napparent that there is a close connection between events in\nthe Far East and those in the West, and now, when Britain\nis concerned for her position and possessions in China, is\nan opportune time for Mussolini to make hay in Europe. It\nwas Britain's difficulties in Europe that encouraged Japan\nto be so high-handed in the Pacific.\nThere is also the fact that the position of France in\nEurope is not so strong as it was and the other fact that the\nLoyalists in Spain are putting up a much better fight than\nwas expected of them. In this latter fact there is comfort\nfor the foes of Fascism, but disquiet for the friends of peace.\nIt may be taken for granted that if the Loyalists establish\na prospect of ultimate victory, Mussolini will be into the\nbusiness again with both feet.\nCommenting on conditions, Senator Borah says the\nworld \"has gone mad\" and that the reason is the general\nbelief that Britain and the United States are arming in\nconcert. This is hardly a correct diagnosis. One-half of the\nworld is trying to remain sane and the other half had shown\nmaniacal tendencies long before America, and even before\nBritain, had begun to rearm.\nIn both countries the rearming programs were undertaken independently and they are being carried on independently. That the representatives of the two countries\nhave consulted is not to be questioned\u2014the interests of both\nare imperilled by the growing spirit of aggression\u2014but\nthat they are cooperating, while it may be suspected by\noutsiders, is not indicated by the facts. The recent fate of\nthe proposal to cooperate in arming China\u2014a proposal\nwhich the United States found it impossible to approve\u2014\nshows that independence of action is still the rule in Washington.\nThis event, by the way, shows how foolish it was to\nblame Simon on the ground that he did not cooperate with\nthe United States to save Manchuria.. The plain fact, known\nto Simon and to Stimson, and proved beyond doubt by later\nhappenings, is that neither Stimson nor any other American representative had power to promise United States adherence to any plan of action.\nWe judge ourselves by what we feel capable of doing,\nwhile others judge n by what we have already done.\n\u2014Longfellow.\nCECIL RHODES\"OXFORD BOYS\nWhat has become of the young men who reached Oxford University by way of the Rhodes Scholarships? There\nare so many of these now, in different countries, that the\nquestion is of more than ordinary interest. They were\nyouths of considerable promise, selected because of good\ncharacter and high standing in their school work. A Rhodes\nScholarship was\u2014and still is\u2014a mark of distinction.\nIt is well known that a thought uppermost in Cecil\nRhodes's mind when establishing these scholarships was\nthe preparation of youth for leadership in public affairs.\nThe world has had no greater need. How has the plan\nworked out in this respect? There is available information\nregarding Rhodes Scholars in the United States, now 870\nin number. Writing in Scribner's Magazine, Milton Mac-\nkaye follows the careers of these men.\nEvidently the academic strain dominates their activities, as 289 are teaching in universities or colleges, 28\noccupying important administrative posts, while 27 are\nsimilarly engaged in secondary schools. The rest are found\nin business, in the profession, in appointive government\npositions, in the army and the navy, and so on. None in\nthe cabinet; none in the senate\u2014and one in the house of representatives. Regarding 13 of these Rhodes men nothing is\nknown; and there should be another story in that.\nWhile these men are doing important work, they cannot be regarded as giving leadership in the public affairs of\nthe coutry. Naturally, university men are keenly interested\nin education; in the academic life. But Cecil Rhodes was\nfar from academic in character, He was a man of action;\na leader of men and movements; a man easily irritated by\ndelay. He \"sketched with large, impatient hand,\" and left\nto others the filling in of details.\nCecil Rhodes was not above thinking that men such as\nhe were needed in the rough-and-tumble business of directing public affairs, but, in the United States, at any rate, a\nmain purpose of the scholarships has not been achieved.\nDespite this condition \u2014 which probably would be a disappointment to Rhodes\u2014the scholarships have worked for\nthe benefit of humanity. For example, nearly 900 Oxford\nmen in the United States, in Whatever work they are engaged, must exert an influence toward better understanding between the peoples of Britain and the Republic \u2014\nwhich, after all, is a form cf leadership in a good cause.\nAnd it is interesting to note that \"actually today there are\nmore Englishmen resident on scholarships in America than\nthere are Rhodes students at Oxford\"\u2014which also should\nmake for closer association between the two countries.\nThe diminutive chains of habit are seldom heavy\nenough to be felt until they are too strong to be broken.\n\u2014Johnson.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B. -.-THURSDAY MORNING, FEB. 10, 1M8.\nTHE CBIEHEIf'S ROB*\nNEWS DISPATCH^ Bomb? From Rebel Plane. Kill Many Children taBM\u00ab16na.\nWINNIPSG (CP) -Twofull-color\nmotion pictures have been prepared\nby the tourist and convention bureau of the Manitoba government.\nOne shows a boat trip from Winnipeg to Norway House, the other\nshows scenes in Riding Mountain\nNational Park.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nAs Written\nby\nSHEPARD\nBARCLAY\nUMrnNG rorjR losses\nWHEN YOU hold the ace, Jack\nand ten of a suit, you are In danger of losing two tricks if the king\nand queen sit over that combination with an extra card to guard\nthem. Even with that situation,\nyou can limit your losses to one\ntrick In the suit if you get that\nopponent into a position which\ncompels him, after winning one\ntrick, to lead the suit back to you,\nor leave him no alternative except\nto lead some other suit which will\nafford you a \"ruff and discard\" because you are void in both hands,\neach possessing one or more\ntrumps.\nAQ.75-\nV A J10 8\n\u2666 J 10\n+ K8\n4 None\n\u00bb753\n\u2666 Q874\n*QJ100\n6?\na>10 6 4\n\u00bbKQ9\n\u2666 AK062\n*9 8\n4.AK9 83\n\u2022|6 4 2\na>53\n*A.\u00ab\n(Dealer: South, Both sides vulnerable.)\nI Here South opened with 1-Spade,\nfrlorth raised to three and South\nIbid four.\nI The club Q was the original lead,\nwhich the declarer won with the\nK In dummy. Three rounds of\ntrumps followed and then the heart\n10 was finessed, losing the Q.\nThe  diamonds  A  and  K- were\ncasrBd and a club returned, winch\nSouth won with the A. Having lost\nthree tricks, South hoped the second heart Unease would be successful. When his hopes were not\nrealized, he found himself one trick\nshort of his contract.\nAs lt was quite evident that the\ntwo losing diamonds would be\ncashed as soon as the opponents\ngained the lead, South had a sure\nway to make his contract. After\nwinning the first club trick and\ndrawing trumps, a club to the A\nshould have followed and then a\nclub ruff. Now the diamond 10\nshould have been offered, which\nEast would have won. After cashing '\nthe other winning diamond, East\nwould have had to return a diamond\nor a heart, and South would have\nlost only-three tricks.\n\u2022 \u2022 \u2022\nTomorrow's Problem\n\u2666 Q10\n\u2022JJ98-\n\u2666 \u00ab*\n\u2666KQ97 2.\n\u2666 J9842rjv.\n\u2666 052\n+ 03\ns.\n\u2666 7683\nVQ83\n\u2666 K109\n+ A84\n\u2666 AX\nf K75\n\u2666 AQJ7J\n4.J-0D\n(Dealer: North, Neither side vulnerable.)\nWhat is South's best procedure\nto make 3-No Trumps after the\nlead of the spade 47\nEXCUSE IT, PLEASE!\nmil A IT\/ CTv\n' fjw ft.tA\u2014*\nCOavniCHt, ms.,_\nMr. Buck will now describe some of his hair-breadth, hair-rait.\n<\"s, fcsir-tingling escapades in Africa.\u2022\"\nV* Questions Q\nA-NSWERS\nThis column of questions and\nanswers Is open to any reader ot\nthe Nelson Daily News. In no\ncase will the name at the person\nasking the question be published.\nQ. K\u201e Cranbrook\u2014Is it within the\nlaw to evict, during the winter, a\ntenant who has refused to pay rent\nfor a house for lour months?\nWhile there appears to be a general idea that a landlord cannot\nevict a tenant during the winter\nmonths, we have never been able to\nquite know where this idea arose,\nIn any event there is no law or\nstatute within the province of British Columbia to this effect. It is possible that in some ot the prairie\nprovinces there are laws or statutes\nto this effect, and for that reason\nthis general idea is prevalent. There\nis nothing, however, to prevent a\nlandlord from taking the proper\nproceedings in (his province at any\ntime during the year to evict a\ntenant in the event of there being a\ndefault which would give rise to the\nright to, evict.\nW. L. G., Trail\u2014Can you tell me\nwhether it was Daniel or Noah\nWebster who compiled the dictionary?\nNoah Webster, who was born in\n1758 and died in 1843, compiled the\nAmerican Dictionary of the English\nLanguage, published in 1828. Daniel\nwas an American orator and statesman born in 1782. He died in 1852.\nM. L., Crescent Valley\u2014Could you\ngive me some names of Electrical\nschools?\nThe Hemphill Deisel Engineering\nSchools Ltd., 1365 Granville St.,\nVancouver. For further information\nwrite to the University ot British Columbia, Department of Mechanical\nand Electrical Engineering, Vancouver, B. C.\nRossland Radio\nFolks Pay Fines\nROSSLAND, B. C. Feb. 8-Three\npersons were fined for not having\nradio licences according to federal\nregulatlons. W. Allibone, A. Turn-\nbull and Mrs. M. Metzgar were fined $2 and $1.50 costs each by Magistrate R. E. Plewman In Rossland\npolice court.\n(0 Trail Boys\nApply lo Join\nSafely Patrol\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. 9\u2014Applications\nfor membership to the newly organized School Boy Safety and Preventive Patrol will be available Wednesday, Chief of Police John Laurie\nannounced today, while further\nplans will be announced later in the\nweek. ,    ,\nEvidence of the growing Interest\nin the new movement was manifested Monday when some 40 school\nboys interviewed the chief relevant\nto the patrol.\nChief Laurie stated that in such\na movement there were many factors to be taken Into consideration\nand consequently, the development\nmust necessarily be slow.\nWinter Parking\nBrings Queries\nby City Council\nSteps to prevent all-winter parking of cars on city streets were\nsought by the city council Tuesday\nnight after Alderman T. H. Waters\nstated' board of works employees\nwere complaining that they made\nsnow plowing difficult.\nIt was pointed out one-hour parking had been enacted for Baker\nstreet, but was not being enforced.\nAlderman C. W. Tyler complained cars parked on streets under winter conditions made driving dangerous, particularly on streets where\nthe street railway occupied the\ncentre ol the roadway.\nNelson Council to\nDiscuss Zoning to\nRegulate Building\nCity council will discuss a zoning bylaw aimed at governing building in the city ol Nelson. Decision\nto this effect was made by the council Tuesday night after Alderman\nT. H. Waters expressed the opinion\nthat such a bylaw might materially\nassist individuals in obtaining housing loans,\nWasson Authorized\nAcquire Shares for\nTrust Fund of City\nAuthority to acquire 12 common\nshares of General Steel Wares Ltd.,\noffered in lieu ot Interest on preferred stock comprising one of the\nfunds held in trust by the city was\ngiven W. E. Wasson, city clerk, by\nthe city council Tuesday night. The\ncompany had made the offer, Mr.\nWasson explained, to . holders of\nshares.\nCity to Purchase\nAir Compressor to\nClean Generators\nPurchase lor $99 ol an air compressor Ior blowing dust out ot\nmotor generators at the city substation, a means ot avoiding trouble\nfrom dirt in the machines, was authorized by the city council Tuesday night. The compressor will be\npurchased \"on trial,\" being returnable.\nTender Supply Ties\nfor Street Railway\nReferred Committee\nPrice on ties for street railway\nuse, placed before the city council\nTuesday night, were referred to the\nstreet railway committee, since no\ncall for tenders had been made.\nStreet railway receipts in January amounted to $1379.75 compared\nwith $1392 a year ago.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\nTrail Employed 17\nMen on Snow job\nTRAIL, B.C., Feb. IH-Seventeen\nmen were required by the City engineering department to clear away\nthe recent snow in Trail, many of\nthem being used on clearing steps.\nThe department reported that up\nto the present time no snow has\nbeen hauled by truck, thaws coming\nalmost Immediately after heavy\nsnow falls. This, it was pointed out,\nwas exceptional, as In other years\ntrucks and plows had been utilized\nlor this work on downtown streets.\n(ily Will Slock\nSuppressors to\nCut Rtidio Noise\nPrices ol \"noise suppressors\" Ior\nhousehold electrical equipment, proposed to be stocked by the city and\nsold at cost to the public, were\nplaced before the city council Tuesday night by R. E. Potter, city engl\nneer, and .the council authorized a\ntrial purchase,  i    -\nRadio dealers felt lt would probably help their business if the city\nwas to stock this equipment and sell\nit at cost, since many more persons\nwould be able to buy it.\nTrail Marians\nEnjoy PHI Skll\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 8\u2014Trail Ro-\ntarlans were treated to hilarious\ncomedj* of a different variety today when Reginald Roome, dressed\nin appropriate costume impersonated\na \"doctor\" of the \"Purgative Pill\nCompany, Inc.\" at the regular luncheon-meeting of the Rotary club\nIn Crown Point hotel palm room\ntoday.\nS. Hi Kyle, another guest, introduced Mr. Roome.\nNotice was received from the Klamath Falls Rotary club, Oregon,\nol intention to nominate. Marshall\nE. Comett, member, lor district governor at the district conlerence to\nbe held at San Francisco in conjunction with the International conlerence there, which begins June 14.\nTo Print Rates on\nCity's Light Bills\nLetter of E. P. Dawson asserting\nthat the city light rate was illogical\nIn that the rate was increased from\nhalt a cent to one cent per kilowatt\nalter 500 kilowatts haa been used,\nand that this increased rate upon\nvolume use would necessitate postponement of installation of an electric range in his house, was received by the city council Tuesday night.\nThe council decl.ed that light\nrates should be printed on bills\nrendered by the city the next time\nbills were printed.\nGARBAGE COLLECTORS\nASK INCREASED WAGES\nRequest ol George C. Langridge\nand J. Leeming tor an increase in\npayment for garbage collection service in view ol increased services\nwas tabled by the city council Tuesday night pending consideration ot\nthe services.\nCity Asks Prices on\nTrucks for Paving;\nPropose Early Start\nTo be prepared to put the city's\nnew road paving equipment to work\nas soon as possible, the public works\ncommittee ot the city council Tuesday night recommended that the\ncouncil call lor tenders immediately\nlor a heavy second hand truck or\nchassis, and lor a two-ton truck with\nmetal dump body. Tenders must be\nsubmitted by March 1.\nELEVEN CASES\nOF WHOOPING\nCOUGH NELSON\n18. Cases Reportable\nDisease Listed\nin January\nEighteen cases ol communicable\ndisease, 11 ol them whooping cough,\nwere reported to the city council\nTuesday by Dr. F. P. Sparks, health .\nofficer.\nThe other cases'were:,\nInfluenza \u2014....\u00bb  1\nErysipelas    _\u25a0  1\nSeptic sore throat\t\nScarlet fever *\u2122\nChicken pox\t\nPneumonia\t\nTuberculosis....\n\"Folks keep complalnin' because\nthe law ain't enforced, but there\nain't one in the lot that don't try\nto prevent justice when his own\nfolks get caught.\"\nLooking Backward...\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(Feb. 10, 1928.)\nThe bodies ot five men have been\nrecovered but little hope is held\nfor the recovery of 44 other miners\nwho were trapped in an explosion\non the 500 loot level at the Hollinger\nmine at Sudbury, Ont.\u2014Mrs. Hugh\nMiddleton Ol Willow Point is a\nvisitor in Nelson.\u2014Honoring his\nguest, Ell-Wood Knight ol Weyburn,\nSask., Norval German entertained,\nat an evening ol games and dancing.\u2014Tony Canzonerl won the\nfeatherweight title oh a decision\nfrom Benny Bass at New York. Bass\nsuffered a dislocated right shoulder blade when he missed a hard\npunch.\u2014Roy McGregor was elected\npresident of the Crawford Bay\nFarmer's insUtute.\nTWENTY YEARS  AQO\n(Feb. 10, 1918.)\nTo save fuel, factories In the east\nhave been ordered closed lor three\ndays.\u2014Coke prices were raised from\n$7 to $8 and gas prices from $1.90\nper 1000 cubic feet to $2.25 per 1000\nI cubic Ieet, by the city ^puncll.\u2014J,\nW. Mulholland left for the coast,\u2014\nE. D. Ireland .formerly with the\nCP.R. engineering department here,\nhas been promoted from sergeant\nto lieutenant.\u2014Lome A. Campbell\nof Rossland passed through town on\nhis way to Spokane.\u2014British sailors\nsaved 1900 U.S. soldiers when a\nGerman U-Boat sank the Cunard\nliner Tuscania off the Irish coast.\nTHIRTY YEAR8 AGO\n(Feb. 10, 1908.)\nAnna Josephine Rudnlckl and C.\nC. Wright, Fernie young people,\nwere married at the home of the\nbride's father, J. F. Rudnickl.\u2014T. G.\nProcter and Harry Wright left for\nthe coast.\u2014J. H. Robertson of Rossland is a city visitor.\u2014J. Read ol\nErie was in the city for tha purpose\nof renewing a lease on the Second\nRelief mine lor another year.\u2014A\nteam belonging to Nap Mallette ran\naway on Baker street, but no damage was done,\u2014J. A. Irving has put\nIn an electric cotlee grinder In nis\nstore, the lirst In the Kootenay. It\nwill granulate two pounds ol col-\ntea In a minute.\n1\n1\n1\n1\n  I\nThe report stated examination of\nhigh school students had been completed, and that tuberculin testing\nat Central school had been practically completed.\n\"Two lunch counters In the city\nwere Inspected,\" the report added.\n\"One was satisfactory, th\u00ab other\nquestionable.\n* \"The city milk supply Is being re-\nchecked at the present time.\"\nRev. Mr. Storey\nAsks Porch Light\nApplication ol Rev. C. A. C. Story\nfor a porch light on the entrance\nto his residence at the Bethel Tabernacle, Baker street, was referred\nby the city council Tuesday night j\nto the tire, water and light committee.\nExtension of City\nLight Service at\nHarrop Approved\nApplication lor extension ot city\nlight service at Procter to serve S.\nR. Pope was authorized and approv-\ned by the city council Tuesday\nnight.\nHome\nImprovement\nCover your floon with Cottonwood Panels, and finish in\nlinoleum effect by dapple-art\npainting. You will have a sanitary, durable floor.\nDistrict Distributors!\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Co., Ltd.\niiiiiiiiiiiniiinuiaT\n\"Build B.C. Payrolls\"\nPACIFIC\nMILK\n\"NIGHT\nSHIFTS\"\nNationwide\nOver CBR\nMonday, 14th\nAt 8:30 p.m., F\u00abb. I-th, the\n\"Night Shift''at the Pacific\nMilk plant at Abbotsford,\nB.C., will broadcast across\nCanada. ,       .\nCBR announcers, and plant\nofficials will detail each step\n\u2014as farmers drive up, as\nmilk is condensed, homogenized, Irradiated, canned,\nsterilized, labelled, etc.\nMonday, Feb. 14, 8:30 p.m.,\nPacific Standard Time.\nPacific Mill\nThat\nJones has'been promoted\u2014trie (Hub meeting Is next\nMonday\u2014the west is in the grip of blizzards\u2014thousands are killed in the Japanese and Spanish wars\u2014tha\nCanadian parliament is having a lively session\u2014\"\nWhen you read the Nelson Daily News\nyou read local, district and world news\nthat's up to the minute.\nSUBSCRIBE TODAY AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF UP-\nTO-THE-MINUTE NEWS\nNELSO^DAILYNEWS\nBritish Columbia's Most Interesting Newspaper '\ni----i.^---..--,---------.;,Vjk_w.;.t._,il|T|if:.\n_______________________\n________\n wsmmmmm\n..:\":\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0-      .\nOut of tfie By Hr\/c Ramsden\nPRESS BOX\nA BIT ABOUT SOCCER\nScotland's famed Hugh Gallacher,\none of the well known centres of\nthe soccer world, has been transferred from Notts County to Grimsby Town, going from the English\nthird southern to the second division. His transfer is listed with\n19 others of recent date, which included:\nHarry Gray, inside-left, Grim-\nthorpe to Barnsley.\nSteve Wragge, left-half, Birley\nCarr to Barniley.\nJack Kelly, forward, Leeds, United to Birmingham.\nHarry Ward, centre-half, Kippax\nUnited to Arsenal.\nAdam Dawson, forward, Halifax\nTown to Rochdale.\nVictor Saunders, inside-lett, Shore-\niham to Portsmouth,\n1   George    Hold'uam,    inside-right,\niRuncorn to Leicester City.\nJames Davies, forward, Port Talbot (South Wales) to Chester.\nJohn Reid, centre-forward,\nWishaW to Queen's Park Rangers.\nGeorge Wilkinson, half-back, Ous-\nton United to Southport.\ni   Alan Hughes .outside-right, Wigen Athletic to South Liverpool.\nI   Francis Bertram  Carpenter,  in-\ntide-left, Rochester to Stoke City,\nKenneth Armitage, centre-hall,\nNormanton Spring to Barnsley.\nJames Collantine outside-right,\nMarske Rovers to Middlesbrough.\nLeslie Farr, centre-forward, Street\n(Somerset) to Wolverhampton Wanderers.\nJohn Fairhurst, roght-hal 1, High\nPark, Southport, to Blackburn Rovers.\nC. Whitechurch, outside-right,\nFord Sports (Dagenham) to Charlton Athletic.\nHarry Smith, centre-forward,\nEarlestown Bohemians to Bolton\nWanderers.\nDesmond Broomfield, forward,\nShoreham Grammar School to\nBrighton and Hove Albion.\nThose who are Interested in\n\"gates\" at sports will be interested\nin the following figures for fourth\nround games of the English cup:\nAttendance   Gate\nAt Everton  *68,158 ...,\u00a35,87.\nAtVillaPark    69,603 .... \u00a35,164\nAt Manchester (C)    .1,937 .... \u00a34,582\nAt Wol'hampton .. '61,267 .... \u00a34,421\nAt Sheffield .'   50,264 .... \u00a33,246\nAt Nottingham ....   39,055 .... \u00a32,893\nAt Charlton     50,516 .... \u00a32,700\nAt Brentford   \"36,718 .... \u00a32,554\nAt Preston     35,000 .... \u00a32,403\nAt Barnsley   \"35,547 .... \u00a32,338\nAt Bradford       31,347 .... \u00a32,077\nAt Luton  *25,746 .... \u00a32,003\nAt Huddersfield ..   29,480 ...  \u00a31,734\nAt York  \"18,795 ....\u2022\u00a31,425\nAt Chesterfield   ..   21,620 .... \u00a31,297\nAt New Bri'ton ....   13,029 ....    \u00a3908\n* Records\na    a    .\ne$jd&AOhL\nand. (peak...'.\nHOW8ABOUT THE\nKOOTENAY   LEAGUE?\nMajor Frederick McLaughlin is\nsaid to be on the verge of loosening the Chicago Black Hawk purse\nstrings. . . .So long as Chicago fans\nkept turning out to see his teams\nlose, the Major didn't see much\npercentage in spending good money\nto turn them into a winner.... But\nthe gossip is that he has been persuaded at last to invest in material.\n... Hawks plan to support an amateur club next year and form a\nworking arrangement with a minor\nprofessional outfit.. . \u2014Ralph Allen\nin Winnipeg Tribune.\nOH, SAY NOT SOI\nThe only real amateurs left in\nsport are the professional golfers,\nwho pay their own way\u2014who travel\nfrom eight to ten thousand miles\nand expect to lose from $1,000 to\n$2,500 for the thrill of competition.\n\u2014Grantland Rice.\nCanadian Horse Is\nUnplaced in Berkely\nWon by Black Hawk\nt>ERBY, England, Feb. 9 - (CP\nEiable).-Rock Land, Grand National\nandidate owned by H. R. Bain of\n'oronto, today ran unplaced in the\nlerkely handicap, won by D. R.\nlarshall's Black Hawk.\nThe Canadian horse started at 10\n} 1 and completed the three-mile\nBourse. He carried 150 pounds.\nThe winner beat J.  V.  Rank's\n.Southern Hero by 1% lengths, with\nThe Earl of Derby's Hillsbrook third,\nWither half length back.\nCanada's Bowlers\nLose Third Place\nSYDNEY, Feb. 9 (CP-Reuters) -\nCanada's lawn bowling team today\nlost to Australia third place in the\nrink competition of the British Empire. Games bowling schedule.\nThe team of Bob Gray, skip; John\nFleming, Ab Reid and Dick Adam all\nfrom Vancouver, tied for third by\ndefeating Australia 21-20. But the\nAntipodes bowlers, skipped by Kinder, reversed the tables in the replay to win 30-10.\nNEW EMPIRE GAMES CHAMPIONS\nI SYDNEY, Feb. 9 (CP) \u2014 Fourteen\nhampionships were decided on the\nimrth day of the British Empire\nlames today. Here are the champ-\nins:\nWIMMINQ-\n110-yard   freestyle:   Bob   Pirie,\nanada.\nWomen's 110-yard freestyle: Ev-\n1 de Lacy, Australia.\n1880-yard Relay:  England  (Fred-\nTrick  Dove,  Mostyn   French-Wil-\nRobert   Leivers,    Norman\ntainwright.)\nWomen's 440-yard freestyle: Dor-\nhy Green, Australia.\n!0-yard breastroke: John Davies,\nUgland.\n)-yard freestyle: Bob Pirie, Can-\nWomen's    110-yard    backstroke:\nPat Norton, Australia.\nDIVING\u2014\nWomen's springboard: Irene Don-\nnett. Australia.\nMen's springboard: R. Master,\nAustralia. *\nWomen's high tower: L. Hook,\nAustralia.\nMen's high tower:  Douglas To-\nmalin, England.\nROWING-\nEights: England (W. Reeve, cox;\nT. Turner, stroke; D. Kingsford, J.\nSturrack, P. Jackson, J. Turnbull,\nR. Hambrldge, B. Beazley, J. Bur-\nrough.)\nFours: Australia, (H. Kerr, cox;\nD. Fraser, stroke; S. Elder, J. Fisher,\nG. Freeth.)\nSingles: H. Turner, Australia.\n[What Canada Did at Empire Games\nIRESTLING\nHeavyweight\u2014 ,\nJohn Whelan, Vancouver, lost first\nby fall; lost second bout on\nIs. (Eliminated).\nVIMMING\n0-yard free style-\nBob Pirie, Toronto, won in final.\nVomen's 110-yard tree' style-\nDorothy Lyon, Toronto, third in\nPhyllis   Dewar,   Vancouver.\n1 in final.\nlyiNG\nVomen's springboard-\nLynda Adams, Vancouver, second\n1 final.\nMarie Sharkey, Calgary, third in\nil.\nlarbara Richards, Winnipeg, fifth\nI final.\n10-yard relay-\nCanada's team (George Burleigh,\nfcronto; Bobby Hooper, Vancouver;\nprdon Devlin, Toronto; Bob Pirle,\nfronto; placed second.\nBy The Canadian Press\nBOXING\nMiddleweight-\nRex Carey, Victoria, won third\nposition.\nBantamweight-\nBilly  Brade, Winnipeg, lost by\npoints (eliminated).\nWelterweight-\nNorman Dawson, Vancouver, lost\nby decision (eliminated).\nWomen's 440-yard free style-\nDorothy Hobson, Toronto, fourth\nin final.\nPhyllis Dewar, Vancouver, sixth\nin final.\n110 yard backstroke-\nNoel Oxenbury, New Westminster,\nB.C., fourth in final.\nFlorence Humble, Montreal, sixth\nin final.\n220-yard backstroke-\nJimmy Prentice,  Toronto,  third\nin final.\n440-yard free style-\nBob Pirie, Toronto, won in final.\nWHISK AWAY\nTHAT UZ*\nTEILING\/\nW\nYOU'LL feel alert and on your toes\nafter a refreshing Gillette wake-up\nshovel Your face gets a stimulating\n\"lift\" for you skim through stubble\nright at rskin Uriel Gillette Blades are\nprecision-made to fit your Gillette\nRa_or accurately. That's why they\nalways give you the cleanest, closest,\nshaves money can buy \u2014 exhilarating\nVfoko-up shaves that make you look\nand feel fit for the rest of the day I Insist on Blue Gillette Blades.\nS for 25c, 10 ior 50c.\n\"SI _ \u25a0 &#.\n.-; -,;\u25a0\u25a0'\nGillette Blades\nfO\u00ab   TH.    WOK-B'S    .INSST    SHAVEJ\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-THURSDAY MORNING, FEB. tt. 1038,\nCurlers to Invade\nDawson by 'Plane\nDAWSON, Y.T., Feb. 9 (CP) -On\na goodwill visit from Fairbanks,\nAlaska, seven men and five women\nwill arrive here tomorrow by plane\nas guests of the Dawson Curling\nclub.\nThe goodwill visit will be returned in March when a party of Dawson residents will accompany- Virginia Chapman, elected queen Of the\nYukon last fall, to Fairbanks, where\nthe Dawson girl will join Alaska\ncity queens in a pageant during the\nannual carnival and dog derby.\nJoliat Steps Inlo\n700th N.H.L. Game\nMONTREAL, Feb. 9 (CR)--Grand\nlittle veteran of an era fast lading,\nAurel Joliat whose pale, placid features camouflage the power and\ncourage jammed within his 135-\npound frame, goes into battle tomorrow night with Montreal Canadiens\nfor his 700th National Hockey league\nengagement.\nThe league's steel mite, the lightest player in the circuit, is its oldest\ncampaigner. No one else has come\nwithin hailing distance of the 700-\ngame mark, for age and death have\ntaken their toll.\nFIGHTS\nMUSKEGON, Mich-Kayo Morgan, 122\u00bb,_, Detroit, outpointed Jack!-\nie Callura, 127, Hamilton, Ont., (10).\nROCHESTER, N.Y. - Freddie\nSteele, 158, world middleweight\nchampion, knocked out Bob Turner,\n162, Newport News, Va., (1), non-\ntitle.\nDETROIT\u2014Natie Brown, 198, of\nWashington, knocked out Lorenzo\nPack, 210, Detroit (10).\nRiggs in Net Semis\nPALM BEACH, Fla., Feb. 9 (AP)\n\u2014Unperturbed by losing a set, Bob\nby Riggs pt Chicago drove into the\nquarter-finals of the Everglades\nclub tennis tournament today with a\n5-7, 6-3, 6-0 decision over Vernon\nMarcum of Lakeland, Fla.\nDates Set for\nIntermediate\nPuck Playoffs\nNelson intermediates are to play\nthe Grand Forks-Greenwood winners in the southern interior intermediate hockey playdowns February 22 and 23 it was announced\nTuesday night, by P. G. Richards,\nsecretary of the Nelson Amateur\nHockey association, on receipt of a\nmessage from A. W. McDonald,\npresident ol the B.C. Hockey association. The southern interior champions will play the Okanagan till-\nists at Vernon February 26 and 28,\nthe winner of this series going into\nthe provincial final.\nThe other finalist will be determined at Merritt February 26 and\n28 by a playoff between Bridge\nRiver and the Nicola Valley winner.\nFinals will be on Vernon's new\nsheet ol artificial ice March 3 and\n5, and March 7 if necessary. Playdowns are to be two games, total\ngoals to count, and the final two out\nof three.\nSouth Slocan Pin\nSquad Beat Nelson\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C-, Feb. 6-\nSouth Slocan gave the Nelson Canadian Legion bowlers a 2343-2210\nbeating on the West Kootenay Power & Light company alleys here today, with S. Ogenski ot South Slocan leading the aggregate scoring.\nHe rang up a score ot 523, beating\nhis nearest opponent, Jack Hamson\nof Nelson, by 15 points. A. Scanlan\nof the Nelson quintet took high individual scoring honors with a mark\nof 210, 11 points over D. Muir, of\nthe local team.\nTeams in order of first, second,\nthird, fourth and tifth follow:\nNelson \u2014 Anthony Stanlan, Frank\nMcClements, Joseph Hunden, Jack\nHamson and William Molisky.\nSouth Slocan \u2014 J. Laurie, Stanley\nOgenski, A. Mawone, David Muir\nand E. Bowkett.\nNorm Bentley's juvenile pucksters\nof Rossland have lined up a fairly\ntough schedule for this week. After\nRossland played the Trail Juveniles\nat Trail Monday night; and Castlegar coming to Rossland on Tuesday,\nthe Nelson Juveniles are booked to\nappear in Rossland Thursday to\ntangle with the locals, but there\nseems to be just a little doubt as to\nwhether Nelson will appear here as\nscheduled, lor they lound it necessary to call oft their last booking.\nRossland Juniors are not faring so\nwell as the Juveniles, but are improving rapidly with competition,\ngiving Ross's Trail Juniors plenty\nof trouble in order to stay ahead in\ntheir first Junior league encounter\nlast Wednesday at Trail.\nWish I could give you some good\nnews about Rossland's entry in the\nW. K. H. L. A headline like this\nwould- look good now: \"Rossland\nMiners are threatening to take over\nfirst place in the West Section of\nthe League.\" But such an event is\nnow impossible. They play their first\ntonight in Kimberley on their second\ntrip ol the cast section clubs with\nlittle hope of chalking up wins. One\nexecutive member of the Miners felt\nlike locking the doors, he said, and\nhaving the rest of the games booked\nfor Ro.sland played in camera, after\nthe meagre attendance for last\nThursday's Coleman game, Well,\nperhaps some other year, with a new\nrink in the once most famous hockey town in the west, Rossland's team\nmay be able to break the jinx of\nonly three wins in one season.\nHOOP8TER8 DOING WELL\nThis city's representatives in the\nbasketball sphere are doing right\nwell by themselves, making six\nstraight wins this year, and turning\nin performances that displayed\nsmooth and tricky basketball. It is a\nmystery to me why more people do\nnot avail themselves of the opportunity to see some of these exciting\nand really thrilling games of basketball. There is a nominal charge\nfor these games, but the Legion hall\nis now well heated and comfortable,\nand, without exaggeration the games\nare of the calibre that any enthusiast of sport would get a kick out of.\n\"Bunny\" Dame ol the Trail Smoke\nEaters kind ol beat me to the draw\nby turning in a bang-up performance against Coleman last Friday\nnight before I had a chance to get\nmy column in, and thereby spoiled\none of my uncanny predictions,\nwhich I was all set to make. I have\nhad faith in \"Bunny's\" ability Irom\nthe start ot the season, and as he\nis now realizing that the main object ol the game is to get down\nthere and score a goal, rather than\nhow, or what he loolfs like getting\nthem, he should prove a valuable\nassistance to the Smoke Eaters in\nthe play-offs.\nGlen Vickers,\ncrosse  player\na hockey and la-\nrfoi\nwho performed\nRossland, and later in Nelson, is\ngetting some good publicity as a\nmember of the Portland Buckaroos,\nand many local fans and others wonder if the coaches and managers in\nthis district know a hockey player\nwhen they see one. Though Glen\nwas a lair player, he was hardly of\nprofessional calibre, as any critic\nwould readily admit. He has a nice\nstyle and a good shot, and is an\namiable and regular fellow, but perhaps he has a pro player's temperament, and perhaps Andy Aitken-\nhead and Bert Scharte, members of\nthe Buckaroos and friends of Glen's\nfrom Saskatoon, together with\nCoach Bobby Howe, decided that\nthey needed another man, and that\nVickers was plenty good enough.\nTHE HARDEST 8P0RT\nWhich is thehardestsport to mas-\nyou wil.. .\nis the toughest to learn, and so do\nter, hockey or lacrosse?\nanswer. Most of\nknow your\nou will say hockey\nI, but I ran into three fellows in\nRossland who were too hard for me\nto crack in this respect. It was a\ncase of three to one, and I, being a\nrather shy and modest hombre, had\nvery little chance against such a\nnotable trio of sports authorities as\n\"Rocky\" Davies, coach of the Rossr\nland Lacrosse club, George Wilson,\nmanager of Rossland's brilliant band\nof basketballers, and J. Gidinski,\ngoalie of Rossland's lacrosse team,\nbut I am taking advantage of my\nposition and saying that you have to\ngrow up with a hockey stick and\nskates to be able to play good hockey, while you can learn to play lacrosse as long as you are able to\nshow a burst of speed now and then.\nFor example, you have Hugh Miller,\nwho was an oi-tstandinz player, and\nthe captain ol lask year's Trail lacrosse team. He played no lacrosse,\nto speak of before last season. Also\nCurly Wheatley, who is doing a lot\nof refereeing in the W. K. H. L.,\nand who did not start to play lacrosse till he was 27 years of age,\nand was fairly successful. So I contend that hockey is the fastest and\nhardest game to learn, but not necessarily the toughest on the player\nhimself. I'm not sure whether I will\nneed a bodyguard the morning that\nthis appears, but I prepared myself\nby renting a bicycle just in case,\nWinchell's flash on the following\nnews might run something like this:\n\"Flash, Hockey News. The Wood,\nVallance company of Nelson, who\nare reported to have the strongest\nhockey machine in the west, will\nhop a plane, 20 strong, to chop\nsticks for the C. M. & S. Warehouse\nBombers, (by requisition). Anticipating a sell-out attendance, the\nofficials have gone to great pains\nin securing the services of none\nother than that friend of hockey\nplayers and newspapermen, the man\nthat puts lacrosse over in this\ncountry, the man from the rabbit\nisland of Australia, W.K.H.L. president, and latter day Saint, Mr. Frank\nCoates, to act as referee. Rules of\nthe game of hockey, in enlarged\nprint, will be tacke.d on to the side\nboards so Frank can't go wrong.\nMay the best team win. Mr. Coates\nrequested that each fan be searched\nbefore entering the rink just in case\nany attempts were made- to smuggle\nvegetables into the rink.\nPirie Hangs Up Two of Three\nt%imminz Marks for Canada\nToronto   Star   Leads\nField in 110 and\n--.   440 Races\nAUSTRALIAN WINS\nLADIES' 110 SWIM\nSYDNEY, Feb. 9 (CP-Reutert)\n\u2014Three new marks went on the\nEmpire's record scroll-today, two\nof them etched In by the powerful stroking of a long-limbed Toronto star on tha British Empire\ngames swimming program.\nBob Pirle, six-foot-two, who\ndivides hli time at home between\na Toronto grain elevator office and\nthe High Park 8wlmmlng club,\nchurned tho waters of the North\nSydney Olympic pool as they have\nseldom been before, to set new\nEmpire marks In winning the 110-\nand 440-yard freestyle events.\nHis times were 69.6 and 4:54,8\nas he ploughed past brilliant Empire opposition for the two championships. In between his record-\nbreaking he sandwiched a sparkling performance that just misted\ngiving Canada the 880-yard relay\ntitle.\nCarrying the Canadian colors with\nPirie were four divers and a compact squad of swimmers who although not in the win column battled gallantly for places with stars\nfrom Great Britain and other Empire countries.\nA SECOND AND THIRD\nLinda Adams of Vancouver and\nMarie Sharkey of Calgary placed\none-two behind Irene Donnett of\nAustralia in the women's springboard diving championship. Barbara Richards of Winnipeg added\nfifth place for Canada.\nThe little Vancouver mlsi again\nranked second In the tower plunge\nwhere her graceful form and cool\nperformance In the face of clattering traffic from nearby Sydney\nharbor bridge which tensed nerves\nof many competitors, won the\nadmiration of 4600 spectators.\nAnd unofficial form experts\nwere agreed while Milt Donnett\nhad won her event by a narrow\nmargin Lynda wai decidedly unlucky not to have been placed\nahead of L. Hook of Australia In\nthe tower dlvei.\nGeorgie Athans ol Vancouver battled gamely with R. Master ol Australia and Douglas Tomaltn ot England in the two men's events, but\nlacked the experience ol his older\ncompetitiors, two ot the Empire's\ngreatest divers. Athans was third in\nboth springboard and tower with\nMaster and Tomalin in that order\nin the first event and reversing positions in the second.\nCANADA.. BEST GIRL\nDorothy Lyon of Toronto was\nCanada's best feminine performer,\nplacing third In the women's 110-\nEard free-style behind Evelyn de\nacy. and Dorothy Green, both of\nAustralia. Miss de Lacy set up an\nEmpire mark of 1:10.1 lor the new\ndistance, increased 10 yards from\nprevious games.\nPhyllis Dewar ol Vancouver finished lourth.\nDorothy Hobson ol Toronto was\nlourth in the women's 440-yard freestyle where Miss Green broke the\nEmpire mark of 5:45.4 in winning\ntime of 5:39.7. Miss Dewar appeared\nto tire unexpectedly and wound up\nsixth. ,\n3ET8 NEW MARK\nPat Norton of Australia established an Empire mark in another\nnew distance, the women's 110-\nyard backstroke where Noel Oxenbury of New Westminster, B.C.,\nwai fourth and Florence Humble\nof Montreal ilxth. Mill Norton's\ntime wai 1:19.5.\nJimmy Prentice of Toronto clung\nto third place in the 220-yard breast-\nstroke, behind Walter Spence ot\nGuiana, and John Davies ot England who was timed in 2:51.9. It was\nalso a new distance.\nIN RELAY\nFrom the short water sprint Pirie\ntook up Canada's burden on the\nlast lap of the 880-yard relay where\nGordon Devlin ot Toronto lpst a\ntwo-yard lead and three yards in\naddition to Robert Leivers of England on the third lap.\nPirle tore through the water,\nswimming the last 220 yards in 2:13\nto break not only the Canadian mark\nhe holds lor the distance but also\nthe Australian record. But he missed overhauling Norman Wainwright\nby two seconds, margin by which\nthe English team triumphed.\nGeorge Burleigh had pat Canada\ninto a two-yard lead over the first\nlap and Bobby Hooper ol Vancouver held the advantage on the second.\nThe lean Toronto ace climaxed\nhis night with another record clipping performance in the 440-yard\nfreestyle where he outstroked a\ntield that was last enough to place\nthe lirst lour finishers inside the\neight-year-old Empire record. Pir-\nie^s time ot 4:54.6 was 5.2 seconds\nfaster than the 1930 time of Australia's Noel Ryan who finished\nlast today.\nLeivers, Biddulph and Wainwright\nfinished In that order with only a\nsplit second separating them,\nBOXING, WRESTLING,\nROWING\nIn the boxing, wrestling and rowing programs, only others on the\nday's program, Canada found little\ncomfort.\nRex  Carey of  Victoria\nplaced\nthird In the middleweight boxing\ndivision but Welterweight Norman\nDawson of Vancouver and Billy\nBrade, Winnipeg bantam, were eliminated.\nCarey outpointed L. Stubbs of\nEngland after Brade lost a similar\ndecision to J. B. Dillon of Australia\nand Dawson dropped a point battle\nto S. Tsirindanls, Southern Rhodesia.\nJack Whelan, Vancouver's heavyweight hope, passed out of the wrestling picture when he lost a fall to\nJ. Knight of Australia and dropped\na decision to James Bryden of New\nZealand.\nAUSTRALIANS WIN\nCanada's highly touted oarsmen\nfound the going too tough in their\nbattle with fours from two sister\ndominions.\nCoxed by Ken Jaggard of Vancouver the shell with Jack McDonald, Jimmy Temple, Max Winkler\nand Don Davis, all of- Victoria,\nwound up third and last.\nThe Canadians were three-quarters of a length back of the second\nplace New Zealand four with Australia another length and a quarter\nin front at the finish,\nPapers Critical\nof Games Judging\nSYDNEY, Feb. 10 (Thursday) (CP\nReuters) \u2014 Sydney newspapers\njoined today in critical comment of\njudging in yesterday's British Empire Games diving contests, particularly the women's springboard and\nhigh tower events in which Lynda\nAdams of Vancouver placed Second.\nThe Daily Telegraph quoted G.\nPercival, reserve diving judge, as\nsaying Canadian cornplaints were\njustified as there had been a complete lack of uniformity in the judges' awards.\n\"Several judges were incompetent\" Percival said.\nThe Sydney Sun quoted Mrs. K.\nBuckle, foremost authority on women's diving in New South Wales, as\nsaying:\n\"I am amazed at the high tower\njudges' decision and thought Miss\nAdams was first, Jean Gilbert (England) second, and Irene Donnett,\n(Australia), third.\"\nMiss Adams was second to Miss\nHook who was awarded 36.47 points\nand the Vancouver girl 36.39. Miss\nDonnett was third with 34 and Miss\nGilbert fourth with 33.9.)\nMarr lo Lead\nRink to (oast\nWilliam (Scotty) Marr will lead a\nrlnk of Nelson curlers into competition at the Pacific coast bonspiel\nat Vancouver next week.\nPlaying with the irrepressible\n\"Scotty\" will be Michael Michelson, Clifford McKinnon and Fred\nSmith.\nWembley, Streatham\nPlay Scoreless Tie\nLONDON, Feb. 9 (CP Cable)-\nWembley Monarchs and Streatham\nplayed a scoreless tie in a National\nleague hockey game tonight. The\npoint brought Monarchs into a tie\nwith Brighton Tigers for second-\nlast place in the standings. Streatham are the tailenders.\nCALENTO-THOMAS\nBOUT CALLED OFF\nNEW YORK, Feb. 9 (AP)-Tony\nGalento's 10 - round heavyweight\nbout with Harry Thomas of Eagle\nBend, Minn,, scheduled for Feb. 18\nin Madison Square Garden, was\ncancelled today when Galento begged off because of a bad left hand.\nJimmy Adamick, young Detroit\nheavyweight will replace Galento\nagainst Thomas on the same date.\nCrisler Is New\nMichigan Coach\nPRINCETON, N.J., Feb. 9 (API-\nHerbert Orrin (Fritz) Crisler resigned his post as head football\ncoach at Princeton university tonight and announced he has accepted a \"similar position\" at the University of Michigan, \"with additional duties in athletic administraton.\"\nAt Michigan Crisler succeeds Harry G. Kipke.\n PA-E.SEVEN\nTrail Juniors\nto Play Nelson\nTeam Tonight\nBoth Teams Have Won\nInitial  Starts\nLeague\nThe Nelson Junior hockey team\nwent through a light hour's practice on Tuesday evening in preparation lor tonight's West Kootenay league game with Trail juniors\nin Nelson. The Nelson team came\nthrough Monday's hard-fought game\nin Rossland in line style, and lol-\nlowlng their 3-2 win over the husky\nGolden City team, have more confidence than when the series was\naranged. Trail beat Rossland 6-1.\nGeorge Russell, who was unable to play on Monday, will return to the delence position in this\ngame, and with Howard Campbell,\nwho starred in Rossland, and Syd\nHorswill will form a formidable rear\nguard. Roy Breeze may also play\non defence, Freddy Romano is not\nexpected to be able to play this\nweek,\nPlayers who are registered for\nthe series are:\nJohn (Pro) pingwall, Ross Cassan,\nHoward Campbell, Syd Horswill,\nRoy Breeze, George Russell, Keith\nYounger, Albert Hooker, Jim Niven, Harold Mayo, Stan Morris, Joe\nGallicano, Bill Kapak, Fred Romano and Don Beattie.\nThe Trail Tigers have a lineup\nof recruited talent including a complete forward line of Doug Martinson, Sammy Calles and Ike Buchanan from NOrth Battleford, as.\nwell as defenceman Chuck Casey\nfrom the same source, George Appleton from Medicine Hat Tigers,\nJack Church, a Pincher Creek boy,\nand Ronny Pickle of Saskatoon\nWesleys, along with a few Trail\nplayera.\nSCHEDULE CHANGED\nD. G. Chamberlain, president of\nthe Nelson Amateur Hockey association announced late Tuesday evening that J. A, Wadsworth had advised him that the Nelson Junior\nclubs request for Saturday evening's\ngame in Trail to be postponed, was\ngranted. To make this change the\nbalance of the schedule has been\nchanged as follows:\nFebruary 10: Trail at Nelson.\nFebruary 15: Rossland at Nelson.\nFebruary 17: Nelson at Trail.\nFebruary 21: Trail at Rossland.\nHemphill in Semi\nof Ladies' Golf\nPALM BEACH. Fla., Feb. 9 (AP)\n\u2014Kathryn Hemphill, boyish-bobbed\nmedalist from Columbia, S.C., today\nstroked her way to an easy 6 and 6\nvictory over Sally Guth of Webster\nGrove, Mo., to reach the semi-finals\nof the Palm Beach women's golf\ntournament.\nSPORTS ROUNDUP...\nBy EDDIE BRIETZ\nNBWYORK,Feb.9 (AP).-Except\nlor a telephone, two well filled ash\ntrays, a lew pencil stubs and a\nscratch pad the only decoration on\nthe big mahogany desk of Al Weill,\nmatchmaker of the 20th Century\nSporting club, is a 10-cent copy of\n\"Snow white and the Seven Dwarfs\"\nwhich Al pores over when no one\nis looking. ..,\nTragedy: This line appeared in\nthe last baseball bulletin: \"Released\nby Cleveland \u2014 Hugh Alexander\"\n. . . Alexander is the promising\nyoung outfielder who played1 a few\ngames with the tribe last fall and\nlooked great.... A few weeks after\nthe season ended he lost his left\nhand in an industrial accident. ,..\nNap Laioie, once of the Indians and\nnow of baseball's hall of lame,\nspends most ol his time these days\non the goll course at Lake Vflbrth,\nFla.\nTHE\nT\u00b0>6\n',HO^_7\u00ab_o0^c-,'''\nM\u00ab>\nrtfftf*\na. c   ,        - ____, -     \u2014   \u2014\n\"Most people talk too much when trying to 'put their\nideas over. Do you?\n\"It's a far better plan to let the other fellow do most of\nthe talking. He knows his problems better than, you do.\nSo get him to talk about them. Ask questions,'*\n-=\u25a0*.\nF %\n\"If you disagree with what he says, don't interrupt.\nBesides being rude, it is bad policy for he won't pay any\n.attention to you until he has expressed his own ideas.\n\"So listen patiently until he has talked himself out But\ndon't abuse your turn even then.\"\nV\ns^\nHAVE YQU SMOKED\nA TURRET\nLATELY?\nI\u00ae.\n\"Your best friends would rather talk about their achievements than listen to yours. Why expect a stranger\nto be more tolerant?\n\"By all means let the other man tell you, about his\naccomplishments if he wants to. But don't start boast-\nabout yoiin.\"\ning\nKb\n\"A modest man never offends anyone, and really, we\nought all to be modest, for none of us amounts to much.\n\"Do you know what keeps the smartest men in the\nworld from becoming idiots? About five cents worth of\niodine in their thyroid glands. Five cents worth of\niodine isn't worth getting a swelled head over, is it?\".\nWE try to be modest in what we say about Turret cigarettes. After all, the purpose of a cigarette is to give\nyou smoking satisfaction\u2014nothing else. Turrets will do\nthat. For Turrets are made from an original and unique\nblend of fine Virginia tobaccos. And you can always be\ncertain of finding Turrets well-filled, firmly rolled and tru.\nsame unvarying high quality. But, instead of our talking\nabout Turrets, let them speak for themselves. In other\nwords, if you haven't smoked a Turret lately, try a package\ntoday! . Impmal Tobacco Company of Canada, limited\nQuality and Mildness\nurret\nCIGARETTES\nPLAIN OR CORK TIP\n-__.___r._\n.5--te_iJ_t-._..i.t-_---__. ,-..- \u25a0;..- .-,..:   \u25a0\u25a0\t\n,_a,___^._^^l.,.-*-___.-.i-.\n PAGE EIGHT-\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NEL80N, B. C.-THURSDAY MORNING, FEB. 10. 1938.\nRESULTS AT  LITTLE COST TO YOU\nSfrlium latlg Wm*\nMember ot the Canadian Daily\nNewspapers Association\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchange Connecting to\nAll Departments\nSubscription Rates\nSingle copy .: $\nBy carrier, per week\nBy carrier, per year .\n.05\n.25\n  13.00\nBy mail in Canada, to subscribers living outside regular\ncarrier areas, per month- 60c;\nthree months $1.80. six months\n$3.00; one year $6.00.\nUnited States and Great Britain, one month 75c; six months\n$4.00; one year $7.50.\nforeign countries, other than\nUnited States, same\" as above\nplus any extra postage.\nClassified\nAdvertising Rates\nlie a Line\n(Minimum 2 Lines)\n2 lines, per insertion .$ 22\n2 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions  88\n(6 for the price of 4)\n3 lines, per Insertion _\u2022  .S3\n3 lines, 6 consecutive\ninsertions   1.32\n2 lines, 1 month  \u201e 2.66\n3 lines, 1 month  4.29\nFor advertisements of more than\nthree lines, calculate on\nthe'above basis\nBox numbers lie extra. This\ncovers any number of insertions.\nALL ABOVE RATES LES8 ',0%\nFOR PROMPT PAYMENT\nSITUATIONS WANTED\n(Continued)\nTRUSTWORTHY YOUNG MAN,\nnon-smoker or drinker, wants\nwork for widow or elderly couple.\nIn country store, hotel or service station, handy with tools. Can\ndrive a car or truck. Box 4885\nDaily News. (4885)\nRELIABLE YOUNG CANADIAN\ndesires any kind of work, Garage\nwork preferred. Have experience.\nGood references. Age 20. Box 4821\nDaily News. (4821)\nMIDDLE   AGED   WOMAN    RE-\nquires housework in Nelson. Preferably as mother's help. .Fond of\nchildren. Box 4845 Daily News.\n(4845)\nPERSONAL\nMEN!\nTO GET VIGOR Vitality, try raw oyster in-\nvigorators and other stimulants in\nNew OSTREX Tonic Tablets. Tone\nup worn, exhausted, weakened system. If not deljghte_t with results,\nmaker refunds price, $1.25. You risk\nnothing. Call, write Mann, Ruther-\ntord Co., Nelson.       (4720)\nMEN'S SUPERFINE QUALITY\nsanitary rubbers. Send $1.00 for 15\nunexcelled. Also LATEX at 25 for\n$1.00. Mention which. BURRARD\nSPECIALTY Co., 18 Hastings St..\nW. Vancouver. .    (4710)\nGENUINE LATEX SPECIAL, GTD.\n25 for $1.00 or Jiffy prepared 18\nlor $1,00 (free catalogue). National\nImporters, Box 244, Edmonton.\n(4711)\nON THE AIR\nCANADIAN BROADCASTING\nCORPORATION NETWORK\n5:00 Rudy Vallee; 6:00 Drama; 7:00\nBing Crosby; 7:30 Musical Tidbits;\n8:00 News, weather; 8:15 Between\nTwo Oceans; 8:30 Backstage; 9:00\nNew Lamps for Old; 9:30 European\nGaieties; 10:00 Book Review; 10:15\nNews, weather; 10:30 Songs to Remember.\nN.B.C.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ KGW KFI KPO KOMO\n590 620 640 680 920\n5:00 Rudy Vallee: 6:00 Good News\n7:00 Music Hall; 8:00 Amos 'n'\nAndy; 8:15 Symphony; 9:15 Nat\nBrandywynne's orch,; 9,:30 Hollywood News; Earl Hines orch.; 10:00\nNews; 10:15 Paul Christenson's orch.;\nBook Parade; 10:30 Orch.\u2014 Jack\nWinston's, Eddie Duchin, Bill Moz-\net.\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NETWORK\nKGO KJR KEX KECA l\\GA\n790     970     1180     1430     1470\n5:00 March of Time; 5:30 Barry\nMcKinley, baritone; 5:45 Philharmonic orchestra; 6:00 Music\nSchool; 6:30 America's town meeting 7:30 Nat Broad. Corp. Jamboree; 8:00 Ed Lebavon's or.; 8:15\nReview; 8:30 Orch\u2014Jim Grier, Roger Pryor, Garwood Van; 9:45 University explorer; 10:00 Orch. \u2014\nLouis Panico, Don Ricardo; 11:30\nCharles Runyan; 11:45 News.\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nRate for advertisements under\nthis heading 25c for' any required number of lines lor six\ndays.\nMARRIED COUPLE - BOTH RE-\nliable and experienced first class\ncooks, require position in hotel,\nrestaurant, mining camp, club or\ninstitution as cooks, caterers, steward and housekeeper. Can organize banquets, suppers, dances, etc.\nHighly recommended Box 4832,\nDaily News. (4832)\nMALE BOOKKEEPER AND STEN-\nographer with mine accounting\nand general office experience. Local high school and Business College training. Single, trustworthy\nand conscientious. Excellent references from local leading business men. Apply Box 4862, Daiiy\nNews. (4862)\nYOUNG, RELIABLE MAN IN UR-\ngent need of work. Experienced in\nbush-work, dairy work, all farm\nworks. Can drive car, truck and\ntractor. Non-smoker. Will consider\nany opportunity to earn board\nand room and small wage. Harold\nLangman, Rossland, B. C.    (4768)\nBAKER, 1st CLASSi BREAD,\ncakes, pastry. Decorator. 30 years\nexperience. Bake shop, restaurant or camp cook. Reasonable\nwage or wage with board and\nroom. Can come Immediately.\nGeo. Adams, No. 11 Bellrose Apts.,\nKimberley, B. C. (4787)\nTRUCK DRIVER AND MECHANIC\nlong experience wants job driving. Charles Domenlco. 877 Byers\nstreet, Trail, B. C. (4810)\nACCOUNTANT, BOOKKEEPER\ndesires position. Experienced commercial and mining. Married. Box\n4781 Daily News. (4781)\nYOUTH REQUIRES FARM WORK.\nWork for low wage. Able to milk.\nP. C. Duff, Nelson, B. C.      (4841)\nMAN WANTS WORK CLEANING\nsnow from roofs. Phone 246Y2.\n(4798)\nFOR SALE\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Company Ltd\n250 Prior SL Vancouver. BC\n(4714)\nPIPE TUBES   FITTINGS\nNEW AND USED\nLarge stock for immediate shipment\nSWARTZ PIPE YARD\n1st Avenue and Main St.\nVancouver, B.C.\n(4715)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacks, liners. McDonald Jam\nCo,, Ltd,, Nelson, B. C.      (4729)\nBEDRM. SUITE, CHINA, PIANO,\nChstrfld. Mrs. Harry Ferguson.\n(4511)\nFOR CASH, 1 FAWCETT RANGE,\n1 Baby Sleigh. Phone 918X.\n(4904)\nPRAM, USED TWO SEASONS. $15.\nPhone 972-L. (4880)\nSTENOGRAPHER OR TYPIST-\nLethbridge Collegiate Commercial\nCourse graduate. One year's office experience. Also have knowledge of bookkeeping. Age 19. Excellent references. Write Vivian\nWatkins, 1221,6th Ave. A. S. Lethbridge, Alta. (4867)\nCOLUMBIA  NETWORK\nKVI   KOIN   KNX   KSL   KOL\n670     940      1050    1130    1270\n5:00 Maurice's orchestra;\n6:00 Major Bowes Amateurs;\n7:00 Sports; 7:15 Leaves in the\nWind; 7:30 Hollywood Showcase;\n8:00 Poetic Melodies; Scattergood\nBaines, dr.; 8:15 Screenscoops; 8:30\nKate Smith; 9:30 Sterling Young's\norch.; 9:45 Hawaiian Moon; Joe\nSaunder's orch.; 10:00 Henry King's\norch.; 10:45 Art of Conversation;\n10:45 Orch\u2014Phil Harris. Ted Fi-\nRito, Henry King; 11:45 Black Chapel.\nDON LEE NETWORK\nKOL Seattle\n5:00 Moonlight Rhythms; 5:45\nDance orch.; 6:15 Phantom Pilot;\n6:30 Sports; 6:45 News; 7:00 Witches\nTales; 7:30 Henry Weber's music;\n8:45 Musical moments; 9:00 Newspaper of the Air; 9:30 Kay Kayser's\norch.; 10:00 Joe Reichman's orch.;\n10:30 Everett Hoaglund's orch.;\n11:00 Roger Burke's orch.; 11:45\nLeon Mojica's orch.; 11:30 Red Nich-\nol's orch.\nCJOR\n499,7 m\n600 w\n600 k\nVancouver\n5:00 Cookie Kids; 5:15 Pelican\nclub; 5:45 Howie Wing; 6:15 School\nChoir;6:30 John Matthew's orch.;\n6:45 Sports; 7:00 Wrestling Interview; 7:30 Skipper Scans the News;\n7:45 Michael O'Brien; 8:00 News;\n8:15 Frank McPhalen, music; 8:30\nTown Meeting; 8:45 Ronnie Matthews; 9:15 Wally Peters: 10:30\nNews; 10:45 Sports; 11:45 Slumber Hour.\nMAN WITH AIR-CONDITIONING\nand refrigeration training at reliable school, wants work. Would\ntake anything in this line of work.\nPractical work with machinery\npreferred. Steady employment\nwanted if possible. Box 4868 Daily\nNews.\nTHEATRICAL \"MAKE-UP\" ART-\nist for engagement to \"make up\"\nfor masquerade, carnivals, plays,\netc. Years of operatic and pantomime experience. Ladies or gentlemen, \"straight\" 25c, or \"character\" 35c. D. Bennett, 407 Silica.\n(4806)\nDIESEL MECHANIC AND OPER-\nator, trained by. a Govt, supervised Diesel schooi, good truck and\ncaterpillar operator. Can take full\ncharge, Well experienced. Also B.\nC. mine experience. Wishing position. Box 4824 Daily News.\n(4824)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES, APTS.\nETC.\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms tor rent   Annabie Blor-k\n(4731)\nFURN- SUITES.\nKERR APTS.\n(4732)\nMODERN NEW BUNGALOW, FUL-\nly furnished, in Rosemont. Apply\n904 Victoria St.     (4892)\nTHREE RM. SUITE WITHlBATH.\nP. O. Box 118 or 720 Baker St.\n(4644)\nTWO ROOMS WITH OR WITHOUT\nboard. Ap. Box 4779 Daily News.\n(4779)\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOMS,\n918, Kootenay St, Adults only.\n  (4866)\n4 RM.  HOUSE.  PARTLY FURN.\n$10 per month. 909, 6th St.  (4871)\nOUT-OF-TOWN READERS\nCUT THIS OUT\nMAIL ORDER FORM\nFOR\nCLASSIFIED ADVERTISING\nBASIC RATE\n.. \" . (Minimum 2 Lines Per Insertion)\nI line per insertion  lip\n1 line per 2 insertions  22(J\n1 line per 3 insertions      33r>\nI line per 6 consecutive insertions  44k?\n1 line daily for a month  $1.43\nRates subject to 10% discount'for prompt payment.\n(Multiply the above rate, for the number of days wanted,\nby the number of lines your ad will take, i.e., 3 line, tj times\n(3x44c\u2014$1-32) less 10% for cash, (131\u2014$1.19>.\nI      ~\n%\nN\nPLEASE PRINT\nADDRE\nss\nNO. INSERTIONS\nAMT. ENO..\nMUSICAL INSTRUMENTS\nWebb's Music House\nREDUCED PRICES\nBand Instruments including Cornets,\nTrumpets, Baritones, Saxophones,\nBasses, Bassoon, Bagpipes, Xylophones, Oboe Flutes, Clarionets,\nConcertinas, Accordions, Violins,\nCellos, Banjos, Guitars, Mandolines\nMouth Organs, Ocarinas, Drums,\nMusic Stands, Bows, Cases, Books,\nStrings, Reeds and Fittings for all\ninstruments. Repairs, Bows rehaired.\nAll work done on premises. Mail\norders, quick service.\n(Next Scandinavian Churqji)\n806 Baker St. Nelson\n(4908)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrigld-iire equipped suites.   (4733)\nFOR RENT - FURNISHED HOUSE\nclose in. J. E. Annabie.       (4616)\nTRAINED DIESEL OPERATOR\nwould like employment for summer months. Received training\nfrom Chicago Institute of Diesel\nEngineering. L. Sims, Box 344,\nKimberley, B. C. (4828)\n010 k\nTrail\nCJAT\n319.6 m\n1000 w\n7:00 Morning Vespers; Musical\nClock; 7:30 Requests; 8:00 Grand\nForks bulletin; 9:00 See CBC except; 9:30 Shamrocks: 10:00 Organ\nReveries; 10:15 Good Morning: 10:45\nMelodic Pipes; 11:15 Stella Dallas;\n11:30 News; 11:45 On Wings of Song;\n12:00 Easy Aces; 12:15 Master Singers; 12:30 Talking Drums; 12:45 In\nLighter Mood; 3:30 News; 3:45 Music Graphs; 4:00 Theatre News; 4:15\nKootenay Echoes; 4:30 Times presents; 4:35 Tea Time Tunes; 8:30\nDance hour; 8:45 Police Headquarters; 9:00 Hockey.\n1030 k CFON 293.1 m\nCalrjary. 10,000 w\n6:30 Music in Fuller Fashion;\n7:00 CKUA; 7:30 Concert Echoes;\n8:00 George McLeod; 8:15 Sam\nHayes; 9:00 News; 9:15 to 11:00\nOld Time Dance.\nEXPERIENCED CAMP CLERK\ndesires position. Unmarried. Hold\ntwo first aid certificates including Industrial, Practical logging\nexperience, Address replies to\nBox_4884,J)ailyNews.        (4884)\nYOUNG MAN NEEDS WORKTCAN\ndo most any kind of farm work.\nAlso had experience as store clerk.\nHave good bicyple if needed. Ap-\n_ply 214 Latimer St., Nelson. (4811)\nMAN WANTS WORK ANY KIND.\nExperience in post office, store\nand farm work. Can drive car or\ntruck. Non-smoker. Ruben Wilson,\n311 Hall Mines Road. (4863)\n19 YEAR OLD GIRL, MCPERIENC'-\ned housekeeper \u2014 private home\nor hotel \u2014 waitress, wants work\nof any kind. Miss N. Ingard, 311\nHall Mines Road. (4852)\nROOM AN!) BOARD\nROOM & BOARD FOR GENTLE-\nmen at 923 Vernon St.        (4849)\n144 [S THE CLASSIFIED\nPHONE NUMBER\nHELP WANTED\nTHE CORPORATION OF THE\nCITY OF TRAIL\n. Applications will received by the\nundersigned up to February 22nd,\nfor the combined position of City\nassessor, building inspector, plumbing inspector and electrical inspector. Applicants are required to state\nage and qualifications.\nWM. E. B. MONYPENNY,\nCity Clerk,\nTrail, B. C.\n(4906)\nPOULTRY, SUPPLIES, ETC.\nVITALIZED CHICKS\nBefore placing your order ask\n, . yourself   this   question.\nWhy are  there  more Bolivar\nchicks sold than any strain in\nb. a.\nTHERE MUST BE A REA80N\nLeghorns, Reds, Rocks & New\nHampshires.\nFree Illustrated folder on the\ncare, feeding and brooding of\nC.lK'l__i.\nBOLIVAR HATCHERIES LTD.\n\u2022 Pacific Highway\nNew Westminster, B. C.\n(4705)\n^MfW     Before   ordering\n\u25a0_\u00a3_H^___i       y\u00b0ur clicks\nV^yH     write for our\n^^P^^   book about \"The\nChicks Which Give Results\".\nLeghorns,   Reds,  Rocks,  Light\nSussex  and  New  Hampshires.\nRUMP & SENDALL LTD.\nLANGLEY PRAIRIE, B.C.\n(4728)\nBuy Game's extra quality\n\"Three Star\"\nRHODE ISLAND RED CHICKS\n$20 per 100 \u2014 and worth it\nPrice list mailed on request\nGeorge Game, R. 0. P. Breeder,\nTRIANGLE POULTRY FARM\nArmstrong, B. C.\n(4776)\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst Assayer, Metallurgical\nEngineer Sampling Agents at\nTrail Smelter 301-306 Josephine\nSt., Nelson. B. C. (4734)\nGRENVII.l.E k GRIMWOOD\nProvincial Assayer and Chemist. 420\nFall Street, Nelson. B  C P  O\nBox   No.  9.  Representing  shipper's interest; Trail, B.C.    (4735)\nHAROLD S. ELMES. ROSSLAND.\nB. C. Provincial Assayer, Chemist.\nIndividual Representative' for\nshippers at Trail Smelter.   (4736)\nChiropractors\nj. r. McMillan, d. c, neuro-\ncalometer, X-ray. McCullock Blk\n(4737)\nW. J. BROCK, D. C, 16 years' Experience Ph. 969 Gilker Bk, Nelson\n(4728)\nCorsets\nBABY CHICKS AND SEXED PUL-\nlets, White Leghorns exclusively.\nAll breeding stock on our own\nfarm, mated to R. 0. P. Approved\nmales. Government approved,\nbloodtested. and certified Free\nfrom Pullorum Disease Price list\non request. M. H. Ruttledge, Der-\nreen Poultry Farm, Sardis, B. C,\n(4488)\nAUTOMOTIVE\nFOR SALE OR RENT\nGOOD MIXED FARM. JOHN GRA-\nham, Perry Siding. B. C.     (4909)\nBUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES\nGROCERY BUSINESS AND PRO-\nperty, 1224 Stanley St., Nelson.\n(4825)\n1929 PAIGE SEDAN\nGood condition.\n$100\nWill Handle\nBUTORAC MOTORS\n1225 PINE AVE. TRAIL. B.C.\n(4730)\n$225 WILL BUY MY EQUITY IN\n1937 Ford V-8 Standard Coupe; 85\nh. p. Run only 5300 miles. Balance\nowing $540 in $30 monthly payments. For further particulars\nwrite Box \"S\", Castlegar, B. C.\n(4910)\nWANTED\nWATCH DOG.  PREFER CHESA-\npeake, Dane or Poliie female. Used\nto children. Box 4826 Daily News.\n(4826)\nWANTED, FURN. HOUSE, 2 BED-\nrms. Modern. Box 4803 Daily News\n(4803)\nAn Ad Here Is Your\nBest Agent\nSpencer   corsets.  M.   W.\n370, Baker St. Ph. 668.\nMitchell,\n(4739)\nEngineers and Surveyors\nBOYD C AFFLECK Fruitvale. B C.\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(4740)\nInsurance and Real Estate\n(Continued) ,\nPHONE 980. STUART AND WAR\u00ab|\nburton. Mutual Benefit H. & A.\nA. First and All Classes Fire and I\nAutomobile Insurance. 577 Baker I\nStreet. _ (4751) [\nMachinists\nBENNETT'S LIMITED\nFor all Classes of Metal Work, Lathi\nWork, Drilling. Boring and Grind-.,\ning. Motor Rewiring, Acetylene\nWelding\nTelephone 593      324 Vernon Street\n\u00ab75_.\nH E. STEVENSON, Machinists\nBlacksmiths. Electric and Acetylens\nWelders. Expert workmen. Satlsfao\ntion guaranteed. Mine _- Mill work I\nspecialty Fullv enuipned shop Ph\n98, 708-12 Vernon St., Nelson. (4783)\nMaternity   Home\nLOIS BRANDON\nFemale  specialist; strictly  private\nmaternity home.  1216 E.  Newark\nAve., Spokane, Wash. Phone Lake-\nview 2870.\n(4754)\nMine & Equipment Machinery\nH. D. DAWSON\n912 Kootenay St. Nelson, B. C.\n(4741)\nFuneral Directors\nSOMERS' FUNERAL HOME\n702 Baker St. Phone 252\nCert. Mortician      Lady Attendant\nModern Ambulance .Service\n(4742)\nInsurance and Real Estate'\nROBERTSON REALTY CO., LTD\nReal Estate. Insurance. Rentals\n347 Baker St., Phone 68.       (4744)\nC. D. BLACKWOOD.   Insurance of\nevery description. Real Est. Ph. 99\n(4745)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. Real Estate. 532 Ward St.\n(4746)\nSEE  D   L   KERR,  AGENT  FOR\nWawanesa Fire Ins. For better rates\n(4747)\nJ. E. ANNABLE,   REAL ESTATE\nRentals, Insurance.   Annabie Blk\n(4748)\nCHAS F McHARDY. INSURANCE\nReal Estate. Phone 135.      (4749)\nR.  W   DAWSON.  Real Estate. Insurance.   Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker St. Phone 197\n(4750)\nPHONE 144\nFOR WANT AD\nSERVICE\nE. L WARBURTON, Representing\nC. C. Snowdon, Oils, Greases,\nPaints, etc. Agt.: Mine Mchnry. Ss\nequipt, rails, steels, piping, sheet\niron. etc. Steam coals. Phone 980,\nBox 28, Nelson. (4755)\nPatents\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVENT-\nor. list of wanted inventions arid\nfull Information sent free. Ttoi\nRamsay Company. World Pateat\nAttorneys, 273 Bank St, Ottawa.;\n(4756)\nPhotography\nNOW IS THE TIME TO HAVE R&\nprints made from your negative!\nfor mounting in albums. Nevtf\nfade prints 3c each. Films develq\ned and printed 25c. KRYSTA]\nPHOTOS, WILKIE, Sask.    (4757\n1\nSash Factory\nLAWSON'S     SASH     FACTOR.\nHardwood merchant. 273 Baker S\n(473.\nSecond Hand Stores\n\u2014\nWE   BUY,  SELL  \u00ab-   EXCHANC\nfurniture, etc   The Ark Store.\n(476\nTypewriters\nH. R. KITTO, Cleaning, Repairin\nAgt. Royal Typewriter. Ph. 964.\n(476\nWatch Repairing\nWhen SUTHERLAND repairs yo\nwatch it Is on time all the tin\n345, Baker St., Nelson,      (476\nBoost for the Kootenay District - It Pays!\nBRITISH  EMPIRE\nTRANSMISSION 6\nG8D 11.76 mcs. (25.53 m.)\nGSC 9.68 mcs. (31.32 m.)\nG8B 9.51 mcs. (31.55 m.)\n3:20 p.m., B.B.C, Trans. 5 _...\n6:20 a.m.\u2014Food for thought. 6:40\n\u2014B.B.C. Military Band. 7:10-Piano-\nforte music. 7:30\u2014Big  Ben.  News\nand annuncements. 7:50\u2014Virtue in\ndreams, play.\nGSC\nINTERNATIONAL\nTokyo 1:45 p.m.\u2014Orchestral selections. JZJ, 25.4 m., 11.80 meg.; JZI,\n,\n_j  __\nEXPERIENCED WOMAN WANTS\nhousework by the hour, day or\nweek, Will also take any other\nwork in Nelson. Phone 231L3.\n(4840)\nON FARM, ANYWHERE, EXPERI-\nenced young couple. Good works.\nJ. M. Erickson, Silverton, B. C.\n  (4827)\n31.4 m., 9.53 meg.\nBoston 3\u2014World News. W1XAL,\n25.4 m., 11.79 meg.\nBerlin 3:15 p.m.-A visit to the\nCity of Fairs\u2014Leipzig. DJD, 25 4\nm\u201e 11.77 meg.\nMoscow 4\u2014News and program for\nEnglish listeners. RAN, 31 m., 9.6\nmeg.\nSchenectady 4:30 \u2014 The science\nforum. W2XAD, 19.5 m., 15.33 meg.;\nW2XAF, 31.4 m\u201e 9.53 meg.\nRome 4:30\u2014Selections from operas; \"The Road to St. Peter's,\" a\ntalk; News in Italian. 2RO, 31.1 m.,\n9.63 meg.; IRF, 30.5 m., 9.83 meg.\nEindhoven, Netherlands 5\u2014Program for Eastern and Southern\nStates of the United States. PCJ,\n31.2 m., 9.59 meg.\nCaracas 5:30\u2014The Waltz Hour;\nconcert orch. YV5RC, 51.7 m\u201e 5.8\nmeg.\nTokyo 9:45\u2014Popular songs. JZJ,\n25.4 m\u201e 11.80 meg.\nSydney, Australia 1:30 a.m. (Friday)\u2014Chimes from G.P.O. Sydney.\nVK2ME, 31.28 m., 9.59 meg.\n\u2014\u2014__________\n Chicago Wheat\nPrices Higher\nCHICAGO, Feb. 9 (AP) .-Aided\nby fairly good export business in\nUnited States wheat, totalling 500,-\n090 bushels, Chicago wheat prices\nmoved upward a cent today but then\nreacted somewhat.,\n\u25a0 Profit taking on the advance led\nto- the setbacks from the day's top\nlevel. Upturns ot securities, together, with unabated drought southwest were a good deal responsible\nfor wheat upturns.\nAt the close, Chicago wheat futures were %\u2014% higher compared\nwitli yesterday's finish, May 95%\u2014\n98, July 91%\u201492, corn Vs off to %\np,-May 59%, July 60%\u2014%, and oats\n1 advanced.\nWHEAT:\nOpen  High  Low   Close\nWay    96       96,.     95%     95%\nJuly    92       92%     91%    91%\nSept    92       92%    91%    91%\n. MONTREAL, Feb. 9 (CP)\u2014Despite late profit-taking the Montreal stock exchange showed at the\nClose today gains up to a point.\nNoranda finished a point higher at\n10 and Smelters gained % at 60.\nInternational Nickel closed for -\nftet loss of % at 48%.\n. B. C. Power A yielded a point\nIn the first appearance of several\nWeeks. Montreal Tramways was up\na full point.\nSteel ot Canada preferred was oft\n4 points to 58 and the common was\ndown 1% at 60. Rails sold lower,\nCanadian Pacific, National Steel Car\nand Canadian Car preferred losing\na fraction each.\nOKALTA OFF THREE\nCALGARY, Feb. B (CP). - OU\nshares prices moved in a narrow\nrange on the Calgary stock exchange today. -Spy Hill, a new listing on the board, sold at 21. A. P.\nCon, sold at 25%, unchanged to a\nfraction higher. Commoil gained a\npoint at 50 while Commonwealth\nwas off V* at 32. Model gained 1 ,i\nto 34%. Okalta was off 3 at 1.91\nand Lethbridge Pete gained a fraction at 3%.\nWheat Futures\nGain, Winnipeg\n\u2022WINNIPEG, Feb. 9 (CP).-Wheat\nfutures gains of almost two cents\nwere cut today as light selling developed following weakness at Chicago. Final quotations were HI\u2014\n% cent higher. May $1.29%b, July\nUiy.b; Oct. 1.10%.\nPrices steadily climbed during\nthe first two hours until July reached about $1.22 a bushel but thereafter southern buying thinned and\nlight selling caused reactions.\nSales oi Canadian wheat were\nplaced at less than 150,000 bushels,\nincluding No. 3 Northern from Vancouver.\nLiverpool advanced %\u2014l%d. Buenos Aires was said to have been\nsupported by German buyers and in\nlate trading was %\u2014% cent higher.\nCash wheat demand was virtually\ndormant and spreads were generally\nunchanged. In the coarse grains section oats purchases appeared to represent western relief needs and the\nscarcity of offerings brought advances of nearly four cents in flax\nfutures. Flax eased later while oats,\nrye and barley did not fluctuate\nwidely.\nHave You Read the Classified?\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B.C.-THURSDAY MORNING, FEB. 10, 1938,\nMarket and Mining News\nToronto Stock Quotations\nMINES:\nAlton Mines Ltd        .02%\nAldermac Copper       .48\nAlexandria Gold   ,.01..\nAnglo-Huronian      3.55\nAmm Gold  U%\nAshley Gold Mining  06%\nAstoria Rouyn Mines 0_\u00a5t\nfatec Mining Co  Or3\/.\nunkfield Gold  69\n3ase Metals Mining 37\nSeattle Gold Mines      1-35\nJldgood Kirkland  22\nJig Missouri  47\njiobjo Mines Ltd 10%\nralorne Mines     9.00\nirett Trethewey 0<%\nBulfalo Ankerite      16.65\nfcunker Hill Extension 17\nCanadian Malartic 96\nariboo Gold Quartz     1-97\n_stle-Trethewey    -     -61\n(antral Patricia        2.55\nIhibougamau    28\nIhromium M _. S 56\nloniagas Mines     1.80\nloniaurum Mines      1-57\nlonsolidatcd M & S    59.00^\nparkwater 1C%\nome Mines Ltd    56.75\nominion Explorers 94\nporval-Siscoe Gold 16\nast Malartic     1-42\nJldorado Gold     2.40\nlalconbridge Nickel      6.20\nfederal Kirkland  08%\nIrancoeur Gold  38\nlillies Lake   16%\nlod's Lake Gold - -      -51V*\nold Belt  .' 38\nIranada Gold-Mines 05\nandoro Mines 06%\n|unnar Gold Mines 98\nrd Rock Gold      1.47\narker Gold 1.\noUinger     13-90\nowey Gold  27%\nJason Bay M & S'    14.50\nIternational Nickel      48.35\nIM Consolidated    - 13\nCck Waite 37\n[cola Gold  15\u00ab\nerr-Addison   ..:     1-98\ntokland Lake     1-35\nake Shore Mines    57.00\namaque Contact  04\nBitch Gold  95\nlibel Oro Mines  -     -13\n^ftle Long Lac      5.40\napa Cadillac 51\nlacassa Mines     4.90\niacLeod Cockshutt     150\nladsen.Red Lake Gold 43\nianitoba & Eastern       .02%\nJandy   20\nlalrobic Mines oj*\nIclntyre-Porcupine       41.25\nIcKenzie Red Lake 91\nIcVittie-Graham -      -15\nIcWatters Gold  34\nlining Corporation     2.15\nNo Gold       -03V.\nloneta Porcupine     \u00ab\u2022\"\nEorris-Kirkland 13\nflpissing  Mining     2.05\nloranda      69?5\nlormetal            \u25a0_\nI'Brien Gold     3.55\nImega Gold      \u25a0\u00bb\nramour Porcupine     -i.bu\njaulore M. }jj\nraymaster Cons  57\nlend Oreille      203\nlerron Gold      \"O\nfickle Crow Gold     4.75\nHave You Used\nDISHES\ni\na\nWhy Not Turn\nThem Into Cash?\nA WANT AD\nWill Find a\nPurchaser\nTwo (2) lines 6 times 80c net\nTwo  (2)  lines once 20c net\nNelson Daily News\nPHONE  144\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Gold\t\nPowell Rouyn Gold\t\nPreston East Dome .........\nQuebec Gold \t\nRead-Authier   \t\nRed Lake Gold Shore ...\nReeves MacDonald\t\nReno Gold Mines\nRitchie Gold Mines\t\nRoche Long Lac\nSan Antonio Gold\t\nShowkey Gold ,   \t\nSheep Creek Gold\t\nSherritt Gordon\t\nSiscoe Gold      '.\t\nSmelters Gold \t\nStadacona Rouyn \t\nSt Anthony \t\nSudbury Basin\t\nSullivan Consolidated .\nSylvanite\nTashota Goldfields\t\nTeck-Hughes Gold\t\nToburn Gold Mines\t\nTowagmac\t\nVentures Limited -\t\nWaite Amulet\t\nWhite Eagle Silver \t\nWhitewater\t\nWright Hargreaves \t\nYmir Yankee Girl \t\nOILS:\nAjax    \t\nA P Consolidated \t\nBritish American Oil .\nBritish Dominion\t\nBrown Oil  -\t\nCalmont   .\t\nCalgary __ Edmonton .\nChem Research\t\nCommonwealth   \t\nDalhousie    -\u25a0\u2022\u25a0\nEastcrest    \t\nFoundation   \t\nFoothills    ..-.\t\nHighwood    \t\nHome    \t\nImperial    .....\nInter Petroleum\t\nLowery Pete .-..-\u2022\nMcColl Frontenac \t\nMerland   \t\nModel\t\nMonarch Roy \t\nNordon\t\nOkalta   \t\nPacalta\t\nPantepec    .'\t\nRoyalite \t\nSouthwest Pete \t\nTexas Canadian\t\nUnited   \t\nVulcan    \t\nINDUSTRIALS:\nAbitibi Power \t\nBeatty Bros \t\nBell Telephone \t\nBrazilian T L _. P \t\nBrewers & Distillers ....\nBrewing Corp\t\nBrewing Corp Pfd \t\nB C Power A\t\nB C Power B \t\nBurt F N Co\t\nCan Bakeries A\t\nCan Bakeries Pfd\t\nCanada Bread Co \t\nCan Bud Malting \t\nCan Car _. Fdy\t\nCan Cement\t\nCan Cement Pfd \t\nCan Dredge \t\nCan Malting \t\nCan Pacific Railway .\nCan Ind Ale A\t\nCan Ind Ale B\t\nCan Wineries\t\nCarnation Pfd \t\nCons Bakeries\t\nCosmos    \t\nDominion Bridge \u201e\t\nDominion Stores\t\nDom Tar & Chem \t\nD.Tar _. Chem Pfd\t\nDistillers Seagrams ...\nFanny Farmer \t\nFord of Canada A\t\nGen Steel Wares\t\nGoodyear Tire \t\nGypsum L _. A\t\nHarding Carpet \t\nHamilton Bridge\t\nHamilton Bridge Pfd ...\nHinde Dauche \t\nHiram Walker \t\nIntl Metals \t\nIntl Milling Pfd \t\nImperial TJobacco \t\nLoblaw A \t\nLoblaw B\t\nKelvinator  \t\nMassey Harris   \t\nMontreal Power\t\nMoore Corp .,\t\nNat Steel Car \t\nOnt Steel Prods \t\nOnt Silk Net \t\nPage Hersey\t\nPower Corp\t\nPressed Metals \t\nSteel of Can\t\nStandard Paving \t\n2.90\n2.10\n2.07\n1.18\n.60\n4.10\n.25\n.44\n.55\n.02\n.14%\n1.32\n.24\n1.14\n1.45\n2.65\n.01%\n-.25\n.15\n3.10\n.99\n3.40\n.02 Va\n5.35\n2.60\n.46\n6.35\n1.70\n.01%\n-05y4\n8.00\n.26\n.21\n.24\n20.50\n.12\n.40\n.40\n2.53\n.40\n.33\n.55\n.11\n.18%\n.60\n.15\n1.16\n18.10\n29,90\n.09%\n13.00\n.06%\n.31\n.17%\n.12\n1.89\n.12\n6.25\n42.00\n.35\n1.44\n.18%\n.95\n160\n12%\n159\n10%\n6%\n1.35\n16%\n29\n4%\n21%\n3\n40\n4\n8\n10%\n10\n103\n30%\n34%\n7\n3%\n3%\n2%\n101%\n14.4\n21%\n29\n6%\n1    7%\n82\n14%\n21\n17'A\n.    6%\n3%\n7%\n47\n15\n41%\n6\n100%\n14%\n22%\n20\n13%\n7\n3oy.\n32%\n35 Vi\n8%\n6\n01\n13%\n15%\n60%\n2%\nAlberta Fears\nLoss of B.C.\n(oal Market\nCALGARY, Feb.9 (CP)r-AlberU\nmay lose a British Columbia coal\nmarket that has consumed 150,000\ntons of domestic coal from this province annually.\nThat is the opinion of British Columbia dealers and authorities, according to Lieut-Col. P.R. Shields,\nrepresentative of Calgary dealers\nwho has returner! from Vancouver\nafter a two-week survey of the situation.\nAlberta coal dealers had petitioned the Provincial government seeking aid and W.J. Asstlstine, B.C.\nminister of trade and industry, in a\nrecent conference with Premier Aberhart at Edmonton, had made assurances there would be no discrimination against Alberta coal.\n'When he returned to Vancouver,\nhowever,\" said Lieut. Col. Shields,\n\"He said no attempt would be made\nto stop the sale of Alberta coal but\nregulations and prices set for B.C.\nwould have to be observed.\"\nMonarch Life Men\nConfer in Nelson\nOn Tuesday a sales conference of\nMonarch Life Assurance company's\nWest Kootenay representatives was\nheld at the Hume hotel; presided\nover by R. F .Boreham, manager for\nthe B. C. mainland, with headquarters at Vancouver. Agents attending\nwere E. K. Thomas, J. Schofield of\nTrail, J. R. Cran, W. M. Van of Rossland, C. F. McHardy, C. W. Apple-\nyard, J. R. Hughes, A. R. Kodson\nand F. A. Whitfield of Nelson.\nMr. Boreham who has been in\nthe district for several days, and\nbeing an ardent hockey fan, witnessed the last game in Trail. The\ncalibre of hockey displayed, he stated, was the best amateur play he\nhas seen anywhero in the west. Mr.\nBoreham was also very much impressed with Nelson's Neon street\nlighting and declared it was splendid evidence of the progressive\nspirit which prevailed throughout\nthe city.\nVancouver Unlisted\nBid Ask\nBayonne    11% 7-.\nColumbia   0    .05 .10\nDurango     07 .08\nEuphrates 02 \u2014\nRoyal Can  13 .15\nWorld Exchanges\nNEW YORK, Feb. 9 (AP)\u2014The\npound sterling and the French franc\nshowed a moderate gain in terms of\nthe United States dollar today while\nother European currencies were little changed.\nThe British unit advanced % of a\ncent and the franc .00% of a cent.\nThe Canadian dollar was unchanged\nat 1.00 1-32..\nClosing rates follow (Great Britain in dollars, others In cents):\nGreat Britain, demand 5.01 y., cables 5.01%, 60-day bills 5.00%;\nFrance, demand 3.28%, cables 3.28%;\nItaly, demand 5.26%, cables 5.26%.\nDemands: Belgium 16.96; Germany\nfree 40.38, registered 2J.10, travel\n25.35; Holland 55.88; Norway 25.19;\nSweden 25.84; Denmark 22.38: Finland 2.22; Switzerland 23.19; Spain,\nunquoted; Portugal 3.44%; Greece,\n.92%; Poland 19.02; Czechoslovakia\n3.51%; Jugoslavia 2.35; Austria 18-95\nN; Hungary 19.90; Rumania ,75; Argentine 33.41N; Brazil (free) 6.75N;\nTokyo 29.06- Shanghai 29.75; Hong\nKong 31.34: Mexico City 27.80; Montreal in New York 100.03%; Now\nYork in Montreal 99.96%.\nN\u2014Nominal.\n(oast Prices Off\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 9 (CP)\u2014The\nprices eased in late trading on the\nVancouver stock exchange today\nafter early dealings set a firm trend\nover the board. Changes were confined to small amounts and sales totalled 80,145 shares.\nIn the golds, Cariboo Gold Quartz\nat 1.94, Kootenay Belle at 1.01, Reno\nat 55 and Premier at 2.10 each lost\none cent. Pioneer was down 10 at\n2.85 as Big Missouri at 46% and Minto at 3% held unchanged. Bralorne\nwas up 5 at 9.00 while Island Mountain at 76 and Sheep Creek at 1.12\neach gained 1.\nBase metals were most active. B.C.\nNickel at 16% and Pend Oreille at\n2.01 each eased a cent while Nicola\nat 5% and Whitewater at 5% dipped\nfractions. Reeves MacDonald added\n3 at 38 and Noble Five a fraction at\n3%.\nOil trading was light. Calgary &\nEdmonton at 2-53, Home at 1.13 and\nDalhousie at 53 each eased 1. Okalta\nwas off 6 at 1.89 while Royalite was\nup 25 at $41.75 and Calmont a cent\nat 44.'\nLondon Close\nLONDON, Feb. 9 (AP)-Trading\nwas more active in today's stock\nmarket, transatlantic securities leading the upward movement and finishing with net gains of from one\nto three points.\nClosing: Brazilian $10%; CP.R. $7;\nInternational Nickel $49%; U.S.\nSteel $54%; Anglo Am. of South\nAfrica 56s 10%d; British American\nTobacco 106s 3d; H.B.C. 22s 3d;\nWoolworth 65s 7%d. Bonds: British\n2% per cent consols \u00a378%; 3% per\ncent war loan \u00a3103%; funding rs\n1960-90 \u00a3114%.\nDow-Jones Averages\nHigh\n30  industrials   126.98\n20 rails  :    28.61\n20  utilities      19.25\n40 bonds \t\nLow\n124,65\n28.08\n18.81\nClose Change\n'125.00\u2014off .52\n28.13\u2014up .25\n18.65\u2014off   .12\n\u2014       90.41-up    .17\nMontreal Stock Exchange\nINDUSTRIALS -\nAlta Pac Grain     1%\nAssoc Brew.of Can  12%\nAssoc Tel & Tel      6%\nBathurst P. \u00a3. P A  10%\nBell   Tel  160 '\nBrazilian T L & P  10%\nB C Power A  30%\nB C Power B      4y.\nBuilding.Products  47\nCanada Cement  10%\nCan Cement pfd  103%\nCan North Power  18\nCan Steamship      3\nCan Steamship pfd     9%\nCan  Bronze    35%\nCan Bronze pfd  103%\nCan Car & Fdy -.  10%\nCan Car & Fdy pfd  21%\nCan Celanese  18\nCan Celanese pfd  102\nCan Ind Ale A     3%\nCan Ind Ale B _    3%\nCan Pac Rly     7\nCockshutt Plow     8%\nCon Min St. Smelting  59%\nDistillers Seagrams  14%\nDominion Bridge   29\nDominion Coal pfd   19%\nDom Steel & Coal B  13%\nDominion-Textile  68%\nDryden Paper     6\nFamous Players C C  13Vi\nFoundation C of C  13%\nGatineau Power      8%\nGen Steel Wares     6%\n.Gatineau Power Pfd   80\nGurd Charles     7\nGyp Lime & Alab     6%\nHamilton Bridge      7,%\nHamilton Bridge pfd  50\nHoward Smith Paper  13\nHolt  Renfrew    20\nH Smith Paper Pfd  96\nImp. Tob of C  14V.\nInter Nickel of Can  48%\nLake of the Woods   12%\nLake Sulphite      5\nMassey Harris     6%\nMcColl Frontenac   13'\nMontreal L H & P  30%\nNational Brew Ltd  40%\nNat Brew, pfd  39%\nNat Steel Car  35%\nOgilvie Flour Mills  240\nOgilvie Flour new   30%\nOntario Steel Prods     7\nPower Corp of Can  14\nWALL STREET\nRALLY (RACKS\nNEW YORK, Feb. 9 (AP)- A\npromising stock market rally cracked against profit realization today\nand leading Issues finished in narrow limits.in both plu_ and minus\ncolumns.\nBuying demand was fairly brisk In\nthe morning hours but dried up as\nthe day wore on. When the pace\nslowed fluctuations widened and\nthere were frequent instances of\nvariations of a point between sales.\nU. S. Steel finished unchanged\nafter a day of small gains and losses, but other shares in the division\nwere inclined to sell off a trifle.\nIn the stock market gainers of\nfractions to around a point included Santa Fe 35, Union Pacific 77%\nand International Harvester 63%.\nLower were Bethlehem Steel,54%,\nChrysler 54%, American Telephone\n133%, Homestake Mining 59 and\nKennecott 37.\nThe Associated Press \"average of\n60 stocks dropped .2 of a point at\n43,6. Transfers totalled 747,770 shares\nagainst 772,150 yesterday.\nVancouver Wheat\nVANCOUVER, Feb. .(CP).-Van-\ncouver wheat cash prices:\nStrt. Tough\nNo. 1 hard 141% ,139%\nNo. 1 Nor.;.  141% 139%\nNo. 2 Nor  132% 130V.\nNo. 3 Nor _  117% 114%\nNo. 4 Nor  107% 104%\nNo. 5 wheat    99% 96%\nNo. 6 wheat    90% 87%\nFeed     80% 77%\nExchanges\nMONTREAL, Feb. 9 (CP)- British and foreign exchange closed\nhigher today. Nominal rates for\nlarge amounts:\nArgentina, peso, .2700.\nAustralia, pound, 4.0009.\nChina, Hong Kong dollars, .3131.\nFrance, franc, .032819.\nGreat Britain, pound, 5.0104.\nIndia, rupee, .3788.\nJapan, yen, .2907.\nNew Zealand, pound, 4.0331.\nNorway, krone, .2519.\nSouth Africa, pound, 4.9860.\nSweden, krone, .2584.\n(Compiled by The Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nMetal Markets\nLONDON, Feb. 9 <AP).-C.c-lng:\nCopper, standard spot \u00a398 IBs 9d, up\n12s lid; future \u00a339 3s 0d, up 12s 6d;\nelectrolytic spot, bid \u00a343 Si, up 8s.\nTin spot \u00a3182 6s, up \u00a33; future\n\u00a3182, up\u00a32 16s.\nBids: Lead spot \u00a315 5s, up 2s 6d;\nfuture \u00a315 8s 9d, up Is 3d.\nZinc spot \u00a314 2s 6d, up 6s 6d; future \u00a314 7s 6d, up 2s6d.\nBar gold 130s 6d, unchanged.\n(Equivalent $35,00),\nBar silver 20 5-lGtl, off 1-16.\nNEW YORK\nCopper steady, electrolytic spot\nand future 10.00; export 9.80.\nTin steady; spot and nearby 41.00:.\nfuture 41.12%.\nLead steady; spot New York 4.75\u2014\n80: East St. Louis 4.60.\nZinc quiet; East St. Louli spot\nand future 4.75.\nMONTREAL\nSpot: Copper, electrolytic, 11.30;\ntin 43.50: lead 4.70; lino 4.45; antimony 16.25; par 100 pounds f.o.b.\nMontreal, five-ton lots.\nBar gold in London down a cent\nat $34.99 an ounce In Canadian\nfunds; 139s, 8d In British. The fixed\n$35 Washington price amounted to\n$34.99 in Canadian.\nSilver futures closed steady today,\nfive points off. No sales^ Bids: 44.90;\nMarch 44.70; May 44.60; July 44.40.\nWINNIPEG GRAIN\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 9 (CP) .-Grain\nquotations:\nOpen  High Low Close\nWHEAT:\nMay  128%   120% 128% 129%\nJuly 120%   121% 120% 121%\nOct 101%   102% 101*5 101%\nOATS:\n48% 40% 49%\n41%    -       -\nMay .\nJuly\t\nOct.\nBARLEY:\n49%\n46%\n41%\nMay\nJuly\t\nFLAX:\nMay .......\nJuly\t\nRYE:\nMay\t\nJuly.\n65%\n60%\n176\n177%\n85%\n84%\n65%\n60%\n65%\n60%\n65%\n60%\n179%   176      176%\n177%   177%, 177%\n86%\n85%\n85%\n84%\n65%\n84%\nQuebec Power     16%\nSt Lawrence Corp     4%\nSt Law Corp pfd    12%\nSt Law Paper Pfd    35\nSouth Can Power    12%\nShaWinigan W _. P    18%\nSteel of Can    60\nSteel of Can pfd    54\nWestern Grocers -   60\nBANKS\nBank of Canada _.  59\nCanadienne Nationale 162\nCommerce  162\nDominion 200\nImperial   200\nMontreal  207\nNova Scotia 300\nRoyal   178\nToronto   245\nCURB\nAbitibi P & P Co     1%\nAbitibi 6 pfd    15\nAcadia Sug Refin      3%\nBeauharnois Corp _    4Vi\nBathurst P & P B _.    3%\nBrew & Dist Van      6%\nBrew Corp of Can :     1.40\nBrew Corp of C Pfd    16%\nBritish American Oil    20%\nB C Packers     12\nCan Dredge & Dock    29%\nCan Marconi   110\nCan Industries B   194\nCan Vickers      6\nCan Wineries     1%\nCons Paper Corp     5%\nDominion Stores      6%\nDonnacona Paper A     5%\nDonnacona Paper B     5%\nFairchild Aircraft     4%\nFord Motor A .'.    17\nFraser Co Ltd    13%\nImperial Oil    18\nInter Petroleum    29%\nInter Utilities A      7%\nInter Utilities B  65\nMcColl Frontenac pfd    89%\nMacLaren P & P     12%\nMitchell Robt     12%\nPage Hersey Tubes    91%\nPower Corp pfd _.   93%\nPrice Bros     13%\nPrice Bros pfd ..._    45\nRoyalite Oil     42\nThrift Stores._, 50\nUnited Dist of Can     1.15\nWalker-Good & W    41\nWalker-Good pfd     18%\nMoney\nBy The Canadian Press\nAt Montreal \u2014 Pound 5,01 1-32;\nU. S. dollar .99 63-64; franc 3.28 3-16.\nAt New York \u2014 Pound 5.-1%;\nCanadian dollar 1.0. 1-32; franc 3.28\n%.    .\nAt Paris \u2014 Pound 152.67% fr.;\nU. S. dollar 30.47 fr.; Canadian dollar 30.47 fr.\nIn Gold \u2014 Pound 12s Id; U. S.\ndollar 59.05 cents; Canadian dollar\n59.07 cents.\nBonds Close High\nNEW YORK, Feb. 9 (AP)-- The\nbond market closed fractions to 2 or\nmore higher today.\nIn foreign sector gains were made\nled by a 1% advance to 74% by Japanese 6%s and a rise of 1% to 56%\nby Japanese 5%s. U. S. governments\nwere 4-32s of a point higher to 3-32s\nlower.\nMONTREAL, Feb. 9 (CP)-Gross\nrevenues of Canadian National railway for week ended February 7\ntotalled $3,258,883, decrease of .115,\"\n221 compared with $3,374,104 in the\ncorresponding period a year ago.\nQuotations oh Wall Street\nAm Can\t\nAm For Power\nAm Smelt & Re\nAm Telephone ..\nAm Tobacco ....\nAnaconda\t\nAviation Corp ..\nBaldwin Loco ..\nBait & Ohio ....\nBendix Av     12%\nHigh\n81\n50%\n135%\n67%\n32%\n3%\n0\n9%\nLow  Close\nBeth Steel\nBorden   \t\nCanada Dry \t\nCPR \t\nCerro de Pasco\nChrysler     56%\nCon Gas N Y ....   22%\nC Wright pfd ..    4%\nDupont   115%\nEastman Kodak 156%\nFord English .... 5%\nFord of Canada 17%\nFreeport Texas\nGeneral Electric\nGeneral Foods.\nGeneral Motors\nGoodrich\t\nGranby       5%\nGrt North pfd ..   22%\nHowe Sound ....  47%\n66%\n18%\n18%\n7%\n40\n27%\n40%\n32.1,\n34%\n16%\n3%\n48%\n133%\n67%\n31%\n3%\n8%\n8%\n12%\n54%\n18\n,17%\n6%\n39%\n54\n22\n4%\n114\n154\n5%\n17%\n26%\n39%\n32%\n34\n15%\n5%\n21%\n45\n48%\n133%\n67%\n31%\n3%\n\u00ab\u25a0\u2022\u00bb\n8%\n12%\n64%\n18%\n18\n6%\n39%\n54%\n22\n4%\n114\n154\n5%\n17%\n26%\n39%\n32%\n34%\n21%\n45\nHudson   Motors 8%\nInt Nickel  49%\nInt Tel & Tel.... 6%\nKenn Copper .... 38%\nMack Truck .... 20%\nMont Ward   34%\nNash Motors .... 9%\nN Y Central .... 17%\nPackard Motors 4%\nPenn R R  21%\nPhillips Pete .... 37%\nRCA  6%\nRem Rand   14%\nSafeway  Stores 20\nShell Union Oil 15%\nS Cal Ed  21\nStan Oil of N J 49%\nTexas Corp   41\nTexas Gulf Sul 31%\nTimken Roller\nUnder Type .\nUnion Carbide..\nUn Oil of Cal....\nUnited Aircraft\nUnion Pacific ..\nU S Rubber ....\nUS Steel    55%\n42\n52\n74\n19%\n23%\n77%\n29%\nWarner Bros\nWest Elec\t\nWestern Union:.\nWoolworth -a....\nYellow Truck _.\n6%\n98%\n25%\n42%\n14%\n8%\n48%\n6\n37\n20\n33%\n9%\n17%\n4':!,\n21%\n37\n6%\n14%\n19%\n15%\n20%\n48%\n40%\n31%\n41%\n52\n73%\n19%\n22%\n77%\n28%\n53%\n6%\n94%\n24%\n41%\n13%\n8%\n37\n20\n33%\n9%\n17%\n4%\n21%\n37%\n6%\n14%\n20\n15%\n21\n48%\n40%\n31%\n42\n52\n73%\n19%\n22%\n77%\n28%\n54\n6%\n95\n24%\n41%\n13%\nCASH PRICES:\nWHEAT-No. 1 Nor. 1.36%; No; 2\nNor. 128%; No. 3 Nor. 122%; No. 1\nNor. 115%; No. 5 wheat 101%; No. 6\nwheat 92%; No. 1 Garnet 123%; No.\n2 Garnet 120%; No. 1 Durum 93%;\nNo. 4 special 107%; No. 5 special\n97%; No. 6 special 88%; track 142%;\nscreenings $5.00.\nOATS-No. 2 C. W. 57%; No. 3\nC. W. 50%; Ex. 1 feed 50%; No. 1\nfeed 45%; No. 2 feed 41%; No. 3\nfeed 38%; track 55%.\nBARLEY-No, 3 C. W. 64%; No. 4\nC. W. 62%; No. 5 C. W. 61%; No. 6\nC. W. 60%; track 66%.\nFLAX-No. 1 C. W. 174%; No. 2\nC, W. 170%; No. 3 C. W. 149%; No. 4\nC. W. 144%; track 174%.\nRYE-No. 2 C. W. 83%.\nTariff Reduction\non Lead and Zinc\nWould Benefit B. C.\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 9 (CP)-A\nreduction of United States tariffs\nagainst Canadian lead and zinc\nwould \"be most beneficial\" to British Columbia, John McGraw, president of Vancouver atock exchange,\nsaid here today.\n\"Although British Columbia last\nyear set an all-time high record in\nthe value ot mineral output, it must\nbe recognized that smaller producers\nof lead and line have worked under\ndistinctly adverse marketing, conditions ever since the United States\nmarket was closed to Canadian lead\nand zinc,\" he said.\n\"Reopening of the United States\nmarket might well result In a gain\nof one or two cents, a pound In net\nreturns to British Columbia lead\nand zinc mines.\"\nMARKETSAT\nA GLANCE\nBy The Canadian Press\nToronto and Montreal \u2014 Gold\nstocks lower; other groups steady.\nNew York \u2014 Stocks closed lower.\nWinnipeg \u2014 Wheat 1% to % cent\nhigher.\nLondon \u2014 Bar silver lower; other\nmetals higher.\nNew York \u2014 Silver and other metals unchanged.\nMontreal \u2014 Silver slightly lower.\nNew York \u2014 Copper, rubber and\ncoffee higher; sugar unchanged.\nToronto \u2014 Bacon hogs off truck\n10 cents higher at 8.75 to 8.85.\nNew York \u2014 Canadian dollar unchanged at 1.00 1-32.\n-PAGE NINI\nSun Life Writes\nQuarter Billion\nNew Insurance\nMONTREAL, Feb. 9 - The Sun\nLife Assurance Company of Canada issued over $250,000,000 of new\npald-for life assurance during 1937,\n$30,000,000 more than In 1936. The\ntotal assurance in force held by\nmore than a million policy, holders\nnow exceed $2,890,000,000, an increase during the year of $120,000,-\n000. The assets ot the company were\nincreased by more than $53,000,000\nduring 1937, bringing the present\ntotal to more than $831,000,000, the\nhighest In the history of the company.\nGovernment and other bonds were\nincreased during the year by over\n$59,000,000, bringing the total In\nthis class of investment to $369,000,-\n000, an amount representing 44 per\ncent of the total assets.\nThe total income from all sources\nexceeds $160,000,000 and the excess\nof income over disbursements amounts'to $59,000,000. The total payments to policyholders and beneficiaries during 1937 exceeded $76,-\n000,000, bringing the total payments\nunder this heading since the company began business in 1871 tb well\nover $1,100,000,000.\nMontreal Produce\nMONTREAL, Feb. 0 (CP)-Prlces\nheld steady today in light trading on\nCanadian commodity exchange.\nButter spot\u2014Quebec grass regraded 33%-33%; Western (38 score)\n32%-32%; Westerns regraded 33%-\n33%. Sales: 200 boxes Quebec grass\nregraded at 33%.\nEggs spot\u2014Ontario A-large 24%A.\nButter futures\u2014Unchanged to %\ncent up: February 33%-33...\nWheat, No, 1 northern 1.61; barley, c.w. No. 3 .77; oats, c.w. No. 3\n.60; spring wheat flour firsts 6.10;\nwinter wheat flour, choice new (to\narrive) 4.35-4.45; bran 32,25; hay,\nNo. 2, ton 10.50.\nCalgary Livestock\nCALGARY, Feb. 9 (CP). - Receipts' today: Cattle 228; calves 42;\nhogs 187; no sheep.\nCattle market moderately active\nwith prices steady. Common to medium butcher steers 3.25\u20143.75; common heifers 3.00\u20143.50; good cows\n2.75-2.85; good to choice veal calves\n6.00-7.50.\nNo hog sales previous close. Selects 8.50; bacons 8.00; butchers 7.50;\noff trucks.\nVancouver to Have\nAdvertising Fund\nVANCOUVER, Feb. 9 (CP)-More\nthan one hundred Vancouver business men started an intensive 10-\nday campaign today to raise $60,000\nas an advertising fund tor the Vancouver tourist association, to use in\naddition to the association's regular\nrevenue In the next two years.\nToronto Gold Low\nTORONTO, Feb. 9 (CP)-Gold\nstocks sold a point lower in the index Wednesday on the Toronto market. Industrials, base metals and junior oils displayed slightly more\nstrength than weakness. Volume at\n650,000 was under that of the previous session.\nFinal prices showed minor gains\nfor Hudson Bay, Falconbridge and\nChromium and small losses for Nickel, Noranda and Sherritt. Eldorado\npressed upward 10 cents to 2.40.\nLake Sulphite moved quietly on\na loss of V. to 5. In western oils\nnet gains ot a few cents were showing at the close for Calgary _. Edmonton, Home, Okalta and West\nTurner Pete. Texas-Canadian added\n4 cents.\nFRANCE-MAY BUILD\n1000 FICHTINC PLANES\nBy ROBERT B. PARKER, Jr.\nAssociated Press Foreign Staff\nPARIS, Feb. 9 (AP)\u2014France's already vast armaments budget has\nbeen revised to provide for 1,000\nnew fighting planes this year,\nstrengthening French African naval\nbases, and the start of a military,\nhighway across Algeria to Italian\nLibya's frontier.\nDefence Minister Edouard Dal-\nadler will ask a 20 per cent Increase\nin 1938 armaments spending, which\nwould be 4,000,000,000 francs (about\n$133,330,000) above the 22,000,000,000\nfrancs \u25a0 (about $733,333,333) already\napproved by parliament.\nThe additional expenditure would\nmake possible the 1,000 planes, Immediate construction of two 35,000-\nton battleships, naval base construction, and increased mechanization of the army.\nCompletion ot a new naval base\nat Mers-el-Kebir, would be hastened\nunder Daladier's plans. Work was\nbegun in 1935 at a cost of 275,\"\n000,000 francs (about $9,166,666).\nFRENCH FRANC OAINS\nLONDON, Feb. 9 (AP)-Unlted\nStates dollar closed unchanged at\n$5.01% to the pound in foreign exchange trading today. A similar rate\nwas quoted for sterling in New York\novernight. French francs gained a\nlittle, ending 152.69 to the pound\nagainst 152.37 yesterday.\nSUNI1FE\nASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA\nlll\u00bb0 O..K-\ni^Fi).\nVancouver Stock Exchange\nBid\nAsk\nMINES:\nAztec Min Co\t\nBig Missouri\t\nBralorne   \t\nBridge Riv Con ..\nCariboo Gold \t\nDentonia   \t\nGold Belt Mines....\nInter   Coal   \t\nIsland Mount \t\nKoot Belle \t\nMak Siccar \t\nMinto     -\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Gold \t\nPremier Border ....\nQuatsino\t\nRel Arlington\t\nReno  Gold    -\nReeves  MacD   \t\nSally   \t\nSalmon Gold \t\nSherritt Gordon ....\nSheep Creek \t\nSilbak-Premler   ....\nTaylor B Riv \t\nVidette\t\nWesko    \t\nYmir Yank Girl....\nCURB:\nBeaver Silver \t\nBluebird    \t\nB C Nickel \t\nB R Mount\t\nBunker Hill \t\nCoast Copper  :.\nCrows Nest new ....\nDunwell Min \t\nFairview Amal ....\nFederal Gold \t\nGeo Copper\t\nGolconda   \t\nGold Mountain ....\nGrandview   \t\nGrull-Wihksne   ....\nHaida   \t\nHecla Mining  \t\nHome  Gold   \t\nIndian Mines \t\nKoot  Florence  ...\nLakeview Mine \u2014\nLucky Jim \t\nMeridian new \t\nMetaline M & M ....\nMcGillivray \t\nNicola    \t\nNoble Five\t\nNoranda Mines\t\nPorter Idaho _\nQuesnelle Q\t\nReward Min-\t\nRufus Argenta \t\n.07%\n.08\n.46%\n.48\n9.00\n\u2014\n.03\n.04\n1.94\n1.97\n.10%\n.12\n.37%\n.38\n.21\n\u2014\n.76\n.80\n1.01\n1.02\n.03%\n2.85\n2.10\n.01%\n.03%\n.22\n.55\n.38\n.06\n.07\n1.12\n1.06\n.05\n.18\n.07%\n.24\n.00'\/,\n.18%\n12.25\n.05\n.03%\n.05\n.01%\n'  .35\n.05\n.01%\n.08%\n.07%\n.05%\n8.00\n.01%\n.01%\n.01%\n.00%\n.03\n.01\n.40\n.UU\n.05%\n.03%\n2.01\n.02\n.08\n.05\n.02\n.02\n.03%\n2.90\n2.12\n.01%\n.05\n.23\n.60\n.41\n.07\n.08\n1.48\n1.13\n2.05\n.05%\n.18%\n.08%\n.02\n.19\n.04%\n12.75\n3.50\n.05%\n.04%\n.05%\n.01%\n.05%\n.02%\n.08%\n.09\n.00\n8.50\n.01%\n.02%\n.01%\n.01%\n.03%\n.55\n.05%\n.04\n2.05\n.03\n.08-%\n.05%\n.02%\nRuth Hope  _\nSiscoe Mines \t\nSilver Crest ....\nStandard S L \t\nSunloch Mines\t\nSunshine Min\t\nWaverly T new ....\nWellington Mines..\nWhitewater-    \t\nOILS:\nA P Con -\nAmalgamated  \t\nBrit Dom\t\nCalgary \u2022& Edrn ....\nCalmont    \t\nCom'wcalth\t\nDavies Pete \t\nFirestone Pete\t\nFoundation Pete ...\nFour Star Pete\t\nHargal   \t\nHome   \t\nMcDougall Seg Ex\nMcLeod     \t\nModel    -\nMonarch Roy\t\nPrairie Roy   _..\nVanalta     \t\nCURB:\nAnaconda   \t\nAssociated    \t\nBaltac     ....\nDalhousie     \t\nEast Crest _\t\nFreehold   \t\nHighwood Sarcee _\nMadison\t\nMar Jon  -\nMercury    \t\nMid-West Pete .....\nMill City\t\nNordon   \t\nOkalta com \t\nPacalta    \t\nRoyalite \t\nSouthwest Pete ....\nSpy Hill Roy\t\nUnited\t\nVulcan \u00ab\nWest Flank \t\nINDUSTRIALS:\nCoast Brew  _\nCap Estates  .\nB C Packers\t\nBCE Pfd _\t\nB C T Pfd \t\nBurns A \t\nBurns B \t\nBrew & Dist .__....\nFord A \t\nPacific Coyle \t\nU D L .;.\t\nBid\n.03\n.13\n12.25\n.00%\n.02%\n.05%\n.24\n.06%\n.10\n2.53\n.44\n.32\n.44\n.17\n.10\n.17\nAsk\n.03%\n2.76\n.04\n.26\n12.50\n.03\n,06\n.24%\n.07%\n2.55\n.46\n.33\n.45\n.19\n13\n1.18\n21%\n.22%\n\u25a0\u2014\n.17\n33\n.36\n18\n.20\n33%\n.34\n.06%\n.08\n09%\n_\n06\n\u2014\n04\n.05\n54\n\u2014\n11\n.13\n05%\n.05%\n15\n.17\n06%\n.08\n07\n.09%\n.15\n\u2014\n.12%\n1.89\n.12\n41.75\n.18%\n.97\n.17\n13.00\n, 3.00\n11.75\n111.75\n108.00\n6.25\n17.00\n.20\n1.15\n.17\n.09\n1.90\n.13\n.50\n.21\n.19%\n1.00\n.20\n13.50\n3.05\n13.00\n112.50\n109.00\n8.50\n4.25\n7.25\n17.50\nIft)\n^)lxlu Seventh\n\\Jj6ar of runic S^ewice\nA FEW FACTS .. .\nTHE REPORT TOR 1937\nreveals another year of successful operation. Impressive increases in AwuranceJ in Force, New\nPaid For Ufa Assurance, and Assets, mark the\ncontinued progress of the Company.\nMORB THAN A MILLION PEOPLE\nco-operate through the service of the world wide\norganbatlon of ihe Sun Life of Canada, for their\nmutual protection against hazards common to all.\nAs the Company grows, the greater i) its contribution to public well-being.\nSUN LIFE POLICYHOLDERS,\nfor the most part, are people of moderate circumstances, and each policy is a personal and family,\nasset which not only provides for security, but is\nalso a partnership In one of the world's greatest\nco-operative and profit-sharing enterprises\u2014Life\nInsurance.\n. . . AND FIGURES\nNew A_i-ronct\u00ab Paid far during\n1*37  \u00ab.,0*.,0.1l\n\u2022\u2022ymeah  -o  Pa.ieyhe.ders a\u00abd\nleieOclarles\nDaring 1937  74,203,342\nSlate Or.anliatlon  1.122,307,344\nAssets. December 31st. Mil .... \u00bb\u00bb).\u00ab''\u00ab*\nUrtlimes   \"I'lH'K!\nFal.-.p Cnltal  J.JJ0,000\nSnrplni and Contingency Reserve 21,118,208\nAll ilmitei tl**i al Ule Aiiteent* fur MM,*! or    -\ntrout Miction ml ax*UMe Hsrotfli lis SUN 1IFB\nb\u00bb CANADA. Th* iirvice of \/\u00bb\u00bb SUN _IFB OF\nCANADA II world uUe mi repreiestlatlm ol the\nCotufJ tn *ltt*>< \"\u00ab* '\u00ab \"l\" \"*\u2022\" ***\u2022 \u2022*\u00bb\nassistance.\nThe Animal Report will b< mailed to all\npolicr_ol-en.\nOthers may obtain a copy upon request.\n^_WW^)\nyUl T     fOUCT     IIUIP       1111\nCANADA'S LARGEST LIFE AS8URANCE COMPANY\nPh. 717 \u25a0\nNelson,\nB. C.\nDistrict Representative\nSen Ui About tha Sun Life \"Bachelors' Endowment Policy\"\n*S\u00a3*' J, R* Fleming\n___________K___,_J_\u00ab^^ _  ,        'Ji____i\n__\u00a3_*_&____.\n'-\u25a0\u2022'\na\n wWF.\u00bb\u00bb<\u00ab\u00ab_w''--yi-w'\u00bbi.g-.\n\u00bbyi~_W\u00bb.Wftw. -\"'.'.' ll\u00bb-TT-\u00bb-r<l\u00abW--ap\nPAGE TEN\nI.ELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON, B. C.-THURSDAY MORNING, FEB. 10, 1938.\nNelson's Annual Carnival\nAN EVENT OF INTEREST TO EVERY SHOPPER IN\nTHE DI8TRICT\nTIMELY BARGAINS FOR THE KEEN BUYER ON FRIDAY\nAND 8ATURDAY\n50c Syrup White Pino and Tar  381\n25e Baby Cough Syrup  17f\n25c Natal Drops with Ephedrine  15> ,-\n35e Menthol Inhalers .,  27,*\n25e Cough Drops  *8<\n50c Nyseptol Tooth Paste  33\u00a3\n25e Nyal Mint Tooth Paste  18\u00ab?\n$1.25 Homers Malt Extract with Cod Liver Oil  89^\n75e Torch Brand Malt Extract with Cod Liver Oil .. 55<*\n$1.00 Pure Cod Liver Oil  58<\n50c size MURIEL ASTOR Cleansing Cream, Vanishing\nCream, Foundation Cream, Cocoa Butter Night      9d\u201e\nCream .   J4t\nLibrary Discards, 35<* each\u20143 for If 1.00\nAND MANY OTHER BARCAINS\nMann, Rutherford Co.\nDRUGGISTS and STATIONERS\nFEED PRICES UP $1 TON THIRD\nTIME 10 DAYS; BUSINESS ALONG\nWHOLESALE ROW IS IMPROVING\nFormer Nelson\nMan lo Speak\nlo Travelers\nJ. T. Berrington of Calgary, formerly in the fruit business in Nelson, will be in the city Friday to\naddress a supper meeting of the Associated Canadian Travellers. Mr,\nBerrington is Dominion secretary\nof the A. C. T. and is expected to\noutline activities of the organization\nthroughout Canada.\nA. M. Parker, president of the Nelson club, will preside and F. R.\nPritchard is arranging the program.\nAbout 50 are expected to attend.\nThe Nelson club has been unusually active latterly, a number of new\nmembers being added. C. R. Hickman was recently named vice-\npresident.\nHogs and Butter Also\nUp; Orange Sales\nat High Level\nAnother advance of $1 a ton In\nquotations on bran, shorts and midd-\n--\"\nJ, A.C. Laughton\nOptometrist\nSuite 205 Medical Arts Bldg.\nlings, the third in 10 days, was reported Wednesday by feed dealers.\nHog prices advanc-d another cent\na pound, and butter was up half a\ncent. These marked the major price\nchanges on wholesale row during\nthe past week.\nGeneral improvement is featuring wholesale business, the customary January slump being past, and\ndealers are looking forward to another good season. Exceptionally\nlow prices have moved* unusual\nquantities o( oranges and bananas\nare selling unusually well in view\nof the competition provided by\nlow-price oranges. The latter fruit\nCIVIC TODAY\nFRIDAY AND SATURDAY\nFarr-Braddock\nFIGHT PICTURES\nWAS TOMMY ROBBED? \u2014 SEE FOR YOURSELF\nSHOW TIMES\u20147:00 and 9:30\nJUNIOR HOCKEY\nKootenay Playdowns\nNELSON CIVIC ARENA - TONIGHT\nNELSON vs. TRAIL\nWEST END DOOR OPEN AT 7:45.      GAME AT 8:15\nADMISSION:     ADULTS 25^     CHILDREN 10^\nThe Officers and Executive of the Nelson Amateur Hockey Assocl.\natlon would appreciate your support at these games.\nTymlch Fined $20\non Driving Count\nGilbert Tymich was fined $20 and\ncosts on a charge of driving to the\ncommon danger Wednesday upon\nconviction by John Cartmel, stipen\ndiary magistrate, in provincial police court.'\nThe charge followed a collision\nbetween the Tymich car and the\nauto of Smith A. Curwen of Ymir\non the Nelson-Ymir road near Apex\nMonday, considerable damage re\nsuiting.\nConstable Ralph A. Lees of the\nhighway patrol wag crown prosecutor, and W. W. Ferguson acted for\nTymich.\nTRAIL SOCIAL\nREXALL STORE\nin the new Bruce crate is especially\npopular. A recently received ba\nnana shipment is regarded as one\nof the finest carloads brought to\nthe district.\nVEGETABLES MOVING\nVegetable sales, with the exception of potatoes, are lively. There\nappears to be little or no demand\nfor potatoes, possibly because of extensive peddling. Head lettuce, celery, cauliflower and broccoli are\npopular. Additional cooler space for\nstoring green vegetables is being\nprovided by one fruit and vegetable\nhouse.\nAn acute shortage in shelled walnuts is reported by wholesale grocers. The principal source is China,\nand in addition to the tieup of transportation by the undeclared Sino-\nJapanese war, the walnut-producing\ncountry is reported to be inundated by floods. Ordinarily stocks are\nreplenished in January, and dealers are working now on carryover\nstocks, which are practically depleted.\nPICKLES UNCERTAIN\nPickle prices are uncertain, due\nto competition among manufacturers. Some canners are already sold\nout of tomato Juice, but stocks of\ncanned tomatoes are plentiful owing\nto a large pack last season. In the\nUnited States, however, a shortage is in evidence. Jobbers holding\nquantities of canned tomatoes expect shipments to the old country\nto resume in volume in the spring\nand it is also possible some ot the\nCanadian produce may go to American markets.\nCarlot arrivals ol the week were\nfairly light. They included two of sugar, two of oranges, one of vegetables, one of peanuts, groceries,\nmeat and so on.\nBy MRS. H.\nMiss Lorna Spiers of Nelson is\nthe house guest of Mr. and Mrs. F.\nA. Burrows, Third avenue. While\nin the city, Miss Spiers will also\nvisit her brother, Gordon Spiers.\nMrs. H. D. Anderson, Green avenue, entertained the Ladies' Service\nclub of Knox United church Monday evening. After a delightful social evening the hostess served refreshments. Mrs. Guy Sanborn, presided at the tea table, and Mrs. John\nMillen and Mrs. A. W. McDonald\nacted as serviteurs.\nMr. and Mrs. A. S. Sutton have\nhad as their guest for the past three\nweeks C. R. Ball of Nelson, who returned to his home Wednesday.\nWhen the Canadian Girls in Training of First Presbyterian church met\nthis week, plans were completed\ntor the Valentine tea which will be\nheld shortly. Miss Norah Ellis, leader, was in charge of the meeting.\nAmong those in the city today is\nMiss Helen Sloan, of Nelson.\nMrs. A. B. Clark was presented\nwith a past president's pin Tuesday evening, when the Past Chief's\nclub of Pythian Sisters met in the\nCrown Point hotel for dinner. Covers were laid for 18. Mrs. E. Howard\nand Mrs. D. Robertson were welcomed as new members. After the\ndinner, Mrs. W. Spooner and Mrs.\nH. Beckett were co-hostesses at the\nformer's home, where after the business was completed, the members\nenjoyed a,couple of hours of bridge.\nThe high score prize was captured\nby Mrs. Robertson, while Mrs. O.\nJ. Wilson won the consolation. At\nthe close of play dainty refreshments were served by the hostesses.\nThe members present included Mrs.\nP. Shields, Mrs. M. P. Norris, Mrs.\nD. J. Duffus, Mrs. H. Simpson, Mrs.\nC. Morrow, Mrs. C. J. Thorndale,\nMrs. R. H. White, Mrs.T. Alty, Mrs.\nD. Williamson, Mrs. E. Clay, Mrs.\nC. Curtis and Mrs. Gordon Holling-\nton.\nWhen the Excelsior club of Knox\nUnited church met Monday evening,\nDr. W. J. Endicott gave a very interesting address on \"The Value of\nthe Publicly Declared Pledge\". Ian\nHumphries was in charge of the\ndevotional period, and Miss Winnie\nDobbs read \"The Life of Albert\nSwitzer\". Miss Margaret Weir was\nconvener for the entertainment and\nROBT.NOLTE\nMASTER TAILOR\nFOR LADIE8 AND\nGENTLEMEN\n%0^s________Z\\\\\n10% DISCOUNT\nWILL BE GIVEN DURING THE\nLow Fares Carnival\nFEBRUARY llth and 12th\nON  ALL   Cooking Utensils, Carpenter\n- Tools, Pruning Tools, Badmin-\n~-_z~'       ton Rackets, Sleighs and Skiis.\nWe cordially invite you to visit our store during your-\nstay in Nelson.\nWood, Vallance\nHardware\nCompany, Limited\nTOO LATE TO CLASSIFY\nFOR RENT SMALL FURN. HOUSE\nfor 3 months. 2 bedrooms. Central\nlocation. Phone 210. (4912)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nSt. Paul's United Church Annual\nSpring Sale, Sat., April 2nd.   (4903)\nBetter Photos at 5 for 10c and up\nat The Vogue Studio. Phone 4-.\n(4780)\nElectrical contracting and repairs.\nPh. 838, Standard Electric, Ward St.\n(4838)\nGet your picture made 5 for 10c\nat Hollywood studio, opp. Eagle hall.\n(4913)\nWe carry Pratt \u00ab. Lambert's \"81\"\nEnamels & Varnishes. Hlpperson's.\n(4716)\nS. ALLEN\nrefreshments which followed the\nbusiness meeting.\nComplimenting Mrs. Woodward,\nwho before her recent marriage was\nMiss Phyllis Babcock, Mrs. G. B.\nBabcock and Miss Mae Sommen entertained jointly at a delightful miscellaneous shower at the former's\nhome Monday evening. Little Miss\nJacqueline Babcock, wheeling in a\ndoll's carriage beautifully decorated in blue and pink and laden with\nmany lovely and useful gifts for the\nguest of honor, made the presentation. After a pleasant evening playing the game \"pick-up-sticks , at\nwhich Miss Keltha Rouke won the\nfirst prize and Miss Agnes Morrison\nthe consolation, the hostesses served\na dainty late supper. Those bidden\nwere Miss Agnes Morrison, Miss\nBetty Pearson, Miss Dorothy Hall,\nMiss Jenny Connell, Miss Kay Watson, Miss Catherine Gunn, Miss\nAda Bourne, Miss Barbara Sommen, Miss Rourke, Miss Edna\nBrownlee, Miss May Barr, Miss Agnes Barr and the guest of honor.\nMrs. Harry Eperson, Spokane\nstreet, was hostess to the East Trail\nbranch of.the Women's auxiliary to\nSt. Andrew's church Tuesday afternoon. Members worked on articles\nwhich are to be for sale at a later\ndate, after which they enjoyed dainty refreshments served by their\nhostess. Mrs. J. Wilkinson, Mrs. C. T.\nConry, Mrs. A. Yates, Mrs. W. Sim-\nonds, Mrs. T. Hinton, Mrs. A. Stain-\nton, Mrs. A .Sawson, Mrs. C. Jones,\nMrs. E. Fletcher, Mrs. W. Robertson\nand Mrs. R. H. Scott were the members in attendance.\nMrs. G. Hinterleitner, the former\nMiss Betty Davies, has arrived in\nthe city to join her husband. Mr.\nand Mrs. Hinterleitner were married in Victoria last month, but owing to the illness of her mother,\nMrs. Hinterleitner was detained at\nthe coast.\nMrs. B. Lowery, who was called\nto the city owinrr to t e 'liness o:\nher daughter, Mss Gwen Low ry,\nwho is a patient in the Trail-Tadanac hospital, returned to her home\nin Nelson Monday evening.\nMiss Thelma Erdahl was guest of\nhonor recently, when Mrs. S. By-\nstro, Mrs. B. Gordy, Mrs. A. Erdahl\nand Mrs. B. Erdahl were co-hostesses at a delightful party at the\nhome of Mrs. Bystrom, Riverside\navenue. After an enjoyable social\nevening, a delicious mid-night sup-\nner was served by the hostesses.\nThose in attendance were Mrs. G.\nWilson, Mrs. D. Kenneway, Mrs. R.\nHarding, Mrs. Bitner, Miss Dorothy\nBailey, Miss Eileen Jacobsen, Miss\nLena Berner, Miss Margaret Trail,\nMiss Anne Larson, Miss Ames Pederson, Miss Clara Brady, Miss\nNancy Rossi, Miss Emma Myers and\nMiss Gena Frea.\nWhen little Ray McVie celebrated his seventh birthday last week,\nhis mother, Mrs. James McVie,\nFourth avenue, entertained a number of his little friends at a birthday\nparty in his honor. A pleasant afternoon was enjoyed by playing games,\nafter which the children sat down\nto the deicious birthday supper. Mrs\nD. Davies assisted the hostess In\nserving. The little guests invited\nwere Patsy Hall, Irene Woolf,\nPatsy Hughes, Maurice Walton,\nJohnny Hughes, Bruce Davies,\nJimmy Weir, Ian Rintoul, Norman\nWalton and Beverly Davies.\nMr. and Mrs. G. Cumming.\nGreen avenue, have had as their\nguests, the latter's sister and niece,\nMrs. K. R. Wood and daughter of\nGrand Forks, who have returned to\ntheir home.\nMiss Dorothy Donaldson has as\nPrescription\nSpecialists\nm\nN. A. H. 'A.- executive meeting\n7:30 p.m .Friday llth at 813 Josephine Street. (4915)\nOrder your spring suit now\u2014 fit\nand satisfaction absolutely guaranteed.     JACK BOYCE. (4873)\nCarnival Low Fares Visitors have\nyour hair done at VENUS BEAUTY\nSALON  (above Gllkers').     (4902)\nROGER8 1938 Automatic Radiol\n$9.45 down and $5 per month\nMcKAY & STRETTON\n(4900)\nMake Wash Day your Easiest Day-\nEasy Vacuum Cup Washers\n$86.50 - $169.\nKOOTENAY MU8IC HOU8E\nYou can still get extra copies of\nthe Nelson Daily News pictorial\nedition from your news dealer. 5c a\ncopy and 3c to mail it. (4898)\nNOTICE\nReserve April 22 and 23 for production of \"Merrie England\" by\nNelson Operatic Society.        (4914)\nher geust her sister, Miss Effle\nDonaldson of Grand Forks.\nDr. A. W. Argue is the guest of\nhis son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. C. H. Simpkinson, Murray\ndrive. Dr. Argue will return to his\nhome in Grenfell, Sask., at the end\nof the month.\nWhen the Knights of Pythias entertained with another of their enjoyable partner whist drives Monday evening, a large number of\nplayers were in attendance, 42\ntables being in play. Eric Olsen and\nA. J. Edlund held the high score\nfor the evening; Mr. and Mrs. R.\nCrockford were second; Mrs. Leonard Rhodes and A. Christenson,\nthird, and Mr, and Mrs. E. Leveque\nwon consolation. Mrs. Morris won a\nlovely tea pot and plate for a special ladies' prize, and C. Melrose a\nset of brushes lor gentlemen's\nspecial.\nMrs. Roy Jones has had as her\nguest Mrs. Howard Beatty of Kamloops who left Monday morning for\nNelson.\nAfter spending a ..w d\"\"s the\nguest of Miss Els'. Alta ..'ay, M's-\nAnnie Ronald has left for her home\nin Grand Forks.\nEngland Revamps\nDUBLIN, Feb. 9 (CP Cable) -\nFive changes have been made in\nEngland's team to meet Ireland in\nthe International Rugby tournament\nhere, February 12, following the\n14-8 defeat inflicted by Wales last\nmonth.\nThe match will be the third of\nthe current series, Scotland defeating the Welshmen 8-6 at Edinburgh\nlast Saturday. Ireland's selectors are\nalso revamping the fifteen that fin\nished second in the quadrangular\ncompetition last year, calling on a\nnumber of younger players new to\ninternational play.\nThe teams:\nIRELAND \u2014 Fullback, P. Crowe,\nShop At Emory's\nA New Spring $5.00 Hat\nFree With Any Suit\nfor 3 Days Only\nAs a special inducement to Nelson\nvisitors for the low fare Carnival we\nwill give one of our new $5.00\nspring hats free with the purchase\nof any suit in the store. This offer\nis good for Thursday, Friday and\nSaturday only. \u2014 Suits, up from,\n$25.00\nEmory's Limited\nQuality \u2014 Service \u2014 Satisfaction\nBlackrock College; three-quarters.\nM. J. Daly, Harlequins, A. H. Bailey, University College, Dublin, L. B.\nMcMahon, Blackrock College, V.\nJ. Lyttle, Collegians; halfbacks, G.\nE. Cromey, Queen's University, Belfast, G. C. Morgan, Old Belvedere;,\nforwards, R. Alexander, North ot\nIreland, C. R. Gravers, Wanderers,\nJ. W. S. Irwin, North of Ireland, R.\nB. Mayne, Queen's University, Belfast, J. E. Megaw, Instonians, D.\nO'Loughlin, University College,\nCork, E. Ryan, Dolphin, S. N. Walker, Instonians.\nENGLAND-G. W. Parker, Black-\nheath; three-quarters, E. J. Unwin,\nRosslyn Park, B. E. Nicholson, Harlequins, P. Cranmer, Moseley, H. S.\nSever, Sale; Halfbacks, F. J. Reynolds, Army, J. L. Giles, Coventry,\nforwards, R. J. Longland, Northamp-\nFRIENDS OF JAPAN\nSOCIETY ORGANIZED\nROME, Feb. 9 (CP)-HAVAS)-\nOrganization of society to be known\nas \"The Friends of Japan\" was announced today to' 'strengthen the\nfriendly relations and cordial cooperation between Italy and Japan.\"\nFURNACES\nInstalled and Repaired\nR.H. MABER\nPhone 685        610 Kootenay St.\nALL ROADS LEAD TO THE\nGOLD RUSH\nTOMORROW NIGHT\u20149 P.M.\nCIVIC CENTRE AMUSEMENT HALL\nOne Hilarious Night of Fun Depicting Klondyke Days\nDANCING-FLOOR SHOW ATTRACTIONS\nADMISSION-50c\n100 violins, $5 up. Guitars, cornets,\ntrumpets, trombones, clarionets, etc.\nreduced prices. Concert master\nstring bows, WEBB'S MU8IC, 806,\nBaker Street, (4907)\n\"Say It with Flowers\" for St\nValentines, Feb. 14th. She will remember\u2014So don't you forget Phone\n962. We (hllver. KOOTENAY\nFLOWER SHOP, 364 Baker St\n'    (4901)\nCORRECTION\nThrough a typographical errcr In\nthe Safeway advertisement of yesterday Sausage Meat and Hamburger\nlisted\u20142   Ibs.       25c.\u2014This   should\nhave been 3 Ibs      25c.\n(4911)\nCARD OF THANKS\nWe wish to thank all those who\nhave been so kind in our bereavement, especially the doctors, the sisters at the Hospital, and the friends\nwho sent beautiful flowers.\nHenry Weibe,\nMr. and Mrs. G. Jorgenson and\nfamily. (4916)\nTRAVEL BUREAU\nComplete travel service by bus.\nairline or steamship to any part\nof the world.\nFor Information Call\nGreyhound Lines\n221 Baker St\nPhone 800\n(4726)\nLeague Hockey Game\nNELSON CIVIC ARENA\nSATURDAY NIGHT\nFebruary llth.\u2014 9:15\nNelson vs. Kimberley\nMaple Leafs Dynamiters\nDoors Open 8:30 \u2014 Game at 9:15\nGENERAL   ADMISSION\nAdults 50c Children 25c \u00abf\nReserved Seats at Nelson Civic\nCentre Office. Phone 118. Price 75c\nThis will be the last appearance of the\nDynamiters  at   Nelson   In   the   present _\nschedule of games.\nPOCKET MONEY\nFOR THE\nCARNIVAL\nFRIDAY TO MONDAY\u201411th to 14th FEB.\nRENT YOUR SPARE ROOM-LIST IT IN THE  NELSON\nDAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED COLUMN\nROOMS FOR RENT\nEvery year there is a shortage of rooms during Carnival time.\nMany empty spare rooms in town but now way in which to\ncontact a visitor\u2014send your advertisement in NOW\u2014number\nof rooms for rent, name, street address, and phone number,\nif any. It you have not rented before\u2014rent now I    .\nPHONE 144\nCALL OR WRITE\nThe Classified Department\nNEL30N DAILY NEWS\nRoyal Export\nBEER\nWhat   Nelson\nmakes, makes\nNelson.\nBuy Kootenay\nProducts\nton. H. B. Toft, Waterloo, R. E. Pre!\ncott, Harlequins, T. F. Husklssoi\nOld Merchant Taylors, R. M. Mai\nshall, Oxford University, R. Bolto.\nHarlequins, D. L. K. Milman, Bed\nford, W. H. Weston, Northampton.\nKootenay\nBreweries\nLimited\nThis advertisement is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or  by   the Government of\nBritish Columbia.\nIAE CLARK\nJOHN PAYN\n\"SMALL TOWN\nBOY\"\nStarring\nSTUART ERW1N\nFLASH!\nEXCLUSIVE PICTURES\nof the\nFARR vs.\nBRADDOCK\nFIGHT\nWas Tommy Robbed? -\nPRICES 35c-15c\nr\/:._)_l'')l \\H Today\nCOMPLETE SHOWS AT 2:00, 7:00 AND 8:39\n4 WZ B\/.OMRS\ni**;*\n<>*\n_t>.\noh<\n(ASIC\nMi\n-D-f-rfSlllfclF\nJOAN TONY GIORIA\n..DAVIS  MARTIN  STUART\nFRED STONE . NAT PENOUTON .DICK MLOWIll\nJOAN MARSH . DIXIE DUNBAR \u2022 ED THORGERSEN\nJED PROUTY.MAURICE CASS.MARJORIE WEAVE!\nJ. C. NUGENT\nFeature Starts at 2:04, 7:04, 9:58\nLORETTA YOUNG   \u2022   DON AMECHE\nin\n\"LOVE UNDER FIRE\"\nMatinee 10c and 25e\u2014Nite 15c and 25e\nGRAND HOLIDAY ENTERTAINMENT\nFriday FRED ASTAIRE in\nSaturday \"A DAMSEL IN DISTRESS\"\n -^_____________________________\n","@language":"en"}],"Genre":[{"@value":"Newspapers","@language":"en"}],"GeographicLocation":[{"@value":"Nelson (B.C.)","@language":"en"}],"Identifier":[{"@value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1938_02_10","@language":"en"}],"IsShownAt":[{"@value":"10.14288\/1.0413373","@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":"1938-02-10 AD","@language":"en"},{"@value":"1938-02-10 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\/1.0413373"}