{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0402271":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2021-09-18","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1926-02-02","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0402271\/source.json","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/elements\/1.1\/format":[{"value":"application\/pdf","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2009\/08\/skos-reference\/skos.html#note":[{"value":" *m^m**u^\n'*\u2022'*>'' I \u25a0 (. I *;.   (. i [\n* 1C .y -i U    1)   C\nCONSERVATIVE AMENDMENT IS BEATEN BY IO\nIPROGS, LABOR\nSUPPORT UBS\nON ALL SIDES\n(Amendment  Expressed  Regret That Speech Gives\nNo Policy Plans\nUrges Tariff Cut\nEXPECT ANOTHER\nAMENDMENT NOW\nLiberal and Progressive Members Hold Floor on Last\nDay's Debate\nPREMIER SAYS\nMONEYED FOLK\nWISH TO RULE\n\u25a0 ,n\u00bb, \u25a0 .\u201e t . #\"\\\nClaims Moneyed Interests of\nOntario Seek to Control\nDominion Government\nFACED CONSPIRACY\nIN THE ELECTIONS\nOTTAWA, Feb. 1.\u2014By a majority\nof 10, tho house of commons tonight\ndefeated the Conservative amendment\nto the government motion for an\naddress in reply to the speech from\nthe throne, ln a vote which followed\nparty lines InBofar as the Conservatives .and Liberals were concerned,\nq.nd in which the government was\nsupported by all the members of'the\nProe.res._ive, Labor and Independent\nparties, the majority which exceeded\n\u2666hat of the last division by seven\nwas obtained. Crowded galleries\nwitnessed the division although there\nwas not manifest the tense interest which marked the division on\nfhe last Melghen nonconfidence\namendment.\nThe vote tonight had been closely forecast. The Conservatives to\n\u25a0*\u25a0 man supported the amendment.\nThe Liberals as solidly voted against.\nThe five Progressives who supported tha Conservatives in, the last division 'switched to th* government\nn this. They are A. M. Carmichael,\nKin-^ersley, W. T. Lucas. CamrQse,\na; m\/ T.outiffi*\u00abrt*veffr\u00bbvi]-*s, W, R.\nFansh, Last Mountain, and N. M.\nrampbell, MacKenzie. The Conserv-\n:\u00bb!vei gained One vote over that\n-\"'-orded in ^he last division. Through\nhi*- presence of A. D. Chaplin, Kent,\nOnt., who was Hi when the last\nvote was taken. Herbert Lennox,\nConservative, North York, was absent but was paired with C. W.\nCross, Liberal, Athabasca. W. F.\nKay, Liberal, of Brome-MIssissiquol\nws  absent   through  illness.\nThe Meighen amendment which\nmet with defeat tonight called upon\nthe house to express regret that the\nspee-h from the throne gives no indication oi policy designed to enlarge\nthe volume of employment in Canada and particularly to give the\nproducers of farm production, coal\nand other primary products the advantage they are, under present\nworld conditions, entitled to enjoy\nin the markets of this country. It\nwas moved by the opposition leader\non January 18. The debate therefore has lasted for two weeks.\nExpect Auother Amendment\nImmediately the result of the\nvote was declared, Donald Sutherland, Conservative, North Oxford,\nrose and moved the adjournment of\nthe debate. He desired, he said, ln\nview of the prolonged observations\nfrom ths Liberal benches to sav\na few words on the main motion.\nHon. Ernest Lapointe, actinfc government leader, voiced no opposition\nto Mr. Sutherland's motion, which\nYitLM   carried.\nIt is understood that Mr. Sutherland will move Another amendment\nadvocating protection for the Canadian dairy industry.\nIn    addition    to    the    Progressive\nmembers supporting the government,\nJ.   8.   Woodsworth,  Labor,   Winnipeg\n(Continued  From  Page  Two,)\nThornton Again\nAsks for Auditor\nGeneral's Report\nOTTAWA, Feb. 1.\u2014Another request\nthat the auditor-general's report be\ntabled at once was made In the house\nthis afternoon by Sir Henry Drayton,\nConservative, West York.\n( Sir Henry said that If the publication of the report was being held up\nfor toe Introduction, he thought the\nhouse would prefer to got the report\njh-w and let the auditor-general submit   hta   Introductory   remarks   later.\nHon; J. A. Robb, minister of finance.\nh plied th't the cause for the delay\nwns tho extra work imposed upon the\nauditor-general and his Matt this year\nbecause  of  the general election.\nImpatience Costs\nMan Three Years\nfor Jail Breaking\nWlWIPlta, 'Feb. 1.\u2014Impatience\ncost Ororgft I.nbodiuk .fust three\nyears   of   freedom. * .\nAwaiting hearing on a ehnrge of\nJ.oust! breuklng, lAbudluk with four\nother prisoners mode a hold break\nfor liberty from Ihe provincial Jail\nhere on October 6 last. Recaptured.\nhe was sent to prlt-on for three\nysar? for Jail breaking. Today he\nwas arraigned on the original charge\nnnd  found  not  guilty.\nG. G. COOTE\nProgressive M.P. for Macleod. Alt\u00ab.,\nproposes to move In the house of\ncommons for a substantial reduction\nin the customs tariff on automobiles\nand motor trucks.\nTRAIL PROFITS\nGO TO DOZEN\nVICTORIA MEN\nNearly Million Profits in\nStock Distributed at the\nCoast\nClaims   Meighen    'Usurped\nPower; Start Bay\nLine This Year\nVICTORIA, Feb. 1.\u2014Nearly $1,000,-\n000. in profits In the stock of the\nCanadian Consolidated SmeLters, limited, at TraH, is being divided by\nabout a dozen Victoria ond Vancouver men, with the establishment\nof the stock this week well over the\nJ200-a-sharo mark.\nIncluded in the group ls a former\nhigh government official who retired\nfrom office a decade ago and has\nboon' living in Victoria and Europe\nsince; a Vancouver shipbuilder, a\nVictoria shipping man, a former Vancouver stockbroker and polo player,\nand several Victoria club men.\nThe sensational boom in the affairs\nof the Trail smelter i\u00ab being accepted\nas one of the first concrete evidences\nof the prosperity of the mining industry   in   British   Columbia.\nAsks if Salaries\nof Employees Goes\non While Adjourned\nOTTAWA, Feb. l.\u2014L, J, Ladner,\nConservative, Vancouver South, inquired in the house of commons this\nafternoon whether it was the intention of the government to suspend\nsalaries of the members of the staff\nOf the house during adjournment.\nSome of the employee., hod come\nfrom considerable distance, and h^\nconsidered that !t was only Just\nthat they should receive full salary\nduring the period in question. Hon.\nErnest Lapointe, acting government\nleader, replied that the matter was\nunder consideration.\nPRINCE ALUEItT. Sask., Feb. 1. \u2014\nPremier King opened his campaign in\nPrince Albert tonight with a speech\nin which he charged that monied Interests in Ontario were endeavoring to\nget control of the government of the\ncountry. He had referred to. Mr.\nMelghen's tar'ff policy. \"Back of this\nprotectionist thought,\" warmly exclaimed the prime minister, \"lies the\ndesire of a few men of great wealth\nte get- political control In this country. That Is the real Issue in Canad\u25a0\u25a0..\nwhether a few men who are already\nvery wealthy, who have certain established privileges, who reside for tht\nmost part in eastern Canada, uid In\nMontreal more than anywhere else\nwhether these few men are going to\nsucceed in getting political control In\nthis country bo that they can make\nthe policies of Canada over to their\nmonied Interests and their selfish\npurse.\nraced Conspiracy\n\"Thli country was face to face In\nthe last election,\" so the prime minister proceeded, \"with an great a conspiracy as any country ever faced.\nThat conspiracy has been made clear\nln the house during the past month\"\nHere Mr. King referred to the Pat-\nenaude conditions In Quebec and to\nMr. Melghen's absence from Quebec\nduring the last election.\nMr. Pntenaude had said he was a_*\nindependent of Mr. Melghen a3 he wa_>\nof Mr. King, yet, the prime minister\ncharged, \"this group from Quebec was\nto be part of the Meighen party.\"\nWhatever tho Montreal monied interests were to tell them to do, they\nwere to tell Mr. Melghen to do.\n\"The government of the country was\nto be carried on In the secret councils\no.' these gentlemen in Montreal,\" tho\npremier  declared.\nThere were only a few ratonaude\ncandidates in the house, but they had\nrot been there five minutes before\nthey were supporting Mr. Mefghep.\nPremier King referred to similar\ncharges made by Sir Clifford Slfton\nduring tho general election campaign\nrr.d Sir Clifford's accusation that cap*\nitaliats had put up from ono to two\nmillion   dollar.., .\nAre righting Money\n\"I say Sir Clifford Bifton told the\ntruth,- declared Mr. King, \"and etery\nman who knows the Inside history of\niheonmpaign knows lt. What we were\nfighting was not the policy of the\nConservative party. We were fighting\nmoney, millions of dollars put In by\nfinancial interests to get control in\nthis country. I say that so long as\nwe have men who aro selfishly seeking\ntheir own Interest, who npp.nred to\nspend money In that way, so long the\nInterests of the people will never be\nsafe.\"\nMr,   tflng   passed   in   In   review   the\n(Continued   on   Page   Five)\nMay Be Deputy Speaker\nROBERT GARDINER\nProgressive M.P. for Acadia, Alta.,\nis now being discussed us the next\ndeputy speaker in the house of commons. Gardiner Is considered as the\nman who started the snowball rolling\nwhich finally engulfed the Conservatives In western- Canada.\nUNDIVORCED\nWIVES LEAD\nTO SENTENCE\nMan Asks Separation but\nToo Late'; Is Sent to\nJail\nDUTCH CREW IS\nTAKEN ABOARD\nRESCUE Lie\n' *> .       _J \" \u25a0 ;\nWireless Tells of Heroic Rescue on Storm-Tossed\nAtlantic Ocean   .\nBRITISH FREIGHTER\nREPORTED MISSING\nSteamers Rush to Aid of Johanne Dybwaid; Other\nShips Late\nComing to Canada\nBBpTf iMiM\n:_JK-*     M-'\u25a0\n3^j|\n.    M\n\u00ab___*.      ***-'\u25a0 <\n*\u00ab..\"-          WM\n^M\njSfjpi\nCrown Prince and\nFormer Kaiser Are\nTogether Once Again\nDOOR-*., Holland, Feb. 1.\u2014Profiting by the first day of the abolition\nof the visa between Germany and\nHolland, former Crown Princo Frederick William of Germany, arrived\nhere thla morning and passed through\nthe village unobserved to his father's   chateau.\nThe meeting between tho former\nemperor and his son was touching\nfor It Was the first time In more\nthan two years that they had seen\none another, William embraced his\nson and was unable to master his\nemotion, but the former crown prince\ndi plnyed  his usual gaiety.\nPrim-ess Hei-mlne, who had previously made visits to Frederick Wll-\niim at Oel? Is reported to have\ni.'\u2022-\u2022''ilv facilitated The reconciliation,\nft Is thought, however, that the\nprincipal reason for the reconciliation Ih to bo found in the matter of\nthe settlement of tht royal proper-,!\nties, which, rumor says, President\nVon Hindeiiburg has promised will j\nlip favorable to the former royal\nfamilies.\nI .< i.N :^0. T, Feb. 1.\u2014Cologne's celebration of t'-e departure of the British occupying forces wan hrought to\nLondon butt night by radio. Llsten-\neri'-ln hi-iiid the people of Cologne\ndiet ring wildly Over their liberation\nfrom the Hritish occupation, (he\nbooming of the great new bell of\nih>* dihedral, the head burgo-mast-\n| t.r'8 speech, followed hy rounds of\nI \"hochs\" and the singing many times\nof \"Deutschland  Ueber Allej.\"\nINVESTIGATE INTO\nINDORi^CONDUCT\nIndia's  Most Powerful Native\nRuler Will   Be   Investigated by Own People\nDELHI, India, Feb. I.\u2014The conduct\nof the maharajah of Indore, ono of\nIndla'e most powerful rial ive rulers,\nwill be tha subject of an Inquiry under\nthe direction of the British authority\nin India. The government has de-\n, cided to Investigate the case of the\nmaharajah as a sequel to the attempted kidnaping of the dancing girl,\ni Mumtai Begum, once a favorite of\n1 hie court, and the murder of Abdul\nj Kadlr Bawla, to whom she had fled\n| for protection. .   ,\ni    The commission of Inquiry will be\ni composed  of  two judges  of  the  high\njtdurt, two native ruling princes and\n\\ a  senior  officer  of  the  political  de-\n1 p-rtrnent.   The inclusion of the native\n1 t*rlf)ctl   means   that   the   maharajah\nwill   be   Judged   by   his   own   people.\n| Their  names  will  not   be  announced\nuntil the maharajah  consents to tho\nInquiry,\nj    His -refusal   will   necosssrily  entail\n! immediate compulsory abdication, but\nin   Much   event   the -government   will\ni 1 .clde    What   alternative    steps   are\ni posslbl*.    In any case no final action\nwill be taken until after mature and\nI cautious consideration  because of the\nj vital  political  considerations Involved.\n'Hie    commission    will    follow    the\nj usual procedtjie used when  the ques-\ntinn ..of  depriving  a- native   ruler  of\nhis power, elthe# temporarily or permanently, Is under consideration.   The\nmaharajah already has been informed\nI that he may decline to attend the In-\nPHILADELPHIA, Feb. 1\u2014Three\naudivorced wives were too many for\nJames Hawkins, despite his bIx foot\nfour stature, and his fervent pleas to\nbe allowed to go back to his 15-\nyear-bride, the third of hla mates,\nproviding he could separate himself\nfrom the others, was not agreeable\nto Judge John Monaghan ln quarter\nsession court today. As a result, he\nwill serve sixty days in prison,\nThe girl-wife was unresponsive to\nHawkins' protestations of devotion in\ncourt today and insisted that he be\npunished. Hawkins, aged 23, formerly of Black-.bu.rg, Va., married\nMiss Catherine Sfdmen In Klkton,\nMd., nnd the pair lived here for\nseveral months before Hawkins* alleged duplicity became known. These,\naccording to Hawkins' plea today,\nwere his happiest days and he declared he would \"give up heaven\"\nfor his girl-wife, if the court would\nnllow him to rectify his affairs, and\ngo  back  to her.\nTWEVE SHOTS\n\u25a0       BjJSBODY\nThree or Four Persons Believed\nIncluded in Murder of Two\nDetroit People\nDETROIT, Feb. 1.\u2014Three and perhaps four participated in the murder of Jay Daubenspeck, private detective, and Mins Silma Lake, 19-\nyear-old domes-tie, who were found\ndead In a vacant field early Sunday,\nIt wus indicated at the post mortem\ntoday,\nDr. Paul Kiebbn, county medical\nexaminer, said Daubenspeck had\nbeen shot with four different kinds\nof bullets. He was shot 12 times\nand six of the bullets were found\nIn the body. Daubenspeck's revolver had not been found, and it\nis possible that it may have been\nwroted from him and used by one\naf his assailants. Only one bullet\nwas found in the body of Miss Lake,\nalthough she had been shot four\ntimes.\nSamuel Pace. 21-year-old, Is being held for questioning. Pace, said\nto have been a sweetheart of the\ngirl, denies all knowledgo of the\nshooting and Insists he can establish  an   alibi.\nNEW YORK, Feb. ..\u2014The wireless\naised its voice t,oday above its week-\nong chorus of distress to tell of an-\nither rescue from the Atlantic's unleashed   gale.\nIt sputtered a brief dozen words\nmto the Hamburg-American offices\n\u2022\"rom Capt, Carl Graalfw of the liner\nWest Phalla. saying he had saved the\n.fficers and crew of the .Dutch\nfreighter Alkaid.\n\"C. ew of Alkaid taken aboard.\" he\n\u25a0mid. \"All's well. To proceed to New\nYork.\"\nThe West Phalia came alongside\nthe distressed Alkaid this morning,\nabout 1000 miles off the coast of.\nNewfoundland. The freighter had\n-bout 20 men aboard, as far a& could\nbe learned here. She was bound\nfrom  Rotterdam  to Philadelphia.\nThe West Phalla, carrying 248 passengers, was due today, but ls not\n-xpected now until Thursday or Friday.\nSixteen Days Overdue\nThe missing ship which figured In\ntoday's messages is the British\nfreighter RyJ.urn, which left Rotterdam on December 28, with a load of\ncoal for Philadelphia. She is 18 days\noverdue, and no word has been heard\nfrom her since  she  left   Rotterdam.\nAn appeal was broadcast to ships\nit sea, asking if thpy had sighted\nher during the storm, she had 120\nofficers and  men aboard.\nThe liner West Anskip had put\nabout and was hurrying to the aid\nof Uje Johanne Dybwaid, according to\nanother message, but was HT miles\naway  nnd  fighting  heavy seas.\nThe Johanne Dybwaid called for help\nfrom mid-Atlantic, where she Baid, she\nhad been \"badly smashed\" by the\nstorm. She was bound from Barry,\nWales, to Boston. The Fort Victoria\narrived with 257 passengers today\nfrom Bermuda, only one hour late,\nafter ploughing through 35-foot seas\nmoat of the trip.\nFour other ships due today could\nnot make it. The Olympic is now\nexpected Wednesday; the Berengs-\nfjord, of the Norwegian-American\nline, has been delayed until tbe\nsame day; tho Baltic is expected tomorrow, 24 hours late, and the\nSwedish-American liner Drottingholm\nannounces she hoped to get here tomorrow or the next day.\nACCEPTS DYING\nSTATEMENT OF\nMRS. MATHEWS\nDead Pair Loved Each Other,\nDeclares Husband oi\nDead Woman\nNO P0wdeiTmarks\nON MAN'S CLOTHING\nTHE DUCHESS OF ATHOLL\nParliamentary undersecretary to\nthe British board of education, who\nis to be one of tho speakers at the\nthird triennial national conference of\neducation in Montreal next April.\nABOlffliOF\nGALLOWS URGED;\nIN MANITOBA\n\t\nElectric Chair More Humane\nMethod, States Attorney-!\nGeneral Craig\nWINNIPEG, Feb. 1.\u2014Abolition of\nthe gallows In Manitoba and the\nuse of the electric chair ns a more\nhumane way of carrying out capital punishment was advocated today by Hon. W. R. Craig, attorney-\ngeneral   of   the   province.\n\"I think the penitentiaries should\nbe equipped with electric chairs or\n.om. other modern device for execution. Civilization should have advanced beyond th. stage of hanging\na man by the neck as a means of\npunishment,\"   he  said.\nAgitation to change the venue of\nthe double hanging of John Stanton and Steve Nazar, convicted murderers, set for February 9, found no\nsupport from the provincial government today.\n\"The law must take its course in\nthe yard of the provincial Jail,\" Attorney-General Craig told the ministerial association, who proposed\nthat the execution be carried out |\nat some place remote from the\nprovincial  Jail.\nAn   appeal   will   be   forwarded   to !\nthe  federal authorities.\nHer   Coming   Home   With\n-Drinks in Her' Cause\nof Quarrel\n\"Wc, the fw-7, -wter havtng\nheard tho .vii.a.i proInced, find\ntint the s.-iu Afm-M. Jane Matthew:. *\u25a0*.'_:._ c-ic-a in ths Xoo_*nay\nI*a'-9 Oencrnl hospital on February\n1, IS'\"*, flirfl frcm the effcts of a\nwci.n.l inflicted by i \u25a0ballet dls-\nchftiged from a rife fcy the deceased Do'nV-i Tiyonna'*; and the\ns&id Do'pli'n Lyonna'i dlr-t January 31, 19W, from a \u25a0-.'-f-inflle.-HI\nwound cat___od from %'..\u00bb sft__i\u00ab\nr.fle.\"\nViituRlly declaring Bol;>.n ty-\nona-i'E* a mnrd-rer snd \u2022 -n'-'ido.\nthe coroner's Jury in th* _*r-'ur**S\nresultiug from the seiixr.t_onat\nfleet..e fr.l'.ng 'n \u00a7JlL\u00a7M*)U*M just\nafter Saturday mifln;; 1... In ' Ita\nverd'et, as rondei.d aV.ve, \u00ab,'_.pt-\ned the women's ver\u00bb.o*i of the\ndouble crim*-, har fleatttaft rtr<t\u00bb-\nment, extractei und r r_*Uinu!*.it la\nKootenry Lake 0**n--. _ _>.p'*al,\nSunday p.ftemoon wus-Bj ho_r\nmale camp, iron of \u2666hu shoeA-tag,\nMra. Matthew , whc.e feuabaal.\nthou-th livlug in KcJa n ..-as not\nliving at the house, thong *. i-cn-\nnala had a room *toer*, * oJared\nthe lao-iier procure*, her ' u.H-jid's\nrifle, and first ohot 'i-r twloe and\ntficn hinn.-'f, his. ora \u25a0*\u25a0\u2022 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u2022*\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 11 ng\nB*e_iUng'y in t n-ar*.o*\"* s\u00bbi. attributed   his   P. t   'O   JO-'i.,:i;.-,V.\nHubb--  Sa i  They  fij-.-cd\nCine of the sen-tafiaiM \u25a0 i   l !.e 'nq.^-st,\n'      \u25a0-\u25a0   practically   n I   \u25a0'.\u25a0;     *,\u25a0,._,_\nrday\nMa\n(_u\nwa*.   the   a dm i\nhews.     Ini. !-:in\ntn,   thai   she     ne\nwith   each   other,\no   Spokane   tn ,.\nr. ii  iy  remain o.*\u00ab.\nul\ndbl\ne*.a (I i\n;>r y   a\nMat*\nMeighen Asks\nAttitude on the\nLocarno Pact\nNo Report Yet\non Survey of\nCoast Elevators\nWINNjrKO. Feb. 1.\u2014The question of the wheat pool building a\nterminal elevator at Vancouver was\nnot dlacusBed nt yesterday's meeting\nof the central Belling agency, but\nmay be brought up when the board\ncontinues its conference tomorrow,\naccording to a statement made last\nnight hy-A. J. McJ'hall, Iteglna, who\npresided   at   the   eessiona   yesterday.\n\"We recently sent a committee\nfrom the pools,\" said Mr. McPhall,\n\u2022'to survey the elevator situation at\nVancouver, and we have received Its\nreport. It Is probable that we shall\ngo Into, the report when we meet\nagain tomorrow. It was not dis-\ncuesed   today..\"\nOTTAWA, Feb. 1.\u2014The question of\nratification of the Locarno pact by\nCanal', i again came up in the house\nof common** this attornoon o\" Q\nquestion by Rt Hon. Arthur Meighen,   Conservative   loader.\nMr. Moighen inquired whether the\nacttng leader of the government wan\nprepared to info- m the house if it\nwas this government's intention t\"\nrecommend to pail lament approval\nof the Kxxsaroo treaty.\nHon. Ernest Lipointe. noting government leader, replied thnt some\n$MSfM ago a member of the house had\ntsked lhat correspondence ln re-\n_pe_tt to the pact should be tabled.\n\"ommunieationH with the nritl*\"h government we e ronfldentiai in character, but its consent to table time\nconnected with this treaty had been\n\u25a0isked   for.\nPending definite r -ply It might\nbo better to allow the matter to\nstand. Mr. Meighen Udd that lie\ncould not see what relationship thia\npoint had to do with -an expression\not   the   government's   attitude,   ,\nThe views of the government in\nIhe matter, retorted Mr. Lapointe,\nwould be given when the time came.\nThere was nothing urgent about the\nmatter. Canada was not bound by\n'he-*-e treaties unl-isa parliament ratified them.\nI,\nTHOMAS PLACED ON\nTRIAL, FORGERY\nReturned to Regina From Detroit; Doctor Jailed  on\nTheft by Conversion\nREG1XA,   1.\u2014Harry   Thomas,   ar- I\nrested   In   Detroit   last   week   at   the j\nrequest of the city police, today  wa*\nplaced   on  trial  on  a   charge  of  for- j\nVary.    He was  remanded  on  a   plea |\nof not guilty till February s. It is al- ;\nlegtd that Thomas forged signatures j\non grain checks totalling  {3U2 andde-j\nposited   them   In   r   local   bank,   aft-j\nerward   drawing   against    them    by\ncheck.    Thomns claims to  he n  wai\nveteran   und    the    possessor \u00bb of   the ,\nD.   C.   M.   and   bar.\nJohn   McAllister  alias  John   Shan- !\nnon alia* Dr, John Hetherlngton, was*\n\u2022sent   to  jail   for  nine   months  today t\non  a charge  of tin it   hy conversion.\nMoAHiMer,  who Is said   lo  be a   qual- |\nified physician and to have practiced ,\nas   mucIi   in   Saskatchewan,   was   ar- :\nretted    in    Winnipeg    ami    charged\nthere    v. itl.    forgery.      The    forgery \u25a0\nwas   in   respect  to  one   of   a   number\ni.f   mon y   orders   belonging   to   ll.\nJ.   Kanyon,   a   farmer   of   Lemberg,\nSask.,   and   :-*<-..-n   from   him   at   a\nlocal  hotel while  he   reated   there  on\nbin   w:iv   to   tiie   cosat   for   a    holiday   trip.     McAllister   was   charged\nwith theft of th-'-e today, he denied\n.\u25a0Haling    them,    declaring    he    had\npicked    them    up.\nAt Winnipeg last week he pleaded\nflillty to forgery and was given iua-\nrUTli-f 1 sent-in c in order that he\nin Th be t ie-l on the theft charge\nf..r\\\nt;;:ls   of   the   Paturdav   ni   . t\nv hid-   they   had   en ei t   i\\   .   .\nthews    and    the    younc     \u25ba. .rl\nNewell,   who   lived   with   ... ;     v., r,\ncalled upon for evidence.    One    f .\nv.us    supposed    to    have    accoiom\nMrs,   Matthews home,\nThe wirl New- II,  though .n the c\u00ab\nals.i  was  nut  questioned.\nAfter hearing all the evi<_**rc\u00bb, the\njury reached its verdict alt t an lo.ur\nand 2a minutes' deliberation, render*\ning ii at 4 o'clock.\nWcanded  Woman  Put  la OtU\nThe Inquest was opened in the city\ncouncil chamber at 10 o'clock In 'he\nforenoon, and long before the opening\nthe room, of course, was packed. Am\nboob as the Jury met, it adjourned to\nview the body of the new victim, Mrs\nMatthews,  ili the  undertaking parlors.\nMis.. Jeasla Benalea, night telepl nn.\noperator of the Jlritlsh Columbia Tele*\nphone Company, testified to receiving\nthe pin.ne call for the poiiee ov>r a\nparty line, No. 5(\u00bbS, between 12:30 and\nI-.':!., o'clock Sunday morning. A fell ale voice, she said, asked h.*r to turn\non the police light as there was a\nmurder m-xt  door  to Jim  lb-id's. Fair-\nTliin   call,\nih.\n.ing testimony of\nMrs. Matthews later revealed, as read\nJn court, was nrol. by .Mrs, MaltheWK\nherself.\nMcKay   Gives   Emar-itncy   Treatment\nDr,    l>.   W.   M. Kay   described   being\nhe got to thi\ntin\nMex Btewart. wl\n'ci'ii a murder:\nhe   other   ronm.'\npolice officer. When\nk door of the house,\nthe door by Sergt.\nio said. \"There has\nthe woman is In\nThe   doctor   saw\n.he   body   or   Nynnnala   lying   on   the\nfloor,   apporentlj    .lead.\n'!\u25a0\u25a0   then   entered   the   \"other\"   room\nVlo\nontinued on Page 3)\nThe Weather\ntnp.raturei,  below  are  for th*\n.\u25a0riding y.-terday afternoon st\nTeachers Go on Strihe\nWhen Board Allows\nReturn 'Impudent' Student\nNEW GLASGOW. N.S., Pfb. 1. \u2014\nFive of the six tenrhers In the local\nhigh school were \"out on -trl-c'' today\nas a result of the controversy with the\n.o.ird officers In the case of Robert\nWilliams, suspended for making an\n\"Impudent\" remark to Miss Clara Mu-\nray, _ .onch teacher. The board, having been appealed to bv the bov's\nmother, declared that he might resume\nhfs studies tf he Apologti.:u ur mi at\nhe sold, and declined to uphold his\nsuspension, This decision resulted In\nthe strike.\nTwo Die of Exposure\nj        in Heavy Storm in\nthe Boston Area\nboston, Feb. l.\u2014A heavy storm\n' which   held   this   part   of   Now   Kng-\niRnrl In its grip since last night- nnd\nabated   somewhat   tonight,    but   not )\nbefore   two   men   had   died   of   ex-\nl posure.    Trolley nnd  bus  lines   were j\nibndly hampered and hundreds of mn.\nItorlsts left their automobiles undercover to add to the burdens of I\ntrains, subways and surface lints. |\nWilliam Taylor, Rochdale, was\nj found frozen to death near his\nihome nnd Placid Chaissos succumbed\nI to \u25a0 exposure in the woods near\n(Juincy, I\nVICTORIA, Feb.\n;.i>iity: Mostly cb\n'  rial  rain  or  sleet.\nNELSON    -\t\nVl-tt.rla    _.\nVancouver    _ _\t\ntmloops   -\t\nI  rrkcrvill.-    _....\nPrince   Rupert   ....\nINU'vun     \u2014...\n1 'awson  \t\nCalgary \u2014\nWinnipeg    -\"..:\nI'ortland \t\n^an  Francisco \u2014\n.Valllo\t\nKpnknno  \u2014\nI'elllii'ton    _\t\nVernon     \t\ndrsnd   Forks   \t\nKalso \t\nCranbrook .\u201e._\t\nIMmonton   \u2014\nPrince Albert  _,\nSwift Current  \t\nQu'Appelle    \t\n\u2022lielow iero.\nNelson    and\nwith   occa-\nMln.\n.. 27\n. 40\n.. .0\n.. JO\n10\n. ao\n.   .\u00ab\nI\n.. M2\n.  .40\n.   48\n.    40\n.    -_\n..    ,11\n.   _rl\n.    .4\n..   -\u00ab\n-   20\n6\n\u20222\n0\n..     0\nMnx.\n11\n51\n43\n32\n_ti\n411\n411\n\u00ab\n2\nli\nB4\nM\n(2\n36\n87\n35\n3D\nS3\nS3\n10\n1(1\n14\n1\u00ab\n \u25a0'  \u25a0'\nPage Twa*^\nTHE NEE20N DULY NEWS,  TUESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 2, 1926\nNelson Boy Dies\nAfter Suffering\nLengthy Illness\nOtto Thor, aged 21, eon of Mr.\nand Mrs. Peter Thor, Silver King\nroad, died at 8:30 Sunday morning.\nHe had suffered a protracted illness. He was born at Ross Creek,\nAlta., and had resided in Nelson 13\nyearn.\nBeside  his   mother  and   father,  he\nIs survived by two  sisters and four\nbrothers.\nThe funeral will tjke place tomor-\nLarge touring car was confiscated when B, Lepper of Buffalo failed\nto appear at Niagara falls to answer\nliquor   charge.\nThief was jailed at Harrlshurg,\nPa., after pleading guilty to robhing\nwoman as she knelt at prayer in St.\nPatrick's Cathedral there.\nLeading Hotels of the West\nWhere Superior Accommodation May Be Obtainei\n^e3za?Me,\nGeorge BenweU, Proprietor\nThe Premier Hotel of the Interior\nAMERICAN   PLAN RATES, 13.60  TO tiM\n\u25a0-:-\u25a0\nRooms with Running Water and Private Baths.\nHeadquarters for all Travelling Men, Mining Men,\nLumber Men and Tourists.\nROTARIAN   HEADQUARTERS\nSPECIAL SUNDAY DINNER, $1.00\nTHE   M08T  COMFORTABLE   ROTUNDA   IN   THE   CITY\nHUJIE-J, A. Mitchell, H. D. I!l.ick.\nToronto: C. 1\". Caldwell. Knalo; S N.\nlions, I'itrkB; Mix. N. Pr.t.r_on. Miss\nI'.   nte-Son,  Appledal.;   H.   !\u25a0:.   riillim.r.\nA. Stewart. C S. William, J. I.emins\\\nVancouver; It. O. t.rirne.s. Kimberley,\nJ. I). Johnston. Hossland; Mr. and Mrs.\nCtirw.n,   Ynilr.\nNEW SAMPLE ROOMS.\nALL DAYLIGHT.\nFREE BUS FROM STATION\nAND BOAT.\nHotel Strathcona\nEUROPEAN PUN\n\"A Home for Those Away From Home\"\nUNEXCELLED SERVICE\n,Trfu\nNew Grand Hotel\n.1*   VERNON   8T.   EAST   \u25a0    \u2022    8.   E.   MILLS,   PROPRIETOR\nHeadquarters for Everybody.    Hot and Cold Water.\nTelephones in All Rooms.\nFREE   BUS   FROM   8TATION   AND   BOAT\nWW   CHAXD   \u2014   .T.    P.   Coalc.   W.\nColegravc.   Coffee   Creek;    _.   Wilson.\n. Kuth   Wilson.   Meadows;   V.   Brlgsr,   H.\nJaspers. Wlnlaw;\ncheek. Trull j li.\nClark,   Sandon;  J.\nlt. Colas. II. Saw-\nColas, Italy; W. J.\nH.   1'elliiiK.   Vsneott'\nQueen's Hotel\nTHE CENTER OF CONVENIENCE\nriot and cold water ln every room.\nSteam heated,\nA. LAPOINTE, Prep.\nQUEENS\nMr.   and   Mrs.   C,   Vian,\nParks;      10,      Kmllson.\nFc-hmiiit.    Batmo;    F.    Clev.r,   J.   Chap-\ni\"\u00abn.   Rossbtrn.;   L.   6.   Maryol,   Cal-\nf.ary;   o.   E.   Massin.   Grand   Forks;   .1.\nK.   CraJn,   I'e.-r   Park;  <J.   IV   Serra,  I-M-\n1'ionlon.\nSHERBROOKE HOTEL\nNssr C. P. R. Station.\nRooms  at  Reasonable  Ratal.\nH.  DUNK,  Proprietor\nSAVOY HOTEL\nBAUER ST.    NELSON B.C.\n2 BLOCKS FROM DEPOT\nSTEAM HEATED\nHOT --.COLD RUHNIHG WATEf?\nIN R0QHS-\nJ A   HEW H, r*M**M*MH Ton.\nSAVOV __ C. J. Dahl. T. F. Olds,\nMarcus*. A. C. McOregor, Spokane; 1'.\nH'ui'in, Vancouver.\nST1RUNG HOTEL\n_'\/2   Blocks   East   of   Port   Offlo*\nSteam heated.   Hot and cold water.\nRooms by day or week.\nAlso   Furnished   Suites.\nP. H. BUSH, Prop.\nOCCIDENTAL   HOTEL\nA.   C.   TOWNER,   Proprietor\nThe   home   of   plenty.\nFifty  rooms  of  solid  comfort\nTe eervs the best meals ln Nelson.\nIt's   the   cook.\nTHE MADDEN HOTEL\nT.   MADDEN,   Prop.\nSteam-Heated  Rooma by tha Day,\nWeak   or   Month.\nEvary eont.dtrat.on shown ta\nguests.\nCor. Bakar and Ward Sts., Nelson\nMADI>I.N - T>. Johnstone. Meadows\n.\". iti-n.1. Bpokaoe; .[, Ailport, M. Oook-\n_oki.fi,\nClassified Ads.\nBring Results\nHer Heart   \u2022\nPalpitated\nShe  Had\nFainting Spells\nMrs. J. Wilson, Port George, N.S.,\nwrites:\u2014\"I suffered from palpitatioa\nof the heart and fainting Bp-lls, and.\nat times, I could not be left alone I\nwaa ao, nervous.\nMy trouble was caused from overwork and worry, having been left\nalone with a large family.\nJ had tried everything, without any\nrelief, but I know, to-day, that I\nwould have been. a nervous wreck\nbut for your wonderful\n,'MIIBURN,!\n_'     UCAQT *\n^MfMsf\nThesa Pills are for sale at all druggists and dealers; put up only by\nThe T. Milburn Co., Limited, Toronto,\nOut.\nTHIS WOMAN\nNOW WELL\nHer Suffering Relieved and\nHealth Restored by Lydia\nE. Pinkham's Vegetable\nCompound\nToronto, Ontario. \u2014 \"I am certainly\nvery grateful for the benefit I have received from Lydia K.Hnkham's Vegetable Compound, also the Sanative\nWash and the Liver Pills, ln the\nearly spring I was suffering so much\nfrom loss of blood that I thought I\nwould never be any better as doctor's\nmedicine relieved me only for the\ntime being., I saw the Vegetable\nCompound advertised in the -Toronto\nStar,' and I find the Vegetable Compound Tablets the best for me. I\nnave been taking them since Spring,\nand I intend keeping them by me all\nthe time. After reading your Private Text-Book I saw it was necessary to use Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash, and I can safely say I\nfeel a different woman. My friends\nremark how well I look. I am a very\nbusy woman, but I am ready at all\ntimes to boost your medicines.\"\u2014\nMrs. CllARl.KS (ilKFIN, 9.9 Lands-\ndowne Avenue, Toronto, Ontario.\nYou may be having an experience\nsimilar to Mrs. Giflin's and will be\ninterested to know what she did.\nEvery sick woman can feel confident\nthat Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable\nCompound will help her, since we are\ntold that it does help 98 out of every\n100 women who take it.\nSold by druggists everywhere.    C\nI MOTHERS\n1       AND THEIR  CHILDREN       g\nS.-YIXCi  UU'XmtY  BILLS\nOne   Mother   Says:\nLittle son had become (he most\ndisreputable looking child in the\nneighborhood, not curing a whit\nhow soon his clothes and hand.** nnd\nface became dirty, Finally I said:\n\"It co*-*ts me five cents lo have one\nof your blouses laundered. I will\npay for a reasonable number each\nweek, and If you soil more than\nthat you must pay me five cents\nfor each extra one from your\n\u25a0\"bending money.!' At once he became more careful and soon the\nnumber of bloii^s he soiled did\nnot exceed the other -hi].lien.*' number.\nINTEREST KEEN IN\nTOMORROW'S OPERA\nl-.M.Tpiional interest centers in the\nappea ranee of Cameron .Matthew*!-,\nand his distinguished H_ngllsl) company who will pre-, ut \"Too Many\nII unhands*\" ni file opera limine .<\u25a0-\nmarrow* \"\nThis c-ompajiy has met with un*\nusual success on their recent trans-\ncontinental tour, and cities at cacb\nHtop have been loud in their praise*-*.\nOne of th\u00ab many compliments paid\nby the Vancouver Province, to Mr.\nMatthews and his company, was us\nfollows\u2014\"In fact had one been in\nLondon, the Criterion could noi\nhave offered a more delightful evening's entertainment.\"\nThere will be a popular matinee\ntomorrow   at   3   p.in.\nMITCHELL'S ARMY\nCAREER IS ENDED\n*?oi'mpr   Colone)'-<   Resignation\nAccepted;  Will  Tour\nthe Country\n\u00a7________\nPiles painlessly treated without op\n.ration. Care (.Min ran toed *|n writing\nMoney returned unless cured. Write\nfl(r f'-or. booklet.   Itching hip.-*..\nrHAt.K   ROSE,   M.D.,   Specialist\n404   Zieffler   Bull clin-j,   corner   Howard\nand   Riverside.   Syokaaa\nNelson s Best Cafes\nTHE WHITE LUNCH\nAll  Whits   Help\nHome Cooking\nProprietor\u2014P.  L. SLOAN\nNsxt   to   Overwsites   Store\nROYAL CAFE\nClassic   Restaurant\nRsfinsment   and    Delicacy    Prevails\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIGHT\nLuncheon,  11:30  to   2    , \u201415c\nSpecial Dinners, 6:30 to 8 36c\nWe specialize ln Chop Suey and\nNoodlea.\nPHONE  182\nTHE L D. CAFE\nFinest-equipped Restaurant ln tha\nCity. OPEN DAY AND NIGHT.\nSPECIAL\u2014 lea Cream, Soda Water\nand Hot Drink... Nice, clean, furnished rooms; hot ond cold water.\nWa   Cster   to   Private   Parties.\nWASHINGTON, DC. Feb. 1.\u2014The\narmy career of William MiteheU ended today. It was brought to a conclusion by a formal notification from\ntho war department that his reslgna-\ntion from tin- army hid been accepted     by     direction ..of.   President\nCoolidge.\nThe acceptance automatically cancelled the sentence of five year's\nsuspension Imposed by the court\nmirtial, wliich held him guilty of Insubordination. Mr. .Mitchell immediately resumed his flffht against war\nand navy management of the national\ndefence.\nHe recalled his efforts tn \"better\nConditions from within the service.\"\nand declared his intention ns a citizen to keep up the struggle for a\nnational defenco \"organized in a\nsingle department \"\nAt the same time, he announced\nthai he would tour the country fur\nthe next throe months to carry\n\"straight to the people a picture of\nihe true condition of our national\ndefence.\"\nPROGS, LABOR\nSUPPORT LIBS\nON ALL SIDES\n(Continued from page 1)\nNorth Center, and A. A. Heaps, Labor, Winnipeg North, also supported the government. Henri Rourassa,\nIndependent, Labelle, and A. W.\nNeill, Independent, Comox-Albernia,\nalso voted against the amendment.\nThe vote came at half psXMt eleven\nin  the evening.\nTomorrow heing a government day,\nthe motion of Hon. Ernest Lapointe,\nacting government leader, moved for\nan adjournment of the house following conclusion of the debate on\nthe* address will have precedence. It\nis understood that this will be' op-\npo\u00b0ed by the Conservatives. When It\nis disposed of. the house will return to consideration of the nd-\ndi ess.\nLiberal nnd Progressive members\nheld the floor throughout tho entire\nd-'iy.\nMr. McPhee, th? first speaker\n\u00abaid \"Canada is prosperous, the Conservative peddlers of gloom notwithstanding,\" he declared. Arthur Reu-\nbtsfi, Progressive, from Provencher,\n.Man., declared his Intention nf voting against thp Meighen amendment\nadvocated, completion of the Hudson\nBay railway nnd also the establish-\nn.'\"\"t   of ft   svstem   of   ruinl   credits.\nThe debate then swung back to\ntht. ivibeiai sine of the chamber,\nand Arthur Dettez of Three Itivers-\nBt, Maurice criticised the campaign\nwaged by the Conservatives In Quebec prior to the general election. A.\n..'. Young, Liberal, Saskatoon, advocate changes in the railway commission which he thought would\nprove beneficial to the west. He\nftUfgaatad Imgcr western representation on the hoard, or the permanent location of part of the commission In western Canada. Or. W.\nA. Hall, I.ibeial, South Bruce, supported the completion of the Hudson Pay railway and J. Q. Knblch-\nRiid, Liberal, (Jloucester, made a plea\nfor the fishermen of the maritime\nprovinces.\nOther speakers during the debate\nwere C. K. Bothwcll, Liberal, Swift\nCurrent, C. B. Howard, Liberal, Sher-\nhrooke and E. J. Young, Liberal,\nWeyhurn.\nMcPhee,     Liberal     York,\nthe      debate      on      the\nn        the        house       this\nlatfernoon. Replying      to      thse\nj who had spoken  In  the hous.   of the\n.benefits   nf   a    Consr-rvatlve    govern-\n; ment,    he    said    that    the    people    of\nI Saskatchewan    lifted    their   voices   in\nsupplication,   that   they   might   never\nj witness    such    occurrences    in    their\nprovinces   as   had   occurred   In   Manitoba   umter   the   Roblin   government\nbefore   the   war.      He   himself   was   a\n\"disciple   of    traditional    liberalism.\"\nMr. McPhee quoted at length ftom\nConservative   papers  whose  editorials\nbefore    the    election    hart,    predicted\nruin    to    industries    If    the ' Liberals\nwere   returned.     These   same   papers\ncairied   extensively   news   itenif*   _\u25a0_\u25a0\nnounctng Industrial prosperity. Can\nada   is   prosperous,   the   Conservative\npredictions   of   gloom    notwithstnnd\ning.\nFactories riourWi\nMr. McPhee asked the Conservatives to com-ider the fact that three\nmanufactured products widely used\nin Canada had no tariff protection\nal -all. These were barbed wire,\nbinder twine and cream neparators.\nhut the Canadian factories making\nthese things had flourished under\nth-1   non protective   principles.\nThe Conservatives had accused the\nLibci a Is   of   taking   credit    for   any\npartial   prosperity   in   Canada.     The\n1 Liberals  did   deserve some credit\nIrecent improvements In industrial life\nj and   he   thought   that   perhaps   even\nW.\ncontinued\naddress\nChildren Ck\nY FOR\nTHE STANDARD CAFE\n820   B.k.r   Street,   Nelson,   B.   C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NIQHT\n11:30 to 2:30, Specisl Lunch 35o\n8:30 to 1:00 p.m, Supper 36o\nPhon*  154\nMOTHER :\u25a0\nCastoria is especially pre-\npai.(1 to relieve Infants in\narms and. Children all ages\nof Constipation, Flatulency,\nWind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the\nassimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep.\nTo avoid imitations, always look for the signature of\nAbsolutely Harmless - No Opiates.   Physicians everywhere recommend it\n14 Coats Left to\nClear;\nMostly fur trimmed.   Today,\nThese are good styles.\nHALF PRICE.\nALSO 15 CLOTH DRESSES\u2014In Tricotines. Serges!\netc.   To clear today at HALF PRICE.\nA BUNCH OF TWEED SKIRTS also go at HALF\nPRICE.   *\nGIRLS'  DRESSES\u2014Tweeds  and  Serges,  at  ONE-\nTHIRD OFF. ,     \u25a0    \u2022\nNelson Dry Goods Co.\nLADIES' WEAR SPECIALISTS\nCRICKET STAR DIES\nFROM AUTO INJURIE\nVANOOtlVHR. Feb. 1.\u2014Robe\nEaton-Shore, 38, known througho\nLritish Columbia as a crk-ke' st\ndied  in hospitul last night as tho\nf   injuries   sustained   Saturcii\nI sided in lUirnaby. Kulon-Shore w\n| ..or-- in Cheshire. Knffland. An Ii\n[quest   Will   he   held   tomorrow.\nNew  York  report  wye  Utly  Cy\nthia   Mosley,   while   in  America,\nin settlemen\nestate* of   her   maternal   gran\ni father,    late    .Joseph    Letter    of    Ch\nDODD'S  \u00ab\nIkidney\n\u00b0'ABrTtS      >     \"\nTHE  GUMPS-SHE SHALL NOT PASS\nK\nI.\nit\n. s\n,i*VflFRlNKlFD  BY THE\n' W-.TER   OF   WVE\nA.ND    KI-JDN.SS\nTMF   DROOPING-   ROSF\nB.GINS   To\nBlOt-M\nAN. W -\n,L\n|Sj_.OV.*-Y   TM*  R01.F&   BEGIN   To CR?fP\n\"i   BACK   TO   TMF   WIDOWS    PMp\nWAN    CH.FKS  - TMt    KINDLY   CARf\nTwit   Gumps   provided  combiM-TO  with\nThi   knov-UdGC   that unci.; Biaa   IS\nJ.IABU   TO   SUCCUMB   TO   TUf  DANGfRou*\nWlUS   OF   TH*    WOMAN    M$   KNOWS   AS\nPRl'MNCl.   CHURCH   ACT  AS   A TONIC\nTO   HASTEN    HER _-_        S^g^\nRECOVERY-\n<$*\n)Or>K<   SHE   SAT   UP  FOR   TWIT FIRST   TIME\nA-JD    CAUED   FOR  AD,  THE   TOILET  ACCESSORIES\n$0   DfAR   TO   THE   FEMININE   HEART - FORCETTINS\nHER   OWN   TROUB-.ES   l_Hr  RESOLVES   TO   USE IVHRY\nEFFORT   T6   TURN   UMO.*;   BlrA   PROM  THE* \u25a0\nPATH   THAT  -.FADS   TO   PRUDENCE  CHURCH\nAND    Df STRUCT! OM  \u2014'.      \u25a0 \u25a0\nn\nHE  MUST BE  SAVED   IN  SPITE\nOF   HIMSEXF -  IF   HE   MARRIES\nTHAT   VVOAAAM    SHE   WILL\nBREAK  HIS GRUT Bl\u00ab  TENDFI**\nHJART   BEr*\u00b0R*  THE  HONtY MOON\nIS   OVER - HE NSfOS  A WOMANIY\nVJOMAN , A WARM HEARTED\nkOVlNfi   MATE   WHO   CAN\nunderstand and appreciate\nhis g.reatness- poor,dear\nGenerous old bimbo-\nTHEPJSr\nprovidence smiled on It as a government.\nArthur Reaubien, Progressive,\nProvencher, discussing Canada's immigration policy, declared that one\nof the great faults was that people\nbrought here were permitted to\ndrift. The consequence was that\nmany  had  drifted south.\nMtifiTS S&SS \u00abf the ' -ening, when the automobile he \u00a3\nproposed tariff board he thought that I ,\"lV1\"\u00ab ei\u00bb4ta\u00ab\u00bb lnl\" \u00ab \u25a0*\"\u00a3 car:\nIt should make a thorough study -1** compan on at the time of t\nInto financial companies in this I \"ceident. (1. C, Peel another proir\ncountry. A thorough investigation I \"?\"*\u25a0 crlckctci-, sustained a tractn\ninto 'artificial indURtriee\" there alao t\u00bb\u00ab\u00ab \u00ab*\u2022 w\u2122 rf^,vet.l(iJ*___ Z\nshould   be  made  by  the  board.   ,\nSupporting the early construction\nof the Hudson Ray rail wny, he\navetred that Ihe cost of the railway\nhad   been   paid  for  through  the  wile\nby the Dominion, government of pre-,-      .    ,      *.* ,     ,        ,,,  \u201e...,.\nemption   lands   in    the   west    which ] watch  her  interests  in  settlement\nformed   part    of    provincial    natural I {&\u2022   \u2022\u25a0taie- nt      '\nresources.      The    west    wiih    Just\nmuch   entitled    to    her   nntural\nsources   as   any   other   part   of  Ct...\nada.     The   completion   of   the   rail-1     Damage   of   $20,000   waa   done   I\nway   would   do   considerable   toward i fire In the businc-s section of Oror\ncementing   fhe   bonds   of   friendship j village   recently.\nbetween the east and  the west. _\u25a0_.\u2014\u2014\u25a0\u2014 ^-\nArthur     Rettese,     Liberal,     Three L\nRivers-St. Maurice, declared that in j\nthe recent election the Libeials had j\ncarefully avoided discussing conscrlp- j\ntlon unless provoked into doing so. |\nConservatives, he declared, had been\ntrying to use the tariff as a shield\nbehind which to hide all their misdeeds.\nTalks   A:-out   Kail   Hoard\nA. M. Young. Liberal, Saskatoon,\nsaid the greatest plec1 of legislation of many years had been the\ncreating the laiiway commission in\n1906. In northern Saskatchewan j\nthere was discrimination in freight !\nrates resulting from the limited ap- \u25a0\nplL-atlon of the Crow's Nest Pass I\nagreement. It amounted, to 2 cents I\nper hundred pounds on grain and\nflour moving eastward. Representations had been made to the commission, hut no action had been tuken.\nMr. Young quoted from the original\nagreement to establish the rights of\nthe epople shipping on lines not in\nexistence in 1807 to the present Crow\nrates. The enrnmi*-*slon as he unit fi stood it. had been created In\norder that matters might be brought\nbefore It easily, and dealt with expeditiously. In this matter there\nseemed to be a great delay. The\nrailway commission had said that\nIt was a court of Justice. ,Mr.\nVoting claimed thnt it was not the\npurpose of the creators of the commission to make it merely a court\nof law. He offered two suggestions,\n(1) perhaps western Canada could\nhave la rger representations on the\nboard, or t2) perhaps a section of\nthe board could be permanently located In the west where cases\ncould   bo   dealt  with   more  Bpeedlly.\nThe very greatest asset to Canada was her agriculture and this industry should receive prime consideration. A protective tariff tended\nto build up cities, but it should not\nhe forgotten that a city could only\nbe as prosperous as the country\naround it. The protective principle,\nwas not  the proper one. <*\nSupporta   Bay   Roa-4\nMr. Young supported the early\ncompletion of the Hudson Bay\nrailway. It was essential to the\nweft, and both Conservatives and\nLiberals were committed to Its construction.\nMr. Young gave as one reason why\nSaskatchewan had not had a Tory\nsovunment to the fact that Manitoba adjoining had enjoyed that\ndoubtful   privilege. Saskatchewan\nhad   been   ably   governed   from   the\nfirst.\nHe was sincerely Interested In maritime right*, but had been sorry to\nhear the advocates of those provinces make attacks on Sir Henry\nThornton. Sir, Henry had given Canada a very excellent s?rvler. in the\nnational railways. Mr. Young concluded his speech with an appeal\nto the Progressives for cooperation.\nThe government and Progressives\nshould cooperate to Initiate legislation to carry into effect that policy\nenunciated in the speech from the\nthrone.\nTwenty-eight naval planes will fly\nto Cuba for the United States fleet\nmaneuvers.\nNine Cakes of La-Mar\nTook Off 28 Poum\nIf   you   are   fat   und   w.nt   to   kno\nWhat   thla reduction   nie.-.ns,  pick   up\npounds   and   carry   it   ten   minutes,\nes   your   vital   organs   as   much\nenry   i?.   pounds   of   superfluous   fles\nRead what Mrs. Willie Hull says:\nJust a few words of praise. I us.\nonly 9 cakes of your wonderful so;\nand lost 28 pounds. How thankful\nam! No one knows how miserable th:\nold   fat wns to  me.\"\nLa-Mar Reducing Soap literal!\nwashes fat away. Results quick. Not!\nlag Internal to take. Reduce any pa.\nwithout affecting other parts. No di<\nor exercise.\nNote\u2014De sure to get the genuln\noriginal reducing soap, La-Mar. Pri<\n50 cents a cake or three cakes f<\n$1.00, at any druggist's, on a mone\nback guarantee, or sent direct by mai\nthree cakes for $1.00. H. J. Brow\nMedicine Co.. Room 13D, King Bulling, Toronto 2.\nTO WEAK MEN!\nWhy continue to suffer from want\nof pep, loss of manhood, bashful-\nness in presence of opposite sex,\nlack of vitality, t.as in stomach\nand bowels, nervousness, defective\nmemory, lack of concentration, Inflammation of the bladder, \"csys-\ntltis,\" urinary troubles, enlarged\nprostate gland, or any kidney and\nbladder affection? Our Herhal\nRemedies will, entirely remove\nyour troubles. Write for book on\nDiseases of Men not mentioned In\nthe usual medical works. Articles\non Diet, booklet on skin and blood\ndiseases. All above literature together with testimonials nnd our\nsdvice free hy mall. Consultation\nfree and without obligation. Thirty\nypars* experience hen- nnd in the\nOld Country. Treatment by mail\nour special'.v. Without dlsparag-\n'n\". your lwi:;U doctors and sur-\njTeons, we would suggest, before\nh .ng an operation vou write us.\nIt will con you nothing.\nENGI..SH   XE1BAL   DISPENSARY, LIMITED\nIZ'.t Davit St., Vancouver, B.C.\n(B C.'s   Oldest   Hcrbul   Institute)\nBurned and Made Face\nSore. Cuticura Healed.\n\" For four yeara I waa bothered\nwith hard, luge, red pimples in\nblotches on my lace and neck. Tbe\npimplea came to a bead and fettered\nand looked terribly, and at times\nburned and made my face very sore.\nMy face looked ao badly tbat I used\nto feel embaneseed when I went lo\npublic.\n\" I began using Cuticura Soap\nand Ointment and they helped me,\nand after using three or four cakes\nof Cuticuta Soap and a few boxes\not Cuticura Ointment I waa completely healed In three months.\"\n(Signed) Mlaa Vera Sweny, 1 Gibson Ave., Toronto, Ont.\nUse Cuticura Soap, Ointment and\nTalcum for daily toilet purposes.\nik Ttm W M-dL   AddraM C-.ruu.i-_--\n THE NELSON  DAILY NEWS,   TUESDAY 'MORNING. FEBRUARY\" 2, 1926\nPage Th;\n$\nSTATEMENT!\nMRS. MEWS\n\/Continued  Prom   Page  One.**\nerred to by. tho officer, and dlrect-\nhls attention to a woman who wa*\nrtly silting up at the foot of u bed.\nI' examined her and found , large\nninds in tho abdomen, a part of\n;\u2022 abdominal contents protruding. He\nited to replace the protruded con-\njflt.?, but it waa impossible, and so\nr* put on :in'emergency truss nnd\n{.va her n stimulant,\nWhile this was being done, he suld,\n.asked Riissel McEwan to send e\njr for Dr. L. E. Burden for assist*\nbe, to notify the coroner, and to\ntio notify the hospital to have the\nierating table ready. With the offer's assistance he wrapped tho paint in blankets and waited for the\n\u25a0\" to arrive.\nIo examined the body lyim. on the\n'jr.  for  wounds,  and,  satisfied   that\nI man   was  dead,   he  again   turned\n. 'attention -to  the  woman.\nEntrance   and   Exit   in   Abdomen\npf. McKay stated when ihe car ar-\n'M he took' the patient to the hos-\n'.I, where he examined the wounds\n,1. fi-tind there was a fairly large\ni-eu-'it* wound, about an inch in\n.meter, over the. right side of the\nKafgen, He* also found a large\njCiihtr Wound  over  the  left  pnrt of\nabout four inches In diameter, and\nrough this wound a portion uf the\n\u2022maeh was showing. Although no\niury was found tn the stomach or\nIwel and there was no evidence of\n'hemorrhage of large blood vessels,\npre was considerable bleeding. Ho\njd on tho smaller wound he found\nit the outside flesh had been clean\n.,   with   some   evidence   of   powder\nrks   around   the   wound.     He   said\nlikewise found powder marks on\n\u25a0 larger wound, due to some missile\ntt entered  the  smaller wound  nnd\nII its   exit   at   the   large   wound.\nsaid on the large wound tiie edges\nre turned out, and ground the\nund were marks Of powder and also\n\u25a0\u25a0att-hes   on   her   dress.\nDeath   by   Shock   and   Bleeding\nh\"he   patient   remained   in   a   seml-\np.cio.i:.  condition,  he said, ami  died\n2:0S   o'clock   Monday   morning,\nIe held a post mortem on her body,\njl he found there was only one track\npassing an Instrument from one\n\u25a0und through the feodjr nnd into\nj other wound. He said tho two\nssiles alleged  to have been fired at\nmigh^ have tfAeri the same course.\nilrs.itatl.ewN' d\u00abath, he said, was\nm a shuck and a hi'mon-hugo re-\ntlng from the -abdominal wounds as\nscribed, nn there was no other cvl-\nice of- injury ur violence.\n)r. Mi'Ka.y stated that he first\nv the' woman on thy bed fully\nthed and in much pain, and did\n1   have  time  to  look for scorches\nher clothing then. Mrs. Mathews\nd to him at that time, \"He shot nt\n' twice, but I don't know if he hit\nboth times. I walked to the tel-\nVione and telephoned myself. He\ntie it \u25a0 because of jealousy I\"\nHo Powder Burns on Lyonnais\n\\t the post- ..mortem up\u00abn Dolphin\n[onnats, Dr. McKay said his death\n-a caused from shuck. Internal liom-\nt-hage. and injury to the spinal\nid. Besides finding the entry and,\n. of the missile on the clothes of\njmnala,   Dr.   McKay  said   he  found\nNeglected\nCoughs\n(Often lead to serious trouble\u2014\n[Are quickly relieved by Dr. Chase's\n[Syrup of Linseed and Turpentine.\nMany people regard a cold as a simple\nfrident.   But Coughs and Colds when\nj-glected lead on to pneumonia and\n\u25a0insumption\u2014the most dreaded diseases\nisnmon to this Northern temperature.\nDr. Chase's Syrup of Linseed and\nurpentinois well-known as a most\nfrective treatment (or coughs, colds\n.onchitis,   croup   and_ asthma.   For\na..y years it has held its place in the\ntimes of Canada as absolutely depend-\nble and was never so popular as it is\n)day. \u2022\nComposed of Binople and yet power-\nIly effective ingredients it is suitable\n\u25a0r children and adults alike ahd is\nttnd constantly in most homes for use\ncase of emerge!.cy. Prompt treatment\nhalf the battle when fighting colds.\n%Quininei\nThe First and Original\nCold and Grip Tablet\nProven Safe for more than\na Quarter of a Century as\nan effective remedy for\nCOLDS, GRIP,. INFLUENZA and as a Preventive.\nThe box bears this -'gnatm.\n\u00a3\u00a3&.\nPrice 30c.\nMade in Canada.\nthe passage way of fh'e missile, which\n'\u25a0might have been a bullet, entering\nhis right lung, passing Inward, Blight-\nly upward and theft backward.\nHe statod he found no scorches on\nthe clothing or powder marks around\nthe wound, on Lyonnais. He suld\nthere was no odor of llyuor in Lyon-\n.talV stomach.\nReid   Heard  Voiooa\nJumea Held, a teamster living next\ndoor to the AJathew residence, gave\nevidence to the time. at Which the\n.shooting: took place, nnd how many\nshots had been fired. He passed by\nthe Mathews house on his way home\nat about 11:30 o'clock, and he heard\nvoices In the house. He paid no teal\nattention to the talking, and did not\nnotice if the voices were raised.\nSome time later he heafd four shots\nfired close lo his own residence, three\nsharp shots and one \"sort of muffled.\"\nThe two first shots were very quick\nones, he said, the third shot being\nfired one or two seconds later, and\nafter a lull, the fourth, a muffled\nshot, sounded.\nStewart Broke tn Dooi*\nSergt. Alex Stewart said It wus\n12:25 o'clock Sunday morning tbat\nhe saw the police light flash, and\nbeing near the Hume hotel he rushed\nInto there dud telephoned the telephone operator, who, he said, toid\nhim that a lady\" screamed over the\nphono that there had been a murder\n\u25a0ommlttcd in . the next house to Jim\nHold's,   Fairview.\nOn locating the Mathews residence,\nand as he was running toward it, he\nheard someone groaning. He found\nthe door locked, but could see Into\niho house, and saw Mrs. Mathews\nstanding on the floor and doubled\ndown. Tho officer said Mrs. Mathews\nmade an attempt to come to the door,\nhut he put his weight against It and\nbroke into tho house, smashing the\n;door open.\nWhen he got Into the room, Mrs.\nM'athews appeared to be In great\nagony, and he noticed the clothes\nabout the front of her stomach were\ntorn quite a int and had a tattered\nappearance, for she kept pulling at\nthem  and  tearing them.\n\"Oh, He SViot Me; He Shot Mc!\"\nTiie officer stated she kept repeating. \"Oh, he shot me! He shot me!\"\nand although she did not mention any\nname, she kept pointing at Lyonnais.\nwhose body he found lying on the\nkitchen floor, face downward, and\nstretched out more or Icks on the\nright side.\nLyonnais'   Arm  Quivered\nMr. Stewart said Lyonnais* right\narm was hooked around his head\nund on the floor, and his left arm\nwns stretched out at an angle of\n25 degrees from his left side and also\non the fluor.. The rifle, shown at the\ninquest, he said, was lying in that\nspace between his left arm and left\nside, the muzzle pointing toward the\n\u25a0pit of his arm. At his first look ar\nthe body, the officer suid, the bead\nand left arm slightly moved, with a\nsmall   quiver.\n'\u25a0I examined the rifle and found an\nempty shell in it,\" said tho officer,\n\"and measured the rifle, finding it tu\nbe 38 inches long and 24 % inches\nfrom the muzzle to the trigger of the\nrifle. I also measured the length\nfrum the tip of Lyonnais' fingers' to\n\u2022the pit of his arm, and found it to\nbo  about   28   Inches.\"\nHeld   Rifle  to   Own   Chest\n\"Mrs. Muthews,\" continued the officer, \"told mo that 'Dolph* held the\nrifle up with his hands, with the\nmuzzle resting on his right chest,\nand pulR'd the trigger. T think this\ncould be possible myself.\"\nThe officer stated that after he\nbad sent In calls for Chief uf Police\nThomas H. Long, the coroner, and\na doctor, he began asking Mrs. Mathews questions in regard to the shooting. He said she told him she had\nbeen cut. and came home \"with a few\ndrinks in her,\" and \"Dolph\" and she\n&ot into an argument over her drinking. She told him Sergeant Stewart\nthat while they were quarrelling she\npicked up The Daily News, and while\nshe was reading it Lyonnais went\ninto the washroom. When he came\nout he had a rifle In his hands;\nshe jumped to her feet, and before\nshe had time to move he had fired\ntwo shots, and they hit her.\nThe officer said Mrs. Mathews told\nhim the shots were fired from near\nthe washroom door, and after he had\nshot her he walked into the kitchen,\nput the gun to his chest, pulled the\ntrigger and  shot himself.\n\"1 usked her how many shots were\nfired.\" said the officer, \"and Bhe replied that she was certain that three\nwere fired, but there might have been\nmore.\"\nThe officer snld he found two\nempty shells lying on the kitchen\nfloor, mid saw three bullel holes un\nthe walls. , . .   ,,\n\"Accurding tu the story which Mrs.\nMathews told me.\" said Sergeant\nStewart, \"the bullet marks culncide\nwith the shuotiing.\" ..\u25a0',:'\nHusband   Admits   Love   Match\nGlover Cleveland Mathews, husband\nof Mrs. Mathews, next called, stated\nthat on the night of the shooting\ntrugedv he was at 215 Luke street,\nwhere he said he roomed and boarded.\nHe stated he had not been living\nwith his wife fur about a month or\nmore un account ot divorce proceedings.    She  was  suing for divorce.\n\"Lyonnais was supposed to M\nrooming und boarding at my wife's\nhou.e,\" said -Mr. Mathews, \"and paying her $30 per month. Lyonnais and\nmy wife wore supposed to have been\nIn love with each other to a certain\ndegree.\"\n\"Why should be scrap?\" asked\nCoroner  Dr.  li.  H,   MacKeuzie.\n\"Well,\" said Mathews, \"I think,\nmustly un his part, they eure badly\nIn luve with each other, and jealous.\"\n\"Had your wife ever mentioned\nLyonnais to you?\" asked the coroner.\n\"My Wife told me. about five weeks\nago, that she was In love with\nLyonnais.\" replied Mathews, \"and he\nhas been living at my wife's house\nfur practically two months.\"\n\"Was there any Intimacy shown\nbetween the two, ..while yuu were\nliving at the house?'' asked the\ncoroner.\n\"Yes.\"\n\"Did they go Out much, together?\"\nasked   the.   coroner. j  !\n\"No. Very little,*' answered Mathews.\nHuniilng the rifle to Mr. Mathews,\nthe coroner asked, \"Who owna this\nrifle?\"\n\"It helunged to my wife, and Is\ni 3*0-30 Winchester Carbine,\" sale\nMathews. \"My wife was a very good\nshut with the gun, and occasionally\nwent out  shooting game.\"\nHale   Found   Bullets  and   Cloth\nConstable Hale Bald he was on duty\non the nlghl of the shooting and\nwent down to the Mathews residence\nwith   the  chief  of  police.\nThe officer described the position\nIn which he saw Lyonnais' body,\nlying <m the floor of the kitchen, and\nsaw Mrs. Mathews with Dr. McKay\nbesldo her, learning she had been\nphot. He picked up the rifle and\nfound an empty shell in it, but the\nrifle, he said, was hot near the body,\nbut was then standing in the corner\nof the room. He was left alone to\nguard the house after Mrs. Mathews\nhad been removed to the hospital,and\nin luuklng around tbe house lie found\na   box  of  -cartridges   In  a  cupboard.\nGIVE GYRO CLUB;\nMIDWAY AGAIN\nMotion Reelected President\nfor Still Another\nTerm\nASSOCIATION HAS\nBALANCE IN BANK\nWill Negotiate for City to\ni Acquire All  the\nBuildings\nAnnouncement or a surplus of\n$773.17 ,for 1925 and a total balance\nof $1265,20 in tho bank, request for\na rating as a class B fair instead of\na class C one, award of the midway\ncontract for 1926 to the Gyros, and\nreelection of the old' slate of officers, headed by President O. P.- Motion, were the features of the annual meeting of the Nelson agricultural and Industrial association, and\nof the meeting of the new board of\ndirectors following, held last night In\nthe city council chamber.\nThe financial success of the ''1925\nfair was prominent in the reports\nuf both Secretary Ocgrgc IidVstead,\nand    President    Motion.\nFigures  Tell   Tale\nFrom Mr. Hor.stead's report it appeared that ln the gross receipts of\n$5864.11, the biggest individual Item\nwas the gate receipts of $2615.30,\nAdult season tickets yielded $698.\nand child's season tickets, $2112.50,\nwhile $693.98 \"was the revenue from\nconcessions. Crants lnclthled. city\ngrant of $250, government grunt ot\"\n$212, nnd donations amounting to\n$182.60, fit G. R. balance was $175,\nwhile the\u00bbvear started with a balance\nof     $492.48.\nThe biggest disbursement was\n$1725 for attractions, while $1172.25\nwas paid out as prize money. The\nbalance in the bank at the end\nof the year was $121.5.20 uf which\n$773.17 represented the year's surplus, the second itl about 20 years,\nthe  first  having  been   in   1924.\nA comparison with 192_ showed a\nfalling off in gross revenue, chiefly\nin season tickets, though the general   admissions   yielded   more.\nIt was con-ddt-red this could be\nmended for 1926 by making a thorough   canvas.\".\nA feeling that the seeking of donations could be dispensed wllh this\nyear, in view of the money in the\nbank, was voiced by several members   of  the   association.\n, Ask   IliKlsrr   Grunt   Itulliiu;\nAfter Secretary Horstead had\nread correspondence of the British\nColumbia Fair association, dealing\nwith the matter of reclassifying the\nfairs of the province, so as to secure\nmore government support fur tin-\ncentral fairs that represented large\ndistricts, it was decided to write to\nthe department usking that the\nNolson lair be raised to H classi-\nflcatlun, on the ground of Its central position, wide territory, und encouragement to the products of the\ndistrict. A copy of the letter will be\nsent to Nelson's member a? well,\nPremier Oliver.\nJf Nelson gets the reclassification\nasked, the provincial grant fur the\nfuture  would  be  40  per cent  of  the\nHe also discovered two bullet holes\nIn the casing of the window, about\nan  inch apart.\nAt this pu.int the officer produced\na piece of lead nnd two small\npieces of Mrs. Mathews' dress, which\nhe took out of the window casing,\nthe pieces of dress being stuck into\nthe casing with  the  lead.\nHe said he discovered a third hole\nabout six feet from the floor, and a\nfourth hole about five feet from the\nfloor.\nDouglas Cummins-, taxi-driver, gave\nevidence us to the condition of Mrs.\nMathews when he took her home\nfrom towu-\u2022Willi a young girl, Mis**\nBeatrice 'J-fowe.l, at 5 o'clock Satur:\nday afteraepn. He .did not talk to\nMrs. Mathews, and he did not smell\nliquor or-**c*e any actions suggesting\nliquor, o-X'the part of Mrs. Mathews-\nduring the. trip. ,\nSon Seldom  Home, Says 'Father\nFrank LyoftnaXs, father of the dead\nelectrician^ was the first to give evidence in.- the afternoon. He stated\nhis son oh-ly spent an hour or two a\ndajf at thu family , residence. He\nsaifl he did not know the place at\nWhich his son was bun;-ding. although\nhe knew it Was a place 'called the\nMathews' house. Ho hud diiscussed\nthe matter of living there with hi\u00ab\nson, Mr. Lyonnais said, more from\nthe point of view as to whether It\nwas a questionable house than any\nother.\nOnce or twice a week,- the father\nsaid, Dolphin would come home drunk,\nbut he said Dolphin had never mentioned Mrs. Mathews to him.\nMr. Lyonnais said the last time he\nlaw his son alive was on Friday evening at about 0 o'clock, when he came\nhome from work, but he suid his\nnun;.bier had told him Dolphin was\nat home Saturday afternoon, but was\n\u25a0julle sober and -did not have any\nliquor to drink before he left.\nChief   Correborates    Sergeant\nChief of police Thomas H. Long\nstaled he received a* call from Serjeant .St.'wui'L at about 12:35 o'clock\nSunday morning, and accompanied by\nJonstable Hale, he went down to the\nicene. As he entered the door, he\n\u25a0.aid he ,saw Dolphin Lyonnais lying\nm the kitchen fluor, apparently dead.\nHe described going into the bedroom,\nind seeing Mi's. Mathews lying on the\n)td In (tfoftXtt.\n\"I arfked her how shb felt,\" said\nhe chief, \"__mt she told mo she was\nn terrible pain.\"\n\"I then asked her questions,\" he\naid, \"jind sh-e replied, ' \"Dolph\" sho\/\nne twice, and then shot himself with\nhe  rifle.' V    -\nliv answer' to another question, Mrs.\nHathewd .replied, \"Wc had been\njuarreling.\"\nTho next day, tho chief said, he\n.aw Mrs. Mathews in the hospital,\nnd she was very low, hut again\n.he stated Dolphin Lyonnais shot her\ntwice, put another shell In (he rifle,\nand shot himself. She ai.o said\nhere were no other persons in the\nhouse besides ..herself and Lyonnais\nit the time of the shooting, and\nalso that she plumed for the police\nherself, and thai Lyonnais had been\nboarding with hor for the paat two\nmonths.\nInstead of going Into detail, the\nchief stated that ne would corroborate, generally the story of the sergeant, (t\n.receding year's prize moriev paid'\njut,  instead  of SO  per cent.\nAn earlier date for the fHU* * was\nmgRested by H. D.M-.urne., I*ut the\nnajority of the members felt thnt\nho customary d-Ues were the best,\nill things considered, and that the\nW'.-athet risk would have to' be taken\nStick to Three |>iiy\u00bb\nSecretary Uonuead pointed out\n'hat a four-day fair would cost no\nmore for attractions than a throe-\nday one. and the other expenses, for\npayment of help, would not exceed\n$50. thus making the fourth day's\nreceipts   lHuctlcally   all   profit.\n\"I'm against four days. Better to\nend it with a bang on the third\nday,\" was J. A. Irving'a comment,\nwhich   was   generally   indorsed.\nKepten|bej* 22 ,tO 24. Wednesday to\nFriday, were settled un aa the dates\nlor   1926.\nHonorary officers were chosen ua\nfollows: Honorary President, Premier Oliver; honornry* vice-presidents,\nHon. K. D. Harrow apd W. K. Esling.\nC, F. Hunter was elected auditor.\ns Direct ore   Ele<A\u00abI\nThen came the -flection of 25 directors, as usdAl, 'though there are\nhundreds of members of the associates, every exhibitor being a member, those, present were fewer than\nthe number of directors to bo electee*. As usual also, the reporter was\nthe only individual present not a director. Directors fur 1926 will be\nG. F. Motion, I. ft. Poole. VV. R.\nJaivis. William Irvine. .1. (>. Bunyan, It. B. Morris, George Horstead,\nW. M. Walker, A. W. Nagle, W. A.\nCurran, A. Wood. Dr. H. H. Mac-\nKenzie. J. A. Trying, Ft. T). Barnes,\nRoss Fleming, H. E. Ferguson, J. B.\nGrey, D. D. Tuwhsend, W. J. Ger-\nbrucht, Rev. F. R. (3, \"Dredge. Alderman Bi A. Peebles, Fred Kwing,\n-I. W. Mulholland and John Kerr.\nNew    Board    -h-k-cts\nFollowing adjournment i|f tW \u00ab*\u25a0-\n-\u25a0ociatlon's hnnual meeting, those\npresent kept . their scats, and did\nbusiness as the  newly elected  board.\nPresident Motion was reelected to\nthat office in spite of his demurs,\nit. D. Barnes waa reelected vice-\npresident, and George Horstead was\nreelected secretary-manager, all without  opposition.\nThe board then elected the following honorary directors for the supporting district.*-' Willow Point, A.\nB. 8h_mnon; Harrop, W. J. McCon-\nnell; Balfour; H. Hudsu.ii; Boswell,\nlames Coupland; Kootenay Bay, W.\nFraser; .Sal mo, Archie Grey; Eric,\nAlex Cheyne; Fmilvalc. W. E, Or ton;\nrioiuh Sloean, J, D. Veal man; Tarry's,\nFiank Tarry; l.obson. W. Buchanan;\nPi try's.   F.  J.   Powell.\nil. D, Barnes atated he was authorized by tiie Gyros to offer the\ngame terms us laet year, for handling the  midway.\nThe   board   accepted   the   otter*\nA proposal for looking into the\nquestion o,f a new building at some\nfuture time bri the north1-1 side uf\nthe Iteereatipn grounds, mad.- by\nI, '.!, I.miyun, found no supporters,\ngni-rilcit of Ituililliig\nOn the other hard, In view of the\ndeelre of the Pavilion company to\nsell the fair building at a very reasonable figure, il was decided tu\ninstruct    thp    building    committee    tn\nsuggest   joint   negotiations   between\nthe bourd, tho Pavilion people, und\nthe city council, with a view to ib*.\"'\ncity takitiK over both the main building fiom the Pavilion company, and\nsubsidiary buildings from the fair\nboard,   on   favorable   terms.\nPresident O. F. Motion was in the\nChair at both meetings, the oth\npresent being Secretary George Horstead A. \\V. Nagle. William Hvin\nP. D. Barnee, I. tt. Poole, D. 1>.\nTownsend, .1. G. Bunyan, .1. A. Irving, W. M. Walker, W. A. Curran\nand   W.   It.   Jarvis.\nPresident's   Report\n\"In presenting my report for the\nvoir 1926 and for the twenty-third\nannual Nelson fair. 1 do su with a\ngreat ileal of satisfaction and gratification. When the secretary presents\nills financial statement, you will be\npleased to know that the association\nfinished the year with a bank balance\nof $1265.20, with all bills paid and no\nUabilUle*, This is exceedingly gratifying as it is something unusual for\nyour association to be favored with a\nbynk balance\n\"Once again it has been proved that\nyou must give the public n good program of attractions, but in addition\nto that yuu must also have some pep\nind push behind your organizatiun.\nuid the, thanks of this association arc\ndue to the local Gyro club for their\nuntiring efforts and cooperation in\nmaking tiie Nelson fair for the past\ntwo years thv success they have\nbeen.\n\"Tbe owners of the main buildin:-;\ntn which we hold the fair quh toaj\nmade us an attractive oifor t<.. uw-\nchase the building. A committeeWa.\nappointed to took Into tbe matter, urn!\nn bringing in their report yqut- committee thought li advisable to b-ivc\nthe matter iu abeyanco for HM time\nbeing. I understand ,the offer ti*\n-\u25a0till open. However, I do not thiol:\n;t ud visalik1 ui* wisp thai wc l-I.oui.1\nimpoverish our treasury for tha salit\n\u00bbf saving the amount we have- to\npay for rental on the building, namely\n$125   per   year.\nRecommenciationa\n\"Now that we are starting out to\npreparo for another fair, I would\nrecommend to the incoming board of\ndirectors that the following reQUtre-\nments bo looked after, which I will\nenumerate:\n\"The cupola in the poultry building and also the roof of th-*. annex\nare in need of repair, and should be\nl-ttende4   to  ns   soon   as   possible.\n\"More permanent doors should he\nprovided for the exits from the annex,\nis heretofore I believe they have had\nto be nailed up every night during\n-h..  fair.\n\"Same wire fronts should be provided  fur   the   chicken   coops,  and   I\nHad 43 Bolls\nAnd Carbuncles\nAt One Time\nMr. Claud UoIan. on, Castlofor<1, Ont.,\nwrites:\u2014\"In regard to your remedios\nI have to ray that B.B.B. was the only\nmedicine I could get to relieve me of\nmy boils and carbuncles,\nI lad fort.-three at one time, and\nmy doctor told ue to take\nBurdock\nR lood\nThe first bottle I took gave mo such\ngreat results that I took three more,\nand after I had ssed them I was completely relieved of my boils aud carbuncles.\"\n'Put up enly by The T. Milburn\nCo., Llmitei-) Toronte, Ont. ...      \u2022 \" \u2022\u25a0\nBOBBY' WALKER\nDIES IN TRAIL\nAFTERJATTLE\nPopular Accountant Succumbs to Attack of Double\nPneumonia\n  IS.\n-TRAIL.. Peb. , $__rVpM fif-'ht for the\n1'fe of Robert (Bobby) Walker thut\ndoctors and the .staff of Trpil hospital\nhave waged for days against double\npneumonia and pleurisy was lost at\n-\/if) o'clock yesterday morning. \"Rob-\nby,\" to the ryjret \u25a0 of all Trail, has\npaMed  on.. .   ,\nMr. Walker, who was cliief accountant fop the Consolidated Mining &.\ntsmeltlng company here,* wus one of\nthe most popular men in Tiail..\nHo was a native of Falkland, Fife-\ntil. J re, (Scotland,, and , cdnie to Canada\nabout 2lJ years ago. He was first employed here by the Canadian Pacific\nrailway at Tadhnac' Since' then, he\nworked In various capacities on the\nstaff of the smelter.\nWas Overseas\nHe saw sorvice overseas with the\nRoyal Knglneers, being attached to the\nsignalling section. He saw service in\nC-Ulllpoll and on the western front in\nFfanderp, where he was wounded shortly  before   the  armistice.\nHe was a mtmbtr of the G.W.V.A.\nnfd the Masons. And. he was jironU-\numt in nil. spotting and social activities of the city.\nFuneral arrangements are. being\nwithheld pending receipt by.' c.ibh-gi'ahi\nof the wishes of his mother and sis-\nlirs, wlio reside  in   Falkland. '\nbelieve it would be -well should we\ndecide to make the 'fisheries exhibit\na permanent one, to have it housed\ntti the poultry building, more care\nbeing taken to take care of the\noverflow of water, und this could be\ncontrolled better ln the poultry build\njug   than   in   the   present  location.\n\"Another matter that should bo\ntaken up is that of providing better\nprotection of the exhibits of home\nconking, and especially that of ladies'\nfancy work exhibits, us I understand\nat lust year's fair several fancy\narticles were stolen, and this matter\nshould   receive   ymn'   attention.\nEDITOR   IS   DEAD\nBAN JOSE, Cal., Feb. 1.\u2014Edwin K.\nJohnston, for ._-. years man&Ilog editor\nof tiie Sai Joete Mercury Herald, died\n.it' the   Han   .lose   hospital   today   un\ncutupiicutiony .'uUnwiiig influenza and\npneumonia. He was 61 years of age,\nand a. native of Renfrew, Ont.\n\"Good Goods at GrayV\nSilverware\nIn   nil    tiro   newest   ami    b.si\nd-_i_nn.\nThe selection ranges from\nBon-Bons   at   S2.50\nto Tea Sets at $50.00\nJ.   B.   GRAY\nWatchTiaker\u2014Jeweler\u2014Optician\n707 BAKER ST.       PHONE 333\nPacific\nMilk\nToffee\n, .cwpom.-J,\nWe continue to (;*.. enquiries for the caramel recipe. These are mailed out\nby return, of course. We\nhave one for, a pilled cream\ntoffee that someone might\nlike.    Just write for it.\nPACIFIC MILK\nHead Office, .Vancouver\nFactories   at   Ladner   and\nAbb.ts.-rd,   B. C.\nInterior Life\n,   Underwriters\nElect Officers\nThe   Interior   of  British   Columbia\nUfe   Underwriters   met   tteturday   in\nNelson ih their annual meeting, and\nelected the following- officers'for the\nyear; President, E. H. Hanley; first\nvice-president, C. F. McHardy; second vlco-pre*3ident, P. Bajes; eecro-\nlury-treasurer, It. W. Dawn-on; directors, J. C. Kennedy of Penticton;\n.7. Kenip of Trail, and C. W. Apple-\nyard  of- JJelson.\nBig Antiu\nClearance of\nDresses\nSuits\nCoats\nBlouses\nSkirts\nCommences at 9 .'Clock This Morning\nJa*ne4yt&e_%t_\nM^ \u25a0III m~\nr\/t\u00a3 exaus\/ve sro,?f\nSee Our Window Display\nBANKING \u00bb\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nr\nI N the Province of British Columbia' the Bank of\nMontreal has a complete Organization, \u2022with headquarters at Vancouver, specially organized to give\ncareful attention and prompt service to Banking requirements of the people of this Province.\nThere arc 45 branches of the Bank of Montreal in this Province, the offices bang located at every important centre. ,\nBehind this Provincial Organization are the resources of a\nnation-wide Institution, having a combined Capital and Reserve Fund of over $60,000,000, and Total Assets exceeding\n^750jOOO,ooo.\nBANK OF MONTREAL\nTotal Assets in excess oC i 7so.ooo.ooo\nHEADQUARTERS FOR BRITISH COLUMBIA\n640 Pender Streer, West, Vancouver\nCONDENSED 'WANT' ADS ORDER FORM\nUie this blank on which to write your condensed ad., one word in each epace. Endow money erder\nor check and mail direct to The Daily News, Nelson, B.C.\nRate: On* and a half cent a word each insertion, six consecutive insertions for price of four\nwhen cash accompanies order. Minimum, 25c. Each initial, figure, dollar signs, stc, ceunt ae one\nword.    Ne charge leu than 60 cents.\nPlease  publieh  the  advertisement   betow timet, for which I  enclose f\t\ntf desired, repliee may be addressed to box numbers  at The  Dally  News  Office,    If  replies  are\nto be mailed, enclose 10o extra to cover cost ef postage and allow five words extra fer box number.\n*_wt*r.*r^-^.' \u25a0?      -. - Mfj*-*-  .-=-\u2022:-.. '\u00bb>.!    -       --\u25a0 '--.      -. .   (\u25a0\u25a0   t*\\- -,jtiii.ii.may\n Page Pour\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,  TUESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY- 2, 1926\nTHE DAILY NEWS\n*- Published every morning except Stm*\nday by Ths News Publishing company,\nlimited. Nelaon. B.C.\nBusiness letrcrn should be sddres-ed\n\u25a0nd check* and money orders nude\npayable to The News Publishing .in.\npany, limited, and In no ess. to Individual members of the st.lt.\nAdvertlalng rate cards and A-B.C.\nstatements of clrculaMon mailed on\nreosest, or may be seen at the offloe of\nany advertising agency recognised by\nthe Canadian Press aseoclation.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy mall (country), per month....!   .GO\nPer year      1.00\nBy mall (city), per year 11.0.\nOutside Canada, per month .5\nPer year         S.80\nDelivered, per week 2.\nPer year U.00\n^^  Payable ln Advance\n -ge-aberAndlt Bureau of OlMU-aUom\" \"\nTUESDAY.  FEBIU-AI-Y  8,  1926\nManual Training's Place\n\"Manual training ls to have a\nplaca on the school program for\ntoys, not to make them carpenters\n\" or shipbuilders or metalworkers,'\nbut   becaus   It   will,   more   fully\n; than any oth,er school experience\nyet discovered by educators, develop in them certain purposes,\nskills and attitudes necessary for\ncomplete living.\" \u2014 Educational\nPurvey statement quoted by Gerald\nBlackett in The Dally News.\nCertain purposes, skills and\nattitudes that we want the boys\nof the nation to have are more\ncertainly developed by the manual training route than by any\npther, our commissioners have\ntold us.\n. A boy thought stupid may\nhave a marvellous aptitude for\nthe .use of tools. With those\ntools in his hand, he may be\ntransformed to the front rank\nof his mates, broadening his\ninterest, which has suddenly become overflowing, now that it\nhas been aroused, to his studies\nin general.\nMany an ordinary boy. may\nnot grasp the practical nature\nof the algebraic relation known\nas the quadratic equation, but\nthe practical value of a knowledge of how to make a good\njoining of two pieces of planed\nwood he sees at once. _ Successful in the one, he may tackle\nthe other with a new viewpoint.\nWhile not many years ago\nmany taxpayers would have\ngladly foregone -the . \"frills,\"\namong which manual training\nwas classed, now not many parents would wish to see this\ndoubly. valuable training\ndropped from the curriculum.\nFor, besides ifs 'educational\nor, drawing, out value\u2014education literally means drawing out\n, rrfvhich jnakes James a better\ni-student, it is grounded in practicality, which, as Mr. Blackett\nhas been pointing out to us in\nhis weekly articles, is seemingly\nthe touchstone by which the\ncommissioners have criticized\nthe present school system and\nmade their proposals for radical changes in it.\nIf practicality is to be the\nwatchword of school development in future,, the manual\ntraining department, which, in\naddition to its beneficial influence on scholarship, and to\nthe practical nature of its work,\nreveals to many a student the\nbent which Nature meant him\nto follow and for which he is\nparticularly adopted, must have\na secure, indeed basic, place in\nthe curriculum.\nThe\nLighter Side\nReader* ot The Dally Newa\ncontribute many of ths beat itemr\nto thla column. Just sign your\nname or Initials, or nom-de-plume,\nand send In your brightest ldeaa.\n\u2014Editor,   Lighter   Bide.\nAUNT HET\n\"I used to worry ahout pa\nmarryln' again after I died, but\nthat was before his head got\nso  shiny.\"\nTest of blood pressure: Sitting\nindoors to avoid the rain at a winter\nresort ,\nJust what good waa a college edu\ncation   ln  the  old   days- before* men\nbegan to peddle bondsYj^;.1 ,A\nBlessed are the poor. They can't\nafford to clutter up their houses with\nantiques.\nSlowly but surely the world\noutgrowe superstition, ignorance\nand oratory.\nThe final hard test of a romantic\nnature Is a stuck of unwashed dishes.\nHow thrilling lt would be at this\ndistance If Mussolini had something\nlike a senator from Idaho.\nOne reason why men of wealth\nllve long is because they don't spend\nany of It to show* themselves a high\nold time.\nONCE IN A WHILE TOU SEE\nAT THE CURB A FLIVVER THAT\nSEEMS TO BE TRYING HARD TO\nDO SOME OF THE OLD DANCES.\nI\nVignettes From a\nHoliday in Europe\ncxvi\nA  TOUGH  JOB ...\n-SU:: j-_.-_S3.__\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\nBy LAVmUV A. XlXXmtMJK\n:&llj Khtl- W-TCIOT^^\nANSWERS TO INQUIRIES\nTOMORROWS MEXU\nBlrup\nBreakfast\nOrangee\nCereals\nGriddlecakos\nCoffee\niAincbeon\nCorned Beef Hash\nPickles\nWhole Wheat  Bread\nMarmalade Cocoa\nDinner\n. . . - . Spanish   Omelet\n,\u2022 ' Colcannon\nBeets\nLettuce Salad\nDate-Ralsln   Pudding  with\nHard Sauce\nCoffee\nA philosopher Is Just an ordinary\nman who thinks a paunch is becoming to htm.\n\"Less corn being fed to hogs.\" Unhappily, this doesn't refer to road\nhogs. *\nOld Dobbin had his faults, but\nyou didn't have to pour hot water\non him to get him started.\nThere were no better cooks in the\nold days. Your stomach Just wasn't\nso darned  particular.  ,-\nA dictator couldn't get by In Canada\nunless he had a moral Issue or a\nmighty good slogan.\nCorrect this sentence: \"After we\ngot home from a> party.\" said she,\n\"we  never discuss the. refreshments.\"\nTroubled. Bride:\u2014I am starting my\nhousekeeping with a big handicap.\nMy mother-in-law lives in the apartment across the hall and she feels\nthat I will never know how to do\nanything right. You see, my mother\nwas not a good housekeeper before\nme. There were always great curls\nunder the furniture In our home! I\nwas working in an office all day\nand was too tired at night to bother\nwlth cleaning. Everything was run\nat odd ends\u2014and this my husband's\nfamily know. Do you think good\nhousekeeping must be inherited?    ,\nAnewer\u2014*I |hould say not! Many a\ngood housekeeper had an Unwise,\ncarejees^nftfether. (Yet often unwise\nmothers are. the most lovable and\nprtjcioiw mothers in the world). If\nI werfe in yourj-place I should try to\nlearn how to \"do things exactly as\nyour mother-in-law does them. It Is\na wonderful chance for you te.learn\ngood housekeeping at close, hand.\nAppreciate your good fortune in\nhaving hec so near to consult when\nhousehold problems arise. She will\nbe less scornful of your inefficiency\nwhen she sees that you appreciate\nher housekeeping science,and really\nwant to learn. Few brides have the\ngood fortune* of an Instructress right\nacross the hall! Don't mind If she\nmedcHe's a little; that Is the price\nof your lessons in housekeeping. Later on, when she may not he near you,\nyou will be glad that you \"got together\" with her and learned her effective  ways. ' \u25a0 \u2022 -   \u25a0\nDon't let pride stand ln the way\nof your development. She won't\nthink you \"hopeless\" when she. aces\nthat you are beginning to do things\nas Bhe does them. If you admit your\ndistress in not knowing much about\nhousekeeping, you will find that she\nwill be the first to be generous, kindly and helpful. The really good\nhousekeeper loves her work so well,\nthat she enjoys teaching others to\ndo things her way.\nMrs. G.-\u2014Although this la a new\nhouse, the dralnboard of my sink ia\nbecoming dark colored. What can\nbe done? \u2022    \u2022     ;J    ;\nAnswer\u2014Dralnboards should be\nfinished with oil or waterproof varnish when new, and fresh applications made at Intervals. However,\nit It. still not too late for you to\ndo this. Unless this treatment ls\ngiven, the dralnboard will' in time\nbecome entirely water-soaked and\nvery   dark.\nInexperienced\u2014How la cheese prevented from becoming moldy?\nAnswer\u2014Wrap cheese in a piece of\ncheesecloth wrung out of vinegar and\nrepeat as often as cloth becomes dry.\nTomorrow\u2014Tender Pie Crust.\nAddress inquiries to Mtee Klrkmaa\nand Inclose stamped-addressed eovel\nope tot reply.\u2014Editor.\nPARIS.\u2014Being finance minister of\nFrance in these -tfmes is no very\npleasant Job. There have been\nfoor or five of them ln the hurt six\nmonths, and the -fate of all has\nbeen  the same.\nEach new finance minister haa\nprepared a budget, presents It to the\nchamber, and is defeated, either going out alone, or taking the government with him.\nThe new minister, M. Doumer, may\n\u2022ucceed, but if se it will be because\nthe chamber has reafched the Conclusion that something has to be\ndone, rather than to the sincere\nsupport of a eolid majority which\napproves of his plan. The house\nls really governed, thanks to proportional \u25a0 representation, by two\nminority groups, one of extreme\nConservatives on the right, and\none of -communists and extreme Socialists   on   the   left.\nThe last minister of finance, M.\ntoucher, was defeated in an unusual\nmanner.. Before a finance bill goes\nto tbe chamber ft has to pass the\nchamber's   finance   committee.\nThis committee knew that Louch-\ner'e plan would not pass the house.\nIf lt went before the chamber it\n. -would, be defeated, and that might\nmean the downfall of the government, which was not desired at the\nmoment. They have had too many\nnew governments already in the\nlast   half   year.\nThe finance committee, then, was\ntianded the axe. -\nLoucher appeared before the committee to explain hie project. He did\nJo, fpr three hours. No member of\nhe committee spoke a word, none\nasked a question, a most unusual\nsituation.\nWhen lie had finished his explanation, decidedly nettled by the si-\ntetK-e, he asked if anyone would like\nany farther Information. Still silence\nprevailed. Then came the first word\nfrom the committee. The chair-\n\u00bbiau solemnly aeked if any member\nwould like to ask a question. Still\nsilence.\nAngry, M. Loucher turned on hla\nbaok   and   left   the   room.\nThen the committee voted to ask\nthe government to submit a new\nproject, and Loucher resigned.\nFrench papers described the action ot the commltee, as \"the crudest . execution In French politics,\"\nthough Loucher's project had no\nfriends   among   ihe   press.\nBut many of the. leading French\nstatesmen are finding the strain of\nthe last six months hard on their\nnerves. During an attack on his\npolicy ln Syria, or rather on Gen.\neral Bar rail, the recalled military\ngovernor, M. Painleve, the present\nminister of war and former premier,\nbecame so angry last Sunday\u2014the\nchamber here sits x>a Sunday\u2014that\nne lett his seat, and lt took the\nunited persuasion of three party\nfriends to persuade him to remain.\nM. iierrlot, another former premier,\nand now speaker of the chamber,\nis so worn out that he goes to sleep\nduring the debates, and has made\none vr two rather extraordinary rulings. ' f\nm the meantime, M. Calllaux, he\nof the much checkered career, who\nfell after his unsuccessful loan consolidation trip to New York, walks\nup and down tho corridors of the\nhouse, monocle ln eye, dressed In\nthe height of fashion, and am in. a at\nthe difficulties of the men who\na little while ago again succeeded\nln  driving him   out   Of  office.\nf. r, p.\nui J i f n :;^j iii;iHj ^ u !i (tu uui:! ^ i ei ej eu^ :iiiU uisiii 'Uiifi h hj i tu lUBUDUimiiiEiuntBUii] mrmf\nThat Body\nof Yours\nBr JAMES W.  BMTO-T, M-D.\n_-_i-\u00bb:i:__i_-__im^\nYour Wonderful Stomach\nCHILD-JUMBO\nIN THEMOVIES\nKentucky    Wonder    Grows\nLike a Bad Weed and\nIs Strong '\nTHREE YEARS OLD,\nWEIGHS HUNDRED\nHis Parents Have   Eye on\nMovie Future for\nTheir Son\nStevens Asks for\nTabling of Orders\nfor Alcohol Release\nOTTAWA, Feb. ..\u2014Hon. H. H.\nStevens, Conservative, Vancouver\nCenter, in the house of commons this\nafternoon asked the minister of customs and excise to lay on the table\nall orders-ln-councll passed during\nthe past two years ordering the release of alcohol from Canadian distilleries, .within a shorter period of\ntime than that set forth under the\nInland Revenue act.\nHon. G. H. Boivio, minister of customs and excise, replied that he could\nhave copies of such orders-in-council\nprepared and laid on the table, as\nsood as possible.\nAs students wc gullied the impres\nshin that the stomach was really not\nvery important from the * digestion\nstandpoint, because people had been\nkept alive with most of the stomach\nremoved. ,\nHowever, It .would seem that every\nIndividual organ ln the body now is\ngetting a great deal of.attention from\nresearch men, and tl\u00bbe stontach is\nreceiving its share. These men first\nspend a groat deal of time experimenting on real healthy Individuals,\nand thus finding exactly What the\nstomach can do In health and how It\ncan vaiy In its work from day to day\nand stltl   be  normal.\nFrom this point they theft examine\nthe abnormal, unhealthy or sick stomachs, und find Just how they differ\nfrom the normal ones. - \u2022**<\u25a0*- \u25a0\nAud the tin-it thing they advise us\nto remember is that the stomach 1s\nan Important organ of digestion, and\nthe manner in which it does Its work\ndetermines to a great extent the cura^\npleteness or thoroughness of digestion and absorption in the smalt in-\n.testlne.\nIf the stomach is working right it\nwill adapt Itself to any and evefy\nkind of food. Just think of all the\ndifferent kinds of food you put into\nyour stomach, turnips, carrots, pota-\ntoeH, bread, cuke, bran, oats, corn,\napples, uli kinds of fruits, meats of\nall kinds. Yet that organ takes them\nall in, refusing none, and actually\nworks and works upon them until it\nhas everything looking alike, and\nre* dy to be admitted to the small In-\nlon.lne for further digestion and absorption. *\nW hen you remember that somo\nfoods, like lettuce, take an hour to\nbe made ready, eggs and cereals two\nhours, steak and roast\/beef 2^4 hours,\nrare roast beef three Hours, and roast\npork S'\/i hours, you can get some\nIdea of the work It has to do. Some\nstomachs take a little longer than\nthis, and nervous, worried folks llke-t\nwise are apt to have stomachs that,\nare a little \"slow\" in action.\nNow, what ls the advice?\nThat while the stomach seems to bo\nable to lake care of everything, no\nmatter when you take it, you\u25a0 can\ngive It the best chance to do Its work\nby keeping your meals at least five\nhours apart.\nLEXINGTON, Ky., Feb. 1.\u2014A career\nin the films is Bought by Mr. and\nMrs. Charley Taylor of Nicholas\ncounty, Kentucky, for their abndr-\nmally 'large son, Meredith Stanley\nTaylor, who at 3 \\_ years of age\nweighs 110 pounds and is as strong\nas   the  average   boy   of   15.\nAside from his unusual tendency to\ntake on weight, Meredith is a healthy,\nnormal boy, and his parents have\nhope that some day he will become\na star comedian of the films.\nMr. Taylor would let his boy \"act\nin the movies\" if they would pay him\nenough, he says, and believes Meredith \"would be a great attraction.\"\nFalls would have to be eliminated\nfrom his acts, however, as the child's\ngreatest- fear is of falling. Even\nwhen seated in a chair he is nervous.\nWhen sitting down ordinarily he will\nrepose on a cushion.\nMeredith's unusual growth has attracted attention of physicians\nthroughout central Kentucky, none\nof whom can give an explanation\nof his rapid and abnormal development.\nThe child was born on June 5, 1922,\nand at the* present time weighs 110\npounds, which is probably the greatest weight of any child this age in\nthe country.\nAt birth Meredith weighed 8%\npounds, and lt was not until after he\nwas 3 months old that he began to\nshow signs of unusual development.\nWhen he waB 1 year old he weighed\n62 pounds.\nParents Under Average\nTne parents of Meredith are below\nthe average in weight. The father is\nabout 50 years of fige and weighs\nabout 140 pounds. The mother weighs\n120 pounds. Twu brothers and a sister are rather. frail. None of the\nmembers of the family on either the\nmaternal or paternal side Is of abnormal weight.\nThe 42-monthH-old boy has more\nthan ordinary Intelligence for a child\nof this age, and is able to speak\nordinary words clearly and distinctly.\nHe has the voice of a child of 12\nto 14 years.\nThe simple games of hide-and-seek,\nrlng-around-the-rosy and others\nplayed .by his brothers and sisters,\nare as eagerly enjoyed by Meredith\nas any of them, and, notwithstanding\nhis weight, he is as agile as any of\nthe  oth-T children.\nThe baby of the family Insofar as\nage is concerned, Meredith's great\nweight prevents him from receiving\nthe loving care of children of lhat\nage. No rocking to sleep ln his mother's lap for him. It Is a task for\nstronger arms than those of his\nmother to tuck him to sleep at night.\nKneels for Best\nMeredith has no favorite amusement. From the time he gets up in\nthe morning until he retires at night\nh. is never idle fo* long at the time,\nprattling around after his parents or\nplaying with his older brothers and\nsisters. When he becomes tired he\nkneels on both knees, which Is his\nfsvorlte poHltion for resting. His diet\nconsists of the food or the rural folk,\nmeat, vegetables, butter, hot biscuits,\nsorghum, buckwheat cakes, etc., only\nhe eats a little more than an ordinary\ngrown person. \u25a0 He sleeps about 10\nhours at night, and has never been\nsick a day In his life.\nMeredith's strength has apparently\ndeveloped along with his weight, as ho\nIs as strong as a boy of 15 years. His\nyounger brother, who Is 11 years, of\nage and weighs about 80 pounds, ls\npicked \"up\" and curried across^ the floor,\nwith ease by the boy. \u25a0 .*,,\nThe Taylors are sturdy, Jural folk,\nof the puro Anglo-Saxon strain corn-\niron to this section.\nChild's Measurement*\nFollowing  are   the  measurements  of\nMeredith;\nHeight,   44   Inches.\nCircumference  of head, 22 Inches.\nNeck,  14  inches.\nShoulders,  48  Inches.\nChest, 41 inches.\nAbdomen* 41  Inches.\nBiceps,  1Z   Inches.\nThigh,   21   JpcheS.\nKnee,   18   inches.\nCalf of -leg, -14 laches.\nMeredith   is   gaining  an  average   of\none   pyund_, a   week,    his   development\nbeing   much   more   rapid   through  the\nwinter     than     curing     the     summer\nmonttiB.    His  parents  believe  he  will\nwvlgh   150   pounds  when  he ls 4  ycarjj\ni>\\  age next June.\n'Many letters are received by his\nphr-ents daily asking for pictures ot\nMeredith. For a time Mr. Taylor at-\nttiiK'ied to accommodate them, but the\nrequests became so numerous that he\nIt. now forced lo ignore all appeals.\nThieves who entered the county\n\u25a0replstry office . at Sandwich, Ont.,\noverlooked |400 in the vault.\nBRIEFS FROM THE WIRE\nCi'iMnmi-r. (aiu'ii.s\nOTTAWA. Feb. 1.\u2014Vote oh Conservative amendment to address expected sometime today. Conservatives caucused this afternoon to\nconsider   further   amendments.\nKliur   ]_\\ii.v(-.   Aci-laiiiatlou\nPRINCK   AL11KHT.   Feb,   1.\u2014Premier King expected  to get acclamation  at  nomination   in   Federal   by-\nelection_ here   today. [\nPost IMim.    Sitting\nGENEVA, Feb. 1.\u2014Committee\nwhich is to discuss groundwork of\nInternational disarmament conference postpones meeting from February   15   till   May   some   tijne.\nTo   Sill   Crown   Jewels\nMOSCOW, Feb. 1.\u2014Soviet government announces it will sell Romanoff crown jewels to buy tractors and other agricultural machines. Jewels are worth \u2022 |230,-\n000,000\t\nTurks  Most  Talk   Turkish\nCONSTANTINOPLE, Feb, 1.\u2014Law\nbefore National assembly wjM make\nit an offence, punishable by $10\nfine, for Turks to speak anything\nbut Turkish except when unavoidable.\nSterling   (iocs    l'p\nLONDON,   Feb.   1.\u2014-Pound sterling\nrises to $4.86%, highest point touched\nsince   war,   parity   is   $4.86%.\nFimructi Die\nNEW YORK, Feb. , 1.\u2014Tragedies\ntake lives of 14 in eastern states\nover week, agencies- being grade\ncrossing, gas poisoning and attempt\nby inexperienced to dig coal pit, a\nboulder falling and  killing  four.\nSlilps In Daufttir\nNEW YORK, Feb. 1.\u2014Sea still\ntaking toll'of ships. Number of,vessels Including United States aub-\ncolller missing since 'January 16,\ncrew taken off \u25a0 dls.ablt.a_ , Dutch\nfreighter. '  < ' \u25a0 ' '    .\nFive Takes T61 of Ufe and Dunnage\nSOUTH BENID, Inu> Feb. Li\u2014Thin\ncity visited by two great fires. Business section has $1,200,000 blaze\nand Standard OH company office\nsuffers $300,000 loss. Fire captain\nkilled and two firemen injured at\nbusiness section.\nBuildings   Burn\nWARREN, Ohio., Feb.. 1.\u2014Business\nbuilding eight stores* and. bank\nburned   out,  damage  $_i 00,0-1)0.\nOptimism 111 Reports\nLONDON, Feb. L\u2014Qualified optimism remarks report of Federation\nof British Industries on trade condition in Great Britain for next\nquarter.\nCaptain   to   Got   Medal\nLONDON, Feb. 1.\u2014British government will award Captain George\nFried of United States liner President\nRoosevelt gallantry medal, highest\naward given In Royal navy for valor\nat'sea.\nLAND SCRIPTS BILL\nREAD FIRST TIME\nOTTAWA, Feb. 1.\u2014The bill Introduced by D. M. Kennedy, Progressive, I'eace River, dealing with land\nscripts was given first reading in\nthe house today. It seeks to an.ei.jl\nthe criminal code where lt affects\nthe transfer of Indian lands In western* Canada.\nThere was no debate on the ..irst\nreading of the bill.\nJapanese delegation has entered the\nfield to end deadlock in Kusso-Chinese\nrailway negotiations.\nFrisky kitten which disconnected\ngas tube is bUmfd for the death of\nan aged man  in New York.\nAfter the Game\nhot \"Oxo\"\u2014re-buildi tired\nmuscles\u2014warms the body\nthrough and through, and\nwards off the after-chill oi\nviolent exercise.\nFamous athletes, airmen,\nexplorers depend on \"Oxo\"\nCubes for the sustaining\ndrink in times of strain and\nstress.\nThe rich beef nutriment id\n\"Oxo\" Cubes renews the\nwasted tissues and promotes endurance.\nMake a habit of having\na cap of hot\"Oxo\"after\nbeing oat in the cold.\nIa tin of 4 cubes i\n10   \u00ab    .\n15c\n30c\n^W \u25bccubes\nTHE GftEAT BEEF ECONOMY\nTen Years Ago\n(The Dally News, February 2, 1916.)\nLieut. F, A. Ladd of the 18th\nbattalion, formerly a resident of\nNelson and an employee of the\nWood-Vollance Hardware company,\nwas reported, in the casualty list\nlast night as having been slightly\nwounded.\n* \u2022    \u2022\nAmong those who attended the funeral of W. J. , Keatley, which took\nplaoe yesterday from his late home,\n107 Hall Mines road, were the members of ,the Nelson Boy Scot\ntroop.\n\u2022 \u2022     *\nA letter of appreciation hns been\nreceived by Hiss Helen Walhich\nof Nelson from Matron A. M. Scott\nof the Castle Douglas hospital, Scotland, in which she expres\/e? tie\nthanks   of   her  soldier   par.-jnts  for\ntho   gift   of   picture   books   for**,\ned   by   Miss   Wallach.\nAt   a   lute   hour  last   night   R.\nBird,   who   has   been   suffering  fr\npneumonia,    was   reported   as   be\nstill   in   a   low   condition.\nH.  H.   Hill  wllf leave this  ml\nIng  for   Lethbridge.'\nIt  is said  that a' large number\ntickets   have   been   disposed   of\nthe   dance   that   Is   being   given\nMrs.   J.  A.   McCarthy,  in  aid  of\nBelgian     Relief    fund. *\n1850\u2014Ye Olde Firme\u201419:\nA HEINTZMAN PIANO\n. -  u \u2022\nLifetime Investment\n511   Baker  St.,   Nelson\ntdways a\nsecondcup\nChase &$anborn'&\nSEAL BRAND   Coff\u20ac@\n\"from the. ORIGINAL RECIPE I746\"\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nLIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or the Government of B.C,\nThe Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, limited\nOffice Smelting end  Refining  Department   ^\nTRAIL,  BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nSmelters and Refiners\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ores.\nProducers of Gold, ,SiIver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc.\nTADANAC, TRAIL\nyhe standard\nPurity fir over\nl60years\nv\/is Gin youwi\nask fir again\ntSfSSjj\nG. W. V. A. at Port Colborne urges\nthat United States gunboats using\nthat harbor fly a British or Canadian\nensign.\nChristmas^Left-Overs\nAll Going^At 20.Per\nCent Discount'for\nOne Week.!\n-\u2022IllISM.'. \"--.---_.\nNelson Hardware Co.\nWholesale and Retail Quality Hardwara\nNELSON PHONE  81 S.  C.\nThis advertisement is nol published or displayed by\nLIQUOR CONTROL BOARD or the Government of B.C.\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your bi\nof Building Material. Coa\nLumber a specialty.\nJOHN BURNS & SO\nMr. Cafe Man\nBills of Fare, Menus, Special Slips, Skeleton Menus\nPrinted to Order.\nGreat variety of colored stocks, both in paper and\ncards.\nPhone or Write Vs for Quotations\nTHE DAILYNEWSJOB DEPT.\nTwo Phones (143 and 144)\nPRINT1NG-RUUNG-B00KBINDING\n m\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS,  TUESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 2, 1926.\nTage\nrill;\nSB-\nJust to Hand\nThis neat model in Patent,\nKid and Black Satin. .\nMade by the\" Harid Turn\nprocess.     ..',\nMade over a combination\nlast which makes it a snug-\nfitting slipper at the heel.\nR. Andrew & to.\nLeaders in Footfashion \u2022\nKootenay and Boundary\ntf. S. Egg Imports\n\/Have No Effect on\n;;;.*_    Canadian Market\nVICTORIA, Vali. ,1.\u2014Detailed infor.\nmat-ton on the.Canadian* egg price situation, gathered by the 'department of\ncgrlculture here, to be laid \"before a\nMass meeting of poultiynien \u25a0 lu New\nWestminster tomorrow, fehows Hint\nUnited States egg importations have\nt.ot atfeeted -the Canaolun n.-irket,.       *\nWHEILDON BAGS\nLARGE COUGAR,\nSOUTH JLOCAN\nWounds Animal First Time;\nDog Trails Him and Seven-\nFooter Falls .-j\nSOUTH SLOCAN, Feb. 1.\u2014When \u25a0 T.\nA. Whelldon returned to- Bis ranch\nabout midday. Sunday, he found, that\none of his geese was missing. He\nnoticed tracks of a cougar around his\nbarn, and at once got his rifle and\ntrailed It for some distance. He finally came across it In tho bush, and got\nin a difficult shot, but wounded tt His\ndog. Rrlnce, followed lt and held it up\n\u25a0until Mr. Whelldon got near enough to\nkill it. The cougar measured over\nseven feet, and the fur is in fine condition. Curiously it was found to\nhaye an old bullet mark on its shoul-\nMer. The thanks of the neighborhood\nare being given to Mr. Whelldon for\ngetting rid of an animal that was a\ndanger to those having small children.\nWILLOW POINT NOTES\nvVILLdW POINT, Feb. 1.\u2014Miss Ann\nMetcalfe left on Suturday night to\nresume her studies at Ht. Michael's\nschool,   Vernon.\nMiss Nlsftle McRobb was the guest\nof  Mrs.  Hugh Middle Urn  Ovfer Hunday.\nJ. L. Bartfndale. who attended the\nsocial here-Saturday night was the\nguest   of   Mr.   and   Mrs.   John   Oilroy.\nD. ,L. Doyle has returned from a\nbusiness trip up thfe Arrow lakes.\nPUBLIC BODIES\nOF TRAIL WILL\nDISCUSSNURSE\nAppointment    of    Medical\nHealth Officer to Be\nPublicly Debated\nSUCH IS DECISION\nOF TRAIL COUNCIL\n'SOCIETY\nThis column Is being conducted\nby Mrs. it. J. Vigneux. All -.newa\nof a uociul nwiu.-.-, including receptions, private * n ter lai amenta,\npersonal items, ninrrhig..0, etc.. will\nappear in this column.' Telephone\nJIrB4 Vigneux- ai\".-per  resident g([\npr. L>av)d Hurthi q{ Spokane lute ar-\nived In the city, j*...]' IS tht* KUtfet of hit!\nmother,   Mrs.   (JtJbeBL. fttttlrij  Vfernon\n' e' next ft.-'\nrtreet, for the\ndays\nDelegation Waits Upon Council; Water Meters Also\nDiscussed\nSimple Way to Get\nRid of Blackheads\nThere Is one simple, safe, and surft\nway that never fails to fat rid of\nMackheHds, that Is to dissolve them.\nTo do thin, get two ounces oi perox-\nina powder from any drug store\u2014\nsprinkle a little on a hot, wet cloth\u2014\nnib over the blackheads briskly\u2014wash\nthe parts and you will be surprised\nbow the bluckheails have disappeared.\nRig blackheads, little blackheads., no\nmatter where they arc, slmpjy dis-\nf-olvo and diw.pj.ear. Rlaeklieads .ire\nsimply a mixture of dust and din\nand secretions that form in the pores\nof the skin. The peroxlne powder and\ntbe water dissolve the blackheads .-o\nthey wash right out leaving the\npores frt* and clean and - In their\nnatural   condition.\nSOUTHl.SJoQCAN NOTES\nSOUTH 8LOCAN. Feb. 1.\u2014Mr. ami\nMrs. D, ^rulckshank and bob, John,\nwho have been residing In! St; Mat*-\nthew's rtcarag-e, have left lu make\nthe'r home in Erie.\nThi badminton club Met |n the l.all\nnnd Mrs. T.'A. Whellduu wus hostess\nlor tbe afternoon and evening. T* ere\nwas a Urge attendance.\nRrlnce Lopkowlcz. scion of an old\nAustrian family, has entered the art\ngallery business In New York.\nRUN DOWN MEN\n- NERVOUS MEN\nDon't Miss This\nYou're beblud Ihe tinies If yuu\ndon't know that Cod Liver Extract\nls one of the greatest flesh producers\nlu  the   world.\nBecause It contains more vitalising\nvitaminea than any food you can get,\nYou'll be glad to know that McCoy's\nCod Liver Kxl raet Table.s come in\nsugar-coated form now, ao if you\nreally want to put 10 or 20 pounds\nof solid, healthy flesh on your bones\nand feel well and strong and have\nii complexion that people will admire\n\u2014ask Canada Drug & Book Co., Puo'.e\nDrug Co.. City Drug Co.. or any\ndruggist for a box of McCoy's Cod\nLiver Extract Tablets.\nOnly 60 cents for 60 tablets, and If\nyou don't gain five pounds In 90\ndays your druggist ls authorized to\nband you back the money yuu paid\nfor them. ->\nIt Isn't anything unusual for a person to gain JO pounds In 30 days, and\nfor old people with feebleness over*\ntakiiv^ thejn  they work  wonders.\nThe Family Remedy\nfor Over Forty Years\nSo   Says   British  Columbia\nLady of Dodd's Kidney Pills -\nMr*.   E. Callier  Suffered  From  Pains\nin   Her   Back   and    It   Now   Com-\nplc.e'y  Relieved. *    -   \u25a0 - * \u25a0\u25a0\nVancouver* B. C* Keb. 1 .\"<SpeciiI>.\n\u2014\"I can truthfully Teco.mi__.nd !Dodd's\nKidney Pills,'' sp states Mrs. K. Chiller. 917 Jllh Avenue East, In. an interview1; **T 'ft-as \"*doubled up with\npftimi In my back, but after taking\nDodd's Kidney Pills I have not felt\na pain In two years. My father always kept them in thu house, as\nhe was* subject to lumbago. He always felt relieved after taking them.\nWe have used Dodd's Kidney Pills\nIn the family for over 40 years. I\nhope Dodd's Kidney Pills will \u25a0 do\nothers aa much good as they have\ndone our family.\"\nHtutements like this have bn.lt up\nand maintained the reputation -Dodd's\nKidney-Pills hold   today.\nYou will find that Dodd's Kidney\nPills will relieve Kidney trouble, no\nmatter where or in what form it is\nfound.       .\nTHE\nHenry Herbert\nPlayer Piano\nIS  A  MARVEL\nAT ITS LOW\nPRICE\nSo simple and perfect\nin operation that even\na child.. can play correctly 'and with ex-\n\u25a0 pression, the Henry\nHerbert Player with ita\nspecial transposing device. Is the outstanding\nPlayer Value in.. Can-_\nada today priced at\n$750    _\n\"Easy Terms From Our\nFactory to Your Home*\"\nMASON & RISCH\n\u25a0 J.IKIT1D '\ni Tsrtory Branch\nA\u00bbAB_.a    BLOCK\n113 W.rf l.mt\namov, B.O.\nWomen's\nDanger\nOf offending under the oldest\nhygienic hindi.ip now ended.\nNewr.-jy provide* truepf otec-\ntlon\u2014discard) like tiiiue\nWITH the old-time \"lenl-\ntsry ped\" women reillts\ntheir constant danger ol of-\nfeme, plui the embermintent\nol disposal, And thus ipend\nunhappy days. ,\n\"KOTEX,\" a new and remarkable way, (a now med by\nS In 10 better clan women.\nIfl fhii limn tl tliiorbinl tt\nerilntry citltn fadil\nYou dine, dance, motor for\nhours In sheerest frocks without a second's doubt or fear,\nIt deodorlaet, tso; And thut\nstopa ALL denser Of offending.\ni\/Dlsea.de es easily u a\nr piece of tissue, No laundry.\nNo embarrassment..\n\u2022 You ask for It at any drug\nor. department store, without\nhesitancy, elmply by stylng\n\"KOTEX.\" '     ....\nDo ae millions are doing.\nHnd old, Insecure ways. Enjoy\nlife every day, \u25a0 Package of\ntwelve costs only a few cents.\nKOT\u20acX\nNo laundry-'discard tikt tinuM\nMiss Helen S-_wt.ll j>t Suitshln*-Bay\nbad us her guest ot_r the week-end net\nfiancee, Joe Chell, of the Fertile teaching stuff.\n\u2022 .-\u2666   *\nMr, and Mrs. Archie Ora^..of Salmo\nv ere .Saturday visitors 'In NeHon, the\nguests of the formers parents, Mr. and\nSirs; H. R. Townseild. ltobsoii-atrset.\n\u2022 Oscar\u2022 Burden of Crawford Bay sp.nt\nyesterday in Nelson.\n-\u2022\u25a0\u00ab\u25a0' \"\u00ab\nMiss Gleuna Demers of Kitchener has\nentered St. Joseph's aeadeiny hoarding\nschool* ..,;-\u2022*\n* *   *., \"-   \u25a0\nMrs. Eugene F.obergne with her Email\nson leaves the Koot.nav' Lake Genera!\nhospital today for ber home in .Salmo.\n\u25a0\u25a0\u2666    \u00ab_.      '**^,.-_    \u25a0   1   *\u2022**    s\nMr.'and Mrs. T), W. Tfiorpe of \u00a3nnable\nare spending a few days in town.'\nMrs. Charles V, p. Faulkner, Hull\nstreet, entertained u.-few friends'Informally at the tea heijr last Week, when\nthose present were Mr*. V. %. Poncas-\nttr, Mrs. Vost, Mrii f. (3,\u25a0 Slorey, Mrs.\nIt. II. Townsen-l, Mrs.O. isbftnee*: CJpd\nin y, Mrs. A* K Par low a_jd Mftt, A J.\nCornish. *\u25a0     ,  ' * **  .-\n\"\nSU Baker Street   Phone 200\nTRAIL, Feb. 2.-\u2014To give. Oue con*\nsideratton to a pub*.:c sentiment favoring the appointment of a medical\nhealth nurse, tbe city council last\nnight decided to call a Joint meeting\nwith the Tadanac council and tbe\nTrali-Tadanac school board at an early\ndate. Delegates representing the board\nof trade, the I.O.D.E., taxpayers, and\ntbe public generally, will be Invited to\nattend and air their opposition, if any,\nto the appointment of a full-time medical health officer, which is contemplated ty  the council.\nA delegation of three waited on the\ncouncil favoring the appointment of a.\nmedical health nurse and urged that a\np-yi.Ul.ic . im-i_.Ui-.it. .ha-,called to receive\npublic opinion of this topic. The\ndelegation was Mrs. C. McNaughton,\nregent, and Mrs. E. 8. Styles, representing the l.O-aii.. and H. C. Caldicott  of the board of trade.\nAn Economical Mot*\nMrs. McNaughton .stated a full-time\nnurse working under a half-time med-\nJcul health officer would have full authority to go itito hotnes and effect\nsanitary and hygienic measures, and\nwou,ld undertake work a medical health\nol fleer would not. Her appointment\n.would also prove economical.\nMayer Clark stated the whole subject had beeo_ iw.dcr revlgw during the. |\nlast two years, a recent Joint meeting\nof the council and Trall-Tadanac\nschool board after much consideration\n1 favored a medical health officer.\nHe, though costing more, would mean\nmore to the city. Several aldermen\nspoke on this debated topic until a\nJoint meeting wns decided on.,\nTo Z.ook Into Vat-tor\nThe -task -of deciding on the type\nat.d make of __0 water meter*, ranging\nfrom ont-h'ilf to two Inche.. intake\n.vbicli will . form the nucleus of a\nmeter system lo be Installed on the\nmains- of largo users, was delegated\nlo the fire, waler'and light committee,\nlo   report--buck  to  council.    **    \\\nTho 90 intuit tec Will haVe the advice\noi1 City Engineer S. S,, McDiarmid. He.\non his recent visit to the coast. Inspected many types of meters used in\nthe city of Victoria,, and studied thi\nseveral advantages and faults as prov\nen by tho experience of engineers\nthere.\nNot leng ago the council decided ou\ntbe stcji> to put large? Mere of water\n1 n meters with a sole object of checking waste. Investigation had shown\nthat wliile ordinary hou-sel-older*. used\n40 gallons daily, the per capila consumption for the whole city ranges\naround __00 gallons a day.\nGERMAN WIVES\nARE LEFT BEHIND\nBEKLINV l*ib. I.\u2014*Dl8i|]us(j|oned\nafter living Happily and ln luxury\nduring the occupation period, hundreds of German wives of British\nsoldiers In the army of occupation\nare bidding farewell to their husbands as the Britlt-h evacuation of\nthe   Oologue   zone   proceeds.\nAfore than 750 Tommies married\nGerman women during the last few\nyears, ubout one In every 10. The\nmajority obtained permission of superior officers for the marriages, and\nprovision has beetj , made for these\nfaii.lllee us tho troops move to Wiesbaden or leave Germany. Those who\ndid not obtain permission are in difficulties.\nThen, too, the unhappy wives in\nmany caees refuse to leave home.\nMarried when a British private's pay\nmeant real luxury in Germany, they\nlittle dreamed that their husband's\noccupation might, lead them to England, India or Egypt. Housing conditions In Wiesbaden are such that\nfew can accompany their husbands\nfor even  that  short distance,\nItaly's \u25a0 debt settlement with the\nUnited\u2014 States - was ratified -In* the\nhouse of representatives at Washington  by- 257  to  123 votea.\nSawmill   worker   at   New   Bedford,\nMass.,  killed himself by  severing his\nown head with a circular saw.\nm\nHousing shortage ls acute In Cap-\nreole, Ojit., and f 1000 Is asked for\nbox-car  home.     .\nMrs. Charles Dh.fc.-r telth'her three\n(hildren has returned1; frqm a Hrip te\nthu eo-iSt. '    . * -\n\u2022\u25a0*,*    ':.*.,\nDr. and Mrs. Veld c-j lilgewood ate\nspending a few days iu Nelson.     '\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022     \u25a0    ,   v. .     \u25a0.. .\nG.  M. Amiable of Annable *pent the\nweek-end in the city.\n\u2022 *\u2022>.\nVery Rev. A, K. Mclntyre, V.U., of\nRossland. Is expected in the city torn\nrow morning to welcome Her. J, C. 1\nKeniiie of Rtvelstoke. who is being tendered a reception Wednesday evening on\nhis arrival to take charge of the Nelson\nparish.\n\u2022 \u00bb    * *\nBert   Oliver   of   South   Sloeoh   spent\nyesterday ln. town.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nJ. l__.B_rtIm_.ile of the Canadian Bank\nof Commet-ee Htp.ff here, left yesterdav\nvia the Great Northern* for f-hilUwucb,\n?hore he haa been transferred.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMiss X McLean R.N., who has been\nspending a time at H-. nnliiglon, returned to her hunie in f'rocter Saturday.\nMr., and Mrs. W. R; Gibbon. Silica\nstreet. had us their gu.-st over the weekend Mis. S. Walton of Calgarv, who has\nleft for trail en route \"to thi. coast.\nHOSPITAL AID\nDOES BIG WORK\nIN SHORT TIE\nRaises Nearly $800  Sine\nFall; Mrs. Horstead Again\nHead\nNotable for Their Warmth,\nLightness and General Service\nThe superlative quality of these Blankets stress\ngood value at these prices. They come, too, in\nall the best English and Scotch makes. Some are\nin White with Pink and Blue borders, and others\ncome in solid colors, such as Rose, Blue, Sand and\nMauve. All are full double bed size, and ara reasonably priced at ?12.50, f 15.00, ?17.50 TO\n?25.00.\n.     DOWN COMFORTERS        ^\nAt 512.50 to $25.00 Each\nMcClintcck's Down Comforters, the world's\ntandard of quality. They come in fine quality\nf down with covering of fancy sateen or satin.\nAll aie full size, and are'light weight and warm:\nSEE  THESE  TODAY  AT  #12.50,  \u00ab15.00,\n110.50 TO S25.00 EACH.\n-r-\nPREMIER SAYS\nMONEYED FOLK\nWISH TO ROLE\nsooner or later result In  loss to both   nn    encore    they    saoc'   several\nof  us.    Kor  that   reason.   I  have  ex-   verses   of  the  same   song. *-   The\nmo:\nBetween September. 11, when the\nnew hospital\"'aid\"-society w\u00abl reorganized, and the' end of its' fiscal\nyear, the society wised .the splendid\nsum of $705.70.   '     *. ..\u00bb''.\nOut of this it spent $385.08 oil linen\nbedding and clothing for the benefit\nof Kootenay Lake General hospital,\nleaving a balance in the bank of\n'801.86 after expenses were paid. Practically all the material bought wus\nmade up voluntarily by the niembyts\nof the society.\nThis was shown, by the report* of\nthe treasurer,' Mrs. H. K. Dill,'and\nthe secretary, Mrs. tl. F. {ration,\nat the annual meeting of the,Society\nIn the board of trade rooms yesterday\nafternoon. r\nOfficers   Elected '\nThe election of officer's fur this\nyear followed, those elected being:\nPresident, Mrs. O. Horstead: first\nvice-president, Mrs. p. Bates; second vice-president, Mrs. (J. Clarke;\nsecretary, Mrs. O. V. Motion; treasurer, Mrs. H. B. pill: buyers, Mrs.\nW. Waldie and Mr*. U. Johnston.\nArrangements were made to hold\na musical afternoon In March, and\nto make violets ^o sell at Easter as\nwas done last year. t   \u25a0\nThe members extended a vote of\nthanks to the women who gave their\nhomes for bridge teas, and to the\nauditor for his services.\nThose who attended the meeting\nwere Mrs. G. Horstead, president;\nMrs. H. K. Dill, treasurer; Mrs. O. K.\nMotion, secretary: Mrs. P. Bates,\nMrs. K. Peebles, Mrs. C. \"VV'ults, Mrs.\nG. Clarke, Mra. G. Hartln, Mrs. V.\nVeiJacott. Mrs. J7 B. Gray and Mrs.\nW. O. Hose.\nCOAL AND WOOD\nGait Lamp, Gait Stove Coal, Ardley Lump Cod\nHard Dry Wood, 4-ft. or 16-in. Lengths\n,- \/'. PHONE  35\nTHE NELSON TRANSFER CO., LTD.\nGARAGE TRANSFER COAL\nAgsnts \u00a3h*vr_lst and  MoLaughlln Cart *\nPHONE OT COR. STANLEY AND VERNON STS.\nSCOTT'S\n\"BLUE SEAL\" *\"\nVitamin * Certified\n*        100% TRUE\nNORWEGIAN\nCOD LIVER OIL\nwonderfully pure, abounds\nin the vitamins that promote growth, prevent\nrickets or bone-weakness\nand build health.\nAt your dmggiat. \u2022\n\u25a0OLE DISTRiaUTOna\nSCOTT ft BOWNE\nTORONTO, 0|IT.\nMAKERS Or SCOTT'S EMULSION\nMrs. Applewhaite\nEnlists Members\n~ 1ft Okanagan Ana\n-\u25a0WILLOW BOTK-T-.\"Feb.-i. \u2014 Mra. E.\nApplewbaite, diucesan president ot the\nwomen's auxiliary to tbe M.S.C.C., has\nreturned from a lO-duys' trip to' th\u00ab\nOkanagan, where nlu- has been addressing meetings of Anglican ehurch women In the interests of the W. A. forward movement or 'membership catn-\nI-aign. During her trip Mrs. Applewhaite spoke at Nuramata, Kelowna.\nEnderby. Armstrong, Penticton, Oliver\nand Kevenieos. Her trip has resulted\nin a considerable increase In the vi -A.\nmembership.        -' .',  - i\nOntario fiteitdr . \u2022*\n_\\W _W. \u25a0\/                    .' 'W__\\ _\\\\_\\\n________                                       <\u25a0_\u25a0\nII :        *       . . PH\n\u2022 H             \u25a0           M\ni     mmmmWL'          ' F       '                                    '     '_____\u25a0\n____________k_.   -_V- \" iSfflfff^           \"^^^^^\nI       BPI--I'\"' 11\n_____!                                               .     '    ___T        '     immmmX\n________E^_____W*T'     _______\n.. ^^^H 1 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0',-\u25a0  <'\"_aEi___w_\\\n(Ccmlhtued Front Page One.)\npolitical situutlon; and. events, which\ntollowed the general tT^ctton. He argued that lie hud followed the correct\nconstitutional coarse tn not tendering\nhis resignatlotK' hut ln advising the\neovernor-geiKUFUl - to summon parliament as eurlf as possible. Purliainent\nhad, lie declared, by trie rejection of\nthe Meiglu-ti amendment of non-confidence, uinteld his view. He sharply\nasked why Mr. Melghen, if he really\nlntended to have a general Increase in\nthe tariff, had not brought down an\namendment to tbat effect. He added\n\u25a0that '-he did not think that Mr. Meighen \/ver really intended un all-around\ni.ictvase In the tariff fur all his talk\nof protection. He charged thut Mr.\nM>igheti had \"usurped power\" in .--jK-\nceeding tilr Robert Borden as preftiier\nft'lthout an' appeal to the people, ami\nIn opening a candidacy for liinis*Jf although his government had bet-tT defeated  at  the  polls.\nOoing Mf .Front Door\n\u2022 \"I am not going to tbe country by\nbay backstair method,\" warmly declared the premier to an outburst of\napplause. \"I am going In by the front\ndi or.\"\nHe concluded with reference to cooperation between the Liberals, and\nI'logressives. He had, ho said, m desire for intrigue or entangle iuectn.\n\"So far us I am concerned,'' added\nMr. King, \"I have made it perfectly\nclear that I am ready for any form\nof cooperation, open and above bourd,\"\nbut it must be something that is open\nand above bourd. It must be a relationship that Is understood throughout\nCanada from one end to ihe other. It\nmust be based on mutual fuitn and\nmutual good will.\nOn the Hudson Bay railway, the premier declared that, with support, the\ngcveiuinent,intended to go ahead. \"We\nhave support, and we 'ntend lo go\nahead,\" lie announced, the crowd cheering, \"nnd that work is' going to be\npioceeded  with  thia year.\"\nPremier Dunning of Saskatchewan\npreceded Premier King at tonight's\nmeeting in support of Premier King's\ncandidature.\nPremier Dunning said  the eyes of\nthe Dominion were on Saskatchewan,\nIncreases  ImpoHunc*\n\"Tiie crisis which has come about,\"\nhe said, \"has increased our Importance!  \u2014-\nin the Dominion to a degree which no kjr  Bartindale Heard tor Last\npressed the hope that we should have\none great party from the Atlantic\nto the Pacific, united us one, standing for Liberal-Progressive principles\nand policies.\" Premier King pressed\nthut Liberals and Progressives had\nthe same fundamental aims. Both\nstood opposed to Conservative thought\nand particularly opposed to that extreme form of Conservatism whieh he\nheartily disliked, numely, Toryism.\nToryism aims at the division of the\nforces opposed\" to it, and .the\" results\nof the last election showed how near\nToryism came to success because of\nthat division.\nConservatives In the election bad\nnot gullied the members they had because of their own strength. They\nhud gained them in large part because Liberals und Progressives were\ndivided.\nCo n a ra tola tea    K nox\nPremier King puid u special tribute\nto Albert Knox, formerly Progressive\nmember for Prince Albert, for refusing\nto offer uny opposition to his candidature. \"Mr. Knox.\" continued Premier King, \"was a great help to me\nIn the lust parliament. Muy 1 say\nalso that I do not think that the\nhouse of commons hud any stronger\nchampion of the Hudson Hay railway\nthun Mr. Knox, and I am glad to\ntell you lhat uli we need to do is tu\nunite und keep united und thut Hudson Bay railway will be completed\nvery shortly.\" I\nClaims Conservative  Opposition\nThe prime minister referred to\nstatements which he said hud been\nissued by Conservatives in Prince\nAlbert and hy Conservatives ut Ottawa that there would be no Conservative opposition iu Prince Albert.\nHe hud thought at the time that\nConservatives were doing a chivalrous\nnet and returning tt courtesy which\nLiberals hud extended in times past.\nMf. King declared he did not wunt\nto believe that there had been any\nlack uf sincerity uu the part of the\nConservatives, but if. us appeured tu\nbe the cuae, the gentlemen who signed\nthe nomination papers uf Mr. Burgess\nwere Conservatives; \"If I find in his\nmeetings Conservatives udvocating his\nplatform, if I find Conservatives coming in from outside to work for him,\nI shall leuve the public of the Dominion to judge fur themselves Just\nhow   chivalrous   und    honorable   the\nence   begged  for  more,  but  It  was\nforthcoming.\nCheers tor \"Bart*\"\nColonel Taylor, again iu costume i\non an appropriately arranged\nsang \"The Nipper's Lullaby,\" and'\nresponse tu what amounted to a demand for more, rendered \"It's Juat\nHer   Way.\"\nToward the close of -the evening\nColonel Taylor spoke of the approaching departure from the district of Mr.\nbartindale. and in a neat speech eje-\npressed 'he regret of the residents of\nWillow Point. \"We know,\" the colonel\nsaid, \"that Mr. Bartindale resides in\nNelson, but we have always felt that\nhe is one of us.\" Mr. Bartlndale's\nkindness hi always placing his musical\ntalents at the disposal of any who\nasked was also dwelt on. This was\nfollowed with the singing of \"Fpr\nHe's a Jolly (Jood Fellow,\" and three\ncheers   for   \"Bart\"\nThe work of Mrs, Nlveti \u25a0 contributed\nlargely to the success of the evening.\nKhe played the accompaniments for all\nthe musical numbers, and, with Mr.\nI'i.rtindal*-. pluy.-d fur the majority of\nthe\" dances, Oth.-rs who helped with\nthe dance music were Mrs. A. Wilbur,\nJack   Thompson   and   Hugh   Middle ton.\nThe evening closorf with the singlnr\nof   the   national   anthem.\n.Conservative   party   has   been   in\nprofessions,\"\t\nWILLOW POINT\nHAS FINE CONCERT\none  would  have   believed  possible\nifew n&nthji .aj?o.\" ...\nMr, Dunning spolfe of efforts at cooperation between'Liberals and Pro-\ngressrvTH-at-pttawur~TC Arna not, he\nsaid, a question of secret bargaining\nor underhand arrangements, but a\nplain, -straightforward cooperation to\nput Into effect the policies outlined\nin   the   speech   from  the  throne.\nThe issue between Premier King\nand the Independent candidate, continued Mr.. Dunning, was nut Just\none* between two citizens. Premier\nKing was endeavoring to bring about\ncooperation between' Liberals and\nProgressives. His success in the\npresent byelectioit would mean that\nPrince Albert was putting the seal\nof Its approval on its efforts along\nthis line. His defeat would spell the\ndefeat of his efforts to bring about\ncooperation.\nAlways   Favored   Progs\nPremier King opened with thanlia to\nboth Liberals and Progressives of\nPrince Albert for his candidature. He\ndeclared that from tho time he was\nchosen us Liberal leader he had never\nuttered one single sentence derogatory\ntp the Progressive party. \"I will\nchallenge anyone In Canada,\" he said,\n\"to quote any word of mtne where I\nHave denounced the Progressive party\nas a party, or their motives or ambitions, in any particular.\nTime Before Departure\nfor Chilliwack\nSALVATION AMY\nSLIDES ARE SEEN\nColonel Taylor Gives Illustrated\nLecture at Local\nCitadel       '  ' -\nColonel 1.. I-:. Taylor, field secretary\nuf the Salvation Army :,hi westferti\nCanada, who is on a visit of )\u00bb-\nspection of the work of'-the, Saltation Army, uccumpunietl by ,Mi\nLay man. dtvl__-i_yriul coinmaiuler\nsouthern Uritish Culumbia, gave\nillustrated lecture in the Salva1\nArmy   citadel   Just   eveiiinj?.\n.Mr. Taylor was one of the' d<\ngates (rum Canada to '.attend\ninternational cungress of, the S.\nti.-Ji Army in England In 1\u00bb1<,\nwKIt- un this trip t-^-^pioWreaJ?**\nmany oi the notable sce^ee-jn tng-\nlU'ul  und Scut land. '   _\" \u2022_*.     \u25a0     '\nThese pictures, along with many\no' hers, were reproduced on a screen\ntbiough the medium uf a slide machine, und were lectured, on and ex-\nplaine.1   by Mr.  Taylor.\nPicture  of   Founder\nOne picture wus of General Booth.\nrounder uf the Salvation Army, and\nthe scene In the street a of London\naa hi* body was being conveyed to\nIts lust resting pluce. A portion Of\nthe crowd, whieh was approximately\nfive miles long, was reproduced ou\nthe   sci-e^p. . \u00a3jj .\nAnother was that of \"Nancy Dickybird\" before she belonged to the\nSalvation Army, und after. She was\nu terror to tiie Munchester police\nund served 173 terms of Imprisonment before she came under tl\\e\nInfluence of the Army, and now..\nstuted ,Mr. Taylor, she Is a modern\nmlrtcle.\nBeuutlful flowers and plants re-'\nproduced, in their natural colors.\nwithout the aid of artificial coloring\nwere shown. Among these pictures\nwus the flora) clock In England, covering a large urea of ground.\nHistorical pictures were also shown,*\nMrs.    \\V.    A.   Miller   of   Cadillac,\nMidi,   accidentally   broke   her   wedding ring which she had worn con-.\nliiiuously for B4 years.\nA. H. RICHARDSON ',\nM.A.M.F., In charge of the reforestation division of the -Ontario forestry\nbrAnch, who addressed the Western\nRetail Lumbermen's association at the\nannual convention In Winnipeg recently.        ._.-_...   ',. v     .,    . ...\nIndeed,  I  have  taken   tho  position .       \u25a0\u25a0-.   - -\nfrom the  start  that  the Progressiva hull,,1e-   \"**     L nJ!   Jlni*   bv\nparty was  an  advance  wing  o*  the   *'\u00bb   known   \u25a0\"\"\u00ab-\u25a0 -bU,-'k - b>-\nLlberal party.\"   He had always taken\nthe view that the two parties should\nbe  working  and  cooperating  in   the\nface of a common enemy.\nFavors On* Grast Party\nHe had done his best, hence he became leader of the Liberal party\nto bring Liberal and Progressive\nthought and feeling together. He\n.had, Premier King continued, taken\nexception to 'Progressives being a\nseparate party. \"I have said,\" proceeded Mr. King, \"that division will\nWILLOW POINT, Feb. 1.\u2014 informality, friendliness and Jollity were the\nkeynotes of a very successful sociul\nheld In Crystal hall under the auspices\nof the women's Institute on Siturduy\nnight. The committee hi charge was\ncomposed of Mrs. V- H. Baylev. Mrs.\nF. Niven and Mrs. A. W. N. Taylor.\nThey had evidently worked hard in\npreparing for this evening's entertainment, and deserved all the compliments\ntliey received. The program consisted\nof musical Items and dancing, these\nbeing well Interspersed so thut there\nwas \"something doing every minute.\"\nA   very   pleasant   supper   was  served.\nPerhaps the outstanding feature was\nthe   singing  and   violin   solos   of   J.   I.. .      ,        ,\nBartindale of Nelson, who made his Ottielul Who performs marriage.1\nhist appearance here before leaving at Koit Madison, Iowa, has offefed to\nfor Chilliwack and who whs very gen-j many couples'for two bushels of\nerous with bis music He opened the COrn, In lieu of money.\nprogram with Ihe song '(ii'e Me the !\nOpen Koad.\" encoring with \"The ftoHd\nThat Leads to You.\" Never has Mr.\nBartlndale's mellow voice been heard\nto better advantage here than in these\ntwo songs. Mr. Bartindale then played ;\na masurka by Jenklnson, and in re-!\nsponse to \u00bb hearty encore gave\nWalenn's       \"Hutnoresi|U*\u00bb.\" Another\nvery pleasing item was his song \"(Jive\na Man a Horse He Can Hide.\" with\n\"Trees\" as the encore. His violin solo.\n\"Harllquinade,\" by Squires, followed\nby Squires' \"California Lullaby,\" was\nalso enthusiastic.-Hy received.\nColonel Taylor Is Heard\nCol. A, W. N. Taylor sihik. In cos-\nif the\nAlbert\nChevalier.     Colonel   Taylor's   imitation\nof   Chevalier   was   excellent   and   held\nthe  rapt  attention  of   the audience.\nIn   the   second   half   of   the   program\nMr. Bartindale plaved \"Salut d'Amour\"\nby   Elgar,   which   wjm   the   faforite   of\nthe   selections   played   by    him.     This\nwas   encored    with    Squires'    \"Klegle,\"\nAnother    group    of    Mr.    Bartlndale's\nviolin   solos   was   Squires'   \"Madrigal\"\nand  \"Danse Orlentele.\"\nMr. and Mrs. V. H. Bayley presented\na    screamingly    funny    skit    centered\naround   the  duet  \"The  Hlch  Man  and\nthe  Poor  Man.\"    This  was  very  well\ndone and brought down the house.   As\n!..' '\"-tr* .   fi  .(] w :*-\u25a0,. .'\u25a0\n Page Six\n\u2022r.\nTHE NELSON DAILY NBWSr.-TUBSDAV-MORNING, -FEBRUARY 2,- 1988-\niVlarkets\nSTERLING COMES\nDP AT NEW YORK\nWithin   One-Sixteenth  of  One\nCent of Gold Parity; Highest\nSince Early War Days\nNEW YORK, Feb. 1. \u2014 Higher call\nmoney ratos apparently Inspired sufficient soiling In today's stock market\nto check the rising tide of prices.\nTwo of tbe most interesting developments of the day were the approach\nc>f sterling exchange to within 1-1C of\nlc of gold parity, the highest rate\nsince the early lluyg of the war, and\nthe advance Of .tic a barrel in raid-\ncontinent crud* prices, but neither exerted any   influence  on  stock prices.\nUnited States Si.ee! common showed\na net loss of IH* nt 13-! .4; Baldwin\ndropped nearly- a point, to 126; and\nAmerican Can closed U lower, at\ntil1*,  after selling as high as  291.\nMotors enjoyed a temporary . out-\nbrrs. of Strength on buying influenced\nby reports that January C4r sales hud\nexceeded expectations. General Motors\nwas run up to 129*4, the highest price\nleached this year, and then sagged-to\n\\2T%, wnere It was up IS on the day.\nPassing of the Pacific Mills dividend\nfor the first time since If.S3 probably\nll.spired selling of American Woolen,\nwhich closed 1%  lower, al .IV.i.\nCall money ren_wed at _Va per cent.\nPdvanced to 5 and then to 6.j, closing\nat the top. Tin- rise was generally attributed to.the heavy calling of loans\nby banks, estimated as high as $__5,-\nODO.OOO in conned Ion with the first of\nthe   month   re-julrimonts.\nTotal   sales\u20141,507,SOO   shares.\nMarket  Quotations\nHigh      Low     Close\nBait.   A   Ohio   ...       SI %      DO'S.     \t\nCan.-Pacific         152%    151*,    152%\ntit.    Nor.   pfd.    ..       75 .fc      74 \\     \t\nNor.   Pacific            73 H      72%     \t\nN.   T.   Central    ..    131        129^    129%\nPock   Island            55 .>.P\u00ab       .:.\"\u201e\nSou. Jfacilic .......    ltilV  10.1 Vi'  .....\nPnlon   Pacific   ...     148li    147        \t\nAna.  rjopper   .....      .Mi.*    4s\u00bb-i    \t\nChile,   Copper    ... U. % ,     .'13% \t\nInsp. -Cupper \u25a0 ... 24%      84'.it 24%\nIntl.   Nickel      44-,4      42.h 41%\nKenne.   Copper   .**. ..fi.fe      5!. -Vi \t\nAmer.    I-oco.     ... 113'* 113 1 li %\nU.    8.    Steel      133% 132% 133%\nGen.   Motors     129% 125% 127%\nStude.   Corp.      59%      51.% 5_%\nWillys   Ovid.    ... 31%      30% \t\nPacific   Oil      7S%      77% 77%\nPhillips    Petr.    .. 40          45 \t\nShell   Union   Oil.. 27\".*      27% \t\nStan.   Oil\u25a0 N.   J... 45%      44% 45\nStan,   Oil ,Jnd.    .. 5H%      57% \t\nTex.    Oulf   Suipli. 137 Mi 12\u00ab!i 12.%\nAmer.   T.   &   T... 144 Vj 144% 144%\nAmer.   Tobac.    ., 1W.\\_ 115% \t\nCert' Products   .. '   41%      40%       II\nRadio   Corp  15%      43% 41%\nWUtJUPEO   DRAIN   JUOTATIONS\nWheat\u2014\nOpen\nHigh\nLow\nClose\nMay\n.    159\nlfil \u25a0\u2022\u2022\u201e\n159\n1591,\nJuly' ..\n.     Ill*\n181 _\nloS'i\nIT,*\".\nOct;\n.     14(1\n141H\n13-',.\nl-9'\u00bb\nOats\u2014\nMay   ..\n\u2022      MX\nSO*\nt9\u00bb;\n49',\nJury    . .\n.       60 %\n50_\nr.u .,\n-0_\nBarley\u2014\nMay\nfi\nt;r,r,\n111-!.,\n64 *\nJuly    ..\nne\ntic '.\u00bb\n16*\n65*\nFlax\u2014\nMay   ..\n.    216'.\n217.\n_n;\n:h',_\nJuly   .\n\u2022     -18%\n_ 1 s %\n-U14\nnti\nOct.    ..\n211 Vi\nRye\t\nMay      .\n.   ior,-v\n1 n 7 _\n105>_\n105 \u25a0%\nJuly    . .\n.   'i\"'\u00bb\n] 117-1.\nmr, 1.,\n1115 M.\nOct.     .,\n- -it\nH%\n97_\nU7 %\nEgg Markets\nOTTAWA, Feb. !. \u2014 Toronto, wli.de-\n_**-.le fresh extratt, 46c to 47c; firsts.\n\u25a02-_- to  *%c>  etorage unchanged.\nMontreal market steady for st.>r-\nn*e; higher for fn-sli; jobbing extra*,\n46c;   firsts.   42c;   Seconds.   ..fie\nWinnipeg Jobbing extras. 41c; firsts..\nrr>c to 3i*ic;  seconds,  25c to 2Sc\nCalgary, country points extra*-. :_\u25a0-_\nto 2K<.;  ftr-Us, 23c to 25c; seconds,  20c.\nKdmonton. Jt.bbbig fresh txtras. 10c;\nfirsts, 35c; Boconds, 30c,\nVancouvt-r. Jobbing fresh ixlias. 3:1c:\nfirsts, 31c; seconds, 25c. Dealers pa>-\nIng country points, ....ras, 30c; firsts,\n28c.\nChicago, spot. 31 %c to 32c; February, SS%C| April, 27%c; DeCenibt-r __-\nfr'.gerfthjrs*.   30 *%*_..\nNew  York,  unchanged.\nVANCOUVER STOCKS\nn. c. hiivit \t\nCons.; Km' Iters    ...\nCork    Province \u25a0  .. ,\nI>un-ell     \t\nGlacier\t\nvlla-Stone     \t\nHowe   Bound   .....\nIndian    -line.     . ...\n_.tI..._oal     :...\nI-Ucky   Jim   \t\nMnllorial    Silver\nPremier    .\t\nStlvercrest     \t\nSilversmith    \t\nB.   C. \u25a0 M.Htami.   \t\nBrit' Petroleum   ...\nMaple \"J>i,_    ......\nTrojan   Oil    .......\n.     1.6S\n.210. Ill)\n.35\n30.00\n2.19\n.101.\n.001.\n.09 ii\nVANCOUVER WHEAT\nVA.VCOUV1-K,    Feb.    'l.    \u2014    Closing\nwlieat prices:\n,'-\u25a0>                        In Prompt\nstore    shipment\nNo.   t   northern      1.43% 103\nNo.   2'   northern      1.58% 1.57%\nHu.   2   northern      1.5* % 1.52 %\nN\u00bb.    4    whent      1.45% I.46M\nNo.    6    wheat.,,,..**.     1.32% 1.32%\nXu,    6    wheat      1.14% 1.14 1-\nr*TT*i ^\/y.-f \u2022*.   \u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u2022 '       \u25a0*,9% \u2022\"''\u25a0\u25a0'\nfccre-rt-infe.l,'  fief' ton. .   J 0.00 IU.00\nDominion Live Stock\nWHEAT PRICES\nCLOSE LOWER\nVisible Supply in United Stales\nShows  Only  Small\nDecrease\nCHICAGO, FVb. 1. \u2014 Surprise _ha.\nthu t'nited States visible supply of\nvtK.it showed a decrcascof only S44.-\n1)00 bus-bela In Ihe iast week gave a\nJolt today to friend'* of high, r price*.\nLargely an a result the wheat ii.uikct\nclosed %q to %6 n-'t lower, Miv m-w\nJIJH* to * 1.75Vj and July \\}lM\\t to\n11,M; with corn %o to *_q down;\noats %c to VjC to M Off; nnd provision., varying frum 10c decline to a\nrise  of 2c. *\nCanada Bonds\nWl.NNIl'l.G.    Ve_.    I,    \u2014    Doitilnlt\nwar  issue prices:\n,    War   loans   \u2014   1931.   $101.90,   J102.2\n1537.   J104.20.   S104.3O,\nVictory        loans    -_    1931. (101.9\nS102.05;     1933      1105.70,    I10R.80;     1.3\nS1H3.95.   8104.115;   1937.   810...R,   I108.M1\nWar   loan   renewals   \u2014   1927,   $101-3\n$101.50;   1932,   (103.10    *103,:io.\n-teftn-dliu,   \u2014   192S,   'ion.to;   i.-i\n8101.50,    J101.70:    1911.    896.90,    800-\n1140.   890 3(1.   $911.50\nB.JO.\nSterling Exchange\nMOW VOUK, Ktl) 1. \u2014 Sterling el\nChllftgt steady at 14.82 for 6*_-day bill\nand   at   $4.h6'i   for   denian.l.\nForeign   bar   silver.   liTe.\nCanadian  dollars\u201413-$.  discount\nFmnes\u2014 Demand,   S.75 .be.\nLira\u2014Demand,   1.011.4 c.\"\nNalsoa    Bterltng    approx.'n.a..    rat>\nMetal Markets\nNEW   YORK    Feb.   1.   \u2014   Co\nSteady;   electrolytic,   spot   and\n14c.\n.    Tin  \u2014   Firm;   .,..,t   and   near!\nfutures,   181.50,\nlion\u2014Steady;   No,   1   northtrti\n$24:  No.  2 north.th.   .-.'t   to *t*J_!\n2   Houlhern.   %tt  to  |23. ;\nLear;\u2014-Steady;   spot,   fit.2Ti\nZtM   \u2014   Firm;   K...U   St,    Lou\nand (stores,  $8.65 to J3.IU.\nAntimony\u2014spot,  122\nAt London:\nStJitdant copper -- Spot   \u00a35s\nfutures,  \u00a3..n  12.   \u00abd.\nElectrolytic   \u2014   spot.   \u00a365;\nL'CS   10s.\nTin\u2014Spot,    C27H    15s ,    I'aiiir.\n12\u00ab 6U.\nZinc \u2014 spot,   (37;   ruiui...\nMontreal Produce\nMONTnEAL.   .el,.   I.   -   Dintvr  ami\ne.KS   ItroilC.   elti.'ese   ,)Ui.t\nCheese    \u2014    Ftnrst    westerns,    L'le    [.\nifllller \u2014 No. i ,, slell'l-ed, lie.\nKn    1   creamery.  43 ..\nBfa' \u2014 Storage extras. 33c: storaic\n'\"\u25a0rsts. 30c; _rt.tr ,xtr\u00abd. l;e; tiesl.\nClrsls.   41c,\nQuebec;   ijoUte.j,   ,,_\u25a0   bag.   car    lots,\nHEA# TRMON\nMINE EXCHANGE\nCapital   Closes   Higher;   Gold\nLeaders Divide Losses\nand Gains\nTOKONTO, . I.. I. - TrriiKuuonr,\niiachorl n\u201e ,,,(a| ,,i s.i.ooo on th,\nSiandarrl Mlninrt i _e!:an(re llii.s rnorn-\niliK. an,I seine -leeks benefited by Ih.\nheavy trading, bul in,, market was n.il\nWholly Ktrnnr. r':i|,lti I. itle leuiler,\neiused the mornln.'. \", up. to 39U are!\nCanadian Lorraln. tra. l hither ul\n1-3. The ...1,1 le\u201e,l,.rs \u201e,,, divided between l.iss..- and ca'na. Argonaut advanced 1%. I.. :'|t-; ArKnnsul O.n-\nselnlateil. 3. ut 13; Barry HnlUnKer\nIS. to 31',_; and t'olunrbua Kirkland\nI., at \u201e4',... On the other hand Ted\nHuKl.es lost 3. at 333: Lake Sin.re 3(1\nat 12.55: Rcora, it. al l_; Bu,i Kiel -\nlanrl Lake, 3, ul 12:'. Heater eas.,I I\not  S31'..\nOntario's New Line\nse.-i j.\n\/rV,C(':.'.\nfVoJecter- Pit.\n___\\ \\\ndCiKV\n\u2022\"ALUS\nM\u00bba*f3\u00bbt\n\u25a0 r.i-%;\n, ..or,,''*. jCtX'WI..\":\nJ\nAbovs showH the propossfl new private railway lino 111 Ontario from\nf_aiJiiNkuHin\u00ab to Smoky Fulls, aji4\nother Hlcp in railway conimunicutiuiui\nwith -Canada's norttisrn shyrcs.\nI BRIEF NEWS FROM\n|    CANADIAN CENTERS\nI (By   Canadian   Prew)\nHOW MUCH\nSHOULD\nASTbfc*\nSPEND FOR,\nADVERtlSING?\ni\nWINDSOR, Ont., Feb.  1.\u2014The  tnjs-\ntcrloua dlnappearuiico Of Mic. Nellie\nI Ddolskl,    mother   of   five    youn*.   chil-\nQrsn, -.vho recently came to Windsor\nfrom Vita, Man., i.s twin* iavestiKaled\nbj tho police. .Mn*. Podolski arrived\nIn the city hint Tuesday, itaylng at\nthe home of .Mis. Kate Hyd;ikoski Until Thurs4l\u00bb2 af;ernoon when she left\nfor Wy.iadotU. Mich, to visit her .sister.     She   lia-8   not  been  hca,rd   of   since.\nMO.NTHKAL..\u2014 Wilfred Fcppin lu In\nInispi'uil . here from hums vustRlned\nwhen he rescued his t'alher-in-law.\nNoel Francoeur, wlio was bedridden,\nfrom a fire thut destroyed their hoini;\nlast  night.\nWALLACEBURQ, Ont.\u2014Fire which\nfir s time threatened to assume ssrl*-\ni us proportions, caussd danuigc estimated at ^40,00-0 in the business ^ec-\ntlon hers today. Occupants of un\n; part ment over the stores which were\ndtatroyed,   escaped.\nTORONTO\u2014A ladder standing by the\nside of the house was the means by\nwhich four children, from 5 to 12\njtari old. escaped, when their home\nit I.*>iik Branch, near here, waa de-\nm i uvea by fire. Damage amounted tn\n' lUlU'.\nTORONTO\u2014Late additions bring up\nto 50 the number of cnargeg thiU J. A.\nM. Armstrbng, former M.P. for North\nVui-l.. and real estate agent and conveyancer of'that county, will have to\nI ice In county court on February 4.\nThe chprgtS ai'e for theft, forgery, ut-\ntirlnB forgeiy hnd fraud. Mr. Armstrong Is at liberty on bail of |B0,000.\nKITCHKNER \u2014' Louis Hamm, 2fl,\ncommitted suicide by shooting at hla\nhi 'ne  in Doon, near hjre.    Previous to\nlii.\u00ab* actum, no reasons Can be given for\nhis rash act. Hamm Is .the third gen*\n\"liition tn meet death by hla own\nhand, his father and grandfather bavin-,-   tonitnitu'd   suicide.   .\nHow  much caa your Etore afford to\nI sp_na fci' adveitifiing?\n\u2022.**\u25a0\u25a0>\n1     No   two \u25a0StoreC   reiiuirc   exactly   the\n: s;:nie atpount of amtrtislng. Tht\namount tint in necesi.ary .and the\nsnout that will ylSld real returns depend   upon   Individual -conditions.\nAdvertising,     like     other     eMiense*-*,\n1 should pay returns for money expended. An idoa of just how much\nyou    shOUM    soend    ma:'    be    obtained\nI from a study of other _iierch;nit.s haml-\n1 ling similar lines of goods.\nThe average -specialty store spend,\nabout 31a pur*ft-Cjit. of its gross Income for adU.tfe-t-i'g- Large depart*\nincut' stort-.t i spoiid ^ at-will the same\namount, but In ianiiller dcpsrtpien]\nstoics Ibc.-J-iWii, )**iy be. cut In hall\".\n.(ewe]**.*', i.l*.rc(. |>F4inarilv spend about\ni.''_et->' ic'im;Vv\u00bbt;,v\u00bb dollar bikyn in.\ntl\u00ab\"pending Upojl twl volume of busi-\nnoss. From l'-jc to 4e Is the usual\nrate for shoe stores, wilh the percentage rising with the t*izc of the store.\nGrocery -\"--torse assd less advertising,\nand their rate Is uslially less than a\nS_e on Hie- dollar. Hardware store.-*\nare also low, but their rate is slightly\nhigher than  Unit of the groceries.\nsmitFcaseIs\nstill going on\nSMELTERS ADVANCE\nOVER SIX POINTS\nAt    Montreal    Issue    Touches\n217% and Closes at 212'\/.;\nBrazilian Most Active\nMtl..THt-Al_.   .V'tr.   1.   \u2014   All\ntor   ml e   ,.r   tradlnil   on   tin-   let\nsleek   excbanKe   wero   sl.alterul   t.nli\nl,,,.l\nwli.n    11).\nHied\n\u25a0i.in-\nWlWllI'I-a. Kel). 1.\u2014Tire rreelpts to-\nflay were 1_\u00ab0 cattle. ll_ enlves, _i)10\nhops,   _0 sheep.\n\u2022 leers \u25a0\u2014 Choice, ftl.io lo ?7; trir\nto. good.  Ij.EO   to $6..5.\nButcher heifers \u2014 Choke. *...7.^ to\nIS; fair to cond. S4.50 to *-._..\nButcher cows \u2014 Choice, *1.2} to\n$_.7_:'ialr to good. }..__  to jl.\nBulls\u2014(lood,  13   to  (4.\nOxen\u2014Good,  111._0  to SI.r.O\nStocker steers \u2014 Choice. ?t.T\". io\n._._.\".: fair to \u00abood, J3.50 to <t...o.\nStocker heifers \u2014 Cnoiee. 3H 7.. lo\ntt:  fair to good. $..7.r\u00bb to f..:.r.\n-ttocker rt-ers\u2014Choice.. *_ 50 to ?\u00ab;\nfair to  good,   $4.26   to  $.j._r>.\nCalves\u2014Choice, 17 to $..60; good,\nIS to ,$6.60.\nH-tl \u2014 -e-ecls, $14.41: thick\nsmoolhs. $13.10; heavies. $12.10; lights\nand iTee.le.s.   $13 10   to   $13-6.\nLamh\u00abr-'\u00bbir  lo good.  \u00bbJ tl IO 411.60.\nSh|\u00bbp\u2014crsir   to   good,   Ji   to   $7.\nMiniieapoHs Grain\nant-NEAPf-LlR. Feb. 1. \u2014 Flour\nvncl.nnged   at   10c   lower   at   $9.75   to\nf\u00bb.*0   a   barrel;   -hlimrenta   \u2014   43,018\narreis. ...\nBraa~\u00bb-\u00ab  to  125.60.\nWheat\u2014No.    1'    aortlrern.    Il.TO',4    to\n\u00bb*_\u00bb_,;   May.  $l\u00ab7 4; July,   \u00bb1.\u00ab2\u00ab4.\n*\u00bb. 3 yellow. J-o to \u00a3\u00abc. . f\nNo. 3 white, 38Hc to 3\u00bbHo.\nNo.   1,   t__4   to  $2.46Vi.\nArkansas poTttlcten has a fractured\nthigh, after losing an arm, a leg,\n|_! ey\u00ab aad breaking two ribs,\nPRICES TAKE AN >,\nUPWARD TREND\nBrazilian    Leads   in    Activity;\nSmelters  in  Greatest  Advance of %y_  Points\nTORONTO,   hVb.   t.-\u2014Prlow cuntlauej (\nt<-   Stiow   ii   stioiu.   Howard   Head   tt)   lie\ntT-uliriK .\u00bb) the Toronto stocrk swihauge\ntoday. Brasilia^ Ud the uiarlv. i ji, jjf-\ntlvity, and tOttchtd a new hiirh ot\n(\"-\u25a0.4, closing at 12.4, up 2t\u00bb on the\n('ny. SmelteiH seored the greatest .id-\n\\anee of the day, whieh was 31-.\npo'nts. nt  th\u00ab-  closing  figure of  2\\1.\nAbltlbi touched \u00ab high of sr.i\u201e, un,|\neio-ted at I., uu 2'a points.    Brompton\nwar   %   hiirher   at   W%\\_.\nCrow's Nssl gained 3M in &i%. n.\nC. Pishing wan off \u25a0*_,, Canadian C.n-\nnerfe coininuii, down '.|: Canadian Loco-\nniotive   down   .'\u201e.\nI* \u00bbh\n!-\u25a0\u25a0   500\u00ab   shan \"   the   high    ,*e:il*\nHfihOd   on   las)   Tuesday,\nBrasllian. hy far the -most active\nutonk of the day, closwl ill t**.1*. ex-\nitvidend. for a net gain of i\u00bb', points.\n('in- nio\u00abl *--pe('li.e\"lar rr-oveliu-nt was\nfn* nli-died bv Consolidated Smelting,\nwhich not as high ..n _il7*v aud elosrd\nat i\\t*_ for a net ndvanco nf m\n[\u25a0Hints, wblcb was tin widest gain\n-shown  in   the dav'H Kit,\nAbltlbi closed unchanged at **-\u25a0.. ifter\n(>;\u25a0 vina sold up io the new maximum\not h5; Canuda Steainahlpj. closed, up\n',., at ti... after having sold as high as\n63  tn   ihe  morning session.\nOther outstanding utrong snots tn-\nilud.d Asbestos, up t; Canadian Car,\nun 2 and the preferr\u00abd, un I; and\ntciisnish  River preferred, up 2.\nCl< nlng prices: Ahitihi i|j Asbestos. a-4: liuiustriul Aieuhol. ]1\\_, Bra-\n\/.ilian, .'\u2022*'i: l.re-werieH, 59; Bromplon.\nM_: Cement, lor.'-: B. C. Fishing.\n38 H-: Laurent Mil. St.; B. B, steel first\nprelVn ed. 1|H: >.. \\% Steel s\u00ab>ron_ pre-\nf-ired, 9'; Spanlt-h meferreil, 119; Spanish   common,   IvlU'i   Montreal   Power.\n31*1 Quobec 1'owef. IIJI'b: Snulters.\nJllH: SliawiniK.-vn. IfiB'-*: Steel of C\u00bbn*\n.-.-..a. H*: Atlantic KngHt. 21): Textile,\nit%; Winnipeg Electric, _>2; New Vork.\nt;. s. 8t\u00abal. iMtt; ci.Mt., n.y., ir.2-^.\n___ -\u00ab\u00ab-\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014\nBRITISH  COLUMBIA  T.QGS\nKn-sh   Mttra*,\npullets,  30c.\n7c;   fresh  first*.\nSPOKANE STOCKS\nilteportcdbyC. W. Apple\n.rd)\nETDMONTON,' Feb. I.\u2014 Admissions\nfrom Matthew Ksdiile thnt there were\nne or two othir \"n,uestlonable or\n\u25a0Rhatly transactionB-' in addition to the\n'fake Invoice chartfes'- 'between ihe\nAlberta government In 1921 and the\nEsdals Press, liihited, and that the\nKsdale Press had made \"donations\"\nto the - government printer, J. \".V.\nleffeiy, featured the afternoon hearing of the G. PI Sinltli case In t-u-\npreme  court,  before  Mr.  Justice  Ives.\nDuring the latter part of the forenoon sitting and all tiie afternoon\ntho principal crown \".vltnei.s was on\nthe stand and was given a severe\ncross -examination by tho counsel for\nthe defence, J. McKinlcy Cameron,\nK.C. The grilling will be resumed\ntomorrow morning, and It Is expected\nthat Esdiile Will be in the witness box\nfor a considerable portion of the day.\nMuch of the evidencf- brought out\nthe cross-examination was similar to that given at tbe royal commission  and  the  preliminary  hearing.\nThe witness was led through a\nmaze of exhibits of Invoice**., bankbooks, ledgers, Cheoksi ami vouchers.\nby the counsel, and at, timet*, roused\nby the culling tones <*r the examining counsel, he respon__\u00bb4 with\" Indig-\numt denial to some of the suggestions\n'advanced by the defence, Kadaltj\nbpoke in a low tone difring a greater\npart of the time, and It, was with difficulty thai he could be heard. He\nwas repeatedly asked to speak in ti\nlouder voice by the judge and the\ncounsel.\n\"VICTORIA, Feb, 1.\u2014Hop pf-oduc-\ntiJn in Canada will be doubled, the\ndepariment of agriculture e^tlrniitos.\nwhen 11)00 acres tn be purchased for\nthis purpose on tho reclaimed Sumu*-*\nlake bed at a cost of $250,000 are\nbrought  under cultivation.\nLEGAL NOTICES\nWoman giving mime of Johnson\n-;olifest..Mi M Buffalo to panning 1UU\nworthless checks within a week.\nBid    Asked Close\nBrasfltart          32*^\nvVlnnlpeir   fc.I< CtrlC       52\n;_inir*.ntide              o9\nAbitibl            11*4\nAmerican Car & Foundry  no\nimperial    Oil           17.4\nVipond        l.K        1.9. \t\nI.uckv Jim 14'i      \t\n'Madstone       3.'. ,38 ...i.\nSilversmith         .M\\      .41 *i \t\nTeck Hughes     3,55        3.60 \t\nCM.    Trethewey,.  1.51        1.63 \t\n('.    P.    R  ill ft\n('reat   Northern          74-*ii\nSt. 0-  N. J       44%\nljodge   Bros       43%\nCons.    Smelters      212%\nCan.   R.   S.   Lines   pfd,,   C3;   common,\n11   to   12.\nWATER HOTXOB\nDiversion snd Vs*\nTake notice that' The Poanshaven De-\nrelopnienj Co.. Lta\\ whose address is\nUlondel P.O., H,C, Will apply for a li-\n-.enee to take and use Forty cubic feet\noer Second of water out of Crawford\nCreek. Which flow* westerly and drains\ninto Kootenay L:ike,about tho htad of\nCrawford Bay. .*'\u25a0,-.\nThe water will he diverted from tho\nstream at a point about ou\u00ab mile bulow\nthe confluence of Hooker CrCefc with\nCrawford Creek, nnd will be us*.d for\npower purposes UP<m the district- de-\nScribed  helow:\nBounded on the west bv Kootenay\nLake, on the north by Latitude 60 N.,\non the east by the watershed between\nKootenav Lake nnd the St. Mary's River\nand on the south by. Lat. 4ff 30 N.\nA petition for approval of the under\ntaking as per section 2<> of the aet will\nbe heard in th1** office of the board of\ninvestigation at a date to be fixed by\nthe controller and thjit any Interested\nperaon may filo an objection thereto in\nthe office of the controller or of the\nsaid Water Jterorder.\nThfs notico was posted on the ground\non the 7th day of December.' 19257\nA copy pf this nbtlcfi und an applies\nt\u00bbn pursufcnt tlTerflo ana *t*b the \"Water\nAct\" will b$ fllBd. in the office of the\nWater Recorders ftt Kaslo and Nelsonl\n\u25a0Objection*\"* to tfie apidleation inny be\nfiled with the said Water Recorder or\nWith tln_ Comptroller of Water Rights.\nParliament Buildings. Victoria, B.C.,\nwithin thirty days after the first ap\npearance nf this notice in a local news\npaper.\nDKANSHAVEN   DKVfiLOPMBNT\nCO., LTD.,    t    **,\nApplicant.\nTer R. T. I>eane, Direotor, Agent.\nThe date of the first publication *of\nthis notice waa the 21th day of Decejn\nber, 1925.    . -      .,\u201e (1653)\nUsed Articles\nReal Estate\nRooms\nBoard\nTo Rent\nBoats and\nAutomobiles\nClassified Advertising Rates\nWant and Classified Advertising \u2014\nOne and a half cents a word per insertion. If paid In advance, 6c per word\nper week, or ItHc PW word i*ter month.\nTiansient ads accepted only on a cash-\nir-advance basis, hMch initial, figure,\ndfllar sign, etc., counts un one word.\nMinimum 25e, if charged 50c.\nI_ocal Beading Notices \u2014 Three cents\nper word each Insertion. In blackface\nor machine capitals, 4c per word. Blackface capitals 5c a word. Twenty-five\npar cent discount if run dally without\nchange of copy for one month or nuro.\nWhere advertisement is set out In short\nlines the charge is 15o a lino for Roman\ntype, 20c for blackface and 25c for blackface capitals, Minimum 35c, If charged,\n50c.\n.Lists of Wedding Presents, and Floral Tributes at runerals\u2014Ten cents per\nline.\nBirths, Marriages, Deaths and In.\nmemorium Cards\u2014Three, cents per word;\n..i)'.' minimum.\nMale Help Wanted\nWANTI-;i>\u2014Bellboy. -Apply' Home Hotel.      ' \u25a0\u2022\u25a0      (1S7S)\nMKN'wANTJ-.p to learn Auto Tractor,\nBattery, Ignition, Oxy-Acetylene\nWelding nnd Vulcanizing. We also\nteach Brick-laying, Plastering and\nTHe-settlng. Write, or call. .Hemphill Auto Engineering School, 10\nHastings Bt. K.,t Vancouver, B.C-\n(1897)\na*=\nSituations Wanted Male\n['HONING,, Spraying  and  Grafting \u2014\n1'hone (!. H.  Fraser..' '   ' (1923)\nEXPERIENCED SHIPPER, grader and\nlicenced log sryier wants position;\nwouhl invest small capital. P.O Bus\n659. Nelson. (18601\nFemale Help Wanted\nHOUSEKEEPER wanted for'family of\nthree. Apply at once to J. Parks,\nfiosaland, BC (1858)\nLADIES WANTED to learn Beauty\nCulture. Write or call for free catalogue. Moier College of Beauty Culture, 10 Hastings at. E., Vancouver,\nB.C. (I\u00bb9J)>\nSituations Wanted Female\nDI-l'-SSMAKlNO \u2014 PlalB or fancy.\nAlterations. 111 Kerr Apartments,\nPhone fiaTU.    ___       US\u00ab)\nEXPERIENCED camp cook. Box 1843.\nDally News. (18411\nYOU Nti WOMAN destrst housework.\nExperienced.     Phono   It. (19*4)\nOH EL wants genenil bou!_ework. Will\niMiirt wllh children. Uox 1|U,\nDally t-fSWS. ^^        .       (1SH8)\nCLASSIFIED nds bring reiUlds quickfy\nand economically     \\%c a word\n...'A(r-nts'\\Vilnted\nwanted \u2014 Traveler for Notaon and\ndistrict for well known llrle of confectionery. No objection t.) cat lying\none or two non-competing tine*.. Preference given to man with candy ex-\npert erlCS. Apply Box l.i'l, Dailv\nNews. (1ST.)\nMachinery Wanted\nWANTED \u2014 Coffee grinder (driven by\nhand and power) *V_ h.p. electric or\ngasoline motor. Make offers to Box\n1X57.  Dailv  News. (1R57)\nRoom and Board\nROOM   AND   HOARD   for   gentlemen\u2014\n507   C'-irhonnto   street (1831)\nFor Rent\nFUHNI-IN.LI HOOMfc,eplng Uoorns \u2014\nAniily Mack's Uilliurd Rail.       (1824)\n-IN'-I.oOM h_L'si_^-Tj twenty. . ,l7w.\n(Inllagher  (1680)\nFurnished Rooms to Rent\nrUnNISHfiP lromi(]_..rirnff rooms,, over\nt'oolo Drug. , .      .      (192-r)\n_ I'l-MSUl-D. b-ilruuii-. Private lronip.\n.10 .Silica. \u2022 (1827)\nCLEAN-.'WrE__\"FCU..I__._.irT*l'ee'.\"ir\nfour room sulle fo decent people\nonly.j 30T Billca -treety \u25a0,, -     (H84)\nSUITE FOR KENT\u2014Ashman's Apart-\nrnenta. (moo)\nTIOLI, jour wnots tlrrouslr Tire Dailv\nNews elaPBifierl  eolrrmns.\nInsurance\nPROTECT YOUR INCOME\nWo have an Accident and Sickness Policy covering all accident\nnnd every sickness. . No matter\nVfhat your occupation, v,-e can protect your  income.\nThe rates are reasonable und\nthe company guaranteed.\nCall or phone, and let us explain this Policy to you.\nR. W. DAWSON\nPHONE 1\u00bb. p.  BOX 733\nAnnahle   Block\n(1883)\n\u2022r-\nCity Property for Sale\nHouses for Sale\n$280ft.0Q---Fivc-room    Houao,    with\ngood   concrete   foundation   and\ncellar, on half-acre block. House\nalmost new..\nRooms large and airy.\nProperty \u2022\u2022cheap at the price.\nOwner leaving town.\n$3200.00\u2014Six-room   Bungalow   on\ncorner,   two lots.\nCement   foundation,   furnace.\nClose to car. line, in good repair,\nA good home all on one floor.   t\nCan arrange terms.\nHugUi W. Robertson\nFarm   Lands\u2014City   Property.\nInsurance.\nPHONE 68 BOX 1074\n'     '     \u2022 (1930)\nLive   Btdck  eells  quickly   when   It   i\u00bb\nadvertised  ln  these columns.\n;Farm& Wanted\nWANTE&. TO \u25a0RRNT-'-A ranch In .Ti-\neinfty ot, Kelson. .Bo* 1844. Dailv\nNews. ''   **.*\/. (1844)\nHouses Wanted\nWANTEIV-Small furnlwhcd house.- hy\ncouple. Close in. Apply Bos l?7.t.\nDully News. (IST'.i)\ni-H-LJU  your   wants   tnrougn   TQb   Bally\nNpws  clafsified   columns\nMiscellaneous\nlosiuire Today\nWe   Insure\nYOUR 'I-IEB\u2014 YOUK rnorBRTT\nYOUK HEALTH.\nCITY PROPERTY\nHounes   for   Bent.\nC.arden and Building Bots for Rale.\nTwo Excellent Bungalow., for Sale.\nOpen   Fire   Places,     and   Modern\nIn every way.\n$2000.00.     .\nINVESTMENTS\nOttawa   Traction\nGovernment   Issues\nYielding   h'\/c   to    6.80%.\nTelegraphic   Stock   Quotations   Daily.\n:C.\nInsurance\nStocks      .   Bflnds ...\u201e\u25a0 City. Property\nNELSON,*'i-v C.\n(1835)\nANVO.NI.    wanting    U-ll\n\u25a0vuc    C\njal,   or\notliur   business   with\nD\nA\nMcEar-\nlurid,   please   telephone\nV.\n11.\nlllirek-\nwood,  99,\n(17'JO)\nY.ANTl_n\u2014Equipped   sin\nO    I\nepir\nr   sliojr\nIn  Nelson or Trail.    S\nate\n;e. Bl\u00bb\n20.1, Dally News.\n(1S-5)\nTELL   your   wants   tnrougn   Th*   Bali*\nNews  classified  columns\nMiscellaneous for Sale\nPIPE AND FITTINGS,\nBARBED  WIRE,   ETC.\nComplete line Pipe and Fittings,\nall sizes; Special 1-lnch Pipe, 8c\nper foot. ]\\'ew Galvanized Barbed\nWire, $4.00 per spool. Roofing\n' Felt, 1-ply, $1.60; 2-ply, $2.00;\n8-ply, $2.65 per roll. Extra heavy\nMineralized Surface, 90 lbs. per\nroll, Special, $3.25. Mixed Wire\nNails, $2.00 per keg. \"Wire Rope,\nCanvas, Logging Supplies and all\nkinds equipment, i\nB. C. JUNK CO.\n195 Powell St. Vancouver, B. C.\n(l'J-i)\nUAltRl-t-S. KKOS AND EMPTY sack-\u2014\nMacDonald Jain Company, Nelson.\n(199-)\nCLASSIFIED ads- bring result! qulcklj\n.and economically     t_e a worn\nMiscellaneous Wanted\nGOOD,   CLEAN   RAOS,   live   cents   a\n\u2022pound.   Daily News.    \"_ (US.)\nHIDES \u2014 3. V. Morgan, Nelaon, B C.\n(1899)\nTELL your wanw throu__  T_\u00ab  Dally\nNewa classified columns.    \t\nMachinery for Sale\nONM R. M. Wade dragsaw. , flrst-elass\nrunning order. Make'roe an offer.\niBearl Martin, Box 39, Ealrao, B.C.\n(183!))\nCLASSIFIED ads bring results quickly\nand econon.lcally.    1 _s n  woru\nFor Sale or Exchange\nFOR  SALE. OR  EXCHANGE \u2014 Light\n.mare.    Spenoo, Boswell. (1750)\nCLASSIFIED ada bring results qulcklj\nand economically.   1 _c a word.\nHelp Wanted '\nPositions Wanted\nLost and Found\nLivestock\nMachinery\nFarm Produce\nTimber and Mine*\nPoultry and Eggs\nS   C. RHODE ISLAND Red Cockerels,\n$r>; good bird*. G. H. Fraser. (19.il)\n-HEEDING COCKERELS\u2014... . , Wilde\nLeghorns from Bolivar ixrtigrvrrt\nmales from 285 ege dam; large \\lg-\nomus birds. $3 each, fob. here. Ilo'-\nmont Poultry Farm, Wlnlnv\nFOR    KALE\u2014Thirty    Leghorn    pulli's.\nforty-two   dollars,   or  one-fifty  each;\nhcirvy   layers.     Albion,   I_lwyn   strrtr.\nFairview,, Nelson. . (1817)\nliltODE ISLAND pullets and cockerels,\n\" J 1.75    each.     Phone   110.     Harilins.\nN.-lson. (1SSP)\nFOR   SALE\u201450   Leghorn   pullets.     Apply G. Janson, sirdar. (1S40)\nBUSINESS AND\nPROFESSIONAL\nDIRECTORY\nAccounting\nCHARLES   F.   HUNTER\u2014\nAuditor, MacDonald Jam Building.\nHex 1101, .Nelson, B.C. (190-1\nTransfer\nATI-msow TBAN-.TEB \u2014 Coal and\nWood.    1'hone  121. (1904)1\nWILLIAMS'    TRAWSrEK\u2014 Baggage.\nCoul and Wood.   1'lrone 106.    (1905)\nWood  Working  Factory\nLAWSON\u2014Below     market.     Cabinets\nand  Cedar chests.  Hardwood  sold.\n (1906)\n Plumbers\t\nWT.   PYHM\u2014Plumbing   and   Heating.    132.  Stanley St. (1907)\nChimney Cleaning\nFOWLES,     Official     Cliimn-y\nCleaner. (1908)\nw*g\nInsurance and Real Estate\nRW.   DAWSON\u2014\n\u2022 Real    Estate,   Insurance,   Rentals.\nnnablu Blk.. I: O. Box 733. Phone 197\n(1909),\nHF..    DILL,    INSURANCE,    FA-tM\n\u2022    AMD   Cm.   PROPERTY.\n608   Ward Street. (19101\nMonuments\nCAMPBELL     ts     RITCHIE,     MONUMENTAL CO.-P. O. Box 865, Nel.\nson.  IU.:.     Telephone   161. (1911)\nChiropractors\nr\\R. R. E. GRAY\u2014Chiropractor, Fho.-an\n*-> 115. Rea 521T. Gllker blk Hours'\n1ft to 12 a.m. 2 to 5 and 7 to 8 p.m..\nexcept   Sundays.   Consultation   free\n (1912)\nA tLAir 8. DODDS, DC\u2014Phones: C86\n\"\u25a0 Office hours: 10-12; 1-4 and hy\nappointment Aberdeen Blk. Nelson, B.C\n.       (J913)\nFlorists\nG\nRIZZELLE'S   OREENHOUSE,   NEL-\nsun.  Cut flowers and floral designs\n(1914)\nVl\/T*- S. JOHNSON\u2014\n\"      Phone   342.  Cut  flowers.   Potted\nI l.-rnts  and   Floral   Emblems. (1915)\nWholesale\nA      MACDONALD  \u00bb CO.\u2014\n..       Wholesale  Grocers and Provision\nMerchants. Imnorters of Teas, Coffees,\nSpices.  Dried Fruits.   Staple and Fanev\nGroceries,  Nelson. B.C. (1916)-\nEngineers\nGreen Bros., Burden C\u201e.\nUELSON.   B.C.\nCITI-.    AND    MININO    ENOINBBBS,\nB.C.,   Alberta   and   Dominion\nLand  Surveyors (1917)\nH\nD.   DAWSON,   Land   Surveyor,\nMining   and   Civil   Engineer.\nKaslo, B.C. (191\u00bb>-\nAssayers\nIf    W. WIDDOWSON, Box A1103, Nol-\nttie sun, B.C.   Standard western charges.\nU9U)\nAuctioneers\nW    CUTLER\u2014\n\u2022 Goods sold privately and at auction.\nNelson   Auction   Mart,   Vernon   street\n(19201\n___\nFuneral Directors\nD.J.ROBERTSON,\nV.   H.  D.   *   B.\nClean, Biiirht  Sanitary  FK*lon\u00bb._ .\nPh.   898. . *.  TiMM   AatO   mttmTMM       ISTb\nBtanflarfl rurnltnr*\nCo. \u2014 UndertaKera,\njrunernl I. irectora.\nAuto Hearse, up-to-\ndate chapel. Best\nservices. Prlce-a\nret-eunnble      (1922>\n-ST_\nBRINGING HP FATHER\ntr\nJSy George McManus\nS*Z_| \\ CSJfrbt) XClO\nHr\\D OET*reR\nI COME-JN-olOEi:\nO 1926 by Int-l Fcaturk Skrvice, Inc.\n'IS. -*L ^'nt B,il*'n rl\u25a0'*\u25a0\u25a0, *\u2022\u00ab\u2022\u00bb\n\"^\n THE NELSON DIILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING,' FEBRUARY 2, 1926\n*\u00ab-J*\nNews of Sport\nALGARY PUTS\n)VER SURPRISE,\nBEATSSHE1KS\nieiks Just Not Fast Enough\n\u25a0 for Hustling Tigers Minus\nHerb Gardiner s\ni air\n'igers\narn th\nCALGARY,       Feb.       L\u2014Calgary's\nuised,   battered   and   much   abused\n>ckey   team   came   into   their   own\nth\u00a3   arena   Monday    night   when\nupset   the   calculations   of   the\nleading   Saskatoon   Whelks  by\na  4  to   2  victory.     It  was  a\n1-dng   game    in    which    the\nIsplnyed     more     finish     to\nerdict.    The  triumph was\necured  v\\\nout  the aid  of  the ster*\nng   dPfone;   gjgj.   1Ierb    f;\u201erdiner,\n|t of a lex Injury, re*\nouver . recently,   wit*\nCoach Urges\nCagers to Sing\nBefore Games\nI WONt>. R WMFRE\nM-   BABf   19\nTONIGHT *\n\u2022p+o~     .\nWHATS THE-\nB\\Cf   IPffAT\n5IN6IH6 eCFOKE\nA -SAt-Ae\nTO SING OP NOT TO SINS BEFORE\nA BA5KETBAU OR FOOTBALL GAMS'?\n\u2022'ho, as a rei\npIvp.i at V\nnfinefl to his v<i\nj Saskatoon pVtf&ftfe h\\l but it\n.-as not enough. \u00ab&W>\u00abmi\u00ab up the\n^hrllHnrr contest which ->Vas spat ling  with   outstanding?   WCUyeV\nTisrrs  in   -Running\nThe   triumph   keeps   Ufe   flRera   in!\n\u25a0he  running  for   the   playoff   hrtes, ]\n\"ni   the   set   ba.-k   did   nr.i   liandffcap\niskaloon a great deal as they fete*\ncomfortable    lead    lu    the    league\nice   and   are  pnu'iic-a) y   certain   of\nI guring  in  the  championship  series.\n\u00abas a  pretty  game   of  hockey,   in\nhlch   speedy   skating,   clever   corn-\nnation  and  sensational  goulkeeptng\nlayed   the   important   part.     Hains-\north    was    In ilhant,    and    hut    for\narvf-ll.ius saves fn ihe last  If. mln-\ntes,    the    score    would    have    been\nne-Nidort   an' the   Sheiks   being   two\n>als   down   paid   more   attention   to\nitack   than   defence   and   this    en-\nbled    the   Tigers   to    get    right    In\nn  top of the Saskatoon  goalkeeper.\nVlnkler    too    was    ln     fine     form,\nlthough       he       did       not       have\nI   many  close  ln  shots   to  pave.\nSummary\nFirst period\u20141, Calfary, Hi Men,\n\u2022om Oliver, 5:35; 2, Saskatoon, De.\nenny, from F. Conk, r>:4.1; 3, K:is-\nitoon, iiill r0\u00ab.k, 3:40.\nSecond period\u20144. Calgary. Oliver,\nom   Dutton.   5:25.\nThird period\u2014f.. Calgary, Duncan,\n2:21; (.. Calgary, Oliver, Cnuri WU-\nin,    7:01).\nIViuillies\nFirst   period\u2014Duncan.   Oliver.\nSecond    period\u2014Dutton,    10    min.\nJtes,  F.  Cook,  Gordon   Wilson,   mln-\ns.\nThird period\u2014L. Scott, minor,\nl.lneiip\nCalgary        Position        Saskatoon\ntloal\nVlnkier .... .**..\".    Hainswnrth\n1 Defence\nllcFarlnne       T_else\njut ton       Cameron\n1 Forwards\ntunean     Denenny\nlllver   W. Cook\ntriden       Scott\n,, Substitutes\nyllson    \u2022    F. Cook\n'eudiey       Bourgalt\natman      Cordon\nY*S Sh?.THAT'S\nMY 0A0Y - NO\n$\\H,V0c4T MCAN\n)klahoma City\nGolfers Captare\nAmatenr-Pro Match\nHOT SPniNC.S, Ark., Feb. L\u2014Pill\n>e.avy, professional of the Oklahoma\nily, Okla., Country club, and ll. B,\n\u2022laid, a member of the < klahoma\n'Ity club, today captured the limn-\nVeur-pro low hall match, opening\n\u25a0Ivent of the south central golf tourna-\nSent. The Oklahomans won in a ono-\n\u25a0jiole playoff this afternoon with John\n,'lolden of 1'aterson. N. .!., ami June\nbolton, lMne Bluff, Ark., amateur,\njfter tleing In the 18-hole morning\nJound   with  o  medal  score  nf  US.\n;\nWINS  ON   FOUL\nI.OCHESTBR, N. Y., Feb. L\u2014Fred-\nhie Mueller of Buffalo won on a foul\nrom Basil Gallann of New Orleans\njn the*,ninth round nf a scheduled  10-\n-ound   bout   here  toniirht.\nThis Lassie Has Her\nColds\"RubbedAway\"\nThe mother of thia attractive little girl,\nMrs. E. E. Emmana, of 215 Seventh Ave.,\nN. E\u201e Portage La Prairie, Man., is one\nof the many Canadian mothers who are\niastic about the vaporizing salve,\nVapoRub, for treating children's\ncolds. Mrs. Emmars writes: \"My little\nriri had croup at night pretty badly and\nVicks did her a lot of good. I have also\nBed it with very satisfactory results for\nlead and chest colds.\"\nVfcks is just \"rubbed on\" for sore\n; tonsilitis, bronchitis, croup or\nchest colds. When so applied,\nhas a double direct action: inter-\nmedicated vapors are inhaled while,\nsame time, sHerwtlly, it is ab-\nthrough and stimulates the -kin.\n\u25bc   VAPORUB\n(hs* 21 Miiuqn Jars Used Yearly\nTy AL DEMAREE\n(Ferrnor Pitcher, N. Y. Giants)\nA. A. S-habinger, athletic director\nand basketball coach at Creignton\n.\u25a0niver.ily at Omaha, Net.., and Ahm-\n7.m Start, at .1. tic director at the\nUniversity of (.'hicagn, don't agree on\none thing\u2014snKing before an athletic\nrunt.st.\nDur.ng the pant football season\nStagg tonk one nf his gridsters to\ntask fo: singing before the Penn-\nChicago pm , which Chicago lost,\n7-0.\nburins the I nketball reason at\nCrelghton un 'verslty, Coach Bohjiblng-\n>i encei-treffS ni* honpsters to sing\nbefore games, 20 they tan keep their\nmind Uf the cum ing battle. Frank\nRyan, captain ami forward, Is Lbs\ntenor nf .the winning i-uintet.\nAnd incidentally, C&a-Otl Sch*iblnil-\ner's ting ng system is pretty \u2022uoofeM-\nful as ho has turned out three consecutive North Cent.al conference1\nbasketball champion*, and expects to\nadd hi*\" fourth conference scalp this\nwinter.\nVANCOUVER AND\nPORTLAND PLAY\nONE-GOAL TIE\nOvertime Fails to Produce\nScore; Cooler Is Popular\nDuring Game\nVANCOUVER, Feb. L\u2014Vancouver\nand I'ortland played to a 1-all tie here\ntonight In 0 western hockey league\ngame. In only -the second period was.\nthere   any   scoring.\nIt was the first overtime game on\nlectl ice this season. Hay and Arbour\nnetted the scores on hrilliant solo efforts, ln the extra session both t*.-anis\nbad a chance to score, but threw aside\nthe opportunity. In the, first session\nthe home team had more shots on\nRc.i.1, hut play nn Ihe whole waa ewci\nThere waa a ste-iriy stream of players*\nto the cooler In the second st: nzn\nhard cherk1n\u2122 and tripping seemod th*\norder of the play, with the result thai\nt-lpht penalties were handed out, Traub\nr_!ng ruled off three timps.\nA   Dlng'Dong   Oanit\nHay oppnert the scoring rifrht after\nMackay had left the Ice aft^r being\nhit In the mouth with fl puck, illsnr-\nRiinzinir the Maroon defence. Tlnuche\ni nd At hour combined on several occasions to give McCusl-er a warm tlm*\nin the Portland net, and thpn Arbour\nworked tlirmr-h the defence lo senrr-\nr1 ving the gofttle ao chance tn save.\nThe third period was a diiiK-t1**.n*. affair, the home -team heing* content tn\ntry long shots and the visitors trying\nto begt the Maroon defence.\nSummary\nPint  period\u2014No s-^ore.\nSecond period\u20141, Portland, Hay,\nr.:_J3;   2,   Vancouver,  Arbor,   TlSi.\nThird   period\u2014No   sooi e.\nPenal tits\nFirst   period\u2014None.\nSecond per'nd\u2014Traub, Moran, Traub,\nTownsend. I.utkowskf, Trapp, irtouelier,\nTraub.   all   two   minutes.\nThird   period   and   overtime\u2014None\nLine-up\nFortlnnd      Position      Vancouver\nCoal\nMcCusker       Lehman\nQe fence\nMiCormiek    . . :\t\nDutnwskl   \t\nForward\nMackey\n.   Moian\nTraub\nIrvln\nHay   .\nI\nDot at y\n\u2022Substitutes\nMackay\n. Arbour\nBoucher\nRetnlkn\nRisa\nCardiff, Wales, supports fnur baseball leagues, one of which is a women's league.\nThe Kentucky Futurity nf 192(1 for\nfnais will have a guaranteed value of\n.21,000.\nThe Athletic Association of Princeton university spent nearly $43,1100\nfor  sports  last year.\nA polo contest will lie held between horsewomen from Philadelphia\nand   Baltimore  next spring.\nJefferson Dickson nf Jackson, Miss.,\nis in cnmpleie control of indoor\nboxing   in   Palis,   Fiance.\n\u25a0Ine Rivers, the old California lightweight, is now an accomplished violinist and  lives in Los Angeles.\nBecause rugby remains strictly\namateur, schools in England are\nadopting the game Instead of association   football.\nThe California Hoxing commission\nhas ivsned an edict that fighters\nmust use their own names in rings\nIn the state.\nVincent Richards of Yonkers, N.Y.,\nhas been Invited by the Japanese\nLawn Tennis ass acia tlon to play\nin   lhat   country   eaily  this   year.\nThe longest distance for which\nthere Is any recognized running record is too mites, the time being 17\nhours 3ti minutes and  14 seconds.\nStakes and purses amounting to\n$12,000,000 will be distributed on\nthe American turf this year. These\nprizes are the ilchest of nny country   in   the   world.\nPhiladelphia is making every effort for the Army-Navy football\ngame this year because of the Ses-\nqul*3entennial. Accommodations are\noffered  for  100,000  spectators.\nCilmour Doble, who ranks high In\ntho coaching woild, is called \"Oloomy\nOil.*' This is due to the fact that before a big grid battle he is one of\nthe most pessimistic personages\nknown.\nA sports arena, modeled after the\nnew Madison Square Garden, In New\nYork City, will he built in Chicago.\nThe proposed building will cost |5t-\n900,000 and have n seating capacity\nof  45000.\nAccording \u25a0\u25a0 to Colonel \u2022\u2022 Henry\nBreckinridge; president of the National Amateur Athletic,'Federation,\nbaseball among the small' boys of the\nUnited States has,' fallen off 60\nper cent in the last'three 'yeuM.\nThe ashes'of Andy Smith,'noted\nfootball coach of the Universly of\nCalifornia, were scattered over the\nMemoilul Stadium from an army\nairplane..piloted by Lieutenant John\nR, Glas.-ock, former California football  player  under   Smith.\n'\"\"-\u25a0\u25a0 \u25a0 \u25a0Cf-1     '      '\u25a0'\"\u25a0*\nOrTAH^A CANADIANS\nDEFEAT VICTORIAS\nOTTAWA, Feb. 1.\u2014Playing superior\nhockey at practically all stages of\nihe game, Ottawa Canadlens scored\na 5 to 2 triumph over Montrenl Victorias here tonight in a Quebec Amateur association game.\n__________M\nTrupp    Waite\nTownsend      Connolly\nHowe    ',   Rostrum\nIt' jeree\u2014Mi .-key    lion.\nBOYSWlfiT\nWESTERN TITLE\nDefeats Brownlee 476 Points in\nFinal Game; Goes for\nDominion Title\nW1NNJPF\/-, Feb. l.-Std Roys, Eng\nlirh billiard champion of British Co-\nlumhta,* defeated Tom Brownlee. Man\nItobn I'hnn.pion by 4Tfi points in the\nfinal game of 41*00 up for ihe western\nCanada professional billiard eham\nplnnshlp.    The match ended tonight.\nRoys thus wins Ihe western title\nfor the first time, ihe second Vancouver man tn do sn since the competition wan Inliialed three years ago.\nHe will go to Toronto to play the\np 'icrn champion for the Dominion\ntille.\nThf match today was strongly con\ntea ted. Brownlee, who sLar.ed f.00\npoints behind, made supreme efforts\nto-catch his opponent but the lead\nwas too great. On the play, however, he scored a total of 1424 pn'nt.\nto the 1400 made by Boys during the\nday's session.\nThe best breaks were: Fovs\u2014113.\n100, flil, 84, 77, 60, 55, 46, 42 \".twbe1\nand 41; Brownlee\u2014R5, 82, 61, 60, 5*1,\nf.7, 56, 51, 47, 40 and numerous 30s.\nBABE HERMAN\nKAJOES DATT(\nCLEVELAND. Feb. 1.\u2014BabeJIer-\nman, New York featherweight\nknocked out Johnny Datto, Cleveland, ln the final round of a furiou**\n12    round   bout   here   tonight.\nBud Gorman, New Yolk, heavyweight won a technical knockout over\nBilly Matthews, Baltimore, in the\nfirst round of an eight-round semifinal.\nGrand Forks Hands\nGreenwood Beating\nby Five Goals to Three\nGRAND FORKS, Feb. I.\u2014-Grand\nForks won from Greenwood, 5 to 2,\nin rt league hockey fixture at Greenwood on Saturday night. Each t^am\nhas now two games on, their opponent's ice and will, this week, start a\nhome \"and home series* with goals to\ncount, to qualify for a try at the\nprovincial   championship.\nLEADER TROPHY ~.\nF1NDS_AN OWNER\nREGINA, Feb. 1.\u2014First trophies to\nbe won In the provincial bonsplel' here\nwere taken by Bill Duncan, Weyburn,\nand Edward McKee of Hegina, in the\nearly draw tonight Duncan won the\nLeader trophy final' hy* defeating\nStephens of Assinlhola In a free scoring game, lit to IS. McKee scored a\n12-8 win over Turner of Cupar to\ncarry  off the  Imperial Life  mug.\nLEO (KID) ROY IS\nWINNER BY FOUL\nPHILADELPHIA,' .Feb. .. l.-^Leo\n(Kid) Roy, Montreal, won from Denny\nKramer, Philadelphia, nn a foul In\nthe first round of their scheduled 10-\nround   windup  at   the   arena   tonight.\nClevis (Kid) Durand, Montreal, 114,\nwon the judges* decision over Tresco\nJohnson of North Cnrnllna, 112 \"i;\nwhile A| Gordon fit Philadelphia, J30.\nwas given the judges' decision over\n\"Red Cap'' Wilson of New York, 13TH,\nin the third preliminary bout.\nKNIGHTS WIN BY   !\nFOURTEEN PINS\nCatholic Bowlers Victors in a\nVery Close Came With\nRotarians\nKnlghta of Clumhus 'bowl, rn ' all\nbut lost the .game lufl night with\nthe Rotftry club, c.imlnK -out fltl\nthe long end of the wore-with the\nsmall lead  of 14 pins.\nThis was the closest gnme nb far\nof all the games played in the city,\ntwhedule thin winter, and was the)\nflrHt half of the Bemi-finnls of the\nfour lowest teams of the eight teams\nin   the   le.'rgue.\nA.    A.    Perrler   of   et   hRotnrlann\nmade the highest  individual scor. of\nSH'pinn arid C. .Heasllp of the same\nteam  made the highest aggregate of\n50fl   plnn.     ' .\u2022   -\n.   Tho _amo by Rounris\nKnightn of ColumbuH\u2014\n1st.   2nd.\n117\nlis\n15S\nty\nA. Choquette\nC. McKinnon\nA.   Sranlon\nL.  McKinnon\n117\n183\n177\n182\nSrd. Ttls.\n1.2\u2014 392\nH8\u2014 456\n15(1\u2014 485\n128\u2014 485\nTotal,\nnotary  flub\u2014\n.585\n578\u20141822\nC. Heanllp ..\nA. B. Gllker\nA. A. Perrier\n1st.\n.181\n.134\n.181\nL.   Kerr       176\n2nd.\n172\n134\n139\n124\n2rd.\n1-6-\n130-\n212-\n11 ft\u2014\nTtls.\n\u25a0 609\n- 398\n-482\n\u25a0 419\nTotals   622    569    617\u20141808\nCANADA UNITED\nSEEN BY THORNTON\nSees  Canadian  National  Playing Leading Role in Near\n\u2022   Future of Dominion\nTORONTO, Feb. 1.\u2014A Canada\nunited, self-contained within itself\nand animated by a national viewpoint with the Canadian National\nrailway? playing a leading role In US\nupbuilding, Vfti the vls(nn of the\nfuture unfolded by Sir Henry Thornton, chairman and president of the\nCanadian National railway today at\none of the largeKt luncheons in the\nhistory of the Cnnadian club. The\nCanadian National railways, snld .Sir\nH.nrv. was rapidly approHrhing the\nday when It would cease tn be a bur-\nl.n  on  the  people  of  Canada.\nlie emphasized the fact that Canadians must look upon the development of their country in* a broad\n\u25a0pti It, unolouder* by sectionalism,\nnterest or prejudice.\n'\"The Canadian i.\u201eiinn;tl rnilwiiyn,\"\nSir Henry continued, \"is necessarily\nbound up In the future cf Canada\nand ihey will eilher ninke rtjr break\nher just as you dictate. r If is now\nthree years since the present National syi-tem, with its 22,000 stretch of\nmileage, has been under the direction\nof the present management Lately\nwe have heard the financial condition ot the Cunndlnn N.nionnl railway referred to mm rrUin-l in some\npnrth. Within the last three years\nthe. net earnings from operation increased fiom KM ihun ja.Oflft.Oftfl ttl\n11)22  to ..ppri.xlm.m'ly  |8M0&-Ht in\nBLOOD PRESSURE\nIS NOT DISEASE\nCommon to. Everyone; Is Merely an Index, Doctor *\nc 7.',. _ Says\nNEW YORK, Feb. 1.\u2014In a talk\nRecently, Dr. Edward S. McSweeny,\nmeitleal director of the New York\nTelephone company, said: \"Blood\npressure ,ln a'word is an index,' not\nji disease, and every one has a\nblood pressure juat as every one has\n\u25a0 piilne. To keep it normal la largely\nwithin our own control. When abnormal the reason can be found only by\nteste which often puzzle and worry\nif ha 'cleverest doctor as to their\nmeaning betore he finds the answer,\n'You can help yourself by letting him\ndo the  worrying.\"\nDr. McSweeny's was one of a program of weekly health talks which\ni-he state department of health has\nbeen broadcasting for nearly four\nlyears. 'These talks probably have\nheen heard by hundreds of thousands\nof persons during this period, and\nmany listeners have written to the\ndepartment for further Information\n.it-out the various subjects discussed.\n\"The popular saying, 'One's hlood\npressure should be the sum of one's\nage plus 100,' while in general true,\"\nsaid Dr. MeSweeny, \"is, like many\nsuch sayings, apt to be absolutely\nwrong when applied *to any one Individual. There is no such thing aa a\nstandard blood pressure to which\nevery one of a given age should conform, ln fact, even In the individual\nthere are daily differences; slight\nvariations occur by reason even of\nchanging the position from lying\ndown to standing up, or after meals.\nIt is foolish therefore, for any one\nto attach Importance to having lowered or raised his blood pressure a\nfew paints.\nThe only one who can Interpret\nyour blood pressure reading intelligently ls the physician who has a\nknowledge of many other things about\nyour individual body and your health.\nThe physician who Is most likely to\nhave this knowledge is the one who\nhas been your' physician for some\ntime.\n\"In general, low blood pressure indicates a lack of general tone. High\nblood pressure, on the other hand, directs attention to certain diseases,\nsuch as the changes due to advancing\nyears and, especially ln women, disturbances of middle age.\nTest   Is   Necessary\n\"Only by taking a blood pressure\nreading with the instrument made for\nthe purpose can it be determined accurately, and often the blood pressure shown by the Instrument is the\nfirst suggestion to patient or physician that one of the things it may\nindicate Is present. A blood pressure\ntest, therefore, should be a part of\nevery good examination, for these\nconditions, like all others, are most\neffectively and often successfully\ntreated only when discovered early.\n\"Visible throbbing arteries do not\nmean high blood pressure, nor does\nloss of blood necessarily lower it.\nTlgh blood pressure does not signify\nloo much blood or any change at all\nhi   the   blood   itself,   but   means   that\n\"TRY A NIP TONIGHT\"\nBEST PROCURABLE\n7sCa\noff\u2014*\n\u2022 OTTIED t 6U\u00bb\u00ab\u00bbNTIJDjr \/J\nfer^^sf*-^\nW-OOUCt    Or     SCOTLAND    \\^\nThe Original Libel \u2014 look for tt st the Vendor's and insist on\nGRANT'S \"BEST PROCURABLE\"\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of British\nColumbia.    *\ntiie blood la attempting to circulate\nunder abnormal resistance.\n\"That 'one is as old,as his arteries'\nis another popular saying. High blood\npressure too often shows that the patient, while perhaps knowing this old\nsaw, has not realized what he could\ndo to influence the matter; by overeating and drinking, chronic constipation and repeated unnecessary colds\nand other infections he has carried\na load for years under which he has\nfinally broken down.\n\"Nature provides a wide margin of\nsafety for most of us, but lt ls not\nInexhaus table. The ills which we\ngenerally class as petty or trivial, frequently repeated, and bad habits of\nhygiene long continued are probably\nmuch more concerned In most of us\nin determining whether we live as\nlong as we should and are able to\nenjoy such length of life as Is given\nus than the comparatively few serious\ndiseases which are common among\nadults. You cannot buy a lower\nblood pressure. The most a skilled\nphysician can give you is advice\nwhich you and only you can carry\nout. Regret and remorse may save\nyour soul, but will lower your blood\npressure but very little If years of\nbad living or neglect have raised lt\nto a high point.\n\"On the other hand, if high blood\npressure is found and leads to the\ndiscovery of kidney disease, and if it\nshould indicate syphilis a cure can\nbo effected. If, on the other hand,\nthe high blood pressure ls only, a\ntemporary phenomenon, one of many\nsymptoms of a natural 'change which\nwill pass in a short time, there is\nno need to be unduly alarmed about\nit; the measures which favorably\nInfluence such states will also affect blood pressure and help to keep\nit within bounds until it. returns to\nnormal. A blood pressure, well below normal limits indicates the necessity of finding out what is the cause\nof the poor condition and eradicating\nit.\"\nFarrell of Chicago\nWins States Title in\nSkating Championship\nBINGHAMTON. N.Y., Feb. 1. \u2014.\nO'Neil Farrell of Chicago with 70\npoints, tonight won the American\nEndtdott, N.Y. Paul Foreman and\nLew Morris, both of New York City.\ntied for second with SO points In the\nnational  skating  championships.\nEuropean scientists are experimenting in the use of electricity to\nclean the teeth.\nCanadian:\ni,, pacific\nWINTER SAILINGS\nFrom Saint John to Europe.\nTO .CITBmPOOL\nFeb   12, Mar. 12\nFeb. 19, Mar   19,  'April 16.\nFeb.   26,   \"April   I\t\n\u2022Mar.    5    \t\nMar,   26   \t\nApril l, from New York.\nApril 9 Montcalm\nApril 23   Metagams\n\"Calls at Greenock for Glasgow\ntO CHEMOTJRO-BOTTTKAKrrO.*-\n. .Montcalm\n. .Montdare\n. .Montrose\n. Metagama\n.Montnalrn\n. .Muntroyal\nFeb. 17, Mar. IS    Marloch\nApril  1    MlnnedoM\nApril   15    Melil*\nFor rates, detailed information and\nreser.ationB, apply to Local Agents\n.verywhere, or write\nJ. 8. CASTES\nDiet, rassgs. Art.. Helson. B.O.\nOLD COUNTRY I\nFOOTBALL RESULTS\nLOVDOK, Feb. 1.\u2014The draw for\n.he fifth round nC the English football association cup competition is\nas   follows\nClaptnn-Newcnstle.\nBury   or   Millwall-Rwansea.,  ,\nSunderland -Tottenham or Manchester  I'nUed.\nNotts   County-FulhAm.\nSouthend-Not is   Forest,\nBournemouth or Bolton-South\nShields,   Shield..\nAitonvttta-Arsenal.\nManchevtf i    City-Crystal   Palare.\nTho garnet, will be played on the\nground*, of ihe first named clubs on\nFebruary   20. *   i\nSUZA\u00a5NYlilAiN~\nWINS HER GAMES\nKir*::. Pran-e, Feb, 1.\u2014Mile. Suzanne Lenglen, French champion,\n\"*\u2022\u25a0 \u25a0*\u25a0 thi a* * ah he first round of the\ningles In the N'i e tennis tournament\nifitj,^. defeate-*** Miss l_.mlly Haeffely\nu\" England* 6-0, R-0. Then, paired\n\u25a0llh l.a*-o\u00ab Henri do Morphurgo, she\ncfraied M'lc. lMn-rns and Paul Jaure-\ni In*, i.v by *i similar score,\n'1 he assurance that Helen Wills\nnd P\"*nnne Lenglen will meet across\nhe t.**--:.** net.-i fur the first time In\nhe-Nle tournriment, which opened\nodav. even if \"ily In the mixed\n'ouhle <. f-a\"Bed a ypiriled rush for the\nnv offl e todny.\nMlllltlllllltlUIIHIII^\nThis advertisement Is not published\nor displayed by the Liquor Control\nBoard or by the Government ot\nBritish   Columbia. *\n\u2022>_.*.    \\i,\nifes-OircTfrnt! (lompann\n4 \u2014co*fro\u00bbt\u00abf\u00a5ff .    ,.!*v\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb\u00bb mro     Jl ~si\nAfter Inventory Reductions\nA Few Special Lines We Are Offering to Make\nRoom for New Goods.\nDry Goods Department\nKNITTING WOOLS\u2014Double Floss, 2-ply\nshades.    1-oz. balls, 2 for \t\nSUPERIOR FINGERING 4-PLY YARN\nBotany Wool, in all shades.   1-oz. bal\nEXCELLO SUPERIOR FINGERING 4-\nPearl, cocoa, black, brown, scarlet, he\nDOUBLE KNITTING YARN\u2014Spun fr\nnew shades.    2-oz. balls, each \t\nHORROCKSES WHITE ENGLISH FLA\nture.   Washes well.   33 inches wide.\nSTRIPED FLANNELETTE\u2014In a good\nweave and will wash well.   34 inches\nyam, spun from fine quality wool, in all\n ZSf\nof medium weight.   Made from Austrian\nIs, 2 for 45<\nPLY YARN\u2014Medium weight.    Colors:\nather.   Per lb $2.5\u00a9\nom fine quality long fibre wool, in all\n 35**\nNNELETTE\u2014Finely  woven,  light  tex-\nYard  45**\nassortment of  stripes.     Extra  strong\nwide.   At, yard 30\u00a3\nLadies' Wear Department\nBig reductions in Ladies' Coats, in   Velours,   Duvetyns   and   Marvella,   fur\ntrimmed.    Some with flare bottom; others made on straight lines.\nRegular $69.50, Special Price ...!?35.00\nRegular $59.50, Special Price $20.50\nRegular $49.50, Special Price $17.50\nRegular $19.50, Special Price $10.95\nLADIES* WOOL PULL-ON SWEATERS\u2014In a fine jumbo knit.    Turtle neck.\nWhite or sand.   Each $6.50\nLADIES' ALL-WOOL TOQUES\u2014With  large pom-pom on top.   Red, fawn, blue\nand white.   From 85^ to $1.25\nMen's Wear\nSpecial Stock-Taking Reductions\nMEN'S PULLOVER SWEATERS\u2014All  pure Wool.      Contrast stripes; V-neck.\nNew price    $3.50\nMEN'S ALL-WOOL UNIVERSAL MAKE COAT SWEATERS\u2014In maroon.   New\n$4.50\nprice\nWOLSEY UNDERWEAR\u2014Pure Wool   Shirts  and  Drawers.      New  price  at,\neach  $3.25\nMEN'S WORK SHIRTS\u2014Khaki Moleskin.   All sizes.   New price  $2.50\nShoe Department\nWe Have a Few Pairs of LADIES' STRAP SLIPPERS to clear at very attractive prices for a speedy sale. Patent Leather or Black Kid Strap Slippers.\nSize 3 only.    Pair j ,     $2.05\nBLACK KID\u2014Patent \"Leather Tan Kid and Calf Strap Slippers. Values to\n$8.50.   Nearly all Sizes in the lot.   Clearing, pair  $4.05\nSIX PAIRS ONLY, LADIES' BLACK KID OXFORDS\u2014Sizes 6*\/2, 7, V\/i and 8.\nCushion sole and rubber heels.   At, per pair  .' $2.05\nBLACK KID OXFORDS\u2014Size 3, 4 and 5\u00bb\/2 only.   Clearing  .......$3.05\n r       Page Eighl *\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, TUESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 2, 1926\nThe Ark\nSPECIALS are the lowest priced\ngoods in the city. Come and examine\nour Wilton, Axminster and Linoleum\nRugs; buy one to brighten up your\nhome. Ladles' Pilk Hose, all colors,\n50\u00a3 pair; Silk-and-Wool, <W)\u00a3 Pair.\nfcilk Bloomers, gl.75 Pair- *iTLT~\ngains in Underwear.\nJ. W. HOLMES\nPhone 534\n606 Vernon * St\nGOOD GLASSES\nIf    You    Need    Them\u2014\nGOOD ADVICE IF YOU DON'T\nExamining     Eyes    snd     Fitting\nGlasses  Is Our Life's Work\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOPTOMETRIST   &   OPTICIAN\nFor Satisfaction, Try\nDOMINION   DAIRY\nPHONE 188L2\nOur Milk ls FRESH, and ls \u00ab\u00ab11t-\n.red to you from our own nerd In\ness than 6 hour-\nCity Drug & Stationery Co.\nPHONE 34     Nelson, B.C.     BOX 1083\nDispensing  Chemists\nBooks,     Kodaks,    Stationery    and\nChocolates\nQuality and Service\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPrescription Specialist\nin   hU-'ineKs  for   your  health.    Let  us\nfill   your   prescriptions.     Mail   orders\npromptly executed.    Call and wait for\nyour  oe>r.    Phone  1.\nNetted Gem\nPotatoes\nFrom the Main Line.   The Best Table\nPotatoes  in   British  Columbia.\nLot Us Have Your Order.\nFLEMING'S STORE\nFAIRVIEW\nMelson Business College\nEVENING CUSSES\nIndividual  Tuition\nIncrease Your Salary\nCHERRY TREES\nPEAR   OR   ANY   FRUIT  TREES\nOrder now for early spring delivery,\ndA there is a shortage.\nFirst-Class   Trees\u2014Guaranteed\nRutherford Drug. Co., Nelson\nPrescription &  Mail Order Specialists\nNASH\nAll NASH Advance Six Sedans\nhave Seven-bearing Crankshaft,\n4-Whc.l   Brakes  on   All   Models.\nNASH    ADVANCE   SIX\nSpvr'n \u2022 Pawtngtr       Four - Door\n.   Sedan  $3585.00\nFive - Passenger     Four - Door\n*\u25a0\u00ab\u2022\u25a0>\u00bb  82630.00\nFive  -  P&nenger     Two - Door\nSr-dnn      $2450.00\nSeven-Passenger   Touring\n$2550.00\nPlve-Paeeenger Tourttrf\n$2200.00\nTwo-Paaeenger r.oad..ter\n $2360.00\nFour-Pa sstingaf Rc*_3-_tk_\n $2520.00\nNASH  SPECIAL SIX\nFivo - Paasenget     Four - Door\n-Man  $2495.00\nFive - ra-senper Four - Door\nSedan  $2270.00\nFive - rasMonftr'r Two - Door\nSedan  $2090.00\n1 .vo-P;isnonr.pr   Touring\n - $1060.00\nTwo-Passenger Coupe\n- $1995.00\nTwo-Passenger   Ko.id-.ter\n - $1960.00\nNASH-AJAX\n.-WHEEL BRAKES\n7-BEARING CRANKSHAFT\nFour-Door  Sedan.  $1705.00\nTouring   $1485.00\nPrices   Subject   to   Changs\nWithout Notice\nDodge and Nash Cars\nCAPITOL MOTORS\nGEORGE W. PEASE, Manager\nOpp.  Post  Office.  Nelson,  B.  C.\nPHONE   65\nWANTED\nOn or about February 4, ten or more teams\nheavy horses, to work by the day or on a ton-\nmile basis. Teams should be 30 cwt. or over.\nSleigh and equipment to be supplied by owner.\nFor further information, apply\nCITY ENGINEER'S OFFICE,\nNELSON\nOpera House\nWEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 3\n(Two Performances, at 3 and 8:30)\nEXCEPTIONALLY FINE ATTRACTION!\nCAM6R0NMATTH6WS\nAND HIS DISTINGUISHED\"\nZ   ENGLISH  COMPANY\nPresent for the First Time Here the Screamingly Funny\nComedy\n*Too Many Husbands'\nBy 80MERSET MAUGHAM, Author of 'The Circle,' 'Our Betters,' etc.\nONE   YEAR   IN   L0ND0N1 ONE YEAR  IN  NEW YORKI\nA   RIOT   IN    VANCOUVER!\nSeats Now on  Sale at City Drug Store.\nPOPULAR    PRICES\nEvening:  $1.65,  $1.10, 80c.    Popular Matinee:  Adults,\n$1.10; Children, BOc.\nE\nH HOUSE\nOPENS SESSH\nTHIS I\nState    Coach,    Search    of\nVaults and All Ancient\nCustoms to Be Observed\nPRINCE OF WALES\nWILL BE ABSENT\nRamsay    MacDonald    Also\nAway; New Bills Are\nReady as Is Speech\nLONDON, Feb. 1.\u2014The state coach\nand all tho customary medieval trappings .or royal ceremony will again\nbe displayed for the delight of London citizens In their majesty's procession to open the second session\nof the present parliament tomorrow.\nIn keeping with .custom, alao in remembrance of tho notorious Guy\nPawkea, the vaults under tho house\nof parliament will be searched early\nIn tho morning, and nothing will ho\nomitted from the ancient and picturesque  ceremonial.\nTho only noteworthy departure\nfrom CUStonu Will he the ahsenc? of\nthe Prince of Wales from the state\nprocession, owing to his inability to\nilnn a State uniform because of Mi\nrecent accident. Me is making an\nexcellent recovery, and it is possible\nUnit he will witness the ceremony an\na peer of.* the realm in ordinary\ndress,\nAnother notable absentee of the\nrealm will be ,\/. Ramsay .MacDonald.\nwho will not return from Ceylon\nuntil the end of the week. J. ft.\nClynes will fill hie place as leader\nof the opposition temporarily.\nAn Important Session\nTho Session Of parliament just\nopening should bo one of the greatest\nImportance, The speech from the\nthrone was rend privately at official\nbanquets given in the house of lords\nand the house of commons by tho\nprime minister, Stanley llnkHvin.\nThese nre also very ceremonious\nfunctions, uniforms and orders being\nworn. When the servants retire, the\nspeech is read for private information.\nThe speech Is expected to refer to\nthe government's hops of a peaceful\nsettlement with Turkey over the\nMosul; to the Italian debt settlement, to Ihe coming Imperial conference, and to European affairs\nconcerned >ln the peace settlement\nand the Geneva activities. Its legislative program will probably be short\nbecause the government wishes to\nkeep time in hand to deal with th\"\ncool question arising from the report\nnf the royal eommlsj-don, to be issued\nabout  a  month hence.\nBaldwin Has Majority\nIi will be a very busy session, with\nthe government's new economy bill,\nI..n electrical power scheme and its\nmeasures for assisting agriculture, to\nsay nothing of Chancellor Churchill's\nbudgetary difference 'increasing revenue to counterbalance the \u00a3 20,000, \u2022\n0(K) expended un the coul mining subsidy. The Pa Id win government Will\nmeet parliament In undiminished\nstrength, retaining practically intaci\nits majority nf 200 over all the\nother  parties.\nLahni*. as the official opposition* is\nlittle changed from last session, but\ntho small Liberal party of about 50\nmembers is more divided than ever,\nhaving throe warring sections, with\nthroats of further secessions in follow the Mond incident. One such\nsecession was announced today in the\nperson of E. I-'. Eni wlstle, who. although not now a member of parliament, was In l!)24 deputy chairman Of\nthe committee of ways and moans.\nHe, like Sir Alfred Mond, has gone\nover   to  the Conservatives.\nBOPSSHAS\nDECLARATION\nCE\nOpposition to Premier King\nIssues Deft to Any\nParty Whips\nFAVOR CONSTRUCTION\nOF HUDSON BAY LINE\nRemoval Income Tax, Reduction Auto Duties, Senators for Term on Program\nP1UNCI-. ALBEP.T. Feb. 1 \u2014lit ('apt.\nDavid 1. Burgess. M.C. a farmer of\nthe Mar Dowel) district near here. Who\nentered the Prim-- Albert byelection\ncontest Monday, Premier King has\nfruiut an obstacle m his Immediate return to tbe sett v.- leadership of the\nLibera) party in the house of commons, The nomination nf Captain\nBurgess us an independent candidate\ncame lis somewhat nf a surprise, although rumors had been broadcast to\nthe effect that, a \"dark horse\" eantft-\ndete was entering the list in opposition to the premier. His papers were\nfiled at. the last moment, and when\nthe Independent nomination was announced    then*    was   an    outburst    of\nleughtei-   from   a   group   of\nLiberals\ngathered   in   the   mom.     \"It's   ;\n\u25a0i   Joke.\"\none  called  out.   While  another\nShouted\nWe will  get his deposit-\"\nWill   tTnit\u00ab   -Partiea\nPremier    King,    in    eommeni\ning     on\nih- de\\elopment, said the effee\nt of Mr.\nBurgess' nomination would be\nto unite\nmore  closely   the   Liberal and   '\nI'rogres-\n.-\u25a0ive  forces.\nThe necessity of a contest may result in a change in the premier's\npchedule.    He hod  proposed  to return\ntu Ottawa on 'Tuesday night, and although the pressure of business at\nihe capital may preclude postponement\nOf his departure, he is conferring With\nthe loonl Liberal executive on tbe\nti attot*.\nla his address ti\nMr. Burgess anno\na    political    \"decl.n\nthe electors  today,\nneed    his    stand    In\nit ion   of   Independ-\nSpecial\nFor a period of two months\nfrom January IS, our prices on\nMatch Block Wood will be reduced  one  dollar  per  load.\nNew Prices Per Load, Delivered,\n8...00 to $5.25\nPHONE    176    OR    568L\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\nBy H. TOWNSEND,\nWood   Dept.\nHe says ho Is not. nor will be If\nelected,   under   tin \u25a0 lash   of  any   party\nHe stands \"fttr tho fulfillment by\nwhichever party assumes power at Ottawa of the pledges made by that party, but' he is not in ae,eord \"with the\ntactics of Mr. Forke In demanding of\nthe two main parties that tiny do his\nbidding re-fardlee.-. of their election\npledres.\"\nI'oints   In   his program arc:\n]\u2014Completion   *t   tho   Hudson   Pay\nrailway   to   the   extent   of   the   pledges\nmede  by  the respective  parties  at  the\nL.st   general   election,\n2\u2014Early construction of the Turtle-\nf< rd   branch   line.\n;\u2014Such rearrangement of freight\ntedules as will provide for the \"haul-\n\u25a0 of our products by Canadian translation systems and for the equal*\ntlon of grain rates tn our winter\nports,   especially   those  on   the   Pacific\nWork on Business Basis\n4\u2014Further proposals for railways\nher than those authorised \"might\nell he left to oar railway chief in\ndor that Such projects shall be un-\n11-ii.'-n upon a busiiK'Ms- r ither than\npolitical basis.'*\nF --l.'.rly  removal   of tin-   Income   tax\nS\u2014Reduction'   of   duties   on    automo-\nh-s of universal type.\nMr,   Burgess   declares  he   stands   for\ninitda  establishing hot*  national   posi\ntlon through tin- use of Canadian ports\nEither than those of tho United States.\nfayors   a   general   election   being   culled\nit once, favors senators being appointed  for a  stated  term, \"but selected for\ntheir   business   ability   rather   tii an   for\nheir   political   sagacity.\"\nHe is strongly opposed  \"to  the  exploitations   of   our   raw   materials   for\nforeign benefit,\" favors a selective immigration   policy   \"which   will   assure\nthroughout   Canada   n   proper   standard\nof living.\"\u25a0\nIn regard to the single transferable\nvote, Mr. Burgess says thnt \"if much\nsystem where practiced has proved\nmore stable government than our\npresent one, J am for It.\"\nSawmill Supplies\nAXES\nCHAIN\nSAWS\nCORDAGE\nPEAVIES\nCOTTON  WASTE\nCANT   HOOKS\nENGINE  PACKING\nLOGGING TOOLS\nLUBRICATING   OILS\nRUBBER   BELTING\u2014ALL  SIZES\nLargest Stock in the Interior of B. C.\nWood-Vallance Hardware Co., Ltd.\nWHOLESALE\nNELSON,  B. C.\nRETAIL\nGet The Daily\nNews Every\nDay\n\u2022\"All the News While It Is\nNews\"\nDelivered to your door\ntn Nelson before breakfast\nevery day for 25c a week.\nBy mail outside Nelson,\n60c a month, $6 a year.\nFull cable, telegraphic\nand British Columbia news\nservice. .,'\nAll the best features.\nSubscribe\nToday\nA. S. Horswill & Co.\nReliable Grocers\nKing   Oscar   Sardines    154^\nSliced  Boiled  Ham  ..'. (JO^\nHead  Lettuce,  Ih 3\u00a9<*\nCelery,  Imported,  lb 15<-\nSwe.le Turnips,-8 lbs 25*^\nIteady Cut Macaroni, 31bs..35<*\n\u2014PROMPT   DELIVERY\u2014\nM'RUER GAINS\nADJOURNMENT\nIN FRUIT CASE\nWitness Fails to Appear;\nLawyers Argue Regarding\nEvidence Submitted\nVANCOUVER, Fob. 1.--.J. C, McRuer. crown prosecutor, sought and\nsecured from Mr. Justice D. -A. Mo-\nDonald in assize court this afternoon\nan adjournment until tomorrow morning of the trial of the Nash fruit\ncase. The delay wan caused by the\nnon-appearance of a witnef*-** for th*?\ncrown.\nTwo or three witness will bo\nnought hy Mr. MoRuer from Edmonton te prove lettters., whieh Sgt.\nArt hm- Patterson, R.O.M.l'.. who\n.-\u2022\u25a0'.zed the business record:' of the\nBrown Kruil company at Edmonton on .tuly IR last, could not\nidentify.\nobjection was voiced by A. McLeod Sinclair, K.C, for defendants, to\nproof by Staff Sergeant Samuel\nWaugh, R.C.M.l'.. Regina, of documents, which the witness testified,\nwore included in a lot found In the\noffice of Mutual Brokers Ltd., Cal-\nt-*ai*y, whom; premises wore searched,\nunder his supervision, on duly 15.\nUnder cross-examination by the\nCalgary defence lawyer, Servant\nWaugh explained that ho ^Identified\ndocuments, which ho had 'initialled;\nbut these had heen banded to him\nfor that purpose by an accountant.\nwho had selected them from a mass\nof business records.\nMr, Slncallr contended that those\ndocuments had not been identified by\nwitness; nnd he asked that they Vie\nremoved from the records. Counsel\nsaid that the crown had \"slipped in\"\nthese documents. Mr. McRuer stated\nhe could overcome the difficulty by\nhaving t.ha accountant, who selected\ntho documents for Bergeant Waugh,\nittond as u witness and Identify\nthem,\nBusiness records seized by Royal\nCanadian Mounted police officers on\nJuly 16 of Brown Fruit company,\nl-dm-onton; Royal Fruit company.\nEdmonton; Mutual Brokers, Calgary; Acme Fruit company, Calgary; Al itcholl Fruit company, Calgary, and of Mutual Brokers, Saskatoon,   wore  in trod need   in   evidence,\nNine hundred and eighty exhibits,\nIncluding hooks, letters nnd other\ndocuments,  have   l>een   Introduced  into\nthe record by the crown.\nFARMERS' COMMITTEES\nDECIDE ON UNION\nSARKATOOX, Feb. l.\u2014With harmony such as pervaded the joint,\nconvention members of tho amalgamation committees of the Farmers'\n','nion of Canada and the Saskatchewan drain Growers' association met\nin ihe King George hotel, Monday\nafternoon and unanimously decided\nto amalgamate anil each organisation has Instructed Its solicitors tn\nproceed with the preparation nf\nthe   necessary    documents   and    hy-\nAt the close oi the meeting a\nresolution moved by Qftol Edwards,\npresident of the Saskatchewan Grain\nGrowers' association and seconded by\n1. A! Btonemon, president pf the\nwas unanimously\nI   committees.\nJUDGE HELEN MacGILL\nNOT LEGALLY A JUDGE\nAll   Convictions.  Judgmonts,   Judicial\nNcitlcincnls   During  Nino  Y.*\u00abrs'\nOffice   De-claml   Illegal\nVANCOUVER, Feb, 1.\u2014Because\nJudge Helen MacGill, of the juvenile\ncourt of Vancouver, never has been\nproperly appointed, all judgments,\nConvictions and judicial settlements\nduring the nine years In which she\nhas hold the office were declared\nillegal in -\"ntpromo court chambers\ntoday by Chief JuHtice Hunter. Hfs\ndecision was the basis for an order\nreleasing two men from Oakalla prison, where they were, serving terms\nimposed by Judge Mac.IIH for contributing to the delinquency of a\nminor.\nMrs. HacGlll was appointed to\nthe position under section 34 of the\nfederal Juvenile Delinquent act\u2014\na section which never has applied to\nBritish Columbia. Provisions for\nsuch an appointment Is mude in\nsection   35   of   the   act.\nThe federal authorities are expected to take action In the case.\nEULER RUMORED\n\" - FOR PORTFOLIO\n. armors\npawed by th\nMONTREAL \u2014 The city of Montreal\nwns ordered to pay $24,880. representing tiie fees awarded In the recent\npolice probe to Arthur Brossard, K.C,\n:md J. r. Lane tot, K.C, tor their-services ns counsel for the city, and to J.\nH. Michauri, who acted as secretary at\nthe Investigation in a judgment delivered today by Mr. Justice Duel OB in\nthe supreme court.\nNelson News of the Day\nQueen City Rebekah T.o.ig.- No. h. 1.\nO.O.K., will meet tonight at 7:30. (IHi)\nDon't fail to hear tha splendid pro>\ngramme in the Memorial Hall, Saturday\nnight\u2014Willow Point Flayers, local artists, danclngi refreshments. Secure\njour tickets early, (1331)\n99 ^0 f\u00b0r^rema'nsat'tsb\nWe've-Cut Deeply!\nSUIT SALj\nSuits to $32.50   we taygjrt CQtt|,e qu;\nfor that remains at it-\nhigh standard, but the\nsTits to $40.00 ^ ten radically re\nm r a to *nsure 'mm^ate\n\/\/   ill ance of these fine ga\nLI#UV   Every suit, with the1\nSuits to $45.00 ception ol plain\n0.0 r A bines, is on sale,\nOZ.DU wl  \u00b0'   Socfefr\nFit-Reform and Leishr\nsuits to $50.00 makes   Values m W\n0|7 TA such as you haven't seen |\ngreysy\nBra\nYOUf.    MONEY'S   WORTH\nOR\nYOUR  MONEY  BACK\nPrescriptions\nAccurately Filled\nYou arc assured of accuracy\nIf you have your Prescription\nfilled at our Dispensary. Our\n\"hurmaclsts are specially trained\nIn Dispensing nnd our lance\nstock insures your Prescription\nbeing filled Just as the Doctor\norders.\nl'hono and we wilt send a\nmessenger for your Prescription.\nAVJun ready it will be delivered\nCanada Drug &\nBook Co.\nNELSON, B.C\nHAS IT\nRehearsals ia full swing hy the cx-\nstudents anil students of HI. Joseph's\nAcademy on the popular operetta, \"Only\na Waif of the Ocean,\" to he staged on\nSt.  Patrick's   Hay. (l!-28)\nThe funeral of the late Otto Thor will\ntake place Wednenday afternoon at 2\n(\u2022'clock from Standard'Cmh.rtnklng Parlors. (H.251\nScandinavian Dance will he held at\nthe Knights of Pythian Hall (tingle\nBlock), Thursday, K.bruary -1th. Same\ntrio as last Thursday will piny. Everybody welcome! (1_.3)\nName Connected With Portfolio\nfor Railways and Canals;\nDeclines to Talk\nOTTAWA, Feb. 1.\u2014It Is under-\nstood here that! W. D. Euler, Lib-\nera] mem her for North Waterloo,\nhas heen offered a portfolio ln the\ngovernment of Premier King. Mr.\nKiller's name ls connected with the\nportfolio of railways and canal,\nwhich ls now held by Rt. Hon. O. P.\nGraham. The member for North\nWaterloo declined to enmfnent on\nthe matter. \"I really have nothing . to say nbout It all,\" was his\n(.tatement when asked for confirmation. Mr. Euler I\u00bb an experienced\nmember of parliament, and hag been\nprominent in committee work as\nwell as In debate Jn the house.\nMary Plckford and Douglas Falr-\n\u25a0banks will leave California ln January for another world tour.\nAt tie Market Hall on Tuesday, February 2. there will be a three-aet play\nentitled \"The Wife That. Would Not\nObey.\" and the youngi-st child waltzer\nin Nelson, aged 3. and the music, will\nbe plaved for her on the oldest vloiin\nin Nelson, 300 years old. Program\nstarts at 8 o'clock, and a danco after\nthe show. Scandinavian orchestra attending. (1891)\nA. F. & A. M. Social Committee announce the first of a series of social\nevenings on Thursday next, 8 sharp.\nMembers  only. (Id84)\nThere will be an Extraordinary Meeting of the Kootenay Hake General Hospital Society held at the Board of\nTrade Rooms on Ward Street on\nWfdnosdny, 3rd February, li\u00bb2fi, at 3\no'clock pin., for the purpose of amending the by-laws. Geo. Johnstone, secretary. (1872)\nEducational Policies, North Amer\nlean Life Assurance, 2-3 Aberdeen Clock\nE. H. Hanley, District Manager,   (IBM)\nDr. G.\nBlock.\nA. C. Walley, dentist, Orlffin\n(1804)\nNorth American Life. 1-J nnd 8 Aberdeen Block. E. H. Hanley, District\nManager. (181.5)\nFor good fresh milk or cream. Phone\n618, Crescent Dairy. (1896)\nFuneral of the late Mrs. Eliza Turner will take place tomorrow, 3rd Inst.,\nat 2:30 p.m., from St. Baviour's\nChurch. (1933)\nHeed the\nAdvice\nAnd put In your supply j\nnow, before the rush\nAnd bear in mind that thd\ntwo kinds of Coal\u2014GOOf\nPOOR; both look allkj\ncost alike. The only wafl\ntry ours and prove Us i\nCall   or   Telephpn\nMcdonald cari\n& FUEL CO.\n503  Baker St    t\nSITS\nWe  have  a  special  in |\nKhaki,   Light   and   Dark\nGrey.     These   are   made I\ncoat style, two pockets, low \u25a0\nand high collars.\nLast Time Ton\u00bb\nThomal\nMeighaj\nIn'Irish Lu-i\nCOMING TOMORl\nThe Famous Melode\n'East Lynn-\nMrs. S. J. Hill\ndrew the $2.50 last\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"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.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1926_02_02","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0402271","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/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","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}