{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0404060":{"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":"2021-11-19","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1931-01-20","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404060\/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":" Nelson Curlers May Benefit by\nTrail Man's Invention\n\u2014Page Seven\nthon jttailg\nBilly Townsend Wins Toronto\nBout in a Hurry\n\u2014Pa_e Seven\nVOL. 29.\nNELSON, B. C.    TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1931.\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNo. 238\nSNOWSTORM\nOKANAGAN IS\nSTUNNED WITH\nFRUIT REPORT\nAssociated Presidents Ask\nif Past Work Is\nFailure\n\"COUNSEL DESPAIR\"\nSAYS F. M. BLACK\nIndependent Shippers Are\nHighly Optimistic,\nPresent\nKELOWNA, B. C, Jan. tft.\u2014\nSaiiiord l.vanr c.iort on the\nmi.. itttUM*) .<_ im tne\n.Okaiucan valle) like a bombshell, Whll.- sume of the leauer*\nIn the fruit business had a\nglimmer in_ of its character,\nthere docs mn appear to have\nbeen anyone who anticipated\nthat H would recommend wrapping completely existing organization)!    and    a    reversion    to\nCompetitive     M'lllliK.\n\"Is the work of eight years'\nupbuilding to he n mas lied to\npieces In one fell blow, and the\nwhole Industry thrown back to\nthe condlt ons of chaos prior\nto 1922?\" asks i; i. (..ambers\npresident of the Associated\nGrowers. \"Surely we have reason to hope for something better  than   that.\"\nR. B. Staples, manager of the Sales\nService, and spokesman for the independents, waa in * happier and\nmore hopeful frame of mind. He\nwae delighted with the Evans rec-\nommenda.ions ana said:\nTRUE REPRESENTATION\n\u00a7 \"Tbe report is a true pregenta-\nf V tion of the situation, as it exists,\nand the real facte of the position\nare presented to tn, public openly\nfearlessly and correctly for the first\ntime.\"\nA \"counsel of despair\" was how It\nwas described by f. M. Black,\nchairman of the Committee of\nDirection, the originator of tlie\n. central sailing plan now advocated,\nand the storm center of the battle\nm the valley between the contending factions.\nFor months tho  valley has been\nlike a house divided.    One section\n(Continued  on Page  10)\nEXAMINES GRANTS\nGIVEN TO FAIRS\nIN THE DOMINIONS\nWINNIPEG, Man., Jan. 19.\u2014Tomorrow Hon. Rotwn, Weir, federal\nminuter of agriculture, will confer\nwith delegates at tend Ins the annual\nmeeting of Uie Western Canada\nAssociation of Exhibitions,  here\nMr. Weir, who arrived tonight from\nOttawa, will uiscufs grants given\nby the Dominion government to\nfain.\n\"The federal government gives to\nthe fain, of the Dominion $750,000\nannually,\" said the minister or agriculture, \"and my purpose ln chV\nciui'ng the grants ls to discovci\nwhether the benefit to agriculture\nis commensurate with the amount\nof money we are paying out.\"\nMr. Weir wished lt understood\nthat the grants wouki not be cut\nln any  way\nIS CONVICTED\nFOR INFRINGEMENT\nMARKETING ACT\nSASKATOON, Sa**., Jan. 19\u2014Convicted of attempting to induce\nwheat pool iarmers of the Maidstone\ndistrict to dispose of wheat _o hlrh\nIn payment against accounts, Oeorg,\nGrant, representative of the Wholesalers' and Retailers' Collection\nAgency, was fined $50 ln oourt her.\ntoday. It was believed to be tha\nfirst prosecution under the province's amended marketing act.\nThe new act provides a penalty to\n\"every person who, having knowledge oi the existence of a marketing contract between a member\nand an association, induces anyone\nto sell any agricultural product\nwhloh ls tlie subject matter of\n\u2022uoh contract.\" It was alleged that\nGrant accepted wheat from pool\nmembers which In turn was disposed ot on the open market.\nUNDER ARREST,\nHELP OFFICER\nBELUNGHAM, Wash., Jan. IS.*\n(AP)\u2014After a ween of exposure ln\nthe snow and cold of the upper\n8_gt. district, near the Okanogan\ncounty and Canadian border lines.\nDeputy Game Warden Vernon Tituo\nreturned to Belllngnam today to\ntell a story of now a man ana\nyouth h* had arrested for the alleged unlawful trapping of fur bearing animals had played the role of\ngood Samaritans and helped him\nback to the nearest outpost of\nDiablo, after he had been crippled\nby rheumatism In hia battle with\nthe elements,\nThe prisoners, o. I. Howlett cf\nHope, British Columbia, and John\nBauquler, 17, ol Puyallup, await a\nhearing ln justice couit. They wer?\ntrapping furs together,\nFurs  valued  at ibout  11*00 wsrf\nLONE SURVIVORS\nHere are four survivors of the sea disaster which occurred recently\nbetween Denmark and Swedm, when the Finnish ship Oberon sank\na few minutes after it collided with the 8. S. Arcturus, 41 perished. The\nArcturus proceeded safely on to Copenhagen with the survivors they had\npicked up.\nJ. Cm Rykert Dies at\\\nRykerts After Long\nand Eventful Lify\nSHOOTS SLAYER\nOF HER FATHER,\nIN COURTROOM\nHEWITT, Ark., Jan. 19\u2014(Al*)\n\u2014Orawlng a pat or as the Jury\nrose to decide the fate of the\nman on trial, Mrs, Ruth fepenee\nbaton, is. shot and killed\nJack Wells, 22, alleged slayer\nof her father, In a crowded\ncourt room here today. Four\nbullets struck YYtlls. Mrs.\nEaton surrendered to the .sheriff.\nWas Weil-Known to All\nas Customs Collector\nONCE ENTERTAINED\n\"TEDDY\" ROOSEVELT\nINDIAN PARLEY\nIS ADJOURNED\nBY MACDONALD\nPrime \"Minister Wishes India\nSuccess in Becoming\na Dominion\nLONDON, Jan. 19. (By George\nHambleton, Canadian Press staff\ncorrespondent)\u2014In the gutter of\ncamera flashlights, the Indian round\ntable conference this afternoon\nconcluded nine weeks' labors.\nYou have op ned a new chapter in history,\" read a farewell message to the delegates from his\nmajesty.\nAnd while the Indian delegates\ncheer.d again and again. Prime\nMinister Ramsay MacDonald said:\n\"I hope. I trust, I pray that India\nwill possess the only thing she\nnow lacks to give her the* status\nof a dominion among tho British\ncommonwealth of nations. What\nshe now lacks for that\u2014the responsibilities, the cares, the bur-\ndins and the difficulties, but\u2014\"\nhe paused for a moment and then\ncontinued, with a proud toss of\nhis head, \"the pride and honor of\nresponsible   self-government.\"\nCANDIDATES TO\nBE NOMINATED\nSOON, NORFOLK\nNORFOLK. England, Jan, 19.\u2014\n(CP Cable) \u2014 Candidates will be\nnominated In all the Norfolk constituencies before March 1 in preparation for any new general election that may occur, it was decided by the Norfolk branch of the\nNational Farmers' union ln a meeting   Saturday   night.\nWl th the exception that Lord\nBeavei-brook attended the mettlng\nlittle information was vouchsafed\nabout this new political development.\nLord Beaverbrook's Dally Express\naald today the movement waa bound\nto spread. \"It reveals a complete\nbreakdown between Hon, Stanley\nBaldwin and the fanners, who are\nthe  backbone of his  party.\"\nENGLISH MINERS'\nLEADER HAS HIS\nLEG AMPUTATED\nLONDON, Jan, 19.\u2014(AP)\u2014A. J.\nCook, spectacular and fiery leader\nof the men who muck for coal tn\nBritish mines, fought the biggest\nof his many battles today.\nAs hia \"boys\" returned to their\npits ln South Walee after a 19-day\nmine tie-up, Mr. cook's lev was\namputated in an effort to relieve\n'he intense pain occasioned hy a\n28-year-old injury received In a\nooal mine.\nTonight physicians said that he\nwss   ''doing   ss   well   a*   could   be\nEstablished Customs Port\nWhich Still Bears\nHis Name\nCRESTON, B. 0,, Jan. 19.\u2014John\nCharlea Rykert. 74. retired customs\ncollector at Rykerts, six miles south\nof creston, is dead at hts somewhat\nhistoric home at Rykerts, and\nhis passing the Kootenays have\nlost a pioneer citizen who figured\nprominently in the history of this\ncountry from the early 80's, among\nother things having the distinction\nof conducting the \u25a0 first government\ncale  of   inwii  lots  ln  N.lson.\nThe end came at about noon today after a lengthy illness at his\nhome, which has been ln charge\nof Mr. and Mrs, Charles Davis, Mr.\nDavis taking on' the work of customs collector at that port on the\nsuperannuation of Mr. Rykert about\nseven years ago. His wife predeceased   him   about   nine   years.\nMr. Rykert was born August 9,\n1857. at St. Catharines, Ont., of\nUnited Empire Loyalist stock. His\nfather was the late Hon. J. C Rykert, a prominent lawyer, who died\nln 1917. He was the last surviving\nmember of Canada's first parliament.\nIn 1873, as a boy, the late Mr.\nRykert was articled to an engineer\nand took part in the preliminary\nsurvey of the C. P. R. ln the Great\nLakes country, which work gave\nhtm his first taste of frontier life\nin   its   reality.\nIn 1874 he Joined the R.N.W.M.P.\nand was with \"F\" troop at the\nfounding of Macleod, Alta., in 1874,\nand Calgary in 1875. The Hon.\nCecil Denny was the first sub-Inspector under whom Mr. Rykert\nserved.\nMARRIKI)   IN   EAST\nIn 1878 deceased returned to his\nold home town of St. Catharines\nand was  for  a short time  in  bual-\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nLIBERAL MEETING\nMAY DECIDE FATE\nMacDONALD PARTY\nLONDON. Jan. 19\u2014 (C. P. cable)\u2014\nOn the eve of the re-asaembllng of\nparliament Saltish political circles\nare tense with expectation.\nThe members of th_ parliamentary Liberal party will meet tomorrow\u2014the opening day\u2014to decide\ntheir stand in regard to the trade\ndisputes bill which comes before\nth_ house of commons for second\nreading on Tursday. The fate of\nthe MacDonald government may\nhang on the Liberal deliberations.\nPRINTERS STRIKE\nIN SPANISH SHOPS\nMADRID. Jan. 19.\u2014.AP)\u2014The\ngovernment's ewn newspaper, the\nOfficial Gazette, wae affected by the\nstrike today of members of the\nprinting crafts. About 4000 men\nwere affected by the strike. They\nasked for _ reduction of working\nhours from eight to seven dally and\nan increase of two pesetas (about\n20 cents)  ln their daily wage.\nThe present high oost of living\nmade the increase necessary, they\ndeclared.\nOnly Job printing work and occasional publications were affected.\nDally newspapers wer* exempted by\nOIL SPOT MAY\nBE A CLUE TO\nMISSING PLANE\nKETCHIKAN, Alaska. Jan. 19.\n\u2014(AP)\u2014An oil .pot sighted today near Davidson point, IS\nmiles south of heir, will be Investigated for possible clues as\nto the whereabouts of Pilot\nRobin Renahan's plane. The\npilot and two companions disappeared near here last October.\nA diver wltl Investigate the\nvicinity over which the oil was\nsighted tomorrow. The United\nStates cutter Oygan and a provincial police boat were fon-\ntinning search for further\nwreckage of the plane about\nPrince  of  Wales  Island.\nCIVIL SERVICE\nCOMMISSIONER\nARRESTED, EAST\nLeo.   Bouchard   Must   Make\nExplanations  of  Exam\nIrregularities\nTHINKS INDIA\nWlU NOT TAKE\nPARLEY TERMS\nRepresentative of Indian\nCongress Says ,That\nTrouble Due\nAN   ARBITRATOR\nIS CRITICAL OF\nCONFERENCE |\nOTTAWA, Ont., Jan. 19. (CP)\u2014A I\nwarrant was issued tonight for the\narrest of Leo Bouchard, civil service\ncommission examiner, on a charge\nof conspiracy to defraud in connection with post office department\nexaminations. A^nnouncemtnt of the\nissuance ofr the warrant was made\nfollowing a long meeting of the\ncommission, at which Mr. Bouchard\nwas put through an examination.\nThe charges were laid In respect to\nexaminations conducted In Montreal.\nCivil service commissioners questioned Bouchard as to his explanation of Irregularities which have\ntaken place in connection with examinations   at   Montreal.\nAllegations of. fraud and conspiracy In the submission of certain of these examination papers\nhave  been made.\nAlready Lionel Chartrand of Aylmer, Que., hae been arrested, and\nlt ls intimated that other arrests\nmay  follow.\nAs a result, of the trreyulnrlllea\nwhich have been disclosed, a list\ncontaining several hundred names\nof eligible candidates for the civil\nservice will, it is said, be discarded.\nOnly a small percentage of tries-.1\ncandidates, of course, were in any\nsense   parties   to   the   irregularities.\nObjects Method Indians\nWere Nominated to\nConference\nWILD OIL WELL\nFINALLY SHUT\nIN, OKLAHOMA\nOKLAHOMA CITY, Okla., Jan.\n19.\u2014 (AP) \u2014Another rearing\nmenace of tlie oil field at\nOklahoma City's doorstep\u2014the\nwild No. 1 Vfespage oil well-\nwas  throttled  late  today.\nThe well, wild since morning,\nwa* shot In by John Oordon,\ntamer of the famous \"Wild\nMary\" Sudlk, Oklahoma's most\nnotorious well, which ran wild\nfor 11 days before being shut In.\nWith the flow of th\u201e No. 1\nWrapage under control, firemen and national guards men\ntook prerau tlons against the\ndimger of ftre In the area soaked\nby oil from the wild rusher.\nMANY INJURED\nWHEN EXPRESS\nHITS A LOCAL\nSome 50 Persons Escape\nDeath But Sustain\nFractures\nBRITISH BOY IS\nLOST EN ROUTE\nFROM THE PEACE\nNote   Is   Found   by   Search\nParty; Was Written on\nNovember 15\nVICTORIA. B. C, Jan. 19.\u2014\"Have\nfailed to get through to fat ICc-\nLeod, and run entirely out of\nfood. Am toing back. A list of\nsupplies taken oy me Is here. My\nfeet and finger tips- are-frost blf-\nten, I liave abandoned\" my liorw,\"\nbo ran the brief message dated\nNovember 15\u2014written by John Noel\nPatch Bennett, 18-ycar-old British\nschool boy who set out against all\nadvice to make his way from\nPouce Coupe.- ln the .Peace River-\ndistrict, through the pine tn Port\nMcLeod on October 14 last. The\nplight of the youth is believed. _\u00ab_.\nous, as he had only i week's more,\nwhich he obtained from a trapper a\ncabin before setting back tm his\ntrail.\nThe note was one of many found\nby a party of three men sent out\nfrom Pouce Coupe on December 19,\nat thP request of the Imperial\nbank of Orand Frairle, aotlng on\nLondon advices. Ted Strand. \u25a0\ntrapper named Kelly, and another\nnamed Sunderland, all experienced\nwoodsmen, were la the party that\nfollowed Bennett's trail, and who\narrived at Prince George today\naccording to advices received hero\nby the provincial polios from Inspector W. E. Splller over the pollct\nwireless   system   late   this   evening.\nMONTREAL HAS\nSECOND HEAVY\nFALL OF SNOW\nMONTREAL, Que, Jan. 19.\u2014 (CP.\n\u2014Montreal's second heavy snowfall\nof the season came today ranging\nin depth from seven to eight inches\nbut without the high wind that\ncharacterized the _torm of a fortnight ago. Traffic was maintained\nwith difficulty as hundreds of automobiles stalled on the streets and\nadded to the difficulty of the tram\ncompany.\nThe storm was a boon to the unemployed as the work of clearing\naway the last snowfall had been almost completed.\nHOOVER MAY COME\nTO OTTAWA SOON\nNEW YORK. Jan. ID\u2014Premier\nRamuiiy MaqDoualda declaration for\nIndian is elf-government will not be\nacceptable to tho all-Indian national congress, according to Dr. Harl-\ndas T. Muzuindar, seml-ofil.ial rep-\nreaciilatlvc o( Mu- congress ln the\nUntied States and t-ue editor of\n\"India   Today   and   Tomorrow.\"\n\"The round of festivities in London came to a close today,\" he said,\n\"On January 26 the world will hear\nthe   Indian   side   oi   ihe   story.\n\"All   over  India,   r  have   i\nword that demonstrations arc going\nto bo hrld  In all iJtles where there\nla a  large  Indian population.\"\n\"Our criticism Of I he London\nround-table conference, at India arc\nfourfold,\" Dr. Uuatundar declared.\n\"First, the tndlans at the rounu-\ntable were norm; i   British\ngovernment and not, elected by auy\npolitical   or   civic   organization   in\nIndia.\niH BSTIONS   KH.IIT\n\u2022\u25a0S'jcoiui-ly, n Ol tha congTOJ,\nparty Question tho right of any\nIndian to sell the liberties of our\ncountry  for fl  thess ol pottage.\n\"Thud, the i.ri'vaion of nrnmrf\nunder the control Of the British Is\npositively unacceptable to the congress.\n\"Fourth, the round-m'-ii EaUtd'to\napproach the minimum demands of\nMa'natma Gandhi. Otie of the minimum demand! if that the io-c*lled\npublic debt, of India be submitted\nfor examination to an Imperial International commission o_ -\nexperts, whose i India's\nresponsibility   should    be    n\nboth by Britain and India.\n\"We do not propose to repudiate\nour public debts m the Russians\ndid. bin tf Britain fails to accept\narbitration in the matter of our\nso-called puolic debt, we may be\nforced to give her a taste of repudiation of obligations which are\nImposed  unjustly  upon  us.\"\nFIND THE FROZEN\nBODY OF TEACHER\nThink   Young   Womaji   Was\nStruck by Car and Thrown\nFrom Bridge\nFORT MORGAN. Colo , Jnn. 19\u2014\n<APj\u2014An irrigation canal today-gave\nup the body of Enid Marriott, 28-\nyear-old Wiggins, Colo., school teacher who dropped from sight November lfl. Frozen io completely that\nthe county coroner HUd at least\nthree hours would be required bo\nrid It of clinging ice and sand, the\nbody was taken from the canal late\ntoday alter more than two hours'\nwork by hundreds of volunteer,\narmed with axes and saws. Coroner\nL. H. Parker siild determination\nwhether the Woman had been killed\nand thrown into the canal would\nhave to await the thawing of the\nbody.\nThe body was discovered in what\nls known as the work lateral, about\nabout 100 yards east. of the\nmam canal and two and one\nhalf miles east of a bridge from\nwhich Morgan county authorities\nbelieve It was thrown after the\nwoman had been abducted or struck\nand   killed   by   an   automobile.\nAPPEAL AGAINST\nSENTENCES WILL\n'    BE HEARD, EAST\nLord Bankey, lord chancellor of\nEngland, chairman of Indian round\ntabic- conference, who recently announced outline of constitution unfit! which India will govern herself, has been chosen one of the\narbitrators in Hindu-Moslem dispute .-Copyright by Acme News-\npictures.\nSAYS PROVINCE\nHAS WEATHERED\nDEPRESSION WELL\nWICKERSHAM LAW\nCOMMISSION HAS\nREPORTEDJOOVER\nResult of Over Y'ear and Half |\nof Work Will Soon Bc\nKnown\nEXPRESS FAILS\nTO TAKE SWITCH\nEngineer   Is   Extricated\nFrom Cab With Acetylene Torches\nRetiring President Vancouver\nHoard Trade Praises Hon.\nH. H. Stevens\nVANCOUVER. B. C. Jan. 19.\u2014At\nthe annual meeting of the board of\ntrade here tonight. Col. R. D. Williams, retiring president, outlined\nthe accomplishments or the past\n_e,,r\nVancouver, said ool. Williams, had\nweathered the period of depression\nh titer than even the most optimistic would have prophesied, unci\nhe noted a turn for the, belter.\nEvents of tho past year, including\nthe low of the Orient, the fight\nfor a Peace river connection, ap-\npolnttarnl or ,). Pjrft Smith to the\nboard of Canadian National Railways and the organization of the\nVancouver council of social agencies and Vancouver Welfare federation, were reviewed by Col, Williams.\nHo paid a tribute to Hon. IT. H.\nStevens, minister of trade and customs, for his suggestion that a\nloan should be made to China to\nrecoup her for the decline ln her\nmonetary value, as one of the\nsteps which might be taken to rector,-   normal   trade   conditions.\nAs a suggestion for the coming\n\\enr. Col. Williams intimated that\ntaxation reductions should be made\nby both civic and provincial governments, especially in their edu-\ncatlonni and administrative expenditures.\nFATALITIES IN\nALASKAN WATERS\nIS INVESTIGATED\nKETICHIKAri,    AlMkft,    Jan     19 \u2014\n(AP i \u2014A series of m\\sterlous disappearances of boatmen in southeastern Alaska wu being Investigated by the United Btatrfi marshal's office anil drpiirtnytil, of Justice, agents .today.\nWhile the elrcum.s'jtiiceH in several of the cases were Mmllar, officers said, thflp had not found\nv evidence to prove tho disappearances were plotted by a single\nkiller.\nThose missing include: Albert\nFarrow and L. C. Davln, who left\nPetereburg, near here, for the west\nconst of Prince of Wales Island\nabout November 9 and were never\nheard from; Albert C. Anderson,\nwho went hunting ashore from his\nboat, md tailed to return, and\nJohn WyckKtrom, a troller, who disappeared, together with his boat,\nnear   hfrr.\nAnother violent death being investigated )_ that of John Marshal,\nfish buyer, who waa found slain\naboard a boat which left Kitchl-\nkun in October.\nWASHINGTON, Jan. 19.\u2014<OP- \u2014\n!\u2022 Uy IB mouths and 23 days after\nIng upon its task, the Wick-\ncrsham law enforcement commission today laid Its study of the\nnation's prohibition problem before\nPresident  Hoover.\nAlmost   immediately   Mr.   Hoover\ndropped  other  o_M   to  begin   ills\n\u25a0r  it.\nThe prcslden* 'a engagement Use\nwas ordered hrld bo a minimum,\nand If expectations at the White\nHouse are fulfilled lie will be able\nto send it to congress, probably\nwith some form o_ message attached, by tomorrow noon. It then.\nwill   lie  released  for  publication.\nDays before the long awaited document was placed in Mr. Hoover's\nhand:; n became known through,\nsottrcee close to the commission,\nthat tho malprity report of Uie 11\nmembers at least would carry no\nrecommendation for repeal of the\nI fifth amerdmciit or mod\nof tht Volstead act ui pcrml-, wine.*\nor  beer.\nDttpHe t1\"* few words tha. have\nleaked out from behind the com-\nmLaSlon'3 long closed cIooth. however, the main portions of both th-\nmajority and Individual reports\nhave remained shrouded fn a secrecy almost unparalleled in Washington.\nENGLISH WEAVERS\nSTILL OUT WORK\nUnion Headquarters Waiting\nfor Word to Open Negotiations\nOTTAWA, Ont.. Jan. 19.\u2014President Herbert Hoover may come to\nthe capital to lay the corner stone\nof the new legation chancery building which the United States government proposes to erect hers, the\nOttawa Evening citizen says today.\nThe building is to be erected on\nWellington street, facing the Dominion's parliament buildings. Plans\nunder consideration call for a structure Vlth 133 feet frontage and\ncosting    in    tbs    neighborhood    of\nTORONTO, Ont.. Jan. in... Appeals against tlie sentences Impeded\non six Toronto mining brokers will\nbe heard by the second divisional\ncourt at Osgoode hall, commencing\nFebruary 18, The sentences were\nthe outcome or convictions of conspiracy charges again.,'. MautIoo E.\nYoung. William J- Smart, D. S.\nPaterson, Au&tln Campbell, Malcolm\n'Stobie and Charles . Forlorn;, members of Toronto'R one-time leading\nbrokerage bouse.\". The MfttenoM\nranged from two and a half to\nthree years.\nREFUSE   TO   REINSTVn,   OFFICE!\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 19\u2014The police\ncommissioner today by unanimous\nvote, refused to confirm Chief W. J.\nBingham's recent appointment to\nthe force of George McLaughlin,\nformer officer, who resigned following  the   Investigation   ln   1928.\nThe commissioners adopted a resolution proposed by C. E. Mahon\nstating that \"we ean not see our\nway clear to approve the recommendation of Chief Bingham that\nOeorge     Met^uehMn     be     appointed\nALBERTA FARMERS\nOPEN DEBATE ON\nDEPRESSION CURE\nCALOARY, Alta Jan. 19\u2014(CP) \u2014\nSecond step In outlining the attitude\nof organized prairie farmers toward\ncause and remedy of existing economic depression ls to be started tomorrow. United Farmers of Alberta,\naccredited agrarian body of the foothills ^ province, open a four-day annual meeting at which a stand will\nbe taken on price-fixing and 100\nper cent pooling of wheat and on\nother   Important  questions,\nLONDON. Jan. 19. (CP Cablet \u2014\nTwo hundred and fifty thousand\ncotton weaver.-., lockei out by the\nmasters last Saturday, were *.' 111\nIdle In the Lancashire textile area\nUxt;.\\\\ Union headquarters were\nawaiting the return\/, from a vote\nof. members to_ determine whether\nthe union executives would be empowered to resume negotiations with\nthe mill ownerb.\nSANFORD CLARK\nIS DEPORTED TO\nCANADIAN SOIL\nLOS AN0CLB8, Oillf, .Is n 19 -\n(AP)\u2014Sanfoul Cla:k. 17, whew testimony l\\vu years afo at th# trUl\nof his luicle. Gordon Stewart North-\noott, flawed strorutiy m sending\nhUn to the ^allows, was deported tc\nCanada  today.\nTwo and a half yeah, aa\u2014. CtaA.\nwas brought to California from\nCanada by Northeott through ndft-\nrepresentAtion about his nationality.\nHe lived on the Wlnevllle chickr.n\nranch owned hy Northeott and his\nmother, Mrs Bansh Northeott, who\nis servlns a life t*rm In f^.tn\nQuentln penitentiary !or the murder\nof four boya atftln there. Clark\nwitnessed thp murders and after enduring torture, i tin har_l of hta\nuncle fled and revettled the crimes\nto authorities .since then he hai\nbeen at a state school near here.\n\"Northeott sot (That he deserved.'\nClark said as he WSJ about to depart on a steamer bound for Vancouver. British Crlumbla, with 35\nother aliens.\nBOSTON, Mass., Jan. 19\u2014\nThe colonial express of th\u00ab\nNew York. New Haven and\nHartford Railroad, speeding\nthrough blinding snow storm,\ntoday crashed into a local\ntrain at Readville causing ItV\njnrioa to more than 50 persons. Limb and skull fractures were suffered by some\nof the passengers.\nThe collision occurred after the express failed to take\na switch at the Wrefchan.\ncross-over, so-called. It plowed into the tender and first\ncar on the local which wss\ncrossing the mail line. The\nlocomotive of the express and\ntwo cars of the local turned\nover and were thrown across\nthe tracks. The baggage\ncar of the express was derailed.\nGeorge Cladding, of Paw-\ntucket, It. I. engineer of the\nexpress which was bound for\nNew York, was pinned within his cab and was extricated\nafter acetylene torches had\nbeen used to cut away the\nstructure.\nFIND THAT MEN\nAND SLOTHS WERE\nONCE COMPANIONS\nLOS ANGELEB, Jan. 19.\u2014Proof\nha_ been found that man lived in\nsouthwestern America 20,000 years\nago. with ground sloths for companions\nDr. Jamei A, B. Bcberwn, director of the Southwest muwum. satd\ntoday that the tlnut sure proof of\nDftwn use man's existence on\nthis -eontlntnt had been uncovered:\nwith human bones in Gypsum cave,\nnevir   list,  Vegas,   Nevada.\nBefore the cave w_ eaBearmted,\npaJeontolofrurt\/i and geolofftota believed roan had made hts advent\nNorth America not more than\n10.000   ypars  afto.\nThe first evidence yielded by tbe\ncave wri* a dart, lt wan found beneath tmtvm left by elotba, but waa\nnot considered sufficient proof that\nman had bo?n there before th\u00ab\ngiant ere-atmw disappeared fromih**\nearth. J_tcr, pieces or baaketn wer-\nfound. The bones of a man were\nfound at Ust by Mark R. Harrington of Uie m_cum'\u00bb staff. T_ey\nreposed ber.cat.. a strata bearinf\nsloth refuse, and near them waa\nthe   charcoal  of  a  ftra.\nTRELLE SAYS THE\nPEACE COUNTRY\nMUST HAVE OUTLET\nPAGO PAOO. Amerloan ShinOas\nJan. 19.\u2014 (AP)\u2014Tbe UAS. Ontario\nreturned LOday from a survey of\nhurricane damage to the atanu*\nWand ktoup. reporttiis ail vUla#!\u00ab\nislands at least 60 per cent\ndestroyed. Ofu, one of the principal towns, was virtually wiped ou.\nby higli wlnaa of last week..\nStartina January 11. a hmrlcanei\nswept islands of Amerloan Samoa\nfor fiv*> days. Last Thirr.^day the.\nwind reached a velocity ot 60 mile.,\ntm hour. No loss of life was reported.\nTHe Weather\nMEXICAN DEPUTY\nSLAIN, AMBUSH\nVANCOUVER. B. 0., Jan. 19.\u2014\nThe transportation problems of the\nPeac? river u ill never be solved,\nand that most promising of all\nCanadian territories will not come\ninto Its undoubted future until\nthere is direct rail outlet to the\nPacific coast, it was declared by\nHerman Trelle, famous Peace river\nking of whtaT growers, in his address under the auspices of the\nON-to-the-Peace association here today.\nMEXICO CTTY. Jan. 19, CAP- \u2014\nInformation reached here today that\nMarclano C. Salaztvr, federal deputy from the second * district in\nSan Luis Potosl, was ambushed\nand  slain   yestrrday.\nThe   deputy   was   riding   a   horse\nalong   a   rox-!    httr   hia   'arch   at j\nTampacan.   uIom   \\_,  (Cutdad   Valler. i\nPARTISAN'   POLK Y\nWINS    DISMUaUt\nVANCOUVER, B. C. Jan. 19.\u2014\nAn Ottawa despatch to tho Vancouver  Provin<v   ssys:\n\"John A. Fraser, M.p for Cariboo, has certified ihat to his\nknowledge Dr, J. J, Olllls of Mer-\nrltt, part-time physician to Indlnns\nin that district, was an active\npolltstjal partisan ln the lost flee \u2022\nthn, and in nomwuiflms Dr. Ottlte\nVICTORIA,  B.   0.,   Jan.   19~n>rr-\newt, Nelson and vicinity\u2014Ofnerailv\nfair, stationary or higher temperatures.\nWin.  Max.\nNELSON 26        34\nNanalmo .31\nVictoria   . 37\nVancouver 30\nKamloope 3\u00bb\nPrince  Oeorge   12\nEstevan       44\nPrince   Rupert 38\nAtlln - - 14    '\nDawson 14*\nSeattle     32\nPortland . 36\nBan   Francisco            .4*3\nSpokane 30\nILos   AngelM  43\nPentlcton    . 24\nVernon    . 57\nGrand Forks 10\n| Cranbrook           .   9\n(Calgary     \u201e  10\nF. \u25a0Itrmnton    -     \u2022\nI Swift Cumnt      2\nPrh'.ce   Albert     . _\u2022\nQu'AnMlll  _    4\nu\n45\n46\n32\n34\n62\n46\n40\n0\nW.rn.neg\n42\n06\n44\n72\n37\n33\n30\n26\n40\n34\n2ft\nll\n14\n1!S\n Page Two\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       tpest\u00bbav  JANUARY 20, 1981.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B.C. Hotels\n^\/w^^MMAMi\\\nJfttmi? ^trttl\nNELSON, B. C.\nThe best hotel and dining accommodation\nin the city.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\nfin rwwwvvwww*\nBTJIOS\u2014 Dr. aad Mrs. Young, I,.. Cookaon. J. A. tewart, Nslson; T\nA. Campbell, W. O. Metoalt, Mr. Taylor. Procter: O. A. Houston, Wln-\nand Mrs. C. A. Craddock, Vancou- nlpeg; A. Anderson, R. Btsdman,\nver; P. B. Fowler, Victoria; h. Mo- | Medicine Hat; R. vy. Marshall, Bhst-\nKaslo;   P.   Ltater,   creston;   J.!field,  Eng.:   L.  Roberta,   Calgary.\nWhere the Guest Is King\nThe Savoy\nNELSON'S NEWEST AND PTNIRT HOTEL\nMANY  ROOMS  WITH  PRIVATB\nBATHS OR SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, Prop.\nSAVOY-\u2014Mrs. A, Cameron, Ores- ,1.; Mr. and Mrs. I. W. Dalroy, Win-\nton; K. Leveque, Blocan; Mr. and nlpeg; O. L. Drewrey, Corra Linn;\nMrs. R. V. Nslly. Reno mine; O. |c. A, Crsrar. Vancouver; 8. Kline,\nOgloff, Lathhrldgs; Mr. and Mrs. i Greenwood: Mrs. J. Streeter, Edge-\nShaw. J. D. Pierce, Montague, P. E. I wood;   T.   Rooney,   Revelstoke.\nCASTLEGAR MAY\nBUPCOMMUNIH1\nHALL THIS YEAR\nWILL ADVERTISE SALMON\nIs  Dlseussed at Meeting of\n40 Residents; Plan More\nActivtiy\nCASTLEGAR, B. C, JaO. 10.\u2014A\nmeeting to turttuv the interest* of\nUie young people, by arranging- for\nmore social functions of _, larger\nscope than oould be taken care ol\nIn an ordinary home, wu held la*u\nFriday evening In Weet. hall.\nTho convenor. Mil- M Robln#un,\nculled tlie maeUna to order, stating that she was concerned by Uie\nineik. at nodal eut*rr__nient .or\nthe younger people, and that she\nhid called the mtedng for the purpose ot publicly discussing warn\nand mean* to provide what wu\nlacking. Mra. Robinson then outlined a tentative plan to accomplish the desired object, and asked\nD. Maxwell to take tine chair lor\nthe rest of the evening. Mr. Mux-\nwell threw the meeting open for a\ngeneral discussion during whloh It\nwas brought out that there wae no\ndesire to eurtaJl the efforts of the\nCttstlegar Community club, otherwise known as tu.o C. C. C, but\nrather to spur tht*m on to greater\nachievements; also that If any\nprof lta .accrued from the proposed\ngatherings, that they would lx\nturned over to th_  Boy Scouts.\nReference to tlie Boy Scouts\nbrought out the fact that the\nboys were about ready to take\ntheir tenderfoot teste and had Increased   ln   numbers.\nTh\u00a9 federal government will spend\n$35,000 to advertise D. C. salmon\nthroughout Canada, each dollar given by the government,to be matched by another from the Industry\nconcerned. A fund of g&O.OOO has\nalready been raised. Above Is shown,\ntop, crew of one of a salmon packer's 400 boata \"bralUng\" freshly\ncaught salmon on to a barge, which\nrushes the catch to one of the\ncompany's 45 canneries on the\nwest   coast.   Bottom,   Richard   Gosse,\n^ni_^-_^H~ST^ffiL.,\u00bbR |SSS2_^\u00ab1^.toBrt^raa^i^rr\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapolnte, Prop.\nHot and cold water In every room\nsteam heated\nQUEEN'S\u2014J. L. deVoln, Beasley:\nat Oollena, Pentlcton; l). MoLeod.\nTrail; J. Steele, Salmo; Mr. and\nMrs. O. Handel, Ymlr; W. Olnoa,\nSsJVca; S. Mors, Sandon; R. E\nObleogt,   Calgary.\nMadden Hotel\nd. a. Mcdonald\nBteam   Heated   Rooms   by   the\nDay,   Week    or   Month\nBvery  consideration shown\nto   guests.\nOor. Baker and Ward Streets\nNelson\nNew Qrand\nHotel\nr. I- KAPAK, Prop.\nWeekly   or   monthly   rates\nHot and Cold water ln aU room*\nPhone 303      P, O, BOX 1081\nwss brought foiwud and there Ls\na possibility that ways and meant\nof erecting such a building can be\ndevised during the coming year.\nThie bulldng, if erected, would\nhouse the 0, C. C, th* Bov\nScouts, and alio would be available\nfor public, entertainments, school\nconcerts, basketba-11, badminton -mil\npublic meetings.\nThere were present, 40 people, a\nlarge number of whom took part tn\ntbe good-humored but spirited discussion which resulted ln agreeing\nto the plan as outlined, and enter-\nBRITISH POLICE\nDISTRICTS PLAN\nAID EACH OTHER\nLONDON,   Jan.   19.   \u2014   Theorlxtng\nteJnment   Is   now   assured   for   the | that   two   heads   are   between   the\nwinter months. uf*.  *>*\u00bb*\u25a0  mv   wing   advan^eu   i_,\n_______________ ! closer  cooperation   between   the   po\nll c*' districts of Bngland and Wiles\nami Scotland Yard ln Ore tit Brt-\ntain's ago old w>r agan*. crime\nnnd    criminals.      Under    condition'.3\nANCIENT BUTCHER    \t\nSHOP DISCOVERED 34 SrSit^of ^SS*t_\n\" oorougn oi Kn.tib.ud  and  Waiee na*\n\u2022 -\u25a0\u25a0 \u2014 l sols,  jurisdiction   over   lta  rerspective\nCLEVELAND,   Ohio,  Jan.   10.\u2014Dis- i territory    and    Scotland    Turd    ha*\ncovery of a butcher shop more then **> ___'Sin*   a*******  ouuiiue  t..e\n_0.000    years    old    was    reported    al ! \u00bb\u2122WOf**&*L **\u00ab& \u00bb;\u00bb\u00bb*\u00ab>\nthe recent meeting of the American: ^X   iu   ^   otliuaib   or   he   Dor\nAssociation  for tbe  Advancement of\n1ough,\nis   a   lamomj   trick   of   sensa-\nSclenoe by Dr. Harold J. Cook, ofjtionai novelist* to bring into their\nthe Cook Museum or Natural Hit.- atorlM a Scotland Yard detective\ntory. Agate,  Nebraska, i who    takon    control,     ignoring     Hi-\nBones.or   the   huge   elephunt-llk*' most entirely the local police, while\nRAILWAY HEARINGS\nBEGIN, ENGLAND\nDO NOT PROFIT\nBY EDUCATION\nLONDON. Jan. 19. (AP)\u2014Hearing!\nbegan today before the national\nboard on request of the railway\ncompanies to reduce wages of employees \u00a311,000,000 yearly, and demands of the men for wage Increases amounting to \u00a37,000,000 annually.\nAfter the board makes Its final\nreport, the unions and th_ companies will decide whether to accept lt or rej.ct it. The board's\nfindings are not legally binding on\neither side, but with one exception\nthey have been accepted ever since\nt he board was established under\nthe Railway act of 1920. The wages\nof  600,000 men are  involved.\nJ. C RYKERT DIES\nAFTER LIFE FULL\nGREAT INTEREST\n(Continued  Prom Pace One)\nness. In 1879 he was married to\nElla Wells, daughter of Mark Wells\nof Niagara Falls, N. T. Mr. Wells\nwas the foynder at tne first express company, the Wells-rargo Wx-\npress company.\nIn 1881 Mr. Rykert oould no\nlonger withstand tbe lure of the\nwest, and Joined tne Canadian customs department, serving at first\non the boats plying between San\nFrancisco, Oallf., and Victoria, B.\nO., but lifter the completion of the\nNorthern Pacific, the first railway\nthrough ths northwest, h* was\ncommissioned by his department to\nlocate and open s customs port of\nentry to handle the goods entering\nCanada destined to the Kootenay\ncountry. The late Mr. Rykert choso\nthe location where the Kootenay\nriver enters Canada, north of Bonner* Ferry, Idaho, and about six\nmiles south of oreston. And this\npoint, his home since 1888, ts\nknown as Rykerts.\nAfter opmlng the customs house\nat Rykerts, named ln honor of\nhimself, his customs work consisted tn the handling of pack\ntrains at first, then the small boats,\nand finally the big steamers that\nmvlgated ths Kootenay to Kaslo\nand Nelson.\nWAR OREAT\nPORT   OF   ENTRY\nThrough this port of entry there\npassed Into Oanada almost all th-?\nimports of the then great mining\ndistrict of the Kootenay, and so\ncontinued until after the building\nof the Canadian Pacific railway in\nthe liter BO's. Mr. Rykerts territory extended from Cranbrook to\nWaneta, and thouatndj upon thou-\n_  erf  dollars were  collected  nyJ\ngoad   dviit,   for   wbtch   Mr.   mtUri      \u25a0\nhad  eometlmse   to  pay   as  high   as\nI  per  oent to  get  remittance  carried to the nearest post office, then\nMud Blogh. near Bandpolat. Idaho.\nAn example ol tbe implicit faith\nthe department of customs bad V1\nMr. Ryksrt's honesty was abown by\ntbe faot that Me office wag not\ninspected lor seven yean after It\nwss   established.\nAmong tb\u00ab Tlflton who enjoyed\ntbs well known hospitality of tbe\nRykerts was the late President Theodore Roosevelt. Before becoming\npresident, .\"Teddy\" spent part of\noe summer with the Rykert. in\nthe late 80*a, and a larga caribou\nshot locally by tbe famous president Is still In the Rykert home\nover   tbe   fireplace.\nIn the long span be waa In the\ncivil servloe and at a time of development in a wide but sparsely\nsettled area, Mr. Rykert, in addition to customs work, served as\nimmigration sgtnt, provincial fov-\nernment agent, mining recorder. Justice of the peace, and held several.\nother such offices, as well as selling tbe first town lots in Nelson\nfor tbe government,\nC. D. Blackwood received a wtro\nfrom Charles Davis, collector of\ncustoms at Rykerts, yesterday, reporting the death of Charles Rykert, and stating that Rav. Mr.\nOirlick of Creston would be assisting with the fun rai services,\nwhich would be at Rykerts Wednesday.\nD, A. McParland, who got acquainted with Mr. Rykert In 1884.\ntwo years after he opened his customs office, Lome A. Oampbell, J.\nQ. Bunyan, collector of customs at\nNelson, T. J, Boanlan, and others\nwho were acquainted with the newB,\nall spoke tn terms of highest appreciation of Mr. Rykert, and his remarkable   career.\n\"Let as play at being married.\"\n\"No, mother says that we\nmust not quarreL\"\u2014Moustlqae,\nrharlerol.\nSo  Declares  Micmac  Indian\nDiscussing the Problems\nof His Race\nNEW GRAND\u2014H. Handrick, Proc-\ntar; P. J. Prttlno, O. Fantus, Sudbury;    N.   Oodr.!.    Winnipeg.\nMADDEN- 3. Btsrtseff.  N. Poskova,\njOMkanook;   R.  E.  McCain,  Spokane.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n;n:.  Vernon  M. Phone 5371\nII.   Wassirk\nFifty Rooms of Solid Comfort\nHead quartern for Loggers and\nMiners.\nT A. Mills, for many years achool\nprincipal at Bobcaygeon, Ont, is\ndead.\nTrail, B.C.\n\u25a0X'.'*'* \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 |   | | | WkmmW \u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0 M |\nmammoth that , had lien hacked\nwitto flint knives by the anclenc\nbutchers, and some of the knives\nthemselves, have been found in\nYuma county, Arizona, by Perry\nand Harold Anderson, Dr. Cook said.\nThe knives burled with the bonea\njuest.uiuiuiy some of i..e\" f.ne_t\ndetectives In the world today -re\nattached to Scotland Yard, and the\n_._u.u,- I., ii tor wf ue_eciun o.\ncriminals are maintained primarily\nto tie... with crime within the Loudon    metropolitan    area.\nSome    time    m\u00abo,    Lord    Bent ford,\nshow men must have lived there | who, ae Sir Joynson \"Hicks, was\nat the same time as the mammoths,;\"*8. t,lt:i ll'\\lw e\u00bboreury, nod-\nDr. Cook believes. Some of the \u00a3SL^I,,L#CiS_ ren'ltablc n_t,ie\nmammoth    bones    showed    ev ld.no; \u25a0 J\u2122\u00ab    ,       . \u25a0_**&\nof having been .hacked while itWL.^uaWe io t.iem. and urged wis\nfresh, or tough and \"green . A, nepd for closer cooperation between\nbison   bone  evidently   uned   In   flak-j \"tne   Yard'   and   provincial   forces.\nP.irticulariy   cages' of   murder   and\nother   _rloua   crime   wa_,   it   urged\nin' i   toe   t_53-fatanee   or   Rth_   Vara\nshould   oe  obtained   at   the   earliest\npossible  moment.\nUnder the present regulations,\nhowever, there ia no power to\nco.uyei loci po.u i Lorces to ca..\nIn help from ticotand Yard, a.nci\nln some counties the view is\nheld that, local detectives are bet-\nco,uU)ped    to   deal   with    JooaJ\nrctary  with  excellent  results.\nOTEL\nAi\n1L1NGTON\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. J>. I_VESQUE. PlT>p\n\u25a0MBflSBIlMaWaHaVBBnilaTI\nQOUGLA\u00a7\nHOTEL\nRooms and Bath\nE.  L.  and   A.  OMOTAG1\nProps.\nSteam  Heated Hot  ;.nil  Cold\nThroogtinot Water\nB*-     608 Phone  263\nTrail, B. C.\ning off particles of flint in making\nthe atone knives also was discovered.\n\"Some of the bison and mammoth\nbonea found here also appear to\nhave been gnawed,\" Dr. Cook said.\nHe did not say whether he thought\nthey had been gnawed by men or\nanimals.\nThe dry Arizona plateau where\nthe bones and knives were discovered was a well-watered flood plain\nwhen the ancient butcher shop was\nln operation. Dr. Cook explained.\nStreams were flowing across lt from\nthe mountains toward the east. All. rj-p|\u00bbri- *iri\u00bbir_ T-\nevldence indicates the Hood plain: OlIiXK UUIVIJi IS\nexisted tn the pleistocene ago, which j\nextended from about. 1,000,000 yeiirr.\nago to within aO.OOO yearn of the\npresent. There Is no probability\n:hat the flood basin is more recent j\nthan that, he declared.\nThe fltut knives were similar to I\nthose found at Colorado, Texas aud\nTorrlngton. Wyoming. They are\nwell made, indicating their maker,\nwere comparatively far advanced\ntoward   eivlllKatinn.\n\"The constantly increasing evidence of thlb character makes it\nappear that early man nut only\nexisted at a much earlier date tn\nAmerica than haw been, until recently, commonly believed, but that\nhe had reached a relatively high\nstate of advancement, at least in\ncertain direction*, in pletstooeni\nlimes in this country,\"- Dr. Cook\n.said.\nTRURO, N. 8., Jan. 19.\u2014Claiming\nthat \"trapping, basket and aye-\nhandle making\" arc the natural\ntrades of hi\u201e people, an Indian of\nthe Truro reserve, writing under the\nnom de plum. \"Qloo_c\u00bbp\", expressed\nhis views in the \"Letters to the\nEditor\" column of the Truro News\non the proposed Indian College to\nbe built at Shubenacadie, N. 3.\n\"Not Vtry long ago,\" the letter\nstages. \"I wab asked what I thought\nof our some thousand dollars lni..,an\ncollege at Shubenacadte wher. the\nfinal touches of our long dr_wn\n'civilization' In to be given, where\nevery thing 'Indian' is to be for--\n4 ver obliterated or cast Into tho Bpt-\ntomlesa Pit. I was told, ln lean than\n10 years' time, some smart young\nIndiana can become priests, doctors\nand lawyers, young squaw.., school\nteachers, stenographers and a-iea-\nladlea Just like the  Whites today.\n\"Remembering my own experience\nof the effects or consequences ol\nWhite Man's education upon an\nIndian and knowing how unchangeable Lo The Low Indian ls, I had\nto utter one of my great great\ngrand-father's grunts and prayed to\nour old Fatter Qlooscap \u25a0 to co_ga\nand save us which I hope he ....\ndo, for to be an Indian is to be\nforever ln constant state of being\nnothing more than a looker on,\nlonging for the good things of thla\nworld which he sees but never can\ngvt.    It i_, nearly 40 years since the\n\\r\nCAUSE OF GREAT\nCOMMOTION, EAST\nFERNIE CURLING\nThe   House   Yon\nWant!\n\\ym TI1KR your'e s prospective buyer or owner\nnf n house, you'll find the\nnsMlflfd Columns worth\nwhile.\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nFERNIE. B. C-, Jan. 16.\u2014In the\ncurling on Friday night Prentice\nwon his camo with McDonald, This\nj gives htm live straight games in\n] the Ingram cup aerteu, and malu-\ni tains his lead over any other link.\nTh. ice remain*, ln .splendid shape.\nThe following are tho results of the\njgnme-:\nKastner 9, Cummtngs 8; Preutlce\n10, McDonald 9; Wilson 18, Sudda-\n;by 7: Wallace 0, Douglas 11. Llp-\nI hardt   6,   Stewart   11.\nMwr# u_r%a_fWIE_S r'eXat*^ r\ndlan'. Today we have not one single\nInjin who can earn his br.ad and\nbutter through or by the use of his\njpen.\n| \"As tiome one said, three months\nafter an Indian Priest ls ordairjed\nand Irtdlan doctor and Indian lawyer\ngraduate, you will find the three\nworking tog. ther at baskets and\nhandles.\n\"Modernism instead of lmproye-\ntng the condition of Micmac Indians\ntn Novtt acotla. u playing havoc wjth\nthem, and everything else 'Indian',\n\"Our last Christmas ln our reserve here was a modern one. Oo\nto church in the morning, go back\nto our own house, enjoy your own\ndinner. If any Indian done it 60\nyean, ago no prayers could have\nsaved  hln  lost soul.\n\"For 80 years ago an old Indian\nChristmas was all 'Indian', all saucy\n| whites,   including   priests   were   ex-\n1 eluded from the Holy of HoU s\nwhere feast upon feasts raged form\nday before Christmas until New\nYear. A New Year was always' a\nreconciliation and kissing day. So\nour modern Indian Christmas her.,\nwas a mere shadow of our fonper\nones.\"\nNelson, B.G. Cafes\nTHE ROYAL CAFE\nCLASHIC    RENTAL RANT\nRefinement   and    nHkarv    Prevail\nOPEN   DAY   AND   Mf.lM\nSpecial   dinner   11:3\"   to   2:S0   35c\nSupper.   5:80   to   8 v><\n*\"  gin Chop Hue.* and  .Noodles\nPhone  182\nAdvising a reduction In the salaries\nof civil servants, and in the sessional\nindemnities of members of the legislature, S. Whlttaker. Conservative\nmember for Moose Jaw county, took\na strong stand in favor of rigid\ngovernmental economy durl ng the\npresent depression, ln a speech ln\ntbe Saskatchewan legislature.\nThe Standard Cafe\n320 Baker Street, NrLson, B. C.\nOPEN   DAY   AND   NH.HT\n11.80  to  2.30  Special  Lunch   S5c\n5.30  to 8  p.  m.       Supper   tSfl\nPHONE 154\nKootenay Cafe\nVHUfOM  NlKi.r,.\nDinner,  11.30 to 2.30    8(e\nSupper    5.30 to 8 p. m.        .    35c\nShort Orders a  Specialty\nQuick   Service\nNut  Kootenay  Hotel,  Nelson\nRead the\nNelson Daily News\nDiagonal\nTweed\nWork\nPants\nReal Heavy Fellows of\nalmost unbelievable value.    See them.\nALL SIZES\n$3.00 Pair\nCharles\nMorris Ltd.\nNUW YORK. Jan. 10. (Hy the\nCanadian    ftesa)--vPatr_lman    Harry\nHunt did Jib duty\u2014more, he did a\nsound lilt of constructive detective\nwork. His reward\u2014bhunned by everyone.\nWhen he appeared, Strong men\nI at linn tu begone, Women\ntrembled and fled in dismay. A\nmagistrate fled from his bench ut\nmere _i\u00abht Of him. He emptied two\npolice tstutlonb of hardened at-\nWcheb when he crusted tueir thresholds.\nPatrolman Hunt whs aware of recent labor trouble*, at it lea room\non West 47tn ,-Lreet, and Ind him-\neelf in the dark shadows of its\nhallway. Someone had been fllng-\ni ng things\u2014thi ngn known to tho\ntrade  as  btlnk   bombs.\nThen, along came Charles J.\nDavifl of tho Bronx, wbo flung the\ncontents uf a bottle into the hull-\nway. The fluid satursised Patrolman Hunt from l\u00ab-tid to loot An\nodor, so 'strong thut it teemed to\ntake material furm and cltofca him\nalmost out of lua shoes, despoiled\nthe   neighborhood.\nThe policeman IoukIh u bravely,\nbtaggered out and clutched, the\nastonl.iiod Da via. P._i-i.raby drew\nback or ran ga^pidu. They .tumbled Into the 47th Strut police station.\n\"Oct oat of hem\" roared the\nlieutenant over his shoulder a** he\nnui, pushing his way through flec-\nm_  policemen.\nHunt smiled sheepishly mid went.\nThey arrived at the 30th Street station, and lt waa cleared limned -\nj lately.\nThey WW to the West Side\nCourt, and Magistrate Richard Mc-\nKJnlry left the bench without waiting to declare a recesH. Gierke of\nJ the complaint room listened to Patrolman Hunt's troubles outdoors,\nbut he had to wait some time before he was received indoors by any\n.ourt  or  police  official.\nClaims Mentality\nStationary  During\nHundreds of Years\n\"TRY A NIP TONIGHT*\nLONDON,  Eng.,  Jan.   19.\u2014U  men-\nkind   want*   to   be   proud   of    its\n,-.<.\u2022.. it will have to get up n<]  hue\ni.e.    Sir  William  J. Pope  says  iua.\nhasn't   Improved   any,   physically   or\nmentally,    on    his    cxve    ancestors.\n.ju    wiiiiams   decoration   wt_   m- a.\nin    his    Norman    Lockyer    lecture.\nEven   ln   many   of   the   arts,   literature    and    possibly    such    ubau-uC\n.subjects    as   moral    philosophy,    nu\nprogress   h a  been   made   for   many\nceaUurles  past,\"   he  says.     He  even\nhints   that   the   situation   is   hope\nlev..\n\"This absence of progress,\" Sir\nWiiitam oonc.udes, \"seems to lore,\nupon us the ooncluslon that certain forms of Intellectual expression were worked out thousands\nDl years ago to the utmost Uui .\nof t.he oat-aclty of hum in Intelligence.\n\"A  nation   has  to produce  or  go\nunder.' \u2014Sir  Arthur  Keith\nBEST PROCURABLE\n\u2014 iOTTUD * \u00abU*UNTT\u00bb_Y \/\/\n\u2014oauci   op   tcOTLsao\n,41 \u00ab4.\"f 64W 4J4* SMMSMS'SlSW^t. SU^^M MOn.\u2014\nThe Original Label \u2014 look (or It al tha Vendor's anil Insist on\nGRANT'S \"BEST PROCURABLE\"\nThis advertisement la not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Govermnant of\nBritish Columbia.\nCAPELL HEADS\nIMPERIAL VETS\nORDER IN TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. 0\u201e Jan. 19.\u2014G. O.\nCapell was tonight elected president\nof the Trail branch. Imperfal Vet-\nerana, when the annual meeting\nwaa held. Other oflcers are aa follow; Col. Pred Lister. M. P. P.,\nhonorary president; Col. A. Cooper,\nhonorary vice-president; O. O. Ca-\nI-ell, president; Robert Porbea, first\nvice-president, and E. P. Lansdown,\naecond   vice-president.\nLTNKOPINO, Sweden, Jan. 19.\nEiurope'g trend toward aviation Is\natrlldngiy shown by the decision\nof a manufacturer of rallroao\ncoe-vlifis here to build metal aero\nplanes Instead.\nSweden alr\u00bb*dy lis * vo Important aenoplne wnrk* whoae product is principally exported w\nsmall countries which have no av\nlatlon   industry   of   the   own\nEczema in Blisters Itched Terribly.  Healed by Cuticura.\n\"When my slater was two years old eczema broke out in blisters all\nover her head. It was very sore and Itched terribly so that she could\nnot sleep.   It was so severe that she lost moot all of her hair.\n' Wa tried all kinds of remedies but none proved to be successful.\nWe were advised to try Cuticura Soap and Ointment so purchased some.\nThey helped her, and after using one cake of Cuticura Soap and one\nbox of Cuticura Ointment her head was completely healed.\" (Signed)\nMiss Angellne MacLean, Jordan Bay, N. S., Oct 23,1929.\nSojip Re. Ointment 25 snd 50c. Tslcti-i 25c.   Sold everywhere.   Sample each free.\nAddre-* Canadian Depot: J. T. Wall Companv Limhwl, Montreal.\nSHOULD THE\nCHILDREN EAT IT?\nF'AHENTS, particularly mothers, are paying a lot of attention\nto children's diet these days. For it is more economical and\npleasant to keep a child well by feeding him correctly than by\nnursing and doctoring him back to health.\nOf course the doctor should be consulted regarding what a\nchild should eat and what he should not eat Bnt do you realize that the leading manufacturers of food seek the advice\nand approval of the leading nutritional authorities in the\ncountry, relative to the claims they make for their products in their advertising?\nIn other words, food advertisements are reliable sources of\ninformation regarding diet. They are based upon the results\nof the latest approved scientific discoveries about vitamins,\nminerals and roughage, In relation to vigorous bodies, clear\ncomplexions, sound teeth and properly regulated systems.\nSo read these advertisements carefully. Consult yonr doe-\ntor about them. Very often the advertiser Invites yon to do\nthig because he has asked authorities, whom your doctor respects, about those advertisements FIRST.\n 0(0\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       TTTESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1981.\nPage Three\nFarthest North Area Is Now\nMapped From the Air\nWINS SIGNAL HONOR\nNorthward   \"the   tide   of   Empire \u2022\ntake* lt\u00ab way\" ln 1930 end survey*,\nengineer*   must    keep    pace    with\nmapping requirements even though\nIn an area nearly a* large as Rustle, only maps of the river valleys\n.nave   heretofore   been   available\n.,   Fortunately,  ln  striving  to  cotn-\nlt>ly with the insistent demand for\niQcurate maps, geographer* and map-\nMrs now U-vt cli.  -'6 of tbe air-\n>lane   with   the   modern   navigator\n\u25a0urveyer, plua  photographic  equlp-\nnent.     Thereby   a   country,   arsc-\nnlcally   unknown   tc   any   but   the\n*ild thing*, has been revealed ln a\nlarge portion of the exploratory edition of the FltEgerald sheet of the\n,_tional   topographic   series,   Issued\nthe   topographical   survey,   department of the interior.\n| The new map. which embrace* an\nrea of about 487u square miles ou\n\u2022oale of four miles  to   he inch\n' the extreme northeast corner of\nIberte,  ls  obtelnaole   upon   application to the bu*\\eyur general, Ot-\n^wa,  for the sum of 26 cents in\nlicet form, or 60 cents, 11 on linen\nack or in folder cover.\nAt townsu'p 110  .'u-t outeld* the\nlUtheasterly       corner       of       the\ntapped   territory,   1*   the   present\n\u2022rmlnus  of   the   surveyed   portion\n'oiks Past 40\nShould Read This\nTlT you are troubled with a burn-\nJig sensation, functional bladder\nleeknesa, frequent dally annoyance,\nIrttlng-up-nlghts, dull pain* in\nf ick, lower abdomen and down\n1 trough groins\u2014you should try the\nInazlng value of Dr. South worth's\nI'Jratabfl\"   at   once   and   see   what\n' wonderful  difference  they make!\n1 thi* grand old formula of a well\nI wvra physician brings you the\n[-rift and satisfying comfort lt has\n\u25a0-ought to dozens of others, you\nIire.v will be thankful and very\n1*11 pleued. If It does not satisfy,\nye druggist that supplied you is\nl..thorlzed to return your money on\nle first box purchased, If you\nIttild know the Joy of peaceful,\nIstful sleep and normal healthy\nladder actions, start this test to-\nl.y.   Any good druggist can supply\nSPECIAL\nFor January\nSilk Dresses\nCLEANED\n25% OFF\nour usual prices\nH. K. tOOT\nHigh Class uyer and\nCleaner\nFalrvlew. Nelson.  B.  C.\nof the fourth meridian which Is the\nlongwt surveyed straight Una In the\nworld.\nA portion of l_ake Athabasca oc\ncuplea roughly eight towu_hlps In\nthe southeasterly corner. In the\nfur trading day, this lake was about\n70 days' canoe travel trom Fou\nWilliam, the old capital or the\nNorthwest oompany. Now the aviator-surveyor takes only sa many\nhours to make the trip, Including\ntime for re-fuellng. By train aiu\n\u2022teamer seven days are required for\nthlls Journey, If clo*_ connections can\nbe made at Edmonton and to the\nend of the steel at Waterways with\nthe boat* which navigate Athabasca\nriver and lake and which continue\ndown Slave ilver to Fitzgerald.\nSLAVE RIVER BOUNDARY Of\nPRECAMBRIAN    tOKMATION\nSlave river, part of the Mackenzie\nsystem connecting Lakes Athabasca\nand Great &iave, divides the Fitzgerald area into two distinctly different classes of country. To the\nwest Is an almost level plain with\nfew lakes but many sloughs anu\nhay meadows varied by ealty plains,\nIs some cases grass-covered. Outside of the grassy meadows and salt\nplains are growths of young popular.\nThis ls a natural range country.\nHorses and cattle from Fi tzgerald\nand Fort Smith graze ovei it all\nthe year round, and -omft out in\nthe spring in splendid condition.\nHere is the cuiy hero of will'\nbuffalo left In the world, the last\nremnant of the wood buffalo hi\nthe past few years bl\u00bbon from Buffalo national park at Walnwrlght\nAlberta, have been bn-ught in and,\ntogether with the wood buffalo, are\nincreasing rapidly. The greater part\nof the area west of the Slave\nfalls within the sanctuary of the\nWood Buffalo park which extend*\nInto the areas embisced by the\nPeace Point map, and portion* of\nthe Lake Claire and Chlpsvy&n\nmaps.\nAll of the mapped territory east\nof the great precambrlan shield,\ndisplaying rocky ridtres and knolls\nwith netted lakes between them.\nAlong the liver on this side Is u\nfringe of lake spruce Farther back\njackpine sparsely clothss the ridges\nwith spruce, tamarack and birch in\nthe hollows. Here Is fair trapping\nground Into which hunter* from\nFite-serald   and   Fort   Smith   pene-\nLake trout and whltefiah are\nplentiful In the Innumerable lakes\nand   streams,   ln   contrast   to   ths\nhest Colds\nRub well over\nthroat and chest\nVUBH\n\u00ab.Bl!WI.'.IIIIT.i;W|..\u00bb:l!llUI.V.J1.IK\nDr.  Frank  Rose\nSpecialist\nIn  th.   treatment  uf\nPILES\nand other diseases ol th. return\nWrit* for free booklet, zieiier\nBuilding, Howard and Riversids,\nSpokane. Wash.\nYour Printing\nCarries\na Message\nPeople with whom you do business judge the\n[character of your concern to no small extent by your\nI stationery.\nGood printing, on first class paper, gives a good\n[impression.\nWith the largest printing and ruling establisli-\n[ment in the interior of British Columbia, equipped\n\u25bawith modem machinery and conducted by a staff\n(whose constant endeavor it is to turn out printing\n(only of the highest quality, The Nelson Daily News\n| Job Department is ready to fill your orders promptly,\nI efficiently and economically.\nIt carries the largest stock of paper and card-\nl boards, cover paper, cards and other material bell tween Calgary and Vancouver.\nMAY WE SUPPLY YOU WITH ANY\nOF THE FOLLOWING?\nPhoto shows, left to right, Major u. \u00a3. Brower, flight commander of\nS.lfrldge Field, and Lieut. Louis A. Vaupre, of tbe 04th Pursuit Squadron,\nafter he had won the Mitchell race, the outstanding event of the army\nair circus staged by the First Pursuit group at Mt. Clemens, Mich. \u2022\nRuled Office Stationery\nLedger Sheets or Forms\nLetterheads\nNoteheads\nBillheads\nStatements\nEnvelopes\nShipping  Tags\nBusiness  Cards\nDisplay   Cards\nLegal  Forms\nBlotters\nHand  Bills\nPosters\nWedding Stationery\nIn  Memoriam  Cards\nStock Certificates\nVisiting  Cards\nInvitation Cards\ns Meal  Tickets\nLetter Circulars\nNote Circulars\nLodge Constitutions\nBylaws\nBooklets\nPrize Lists\nAuditors' Reports\njackfish and suckers whch frequent\nthe waters of the portion weat of\nthe Slave l_ke Athabasca is famous fishing ground yielding quantities of whiteflsh, which art shipped ln Ice on scows to Waterways,\non the Athabasca river, to the south,\nand loaded on express trains fox\nChicago and ether outside points.\nKnown formerly as the \"Lake of\nthe Hill,\" leferrlng Lo the rough\nprecambrlan country along its\nnorthern shore, Athabasca lake is\naald to have been * traditional\nand central gathering point o. the\nIndlans sucn as Onondaga lake waa\nto the Iroquois\nDBOP OF 116 FEET,\nI'OiENTl.VL   WATLlt  POWElt\nFort ttmitn has ueen dei-ermtnea\nby survey lo be Just lns.de tne\nwuruiweHt Territories It is, therefore, immediately outside the __u-\ngerald map, but suown upon It in\na   marginal   in_a.\nOn a\u201eve river between Fitzgerala\nand tort Smith, a Distance of 16\nmiles, ls a source of potential water\npower in a series of rapids with a\ndrop of 116 feet. These are circumvented by a good portage served\nijy motor trucks, wnere formerly\nOA.on and Red river tarts, or 0-CD\nin iour-ln-nantls with wagons, did\nduty. A telephone tine counecu.\nuie   two  settlements.\nAt the \"Rupids ui the Drowned,\"\nnear Feat oralth, Cuuibert Grant,\nin 1786, lost ijve of his men, two\ncanoes and s^me merchandise while\non hi* way to found the post on\nGreat Slave lake, which Alexander\nMackenzie meut.ons sa having been\nlocated on the south shore in that\nyear.\niviackenzie, leaving old Fort Chlpe-\nwyan on June 4, l'.Bfl, tod.scover tht\nriver whlcn now bear* his name, ai.ci\nto traverse it to it* mouth, reachej\nthe vicinity of Fort omlth on June\n6 after portaging six times. Al\nthe Mountain rapid, the location o;\nwhich the map shows, he lost a\ncanoe. Just above he noted numbers of pelican which have given\nthe name t<w Pelican rapids, tne\nsecond of tiff series below Fitzgerald. Descendants oi Mackenzie'_\npelican of over a century ago still\npersist on the wooded Islands in\nthe swirling rapids. Here they are\nat one of their most northern\nbreeding places They make the!?\nnests in slight depressions In tr-e\nsand and feed their young on fish.\ncontrary to the prevailing poetic\nidea of the mother pelican whoso\n\"beak unlocks ner besom's stream\nix) stUl her famished nestling's\nscream.\"\nThe   autumn  of   1769.  Mackenzie\npassed up the Slavs having accomplished a Journey of over 30Oq mllta\nin canoes.   It is worthy of note that\nhe   and   his  five  white  men,  with\nthe  Indian  occupants of  two  other\ncanoes,     lived     off    the    country\nthough armed only with the lingering flint locks of the time.\nFAMOUS   STEAMER*.   ON   THE\nMACKENZIE  SYSTEM\n. Not   t-3   mention  airplanes,   Mackenzie's canoemen would have been\namazed If they could have seen the\nm parlous     flat-bottomed     Hteame:s\nwhich   now  navigate  the  Mackenzie\nj system   In   a   relay   mrth   of   the\n! rapids.    Acconrtng  to  Surveyor  Wll-\n' 11am    Ogilvie,   F.R.O\u00a3u   of    Yukon\n: fame,   the   first of  those  boats,   on\n' the   lower   Mackenzie   system,   tiie\nj \"Wrlgley,\"  which waa. built  at Fort\nSmith ln 1837, navgaeed from there\nto the delte. of the Mackenzie.   The\nI lumber   for   Its  hull   and  housing\n\\va_  all __and-sawn  from timber at\n; hand.      The    machinery    made    In\neastern   Canada,   reached   Edmonton\nby  train  and  boat and  from  there\nwas  freighted on carte, and  wagons\nover  100 miles to Athabasca Landing, then down Athabasca liver and\nlake nearly .50 miles to Fort chlpe-\nwyan and onward another 100 mil*\"\nor   so   to   Fort   Smith   where   the\nnarte  were nswmbled.    TTp  to that\nUme,   or   before   the   portage   road\nwas    cut,    small    boate    ran    the\nrapids.    The \"Wrlgley\" was 80 feet\nover  all,   14  feet beam  and  10  feet\nIf what you want is not on the list, write or telephone The Nelson Daily News Job Department. We\nare always glad to discuss printing problems with\n;you. f\n\\   Nelson Daily News\nJob Department\n\"Creators of Fine Printing\"\n[Baker St Nelson, B.C.\nLife Savers  Vjjgjg\nscore a    -i\\\ngrand slam\nwith everybody\nat Bridge\n'bST life Saver time\nis any time.\ndeep.    When fully loaded she drew\nsix feet of water at the stern\nAuotucr old boat, ths \"Grahams,\"\nlaunched ln 18d3, navigated from\nFitzgerald up the Slave river and\non up the Peace to Vermilion\nchutes it had muoh larger dimensions, being 143 lcet long with a\n-tf-foot beam and required nearly\na quarter of a million feat of\nlumber, ail of which was cut In\nthe country from native timber,\nhand sawn for the purpose. Both\nof tnese bo_ts went en long ago\nio  the steamboat's  heaven.\nStill another steamer, tile \"Athabasca,\" navigating, for tne moat\npart. th_ river after which it was\ncalled, has been replaced by a\ns<A.ond steamer of the same name.\nAll of the Mackenzie river system\n(\u2022Warners, then, as new, burned\ncordwood which li contracted icr\nand J-hen cut and piled on tho\nrivers' banks at various polnte.\nTIMBER,   GYPSUM  AND   SALT\nCommentng on the timber along\nthe Slave, Surveyor Oghvle said:\n\"There ia an aoundance of unuer-\nbTui.ii, alder, willow and liaise!.\nAlders and willows grow to a size\nwuich \u201eou_u s_prise people from\nthe eastern part o_ the country. I\nhave seen alders more tnan eight\ninches in diameter and 30 feet\nhigh, while willows are o*ten \u00a3>een a\nloot ln d.ameter. I have met with\none 16 Inches ln diameter. P,plar\nis found in grovts seldom exceeding 12 to 15 inches in diameter\nand from 100 to 120 feet hlgn.'\nriom tills report it Is obvous, that\nln addition to the lumber obtainable from spruce, there ls a supply\nof timber in this northern region\nlot fences, buildings and fuel.\nAlthough rail couuecuon now extends to Waterways, Aiberta, Ogilvie, on his way io the Fitzgerald\nregion and beyond, travelled northward frcm CaJgary In 1892 by construction train tc- the t-nd of the\nsteel at that t.mc, 30 miles south\nof Edmonton, f'ron. there he employed wagons to transport his\ns_4pplies in to Edmonton and on\nto Athabasca Lauding v. here he\n.ound the old Bteau.er \"Athabasca\"\nawaiting the arrival of the \"up\nbeats with the yearly fin returns,\nby which mean* he reached Ora-\nhame's Landing, later named Smith.'.,\nLanding for 8lr Donald A, Smith of\nthe Hudson's Bay company who became Lord Strathcona and the third\nCanadian   commissioner  tc   Britain.\nTo avoid confusion with Fort\nSmith, the \"landing\" was changed\nto Fitzgerald, tn memory of a\ngallant gentleman, Inspector Fitzgerald of the Royal North West\nMounted police, who laid down nis\nlife tn the nortn on the Mcpherson -Dawson patrol ln 1911.\nAt Fitzgerald there are trading\nstores, warehouses, dwellings, a poat\nof,lee and a mission church. The\nsettlement owes its existence chleny\nto the fact that It is the point wlwre\nthe freight from the steamers u\nunloaded and re-Ii>aded on trucks\nfor the portage road to Fort Smith.\nGovernment administration buildings are located at. the latter, with\na mission school, church, store*,\nposr. office, wlrelcffl station and\ndepot of the rtoyal Canadian\nMounted police. Both Fltegerald\nand For. Smith have a weekly mall\nirom   abooit   Apill  to  November.\nAt. the fort the &l-ve river is\nabout a mile and a half wide. The\nlower portion off tne map to the\nnorth, toward Great slave lane,\nflows through low, swampy land\nand is so tortuous that tlie earlier\nsurveyor-explcreia, travelling by it,\nliad to go three time, ss far as tlie\nmodern aerial surveyor. Just below the fort the banks begin to\nrise until at. the fon. Itself the\nheight above the water is about\n160 feet with drift or clay, gravel\nand sand on top of granite. Thla\nformation, varied with exposures of\ncalcareous sandstone containing\nsmall masses of gypsum, characterizes thla portion of the Frtegeralt.\narea _ \u25a0\nOn the west sloe of tnB Slave,\nopposite I*. Butte, about 34 mtU>\nln an airline south of Fltegerwd.\noutcrops occur of about 10 icet of\ngypsum, overlaid by 2o feet of\nbroken limestone. Between this and\nFitzgerald are several other outcrops of gypsum on islands, down to\nCaribou Island- The upper beds\nof these section* axe used locally\nfor making lime, benefit cf whikh\nIs shown in the whitewashed houses\nof both  tho settlements.\nSouthwest of Fitzgerald o\u00bb the\nSalt river anot.her .leposlt of 20 feet\nof gypsum is found overlaid by\nabout 10 feet of doiomltio limestone. This escarpment extends\nmore or less continuously In a\nsinuous lln* northwetaward for\nabout 40 mile* to the Little Buffaio\nriver on the Peace Point map. Tne\ntop of tbe escarpment Is broken\nand pitted with hlnk holt* in a\nway characteristic of a gyp*am region. Geologists express thft opinion that a great part <M the drainage Is subterranean through the\ngypsum irtrata, and that th\u00a9 \u25a0mire*\nof the salt in* the various brine\nsprings i\u00bb to be found in crystals\ndisseminated through ths **yP\u00bbum,\nRICH FLORA AND\nVARIED   FAUNA\nEarly traveller* on the western\nprairies exclaimed over the wealth\nand beauty cf the nowers. Not less\nvaried and rich aie the flowers of\nthe Fitzgerald country \"whose glory\nand whose multitude rival the constellations.\" to quote Bryant's Hues\non the flowers of the prairies to\nte south. Here, lending beauty to\nthe summer landscape are dandelions, aooempaniment of mans\ncivilization, yarrow, careopals, dog\nrose*, frtderood. pin anemones\nh_rebells of *uch heavenly blue as\nare never -c*n In more southern\nlatitudes, lady's trcssee, pink la les-\nsllppers, tall meadowaweet, flaming\nprtnos's plume and wild marsh\nmarigold    Shining    \"like    {toe    tn\nbOLl) MINES IN\nDOMINION DRAW\nEYES OF WORLD\nWorld currency problems and the\nincreased purchasing power of gold\nhave focused attention on Canada's gold mines, says tbe Financial\nPort.\nJust before the war Canada wu\nproducing about 800,000 ounces of\ngold annually, but after the war\ndevelopments in Porcupine and\nKlrkland Lake areas brought rap-\nld Increase until the total of\nmore than 2,000,000 ounces, valued at 143,000,000, was reached ln\n1930. There are good prospect* of\nfurther stead y Increase in Canadian production of gold as there\nar* still many developments pending or under way involving the\nincrease in the productive capacity of existing mines and exploration work goes on intermittently\nseeking to discover new mines in\npromising  area*.\nThe Dominion Bureau of Statistics has estimated Canadian gold\nproduction to reach 146,500.000 annually by 1840 but this estimate,\nmade last March, has already been\nshown to be based upon a very\nconservative method and the estimate of Joseph Kitchen of \u00bb55,000.-\n000 annually by 1940 ls a more\nliberal estimate. Obviously, further\ngovernmental co-operation la stimulating exploration and development\nmight speed up the growth in Canadian production with the advantage both to the world at large\nand to this country.\nGold mining ln Canada ls decidedly of more than ordinary interest\nnow with a world shortage of that\nvaluable metal. There are potential gold mines In practically\nevery province and If good luck\nattends the efforts of our explorers and developers our annual\nproduction may continue to rise lor\nmany years yet. This production\nhas a percullarly important value to Canada not only ln providing wages, freight, taxes, and\nwealth ln otftier formB but In aiding\nus in the maintenance of stabilized currency and ln meeting obligations abroad that may be due\nto any deficits in our international\nbalance of payments, both visible\nand otherwise.\nMADAME   JOFFRE   PENSIONED\nPARIS, Jan. 19.\u2014(AP)\u2014The finance committee qj, the chamber of\ndeputies today approved a pension\nof 100,000 francs a year (about\n$4000) foT Madame Joffire. widow of\nthe marshal. Tne pension is similar to that voted the widow of\nMarshal Foche  In  1928.\nLectures on Fungi\nDr. A. H. R. Buller, F.R.S.. protestor of botany of Manitoba, who gave\na lecture at Toronto, Ont., under\nauspices of Royal Canadian Institute\non \"Romance of Fungus Life\".\nCOMMITTEES ARE\nAPPOINTED BY\nYIR INSTITUTE\nGEORGE TRICKETT\nESTATE IS GIVEN\nVALUE OF $11,591\nMrs. Trickett Is Beneficiary\nand Executrix of New\nDenver Merchant\nJUDGE ACTS UPON\nSEVERAL ESTATES\nNoble F, Kee, Nelson Leaves\nEstate of $2742; Take\nAccounts Stenberg\nThe Queensland government has\nextended the provisions of the Sugar\nAcquisition act of 1916, permitting\nthe government to acquire all the\nflour ln the province with the object of saving the wheat growers\nirom  financial ruin.\nswamps   and  hollows  grey.''\nAdded to these _r*\u00bb the blossom*\nof small frul s, with later the\nfruits themsel.Qs, mica as high\nbush cranberry, cherries, strawberries, wild currants, gooseberries,\nblueberries, together with raspberries whii.li spread their cantx. alway*\nover   newly-Uurnt,   country\nWater birds, migrating in spring\nto the mud flats nf the delta of\nth\u201e Slave, cross the water aroaa\neast of the river and the fewer\nlakes and streams to the west of\nit. The UJ-HWMJ Canada goose\nnests anywhere from old muskrat\nhouses to trees 40 feet high. Swans,\ncranes, plovers, grouse, BongMers,\nthe pirate crows, and varieties of\nmany species of biro known to\nother parts of Canada, people the\nwoods and opener wilds, other\ndenizens are moose with bear; beaver, otter, foxes, wolves and other\nfurbearers, and that most majestic\nbrute  of   all.   the   buffalo.\n\"Such then Is LhU Innd, two-\nthirds of the way bet-wren the international boundary and the Arctic\ncircle, whinh lifs in the same latitude   bs   Lentmrrad.   Rua*ta.\nTho Fitzgerald map, with the\nFtlCg Point sheet west cf it. repre-\n\u25a0:>\u25a0 most northerly trrrltoryon\nCanada's mapping program to be\nmapped from the air with the accuracy at detail which that method\nreveals. With the maps of Chi_w-\nwyan and Lake Claire to the south\nand Peace Point to the west an\narea of nearly 30.000 square rml\u00ab\u00bb\nls depicted.\nYMIR, B. C., Jan. 19\u2014 The Ymlr\nWomen's Institute gave a bridge\nparty on Thurtday afternoon at\nthe home of Mr*. H. Stevens. The\nguest* were Mr*. 6^ A. Curwen,\nMrs. A. McLeod, Mr*.' J. H. Clark,\nMrs. Leslie Bond, Mr*. Clarence\nMclsaac, Mrs. W. Clark, Mr*. W. B.\nMclsaac, Miss Grace Rendall, Mrs\nE. Emllson, Mm. M. Hsnls and\nMrs. H. Stevens.\nHonors for high score went to\nMrs. J. H. Clarke, second high Mrs.\nI^slie Bond. Refreshments were\nserved by the hostess assisted by\nMrs. Clarence Mclsaac and Mr*.\nLeslie Bond. The next institute\ncard party will be held at the home\nof Mrs. 8. A Curwen.\nMrs. Carl Nystrom of Hall wu\nthe guests of her mother Mrs. C. J.\nAnderson   on   Thursday.\nMrs. J. H. Clarke entertained at\nthe tea hour on Friday afternoon\nThe Invited guests were Mrs. E.\nDaly, Mrs. S. A. Curwen, Mrs. A.,\nMJLeod, Mrs. Clarence Mclsaac. ,\nMrs. H. Stevens and Mrs. W. B. Mclsaac.\nThe Ymlr Women's Insitute have\nappointed the foliowlng committees\nfor the year of 1931. Ways and\nmeans, Mrs. E. Daly, Mrs. S, A.\nCurwen and Mrs. H. Stevens, library Mrs. W. Clark, others to be\nadded later. Home Economics, Mrs\nJ. H. Clarke and Mrs. E. Emllson\nFlower and sick committee Mrs. J\nM. Gllle, publicity, Mrs. W. B. Mclsaac and Mrs. H. Stevensx School\nbetterment and child welfare Miss\nGrace Rendall, Mrs. Clarence Mclsaac and Mrs. Leslie Bond.\nThe directors of the Ymlr Women's institute held a meeting at\nthe home of Mrs. 8. A. Curwen on\nWednesday afternoon. Tlie directors\npresent were Mrs. H. Stevens. Mrs\nS. A. Curwen, Mrs. W. B. Mclsaac,\nMrs. J. M. Gllle and Mrs. J. H.\nClarke. Mrs. A. Mclsaac was a visitor at this meeting. After the routine business was finished delicious refreshments were served by\nthe hostess, assisted by Mrs A. McLeod. The next directors meeting\nwill be held at Che home of Mrs.\nJ.   H.   Clarke.\nMrs. R. R. Shrum left for Col-\nvllle on Thursday morning where\nshe will be the guest of her son-\nin-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs\nR. Mifflin for some time.\nThe soft weather here for thi-\npast few weeks has caused an ep-\nedemlc of colds, eight children being out of school for several days\nthis   week.\nWill of tbe late oeorge Trickett.\nNew Denver merchant, admitted yesterday to probate by Judge W. A.\nNlabet, sitting ln chambers, leaves\nto hi* widow, Marian Ellen Trickett,\nhis estate, valued at $11,591. Letters\nprobate were issued to Mrs. Trickett\nas executrix, on th* application of\nher counsel, E. G. Matthew. Mr.\nTrickett died  January 8.\nAn estate of *3742 Is left by\nNoble F. Kee of Nelson, who died\nSeptember 38, lettere of probate\nbeing granted to the executrix, Mrs.\nMary Margaret Ludwlg, on the application  of  E.  P.   Dawson.\nIn the estate of the late Gustuf\nGerhard Stenberg of Nelson. Mr.\nDawson obtained an order on behalf\nof the official administrator, Sheriff\nM. E. Harper, for the taking of administrator's accounts.\nAn order for discharge of the\nofficial administrator, Sheriff M. E.\nHarper, in the estate of the late\nJohn T. Bstone of Creaton, who\ndied August 7, 1928, was obtained\nby  Mr.  Dawson.\nDR. ETHEL BENTHAM\nDIES IN LONDON\nLONDON, Jan. lt. (AP)\u2014I*. >th-\ne! Bentbam, Labor member ol par*\nllament lor E_t Islington, died\neirlv yeaterdaj morning at tb* age\nof  70.\nShe wu famous aa a champion\nor women*. Interests and aa a dla-\ntlngulabed   medical   practitioner.\nDr. Bentham bad a long career ln\npublic activities before ahe entered\nparliament ln 1938 and w*\u00bb one of\nnhe first women Justices of peace\nappointed   ln   Oreat   Britain.\nAll her lHe she waa active la ttv\nwomen's   suffrage   movement.\nExcelsior Club\nat Nakusp Has an\nImaginary Tour\nNAKDBP, B. C, Jan. 18\u2014On\nThursday evening the Explorers'\nclub met at the manse. The \"expedition\"' was in ttoe form of an\nimagenary trip through Yellowstone\npark, Illustrated by views of the\ngeysers, the hot-springs, and terraces. Rev. A. C. Pound spoke of\nthe  wild   animal   life  ln  the  park.\nThe members planned a sleighing\nparty to he held the last week In\nJanu*r^\nBladder\nWeakness\nIf Getting: Up Night*. Backache,\nfrequent day call*, Leg Pains, Nerv-\nousness. Rheumatism, Acidity, Burning. Smarting1, Bladder Irritation, or\nKidney Weakness make* you feel\ntired, depressed and discouraged, try\nthe Cyetex Test. Works fa*t, start*\ncirculating thru the system In 1|\nminutes. Praised by thousand*. Don't\nrive up. Try Cystex (pronounced\nBlss-tex) today, under the iron-Clad\nGuarantee. Must quickly stop thee*\nconditions, improve restful sleep ami\nenergy, or money back. Qui\/ 7*0 at\nall drug stores*\nWatches\nPocket Watches for men\nfrom f 1.75 to $85.00\nWrist Watches for men\nfrom $8.00 to $55.00\nFine selection of ladies'\nWrist Watches, from\n$8.00 to $75.00\nJ. B. GRAY\nWatchmaker,     Jeweller\n407  Baker   St.\nNelson, B. C.\nHas Never Seen\nEqual of Sargji\n\"I've never seen or heard of any\nmedicine as good for stomach\ntrouble    and    c'earlnf    up    h    toxic\nTHE OLD ARMCHAIR\nHIS ONLY AMBITION\nYOtTTn   SAVES   THEM   THE   Uffl\nVANCOUVER. Jan. 19.\u2014DrrJann.'\nthat only thalr .yoivfji *aved them\nGfrom the punishment ot tho lash\nft>Hcs Magistrate H. C. Shaw sentenced tour boys under the age o:\n18 to the penl:entlary for two\nyeara artor they had pleaded guilt;\nto a charge of robbery with violence.\nButWifeSays\"No!\"\nWilkinson was a half-sick man\u2014no\nenergy\u2014no desire to work\u2014no ambition. But his wife was on the job\u2014\n\u25a0he told him the secret of how to\nattain that youthful feeling that make*\nlife a joyous adventure. But let him\ntell the story.\n441 owe you and Kruschen an apology.\nI used to smile at the clever ads. nf\nKruschen Salts, and have often\nremarked that it was no better than\nEpsom -but, being of rather heavy\nbuild, I used to get up in the morning\nwith not the lejwt appetite for work,\nwishing all the time that I could just\nalt in an armchair and sleep\u2014 but my\nwife one day saw some Kruschen Sails,\nand persuaded me to try it. The effect\nwas a revelation. I never miss it, and\nam a real live man, mentally and\nphysically\u2014keen all day and every day.\nI have been taking it now for about\n8 months, and must confess that had\nit not been for Kruschen I do not\nknow how I should have got through\nthe worry and drive of business.\nI owe it all to ' the little daily do*o.' \"\n\u20141\u201e Wilkinson.\nIf you have never tried this perfect!\nblend nf six natural mineral salt* that;\nkeep liver, bowels and kidneys in raped)\nhealthy- activity, you've got the j\nsurprise of your life coming.\nKruschen is different, fmm all other!\nwits.   It brings to half-sick, worn-out!\nmen and women that glorious feeling\nof joyous health\u2014ana keep* them\nfeeling thai wiy.\nV quarter of a leaspoonful in hot water\nevery mom in i; koepi you free from\nconstipation, biliousness, headaches,\nnvcr-aridity, rheumatism and even\neczema. Millions tho world over\ntake it, every morning to keep themselves in superb roiirfition.\nIt's tha little dally Jose that-, doe* it.\nKruschen Salts is obtainable at all\nDrug blores at Me. and 75c. per bottle.\n-.    I NOMAS    MXIM'Nl'.IM.\nsystem as Sargon and Sanson Pills.\"\ndeclared Mrs. Thomas Marchbank,\n2577 7th E., Vancouver. \"I say that\nituL, only from my own personal\nexperience, but from the wonderful\nway the treatment has helped my\nhusband, my mother and any number  of  my  friends.\n\"I want to especially recommend\nthe Sargon Pills. Epsom salts and\neven enemas had ceased to act\nrightly for my condition 'and It\nyas certainly a b.essed relief to find\na laxative that, acted as gently and\nthoroughly a* nature Itself.\n'.The Sargop liquid overcame everv\ntrace of indigestion I suffered with\nand also freed roe of bacluche*\nand terrible pain* I used to have\nln my legs. I have a comfortable\nfeeling of health and well-being now\nthat I haven't had In years a_\nyears.\nSold by Mann-Rutherford Drug Co\nU IWCO*i*OWATBD,M..MWWaW MAY\nOther  Branches at  Winnipeg.  Yorkton,  Saskatoon,  Kdmontoo,\nCalgary, Lethbrldge,  Vancouver,  Kamloops,  Vernon  aad  Victoria\nJANUARY SAVING SALE\nDRY GOODS\nTake Advantage o(\nthe Lower Prices\nENGLISH  DOWN  COMFORTERS\nOF EXQUISITE TASTE\nFrom England come these beautiful Comforters in full bed sizes.\nShown in lovely scroll designs\nwith rich contrasting self colored\npanel. Each comforter guaranteed\nto be filled with purified down\nExpressly made for H. B. C.\nSpecial prices during this week:\n$10.95 for    S8.95\n\u2014Main  FltMi^H. a c. \u2014\nChildren's Wear\nPULL-OVER SWEATERS \u2014 With\ncollars. Suitable for school wear.\nShades are Fawn, Blue, Brown,\nRed ajid Green. Regular values\n$1.75.\nSale price  ...81.35 and  $1.25\n\u2014Second  Floor\u2014 B. B.C.\u2014\nLadies' Wear\nONE RACK OF DRESSES\u2014Made\nof heavy all wool flannel. Neat\nstyle*. Pleats on side and front.\nBelt at backs. Trimmed with contrasting shades. Sizes 16 tn 42.\nShades are Fawn, Blue, Scarlet\nand Green. Regular values 46.95.\nTo clear at   S4.95\nHATS\u2014Felt and velvet. In all\nshades. Regular values up to\n$4.95.  Sale  price      If 1.95\n\u2014Scnnnd   Floor\u2014EL B.C\u2014.\nMen's Dept.\nMEN'S    BLUE    DENIM    WORK\nPANTS\u2014Good quality heavy denim.   Full   cut.   well   made.   Sizes\n40, 42, 44.  Regular $2.25.\nSaving price   $1.50\nBoys'Sailor Suits\nAll wool English Serge, with separate Blue collars, White vest,\nlanyard and whistle. Regular\n$5.75. Saving price   *3.75\n\u2014Main   Floor\u2014Ft B. C. \u2014\u2022\n Page Four\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1981.\nThe Gaming\n(By (Rosbert ^Terry Shannon\nCHAPTER   SIXTEEN\nThe polio*. Uie assistant district\nattorney, were all surprtungly decent to Oonnle. These men. throiwh\nions experience ln dealing with\ncriminal* af both sexes, had developed a uaychlc lnsUht that enabled\nthem aosrwhow to apprala* Oonnle\nfor what ahe really wa*. Their attitude wae Rvmnathetic uudar-\n\u25a0tandlnjr. When she oold them\natu had known none of the details\nOf th* DTODoeed robbery, they be-\nItemed her. In any case, her story\nwas not important, for two of the\nmen  had  confessed.\nShe saw Bddle in the Tomb*, hi*\nghostly faor strained doe* to the\nbar*. HI* eve* were bleak. Bettor*\nthev said a word, one to other,\nthe realization that ahe had gambled\nand Irretrievably lost, beat into Oonnle'* soul like an aold. She had\nhoned amJnst hone that Bddle\nmlKht have b*en strong enough to\ngo strahrht: that at bottom, h* was\nreallv sound. Now. looking at him\ncued like an animal, ahe knew all\nher hope* had been counterfeit\nIvervthlnK wa* lost, wasted. Her\nbody was alive, but some nameless\nflower  waa  dead.\n\"I done it for you Connie\u2014 I\nswear to God I thouaht it was tbe\nbeat wav to make vou happy.' Bddle said. \"I thoiurht J wa* wise.\nIt looked 1_J a cinob. EM. X dldnt\nhave anythtim to do with knoaklwt\noff that watchman. I -wear T\ndidn't. What's more, the cop* knov,\nI didn't. All I don* wu to \u2022tend\nout ln the street and watch. I\ndldnt even hav* a gun on me.\nTm going to tell everything I\nknow; I'm (mtror to turn state's evidence They're not. going to makr\na goat out ot me. I won't go to\nthe ohair. and I won't a*rve a Ion*\n_ri_retch That** fixed. Ill only get\n10 vear* at the moat, and serve\n*lx or seven. If I get * parol* I'm\nout sooner. I been a sap. Connie,\naad I know it. But It's like the\nSalvation Army say*\u2014a man may\nbe down, but he's never out. 111\nmake  you  happy  vet.\"\nFtom th* depth of her misery\nConnie Neville realized that JQddlo\nOOBtello. never Main, in any wav.\nomild contribute in the slightest\nmeasvue to anvUtlna that mlaht be\ncalled her happlneas. But this jhe\nkept   to  herself.\n\"What do vou want me to do.\nEddie?   Ia there annhlrur I can do?'\n\"I won't a*k you to stay true\nto me.\" he aald. \"because I know\nyou're on Uie level. You wouldn't\ncheat. There's nothing vou oan do\nabout tiu le\u00abal end of it. I really\ndon't need a lawyer; the court will\nappoint one. All vou sot to do Is\n*lt tight and wait till I get out.\nIt won't b* long. You forgiv* me\nfor ail this mees. don't you. honey?\nIt waa borne upon Connie that\nthe western, thing of all waa to forgive Bddle Costello. H\u00bb was\nunsound- She pitied him. Her\nheart throbbed with sorrow at his\nplight. But love . . . now she knew\n:hat never, reallv. had she loved him.\n\"You don't have to ask my forgiveness. Eddie. I understand vou\ndid what vou did because you\ncouldn't helo it. I tried to save\nvou. but everv human being chooses his own oath. You turned your\nback on me and walked in another\ndirection. If there ls anything I\noan do to help vou III do it. But\nret me right.\u2014vou and vour mob\nkilled a man: that man had a wife\nand children. Mv _wnj\u00bbthy la with\nthem. I'm *entlm*ntel. but I'm not\nRpnUmentaJ enough to think Its\n[(erectly all right to knock off\nsome poor old man that struggling\nto support a familv on gen a month.\nIf vou were mv own father, or my\nbrother, or mv own son. I still\nthink you ought to pay ,th_1_?,en.':\nalty.    That'* the wav I feel, Eddie.\nHis   eve*   blink*d   rapidly.     \"So\nthat's tb* way vou teel about me!\nh* cried  hoarwly. _  __\n\"That** th* way I fee*, ana repeated steadily. _   _ __      ________\nHis Ud* draw back from hi* teeth.\n\"Bo vou turned on roe. did you?\nTou turned on your awn hu*b*nd.\nWhy. damn you for *\u2014'\nShe left him abruptly, bar face\n\u2022car let.\nThe neat dav \u00bbh* wa* working ln\na factory making artificial flowers.\nHer Day was 116 a week; th* rent\non th* flat wa* *60 a month. Eddie'* slater Mav was about due to\nreturn from the Island. Until May\nshould oome back Connie decided u.i\nstar ln th* flat\nThe dav* passed, wearteom* with\ntoll. May Cortello was freed from\nWelfare Island, but she did not\noomei back to the old home. Thei*\nnot*   addressed   to   Oonnle.\nAt the end of a month the gangster* wer_ tried. Connie herself did\nnot appear in th* eourtruar.; her\nteatimonv wu not needed. All day\nlung she sat in th* little Kpartineni.\nmovLna restlessly about, abstaining\nfrom mod. Bddle had written a\nbrief note . . . \"Keen awav from th*\ntrial.\" he bad said \"the:\/ might\ncall me some pretty hard namen\nthat I wouldn't want you to hear.\"\nConnie knew that Eddie meant\nhia reoord. hi* past crimes, would\nbe brought out. He would be\nstamped and labeled with tih* brand\nof a criminal . . . there would be\nthings brought out that would\nsham* him to ha.ee her hear. Yet\n. . . he   wae   her   husband.\n\"I am his wife, and mv place Is\nat  his  side.\" sha told  herself.\nBut there was a false ring\nher logic. He had embittered her\n... had blasted all of her faith.\nGrimly she told lieraelf that sb*\nhad been swindled In love; that\nfalsa sentiment was as contcmptlblo\nas any other form of hypocrisy,\nNevflrtheleaa r!u weot almost constantly; wept for tha shattered\nIdeal, the dream of happiness that\nwa*   gone   forever.\nThat evening she read the results\nof the trial In a newspaper. One\nof th\u00ab gangsters wa* sentenced to\nthe electric chair, three wer* sent\nto   Bins   Sing  for  life.\nEddie Costello was sentenced to\n10 years imprisonment.\niTo be continued)\nRain Coats Very\nGay\nLittle Gaiters Used to Pro.\ntect Hosiery\nGENE AM) THE WIFE\nDull ekles and moist atmosphere\nreigning in Paris have made women\nacutely conscious of rain apparel-\nclever coata and the requisite accessories, including umbrella* and\novershoes.\nDays of downpour have brought,\nout chic uniforms which exhibit\nconsiderable ingenuity on the part\nof  their designers.\nThe Flicker, shining and slim\nlooking, ts colorful tn Its bright\nyellow, red, green, lavender, even\nblaok. With this ls learned an umbrella made of One same transparent\nwaterproofed material Provided with\npateat fastenings the newer coate\nlook something like slip-ons. fastening from the neck to hem and\nfitting the cuff* closely to the\nwrieta.\nFor tho** who have a penchant\nfor matrhljtg from top to toe there\nare little \u201el loiter-like hats and glovp.\nthat harmonize in tone if not In\nactual shade.\nTh* rubberized theme haa been\nextended tu hand bags. What looks\nsomething like patent leather is\nreally rubber in pocketbook form.\nBut for one's own bag there li a\nlittle case to be slipped over it\nto   prevent   spotting.\nWhile  Americana  usually  walk  on\ntiptoe* to avoid rVDlaslilng st.Tcklnge.\nthe  Parisian  is  favoring   new   little'\ngaiters  which   can   be  donned   over I\nth*  shoes and  are  sufficiently   high;\nln back to protect the hosiery. These :\nhave patent fastenings and are trimmed   with  a bit of fur around  tho\nton\u2014eouallv   as   (rood   for   snow   or\nrain.   It   go**   without   aaylng   that\nParis   supplies   these   in   colors   to\nmatch other rain attire.\nMa]or t>ene Tunney. retired heavy-weight boxing champion and newly\nappointed aide to Governor Wilbur L. Cross of Connettcut, Is shown\nwearing his formal full-dress uniform, with Mra. Tunney at the brilliant\ninaugural ball at Hartford. Th* ball wa* given by the Governor's Foot\nOutbid*, and was on* of 'the moat brilliant social events of the season.\nDuring Inauguration ceremony of new governor, the famous boxer outshone even the state head sa a oenter of crowd interest.\n\"CAnswers by Beatrice\nBULLETIN BOARD\nA good kitchen idea is to have\nlittle bulletin board made of\nlinen, bound in your kitchen colors.\nOnto this, stick new recipes which\nyou see in periodicals, or a pretty\npicture that you may want to look\nat once ln a while, or a scrap\nof appealing poetry that you would\nlike   to  learn.\nChicken Sandwich\nIncludes Pineapple\nTo make a hot chicken sandwich heat two cups of chopped,\ncooked chicken with one-half cup\nof drained. crushed pineapple.\nServe on hot rolls or buttered\nI toast.\nEfficient Housekeeping\nBy   LAIKA   t.    MlthMAN\nThinking of Leaving\nHome\nDEAH   MISS   FAIRFAX;\nI am a high trchool graduate.\nrath_ attractive, and I can get\nalong nicely with most people\nHowever, my parents are very\nstrict, and they really made my\ndays right miserable! You may\nsay that tfhey know best and\nare being strict for my own\nR__.K.i, but really it Is hard for\nme to enjoy living when I\ncan't even go to see ray girl\nfriend. It make* me feel downhearted, and I have decided\nto leave home. But, I really\nwould like to find another way\nol solving my problem, lutd I\nknow   you   can   help met\nPlease answer ihls very soon,\nas I will bs waiting patiently\nfor It.\nHIGH SCHOOL GIRL\nI hope you are not In earnest\nwhen you talk of leaving home\nin tliijj season of unemployment.,\nIf you are reckless enough to do\nthat, it's safe to prophesy you'll;\nlook back on home, strict as it mav\nbe. as a paradise compared with\nconditions you'll hav* to contend:\nwith. I have the deepest sympathy with girls who are kept I\nlike caged creatures hy I heir pn r-\nents, and my experience has been\nthat such a course Is often more\ndisastrous than letting them have\na normal amount of freedom. But\n--^rou'd better stay at home and\nI rv   to   break   down   what   I'm   go\ning to call their company-reels ta u c e than drop ou t of the\nnest too young and unprepared,\nin most families there is someone\nulewed with good common-sense\nw*qo lfl regarded as a \"regulator\"\n\u2014some comfortable Aunt Mary,\nCousin Ella, or even a wise old\nyrandmother. Get such a relative or\nfriend to talk to your parent* and\nsee if they wont relax a little. If\n' hey won't \"stay put\" till you're\nolder, wiser and have a good Job.\nThis will answer Betty Blue, Kate\nT. 8., \"Miserable,\" 'Homeslck-at-\nHomo\" and scores of other girls\nwho have written m* about the\nsame thing.\nfOMOBBOWS  MBKC\nBreakfast\nBanana*\nCereal\ntoeftved Egg*\nMarmalad*\nluncheon\nBaked\nIjettuoe\nRaisin\nRic*   and   Ohaea* ,\nRussian   Dressing;\nJam:\nDLonat\nCelery\nPresh    Ham    Tloeet\nToast I Pntstoe* Spinach\nCoffee I Apple  Betty  with\nliquid Lemon Sauce\n;;mnmmiiniTnin:\nPThe Beauty Box:\nF BY Helen FoUett j\nifcnii uiiimnimiur\nVisit Us\nToday\nWe are nnw located\nin our new store in\ntha Medical Art*\nBuilding. Pay us a\nvisit and look over\nour lines of perfume*, toilet article*, err. They are\nkept up-todate\" at\nall time*.\nPHONE as\nPOOLE DRUG\nCo.\njupansmma\nCoffee\n\\V\u00bbWBR\u00abJ    TO    INQITRIF,!*\nYoun*  Reader;   \"Pleas.)  publish  a\n! rcpipe  for  Fresh  Ham   Roast.*\nAnswer Presb Hum Hotel.; Leave\ntb* hone  In,  or not.  as  you  desire.\nI If you have the butcher remove it,\nfill   the   cavity   with   a   bread   and\n! nrjou   poultry   dressing.     Then   out\n, th** fresh bam in _ routing ,u_t,\nrlredge with flour, salt ard pepper,\nadrt one-fourth cup of boiling water\n! and  sear  th*  moit,   \\<\\  the  pan, [n\n: a   very   hot   oven   for   111   mlnuteg.\n1 Nnw reduce the ov*n temperatun Eo\nmoderate\u2014a little b\u00ablow 400 degree*\n1F. and continue roasting, allowing\n30 minute* to the pound     a\n: fiwt hour,  pour  two  cupi  I\ninto    the    naa-bottom    and    beati\nj often, with this liquid. At the \u00abnd\nof the seoond hour, 'he elder may\nhave cooked away, in which < awe\npour in two rur* mors nf it, wsvn\nmeat   1*  t*nd*r,   msKe   a  sauce   hv\n| thickening the liquid with Hour\nServe with the hot meal.\nf    Newly weds;   \"'How   can   ws   te-tjga\n\u2022 a rug which hss lwnme very limp\"\"\nAnswer: Dissolve one pound of\ngragiulaited ;j]i|p In one aalW\nof boiling waiter. Turk the tu\u00ab\non the floor, face d\u00abwn,. and apply\nthe hot-glue to th* back with a\nwhite-raah brush. Let rirv before\nturning   over,\nBoonomy: \"How l* a shiny surface\nremoved  from  woojlen   clothes?\"\nAnswer: Wring a piece of cheesecloth out of water containing a few\ndrops of ammonia and sponge tfie\nshiny part nf the fabric with this,\nthan pr*ss under a damp cloth, on\nheavy suitings, which h\u00bbv* becom*\ngIo**y. however. 70U may hav* to rub\nwith   fine   sandpaper,   instead.\nMis* T.: \"How ere ha;r brushM\nbent  washed?\"\nAnswer; Pill a baam with cold\nwater and to It add a little am.\n\"lonla. Tip th* basin enough to\nlet th* brush be awtshad up and\ndown in this, cold #a, \u00bbr without\nwetting ths bank. 'Una* ln ol*ar\nwatfr, shake well, and lay en its\naid*   or   fee*   to   dry,     Never   wash\n.brush** In hot water and ntver l*t\nthem   dry  oa   their   backs.\nStretch for beauty's sake. Also\ntor the sake ot muscles and digestive organs. Babies aud *n!ni,.h\nstretch upon awakening. They follow N-ititre's laws; they know what\nthey ar* about, even If tbey don't\ntwo* why. Wheu awakening In tho\nmorning, extend the arms upward,\nsend the lefts to their limit of\nlength, stretch the toes. During\nsleep circulation Is sluggish, breath-\nlug la light, the entire .\nsystem Is getting as much re*!\ncan. Stretchln\u00ab ring? all the Utile\nbells in the human fra-1\nwakes everybody un. helps to etsp!\nthe day right.\nWhen  hair  ha*  been bleached   In\nsuch    an    extent   that    tlte\nwill be found more mccesb.i.\ntbf  unn*)   thre*- egg\u00ab  beaten  slight\nly.   Prtei.lon   well,   rinse   with   tepid\nwater,  apply  three  more eggs, vtnsf\nagain.    Excessive    bleaching    makc-\nthe   hair   take   on   fhe   \"feel\"   and\nquality   nf  jute.  It  la  bad   b\nFreckles will return \"i\"\npo_ur* to wind \u2022and sun. They can.\nIt not ton lone established, be ken.\nlu abeyance by nightly application of peroxide, followed by a\nlight smesring of cold cream. The\nskin should be protected from exposure bv a Irrtmmed hat and fV\nJeneroue use of powder. Powder\nrjrms a barricade against the rav*\nise*. of the elements.\nWhen ank>9 are large because\nankle bones are bulky, not. much\ncan b* done about them. If fat\nIs at fault, get a jumping rope\nand do your stunts twice a dav.\nNothing Ilk* a jumping rope to\nmake the fat cells fly. The sara*\nexercise will fill out skinny legs:\nit strengthen* muscles.\nPlnt-alred girl*, girls with elbows\nsharp and collar bone* showina\nshould settle down to the occupation of fattening. Not difficult when\nthe find la put on it. A dish\nor oere\u00bbl every morning, with plenty oi cream, and sugar. One egg\na day, Every meal topped off with\na -fla** of cream and milk, half\nand half, And in hours sl**p every\nlUght.   Baayl *.\nFather \"Yells\" at Her\nJiKAXt   MUi3   FAIRFAX:\nPlease advise a discouraged\ngirl what to do. I am at th*\nbreaking point. Whenever I\nhear screaming or yelling, beast\nor man. I think a grouchy, irrt-\nfor me. fhav* a grouchy. Irritable father, who yells instead\nof talking. When l do anything\nwrong. I'm not corrected but I\nam yelled at by someone who\nlike* lo use the latest cua*\nwords.\nYou   may   say   to   me:   \"You\nmust   do   everything   wrong,   if\nyou    can't    respect    your    father;\"   but,  Mlsa  Fairfax,  I  think\nmore  of  my  father and  mother\nthan   I   can   express      but  who\ncould  understand  a  father  that\nnever    apoke    kindly    or    shows\nthat   he   loves   me.   I  really   try\nto   do  tbe   right   thing  after   I\nhave   bf*n   corrected,   but   then\nI   lose   all   (heart.   I&veiy    time\nI   am   corrected,  I  end   up  crying.    How    many    young    girls\ndo   this?      Don't  you   think   h*\ncan  correct and  talk  to  m\u00ab  in\na   more   dltrnlfled   manner.   Do\nnot  talk  to  me in  front of my\nfriends    hy   yelling,   because    it\nreally   gets   me   sick   and   nervous, j   m\n.lour    father    ls    probably    not\naware    ot    hie    unfortunate    habit,\nand    would   be   much   surprised    tf\nhe     knew    how    it    affected    your\npeace    of   mtnd.    It's   pretty    difficult   for   a   girl   to   question    her\nfather*   privilege.]   around   his   own\nhome,   even   that   of   \"yelling.\"   but\nIf   you   told   him   tactfully   that   It\nwas   making  you   ill   and   nervous\u2014\na*   I   see   It   is\u2014he   might   try   to\ncontrol   his harsh manner of speak-\n\u2022Hi II I)  B. C. fAYROLLS\"\nFor\nInfants\nAnd for\nAdults\nOttCffi rivIpr the mnw wrtklnir\nrrsult-s where Pacific Milk has\nIwn used as fr*oci for infants\nare ln our files, and Iett.fr* revealing the satisfaction of more\nthan * thousand women who\nhave used Pacific Milk In cooking with the utmost satt_tf*c-\nHon  are in our files.\nTh* conclusion oome* swiftly from the experience of\nthese patrons that they\nbar*, found In this good\nmilk the highest food value.\nPacific Milk\nFactory    at\nABBOTHTORD, B.C.\n\"100%   B.C. Ownrd  and  C\u2014itrotlnr\nScarfs Still Smart\nas'Chic Accessory\nBoth Fur and Cloth Scarf Becoming and Useful\nPABJ8, Jan. ia~-Thar* s**m* w*\nbe an indication that scarf* are not\nquite* so popular a* they wer* aome\nseasons back. Ther* is. of course, a\nvery good reason for this. Scarfs\nwere an Inseparable adjunct to the\nvarious    types   of   sports    suit*\ndainty.\nHere also the scarf must remain\nan accessory and never risk, by too\noriginal a design or coloring, being\nmore conspicuous than the dress\nItself.\nThat Is way we prefer all raous-\nensembles which women then wore! sellnes with delicate designs jn\nuntil dinner time. It ls only natural j p*st*l shadings to tho bolder colored\nthey ahould tire of one of the most modernistic patterns. Beaded or\npleasing   accessories   of   the   former j pailette-embroldered   accessories   are\nmoete.\nThis does not mean to Imply that\nthe scarf has altogether disappeared\nfrom fashion's scheme nf things. It\nhas, in fact, evolved as all other\nitems of women's dress and the\npresent day scarf is a very sophisticated article Indeed, as regards\ncut,  design and  coloring.\nA fashion creator cannot very\nwell afford to ignore the scarf or its\npass! bin tie*. It presents a number of\nvery practical qualities and lt oan\nalso be a very subtle decorative\nmedium.\nThis whiter launched the fur stole,\nor scarf, Jor evening wear to fill a\npractical as well as h decorative\nneed. It has been uhown that there\nwer* many occasions when a woman,\nunable to retain her cloak or wrap\nas altogether too cumbersome, still\nfelt the necessity of some protection\nfor her arms ami shoulders. The fur\nKtole was never meant to be anything more than sn accessory, however, the gown Itself retaining all\nInterest, but It ws\u00ab. practically the\nonly accessory that oould harmonlr*\nwith th* sumptuous character of\nformal evening dress and. what is\nmore,   enhance   its  splendor.\nThe same principle rules In regard\nto th* .narrow fur scarf which ls\nmeant to accompany a simple morning dress or suit. Altogether far le*s\nimportant than the evening scarf, lt\nimparts a trim, finished look to\nthe modern out-of-door dress, whether it is worn with one end slipped\nthrough the other or tied around the\nneck. When worn with a Jacket\nthe ends can be worn outside or\nnot, as preferred. It is extraordinary\nhow youthful such a tie can look,\nmuch  more  ao  than  the fox scarf.\nWith a black or somber-hued afternoon dress, the chiffon scarf or\nsquare Is always a successful complement. It supplies the note of\ngayety much in the same way that\na piece of Jewelry will, but it has\nthe greater advantage of being at\nonce   more   personal,   feminine   and\nIng to you. Get a* nroch diversion tn your lit* aa possible. Oo\nout with your friends, cultivate\n1 taste for reading, join a class\nfit the \"Y\" or similar organisation, and try to bear in mind\n;hat your Dad probably imagines\nhe's   the   best  of  fathers.\nnot ln good taste for ths afterno<-\nThere Is on* type of dre** wher\nthe   scarf   plays   a   more   important\nroL?   than  that   of   Just   simply   an\naccessory.\nThis is the simple, light drees,\nsomewhat akin to th* tennis dress,\nthat is created for winter resort\nwear, but a Uttle more fanciful ln\nthe matter of cut and trimming.\nHere th* scarf plays an excessively\ndecorative role and Is part of the\n.\u25a0et of accessories, comprising hat\ntrimming and bag, that complete\ntire toilette. A careful study of\nall proportions, design and fabric\nIs necessary In order that these accessories be absolutely perfect, otherwise the whole atmosphere of tho\ndress and Its background ls defeated\nand It* greatest charm, that of\nsimplicity,   completely   destroyed.\nTAILORED SUITS\nWILL BE WORN\nBY LADIES, SPRING\nPAMfl,    Jan.    18\u2014(AP)\u2014    Broad\nshoulder*, fitted waist lines and\nskirts 13 inches from the ground\nare the newest styles noted on suits\nwhich smart women will wear this\nspring in what Paris stylists predict\nwill he the greatest tailored suit\nseason   for  several   years.\nThe collection of one of the most\nlmportan t tail or-dressmaker* shown\ntoday exhibits tailored suits with\npinched waist lln(%_nd occasional\nbelt*.\nnafeand\nGINGER COCKTAIL\nEASILY CONCOCTED\nDiced pineapple, orange, and can\ndied ginger make* a nice combination for fruit cocktail. Add some\nof the puloe from the preserved\nginger  Jar.\nHERE'S  EASY  PLAN   FOR   TOMATO\nfiOHP#\nAn easy way to make tomato\nsoup. Heat contents of cans of tomato Juice. Season with salt, pepper and onion Juice. And there\nyou are.\nPERSIMMON\nPICKLING PLAN\nVartoua fruit, si* vest m ssr-\nnlabw tor roaat mwta ud poultrv. Among than ls tb* penlm-\nmon. which, whan splood. it especially nice with baked meats that\nhave rather a large amount of fat,\nsuch   as  ham.\nSteam the peralmmone until tender, then place ln a crack or bowl\nand oover with eweet .ploed vinegar. Let stand overnight\u2014a little\nlonger   Is   better.   Skim   ths   fruit\nout sarafan?  ud  smuts  on\nmc* le\u00bbv*s around th* roes*\ntot.\nCHOCOLMI CHAKOM \u2022_!\u00ab\u2022 I\n(-MAX\nTon ou ohangs ths flavor\ncooked csnsl br add Ins two\nthrm tablespoons of ground\nlate or cocoa when ths ~\ncooking.\nIn  recipes wher*  boner  I*\nstltutad   for   sugar   lt   should\nuMd  cup  for  cup  but  tbs\ntitj of liquid Should be slightly\nduoed.\nEXCLUSIVE EVENING]\nFROCKS\nWe have selected a great many of ovr higher priced\nand better evening gowns, and are offering them tol\nyou at. $19.75. New York model*, Madame ArnottsM\nand Colonial, etc., and it would be quite likely thaw\nyou could not find a duplicate ml\nB. C. of these dresses, more espe-l\ndally so the ones we get from\\\nNew York. Every dress the lati\\\nminute in style, and every dresil\none of a kind and all new arriv-l\nalu. The greatest offer of 6\u00abtt*rl\ndresses  we  have   ever  given i\u00bbj\nNelson. Why pay |35.00 to $60.001\nclsewhwe? Very special.\n$19*75\nSee Our Windows\nQuite a few showing, with some-J\nthing  like  60  more  on  display!\nracks in our Ready-to-Wear Par-f\nlors on Second1 Floor. All ths\nnew shades.\nLadies' Chauncy Model Hats, sill\nhand made. Your <CO OR]\nchoice \u00ab4>u**w|\nSamsden Iros.\nSmart Shoppe for Smart Women\nEVERY\nMORNING\u2014\nWorld Wide and Local\nNews\nComplete Financial\nReports\nLatest Social News\nAll the Sport News\nAnd the Best of\nFeatures\nThe Nelson Daily News\nBY MAIL OUTSIDE OF NELSON\n$6 Per Year\n$3 for 6 Months\n60c Per Month\nDELIVERED IN NELSON\nBY CARRIER\n26c Per Week     \u2022\nOUTSIDE OF OANADA\n$7.60 Per Year\nThe Nelson Daily News\n143\nPHONES      -      144\n THE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS        TT^TjAY. JiNTTARY 20  URJ1.\nPage Five  \u2022\nDo Not \"Miss This\nSKoe Sale\nHundreds of pairs of\nMen's, Women's and\nChildren's Shoes\nmarked down.\nR. Andrew\n&Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\n[TRAIL, ROSSLAND\nLODGES INSTALL\nTHEIR OFFICERS\nROSSLAND, B. C., Jan. 19.\u2014Sam-\nI arltan encampment No. 8 of Ros&-\nf land, and Lookout encampment No.\n19 ot Trail held a Joint installation\nrat Trail on Wednesday evening, the\nF, installing officer being William\nfeCallln, D.D.O.P.. ol Rcasland. The\n[following were InsiUled for Samaritan Encampment No. B:\nO. H. Clegg, chief patriarch: J. B.\n[llowatt, high prleU; c. R. Ncebltt.\nj senior warden; H. B. Johnson,\nllt_r_.r wurden; Philip Toogood,\nTscribe; Kenneth Martin, treasurer;\nI Horace Best, guide; Percy Moult,\nIflrst O of T.; J. McCullough, sec-\nlond O. of T.; O. C. Cobb. Inside\n|\u00abentlnel; J. G. Mllllgan. outsldf. sen-\nItlnel; Edward M. Palmer, nrst W.,\niPhllip Olover, second W.; S. Bean,\ntthird  W.;   Iaaac  Ghver.   fourth  W.\nROSSLAND, B. C, Jan. 18.\u2014Pol-\nllowlng are the recently-lnawlled of-\nIfleers of Rossland Lodge No. 45\nll. O. O. F., the installing officer\n\u25a0having been K?nncth Martin,\nID.D.Q.M.;\nR. J. Port-man, N.Q.; Horace Bes',\nIV.O.; C. R. Neebitt, warden; C H\nIciegg, secretary; Robert Anderson\n^treasurer; J, o. Mllllgan, conductor;\nJj. 0. Molyneux, chaplain; J. B.\niMowatt, RJS.N.Q.; l\"ercy Mouk,\nILBJI-O.; H. H. Met__ar. R.S.V.G.;\nID. T. Mclntyre. L.S.V.O.; Isaac\n\u25a0Olover,   Inner   guard.\nIAMES KENNY\nLAID AT REST\nBY ELK LODGE\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 19.\u2014Funeral\nlervtces for James Kenney were connected from Graham's Funeral\nllome this afternoon under the aus-\nliioes of the Elk lodge. Funeral and\n|rave\u00ablde service were conducted\nIntlrely by the Elks. Interment\n|vas made in the city cemetery.\n; Mr, Kenney. who died suddenly\n\u25a0Tiuraday evening, was well known\nIn Trail, having resided here for\n\u25a0 bout 20 years. He is survived by a\nBrother In Edmonton, and a sister,\njLts. C. A. Robertson of Creston.\nIlrs. Robertson came to Trail to\nIttend the funeral.\ni There were many beautiful floral\n|rlbutes.\nPallbearers were: J. Kelly, J. Fife.\nWilliamson,   O.   Quinstrom,   W.\nfcullvan and E. Oheler.\nAir Adventuress\nMl_ Elizabeth (Llbby) Chase\n(above) Chicago society girl, arid\nAlicia Patterson, daughter of J. M.\nPatterson, Chicago and New Tprk\npublisher, ar. making a flight across\nthe heart of Australia, from Sydney\nto Darwin..some 1900 miles. They\nplan one Stop, at un oasis where\nthey will hunt Kangaroo. Mlas Patterson ls an experienced filer and\nMiss Chase, a well known globe\ntrotter.\nUNITED CHURCH\nLADIES GUESTS\nOF AID AT TRAIL\nMusical Program Is Enjoyed;\nCarnation, Tapers, Silver\nCharming\n.LEGISLATION\nFOR WOMEN IS\nGREAT, ENGLAND\nMONTREAL,   Jan.   19\u2014(CP)-More\nlegislation affecting women has been\nused lu the British hou\u201ee of com-\n\u25a0nona ln the 12 years since women\nTiave   been   members,   than   lu   the\nprevious 30 or 40  years,  Miss  Ellen\nVllkinson.   Labor   member   of   the\nBritish    house    told    tho    Montreal\nWomen's   club   members   In   an   ad -\nhress   here   today.    The   diminutive\nBritish    parliamentarian    gave    her\ntudlence   Intimate   glimpses   of   life\nIn the English parliament ln recent\ntears.\n(DIAMOND   CUTTFRS\nQl'IT    FOR    MONTH\nANTWERP, Jan. 19\u2014<AP)~All dla-\nEnond cutting establishments In this\nRenter of the trade closed for a\nfnoath today in order to reduce the\nfeutput of rut diamonds. The ac-\nflon waa in accordance with an\nligreement reached by the International commission for the diamond\nI industry.\nTl&n. B. 0. Jan. 19.\u2014Ladies of\nthe congregation of Knox United\nchurch were guests of tha Ladies*\naid at a delightful tea in the church\nhall Saturday afternoon, from three\nuntil five. A program of music was\noffered.\nrink carnations, pink tapers ln\nsilver cases and stiver table appointments were made doubly attractive on their \"setting of white\nlinen, by the soft glow of th\u00ab\nshaded lights.\nMrs. B. L. Oaten. Mrs. W. C. Mackenzie and Mrs. W. H. Horton received tho guests. Tea urns were\npresided over by Mr_. J. . Twells\nand Mrs. D. Chapman.\nS.rvlng the guests were: Mrs. R.\nR. Burns, Mrs. a. Burton, Mrs. F.\nW. Jackson, Mrs. T. Temple, Mrs. H.\nClark and  Mrs R. Wellwood.\nCulinary arangements were taken\ncare of by Mra. A. Buchan, Mrs.\nI. Tyson, Mrs. F. c. Moran and Mr*.\nW. C Aston\nAppearing in program numbers\nwere: Mrs. D. Stewart, piano solo;\nMlas Thelma Weir, vocal solo; Miss\nVera Cooper, recitation; Mrs. D.\nMacDonald, vocal solo; Mrs. All\u00abn\nMerry, vocal solo. Mrs. K. A. Marge-son and Mrs. D. Forteath were\npiano  accomplanlsts.\nRev. B. L. Oaten was chairman.\nHyndman to Head\nPensions Appeal\nCourt, Dominion\nOTTAWA, Ont., Jan. 19.\u2014(CF)\u2014\nThe appointment of Hon. James D.\nHyndman. retired Judge of the appellate division ol the supreme\ncoiut of Alberta, to be president\nof the pe ost ons appeal court was\nofficially announced late thla afternoon by Hon. Murray MacLaren,\nminister of pensions and national\nhealth. The appointment takes tf-\ni-ect as of today.\nDr. Wood's\nBad Cold On Her Chest\nHad To Stay In Bed\nMra, J. C. Winters, Janow, Man., writes:\u2014\"I have\neverv reason to pr*\u00bbi*e Dr. Wood's Norway Pine\nSyrup as it has done me a world of good. I had a\nvery bad cold on my chest, and had to stay in bed\ntwo weeks, and could hardly speak on account of\ncoughing so much. I tried every medicine and Hni-\nmont I could think of, but I got no relief. My\nhusband read about Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup\nbo I decided to try it I took only one bottle and I\nam ready to recommend it to anyone with a eold.\"\nPrice 85c, a bottle; large family siss 65c,; at all\ndruggists or dealers; put up only by Tha T. Uilborn\nCo. Ltd., Toronto, Ont.\nSee the Connor\nThermo Electric\nWasher at\nHlpperson Hardware Co., Ltd.. Nelson; Modern Electric Shop. Trail;\nHendricks' Oarane, Kasio; 8. A.\nSpews, Creaton; F. Parks * Co\nCranbrook; West Kootenay Power *\nMint Co., Bosfland; Klmberley\nHardware   Co..   Ltd..   Klmberley.\nSociety\nThis column is conducted by\nUrs M J. Vlgneux. All news\nof a social nature, including receptions, private entertainment,\npersonal Items, marriages, etc.\nwill appear in this column. Telephone Mrs. Vlgneux al her boms.\nMS SUlca street.\nMr. and Mrs. A. D. McLeod, Silica street, have aa their house guest\nMn. E. O. Montgomery of Klmberley.     ,\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. C. A. Knowles, Edgewood avenue,   haa   returned   from   a  short\nvisit   to   Procter.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nYesterday  at the Church of Mary\nImmaculate, Rev. J. C. . McKenzle\nunited in marriage Mrs. Annie McKay and Alex McLennan, both of\nthis city. The bride was given ln\nmarriage by her father, Thomas\nDunbar, while the attendants were\nMiss Grace Dunbar and Lawrence,\nMrs.  MeLellans  slstrr  and  brother.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. Mary Kerr, Kerr apartments.\nhas aa her guest for the next few j\nweeks Mrs. Thomas Brennllson of j\nBalfour.\n\u2022 e   \u2022\nWilliam Ramsay, public works engineer,   left   last  night   for   Arrowhead.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMn. A. Major and her son Colli1.\nof Procter were city shoppers yesterday.\n\u2022 * \u2022\nHarold Horton of Anchorage, Alaska, who has been the house guest\nof his brother and sister-in-law.^\nMr. and Mrs. R .E. Horton, Oak\nstreet,  left yesterday for his home.\n\u2022 *      \u2022\nAmong visitors to town yesterday\nwas  Logan  McPhee  of Kaslo.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr.  and Mn. J. E. Bedford, Mill\nstreet, have as their guests their\ndaughter ' and granddaughter, Mn.\nRobert Weir and daughter Dorothy,\nwho will leave Thursday mornl ng\nto Join Mrs. Weir's husband, Hon.\nRobert WVlr, federal minister of agriculture, ln Calgary.\nt \u2022 *\nE. P. Vlpond of Rossland was a\nvisitor to town  over tho week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nA very quiet wedding; was solemnized January 17 at 2 o'clock\nat the Trinity church manse, when\nRev. W. C. Mawhinney united ln\nmarriage Mary, second daughter of\nMr. and Mrs. L. Buysat, Third\nstreet, Palrvlew, and William, eldest son of R. J. Hegan of Kerro-\nbert. Sask. Those witnessing tho\nceremony were Mrs. J. Riddock and\nMn. W. c. Mawhinney.\nest\nFollowing the bowling tournament Monday afternoon at Gellnaa'\nalleys, Mn. T. E. Levasseur entertained the Ladles' Bowling club\nat Pltner's in honor of Mrs. O. L.\nKemmerllng, who is leaving shortly\nto reside ln Pentlcton. Pink carnations and candles wer= used for\ntable decorations. Those present\nwere: Mrs. A. O. Gelfnas, Mn. H.\nLakes, Mn. W. Deajardlns. Mn T.\nH. Wllleta. Mn J. Bell, Mrs C. A.\nLarson, Mrs. D D. McLean, Mrs. P.\nBamford, Mn. H. McTler, Mn. Q.\nWright, Mrs. T. E. Levasseur, and\nthe guest of honor, Mrs. a. L.\nKemmerllng.\nROTARY MEMBERS\nFELICITATE ON\n\"CMC SPIRIT\"\nFive Offered for Public Service in the Recent\nElections\n!]|MR. BLAYLOCK WILL\nBE SPEAKER  SOON\nS. J. Gridley Given Description of Trip to the\nOld Country\nMATCH FAMOUS\nWALL PAPER AT\nMOUNT VERNON\nWASHINGTON, D. C, Jan. 10--\nPerbaps the Impatience of Martha\nWashington which prompted her to\nput some gay wall paper on unfinished walls at Mt. Vernon wa*\nresponsible for a search which has\nextended to many parta of the\nworld.\nProbably no womm matching\ngoods with a scrap of cloth ever\nhad any more difficulty than Col.\nHarrison H. Dodge, superintendent\nof Mt. Vernon, in matching that\npaper.\nBut at laat he has found It ln\nand old house ln Maine, and now\nthe room will be papered once\nmore Just as it was when Washington occupied It. The paper ls sepia\nbrown, bearing pictures ln vivid\nbuff, blue and crimson of mountains, sunsete, churches, lakes and\nawans.\nColonel Dodge discovered the original old paper recently while making repairs to Washington's bedroom\nin preparation for the George Washington  bicentennial  in   l\u00bb\u201e,\nUnderneath . the smooth white\nplaster walls he discovered scraps\nof paper which hsd been pasted on\nthe unfinished plas:er in 1775.\nColonel Dodge believes that the\ntnlstreaa of Mt. Vernon may have\ndone the papering when ahe became\nImpatient to occupy new unfinished\nbedrooms which were part of an\naddition her husband started to\nbuild when be was called away to\nwar. At any rate ahe had the room\npapered without waiting for the\nwhite finishing plaster.\nBuahrod Washington became the\nowner of Mt. Vernon In 1803, aud\nhe Immediately aelected for his own\nuse the bedroom which had been\noccupied by hl\u00bb uncle. He had the\npaper removed and the walls covered\nwith  white  piaster.\nAfter much effect Colonel Dodge\nuncovered enough of the paper to\npiece together and photograph. The\nphotograph was sent far and wide ln\nan  attempt   to   Identify   the  paper.\nFinally a duplicate of lt was located ln an old house near Portland,\nMaine. The pattern waa faithfully\nreproduced for repaperlng the bedroom walla.\nra&cmaung.y summery Is this costume consisting of an afternoon\nground and tiny white floral pattern, large white straw hat, lyad\nwhite aid glvoco. The tucked white\nfrock of printed crepe with rose\norgandie neck finish edged with crochet lace, adds a pleasing touch.\nDECEMBER FERRY\nRETURNS HAVE A\nLARGE INCREASE\nAuto Traffic at Nelson About\nDoubled;  Many Trucks\nAre Handled\nTraffic handled by Nelson, Harrop\nand CaoUegar ferrya during December 1930, showed an enormous in-\ncreate over that handled during\nthe same month In 1929\nAuto traffic on the Nelnon ferry\nwaa over half as much again and\nthat of the Castlegar substantially\nincreased.*\nWhile 330 iheavy trucks was carried by the Nelson ferry and 205\nby the Castlegar craft In December\n1929, 682 were carried by the former\nand 575 by the Utter during December,    1930,\nFreight in the ease of Nelson\nshowed as large increase in the\ncase or Castlegar over twice as\ngreat, and In the case of Harrop\nalmost half as much again as that\nof the previous year.\nCause of heavy traffic may be attached to tho weather. December\nconditions last year were much more\nfavorable to travel than during 11)29\nnelson  rati\n1939 1930\nA^tos  fsaG 3a26\nTrucks,   light   ....... Hli J95\nTrucks, heavy  330 __2\nMotorcycles    1 rjj\nR183    -   89 fi.|\nPassengers  8074 13715\nFreight                           261 410\".\nIIAttKOr   I ( (IK,\nAutos                      ___, 293 MB\nTrucks,  light  54 23\nTrucks, heavy  129 114\nMotorcycles  2 4\nRigs    ~  10 21\nPassengers _ 823 747\nfreight  va w_r4 I\nHorses 15 13j\nCattle  .. . 0'\nCAKTLECMR *\nAutos      1094 igai I\nTrucks,   light   \u201e.... 9. |1|\nTrucks, heavy  _ 205 q7\u201e\nMotorcycles  7 12 \u25a0\nHlgs      157 75!\nPassengers      4164 6S74I\nFreight  160^_ 373\nHorses    ...._ \u201e  15 33\nCattle    _ , 5 g\nFive member* at the Rotary club j\non the happy suggestion of Jkt\u00a3A~ !\nde.f, C. B. Garland, were formally !\ncongratulated at Monday's weekly\nluncheon, on \"tttcir exhibition ot\nohio  spirit,\"\nTha allusion wa-i to the fact of\nthem having offered themselves for\npublic office ln Nelaon, .and the\nfive were H. W. Dawsob, newly\nelected alderman; G. A. Brown, \u00a3.\nP. Dawson and Dr. John Oananer,\nnewly elected school trustees; and\nB. A. Peebles, wno ran for alrteraum\nand Just  missed nucceso.\nFollowing its long established custom, the Rotary club will Invite\nMayor J. P. Morgan and all the\nmembers of the 1931 council, to be\nIts luncheon guest j next week.\nMK. BLAVLOCK TO SPEAK\nA speaker in the early future will\nbe a. G. Blaylock, vice-president\nand general manager of ths Consolidated Mining & Smelting Company of Canada, who will speak on\n\"Buying ln Oanada.\" Oeorge Dvor-\njetz, chairman of the Buy-ln-Cau-\nada committee, reported that o*1 ln\"\nstructions of the club he had got\nin touch with Mr. Blaylock, and\nthat Mr. Blaylock haa consented to\naddress tlie club on this subject\nand would advise the date on wh.cn\nhe could convenieently discharge\nthis duty.\nTh* Canadian program committee was In charge of the program,\nand 8. J. Gridley, who with Mr*.\nQridley made a tnp home to Boot-\nland ln the summer, gavn a vivid\ndescription  of  th.*,  trip.\nApart from matters of scenic interest, such as Shakcspear's hotue\nat Stratford-on-Avon, the ancestra,\nWashington home at Poole, the\nAnn lUUiaway cottage, and other\nshrines. Mr. Gridley related how m\nEngland a man with a pack on his\nback boarded their railway compartment, and turnM out to be a\npilot of the Consolidated on leave\nfrom his work in the northland,\nand how the heads of the Canadian\nPacific offices In Lonaon inquired\nafter J. S. Carter, who had taken\nthem around  this  district.\nLIVED ON FISH\nFORHVO MONTHS\nminNmmmm\u2122Trrr%Mmmima\ncMEA GHERSSD\n607 Baker St.\nPhone 200\nJANUARY SALE\nQuality Merchandise for Less\nTHE THIRD AND LAST WEEK OF OUR JANUARY SALE BRINGS\nBETTER VALUES THAN EVER. MANY LINES HAVE BEEN FURTHER REDUCED IN ORDER TO EFFECT A COMPLETE CLEARANCE\nBEFORE STOCK-TAKING. YOU SAVE BY PURCHASING NOW.\nMODEL COATS\nH.ALF PRICE\nA wonderful saving on these fine coats. Every\none a model, and the best of its kind. They are\nmade of French broadcloths, beautifully finished,\nand silk lined and interlined throughout. Only\ncoats from the best manufacturers. All wanted\ncolors and Black. Sizes 16 to 42. Regular values\n$85.00 to $125.00 each.\nSALE PRICE, EACH  $42.50 TO $62.50\nMiss Joan Graham Describes\nTeaching Experience on\nCHIEF JUSTICE\nOF ONTARIO IS\n87 YEARS OLD\nTORONTO, Ont., Jan. 19\u2014(CP)-\u2014\nWithout deviation from his dally\nround ot Judicial duties. Rt. Hon.\nSir William Mulock, chief Justice\nof Ontario, today celebrated his\n87th   birthday.\nrto thought of retirement wan in-\ncUaated by 9lr Wultyjun when\nqueried   In  that regard.\nAt luncheon in Cwgoode hall, Sir\nWilliam was presented with a basket of 33 roses in token of his 3o\nyears on the siiweme court bench\nof Ontario as well as his celebratjon\nof   erne  more  birthday.\nFirst Aid Classes\nFinished, Kimberley\nKIMBERLEY, B, C. Jnn. 19.-\nMrs. E. O. Montgomery left tod a.\nfor a week's visit with friends ir.\nNelson.\nThe first aid classes held In McDougall hall for the paft twe\nmonths came to a close toll w-rek\nThose having taken the course will\nsit for their examination on Tie\nat. John's ambulance lectures\nthroughout  the  coming week.\nMrs. McDonald of Nelaon Is at\npresent the gu*st of her daughter,\nMrs. Walter McKenzle, who has\nbeen ill at McDougall Heights hospital   for   a   fortnight.\nMrs. John Walker, who has been\nsuffering from quinsy ln tho hospital,   ls   recovering.\nMiss Florence Morrison, who has\nbeen ln the hospital with tonsll-\nltls,   Is   Improving.\nMrs. Pearson, who has been UI\nwith a severe attack of bronchitis\nduring the lost two weeks, ls\nslightly   improved.\nMiss Glcndcnnlng of Cranbrook\nwas a guest of Mrs. Will Btnnie\nover   the   week-end.\nMiss Irts Morrison en tertsined\nthe Junior group of the Canadian\nGirls ln Training at her home this\nevening.\nLabrador Coast\nMONTREAL.    Jan.    lfl Living   on\na dally diet of salmon and potatoes,\nunadorned by men vitami:\nmi.k, fruit or green vrtretablew, in\na colony constating of two families,\nthe mothers o! wn.cli were \u2022nsterfci\nteaching tho children not only the\nthree R's but also how uo play\nwith a ball and the art of slnginK,\nalso doing pioneer work ln introducing applau.% wa* the experienw\nof Miss Jean Orsharu during the\npast summer.\nMiss Graliam, who addreivsed the\nNolan-Conifll chapter I. O. D. E..\ndescribed her volunteer teaching\nnperienoe at the tmy mpf. on the\nCanadian Laorador co_t ual.ej Rocky\nBay. The QuepM provincial chapter makes' a cram towards the\ntravelling expen-sea of teachers doing volunteer eduational work u\\\nLabrador.\nDuring th\u00a9 two months Fhe was\nat Rocky Bay, Mls.s Graiisni l S*\neelved mail (r. ni home only twice,\nfor there is no null boat MTVlee,\nThe two families, \u00abna one of whicn\nsho stayed, conststeci of 12 person j,\nsix ciilidren coxposing her educational establishment, claesos of\nwhich were bo.d lu one of tb.3\nhomes. None of the*\u00a9 youngsters\nhad ever been to school, and QDl)\none could read I little. There wa\u00bb.\nof course, no equipment, Miss\nGraham remarked, and teacher snd\npuplla sat around a home-madf,\ntable for lessons, onft little girl having the special distinction of usltw\nthe family sewing machine u u\ndesk.\nGames were an entirely upw idea\nto the children, and th* ground did\nnot lend Iteelf to sports, being\nrocky and lacking level places.\nHowever, Miss Graham had taken a\nbail with hfr and she taught the\nchildren to play with it. Prior to\nher coming they had never nwff,\nyet to such good purpose did they\nabsorb her teaching of sops* that\na concert was given to wind UP\ntho school season, with music and\nrecitation, la was nn thla occasion\ntflat the colony le\u00abumed what applause was. registering some astonishment when Miss Grntiam\nclapped her hands after the various\nnumbers on the program.\nSalmon fishing Is the only industry at this spot, which ls at\nthe mouth of a rlvpr, although OOd\nIs the usual product of the Labrador ooast. No farming of any\nkind la pcwtble becauap the territory Is all rock, said Mlas Graham.\nHOUSE DRESSES\n89c Each\nSmart   lines   of   fast   colored\nprint. Slip-on styles, In sizes 36\nto 42.\nSALE PRICE, EACH ........ 89\u00ab*\nDRESSES\nAt S4.95 Each\nEvening   dresses   and    street\ndresses in a good range of styles.\nMisses' sizes, 14 to 20.\nALL ONE PRICE,  EACH,  S4-95\nWOMEN'S HATS\nS1.00 Each\n30 hats of velvet and felt.    All\nwanted colors.\nCLEARING AT, EACH   $1.00\nWOMEN'S DRESSES\nS15.95 Each\nA still further reduction on the\nbalance of these driMM, There Is\na splendid range to select from.\nFlat crepes, georgettes and sporti\ndresses of wool. Sizes 16 to 42.\nALL ONE PRICE, EACH, $15.95\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\ndelicious    refreshments.   The   guest\nof   honor   received   manr   presents.\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022\nMr.   and   Mrs.   N.   Minnies   of   Seattle  were  visiting  in the dty during   the  week-end.\nCAPTAIN DOLLAR\nHAS OPERATION\nDR. STEELE DIES\nIN NOVA SCOTIA\nThe flnt car of a crowded eeven-\near train from New Jersey split a\ntwitch and virtually cut lteelf in\ntwo against a curtain wall of steel\nand concrete in Hudson Tubes\nterminal, at 33rd street and Sixth\navenue, New Tork. Of the 80 passengers ln the car 19 were injured.\nHon. J. F. Bryant li proposing that\nthe Saskatchewan legislature be\nopened dally with prayer.\nAMHERST, N. S., Jan. 111. Rev,\nDr. D. A. Steele, pastor emeritus\nof the First Baptist church here,\nand widely known denominational\n1-rader, died at his home today in\nhis  93rd   rear.\nDr. Steele, a native of Herford-\nshire, England, came to Canada ln\n1845.\nt>r. Steele leaves two sons, Walter, in Pentlcton, B. 0, and Crelgh-\nton, ln Bothwell, Washington, and\na daughter, Mrs. Grace Robb. of\nToronto.\nSAN RAFABL, Ce.1., Jan. 19. -<AF-i\n\u2014Capt. Robert Dollar. 86 head of\nthe steamahlp Un* that bear his\nna_ne, was operated on at his home\nhere today, and his condition was\nsaid to be \"satisfactory.\" The three\nphysicians who lssueu a statement\nafter the operation were R. 0\nDufflcy. San Rafael. V. H Owen-\nwood, and Henry Krutzman, both\nof   San   Francisco.\nCaptain Dollar wss taken violently\nHI at his home last night. The\nphysicians were called Into consultation . pronounced the allmeuI\na stoppage of the bladder, and performed  tho  operation  at  noon.\nHe was said to b\u00a9 resting easily\ntonight.\nT. Edson White, 67. president of\nArmour & Co., wan killed by a fall\nfrom a room window in ihis Chicago\nhome.\nTRAIL. B. C, Jan. 19 -\u2022.'. Oage\nand T. Terry, who have been working for the pant three week, h\\\nTadanac. leit .Saturday evening en\nroute to their homes lu Birmingham,   England.\nMrs. Howard D, Anderson w**\nhostess at the tea hour Friday to\na number of her friends She wan\nassisted in serving by Mra. J. MU-\nlen Her guests were Mrs. N. Ma-\ntor Mrs. E. J. Provost. Mrs. W. J.\nSullivan. Mrs. O. H. Nelson, atn.\n.1 Millen. Mrs. P. S. Moynes and\nMrs,  D.  C.   Irwin.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u00bb\nMrs    C     F.    Brown    \u00abnd    Mrs.    A,\nDeBruyn  were the giusts of friends\nIn Trail East Sunday.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nM    Cumming   left   Saturday   evening for Powell  River and  Ashcroft.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMrs    A    n    Cameron   and   smsll\ndaughter    of    Rossland    were    shopping   in   the   city   Saturday,\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nL Hellyer, A. Pearson, J. H. Foster and B. E. Smith motored in\nOwtl\u00abR*r   Saturday   evening.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs.   R   Zura  Ol   Spokane  arrived\ntn   the   dty   Saturday   and   will   re-1\nmain  for  the   next  few  week*.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nMr and Mrs. J. D. Hartley returned Friday evening from a honeymoon trip to Spokane and Seattle. Th*?v hare- taken up residence\nIn   the   Columbia   apartments.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nSteven Chahley of Grand Forks\nWH* visiting to Trail Saturday, leaving   yesterday   for  Nelson,\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMrs M. Mawdsley and Miss U.\nMawtlslev wer* vlsltms in Nelson\nduring   the   w\u00abe_-cnd.\nArthur   Borrow,   James   Darls   and\nAlex  Webster,  who  attend  the  high\nschool   here,   returned   this   morning\nafter    spending    the    week-end    at j\ntheir  homes  in  Frultvale.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nJack    Reardon,     who    has    been |\nspending  some  time  visiting  friends .\nin Powell River, and  his mother  In j\nTacoma,   is   expected   horn;   tomorrow.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nJ. Dowling returned taet week\nfrom a holiday spent with friends\nm   New   Westminster.\n\u2022 *    \u2022\nMr, and Mrs. Alex Wilson re-'\nturned Friday evening from a honeymoon spent in Spokane, snd\nwill  rtelde  on  Riverside  avenue.\n\u2022 t   I\nMies Ruth Doughty, temporarily\nof Nelaon. spent yesterday the guest\nof her parents. Mr. and Mrs, J, M.\nDoughty, Bay  avenue.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. F. 8. Peters of Rowland spent\nSaturday   In   the   city.\n\u2022 e   ,\nMr. and Mrs. J. YuroskI, Rossland avenue, entertained about B0\nof their friends at a party Saturday evening ln honor of their\ndaughter Sophia, the occasion being\nher birthday. Oames and dancing\nwere feature* of the evening, music\nbeing supplied by an orchestra. The\nlarge room was tastefully decorated\nwith red and white crepe streamers, and Oregon grape in silver\nvases added to the beauty of tha\nscene. Mr*. Yuroakl, assisted by\nMrs, P. Kobluk, Miss Louise Yuroe-\nki   and   Mlsa   Mar;-   Yuroakl,   served\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL HOUSES AND LOTS. TS-\nmirsjicc. Notarv. .J. 0 And^.-\nson.   Trail.        (34MI\nINSTITUTE HAS\nSAME DIRECTORS\nThe directors of the Nelson Wo-\nmen's Institute, reelected for the\n1931 term at Its annual meting st\nMrs. H. II Pitta, presidm!, Mra A\nH. Crossloy, first vtM-pntldent; Mrs,\nW. Rutherford, second vice-president\nMrs <t. K. Ashby and Mrs, J.\nTuraT, director*, and Mrs. Hector\n! Mackenzie,   secretary-treasurer.\nI Captain Ian Fraser. who was bundled while serving with the Shropshire\n| Light infantry In the war and .\\-_,\n) Conservative member ol parllamesi\nj for North St. Pancras from 1924\n) to 1930. has passed the final exam-\ni lnatlon for  the  bar.\nCRUICKSHANK IS\nSPEAKERAT GYROS\nPrtrHncial    Police   Inspector\nGiv#>q Outline of Policing\nSystems\n[napeetor Forbes Cruiokshank of\nthe provind*] jwlM faro* wa* a\nguest nf Mis Ottos at a mewttnK\nand   luncheon   ln  the  Canadian  Lr-\n:' \u25a0 |     iV '\".fi   v     ri-rning.\nMr Crulckshank, main speak'*\nol the evening, gave and outline of\nadlan an.] Aawrlcai\npolicing B.atcrc. lie also gav* aev-\neral accounts of the style of run;\nrunners   and    the   moans   they   user!\nin.  running   liquor.\nCUTS\nTftat \u00ab once; prevent Inninlafc\naid healing, nviickly, lately, wttfi\nDodd's\nOINTMENT\nlit a for lik th\u00ab \/inf*t fait crc.vnt Pike 50c\nA FriendtoWomen\nLydia E. Pinkham's\nVegetable Compound\nLYDIA E. PINKHAM MKD1CTNK CO\nLrna, Mih, U.S.A.\n\u25a0ad Cobourg, Ont , Canada.\nOur New\nDining\nRoom\nIs Lho ideal place fjr\nliar.queta, dinner parties\n\u2022' your afternoon\nteas. Pay ua a visit;our\nservice is good, and the\nfood served vou is the\ni>e\u00abt ;\u2022!  a!! times.\nQoUcn Qate\nCafe\nRobinfHood\nFI\/OUR\n\"MONEY-BACK\" Guarantee\nProtects You\n Page Six\nTHE NELSON DAILY Nr~WS        TPESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1381.\n5ty* Nt?iium Bailij 5f?tms\nPublication w\u00aby mornln\u00bb \u00abu\u00bbpt Sunday Mr Tt* Haw. PuMlah-\n' tec  Company,   limited.   Nelson.   B.   C.\nBualnaae letter, .hould b* ad\u2014eewd and check, and monev\norders nude payable to Th. Hew. Publishing Companv. Umlted.\nand  in  no caae  to  Individual  memkera ot  the .tart.\nAdvertlalnc rate cards and A. B. 0. atatementa of circulation\nBalled on request, or may be aaen at the office of any advertulnf\n\u2022tency recocnlaed by  tb. Canadian Dally Newipaper. AaaootaUon.\nBy  mall   (country),   p.r   month\nPer   year   \t\nBy mall   (city), per year  _.\nOutalde   Canada,   per   month   ...\nPer   year    ^\t\nDelivered.\nPer   year\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nper    tree*\nPanbl.   In  advanet.\nMember   Audit   Bureau   of   Circulation.\n..  \u00ab.oo\n...  13 00\n.      ..75\n_   7J0\nM\n_ u.oo\nTUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1931.\nAll Fruit Growers Watch Kelowna\nToday at Kelowna fruit and vegetable men from\nthe province of British Columbia will assemble on\nthe occasion of the 41st annual convention of the\nBritish Columbia Fruit Growers association. This\nmeeting promises to be a notable event in the history of the organization.\nDiscussion and action on a plan for central selling\npromises to be the big feature of the gathering. The\nexecutive of the association has committed it to an\nendorsation \u2022 of a growers' marketing plan.\nBut all growers will not be present , as certain independent fruit and vegetable men have signified\ntheir intention of non-attendance. If carried out,\nthis threat will not greatly aid the industry. Whether\nopposed to the central selling plan or not every member possible should attend the Kelowna meeting today.\nAll eyes of the province interested in the fruit\nindustry will be focused on Kelowna today and tomorrow. Difference of opinion among the growers has\nmade the 41st annual convention one of the outstanding ones of the association's lifetime. The\nKootenays will be well represented, and decision reached at Keiowna will be taken up in local branches with\nhaete.\nB. C. Telephone Density Great\nThe installations of telephones in Canada continued\nto increase during 1929, the total number installed, 1,-\n899,986, Exceeding the total for 1928 by 65,452, or 4.9\nper cent The average number of telephones per 100\npopulation was 14.29 and the United States with 16.93\n(1928) was the only country with a greater density.\nGermany with 2,950,430 and Great Britain and\nNorth Ireland with 1,759,686 (1928) were the only\nother countries with large numbers of telephones, but\ntheir averages per 100 population were only 4.6 and\n8.8 respectively.\nThe greatest provincial density was in British Col-\nlnmbia where the average was 21.2 telephones per\n100 population. Ontario was second with 18.9, Sask-\nand Manitoba fifth with 145, Alberta fourth with 12.4\nand Manitoba fifth with 11.9. Quebec, New Brunswick\nNova Scotia, Prince Edward Island and the Yukon\nTerritory following in this order.\nGrowth of English Language\nA hundred years ago German was spoken by 82,000,-\n000 people; it is now the speech of between eighty\nand ninety millions, while twenty more millions understand it. The other Teutonic lanugages show an increase of well over 100 per cent., the respective figures being: Dutch, from 6,300,000 to 15,000,000; Swedish, from 3,200,000 to 7,500,000; Danish, from 2,-\n100,000 to 5,000,000. Growth of the languages of Roman origin is seen to be not quite so rapid. Italian\nleads with an increase of 21,400.000 to 15,000,000;\nSpanish coming next with figures that have advanced\nfrom 35,200,000 to 50,000,000. The record for French\ngives it place as a tongue which has advanced from\n82,400,000 to 45,000,000, and the claim that it is now\nunderstood by 75,000,000 foreigners.\nWhat of English? A century ago it was spoken by\nnearly 20,000,000 people; today it is the language of\n160,000,000, with 60 more million understanding it even\nif they do not call it their mother tongue. And in view\nof the further statement that English, spoken by 220,-\n000,000 people, now occupies the first place, there being no part of the world where English is not spoken,\nthe time may come when it will be almost the universal language.\n,\nVice-president of Sears Roebuck announces that\nafter a trial lasting the full year the thirteen-month\nplan of conducting the business has proved successful. The advantages pointed out are accurate ac-\nturing, operating and sides costs and the facilitating\ncounting and comparisons of production, manufac-\nof budgeting. The plan affects 40,000 employees\nwho was reported as l\u00abing happier. We can understand that. T o or three days is a long time to wait\nfor a cheek at the end of the month, even if the\nfigures are not so large.\nAnd now we are told by radio enthusiasts that\nit will not be long before we shall pick scenes that\nhappened centuries ago. Nero fiddling over Rome and\nnnd\" the Trojan horse am still knocking about the\nuniverse. We are about to corral the ray of light\nfrom these events as they come bouncing back from\nthe stars of the sky.\nSeen and Heard in\nNELSON\n(Br  1.  B.   C)\nHo bum) Aaoother day and Monday at that. What can we write\nabout today? There are lota ol\nthing* to write about, but to find\n\u2022omothlag lulUble for all li ratuer\na bard a\u00ablfnment. What about\nClara Bow? Not botng an ardent\nmovie fan 1 do not know much about\ntha \"henna haired\" movie queen.\nBut Clara le certainly ln the limelight down south Juat now. Clara\nls charging her former aecretary,\nDaisy    Devoe    with    the    theft    of\nllArSOO.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nIvory paper from California hu\nglaring headline*, and tha general\npublic la reading \u00bb_\u2022 court proceed'\nInge, whloh are printed verbatum\nClara, from evidence given by her\nlacretary, a former beauty parlor\nworker, employed by Clara at\nsalary of (75 per week, has twin\nstepping high, wide and handsome.\nPrior to working for Clara ane waa\nearning $42.50. Her first iutics when\nemployed by the \"It\" girl, were to\ntend to Clara's beauty wants, her\nhair, her face and her finger nalla\nand dainty hands. Then Clara\nfired her secretary and turned the\nwork over to Daisy who was to\nget a raise Which ahe claims ehe\ndid not get. Then came a quarrel,\nas only two young people who have\nbeen friends can  quarrel.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nMlM Devoe'* real name la Deboe.\nShe Is from Kentucky and evidence\nln the case reveals that her father\nls tn prison f0*\" having dealings ln\nliquor, and for operating a still In\nthat southern state. Her mother\nhas been hard up and Daley admit*\nsending her money. Some promised\nher  by  Clara.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nFrom what I can gather MIm Devoe l\u00bb going through the trial with a\nfirm upper lip. This blonde mist,\nwhom Clara charge* was ln love with\na Chinese, eavs she Is going to\nshow up Hollywood, and that Clara\nwill be out of the movie* forever\nwhen she tells the world all she\nknows.\nBoth Clara and Delay appear to he\nhard boiled on the stand, but\nDaisy Is playing the part of the\nlady. Her speeoh is excellent and she\nuws the beit of grammar. Clara on\ntbe other hand throw* the clang\naround pretty well, and hae on sev-\neral occasions caused Daisy to break\nforth ln the real Hollywood style.\nTho \"It\" maiden, who Is declared\nto be highly emotional, has shown\nthis on the stand. She appeared at\nttbe trial the first few days decked\nout In dark glassies. She has thrown\nfit* of temper that have stopped\ncourt proceedings, and she haa com.\nout of these remarkably fast. Of\ncourse a movie queen should be able\nto throw one of these fits and the\njurors would not know whether she\nwu acting natural or Just giving\nthem movie stuff, or perhaps practising for a future picture.\nHowever, as the rase goe* on, there\nare stories of liquor parties in which\nThat Body of Yours\nBr  \u00abB.   W.  BARTON,   M.  D.\nTESTING YOUB HEALTH \u2022>\nKNOWLEDGE\nIt would seem that lp these days\nwhen there ls so muoh known about\nthe care of children and tha prevention of serious ailments such as\ndiphtheria, scarlet fever and measles\nthat when children grew to manhood\nand woman hood that a fairly large\npercentage would b* ln good 'physical   condition.\nWhat do we find?\nThat about 75 or 80 per oent of\nthe men called up for war service\nwere below normal physically. All\nsorts of defects wsre found-\u2014sight,\nhearing, dental, overweight and underweight, hernia, hammer toes, flat\nfeet, varicose veins, undersized\nchests,   heart   disease  and   so  forth.\nNow how much should the average man and woman know about\nthemselves, about their body and\nIts care?\nDr. Livingston Farrand, president\nof Cornell university, hu devised\nan Intelligence test on health for\nthe \"educated\" person, but It could\nreadily be tried by anybody. Juat\na* Edison and others like \u00bb Question student* a* to their general\nknowledge of history, science, and\ninvention, so in. Farrand suggests\nthat to pass an Intelligence test on\nhealth   one   should   know:\n(a>   The   buls   for  sound   health\nhabits such as sleep, posture of the\nbody, sitting and standing, exercise.\nand the getting rid of wastes from\nthe body-_weat, urine, breath from\nlungs, and waste from intestines,\n(b) Know type*, amounts, and\n\u25a0proportion of food neceeury for\nproper nourishment of the body.\n(c) Know the normal mental actions, and conditions that might\ncause  variations in mental actions.\n(d) understand   sex   instinct,\nit)   Know   about   Infeetlon,   and\nhow body can be artlflclaly protected against diphtheria, smallpox,\ntyphoid Tever and so forth.\nif' Know cause* bringing on\ntrouble with heart and blood vessels,\nso as not to break down ln middle\nage.\n(g) Know how to guard oneself ,\nagainst polluted water, milk and oe j\nforth.\n<h)   Appreciate   the   neoseslty   of\nfrequent medloef and dental eiam-'\n.nations.\n(1)    Choose   wisely   medical    and]\ndental   advisers,   remembering   that I\nihe 'practice of medicine i* grounded I\non  science,   not  on  mystery,   fancy,\nand   tradition.\n(J) Know the important health I\nproblems facing a community, and 1\netlifly the beet methods of attacking I\neach   problem. 1\nWhy not uk yourself how youl\nwould get along if you were re-1\nquired to pass an examination re*<l\nquired on the above simple health|\nmatters.\nAmerica Discovered in the\nYear of 1492 or in 1477\nAlma Mater and her chee-lld.\nFinger Bowls Old Custom\nDown in Mexico\nThe city of Mexico Is said to be that the god* assembled to create\nthe oldest metropolis on the North] the sun. They lighted h great fire\nAmerican continent, reaching back and brought offerings. Two of the\nto the dim and primitive past, and I gods were chosen to sacrifice them-\nwhlle full of human interest for i wives by Jumping into the fire.\nall, lt and Its environs is s ven-! One was Tecuzlztecatl. a powerful\ntable gold mine for the student, and rich god. wro brought offer-\nthe writer, and the architect. Mexi-| ing* of Jewels and incense, \"ine\ncans of today we keenly alive to, otlier Nanaoatiin, poor and ugly,\nthe archaeological possibilities of j could only offer flowers, grass and\nClara  Bpent  hundreds of dollars 1 or j their   country   and   they   \u00abnoourag<v lnorn_.\nwine and whisky.   There are stories; exploration* thst will bring to Hint      -n.^    Umw    TecuzliEt*catl    tried\n_\u00bb ..-Mir.,    mi..  i_T-e_ _u\u00ab r.UTMI tlie   nurlncl   story   of   a   remarkably   in   ilirrm   irit.   t.hA   firm    hut-.   ff._r\nof gambling.    Mlsa Devoe says Clara\ntemarkabjy\nadvanced     civllzatlon     that     dates\nt o   Jump   into   the   fire,   hut   fear\nlost: heavily\", but on the stand Clara : ^Hu^he\"^^ of\"the Mava\"  held    nlm    bart-    Th('n    ^ruastzin\nsays she play* a mean hand of poker. \u00a3\"$\" ^Jrjg *  tM  ^^i ^^'^^^^^^^4^\nK'unm^ 52 j T\u00bb .rt&JPW uTSff great \\ \u00bb^'\u00abSWS\nWtmw^una xn\\tiB\u00a3& JHLS S\n\u201e]ajn \"* | dimming its light. This, your guide\nWell, the case will likely drag\nalong for some time and someone\nwill likely win, but the suit will\ncost both girls a pretty penny . . .\nbut the advertising will be great. Although pulled from one picture on\naccount of the case, her nerves having been shaken too muoh for work,\nwe can rent assured that we wilt see\nClara again in all her enchanting\nroles and playing to bigger houses\nthan ever. Movleland has to have\nsome kind of a ahakeup nncc In\nswhlle Who knows the limelight of\nthe court caae may be Daisy's means\nof starring in the films.\nSo  much  for  Clara, now  for   iut\nBuried beneath the present citv\nHe the ruin* of another great metropolis founded In 1325 by a\nlittle .band of htaxvlng, hair-clothed Aztecs, refugees who had fled\nto the marshes of Lake Texcoco to\nescape extermination. By super human effort they built nn small\nIslands so:n\u00ab of them artificial tne\ncity of Tenochtltlan.' destined to\nbecome the import ng ea_>itaj of\nthe Aztec* empire-\nFIRST CITY DESTROYED BY\nTHE   CONQ1 IIHNti   SPANIARDS\nTo.    this   in    1510    came   Spoln'b\ngreat  exp.orer,   the  conquering   Cor-\ntez,   and   nia   soldiers,   wt>o.   though\ndazaled   by   the   wealth' and    ma<-\nlocal   people-      These   people   I   am j ntflcence   of   the   glittering   metro-\nabout  to   mention   have  not   neces- polls, were so shocked   by   the  rell\nsarlly got \"tt\" but. I noticed them l\nmy rambliugs yesterday afternoon\n. . . .Oharlle Young, C P. R dispatcher we*    carylng    a    large\nparcel up and down ths street. . . .\nIt looked like a large picture or something of that nature And Douglas Creney deliberately walked across\nglous practices of the Incas, cruel\nand barbaric beyond measure, thgt\nthey razed the conquered city,\nleaving not one stone upon another, and leveled the ruins to make a\nfoundation .or a new city on Spanish lines, which was destined to\ngrow into the present city.\nLife In the City ol Mexico todgy\nWard street. . , .And cut the inter- \u25a0 centres around the magnificent ca-\nsectlon .. He was Just Jaywalk - thedrul. largest and oldest ln the\nin_ A*   wa*   Frank   Slmms\u2014 ' western    hemisphere    which    stand*\ning. . . . . as was rran_ \u2122\"f\" . 0n the Rite of the atone-capp\u00abd\nwho looked all the more prominent j \" mid oll tt.hlch th, Aztecs ol-\nwtth 'hts white grocery apron tied, .^ up thc)r hUman sacrifice*,\naround him. . , . And R J- H>wlti, anti _own which flowed the b.ood\ncame   up   Ward   street   and   crossed! 0f   60,000   slaves,   butchered   In    a\nBaker He was carylng his* gloves year.\nin one  hand And Tom Choate      The     National     Museum     already\nI was about to do a little Jaywalking ; house*   rare>   cwving*\u25a0. P1^-^;\nI n.,1-   ,i,innii   hi.   -lin\/i ' ings   and   Mayan    books   that   give\n.But  \u00abnaD\u00ab^.h'\"   \u00b0_Lnnd\/ --evidence  of   a  civilization   in   which\nAnd in  front of the Bank  of Com-, thft   nobieB   ate   at   tables   set   wlUi\nmerce   C.   W.   Appleyard   and   L.   V.isllveT  ^.a   g0]d  p,at_,   had   c.iafUi.\nI Rogers  were  in  conversation. . . -Mr. j to keep their food warm, used nap-\n! Rogers had a parcel under one arm; kins  and   tiager  bowls,  and  smoked\niMunroe and O. Tapanlla were <fl\u00ab\"\u00abY_    sacrificial   stow   on    which\nI sln\u00ab  rallwsy  topics.    .  Ana  upi  the, thousands of  human  being,  pcrisn-\n! street B. Townshend. ol Willow Point 144   u   nfferlniir.   to   the   gods   was\nv:,s watching two automobile, being  found   near   th.   cathedral   mil   the\nj untangled  . . . And r moment later, lamoua   Aztec   calender   htone,   re.\nwas met by Alex Lelth who transfer-1 cording    their    ay.t\u00bbm   ol    dividing\nr\u00abrf a narcel to Mr   Townihond.    . .'tne   year   into  etghtfra   months   of\nI ,^Jt. _Ifm_? in whai looked   twent\u00bb d,\u00ab Mch  wllh  f,l\u00ab  \"nam.-\nIt wae vrrapped in   .        V^at looks   , ]MJ., tlw  e_\u201e    ,   \u201e,,  yeat\nto me.  an  old  copy  of  The  Nelson _ug   out   of   ,\u201e\u00bb      rth   ,iilda,\nDally   Newe No   I   didn't   \u25a0\u25a0\nwill lell you. U. whv we see the\nMen ot a rabbit In *.he disc of lire\nmoon!\nAUNT HET\n\"1\" believe that story about manna\nfrom Heaven. I wa. rushlu' ho.ne\nto scrape up some kind o' dinner\nfor that missionary an' run over\nthe   nicest  Had  o'   fryln'   chicken.\"\nClara Bow\u2014But I had a lady call me\n'on the phone the other night and\nj she said she wa. Joan Crawford\nAnd she wanted to make a date\nthe   great   plaze.   Both   are   m   the\nmuseum,  as  ls   the  siile.d  of  Mon-\ntezeuma  and   the  coronation   coac_h\n. .  of  the  Emperor  Maximilian\nSuch   books   as   escaped   the   des\nIn Delhi, India, a .nan can jet a shave on the\nmain street. The barber seats h's victim on\ntha cdee of Ihe fountain and let's the hair fall where\nit may. We also have curbstone brokers who shavi^\nua on the street.\n^nny   the   wSaT^me   wo\u2122_   _.t J\u00bb7>-iEBr_  la  thejr\nfnto their h,X.       I hsould have \u00bb\u00bb!;<\"\" fanaticism .!   \u2022 a remark\nssld 1 wa. the Prince of Wales\nLet', go.\nTEN  YEARS AGO\n(From Ihe p^ly News, Jan. ID. lust)\nJ. w. Mulholland and C. O. Wood-\nrow, wiio left last Thursday for the\nSilver   King   mine    returned   yestor- ^SS^'-JTSSTm-\"_* 1to\u00a31\nrtay.   They report that eight feet of ^n   Juan   Teotlhuacan.   which   are\nmow  haa   fallen   in  the  vicinity   of supposed to have occupied the cen-\nable literature of poetry, philosophy, aclenoe, a hlgnly civilized\nform of government, which encouraged agriculture; _ highly developed skill in working gold, silver and coDDer. and a rur*1 knowledge  of dyes.\nPYRAMID  OF   THF   M N   -ifttAT-\nF,K   THAN   ANY   IN   F,(;>PT\nDp ting    further    back    'han    the\nMayan    civilization    are    the    great\nEnstein's home haa been robl>ed in German\\! Possibly trying to steal hia relativity! If they |ot it,\nhow would they know what to do with it? Twelve\nmen under suspicion.\nOklahoma oil sharks are said to be seeking suckers\nin Canada. And yet some mining brokers thought theae\nwaters were fished out\nthe   mine.\nTrail curler* have fatr ice and are\nI all ready for the bonaplel next wee.*.\n! affording   to   Fred   A.   Starkey,   who\nviiitod  In  Trail   yesterday   with  tbe\nE-li*.\nter of the ancient aacred ol y. Qo\nburled in the remote past are those\nfrrpat monuments that even the\nhistorian la able to thow only\nscant llgh t on the people t hat\nerected   them.\nThe Pyramid of the Sun occupies\nan   area   considerably   greater   than\n\u2022    \u2022    \u2022 that ot th* great Pyramid of Egypt, t\nI A succoMful Institution of the. tho_rh lt 1* lew ln height. Mag-\nnow Benevolent Protective Order of nlflcent carvings^ flank a majeotlc\nI Kliti wa* carried out at Trail tton\nWhat the\nPress Is Saying\nMK,  STEVENS  SUM  IT\nJuat b* Mr. Betin-.tt in hit, addreM\nto the Board of Trade and the Kl-\nwnni* Club recently looked things\nsquarely In tho face, so, hi* Minister (.f Tride and Commerce, Hon.\nMr. Stevens, makes no pretence of\nIgnoring unpleaaant truth*. In a\nstatement on the condition* of\ntrade lwued recently and published\nin all the press, the Minister sum a\nup the tvenls of the paat year and\nbays ,in effect, \"Things have not\nbeen good.\" But after showing iis\nfrankly and fearlessly Jmt how bad\nthey really have been Mr. Steven*\ndirects attention to the bright spots\naud soma of the facts and figures\nhe quotes will astonish most of \\\\b.\nHe shows ns, for Instance, that the\ncondition of wholesale and retail\ntrade, the business of buying and\nselling things, actually reach? d a\nhigher figure than the record year\n1829, thereby establishing a new\nmark. Again, tho fact that ftenures In the building construction\ntrade while lower than tho*,- of the\ntwo previous years are higher than\nln any year from 1913 to 1997 helos\nto emphasize the folly which m_>t\nof us hav\u00a9 uermltUxl ourselves of\ncomparing the subnormal with the\nAbnormal and attempting to reach\nconclusions from the result. If we\ncompare the admittedly subnormal\nyear of 1930 with rv normal r.ar\nwe shall Und, as th* Minister haa\nattempted to show us in the caae\nof the building trades, that the\nyear whloh Is gone was hut little\nbelow the av- race Or. as Mr. Steven* puts it, \"While the times through\nwhich we are \"passing ar*, admittedly difficult, they are not so difficult, us those we have raced before,\" and the reason for this, \"that\nCanada is wealthier tnd better able\nto withstand adversity\" seems to\nsuggest that th- rigors of hard\ntimes as known to our pioneer\nfrontiersmen may not be expected\nto recur.\nBut facts and figure* are cold\ncomfort. What hae the Minister to\nsay of the futur:? What indication\ndoe* h* see of the turn of the tifle?\nI.Ike hia review of past event*, his\nviaion of tn* earlv uture is be**u\non fact and when he sees improvement close to hand we may he\nsure that it 1* not a thought which\nis  child  only  of  the  \u00bbUh,    Reading\nhis rne*ea\u00abe une feels that his\nconfidence that depression has\ntouched bottom U not gu; *wprk\nbut rath.n that it is a scientific\ncalculation worked out, not only by\nthe minister hl-rwlf but by the\nindeed,    Mr.     Stevens     quote*     as\nmost Qualified economist* whom\nauthority for hi* foreonat ti>3t\nwhen th; normal processes now at\nwork ar* completed \"prosperity will\nreturn and cheap capital will facll\nltate   the   inauguration   cf   new   en\nThe Lighter\nSide\nMOTTO   ADOPTED\n(jrandpa: \"Tom, go and fetch\nthe   old   horse.\"\nTom: \"Why the old one,\n(iraudpa?\"\nOrandpa: \"Wear ont the old\nfirst\u2014that's my  motto!\"\nTom: \"Well, Grandpa, then\nyou  letch the horse.\"\nOlrl: \"Do you know where a man\nlives, with one leg named Sanders?'\nDrug Clerk: \"What w_s the np._r\nof   the  other  leg?\"\nSomebody asked a college professor how science helped business.\nand he replied, \"What wou.d tm\nsuspender business amount to\nwithout the law  ol gravitation.\"\nAccording io statistics, there\nare 4.1 persons ln the overage\nCanadian family- It Is understood that .1 In usually referred  as \"father.\"\nTwo men played a round of\ngolf In the morning and then\nsat do a ii to a very heavy lunch'\nroil. Indeed, they bad not finished their hut glass nf kum-\nmrl\u2014which for some reason Is\nconsidered to Improve one's\nput ting\u2014until    3:.10    n.    m.\nFinally they started out and\nmaintained a hstfy silence until\nthe  seventh   hole.\nWhen thev reach*ii the green\none satfl to the oiher. \"I say,\nold   boy,   how   do   wc   stand?\"\nSaid the other, \"I don't\nknow. 1 call it a miracle.\"\u2014\nTU-Blts,   London.\nTWEOTY^EARS AGO\nWhen did Columbus discover\nAmerica\u2014In  1493  or  1477?\nA   Peruvian   *cholar.   Lui*   Ulloa,\nit Is who raise* the question, and\nth*    New   York    Time*   hu   fflven\nto   American   reader*   the   first  *al-\n1 to of the Peruvian'* heavy artillery\nyet   fired   in   an   Aaglioh   translation.   Prom   the   record*   *o   offered,   which  exhibit  the  central   feature   of   Ulloa'*   case,   at   least   It\nmust be said that this South  American   student   ha*   placed   before\nhistorian*   a      worthy      inte'.lsctual\no _ m.    The    epnoeMton*    which\nFerdinand   and   Isabella   offered   to\nColumbus    before    he    set   out- in\n14M,    the    authentic    text   of    ihe\ncompact   declares   that   tho   sover-1\neign*   grant   to   him.\nIn recompense for what he* ha*\nfi'\u00ab\"ivered   In   tho   seas   of   tho\nocean  and  of   the  voyag*   that\n!      _t   now.   with   tbe   help   of\nOod.  to make  upon   them.\nHitherto    historian*    have    relied\nupon    a    modern    version    of    tho\ntext of the compact which a Spanish  student  published  In   1835,  declaring   that   the   grant*   are   made\nto   Columbus   \"In   recompense   for\nwhat  he  is  to  discover.\"\nNot only doe* the official text\u2014\nrecently brought the light In a\nren-\u201e;ini7Mion of tho Spanlah archives\u2014show the wording to which\nU.joa now call* the world'* attention, but also tho certified copy\nfrom which the erroneous form\nwas first taken ha* been found\nagain by Ulloa, and tht* copy also\nshow* that the grant* wore made\nti Columbus tn recompense for\nwhat \"ho has discovered in the\nsea. of the ocean\" as well a* In\npr-=o*ct of the fruits or hi* new\nvoyage. Again, ' the notes from\nVustM the anal compact waa drawn\nbfw found, and they also\n\u2022how tho same wording. More-\nu . tii. .mdwritlng Is clear\nand exact beyond question, the\npr-j-lom cannot be one merely of a\nclerks error.\nWhat wa* ft that. Coluiftbue\nhad already discovered? The Peruvian's Investigation* leo> him to\nthe velw that Columbus had made,\nduring the decade from 1470 to\n1480. voyage to Iceland, and thence\non  to the  North American shore.\n\"One thing must be recognised,\" comment* the Bostan Transcript.\" \"Trade relation* between\nKurope and Greenland via Iceland\nwere by no meane so defunct at\nthe time of Columbus a* historian* have supposed. Aa Dr. VUh-\nJalmur Stefansson shows, recent excavation of graves of member* of\nthe ancient Norse colony  ln Green\nland havep roved that the eolonyl\nww not yet loot to tho ken ofl\nEurope at the close of the 15thI\ncentury. Clothes have been found]\nupon the skeletons which are de-\nsinged in the fashion* that pre-l\nvailed ln Europe In the year 14A0T\nMoreover, microscopic examination!\nof the texture of these garment*!\nshow thorn to be of the same \u2022tultj\nand qua.lty a* certain clothe* ftu\nufactured at thi* time In Bur*\nope. If Oolumbu* ever did approach I\nthe shore of America before 149*\u2014|\nand that remains to b* proved-\nat least It is not unnatural, but I\nextremely natural, to suppose that!\nhi* voyage may bav* been madel\nby way of Iceland and  Greenland.\"!\nTHIRTY  YEARS  AGOl\n(From  The  Tribune.  Jan.   20.  1901)1\nNelaon puck chasers defeated thel\nSandon team 7-2 hero yesterday.]\nWetmore, Thompson and Perrier pil-f\ned up Nelson's seven goals.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nEach span of the 14 bridge* onl\nthe C. P. E. tracks between Robson I\nand Midway Is to be housed JnT\nThe work will commence at once]\nand will cost 17000.\nAnother compound Baldwin loco-1\nmotive to be used on the Columbia!\n_i Western division arrived In the!\ncity yesterday from Winnipeg. ThisI\nmakes the third to arrive lu the|\nlocal yards.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nAlderman Hamilton wa* sworn in!\nyesterday   by   City   Clerk   Strachan.f\nSkip    J.    McKensle's    team    beatl\nPred   A.   Starkey'a  curler*   13-6   and!\nF.   A.   IVmblyn's   curlers   beat   Dr.|\nPorln's H-9 in two curling matchoj\nhere last night.\n'LITTLE\nTOIDEY'\nJuvenile Closet\nSeat\nYour Child Needs It\nBe C. Plumbing\n& Heating Co.\nHaircut prices nave been cut to 10 centg in Waterloo and now aU Guelph is choosing between long hair\nor a long walk.\nInmate of a Sanaa jail yot an extra year for punching a fellow-prisoner. Correct The rules forbid hitting\nin the clinks.\n1 day.      Thomas    Dunbar,    Fred    A.\nI atarkey, j. Oendl*. Oeorge Gully, B\nb.airway   which   leads   to   the base\nof  tho  pyramid.\nProm   the   top   there   la   * mag'\nnlflcent   vlew_ of   the   valley with\nStrudwlck aad S. Oomroons of \u00bb\u00abl-|tJw 8maror Pyramid of the Moon\n\u25a0on aa*i*ted in the ceremonies. t0 th\u00ab north, and the templo of\nJames Hardlngton wa* elected exalt- Quetaalocatl to- th* south, while\ned ruler. i east   and   west   as   far   as   the   eye\ncan   reach  are   small  mounds.\nA lead of 30 points was establish-\ned by President R. D. Barn**' slda\nln th* annual opening of the Nelson Curling club, the Pmldenu\nveriu*   Vlce-Pmldont*   roatcn-\nI.EGFNp   EXPLAINS   RABBIT\nSIGN    IN   THE   MOON\nAtrordlng to the legend thoy will\ntoll you In theae parts it wa* here\nan   In*   top   nf   th*   areflt-   pyrninH\nterprtoe*   and   the   Increase   of   em\nployment.\"\n-Calgary   Albertan.\nM-RPIUSEn\n(ieorge: \"Youre marrying\nEthel? I didn't think yonr affair  wo\u00bb  so  serious   as  that.\"\nJim:  Neither  did  f\nBride: \"Vou must not expect\nme to fllve up my girlhood\nwars aU at once.\nBridegroom: \"Certainly not,\nmy dear. Oo on taking an allowance from your father as\nir   nothing   bad   happened.\"\n(From The Dally News. Jan. 20,1021)\nMiss Anna Palmqulst, Miss Isabella Goodwin and Bis Gladys Morre\nare candidates In tho field for the\nbig Ne.ion Dally New* subscription\ncontest.\n\u2022       A       *\nWilliam White, ln announcing th*\nprogram of work for the C. P. B- In\nMontreal yesterday, stated that the\nline known as the Kootenay Central\nfrom Golden, which ha* now 30\ngitles of track, during tho year will\nbe extended  to 60 miles.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nThe Ice blockaded below Burton\non tho lower Arrow lakes was raised\nyesterday by the steamer Minto\nunder the supervision of Capt. J.\nC. Gore, superintendent of the C\nP. R.  Lake and  River  service.\n\"Big BUI\" Wsshburn of Castlegar.\none of the most successful trapper*\nin tho interior came into Castlegar\n:rom hli tr*j> line last week. He\nbrought with i-im one of the l*ree*t\nsnd finest lynx skins ever eeen\naround Castlegar. He returned yes-\n\u25a0erday with a pack on hi* back\nweighing 173 pound*.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe Edgewood Lumber company is\ni preparing   to   construct   an   #18,000\nOne*Stop Service\nWe can supply you with anything: from\nair in your tires to a new motor or even a\nnew car.\nWc work on flat rate prices\u2014 guarantee\nworkmanship\u2014 use only the very best materials.\nWe Solicit Your Business\nSmedley Garage Co.\nNext Door to P. O.\nNelson, B. C.\nPhone 71\n-W\nNOTHING JUST\nAS NICE ON\nTHE MARKET\nENAMELLED\nSTEEL\nRANGES\nALL PRIGES\n-SEE THEM\nNelson Hardware Co.\n\"Wholesale and Ketail Quality Hardware''\nNelson, B. C.\n THE NELSON D.ULY NEWS       TUESPAY, JANUARY 20, 1931.\nPsfe Sewo\nDUD BLACKWOOD IS\nINSURED AGAINST\n\"CRICK JN^ NECK\"\nTrail   Curling   Sympathizers\n'  Send Him Beneficial\nDevice\nIT IS AUTOMATIC\nIN ITS WORKING\nMay Size Up Weather Many\nTimes a Day Without\nEvil Effects\nIf visitors to the office of C. D.\nBlackwood   should   find   the   genial\n\"Dud\"   on   bis   back   on   th*   floor\nIT with   a   thin   board   bound   to   tbe\n\"  back   of   hli   head,   or   should   see\nhJm    on    Baker    street      shooting\nstrangely mechanical  glances at the\nsky with alternate steps, they should\nnot   hastily   conclude   that   he   has\nthe willies.    He will merely be trying out an \"antl-crlck ln the neck\"\ndevice received yesterday from Trail,\nthe   kindly   gift    of    the    \"Senior\nleague\"  to  a  veteran  Nelson  curler\nassumed   to   be   ln   th*   throes   of\nanxiety   over   \"curling   weather\"   for\nIt the British Columbia bonspiel. which\nshould   have   opened   here   Monday.\nThe   small   board   or   \"splint\",   to\nwhich  two  small  rolls  of  bandage\n. were clasped by elastic band, was\nreceived by Hr. Blackwood yesterday,\naccompanied by an explanatory let.\nter  from   a  Trail   member   of   the\n] British   Columbia   Curling   association  executive.    This  letter  waa  as\nfollows;\nTO AIXBVMTE SUFFERING\nDear Dud\u2014At a recent meeting\nof the Senior league (poker) tha\nforthcoming   Nelson   bonspiel   came\n. under discussion, and ln view of\nthe  very  uncertain  weather  we  are\n' having, and knowing that those\nresponsible for weather forecasts\nand  the success of the  bonspiel ln\nPlay Golf\nToday\nPlay a rnond on our eonr*e to-:\nnlitht. The many novrl holes are\nsure to give you plenty of entertainment. First round 25c,\nFollowing  rounds  1.1c.\nGelinaQ\nRECREATION\nThe   borne   nf   indoor   sports\ngeneral are. whll* this unoertaln\nwaather la*ts, pron* to cast the eyes\nskyward several hundred times per\nday. and Ood knows how often in\nthe night time, resulting ta what ln\nknown to tho** outside the medical\nfraternity as \"crick In the neck\",\nIt wu felt that those of ui who\nhad gone through the tortures of\nfirst lid ahould apply what little\nknowledge w* gained .through sitting\nout those lectures, to alleviating the\nsuffering of our curling brethern.\nIt is a well known fact that aome\nof our own curlers havt suffered ln\nby-gone years from this e*rlou*\nmalady, notably Crulck and big\nOeorge, who developed suoh a pain\nin th* neck prior to a 'spiel here\nthat for month* afterward the mare\nmention of th* word \"weather\" was\ntaken   as   a   challenge   for  a  fight.\nIn order that no such distressing\nIncidents may occur among your\nmembers we are tending you a small\ndevice which may at least be very\nhelpful even If lt does not entirely\nprevent such' an occurrence.\nLIB    ON    FLOOR\nTo apply the devic* properly, the\npatient should ll* flat oa his back\nwith shoulders and back of head\ntouching tbe floor; tilt the head\nback slightly, and then put the\nsplint In position at the back of\nthe neck, taking care that lt does\nnot reach too far up on the head\nnor too low down on the spine.\nThe bandage ls now brought Into\nplay, and th* splint bandaged tightly, but not so tight as to Interfere\nwith breathing or swallowing. The\nbreathing ls not so important, hut\na curler who can't swallow, particularly during a bonspiel, 1* In a\nhelluva fix, ao watch this detail\ncarefully. When properly bound the\npatient may then stand up. and he\nwill find to his surprise that hi*\nneck Is quite comfortable.\nWORK- WHILE WALKING\nTou will notice a hole In tbe\nspline. To this should be attached a\nshort rope, the other end of said\nrope being fastened to the right\nor left heel ae the case may be, so\nthat when the patient walks abroad\nbis head will be jerked back every\nother step, this giving him a perfect\nview of th* skies, stars, weather,\nor whatever he had been looking\nfor before be became afflicted.\nNOT   FOR    MEAGHER\nThe number of times per minute\none oan view the \"weather\" ln this\nmanner depends of course, on the\nspeed of locomotion of the lhdt<\nvidual, and right here we wish to\nIssue a warning that we do not\nrecommend this device for speedy\ncurlers like Joe Meagher, who, we\nunderstand, hold the local golf\ncourse record of something under\n09 1-8 seconds. We do. however,\nheartily recommend lt to gentlemen\nof a dignified and leisurely gait,\nIlk* Jack Bunyan or yourself, and\nfeel sur* you will find It a boon\nand a comfort. Speed merchants\nlike Joe Meagher we are afraid\nwould Buffer from a disruption of\nthe spleen or colon or whatever\nit Is that cause* curlers to bellow,\netc., during a bonspiel. and we feel\nthat a curler, snd particularly a\nskip, whose organs of sound are\ndamaged, would be playing under\na   very   severe   handicap.\nfectly,  take  lt good  naturedly and\n    . \"ugging.   Things   will   change\nfor th*' better. If you allow yourself\nSPEED SKATERS\nFROM PRAIRIES\nWILL GO EAST\nOTTAWA. Ont., Jan. 19, (CP1\u2014\nManitoba, Saskatchewan and Alberta\nwill send representatives to the Canadian speed skating championships\nto be held at Ottawa February 6\nand 7 during the carnival of winter\nsports. Manitoba has been represented at eastern skating meets before, but It will be the first ap-\npe.\u201eance In the cast of speed skaters from Alberta and Saskatchewan.\nAs every province In Canada except British Columbia will have\noontestants here, the Ottawa meet\nwill be th. most representative skating  event ever   held   In  Canada.\nElimination trials are now being\nheld In several center* In tech\nprovince. Montreal and Toronto\n\u25a0peed artists met last week-end. A\nlarge delegation is coming up from\nthe  three  maritime   provinces.\nEntries have been received from\nseveral athletic clubs acros* the\nborder for the American ladles'\nspeed skating championship, whjch\nwin be held in Ottawa in connection with the Canadian and Olympic  events.\nALSO IN  IMPERIAL\nCALLCN JARS +2$P PUIS\n30*H*t CONTAINER (flfJlOMMfiU)\nMATURED AND BOTTLED BY\nVICTORIA WINERIES\n6fifWH ttl.MW)UMm_> VIPOMA B.C\nllahed or displayed by tbe Liquor\n' Control Board or by the Government   of   British   Columbia.\nPLAY    IN    SNOWSTORM\nPRAOUB, Czecho-aiovakla. Jan.\n10. (CP Cable via Reuters)\u2014Six\nthousand people* sat ln a blinding\nsnow storm for two hours today\nwhile a team picked at random\nfrom the student* of Prague played\nan exhibition match with the Manitoba University team, now touring\nEurope. The game ended with a\nscore of two goals to one for the\nCanadians.\nThe rink wa* covered, most of the\nUme, with  an inch of spow.\nMAKES    NEW    WOMEN'S    RECORD\nHAMILTON. Bermuda, Jan. 19-\n(AP)-~Mrs. Dorothy Campbell Hurd,\nformer United States women's cham\nDion, established a new women's\nrecord for the Belmont Manor\ncourse today when ah*' negotiated\nthe   lfl   holes  in   74.   exact  par.\nShe played all but two holes in\npar figures. Bhe went one over on\nthe 19tb, but scored a birdie on\nthe   lHth.\n\"SEE MOORE for MORE VALUE\"\nBODY and FENDER\nWORK\nLet us repair your Body and Fender\nDents now, and have your car looking\nits best ready for spring driving. We\nwill call for and deliver your car free of\ncharge.\nMOORE\nFENDER & BODY WORKS\n\"Big League\"\nBOWLING\n4\ntflV\nAr.\nr-^\n^donY\n_m lose Your\njm TeMPEf?.'.'\/\nnTeep Optimistic\nrINP CHeeRFUL-\na disc00ragin6\nswrt often means\na 0r1llmmt   j\nFinish  J\n\/t\u00a3J>&Y*<r*\n?4_~\nBy  AL  DEMAREF\n(Former  Pitcher, New  YorK   (Hants.\nLosing your temper when bowling\nis just as fatal to the success of\nyour game as It Is to a golfer or\nbaseball player when he becomes\ntemperamental.\nIf you get \"tapped\" even though\nthe pins deem to have been hit per\nkeep   plu\nto become irritated when the breaks\ngo against you, your menial distress wU interfere with your aim\nand co-ordination on the next ball\nyou deliver.\nMany players become so emotionally upset when tr.ey think they\nwere entitled to a strike that they\nthrow   away   a  spare.\nDon't think you have all tbe bad\nluck. The breaks will even themselves up in the course of a few\ngame*.\n\"Railroads\" are Jtist as muoh a\npart    of    the    game    as    \"strike*\".\nKeep your temper under control\nand you will find your game ls improving.\nAl Demaree has prepared an Illustrated bowling leaflet on \"Spares\"\nwhich he will gladly f\u00bbend to any\nreader requesting lt. Address Al\nItemarec tn care 0f this paper and\nbe sure to eruinge a self-addresed,\nstomped  envelope.\nPORMilEATS\nVANCOUVER, 2-1\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 19\u2014Leadership\nof the Pacific coast hockey changed\nhands tonight when Portland Buck-\naroos defeated Vancouver Lions 3\nto 1 In a hotly contested game.\nBucks now lead Lions by a single\npoint with Seattle ln third position,\na point behind Vancouver. A third\nperiod unassisted goal by Conn hrofce\na one-all deadlock that existed at\nthe end of the^second session.\nFirst period\u20141, Portland, Downle\n2:54\nPenalties\u2014Tcel   _.   Pettlnger.\nSecond period\u20142, Vancouver, Os-\nmundson   12:16.\nPenalties Coupe*;.   McOoldlck,\nRunge,   Downle.\nThird period\u2014fl, Portland. Conn,\nfi:30.\nPenalties\u2014Maber '5 mlns.); Brennan 110 mlns,., Redpath. Altken-\nhcad   (19).\nFinal\u2014Portland   9,   Vancouver    1\nVancouver\u2014Jackson: Brennan, Ar-\noott; Jerwa, Bandersou and Dunn.\nSubs\u2014Pettlnger, Carr, Oemundson,\nHedpath. Blyth.\nPortland\u2014AH-cnhead; McGoldrlck.\nRoulston: Conn. Downle and Cou-\npi-7. Subs\u2014Runge, Tell, Maber,\nArmstrong.\nOf flcla.a\u2014Lindsay   and   Rickey.\ntrail\"curling\nBILLY TOWNSEND\nWINS KNOCKOUT\nIN 35_SECONDS\nThird Blow  Downs Hornier\nof New York; Townsend\nChallenges Phillips\nTORONTO, Jan. 1\u00bb\u2014 (OP)\u2014 A\nsmashing right Jolt to tba Jaw which\ntravelled barely a foot, gave Billy\nTownsend. knockout artist from\nVancouver, the quickest victory of\nhis career over Jackie Hornier, St\nLoula, 35 seconds after th* start\nof their 10-round main bout on\nthe Queensberry Athletic club's boxing program here tonight. Tb* win\"1\nner weighed 146% and Horner 14M;\nTbe Vancouver blonde haa challenged Jaotie Phillips, Canadian\nwelterweight champion, Toronto, for\na titular match whleh will be held\nher* on February 2. The bout with\nHorner wa* expected to prove a\ngood conditioner for the challenger\nHorner ha* fought her* twice before\nand became an instant favorite with\nthe fans by his aggress!vene*e. He\ngained a decision ov*r Phillips and\nlost to Pinkie Kaufmann, New Tork.\nand lt wa* expected he would keep\nBilly busy during most of the\n10 rounds.\nIMPRUHMIVt:   APPKAKANCV\nTownsend wa* making hia third\nappearance here al*o and while he\nmade it brief, It wae decidedly Impressive and be ha* already been\nestablished a heavy favorite to take\nth* crown from tbe looal  boxer.\nOnly three blows were struck ln\ntonight's headliner After sparring\nfor a moment Townsend tapped\nHomer with two sharp lefts to the\nhead. The last turned the St. Louts\nboy's beed slightly and almost ln\nthe same motion the Pacific coast\nblonde snaked over a short right\nbook which connected squarely on\nthe side of the Amerloan'* Jaw and\nhe collapsed to the canvas completely  o-t.\nHAZARDOUS COURSE\nFOWLES'AND 0111?\nBOWLERS CAPTURE\nLEGION FIXTURES\nN. CasaioB and Team Nosed\nOut by Eight Pins; C.\nMiller's Men Down 180\nO. Dill and trto noted out, N-ck\nCaaalo*' bowler* by a small ms__.n\nof eight pins, while W. Fowie-\nteam piled up a margin of 180 Una\nover C. Miller's on the Legion alley..\nin two Canadian Leagrue tournament  gams* Monday  evening.\nNick Casslos led In the first poe\nwith his single of 201 pins, and bis\naggregate  of  588  pins.\nW, Fowlea cornered tbe Individual\nhonors   ln   the   second   game   with\ni an   aggregate  cf  503   and   a aingic,\nI of 184 pins.\nScores were:\n' Player* let   2nd   3rd  Tot.\nChapman    121    164    161\u201444\u00ab\nHall          00    130    130\u2014650\n, Dill        310    150    184\u2014644\n|     Totsl*    .....  431    444    475 1340\nF. GRAHAM BOWLS\n254 IN OPENING\nOF CITY JOURNEY\nC. P. R. Bowlers Take Opening:  Game  From  Merchants Team by 246\nHigh scoring fsatured the open\nIng game of the City league howling tournament staged at Qellnas'\nMonday evening, when four ends)\nC. P. ,R.' bowlers took the Merchants' into   camp   2163-1817.\nFrancis Oraham, C. P. R. bowkr,\nset a season's record that will take\nsome beating when he toppled 254\npins in his second game for high\nsingle. High aggregate also fell to\nMr. Oraham. who piled up a total\nof 569 pins. O. Simpson, also a\nC. P. R. bowler, took secondary honors in the individual scoring with\na single of 216 snd an aggregate\nof 540.\nScores Ml;\nMerchants 1st   2nd   3rd Tot.\nJ.   Bell    .    _ 140    183    158- -480\nR.   Brown       . 3*70    124    180\u201448*\nJ.  B. Gray   188    154    165   457\nJ.   Allen     17&   .183    134    4fl6\nTotals       627   663    637 1917\nC.   P.   R.          1st.   2nd   3rd Tot.\nL.  McKlnnon     . . 211    156    170 637\nF.  Oraham      ... 146   254    169 569\nO.    Simpson   . ... 216    169    155 540\nE,  Y. Brake .        157    111    179 517\nTotals\n730    760    673 21A3\nTRAIL, B. C. Jan. 19.\u2014Following\nare the results in the Ladles' club\ncurling schedule gamer, played this\nafternoon:\nMra. L. F. Tyson 7, Mrs. J. H.\nYoung   6.\nMrs. A. It. Buchan 3, Mrs. It. C.\nCrowe 9.\nMrs. D. MacDonald 7. Mrs. S. E.\nEwart  6.\nMr*. J. Klnnls 5, Mrs. D. Forrest  4.\nBean feed competition of the\nTrail Ladles' Curling club la to be\nplayed   Tuesday.\nThe  games  art:\nTLKKDAY \u2022\nBean   feed,   at   1:30:\nMrs. W. F. Truswell vs Mrs. J.\nH.   Young.\nMrs. O. J. Klnnls vs Mrs. n. MacDonald.\nMrs. R. C. Crowe va Mrs. R. w.\nClarke.\nMrs. D. Forrest vs Mrs. L, F.\nTyson.\nAt   230.\nMrs. A. R. Buch.u vs Miss E.\nEwart.\nMrs. R. W. .Simpson vs Mrs. R.\nC.  Crowe  or Mrs.  R.  W.  Clarke.\nResults In the mens play Monday night were as follow:\nW. H. Baldrey 6, A. B. Ritchie 10.\nE.  W.  Hiilewood  8.  D.  Downle  7.\nDr. C. 8. Williams 10. A. J. McDonnell   12.\nJ. A. Wadsworth 16, E. M. Stiles 6.\nDr. W. A. CoghJln 12. J. B.\nTwaddle   9.\nH. E. Wade 18;  Dr. J. B. Thorn 6.\nJ.  H.  Young 8, B. J. Provost  11.\nQ.   E,   Murray   13,   H.   W,   Mcln-\nnes  6.\nTIESDAY\nAt   6:30:\nSheet 1\u2014li, F. Tyson ~\u00bb J. Oampbell\nSheet 2\u2014J. Craig v\u00bb R. ftommer-\nville.\nSheet. 3\u2014A. M ChfiHer vs .r,\nLeckle.\nSheet 4\u2014O, McGowan vs j. B.\nWalsh.\nAt 8:\nHockey\u2014Trail  v* Nelson.\nR. W, Ward das reelected president of tbe CslRsrv Conservative\ni association.\nHAMMOND'S RUNS\nARE FEATURE OF\nCRICKET, AFRICA\nDU*BBAN. Jan. 19\u2014 iC P cable.\u2014\nWally Hammond's innings of 83\nruns for England featured tbe test\ncricket match wltb South Africa\ntoday. South Africa completed their\nfirst innings, scoring 177. England\nthen started their first inn lugs with\nWyatt and Hammond and the two\nput on a fine first wicket _tend.\nBetween them they scored a hundred In au hour and 46 minutes.\nHammond hit. out all round the\nwicket and gave two chances, one\nwhen he was four and again when\n32. When stumps were drawn England had 130 runs to which Wyatt\ncontributed 45 and Hammond 83.\nboth  not out.\nAfter almost two day* without play\nbeing __ possible the South Africans\nwent ln this morning having lost\nfour wlcketh on Friday for 69. The\nwicket was wet underneath after\nthe recent rains, but recovered under the Influence of the *un. It\ncaused the ball to come off the\npatch at varying paoes. The cricket\nwas rather perfunctory as there\nls only the faintest chance of the\nmatch being finished. South Africa\ndid their utmost to retrieve their\nbad start, employing defensive tactics. Vpr-e was a constant menace\nto   the   Springbok   batsman.\nSnores:\nEngland   first   Inning*:\nWyatt,  not out. 48.\nHammond, not out, 83.\nExtras,   3.\nTotal  for  no   wicket*,   130.\nPlayers\nAnderson\nj Player   .-.\n! Casslos   ...\nToteli   .\n1st 2nd 3rd Tou\n. 185 114 138\u2014877\n,  118 133 118\u2014867\n. 201 186 19W--6B8\n. 462 434 446 131a\n1 Player*                  1st 2rtd 3rd Tot.\nWool!*   116 124 146\u2014888\nUnglll                  . 103 170 161\u2014401,\ni Ftowle*      ...  134 148 178\u2014603\nPlay for the E. W. Beatty challenge trophy m\nth* annual Bmpre** mld-wlnter golf tournament fit\nVictoria, February 33-28. this year will he played\nover the rock-bound Oak Bay course. Tba ploture\nabove  vividly  portray*   th*  rock  hazard   to   be  over-\nOOOMi   wlncn,  coupled  with   the   \u00abans  off-s.?A   Drew: *       Tnt*is\nmake*   the   course   one   of   Canada's   trickiest.   Inset,;\nsn   unusual   action   photograph   of   George   Simpson, ] Flayers\nVictoria,   caught  by  th* speed  camera in  lest  year's\ntournty.\n.._ 463    437   486 1386\nLADIES BOWLING\nTHROWN INTO TIE\nBY GAMEMONDAY\nMrs. C. A. Larson's and Mrs.\nG. L. Kemerling's Team\nTie for First Place\nDefeating Mrs. T. E- Levaaseurs\npin squad by a margin of 36 pins In\na final game of tbe Ladles' Bowling\nleague on OelinnV alleys Mondn\nafternoon, Mrs. O. L. Kemmerllner'B\nteam moved up one position to tie\nwith Mrs. C. A. Larson's team for\nfirst place  ln  the league.\nMrs. Levasseur's* players loosing\ntheir game, dropped one position to\nbe thrown into a tie with Mrs. H\nLakes' team for second and lust\nplace.\nA deciding playoff will be bowled\nat  a  later date,\nIn   Mondav  afternoon*  game  Mrs\nT.   Wllllts   was   high   lady   with   an\naggregate  of  496  pin* and  a  single\nof   182.\nLEAfil E    STANDING\nSlkps Won  Lost\nMrs.    O.   A.   Larson     6       3\nMrs.   O.   L.   Kemmerllng   ...   6      :,\nMrs.  T.  E.  Levasseur    3       6\nMrs.   H.   Lakes 3        6\nPlayers 1st   2nd   3rd   Pis\nMrs. T. Levasseur 130 111 157 43B\nMra. H. MarTler 116 106 116 338\nMrs.   F.   Bnmford   160    139    158    457\nBRITISH  RUGBY\nLONDON,   Jan.   19.\u2014 (O.   p.   cable)\n\u2014The  following  are  the  result* of\nrugby    game*,   played   lu   the   old\ncountry   Baturda;,;\nRLUBY  LRMH I\nDarrow  27,   Bradford  Northern  6.\nBrantley 2, Huddersfleld 12.\nCartleford   fi.   WakefHd  4\nDcwsbury    21,    Fethcrstone    Rovers  5.\nHalifax   11,   K\u00abghJev   D.\nHull   Klngsto.1   Rovers    16,   BftU-\nley   13.\nHunslet  0,   Leeds  9.\nLeigh  2,   Broughton Rangers 6.\nOldham 7. Bt. Helens Reo. 6.\nRochdale- Hornets 6, Wldnees 7.\nSaiford   6.   Wlgan   3.\nSt.   Helens  R,   Swlnton  3.\nWarrington   29,   Hull   4.\nWlgan   Highfield   vs.   York\u2014postponed.\nLONDON.   Jan.   in - -a:.  P.  cable)\n\u2014Rugby    name^'    plnyrd    today    resulted   a*   folru-v\nRI'GBY   I MON\nTorauav Athletic 3, Newport 13.\nnrr.BY  LEAGI R\nHndrienvfleld   37.   Waketlelri   Trinity   31.\nNELSON PUCK\nTEAM TO MEET\nTRAIL TONIGHT\nSeniors  Phy  on  Trail   Ice;\nThompson on Sick List\nMonday\nArSTRALIA   *_\u25a0\u2022\nCRICKET   RCBBFR\nNelson senior hix-key tram completed its pmctiftlntr last night prior\nto tonight's invasion of Trail. There\nthe local seniors *_e looking for\ntheir second league win and the\nopportunity to tie up the league.\nA strong aggregation will fare\nTrail tonight but it. t* not known\nwhether or not Bobbie Thompson,\ndefeuseman, will make the trip, lie\nwas a hospital jAtJent Monday with\nan Infected arm\nNelson will make the trip to\nTrail by oar. leaving Nelson lat.\nthis   afternoon\nBRI3BANK, AUAtrsli*, Jan. 30.\u2014\n.Tuesday i \u2014 Auertralia's cricket team\nwon Ihe rubber match with ths !\nWest Indies today, hy an Inning,- j\nand 217. The Wesr Indies was all\nout with 148 In their second In- !\nntngs.\nl.mmARI>I   SOLD   TO   BROOKLYN\nOAKLAND, Calif., Jan. l_'.--fA_*.\n\u2014\u2022Ernest l^mbardi. giant catcher nf\nthe Oiiklnnrl liftflebftll flub, was sold\nt\/idHv v> the Brooklyn National* for\nu sum reported not, lees than >60,000\npirn,  two players.\n \\     Ux   ind 3rd  Tot,\nCWaaebrook      W0   131 lav -346\nKennedy     - 154    127 !4*-43?\nMiller        104    12\u00bb 137\u2014U0\nTotal*\n  438    377    390 1203\nOLD COUNTRY\nSOCCER\nENGLISH   CUP\nLONDON, Jan. 19.\u2014Replayed third\nround English cup tie* played today   follow:\nBradford   2.   Mlddlesborough   1.\nManchester  United  4,  Stoke 1.\nReading   0,   Cryatal   3.\nCharlton   1,   Wert BromwlcH 1.\nMORENZ   LEFT   BEHIND\nMONTREAL. Que., Jan. 19.-\u2014(CP)\n\u20146\\iffering from a sore wrist and a\n\"Charley horse.\" Howie Mgaeni.\nflashing center loe man of the Montreal Canadlens. remained behinci\ntonight when th\u00ab\u00bb team entrained\nfor New York where they will engage tha Rangers tomorrow night.\nNeither of the injuries to tho fastest\nof tlie 0ytn\u00bb| Frenchmen w*a\nserious but it wat thought better\nto give him a few days' rest. H*\nwill be ready for action against the\nSenators   on   Thursday   night.\nMILIJONAtRES   WIN\nI06 ANOU33. Jan. lfl.\u2014The Los\nAngeles MJlIlrT)a_re*. prtrfeesdonal\nice hockey team, defeated the S__t\nPYanrisoo Black Hawks,, eight to\nfour, I n a Call fom la league game\nhare tonight.\nTotals  .\n406    393    431 1233\nMm. Kemmerllng  118 U4 I ho   3R7\nMrs.    T.    Willi,.,    182 153 160    4S)ft\nMr.     J.    Bell    ... 120 108 153    387\nTotals     424 372 473 1260\nGREENWOOD HIGH\nSCHOOL HOCKEY\nTEAM IS BEATEN\nGRAND  FORKH.  B.  C,  Jan.  10    A\npicked team from the locnl pntlic\nschool met a t#mn frum the Ctrecn-\nwood public school on the lorn] rink\nFriday night. The visitor* were defeated by a score 4-3. This is the\nfirst hockey match d the treason.\nThe first game of I ho Boundary\nleague Is -scheduled lo lake, plsco\nTuesday  at   Urmid   Forks.\nWALKFR  WON  KNOCKOlT\nBALTIMORE. Jan. Ifl-tAPi -\nMickey Walker. Rum^on, N. J.,\nmiddleweight champion of tbe world,\nknocked out Herman Weiner of\nBaltimore m one minute, 40 seconds\nI of the first round of a 10-round\n1 battle here tonight. Walker weighed\n| 168H and Weiner 102.\ni The kno**kout came with a short\nj right  snd   left   to   the   Jaw.\nBET  BRINGS  DEATH\nBRUNSWICK. O*., Jan. 19,--(AP\u00bb\n\u2014Buster Day, 12-year-olti Negro golf\ncaddy, bet another caddy 10 cents\nhe oould stand on bJs head 10\nminute*.\nBuster    kept   his    feet,   alnft   for\nfive minute* and then toppled over.\nHe had ruptured a blood vessel and ;\ndeath  was lnunedl_te\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 19-~Th* stenos\" I\nbasketball team entered the finals j\nfor the first half of the ladles basketball league tonight when they!\ntriumphed over the Cardinals by a'\nwore   of   30-30.\nThe game was fast, and although\nthe Cardinals got In around the I\nbasket quit* often, they wer* not!\nable to ring It. The Stenos played\nfine combination and seemed ln\nbetter   condition.\nThe   teams:\nCardinals\u2014M Matthews. 13; F-\nLeckle, 2: B. Hosier 3; B. MorrlSr\n2; Mawdsley. Roa* Severn, 3; R\nBalfour.\nSteno*\u2014Mre. J. D. Hartley, 6: B.\nAnthony, 8; L. Hunter, V. Hastings\n7; E. Ritchie, fl; M. Hoefer, J. P. i\nEtfown. '\nPipes\nWe have a line of pipes\nthat arc sure to please the\nsmoker. Let us show you\ntoday. Amongst our selection are:\nniJNHIU.\nPETERSON\nD. B. L.\nD\nI\nX\n1\nE\nfor greater enjoyment\nof sports ... of social evtnls ... of all life's\ngood thing*... For DIXIES arc made to meet\nthe demand of tH who are looking for a better\nVirginia Cigarette . .. they're mild, cool, fragrant\n... the ftr.t puff tells you why they're called\nCanada's Pleasure Smoke . . . rolled right so they\nsmoke right I\nTHE BETTER CIGARETTE\nSAVE       THE       POKER\nHANDS\n Pate F.i_h,\nTHE NELSON DAILI NEWS       TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, ITOl.\n3_s%i.Want M iitftm__\nROOT SYSTEMS\nIN APPLE TREES\nNEED BE HARDY\nRecent Investigations conducted In\nboth England and America have\ncalled attention to the fact that\nform, hardiness, productivity and\nlongevity of apple tree* may be\nvery materially Influenced by the\ncharacter of tbe root eyitemi on\nwhich they are worked. The common practice ln America 1* to\nbud or graft commercial varieties\nof apples on seedling roots. There\nis now general agreement that\ngreater car* should be taken to\nIncur* that apple trees are provided\nwith roots of uniform vigour and\nhardiness. There Is, however, great\ndifference of opinion as to how\nthis result cen be most satisfactorily and economically achieved.\nOn the one hand, the suggestion\nhas been advanced that th. solution\nof the problem Ilea ln the vegetative\npropagation of root stocks. Attempts to secure commercial varieties of apples on their own roots\nhave not given very encouraging results. Fortunately, however, a number of comparatively free-rooting\napple stocks have been isolated, and\nfairly rapid and economical methods\nof Increasing these by layerag. and\nroot cuttings developed. Certain advantages In the control of tree size,\nfruit production, diseases and Insect\npests are claimed for thsse vege-\ntafelvely propogated stocks. Tlie\nchief objection* to their general\nuse at the present time are the\ncost of reproduction, th; limited\nsupply of roots available, and the\nlack of knowledge as to how trees\npropogated on these stocks will perform   under Commercial   conditions.\nAs against the necessity of using\nTentatively propagated roots to\nsecure uniformity in apple trees,\nthere ls some evidence to support\nthe contention that equally good results can be more economically\nobtained by the use of seedlings of\nselected parentage and by improvement in the technique of budding\nand grafting.\nA comprehensive investigation of\nboth seedling and vegetatlvely propagated root stocks ii being carried\non at the Summerland experimental\nstation In a project of this character experiments must be conducted\novtr \u00bb period of year* before deflln-\nlte conclusions can be drawn. However, some very suggestive results\nhave already been secured. Commercial nurserymen are keenly interested in ths work and can be trusted\nto put the findings Into practice.\nHendricks Has\nHand Injured\nBetween Barrels\nKASLO, B. C, Jan 10.\u2014F. e.\nLe Ner* of Vancouvei was a business   visitor   in   Kaslo   Wednesday.\nMrs. E. H. Exter, who has been\nthe house guest of Mr and Mn.\nO McDougall, left Thursday for\nNelson whore she will make hci\nhome for the next few months.\nT. D. Francis and son of Crawford Bay were Wednesday visitors\nIn   town.\nMrs. 8. 8. Fowler of Rlondel was\na   visitor   in   th*   city   Wednesday.\nMT and Mrs. Graham-Brown ol\nDeanahaven were Wednesday vision ln  town.\nA. Bartholomew of Vancouver ar-\nrlved  In Kaslo  Wednesday  evening.\nMr*. A. J. Watson of Kootenay\nBay waa a visitor ln town Wednesday to visit her daughter Mrs. Doug,\nlas Fisher who Is a patient ln the\nVictorian    hospital.\nQuit* a number of Kasloltes attended the \"Hard Times Bar at\nAdjwworth,     Thursday    evening.\nMr. and Mrs. E. J. Cook* and\nson Ernest of Castlegar, who have\nbeen the guests of Mrs. Cookes\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Tlmms,\nleft Friday for their home, prior\nto going to Vancouver where they\nIntend to make their home in the\nfuture.\nM- M. McLeod of Nelson was a\nHitter to town Thursday.\nA. L. MoCuIloch of Nelson was In\nths city on business In connection with the construction of the\nnew power dam.\nC. F. McDougall left Wednesday for his home in Nelson.\nR. T. Deane of Deanshsven was a\nvisitor In  the  city   Wednesday.\nWalter Hendricks met with a\npainful accident Wednesday while\nlifting gasoline barrels, getting his\nhand caught between two of the\nbaml*.\nPENNILESS BUT OPTIMISTIC WOULD NOT KNOW\n^^^^^^^Tfe IN THE EAST THAT\n\u2122 j MINING DEPRESSED\nLarge Operators Going on an\nUsual  Says  \"Surprise\"\nSmith\nAMPLE CAPITAL FOR\nRIGHT   PROPERTIES\nRecovery of Base Metals Not\nSo Far Away Thinks\n.   Mr. Smith\n\"In eastern Canada, so far as the\nlarge operators are concerned, one\nwould not know there was supposed\nto be a mining depression in Canada,\" remarked Alex Smith of Toronto, at the Hum. Sunday evening.\nMr. Smith was for many years\nknown to fame as \"Surprise\" Smith,\nthrough his operation of the Surprise mine in the Slocan.\n\"The Noranda, even though copper\nls down at present, is doing well,\non account of Its gold values, and\nhas also found new ore.\n\"Its refln:ry at East Montreal will\nbe completed ln th* spring, and ln\nconjunction with the refinery is\nbeing built a plant that will work\nup its refined copper into finished\nproduct, such as rods and copper\nwire.\n\"The Holllnger, Mclntyre and\nDome of the Porcupine camp are\nall active and all doing well.\n\"No mining proposition of tested\nsoundness is having, any difficulty\nin finding all the mining capital it\nneeds,\" Mr. Smith remarked, adding\nhowever, that this capital was not\navailable for propositions of a\ndoubtful  character.\nMr.   Smith   expressed   the   opinion\nthat lt would not b: as long a time\nfcs   many   thought   before   the  base\nTNk'^TTCR   1<1   liT. AIV metals  would  be  once  more  ln  de-\nJIMXOIUV   13  1JMUH.U mand,  as  this  must  occur  as  soon\n_     i     a    i   r\\ee* I     REVELSTOKE,   B.C.  Jan.   19.\u2014The j as   present   stocks   of   goods   using\nKeel\u00a3Cied   UlllCerSideath  occurred   at  the  coos,   of   w.! these   metals  were   exhausted.\nI inketer,   a   resident   of   Revelstoke I\nfor   almost   M   \u00a3\u2022\u00bb.   Mr.   Iototar.   S1EZE  STIMSON'S\nwho   wi p   a   member   of   the   C. PR.\nshops  staff,   wu  widely   and   tavor- j      BOOKS, VANCOUVER\nabMrsknirUt\"ter I* recovering .from) VANCOUVER, B. C., Jan. 19\u2014\na serious cpcration in St. Paul's| Books and documens of record in\nhospital. Vancouver. Members of the I Vancouver offices subsidiary to G.\n\u25a0 am.lv !n R.Wl\u00bbtOk* are John Ink-IA .St^u and Co LM bond\nfttr. Who is well-known throughout; ^*?\u2122t\u201e}^'\u201e.\u2122** -\u00a3!*?. -by\nthe province a* i. piper; \"Seotty\",\nalso widely known In pugilistic cir-\n\u25a0!_*,  Donald  and Mr?. H. H. Robtn-\nPennllesti and e.t_ r lor any sort uf work, Major Ramon Franco, the\nfamous -Spanish airman, who took a prominent purt In the recent\nrebellion, is shown above as hs arrived ln Antwerp, Belgium, from Lisbon,\nwhere h? fled following the failure of the uprising. Shown above, left\nto right, aboard the Tysville at Antwerp, are M. Rudd, Franco's former\nmechanic, who accompanied him, Franco and M. Macia, the exiled\nCatalan Separatist.\nSt. Anges Church\nat Edgewood Has\n! FATHER jOF 'SCOTTY'\nEDGEWOOD, B. C, Jan. 19.\u2014Thu\nannual meeting of the members ol\nBt. A\u00abnes uiurch for the election\nof officer, was held In the Edbe_\nwood hotel on Monday, January \\2.\nCanon G. Thompson, chairman, tut-\ndressed the meeting coneiudlng wUh\na motion of condolence to thg\nI^mUlea of col, v. Harrington and\nJohn Jowett, J. Job, treasurer, presented the church account's. He also reported on the work of the\nSunday school during tlie year.\nMrs. E, H. Kelso Bummarlaed the\nwork of the Church Helpers which\nwas expanding. They proposed further social events. The church officers were all reelected. Following\nthe meeting art enjoyable social\nevening commenced \u00ab'ith a short\nprogram of songs and readings Including songs by F. Job '.mil W. E.\nLewten; piano duet by Misses B\nand W. Donselaar nd readings by\nCanon  Thompson and Dr.  Yeld.\nInteresting motion pictures were\nshown by E. Niederman, tlie local\nevents causing much merriment.\nAfter an interval for refreshments,\ndancing, accompanied by voluntary\nmusic, occupied the reminder rt\nthe evening.\nton.\npolice Saturday night. Th* action\nfollowed Instructions from t^e department of the attorney-general\nln Victoria, acting on the reques*\nof  the  attorney-general  of Ontartj.\nWANT  AND  CLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nOne Insertion 10 cents a lln*\nSix Insertions 40 oents a line\nOn* month $1.30 a line\nMinimum  two  line*\nNo extra cr_rge if charged\nof\nBirth notice* free ot charge\nDeaths,     marriage*    and    cards\nthanks. 3o cents ner line,   \u201e\nFuneral flower* 16 cents oeh line\nNews   of   the   Day   Items  30   cents\nper\nNO\nTEA COST IF CHARGED\nLKGAL NOTICES\nIN  THE  m PKKLvih , OIRT OF\nBRITISH   COM'MBIA\nIN   PROBATE\nIN   THE   MATTER   OF   THE   ESTATE    OF    HARRY    JAMES\nEMERSON.  DECEASED\nNOTICE Is herebv given that all\npersons having claims seainst tne\nsaid deceased, who dleo on the 26th\ndav of June, 1930. at Silverton. in\nthe Province of British Columbia\nare reoulred to tend oarticulars\nthereof, duiv verified to Hamilton\nWraafife __ Hamilton Canadian Bank\nof Commerce Chambers. Nelson.\nB C. solicitors for ihe administratrix of the said Estate on or\nbefore the 31st dav of Januarv\n1931 after which date the administratrix will nroreer' to distribute the\nassets of thp said deceased to the\npersons entitled thereto, having regard onlv to the claims of which\nshe shall then  have had  notice.\nDATED    at    Nelson.    B.    C.    this\n19th   dav  of  December   1930.\nHAMILTON.   WRAGGE  &\nHAMILTON\nSolicitors for the Admlnlstratri\nof the Estate of Harrv James Emr.'\nson   Deceased. (3389\nniRTns\nu>\nTHOMAS\u2014To Mr. and Mrs. Ew-\nete Thomas at the Trall-Tadanac\nhospital,   anuarv   IS.   a   daughter.\nOWEN\u2014To Mr. and Mm. W\nOwen. Riverside avenue, at Trall-\nTadanac hospital. January 17, a\ndaughter.\nGILKEFr\u2014 At   the   Kootenay Lake\nGeneral   hosoltal   to   Mr.   and Mrs,\nJ.   C.   Gllker   of  Bonnlngton. January   18.   a   son.\nBENNETT\u2014At the Koutenav Lake\nGeneral ho=pltal. to Mr. and Mrs.\nMaxwell Bennett of Bonnlngton.\nJanuarv   18.   a   daughter.\nSITUATIONS  WANTED\n(11)\nWANTED   \u2014   SEWING.     REMODEL-\nUng.   specialty.     Phone   644L.\n(3556)\nEXPERIENCED GIRL WANTS\nhousework* Aunty Box 3575 Dallv\nNews. .8575)\nGIRL 20 DESIRES POSITION. RES-\ntaurant experience. Box 3618\nDally    News. (3816)\nWOMAN NEEDS WORK BADLY.\nWill do anything, oart or whole\nday.   Box 3612 Dally News. (3612)\nCapt. Ernest Phtlpot has decided\nto accept the Liberal nomination\nfor West Hamilton In the byelectlon\nfor   the   Ontario   legislature.\nHELP WANTED\n<*\u2022> I MISCELLANEOUS FOB SALE      <\u00bb7) | fOULTBY AND BOOS\nWANTED\u2014TWO    GIRLS     KITCHEN\nand table work. Apply French\nBoarding House. Ojpcs.te Mhc-\ndonald's  Con, (it*17)\nWANTED BY AN OLD BSTABLISH-\ned real estate and Insurance office, vouth or man to sell City\nproperty, preferably party with\nr**4 estate and insurance experience and ume to drive a car.\nStat* salary expe_:ed. Apply Box\n3605 Dally News. (3806)\nFOR    SALE\u2014DRAY    SAW   OUTFTT.\nChalmers, Thrums, b. O.      ;361ai>\n<M>\nFOR SALE\u2014 BARRELS. KEGS. BUR-\nlao sacks, white sugar sacks. McDonald   Jam   Co. 13427)\n,'AJRNISHED ROOMS Tor Rent  (15)\nFURNISHED ROOM STEAM HEAT-\ned. hot and cold water. 316V,\nBaker. i*oo\\i)\nROOMS\u2014To  Rent\n(19)\nAPARTMENTS IN THE MEDICAL\nArt* Block for rent. Apply Chad.\nF. McHardy. (3506)\nHOUSES   FOB   RENT\n(21)\nFOUR-ROOMED COTTAGE. PARTLY\nfurnished. Apply Now Orand\nHotel.     Phone   303. (3589)\nTHREE ROOMED COTTAGE TO\nrent. Cook sto ve. Three mln -\nutes from street car. Mrs. R\nLunn,  Fell St.. Fairview.      1.3610)\nPROPERTY  FOR  SALE\n(31)\nBARGAIN!\u2014EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE\nand all adjoining buildings for\n\u2022500.00. For removal from present\nsite, comer Baker and Falls Sts\u201e\nNelson. B. C. ApMy Elks Taxi.\nTransfer and Freight Limited.\nPhone  77. (3580)\n::i:;;!!!!iiilfi!M\nll  Have  Many\nI Clients Wishing\nto Purchase\nHouses\nj I Would Appre* 1\nciatre Your\nListings\nfC.W.Appleyard |\nI Established  18 Years   !\nOffice next Nelson\nHardware Co.\nI City Property, Insurance p\n! PHONE 269\nI. W. Wlddowson. Bolt A1108 Nelson\nB.  C.    Standard   western  charges.\n(34621\nBan \u25a0\n(3604)   _\ni\nlllllfntaiiMPTiTitPll!!\nBU.COND HAND PIPES AND FIT-\ntings for sale. When you are In\nneed of used Pipe* and Fitting!\nany size Black or Galvanised,\nwrite to Bwartz Pip* Yard, 990\nFirst Ave. East, Vancouver. B. 0.\nThe largest exolualv* dealers In\nReconditioned Pise* and Fitting*.\n.3426)\nIN Si: RANCH\n\u25a0H\nkm\nImportant Notice\nHave you plenty ot FIRE\nINSURANCE? If you haven't\u2014\njon't delay, but call at the\noffice, telephone, or write, and\nyour requirements will be Immediately  attended to.\nDelay   Is  dangerous.\nChas. F. McHardy\nSis  Ward  St.        Phona  lis\nNelaon,  B.  0.\ni3505i\nisst.:;... i::::;:ii.ffi:i,..,:!,.u,a:t_\u00ab_! _________\nBUSIN'ESS~AND ^R0FESSI0NAL~^ECTORY\n #\t\nPEDIGREED LBOHORN OOCKEFU0.5\nfrom Registered and R.OJ. F>u>cl:.\nModerate _    Prtoen. Chalmers\nThrum.. B.\n~3\u00ab14i'\nPROPERTY   WANTED\n<\u00bb>\nWANTED\u2014A RANCH. KENT WILL\nbe paid monthly. Apply Mrs. II.\nEllla.   Han-op. (3611.\nNIBSEBY  PRODUCTS\n(47)\nLAYRITZ    NURSERIES TUB    Dependable   Fruit   and ornamental\ntrees.     Order   now. T.   Rovnon.\nAKent. Nelaon. B. C. (8493)\n(481\nINVESTMENTS\n~   INVESTMENTS\n8%\nWe place your funds on\nFirst Mortgage*, City Property, without expense to ypu.\nPlease   coll   In   and   see   us.\no\u2014 o\nWe write all form* of In-\nmrance: Life, Fire, CasuaJty,\nCar Insurance,\nEstablished   18  year*\nC.W.Appleyard\nNelson,   B.   C.\nBox 026 Phone 309\na   <Mtt> -\nAssayers\nAuctioneer\nMercantile   auctioneer.    A.  Ravmer\n513V,   Hall fit.    BOX 1176.      (3403,\nDentiats\nDR. O. A. C. WALLEY\u2014205 Medical\nArts   Bulldlna.     X-Rav.     Nelson.\n(3469)\nChiropractors\nDR. GRAY   GILKER BLK.. NELSON\n(3465)\nAccounting\nCHAfi. F. HUNTER\nPublic  Accounting  and  Auditor\nMcDonald Jam Bid*.. Nelson\n.HH**H\u00bbsH**H*\u00bbH_iH*HtB__**\u00abT--( g461 (\nBeauty Parlors\nSocietv Beautv ShoD.   Qllker Block.\nMra. E. Halgh, Phone 171.    (346*)\nFlorists\nGrizzelles Greenhouse   Nelson.    Cut\nflowers and Horal deelriiT^^s?\": |\nDR. MITTUN. X-RAY. CRANBROOK\n(3466)\nEngineers\nI NELSON FLOWER 8HOPPE. Full\n*    line   cut   flowers   at   all   times:\nfloral designs. Phone 288. (3476)\nJOHNSON'S    GRBKNHOU8B\u2014Phone I\n343.     Cut   flower*.   Potted   Plants!\nand   Floral   Deal una. (8*77) 1\nPhotographers\nCHAS.   MOORE\u2014LAND   SURVEYOR,\narchitect.     F-evelstoke.   B.   0.\n(3630)\nH.  D.  DAWSON\u2014LAND  SURVEYOR\nMlnlns  and  Civil  Engineer   Kaslo.\n(8467)\nA. H. GREEN CO.\u2014CONTRACTORS\nFormerlv Green Bros.. Burden\nNelson. Civil and Mining Enalr*.\nters B. C.. Alberta and Dominion\nLand  Surveyors. (3468)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nGEOROE   A.   MEERHS\u2014Artist    and\nphotoaranher.    71fi  Baker  St.\n(3471)\nTransfer\nWILLIAM'S TRANSFER\nBAGGAGE   OOAL  AND WOOD\n Phon*  106 (3473>|\natkinson   transfers-Co*.   _r_\nWood.     Lon\u00ab   distance   hauling\n(3473V\nWood Working Factory\nr.   W.   DAWSON-Real   e*tat*.   In-I LAWSON\u2014Baker  St..   rwW_eT~!r_\nMiss Lily Hascarl\nHostess at Cranbrook\nOIJCNBANK. Nakusp, B. C. Jan.\n10\u2014The small hall wa* gayly decorated on Wednesday evening when\nMl** Lilly Hascarl entertained a\nnumber   of   her   friends.\nThe novelty dance was won by\nMr.   and   Mr*.   L.   Hascarl  Jr.\nDainty refreshment* were served\nat midnight.\nThose present were, Misses Marie\nGreen. Mildred La Rue, Marjorle\nWhite, Bkinloe carruther*. Ruth\nBWrd. Jessie Ion, Molly Islip, Kath-\nle*n Fowler. Betty Allan. Nellie\nJohnson, Marlon Steele, Florence\nHartford, Louis* Cuslck. Winifred\nHall. Edith Adshead, Mlas Detta,\nFlorence Dilley. Beds Campe, Nancy\nWaterfteld, Alberta Hascarl, Mrs.\nM. Balrd, Mr. and Mrs. L. Hascurl\nHr., Mr. and Mrs. J. Graham. Mrs.\nR. Buerg*. Mr. and Mrs. L. Hasctrl\nJr., Messrs. Erneet Oxenham, Arthur\nStanley, Richard Blytfce, Marsden\nBalrd, Fred Harrison, David Folko,\nHerbert Bowes, Jack Benton, Char-\nlee Howarth. Jack Harris, Charles\nCompe, Paul Alpaen, Clarence Pic-\nerd, Alfred Carlson, Bert Stelnhoff,\nGeorge Dodds, Oordon Balrd, Albert Turner, Roland Jordon, Her-\nman fltelnhomm. Den Carlson,\nPeter Hurry,  Charles  Janaeii.\nThe regular meeting of the N*k-\niu Ladle* Aid was held on Wednesday at tlie home of Mrs. T. L. Benton with  reoord   attendance.\nAfter tbe business routine tea\nwa*  *erved   by   the   hostess.\n\"I am eomlng back,\" Lord Willlngdon declared as he passed through\nMoncton, 11. B., homeward bound.\nH* hoped some day to have a summer home in Vhe maritime provinces.\nhit eneUencr  said.\nMrs. Benton Hostess\nLadies' Aid Meeting\nof the United Church\nNAKUSP, B. C, Jan. 16\u2014Nakusp I\nUnited Church Ladles' Aid meeting\nwas held at the home of Mrs. F. |\nBenton, on Wednesday afternoon,\nthe president, Mrs. E. W. Somers, |\nwas ln the ohalr, Mrs. W, Ion, sec-1\nretary.\nThe   annual   election   of   officers |\nwas   postponed   until   after   a   meeting   being   bald   next   Thursday   at I\nthe    Church,    with    the    Glenbank j\nLadies' Aid,        _-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_-_\nThe   arrangments   were   made   for j\nrefreshments    at   the   annual   congregation   meeting   to   be   held   on |\nMonday. January 36.\nThe   members   voted   a   donation j\nto    the    missionary    and    maintenance    fund;    tbe    treasurer's   report I\nshowed   a   very   .substantial   balance I\non   hand.\nAfter the btislness part of the |\nmeeting had adjourned, the hostess, assisted by Mr* Oeorge Keys)\nand Mlas R. Hamer, served delirious holiday refreshments. There\nwss an attendance ol 17, of whom\nthree were rtgttttr*. One of these\nwa* Mr*. Hall of S.dmouth, who\nIs ?he guest ot Mr. and Mrs. Jam?*\nWagetaff.\nMrs. E. H. McGregor Is\nHostess, Bonnington\nBONNneOTON FALLS, B. C. Jan.\n18\u2014Mrs. E. M. McGregor was a\ncharming hostess on Wednewj>t\\\nevening when she entertained at a\nJolly house party in ihonor of her\nhusbands' birthday. The cheery-\ndecoration scheme of red and |Mtn\nwas carried out In all the room*\nand the supper tab.e which looked\nvery inviting centred with a lovely birthday cake sermoiinied by the\nusual candles, large red tapers nt\nthe four corners completed a very\npretty .-effect. Mrs. Harry McDougall and Miss McHardy assisted tlie\nhostess In serving. During the\nevening wihlch was spent In playing\nbridge and dancing the guests were\ngreatly elated when a radio message cam* to Mr. Eddie McGregor I\nfrom Seattle, Wash. Bent by Ken j\nStuart, wishing him a happy birthday.\nThe guests were Mr. and Mrs.\nIvor Jones, Mr. and Mrs, A. F. McDonald, Mr. and Mrs. H McDougall, Mr. and Mrs. J Hawkins, Miss\nEleanor McHardy, Nelson, Mr and\nMrs. A.ex Stewart, Nelson, Mr. and\nMr*. S. C, Bradshaw of Trail, E. J.\nMcGregor of Vancouver and Joe\nRiley.\nMr.   nnd   Mrs.   H.   McDougall   and I\nMr.  and  Mrs. E. J. McGregor  motored      to   Trail      and   Ar.nable  on |\nThursday  and  spent the <tiy.\nGrantham township has lost tw\nprominent officials by de-th. Klrby\nMasterson, reeve, and Norman W.\nCudney,\n <\u00a3\nTHE   NELSON   DAILY   NJTWS       TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1981.\nPag* Nln\u00ab\nMarket and Mining News\n[CANADA MIGHT\nHND A LARGE\nMARKET, ITALY\n(Foreign  Correspondent  Sees\nGreat Opportunity for\nDominion, Abroad\nVANCOUVER,    B.    C,    Jan.    19.\u2014\n\u00bbly   expects   to   buy   more   and\nInore wheat all the time from Can-\nIda,  and  I  believe  you  could   ship\nInany tlmse tbe quantity of salmon\n10 our ootintry that you are selling now,\" said Carlo Pe _Onga.ru.\npersonal representative al his excellency Senator Oorradinl, minister of\nlute ln tbs Italian government,\nJ'ho arrived ln Vancouver todsy on\nhie  new  Libers   liner  California.\n1 Slgnor De L'Ongara le one of the\n3lost   distinguished   of   the   foreign\nlorrespond\" nts   of   Olornale   D'ltalla.\npU   mission   aboarJ   the   California\nto write special   articles  for   the\nfclornale D'ltalla on business condt-\n|om  snd  prospect,  along the  Pa-\nHie  coast  of  North  America.\n\"Canada's   trsde   opportunities  ire\nloundleis   at   the   present   time.\nIre ovrrlooking\n|iakk, r\n\"I believe your exporters are overlooking wonderful markets.\n\" \"Pour months ago I returned to\n|taly from South and West, Africa.\nWest Africa, to give you just\n|ne case ln point, the United states\nselling tractors snd agricultural\nlischlnery   on   an   incredible   scale.\n\"Why should not Canadian manufacturers make  room for themselves\n11 such  a  rich  market?\"\n1 He added that British Columbia\npinion, which ls very expensive\nnd Is consider: d a luxury food In\nFssly, oould be eold ln muoh greater\nluantltles If it wers popularized\nInd could be supplied to the con-\ntuners at lower prices. *\nJ Re suggested that paper manufacturers of th. Pacific coast might\nlad markets ln Italy for their\nIroduct, and said he thought furs\n\u25a0light be exported from Northern\n\u25a0anada to Europe through Vancouver as well as through Montreal.\nVANCOUVER LIST\nMINES\nBid     Ask\nlajnrfs\u2014   -   01\nIII   Missouri    .  J9       .40V4\nfork Provlnoa   00V4   .01\nEnterprise   ...\u2014 .09\nores Copper   80       .85\nKwjla  Rlvar    \u2014    03 St    .03 V,\nirandvlew     ,  .04>4\nIndependence      \u201e.. .01\u00bb_\nfct. OAO  18       .as\nKootenay   King        .01       .02\nI'oble   Five          .05       .05.'4\negon   Copper    05t>   .07\n\u25a0emler     - ....-  .71\nlorter Idaho     07V4   .08\n\u25a0Uvercrest  - 01 Vt\nInowflake   \u2014 03      .04\nlopley Richfield   .01V.\n7\/elllngton       .01\nOILS\np   Consolidated      32\nlommonwealth     \u2014.        .34\nUhoualc    51\nkstcrest    ..  _ 53\n\u2022hold        17a\nlargal    . ..        .11\nlome   Oil           1.80\nlltnols   Alta _ _ _      .06 \"J\n|eDougall   Segur   Ex        .09 ',\u00a3\n[cDougall  Segur  New        .28a\nUI   City     _- 34\n\u25a0kalta   New     28a\n[agent      -        .05\nloyallte      _ _   16.00\n[Edmonton civic utilities will show\n1 surplus of 9515,000 for  1930.\nLOGAN & BRYAN\nGRAIN\nSTOCKS,    BONDS,    COTTON\nMEMBERS:\nlew  Tork,  Montreal  and  Vancouver\n|toek   Exchanges,   Chicago   Board   of\ntrade    Winnipeg   Grain   Exchange\nand   other   trading   exchanges.\nPRIVATE   WIRE\nOITICE9\n: Vancouver,  Spokane and  Beattie\nNEW YORK STOCK\nSALES ABOUT HIT\nNEW LOW RECORD\nNRW TORK, Jan. 19\u2014(AP)\u2014Qpme-\nwthst at tba tvpense of quotations,\nthe stock market gave Itself over\nto the luxury of Idleness today.\nThe. lack of leadership, increasingly evident ln the later ssaslons last\nweek, became even more apparent\nand had there not been a flurry of\nactivity Jn the final hour the turnover would have set a new low reoord for more than three years. As\nlt was, sales aggregated 1,114300\n\u25a0hares, the smallest volume since\nDecember 1.\nAlthough fluctustlons In so dull\nmarket do little but emphasise\nthe feebleness of the speculative\npulse, the trend was noticeably lower   tnroughout   the   day.\nWINNIPEG WHEAT\nSLIGHTLY HIGHER\nReduction of  Wheat Supply\nin United State. Adds\nStrength\nWINNIPEG, Jsn. 19\u2014(CP)\u2014Wheat\nnrlees struggled fractionally higher\ntoday despite a dull and featureless\nmarket. Weakness at the opening\nlower quotaa- % cent but firmness\nat Chicago and reduction ln the\nvisible wheat supply In United\nStates injeeted strength here and\nclosing figures were % cent to >A\ncent higher than Saturday.\nVery little activity was displayed\nIn cash wheat and quotations were\nBenerally unchanged. Good demand\noats featured coarse grain trading\nnnd small advances occurred In this\nsection.\nClosing quotations on the wheat\nfutures were: May 88% cents; July\n57% cents bid, and October 50 cents\nper   bushel.\nTORONTO   STOCKS\nAbana    ,  -.-\u201e\u25a0_\u25a0\nAJax     \u2122..!.ZHIZL_\nAmuJet     _.\nAssociated      \t\nArga     \t\nBaldwin     \u201e_  _.\nBaltic Oil  _._  \t\nB.  A.  Oil     _.\nBase   Metals     __\u00ab_\u2122_\nBldgood \t\nBarry  Holllnger  _., \u201e...\nBwana      \t\nBig  Missouri \t\nOalmDnt    \u201e_ \t\nCentral   Manitoba   ..--_._.\nChemical   Research   \u201e\t\nClerlcy    \t\nDome  ....  -.._ _..\nEastcrest     \t\nFalconbrldge     \t\nHome Oil  .-.  _\nHowey       \u201e.\nHolllnger    \t\n(iudson   Bay   \u201e\t\nInternational Nickel ...\u201e\t\n'{eelly   _ _ \t\ni^ak.   Shore   ....,.._... _>_._.,\nKirkland   Lake _..._\nKootenay   Florence  ..-.,\t\nMacasaa\nMandy\nPremier   Gold   \t\nSherrit   Gordon    \u201e\nSudbury Basin   -\nSlscoe     _ __\nSt.   Anthony    \t\nTech   Hughes\nELECTRICAL\nCONSTRUCTION\nAND\nCONTRACTING\nHaving returned from installing\nI power plant at Ferguson. I will\n[now be permanently located in\ny Nelson, and will now give im-\njjpersonal attention to all business entrusted to me.\nEstimates Given on All\nKinds  Electrical Work,\nJ. F. COATES\nElectrical Engineer\n620 Front St.\n.it\n.on,\n1.63\n.31\n.It\nJ11V,\n\u202201V,\n.10\n15.00a\n1.15\n.04\n.11\nLisa\n.38\nM\n.09\n8.00\n.05\n10.15\n.53\n1.40\n1.55\n.59\n8.00\n4.30\n15.00\n.37\n34.80\n.88\n.01\n.18\n.08\n.02\n.03 M\n31.50\n1.76\n.70\n.0514\n17.50\n1.30\n15.15\n.03 y,\n.76\n.70\n.86\n.<5a\n.44 Vi\n.04a\n.03\nThompson  Cadallac        e.60\nVipond    _ \u201e _     i.jo\nVentures     _ \u201e 45\nWright  Hargreaves    ,      3.07\nWalts   Ackerman         1.75\nTORONTO STOCK\nEXCHANGE HAS\nQUIET SESSIOK\nSmelters Off Two Points to\n140; Noranda Has\nSlight Gain\nTORONTO. Jan. 19\u2014Oslns .'ell\nback to the smallest category on\nthe Toronto stock exchange today\nln comparatively quiet trading In\nwhich only 18,037 shares turned\nover.\nThere was some profit taking ln\nthe major liquor shares, Walker\nlosing V\u00ab to close at 8 V.. Distillers\nSeagrams lost % to close at 11<_.\nCanadian Industrial Alcohol was up\nV.   to 4.\nSmelters at 140 was off 2, Crows\nNest Coal at 13 was off 3 and\nNoranda gained fi cents to $18.40.\nLake Shore was off 15 cents to\n\u202224.88 and Molntyre lost 28 cent?\nto   close   at   gai.78.\nImperial OU lost W to 17V., International Petroleum was down v* to\n14^ and McCoU Frontsnac st 10 H\nwas off %. Super-Test at 30 was\noff   >A-\nBrazilian Traction went as high\nas 23 but closed without net change\nat 22 tt* Bell Telephone gained\n114 to 143tt and 0. P. R. was\nunchanged at 40. Page Herscy\n.Lined Va to 851,. Pressed Metals\nat 13 was up tt and Hamilton\nBridge gained ltt to I6tt and Steel\nof Canada preferred at 36 2 -3\noff   Vi.\nford of Oanada lost % to 33*_.\nConsolidated Bakeries at B'_ waa\nup   tt.\nBrazilian Traction\nEarnings Arc Down\nManitoba Basin  \t\nMalartio     \u201e-.\nMclntyre     -..-._\t\nMining  Corporation   \t\nMayland    _...\niVewbec    _. \u201e.\nNew   Imperial   Oil   \u2014\t\nNlpiBslng     -_____._\nNorancU      __ .,\nPeterson Cobalt  _\t\nPend  Oreille\nMONTREAL, Jan. 18\u2014A decline\ncompared with 1939, of 1135,063 ln\nthe net earnings of Brazilian Traction for the month of December\nbrings the total decline In net for\nthe 12 months of the fiscal year\nto 4803,368.\nGross earnings for the year were\n$48,395,444. u decrease of 12,452,771\nfrom the preceding year, while operating expenses were cut 11,949.403,\nleaving net earnings for the year,\nbefore provision for depreciation\netc., 837,849.594. against 828,052,962,\nor a decrease of 8803,368 for the\npreceding year.\nGross earnings for December totalled 83,888.067 against 83.684.103\na decline of 8399,244, while working\nexpenses were out from 81.743,010\nto 81.478,835 the month's net at\n83.106.232     against    $2,241,299.\nMONTREAL BOARD\nHAS IRREGULAR\nTREND IN PRICES\nMONTREAL, Jan. 19\u2014Price trends\n.en\u00bb irregular on the stock exohange\n.oday with sales volume Ught and\n.he greater part of the day's movements being fractional. Due to the\nansteadlnees of New Tork the looal\n.1st was unable to give a better\ndisplay. In the larger center the\nweakness was quite definite In the\nlaat half hour, but the effect here\nwas only a broadening ol the frac-\nlonal   easiness.\nSoftness ln McColl Frontenac,\nwhich eased another point to 19).,\nwas a feature of the list.\nAFFECTED BY STIMSON ASSIGNMENT\nVANCOUVER LIST\nHAS FEW CHANGES\nMost Issues Away Within a\nNarrow   Margin;   Big\nMissouri Leader\nVANCOUVER. Jan. 19\u2014In the absence of aggressive trading stocks\non the Vancouver market swayed\nwithin narrow range today. Although\nlosses predominated among the oil\nshares, the important issues generally ended the day unchanged, The\nmines and Industrials were featureless.\nHome traded at 1.59 and closed\nunchanged at that price, while C.\nand I., registered a fractional loss\nat 62tt cents. Mayland dropped 2\noents to 70 cents, and the Southwest\nPete sagged  9 cents  to  15  cent.\nBig Missouri led the mines list\nand sold down to close 1 tt cents\nlower at 30 cents bid. Premier Gold\nand   Pioneer   closed    firm.\nWINNIPKG GRAIN\nNEW STORK STOCKS\n8Tt\n168%,\n107*4\n27%\n43\nMil.\n109'\/,\n32%\n189%\nAllegheny    ....-\nAll   Chem   ...\nAm  Can\t\nAm For P  ...\nAm   8   ft   Oe\nAm   Tela    _.\nAm   Tob   _,\u2014\nAnaconda   \t\nAtchison\t\nBaldwin      01\nBait St   Ohla   _ 78>sj\nBen  Av    _ 18*.\nBeth  Steel  47\n0   P      40%\nCerro De Pas .... 24\nChes   St   Ohio.... 40%\nChrysler      18%\nCon  Oaa N Y... 83%\nCorn  Prod    78\nDupont      85\nEastman    K.  146\nErie        80\nFord   Eng     \u2014\nFord  of  C   _.. \u2014\nF  Nat  B   _ 45%\nPreeport Teg  ._ 80\nGen    Mot      88%\nOen    Eec      42%\nOen    Foods    .... 49%\nOold   Dust   -  33%\nDOMINION  LIVESTOCK\nWINNIPEG, Man.. Jan. 19.\u2014Livestock receipts: cattle, 2325; calves,\n165:  hogs, 3245:  sheep, 290.\nCattle: Steers, up to 1050 lbs.:\nGood and choice. $5.75 to J9.75;\nover 1050 lbs.: 88.00 to 87.00;\nheifers, good and choice ,18.1V? to\n38.00; fed calves, good and choice,\n$7 00 to 88.00; cows, good, 44.00\nto 84.75; cannera and cutters, $1.50\nto $2.26; bulls, good. 13.75 to \u00bb4.05;\ndocker and fseder steers, gooj\n\u00bb4.00 to 84.75; stock cows and\niielfers, good, 84.00 to $4.05; milkers\nand springers, $40.00 to $66.00. Veal\ncalves, good and choice, $10.00 to\n$12.00.\nHogs: select bacon, $1.00 per head\npremium; bacon, $8.60 to $8.50;\nbutchers, $1.00 per head discount;'\nlights and feeders  ,$8.50 to $9.00.\nLambs: Good handyweight, $8.00\nto $8.00; good heavies, $6.50 to $7,50-\nbucks, $5.00  to $6.00.\nSheep: Good heavlea, $s.5n to\n$4.00; good handyweight, $4.50 to\n$5.00.\nITIs four acres of crab apples,\nplum and hybrid cherry trees netted\nhtm a greater profit laat year, William Shepherd, Rathwell, Man., said,\nthan 300 acres of grain would have.\nMr. Shepherd considered fruit farming had a bright future in Manitoba.\nBuilding\nMflteriCli  John Burns & Son\nLet us figure your bills on\nBuilding  Material.    Coast\nLumber  a  specialty,\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Co. ot Canada, Ltd.\nOtUoe. Smelting and Refining Department\nTRAIU BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS and REFINERS\nPurchase .-. Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Ore\nProducer*      Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC, TBAIL\nGranby    -\nO   W   Sugar\nHowe  Sound   ....\nHud    Mot    \t\nIns    Cop    \t\nIn   Rap   T   \t\nIn  Nickel  _\t\nIn T St T \t\nKelly    Spring...\nKen  Cop      24%\nKresge    S    S    36%\nKroegg  St T ....   21%\nMack   T       38%\nNash   Motors   ...   32%\nN   D  Prod       40%\nN  Pow     \u201e  ....   \u2014\nN.  Y.  Cent 118%\nPac G St E 47\nPackard    Mot      9%\nPenn R R\t\nPhil   Pet   t _\nRad   Corp'   \t\nRed Keith Or .\nRem  Rand\t\nRock I  \t\nSafeway   6   .\t\nS Louis St SP....\nShell    Oil    \t\nSinclair   Con   ....\nS   Cal   Ed    L\nS   P     _\t\nStan Oil of C .\nStan OU tnd...\nStan OU  N J  .\nStewart   W   \t\nStudebaker  ,\t\nTex.   Corp   \t\nTen Oult Sul    ..\nUn   Car   \t\nUn   Oil   Cal   ....\nU   P    -\nUn   Aircraft   ....\nU  S   Rub\t\nU  S   Steel   \t\nWest   Elec   \t\nWlUys   Ov   \t\nYeUovr  T  \t\n8%\n153%\n106%\n26%\n41%\n180%\n108%\n32%\n188%\n21%\n74%\n17%\n45%\n39%\n23%\n40\n16\n82%\n77%\n83%\n143%\n29%\n44%\n29%\n36%\n41%\n49\n32%\n15%\n9\n22%\n22\n16%\n9%\n33%\n22%\n8%\n15 14%\n..   22%     22\n1%       1%\n23%\n11%\n37%\n31\n40\n117%\n46%\n9\n69%\n13%\n12%\n16%\n10\n54%\n40%\n\u00bb%\nU%\n47%\n100%\n45%\n45%\n17%\n22%\n81%\n46%\n66%\n22%\n12%\n12%\n16%\n18%\n55\n41%\n48%\n9%\n11%\n47%\n101\n46%\n47%\n17%\n23%\n31%\n46%\n66%\n32%\n.     187\n13%\n139%\n84%\n.   8\n-   \u00bb%\n12%\n138%\n82%\n8%\n153%\n107\n27% I\n42%\n181%\n109%\n32%\n180%\n21%\n76%\n18%\n48%\n40%\n23%\n40\n16%\n83%\n78\n84%\n144%\n30\n16%\n22%\n46%\n29%\n36%\n42\n49%\n33\n15%\n9%\n23%\n22%\n8%\n24%\n14%\n22%\n1%\n24\n36%\naiV*\n37%\n31%\n40%\n31%\n118\n46%\n9%\n59\n13%\n12%\n16%\n16\n55\n40%\n40%\n9%\n11%\n47%\n100%\n46\n35%\n46%\n17%\n32%\n31%\n48\n65%\n22%\n187\n23%\n12%\n139\n83%\n5\n9%\nWINNTPEO, Man., Jan 19\u2014(Oraln\nQuotations)\u2014\nWheat:\nMay    86%    5T%    55%    56%\nJuly    .._-     M        57%    56%    57%\nOct     68%    69        57%    59\nOats:\nMay    37%    38%    27%    28%\nJuly        26%    27%    28%    27%\nBarley:\nMay        24%    26%    24%   36%\nJuly    ..._...    25%    26%    26%    26U\nOct    28%    28%    28%    28%\nFlal:\nMay     103% 102% 101   101%\nJuly     102% 1<B%  101% 102%\nRye:\nMay          30%    30%    29%    30%\nJuly    ..._     31%    31%    31%    31%\nOct    \u2014        \u2014        \u2014       34%\nCash  Prices:\u2014\nWheat: No. Hard. 53%; No. 1 nor.\n63%; No. 2 Nor 50%; No. 3 Nor.\n46%; No. 4, 42%; No. 5 40%; No. (\n28%; feed, 37%; track, 53%; screen\nings  per  ton  8100.\nMONTREAL FIRM\nMAY BUY STREET\nRAILWAY SYSTEM\nlfl.    (CP)\nlikely    to\nHAMILTON, Ont., Jan.\n\u2014Montreal interest* are\nacquire the Hamilton street railway\nsystem at a prlo? of M.000.000. The\nHamilton city council recently rejected the offer made by the Ontario hydro commission, ownerg of\nthe railway, to sell the system to\nthe  city at  the  same   price.\nTORONTO MINES\nHOLD FIRM EDGE\nHoliinger     Leads     Precious\nMetals Group;  Gains\nFive Points\nyour subsiu..wv companies of O.\nV Stlmson \u00abV Co., filed Tountwr\n.^Hlgnmenta at Osgoode Hall, Tor-\n\u25a0 January 14. According to\n.uir-equent statement* by P. O.\nfobaaoa, president of Uie parent\nrompany, crtditora will b\u00bb pro*\ntfcted. Aho-ve are shown: (1) Maiv\n.np building. Vancouver, financing\nnf which wan a recent Stlmson com-\nundamttx*; (2) r, a.\nJohnten, preaident of f>. a. stlnwoa\nCo., Ltd (3) Commerce and\nrmu.8por_mT;r,ri bulldln*. Toronto,\none of moM. recent important financial project* of the <*on_p*ny.\n.4) William Jam*. Dow, BccreMry-\nireaiurer. and (fir Major Laurenot\nE Clark, vlce-prraicfrnt and nan-\niTB.i   manager.\nCHICAGO GRAINS\nIN SHORT RALLY\nTORONTO. Jan. IB\u2014While sales\nvolume waa fairly good and the\nprice movement held an edge of\nfirmness, transactions on the Standard Stock and Mining exchange today failed to develop anything of\nan outstanding nature. Specialized\ntrading ln a few penny stocks accounted for almost half the day's\nsale3.      Total     aalea    were    207.960\nHolllnger led the precious metal\ngroup and closed at $8 for a gain\nof 5 points. Dome held unchanged\nat $10.20. I-alie Shore fell 15c to\n$24.84. Teck Hughes closed unchanged at 16.65. Noranda Mines closed\nunchanged at \u202215.25. Nickel turned\nreactionary dropping 25c, to $14.75.\nHudson Bay wan off 10c, to $4.50.\nSudbury Basin 5c. to 60c, and Pend\nOreille recovered 5 points to close\nat 75c.\nCities Service and Imperial Oil\neach fell 25c, closing at $16.25 and\n$17.60 respectively; British American   closed  unchanged  at $15.\nWestern and lower-priced oils were\ndull    and   listless.\nEGG .MARKETS\nVictoria, British Columbia, residents by a majority of 1713 voted\nagainst the sale of beer by the glass.\nE. M. Couiisell. prominent Winnipeg financier, ls dead. He was a\nnative of Hamilton.\nBoundary District Fertilizer\n. Experiments in 1930\nOTTAWA, Ont., Jan. 19.-Lower\nprices again are reported from the\nmajority of Canadian egg markets\nwith production still holding an\nabnormal volume lor the eeason.\nToronto: Dealers are quoting producers and country shippers for\neggs extras 22 to 25, first, 19 to\n20, seconds,  14 to  lfi.\nMontreal: Fresh eggs are lower.\nBritish Columbia eggs are gelling\non spot at extras 30, first 8, pullet\nextras.  26.\nAlberta and Ontario eggs nre\nbringing about two cents below\nthese prices. Storage eggs can be\nbought on spot 16 cents for firsts\nand  14 cents for seconds.\nWinnipeg: Dealers are paying producers and country Bhippem for egg\nextras  30,  first  18, seconds  16.\nVancouver: Wholesale dealers are\npaying producers today for eggs\nextras 16 to 20, firsts, 16 to 17;\npullet extras,  14 to 13.\nChicago spot 191,, Jan. refrlgem-j\ntors 12%, Aprils storage packed i\nfutures.   30H.\n(By O. L. Landon, District Agriculturist, Grand FV>rks, B. C.)\nDuring 1930 a series of fertilizer experiments were conducted at Orand\nForks, Midway and Rock Creek by the provincial department of agriculture,\nusing triple superphosphate, ammonium phosphate and potash sulphate:\nthe fertilizers being supplied by the C. M. & 8. company from Its Trail\n'plant. The crops used in the testa were Danven Yellow Olobe onions.\nNetted Oem potatoes, Kelway'a Crimson King mangels and spring wheat.\nIn Grand Porks district the crops were irrigated and very good results\nobtained, but In the Midway and Rock Cre.k districts the result, were\npoor due to the extremely hot, dry weather in July and August,\nPractically all the plots were on t.andy loam soil with sand subsoil\nand the soil analysis of rich plot showed lack of phosphoric acid in all\nplots, with some low in nitrogen and potash. Some of the plots needed\nlime also due to the acid content. The results obtained are shown tn the\nfollowing tables:\ntillerlmo.nl No. A  (Onions)   Orand Forks\nRate TfcM\nPrr Acre Per Acre\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW YORK, N. Y., Jan. IK\u2014Cop-\npar steady; electrolytic spot and\nfutxrrs) 10. Iron qulst; No. 3 fob\neastern Pennsylvania 17.00-18.00;\nBu'fala 15.BO-16.00; Alabama 10.80-\n14.00. Tin easy, spot and nearby\n38.00; future MJtH. Lead quiet; spot\nNew York 4.78; East Bt. Louis 4.88.\nZinc quiet; east St. Louts spot and\nfuture 4.00-4.08 antimony 7.80.\nQuicksilver   104.00.\nAt London -etandard copper\nspot \u00a348 7s fld; futurs \u00a348 6s; elec.\ntrolytlc. spot \u00a348; future \u00a348 18s.\nTin spot \u00a3118; future \u00a3117 10s.\nLead spot and future \u00a313 18s.\nZlno spot \u00a313 13s \u00abd; future \u00a313\n17s \u00abd. ^____________\nJesse Bishop, well-known rancher.\nand later a g-ovsmment road foreman, died at Medicine Hat. He\na  well  known  curler.\nFertilizer Used\nTriple   Superphosphate      400 lbs.       23,800 lbs.\nTriple   Bup. rphosphatr   . \u2122o 24.000\nTriple    Superphosphate                     . 200 20,000\nAmmonium   Phosphate 400 20,000\nAmmonium  Phosphate   ..        -   300 18.400\nAmmonium  Phosphatu               200 16.400\nAmmonium   phosphate      3\u00b00\nPotash   Sulphite    --   \">0 20.000\nCheck   Plot   .... ]2.B\u00b00\nExperiment No. B iManjrpIs) (iraml Forks\nRate\nPlot No.        Fertilizer Used Per Acr.;\n1. Triple   Superphosphate 400\n2. Triple   Superphosphate 300\n3. Triple   Superphosphate   .. 200\n4. Ammonium   Phosphate   .. 400\n6. Ammonium  Phosphat.,  \u201e 300\nfl.      Ammonium  Phosphate  _ 200\n7. Ammonium   Phosphate   .. ;too\nPotash Sulphate    inn\n8. Check   Plot\nYield\nPer Acre\n30  tons\n28\n3(1\n38\n36\n32\nN\nInc.   Over\ncheck Plot\nslO.000 lbs.\nxl 1,200\nx \"200\nx 7.200\nx 5,800\nX 3,600\nX 7,200\nInc. Over\nUheck Plot\nx 4 tens\nX 3\nX10\nxia\nxlO\nX  fl\nExperiment No. C (Potatoes) r.ranrt Forks\n400 Ibi.   33.360 lbs.\n300 24.440\n200 21 osn\n400 38.040\n300 39,630\n200 33,040\n300\n100 39,460\n27.180\nEvperlniciil. No. P,  (rotatnesi   Orand Forks\nTrlplo Superphosphate\nTriple Superphosphate\nTriple Superphosphate\nAmmonium Phophate\nAmmonium Phosphate\nAmmonium Phosphate\nAmmonium   Phosphate\nPotash    Sulphate    \t\nCheck  Plot\nTriple   Superphosphate 400 23,072\nTriple   Superphosphate 300 21.688\nTriple   Superphosphate 200 19,376\nAmmonium   Phosphate 400 38,308\nAmmonium   Phosphate 300 20.832\nAmmonium    Phosphate -            300 17.902\nAmmonium   Phosphate 3\u00bbo\nPotash   Sulphate 100 23.072\nCheck   Plot   ..    . 10,364\nTbe  results  on  the  avtrase were A\t\nxl2\nx 6.080 lbs,\n- 3,740\n- 3,230\n\\ 10,8^.0\nx 9,440\nX .1,760\n112.280\nx 3808\nX 3424\nx 112\nX 6944\nX 1868\n-1372\nX 3808\nhighly satisfactory under Irrnated\nconditions which prevail st Orsnd\n\u00bbtorka. Ths results ln some of the\nplots were affected by flooding of Irritation water with subsequent baking of the' soil. Fertilizer experiments are influenced by seasonal\nellmatlo conditions, types of soils,\nsoil conditions, crop rotation methods, etc .and have to be considered\nln an analysis of the results secursd.\nAmmonium phosphate contains\napproximately IS par cent nitrogen\nand 61 per cent phosphoric acid,\nboth being in an Immediately avail\nable condition, which makes tt\nhigh grade fertilizer. Triple superphosphate contains approximately 45\nto 48 per cent, phosphoric acid which\nIs treble the amount of available\nphosphoric acid found In ordinary\nsuperphosphate. Potash sulphate\ncontains approxlmtelv 60 per cent\npotash. The Increased yield from\nthe fertilized plots, particularly the\nplots with ths complete fertilizer\nof ammonium phosphate and sulphate of potash, resulted* Ln a considerable net profit over ths cost of\nth* fsrUllisr.\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW YORK. Jan. 19\u2014Sterling\nexchange Irregular at \u00bb4.83 1-6\nfor 80 day bills and at \u00bb4^a 3-lfl\ntur  demand.\nForeign  bar  silver  28%   cents.\nCanadian   dollars   7-32   cent   disc.\nMarks    23.73'i    cents.\nKronen   26.76   cents.\nFranca   3.91    11-10   c\nUrs    8.33    1-18    cents.\nNelson approximate sterling ex\nchansc   rate   84.87   8-16.\nUnexpected Shrinkage In VI*.\nihle Stocks of Wheat Haa\nUplift  Effect\nMINNEAPOLIS  GRAIN\nMINNEAPOLIS. Minn, .Tan, 1!)-\nl\"7our unchanged, ln carload lots\nrnnil'v   p 1.48  a  barrel  In\n98-pound cotum sacks. 6hiptusut3\n34,053.     Bran   15.60-16.00.\nWheat No. 1 Northern 75-.-78V.\nNo. 1 Red Durum 643\/4-65*et May\n77%;   July   73'j.\nCorn;   No.   3   Yellow   80-62.\nOats:   No.   3   White   2:)i<-2!)14.\nFlax:   No.   1,   1.34>,-i\nIt  was  11   years sines  pr\nbecame   law   ln   tho  United   State:;.\nCrnCAOO, nia.. Jan. _\nIve to an unexpected shrinks** ol\nthe United States whsat vlalble supply and to only meagre aolargw-\nment of stocks of oom, grain* rallied late today. Adverse weathir\nfor corn crop movement added to\nthe upward momentum of corn.\nTraders ignored French Import control plans that Included 12 a bissnel\nts a minimum price for wheat,\ngrown In France. Similar meKeure*\nare already enforced bv other European countries and German official prioas for hcane grown wheu.\nexceeded   \u00bb2.\nWheat closed Irregular, Vt\" off\nto <s up: corn 4s to 1 cent advanced: oats unchanged to S\nhigher and provisions varying from\ntwo cents setback to an equal gain.\nEARMNOS   DOWN\nMOVTRIAL, Jan. 19\u2014Traffic earnings of the Canadian Pacific railway\n'or the week ended January 14, 1931,\nven 82 487 000 compared with 83.-\n715,000 for the corresponding period\nof   1930,   a  decrease  of  8268.000.\nSteady Progress\nThrough the Ups and Downs of 114 Years\nt\\].L through the many\nchanges and fluctuations in the economic situation during\nthe List century and more, the Bonk of Montreal has\nmaintained an unbroken record cf successful operation and\nsound progress in serving its customers and Canada as a whole.\nIn this fiict lies assurance of l continuance\nof that success and progttv>s in the future.\nBANK OF MONTREAL\nEstablished l8t7\nTOTAL ASSETS IN EXCESS OF *o00.000^00\nNELSON   BRANCH\nTrUn.  BB4NCH:\nBOSSLANP   BRANCH:\nNTW    DKNTta    BRANCH:\nK\\M<>   BRANCH:\n!..   I.   DEWPNEY,   Manairer\nn.  \u00bb .  PATERSON,   Manaitcr\nI.  SALT,  Mutates\ni     I    IBWrS,   Onager\n11    v  ( HESTER,  Manage!\n Page Ten\nTHE  NELSON   DAILY   NEWS       TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1981.\nStock Taking Specials\nZEE TOILET PAPER. One of the finest Toilet\nTissues. Regular 20c value, to dear at IO4* each.\nFLASHLIGHTS. Complete with two batteries.\nRegular $2.25 value, to clear at 81.70.\nPAL ALARM CLOCKS. An excellent clock at\nthe regular price of $1.50. To clear at 95\u00abf.\nNEW GILLETTE RAZOR with one blade. Regular 50c. value, to clear at 15^.\nSole Agents in Nelson for SARGON.\nMann, Rutherford Co.\nDRUGGISTS and STATIONERS\nCAnnouncement\nDr. T. H. Bourque, Dentist, formerly in partnership with Dr. Keeley, announces that he has taken\nover the entire practice,\nand has moved his dental\noffices to Suite 201, Medical Arts Building.\nNELSON BUSINESS\nCOLLEGE\nDay and evening classes\nIndividual Tuition\u2014Commence any time.\nFor\u2014\nSERVICE\nPRICE and\nQUALITY\n\"W* GROCERY sMm\nPhones 10 and 11\nASKS THAT AU\nTARIFF LAWS BE\nRESCINDED SOON\nVAGRANT IS SENT\nHERE FROM TRAIL\nI    J.   MoLellan   was   lodged   ln   tho\n| provincial jail here to spend two\nmonth*. A sentence given him by\nPolice Magistrate Noble Blnni, at\nTrail on a charge of vagrancy.    He\nI wa*  conducted   to  Nelaon  by  Con-\n| stable   Mitchell.\nEVAN'S REPORT\nIS BOMBSHELL\nIN OKANAGAN\nLibera]   Member  ln   Saskatchewan House Supports\nFree Trade\nRJEOINA, Saak., Jan. 10. (CD-\nJoint action by the gownmente of\nSaskatchewan *'\u2022\"\u2022.-*\ntoba to prewil upon Ottawa to rescind all tariff r**tu_\u201e. ..\nIng Oreat Britain and institute,\nInstead, free trade relation*, wae\nadvocated in the legislature this\nafternoon by C, M. Dunn, Liberal\nmember   for   Pheasant   Hill*.\nMr. Dunn was speaking on the\ndebate on tho reply to the speech\nfrom the throne, to which, by th*\nend of the day's sitting, 34 member* of both sides of the house\nhad   contributed.\nFiscal policies occupied the attention of practically every speaker who\naddressed the assembly today. Oeorge\nCockburn, Liberal, Reddery, who.\nwhile Hi-clalmlng identity with the\nmovement, expressed sympathy for\nmen woo m their extremity were\ncrying  for  secession.\nThe policy of free trade with\nBritain was strongly urged by the\nseveral Liberal speakers, while both\nMr. Dunn and Mr. Cockburn believed that price* should be stabilised at a higher level than that\nat which agricultural products now\nrested.\nKASLO COUPLE\nINJURED, AUTO\nCRASH IN U.S.\nMr. and Mrs. Thornburg Recovering; His Sister Dies\nAfter Crash\nDOGS TURN WILD\nIN CITY THE PAS\nTHE PAS, Man., Jan. 19\u2014Police\nof The Pas today started open warfare on all ownerless dogs that heretofore have run wild in this northern city. Five children were attacked tn the last few days by\nhusky dogs as the animal* reverted\nto the Instinct* of the wolf. It\nin believed the dogs were starved.\nNone of the children waa seriously\nInjured.\nSeven year old Ella Marten, returning home from Sunday school\nyesterday, was attacked by a pack\nof dogs. She climbed a fence but\nthe big animals pulled her down\nand only the appeaif.nce of several\nadults, who drove them off with\nsticks, saved the little girl's life.\nNOW READY\nKootenay Music Festival\n1931 SYLLABUS\nSEND FOR YOUR COPY AT ONCE\nApply to    .\nMRS. W.  C.  KETTLEWELL,\nP.  O.  BOX  187.  NELSON,  a   C.\nor to\nMR. WILLIAM RAMSAY,\nBOX   609,   THAI!..   B.   C.\nTELL  YOUR   FRIENDS  AND  BOOST\nAll 1931 Festival music now on sale at\nHall's  Music House,  Trail,  B. C.\n\"Say It With Flwvers\"\nWhile They Last\nWe are still offering\nour full line of bridge\ntallies and place cards\nat half price.\nA wonderful variety\nof frestj flowers for that\nparty or that sick friend\nIn the hospital.\nViolets today \u2014 50\u00a3\nbunch.\nNelson Flower Shop\nPhone 233\nPrompt Delivery\nKASU), B. c, Jan. 19.\u2014Word he*\nreached the city of a serious motor\naccident, which occurred January\n5, near Mantpelier, Indiana, in which\nMr. and Mis. Scott Thornburg of\nthi* city were enjured and Mr*. J.\nNewhouse, a sister of Mr. Thornburg, was so Mxioi^ly injured\nthat she pawed away a few hours\nafter the accident. Mr. Newhouee\nwho alBo was badly Injured, was\ndriving when he was Winded by\nthe glare of the headlights of\nanother car approaching over the\ncrest of a hill. Mr. Newhouse\nswerved into a ditch and crashed\ninto a telegraph pole. He received severe cut* about lace and\nhands and had one elbow crushed\nby the weight of the car resting\nupon it, as well ae being badly\nbruised  over   the  entire body.\nMr. Thornburg lost four teeth.\nwas badly bruised all over, and haa\nnaety cuts on the face and right\nleg.\nMrs. Thornburg was the least Inured, but also suffered from body\nbruises and cuts on the face,\nhands and limbs. Mr. Thornburg,\nwho has been in poor health for\nsome time, left a few weeks ago,\nwith Mrs. Thornburg, to consult ft\nspecialist in the east, after whlcn\nhe derided to visit his old home\nand   relatives   on   his  way   home.\nMr. and Mrs. Thornburg were the\nguests of Mr. and Mrs. Newhouse\nat the time of the accident, which\noccurred when the party was returning from a visit to relatives\nln a nearby town, This was Mr.\nThornburg's first visit to hia sister,\nand the place of his birth, ln 44\nyearn. Mrs. Newhouse was 64 years\nof age. Latest report*, are to the\neffect that the survivors of the\naccident ar* well on tbe road to\nrecovery.\nFIRE IN TEXTILE\nCOMPANY CAUSES\n$600,000  DAMAGE\n(Continued  From Pag*  One)\nof th* population haa been supporting tha central selling schemes\nas recommended by F. M. Black,\nwhile the other haa been fighting  it. <\nComing at a psychological moment, two day* before the B.c.F.O^..\nconvention, where central selling\n1* likely to be one of the main\nIssue*, It ha* brought disappointment to the central selling advocates, and gratification to its opponent*, generally referred to aa the\nIndependent shippers.\nWHAT WILL THE\nCONVENTION DOT\nWhat the development* at the\nconvention may be 1* still a mattet\nof doubt. It wa* stated by one of\nthe convention official* tnat greater\nweight wae being placed on the\nextent to which the general petition for central selling had been\nsigned than by any resolution from\nthe convention.\nIt 1* claimed that the petlton ln\nfavor of central selling has already\nbeen signed by 85 to 90 per cent\nof the growers available, and that\nthe request for central selling legislation, and the right to vote for\nor against ihe bill when it ha.*;\npassed the house will be brought\nto the attention of the government\nhf presentation to tt of the petition.\nThe main question among all\nsections of the growers Interviewed\nhere is In regard to the possible\naction that may be taken by the\ngovernment In view of the Evans\nreport, which ls so strongly condemnatory of any government legislation of the sort.\nWill the government, they ask.\ngive heed to the petition of tho\ngrowers asking for a referendum on\na bill, which, if passed by tlie legislature and approved by a vote of\nfrom 85 to 70 %>-T cent of the\njrrowers, would automatically become\nlaw, or will It fallow the advlct\nof Its commissioner and wash Its\nhands of the whole fruit legislation\nbusiness?\nFINDS NO LAW ,\nBY WHICH TO\nGOVERN CASE\n'Where Fender and Body Work Is an Art\"\nHOW IS\nYOUR\nCAR TOP\nThis is the time of the year when it is necessary to have your car top cover water-tight. If\nnot the dampness will create mildew in the interior frame work which is very costly. No\nmatter how old your car is have a good look at\nthe top cover. Perhaps it may only need dressing\nor again it might need recovering. In either case\nwe urge you to have it made water-tight.\nOur upholstering department is complete and\ncan do and guarantee any job, no matter how\nlarge or how small at a reasonable cost.\nBody work\u2014 tenders repaired\u2014 Duco spray\npainting.\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nPhone 35\nPresenting the\n\"Miss Liberty\"\nIt's a BulovaI\nNever before hu ft watch\nreceived such universal\nendorsement.\nIn presenting the \"Miss\nLiberty'* we offer what we\nbelieve is the most bemud*\nful lady** wrist watch ever\nshown udder $50.\nExauisitely engraved, set\nwith six emeralds or tip*\nphirn of scintillating color\nwith ft flexible bracelet to\nmatch, \"Miss Libc- ' introduces ft new s. ;rd\nio watch styles and watch\nvaJne.\nOn di.pUy...fe* the fit* time^\nfomsrrew!... Bt tstn te see it.\nE. Collinson\nJEWELER\nThe House for Watches\nMONTREAL   One..  Jan   19\u2014(CP'\n Causing    damage   estimated   at\n$800,000 and throw.ng some 35 men\nand women out of work, fire swept\nthrough the extensive premises ol\nthe Dominion Textile company, St.\nAnn's branch, ln the east end ot\nMontreal, today. The blame was\nfirst discovered In the spinning de- I In    American    waters,    near\nSEATTLE, Jan. 18. (AP)\u2014Assistant U. S. District Attorney Cameron Sherwood ordered the small\ngas boat Cascade and her crew of\nfive released her* tonight. The Cascade was brought in late today by\na coast guard patrol boat after 69\nbottles of beer were found ln her\nhold.\nSherwood said the four Canadians and their American master had\n\"a permit for the beer and that\nthere appeared to be no law covering   the   unique   case.\"\nThe crew said they were plying\nbetween Canadian points from the\ncoast of Vancouver island to White\nRock, B. C, and that they had to\ntraverse American waters for a short\ndistance to make the trip. It was\nPoint\nW. R. CAMPION\nGROCERIES\nOUR PHONE NO. IS 121\nii  lta.   Creamer,   halt-   f .75\nQueen Onves, Jar .     .35 and    .15\nApple*,   box    _   1.15   and   1.00\nA  packet of Pancake  rloar\nfree   with   purctuue   tf\nMaple   Svrnp.\nUrn  Mr   Sweet   MTsea\nnomas _____ 4\u00bb\nWorceeter  Sana  _   .15 Ud    .41\n4 packets dinette's  Sweet\nHimiH\nVegetables of all kinds.\nHome   calendar,   left.   Have   roo\ntot  yours?\nDELIVERIES  TWICE  DAILY\nUPHILL and  FAIRVIEW\nCANADA SUGAR\nSHAREHOLDERS\nGET $600 SHARE\nMONTREAL, Jan. 19\u2014The Montreal Star toda,y published the following:\n\"The consideration received by\nshareholders of Canada Sugar Refining company ln the recent sale of\nthe property for merger purposes\nwith Dominion Sugar Refining company, under the new corporate title\nof Canaua and Dominion Sugar Refining company, was well over |600\nper share, according to meagre details of the transaction which have\nbecome known.\n\"Shareholders of Canada Sugar\nreceived $356 per share ln cash\nphis 30 shares of new Canada and\nDominion stock for one ehare of\nCanada. Quotations for the merger\nstock range from \u00bb18.50 to 120 per\nshare and taking $19 as a basis it\nwill be seen that the cash and\nstock consideration have a combined\nvalue  of  around   $6315.\"\nCANADA BONDS\nWINNIPEG, Man.. Jan. 19.\u2014Quotations on Victory bonds tor 11000\nare as follow:\nWAR  LOAN:\n1931, 6 per cent, 100.70.\n1937, 5 per cent, 104.40.\nVICTORY LOAN:\n1933, t'A per cent, 108.10.\n1934, 5\", per oent, 103.00.\n1937, &_ per cent, 107.60.\nWAR LOAN RENEWAL:\n1933. 5 _  per cent, 101.70.\nREFUNDING LOAN:\n1943, 5 per cent,  103.80.\n1940,   44   Per   cent,   100.00.\n1944, 44 per cent, 100.00.\n1946, 44  per cent, 100.00.\nFashion-Craft\nMADE-TO-MEASURE SUITS\nAND OVERCOATS\nt\n20% Discount\nBetter order that new suit now, and save\n20%. For the balance of this month Fashion\nCraft are giving this liberal discount off all\nfancy suitings and overcoatings. Fit and\nsatisfaction guaranteed. Look over the\nsamples today.\nService\nQuality\nSatisfaction\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBonk of Commerce\t\nDominion  Bank   \t\nImperial   Bank    \t\nBank   of   Montreal    \u2014\nBank   of   Nova   Scotia   ...\nRoyal  Bank   r.\u2014\nBank of Toronto .  -\nAbltlbl Power anl  Paper .\nAtlantic   Sugar   \t\nBell  Telephone\nBrazilian T L & Power\t\nBritish   American   OU\t\nCanada Bronze \t\nCanadian Oar &  Foundry __\nCanadian   Cement    \t\nCanadian cement pfd  \t\nCanadian   Converters   \t\nCanadian   Industrial   Alcohol..\nCanadian  Cottons   \t\nOan. General Electric pfd\t\nCanadian   Power   ..._ \t\nCanadian   Steamship   Lines   _\nCons. Mining & Smelting \u2014\nDominion  Bridge\t\nDominion  Olaas   ,, u,\nDom.   Steel   <fc   Coal   \"B\"   \u201e\nDominion    Textile    \t\nA  P   Grain\npartment on the top floor \"of the\nfive-storey buildlnp. Before it wa*\ncontrolled it had burned down\nthrough the fourth and third floors,\nwhile the lower floDrs suffered great\ndamage from water and flre-fightiug\noperations.\nRADIO INSPECTOR\nCHECKS LICENSE\nIN CITY, PRESENT\nRoberts, that the boat was seized.\nThe crew conslatrd of William E.\nHarkleroad, Blaine, Wash., master\nand part owner of the boat; Edward V. Lewenden, New Westminster, B. C; William Stewart. Crescent, B. C; William James Haddon,\nWhite Rock, and his brother, Dou-\ngal   Haddon,   N.w   Westminster.\nBOMBARD POLICE\nWITH ICE AND\nB. Irvine, radio Inspector for the i\nprovince of British Columbia, Is in\nNelson  at  present  checking  up  on\nradio licenses\nI'lOiNEER WOMAN\nMONTREAL, Que., Jan. 19. (CP)\n\u2014Police broke up a meeting in the\nLabor temple this afternoon, arresting five men who were charged\n(with making inflammatory speeches\nDl_-b, VIC lUKiA|\".>ai_t the police department, and\nfive  others,   when   a   mob   gathered\nmtm    ~   _ __     . ,.  ,  I to   obstruct   th.   police   when   they\nVICTOR*, B. C:    Jan. 19.-A link   left   tne   bUilding   with   their   prls-\nwlth   the   early   history   of   Brltlbh <oner_\nColumbia was. severed by the death '\non  Saturday   of  Mrs.  Aurella Man-\nfun,  u  native  daughter of l_nglcy,\nBritish  Columbia,   who died  at her\nhome, Royal Oak, a_ed 63\n!     A   daughter   of   the   late   James\nI Murray  Yale,   knevn   in  ploneerin_\ndays  as  \"Little   Yale,\"   after  whom\nI the   Yale  county   waa   named,   Mrs.\nManson  came   with   her  parentis  to\nVictoria during  the  time  of  James\nI later   Sir   Jamcej   Douglas.\nMrs. IM ai uson 's father was ch tef\ntrader at Fort Langley, which was\nthen  a  fur-trading   station.\nPercy Berry in\nHospital; Hurts\n'   His Head in Fall\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 19\u2014Striking\nthe pavement and injuring his head,\nwhen he fell Saturday night, Percy\nBerry ls a patient in the Trall-\nTadanac hospital. His condition Is\nnot  considered   serious.\nEdgar J. Proom. who took up land\nat Dominion City, Man., ln 1978,\nis dead.\nWe carry a complete stock of\n'EVEREADY'\nFLASHLIGHTS and .BATTERIES\nUnit Cells Dry Batteries\nRadio Batteries\nPrices Right\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCO., LTD.\nWHOLESALE    \u2014 Nelson, B. C. \u2014   RETAIL\nA. D. PAPAZIAN\nWATCHMAKER,\nJEWELER,\nand Graduate Optician\n413 HALL STREET\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNELSON'S   DISPENSING    CHEMISTS\nJoin   our   Lending   IJbrary.       Read\nup-to-date   books.\nCall  and   get  your  weight  free.\nBOOKS\u2014KODAKS\u2014STATIONERY\nPhone   34 Bat   10H-.\nNews of the Day\nPythian   Bisters   Old   Time   dance\nJanuary  3n  in  K.  P   hall.      (3620)\nNEW VICTORY\nSTRAWBERRY\nDuring the laat few years one\nmight h-:ar from many sources such\nstatements as these. The Magoon\nstrawberry ls not what lt used to\nbe; the Magoon ls all gone to Monkey Faces; the Magoon does not carry\nwell. Though the Magoon has had\na wonderful peat; though It has\nexcellent qualities ln large measure,\nthere has been an Increasing desire\non the part of many to find a better\nvariety. With the hope of finding\nsuch a berry, possessing such qualities as wire demanded by the\nSaanlch Growers works was undertaken by the experimental station,\nSidney, B. C, In 1925. Pour hundred seedlings arising from seed\ntaken from some of the standard\nsorts wer. grown during the year,\ncarried ln the cold frame during the\nwinter,  ind   taken   to   the  field   in\nCMf.W\u00bbAT T G    X? AI2T March- 1Mfl   Thwe plant* bore frult\nOiNUWbALLo, hiVbl  in   1927    Many   of   these   seedlings\nhad no value, but from the Mariana\nfive were retained, Burrill five,\nGreenville eight, Blsel eight. Glen\nMary twelve. Wide variation was\nshown in the character of the seedlings retained ln date of ripening,\nstorage tests, size, flavor, yield.\nIn addition to the work outlined,\nconsiderable hybridizing has been\ndone, using several of the more\nprominent varieties. Eight hundred\nof these hybrids have fruited making a total of twelve hundred plants.\nEach plant of the twelve hundred\nhas been examined, described and\naccept.d or rejected as the merits\nor demerits of tha plant became\nknown. The crosses made were as\nfollows: Magoon crossed with Royal\nSovereign, Royal Sovereign with Magoon, Paxton with Magoon, Greenville with Mariana, Greenville with\nMagoon, Paxton with Mariana. The\nmother has been mentioned first\nln each instance. The way of the\nplant breeder ls hard, for of the\nhundreds of crosses, only 28 had\nsufficient value to be retained for\nfurther work. One of these, a cross\nbetween the Royal Sovereign and\nMagoon, la the berry named \"The\nNew Victoria\". The not.a concerning the New Victoria are as follows:\nPlant large and vigorous foliage;\nflowers rerfect; date first ripe\nfruit, June 10; color, bright red;\nseeds prominent, fruit solid; stands\nup well in storage; prolific; large\nto very large.\nIn the opinion of the writer this\nberry ls very promising It possesses\nthe vigor of tlie old Magoon, and\nthe aroma of the Royal Sovereign.\nIt carries with it many of the\ncharacteristics demanded by the\nSaanlch fruit men. A variety to\nsuit the Saanlch growers must be\nmade to order. It must resist\ndrought;   It   must   yield   well;   the\nHillcrest   Colliers    -\nLake of  the  Woods  \t\nMassey   Harris     _\t\nMontreal   Power    \t\nMontreal   Telegraph    -\nMontreal   Tramways   \t\nNational  Steel  Car   _\nOgilvie  Milling    _.\nOntario   Steel   Products\nOttawa L H __  power ...\nPenmana Ltd.   ..._ \t\nPower   Corporation   \t\nPrice Broa.    -...._\t\nQuebec   Power    \t\nShawlnlgan\nSherwln   WHllama   \t\nSo Canada Power \t\nSteel of Canada  _..__\nSt .Lawrence Flour Mills\nWabaaso   Cotton\t\nWestern Grocers  \t\nWinnipeg  Railway   \t\nWinnipeg  Railway   pfd   \u201e\nIt was estimated that 20 men\nand women suffered minor Injuries when the officers used their\nclubs under a barrage of ice and\nsnow-balls from the crowd outsld-a\nthe  building.\nA squad of 100 officers took part\nln   the   raid   on   the   hall.\nTHIEF CONVICTED,\nCRESTON, LODGED\nIN NELSON JAIL\nConvicted on a charge of theft\nat Creston, Alan Peterson was sentenced by Stipendiary Magistrate -E.\n\\ Mallandalne to pay a flue of |10\nor in default to serve a term of 14\ndays in Jail. He was escorted to\nNelson by Constable R. H. Hassard\nand lodged ln the provincial Jail\nhere.\nSWINDLE VICTIMS\nWANT MONEY BACK\nHAMILTON, Ont., Jan. 19\u2014 (CP)\nNews of the arrest of Jacob Miller\nalias George Wesley, has brought a\nflood of mall to the police chief of\nthis city requesting the return of\nmoney to victims of the swindling\nscheme  he  ls  alleged  to  have  pro-\nI fruit  must  be   firm   and  stand   up\nMiller   was   arrested   bv   tv,Hc\u00ab   _ wel1   ,n  storage;   the  fruit  must  be\n\u00bb\u00ab\u00bb\u00bb \u00bb_S^____HJf    .K  result Teerle. Vt  SSrthS^Wt.   of   aood   flavor,   and   devoid\nI.   O.   O.   t\u201e   meets   lonight   !\u25a0 JO.    _.\u00bb___ \u201e.._..-_*,\u2014 \u00bb\u201e #. ___. ___ iof  Monkev  Faots:   the  follaee  must\nMower urlli.\n.ncnts purporting to furnish  mater-;?1  \"0I*n  Faws;   the  foliage  must\n\u2122\u00b0\u2122 TAXI\n\u00ab& JC rh\u00ab   Brst  of   S'r.lc\n_^_   Careful,    rnnitaon,\nvlaa^ *mV Drivers\nNelaon. IranaCor Co., Lid.\nHcsorve Friday February 13, ror\nMrs. Graham's circle Valentine tea\nSt.   Saviour's   rectory. 13610!\nGrlzz*lle's and Kindvlaad lot\nflowers. Pot cinerarias, malacoldes,\nprimulas, daffodils etc., 50 cents\ntu  $1.00. (3818)\nCanadian Lesion Bowline club\nhoclat evening, whist and dance,\nWednesday.    January    21. Cards\n8 p.m. sharp Elks hall, admission\n35 censs. Refreshment..*, everybodv\nwelcome. (38211\nNKI.SOV WOMIiV UUERAL ASSOCIATION will meet ln the Can\nadlan LentOn rooms at 8 o'clock\ntonlffht. Election of o:fteer\u00bb. Every\nmembers   reauested   to   attend.\n(3622)\nBIBNS'    ANMVEB.SAEY\nSupper. Concert anda Denoe. Fab'c\nHall. January 23rd. Tlcieta |l.u0\neach. Umlted numoer To be had\nfrom Ledlnaham's Store or A. Wallach. (2802)\nKOOTENAY   MSMCAj,   FESTIVAL\nSyllabus   now  available  ln  Nelson\non application to Mrs. W. Kettlewell.\nsecretary, and at th. following\nstores: Mason and Risen, Helntz-\nman Co.. Kootenav Music Houac.\nNelson Flower Shoppe   Ollker's Ltd.,\njals and patterns to women for a\ndeposit of $6. The women were\nto complete the work and the finished article sold for them\nprofit. Police Investigation disclosed\nthere waa uo material In Miller's\npossession\ni'.         mg   and   free from   disease\nThL.-   characters   are to   be   found\nln  great  measure  ln the  New  Victoria.\nUnemployed in\nVancouver Stage\nAnother Parade\nVANCOUVER, B. C. Jan. 19.\u2014\nVancouver's upnemployed paraded\nagain today. Attempts by leaders to\nInterview the city council were\nthwarted when the city fathers\nruled that they would receive any\nrepresentations that the jobless have\nto present, at ;e next meeting Of\nthe civic  finance committee.\nThe nun gathered at Powell street\ngrounds and later marched to\nGamble street grounds where addresses were delivered by leader?.\nStrong police detachments patrollea\nthe streets from Powell to Cantbic\nstreets.\nRed   Deer  creamery  made   260,000\nDAIRY'   INDUSTRY\nINCREASES QUALITY\nHALIFAX, N. S., Jan. 19-^An in\ncre.se ln quality during 1930 in\npractically all branches of the dairy\nIndustry in Nova Scotia, with\nUllght decrease In value, are reported\nby Hon. O. P. Goucher, minister of\nagriculture. Butter production In\ncreased over 10 per cent to 4,724,\n118 pounds; and, Ice cream gained\n17 per cent to 2,071,981 quarts. The\nvalue of the Industry decreased\nshout  44000  to 42,983,934.\n$25,000   DAMAGE   PONE   BY   FIRE\nST. JOHN'S Nf.d.. Jan. 19\u2014Damage\nestimated at $28,000 wa. caused\ntoday by fire which destroyed a\nlarge barn ODnnected with the\nMount Cahsel Catholic orphanage.\nA large supply of grain and cattle\nfeed was destroyed. The main institution stands only a few yard,\nfrom tne barn, but was saved, the\nwind blowing ln the opposite dlrec-\n228 Mi\n222\n228.\n289\naia\n379\n230\na\n17\n143\n22Vi\n14.50\nas\n18%\n12%\n92\neo'A\n'4\n40\n327\nav.\nI\n139 y,\n52 %\n112\ne%\n79 !4\n\u00abH\n50\n18\n8%\n6414\n48\n184\n84\n258\n18\n98\n72 K\n51\n39\n41V4\n50\n27\n30\n39%\n18%\nas\n18\n14%\n8014\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL,    Jan.    19\u2014Eggs    ai\nbutter  lower;   cheese  higher.\nCheese, finest white 11 to 1114,\nCheese, finest colored   13.\nButter, No.  1 Quebec, 8114.\nEggs, storage extras 35.\nEggs,  storage   firsts  33.\nEggs,   storage   seconds   30.\nEggs,  fresh  special.  37.\nEggs, fresh extras 35.\nEggs,   fresh   extras   33.\nC.N.R,   TO   ASK   LOAN   BIDS\nNEW YORK, Jan. 19\u2014(CP)\u2014The\nCanadian National railways will call\nfor bids January 31, on a 170,000,000\nloan, lt was announced on Wall\nstreet   today.\nThe loan will be ln the form of\n414 per cent non-callable debentures\nf 25  years maturity.\nO-K\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Lauirhton. R. j\nOPTOMETRIST   and   OPTICIi\nSuite 305-308, Medical Arts\nSMYIHE'S CREO-\nFor   deep-seated   stubborn\nLow  of  flesh   loss   of   appetite\ngeneral debility.\nSmythe'8 Pharmai\nPrescription   specialist.\nPHONE  1\nShop  With   Us  Br  Mall\n44 TAXI AND,\nTRANSFEi\nlatAIL  A.M)   ltU.V>LA,SD\nIKEIUUT   AND   LXFIUSM\nbilled uie\nDally   \u201e  Trail,  leave.  10 A.\nTAXIS  DAY   AND   NIGHT\nPhone Ta:\n77\ni .eight      Sett\nDaily to Real\nand Trail, It J\nBUD      STEV|\nProp,\nTrail Phona\nWATCH FOR OUR\nWEEKEND   SPECIAL\nHORSWILL BROS.\nPHONE 235\nTwo Shows  Nightly\n7 and 9 p. m.\nMatinee at 2    p. m.\nNOW SHOWING!\nWITHOUT DOUBT ONE OF THE BEST\nPICTURES THAT HAS COME TO\nTHE ALL-TALKING STAGE\nGEORGE ARLISS\nIN\n-m \\u_w\nBj   JOHN   GALSWORTHY\nSUPPORTED   BY   AN    ALL-ENGLISH    CAST\nA   praiid   romance   of   an   gentleman  of  the  old  school,   who\ntu u slit   the   you lifer   generation\na  few  tricks I\nOeorge   Arllss   and   John   Gal\nworthy!   The   finest   actor\nthe   most  celebrated   playwright!\ncombine to  create a  screen\nmasterpiece.\nI\nI\nI\nl\nI\nL\nWE KNOW WE'RE SAFE IN RECOMMENDING I\nTHIS WONDERFUL PICTURE TO YOU AS ONE OF\nTHE   FINEST  SCREEN   ENTERTAINMENTS   WE\nHAVE EVER OFFERED OUR PATRONS.\nCOMEDY\nOUR   GANG   III   \"SCHOOL'S   OUT\"\nContinuous  laurhs  from  beclnnlnt;  to end.\nPHTOKIAI^-A   decidedly   entertalnlin   reel.\nNEXT ATTRACTION\nGEORGE  O'BRIEN\nin   Zane   Grey's  great  outdoor  romance\u2014\n\"I.AST   OP  THE   DUANE8\"\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_1931_01_20","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0404060","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"}]}}