{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0404113":{"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":"1931-01-26","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404113\/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":" \\\\\u00a3\nLockart Thinks China Is Good\n' Field for Trade\n\u2014Pa_e Nine\nSmokeaters Beat Kimberiey in an\nExhibition Game\n\u2014Pa_e Seven\nVOL. 29.\nNELSON, B. C.    MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1931.\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNo.  288\nCANADIAN SHIP IS SHELLED\nBullets Unexplained\nOrders the Release\nLord Irwin Says\nBanned Committee\nIs  Lawful   Again\nIs Expected That the Nationalist Leader Will Be Un-\n^^B    conditionally Free Man This Evening;\nViceroy lrwin Has Reasons\n's    >\nUt\n(a\nAahatma Qandhi\nGANDHI IS SHOCKED QUT OF\nCOOLNESS BY ANNOUNCEMENT\nStates' That \"He Had Not Expected Such Generosity From the British;\" Followers\nAre Already Congregating\nNEW DELHI, India, Jan. to. AP)\u2014The uncondition-\n. al release from prison ol Mahajma Gandhi  and  other\nij-jnembers of the Nationalist congress working committee\n| today by the viceroy, .Lord Irwin.\nAlthough n0 time was set\n1 in the release  order,  it is\nj expected to take tJffect by\ntomorrow evening.     Gandhi,\n| leader   of   the   Nationalist\n| movement,, has been in jail\n1 at Poona since May 5.\nThe viceroy also issued an\n! order establishing the law-\ni fulness of the congress working committee.\nIn his statement, the viceroy said.\n\"In order to provide an\nopportunity for consideration\nof  the   statement   made  by\ni Prime Minister Ramsay MacDonald on January 19, my\ngovernment, in consultation\nwith the local government,\nhas   thought   it   right  that\nI members of the congress\nworking committee of the all-\nIndia congress should enjoy full liberty of discussion between themselves and with those wno have acted as members of the committee since January 1, 1930.\n\"In accordance with this decision and with this ob-\n[ject, and in order that there may be no legal bar to any\nr meeting which they may wish to hold, the notifications\nI declaring the committee to be an  unlawful  association\nj under the Criminal Law amendment act will be withdrawn\nby all local governments and\n(action will be taken for the\nj release of Gandhi and others\nj who are members of the com-\n\\ rnlttee or who have acted as such\n\\ since   January    1,    1930.\n\"My government will Impose no\n^conditions on those released be-\n[ cause we feel that the best hope\n[' of   restoration   of   peaceful   condl-\nMAHATMA    C1A.N0H1\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nOFFICIALS TRY\nFIND CAUSE OF\nRAILWAY WRECK\nCHATANOOOA, Term., Jan. 25.\u2014\nOfficials and engineers today surveyed the wTeoltare-eitrewn loadbed\nof the Southern railway near Helen-\nwood, Tenn., in s_ effort to determine the cause or a derailment yesterday of the Florida-bound Swanee\nspecial, whloh resulted in the death\nof five persons and injury to moro\nthan 20 others. All the Injured\nwere reported recovering. Some had\nleft   hospitals.\nThe wreck occurred shortly after\nnoon on a curve ln a mountain\npass while the train was travelling\nat a speed later described by passengers as high. They said they\nbelieved tl*e engineer was trying to\nmake up time, but Southern officials today declined to comment\non the cause of the accident.\nINDIAN PARLEY\nRESULTS TO BE   .\nDEBATED TODAY\nLONDON, Jen. 2o.\u2014<C. P. Cable)\n* \u2014House of commons will debate\ntlie result of t lw Indian row ncl-\ntable conference tomorrow. Rt. Hon.\nWinston Churchill, who criticized\nthe conference during -Its session,\nand Sir Samuel Howe are expected\nto  ho  the   CVmservatlve   speakers.\nTli debate will be opened by a\nbrief statement uy Prime Minister\nRamsay  MacDonald.\nWOULD PROTECT\nAMERICAN GOODS\nWASHINGTON, D. C., Jan, 26.\u2014\nCAP)\u2014Appointment of a committee\nof 25 to urge Secretary Mellon to\ntake steps for protection of American products against Russian convict-made goods was authorized today at a meeting of house members\nfrom lumber states.\nChairman Pish, of the Communtat\ncommittee, was directed to name\nthe committee. The meeting wte\nsttended by about 15 members of\nfhe house and Senator Oouls, Republican, Maine.\nFORMATION NEW\nPARTY LAUNCHED,\nNORFOLUNGLAND\n'Agricultural\"    Party    Has\nFive Main Planks in\nPlatform\nPolice and transportation investigators of Toronto have been unable\nto locate the party who fired the\nrifle bullets that shattered the vestibule of a College street car as\nit pulled up at St. Oeorge street\nrecently. The shots Just missed\nMotorman Burns' head. The police\nhave been unable to determine\nwhence the bullets came, except\nthat a northerly direction is indicated, as the glass ln the right-\nhand vestibule window was shat-'\ntered as shown ln above photograph.\nMAY HAVE SHOT\nMAN IN MISTAKE\nFOR MOOSE, EAST\nLaborer Gives Self Up Soon\nAfter Body of Dead Man\nIs Found\nNORWICH, England. Jan. 26\u2014(O\nP cable)\u2014A new party\u2014the so-called\nAgricultural party\u2014was launched at\na meeting of Norfolk county farmers\nhere last night. Five main planks\nwere laid down as the party platform and this platform will be submitted for endorsation to all the\nNorfolk members of parliament and\nto   prospective   candidates.\nThe platform follows\u2014(1). Imposition of taxes on foreign agricultural produce which competes with the\nhome-grown article; (2). Guaranteed\nmarket and guaranteed price for\nwheat based on the cost of production on the average British farm;\n(3). Duty on all imported foreign\nbarley to be used for malting and\ndistilling, this duty to be without\nreservation; (.). Olving of preference\nto home product foodstuffs ln army,\nnavy and air force contracts; (6).\nDominions should get benefit of a\nmarket for the supplies of foodstuffs\nneeded \"over and above the maximum home production,'\" ,\nROYAL ROMANCE\nRUMORED THROUGH\nKINGDOM, SWEDEN\nSTOCKHOLM. Jan. 25. (AP)\u2014Reports of a royal romance,, involving\na grandson of King Oustav. and\nthe daughter of a prominent \u2022 Industrialist, are intriguing sll Sweden.\nTh. newspaper Dagblad said today that announcement was imminent of the engagement of Prince\nLenhart, 21 -year-old son of Prince\nWilliam, second son of the king, to\nMademoiselle Karln Nlsswandt, the\ndaughter of a prominent Stockholm\nIndustrialist, whos_ family is of\nDutch  origin.\nCourt circles emphatically deny\nthe report. It is pointed out that\nsuch a marriage would entail renouncement by the prince of his\nright  to  succession  to  the  throne.\nThe newspaper Mya Degllgt Ale\u00ab-\nhanda, however, later published an\ninterview with the prince In which\nhe ssld he had not intended to\nmake the engagement known until\nsummer.\nNIPAWIN. Sask., Jan, 26.-Shot\nthrough tbe back, Just about level\nwith the shoulder blades, the body\nof Louis Thompson was found in\nthe dense woods lining a primitive\ntrail 23 miles northeast of here\n*arly yesterday fternoon by A. E.\nClancy and a companion. Edwin\nCdahl, laborer on the farm of Tim\nRoberts, Is held by the R.C.M.P.\non ii technical charge pending further   Investigation.\nWhile the members of the local\nR.C.M.P., with the coroner, were on\ntheir way to the scene of the tragedy, Udahl walked into the police\nheadquarters and gave hlmsel f up,\nsaying, It ls alleged, that \"he had\nshot a man In mistake for a moose.\"\nAn Inquest has been called by\nCoroner Dr. S. M. Scott, the date\nfor which will be determined following the orders of Attorney-General M, A- Mcpherson, who had\nbeen communicated  with  by police.\nLittle Is known of either the dead\nman or of Udahl in this district.\nUdahl, lt ls known, was employed\nas a laborer on the farm of Tim\nRoberts, and claims that he was\nhunting big game at the time of\nthe   tragedy.\nSAFETY MEASURES\nTO BE ENFORCED\nIN ALL QUARRIES\nVICTORIA, B. C, Jan. 2t.\u2014Safety\nregulations for the benefit of 2000\nworkers, employed in quarries and\nother excavations other than coal\nand metal mines in British Columbia, have been put Into effect this\nweek ln order-ln-councll, on the\nrecommendation of Hon. W. A. McKenzle, minister of mines.\nThese regulation., call for certificates of competency on the part\nof ell .those handling blasting materials   in   surface   workings.\nThey give power to Inspectors to\ninsist on the use of water sprays\nIn connection with underground\ndrilling, and other measures to\nreduce  dust   In  surface   operations.\nThe force the fencing of dangerous machinery and Bpprouctws to\npits; also safety ropes for steep\nworkings, and provisions for care\nin certain workings where falls of\nrock or other material may endanger\nlife. Inspectors of the department\nof mines hav? insisted on most of\nthese practices since the Inception\nof the Quarries act of  1920.\nLITTLE TOT IS\nFOUND DROWNED\nIN DITCH, COAST\nNEW WESTMINSTER, B. C, Jan.\n26.\u2014Missing ftom the hiyme of his\ngrandfather since Saturday morning,\nthree-year-old Clifford Johnson was\nfound drowned ln foui feet of\nwater in a roadside ditch in South\nWestminster this afternoon. A tricycle near the road attracted polloe\nto tho spot where the body was\nlocated. It ls thought the boy had\nattempted to walk across a plank\nover the ditch to look at a horse\nIn a nearby pasture, snd had fallen,\ninto the water.\nSPEEDER RUNS\nKIDDIE DOWN\nNEAR WINLAW\nEight-Year-Old Mike Fo\nminoff Gets Broken\nLeg, Dragged\nWAS ON SLEIGH\nWHEN STRUCK\nTopography   Responsible\nfor the Accident, Say\nPolice\nCrashing Into a gasoline\nspeeder as his sled\" was crossing the track at r railway\ncrossing 1!_ miles north of\nWlnlaw. HttV Mike Fomlnoff.\n8-year-old Doukhobor kiddle, was\nrun over by the speeder, and\ndragged about 12 feet, with a\nbroken right leg, Saturday at\nabout  1:30 p.  tn.\nAt the point where the accident occurred, the road, which\nIs about a 1 per cent grade.\nW obscured from view of the\ntrack by four-foot bank, and\nneither the driver of the speeder. Section man Jotin strand of\nWlnlaw, nor the child saw each\nother until but a few yards\nseparated them. The little fellow endeavored to swerve his\nsled    to    cross    ahead    of    the\n\u25a0peeder,  but  Just     ^^^^^^^^\ngetting under It. On the speeder, which was coming from  up\nthe valley, was aJso the seetlon-\nman'fs   brother.   Hugh   Strand,\nDR.   F.   M.  AULD   CALLED\nThe child was taken to the home\nof his parents. Mr. and Mrs. Larry\nPomlnoff of Wtnlaw, and was there\ntreated later by Dr. F. M. Auld of\nNelson for slight head bruises and\nscratches, the boy having bumped\na wheel  In the collision.\nA truck was sent to Brilliant to\nget the official bonesetter of the\nChristian Community of Universal\nBrotherhood, to set th. broken leg,\nthe fracture being between the knee\nand   the  thigh.\nProvincial Constables R. H. Mc-\nIntoah and L. Smith of Kelson drove\nout to Inquire into the accident,\nand came to the conclusion that no\none was to blame for lt. The speeder\nwaa proceeding at 15 miles an hour,\naccording  to  Sectlonman  Strand,\nCOMMUNISTS ARE\nBROKEN UP BY\nPOLICE, COAST\nVANCOUVER, B. C. Jan. 25.\u2014Organized disturbances by communist\nagitators met a quick quietus at the\nhands of city police early Saturday\nafternoon tn Victory square, around\nthe cenotaph, and when the situation was finally brought under control five men were under arrest\nand a crowd estimated at several\nthousand was scattered In all directions . Included in those placed\nunder arrest was Alan Oampbell,\nalias MdEwan, who was out on\nball awaiting trial on a previous\ncharge of disturbing the peace.\nFire Razes Store\nValued at $30,000\nSTRASBOURG, Sask., Jan. 28.\u2014\nFire of undetermined origin, breaking out In the basemen, of the\nPioneer Store company's building\nhere before 2 o'clock this morning,\ncompletely razed the one-storey\nstruoture and caused a loss of\nabout (45,000. Slock In the store\nvalued at $30,000 was only partly\ncovered by insurance. The building was fully covered \"by insurance.\nBRITISH AVIATRIX\nPhotograph above shows Mrs. Victor Bruce, note*' cffltiah avtatrlx,\nwho flew from London to Japan, us she arrived ait Loe Angeles from\nSeattle in her monoplane. Bluebird. Following a visit to New York,\nMm.   Bruce   plans   a   trip   to   South   America.\nH1NCHL1FFE MAKES MOST DRASTIC\nEDUCATION REFORM UNDERTAKEN IN\nPROVINCE DURING RECENT YEARS\nYoung Skipper of\nRum-Runner Killed\nby Bursting Shell\nUnited States Coastguard Cutter Comes Upon Josephine K. Unloading Cargo of Liquor.\nEntrance New York Harbor\nQUESTION IS WHETHER OR NOT\nSHIP INSIDE 12-MILE LIMIT\nLimits   Attendance   at   Two\nProvincial Normals to\n360 Students\nTEACHING STANDARD\nWILL RAISE, RESULT\nAccommmodation   for   Only\nBest  Students Will Be\nBasis System\nVWTOIUV Jan, tlV-British\nColumbia's system of training\nmen and women for tbe teaching profession wa* overhauled\nfrom top to bottom by the gov-\nernment Saturday In the moat\ndrastic education reform undertaken In tbe province In recent\ntimes.\nIn effect, nrw regulations announced by Hon. Joshua Hlnrti-\nllffe, minister af education,\nlimited the attendance at the\ntwo provincial normal tchools\nto 360 students and at tlte\nsame time make relative academic standing and test of admission. That is, the 220 students admitted to the \\ an-\neouver normal school and the\n120 admitted to the Victoria\nschool will be chosen from\namong those with the highest\nsohoolasttc attainments. Students with tlie least academic\nqualifications will have the least\nchance of admission. In this way\nthe standard of teaching wtU be\nprogressively rained through the\nyears.\nMIST   BR   OF   GOOD\nmoral i mm\nMr.    Hinchllffe    announced    that\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nHOLDUP MAN IS\nREGULAR CALLER\nAT COAST STORE\nGANOES, Jan. 28.\u2014captain McGregor Macintosh of Salt Springs\nIsland, Conservative, was elected by\nacclamation Saturday to the provincial legislature as representative\nof \"the Islands\" ln the byelectlon\nrendered necessary by ths resignation of t\u00bbl, c. W. Peck, V. 0. now\na member of the regional pensions\nappeal   board.\nWINNIPEG BUSINESS BLOCK GUTTED\nBY FIRE TO THE EXTENT OF $500,000\nFiremen Battle Blaze, Freezing Weather; Origin Is\nUnknown\nWINNIPBO, Jan. 25\u2014(CP>\u2014In the\nheart of Winnipeg's downtown business section, fire early this morning\nraged for close 'to five hours, destroying the Avenue block, a six-\nstory office structure, and causing\ndamage estimated at about 1600,000.\nOrigin of the fire  is unknown.\nFiremen batUed the blase tn\nfreezing weather. Companies from\nall sections of the city answered\nthe early-morning call and tolled\ntill long after daybreak before the\nflames were dead. It was believed\nthe fire broke out ln Allan's shoe\nstore about four o'clock.\nFlames shot up the elevator shaft,\ngutting the top three floors, devoted\nto offices. Fire fighters were successful In checking the blaze from\nbelow and damage on the second\nand tt.'\/d floors wag confined to\nthat  caused   by   water   and   smoke.\nStocks in the retail stores in the\nlower Portage Avenue building were\ncompletely wiped out- Cause of\nthe fire had not been determined\ntonight.\nHeaviest individual loss wae to\nStiles and Humphries, retail men's\nclothiers. Damage to stock ln the\nclothing store., on the ground floor\nof the wrecked block, was estimated at $75,000 Stock totally\ndamaged, owners of Richardson and\nBishop, stationers, figured their loss\nat 150,000. The Allan shoe store\nwas gutted and loan wss noted at\n\u202236.000. '\nIn tbe ne*t building to the Avenue\nblock, Ohevrlers' clothing store waa\ndamaged tjy smoke and water to\nthe extent of 930,000. Owners of\nthe Boston lunch were unable to\nTive and estimate of damage to\ntheir  reetaudan*.\nWater tonight stood several feet\ndeep ln the basement of Dingwall's\n'ewellery store and damage to stook\nwas expected to amount to several\nthousand  dollars.\nVANCOCVKR, B. C. Jan. 25.\n\u2014There Is no better sdverttse-\nment than a satisfied customer,\nsays the Business A\/re, and yesterday morning M. Ihtvidoff of\ntne Robson Clothing Exchange.\nItohstvn street, learned, and tery\nregretfully, that this commer-\nd.il adage apparently applies to\ngunmen.\nTwo week- ago Mr. Davldoff's\n\u25a0tore was entered hy a holdup\nman, who after changing Into\na stilt, which he wished to\n'purchase,\" helped himself to\nMr.   Havidoff's  cash.\nSaturday the same gunman\nreturned. He was recognized by\nMr. Davtdoff. This time he\nbrought a companion. The store\nowner was threatened with a\nrevolver and forced to surrender  hts  money,  VH.'.o\nLEAGUE NATIONS\nLAYS DOWN LAW\nCondemns Activities of Polish  Patriotic Organizations; Must Cease\nGENEVA, Jan. ae (AP)\u2014Council\nof the League of Nations topeped off\na week: of laborious sessions last\nnight by composing the inflammatory German-Polish minority question with a settlement hailed ln\nGeneva as one of the most Important\ndecisions of the League In recent\nyears- *\nIn effect the council unanimously condemned the activities of\npatriotic organizations in Poland\nwhloh were charged with violent acts\nagainst the German minority and\nsummoned the Polish government\nto break off all connections with\nthese   bodies.\nFurther, the Warsaw government\nwas asked to report to the council\nbefore its session ne*t May what\nmeasure had been taken to execute\nthe League's mandate.\nIn addition to Its action on the\nminorities question, the council issued a call for a world disarmament conference to begin February\n2, 1932. Genera was named as the\nsite for the parley, providing arrangements can be made in advance\"\nfor the proper housing and enter-\n*\"ilnment of the hundreds of delegates, observers an ti newspapermen\nwho will attend.\nRENA_\\N~SEARCH\nMAY BE GIVEN UP\nWas to Have Been the Last Trip of Caot. William\nP. Cluett as Skipper of _ Rum-runner:\nInvestigation Ig Held\nNEW YORK, Jan. 25\u2014(By the Canadian Press)\u2014\nCaptain William P. Cluett of the Canadian Josephine\nK. was killed, three vessels were captured. 19 men\nheld, and some 4000 cases of liquor with an estimated\nvalue of from $250,000 to $300,000 were confiscated\nby officers of the United States coastguard cutter 145\nafter an exciting chase late Saturday night off Am.\nbrose Light at the entrance to New York Harbor.\nCaptain Cluett, whose home was in Lunenburg, NA,\nand whose vessel is registered out of Digby, N. 8.,\ndied in Marine hospital, Staten Island, several hours\nafter a one-pound shell from the coastguard boat had\nshattered the schooner's pilot house as the Josephine\nK. attempted to escape. The firing upon the Canadian\nvessel and the subsquent seizures occurred within\nthe twelve mile limit, the coastguard reported about\n__ . f.\n4m miles Mvutbeu tor smbma.\nMshWiin and 10 mlsM oil Ihe\nheorh   at   Sand.,   Hook.\nThe two boat, captured akma\nwith the Josephine K were the\nem-bare m-ow ftrooklm. Into\nwhich the Hqnor waa balltf\nloaded from the schooner, and\nthe tux Dauntless No. a. uaed\ni'. tow the scow. A speed boat,\nalso reported to nave hewn unloading olid svhlih apparent!)\nmaintained contact between th.\n\u2022.chooner and the shore, escaped\nIn the darkness.\nTRADES DISPUTES\nBILL MAY PROVE\nDOWNFALL, LABOR;\nLONDON, Jan. 25 (C P cable)\n\u2014Pacing perhaps the |reat_i\u00abt\ncrisis in Its career, the Labor\ngovernment of ('teat Britain\nenters a week which may he\ncrowded with grave events. On\nWednesday night, the house of\ncommons will vote on tlie trade*,\ndisputes hill, ;i hill nf evtremely\ncontroversial nature, ahlch rf-\n\u2022trtetl ths powers of unions on\nstrike, and which Ihe govern.\nment seeks to modify. The tr-\nsiilt of the vote *>,, this bill\nla one which may set\" the government tmerge victorious, or\nwhich may see it defeated and\ndissolved.\nWASHINGTON\".    D.   C.   Jen.   25.\n(By Ken Clark. Canadian prv\nwriter)\u2014In    the    case    of    Cap'j i\nWilliam   Cluett   of   the   Joseph in\nmotor    ship    out    of    Digby,    Nsfi\nScotia,   killed   bv   gunfire   from   the\ncoast   guard    patrol    boat    14.1    oH\nAmbroee   light,   New   York,   no   rt\"\nporta    from    the    ooaet    guard    to\nheadquarteu-s r_ave been received here\nand  no complaint  to tbe   Canadian\n(Continued   on   Pag..   Two)\nGUNMEN HOLD UP\nBANK AND ESCAPE IMUD-SLIDES ON\nWITH $4000 CASH; GREAT NORTHERN\nBranch of \\Veybum Hank ;i\\ DfcLAY  GAS-CAR\nCoderre Pillaged by Ua-\nma.sked   Pair\nPRINCE RUPERT. B. C. Jan, 35.\n\u2014Pilot Anacel Eckmann, engaged in\nthe search for the lo\u00bbt Renehan\nplane, was forced to remain here\ntoday, his return to Ketchikan-.\nAlaska, being prevented by continued stormy weather. The search for\nthe plane has now reached a point\nwhere It Is believed the quest will\nsoon be abandoned. Despite intensive hunt over sea and along shores\nsouth and north at Ketchikan, not\na single clue of Importance following discovery of wheels of the\nplsne and a fragment of, the funel-\nage.  has  developed.\nMOOSE JAW. Bunk,  .Un.   38    ft F)\nTwo airplanes are humming over\nthe countryside and inrn of the\nRoyal Canadian Mounted Police are\n\u00bb arching the roads and trails about\nCoderre, Sask., for two bauk bandits\nwho held up and robbed the Weyburn Security Bank Saturday of\n$4000, Coderre. a little town 86\nmiles southwest of Moose Jww. was\nstartled by its first bank robbery,\nend posses of citizens wore on the\ntrail  of the bandits.\nEarly Saturday the unmasked men\nsauntered casually Into the bank,\nthreatened the manager with guru,\nsecurely bound and gagged him,\nthen tossed the helpless official into the vault. The cashier was in\nthe cellar attending to the furnace.\nwhen the small-town bank robbers\nentered, .but when lie appeared the\nsame trentmeni was meted out,\nand he was thrown into the vault\nbeside the manager,\nLEAVH   |\\   CAM\nSnatching stacks of bills from\ntht- vault and i small amount of\nmoney from the teller's till, the\nbandltfi skipped through the front\ndoor, and, according to oiiice. swept,\nout of town in i \u25a0'-**'H auto, A\ngood description of I he gunmen\nwas given police by the hank officials, who freed I hemselves from\ntheir bonds shortly after the heddup\nAll roads leading from the town\nare covered by men afoot, while\noverhead soar two planes, requisitioned hy the Rt'MP., their pilots\nscanning the terrain for the robbers.\nMAY SAY, THANKS\nFOR THF. BUGGY\nRIDE,\" BERMUDA\nHAMILTON, Bermuda. Jan. 2&.-~\n(APi\u2014Tho Prince of Wales and hi*\nbrother. Prince Oeorge, will be\ntaken for a buggy ride _ one of\ntoe principal items of their entertainment when they arrive here\nJanuay   37.\nDespite the privilege.** or royalty,\nthey will not violate the tradition\nthat keeps the Bermudas, or \"eum-\nmer Isles,\" its the old travellers\nknew them, free from the encroachment   of   the   automobile.\nC. P.  R.  TRAFFIC   1 \\RMM-   DOWN\nMONTREAL, Jan. 25 (CP.\u2014Traffic\nearnings of the Canadian Pacific\nrailway for the seven-day period\nending January 31 were \u00bb2.701.000 as\ncompared with \u00bb3.179.000 in the\ncorresponding     period     in     1930,\ni decrease\" at M\"\u00ab non.\nLargest Juat Thin Side\nBoundary; Car Is\nFour Hours I\nA big mud slide _h*i   c    <\nGreat Northern  tarck   [Of .>. _J\nof   100   feet   it   mUepoat   149\nmiles Uils side  of the international\nboundary,   wm   the  principal   QMtoi\nin the Great  Northern gaa-car that\nng a\u00abW between South Nelaon and\nMarcus,   Wash,   being   four   and   a\nh;ilf   hours   !at*   In   completing   Its\nrun to Nelson Saturday night.\nIn c-lr-anng the line of the bl_\nslide, which In places was four feet\ndeep on the road bed, tree trui_s\na foot IB d 11 me ter were chopped\nthrough by the crew, and heavy\npookl   shifted\nJvurt nfter this slide was clearec.\nanother came down, carrying trees\nand rocks, but stopped abort of tht\ntracks.\nIn addition o the big elide, there\nwere three small cmes on ttie track\nbolow Columbia Oardene, but these\nwere cleared with comparaUv. eae*\nThese mud slides, tne result of\nthe thaw and rains, are extraordinarily early, aa they usually do not\noccur until the break-up of winter.\nLAVAfLllLYTO\nFORM GOVERNMENT\nFRENCH REPUBLIC\nPARIS. Jan _8 'AP' .^rmatin\nor a cabinet bv Pierre Lave youth\nful Independent ~Soc.nl lat senaun\nappeared aseured tonight when tbi\nHsdtcal 3oclals-Ht party, contrail im;\n135 votes In the chamber of deputies,    voted    Lft_    s.up,virr\nThe decisirm of the party, anions\nwhose leaders are TTrrnot. IWadiei\nand Cnautemps, enme after a three-\nhour   caucus.\nThe Laval cabinet. !t Is expected\nwill be composed of many element^\nof the former iSteeg and Tardieu\noabincta, dropping tlie Socialt*t support and seeking a ma)ority in Uie\ncenter and moderate right elements.\nTardMi is expected to be offered a\nportfolio.\nThe cconomi.: crtstl and the unemployment quohtlou seem to dominate the present efforts of I*val to\ncreate a cabinet. Called upon to\nsucceed the Steeg government, which\nwent down on a proposed increase\nin the price of wheat, with lta\nthreatened high coat of bread. Laval is bringing aU Mj efforts to\nthie  *'\u25a0>>\u25a0\n Page Two\nTHE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS       MONDAY, JJWUARY 26, 1981.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B.C. Hotels\ngV3 \/VWV^WWVWV^\n\u25a0r\nNELSON, B. C.\nJ%e beet hotel and dining accommodation\nin the city.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\na  Root   J.  J.  Wbod.\nA. J*. McNaughton, H. J Buyann,\nll A l^owler. F A Sherrtn, N Thomt-\nsoon, Mrs A. Zen, E. P. McDermld.\n_. Barttnlotoaw. H. 6. UoLeod. J\nDunselth, A P MoLean, P H. ww, .\nO. A. Evans, A. J. Hutohlnson, J.\nR. AnoUa, R L. MOLssn, vanoouver:\nJ. H. Wlnton A. B. Kay, Mrs. F E\nDootoertll, Tr*n. Mrs D j Barclay,\ni J. A. Gibson. Mlse Cant,\nT Hurst, Nelson; W. B. Hanba*..\nSilverton; V. M. Roberts. Mr. and\nMrs Dufour, J s Dunlop, A J. Ironside. MIbr Phyllis Wallace, T. A\nWallace, O. 8. Mcintosh, C:anbro\u00a9k;\nJ. A. Donfour Tye; W. O. Cosman,\nR. C Crawford, A Anderson, A\nBrough. Q H. Monkman, T. Bain.\nW Catharine Winnipeg: A Sutherland Nelson; W. Wodsouf, Souln\nBlocan;    J-   A,   MltchHl,   Toronto.\nWhere the Guest Is King\nThe Savoy\nNEsSOITS IfRWXST  AJTO FINEST HOTEL,\nMANY  ROOMS  WITH  PJUVATB\nBATHS OR pHOWERS\nJ. A. KERB, Prop.\nCRANBROOK. AIR MINDED BOARD\nOF TRADE WORKING FOR AIR MAIL\nPORT NOW THAT HAVE THE HANGAR\n3A.VOY\u2014C. Penr.  M. J. Bedford, \\ Sanca.   1.   J  McLennan.   Vancouvei;\nWinnipeg; B. Lenqott, Birder; N.\nJBerthelMC, C. H. Martin, W. O.\nRose, Oelgvr; 1\u00bb. O Ototvl, Mllu.\nWis.; Mr*. J. Bndlsr Crow's Vest;\nA.   J.   K*Ui,   John   OQradj,   W.   L.\n8 F. Oraneer, Spokane; J. D. McDonald, R. McLean A. Rainier.\nCora Linn; O. E. sacrum. Procter;\nA Ounswater. New Westminster;\nMr. and Mrs. .1. Parrel, city.\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapolnte, Prop.\nHot snd rold water In every room\nStrain bested\nQUEENS\u2014T. OotUtwton. Jarten,\nM. Irving, Pruifcfal*: L. MxjLeiud,\n(.algarv: O Olson. H. D. Eanson.\nntr. R. Eauitlnl, L. Nafua. F Poe-\nloot. P Bojorew K. Murray. Trail.\nJ,. BOmith, P. Ard%, P. Lawerto,\np H. Robanson, O. O Sawyer, Ferine; J M Rmai Winnipeg; Mr\nand Mrs. J Alttan. South Blocan;\nMr and Mrs. d\u00bb Oroot, J. Labbe,\nM. de Oroot, J. tie Oroot, Vancouver.\nMadden Hotel\nD.   A.   MfDONALD\nSteam   Heated   Rooms   by   the\nDay,    Week    or    Month\nBvery consideration shown\nto   guests.\nCor. Baker and Ward fltreets\nNelson\nNew Qrand\nHotel\nT. L. KAPAK, Prop.\nWeekly  or   monthly   rates\nHot snd Cold water In all rooms\nrbone cos     P. O. BOX 1061\nNEW GRAND\u2014T. Knowlson, 6.\nZwolsi, J, Dsmytrvwn, Procter; H.\nW. Mclnnes, A. W McDonald. B.\nKenaall. C. F. Keodlc*. H. Jordan,\nJ Hanson C. Potter, B Brown, L.\nHastard T Wheatley B. Hornquloi,\nW. Rlbley, Mr. and Mrs. M. Johnson, J. Cooper rran; J. Crafton,\nE Langllle, Rossland; S Terzlan.\n,T Hebert. Nelson, a sisley, Drewery;\nLouise   On   Kaslo.\nSeek Cooperation of Klmberley; Want Customs\nHouse\nCRANBRQ0K,   B.   C  Jan.   36\u2014At\nthe regular meeting 0f the hoard ot\ntrade   Thursday   evening   Dr.   Largs\nreported   that   he   and   H.   A.   McKowan,   at]   a  special   finance  committee on work lor the recent airport  bylaw,   had  collected  the  sum\nof |92. to defray expenses of advertising and working for the measure.\nTha secretary  was directed to write\na   letter  of   thanks   to   Mr.  Blaine,\nmanager of the theater for running\nan  advertisement for the  bylaw on\nthe screen during the campaign*\nConsiderable   discussion   arose\nas  to  what   might  be  done  toward  secnrlnx a port of call at\n(Yanbrook   on   the   coming   air\nmall route, which will pass over\nthe city.  The  secretary was Instructed   to   write   to   Klmberley\nto   solicit   thrlr   support,   pointing out  to them  the advantage\nof having a port of call on the\nair i-oute so close to their city.\nOn motion of Rev. J. (\\ McLean-\nBell   and   I)-   S.   Santo   a   committee waa appointed, lo oonalat\nof   President   F.   II.  5Wj.li,   and\nW.   II.   Wll\u00abon,   with   power   to1\nadd to their numbers, In Interview fi. O. Montgomery, general\nmanager    of    the    Consolidated\nMining   and    smelting   < <>.    at\nKlmberley, to secure hia cooperation  and   support.\nOn motion  of  W. H. Wilson  snd\nW.  S.  Santo  the  secretary  was  Instructed   to   write   to   Hon.   H.   H.\nStevens, minister of trade and com.\nmerce,  and io  Senator J. H.  King,\nadvising  them  of Crsnbrook's needs\nat  the  present  time, and  soliciting\ntheir support  in  having a  customs\nclearing  house established at Oranbrook, for tlie clearing of American\nair-waft  coming   Into  the city.\nTt was decided to suggest to the\ndty oouncil, that they endeavor to\nobtain a government gran t toward\nthe airport, pointing out that other\ncities had already secured such aid.\nOn motion of W. H. Wilson arid\nDr. lArge the secretary was instructed to write to T. L. Comba\nof Calgary asking him to route the\nAll Canadian air tour, an -sir circus\nconsisting of planes doing stunt\nflying in various towns of the Do<\nminion, through Cranbrook during\nthe   coming   summer.\nThs matter of securing an\nforest patrol for the district was\nleft ln the hands of P. M. Mac\nPherson, the local member, to bring\nuo at the coming session of the\npjevlnclal house. The East Kootenay\nAir Transport company of thla city\nwill of course bid on the contract\nif one ia secured for the district\nIt was decided to request the city\noouncil and the department of public works to have the extension ol\nVan Home street, to connect with\nths main highway somewhere be^\nyond the South Ward school, completed before the beginning of the\ntourist   aeason   this  summer.\nTbe secretary was instructed to\nwrite to M. A. Besle, ss a representative $f ths fire underwrltera.!\nasking htm to take up the matter of\nreduction of rates in the city as\npromised- This request Is to be\nmade owing to the improvement ln\nthe city fire protection system during the past year.\nA committee composed of P. H.\nDezall and K. A. McKowan waa appointed, in response to _ request\nfrom the city council, to act ln\nnonfunction with the council ln the\nmatter of the erection of a hangar\non the airport site, which wa\u00ab au.\nthoiised  by  the  reeent  bylaw.\nMATJETOf\u2014A. Strom, Taghum; IB\nRrlckson. R. HaJqulst, Beasley; A.\nKlerigrnbeTg.   S-jwkene\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n706 Vernon St. Phon*\nH.   Wssslck\nFifty Rooms of Solid Comfort\nHeadquarters for Loftier* and\nMiners.\nAlex   Wilson   ha*   been   merit   of\nthe viltago of Hastings for 43 years.\nTrail, B.C.\nBISHOP FALLON\nILL, ONTARIO\nLONDON, OnU. Jan. Sfc\u2014(OP)\u2014\nBishop M. P Fallon of ths dlooass\nof London, suffered an attack of\niknees early to_.y aud for soms\nhours his life wus despaired of by\nv>hy\u00bblqlans. Tonight, however, his\nstrength had returned ln great\nmeasure, anl be was declared to bs\nin no Immtu*nt danger, although\nbis condition ta regarded as very\nserious.\nSpringfield Has\nWin, New Haven\nNEW HATCH, Conn., Jan. 30.\u2014\nSpringfield Indians defeated Mvw\nHaven Eagles three to two hers tonight In ons 03 tne fastest games\not tba season.\nAMATEUR RADIO\nCLUB HEARS TALK\nON JK DUTIES\nEarl Swanson Tells Members\nof Radio Telegraph Communication\nLIQUOR BOARD\nINSISTS HIGH\nSTANDARD B.C.\nWill Exercise Care Granting\nBeer Parlor Licenses in\nInterior\nHINCHLIFFE SAYS\nTEACHERS TO BE\nHIGHER STANDARD\n(Continued Prom Page  One)\nmen and women anxious to enter\nthe teaching profession must first\npresent a certificate of good moral\ncharacter and pass a satisfactory\nm\u00abit_l examination. Applicants\nwho oan meet these requirements\nwill be enrolled in order of aca-\ndemlo standing in three main classes\nThe class which will have the\nfirst Chance to enter the normal\nsohools will be those who, by the\nend of July, obtsln full senior matriculation or full first year standing In arts ln a recognized Canadian or British university, of\nhigher   academic   standing.\nA second class includes all who\nobtain an average of at least 60\nper cent on ths normal school en-\ntrance examination... and, in addition\npass In ons or more subjects of\ntho senior matriculation examinations, or obtain three or more\nunits of credit toward the completion of first year standing in arts\nin a recognised Canadian or Brltls'.i\nuniversity.\nWILL BE  A  THIRD  CLAS8\nIf this class does not fill up the\ndesks tn Vie normal schools entrance win be open to a third class\nconsisting of all applicants with an\naverage of at least 60 per oent on\nthe normal entrance examinations\nand who, ln sddltlon, pass In one or\nmore subjects of the senior matriculation examinations or obtain three\nor more units of credit toward the\ncompletion of first year standing in\narts in a recognized Canadian or\nBritish    university.\nIf these three classes do not\nexhaust all the Accommodation, admission will be available to a fourth\nclass comprising all applicants who,\nby the end of July, pasa the normal\nentrance examinations ln the order\nof their standing in the examination,\nwith certain credits allowed lor\nspecified   work.\nThe new regulations will go into\neffect for the term commencing\nSeptember next and applications for\nadmission to normal schools must\nbe in the hands of the two school\nprincipals not later than August 21.\nAt the same time the minister announced a change ln the regulations\nwhich will smooth the path for\nreturned soldiers of the necessary\nacademic standing ln securing teach\nIng certlfloatea.\nA lecture On the requirements of\nan amateur radio operator were\ndescribed by Xarl Swanson in bis\nlecture entitled \"Radio Telegraph\nCommunication\", to a gathering of\nmembers of a recently organised\nAmateur Radio club, at tbe Koote\nnay   Music  House  Sunday evening.\nMr. Bwanson stated that to become an amateur was not as difficult as one thought and thst It was\nnot as expensive. He showed how\none could construct ones own station  at a very small  oost.\nThe theoretic functions of wireless\nand the functions of the world wide\nrganlzatlons were explained by Mr.\nBwanson.\nHe showed how that lt was not\nonly a hobby but a useful accomplishment. He tola ol the Plori-\nda hurricane when all communication except that supplied by the\namateurs was cut off. Polar Explorer Byrd owned amateur operators\nInformed Mr. Swanson.\nBENEFIT   TO   COMMUNITY\nHe stated that the aim of the\norganization was a benefit to the\npublic, ln that tbs club would\nassist to better radio reception and\nwould assist local operator a. Becoming an amateur wss the first\nstep to a wireless operator, said\nMr. Swanson.\nThe looal club has n\u00abw a strong\norganization and has planned a\nseries of lectures for their meetings\nAt Sunday's meeting 15 were present,\nThose present we're M. W. Brown,\nB. Sutherland, A. C. Foster, Jack\nBlgga, r. Oerman, Prank Phillips\nJ. stout, Ron Sampson, Earl Swanson, Pred Morris, A. Jeffertes, e.\nHooker, W. Wilson. j. Meed, B,\nBrandon.\nORDER RELEASE\nOF GANDHI WITH\nNO CONDITIONS\n(Continued  Prom Page  One)\nOTEL  ARLINGTON\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL, B. C.\na. p. urvRseuE, prop.\njJOUGLAg\nHOTEL\nRooms and Bath\nt.  L. and   A.  i.Kiiilii.i,\nProps,\nSteam  Heated Hot and  Cold\nThroughout Water\nB-      60s Phone   263\nTrail, B. C.\nThe\nHouse   You\nWant!\nWHETHER reft a prospect!?, oiiyer or owner\nof a house, you'll find ths\nrtasetrtetf Columns worth\n\u2022MM,\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nGOVERNMENT WILL\nBUILD NO RAIL\nLINK TO PEACE\nIn  Favor  of  Road   But   Is\nNot in Position to Finance  Project\nNelson, B.C. Cafes\nTHE ROYAL CAFE\nCLAftsK     RfcsTArRANT\nRefinement   and    Itellcac>    Prevail\nOPEN    PAY    \\M>   Nlf.HT\nS[>_c 1*1   dinner   11:30   to   2..10   35e\nHopper,   6:30   to   8 3r\u00bbe\n(specializing in chirp Sup> mid  Noodle*\nPhone   JJW\nKootenay Cafe\nYbK.NON  ITtttt\nDinner, Jl.30  to \u00a3.:io      Sta\nCupper    S.30 to 8 p. m     35c\nShort  Orders a Specialty\nQuirk   Berries\nNext   Kootenay   Hotel,   Nelson\ntlons lies in the discussions being\nconducted by those concerned under the terms of unconditional liberty.\n\"Our action nae been taken in\npursuance of a sincere desire to\nassist in creation of such peaceful\nconditions as would enable the government to implement the undertaking given by tli_ prime mlnlater\nthat if civil quiet were proclaimed\nwid assured the government would\nnot   be   backward   in   its   response,\"\nPOONA. India, Jan. 25. fCP cable\nvia Reuters)\u2014Mahatma Gandhi, the\nseldom surprised, was frankly aaton\nlahed out of hia ascetic coolness\ntonight on hearing that Lord Irwin,\nthe vlcroy of India, had ordered\nhis unconditional release from prta\non.\nHAD  NOT   EXjPECTED\nUF.SRROSITY\n\"I had not expected such a grn-\ncroue gesture from the British,\" he\n* hid ln mild tone:., m explanation\nof  hia  being   taken  unaware*.\nBeyond thla Gandhi aald nothing\nwhen told his release would probably come within the next day or\nao. Aa he has several times declared\nhe would not accept his liberty unlet all congress members and political prisoner, are liberated with\nhim, the authorities may be faced\ni with an embarrassing situation If\n| Ihe \"great soul\" adheres to hts de-\nI termination.\nj Since lust Msy. the wiaened little\nI man to whom millions of Hindus\n', l\u00bbk with veneration, haa been in\nprison. He has been treated well,\n! and for this he has given credit to\n; lna captors. He hss slept usually\ni in the open air, has eaten a per-\n\u25a0 f-onally selected diet, and has apent\n| his time in reading, meditation and\nin   spinning.\nThe government had been Indefinite regarding the tim. of Gandhi's release, and they may remove\nhim. in tecrecy, some distance from\nthe prison, for fear of mass demonstrations. His followers are already\nbeginning to make the Yeroda\nprison here the scene of a pilgrimage   of   celebration ,\nVICTORIA. Jan. 35\u2014In reference\nto lta desire to raise the standard\nof beer parlors In connection wrth\nhotels and resorts catering In sea.\nto tourists. British Columbia liquor\ncontrol board made tbe following\ngeneral observation on the results\nof the recent plebiscites in the\nInterior, and on other Issue*:\nSTATEMENT   IB   MADS\n\"The     official    returns   at   tbs\nplebiscites   bald   up-country   an  ee\n\"-     44\nAffirmative Is\nVictor Debate,\nCranbrook School\nCRANBROOK, B. C, Jan. 35.\u2014A\ndebst* was held by tbs Literary\nsociety of the Cranbrook high school\non Friday afternoon ln the school\nauditorium. Ths affirmative of the\nsubject, \"Resolred, tba. an airport *ould be beneficial to Cranbrook,\" was supported by representatives ol Orade XL, while two\nchosen from Orade XII. argued for\nths negative. The speakers ware\nGarnet Blaine and Ruth McKowan\nfor tbe affirmative and Chris, Foote\nand Grace Flett for tbe negative.\nMlsa McKlnnon, Dr. Norrlngton\nn1 A McPhee of the staff acted\nas judges. In giving the decision\nme judges stated that all speakers\nh\"d h;-ndled their subject matter\nwall, but that the affirmative bad\nmanaged to gather tha greatest\nnumber of points.\nSelections were rendered by the\nhigh   school   orchestra,   under   the\nfollows:      Hedley,    Slmlksms^i \t\nfor,   e   against;   Coalmont.   Blmllka- [ i^_ershlp of professor \"Hobson. Alan\nmean,   47   for,   10   stain*!:   Chase, ,.ted as chalnnan for the\nCANADIAN RUM\nRUNNER FIRED\nUPON IN EAST\nSalmon Arm, 114 for, 31 against;\nEndarby, SflB for, 63 against; total,\n673   for  and  01   against.\n\"Applications for beer licenses\nwill probably be coming In from\nthese points, but tbe lmpesslon that\nany or all applications will bs\ngranted a license from tbs board Is\nerroneous, as only suitable places,\nowned or leased by applicants of\ngood charaotsT, wbo will be able to\n\u25a0\"nduct them properly, will be considered.\n\"In new of tbe fact that ths\nprovinoe of British Columbia has\nin the last tan years spent 404,808.-\n838 on roam and bridges, on capital\nand mslntenanoe account, lt Is considered ssssntlal that proper accommodation ahould be provided for\ntourist and visitors to British Columbia.\n\"This being tb* case.\" tb* statement of ths board continued, \"tbs\nboard will ejrerclae tb* greatest oar*\nin thf granting of licences and endeavor, however possible, and as\nrapidly a* possible, to improve tb*\nstandard of tbe existing stopping\nplaces   in  tb*  country.\n\"It Is considered that a move of\nthis kind will greatly enhance British Columbia's reputation from a\ntourist point of view, snd tb* pro-\nvino* expects s substantial addition\nto th* automobile traffic of visitor*\nduring the coming season.\n\"To accomplish this, sine* the In-\nceptlon of the present board in\nAugust of 1930, 34 licenses hav* been\nsuspended or cancelled. Prosecutions have been lntlttated against\nmsny of them for infraction of the\nLiquor act. resulting ln fines\namounting to a turn in excess of\n440,000 under all headings.\" th*\nboard's   statement   concluded.\nmeeting. The decision of the Judges\nwas given by A. McPhee. who point-\nout where tbe speakers had\ndon* well and where their arguments  might  have been  Improved.\n(Continued  From  Page  One)\nlegation concerning Saturday night's\nincident had  been mad* tonight.\nBut the Washington situation wu\nclear. The International situation\ndepends, lt was explained, not upon\nproof that the Josrphlne K was a\nrum runner, or that, as alleged, she\nhad S00 cases of liquor aboard, but\non the distance from shore that\nthe action of the coast guard\noccurred.\nIf Captain Cluett was killed within an hour's sailing distance of\nthe United States coast, the Canadian case ls thereby weakened, for\nthe anti-smuggling treaty between\nthe two countries holds that the\nUnited States authorities may \"seize,\nsearch snd adjudicate\" within that\ndistance. Authorities here suggest\nthat the act of seizure here predicates   the   use   of   force.\nIf, on the other hand, Captain\nduett's death resulted from action\noutside the treaty limit.s the esse\nls even more serious from a Canadian point of view than that of\ntbe  \"mi Alone,\"\nNEW TORK, Jan. 38. (CP) \u2014\nWithin s few hours of the shelling of ths Canadian schooner Josephine K Saturday night and the\nkilling of her captain, William P.\nCluett, of Lunenburg, N. S., says\ntbe New York American, the Dominion government and the Canadian legation in Waablngton \"began unofficially to express grave\nconcern over the killing.\"\nMAY   RE\nVANCOUVER, B. 0\u201e Jan. 25.\u2014Th-\nVancouver Sunday Province today\ncsrrles the following special dispatch   from  Victoria:\n'British Columbia is not going to\nbuild the Pacific Great Eastern rail- \t\nwav to Peace River. AU the present | OUTBID! LIMIT\nattempt-., fathered in Vancouver, to \"The Canadian legation,\" oon\npersuade the government on this | ttnues the American, \"psrmltted it\nto   become  known   that   it  will   ask\nproject alone, are futile, for the\ngovernment has definitely decided\nthat it oannot undertake such a\npolicy with lta present financial resources.\n\"This pivotal point of government\npolicy was made clear here Saturday after strong pressure from various sources had been brought to\nbear on the cabinet, in favor of a\nprovincial 'on-to-the-Peace' movement. The government Is emphatically In favor of a peace River railway .but It must be bunt by one\nor both of the transcontinental systems,   or  by  other  capital.\n'The cost of an extension of the\nP. O. E. to the Peace River Is hot\nknown to anyone. Reports In the\nhands of the government estimate\nIt at anything from J30.000.000 to\n$40,000,000. In any case the province, ln view of the government,\ncould not consider It for a moment. Evyi at a cost of 420.000,000.\nthe fixed chargfa of the necessary\nborrowing would be something more\nthan 11,000.000 a year, at a time\nwhen provincial revenues have dropped in every direction, and when\nonly the moat rigid economy can\nprrvent   Increased   taxation.\n\"Any large extension of the P.O.E.\nat this time would certainly mean\na large new burden.of taxation on\nthe people ot thla provinc?. This\nthe government Is not prepared to\nimpose.\"\nRead,the Nelson Daily News\nMODERATOR OF\nUNITED CHURCH\nSPEAKS, TRAIL\nTRAIL, B. C. Jan. 38\u2014Dr. E. H.\nOliver, moderasor of the United\nChurch of Canada, spoke at Knox\nUnited church here this morning. A\nlarge attendance of both Knox and\nBast Trail United church members\nheard Dr. Oliver talk on \"Make\nyssus Christ Supreme.\" Rev. Bever-\nThe Anglicsn rector at Coleman ly L. Oaten of Knox and Rev.\nadvocated   the   putting   into   c.*\u00ab_t.Francis   H.   Stevens   of   East   Trail\nFERNIE CURLING\n1 FERNIE, B. C, Jan. 38.\u2014At the\ncurling rink Prtntlce still keeps\nahead and increases his lead on ths\nother rinks. On Thureuay night\nthe games were played on rwher\nheavy loe. Mild weather with rain\nstopped the games altogether ou\nFriday.\nTh* results of Thursday's games\nare as follows: Prwntlce fi, Suddaby\nfl; Wallace 13. Cummings 4; Sanborn   19,   Herchmer   11;   Wilson   14,\nMcDonald   4.\nWEST KOOLiiY\nLINE CAMP IS\nMOVINGJifANETA\nConstruction Completed; Dal\ngleish on Way to California for Health\nCRANBROOK GYRO\nCLUB HEARS OF\nPIJWB,l_GHT\nPilot Gunner Speaker; Hopes\ntoo See Time When Club\nFormed\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 25.\u2014With work\ncompleted at tb? camp of the West\nKootenay Power _t Light company,\ncamp la breaking up, and soon no\nsign   of   activity   will   be   left.\nLinesmen and truck drivers are\nbeing retained, and will Bo to\nWaneta to work on construction ln\nthst   district.\nD. O. Dalglelah, congenial foreman, who left for Ingkwood, Calif.,\nsaw everything practically completed\nbefore he left. He expects to return in about three months, th*\ntrio being to recuperat.  his health.\nHerbert Burnes will ln charge M\nthe camp until Mr. Dalglelah returns.\nCRAKBROOK, B. C, Jan. 35\u2014\nPilot Gunner, of tb* Cranbrook Air\nTransportation company, which operates a plan*, the Wings of Cranbrook, In the districts of Cranbrook\nand Fernie, wa* a speaker oa tbe\nsubject of bis craft at th* Oyro\ndinner on Thursday evening, giving\nan interesting and instructive talk\nthat waa enjoyed by all. He told\nconsiderable of tb* different types\nand builds of ships now in operaton\nin the air ln transportation and airmail   service.\nMethods of Instruction were dealt\nwith.\nHe told of different msthods of\nlanding on large and small landing\nplace*, saying that from an altitude\nof 10,000 feet about 14 miles of\ntravelling would be necessary to\naffect a landing on the ground. Tfc*\ndifferent types of lifting devices on\nships was described, ships with slot*\nln the wing*, as has Pilot Gunner's\nown.\nPilot Gunner expressed pleasura\nthat cranbrook is to have an improved airfield with a hangar and\nworkshop. He said he thought lt\nwould tend to make the community\nmorw air minded would make of the\ndistrict a real air center. Landing\non skits, ss one must do here In th*\nwinter months was, he stated, easier\nand safer than on wheels and\nwould present no difficulties for\nbeginners learning In the winter\nmonths.\nHe stated that anyone with normal health and Intelligence can learg\nto fly and expressed a hope that\nthere would be, in the not distant\nfuture, a flying club ln the city\nwith a f\u00abv private plans* to add an\nImpetus to  the sport.\nLONDON, Jan. 30 (C P cable)\u2014\nIt was a day of rest and temporary\nrelease from pressure of official\nduties, for Lord and Lady Willlngdon, who returned from their viceregal tenure in Canada on Saturday.\nA few Intimate friends visited their\nexcellencies at their temporary residence ln London, but to newspapermen they were \"not at horn*.\"\nIndigestion So Bad\nWas Afraid To Eat\nMrs. A. T. Bowman* 157 Rebecca\nSt., Hamilton, Ont., write*I\u2014\"I -\nbeen troubled, for years, with i\ndigestion and suffered so badly I wa*\nafraid to eat. I am on n,v third\nbottle of Burdock Blood Bitters, and\ncan now eat anything I like without\ndistress after, and can enjoy my sleep\nevery night without fear of suffering.\nI cannot praise B.B.B. too highly for\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^m what it has done for\nTot \u25a0*)\u2022 st all drag sad geMi-el atoraa; mw.factnrad, for ths psst 51 rsara, eatr\n*- the T, suitmn, (K_ Ltd.. fwoato. OaL _ _ . __^\t\noi to* Cei_t a Day\" plan, whereby\nall church members would put by\na cent each day, in addition to their\nordinary giving*, so that frequent\nappeals by means of teas, whist\ndrives and other means of raising\nmoney would .be eliminated.\nan   Immediate   investigation.\nScrutinising reports which placed\nthe soene of the shooting as four\nmiles to five miles southeast of\nAmbrose lightship. Canadian lega\ntion attaches pointed out that the\nlightship la 7u, mll\u00abs southeast of\nRockaway, Long Island, and that\nthe aliening might have occurred\noutside   the   13-mile   limit\"\nLUNlMBURG, N. 8., Jan. 36. (CP)\n\u2014An Anglican rector who six years\nago united tn marriage a 33-year-\nold seaman with a daughter of\nLunenburg's sea-going bread today\nwaJkcd to their family home to\nbreak the news of that union's\neternal severance by the bullets of\nthe United States coast guard patrol.\nTidings were carried by Major\nthe Rev. W. E. Ryder, rector of St.\nJohn's church,- to which William\nand June Cluett belonged, and\nwhose watchnlght service on Christmas ere they attended, the last\noccasion on which the youthful captain   visited   his   home.\nStunned silence and then quiet\ntears were the tribute of June Cluett as she learned of her husband's\ndeath. In a few weeks she will become the mothw of th. third\nchild. WlU* hsr were their two\nsmall sons, five and three years\nold, whom she was preparing for\nthe mornlpg Sunds-y sohool service\nwhen the rector arrived. Sea-wives\nare not demonstrative when ths\nsea takes toll. But William duett's\nlife had not been forfeited to ths\nsea.\nWAS  ON  LAST  TRIP\nCaptain Cluett, by tragic irony.\nwas on his last trip as a liquor-\nrunner, after three years as otp-\ntaln of the Josephine K, without\nprevious contact with the coast\nguard. During hts Christmas visit,\nhe had expressed himself as dissatisfied with the game, and ready\nto get out of It. Though still ln\nhis twenties, be had made an enviable reputation as a sound seaman, and for some years after\ncoming bar* from Baloram, Nfld..\nhis birthplace, had followed the\n^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^ coastal   trade.   Steady,   reliable,   of\nJohn Groves, president of th* 1 consistent good habits, be was Just\nJohn Groves, limited, general met- beginning to reach fairly comfort-\nchants of aravenhurst, died reoently.tble circumstances. .    '\nUnited churches assisted in th*\nservices. The choirs of both churches\nwere ln attendance,\nWHAT have you\ngot to SELL\nSomewhere within the wide radius\nat circulation of THE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS there are several\npeople who want to buy just what\nyou have to sell. You haven't the\npsychic power to lead you to them,\nbut the WANT .ADVETISEMENTS\nwill uncover them for you. Isn't the\nfew cents investment worth while aa\na short cut to a successful sale.\nNelson Daily News\nClassified Ads\nPHONES 143 and 144\n THE NELSON D\/VILY NEWS      MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1931.\nPage Thm\nFERNIE'S 1931 COONCIL IS FACING\nHARD YEAR; DEFICIT LEFT BY THE\nRETIRING COUNCIL, MAYOR STATES\nDepression Met By Bank Financing; Departments Exceeded Estimates\nTAXATION MUST\nPAY OFF DEBTS\nNames Chairmen of Committees and Urges Cooperation in Work of City\nFERNIE B. c., &n 24.\u2014The dty\nI council met for the first time on\nI Thursday    evening.      Mayer    Harry\nDouglas and all the councillors\nI were present. The mayor congra-\nItulated Aid. M-tato and Caroeello\nI on their reelection and Alderman\nI Kerr for hie election {or hia eleo-\njtlon after a rest for aome years\n| from   municipal    work.\nThe mayor said the outlook was\nInone to rosy from first view. The\nldelicit for last year In all depart-\n|ments of the city wae about $27.-\nLost year's council began Its\nlyear ^f work with a surplus of $12,-\n|_24. This showed that the exlst-\nllmg depression has met by flnan-\nIdng through the bank, and will of\nInecisBity have to be paid for by\n\u25a0future taxation. He said he had\nIno doubt that the old oouncil car-\n|rled on to  the  best  of  Its ability,\nmt tbe fact remained, that he most\n|of   the   departments   had   exceedet,\nwtima-tes, ..nd wnet had thrown a\nI big   burden   on   the   new   council.\n\"Trie only way I see to balance our\nI accounts during the coming year,\nlis to exercise the strictest economy,\nlln every way possible.\" he declared.\n|He said It was  hia desire to meet\nEVERY LOAD OF\nOUR COAL\ndumped   Into  your  cellar  or bin\nmeans   solid    comfort   and   fuel\neconomy,   for    our    coal   throws\nout a  fine,  even  heat  and  does\n1 lt with far less coal than ls re-\nI quired-   when    ordinary    ooal    ls\nl used. Try a ton or so and keep\nJ a  reoord   of   how   long   It   lasts.\n| That will  prove  the economy  of\nordering   your   coal   here.\nWest Transfer Co,\nPHONE   33\nths school board and balk ore\nrinanoes with them. As to won\nfor the unemployment, there was ,\npossibility of the oid wooden watt\nworks pipe on the Fairy creek en\nof the water works system requ i\nIng repaclng. He would advise doli\\\ntahls work only after having tl,\nopinion of Its need by a tmlne\nengineer. This work would have i\nbe flnanosd by the sale of deben\nHires.\nThe mayor appointed his commit\ntees for the year as follows; tl.\nfirst name being the chairman ti\neach   oast*:\nPirjinoa\u2014Eutledge   and   Oarose:i.\nFire water and li_ht\u2014McOaUxu.\nand   Mlnton.\nHealth\u2014Oe\u00bb  and  McCalium.\nAirport and park\u2014Mlnton sn\nCarosella.\n.Relief\u2014 Gee.\nAldetmn Mlnton was also tt]\npointed as the council's member o.\nuie swimming pooj committee, an.\nAlderman Rutledge was appointee\nas city member ot the hosplt.-.\nboard.\nrire Chief Crawford's report fo\niti30 waa again re-id, and on motto,\nwas accepted. The mayor commem\nted favorably on ths firs chief',\nwork last year and On th* very\nlow fire loss  for the year.\nThe council discussed increasing\nsmall debts owed the city by persons who had purchased material\non credit and had not settled thes*.\naccounts. A motion was passed\n\u25a0\u25a0That no material shall be provided\n.y the city for ths public use, except under   order  and  for  cash\".\nThs council discussed a number\nof schemes to employ the men out\nof a Job but left this matter over\nto   a   -later   meeting.\nREPLACE CABLE\nOVER ELK RIVER\nELKO. a. U., Jan. 38.\u2014S*T*ral\nlocal men and Ferule members of\nthe East Kootenay Power company\nstaff, are employed at the local\nplant replacing a lartre cable stretoh-\nini across the El\u00ab river and reassembling one of the big turbines.\nThe cable, on which a \u00abm*ll car\nruns over the river, wa* recently\ncut ln two by * heavy rock slide.\nGirl of 10 Gained 7\nPounds In 27 Days With\nMcCOY'S\nCod   Liver   Extract   Tablets\nShe  writ**\u2014\"I  lust  finished  talcing   2   boxes  of  McCoy**\u2014I   am   10\nyear*     of     age\u2014before     taking\nweighed 54 pounds\u2014I now weigh 61\npounds.\" __\nMother: If your little one needs\nmore weight\u2014more energy\u2014rpsy\ncheeks and good appetite, put your\nfaith ln MoOoy's\u2014Try them for 28\ndays\u2014If you are not delighted\u2014\nmoney back\u2014\u00ab0 tablet* 60 cents st\nany druggist anywhere\u2014Just a\u00abk fpr\nMcCoy's.\nNEW PASSENGER PLANE\na close-up view of one of the squadron oi multi-\nnglned airplanes that will be used by Imperial Air-\n-vays, Ltd., ln new London-Cap. Town regular pas-\nenger   service,   slated   to   be   ready   for   operation\nsoon, severs, machines of ths above type have Just\ncompleted sucozsafully their first flights at Redlett\nslrdrome,  England,\nNELSON SCOTS\nPAY HONOR TO\nBURNS MEMORY\nEagle Hall Filled at Annual\nBurns Banquet of Clan\nMcCleary\nALDERMAN  GRAY\nIS  THE   SPEAKER\nPleasing Entertainment Program Also; Dancing\nFollows\niEYEN SCOUTS\nAT CASTLEGAR\nPASS IN TEST\nReceive   Tenderfoot   Badge;\nTroop Ready for\nRegistration\nOABTLEOAB, B. 0 . Jan. 36.\u2014Justifying their name, the Beaver patrol\nof the Boy Semite to the number of\nseven passed their tenderfoot tests\nlast Thursday.\nJ. BpeaJunan Judged them during\nthe tests for a prize given by a\nmember of the troop committee to\ntbe scout who came highest In\nrnrtrtos for speed, neatness and\naccuracy. Lou Watson was the\nwinner, being one point above his\ntwo closest competitors. The lowest\nmarks were only three below the\nwinner. In addition to their work\non Scout craft, the boys have been\nmost industrious In helping to prepare their lodge for occupation,\nthough ln doing so, they have created a somewhat ironical situation\nss th\u00ab contractor for the work, Mr.\nWatson, has expressed his intention\nof donating the proceeds of his work\nto tbs Scout fund. Bo by working\nhard the boys have lowered their\nown funds. The troop Is now ready\nlor registration and the following\nnames are being submitted to E. L.\nHodge, district commissioner, at\nTrail:\nScout master, Lelgbton J. Cook;\nassistant scout master, James C.\nDavidson; patrol leader, Nels Hanson,\nsecond, Lou Watson; members or\npatrol, Phil Parent, p. McCJauley, G.\nMcOauley, W. Davidson, V, Zachar-\nenko.\nMISS FLO SAPPLES\nVISITOR IN NELSON\nSALMO, B. 0. Jan. 38.\u2014W. L.\nShell  spent Friday   in  Nelson.\nMiss Flo Bapples ls spending a\nfsw days in Nelson the guest of Mr.\nand Mrs. Henry Payant.\nR. 0. Bush arrived home from\nCorra Unn where he has been employed for the psst two months.\nW. Miller had as his dinner guests\non Monday night, W. Shlell, J3.\nStanmore and J. Fraser.\nMr. and Mrs. R. V. Nlelly were\nrecent visitors to Nelson.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Bapples snd Miss\nKathleen Bapples spent Wednesday\nln Nelson.\nFRANK R. NEWTON\nSUPERANNUATED\nProtect\nThem\nINSURE!\nProtect your loved\nones against want\u2014be\ninsured yourself and\ncarry sufficient Insurance on your home,\nyour furniture, and\nyour automobile. We\nissue policies that will\nfully safeguard your\ninterests.\nWhy not take out the necessary policies with\nus TODAY?\nFor FIRE Insurance\nAutomobile, Life, Accident and Sickness,\nPlate Glass and All Other Forms of Insurance.\nJ. E. ANNABLE\nC. D. BLACKWOOD\nR. W. DAWSON\nH. E. DILL\nP. E. POULIN\nC. F. McHARDY\nW. M. WALKER\nJESSE KEMP, Trail, B. C.\nFor LIFE Insurance\n0. D. BLACKWOOD, The Greet Wert Life Ass_\nance Company.\nB. W. DAWSON, Manufarfarert Life Assuranea\nCompany. '\nP. E. POULIN, North American Ufa AsBoranca\nCompany.\nC. jr. McHARDY, Monarch Life Assurance Company.\nfi.   a   LATORNELL,  Dominion   Life   Assurance\nCompany.\nELKO WOMAN HAS\nTHUMB CAUGHT IN\nMACHINE WRINGER\nELKO, B. C. Jan. 36.\u2014A, Kometz,\nwho formerly relieved here as OP.R.\nstation agent, arrived Monday from\nMichel where he has been operating\nto take the place of W. Haley who\nhss been night operator here for\nover a year.\nMrs, R. N. Hubberstey was unfortunate enough to get a thumb\ncaught ln the wringer of an electric\nwashing machine last Monday but.\nthough painful, the accident waa\nnot serious.\nW. Wlnsor, Jr.. ls now employed\nby C. Sartoris in making ties on\nhis timber limits four miles south\nof here on the South Fork.\nA. Martin ls employtd at present\non some work which ls being done\nat the local power plant.\nMr. and Mrs. W. Wlnsor. Jr., were\nthe guests of Mr. and Mrs. K. H.\nPerkins st their home on Monday\nevening.\nW, W. Browne, engineer for the\nEast Kootenay Power company, motored to town on Wednesday In\nconnection with the work at the\nlocal plant of the company.\nMrs. M. Roo was a business visitor\nln Fernie on Monday evening,\ngoing ln by train.\nW. Haley left for Sirdar on Wednesday morning on business.\nRalph Lister, accompanied by Mr.\nand Mrs. H. H. Perkins and Miss\nCellna Folsy motored to Fernie and\nspent the evening  there.\nMiss Nina Wlnsor is now employed\nin Fernie at the  Waldorf hotel.\nMr. and Mrs. J. A. Grady and son\nDonald were the guests of Mrs. A. J.\nCarter on Wednesday evening at her\nhome.\nMaurice Anderson, assistant station\nhere, waa confined to his bed for\ntwo days this week with a severe\ncold,\nMr. and Mrs. J. H. Angeli and\ndaughter, Marlon, accompanied by\nMlsa Marlon Freek, motored u\nFernie on Thursday morning on >\nshopping trip.\nBert Hawkey of Fernie, wbo Is employed at the local power plant for\nthe present, had the misfortune\nwhile motoring to Elko Monday\nnight, to skid and run off the\nroad several miles the other side of\nthe tunnel. No danger was done to\nths caf and lt \u00ab*n_ easily pulled\nback on the  road.\nMrs. W. Haley hat} as her tea\nhour guests on Thursday Mrs. J. H.\nAngel] and Miss Marlon Freek.\nRalph Lister and Miss Florence\nSheridan were the guests of Miss\nCellna Folsy at her home on Tuesday evening.\nPLAN CAMPAIGN\nPROCURE X-RAY\nPLANUOSSLAND\nCitizens Discuss Matter; Plan\nDances and Bake\nSale\nPioneer Railwayman of Trail\nHas Served C. P. R.\n27 Years\nTRAIL, B. O.. Jan. 26\\\u2014Frank R.\nNewton, after 37 years\" employment\nby the Canadian pacific railway, ls\nenjoying a well-earned rest, having\nbeen superannuated by the company.\nMr. Newton (jam* to Trail in\n1886 from Buttt. Mont,, travelling\nthe last part of his journey to\nTrail on the historical steamer, the\nLytton, then plying the Columbia\nriver between Northport and the\nhead  of  the  Arrow  lakes.\nWithin  two weeks  of  his  arrival\nROeSLAMD. B. C Jan. 35\u2014With\na view to Instituting a vigorous\ncampaign for funds, wltto which to\nput ths X-ray equipment at the\nlocal hospital, on a par with that\nIn ths Trall-Tadanac Institution, a\npublic meeting was held In ths city\nhall Thursday evening, Mayor W.\nA. Turner acting as chairman. Mme.\nEva Reaney was elected secretary\nand Dr. E. E. Topllff consented to\nact as treasurer. Dr. Topllff presented some data on the equipment required stating that the cost\nwould be In the neighborhood of' sections of the banqupt tables, and\n\u2022800. His worship stated that $24 ! the banquet was on.\nwas already available, and that1 Messages from the president of\nplans were 0n foot for a dance, J the Cranbrook Caledonian society,\nwhich would proobably, be given! Wld PkA Chlef L\"Ue Craufurd,\naround  February 9.      A number of i now ln the hospital, were read  b>\nWhile Nelson's street* were deep\nIn slush and Nelson's sidewalks\nwere washed with rain that had\nbeen\"faUlng'fDr 34 hours, both un-\nJanuarylike conditions, Nelson's\nScottish citizens, and admirers ol\nBurns generally, were celebrating\nIn Eagle hall Friday night the\nfamous \"blast of Janwar win'\"\nthat something over 100 years ago\nin Scotland \"blew hansel ln on\nRobin.\"\nWhether the blessing the blast\nblew ln on the roving and irresponsible elder Burns was apprt -\nelated by him, or not, lt clearly\nfound other appreciation ln overflowing measure, for Robert Burns,\nwhose picture looked down upon\nthe 175 Nelsonltea commemorating\nhis arrival on the globe, becan.e\nknown as \"the poet of mankind.\"\nHAGGIS    PIPED   IN\nAt the Burns dinner, ths 17th or\n18th that Clan MoLeary has sponsored ln as many years, Chit> r\nIvy Spelrs presided, giving \"to\nold friends and new a hearty welcome.\" Chaplain earn Barton pronounced the Selkirk grace, after\nwhich the haggis waa borne ln\naloft by Bandfcman Ernes* Walsh\nto thft piping of Piper Jlmmle\nStout, who preceded him. Past\nChief A. G. Ritchie, who was to\nhave given the address to the\nhaggis, was absent through Illness,\nso lt fell to C. H. Stark to read\nthe well-known addree*- snd express\nto the succulent meat pudding the\nwish that \"Fair fa' yer honest\nsonsy mcr, Great chieftain oi'\nthe  puddln'   race.\"\nAfter ths ceremonial haggis was\ncarved by Chief SjplrM, replicas ol\n\"   appeared   nhmiltaneausly   at   all\nother suggestions were offered and\nlt was thought lt would be a good\nplan to put on a home cooking\nsale. W. O. Mara and S. irvln\nwill make a canvas ot the business\nmen, and subscription lists will\nbe posted around town. Mrs, J. R.\nHardy and Mme. Reaney will get\nln touch with tho various lodges to\nsolicit  assistance for  the  dance.\nAs  ls  the  case  with  the  present\nequipment,   when    the    madhln.    Is\nhe was employed as a brakeman on   br01\u00a3_V UD to v.te   lt wm~__\\7Tmmd-\nthe  old   narrow   gauge   railway   be-   \u00b0hi\u00abiw \u00bbL hv th* ^2i. \u201ef ___\ntween   Trail   and   Rossland.   owned ' ,\"f** forw\"\u00ab \\ih\u00ab cftlwna of Ross-\n\u25a0 land,    with    no    expense    except    \"\nthat time by Augustus Heinze, originator of the tsmelter. Afte about\nfour years' work Mr. Newum returned to the United States.\nTwenty-seven years ago he returned to Trail and was employed\nby the Canadian Pacific railway,\nwhich had in the meantime purchased the Heinze holdings.\nIn 196 Mr, Newton was prornotea\nto conductor and served tn that\ncapacity until 1920. His runs were\nfrom Nelsmi to Midway and from\nNelson to Rossland. During this\ntime Mr. Newton msde his home\nfor  some   time   in   Nelson.\nIn 1930, niffertng trouble with\nhis eyes, Mr. hew ton was transferred to the Tadanac yaras where\nhe was made foreman, serving lu\nthis position until his superannuation.\nMr. Newton has not yet missed\nhis work. Ho declared he has been\nbusy around his homt so far, and\nln any case when a man reached his\nage,   a  rest  was  really   enjoyable.\nBesides his wife. Mr. Newton has\nresiding with him at his home, one\ndaughter. Rose, and - son, John.\nMrs. A. E. Jefpery of East Trail Is\na daughter. There Is a*\u00bbo a daughter residing in Vancouver and one\nin   San   Francisco.\nMrs. W. Reid Has\nReturned, Grand Forks\nGRAND PORKS, B. C, Jan. 35\u2014\nJ. Lyden returned Monday from\nSpokane where ne had gon* lor\nmedical treatment. His condition\nhaa  lmproTtd.\nJ. Reed returned from Sprague,\nWashington   on   Tuesday.\nMra. w. Reld who h*e been *\npatient at Soap l\u00bbie, Wa*h.. for\nmany months, returned horn* Tuesday.\nH. Brtnlonan returned Monday\nfrom Spokane.\nWinnipeg** population, a* officially _bulatx>d by tn* city asseeement\ndepartment for 1*11. 1* 313.815, an\nInert*** of 8538 over 1930, and\nonly 74 \u00bbhort of the peek year of\nWIS,  wtwu It wa* 313,MS.\nMRS. E. L. BEST IS\nLEADER MPSSI0N\nSOCIETY AT KASLO\nKASLO. B. O, Jan. 35\u2014The wo\nmen'* missionary society of the\nUnited Church held their annual\nmeeting Tuesday afternoon at the\nhome of Mrs. A. L. MaoPhee. Reports from various committees\nshowed that the work of the society during the past year had been\nvery satisfactory.\nOfficers elected for the ensuing\nyear were Mrs. E. Leslie Best, pres\nldent, Mrs. S. H. oreen, vlce-pres\nldent, Mrs. Clarke secretary. Mrs.\nH. D. Dawson treasurer. Mrs. W.\nJ Oreen mite box secretary and\nMrs. J. M. Allen, M. M. secretary.\nDr. Henry of Ainsworth, who has\nbeen a patient ln the Victorian\nhospital  has returned  to hi* horn*.\nMr. and Mrs. Leslie Trainer of\nNel*on were Kaslo visitors Wednea-\nday.\nD. A. McLellan came down from\nth* Bluebird mine Monday, to\nspend a few days here with his\nfamily,\nMrs. P. T. Abey of Nakusp Is\nspending a few days ln town visiting   her   sons   Oeorge   and   Prank.\nTransportation Is\nHost, Trail Folk\nTRAIL, B. 0.. Jan. 25\u2014Transpor\ntatlon Hockey club was host tonight\nat an extremely successful dance\nat the Elks hall.\nCommittee ln charge was: R. Mo\nQuarrle, D. 8. Moynes, M. ThomP'\nson,   J.   Brennan.\nAttendance    was    good    and    t\ncrowd was ln a hockey mood.\nnominal fee tor the doctor'* services\nDAVIDSON HEADS\nCOMMUNITY CLUB\nFOR CASTLEGAR\nChief Spelrs, and shelr sentiments\nwer\u00a9 warmly applauded. Pa_.t Chief\nWilliam McLeary, who has resided\nIn Trail for several years, was present as usual.\nALDERMAN ORAY\nTOASTS   BARD\nTrie duty of proposing the toast\nto \"The Immortal Bard\" was discharged by Alderman J. B. Gray.\nwho expressed his appreciation of\nbeing called to tnis signal honor,\nthough realizing hts limited qualification  for the  task.\nThere must be some strong reason, ho said, behind the worldwide celebration on this date annually, of the blr>h of a numbie\nboy in a humble Scottish cottage.\nThe strong reason waj> thai, while\nBurns addressed nlmself tn his\npoems primarily to the Scottish\npeople, those poems went to the\nheart of the people in every walk\nof life, and wherever the English\nlanguage was known. One element\nIn this sppeal wae that Bums took\nth* simple things of life as the\nsubjects for his poems, simple\nthings familiar to all. What a\npicture sprang to the mind's era\nat the eipresslon. \"tha primrose\nbank,\" suggeMeu the speaker, who\nquoted j_ verse to 111 ustrata th ta\nexquisite slmpllclt? of theme, every\nphrase evoking a new yet familiar\nmental picture or Nature.\nLOVE   OF   COl'NTRY\nLove of country and love of home\nalike characterized Burns and found\nCASTUBOAR. B. C. Jan. 28.\u2014At\na special meeting of the Castlegar\nCommunity club held In West's hall\non Wednesday, Mr. Chrlstenson, time\nhonored president of the club, tendered his resignation, as his business\nnow demanded his attention durtng\nth. club's q&eetlng hours. This was\naccepted and a hearty vote of thanks\ngiven  him.    H*   feelingly  responded ' Plrp~r^ion~.n\" his r^\u2122.~Alderrn__\nand stated that he would still do his   0ray  mia.    He  had   an'abounding\nbest to aid tlie club. Nominations\nfor the vacated office resulted in\nthe unanimous choice of James\nDavidson, Jr.   Mr. Davidson thanked\nm club for Its confidence.\nA question from the floor brought\nout the fact that so far no special\nbenefits hsd been given the members by reason of their payment of\nannual dues. It was then decided\nthat non-members Attending the\nfunctions of the club would be\ncharged an additional 10c an whatever entrance fee the members paid.\nAs the club now owns, without encumbrance, Its own piano, dishes\nand other equipment, and as there\nIs no special object to rats* funds\nfor, Jt was decided to lower the\ncharges for entertainments during\nthe slack winter season: Miss M.\nFisher, secretary, reported that a\nnumber of the new members had\nJoined up. During the evening, over\nISO wae paid ln. The first and\nthird Wednesdays of each month\nwere decided on for the club's entertainments.\nlove for Scotland, so much so that\nScotland today was sometimes\ncalled \"The land cf Burns.\" One\nof the influences ln his life was\n\u2022tlie 'Ute of Wallace.\" the first hook\nhe read, from which he became\nafter with patriotic fervor, much _\na recruit, becoming acquainted with\nthe  glorious  traditions  of his regi\nment, might beoome steeped 1A a\ndetermination to oarry them on.\nFrom Burns' life, the speaker suggested tbe moral that Soot* and\nthose of Scottish descent today\nshould so live and act that Scotland oould be proud of them.\nAlderman Oray named 'The Cotter's Saturday Ntgnc\" as his favorite\npoem, and dwelt on its simple\ntheme, the Uttle cocUMte ot \"but\nand ben,\" in which the numbie\nfarm laborer gathered his Uttle\nfamily for the Saturday night dt>-\nvotlons. Quoting passages from the\nfamiliar classic, he declared 'the\nver lilt of lt\" put tbe simpio\nscenes before one's eyes. Its teaching was that \"An honest man's the\nnoblest work of Ood.\"\ntX'ND   OF   HUMOR\nOne of the attributes of Burns\nwas a strong sense of humor that\nnever failed him. and he oould\nthrust at the follies and totbles of\nmen on every occasion offering.\nVet he had plenty of foibles ol\nhis own, and. Alderman Oray remarked , Bui ns or ten laughed at\nhimself. To keep things in a proper perspective, one ahould laugh\nat himself occasionally. This was\ngood even for an araerm&n, he suggested. Picturing the self-important man strutting, Burns appraised\nhim with the Jibe, \"The man o* independent mln', he looks and laughs\nat   a1   that.\"\nWhile laughing at foibles, and\nmercilessly f.ayiug hypocrisy, Bums,\nAlderman Oray sal d, had a deep\nrespect  for  all   that  wae  good.\nPicturing htm successively as ths\nboy of obscure blrlh the plowman,\nthe prolific Singer, and finally tlie\nHon of Edinburgh, at that tlms\nprobably tlie literary capital of\nEurope, Alderman Oray carried the\nalory to the final act, of his dissolution, pointing out that his\ndying prophecies were fulfUled, and\nthat the world today accorded him\nuniversal honor, alike from the\nhumble and the intellectual.\ni'LEAKINO  PROGRAM\nFollowing Alderman Oray*s ad-\ndresa, which was followed by long\nand loud applause, a pleasing program of entertainment numbers was\ngiven.\nThs Misses Grace and Daisy May\ngave \"The Auld 3cotch Sangs\" as\na pleasing duet, to which \"O Wert\nThou In the Cauld Blast\" was an\nequally   pleasing   encore.\nA. Pagdln sang with singular\napipeal \"Mary,\" *lth \"Calling Me\nHome  to You\"  ai, sn  encore.\n\"Where Hath Scotland Found Her\nFame\" was exquisitely sung by Mrs.\nJohn Gansncr, with \"Bonnie Doon''\nas  the encore.\nNelson Ball pleasingly rendered\n\"Lassie o' Mine,\" and encored with\nthe historic \"A Hundred  Pipers.\"\nMian Mae Ferguson brought down\nthe house with ner recitation of\n\"The Wee Tewky,\" from \"Wee Mac-\nGreegor,\" and gave as an encore\n\"The Broken Bowl.\"\nThe final entertainer was Miss\nRuth Craufurd, whose solos, 'Mlac-\nOrsgor's Gathering.\" and \"Caller\nHerring,\" were most wai mly applauded.\nMiss Ina Steed and Mrs. Nelaon\nBall  acted  as   accompanists.\nAt the close cf the program.\nChief Spelrs warmly thanked the\nartists, and all those who had contributed to ihe success of the function.\nThe foor was then cleared, and\ndancing was indulged ln to a laie\nhour.\nCONSOLIDATED\nHIGH  SCHOOL\nCRESTON AIM\nTrustees to Go Into Matter\nof Fourth  Tear Class\nfor Fall\nr*R__TON. B, C, Jan. 3S-\u2014After\ndisposing of the business features\nAt the January meeting of Creston\nschool board, which wa\u00ab lo charge\nof the chairman, Mrs. Henderson.\nand trustees Oeorge Nickel end\nJames Cook ln attendance. Principal\nLevlrs of the high school in a very\nbusiness-like address outUned the\nmore Important features of tbs\nthree snd four year courses for high\nschools, and at the conclusion of\nhts address the trustees were screed\nthat the four year course was tbe\none  best  adapted   to  Creston.\nIn connection with the high school\nthe enrollment now stands at 00\nstudents and will necessitate securing a third teacher for the term\ncommencing September, 1931, Secretary Nlcke] was instructed to\nwrite the department of education\nto find out exactly what portion of\nthe cost of building and furnishing\nthree-room high school tha department is willing to pay. T_ils\nInformation will bs passed on to\nthe other school districts hi ths\nvalley ln an effort to secure united\naction m building a consolidated\nhigh school at Creston.\nIn connection with tbe public\nschool the enrollment continues to\nIncrease and Is now about 214. If\nthe lnoreass Is maintained until\nmidsummer it is Just possible there\nwill be occasion to establish a\nseventh room  In the public sohool.\nAccounts passed for payment totalled $834.\nH0PAL0NG TRIO\nHOSTS, GAY CIRCLE\nGRAY CREEK. B. C. Jan. 25\nA dance was held in the Gray Creek\nhall by the Hop-along trio ln aid\nof a piano. Admission was charged\nand refreshments were served. Many\npeople motored from Crawford Bay\nand Boswell to attend. Those who\nhelped to serve the refreshm*nts\nwere Miss Topsv Peters, Miss Barbara\nBurge, Mlas Owen Burge, Miss Kathleen May, Mlas Annte Adams. R\nJacobeon, C. Derbyshire and D.\nMiggy.\nMrs. J. Hodnett of Oray Creek returned on January 11 to resume her\nduties as school teacher, after spending the psst few wrr-k* in Vlrtorls.\nMiss Kathleen May who has spent\nthe last two weeks at Oray Creek\nleft for her home at Taghum on\nMonday last.\nJ. Rlbbald of Oray Creek left\nMonday morning for Edmonton for\na holiday.\nTen residents of Halifax were arraigned in the police court, and\nfined ISO centa ml_ no (v%t_t) or one\nday in the \"coop\" for the violation\nof the snow rem-wal act of the\ncity\nMrs. F. Carlson Is\nHostess, Kimberiey\nKIMBBRUSY. B. C., Jan. 28.\u2014Mn.\nFrank Carlson entertained a number\nof friends at her horns Friday night.\nthe occason being her birthday. Cards\nand light refreshments were features\nof the evening and an enjoyable\ntime was the result. Mrs. C. H.\nPhillips won first pries and Urs.\nCaldwell   won   the   ooneolaton.\nBetty McLeod. little daughter of\nMr. and Mra. Hedley McLeod. osle-\nbrater her sixth birthday anniversary\nMonday afternoon by entertaining a\nnumber of her Uttle friends at a\nbirthday party. Games of several\nkinds and refreshments featured ths\noccasion.\nMr. and Mrs. Fulton accompanied\nbv Miss Kershsw and Miss Haaal\nFulton motored to town from Fort\nSteele on Sunday. Miss Haael will\nremain In  town  for the  winter.\nMrs. Whalley mother of James\nWhalley of the Mark Creek store,\nleft Monday for England .where she\nwill spend several months visiting\nwith    relatives.\nReverend and Mrs. Scratch of the\nFull Ocspel Tabernacle left yeeterday\nfor Trail, Nelson, and Leadpolni.\nWashington, where they will do\nevangelistic work for a short time.\nDuring their absenoe J. Lsbroeq\nFrench evangelist, will conduct ser\nftetg   at   the   tabernacle.\nMrs. Saunders of Blarahmont entertained at four tables of brtdw on\nTuesday afternoon compllrasntarv\nto her tmother. Mm. Eyton, who ha*\nborn her house guest for the pest\neight weeks. Mrs. Banks won first\nprize   and    Mrs.   Foots   consolation\n2 GLASSES WATERT-\nNOT  TOO    COLD.\nHELP  CONSTIPATION\nOne glass water is not en\ntake 2 glasses a half hour\nbreakfast. You get quicker and better results by adding a little simple\nglycerin, saline, ete , (\"known ss Adlerlka)   to  one   glass.\nUntiles other remedial, Adletfta\nnrt*j on BOTH upper and lowar\nhowe| snd remove*, old poisons yom\nnever thoiiahi. w\u00abrs In vour system.\nArt.erik*. ttapt OAS and sour stom-\narh In ill minutest Relieves constt-\npaMor In _ hours.\u2014Mann, Rutherford  Co.  Druggists.\nC. NEWC0MEN IS\nSCHOOL TRUSTEE,\nVALLICAN FOR 1931\nNEW   DENVER   BRIEFS\nNEW DENVER, B. C- Jan. 2S.\u2014\nMrs. Angus Cameron of Erlckson,\nB. C, who has been the guest of\nMr. snd Mra. Hugh Gunn for ths\npsst 10 days, has returned to her\nhome.\nRev. J. Herdman has returned\nfrom a visit to Sandon.\nR. J. Johnson, of Slocsn City, was\na recent visitor in town.\nL. J. Smith of Alex. Alberta, was\na reoent business visitor In town.\nDr. A. Francis was a recent visitor\nIn Nelson.\nMrs. Parkinson and daughter of\nNakusp, who have been the guests\nof Mra. O. T. Trickett, have returned home.\nVALUCAN, RCJan. 28\u2014W. Fin-\nnls has returned after spending a\nfew weeks at the coast.\nM. Mike Robar motored to Nelson   on   Monday.\nMr. and Mrs. J. Strachan have\ntaken up residence at Blocan City\nwhere Mr. Strachan will bs em-1\nployed  there  for sometime.\nThe Vallican community held a\nspecial school meeting st the hall\non Wednesday night, C. Newcomen I\nwas erected trustee ln place of1\nMrs. J. Flnnls. who has resign-,\ned. I\nMrs. W. Flnnls has returned!\natfer spending a few weeks nura-\nln Nelson\nMrs. W. Young of Passmore spent\nThursday here the guest of Mrs. E.\nT.   Coleman.\nMrs. F. D. Bdgar. Mrs. E. T. Coleman, Mrs. c. Harrison. Mrs. R.\nKlenilng, Mrs. E. Rolland, Mm.\nF. Saucey attended tlie special\nmeeting of the Blocan Valley Women Institute at Passmore on Saturday afternoon.\nThe Plcherlng Bros, motored to\nNelson for the weekend.\nMr. and Mrs. E. W. Kopecki and\nbaby of Appledale spent Sunday\nhere the guests of Mr. and Mrs. F.\nSoucey.\nHome talkies, 'film.\" recording,\ntelevision, \"wtred\" wireless and great\nprogress ln the elimination of radio\nstatic will all become realities ln\nUie opinion of Major J E. Hahn,\npresident of De Forest Crosley\nRadio corporation, speaking at Toronto.\n(s sua tm*\\m atco. .\u201e !*Pvaw May\nnmpfliui\nten      W At*\nother   Branches  at  Winnipeg,   Xarkton.   Saskatoon,   F.d\u2014onto?,,\nCaliary, LethbrlUce. Vancouver. Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria\nJANUARY SAVING SALE\nLADIES' WEAR\nONE RACK OP DRESSES \u2014 Including art flat crepe, crepe cel-\nanese and spun. Neat fitting\nstyles. Flares. Pleated fronts and\njabots. Coat effects. Suitable for\nafternoon wear. Sizes 15 to 20\nyears. In all shades. Specially\npriced at ..._ _  $6.95\nHATS of velvet at reduced prices.\nShades are Black, Red and Blue.\nRegular values $5.50 and $4.95.\nTo clear at  $1.95\n\u2014Second   Hoot\u2014 B. B.C\u2014\nFIND OUT-That s\nthe Way to Know\nFor the past few weeks we have\nbeen telling you about our special\nsavings on merchandise to reduce\nstock prior to inventory.\nThis is now nearly accomplished,\nand it has disclosed many oddments, short lengths and single\ngarments. These have now been\nsegregated, and will be offered\nthis week at special prices.\nDRY GOODS\nExtra Specials for\nToday's Selling\nSNOWY WHITE FIjANNELETTE\nof a most durahle and fine texture, yet possesses that desired\nsoftness in quality that will undoubtedly give long wear and sat-\nisfaction. Full K6 inches wide.\nRegular 45c yard. Today for,\nyard     35\u00bbj>\n\u2014Main   Floor\u2014B. B. C. \u2014\nMEN _ SOCKS\nAll regular lines reduced. Cashmere, silk and wool and silk and\nlisle.\nRegular 75c; saving price 58**\nRegular $1.00; saving price 79\u00ab*\nRegular $1.25. saving price 95\u00ab^\n\u2014Main   Floor\u2014H.B.C.\u2014\n Page Foot\nTHE   NELSON   DATUY   NEWS       MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1981.\n-fam,\n_he Gamin^c)\n<By (Robert 'Terry Shannon\n in \u25a0 I'I\nMARRIED IN THE EAST\nCHAPTEB    TWF.NTT-OSE\nJustin Kent wa\u00bb content not to\ntalk as the taxlcab rolled on lt*\nrather long Journey into the fresher leu tense atmosphere of Long\nIsland.\nConnie leaned back ln the cushion; her eyes closed her heart\ntroubled Time and again, the told\nherself, she ihould be complete.\nIT happy; that here waa tbe most\nwonderful opportune ln the world,\nthat she waa ths luckiest of all\ngirls.\nTet, and the very thought made\nher heart cold, was ths terrifying\nml lint Ion that somehow ahe felt\ntrulltj at ths thought of Eddie\nOoeteUo. Time and again she had\ntold herself that the did not test\nhim, that ahe wae perfectly safe\u2014\nkiyei with Justin Kent. Neverthe-\nless, she hesitated to tell him of\nth* meeting with May Costello\u2014\nof Bddle's burning meesage of affection. Bdd le, of course, d Id not\nknow yet of her marriage to Justin. But May would tell him.\nMenace, like a trembling ague,\nshook  through  Connie's   vein*.\n.Justin Kent's eyes, unworldly and\nInnocent,   studied   her   face.\n\"I was pust looking at you as\nion est there dreaming,\" he said,\nand I neve Just begun to realize\nthat you are a remarkably attractive girl. There in character in\nyour faoe, too. I hope you wont\nthink I'm trying to flatter you.\"\nHis words were lneiprengably tender\u2014were shy. Pity for him suddenly struck Connie with sharp\npangs.\n\"Don't, please dont talk to me\nlike   tihat,\"   she   eald   quickly\n\"I am sorry\u2014\" His voice was\nbrisk, hut Connie sensed that he\nwas cowing a hurt. \"Please don't\nthink I am gushing or sentimental,\nMlss\u2014^\nAll of Connie's sympathy quickened.\n\"Why I'm your wife. Tou can\ncall me Oonnle. and you can say\nanything to me you like. It was\nJust that I dldnt want you to start\nsaying nice things to me when I\nam   so\u2014when   I   am   so   unworthy.\"\n\"My dear child. You do yourself\na grave injustice. I think I can\nunderstand why you feel unnecea-\nssrlly humble. It ls. I imagine, on\n\u2022\u00a9count of your unfortunate marriage with Eddie. But that's all forgotten and burled In the dead pant.\nYou'll never hear of Eddie Costello\nagain, He's out of your life forever.\nOur wonderful future is Just beginning\u2014bright,   glorlouu,   untroubled.\"\nConnie touched hi? hand with a\nkindly gesture\u2014as though he had\nbeen   a   child.\n\"Let's talk about something else.\"\nshe aald. \"Tell me about the house.\"\nBut, on the matter on their new\nhome. Judson Kent was adamant;\nhe revealed not a fact, concerning It\nuntil the taxlcab turned Into a\nbrick pillared entrance of a small\neatate and rolled down a tree-sheltered driveway for several bundrad\nyards Not until a sharp turn took\nthem Into an open lani, where the\ngrass was like green velvet, did\nConnie get s glimpse of a long, low\nEnglish cottage that snuggled on the\nfhore of a little moon-shaped bay\noverlooking  the   sound.\nTbe sheer beauty nf it assailed\nber with a sensation that was almost\npain. Here, at last, was something\nthat she could respond to with a\nfull heart. A low brick garden wall\novergrown with vines, a green wooden gate. Through lt the long, one-\nstory house, with Its stucco walls\nand Its green tiled roof, the boxwood\nthe flowering shubbery; a long pergola of brick columns down ths\noenter of the garden with white\nbeams overhead, hanging heavy with\nvines. At the end a little brlok\ntea house with rustle chairs and\ntable. On a pole a email house for\nwrens. A cheery-faced German woman ln a clean apron, taking her\nbundles out of the car dropped\ncurtsey.\nJustin Kent held the door wide\nopen, and Connie passed into a\nwide' living room, beamed ceilings,\nemail pansd windows. Here was\nquiet,   unobtrusive   luxury.\nConnie's eyes fell on s smell\ngrand   piano  in  a  nook.\n\"You like  It?\"  he asked.\nShe went to him and put her\nhands on his shoulders.   \"It love It.\n\"I hope, dear girl.\" he ssld. \"that\nyou will be happier here than you\nhave ever been ln your whole life.\nI  know that  I shall  be.\"\nThe servant woman carried Connie's bundles to a delicately furnished room overlooking the sound.\nFor a moment Kent stood ln the\ndoorway.\n\"I thought you would like this\nroom best,\" he said. \"Out here In\ntbe country you may bs a Uttle bit\nafraid or lonesome, but you are not\nso far away that you need feel at\nall lonely. My room ls down the\nhall, and I can easily hear you call\nIf you become nervous. I Just mention this, because I want your feeling of security to be complete ln\nall   respects.\"\nHe closed the door and left her\nto herself.\nLater tbey had luncheon together\nln a cheery dining room. It was\nstrange to Connie how, recently,\nshe had become a prey to Impulses\nthat mystified her. Now, for no\nknown reason at all. she desired to\nbe alone.\nShe went to her room, and slipped into an exquisite silk negligee,\ndozed for a while on the bed. Later\nshe  arose  and  sat  bv  the  window.\nProm the shore line, extending\nout Into the little bsy, was a narrow wooden pier; at the end a small\nroofed platform with a springboard.\nShe became Interested In a man,\nclad in a bathing suit, who was\nswimming.\nSeveral times he climbed up to\nthe platform and dove beautifully\nInto the water. His form was slender, symmetrical\u2014beautifully perfect.\nHe reminded Connie of a Greek\nstatue she had once seen at the\nMetropolitan museum, where her\nfather h*d taken her for a rare\nafternoon. In the form of the\nstranger was the same smooth outline, the same proportion.\nPresently, ths swimmer finished\nand walked down the pier toward\nthe house. With a definite shock\nConnie realized that tbe man was\nJustin Kent\u2014that she had been obscurely deceived by his negligence\nin the matter of good clothes, by\nthe worried look on his face, and\nhis rumpled hair.\nJustin Kent, as she now saw him,\nwas a perfect specimen of intellectual manhood In the flood tide of\nhis maturity. A man clean and un-\ndeflled\u2014a man, to respect and love\n(orever.\n(To   be   continued)\nHoop Skirt and\nGreek Costume\nFigure in Mode\n19S1 Goes Back to Victorian\nEra  for  Inspiration\nNEW    YORK,    Jan.   3tV-T_. hoop\nskirt\u2014with  modlftcattons\u2014is due to\ncome back.\nThla was dicloeed by Amoe Pexris,\nfashion expert, in discussing spring\nstyle at his semi-annual fashion\n\"clinic.\"\nAnd not only the hoop-skirt ides.\noriginated and worked by the Empress Eugenie, but several fashion\nIdeas inspired by Queen Victoria\nare due to grate the. 1931 miss.\nAmong these will be modern versions of the Victorian fitted Jacket\nto be worn as evening Jackets\nwith   evening  costumes.\nOther inspirations for spring have\nbeen derived from the snclent\nGreek goddess .whose costumes Mr.\nFarris explained4 consisted of t>\npiece of cloth draped around them\nin a very artistic, yet very simple\nway.\n\"Long, straight flowing lines.\"\nhe said, \"peplums or short tunics on skirts, draped necklines,\ncowls and scarfs, draped girdles\nand sash ties are some of the im\nportent fashion details that the\nGreek   In    their   Inspiration.\"\nThs question of dress length*\nhe  said.  Is  no longer a question\n\"Por general street and daytime\nwear,\" he said, \"skirts worn by a\nmajority of women this spring will\nbe middle calf length; for the\nmore formal afternoon wear t he\nlower calf length will be most\npopular and for evening wear, ankle\nlength.\"\nOn the right Is Mrs. William B. Blake, who, before  \/ Mrs.   Blake  of  Hamilton,   Ont.  On   the  left  ts  Mrs.\nher recent marriage in Knox College chapel, Toronto,\nwas Mtss Pnlt.h Baxter, daughter of Mrs. ICdwyn Baxter and the late Lleut.-CoI. E 8. Baxter, and granddaughter of ths Hon. Hon, Jacob Baxter of Cayuga,\nOnt, Mr. Blake ls a son of th* Rev. w. G. Blake snd\nTelford Altchlson, formerly Miss Helen D. Anderson,\ndaughter of Mr, and Mrs. Joel Anderson of Kempt-\nvllle, Ont. Mr. Altchlson Is a son of MT. snd Mrs.\nGeorge  Aitohlson   of   LucXhow,   Ont.\nWindow Ventilators\nTOMATO   HALAD   DRESSING\nEquipment at windows for allow-^card them during the summer\ntng a certain amount of fresh airi months when only an Insect screen\nto enter and at the same time to may be wanted. If the window ls\nexclude   dust   and   dirt   ls   often   a | near   a   desk   or   table   with   many\npart   of   the   well   furnished   house.\nVentilators especially  In winter protect  draperies  and  rugs  and  lessen\ncleaning  duties.\nA   type   of   ventilator   which   has\npapers, however, the ventilator pro\ntents them from sailing around\nthe room and at the same time lets\nin a breeze. The ventilator with\nthe   dust   screen    attachment   costs\nOne cup of tomato soup, % cup\nvinegar, \\_ cup oil, % cup sugar,\none tablespoon Worcestershire sauce,\nthree tablespoons grated onion. Put\nabove ingredients Into quart Jar In\norder given. Mix together one teaspoon salt, one teaspoon paprika,\none scant teaspoon mustard, and add\nto mixture ln Jar. Seal and shake\nwell. This Is delicious on head lettuce and oan be- kept for a long\ntime in cool place.\ndust screen recently patented approximately $12. If one already\nis attached to the window casing has the ventilator, the dust screen\nhy steel brackets fastened to the can be attached. '\nwood on each side of the window, i Much cheaper types of venttla-\nThese hold a heavy glass Which tors are the sliding kind which\nleans out slightly toward the room are placed directly under the wln-\nand away from the window sending dow. They can be bought in sev-\nthe fresh toward the celling. Ex- eral different lengths. Some have\ntending from thla glass to the a metal frame work backed by\nwindow pane Is a horizontal met-' screening. Others have a cloth fab-\nnl covering which holds a flnejrlc framed In metal,\nmesh   copper   screening.   This   dust     Probably  the  best  guide for pur\nscreen excludes soot. dust, and dirt.\nBeing detachable from the rest of\nthe  ventilator,   the  dust  screen  can\nb*   removed   when   it   ls   necessary\nchasing a ventilator is the case\nwith which It cen be cleaned. Dust\nand soot quickly clog small openings, snd unless these can be eas-\nto raise or lower the  window. Both   Hy   brushed       out      or   washed\nthe   dust   and    the    ventilator   arelprnves bothersome. -Christian Science\nremovable  If it is desirable  to dis- j Monitor.\nLittle Beauty Hints\nIt   Is   not   a   difficult   matter   tOf,v_.y    blank,    you    do    pot    require\nreduce vour stomach If you will be\npersistent in your exercises. Walst-\nbendlng and twisting exercises will\naccomplish It.\nBleaches have a tendency to\nmake the hair dry and brittle. It\nmight be well for you to discontinue using a bleach and treat your\nhair.\nIf    your   eyebrows    are    naturally1 It,\nmascara.    Use   a   gray   eye   shadow\npaste.\nDigestive disorders and constipation are the chief acusea of bad\nbreath. There may be diseased tonsils. Infected teeth or some nose\ntrouble whloh give the breath a\ndisagreeable odor. You must determine   the  cause  first,   then  correct\nEfficient Housekeeping\nBy   LALHA   K.   MRKMAN\nTOMORROWS   MENU j\nBreakfast\nBananas\nCereal\nScrambled Bggs Bacon\nOrange-Ginger Marmalade\nCoffee\nLuncheon\nWaffles\nMaple   Syrup\nFruit Cup\n<oo_:ei\nFraternal\nocieties\nAre you in need of constitutions and bylaws governing the regulations of your lodge?\nIf bo, why not let us give quotations and assist\nin drafting it into shape for you. We are equipped\nto give you a speedy and complete job, and our prices\nwill compare most favorably with work done on the\noutside.\nPhone 143 or 144\nand have our representative talk the matter\nover with you.\nSht Ndfiim lathi. Sfania\nitab B*partm*nt\nCrtator. of Fine Printing\nNelson, B. C.\nTea\nDinner\nlimb   Stew   with\nPotatoes  and  Peas\nEgg Dumplings\nFruit Qclatine Molds with\nMock   Whipped  Cream\nCoffee\nhalf teaspoon nf ground nutmeg\nand one-half teaspoon of salt. Add\none cup of granulated sugar, one\ncup of cold, sweet milk, one cup\nof rigs put through the food\nchopper .'measured after being\nground), one cup of rhoppod beef\nsuet, one teaspoon esch of vanilla\nextract and1 lemon Juice, nnd one-\nhalf teaspoon of baking soda dissolved in three teaspoons or hot\nwster. Pill a large, greased can only\nhalf full of this mixture, and after\ntying on tightly-fitting cover, sink\nth e can 1 n boiling water and let\nwater continue to boll around it\nfor three hourg. Serve hot with\nany    desired    noid    hard    sauce\nNEW DISHKS THIS WEEK\nOrange-Ginger Marmalades; Remove peel Jn quarters from seven\nmedium-slaed thin-skinned oranges\nand. after scraping the white part\nfrom the rind (discarding white\npart), cut the akin Into thin\nstripe with a pair of scissors. Also\nslice tbs pulp of the seven oranges. Mix pulp with rlndstrips,\nthen add two large lemons, slicing\nthese thinly through rind and\npulp; Into this mixture *tlr seren\ncups of oold water, and let stand\novernight, Wert. d*y. boll three\nhours before adding seven and one-\nhalf cups of granulated sugar\nand one cupful of crystsllzed ginger cut in tiny bite (measured\nafter chopping), and let the mixture boll one hovir longer before\nturning it into hot, sterlllMd Jelly glasses. Cover with hot, melted paraffins wax when cold.\nEgg Dumplings: Into a medium\nsized mixing bowl put. one beaten\negg and one-third cup of cold,\nsweet milk. Add one nip of pastry\nflour prerlously sifted with one\nteaspoon of bsktng powder snd\none-fourth teaspoon of salt. Mix\nwell before adding ons tablespoon\nof butter, measured before being\nmatted. Drop this stiff batter In\nfrom four to six llttls piles onto\nthe more solid parts of the stew,\ncover the pot closely, and let the\nstew boll for 13 minutes at a fairly\nbrisk pace, before lifting tbe cover. Then serve at once. These\ndumplings wtll h\u00ab slightly yellowish\nIn color, very light, and. If only\nfour are desired, tbey will measure\nabout three Inches ln diameter\nwhen   done. *\nSteamed Fig Pudding: Roll M\nsoda crackers till finely crumbed.\nthen Into) these crumbs stir one\nt   baklog   powrter,   one-\nE&fcs, New York\nStyle\nBoil six eggs one hour, drop into\ncold water, shell and quarter. Place\nln buttered baking dish, holding\nabout three pints. Prepare a white\nst-uqe as follows: Heat ono pint\nmilk, melt in saucepan ons table-\nspoonful of butter, *t_r into the\nbutter two rounded tableepoonfulH\nof flour, add ooe-q.ut*rter of the hot\nmilk snd stir vigorously until the\nmixture is A smooth paste. The remainder of the milk may be added\nthree separate times, -stirring in\neach addition until it, Is smoothly\nblended. Season with one-hajf\nteaspoonftil of salt _,nd dash of\nwhite poppet. Chop two large.tcold\nboiled, seasoned onions, stir onlmu.\nInto the- sauee and pour over thy\neggs. Sprinkle over the top one-\nhalf cupful of cracker crumbs\nmoistened with one tablespoon ot\nmelted butter, and two tablespoons\nof grated cheese for a top layer\nand bake In a hot oven about 15\nor 20 minutes until onrmhs and\ncheese   are   slightly   brown\nSAUCE\nA delicious sauce for broiled fish\ncan be made, nays St. Louis Post-\nDtapatch. by mixing together the\nJuice and grated rind ol one lemon,\ntwo tsbleepoonfuls sugar and ths\nwell-beaten yolks of two eggs. Add\ngradually to one cup of strained fish\nstook which haa- been placed In a\ndouble boiler over the fire, Btlr\nconstantly until the mixture thickens. Pour sauce over fish Just before serving.\nPOTTED  HEAD\nTake lower part of shank of beef\ncover with water, boll till tender\nenough to cut tn dice, throw back\nln pot and season with gait and\npepper, mace, celery and cayenne,\ncloves and allspice. Have ready little melted gelatine and mix all\nthoroughly. Let boll a abort time\nand  pour Into mold.\n'CAnswers by Beatrice\nCertainly, She Needs\nAmusement\nDSAR MISS FAIRFAX:\nI  am  34  and  the  mother of\ntwo boys.   Tve had a bard life\nwith my husband and now he's\nbeen   put   away   for   his   own\nfaults.   I   always   was   a   good\nwife and still am, but after he\ngot Into trouble I had to move\nto my  mother's  so  I  could  go\nout to work.   I work every day\nand   also   help   out   with   the\nhouuse work at night.    I go to\nthe   movies   once    a   week,   or\nsometimes every two weeks, and\nmy   mother   gets   sore   at   me.\nWhat   am   I   supposed    to   to.\nwork all my life and never have\nany   pleasure?   Please   help   me\nIn   soms   way.   I   will   be   very\nthankful for your advloe. L. P.\nI  can't Imagine  any  one  needing\na   little   diversion   more   than   the\nwriter of this letter.   She has been\nthrough   great   trials;   hsr  husband,\nshe says, has been put away for his\nown   faults,   and   shs   goes   out   to\nwork   every   day.       Without   doubt\nshe needs a little amusement occasionally to make her forget the aad\nrealities of  her  own  life.   My  suggestion would be at least one movie\na   week.   Instead   of   the  occasional\nmovie  in  two weeks.   We  all  need\ndiversion.   'The    Orange'*   wa\u00bb   organised to give people on farms an\nInterest    outside    their    own    four\nwalls.   And   when   telephones  began\nto' knit  up  outlying   districts,   insanity   In   rural   communities   grew\nless.   At ths end of the day some\ntired   farm   woman   probably   called\nup another and said: \"Please let me\nhave  that  recipe   of  yours for  soft\ngingerbread?\"       And   ln   the   little\nehat   that   followed,   they'd   forget\nthey'd  been  on  their  feet  all  day.\nWe  all  must  have  a   little  change\nana diversion sometimes.\nHe \"Plays Dead\"\nDEAR MISS FAIRFAX:\nPlease help me as you have\nhelped others, won't you? My\ntrouble is, I had been going,\nup to two months ago, with a\nman 13 years my senior. We\nhad gone together for a year\nand a half and got along\nsplendidly. Just two months\nago, he gave me an expensive\nbracelet and, after that* never\nshowed up again until Just a\ntew days ago, when he took me\nout for luncheon.\nHe has expressed his love for\nme many times and has even\nsuggested marrying me In a\nyear or two, but never has he\nbecome too serious. Do you\nthink lt Is the difference in\nour ages that accounts 'for his\nlate   action?   Is   he   Just   giving\n' me a chance to taste the\nworld and wanting me to be\nsure of myself? I am only 19,\nbut v#ry settled for my ace.\nHave you any Idea as to why he\nshould set like this? It I dont\nhear from him again, will lt be\nall light to send blm a greeting card? If I do, will he probably think I am chasing him?\nIf I ever go out with him again\nwould lt be out of place tat\nme to ask htm why he had acted\nthe way be did? Thank you for\nany advloe you will give. I\nhave oome to you because I\nhave no one dear to me to advise me.\nALONE.    BUT   TRYING.\nA good many men act ln the unaccountable way you describe this\nmen's behavior\u2014end get away with\nIt, too. He tells you he loves you,\nsuggests marrying you ln a year or\ntwo, but conveys the Impression\nthat he's not entirely serious\u2014\ngives you an expensive bracelet,\nthen \"plays dead\" for two months.\nIt seems to me that lt was up to\nhim to make some explanation,\nwhen he took you to lunoh, of his\nlong absence. If you see htm again,\nI'd ask htm why he dropped out of\nthe picture for so long a period.\nHe doesn't sound \"eerlous\" to me\nand I'd try not to think too much\nabout  him.\nLACQUER   ON   SHOE   HEELS\nWhile decorating a magazine rack,\nMrs, a happened to notloe her shoe\nheels were badly scaled. They were\nold shoes so she took a chance\noa lacquering the heels. Her astonishment was great when a few\nminutes later ths heels had attained as high a polish as they had\nwhen new. \u25a0\nSince then she always keeps a\nbrush and lacquer (whloh she has\nthinned down a Mt) In with her\nshoa polishing outfit so her shoes\nalways.have shining heels, attained\nwith alight effort.\nA    BODY   BUILDER\nMy boy never ate between meals\nuntil he started school, then naturally he wanted something at recess\nalong with the other youngsters.\nHowever, this tiny bite may be nourishing by having graham crackers or home-made cookies on hand\nand putting one or two ln sonny's\npocket for the little lunoh, Dont\ngive htm a penny to buy soms cheap\ncandy that  win upset his stomach.\nBOOT  THUS\nPlace rolls oi cardboard In the\nrubber boots after removing. It\nwill hold them erect, prevent cracking and let them dry out thoroughly.\n0. STEPHENSON IS\nNOBLE GRAND 0DD|\nFELLOWS AT FOf\nORaJTD FORKS. Jan. n-rtmemv*\nLodge   No.   At.   IO.OF.   held   fc*llj\ns*ml-annual installation of qttlceral\nwsdn**dar night Dr. D. o. if.: ll\nHaddon aotlng as Installing offleerl\nTh* following offloers were ln*tall_\n*d. N. O. O. Stephenson; T. O.. Kf\nSoheer, J. P. o.. W. MdPbersonf\nChaplain. E- Harrison: R. S., B. Ll\nKldd: F. S. W. J. Pearson; Treul\nP. A. Peterson; War: J. Sran,|\nCon. A. scott, R. 8. If. O.\nOowans; L. S. NO. W. Reelyl\nR. 8. V. B. P. Scon; L. 8. V. O. _\nTutt; I. a. W. Chalmers; O\nT. Wilkinson; R. 8. 8. Cal Hopper!\nLAB. J. Mooyboer After lnstsllaf\ntion sn excellent supper was sen\nIn the banquet hall.\nMRS. R. HENDRICKS\nSUFFERS   BROKEN\nBONES AT KASI\nKASLO. B. C. JUL lav-tin. 8. 8]\nFowler of Rlondel arrived ln the!\ncity Wednesday and la th* guest oil\nMajor and Mr*. J. H. Stubbs.\nMis*  M.  Mllbum,  matron  of\nKlmberley hospital, wa* \u2022 vlaltor lnj\ntown Wednesday.   Miss MUburn '\nformerly   matron   of   tho   Victorian]\nhospital ln this city.\nB. T. Dean* and two small daoghj\nten, of Deanahmwn. wen WednesdaJ\nvisitors in the dty.\nJohn Massey of Nelson 1* * Tt*lto|\nln th* dty,\nMn. Robert Hendricks met with I\npainful   accident   Wednesday   what]\nshe    fell   Juat   outside   her\nbreaking her left leg ln two :\nJust   above   the   enks).     Dr.\nBarclay   la   In   attendance   and  th|\npatient ls resting easily.\nUrt. L. M. Quay ot Calgary ts\nvisitor In th* city.\nA. McQueen wa* a business Ttstt|\nor ln Nelson th* first of th*\nMn. A. Camay and Infant\nhav* left the Victorian hospital\nthslr horn*.\nMn.  Oeorge  Abey  Is relieving  a|\nthe public school  during tit* Ulna\nof  Mlas  M.  Smith  teacher ln  th|\nprimary department.\nMn. Ronald Hewat wbo haa beei,\n111 ls now able to be out again.\nH. F. Wade of Nelson waa * visit\nto town Thursday.\nBEADY FOB TJ8P,\nWhen putting away sonny's *ult_\n\u2022fter laundering, button the veetetl\nInto tho blouse and the trouesrl\nonto the blouse. Than whan ln thf\nusual rush for kindergarten\nschool there will be no search ta\ndifferent parts of the suit.\nPin Money\nA FIVE-CENT PAPER of pins as a wedding gift would .now be considered biearre\nand the donor \"tight,\" to express it mildly. Yet pins were once so scarce that none but\nthe wealthy could afford them. A box of ping was the ne plus ultra of weddintr\npresents, as much admired as costly jewelry and silverware.\nAs pins became less expensive and In mare common use, women were provided with\na certain amount of money to be devoted exclusively to the purchase of pins. And\nso the expression \"pin money,\" was originated. The phrase now has a much broader\nmeaning and denotes any allowance to wife or daughters for personal and incidental\nexpenses.\nTin money now buys a thousand and one things dear to the hearts of womenfolk.\nThe advertising columns are scanned eagerly by millions of women to see what is\noffered that comes within purse limits. They know that the advertisements enable\nthem to buy the wanted articles at reasonable cost.\nAdvertising also keeps them informed of the latest news In the world of fashion.\nIt tells what Paris is wearing in dresses, hats, hosiery and footwear. It pictures gowns\nfor evening, afternoon and street wear, as well as simple little house frocks thut are\ncharming In their simplicity. Advertising introduces improved household utensils,\nnew foods, automobiles in gay coIlts\u2014in short, everything that the heart of a woman could desire.\nAnd that is why women are such careful readers of advertising. It enables them\nto make their pin money buy more and last longer. It helps them keep expenses\nwithin the household budget. Every one should read advertisements. It Is one of\nthe simplest habits to cultivate, and pays dividends in savings and personal comforts.\nRead the Advertising in this Newspaper... it is\nfull of things you want to know and buy\n THE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS       MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1981.\nin\nPage Fhr\u00bb\nJanuary Shoe Sale\nIn This Sale\nWe Have Embodied\nAbout 300 pair\nof\nBoudoir Slippers\nThese slippers were just in for Christmas\nTrade\u2014and are all new goods.\nColors\nPrices\nBLUE\n$1.40\nROSE\n81.80\nRED\n$1.95\nPINK\n$2.40\nBLACK\n$2.80\nR. Andrew & Co.\nLeaders in Footfashion\nINSTITUTE\nIS ORGANIZED\nAT APPLEDALE\n|Ten Brave Storm to Launch\nit;  Is Thirty-First  in\nKootenay\nSuccessful formation of a Women's\nInstitute at Appledale wss reported\nSaturday by Mrs. H. H. Pitts, who\neturned Friday night from her visit\n'.o the active Slocan valley settle-\nnent.\nThe    organization    meeting,    held\nWednesday evening at the residence\n|>f Mra. M. A. Woyna, assembled 10\nmembers, in spite of the heavy\nmowetorm that prevailed. Mrs. A.\nVatson was elected president, Mrs.\n?ora Flynn, vice-president, and Mlas\n[vy Honeysett, secretary-treasurer.\n| rhe two directors to complete the\nexecutive were Mrs. Mary Trozzo\nand Mrs- A. Cant.\nWES.   PITTS   DEMONSTRATES\nAfter organization  was  completed,\nMrs. Pitta gave a demo   .ration of\n|tvax   craft,   and   the   hostess,   Mrs.\nWoyna   served   tea.\nSnow    conditions\u2014the    stage    in\nwhich she started for Nelson getting\nstalled soon after leaving Appledale\n\u2014 resulted tn Mrs. Pitts postponing\nher   return until  Friday.\nThe Appledale institute brings the\nnumber In the Kootenay-Boundary\nto 31. It ls the tenth with whose\norganization Mrs. Pitts, aa district\npresident,   has   been   associated.\n\"Truth\" Subject\nin the Christian\n. Science Churches\nTRUTH\" was the subject of the\nLeeson-Sennon In the Christian\nScience church on Sunday.\nOne of the Scriptural texts contained ln the Lesson-Sermon was,\n\"Thy righteousness ls an everlasting\nrighteousness, and they law ls the\ntruth\"   (Psalms   119:142).\nFollowing the reading of the Bible\ntexts, passages were also read from\n\"Science and Health with Key to\nthe Scriptures\" by Mary Baker\nEddy, one passage being the following from page 184: \"Truth, Life,\nand Love an the only legitimate\nand eternal demands on man, and\nthey are spiritual lawgivers, enforcing obedience through divine\nstatutes.\"\nConstabulary headquarters at Manila confirmed a Llngavan despatch\nto the Manila Bulletin stating 400\ncolored \"religious fanatics\" sacked\nthe town of Tayung Friday night,\nburning homes and killing residents.\nChest COLDS\nSociety\nThis column is conducted by\nMra. M. J. Vlgneux. AU news\nof a socui nature, including receptions, nrlvka entertainment,\npersonal ltemsT marriages, etc.\nwlU appear in this column. Tale-\nphone Mrs. Vlgneux ai het noma,\n618 Silica street.\n-yield to this\ndouble-action\nsalve\nWhen colds reach the bronchial\ntubes it ls Important to start Vicks\ndouble-action treatment at once.\nVicks begins its twofold relief the\nmoment it is rubbed on the throat\nand chest:\n(1) Like a poultice or plaster, it\nacts through the skin, thus relieving tightness and soreness.\n(2) Its healing Ingredients are released as vapors by the body heat,\nand breathed in direct to the inflamed parts.\nThis method of treating colds originated with Vicks.Today.the whole\ntrend of modern medical practice\nis away from needless \"dosing.\"\nWICKS\nWVapoRob\nEnamelware Specials\nFIRST QUALITY ENAMELWARE\n6-quart Straight Saucepans 98c\nPotato Pots ...... 98c\nCoffee Pots ... -.. 89c\nPalm Fibre Brushes   25c\nJapanned Dust Pans 15c\nPierced Ladles -  10c\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\nCO., LTD.\nLook tor the Red Hardware Store\nPHONE497 BOX 414\nUxm. S. O. Montgomery, who, during her visit ln Nelson at the home\nof Mr. and Mra. A. D. McLeod,\nSHU* street, haa been the inspiration for a number of social\naffairs, leit yesterday morning for\nher  home   ln Klmberley.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Robert Vyse, Palrvlew, had as their weak and guests\nthalr daughter, Miss Dorothy Vyse,\nwbo teaches at Frultvale, Miss Pearl\nGrieve, principal of the Frultvale\nschool, and Clair Mason and Douglas   Knowler,  both  of  Frultvale.\nMlsa M. Daly left yesterday morning via the C. P. R. for Toronto,\nMontreal, New Tork, and other eastern cities.\n\u2022 e    e\nMr. and Mrs. W. S. Ashby of Harrop spent Saturday In town.\n\u2022 *   *\nAmong shoppers  to tha city Saturday was Mr. cant of Appledale.\nset\nMrs. J. A. Curran, palrvlew, underwent an operation for appendicitis\nIn the Kootenay Lake Oeneral hospital on Sunday morning. Last night\nshe was making as good progress as\ncould   be  expected.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nComplimenting    Mrs.    J.    Bernal\nBiker of Spokane, who Is visiting ln\nNelson at the home of Mr. and Mra,\nW. J. E. Biker, of the north shore.\nMrs. I. a. Nelson Carbonate street,\nentertained delightfully at bridge\non Saturday afternoon. Daffodils\nwere used to center the tea table.\nMr\u201e. Nelson's Invited guests included\nMrs. J. Bernal Biker, Mrs. W. J. E,\nBiker, Mrs. Charles H. Hamilton,\nMrs. J. Percy Ooates, Mrs. Harry\nH. B. Horton, Miss Marian Black\nwood, Mrs. E. a. Matthew, Mrs. P.\nO. Moray, Mrs. L. E. Borden, Mrs.\nW. T. Potheringhsm. Mrs. Harold\nLakes, Mrs. John cartmel, Mrs. Paul\nLincoln, Mrs. R. W. Dawson, and\nMrs. W. R. Grubbe.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. A. Sommervllle of South Slo-\noan aad her daughter were city\nvisitors  Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong shoppers to Nelson Saturday was Mrs. Levlck of Harrop.\ne   \u2022    *\nRobert Clerihew, Palrvlew, left\nSaturday night on a fortnight's\nbusiness trip to the coast cities.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Jack Bell and Mrs. Robert\nBell were Joint hostesses Friday\nnight at the home of the former on\nGore street, when complimenting\nMrs. George Kemmerllng they invited a number of friends to bridge\nthe honors for which were won by\nthe guest of honor, who also received a guest gift and Mrs. J. P.\nBurns, Mrs. Colin F. McDougall,\nMrs. Joseph Hawes and Mrs. L. W.\nOughtred assisted the hostess in\nserving at the tea hour.\nsee\nMrs. E. G. Montgomery of Klmber\nley who has been the house guest\nof Mr. and Mra. A. D. McLeod, was\nthe ralson d'etre of a dainty dinner\nparty glven by Mr. and Mrs. E. E.\nL. Dewdney, Carbonate street, as\nhosts. The dining table, where\noovera were laid for 13, was centered\nwltb daffodils. The guests Included\nMrs. Montgomery, Mr. and Mrs. A. D.\nMcLeod, Mr. and Mra. James CXShea,\nMr. and Mrs. W. M. Walker, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. R. Grubbe, and Mra.\npatera.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Percy Coulter, Baker street,\nentertained at a smart bridge party\non Friday night in honor of Mra.\nErnest E. Eddy, who in leaving the\n\u25a0ity ahortly to reside in Spokane,\nThe honors were carried off by\nMm. Guy Browell and Mrs. Eddy\n.eoelved a guest gift. Mrs. Coulter's\ninvited guests were Mrs. Eddy, Mrs.\nM. J. Miller, of Vancouver, Mrs. J.\nIvan MacKay, Mrs. L. M. Varner,\nMiss Margaret Arthur, Mrs. Guy\nBrowell, Mrs- Jamea*Armstrong, Mr*.\nNelson Ball, Mrs. Arthur Foster,\nMrs. George Kemmerllng, Mrs. David\n\u00a3err and Mra. E. T. Brake.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs J. F. Stevenson of Harrop\npaid a visit to town Saturday.\nMrs. R. D- Barnes, who has been\nvisiting at Pettlplsce, Manitoba and.\njther eastern cities since November,\n.ias  returned.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nIn honor of Mrs. George Kemmer.\n.lcg, who Is leaving the city shortly\nto reside In Penticton, Mrs. F, E.\nBamford, Second street. Fairview,\nentertained Informally at the tea\nflour recently when her invited\nguests, besides the guest of honor,\nincluded Mrs. J. Bell, Mrs. B- Mc-\n'relght, Mrs. T. E. Levasseur, Mrs.\nrfobert Bell, Mrs. J. Coulton Currier,\nMrs. F. T. Willits, Mrs. Ouy Wright,\nMrs. C. E. A. Simmons, Mrs. Mary\nBamford and Mrs. J. Ryan, of Trail.\nAn Informal tea was given Friday\nafternoon by Mrs, J. Ivan MacKay\n\u00abvhen she Invited a few friends to\nmeet her mother, Mrs. M. J. Miller,\nof Vancouver, who ls spending the\nwinter In Nelson. At the tea hum\n.Mrs. MacKay was assisted by Mrs.\nAllan McLeod, who presided, white\nthose serving where Mrs. Adolphe\nBrowne, Mrs. Arthur Foster, Mrs, W.\nJ. Gerbraoht, Mrs. Gordon J. Den-\nholm. The guests were favored with\nvooal seleotlons delightfully rendered  by Mrs. o. W. Tyler.\n\u2022 a.   s\nMra. H. H. McKenzle, Carbonate\nstreet, was hostess to two daintily\narranged bridge luncheons on Friday\nand Saturday. For her table center\nMrs. McKenale hsd daffodils and\nfreeslas. Invited guests included\nMiss M. Cameron. Mrs. w. O. Rose.\nMrs. H. Rosllng. of Willow Point.\nMrs. William Waldle, Mrs. C. B.\nGarland, Mrs. Gordon Hallett of\nLongbeach, Mrs. W. A. Nlabet, Mrs.\nHugh W. Robertson, Mrs. James\nJohnstone, Mrs. Paul Lincoln. Mrs.\nJamas McGregor, Mrs. L. V. Rogers\nMrs. John Cartmel. Mrs. Alex Lelth,\nMr*. James 0*Shea. Mrs. F. C. White-\nhouse, Mrs. A. L. McCulloch. Mrs. W.\nM. Walker, Mra. 0. W. Api^-yard,\nMrs. W. R. Grubbe, Mrs. E. G\nMatthew and Mrs. E. L, Reld.\n* e    \u2022\nMra T. G. Gibson. Carbonate\nstreet, -has aa her house guest Mrs.\nA. T. Eyton, formerly of Nelson, who\nhaa been visiting at tha home of\nher son-in-law and daughter, Mr.\nand Mrs. Saunders ln Klmberley.\n^__\nMiss Kathleen Brodle, who teaches\nat Shoreacres, spent the week end\nat the home on Stanley street a'\nher parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jan.; ,\nBrodle.\n* e    \u2022\nSaturday evening Mra. A. O.\nGelinas, Victoria street, entertained\nthe members of the Lady Bowlers'\nclub when she was assisted by Mrs.\nWilliam Desjardlns and Mrs. Dan\nMcLean. The tea table was prettily\ncentered with red carnations and\ncorresponding colored tapers. Those\nInvited were Mrs. T. E. Levasseur.\nMrs. George Kemmerllng, Mra. Jack\nBell. Mra. F. T. Willits. Mrs. F. E.\nBamford. Mrs. Guy Wright, Mrs. McTler, Mra. Harold Lakes, Mra. C. A.\nLarson, Mrs. W. Desjardlns and Mrs.\nD.  McLean.\n* \u2022    e\nMr. and Mrs. A. D. Emory, Vernon\nstreet,   have   aa   their   house   guest\nMrs. S. J. McDonald of Willow Point.\na   a   a\nA most enjoyable bridge was given\nSaturday night with Mr. and Mrs.\nJ. Ivan MacKay as hosts when five\ntables were In play. Mrs. W. M.\nWalker and Allan McLeod carried off\nA. Clyde Emory also won a prise.\nThose Invited were Mr. and Mrs.\nW. M. Walker. Mr. and Mrs. E. G.\nMatthew, Dr. and Mrs. W. B. \"Steed,\nMr. and Mrs. Allan McLeod. Mr.\nand Mrs. J. B. Gray, Mr. and Mrs.\nErnest E. Eisjv, Mr. and Mrs. A.\nClyde Emory, Mr. and Mra. E. E. L.\nDewdney, Mr. snd Mrs. Gordon J.\nDenholm, Mr. and Mrs. Allan McLeod, Mr. and Mrs. G. o. Arneson,\nH. C. Taylor of Winnipeg, and Mrs.\nM. J. Miller of Vancouver.\n* *    \u2022\nComplimenting Mrs. E. G. Montgomery, of Klmberley, Mr. and Mrs.\nJames O'Shea entertained on Saturday night at a delightfully arranged\ndinner party at their home on Silica\nstreet.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMiss J. Archer who has been In\nKamloops during the past week,\nhas  returned   to   the  city.\nSocial Events\nofTrailCity [j     ^MEA GHERS^)\nRECEIPTS ARE\nHIGHER, FERNIE\nHOSPITAL BODY\nAssociation Ends Year With\nFair Balance: Reports\nHeard\nFERNIE, B. Oh Jan 25.-Tho annual general meettng of the Fernie\nhospiuil society woe held last\nweek. In tbe absence of President\nJ. R. Johneon, Vice-President H.\nA.  Bymnt  occupied   the   chair.\nThe secretary's report waa read,\nshowing that the hospital had\nduring the past year, 66fl patient\ndays. The patient day ooet was\n\u202251.09. The gross receipt, were Wo,-\n526.90 and the disbursements $24,-\n791.43 lowing at net balance of\nS73&.47.\nThe assets on Dec. 31, 1930 covering buildings, furnishings and\nmaohlnery were $23,287.41. Current\nassets $1.10X98.99. Inventory of\nequipment, supplies, drug* linen\nand eta, $7,438.07. Total assets $41,-\n438.07\nVice- President Bryant said regarding the past year's work there\nwaa very llttlo to report, other than\nthe careful running of the hospital. On account of the present\nfinancial depression, the extension\nto the hospitiJi building that was\nunder way at the beginning of lost\nyear had been discontinued, until\nfinancial coavUtlons Improved. During the year they had replaced the\nback balcony, reshlngled the laundry building, cda fixed the storm\nwindows. They had built a trellis\nrence from the back door of the\nnurses' home to the lane, and placed a fire escape from the front window to front balcony. They had\nbought a new lawn mower, roller\nand edeer, _n_ had. seen that tho\nfumisnitngs and equipment of the\nhospital   was   kept   up   to  standard,\nMr. Byrant expressed the appreciation of the society for the work\ndone by th\u00a9 women's auxiliary ln\nsupplyhig linen and other hospital\nneeds.\nDue to the slackmess Ln the mine\nwork and other Industrie*., the\ncontract dues were over $2000 It*,\nln 1930 than they had been in 1928.\nDue also t-, less patient days the\ngovernment   grant   was   also   less.\nHe commended the hospital staff,\non Its year's work. A. Lees reported\na little difficulty In the regulation\nof vSsitora He said some new arrangement was advisable. The board\npassed a recommend..tion to the\nincoming board to deal with the\nmatter.\nA motion was alap passed asking\nthe incoming board board to invest the hospital funds now in\nths savings bunk ln guilt edge\ngovernment guaranteed securities\nwhere.a greater amount of interest\nwould be obtained. The following\npersons were elected to the hospital board for 1931, J. R. Johnson.\nH. K. Douglas. H. A. Byrant. E.\nMorrison. M. A. Kastner, a. Snow.\nNeil MoOallum, A. Lees, Jatv McLean and Thornas Shorthouse.\nTRAIL. B. C, Jan. 26\u2014Mra, O. H\nNelson was a charming hostess\nwhen she entertained informally at\nthe tea hour Friday at ber home\nln Tadanac. Yellow and white\ntulips were used la decoration, effectively setting of the beautifully\nappointed tea table. Assisting Mrs.\nNelson ln serving waa Mrs. J. MlUen.\nMrs. A. H. Hopkins presided at the\ntea urn. Tha guest list included\nMra. Walter Brown, Mrs. H, D. Anderson, Mrs. F. Btndel, Mrs. D. s.\nMoynes. Mrs. C. W. Wilson, Mra. W.\nR. Williamson, Mrs. R. E. Hawks*.\nMrs. R. varcoe, Mrs. J. E. Carter,\nMrs. R. Leonard -and Mrs. James\nCalder.\nsee\nMra. D. McLeod. Topping street. l_\nIn Nelson visiting her daughter.\nMlas Kathleen McLeod. wbo la a\nnurso-ln-tralnlng ln tha Kootenay\nLake General hospital.\nErie Johnson of Vernon la tn the\ncity visiting friends.\n\u2022 \u2022    \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Frank Jasper were\nvisitors in Rossland at a bridge gtven\nby Mr. and Mrs. Jaeger.\nAllison McNeil of Vancouver la the\nguest of his uncltg and aunt, Mr.\nand Mrs. W. O. Devltt, Third avenue.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nMls\u00ab Alice McDougall of Nelson Is\nthe guest of Miss Edith Woodacre,\nRiverside,  over   _b\u00ab  week  end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nO. Pennoyer of Grand Forks U\nvisiting relatives here.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nW. B. Marshall of Silverton la\nvisiting   tn   the  city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nArchie Browne, who haa been 111\nat his home for the past few weeks,\nwas removed to the Trall-Tadanac\nhospital Friday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. c. F. Baldwin returned Saturday evening from Vancouver sc-\ncompanled by her children. ' Mr.\nand Mrs. Baldwin and family will\nreside on Columbia avenue,\nsee\nMrs. James Allan of Grand Forks\nwaB  visiting  In  the  city  Thursday.\ns   \u2022   s\nMrs. A. Anderson of Rossland was\na  visitor  ln  the  city   last  evening.\nPlumbing - Heating\nPhone 1(9 (or prompt and oj-\nperteiwed work on your plumbing   and   heating   requirements.\nNELSON   PLUMBING\n_    HEATING    CO.\nGEO. BRANT\nMUSIC LOVERS\nAND MALE GLEE\nCLUBS^TO JOIN\nJoint   Concert   Proposed   to\nRaise   Expense   Money\nFor Festival\nFrom a meeting of committees\nselected by the Music Lovers and\nthe Male Glee clubs held yesterday\ncame the announcement of a combined concert to be staged ln Nelson\nIn the  near future.\nThe proceeds are to be divided\nequally to help defray expenses of\nboth clubs, in going to Trail ln May\nto compete at the Kootenay Musical\nfestival.\nThe committees chosen sre as\nfollows: Music Lovers club\u2014Mrs.\nJohn Gansner, Mrs. A- H. Crossley\nand  Mrs.   N.  L.   Ball.\nGlee olub\u2014F. E. Wheeler, S. J.\nGridley and A. A- Ps.g_.ln.\nTrail News of the Day\nTRAIL HOUSES AND LOTS. IN-\nsurMice. Notary. J. D. Anderson.   Trail. (3490)\nMELBA SERIOUSLY\nILL,MJSTRALIA\nFamous Opera Singer in 71st.\nYear; Was Taken III on\nShipboard\nSYfltTEY. Australia, Jan. 25\u2014 (AP)\nDame Nellie Melba, famous opera\nsinger, was reported seriously 111\ntoday.\nThe noted singer, 71 years old.\nwas so 111 when she arrived at Free-\nmantle. Australia, on November 4,\nthat the doctors forbade her to\nland. On the arrival or the ship\nin Melbourne November 10 she was\nremoved to a hospital. At that time,\nhowever, lt was stated her condition\nhad Improved and speedy recovery\nwas  predicted.\nDame Nellie Melba (Helen Porter\nMitchell \u25a0 was born in Richmond\nnear Melbourne, Australia, May 19,\n1859. In recent years she had been\nmaking her home in Coldstream,\nVictoria,\nShe took the pseudonym of Melba\nafter her debut as Gilda in Rlgol-\netto In Brussels, Belgium, 1887, Her\nsuccess was Instantaneous. She was\ncreated a dame of the British Empire   in   1918  for  her  war  work.\nCITY IS AGAIN\nIN WINTER GARB\nMercury Soars to 41 Degrees\nSaturday and Drops to 27\nfor Sunday's Minimum\nFollowing closely on an extremely\nwarm spell, when rain fell for two\ndays, snow again set In early Sunday morning and by noon the city\nwas once more garbed ln a winter\ncloak. Trees, throughout the city\npresented a beautiful sight as tbey\nstood heavily laden with soft snow.\nUa to 6 o'clock 2,4 inches of snow\nhad  fallen.\nSaturday the mercury reached an\neven higher mark than It hid on\nFriday. During the 24 hours which\nconstituted tbe day, the maximum\ntemperature was 41 degrees and the\nminimum 32, on the upper reaches,\nwhile lt was several degrees higher\non Baker street. During the day .17\nInch   of  rain fell.\nLate Saturday night a strong wind\ncleared the atmosphere and the\ntemperature dropped so that 27\ndegrees was recorded for Sunday's\nminimum. Maximum temperature\nwas   32.\nMRS. M. HL00K0FF\nOF NELSON DIES\nHusband a Carpenter; Broth-\ner-in-Law Employee of\nJohn Burns\nHelen Hlookoff, ajred 22 year*,\nwife of Mike Hlookoff. died here\nSaturday n'ght after a lingering\nillness.\nMrs. Hlookoff was born In Saskatchewan and has been a resident\nof the district for ]\"> years. She\nlived with her husband ln Nelson.\nMr. Hlookoff is a carpenter and has\na brother Pete, who ls employed\nas a carpenter by John Burns.\nShe is survived bv a father and\nbrother at Brilliant. The body was\nshipped to Brilliant Sunday morning\nfor  burial.\nBEEF   LOW'\n2 pounds round steak, I pound\nham. % cup bread crumbs. Put\nmeat through chopper. Add crumbs\nand seasoning and pack tn coffee tin snd bake one hnur.\n607 Baker St\nPhone 200\nSpecial Stocktaking Prices\non Women's Ready*to-Wear\nM4A4NY SPECIAL VjVLUES ABE OFFERED IN OUR READY-TO-WEAB\nDEPARTMENT PREVIOUS TO OUR STOCK-TAKING. THESE ARE\nLINES WE WISH TO CLEAR AND ARE OFFERED AT CONSIDER.\nABLY LESS THAN M^UFACTURERS' PRICES.\nTODAY WE OFFER:\nWOMEN'S\nDRESSES\n$19.95\nEach\nManv new dresses\nhave been added to\nthis dress rack, and\nin spite of the heavy\nselling of the last two\nweeks you have now\nas complete an assortment as ever. There\nare dresses of sheer\nvelvet, georgette, flat\ncrepe and silk tweeds.\n, Many of   these   sold\n1 formerly up to $50.00\nA complete range of\nsizes, from 16 to 44,\nALL   ONE   PRICE,\nEACH   $10.95\nMISSES' SKIRTS\n$1.95 Each\nPleated or plain tailored skirts of\nall wool tweeds  or  fancy  French\nmaterials. Assorted colors. Sizes 16\nto 20.\nALL ONE PRICE, EACH, 91.95\nCHILDREN'S and\nJUNIOR COATS\n$10.00 Each\nCoats of tweed or velour in sizes\n6 to 14 years. They come in gjl\nwanted colors and with fur collars.\nALL ONE PRICE, EACH, $10.00\nWOMEN'S COATS\nat $19.95 Each\nOne complete rack of women's\ncoats at _ to _ off the regular\nprice. They come in all wool tweeds\nand broadcloth. All are advertised\nlines, and of the better class of merchandise. Siies for misses and women up to 40. Values to $65.00.\nCLEARING   AT,   EACH,   $19.95\nParties Are Held by\nSilverton Folk; Skating   Rink   Is   Open\nSILVERTON, B, C. Jan. A5\u2014Miss\nJ. Walton returned from Nelson\non Friday, where she was the guest\nof her grandmother, Mrs. W. McVlcar.  Mill   street.\nThe regular monthly meeting of\nthe Silverton Women's institute\nwas held on Thursday eve at the\nhome of Mrs. M. Ulbscher. when\nlaat years work was discussed and\nthe programme for the new year\nplanned and commented upon.\nA whist drive was arranged for\nthe near future and a committee\nappointed   to  look' -after thla.\nMrs. W, Hunter entertained a number of her friends at bridge recently in honor of her laughter\nMrs. H. Chester of Cranbrook.\nprices for the \u00abame being won by\nMrs. A. Mclntyre, Mrs. H. Dlm-\nock and Miss Irene Dlmock. Tbe\nInvited guests Included, Mrs. E.\nMathews. Mrs. W. Tatterle. Mrs. W.\nJohnatone, Mrs. S. Watson. Mrs.\nH. Lancaster, Mrs. J. Timing, Mrs.\nM. McNaught, Mrs. O. Ironside.\nMia. T- Wilson. Mrs. T. Burley, Mrs.\nJ. Matheaou, Mrs. O. Stavert. Mrs.\nM. Emerson, Mrs. H- Dewls, Mrs. A.\nWalton, Mrs. W. Marshall. Mrs. J.\nJohnson. Mrs. A. Mclntyre, Mrs. O.\nLockhart, Mrs. H. Dlmock, Miss D.\nHunter, Miss M. Oorrlnge, Miss O.\nRandell, Ulss I. Dlmock and the\nguest  of  honor  Mrs.  H.  Chester.\nThe first aid classes organised\nby the Silverton Women's Institute and supervised by Dr. Prancls\nof New Denver are being vary well\nattended, about 26 members having\nenrolled.\nMrs. W, Tattrle was a weekend visitor to Nelson the guest of\nMrs.   J.  Stmee,   Victoria  St.\nMrs. M. E. Emerson who haa been\nvisiting friends in Nelson, returned\nto her home last week.\nMies E. Marshall Is spending a\nfew days in Kaslo, the guest of\nMiss  M.  Cadden.-\nMr. and Mr*. Marshall and family   were   recent   visitors   to   Nelaon.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Dlmock of the\nMolly Hughes. New Denwjr, and\nthslr daughters Emilia and Irene\nwere week-end visitors to Silver-\nton \u25a0\nMrs. H.. Dewls was hostess to\na few friends last week, entertaining Utformally ln honor of Mrs.\nF. Parson and  Mrs. T. Wilson.\nThose present Included, Mrs, W,\nHunter, Mrs. P. Parsons, Mrs, W.\nJohnstons, Mrs. T. Wilson, Mrs.. O,\nIronside, Mrs. j, Ttnltng, Mrs. M\nMcNaught, Mrs. A. Wallace, Mra.\nJ. Kelly, Mrs. A. Molntyre. Mrs.\nA. Walton, Miss M. Oorrlnge and\nMiss  O.  Randell.\nTha Silverton whist club held\nanother of its enjoyable evenings laat Thursday when eight tables of whist were plaved. the honors of the game being awarded to\nMrs. O. lockhart and J- Tlnllng.\nwhile tbe consolations ware taken\nby Miss D- Hunter and W. Rtew-\nart.\nRefreshments vara afterwards\nserved by the hostesses for tha evening, Mrs. E. Mathews and Mra.\nIronside.\nThe skating rink opened for the\nfirst time this season, on Thursday evening. A large number of\nenthusiastic skaters being in ert-\ndenoe.\nMrs.   H    Lsncnster   rntcrtalned    a\nfew friends Informally at the tea\nhour on Thursday January M.\nWinners of an amusing contest\nwere. Mrs. a. ironside and Mrs.\nW. Johnstone. Tnoae present included, Mrs. W. Hunter, Mrs. F. Par-,\nsons, Mrs. T. Wilson Mrs. o. Ironside, Mrs. W. Johnstone, Mrs. S.\nWatson, Mrs. M. MoNaught, Mrs.\nO. Stavert Mrs. E. Watson. Miss M.\nGorrtnge and Miss D. Hunter.\nFAMOUS HOSTESS\nDIES AT AGE 85\nLONDON, Jan. 35. <APl\u2014Ladv St. I\nHeller. 85, one of the most noted\nhostesses of the late Victorian era, ]\nand of Klug Edward's reign, died\ntoday. She was famous, not only for\nthe brilliance of her entertainments,\nbut for indefatlgablf social work\non   behalf   of   tba   poor.\n2 cupa hot rloed potatoes, i tablespoon butter, 'i teappoon salt,\nand pepper, |4 teaspoon celery salt.\nfew drops onion Juice, 1 teaspoon\nchopped parsley. 1 egg yolk. Mix\nand shspe. Dip in egg and crumbs\nand  fn\"  one  minute  in deep fat.\nSCHOLARSHIP IS\nOFFERED TRAIL\nRotary Club of Trail to Provide $100 for the Beat\nEssay\nTRAIL. B. C, Jan. 96\u2014Trail Rotary club is again offering a $100\nKrholarshtp to high school students\nhere for essay writing. This yesr\nthe essay is to be written on Sir\nJohn A. MacDonald. The $100 will\nbe available to assist the winner ln\nthe coat of his or her education\nafter leaving Trail high school.\nEssays sliouid be sent to that aec-\nrptarv. Glenn dimming, or to R. C.\nCrowe, not later than the end o* *h\u00ab\npresent school term. It haa be?n\nu_gested. however, that tf the essays\nwere submitted earlier winner* mlgh';\nbe announced prior to the summer\nholidays.\nJack Page of Rossland was a winner of the RoUry scnolanblp las:\nyear.\nTwo Boxes Relieved His Backache\nOntario Man Ujad Dodd's Kidney Pill*\nDODD'S\nKIDNEY\n.    PILLS    j\n\"I suffered with ray back and kidneys\nfor quite a long time,\" writes Mr. Jos.\nBrideau, 32 Columbus Ave., Tinunins,\nOnt. \"A friend advised me to take Dodd's\nKidney Pills and I found after using two\nboxes that I got relief. I would not be\nwithout them now. Thanks to Dodd's\nKidney Pills I never suffer with my back\ndow like I used to.\"\nDodd's Kidney Pills stimulate and atreactben Weak\nKidueym. You will be surprised how soon they be_.n\nto cleanse and purify, tn soothe and htel tbe kidney \u25a0,\n\u2022t the same Ume Backaches, Rhriimstiam. Headache*\nand ailment* due to faulty Kidney* are relieved.    i\u00ab4\n\"ft* Safe Bemuse It't Pasteurized\"\nFor Dull\nAPPETITES\nTry Curlew Pasteurized Milk when appetites have\ngone bad\u2014or if you feel dull and log_y after meals.\nThere's nothing like this delicious food drink for\nhealth and refreshment . . . drink it regularly\u2014the\nfinest habit you can acquire\u2014if it's Curlew pasteurised. Phone now and have it delivered to your home\nevery day.\nCurlew Creamery Co., Ltd.\nICE CBXAM BUTTER MILK\nALL PERFECTLY PASTEURIZED PRODUCTS\n=J\n Pag* Six\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       MONDAY, JANUiUl. 26, 1981.\nStye Nelamt lai, Htm*\nPublication every morning eio.pt Sunday by The News Publishing   Company.   Umlted.   N*lson.   B.   0.\nBusiness letters ahould b* sddreosad aad ch*cks and money\norders made payable to The News Publishing Company. Limited.\nand ln no ease to Individual members of the ataff.\nAdvertising rate card* and A. B. C. statement* of circulation\nmailed on request, or mag b* Hen at ths office of any advertising\nagency  recognised  by  the  Canadian  Dally   Newspapen   Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION RATES\nBy man (ooontry), par month ,\t\nPer  rear |\nBy  mall   (olty).   per  year  \u2014\nOutatde   Canada,   par   month\nPer rtAMt^^^^^^^^^\nDelivered,   per   week\nPer  year ,\nPayabl*  ln   advance.\nMember Audit Bureau of Circulation.\n_l   no\n_ (.00\n.. 1S.0O\n.. .'\u00bb\n. 7*1.\n.. as\n_ 13.00\nMONDAY. JANUARY 28, 198L\nTolmle Still Going Strong\nPremier Tolmie of British Columbia has won a couple of by-elections. In North Vancouver, Liberal for\nsixteen years, the Conservative was returned by 700\nmajority, while in Prince George the Conservative majority was greatly increased, tsiysa the Toronto Telegram.\nAll this is a most effective answer to stories circulated in the east that Hon. Simon Tolmie had fallen\ndown on the job and that his weakness was largely\nresponsible for Conservative losses in B. C. in the Federal elections.\nSo long as Mr. Tolmie continues to hold the confidence of his own people he has no need to worry about\nwhat the eastern wiseacres say about him. At the\nsame time, his friends in these parts, and he has\nmade many of them, are glad to hear that he is up\nand doing and going strong.\nThe Magic of Old Days\nSometimes we wonder if we are able to recognize\nromance when we see it at close range says the\nVictoria Times. If it is far enough away, of course,\nit iB recognizable. Miles of distance or years of time\ncan put a haze about any object and make it look\nlike the relic of a fairer day, but that same object,\nbrought to our immediate vicinity, loses its magic.\nRomance is always a thing of yesterday, or something\nthat lies just over the next hill. It ig never in our own\nbackyards.\nAll of this reflection is provoked by a perfectly\ncommonplace little newspaper item; a brief announcement that a middle-western electric interurban railway\nia about to go out of business. And if you fail to see\nanything romantic about an electric railway, just stop\nand think for a minute about the necromancy wrought\nby the passage of the years.\nElectric railways have been having g high mortality\nrate lately. The hard-faced road and the omnipresent\nmitomobile have combined to kill them by the score.\nThose that survive have to fight very hard indeed.\nFor tho most of them the struggle has been too\ngreat.\nThere is a curious parallel here betweeen the electric\nrailway of today and the canal of a century ago. Just\n\u00bbs the electric ralilway, along in the 90's was hailed\nas a tremendous boon to the rural districts flanking hig cities, so the canal of an earlier generation\nwas greeted. The canal was an invaluable artery of\ncommerce. Its clumsy, horse-drawn barges played a\nbig part in development. Then the railroad came along,\nand the canal died.\nToday the canal looks romantic to us. If anyone\nof us could step out now and make a trip on a canal\nboat of 1830 he would feel that he had been wrought\nupon by time and disuse, gleams for us with an aura\nit never had while it v*s alive. In its day it was\nsimply a public utility\u2014subject, doubtless, to the same\nsort of wrathful objurgation that public utilities always get. Now, being long dead, it is a thing of\nromance.\nOur great grand children, in their turn, will look on\nthe electric railway precisely as we look on the canal\nIt will be, to them, one of those delightful bits of\nfurniture used in the expressibly quaint, colorful and\nromantic early 1900's. They will envy us, our privilege\nof swaying over bumpy tracks through!, the quiet\nrural scenery, and will half wish that the automobile\nhad not come to end that privilege\u2014just as we half\nwish that the railroads had not killed the canals.\nAnd that is the way it usually goes. Romance is\nalways something that one's grandfather had. It\nlies beyond the borders of everyday life, and it always\nwill\u2014which is why we are always seeking it and never\nfinding it.\nOur Debts to Out Towns\nThe following article from an exchange has a practical application locally and in the district and citizens\nwill find food for thought in its perusal:\nMy town owes me nothing. If accounts were balanced\nat this date, I would be the debtor. Haven't I all these\nyears lived within the limits of the town and shared\nall ita benefits? Haven't I had the use of its park and\npublic places?\nHaven't I had the protection of its fire, police and\nhealth departments? Haven't its people, during all this\ntime been gathering for me, from the four corners of\nthe earth, food for mv table, clothing for my body, and\nmaterial for my home?\nHasn't this town furnished the patronage by which\nI have succeeded in my business? Hasn't is furnished\nthe best friends of my life, whose ideals have been my\ninspiration, whose kind words have been my cheer, and\nwhose helpfulness has carried me over the greatest difficulties?\nWhat will I give in return? Not simply tlie taxes\nwhich cover so small part of what I have received. I\nwant to give more; I want of my own free will, to\ngive enough that I can truthfully say \"This is my\ntown,\" so that I can take pride in its prosperity, In the\nhonors which come to its citizens, and all that makes\nit greater and better.\nI can do this only by becoming part of the town\u2014\nby giving generously to it of myself. In this way only\ncan I, even in a small part, pay the great debt I owe\nmy town.\nDr. Walter A. Wells is quoted as saying, \"An actual\nfondness for noise has become alarmingly common In\nAmerica.\"   The only avenues of escape seem to be\nlibrary, the hospital and the funeral chapel.\nSeen and Heard in\nNELSON\n(By J. B.  G)\nSunday evening after dinner conditions were Ideal for a stroll. I\nknow tt, because I missed a street\noar at the Falrvlew end of town,\nand after pursuing tbe elusive tram\nfor two blocks, I gave up. much out\nof breath. Then I settled down to\nan enjoyable but brink walk to\ntown. Zt was about half snowing\nand half raining at the time, but,\nthe trees were laden down with the\nfilmy white. They presented a\nfairy-like appearance against the\ndrab  black of  the evening.\npaths wen well beaten. and I\nnoticed many strolleis taking ln\n\u25a0the night atmosphere amid the\nstillness that only accompanies a\nSunday night when there ls snow\ntn the air.\nBvery wire fronv telephone pole\nto telephone pole was coated ln\nsnow, and to a thickness that they\nresembled falr-alzed cables. Guy\nwires supporting the trolley Unes\nwere also heavily laden, and the\nmaglo of it all was the fact that\nthe trolle wires, its snow shaken\noff by the ever-pseatog atreet can,\nwaa Invisible against the inky sky.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nClumpa of alder trees along the\nroadside to Uie fading light, much\nresembled small forests of willows\nwith the \"pussies\" showing forth\nto all tbedr \u00abp.lnat-Uke glory.\nGroups of birches presented a pretty\npicture, and the snow clung to the\ntrees*  tiniest  branche*,.\n\u2022 \u00bb   \u2022\nOayly lighted honus along the\nway were snow-topped, ana enchantment was lei.t by nearby tin,\ntheir branches bending under the\nheavy accumulation ot snow particles. And as one wandered along\nthere came the clang clang, clang\nof distant churn uella Then from\nvejiou* homes could be beard strains\nfrom numerous radios. Some we.-e\ntuned ln to classical gems oomlng\nmaybe ffom San Francisco, or from\ndistant New York city. Others\nwere pounding out the clashing Jazz\nof thie day and age. And I\nstopped eepectally to listen to one\nwhich waa emitting weird sounds\nwhich I later Identified ae tunc*,\nfrom the bagpipes. And it was a\nScottish reel.\nPassing along High street I heard\nhealthy young voices singing to the\ntune of a piano, \"Abide With Me.\"\nAlthough I could not see within\nthis partlQular home, I could picture the family and possibly the\ngirl friends or - the boy friend*,\ndraped around the piano In a real\naid-fashioned Sunday night program\nAnd amid all thu stillness I\npassed the hospital where I noticed\nwhite-capped nurse* passing to and\nfro to their busy professional-like\nway, doing their utmost to make\ntheir many patients as comfortable\nas possible for the night. And then\nthe lights of Baker street stood out\nIn the snow-blown atmosphere. And\ntheir many colors gave one the\nimpression that the whole tw_i\\\nwas afire. And so on toward the\ncity. Hare the stillness gave way\nto the rush of automobiles, ths\nrtwleh of galoshes through the\nsnow, the laugh of the young a&\nthey tripped along, probably to\nchurch. And then, stepping onto\nBaker street, I realized that the\nstillness of the outskirts of the\ncity was no more. And ! began to\nwonder what I was going to wrtto\nfor this column today. Above ls\nthe decision I reached as I mounted\nthe office stairs to begin a nigh*\nof toll.\n\u2022 \u25a0    \u2022\nT was Impressed yeeterday afternoon by a wonderful flight or swarm\nof birds that hovered aound Vernon\nstreet In the vicinity of the old\nfair building. Thousands of Wrdi\nflew here and there ln a wide\ncircle. An*i as I happened along\nA. Stanley Horswlll was watching\ntheir dodging hither and thither.\n\"Oedar Waxwingh?\" lie questioned as\n1 happened alone \"Quite likely,\"\nI replied. But what 1 could not\nunderstand was tho fact that although the thousands of leathery\ncreatures flew l>elter skelter, never\nonce did any collide, one with tne\nother.\nDid you ever get mixed up with\ntbe wrath of some good woman? Did\nyou ever sit and listen snd not say\na word? And did you ever, after\nhearing lt all, feel like leading a\nleft hook, and following up with a\nsmash to the chin? But being a\ngentleman, you had to be polite, so\nyou took It like a man, didn't you?\nWell they say a woman can tame\nanything. Who was lt who whipped\nnine wildcats every morning before\nbreakfast? I don't know . , . but\nover In Idaho the otfaer dsy a wildcat got Into the bad graces of a\nwoman \u2022 - - And he took lt like a\nman. His hide Is likely being\nprepared for a prominent place on\nthe Ubrary floor.\nt   \u00bb   *\nA lady at Elk River, and she It\nnot a golfer . . . She doesn't know\na thing about the links, has proven\nthat such a thing as a wild lynx\ndoes not worry her. She Just stepped rlgnt up and combed the monster to death. This lady Is a chicken\nfancier and runs a fine poultry\nfarm. Taking a motherly Interest\nm her flock, she did not like late\ncallers at her chicken farm. She\nbelieved the chickens should get to\nroost early. But when a large lynx\nvisited her establishment she proceeded, besides raising her chickens.\nto raise the hair on said bobcat,\nand. single banded, alay it.\nsea\nThis was no little bobcat either.\nIt measured four feet from atem to\nstern, and it had a temper thst only\nmembers of this particular family\ncan display. The lynx entered the\nhenhouse and conducted a gre-.t\nslaughter. The prloe of poultry\ndwindled suddenly, and ready plucked feathers were s numerous enough\nto make a feather mattress. But the\nlady was determined. She grabbed\na garden rake and the battle was on.\nShe went inside and locked the door\nbehind bar. Very womanlike. I\nwould say. Then, although not\nrelated to tht story I read, I guess\nshe started talking, With every\nword there likely was a blow or a\ngood raking. Well, by the time she\nhsd finished giving Mr. Lynx a good\nraktog over ha was non-existent..\nBut there wsre minutes when feminine and feline threats rent the air.\nA real catflght. Well tha north\ncountry still rears a hearty brood\nof women.\nJBRSiV\n\\ life!'\n\"Say tie word and 111 take this one.\"\nGerman City Turns French\nThe mlrscle of Strasbourg\u2014the,\ntransformation of a German clt>\nInto one typically and predominantly French\u2014has been practically\naccomplished with ln the comparatively few years since the World\nWar.\nThe change oould not be made\nln less than a generation, It was affirmed by some when the historic city was restored to France\nafter the wsr. But it has been\ndone. The story Is told by E. M\nNewman in his new trsvel book.\n\"Seeing   France.\"\nSeveral years after the war, says\nMr. Newman, \"the city waa as German as ever. Walters at the hotels and restaurants spoke French\nconaPlclously.\nOne observes a few beer-drinkers, But they quickly Inquired,\n\"Verstehen Sie Deutsch?\" snd if\nthey received affirmative answer,\nthey were pleased, and the guest\nreceived far better service.\" At that\ntime,   Mr.  Newman   writes:\nThey ssld that Strasbourg would\nnot be French before another generation;    but   they   were   mistaken.\nToday one finds It as typically\nFrench as the Parlsan boulevards.\nAll the ahop signs are ln the\nFrench language, and so are the\nadvertisement of the tramesrs and\nbuses and the menus at the restaurants   and   hotels.\nThe   visitor   hardly   hears   a   word\nGerman unless lbs announces\nthat he understands that langu-\n_\u00bb; aud can not understand\n\/rench. German has become a\nconcession of courtesy to visitors;\nFrench Is tht official and almost\ndie universal language. It Is considered not so \"polite\" to speak\nin  German.\nThe principal stores hsve taken\non a chic that is typically French.\ni ml never observed to Germany,\noven ln the metropolis. Paris newspapers ars the popular reading\nof the people. Tbe streets ln the\ncentre of ttee town are filled with\nlittle Iron tables and chairs, where\npeople spend touts, sipping coffee or cordials, and gossiping about\nthe   affairs  of   the   day.\nOne observes a few beer-drinkers; but they may be seen anywhere  to  France.\nEven citlaens of German ancestry particularly the younger generation' appear to enjoy the innovation, probably they had a smattering of French before the war,\nfor many of the population understood and spoke both languages;\nbut now they seem to en.at loudly\nln the cafes to prove their fluency   In   the  French  tongue.\nThe leaven has worked.\nOften It ls a alow process; but\nthere has been speedy sccomplish-\nment  a\u201e  Strasbourg.\n\"I nope none o' thsse tattlers an\ntals-bearers get to the new preacher before I get a chance to tell\nhim   the   straight   o'   things.\nTOLD IN RIME\nWhat the Press Says\nBE  JUST   TO  OBEAT  BRITAIN   equate.\nioday   innumerable  plans are  be-\nAccording to a statement Issued\nby the British Government, a debt\npayment was made early tin is week\non the patr of that nation to\nthe United States Treasury of $94.-\n33fi.ooo. Of this amount iljs.ooo.-\nOuo Is for replayment of principal, while the balance represents\nInterest. Since tha funding of the\nBritish war debt, tmat nation has\npaid to the United States $1,265.-\n760,000, of which \u2022203.000,000 represents repayment of principal.\nRoughly speaking, therefore, Oreat\ni Britain has paid the United States\ni aa interest something over *1,000,-\n000.000.\nIf one in interested enough to\nlook up the Treasury figures regarding them payments lt will be\nfound thst Great Britain pays In\ninterest approximately 3.306 per\noent. The rates vary during different portions of the 63-year period   In   which   the_ indebtedness   ls\nIng proposed for the u,llazation of\nthe sum* paid to Uie United Btat.es\nas interest on the war debts for\nvarious purposes advantageous to\nthe countries making the payments.\nAmerica is asked to repeat to a\ndegree its benevolent gesture toward China when the whole\namount of the Boxer indemnity\nwas remitted, the revenues to be\nemployed in the education of Chinese students. DoubUeaa a certain\nunrest on the part of the Amerloan conscience Is responsible for\nthe suggestion of like action with\nreference to war indebtedness, and\nprobably in time out of that will\nproceed some measure for the rey-\nIalon and perhaps lessening of the\nnation's claims.\nBut, pending that general action.\nIt would appear to be a proper recognition of the honorable action\nof a worthy ally should the United   States   now   rsducs   the   ra_e\nl? be\" dSi?,^'it' X'\u2122>' a\" IS j^^fiWd,7\u00bb-?,.>!f \"ft\nTwo persons were killed, three\nothers were overcome, and 35 residents of a row of houses made ill\nby fumes which escaped from a\nBaltimore gas main Into the basement of one home and spread to\nths others\ned at the same time that France\npays approximately 1-640 per cent.\nalthough France Is now recognized\nan the moat prosperous nation of\nEurope. If not. indeed the moat\nprosperous nation In the world.\nBelgium save 1790 per cent ,and\nItaly, the last of the whilom\nchief allien. 0.405 per cent-\nIt Is npedleas r.ow to go into\nthe Justice of these different rates\nof interest charged against the\nformer associates of the United\nStates ln the World War. They were\nfixed at the time of the various refunding agreements in acoordsnqe\nwith what was believed by the representatives   at   the   United   States\ndebt to Bhat. lat us say, paid by\nFrance. There seems to be no Just\nobjection to this proposition, while\ninnumerable considerations justify\nsuch action.\u2014 Christaln Science\nMonitor-\nTHE    BRITISH   EMPIRE\nSometimes villages have been economic units; sometimes countries.\nand under the Navigation Laws\nthe British Empire was, though Indefinitely, aome such unit. We are\nsuUerlng from the impossibility of\nworking the system of the world\n    \u2014    \u2014    __.-\u2014, 1 a unit In itself. Ths British Empire\n-v,   ~-   are   capacity   of   the   debtor |couid be made as much like ons as\ncountries to pay. I       _\u201e \\\\]_ei_   to see again. Bv  this\nThe  Brltl* .atre.ment  alone  wa*!\u2122'^ \"\u00a3_'0__,__  \u00a3,_\u00a3\u2022. _, '\u00a3?.\nnot affected by any sueh conditions. That nation, first of all, approached the United States with\nthe proposition to fund Its debt,\nand assumed honorably the staggering burden of Interest payments\ni hereon- Tt made no plea of Incapacity to pay. It iirsftd no considerations of war-time fellowship in a\ncommon undertaking Animated by\nthat sens* of commercial i_ono?\nwhich may fairly be ascribed to the\nBritish public as a whole, the British government cheerfully accepted Its obligations and entered Into\nan agreement with the United\nsTates for their discharge.\nAa a result, the spectacle ls presented of Great Britain paying on\nits obligations to the United States\na rate of Interest more than double that paid by Belgium or France,\nand something like eight times aa\nmudh as that exacted of Italy. The\nreward of commercial honor doe,*\nnot seem to  hive  been  quite  ade-\nlioover called them the forces\nWQlch shake credit and which we\ncannot hope to control, could be\nEmpire, as a more or lees self-\ncontained unit, would be able to\nwatch tbe fluctuations of world\ncredit, not with complete detachment, but at any rata with an increased sanaa of security brought\nby the knowledge that tbe great\nfactors regulating Us own credit\nwere also within its own boundaries.\u2014From tha London Dally Telegraph.\nA learned scholar distinguished\nfor his work ln Old Testament\nhistory and Hebrew language, hae\narrived at MacOUl college to lecture\nat the United Theological college.\nHe ls Rav. Oliver Shaw Rankin, MLAH\nbj>., n.utL. of Sorbfa. Scotland-\nAUNT HET\nThat Body of Yours\nBr MS. W. BABTOh,  M. D.\nYOU NEED LIME\nEVERYDAY\nYou are reading a trreat deal these\ndavs about the value of lime to the\nbody. Just as limn ls essentlsl to\nplant life so Is lime absolutely essential to the human body.\nIt la neoessarv lor the wooer\nformation of bones and teeth, the\nunderlying structure on which the\nother tissues of the body sre built.\nAnd likewise It ls essential to\nproper blood formation, to fact\nphi wioiosrlem tell us that everv cell\nin the body must have lta portion\nof llm* If it is to do Its work\nproperly.\nIt would seem that nature know-\nIn*? exactly the needs of voung\nlife ln animals\u2014human and othern\n\u2014gave tne natural food to supply\nlime to the form of milk. Milk la\nthe standard food fcr all young animals ln that It not only gives\nsr-rerurth to th* Browing bones but\nto th blood, and other fluids ao essential to the cells of the body.\nAnd young animals like milk not\nonlv because lt answers ths needs\nof the body, but milk hss a vitamin\nthat actually sUmuli<.Le* the apuetlU,\nfor   food.\nHowever, as you stow older you\nstill need Ume to you diet not so\nmuch to give strength to bones and\nteeth, but to keen tbe -tissues am.,\nfmlds  ln  ths  body   ln an alkaline]\nrather a condition that Is nearly!\nadd means 111 health and poorl\nworking of the various parts of the!\nNow while milk ls \u2022 good food foi\nchildren, as much as a Quart a day]\nbeing consumed bv many thousandr\nof vouusaiera. it. hardly answers **\"\nrequirements o. Uie adult.\nAnd so you must turn to\t\nf03da for your supoly of lime]\nNaturally milk products come firsf\nto lime content. Good hard cheesd\nis rich In lime as also le coi-tagJ\ncheese and buttermilk. Egg vo*if\nalso ls nearly as rich In lime as thd\nmilk products.\nThen oome drv beans, almon\nand oeanuts followed closelv '\ncelery,  cauliflower  and  cabr\t\nAfter    these,    walnuts,\nwhole   egits.   string   beans,\nlemons *nd  lettuce.      ^H\t\nAnd ftnallv barley, asparagus]\nbread, potatoes and cornmeal. Flal\nand'meat ar* comoarativelv poor r\nThe point Is that vou need Ul\nevery dav.   If you are In good\ndln&rv   health    eattnir   almost   L\nkind   of   food   wui   give  vou  sufftl\ncient Ume as the above list sho\"\nIf you are to poor health a_,\nneed lime your doctor wUl oreacrlq\nlt  In  drug  form. ^^^^\nTHIRTY   YEARS  AGO, TWENTY YEARS AG\n(From The Tribune, Jan. S6, 1801)\nLieutenant Oeorge 8. Beer, commanding of,leer of the Nelson oompany of the Rockj Mountain rangers, last night received the application forms for ths enrolment of\ntroops for South Afrlcs.\ness\nW. J. Richardson i rink beat that\nof  A.  Grant  17-3 and  Dt. Porto's\nrink beat Mayor Fletcher's 11-4 In\ntwo games for the Fletcher curling\ntrophy.\ns . \u2022 s\nFire broke out In the Cameron\nbuilding two days ago at Sandon\nwhch resulted tn about $1600 damage, Oeorge Chapman, who waa\nsleeping ln the building, wu suffocated.\n\u2022 e. s\nSlgnor \u2022\u25a0\" -mi has been conducting expr lments In wireless\ntelegraphy that are likely to have\nImportant results. Hitherto any\none oould receive the messages.\nNow he Is experimenting oo a\nwavelength basis which will only\nallow tuning to on certain wave\nlengths.\nt   \u2022   \u2666\nThe steamer Kokanee will make\na special trip to Crawford Bay on\nSunday for the purpose of bringing\nthe smelter here over 300 tons of\nore  from  the  Silver  HUl  mine.\n<Fom Ths Dally News, Jan-11,1\nBorn on January  14  to Mr.\nMrs. Donald Mousod. Stanley stree|\na daughter.\nJames H. Aahdown, head of thj\nAshdown    Hardwa\/e   oompany,\nrived   last   night   from   Wtonlpi\nHe will be in Nelson for a coupl]\nof   days   to   connection   with   thf\nclosing down of ids  branch.\nBarn oa January >1 to Mr.\nMrs.   W.   T.   McA-we.   Ward   streel|\na son.\ns   e   \u2022\nWhile coasting at Ainsworth. Mis'\nEdith Burgess of the post offlcj\nstaff of that oU\u00bb oroke one of F\nlegs. She was brought to Nelsol\nand the fractured limb was set b|\nDr. W. O. Rose.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u00ab\nBorn on January  15 to Mt.\nMrs.  J.  H,   Smitju,  Baker  street,\nson.\nWork on  the  eastern section\nthe city sewerage syster autl\ns,  the olty oouncil  meeting,\noenced  yesterday.\nBorn on January 34 to Mr,\nMrs. Joseph Skinner. Robson stne|\ntwins,  son  and  daughter.\nUTTLE   TREE\nHeart-weary wen thou, Uttle tree.\nBare   bleak   branches   stretched   beseechingly\nTo those above I\nLittle tne, shivering in winter's chil,\nTrying,  bravely,  your   h*art-sobs   to\nstUl\nLest someone seel\nLittle  tree,\n'TU only 1.\nA lonely mortal longing to forget\nHow much of life is veto, and yet . .\nTremblingly   happy   art   thou,   Uttle\ntree,\nIrredlant   in  the  simple  Jew'lry   of\nthe sky-\nSilver   snowflaka   baubles   with   the\nmoonlight high l\nTU strange that I\nAm not content such easy Joya to\nshare\nBut seek much money, earth pearls\nran.\nNot lova\nBut vanity appeased, and ell those\ncountless things\nBy which the favored few win their\nearth-shackled  wings.\nI netd\nNot wonder that God passes by.\nHastening to banish a tree's soft sigh.\n\u2014Kvelyne Marguerite Porter\nTEN YEARS AGO\n(From The Dally News of\nJanuary ao, 1031)\nLeslie Craufurd waa reelected the\npeople's warden and C. w. Busk\nwas elected lay delegate to the\nsynod snd P. Q. Mbrey auditor of\nSt. Saviour's church, at Its annual\nmeeting   held   last   night.\nIna Mackenzie, the Liberal soldier\nmember for Vancouver in the provincial house, anci Ueut.-Col. R\nD. Davles, D.S.O., passed througn\nNelson last night for Revelstoke,\nen route from Camp Lister and\nCreston where they examined the\ngrlevaneee of the nrurned men.\ne   e   \u2022\nEamonn De Valera, president o.\nthe Irish Free State, sailed from\nPhliedHphie ln Jisgulse of stoker\non a Britlah freighter and arrived\nin Inland unidentified.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nBunyan and Smith of Nelson are\nin tha semifinals of the Nelson\ncompetition ln the provincial bonspiel now under way at Trail.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\n0- D- Blackwood Mayor C. F- Mt>\nRardy and Harry Lee will be three\nmembers in tbe seventh Nelson rlns:\nwhloh left last night to compete in\nthe provincial bonspiel.\nIt as learned in totemsxlon*'\nbanking ctrcleg ln New Tork that\na Brazilian coTfse loan, believed to\namount to about $35,000000, la being nswptlatad In London. There\nwere no indications In Wall street\nthat United States bankers would\nmrt.trgpeU In  ihe lota.\nm Mr.\n\"Economy-in-\nAdvertising'*\n\"-\u2022its the\nconstant pressure\n^REPEATED\nADVERTISEMENTS\nthat pushes the\nconsumer over into\nyour buying held\nand adds efficiency\nto your advertising\ndollar \/\nUSE THE\nNELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nREGULARLY\nTO CARRY\nYour Advertising\nNOTHING JUST\nAS NICE ON\nTHE MARKET\nSNAMELLED\nSTEEL\nRANGES\nALL PRICES\n-SEE THEM\nNelson Hardware Co. I\n\"Wholesale and uetail Quality Hardware'\nNelson, B. C.\n THE NELSON D^Y NEWS       MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1981.\na%\nPa*. Seren\nIODDERSFIELD\nWINS SOCCER IN\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nats Middlesbrough In One\nof Two Senior Division\nGajnes Played\nLONDON,  Jan. 3fl\u2014(C   P. cable.\nwine to oup ue engagemenits by\nbalance   of   ths   lltst   dlvlalon\nflubs  ot the Engniii soccer  league\nnly two senior gomes were played\nn    Saturday.     ruutiersfleld    Town\nat  out  Mlddleaborougn  by   three\n\u25a0'~ to two ln an exciting match.\nplayed    at    MlduLeeborough.\nha home aldepreased at t&e start,\nDOng a lead ln the 13th minute\nthrough   Scott,   who   deputised   for\nIhe Injured Peaae.   Soott then gave\nfCuttlbt a beautiful paaa a moment\nbut the latter failed  to con-\nwit   lt.        Huddersfleld   equalised\nPhon   Kelly  scored   with  the  goalkeeper lying on the ground. Muttut\nput    Mlddlesborough    ahead    again\nIramatlcaJly   with   a  beautiful   goal\nlust before the interval,    rhe seo-\nlnd half opened dramatically.   Elites\nVck passed to Mathlaon, but Rob-\nion intercepted and put ln a shot\ntm   Mathlaon   with   lightning   like\nMathlson   saved   but  Kelly\n. from the rebound,   Hudders-\npeld want ahead lu the last three\nnlnutes   through   McLean's   goal.\nIn the other first dlvlalon filxture\njlverpooi and Aston Villa drew, one\nfroal all.    The first half waa tame,\nrlth Liverpool slightly the superior\nbut   weakened   through   injury   to\nSmith.   Miles, making hia debut ln\nthe Aston Villa goal,  made several\nTine  saves.    Walker  scored  for the\nKllla   ln   the   18th   minute   of   the\njecond  half and Hodgson equalized\n\"TUnedlateiy afterwards.\nEAUINO LOSES HARD BATTLE\n' Despite a team weakened through\nhJurtes  and   Influenza  Beading  in\nsecond division game only lost at\nouthampton   after   a   good   fight,\n\u25a0fter the Southampton defence had\n\u00aben in difficulties Bacon scored for\nling tn the fifth minute with a\nhios shot from Davles' center.    Arnold  knotted  tha  count five minutes    after   the    interval.     Southampton   unproved   greatly   in   the\nsoond half and a keen struggle de-\nsloped,   both   goalkeepers   making\nnumber of excellent eaves before\nllalnes   gave   Southampton   a   lead\nwith   a  clever  goal.    Subsequently\nfie scored again after a tine run and\nby Arnold.    Featherby reduced\ndlng'a deficit. Peatherby reduoeu\n\\>V the finest shot of the match.\nA blunder by Notta Forest's goalkeeper allowed Forsyth to score for\nIflUwall   In   the  first  five  minutes\npf  play.    Mllwall   should  have  In-\nsreeeod   their   lead,   but   their   attacks finished badly.   Brown equalised cleverly in tha Utter atages of\nhe second half, but two fine shots\nrora the same  players 'were saved.\nHe got the winner for Notts in the\nfinal moments of the match.\ntn a southern section, third dlvl-\nmatch.    Swindon    smothered\nJlapton Orient.    Swindon outplayed\nIhe   Orient   right   from   the  start.,\nnut lt waa not till the 13th mln*\nhte  that  Eddleston  scored  an easy\ngoal when the Clapton goalie blund-\nMorrLT  missed   an  open  net.\nthe   first   few   minute*.    Morris\ndded   a   second   Juat   before   half\n|lma.    Morris  scored   again with  a\n\u00bbat  ahot   from   the  edge   of   tun\nUty   area   three   minutes   frdlh\nhe restart.    Wi*_. ln  the  Orient\nfoal,   saved   mauy  shot*  brilliantly.\nItorrls  hat-trlqked whan  he netted\nIn a corner shot.   Richardson added\nSwindon's fifth and Cropper replied\nOr  the Orient.\nIn   the   northern   section   match\nmesterfleld went down to a mlaer-\nfcle  home defeat at the hands  of\nBull City.   It was their first home\nfafeat of the season.    Hull scorers\nwere:   Alexander and Weldon in the\nfirst half and Duncan and Raleigh\nin   the   second.     Chesterfield   had\nboat of tho play but finished badly.\njti one occasion in the first half.\nSinks, Duncan and Lee all ahot Into\n[be   goalkeeper'a   hands.\nJRD1MN0VER\nTHE QUAKERS, 4-2\nuis   Boston   Team's   Lead\nThree Points Over the\nBlack Hawks\nCHAMP'S TITLE\nSTILL IN BAL.4NCE\n\/^?*______L\nBy   AL   pEMABEE\n(Former  Pitcher  New  Tork  Giant*)\nTha heavyweight situation haa\ndeveloped Into a game of \"Champ\nChamp,   find   the   Champ!\"\nBut regardless of whatever la done\nhy tha New Tork state boxing commission, who are trying to rectify\na mistake they made ln tha beginning. Max Bchmellng ls going to rental n heavyweight champ Ion until\nsomebody beats him. or until Gene\nTunney changes hia mind and\nemerges from hia seclusion and\nscholarly pastimes.\nSchmeling. like Tommy Burns or\nMarvin Hart, may be the worst\nheavyweight who ever wore the\ncrown, but there he ls. and you\ncan't laugh him off. And there he\nwill stay in the minds of the boxing\npublic until somebody licks him or\nls fouled ln the title, which la apparently the trend of things pugilistic theae decadent days.\nMOTHERWELL UP\nWITH LEADERS,\nSCOTTISH SOCCER\nNow Tied \"with  Celtic and\nRangers  in   First\nDivision\nGLASGOW, Sctoland, Jan. 25\u2014\n(OP>\u2014When Celtip and Bangers\ndropped a point in their Scottish\nleague, first dlvlalon, soccer ma-tches\non Saturday by figuring in draw*,\nMotherwell came up on level terms\nwith them at the top of the championship table. Motherwell had s\nfine win over Kllmarnook by four\ngoals to one at Kllmarnook. Oeltic\nplayed at Aberdeen and Bangers at\nIbrox Pari again* St. Mlrren.\nTbe Celts w\u00abre a goal down\nthrough a fin* effort by the veteran\nBob McDermid. However, before\nthe end, McGory's understudy,\nOowan, a Junior from Wellealcy,\nFife, making hia fltst league appearance, equalized\nAfter leading oy McPhall's goal\nRangers were forced to concede a\npoint when Bellly goaled for ox,.\nMlrren. The Saints were fortunate\nat that, a sound half-back defence\nsaving   them.\nMcPayden did the hat-trick for\nMotherwell and Murdoch added another for good measure. MdEwen\nhad tbe Klines' goal following a\npenalty. Boy, Clyde's new center,\nagainst Alrdrie got two goals. Sharp\nsaved  Alrdrie  from  a  whitewash.\nPartlck Thistle defeated East Fife\nsomewhat luckil. Duncan, Bast\nFife's right back, had his collarbone  fractured.\nFalkirk had an easy time with\nCowdenbeath, Morgan scoring four\ngoala far them ln a brilliant display. Cowdenbeath made no response.\nHamilton Academicals Just got by\nat home against Dundee- D. Wilson\nscored for Hamulon and Dundct\nfailed to reply. It was a keen\ngame.\nHibernian won against Ayr Untied. Main and II. Brown goaled for\nthe winners.   Ayr did not score.\nBattles, Hearts' great center forward, di the hat-trlok against\nMorton an }i~n_\\e added a fourth.\nMcCartney and Russell goals for\nMorton. Despite ..nn difference in\nthe  scores  if,  was  a  good  game.\nQueen's Park, under strength,\ndropped a point at Hampden Park\nto Lelth Athletic. Cordiner goaleu\nfor Queen's Park and Johnstone\nfor   Lelth.\nMANITOBA TEAM\nWINS ANOTHER\nGAME, GERMANY\nMUNICH, Germany, Jan. 26. (CP\nCable, via Reuters) \u2014 The touring\ngraduate hockey team of the University of Manitoba ia still winning   victories  all   along   ths   line.\nTha Canad tins won by three gdtfl*\nto on* in a match today with the\nRelsser Ze club. Watson scored\ntwice and McKenzle once. The German defence was weak, and only\nthe unusual skill of the goal-keeper prevented a much worse defeat.\nPHILADELPHIA.    Pa..    Jan.    26.\u2014\nrton  Bruins  Increased their  lead\n|n the American group over Cbloago\naok Hawks to tvuree pointa, as a\n|-esult of defeating th* Philadelphia\n\u25a0tare las. night, four to two, in\nNational league hookey game.\nLed by Bddle Shore, the Bruins\nminted once In tha first and third\np.Tlod,   while   two   goals   ware   re-\nfc'irded in the midle session.   Shore\nAllied  twice, one  In the first and\nln the second, both on spec-\ncular  dashes.\nWelisnd   and   Oliver   tallied   tha\nher   points.     McOalmon,   assisted\n(by Lowery produced  tha first looal\nnt, while Lowery. on a brilliant\nflash around the Norton net, ended\nhe game with a uoel.\nFirst period: 1. Boston, Shore, 1:6*\nPenalties:     Pratt,    Barton.\nSecond period:    2. Boston. Shore,\n*:00; 3 Quakers, McCalmon (Lowery)\n1:60;   4,  Boston Wetland   (Clapper)\nML\nPenalties:    Pratt Jarvls, Shields.\nThird  period:    6.   Boston,   Oliver\nl(Beattle)   ;42;   fl,   Quakers,   Lowery\n|(Shielda)    12:61.\nPenalties:    None.\nBRUINS DEFEAT\nRINKYDINKS1-0\nTRAIL HOCKEY\nSCHOOL  HOCKEY\nSENIOR   LEAGUE\nBruins   1.   Rlnkydtnks  0.\nMyptery Nine 2, Silver Rangers 0\nJUNIOR  LEAGUE\nFalkners   1,  Canucks  1.\nMable  Loafs  2. Starrs 0.\nTRAIL. B. C, Jan. 25.\u2014Presenting\nthe finest hockey of the Central\nSchool Hockey league this season\nto date. Bruins defeated the Rlnkydtnks Saturdav morning 1-0. James\nDonauihy   scored.\nTha players were as keen as the\nfast les, showing cyclone speed from\nstart to finish. The captain of eaeh\nteam had things well organised, and\nplayers kept their places. The teams\nware evenly   balanced\nIn the second gams of tha senior\nleague the Mystery Nina whipped\nthe Silver Rangers by a acore of\n2-0. Thla was a rather one-skied\nattraction. It seemed as though a\nmagnet drew the Mystery Nine to\nthe Silver Rangers' goal and held\nthem there. Willie Osputo and Bill\nTurtle   acored.\nIn the Junior league Canucks and\nFalkners tied 1-1, and Maple Leafs\ndefeated the Stars 2-0. Bruna Sam-\nmartono distinguished himself in\nthe latter game by scoring both\ngoals.\nVincent Oeorgetti had hia team\nproperly organized and under good\ncontrol, but other oaptalna must\nimprove ln these departments if\nthey want to make a showing.\nSwanson refereed the flrat game\nand  Morris the latter  three.\nICKEY BRENNAN\nSCORES GOAL AT\nFORT WILLIAM\nPORT  ARTHUR.   Ont,  Jan.   26.\u2014\nWilliam   and  Fort  Arthur  sellers   played   80   minutes   overtime\na 9-3 tie hart Saturday night in\n- Thunder Bay Hockey league con-\nist.  Seeking to soars  their  second\ntan of tbe season over the Fort*.\nPort Arthur ware unable to solve a\npturdy   opposition 'defence.       Forts\nave now won six games from  tha\nUlan   cup   finalists   of   last   year.\n\"Mickey\"   Brennan     and   \"Phat\"\nWilson scored for Forte, while Brennan   slapped   one   accidentally   irtfo\nown goal,  and \"Porky\" McLeod\nVls  otbex  Port   goal,\nSchedule for the\nLady Curlers in\nTrail This Week\nTRAIL,   B.   C.   Jan.   IS.   \u2014   Thla\nimak's   ladles'   curling   games,   all\nclub   scbtdult  competition*,   art:\nMONIMY\nSheet   3\u2014Mra.   It.   W.   dark*   va\nMrs.  J. H.  Yount.\nSheet \u00ab\u2014 Mrs. W. Slmpaon \u2014 Mn.\nL. F. Tyson.\nTUESDAY\nSheet   3\u2014Mrs.   R.   C.   Crow,   vb\nMra. O. J. Klnnla.\nSheet 3\u2014Mm.  w. p. Truml]  vs\nMrs.  D.  MacDonald.\nShttt   4\u2014Mlsa   Ewart   va   Mra.   W.\nSimpson.\nTH11R8DAT\nSheet   a\u2014Mrs,   J.   H.   Young   vs\nMiss I. Swart.\nShett   t- Mrs.  A.  R.  Buchan  vt\nMrs. D. Forrest.\nFRIDAY\nShut   I\u2014Mrs,  a.   J.   Klnnla\nMrs. W. F. Trutwell.\nSheet   9\u2014Mn.   D.   MacDonald   vs\nMrs. R. c. crow*.\nShett   a\u2014Mn.   R.   w.   Clark,   vt\nMrt. D. Fomit.\nShett    4\u2014Mm.    L.    F.    Tyson    vs\nUrs. A.  R.  Buchan.\nKANSAS   CITY   BEATS   ST.   LOOTS\nKANSAS CITY, Ma. Jan. M. (AP)\n\u2014Kansas City defeated St. Louis\nFlyers In a listless American league\nhockey gams tonight 2 to 0, Nllthtr\nteam waa effective in th* early\nplay, with Kansas city's pats attack falling to click, and Si. Louis\nnMlertlng to follow up tt* often\n1*1),  stUtifHuss,\t\nBERG TO BATTLE\nPER11CK_FRIDAY\nTommy Loughran Takes Shot\nat  Jack  Gross of\nSalem, N.Y.\nNEW YORK, Jan. 2b \u2014Jeek (Kid)\nBerg, busy leather-swinger from\nEngland, comes back to Madison\nSquare Oarden tuts week for his\nthird clash with Herman Perilck,\none of the Kalamzoo, Mich., twins.\nThe BeTg-parlick bout tops the\ngarden's regular Friday night card.\nAlthough Perilck rates only as a\ntrial horse among the lightweights,\nhe has been able to give Berg all\nkinds of trouble ln their two previous meetings.\nTomorrow night, Tommy Loughran, retired king of the llgh. heavyweights, takes another shot at the\nheavyweights, tackling Jack Gross\nof Balem, N. J., m the ten-round\nwind-up of the Philadelphia arena's\ncard. At Boston at the same time,\nKrnle Schaaf, rugged Boston heavy,\nweight, makea his scoond start ln\nfour days, battling Dick Daniels of\nMinneapolis. Scha&f outpointed\nJimmy Braddock at the garden here\nFriday  night.\nTommy Freeman of Cleveland,\nwelterweight champion, takes on\nBddle Murdock of Tulsa, in a non-\ntitle 10-rounder at Oklahoma City\ntomorrow  night.\nROBINSON TAKES\nSPEED SKATING\nHONORS, ALBANY\nALBANT, N. T.. Jan. 28\u2014Rons\nRobinson of Toronto A. C, Toronto\nOnt.. carried off lndtvldusl honors\nln ths eastern United States speed\nskating   championships   here   today.\nRobinson. Canada's Olympic star\nand holder of the world's five-mils\nrecord, captured first place in the\n440-yard and 880-yard races and\ntook second In the 2ao-yardi\u00ab, col\nlectin* 80 points to win the mayor\nThacher  trophy.\nTRAIL HOCKEY STARS BEAT THE\nKIMBERLEY EAGLES SEVEN-THREE\nIN FAST GAME, KIMBERLEY RINK\nLOH WINS HIS\nFOURTH INDOOR\nTENNIS TITLE\nBeats Van Ryan Fire Sets;\nGreat Display of\nTennis\nMONTREAL, Jan. 20 (AF) \u2014For\nthe fourth time In five years Oeorge\nM. Lott, of Chicago, United States\nDavis cup player, won tha Canadian\nindoor tennis championship crown,\nwhen he defeated John Van Ryn,\nof Philadelphia, ln the final here\nSaturday 6-2, 6-7, 1-6, 6-8. Lott\nand Van Ryn then paired together\nln the doubles to score a straight'\nset victory over J. Oilbert Hall, of\nSouth Orange, N. J., and Charles W.\nLeslie of Montreal, Canadian Inter-\ncollegiate championy, 16-16, 6-3, 5-1.\nTennis brains and tennis strokes\nplayed an equally important part ln\na brilliantly fought singles final.\nLott and Van Ryn, each at the tap\nof his game, provided the large\nMontreal audience with one of the\nbest displays of tennis ever seen\nhere. Matching eaoh other almost\nevenly in speed and accuracy of\nstroke, the two were forced to resort\nto every strategy as they battled\nthrough five sets of exciting tennis.\nOutstanding in the doubles match\nwas the playing of Oilbert Hall,\nthe populsr 37-year-old player from\nSouth Orange.\nCANADIENS BEAT\nAMEWCANS, 6-1\nSuperior Speed and Aggressiveness   Results   in\nMontreal Victory\nMONTREAL, Que., Jan. 25.\u2014(CP)\n\u2014Cans d lens buzzed around the\nhiiAky Americans like a swarm of\nangry hornets m the forum Isfit\nnight, and with their superior speed\nand aggressiveness, thrust a 6-1\nbeating down Americans' threats.\nThus the Oanucks maintained their\nperch at the top of the Canadian\nFucuion of the National hockey\nleague standing, though Toronto\nalso pulled  out  a win.\nThe flashing, hurtling Canadlens\nbored in on Worters from all angles\nin the unequal battlp. With Ho*ls\nMoreno used but sparirudy due w>\nthe back Injuries that kepr, him ou_\nof two games Pete Lepine played a\nsmart game at oenter. With him\nraced Johnny Oagnon, Oeorge\nMantha and Aurel Jollat to maintain the blazing pace from the outset.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period:\nnon   (Lepine)\nPenalties:\n1. Canaflleus,  Oag-\n36.\nLepine.     Patterson.\nAyres (2), Burke McVeigh. Leduc\nSecond period: 2. Canadlens.\nRivera (Burkc-Jollat). 11:00; 3, Can\nadlena,  Leduc,   :18.\nPenalties: Ayres (2), Leptnc,\nBrydge,  Dutton.\nThird period: 4. Americans, Simpson (Sheppard) 8:20; 6, Canadieni.\nMorenz (Burke) :45: 6. Canadlens.\nLesleur, 9:28; 7. Canadlens, Morenz\n(Jollat)    :25.\nPenalties: Oagnon < 2), I_errteur,\nPatJcerson, Hlmes. Brydge, Leduc.\nN. Y. U. CAPTURES\nTRACK HONORS\nNEW YORK, Jan. 26.\u2014Unofficially\nbut still emphatically, New York\nUniversity captured the topmost\nhonors at the Brooklyn college Indoor track meet last night. Phil\nEdwsrds, negro star, who wore the\nviolet colors a few years ago. and\nnow competes for the Hamilton.\nOnt., Olympic club, and Ira Singer,\na N. Y, U. student who Is Ineligible\nfor college competition, won two of\nthe  four  big scratch  events.\nBRITISH FOOTBALL\nLONDON. Jan. 35.\u2014Arsenal. th\u00ab\ncup holder, vat eliminated from\nthe English football association cup\ncompetition Saturday at Stanford\nBridge by Chelsea, two goals to\none. All the scoring occurred In\nthe first h\u00bblf.\nFOURTH   ROUND\nCrystal   0,   Everton   8.\nBradford  0.  Wolverhampton 0.\nBury   1.   Exeter   3.\nGrimsby   1.   Manchester  United  0.\nLeeds 0, Newcastle  1.\nChelsea a,  Arsenal   1.\nSouthport   3.   Blackpool   1.\nBlackburn  6, Bristol   1.\nBradford   3.  Burnlty  0.\nBolton   1,   Sunderland   1.\nShoffleld   U.   1,  Notts  County   1.\nWest   Bromwlch   1.   Tottenham   0.\nWatford 3, Brighton 0.\nBrentford   0,   Portsmouth   I.\nBarnsley 3. Sheffield Wednesday 1.\nBirmingham   3.   Portvele  0.\nENGLISH LEAGUE l\nFIRST   DIVISION\nLiverpool   1,  Aston  Villa   1.\nMlddlesborough 3, Huddersfleld 3.\nSECOND  DIVISION\nCharlton 0, Bristol 0.\nNotts  3.  Mllwall   1.\nSouthampton 3, Reading 3.\nSwansea  3,   Plymouth  0.\nTHIRD   DIVISION,\nSOUTHERN\nCoventry 3, Norwich 0.\nFulham   4.   Thames  3.\nSwUxtqD   V   UtaMQtl   J,\nWtlaall  0,  Ouwn's  Pars.   3.\nTHIRD   DIVISION,\nNORTHERN\nAccrlngton  3.   Carlisle  0.\nBarrow   1.  Rothtrham  0.\nChesterfield   0.  Hull   4.\nCrewe   3.   Wreirhsm   I.\nDoncaster 0.  Lincoln   1.\nGateshead  0.  Hartlepool  0.\nHalifax   1,  Darlington  0.\nNew Brighton 2,  Nelaon 0.\nRochdale   1,   Tranmere   3.\nBouthport-York   City   not   played\nStockport 4,  Wlganboro   1.\nRCOTTISn LEAGUE\nFIRST   DIVISION\nAberdeen  1.  Celtic   I.\nClyde   3,   AJrdrleonlans   1.\nEast Plfe 0.  Partlck 3.\nFalkirk   4.   Cowdenbeath   0.\nHamilton 1. Dundee 0.\nHibernians   3,   Ayr   0.\nKilmarnock   1.   Motherwell   4.\nMorton 3, Heart* 4.\nQueens  Park   1,  Ltlth   1.\nRangers   1,  St.  Mlrren  1.\nSECOND   DIVISION\nAlbion 0, Third  Lanark  0.\nArbroath   3,   Clydebank   0.\nBo'neti 0.  latt  Stirlingshire  \u00ab.\nBrechin   1,   Alios   3.\nDumbarton   0.   Armadale   3.\nDundee  United  4.  Forfar  S.\nDunfermlln* 3,  Montrose  3.\nKing'* Park t. Ralth 1.\nQueen   of   South   4,   Stenhouse\nmulr   1.\nB_ fl\u00a3mj__'a  _ __ _____*  L\nTrail   Defense   Too   Strong\nFor  Lea* Experienced\nOpponents\nREDDICK CENTER\nOF AN ARGUMENT\nTrail Players Like New Rink;\nKimberley Gets Two,\nLast  Period\nKIMBERLEY, B. C. Jan. 35.\u2014Saturday evening before about 1000\nspectators, the largest hookey crowd\never seen In Klmberley, Trail Smoke\nEaters took Klmberley senior Eagles\nInto camp, seven to three, after a\ngood game. The lee was pretty\ngood If somewhat rough tn spots.\nIn the first period, play opened\nst a fast pace, Jordan scoring on an\nassist from Wheatley ln the first\nfew minutea Oough was hurt and\noarrled off after 10 minutes. He\nsuffered a severed artery on ths\nleft foot, a skate cutting right\nthrough hia boot. Botterlll had a\ngood solo run but missed. It was\nclose ln. After 14 minutea Trail\nscored through Brown and added\nanother aofi one two minutea later\nfrom a acrtmmage In front of the\nlocsl goal, the puck going through\nJahren'e legs and barely reaching\nthe net.\nKrmberley   pressed    heavily    and\namidst tremondoua enthusiasm Mellor scored a fine goal. The period\nended three to one in favor of the\nSmoke  Ewers.\nIn the second period Livingstone\nJus*, skimmed the top of tha net\nwith a daisy cutter. Trail then\nscored through Wheatley after 10\nminutea. Reddlck. who wae penalised\nfor body checking Mellor, argued\nwith Referee Sud Smith and refused to leave the Ice. The game\nwas delayed 10 minutes and Reddlck w\u00abe erentua.ly persuaded by\nKendall to obey the ruling. The\ncrowd was hostile at Roddick's re\nfusel.\nTrail acored again. Tt wu Kendall from an assist by Wheatley\nand a fev minutea later Kendall\nbackhanded past Jahren.\nKlmberley, playing strongly, bam-\nbarded Hornqulst continuously, but\ncould not beat htm. The period\nended all to one In favor of Trail.\nIn the third period Mellor scored\nhis seojood offside goal, but after\n14 minutes scored a peach, Uvlng-\nstone adding another two minutes\nlater on a pass from Mackie. In\nthe dosing minutes Reddlck scored\na soft goal, the game ending seven\nto  three.\nOough was badly missed, his absence upsetting Klmherley's combination.\nKlmberley tried all the way but\nwere up against \u00ab. more experienced\nteam with a stone-wall defence,\nparticularly the goalie. Trail also\nshowed more combination, but the\nEagles were unlucky to loae by so\nlarge a  margin.\nAfter the game the teams were\nbanopetted. Speeches were made by\nLloyd Crowe, E. fl. Montgomery,\nCarroll Kendal.. Art Maqkle and\nothers. Tht Trail players aU remarked upon ths splendid rink, declaring it by far the best ln tbe\nKootenays.    Klmberley is playing a\nreturn gams ln tbe amattat et\\9\nsoon.   Thoy may also play Watson,\nLineups:\nKlmberley: Jahien. Gt-igh. Shaft,\nMackie. Mellor. Livingstone, T. Summers.  Botterlll.   Kali.\nTraC: Hornaois-. Reddtefc, Jot-\ndan, Wheatley. Brown, ffliaaon. Mo-\nDonald.   Kendall   Hasaard.\nMAROONS HALT\nBLACK HAWKS, 3-2\nIs Third Straight Win of the\nSeason, Montreal Over\nChicago\nCHICAGO. Jan. 35\u2014(AP)\u2014 The\nMontreal Maroons halted the six-\ngame winning streak of the Chicago\nBlackhawks tonight by squeeeiug\nout a ha_U 3 to 2 victory in overtime. Nels Stewsrt rifled ln the\nwinning   goal.\nIt was ths third straight victory\nof the season for the Maroons over\nthe  Blackhawks.\n.The Hawks fought a great uphill\nbattle to tie the count In the final\nperiod and force the game Into\novertime. Trailing by two goals to\nnothing st the start of 'the final\nperiod, they caught the Maroons\nwithout the services of two men foi\ntheir first goal and short one man\nto knot the count.\nSummary:\nFirst period\u20141. Montreal, Trottier,\n6:0fi; a, Montreal, Smith. (Stewart)\n10:40.\nPenalties\u2014This, Homers. Maroh.\nTrottier    (8).   Wlloox.\nSecond  period\u2014No score.\nPenalties\u2014Conacher   (3).\nThird period\u2014 3, Chicago, :98\n(March) 11:40; 4. Chicago, Miller\n(Cook   and   Oottpeltg).   14:00.\nPenalties\u2014 Conacher, Northeott,\nGallagher. Wilcox, Trottier, Ingram\nand Adams.\nOvertime period\u2014 &, Montreal,\nStewart   (Ward)   8:20.\nPenalties\u2014None.\nPittsburgh Beats\nWindsor, Score 2-1\nPITTSBURGH, Pa., Jan. 26\u2014Pittsburgh Tellov Jackets came from behind to down Windsor Bulldogs in\nan International leagufe hockey\ngame here last night, the locals\nwinning 2-1.\nDeservedly Populai\nTha nam* 'Black & While' on a bottla of whUky It\nIhssJep? \" absolute a guarantee as lha hall-mark on silver.\n\u25a0aSTrnx!.** \" assures that subtle difference In flavour and quality\nL __>, ^ * which distinguishes this whisky from all others. It guar-\n*_\u00bb\u2014\u00a3*__ antees that only the finest materials have bean used\nand that always everywhere tha quality Is lha same.\n\"BUCK & WHITE\"\nSCOTCH WHISKY\nDistilled Mauled ..ml lUllkd inS,o,l....<l\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by\nthe Liquor Control Board or by the Government of\nBritish  Columbia.\n197 PRIZES*.\nfor British Columbia Pipe Smokers f\nYour letter may win part of this $250.00\nIt's the easiest contest that has ever been run\narticles to buy\u2014\n\u25a0 no difficult conditions to fulfil\u2014no high-priced\nSimply purchase a package\nof cool, long-burning Turret\npipe tobaca)\u2014smoke a few\npipesful and then write a\nletter, idling your opinion\nof this new, popular-priced\npipe tobacco.\nThe Best Letters\nWUl Win Theme\nPrizes\n1st PRIZE 950.00\n2nd PRIZE ' gSS.OO\n20 PRIZES of f 5.00\n75 PRIZES of gl.00\nand 100 half-pound tin* of\nTurret pipe tobacco\n-...\u2022..WHWtSSS*\n\\7__a_B\nTURRET\nPIPE\nTOBACCO\nSIX SIMPLE\nCONTEST RULES\nI The Utter must be itrittt- on\none aide of the that* only,\nand signed plainly Kith thi\nwriter**  name and address.\n\\_S AU letters become Ae pro.\npsrtyafOie Imperial Tobacco\n< a of Canada, limited.\nJ J AU entrim must be aeonm-\npanied by a wrapper from a\npackage af Turret pipe te-\nbaceo,\n\\ The Imperial Totems Csms-\npany of Cmada,Limited, mjg\n*** \u00abr*ar into any cer\u2014spsmd-\nencstrmattoesm rsgmAtgmty\nentry in this contest.\n5 TV daemon ty the faips\nwUbefisnl\n(I The Contest deem Pebrmwre\n:9th, 1931.\n!fjarJ47t\u00bb<_t_p_l_-rbiM*a*_LW\nCanada, IM-Ud. _th_M hat_\nSend all fetter* to \u2014 TWrtrt Pipe Tobacco \u2014 P.O. Box 1314, Montreal\nTURRET\nPIPE TORACCO\nUe. peekace contain* 2 poker\n20c pmskss.. cwsuin* I poker\nWul*\n\\S\\ pound tin* con tsixx U pokatr\nhnsad*\n It\u00a9.*,\nWant M Patte\nRECREATIONS WIN\nOYER HIGH SCHOOL\nIN BASKETBALL\nClose  Game  In  Nakusp   Is\nWon in Last Minute\nof Play\nHOW THEV STAND\nBOYS\nRecreation    ..\t\nHigh School \t\nOIKLS\n\"Old Girls'' - \t\nN.  H.  8.  \t\nW. L. D.\n4    10\n14   0\nW. I.. D.\n0    10\n10   0\nC,   Jan.\nOLENBANK. Nakusp. B.\nas.\u2014Nakusp high school boys lost\nto the Recreation ln what might almost be termed a basketball battle\nwith the close score ot 32-31.\nBoth teams played wonderfully.\nNeither team seemed to be able to\ngain much of an advantage for the\nwhole of the first halt which ended\nwith the student* haying the very\nabort lead of 18-17. The second half\nbegan with a rush by the student*\nwhich gained them quite a lead on\nthe Recreation. When time out was\ntaken the fans tn the audience were\nwell pleased for nearly all ware gasping for breath.\nThe last five minutes was hotly\ncontested. Recreation's team began\nto fight for a foothold and with\nfour minutes to play scores stood\nM-sn, with the high school team at\nthe fore. The Recreation then put\ntheir speed to a test and by dint of\nlong passing to A. Carlson are score\nrose to 30-31 with the high school\nstill ln the lead. With one minute\nm play the high sohool was forcing\nthe Recreation'* end when A. Carlson captured the ball and scored the\nlast basket before the final whistle,\nwhich blew Just after the score was\nmade for the Recreation which put\nthem In the lead with the very close\n\u25a0core of 32-31.\nSubstitutes were not brought out\nduring the whole of the game and\nboth teams were tired.\nThe Line-up:\nHigh school\u2014Right forward, Reg.\nWhite (11); left forward. D. Blyth\n(12); centre, Chas. Howarth (7);\nguard, Fred Whit* (1); guard, F.\nAlpsen;   sub-guard P. Bums.\nRecreation; Right forward, D.\nCarlson (6); left forward, A. Carlson\n(20); centre, H. Jordan (6); sub-\nforward, A. Stanley; guard. R. Jordan; guard, c. Mayoh; sub-guard,\nO. Dcdds.\nFERNIE CURLING\nFERNIE, B. C, Jan. ad\u2014In the\ncurling raw for the Ingram cup on\nWednesday night Prentlca'i rink\nwaa still in the lead with alx wins\nand only one loss. Cummings' and\nKeetner'e links tli for second place,\nwith all wins and three losae* each.\nTha curling loe still remains good.\nwith only a few degrees of frost\nfrom tha malting point.\nTha following are tha results of\nthla  week's games.\nMonday night\u2014Wallace 9, Prentice\n8; cumming* 13, Mlnton 11; McDonald 12. Llphardt 5; Oates 3.\nDouglas 12;  Suddaby 4. Stewart 14.\nTuesday night \u2014 McDonald 3,\nDouglas 12; Cummin* 12, Stewart\n10; Oates 0, Walde 10; Kastner 4,\nPrentice 12; Sanborn 17, Mlnton 4.\nWednesday night \u2014 Wilson 14.\nCummings 7; Herchmar 10, McDonald t>; Oates 11, Wallace 0,\nSuddaby >. Llphardt 4; Kastner 9,\nMlnton 8.\nNESONlOMRS\nAGAIN SECOND IN\nTELEGRAPH GAMES\nMillar of Cranbrook and Weir\nof Trail High Individuals\nNelson bowlers took second place,\nby a seven Pin margin over Trail,\nln Wednesday's telegraphic bowling\nfixtures according to the scores\nreceived Friday, to take second\nplace for the second time. Cranbrook headed the list.\nCranbrook bowlers downed 8266\npins, Nelson 6176 snd Trail 8169\npins.\nMillar, Cranbrook bowler scored\nhigh aggregate of 588 pins and\nWeir of Trail high single of 230\npins.\nScores were:\nCranbrook 1st   2nd   Srd   Totals\nBrtcivalll      180   214   IM 600\nLlto      172    160    169 601\n30\u2014      188    189    257 614\nunter    O  189   181    144 614\nDallas      186    132    147 495\nAnttjn     -  188    157    178 801\n*>rinson      180    186    143 509\nBeggs     300    176    179> 655\nLombardo     162   148   151 461\nMUlar      200    162   204 686\nMICHEL BEATS\nALL-STAR PUCK\nmM^OVERTIME\nScore Is 6-5 in Rough Battle\nPlayed on Michel\nIce\nTotal\nTrail\nMoore    \t\nRoberta   \t\nDerrlta \u2014\nMorrlsh .\u2014\nVannata    _.\nNoria    \t\nA.    Merlo\nMICHEL, B. C, Jan. 35.\u2014Michel\nsenior hockey team handed the plok\nof the Albert* end ot* Crows Nest\nhockey players a fl-5 defeat In a\nrough and free lor all game here\non Wednaeday night ln an over-time\nbattle. Poor lights was responsible\nfor large scores.\nEdwin Whalley, btg defense star\nfor Michel opened the scoring up\nby shooting from the blue line past\nManequet, the opposing goalie, Tbe\nAllstars who went under the name\nof Blalrmore Bruins evened the matter when Stewart drove a fast one\npeet Taylor, Michel goalie. Thrills\nwere galor\u00ab at thla stage of the\ngame. P. flask.11 scored for the\nMichel team and M. Manequet\nscored for the Misters at the cloee\nof the first period to make the score\n2-2.\nAt the end of tbe third period the\nscore stood 4-4. Considerable argument arose when F. Sinister, right\nwing for Michel, scored between the\ntimekeeper's whistle and referee's\nbell   Michel getting the preference.\nG. Seiko of Michel and his wing\nmate, T. 8t. Denis, went up the ice\novertime period. Allstar's overtime\ntwice In succession to score ln the\ngoal was tallied by Sclany.\nTeams  were:\nMichel \u2014Taylor, goal: Jenkins and\nWhalley. defense; Slmleter, Sofko, P.\nOeskUl, Bt. Denis and Travis, for-\nwvde,\nAUatare\u2014Manlquet, goal, Howe end\nBottel, defense; Sclany, M. Manlquet,\nBias. R. Manlquet. Stewart and\nDecoui, forward*.\n6256\n1st   2nd   3rd   Totals\n  153    171    164 468\n.... 180    182    182 524\n  197    193    183 513\n 140    184    192 616\n__ 189    196    1R1 546\n.  168    161    148- 477\n198    185    174- 537\nFERNIE HOCKEY\nSQUAD DEFEATS\nLUMBERTONITES\nScore is 5-4 In Long Overtime Tussle; Atkinson.\nMcKay Star\nFERNIE. B. C\u201e Jan. 28\u2014Thursday\nevening the local arena wae tbe\neoene of the longest, hardest and\nmoet bitterly contested game ln\nttie history of the East Kootenay\nleague. Fernie came out victorious\nover Lumberton when Tho__psc_\nbroke the tie in tha second overtime period of the game, and made\nthe final ecore 5-4 for the home\nteam.\nAtkinson of Fernie and McKay\nof Lumberton starred throughout\nthe whole buttle. Atkinson slapped\nln three of Fernle'e five goals and\nassisted on the fourth, making him\nthe crowd's hero of tbe evening\nMcKay beet the local netmlnder\ntwice and then as If In omen of\nLumberton'a defeat was knocked\nout during the overtime and was\nunable to bike the ice again during tbe game.\nlh\u00bb first period started out with\na bang and for a while tbe Lumber-\nton goalie looked like he had run\ninto a hailstorm of pucks but\nwith hts quick eye he lived up to\nthe vow of ell netmen, \"it shaJ.\nnot pass.\" The Lumberton counter\noffensive swept sll before it, McKay and Downer of tbe visitors\nouigtng the net tn quick succession after combination plays and\nwicked encse. The first period\nended Juet after Atkinson slipped\nm   the    firs,   of   fats    tricky    goals\nDuring the second period Fernie\ngot three tallies and Lumberton\ntwo tying the score, and paving\ntbe way for the double overtime\nto come. ' Atkinson put in two\nand slipped the pass over to Berkou\nIn front of the goal who flicked\nln the third. Mitchell and McKay brought the honors to Lumb-\nberton  with  well   played   tallies.\nThe third period was slowed up\nsome by the softening loe an<_ was\nan evenly matched battle to break\nthe tie but neither team received\nnythlng more than a flock of\npenalties.\nlt was not till the eeoon_| overtime that the great thing happen-\nand when Jimmy Thompson\nplanked in his winning goal the\nold hockey game rolled over Into\nthe   Fernie   mltt   and   stayed   there.\nFernie is at the top of the laigue\nWeir       153    220    150 523\nB.    Merlo    .-  146    175    207 528\nLaurence 170    203    144 517\nLumberton: Ooal, A. Ftnley; defense; C. Peaky and I. Lewie; forwards; Ml whell, McKay, Downey,\nLogan,   South   end   Athoheeon.\nFernie: Ooal; A. Shad; defense.\nR. BmoUda. and Mil bum; forwards.\nAttkneon. A. Dicker*. F. Johnstone,\nThompeon,  Berkov, F. Johnston.\nJ. BELL CRASHES\n233 PINS, LEGION\nHartwig, Brake \u00abnd A. Choquette Skip. Winning\nTeams\nCanadian Lesion host ling fixtures\nof Friday evening went to Pred\nHartwig and Ills pin trio who\nbeat  W   Knar's team  1376-11(3.\nSkip Fred Hartwig waa high\nman with a single of 300 pins and\nan  aggregate of  487  pins.\nIn Thursday'B games ,E. T. Brake\nbeat J. Ball and A. Choquette\nbeat J.  Blner.\nJ. Ball waa high Thursday night\nwith a 233-pin single and a 614-\npln aggregate.\nScores were:\nFKIDAV\nFlayers 1st   Snd   Srd   Totals\nC,  Hood    143     93    114 349\nJ. Dee   133   139   1_ 413\nW,   Blner   -  183   13S   170 431\nTotals                397   350 446     1193\nPlayers            1st   Snd Srd   Totals\nJ.   Beatty     117    138    106 3*1\nA. Kraft     136    141 163\u2014438\nP. Hartwig   209    136    163 497\nTotals 451 404 431 1276\nTHt'RSDaY\nPlayers             1st   2nd 3rd   Totals\nSwain    96   102   141 339\nCurrier    144    141    163 448\nBrake -  149   176 146\u2014470\nTotals 398    419    449        1367\nPlayers 1st   2nd   3rd   Totals\nHomersham   ....   93     79     &4 366\nSpencer  ISO   130   130 390\nBell     -...   333    160    131 514\nTotals 456   359   355       1170\nPlayers 1st   3nd   3rd   Totals\nOoodlet  100    142    138 370\nMarr  130   130   130 390\nChoquette     193   130   126 449\nTotals             433   402 384       1209\nPlsyers            1st   2nd Srd   Totals\nHood  105    108    133 346\nDill -         112    149 133\u2014348\nBlner      _... 139    178    1415 460\nTtotals\n356    433    401\n1180\nTwo   tons   of   grain   will   produce\nnow   having   won   four   games   to 1480 dozen of eggs. Sold as grain at\nLumberton'a   two   and   Klmberley's [ a price of tl per cwt. It would he\ntwo. j worth t40. Sold as eggs at 36 cents\nThe   lineups   were   as   follows:    I per dozen  lt  would be  worth $120.'Hrnnlger  acted as serrlteurs.\nWANT  ANb  CLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nOne Insertion 10 cent* a line\nSli Insertions 40 cents a line\nOne month tl.S0 a line\nMlrJmuai  two  itnet\nNo extra chugs if ohsneed.\nBirth notices free ol charge\nDeaths,    marriage*    and    carda    of\nthanks, 20 cant* per line\nFuneral flowers 15 oente pah Una\nNews   of   the   Day, Items   20   oents\nNO ffi-'BA COST IF CBAEOED\nLEGAL NOTICES\nCanada\nMAIL   lUYlKACT\nSEALED TENDERS, ad.t\nthe Poetinaeter General, will be received at Ottawa until noon on Friday, tne 20th Pebruary. 1931. for\nthe conveyance of His Majesty's\nMalls', on a proposed Contract tor\na period not exceeding four yean\nalx (6) timet per week on tbe\nroute Kaslo and Nelson iPropoeed)\nfrom tbe Postmaster General's\npleasure.\nPrinted notices containing further\nInformation as to conditions of proposed Contract may be seen and\nblank forma of Tender may be obtained at the Post Offices of Kaalo.\nNelson. Balfour. Ainsworth Queen's\nBay. Harrop \u00abnd Mirror Lake. B. C.\nand at the office of the District\nSuperintendent of PostAl Service.\nDISTRICT SUPiaailVnialTOENTS\nOFFICE.\nVancouve, B. C.\nJanuary 38rd.  1931.\nJ.   F.   MURRAY.\nDistrict  Superln Undent\nof   Postal  Service.     (3667)\nHELP  WANTETf\n(10)\nWANTED\u2014SALMBMAN. NEW IN-\nterchangeable letter Imitation\nelectric and other signs. Write\n\u2022Jeneral Advertising Assn.. 416\nGraham Ave.. Winnipeg. Man.\n(MM)\nSITUATIONS  WANTED\n(11)\nSTENOGRAPHER WANTS PART  OK\nwhole Ume work.   Phone 798L1.\n(3629)\nMrs. 0. G. Dunn\nHostess, Institute\nin Grand Forks\nGRAND FORKS, Jan. 35\u2014MlB. O.\nG. Dunn, president of the Sunshine\nValley Women's Institute wae hostess to the members of that In-\nstltute on Thursday evening. There\nwas quite a representative gathering. Some interesting pieces of\nMrs. Dunn's own handwork including, gesso, wax work, and fancy\nshades, etc., were shown to the\nmembers and very muoh admired.\nMisses D. Flynn, Margaret and\nCharlotte   Luscombe   and   Catherine\nURMSHtI)  BOOMS  For \u00aben<:   (1_\nFURNISHED ROOM. C.\n009   Mill   St.\nWARDAIA,\n\u2022   (3660)\nFURNISHED     H O V S X K E E PI NO\nrooms.    Apply   014   Josephine  S.\n(\u00bb)\n\u25a0OOM   AND   BOARD\nBOARD AND BOOM FOR TOUNO\nwoman ln quiet home. Down\ntown location. Box 3CU8 Dally\nNew*. <MM)\nBOOMS\u2014To   Bent\n(19)\nAPARTMENTS IN THB MEDICAL\nArt* Block for rent. Amay Chas\nPITlcHardy. <360d>\nHOUSES  WANTED\n(10)\nWANTED\u2014BEFORE MARCH 181'.\nhouse with three or more bedrooms. Apply Bos 8676 Dally\nNew*.         '3Cr\"\n1101808   FOB   BBNT _1>\nFOR RENT\u2014FIVE ROOMED HOUSE,\npartly furnlehed 118.00 a month\nPhon* 393L3. l8\u00ab86j\nSIX ROOMED HOUK FOR RENT.\nNelson Ar... arallable February 15.\nrent  MO.     Phone   594. (3653)\nLIVESTOCK   FOB   RA1.B\n(Ml\n40 YOUNO YORKSHIRE PIUS. M.P0\neach. John EglofI, Ziaewood.\nE!c. <8GS4)\nPURE BRED  REOISTE\u2014fD  NUBIAN\nBuck. 18 months old.    Also does.\nT. Delrymple   R.  R   1. Nelson.\n(WW)\nAYRSHIRE BUI L CALF SIX WEEKS\nold. R. O. P. it-is; F':r particulars call or write Fisher. Port\nCrawford.\nL'CIO)\nA    FINE    PURE    BltED JERSEY\nheifer,    one    week    old: mother\na   heavy  milker;   $10.00. Pie ter s\nNelson.   B.    C. (3833)\nLIVESTOCK   WANTED\n\u00ab4>\nYOUNO     FRESH     .TEPSKY     COW\nwanted.    Danlell. Procter.    (3482)\n(Ml\nPOULTRY   AND   EOOS\nRHODE 18LANO RED COCKEREL,\ntrod bird S4.00 O. H. Fraser.\nNelson. (3836]\nPEDIGREED LEGHORN COCKERSI\u00a3\nfrom Registered and R.O.P. Stock.\nModerate        prloea. Chalmers.\nThrums. B. C. (3814)\nMISCELLANEOUS   FOR  SALB      (27)\nFOR SALE\u2014BARRELS. KEOS. BUR-\nlap sacks, white surer sacks. McDonald   Jam   Co. t3427)\nONE SET Oi'' 'THE BOOK IJF\nKnowledge.\" ln cood condition.\nPhone 708.X. or Box 3677 Dail-\nNews. i1677)\nMISCELLANEOUS FOB SALE\u2014(Can)\nFOR   SALE\u2014DRAY   SAW   OUTFIT.\nChalmers. Thrums, b. O.      .361.0\nSECOND HAND FH_ AND FIT.\ntings for salt. When you ar* ln\nneed of uaed Pine* and Fittings\nany slae Black or Galvanised,\nwrit* tt swart* pip. Yard. 230\nFirst Ave. Bast, Vancouver, B. O.\nThe largest excluslvi dialer! tn\nReconditioned pipes and Flttlnga\n13426)\nFRED  WILLIAMS\nTRANSFER\nCorbln Furnace  Ooal\nOorbln   Washed   Steam  Ooal\nLethbrldge  Standard   Coal\nNewcastle  Ooal\nWood ln all lengths\nGasoline Ice\nFireproof Storage\nMISCELLANEOUS    WANTED        (28,\nWANTED\u2014 FOUR THOUJVND FEET\ngood Iron pipe. George White,\nTaghum. ,3'i ,o\nLOSI AND FOC9.\n(11)1\nLOST\u2014ONE B. 8. A. .22 CAJJBRXI\nrifle. Thrown out of Medlcsll\nArte building- with packing boxes!\nJanuary sTPhone 823R.   Seward.!\nI  (SSSSil\nPROPERTY FOR SAMS\n(341\nFOUR   LEVEL  OORN7\/R  DOTS  FORI\nImmediate sale, near Hume school.!\nPhone  514. 18664)1\nPROPERTY  WANTED\nWANTED\u2014A   RANCH.   KENT   WIU_\nbt paid monthly.   Apply Mn. Hi\nBIna.   Harrop. (8611)1\nTaMH AND  DAIRY  PRODUCE   (38J\nFOR 8AI_\u2014 TIMOTHY AND AWA1-\nfa Hay by car.    Netted Qem Pol\ntatoee. Cabbage and Carrot* mix*,\ncars.  ^'S. A. F. _ Ltd..\" __Sn\u00ab\nAnn. B. C.\nAUTOMOBILES FOR SALR\n(36811\n(40ll\n\u202266\u2014CHEVROLDT   TOUiilNXl    CAR]\n1834 model.    Applv 816 RlchirdeT\nNURSERY  PRODUCTS\nLAYPJTZ     NURSERIIS     FOR\nOrder\nAgent. Nelson.\nT.   Rovdol\n(8482.\nCATS AND  DQQg FOR ,*__      ,,_!\nWAin_-HOME  FOR GREY  Jerri\n_ten.    Phon.  390R BEY jggl\nBUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAssayers\nE. w.'Wlddowson. Box A1I0B Nelson\nB. C     Standard  weetern  charges.\n(34621\nAuctioneer\nMercantile   auctioneer.    A.   Ravmer\n51314   Hall St.    Box 1175.       (8463)\nDentists\nDR. O. A. O. WALLEY\u2014305 Medical\nArte   Building.     X-Rey.     Nelson.\n(3468)\nChiropractors\nDR. ORAY   GLLKER BLK. NELSON.\n(3465)\nDR. MITTUN. X-RAY. CRANBROOK\n(3468)\nAccounting\n'\u00ab...,. 'OHAS. F. HUNTER\nMcDonald JamBIdi!.. Nelablr\n(3461)1\nBeauty Parlors\nBopletv Beauty Shop    aur\u00bbr pt~.wI\n_-__Ei2i*__Jh\u2122ti~m   fsSfJ\nFlorists\nOrlzzelle's Greenhouse   Nelson    r*J\nflowers and floral \u00ab\u00abli_J%,,7_|\nEngineers\nNELSON   FLOWER   SHOPPE\nJSr-aldeWnr^honVT^I\nand  Floral   D_ig_i.\nPhotographer.\nCHAS.   MOORE\u2014LAND   SURVEYOR.\nArchitect.    Revelatoke.   B.   C.\n(3530)\nPARKER 30 GAUGE LOUIILE BAR-\nrel shotgun, hammerless. ln A.l.\ncondition. 825.00. T. 8. Lvons\nWlnlaw, B. C (307Ui\nRADIO. PILOT A. C. SUPER WASP\nshort waves and broadcast power\nneck and extra audio power tube\nPrice 895.00. Boat 2003. Trail\nB. C. (3645)\nH. D. DAWSON\u2014LAND  SURVEYOR\nMining and Civil Engineer   Kaslo.\n(3467)\nA. H. GREEN CO.\u2014CONTRACTORS\nFormerlv Green Bros.. Burden\nNelson. Civil and Mining Engineers. B. C. Alberta and Dominion\nLand Surveyors^ (8468)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nR. w. DAWSON\u2014Real estate, insurance. Rentals. Next HlDoerson\nTTorrtware   Baker 8t. (3470)\nOEpho^DA\u201eer^?5^^rst'\nTransfer\nWILUAM'S TRANSFER\nBAGGAGE. COAL \u00abNB WOOD\nPhone 106 (347,1\nATKINSON    TRANSFER\u2014Coal    .\nWood     Long   dlatonceiuVulin\u2122\n(34731\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON\u2014Baker St..  Carpenter \u00bbJ\nJoiner      ftash   ..4   i?\u201e;J._l \u2022\"\u00ab]\nI    Joiner.\nSash   and   Hardwood\n'3474*1\nTHE  GUMPS \u2014THE  TRUTH   WILL   OUT\nCOAL CREEK IS\nWINNER  OVER\nWARDNER TEAM\nMaple\nLeafs and\nMercantile Draw\nTRAIL. B. C, Jan. 25\u2014Mapto\nheels and Trail Mercantile played\nto a 1-1 tl\u00ab ln a commercial Hockey\nleague game herp tonight. Pred\nLaurlente scored on Hank Laurtente's\npees la the first, period and Ver-\nzuh evened the count In the third.\nMaple Leafs played better combine\ntion but were unable to break\nthrough the Mercantlle's defence\naffectively. Maple Leaf's goal tend\nor. Woytella, was sent to the box in\nthe third for clipping Ross of the\nMercs. M. Marshall, Mercantile\ngoalie, was Injured early ln the\ngame and was replaced  by L.  Gar-\na_RN_!, B. C Jan. 2\u00ab.\u2014On Shin-\nday afternoon, January 18, Coal\nCreek played the return game with\nWardner on Coal Creek Ice. The\nCreek came out victorious with a\nscore of 6-a after a sweeping offensive In the last period. The\ngame was played on good loe, before a large crowd of cheering fans,\nduring the first period there was\nnot much superiority shown by\neither team. Both were striving\nto get ln the lead, but despite their\nefforts, the first period ended\nscoreless.\nThe men from the Creek opened\nthe scoring soon after the start of\nthe second period when T. Atkinson beat the Wardner goalie after\na pass from P. Ashberton. Wa \/ -\nner immediately retaliated however\nand evened the score again when\nP. Moore slipped the rubber past\nPlrle ln the Ooal Creek goal. i%cotty*'\nSimpson put the home team ln the\nlead once more and the boll rang\nwith Wardner gamely fighting to get\npast the Creek's stonewall defense.\nThe last period was one sided to\na great extent, Coal Creek breaking from the first and tallying four\ntimes during the first part of the\ntime. The goals wer\u00ab scored by\nH. Aaherton, J, Asherton, Ted Atkinson and J. Mllbum. W. McKenzle\nof the mill town scored their only\ntally ln this period. The game ended\nwith Wardner fighting hard but\ntoo far behind to recover.\nThe line-ups were Is follows:\nWardner\u2014Goal. M. Sinclair; defense, H. TT _ipson, B. Iverson; forwards, O. Thompson, R. Thompson,\nJ. Moore,O. Hlllman, F. Moore and\nW. McKenzle.\nCoal Creek\u2014Ooal, W. Plrle; defense, L. Atkinson and J. Mllbum;\nforwards, B. Atkinson, P. Asherton,\nF. Johnstone, L. Chester, H. Asherton,  G.   Stmpaon.\nBearcats Defeat\nSons of Colombo\nMRS. J. D. REID OF\nNELSON RETURNS\nFROM THE SLOCAN\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e Jan. 25\u2014Bearcats\ndefeated Sons of Colorabo 3-0 ln a\nsparkling Junior hockey league\nmatch at the rink tonight. The\nteams were in great form. Co-\nlumhos played the better passing\ngame but they lacked finish and\ntheir defence system was weak.\nBearcats relied mostly on Individual\npUj. Woytella scored two goals\nand   Brown.   1.\nOHBCKHRS     IN     FOL'RTH     PLACE\nSLOCAN CITY, B. C, Jan. 26.\u2014\nMrs. J. D. Reld of Nelson who had\nbeen visiting with friends here for\nthe past two weeks, left on Wednesday for her home ln Nelson. Mrs.\nReld was the house-guest of Mrs. M.\nHicks, and waa the guest of honor\nat several teas. Among the hostesses\nwere Mrs. J. Marchi and Mrs. T. J.\nArmstrong.\nThe regular monthly meeting of\nthe Women's Institute was bald ln\ntht Orange hall on Thursday afternoon with the president, Mrs. popoff\ntn the chair. It was decided at the\nmeeting to bold a Valentine social\nln Pebruary and to raffle the quilt\nwhich waa dohated by Mrs. J, D.\nReld to the Institute some time\nago. At tba adjournment of the\nmeeting Mra. B. J. Leveque and Mrs.\nM. Cameron were tea hostesses.\nThere were 10 members present,\nOAKLANO, Calif., Jan. 25 (AP)\u2014\nThe Oaklaiftl Checkers moved nto\nfourth place ln the California Ice\nHockey league by defeating the Los\nAngeles Millionaires 2 to 1, here\nlast night.\nG. BulmeT, manager of an apartment block at Vancouver, reported\nto police Sunday afternoon the theft\nof .W23 from his suite, while absent\nfrom his apartment for a few hours.\n uq\nTHE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS       MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1981.\nPag* Nin*\nMarket and Mining News\n[THINKS CHINA WOULD BE A VIRGIN\nTRADING GROUND FOR THE CANADIAN\nEXPORTER; NEED SOME COMMODITIES\niLockart Cites Various Can\nadian Products Saleable\nin the Orient\nVICTORIA. B. C, Jan. 28.\u2014With\n|he Nanking government desirous of\neffecting a lasting union of Chine's\nnany provinces and rehabilitating\nIhe country Industrially, it would\nI-eem to me that Canada, tf she is\nIn a position to take advantage of\n|hem, will have some ipkndld op-\n\"tunltiee to sell that country\nlertain wanted commodities,\" J.\nIiookhart, late adviser to the Chl-\nfcese government railway administration, who wae a passenger on\npe s. S. Kmpr-ree of' Russia from\nIhe Orient, stated in an interview\nf\u00abtuf_ay.\ni Mr.  Lockhart  is en route to Ire-\nknd,   where   he   has   accepted   the\nlosltlon   of   superintendent   of   the\nnreet Northern railway.\n1 \"Included    in    saleable    material*\nJhere will be, ln my mind, all kin*0\nIf    electrloal     machinery,     rallwav\nMuipment,  motor   cars,   and  for  a\n\u25a0hart   time,   canned    goods,    wheat\nl\u00bbd    flour.    Pot    the   latter   three\n|6\u00bbms,   Canada  need   not  expect  an\ndeflate market,  but for  the  first\nlaentloned  articles  it will  be many\nMars   before   the   country   Is   In   a\nTsltion   to   take   care   of   lta   own\nda   In  these   line*\n| ORICUVTURAL DEMAND\nI \"Primarily   en   agricultural   coun-\nChina's   vast   areas    will    pro-\n|uce  more  than   enough   wheat for\nown people, and you must look\nher aa  a  competitor  when  ihe\nkings   the   fertll     plains   of   Man-\n%urla to tha stage of full produc-\nlon.\nJ \"In   thla   connection,   the   sUve-\npan whleh ls now suggested might\ni used to excellent advantage, prodded   It  oould   be   applied   honestl-\nAd   straightforwardly   to   put   th\nuntry on a productive  ba\u00abla,\"satd\nLockhart. \"There  are so many\nhterests     involved,     however,     that\nEals ls not likely to happen. If all\nJEM contributory nations  would con-\n\u25a0snt to place the fund's admlnlstra-\nion in the hands of a select com-\n|UtU\u00bb   of   the   League   of   Nations\nIhe dlffloulty might be solved to a\nIreat extent, hut such a suggestion\nrill  probably  not  be   accepted.\n^oild rnrr.1 win loan\n\"At any rate, I cannot believe lt\n[111 be good business to extend this\npan unl-raa It can be preguarded.\n[here should be no question of\njsntimentallty enter into this ne-\nlotlBtion. and If tt la really a ques-\nlon of obtaining trade prefereno-s\nInd securing them, It would probably be sound business, If not\nloonomy. to advance the money\nInd forget the principal and  inter-\n1 Touching on Canada's proposal to\n\u25a0artlcipate ln this suggested credit\n\u25a0>an of a billion dollars in silver\nlull ion Mr. Lockhart stated that If\nlanada's portion was advanced con-\nIntent upon wheat sales alone, it\nImld not achieve Its object. \"Rest\n|oured, he added, \"that whatever\n*'t11t la pledged, it will be devote\"\neventually defeat the imports-\nIon of products of the soil,\"\n)ptimism o\" \" e\nMinin    Tndirtry\nKils ^pressic^\nIKTRKLANT) LAKE, Ont., Jan. 35.\n|3P)\u2014\"In this period of depres-\nthe spirit of optimism as\n|iown by those engaged ln mining\nshaken off the mantle of de-\n\u25a0Vetr,'* said Hon. W. A. Oordon,\nlomlnlon inspctor of mmes and\nlamigratlon, in an address to the\nlaard of trade here last night.\nJ When industrial heads and farm-\n|-i were hindered for lack of\nIvoney, the minister said, the mln-\nlif industry wu making Increases\nfithout any special aid or support.\nIhe industry was maintaining the\nllgh standard of wages, and last\n\u00bbr   had   paid   out   1130,000,000.\nJ Tbe reduction of tnter-allled debts,\n|> stimulate the recovery of business\nadvocated by Albert W. Wiggin,\nAirman of the Chase National\nlank, the world's largest, in his\nInnual  report  to stockholders.\nDr. T. A. Wilson, chief Indian\nl.iedieal officer In Britlah Columbia\n|or the past 21 years, died ln Vancouver aged 00. Deceased was\n|.orn ln Ottawa and went to British\n\u25a0Mumbla 34 yean ago.\nLOGAN & BRYAN\nGRAIN\n\u25a0TOCK9.   BONDS,   COTTON\nMEMBERS:\nbav  Tork,  Montreal   and   Vancouver\nJtock   Exchanxes.   Chicago   Board  of\nI Trad t    Winnipeg   Oraln   Exrhsnr,\nand   other   trading   exchanges,\nFBITaTI  WU*\noffices\nVancouver. Spokane and  Seattls\nOFFERS ALL HIS\nMONEY TO CAUSE\nOF UNEMPLOYED\nSASKATOON,    Sask.,   Jan.   35.   \u2014\n(CP)\u2014The ample, soft heart of Alex\nKamx ta sorely touched by tbe\nPlight of Saskatoon's unemployed\nmen. Seven years ago this middle-\naged, whiskered farmer came tb\nCanada from Austria and made\ngood. He Is now a laborer and his\nsavings   amount   to   $690.\nYesterday Alex Interviewed Commissioner Andrew Leslie at tbe city\nhall. He mad; a gallant bow and\nkissed the commissioner's hand.\nThen from a pocket he drew a\npack of bills and offered it to the\nofficial\u2014for the unemployed. The,\nroll   contained   $590.\nThe Austrian - Canadian philanthropist wanted to see the city's\n.oblesa ln a happier state. Relief\nOimps, he thought, were far from\nsatisfactory. In fact, Alex urged\nth.it unemployed single men be\nhoused in hotels and fed at restaurants. That was why he offered   his   savings.\nCommissioner Leslie hastily assured the former farmer that Saskatoon wae quite able to look after\nite out-of-works. StUl, he had to\nstuff the $390 in Alex's pocket as\nthe benefactor , of the unemployed\nturned to leave. Hotels for th*\nworkleas are still things of the future.\nWINNIPEG dlUIN\nTORONTO MINES\nFEATURES FEW\n.'rice   Firmness   Is   Good;\nGolds Are Predominant\nIssues\nTORONTO. Jan. as\u2014 (OP)\u2014Business on the Standard Stook and\nMining exchange yesterday, while la\ng-ood volume for a two-hour session, waa without special feature\ninsofar aa Individual stock and the\nprice movement were concerned. The\nboard, aa a whole. Indicated price\nfirmness, but changes wire of small\nproportion. The golda again dominated the trading list and were\nsteady ln prloe; base metals and oils\nmoved in a sluggish manner with\nprices unchanged to lower. Total\nsales Involved 343,66a share*, aad of\nthe 76 stocks trade, 32 oloaed unchanged, 37 moved upward and 16\ndeclined.\nTha lower priced told Issues wore\nwell represented on gales sheet*.\nBarry Holllnger with sales of 11.600\nsharee, continued firm, olosing up a\nfraction at 16'4c; San Antonio also\nadvanced a fraction to 14V>o. with\n11,000  aharea   traded.\nSteady to fractionally higher prices\nheld In the more prominent gold\ncooks during the short day. Lake\nJhore moved up 36c to 636.36; Dome\nreturned to the gain column, sailing\nup 16c to 610.40; Mining Corporation advanced 6o to $1.96; Vlpond.\n3c to 61.19; Klrkland Lake 3c to\n79c. while Mclntyre, Teck Hughes\nand Wright Hargreavei closed unchanged.\nThe Higher-priced oil and metal\nIssue!', under slow trading developed\nsome weakness. International Nick-,\nel broke 36c to 61660, while Noranda opened at 616.40, sold up to\n616.60 then closed unchanged for\nthe day at 616.35.\nwiNNlPBu. Haa, Jan. at\u2014Oraln\nquotation*;\nOpen High Low clou\nWbeat:\nlu                Ma ll Hit Mia\nJuly        87% \u00bb7\u00bb \u00bbT* 67\u00bb\nOct.        M \u201e MH 69\nOat.;\nMay    \u2014   36% 37 36V, 36%\nJuly        WW 37 36H 36%\nBarley:\nMa.         39 31% 31% 33%\nJuly    \u2014   36% 34% 38% 38%\nOct.    \u2014   36% 36% 36% 36%\nFlax;\nMay    \u2014 100 100 06% 97\nJuly    \u2014 100% 101 96% 08%\n*ya:\nMay    ......   37% 36% 37% 38%\nJuly    __   36% 98% 39 19%\nOct    11% 81% 81% 33%\nCaah  prices:\nWheat\u2014\u00ab\u00ab.   l nard.  63%; No.  1\nnor., 68%; No. 1 nor. 61; No. 8\nnor., 48%; No. 4 43%; No. S, 40%;\nNo. 6 38%;   lead, 87%;   track  63%;\nscreenings,   par ton,   gl-00.\nVIGOR IMPORTANT\nSELECTING THE\nBREEDING PENS\nThe time ls at band to five\nthought to tbe mating of tihebreed-\nini   pens.\nIt should be borne In mind that\nvigour it of primary importance,\n\u25a0elect for bleeding purposes only\nbirds that have this quality developed to a marked degree aa lt ls\nonly birds of this kind that can he\nexpected to paw on to their progeny sufficient stamina to stand up\nunder the condition of heavy egg\nproduction so essential to satisfactory profits under present eoononlc\ncondition*.\nFirst of all tbe females for the\npen should be of good *l\u00bb and\ntype for the breed and should\nhave Indicated by their past performance that they have stamina and\nvigour to stand up under heavy\negg production. Tils presupposes\nthat the female* will have trap-\nnest records. To these females selected not only for else. body, type\nand high laying ability, but also\nfor their ability to lay eggs of standard alee should he mated a male\nthat ts the son of a high laying\nben whose eggs s waged above\n24 ounce, to the dozen and whose\nsisters have also shown br their\nrecords that these qualities have\nbeen Inherited by them. Thla male\nshould be strong and vigourous\nas evidenced by a good full body\nplaced on well Mt legs, a head not\ncoarse though fairly strong with\na clean out smooth faoe and prominent eyes, showing a bold ener\ngetio expression.\nB. C. EGG LAYING\nTO SPEND $9000\nON WANETA ROAD\nGet   Further   Appropriation\nto Continue Waneta-Co-\nlumbia Gardens1 Road\nTRAIL, B. C, Jan. 36\u2014Additional\nappropriation of 99000 has been received by the district office of the\ndepartment of public works for the\ncontinuation of work on the new\nroad being bulit between Waneta\nand Columbia Gardens by the department.\nWork s.arted some time ago on\nthe new road, which follows the old\nflay ward   trail.\nConstruction was started with an\nappropriation regularly voted for the\nwork. It was insufficient, however,\nand the urgent need of an Improved\nroad necessitated a further appropriation.\nIn spite of the arrival of near-\nzero temperatures, and the fall of 10\nInches of snow, two of the three\nrobing were seen by Police Magistrate Wright of Brockvllle, Ont.,\nrscently.\nMrs. Henrietta McLeod, a passenger Montreal-bound on the Canadian Pacific steamship Montclavre,\nwu lost at sea on the voyage from\nLiverpool, it was learned whe\u00ab the\nvessel  docked  at Saint John, N. b..\nBuilding\nMaterial John Burns & Son\nLet us figure your bills on\nBuilding  Material.    Coast\nLumber  a  specialty.\nAOASBIZ, V. O, Jan. i\u00ab.\u2014Follow-\nlng 1* the standing ol the eg. laying contest for tht eleventh week.\nTotal\nOwner                              Pta. Sua\nRHODE   ISLAND   BUDS\nP.  Marnaw      ti 131\nPeruser's   Red   Parm   .... S0.8 151\nD.  Russell    36.6 466\nSwastika P. Parm   40.6 446\nWHITE   WYANDOTTES\nA.  Cant      42.5 407\nJohn   Moeton     41.6 416\nEp   Station,   Sidney  ...  23 4 270\nBARRED   ROCKS\nExp. Parm,  Brandon   ... 40.4 622\nJama* Lamble  60.1 366\nA.   Pennington    6T.1 624\nO. H. Trafton    40.3 313\nMra.   A.   William*     36.6 366\nBLACK   MINORCA*\n8. S. Martin   \u00bb7.7 216\nWHITE LEGHORNS'\nP.   W.   Appleby    At.- 607\nBolivar  P.   Parma,   Ltd. 40.4 416\nBoyes   Bro* ~ 40.8 885\nO.  D.  Oalder  ...-._._. 46.S 471\nJ.   Ohalmera    47.- 483\nll.   W.   Chalmers     335 404\nP.  Darbey  and  Son  ..- 84.9 437\nJ. O.  Deldertch*   -    40.- 388\nDowd    and Moran   89.5 810\nP. O. vane  - - 50.5 633\nW. M. PalTweather \u2014 80.1 474\nW.   Forsyth    40JJ 367\nJ. Oreen 96.8 303\nC.   Heady     41.8 400\nHodgson   _   Buehby   ... 89.8 451\nHolland and Bona   37.4 368\nM.    L.    Homan      60.6 327\nKennedy  Bro*    28.4 313\nC.  W.  Lawson   44.- 444\nLucille P. Farm  46.9 309\nC. P. Metcalfe    61.7 884\nA.  Robertson \u00bb0.- 815\nM   H. Ruitledge  166.3 493\nA. W.  Behofleld   50.1 433\nM.   S.  Sohofleld 36.7 858\nShannon   Broa.    58.6 391\nSmith   Broa    33.8 293\nJ.   W.  Spence   lt* 356\np   O.  Verohera . 31.8 390\nOeorge   Ward     - 24..- 362\nW.    Whiting       67.- 569\nWllaon   Bros.    40* 428\nANCONAS\nP.   B.   Pullen  22 8 805\nProduction 63.89 per cent,\nVANCOUVER LIST\nMINES\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Co. ot Canada* Ltd.\nOKloa, Smelting and Refining Department\nTHAU. BRITISH COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS and REFINERS\nPurchasers M Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Or*\nProduce\u2122 \u25a0   Gold, Silver, Copper, Pig Lead and Zinc\nTADANAC, TRAIL\nBayvlew     \t\nBig   Mlasourl '\t\nCork Provlnc*\t\nOeorge Oopper \t\nGeorgia   River   .\u2014\nOrandvlew    \t\nIndependence    \t\nInt C * O  \u2014\t\nKootenay King  -....\nMorton   Wolleey   -\t\nNational   Silver   \t\nNoble   Five\t\nOregon Copper  \t\nPremier    \u2014\t\nPend Oreille -..\u2014_\t\nPorter  Idaho  \t\nReeve*   McDonald   ......\nRuth   Hope   \t\nSllwjrcrasrt  \t\nSnowflake    _ \u2014\u25a0\n' Ttopley RlflMleld \t\nOILS\nA. P. Consolidated \t\nC and X I*Jid.  \u2014\nCalmont    \t\nCommonwealth - -\nDalhouale   \t\nDavenlsh      \t\n_*nl3ra\u00abt    \t\nFreehold     \t\nHaigal      \u00bb \u25a0\u25a0-\nHome   OU   ...- \t\nIllinois    Alta   \t\n. McDougall Segur ex\nI McDougall Segur new\nMercury     -\t\nI McLeod    - \u2014\u2022\nIM   CItT \t\ni Okalta new  \u2014\t\nI sterling    Pacific    \t\nI vulcsn    \u2022-\nBid\n.46\n.00%\n.56\n.02\n.15\n.01\n.04\n.02\n.05\n.06 ii\n.70\n.70\n.07\n\u25a001V.\n041(.\n.01\nAsk\n.01\n4614\n.08\n.04\n.01 li\n.23\n04%\n02 V,\n.05 Vi\n.07\n.72\n.06\n.30 .\n.05\n32\n.66\n.32\n.30\n.56\n.03\n.5(5\n\u25a017Vi\n.11\n1.65\n\u20220714\n10 Vi\n.28\n.34 Vi\n.68\n.35\n.25\n16V4\n.15\nLIGHT STOCKS\nMAKE INCREASE,\nVANCOUVE* LIST\nGold Group Is Prominent In\nActivity; Turner Valley\nOils Active\nVANCOUVER, Jan. 86\u2014Light trad\nIng stock* mad* further progr***\ntoward higher level* during th*\nshort laaalon on th* Vancouver\nstock market Saturday. The gold\ngroup again led the forward move,\nment and the upawlng ln thi* division wa* reflected In tha Turner\nValley oils, all of which recorded\nmoderate  price  advances.\nPioneer eold wu prominent tn\nthe conetructlve trend and closed\nwith a net increase of 16 centa at\n1.40. Reno Oold row from an\nopening at is cent* to a peak for\nthe day at lt cent*, to close at 18V4\ncenta, up 1 oant above Friday'*\nquotation. Premier rased 1 cant to\n70 centa, while Big Missouri, ended\ntbe day unchanged at 46 cent*.\nWith the exception of fair activity\nln Merland. the oil* M*ue* were dull.\nMerland aoftenad (lightly to IS\noent* bid, whT.e Home, C. and E,\naaetxjreet. United, Commonwealth,\nand Dalhouale, cloaed 1 to 3 cent*\nhigher.\nEGG MARKET IS\nWEAKENING AS\nWINTERGOESON\nFresh  Eggs Crowd Storage\nEggs and Prices Both\nGo Down\nA* the days pas*, and with each\nday th* hone of cold weath*r recedes, th* egg market ln the Interior of Britlah Columbia oon-\ntlnuea to *how the weak tendency\nwhich le characteristic of egg market* today. It might be interesting\nto trace the cause* of the present\nsituation, declare* the weekly report\nof 8. R. Bo well. Dominion egg inspector. \"While the main \u00aburfec*\noeuae ls undoubtedly the unseaaon-\nably mild weather, w* have to look\nfurther for the real ceuet.\" hi\naaya.\nLeit uaaon waa a fairly profitable\none. for the storage operator, with\nthe result that thi* season's pack\nof itorage eggs wa* heavier than\nusual. The collapse of the wheat\nmarket led the farmer to feed larger quantities of grain to hi* birds.\nThla, with the mUd weather, haa\nresulted In vastly increased production at point* not ordinarily con-\naldered   winter  egg  producers.\nFreeh ejgs. consequently, have\ncrowded itorage egg*, with the Inevitable result that both fresh and\nstorage prices suffered. And back\nof It all looms the all-Important\nfact that world-wide economic depression haa reduced buying power\nto a point where high price* for\nany commodity are Impossible. In\nfuture these reports will not refer\nto prloss,' owing to th* sxtreme difficulty of giving coirect Information\ncovering so large an area. They\nwill, however, give Information which\nwill possess value for producer and\nconsumer alike. A movement Is now\non foot to furnish producers and\ndealers with up-to-the-minute market Information through other channel*.\nMARKET MEN SELL\nEGGS FIVE CENTS\nLOWER THIS WEEK\nBusiness is Steady; List of\nProduce Remains\n.Stationary\nEgg price* d*clln*d five oente on\nthe Nelaon market lut fle.t_d.vy.\nPints eold tt 4ft rente end two\ndown for 80 centa end eitree eold\nat 50 oente and two down for Oft\ncent*.\nAlthough no mat rush ot buelneae\nwee reported, ail lines wen cleaned\nup fairly  well.\nNo new produce appeared on the\nHate and none were erased from It.\nA small Quantity of celery waa\non   tha   list.\nAU meat prioaa remained ataady,\nand the market waa substantially\nstocked  with thla produce.\nPrices were:\nVEGETABLES\nCarrota,'  per   6   lbs   ( M\nCabbage,   per   lb.   ....    J8\nBeau,   per   8   lbs.       .U\nIHrsnlpe,   per   lb \u2014\u2014 08\nPotatoes,   per   100   lbe. 3.98\nParsley,   per   bunch 08\nOnions,   per   lb.       .08\nLeaks,   par   bunch     08\nTurnips,   8   lb*.        M\nFRUITS\nApples,    Dellcloua     1.50\nApples,    Wagners       1.80\nWinter Bananas \u201e 1.Q0 to 1.60\nApples,   Jonathan      1.78\nPears,  Damaon,  %  lbe.    M\nPLANTS   AND   111 LBS\nCtnerlaa             1.00\nChrlatmaa   Cherry,\npotted, up from  ._.__\u201e.    .78\nGeranium*      \u201e 36\nPrimulas,   potted   up   from   ....   .80\nPerna 50 to  1.78\nDaffodil   bulbs,  per  donen  1.00\nHVaclntb bulbs, each   Vi\nPlbrous    begonlaa     _\u2014._ 60\nBegoniaa, potted, from     .26\nCyclamen,   from    _...  1.00\nAaphodediue, potted, from ..-\u2014 100\nME ATH\nUver,   beef,  per   lb.\nLiver,   veal,   per   lb.\nPork, per lb  36 to   .80\nOeeae,  per lb.\nDuck,   per   lb.\nBeef, per lb. -__.. j3B to\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nBank   of   Commerce    331\nDominion   Bank    \u201e. sag\nImperial   Bank    _ J 233\nBank    of    Montreal     _.. its\nBank   of   Nova   Sootla    _ 318\nRoyal   Bank     \u201e  ago\nBank of Toronto   330\nAbltlbl   Power   it   Paper   ....    9*\nAtlantlo  Bugar     aavi\nBell    Telephone              H414\nBraalllan T L _ Power     34\nBrit.  American  oil       lj\nCanada    Bronx*      34\nCan    Cement          ia\u00ab\nCan Cement, pfd      93\nCan Converter! \u201e    '   gov\noan Industrial Alcohol _     \u00abv,\nCan    Cottons         40\nOan   Oen   *_ectrlc,   pfd  220\nCan.    Power     \u201e      2V.\nSan Steamship Unas  _     s_\nCons  Mining  &  Smelting  .... 130\nDominion  Bridge       m_\nDominion   Glass   112\nDom  Steal   &   Coal   \"B\"   .   ..     8%\nDof Tertlle  _    70\nA.  P.  Oraln      _    ei4\nHlllcrest   Colliers   ._    M\nLake of the Woods  _    12^4\nMassey  Harris    7_\nMontreal Power     88\nMont.   Telegraph       49\nMontreal   Tramwaya  185\nNational Breweries      28>,a\nNational  Steel  car    34V.\nOgilvie     Milling  280\nOntario Steel  Products    u\nOttawa L R  t  powir     98\nPenmans.    Ltd.        73%\nPower    Oor\u00bb    52H\nPrice    Bro*      39\nQuebec   Power    \u201e     41\nShawlnlgan   _     _\nSherwln    Williams        27\nSo  Canada  Power   30\nSteel  of  Canada       39%\nSt. Lawrence  Flour Mill*     ie\nWabaaso   Cotton    88\nWestern   Grocers    -    18\nWinnipeg    Railway         in,\nWinnipeg   Railway.   Pfd    80\nDON'T   OVERFED\nWith an abundance of low priced\ncoarse grains and wheat available\nthere la an apparent tendency on\nt:\u00bbe part of farmers to overfeed\ntheir market hog*. Thi* Is shown\nby th* Increase in the average\nweight of hogs now coming onto\nthe market. Tha two hundred pound\nhog is the ideal market weight A.\nA. MacMlllan. chief of the sheep\n\u2022nd swine division of th* federal department of agriculture, pointa\nout. With the price of lard what\nIt is today, relatively lower than\nthe price of bacon, lt is the bacon\ntype which means money to the\nproduoer. Farmers should watch\nhog feeding closely to guard against\nboth light weight and eiosss fat-\nhe must keep away from the out-\nwslght grades if be ls going to\nget the top of the market for his\nhogs.\n30\n.30\n30\n.10\nM\n.30\nLamb, per lb. _   .25 to    .30\nHam,  per lb.     28 to   .30\nHead cheese, per lb.   _..   .20\nMutton, per lb   .18 to  .30\nTongue, per lb. .28 to 3D\nTurkey,   par   lb.\nPOM.TBY,   BOOS\nANP   BUTTER\nEggs,    pullet*    .....\nEggs,   firsts   \t\nEggs, eitras  ...\nChicken, per lb.  ..\nFowl, psr lb\t\nButter\t\nButter,   per   lb,   ..\nButter   \t\nButter.  3   for  \t\n.35\n.40\n.50\n.55\n.34\n.85\n.85\n.40\n\u26668\n, 1.00\nMASSEY-HARRIS\nDROPS TO NEW\nLOW AT TORONTO\nTOSOMTO, Jan. 35\u2014 (CP)\u2014 Announcement that tha cumulative\ndividend on Maasey Heme preference stock bad bean deferred caused\nsome further selling on the common\non the Toronto stock exchange Saturday, with th* result that this\nissue fall 1% pointa to a new all-\ntime low of 714.\nThere waa a slight edge of firm-\nnet* ln tha market a* a whol*. although volume wa* very low. Total\nturnover for tha day waa 9.S00\nsnares.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nDROP LOWER LEVEL\nNew   York   Haa   Retarding\nAffect on Sales During\nthe Short Session\nMONTREAL. Jan. 26\u2014Stocks vera\nlower on the Montreal stock exchange Saturday but leading laeuen\ncontinued to exhibit a fairly firm\ntone. Brazilian Traction closed\nsteady while fractional loaaaa were\nBuffered by such stocks aa Intrr-\nnatlonsl Nickel, Montreal Power.\nDominion Bridge, Shawlnlgan Power\nand National Breweries. The change\nfrom Friday's general steadiness was\ndue in aome measure to the rather\nunsteady New York Hat. Locally, a\ndull cloae showed net losses with, a\nwide margin over net gains.\nThe morning's feature ln point\nof strength waa Atlantic Sugar,\nwhich again advanced to a new high\nlevel at aaf., where lt cloaed for a\nnet (rain of %. Other closing prices\nlnetiided: AWtlbl, unchanged at\n10; General Steel Wares, 1V\u00ab higher\nat 8; Canadian Car. unchanged at\n18H; Canadian Industrial Alcohol,\nup 1* at 8; Canadian Pacific, unchanged at 42>_; Canada Power and\nPaper, up Vi at 2%; Oockihutt\nPlow, off h at m_; Coneolldatfld\nSmelters, off 'j at 139<_; Dominion Bridge, off '. at 34'a;\nMassey Karris, off >\\ at 7\u00bb\u201e. * new\nlow level; McColl Froontenac, unchanged at 20; Montreal Power off\n% at 6614; International Nickel,\noff : at IS1.; Shawlnlgan Power,\ndown W *- 60. and Bank of Montreal,   off   3   at   288.\nBrazilian closed at 24V., unchanged. Nickel cloaed off Vs net\nat   18V\nTotal  aales  8.004.\nFARMERS' TRADE\nLARGE, CRESTON,\nTALK STORAGE\nTurnover al Institute Is $20,.\n000: 66 Members in\nOrganization\nCHICAGO WHEAT\nHAS A SETBACK\nRumors of Increased Arrivals of Corn Has Depressing Effect\nWINNIPEG WHEAT\nPRICES GO UP\nReports   of    Crop    Damage\nFrom Argentine Increases Price\nCHTCAOO. Jan. 36 (By John P\nBoughsn,, Aesodated Press market\neditor)\u2014oppressed by gaaeral expectance of increased arrivals tt\ncorn In the near future, grains suffered new all-around price breaks\nyesterday. The season's bottom-\nmoet quotations heretofore were\noutstripped both by corn and rye.\nLeadership on the bull aide of every\nking of cereals appeared lacking,\nand many trader* aald the low\nprices were without the appeal that\nwould ordinarily develop if there\nwere no government interference\nwith business.\nCorn closed nervous, '. to i ^\ncents lower; Wheat irregular, *\\ off\ntk up; oau 'i to H down: and\nprovlalona at 0 to 16 centa decline.\nTORONTO   STOCKS\nAbana    \t\nArno m\t\nAJai      \t\nAmulet     _,\nP. OoneolltlaMtt\t\nBaldwin\t\nB  A oil\t\nBaas   Metala\t\nBidgood  \t\nBarry  Kolllniar\t\nBig    Mlasourl     \t\nCalmont      \t\nC and E lAnds  \t\nCentral  Manitoba  \t\nChemical   Research   \t\nClerlcy \t\nDome     \t\nDalhoual*   \t\nEastcrest      \t\nFalconbrtdge    \t\nHome OU \t\nHowey    \t\nHolllnier _ *\nHudson   Bay    \t\nInternational Nickel\t\nKeelry\t\nLake Shore    _\nKlrkland  Lake   \t\nKootenay Florence \t\nMacassaa  -\nMandy    - \t\nManitoba Basin \t\nMalartlo     \t\nMclntyre\t\nMining   Con) \t\nMayland\t\nNewbec     \t\nNew  Imperial  oil  \t\nNlptsslng\t\nNoranda    \t\nPeterson Cobalt  \t\nSherrlt  Oordon   \t\nSudbury   Basin   \t\nStadaoona     _\nTech Hughes \t\nThompson  Cadallao  \t\nVlpond     _\t\nVentures     -. \t\nWright   Haiarsaves   \t\nWalt* Ackerman\t\n.IT\n.01*\n1.49\n.98\n.31\n.09 Vi\n1S.00\n1.1.1\n.05\n.16*\nts\n.    .11\n. f.01\n. 0\u00ab\n. 10.40\n.   .at\n. .98\n. 160\n. Ill\n. So 14\n. 1.00\n. 4.75\n. H.T6\n. .97\n. 96.05\n. .78\n. .09\n. .14\n. .0\u00bbV4\n.     .08\n.0\u00ab,\n. 98.60\n.   1.87\n.     .77\n\u25a005V4\n17.00\n. 1.86\n. 16.36\n. .09H\n. .90\n. .65\n49\n.04\n7JK>\n.     .08\n1.16\n.60\n9.96\n.   1.7\u00bb\nWOULD SPEED UP\nSTOCK TRANSFER\nAT CHURCHHILL\n(CP)\nYORKTON.    Bask..   Jan.   98.\nEstablishment at Churchill, Manitoba'a port on Hudson bay. of faculties for transfer of all live stook\nfrom rail oars to ocean vassals\nwithout delay waa favored at tha\nannual convention of tbe \"On-to-\nthl-Bay association of Canada\" held\nhen. Minuter* of railway* and\ncanals and of agriculture for the\nDominion will be advised of tbe\nstand.\nWDWIPBO. Jan. 9!\u2014fOTI\u2014Bearish Argentine reports once more\n\u2022trengthened the wheat market Saturday when advances ol ', t\u00bb !,\ncent occurred. Rain storms ln the\nsouthern republic were statcrl to be\nhindering harvesting and damaainK\nwheat. Brport business amounting\nto nearly one million bushels of\nCanadian wheat was another bullish\nfactor   here.\nOalns of >, cents occurred In the\nMay snd July futures, closing quotations being at ts.% cents for May\nand 57% for July. October spurted\n'. cent to 69. Caah wheat figures\nalso moved forward fractionally but\ncoarse   grains   were   unchanged.\nCRESTON, B. C, Jan. aa,\u2014Th* annual meeting ot Oreston Parmer*'\ninstitute waa held ln the town hall\nWednesday afternoon, with the president, Don Bradley, in tbs chair.\nThe turnout was disappointing aa\nto numbers, but there waa no tack\nof enthusiasm on the part of those\npresent, and many matters were\npromptly dealt with.\nIn hia address ths president\nbriefly sketched the activities of\n1930, which included the establishing\not an egg shipping depot, which has\nbeen generously patronised not only\nby Institute members, but by many\nothers, with tbe result that practically all the eggs leaving Creaton\nare now being handled at the Institute station.\nThe financial etatement as submitted by the secreta*. and treasurer\nCharles Mlrrrell. wae adopted. This\nreveals the fact that supplies purchased last yew for members amounted to about 490,000. This Included\n90 cars of hay, grain, flour, etc.\nalong with 65 cars of powder, while\nmiscellaneous supplies purchased\namounted to 81700.\nThere has been steady growth tn\nmembership, wblch now stands at 66\nand 100 members for 1931 Is now\nconfidently anticipated. The former\ndirectors were favored with reelection. They are Don. Bradley, W.\nH. Hilton, K. E. Paulson, Charles\nMoore and E. Wtckstrom\nCOLD  STORAGE\nThe question of cold storage was\nagain to the fore, and It was felt\nfrom the noutryman's point of view\nstorage was most essentlsl. The mat.\nter has been discussed with the authorities at Ottawa, and a grant nf\n33 per rent, may be looked Xor uadaf\noertaln conditions, it was fell tint,\nIf possible, the necessary capital\nshould be raised locally. A committee was named to further probe\nthis mater. It Is D. Brsdley, Oha*.\nMoore and w. H. Hilton.\nThe w. O. Llttlejorn resolution\nin connection with central selling,\nln which It Is affirmed Creaton Is\nopposed to tjio new motv unless\ncomplete locnl autonomy ls guaranteed, was endorsed, and the Institute\nis prepared to put up one-fifth of\nthe expense of sending a delegate\nto Victoria If the proposed new marketing policy Is to corns before the\nagricultural committee of the B. O.\nlegislature. Definite decision on this\nwill he made after hearing the reports of tho creston delegates to\nthe Kelowna convention, who are\nto address a growers meeting on\nMonday afternoon.\nIn reply to a letter from creston\nValley Hospital association, asking\nfor support of Creston's new public\nhospital, the secretary wss Instructed\nto purchase a life membership for\nthe Institute.\nThe secretary reported that the\negg pool was receiving good Mipport,\nand that about 25 cases had rwen\nhandled In December. Market cond!\ntlons, however, were not good, owing\nto the mild weather on the prairie,\nwhpre thf. co-operattres were consigning eggs to anyohe who would\ntake them.\nVarious matters In connection with\nInstitute sctlvltles were discussed\nbut no Important decisions were arrived at. The meeting closed with\nthe usual hearty vote of thanks to\nthe directors for their services ln\n1980.\nNEW YORK STOCKS\nAUeghsny        lott\nAllied   Chemical   188\nAm   Oan   ._  113.,\nAm Por Power 991.\nAm Smelt Rof 46fc\nAm T^lanlvm* 1881,\nAm    Tobacco   _ UOti\nAimajonda        94%\nAtchison 194rt\nBaldwin        93\nB   A   O     80%\nB*d_i   Aviation    90M\nBeth  Weal \t\n0   P\t\nCerro d*  Pasco\nC   *   O\t\nCbryaler\t\nCan Oss H T\nCorn   Prod  \u2014\nDupont\t\nEast    Kodak    .\nErie    \t\nPord English .\nPord of Canada\nPlrat Nat Stores\nPraeport Texas\nOen Motors ....\nOen   Electric\n61V4\n49H\n96\n44\n18H\n91S\n81 v.\n88\u00ab.;\n166%\n89 *\n46%\n81%\nMM\n4>H\nOan  Poods  _    61%\n94*.\n17U,\n9\u00bbi\n94H\n93%\n8%\n16\n97%\n1%\n96%\n361,\n93%\n41%\n33 V.\nei\n195%\n40\n9%\n69%\n13%\n14%\n18%\nOold   Dust\nGranby   \u2014\nO   W   Sugar\nHowe   Sound     .\nHudson   Motors\nIns   Copper   ..   .\nInter Nickel  \t\nInter   Tel   Tel\nKelly   Spring     .\nKenn  Copper\nKresge S 8 \t\nKroegg   k   Toll\nMack   Truck\nNash   Motors   ...\nNst Dairy  Prod\nN P At L\t\nN  Y  Central\nPac   O   A   Bee\nPack   Motors   .\nPenn R R  \t\nPhillips  Pete\nRadio Corp \t\nRadio   K   Orp\nRem    Rand         17\nR   I       61%\nSafe   Stores       48%\nBt.   L  *   8 P   .   69%\nShell TJnlon OU     10\nSin   Oon       WV\u00bb\nSo   Cal   Edison     49%\nS    P     1061,\nStand   Oil   Oal     46 Vi\nStand   OU   Ind\nStand OU N J\nStew  Warner  ...\nStudebaokar  .....\nTsxas   Corp   \t\nTexaa O Sulu   ..\nUnion   Carbide\nUnion   OU   Cal\n17    P\nUnited   Aircraft\nU  8  Rubber\nU   8   Steel\nWest   Elec\nWillys   Over\nTaUow Truck\n49\n18%\n98%\n33%\n49 V.\n60%\n94%\n194\n13%\n143%\n87%\n5%\n11%\n9%\n169\n119%\n30%\n46%\n187 V4\n106%\n34\n194\n90%\n80 Vi\n90\n60%\n43\n94%\n43%\n17%\n\u00bb%\n80%\n87%\n184%\n46\n91%\n88\n46\n51%\n94%\n9%\n94\n39%\n8'.\n15%\n35',\n96%\n20'.\n22%\n40\n31%\n49%\n194%\n48%\n9%\n69%\n13',\n13%\n18\n16%\n61\n44%\n69%\nIM\n19\n48%\n104\n47%\n48%\n17%\n99%\n32%\n48%\n59 V.\n193%\n13\n142\n85%\n9\n10%\n\u00bb%\n161\n113\n31\n43%\n188\n108%\n34\n194\n93%\n80 Vs\n30\n60%\n48%\n34%\n48%\n18\n90\n81%\n88\n155\n89%\n19%\n99%\n46\n81%\n38\n46%\n61%\n84%\n17%\n8%\n94\n38%\n8%\n15%\n36%\n1%\n95%\n28 V,\n22%\n40%\n32 Vi\n43%\n94%\n194%\n49%\n8%\n83%\n13%\n14%\nIB\n16%\n61%\n44%\n52%\n9%\nIS\n48%\n104\n47%\n87%\n48 %\n17%\n33%\n32%\n49\n60%\n94%\n193%\n26%\n13%\n86%\n6%\nU%\nMrs. THaodore Groavenor, daughter of financially prominent W. E.\nStrawbrldg*. Philadelphia. waa\nknocked unconscious when hsr horse\nfell dead during a hunt with tbe\nCottesmore hounds et, Melton Mowbray.   England.\nMONTREAL PR0DUC1\nMONTRXAL.   Que.   Jan.  98-\nlower. butter and cti**aa higher\nCheese, finest white. 11%; flnaat\ncolored  13%.\nButter. No. 1 Quebec. 11% to 99.\nEggs, storage extra* 34, atora_a\nftrst* 31. storage uoona* \u00bb, ftaafc\nspecials 36, Crash axtrae 84. IMaat\nfirsts 30.\nBULK APPLES\nDOING WELL\nON PRAIRIES\nPeat* Arrive Bat Prices Us*\nchanged; Tomato Market\nIs Firm\nVICTORIA. B. C. JtML M\u2014Th*\nmrualaUton of the see. bulb \u00bbnd\nnursery -stock rrowers, started test\nfall In Victoria, hse spread to\nVancouver XaLaod polnte and the\nlover mainland, says tbe market\nnnw\u00ab letter, department ot tcrl-\nculture, Victor!*, on Saturday tba\n17th jnsuuM,. s, well attended maa\u00bb\nin* wae held In Vancouver and\na decision reached to ortaniM the\nlower mainland in n elmllar way\nto what was done In Victoria. A\nfull t<]at_ of ofricer* \u00bbiid dlrectora\nwas named with K. J. Barber, M.P,\nChilli wexlt, aa honorary president.\nMr. Barber was present at the\nmeeting and outlined the poe-\neimiltlee of the eastern Canadian\nmar_#t. Jolrif. committees wilt\nmeet L- P. Burrows, secretary of\nthe Canadian horticultural oounoll,\nln Victoria and present to him tb*\nwestern viewpoint respecting tariff\netc. It Is oxpected that aome definite action on tariff will be taken at\nthe  next  sitting  of  parliament.\nKttmontan\u2014Bunness is fair. Trada\npleased with volume of business\nsince first of year. Apple market\nand price unchanged. Bulk apple*\nstill arriving. AU houass carrying\nmorp or less bulk apples. *W boxes\nof Brttlnh Columbia pears arrivin*.\nbut market practically cleaned and\nprices unchanged. Tomato marital\nfirm, only Bahama* at 96JO to\n\u00abf!7i. per crate. California lettuce\nper crate M3S to $4.60. Celery\nscarce, California Chula Vista at\ntr) tn no per himdrwtwwtgh*.\nCabbage wry scarce. California\nnew cabbage rolling. Looal cab*\nbage at W.flO to 14 per hundredweight. Potato market unchanged.\nNo. a, H2JW to till per ton. Onion\nmarket quiet and unohanied. British Columbia onions per hundredweight 12.30 to 12.00. other vegetables   plentiful.\nWi n nJ peg\u2014Weather eold. Burt-\nneea some better. Prices unchanged.\nOne car of Bahamas tomatoes arrived thla week. British Oolumbla\nbulk apples being unloaded and\ndistributed every day. Oood buaV-\nnesa on Imported green vegetable*\nreported. Also usual citrus frulta,\nwith oranges selling well on account,\nof low pices. Looks aa If btdk\napple deal would continue \\d~\ndefinitely.\nEXCHANGE RATES\nNEW YORK. Jan. tt.-_far.tng\nexchange Irg^ular at MM Hi tor\n60-day bills and \u00bb4-M ft.IS for demand.\nCanadian  dollars B-31 eanta dfae.\nForeign bar sllrer 29% cent*\nMarks   2^74'.    mate.\nKronen 38.761,  cental\nFranca  3 01*4   oenta.\nLire  6.23 Mj   oensa\nNelson   approximate\nChange   rate  H-W  6-\u00bbS.\nMINNEAPOLIS GRAIN\nMlKTriiAaPOLlB.  Minn. Jan. tt.\u2014\nFlour unchanged.    Shipnjanfa 31,306.\nBran   14.50  to   16.00.\nWheat: No. 1 northern 7_ \u00abo 78.\nNo. 1 red durum 64H to WH; May\n77;   July  78.\nCorn:     No.  3   yellow M to  68.\nCats:    No   3  white 3fl%  to 394_.\nFlax:    No.   t   l.M*   to lM-%.\nThaadore Steeg, premier of Prance.\nIn an Interview with the Associated\nPress, urged economic and financial\ncooperation between Prance and the\nUnited States as a mean* of establishing and maintaining the peace\nand happiness of the world s\n$200.06 for t\nevery $100.00 invested.\nAmount of Paller So. s%Ut\npaid at aa,- sixty   .    .    .    . I 1,1\nDeposited hy policyholder\nwltb Mutual l.ileolCanada        AsAM\nGain to palioyhaUaa-.\n. f    aUJI\nA CHEQUE for $1,000 wti reemtfy\n,iaid to ihr insured under policy\nNo. 22,763 and represented over $2.00\nfor every dollar in vet tod in tUe\nCompany.\nHad death oeenrred at any time after\nlbe first deposit was made at age\ntwenty, the $1,000 would hare imn\npaid immediately.\nAn endowment policy in ths Motaal\nLife of Canada combines complete\nprotection witb a form of investment\nwhich absolutely secures the principal\nand yields ., high interest return.\nIf yon would learn more about Mtttaal\nlife endowments, call in a repreaenta-\ntive of this Company, or send yonr\nnam'' and address to our Head UUjce,\ndirect, for booklets.\nSame-\nAddress \u2014-\u00ab._.\na    .    \u2022   .\nTHE\nMUTUAL   LIFE\nASSURANCE COMF.-VN.\nOF CANADA\nHEAD OFFICE\u2014WATERLOO, ONT.\nfestabfishad JIM\nJ. D. BBACKKTT. District Manafw, Cranbrenk, n. a\nJAMKM   SMSM'.K.  Representative,  Trail, B. C.\nl:\\KI    II.   HU.TV.   Krpm-utatlve,   Nelaon,  B.  O.\ni\n Page Ten\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1981.\nOur Annual\nBook Sale\nNow on\n$2.00 FICTI0N\nLIBRARY   DISCARDS\nBOOKS FOR BOYS\nPICTURE BOOKS\nMISCELLANEOUS BOOKS\nTo clear at\n25c, 15c and 10c\nWe invite vour inspection\nMann-Rutherford Co.\nDRUGGISTS and  STATIONERS\nExide Batteries\nInsure your car\nagainst winter driving\nby installing an Exide\nBattery TODAY. .\nBennetts Ltd.\nHunter Electric\n<c Plumbing\nPlumbing, Sewer Pipea,\nFittings _nd Fijctures.\nElectric Conduit, Fit.\nting, Wire and\nFixtures.\nPhone 530\nFUEL-FUEL\nWe have a coal for yonr every use whether\nIt be for furnace, heater, or kitchen stove.\nPHONE 35 FOR PROMPT\nSERVICE\nNelson Transfer Co.,Ltd.\nTHE\nFOREST.\nFINEST\nNatures best efforts are augmented by man's\nscience to give you timber that is strong and lasting\u2014wood that builds beautiful homes and keeps\nther.1 looking new\u2014wood free from defects. When\nyou build or rebuild, no matter what your plans,\nyou'll find sure satisfaction in the materials and\nservice found at\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\nThe Home of Good Lumber\nPhone 176 Foot ot Stanley St.\nCooking With\nGAS\nSaves Work\nand Strength\nA Meal Can Be Cooked With\na Gas Range for the Price\nof a Box of Matches\nHot, searing flame sizzling a roast in\nthe oven. Steady, quiet flame \"perking\"\ncoffee on the stove. Tiny, blue flame\ngently simmering vegetables. Cooking\nflexibility . . . that saves work and\nstrength . . . that makes meal-time a\npleasant duty . . . that prepares a meal\nin the jig of time at the cost of a box\nof kitchen matches!\nPhone  37,  the  City  Gas  Works,  and  learn   how\neasily you can have a new style gas range installed\nand upon what easy terms of payment.\n-The City oS Nelson\nWe carry a complete stock of\n'EVE2EADY'\nFLASHLIGHTS and BATTERIES\nUnit Cells Dry Batteries\nRadio Batteries\nPrices Right\nWood. Vallance Hardware\nCO., LTD.\nWHOLESALE   - Nelson. B. C. -   RETAIL\nCORBIN HOCKEY\nHAN QUITS ICE\nIN FERNIE GAME\nWere   Being   Trimmed   by\nCorWn  5-2  When Dispute Arose\n_. a O., Jan. 2b.~Ooel\nOreek hookey team met tbe Oortrtn\nhockey team at Uie Fernie skating\nrink on Saturday evening. A fair-\nsized crowd at teas had to wilt ao\nminutea after the scheduled opening on acount of tbe lata arrival\nof the Corbln team.\nThe loe was heavy and out up\nbadly during the play. Any fine\n\u2022Hot: handling was Impoeelble on\nthla account With the score 5-2\nfor Coal Creek the Corbln team quit\nthe loe.\nIn the opening period the Corbln\nteem had a little the beet of tbe\nplay, and showed some good organised oomtoinetlon play In spite\nOf the loe conditions. After IS\nminutes of play rraaer of Corbln\nshot the puck put the goalie.\ntram cloee in front of the net.\nThe period ended with a score of\nCorbln one and Coal Creek nothing,\nlabored with Coal Creek struggling\nlabored with Coal Creek strugllng\nto even the score, whloh they accomplished after nine minutea of\nplay. E. Atherton of Coal Creek\nhit tlie net with \u2022 snot from near\nthe right side of the blue line.\nThe struggle, of the teams to break\nthe Ue through <n\u00ab remainder of\nthe period  wee without results.\nIn the third period the great\nstruggle of the game began. The\ncontest got hotter and rougher every\nminute. Referee Cougland meted out\npenalties right and left without\nmercy. The tie was broken a few\nminutes after the play began by a\nshot by Atkinson of Coal Creek\nfirom the right side of the blue\nLine. Twelve minutes afterwards\nP. Atherton broke through the forwards and Ahot another goal for\nCoal Creek at close quarters. P.\nJohnson In another three minutes\nhad repeated Atherton's stunt and\nadded another goal for Coal Creek.\nOorbin Immediately retaliated after a rush  on Wie aoal Creek goal.\nE. Atherton soon after added another goal, making the score five\nfor Coal Creek and two for Oorbin.\nThe Corbin team had a dispute\nwith the referee and walked off\nthe Ice Juat 28 seconds before tlie\ncloee  of   the   period.\nThe line up of the teems ls as\nfollows:\nCoal Oreek\u2014Cotton goal; Mn-\nburn and Smoilx, defence; E. Atkinson, P. Atherton P. Johnson,\n^Atkinson. Q. Simpson, H. Atherton, forwards. t\nOorbin\u2014Uphill, goal; J. Jolce and.\nGardner, defence; Lillys, Fraser,\nJenkins, Solenski, MoMey, C. Joyce,\nforwards.\nFIND MINIATURE\nARSENAL, WINDSOR\nWINDSOR, Ont., Jan. 25. (CP) \u2014\nA miniature arsenal of M high-\npowered rifles, five automatic shotguns and several thousand rounds\nof ammunition, all of Oennan make,\nwas uncovered by police over the\nweek-end in the basement of a\nWindsor   sporting   store.\nIt ls alleged that the armaments\nwere stored here by an officer of\nthe United States army, whose wife\nwae arrrsted last Thursday In Detroit. She wae taken Into custody\nfollowing the discovery there of a\nquantity of guns and ammunition.\nLAST MINUTE\nADVERTISEMENTS\nReceived    too   late   to   go   on\nClassified    Page\nLoerr \u2014 brown    and   white\nSplnger Spaniel  tnip. three-quartern grown.    Phone 821.        (3683)\nNews of tbe Day\nWanted\u2014A lam* cusntitr of apples. Write or pho___ MacDonald's\nJam Co.. Nelaon, B, C. (3835;\nOome to the, Military Whist\nDrive. Memorial Hall. Monday, at\n8:lfi. Admission 36c. Everybody\nwelcome. Auauloes Sons and Daughters of England. (3857)\nMarmalade Oraives are now\navailable af. your arooeT*s. MacDonald Jam Co. 13*961)\nTeacher wanted for Nelson BChool\nfor February 1. orimary grade. Ad-\ndIv with references up to 6 p.m..\nFriday, the 30th inet. F. L. h-wln.\nSecretary. (3672)\nDaughters of England will meet\ntonight tn Memorial Hall at 7:30.\nMilitary Whist at 8:15. AdmJiwlon\n35c.    Bveryhody   welcome.      (36741\nThe old timers of the Nelson district (30 years residence) are requested to meet ln the Board of\nTrade rooms on Thursday evening.\nJanuarv 20th at 8 o'clock for tlie\npurpose of forming an old i-lmen,'\nassociation. (3660)\nKOOTENAY   MU8ICAL   FESTIVAL\nSyllabus  now available In Nelson\non application to Mrs. W. Kettlewe.l,\nsecretary, and at th*> following\nstores: Mason and Rlsch, Heintz-\nman Co.. Kootenay Music House,\nNelson Flower Shoppe Gllker'a Ltd.\nand Flemings Orocery. (3608)\nMERCURY\nCOAL\nTHE MOST\nECONOMICAL\nFUEL FOR\nWINTER\nCLEANSOOTLESS\nPHONE 797\nRENWICKS\nTRANSFER\nPhone J AXI\n35\nThe   Best   of   Rerilee\nCareful.   Courteous\nDrtTert\nM\u00abUot> Jeenetem Co\u201e Ltd.\nCLEVELAND HOLDS\nFOURTH PLACE\nOI_ve_iij. ou*. Jan. 26.\u2014iAD\n\u2014Cleveland keot lt* hold oo fourth\nplace ln the International hockey\nleague ftttndlnc. last night by virtu* of . lucky goal In tn* final\nperiod of an otherwise scoreless\ngame. It gave Cleveland a season\nrecord of 13 victories against 11\nloase*. Also lt .auk Detroit further\nInto sixth plecv with 11 defect*\nagainst 11 win*.\n\"King\" Williams effected the lone\nCRAIG'C RINKS\nLEAD IN SPIEL\nPLAURESTON\nBut Weather Halts Competition; Another Cup Donated Club\nCRBBTON, B. C. Jan. 36.\u2014After\na third atteovn lo complete the\nopening competition, Preeident vs.\nVice-president, curllntz at the Creston rink waa again halted on Thursday with two more nights' play required to complete this feature, In\nwhich Vice-president W. J. Craig\nand his supporting links have still\na flew points' margin. The club\nhas been favored w*:h still another\noup for annual competition m dea-\nUrnated by the club. It u a\nhandsome silver cup from Cranbrook Brewing company, whloh\nreached Secretary R. Chandler about\nthe middle of the week, and ls\nnow on display at the Speers'\nstore. The club has also a definite\npromise of a suitable prise If tt\nfinds It possible, before the season\nIs out, to have a points competition. This feabare of the roarln*\ngame hae never been introduced\nhere, due to the fact that the season is hardly ever long enough to\nplay off all the regular competitions\nfor which prizes of various sorts\nare  annually  donated.\nGRAND FORKS IS\nDEFEATED 4-0\nBY GREENWOOD\nOrer 300 Fans See Fast Game\nPlayed  in ttreenwood's\nRink\nGREENWOOD, B. C, Jan. 3fl.~\nThe third game \u00bbf the Intermediate\nhockey play- down was played at\nthe Oroenwood ring on Friday night\nbetween the Greenwood Gorillas and\nthe Orand Forks Indians. About\n300 watched the match, a large\nnumber coming from Grand Fork*.\nThe result was 4-0 ln favor of\nGreenwood-\nIt was a hard-fought game on\nboth sides. Madden, Puddy, Lennox\nand Walmsley scored the goals for\nGreenwood. Tayloi, the Greenwood\ngoal tender, was In excellent form,\nstopping the puck time and again.\nCarlson was a good referee, enforcing the rules of the game. Several players from both teams spent\nsome minutes on the fence.\nLADY BOWLERS\nL0SFT0A.C.T.\nMrs. C. A. ......son, Mrs. T.\nE. Levasseui' and L. Bradley High Scorers\nLady howlers handed a squad of\nAssociated Canadian Travellers quite\na surprise Saturday when they\nmanaged to keep within a cloee\nrange of the men's lead In a three-\ngame tournament on oellnas' alleys.\nThe ladles, put on an equal basis\nwith the men, after being given *\nhandicap of 130 pins a game, only\nlost out by 33 pins.\nMrs. C. A. Larson and Mrs. T. E.\nLevasseur led thflr lsdy companions\nln the scoring honors, high single\nof 168 going to Mrs. Larson and\nhlgti aggregate of \u201e3 pins going to\nMrs.   Levasseur.\nL. Bradley was high man ln the\nplay with an aggregate of 538 and\na   single   of   163.\nScore* were:\nLadles 1st Snd 3rd Tot.\nMrs. T. Levasseur 139 149 167\u2014403\nMrs. P. Bamford .. 166 137 131\u2014434\nMrs. O. A. Laison 131 67 198\u2014366\nMra. D D. McLean 61 118 137\u2014333\nMrs. J. Bell ... 100 130   67\u2014317\nMrs.     Kemmflrllng Ul 188 116\u2014413\nTotal*      -. 766 773 806 3844\nHandicap    -  130 130 130\nOrand   totals   .... 888 883 836 3704\nA.  0.  T. 1st 3nd Srd  Tot.\nJ.   MoAdam  V.I 181 131\u20143J4\nU     B-|dley       18S 181  168\u2014837\np.   Baiter  134 108 173\u2014403\nW. Bamford    180 188 188\u2014839\nO.   Denholm     137 173 141\u2014440\nC.  Stark    186 134 156\u2014418\nTotals      816 633 680 3727\nLAYTON DEFENDS\nBILLIARD TITLE\nSENSATIONALLY\nCHICAGO, 111., Jan. 25.\u2014Johnny\nLawton. defending champion, defeated Arthur Thurnblad, Chloago,\ntonight 60 to 40 In SO innings ln\none of the most sensational games\nin the history of world's championship   three-cushion   billiard   play.\nLayton chalked up his fourth victory ln five games. It was Thurn-\nblad's first setback ln the same\nnumber.\nBUCKAROOS BEAT\nOAKLAND, 1-0\nPOBTLAOT), Ore., _an, 3fi.\u2014(AP)\n\u2014The Portland Buckaroos, leaders\nof the Pacific Coa#i Hockey league,\ndefeated the Oakland Shieks. California leacue leaders, one to\nnothing, ln an exhibition game here\ntonight.\nThe winning goal was made when\nthe third period wa* 10 minutes\nand SO seconds along. Jimmy Evans,\nforward, acored on a pass from Joe\nMcGoldrlck, defence.\nA loan of about 132.500,000 for IS\nmonths haa been arranged by the\nRothschilds for the Bank of Bnull\nunder a guarantee by the Braslllan\ngovernment.\nLOCAL HIGH BOYS\nTAKE BASKETBALL\nGAME FROM TRAIL\nWin 30-25 in Fast Contest;\nLocal Girls Lose to Visit\ning Team 10-27\nNelson's basketball followers were\ntreated to the fastest ball-handling\nexhibition of the season at the high\nschool gymnasium Saturday night\nwhen the local high boys beat the\nTrail hoop squad 30-26. The two\nteams with one victory apiece battled\nstrenuously throughout every minute\nof  the  play.\nTrail girls took the local team\nInto camp ln a decisive manner for\na 27-10 win. The local girls put up\na good battle but were outplayed\nat   every   afcage   of   the  game.\nTrail boys drew first blood but\nthe local boya evened up matters\nalmost Immediately. After the open'\nIng baskets, the smelter team, using\nthe huddle system for .prearranged\nplays, took a four point lead whloh\nthey managed to bold for the greater\npart  of  the  first half.\nNelson forced an already furious\npace and dropped ln two baskets\nJust aa ths half time sounded, to\ntie   the   score   18-13.\nLong shots which dropped ln tbe\nbasket, ran around the hoop and\ndropped out again, were surprising\nln number, and caused the support-\nera of each team no end of anxiety.\nNelson gradually drew ahead and\nretained Its lead until the final\nwhistle brought the game to a cloee,\nGl ARDH   HOLD   VISITORS\nSterling work on the part of Stewart and Burns, Nelson guards, kept\nthe flashy Trail forward line In\ncheck.\nBalllle with 10 points, Morris with\nnine points and AngerelU with five\npoints, did all the scaring for the\nsmelter   city.\nThe local scoring honors were\nalmost equally divided, Stewart piling in  seven points for first place.\nTeams were:\nTrail\u2014Balllle 9, Forrest, Morris.\n10, Lund, Chrlsante 1, Battlste and\nAngerelU   6.\nNelson\u2014Burns 4, Stewart 7, Mac-\nLean 4, Clark 6, MoCualg 8, Buchanan   2,   McDougall   2,   Duffy   2.\nSYRACUSE DROPS\nINTERNATIONAL\nGAME, BUFFALO\nPORT ERIE, Ont., Jan. 25.\u2014Buffalo defeated Syracuse here last\nnight by four to two ln a hard-\nfought International hockey league\ngame. The play at times bordered\non undue roughness while the\nchecking was always close, penalties\nproved costly to the Stars, two of\nthe Bisons' goals ln the first period\ncoming ln quick succession with\nB'U Holmes resting ln the penalty\nbog.\nLauder, Gauthler. Martin and Bo-\ngard^s scored for Bisons and Klein\nnetted  both Syracuse goals.\nFAMOUS MUSHER\nGOES EAST FOR\nTHE DOG DERBY\nWINNIPEO. Man., Jan. 25.\u2014(CP)\n\u2014A new threat to dog-led drivers\nin the east came jut of the north\ntoday. \"Shorty\" Ruaslck, Bturdy\nlittle musher from FHn Plon mines,\nwhose record for The Pas 200-mile\nnpn-ertop raoe has never been\nequalled, reached *Vlnnlpeg tonight\nand tomorrow will entrain for Ottawa. He will be a starter In Uie\nOttawa derby on Pebruary 3. Ru&\ne_ck is accompanying Emil bt.\nGoddard of The Pes who will defend three major mushing title*\nhe  won  ln  the  east  last season.\nIt will be Ruselck's first appearance ln eastern dog derbies. He\nprobably will also compete at Quebec and New  Hampshire.\nKONKIN COMES UP\nFOR PRELIMINARY\nHEARING TODAY\nLome Konkln, Doukhobor youth,\nwill appear ln police court this\nmorning at 10 o'clock, to be charged\nwith attempted suicide and given\nhis preliminary hearing, based on\nhis action ln shooting himself 'in\nthe head at the Union depot ln\nNflson   a   couple   of   weeks   ago.\nAmong the witnesses subpoenaed\nare his parents, Mr. and Mrs. M.\nKonkln,   Rossland.\nActing Chief of Police Alex. Stewart  will  prosecute.\nODLUND TURNS\nIN SURPRISE\nWIN, SKATING\nM_rXE\u00a3POLIS, Minn.. Jan. 28 \u2014\n(CP)\u2014 Binard Odlund, Minneapolis,\nspeeded His way to principal honors\nSunday In the Minneapolis invitation   speed   skating   meet.\nOdlund won surprising victories\nin the senior mile and two-mile\nraces, the only senior events of the\nmeat, voer * speedy field In which\nRutfaeford Btaineby and Bart NeU<\nof Winnipeg and Jimmy WWWter\nand Duke Donovan of St. Paul\nwere favored to win leading honors.\nFALCONS MOVE UP\nTO THIRD PLACE,\nNATIONrULEAGUE\nBeat New York Rangers 1-0;\nCarson Cooper Scores\nOnly Goal\nNEW YORK, Jan. 29\u2014Detroit Pal-\ncons finally climbed Into third place\nln the Amerloan division of the\nNational Hockey league tonight as\nthey ousted the New Tork Rangers\nwith  a   1   to   0   victory.\nA long shot by Careon Cooper,\none of the many drives from the\nblue line the Falcons forwards let\nf.y ln the evening of cautious play,\n*nund a weak spot ln the armour of\nGoalie John Roach for the only goal-\nSuinmary:\nFirst  period\u2014No  score.\nPenalties\u2014Lewis, Sorrell.\nSeoond  period\u2014No   score.\nPenalties\u2014Gegan, Jerwa, Rockburn.\nThird period\u20141, Detroit, Cooper,\n11:51.\nPenalties \u2014P. Cook, 3, Cooper,\nLewis.\nMAPLE LEAFS WIN\nTHIRD GAME, WEEK\nBeat Senators 5-2 to Strengthen Second Place Hold\nin landing\nTORONTO, Ont., Jan. 35.\u2014(CD-\nToronto Maple Leafs scored their\nthird victory ln a week when tbey\ndefeated Ottawa Senators, five to\ntwo, at the Arena Gardens Saturday night to keep pace with the\nMontreal Canadlens, leaders of the\nsection and strengthen their hold\non second place tn the standing.\nIne Leafs were without the services\nof their leading goal scorer, \"Ace\"'\nBailey, wbo was out through injuries.\nEach team scored ln the first\nperiod, Toronto \/annexed tlie lono\ntally of the second and outeqored\nthe Ottawa team three to one in\nthe goal-scoring splurge of a ro_-\nlng third period ln which one\nmajor penalty was meted out when\nHorner, the Leafs' redhead dejenue-\nman took exception to the tactico\nof Joe Lamb of the Senators, droi -\nped his stick and started pummelling the Ottawa center\nReferee Hewltson and the players\npried the Pair apart with difficulty, Horner getting a major ana\nLamb ls minor. Horner automatically ls suspended for one game,\nthis being his third major penalty.\nS I'M MARY\nFirst period: 1, Toronto, Cotton\n(Clancy, Blair) 3.53, 3, Ottawa,\nKllrea.   10:30.\nPenalties: Alex Smith, Hornei,\nGagne.\nSecond period: 3, Toronto, Conacher  iDay), 4:33.\nPenalties: Kllrea, Conacher, Art\nSmith.\nThird period: 4, Toronto. Prtmeau, :56: 5, Toronto, Jackson (Pn-\nmeau) 3:30; 6. Ottawa. Alex Smttn\n(Kllrea), 10.20; 7. Toronto, Conacher   (Jackson)   1.30.\nPenalties: Horner, Lamb, Horner\n(major).\nFree Trousers\nWith Fashion Craft\nMade - to - Measure Suits\nA pair of pants free with every Fashion-\nCraft made-to-measure suit for the balance\nof this month.\nOrder that new salt now and save 20%\ndiscount or get an extra pair of pants free.\nService\nQuality\nSatisfaction\nJohn Robert Connon, the holder of\npatents on the panoramic camera,\nwhich he Invented, and one of the\nmost prominent r*.'dents of Elorft,\nOut., district, ls dead.\n-NOTICE-\nRADio OWNERS\nThe annual meeting of the Nelson Radio Club wfll be heM\nIn the Canadian Legion building Thursday, January 29, at 8 p.m.,\nfor the election of officers and general, bostnesa.\nThe Club aro pleased to report that their have gotten a part\ntime Inspector appointed, who now has his equipment and ls\nworking   on   the   locating  of   radio   Interferences.\nThere still remains a lot for the Club to do, and In order\nthat the Club may aocumpllih this wort It li necessary that they\nhave a strong membership ol the radio owners at Nelson. We\ntherefore urge every radio owner of Nelaon to attend this meeting\nand support the Club for BETTER RADIO RECEPTION IN\nNELSON.\niiPRINGFIELD\nTEAM SHIFTED\nbprjngpield, Mass.. Jan. 25--\nObeylng a mandate from New Tork\nHangers, owners of Springfield Indiana, Coach Prank Carroll of the\nCanadian-Amerloan hockey league\npace setters, rem delled his team\nlast night. The result was that\nProvidence Beds trampled on tha\ntribe by a six to one score.\nThe shifting about of tne lineup\nwas somewhat ln the nature of an\nexperiment, ss the Bangers want a\ndefinite line on some oi their\nyoungsters who may be moved up\nto   tbe  National   league.\nSlebert, _ defence man, Maracle\nand Walte, forwards, were affected\nby  the  ordered  change.\nCormier, Hart, A. Olrona, Q.\nGiroux, Gaudreault and Careen did\nthe scoring for the winners. Hex-\nlmer  scored  for  Springfield.\nTTJL8A  BEATS  MINNEAPOLIS\nTHUJA, Ofcl*., Jan. 26\\\u2014 (AP)\u2014\nDesperate ofenslve in the last four\nminutes of play produced goals foi\nthe Tulsa Oilers and brought them\n_ 3-1 victory over Minneapolis ln\nan American hockey league game\nthis   afternoon.\nWAMPOLES\nCod \u201e\u00bb*t OU\n*   Bodj   Builder\nSmythe s Pharmaoy|\nPrescription Specialist*\ns Phone  1\n44 TAXI AND 44\nTRANSFER\nTBAIL AMD  BOSS_..\\U\nIRtlUIIT  AND  EXl'UESi\navnetlul*\n(Mils'  lj  Trail,  lta.es  11  \u00ab. H\nTAXIS DAT.  AND NIGHT\nA.D.PAPAZIAN\nWATCHMAKER,\nJEWELER,\nand Graduate Optician]\n413 HALL STREET\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNELSON'S    DISPENSING   CHEMIST\n\u2022Join   our   Lending   Library.\nup-to-date   books.\nCall snd  get your weight free.   ,\nBOOK^\u2014KODAKS\u2014STATIONERY\nPhone   34 Box   108. |\nGLASSES\nJ. A. C. Laughton. R. 0.]\nOPTOMETRIST   and   OPTICIAN   .\nSuite 305-306. Medical Arts Bldg. j\nNELSON BUSINESS\nCOLLEGE\nDay and evening classes\nIndividual Tuition\u2014Commence any time.\nPeace Restored\nAlberta Hockey\nCALOARY, Alta., Jan. 3&\u2014following a conference betwe*n the Alberta\nAmateur Hockey association and the\nSouthern Alberta leegue officials,\npeace was restored in nocitey ranks\nIn this part of the west on Bun-\nday. Turner Valley returns to the\nleague and tne .schedule will be re\nmimed as previously arranged. Pol-\nlowing the regular playing season,\nall five teams will compete In the\nAllan   cup   eliminations.\nIncorrigible Boy\nTaken to Coast\nfor Detention\nChief of Police Thomas H. Long\nleft Friday night for Vancouver,\ntaking with him for committal to\nthe Juvenile detention home, a Nelson boy who had been adjudged\nIncorrigible.\nTrail Churchmen     m^\nHear H. Mclnnes\nTRAIL. B. C, Jan. as\u2014H, w. Mclnnes spoke at the Churohmens club\ntonight on naturalisation. A general\ndiscussion followed ln which many\ncomplex questions were put before\nMr. Mclnnes. There wss a good\nattendance.\nPhone Taxi\n77\nI'relrht     RclistHm\nDsllr te Bosslanil\nand Trail, 10 us\nBUD      STEVENS.\nProp.\nTrail msns 131\nTwo Shows\nNightly\n7-9\nMatinee\nat 2 P. M.\nT-O-D-A-Y\nAGAIN the Joy-Giver of\nthe Talking, Singing\nScreen in His New\nLaughter, Loving,\nLilting Hit!\nMaurice Chevalier\n'Playboy of Paris'\nwltb\nFRANCES  DEE,   O.  P.   HEOOIE,\nSTl'ART    IRWIN\nCOMEDY\n'30  QUIET ON THE\nCANINE FRONT\"\nCOMEDY    ACT\nBURNS and ALLEN\n\"FIT  TO  BE  TIED\"\nTUES.-WED.\nThe Book That Made\nYou Gasp Is Now\nTalking; on the\nScreen\n'All Quiet\non the\nWestern\nFront'\nTHE HUMAN SIDE OF\nTHE WAR AS SEEN\nTHROUGH THE EYES\nOF YOUTH.\nFOX NEWS\nSPECIAL CHILDREN'S MATINEE AT 10:30\nSATURDAY MORNING   First showing of the greatest\nof s6ri_ls'\n' \"THE INDIANS ARE COMING\"\nFull program will be shown at the morning matinee.\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_26","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0404113","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"}]}}