{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0404137":{"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":"2021-11-16","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1929-03-11","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404137\/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":" Semie Rate 41 Mills\nSee Page S\nSjfof\nIII\nB   C\nCdlK Of f f or Calgary\nSee Pafe 7\nH_ 27.\nNEl^ON, B. C- MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 11, 1929\nNo. 287\nRINCE WALES MAY BE REGENT\nimberley Man\nOUT URULEJO\nof Cm Abo Checked\nGovernment     Claims;\n:ljuirre Sues for Safety\nCONSIDERED FOR REGENCY\n[SLING FIGHTS\nOPERATION\nAGAINST TPRBEON\nI Federal Body to Advance\nIt; Rebels Who Took\nare. to Aid Defence\nBOO CTTT, Mareh 10.\u2014Defeat ol\nTJrbeleio   and   bis   rebel  de-\nt at Csnltas, was officially an-\nbera tonight.\nrebel general was said to bave\nan escort of 30 men before\nrtorious advance of federal troops,\ncampaign was under tbe personal\nef   Secretary   of   War   Bias\nON NEXT\ncapture of Canltas,  a strategic\njy junction, opened the way for\n|)ral northward push toward Tor-\nyrbere  one  of  the  largest  rebel\nIS concentrated.\nInwbUe Federal Oeneral L. Juan\nordered   an, advance  of\n>d  from   westward   toward\nmovement la carried out surly, the Mbel would face at-\nfrotn two sides,\ngovernment anouncement aald\nand also tbe city of Dur-\neipected to tall to tba feder-\nitbln from. M to 48 hours,\nlumably Oeneral Calles plans to\npart of lbs force to attack Dur-\nT where UrUaleJo has additional\ni, while tbe main body moves\n\\t Oenersl OoMalo Isbar at Tor- j\nOF  SVBWKBCst\ngovernment  said  tbat   Oeneral\nM. Agulrre, rebel cbieftsn, who\nijera Cruz ln defeat, had telegraph-\noffer to surrender lf the aft-\nallowed him safe passage from\nntry.       The   government   re-\ntbat his surrender must be unit promlssd to be \"benov-\n.towards bis troops and minor\nt, but declared the leaders would\n,tyected to a court-martial.\ngovernment statement declared\nf the advance of the Sonora rebels\nOeneral Roberta Cruz, ln the\n|r erf Slnaloa, had been checked,\nyesplanatlon of the victory at Can-\nIt was said the troops of Ur-\nhad been duped Into thinking\n| they were \u2022fighting for the gov-\nAst. and thsy promptly turned on\n\"leader when they found he was\n( advinoe guard of the Calles army\nhe help of theae unwilllni rebels\nth\u00bb Urbalejo forces,\nmain army was moving up to\ndata.tbe Canltas position, which\nwill make the base for mis ad-\non Torreon.\n[f*ernment circles were Jubilant at\nAws.    Marter Oomez secretary of\n|_ture and official spokesman tor\nrvernment said:\nI revolution Is over ln Vera Cruz\nijust about over m the north.\"\nP.   Rr-lNFOJtOF.MENTrr.\nChlhl,   March   10.\u2014Vlctor-\n|Vebel troops who conquered Juaraz\nfive  day  struggle   last   Friday,\n! enroute  today   to reinforce  the\nttlonary  army  near   Torreon,   In\n\\jttu Chihuahua, where a decisive\nIs expected  within a law dsys\nlarge government foroe.\nThat tho Prince of Wales may be\nappointed regent is stated this morning by the London Daily J\u201411 The\ncoum-11 of all to whom Hla Majesty\nissued   a    commission   to   sign   state\npapers, lt# Ml for tne p\"\"T*tx* \u00b0' nls\nIncapacity through illness has not the\nauthority to Bummon or dissolve parliament, and & dissolution must take\nplace   shortly.    Under   these   clrcum-\nI\nstances, a regency rnay'fc decided on,\nsince the King, thou*B 'ijadually gaining strength, Is obvMUsly mo frail\nto tnke any steps In reqnnl lo state\nmatters.\nFORNEWDERVER\nGives Railway CommiMion Report of Conference and Digest of Correspondence\nFALLING ROCK\nFROM A STOPE\nKILLS ED KEMP\nKimberley Mine Worker Meets\nInstant Death;  Five'\n\u2022   Years in kimberley\nKIMBKR\u2014SY, B. C, March 10.\u2014Kd\nKemp, age 33, met Instant death In a\nmine accident here Saturday morning.\nThe fatality occurred shortly after he\nhad gone on shift. Falling rock from\na stope, which struck-the unfortunate\nvictim, was presuim\u2014 to'-be the( cause\nof tbe tragedy.\nDeceased was highly respected by h'.s\nfellow workers, having resided-In Klmberley for tbe past five years. He wis o\nwidower, his wife having predecease\nhlni about a year ago.\nHGHTS STORM FOUR\nDAYS ON LAKE ICE\nPostmaster    of     Duck     Bay\nForced From Trail on\nLake Winnipe-a-osis\nWINNIPEG, Man., March 10\u2014After\na battle of-four days and four nights\nagainst snow and wind while attempting to cross take Wlnhlpegosis, R. _\nJones, colored, postmaster of Duck Bay,\nsnd pioneer trapper and fisherman. Is\nsafe at his home tonight.\nCaught in the fury ot a northern\nhi\u2014sard 15 miles from, shore on I\u2014ke\nWinnlpegoas, Jones was forced far\nfrom the Ice' trail across the lake, but\nwhen the state' abated the old trSp-\nper was able to guide his team of\nsturdy ponies, hitched to a sleigh, back\nto within five miles of the shore, where\nhs sought shelter for a night In on\nabandoned fisherman's cabin. Then he\nfinished the Journey to his home st\nDuck Bay.\nHis face was frown slightly, but despite his being without food for the\nfour days, he was ln fair physical condition after his strenuous battle against\nthe elements. ,\nBritain Ordert a\nMachine That W'dl\nAttend Vertically\nWNDON, March 11. \u2014 The\nMail todays soys that a flying\nmachine called a \u2022\u2022Hellcoglre\"\nls being built at the order of the\nBritish air ministry and Is nearly\nready far tests.\nIt Is a development of the\nhelicopter and was Invented by\nVlttoro Isaac, who ln 181** collaborated with Pescaraln maklnc\nfive helicopters. \"*\nThe sew machine ls designed\nto ascend and descend vertically\nand'to hover motionless ln midair..*\nMAKES FIRST LEG\nTO MOOSE FACTORY\nON MERCY IRRAND\nCapt. Roy Maxwell of the Ontario Flying Service on \u2022\nWay to Sick Clergyman\nVictoria Aviator and\nFriend Injured When\nPlane Hits Plowed Land\nDRAFTSMEN AT\nCOAST ASSUMES\nTITLE OF BARON\n\"Ricky\"   Carmichael   Succeeds\nto Two Baronetcies Vacated\nby Death of  Counsin\ni Meet Violet Ends\nSt. Boniface, One by\nTram, One ok River Ice\nMarch    10.\u2014Two    untie! men  met  violet  deaths In\nilfsce city  today,\ni \u00bbsn,  sbout  00  wars  of  age,\n(struck   and   killed   by   a   street\n(Tha motorman failed to see the\n| and the body was dragged 300\nbody of the other man, about\nr of age. was found on the ice\nriver directly be\u2014w Nor-\nbridge.   He la believed to bave\nfrom  the  bridge  railing.\nToronto Truch Driver\nAi\\U Ten to Escape\nFrom Burning Block\nTOIW5NTO, Ont.. March 10.\u2014Using\nhis track aa an Impromptu fire escape.\nOeorge Neath rescued 10 persons trom\na burning building on Bloor street today.\nNeath noticed three persons were\nclimbing to a ledge on the front of the\nbuilding. With great presence of mind\nhe drove hts truck up on the side walk,\nand thus ensbled the people to Jump\nfrom ther positions to the top of the\ntruck, and then to the ground.\nSeven more persons followed out the\nupper windows.\nVANCOOTHt, March 10\u2014A second\nCanadian rorhance of the British peerage wltoln recent weeks lias come\nto light In Vancouver ln the\nsuccession of Eric Windham Francis\nCarmlchael-Anstruther to the baronetcies of Carmichael and Anstruther.\nThe Vancouver man, now Sir Eric\nWindham Francis Carmichael-Anstruther, has left for the family seat, Carmichael House, Thankerton, Lonarkshlre.\nScotland, ,to settle matters In connection with the estate, following the\ndeath of hU oouiln, Sir Windham Car-\nmlchael-Anstruther, Bart.\nNOW \"SI*UBIC\"\nSir Eric expects to be In the old\ncountry about three months, after\nwhom lt Is hts Intention to return to\nVancouver, where he has been employed as a draftsman for the past\nthree years\/ tt ls not known whether\nhe will make his permanent home here.\nHe Is 29 years of age and unmarried.\nHe is familiarly known to his friends\nhere as  (Ricky).\nSir Eric, comes, of a very old Scottish\nfamily which traces its ancestry for\n700 years. He will be the eleventh\nbaronet ol Anstruther, created In Scotland ln 1700. and eighth of Carmichael.\ncreated ln England In 1798. According\nto a directory.of titled persons, he will\nalso assume the honors of hereditary\ncarver to the royal household in Scotland and ' onfe of the masters of the\nhousehold.\nSUDBURY. Ont., Match 10\u2014 Bound\nfor Moose Factory on. a mission of\nmercy. Captain nay W. Maxwell, director of the Ontario govfernment flying\nservice, arrived In Sudbury at 6;10\npjn. today, and with favorable weather, will take off for B_rrmy I\u2014ke. the\nnext leg of his flight, early tomorrow\nmorning. He WIU *e occompanled\nfrom Sudbury by Air TfSjl\u00a3*e' George\nOlll, snd at the lake wnrplck up a\nphysician end proceed to Mccse Factory where Rev. O. Morrow, Anglican\nclergyman of Rupert's House, lies at\nthe point of death from Injuries.\n\"I confidently expect to reach Moose\nFactory tomorrow, that !\u00bb If we have\nany sort of weather.\" Csptoln Maxwell stated when Interviewed this evening.\nAsked If he would bring the injured\nmsn back to civilisation, captain\ncircumstances.\nMoxwell   said   that    lt   depended   on\nwell said, ho would \"cut\" a place to\nShould It he necessary. Captain Max-\naccomodate the patient. *\nToday's flight from Camp Bcrden\nto Sudbury was not without adventure, Captain Maxwell encountering\nseveral snow storms. The machine is\na Moth plane.\nOTTAWA, March 10.\u2014Complaints of\nNew Denver merchants, mine operators\nand citizens concerning Inadequate\nwharf and boat service has been taken\ndirect to the railway commission by\nWest Kootenays member. W. K Esling.\nHe furnished tbe commission not only\nWith details of the conference by members or the board of trade with CP.R.\nofficials and tbe railway commission's\nrepresentative, but with a complete\nsummary of all correspondence, promises and understandings as between the\nboard of trade, Thomas Hoben on behalf of merchants and mine operators\nand others who complained of the company's lack of wharf and boat facilities for receipt and shipment of mer-\nchsn.cHse and ore in carload lots.\nTEE   RePRESENTATIONS\nThe C. t. R. suggested that Denver\nSiding or Sllverton offered necessary\naccommodation, but New Denver residents assert the extra haul would Involve from I1J0 to 13 per ton additional freight, and would place them at\na   distinct, disadvantage.\nThey further contend that this additional charge on ore would discourage operation of such mines as\nusually shipped from New Denver.\nThe C. P. R. In support of present\nlimited wharf and boat facilities, contends that the construction of tbe\nhighway along Slocan lake has materially decreased the company's business.\nFred A. Starkey of Nelson has been\nendeavoring to effect arrangements\nsatisfactory to all interests.\nTlie matter is now under review by\nthe railway commission.\nIn addition to taking the case to\nthe railway commission, Mr. Esling\npersonally Interviewed D. c. Coleman,\nvice-president of the c. P. R. for\nwestern lines, and presented a statement of fact similar to. that pitpwstsd\nto the railway commission.\nVICTORIA. B. C\u201e March 10--\nwhen tbe engine of his airplane stalled at a considerable\nheight here today, A. W. Garter,\nlocal aviator, attempted to land\nn a plowed field at Cedar HUI\nwltb disastrous results to himself, F. O. Altken, wbo accompanied nun, and tbe Moth plane\nof the Vlotoria Aero club. Tlw\nlanding was made on a slope,\nthe i\u2014ea of the machine hitting\nthe ground first.\nTbe plane waa wrecked, and\nboth men seriously Injured and\ntaken to a hospital.\nComplicated Constitutional Po-\nfor Regency; Queen\n' Can   Be  Chosen\nCOUNCIL OF STATE CANNOT GRANT DISSOLUTION\nCompetent    Precedents    Exist\nfor Regency; King May\nSoon Oo Outdoors\nHIT Bl TROLLEY\nMrs.   Giroux   Is  Killed  When\nCar Struck by Intel-urban\nat Crossing\nTWO MEN, TWO WOMEN\nARE INJURED IN SMASH\nMotorman Rogers Is Arrested\non Technical Charge of\nManslaughter\nROSSLAND LINE\nSLIDE BLOCKED\nMUD AND GRAVE\nNoon Train Forced to Return\nNelson; Expect Resume\nService Tomorrow\nVANCOUVER, March 10.\u2014One woman was killed nnd four other persons\nwere injured when an automobile and\na British Columbia electric interurben\ntrain collided at the Sixth avenue and\nPine street crossing here this afternoon.\nThe dead is Mrs. J. T. Giroux. Og-\nden avenue.\nThe injured: J. T. Giroux, husband\nof the dead woman; Mr. and' Mrs.\nJ.   II.   Kerr,   Mrs.   Catherine   Stevens.\nAlexander Stevens, driver of the automobile,   escaped   uninjured.\nA. Rogers, motorman of the tram,\nwas arrested on a technical charge of\nmanslaughter   and   Is   held   on   ball.\nCLAIMS DISTRESS\nNORTH ONTARIO\nSturgeon   Palls  Member   Says\n25,000  People  Living  in\nShacks in Northtend\nVISCOUNT UNLAY\nDIES IN LONDON\nMember of International Court\nof Justice and a Former\nLord Chancellor\nLONDON. March 11 .\u2014(Monday)\u2014The\nMall this morning says the possibility\nof appointing the Prince of Wale* regent to art for hi* father ls being discussed The complicated constitutional\nposition resulting from the long illness\nof King George wus said to he tbe\nreason.\nThe newspaper sav> it ls now\nclear that his majesty, although -\nhis progress is maintained, will not\nbe able to undertake duties of state\nuntil after the general election,\nwhich is expected during May.\nHe will therefore be unable to\ndissolve  parliament himself.\nThe council of state, which wa_\nappointed to act for the King during his Illness, cannot perform\nthis function.\nThe  proclamation  which  constituted   that   body   declared:   \"The\ncounsellors shall  not dissolve parliament.\"\nMINISTERS  IN\nTHE   COINT1L\nOthei1 difficulties arise from tha fact\nthat Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin\nand Lord Chancellor Lord Halsom. aro\namong the counsellors.\nThe Mall understands that the situation is under consideration and tha.\nthe policy under which the prince\nwould become regent Is under consideration. The paper recalls that there\nMo competent precedents for tke--pro*\nposed course.\nKING iMPftOTlKU\nBOGNOR, Sussex, Mafch 10 \u2014tilonoiu\nsunshine, accompanied by little or no\nwind, made weather conditions nt Bognor ideal today. Tlie King was officially stated to have pawed a good\nday today, and a good night last night.\nThousands of visitors came to the\ncoast today by motor and rail, and\nmany of them walked or drove out past\nCralgwell House.\nIf the present spring-like weather\ncontinues, his majesty may be able n\ngo out Into the grounds of Craljiwoil in\nthe near future.\nBody of Victoria\nIndia* Is Found\nUnder His Laanch\ni Zealand Quake\nBusts Rod Tracks\nKOTOM. Nsw Zealand. March\n, severe earthquake seriously dam-\n\u2022 railway traolus at Canterbury to-\nfae shock also was (sit at Chrlst-\nki. Ms casualties wars reported\nNr&er.-\nI-KKVF.NTS  HPEr-D\nMTBMrr   BY   SEAOBAVE\nONA BIACH, Ha., March 10.\u2014\n|and  northeast; winds  of  almost\nrtlons today prevented Major\n[ P.-Bsatrart of Bngland from st-\nto break   tht  maid's  auto\nlucent.\nVICTORIA, B. C March lp.\u2014The\nbody ot Phillip Preachy, chemalnus\nIndian, was found Saturday under his\nlaunch, Frenchy visited Victoria Friday,\nsnd falling to return homo Saturday\na search was Instituted. He had apparently fallen overboard.\nFort ChnrchiU and\nFlin Flon Townsite\nHanded to Manitoba\nKing Amunullak Off\non March Aimed ta\nRecover His Throne\nLONDON, March 10.\u2014Tha Mall tomorrow wltt print a .dispatch from\nLahore. India, saying that former King\nAmanullah has- commenced a .march\nfrom Kandahar to Kabul to attempt\nto recover the throne of Afghanistan.\nWINNMtQ, Man., March 10\u2014The\nManitoba Free Press in a news pagr\nstory,  says:\n\"Both the towns of Port Churchill\nand the townsite at the Flln Flo:_\nmime have been transferred to the\nManitoba Vovernment, lt was learned\nin  the city last night.\n\"Definite announcement that Churchill bad been turned over to the provincial authorities was. made In Ottawa\nover the week-end, followng a conference between Hon. Charles Dunning,\nminister of railways, and Hon. D. O.\nMacKenzle, minister of mines and resources far Manitoba.\nTurkish Passenger\nTrain Hit by Rock;\nFifteen Casnalties\nTORONTO, Ont., March 10\u2014Conditions of distress comparable to those\nof the mining areas of Oreat Britain\nexist in northern Ontario according to\nT. Legault, Liberal member ot the\nOntario legislature for Sturgeon Falls.\nHe has invited Premier Ferguson, Sir\nJoseph Flavellei chairman of the Ontario research foundation and Han.\nWm. Finlayson. minlHter ttt northern\ndevelopment, to \"follow we example\nof the Prince ot Wales.\" and investigate\nconditions for themselves.\n\"There are 25,000 people In that\nnorthland living In snack*, the worst\npossible kind ot homes,\" Mr. Legsult\nstates.\nCONOTANTWOPLE, March 10.-Pour\npersons ware killed and 11 seriously Injure- last night when a huge boulder\ncrashed from Use mountain-side on t\npassengar traUi near hare. The locomotive ar_d*several cars of the train mete\ndemoUshed.\nTen Casualties in\nHongkong\nGreat Hotel Burns\nVICTORIA, Hongkong, Mareh 11\nFire broke out ln the King Edward\nhotel here early this morning, and\nstill was burntim seven hours later.\nIt was Believed that there had been\nat least 10 casualties.\nThe King Edward hotel is one of\nthe largest and most frequently patronized by tourists In the elty. It Is\nlocated nesr the water frcnt ln the\nheart of tne British  section.\nAn American seaman named Klsh\nfrom the cruiser Memphis, waa killed\nwhen he Jumped from the burning\nhotal to a sheet held by flrement and\nspectators. He missed the sheet and\nstruck the pavement\nA crew of 30 to 40 men was rushed\nto Blrchbsnk with equipment yesterday to clear mud and gravel slides\nwhich blocked the line and disrupted\ntrain schedules on the Nelson-Rossland\nbrnncli of the CP.R. Robert Armstrong,\ndivisional superintendent, und his assistants followed by a Ister train to\nsupervise line clearing work. It ls expected service will resume tomorrow.\nTho train due In Nelson at 0:30 from\nRossland made Its mn, but the train\nleaving Nelson at 12:4*3 for Roesland\nwas forced to return here. The service will be discontinued today and\nuntil the line is cleared.\nSeveral elides dropped on the line\nln (ho vicinity of Murphy creek, near\nBtrohbsnk.   Some were of good slie.\nIstte laat night lt was reported the\nKettle Valley train due here st 11\no'clock had been delayed two hours\nthrough a rock falling on the Une\nnear Beasley. This was not confirmed\nby   railway   officials.\ni\nTimber Royalties\nWiU Be Continued\nan Additional Year\nLONDON, March 10.\u2014Viscount Flnlay of Nairn died here last night at\nthe age of 86.\nHe wss the British member of the\npermanent court of arbitration at\nThe Hague tn 1920. and a member\not the International court cf Justice\nestablished by the League ot Nations.\nBorn in Edinburgh, he graduated\nln law at Edinburgh university and\nwaa called to the bar ln 1876. He\nwas a solicitor-general from 1895 to\n1900; Lord Rector of Edinburgh university in 1902 snd 1903: attorney-\ngeneral from 1900 to 1906. and lord\nchancellor from 1916 to 1918. He represented Edinburgh and Saint Andrew's university in parliament for\nsix years.\nHis heir is Sir William Flnlay, who\nls   also   known   as  a  lawyer.\n77ir<?_? Days last on\nGreat Lakes, Two Men\nand a Woman Make Home\nCHICAGO, 111., March 10.\u2014Two men\nand a woman who were reported missing ln their lake boat Wednesdsy. end\ngiven up as lost during a storm, pulled\nup At the south coast guard station\n.. i Saturday,   safe   and   sound,   although\nThe three persons who were lost on\nVICTORIA.   March   10.   \u2014   Existing\nBritish Columbia timber royalties will\nZIOMHTS TO RAISE\nITNIW   IN   n-ttMIMON\nMONTREAL, Que.. March 10.\u2014A Dominion-wide campaign to raise a_40,-\n000 towards the reseoiation of Palestine\nwill be inaugurated In Montreal oy\nColonel Frederic-. Klsch, D, 8- O.. O. B.\nI., a noted British .army officer, r.nd\nhead of the Palestine Zionist execu.lv.,\nlegislation introduced in the legislature\nby Hon. F. P. Burden, minister of lands.\nThis legislation will give th\u00bb timber\nindustry two years under existing (Jon-\nditlons and the house will decile a\nyear from now whether any change\nshould be made after that time. The\ngovernment's decl.lon to postpone nny\nchange in the existing royalty followed\nemphatic protests from lumbermeri ftll\nover the province against th\u00bb increase\nof approximately 25 per cent due td to\ninto effect on January 1, 1090, umvr\nthe law as lt stands.\nFormerly royalties have been ftxed\nfor five-year periods on the Weals of\nlumber prices tn the preceding fiv\u00ab\nyears.\nthe the lake three days were Nels Jen\nsea,    90,    WaukeganR    fisherman;    hla\nwire, Anne. 21; and his brother, Charles,\nH\n\u2022Since Wednesday they had drifted in\n|he lake between Waukegang and\nVrandhaven. but Saturday they succeeded ln partly repairing their disabled motor, and pulled Into the Chicago station under their own power.\nThree Men Lott From\nJapanese Steamship\nin Crossing Atlantic\nSafe Crackers Get\nLoot in Winnipeg\nWINNIPEG, Man.. March lO.\u2014Thlevaa\nwere successful in a week-end robbery\nat a local bakery plant, escaping with\n$500 which has born taken from a wfe\nafter the iron door had been cracked\nopen.\nThe office of an oil company also\nWaa entered, and the safe door blown\noft, but no loot was obtained. The\n\u2022afe contained only papers.\nNEW YORK, March 10.\u2014Three men\nwere lost from the Egypt Muni, a Japanese steamer, during a hurricane on\nFebruary 24, and the wireless operator\ndisappeared a day or two later, tlie officers reported today when the vessel Arrived from Hamburg.\nThe Egypt Msru left Hamburg February 15, and was battered for 24 hours\nby the hurricane. The storm swept\noverboard the third officer, boatswain\nand another seaman.\nThe wireless operator waa missing a\nday or two later when the storm\nabated, and officers could not account for hla disappearance.\nLONDON. March 11 .\u2014The question\nof introducing a bill to make tb..\nPrince of Wales regent to act for hla\nfather is being considered, according\nto information gathered tn parliamentary and political quartaj> this morning.\nThe possibility of calling upon parliament to act on the matter was (eld\nto be under advisement of the Utw\nofficers of the crown, the attorney-\ngeneral and solicitor-general.\nAlthough the King has been making\nsatisfactory progress toward rcocmy\nfrom his long and serious illness, morning newspapers were led to apeduieto\nln what way parliaAient could be dissolved before the general elections\nscheduled for May. His Majesty waa nc\nlikely to have retnined stri-moii tor\nsuch duties of state, and the rcftincu\nof state, which has acted for him la\nlesser matters for some time, wae expressly forbidden ta dissolve pari 1:,mem*\nln the proclamatloft which created H,\nOther difficulties arise from the fact,\nthat two members of the present Conservative goverrune\u00abt. Prime Minister\nStanley Baldwin and Lord Hailahnm\nare among the councillors.\nIt was said to be considered uuwls-i\nto risk retarding the recovery of tti-i\nKing by calling for hts personal ...consideration of matters Whleh will necessarily arise in connection wttJi tho\nappointing of a new government after\nthe elections. In every case, the formation of a new administration body\nentails upon the sovereign a great-.\nnumber of interviews with statesmen,\nwith intricate discussion of sus-tsted\nappointments.\nThese are naturally more nunteroui\nand prolonged in event of the existing\ngovernment being defeated. If cither\nthe Laborltes or Liberals should win.\nRamsay Mcdonald or David Lloyd\nOeorge would have to consult tho King\nconstantly with reference to suggrfi-\ntlons of new ministers with whom His\nMajesty would be less familiar than\nthe present holders ot government t.i-\nflcers.\nThe duty which develops upon tha\nlaw offtcera ls to consider the constitutional position in event a decision\nls reached that the condition of tlw\nKing necesnitates his acting by deputy,\nand how far precedents cover the situation.\nIt waa suggested that a way might\nbe found to empower the ex latin*\ncouncil of state to function in auch\na manner, but the general assumption\nwas that the likeliest way out of the\ndifficulty would be the creating of a\nregency, with the heir to the throne\nmoat probably, but Queen Mary, poa-\nsibly aa regent. The decision will -not\nbe fostered Immediately but must be\nmade before tbe elections which are expected before the middle of May.\n THE NELSON DAILY MEWs   MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 11, 1&29\nGEORGE BENWELL, Proprietor\nlne rrentier notei ot tne Interior\nEUROPEAN PLAN, ROOMS $1.M UP\nRooms With Running Water.   Private Baths ea Sate\nHeadquarters for all Traveling Men, Mining Men, Lumber\nMen and Tourists\nSpecial Sunday Dinner fl.tiO Rotarian Headquarters\nThe Most Comfortable Rotunda in the City\nBoy Scout Doings\nIn the Kootenay and\nBoundary Districts\nHUME\u2014Mr ami Mn. J. R Holland\nTrail: 1. Oallo. Spokane; W W Bush.\nJ. C. Bondwell. Charles w. MU, a.\nMcintosh. John Hellwrll. L Hellwefl,\nA   L. Boden, D   Dennis, H   Phillips. J.\nInnes. 9,om Spur; C. P. K\u2014<ht, Hamilton; O. Spare. Montreal, Rt. Rev.\nAlexander J. snd Mrs. Doull, Vernon;\nA. K -Mode. New Denver. \u2014 Bloom.\nProcter: J M Wolverton. New York\nN.   \u00a5.:   A    V    Master,   Spokane:   R.   I.\nBrown,rig,   Vancouver:   Oeorge   tests.   'Cameron,  Trail;   F.  O.   Berg,   Spokane.\nThe SAVOY\nNelson's Newest and finest Hotel\n\"Where the Quest Is King\nSteam Heat.  Hot and Cold Running Water in All Rooms.\nMANY  ROOMS WITH PRIVATE  BATHS  OR  SHOWERS\nJ. A. KERR, PROP., NELSON, B.C.\nSAVOY\u2014H. H. Harper, Procter; *.\nMcKav. Bonnlngton; P. T. Campbell,\nTraU; J. Perry, J. Terry, T. Renwlck.\nN.   E.   Shore,   Vancouver;   E.   D.   Hall,\nTrail; W. Brown, Calgary; O. Splller,\nBrilliant; B. Jeffers. Rossland; V. Erickson. ttoss Spur; H. White, Trail* Sidney HaU,'Ross Spur: A. litrNsughton.\nThrums: P. Trainer, Rosaland.\n\u25a0\nnun\ni\nTM* cnhnii Is open ta all Setwt\nnrtanixatlADN la tne Root-mar aad\nBouMary districts, stout bows\nma* ke la the editorial departawnt\nby  Saturday   night  at  the   tat**.\nTJien- juris one ot the largest -ttend-\nttte Friday night, that there\nbet\\)k\\ lor nome tome; wheti 9+\nHieing present. It is ver* grati-\nV have such a targe number ttira\noat. Otr it shows the bold the uoout\nmovement has on the boys of the city,\nespecially when it is remembered that\nthe troop has been in existence for\never seven years. Judging from all ap-\npearmces. it le good for another seven\nas the Cub pack, which ta a feeder for\nthe troop, is very strong. As long as\nthe pack keeps up to strength there ta\nno fear of the troop going out of business but tht question of how to handle so many boys, will have to be faced\nsome clay. Unless volunteers who have\nbeen through the scout business themselves come forward at no distant date,\nthose in charge of the First Netaon\ntroop will be compelled to close the\ndoor on amy boy wishing to Join and\ndepend entirely on the annual promotion from the Cub pack to keep up the\nstrength  of the troop\nAt, the last meeting there were three\nclasses for first aid and one for map\nreading, as well as the classes for tren-\ncial scout work. Those classes for special subjects are under the charge of\nFred Blokeman, Dave Rees, W. O.\nCrowther* and Boyd Affleck, and the\nboy*-, are making steady progress in\ntheir studies.\nKen Rees was in attendance Friday\nfor the purpose of making up wltb tbe\nQueens\n1HR  CENTER  OF  TONVENIENCI!\nHotel\nRot and oold water In every room\nSteam Heated.\nA.LAP0INTE,PR0P.\nQW.WS \u2014 H. Winding, Salmo; J.\n'.' Johtts'-on, Regina; N. V. Pelton, Cran-\n:.; brook; H. McDonald, J. Palfrey, W. D.\nGalloway, Spokane; T. Turner, H. Turn-\n;i* er, Columbia Gardens; W. Hill. Ross-\nJa land; T, Boden, Rev. James Hagen.\n| Trail.\nMADDEN HOTE\nI. MADDEN, Prop.\nMsam  Heated  Rooms Mr  the  Day\nmeet or Month\nBrer. Consideration shown to guests.\nCat. Baker and Ward  Bta, Nelson\nMAODENW H. Hutchinson, South\nSlocsn; A. J. Rlckett, Spokane; P. Hen-\n,'shaw, Bonnlngton, D. Carmichael, Brilliant; H. Dallas. Rlondel; Mr and Mrs\nKitchener, Trail: V. Spencer. City, W.\nMcKenzle, R. Winter, Charles Brett,\nRosslund; H. Chambers. T. Smith, Nova\nScotia.\nNEW GRAND HOTEL\nA modern Brick Building\n810  Vernon Streat, Nelson, B.C.\nHot and Cold Water ahd Telephone\ntn  All  Rooma.    Steam  Heated\nThroughout\nP. KAPAK, Prop.        European Plan\nNEW GRAND \u2014 M. Mlros, Taghum;\nTony Mack, South Slocan; W. J. Jamleson, Bonnlngton; P. Norberg, Procter;\nJ. Maryland, E. Anderson, Mrs. G. A.\nSmith, Cranbrook; Mrs. A. Helper and\ndaughter. Rossland; Mrs. A. Mackle,\nMiss G. 1. Mackie, Boswell.\nOCCIDENTAL HOTE\nThe Hone of Plenty\nMS Vernon St        Phone Mil.\nII   WARRICK AND O. IIYlTlt'K\nFifty   Rooms  ot  Solid   Comfort\nHeadquarters for Loners and Miners\nKOOTENAY HOTEL\nUNDER  THE MANAGEMENT OF\nWILLIAM   -ONES\nOOOD, CLEAN ROOMS.    REASONABLE\nRATES.\nPHONE  75. 516  VERNON  ST.\n\u25a0\nHotel Arlington\nTRAIL, B.C.\nA. P. LK-VKKOIE, Pron.\n'       Completely Renovated and Refinished\nHot tnd CoW Run-i-j Water European Plan\n Stesm Healed\nRotary\nWI    Headquarters\nCentrally Located\nSample Rooms in\nConnection\nNelson's Best Cafes\nboys U>e matter of forming a scow*\nhasketbaB league. the boys were greatly\nIn favor of this move, and the troop\nwill be able to iorm seven tear\u2014s. It la\nexpected that tlw .Third Nelson troop\nwill enter a team In the league aa\nwell.\nThe nlgMs SM apart for the garrses I\nwill he Tuesdays after the regular cub |\nmeeting, _______ Thmrsdayrt as\u2014 Saturdays\nafter I o'clock. Bach member of the\nregular Junior team, will have charge\nof one of the stem teams.\nAll arrangements have been made In\nconnection wltb conducting tlse service\nin St. Paul'a United church in a short\ntime. It Is expected that ln addition to\nthe membera of the First Nelaon troop\nand pack, than win be present the\nThird Nelson troop and pack and also\nthe first and second compenlee of Girt\nGuides and the'Firm Nelson pack of\nBrownies.\nBritish   Industrial   Peer   Tells\nToast Canadian Club of\nGreat Advances\nMILLION MORE WORK\nTHAN BEFORE WAR\nAll Obligations Met and Service Extended; Iron and\nCoal Are Healthier\ncuts It fully.** SB* believed that\nevery number of parliament st\u2014uld\nSave a thorough knowledge of Canada\ngained by a tour from coast to coast.\nHOLDS THEM!\nThe STANDARD CAFE\nMO Baker Street, Nelson, B.C.\nOPEN DAV AND NIOHT\n11:30 to 1:30 Special Lunch .  9Sc\n6:30 to 8:00  pm., Supper ..........SSc\nPHONE  IM\nTHE L. D. CAFE\nFinest equipped Restaurant ln tlie 0tt7\nOPEN DAT AND NIGHT\nWe Cater to Private Partlee\nSpeeial\u2014Ice Cream, Soda Water aad\nRot   Drinks.     Nice    clean   fund-bed\nrooms, hot and oold water.\nTHE ROYAL CAFE\nCLASSIC   RESTAURANT\nRefinement and Delicacy Prevail\nOPEN DAT AND NIOHT\nSpecial Dinners 11:30 to 2:30 \u2014__38c\nSupper   5:30   to  8  \u201e.._...\u201e__. _-..\u2122...35c\nFIRST N-TLSON WOLF PACK     ....  ,.,->.\nH mar be realized what a hold the\ncub movement has on the younger boys\nof town when It ta noted that there wae\na turn out of 60 members at the pack\nmeeting last weak. The pack was divided into three groups, two being\nunder Garnet Kerr and BUI Price respectively. The third, numbering 24.\nmade up of the cubs who will be eligible to move up Into the scout troop\nnext fall, waa under the charge of the\nscoutmaster.\nThe scoutmaster will in future have\npersonal charge of the latter group, and\nit is the intention to gradually work\nthem into scout activities during the\ncoming summer, and in the fall to\nset aside an evening for their training.\nIt is not tbe intention to move tbem\nup Into the troop till the fall of 1030,\nand by that time it ls expected that\nthey will tee fleet class scouts. Should\nthe membership of the troop be a;> large\nln the latter part of next year as it\nIs at present, and there Is no reason\nwhy It should not be, lt may be a\nmatter of forming another troop, but\nwhen that time comes, tt will be a\nmatter for the district scout commissioner to decide. Oreat things are expected from tboee future scouts, and\nby this time next year they will be a\nvaluable addition to the scout organization. Most of them have been\nIn the cub pack for several years, and\nall of them have had a thorough\ngrounding In the cub principles and\nwhat cubbing means, and lt will be\nfairly easy work to carry them through\nthe early stages of scout work. A\ngoodly number of cubs turned out Saturday night for a basketball workout,\nand there la no doubt that this\nbranch of their activities will prove\nvery popular. .    ,,Jr\nWe Specialize in Chop Suey and Noodles\nPhone  182\nTrail Hotels\nSteam Heated\nThroughout\nBot ana CoM\nDOUGLAS HOTEL\nI. I.. AND A. (IROIITAOE, Props.\nBoi SOS        Phone SM        Trail, B.C.\nA WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY IT\nGENUINE\nVALUES\nIn Popular Priced Men's\nand Boys' Wear, is oar\naim\u2014But unless you call\nand pass judgment upon\nour efforts by a fair comparison, you will never\nknow how much you can\nsave,\nHOii\nWEAR\nBOYS\ntor\u2014 WEAR\ntost outside the high ROff dSiwt\nEOOP\nFHWT TRAll* Tl\nThursday, as has been respected In a\nprevious issue of this paper, was a\nletter day for the scouts In Trail. It\nwas the first time ln the history of the\nmovement lh this city, that a public\ndisplay of scout work was given. Judging from the comments made by interested spectators, who packed the gallery around the gymnasium, it waa one\nof very greet merit. The press has reported It and so we will not have to\ngive It mention here, except to say\nthat thla was tbe first, we hope, of\nmany.\nAt the meeting Friday two recruits\nwere invested with tbe rank of tender*\nfoot. Recruits Bill Hopkins and Carl\nLunde are now scouts and have taken\nthe promise to share In tbe ideals of\nthe millions of brother scouts, and help\nto carry the great work along. Jack\nGibson who was at one time leader of\nthe Cougar patrol, hut gave lt over to\nhie second, was invested with the rank\nof patrol leader, such rank not having\nbeen conferred before. 'Jack wae' appointed, on the advice of the advisory\ncouncil, as acting assistant scoutmaster.\nArt Morris, who waa at one time patrol leader of the Beavers, and wbo also\ngave his patrol over to the second, has\nbeen appointed troop secretary and will\nlook after all records. Patrol Leader\nJohn Hollington continues to look after\nour dues and pay all accounts, and of\ncorse bears tbe title of troop treasurer.\nSeveral new ideas were Introduced\nlast meeting, and with tbe compulsory\nuniform starting March 39, tbe troop\nwill look smart outwardly, as welt aa\nbeing smart Inwardly.\nThe new competition will start April\n1. and will be bandied mainly by\n\u2022lack Gibson.\nIt ls expected that we will have an\nannouncement to make shortly _b regard to more of the' combined troop\nactivities.\nVANCOUVER. March 10.\u2014A picture\nof improvement ln general conditions\nthroughout Qreat Britain, \"accurate and\nnot unreasonably optimistic,\" was given to the Canadian club here Saturday by Lord Weir of Eastwood, British\nIndustrialist.\nIn spite of unemployment, one million more people were at work in\nOreat Britain than in 1914, Lord Weir\nemphasized. The gold standard had\nbeen reestablished, and the grave sacrifices of deflation dealt with, more than\n1,350,000 houses had been constructed\nat vast cost to the state, the great\nsocial service system of old age. Widows\nand other pensions, health and unemployment, insurance had been extended on a scale far in excess of all other\ncountries; all the vast debt obligations\nhad been met, and Britain was sustaining a burden of taxation unheard of\nin hlfttory. Moreover, London was still\nestablished more firmly than ever as\nthe center of the financial world, and\nfinally, the country had successfully\nmet and dealt with the \"great unconstitutional attack made on lt In 1936\nat the general  strike.\"\nI \\PITt VI I I I KIi  FEAT\n\"I siiggent to you In real serioun-\nnesti,\"   lord   Weir   declared,   \"that\nIs  a  very   great   performance,   not\nparalleled In history,   ft in certain-\nly not tlie performance of a down\nand out people.\"\nThe -speaker reviewed difficulties with\nwhich Oreat Britain was contending.\nPor the most part, they were the outcome of the war. The country's trouble\nmight be summed up tn the single word\n\"unemployment.\"\nIn regard to the iron and  steel industry, Lord said:\nIRON   ORGANIZATION\n\"Perhaps we have been rather slow\nIn adapting ourselves to the new tendency to what ls called 'rationalism' or\nlarge scale cooperation. May I put it\nthat we have always placed quality in\nfront of cheapness, and individual effort before modern organizations. The\nrejuvenation of Iron and steel to rae\nrepresents the key to a solution of most\nof our difficulties. It ls therefore\ngratifying that In the past 12 months\na very general appreciation has developed\nof the need of rationalism and reorganization.\"\nIn the course of his references to\nCanada, Lord Weir said he felt lt would\nbe a good thing to organize a party\nof 13 of tbe younger group of financiers of Oreat Britain to pay a special\ntrip to British Columbia and set up\ntrade contacts.\nHon, R. Randolph Bruce, lieutenant-\ngovernor of British Columbia, and Hon.\nDr. William Egbert, lieutenant-governor\nof Alberta, were guests at the luncheon.\nHOMER II\nGETM'SlOi\nPAEMITI\n\u00ab-*-\u25a0'\nHand #f Gov\u00abmme-tt l\u00bb Ifl\non  Far*  Relict fed\nTariff Sltaatten\nD.   KEMP\nTrail goalie, against whom the Vancouver Sx-Klngs were able to score,\nonly two goals ln the province hockey\nplayoffs. In Friday's game he held off\nthe coast champions when two Trail\nmen were taking enforced rests, leaving\nhim with only three defenders. He\nsucceeded Percy Jackson, star net\nminder of the Pacific Coast professional   league,   between   Trail's   pipes.\nFEMININE ARMY\nFOLLOWS THE\nMEX REGULARS\nNOT LIKELY TO USK\nHfS TARIFF POWEl\nSpecial Session, However,*\nDeal With Those Subj.\nFirst   of    Al\nWomen     Are     Commissariat,\nBine Cross, and Other\nExtra Services\nMARY ELLEN BALLOT\nBOOSTERINTHE EAST\nUrges   Votes   for   Women   in\nClub Address. Montreal;\nfor Canadian Tours\nMONTREAL, March 10.\u2014\"Women\neeek the ballot for tbe power it glvee\nthem to create -better conditions, to\nmake homes happier and hearts lighter,\" Mrs. Mary SUen Smith, formerly\nof tbe British Columbia government,\ntold members of the Montreal Central\nWomen's club in a luncheon address\nSaturday.\nLiving conditions were bettered, she\ndeclared, hy having women included\nln the national housekeeping of the\nCountry.\nMre. Smith praised Canada's war\npensions system and the finances system generally, declaring that lt was\nsuch ae to inspire confidence abroad\nand encourage others to make tbelr\nhomes in this country.\n\"Canada Is a country well worth living in,\" ane eald, \"and all should\nknow it from coast to ooast to appre-\n.MIXICO CITY, March 10.\u2014(By Lindbergh's Air Mail)\u2014Behind former President Calles' army of around 16,000\nmen rolling northward on box cars toward what is expected to be the crucial battle df the revolution, a feminine army Is pushing forward In any\ntype of conveyance rt can find. Some\nof the women even are afoot.\nSome might characterise theae volunteers as camp followers, but they\nhave a much more Important function\nin the Mexican armies, where they\nserve as the commissary department,\nand at times as the Blue Cross and several other branches of war service.\nThey have no official status, and\nthey receive no pay from the government, yet Mexican generals referred to\nthem as the \"Noblest of Mexico's warriors.\"\nWIVES,    SWEETHEARTS,   MOTHERS.\nThey are the wives, sweethearts,\nmothers, and sisters of the soldiers.\nMany of them devote their lives for\ncaring  for  the  fighters.\nThey cook for the soldiers, mend\ntheir clothing, forage food lf necessary, and cheer them up when they\nare downcast.\nTheir lot ls a hard one'when the\narmy moves they follow afoot or\nln any way they can find. If a soldier\nts killed in battle, the woman who has\nbeen caring for him frequently adopts\nanother, and goes on with bet* - cc\nmlssary duties.\nWASHINGTON, Mareh  W.\u2014(\u00bbp,i\nbralth)\u2014The change of govemnMf]\nproduced   very   little   dlsturba_Jr|\nWashington.    At the end of 1% j\nweek   ln   office,   the   Hoover   <*m\\\nseems  to  be  getting   Ite   stride,.\nPresident Hoover himself  Is 1\nchiefly with the farm reflef and '\nsituation of congress, which Wrt\u00bbf1\nApril   18.\nThere   will   be   many   appolr\nto  be approved  when  the  new\ngrass   meets,   and   one   or   two\nof legislation left over to be dearf 1\nBut   Mr.   Hoover   is   determined\nthe special session shall waste So-1!\nover   anything   except   farm   probk\nand  he  seems to  have   an\nwith   leaders of  both   houses\neffect.\nNO  EMERGENCY  ACTION\nMeanwhile   It 11   pretty\nna tmai-f-e will be made la\ntariff   under  tlw  provision  of\nTariff act, under which the\nitent, by advice of his tariff\nmission, may vary the Ahtlng dnfj\non a specified commodity not 1\n, than IM per cent erf the CKfti\ndoty, up or down.   The tarVf jj\nmlfwion makes Its ret\nafter Investigating ta -open *\nthe cost of pnMltirtlon. lh i-Imj-c\ntry from which most of the I\nled commodity  ts lM_povted.    tt-\nknmm that the ronmil*sl\u00bbn at <\ntime or another   in  the  last\nyears   had   made   reeommendatlo1\n' to  President.  Ooolldge on \u00ab '\nher of wnnaiodtuek.   These of 1\ninterest to Canada are milk\ncream, maple sugar, flax need,\nbet and shingles.\nThe Investigation of the settle-\ndustry made'for the United State* 1\niff commission .in western Canada 1\nsummer by Or. L. O. Conner waa k\nducted under the broad powers of |\ncommission to get data for the <\nand    not   -under   section   31ft,\ngives the president power to vary '\nwithout  reference to congress. -\nWHOLE   REVISION   IP\nThe recent bearing by the watt |\nmeans commission of congress\ned evidence ln favor of increased\niff on practically everything\non the farm.    It Is not ill\nHoover will make any arbltary b\nln   the   tariff on  a  limited\nproducts while congress is revising '\nwhole Fordney-McCumber tariffi\nMr. Hoover stated yesterday to 1\npapermen that he would reveai\npolicy cm agricultural tariffs _*\nmessqpe to tbe new congress and .\nbefore. It Is understood that\nIn favor of some increase la\nbut la opposed to the wholesale\ncreases demanded by the farm 1\ntions before the ways and 1\nmission.\nGRAIN PROBE NOW\nDUE AT WINNIPEG\nCflECKINSPECTON\nWINNIPEG, Man., March Ip.-Tbe\n-Saskatchewan royal grain inquiry-commission will commence sessions in\nWinnipeg tomorrow morning, and while\nhere will investigate closely Into the\ninspection and grading systems. Members of the board of grain commissioners also are expected to appear before\ntbe commission here.\nThe -first witness tomorrow is expected to be J. D. Fraser, chief inspector of the government inspection department.\ncni'RCH   WILL   FIGHT\nBEAUHARNOIS   PERMIT\nTORONTO, Ont., March 10,\u2014T. L.\nChurch, Conservative member of parliament for Toronto Northwest, In an interview here tonight said he would\nIntroduce a bill In the house of commons tomorrow to revoke the Beauharnois permit for power development\non the St. Lawrence river.\nMRS. WALDIE IS\nLAID REST\nMany   Attend   the    ^^^^\nBeautiful Floral Tribute* j\nAre Received\nMjs. Margaret Waldle, who dlatf TtM\nday,   was   burled   Saturday   \u00abrun_|\nfrom   D.  J.   Robsrtson's  parlors.\nP. R. O. Dredge officiated at tlw :\nlott and at tbe  graveside.\nThe pallbearers were Oedrge *hr]\ncott. David Kerr, C. W. WIU, WsJ\nDavis, P. Johnson and T. H. Hulli.l\nThose* (ending  floral   tributes  n*t\\\nHUow, the family; wreaths. PWCT\nElisabeth,   James   Graves   tod   funr]\nMr. and Mrs. Oeorge Truscott, Mr.'\nMrs. Thorndale, Mr. and Mrs. Bard I\nMr. and Mrs. Oeorge Talbot and ttxaj\nMr. and Mrs. P. Johnson; sprays,\nHeath   and   family,   Mrs.   B.   VftM\nBruce and  Jennett,  Mr.  arid   Mra.1\nBalding. Mr.  and  Mrs.  E.  O.  Bpftrl\nMr.   and   Mrs.   3.   Will   and   tfbftl\nMr.  and  Mrs.  C.  Fandgren,   Mr.\nMrs. John Burns, Mr. and Mra. -Oeti\nWebster, Mr. and Mrs; Dsvld1 taw, M\nand Mrs. M.  Laurlta,  J.\nand Mrs. H.  Hulls.\nNo Time Likcl\nthe Present\nTo take' a look through\nthat accumulation of furniture in your attic and\nbasement. You'll be aur-\npriaed to find that a good\npercentage of it could -be\nsold for cash; To do this,\nyou have only to make out\nyour list and telephone it\nto the \"flor Sale\" depart-\nment of\nThe Daily News\nCLASSIFIED\nCOLUMNS\nPhone 144\n IBE SffclfiOR MHYTI-J^B, MONDAY M-ORNING, 'MAfc.H\nHIS SUFFERINGS\nBowel CoadUion\nKeller ed\n___________-* _\nMr. Jaa-s Page of Cabalt), P.Q, tm\n\u2014i a irery dangerous condition. The\nCa_rtipation from which he had\n\u25a0uBered for fire yean was unil-rrluihini?\nhis whole system. It a_i not only\nrupu&f his ditreetion and noisonin^ his\nMood, but had ilea brought on painful\npita. ' ViMows treatments failed to\nImp him until he tried \"Fmit-a-tives,\"\nWtt \u00ab-intensified tniit juices com-\nssmmi with scientific medifrinal ingredi-\ntxxms. , \"One box of this wonderful\nMedicine,\" he writes, \"gave me\nconn\u2014te relief. 'Fniit-a-tives' givrs.\nmults u nothing also does, and I\najncerery iwBtnnwi\u2014t\" It to evfery _n_if-\nfferer.\" Try this great medicine.\n25c. and Ma. ft box\u2014at dealers cveiy-\n| England Ends Fast\nInnings With 519\nRuns in Fifth Test\nMELBOURNE, Australia, Meroft 11.\u2014\nIon* Cable)\u2014Engianr ended their first\nnnlngs of the fifth cricket test match\nrtth Australia today with a total  of\nliilt) runs.\n\"A\nGREAT\nTONIC,\" SAYS\nMRS. RUSSELL\nTaking Lydia E.\nsVf\nAfter\nPinkham'e Vegetable\nCompound\n: .rFenwlck, Ont\u2014\"I am taking Lydia\nM, Pinkham's Vegetable Compound\n\u2014*~\" -during the Change\nIjof Life for nervous\nHeelings, loss of ap-\n[Ipetite and to gain\n||strength. It is a\nTeat tonic and I\nirave taken a down\n\u25a0bottles of it. It was\n\u25a0recommended to\nline by a friend and\nInow I recommend\nlit td all women for\nIsuch   troubles   as\nT-Jcome at this time.\"\n-jMrs. W. V. Russell, E. R. No. 6.\nf Wnwick, Ontario.\nWORKS ENGINEER\nGOLDEN VTQNITY\nSuceeeds   Stevens;   Hayne   of\nFernie Goes to Williams\nLake; General Shuffle\nW. .. Biker of Nelaon will become\ndepartment oX public works engineer\nat Oolden, in a general movidg WOUnd\nof engineer*. necetsitatsd fcy the resignation of Major E. M Taylor, district\nengineer ft. Kamloops, to take an important position with a contracting\n!.rm,\nKvan S. Jou__, transferred frou. Williams lake, will succeed MftJQr TAylor.\nMr. Jones pltfce will Oft Uik.n by District Engineer M Hayne of Pernie, and\nW. H, Ste-rofts will succeed Mr. Hayne\nMr. Biker, who thus attains the position held by Mr. Stevens, was formerly\nconnected with the water bran-en, lands\ndepartment.\nKASLO NOTES\nKASLO, >. C,', -arch 10.\u2014Gordon\nBowker 6S Mirror IA\u2014_ has returned to\nhis home after visiting mends in\nNelson.     \u2022\nJ. F. Coates of Nelson is In the city\nand Is malting a survey of ths local\nelectric light plant.\nMrs. n. E. Snrlght arrived ln the citv\nTuosday from Johnson's Landing, where\nshe made an extended visit with her\nbrother snd sister-in-law. Mr ahd Mrs.\nW Wsdsms. Mrs. B-trlijht left for her\nhome at Burns, Wash., Thursday morning.\n- Wood, O. Nellson, A. Ellason and\nB. Randall arrived in the city trom\nWhitewater  Wednesday,    .\u2022      >\nW. Callln Is hers from Blnctoa for\na few daya\nW. Omsymi Veturned from the Lucky\nJim mill* Wednesday.\nThe Ladles' Hospital aid met Monday\nafternoon, the president, Mrs. Charles\nBowker, being ln the chair. Pinal arrangements were mads for ths annual\nball.\nw. V. Par-worth, city clerk, was a\nNelion vtiltor Tuesday.\nTuesday evening the members of\nthe Kaslo Orange lodge entertained\nfriends at a party ln the lodge rooms.\nCards provided amusement during the\nearly evening, winners being Miss Winona Rouleau and Ernest Creed. After\nrefreshments, dancing was the order\nof ths evening. Jsmes Edwards was ln\ncharge of affairs.\nMrs. P. T. Abey has returned from\nNelson, where she wss the guest of her\ndaughter, Miss Olive A3ey.\nLance Hillmsn was down from Whitewater Wednesday.\nMayor James Anderson ls a business\nvisitor in Nelson.\nMiss Queenle McQueen of Balfour\nspent the week-end with her parents\nhere.\nMr. and Mrs. Peter Price have as\ntheir guest, Mrs. Osborne of Nanaimo. a sister of Mr. Price.\nMr. and Mrs. Cecil Pangburn of Retallack spent the week-end ln Kaslo.\nRev. D. W. Scott was ln Nelson attending   a   meeting   of   the   United\nchurch presbytery.\nMrs. Black of Sandon ls the guest\nof Mrs. J.  W. Oreen,\nMrs. A. B. Fleener, who Is spending\nthe winter in New York with her\ndaughter, Mrs. Loye, Is recovering from\na recent illness,.\nE. Helslng and K. Wickstrom came\ndown from th* Whitewater mine Monday.\nAngus MacPherson. superintendent'of\nthe Cork-Province mine, ls spending a\nfew dsys tn town.\nOtto Kahle was down from Whitewater Monday.\nA. Karlson ls spending a few days\nln the city.\nlnflNm-_eDajFRENCBRYVVElG_n\n^^^^       MAY MX, CANADA\nAt   a   recent   big   London   wedding\nthe page wore a pale blue Chinese suit.\nTJtAIU B.C., Mareh 11\u2014A delightful\nbut quiet wedding was solemnised at\nthe residence of W. Langland, Riverside,\nyesterday afternoon, whan John Robert\nHolland and Urs. Kathsrins Julia Locke\nwer* united IB mar\u2014It. The service\nwaa oonduoted by Rev. H. P. Humphreys ot ths trail Baptist church. The\nbride who was given In msrrtags by\nMr. Langland. Was becomingly gowned\nin t white satin \u00abitm, with yell\nand orange M*MMr\u2014I. Bh\u00bb Ma supported It* Mrs Dlvina McTwr. Mr.\nHolland was supported by P. Norrls\nFollowing the ceremony, a delightful\nsuppsr was enjoyed. It Is understood\nthe couple will reside In Trsll.\n\u2022 s   s\nMia Consumes iannett of tht Cork-\nsolldSted HllUHg tt Smelting cdtttrMrty\noffice steff. who waa entertained st a\nshower Tuesday evening, left this morning for her horns ln Seattle. Ths engagement was recently announced of\nMlsa Bennett to Ian Hastings, also of\nth* company's staff, who will, It Is\nstated. tM** for Seattle at the end of\nthe month,\nsst\nMrs. John Bints of Waneta was In\nTraU BaWrdn..\nI   .   t\nF. Jenkins of Robson spent J\"Hday ln\nTrail.\n\u2022 .   \u2022\nMrs. Pete Hardie of Castlsgar spent\nPrlday, ths guest of Mrs. 1.4. Robertson.\"\n\u2022 s   \u2022\nMisses Kit iM Bdlth Thompson entertained at bridge Friday evening at\ntbe home of their sister, Mrs. Donald\nMcDonald, Pin* avenue.\ntit\nMiss Louise Harper of the staff of\ntht lank of Montreal, ha* accepted a\nposition with the West Kootensy Power\n& Light company In Rossland.\n. *   *   *\nW Tullet of Vancouver has arrived\nto take up residence ln the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs., N. Skene of Winnipeg, Who Is touring through this part of Canada, was\nln the city Thursday.\n\u2022 *   i\nMrs. Holt C. Caldlcott, Riverside avenue, entertained at bridge last night\nIn aid of the boy scout fund.\nt   *   *\nMr. and Mrs. Davis Calder, Bay\navenue entertained this week ln honor\nof their son, Arnold's birthday. The\nevening was spent at music and games\nand a most delicious supper.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nJ. Whitney returned Friday night\nfrom Vancouver, where he has spent\nthe last week.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nB. Petronl, who has been visiting\nhis old home in Italy for some time,\nhss returned to Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs. Anderson and her two granddaughters, Florence and MarJorie, are\nvisiting in Spokane.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022 '\nMrs. E. Crowe entertained at bridge\nst her residence on Hannah bench.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Muriel Stanley has returned\nto her home in Trail after spending\nsome time In Nakusp.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nR. M. Powers of Thrums visited the\ncity yesterday. He is well known ln\nTrail. He snd Mrs. Powers are leaving\nthe district shortly to reside In Vsncouver.\n\u00ab    *   \u00ab\nMrs. B. T. Simpson. Farwell street,\nentertained lsst evening at five tables\nof five hundred.\nBoth   Schwartz  and  Belanger\nSift to Meet Him if Winner of Coming Boot\nTORONTO,, storoh 10.-\u00bbnU Pl*4-\nner, setis\u00bbtlon_U f-fenoh flyweight, who\nrecently __\u00ab_ld out Prank!* OM-\naro in 47 seconds of fighting, probably will box lh Toronto this summer\nfor the world's flyweight championship, Matchmaker Playfalr Brown af\ntbs Shamrock Athletic club announced\ntonight.\nBoth Corporal fade \u2014rhwartt, receg-\nn_es_ t\u00bby th* hew York state athletic\ncommission is world's champion, and\n\"Fnnahy Belanger, Canadian title\nholder, who fight for the title heft\nTuesday, have signed contrasts for\nthe winner to meet the Parisian hero,\nprobably at the Maple Leaf baseball\nstadlulh OX Jliht.\nThe world's ehamplon Is a fl-to-5\nfmvorlte' *tof Ma*bout with Belanger.\nwho h* defeated on points recently.\nRainfall Exceeds\nInch and a\nOver the Weekend\nNo   Hope  of  More  lee   This\nSeason; Snow Disappearing Quickly\nStarting early Saturday evening rat-\nfell to tha extent of 1118 Inches, or\nover an Inch and a half, by 5 o'clock\nyeaterday afternoon Rain fell practically all moraine and well on Into\ntb* afternoon yesterday It wss tha\nlargest rslnfsll recorded In 94 hours\nsince last fall.\nThe ternperstures were well up yesterday, the meroury going only to 36\nat the coldest time ot the dsy, snd\nrising to il during the warmest part.\nTbt minimum temperature Saturday\nwas 83, one degree above freezing, and\nthe maximum wu 43.\nCLOUDY   TOKAY\nTh* forecast lor today promised\ncontinued cloudy weather, probably\nwith   showers.\nThe rain over the week-end removed considerable snow and there was\nnow little left except where It wa*\nbanked deeply. Many street crossings\nthroughout the lower and the hill\nsections ot Uw elty were almost Impassable  yesterday.\nThat spring Is here wss deflnstely\nproven yesterday when members ot\nthe Nelson Curling club decided that\nlt was hopeless to expect Jack Frost\nto give them another sheet of Ice on\nwhich to complete their Invitation, competition. There was no curling all\nlast week, but there were hopes. The\ncurlers will wind up their season this\nweek with the annual supper.    Hop*\nas also been given up of obtaining\nanother Ice sheet at the skating rink.\n.j Pussy-willows have been in bloom\nfor about 10 days. This Is considered\nsn indisputable sign of spring.    \u2022\nWhatDoYoollimk?\nPARLIAMENT WILL\nRESUME ON BUDGET\nDiscussion  Will  Probably Not\nBe Prolonged;  Bennett\nBack  From  Coast\nFACES STORi\nDuplicate, Triplicate\nQuadruplicate Forms\nIn manifold forms, it is essentiol that the\n'work should be well and carefully done. The\nruling and printing, or if printing alone,\nmust be in perfect \"register\". Otherwise line\nNo. 1 on the original sheet may not \"hit\"\nproperly in the duplicate or triplicate sheets.\nFor the same reason, the sheets must be\npadded or bound in perfect position.\nWe have been very successful in work of\nthis nature and are proud of the satisfaction we have been able to give customers\nThe Daily News Job Dept.\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)\nNELSON, B.C.\n1K*rn^'*^mmm\\mUm\nNotice to Correspondents\nSeveral letters from all parts\nof the district not having signatures as well as nom de plume have\nreached The Dally News office.\nSeveral of these letters are being\nheld and will be run iMl\u00bb writers\nwll). send their names, not for.publication, but as an evidence of\ngood filth on behalf of the writers.\nIt la necessary that alt totters for\nthin cpliimn be signed by the writer\neven if a nom de plume ls used,\nMail Failure on Lower\nArrow Due to Tug's Lack\nof Power, Asserts Nash\nTo the Mitor of The Dally News:\nSir:\nI have, been 16 years on the lower\nArrow lake and t would Uke to sa* %\nword about the failure of the mall t'e-\nltvery this winter.\nIn 1016 wc had simlliar Ice conditions only worse. There the powerful tug Whatshan, pushing a Uarr-r,\ndelivered our freight and mall. You\ncould hear her coming miles av\/ay\ncrushing the Ice, and it teemed to\nmake no difference to her speed. She\ncame right along and delivered the\ngoods and on time.   She bad the power\nIn 1930 when the Columbia vas\nlaunched to take the place of the What-\nshan I was lln NakuBp and feared when\nI saw her engine. The authorities did\nnot give her sufficient power to ccpe\nwith ice conditions such as we have\nhad this year or such as prevailed tn\n1916. The Columbia has not the power.\nF. W. HACK.\nRenaU, B. OU March 9, 1926.\nOTTAWA, Marcl? 10.\u2014Parliament\n; will enter tomorrow on its second\n| week of discussion on the budget. Hon.\nj R. B. Bennett, Conservative leader,\nI will be back ln the house following\n[ a trip to the Pacific coast, and with\nbis return the debate will probably\ntake on a  mere lively  complexion.\nDivision on that main motion, and\nthe opposition amendment expressing\nj regret that the government's fiscal\nculture and industry- la generally ex-\npollcy affords no safeguards to agrl-\npected within the next  10 days.\nFrom all indications, discussion of\nthe annual financial statement of the\nminister of finance will be briefer In\nduration than ln 1998. Last session\ntha debate extended from February\n81 to March 14. This year only four\ndays of actual discussion have so far\ntaken  place.\nDiscussion tomorrow afternoon will\nbe resumed from the Conservative\nside by Oeneral J. A. Clarke, Butrard.\nGEOROETTI AND BATTEB\nWIN   LONG   BIKE   GRIND\nNIW YORK. March 10 .--Approximately $1-6,000 in guarantees nnd bonus\nmoney was distributed today in Madison Square Gardens for the 46th international bicycle race, which came\nto an and last night.\nFranco Oeorgettl and Gerard Battes,\nwho won the grind by the overwhelming margin of five laps, split about\n810,000 between them.\n00)\nNEW  HAVEN   NOI.CS  QUI\ntPMNOrH-IJ)   tttt   III1I1D\nNBW   SaVs-N,    Conn.,   March    10 \u2014\nNew   Haven   nosed   Sprlnttleld   out   of\nI third  place In the Oansdlan.Americsn\nI Hockey league, defeating Boston, 3 to 0.\n1 *\u2022_\u25a0_<*\u00ab, '   \u25a0\u00bb'    -\nYMIR NOTES\nYMIR, B. C, March 10.\u2014Miss M. Bur-\nJess returned from Klmberley Wodnes-\nay.  She had been nursing in the Klmberley  hospital.\nO. L. Thompson, manager of the\nTanker Girl mine, returned from Nel*\n\u2022on Wednesday.\n\u25a0* The Ymir Ladies' guild met' at the\nhome of Mrs. M. Peters Thursday afternoon. Those present were Mrs. M.\nPeters. Mrs. W. Clark, Mra. J. H. Clarke,\nMrs. S. A. Curwen, kirk, A. B. Clark,\nMrs. L. P. Bond, Mrs. J. M. Gille, Mr*.\nA, Burgess, Mis. W. A. Buchanan and\nMrs. w. B. Mclsaac.'Refreshments were\nserved.\nUrs. N. Peterson and son, Elmer, left\nfor the Kootenay-Flotwncf mine at\nAlnsworth Thursday, to spend the weekend. .\nYMIR, B c. March 10\u2014A, Chernoff went to Nelson Thursday for\nmedical  attention,  returning  Saturday,\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. Camley of Salmo\nwere Ymir visitors Friday.\n. J.  V. Hughes and  J.  Reisterer  were\ndown from Wild Horse camp Friday.\nMrs. C. Mclsaac and Mrs. W. B. Mclsaac entertained at the. tea hour Friday. The guests were Mrs. S. A. Grls-\nwen, Miss E. Thompson, Mrs. J. M.\nOllle, Mrs. J H. Clarke and Mrs. H.\nJttevens.\nMr. and Mrs. S. A. Creswen entertained\nat bridge Friday evening. The guests\nwere M\u00ab. and Mrs. O. A. Canley Of Salmo, Miss E. Thompson, Mrs. H. Stevens,\nJ. V. Hughes and J. Relaterer. Honors\nfor high score went to Miss E. Thompson nnd c A. Canley, consolation* beiny\nAwarded to Mrs. C. Aw Canley and J- V.\nHughes,\natnfVm,ti.emfm,-*aM--->      \u25a0\nHon. Charles .Stewart, minister of\nthe interior, will bs under firs tn the\nhouse of commons wnen the discussion of the Seven Sisters power grant\nis brought up by the Winnipeg members. It Is alleged that Mr, Stewart\nafter a meeting with the Manitoba\nmembers declared he would take no action except that which they could ap-\nThey voted, nine to four against\ngranting tbs  alts to private   interests.\nBROCKVILLE. Ont., March 10\u2014The\n\u2022trees of living an tlie. cities is today\nmore potest factor in causing insanity than the loneliness Of the\nIsolated, farm and settlement on which\nemphasis has Wen so frequently laid in\nthe past m Canada, aays Dr. w m\nEnglish, medical superintendent of the\nOntario hospital here, with over 800\npatients. Telephones, motorcars and\nradios, he adds, bave broken down the\nisolation of the farmer and settler and\ninsanity through loneliness is no longer found in the degree formerly known.\nA change in this respect has beee\nobserved  particularly  in  the  west.\nEl Ouafi, Arabian of tbe 1938 Olympic marathon, earned fKxw during his\nfirst American tour as a professional\ndistance runner.    .\nNAMES\nBy GERALD  KK1>\nThe other day I received a latter\nfrom Hoop End Bend, bearing an English stomp. It la in Hampshire, not\nshown on a large scale map, though\napparently every other two by four\nhamlet is registered. It wae not even\nln the atlas index. The nearest to\nit was De Hoop, ln latitude 34, longitude 20, east, a Sabbath day's Journey\nfrom Cape Aghulhas, where \"the aching\nberg props the specklesB sky,\" and the\ngreat cape combers roil. How fascinating these old country names! Whence\ncame they and how grew they? Why\ntheir hyphenation, and what moment\nbaptized them twins? Names like Sutton-Mandeville and Kingston-DevertU,\nMaiden Bradley and Compton chamber-\nlayne (rather reminiscent this of a\nPlcsrdy village known to all Vimy\nRldgites). Also Chew Magna and Nether Wallop. What do you know about\nthat? Did ye ever hear the-llke? How de\nUghtfully they roll from tbe tongue.\nWHAT'H IN  A NAME?\nWhence came Upper Noble and Buck-\nhorn Weston? Refer to a map of England, and make your own selection\nof glorious oddities. An inventive\nmind .must bave coined Pudley-.um-\nSalterton. Wooton Pltzpaine and 3yd-\nllng St. Nicholas, presumably the village of all good Christmas cards. These\npicturesque places. I wot. ere as charming as their nomenclature, brooding\nover their past, deadly quiet ln their\nseclusion, though of recent years, they\nhave com* to a \"certain liveliness\"\nthrough the advent of Juggernaut cbar-\n' side devouring gas at hydra-headed\np.tr.1 stations which ww biot the\nroads, leaving in their wake broken\nbotttles and orange peel to mark their\nsmoky passing. Flos inns are to be\nfptt-M hi (beee old Ukssss, with bread\nahd ttMNe and elder. CM* enough tm\nlie, and far you- too. If not too intellectually tecltned. you can therein\nohat with the yokels (not so wurzel-\nheaded as sane Mk kalleve) who have\nlarge .mugs in front of tbem- Abs-*>-\nallylutely old fashioned\u2014* faded framed\ndagurreotype on the wall of \"granfsr\"\nand his spouse taken In tke evstit-\nful year of the Hyde Park exblkitton.\nAnother picture, not so faded, of a\nself-conscious but determined groom\nstanding very much at attention with\none hood resting on the shoulder of\nhis smiling bride, the vfUafe belle.\nIN \u00ab LILAC   TIME\nAnother one. an enlargement, new,\n(tf a lad in khaki, maybe a tiny piece\nof crepe attached to one corner to\ntell of a youthful Odyssey ended in\nflame at *uvia Bay, or tn the swamp*\nof the old salient. His name \"known\nunto Ood\" is deeply engraved perchance, on the tablets of the Menln\nGate memorial athwart the Menin\nroad. Usually, a waesy old piano la\npropped against the further wall, with\ntorn music to keep rt company ln its\ndottage, and the family album, that\nmonument of affection, almost a handbook of biology I A few books, school\npries volumes, gold backed \"awarded\nto Emily Scruggins for good conduct\nand scriptural knowledge.\" Dear Emily, likely eno' a twin to Matilda, a\nsweet young thing in cotton hose (giving a longer run for her money than\nRayon) I can see her now with a\nsoap-shiny face, row cfaeeck free from\nrouge and lipstick, wltb hair in pigtails. How odd she appears alongside\nUie dimpled darling Miss 1039. new\nmodel, wtth her hlrh heels, and air-\ncooled knees, ever about two whoopees\nahead   of  fashion's   latest   whisper.\nI wonder what happened to Emily,\nand if this Jazzy age has had any deleterious effect on her recorded virtues,\nYOf'ftE MY BABY\nAs I endeavor to write this, I see\nfrom coach window as we shovel along\nthrough the valley of the Kettle, making up some lost time, such prosaic\nnames as Ruth, Lorna, Myra, Loos and\nLola. Ths selector of these cognomens was dreaming of the last \"hop\"\nand of tbe dear little girls with whom\nhe stepped the light fantastic.\nTOO OBVIOI'S FOR,\nANYTHING\u2014ROCKS\nThere is a gleam of fancy about\nZamorra and Arrawana. but little about\nRock Cree! For a change, and such\na change, I would wish to be sitting\nIn flrat class carriage behind a 'sixty-\nmile\" green \"King\" compound of the\nGreat Western.\nShaped   long   and   arrowy\nFor tearing .the gusty side of Space.\nBound for the west countries out of\nPaddtngton, bound for the Cornish\nRiviera, non stop, where the magnolia,\nthe red camella and the euculptus flourish, where once King Arthur with his\nmagic sword excallbur and his perfect\nWWktfr..\n0C0tm or tte i\ntke Vale of Avaloo\nof  Camelot.\ntht exquisite scaur? i .\npast rich psstursttnd aad -\napple  orchards;   dss.    \"\ncottages  m-bound,\nik vr\u00bbM ^^\ncool  woodf.    -BB\nwater snd nsgd sandy bessftsa \\\t\nTbe eetmitej- of ever shining sea\nFor right hand use, bared Mtte agattMt\nthe sky,\nthere a faint line of distant\nbills c home . . . And la tbe paaekta\nto hurriedly gtlaapss such hsftft\ntongue-rolling names ae High W-Sagse,\nVenn Ottsry. Plyapton Karle and Westward  Bo!\nT.-LWatersftCs.,Uf\nBidders and CMtractan\nPhone IM r. o  mm Ut\nN-OMN, _.C.\nWINDOWSANDDOOtS\n^TAJKS\nSHINGLES\nPoultry men!\nTo  get  the  best  results\nfrom your brooders,\nUse\nCanmore\nBriquettes\nPetroleum Coke\nThe ideal fuel* for\nBrooders.\nWest\nTransfer Go*\nP.O. Box 116      Phone 33\nTHE\nPEDICORD HOTEL\nYoor Spokane Home\n\"Where Canadians Art Among Fnmdt\nWhen in Spokane\"\nThe only hotel in Spokane with FBKE\nBUS service and our own garage adjoining.\nBarber Shop, Cigar Store and Cafe. Complete service under one roof.\nJOE PEDICORD, Manager\n\u00abw io tit ana-Da\nSPOKANE, U. S. A\ntS* TO  219  BIVGBSIIrl\n| tsrcYyrY^Y^CY*?i^Y*^~>cY*Y^\n(ir'  \u00abAj     .JS.     ^Sj     sOj     Jt.     tA*     sIsj     sOj     iSj     c\u00bbj     .A.      \u00ab_&.     lTSSTj     .JS.     cSj     \u00ab_Sj     cSb     dt.     sJ.s     JSj     OS_>     Jts     J^s     _Jl*     sJtl *61\nThe Passing Show\nof 1929\nIt's a show that changes every day. Keep abreast oi\nthe times. Always np-to-date\u2014ever in step with the\nmode, or a little ahead\u2014turning the spotlight for you\non the things that are new, smart, stylish, convenient\n\u2014desirable.\nThe passing show of current times\u2014the advertisements in your newspaper. Packed with interest- alive\nwith the vitality and surging change of this modern day.\nThe advertisements are more than reliable buying\nguides. Indications of quality they are, surely\u2014for\ntoday no manufacturer can win lasting success by buying publicity for a cheap or shoddy product. Advertise-\ning weeds out the unfit. But more than that -advertisements are the fascinating daily record of progress in\nindustry\u2014of advances in the world of goods and services. And of such things you need to be fully informed\u2014for you are the one who buys them.\nBuy intelligently\u2014with open eyes. Read the advertisements every day. Compare values. . . know what's\nnew, what's better, and why. When you start out to\nspend your money\u2014be informed!\n8\nPi\n3\n\u00a3\ntf\nMake it a habit to follow the advertisements.\nEvery day there's a new edition of\ntht passing show!\n l\u00bb-w_B\"\nDAfrY  NEWS\ntWiext\n\u00ab*\u00bb Tj*w*   Pubiwilng   com-\n<t.  Mtison  B\n*t*rs should be \u00abddres*\u00abd\n\u00bbnd  mooev  ordsn  mad*\nJ* Th* N*w* Pnbllahtnt osan-\nand In no cm* to lndf-\n\u25a0r* ot th* staff.\n- .rat* card*  and  A B C\nof   droulatlon   mailed   an\nBay b* mm at th* oflic*\n.JS&\n.SOTSCRDTION   RAT-*\n\"_\u00bbounti7). per month. |   do\nf.-P\"~irS_r-__Z_I Uo?\nP*r inimth \u2014.    ,tl\n_*\u2022 7g\nluo\ntnyabl* In Advanoe\nxttamter\nAndlt\nBursa*\naf\nClrentotlra\n<ammvs^s'\nf -MONDAY\nMARCH\n11,\n1931\nMe Government Intends\nto Continue Kg Highway Program\nUl bill of $9,000,000 provid-\nugi for construction of new\nMftways, Hon. Nels Loug-\n\u25a0en, minister of public works,\njttfed that it was intended\nEaontinue the policy of hav-\n|b engineers instead of road\njfitnen during the construc-\nJjtS era which would \"probably\nasf another 10 years.\"\nft the end of 10 years it\n-\u2014I undoubtedly be found good\nwlfcy to continue the policy of\n[laying trained engineers in\npap-Re, but the interesting\nm&t to the minister's obser-\nnf on is that he evidently promotes to complete within a\nlecadu the main work of con-\nItrpcting highways in British\nDokimbia.\nThat such a vigorous policy\nkftoad construction should be\ntinned is good news. It\nihflrws that while the govern-\nneat is to make a loan of\n\u00bb,900,000 for highways this\nWar, the largest highway loan\na the history of British Co-\numbia, this is no flash in the\nInn, but the first step in a\nlennanent policy of worthwhile\nrxpenditurc on roads by the\nMmie government.\nThat is splendid, and the\nlenternment will find that the\npublic is behind it in its policy\nh constructing good roads\nirvhkh will stand up under mod\ntru conditions of travel.\ntef'i Invite the Doctors to\nCame Thit Way\nTbe British Medical association will hold its annual meet-\nBig in Winnipeg from August\nK to 29 and of the 2500 persons who are to attend the\nnetting a party composed of\nline-third will Visit the coast.\nNelson board of trade might\nlake up the matter with the\na. P. R. and endeavor to arrange for this party to travel\nme vyay via the southern in-\nprior of the province.\nIn Kootenay, Boundary and\nbkanagan we have much which\nwould be of interest to the\nf-isitint* medicos.\nThe\nLighter Side\nIf you would know \u00bb man's history,\ntarn ask his opinion of iriends.       .\nA ttm land la on* that wont suitor sny dictator except one Inter\u2014ted\ntn It* soul.\nAmong the sins of th* fathers visited on tbe children to th* fourth gen-\nnation  are paving  bond*.\nNATURE BALANCES THINOS. IF A\nHUSBAND F__J3 SORRY FOR HIM-\n\u00ab__*. TBI NBIOHBORS FEEL SORRY\nFOR BIS WIFE\n\"Tout* a pharmacist.'- said Sherlock Holmes. \"I see spots of msyon-\nnatse on your vest.\"\nIf It sccompllshes nothing else,\nth* work of our great critics reminds ns of our ow* sophomore\ndays.\nWhen a modem youth aays he wants\nto begin work st the bottom, be probably has ln mind the slgnlpg of\nletters and checks.\nCanadlanlsm: Keeping ourselvc as\npoor a* tbe rich once were by trying\nto live as th* rich do now.\nTrotsky Is a unique character\u2014unless you count the Wandering Jew.\nOne reason why glrla leave home la\nbecause there Isn't anything to eat this\naide of the drug store*.\nThe only word meaning both \"norty\"\nand \"dull\", one gathers from publlshcre'\nblurbs, Is \"frank.\"\n. One thing dad gives up during I#nt\nls aU thought of getting Christinas\nbills paid untU after Easter.\n80 they want a name for the new\nEinstein theory that nobody understands.     Whst about \"she\"?\nThere sre no swear words in the\nWelsh language, the authorities believing   the   climate   sufficient.\nCORRECT THIS SENTENCE: \"YBS,\nI KNEW YOU WERE TAKING TH\u00ab\nWRONG TURN.\" SAID THE LADY IN\nTHE BACK SEAT, \"BUT I HATED TO\nSAY   ANTTHINa.\"\nSo live that you never feel an urge\nto denounce the intolerance of a narrow-minded world.\nBritain Prunes ltt Naval\nProgram\nWhile the United States is\nrepailng    for    the    largest\nval expenditures in its his-\nfear-y, Breat Britain is pruning\nbeverely its naval program.\nf Of course, the United States\nbas the right, legally, to build\nail the warships it pleases,\nwhether it really needs them\nfor defence or whether the\npresent insistence on more\nahipt- is, as one American critic\nof the naval bill puts it, \"mere-\nB to gratify the vanity of a\nbunch of admirals.\"\n. In any event, Great Britain\n1   showing   something   more\nphan  lip loyalty to the prin-\nples   expressed   at   Locarno\nid Geneva.\nUenbank Nakusp W.C.T.U.\nHakes nans Hold Contest\nOLENBANK. B. C. ' March \u00ab -A\n(Meting df the W. C. T. U. was held ln\nOlenhank church Tueeday s\/ler-\nloon. Mn- Barley occupying th* chair.\nI It waa decided to hold a contest at\nltt early date. Mn. Balderson read the\nBunt chapter ot M_ssMcYocklr_da.es\nKudy book. \"Alcohol \u2014 tbe Enemy of\n1 ' ___-_j_s \u2022 \u2022\u25a0\nI\nTHE CAREFUL DRIVER HAS ONE\nCONSOLATION. HE ALWAYS GETS\nBUMPED IN THE REAR, WHERE\nTHERE'S   NO   WINDSHIELD.\nAn \"old maid\" la one who resents\nIt. A \"bachelor girl\" ls one who ban\nsense enough to know when she's\nweU off.\nWhat's the use? If you have sense\n.enought to earn two or three cars,\n'you have sense enough to walk for\nexercise.\nStlU, a man sucker enough to\nmarry a goM-dlgger would be trimmed by somebody else lf he dldnt\npay alimony.\nThe bride, scene 1: \"Thank my stars:\nI'll never have to work any more.\"\nScene 3: \"I wish I had some spending money of my own.\"\nThe ldesl servant ta one with brains\nenough to work for leas than you would.\nIt would be \u2014tenting to know\nat Just what stage \u2014ethos*\u2014It got\na new lease- on life by hating his\ntonsUs and appendix removed.\nCORRECT THIS SENTENCE: \"I\nDESPISE OUR NEW PREACHER.\" SAB)\nBROWN, \"BUT I'M TOO BIO TO UR\nTHAT AFFECT MY CONTRIBUTIONS\nTO THE CHURCH.\"\nEfficient\nHousekeeping\n\u25a0V IJ-WftA A. KIMCMAN\nTOMOMtOW'H  MENU\nT-rtfi.il\n\/   Banana*\nCereal\nBroiled   Slice   of   Ham\nPop  Overs Marmalade\nCoffee\nLunctteon\nKing'.  Balad\nCornbread\nStewed Prunes Cookies\nCocoa\nDinner\nMustard   steak\nLyoaM-M Potatoe* Coin\nLettuce French Dressing\nBaked Apples with Cream\nCoffee\nKing's Salad: Soak one-half envelope\nof granulated gelatine ln oi_--half cup\nof cold water for several minutes, then\ndissolve tills tn one cup of Dolling\nwater, add six table-spoons of su&ar, a\npinch of salt and a few drops of lemon Juice and set aside un lt starts to\ncongeal (that ls, when It begins to\ncling to the sides of the bowl). Then\nstir ln one cup each of chopped celery\nand raw apple; one-half cup of broken\nwalnut meats and one tablespoon of\nchopped pimentos or red sweet pepper. Let become firm and serve on\nlettuce with Mayonnaise. You may divide this between individual molds\nafter adding the fruit and vegetables,\nor Just let lt mold ln the mixing bowl\nand then break up with a spoon into\nfairly largo pieces for servlnlg.\nCream of Squash Soup: Heat four\ncups of sweet milk In the top of a\ndouble boiler and to lt add one and\none-half cups ot sifted squash, cither\nthe freshly-cooked Hubbard squash, or\nthe canned variety put through a\n30 mlnutea over briskly boiling water,\nwater, one-third cup of chopped raw\ncelery and two tablespoons of ground\nraw onion, and let this mixture cook\n30' minutes over brlsky boiling water.\nThen thicken lt wtth four tablespoons\nof flour previously rubbed Into four\ntablespoons of soft butter. Season with\none teaspoon (or more) of salt, stir till\nthickened slightly, cook 10 minutes\nlonger with the cover on, and serve.\n\"Mustard Steak: (Contributed by Mrs.\nX.) Spread prepared mustard over\ntlie entire surface of a beefsteak, using\none tablespoon of the mustard to a\npound of the meat. Broil steak over a\nhot flame. The mustard gives a wonderful flavor and, when spread on both\nsides, holds the meat Juice\/'\nTomorrow\u2014Answers to Inquiries.\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(From The Dally News March 11, 1909)\nNelson Cricket club held Its first\nmeeting of the season yesterday when\narrangements were made for the coming   season.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nIff. P. P, Paterson. who left Trail\nlast spring for England, Is returning\nto  British   Columbia  shortly.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBuilding commenced today on the\ngovernment bridge over the Slocan\nriver about half a mile from Little\nSlocan.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nE. J. Avison came Into town last\nnight from Cranbrook.\n\u2022 *   *\nJames'Anderson of Kaslo la a mining\nvisitor   in  the  city.\n7*11 Years Ago\n(From Tbe Dully News March 11, 1918)\nPrivate Bert Hodben of Creston returned home last night after serving\nthree   years   with   the   colore.\n\u2022 e   s\nMiss Myrtle Oebert and Joseph B.\nScots were married recently at Sllverton.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nTwo Pernle rinks skipped by James\nJohnston and Prank Oreenwood visited\ntbe Coleman Curling club recently.\n\u25a0 \u2022   *   \u2022\nCaptain H. Oreenwood, M.C., arrived\nfrom overseas last night after serving\nwith the colore since 1914. He enlisted\nas a private and won hts promotion\non the field-\nTHAT BODY OF YOURS\nIf hy the Spring Tonic Seems\nNecessary\nAs the spring arrives you begin to\n\u00bbee advertised la tlie drug store\nwindows all kinds of spring tonics.\nThere is no question but that at this\nparticular time a grant many' Individuals have thai \"don't care\" feelinc,\nvery much like the after effects of the\nflu, tonsillitis, or any other depressing\nailment. Perhaps you feel that way\nyourself as the early spring weather\narrives.\nOne of ths reasons Is that you have\nbeen living Indoors without much exercising during the cold weather, and\nhave likely accummulate- the usual\nfive pounds or more of weight that the\nnormal man or woman takes on between fall and spring-.\nNow the fact that you put on this\nweight ls not a bad sign at alt, in fact\nshows that your tissues respond well.\nHowever ln addition to accumulating\nthe weight, you have been living the\ninactive indoor life, and when spring\ncomes you feel \"loggy\", not because of\nthis extra weight but for two other\nreasons also. Plrst this extra weight\nacts as a sort of inculator to the body\nand you retain more heat, this may\nbe valuable in cold weather but Is\ncertainly most uncomfortable when the\nwarm spring days are at hand. You\nhave little desire to work or exercise\nand when you do you feci very \"stuffy.\"\nSecond, weather or not you put on\nmuch extra weight, if you've lived the\ntndoor life, you . have put too much\nwork on one particular organ and the\nfeeling of depression tn the spm.g in\nthe. majority of cases is due to this\noverwork.\nThe more food jyou eat the more\nwork the body\"should do to u_e up\nthat food. The tissue that wits put on\nthat body of yours to do work is muscle\ntissue. Your whole body Is covered\nwith lt, large masses of it. However\nyou eat the food and don't use the\nmuscle, or at  least Use it very little.\nWhat happens?\nThe organs of the body have not only\nto take care of that food but get rid\nof Its wastes.\nThe liver, big as It Is, and lt is the\nbiggest organ in the body, gets so much\nfood material to work on that it cu&'t\ndo a complete Job, and some of the\npoisons that should be washed out of\nthe blood, are left in, and this partly\npoisoned blood goes all over the body.\nDo you wonder than that you feel\n\"heavy as a log\" In the spring? Oet\nbusy, burn up these poison.* or any\nextra weight by some outdoor exercise.\nThat ls better'than washing out with\ndrugs.\nmoderate precipitation to be general\nduring storm period, making good\ncrop weather In south and subsoil\nmoisture ln central and northern latitudes. March Is expected to average\nbelow normal precipitation in most\nareas, but wlU furnish sufficient moisture for early southern crops ln mos^\nall sections; west end of cotton belt,\neast of Rocfies. will be expected to receive least moisture during this month.\nStorm wave of mild intensity, expected to cross continent during week centering on IS. will also cause a general\nrise ln average temperatures during\npassage ot storm center,' but following the storm center, a cold wave\nwill be expected ln central and northern latitudes.\nDuring 1939 crop season, I will expect principal crop damage to occur\nduring last half of season; more\ndamage probable from unseasonable\nfrosts than from hall; more damage\nfrom excessive moisture than from\nrainfall shortage; no drouth will bs\nexpected; principal moisture shortage\nwill occur during spring, heavlst precipitation during last half of summer.\nBest yields in spring wheat belt will\nbe from early sowing of short season\nvarieties of grains. These remarks\nare of a general nature, to be applied\nto ths general average. Crop Season\nof 1930 will be almost the reverse of\n1939 conditions applied to given localities.\nPresent estimates or world wheat\nacreage are thst winter acreage has\nbeen about 3.5 per cent less than for\n1938. Severe weather in both Europe\nand North .America has had no effect upon- price levels. The immense\nwheat crop of 1938 stays ln the minds\nof the public and makes an uneasy\nfeeling as to probable values. Excluding Russia and China, latest government estimates are that world\nwheat production tn 1938 was 3780\nmillion bushels; 176 millions more than\n1937 production; 740 millions more\nthan pre-war average. I cannot see\npresent world supply of bread grains\nas excessive, considering probable 1929\ncrop conditions. The value of wheat\nls now entirely dependent upon new\ncrop conditions. Reliable reports ol\nof northern hemisphere winter kill will\nbe the first adverse condition; of\ngreater Importance will be the first\nabandoned acreage. It Is now safe to\nsay that Russia, China and India will\nexport no bread grains during the next\nyear. It ls entirely too early ln the\nseason to rush grains to market as\nfarmers are now doing.\nFoster's Weekly\n. Weather Bulletin\nWASHINGTON. Mgrcti 9, \u2014 Storm\nwave of mild Intensity expected to\ncross continent during week centering on March 10 will be of considerable\nImportance,   causing   warm   wave   and\nHusband Was Afraid\nShe Was Getting\nPneumonia\nMn, Charles Edwards, R. R. No. 2,\nWheatley, Ont., writ\u2014I:\u2014\"I_st winter\nI was bothered with a very bad cold,\nand my husband wss afraid I was getting\npneumonia.'\n\"One day one of my neighbors cam*\nin and she suggested that f try\nDr. Wood's\n' Norway\nPine\nSyrup\nI took a few doses and I was greatly\nrelieved.\n\"It also relieved my ton, aged nine,\nt_r tne croup. \u2014 \u2022 \u2014 \u25a0-\u2014-.\u2014 -,.-.\n\"I will never be without a bottle of\n'Dr. Wood's' in the home, and I cannot\nrecommend it too highly.\"\nPrice 2lje. a bottle; large family siie\n60c. at all druggists and dealers.\nPut up only by The T. Milbura Co.,\nLtd.. Toronto. Oat\nC. P. R. Survey\nKootenay Lake\nNow Completed\nPROCTER, B. 0. March 10\u2014T. Francis and his survey party have completed their survey from Kootenay\nLanding to Procter for the proposed\nnew CP.R. connecting link, and leave\nfor points near Trail Monday.\nThe new CP.R. slip, which has been\nunder construction for the last two\nmonths, le now nearing completion.\nIt Is expected lt will be put Into portion within the next week.\nAlthough Procter ls at its wont at\nthis season, several of the men have\nannounced their Intention to retur.i\naa permanent residents. Ivery bouse\nIs occupied, for the first time ln several   years\nKidd and Miss Grieve\nWinners Whist Drive\nFrmtpde Institute\nimuiTVAUC, B. C, March 10.\u2014An\nenjoyable whist drive and dame, the\nfifth of a series, was given by the\nladles of the womens' institute ln\ntbe haU Prlday evening, a large number\nattending.\nThe winners of the first prise were\nMlsa D. Grieve and R. Kldd, Mrs. P\nM. Barrett and J. Grieve received the\nconsolation awards. A dainty lunch\nwaa served.\nDancing was enjoyed till the e.'.rly\nhours, music being supplies by loea-\nmusicians.\nStock-Taking\nBARGAINS\nAs bur yearly.stock taking proceeds, finds us with\na lot of odds and ends which we dose out each January at greatly reduced prices.\nStarting With Today\nWe Are Offering the Public at\n20 to 50 per cent Reduction\nAll our leftover Christmas goods and all odd lines,\neach day will find several lines added to our\nBARGAIN COUNTERS\nConsisting of Heaters, Sleds, Hockey Sticks, Pads,\nBadminton Racquets, Skiis, China, Tinware, Stoves,\nCut Glass, Electric Lamps, Flower Pots, Smokers' Sets,\nBaskets, Brooms, Brushes.\nNow is the time to load up your home, and for that\nBridge Party\nFirst Come, First Choice \u2014    \u2014 Watch Our Window*\nNelson Hardware Co.\n\"Wholesale and Retail Quality Hardware'*\nNELSON, B.C.\nSale of 60 head of Holstelns to a\nUnited States buyer for delivery next\nweek, was reported by Byron Jenvey,\nsales agent of the Oxford Country Holsteln  Brooders'   club,\nOntario Man Spealtt Highly 0\/ Dodd's Kidney Pill*\n\"I was \u2022uffering frim \u00ab Chill in ths Kidneys, Bladder Trouble,\nalso Impure Blood, which caused boils to break out\nupon my face and neck,\" writes Mr. R. Liner,\n228 Bajiiol Street, Toronto.   \"I triad many so-\ncalled wonderful remedies with no result,. But\nafter trying on* box of Dodd't Kidney Pill*\nI knew that I had found something good *t\nlast.   I fait a lot better and my skin took on a\nhealthy color.   Am now on my fourth bos and\nam very pleased to say I am feeling in the pink\nof condition.    I always recommend Dodd**\nKidney Pills.  Thsy at* worth mot* than 50c\n* bo*.' Even when weU, *n occasional dot* of\nDodd't Kidney Pills will fortify the Kidneys.\nKftf A\u00abA\u00bbD*a!.rt,sfbyr-_h-sT_\nJUC Ds_UMrfcki.Cs.Ltd,Teroot.2,Oat\nDO!\nKIDNEY\nPILLS\n:ii_M\n\u25a0\naProve SUPERTWIST\ntire\nsuperiority on\nthe cord testing\ntdjoutjC^W\\^P^de^ers\nBuilding\nMaterial\nLet us figure your hills ot\nBuilding Material. Coast 1,umber a specialty\nJohn Burns & Son\n1\nShipping Tags\n*\nIn the transportation of thousands of items, there is no substitute for the\nShipping Tag. It is attached to all kinds of merchandise parcels to insure their\ndelivery to desired destinations. Whether used in conection with a parcel post\npackage weighing but a few ounces, or with a gigantic machine or steel casting weighing several tons, it does its du ty like a faithful messenger.\nSniping Tags are also manufactured to answer various needs with respect to\ndurability. There is a size and quality suited for each purpose for which a Ship-\nprig Tag is adapted. Those meant for light weight parcels and short distances,\nnc.-d not be of a durable nature; while those intended for heavy castings and\nother articles which may be transported long distances, ahould be of a quality to\nwithstand hard usage.\nShipping Tags are also used as a means of identification in repair shops.\nThese are usually perforated in one or two places and consecutively numbered in\nduplicate or triplicate, one coupon of which is given to the customer. Instructions for repairs or alterations gometim es form a part cf the tag, when used for\nidentification,purposes.      . #\nHave Your Printing Done by Modern Machinery Using Modern Type the\nModern Way\nThe Daily News Job Dept\nPHONE 144 (Two Lines)\nNelson, B.C.\nPRINTING - RULING - BOOKBINDING\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS,   MONDAY MORNING;-\"MAKC-Plt, 1928^\nLex the Children Wear\nthe Best!\n\u25a0 SDB- THAT JHKrR SHOW ABB\nxrt, and --allow mn to (nt (bt\nmy to*.* im\nR; A_ttdrcw\n&Co.\nLeaders in Footftvlmvm\nAIRBANK PRESIDENT\n\\iWm SOCIAL CLUB\nFERNIE TAX RATE\nSfit AT 41\nM\nEast Kootenay Power Company\nSeeks, to Pjircha-p Citj.\nPower System\nF\u2014EtNIE, B.C.. Mar. 10\u2014At the meeting of the council Thursday evening,\nMr. Doherty, representing one of th*\ntruck companies, talked to th* council\nrelative to a new dumping attachment\nlest one or the city trucks. As the\ntruck wa* an old model, this attachment would have to be made to order.\nHe advised having a steel dump body\nhunt and b* attached by an Iron works.\nIt would have to he worked by hand, as\na power model would not be practicable. Tha works committee was Instructed to procure a body along this\nline.\nMr. Wilson waited upon tb* council,\nasking a reduction la th* peddlers'\ntan levl\u00bbd by a cjty bylaw. He thought\n1100 a year to* much to charge a man\nwho wished to go' from bouse to house\nto solicit business. No relief could be\ngranted for rear of creating a precedent, and having to grant similar licences at tb* reduced rat* to other*.\nA grant of lioo was made to the\nboard of trade.\nA grant of US was given to the Salvation Army for relief work during the\npast winter.\nJama* Blgrlgg applied tor ttt remuneration for hla goat, which waa\nkilled by two dogs owned in th* annex. The application had been filed\ntoo . late after the incident to take\nadvantage of the bylaw covering this\nquestion.\nHarold White applied for the position\nof truck driver for the \u00ablty.   Thle was\nlaid over.\nTRUCK   TKNDERS '\nTenders received from Mr, Beaumont\nand Mr. Dicks to supply * truck for\nthe city, mete laid over tog further\nInvestigation.' There was * tender also\nfor a tnujk body, but this did not\nmeet with,the aldermen's approval.\nThe city clerk waa instructed to advertise tor tenders for quo of the\nformer truck* of the elty, to be ln by\nMarch 30.        ,\nThe revised estimates of the school\nhoard requirements for the year were\npassed by the council The mayor had\nrequested the board to reduce Its original estlnjatcs by (3000, this being\nthe amount of certain poll tax. The\naccepted estimate was S45.929.\nThe estimates for the current year\nwere considered. The total amounted\nto 41 mills, ss compared with 41-3\nmills last year. Of this, 13.95 mills\nwould go for general expenses, and\n29.09 <\u2014\"s for school purposes. This\nwould mean a reduction ot 10800  ln\nLux keeps\nnew\nrjrtoKe than twice as long!\n!\nv   *..  : \u25a0 t\nHOW do you keep them so soft and fluffy?\"\n\u25a0 says the young housewife. For the Lux-\nwashed blanket- of experienced housekeepers\nare not a bit like the ones that come through\nordinary washings!\nMany soaps, whether flakes, chips or cakes,\ncontain harmful alkali which dries up the\ndelicate wool fibres\u2014makes blankets hard and\nshrunken.\nWith pure Lux suds, blankets are washed\neasily and safely\u2014woolly i\u00bbp kept downy,\nlusciously; ao|t\u2014-for years!\nAt the touch of hot water, the tissue-thin Lux\ndi\u00bb\u00bbond\u00bb dissolve completely, foam up into rain-\n. bow bubbles. Add cold water, then press the lovely\nlukewarm suds through the blanket-)\u2014soil and dust\nare carried away. Rinse in two or three luke-warm\nwaters, then gently sqneeze out. Now the blankets\nare ready to hang in a warm (oot hot) place to\ndry, soft as new.\nTo keep your blankets like new, always use\npure Lux, sold only in the blue box!\nIf it isn't ilk the\nUrn box\nI;\nitm^tLux\n,_^ \u00ab\u00ab>___\u00ab t-eiU-T-X-*> ..\n__.\nth* amount of tax** collected. Thlat\n*A (____* by inn-**f..**_*\"'T th* tan- 1.\nmill rate and a reduction In the aa-\nrowEK 'F-orOjgjgToy\nmer, rjores-ttlpg the \u00bb*st Robtenay\nPOM Somas\u2014t. wsjted upon the council. Mr. Hen\u2014met outlined the company's proposition Tor buying the light\nana Haw* ofgs__at_\u00bb of the city of\nPemle.' Th* city w** not In the electric*! business sod therefore th* power\ncompany thought tt could build up.\nbuslnea* in the. city to tetter advantage. The city had paid 165,000 to the\ncoal company in 1910 for the plant.\nTile power company would also assume\nresponsibility for poles and other equipment, which would likely cost the city\n110,000, to \u00bbia,00O' tor maintenance In\nthe next 10 years. .     *\u2022\nMr. Sanborn spoke of the happy relations between company and city since\nbeginning to supply elty with power\nin May\/ 1\u00bb*H. Soon ' after this, *\ncheaper rate for light and power had\nbeen put into effect in the city, with\nthe result of a marked Increase In\nthe net earning* of the city from this\neource.\nThe proposition the company was offering was $100,000 caah tor a 10-year\nfrinchlqe to sell power in the \"olty\nand school district, and take over th*\npresent plant and distribution system.\nThe company was also ottering a lower rat* tor consumers, in thst the discount allowed would be 36 per cent\nInstead of 10 per cent. The company\nwould charge no meter rate.\nLOW  RATE\nThe coinpanys proposition would give\nFernie tbe fifth lowest rat* In western\nprovinces for residential lighting, said\nMr. Sanborn, with proportionate reductions ln the commercial block*. They\nwould also give a flat rate for window\nlighting and a better arrangement for\nstreet lighting.\nMr. Sanborn was sure his proposition was to tb* advantage of the\ncity as well as satisfactory to his company. Tb* city's average earnings from\nthis source for the last 10 years had\nbeen about S80O0 a year, whereas the\ncompany waa offering well over $10,000\na year, or $10,000 with  Interest.\nMr. Sanborn sketched the growth\nand reliability of his oompany. It\nstarted with one small plant and had\ngradually add\u00abd units. It' hod acquired new rights on Phillips ennyou.\nWhich had to be developed In the hear\nfuture. Plans had to'be on file wtth\nthe water department by the end ot\n1939, and unless an extension was\n\u2022ought construction would have to begin hy the middle of next year.\nCity accounts for the month to the\namount of $39(11 were ordered paid.\n.jr* .ti \u25a0 ti 4.\nProcter Ladies' Aid to\nMark St. Patrick's Day\nPROCTER, B. C, March 10\u2014A meeting of St. Andrew's United church ladles' aid was held at the house of Mrs.\nA. Helghton Thursday afternoon.\nAfter the devotional period final arrangement* were made for a St. Patrick's  birthday  party.\nTea was served by Mrs. Helghton.\nThose present were Mrs. c. Carne, Mrs.\nR. Walton, Mrs. F. Campbell, Mrs. A.\nHodgson. Mrs. w. Donaldson and Mrs.\nOeorge Kinney.\nEarly Days of Sandon\nAre Described Members\nof the Anti-Kare Club\nfMflDON. B....O.;-'.!____*__ 10.\u2014The\nweekly meeting of th* Anti-Kant club\nwa* held Monday night In th* basement of the United Churoh. The business of the meeting being quickly dispersed with, the attention of the audience was directed to' a few1 short\ntalks.6n the \"Early Days of Sandon,\"\nglveti by Mrs. M. Thompson and Grant\nCameron. Recitations were given by\nStain ttudkln and t-ss V. Sharpe.\nMrs. Thompson was particularly Interesting, .describing actual incidents\nas thsy occurred. Her talk was concluded wtth a reading by Robert Servrs.\nA guessing contest appertaining to\nthe names of mint* about Sandon was\nof interest. Prises donated by a group\nmember were won by Mrs. C. McMDan,\nladles first, and Harold Russel, men's\nfirst.\nFloor games were played preceding\nthe serving of light refreshments by the\ngroup hi criarge.\nBALFOUR NOTES\nBalfour, B. p., March 10.\u2014Miss I.\nMcQueen spent the week-end with her\nparents at Kaslo.\nMiss Mary Blewer ot Balfour spent\nthe week-end in Alnsworth, visiting\nfriends.\nMis* A. Noake left to visit at South\nSlocan Friday.\nThe ladle*' guild met at the home of\nMrs. C. Holt Wednesday.\nA Hakes returned to Yakh Monday,\nafter spending the week-end wtth his\nfamily at BaUoi__r_,    -\nA Winner\nal Ulxture aud\ntho world.\nBUSH'S\nBush's Special Mixture and the best\nSOc lighter ln the world.\n!\nMr. and. Mrs. a. C. Ameeoo, Stan- ;\nley svee*. entertained st two evening 1\nbridges recently when the ' prises for ,\ntop soon* Were won by Mrs. W. T.\nFotheringham. Mis. Ferguson Wilson,\nI. o. Matthew a\u20141 W. T. Fotheringham. Those playing included Mr. and\nMrs. A. Clyde Imory, Mr. and Mra.\nHarry Ferguson. Mr. snd Mr*. W. T.\nFotheringham, Dr. and Mr* John\nOananer, Mr, and Mrs. w. J. Oar-\nbracht, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Hunt, Vt.\nand Mra. David Kerr. Mr. and Mrs.\nE. O. Matthew, Dr. and Mrs. Boy\nMaurer, Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Murphy,\nMf. and Mn>. R. L McBrlde, Mr. and\nMrs. O. Dougia* Nagie, Mr. and Mrs\nBoy Sharp, Dr. and Mn. W. B steed,\nMr. and Mrs, Ferguson Wllsor), Mlsa\nIna Steed. MM* Connie Smith, Mr*.\nOeorg* Ferguson. A. Padgin and John\nA. Ferguson.\nO. B. Matthew,\nreturned yesterday\nspent at his ranch at Rlondel.\nEdgewood   avenue,\nfrom a few  days\nO. P. Melrose. SUlca street, lsft lor\nPentlcton  last night.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nCharles   t.   McHardy   has   returned\nfrom a week spent in Ooeur d'Alene,\nIdaho,  with | Us  family\n.   .   .\nHarry Bums, who has been in town\nfor the past few days, has left for hla\nhome  at Canal I Flat.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMrs. B. te. Eastman, who ha* been\nthe -house guest of Dr. and Mrs. I. L.\nReiri. Rosemont, for the psat week, lett\nfor her home tn Blondel Saturday.\n\u2022 \u00ab   *\nMra. Eric Anderson of South Slocan\nwas a city shopper   Saturday\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nRobert Quln of Harrop spent Saturday  in   Nelson.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr.   Eldrldge   of   Trail   spent   the\nweek-end ln  town with his relative*\na   .-   .    .\nW. P. Trent, post office inspector.\nIs a city visitor.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and nfta. H D. Peterson, $17\nCarbonate street, have as their guest\nMrs. Paterson'* father. J. Cl. Glen-\nwrite of Vancouver, who arrived ln\ntown  Friday  night.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nT. E. Levasseur, SUlca street, has returned from a visit to Edmonton and\nOalgary.\n___\nP.  McGulrc.\nOlty,   was   in\nmining man of Slocan\ntown   Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. R. I. M Powers,\nThrums, were in Nelson Saturday and\nleft that evening for the coast.\nH.\nPaid\nDozenberger   ot   Sunshine   Bay\na  visit   to   town   Saturday.\nJesse Bandars of. Balfour spent Saturday  in Nelson.      \u201e'\n.....' i \u2022\u25a0..    ,,.\n.Mrs, A DunrmHrrewa* ia town from\nSouth   SloCan  Sat\u2014day.\n\u25a0\u2022   \u2022 .* '\nAmong shoppers to town from Harrop\nyesterday were Mr. sort Mrs. Ohsrles\nPeterson.\n,**.  \u2022nj*   .\nThe Excelsior club held a most successful tea and bake sale Saturday\nafternoon at St. Paul's church. The\ntea tables, under the supervision of\nMiss Ina Hunter and Miss Bessie MacKenzie, w*\"\u00bb tastefully decorated wtth\ndaffodils and pussy willows. During\nths afternoon Mrs. W. Anderson \u2022 and\nMrs. Louis Choquette poured tea, while\nthose serving were Kiss Maud Simons,\nMiss Irene Laughton, Miss Katie Beb-\nIngton, Miss Margaret Arthur and M\u2014s\nCbarlotte Notman. Miss Eileen Mackenzie wae In charge of the fancy\nwork, Mrs, A. D. Oliver and Mis*\nOracs Laughton presided over the home\ncooking and Miss Emma Kahle was the\ncashier.\n+   \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Oeorge McKay o!\nTrail, who have been spending the\nweek-end ln town, guests at the home\non Latimer street ot Mrs. McKay's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ongoire Choquette.\nleave for their home this morning.\n\u2022 *   *\nMr. and Mrs. W. L. Smith ot Lardo\nwere city visitors Saturday and left\nyesterdsy morning for Sand Point,\nIdaho, where their son resides.\n* \u2022 \u2022' *\nMrs. J. Norrls and her daughter.\nMis* Betty, were in from South Sip.\ncan Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. Anderson of Yfnir and his daughter, Miss Muriel, motored to the city\nSaturday.\nMrs. William Swannel and her family\nleft for the Coast Saturday night.\n* *   *\nCircle No. 1 of Trinity United church\nheld a very successful tea and bake sale\nFriday afternoon at tbe home on SUlca\nI\n'\n00000.. 00% 00M\nCHI-ENAMEL  '\nFINISH\nA high grade afeell gloss fipisfi for the interior of\nthe home. A delicate, sanitary, washable enamel in\negg shell finish.\nThe ideal finish for all interior wood vork and,\nfurniture. j   _. *\n'\nHlpperson Hardware Co.\nI-QNE  497\nlook for tke Red Hardware Stan\nBOX 414\n6U Lsxtiettr Street.\ner's\nPttona 200\nWomen's Sport Dresses\n, $14 to $79.50\n*_r ''I\nDu.e-.es o\u00a3Pw\u00bb Wool or Sillf, M|d. Wott1.,Jersrey, %therwei_rht\nTweed, Wool Gw-f^ette and Novelty Silks,' m a rang** at Wonderful\n'colors. One-, *fcwo- ffi three-piece styles. In fact, everything that's\nshow, in the rhost exclusive stores is here for your inspection, and\nbest of all, there is only one of a Itind. \"Sizes'16 to 44. EACH,\n$14.0Q TO \u00bb70.50. tf'\\\nNew Sports Coat*\n$25 to $95 Each\n\u25a0 *- s_sT*r-*y *. \u25a0 sw*, \u25a0 .si \u25a0 r*.   , _.     ... .<\n\"r ' . ,' ,   \u25a0       '   .\n_\nGolflex, Shagmoor and Caravan, the three most exclusive lines of\nSports Coats. Made of imported Weollen cloths. * Some plain tailored in double breasted or wrap-around styles and other* with fur\ncollars of Fox, Squirrel, <\u00ab Umoul. Richly lined and well tailored.\n..CH, 00S.OO, *_>.00, 0SBM TO *8_.0O.\n..  . _'\u25a0'\u25a0\u2022      ....    *>\u25a0\"\nSizes 14 to 44.\nsn\n\u00bb1\nNew Tailored Bats\n$8.50 to $15 Each\nDirect from New York, or other Eastern Centers. These sire\namong the really smart Hats shown this season. Tbey come\nin all the new shapes and in lightweight straws or Novelty\nSiJks. Many with scarfs to match. EACH $8.50, 810.50\nTO 015.00.\n.\n..j\n\u25a0I,\nI\n\u201el.\nri\nin\nmaaatwawtmty.ti-\nstreet of Mrs. J. c. Orammett. During\nthe afternoon the miests were enjoy-\nably entertained by Mrs. A. H. W.\nCrossley, Mrs. I. Marsden and Miss\nEnid Etter ln vocal solos, accompanied\nby Mra. E. Swanson. Reading* were\ngiven by Mr*. Gordon Allen end Mis,\nOeorge simms. while Mise Edna Buchanan provided piano selections. Ths\ntea table\/which Wss centered With dat.\nfodlls, was presided over by Mrs. Oeorge\nSteed and lbs. J. Lundie. Acting as\nnervlteurs were Mrs. Cl  E. Spatkes, Mrs.\nD. a. Ferguson, Mra. J. Woodell. Miss\nFranca* Rowe. Mrs. E. 3. Cook, and\nlfrt. W. Jeffs. The bake table was ln\ncharge ot Miss M. X. Smith and Mrs.\nE. Rowley acted as cashier. The hostess\nof the afternoon was assisted ln receiving the guests by Mrs. J. B. StaUwood.\n...\nS.   Pond   left  Saturday   to  spent  a\nweek ln Salmo.\n* -.   .\nMr. LePage returned to Salmo Saturday, after a few days spent In Nelson.\nwith his family on Silica street.\n...\nMrs. J. Foy of Procter spent Friday\nIn the city shopping.\n,\u2022\u25a0*.*\nMrs. T. t\\. Whelldon of South Slocan\npaid a visit to Nelson Saturday.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nHonoring   her   mother,   Mrs.   S.   o.\nBTewester of Frultvale, Mrs. R. A. Alder-\nsmith Observatory street, entertained at\nthe tea hour recently\nf .   .   .\nMrs. Charlee Moll of Roesland was a\nvisitor to the city Saturday.\n* *   *\nCarl Nystrom of Tmlr spent Saturday in town.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nW. W. Powell, who has been In Nelson   for   several   days,   lett   Saturday\nmomlns for his hope in Spokhne.\nP, R. Rotter of Rotter's Spur, spent\nthe; week-end with his family in Fair-\nview.\n'- \u2022  4*7*\nMrs. J. L. Purdy ot South Slocan was\na olty visitor Saturday.\nMr. and Mrs. N. Murphy, Kerr apartment*, have as their guesl, Mrs. Hsrry\nBums ot Canal. Flats,\n* . .*\nThe   Misses   MarJorie   and   Murrlel\nRussel of South Slocan were visitor*\ntb town Saturday,\n* *   \u00ab\nMr. Tattrle of Silverton* spent Saturday In the city.' **\n.   .   .  .\nI. Hanna, Cedar street, left yesterday\nmorning for a visit to easterr*. *f*ntaclo.\nA very pretty wedding took place\nFriday at the home ot the bride's\naunt, Mrs. W. Lauglands ot Trail,\nwhen Katharine Lock, daughter of Mrs\nHorace Lapolnte ot Nelson, became the\nbride of John R. Holland, son of Mrs.\nSt E Holland of Trail. The ceremony\nwa* performed hy Rev. tj, F. ^hum-\nphreys. The bride was be*0__tlnfly\nmessed In a gown of duchess aatln\ntrinjmed with tulle, and oarrl** a bouquet of pink, carnations and lllllas est\not th* valley. Mrs.' It. 0. McTeer,\nmatron of honor, wore * pale shell\npink taffeta, frock with a picture hat\nof crepe de chene to match, p. Norrlr-\nof Trail, brother of tbe bride, supported\nthe groom. The bride was given tn\nmarriage hy her uncle, w. Lanfrlands.\nOnly Immediate relatives and friends\nwitnessed the ceremony.\nI     Saturday night, $. o. Matthew en,\n^^^-1 _. .__.\nBuchanan, A. D. McLeod, W J. Ger-\nl>mclit, John Cartmel, D. D. Town-end.\nOr. E. L. Reld, W. M. Walker, Harry\nPerguson, John A. Ferguson, J. Holland,\nP. H. Sheffield, Kugene Poulin, Robert\nCrerar, Dr. H. H. Mackenzie, w. M.\nMyns and W. J. Sturgeon.\nSALMO NOTES\n' . \u25a0\n\u25a0 a\u00bb.LMp, B, 0\u201e March 10.-^Krs. G O.\n' Fair i nttrtg-ned a ntsssspcr ot the\nyounger set at her home Tuesday, cards\nbeing the feature of the evening. Tne\nhigh score waa held by Mrs. G. Leahy,\nMrs. M. Llndow held tbe low score. The\nInvited guests were the Misses F. Sapples. K. Sapples, M. Llndow, M. Rleet-\nerer. M. Harrop, O. Leahy, C. Hauson,\nH. (inrtchflelcl. J. Fair, O. G. Fair and\nMra. E. Nord.\nMrs. W. C. Gelling of Rowland I*\nspending the week here as the guest\nof Mrs. C. Llndow.\nMr. and Mrs. W. R. Henley entertained a number of friends at bridge\nThursday. Their gueeta were Mr. and\nMrs. C. W. Llndow, Mr. and Mrs. H.\nJohns, Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Gelling and\nMr. and Mrs. J. Lirines.\nTho home ot Mr. and Mn. M. C. Donaldson was the scene of a lolly party\nThursday afternoon when their oldest\ndaughter, Peggy, entertained a number ot her girl friend* lh honor of her\ntwelfth birthday. Her guests Included\nBetty Bustln, Merle McCaslln, Stella\nahd Hazel Darey, Mary . Feeney, Mary\nMiller, Olive and Dorecne Fall, Patsy\nand Lydia. Henley, Kathleen Hearn.\nEliza Flnley and Shirley Donaldson,\nMr. and Mrs, M, Stevenson and family lett Thursday tor Ymir, where they\nhave, taken up residence in the Cosmopolitan   hotel.\nMrs. R. Stewart apent Tuesday in\nNelson.\nPROCTER NOTES\nPROCTER. B. C. March 10\u20144). Ashley (pent Thursday  ln Nelson.\nMrs. A Say spent Friday In Neljon.\nMiss Iris Cronln spent Saturday ln\nNelson.\nMrs, F. Campbell arrived at Procter\nWedntsday from Alnsworth. She is\nthe guest of Mrs. R. Walton.\nMl*e Eleanor MacCallum spent Sst-\nurday in Procter, the guest of Mrs,\nR. Walton:\nMis* Leslie Montgomery and Miss\nRuth Heath arrived at Procter irrlday\nto spend (he week-end visiting Mrs.\nOr Kinney.\nTom Williams left Saturday for his\nhorn*  ln   Nelson.\nNakusp Institute\nBacks Resolution\nNAKUSP. B, C, March 10\u2014A meeting of the women's Institute waa heKr\"*'\nThursday afternoon at tba home of Mrs. 1\nJ. Par\u2014it, Sr.' t\nThose present were Mrs. o. H. Oard-\nncr, president; Mrs. H. W. Herridge, a*c- it\nretery pro tern: Mrs. Grlgg, Mrs. J.\nParent, Jr.. Mr*. Hilts. Mrs. Thurgood,\nMrs. Howarth, Mrs. Millar, Mrs. Buthtr-jj,\nland, Mrs. Fowler, Mrs. Harvey, Mra.\nJohnson, Mrs. Cllngsmitb. Mra. Dorry,\nMr*. Baird, Mra. Kershane asd Mr*.\nParent.\nThe resolution regarding communicable diseases aad maternal and infant^\nmortality in child-birth, a* weU a* the \u2022\nmedical inspection ot school children *\nthroughout the smaller towns and vUg- ,\nlagea and rural areas of th* Dominion. ._,\nwas passed.\nMembers of the Institute accepted oar if\nInvitation   to   apend   th*   ewenl\u2014K   of\nMarch 20 at a concert to be held In\nthe optra house.\nReport from the president, Mrs. Oard-  |;\nner, on the bridge party held Friday,\nshowed   \u00bb15.50   was   raised   tor   the\nEileen Anderion tund.\nThe following canupltt*** were\nformed: Cemetery, Mrs. Gardner, MTa.\"*'-\nCarruthers and Mrs, Parent; visit\u2014_s\ncommittee, Mri, Parent and Mrs. Fowler; hospital. Mrs. Fowler and Mrs.\nSutherland.\nHome-making ot rugs was demon-\n\u2022tated.\nA solo by Mrs, Howarth was greatly  ;\nappreciated.\nAfternoon tea was served.\n. r*:\nHARROP NOTTS\nharrop, B.C., Much io.\u2014Miss Helen\nQuln entertained at a small OOdge\nWednesday   afternoon.    Those   Playing\nMl\u00a3i S. Mcintosh. Miss K  l-ntocT-ft\nE.  D.  Serres  and  Mra  C.  Peterson.\nL. \"\nic^|I^w.tM^n-5.\"'\n1 Bertie Simons'left Tueeday momlnsj S\nfor his home st Divide. Sask,  Saving\nspent  the winter with  MFancTifiZ*\nF. Andrew*.\nW.    J.    Ashley    of    Nelson    \u00abMn\u00bb'.\n?.   fl? Smith.' who  has  been  Willi '\u2022\u2022\ntertng   ln   Vancouver,   *rrtve.   at   hit\nranch, Kilkare, Tuesday.\nVelvet nightdresses ar* a new Pari* K\nfancy.\nJust Right for This Weather\ni& in calories and\ndrates-No fuss or _\noven and serve\n\u25a0*1_i\n mm\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS, winday MORNING, MARCH 11, 1929\nMarkets and Mining\n\u25ba_$ AT TORONTO\nA MXED PICTURE\nlew   Operations    Strong   on\nWkole    WhUe    Older    Es-\ntaWiahed Show Declines\nTOBONTO. Msrch 10\u2014Light trading\na narrow margin, with no signlfi-\n\u00bb mem* m either direction featured\nitock.    ex\u2014isage's   short   session\ninckel   opened   at  6J,\nthree-quarters of a point, then\nfor   a  quarter-point   leas\ntrading.\nslipped down a quarter point\noils erassulld a mixed picture.\nMM OU took aa adverse turn foils** Its; ttt peak on Prlday. With\ndrop of \u00ab4 a share, It closed at\nB. Fbffpuila, on th* other band,\ndttnuedto spar. By adding another\nI oante it closed the day at MO, ltt\nIghest .j*. .<_**.\nIll* asore fin-; estsbllshed oils\n*ra Inclined to be uncertain. North\ntt and Super TMt recorded gains.\ntuti Dominion, Imperial and tho\nanfdlsn ou companies acored losses.\n'Jmttt *rom a 3-polnt drop In Do-\nStores to Ita, there war* no\nloeaw  Of   significance,\nto (kin* for the 'day ware\n****-\u20141-*. up one to 11%;\ntapeon', fettferred. a gain of 8 points\n) 108;  OftatUeit lire, S, up to ttt.\nIN\nTORONTO NARROW\ntome Oil Down $4* From Friday Citfmt; Ontario and Manitoba Mines Change Little\n*I*0\u2014CiwR), March   lo\u2014With half a\noaen exceptions, stocks on the Stand-\nrd Mlnlt_| exchange moved within ex-\nreraely narrow margins Saturday.\n[ Heme Cn% outstanding feature of the\npe-flo\u2014i   day,   opened   unchanged   at\nH, but Ml back rapidly to an ex-\nloif of 118.90 and later rallied\nate. xJ)aihoual\u00ab   Oil   declined   38\nts to tl.to.    wainwell ranged from\nee_ts'.to   4314   cents,   with   final\nt\u2014Oa at  41  cents steady with\nPrertMu cloae.    southwest Petro-\n' sold, ta to a peak of 8330 and\nred at 88, a sain of 25 cents.\niternatlonal     mckel     receded     to\n.It,   a   loas   of   15   cents,   Falcon\nBridge Nickel wu also T5 oents lower.\nSudbury Basin touched 813 and ended\nat 81146. up 15 cents. A broken lot\nof Treadwell Yukon cam* out at\n316.60, down 61.\nNoranda fluctuated between 801 and\n881\u20146. closing at the latter mark, a\nloss of 10 cents.\nMclntyre aad* a (am of 36 cents\nto 83130, sod Dom* 80 oents up ta\n830. Teck Hughes advanced 36 cents\nto 89.60, while Wright Hargreeves wa*\n38 cents tetter at 83 18.\nManitoba Basin was, a* usual, very\nactive, ranging from 60 cent* down to\n87 cent*, a decline of a cents. Hudson Bay Mining wa* 10 cents higher\nat $81.10. Sherrltt-Oordon moved up\n10 oant* to 88.40.\nBK \u2014\u2014sourl advanced 3 cent* to\n81.18. Premier eased 6 onto to 8140.\nPioneer made a gain of 5' cent* to\n66\nTORONTO MINES\nAconds ........\nAmulet   \t\nArgo    \u2014\u2014...\nArea\nBarry   Holly   \u2014\t\nBldgood  \t\nCastle   \u2014\nCan.   Lorraine   \t\nCent. Man. Mines\nCon\u2014as* \t\nCrown\n.   .1*\n. 3.34\n.    .08*4\n.   .13\n. M\n. .40\n.   -8\n. .03\n.   M\n. 1,66\n.   .06\nCapital     \u2014    MM\nDuprat     \u2014S\nDome      10.06\nOold IM*     .11\nOranada       .38\nOrover Daly   08\nHudson Bay - .3146\nIndian  ,     46\nJackson  Manlon   13\nKlrklake   .\u2014 .- 143\nKeely   .:....-..    48*4\nKootenay Florence  18\nLak*   Shore    i -44.76\nLaval       47\nMacassa  .._. ........    40\nMcDougall   _. 60\nMclntyns  ....41.60\nMcKlnley  _    43\nMining Corp. 5.40\nNewbeo        .40\nNlplssing  346\nNoranda  \u201e 6146\nPend   Oreille  13.10\nPioneer     _ 63\nPremier     _  148\nPotter   Doal   03\nRlbaeo  , 03\nSan Antonio 14\nSherrltt-Oordon 9.40\nStadaconra    in',_\nSudbury Basin  11.75\nSylvanlts  3.06\nT\u00bbck Hughes   8.6S\nTough Oakes     44V4\nTowagamac       3.75\nVipcrnd  1.16\nWright   Hargreeves    3.16\n40\n348\n.03V4\n.18\n40\n.-1\n48\n48\n45\n47\n.0514\n1040\n4314\n.03%\n.13\n1.46\n.60\n40\n35.00\n.08\n43\n.63\n31.76\n46\n6.60\n.41\n3.40\n61.13\n46\n1.00\n.03)4\n.04\n9.45\n.13=4\n11.80\n3.10\n8.69\n.05\n1.17\n2.18\nTRADING IN OILS\nIS HEAVY UPON\nVANCOUVER MART\nMines, However, Are Relatively\nthe  Stronger;  Reeves,  Mis-\nby  Death  of  Cousin\nPRICES CHURNED\nWITHOUT EFFECT\nIN WALL STREET\nRadio Iaauea Fltttuiite Wildly\nbut for the Most Part Day\nWithout Change\nMargin Accounts\nWs ar*. pleased to carry stocks listed on ths New York. Montreal and Toronto Exchanges on a coftservatlve basis stocks\nlisted on the Toronto Standard Mining Exchange such ss\nSherritt-Gordon, Sudbury Basin, Noranda, Etc.\nCan be bought on a 40% to 50% margin.\nCONTINUOUS QUOTATIONS BAH.Y\nR. P. Clark & Co.,(Vanc.) Ltd.\nINVESTMENT BANKERS\nNELSON, B..C.\nPHONE 100\nSERVICE ON THE\nSTOCK MARKET\nWe solicit your business on all markets and are\nprepared to buy and sell all listed or unlisted stocks.\nOPEN FOR BUSINESS AT 6:45 A.M. and on the\njob until the markets close with DIRECT WIRE\nSERVICE 1\u00bb AIL EXCHANGES. Visit our board\nroom.   _\u00bbu._iay *j>hone or wire your orders. :\u25a0.\nHUGH W. ROBERTSON, Limited\nNELSON AND TRAIL\nSIMPSONS LIMITED\nl   t nv cent Cumulative Preference Shares.   Price $100 per Share.\nDividends half yearly at par at any branch of the Company's\nbankers lu Canada.\nBalance ot assets over liabilities,.   \u00bb8,B32,0OO.\nEarnings for th* last three years have been equal to four times\nthe requirements in this Issue.\n\u2022\nEDMONTON   CITY  DAIEY   LIMITED\nt% per cent cumulative, redeemable preference stock, with\nbonus of one-half share of common.    Price, 1100 per share.\nRedeemable at 30 days notice at  106.\nDividends payable quarterly at par at any branch of the Company's banker*.. '\nBoth the above may be purchased on our Instalment plain.\nRoyal Financial Corporation, Ltd.\nVANCOUVER\nB. J. HEWITT. District Bsw Mutative.\nBlpperson Mack Nelson P. O. Bo* Ml\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Company of Canada, Ltd*\nOffice, Smelting and Banning Depsrtment\nTRAIL, BEITISH  COLUMBIA\nSMELTERS AND REFINERS\nPurchasers of Gold, Silver, Copper, Lead and Zinc Orea.\nProducer* of.Cold, Silver, Copper, Plf Lead and Zinc.\nVANCOUVER. B. C March 10.\u2014\nTrading continued ln heavy volume on\nthe atock exchange with oils again\nshowing the way In volume of trading.\nSeveral ol the mines were stronger with\nearly gain*. In the oils price changes\nwen mixed. Homo, opening unchanged art MO. sold down to close\nat S19.36 for a net loas of 76 cent*,\nrut ending ranged between the opening and \u00ab19.S0. A. P. Consolidated\nwas again th* heaviest trader and\nacored an advance of 1.1 cents, to 13.11.\nDevenlsh Petroleum moved up la\ncents, to 11.19: Illinois Alberta 13 cents\nto 11.83: Mayland 36 cent* to 68.60.\nand McLeod 6 cents to 34.80. Dalhousle\nwas steady at 33.46, and Calmont 10\noent* to 31.95. Fsbyan -turned over to\nthe extent of 86,000 shares between 14\nand 16, closing unchanged at 14ft.\nIn the mines, Reeves McDonald was\nstrong, finishing 16 cents higher at\n33\u20145; Big Missouri moved up 30 oents\nto II 70: and Kootenay King 8 cents\nto 61. Planet Mines gained 8 cent*\nto 86 and Cotton Belt 3 cents to 86.\nPend Oreille ranged between 813 and\n312.25. closing at the former figure for\na net loss of 15 cents. Mixed gains\nand losses extended through the balance of the list. -.    *,\"-\nCREDIT SITUATION\nMUCH IN EVIDENCE\nMost Traders Are at Sea, bat\nOld Hand* Contend Low\nEarners Cant Be Carried\nAver.\n60 Indus. 20 Ralls.\n20 Utll.\nToday   \t\n  3143\n135.4\n312.6\nPnvlous   day  ...3144)\n135.6\n310.1\nWeek Ago .\n sna\n138.7\n218*\nTear Ago ...\n _ 143.3\n119.3\n134a\nHigh (13381\n  318.0\n141.2\n233.8\ntow  (1339)\n  301.8\n132.8\n193.1\nj , h-\nTtxlta Oilers Beat\nSt Louis FUert\nSixth in a Row\nTULSA. Okla., March 10.\u2014Soaring\ntheir eighth eon*scutlve victory hen\nlast night, the Tulsa OHera trotmced\nth* Bt. Louis Pliers by a lop-sided\n\u2022cor* 13 to-8. It was the Missouri*!-\nsixth defeat In a torn by the Okla-\n(MflTE-POORMAN\nBIG TUNNEL WILL\nTAKE ABOUT YEAR\nBig 4000-Foot Adit to Be Followed by Crosscut to\nCut Six Veins\nUNE UP\nSt. Lo\u2014a\u2014Malstead. seaborn,\nHeadley, Cameron, Bolleau.\nSub*\u2014Metcalfe, Powley, Acosts.\nTula* \u2014 McCuster, Trapp, araham,\nKeats,   Sh*pherd,   Miner.\nSubs\u2014Lafnnce, Cook, Johnson, Wake-\nford, Moran.\nCANADIENS AND\nCOUGARS CANNOT\nBREAK THE TIE\nSMITH AND FOX WILL\nUSE LATEST METHODS\nCompany    to    Renew    Water\nLilies; No Mill Work Until\n1   the Ore Is Opened\n1* on the upper side of ths\nroad out of Neleon   a\nbum 160 long to c\ndump  sit*  beside\nof 75 tana capacity,\nor earlier, tb* enw\n15 men, and tunnel\nfrom    th*\nstripped and fswd lsst\nan open cut wa* mad* __\nThis _!l*H_L*!M.v?*%__^S(1l*4\nth\u00bb work\nor\u2014son\ncal\nCEMENT LEADS\nMONTREAL BOARD\nFor First Time in Months International Nickel Second;\nPapers Strong\nMONTREAL, March 10.\u2014With the exception of a wave of buying In a\nnumber of selected Issues, In reflection\nof spectacular developments, the Montreal stock exchange In Saturday's brief\nsession continued ln the dull and Irregular manner of recent markets.\nPor the first time in months. International Nickel failed to lead ln activity, that position going to Canada\nCement, while Nickel came second with\na turnover of 5700 abares. The stock\nmoved within an extremely narrow\nprice range, and closed % lower at\n62. Camada Cement and Lyall Construction both .gave firm and active\ndisplays. Cement had a turnover of\n8270 Shares and cldscil -4 hlgber at 34.\nLyall had sales totalling 3115 shares\nand closed at 83, for a net gain ot\none point, after touching the new\nhigh .0\/   65.\nThe paper stocks were quiet, but for\nthe most part firm. Abitlbi was steady\nat 43; Brompton touched the new high\nof 49, and closed at 43'., for a net\ngain of V_ point. Canada power &\nPaper was unchanged at 30 and Wayegamack sold up two polnta at 84.\nGRAIN SHORTS BUY\nSELVES FROM HOLE\nTheir  Frantic Bidding Shoots\nUp Wheat and Corn Prices\nin Chicago Pit\nCHICAGO, March 10.\u2014wheat prices\nran up Uke a steeplejack Saturday\nand corn followed ln quick order.\nSpeculators discovered they had sold\nthemselves Into a hole, and that to\nget out befon the week-end they had\nbid against each other at such a lively\nrate as to force a sharp Increase In\nvalOes.\nClosing \u2014heat was strong IH to lc\nto a bushel net higher. Cora finished T\u00bbc to lftc up. Oat* unchanged\nto %c advance and provisions un-\nchanged to a rise of 12 cents.   .\nTOW YORK, March 10-stock prloe*\nwere churned about In erratic fashion\nSaturday but, except ln a handful of\nSlues, the day's net changes wen\nnegligible. Th* market opened with \u00bb\nsurprising outbunt of strength, turned\nreactionary ln the laat hour, and then\nmade Irregular recovery.\nCall money was not a direct factor\nIn today's market because the Prlday\nnt* curie* oyer the week-end, but\nCredit condition* codtlhueti to receive\nwidespread attention In brokerage and'\nbanking house comment. Retention\nof the 4V4 per cent rediscount nt* br\ntbe San Francisco federal reserve bank\ngenerated some bullish enthusiasm on\nthe theory that the New York federal\nreserve bank would not increase lt*\ncharge until all othtr central bank\nrates had been brought to the 6 per\nCent level.\nHowever, the recent decline In sterling, threatening a further drain on\nOreat Britain's gold, Is likely to result ln another Increase ln the Bank\nof England rate, which undoubtedly\nwould draw foreign funds from New\nYork.\nMost traders confess they an completely at sea regarding the credit\nsituation and outlook. While many veteran observers point out that stocks\nyielding 3 to 4 per oent or lees can\nnot be carried Indefinitely on margin\nat the recent call rates of 6 to 13\nper cent, stock market operators continued to show defiance to the fedenl\nreserve authorities In their effort to\ncurb securities Inflation by bidding up\nmany Issues to new high records.\nRsdlo Issues were again the spectacular feature. Th* old .stock fluctuated\nwidely and cloaed at' 46 i. The new\nstock closed at 93, up 3 point* net.\nWestern Union touched a new high\nrecord at 220%, broke to 213 and rallied to ait}, up 3.4 net.\nKennecott Copper was heavily bought\nIn tbe late trading, touching a new\nhigh record at 99>,i. Miami Copper\nadvanced 3 points. On tbe other\nhand, Anaconda fell 2 Vi points, Greene\nCananea IH, Andes i<' and Amertcsn\nSmelting uid Cerro.de Fast*, yielded\nfractionally. '<-\nWide swings took place ln some of\nthe higher priced specialties. Adams\nExpress and Burroughs Adding Machine\nJumped M and UK points respectively,\non one sale each. Brooklyn Union Oas\nsoared 7*4 points and Croosley Radio,\nCommercial Investment Trust, Mandel\nBros., Allied Chemical, Gtllet Safety\nRazor and People's Gas moved up 3\nto 5,4   points.\nBaltimore and Ohio, International\nCombustion, International Harvester,\nSouthern Railway and Vanadium were\nconspicuously heavy.\nAllied Chemical  287\u00abj 284    d87>4\nAmerican  Can  123H lie.4 119\nAmerican Loco  112'\/, no    11214\nAmer. Smelt. & Refln. 116*4 US    115\nAmer. Steel Indus    70      63%   68*.i\nAmer.   Telephone   ... 214% 214'\/_ 214'.,\nAmer.   Tobacco      62      60      60\nAnaconda     158% 166*4 166*4\nAmer. & For. Power  10914 108     108%\nBaltimore _ Ohio ...   133% 139     139\nBethlehem .Steel   .... 104% 100% 104*4\nCanadian  Pacific   .... 248% 346% 34744\nChile  Copper     114% liaVflHW-\nChrysler     111% 109% 111\nDupont     183% 180% 1(0%\nNo Score Until Overtime, When*\nEach Team Gets a Single\nMarker\nI mines\nfinanced\nls\nDETROIT, March 10\/\u2014The last game\nof th* sesson between the Detroit Cou-\ngsrs and Montreal Canadiens here tonight proved to be tho moot wnsa-\ntlonal of the year, ending In a tie, a-1,\nafter an overtime period that never\nhaa been excelled here for enter\u2014In-\nment. Nearly 14,000 people, a record\nNational league crowd, saw the battle.\nHowie Moren* scored for the Cana-\ndlenE with three minutes to play on a\nIon* rush.' Reg Noble got a break\nand slipped a ahot from along-side tk*\nnst to beat the -goalie.\nSummary:\nPint period\u2014No score.\nSecond period\u2014-No soore, .'.;\u25a0-.\nThird period\u2014No score.\nOvertime period\u20141, Canadians, Moren*, 7:30; 8, Detroit, Noble, lrOO. -    -\nLINEUP\nDetroit Canadlent\nOoal\nDolson .,    Halnsworth\nDefense\nNobis  _...-.    Smantha\nBrydge    .'.    Burke\nCenter\nConnors  \u2014    Leplne\n.    _    Wing\nCboper   ...'.     Oagne\nHay  _. _   Jollatt\n\"Bufi-rtitute*\nHerbert*     Mondou\nOreen   Morenz\nTraub     _.-.__**.\u201e' Leduc\nAurle  -    O.  Mentha\nBrophy  \u201e _.._....... Patterson\nDaley __\nWith totting cjf a contract to H. R.\nSmith of Vancouver ahd F. H. Fox of\nNelson, for a 4000-foot adit tunnel\nInto tha. \u00a3*se of th* mountain, to\n\u25a0ber th* avenue for deep development\nfor the company's - six gold-bearing\nveins, Oranite footman ool\n>rganl*ed last y**r and now\nfor a year* development\nlaunched upon It* big program for\nattacking    Its    numerous    ore    bodies\nAside from paying for the big tunnel,\nwhich ls to be seven by eight feet,\ntbe company'* only other current outlay will be fore replacing th* flume*\nfrom Sandy and Eagle creeks with\nwire  wound   wooden  piping.\nWhen the big tunnel I* completed, at\na point under the approximate center\nof the veins, a year or so from now, lt\nls exported that monar will be ln the\ntreasury tor Ute crosscut to cut al.l\nthe veins at depth, and to raise on\ntlw Oranite ore to the old workings,\nthrough which the Oranite and Poor-\nman, which are connected by their\nworkings will be drained, making\navailable exteh\u00abiYe sloping ground already existing. Engineers' report, show\n\u2666280.000   worth   of or*   now   blocked\nSt. Francis Xavier\nQuebec Champions;\nNow for Maritimes\nMONTREAL, March 10.\u2014TO* St.\nFrancois Xavier Intermediate* will\ncarry the hopea of Quebec Into the\nAllan cup playdowns. The Saints won\nthe provincial amateur hockey championship when they held Victoria*,\nsenior Quebec champions, to a one-all\ntie ln the second game of a home\nand horn* series here today. >\nThe winners won tbe first encounter\nS to 3, thus taking the round by a\nscon of 6 to 4.\nSt. Francois leaves here for Halifax\ntomorrow morning when they, play\nBathhurst, maritime champions.\nstarts from the\n1 between the\nPoomuin and Oranite veins. The crosscut to follow later, and whloh may\nbe driven either by the company, or\nby contract, wilt go both ways; to the\nright or lower side of the mountain\n-rutting successively the Poorman, Hard-\nup and Harscarbble veins, and to the\n-oft or upper side, the Granite, Greenhorn and Beelzebub veins. Five of\nthese veins have been independently\n--rveloped, all yielding pay ore: while\ne older ones have been mined at\ntervals over a period of 80 years or\nso. Th*. deep work will give 600 feet\ndepth below the bottom of the 1000-\nfoot Inclined shaft on the Granite\nvein, and proportionately ln the case\nof the othen.\nIRIlANraiNO THE JOB\nMr. Fox, who ia the working partner In the contract tunnel driving,\nmoved out Thursday to the mine,\nwhich 1* four mile* below Nelson, his\nof   five\ntion and ftom Use flrat\nwul b* tt solid reck.\nWhile it may tak*\nor tbre* month* to\naooo-foot\nof the exl\u00bbHn(\navailable for L_\npoass.   Th* mill _\ntrlcil  and   water power .\nand both kinds of power may\nof over ION cubic feet of \u00ablr,\nneartr\/ a *Mrn of drill*.\nEQUIPMENT\nj tasttt. tttt. frm eipeote\nto make 10 to 12 feet per day, tha\nreck being granite, and he ftgutt*\nthat' the tunnel should b* complied\nIn IB or 14 months. \u2014i* **r\ntllation will be taken ln\u00abo__\nin wire wound pipe* foot inj\nand electr&lly thUets boo*\nwill be Installed at mural*'.\n00 or 400 fact, a mechanical n\nwill be used, and the ws*te rocl\nDe brought out by electrical haulage,\na   storage   battery   locomotive   having\n8T   EQU\nB\npurchased foe this work.\nIn  going  In,  the  tunnel win\n-trough the Golden Queen claim,\nbased last summer from Oeorge\nnil, and at 1600 teet should cut this,\nrein, which has surface gold Bhowlags\nof  Its own,  the  Golden  Queen   sn\n-longing to a different vein system\n\"m   tbe  Oranlte-Poormsn  series,   *\n. Unless Important ore should be opened In this vein, or In Mind veins\nnot now known the company doe*\nnot expect to touch the mill until the\ntevelopment program outlined \"bring*\ntn\" tbe ore of the Granlte-Poorn\u2014n\n3eriee.\nFred A. Starkey, resident manager\nof the company, states-that stock sub-\nrcrlpUon* are being received from.I*--:\n-lous   residents   through   the   Granite,\narea who are familiar with  the property from having worked in it.\nIt ls the general belief In the district that the preeent program, whljrh\nwill  give  great  depth  on  all  the  q''\n-odles, -nine tbe ore from below wlfl\nout pumping and hoisting necesai\nunder all previous operations del _\nUie ore -at the mill without aerl\ntrams, and use large set'\nwill result ln one of thej\nnent operations of  the\nnrer\n*rhe ,.\nulldlngs In ahaj\n-upancy.   ~\nmen   going\nJob a day earlier, to put the camp\ndings  In shape for  Immediate oc-\nFrom the tunnel site, which\nLogan &B-y\nPrivate Wire   '\nSTOCKS     BONDS     COTTON\nDRAIN\nMEMBERS\nNew Tork, Montreal and Vancou\nver   stock   Exchange*.     Chicago*\nBoard of Trad*. Winnipeg Oraln\nExchange and other leading ex-\nchaaitta\nOFFICES:\nVanoouver, Spokane and Se*ttlr I\nST.  PAUL   DEADLOCKED\nWITH   KANSAS\non\nWINNIPG GRAIN\n78%\nFlelschman  Co.\nOreat Weet. Sugar\nOeneral Motors ...\nOeneral Electric ..\nOranby\t\nOreat. North, pfd.\nHowe   Sound\t\nHudson  Motors       90%\nInterboro Rapid Trans. 63%\n73%   78\n37%    38\n83%   81%    81%\n239     33\u00abi 337\n90%   90       90%\n109     109     108\n76       74%    76\n89%    89%\n63%\nMkrch   10.\u2014Butter, No.\n1   pasteurised,   43%c.\nEggr-Storag*   firsts,   41c;   Mcond*,\n\u20227c:   extras.   61   to   63c;   fresh   firsts,\n*\u00bb to ate.\nAt * meeting of the board of dlrec\nton  Pf  Silver Leaf   Mines held  Pri\nday  purchase of an  aerial tram tttt\narranged,   the   deal   being   completed\nSaturday.\nThe tram will connect the tower\nRover tunnel with bunker* to be\nerected at the Oreat Northern track\ncrossing Anderson creek. In Kelson's\noutskirts and will have a length of\napproximately 1800 feet.\nA crew Of 10 men ls new at the\nproperty, \u00bb portion sacking on, and\ntM teet Mac \u00ab develop^*!** W0\u00ab*.\nInspiration Copper 63% 61 61%\nInternational   Nickel    62%   61%   OVA\nMack. Truck  107% 106% JO1)\nMarland    OU        39%    39%    39%\nMiami Copper      48%    47%    48%\nKelly    Springfield       20%   19%   30\nKennecott Copper ....   99%   99%   99%\nKresge   8.   S    63%    63       63%\nNational Pow. It Light 68%   66%   67\nNash   Motors     107% 107    107\nNorthern   Pacific   ... Ill     109% 109%'\nPackard   Motors    140% 139% 189\nPhlUipa  Pete       38%   38%   38%\nRadio Corporation .... 484 446 461\nShell Union Oil .... 26% 36% 36%\nStandard  OU   Calif.    68%   67%   68 M,\nStandard Oil N. J 49%   49%   49%\nStewart Warner   132% 136% 136%\nStudebaker           88%   M%   87%\nTexas Corp.      60%   68%   60\nTen* Orulf Sulphur     73%   73      73%\nUnion Pacific  224% 338% 334%\nUnited States Rubber 61 68% 69%\nUnited States Steel 187 ,186% 186%\nWillys   Overland   ...   ao%   37%   30\nYellow Truck      41%   41      41%\nExchange-\nMarks, 33.69.\nKronen, 96.64.\nST. PAUL, Minn.. March 10.\u2014St.\nPaul and Kansas City remained deadlocked for third place ln the American\nHockey association by Playing a 1-1\novertime tie here last night.\nKansas City has finlahed Ita league\nschedule while Bt. Paul hss two games\nto play. The Saints need only a tie\ngame to gain one point and thus\nnose out Kansas City for third place\nand a berth ln th* league play-off\nseries for the championship.\nUNE UP:\nBt. Paul \u2014 Stark, Oohen, Nicholas,\nDeJardlnes, Wilson, Ingram.\nSubs\u2014MUUgan, Romner.. Rennle, Con-\nroy,  Capen.\nKansas City\u2014Byrne, McLeod, Dutkow-\nokl, Mitchell, Scott, Dunfleld.\nBub* 1 lit Campbell, MCCormlck,\nRanger, Munro.\n\u2014SlOBIElbRIPNG *<B\u2014I\nSTOCK BROKERS\nU COMMERCE BLDG., VANCOUVER, B. C     Phones: Sejr. Jlll-W\nHead 0trice: TORONTO\nMembers: Standard atock A Miffing Eichsnge, Toront*.\nVsncouver Stack Exchange and other Exchanges\nComplete Advisory and Statistical Service\n\u25a0 ,,i   On Mining Stocks\nOUR OWN PRIVATE WIRE SYSTEM FROM COAST TO COAST\nI\nWhen\n\u25a0\n\u00ab..t'\nDULUTH HORNETS\nSTUNG   BY   MILLERS\nDULUTH, Minn., March 10.\u2014Duluth\nfinished Its home season here last\nnight by dropping a slow and uninteresting American Hockey aaaoclatlon\ngame to Minneapolis, 8 toll. Th-\nHornets were powerless before the\nsteady defense presented by the Millers,\ntogether with brilliant work by Winkler. w\nLINK UP:\nDuluth \u2014 Turner, Davie*, William*,\nKoskl, Merrill, Bergle.\nSubs\u2014Thorstelnson, Goodman, Morrison, Jamleson.\nMinneapolis\u2014Winkler, Boetrom, Benson, Oordon, Hill, Crawford.\nSub*\u2014Adams, Stanley, Garrett.\nCALGARY OIL\nAdvance  ...\u00bb 1.70\nA. P. Consol      3.90\nDalhousle     8.36\nIIHnoU Alberta * . .   1.76\nMcDougall Segur ex    4.00\nMcDougall Segur, new     2.90\nMill  City      1.70\nRoyallte    98.00\nDevenlsh    -    #1\nSpooner    3.00\nMayland      6.80\nOkalta, preferred  300.00\nCalmont     3.10\nNEW YORKER TAKES  THE f\nCANUCK SQUASH TITLE\nMONTREAL, March 10\u2014H. Rawlins,\nof New York, won the Canadian squash\nracquets champlooahlp, by defeating\nR. Powers, of Boston, In the final\nmatch here tonight. Rutin* won ln\nthree straight gamea   16-6,   164,  16-6.\nMILLIONAIRES BEAT\nLOWLY CATARACTS\n-HAMILTON, Ont., March 10\u2014Harry\nHolmes' Toronto Millionaires tightened\ntheir grip on a play-off berth ln the\nCanadian Professional Hockey league\nhen lnt night with a 3-1 verdict'over\nthe lowly Niagara Falls Cataracts.\nBATHUMI    VICTORS\nBATHUR8T,  N.  B,  Mareh   10.-8ath-\ntonight holding \"aJSj^olyES\n\u2022ertos.    They defeated thTwolnrlMW\non* to nothing  at   Halifax  Tuesday\n-        - - \u25a0 .'\nAre you setting- aside sufficient to\nsafeguard the future of yourself and\nyour loved ones?\nWhen Prosperity shines, 1st Insurance guard against the dark days of\nadversity.\n'      --..- .        '        ' '   .- ' e    ,--   ,\n*\u25a0 t f , 4\nFor Fire Insurance\nvutomobile\u2014Lite\u2014Accident and Sicknei**\u2014Plate\n>    Glau and All Other Forma of Insurance\n_   ANNABLE\nC.\nF\nMcHARDY\nW   APPLEYARD\nH\nE\nDILL\nO   BLACKW0.P\nP\nE.\nPOUUN\nW    DAW80N\n0\nFor Life Insurance\nW. APPLEYARD, Sun Life Assurance Co.\nD   BLACKWOOD, The Great Wert' life A_M_*-\naoce Co.\nH W  DAWSON, Imperial Life Assurance Co.,\nR. E. CRERAR, North American life A\u00bbsura_ce Co.\nC. F. McHARDY, Monarch Life Assurance Co.\nP. E. POULIN, North American Life Assurance Co.\nJ. R. FLEMING, Sun Life Assurance Co.\n\u25a0%\u25a0\u00bb-\nr_M-g_B\nmm\n1\n VTORS WIN\nWM BRUINS IN\n)VERT1E PERIOD\nsn,     Boston      Leader,\nores His First Goal of\nSeason to Get Lead   -\nl*ON. Mas... March 10.\u2014Ottawa\nfor* defeated Boston a to 1 here\n,d\u00bby night In an overtime NHL.\noonte*t, which wu dull and\nimost of the way. Though vlc-\n|we* vital to the Bruin*, they\n| guilty of much sloppy hockey.\nMem* took the entire first period\nup,' and midway through the\nFlank Hitct\u2014lan, the \"\"ruins'\namazed the crowd by scoring\nrat goal of the season.\nClancy scored th* Senators'\nj tally in the third. Ke dribbled\nI center Ice for some seconds snd\n| when the Bruin* were off guard,\n* long shot straight down Ui*\ninto the Boston net. Flnnl-\nut the Senators in th* lead tn the\nBe session.\nIP\nPosition Ottawa\nGoal\n.peon   .....     Council\nDefence\n -Smith\n  Clancy\nCenter\n  Nighbor\nWing\n,-.   Wire*\n    Flnnlgen\nSubstitutes\nIfnd  _.... Lamb\nBar-    Shields\n|r k - ..,...'.   Giosvenor\n    Louey\n|UBV\n: period\u2014MO score.\njjnd period\u20141, Boston, Hltchman,\nrd.   period\u20142,    Ottawa,    Clancy,\nIrtbne  period\u20143, - Ottawa,  Finne-\nROONS LOSE\n'FIFTH IN ROW;\nAMERICANS WIN\nGoal   Margin   Aids   New\n<rk T.eam to Keep in Running for Ton Place\njNTREAL, Que., Mareh 10.\u2014The\n\u25a0-_1 Maroons are still, slipping. At\n\"orum Saturdsy night they lost\nstraight Na-ddhal Hockey league\n| when the New York Americans\nI through to a 3-2 victory in a\ni that ran the gamut from the\nhockey seen here this season to\ntrilling work by both teams.\nwin kept alive the Americana'\nthat they will overhaul Canadiens\nInlsh   the regular scheduled sea-\nn first place.\nUP:'\nroons Americans\nGoal\n*_clt    Worters\nDefense\nf.     Conacher\nJn   Relse\nCenter\n  Burch\nWing\n \u201e  Broadbent\n - Conner\nSubstitutes\n,&st\\ ^..^i,.....,.. Stoipson\nm      :.;.....'..... JUtaes\ni\u00abK_    Sheppard\niier ,:  White\n    McVeigh\nHoott   Dye\nBit period\u20141. Americans, Simpson,\nVend   period\u20142,   Maroons,   Smith,\nI   3,   Americans.   Conner,   1:46;   4,\nI'lcsns, McVeigh, 10:40; S, Maroons,\nAl,\nperiod\u2014No score.\niior Rep Hoop\ni Team to Practice\nfson's senor B representative hoop\n|, will, turn out at the.new junior\n\\ school gym at 7 ' o'elook tonight\n$_   half   Dour   of   signal   practice.\nofficials   h\u00bbve   stressed   ths  lm-\nwnee  of   having   the   players  out\nB  at,- 'he   starting   time   as   the\nIP must be vscited lor the opening\nj Of the second half ot the senior\n|||y leatuc at 7:30\n> players worked out Friday night\n_\u2022 the ooaching of A. A. Pagdln,\nfitly appointed team coach and\nBin. They wtie n flno shape snd\nfjn lined up several  plcyers   *ho\n.n out tonight.\nt players are: \"Scotty\" Notman and\nHy\" Martin, center; Al Jeffs, Ken\nrorvfile Shugg and 'Roddy*' Mc-\n' forwards; \"Deacon\" Hanna, Bill\ni Gordon Roynon and Dave Lan-\nguards.\nV1CS   WIN\nPRELIM   ROl Ml   17-*\nIHTRBAL,   Que.,   March   W.\u2014Vlo-\nwon   the   right   to   enter   the\ni junior hockey playdown* by\nthe Sherbroo\u2014_ district win-\nJ StansUad   college,   9   to   0.   on\nIday In the second game ot the\nI and home series.     Ths junior\n|won tho first gam* st Sherbrooke\n8 to 2 count, thus taking th*\nH to _\nManagers Fall\nFor Golf\nBy AL DEMAREE\n(Former Pitcher New York Giants)\nJack Sharkey, the fighter, Is' the\nlatent athlete to take up the Scottish\npastime.\nOolf ls certainly becoming the universal sport, where exponent- of every\nline of athetotics meet on a common\nground. *\nAmoung the fight managers, Leo P.\nPlynn ls ln a class by himself when\ntt comes to golf, and Buckley probably the worst.\nNearly all the ball players, with the\nnotable exception of Rogers Hornaby,\nplay golf whenever they have the opportunity, and the contagion ls fast\nspreading to the boxers, swimmers,\ntennis  players  and   track  athletes.\nBabe Ruth takes as much pride\nIn a long tee shot or am iron bhot to\nthe green as he does ln knocking cut\na home run .n a world series game.\nIt's -a greet game. Once a man\nstarts playing lt he never quits.\nOLD COUNTRY\nFOOTBALL RESULTS\nLONDON, March 10\u2014Scheduled league\nfootball games yesterday ln the British\nIsles resulted as follows:\nENGLISH LEAGUE\nFirst Division\nAston Villa l, Birmingham 2.\nBurnley 2. Derby 3.\nBury 0, Portsmouth 0.\nCardiff 3, The Wednesday 1.\nLeeds 2, Everton 1.\nLeicester 3. Manchester City 1.\nLiverpool 2, Arsenal *..\nManchester   Un.   1,   Huddersfleld   0.\nNewcastle 4, Sunderland 3,\nSheffield United 1, Bolton 1.\nWest Ham United 3, Blackburn 3.\nSecond Urvlston\nHull city 0, Clapton 0.\nMlddlesboro 0, Swansea 0.\nMlllwall 1, Notts Forest 1.\nNotts County 2, Bristol City 0.\nOldham 4, Blackpool 9,\nPortvale 8, West Bromwlch 1.\nPreston 2, Bradford 0.\nReading  1,  Grimsby  9.\nSouthampton 1, Chelsea 2.\nTottenham 1, Stoke City 0.\nWolverhampton 3, Barnsley 1.\nThird  Division\u2014Northern Section\nAcorlngton 6, Doncaster 0.\nBradford City 8, Barrow 0.\nCarlisle 6, South Shields 0.\nCrewe Alexandra 1, Soutbport 1.\nHalifax 1. Wrexham 2.\nHartlepool  1,  Ashing ton 3.   -\nLincoln   1.  Chesterfield  0.\nRotherham 4, Nelson 0.\nStockport 2, New Brighton 1.\nTranmere Rovera 5, Rochdale 1.\nWiganboro 2, Darlington 0.\nThird  Division\u2014Southern Section\nBristol Rovers 1, Bournemouth 2,\nCrystal Palace 1, Northampton 0.\nFulham 2, Southend 4.\nOilllngham 1, Brighton and Hove 1.\nNewport 2, Coventry 1.\nPlymouth o, Exter City 0.\nQueens Park 8, Merthyr 0.\nSwindon 1, Charlton 1.\nTorquay United 0, Norwich 3,\nWalsall 0, i_uton 0.\nWatford  2,  Brentford  0.\nSCOTTISH LEAGUE\nFirst Division\nAberdeen 2, Ayr United 1.\nClyde 3, Third Lanark 2.\nDundee 2, Alrdrle*. 2.\nFalkirk 2.  Cowdenbeath 2.\nHamilton 3, St. Mlrren 0.\nHearts 0, St. Jhonstone 3.\n-Umornock 4, Motherwell 2.\nqueens Park 3, Partlck Thistle 2.\nR\u2014th Rovers 1, Celtic 4.\nRangers 3, Hibernians 0.\nSecond Division\nAlbion Rovers 0, Armadale 1.\nAlloa 1, Arbroath 2.\nBathgate-Arthurlle, not played.\nClydebank 3, Bo'ness 0.\nDunfermline >, But Stirling 1,\nForfar  4,  Stenhotuemulr  1.\nKing* Park 2, Bt. Barnard* 4.\nLelth 8, Dundee United 2.\nMorton   >,   But   File   3,\nqueen of South 8, Dunbarton 0.\nNEWCASTLE HALTS\nSUNDERLAND IN\nLEADERSHIP TRY\nFifty-fire Thousand Sec Galla-\ncher   Head   Winning . God\nInto Sunderland Net\nSIXTY THOUSAND SEE\nBIRMINGHAM DO VILLA\nBradford   City   Scores   Eight\nGoals in Match with Barrow;\nFour  By   Whitehurst\nLONDON, March 10.\u2014No change at\nth* top ot th* average* wa* made by\nSaturday's matches In the, English Soccer league. 'Tb* leaders are The Wednesday, flnt dlvlaion: Mlddlesboro, second division; Northampton, third' division, southern section; and Stockport\nCounty, third division, northern section.\nThe feature match In th* tint dlvlaion ww Sunderland's battle at Newcastle. The former team were halted ln\ntheir attempt to draw cloae to th*\nWednesdsy. Plfty-flve thousand people\nwitnessed the game and got lota of\nthrills, seven goals being counted, of\nwhich Newcastle had tour. Oallacher got\ntbe winner two minutes from time,\nwhen he headed Into the Sundeiland\nnet.\nGREAT GAME AT VILLA PARK.\nSixty thousand people saw Aston\nVilla get a beating from Birmingham\nat Villa park. The first halt was open\nand even, each side scoring. The Villa\npressed after resumption but ln a\ncounter attack Crosble got a tine pass\nfrom Bt-lggs and scored ln the twentieth minute. Villa worked hard after\nthat but could not find an opening.\nA ground record was broken at\nSouthampton, where Chelsea pulled off\na neat victory by two goals to cue.\nTwenty-four thousand were ln attendance. The pensioners were the stronger\nteam ln the second half, ln which all\nthe scoring took place.\nCrystal Palace again demonstrated\nthat they are a very powerful teem, by\ndefeating Northampton by the one goal\nscored. The tally was earned 'by Butter In the second minute of play.\nThe star tn the match between Bradford City and Barrow was Whitehurst.\nwho scored 11 goals last week. His\ncontribution to Bradford Clty'a eight\ntallies Saturday was four.\nBLACKHAWKS GET\nONLY COUNTER IN\nGO WITH PIRATES\nRipley    Scores    on    Rebound\nWhen Goalie Miller Stops\nShot  hy  Gottselig\nFORT ERIE, March 10.\u2014In a tame\nNational Hockey league game here Saturday night, Chicago Blackhawks defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates, 1 to 0.\nThe lone score was made by the Hawk\nace, Ripley. Johnny Oottsellg coralled\nthe puck back of the Chicago net and\nrushed the length ot the Ice to drive a\nhard one at Miller. The Pirate goalie\nmade a brilliant stop but could not\nhandle when Ripley let fly when he\nsecured tbe rebounding puck.\nLINEUP:\nChicago Pittsburgh\nGoal\nGardiner   Miller\nDefense\nTaylor     -     Smith\nWentworth   McCaffrey\nCenter\nRipley   Frederickson\nWing\nArmour   Milks\nMarch   -  Darragh\nSubstitutes\nCouture       DrufY\nOottsellg  Taylor\nIrvine   Bouchard\nCannon \t\nSummary:\nFirst period\u2014No *oore.\nSecond   period\u20141,   Chicago,   Ripley.\n15:00.\nThird period\u2014No score.\nSENIOR, JUNIOR\nHOOPERS RESUME\nLEAGUE TONIGHT\nSenior Games at Junior High\nTonight;      Intermediates\nResume Wednesday\nHigh school bosketeere will battle\ntonight with the Wolves, and the\nMcLearles will tackle the Fairvlew\nsquad, opening senior B men's games\nIn the second halt of the Nelson Basketball association's league schedule\nat the new Junor high school gym.\nFairvlew and the high school will\nopen the junior division at the Oent-\nral school tonight at 8:30. Th* senior games at the junior high school\nwill get under way at 7:30 and 8:30.\n\u2022hie Intermediate division will resume play Wednesday, when Fairvlew\nand the Wolves will clash at 8:30 at\nth* high school.\nWednesday will also see two more\nsenior B games snd a junior game.\nOld Timers will battle Hlgb School and\nChecker Boys will tangle with the McLearles In tbe senior .games at the\njunior high school, while Pirates and\nCallles will battle In the junior game\nat the Central school.\nTravelling With Nelson Cubs\nEn Route Calgary; Much Music;\nChallenge Canadiens to Marbles\nCRANBROOK, B.C., March 10.\u2014(In\nroute to Cftlfftry wltb tine Nelton Cube)\n\u2014Pull* of pep uul optimism, 10 members of the Kelson Cube hockey teem\nere the life of the train rolling C*l-\ngery-ward tonight. Thus far there\nhM   not   been   ft   dull   moment\nThe boya are not wanting for entertainment. Bealdee being hockey\nplayers, this bunch of 'union, British\nColumbia champions, are an accomplished lot when, lt cornea to music.\nNo less than three banjo-ukelelee art\namong the crowd, and there are some\nreal mouth organ players,\nTraveling in a private parlor cur -\nthe boys to the aceompanlnieiit\nof the ukee and mouth organ*,\nabout exhausted aU the old-time\ntunes, even Including \"Moonlight\nand Banes.\" The dub musicians\nare Wilfred LautiU, (art and Orcll\nKiim-den and Walter (Jltlette.\nGeorge Marshall Has definitely\nproven that as well as carrying the\npuck, he can carry a tune. Aboard\nthe Nasoakln the boya surrounded\nthe piano and made merry. It\nwas Indeed a happy throng of\nyoung athletes.\nCALOARIANg HEAVY\nThe Cube aro taking the Calgary\ngames seriously and hope to send home\nfavorable reports on Tuesday and\nThursday. Advance information received on the train la that the Cal-\ngartona are a much, heavier aggregation than the Cube. \"Bigger they\nare the heavier they fall,'' say the boys.\nEverywhere along the route the boys\nare being wished tbe best of luck,\nshowing the interest taken tn the\nKootenays in the Junior series.    Beat\ntwo  out cf  three  game*  will  decide\nt_\u00bb. aeries.\nMdle Poulin's Calgary Canadiens.\nare recognized ln Alberta as the premier Junior aggregation ef years: Tbey\n\u2022neve gone through the season without\na loas. Thsy played 11 league games\nand scored three shutouts. One game\nwas a draw.\n* (oalng Into Yahk tha.boys got\na real thriller when the Hpokane\ninternational and the ('. r. k.\ntrain en which the Cuba yere\ntravelling bad a rare for about two\nin lies. The Spokane, backed' by\nJoe Ramsden, won out. \u2014\nTEAM  CR08-9E*  LAKE\nThat Moyle lake was a solid auu>_\nof Ice of great thickness was demonstrated to passengers on the eaatbound\ntrain today when a team of horses\npulling a loaded sleigh was observed\ncrossing the lake. Indications at the\nold mining city are tbat considerable\nIce has been cut. Steady rain does\nnot seem to bave weakened the Ice\nany.\nCliff McKlnnon. express messen-\nger on the westbound train, in\"\nformed the Cubs that there was no\nlee In Calgary, but undaunted,\nthe Cubs pvomptly tamed a challenge to the Alberta, champs at\nmarble-*.\nRain, rain all along the lint so far,\nand very little enow left ln this vicinity.\nSo far Joe Ramsden and Jlmmle\nCurran, ln charge of the British Columbia champions, have had little\ntrouble with the players, the hardest\nJob of all, they report, ls keeping the\nboys well supplied with pork chops, etc.\nALL BADMINTON\nCHAMPS BUT ONE\nARE DIFFERENT\nMrs.   Coke   of   Toronto   Only\n1928 Champion to Retain\nHer Title\nVANCOUVER, B. C, March 10.\u2014Mrs.\nE. F. Coke of Toronto was the only\nchampion of 1928 who retained a title\nin the finals of the Canadian badminton championships, concluded Saturday afternoon at the Vancouver\nclub. Bhe defeated Miss Eileen George\nof Vancouver, 11-4,, llr_. Mrs. Coke's\nexhibition was one of the big features\nof the three-day tourney.\nThree titles came to the coast and\ntwo go cast.\nJack Purcell of Ouelph, Ont.. defeated tho champion. Jack Underbill,\nVancouver, ln the men's singles, 15-8,\n14-7, 15-7. Purcell now holds the J.\nK. L. Ross challenge cup for the first\ntime, while Mra. Coke will hold the\nOttawa challenge cup. .\nVAN-TOW Ml   (URL'S    MM.\nMiss Bileen George < and Miss Milliner, Vancouver, created a surprise by\ndefeating the national Champions, Mrs.\nCoke and Mrs. Boone of Toronto, 18-13,\n6-15, 15-12, thereby winning the Montreal challenge cup.\nJack Mulr and Noel Radford, Vancouver, played championship-brand badminton to defeat Jack Purcell and Dr.\nCramer ot Ouelph ln the men's doubles\n11-16, 16-9, 16-7, earning the Quebec\nchallenge cup.\nMiss Eleen Oeorge and Jack Underbill, Vancouver, defeated Mr. and Mrs.\nJack Mulr, Vancouver, for the mixed\ndoubles title and the Toronto challenge\ncup, 15-9, 15-6.\nIn consolation finals Miss L. Mowutt,\nMo'htreal, won ladles' singles, defeating\nMrs. Gordon Pin. Winnipeg. 11-6. 11-0,\nand the Misses Lafferty and Dupre,\nQuebec, defeating Mrs. Gooderbam aud\nMiss Emsley, Toronto, 15-10, 16-12.\nCOUGARS BEATEN\nBY MAPLE LEAFS\nToronto  Tickled  When  Home\nTeam Blanks Detroit; Probable Playoff Opponents\nMlsa WEIB WINS EAST\nFLORIDA OOLF TITLE\n8T. AUGUSTA, Pla., March 10.\u2014Ulss\nmen van Weir, Chicago, won tbt lsst\nFlorida foil championship by defeating\nMrs. Helen* Hitches et New York, 3 and\n2, to tt* final* flaturaar,\nTORONTO, Ont.. Mareh 10.\u2014Au Indication ot what Toronto Maple Leafs\nmay do ln the National Hockey league\nplayoffs was given hens Saturday night\nwhen the locals decisively detested Detroit Cougars, 3 to 0. The teams probably will finish in third places in their\nsections and meet ln the playoffs, so\nToronto's exhibition ot their clear superiority was particularly pleasng to\nlocal fans.\nScoring twice In the first period,\nand again tn the third, the locals had\ncommand ot the game at all I time*.\nThey should really have several markers, but Dolson's spectacular work lu\nthe Cougar cage thwarted them.\nLINEUP:\nDetroit Toronto\nOoat\nDolson   , _, ..Grant\nDefense\nNoble    -    Day\nBrydge -\u2022 *. Horner\nCenter\nCooper  Blair\nWing\nHay   ,.\u2014   Bailey\nConners   Cox\nSubstitute*\nTraub  Duncan\nAuric  -  Cotton\nBrophy     Hrime\nDaley  -  Smith\n Chabot\nSUMMARY;\nFirst period\u20141, Toronto, Cox, 13:10.\ni, Toronto, Horn, 4:11.\nSecond period\u2014No score.\nThird period\u20143. Toronto Cox (Blair)\n11 Aft\nHigh River Takes\nLead on Blairmote\nin Alberta Series\nHIOH RIVBR,, Alt*.. March 10.\u2014High\nRiver Flyers, senior champions of Alberta, defeated Blalrmore 3 tn 1 here\nSaturday night in the first game ot\nthe provincial series. The.second game\nwill be played ln Blalrmore Mondsy\nnight, and If the Intermediate champions win, a third game will be played\nat Nanton cn Thursday.\nUAKIllllllol l.lis   MAKE\nJUNIOR    SEMI-FINAL\nTORONTO, Ont., March 10\u2014Marl-\nborougha of Toronto won their way Into the Junior O. H. A. seml-fliials by,\ndefeating Young Bangers, Toronto, 2-1\nhere Saturday afternoon. The two finished tn a 3-3 deadlock Friday night,\nand the Saturday victory gives the\nMsrlboroughs a 6-4 verdict on the\nround.\nHOCKEY PLAYDOWN\nDATES ARE FIXED\nBY THE OFFICIALS\nNelson Cubs Play at Caii*u7\nTuesday and Thursday; Winners Play in Saskatchewan\nABBOTT FINALS AFTER\nMANITOBA    PLAY\nWestern  Finalists Meet Winners of the Winnipeg-\nThunder Bay Series\nREOINA,    Bask..    Mareh    10-Jack\nHamlllon  of thl* city,   lh*  vice-president of the C. A. H. A., and the officials  in charge  of the  western  Canada    playdowns    tonight    announced\nthe dates for the Junior playoffs for\nthe  Abbott  cup,   the  western  Canada\nchampionship and  the right to meet\nthe winners ot the eastern honors to\nToronto  for   the   O.   H.   A.   Memorlsl\ntrophy and the Dominion  title.\nNelson   Cubs,   British   Columbia\ni iiainpions, meet the Calgary Canadiens,  Alberta  champions,  at  Calgary en  March  in and   14.    The\nwinners    play    the    Haas\u2014tchewan\nwinners,   either   Reglna   Batts   or\n.saskatoon on March IB and lt.\nManitoba champions. Winnipeg Elm-\nwoods,   play  In   Kenora   or  the   lake\nheads   on   March    15,   and   back   In\nWinnipeg on March 18.\nWESTERN  FINALS  MARCH  20, \u00ab\nThe Abbott cup finals for the west-\nem Canada Junior championship and\nthe right to play In tbe O. H. A.\nMemorial cup finals wtu be played ln\nWinnipeg cn March 20 and 23. the\nwinners cf the Winnipeg-Thunder Bay\naerie* meeting the western finalist*.\nThe senior Allan cup game scheduled\nhere for next Saturday night between\nPort Arthur and the Saskatchewan\nchampions, either the Reglna Vic*\nor Moosomln. has been advanced a day,\nand will be played on Friday night,\nMarch 15.\nTohiB at Toronto\nStill Billiard King;\nNearly Doublet Quimt\nMOOT-tAL. Uttah 10_i-lM\u00bb \u00ab_-*.\u00ab\not Toronto retained his tttl* ss Veo-\nfetsional Bngllah bUllejrl nlH-MjW\nwhen he \u00ab_*d his BOOO-POll- match\nwith Jen-* Qulnn ot attmueal ansttte\nday night with a lead of \u00bb1* j^^H\nover th* challenger. Th* M-\u00bb etnamt\nwas:    TohW.  toss.:  Qui*\".  \u00ab\u2022*\u00bb\u2022'\nTothlU today expimed a annxn ,|*\u00bb\nmeet Irnest A. Lelth. ntcnxtmei, a\nformer champion, to a BIOWjJ*\ngame,   TothlU. oocodlag   ld0\u00bb  potata.\nIROQUOIS FALLS WW. ^^\nMEET TOBOSM TJ_\u00abrrr\nTORONTO, Ont., March 10.\u2014\u00bb\u2022\u00bb\u2022*\u2022>\nlng -Itobener Oreen Shirt*, l\u00bbt\u00ab_\u00bb-\ndiat* O. H. L. chsmplons, t to 1. h*r\u00bb\nSaturdiy *ft\u00abnoon, Inxpiol* Fall* *\u00bbOB\nthe right to _\u00bb*t UalwMltT of Torr\nonto, --or O. H. A. Utt* ho_*r* to\nthe All\u2014t Cup pl*\u00bb-4own.\nTh* Northern Ontario Hockey \u2022\u2022*_>-\nelation* senior cha_*lon* matt, tb*\nrovmd 4-1 m Kite\u2014war ha-l w\u00abw -*\"1\nln th* tint gam* Thursday.\n\u2022EJLMWOOD   TEAM  TO _____*_\nFLAT FOB MAMtfl\u00bb\u00bb\nWINNIPEG. Man., March IO,\u2014\"**\nElmwood Million*!\u2014*, city cb\u2014WHon*.\nQualified laat night to repr***ni Man' \"\nitoba tn th* Memort*! cup pl*y down*\nhere for the third cotasecuttve **M6\u2014,\nby defeating Mlnnedo**\u2014BBly Jim***)\n11 to 0, ln * one-sided \u2014cture. Ts_\"\nlocal   tenn  wa*  never extended.\nNurrni lt Reinstated\nand Celebrates With\nCountryman by Winning\nNEW YORK, March 10\u2014Paavo Nurml, greatest of Finland's many runners, was reinstated to good standing\nby the registration commission of the\nMetropolitan association, A. A. U. Saturday, and celebrated his return to competition by winning, with his countryman, Ova Anderson, a two-mile two-\nman team race at the seventh regiment games last  night.\n\u2022u\nBRITISH;\nSUBJECTS;\n> who arrived In Canada htlata\nJune (.th 1928\nmay bring their\nWIVES\n\u2022nd\nFAMILIES\nCANADA\nm\n\/PSB\ne\\>\n,  (children under IT year* Ir**)\nChildren over 17 year*\n$50 each\nAp-fltw to\n6- Hastings Se. Wert\nVancouver, B.C\ntsr Any Ssessmiltip Aim,\nCUN\/VRD\n_*_-__.<\"ANADIAN Sf PA Hr\n,.f>\n-\nbl\n|tl .2-tV \u00ab2S^ im_- _r^\nthe CHALLENGER...J*fr\nall these\nP| records....\nV- tit.\nWide Rang* of Colon\nat No Extra Coat\n*840\nAND UP\nr. O. B. Wttasar\ntanas extra\n('_____: h,SS40. MW\u2014W**,\nSK40. Ph.\u00ab_on, t*40i (_\u2014V\nK(w*kn_n*UMUI,M7J(\n\u25a0 ndsrd Sects*. *9*Oi\n1\u00bb- __-_.\u00bb10W. RaU-\nll.r, 110251 Coa\u00bb\u00abItlbU\nCoope. $10*0.\nStandard BqulWM tm-\n_JSS \/.\nS_X1_*\u00a3?\u00abS9E-\n\u25a0\u2022 Ifrrr-r\u2014 r trtew metvW\u2014\nelectrtsltsck \u2014 c\u00bbfitroll \u2022*\n\u25a0uvrin* uKhI - all tri*ftl\n.aril chnstnittrst-ttlattd.\nduring Nation\nCHALLENGER WEEK\nest\ni> \"Vt\n;. ::\u25a0. . 1\n;\u25a0.:    P\nv :.*_\nSPEED\u2014As fast as >ou dare drive.\nRELIABILITY\u2014As long as you wish to drive at BO\nmiles per hour.\nACCELERATION\u2014From  111 to *0  lnlks  In  17 sec\nond-).\nECONOMY\u2014Over 20 miles to the gallon of gas.\nAbove we show some of\nthe local records, officially\nobserved by newspaper\nmen .which Essex (he Challenger established during;\nNationwide Challenger\nWeek. Owners here, and\nowners ljy thousands all\nover the country, have\nduplicated theae tests, or,\nat least, verified the capacity of their own EiSsex\nthe Challentjer to reproduce any or all of these\nproofs.\n-ft\nIN FAST GET-AWAY\n\u2014no car is excepted. IN\nSPEED\u2014 anything the\nroad offere up to 70 miles\nan hour. IN HILL\nCLIMBING-against\nany car you choose. IN\nAPPEARANCE-match\nit for smartness with costlier cant. IN EASS OF\nDRIVING - note\nsmoothness of motor \u2014\nease of steering\u2014readability and effectiveness of\nbrakes. IN ENDURANCE\u201460 miles an hour\nall day long is well within\nits range.\nOne million owners know\nthe special advantage! of\nthe Super-Six. They are\nbest qualified to compare\nthe Essex the Challenger.\nTo them we offer first\nopportunity to test the\nmost powerful, the largest,\nroomiest, smoothest, easiest riding\u2014most complete\nEssex ever built. But all\nmotordom must \"be astounded that even with\nseventy-six notable improvements, the price is the\nlowest in Essex history\u2014a\nprice but little above the low-\nest-pricedcaronthe market.\nSTANFORD UNTVlBamt, Cal..\nMarch 10.\u2014Xrlk Kren*. Moods giant\nof tha Stanford track and field te*m\nbroke th* world's record to tb* discus*\nthrowing Saturday with a heave ot\nl\u00abs feet BH toche*.\nWofrf. l\\\\h\\ the CHALLENGER\nAn Essex Challeng-er won the trophy offered by the Oakland, Cal., Post-Enquirer,\nfor the fastest time up Mt. Diablo. It cli imbed the 11-mile tortuous twisting trail in\n23 minutes, 43 1-5 seconds. A remarkable demonstration of its perfect balance and\nsturdy construction.\nSmedley Garage Co., Nelson, B\u00bbC.  .\nNew Cars Now on Display\n\t\n IBI ifflLBON OAlLf Nft\u00bb_,  MONDAY MOHNING, MARCH 11, 1929\nFERNIEGOLF-RS\nREDUCE DEFICIT\nOF CUB $750\n' \"\"mn   m.   \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0*,\nMake   Reduction   at   1250   in\n\u00a5__\u25a0\u2022 to Bay New Mow;\nDrive for Members\nHMI 9- CH The snnusl meeting\net test Heme Oolf and Country club\n,wa\u00bb   held   In   the   oouncil   chambers\n*lfcr\u00bb r*tirtn\u00bb president. A. B Sanborn, gave an account ot hla steward-\n\u2022hip.\nTb* Stewart Cup competition bad\nbun th* only on* to be rlayed\nthrough to completion. Th* Herchmer\nCup had been started but not lln-\nl*h\u00ab(J. Tht Uphtrdt Oup waa not\ne**S started Thla In* In accordance\nwtth th* procedure of th* prcvloui\u2022\nwar*, tb* l\u00abdl\u00ab*' oomp*tiUoos wsrs\nssttssmt mora completely.\nTO'tTiNn'   SUCCESS\nTh* CroW* N**t Oolf association had\n. ha*m the guest of tbe local club at\nttl* district tournament. Thl* waa\n**-*Q summed. Th* club (merged from\nt\u2014\u00bb venture with over 860 or. the\nright aU* of tlw ledger.\nQa tttbor day an invlsstlon tourna-\nrssmxt tost bald. There were taw *n-\ntri*\u00bb In thl* but It was, nevertheless,\na financial uccess.\nTh*. service, of Mr. Ellidge, the\nIts\u2014r-ktepar, were highly satisfactory.\nTh* equipment was In fslr shape except\n(or the newer which must b replaced.\nTh* tennis courts bad been well\nkept during the year. The regular\nexpense of tapes ahd lurfaclng wu\ngreater than -at be last gear.\n\u2022ome bunkering and lengthenlut ot\nhole* htd bees done.\nIt had not b*en wholly satisfactory\nsnttttstt the ladle*' organization In-\ncorporate wtth that of th* men. The\n\u2014die* would prefer their own association. -\u2022\u2022.'\"\nFEES DBOF\nThr fee* had dropped 1300 as compared with the previous year. Th*.\ndeficit at tb* fust of the yesr had\nb**n over HM. Vhe present deficit\nwu #\u00bb60. This wu too little reduction in th* deficit, he said.\nAa executive muting had been held\na few days previously and had drawn\nup recommendations for the Incoming\nexecutive to put before the melting.\nTh* president thanked his executive\ntor It* help and commended the excellent  serivces   of  the   Mcretary.\nJ. S. Irvln* reported for competition\ncommittee. Explaining the men'* competitions, he said the two-ball four-\n\u2022ome wu * difficult competition. Too\nmany people did not turn up to\nplay tn lt.\nNEED NEW MOWER\n8h*rwood Herchmer, giving tbe report\nof th* green committee, stated hlm-\n\u2022elf and Mr. Hayne comprised the\ncommittu. Th* course was now long\nenough, well laid out. and in good\ncondition for continued play. A n^w\nmower wu needed, u the greens-\nkuper spent more time mending the\nttttrhln* than cutting grass, with *\nnew mower the rough could be kept\n\u00abut end rronip ir* tb* playen golf balls.\nHo other expenditure wu needed oa\nthe  greens.\nTh* president called attention to the\ntact that th* mower had cost, In repair* and keeper's time, over $300,\nwhich wu a large traction of the cost\nof a new mower, *\n\u25a0. _. Stewart moved that the ex-\n\u2022\u2022eutlv* ahould be increased by two\nmen members. This was done to so\naugment the executive that it would\nen*bl* the Indies to withdraw and form\ntheir own organisation, or appoint rep-\nr-enutlm. to tht general executive\nat their option.\nTb* following officer* were elected-\nHonorary president, W. R. Wilson; honorary Tlce-prealdent, _*. L. Oates; president. Donald M. MltcheU; vice-president. Charles Bennet; members of\n\u2022ucutlvs. A. B. Sanborn, ex-pruident\ne-sfficlo, Stanford Wilson, I. K. Stewart. Sherwood Herchmer, J. S. Irvine,\n*. E. Suddaby, Dr. Kalman, F. Petty and\nJ   R.  Wallace.\nTh* tennis players WUl be askid to\n-\u2022appoint   two   representatives   to   this\nexecutive, making  18 In all.\nI    The   meeting   authorlwd   the   purchase   of   a   new   triple,   horse-drawn\n\u00a3 mower at a cut of \u00bb750.   There wa* a\ngreat deal of discussion on thl*. Some\nwanted a tractor form of mower, but\n;lt  wu  pointed  out  tbat  the  horses\nout only tb*lr teed,  which wu  not\ncomparable with th* cost of operating\na motor,    tttt executive was ordered\nto ue th*t the rough wu kept well\n.cut and oertaln fairway*  widened  eo\nWhen\nYou Come to\nThink About\nlt!\nThere are very few things\nfrom which you will get as\nmuch knowledge, interest,\npleasure and satisfaction\nas can be obtained from\nhaving a good, bright, up-\nto-the-minute newspaper\ncoming into the house\ndaily, bringing with it the\n. current happenings ot the\nday.\nThe Daily News gives\nyou the news, and gives it\nto yon first.\nSubscribe for a time and\ntry it.\na month,\nsix months.\n\u2022 year.\na week delivered\nby carrier.\nthat In future th* lost ball nulsirace\nwould he k*pt *t t ailnlmuai,\nAs a numb* of excellent players both\nman and worntn, had b**a lut tr the\nclub lut year through faasUls* removing from town, lt waa d*clded\nto put on * drive for new members\nIn view of the Initial \u00abap*n\u2014 fer\nclubs and other equipment It wu\ndecided to admit - green members to\n\u2022II prlvel*ges of th* Country Club lor\n*n* year at a special reduced fu. Othtr\nttm wlU be tbe same u lut year\nPEARCE BATTLES\nBONNERS FERRY\nTOMORROW NIGHT\nWiU Tackle Jack Berg of Sand-\npoint; May Box McCor-\nmack of Kellogg\nCELTIC DEFEAT\nROVERS, NOW IN\n!   UIE FOR SECOND\nI Falkirk    Penalized    for    Two\nGoals Yet Draws With Cowdenbeath in Weird Tussle\nDun P*srce, manatKrr-.airt'r of\nOeorge Harlow, Nelaon heavyweight.\nwul leave tonight or tomorrow morning for Bonner* Ferry, where he will\nbattle Jack Bug of Ssndpolut ln tbe\nnjaln event of a boxing card tomorrow night. Bddle Buah of Creston.\na protege of Pearce, will appear on\nthe  card  ln  the  semi-final.\n\"Chuck Snyder of Kellogg, Idaho,\nwhence Pearce bails. Is negotiating\nwith Pearce to meet Oeorge McOor-\nmack, snappy welterweight of Kellogg.\nIn a 10-round main event. If terms\ncsn b\u00ab arranged, Pearce WlU go trom\nBonners Ferry to th* Idaho city direct\nHe will bs accompanied to Bonners\nFerry and probably to Kellogg by\nGeorge Harlow.\nWILL BE COMEBACK\nIf the Pearce-McCOrmack bout Is\narranged, lt will be a comeback for\nboth battler* after a yesr of no real\ntough battles.' Pearce hu confined\nhis boxing for the past year to keeping\nHarlow in shape and battling one or\ntwo short bouts. He knocked out Mike\nScherrup in th* first round at Creston\nrecently.\nMcCormack ls battler of no mean\nabUlty. He knocked out Young Flrtro.\nwell-known welterweight, In two\nrounds; Jimmy Cottrtil of Spokane,\nwell known in Nelson, in seven rounds,\nand Jimmy Sacco, anothery widey\nknown   scrapper,   ln   six   rounds.\nBarrow Omits\nHornsby From\nAll Star Team\nGLASGOW. March 10\u2014Teams both\nat the top and bottom of the Scottish\ntltmt division soccer averages were affected by yesterday's games. Celtic,\nwho are now favorites' for the second\nplace behind the Bangers, met and\ndowned Ealth Rovers, who look doomed\nrelegation. Clyde and Hamilton Academicals improved their positions, but\nTlUrd Uuiark went back a little. Hearts\nlost on tbelr own grounds to St,\nJohnstone while Motherwell lost two\nvaluable points to Kilmarnock.\nThe meet interesting game of the\nday took place at Falkirk where the\nhome team had two goals struck off\nfor offside, missed two penalties, and\nyet managed to draw wtth Cowdenbeath, two goals all. Cowdenbeath had\na new recruit in action in Campbell,\nwho made a most promising debut by\nscoring  his. side's two tallies.\nRangers had sn easy time against\nHibernians. They scored through\nFleming.\nKelt Harris made his reappearance\nin Scottish football for the Third\nLanark but tbe old International did\nnot get a chance to shine. Hamil and\nCallags did the scoring for Third Lanark.\nMl NAl....   SCOKtS  THREE\nMcNalley, who on one occasion scored\neight goals for Arthurlle, scored three\ngoals for Hamilton Academicals against\nSt. Mlrren.\nRiley scored first for Ayr at Aberdeen,\nCheyenne equalizing und also getting\nttie winning counter.\nAlrdrle had scored two goals through\nMcDonald before Dundee made a start,\nbut Barreet enabled them to get a\npoint out  of the match.\nThe Perth men were easily the better team at Edinburgh ond Hearts, who\nad  their strongest team  ln the first\nline were a disappointment.\nKilmarnock were good winners against Motherwell though both elevens were\nunder   strength.\nQueen's Park scored their fifth successive victory when tbey beat Patrick Thistle. McCleland, two and\nChalmers had queen's goals. Both were\nchosen to play on the Scottish Amateur team which meets England at\nLeeds next  week.\nRaith Rovers fell at home to Celtic.\nBRUINS TAKE\nLEAD NOW IN\nAMERICAN RACE\nBy Defeating Rangers 3 to 2,\nThey Are Now in Preferred Position\nBy AL DEMAREE\n(Former Pitcher New York (Hunts)\nSinister Bd. Barrow, secretary and\ngeneral manager ot the N. Y.\nYankees, says that Hans Wagner ls\nthe greatest baseball player of all\ntime and I agree with him.\n\"Wagner could do more things\nbetter than Ty Cobb, whe was only\nan ordinary fielder aud thrower,*'\nsays Barrow. \"Babe Ruth Is a great\nplayer, but not In a class with\nWagner, La Jole, or Cobb.\"\nBarrow,   who   has   seen   practically\nfll  the great  teams of the  National\nand  American  leagues since the  days\nthe  Baltimore  Orioles,  names  his all\ntime lineup as follows:\nfirst  Base\u2014Hal   Chas*\nSecond Base\u2014Larry La Jole\nThird Bass\u2014Jimmy Collins\nShortstop\u2014Hans Wagner\nLeft rield\u2014Ty Cobb\nCenter Field\u2014Trts Speaker\nRight Field\u2014Babe Ruth\nCatcher - Ray Schalk\nPitchers\u2014Walter   Johnson,   Mathewsou,\nPennoclc.   -\nI agree with all of Barrow's selections except that I would name Roger\nBresnahan as the catcher and add the\nnames of Cy Young, Rube Wsddell\nand Grover Alexander to the list of\npitchers.\nWhat do you think, fans? I would\nlike to hear your views on all-star\nteams. Send your line-ups In. What\ndo y*u think of the ids* of putting\nHornby on third ln place of Collins?\nNEW YORK March 10.\u2014Boston's\nBruins took undisputed possession of\nfirst place In the American division\nof the N. H. L. tonight by detfeatlmr.\nthe  New  York  Rangers,  3   to 2.\nThe Bruins now have three game.-'\nIn which to hold the lead, while only\ntwo   are  on   the   Ranger   schedule.\nIt was the hardest and closest\nbattle of the season here.\nHarry Oliver played the leading role\nin Boston's scoring, putting his team\nahead with a goal in the first period,\nand scoring the winning tally ln the\nfinal frame.\nLINEIP\nNew York Position Boston\nOoal\nRoach   c. Thompson\nDefence\nAbel     ., _. ,.    Shore\nBourgeault     Hltchman\nCenter\nBoucher    Oalnor\nWing\nBill  Cook  ...._....._    Oliver\nBun   Cook    _   Oalbriath\nSubstitutes\nMurdoch         W.    Carson\np. Thompson  ;._  Wetland\nKeeling   Owen\nO.  Carson      Clapper\nOatmail      ,     I_ap__\nVail  \u201e ;  Klin*\nKt.MMARY\nFirst period\u20141, Boston. Oliver, 1:15;\n2, Rangers, BUI Cook, 17:10.\nSecond period\u20143, Boston, Owen,\n12:10:   4,   Rangers,   Murdoch,   6:45.\nThird period\u20145, Boston, Oliver, 3:04.\nform-et\u2014Wrounds\u2014awK4\njgtttrlaiH\nto Flayed\nHigh School Gym\nProminent    Sportsmen    Think\nGood Game; Good Foot- .\nwwt  la  Essential\nAdvertising\nGasiffied Advertising Rales    Miacellanwa for Sale\nAmong Uw many litdo r sports which\nprominent Nelson, epoiusmen have suggested could be played at the gymr*-\n\u2022*iri of th* at* Ju-ii-r nigh school\nheie Is the game of handball. TM0\n.uKgehtloii hu met with ihe favor of\nathlete*, both young and old, ft* \u00a3\ngame which provided both excrete and\n;riiereeUng competition whether played ,\nas _cratch game* or whether on in or- '\ne mi iw-d  league  bH-B.\nThe Nelaon Skskeibnll association\nhi*s already obtained the use of th*\ngun. and it la held that if a handball\nleague or etub were farmed, the school\nboard would probahlv grant an ere-\nning or mon & wpek it was thought\nthat It waa pratftbly loo late to or-\nganiM a league thia reason, but if a\nhandball was obtainable at the gym.\nmany players would (urn out for\nscratch   games.\nHandball ia considered one of the\nbest games devised for a small number\nnf players. Two ot- four people oan\nplay. II fonr play, two play on each\nHide. Handball la a highly developed\nijame and Is splendid oxer-cits, because\nit brings ail the muscles of the arms, 1\nlegs and body Into constant play.\nA  tennis ball  would  be satisfactory\nfor  play.    The  regulation  handball   ls\nibout two Inches in  diameter and  ls 1\nspecially mad* for the game.\nHOW  TO  PLAY ,     ,\nStanding behind the middle or\n'shon\" line of the court the server\nbounces the ball on the ground and\nwhile the baU is on the rebound bat-\nit sharply with the palm of the hand\nto that it strfkesc against the part of\nUie wall Inside the markings and\nbounce* back Into the outer half of\nthe court. The opposing side strikes\nIt either on the fly or the first bounce\nao that It again hits the wall and\ncomes back into any part of the entire (\u25a0imit Tha serving side again\nplays on the ball, and play continues untl one side misses or the\nball strike* out of bounds.\nIf a ball ts ' caused to strike the\nwall outside the lines, or goes outside\nthe court line* Jhe tide which lilt\nit last loses the point It Is necessary\nto- have the ball bounce out into the\nouter court onlr ' on __he serve. Tha\nserver has a second try at serving in\ncase the first one 1r too \"long or too\n\"short\" to land inside the outer court.\nBut lf the server strikes out of bounds\non the wall or outside the court lines,\nthe server is out tn the first try. If a\nsecond, attempt falls the server ls out.\nThe players tak* turns In serving, both\nplayers on a sida serving before the\nother 'Uie serVbfi,\nSOOR1NU   POINT*\nPoints are scored only when a side\nis serving. If the side which Is not\nserving wins a point it puts out the\nside that it serving, but does not\ncount a point In the score. When\nthe side that is serving wins a point,\nit counts one. The Aide wins which\nfirst scores 31 points. Should each\nside wore 20 points, a side to win\nmust  score  two  points   In  succession.\nIf a ball strikes a line it ls counted\ninside the line. The server may stand\nanywhere he pleases behind the \"short\"\nline, but experlsftce shows It Is best\nl~ stand at one end of the other.\nOther players must standing outside\nthe Court on the servo but may move\nInside as -seen, as the server bounces\nthe ball.\nIf 0 regulation ball is used lt is\nwell for the player;- to wear thin\ngloves, to prevent prtsplration making the ball slipper..\nAll returned balls and all served\nballs must tcudh the wall before\ntouching the ground,\nlf a ball leaving the board strikes\na player it is against the side so\nstruck and is either a point or a put\nout for the other side. If a ball in\nplay strikes au opposing player on fl*\nway to the board it is a \"hinder\" and\ntwo \"hinders\" caused by one side ln\none serve constitute a point or put\nour against that side. Such a ball\nhitting a partner scores an out or a\npoint agalnat the side committing the\nerrcr. If a player coirtpletely mlses\n.i  ball,   his  partner   may  play  It.\nThere is no game where footwork\ncouifts more than in handball. Poet\nfreedom and noslrp shoes are absolutely\nrequired to make the game worth\nwhile.\nI-octf Heading Notices\u2014Three wpte\noer word each Insertion. In blackface\nor m*ch-*e capitals 6c a word Twenty-\nfive fer cent discount ff run daily\nwithout change of copy for on* month\nor more. TWiere advertl-mant Is set\nout ln short Unci the charge la 16c\na line for Roman type, 30c for black-\nfate and Mo foe blackface oapltoU.\nMlnlmiun   36c,   if  charged   60c.\nWAnt and Clasjtfte* adv_rt__(Bf\u2014\nOne and alialf cents a word per i_ufcff-\ntlon. If paid in advance 6c per word\nper wee*, or 32% c per word per month\nTnuMeat ads aooepted only on %\ncash-in-advance basts. Each Initial\nfigure, dollar mgn, etc., counta a* one\nword.    Minimum  26c,  If  charged   60c.\nBirth r\nLOST \u2014 Black   Cocker   Spaniel,   seven\nweeks old.    C. W. Tyler, 706 Stanley\nstreet. (76)0-tf)\nHelp Wanted\n...^\u25a0r*^*.M^^IlWIW^->*****-----\"-        \" \u2014\nA P0QPBB8IONAL BAKEB WANTED-\nDuties to commence May 1st for\nparticulars  apply  to  Natal.  Bakery.\n*t f D**jV*-irfGl )\nWANTKD \u2014 Night llremari, 4th class\nDartre, Apply to Box 618, Cranbrook.\nB. X;. (1641 Ml)\nABSAlntR \u25a0WANTED\u2014Stats MtperWnee,\n\u2022ge. salary required. Kootenay mines\nBox SSS, N\u00abtoon. (7531-380)\nPOR SALE\u2014Youn? pigs, 7 weeks old,\na.80.   fob..   Edgewood.       3.   lk-loff\ngewood. (7481 r\nAMBITIOUS WOMAN To handle specialty line. Ptrt time work. Oood p*y.\nApply Mrs. Ames. Savoy Hotel. 4-6\nIO.  (7806)\nSituations Wanted\nWANTED\u2014 Stenography.     Pull  or p*rt\nUrns.   Phon*   703B. (7S7S)\n_X_*KR-\"NC-D ELECTRICIAN \u2014 And\nmachinery man wanl* position mining or otherwlsa Box .'60S. Daily\nNews. (7S081\nEXPERIENCED WOMAN COOK\u2014Wants\nWork. Camp pnrflerred. Apply Box\n7S10,  Dally News. (T610)\nA Y0__*O. \"WOMAN WANT3 HOMEWORK ID Rossland. Apply Box 7479\nDaily  News (747B)\nYOUNG   OIRL\u2014One   year  high   school\ndesires  position ln  storo;   some  experience.   Apply Box 7357 Daily News\n(7475)\nlive Stock for Sale\nFOR SALB\u2014One horse about 1000 lb*.\n4 year* -old, broken In. a good\nworker single or double, very quiet.\nOwner sold ranch. A. _5. Richards.\nTarrys. (7542-381)\nPOR   SALE\u2014Fine   pure   bred   Jersey\nheifer one week old.    $10.     Mother\nheavy milker.   E. A. Pleters. Nelson.\n(7613.\nPOR SALE\u2014Shrop Shire Sheep, one ram\nand ten ewes, due to lamb middle of\nMay. A. O. Watson, Appledale. B.\nC. (762S)\nFOR SALE\u20143 year Jersey Ayrshire\nhetfer^\u2014first calf due In few days.\nW.   Rutherford,   Nelson. (7581)\nMiscellaneous\nWANTED\nListings   ot   City   properties. We\nhave clients wanting to buy five,\nsix  and  seven room houses. List\nyour  property with Tis.\n508 Ward St.\nH. E. Dill\n. Fhone 160\n(7682-280)\nFREE \u2014 Our catalogue of Gladiolus,\nRoses, Dahlias, UUier, and perennials.\nRose Rpeclal. 6 beauties postpaid.\n63.75. M. it O. Doads, Sorrento, B.\n0. (7543-tf)\nFRUIT TREES AND SHRUBS\u2014Garden\nseeds, grafting wax. etc. Order\nearly. Mann St Rutherford Co.,\nNelson. (7680)\nLUMBER FpR SA_E\u2014On* HI Mro Inch\nrough lumb*r. sight feet long. *14.tK>\nper thousand, f o. b. Creston. Mourad\nWlgen,   Crwton.   B.   C. (76W)\nWANTImm\u2014A Bo* car  of  dry alabwood\nfor bakery at tarn.    Apply to Natal\n(7650-381)\nS-sr\nHAY FOR 6AI__-Wo. 1 Timothy*, hsy.\n\u2022 15.00 per ton fo.b. Lunrby. B. C.\nOeo.   Ulrolette. (7607)\nFOR SALE\u2014McCask*y. 136 book *mt*ri.\nNew. Cash prloe, \u00bbJ0. Bot 11,\nEdgewood. < 74801\nI.AYRITZ NURS\u2014\u00bb\u2014\u00bb he*douarters\nfor reliable nurstry stock, both fruit\nand oma_\u00bbntal. Order sow for\nspring d\u2014lvery. T. Roynon. Agtnt,\nNelton, B. C.      < (7476)\n(7661)\ns\/S-rBri-r-___rA--3\ncA8i\nFroperty For Sale\nFOR SALE\u20146  room house.     Close ln.\nApply P. O. Box 6*3   Nelson.  (7665)\nFOR SALE\u2014Six room house good condition.     Apply S16  Vernon street\n(7514)\nSEVEN >, ROOM\nHOUSE\nClose In\nStone Foundation.\nLarge Living Booms.\nTwo  Open  Fireplaces\nFurnace\nOarage\nAll ln good condition\n$3000.00\u2014Terms.\nRobertson Realty\nCo., Ltd.\nPhone 66\n414 Ward St.\n(7591)\nFor Rent\nSUITES   for   rent.     Ashman's   Apartments (7662)\nSEVEN-ROOM   house  for  rent.   Apply\nD. Magllo.    614 Vernon St.        (7663)\nFOR RENT\u2014Prom April 1st; Plve room\ncottage   across   lake    14    mile   from\nferry. Apply Mrs. Oram, R_R.I. Nelson.\n(7633)\nFOR KENT\u2014Six room nous*,   Close In\n130.    Adults.    P. O. Box 6S3.  (7601)\nAutomobiles\nFOR SALE\u20141936 Fort touring, good\ncondition, four new tires. Apply Vrs.\nH. M. Heath, Nelson. (7606-6-283)\nLost and Found\nFOR SALE\u2014No. 1 twelve pound rails\nfob. Zwicky, B. c. 655 per ton.\nFor information apply Creed Bros.,\nNashton,   B.   C. (7607)\nOTTAWA SHAMROCKS\nWIN   VALLEY   TITLE\nOTTAWA, Ont., March 10\u2014The Shamrocks, amateur hockey champions of\nthe capital, will represent the Ottawa\nvalley ln tlu Allan Cup playdown*.\nThey swept through the Cornwall Colts\nto a S to 1 victory her* Saturday night\nto eliminate the valley title holder*,\nfrom the hunt, and thus earn the\nright to contest for the All-Ontario\ntitle against the winners nf the Iroquois Falls-Toronto Varsity series. They\nwon the round 6-2.\nCONDENSED'WANT'ADS ORDER FORM\nUse this bl\u00abji_ on which to write your condensed \u00bbd_, one word in each rrpa-K\nEnclose money order or check and mail direct to The Daily News, Nelson, B.O.\nBate: One and a half eent a word each Insertion, six eeo-Mi-Ha insertioni for\nprice of four when cash accompanies order. Minimum, 23& Each initial, flgur%\ndollar sign, etc, count aa one word.   No eharg* leaa than 60 cents.\nPlease poblish the ad vertUement below times, for which 11\n..\n.    .\n\u2022\n-\u25a0     \u2014.     .                .   :\n1\nat*  to\nAgents ffMted\n43 vnm cat i gallon of oa\nWond\u00abrful new Vapor Molstur*\nmldllKr snd -\u2014=****-\u2022\"*\"\nautoa.     1  fi\u00ab.\nlow, Inventor.\nTul new Vapor Moisture I\n'-!\u00a5?-\"'\u2022*=\"--\u00ab\u00bb\nPoultry \u00abrt tfg\u00bb\nBARRED BOCK Breeding pen, ten tt\nold  hens      \u2014cAlymCs  strata.     I\nyouag rooster, Atusry strain    r\"\n135.    S. S. Frank, Boswsll       (f\nPOR   SAtyt\u2014Cyphers*   Incubator,\n248   eggs.      Apply   Ml   Latlmek\nPhon* 639L. (TKMA-l-t\nBARRIO ROCK babv\n_   eggs   from   h:\nO. P   siook.\n_*_\n-Vita. Hem\nlag th* Orand Forks ~~\ntest.    Shod*\nfor salr\nCreaton\nRhode   Island    Red* ooetji\nDON BRADLEY\u2014Creston. -ireedar I\nhorns and Reds: Illustrated m\nlogue. write today, (7.\nDISTANT      PASTURES      look\n*mu not buy your Lgghorn b*bf i\nh*r* at horn* AppMlon Bro*., Pf\nt\u00abr. (6944-60-1\nIABT CHICKS, hatching egg*, pyll\nP*dlgr*__d   oockerels,    brsedlnf   p\nSatisfaction   guaranteed,     writ*\nCatalogue.   Deverson,   Port   Orawf\n_______________ f\u2122\nBusiness Opportunitk*\nBAKBRY and confectionery busln***\nTrail, B. 0., on main strwt!    f\nconcern.   Apply. Bog 7478 Dairy j\nBUSINESS, PROFESSION\nDIRECTORY\nAuctioneer and Bailiff\nJAMES    II.    DOYLE\u2014Ballf.   Auotl\nNelaon,   B.   C. <\nPhotographers\n\u2014 .-\u2014-\u2014.\u2014....\u25a0--\n i.\n(1EOROE A. MEERES\u2014Artist and PI\ntograpl\u2014r.    715 Baker St. (7S\nCabinetmaker\n'. B. CHAPMAN\u2014Bakar St.    Cabin\nmaker   and   Upholsterer.    Phone  I\n  (7\u00bb\nDentists\nDR.  O.  A. C.  WALLEY\u2014Griffin, Bin\nNelson.   B.   O. (76\nAccounting\nCHARLES F. HUNTER\u2014 AUDITOR, I\nDonald Jam Building.   Box 1911, II\nson.   B.   C. (75\nAssayers\nE. W. WIDDOWSON, Box A1108 Nels\nB.O.    Standard western charge*,\n  (761\nMonuments\nKOOTENAY     MARBLE     *     ORANI\nWORKS-. Nelson.    B.O.      Writ*\nPrices. (75,\nTransfer\nWILLIAMS'   TRANSFER\u2014Baggage,  0\n(TO\nand Wood.   Phone 108.\nWood Working Factory\nLAWSON \u2014 Baker Bt.   Carpsnt*r\nJoiner.    Sash  and  Hardwood.\n (TO\n-unrance and Real Ertat.\n_, W. DAWSON\u2014Real Estate. Insunui\nRentals. Next Hlpperson Hardwa\nBaker street. (7$\nH.   E.\nS,.JW\u00abr-niSUBANCE\nPARM AND CITY PROPERTY\n 608  Ward  St. (768\nInsurant, C\u00ab_f_o__' of iSd, SS\nTelephon* 40 P. O. Box 24\n(7M\nChiropractors\nDB   GRAY.   GILKER   BLK\u201e\nNELSO\n(7S6\n\u25a0Florists\nGRRSZELLE'S    GREENHOUSE.    Neb*\nOut flowers and floral designs\n(768\nWM.   S.  JOHNSON\u2014\n__']?_?0-L3\"u  0u- lowers Potted Plaii\nWd   Floral   Bmblems. <7lS\nEngineers\nNJL_te-\"____    \u00a3\u00b0\u2014CONTRACT\u00a9.\nFormerly Green Bros., Burden Nels.\nB Ci^* atSL -*\u00bbi>w. \u00abnsli_.i>i\n\u00bb.  C,  Alberta and  Dominion li\n Surveyors (751\nH-   D.   DAWSON\u2014I_and   Suvevors  IA\n  (76?\nFuneral Directors\n-QW-I\nStandard Furnltu\nDo. \u2014 undertake\nr\\uto Hearse up-t\ndata Chapel Be\nservice. Prici\nreasonable.     (-167]\n.' 1 \u25a0 tol-Wto\n \u25a0\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWR MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 11, 1929\nThe Snob\nBy Vida Hurst\nCHAPTER XXIX\nTOUT.\n\"Oomt   out  of  tt.   Nuicy.\n^unoWing a time clock today.\"\nN*icy o*>n\u00abt steep-aodden eye* toaee\nur nominate, flat oo the floor, coming\npit* a sitting position, touching her\nfmaA down. ...\nlutt are jou doing?\"\nking my exercise*. Tm going to\nUhyfca figure Luce Annette Romaine'a tf\n_C tj-ta. me ten years.\"\nwho's Annette Eomsine?\" Han-\nerled, stretching wearily and wlth-\nnuck real Interest.\nlest   girl   In   the   store.     She's\nJewelit,   but  she   models   new j\npart of ttie time, too. You'll sen\nrolled across the floor twelve\n,lmte and eame up. breathless.\n\"Cesne en. WU have te hur-ry.'\nOut into the shivering, clamminess of\ntee unhealed room, Nancy drew her\ntlottoM tip, gratefully. Glancing at her\nrim reflection, wondering how soon she\nKuH begin to look like a \"salesperson.\"\nUnHkdy the term \"shop girl\" had been\ntyHBd from her vocabulary.\nAl they hurried down the street. Sue\nlaid: briskly: \"I hope the girls will like\nD Nancy. You were always so pop-\nat school.\"\nIi seemed to Nancy rather unimpor-\niapt* She wae not greatly conoerned\n#\u2022*? what the girls at the store thought.\njMer ambition waa to make good with\n.he; management, earn some money, end\nhet Into sonsrtWng else as crulckly as\nPoafible.\n| ahe had expected to be treated as a\nEwrnsnt by her superiors. To be Known\nif flf number only. She wm therefore\nto hear herself addressed by\nas \"Mies Oage.\"\nnew girls were sent to Miss\nWho gave each her number and\nepftrtment and sent them, with a\niljh>. into the Cloakroom,\n\"time clock's right over there,\" this\n,'lrl announced, carelessly.\n! But Nancy had never punched a time\ncfcx*. What did one do? Was there\nj* trtck to It? She watched for a mo-\ninent. then slipped her card in and\nneeled the lever,\nI  \"ITancy   Qace,   \u00a9spt    10\u2014No.   00\u2014\n|ji Hsr spirits sank for a moment, then\niwottg upward In sheer interest in the\n_ew eMM-teoce. All right. What next?\ni \"Which   department   are   you   ln?\"\nIlaked her conductor.\nw, \"Department 10.\"\nf ,rt_Wta Jewelry. Oot your book and\nijttncil? Let's go.\"\nW Back Into an elevator of chattering\nIris. Girls who were smartly attractive ln the well-fitting dark dresses.\nloat of them wore black satin. Many\nrtth white or pale pink cottars, immaculately  dainty and fresh.\nh \"How   do  they   keep   them   clean?\"\nwfency wondered.\n| Bhe was yet to -team that the working girls' routine for the night includes\nlittle washing hung over the back of\n|ji chair, A pair of stockings, a \"teddy\"\npr bloomers, a lace or satin collar. . .\nShe   was  startled  to  hear   her  own\nKoame apoke* by 4he other girl addressing a floor man.\n\"Hiss Gage, Ur. Henderson.''\nHe looked her over, swiftly, and consulted a memorandum.\n\"Jewelry?\" ,\n\"Y*_. sir!\"\nNancy followed him to the Jewelry\ncounter.\n\"This 1\u00bb Ulse Gage. Miss Wett. Your\nbuyer, Ulse Gage. Shell tell you what\nto db.\"\nBusinesslike but amazingly courteous.\nNancy saw a pair of keen blue eyes ln\na smiling face. She was Introduced to\nthe other girls ln her department hs if\nshe were at boarding school.\n\"Kite Uage, Miss Romalne, Miss\nBranson.\" .   .   .\nKinney managed a smile ln response\nto their frankly scrutin_c|ng ga_c. A\nmoment later' she was rearranging a\npile Of assorted broaches. The buyer\nhad departed saying: \"You might .Arrange those pins, Miss Gage. We won't\nbe busy for an hour or so.\"\nThe other two, dusting the glass\nshelves, sorting breads and braceltu,\ncarried on a low conversation which\nceased lf Nancy came two near. Urged\nby Sue and chilled by this aloofness,\nshe attempted to be friendly. In the\nbright, supercilious tones reserved for\nothers than her own \"class,\" she asked\na question, discovering that she was\nforced to repeat it as many as three\ntinea. If the girls were waiting on\ncustomers they Ignored her requests\nfor information altogether.\nFinally she said, \"How cati I, tell the\nprice of these pins when they aren't on\na card?\"\n\"Look through them when you aren't\nbusy,\" advised Evelyn Bronson. 'There\nwill be another Just like It on a card\nHaven't you ever sold Jewelry before?''\nCheeks flaming, Nancy answered,\n\"Not Jewelry\u2014no!\"\nA little later lt eame to her that they\nwere deliberately \"rltzlng\" her. Oi_e of\ntbe girls employed in the store bought\na strand of pearl beads for $3.96. Nancy\ncould not figure the 15 per cent discount.\nWhen she turned to Evelyn Bronson,\ncrying \"For Heaven's sake help me out.\nHow do you do lt?\" the other girl seized\nthe book and made lt out without a\nword,   .   .   .\nNancy had never felt so humiliated in\nher life. Not even ln the old days at\nHigh School.\nAt nodn in the dressing room, hands\npressed to her smarting eyes, ahe whispered to Sue, \"The girls don't like me.\"\n\"Why not, Nancy? What have you\ndone?\"\n\"I havent done anything. And I\ndon't care. It's nothing to me what the\ngirls In. this store   think of me.\"\nBut Sue was worried. She insisted\nthat Nancy would need the cooperation\nof everyone in ber department. They\ncould \"get her bad\" by refusing Information or reporting her mistakes\nMistakes a beginner was sure to make.\n\"Don't be uppish with them,\" begged\nSue. \"They won't stand for condescension from Anyone living. Do as they\nsell you and keep sweet, no matter\nwhat happens.\"\nNancy flushed, but she dared not disobey the advice of this friend whose\nhospitality she was accepting. If this\nwere. a  part  of  the  game,   why   then\n-he'd   play   lt.   She   returned   to  the\nI n \u25a0* li si    ^^m_I_m__ , \u25a0\u25a0!_________v   ^____________\nJUW\\7Sn\\m'    VT|-ppfMwr*    mots^aemm^     WVSMMiM\nto win their respect. Btxe weedd prove\nthat ahe waa \"one of them\" m she had\nlong ago proved it te the wealthy girts\nat her own town. Proof tt was of ber\nawn new clear-sightedness that she\nrealised this would be no less of a took.\nAfter lunch a mob gathered about\nttie counter with Ita \"specials\" of pean\nHeads, dollar pendants and \"flapper\"\ndtngs that Nancy had na time, for speculation. But she warned cheerfully.\n\"May I help you?\" became her slogan-\nrepeated with a smile copied from the\npetite Annette. Annette was never too\nbusy to give a customer the full benefit\nof her personal attention. In the midst\nof a sea of faces, a babel of voices, she\nwould say placidly The pink beads are\nmore becoming. Do you wish to try the\nchoker? Yes, tbe others are newer, of\ncourse. Never too rushed to hold a\nglittering pendant against the Whiteness\nof her own throat. Or to murmur\nThank you.\"\nHer methods were a revelation to\nNancy. The end of the stampede left\nher weary-eyed.\n\"Better rearrange those slave bracelets, Mlas Gage.\" .\nShe fancied the tone wae kinder. Two\nhours of working side by side, reaching\naround eaoh other, bad done much to\nbreak the ice. They discussed their\nsales impersonally.\n\"lne pendente went over fine, dldnt\nthey?\"\n\"We need some more of these rhlne-\nstone pins, Mlsa West.\"\n\"I ordered tbem this morning. Miss\nBronson. How about the sale on those\nnew characters?\"\n\"Great. We duly nave a few of them\nleft.\"\nAnd these, thought Nancy, shifting\nher weight from one swollen ankle to\nthe other, were the girls whose conversation was supposed to consist of \"And\nI says, and he says to ae\"   ,   .   .\nOnly one glimpse did she have of romance. When a blue-eyed, sullen-\nmouthed youth approached tho counter\nand stopped -before Annette Romaine.\n\"I cant talk to you now,\" she heard\nher say, hurriedly.\n\"When will you talk to me? Tonight?\"\nHer voice was full of scorn and a\nbright, burning pain.\n\"Oh, I suppose so. But dont come\nhere any  more, Howard. Plea**!\"\nAa be stalked away she turned to a\ncustomer with an unclouded smile.\n\"May I help you, madam?\"\nNever In her life had Nancy been so\nInterested tn a member of her own sex\nas she was tn tots low-voiced, swlfe,\nsmiling girl.   *   ,  .\nMANY CHANGES IN\nTHE CITY TO BE\nSHOWN, NEW MAP\n_J\t\nAll   ImjwrUnt   Building.   Located, Including Junior\nHigh School\nTRACES NEW COURSE\nOF ANDERSON  CREEK\nWill  Be  for  Engineer's  Use;\nWfll Place Sewers, Sidewalks and so on\nSILVERTON NOTES '\nSILVIRTON, B. C, March 10.\u2014Mtis\nAnnie McNaughton left Monday for\nNelson to resume her duties at the\nKootenay Oeneral hospital.\nT. Brown left Monday for Nelson.\nMTs. T. Crow, who has been visiting\nher daughter Mrs. R. White, left Friday for her home at Beaverdale. She\nwas accompanied by her grand daughter. Miss  Dorothy  White.\nA Jolly young people's party was given\nby Miss Molly Harding, at her home\nhere Wednesday, the occasion, being\nher   birthday.\nThe Invited guests were the Misses\nDorothy Hunter, Adallne Hanna, Gun-\nley Peterson, Dorothy White. Audry\nWatson, Prances Johneon, Olza Reeder,\nMary Moir, Johanna. Groenhuysen, Minnie Wetterhause, MarJorie and Edith\nTattrie   and   Isabell  Letbechere.\nA very pleasant whist drive was\nheld In the union hall here Thursday\nby the Sllverton Whist club. 11 tables\nbeing ln play. The prizewinners were\nMrs. Lelbsphere and Joe Johnaon, first,\nMarJorie .Tattrie and Percy Hayward.\nconsolation. Mrs. G. T. Ironside and\nMrs. A. 8. McAuley were the hostesses\nfor the evening.\nWalter Tattrie was a business visitor\nto Nelson Friday.\nHAPPY   MEETINGS\nm\u00ae, -As-s .\"\nawr.\nthat\nI hate to leave,\nit's really home to me\"\n\u25a0\n. . . they met in the\nclasnlied colamns\nIt was not the sort of a home\nthat one could pick up on the\nauction block ... or even contrive one's self on short notice. It\nwas the result of years of development in supplying home comforts.\nBut Evans was leaving town and\nhad to sell. What a stroke of\ngood fortune for Carr to find\nsuch a home ready to step into.\nA map of the ctty of Nelson, including Palrvlew and Rosemotit and showing changes tn resent years, and all\nnew buildings, ls being traced by City\nEngineer Boyd C. Affleck. The map\nwhen completed will be for th_ e_gl-\nneer's personal use. He will have *ev-\neral blue prints made. The blue prints\nwill be used, one for showing the city\nwater system; one for showing the\nelectrical system; another for showing\nthe material sidewalks are made of in\nthe different parts of the city, and for\nvarious other information vital t# the\ncity engineer in carrying on his work.\nThe map will be about five fset\nlong and three-and a half feet wide,\nand will show the new city boundary\non the north east, created when Fair-\nview became a part of the city aeveral\nyears ago. It will be ihe first map thet\nhaa not shown fairvlew as a suburb\nof Nelson.\nNEW COURSE ANDERSON CREEK.\nAmong the many changes since the\nmap that Is In use now was complied\nand which will be shown in the new\nmap, Is the change of the course of\nAnderson creek ln Palrvlew from almost\ndue west to north. The creek formerly\nemptied into what wan known as Con-\nnaught park, now Lakeside pork, but\nnow tt empties into the old city\npark.\nSeveral change* will be shown ln the\ncity sewer outlets when the copy of the\nmap''showing the water' system unci\nsewers is completed.\nAt one time, at the Fairvlew terminus of the street railway system,\nthe motorman hurt to change ends ln\norder to make the return trip to town.\nThis was shown on the old map with\na bumper at the end of the track. Ou\nthe new map, tbe loop at Fairvlew,\nwhich allows the cars to continue on\ntheir return trip without changing\nends, Is shown. The loop was constructed several years ago but never\nshown oh a man.\nNEW   I'EATl'KES.\nOther features shown on the new\nmap but not on the old one, are the\ncity gravel pit with bunkers ln Roee-\nnumt; the new Junior high school,\nwhich, although no longer known by\nthat name, is shown as Trafalgar\nschool; Cottonwood park, which includes the Cottonwood canyon and\ncreek river tn the locality of the Rosemont bridge; the city gas works on\nRailway street and the railway spur\ninto the workA; the old Silver King\nmine tramway to What used to be the\nHall Mines smelter in Rosemont, and\nthe ore bunkers at the end of the\ntramway; the street car barn with the\nspur leading Into It at Hall Mine;; road\nand Kootenay street; the newly completed Terrace apartments at Vernon\nand Kootenay street and the Nelson\nTransfer located next to lt, both new\nbuildings within recent years.\nAU,  CHLRCIIES   SHOWN.\nThe Christian Science church, a modern stucco building on Baker near Fall\nstreet, will be shown as well as all\nother churches in- the city. The fair\nbuildings and recreation grounds will\nbe depicted, as will Gyro or Houston\npark on the bluff shown on the old\nmap as the City park. New roads cut\nthrough the park since its Improvement was undertaken by the Gyro club\nwill also be shown.\nThe location of the fifootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital, not shown accurately\noh the old map, will be shown correctly on the new one. The furses'\nhome adjacent to the hospital, completed a little over a year ago will \u00abUeo\nbe marked.\nThe ctty wharf. C. P. R. depot and\nthe Canadian Legion building formerly\nshown as the Y. M. C. A., as well as\nall other most well-known buildings ln\nthe city, will be included.\nROSEMONT   BOUNDARY.\nThe actual boundary of the city at\nRosehiont and the two roads, one leading past the street car barns and the\nother from the end of Latimer street\nacross the bridge to Rosemont, will be\nshown. Neither of these roads w.r.\nshown on the old map, there being no\nmeans of entering Rosemont depleted\nwhatever.\nthe   boundary   tn   Rosemont   shows\nsomething   that   few   Nelson   residents\nrealise. Tbe general Impression  is that\nthe   city   limits   are   at   Cottonwood I\ncreek,  and   that  once   the   Rosemont 1\nbridge Is crossed, one ls lh Rosemont. |\nSuch ls not the case. Roughly  10 city\nblocks  on  the   Rosemont   side  of   the\nbridge are within the  city   limits.\nThe new junior high school, situated\nalmost in the center of a block formed\nby Josephine, Robson, Hall and Observatory streets, Is partly within the\noriginal townsite of Nelson and partly\ntn a part later included ln the city.\nThe northern half of the school\nbuilding is In lot No. &5. the original\ntownsite, and the southern half is\nwithin the first division of lot No. 105,\nsurveyed later than No. 95, and later\nincluded within the city limits.\nEDGEWOOD   AVENUE   CHANGED.\nThe change in the route of Edge-\nwood avenue and High street at the\nhospital will be traced. Edgewood avenue at one time ran at right angles\nto Cedar street, but this was changed\nto make Edgewood avenue nui into\nCedar street. The same thing was done\nwith, High street passing the hospital.\nBoth these Intersections are now gradual curves Instead of right-angle intersections.\nWhen the new map Is completed, the\nengineer intends to compile a loose\nleaf book, showing the city ln sections\non a large scale. Each page will contain a map of about four city blocks\nwith everything in detail, giving an\nenlaqged reference map which would\nprove a boon to the engineer's work.\nAntlcostl.    Now \u00bb regular service eon-\n\"fc-JS -S'^XtcWTV\nla tad points, special trips hsve been\nmade along the ooast of James bay\nand into the rich mining area* tn\nnorthtm Alberta and British Columbia.\nChristmas parcels were carried Into the\nnorth, which otherwise would have to\nwait on the slow and infrequent\nJourneys of dog sleds. The development of the mining districts in the\nsub-arctic has been in no small degree\ndue to tbe transport of air mall.\nMAIL   CARRIED\nIn the less spectacular devetoprnmU\nTolw pro*** has been achieve* During 1928 the service between Montreal\nand Albany, N.Y., Varrled ao.MO pounds\nof mall. Between Mantreal and Toronto, 17,348 pounds were carried and\non the Wlnnlpeg-Reglna-C_^ary -Edmonton route 4830 pounds. The latter\nwas on an experimental service, tasting only a few weeks and Ibaking toward a complete trans-Canada route.\nLatterly a service between Ottawa,\nMontreal, Saint John and Halifax has\nrjeen Instituted. Formidable objects in\nthe geography of the country- have\nbad to be met in this route. Donald\neration Is now being given to the\nconstruction of a series of air haTho,\nto facilitate flying ln eastern Canada\nind shorten the mail time betwee:\ntbe maritime provinces and the central\npart of  the country.\nA moat significant development hae\nleen the mall route between Sioux\nlookout and the Red [Ate area' ln\nnorthern Ontario. Mineral deposits\nln that locality are bringing abou\n-apid growth of population. On that\nroute alone 13,000 pounds of mali\n-vere carried during the past year.\nORE CONFIDENCE\nThe use of airplanes for carrying\nmail has definitely stimulated public\nnterest and confidence m aviation.\n\"V dependability of the service as\nwell as Its novelty Is developing a\nspirit of uir-mtndedness ln the Canadian people. In the experimental\n\u25a0(hts the national defence department has provided planes and aeronautical engineers to study proposed\nroutes. After feasibility has been es-\nrablished contracts are awarded private companies by the post office de-\nartment.\nIn adopting the policy of awarding\ncontracts rathe; than granting subsidies, post office authorities have sought\nto give impetus to the development\nof Canadian aviation generally. They\noelieve it arouses a vivid air concept\nln the minds of the people and gives\nsolid financial assistance to private\n\u25a0enterprise.\nOINO ur\nThe   air  mall   service   has  played   a\nvery positive part In the development\nof   inter-Empire   communion tion.    The\nspeeding up of trans-Atlantic air malls\nis   rapidly   overcoming   the   handicap\n\u25a0f  slower  speed   which  formerly   milliard against quick conununcttion  be-\nween the 0-\"Msh IsleB and other parts\nt the Empire.   The service from Mon-\nreal,  Ottawa and Toronto, covers the\n.\u2022stance of 330 miles ln lees than 2*M_\nours and effects a saving of from 34\no 96 hours for mall from the British\nles  to  the  Pacific  coast.    A  similar\ntaring Is effected  ln the Ottawa-Saint\nhn route, which is still in the ex-\nomental stage.\nMany of the problems the develop-\n.nent cf air mail communication faces\n-the enormous distances* and the for-\nnldable natural barrlee of the lakes\nnd mountains\u2014would seem almost\nsurmountable if It were not for tlie\nourage and tenacity of the Canadian\nviator. Many flights have been hazar-\n\">us ln the extreme. Frequently fly-\nrg, have hod to cover long distances\nver country where a forced landing\nvould have been disastrous. To the\nkill and experience of the Canadian\nviator is due the fact that no accl-\nlent   or   serious   delay   has   occurred.\nCRANBROOK CITY\nCOUNaL DEBATES\nFIRE HALL BY UW\nDebentures   Involving   Paving\n$10,000 Yearly to Be Retired Tkifl Year\nPOWER COMPANY IS\nPURCHASER OF.OLD\nRECLAMATION FARM\nContract- Being Let for Additional  Reclamation  on\nKootenay River Tract\nSale of the old Reclamation farm on\nKootenay river by the Alexander interests, represented In this country by\nJames Anderson of Kaslo, to the\nKootenay Valley Power & Development company has been practically\nconcluded.\nAhnminc-ment to this effect was\nmade Friday by E. C. Wraggle, solicitor. .\nHoward A. Amon of Sookone. the\nmoving spirit in the Kootenav .Valley\nT.mpany, ls now at the Reclamation\nfarm arranging for the letting of contracts for additional reclamation work.\nThis will Involve work at bolh ends of\nthe tract and probably the raising\nind widening of the n_\u00bbsent dykes.\nWhen this work has been completed,\nthe Intention is to subdivide the land\nand   sell   It  for  fnrmlnV  purposes.\nCRANBROOK, B. C. March 10.\u2014A\nipeclal meeting of the citv council\nwas held in the council chambers of\nhe city hall Tuesday to discuss the\nlylaw which will be submitted to the\natepeyers of the city March 36 to raise\n31,000 by the sale of debentures for\nhe purpose of constructing a new\nire hall and purchasing a new com-\ninatlcn chemical and ladder truck for\nhe fire brigade.\nThe obvious need of a new fire hall\nnd fire fighting apparatus has been\npparent to the members of the coun-\n1 for seme years and has had the\njnstderation of different councils at\nurlous times but delay has always\n\u00aben considered advisable, awaiting\nhe retirement of certain existing debentures before entering upon the expenditure which this bylaw would en-\nall.\nfinal payments are being mode this\nyear on four debenture issues, which\nwill reduce the annual interest and\nlinking fund charges by nearly 910,000.\nThese payments are: Bylaw No. 63,\nstreets, 1803,25; bylaw No. 57, schools,\n$2811 01; bylaw No. 66, water. $562202;\nbylaw No. 173, arena rink, 9361.80.\nthe total Is 90687.97.\nThe    Interest    and     sinking    fund\ncharges will amount to 92581.06, spread\nover a 20-year period.\nPKOPOKED BLILDINO\nA sketch plan of the proposed building shows the main part of the ground\nfloor occupied as an apparatus room,\nwith the fire chief's ofifce on the\nnorth side ahd hose tower, .hose room\nand work room on the south side.\nThe first floor plan provides for\nreading and recreation rooms and dormitory for the flrement, together with\nthe bath room. The chief's quarters\nwill be across tbe front of the build-\nThe location of the proposed building has not been definitely decided\nupon. One site suggested ls tbat\nfacing on Norbury avenue between the\ncity    hail   and    MacPherson's    under\ntaking parlors, aa\n{_,-**-_L_li*r '\nconstruction, ss\nhosted  br  tlu\nstsllsdln -\npsrtmsnt \t\ncalled  tbs sttsntloo\ntils  urgent  need\ncal   snd   ladder\nlnsdequacy   at   r\n11 called upon to f\nln sny one of th* nr\nthree-stonv buildings      \t\nthe  nre TImlts.    \u25a0_______\u25a0__\u25a0\nOIJJ    <)l A\u00bbTEK\u00ab\nThs     Cranbrook     Ors     department\nstarted out In 1\u00ab<M In H-1WSSST W_c\nten.  located  St whst Is now  tbe entrance   to   tbs   T.   _   C.   A.   (rounds\nat the comer at Van Home a\u2014i Baiter\nrtraeta.    The   building   was  tatar  tart-eased ln stse, to make room n\nIre tssm and additional equipment m\nrrocursd.    Io  WM. tbe  trulldlne  wh\nnsved to IU present arte, when luiHi\nr  additions   were  made  to  mast  the\nlcreasted   demand   upon   the   49art-\noant   for  fire protection. *^V_\u2014I\nFew chances bare been made ,1\n-cent  years,  se  It was felt    \"       \t\ntext move should be the rerolactssst et\nh building with a mm* permanent\ntructure. The building le now In\n:uch a dilapidated \u2014odltJon that It-ls\nlmost unlnhsbluble, and ui\u2014ask a\nnew hall ls built the council will be\n\u2022reed to consider a large expenditure\nln repairs, which Is not conalderad\nwarranted.\nAnother matter which was dealt- with\nat thla meeting, one wh\u2014h lusd bemi\nlaid over from the regular me sting- oaf\nebruary. waa the purchase ei additional trucks for the works department at the request of the olty superintendent, D. Phtlpot. Mr. PhJJpot\nasked for the purchase of three (tucks\nbut the county* felt that all tlw\ndealers ln trucks In the city should ha\ngiven an opportunity to figure' on\nthese, and had laid the matter oarer.\nAs tbey need for the equipment ws_a\npressing, the council decided to buy\nat one one medium duty trunk, and\ndefer the purchase of the othsr - two\nuntil  later.\nSLOCAN CITY NOTES\nSLOQAN CITV, B. C. March 10.\u2014O.\nw. Long went to Nelson Wednesday\nnight for medical treatment.\nTbe   ladles'   aid   ot   stnox\nT?\nchurch met at the home of Mrs. 1%. %\\.\nMcMillan. Those present were Mrs.\nT. McNeish, Mra. Sogers, Mrs. J. Terry.\nMrs. W. A. Jackson, Miss I. Great and\nMrs. McMillan. Lunch was served and\nthe conclusion of the business.\nHenry Gill Mails $246\nto Himself Each Year\n' I *!__!_ $246 in Henry GUI's annual payment on\n1 his North American Life \"Four Way\" PoUcr.\nBut he ia actually sending the money to _i__rl_\nHere's how this policy works out:\n(1) At s*e 65 he will receive 110,000, \u00abr if he\n* .            prefers it, **W5 Yearly far the -dance of\nhire life.\n(2) Before reaching age 60 If he becomes unfit\nfar work, he will receive 1100 monthly; will\nmake no farther annual deposits; and at 65\nwill receive $10,000 or $895 ye_-lv.\n(3) If he dies before age 65 Us family w\u2014I receive $10,000.\n(*) If hi. death ia accidental bit family wfll receive $20,000.\nThis \"Four Way\" Policy makes perfect proriaUm\nfor the future comfort of one. self and one's    , .\nSamUy.  It covers every emergency.\n. Why not plan to start potting away a portloB of\nyour income* eachyearfor yourself on thisNorth\nAmerican Life \"Policy That Pays Four Ways.\"\nNORTH AMERICAN LDFE\nASSURANCE OOMPANY\nFnsident:\nTHOMAS BRAOSHAW\nChttirntan of the Board:\nJ. H. GUNDY\nGeneral Manager:\nD. E. KILGOUR\nIt   E.  CIUE-SJI\nDistrict Manager,\nNelson, B. O.\nHesn Office:\nTORONTO, CANADA\nThe DAILY NEWS\nPHONE 144\nLOOK in the CLASSIFIED m-m\nCANUCK AIR MAIL\nAMONG FIRST RANK\nAerial Service Prove. Highest\nImportance   Trough out\nDominion\nOtlicr Branches at Winnlpec, Yorkton, Saskatoon, Edmonton, Canary, Lett\u2014rMie,\nVancouver, Kamloops, Vernon and Victoria.\nOTTAWA, Msrch 10.\u2014In the provision of rtvplci and safe chutiuela of postal communication into places tHm-\ncut of access, Canada's sir mail Service has already a proud record of\naeb'-vement. To the remote mining\ndistrict of Ontario and Manitoba\nand the scattered, isolated communities Ion the north shore of the St.\nLawrence river and Antlcostl* and the\nMagdalen islands, malls, are conveyed\nby nans over routes that otherwise\nwduui involve the use of canoe. do\u00ab\n-am and other slow and costly means\nof tranaportation.\n__._       close   of   navigation   the\nloner? fishermen on the Magdalen\nislands m the gulf of St. Lawrence\nwere completed cut off from communication with the mainland before the\nadvent of the air mall. Por several\nmonth- they received no word ot whst\ndalUrsarnos carries them letters news-\nl\u2014nets and parcels.    The same situs-\nUw wm p-we-i la Vern. umAi m<i\nDRY GOODS\nLEADING LINES IN LADIES' HOSE AT SPECIAL PRICES\nORIENT HOSE\u2014Pure silk to the top.   Full range of colors.   Regular price $2.50.\nFor   il-TO\nORIENT CHIFFON HOSE\u2014Full range of colors.   Regular price, $2.00.\nFor    fl-50\nMONARCH GREEN STRIPE HOSE\u2014Full range of colors. Regular 98c. For 65*\nBEAVER BRAND ENGLISH MERCER IZED LISLE HOSE\u2014Full range of col-\nors.   Regular $1.25.   For   75\u00ab>\nMERCURY SILK HOSE\u2014Point heel.   F uU range of colors.   Regular $1.95.\nFor _ _ _ _ _ '.. fl.BO\n.MERCURY FULL FASHIONED SILK  HOSE\u2014Full range of colors.    Regular\n$1.99.    For  _ _ fl.25\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\nLADIES' WEAR\nHOUSE DRESSES in smart styles and designs.   Just the thing for the house now\nthat the bright spring days are here.    All sizes.   At from $2.25 TO $4.95\nSILK 0VERVESTS\u2014In many different styles.    Sleeveless, or long sleeve.    In\ncolors of Peach, Pebble, Blue and Whi te.   All sizes from 32 to 44.\nPriced from _ $2.75 TO $8.50\nSMART NAVY SERGE REEFERS\u2014Tri mmed with brass buttons. A snappy little\ngarment for the small boy or girl.   Price  $4.50 AND $4.95\nJERSEY DRESSES for the young Miss. From 3 to 12 years.   Some of these are\npanty style and come in colors of Scarlet, Jade, Pebble, Rose, New Blue.\nAt   $3.95 TO $7.95\nA shipment of Ladies' and- Children's hats just opened up.\n\u2014Second Floor\u2014H B C\u2014\nMEN'S PYJAMAS\nl<S*s_.-*\u00bb NEW PYJAMAS for Men in very attractive smart stripes*\nwith silk frogs in English Broadcloth, Twill and Flannelette.   All sizes $2.50, $2.75 AND $3.50\nNEW   STRIPED   FLANNELETTE   NIGHTSHIRTS\u2014All\nsizes.   At  $2.25\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014B B C\u2014\n\\n\\s00Wa0\\smtamomWmm\\m\n\u25a0\u25a0\n \t\nMR Ten\nTrW. NFL80N DAILY NEWS. 1\"*M\"*-V -itARNTNG. MARCH 11, 1929\n-77-\nNow* Depot aad Taxi\nsna* EitMss\u2014Rsdan Cart\nM-0   STEVENS\nMUSCLES\n\u25a0rs trouoie mifht not alone\nm eauasd by tbs IKbt entering\ntbs eye, tormlnt an Imperfect\nMature, tt mil ht be dua to feulty\n>a_nss of tbe muscles that rotate ths aye about, caualng much\ndlsoomfort.\n\u00bb7 sue system, ve harmonize\n1 this dafsct, jiving ease and com-\nftsjt.\n\u25a0apart  Service\nJ. 0. PATENAUDE\nOptometrist  and   Opt klan\nLearn to Earn\nJ. A. C. Laughton, R.O.\nSpecialising    In    Correcting    Defective\nSight by Proper Olaasea\nQuick Repair Service\nORIFFIN  BLOCK PHONE  M.1\nB C. PLUMBING &\nHEATING CO.\nAgents for\nALBERTA  CLAY   PRODUCT*.,\nKEWER PIPE . DRAIN TILE\ntM Baker Street NcImd, B.C\nFOE THE NINE & MILL\nWe Recommend MAPLE LEAF PANELS\nManufactured in Nelson from native cottonwood, in\nvarious thicknesses and lengths\nThey are particularly well adapted for lining bunk\nand board houses, stable and tool sheds, also for labia\ntops and cupboards, etc.\nWhen building or repairing, write us for literature\nand prices.\n\u25a0sffi;\nDistrict Distiibutora\nWood, Vallance Hardware\nCompany, Limited\nWholesale        Nelson, B.C. Retail\ncA <_). \"-Papazian\nWATCHMAKER,    JEWELEB\nAND GRADUATE OPTICIAN\n413 HALL STREET\nSmythe's  Laxative Quinine\nTablet.\nWill Check a Cald In a Fe* Hoars.\nSmythe's Pharmacy\nPRESCRIPTION   SPECIALIST\nOpp.  Bank of Commerce.        Phons I\nlesQood!\nHave you tried a tin of\nMcDonald's New Pack of\nOrange Marmalade. If not,\ni genuine treat awaits you.\nMcDonald\nJam Co.\nNelton Brand Jams\nNKI.SOV, II.C.\nV'\ntx** tgr- iff l, - *\u25a0\nIMPORTANT-\n\u25a0*\"\n, Don't be numbered among the disappointed. Have\nthat Spring Coat, Suit or Dress in early to av_d the\nfinal rush.\nSpring Coats in by March 13.   Special, &1.75\nCOATS SUITS       '    DRESSES\n\"Like Neio When We Return Them to You.\"\nYcur clothes can be worn as soor a? they arrive.\nWe guarantee absolutely NO-ODOR.\n\u25a0 Phone 128.   We call and deliver.\nPlease pay Mr. Hamann, as he is working on commission and we hold him responsible.\nKootenay (no-odor) Dry Cleaning Co.\nC A. LARSON, Mgr.    _\t\nCHRIST STRONG\nIND AND BODY\nBISHOP STATES\nBishop  Doull  Tell-. Redeemer\nCongregation Conception\nLs Wrong\nDrawing a picture ei Christ aa tbe\nstrong Bon of Ood nnd not a weak\neffeminate being u most of tho\nfamous painters depleted him, Rt. Ber.\nAlexander J. Doull, D. D.. bishop of\nKootenay, addteeaed the con_regBtkm\nof the Church of the Redeemer, Fair-\nview, last nitht. 'the bishop also\npreached at tbe nternlng service.\nThe reason that religion did not\nappeal to the young men and boya\nof tbe present generation was that\nChrist* was often pictured as a weakling by hymn writers fend painters, bis\ngrace pointed out.\nIf certain, hymns were cut out of\nthe hymnal It would be n good thing,\nhe asserted. *\nDisregarding hymns and pictures and\nturning to the gospel, the speaker gave\nseveral Illustrations of the physical and\nnormal strength of the Son of Ood.\nSTRONG   1-IIVSIQl'E\nThat, It was never recorded that\nChrist was 111, although he worked\ncontinually among the sick and lepers,\npointed   to   bis   strong   physique.\nThe evangllsts tell that Christ had\nnot time to eat on occasions. He\nspent nights in prayer without sleep.\nDid this Jpoint to a weak man or did\nIt indicate a man strong tn body*-nnd\n|n mind, asked the speaker.\nWhen one reads of how Christ drove\nthe vendors out of tbe temple, how he\ndeclared that he was the Son of Ood,\ndid one think of. a weakling, one who\nwas afraid of what people thought, tht\nbishop asked. These actions pictured\na Christ who was coungeoui*. and unflinching   In   his   net ion- '\nThat one who was not ihe strongest\nof men, both bodily and mentally, could\nnot have endured the sufferings end\ntrials of Christ's passion was shown\nby  the speaker.\nEncouraging the younger generation\nto seek, for Itself the true type of\nChrist ln the gospel, not to think of\nhim as a man who was effeminate and\nsoft, but as a captain who was ever\nat the head of his men, the bishop\nconcluded.\nFRUITVALE NOTES\nFRUITVALE, B. C. March 10.\u2014Put\nHealy arrived lD- the valley Tuesday.\nHe ls the guest of his mother, Mrs.\nSharp. . \u25a0   \u2022 .\nMrs. I.. De Bruyn, who spent tbe\nwinter ln Trail, returned to her home\nhere  Friday.\nR. Kldd and W. Nipkow were visiters\nto  Trail  Friday. ' i.\nHarold Mason returned Friday after\nspending   Several   months   In   Chicago.\nEarl Grieve came home Friday lrom\nMcRorie, Bask., where he spent the\npast   few  months. \u2022\nL. De Bruyn spent Friday la tht\nvalley.\nE. Cole, A. Webster end R. St. in-\nthorpe were Trail visitors Saturday.\n'    \u2022\nAnnouncing\n\u25a0\nColumbia Electric Ltd.\n>\u25a0\u2022-\u2022 #\u2022*#_\u25a0*- ........... j^\n305 Baker St., Nelson \\\n|MltM>HMAa\u00ab  .**\u2014-.-' m     \u2022*\u2022>-\u2666 -I | -T-**       \/\u25a0\u25a0*\nand Kimberley, B. C.\nNelson Branch open to the pub lie Thursday, March 14\nWe invite your i nspection\n*,.      ,., .'.....\n\u25a0 The Columbia Electric Ltd., haa been incorp orated to operate in Nelson and -Kimberley. It\nis district agent for FRIGIDAIRE DELCO LIGHT, WATER SYSTEMS, products of General\nMotors, and will sell all kinds of Electric Appliances and en-j-ag-e in Electrical Contracting including wiring and complete installations.\nThe Columbia Electric Ltd., will have a staf f of highly trained Electricians and Frigidaire\nand Delco Service men.\n\u2022\n: Under the name of the Kimberley Electric\nbet of years in the Electrical business in Kimb\nnew Company has been forme, to expand the bu\nKootenay. West Kootenay headquarters will be\nKimberley.\nAll over, the continent the demand for Frig\nand Columbia Electric Ltd., as district agents w\nnot been able to obtain before.\nCo., thia company has been engaged for a num-\nerley. It has been so successful there that the\nsiness to cover West Root-way as well as East\nat Nelaon and East Kootenay headquarters at\ni *  I    '\nidalre lyjulpirtent is growing by leaps and bounds\nill be able to give the public a service it has\nA specialty will also be made of Electric Wi ring *1<1 inttallation work and on accpunt of\nthe connections Columbia Electric has establish- d, it will be able to supply materials of the\nhighest grade at very economical prices, while t he competency of ill* employees will enable it\nto guarantee the high quality of all work,\n.1, ' \u25a0< '\nSee the New Frigidaire Now on D isplay in Our Showrooms\nCOLUMBIA ELECTRIC Ltd.\nP. 0. Box 917\nP.O. Box 746\nNELSON\nKIMB ERLEY\nPhone 695\nPhone 56\nLog Hauling Ceaset\nGlenbank for Season\nGLENBANK, B. C, March 10.\u2014Tbs\ncessation ot log hauling has mads qitftsr\na difference to the appearance ul ths\nOlenbank roads. light teams hsve bee.\nkept going Without a break for the\npest three months. The contract be-\ntween W. Bailey snd the Arrow Lakes\nLumber company has terminated. The\nroads _\u00bbve become Impassable with\nthe disappearance of snow.\nWALDO NOTES\nWALDO, to. C\u201e March 10.\u2122Prank Belanger. contractor for the Baker Lumber\ncomoany during the Dast winter, will\nbuild summer camps near the Black\nTall timber reserve. In the near future.\nHe exDecta to Iok extensively when road\nconditions will permit the use of motor\ntransportation.\nDavid Price, of \"Sour Dough\" farm.\nhas accented a oosltion with James\nMulr ae chief cook, to succeed John\nClement resigned.\nJohn Pero. teamster, will leave shortly for Riverside. Calif., where he expects to resume  his former work,\nWilJ'am CCMthlan. blacksmith and\nhandyman for Prank Belanger. camp J6.\nhss completed his Boason's work and Is\nrecuperating for a few days at Waldo.\nPrank Boleaux is spending a few days\namong friends at Waldo, after mn\nabsense of several months ln the forests\n\u25a01 Bear mountain.\nBln> To'laon has resinned his position with James Mulr, and will proceed\nto Seattle in a few davs to Join his\nuncle, who' is in business at the coast.\n\"Chic\" Abbey has left the Bee*\n-ou'1 Rlr timber area and mav go to\ntbe U. S. A. for the summer, after\nspending  a  few  days at hla  home at\n-\"\"\u2022\u2022\u25a0tone.\nThe  warm  wind and  the  increasing\nsun heat at this nerlod is raising havoc\nWith  winter   truck  roads,  making  the\nhighways almost  impassable for  heavy\n-uling. . ,\nNelson News of the Day\nWHAT  WE  NOTICE  IN TOWN\nAn extraordinary Displnv Revealing\nthe New Easter Hats, with a noteworthy\ncollection of the smart colors of Individual and graceful refreshing smartness at RAMSDEN BROS. Opening.\nSaturday, Monday and Tuesday.\n(7696-270)\nrillRCH   OF   THE   REDEEMER\nThe services tomorrow. Sunday, March\n10, will be conducted bv Rt. Rev. Alexander^. Doull, D. D.. Bishop of Kootenay.\nMatt Ins and holy communion\u201411\nam.\nEvensong\u20147:30 p.m. (7597-3761\nAPRIL COSMOPOLITANS AND\n\u2022SMART SETS, Read Calvin Cooltdge's\nown Story ln Cosmopolitan. For Sale\nat 77 News Depot and Taxi, Williams.\nCanada Drug and Ruddicks.   (7593-276)\nKOOTENAY   LAKE   OENERAL\nHOSPITAL   SOCIETY\nNotice of Annual Meeting.\nIn accordance with the bylaws of\ntbe society, the annual general meeting\nwill be held ln the Board of Trade\nrooms on Ward St., Tuesday, March\n1.2. 1929. at 3 p. m.\nMemhershin conditions: all annual\nsubscribers for the sum of $10 are\nmembers of the society, eligible to take\npart In the election of directors for\nthe   ene .ting   year.\nJAS.   C.  PORBES,   Secretary.\nFor rent, furnished two room suite.\nKerr   apartment. (7*441)\n' The. Annual Meting of the Nelson\nLiberal' association will be held ln\nthe Board Of Trade rooms on Tuesday\nnext. Much 12th at 8 o'clock. All\nmembers are urgently requested to be\npresent.\nH.  H.  MACKENZIE.  President.\n(7576 3-278)\nRESERVE  MARCH   IK FOR ST.  PAT-\nKICK'S   DANCE  AT  HARROP.       (7M0>\nDaughters  of England will meet to-\nright at 8 o'clock in Memorial hall.\n17604)\nSt. Patrick's Dance, South Slocan hall\nFriday, March 15.   Gentlemen, 75 cents.\nladies, 50 cents.\n(7605)\n77, News Depot and Taxi, April\nCosmopolitans  and  Smart Sets-\n(7609-277)\nThe family of the late Mrs. -Robert\nWaldle wish to extend their thanks\nfor the expression of sympathy ind the\npractical .assistance rendered by their\nmany friends during tbelr recent sad\nbereavement, \u2014 Mrs. Wilson, Andrew,\nAlex,  James  and  Oeorge. (7608)\nCO'rtl'l    \/COAl\nFOB THE  BUST   IN\nDOMESTIC\n(t ,\nSTEAM  COAL\n\u25a0M \u00ab l J     *\nDRY  WOOD\nAU   Lengths   tt\nRegular    .Prices\nsee\nMacDONALD CARTAGE\n& FUEL CO.\nMl  Baker St.\nPhone M*\nCity Drug Go.\nNelson's Dispensing Chemists\nFilms,   Kodaks,   Drugs,   Stitlsncrj.\nMall   orders   promptly   despatohed.\nBOX   1081    NELSON,  B.C.    PHONE   34\nCome In and Get Your Weight Free\nRAINCOATS\nGABARDINES\nSUCKERS\nTRENCH COATS\nSHOWER-PROOF TWEED5\nNow is the season of the year that you need a\ngood rainooat. Our stock of English Gabardine*\nSlickers, Trench Coats and Shower-Proof Tweeds its\ncomplete. Made in the new styles and colors. Cotfte\nin today and look them over.\n$7.50 TO $35.00\nEMORYS Limited\nPerfect Heat Control\nWith an\nELECTRIC RANGE\nL\nWhen you put a roast, pieyor other dish\nin the electric oven, just turn'the switch as\ndirected in the instructions.\nThe heat Will remain constant and do\nthe cooking \"to a turn\".\nAnd electric cooking is so clean, no coal\nor ashes to bother with.\n-The City oE Nelson\nRetail Lumber\nWhite Pine\u2014Spruce\u2014Fir\u2014Larch\u2014Hemlock\nCedar and Coast Fir\nW.W. PoweU Co. Ltd.\nThe Home ol Good Lumber\nPhone 176 Stanley St.\nA WANT AD IS BOTH CHEAP AND EFFICIENT. TRY II\nHUNTER ELECTRIC\nOpera House  Block\nNELSON\n. APPLIANCES\nINSTALLATIONS\u2014REPAIRS\n44 Taxi & Transfer\nREDAN CARS FOB\nDay and Night 8en.ee\nReasonable   Rates Careful\nDriti\nCON   CUMMINS,    MANAGES\nMusic Night\u2014Augmented Orchestra in the\nPomp and passion. Revolution and\nruin, all\nfor the\nlove of\na   maid.\nLOVE\nCame With the Sting of\nWhip Across His Heart I\nTHE FRONT END\nBad roads demafd carilul driving.\nYou will make no Mistake In placing\nyour repairs ln our \"competent hands.\nSMEDLEY GARAGE CO.\nA great drama\u2014A great love.\nBarry-nore's greatest.\nA  raging, Mazing, colorful  background for\n\u2022 ' A gentleman beast.\nJOSEPH M. SCHENCK preitnti\nAmerica's Most\nDistinguished Actor\nJOHN\nin the Epic of Russia's\nRed Days\n-.th Camilla horn-louis wolheim\nA SAM TAYLOR PKODUCTION\nCOMEDY\n'COMPANIONATE SERVICE;\nPathe Review\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. 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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"}]}}