{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0404254":{"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/dataProvider":[{"value":"CONTENTdm","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/isPartOf":[{"value":"BC Historical Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/issued":[{"value":"2021-11-19","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1931-02-27","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0404254\/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":" 35%\nSharkey in Summer\n\u2014Page Seven\nthon laitffl I\nSilver Has Slight Increase in\nNew York Market\n\u2014 Page Twelve\nVOL. 29.\nNELSON, B. C.    FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 27, 1931.\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNo. 265\nr\n\u00bbt\nJL   w\nSill HU. DIES Situation  in\nAFTER LIFE OF Becomes    Involved!\nFINE SUCCESS\n1 Veteran Railroad Builder\nReached the Age of\n74 Years\nKNEW ROYALTY\nOF THE WORLD\nEntertained Famous Personages While Touring\nAmerica\n.PORTLAND, Ore., Peb. 28\u2014\n(AP)\u2014Samuel 1*11, well known\nrailroad builder, died hen at\n6:43  |v  m.\nDeath came a* the result of\nan attack of intestinal Influenza followed by complications,\nphysicians mid. He waa 74 years\nold.\nHill became 111 here February\n8 while en route to Salem. Ore.,\nto address the state legislature.\nLaat week lie underwent a major operation and hae been\ndangerously  111  since  then.\nThe past few days his condition had been improving, and\nhospital attendants expressed\nsome hopes for his  recovery.\nHis  jon,   James   Nathan   Hill,\nef New York, was present when\nthe end came.\n,     Hill,   wbo   aiu.lnsd   etfccess   as   a\nj lawyer,  railroad  executive   and  road\nI builder,   was   noted   in   the   Pacific\n) northwest   particularly   for   his   ac-\n| tlvltles In bringing about construc-\n| tion of the Columbia river highway\n\\ and   the   Pacific   highway.\nRill's   services   to   allied   nations\nI during   tho   world   war, as   a   road\nbuilder   won   him   decorations   from\nFrance,   Japan,   Belgium   and   Rou-\nI mania..\nWhen  Queen  Marie   of  Roumanta\nad har entourage visited the Unlt-\nI eel   States   several   years   ago.   Hill\nentertained the party and the queen\n' dedicated   the   Roumanian   room   at\nMary    Hill,   the    railroad    builder's\n1 now lonely  castle  built  on   a  high\n| Washington    cliff    overlooking    the\nColumbia  river.\nj     Four   years   earlier  Hill   was   host\n< to   many   European   rulers,   and   he\n} knew the statesmen, capitalists and\nh leaders   ln   fine   arte   in   both   the\nOrient snd the Occident.\n, He was a native of Deep River,\n[ N. C. but he spent must ot his\nI life ln the west. Aside from his\nvarious railroad positions, he was an\noverseer of Harvard university for\ni several   years.\nLtBt\n**l\nFARMER ^RTY IS ASSURED\nSEEK BACKING\nON NON-PROFIT\nPOLICY BASIS\nOST BEAUTIFUL CO-ED\nTwo Cars Warfield\nFertilizer Roll; One\nGoing Asiatic Market\nTRAIL,   a   C,   Feb.   88\u2014The\nfirst shipment ot fertilizers\nfrom the new plant of the Consolidated Mining & Smelting\nCompany of Canada, limited,\nat Warfield, was made this\nweek.\nThis first shlprtent consisted\nof two carloads of 20 tons each\nof ammonium phosphate and\ntriple  superphosphate.\nA notable feature about this\nfirst shipment was the fact\nthat the car of ammonium\nphosphate1 was destined for Asiatic consumption.\nThe car of triple superphosphate was consigned to Vancouver, and will be for the British\nColumbia   market.\nLABOR BILLS GO\nDOWN TO DEFEAT;\nARE NOT MAJOR\nLONDON, Feb. 26 (C P cable)\nThe Labor government of I'rlme\nMinister Ramsay .MacDonald suffered two defeats In standing\ncommittee ft might, two of the\n* administration's most important\nbills being Involved, but in\nneither oase was the defeat\nregarded as a major reverse. A\nLiberal amendment to the trades\ndisputes bill was passed and\nsome commentators view the\nchange as a virtual emasculation of the bill. The other defeat came when a Conservative\namendment to the agriculture\nmarketing  bill  was  adopted.\nThe Liberal amendment to\nthe trades dispute.* bill substituted a Liberal definition of\nan illegal strike for the original\nLabor definition. Thus the bill\nla changed almost beyond recognition and It is believed the\ngovernment may abandon further attempts to make the measure   law.\nPENAL TERM OF\n14 YEARS COMES\nFitOM THIEVERY\nMONTREAL. Que., Feb. 26.\u2014(CP\n\u2014Judge Cusson today sent Leo As\ntroff to the penitentiary for H1\nyean for theft and receiving staler\ngoods. Last week a two-year sen\ntence was given to him on a aim\nliar   charge.\nThere were 23 charges against\nAstroff In all. Free Clark, co-\naccused, waa sentenced to five\nyears lu the penitentiary last week\nprovincial police on their way to\nanswer a burglary call at Pierre\"--\n\u25bcUie, came upon Astroff and Clark\non the road, loading the stolen\ngoods from their broken-down automobile to a truck.\nPASSENGER PLANE\nSERVICE THREE\nYEAKD1STANT\nIs Prediction of Major-General J. H.  MacBrien for\nCanada\nMONTWBAU Feb. 28\u2014It WlU be\nthree years yet before Canada Is\nready to inaugurate a trans-Canada\npassenger airplane service, predicted\nMajor Oeneral J. H. MacBrien, today.\n\"I expect ln three, years we shall\nbe able to cross the continent tn\nthree  days,\"   said   the  general.\n\"First of all big airports are needed every 500 to 600 miles. If you\nmake the porta less far apart than\nthat, the train will be able to complete on fairly even terms, and if\nyou make them much farther than\nthat, you will be carrying fuel Instead   of   paasengers.\n\"The United States, whleh leads\nthe world today ln ground organization and ln organised flying routes,\nha* 16,000 miles lined up. They\nhave emergency landing grounds\nevery 40 miles. X believe Canada\ncould do with such fields about\nevery 60.\n\"The economical distance to fly a\nplane is Just about 600 miles. More\nmeans gasoline as opposed to a\npaying load, while leas means train\ncompetition. We have found out\nthat planes can cross the ocean,\nbut all the load Is taken up in\ngasoline.\"\nNew Revolt Is Reported\nFrom Oil Region in\nNorth\nREBELS TO NORTH\nAND SOUTH LIMA\nGovernment Forces Are\nSent in Both Directions\nADVOCATE FLAT\nPOWER RATE IN\nONTARIO HOUSE\nTORONTO, Ont.. Peb. 26. (CP>\u2014\nAdvocating a flat rate for hydroelectric power throughout the province, taxation of users of large\nmotor trucks and an assumption\nof the whole cost of provincial\nhighways by the provincial government, a. H. Acres, Conservative,\nCarleton, spoke in the Ontario legislature today. In an extensive review of farm conditions, Mr. Acres\nurged a number of measures which\nhave long been pressed by one or\nother of the two opposition parties.\nThe Liberals' or the Progressives. In\nfact, Furquhar Oliver, the lone\nU. F. C. member of the house, who\nfollowed the Ottawa Valley Conservative, charged him with stealing   his  speech.\nClaiming the great need of the\nfarming community was markets for\nanimal products, Mr, Acres ascribed\nthe decline ln the exports of bacon\nto Great Britain ln reoent years to\nthe virtual monopoly which controlled the packing business of the\ncountry.\nLIMA. Peru, Peb. 26.\u2014(AP)\u2014The\nPeruvian revolt against the military\nJunta governing tha country now\nIs distressing the government at\neach end of the republic.\nToday lt became known that two\ninfantry companies at Plura, ln an\noil region in the extreme north, had\nrevolted ugalnet the provisional presidency of Ueut.-Col, Luis M. Sanchez Cerro, who himself gained\notfice by a revolution last August.\nThe Plura troops rebeUed Tuesday\nunder   the  leadership  of  Col.  Manuel   Valde   Igleslaa.\nDESPATCHES    TROOPS\nHence with the spread of armed\nrevolt to the north and south of\nthe capital the Lima government\nhad dispatched troops ln both directions to suppress the rebellions.\nOfficial statements have said that\na. loyal cavalry regiment from Tacna\nls approaching Arequipa, the southern point whioh has been held etr.ee\nFtlday by revolting soldiers whila\na fighting division mobilized at.\nLima to move southward. The government also claims the adjacent\ndepartments of Moquega and Apuxi-\nmac are loyal and loyal forces hold\nthe fort of Mollendo, bey to Art\nquipa's sea trade.\nGovernment forces were started\nnorthward yesterday to crush the\nPlura insurrection, although lta ex\nlstence wns not made known a\nthat   time.\nThe government announced tonight that a newspaper censorship\nwould be established and kept In\nforce while the country ls ln a state\nof siege.\nEINSTMGiVl\nYOUTHMESSAGE\nGreat   Scientist   Tells   4000\nBoys and Girl; to Keep\nFaitb\nMurder Enters Into\nQraft Investigation\nNew York Woman \"Taken | MINERS REFUSE\nfor Ride\" and Then\nStrangled\nRAD INFORMATION\nFOR THE POLICE\nMen Named in Diary of\nVivian Gordon Are\nHunted\nI.1..A      1444.44      M  llllUl.      flUCttUiiflNi      llh'l\u00bbi\nMiss Martha Fall, granddaughter of lormer United States Senator\nAlton Fall, who recently was elected tb* most beautiful girl In high\nschool at El Paw, Tex. She wou over 19 other candidates. Miss fall\nplans   a   Journalistic   career   ofter   completing   college,\u2014A.P.   Photo.\nHurricanes Leave a\nTrail of Destruction\nASKS FOR SHELL\nOF BULLET THAT\nKILLED FRIEND\nPASADENA, Oallf., Feb. 36 (AP)\u2014\nThe great mind of Albert *91natein\nrevealed its curves of thought today\nln a message to student. As his\nfirst utterance upon arrival ln California two months ago expressed\nfaith In the youth of today, so he\nrounded out his visit with his laat\npublic appearance here again expressing  that faith.\nSome 4000 boys and girls were\nhis audlenc! ln the dedication of a\nnew astronomy building at the\nPasadena   Junior  college.\n\"Bear ln mind the fact that the\nwonderful things which you come to\nknow ln your schools are the products of many generations which\nhas been accomplished ln enthusiastic struggle and with great effort\nln all countries of the earth,\" he\ntold them.\n\"All thla Is now laid In your hands\nas your inheritance to the end that\nyou may receive, honor and advance\nlt and some day faithfully convey it\nto your posterity.\n\"Thus we mortals are Immortal\nin that we work together in never-\nending achievement.\n\"it you will constantly bear this\nin mind, you will Una a meaning in\nlife and effort and will attain the\nright attitude toward other people\nand   other   times.\"\nWOULD ENQUIRE\nINTO ECONOMIC\nSTATE OF WEST\nREVEAL NATIONAL\nLOTTERY TICKETS\nSOLD IN STATES\nMICHIOAN CITT, Ind., Feb. M.\n(AP)\u2014Existence of a national lot\ntery on the English Orand National sweepstakes was revealed by\nthe federal authorities today wtth\nthe arrest of Charles Clark, 38, and\nEdward Davis, 42, formerly ot Spo\nkane,   Wash.\nThe authorities estimated that\naxivroxlmately \u2022000,000 worth of\ntickets already had been sold\nthroughout the country. Ticket\nbearing numbers exceeding 1,000,00\nware found ln possession, of feh\nmm- *\nMONTREAL, Que., Feb. 36.\u2014(CP)\n\u2014A strange request was put before\nCoroner Prince here today after he\nhad returned a verdict exonerating\nAlphonse Dorals of the accidental\nshooting of his fellow clerk, William\nLeger, ln a branch of the Bank of\nToronto here on Pebruary 17. The\nyoung man asked the coroner If he\nmight keep the cartridge shell of\nthe bullet that killed his companion.\nCoroner Prince gave him permission\nto   keep   the  souvenir\nDorals said the accident occurred\nwhen other employees were at lunch\nthe revolver discharging ln his hand\nas Leger playfully extended hts forefinger at him ln imitation of a\nholdup man Dorals said he grabbed the gun and it went off, the\nbullet striking Leger tn the abdomen. He died several days later\nafter telling detectives that the\nshooting had been accidental.\n\"ROCK PILE\" TO\nBE RESTORED\nTORONTO, Oot., Feb. 36.\u2014(OP)^\nThe \"rock ptl*\" will be restored to\nall Ontario penitentiaries and Jails\nln the belief tbat reformation is\nbest accomplished by hard and productive labor. Prisoners will be I\nprovided with goggles to prevent\nthe  danger  at aya-lnjury.\nREOINA. Sask., Peb. 26.\u2014A royal\ncommission appointed by the federal government to Investigate\nthoroughly economic conditions In\nwestern Oanada, was advocated In\nthe legislature today by Hon. W.\nC, Buckle, minister of agriculture.\nSuch Inquiry would be on the same\ngeneral principle as the Duncan\ncommission In the maritime provinces.\nIn the event of the federal government falling to implement this\nresolution. Mr. Buckle's motion\nurges that the Saskatchewan government be Instructed to approach\nthe governments of British Columbia, Alberta and Manitoba, w)th a\nview to the appointment of suoh\na oommlasjon by the western provinces.\nVERNON TO HAVE\nA NEW HOTEL\nVERNON, B. C Feb. 386\u2014Tbe of\nfer of $4600 mad* by a Vernon dti-\n\u00bbna* oommittee Interested ln build'\nlng a modem and up to date hotel\nIn this city for eight lota adjacent\nto the old Kalamalka hotel has\nbeen accepted by the city council.\nIt la planned to erect a new structure on tha site of tha old hotel\nand th* adjacent lota.\nSouthern Italy Damaged\nto the Extent of\nMillions     \u2022\nNAPLES, Italy, Feh. 26\u2014<AP>- I\nCyclonic storms, which have bat\ntered southern Italy for almost *\nweelt, had abated tonight, leaving In\ntheir wake about 27 persona drowned and several million dollars damage.\n.The storm, which reached is\nmost northern point here, wrought,\nits worst damage tn small vessels\nseaports and country districts. The\nsouthern provinces were hardest lilt\nln recent years. Lives were lost in\nwidespread points such ms Trapani\nof the western tip of Sicily, Messina,  Foggla and  Naples.\nAn actual check of damage pros-\nably will not be possible for several days.\nSeveral fishing boats have been\nreported sunk. The coasting steamer Marla Gn.12.ia was burning 60\nmiles off Capri after the 14 members of the crew had been rescued\nby a Oreek vessel\nGIANT WAVE KILLS ANIMALS\nA giant wave hit the cattle boat\nSchlafflno, loading here, and swept\n3   of   the    animals   overboard.\nSome loss of life was attributed\nto washouts and floods Inland.\nAs reports trickled In from outlying towns the death toll climbed\nsteadily.\nRegglo     and     Calabria     reported\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\n*Some 2.30 Persons Rilled\nby Fiji Island Hurricane\nNEW YORK, Feb. 38. (AP) \u2014\nMurder stalked today Into an Investigation Into alleged graft, bribery and Judicial corruption which\nhod been agitating New York for\nmonths. Vivian Gordon. 82. red-\nhaired artist, who had promised to\nreveal a \"frame-up\" by a police\nofficer, was taken for a ride and\nstrangled.\nTonight detectives were combing\nthe city for a long list of men\nlisted ln three diaries discovered\nin her luxurious apartment. One\nwas found and detained for ours- j\ntiontng, but detectives kept bis;\nname secret.\n'I   fear   but   one   man,   and   he\n-\u2014-\"  the  girl  had written concerning him.\nBesides the diary police found\nseveral hundred love letters from\nmen, 611,000 in bonds,*and papers\nIndicating the victim had wide bualneas Interests.\nTAXI DRIVER\nHAS   CLUB\nAnother clue was furnished by a\ntaxi driver who said that tn the\ndark hours before dawn he pursued into the park a cab ln which\nii screaming woman w_ struggling\nwith two men. The cab disappeared\non the road near whleh the body\nwas found.\n1 Vivian Oordon, once a reformatory inmate, was found dead in\nVan   Courtland   park,  one   delicately\n(Continued   on   Page   Two)\nTO WORK UNTIL\nFELLOWS FOUND\nWHITEHAVEN, Eng, Feb. 91\n(API\u2014 The bodies of 14 ooal\nminers, entombled under Uie\nsea for three years, today caused\na strike by 1500 workers In the\nHalg  pita.\nThe miners have been Idle\nsince an explosion January 29\nkilled  27 of their comrades.\nTbe Halg pita extend for two\nmiles under the bed of the sea.\nAfter an explosion In 1928 part\nof Uie mine was walled off and\nthe 14 bodies were left there.\nThe men notified miller heads\ntoday they will not go back\nuntil the 14 are brought tip\nfor   burial.\nSUGGESTS HIGH\nCOMMISSIONER\nUN AUSTRALIA\nMatter Brought Up in Lords\nby Former Governor-General of Australia\nDEPORTATION OF\nMRS. NORTHCOTT\nIS CANCELLED\nSAN FRANCISCO, Feb. 26 (API \u2014\nW. E. Walsh, Inspector in charge of\nthe San Francisco bureau of the\ndepartment of immigration, said today a deportation warrant for Mrs.\nSarah Louise Northeott. mother of\nOordon Stewart Northeott, executed\nfor the Wlneville farm murders, had\nbeen cancelled.\nCancellation of the warrant, which\nhad beon filed with the department\nby San Quenttn prison authorities.\nwas ordered, Walsh said, because\nMrs. Northeott had forfeited her\nCanadian citizenship.\n\"It Is necessary to obtain the\nconsent of Canadian government\nauthorities when deporting any one\nto that country,\" Walsh said, \"Canada refused permission ln Mrs.\nNorthcott's case claiming sbe had\nlost  her   citizenship.\"\nWalsh said he understood Cyrus\nO. Northeott, her husband, and Mrs.\nLarry Newgent, wife of a Los Angeles evangelist, who was spiritual\nadvisor to Northeott when he wss\nexecuted, planned an appeal to\nGovernor Rolph to commute Mrs.\nNorthcott's   sentence.\nWOULD KNOW WHY\nNOVA SCOTIA'S\nECONOMICS BAD\nHALIFAX. N. 8., Feb. 26 (CP)\u2014\nAn opposition demand for an \"authoritative and exhaustive inquiry\ninto tha conditions which cripple\nNova Scotia's economic life\" was\ncharacterized by the government aa\na request to cover ground already\ngone over by the Duncan commission, as the house of assembly divided on party lines to defeat a\nLiberal amendment and carry the\naddress tn reply to the speech from\nthe tArona by an 18 to 14 vote\ntonight.\nSUVA, FIB, Feb. 27\u2014 (AF)\u2014\n(Friday)\u2014Two hundred and\nthirty persons wer*. killed Saturday In the worst hurricane\never experienced In the FIJI\nislands. Most of the victims\nwere Pljlans j.imI Fast Indians.\nOne European nu electrocuted.\nHeavy floods devastated t he\ndistricts of HI gnat ok a, Ba, and\n1 uitokn, tutting off ail communication   until   today.\nOne    hundred    died     in     9lg-\nnatoka,   Hit   in   Ha   and   M   In\nUuitok.,.     More   were    expected\nto    die    of   exposure    and    raid\nbefore    help    arrived.\nA  train on  the  Ba-Lautbka  railway was blown off the tracks, killing one person and injuring many.\nA  Fijian woman, struck  by  three\nsheets   of   iron   simultaneously,   waa\ncut   to  pieces.\nTanks, containing 600 gallons of\nwater, were hurled 60 feet. A house\nwas  blown on top of another.\nHot gusts of wind from leaden\nskies Saturday morning developed\ninto a furious hurricane at 3 -30\np.m. It lasted until 3 a.m. the\nnext morning, with torrential rain\nthroughout.\nStores and other buildings were\nsmashed into a scene of terrible\ndes^la'lon.\nThe damage was done in a narrow radius 60 miles from Suva.\nPROTEST IS FILED\nOVER REDUCTION\nMUNICIPAL GRANT\nVICTORIA, Feb. 36\u2014Vancouver\ncity authorities started a drive here\ntoday against any reduction ln government grants to* municipalities\nand were confident that the proposal to divert pSri-mutual taxation\nfrom the municipalities to the provincial treasury would be abandoned.\nThis was the understanding among\nmembers of a large city delegation\nwhich  met  trn\u00bb  cabinet   today.\nAt a further interview with the\ngovernment Friday, the city representatives will make a formal protect against any reduction in their\nrevenues    from    provincial    sources.\n\"We simply can not stand any\nlarge cut in our present civic income,\"   Mayor   Taylor   declared.\nNAVAL PARLEY\nRUNS SMOOTHLY\nFranco-Italian Differences Hit\nNo Snags in Process of\nSettlement\nROME, Feb. 26. (AP)\u2014British and\nItalian naval experts spent six\nhours today shuffling paper warships from category to category ln\ntheir search for a settlement satisfactory to Italy and. Franco-Italian\nnaval   differences.\nIn the meantime the British foreign minister. Rt. Hon. Arthur\nHenderson, and Rt. Hon. A. V. Alexander, rirst lord of the admiralty,\nwho headed the British peacemaking mission, called on Premier Mussolini and discussed the pending\naettlement with him. It was understood they acquainted him thoroughly with thc terms of the provisional accord reached between\nFrance and Great Britain and adhesion to which by Italy will bring\nthe two continental powers Into\nthe treaty signed at London last\nyear.\nWork of the technicians will continue tomorrow, but this had been\nexpected, and officials intimated\nthat nothing discouraging had developed during the day. As a result, hope that a full accord would\nbe reached before the British mission leaves on Saturday, became\nalmost an expectation among the\nwell-informed.\nLIQUOR AGENTS\nRAIDS CLUBS IN\nPHILADELPHIA\nWOMAN JMLED\nEIGHT MONTHS\nFOR SMUGGLING\nPORTLAND, Vermont, Feb. 26.\u2014\nMrs. Lillian Plouffe of Bedford,\nQue., today was sentenced to serve\neight months to two years in the\nwomen's prison here. She pleaded\nguilty to smuggling into the Franklin county Jail hacksaw bladrs\nwhich were used by alien prisoners\nln a reoent attempt to break Jail.\nThe woman wns arrested when she\nreturned to visit her Incarcerated\nhusband a week after tne attempted   break.\nChief of Stoney\nIndians Is Dead\nQTJESNEL. Feb. 26\u2014Chief Antotne,\n77, died recently on the Stoney\nCreek Indian reserve, near Vander-\nhoof, was chief of the Stoney Creek\ntribe for 45 years. He is succeeded\naa chief  by his  son.\nPHILADELPHIA, Feb. 26. (AP)\u2014\nPolice raided the old exclusive Blue\nStocking Philadelphia club this afternoon and reported they had obtained 200 bottles of liquor. Early\ntoday the wealthy Manufacturers*\nclub wss similarly raided, and 255\nbottles of choice wines and other\nliquors   were   confiscated.\nTlie Philadelphia club, organised\nIn 1833, has had in lte roster the\nnames of many of the best families of PhUadelphia and vicinity.\nMembership has always been difficult   to   obtain.\nSEATTLE BAKERY\nSCENE BOMBING\nSEATTLE, Wash.. Feb. 26 (AP)\u2014\nA plant of the Oolden Rule bakery\nwas bonbad here tonight. Injuring\nCharles Short. 22, four others working ln the plant were unhurt. One\nside of the structure was wreaked.\nThe explosion shattered windows ln\nnearby residences and waa beard\nover a  radius  of  three   miles.\nIt was the second Ume within\nfive days that an attempt had been\nmade to bomb the building. A\nlarge quantity of dynamite was discovered outalde the walls Sunday.\nEd. Hagen, former Seattle policeman snd ex-convlct was charged\nwith \"attempting to endanger life\nand property by explosives\" in a\ncomplaint filed today by Chief\nDeputy Prosecutor Emmet o. Leni-\nhan, m connection w.th the at\ntempted   bombing.\nLONDON.       Fib.      M\u2014(CP)\u2014Th\nsuggestion that the British gov\nernment appoint a high oommis\nsinner In Australia to act as Liaison\noffice between the Imperial and the\nAustralian governments waa made\nIn the house of \u00abjmmona today by\nLord Denman. a foTmer governor-\ngeneral  of  the commonwealth.\nIn bringing up the question. Lord\nDenman. ..who occupied Mia vt\"-e-\nregal post from Ifltl to 1914, win\ncareful y> explain that he mean* nv\nreproach against'the appointment of\nSir Isaac Isaacs, a, native Australian\nas governor-general, but he wished\nto point out that, with the exception of the Irish Free State, , no\ndominion had adrjpted such s\ncourse.\nLord Stonehaven, whose term as\nH (i wm ior- general of the common -\nwealth expired a few months ago.\nsupported   the   suggestion   that   ai ^\" ej^,et\nThe   convention's  stand\nSaskatchewan Party to Be\nFormed in Two Months\ntime\n\u25a0-\u25a0- \u25a0\u00bb\nPLATFORM BASED ON\nU. F. C. ECONOMICS\nIs a Reversal of 1930 Decision; Leader Not\nNamed\nBASKATOCTX. Sa.*., Feb. M.\n\u2014 (By (>iaH Purceli. Canadian\nPress staaf writer.\u2014 Saskatchewan ts assured of a new farm\nparty. Hr a virtually a_.nl-\nnmm derision, ignited Farmer*\nof CanadA. Saskatchewan tectum, todav derided to enerr\npoUtlrs. Th#y will seek backing\nof all citizens Id electing candidates on a policy ulmed at\nultima.*1 social ownership aad\nnon-profit   production.\ntifforta of the new party,\nwhoa* date of Inauguration ft\nyet to be set, will he directed\nInto provincial and Dominion\nfields. The Saskatchewan bod>\nHalms 2fi.800 member*, as compared with 18.1 os for cmted\nfarmers of Alberta.\nACTVAL FORaMATlON\nDKLAYBD\nActual formation of the new party\ncannot take place for at least two\nmonths. It is necessary, before official Inauguration of the movement, to receive ratification from\nlocal lodgei for a constitution a.\nchange removing the U. F. c.'s ban\non   poWtlist   HJ1tR.nr.as.      \u2022\nThe   platfnrm   of   lba   re-\u00bb   partv\nwill  be baaed ot:   'he   U.  P.  c. era-\nnomlr. policy, approved ft  the four\nday annual convention's second tension   yesterday.\nDelegates, in favoring political action, wiped from a resolution nf\nthe U. F. C. board all st.piu.afJo!,\nthat formation of the new part'\noccur at the refusal of Oomlnlor\nor provincial administration to put\nthe new-formed \u00aboonrtra(c pollcv in-\nhigh   commissioner   be   appointed\nLord Passfleld, secretary for the\ncolonies, ln replying, said: \"Our\npolloy haa been to go slowly and let\nconstitutional practice work Itself\nout following Uie desires of thr\nseveral dominions from time ta\ntime.\" The question of having e\nrepresentative of the British gov\nernment In Australia was being considered.\nWATER DELUGE\nIN MINE TRAPS\nMANY WORKERS\nM KANTON, Pa., Feh. %*<\u2014\n(AP)\u2014A flood of water, presumably from un abandoned\nworking, brought death to one\nman and trapped ?1 others for\nmore than an hour today in the\nI'nderwood mine of thr Pitts-\nton   Coal  company,   near   herr.\nMany other men fled to safety\nbefore the water reached them\nand first report* circulated\nabout, the countryside were\nthai scores of men had been\nkilled. Officials said nil the\n1200 workers In the plant had\nbeen   accounted   for   tonight.\nEdward Curtis. 40. Jessurs.\ndrowned. The     r recited     had\nnothing worse than a soaking\nand   shock.\nMine officials said a miner's\nblast might 1i*vp opened the\nway for the waters, thousands\nof gallons of which poured\ninto the  mine\nsquatt\u00a5rsmust\nleave stanley\npark domiciles\nVANOOUVER. B. C, Feb 68.\u2014\nFive familtee of squatters who occupy onfl of the finest beauty spots\nof Stanley park, will shortly br-\ngiven three months' notice to seek\nother Quarters, the board of park\ncommissioners decided this afternoon, s\nThe squatters live in attacks- situated on the drive bet7ween Brockton\npoint and the nine o-clook gun\nand, According to Conunlsslcnirr\nR. Rows Holland, who brought the\nmatter to the board's attention,\ntheir presence withholds from the\npeople of Vanoouver one of the\nfinest obtainable views of ttie harbor  skyline.\n___________________________ \u25a0\u25a0   *   re\"\nversal   of  the  decision  at  the   1980\nmeet,    when    politirtil    action    wss *\nturned   down   by   eigh t   votes   and\nformation   of  a  political   body  o*rt -\nside the U. F. A,  was favored.\nIt' ls considered unlikely thst\nOeorge H. Williams, immediate past\npresident of the U. F. C, will seek\nthe leadership of the farm party\nif lt is formed before spring. Ha\nIs understood to believe that A. J.\nMacAulay. elected president of th*\nU. F. C today, should rather b\u00bb a\ncandidate   for   thc   position.\n.AMENDMENTS TO\nMOTOR VEHICLE\nACTS iVRE MANY\nVICTORIA, Feb. 26 <CP>\u2014Speeding motorists, hard hitting magistrates and the validity of \"Sootch\"\noaths came in for dLscureion during\nthe comni.ttec atage cf the proposed\namendment to th** Motor Vehicle\nact, today in the legislature. Attorney-General a, h. Pooley, K. C,\npiloted the government measure containing $2 sections amending; former\nprovisions in the statute and adding\nnew  ones.\nConsideration of creation of special   magistrates   to   try   cases   arising\nout  of  motor  vehicle  operation  was\nt-r.iggested   by   A.  M.  Manson,  K.  O..\nformer   attorney-general.    Mr.   Man-\nson   told   how   one   magistrate   had\nstamped  out in  three  months  hard,\n| driving by students at the University\nj of British  Columbia by a series of\n'stiff  sentences.\nMr. Pooley concurred that speeding offences liad to ba curbed and\ntold of a. very wide power now in\ntlie hands of the commissioner of\npolice to suspend or cancel licenses,\nTba attorney-genera! explained th*\nterm in the bill which would tighten\nup regulations in regard to rep-irttng\nserious accident*, and ot ivr means\nof exercising due control over increasing  traffic  probii'im;.\nThe Weather\nSCRIPPS-HOWARD\nBUYS NEW YORK\nWORLD P.4PERS\nNUW  YORK.   I\u00ab*b.  37.\u2014lAP)\u2014Tt\u00bb\nN*w   Tort   World   newspapw.   wsr.\nsold   to   tb.   Scrtpps-Howard   syndicate   early   till*   morning   for   ap- Pentlcton\nproximately   .5.000.000 Vernon\nThe  contract   was  sined  by   th.  Grand   rorks\nthree   Pulitzer    brothers,    publishers  Kaslo\nof  the  Morning World, the Evening   Cranbrook\nWorld, and  the Bunday World,  and Calgary\nby   Roy   W.   Howard,   clwlrman   of  Edmonton\nthe  board  of Scrtpps-Howard.    The  Swift  Current\npurchase  goea Into effect with  th\u00ab( Prince   Albert\nfirst   edition of  the Evening World) Qu'Appel!.\ntoday. .   | Winnipeg    . .\nMas.\nI\nPorecsat:     Nelson   .->n6    ;-r:nli\nPartly  cloudy   and  mild   mtb  ocx.\nslum*!  rain or sleet\nMm\nNHU80N M\nNanalmo r;\nVlotarla .   ..   i\u00bb\nVancouver N\nKamloops ns.\nprlnoe  Qccme M\nEste-Tan   Point ;14\nPrince  Rupert  3.\nAtlln \u2014.'\u25a0  I\nDawaon,   V    T *\nSeattle it\nPortland +f)\nSan   PmncLw^n 4.R.\nSpokano 28\nLos   Angelrs S3\n39\n37\n38\n30\n. 37\n19\n22\n20\n3\n. 14\n3d\nAt\n4!\n37\n4.\n41\n311\na;\n Page Two\nTHE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS      FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1981.\nPLEASURE PIER\nMAY BE BUILT\nIN VANCOUVER\nVANCOtrirtR. B. C. FW>. 36.\u2014A\nnew proposal for a MOO.OOO pleasure pier at s_gllsh Bay, this time\nto bt located at the east side of\nthe bar. at tba foot of Bid well\nstreet, wm\u00ab placed before the park\nboard today by William  Lyon Mac\nKenzie,   Vancouver  business  man.\nThrough hia solicitor, H. M. Drott,\nMacKenzie asked for a 00-day interim option on the site. The commissioners will hold a special meeting next Thursday to discuss the\nproposal, and to assure themselves\nthat MacKenzie and hli associates\nare able to finance the project and\ncarry it out ln a manner suitable\nto  the  city.\nCommence gently to \"wean\" birds\nfrom   winter  lighting.\nGuide for Travellers\nNelson, B.C. Hotels\nSAYS THE PRESS\nMISLEAD PUBLIC,\nREVENUE REPORT\nPAYS RESPECTS TO HOOVER\nvw^lN\\^^^Jvw*^^\nNELSON, B. C.      .\nThe best hotel and dining accommodation\nin the city.\nGEORGE BENWELL, Prop.\n\/WVWWv**rfW^i^V^\nWOtBt\u2014tX. L. Moljsan. N. Ui brook; II. W. Courser, O. Slbl.r\nMann. B. RotMrtKm, D. H. Currier,! Medicine Hat; R. R. Pag*, J. e,\nVanoouver; J. J. Blnna, Kaalo; N. seaman, Spokane; O. A, afcBain,\nBookers, Trail; D. P. Chapman, | Toronto; Mr. and Urs. W. J. Meagh-\nSeattle; W. Morrison, E. Rlne. J. er. J. Cookson, Nel*on; M, D.\nW. Reld, Calgary; A. Doufour, T. ChlAhoIm, Klmberley; M. Heftrn'\nA.   Wallace,  O.  S.  Mcintosh,   cran- j Brokemere.\nHR__\nSAVOT-fP. J. Behan. Sirdar; Mr*. | brook; s. Stan. Trail; Mr. arm Mrs.\nM. McLeod, Procter; Mr. and Mr\u00bb.' E. J. Resbury, Pentlcwn; J. a\nVT. Laurie and family, J. A. Johnson, Shepherd, Sandon.\no.   Brabazor..   8.   W.   Blrrell,   Cran-\nQueen's\nHotel\nA. Lapolnte, Prop.\nHot and eold water ln every room\nSteam heated.\nquiIiMB\u2014D. U Stem.. Spok.ne;\n_ N. OH.. Sharon, Wa*h.; _ Flem-\nlng Valleytord, Wash.; C, Byels.\nBpangl*. Wsah.; Mr. end Mn. A. K\nUnjer.   TraU.\nMadden Hotel\nd. a. Mcdonald\nB*at*d Room, by th.\nD\u00bby, week or Month.\nBv*ry consideration shown\nto   fU\u00ab.t*.\nOe* Baker and Ward Btrwt*\nNelson\nNew Qrand\nHotel\nP.  I*.  KAFAK,  Prop.\nWeekly or monthly rates.\nHot and cold water ln al) rooms.\nPhone 503       P. O. BOX 1061\nMillion Dollar Reserve Fund\nof Liquor Board Not\n\"Swept Away\"\nVICTORIA. Feb. 3C\u2014Peeltac engendered at the opening of publio\naccounts committee thie morning\nflared into heated debate In the\nlegislature thla afternoon, over the\ndisposition of approximately $1,000,-\n000, reserve funda of the liquor\ncontrol board, and*argument on the\ngeneral policy of the government ln\nrelating   to   allocated   funda.\nH. D. Twlgg, chairman of the pub-\nHe account*, committee, Introduced\nthe iwue, on a point of privilege ln\ncomplaint of a report of the committee proceedings appearing In The\nVictoria Times thla afternoon, and\nwhich he said tended to create the\nimpression that the government\nhad   \"done   away   with   11,000.000.\"\nThe facta were, aald Mr. Twlgg,\nbefore tbe committee had been that\nthe liquor board reserve had been\nplaced In the treasury, and while\nnot now held in cash, was represented by assets to that value ln\nstock., fixtures, and other assets of\nthe board. Evidence taken before\nstanding committees was only avail'\nable to newspaper! through courtesy,\nand this privilege should not be\nabused,  Mr.   Twlgg  stated.\n\"The suggestion that 11,000,000\nwas swept away by the government\nle not only very wrong, but very\nImproper and quite untrue,'* Mr.\nTwlgg declared. Mr. Craig had\nshowed <it exact state of all trust\nfunds ln the hands of the treasury,\nand there was nothing to support\nany suggestion that $1,000,000' of\nliquor board funds had disappeared,\nho said.\nPATTIXLO   DEFENDS  REPOBT\nT. D. Pattullo, defending the report In the press, stated the fault.\nhe found with the account was\nthat it erred on the side of being\ntoo favorable to the government.\nTaking the figures given by the\ncomptroller general, said Mr. Pattullo, lt would be seen that there\nshould be approximately $0,000,000\nIn the treasury ln special accounts\nincluding thc liquor control board\nreserve, superannuation funds, and\nother special accounts which were\nnot now there, and as against that\napproximately $474,000 was shown\nas cash on hand. It wag true, said\nthe leader of the opposition, that\nthe comptroller genera] had stated\nthat the $1,000,000 of liquor board\nfunda were now represented by\nassets.\n\"Olp   HEN* COMBS\nHOME   TO   ROOST\"\nIt was a case of \"the old hen\ncoming home to roost,\" said Oeorge\nS. Pearson. The Liberals bad been\nattacked in other years for alUged\nuse of funds in trust accounts,\nwhich had not been misspent but\nused ln the ordinary way that\nwould have been followed by any\nbusiness. There was nothing amiss\nwith  the   press  report,  he  said.\nA. M. Manson referred to Mr.\nTwlgg as \"the Mussolini of the\nhouse,\" a sally that drew a request\nfor   \"order\"   from   Mr.., Speaker.\nMr. Twlgg: \"Vou wtll .have to\napologise   to   Italy   If  you   go   on.\"\nMr. Manson went on to discuss\nthe figures of the comptroller-\ngeneral's statement. If he were not\nmistaken, lie said, over $3,000,000\nof monies which should have been\nheld' in special accounts had been\nused, and only a \"very paltry sum'*\nremained   ln   the   bank.\nStatutes required that these funds\nbe paid into consolidated revenue,\nand not separate accounts Mr.\nTwlgg reVrted, after slight further\ndiscussion the debate wae dropped\nand the motion, supporting the\npoint  of  privilege,   withdrawn.\nNT5W    ORAJTD\u2014J.    Brtce,    Nelson.-\nD.  Hackston, Trail;  E. Eng,  Procter.\nMADDaW\u2014O. 8. Taylor, Spokane;\n_l j, wataon, D. McPhall. Sirdar;\nA. KatfaOeon, Cranbrook; A. McDonald,   Smlthera.\nOccidental Hotel\nThe Home of Plenty\n70S Vernon St rhrm.\nH. Waaslrk .\nFifty   Booms of  Solid   Comfort.\nHeadquarter,   for   Loggers   and\nMiners.\nA.  II.   ORJEBN  COMPANY\nAPPEARS   IM  LIST\nVICTORIA, B. C. Feb. 26.\u2014In\neluded ln companies .nd sooKUe.\nincorporated ln British Columbia\nthis week 1\u00bb the A, H. Green Com-\nlmny,   Limited,  Nelson.\nTrail. B.C. Hotels\nWOMAN IS TAKEN\nFOR A RIDE AND\nSTRANGLED, EAST\n(Continued Prom P*\u00bb* On.)\nH\nOTEL\nRLINGTON\nCentrally Located\nTRAIL, B. C.\nA. P. LBVEBQOB. Prop.\nDOUGLA6\nHOTEL   9\nRooms and Bath\nt. l ud i. euion At.i;\nProp*.\nSteam Heated\nThrouihout\nHot and Cold\nWater\nPhon. 2S3\nTRAIL, B. C.\nThe House'You\nWant\nII\/HETHEK   jnu'rs   a    pros-\nrr pertlre   bujer   or   owner\nof   n   hou.e,   you'll   find   tbe\nclassified  Columns  worth\nwhile.\nTHE NELSON\nDAILY NEWS\nmanicured band clutching a clothes\nline, with which she had been\nstrangled.\nHer long, ruddy hsir cowed her\nface; her black velvet drew was\ntorn.. An expensive pump, encrusted\nwith brilliants, was found some\ndistance from the body, and a pair\nof white kid gloves lay ln tbe mud.\nShe had been dead live or six\nhours.\nPolice Commissioner Mulrooney\nordered that Patrolman Andrew O.\nMoLoughlln, who arrested the woman eight years ago on a vice\ncharge, be questioned about the\ni arrest. Mulrooney said McLoughltn\nhad been the partner of a plain\nclothes man suspended as the result of a vice case now under investigation.\nLETTKIt   IWCEIVED\nOn February 7 a letter had come\nto Isldor J. Kresel, former Investigator of tht magistrates' courts,\nwhose charges of wholesale \"framing\" of women by the vice squad\nhad cast a pall of scandal over\nthe   courts  and  police.\n\"I have some information ln connection with a frame-up by a po-\n1 lot officer and others wh tob I\nbelieve wlll be of great aid to you\nm your investigation.\" It read. \"I\nwould appreciate an interview at\nvour   earliest   convenience.\"\nIt  waa  signed   Vivian  Gordon.\nShe was asked to call last Friday, but failed to appear or to\nsend   word.\nNelson, B. C. Cafes\nTHE tOYAL CAFE\nCLA&MC   HKsT.il. KANT\n\u25a0eflncment   and    Delicacy    Prevail\nOPEN   DAV   AND   MOHT\n--.IK)   35c\n      3.W\nrand  Noodles\nKOOTENAY CAFE\nVERNON STREET\nDinner,  JU0 to \u00a3.3Q  -...   Site\nSupper, 5.30 to B p. m     8BC\nShort  Orders a Specialty.\nQuirk   Service\nNext Kootenay Hotel, Nelson\nRobert Norris, 65, Widely known\nas an agriculturist, died suddenly\nat his home near Staffs, Ont., on\nthe same farm on which he wss\nborn. He was particularly noted as\nu breeder of Shorthorn oattle and\nheavy   horses.\nARGUE FOR THE\nREMOVAL OF TAX\nON PHOSPHATES\nPattullo Cannot See Why Consolidated Should Have Tax\nRemoval  Aid\nSTATESMAN\nHIMeYTiutC ms   '\u2022i.i.,,,,   . ...n.-,  \u00a5ftUtU ttwS*.\nHon. Hugh Outhrle (left), minister of Justice of Oanada, with Hume\nWrong, oharge d'affaires at the Canadian legation at Washington, DC.\nupon the former's visit recently to the White House to pay his respect*\nco President Hoover and his attendance at the eleventh annual banquet\nof  the   Federal   Bar   association.\nWOULD UNITE ALL\nEUROPE ON WHEAT\nPARLEY IN MARCH\nPARIS, Feb. j\u00bbfi\u2014 When the\nworld wheat conference meets\nIn Rome on March 28, P. Elbe!,\ndirector of commercial agreements ln the French ministry ot\ncommerce, would hare the European nations present a united\nfront. V Klbel urged the desirability of Mich a course at\nthe European cereal conference\nthis  afternoon.\nOn' the question of tariff\npreference), for cereals, conference discussion revealed wide\ndivisions of opinion. Jugo-Slavla\nwae frank In expressing the view\ntbat the best remedy for the\nsituation was the establishment\nof a preferential tariff system.\nRichard Srhueller, of Australia,\nstressed the Impossibility uf\nestablishing a preferential system without the consent of aU\nthe states who oould claim in\nbenefit from t he most favored\nnation treatment.\ntYClM WRECKS\nMUCH OF LOWU\nPORTION ITALY\n(Continued  From  Page  One)\nwidespread floods with a number\nof houses collapsed but no deaths.\nThree persons died In nearby villages,   however,\nAt Tlrlolo the streets were blocked\nwith fallen buildings arid all wires\nwere down, but there were no\ndeaths.\nThe river Bsssnto overflowed the\nstreets of Potensa and many buildings  collapsed-\nTwo were killed In the collapse\nof a house at Santa Mtrra.\nA church and a number of othur\nbuildings were wrecked at Amato\nwhile 30 houses collapsed at Ctro\nMarina.     No   one   was   killed.\nStreets were flooded at St. Bruno\nand bridges were wrecked, with the\ninhabitants going about in boats.\nA factory was wrecked at Tur,\nand  a man and a woman died.\nTwenty houses fell at Mlgllerlne\nbut no deaths were reported.\nReduction in Fare\nto Scandinavian\nPorts 18 Announced\nDRY MAJORITY\nPREDICTED BY\nTWHEADERS\nTemperance     Chiefs    Term\nProhibition _ Worst Better Than Saloon\nVICTORIA, Feb. 39\u2014 Respective\nneeds of the new phosphate mining\nIndustry and the esmbtlsbsd coal\nindustry were argued out ln the\nlegislature Wednesday, bringing a\nrequest from O. S. Pearson, Liberal\nof Nanalmo, for removal of the 10\nper oent royalty per ton on British\nColumbia ooal.\nIt asms up on the second reading\nof the act to amend the Phosphate\nMining act, which would eliminate\nthe 10 per oent per tan royalty on\nPhosphate rock mined la the provinoe.\nlion. W. A. McKenzle, minister of\nmines, when he Introduced the bill,\nexplained that It was to give encouragement to the phosphate production In the province as there\nwere heavy Imports at present. A\nnew gio.000,000 fertilizer plant had\nbeen constructed at Tadanac by\nConsolidated Smelters.\nPATTULLO WANTS\nFULL   REASONS\nT. D. Pattullo leader of the opposition declared tbat complete reasons for this tax removal should\nbe given to tha house. He said that\nthere was a well defined opinion\nin the provinoe that natural resources should be developed on a\nbasis of \"payment for value received.\" Why did Consolidated Smelters  need   this  aid?\"\nO. A. Pearson agreed with the\nprinciple of the bill, but only hoped\nthat* the same would be done with\ncoal. He supported the second\nreading. It was then explained by\nCol. O. A.' Walkern, Conservative of\nVancouver, that the cost to the\ngovernment of maintaining suitable\nsupervision over the coal industry\nln the province made elimination\nof tax Impossible at the present\ntime.\nHon.   R.  H.   Pooley,  attorney-gen-\nDEAD   AT    LONDON\nSir Laming Worthington Brans,\n6H .secretary of war in the last\nConservative government of Oreat\nBritain, who died Peb. IS. had a\ndistinguished political career and\nwas one of the mainstays In the\nhigh councils of tht Conservative\nparty. As a great lawyer he will ba\nre membered by Canadians principally se tbe London solicitor appointed by the English courts to\nrealize aaaeta of the British American company, the London and Globe,\nand other Whlttaker Wright consents after the great fli\nsmash   ln   1901.\nProvincial Market\nProposal Formed\nin Saskatchewan\nREGINA,    SiSt,   Peb.   M.    (OF)\u2014\nMarketing of eggs and poultry pro\nducts   through   one   provincial   or\n,  .gantzetlon is favored by the Saakat-\neral,   said   that   Consolidated   Smel- cnewan cooperative Poultry Produc-\nter8 had a name for fine treatment ers   Umlte4.    A  ballot   among   the\nof their men and continued a large memberf of the co-operative resulted\ntsu\nLONDON SHOWS A\nSMALL INTEREST\nINTHEttECTlOl\nCounty Coundl. Election\nMarch 5; Traffic SysUm\nIssue Up\npayroll   enn   ln   the   depression.\n130 Farmers Paid\nIncome Taxes in\nManitoba, 1930\nWINNIPEG, Man., Peb. lt. (CD-\nOnly 130 farmers ln Manitoba paid\nIncome tax ln 1039, lt was revealed\nIn the report of the Manitoba Tax\nCommission, tabled ln the legislature\nrecently. A total of 2(70 farmers\nmsde returns but only 130 paid Into\nthe government's coffers and tbey\ncontributed only $3400.\nEmployee., lt was shown, pay far\nthc greater part of th. provincial Income tax. Over 16,000 employees\ncontributed 1.58,100 while 930 merchants  and  manufacturers were  as\nPROVIDENCE. B. I,, Feb. 29\u2014Prohibition at Its worst was bsttar th\u00bbn\ntbe saloon and the licensed liquor system at their best, two of\nthe foremost prohibitionist* In the\nUnited States declared ln addresses\nhere.\nDr. Clarence True Wilson, of the\nMethodist Board of Temperance and ^ j_ tJT^TtT^KMs-' tox\n0^1Mer,\u201e^dFenfoTthMeCrtf: %\u00a3* ?>-\u2122-?t SKKRo _\nSaloon  League,   predicted   that des-!       \u25a0      \t\nplte  wet  gains  at   tne  last  general   .\u00bb      .,   .       _ ,\nelection,   the   next   Congress   would! .118111101)8  Spent\ncontain a majority of drys In both]\ns   nnd   House   of   Representatives, and that attempt* to nullify I\npjombitlon  would  fall.   \u25a0\nThe speakers attacked wet '\"prop- \u2014\t\naganda\" bureaux and the wet press WINNIPEO, Man., Peb. 28. (CP)\u2014\nfor what they declared to be false Manitoba spent .117,000 on liquor\nstatement* concerning the aftllla- law enforcement during the fucal\ntlons of office holders. year ending April 30 last, according\n\"Thsy say that Morrow's victory ln' t!>   *\u00bb\u2022   report   of   the   government\nNew Jereey  ls  turning  a  dry State liquor control commission tabled  in\nover to a wet leader,\" commented Dr. the legislature recently.\nWilson.  \"Morrow ls ths dryest\n$117,000 to Enforce\nthe Liquor Laws\nwho has ever been nominated by\nthe Republican Party in New Jersey. He takes the seat formeny\n..eld by Edge, wet Inside and out,\nand by Edward*, who tried t0 make\nhis State as wet as the Atlantic\nocean.\n\"When he wa\u00bb running he announced that he would come to such\nand such a place tn an aeroplane\nwith his son-law. Twenty-five thousand people would stand looking up\nInto heaven waiting for bltn and\nworshipping. Now the wets say tfhey\nwant to run him for the presidency as a wet ln the wet States\nand In the dry States as Lindbergh's father-in-law.\"\nSome wet newspapers had relieved that dryest drys of the accusation of being fanatics, asserted Mr.\nMcBride. He believed that ln recent\nmonths these papers had done\nmore to hurt their own cause than\nhelp  lt.\n\"If liquor comes back the saloon\nwlll come back,\" he said. \"There\nhas been no legislation to put out\nthe saloon as an institution. It ls\nlust as legal as it ever was, and If\nliquor oomes badfci, the saloon\nwill be with It.\"\nState option- would greatly Increase\nthe amount of Federal effort needed to enforce the law, and In any\ncase would be practically impossible to maintain, he said.\nCharlie Chaplin was the guest\nof Premier Ramsay MacDonald at\nuncheon.\nIn 76 per oent. of thise voting pledg\nlng support of a single marketing\nsystem.\nThe purpose of the ballot wu to\nascertain whether members of the\nco-operative favored requesting the\nSaskatchewan government to pis?\nlegislation permitting formation of a\nprovince-wide egg and poultry products marketing body.\nIt Is expected that the poultrymen\nwill now place their request before\nthe government of Premier J. T. M.\nAnderson.\nHas Own Idea as to\nDebt Collection\nBut Lands in Jail\nTHE PAS. Man.. Peb. 36*. (OP>\u2014\nGregory McOregoradie was a patien*\nman. He also had definite ldota of\nprocedure tn the matter of debt collection.\nGalled to oourt to explain a charge\nof damaging the property of A. La-\nfontalne, Gregory also had a novel\ndefence. He claimed that Lefontalne\nhsd owed him $20 for some considerable time and he had tried to collect\nthrough the ordinary channels' without result. McOregoradie decided h?\nwould destroy Lafontalns's propert\nto the extent of twenty dollars an I\ncall everything square. Forthwith he\nproceeded to rip up Lafon feline's\nblacksmith apron snd bisect the\nblower.\nHis novel defence availed but Uttle,\nhowever, when the magistrate de-\nelded a Jail term might be in order.\nLOTTDON, Feb. 3\u00ab.\u2014 (By\nT. Champion, Oaradlsc press\ncofTsepondent>\u2014Th* tzleiuuu\ntioqe for th* London county oau;\ned take plaoe on March a, but It\ndoubtful whether Ureater Loodoi\nmllUcns wlU display'any .\nthere hahltlual Indifferenc* to J\n.c.pal   poiitlca.\nlbs   council   administers  sa\nof   117   square  miles  and\naround   \u00bbitW,0(X>,000   annually.\ntion.   Winston   Churchill,   whs\nstopped    in    with    an    anti-l\noroadslde,   oalla   London   the   bead\ngoverned   olty   ln*the   world.     B|\naon.  Philip  Snowden  describes\ncounty oouncil as the greatest pl\u00ab\nuf machinery ln the world for\npractical application of socialism.\nThere   are   fli   divisions   retu,\ntwo members each.    The Municlp\nHeform    party    (Conservative)\nbeen   dominant  with   77\nLabor    following    with    _.      Nex|\nmonth the reformat! and Labor will\ncontest   every   seat.     Liberals,   whl\nonce   controlled   ihe   council.   hav|\nonly  five  seats bus are  submittin\n.jo  candidates.\nThe question of transport Is pari\nhaps  thg only  aspect  of municlp\novemmsnt   ln   which   tbs   averagfj\n..donsr takes mors than a i\nerert.     The   council   control*\n..n-mous   street   oar   servloe   whlol\na meeting Intense competition 1\nths motorbus and underground tubj\n-ombine.    Interest in tha\niias  been   aroused  a   uttle   througi\ntbe  minis.ry of transport's Pisa tl\ncoordinate   all   London   trafflo   sysfl\nterns.\nLabor Is agitating on ths coostll\ntutlon of the new public aesiauwcJ\ncommutes, which supersedes thi\nDid poor law bodies. In this son!\n.taction, the municipal reformerl\nare harping on the danger of Lebo*|\ncapturing th* reins, sad\non all London an extravagant relief\nyean In ths psnltsntlsry .last\nboard of guardians known throughj\nout   the   oountry\nESTABLISH CHURCH\nOF ALL NATIONS\nwrrrviPBO. Man., Feb. M. (OT)\u2014I\nA church of all nations, where dif-jl\nferences ln creed are forgotten, lsl\nestablished st Churchill, Manitoba's!\nnew seaport, and terminus of the|\nHudson Bay railway.\nRev. 8. A. Martin, pioneer United I\nChurch minister, now of Churchill, \u00a3\nvisited hers recently and in addresses!\ntold of the advanoe of missionaries |\non the great northern frontier.\nThe churoh of sll nations conduct-1\ned by Mr. Martin has had for con-1\ngregatlon trippers and traders, rail-1\nwaymen and construction workers,!\nand aa many as eight nationalities!\nattend the services.\nThe institution was the oja spot I\nIn the faraway port\u2014100 miles froml\nWinnipeg\u2014which represented the so-l\nclal warmth of civilization, said Mr I\nMartin. Difference ln creeds were J\nforgotten.\nMONTREAL, Que., Feb. M\u2014In\norder to help stimulate passenger\ntraffic between Canadian. American,\nBritish continental and Scandinavian ports, which has become somewhat diminished by the recent Immigration restrictions, the Canadian\nPacific steamships have announced\nthis evening a reduction In third\nclass  rates.  All   third   class   passsn-1 -\ngers travelling to British ports will LONDON, Feb 38. (CF> \u2014 Tbs\nbetween March 3 and April 80 costs ln the famous case ot Bard-\nand August 1 and October lo, be \u00abn nraus Pickwick, said \u00abr Henry\nentitled to reduction of 36 per MoCardle, Judge of the king's bench,\nons   wsy  addressing   the   Author's  club,   wers\nLORD WESTBUUY\nHAD GREAT\nSENSE, HUMOR\ncent   on    the    combined\nfare. All third class passengers trsv\nelllng to continental Scandinavian\nand Finnish ports wlll be entitled\nto a reduction of 33 1-3 per cent\non the combined one-way fare during the same periods. The return\ntickets, however, which sre good\nfor two years, will enable; the holder to a return passage on a Canadian Pacific liner at any time of\nthe   year.\nAbraham Steinberg, through his\ncounsel, T. H. Lennox. K.C. filed\nnotice of appeal at Toronto against\na   conviction   of   murder.\nDr. Wood's\nHer Two Children\nCoughed Day And Night\nMrs. Fred. T. Kilnappel, \u201eE No. 1. St Afsths,\nOnt, writee:\u2014-\"Mj two esildren were coughing, dey\nsnd nifht, from s very \u25a0 severe, whospy eoufh. I\ntried every kind of medicine I could think of, but\nthey got no relief. A friend told me I ahonJd try\nDr. Wood 'i Norway Pine Syrup, so I got two bottles\nof it, and before they were used the children were rid\nof their coughs. It is a very good inedicine, and I\nwould not be, without s bottle is the house,''\nPrise 33c, s bottle; large fsmiry sis* 66e\u00bb; st all\ndruggists or flwlerif; put up only by Ths T. Mfflnm.\nCo., Ltd.. Toronto, Out\nthe same as the cost involved In\n&  breach of promise case  today.\nStr Henry Mocardie, wbo is a\nbachelor, nu to i certain extent\nreplaced Lord Darling as the humorist among the Judgea of the\nking's bench- \"People sometime;.\nthink that Judges are devoid of\nheart,\" said Sir Henry. \"They are\nnot, I assure you. It will not do\ntu give way to sentiment and sympathy, If you' did tbat you could\nnot live s week through the great\nassises that you have to visit. Tou\nmust be stern, you mu.it repress\nyour Instincts, and you must withhold your sympathies. It Is said\nthat there Is ene law for the rich\nand another law for the poor. But\nI never met a Judge yet who did\nnot if, hs could, somewhat Incline\ntowards the poor man. Thst is one\nreason why we hope to maintain the\noorffidence of the public.\"\nEV(D Lord Chancellors had thetr\nsense of humor, added Sir Henry\nMoCardle. On the occasion when\nLord Westbury wss out driving, ths\nhorse bolted, and the coachman expressed the fear that he would be\nunable to control the' animal. \"If\n\u2666 *\u00bb ** ls going to be an accident,\"\nexclaimed the Lord Chancellor, \"for\nheaven's sake drive into something\ncheap.\"\nPublic   school   enrolment  fn   Edmonton  ln  January  reached   16,806.\nThe Best DENTISTRY for Less\nThere Is NOW No Reason\nTo Pay High Prices for Dental Work\nin sSelson\nMANY PATIENTS HAVE BEEN SURPRISED\nAT OUR EXTREMELY\nLOW PRICES\nThey Claim That\u2014\nWe Are Filling a Long Wanted Need in This District\nREMEMBER!\n\"Every Patient Must Be Satisfied\"\nYou are assured of absolute satisfaction ln every way when you have your\nDentistry performed in our most modern  Dental office.\nWE PERSONALLY DO ALL YOUR DENTISTRY\u2014FILLINGS, CROWNS.\nPLATES, BRIDGES, X-RAYS, EXTRACTIONS.\nWe have the highest grade materials  money  can   buy   to   choose  from.\nFlesh Colored Plates\nAre Always Beautifully Natural\nPhone\n830\n510 Baker St.\nNelson, B. C.\nGilker Block\nI Drs. SHAW I\nAMD\ns LEDINGHAM\nT\nS\nOPEN EVENINGS\nN\nT\nI\nS\nT\nS\nPhone\n830\n510 Baker St\nNelson, B. C.\nGilker Block\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS       FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 27, 1931.\nPage\nGEEAVISON HEADS\nTHE SLOCAN PARK\nIMPROVEMENT BODY j\nBLOCAN  PARK.  B. C.  Feb.  AA.\u2014 1\nI A meeting of the Slocan Park Im- j\nprovement society was held In the,\n. Blocan  Park  school  last week.    E.\nuOresvison took the chair and A. T.\nft Nichols acted as secretary.\nThe chief bu*meas of the meeting\nnt th. annual .lection of officers\nand   the   reading   ol   the   financial\n[: report.\nOfficers   elected   for   the   coming\nQye\u00bbr   vver.:   E.   Oreatlson.  president;\nA.   Nichols,   secretary-treasurer.\nPour new members Joined.\n,    The 0. !\u00bb. E. .tatlon at Balcarree,\nt Bask.,   wa*   destroyed   by   fire.\nWILMER McHARDY\nHAD RIVAL WHO\nSOUGHKOMMAND\nBut   Ex-Naval  Officer  Did\nNot Make It Stick; Told\nSit Down\nMcHARDY'S BOAT HAD\n50  to 60  ON  BOARD\nEvidence at Wreck Inquiry\nGives Testimony of\nNelson Boy\n*LST\nLife Saver\nTime is\nanytime\nVI-O-lET\nPEP-OMINT\nWINTOGHKN\nLIC \u25a0 0-RICE\nCINM,-0M0i>.\nCL O-Vtt\nEVERY LOAD OF\nOUR COAL\ndumped into your cellar or bin\nout a fine, even heat and does\nlt with tu lees coal than ls required when ordinary coal ls\nused. Try a ton or so and keep\na record of how long It lasts.\nTbat will prove the economy ol\nordering   your   coal   here.\nWest Transfer Co.\nPHONE   33\nmesne   solid   comfort   and   fuel\neconomy,   for   our   coal   throw?\nStanding off an ex-naval officer\n\u2022vho wanted to take away comm_inrt\nJi the lifeboat from him. was-one\nof the Incidents of the experience of\nvVllmer McHardy, son of Mr. and\nMra. c. F. McHardy of Nelson, during the rescue work following the\nwrecking of the British mo^orship\nHighland Hope on the Farilhoea on\n\u2022ovember   19,  according  to  the  re.\nort   in   Lloyd's   Uet   to   Shipping\nalette  of  the   board   of  trade  ln-\n-Ury held  at   the  law  courts, into\ne wreck.\nThe examination of McHardy Is\nthus reported ln that publication's\nMuc cf February 3, a copy of which\nMr.  McHardy  has  just received:\n\"William John McHardy, who was\n\u25a1n lookout on the evening tho\nship left Vigo, said that he noticed\na. flashing white light on the- port\nbow, just before 7 o'clock. Hs\nwent off duty at 8, and was on duty\nttgrin early next morning. At 2\no'clock the wee\/ her was overcast\nnnd the horizon all round was pitch\nMack^'I  was  In  charge of No.  7\nChildren's Colds\nVIA       Checked without\n\"dosing.\" Rub on\nwmsm\nV'CKS\nDr. F. Rose\nPh v.ldsn   ahd   Snr\nKe n. Hperlallst lu\nre. .1 ui4l intestinal\nds>    ses  only.\nIvILES\nboat,'  said  McHardy.    'It  contained\nabout SO or 60 people.'\nBX-OFHCKR   ASPIHRh\n\"Mr. Pilcher: There was an cx-|\nnav.il officer. Oommander l\nthe boat. I believe?\u2014I did not know\nthe names of anybody ln the boat.\nThey were mostly emigrants. There\nwas one first-class passenger who\nspoke English.\n\"Did any passenger attempt to assume command?--Yea, this gen:leman was up forward, und he stood\nup and said, 'I am going to take\ncommand.'    I told him to sit down.\n\"Mr, Pllchcr: Did he?\u2014He did.\nand after ttwt he was very good.\n(Laughter).\n\"After your crushing remark he\nremained seated?\u2014Yes. (Renewed\nlaughter).\n\"Commander Pink w.e tn Indifferent health and fainted alter-\nwards, I believe?\u2014Yes, and we had\nt0 revive htm. One of the women\npassengers had a small flask of\nliquor and that brought htm round\nall  right.\"\nKOOTENAY PHONES\nEXPAND LARGELY,\nNELSON LEADING\nNelson's Gain in January 16\nand Trail's 10; the\nFigures\nBRUHN HOPES FOR\nFAIR PORTION OF\nROAD THIS YEAR\nBut Extent Will Depend Upon\nRoad Loan He Writes to\nBoard\nARRANGEMENTS FOR\nFERRY ABOUT MADE\nBoard to Write Col. Lister to\nGet Facts on Ferry\nCharges\n4U.C11  w.ttiout i.peraUun\ntlun successfully tifatei!\nI onatlua-\nVVrlte Tor\nfree'booklet, 4th floor Zlejler Bid...\n636  Riverside  Ave.,  Spokane,  Wash.\nindigestion Seemed\nto Go Right Away\nAs Soon as He Started\nTANLAC\nOnly those wh0 have been tortured for years with Indigestion,\nGas, Pain, Dizziness can appreciate\nwhat It means to have their stomachs get back to work again. Mr.\nF. Gauthter, of Great Palls. Man.,\nknows this. Even the lightest ol'\nmeals brought on cramps. It seemed\nas if hts stomaqh could not digest\nanything. Every day he grew weaker and more nervous, in spite of\ntrying many different remedies and\ntreatments.\nThen some good friend told him\nabout TANI.AC and urged mm tc\nget a bottle. Mr. Gautnle? was finally persuaded to try lt and \"I\nwant to say that TANI*AC filled\nUie bill.\" he writes, \"Indigestion,\nstomach trouble, cramps, nervousness, have all disappeared; and\nI am eating, sleeping and working\nas a healthy man should.\"\nThat's TANLAC, every time. Over\n55 million bottles of this good reliable tonic have been sold\u2014and\nover 100.000 men and women have\n| endorsed It tn their letters. Get\na bottle today at your druggist's.\nNelson exchange made a net gain\nof 10 telephones in January, and\nTrail exchange made a net galn\nof 10, while the 16 exchanges of\nthe British Co umbla Telephone\ncompany ln Kootenay and Boundary collectively made a net gain\nof 29. Actually seven exchanges\nthat expanded chalked up a total\nof 60 new phones net, but at tbs\nsame tim; four exchanges suffered\nslumps, for an aggregate loss of 21\nphones, while exchanges remained\nas   they   were.\nOn these figures, obtalnfd from\nTelephone Talk, the B.C. Telephone\ncompany's magazine, the Nelson exchange on Pebruary l had 1021\nphones, with Trail coming next with'\n1410.\nThe figures for the 16 exchanges.\nare as follows: The columns read-1\nlng respectively, Jan.l, Peb. 1, peri\ncent:\nBalfour          18        13       \u2014 I\nGrand  Forks       276     281      1.81\nGreenwood          49       49      \u2014\nInvermere     _...   106     108     1.9\nKislo  Ill     107   - .6\nNakusp     \u201e....      38        38       \u2014\nNelson     \u201e _ 1605   1621      1.0\nNew   Denver        128      120    -4.0\nRock  Craak        41       41      \u2014\nRossland        279     283      1.4\nTrail      1400    1410       .7\nCranbrook         591     582    -1.6\nCreston       134     135       .7\nPernio    -    327     324    - .9\nKlmberley         110      112      1.8\nMichel     -      42       42       \u2014\nBOARD IS URGED\nTO BACK SLOCAN\nFOR DAILY MAIL\nCouncil Unanimously Recommends it in  General\nInterest\nthetime'\nto want-ad\nRISUIIS\nEvery morning our classified colunuw are being\nread by tfceatands of\npeople who want wtint\nyou have te offer, rent er\nsell. How long wonld It\ntake yen to cover the\nsame greuna tn any\nother  way?\n\u25a0Phone\n143 or 144\nQthe Classified]\nUnanimous recomendatlon wa\nmade by the council of the Nelson\nboard of trade Thursday, that the\nboard make representations to the\npostmaster-general endorsing th\npetition of the Slocan board cf\ntrade, for a mall service between\nNelson and Slocan valley and Slocan\nlake points six days h week tn place\nof the present three-times-a-week\nservice.\nThe matter was raised by President H. M. Whlmster. and It- was\nagreed there was no argument for\ndenying to the Slocan full mall\nfacilities on the slx-days-a-week\nbasis, selng that there ftre scheduled\nmotor sei-vlces ln regular operation,\nby which the mail could bo car-\nj rled on non-train days.\nNo request has been made to the\nNelson board for Us support In\nthe matter, and the action taken by\nthe council was voluntary, as tn\nthe obvious interests of the district,\naffected, and consequently of Nelson\nJudge J. D. Swanson. ln a case\nat Kamloops the other day, ruled\nthat an agreement drawn up, and\nsigned on Sunday was illegal.\nThat the provincial government\nhopes to bo able to carry out a\nsubstantial part of its highway\nstandardization program between\nGray Creek aad Pilot Bey this year\nout of the mgnway loan that the\nhouse will be asaed to vow, and\nin the meantime ls expediting completion of the highway to Gray\nureeK from which a temporary ferry\nservice will be operated by Canadian. Pacific steamer, was in-\niormatlon laid before tho board of\ntrade council Thursday in a letter\nwritten by Hon. R. W. Bruhn. minister of publio works, this week.\n\"1 beg to acknowledge receipt of\nyour tetter of Pebruary 19 informing me that the Nelson board oi\n-rade is most anxious to know ihe\ndetail of our intentions ln connection with the construction of the\niilghwsy on the east side of Kootenay lake, 'and how we propose\n..andling the business and tourist\n.raffle in that section,\" wrote th<.\nuilnlster.\n\"In reply, I beg to say that at i\n-ne present time we have practically!\ninade arrangements with the CP.R.\n.o transfer passengers and ours from\nGray Creek to Balfour during thc\ncoming summer and It Is our intention to put the road t0 Gray\nJreek ln good shape as rapidly S3\npossible.\nriOFftl FOR\nSUBSTANTIAL   PART\"\n\"The extent of the work which\ncan be carried on from Gray Creek\n<.o Pilot Bay entirely depends upon\nthe amount of money which wtll >\nbe voted by the house for hlghwsyj\npurposes and I have every hope]\nthat sufficient money wtll be voted [\nco carry out a substantial part of|\nthis work  during  the coming year.\n\"I am very sorry Indeed, but\nthis Is all the information I ara\nable to give you until the highway\nloan has been passed by the house,\nalthough I think that you wlll\nrealise the same as everyone else.\nthat it will bo impossible for the\ngovernment to o-ury on a\u00ab extensive\na program as has been done during\nthe past two years, much as we\nwould like to do so.\"\nIt was noted that the minister's\nletter did not answer the board's\nInquiry as to the charges that ]\nwould be made for transporting cars\nacross the lake by the temporary\nferry, and Secretary D, A. McFalard\nwas Instructed to write Lie.ut.-col.\nPred Lister, MJ.P. for Creston. ln\nwhose riding the ferry will operate,\nthat the board desires to know tlie\nscale of charges as early as posslnli>\nfor the purpose of informing tourist\nagencies, and also that it, hopes that\nthe  charges  wlll  be  reasonable.\nIf there was a car charge of $3\nplus passenger fares for the occupants, It would kill the potential\ntourist traffic, President H. M.\nWhlmster asserted.\nBOARD'S   STAND   ON   RECORD\nIn the nyitter of completing the\nhighway from Gray Creek to Pilot\nBay, the board at its last meeting\napproved the terms of a letter to\nthe minister drafted by the roads\nand bridges cdhimlttee, stating the\nhoard expected the government to\ncomplete the highway to Gray\nCreek, Improve the Nelson-Balfour\nhighway, and establish a satisfactory\ncar ferry, for this season's traffic,\nand to complete the road Improvement from Gray Creek to Kootenay\nBay or Pilot Bay and have a permanent . ferryr with proper ferry\nlandings, in ttme for the motor\ntourist  Mason  of   1932.\nREGISTRATION\nOF COMPANIES\nIS CLfiAt&EU UPj\nELMONTON,    Alta.,    Peb.   28.\u2014Al-I\nits the right as a provtnrr'\nto Impose regis .ration fees upon\nKomlnton Incorporated companies,\nuut must do so by statute and not\nby   order-in-coundl.\nThat ls the effect of a supreme\ncourt judgment handed down b)\nUnier Jus.lce Harvey In Calgarn\nMonday, according to W. B. Oray,\nK.C, solicitor In the attorney*\ngeneral's  department.\nPress dispatches from Calgary\nregarding this Judgment gave an altogether wrong impression, states Mr.\nOray. Thc province did not sue the\nRoyallte company for collection of\nregistration fee. _\u00a7 Indicated, nor wsr.\nan appea l taken by the cempan y\nAll that happened wes that a\nfriendly reference was mads to thf\nmipreme court, for a declaration o)\nthe power of the legislature to\nregister companies Incorporated under a Dominion charter, and to Impose  fees.\nSAY GOVERNMENT\nSPENT MILLION\nDOLLAR RESERVE\nLiberal   Members  of   Public\nAccounts Committee Cross\nQuestion\nMrs. P. Palmer Has\nResigned as Chief\nRossland Pythians\nROSSLAND. IB. C, Feb. 26.\u2014The\nresignation of the most excellent\nchief. Mrs. Pearl Palmer, who ls ln\nVancouver caring for her husband.\nwho ls undergoing surgical treatment under specialists there, made\nnecessary a re-election of officers\nut Maple Leaf tenupBe No. 4.\nPythian Sinters, last evening. 'The\nfollowing wlll fill the chairs for\nthe ensuing term.\nPast chief. Ethela Bray; most excellent chief, Maude Tweed; excel.\nlent senior, Fanny Wtxon; excellent!\njunior. Marjorle Stevenson: man-'\nager, Catherine Patterson! protector.'\nBthel Macintosh; guard, Mllllcent\nTopllss; M. of F.. Annie White; i\nM. of R. and C, Dorothy Otll;!\ndrill    captain,    Sophia    wtltson.\nCanora,    Sask..    has   dropped    Its I\npolice   force.\nVICTORIA, Feb. 26\u2014Liberal members of the public accounts com-\nmtttte of the legislature at a committee meeting today claimed that\nthe one million dollars cash reserve\nset up to provide against losses of\nthe liquor board has been spent by\nthe government, and that the reserve standing tn the Accounts today\nrepresent\u00a9.! Investments In the\nliquor board's business assets, The\nLiberal members also claimed that\nmore than five million dollars, representing superannuation funds, money deposits and liquor board reserves, wers spent by the government with cash deposits only showing $1,138,000 at March 31, 1030, to\noffset   these   expenditures.\nIt was also claimed that the\nmunicipalities' share of liquor profits were used by the government\nfor a period pending distribution\nand that the government had to\nborrow to pay the municipalities\nwhen   the   profit  shares  came   due.\nThe Liberal question of J. A.\nCraig, comptroller-general, the witness before tbe oommittee, was led\nby T. D. Pattullo. opposition leader,\nand A. M. Manson, former attorney-\ngeneral.\nMr. Craig, In reply to questioning,\nsaid the liquor board funds were ln\nthe hands of the treasury, and tlie\nreserve fund of one million dollar\nrepresented the general assets of\nthe board.\n\"Do you thtnk that to have  this\nreserve  tied  up  ln realty  buildings.\nand so forth, ls in compliance with\nthe   act?\"   asked  Mr.   Manson.\ntVOILD   NOT  A NATTER\nMr. Craig did not think he ahould\nanswer    that    question.\nThe government spent. It, that's\nall,\" ssld  Mr. Pattullo,    \"That mil\nlion dollars has been spent and\nnever    replaced.\"\nMr. Craig said he was not aware\nof any charge being made against\nthe reserve fund for losses or administration.\n\"In other words, the reserve has\nbeen   used.\"  said  Mr.  Manson.\n\"It all goea to tbe treasury,\" replied   the   comptroller-general.\nMr. Manson turned to the municipal share In liquor profits. \"The\nprovince haa the use of this money\nfor a period of tlms before lt Is\ndistributed, without being charged\ninterest?\" he inquired. Mr. Craig\nsaid that was so.\nIt resulted in s saving to the\nprovince to use this money, declared\nJack lioutet, Conservative, or North\n. Vancouver.\n1 Mr. Craig declared that items\nreferred to us trust funds and listed\nunder money deposits were in tho\ntreasury by authority of statute and\nsecurity of the province was behind\nthem.\nAppearance of Col. Don Martyn\nfor information on Industrial loans,\nand V. Rollings, purchasing agent,\nat the next meeting Thursday, was\ni asked  for  by Mr. Pattullo.\nMr. and Mrs. Dawney\nGuests at Surprise\nParty at Perry's\nPERRY'S SIDING. B. C, Peb. 2S.-~\nA Jolly surprise party was given to\nMrs. E, W. Downey, Aehford ranch,\non the occasion of her birthday on\nSaturday. A very enjoyable evening\nwas spent In cards, music and\ndancing. Dainty refreshments were\nserved during thc evening. Those\npresent were Mr. and Mrs. E. W.\nDawney, Mr. and Mrs. M. Patterson,\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Carlson, Mr.\nand Mn. S. Bentley, Mr. and Mrs.\nH. Gustapherson and Ella Gustaph-\nersoh. Mrs. G. A. Hodgson, Ous\nCnwtland, Andrew Carlson and Don\nLivingston.\nRaymond C. Matthews was a visitor to Nelson Saturday, returning on\nSunday.\nNorman B. Ireland, aged 60 years,\nof Saskatoon, traveller for William\nRoberts nnd Son, Winnipeg, died\nsuddenly at Reglna.\nhome .from Sain\nthe   weet.\nMrs. J. M. Gllle had as i\nrecently Mrs B. A. Curwen,\nStevens,  Mrs. Grace Grant,\nEmllson,   Mrs.   W.   B.   Mclsaac\nMrs. Leslie Bond and children.\nMrs. Carl  Nystrom  of  HaU   on\nYmlr   visitor  on   Tuesday   ami\nthe guest of her mother Mrs. C\nAnderson.\nTJ.   S.   Postmaster-General\npredicted   a   postal  deficit  of\nthan $150,000,000 for the next\nyear.\nt\nSOREHROAT\nand COLDS\nMr. and Mrs. P. 0. Bird\nCelebrate Twentieth\nWedding Anniversary\nJas.  H.  connal,  leading  Pcterboro\nmerchant  and curler.  1*  dead.\nDespaired of Ever\nBeing Well Again\n\"For the past fifteen years I suffered almost continually from Indigestion, constipation and headaches.\"\n\u00aerf* Mzim Batlg H*nw\n143\nPhones\n144\nMRS.   ELIZABETH   ANpREWS\ndeclared Mrs. Elizabeth Andrews,\n453  Symington   Ave.,   Toronto.\n\"My back pained me between my\nshoulders; I had neuritis ln my\nleft arm and was so nervous and\nrestless I couldn't sleep. I tried so\nmany different medicines without\nrelief I had almost lost hope, when\na friend of mine told me about Sargon and Sargon Pills. It was amazing how quickly this wonderful\nmedicine made every trouble I had\ndisappear! It's been years slnoe I\nfelt so well and strong.'*\nBold by Mann-Rutherford. DrugOo.\nSOUTH SLOCAN, B. C.. Feb. 26 \u2014\nMr. and Mrs. Percy O. Bird entertained at their home on two occasions at bridge, celebrating thetr\ntwentieth  wedding  anniversary.\nThis being the china wedding,\ndainty china was used for the serving of refreshments. A novel arrangement of the evening In choosing partners for bridge was in piecing valentines together. The prizes\nfor honors in bridge were mostly\nof china.\nChoice red carnations in china\nvases were used for decorations, the\ncharmingly appointed table was centered* with a large wedding cake decorated with hearts and flowers and\nwith the inscription \"20 years\" on\nIt.\nMr. M. J. Burne on behalf of the\nguests wished the bride and bridegroom of 20 yeara many more years\nof wedded bliss.\nMr. and Mrs. Bird were the recipients of some very nice pieces of\nchina.\nMrs, P. B. Hsrdln and Mrs. E,\nBowkett wers hostesses for refreshments at the bi-monthly social\nevening of the badminton club of\nNo. 3 plant when some friendly\nmatches were played. Amongst those\nattending were Mr. and Mrs. W. J-\nTlndale, Mr. and Mrs. H. McDougall,\nMr. and Mrs. W. A. McCabe, Mr. and\nMrs. F. B. Hardin, Mr. and Mra. E.\nBowkett, Mrs. P. O. Bird. Mrs. F.\nFrisby, Mrs. J. Thompson, Mrs. P.\nScott, Mies A. R. Mitchell, A. Lambert, W. Wadeson, W. Rodgers, C.\nFisher, B. Thompson, E. Keech.\nMrs. O. W. Humphry had as her\nhouse guests for the week-end Miss\nMolly Irving of Tarrys, MJs\u00bb Violet\n, Towgood of Sandon and their\ndaughter, Mlas Myra Humphry, of\nNelson.\nMiss Mary Potoaky who has been\nin Vancouver for medical attention,\nand her mother. Mra. J. Potosky,\nwho accompanied her, returned on\nTuesday evening. Miss Potosky ts\nmuch improved.\nMlas Dixie Edwards has returned\nfrom Brilliant where she was the\nguest of Miss Ethel Shaw. Miss Shaw\naccompanied her back and spent the\nweek-end.\nThe Rev. W. J. Crick of Nelson\nofficiated at morning servloe and\nHoly Communion on Sunday. There\nwas a good attendance, Mrs. G. K.\nAshby, who played the otgen, and\nArchie Biahop motored out from\nNelson  wltb  Mr.  Crick.\n^fcony'. *g (tuttqwiqta'\nINCORPORATiO   \u00bb\u25a0?\u00bb MAY 1670.\nOther  Branches ut  Winnipeg,  Yorkton,  Saskatoon,  Kilmonton,   Calgary,   Vancouver,   Kamloops,   Vernon   snd   Victoria\nLADIES'\nWEAR\nCORSELETTES \u2014 D. & A.\nmodels. Inside belt. Made ot\ncoutil. Non-slip straps. Sizes\n34, 36, 38 and 40.\nPrice   $2.50\nGIRDLES  \u2014 Made of satin,\nswammy silk, coutil. Slip-ons\nand  hooks. Elastic at sides.\nSizes 24 to 30.\nPrices $1.25, $1.95, $2.25\n-Second   I loor\u2014H.B.O.\u2014\nRUGS\nNEW LINOLEUM RUGS, at 1931 lower prices.\nSize 6      x 9     at  - $  7.95\nSize 7'->  x 9     at  \u2014     9.50\nSize 9      x 9      at  -    11-50\nSize  9      x  lOVa  at  ...._-    12.95\nSize  9      x  12  at      14.95\nThese new patterns, with the borders all around,\nmake very attractive floor coverings, and are\nnow much lower in  price.\n\u2014Main   Hoor\u2014 H.B.1 \u2014\nDRY GOODS\nOF INTEREST TO LOVERS OK\nART NEEDLEWORK\nOur extensive range of stamped goods is not. only\ninteresting, but qualities at such attractive prices\nare bound to appeal to you. It would be to the\ninterest of sewing circles to inspect our values.\nLARGE SIZE LINEN Y.ITCHEN TOWELS, for,\neach       29\u00bb?   to   59<\nLARGE TURKISH TOWELS\u2014Heavy qualities,\nwith assorted colored borders. From, each, 59\u00ab?\nGUEST TOWELS\u2014Plain borders. Eacii 39.* to\n98*..       ,\nLADIES'  SMOCKS\u2014Assorted  colors.  Each  75*\nLADIES' NIGHT GOWNS\u2014Assorted color?, 69<\nH\/S PILLOW CASES\u2014*ull size. Extr.i heavy\nqualities. Specials for, pair    $1.25\nAll colors in D.M.C. Belding's Embroidery Silk\n(plain and variegated), Wild Spur, Pearl Cotton.\n\u2014Main   ffiisa   Hltf\nStraight\nEight\nFootwear\nfor Men\nIn Black Scotch Grain Blucher Oxford with full\ndouble sole, leather heels. Suitable mode! for\nsport or country wear, at   $8.00\nMEN'S BLACK OR TAN CALF OXFORDS,\nstyled specially for the professional man, whose\ndress must be correct on all occasions. Priced,\nper pair  _  $8.00\niMade in Canada, by Scott McHale, Ltd.\n\u2014Main Floor\u2014H.B.C \u2014\nGrocery Values\nand Service\nRolocream Health Oats. Family package ...$  .30\nChateau Cheese. 1 lb. package 40\nGold* Seal Salmon, fancy Sockeye. \\_ lb. tin     .20\nGold Seal Salmon, fancy Sockeye. 1 lb. tin     .35\nSwift's Silver Leaf Lard. 1 lb. carton 20\nChocolate  Eclair  Biscuits,  lb _...      .30\nBlue Goose Oranges,  3 dozen  for      1.00\nWagntr Apples,  fancy.  Box      1.75\nNetted Gem Potatoes, B. 100 lb. sack     3.25\nH.B.C. quality Tea. Red package, 1 lb 60\n11.K.C. M. & J. Coffee, fresh roasted, t lb.       .50\nCONFKCTIONKRY SPECIAL\u2014\nPlain   Marshmallows,   lb.     25\nChocolate   Dates,   lb _ _       .30\n\u2014Main   Floor\u2014 H.B.C \u2014\nMEN'S AND BOYS'\nPANTS\nNever before have we had such\na wide range of .men's and\nboys' Pants, with qualities that\nare better and prices th;it un\nlower than ever.\nMFNT'S 1'ANTS, in good quality\nTweeds and Serges .. , $3.50\nMEN'S  PANTS,  in fine  Serges\nmid Tweeds $4.50\nMEN'S  PANTS,  in  Navy,  Grey\nand Brown.  Plain and  striped\nSerges S5.50\nMEN'S    GREY   MOLESKIN\n,    PANTS,  with  5   pockets,  belt\nloops and cuff bottoms. A real\npant for hard wear . .   $3.50\nBOYS'  PANTS\u2014Our \"Hudsonia\" Brand,  in  new\nTweeds and Navy Serge. Special    . $2.95\nBOYS'   TWEED   SHORT   KNICKERS\u2014In   good\nwearing fancy Tweeds         $1.50\n\u2014Msln   Floor-linx \u2014\n THK   NELSON   PAIL1    NUTfvTS        *TilDAY, MCBRUAKY tl, lUSl.\nENTERTAIN PRINCES\nCHATTEH   FIFTY\nJwttn Kent reached out an arm as\nthough to restrain Connie.\nTen not going to ask favors of\n\u2022njrons,\" he said, struggling to keep\nbit voice level. H 'Thrice armed is\nIk* whosa quarrel is righteous I* I'm\nnot afraid to stand honeat trial lo\neven oourt.\"\nThat eounds pretty, but you forget you did a Oerald Chapman out\naf  a  whole  roomful   of   detectives.\"\n\\WMm*t\\mJte___*\\m-i__w\nYour\nDoctor's\nPrescription\nwill be accurately filled\nunder strict hygienic\nconditions and delivered\npromptly to your residence.\nHave your doctor phone\nhis  prescription  to  us.\n. We will deliver it.\nPOOLE DRUG\nCo.\nPhone 25\nMedical .Arts Building\nmaimswrnrnm^-m\nMay reminded him. '\"That's almost\nac bad ae confession.\"\n\"I wag responsible for that,\" Conic said cooly. \"and I still believe It\nwas the only thing to do\u2014Just as\nI now believe Eddie Costello is the\nonly man who can help us.\"\n\"And I partlculary, shall ask no\nfavors of Eddie Costello,\" Kent de.\ndared-\nConnie measured his resolution\nwith her eyes; saw that hia determination was deep aeated. No headway could be made by moderate argument.\n\"This la tbe first time rou have\never tried to wreck my happlneaa,\"\nshe laid to him, penetratingly. His\neyes were blank with lack of comprehension.\n\"My dearl\"\n\"Yes It's true. I feel deep down Inside me that I am being guided to\nEddie Costello. If you hold me back,\nsomething tells me that ws will bs\nseparated for many years. It's almost\na vision with ms, Justin. If you\nstop me, you wlll ruin your life and\nmine. Tou will be sending me out\nalone in the world ln proverty\u2014\"\nJustin Kent's lips began to work:\nIlls hands opened and cloaed. On\nhis forhead were Uttle beads of perspiration.\n\"My Ood. Connie! Tou try my very\nsou) I In Heaven's name, what's all\nof this about? Where are we drifting? But I love you so\u2014your will ls\nlaw with met\"\nBhe went to him, kissed him oe\na mother might kin a child.\n'\u25a0Trust me, Justin,\" she said.\nThe next Instant she was out of\nthe room and May Costello was alone\nwith Justin Kent.\nDown the darkened hall Connie's\nfeet stole towards Eddie Costellos\nroom. May had pointed lt out when\nthey came upstairs. He hand fall\non the knob, and it turned ln her\ngrasp. Suddenly the door swung\nopen, and she was ln complete darkness.\nSilence. . . except for the soft\nbreathing of a form on the bed,\nwhich gradually grew definitely visible as her eyes became accustomed\nto the bed light. She came close to\nthe bed noiselessly, stood looking\ndown.\n\"Eddie,\" sht whispered softly. He\nstirred slightly, dreamily.\n\"Connie\u2014\"\nA DINING-ROOM TRAGEDY!\nTabus rpnad with delidou.\nfood ... most of It soft, highly\nnflmd\u2014larking in tho \"bulk\"\n\u2022nd iron your body must have\nto keep well and rtrong.\nThil ll the dimmr-room trar-\n\u2022djr that occurs daily in millions of homes. No wonder\nmost people suffer from constipation. No wonder headaches,\nbackaches, and dull days are\nfrequent I\nJurt add one delicious food\nto your tables\u2014and you will\nhelp correct all this suffering.\nAdd Kelloinr's Ai.l-Bran in\nsome form every day.\nAll-Bran add. the neces-\n\u25a0ery \"bulk\" or \"roughage\"\u2014\n\u00bbnd iron\u2014that is ao often lacking in our diet today. This bulk\nis needed to prevent constipation\u2014to sweep the system clean\nof poisonous wastee\u2014to exercise the intestines and keep\nthem healthy.\nAll-Bran is delicious as *\ncereal with milk or cream.\nSprinkle over other cereals or\nuse in cooking.\nTwo tablespoonfuls daily ar.\nguaranteed to relieve both temporary and recurring constipation. In severe cases with each\nmeal. At your grocer's\u2014in the\nred-and-green package. Made\nby Kellogg in London, Ontario.\nAll-Bran\nEfficient Housekeeping\n. \u25a0\u2022__     \u25a0      uiDVUiV\nBr   LAl'BA   E.   KJBKMA.N\ntn<ji\u00absw.tli*lis4VtIt\u00abn\u00bbtv\u00abTOU. Last\nI stir ln .IUmt  thwe  tablespoon, ot\ni dry ooco. povKUr or two squares ot\n- Hah.   Beat   well\nTOMORBOWS  BlStro\nBreakfast\nAP oLaal\u2122' ' bitter'chooolati   malt*..\n\u00ab_*_ _m^ Tout betor. dividing \u00abmong small butttr-\n8_mUo*         ' Coll*.      od   cup-caa.   well..'   I   ftow   these,\nHarmM* artM ___t th\u00bbm 18 mlnut*. to a\nr<*n  eT_s\u00abrol. quick oven,  at 400 degress F, wltb\nCorn en C-a-wl^ . Q ^ ,,,\u201e   ^    , m\nMoldM   Oelattn.   Oeeeert tbem Into desiccated cocoanut.\nDinner BBOWN COOKIES\nBoast ot Aeet \u25a0\nOravy I    -\u201e cupt 0| wblt* sugar, on. oup\nPotatoes Pannlp. o( ^uned butter, one cup ol Hew\nLettuM French   DiMsirw cytiettss  molasses,   on.   cup   ol  oold\nLemon   Meringue       Tart.       Cone* cot,M   on8   tea*poon  ol   Md*,  one-\nhilf tesspoon ol glnser. one teaspoon\not  cinnamon,   one-halt  t*\u00ab*poon   of\nFlour to roll out.\nPhotograph* .Dove show three South American\nbeauties, who occupy th. muoh envied position ot\nhostesses to tb. Prince ol Wales and bis brother,\nPrince Oeorge, as they stop at Lima, Peru, lor .\nshort sojourn on their trip south to Buenos Alias\nto   open   the   British   trade   exposition,   tl)   Senorlta\nDeflno Mlro Quessda Laos, daughter of a Lima newspaper editor. Ol Senorlta Ines Laos Lomer, and\n(3) Senorlta Elvira Mlro Quesad. Qsrlsnd, daughter\no! a Lima publisher.\u2014Copyright by Acme Newsplc-\ntures.\nHe did not move or open his\neye.. . .he had answered feverishly.\nConnie dropped to her knees at\nthe side of his bed, there wa. no\nsense of unlamlllsrlty here now, no\nconception of Immodesty. Eddie Costello, the lover, the husband, ex-\nl.t.d no longer, Bhe uw him, she\nfelt hi. presence, s* a dangerous but\npowerful force which, at almost any\ncost, must be used to save Justin\nKent.\n\"Eddie, It's Connie\u2014I'm here, Eddie.\"\nShe reached over and took his\nwarm hand and held lt tightly between her own; the heat of lt was\nunnstur.1\u2014he ws* feverish and she\nhad an uncanny sensation that some\nInternal heat wu burning out of\nhis nature something of th. dross\nof the put. The Idea wu vagu.\nand formleu, but It gave her sn\neerie sensation.\n\"Oh, my Ood, Oonnle,\" hs murmured,  \"oonnle,  where  are  you?\"\nHe did not move; she pressed hit\nhand tightly.\n\"Eddie, dear. I'm here. Eddie,\ncan you wake? It's Connlel I've\noome to you because I need your\nhelp, Eddie. I've come to you at lut\nbecause I want you to do something for me! Eddie, you loved me\none*! Do you hear me, Eddie . . .1\nneed you.\"\nHer voice was scarcely more than\na whlaper etruramlng ln tune to the\nvibration  of  her  own  heart.\nEddie Costello turned slowly on\nthe bod until his lace was quite\nnear her own.\n\"Connie,     darling.     I knew    you\nwould come back to me some Ume.\"\n(To be continued)\nWe Sensitive Souls\nBy BEATRICE FAIRFAX\nAn Authority  on  Problems  of   Love  and  Marriage\nThe Beauty Box\n<By Helen Follett\nIt the composition of the feminine shape ls to be attractive, bear\nthe svelte outline, muscles must be\nfirm and resilient and there must\nbe enough adipose padding to impart a graceful contour. Heavyweights aren't ln the beauty class,\nnor are angular, scrawny females\nwiho, wtth their lack of soft outlines,\ntake on a sort of sUnd-off-lsh\nausterity. By courting the goddess\nHygela, learning what to eat, getting exercise every day ln the open\nair, almost any woman under the\nape of forty can be a Diana. No?\nThem's our sentiments; we stick\nto  'em.\nDo you remember seeing ln the*,\npapers about a week ago that a\nBrooklyn. N.Y., high school girl,\nconfident of passing hsr examlua-\nUons and graduating with honors,\nixjok poison when she failed to do\nhq and certain members of her\nclass made  fun  over  her  of  that?\nNot tn from the cave of the\njungle ls that tort of humor tooth\n:uirt claw showing visibly through\na very thin veneer of civilisation.\nA good many yeara with their burdens of sorrow will have to pass\nover those calous young olasemates\nbefore they fully realize how cruel\nthey were. There Is something In\nyouth that cannot endure the humiliation of having its failures\nbroadcast and being made the subject of merriment.\nMaturity is used to the ups and\ndowns of life, one misfortune more\nor lees ls not the unbearable calamity lt ls to youtii which has no\nbroad perspective from \"Which to\nJudge.\nRidicule, criticism, comparing\nohtidren with others who are more\ngifted, brighter or better looking,\nhas blighted the lives of countless\nyoungsters by in*tilling a sense of\ninferiority. And that self-same Inferiority complex, about which we\nhear so much of these days Is a\ngood deal like the fall of Humpty-\nDumpty\u2014\"ui the king's horses ai.d\nall the king's men cannot put\nHumpty _u*.jpty   together   attain.\"\nWhich of m does not recall the\nshivering sensitive school girl or\nboy who was the butt of the class\nharried by a teacher who would\nhave been better employed digging\nditches than having the direction\nof young people?\nToday, thanks to ths personal\nppllcatlon of psychology to the\nclassroom, we have fewer of the\n.Yackiord Squsers type of school\nmaster Immortalized by Charles\nOtckore ln his novel, \"Nicholas\nNlokel by.\"\nUniess we are riotous egoists\u2014\nin which case the world has a way\nof leaving iw alone In our glory-\nIt doesn't take much to blow out\nour Uttle flame of self-confidence\nwhich leaves us In utter darkness.\nOur HUe vunlties, conceits, shreds\nof self-approbation are, after ali\nthe equivalent of air ln our motor\ntires and It's only when some cruel\nor mischievous hand unsa-ews the\nvalve, that the tire goes flat, and\nwe are  unable to keep  going.\nWhy does one In six marriages\nta this country go on ths rocks?\nFailure of appreciation of home\nhelps to sum up* the deadly total.\nIt Is not the craving for bootleg\naffection that lands people In the\ndivorce court as often as lt ls the\ncraving for bootleg approval, commendation, praise.\nHave you ever happened to sit\nat an adjoining table in a restaur*\nant where a gentleman of the type\nknown as a \"sugar daddy\" ls dining a young lody of ths '\"baby\ndoil'  type?\nYou know her line. Daddy Is\nassured that he is young, handsome, and his wit sparkles. His\nwife doesn't tell him theae things.\nNor does he tell his wife that she\nls still young and lovely. To revert\nto ths figures of ths ' motnr Urs,\nthey go somewhere io get \"free alr\\\nand they want lt so badly, they\nnevw stop to Inquire If lt might\nnot be plain hot air.\nRBADBES-   CONTRIBUTION\nReader Friends Kavo sent me the - ciove,, nutmegs, rcour to n\u00abi ou*.\nfollowing recipes for publication, \u25a00|ut |t#n(1 over night. Cut out afitf\n\u201eat othfr women may use them.      bake\n\"Mrs. U'a Pickled Fi\u00bbh: cut elther| N,,,fl ftna frosting are a pleasing\nsalmon or mackerel into fairly small 1 ^dltlon\nportion, cover with water, adding\na dash each of salt and tapper,\nand boil till the fish ls tender but\nBtill firm. Now take from the water,\ncool, then lay It In a deep dish with\nseveral sliced onions, a low bay\nleaves, and a little more black pepper added; over all pour tho following spiced vinegar: In a small\nsaucepan over the fire combine\nthree-quarters of a cup of vinegar\nwith one-fourth cup of cold water\nand one tablespoon of granulated\nsugar; bring flhis mixture to a boll,\nthen cool lt before turning it over\nthe cooked fish. Cover the dish,\nstand it overnight ln a cool place,\nnnd serve cold, as a sort of Bplcy\nentree <we like lt before our meat\ncourse).\"\n\"Mtw R.'s Corn on Casserole: Into\na medium slsed baking dish or casserole put two cups of csnned corn;\nadd one slightly beaten egg, one\ntablespoon of finely minced uncooked green *weet pepper, one-half cup\nof diced raw celery, one cup of cold,\nsweet mlik. ons tablespoon of flour,\nand salt to suit individual Uklng.\nPut on cover and slip the dish\nInto a moderate oven to bake, at\nabout 350 degrees P., for 40 minutes. Serve hot, Irom tbe same\ndish.\"\n\"Miss O's Chocolate Cup Cakes:\nCream one tablespoon of butter with\none cup of granulated sugar and\nstir in the beaten yolk of one eg,\nDissolve one-half teaspoon of baking\nsoda in one cup of thick sour\nmilk, then stir this frothy liquid\nlo to the first mixture. Also add one\nand one-half (possibly one and two-\nthirds) cups of ordinary bread flour\nand a pinch of salt; flours of different brands seem to differ slight-1\nly in regard to their ability to ab-l\nsorb   moisture,   but   these   measure-\nABOLITION   OF   UMVt   IK   CHTNA\nLikln  ls the  principal source of\nrevenue  to  provincial   governments.\nThe governor of a province had here >\na vast source of money at his com- ,\nmand, and it hM been used to per- .\npetuate feudalism and promote civil\nwar.    The  Consumption tax,  whlcli\nis to take ths place of nam. is to\nbe  paid  Into  the  national  treasury\nand   grants   wlll   be   made   to   the\nprovinces.   If Nanking can thus con- |\nBolidate   Its  hold  over  the  taxation |\nof China an  immense  advance will\nbe made towards unified control ami\norderly   administration.     The   local 1\nwar  lords  wlll   have  the  sinews  ot\nwar  cut at  the  very source.    Nan- ]\nking intends to have Its own revenue ;\ncollectors throughout the land, and\nthough the smoothness of England's\nInland    revenue    machinery    cannot |\nbe   expected   at   the   outlet,   there\nwlll be  a valusbls improvement on :\nthe   present   method.\u2014Hong ' Kong\nPress.\nA Product of B.C\u00bb\nNESTLti'S\nr^gggJMILK\n\u00bb\u2022 PRODUCT OFCAHgj\nflESTLlf\n\u25a0 WHIM I*\nI\nvAPOR^\n\\_ LNESTl\nTOM, if\nTALL SIZI\n\u00bbA\u00bbY SIZR\n' - -.DBOtT 0. t\"--4\nNSTLfij\nCANADIAN houiewivei\nhave come to know that\nthev on depend on NestlS's\nEvaponted Milk\u2014a product of\nCanada. For this delicious,\ncreamy millc never varies ia\nquality. Pure cow's millc,\nuniformly rich; mad*\n\u2022afe by sterilization |\nkept safe by sealing its\nairtight containers.\nNISTLE'S \u2014 \\TtsrUh\nLargest Pro\u2014tars aed\nSellers ef CemJemcd md\nEvaporated MUk\nAS\nDelicious\nJuicy\nFresh Killed\nMEATS\nJuicy\nDelicious\nTry a roast of No. 1 Steer Beef,\nChoice Fresh-Killed Veal, Choice Lamb\nand Prime Young Pork.\nLook Over Our Windows Tonight\nfor Specials.\nFresh-Killed Rabbits, per lb 25c\nFresh-Killed Foul, per lb., 25c\nSweet Pickle Cottage Roll per, lb., 25c\nI Cottage Roll (Peameal) per lb  30c\nPicnic Hams, per lb.,   25c\nLake Superior Herring per lb.,   10c\nTry Our Tomato Sausage or Shamrock\nBacon for Sunday Breakfast\nFRESH EASTERN OYSTERS\nBurns & Co., Ltd.\nQuality \u2014 Cleanliness \u2014 Service\nCphlll  Dettvery .S.S0  a.  m.\u201410:00 ..  m.\u20143  P.  m^-4 p. a.\nFairview.   0:30   a.   31.-2:30   p.   m.\nPHONE  SO BAKER ST.\nWest Kootenay Butcher\nWARD  ST.\nWomen with vivid personalities,\nwith chic and zlPP. and a Hare lor\nextreme fashions can get away with\ncosmetic crlmte. They are the\nkind who can \"carry\" make-up. The\nmore timid woman should cultivate\nnatural loveliness, get roses in her\ndheeks by tailing ood-Uvetr, by\nsticking to her breathing exercises.\nand. Instead of going in for extreme\nfashions find modes that are flattering and youthlfylng. Every fellow to his type. What makes a\nmasterpiece of beauty of one woman will mike a caricature of another. Use the old bean, that's\nthe ticket.\nPLUM PUDDING\n1 cup soft bread crumbe, 1 cup\nfinely chopped suet, 1 cup chopped\napples, V| cup brown sugar, 1 cup\nseeded raisins, 1 cup seedless raisins,\nlM cup chopped walnuts, '. cup\nsliced citron. '^ cup flour. \\_ teaspoon each nutmeg and cinnamon,\ntt teaspoon clovss. \\. teaspoon salt,\n2 eggs, beaten well,  Vii  cup mUk.\nMix bread crumbs, suet, chOKped\napples, fruits and nuts; sift flour,\nspices and salt, Combine mixtures,\nadd eggs and milk, Butter a covered\nmold well and dredge with sugar.\nHave a kettle half full of boiling\nwater; place a rack or plate on the\nbottom and set the tightly covered\nmold on the rack and cover kettle.\nKeep water constantly boiling until\npudding Is cooked, about 2 hours.\nServe wtth a hard or foamy sauce.\nRARELY   DILI TED\nUnless ordered to do so. do not\ndilute couph sirups with wat>r. Usually the object of the syrup is to\nlubricate the sore parts and through\n'Its Kootihing qualities stop the\ncoughing. Naturally this is lessened\nif  followed  or  diluted  by water.\nONION   SOUFFLE\nIVa cup onion pulp (about 8 medium   sized).\n'soup  white sauce,\n3  eggs.\n2  teaspoons chopped  parsley.\nOne-third   cup   bread   crumbs.\n1  teaspoon aalt.\nPepper.\nCook the thinly sliced onions in\nboiling salted water until soft, drain\nand force through a sieve. Add\nwhite sauce, parsley and bread\ncrumbs. Beat the yolks of the egg&\nuntil thick and lemon colored and\nadd to the first mixture. Cut and\nfold in the beaten whites. Turn tnto a buttered baking dish und bage\nin a moderate oven until firm to\nthe   touch   In   the   center.\nBaked  Onions With  Cheese\nOne pound of onions, Vi pound of\ncheese, salt and pepper, .aid tablespoon of bucter. Boil onions well,\nchop with two knives; grate cheese.\nadd '* of It to boiled onions, with\nsalt, pepper and butter 0r bacon fat,\nMU all well together, put ln a shallow dish, and Bprlnkle other half or\ncheese on top. Delicious with hot\nEnglish tea cakes and a perfect cup\nof tea.\nWhite-haired women are the last\nones who should wear black. They\nneed bright colors, Jade green, periwinkle blue, even Chlnece red, Velvet is a nattering fabric for thc\nsllvw-rurlred darlings; brocades arc\nnot. Oeorgettes and chiffons are\nbeautiful for all ages, for women\nand girls of ail complexion colorings.\nIt ls said that the blonde cc\u00abn-\nplpxlon, when suffering from an\ninjury. Is less likely to scar than\nj the darker complexion, though wc\nwouldn't swear our lite on that\n| statement. The skin of an elderly\n1 woman heals more slowly after ln-\n: Jury than thst of the younger one,\n; yet ln the aged Is more vigorous\n! than other  organs of  the body.\nNever massage ths eyelids. Pat\nthem lightly. Tissues there are\nextremely soft and delicate, the\nmuscular formation underneath having little depth.\nBATHING   SUITS\nThe one-piece bathing suit simulating the two-piece 1\u00ab emphatically new, although the two-piece\ntrunk version is still being shown.\nThe bathing suit with straps starting ln front to form a dssp Y\nin the back Is very much favored.\nA top suit of lingerie fabric also\nIs new in ony one of the high\nshades and usually piped in white\nor a contrasting color. French Jersey\n\u00bbnd trioot jersey will be the most\nfavored fabric for bathing suits,\ncomplsted by brief caps and berets\nto match tbe costume either ln\ncolor or  tn  fabric, or ln both.\nDont forget that the surplice\nline is becoming to those who must\ndiet   ss   weU   as  to   ths  slim.\nKnow Your\nCARRIER\nBOY . e .\nTHE very promptness and\ndispatch with which\nyour Nelson Daily News is\ndelivered to your door each\nday may cause you to take\n\"as a matter of course\"\nthe young fellow who delivers it. You may know\nhim by sight... enough to\nsay \"hello\" to. But do\nyou REALLY know him?\nAs a budding young business man to whom YOU\nare a customer to be\npleased. Ag a conscientious chap who is careful to\nsee that your Daily News is\nplaced  on  your steps  or\nporch and not under the\nbei s a loyal worker\nwho takes his job seriously,\nwho knows he is the vital\nSERVICE link between the\nnewspaper and yourself.\nMeet your carrier boy. Get\nto know him ... by name.\nShow him that you appreciate his efforts to keep you\n\"a satisfied customer\" . . .\nit will spur him on to even\nbetter service.\nThe Nelson\nDaily News\nThe Kootenay's Home Newspaper\n THE   NELSON   DjULY   NEWS       FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1981.\nPage Five\nShow\n.JETXg\nSHOES FOR WOMEN\nN1 I LONOti'\nFOLD\n%iwmn\nHAVf AN\nS9.1t\nTun. in Enn. Jtttick\nMelodies every Sun-\ndsyet8PJvH. (E.S.T.)\never WJZ snd Atto-\ndeled Stations In e\nCo.it-to-Co.rt Broadest\nR.Andrew\n&Co.\nLeaders in Footfaskion\nexperts in Fitting\nenna jettick shoes\nJ Por * dime bay s smell shovel\nWith sides that you oan flatten\nlaw and use lt to remove pans\nrom  tbe  oren.\nSociety\nThis column la oooduoted by\nMnTlf. J\/Vlgneux. All news\nat a social nature, including receptions, private entertalnmanU,\npersonal Items, marriages, etc.,\nwlU appear In thla column. Telephone lira. Vlgneux at her home,\n619    SUlca    street\nUrs. Ouy Wright. Stanley street,\nentertained at a couple at smart.\nbridges on Wednesday afternoon and\nevening, whin ahe earned out a.\ncolor scheme of red and white, ana;\nchose daffodils for floral decoration*. Prises for the game wera\nwon by Mra. at E. Plaury, Mn.\nFerguson Wilson, Mrs. J. P. Burns\nand Mrs Robert Bell Mrs Wrigm\nwas assisted at the tea hour by\nMrs. J. Oarlton Currier, Mrs. George\nW. .Allen and Mrs. Harry Dun**.\nThose Invited were Mrs. L. L. Boomer, Mm. W. B Smythe, Mn Qooige\nW. Allen, Mft. B. L. Buchanan, Mi's.\nW. H Hoare, Mn Ferguson Wilson,1\nMrs Howard Bush, Mn H Madden,\nMn James Brodle, Mn. Harry Dunk.\nMn. Joseph Bradshaw, Mn. D. McEachern. Mn. M. E. Fleury, Mra. T.\nW Slader, Mn W. A. Bennett, Mn.M\nMadden, Mn J F Gamble. Mis\nW. A. Thurman, Mn. S. N. McDougall, Mn J. Armstrong, Mrs.\nAlfred Jeffs, Mn. T S Jerome, Mrs\nThomas Brown, Mn B. R. Redpath.\nMn. J. A. MoDonald, Mrs. P. 0\nRowley, Mn \u25a0 A Mann, Mrs J\nCarlton Currier, Mn Hugh Rosa,\nMn Leslie Bedford of Pasadena,\nCalif.,   Mn.   Alan   MoLeod.   Mrs.   O.\nB. Russell, Mn. j. Ramsay, Mrs.\nJ B Curran, Mn F E Bamford, Mn\nE. T. Brake, Mn Percy Coulter, Mn.\nC. A. Larson, Mrs. 0. W. Tyler, Mn\nW M Vance, Mrs Roy Maurer, Mn\nLouis Choquette, Miss Orace Barclay\naf Vancouver, Mrs J. Spenoer, Mrs.\nCharles D. Pearson. Mn. Robert\nBell, Mn. Jack Bell. Mn. J. P.\nBurns, Mn R. Q McKeown, Mn\nHarry Maundrell, Mn. J. Gordon\nDenholm, Mrs. Charles Darough,\nMn. 0. F. Sedgwick, Mra. Ernest\nBergerson, Mrs R. D. Hall and Mrs.\nM  Maloney\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThe home of Mr. end Mra. J. A.\nMoDonald, Hoover street, was the\nscene of a Jolly party recently,\nwhen a surprise party was given\nln honor of their daughter Mary's\nbirthday. The evening was spent\nIn music and dancing. Those winning prizes for the novelty dances\nwere Miss Joy Duncan, Mrs. J.\nRobb, Mra. A. Browne, Reginald\nGerman. Those present were Mia\nQueenle German, Miss Mary Phil\nhps. Miss Mae McFarlane, Miss\nHenrietta May, Miss Daisy May.\nMlsft Joy Duncan, Miss Frances\nWheeler, Miss Nan Wlll, Miss _!\u00abn\nMoDonald, B MoDonald, Mn. A.\nBrown, John Robb. Gilbert Johnstone, Nerval German, Cobett Will,\nReginald German, Charles McLean,\nFrank: Phillips, R. Seal, E. Brown,\nErnest  Welsh  and  A.  Browne.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nR. P. Wllmot of Victoria spent\nyesterday  In  the  city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOne of the meet successful ohurch\nteas of the season took plaoe yesterday at the home of Mrs. D. A.\nMcLeod, Silica street, under tlie\nauspices of the Ladles' Aid of the\nFirst Presbyterian churoh. Mrs.\nHugh Ross, president of the organization, and Mn. McLeod reoelved the guests. The tea tabl*\ncentered with daffodils, was presided over by Mra. W. Waldle, and\nMn. A. Lelth, Mrs. A. N. Wlnlaw.\nMiss Jean Waldle, Miss Plorence\nHanna assisted ln serving. The\nbake table was taken care of by\nMn. C. R. Banna and Mra. A.\nWallach.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nBarry Bperson and his Uttle\ndaughter, who have been guests ln\nNelson at the' home of Mr, Eperaon's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. V. Bperson,\nVernon street, left last night fur\ntheir  homo  In  Princeton,\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMrs.   A.   F.   West   of   Kaslo   left\nfor her home yesterday after a few\nVICTORIA SCENE\nQUIET WEDDING\nVICTORIA, B. C- Feb. *>6\u2014At a\nprivate oaromony held tn Christ\nchurch cathedral at noon today. Miss\nMargaret Bruce Macttenale, niece of\nHis Honor the Lieutenant Governor\nHon. R. R. Bruce, and Chatellne at\ngovernment house, and Captain W.\nHobart Molaon, M. 0.. aide-de-camp.\nwere united in marriage by Bishop\nC. Der. Schofield.\nisia*y k i,w \\nends witnessed the \u25a0\nmarriage. Miss Betty Ward acted;\nas bridesmaid and A. M. D. Fair-1\nbairn, secretary to the lieutenant-;\ngovernor, supported the groom.* Hltj\nHonor gavs the bride away.\nThe oenmony was simple in nature and after lta conclusion the!\nparty returned to government house i\nfor luncheon,\nii .,\u00abi previously been announoed I\nthat the marriage would take placet\nin Montreal on March 10.\ni-.e \u201eupi\u00ab .ti, on Uie afternoon\nboat for Vancouver.\nANDREW BURGESS\nCAME TO YMIR\nIN YEAR 1897\nMlaa in Packing and Dray-\ning Business;  Died at'\nVancouver\ni Mts. Mary Pottakj returned Wsd-\nnesday night from Vancouver, where\nshe ess operated on for a goitre\nin th* St. Paul's hos;>lt*l. Her\ntoother, Mrs. J. Potosky of South\nSloqan, who accompanied her to\nthe coast, also returned.\nColumbia Electric\nLtd.\nNelson and Kimberley\nHeadquarters for\nFRIGIDAIRE\njGainaday and Easy Wash\ning Machines and Hot-\npoint Electrical\nAppliances\nElectrical Contracting\nand Repairing\nExpert Work\nPHONE  695\nAgents for\nNEON SIGNS\nD. Kane, postmaster of Kaslo,\nspent yesterday in the city.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u00ab\nMr. and Mn. a. E. Sparhes, Hr.ll\nstreet, have had as their hoirw\nguest Rev. A. C. Pound, who has\nreturned   to   Nakusp   after   attend-\nDODD'S\n1:1 KtDNET- Pf\nlU    H?1\" \u2122\u00b0 si*\nDANCES     WITH     GEOROE\nMiss Virginia Harris of Columbus.\nMo., private secretary to United\nStates ambassador at Lima, Peru,\nwho won favor tn the eyes of\nPrince Oeorge as a dancing partner,\nduring the visit of the royal broth-\nen In the South American republic\non their way to the Argentine exposition ^-Copyright by Acme News-\npictures.\nlng    the    Kootenay    presbytery    of\nthe  United   church   meetings.\n\u2022   *   *\nMn. W. E. Marshall of Silverton\nand her _a.ugh.er, Haael, were city\nvisiters  yesterday.\nJohn A. Barnes, superintendent at\nPentlcostal Assemblies of Canada,\nspent yesterday ln town en route\nto Victoria.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMiss Annie Blewltt. who has been\nto Beaverdell visiting friends, has\nreturned   home. \u2022\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. 3. A. Hunter, who\nhave been holidaying ln California.\nwere ln town yesterday on thetr\nway home to Kaslo.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJ. Brernner of Ymlr paid a visit\nto the city  yesterday.\nO. Larson left yeeterday morning\nvia the C. P. B. for Trondhjen,\nNorway.\nWARDNER GOLFERS\nPREPARE FOR THE\nCOMING SEASON\nWA.RDNER, B. C, Peb. 86.\u2014W.\nBurrows returned on Thursday from\nCalgary where he hae been on business.\nJ. Wright returned from a trip\nto   Spokane,   Wash..   On   Friday.\nC. Read and friends of Cranbrook were visitors ln town on\nT\/hunday.\nMeson. Alex Daye, W. Glfford. J.\nNelson and August Daye were fishing  ln  the  Elk  river on Thursday.\nA sucoeeaful dance . under the\nauspices of the recently formed orchestra the Kootenay Kanadians,\nwas held ln the Employees club\nhall on Friday. Tbe orchestra are\ntrying to raise money to purchase\nsome ne w I nstruments. A large\ncrowd  was  present.\nAmong those Journeying to Kim\nberley on Saturday night to see\nthe hockey game between Trail and\nFernie were Mr. and Mn. F. Moore,\nMr. and Mn. Powen and son, Miss\nMargaret Moore, Messn. Harry\nThompson, Sam Roland, W. Bennl-\nson. Murray Sinclair, Bill Sinclair,\nO. Sinclair, Alex Daye, August Daye,\nBen Daye, O. W. Aversby, Leslie McGrath, Jack Moore and Oscar Hellmen.\nMies Sophie Maden and Miss Josephine Roslcky of Cranbrook spent\nthe   week-end   visiting   in   Wardner.\nJ. Martlnos has changed bis store,\nmaking some improvements for the\nsummer business.\nMiss Dorothy Scanland of Sand\nCreek spent the week-end visiting\nat   her   home   here.\nHoward Haney of Canal Plats\nspent the week-end wtth his family\nMM,\nMr. and Mn. E. Peppier returned on Monday evening after\nhaving spent the past two months\nvisiting relatives and friends in the\neastern states.\nA meeting was held on Monday\nevening to make arrangements for\nthe up-keep of the golf coune for\nthe coming summer. It* was decided\nto charge a fee of 15, the money to\nbe spent on the golf course\nWEATHER CHANGED\nBY FALLOT SNOW\nLight Fall Occurs in Evening; Temperatures Range\nFrom 30 and 39 Degrees\nA \"light\" snowfall occurring ben\nThursday night was a change from\nthe dry, moderate weather of the\npaat week or more. The snow\nstorm which threatened during the\nlatter part of the afternoon broke\nabout 7:30 pjn., when large wet\nflakes started to fall. The fall only\nlasted a shoct tlms. The temper,\nature during the day was moderately\nhigh, tbe maximum being 89 degrees\nand the minimum 30 degrees.\nSLOCAN   PARK   BRIEFS\nSLOCAN   PARK,   B.   C,  Feb.   26 \u2014\nDr. S. S. Ousterhout was a visitor\nto Slocan Park last Sunday. While\nhen ho took the Sunday morning\nservice.\nUoyd curzori was a visitor to\nNelson recently.\nMn. Max Baskin, Latimer St.,\nNelson, spent a day hen recently.\nMiss A. Allen of Passmore spent\nSunday the guest of Mn. A. Smith.\nPred Cursons attended the \"H. M.\nSavoy Choir\" musical given in St.\nPaul's church Monday. While in\ntown he was the guest of Rev. and\nMn. T. J. S. Ferguson.\nSocial Events\nof Trail City\nTRAIL, B. C, Feb. 26.\u2014Mn. James\nDwyer entertained at a delightfully\narranged bridge last evening at her\nhome, Short street, four tables being * tn play. Daffodils lh silver\nvases were used ln decoration. Mrs-\nW.   Douglag   won   flnt   prize,   Mn.\nE. J. Provost second, and Mn, O.\nA. Rendell consolation. Mn. W.\nDwyer and Mrs. W. -J. Sullivan assisted the hostess ln serving. The\nguests Included Mn. H- O. Hlnch.\nMrs. A. Hector. Mrs. W, Douglas,\nMn. R. B. Hawkes, Mn, C. Fransen,\nMn. I. Minion, Mn. T. A. Temple,\nMn. D. Chalmew, Mrs. O. A. Rendell, Mrs. J. Docksteader, Mn. E. J.\nProvost, Mn. F. Slndel. Mrs. M. A.\nYork, Mn. w. J. Sullivan and Mre.\nF. W. Jackson.\n\u2022 \u2022   e\nMrs. C. Fransen. Riverside avenue, entertained tho members of\nKnox United church Ladles' Aid.\nCircle No. 1, at her home yesterday\nafternoon. Mn. W. Spooner, Mn. J,\nUiurie. Mrs. H. E. Webb. Mrs. J. W.\nWagstaff, Mn. R. Thompson, Mn.\nC. D. Stuart, Mn. O. A. Burton\nMn. F. W. Jackson, Mrs. T. A\nTemple, Mrs. E. A. Temple, Mn. W,\nC, Mackenzie and Mrs. R. Cooper\nwere present. Mrs. P. R. McDonald\nwas hostess to the memben of\nCircle No. 2 at her home, Qnen\navenue, those attending being Mn.\nF. Taylor, Mn. H. Clark, Mn. R. R.\nBurns, Mn. E. Twells, Mn. J. clay,\nMn. D. R. McLeod, Mn. P. B.\nMonn, Mn. A. Buchan, Mn. J. F.\nTwaddle, Mn. J. Forrest. Mm. T.\nBrown. Mrs. C. Nichol, Mn. O. F.\nWetr, Mn. w. T. McKay and Mn. I.\nTyson. Members of Circle No. 3 met\nat the home of Mrs. R. Wtjllwood,\nTopping street, Those present were\nMrs. W. C. Aston. Mrs. J. Balfour,\nMn. C. G. Coulter, Mrs. J. Currle,\nMn. E. L. Bice, Mrs. m. Carpenter,\nMn. J. B. Dovey. Mn. A. Eccles,\nMn. D. W. Forteath, Mrs. McCrae,\nMn. P. Phillips, Mrs. A. J. Randell,\nMra. J. Young and Mrs. W. H. Morton.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Fred Bell was a charming\nluncheon hostess yesterday at her\nhome, Second avenue. Mrs. Harold\nHey assisted her In serving. Guests\nwere Mrs. A. E. Fletcher, Mn. H.\nHey. Mrs. P. Flynn, Mrs. j. Mc-\nGovern, Mlas Iaabell Leckle, Miss\nGrace Leckle. Miss Dorothy White,\nMiss Jean McGovern, MIsr Dorothy\nHey   and   Miss   Irene   Fletcher.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMn. J. E. Dodds spent a few days\nln  Nelson  this  week.\n\u2022 *   *\nMn. W. Colllnson, who has been\nvisiting friends in Kaslo for a few\ndays, haa returned. Her mother,\nMn. J. B. Stewart, met her Monday\nln Nelson, where they spent the\nday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. R. C. Dounan and\nMiss Edith Dounan are visiting In\nNelson   today.\nWear-Ever\nCast Aluminum Wear for waterless cooking.\nCast Aluminum Skillets with self basting covers.\nCast Aluminum Dutch Ovens with bottom racks and self basting covers.\nCast Aluminum 2-quart Sauce Pans.\nCast Aluminum 4-quart Sauce Pans.\nCast Aluminum 5 quart Sauce Pans.\nCast Aluminum Triple Sauce Pans.\nHIPPERSON HARDWARE\nCO., LTD.\nLook Bov the Rod Hardware Store\nPHONE 497 BOX 414\nADHESIVE   TAPE\nStrip* of adhesive tap* ar. splefl-\ndtd to mend worn books and old\nnu.ilc a* lt practically rebinds any\nxtlon tbat is torn.\nTrail News of the Day\nrRAIL HOUSES AND LOTS. IN-\nsurance Notary. J- D. Anderson.    Trail. 13838)\nAppointment of John A. Styles\nas chief executive officer of the Boy\nScouts organization in Canada is\nannounced.\nYMIR,* B. C, Feb. 36.\u2014The people\nor   Ymlr   and   vicinity   beard   with\nn regret, of tha death of Andrew\nleas on Tuesday morning in\nVanoouver, when be had gone\naoout a month ago for treatment.\nHe had been ill since September.\nii.xeryth.ng was done that could bo\ndons. He died from the result of\na growth on the brain. He passed\naway without much suffering at the\nlaet.\n, Mr. Burgess oame to Oanada from\nScotland when he was 18, living for\na time in Alberta and a*, the co\u201et.\nHe came to Ymlr or what wee then\nQuarts Oreek in 1807 and was engaged in the packing and draylng\nbusiness.\nSince coming hera he was also interested   in   mining.\nHe was a member cf the Ymir\nhospital board while the hospital\nwas ln existence and was also en\nthe school board for a number of\nyean,  being secretary for  13  year*.\nHe was married tn 1903. Mrs.\nBurgess and five children survive\nhim, Mkunle, who ls at present at\nTranquille sanltorlum; Mra. Gordon\nPeten of Toronto; Matthew and\nNorman at home. He also has a\nbrother   and   sister   ln   New   York.\nMr. Burgess was In his 60th year.\nThe funeral wlll be held In Ymlr\non    Saturday.\nMRS. A. C. POUND OF\nNAKUSP HONORED\nON VISIT, MOYIE\nMOYTB. B. O.. Feb. 36.\u2014Mn. J.\nW. Fitch entertained at tea on\nThursday afternoon in honor of\nMrs. A. c. Pound of Nakusp. who\nls her house guest. M>a. R. A.\nSmith poured tea. and Mn. F.\nGulndon assisted ln serving. Mrs.\nPound wbo left Moyle for Nakusp\nlsst summer, was enabled to renew many old friendships. During\nthe afternoon musto and teacup-\nreadang waa enjoyed. Those invited\nwere Mrs. B. H. McLaren, Mra. A.\nForsyth, Mn, P. Conrad, Mra, B\nCameron, Mrs. G. A. Smith, Mn.\nOmar Geroux, Mn. W. E. Andrews,\nMn. R, T. Bralden, Mn. S, Farrell,\nMrs. C James, Mn. J. Whitehead.\nMra. F. Guidon, Mn. R. 8. Walker,\nMn. R. A. Smith. Mrs. A. C. Pound,\nMn. Mfcry Conrad.\nJ. Brubaober of Creston was gueet\nat the home of Mr. and Mn. C.\nJames during the week.\nTom Waeolchlck left on Wednesday for Coleman. Alta., to spend\nseveral days with hts relatives aad\nfriends,\nMn. Mary Conrad received word\nfrom her daughter, Mn. d. A. Ruark\nof Chelan, Washington, conveying\nher the news of the death of her\nfather-ln-lay, A- Ruark who pasaed\naway at his home very suddenly\non Saturday.\nJohn Anderson returned to Moyle\non Wednesday after spending several days in South Slocan, and\nNelson,\nOaoar Burch arrived ber* from\nChapman Camp tg visit with his\nmother, Mrs. B.  Burch,\nMn. Mary Conrad left on Thursday for Klmberley and Chapman\nCamp to be near her son Philip who\nwent under art operation on\nWednesday in the Kimberley hospital.\nNelson L, Smith of CranbTook\nspent a couple of daye at the home\nof hia parents during the week,\nMr. and Mn. R. A. Smith.\nWm. Corry was taken to the St.\nEugene hospital Cranbrook on Saturday morning and is reported to\nbe ln a critical condition.\nMn. W. E. Andrews and Httle\ndaughter were Cranbrook visitors\non  Monday.\nMisses Foster, Seyr White, nurses\nIn the St. Eugene hospital Cranbrook were gueste to dinner tat the\nCameron house on Sunday.\nMn. PhUlp Conrad left on Saturday's train for Kimberley to visit\nwtth her husband who la confined\nto   Uie   Klmberley   hospital.\nCUSTOMS SHAKE UP\nTO RESULT FROM\nINVESTIGATION\ndlf if(M wanttonmke\necmomiml, Micivus dishes\nclip tins coupon\n^\u25a0B EDWARDSBURG   a_T\nCROWN BRAND\nCORN SYRUP\nTalo fames* Recipe Book \u00abnt_\u2014 nearly 2M prhe reclpw ehomm       _,\n(ttm 7J.SH reeeHed (rem ell yarn of OmmU.  They are endoreej\n|y ms mi Oaaesa'e torerooet food experts.   Be sun to) sad\u2014i\nH easts In stamps er cole te cover mailing ceets.\nWINDSOR, Ont., Feb. 28\u2014(CP)\u2014\nRe-organlaation of tbe customs\nstaff at the port of Windsor waa\nforecast tonight as the result of\nthe Investigation Just concluded by\ninspector Jackson of the department\nof   national   revenue.\nThe probe was instituted following charges by Roy J. Slnaaac, a\ndismissed customs offioer, that then\nwas collision between Canadian and\nUnited' States inspectors to permit\ninterchange   of' smuggled   goods.\nWhile authorities here were reticent regarding the changes proposed, it was declared probable that\nat least two memben of the staff\nwill  be relieved  of  their  duties.\nIn proferrlng charges Slnasac alleged that some senior memben of\nthe staff had not honored their\noaths, that money had been accepted for protection of violators of\ncustoms regulations and that customs efficen here, had secret markings that were placed on autos ao\nthat they would pass with but scant\nInspection at the EUtrolt side of\nthe river. Slnasao gave names and\ndates to support certain of hts\nallegations.\nIt ls reported that some of these\ncharges have been sustained, and\nthat the staff shake-up wlll be made\neffective    shortly.\nBARGAIN\nBASEMENT DAY\nSTOCK-TAKING BEING OVER, WE ARE HAVING A\nREAL CLEANUP IN ALL DEPARTMENTS,   AND\nTODAY THE BARGAIN BA-SEMENT WILL BE\nGIVEN OVER TO A REGULAR CARNIVAL OP\nPRICE CUTTING.   THE FOLLOWING WILL\nGIVE SOME IDEA OP THE VALUES OFFERED FOR TODAY AND THE FOLLOWING WEEK.\nCome Early and Pick the Plums:\nLADIES' WOOLEN SKIRTS. Fifty to select from.      Regular to $12.50.\nS 1.50 EACH.\nWOOL JERSEY DRESSES. A good selection\n-. S 1.00 EACH\nWELL TAILORED SUITS in Black, Navy and Tweeds. Regular to $45.00.\naa.95 EACH.\nSUITS in fine Serges, Tricotines and Gabardines. Beautifully lined with\nFlat  Crepes.  $3.95  EACH.\nALL WOOL SWEATERS in Pullover and Coat styles $2.00 EACH\nFLANNEL AND JERSEY DRESSES $1.75 EACH\nA TABLE OF ODDMENTS, including Hosiery. Gloves, Underwear, Romp-\nera and Dresses. All at 50V EACH.\nNEARLY 700 ARTICLES, from all departments.      ALL AT 25* EACH\nGREY  FINGERING YARN.  Regular $1.75 the pound.    $1.00 POUND\nREMNANTS  FROM ALL DEPARTMENTS AT HALF PRICE.\nciMEA GHERS^\n607 Baker St.\nPhone 200\nInteresting Service\nIs Held in United\nChurch, New Denver\nCiRANP   FORKS   tUHErS\nORAND PORKS, B. O., Feb. 3\u00ab.\u2014\nIris Morris returned Mondsy morning from Klmberlsy.\nMis. B. Campion and Ml** E.\nPhillip, of the Central school teach-\nIn* staff, returned Monday morning from Trail.\nMlas M. Patterson returned Monday morning from Nelson, where\nah*  had spent  the  week-end.\nMrs, I. Moran of Medford, Otj..\n1* a guest at th. home of Mr.\nand Mrs.  J   Keregon.\nBert Cannlffe of Creeton Is wending a f.w  day. at his home  here.\nThe CANADA STARCH CO., Limited   MONTREAL\nAl\nFarmers have started ploughing lo\nthe   Chatham,   Ont.,   territory.\nKeep the home saft.   They suffer\n, most,  when   \\-r>n  aft.  hurt.\nNEW DENVER. B. C. Feb. 36.\u2014Rev.\nJ. Herrlman of Turner Memorial, ls\na visitor in Nelson.\nMiss Anne ltountaln of Vancouver\nwm a recent visitor in town.\nDawson Irwin has returned home\nfrom Nelson where he was atendlng\nbusiness college.\nMrs.- Carl White has returned to\nher home In Trail, after spending a\nholiday with her mother. Mrs. H.\nWallbaum.\nMr. and Mrs. J. c. Harris of tbe\nBottun ranch were recent visitors ln\nNalcusp.\nGovernment ro*d work on the\nNew Denver \u25a0 Silverton highway,\nwhich has been closed down for\nths last 10 days, was resumed again\non Tuesday of last week and quite\na number of men are back on the\nJob.\nThe Canadian Legion had a whist\ndrive on Saturday night, when there\nwere five tables in play. Those\nmaking high scores ware: Miss E.\nBoudlr and D. P. Morgan. Consolations were won by Mrs. H. Pendry\nand R. Crellln. After cards a delicious supper wu served by ths\nveteran*.\nThe Knights of Pythias held their\nannual dance on Friday evening.\nThere was a good crowd and a most\nenjoyable evening was  spent.\nA very Interesting service wu held\nin the United church on Sunday\nnight. The life of Christ was told\nln songs and readings, taken from\nthe Hymnal and Gospels. Mrs.\nMacLeod White, who was responsible\nfor the service showed great cars\nand skill ln tbe choice of hymns\nand Scripture selections. Throughout the service was worshipful and\nreverent and had a deep spiritual\nappeal. A choir augmented by the\nmembers of other church choirs ln\ntho town rendered most effectively\nthe old hymns. Those taking part\nwere Miss Hilda Crellln, Miss A.\nS mil lie. Mn. C. Thr lng and Mra.\nHaoLeod White. Accomapnlsts were\nMrs. A. L. Levy and Mr. c. W.\nWebber. Following the above service\nslides on the \"Passion Play\" were\nshown by Miss Anne Fountain\nwhich wers very Instructive and\ngreatly enjoyed by all present.\nMidget The     very     late*\nRadios on    the    markrt\n8   Tubes \"MAJESTIC\"\nJ 120.00 \"Mighty     Monarch\nndudlng of   the   Atr\"\nthe New Jut     the     ntos\nMulti-Nil wonderful    value\nTnhee. known\nKootenay Music House\n304 Baker St., Nelson. B. C.\nPhone 583\nFebruary Sale\nThe Great Event\nEor the Home\nTime Payments ', Down. Balance Can\nBe Arranged to Suit Customer.\nNote the Savings on\nCHESTERFIELD SUITES\nAnd ot Well Known Makes\n3-PIECE  SUITE \u2014 Chesterfield,  Wing Chair and\nChair. Loose and reversible cushions. With Bridge\nLamp and Shade. Complete      $127.50\n3-PIECE TAPESTRY SUITE\u2014Loose reversible cushions. Made by Snyder Sani-Built.      With Bridge\nLamp and Shade.  Complete         $137.50\n3-PIECE   MOHAIR  SUITE\u2014Loose   reversible  cushions.  By  Snyder Sani-Built.  With  Bridge Lamp.\nComplete  _ .:   $187.50\n1 odd large-sized TAPESTRY CHESTERFIELD\n1 ODD TAPESTRY CHESTERFIELD .      $72.50\n4-PIECE SUITE\u2014Chesterfield and large Arm Chester\nChair, 1 Occasional Chair, 1 long Chesterfield Table,\nWalnut finish. With Bridge Lamp.\nComplete     $227.50\nSTANDARD\nFURNITURE CO.\nComplete House Furnishers    Nelaon,B.C.\nThe STORE oS SERVICE and SATISFACTION\n.\nI\n Fare St*\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       FRTDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1981.\n31)*? 8 elfimt lailg NmB\nPublication every morning exo.pt Sunday bs Th. Nsws Publish-\nInt   Company.   Limited,   Ntlaon.   B    C.\nBusiness letter, should b* aAArtea.t tea ebecsa and moan\norders mad. payable to Th* Ntnes Publlshlni Company. LUnltao,\nand in no cue to individual numbers or th. stall.\nAdvertising rat* card* and A. B. C. .tattnttnt. ot etroulatton\nmailed on request, or may be wen at th. oftlos ot ana edwrtl^ni\n\u2022ccncy   recognised  by   UM  Canadian  Dally   Newspapers   Association.\nSUBSCRIPTION BATES\nBt mall (oountry), par month -.    --\u2014.\u2014\nPar  yaar  _.__  , ., .\nBy  mall   (city),  par yaar        \u25a0 \u2014-\nOutsuie   Cansda  per  month .\nPW   rsarT^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nDelivered,   par   nek\nPer   y*ar\t\nPayabl.  In  Ktane*.\nHunter Audit Bureau of Circulation.\nJt   eo\n- IM\n- 11.00\n_    .It\n.  ito.\n_     AA\n_ U.00\nFRIDAY.  FEBRUARY  27,  1931.\nWhat About the Bridge\nPeople of Nelaon and district are waiting with a\ngood deal of interest for news as to whether the\npublic works estimates, shortly to be brought down in\nthe legislature, will include provision for commencing\nwork on tbe Nelson bridge.\nThis discussion during the visit of Premier Tolmie\nto Nelson brought out the fact that there should be\nno difficulty in constructing a wooden bridge wtiich\nwould serve the purpose just as well as a steel bridge.\nA wooden bridge could be built for $200,000, whereas\nthe steel bridge upon which a preliminary estimate\nof cost was made would run into a million and a half\ndollars or so.\nIf the government spent $200,000 on a wooden bridge\nit would save money as compared with present ferry\ncosts, it would implement the promise of the premier\nto build the bridge and it would provide a link ln the\ntransprovincial highway of very great importance. As\nthe expenditure would bring about an actual saving\nin annual cost, to build the bridge at this time should\nnot interfere with any other public work projects.\nThere is no real question as to the practicability of a.\nwooden structure. The C. P. R. is using one to carry\nits trains across the lake at Kootenay Landing.\nThe Telephone Industry\nCanada is pre-eminently a country of telephone users.\nThe Dominion has, according to the latest statistics, the\nlargest number of telephone conversations per capita\nin the world. In the number of telephones per capita\nthe Dominion comes second only to the United States.\nThe average number of telephone conversations per\ncapita in Canada in 1929 is estimated by the Dominion\nKureau of Statistics at 267. The estimated number in\nthe United States in 1928, according to figures published by the American Telephone and Telegraph company,\nwas 230.7. The number of telephones per 100 of population of the United States in 1928 was 16.8 .while\nthat of Canada in 1929 was 14.29. Germany and the\nUnited Kingdom had larger numbers of telephones than\nCanada in 1928, but their averages per 100 of the population were only 4.6 and 3.8 respectively. Leadership\namong the Canadian provinces in the number of telephones in operation in 1929 was with British Columbia,\nwith an average of 21.2 per 100. Ontario came second\nwith 18.9 and Saskatchewan third with 13.4.\nThc growth of the telephone industry in Canada has\nbeen rapid. In the eight years following 1921 there\n-was an increase of over 65 per cent in the number of\ntelephones in operation, and in the five years ended\nwith 1929 there was an increase of over 30 per cent.\nThe number of installed telephones in Canada in 1929\nwas 1,899,986, which exceeded the total for the previous\nyear by 65,452, or 4.9 per cent. At the end of 1921\nthe total number of telephones in the Dominion was\n902,090, and at the end of 1924, 1,072,454. The number of telephones per 100 of population in 1921 waa\n10.26 and 1924, 11.62.\nMake Huntsmen's Lives Safe\nThe British Columbia legislature is dealing with a\nnumber of fatalities in the woods of the province during hunting season.\nOn Vancouver Island five accidental shootings occurred last year and there were several in the interior\nof the province.\nThe government is proposing a bill but it is not\ndrafted yet. Unnecessary loss of life in the woods is\na blot on the laws of any province. Drafting of a\nbill tended to curb these tragedies will be watched\nwith interest and any method adopted which may lead\nto safety in the woods should meet with general approval the province over.\n$200,000,000 to the Good\nSeen and Heard in\nNELSON\n(By  J.  B.  C)\nI wonder if ws ar\u00ab sll silks or If\nI sm different from a lot of people\ntn this old world? Many a time I\nsm hiklnt down tbe main stain.\nthinking furiously about nothing in\nparticular, in the distance 1 notlos\nsomeone oomlnc. Coming out of a\ntrance I brace tip. Head comas\nerect and I prepare to smile, doff\nmr bat and pass a cheery greeting.\nBut so I arrive on the scene, tbs\nobject of m> lntereat looka into\ns store window. I then feel like\ntwo bits, dare not look back, and\nresume   my   way   much   downcast.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThan X begin to think about lt\nall. Aa I pass along I hear some\non* suddenly come out with: \"Oreat\nday.\" And, lo and behold, I ha?e\ndona the earns thing tbat my\nfriend bad done in tbe block before. Of course apologies are extended. But I Sometimes wonder\nIf that fellow thought I waa passing him up.\nAnd again tn a crowded street ear\nI will nod at an acquaintance and\nperhpa 10 or 12 people will see\nme nod. They always look to sea\nwhom I am greeting. But imagine\nmy embarraament to find the oh*\nJeot of my address glancing elsewhere Juit at the moment be ahould\nbe looking my way. Hastily grabbing\nmy handkerchief, I nod a couple\nof mora tlmea. Then I put over\na fake aneesa to show my watchers\ntbat 1 am not altogether daft. (A\ngood word, tbat).\na   a   s\nOr maybe lt will occur In tbe\nrotunda of the Hume. I see an\nold acquaintance. He looks me over.\nI recognize him. Hat ln hand and\nother hand extended, I rush up\nto gnat blm. But upon reaching\nthe goal of my quest I find the\ngentleman's back turned. He is engrossed In conversation with someone else. He haa not recognized\nme. I feel, sa O. O. Mclntyre says,\nso low tbat I could walk under\na well known Hume cuspidor an<t\nwith a silk hat on my head. And\nso It goes. Sometimes X think It\nts not worth while to be friendly\nand agreeable, or to even try to be\nsuch. But then whsn I put myself\nin tha other fellow's plaoe I recollect that often while engrossed\nin thought (If that Is possible), I\nhave done the same thing. Yep,\nit's   a   queer   world.\n\u2022 \u2022    *\nPhlll Skinner, a restaurant waiter\nwss treated ln a Montreal hospital\nrecently for a broken Jaw Asked\nhow he received the Injury he\nsaid he served an order of biscuits to a customer who objected\nto thetr state of preservation. The\ncustomer, and I would almost ssy\nrightly heaved the biscuit ln ths\ngeneral direction of the wetter, it\nhit him on the jaw. The waiter\nloyal to his firm, refused to tell\nwhere he worked. However, he Insisted that he had made the biscuit\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nWell that ts not so bad. Thst Is\na practice that could be carried\nout locally sometimes. In fact \"\nremember one morning some time\nego when a waiter departed hastily\nto a kitchen In a local restaurant.\nHe was not pursued by one biscuit. He was followed by a barrage\nof doughnuts, a whole jarful ln\nfact. Luckily for him none reached\nIts mark. Had It done so, tbe waiter, likely, would hsve been in the\nhospital-for a month. But that waa\nnot all. The boys after that had\nan Improvised hockey gams wtth\none  doughnut.   And   as  true  as  I\nThat Body of Yours\n% MS. W. BAXTON, M. B.\nFEEDING THAT BODY BY**1\u2122 \u00abupw\u00bb wit* toon without\ni 4JW4. _._   -\u2014\u2014._\u201e  Tin*  of  tin  stomaoh.   Intestine\nME.VNS OF THE VEINS^^^^^^^^^^\u2122^\nTh\u00abf\u00bb sn Ham trim to test, the\nstomach am Intwtla. a. rats wall!\nnuan. in. Itaatf:   an ulosr ot tb.\nstomwh or lntastln., an operation\nwhere two end. ol Intestine hav.\nbeen Joined together after . ttesgren-\nous portion bs* b\u00bben removad; In\noMtructlon of lntwtln* and so forth.\nYet tb. petlsnt mu*t reoetr. food,\nmust be nourished If UI* l* to b*\nprewired.\nTherefor. It la tntareatiag to know\nof . method of mtlng th. dltestlte\napparatus, and fwt Keeping th. patient all...\nDr. Oeo. A. H.ndon, LoulsrUla\nKf describe. . method b. bu employed la a Bumb*r et mam by\nmean* of whloh h. not only supplies\ntne food MOsaary to keep tb. patient allv., but supplies alao an;\nmedicine* tbat ar. nestled.\nTbe method U to op*n up th.\nflesh and .tpos. tb. v.ln abon\ndbow or knee, and lns.it . mMal\ntub. to whloh I. .ttaobad I rub-\nMr tubing whloh ln turn ls fed from\na vacuum bottle situated at a height\nof about ill taut.\nThis vacuum bottl. contain, th.\ndextros. or .ugar solution tbat u\nfed into tb. vein and tbe system ls\n\"Those reducing salts are simply wonderful.   I wouldn't use any-\nlMng else.\"\nCapital Punishment\nMr.   Lewis   E.   Lawea,   warden   a*, passed   him   the      tiny   bottle   ot\nJing Sing Prison, writing In \"Coiner's Weekly,\" the wwll-known Am,\ntricar, newspaper, would, Judging\noy the following, nave made an\n.uterestlng witness at the meetings\not the committee on capital piui-\n...iiment, uie report of which will\nsjo issued ln a few weeks' time.\n\"It's lidjU to see a young man\ndie. My duty has obliged me to\ncarry out Uie execution otf 13d men\n..nd .one woman. The electrocution\nof ene young man stands out as the\ncraves, and moat poignant memory of all,\" writes Mr. Lawes.\n\"His crime had been one of passion: he had killed Uie girl who\n.iad scorned him. He came of\niuod, self-respecting family, a clerk\n\u2022villi a record for industry and hou.-\nu\u00ab\u00aby in his employment. He was\nhandsome and of athletic build\nand only 23 years old.\n\"I oam\u00a9 to like this lad because\nhe  had  no friends,   was   reconciled\nam alive,  that doughnut stood  tha   w   W\u00bb   *\u00ab*\u2022   quietly   professed   his\ngarr  although   battered   and  kicked   continuing low for the girl he had\n\u2022 _ \u25a0 a     .. a      , j*.in      rW.nW-    i-fcu-n.l-.t_t     thai    \u2022_\u00bb\u2022.     a.n.l\nFrom the first of August last until the end of\nJanuary, the exports of Canadian wheat totalled 60,-\n000,000 bushels more than during the corresponding\nperiod a year ago.\nIncluding the carryover from last year, the amount\navailable for export was calculated at 400,000,000\nbushels. At the end of January the balance available\nfor export was 244,000,000 bushels. There was thus\nexported in the meantime something less than 156,-\n000,000 bushels. Allowing for the wheat used as feed,\nit may be assumed that twice the amount was shipped\nduring the stated period this year as during the parallel month last year; say 120,000,000 bushels.\nThat 120,000,000 bushels sent abroad brought a\n\"heap\" of money into Canada, $75,000,000 or more.\nThat is a fact that should get a good deal more attention than is being given it\nIt is rather the fashion to speak of the depressed\nprice of wheat as being equivalent to a crop failure.\nAnd no doubt the difference is hard to distinguish,\nfrom the standpoint of the man who has to sell his\ncrop for less than it cost to produce. But there is a\ndifference and a vast one, to the individual to the\ncountry.\nIf the wheat grower is having hard times, and if\nbusiness in dull because of that, what would be the\ncoi'itions if there had not been $78,000,000 of wheat\nmonty pUt into circulation during the last six months,\nand if there were not more than $100,000,000 in sight\nas proceeds for the grain still to be shipped out?\nLast year's low priced crop was better than no crop\nat all ..about $200,000,000 better.\nabout tor several minutes. A threat\nto call the police ended the fun.\nIt seems tough but the restaurants\nseem tbe same the Dominion over.\nI hops they do not bar me for\nthis.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nAt laat! Girls you are eaved from\nthat fata so draa-fjed by many. Take\nthis advise that follows and you\nwill never grow skinnier, flabby,\nsloppy, awkward lacy and morose.\nAnd it Is all so cheap at that.\nThis alt came from Washington,\nDC, and according to the United\nStates preaa you can believe almost\nanything that comes from Washington, providing it does not oome\nfrom the lips of a congressman.\nSomething like ths situation at\nOttawa\n\u2022    *_____\nMo this doss not come from a\npolitician and lt concerns health\nand diet, if you do this the three\nF>  are  goners.\nNine young women who lived\nfour weeks on diet coating 29 centa\na day apiece today were pronounced\nby phyalclana fitter, fatter and\nfairer.\nThese three ps were acquired on\ndiet which included no meat,\nbutter or milk. Eggs were on it\nhowever, while peanut and soy bsaQ\nproducts Joined with cottage cheese,\noranges and tomatoes in furnishing\ntba needed ingredient. They had\ntood left over at the end of the\ntest.\nTbe experimenters were two Instructors and seven students at the\nWashington Missionary oohege. The\ngovernment's bureau of home economics made  up  the  menus.\nME-OWt       |\nMary bad a little ring; twas\ngiven by her beau; and everywhere\nthat Mary went that ring waa sure\nto go.\nShe took the ring wtth her one\nday, when she went out to tea,\nwhere she might show It to the\ngirls,   who   numbered   twenty-thdee.\nAnd hen the girls all ss* that\nring, they made a great ado, exclaiming with one voice: \"Has it at\nlast got round to you?\"\nTWENTY YEARS AGO\n(From The Dally News of\nFebruary 37, 1911)\nThat an option has been taken\non the Kaalo to Sloosn railway by\na syndlqate Of Kaalo capitalists and\nthat arrangements are In progress\nfor the proceeding with the ro\noperation of the much-discussed\nline, waa tha information received\nyesterday by W. B. Zwlckey. man-\nsger of  the   Rambler-Cart boo  mine.\n\u2022     \u2022    a\nPlans for the summer fishing\nactivities are now under way. When\nSir J. Eardley Wilmot returns from\nEngland be wlll bring back the\nfinest assortment of Irish files\nobtainable for Fred Jarvls. J. A.\nKilley. keeper of the C. P. R. lodge\nt Slocan Junction, who keeps\nrecord of the big fish, stated that\nIn 1-oklng over the book far lut\nyesr. W. Cookson's four and a half-\npound trout waa the record for the\nseason. Dudley Blackwood ls out\nto eclipse thla eeteh.     .\n1\n\u25a0lain, deeply regretted the act, and\ni eoognlzed his sentence wjs just.\n\"During his six months' confinement ln the death house the autn-\nmattc interval between conviction\n.~uid confirmation of sentence by ihe\nstate oourt of appeals\u2014he had displayed none of Uie moody bitterness of the average condemned\nman. If not cheerful, he had been\npleasant. We of the prison who\nq.-uid reach beneath the aur&oe of\na man's conduct knew this boy had\ncourage. Three men went before\nnlm to the chair, and he gave them\n-voids, of comfort without reviling\nthe state that sent :hem there.\nlhat's a sign of self-control.\n\"The day bt-s. u? he was to die ho\nasked Uie death-house gvnrd If 1\ncould see him. When I went \u2022<> his\ncell  I  found  him  unusually  tense.\n\" 'Warden; he said ln a low whisper so that his \u2022oell.Aelgh.bora\ncouldn't hear, 'I don't think I'm\ngoing to do so well tomorrow night\nwhen Uie time comes.'\n\u25a0' 'Ybuve borne up bravely,' 1\nanswered, 'Don't s*rve way now.'\n' 'I've had to struggle. Warden.'\nhe said. 'Watohlng other boys go hy\nthis cell toward the outer cell\nwhere they wait for the chair\u2014\nuh.wt hasn't been easy. .Somehow, I\nfeel  I'm slipping.'\n,\" 'You'll have the chaplain at\nyour aide. Let me bring you a book\nor two to read, ^^^^^^^^\n\" 'No thanks. Warden. But you\ncan do eome.&tng else for me.\"\n\" 'Anything that the rules al\nlow.*\n'\"That's a btt against the rules,\nson,' I replied.\n\" 'Warden,' he touched hia for-\nhead as If tipping an absent hat,\n'you oan do me a favor if you'll\ngive me a stiff drink of whisky\njust 10 minutes before they take\nme.'\n\"It's ail I ask. Warden.' he plead\ned. 'I want to bear up to the end.\nJuat ons stiff drink.'\n\"I hesitated. H_ eyes wan unutterably  anxious.\n\"'All right, son,' I said \"You'll\nhave your drink.'\n'After dusk the next, evening,\nmindful of my promise, I went tc\nthe Infirmary and secured from thc\ndoctor a two-ounoe bottle I filled\nwith pure rye whisky. 1 slipped\nJhis in my packet, * trifle unoer\ntain. By strict rule wa never giro\nbUmulanta of any kind to a condemned prisoner on hia way to\ndeath. But I'd made my promiso\nand I liked the boy.\n\"When I faced him SO minutes\nbefore he was to dla, he whispered:\n\" 'Did  you  bring  the drink?\"\n'I nodded. Then, for the first ttme\nIn my experience, the sight at a\nman going to his death a\u00bbve me\nqualms, rsMises*. He was young, virile, brave. It seemed sacrilege thst\nao vary soon this stalwart, dear-\neyed youth would become a corpse\n\"My mood must have been reflected ln my face. The young man\nscanned me. Just before the wait\nto the chair down a narrow con,\ncrete path to .ho green door tr\nhtad which 19 of his peers ln-\ncJ udlng the district attorney who\nhad prosecuted him and the Judge\nwho had pronounced his dcrai, sa\nto witness his death, I stepped dose\nto him, ao theft nobody aaw me. I\nwhisky.   ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\n\"He smiled. Took a step aside.\nAa the guards uirnsd to cover him\nne passed back the bottle.\n\" You need tills worse than I,\nwarden,'   he  aaid.  'Please  drink  it.'\n\"I did, and he went to his death\nsmiling.\n\"If you ask me what society gained by putting that young rrw. io\ndeath, I am frankly puzeled. Very\nlittle, I think, because the crime he\ncommitted haa been repeated scores\nof times since his execution, which\nlike ail executions, ls supposed to\nact as a deterrent, If there ls any\nlogic, at ell ln capital punishment.\n\"We knew by every means of\nrecltt\/ning that the death penalty\ndoes not deter s>ny more than Uie\npenalty of life Imprisonment. Indeed, the latter Is probably more\neffective   when   rigidly  enforced.\n'Since penology begins where the\npolice leave off It ts not my port\nto discus the vital Importance of\nquick visitation of the law on criminals as the most wholesome preventive of crime. But. the deaUi\npenalty of crime induces more often\nremorse than, repentance; and the\ninsUtutiOTi of the death-house In a\nprison \u2022 has a sickly, unwholesome\neffect. Society may not care a rap\nabout that, whloh ls % symptom of\nwhat ts wrong with our sdc1.i1\norder.\"\nTEN YEARS AGO\nAuncHet\n\"One reason I like to use turpentine an' hog lard on Pa's\nchest ls because I know his oold\nis broke when hs hollers about\nthe  way   it  smells.\nothsr parts ot tha digestive aysti\nYou oaa perhaps see some of\ngnat advantages of this method.\n\"It la a simple, safe, and efficient\nmethod of supplying nutritious tat\ndirectly into the circulation ln an]\nquantity that may be desired.    Th|\nflow can be regulated so that there I\nno shock\u2014-no reaction.\"\nAside  from  Its  ability   to  suppll\nfood, it offers the most logical i\nof overcoming infection ln ths Wool]\nYou can at once see how a medicln\nor drug that kills organisms can tbuj\ngat  directly tnto the blood and\nIts work  without  having  to go\nthe way  through the  stomach\nIntestine, which not only means\nloss   of   soma   of   lta   strength,\nmeans that much  mora delay.\nDr. Hendron mentions the\nent ailments In which this ma)\nhaa been of help ln his hands,\nln the hands of other physic!\nshock after operations, ulosr\ncancer of stomach and lnU\nstoppage of bowel, abscess of\nUver, obstinate vomiting, blood r\nfusions and so forth, Patients hsrs]\nbeen fsd ln this way for as long i\nid days, which gave the digestif\norgans a chance tj heal complete*!\nWe   must   admit   that   this   ls\nbig step forward ln the treatment .\nthese allmmta. ^^^^^^\nWhat the Press Says\nWESTKBN   CANADIAN\nSECURITIES\nIn thla Issue of tha Financial\nNewa la presented a fairly comprehensive review of business and\nindustry after 19S0, giving special\nemphasis to  that of  Western  Can-\nOne object of the editorial staff\nhas been to draw attention to\ncertain of the bet ter-established industrial enterprises whloh have securities on tbe Western market.\nStandard information haa been\ncompiled whloh should be of value\nto tha reader as matter of Interest and  reoord.\nIt ls not generally appreciated\nhow  many sound  securities  of an\n*,ternaUoo*j confidence,\n7 and friendship. But. as M. D'C\nson pointa out, the countries whirl\nan most seriously affected by th|\ncrisis ara those which are dot\ntheir utmost at this inausploi\nJuncture to shake lntsrnaUonal ooal\nfldence. They destroy the calq\nwhloh ts necessary tor ths\nment of economic conditions;\narouse a sense of uncertainty,\nanimosity, of fear. They engage ;\nheated discussions on etiquette whill\ntheir house ls burning. r\nThere  la  in  this  picturesque  dej\nscrlptlon much sound sense.    It\nlamentabls   to   hear   even   hints\nwar If certain demands are not me|\nwhen tt Is common knowledge\ninvestment    and    specuative-invest- thess nations havs hardly the\nTOLD IN RIME\nLADY WITH A JAPANESE SHAWL\n(Prom The Daily News of\nFebruary 27, 1931)\nNets Nelson, world's amateur\nchampion, who did a Jump of 301\nfeet at the Revelstoke o-ruival, is\none of Uie six cmok ski Jumpers\nwho will take part lu ihe\ncarnival which will be staged here\ntomorrow by the O. W. V. A.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nCapt. C. O. Black, who tar the\nlast 16  months has been ln charge\nof the fiaivation Army activities\nhere, hae been ordered to proceed\nt0 South Africa, to take up Uie\nwork ln connection with the Baiva-\n.lon army service to the natives.\nsee\nSpecimens of rhubarb 34 inches\nlong and 1% inches in diameter,\nwere seen in Nelson yesterday grown\nin the open air by Truflt at\nBrighton,   serosa   ths  Arm.\n\u2022 *   \u00ab\nR. A. Grimes, manager of tha Mo-\nAUister mine at Three Porks, w>..a\nin Nelson today en route to the\nSpokane   mining  oonvenUon.\ne   e   s\nIn a boxing night staged by\nthe Y. M. C. A. here last night a\nfight between Fred Hartwig and\nTom McEldeiry, a middleweight\ncontest, which ended ln a draw,\nsnd a lightweight fight between Ted\nBlack and Hughia Horswlll, wore\npronounced   the  two  best  numbers.\nYou  marvel   at  the  beauty  of  this\ngift you wear.\nAnd  yet  you praise  Its charming\ncomfort, too\u2014\nThis   dream   tn   silk   a   dark-eyed\ncraftsman made\nPatient and loving sad all for you.\nA   hint   of   cherry   blossoms,   and.\naome where a bird's\nShy  singing  ln  ths blossoms you\noan hear\u2014\nAh,   Igdy,   there   Is   magic   ln   thla\nweave\nWrought   by   mystic   formulas   of\ncheer.\nFor wlss ls he who made lt In ways\nthat we know not,\n(Though we may learn the secret\nmagical),\nWiser In knowing sven shawls can be\nBeautiful yet practical.\n\u2014Arthur  Wallace  Peach   ln  the\nChristian Science Monitor.\nmeat type are available on West-\nem market today. Tha Financial\nNewa ls convinced that much good\noan he dona tbe West and people\nof the West by making the Information more widely known and pro-'\ncuring in the Weet a more ready\nmarket tor good icecurttlea ln well-\nmanaged Canidlan and Western\nCanadian securlUas rather than\nthose  of  foreign   countries.\nWho doubts the future of the\nWest?\nIt is a land of such Immense\nresources and of such meagre development, of suoh vast potenUali-\ntles that even while the rest of\nthe world comas to a period ot\neconomic pause of reaction, the\nWest must continue ln certain directions to expand lta industries\nand Its commercial activities. It\nfaces on the Pacific and looks tor-\nward to all that the Pacific era\nwill bring. Ita future\u2014the phras*\nla stereotyped but full of meaning\n\u2014lte future Is assured.\nWith thla wist country will grow\nlta batter managed industries. More\nand more theae induarias will become familiar to the publio. The)\nmust do ao In order to expand,\nfor in modem democratized commerce and industry more participation in financing becomes more\nessential to successful enterprise.\nYoung Industries of today In the\nWest keeping contact wtth the Investing public axe ensuring themselves of support ln the future\nwhan expansion eras call for expansion of their flnancUl structures to meet business opportunity.\nAnd by the same token, Western\nCanadian . bualneea men and investors who hold good portfolios\nof Western Canadian securities along\nwith Uiose of the rest of Canada\nare doing something to improve\ntha business ot the country in\nwhich tiiay live, ^^^_\nDuring the war days lt waa\nsaid ln the midst of Victory Loan\no-mpaigna that a oountry waa fortunate that owed lta debt to !\u2022*\nown people. Similarly it may be\nsaid today, that oountry is fortunate whloh pays to its own peopK\nthe rewards of Its industrial and\ncommercial    activity.\nBond dealers of Western Canad \u25a0*\nln urging their fellow citizens u>\nbuy Western Canadian and Canadian securities are advising along\nlines of eimple commercial wisdom.\n\u2014The   Financial   Tlmea\nrHIRTY   JTEARS  AGO\n(From   The  Tribune  of\nPebruiary 27. 1901)\nChief   of   Police   W.   H. \u2022 Bullock-\nWebster, who bas been in Paterboro\nfor the last week, engaged in obtaining evidence tn connection with\na   murder   that   took   place   there\nsome time  ago. returned last week.\nsee\nDr.     Kennedy     snd     Lieutenant\nOeorge  S-   Beer  were  busy   all  day\nvesterday at the armory In raorul\nlng men for the Baden-Powell constabulary  ln South Africa.\nsee\nAccording to the report sent to\nhe managers oy X. Nslson Fell,\ngeneral manager of the Athabasca\nmine, tha returns from the ore\nmilled for the year ending December 81, amounted to $170,068.08.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nB. W. Sttndlland. tha Sandon mln.\nlng  man,   was  a  visitor  In  Nelson\nesterday.\nI   r i\nThe naw tug Valhalla made ltr\n\"rst trial mn yesterday, which\nproved   successful   in   every   way\nTREES  IN  FEBRUARY\nLoveliness never forsakes a  tree.\nNo matter what the season  ba;\nVerdant  summer,  autumn   gold.\nSpringtime's  rapture,  manifold,\nEven   wlhter's   fingers   trace\nLines of silhouetted grace.\nBuds are the promise of leaves to be.\nBursting their shealths In ecstasy;\ni.eaf-ladtn boughs are harps to play\nFor winds that art sad, winds that\nare gay;\nDown-falling follsge spreads a pall\nPor  earth     whom winter  holds  ln\nthrall;\nBut trunk and branch and swaying\nhough '\ntoe naked weird and elusive now,\nComes   the   snow     on  a  glistening\nnight.\nSoft,   persistent,   and   sequin-bright,\nClothes,    each    twig    with a frosty\nflower.\nLight aa a feather\u2014gone in an hour;\nWarms   the   heart  with  remembering\nApril petals that drift and cling.\n\u2014MOLLY   BBVAN\nWHILE THE HOUSE BURNS\nVladimir D'Ormesson, a distinguished political writer, has pro-\ntasted against inflammatory diplomatic discussions in Europe, on the\nground that they are irrelevant, essentially unimportant, and ludicrously mistimed. When Dr. Curlnn.\nor Dr. Bruenlng on one side of the\nRhine oalla for revision of treaties,\nand M. Br land or M. Tardtau makes\na vigorous reply, the disputants are\nlosing sight of facte. When B'guoi\nMussolini makes flamboyant spsechos\nhe, too, misses the main point of the\npresent situation.\nIn a striking image lt la aald that\nall these quarrels about treaties and\neven about methods of disarmament\nresemble quarrels about etiquette\nwhen a house is burning. It ls\ndoubtless necessary to inquire whether this or that oountry should be\nrelieved of unilateral disarmament\nclauses; but these are problems\nwhich can wait, and the controversies should not divert attention from\nthe economic crisis.\nThis economlo crisis which affects all nations, and will affect\nthem whether their boundaries are\naltered or not, oan be largely removed by the simple process of ln-\nof living oomfortabty at pesos. muo|\nleas  the  means  of  waging  ao\npensive and destructive warfare.\nthe   meantime    there    are\nwhloh   suffer,    millions   of\nployed;   and   on   a   heap   of\nthere are people which starve,\nproper 'distribution ot wheat hag 1\noome an urgent and vital probl\nThe  proper   distribution   of   capiu\nwhlch, like wheat ,la used usurtoual\nly in one quarter and la aoeumulati\nwithout    being    used    ln    anoti\nquarter, is also an urgent end vlti\nproblem.    Overproduction   and   uni\nderoonsumptlon,   lack   of   co-ordinal\ntion\u2014hera are subjects which mlghl\nwell   absorb  ths  energies  ot  \u00aboon|\nomlsts     and     atateamem\u2014Chrtstlaf\nScience Monitor.\nBRITISH IMMIGRANTS Df CANADj\nJust for the present this count\/\nneeds lmmigmnte about aa muoh i\nlt  needs  more  wheat,  and  It  ma|\nbe a long time before there will i\nwisdom in resorting to the kind \u2022\ntalk used (A immigration i\nand     in     immigration     pempolstJ\nthroughout Uie British Isles in th|\nyeara paeu   A Uttie lorn at that i\ncf   thing   in   days   gone   by   mdgh|\nnave   lauded   fewer   Immigrants.\nour porta,  but might have  meartl\nJust as many, perh^pa mere, aa ou|\nland;   and it  would  have saved\na  lot of  bad  advertising from thi\ndisillusioned   and   misled.\u2014The   Otf\ntaw* Journal.\nRUBBISH  IN  BOYS'  BOOKS\nA fearful amount of ruMrtsh\npublished In tbe way ot boys' boota_\nThere seems to be a notion ahroa|\nthat a boy's book need not bt\nwell written as one that le\ntended lor his mere crlttoai fathel\nBut children have a greater caoeoitf\nthan we give them credit for, anl\nthe man who intends to write fcf\nthem might consider the fact\nmost cc* the books to whloh\nhood give Immortality were '_\nten origlnallly for grown-upe, Bootl\nDickens, Cooper, Dumas, Marl\nTwain\u2014they wro*e for adults^~Tb|\nVictoria Times.\nPersonal\nAssortments\nMany women hare rataliltsVa!\nwith tb. Happ Candy Dealer,\nlisted below, m a matter of reoord, their preferred attornments\nof Sapp's Finer and Fresher\nChocolates. 80 when they order\nby phone or thetr men folk drop\nIn those Candy Dealers know\nexactly wlatf to provide them.\nSapp's Chocolates .re so dr.Ur.lons\nthat on.', taate neve,\nJaded with repetition.\nOBTAINABLE All\nPoole Drui OO. Nelson I\nHunt  Broa Traill\nII. Chen-lntHm Rowland I\nCranftrook pruf Co. Cranbrook I\nMlnton1. Pharmacy Feral. |\n\"Th.   fool   I.   th.  men   who  be.\nIIstm   that   he   en   le.rn   nothlnu\nof th. Mcrat. of Hts from book*.\n\u2014\u00abr ClMTl* O. Hobertaon\nBECAI'.IE OF T\\W OREAT BOtTNTY\nBecause I hav. been fflv\u00abn muoh,\nI,  too, .shall  rive;\nBrosuse of Thy treat bounty. Lord,\nlach day I UT.\nI .hall   divide  my   lifts  from  The.\nWith every brother th.t I w.\nWho ha* th* need of help from ma.\nBecame  I  hav* been  twltend,  fed.\nBy Thy (ood ear.,\n1 c\u00bbn not sm another', lack\nAnd I not shar.\nMy  trowing fir*, my loaf of  bread.\nMy   roof.   nf.   shelter   overhead.\nThat  ha,   too,   may   be   comforted.\nlectin lon ha. been lavtshad  so\nUpon m\u00ab. Lord. ^^^~\n\\ wealth I know that wa. not meant\nFor m* to board.\nshall live love to thoM' In n**d,\nihe   oold   and   hungry   clothe   and\nteti,\nnut mall  I .how my thank, indeed.\n-Orsc. Noll Orow.ll in Oood Hetsm-\nkmptnt.\nNOTHING JUST\nAS NICE ON\nTHE MARKET\nEnamelled\nSteel\nRanges\nALL PRICES\n^^^^^^^^^      -SEE THEM\nNELSON HARDWARE CO.\n\"HiioMMie and itetail Quality Hardware\"\n NELSON, B. C\nF\n^\n THE NE_ON DAILY NEWS       FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1981.\npas* Berts\nif! ____!_\n\u2022WALKER TO SUNG\nLEATHER AT JACK\nSHARKEY, SUMMER\nConvincing      Demonstration\nWith Risko Moves Middle\nweight Along\nMIAMI, P_., Peb. 36.\u2014(AP)\u2014\n* Mickey  Walker,  tbs  grown-up  bull-\nI' dog, having demonstrated his soil.\nIty to mix ln bigger company, by\ntwlos whipping Johnny Rlsko, will\ntight Jaok Sharkey somewhere this\nsummer, preferabbly in New York ot\nJersey Olty, If present negotiations\ngo through, Jack Kearns, Walker's\nmanager, declared today. ^^^~\nMickey's convincing victory orer\nS Johnny lsst night, while more ol* ah\nI artistic than a financial success for\n\u00bbeU concerned, nevertheless, gave im\n[pct-us to ths ballyhoo for the raided leweujht champion as s front rank\n\u25a0fcontender   for   heavier   honors\n\"We'll    fight    anybody    si    any\nli weight, so long as ws oan see the\n\u25a0ncoior of the dough,\" assarted Kearns,\n\"but   ws   prefer   Sharkey    I   have\n\\ otters tor  the match  from several\n; Pisces,    Including    Cleveland,    Chi\n; cago and Detroit.\n\"Walker hasn't fought ln New\ni Tork for four years and that looks\n\u25a0 like the spot for me, If wo can\n[ close   the   deal.\"\nKearns, who piloted Jack Dempsev\n',\u25a0 to ths world's championship, ls\nj seeking bigger gams for Walker be\n' cause of a dearth of middleweight\n; material\nBRITISH FOOTBALL\nDRAWS\nLONDON, Peb. 36 (C P cable)-\n(The British Isles on Saturday will\n\u25a0be plunged into a welter of football\n(matches. Besides league soccer\n; games England and Scottish cup\nties will bs played, while three\nInternational, two rugby and one association, struggles are to be staged.\nThe international rugby fixtures\nsre: Ireland versus Scotland st\nDublin and Wales versus Prsnoe\nst Swansea. Waits and Ireland\n[clash ln Wales ln sn international\n'soccer   match.\nTbs English oup ties sre ln ths\nSixth round of this competition\nand four games wlll be played'. Of\nthe eight teams engaged only thrse\nsrs In ths first division so that s\nfinal with no senior club Involved.\n1 An unprecedented thing ln recent\n'times, ls possible. The draw follows:\nSunderland versus Exeter City;\nWest Bromwlch Albion versus Wolverhampton Wanderers; Everton\n', versus Southport; Birmingham\nversus Chelsea.\nIN   SCOTLAND\nIn Scotland  tbe fourth  round of\nths oup competition hss been reached  with  eight  games  being  played.\nSuoh  strong teams as Celtic, Aberdeen, Motherwell and Kilmarnock of\ntbe  Scottish  first division  srs  still\nln   the   running.     The   seoond   division is represented by third Land-\nard,    snd   Bo'neae.     In   ths   third\nround.\nThe   draw   follows:\nCeltic  versus Aberdeen;\nThird  Lsndard  versus St.  Mlrren;\nCowdenbeath   versus   Motherwell;\nBo'ness versus'Kilmarnock.\nBig League\nBOWLING\n\/)OA\/TM\nSeeo\/ve \\a\n\u00a3kSQOUf?M\u00a3D\\h\nJ Poor\nSrjffr\nA tsOOP\n^^***e***$<*=r-\nBy  AL  DEMAREE\n(Former pitcher, New York Otants)\nDon't beooma discouraged aud let\ndown  la your efforts  mentally and\nATHLETES ARE\nBASKET WINNERS\nIN NAKUSP PLAY\nBeat High School 28-25; Superior Weight Hag Tell-\ning Effect\nHow \u2014a, stand:.\nN.    H.   B.\nAthl\u00abt\u00ab\u00ab   _...\nConuwrcUU. _..\nP    W L F A\n.._   8    a 1    4 3\n_ s a l . a\n....  a  o a o t\nNAKUSP, B. 0., lab. Its-Tts.\nAUiiete. cheated ah. If. It 9. boys\ntn rather rough gam* of basketball on Saturday laat, with a fin*\n\u2014*  of  Sfl-15\nTha tint half wu nana or Im.\n\u00bb;.4 .., _\u201ea \u00bb** w..l pa-jad br th.\nteam, cor.oornad. At th. first \"tim.\nout\" th. hash school ws* lMdlnf\nwith a sect, of \u2022-\u00ab.\nTn. gain, from then on wm fart,\nfor both teams war. fairly av.nly\nuividad as to baslcetmakar., but th.\nAthisUc* had mora ws.gbt -nd\nthey gradually played with th.\nN, H. S. teum down, ahd a *eo-\nctia \"tim. out\/' wm called. Tht*\ntune the Atilletas wer. ln the lead,\nwith a *cors of  10-12.\nAt half tim., how.T*r the *cors\nwm 17-17 with both teams well fsg-\nged out.\nRested a bit, both team* played\na superb game, but for once superior weight gained a lead orer Nil s.\nand by the tim. a 3rd \"tim. out\"\nwm called be Athlete* were ln tb*\nlead with tbe mot. standing al\nJo-03.\nPlay  In  the  latter  part  of   th*\n.am. w*. extntnaly warm .nd al-\n,._\u201e\u201e.\u201e     . : ---.---.    -   ,_\u25a0 -hough H. H. 8. put up a .uperb\n-SS2J1\" \"\u00ab.. \u201enBl mtl* Iewi \u25a0-\u00ab*\u2022 \u00ab-\u00bb \"\u25a0*\u2022\u00bb o- tS. Ath!i_\n\"ralreada   and blow a spar, or ao   jeat  _\u201e_ ^^  tht timt \u00ab^,,.,f\nln th. early frame.. LDte any other i   ieh the score standlna at 28-35.\ngam.,  bowling  has enough  of  ta\u00bb     ---, lineup\u2014N. H. 8*   Centre, o.\nKAYE DON TRIES BOAT\nMICHEL ESKIMOS\nWIN SEMI-FINALS\nIN CITY HOCKEY\nMiss Lngiand   II. going  through  her  first  trials at,\nLough  Nesgb,  Belfast,  with  Bays  Don  at  tbe  helm.\ni-on   may\ncup   race.\ndrive   ths   boat   lh   the   next   Harmswcrth\nTRAIL CURLING\nTRAIL. B. C, Feb. 36.\u2014Trail curl-\nling results ln the semi-finals for\nithe Patrons' cup tonight, the final\nI to be plaxed tomorrow night, were\nIaS  follow:\nC. Hoefer 12. J. Oampbell 8; J. J.\n\u25a0Klnnls 13, W. H. Baldrey 7, A. M.\nI Chesser  14, J. C.  Robertson 7.\n| jack if,   fields  wins   decision\n6TRACTJ3K, N. Y.. Feb. 26. (AP)\n\u2014Jackie Fields, former welterweight\nchampion of ths world, won the\nJudges' decision over Jackie Brady\not .Syracuse, ln their 10-round bout\nhere tonight. Blx thousand spectators saw the California star outpoint his opponent by a comfort-\n\u2022bis margin In all but two rounds.\nluck element to make lt fascinating.\nIt ls ths uncsrtalnty of tbe outcome ot sny gams thst makes it\npopular. Keep hustling. Don't think\nthe othsr fellow has sll the luck.\nThings will changs. Ths best of bowlers have thetr tough luck games\nwhen thsy simply cannot score.\nI've seen msny s bowler start out\nwith three or four open frames and\nthen got hitting the pins for s\nstring of strikes snd snd up with\noetter than a iluu game s, guou\ncount in any man's league.\nDon't tell Anyone whst you sre\ngoing to do. Watt until after the\ngame and tell them what you did do.\nAl Demaree  hu  prepared  sn\nillustrated bowling leaflet on\n\"Spares\" which he wlll gladly\nsend to say reader requesting\ntt Address Al Demaree In care\noi 'i',.e nelson D.uiy News ..nd\nbe sure to enclose a self- sd-\ndressed,  stamped  envelope.\nFRED LENHART TO\nFIGHT BELANGER\nifowarth soored 2; left wing, II.\naiyth (13); right wing, B. White;\n(10); left gu-rd. F, White; right\n.uard, P.  Alpsen.\nAthlete.: Centre. J. Harris (14);\n.et wing, A. cariwn (4); right wing,\nJ. asrtaon (8); left guard, II.\nBowes (1); right guard, c.\n.tfftyoh   (1).\nCANAD1ENS BEAT\nTHE FALCONS, 5-0\nMontreal Breaks Detroit Jinx\nWith a Complete Shutout,\nat Home\nVic Foley to Stage Another\nBoxing Card on the Coming Tuesday\nVANOOtTVEB, B. Ch Fob. 26.\u2014\nFight followers here will bs prlvll\neged to see Charley Belanger, Canadian light heavyweight champion.\nIn pursuit of revenge ln ths next\nAuditorium boxing show, Vlo Foley,\nmitt lmpressarlo, announces. Vic\nhas lined up Fred Lenhart, bard\nhitting Spokane battler, to meet\nBelanger here next Tuesday. Lenhart got the call over the French-\nCanadian in a bout at Taooma two\nyears ago. In that scrap Lenhart\nknocked Belanger off his pins, the\nonly man ever to have accomplished\nthis  feat,  Foley declares.\nMore recent than his triumph\nover Belanger, ls Lsnhart's grcs t\nvictory over Leo Lomakl, one\nthe leading light heavies of tbs\nday. Lenhart bsat Lbmskl ln Port'\nland just before Christmas.\nThs bout here will be? over ths\n10-round route snd ls expected ta\nfurnish ons of ths bast flactic at- \u25a0\ntractions offered ln these parts fot\nsome tlms. Both men wlll weigh I\nabout 180 and will bs working out\nat ths CavsJry olub from Friday on.\nMONTREAL. Que., Feb. 26.\u2014(CP)\n\u2014Ths Canadlens effectively broke\nthe Jinx the Detroit Falcons held\nover them all season, and handed\nthem a 6-0 shutout ln a National\nhockey league game hare tonight.\nThe Flying Frenchmen swarmed over\nJaok Adams' team, notching thrse\ngoals in the opening, and one each\nln the second and third periods.\nDetroit tried hard, but were now\nerless before the stout defence Can\nadlenea had In front of Hainsworth, who also turned ln s fins\nperformance which robbed the Falcons of the chances they did have.\nEbtrie Ooodfeilow and Howie Morons, topnotch scorers of the league,\nworked herd to fatten their scoring\naverages, but both drew a blank.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u201411) Canadlens; (2)\nCanadlens, Lepine (Jollat, LaBo\nChelle) :fil; (3) Canadlens, LaRo\nchelle    (Jollat)    3:01\nPenalties: O. Mentha, McCabe\nMorenz,   Qoldirworthy.\nSecond period: i*i> Canadlens\nOagnon,    (Lepine)   4:8S.\nPenalties: Mondou, Ooldsworthy\nRockburn,  Leduc\nThird period\u2014(5. Canadlens, Ls\npine     (Wasnie.     )3:ifl.\nPenalties:    None.\nRICARDO TAPIA\nTAKES HIS THIRD\nROUND TENNIS GO\nMIAMI BBACH, Fla., Fob. J\u00ab.-\n(AP)\u2014Ricardo Tapia, Mexican rac\nduet   wleldar,   eliminated   Oiut.ro\nRANGERS BEAT\nTORONTO, 4-1\nGives Rangers Better Chance\nto   Get   Into  National\nLeague Playoffs\nNEW YORK, Fob. 20.\u2014(AP)\u2014New\nYork Rangers brought about a big\nImprovement in their chances for\ngetting into the National hockey\nleague playoffs, as they trounced\nToronto Maple Leafs four to one\nhere  tonight    Tbe   victory,   coupled1 aibx smith\nBOAT CREWS IN\nSTIFF TRAINING\nFORJG EVENT\nBoth Oxford and Cambridge\nCrews on River Despite\nBad  Weather\nLONDON, Feb. 26.\u2014(C. P. cable)\n\u2014The university boat race crows,\nafter seven weeks' preliminary\ntraining, are well into the second\nstage of tlie long training grind\nfor the classic Oxford -Cambrldgi\nboat race on March 21.\nOxford had two trials today\nWith J. E. Plattsmllls. s New Ze_\nlander. suffering from an inflamed\nright hand, Oarstang of Trinity\ncollege was brought in at bow and\nD. E. Ttnn* moved from bow to\nNo. 8. The orew paddled to\nHambledon look ln the morning,\nputting in a minute's burst tt\nrowing at a rate of 29 Vi strokes\non the return Journey. In the\nlate afternoon the dark blues\nwent out again as far as Hambledon\nlock, getting in a good stretch of\nrowing at an average rate of 20\nand' finishing with a burst of 32\nstrokes to the minute. They showed\ngood form under the circumstances\nCambridge, despite the cold, we:\nweather, accomplished a useful\npiece of work. After paddling down\nstream they rowed from Oates.\nhampton ferry to Harslock Wood--\none and a quarter miles\u2014starting\nst a rate of 31 ta the minute and\nsteadying down to a fast 30\nstrokes. Tho crew maintained tins\npac\u00a9 for a good while, finishing\nwith a burst of 32 strokes to tho\nminute.\nENGLISH LADY\nGOLFERS MAKE\nSEMIFINALS\nOBMOND BRAOH, Fla.. Feb. 26.-\n(AP)\u2014Two English and two American girls today made their way into\nthe semi-finals of the South Atlantlo  golf  championship.\nDiana Flshwtck. tho Britlah leader,\neliminated Peggy Wattles, Buffalo.\nN. T., today, three and one, and\nwlll meet Kathleen Oaraham, her\ncountrywoman, who defeated Marian\nBennett, New Britain. Oonn., five\nand  four,  ln  the  quarter-final.\nHelen Hicks disposed of Mrs. H.\nD. Sterrett, Hutchinson, Kss.. six\nand five. Tomorrow Miss Hicks\nmeets Martha Parker, Spring Lake.\nN. J., who won her quarter-final\nfrom Mrs. I. G. Riley, Pittsburgh,\nsix  and   flvs.\nCOTTON MAY YET\nHAVE TO BOW TO\nPRO GOLF HEADS\nENGLISH RUGBY\nRESULTS\nAMERICANS LOSE\nTO SENATORS, 4-2\nIs Bitter Defeat for the New\nYork Team in Place\nStruggle\nOTTAWA. Ont,. Feb. 26.\u2014(CP) \u2014\nThe smoothly-working combination\nattack of Ottawa Senators sent New\nTork Americans down t0 a 4-2 detest thst waa especially bitter tor\nthe latter, In their closing drive for\na playoff berth In the Nstlonal\nhockey league's pennant chase\nHolding their place in the Canadian\nsection by a single point over Montreal Marcons, the clan of Eddie\nGerard would probably have given\na flock of right legs to win but!\nthey could not cope with the fun j\nof  the   tatl-endrrs'  efforts.\nEvery  one of  the Senators'  goals |\ncame   from   passing   plays.     Dannv'\nOox took down scoring honors with\none tally  and assists  to two others\nSUMMARY\nFirst period-\u2014 i.l> Ottawa, Alex\nBmlth (Cox) 10:35; (2) America^*\nPatterson iBirroh) .55: (3) Ottawa\nCox,   Alex   Smith,   Touhey)   5:15\nPenalties:     Shsppard,   Art   Smith\nLONDON, Feb. 26 (C P cable)\u2014\nResult* of rugby matches played in\nEngland  today follows:\nHospital cup~oeml-final:\nSt. Mary's 15. University College 0.\nRVOBY   LEAGUE\nHull   Kingston   8,   Warrington   0.\nLONDON, Fsb. 26. (AF)\u2014Henry\nCotton, the young Bolshevik of British golf, who wont Join ths British\nRyder cup team sxoept on his own\nterms, is tatting mors sympathy\nover hers than an American holdout probably would receive under\nsimilar circumstances ln the United\nStates.\nWhen the controversy began tbe\nyoung pro's sheer audacity in resisting the terms of ths British\nP. G. A. was so unusual it msde\nan appeal to many golfers snd golf\nwriters.\n| The first bunt of sympathy for\nCotton, however, quickly subsided,\nand It ls likely that unless he recants snd bows to tbe terms under\nwhioh Charles Whltcome snd tbe\nothsr members of the British team\nmake the American trip hs will\nlose  much  favor  ln  his  homslsnd.\n.For he will be put in the position\ni of '''letttnf tbe teem town\" at s\ntime when there may be something\nof a chance to win two Ryder series\nhunnlng.\nCotton hss yet to win s big\ntournament, either ln this country\nor   ths   United  Btstes.   Hs   ls   only\n.{24   years   of   age.\nBeat Bulldogs 3-1; A. Littler\nA. Andro-ie Venzlle and\nB. Phillips Score\nMICHSL, B. C. Feb. 26.\u2014In tbe\nsemifinals of tbe City Hookey league\nplayoffs hers Wednesday evening,\nMichel Eskimos defeated Days\nThewles*  Bulldogs, 8-1.\nOpening wtth a burst of speed\nthat, kept the Bulldogs on the offensive, the Eskimos stepped into\nan early lead and held the Bulldogs ta ons goal throughout the\ngame. a. Littler soored ths first\ngoal for Michel Eskimos whsn he\noutwitted ths whole, opposing team\nand circled the nets to beat Lyne.\nThe Bulldogs' only goal cam* from\nBilly Phillips' stick whsn hs scored\nIn a scrimmage ln front of the\nEskimos'  go.U.\nThe seoond psrlod wss soorslsss.\nIn the final period the Eskimos\nguns went off when A. Androlite\ntook an early pass from T. Taylor\nsnd scored. The Bulldogs mads ssv.\neral attempts to break through but\nwere stopped from scoring by\nVenule the Eskimo goalie. Kenny\nOwen was responsible for ths Eskimos' third (x*i. assisted by A.\nTaylor and B. Zerattt.\nTeams   wsre:\nEskimos\u2014Zenzle, goal; Clmallnl\nZerattl, defense; A, Taylor, A. An-\ndrtoUe, K. Owen, T. Tailor. A\nLittler   snd   W.   Ball.   forwards.\nBulldogs\u2014 Lffne, goal; Wlgan, Mo-\nOorern, Defense; Doratt-I, Phillips,\nHosier, Travis, Halko, Sofko, forwards\nBELL PULLS INTO\nBERMUDA TENNIS\nHAMILTON, Bermuda, Feb. 26.--\n(AP)\u2014Rain out short play ln ths\nBermuda tennis championships but\nhsld eft long enough to permit\nKerkeley Bell. Texas star, to gain\na piaqs In the semi-finals along\nwith John Rope Doeg, American\nchampion; Cliff Sutter of Hew Orleans, and Herbert l Bowman of\nNsw Tork. defending tltiehotder\nBell defeated the Canadian Davti\ncup atar, Jack Wright of Montreal,\n4-6, fl-2, ft-8. Bsdly outplayed tn\ntbs first set. Ball took, command of\nthe situation thereafter and Wrlgh:\noffered   only   modsrate   resistance.\nThe only other matches pined\ntoday were ln doubles.\nBowmsB and Doeg were too pow.\nerful a combination for Wright and\nAlan McMartln, another Montreal\nstar, snd advanced to ths final\nround by 6-0, 0-1. Thsy will meet\nSutter and Ben for th* title. The\nlatter pair eliminated H. Colin\nSmith 0f Bermuda and Craig Blddle\nof  Philadelphia.   6-1,   ft-4.\nIU SPRAINS\nfl PWIWIW    ion    IU\nfl      \u2022\u00a3_*\"    '\n\u00bbY     Pwh yea\u00ab\nPETROLLE AND\nKING TUT TO\nMEET TONIGHT\nNEW YORK. Fib. 26\u2014(AP)\u2014For'\nthe sixth tlms. Billy FetroUe and\nKing Tut, a couple of the best;\nmatched small men ln the fight\ngams, will tangle tomorrow night,\nthis time in a ten-round \"rubber-\ngo In Madison Squsre Oarden.\nIn flvs previous duels thsy hav*\nshared honors equally but their\nlaat meeting ruined sll prospects\nof forecasting their actions from\nwhat had gone before. Petrolle,\nfresh from a decisive walloping of\nJimmy McLarnin, marched, into the\nnigged blonde king's right hand' and\nfaired to last out th\u00ab first half1\nminute of fighting.\nPetrolle won their first battle on\na foul. ths second by decision.\ndropped verdicts ln the third and\nfourth and was so briskly smitten in\nthe fifth.\nOUR SMOKERS\nSUPPLIES ARE\nCOMPLETE\nPipes\nLighters\nPOUCHES\nHolders\nGases\nAll brands of cigars and\ncigarettes\nWRIGHT'S CIGAR\nSTORE\nm \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 m\nwl:h  Detroit's  defeat,  gave  Rangers\nVoUmer. ranking No. 1 plajer of i __ ^ree.pomt, margin In the struggle\nCubs. 8-1, 6... In th.lr third | tor a.^ pj^, ln m, American\nround   single,   maton  todar   of   tter division\nPan-American tennis championships\nOeorge- Lott. Chicago, won b's\n.Ingles match with Marcel Ralnvllle, Montreal, 6-3, 8.4, whll* J.\nGilbert Igall. Orange. N. J., ad\nvanced by a 6-3, 6-3 defeat of J. a\nMcDermott, Nsw York. John .an\nRyn. Bast Orange, N. J., whipped\nCarroll Turner. Miami. 5-7. 6-3, 8-1\nIn the double* play. Hall and\nRalnvllle won 6-a, 7-B, fttim Paul\nfltsgg, Chicago, and Marvin Tarp\nley.   Tampa.\nVan Ryn and Lott won 8-1. 8-1\nfrom Keith Morgan, New Tork, and\nMcDermott.\nIn the nert double, round Tupla\nand VoUmer defeated Bill Sutherland and Ale* Perlel, Albany, N. V.,\n6-0, 6-3.\nALSO IM IMPERIAL\nICALLCN JARS *2\u00bb PUIS\naO*H* CONTAINER (MTMWUlO\nMATURED and BOTTLED By\nVictoria tmmtS\n\"nrnsH muMN\u00bb,.JMm\u00bb vkrma i -\nIsWied  or  displayed  by  the  liquor\nControl  Board  at  by  the  OoT.ni-\nttf  Brtttsh  CorunMa.\nTH0M.AS BOYD IS\nDEAD, WINNIPEG\nToronto's   penaltlea   proved   costly\nSecond period\u2014(4) Ottawa Ffnnl\n(tan (Lamb) 13.SS: (5) Ottawa\nQoqne,   (Oox)  3:10.\nPenalties:     Starr,   Oagne.\nThird       period\u2014 (6)       .fVmerlcarvs\nto the Leafs sS three of the Rsng-1 Emms   (Brydire)   9*H..\nWEVNn_3, Feb. 3S <CP>\u2014Thomas\nBoyd, 64, tether of srasteur athletics In westsrn Oanada, former\npresident of the Amateur Athletic\nUnion of Canada, a former alderman of this city, died here today.\nMr. Boyd . had been ln ill health\nfor qpme time. A wssk sfo hs\nsuffered a stroke from which hs\nnever recovered. He had been unconscious  sines  last  Wednesday.\nere' goals were mads when their\nopponents had men In ths penalty\nbox With Happy Day off the Ice\nln the second psrlod, Nsw Yortt\nsank two counters less than a minute apart The Rangers added sn-\nother pair In the next tr.rne, sfter\nCharlie Conacher had scored ths\none Toronto goal on a speedy play.\n8UMMAKY\n- First period\u2014No score.\nPenalties:    Peters.  Boucher.\nSecond period\u2014(1) Rangers, W.\nCook (P. Cook, Boucher) 4:83: (2)\nRangers,  Boucher   (W.   ook)    :51,\nPenalties: Day, Johnson, Clancy,\nF.   Cook,   Jackson,   Prtmeau.\nThird period\u2014(3) Toronto, Con.\nacher (Prlmeau) 3.-48; (4) Rsnssrs.\nW. Cook IF. Oook) 6:30; (B) Rangers, W. Cook (Boucher)  8:37.\nPenalties: Boucher, Clancy (3),\nBlair   (3).   Day.\nPenalties:  Patterson and Flnnlira.n\nWILLIE   HOPPE   AWAY\nTO   A   GOOD   START\nNEW YORK, Feb. 26. (AP)\u2014Willis Hoppe of New York won his\nthird game In four starts in the\nInternational 18.3 balk line billiard\ntournament tonight, defeating Crlc\nHegenlacher of Oermany, 400 to\n162,   In   eight   innings.\nBOBBY   JONES   GIVEN   MEDAL\nCHICAGO, HI.. Feb. 38. \u2014 The\nJunes E. Sullivan medal\u2014premier\nhonor for champion amateurism- -\nwas formally presented to Bobby\nJones in a ceremony hea te-tsy.\nINTEBNATTONAL   AIRPORTS\nMAY   INTEREST   CONOREBS\nWAflHINOTON. F*T>. 36-\u2014(AP)-j\nEtotablUhrnent of International airports olong the Canadian and Mexican borders to facilitate air traffic\nmar receive congressional at ten\ntion next winter. Representative\nMass, Republican, Minnesota, phns\nto introduce at the next eeaslon s\nbill   to  thst   end.\nMix s quantity of quicklime with\ns half-pint of skim milk snd use\nthis as s wftiltener for the marble\ndoorstep otter it hss been scrubbed,\ntt will keep It tn beautiful condition.\nBATTERIES\nBest of All...\n\"Yes, wo Bsli Coyle Batteries\nexclusively. Trp to a year agows\ntried them all. We found thst\nCoyle was the best valuo ln the\nbettary market snd since that\ndate, ws havs stuck to this\nons good lino. We most heartily\nrecommend lt to everyone who\nowns  s   car.\"\nSmedley Oarage Go.\nPhone 71.       Nelson, it. C.\nTOR.1ET\nP I PE\nTOBACCO\n2 pake. hand.\n30c.  pack.),  otinl.lna\n3 poker hand.\nx'i pound tin contain.\n12 poker bud.\nis the last day for posting letters\nentered in $250 prize contest for\nTURRET\nPIPE TOBACCO\nThere is still time to enter the $250 Priae Contest, by\nwriting a letter giving your opinion of this cool, long-\nburning pipe tobacco.\nJolt state, in simple language, what you like about\nTurret pipe tobacco and why it appeals to you.\nSIX  SIMPLE  \u00ab OXTFST   RULES\n1 7'fifl letter must be evrittm em one tide of the\ntlsert only, and tsgnni plainly with tke\nwrits\u2014'a name and address.\n2 4U letters become the property of Imperial\nTobacco Co. of Canada, Limited.\n3 M entries must be accompanied by a wrapper\nfrom a package of Turret pipe tobacco.\n_ Imperial Tobacco Company of Canada,\nlimited, mil not enter into any correspondence\nsahaUoeeer regardina any entry in this\ncontest,\nH     The decision of the jstdffa will be final.\n6     The Contest closet February 28th, HOI.,\n[Employee* at Imperial Tobacco Co. of Canada,\nlimited, excluded from this contett.]\nSend all Letters to\u2014Turret Pipe Tobacco\u2014\nP. 0. Box 1314, Montreal.\n Page Eight\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS     ' FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1981.\n1931 House Holders Make Great Saving!\nNATION CARRIES OUT NEW\nPROGRAM OF REMODELING,\nREPAIRING AND BUILDING\nExtensive   Advantage   Is  Taken\nof Opportunities Offered by\nDrop in Building Costs\nLet's not quibble over motives, history the Canadian publio has\nWhether to relieve the untmploy* oegun to build.' And when the Can\nment situation or to take advantage .idlan public begin, building, the\nof the greatest bargains ln building  spell  ls broken, .nd ProeperttT pre-\nModern....\nPLUMBING\nHave your plumbing modernized and\nput into tip-top order. We will do your\njob quickly, efficiently and inexpensively.\nWe specialize in plumbing and heating jobs of all sizes and descriptions by\nexperienced experts, and are equipped to\nsupply all requirements for plumbing and\nheating fixtures and supplies.\nB, C PLUMBING\n& HEATING CO.\n306 Baker St.    NELSON, B. C.   Phone 181\npant   to   pay   the   nation   another\ndelightful visit.\nLogical enough, Isn't lt? The\nprices of labor and materials and\nprofessional services are low. extremely low, too low. But you and I oan't\nhelp that. Bo owning a house that\nwants repairing or remodeling, or\nhaving a house to build we pounce\nupon thla unique opportunity, We\nbuv while the buying is good.\nRETURN   TO   NORMAL   TIMES\nThis sounds all very selfish. But\nln reality ls precisely the opposite,\noy buying materials, labor and professional services, we pour money\nInto circulation, stimulate business\ngive the unemployed employment,\nstart the economic ball a-rolling. We\ndo a wonderful bit towards hastening   the   return   of   prosperity.\nPerhaps lt is Just the old truth ln\nnew dress: that the Individual good\nIs tbe common good, and the common good Is the Individual good.\nCertainly, there has never been a\nmore opportune time for painting a\n(Continued   on   Page   Nlns)\nCheer Up\nYourWalls!\nARE your walls happy?\nThey will be, if you\ncover them with some of\nthe new, distinctive wallpapers. The price of\nwall-paper Is down. And\nthere aie colors and patterns to suit everybody.\nLet us show you.\nTIM PLAYER\nPainter and   Paperhanger\nopp. B. c. Telephone Company\nSTANLEY 9TBEET\nBE SURE\nof Your\nBuilding Materials\nfor Your\nHOME\nNo amount of care or workmrnship or expenditure on a home can make\nup for poor building materials. On the building materials rests all. They need\nto be good. You can be certain that they are if we supply them. Ask your\ncontractor.\nBuilding Materials\nFor All Types of Construction\nLumber\nShingles\nCoast Fir\nCoast Finish\nBrick\nLime\nCement\nPlaster\nGyproc Plaster Board\nTen Test Insulating Board\nAutomobile   Glass\nGarage? Bungalow? Mansion? Industrial Plant?\nWhatever it is you plan to build you can rely on us for\nall your building materials.\nBuilding Material of the very highest calibre, of\nevery description, are available here at fair prices, and\nour delivery service is prompt. We will meet your own\nor your contractors specifications promptly and accurately.\nOur Building Materials are selected for\ntheir durability. Specify them for your next\nbuilding or remodelling job.\nT. H. Waters & Co., Ltd.\nPHONE 156\nFoot of HaU St.\nP. 0. Box 835\nLaKI  UTVEL  TA DOWN  SUOBTLT\nA slight Tarlatlon ln tha water\nlevel of Uie Wat Arm ot Koottnay\nlake at Nelson, toward, a lower\nmark, wa* noted Thursday wtwn lt\ndropped .08 too*. Thursday th.\nlevel stood at .10 toot below low\nwater mat- and on wedneaday It\nstood   at   .It   foot  bs\\am.\nTOWARD PROSPERITY!\nThe scene is typical of the nation-wide activity that has followed a sharp fall ln the \u25a0 prices of\nlabor, building materials and professional services. The movement\nis ln line with Dominion and Provincial building programs recently\nurged and hae already gone a long\nway to relieve the unemployment\nsituation. Every home that ls built,\nevery Job of remodeling or repair,\nputs a number of men to wort,\nstimulates trade ln many fields,\ngets money into circulation. And\nthe householder ls receiving more\nfor his dollar than at any time\nsince 1915. Scenes such as that\npictured above are multiplying day\nby day, and day by day the return of Prosperity grows nearer.\nAnd with the opening of the\nspring season this activity no doubt\nwlll take on renewed life. After\nmonths   of   depression   the   country\nla awakening from Its lethargy and\nif economists are correct ln their\npredictions, as many of us are prone\nto believe, there should be a gradual\nimprovement as the year advances.\nBy fall, say these forecasters, things\nshould assume normal proportions.\nFor that reason lt be hooves ua\nto take advantage of the situation.\nrVill Finish Board\nRoom Ceiling and\nWalls in Veneer\nFollowing the reshlngllng of the\nboard   of   trade   building   last   fall,\nhe oouncil of the board yesterday\nawarded a contract to T. H. Waters\nto Co., to finish the ceiling ol the\noard room, and the walls down to\n'.he walnscottlng, with Nelson veneer, a: a price of 9100.50.\n21 DAYS WITHOUT\nOPTION OF FINE\nFOR VANGRANCY\nJohn Carlson was found guilty\nln polloe oourt Thursday of vagrancy, and was sentenced by Magistrate William Brown to 31 days'\nimprisonment without the option\nof   \u00ab,   fine.\nThe charge waa based on alleged\nbegging   by   the   accused.\nHome\nBuilding\nLet ua attend to that\nnext building job you are\nplanning. Expert workmanship with prompt\nservice and the use of\nthe best of materials as.\nsures satisfaction.\nT. HULLS\nSpedallilni In  All  Classes  ot\nBtiUdUif and Repair Work\nPHONE 3ML1        Nelson, B. C.\nContemplating\nBuilding\nSee us for all\nROOFING\nTINSMITH\nand\nFURNACE\nINSTALLATION\nWORK\nR. H. MABER\nTinsmith\nPhone 655\nNelson, B. 0.\nPerhaps you keep the kitchen\ndoors closed so the odor of cooking\ndoes not get into the other rooms.\nIf you also beep the windows closed\nthe air will become heavy and unhealthy but burning a few lavender\nheads and stalks will eliminate the\nunpleasant odors and will also be\nfreshing.\nIs Your Home Still Home?\nIs your living room still\na room that invites living\nin?' Are your bedrooms\ncozy and cheering? You\nshouldn't make th sad\nmistake of letting your\nhome run down. It pays\nto keep your home homelike by having it attractively redecorated and\npainted.\nlAMES SPENCER\nPAINTER and DECORATOR\nPhone 247L Josephine St.\nIf Contemplating\nBuilding or Moving\nLet us attend you. Our haulage service\nis at your disposal at all times.\nPHONE 797\nRENWICK'S TRANSFER\nNOW you can\nafford to\nREMODEL\nElectrical Fixtures\nand Appliances\nAre Important\nModern Electrical Fix-\nlures, expert electric wiring, bridge lamps, table\nlamps, electric iron, electric vacuum cleaner,\nwashing machine, etc., may seem only trivial. But they\nprove to be not only essential, but of major Importance. So keep'them in mind when building or remodelling your home.\nAlso keep in mind COLUMBIA ELECTRIC LTD.,\nwhere modern electrical fixtures, expert, electric wiring, bridge lamps, table lamps, electric irons, vacuum\ncleaners, washing machines, and other such important\narticles are of the finest, and reasonably priced.\nExperienced Electrical Contractors and\nDealers in Electrical Appliances,\n, Supplies and Fixtures\nAgents for FRIGIDAIRE and NEON SIGNS\nColumbia Electric Ltd.\nNelson and Kimberley Phone 695\nWHITE PINE\nCOAST FIR\nSPRUCE\nCEDAR\nARCH LATH\nSHINGLES\nETC.\n1VJ0 matter what you thought a year ago, you\n\" should inquire into this year's Building costs.\nYou may be surprised to find that you now can\nafford those long-needed repairs on your home,\nor even that new home of your dreams.\nLumbers of the very highest calibre are available at extremely low cost. We will meet your\nown or your contractor's specifications promptly and accurately. Our lumber is selected for\nits uniform durability. Our price is always\nfair. Call us for an estimate.\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd\nThe Home of Good Lumber\/*\nPhone 176 Foot of Stanley St\n THE NELSON DAILY NEWS        FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1931.\nPi** Mat\n931 House Holders Make Great Saving!\n[NATION CARRIES OUT NEW\nPROGRAM OF REMODELING,\nREPAIRING AND BUILDING\n(Oonttoed Pram Veto Wght)\nftouse,   or   plastering   a   room,   or\nbringing one's plumbing up to date,\nor buying e door-knob. And certainly, to do any of tbese things\nls   to   put   someone   to   work.   And\nRepairing and Remodeling.\nService\nNow U the time to have that\nwork done, before the rush\noomes, Our facilities for handling all classes of building' and\nrepair work are up-to-thr-minute.   Satisfaction   guaranteed.\nP.WALGREN\nCARPENTER and BUILDER\nPhone 621R Nelson, B. C.\nPhone 33, The West Transfer Co. We specialize in\ncareful, efficient and speedy Furniture and Piano\nMoving.\nWe are fully equipped and experienced to handle\nyour General Teaming Problems, whatever size they\nmay be.\nA trial order will prove the economy of ordering\nyour coal, coke and woqd here. We are dealers in\nCoal, Wood and Coke and are agents for Crow's Nest,\nLethbrldge and Acme Coal.\nWest Transfer Co.\nPHONE 33\n\u25a0\u25a0MHMMtfHMaSMMI\nDecorating .\nto Suit Your\nHome and Purse\nWith Spring in the offing, it's just\nabout time to liven up your rooms\nthe Murphy way. Let us look over\n\u2022 your rooms and give you an accurate estimate. You will be surprised to find how little the new\nwall coverings and wall finishings\ncost. Whatever you spend, it is\nwell   spent,   with  us   on   the  job.\nWALL PAPERS, WALL FINISHES,\nWALL PANELING\nINTERIOR DESIGN\nAND CONSTRUCTION\nMURPHY BROS.\nPainters and Decorators\nPhone 555 Nelson, B. C.\nwhen everyone la put to work, .hard\ntimes will be forgotten, and you and\nI and our neighbor  wlll be sharing\nthe   reward   ot   prosperity.\nADVERT16KR8    LOWER   COST\nAll In all, there la no way ot\nspending more effectively or investing mare soundly than to build or\nmodernise your home. The advertisers on this page ln the interests of\nthe unemployed, and In your Interests as well as their own. are offering their labor and materials and!\nprofessional services at a phenomenally low cost. They are co-operating with the nation-wide Building\nmovement.\nPlease remember! Tou end I. the\nhouseholders of 1931, can make great\nsavings. At tbe same Ume, we oan\nput the unemployed to work, thereby doing a double servloe to our*\n\u2022elves and our country. Motives are\nbeside the point. It's the results\nthat nutter. And the results\nof Building are Jobs for tbe Job-\nleas,   and   Prosperity.\nGOVERNMENT MAY\nTAKE ON RUNNING\nOF BEER PARLORS\nThink That In This Manner\nBeer Drinkers Would Get\nMoney's Worth\nVANCOUVER, Tea. M-~The Vancouver Province publishes the following  despatch  from  Victoria:\n\"That the provincial government\ntake over and operate all British\nColumbia beer parlors, ls one of the\nproposals under consideration by tbe\ngovernment and Conservative members of the legislature.\n\"Whether the scheme would be\nadopted or not thla session was in\ndoubt today. No final decision bas\nbeen reached on the proposal, but\nlt has strong support In the caucus\nand In the ministry Itself. Even If\nlt Is abandoned tor this year, Its\nsupporters are hopeful that It will\nbe  Implemented  later.\n\"Two arguments are used ln favor\nof government beer parlors, first\nthat they would bring ln a large\nnew revenue to the provinoe, when\nrevenue is badly needed and secondly\nthat they would help to solve tbe\nperennial probe of beer profile and\nbeer   quality.\n\"In Its own parlors, the government could make sure that nothing\nbut beer of good quality was sold\nand at a reasonable price, whereas\nunder the present system both these\npoints are the subject of constant\ncomplaint from beer drinkers, lt\nIs argued,\"\nFORMES MERGER\nOF CONSTRUCTION\nMSJOESON\nA. H. Green Forms New Company and Takes Over John\nBum's and Son's Business\nA. H. Oreen Oompany, Umlted.\nhae been Incorporated ami has\ntaken over th* construction and\nengineering business of ths A. K.\nOreen company and the contracting,\ncontracting supply business and\nsash and door factory of John\nBurns  to Son.\nCapitalized \u00abt \u2022160,000. the company wlll carry on the business of\ncontractors, mining engineers, and\nland surveyors as well as operating\nthe sash and door factory and supplying lumber, oement and other\nbuilding   materials.\nOfficers of the company are A.\nH. Oreen, president and managing;\ndirector: w. J. Dunn, vice-president;\nW. ML Myers, second vice-president;\n.Lorne Simpson, secretary, and A. L.\nPurdy, director.\nE. O. Matthew is solicitor for tbe\ncompany Incorporation was effected In less Uian a week after\nthe dispatch of the papers to Victoria.\nThe organization of both the\nOreen comtauiy and the John\nBurns company Is being retained,\nIncluding W. J. Dunn and Lorne\nSimpson of the Bairns concern and\nW M. Myers and A. L. Purdy, In\ncharge of surveying, ot the Oreen\noompany.\nLarge construction Jobs on hand\nat this time include construction\nof the new transoontlnenti.il line of\ntho B. O. Telephone company between Midway and Castlegar and construction of dam and pipe-line for\nthe new Kaslo hydro-electrlo plant.\nTBANSCANADA   HIGHWAY   TO\nBE,    SHOVED    FURTHER\nTOItONTO, Ont., Feb. 30.\u2014Oom\npletlon through to Manitoba of Ontario's section of the transcanada\nhighway is hoped for this year, said\nHon. William P. Plnlayson. Ontario\nminister of lands and forests, speaking to the Ontario Oood Roads convention today. Mr. Plnlayson alw\nexpressed the hope Manitoba's section would also be completed this\nyear   to  meet  the  Ontario end.\nEMPLOYMENT IN\nCANADA SHOWING\nAN IMPROVEMENT\nBritish Columbia Shows Moderate Contraction in\nEmployment\nOTTAW.V Out, Feb. Mv\u2014tOP)\nAlthough tbs number of persons\nemployed by Canadian firms reporting to the government at tbe be.\nginning of February was less than\nat ths same date in the preceding\nthree yeara, lt was greater than in\nany earlier year since 1011. Returns\nhave been reoelved by the Dominion\nbureau of statistics from 7481 firms.\nThese show pay-rails aggregating\n904,910 persons on February 1, ae\ncompared with 913,080 on the first\nof January. Just one month previous.\nThe bureau reports that Important recovery was shown ln the employment returns reoelved from\nmanufacturing firms, especially\nthose engaged In the textile and ths\nmm   and   !\u25a0__\t\nprovemeot was also shown In nil-\nway construction and in shipping\nand stevedoring. On the other\nhand appreciable declines wsre\nnoted In highway and building\nconstruction, in trade, mining and\nlogging. Theae contractions, lt Ui\nstated, wave, ln many cases, of\nseasonal chancier.\nBMFLOYMENT   TUN1)   rPWARD\nThs trend of emptorment, tt Is\nreported, was upward In Montreal\nOttawa Hamilton, Windsor and ths\nadjacent 'border dtles, and Vancouver. Quebec city, Toronto snd\nWinnipeg    reported    reductions.\nThe bureau makes the following\nreport on employment by economic\nareas:\nPrairie provinces: E&nptoyment, in\nthe prairie provinces has shown s\ncontraction at th* beginning of\nFebruary ln most, yean of the\nrecord, but the falling off reported\nby tbe firms making returns on\nFebruary 1, 1931, involved a larger\nproportion of the aggregate payroll\nthan has been tbe case tn the last\nfew rears. Statements were tabulated from 1103 employers, whose\nstaffs declined \u00abi\u00ab) persons to 181.-\n873 on February 1. Logging was\nmors active and railway construction also showed Improvement, but\nmanufacturing, mining, communl\noatlons snd transportation reported\nconsiderable   curtailment.\nBritish   OotaVM\nmoderate caatrairttna te I\nai tbe ksajlnatu at I _\t\nI.nly   In  tbs  highwa.\neenstrootlon    and    service    grouns\n\u25a0i >u\nang] railway qcwelmction were rather buster, fk* wetting forest of\nthe 744 reporting linns a\u00ab_ v.-*.-.*\n79.393, a decrease off 469 persons as\ncompared wltb their J> nuarj '\nsetts. A slight lmpneeaasol **ed\nbeen Indicates on February i.\n1930. and tbe Index wae then a few\npoints  higher.\nHOME   MADE   FLANl\nCLIMBS   MM   rtFT\nmTCKBHKn. Ont.. Fab. *\u2014An\naltitude of 3AM feet we* sttetiwd\nyesterday by Theodore DUtrteh. tn\na small home mad* airplane sewered only by a 27 horsepower meter\ncycle engine. Dktrteh'a odd UteW\nship climbed steadily. On THUfctiMI\n1800 feet the pilot took both hands\nfrom ths controls to demonflfcrate\nthe stability of tbs eraft.\nBLRl.IN     FABUAMKNT\nOUABI)\nBHRLIN. Feb. He\u2014 tAP>\u2014Tfc\u00bb e\u00abW\nparliament, hearing rumors that\ncommunist* planned diet urtem use\nat th\u00bb dty hall, held tw0 a\u2014Ions\ntonight under heavy pollee sward.\nThs sittings were noisy but thev\nended without any sign gf r\nBOARDS WORK ON\nPARALLEL LINES\nTRAVELERS CARS\nCranbrook  and   Nelson  Are\nBoth Dealing With\nQuestion\nNelson and Oranbrook boards of\ntrade \u00abre working on parallel lines\nin connection wiUi the discriroln*.\ntfon now shown by British Coium\nbta against commercial travellers\nfrom other provinces, ln requiring\nthem to take out motor licenses\nln this province If they wish to\ncover their districts by car.\nA letter Just reoelved from the\nCranbrook board was dealt wtth by\nthe council of the Nelson board\nThursday, and a reply was ordered\nsent that this board had been work'\nlng on the matter.\nC. H. Hamilton, chairman of ths\nspecial committee that looked into\nthe question, said he was informed that when Dr. L. B. Borden,\nM.P.P., approached Hon. R. H\nPooley, attarney-geheral, on the\nmatter on behalf of the Associated\nCanadian Travellers, he was\nsured that if the Travellers wished\nto proceed with the matter, the\ngovernment would be favorable to\nacting on the line of reciprocal\ntreatment. The Travellers, how\never. Mr. Hamilton said, did not\npress the matter, deolded that, tt\nvfOB not a question ln which their\norganlFAtlon  should   act.\nRESIGNS POSITION\nMajor wm. 3. Morrtaon, yrbem rmlt-\nnatlon as 1up.rtnt.iM4.44t at tb.\nJail (arm at Langatall. Out, to tax*\netlect, May 1, I* a taatur. ol provincial secretary's report, toUovUw Jail\n__M\\^^^^^^^^^\nY<\nANNOUNCEMENT\nLUMBER\nBRICK\nmmm\nCEMENT\nLIME\n4\nPioneer Firm Changes\nHands\nJohn Burns wishes to announce that the firm\n\"John Burns & Son\" has been purchased by\nA. H. GREEN Co., Ltd.\nwhich has been incorporated.\nChange Took Effect\nJanuary 1, 1931\nAccounts owing to John Burns & Son up to\nDecember 31, 1930, are payable to John Burns\n& Son, and accounts after January 1 are payable to A. H. Green Co., Ltd., at is\nFront Street office.\nExpression of Thanks\nJohn Burns thanks his customers for their\npatronage in the past,  and  would greatly.\nappreciate  a continuance of  this  support\nwith the new company.\nBRICK\nCEMENT\nLIME\n'XT*,\n_l\n Pa.se Ten\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1981.\n2^1% Want M Pafe..^ $g\nFERNIE BOARD OF TRADE URGES\nGOVERNMENT RETAIN PROVINCIAL\nPOLICE HEADQUARTERS IN CITT\nProtest .Against Removal to\nFernie; Mangan President\nfor Year\nFERNIE, B. C, Tea, 28.\u2014At the\nannual meeting of the Fernie board\nof trade held Tuesday evening John\nMangan was elected president for\nthe coming year. Alfred Cummings,\nvice-president, and Thomas Beck.\nsearetM*y-tre*urei). The fallowing\ncouncillors were appointed M. A.\nKastner, Thomas Shorthouse, Dr.\nOee, Harold Mlnton, B. K. Stewart, A. Walde, and Harry Douglas.\nThe auditor Is J. H.  Marshall.\nFernle's board of trade will again\n\u2022innate with the associated boards\nof tnde of eastern British Columbia.\nThe report of Cooper Stevenson.\ncaretaker of the Auto Camp last\nyear reflected the financial depression as only 813 cars used the camp\nwith some 3284 passengers. This\nIs reduction of 220 from the year\nbefore.\nPresident Charles Bennett ln his\nreport of the year's work, mentioned the board's endorsatlon of the\nelty council's and coal operators\nment for a subvention of a fifth of\nrequests to the Dominion govern-\n\u2022 cent per mile per ton on freight\nrates to Manitoba. This had been\npartially successful up to an eighth\nof  a  cent.\nHe mentioned the board's request\nto the provincial works department\nlor improvement* in the main highway through the Crows Nest Pass.\nAll asked for had not been done,\nbut many major Improvements to\nthis road had been completed, and\noil of the bad hills were now in\nthe course c* being eliminated, by\nnew greatly reduced grades. The\nNewgate road asked for had been\ncompleted, and Improvements near\nDorr were partially done.\nThe representation to the B. C.\ntourist bureau that errors In their\ntourist maps be corrected had had\nresults.\nMarked Improvements ln the tourist oamp had been carried out\ndurtng  the year.\ngeneral   expenses\nAlbert*.  Motor  Am.\nAss.  Bo rd   of   Trade   \t\nWestern Can. Road Route\nCan. Chamber of Com...-:.,.\nRoad Maps Lethbrldge\nB of T  \t\n411.12\n10.00\n25.00\n60.00\n10.00\n100.00\nTotal\nBalance on hand\n8781.12\n36.21\nPOUCE COURT\nHAS BUSY YEAR\nABOUT CRESTON\nCRE8T0N, B. O., Feb. 26.\u2014In the\nreview of 1B30 affairs submitted by\nPresident Mallandalne as part of\nhis presidential address at the board\nof trade banquet, some facts and\nfigures In connection wltb provincial polloe actlcitles for the past\nyear are interesting, especially at\nthis time when the board Is pressing the Victoria government to invest something like 312,000 to erect\na government building to give the\npolice quarters of a size and design\nthat the work now transacted and\nrevenues collected fully justify, and\nat the same time give like accomodation for the other government\nbranches   at   Creston.\nOfficial figures show that for\n1930 the Intake at the police office\nfrom all sources totalled 310,303, a\ng..ln of 31892 over 1929. The outstanding gains were in connection\nwith ths Motor Vehicle act where\na total of 87491 was collected, and\nrepresenting an increase over the\npreceding year of 8410. Prom police\ncourt lines and coste 81015 was\nreceived, representing a gain of 1685\nover the year previous. Two hundred and fifty dollars of trade licenses were collected for an Increase of 825. Amusement tax intake was 3209, for a gam of 84,\nand the total paid for dog licenses\nThe\" caretaker of the auto camp was 8105, representing a gain of\nrecommended   for  the  coming  seas-   826.\non that four more electric light\npoles be erected ln the camp. Four\nnew heaters be procured for the\ncabins, and five chimneys be built.\nHe also recommended the building\nof another cabin.\nReference was made to the request of the associated boards of\ntrade of Eastern British Columbia asking the Alberta government\nto keep the road over the Crows\nNest Pass open durtng the winter.\nThe Alberta government did the\nJob herself and the road has been\nopen   all   the  winter.\nThe board asked the prorln-\neial works department to gravel\nthe road on the way to the White\nSpruce.   This  has   been   done.\nThe request for a new road down\nthe Flathead Valley has resulted\nIn the location of a new road over\nhalf this distance. It Is expected\nthat this location will be completed ln the coming year.\nAID   TO   TRAVELLER*\nThe Femie board of trade endorsed the resolution of the Cranbrook board of trade, that commercial travellers from Alberta having auto licence shall not be required to procure a British Columbia auto licence when travelling\nln B C. It was stated that commercial travellers from Brtttah Columbia ars not required by Alberta\nto procure an Alberta licence. It\nwas the opinion of the board that\nthis privilege should be reciprocal.\nPOLICE   PROTEST\nThe proposed change of the headquarters of the provincial police\nfrom Fernie to Cranbrook was discussed and tbe secretary was In\nstvructed to send the following telegram to the attorney general, and\nto J. H. McMullin of tha provincial\npolloe Victoria, with a copy to\nThomas Uphill M. I*. A. now at\nVictoria,\n-It has been brought to our attention, that It ls proposed to\nmore the headquarters of the provincial police from Fernie to Cranbrook, and this board strongly\nurges that this matter be reconald'\nThs Motor Vehicle set revenues\nwere as follows:: Licenses Issued,\n397; renewals, 301; new cars registered, 39; used cars registered, 39;\nused trucks registered, 15; transfers,\n73; drivers' licenses, 146; duplicate\ndrivers'   licenses  31.\nCollections under the Game act\nwere from: Ordinary firearm licenses\n369 at 82.50; non-resident general\nfirearms licenses, 18 at 826; resident special firearms licenses, 26\nat 810; non-resident dally anglers'\nlicenses. 42 at 810; resident general firearms licenses, 3 at 85; extra general firearms licensee, 1 at\n810;   Game  act   tax,   320.49.\nThe police court business was as\nfollows: 80 police court cases heard\nwtth 60 convi,ctions, 1 committed\nfor trial, 19 dismissed. The charges\nwere: .Assault 9, Indian act 21, theft\n7, Liquor act 9, vagrancy 6, Motor\nVehicle act 7, allowing bull to run\nat large 1, obstructing fire ranger\n1, intoxicated driving car 1, neglecting children 1, damage to property\n1, Game  act  12. *\nCITY GIRLS FORM\nBASKETBALL TEAM\nFOR PLAY, KASLO\nMOTOR PIONEER\nTAKEN BY DEATH\nJames S. Hinde ^as Making\n\"Courier\" Car When Ford\nWas Starting\nSANDUSKY, Ohio, Feb. 26.\u2014James\nS. Hinde, 73, who counseled Henry\nFord while he himself was floundering In the financial uncertainties whloh bested the automobile\nmakers, died recently of pneumonia.\nHinde, who manufactured the\nCourier automobile, often receiving\nvisits from Ford, then struggling\nto get s start. They were to have\nformed a partnershop, associates of\nHinde said, but at the time neither\nhad the capital on hand. Ford survived, but the Courier went Into\nthe long list of forgotten pioneer\ncars. About 40 years ago, when\nhis capital consisted of three horses,\ntwo wagons, a horsepower straw\nbailer and 10 tona of straw, Hinde\nand J. J Daugh founded one of\nthe world's largest fibre paper concerns. Daugh died recently and\nHinde withdrew from the presidency\nln 1910.\nMission Society\nat Nakusp Hears\nPresbyterial News\nNAKUSP. B. C Feb. 26.\u2014The rev?-\nilar monthly   meeting   of   the  W**\nnana   Missionary   society   was   held\n\\t the home of  Mrs. M. LaRue on\nTuesday afternoon,  Feb.  23, Miss A\nV'len presiding,     and     with     Mrs.\nGeorge   Keys   as   secretary.   Mrs.   H\nKershaw    gave    a    financial    statement. There were 10 members pres-\nnt.   After   an   Interesting   talk   by\n'to. A. C,  Pound,  who  roently at-\nended    the    Kootenay    Presbyterlo.\nt cranbrook,  the  secretary was rented  to write.  Miss Poster,  field\ncret ry   for   the   Dominion   board,\nnd who has recently returned from\n*hlna, to ask If Nakusp could secure\n.er* services  to  address   the  Nakus.\niranch ln the near future\nThe following were electee to ac\ni the watch tower committee, Mrs\nmnd. Japan. Mrs.  Keys. New Cab.\ndians;    Mrs.    J.    Wagstiff,    China\nIrs. M. LaRue, Korea;  Mrs H. Ker-\nhaw, South Africa; Mrs. E. o. John,\n\u2022on,   India;    Mrs.   Atchison,   Nort:\n\\merlca,      Mm.      J.   H.   Stevenson,\n'rench;    Miss   Betty    LaRue,   Trln-\ndad.  At the close  of  the  misston-\nry    meeting     important     W.C.T.U\n'tsdness  was  discussed.\nAfter tea was served  by the hostess .assisted by her daughters, Miss\nJetty and Mlas Mildred La Rue\nWANT   AND   CLASSIFIED\nADVERTISING\nOne   Insertion   10   cents  \u2022 11ns\nSix  Insertions  40  cent*  a  line\nOne   month   31 SO   a   line\nMinimum    two   lines\n\u25a0Nn extra charge  if charged.\nBirth  notices free of charge\nDeaths,    marriages    and    cards\nthanks,  20  cents per Une\nFuneral   flowers   15   cents   per   line\nMews   of   the   Day   items   20   cents\nS^T _Qe-\nO  FXTRA  COST  IF CHARGED\nFERNIE COUNCIL\nPROTESTS POUCE\nSERGEANTS MOVE1\nFERNIE, B. C, Feb. 26\u2014The\ncouncil of the city of Fernie\nmet in \u2022 special meeting on\nTuesday afternoon, to consider\na telegram received from Assistant Commissioner Dunwoody\nof the pnsinclal police depart-,\nment. This telegram contained\nthe proposal that the provincial\npolice sergeant's headquarters be\nremoved form Fernie to Cranbrook.\nAfter a thorough discussion\nof this matter, the following\ntelegram was sent to the attorney general, and to J. H. McMullin  of the provincial  police.\n\"Referring wire received today from Assistant Commissioner Dunwoody. Council ln sess-\nslon today hag expressed great\ndissatisfaction at proposal to|\nmove provincial police sergeant's\nheadquarters from Fertile from\nFernie to Cranbrot* After a\nsimilar previous proposal some\nI years ago, lt was agreed verbally that Cranbrook was to have\nthe public works headquarters\nand Ferule the Police headquarters. Council la of thr opinion that Fernie being the central point among a number of\nsmaller communities as (Yrbln,\nCoal Creek, Michel, and the\nboundary country, Is a much\nmore logical center. Council\nstrongly urges reconsideration of\nproposal   to   move   headquarters.\nRETURNED MINER\nDECLARES RUSSIA\nPLACE FOR WORKER\nFERNEB, B. C, Feb. 28.\u2014Uoyd\nMcLeod a miner of District 18,\nspoke to a full house at the\nGrand theatre on what he saw In\nRussia during his recent visit. Mr.\nMcLeod was sent to the red conference ln Moscow, by the miners\nof  District  18.\nHis report was very favorable on\nthe working conditions in Russia.\nHe termed Russia the Working-man's\ncountry. He stated that the number\nLEGAL NOTICES\nMINERAL ACT\n(Pom F.)\nCertifleat*  of Improvements\nNOTICB\nUrthall and Casslsr Frac. Mineral Claim* situate ln the Nelson\nMlninK Dlvlalon of Kootenav District.\nWhere located:\u2014On Fawn Crtjea.\ntributary  to  Sheen  Crwlt.\nTAKE NOTIOE that I A. H.\nOreen. acting as Apent lor tne\nRENO OOLD MINUS. LTE.. NJ>i..\nFree Miner's Certifleat. No. 81646-D.\nIntend, sixty davs from th. date\nhereof, to apo'v to he Mining Recorder for a Oertlilcate of Imorove-\nment* or the purpose of ouulnlng\na Crown Orant of th* above claim*.\nAnd further taav notice that action\nunder section 85. must be commenced before the Issuance of such\nCertifleat*  or   Improvement..    -\nDated this 8th dav ot January.\nA. D. 1931.\nA.  H.  GREEN.\n135U\u00bb\nBIRTHS\n(1)\nSKILLIOORN\u2014To Mr.  ud Mn.  R\nL. Sklllicorn, at the Vlo.orlan ho*-\npttai, Kaalo, on Tuesday. February\n24,  a  son.\n1ILATH8\nHI\nHENRY\u2014Funeral  of   the   late   Di\nJohn    Henry   of    Ainsworth    wlU\nbe held ln Kaalo on Sunday, March\n1,   at  2   p.m. (.116)\nSAARE\u2014Paul, ace 18 year*, paired away suddenly Sfeturtt j, Fune i\nthis afternoon at 2 o'clock from\nthe Howell Funeral Home. Rev. \\.\nC.  Mawhinney  officiating. (4122)\nHELP    WANTED\n(101\nWANTED\u2014FIRST CLASS MILKER\nable to drive truck. Applv Bog\n361.   Trail.   B.   C. (4089,\nWANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED MAID\nfor _geneiU housework. Apply Mrs.\nA.  D.  Ritchie, Tadanac.        (40701\nWANTED \u2014 EXPERIENCED MAID\nlor general housework. Apply Mrs.\nG.   A,   Walllnger,  Trail,  B.  C.\n(4073)\nWANTED\u2014OIRL   TO   LOOK   AFTEll\ntwo children ln afternoon.    Appl\n908  ernon   St,   or  phone  789 L.\n(4103\nWANTED\u2014EXERPIENCED FARM, a\ntn operate 27-acre Fruit Farm in\nGrand Forks, on shares or cash\nbasis. For further Information\nwrite Boi 423. Trail. B. C.    (4109)\nAGENTS WANTED\nODTBTAKDINO OPPORTUNITY POR|\non* reliable woman In every town\nto earn 129 up weekly. Pro-Tex\nDistributing Co.. 609 Richard. St..\nVancouver. <4061)\n(lt)    MlsCKLLANlOtls) fOB BALtr-(Caat)\nFOR SAUa-BABSILB. KIOS. Big-\n-  -rhit* sugar nog*.   \"\na,  Co.\nFURNISHED BOOMS roi  Beat  (15)\nCOMFORTABLE LARGE BSD 8IT-\nttng room, centrally *ltual*d.\nPhone   190.Y. (MM)\nBOOMS\u2014To   Ben.\nAPARTMENTS IN THE MBDICAL\nArt* Blocs for rent. Apply Cha*.\nF.   McHardy. (S7S4)\n.lOL'SES  WANTED\n\u00ab\u00ab)\n(\u00bb?\u00ab>\nFOR UAUS-OK* BA-ITCS_BlsXO,\nph n*. silver pla... gold bell, with\ncase and \u00bbtan<l. P\"\u2122* condition\n.110.   Also one ProfjMloDal Uid\nBaas   Drum   with   oaf.   and\n, of  acossaorle.,  175.\nHoogarmrf. N.uon, B. c\nvtlg Bass urum wu\nfull Une of acossaorli\nply B. \"\nAp-\n(4119)\nSMALL   FOUR-   OR   FIVE-ROOMED\nhouse   wit.1   n         .\nGive full particulars. Prle. for\ncsah or terms. also location. Bog\n4118   Daily  News. <41itl)\nSEOOND BAND POTS AND Fitting* for sale. When you ar. ln\nneed ol used Pipe, and Fitting,\nany tun. Black or Oalvanlnd,\nwrite to Bwartz PIP* Yard, 2S0\nP.m Av\u00ab. Eaat. Vancouver B. o.\nTh. largest exolu.lv. dealsr. In\nreconditioned Pipe, and FUNnm-\nHOUSES   FOR   BENT\n(ll)\nSIX-ROOMED   FURNISHED   HOUS: i\natoo furnlslMd .ulte.   Phone \u00ab771i.\nPOR RENT 4 ROOM HOUSE FUR-\nnl\u00bbhed. Complet* with bath and\ngas. Apply D. Maglio, Phone\n48SR. (4044)\nI'OI I.TRY   AND   EGOS\nCO\nWHITE WYANDOTTE COCKBKBLS,\n\u20226.00, Pullo,s M.OO. Order Baby\nchicks early. Rutherford, R. R. 1.\nNelaon. (4077)\nVHITE   WYANDOTTE   COCKERE!\n83;  R.O.P, pedigreed. 86 up. Or.:   .\ntaken for Ml pullet*. J. MOST\nARROW  PARK. (411  )\nFOR BALE\u20141930 R. I. RED PUL-\nl*ta, splendid shape. Oood laying\nstrain. Por particulars write Paul\nR.  Henke. Nakusp, B. 0.      (4088)\nBABY CHICKS, QUEEN QUALITY.\nWhite Leghnrna. Barred' Rocks,\nRhode Island Reds, from record\nlaying stock. Write for catalogue.\nQueen Hatchery, 36 Cordova St..\nW. Vancouver, B. C. (3982)\nS. 0 W. LEGHORN BABY CHICKS\nfrom trap-nested hens mated to\nR. O. P. advanced and Registered\ncockerels wh.ch have three generations of 300 eggers on female\naide and four on male side. Get\nour mating and Pr oe list and\nknow what breeding ls behind\nyour chick. A Deverson, Port\nCrawford. (3910)\nSITUATIONS   WANTED\n(11)\nSTENOGRAPHER,        EXPERIENCED,\ndesires position.    Good references.\nPhone 353R. or P. O. Box 994.\n(4059)\nof churches there had been greatly reduced, but that If one wished\nto go to church there were churches\nthat he oould attend.\nMrs. Oeorge Dewey, widow of\nthe hero of Manila Bay, died unexpectedly  Saturday at Washington.\nMISCELLANEOUS   won   BALE       f27)\nRUPTURE TRUSSES COMPLETE.\nSingle 82. Double 83. Mailed anywhere, state belt length J.\nStephenson, 118 Columbia Av...\nVancouver,   B.  0. (3968)\nSAMPLE PACKAGES, SHIP ANY-\nwhere. 10 lbs. three kinds Good\nLeaf Tobacco, mill or strong 82.80\n20 lba. 84.50: 860 lbs. 810. Ques-\nnel. 2 lb., 82. G. Dubois, 18 Hen-\nderaon St., Ottawa. Ont.,      (4039)\nHIGHEST QUALITY WOOD PIPE\nfrom two tc aright Inch for various\nnreasures, Write us for full information and special spring\nprices- The A. P. Harms, Wood\nPipe Co.. Deo: Park. B. C.    (4056)\nLOST AND  FOUND\n(11)\nLIVESTOCK   FOB   laX*.\nFOR     8ALB\u2014RBOISTKSBD\nIN8UBANCB \"\nLOST -SPECTACLES IN CASE. RI-\nward. Leave at Nelson Dally Ne\u00bbs,\n\u2022office. (4118)\nAWordtotheWise\nAutomobU* owners, ba wis.,!\nand profit from the *xpeHauo*|\nof tho motor oar owner, whoa. 1\nuninsured oar. happened to b. I\nIn accident*. Be wise at first!\nand not l**t. Inmxr. *gainst I\nALL RISKS attaohM to auto- L\nmobile ownenhlp. call on tt* I\nand   get   particular*.\nH. E. DILL\nt08  Ward  St,\nfoots.   IM\n_____&\u2014_.\nPROPERTY   FOR   SALE\nLOST\u2014CAMEO    ON    FTOT    CHAIN.   FORTYJ5IOHT      ONB-H\t\nvalued as keepsake.   Finder please vi *n acre land. Orchard\nreturn   to   Strathoona   Hotel   and Kaalo,    tor    aula   cheap.\nreceive   rewi rd.                      (4091) sto.t.   Kaalo.                           (.ill\nBUSINESS AND PROFESSIONAL DIRECTORY\nAssay ers\nE. W. Wlddowson, Box A1108, Nels-:.  ,\nB.  C.    Standard  western charit-\n(niii\nAuctioneer\nMsrcajHUa, auctioneer.\n51314   HaU St.\nA.   Ray met,\nBox  1179.    (3792)\nChiropractors\nDR. GRAY. GILKER BLK..  NE..SO;,\ni38'.'2'\nDR. MITTUN. X-RAY, CRANBROOl..\n(MM<\nDre'-iakini?   and   Designing\nDRESSMAKING AND DESIGNING\nlaughtr\u2014Academy of Useful Art*\nNo. 4. Write to Mary E. Rodgers\nBox  352.  Roaaland. (4096)\nEngineers\nCHAS.   MOORE\u2014LAND   SURVEYOR,\nArchitect.     Revelstoke.   E.   C.\n<3794)\nH. D. DAWSON\u2014LAND SURVEYOR,\nMining and Civil  Engineer. Kaslo.\n(3796)\nA. H. OREEN CO.\u2014CONTRACTORS.\nFormerly Ci en Bros.. Burden,\nNelson Civil nd Mining Engln.\neers, B. C, Alberta and Dominion\nLand Surveyors. (3796)\nInsurance and  Real Estate\nR. W. DAWSON\u2014Real Estate. In.\nsurance, Rentals. Next Hipperson\nHardware,   Baker  St. (3797)\nAccounting\n_ \u201ecb*a f. mtrnai\nPublio    Accountant,    mini\nMunicipal   and   Commercial   Au\nBeauty Parlors\nSociety  Beauty Shop.    Gllker Blot\nMr*, E. Hagh. Phon* 171.    <88t\nDentists\nC   WA\naiding.\nX-Ray.\nNflUoJ\n(STOSf\nFlorists\nGrtzzelle's Greenhouse. Nelaoo.\nflowers  snd  floral  designs.   (8\nNELSON    FLOWKIt    SHOPP1.\nline   cut   flowers   at   all    _\nfloral designs.    Phone 383.    (fi\nJOHNSON'S      GREENHOUSL\n343.    Cut flowers.    Potted Plan!\nand   Floral   Deslgpa. (88f\nPhotographers\nQEORGI    A.    MEERBS\u2014A\nPhotographer.    716\nSecond  Hand  Store*\nThe   Ark.   dealers   ln\ngoods.    Phone 884.\nTransfer\nWood Working factory\nLAWS03\u2014Baiter  St..  Carpenter and\nJoiner.     Sash   and   Hardwor<l\n(8808)\nWILLIAMS' TRANSFER !\nBAGGAGE, COAL AND WOOD\nPhone   108 (V\nATKINSON     TRANSFER\u2014OceJ\nWood.    Lone distance haulh\nKASLO,   B.   C,   Peb.   36^-Laehlan\nMcLean   lett   Monday   to   spend\nfew days   tn   Nelson.\nAlex Sutherland was a Nelson\n\u25a0viator the Utter part of the week.\nMrs. E. L. Best ls spending several days i n Cranbrook to attend\na   district   United   church   meeting.\nMrs. V. Trail of Mirror lake ls\nspending a few days in Crawford\nBay, with her eon-in-law and' daughter, Capt, and Mrs. Henry Hlncks.\nMrs. Trail expects to leave ehortly\nfor a visit to her old home ln\nEngland.\nJ. Gallo of Three Forks wm a\nTuesday   visitor   In   Kaslo.\nJ. Tier spent  Sunday  in Nelaon.\nMr. and Mrs. H. Angus were\nMonday   visitors   to   Nelson.\nMrs. Jack Paterson who hae been\nered     and    that    the    headquarters\nr^ln^n   Fernie.   It   la   immllricwrflwl -*\u00b0   hw   home   *   1UneM\nunderstood here that tt wae agreed\npreviously that police headquarters\nwere to be at Fernie. and the district head office of the public\nworks department at Cranbrook.\"\nThe ttomclal report of the board\nol trade Penile, for laet yeara ie\n\u00bbs follow*:\nDonations, Fees and etc. ...J   839.18\nRent  for  Cabins     T   1M-00\nBalance from year before ..*..     14.16\nTotal 980738\naeoretarys   salary   including\n3 mos. of previous yr..       176.00\nUpkeep of tourists camps and\nMeiVs\nNavy Suits\nWITH TWO PANTS\nHere is your\nop^ortuniiy\nto acquaint\nyourself\u2014\nStudy\u2014\nCompare\u2014\nand Analyze\nSuit Offerings\n$25\nShop Morrii and See\nCharles Morris\nLtd.\nls now  able  to  be out again\nA number of the city girls are\norganizing a basketball team, practices to begin Wednesday evening,\nthey hope to be ln condition soon\nto mtet the High school girls'a\nteam.\nFirst Aid Class at\nFernie Outgrows the\nQuarters for Class\nFERNIE, B. C Feb. 36\/\u2014The St.\nJohn Ambulance association had s\nrrcord class last Sunday af 140.\nThe mine rescue station haa now\nbecome too small for these classes,\nand they have been forced to move\nto the upper floor of the Legion\nbuilding. On week nights they are\nnow holding practice classes in\ntheir   new   home.\nMrs. N. S. Houston\nHostess, Passmore\nPAfiBMORE   B.   C,   Feb.   36.\u2014Mrs.\nJ.   Latto   wae  a  business  visitor\nNelson on Saturday.\nOn Friday evening Mrs. N.\nHouston invited the residents to a\nmusical evening. All enjoyed community singing and more wlll be\nheard In the near future. Gordon\nNewell and Uoyd Curzon of Slocan\nPurk were among the visitor*.\nMiss Whlteman motored to Valllcan on Monday and was the guest\nof Mrs. J. W. Coleman at the camp\nwhere the pansles sre in bloom.\nThe U. S. senate approved a 810,-\n.jj.ono addition to the naval ap-\nji-opriatloa oiil for starting work\noa 11 destroyers authorized IS |\n,o n  ago.\nmttb\n74. noted stock\nr, Man., nno came\nav\u201eL_nd   in   1903,\n cW3\nTHE   NELSON   DAILY   NEWS       FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1981.\nPage Eleven\nMarket and Mining News\niflCKEl IS ONE\nOF FEW BRIGHT\nSPOKJNEAST\n'oronto Exchange Sees Long\nGenual Ron   on  Bas*\nMinerals\nr.TORORTO.   Feb.    38    (OP)\u2014With\nI hard to prices only on* or two\n(Rght spot* win displayed en th.\nI tandaM   Stock:   and   Mining   ex-\n. Mug*   today.     The   general   trend\na.   downward   Kid   la   mn   ln-\n\\ anoes  loeaas   were   heavy.\n, llntm-natlonal   Nickal   atood    well\n> th. front as the  feature of  th.\n, \u00bby. and with .ales of 3860 .hares.\nii.   Mock   opened   at   818.38,   *nd\nIsoved  up  stesdlly   to   close   st   It*\nMgh point of 113.50, a net xttance\n\\*. .1.36. Noranda aUo prloe strength\nltt In a movement of 3153 *hares\n)   tie,    adranoed    to   AiAM   and\n\u00ab*td firm  .t  116.10.  a  n\u00abt  gain\n1   Mo.\nTh. general run of base metal\noek proyed fsatureless In trading\nid softer ln price. Lake Shore and\nolllnger dropped 30c, closing at\n36.05 and 87.90 respectlrtly; Mc-\natyre decline 36o to 130. E.do-\n*do moved up closing at 07c for a\naln of aix point*,\nla a transaction involving a\nngle share Royallte changed hand.\nt tUt, a net drop of tl und* It*\nrerlou* price on thi. board. Cheml-\nJ4I Research dropped 46c to cloee\n5 13.76, making a loss for the laat\n.0 trading day. of $1. Imperial\n\u2022dined 30o to tlOJO; British\nraerlcftn wo* unch*nged at 414.79\nid International Petroleum ad-\n6c to 114 JO.\nMETAL MARKETS\nNEW TORK, fwb. \u00bbS\u2014 OoPP\u00ab\nfirm;   etoctrolytlo  .pot   .nd  futur.\n10% to 1014.\nIron  quiet,  unchang.d.\nTin easy; nut and nearby 37.00;\nfutur. 37.10.\n, Lew steady; oot Haw Tork 4.00;\nBut St.  Louis 4J1.\nZinc steady; But St. Louis spot\nud   futur.   4.00.\nAntimony   7.13.\nForeign bar sllmr 10%  cent*.\nAt  London:\nStandard copper apot and future\n\u00a341 13* Sd. electrolytic, mot 143\n10s; future uo.\nTin .pot \u00a3131; futur* {113 10*.\nLead .pot \u00a313 17. Od; futur.\n\u00a314   3.    Od.\nZinc .pot 113 lta; futur* CIS.\nMONTREAL STOCKS\nSTAGE ANjJPTURN\nConsolidated   Smelters   3>\/t\nHigher at 177    ; Montreal\nPower Up\nBANK CLEARINGS\nweek ending Week ending\nFeb. it. 1331, Feb. 35. 1330\naltf.x     8   3.476.147       3.413.104\nlint  John       3.048,000\n086.078\n703,034\nfoncton \u2014\n(*rbrook*_\nuebec    \t\nMontreal     _\n*t\u00abwa    \t\ntlngston \u2014\n.terboro   \u2014\npronto    \t\namllton \u2014\njltchener _\nrantford    \u2014\nondon\t\nh.tham    \u2014\narnie    \t\nudbury   \t\n7indsor \u2014\nart William\nWinnipeg .-\n(randpn \u2014\nloose Jaw _\nukatoon    \u201e.\ndmonton   \t\nUlgary \u2014\nJndlcln* Hat\nMhbrldge\n'.noouver _\nfVrtorl* \u2014\nfew\nWestmlMter\n3.177,030\n891    105\n8O0.065\n5,210,470\n07.818,451    100.404.033\n0,300.540       0,008.711\n487.847    844,300\n613,780    001,840\n08,857.379  104,350,314\n4,677,096   6,401.100\n804,913\n783,481\n3,302,300\n607,130\n444.407\n036,183\n2.909.344\n470,008\n30,331,994\n254,160\n505,031\n385.022\n3,693,416\n0378,991\n194.498\n300,974\n14.134,346\n1,650,808\n354,333\n9.001.168\n1.352,040\n908.533\n3,542348\n547,000\n684 337\n1,088.000\n6.17J.804\n106,743\n46,971,813\n381,684\n970,757\n1,703.131\n4,522,332\n8,373.387\n334.640\n17.067,038\n3410.073\nEXCHANGE RATES\nttt YORK, Feb. 30\u2014Sterling extant* eaoy at 14.83 1-10 for 00\nly bill., and at 8485% (or demand.\nMarks   23.76  cent*.\nKronen   26.75%   cent*.\nCanadian   dollar*   par.\nFranc* 801   18-10 cant*.\nLire,  6.23 V,   cent*.\nVsisxtn   approximate   sterling   ex-\nMat* rat. M-B7H.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nJ MONTREAL, Jab. 36\u2014Butter, egg.\nInd ehease unchanged. elves*, fln-\nIst whit* 13; cheese, finest colored\nB4H to 15; butter. No. 1 QuebM\nInd western 31; egg*, storag; extra.\nIt: eggs, storage seconds 20; egg*\n\u25a0 VMh special* 87; efrga, fresh extra.\n15;   egg.,  fre'h   tint. II.\nIBDBBATION RE8EHVI; BANK\nHAS   NO  DISCOUNT   CHANOE\nJ IWW TORK, Feb. 30\u2014The Fed-\nIral R serve Bank of New Tork\nladay announced no chang. ln Its\nItdlMouot rat. of 3 pm c*nt.\nCave & Company\nLTD.\nFORMlKl.T\nfbe B. C. Atmr *\u25a0\u00ab ClwttiHal\nSupply  Cnuony,  Ltd\nAssay Supplies\nChemicals\nLaboratory Equipment\nFOR\nCHEMICAL.    INDUSTRIAL\naOOCATIONAL    AND\n\u25a0OSFITAL   LABORATORIES\nM7 Barnky  St,\nVancouver, tt. 0L\nMONTREAL, Feb. 20\u2014Aided by .\nrenewal of strength ln New Tork,\nstocks on the Montreal stock exchange staged another upturn today.\nTh. close showed most active Issues\nfractionally below tbe best level, of\nUw session, but still higher on th.\nday.\nAmong closing prices of the more\nactive luuea wer. noted. Abltlbl\nlis higher at 13li, whll. th. preferred wa. thr*. higher at 48, having sold at 50, the heart level sine,\nearly In Ootober; Atlantic Sugar,\nIV, higher at th* new peak level of\n33K; B. O. Power, up 14 at 31;\nCanadian Pacific,  Va  higher at 4414.\nConsolidated Smelter, wu 8)4\nhigher at 177%; MaaMy Harris, unchanged at 0.\nMontreal Power wa. active leader,\nand at tbe clow wu Vi net higher\nat 01, alter selling at 62%, th* best\nlevel slnoe October 6. Brazilian\nwas second ln activity, and at th*\nj1o*s ww Vs higher at 30%. International Nickel ww third In activity\nand clowd at 1014. up  % net.\nTotal sales 83,000 Shane; bonds\n\u00ab19,250.\nVANCOUVER LET\nRALLIES DURING\nLAST OBSESSION\nFails to Completely Wipe Out\nLosses; Home and Mercury\nBiggest Traders\nMONTREAL. STOCKS\nSank   of   Comqwroe 235\nDominion   Bank     333\nonperui   Bank   -. \u2014 331\nBank  of   Mantraal , 300\n,-iank of Nova  Sootla   819\n-\u2022oral    Bank 387\n.dank or Toronto 238\nAbltlbl  P  to  P \u2014   12 Vi\nAsbf\u00bbtos   Corp .        Va\nAtlantic    Sugar ,    83\nBoll   Telephone       148\nBrazilian   T  L  &   Power 26 Va\nant.   .Am   oil   -.._     mm,\nCanada  Bronze    86ft\nOan Car to Poundary     17%\nCan Cement    .'. \u25a0.\u25a0\u201e.\u2014-   14Vi\nCan -Cement pfd        04\nCan Convertere    60\nCan    Industrial    Alcorol 4Vt\nCan     Oattona       \u2014.   40\nCan  Gen   Kectrlo  pfd   330\nOan    Power          3Vi\nCan   Steamship   Lines   ..\u201e\u2014     7%\nCons Mining to Smelting 176%\nDominion   Bridge     60%\nDominion   Claae     130\nDom   Steel   to   Ooal   \"B\"         6%\nDom   Textile        76\nA   P   Grain   ......      *\\k\nHillcreet    Colliers    -     80\nLake  of   the   Wood*    17\nMaasey   Harrta     -\u2014     8%\nMontreal   Power       81...\nMont   Telegraph      48\nMontreal Tr\u00abmways 169\nNational    Breweries        33%\nNational  Steel  Car      39%\nOgiUle    Milling      MO\nOntario SUel  Products    15\nOttawa L H to Power 93\nPeniu-.ni!,   Ltd     58\nPower  Corp 65%\nPrloa    Bros.     30\nQuebec   Power       45 %\nShawlnlgan     _._\u2014 55....\nciherwin William* .-.    39 y%\nSo Canada   Power   \u2014.    30%\nSteel   of   Canada        39%\n3t. Lawrence Plour Mills    19\nWabaaso   Cotton        36\nWestern   Groctri        18\nWinnipeg  Railway      16\nWinnipeg   Ral.way   pfd    -   78\n..UlNNhAi'OU- UaiAIN\nVANCOTTVKR, Feb. 26\u2014Weakened\nby heavy liquidation during the\nmorning session the Vancouver stock\nmarket slowly rallied in the late\ntrading, today, but tbe support\nfailed to entirely wipe out the losses\nsuffered ln the setback. With the\nexception of Home and Mercury,\nwhich bore tbe brunt of tbe selling\nmovement, trading was of a limited\nnature.\nRumors of a further reduction\nln Alberta Refinery prices started\nselling in tbe oil* division and quotations dipped abarply. Ths lesser\nactive issues tumbled In sympathy\nand before the noon recess a definite downward trend developed. The\noils generally reached their low\npoints by mld-seaslon. In the final\nhour tb* leaders firmed on denial\nof tbe bearish report* and losses\nwere reduoed before the closing belt\nBASE  MEATL  IRREGULAR\nThe base metals and gold sharea\nwere irregular ln sluggish trading.\nPioneer Gold dropped 6 oents to\n1.55, while Premier eased 1 cent to\n71 cent*. Reno Gold rose 2 cents\nto   18   cent*   bid.\nPend Oreille sharply climbed from\nan opening at 1.35 to a high for th*\nday at 1-30, to close unchanged at\n1.20 bid. Reeves McDonald closed\nfirm at 85 oenta, while Oregon\nCopper gained fractionally at 8\ncents. Oolconda aoftemd 3 cents\nto 43 oents on the  final bid.\nProm a strong opening at 1 JO\nHome gradually declined to a minimum at 1.18, before hardening to\n1.17 on tb* laat sale, to end the day\nwltb a net loa* of 4 cent*, large\nblocks of Mercury were thrown on\nthe market and the stock sagged to\n19% centa, but succeeded In rallying to 30% osnt* prior to th* cloae,\nto record at net decrease of 3 cents\nat 10% cent* bid. Insignificant\ndeclines developed ln Mayland, Dalhousle,   Eaatcreat   and   Calmont.\nCANADA WELL UP\nIN HER FOREIGN\nTRADE BALANCES\nOTTAWA,   l\u00bb\u00abb.   SO\u2014(OP)\u2014Ot   the\n35 countries who** trad* with Canada in 1930 la listed ln a return\nIssue today by tba Dominion burrau\nol statistic, tbl* country has a\nlavorabl* trade balanot wltb 19,\nand of that 19, seven wer. countries within th* British Empire.\nIndia, Jamaica and Britlah Oulana\nwere tb* only rn.mb.rs of the\nQnplre whose trade balance was\nadverse  to  Canad*.\nCanadian trad, within ths British\nEmpire amounted to \u2022544,303,000 ol\nwhich 1316.71 J,000 constituted export, .nd .327,825,000 import..\nNEW YORK LIST\nSWEPT UPWARD\nBY WILL RUSH\nUtilities   and   Steel   Climb\nAboard Rally for Increases\nin Values\nf ORONTO STOCKS\nREGAIN STRENGTH\nAbitibi  Power, Paper  Com.\nmon Stock Rise Is Interesting Feature\nMINNEAPOLIS, Feb. 35\u2014Flour unchanged. Shipment* 35,305. Bran\n14.00   to   14.50.\nWheat\u2014No. 1 nor. 78% to 77%;\nHo. 1 red durum 83%; May 76%;\nJuly 69;  Sept. 65%.\nCorn: No. 3 y.llow  SS to 54.\nOat*:   No.  3   whit*   37%   to  38%.\nFlat:   No.   1   1.53   to   1JS8.\nTORONTO STOCKS\nAbana .15\nIsrr\u2014 At\nAJax     1.68\nAmulet     ii\nAmity         .01%\nA p Comolldated _      at\nAssociated           .13\nArea   .03%\nBaltlo   Oil          06%\nB    A    Oil    .___ 14.75\nBaae   Metals       1.25\nBid    Good          .07%\nBarry    Holllnger     . .15%\nBig   Missouri          .48\nCalmont          .18\nO  and  E  Land.       .60\nCentral Manitoba     .08%\nChemical   Research       8.66\nCleMcy     ....      .04%\nDome     10.70\nDalhousle      . .48\nEastcrest      47\nFalconbrldge       1.80\nHome Oil   1.18\nHarker   Oold         .01%\nHowey   38\nHoUlnger     7.95\nHudson   Bay    _ \u2014   6.66\nInternational    Nickel      . 19.60\nKeelly       .37\nLake   Shore     ., 35.75\nKlrkland Lake    ,      .64\nKootenay  Florence  \u2014      -01%\nMaoassa      .14\nMandy      .13\nManitoba   Ba*ln         .04%\nMalartlc       07\nMclntyr.     -  ... 33.00\nMining Corporation 2.10\nMayland          .60\nMurphy       .05%\nNewbeo         .06%\nNew Imperial OU    _ 17.00\nNlplaslng       150\n.\u2022\u2666oranda       18.36\nOld  Colony         .01%\nPeterson   Cobalt    .      .03\nPend   Orellla       1.20\nPremier Oold         .70\nSherrlt    Oordon 118\nSudbury   Basin      .66\nSlscoe           .45\nSt.   Anthony .13\nStadaoona     , \u201e      .03%\nTech  Hughee       6.80\nThompson    Cadallac     \u2014.     .04\nVlpond         1.08\nVenture.      \u2014     .56\nWright Hargre.vea     0.15\nWalte   Ackerman    ..\u2014   L71\nCANADA BONDS\nTORONTO. Feb. 36 (CP)\u2014Strength\nagain developed on the Toronto\nstock exchange today. Totsl volume\nfor the day  was  23,981  shares.\nTh* most Interesting price devel\nopcoent wa* that ln Abltlbl Power\nand Paper. Th* common Jumped\nto 13%, closing there at Its high\nfor th* day with an additional\nappreciation of 2%, The preferred\nrose a. high as 50, a new high mark\nfor this year, but profit taking sold\nIt down to 48, st th. close where\nthe day's n.t g.ln was four point*.\nMontreal Power gained % to close\nat 63. United Fuel preferred fell\nto a  new  low  of 50, off 4%.\nInternational Nickel which sold\nup close to 20 but reacted under\nrealization sales to close at 19 where\nlt wa* up %. Smelters at 178%\nwas up 3% and Noranda gained 45\ncents to cloae at 618.46. Ford of\nOanada \"A\" was sent up to 38%, a\na net gain of 1%.\nOil* continued to move listlessly,\nexcept McColl Frontenac, who*, common lost 1% whll. It* preferred\ntook on three to 78.\nNEW TOEK, F\u00abb. 36 (AF)\u2014With\na large volume ot realising out of\nthe way bulla Jumped back Into the\nstock msrket with both feet tod.y,\nru.hed the leader* to n*w high,\n.nd then took further profit*.\nThe late selling, although brisk,\nfailed to erase th* earlier gain*.and\nnet advance, of 1 to 3 point* were\ngeneral. Sales totallad 4,600,000\nshares.\nOtoup strength in tha utnitiw,\nwhleh reoelved strong pool epensor-\nship, brought back memories of old\ntimes and of aom* thst are not so\nold, notably the' advance of Jtut a\nyear ago.\nSteel climbed aboard th. rally,\nled by u. S. common which rose\nnearly four pointa to a new top for\nthe year at 162%. others exceeding\ntheir previous maximums Included\nAmerican Telephone, General Electric, Westlnghouse, Bethlehem. Oeneral Motors, Consolidated Oa* and\nWorth Amirlflan. Simmon* was\nparticularly strong, so war* Pullman,\nSinclair oil. B. H. Macey. United\nAircraft, BtaiKlard Oas and Electric.\nAmerican Water Work, and Wrlgley.\nln which net gam. rang.d from 1\nto 4. Auburn chugged up 14\npoints to 217%, but closed \u00bbt 209%\nwhere lt was 6%  higher.\nSear. Roebuck end Montgomery\nWard reacted under profit taking.\nAmerican Can, unable to reach new\nhigh ground. lost a small fraction\nnet, while the advance ln U. S. Steel\nwu cut to 2%. Shares closing 3 to\n3 hlgner embraced Bethlehem. General Electric, Westlnghouse, Anaconda, Paramount. Fox, Dupont and\nNational cash Register. Caae turned a 3-polnt gain Into a 3-polnt\nloa.     Olllett*   wa*   soft.\nTh* day's activity ln the bond\nnwket was virtually a repetition of\nthe   previous  session.\nln .bout the same volume of\nbusiness pressure wm renewed\nagainst u. S. governmenl*. Corporate domestlo bonds were dull and\nnarrowly Irregular and foreign* were\naccumulated   at  higher  price..\nROYALITE POSTS\nITS DIVIDEND\nCALOARY, Feh. 2\u00ab\u2014Dividend of\n150 cent* a ahare to all aharehoiders\nof tbe Royallte Oil Co., on record on\nthe book* tor tb* oompany March b,\nwa* announced thla afternoon by\nofficial* .of tbe  company.\nIt i* atated that dividend check*\nwill be mailed to all shareholders on\nMarch  16.\nThla wlll be tbe \u00abventh dividend\npaid by th* Royallte company since\nIt* formation and tb* fourth dividend announoed by Turner valley\noil companies alnc* tbe first of this\nyear, other confpanles wtio bave\nannounced dividend payment* are\nWellington,  Model  and  Spooner.\nMARKET PROBLEM\nWILL BE TREATED\nEARLY NEXT WEEK\nSponsors of Central Selling;\nReady- for Introduction\nof Their Bill\nWINNIPEG WHEAT\nFUTURES SLIDE\nAmerican Export Report Confirmation Starts Plunge\nDownwards\nWIKNIPBO. Feb. 24 (CP)\u2014Report*\nthat 36.000,000 buahels of wheat\nwould be exported in th* next few\nmonths by tbe federal farm board\nof the United States tore all support\nout of the wheat market today and\ntumbled price* two to 2H cent*\nbelow   yesterday's    quotations.\nAt tbe opening, the market displayed Uttl* strength and when it\nwas confirmed that 35,000,000 bushel* of American wheat would be\nInjected into tbe export field the\nmarket plunged, carrying tbe May\nwheat future down 2s', cents to 80%.\nJuly and October dropped two cents\neach to 62 and 64 respectively.\nCash wheat values were unaffected\nby the bearishnese in the futures\nand closed at unchanged level*.\nCoarse grain quotes remained unaltered ln a dull market.\n1* by no means unanimous.\nIt la Impoealble at till* tun* to\nguage the -feeling of the bouse on\ncentral selling, but a poll today-\nwould. It 1* thought, probably reject\nIt. In th< P\u00abt, howwr, \u2022imltar\nlegislation, whll* unpopular at first,\nhaa often been adopted ln the end.\nThe co-operators are counting heavily on their ability to persuade a\nmajority of members durtng hearings\nbefore   the   agricultural   committee.\nVICTORIA, .Feb. 28\u2014The 1\u00abH*-\nlature will face th* market problem* of Britlah Columbia growers\nearly next week when legislation\nproviding for central selling of i\nOkan*tgen   fruit   ls   Introduced.\nSponsor* of central selling are\npreparing here now for thc introduction of their bill and for a\nstrenuous fight on lt before th*\nagricultural committee of th* house.\nThe bill ha* been drafted along\nlines already discussed at fruit\ngrowers' convention ln th* Okanagan\nvalley.\nIntimation that the (central marketing scheme would* be brought\ndown without delay following legal\nadvice taken by sponsors of this\nlegislation. They have been advised definitely that thetr proposal\nIs quite valid and ls not affected\nby the supreme court's Judgment\nthrowing out the Produce Marketing act. They do not fear now that\ntheir bill will be up*et on legal\ngrounds, but opinion on that point\nFORMER COUNTY\nTREASURER IN\nTHEFT ACTION\nPEMBROKE, Ont., Feb 28 fCPl\u2014\nWatford A. Bigg*, recently resigned\nas treasurer of Renfrew county, appeared ln magistrates court here today charged with stealing over 9100.-\n000 of county funds and elected for\nsummary trial before a county Judge.\nTrial wlll likely bs commenced\nbefore Judge Mulcahy ln a few days.\nNEW PENSIONS\nBOARDS SWAMPED\nWJTH APPEALS\nOTTAWA. Peb. 26 (CP)\u2014The ntw-\nly created pension board* or tribunal* are amid to be swamped with\napplications and appeals for pensions. It is possible that some\nspecial steps may be taken to deal\nwith the deluge of applications and\nassist the boards in dealing with\nthe large number of cases.\nFERNIE AIRPORT\nWILL BE CUSTOMS\nPORT IN FUTURE\nBANK ENGLAND RESERVE TO\nLIABILITIES   ON   pECREASE\nLONDON, Feb. 28 (AP)\u2014 Th*\nweekly statement of the Bank of\nEngland show* the following oh*n\u00ab\u00bbs\nIn pound*: Total nserrs decreased\nS 146.000; cumulation mcrea*. 8.-\n535,000; bullion Increase SM.000;\nother securities Increased tl,784,000;\npublic d*po.lt* Increased 1.064.000;\nother deposits decreased 1.806,000;\nnot*, reserved decreased 3,181,000:\ngovernment securltl.* lncres*ed 600,-\n000.\nTba proportion of the bank's re-\nserv* to liability Is 40.65 pm osnt\noompartd   with   63.14  last   week.\nRate of  discount   three  per  cent.\nBuilding\n{Material   JohnBurns&Son\nLet us figure your bills on\nBuilding Material. Coast\nLumber a specialty.\nThe Consolidated Mining and\nSmelting Co. oS Canada. Ltd.\nTiElJI,\u2014BRITISH   COLUMBIA\nManufacturer,   at\nELEPHANT\nBrand\nCHEMICAL FERTILIZERS\nProducers  and  Refiners  at\nTADANAC\nBread\nELECT ROLTTIC\nAmmonium  Phosphate\nSulphate of Ammonia\nTriple   Superphosphate\nLead-Zinc\nCadmium-Bismuth\nWINNIPEG. Peb. \u00ab6\u2014Quotations\non Victory bonds per .1000 are as\nfollows:\nWar loan:\n1031,   5   per   cant,   100.70.\n1937, 5   per   oent,   106.70.\nVictory loan:\n1938. 6'\/,   per oent,  103.46,  101.76.\n1934. 6(4   per cent.  103.80.\n1937, 5'.,   per cant  108.80.\nWar loan renewal:\n1933.  6',,   per oent,   101.90.\nRefunding   loan:\n1943. 6   per   oent.   109.86.\n1940.  IM   per   cant,   99.78.\n1944, 41,   per oent. 19.78.\n1940, 44  per cent,  99.76.\nECi(i  MARKETS\nOTTAWA, Ont., Feb. 38.\u2014Toronto:\nExtras 39 ^ to 30; first* 27 to 28;\npullet extras 26 to 26; seconds 22\ndelivered, in freeh cases. Wholesale\nprices   unchanged.\nMONTREAL: Extra* 29V4, first* 27;\nseconds   21,   delivered.\nHALIFAX: Unchanged\nCHICAGO: Spot 17V*; April storage packed future* 21; refrigerator future* 24 %.\nVAjNCUUVEI\nI LIS\nBid\nT\nAsk\nBayrlew    \u2014~\t\nn      \u2014\n.11\nBig Missouri \t\n.44\n.46\nCork Prorlnce\t\n.01\n_,\u2014\nOeorge   Kent      \t\n\u2014\n.03\n\u2014\n1.00\nOeorgla   River\t\n.03\n.08 U\nOolconda    \t\n.42\n.46\nOtrandvlew    \t\nJ06\n.06 U\nIndependence  \u201e..-,\n_\n.01 tt\nInt. C to C  \t\n.15\n.01%,\nKootenay Florence ....\n\u2014\n.01%\nNational   Silver   ._\t\n\u25a001 Vs\n\u2014\n\u202208 tt\nOregon Copper \t\n.06\n.07\nPremier    \u2014-.-\n.71\n.74\n1.20\n1.36\n\u25a00T,\u00bb\n.35\nReeres   McDonald   .-\n.38\nRuth   Hope   .\u2014\t\n.05\n\u2014\nSllvercrest     \u2014\n.02 Vj\n.03\nSnowflake    -~\t\n.03%\n08 tt\n.01 -i\n.03\nWhitewater     \u2014\n.05\n\u2014\nOILfl\n\u25a0l\nA P Consolidated \t\n.33\nC and E Lands  -\n.60\n18\nDalhousle     -\u2014\n.48\nEastcrest  _ \t\n *..,..\n.49\n.lltt\n1.16\nIllinois  Alta   \t\nm\t\n\u202204tt\nMcDougall Segur ex ..\n ,\n08 tt\nMcDougal   Segur   new\na..-\u2014\n.36\nMercury      _..\n.33\n18 00\nSterling   Paclflo   \t\n.13\nCHICAGO WHEAT\nSUFFERS BREAK\nAnnouncement to Form Board\nPolicy Concerning Exports\nIs Bearish\nDOMINION  UVESiOCK\nWINWIPEO, Feb. 'Sfl\u2014 Reoeipta.\nCattle 825; calves 15; hops 630;\nsheep  55.\nSteers, up to 1050 lbe.\u2014Good and\nchoice  95.00   to  95.75.\nSteers, over 1050 lbs,\u2014Good and\nChoice  95.00  to 96.00.\nHeifers\u2014-Good and choice 94.75\nto  (6.25.\nFed calves\u2014Good and choice 96.00\nto 97.00.\nCows\u2014Good 93.50 to 93.75; can-\nners and cutters 9100 to 92.00.\nBull*\u2014Good, 93-00 to 93.25.\nStocker and feeder steers\u2014Good\n94.00   to  94.50.\nStock oows and heirers\u2014GoocT\n93.00  to  94.00.\nMilkers and springers\u2014940.00 to\n965.00.\nV*al calvea.\u2014Good and choice\n96.00  to  910.00.\nHogs\u2014Select bacon 91.00 per head\nprem.; bacon 95.75; butcher* 91.00\nper head disc.; lights and feeders\n95.75   to  $6.50.\nLamb*\u2014Good handyweight 97.00\nto 97.50; good heavies 96.00 to\n96.50;   bucks  95.00   to  95.50.\nSheep\u2014Good heavies 93.60; good\nhandyweight   94.00   to   94.50.\nCHICAGO, Feb. 29\u2014 (By John P.\nBoughan, Associated Pres.-. market\neditor)\u2014Wheat suffered a maximum\nbreak of 2H cent* a bushel today,\nlargely as a result of definite announcement of the federal farm\nboard's export policy. Tlie announcement said 35,000,000 bushels\nwere held by the grain stabilisation\ncorporation, an auxiliary of tb* farm\nboard, would be offered abroad, and\nwae generally  construed as  bearish\nWheat closed nervous at a fractional rally, ifc to 2V4 cents off,\ncorn showing '.'\u00ab to % setback, oat*\nunchanged to % decline, and provision* unchanged to 20 osnt* higher\nPffHRTE, fl. C, Feb, 26.\u2014The city\nclerk has Just received a telegram\nfrom Ottawa, stating that Fernle's\ncustom airport ltoeoas 1* on lu\nway to be endorsed by the dty\nofficials. Thi* la the first Intimation of the granting of customs\nport   for  airplane*   at   Fernie.\nFernle's airport ie ln excellent\ncondition for receiving visiting\nplanes. About a year ago a bylaw wa* passed authorizing the\n\u25a0pending of 910,000 on the airport.\nSince then the city park close to\nthe city has been converted Into\nlanding field of spacious area,\nand all dangerous obstruction* to\nflying cleared away. A large hangar\nhas been built which will aooom-\nodat* three planes. Although Fernie\nls ln the mountains th* valley here\nls wide, and local pilot* state th\u00ab\nvicinity la <:c_paratlvely fre* from\nbumps and dangerous cross-currents.\nFernie ls on the direct course\nof the across Canada air mall when\nestablished   this  year.\nNEW   YORK  STOCKS\nEugenie Dell* Grsjd*. 68, on* of\nAustria's roost renowned writers,\ndied Friday.\nLOGAN & BRYAN\nGRAIN\nSTOCKS,   BONDS,   COTTON\nMEMBEU:\nNaw   Tort,  Montreal  and  TaiM..f.r\nStock  Eschanm,   Chlcai.  Beam   of\nTrad.,   Winnipeg   Oraln   Kxchanje\nand other trading eiehangn.\nPRIVATE    WIRE\nOFFICES:\n\\a.emsser, stwk.n. and Statu.\nWINNIPEG  GRAIN\nWINOTPBO,  Man.,  Fab.  36\u2014Oraln\nquotation*:\nOpen     Hillt     Low do*.\nWheat:\nMay     _   63V,     63Vi     d0>a \u00bb0%\nJuly    ...-    831,      64         tt 93\nOct.         SS         861,     04 64\nOats:\nMay        30V,     30%     SOU -30V.\nJuly    ......   SO*.     30%     80 301,\nOct    S3>,     S3H     8114 817,\nBarley:\nMay     \u201e_    25',      26          241, 341,\nJuly    .....   27 V,     VI'\/,     36 V4 36'4\nOct -   29Vi     29 li     28% 38*.\nFlax:\nMay      ltMli    104%    103% 108ti\nJuly      106       lOSVi    109% 10SM,\nOct      10*       110%    108 10814\nRSwl\nMay        33>,     33%     33% 3]%\nJuly    -..-\u25a0 S8%     3JV4     83% 33%\nOct _   87%     87%     86 36\nCash  prloe.:\nWheat\u2014No.   1   hard,   87%: No.   t\nnor.  67%     :  No. 2 nor. 56%:  No.\n3   nor.   1(1%:   No.   4.   47%: No.   S\n48%: No. 6 43%: leod. 41%: track.\n67%;   screening*,  par  ton  81.00.\nWASHINGTON. Feb. 36 (AP)\u2014\nLoan* to broker* .nd dealers held\nby New Tork Federal Reserve member bank* for tbe week ending\nFebruary 26 were announced by the\nFederal Reserve board today as II,-\n798,000.000,  representing an increase\nlof   838,000,000  as  compared   to   the\n' preceding week.\nTh. loan. Ior th. week ending\nFebruary 36. 1930, were 83,489.-\n000.000.\nAllegbeny    \t\nAll Chem . \u2014\nAndes    \t\nAmerican   \t\nAm   Far   P.\t\nAm Sm 8s Re....\nAm   Trt  :\nAm  Tob  .\nAnaconda    \t\nAOchlatm    :\nBaldwin    \t\nBait  tt  o \t\nBendlv At\t\nBath  Steel\t\nC   P    _..\nCerro de Pa* ....\nChes 8s  O.\t\nChryaWr    \t\n.011   Oa*  N  T.   :\nCora   Prod  \t\na   Wright   Pfd...\nDupont   :\nEastman   K   ....\nErie    ....\t\nFord  Eng\t\nFord    of    C\t\nFirst  N  S  \t\nFreeport T \t\nOen    Mot    \t\nOen    Elec   \t\nGon    Food*    ...\nOold  Duat .\noranby\t\nQ  N  Pfd  \t\nti   W   Bug   \t\nHowe   S   \t\nHud    Mot   \t\nIns Copper\t\nInter Hupld T...\nInter Nickel...\nInter T tt T...\nKeelly Spring .\nKenn   Cop\t\nKresge   S   S   \u2014\n: Kroetm is T\t\nI Mwok Truck ....\nj Nash Motor. ....\nIn. Dairy F \u2014\nIN  Pow  8s  L ...\nN Y Cen  \u2014\nPae O As Elec .\nPack   Mot\t\nPann   It   B   ...\nPhillip*   P \u2014\nRadio Corp ...\nUadlo K or ....\nHtxm Rand  \t\nHock   Island   \t\nSafeway   8   \t\nS Louis As 8F.._\nShall U OU...\nSinclair Con ....\n3 Cal Id .. .\ntitand Oil Cal..\nStand Oil Install OU N J...\nStew     Warner...\nStudebaker \t\nTex   Oorp   \t\nTea Oulg Sul. .\nUn   Carbide\t\nUn  Oil  Cal\t\nU  P - 1\nUn   Aircraft   ....\nU   S   Rub   \t\nU   8   Steel\nWest   Elec   \t\nWillys Over . .\nYellow Truck  ....\n11... 13%\n103% 1031J\n\u2014 1914\n136% 126%\n67 47%\n66 6814\n198', 199%\n119% 119%\n40 41_\n199% 199%\n26% 28%\n88 88%\n3314 24%\n68 68%\n44 41%\n38 30\n44% 44%\n33% 33%\n9914 101\n85% 88%\n\u2014 814\n99% 100 V*\n181% 181%\n38 38%\n41%     41%\n139%    180\n60%     61%\n16% 18%\n148% 1S1\n100% 108%\n5% 6%\n13>4 1314\nIf you WI4U1 to measure drops of\nextract or medicine from a bottl.\ndip your ringer ln water and moisten th. rim of the bottle ln on.\nplace, using this place from which\nto drop the essence. You will llnd\nlt  wlll drop quit* evenly.\nUse our money orders\nWhen you pay a small\nbill use a Bank Money\nOrder. This method is\nsafe and economical\nTellers at any branch of\nthe bank will gladly sell\nyou Money orders.\nIMPERIAL BANK OF CANADA\nHEAD Office TORONTO\nCapil*. md Ruerva $.5,000,000\nNELSON\nCRESTON\nW.R.<\n}\u25a0 3. W.CLOWES,I\nN\no other whisky\n\u2014 so old v tv\n\u2014 so smooth\n\u2014 so good *-\nDOUBLE-DISTI LLED- RYE\nThe ast \u00bbWp on etch bottle ol \"B.C 11 reer oM\"\nshows that thc aje ol every drop of this splendid wUftiy\nU giMMatod by the Ftdci.1 Government.     \u2022\nP_\nm\n: \u25a0 -'&\\\n\u25a0::::^::;:JS;.,\nss        \u25a0 ^        ->'\"'\u25a0\u25a0      'ii\n\u2022...-. \u2022.\u2022,:'.:.\u25a0\u2022\"..\nThis advertisement is not published or displayed by the Liquor Control jBoard or\nby the Government of British Columbia. *\n Page Twelve\nTHE NELSON DAILY NEWS       FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27,1981\nKOTEX\n60c\nPER\nPACKAGE\nManpt-RutherCord\nGo.\nWEST\nTRANSFER\nCOMPANY\nThanks it customers (or\nth* patronage extended to\nit In the past and informs\nthem that it will continue\nto carry on the business,\nand to give them the same\nservice and attention as\nheretofore, and requests a\nxntinuance of their patronage.\nROAD VISION\nBrcry autoist ahould know tba\nvalue of perfect eyesight. If his\neyas do not focus instantly and\ncorrectly upon a turn ln a road,\nupon a bridge abutment or upon\nthe vehicle ahead or aome other\nobstruction, s serious accident\nmay result. If you experience\nthe slightest difficulty with your\n\u2022yea, you should have them examined.\nJ.O.PATENAUDE\nexpert   Optical   servlc*\nO-K\n*3BMp\nSpring\nDRESSES\nWe have received quite a number of new spring shipments in\nthe very latest styles. Ideal for\nafternoon and street wear.\nThese are in printed crepes,\ntravel tweeds, ripple chiffons, and\nin cantons.\nA wide  range of colors,  and\nare moderately priced from\n$10.95 to $35.00\nJAMES GRANT, THE\nAGED PROSPECTOR,\nSLEEPS OVER HILL\nService  at   Salvation   Army\nCitadel Marks Closing\nChapter\nWAS RESIDENT OF\nNELSON 40 YEARS\nWas Active In Many Camps;\nIncapacitated In His\nLater  Years\nA service at the Salvation Army\ncitadel, conducted by Captain A.\nCartmell, and a committal service\nait the gTave In the City cemetery,\nat which adherents of the Salvation\nArmy and a few old-time friends\nattended, Thursdsy afternoon, marked the closing chapter tn the history of James Orant, well known\nprospector and oldtimer, who made\nbis home ln Nelson for more than\n40 years.\nAt the service at the citedel, Mrs\nCartmell rendered a solo. The pallbearers, old* time friends, were WU-.\n11am Jones, N. Mallette, J. Olllis, I\nHarold Orlce, W. J. Dunn, and\nAndrew  Pollock.\nJames Orant, known wldaly as\n\"Jlmmle\" Orant, was born in Parts,\nOnt., 77 years ago, and wes christened ln the Presbyterian church of\nthat church.\nHAD   CLAIMS   ALL   OVER\nHe was one of the Kootenay old'\nCANADA, CUBA\nARE NEIGHBORS\nSAYS J. H. WOODS\nHAVANA,   Cuba,   Feb.   30.    (C.   P.\ncable)\u2014\"In the eyas of Canadians,\nCuba is a near an Intimate neighbor,\" declared J. H. Woods, Calvary, president of the Canadian\nChamber of Commerce, at a banquet given tonight by tha business\nman of Cuba.\nMT. Woods stated frankly that\ntha greet object among Canadians\nwaa to build up the trade of the\nBritlah Weat Indies, a trade which\nhad Increased very much with his\nown country ln the laat few years.\nNercisoo Macia, chairman of the\nHavana board of trade, expressed\nthe hope that trade between the\ntwo ' countries, especially *Jn flour\nand   potatoes,   would   increase.\nWOOLLS', FOWLES'\nBOWLERS WIN BY\nSMAJLLMARGINS\nGeorge Dill Is High Man With\nSingle of 192 and Aggregate of 518\nSILVER RISES\nQUARTER CENT\nAT NEW YORK\nCopper Sales Are Fair for Domestic .Account; Zinc Baying Is Better\nNsTW TORK. Mb. 30 (AP>\u2014Non-\nferrous metals showed a somewhat\nfirmer tone today, silver and zinc\nadvancing and copper buying for\nforeign account continuing at a\ngood rate.\nBar silver in New Tork rose 'i\noent to lfi% cents an ounce. The\nmetal also was firmer In London,\nwhere lt advanced 1-18 of a penny\nto   12   7-16   pence.\nCopper sales ln the export market\ntoday amounted to 6,500,000 pounds\nand was described as fair for do-\nmfstio account. The continued good\ndemand for the metal particularly\nfor export, has led : to speculation\nln the trade as to the possibility\nof an advance In price. Although\nthe domestic price remained at toy*\noents, delivered, today, trade circles\nreported   lt   was   becoming   increas-\nNO POLL-TAX\nFOR WINNIPEG\nWINNIPEG. Peb. 36\u2014Non-tax-pay-\nlng cltlsene of Winnipeg were relieved tonight of team tbat a $10\npoll tax would be exacted of tnem\nby the city. The civil legislation\noommittee gave a one-year hoist\nto enabling legislation that would\nhave permitted the council to Impose the levy on both men aad\nwomen,    otherwise    untaxable.\nMRS. LtVASSEUR\nIS HIGH BOWLER,\nLADIES' GAME\nMrs. T. E. Levasseur and Mrs.\nG. Wright Skip Winning\nTeams\nDR. JOHN HENRY,\nAINSWORTH OLD-\nTIMER, CALLED\nVeteran Merchant Dies hi the\nKaalo Hospital After Be.\nlng IH a Tear\nIN .UN8WORTH\nFOR 40 YEARS\nWas Prominent Mason; Served on School Board; Funeral Kaslo Saturday\nIn ths Legion bowling play\nThursday evening, two fairly even\nnames were pl.yed. In the first\nE. Woolls nosed out C Millers\nsquad by lo pins while W. Fowles\ntrio trimmed George Dill's man by\na   margin   of   37   pins.\nIndividual    honor*    of    the    tint\ngame    went    to    George    Dill,    who\nscored . single of  192 pin. and an\ntimers, the date ot hi* arrival being   aggregate   of   518   pins.     E.   Woolls\nobscure,  but   he  ls  known  to  have   was  high   man   ln  his  match   with\nPlayer.\nW.  Chapman\nTotal.\nbt.\nSERVICE RIGHT NOW\"\nAccessories\nFor all makes of cars.\nOur stock is complete, and we can\nsupply you with accessories for all makes\nof cars.\nHorns, Batteries, Automatic Windshield Wipers, Car Lighters, Ash Trays,\nJacks, Rim Wrenches, Pumps, Grease\nGuns, etc.\nPhone 35\nNelson Transfer Co., Ltd.\nbeen in and around Nelson for more\nthan 40 years. He hsd claims all\nover the Kootenay district, ln many\ndifferent camps at different times,.\nIncluding Forty-Nine and Hover\ncreeks below Nelson, but he had\nparticular faith In the Bayonne and\nthe adjoining Cultus creek area,\nand kept alive his claims there\nuntil unable on account ot disabilities to hold them further. In\nspite of hl\u00ab ltfe-tlme devoted to\nprospecting and mining, he was not\nfavored by fortune, and he made\nno big stake. On ons occasion,\nhowever, lt Is recalled' that he\nstaked  and sold a timber limit.\nAside    from   actual    mining    and\nprospecting,    he    sometimes    did    a\nlittle commercial packing  to mines,\nand   after   the   war   was   employed   R.  Hale\nfor   several   years   by   the    Nelson) G.  Dill\nTransfer   company,   chiefly   looking\nafter  the  pack  horses.\nHAD   OLD   AGE   PENSION\nOld-timers recall that he was a\nstrong Liberal, and worked In the\nLiberal cause. Some 10 or 1*. years\nago rheumatism began to get the\nbetter of the old man, and he\ngradually became a cripple, and\nsome three years ago or so he became bed-ridden. For many years\nhe lived, ln a small cottage or shack\non HaU street, Just off Baker, being\nmoved by the city last year to a\ncottage owned by the city, on Front\nstreet. He was one of the first ln\nthis district to receive an oid age\npension.     He   never   married.\nWhen the British Columbia Prospectors Protective association was\norganized soon after the war, he\nwas one of the first to Join the\norganization, though his membership was not kept up after he became   Incapacitated.\nPractically nothing ls known about\nMr. Grant's relatives, though In\nearly times here he had a nephew\nof the name of Orant living with\nhim.\nC. Miller, scoring high single of 182\npins   and   high    aggregate of   459\nPins.\nScores   were:\nPlayers i                  1st   2nd 3rd Tot\nL.   Plckard     135    167 133\u2014425\nJ   Valentine     144    141 135\u201441o\nE.   Woolls     182    124 153\u2014453\n461    422    411  1294\nAINSWORTH,  B.  0,  Feb.   HO\u2014Dr.\nJohn Henry, general merchant, and\none of Alnsworth's pioneer citizen*.\ndied ln the Victorian hospital at\nKaslo at 9 a.m. Wednesday, on\npractically the eve ot his 71st\nbirthday, which was due March 11.\nHe had been ln 111 health about\na   year.\nDr. Henry was a qualified veterinarian, but ln early times engaged\nln merchandizing, buying out the\nbusiness    of    the    Oreen    brothers.\nMrs. T. B. Levasseur's and Mrs.\nO, Wright's bowlers came out winners ln the ladles' bowling play on\nGelinas' alleys Thursday, Mrs. I*e-\nvasseur's ladies' defeating Mrs. O. A.\nLarson's     1171-1033     and    Mrs.    O.\n^'Tuu'cult\u2122   ^uTn-the-meur \u2122*___ffi\"'\u00abt-   \"'   Bim\"\nat   that  level  and  Indications  were   r _ *\u2022*>>\u2022  1\"'\"1i*J-   ,,.\u201e,,   h-_,.T\n_ w^rc^|;^y*fd.i \u00bb\u00a3-\u00ab.*--\u25a0 \u2014.-\u2122 ^__n .\u00ab* \u00ab.\nsvr\u00abr: si\/ss Sir-. - - - ;^v. _r_ _ _\nscores  were: course  of   his  career  served  several\nPlayers 1st 2nd 3rd   Tot. term, aa secretary of the Ainsworth\nMrs    T    Lenaatmr 178 160 144\u2014.79 board of school trustee..    He was a\nMrs   H   Lakes   100 106 126\u201433)1 prominent iiaaon.\nMrs' W   Deajantlns 109 129 131\u2014300|    H.   leave,   his   widow,   and   on.\n      \u2014 daughter,   Mrs.   Oeorge   Hobbs.   The\nTotal.     >87 384 400 1171 funeral    will    bt   held    >t    Kaslo\nPlayers l*t 2nd 3rd   To.   Saturday,   under   the   direction   of\nMrs   C    A.   Larson 116 106 111\u2014331'Kaslo   Ifuuuc  lodge,\nMr..   J.   Btvtl      108   (18 140\u20143111\nMrs  D.  D.  MCLean 136 106 109\u201484J\nGIANT BEAN FEfcD\nCOMPETITION IS\nCURLER'S FINALE\nNine Sheets Will Be in Play\nfer Big Winding Up Competition in Trail\nTotals\nPlayer*                   1st Snd Srd T-t j    TRAIL, B. C, Peb. 26.\u2014Th* giant\nJ.  Qlazebroo*   .... 144 176 148\u201446SI Bean Peed compeU.lon, engaging 30\nW.    O.   Kennedy 130 130 130\u2014390 i rink* and using nine curling sheet,,\nC.    Miller      lis 1SS 140\u2014421 j will   take   ail   Trail   curlers   to   tha\n , rink  Saturday  for   the  big   wlndup\nTotal.     390 471 418 1279 of the season.\n1st   2nd   3rd Tot\n140    148    115\u2014410\n130    130    130\u2014390   AT   1   O'CLOCK\nSix-end  games  are   to  be  played,\nand  the  lid ls off for fun.\nFollowing are the gunes as drawn:\n148    ISO    192\u2014518\n425   468   437 1918\nHOOVER MAY LAY\nCORNERSTONE OF\nLEGATION PILE\nIS THE TIME TO PURCHASE A\nGAS RANGE\nFor the advantages to be enjoyed by owning a\nGas Range are so many that yon should not be without one another day.\nCooking with a Gas Range saves time . . . Saves\nWork . . . Saves Worry . . . Saves Money and it Is\nCleaner . . . Easier ... and More Efficient.\nPhone the CITY GAS WORKS today, 37, and\nlearn how easy it Is become the owner of a Gas\nRange. ,\n\u2014The City of Nelson\nW*\\HHINGTON, Feb. 26.\u2014 (CF)-\nWork on ths United States lega\nion's buildings on Wellington strce\nln Ottawa wlll probably begin early\nln July, lt was said here today\nWhile there Is a remote possibility\nthat Mir. Hoover may go to Ottawa\nto lay the cornerstone of the legation, lt in more probable that Secretary of State Henry L Stlmson wlll\nattend as a representative of the\npresident.\nL. B. Eleetrle\nPhone 8 for a Demonstration of the\nBOSCH RADIO\nClear Tone\u2014Good Volume\nBeautiful Cabinet\nDesigns\nPlayer*\n1st\nSnd\nSrd Tot.\nW.   Woolls   ....\n.._ 126\n165\n170\u2014400\nE.  Langill  _....\n.... 146\n166\n163\u2014475\nW.    Fowles    ..\n.... 140\n140\n140\u2014420\nTotals     _ 411    471   473 136\nPOSTMASTER WILL\nBE PICKED FROM\nOUTSIDEJSERVICE\nCommander  Bourke  Obtains\nCommission's Ruling From\nOttawa\nAuthoritative Information was obtained yesterday that the vacant\npostmastershlp at Nelson will be I\ndealt wtth by the civil service com-;\nmission not on civil service lines, i M\nbut on the basis of open eligibility. | MS^\"ne\"\nLieut.   -  Commander Rowland\nBouriw, V. C., D. S. O., of Crescent\nBay, one of the candidates for the\nappointment, yesterday morning\nwired to Ottawa to Major Ashton.\nchairman of the soldier settlement\nboard, asking him to obtain an authoritative statement as to the\nlines on which the vacancy would\nbe construed. The reply came yesterday afternoon:\n\"I am Informed by commission\nthat appointment will be made from\noutside the service. Position wlll be\nadvertised and applicants interviewed by either district superintendent or Inspector of post offloes.\"\nShee   1\u2014R.   J.   Walsh   vs.   J.   H-\nYoung.\nSheet   3\u2014Dr   O.   S.   Williams   vs\nW.  W. McKay.\nSheet 3\u2014W F Doubt vs O E Murray\nSheet 4\u2014O. W. Weir vs. R. Bom-\nmervtlle.\nSheet 5\u2014H. B Wade vs L P Tyson\nSheet   8\u2014P   P.   Mclntyre   vs.   E\nW. Hazlewood\nSheet   7\u2014Dr.  J.  B.  Thorn vs.  G.\nJ   Klnnls\nSheet  8\u2014J  J.  Plngland   vs   W   H\nBaldrey\nSheet   9\u2014E.   M.   Stiles   vs.   S.   P.\nWalley\nAT   2:15\nSheet 1\u2014H W. Mclnnes vs H. J.\nPalmer.\nSheet   2\u2014&   G.    Blaylogk   vs   T\nBrown\nSheet   3\u2014G   C   McKay   vs.   P.   R\nMcDonald\nSheet   4\u20140   Dodlmead   ve   A   A\nMllllgan.\nSheet   6\u2014A   M   Chesser   vs   K   A\nMargeson\nSheet 0\u2014Dr. W. A. Coghlln vs. D.\nForrest\nSheet   7\u2014D   MacDonald   vs   R   C\nCrowe\nSheet  8\u2014W P Truswell  vs. A. J\nC.   Roberteon   vs   J\n44 Taxi and 44\nTRANSFER\nTRAIL  and   ROSSLAND\nFREIGHT  and   EXPRESS\nSchedule\nDally  to  TraU, leaves  1.  A.  M.\nTAXIS   DAY   AND   NIGHT\nCITY DRUG CO.\nNELSON'S   DISPENSING   CHEMISTS.\nSEND   DS   YOUH   MAIL  ORDERS\nw.   give   you   Immediate   and   Intelligent   servloe.\nPHONE    34. BOX    1088\nNSLSON\nPRUNING TIME Is Here\nWe Have In Stock:\nReiser and California Pruning Shears\nBishop Pruning Saws\nPruning and  Budding Knives\nTree Pruners, 6 ft., 8 ft. and 10 ft.\nGrafting Wax, etc\nLet Us Supply Your Wants\nWood-Vallance Hardware\nCo., Ltd.\nWtt&esale -  KELSON, B. C. -  Retail\n2Z TAXI\n*^a\"*M, Tlie Rest of Service\nA_W e_W Careful, Courteous\n^^ ~~ Drivers\nNelson Transfer Cc Ltd.\nPhone Taxi\n77\nFreight Srhrdulr\nDally to Rowland\nand Trail, 10 am.\nBUD   STEVENS\nProp.\nTrail Phone Its\nSAYS SUCCESS\nRUSSIAN PLAN\n. KILL CAPITAL\nWINNIPEG, Man., Peb. 28. (CP)\u2014\nOn tbe heels of a prediction that\ntf Russia's five-year plan succeeds\n\"lt will be the beginning of the\nend of capitalism in every country\non the globe,\" William Ivens. Winnipeg Labor member, urged In the\nlegislature today tbat Manitoba repudiate interest due on tbe public\ndebt. Interest, according to the government's estimates, amounts to \\i.-\n544,366.38.\nWhile Mr. Ivens said he did not\napprove of the Soviet government's\nmethods of attaining Its ends, he\ndid approve of the objective* of the\nCommunists. As for paying Interest\ncharges on the public debt ln Manitoba, It wae \"annually getting the\nprovince deeper Into a financial\nbog.A\nGLASSES\nJ. A. g. Laughton, R.O.\nOPTOMETRIST   .nd   OPTICIAN\nSuit*  HAt-tt*.  Medics!   Art.  BIOS.\nThe Sugar Bowl\nGrocery\nFRIDAY   and    NAT! KDAY\nSPICIALfl\n7  cans Peas,  Tomatoes\nand Corn    si.no\n6 cans Oreen Beam   1.00\nI)  cans   Clark'*   Pork\nand   Beans,   Vs   ,_\u201e  1,00\n9   <ttiu   Blue   Mountain\nPineapple       1.00\n.1   cans  Oolden   Bantam\nCora  \u201e    M\n1 lb. Premium Back Bacon .40\n% doc, Presh  Feu*, large\nUrate    _ _   .75\nf lb.  Premium  Sliced  Side\nBacon         ,56\n20  lbs.   Oranulated   flogar   ... 1.2ft\n1 lb. Sliced Cooked Ham M\n5   lbs.   Swift's   Silver\nLe*r Lard     1.00\n2 cans Sockeye Salmon      40\n2  lbs.. (Smiles)   Cookies       .40\n2 lbs. Onr Special Pekoe Tea    -7.1\n4  doz. Sweet  Orange*   _... 1.00\n2 lb. hoi Cream Cheese     .00\nCOFFF.E\u2014 Nabob  or  Bine   Ribbon,   Malkln'a   or   Braid's     .50\n2 lbs. Smoked Haddle (Wets    .55\nPHOXB  no\nwith your first of month orders.\nDeliveries   8   a-   m.   to   5   p.   m.\nSheet   9\u2014J.\nBalfour\nAT 8:80\nSheet  1-\u2014J.  A.  Wadsworth vs. W\nB.   Hunter.\nSheet   2\u2014G   McGowan    vs   J   B\nTwaddle\nSheet   3\u2014J.   R. *Cralg   vs.   W.   E\nNewton.\nSheet 4\u2014G Bhaw  vs P MeArthur\nSheet 6\u2014J  Campbell  vs.  A.  Kerr\nSheet   6\u2014H.   C.   Caldlcott   va   L\nH  Jackson,\nSheet   7\u2014D.   Downle   vt.   J   Williamson\nSheet 9\u2014A. Balfour  vs.  J.  Leckle\nSheet   1\u2014W.   E.   Wilson  vs.   H   A\nMcLaren\nSheet   3\u2014P   W.   Steacy   vs.   A.   G\nHarvey\nThe winners continue to play until   a   final   victor   ls   decided\nROUGH PLAY IS\nFEATURE TRAIL\nGAME AT COAST\nTotals  SBo 306 3D9 1033\nPlavers 1st an* tr*   Tot. I\nMrs F. Bamford ... 113 113 146\u2014311\nMrs A. O. Oellnas 116 106 168\u2014378\nMrs.    Roy    Pollard 138 117 134\u2014377\nTotsl.      SM 336 4J7 112\u00abi\nPlayers lat 2nd Srd   Tot.\nMrs O. Wright   1\"   80 V-a'a\nMrs. T. H. Willits 103 133 189\u2014394\nMrs.   A.   Choquette 138 134 148\u2014413\nTotals\n\u201e 363 345 434 1131\nSFATTIF LOSES\nTO PORTLAND, 8-1\nPORTLAND, Ore.. Feb. 36. (AP1-V\nWith a wild buret of soorlng the\nPortland Buckaroos tonight began\ntheir long climb from the Pacific\nCoast Hockey league cellar by defeating Seattle, 8 to 1. The victory\nstill lesvea Portland six points behind the league-leading Vanoouver\nLions and five points behind the\nEskimos.\nniMMAax\nFirst perlod\u2014l. Portland, Armstrong (Downle), 3:30; 3, Seattle,\nAnderson (Walker), 2:39; 8, Portland,   Rouiston.   10:41.\nPenalties\u2014Rouiston.\nSeoond period\u20144, Portland. Rouiston (McGoldrlck), 7:45; 5, Portland, Downle, 3:05; 6, Portlan, Teel\n(Evans), 2:03; 7, Portland, Downle,\n1:22.\nPenaltlea\u2014Rouiston, 15; Runge,\nBellefeullle,   Armstrong,  Conners.\nThird period\u20148, Portland, Downle,\n143; 0, Portland. Evan* (Coupez),\n11:47.\nPenaltlea\u2014Ma her, Anderson, Tell,\nDownle.  Armstrong,  15.\nLAST MINUTE\nADVERTISEMENTS\nReceived    too   late   to   go\nClassified    Page\nBUTTE   POR   RENT,   TERRACE   AP\nertmente. (4125\nLEGION SWAMPED\nBY EKS IN PIN\nCONTESUELINAS'\nGeorge Dill and R. H. Maber,\nBowling for Elks Were\nHigh Individuals\nNew Spring\nShirts\nWe know men's tastes '\nas well as we do men's\nwear. We selected thess\nshirts with this in mind.\nYou will be pleased with -\nthe   new   plain   broadcloths,   In  five  shades,.\nwith   ties   to   match.'\nWhite,   Blue,   Green,\nCream and Copper.\nTHE   FLIGHT,  $2.50\nTHE BOGEY, 81.96\nMade with pre-shrunk\ncollars.\nBy a large margin of 833 pins\nthe Canadian Legion bowler, ware\nswamped by the Elks Thursday\nevening ln * City league match\nplayed on Oellnas' alleys The\nLegion bowlers were down Ut each\nof  three  games.\nOeorge DUI and R. H. Maber, Elk\npin artist*, forged ahead of their\nfellow bowlers to corner lndlndu.1\nhonors, DUI scoring high .Ingle rf\n211 pins and Maber high aggregate\nof 530 pins.\nScore* were:\nElks 1st   2nd   Srd   Tot.\nNick    Cassia*    .... 172    187    178\u2014814\nO.   DUI     165    148   211\u2014624\nBELGIUM SIGNS\nWHEAT DISPOSA\nPARIS. Peb. Vt. (By Oeorg.\nbleton,   Canadian   Ptan   staff\nrespondent)\u2014Belgium ww today\n17th oountry to sign th.\nfln.l   ut   for   disposal   of\ncentral and eastern European wk\nstock*.\nBritain, bMrtng th. available\nplus*, of Canada and Australia tl\nmind, .till remain, outside the  aoT\nR. H. Maber\nPalrhead    \t\nLegion\nH.   H.   Cren*.\nS.    LangUl    ...\nA.   Choquette\nFred   Hartwig\n187 183 180\u2014880\n141 177 187\u2014606\n886 876 788 3873\nUt 2nd SM Tot\n.   89 141 180\u2014390\n141 106 181\u2014408\n. 147 180 149\u2014428\n. 181 189 147\u2014617\n668 668 617 1741\nDown with  accident*. B Whamot\nEl   Bockal  El Sonkt\nA. D. PAPAZIAN\nWATCHMAKER\nJEWELER,\nand Graduate Optician\n413 HALL STREET\nDr. West Tooth Pa\nContains special  ingredient\nto restore brilliance te th\nteeth and retards acid\nditions\nSMYIHE'S PHARMAC\nPrescription Specialist\nPHONE 1\nShop Wth Us by Mall\nAll Material for\nElectrical\nand\nPlumbing Work\nKept in Stock at\nLowest Prices\nPHONE 530\nHunter Eleetrle]\ntic Plumbing\nNews of the Day\nDaughters of Scotia meet tonlg1 t\nat 8 o'clock.    Social WSnlng. (411K)\nWomen's Institute meeting Friday\n37th. 3 o'clock. Tblk. Growing Swee\nPeas   by   Mrs.   Rutherford.      (4099\nEvangellatlc Service Presbyterian\nchurch tonight 8 o'clock. Subject\n\"TI144. Cost of Neglecting Salva'lon\"\nCOME! (4124)\nD. C *j. Shoppe\u2014New Prints\njust arrived.\u2014To avoid dl.ippolnt-\nment plaoe orders early for house\ndressea.     , (4108)\nReferees Are \"Useless;\" Vancouver Defense Plays Crude\nRugby,\" Wire\nTRAIL, B. C, Peb. 26.\u2014Hockey\nteems Us be rough ln Vancouver.\nTuffy Garland wires:\n\"Vancouver defence played a crude\ngame of rugby Ginger Russell absolutely a Joke as a referee. No\ncasualties, but boys all more or\nleu bruised. Trail has fjr the\nbest squad but boys appear timid\ndue to roughing by Vancouver defence. Andy (Anderson) will be\nplaying Friday ... No use to go on\nwith present referee*. All the\nboys  are  confident of winning.\"\nAnd A. W. McDonald telegraphs\nas  follows;\n\"Equipping team with heavier\npads and If the referees do not call\nthem aa they should Vanoouver\nte-m wlll be badly crippled up\nJefferd wlll give them a talking\nand have the game refereed as It\nshould be Boy* ln fair shape except  for   bruises.\"\nElliott Crowe, president of the\nclub,  replied  thi.  afternoon:\n\"Sending armored suits by air\nmall.\"\nOLIVER BALDWIN\nRESIGNS LABOR\nLONDON, Feb. 36. (AP)\u2014OHw\nBtldwln resigned from ths Labor\npsrty todsy, protesting the \"imc-\ntivlty 0* the government ln the\nface of the general economic crisis\"\nBaldwin, who Is the son of Rt.\nHon. Stanley Baldwin. Conservative\nleader, la associated with Sir Oswald Mosley'i group of Young Brit-\none, some of whom have Indicated\nthsy wlll withdraw from ttie Labor\nparty    and    'orm    an    Independent\nBoost   the   Wolf    Cubs.\nMilitary    whist   tonight    st   Legion\n8  pjn.  sharp.     Admission  35   centa\nAll   welcome. (4121)\nSnappy\n^stflc\nThe Puneral of th* late Andrew\nBurgess of Ymir will take place\nSaturday at 2 o'clock from the\nUnited Church, Ymlr. (4113)\nAS USUAL. Bl OLE BAND DANCr,\nAT EAGLE HALL SATURDW\nNIGHT. MUSIC BY THE RAM\"\nLER   DANCE   BANt*. (412^)\nDancing at the  Upper South Slocan   hall   Saturday,   28.     Music   hy\nRhythm   Klntfa   orcnestra.    Dancing\nslurts   at   9   o'clook.     Refreshmen s\n(41061\nTYPEWRITERS. Real Bnaps n\nRemington Standard No. 10, one nt\n$35.00 and (40.00. only two lei\nFully fruaranteed. Apply Alex F\nShepherd. Hume Hotel, Phone 787\n(4110)\nMeetlnjr of The Ladles' Auxlliarv\nof The Nelson Oolf and Count' y\nClub wlll be held for the election\nof Officers Wednesday. March 4th\nat 2 p.m.. at Mrs. W. J. Grove's\nTerrace  Apts. 14114)\nFloral Baskets\nMany attractive designs in\nFlower Baskets made by blind\nsoldiers.\n75* * $5.00\nPilled   with   appropriate  flowers,\nthese   make   an   ideal   gift.\nNELSON FLOWER\nSHOPPE\nPhone 233\nPrompt Delivery\nT-O-D-A-Y\nSATURDAY\nTwo Shows Nightly\n7 and 9   p. m.\nMatinee at 2   p. m.\nA Happy, Youthful Laugh Treat\nthat makes you FEEL young.\nMark Twain's Immortal Story\nof Boyhood.\nfcTom Sawyer1\nWith\nJackie Coogan -Mltzl Green\nEnjoy ererj nwmsnt\nof this heart-warming picture! Fun for\neveryone, from 6 to\nfO. You'll oomatwle.\nto m. \"Ton Sawyer\"\nYou'll be a Md\u00ab\u00bb\u00abln\nwhen you see Mark\nTwain* beloved story\nof childhood ... If\nyou fail to see lt\nyou will be missing\none of th. moat enjoyable things that\nour present-day Df.\nhas   to   offer.\nEntertainment for the children\u2014\nassuredly\u2014and assuredly\u2014more than\nentertainment for the grownups\u2014an\nentertainment you'll never forget, and\nenjoy as long as you remember.\nSERIAL\n\"THE INDIANS\nARE COMING\"\nOARTOOH\n\"IRISH STEW\"\nIfs  good\nFOX NEWS\nMONDAY\u2014TOIBnAT\nGARY    COOPEB\u2014MARLRNE    DIETRICH\u2014AOOLPHE\nMZNJOV\n\"MOROCCO\"\nDON'T roMBT-gatnrday Morning\nB-f\u2014 I\n\u00b1s\net _\u2022\u00a5>\n","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"The Nelson Daily Miner was purchased by F.J. Deane in April of 1902 and renamed The Daily News. It changed hands again in May 1908 when it began to be printed by the News Publishing Co. managed by W.G. McMorris.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/hasType":[{"value":"Newspapers","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/spatial":[{"value":"Nelson (B.C.)","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/identifier":[{"value":"Nelson_Daily_News_1931_02_27","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0404254","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/language":[{"value":"English","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#lat":[{"value":"49.493333","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/2003\/01\/geo\/wgs84_pos#long":[{"value":"-117.295833","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/provider":[{"value":"Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/publisher":[{"value":"Nelson, B.C. : News Publishing Co.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/rights":[{"value":"Images provided for research and reference use only. Permission to publish, copy or otherwise use these images must be obtained from the Touchstones Nelson Museum of Art and History: https:\/\/touchstonesnelson.ca","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/source":[{"value":"Original Format: Royal British Columbia Museum. British Columbia Archives.","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/title":[{"value":"The Daily News","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/type":[{"value":"Text","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/purl.org\/dc\/terms\/description":[{"value":"","type":"literal","lang":"en"}]}}