{"http:\/\/dx.doi.org\/10.14288\/1.0405305":{"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":"2021-12-05","type":"literal","lang":"en"},{"value":"1936-03-16","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/aggregatedCHO":[{"value":"https:\/\/open.library.ubc.ca\/collections\/nelsondaily\/items\/1.0405305\/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":" Prince Albert Beats Luscar;\nPlay Kimberley Here\n\u2014Pc_e Seven\n,sstm\\ tin\nPROVINCIAL\nLIBRARY\nyr\\\nSpokane Skaters Please\nNelson Crowd\n\u2014Pa&e Six\nVOLUME 34\nFIVE CENTS A COPY\nNt-t0>lm_______________________________________________-_____--_\\\nNUMBER 27-\nPUNISH GERMANY IS FRANCE'S DEMAND\nVT\nWILL NOT MEET GERMANY AS AN EQUAL\nKick of Polo Pony Is fatal\nFrance's Defence Against Noels\n\\    AHTWERP?fif v\\   A^foDUSSeL0ORr*>\n_________________ __^\"**ACrLI\u00abKl _.\u00bb     \/^J k -\u2022     \u25a0 ^\u25a0\u00bb\u00bbee**********\u00bb***********\u00bbl\nrCOLOGNt\nut>*i \u2014,      \/-^v^-\u2022 i   __________\u25a0\n*. !\"^|^r<\nrr       REIMS*     VERt-ON^sA.      MAK\nlpAR'* -    ArM^*^sr>r   *\nCPr\u00bbJAi*iJk\nI [^\neCLFORTjCi!\n_^> MAIN\n\u00a3|[   rORTtnCATIONS\n^>  PtYINC\nK    SQUADRONS\n!___.   PIU BOX*\n\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 D-TO4SE POSTS\nGermin tnd French troops ire within firing rtngt igiln. Te mut\nGermany's itertllng reoceupatlen of tht Rhineland, barrtd to Ger.\nmm irmi by trttty, Fnnc* ruihed troopi te her frontier fortifications.\nMip shows thi French and Belgian border fortifications and advincu\nef Nul troops rtporttd te dite. Tht almost solid line of French tnd\nBelgian pillbox defences Is shown, bicked by thl larger forte In Fnnct\nfrom Btlfort to Vtrdun. Germin troopi wtrt girrlsoned tt Minn-\nhelm, Frankfurt, Cologne, DuMtldorf ind ether point*, whil* Frtnch\nira concentrating at Mett.\nBRIEFS FROM\nB.(. HOUSE\nVICTORIA, M*rch 15 (CP)-An-\nswers to quuUons filed Fridey in\nthe legislature contained the following Information:\nTh* province coUected 32,846,762\nin grou gasoline texu between\nMarch I, 1935, and February 29,\n1936, and banded beck 3316,687 in\nrebate* to farmer*, miners, logger.\ni md fishermen, at six cents per\ngaUon.\nThe province borrowed 81,000,000\nfrom the Dominion Bridge compmy, Riling the compmy 81,000,000\nin short-term bondi at 3% per cent\ninterut, maturing ln 1938; and arranged to borrow an additional 31,-\n000,000 from the ume tource u and\nwhen required, other aniwen revealed. The .money is being uied\nfor conitructlon ot the new toll\nbridge over the Fruer river.\nThere are 1330 regiitered Brltlih\nColumbia civil servants, apart \"from\nthe provincial police and sundry\nemployees,'' Hon. Dr. Weir replied\nin answer to questions. In provlnclil departments in Victoria, 607\n\u2022re employed, exclusive of 45 otheri\nelsewhere on Vincouver Island.\nHow many civil servants actually\nliv* In Victor!* is not known. The\ntotel ln provincial employment wu\nnot iteted.\nThe capital cost of the south Okanagan IrrigaUon project was 83,-\n371,799 it March 31, a year ago. Delinquent water rites have been accumulating tor leveral years.\nIn the fiscal year 1935-36. the province ipent 863381 on roads in\nOUver district, other answers revealed.\nHauptmann Likely\nto Die March 31\nTRENTON, N.J., Mtrch 18 -\n(AP)\u00ab\u2014Invltetlem te th* electrocution ef Bruno Richard Hauptmann will be milled ntxt Saturday, Col. Mark O. Klmbirllng,\nwarden ef tht Ntw Jersey state\nprison, announced lait Saturday.\nBirring \u00bbn Improbible 11th\nhour respite, the convicted killer\ngf tht Llndbtrgh biby will go to\ntht thtlr tht wttk of Mirch 30\u2014\nprobibly it 8 p.m., Tuesdiy,\nMirch 81.\nCentral Ironside\nat Vancouvtr\n\u2022VICTORIA, Mirch 15 (CP)-*1\nthink tht diy will come when India\nwiU be is lucceuful in self-government \u2022\u25a0 South Africa,\" deelired\nGen. Sir Edmund Ironild*. K.C.B.,\nC.M.G., D-3.0., former quartermu-\nter-general of the BriUih forces in\nIndl* who arrived in Victoria Saturday on the Empreu ot Ruula.\n\"Look wh*t happened in South\nAfrica,\" the general uid. \"Men like\nSmuts, Herteog md Botha, wbo\nformerly oppoted ui, became more\nBrIUsh than tbe BriUih. Look it\ntheir loyalty during the war. Tbey\nput down a rebeUion in their own\ncountry end wut to th* eld of\nGreat Britain.\n\"And I think that ii whit would\nhapptn ln Indl* If we wer* again\nlaced with \u2022 crliii. I don't know if\nther* 1* * crliii coming but conditions art not very nice. They trt\nmost serious.'*\nSPANISH ARMY\nTHREATENS TO\nTAKE CONTROL\nMADRID, Msrch 16 (AP)\u2014Th*\nSpanish army gav* whit wu\ntantamount to in ultimatum todiy to Prtmltr Minutl Anna\nthat unleu the ntw lift govtrn.\nmint adept! meisures to tnd\nwideiprtid violence It weuld tike\nth* milnteninet ef trdtr Into It*\nown hinds.\nTh* army acted following dlt*\ntrdertttLegref* ln.whteh.an unknown number of persons wtr*\nkilled In \u2022 cluh bttwttn txtrtm-\nllte and troopi. It wu undtrttood\n\u2022t least 11 war* kllltd tnd 40\nwoundtd.\nItaly, Austria,\nHungary Confer\nROME, March IS (AP).-Benito\nMussolini, Kurt Schusehnlgg md\nJulius Goemboei, prime ministers of\nItaly, Austria md Hungary, who\nhave linked their states ln a semi-\nalliance and now are anxious over\neach other's conduct in a changing\nEurope, wlU meet here this week to\ntry to reestablish their common\npoint of view.\nAdolf Hitler's scrapping of the\nLocarno treaty md his reported\nwillingness to ilgn I pict with Auitrit will bt among the topic* for discussion. The conferences will be\nheld Wednesdiy, Thunday md Frldiy.\nGINGER COOTE\nIN HOSPITAL\nWILLIAMS LAKE, B.C., Mirch\n15 (CP).-Pllot \"Ginger\" Coote, the\nmercy flyer who brought Dm\nCrowley from hii ctbin on Angui\nHorn like to hospitel here recenUy\ntor treitment for frozen feet, luffered i iprained leg Siturdiy u\nhe wis loading hi* plme.\nCoote lUpped on in icy bank u\nhe wu carrying two large pails\nof oil to his machine, md fell,\ndoubUng hii leg under him. Me\naroie but found that hi* leg could\nnot hold him md wai forced to go\nto hospital.\nAU tripi ot the plan* wlU be\ncmceUed for a tew dayi.\nAdvertising Director\nof Provinct Rttirti\nVANCOUVER, March 15 (CP).-\nW. C. Ruuell. advertising director\nof the Vmcouver Dtily Province\ntor the put 27 yeen, is retiring\non lupermnuiUon, It wu announced Siturdiy.\nHe wiU be lucceeded by W, A,\nGreen who hu been employed in\nthe deportment for the put 10\nyean.\nFREDERICK M. I. ROY,\nWESTERN RAILROADER,\nPASSU AWAY IN N.S.\nNEW MINES, N.S., Mat-eh 15\n(CP)-Fredirlek M. B. Roy, 64,\nwho wu * Cinidlin Pacific railway conductor In Ita weitern dlvlilon fer 26 yur*, dltd Saturday\nat the home In whleh he wu born.\nHe returned hire tivtrtl monthi\ntge ifter suffering a itroke In\nVincouver In September.\nfor Prince Serge Mdivani\nTRAGEDY MARKS\nEND OF SECOND\nOF THE FAMILY\nBrother Alexis Killed\nin Auto Crash Few\nMonths Ago\nWIFE SEES PONIES\nCRASH, HUBBY DIE\nWas Married to Lady\nFormerly Wife of\nDead Brother\nDELRAY BEACH, Fl*., March 16\n(AP)\u2014Prince Serge Mdivani wu fa-\nAbove\u2014Prince Serge Mdlvinl.\nBtlow\u2014Hll wlft, Louise Alter vin\nAim, Ntw York society girl.\ntelly injured on the polo field here\ntodty.\nThe prince, one of the timed\n\"marrying\" Georgia Mdivani! died\n10 minutei after being kicked in the\nhud by hii own pony.\nThe iccldent occurred it Uie Gull\nStreim polo fields.\nMdivsnl wu \u00bb brother ot Prince\nAlexis Mdivmi, former husband ot\nBarbara Hutton, who wu klUed a\nfew monthi ago in an automobile\naccident in Spein.\nPrince Serge wu mirried only I\ntew weeki igo to Louise vm Alen,\n(Continued on Pege Ten)\nShamrock Refuses\nGrow in Amtrico\nBy the Cinidlin Presi\nSure there ere ihemrocks md\nshimrocks but no son or diughter\nof Erin will idmit my of the varieties gracing St. Patrick's day\nthis side of the AUmtic ire worthy\nof tht \"trlfolium minus\" accepted\nti the naUonal emblem ot Ireland,\nwhere It green* in profusion in the\nwoods.\nIreland's shamrock refusu to\nthrive tn America. Cinadiin florist! admit thli. There ire teveral\ntrifoliate planti boutlng the Irish\nname and uied here u substitutes\nbut they ire \"just cloven\" to the\nexile of Erin. At the sime time\nthere ls ilwiys \u25a0 big demmd for\nthe pseudo-shvnrock this Umt of\ntht yeir md some grower! ln virloui parte mike * ipeclalty of It*\nproducUon.\nTndlUon hu it Uie ihimrock became the nitional emblem ot Ire-\ntend when it wu honored by St.\nPitrick who in hii preachings to\nthe druld* uied the trl-leaf u m\nillustration ot Ul* Bleued Trinity.\n\"Shvnnkh\" is Arabic for trefoil,\nheld ucred In Iran u emblematic\not the Penlin Trtedi.\nCHURCHILL URGES SUSPENSION OF\nSANCTIONS AND RETURN OF SAILORS\nBIRMINGHAM, Mirch IS (CP).-Wlmton Churchill, formtr\nchmcellor of tht exchequer, urged tht \"suspension\" of unetlom\nigilnst Italy for tht duration tf th* prtunt Locirno crisis, In * speech\nhtrt lttt night.\n\"It ihould bt possible,\" ht uld, \"to relieve our ttllor* from their\nlong vigil at Alexandria and bring thl miln portion of eur flltt Into\nheme wtter* whert, for miny reuons, thtlr present* Is greatly\ndulrtd.\"\nONTARIO FLOOD\nWATERS RISING\nAn Ice Jam Threatens\nBelleville; Traffic\n. Is Rerouted\nBELLEVILLE, Ont., March IS\n(CP).\u2014Huvy week-end rains added\nto the flood menace in thil itricken\ncity today, ciusing fun thit in ice\nfield ibove Cmnifton dam may\nmovt down ind forUfy the ice-Jem\nln the flooded Moir* river.\nThe reins raised the height of\nwiter running through downtown\nstreets u much u five inchu. In\ntht extreme lower part of the busineu section, flood witen igaln ran\nInto itores. Lut wtek the witers\nwere five feet deep ln thl* ire*,\nforcing reildenti to evacuate.\nGang* of workmen were kept\nbuiy today cutting up large cake* of\nIce left in the main itreete by tbe\nrahing witers H wn he**-, to) rt-\nsumtr traffic along the provincial\nhighway but the itretch of witer\nmd Ice-filled roid wu not cleared.\nTraffic wa* rerouted for Uie fourth\nconsecutive diy.\nFIVE FINED FOR\nFAILURE TO HAVE\nRADIO LICENCES\nFlv* Ntlion pteplt plttdtd\nguilty In city poilct court Setur-\ndty morning btfort Magistrate\nWilllim Brown to unlawfully\nworking a radiotelegraph ippara-\ntui not undtr, ner In accordance\nwith iny linnet, lnd wtr* lentenced to piy flnti tf 82.80.\nThou tppetrlng and pleading\nwere Albert Olson, George Olson,\nCharlu H. Stark, Leonard Gusts'.\nson md Douglas Nlgll.\nNICKEL CARGO\nSTILL HELD UP\nHALIFAX, M\u00bbrch 15 (CP)-Cui-\ntoms official! tonight were awaiting\ninstructions from Ottawa regarding\na ihipment of Cmadian nickel consigned to Germiny.\nDetained at a preciutlonary meuure to prevent my vlolttion of\neconomic unctions igiinit Italy,\nthe 73 boxes had been under harbor\npolice guird ilnce Frldiy, when the\nAmericin freighter Liberty irrived\nto load them.\nThe Liberty wu itlll it pier 30\ntonight tiking on copper bin ind\ngeneral cirgo md wu not expected\nto finiih loading until tomorrow\nafternoon.\nBritiih Boot li\nSeized With Load\nof Booxe Aboard\nPORTLAND, Me.. Mirch 15 (AP)\n\u2014The cout gu*rd patrol boat Harriet Lane brought the captured 72-\nfoot British power boat Mi-erinko\nInto port today with a cargo of alcohol eitlmated by cout guard officers at 7200 gallons\nNtw Manager\nfor CP.R. Hottl\nWINNIPEG, M*rch 15-Hugh C.\nMicJtrlue hia been ippointed\nminiger of the Royil Alexindrit\nhotel In Winnipeg, lt wis mnounced\nhere by H. T. Mithewi, general\nmanager of Cinadian Pacific hoteli,\nMontreal. Mr. MacFirline, who hu\nbeen assistant maniger ot the Royal\nAlexandra ilnce lut June, succeeds\nA. H. Devenish, who hu been granted leive of *b*ence due to iU health.\nThe appointment Is effective immediitely.\nMr. MicFirlane wu born it\nKnowlton, Que., in 1881 md hu\nbeen ln Canadian Piclfic service (or\n27 yeen. He wu an Inspector Ui th*\nsleeping md dining car depirtment\n*t Calgary from 1929 to 193. and I*\nwell known there ind ln other part*\not wutern Canada.\nSTOCK MARKET IS\nBACK ON FEET;\nGAINS GROW\nNEW YORK, Mirch 18 (API-\nSpurred by Indleetlont thit wir\nwill bt ivoldtd In lurept, (hi\n\u2022tock.mirkit Saturdiy icortd tht\nwidest gains In mor* thin twe\nyun.\nNumerous luuu tint had taken\ne seven besting during the pait\nwuk Kind Into th* nee-very\nmovement with idvmcti ef $1 te\niround 88.\nThi Auoclited Prtu ivingt\nef 80 ttocki htid en idvtnct of\n1.7 at 61.5 the greitest llnglt day'i\nupturn ilnct Jinuiry 15,1834.\nMut luuu cloud iround thtlr\nbut notwithstanding itm* Jit*\nprofit-taking.\nMarkets at\na Glance\n\u2022y th* Canadian Prtu\nToronto tnd Montretl\u2014Induitriil\nstocki ihtrply higher.\nToronto mines\u2014Shtrply higher.\nNew York\u2014Stocks rebound snd\nclow study.\nWinnlpeg-Whut down Vt to 114\ncenti.\nLondon\u2014Btr sUvtr higher; other\nmetals unchmged.\nNew York\u2014Metal* unchmged.\nMontrul\u2014Silver steady.\nNew York\u2014Rubber md cotton\nhigher; coffee ind iugir unchmged.\nNew York\u2014Canadlin dollar unchmged at 1.00.\nFRENCH TO VOTE\nLEFT VS. RIGHT\nPARIS, March 15 (AP)-Rlght\nmd left wingi ot 17 quarrelling\npolitical parties wlU itruggle et\nthe polli in AprU to emerge with \u2022\ngovernment that cm govern France,\nMany, like lormer President Gis-\nton Doumergue, who left ln dilguit\n\u2022tier hli \"public ufety\" ubinet wu\ntorpedoed, call the preunt crliii\nthe \"lut chance\" of the parliamentary system.\nThe left ll organized, Communiiti\nhobnobbing with the \"bourgeoli\"\ngroup ot the liberal leider, Hirriot.\nThe right Is divided but the best\nelectioneering midline of Franc*,\nwithout \u2022 ptrty libel, ii becking\ncenter ind right partiw under the\nbroad libel \"nitlonil republican!.\"\nThe set-up pit! the \"populir\nfront\" igilnst the \"nationals.\"\nThe left controls parliament now,\nlupporUng the Sirraut government.\nB. C. House Will\nProrogue Within\nTwo Wttkt Timt\nVICTORIA, Merch 15 (CP)-lt\nwu predicted Saturday the Britiih\nColumbii legiilature will be reidy\nfor prorogitlon within two week*.\nAfter two md a half weeki' in\nsession, the house adjourned for the\nweek-end with the budget debate\nhilt over. Once thli is disposed of,\nth* estimates md the health insurance blU remain to be discussed,\nwhich cm be done before the end\not the month. As yet there i' no government indicition of when Uie\nhealth bill will be introduced in\nthe houu. Night sessions commence\nMondiy.\nCoal Strikt in\nWalts Thrtattntd\nSWANSEA, Wilei, Much 15 (CP\nCtble). - Welih inthraclfe cotl-\nfield* tonight faced the pouiblUty\nof e strike Ukely to have serious\neffects on the Cinadian inthrteite\nuiion, opening In a tew weeki\ntime.\nAlreidy leven freighter! art tying tully loaded with more thm\n70,000 ton* here md et Port Talbot, awaiting newi that the St.\nLawrenc* 1* again navigabl* to\nMontrul. But iubtequent ihlpmenti\nmay be Jtopardlied.\nTWO DAUGHTERS\nOF FARMER ARE\nSHOT TO DEATH\nHired Man Is Believed\nResponsible for the\nAlberta Crimes\nTAKES OWN LIFE\nPOLICE SURMISE\nHome, Barn Burned\nAlong With Body\nAlleged Killer\nLETHBRIDGE, Alt*. March 13\n(CP)\u2014Doublt murdtr tnd suicide\nwu btlltvtd ky poilct todty te bt.\ntht solution ef thru dttthi it th*\nfarm of C. R- tlluen, tight mllu\nnorth *f Turin, Alta. Turin li\nabout tt mllu northtut of Leth-\nHorrlbly mingled by thet-gun\nptlleti, tht   bodlu  ef the twe\ndiughten of Ellison, Aliln and\nLiuntn, tged 18 and 18 rupee-\ntlvtly, wtrt found tt tht firm yts-\nttrdty. Th* eorpu ef Louis Cub*,\n38, wu found, burntd to \u25a0 iktlt-\nten, In ttl birn. Mf. Illwen'i fine\nfirm Komi and barn wtr* smol-\ndtrlng rulm todiy.\nPoUce believed the two girls were\nmurdered during  Uie ibeence  of\nother member* of the fimily Saturday afternoon, ud Cuba committed\nluicid* In the barn after setting tire\nto both structures.\nRoyil Cinidlin police were in-\nvutigttinp today. Coroner Dr. D.\nB. Fowler his ordered \u00bbn lnquut\nto open here Wedneiday morning.\nCuba, a Hungarian, wa* hired\nmm *t tb* Eliawn farm.\nNeighbor! noUcinr the fire arrived In time to remove the girls'\nbodlu trom the burning home before lt was demoUshed.\nCOAST PIONEER\nIS DEAD\nVANCOUVIR, Merch 15 (CP) -\nFuneral servicu will be held eerly\nthis week tor Capt. Edwin Sayre\nScoullar, pioneer resident of Vancouver who died here Friday night.\nCapt. Scoullar was well-known in\nbuiiness and military circles in\nBrIUsh Columbia. He wu born in\nStint John, N. B.\nCipt. Scoullir wu one of the first\nownen of tbe New Westminster-\nVancouver electric interurban line\n\u2022nd of the fint telephone compmy\nhere. He buUt Central ichool ind\nhelped in building the tint Vucouver hotel.\nGETS DREDGING\nCONTRACT\nOTTAWA, Mtrch 15 (CP)-British Columbia Bridge Si Dredging\nCompuy Limited of Vucouver has\nbeen twirded the contract for\ndredging the north irm of the\nFruer river, lt wu mnounced Siturdiy by the depirtment of public\nworki. The contract ii for 574,042.\nAnother contract awarded waa for\nI protection wall on the Fruer\nriver (north irm), B.C. It wu\nawarded to R. R. ChriiUe, New\nWestminster, it $8,718.75.\nCLERK HEIR TO\nVALUED LANDS\nHOLLYWOOD, Mtrch 15 (CP).-\nJimei-R. Willi!, \u00ab-ye*r-old cterk,\nuid today he htd inherited in\neighth lnterut In Louiilmi iwamp\ntends thit hid luddenly become\nworth $10,000,000 beciuse ot in oil\nbom.\n\"I htvt iccepted in ofter of $1,-\n920,000 for i leue on my there of\nthe lmd netr Rhodesu, Louisimi,\"\nuld Willis.\nTEXTILE PROBE\nTO OPEN TODAY\nMONTRSAL. March 15 (CP)-Tht\nroyal commiuion probing the textile\nindustry of Cmada wiU open it* tc-\ntlvitlu tomorrow *t Sherbrooke.\nJuiUce W. F, A. Turgeon ot Stiktt-\nchewm irrived here tonight ud\nwill proceed to tb* Mitern town-\nihlp* etrly tomorrow morning.\nFrance Would Leave League\nRather Than Discuss Peace\nProposals With the Germans\nGermany Demands Discussion on Peace Plans]\nand That She Take Part in Council Meet\non Equal Terms With Other Powers\nFRANCE WILL HOLD OUT, EVEN IF\n\"WRECKS LEAGUE\", SAYS CABINET!\nFrance Refuses Withdraw Plan of Sanctions]\nAgainst Germany; Britain Feels Situation\nIs More Serious Than Ever Before\nBy CANADIAN PRIM\nAn icciptence, but with itrlng* itteehtd, wu unt to London\nlut night by Chtnctllor Hitltr In rtply to in Invitation to Gtrmtny\nto und a reprtuntetlvi to today'i muting of th* Lesgue ef Nitloni\ncouncil.\nCondltioni itteehtd to thl rtleh'i tcceptence led te virtual abandonment ef ill hope thet Qermeny will be reprutnted whin th*\noouncll meet* thli afternoon to decide whet mtuuru irt to bt tiktn\nagtlnit tht Gtrmtn govtrnmtnt ftr Itt remlllterlutlon of the Rhine-\ntend In violation ef the Trttty of Locarno.\nCOUNCIL WILL MEET IN PRIVATE\nThe council will meet In private lession to cemlder tht Gtrmtn\nreply, whleh demindtd thtt Hitler's peace propouli be discussed\nsimultaneously with tht Germin occupation. Thli condition would\ncompel the French tnd Belgians to ibindon their position thit thty\nunnet ntgotlttt u long u Germin troopi remiln In tht dtmlllterlud\n-one.\n\"I would wilk out ef tht council before I weuld de iuch a thing,\"\nuld Plerrt-Itltnnt Fltndln, tht Frtnch fortlgn mlnlittr. \"I weuld\ntvtn Ittvi tht Lttgut of Nitloni.\"\nHOLD OUT TO \"THE BITTER END\"\nFrom Parte cimt Instructions to the French dtltgetlon here te\nheld eut \"to the bitter end* fer puniihment ef Qirminy. Reliable\nsources uld e Germin emliury hid mtt with refusal In hll tfforti te\npenuidt Frtnch leaders to drop consideration of unctioni.\nHitter will resume hll Rhinelind (puking tour with * speech it\nFrankfurt tonight Ht will review troopt en tht flnt innlvtrury of\nthe niurreetlon of eeneerlptlon In th* rtlch. .  ,\nOUTLOOK IS DEFINITELY DARKER\nLONDON, Mtrch 15 (CP cabli)\u2014Th* Europun outlook li definitely darktr tonight\nCondltioni whleh Gtrmtny tttaehu to her prut'nee it tomorrow.\nmtltlng of tht Lttgut ef Nitloni council leave th* tltuttlon woru,\nIf poulble, then It wat before.\nChmcellor Hitler ttteches twe condition! te Germin aeeeptenee\nef th* council's Invitation: (1) That th* Gtrmtn reprastntttlvt shall\nattend the council meeting en a bull of complete equality with othtr\nrepresentatives; (2) thit Herr Hitler's peace propouli ihall bl discussed at tht umt timt ll German occupation of tht Rhineland.\nPltrrt-Itltnnt Flandln, th* French foreign mlnlittr, declines he\nwill return homt md leive thl council rather than accept the second\ncondition.\nBRITISH SHOW DISAPPOINTMENT\nTh* British, white taking the \"official ground thit the decision'\nMu with the lttgut oouncll, obviously ar* duply dlsippolnted. Te\nthtm tht disappointment ll ill tht greater because th* Brltlih gov.\nernment mode e speciil effort to secure Germin representation whin\ntht Locarno trttty It dfcscusstd by tht lttgut council.\n(Contlnutd on Pig* T*n)\n400,000,000-bushel\nWhtat Crop in 1936?\nVANCOUVIR, M\u00bbrch 15 <CP)-\nGlven u average growing season,\nthe prairie provlncu wiU produce 1400.000,000 bushel wheit crop\nthl* yur, W. M. Nul, general manager of weitern Unci of the Canadian Pacific Railway, uid here todiy.\nMr. Neal il on a trip of Inspection to the cout and expect* to remiln here for tbout 10 days.\nHe believei the long drought\nwhich hai afflicted the prairie provlncu llnce 1029 1* ended.\nSANK OF ENGLAND\nOPPOSES SANCTIONS\nLONDON, March 15 (CP-Htvu)\n\u2014Thl Havu news igeney leirned\ntonight that tht Btnk of Englind\nIt bringing pressure on th* govtrnmtnt to oppose application! ot\nunetlom against Gtrmtny.\nFlmncltl leaders art convinced\nGtrmtny'i rtply to a leagut embargo would be denunciation of\nthl \"standstill igreement\" under\nwhleh tht rtlch makes Interest\npiyments en Brltlih tradt credits.\nHAROLO DE VERE\nPARTRIDGE DIES\nTORONTO. March 15 (CP) -\nHarold dt Vere Pertrldge, brother\nof Arthur Ptrtridge, general maniger ud lecretary of the Canidlan\nDally Newipeper isiociition, ditd\nit hi* home yuterd*y,\nHOSPITAL MATRON DIES\nASHCROFT, B. C, Mrnch 15 (CP)\n\u2014 Mlu Dorothy M*y Cornwall, mi-\ntron of the ltdles' mental hoipital\nhere died todty ifter I ihort Ulnen.\nAberhart Says He's\nNot Playing \"Double\nHand\" in Alberta\nCALGARY. Mirch 15 (CP) -\n\"You don't need Douglu, (Mijor\nC. H. Douglu, founder of Social\nCredit theoriesi md you don't neel\nme,\" Premier Aberh*rt of Alberta\ntold foUowen it hi* prophetic Bible\ninititute here today u he denier}\n\"rumors' 'about hlmielf and merted\nhe wai not playing % \"double-hind\"\nwith the people ot the province.\nPremier Aberhart uld he was\n\"trying my belt\" to bring the pro-\nvinctel govemment'i chief recon-\n\u25a0trucUon adviser to Alberta but he\nwu unwilling to tramfer \"fuU luthority\" to Mijor Douglai whil* he\nreteined Uie reiponilbiUty.\nTHE WEATHER\n(SUNDAY WEATHER)\nTempertturts: Min.   Maa_|\nNELSON    25\nVictoria   41\nVmcouver  \u2014 40\nKimloopi  - 30\nPrince George - 23\nEiteven Point  34\nPrince Rupert  34\nAUin    - 33\nDiwson, Y.T   0\nSeatUe   -_\nPortland, Ore 40\nSen Pranclico - -. 52\nSpokme  \u2014 **\nLo* Angelu\t\nPenUcton   -\u25a0\nVemon   \t\nCilgiry \t\nIdmonton ....\nSwift Currant .\n..\u201e S3\n 34\n 27\n 24\n II\n 30\n    8\n 10\nPrince Albert ..\nSukitoon \u2014\u2022^^^^^_\nQuAppeUe -\u2022\u2022\u2022 JJ\nWinnipeg   \u00ab\nMooie J-w  , _ \u00bb\n40\nSO\n52\n52\n44\n46\n48\n30\n54\n54\n72\nit\n55\nS4\n3D\nJO\n50\n52\nJO\n PAQE TWO \u25a0\nW ANE PARTY\nARE FETED AT\nBOARD BANQUET\nChamber Commerce\nand Skating Club\nEntertained\nARCHDEACON IS\nNELSON SPEAKER\nLibby and Dr. Kimble\nReply on Behalf\nof Spokane\nCommunity of interest between\nKelson md Spokane, the uniformly\ncordial relations between the two\ncenters, and the pleaiure each took\nin entertaining the representative of\nthe other, were strongly emphasiied\nonce again, at the board of trade\nbanquet at the Hume Saturday evening to the large visiting delegation\nfrom the Spokane chamber pf commerce, Spokane Figure Skating club,\n\u25a0nd Spokane Hockey club. The tunc-\nHon took the aspect of a community\nurelcome to the visitors, for business\nnen and citizens were accompanied\n>y their ladles, and naturally the\n:ivic center, which provided the\nImpulse for the visit, was one of the\ntopics touched ln all the speeches.\nThe banquet, which was held in\nlhe lilver room, began about 6:45,\n|nd on account of the other major\nrvent of the visit, the program at\nhe skaUng rink, was limited in the\nlime available for touts, President\nIff. B. Bamford, of the Nelion board,\nleing toastmaster.\nIn opening the brief program,\nPresident Bamford expressed the\npleasure of the board in acting as\nlost to the representatives of the\nhamber of commerce md ot the\nskating organizations, and then gave\nIrey to Ven. Archdeacon Fred H.\njraham, who was charged with the\nluty of extending the formal wii-\nlome\nRCHDEACON WELCOMES\nMaking one of his characterisUral-\ny happy speeches, Archdeacon Grt-\nNew Way to Hold Loose\nFALSE TEETH\nFirmly ln PUce\n_JB*} false teeth tnnoy and bother\niy dropping md slipping whu you\nat, talk or laugh? Just sprinkle a\n,tt)e FASTEETH on your plates\nhit new, tasteless powder holds\neeth firm and comfortable. No\ntummy, gooey pastv taste. Makes\nrreath pleasant Get FASTEETH\noday at my good duig store.    \u2022'*\nham told the visitors how wtnnly\nNelion welcomed them, for many\nreasons, one of the tint being because of Spokane's geographical\nnearness to Nelson, many visits having been exchanged. Nelton had had\nthe honor of entertaining delegation! from the board. The Nelwn\ndelegate* came back from one of\ntheie tripi warm in the praises of\nthe hospitality they had received,\nthough some of them could not remember mueh ln detail. Spokane,\nfor ita part, generously gave Nelson\n\u25a0 name for hospitality, md to live\nup to this wu not always euy.\nCondensing his remarks because\nof the number present who were\n\"waiting to go on a skate,\" Uie archdeacon dectared it to be a very fine\nthing that at a time when tbe newspaper! were filled with headUnes\nreliting to demilitarized zone*, military forcei, and possibilities ot war,\n\"we are meeUng here together in\nfriendship,\" and the only forces that\nentered Into consideration ot thote\nvisiting across the InternaUonal\nboundary line were thoie of cuitom* ud excite. Though Uie two\ncountriei had one of Uie longest\nboundary llntt id the world no que*-\nUon arose of guarding it, and \"we\nare u welcome on your aide ai you\ntre on our tide.\" Without let or\nhindrance the people of the two\ncountries could cross the line at\nwilL Having the same ideals, the\nsame customs, the same pastimes,\nthey could fraterni-e as the nationals of few contiguous countriei\ncould do.\nHe could not help feeUng that the\ntwo districts represented had a great\nfuture, if only they could sei-e it.\nThey hid followed the advice of\nHorace Greely md come weit, md\nafter the romance ot travel, hid remiined to stay, most of them probably because nowhere elso could\nthey live so happily, enjoy so much\npeace, have such prosperity, or\nmake so many friend*. And so this\njoining of hmd* across the border\nfound expression in marly ways, one\nof them illustrated by th* pretent\noccuion.\nNELSON'S LITTLI FLUTTER\nAdmitting that Nelson had been\nbitten by the expansion bug, the\narchdeacon said of coune it didn't\ndeil in billions of dollin, such u\nAmerican* were accustomed to, in\nmatten of credit, debt, ud io on,\nbut treated itself once in a while to\na gentle flutter of hundreds of\nthousmdi, md so bad come to build\nitself a civic centre. It had a good\nmmy curlen and ikiten, wbo In\nthe put hid been badly treated by\nthe weatherman, but now it could\nmake it* own ice, and tell the weatlv\nermin to go to Halifax. It had alio\nbuilt an auditorium, which wu going to be an asset to the town, so\nthe people of town ud diitrict in\nvarioui conjoined intereit* could\nmeet together. Nelion wu a email\ntown, with only MOO populaUon, but\nhe uked Uie vliiton to give credit\nto Nelson'i \"noble 6000'' tor building\nthta tine facility at the InittgtUon\nof the germ ot expansion .\nRemarking that \"the more we (et\nGuide for Travellers\nNELSON, B.C., HOTELS\n\"Finest in tht Interior\"\nHUME HOTEL\nFt** Bu* Service Geo. Benwell, Prep.\nBREAKFAST We and UP\nLUNCHEON 40c te CO* DINNER 40* to 85c\nROTARV AND GYRO HEADQUARTERS\nTELEPHONE 787 NELSON. B.C. ttt VERNON ST.\nHUME-V. Dolmige, F. McCle-\nS. J. Crocker, R. S. Greer*\nVmcouver: J. McDonald, N.\nd, A. Flnlayson, J. Ferguson,\nder; T. A. Burns, H. W. Cour-\nR, Steedmm, Medicine Hat;\nItr. ud Mrs. S. GuUett, Boswell; A.\njfackereth, Broadwater; Mrs. A. M.\njrge, Mill E. Stoddirt, J. B. Burge,\n, A. Meggy, Gray Creek; J. Glb-\nImi, J. J. Carter, Toronto; T. W.\nUlshouse, Nakusp; W. B. Powen,\nGardner; G. S. Moore, Cranbrook;\nShicll, H. E. Miard, Fernie; Mr.\nnd Mn. A. R. Wilmer, P. F. Horton,\n\u2022lino; Mr. and Mrs. W. Fraser,\nkooteniy Bay; H. A. Bote, I\\w\nkjnver; A. Whyte, Victoria; Miss\nTyion, Tntl;  H. S, Renfrew,\nVernon; O. Prideaux, Princeton; R,\nMorrii, Edmonton; C. A. Yule, R.\nS. Fraser, W. R. Lawrence, Penticton; R. H. Ward, W. Kaiser, Mn.\nJ. H. Schaefer, Miu .V. D, Schaefer,\nMin E. Rudkin, Miss E. M Hardin,\nMiss R. Phalr, Mis* G. Rudsten,\nDr. A. H. Kimble, P. Lewekson, B.\nWoods, C. Malone, E. 3. Bray, Miss\nJ. Aihlock, H. Goudge, G. H. Simon-\nson, R. Stafford in. ion, K. Jonei,\nJ. T. McDermott F. L. Crowe, S. C.\nSmlthwlck ud family, Mr. and Mn.\nL. Libby, Mr. and Mn. N. T. Anthony, Mr. and Mn. E. K. Banen,\nMiss G. Sherwood, Misi E. L. Williams, Miss M. R. Barnet, Mn.\nLundequist and daughter, Spokane,\nWash.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. MARCH 18. 1988\nTHE SAVOY HOTEL\n\"Whert the Guest It King\"\nMODERN SAMPLE ROOMS\nFullv Licenced\n124 Baker St.       W. K. Clark, Prop.       Nelion, B. C.\nlew Grand Hotel\nP L KAPAh. Prop.\nHot ind Celd Wtttr\nSlnelt Me ue: doublt Mt ue\nMonthly rttti HO.OO ud\nPH  -34      61. VERNON ST\nitl-tntt 3at.it Nrtua\n[iterior of British Columbia's\ndost Interesting Newspaper\nOccidental Hotel\n703 Vtrnon St Phut M7L\nH. WASSICK. Pres.\nSPECIAL MONTHLY RATES\nGood Comfortable Rooms\nFullv Lleenud\nMadden Hotel\nA rVtleomt Awaitt You\nJ\u00bbS A MADDEN Proo.\nCemilettlv Rtmodtlied\nHot ud Celd Wtlir\nIn tht-HEART ot tht City\nPHONE N     BOe waRD ST.\nRANSPORTATION - Motor Frelqht Lino*\ntogether Uie happier we will be,\" he\nreferred to the common language\non the two shies of Uie line, and expreued the hope that thii occuion\nwould have many luccesson, whu\nSpokme and Nelson people could\nget together. He concluded by a\nspecial reference to the vl*itlng\nsk*tera, who were shortly to show\ntheir grace ud agility at the rink,\nand bade them a hearty welcome,\nLIBBY CHAMBER\nSPOKESMAN\nLee S. Libby, chairman of the Inland Empire relations committee of\nthe Spokane chamber, replied tor\nthe delegation from Uie chamber.\nSeated next Archdeacon Graham,\nMr. Libby, who is treasurer of John\nW. Graham k Co., nld he felt wholly\nat home ln Kelson, in part because\nhe wu ilttlng beside a man named\nGraham, for he had worked beside\nor worked for John W. Graham for\n14 yean, hi* employer never Uring,\nhe uld, of telling of the hospitality\nenjoyed here two year* ago u member of a Spokue delegation.\nHe said Nelson enjoyed a unique\nreputation in Spokane fer ita hospitality, and there were never any\ndifficulty in getUng a good crowd\ntogether when a visit to Nelson\nwu in view.\nMentioning that Spokane was populated to a large extent by people\nof New England and middle west\norigin, whose ancestry was English,\nhe uid Spokane looked on tht\npeople up here u their cousins.\nWith the trouble that Europe was\nhaving over boundary Unes, lt wu a\nwonderful thing that such fraternity\nwu a matter of course here.\nSPOKANE MAY EMULATE\nCommenting that no town wa*\nany good unleu it had a live chamber ot commerce, Mr. Libby iaid\nthat Spokue didn't yet own its light\nor gu, and had to resort to th* Fox\ntheiter for targe public gatherings,\nbut still he hoped the chamber would\nsome day bt able to invite the people\nof Nelton to viiit \"our own civic\ncentre.\"\nIn reference to the mention of\nbillion*, Mr. Libby pointed out thit\na bilUon dollan could be bumble\nin origin, md uid a atatlaticlu had\nworked out that $1 let aside in the\nyear 1, and implemented each year\nsince by mother dollar, would now\namount to a bUlion, to Americani\nwere not worrying over owing bilUon*.\n\"We admire your auditorium, and\nappreciate greatly your invitation to\ncome up md see it, and the hospitality your are extending to ui,\" he\nconcluded.\nThe lait speaker wu Dr. C. Hale\nKimble, presidnt ot the Spokane\nFigure Skitlng club, and chairman\not the committee that arranged the\nvisit to Nelson. He uld the president\nof the Nelson club, Mlu Kathleen\nOordon wmted to annex Spokane,\nmd be penonaUy wu willing to be\nannexed.\nAfter a humoroui reference to\nthe quality of the Nelson-Nelway\nroad, which be iaid one ot the ladiet\not the party described u the bett\nihe ever tasted, he said the memben\not the party were greatly impressed\nwith everything they uw when they\ngot te Nelson. They were amued at\nthe wonderful skating rink, ud ad'\nmired the beautiful auditorium that\nwould be iuch a cultural center foi\nthe young people.\nYOUNG PEOPLE RIAL\nDIVIDENDS\nBut what moit inspired them wis\nth* ipirit behind Nelion'i new in'\nsUtuUon, this solicitude for the future generation. While Nelton wu\nfamous tor its gold mine*, which\nbrought dividend* to it* banks, its\nreal dividend*, he declared, were\nIt* young people. He uw Nelion em-\nb*rked on * program calculated to\nmake it the cultural, athletic, rec\nnational md educational center of\nthis part of the Canadian northwest,\nand he visualized a future when the\nroadi leading to it would be filled\nwith can bringing people to make\nuse of its facilities.\nDr. Kimble congratulated Nelson\non the civic pride which had found\nsuch a noble expreuion, md suggested it wu in Une with the ac-\ncompUihment of \"one of your Canadian citizens who put over a five-\nyear program in nine months.\" Every\ngreat institution wu uid to be the\nlengthened ihidow of tome one individual, md he mentioned thtt in\nthe ifternoon he had had the pleaiure of meeting the man who wu\ncredited with being the fither of\nNelson'i civic centre.\nFellowship, he uid, wis like a\nwine of a rare old vintage, and\nthe party had been Impressed with\nthe transcendent quality of tbe hospitality they had been received with\nin Nelson. It wu something seldom\nto be found \"except in your incomparable Canada,\" he concluded.\nWATERS APPLAUDbO\nBefore dispersal, Preiident Bim-\nford called on Aldermm T. H. Waten, \"father ot the civic centre,\" to\nitand up. He wu generously applauded.\nThe pleulng function, which had\nbeen punctuited by ready applause\nfor the speaken and hearty laughter\nat their quips, wu brought to in\nned with \"God Scve the King.\"\nPER80NNEL OF PARTY\nThe chimber ot commerce group\nconsitted of Dr. C. Hsle Kimble,\nMr. tnd Mn. Lee S. Libby, Mr.\n\u00bbnd Mn. H\u00bbrry T. Anthony, J. T.\nMcDermott, F. Lloyd Crowe, D*vid\nC. Gull-erf, Rollin Stafford* md\nJack Stafford, Mr. and Mrs. S. Carl\nSmlthwlck and children, John, Virginia, Marilyn tnd Carleton, and\nKenn*rd Jonei, R. H. Ward and William Kleser represented the Spokane Hockey club. The Spokane\nNEISON CURLING\nDRAWS\nGames have been icheduled for\nplay at the Nelion civic centre curling rink thii week u follows:\nMonday 7 p.m.\u2014R. D. Hall vs. C.\nI. Archibald; T. W. Ledingham vs.\nA. Jeffi; C. E. Mansfield vs. W.\nBrown; A. B. Gilker vs. A. S. Horswill; G. W. Steele vs. W. K Clark.\n9 p.m\u2014R. Andrew vs. A. Browne;\nW. Allen vs. R. E. Crerar; M. Michelson vs. C. F. McHardy; Dr. W.\nB. Steed vs. E. E. L. Dewdney; J.\nG. Bunyan vs. H. S. Watson.\nTuesday, 7 p.m.\u2014J. W. Smiley vi.\nS. P. Bostock; E. H. Woolls vs. R.\nD. Hall; C. E. Mansfield vs. W. E.\nWasson; Aid. Roy Sharp vs. T. W.\nLedingham; A. Baird vs. P. E. Poulin.\n8 p.m.\u2014T. R. Wilion vs. H. Houiton; J. A. Smith vi. S. Haydon;\nF. A. Whitfield vs. J. M. Gordon;\nH. Bush vi. Dr. H. H. MacKenzie;\nR. E. Horton vi. W. Marr.\nWednesday, 7 p.m.\u2014W. Allen vs.\nG. H. Ferguson; R. E. Crerar vs. D.\nLaughton; R. Andrew vs. W. K.\nClark; W. T. Fotheringham vs. Aid.\nA. G. Ritchie; W. B. Steed vs. A.\nKraft.\n8 pm.\u2014Kimberley vs. Prince Albert hockey game.\nThursday\u20147 p.m.\u2014R. D. Hall vs.\nJ. G. Bennett; W. E. Wasson vs.\nAid. Roy Sharp; J. B. Gray vs. M.\nMichelion; H. S. Watson vi. J.\nTeague; J. G. Bunyan vs. Aid. A.\nG. Ritchie.\nFurther gamei will be posted\nliter.\nFREIGHT TRUCKS\nLEAVE NELSON TWICE DAILY\n5 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Except Sunday\n\u2122 TRAIL LIVERY (0. *_\u2022*\nTRAIL LIVERY (0.\nM. H. MclVOR, Prop.\nGoo. li Friday 13\nVictim\nTRAIL, B.C., March IS\u2014Al far u\ncould be learned today, Trail citizens escaped the tough luck traditionally associated with Friday 13,\nbut animals weren't so lucky, and a\ngoat, wandering around in Tadanac\nmuniciptlity unsus-ecUngly aware\nthat it was an unlucky day anyway,\ncame under' the vigilant eye of\nChief Campbell and wu thrown into\nthe hootegow.\nOtto Gray of\nNelson Passes\nFormer Wire-Chief <of\nB. C. Telephone\nCompany\nOtto Ambrose Gray, former wire-\n| chief for the B. C. Telephone com'\nI pany, died at Nelson Sunday after\n| a lengtl.y illness,\n| Mr. Gray was 30 yeara old, md\nI wu born ln Homer, New York.\nHe went to Cranbrook in 1112 u\n| an employee of the B.C. Telephone\ncompany ud came to Nelson as\nI the compuy's wire-chief ln 1929.\nj    He wu the son of Arthur C. Gray\n; and leavei hii wife, Lillian, one\nFIFTY CURLERS\nATTEND CHURCH\nClose to SO memben ot the Nelson\nCurling club attended lervices at\nTrinity United church Sunday eve-\ninng for the annual church parade\nand service. Rev. J. A. Donnell.\nchaplain of the club, spoke reltUve\nto the game and the spirit of play,\non the theme \"Thoughts of a curling\nclub Chaplain.\"\nWolves and F.A.C\nin Hockey Final\nFirst Game Slated for\nTuesday at 7 P. M.\nPostal Boxes Are\nDamaged ot Troil\nTRAIL, B.C, March 15\u2014According to complaints reaching city police department postal mail boxes\nthroughout the city are from time to\nUme being damaged, supposedly by\nyounger boys. Pointirg'out that the\noffence wu a serious one, Chief\nJohn Laurie today reuested the cooperation ot parent* in the city,\nuking that they explain to chUdren the criminal nature of the offence and warn them of the penalty\nittached.\nIn Hospital for\nNearly a Year\nPete Chorney Lost a\nLeg When Fell Under\nTrain Near Nelson\nPeter E. Chorney, who hu been\nu inmate of the Kootenay Lake\nGeneral hospital since May 7, 193S,\nwu discharged Saturday and is being sent back to his home at Calder,\nSuk.\nPete, who is only 21, met with\nsevere injuries lut May when be\nattempted to Jump the G.N. train\nen route to Ymir. Running \u00bblong-\ntide the train he Jammed hli foot\non a rock and wu thrown a considerable distance. His lnjurlei\nproved so serious that his left leg\nhad to be amputated above the knee,\nand he lost two toes on hit right\ntoot, besides receiving injuries to\nhis right arm.\nDespite these physical handicaps\nhe appeared quite cheerful, and said\nthat he had been well treated by the\nhospital staff and doctors during his\nlong itay in hoipital. Queried about\nhis future he smiled and remarked\nthat he did not think that be would\nbe riding freight trains uy more.\nAiked about his family Pete itated\nthat he could not count them all\nbut did recollect having eight brothers ud two (liter*,\nMlu idt, superintendent, pointed\nout Uiat Pete's cue wu one ot many\nthat are cared for at the hospital.\nFor room rate alone he had cost the\ninstitution $782.50, while Uie only\nremuneration that the hospital could\nexpect was the 70 cents a day which\nthe government contributes to\nwards patient's keep, amounting to\n(219.10.\n\"Substance\" Theme\nof Lesson-Sermon\n\"SUBSTANCE\" wu the subject\nof the Leuon-Sermon in Flnt\nChurch of Christ, Scientist, on Sunday.\nThe Golden Text wu: \"Honour\nthe Lord with thy substance, and\nwith Uie firstfruits of til thine increue\" (Proverbi 3: 9).\n* Among the citation! which comprised the Letson-Sermon wu the\nfollowing from the Bible: \"The Lord\nreigneth, He is clothed with mijesty; the Lord is clothed with\nstrength, wherewith He heth girded Himself: the world also is stab-\nllshed thit it cannot be moved\"\n(Psalmi 93: 1).\nThe Lesson-Sermon also included\nthe following passage from the\nChristian Science textbook, \"Science\nand Health with Key to the Scriptures\" by Mary Baker Eddy: \"Spirit,\nthe synonym of Mind, Soul, or Ood,\nis the only re\u00bbl substance. The\nspiritual universe, Including Individual man, is a compound idea,\nreflecting the divine substance of\nSpirit\"\nFigure SkaUng club group embraced Paul Smithson, who wu\ncaravan captain. Miss Ruth Phair,\nMiss Jane Ashlock, Mr, and Mrs. E,\nK. Murray, Mlu Henrietta Hum,\nGeorge O. Brlen, E. K. Barnes and\nMiss Mary Ruth Barnes, Miss Gloria\nSherwood, Miss Sarah Lee Williams, Claude Malone, Elton Slmond-\nson, Miss Ellen Cavanaugh, Ernest\nBray Lorln E.- Woods, Mrs. Ivar\nLundqulst and little Miss Britta\nLundquist, Miss Eva M. Hardin, Mn.\nJ. H, Schaefer ane Miss Ada D.\nSchaefer, Miss Esther Rudkin, and\nHarold Goudge.\nI Face Covered With Pimples\nCauses Much Embarrassment\nTher* is little donbt but thst Impnn tod\nImpoverished blood is the soil on which\nthon nd, white, pus filled pimples de\nvtlop ud thrive, tnd thtt nothing ihort\nof * rigorous, persistent blood purifying\ntreatment will eradicate them from th*\n\u2022yittm.\nBurdock Blood Bitten binlihee bad blood\nand with the had blood banished tha ikin\nbecomes fne trom pinplrs.\nTry t few bottles and be convince-.\ndaughter Agnes, two sisten, Mn.\nAndrew Burghardt of Lyle, N. Y.,\nand Mn. AUu Lamphcre fo Po-\nlutch, Wash., and one brother Ezra\nGray of Paulson, Montana.\nHume Takes Lead\nIn Juvenile Series\nSam Pasacreta'* unassisted goal\nhalf-way through the final period\ngave the Hume hotel juvenilei a\n1-0 win over the Fairview Juveniles\non Saturday morning to carry a one-\ngoal lead into the second game of\na two-game total-goal seriei for the\nright to pl\u00aby Uie Comet* In the loc*l\nJuvenile Hockey league final*. The\nsecond and final game wlU be\nplayed on Tuesday.\nThere wu very litUe difference in\nthe two clubs, the only goal of the\ngame coming when Sam Pasacreta\ncaught the whole Fairview teem up\nUie ice on a power play, ud went\nright in on George Bishop to score.\nBiihop made a valiant attempt to\nsave but tfter coming out of Uie net\nthe puck trickled through hii legs.\nOn Saturday'! game both teami itill\nhave an even chance ot making the\nfinali. The Fairview team had the\nmost scoring chances, Mayo, Jonu\nand Hunt missing glorious chances\nto score. Freddy Romano also missed\na good chance to score for the Hume\nclub. Dick Wallace played his best\ncame of the season for the Fairview\nteam.\nBoth the French-McCrelght end\nGallicano-Bowell defences showed\nup well, and their work was mide\neasier when moit of the forwardi\non both teami hugged the boardi on\ntheir trucks.\nR. Taylor md Jimmie Ringrose\nrefereed the game.\nThe teams were:\nHume \u2014 Suto DelPuppo; Carl\nGallicuo, Gary Boweli, John Deferro; Freddy Romuo, Gabby Gore\ntnd Bill Kapak; Sam Pasacreta,\nGeorge O'Geoski md Aubrey Custance.\nFairvlew-Oeorge Bishop; Benny\nMcCreight and Archie French; Stan\nMorrii, Howie Hunt and Harold\nMayo; Dick Wallace, Raymond Burgess Bob Andrews md Frank Jones.\nStops by periods:\nBishop     3   4   8-13\nDelPuppo          5   4   8\u201415\nPROCTER C. G. I. T.\nIN A DRILL\nPROCTER, B.C, \u2014 The C.G.I.T.\nRainbow group met Monday when\nMrs. A. S. Ritchie rehearsed a drill\nwith the girls, Mlu K. Butler accompanying on Uit violin.\nTen members attended, Including\nEileen Pound, Edith Johnson, Elsie\nBennett, Barbara Ritchie, Loli\nHunt, Faith Ritchie, M*ry 8chw\u00bbr-\nok, Mary Merrifield, Alice Croiby,\nMn. A. S. Ritchie and Mn. A. C.\nPound. Later the girls went to the\nbasement of the United church\nwhere they held * sing-iong, conducted by Mrs, Pound.\nThe World Day of Prayer wu obierved in Procter when Mn, J.\nHurst read the icripture leuon md\nMn. O. Johnson led the responsive\nreading. The period of thanksgiving was led by Mrs. H. Clift. Prayen were offered by Mrs. D. Mcintosh, Mrs. W. Muirhetd md Mn.\nA. C. Pound.\nThe offertory wat received by\nMn. J. MacLeod.\nMn. W, Htig-Smellie acted ai\norganist.\nProcter Junior Red crou met\nwhen thoie present were from the\n3, 4, 5, and 6 gradei. Selma Smith\nand Edna Heighten were elected\nboard officers for the week.\nTrail Rangen group met when In\nthe absence of the mentor, Rev. A.\nC. Pound, the meeting was led by\nPaul Ritchie. A general discussion\nof speciil badge work and plans\nfor a ipecial Enter meeting were\nprincipal Itema. Rtngen present\nwere Piul Ritchie, Iin Carne, Henry\nJohnson, Rill, Mike Sokoloskl, ind\nKenneth Soles.\nEducition week wu obierved in\nProcter school, the speeken in the\nJunior room being Mra. A. S. Ritchie,\nRev. Clyde Harvey, tnd Rev. A. C.\nPound. Rev. A. C. Pound ilso give\nan interesting address to the senior\npupils and an informal geography\nlesson on Chlnt.\nEvangelists Tell\nof Christ's Gospel\nGlad Tiding! church wu packed\nSunday night with an intereited\n[-10 t-II-18 \"Mi -to. c. aoueipn*\nevangelists, sing, play ud present\nthe Gospel in their unique way.\nThe evangellsUc menage dealt\nwith the modern evil* of today, giving at a solution to the problems\nwhich humanity is facing, the Goi-\nped concerning Jesus Christ\nThe girl evangelist* will continue\n-iu,-|u ajoui _noi jo; ul'eduiw .pir)\nNEEDLES MAN IS\nGAZETTED A J.P.\nJsmes Freetand of Sproat Lake\nhu been named a notary public,\naccording to a notice in the BriUih\nColumblt Gazette. Ralphey Leckett\nof Needlea hu been gtietted a Juitice of the peace.\nWOULD 8TOP 8TRTET ORATORS\nADA, Oklt. (CP)-Mtyor J. D.\nWilloughby proposes a town byltw\nbarring campaign oratory on the\nroadways within two blocks of\nMain streeL ,\nAccording to local officials, trrangementi have been made with\nthe managemnt of tbe local civic\nrink to start the commercial league\nhockey finals on Tuesday evening\nbetween the league leading F. A. C.\nIntermediate* md the Wolvei, wlnnen of the semi-final lerlei with\nUie Savoy rlub.\nThe game i* scheduled to be pliyed *t 7 p.m. to 8:30 pjn. The tecond\ngame of the triple header program\nwill bring the Reds md Scouts together ln a bantam league game\nfrom 8:30 to 9:15 p.m. After which\nthe Fairview and Hume Hotel Juvenile teams will play the second\ngame of their two game total goal\nseries for the right to play the\nComets in the league finals.\nWhile the itrong Fiirview intermediate team ls favored to win Uie\nfinals, which will be a but two out\nof three game affair, the Wolves\nhave plenty of supporten who figure\nUiat their favorites have just struck\ntheir true form, is three itraight\nconvincing wins in the playoffs\nprove that the Fairview team wiU\nhave their hand* more than full if\nthey wish to carry off the UUe.\nThe Hume Juveniles at present\ncarry a one goal lead into the final\ngame u the reiult of a 1-0 win in\nthe first game lut Saturday, but on\nthe play anything cu happen in the\nsecond game.\nPuck Schedule\nfor This Week\nGames on Wednesday\nand Friday Nights\nNELWAY BETTER\nTHAN EXPECTED\nThe ichedule for local hockey\nteami at the rink from Mondey to\nand including Friday it u followi:\nMondiy, 7-8 a.m., Roughriders\nmidgets pracUce; 4-5 p.m\u201e Redi and\nBlues, practice; 5-5:30, Hume Juven-\nilea, practice; 5:80-8:30, Wolves, com\nmerctals, practice.\nTuesday, 7-8 ajn., Panther midget\npractice, 7-8:30 p.m., Fairview In'\ntermediatei vs. Wolves, flnt game\nof final series; 8:30-9:15, Red! vs.\nScouta; 9:15, Hume vs. Fiirview.\nJuveniles, second and final game ot\nJuvenile semi-finals.\nWednesday, 7-8 tm. Wolves, Juvenile pracUce.\nThunday, 7-8 a.m., Scouts, midget\npractice; 4-5 pjn., Pmthen,, bantam\npracUce, 5-5:30, Comets, Juvenile\npractice; 5:30-8:30, Fairview intermediates, practice.\nFriday, 7-8 a.m., Fiirview midgets,\npractice; 7-8:30 pjn., Wolvei vs.\nFiirview intermediates; 8:30-9:15,\nPanthers vs. Blues, bantams; 9:13,\nComet* vs. Fairview Juveniles or\nHume.\nSpokane Caravans Get\nThrough Without\nDifficulty\nRoad conditions south ot Nelson\nwere not is bad Saturday u bad\nbeen anticipated for the two motor\ncaravans from Spokue coming up\nby Nelway. Men were sent out to\nNelway by Assistant Diitrict Engineer O. G. Gallaher to be on hand\nto help cen if they should get in\ndifficulties in that area, but both\ncaravans checked through in good\norder. The Spokanites reported they\neven made good time between Salmo and Nelson, this 27-mll itretch\nhaving a good surface owing to the\nice covering, or to the ground being\nfrozen where exposed.\nOwing to the Saturday night\nmowfall, which would retard melting, no doubt the Spokane motoriit*\nfound conditions much the ume tor\ntheir trip home. The chamber of\ncommerce group for the most part\nitarted south early Sunday, while\nthe skaten spent the day here,\nleaving late in the day, with \u2022 night\ntrip before them.\nFrosty conditions at night, while\ndelaying the drying out of the\nroads in the Nelson-Creston riding,\nhave enabled heavy vehicles to\noperate late night, under the arrangement by which when the roadi\nare hard owing to frost the embargo\nfor units of over two toni, applicable\nduring the spring break-up, is relaxed between 10 p.m. ud 10 am\nMinimum Wage\nCase at Trail\nIs Adjourned\nTRAIL, B.C., March 18.\u2014Charged\nwith viol-tlon of Uie Female Mini-\n,ium Wage act whu he allegedly\nmployed a female penon at a wage\nless than that let out by the tet,\nHtrry Taylor appeared ln city police\ncourt Saturday morning and requested m adjournment until March\n.1. AcUng Police Magistrate Donald\nMacDonald agreed to the adjournment\nMrs. McBride Is\nAuxiliary Head\nAt the mnual meeting of the\nNels-.i Women's Golf auxiliary Mra.\nR. L. McBride was elected president\naglin and Mn. A. T. Stephenson\nwu named vice-president. Mn. E.\nC. Wragge ii secretary ud Mrs, H.\nLakes was named captain.\nGeneral plans for the comln?\nyeer were discussed but nothing definite was decided upon.\nNELSON ENIOYS\nFINE WEATHER\nSunday wu another iprlngllke\nday ud although ihowen threatened intermittently they held off\nand a big throng of Nelsonltet went\nout ot doors for an afternoon stroll.\nWhile the temperature remain*\nfairly high there ii itill a great\nquantity ot ice on the lake, indicating that It must hr.ve frozen td great\ndepth during Uie freeze-up. Sundry temperatures were 38 md 40\ndegrees.\nRoughriders In\nTie ior Second\nLed ty len Dingwall who tcored\ntwo goals, the Roughrlden wut\ninto,a Ue for second place with the\nScouts in the local Midget Hockey\nleague whu they nosed out the\nScouta by a close 3-2 icon on Saturday morning. Bob Morris scored\nthe other goal for the winnen\nwhile Howard Campbell ud Aliu\nEmmott were the scoren tor th*\nScouta.\nNumeroui penaltiei were handed out by Referee* Jimmy Ring-\nrose and Bill Brown.\nTbe teams were:\nRoughrlden\u2014Jimmy Allan, Jack\n\"Slugger\" Gray, Frank Raukeis, BIU\nMcEwan, Ian McKenzie, Alex Jurlloff; Bill j iyers, Im Dingwall, Doug\nNoel and Bob Morris.\nScout* \u2014 Dave Rees, Howard\nCampbell, George Gill, Ronnie Newell, Allan Emmott, Bert Ramsden,\nGlen Price, Dave Hale, Alex Strud-.\nwicke, Everett Kuhn and Morris\nAldersmith.\nFranct Uses Its\nWarning Signals\nPARIS (AP).-Fnnce, with the\nflnt step ln it* military preparations\ncompleted, tuned up ita elr raid defence* early Sunday morning. Walling itrui in Parii neer midnight\nbrought the tint teit of the warning signals since Germmy remilitarized the Rhineland.\nAt Nancy, officials itarted the\nconstruction of underground shelters\nhi the center of the town. The town\ncouncil of Epinal appropriated 200,-\n000 franci (ibout $13,000) to buy\ngu muks and rescue equipment\nSecurities Act\nPresent Title\nIn publishing Saturdiy Uie memorandum by E. C. Wragge on the\nSecurlUet \u00abct, for the repeal or\namendment of which the Nelion\nboard of trade is uking, the act wu\nreferred to ln the heed over the\narticle, u the \"Security Frauds Prevention act.\" Thtt wis the UUe under which the ect wu tint in force,\nbut a couple of yean igo lt wu\namended to \"Securities tet\"\nPUR  INDUSTRY THRIVES\nREGINA, (CP)-Total v\u00bblu*i of\nfun told in Saskatchewan for the\nfiscal yeer 1934-15 wu 81,283,058,\naccording to the mnuel report of\nthe provincial department of natural resource*. Of this amount,\n$1,049,817.78 waa rtw fur producUon, md $213,238.25 wai private\nfur firm production.\nTAKE   IT  IASY\nTOKYO (CP)\u2014Jipm't new minliter of finance, Chujl Machlde, uya\nIt \"Choo-Jee Mth-chee-dih\", tUeis-\ning all tyllbales equally.\nGiven Suspended\nSentence Failing\nKeeping Rec:rds\nTRAIL, B. C\u201e M:rch 15-Plead-\n'ng guilty to a charge ot failing to\n.eep the necessrry records under\nthe Male Minimum Wage ect, James\nDoherty, Jr, wu allowed to go on\nsuspended sentence for 30 days ud\nordered to pay ccc'.s of the court\nwhen he appeared in city po'lce\ncourt Saturday mornlnt before Acting Police Magistrate Donald MacDonald. T. E. Gordon was ciimel\nfor the defence. The crse had been\nadjourned from March 7.\nMothers Hare Sale\nfor Boys' Band Fund\nMembers of the Mothen' Association of the Nelson Boys' B?nd hsd\na seU-out tor their uie of home\nbaking in the Star Grocery Saturday morning when a nice sum was\nraised for band work. Mn. V.\nGrave*, Mn. W. R. Gibbon. Mn.\nJ. Draper and Mrs. A. Whitehead\nwere ln charge ot the ulei.\nPORTLAND BEATS VANCOUVER\nPORTLAND, Ore. (CP) - The\nPortland Buckaroos took the fint\nstep towsrd the finals of the Northwest Ice Hockey leegue Sunday\nnight by defeaUng the Vucouver\nLions 3-2.\nSkiers Make Fast\nCascenl, Nelsu\nNelson sklen set up Aew records\non the Silver King trail Sundy,\nnejoU.tlng the descent from the\nridge beyend the mine camp to the\nmain roed in Rosemont in 18 minutes.\nD-nny McKay led the perty of R\nGreenwo.d, Bob Brown md Blend\nMarley a merry chase. Cutting\nthrough switch-backs over the ror.d\nand h-lf way down the next shortcut The party had their skill ta'cn\nup on the J-Ssle-Vlctoria tractor.\nNext S_n..y th?y \u00bbre planning to\nhike back over the King to the\nFern mine on Hall creek.\nUse thi Want Ads for Results!\nONLY FRUIT-A-TIVES\nGAVE LASTING RELIEF\nFROM CONSTIPATION\nConitipation and atomach\ntrouble banithed quickly.\nAfter lutTering monthi from coniti-\npaiion,Mr. W.Huddlestone, Belleville,\ngot quick relief from Fruit-i-tivet.\nHe uyi, \"Conitipation troubled me\nseverely for months. Nothing did my\ngood until I tried Fruit-a-tivei. They\nbrought me quick and complete relief.'*\nA famoui doctor mide Frult-t-tive*\nwith extracts of APPLES, ORANGES,\nFIGS, PRUNES ud HERBS. The\nresult isaremedy natural ud effective.\nFruit i-tivet bring, not just temporary\nrelief, but relief that tails.\nFRUIT-A-TIVES\nN-turV. PnMtt tmt H\u00abr\u00bbt\nDrink moreT\u00a3A formality\/\n IVJ\nNAKUSP LADY\nIS AID HOSTESS\nNAKUSP, B.C.\u2014Mn. H. L. Miller\nwu boitesi Tuesday when members\nof the United Church Ltdles' aid\nmet at her home.\nThe business session was conducted by the preiident, Mrs. E. W.\nBiU. Arrangements were made tor\nthe first of a series of quilting bees.\nThe committee in charge consists\nof Mn M. LaRue, Mrs. M. Ion, Mrs.\nH. Thurgood ud Mn. H. L. Miller.\nPlan! tor decorating for ipeclal\nEuter services were ilso discussed.\nThe hostess wu assisted serving\ntet by Miss R. Hamer.\nThose present included Mrs. E.\nW. Bill, Miss R. Hamer, Mrs. M. La\nRue, Mrs. G. Keys, Mrs. A. Lidberg,\nMn F. Carlson, Mrs. G. D. Stibbs,\nMrs. McRoberts, Mrs. M. Ion, Mrs.\nE. C. Johnson, Mrs, H. Thurgood,\nMn. C. B. HambUng, Mrs. O. Sal-\nstrom ud Mn. Miller.\nMiss Jessie Ion, who recently\ncompleted her training at Kamloops\nhospiUl, arrived Wednesday to\nspend a holiday at the home here,\nJ. Hightm of Birds lmding was\nin town Tuesday en route to Halcyon.\nJ. Finch was a visitor from West\nDemars Wednesday.\nMn. H. L. Hiltz has returned to\nGraham's Landing after spending\na week in town.\nW. MlUer of Burton was a Nakusp\nvisitor Monday.\nMrs. Horton and Mrs. P. A. Yeld\nof Edgewood were guests at the\nhome of Mrs. A. Dunn Tuesday.\nThey left Wednesday for Halcyon.\nE. Abriel of Pope's Harbour, N.S.,\n\"fmeweu to\"\nBACKACHE!\nHsr bs* tdM**-*-*\nWt __smMe\u2014nt ya\n\u2014ikt esuld-'t b>\n\u2022Vx-sttd\" it-.\u2022-\u2022-\nIk* a_Ur_ wkh b\u00ab\nfriwis tnd wss'welt.\nHtrsisttridriitd\nIht tt Ukt Dodd's\nKidee; Pills. Her bsrlsthe nor. Yiniil\n\u2014entli-sUsa ltd enerrj  returned   htr\nart, ss-rkW- her strp mu iprifhtly\u2014 snd\n\u2022ocs liiin she wu hef \"old sell.\"       II.\nSay \u2022OODir. TO MCMCHI wlft\nDodds Kidney Pills\n\u2014\u2014\narrived in Nakusp Tuesday. Mr.\nAbriel Is a brother of the Ute\nThomas Abriel.\nCaptain E. Trimble was in town\nTuesday en route to bis home at\nVancouver.\nF. Broughton of New Denver was\na motor visitor here Tuesday.\nMiss M. Hall of East Arrow Park\nvisited Nakusp Tuesday.\nD. Fulkco returned Tuesday from\nNelson.\nMra. Dobson of Baie Verte, N.B.,\nwho was visiting in Nelson, a guest\nof her brother ond sister-in-Uw,\nMr. and Mrs. E. W. Somecs, is a\nguest here of her brother-in-law\nud sister, Mr. and Mrs. W. Maxwell.\nW. Mole of Arrow Park wu a\nvisitor here Wednesday.\nMrs. D. Lyons of Arrow Park was\namong shoppers in town.\nIS IN HOSPITAL\nAT KASLO\nNILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINQ. MARCH 18. 1938\nHEADQUARTERS\nFOR QUALITY\nFOODS - FRUITS\nMEATS - VEGETABLES\nPHONES 865\u2014866\nSAFEWAY   STORES   LIMITED\nKASLO, B.C.,\u2014Chrii Marsden of\nMeadow Creek is a patient in Victorian hosplUI here.\nRev. T. W. Reed, paster of St.\nAndrew's United church hu returned from a visit to Vancouver.\nGeorge Mclnnis of Howser was\nhere Saturday, leaving Sunday to\nspend a few days in Nelson.\nW. Brandon of Gerrard was a\nweek-end visitor in the city.        ,\nGeorge Abey of Mirror Lake was\na visitor in Nelson Saturday.\nMrs. J. R. Tinkess and Mrs. Brunei Murphy were joint hostesses\nto the Ladies Bridge club, at the\nhome of the latter, Monday. Players were Mrs. Fred Aydon, Mrs. B.\nF. Palmer, Mrs. J. R. Tinkess, Mrs.\nBrunei Murphy, Mrs. St. Denis, Mrs.\nFrank Wilson, Mrs. C. J. White,\nMn Jack Paterson, Miss Tina Bourget, Miss Irene MacGUlivray, Miss\nMargaret McQueen and Miss Katherine Streit.\nMrs. Frank Wilson was a bridge\nhostess Thursday, guests being Mrs.\nFred Aydon, Mrs. J. R. Tinkess, Mrs.\nBrunei Murphy, Miss Irene MacGUlivray, Miss Margery Speirs, Miss\nTina Bourget ud Miss Katherine\nStreit, Miss MacGUlivray was winner of high score prize, consolaUon\ngoing to Miss Bourget.\nM. Knight of Mirror Lake is a patient in Victorian hospital here.\nA. J. Dunnett of Nelson was a\nvisitor in town.\nThe Kaslo Social club held a party\nThursday in the Orange hall. Military whist was played with re\nfreshments foUowing. Seven tables\nwere in play, Nicareuga being the\nthe wining table, with Mrs. Jack\nPaterson, Mrs. Chester Speirs, Mr.\nRiley and Norman Leet playing.\nYAHK LADY IS\nW.A. HOSTESS\nYAHK, B.C.-The Women'i tsio-\nciiUon of Uie United church met tt\nthe home of Mn. Carl Andenon\nwhen there were nine memben and\none viiitor present. After business\na social hour wes spent.\nMrs. A. L. Lythgoe was a tea\nhostess when her guests included\nMrs. A. E. Perkins of Kaslo, Mrs.\nL. Walther, Mn. D. White, Mrs. J.\nHamilton, Mri. B. Revani, Mn. J.\nNedelec, Mrs. E. Lazenby, Mrs. S.\nJ. McCartney ud Mn. E. A. Lythgoe.\nMrs. A. L. Barnhardt and daughter, Naida.were visitor! from Glen-\nUly Thursday.\nJ. Johnson of Canal Flat visited\nfriends here Friday.\nMajor Hornby of Goatfell West\nleft Saturday to visit Edmonton.\nGrace Wardrop* was a Creston\nvisitor.\nJack Sales of Canal Flat visited\nfriends to Fort Steele.\nNancy Revans has been confined\nto hei- home with a sprained ankle,\nfor a week.\nBob Tipper of Glenlily was a visitor here Tuesday.\nBill Jupp and Bill Simmons were\nbusiness visitors to Camps east\nCyril Radford has returned from\nCrow's Nest where he spent a\nmonth.\nMrs. H. Blinston who.spent several days visiting relatives in Cranbrook, has returned.\nBob McGillivray, foreman at the\nlocal airport camp went to Cranbrook Saturday to attend the curlers' ball. i\nNaid Barnhardt of Glenlily returned Sunday from Kimberley\nwhere she had spent three months.\nD .White and son Murray, were\nvisitors in Nelson Monday.\nSWEAT OUT\nTHAT COLD!\nColda mean poisons in the body.\nIt's easy to sweat them out with\nmustard baths. Soak your whole\nbody in tt hot bath with 3 table-\nspoonsful of Colman's. Or wrap\nyounelf up warm and take a\nsteaming mustard toot balh. Then\nget into bed right away and\nperspire.   Just try it.\nYou will find Dr. Mustard's way\nis the best bome\nremedy ... Simple-\n, and old-fashioned\u2014\nbut very effectiv*\nm>\\\ntuc\n(OIM\/VNS\nMustard\nVisitor Honored\nat Slocan (ily\nSLOCAN CITY, B.C.,-Mr. and\nMrs. K. Popoff entertained Saturday in honor of Mrs. E. J. Leveque\nof Fernie who is here visiting relatives.\nGuests were Mrs. Leveque, Mr.\nand Mrs. R. R. Hanna, Mr. and Mrs.\nW. E. Graham, Miss B. Lang, Mrs.\nT. McNeish and J. Wafer.\nMr. and Mrs. W. E. Graham enterUlned Sunday in honor of Mrs.\nE. J. Leveque of Fernie. Invited\nguests were Mr. and Mrs, K. Pop-\noff, Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Hanna, Miss\nB. Lang, Mrs. T. McNeish, the guest\nof honor Mrs. Leveque, J. Wafer,\ntnd Mr. and Mrs. Graham.\nMrs. T. McNeish entertained on\nTuesday in honor of her daughter,\nMrs. E. J. Leveque of Fernie. Guests\nwere: Mrs. J. P. Sutherland, Mrs.\nW. Hislip, Mrs. R. G. Warner, Mrs.\nR. L. Reynolds, Mrs. R. E. McMillan, Mrs. A. E. Gage, Mra. S.\nLittle, and the guest of honor, Vn.\nLeveque. Prizes for bridge were won\nby Mrs. Reynolds and Mrs. Warner.\nMr. and Mn. K. Popoff had for\ntheir dinner guesU Sunday Miss B.\nLang, Miss L. J. Reynolds and\nCharles E. Barber.'\nMrs. Harold Swan of Nelson spent\nthe week-end here a guest of her\nfather-in-law, Mayor P. Swan.\nDelicate-colored wash materials\nwill not fade If they are soaked in\nlukewarm water, to which a few\ndrops of turpentine have been added. This should be done before they\nare washed.\nBECAUSE pain can itrlke with\nthe swiftness of an arrow ... be\nprepared 1 Keep Sloan's Liniment\nhandy. When applied, it quickly\nsends a soothing warmth into the\ntissues. By promoting active circulation Sloan's relieve* congestion\nand easts the pain. Juit ptt it on, it\nU quickly effective and is not greasy.\nThe moment paini or ache* itrike\nduring the day or night.., apply\nSloan** Liniment for speedy relief.\nAlways have it in the home as a\ntint aid to which the family can\nturn when In pain. Get a bottle\ntoday from your druggiit.       \u00bbJ\nIt**'\n\u201eCrUS\ne*v>*stS\nso**tS5\nOfficer Honored\nat Invermere\n- PAQE THRU\nSOCIAL HAPPENINGS\nIN NELSON CITY\nThii column is conducted by Mrs M. J. Vigneux. AU new* of a\nsocial nature including receptions, private entertainments, personal\nitems, marriages, etc.. wUl appear in this column. Telephone Mn.\nVlgneux at ber home. 818 Silica streeL\nINVERMERE, B.C.-At a meeting\nof Windermere District branch of\nthe Canadian Legion, Commander\nJ. Copley-Powles, RN., was presented with a past president's medal\nin recognition of his three year's\npresidency, and hii many acta of\ngenerosity to this branch.\nDuring this time, the mortgage\non the Legion hall was terminated\nand the branch is in a flourishing\ncondition.\nAt a meeting it was dected that\nthis branch would send T. W. Turner, the secreUry-treasurer as delegate to the annutl convention of\nthe Dominion Canadian Legion in\nVancouver and the end of March.\nMiss MadeUne Turner has left for\nEdgewood to visit Mrs. Yeld for a\nmonth.\nMr. Elson of Calgary, a retired\nC.P.R. conductor, who has just returned trom a visit to England,\nwhere he placed his youngest son,\nBilly, as a cadet on the training\nship \"Conway\" at Liverpool, visited\nMr. and Mrs. C. A. McGulness here.\nWhile in Liverpool Mr. Elson\nspent some time with Mr. McGuin-\ness' relatives there, and brought the\nlatest news from the old country.\nHe was in London during the funeral services for the late King\nGeorge.\nRev. Mr. Harding, priest of Calgary, western field secreUry for\nthe general board of religious educaUon in Canada, spent the weekend as house guest of Rev. and\nMrs. F. Stanford at the vicarage, Invermere HeighU.\nAt Christ church Sunday morning\nhe gave an address on \"Religious\nEducation ln the Home and Sunday\nSchool.\"\nThe playoff for the curling cup\ndonated by the local branch of the\nCanadian Legion has been corn-\ncompleted. The rink skipped by Mr.\nKirkpatrick with Major T. C. Bell,\nJack Nixon and Lloyd Tegart won\nthe final.\nJoan and Robert (Bob) Kerr were\nhostesses. Friday evening at a St.\nPatrick skating party at the civic\ncentre skatir| -rink when their invited guests were Miss Necna Mc-\nLenent, Miss Norma McCurrens,\nMiss Elizabeth Ferguson, Miss Shirley Beeston, Miss Nina Gansner,\nMiss Murielle Whimster, Miss isabelle Young, Miss Genevieve Griz-\nzelle, Miss Shirley Scatchard, Gordon AlUn, W. Affleck, John Norris,\nWalter Wood, Warren Ferguson,\nRobert Collinson and Jackie Argyle.\n\u2022   \u00bb   \u2022\nJ. MacGUlivray was in town from\nKaslo Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00bb\nShoppers in Nelson Saturday included Joseph Thompson of WiUow\nPoint\nMrs. F. Boyd of the staff, of the\nCanadian Bank of Commerce is\nspending her vacation in Trail and\nDeer Park.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. Charles Kelman,\nWard street, had as their week-end\nguest their niece, Mrs. W. R. Williamson of Trail.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMartin Lauritz, Fairview, leaves\nthis morning for Portland and Salem, Ore. In the latter place he will\nvisit his son, Norman Lauritz, who\nattends the University of Oregon.\nIts\nJ. Kerregan of Cranbrook is a\nNelson visitor.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss AUce Dunlop wai in the city\nfrom Crescent Bay during the weekend, a guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jess\nSanders, Baker street.\n,   *   \u2022\nCapL C. S. Price o. Sunshine Bay\nspent Saturday in town.\n\u2022 \u00ab   \u2022\nNoel Harrop left for Trail Saturday.\n.-_ .   \u2022\nShoppen in the city Saturday included J. D. Anderson of Kokanee.\n.     *     9\nW. H. Seamon, superintendent of\nthe Ymir Yankee Girl mine at\nYmir, spent the week-end with his\nfamily on Mill street.\ntet\nR. J. Boyle of Trail spent the\nweek-end in Nelson.\ntti\nMrs.  Russell  Tinkess  of  Kaslo\nvisited the city Saturday.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. Donald McCharles, wbo has\nvisited at\" Uie home on Carbonate\nstreet of Dr. and Mrs. John Gansner,\nfor the pait few weeks, has returned\nto her home in Vancouver.\n.  .  .\nMiss Woodwcrd. who teaches at\nAiniworth, visited frien.s in town\nduring the week-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nShoppers in Nelson Saturday included   Miss   Catherine   Streit  of\nKaslo.\nttt\nMr.   and  Mrs.  George  Murray,\nwho have visited in town, have re-1\nturned  to  their  home  in   Grand |\nForks.\nttt\nP. Chorney  left yast night for\nCalder, Sask.\n**t\nMrs. Ethel Gilroy of Chicago,\nwho is a guest of Mr. and Mrs. John\nGilroy at WiUow Point, was in the\ncity Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nE. W. Slader of Harrop spent\nSaturday in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nAmong those attending the Canadian Women's club banquet at\nthe Hume hotel silver room were\nton, was a week-end visitor in Nelson.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nShoppen in the city Saturday included Mr. and Mrs. Frank Abey of\nMirror Lake.\n.   .   .\nMri. WUUam Gray ot Salmo spent\nSaturday in Nelson.\nRev. Clyde Harvey of Procter was\na recent visitor in town.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMrs. W. Wagstaff, 1023 Observatory street, left Saturday to visit in\nVancouver.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMiss Eleanor Cameron, who\nteaches at Balfour, viiited in the\ncity Saturday.\n\u2022 *  -\nMisi B. Daviei, teacher of Boswell, was a city visitor over the\nweek-end.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u00ab\nShoppers in Nelson Saturday included Mrs. R. G. Elliott of South\nSlocan.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nJf F. Donaldson of Salmo visited\nin town Saturday.\nttt\nMiss Helen Affleck of Fruitvale,\nwho teaches at Sitkum Creek, was\na Nelson shopper Saturday.\nttt\nMrs. Thomas Wall of La France\nCreek ls a guest at St. Joseph's\nacademy.\n\u2022 . \u2022   *\nJ. Fairbanks of Slocan City visited Nelson during the week-end.\n\u00ab   \u2022   \u2022\nVisitors in town included A. Mac-\naereth of Broadwater.\n\u2022 \u2022   *\nMr. and Mrs. E. C. Knight and\nyoung son leave today for Nanaimo\nwhere they wiU make their home.\n\u00bb   \u2022   *\nMrs. Johnson of Fernie, an ex-\nresident of Nelson, was in town\nshopping Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. Jaeger of Spokane,' who\nspends his summers in Nelson, was\na week-end visitor in Nelson and\nWillow Point.\na   *    *\nMr. and Mrs. Philip Rahal, Josephine street, had as their week-end\nguest their daughter Miss Catherine Rahal, who teaches at Erie.\na   .   .\nMra. J. J. SeweU of Sunshine Bay\nwas among Nelson visitors Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2666   \u2022\nMr. Biggar of Slocan City spent\nthe week-end in the city.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nShoppers ln town Saturday Included Mr. and Mrs. Rogers ot\nSouth Slocan.\nKASLO DENTAL\n(LINK AIDED\nKASLO, B.C. \u2014 The Women'i\nAuxiliary of the Canadian Legion\nmet Thunday at the home of Mrs.\nFox. Mn. T. H. Horner, preiident,\nwas in the chair.\nMrs. Fox, secreUry, gave ber reports, which dealt principally with\nthe denUl clinic. A letter wis read\nfrom Dr. Young of Uie provincial\nhealth department in which he\ncommended this group of women\nfor the manner hi which they had\norganized and were carrying on this\nwork.\nIn regard to a letter from T. Taylor of Shutty Bench, it was considered probably that the children\nfrom that locality will come in to\nthe clinic on the same basis as the\nchildren of Kaslo.\nDr. T. R. Bourque of Nelson, in\ncharge of the clinic, has already\nspent some time here and wUl soon\nreturn to finish the work.\nThree Kaslo ladies tdvanced an\namount required to make up the\nnecessary total and the government\ngrant has been received. In tn, effort to re-imbune these women, the\nAuxilliary will, sponsor entertainments of various kindi, the proceed!\nto be turned into the denUl chnic\nfund.\nOwing to severe cold weather \u00abnd\nlack of power a moving picture\nshow to have been presented in February, was postponed but will probably be given at any early date. A\ndance to be held Ust month was\ncanceUed.\nCommittees for a coming tea were\nappointed as follows:\nCulinary \u2014 Mrs. Whlttaker and\nMrs. McGibbon.\nCanvassers\u2014Mrs. McGibbon and\nMrs. Fox.\nTea\u2014 Mrs. Horner, Mn. Driver\nand Mra. G. Palmer, with Mn. J. R.\nTinkess and Miss McQueen assisting in serving.\n\"White Elephant\" itell - Mn\nChandler and Mn. Latham.\nMri. McGibbon, \"Cheer-up\" secreUry, gave a report of acUviUes\nof the past two month*.\nMn Fox'was tea hostess. Those\nattending were Mrs. T. H. Horner,\nMrs. Fox, Mrs. WiUiam Whittaker,\nMrs. Fred McCfibbon, Mrs. George\nPalmer, Mrs. F. S. Chandlef, Mra.\nDriver, Mrs. E. H. Latham, Mrs. J.\nR. Tinkess and Miss Margaret McQueen. Miss S. Jesty came in tor tea.\n$ ^.itotf*'$*g (EtfmtMng^it\nWhat's New at \"THE BAY\"?\nCOLLEEN\nAPRONS\n]ust in time for St. Patrick's\nDay. Bright colored \"Colleen\"\naprons in printed ginghams.\nAssorted shades.\n69<\nNarrow Escape\nas (ar in River\nIs Guest at Sirdar\nFOR QUICK\nRELIEF\nJUST   PAT\nSLOANS\n%\"*4LINIMENT\nSIRDAR, B. C\u2014George Ever*]\nwas a guest of Mr. and Mrs. James\nPasscuzzo Friday and Saturday.\nCharles Botteril of Creston, who\nis in charge of the large rotary\nplow engaged in clearing the road to\nthe Bayonne mine, was home for\nthe week-end, the recent snow\nstorm stopping work. There are a\nfew more Creston men working\nthere.\nJ. S. Wilson was a visitor to Creston Thursday and Friday.\nMrs. L. Miller ot Sanco was a\nshopping visitor to Creston Friday.\nVictor Johnson of Sanca was a\nvisitor Creston Friday.\nMr. and Mrs. James Passcuzzo\nwere shopping visitors to Creston\nFriday.\nSeveral small rock sUdes took\nplace here on Friday on the railway.\nOne near Sirdar sUUon was responsible for deUying the train Saturday morning tbout an hour. Tho\nloctl section crew handled the rock\nclearing.\nFrank Hamilton of Kooteniy Lmding wai a visitor to Creston Thunday and Friday.\nFrank Pelle, who has been ratber\nill for some time was in Creston\nThursday for medical treatment.\nMrs. I. Lewis of BosweU wai an\novernight gueit ot Mr. and Mrs.\nJames Passcuzzo of Sirdar,\nDick Bevan has resigned as chef\nin the ktchen at the road camp here.\nGus Foster of Camp Lister replaces\nhim, with Donild Bolton, who arrived here Friday, at second cook.\nThe highway here ia being patrolled to remove any bouldera that\nwere slipping down now that the\nthaw has set in.\nPete Ostrlflchuk wai e viiitor to\nCreiton Saturday. He has secured _\ncontract for the delivery of firewood\nthere.\nSydney Rogers was playing with\nthe Creston bssketball team In a\nmatch against Bonners Ferry Fri:\ndsy.\nC. P. R. Men Manage\nto Get Out of Coupe\nUnder Water\nCANAL FLAT, B.C. - W. B.\nSmyth, bush superintendent for the\nC.P.R. here and H. Arbuckle. Ue\ninspector, had a narrov escape from\ndeath, when Mr. Smyth's coupe, in\nwhich they were riding, plunged\ninto the icy waters ot the Kootenay\nriver.\nThe men were on their way down\nfrom camp 10, some 30 miles up the\nMrs.  Duncan   Smith,  Mrs.   N.   J-j Kootenay from Canal Flat. At\nLowes, Mrs. C. G. Simpson, Mrs. R.\nL. Oliver, Mrs. E. M. Rodgers, Mn.\nL. Hanna, Mrs. T. H. Wall, Mrs. G.\nA. C. Walley, Mrs. G. Spencer Godfrey, Mrs. P. G. Morey, Mn. Harold\nLakes', Mrs. John Cartmel, Mrs. L.\nV. Rogers, Mn. L. H. Choquette,\nMrs. Robert M. Thompson, Mrs. R.\nA. Peebles, Mrs. L. M. Varner, Mrs.\nCharles Kelman, Mrs. W. E. Wasson,\nMra. G; Stuart Macintosh, Mrs. Harry Burns, Mrs. Nelson Murphy,\nMn. C. W. Tyler, Mrs. M. V. Allen,\nMrs. H. H. MacKenzie, Mrs. J. H.\nWheeler, Miss Kathleen Gordon,\nMn. A. A. Pagdin, Mrs. Norman C.\nStibbs, Miss Bessie MacKemie, Miss\nL. HoUand, Mrs. A. C. Emory, Mra.\nJ. A. Donnell, Miss Gladys Ewing,\nMrs. E. A. Mann, Mra. R. B. MacEwan, Mra. David Kerr, Mrs. G. F.\nLynch, Mn. Charles F. McHardy,\nMrs. C. G. Hogarth, Mn. W. S. Wilson, Mn. W. M. Walker, Mrs. John\nGansner, Miss Caroline I. DeWoUe,\nMiss Donalda McCharles of Vancouver, Misi Enid Etter, Miss Constance\nOgs'ton, Miss Patricia, Miss Gertrude\nHudson, Mrs. Hector MacKenzie,\nMiss Eileen Mackenzie, Mrs. D. D.\nTownsend, Miss Vera B. Eidt, Mrs.\nWaldo W. Ferguion, Mn. R. D.\nBarnei, Mill Mibel E. Rocl'ffe, Mra.\nJ. M. Kirk of Kislo, Mra. J. H. Argyle, Mra. Charles H. Hamilton, Mrs.\nJ. G. M. Lock, Mrs. Leonard Cow-\ndrill, Mrs. A. T. Stephenson,\nttt\nMrs. Andrew Scott of Willow\nPoint visited Nelson Saturday.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMr. and Mrs. William Fraser of\nKootenay Bay were week-end visitors ln the city.\n, \u25a0*\u2022 t, ,t\nMr. tnd Mn. Lewis Johnstone of\nthe Emerald mine were week-end\nvisitors at the home ot the former's\nparents, Mr. and Mrs. George Johnstone, Kootenay street.\n'  \u2022 \u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nMra. P. Kapak, Vernon stnet,\nhas returned from Spokane where\nshe hai been for the par' few dayi.\nShe was tccomptnied there by her\ndiughter, Miss Rose Kapak, who\nentered the nurse-in-tralnlng school\nof the Sacred Heart hospital,\niat\nS. Mtyzes of Rossland wai in\ntown Saturday.\n\u2022 *   \u2022\nAim Gilroy, manager of the Canadim Bank of Commerce in Cres\npoint along the road known as Red\nRock, about 10 milei from here,\nthere is a dangerous stretch bordering the river. ApparenUy the melting snow caused rocks to slide down\nonto the road. The car hit one of\nthese, causing it to swerve and it\nwent headlong into, the river.\nThe car landed upright in the\nriver, and although the water almost covered it, the men were able\nto extricate themselves through one\nopen window.\nAlex. Kearns was not far behind\nand he picked them up and brought\nthem into town. \"BIU\" and \"Harry\"\nara itill wondering how f ite missed\nthem.\n 1\t\nA  ROYAL  MEMORIAL\nLIVERPOOL, Eng. (CP)-Figures\nof King George and Queen Mary\nare to be included in a stained-\nglass window In the northwest\not Liverpool cathedral, the window\nbeing to commemorate t' - cathedral's consecration.\nFruitvale Ladies\nPlan a New Hall\nPrepare for Bazaar;\nRaise Money by\nBridge Drives\nFRUITVALE, B.C.,\u2014The Fruitvale Women'i insUtute met at Uie\nhome of Mra. F. M. Barrett on Wednesday afternoon. Thirteen members were present and three visiton\nand Mri. T. W. Woodi, preiident.\nA discussion took place as to size\nand plan of the new hall to be erected. The annual bazaar was also\ncommented on, and money voted for\nmaterial to be distributed to the\nmembers, to get the work well in\nhand, before the summer months.\nA series ot bridge drives, is also\nplanned, to Uke place each week,\nto the end ot the series. A ways md\nmeans committee was appointed.\nMrs. G. W. Baker, Mrs. R. Kidd, Mn.\nF. M. Barrett and Mn. J. Sadler,\nbeing named and Mn. W. Mills, and\nMn. J. Sadler, two new members\njoined.'\nA d*inty te* was served by the\nhostess, assisted by Mrs. D. C. Mason.\nA luccessful military whist was\nstaged in the tea room, Fruitvale\non Friday evening, to settle several\nsmall items owing following staging of the innual Christmu tree.\nSeven tables were played, Uble\n\"Robson\" winning high tcore with\n36 flags. E. Startup, J. SUrtup, 0.\nGrieve and M. Barrett, were winners.\nMra. J. T. Woods, Mrs. G. S. Biker,\nMn. D. C. Mason, Mrs. R. Curtis\nand Mra. F. M. Barrett, were joint\nhostesses.\nMin W. Bush of Salmo, hu been\nvisiting here, the guest of her liiter\nMn. J. DeBruyn.\nMra. R. Ruihton, who hit been\nviiiting in Nelson, gueit of Mr.\nand Mrs. R. Morrison, has returned.\nMiss Margaret Smith of the Trail\nTadmac hospital staff was visiUng\nhere on Tuesday, the guest of her\nparents, Mr. tnd Mrs. W. M. Smith.\nMr. md Mn. E. Cole, were visiting in Amble on Stturdty. guests\nof their son-in-law and daughter,\nMr. tnd Mrs. A. R. Heighten.\nSocial News\nof Rossland\nROSSLAND, March 12\u2014Alec Turner celebrated his 12th birthday tn-\nniverstry by entertaining hll friendi\nit hli home on Sixth avenue. Supper wai lerved, the Uble being\ndecorated with pink crepe paper\nand bearing a pink birthday cake\nbearing 12 candles. A couple ot\nhoun after muper were ipent in\ngames. The guests included David\nWood, Ronald SUudinger, Arthur\nMiUer, Eugene Miller, Donald Miller, Billy Miller, Jimmy Miller, Leonard md Joan Turner, Mrs. E. E.\nMiller, Mrs. G. SUudinger and Mrs.\nH. Ferguson.\n\u00bb   \u2022   \u2022\nRoutine buiiness occupied the it-\ntention of the members of the Women's auxiliary to Rossland branch,\nCanadian Legion, B.E.S.L., as they\nmet in the armories Wednesday\nnight. Tet was served by Mre. Percy\nE. Taylor and Mrs. Ernest Turner.\nThose present were Mrs. Regintld\nSymons, Mrs. E. H. Ruelle, Mra.\nJohn McCullough, Mra. Thomis\nWood, Mrs. Percy E. Tiylor, Mrs.\nWilllim Butorac, Mra. Ernest Turner, Mn. William Gresly-Jones,\nMrs. William Buick, Mrs. Guy Cooper and Mrs. Howard Ferguson.\n\u2022 ttt\nMrs. W. W. McKay of Trail is\nthe guest of her sister, Miss Jennie Henderson.\nttt\nMn Louis Schwartzenhauer has\nreturned to Grmd Forks after spending * few d\u00bbys in the elty with her\nUther, W. Heidler.\n!\u25a0* t    t\nA speciil meeting of those interested ln the Girl Guides md\nBoy ScouU of Rosslmd was held to\nplm for a membenhlp drive to be\nheld the end of the month. Those\npresent were Mrs. J. H. Beley, Mra.\nFrank eeson, R. E. Plewman, tret-\nsurer, Normin Cunningham, lecretiry, Robert Lloyd, scoutmaster, M.\nH. Hoyte, A. F. G. Drake, President\nJ. N. Crtn, Mrs. Murriy Gibson md\nMrs. M. F. R. MicLenntn.\n\u2022   t   t\nROSSLAND, B. C. Mtrch 13-\nTht Put Chief's club of Miplt Lett\nTemple No. 4, Pythitn Sisten, en\ntertalned Thursday evening with t\nctrd p\u00abrty in the dinning room\nof the Irvin hotel. Honon at bridge\nwent to Mra. D. F. Mclntyre md\nFnnk T. Abey and the consolations\nto Mn. Josi *nd OUver Abbott At\nwhist the first prizCi were won by\nMn. L\u00bbwrence Abbott \u00bbnd Willism\nMcKiy tnd the comolttlon! by Mn\nRobert E. Fox md Liwrence Abbott.\nThe pillow wu won by Miss Frances Simcock.\n1*4\nMrs. C. O. Bowden of Vmcouver\nli the gueit of her diughter, Mra.\nNorrii E. Churchei.\nVisitor Honored\nat New Denver\nNEW DENVER, B.C.,\u2014A lurpriie\nfarewell party wu held at the home\nof Mr. md Mn. A. D. Trlckett with\nMiss Bernice Burkitt u hostess, for -\nMiss VesU Mae Right who leaves\nshorUy tor her home in Eugene,\nOregon.\nGamei were played. -\nFollowing refreshmenU, Jim Bur- j\nkitt, on behalf of the guests, presented the guest ot honor with a small\nsourvenir.\nGuests included, VesU Mae Kight,\nRuth Aylwin, Florence Picard, Margaret Young, Violet Gunn ud Bernice Burkitt md Ellison Crellin, '\nTed Shinnon, SUnley Aylwin,\nJtmes Burkltt, Donild Francli and\nHarry Walbaum.\nMiss VesU Mae Kight, who ba* I\nbeen a guest of her uncle md aunt, I\nMr. and Mrs. H. Gunn, tor a few\nmonthi, expects to leave for her\nhome in Eugene, Oregon, thli week.\nProcter Aid Plans\nHold a Tea\nPROCTER, B.C.,-United Church\nLadies aid met Thunday with Mn,\nO. Johnson presiding.\nPUns were mtde for * te* to raise\nfunds for the new hymnary.\nThe secreUry wai instructed to\nwrite to Mrs. Bennett, who is t pi-\nUent in the Kooteniy Like General \u25a0\nhospital, Nelson.\nAt the tet hour the hostess wu\nassisted by Mn 3. 3. Scott, Mrs. O.\nJohnson, md Mrs. H. Gift and Miss\nEileen Pound.\nThose ittending were: '..In. J.\nBichan, Mra H. Clift, Mrs. W. Halg-\nSmellie, Mrs. MacDonald, Mrs. D.\nMcintosh, Mn. J. MacLeod, Mrs.\nT. Mair. Mn. L. Bullock, Mrs. J.\nHunt, Mrs. W. H. Jirvis, Mrs. A.\nDes Rosier, Mn. T. Knowlson, Mr_i\nW. Mulrhead, Misses Mae and Olive\nMuirhead, Mrs. J. Scott and Mrt.\nPound.\nPercy Bennett wss in Nelson to\nvisit Mrs. Bennett, who it a patient in Kootenay Lake General'\nhospital.\nMrs. N. Schwarok wai a Nelson\nvisitor.\nMiss Rose Schwarok wai a viiitor\nin Nelion.\nMiss Hazel and Emmie Croiby\nwere Ntlion viiitor.\nMrs. D. Mcintosh wu t Stturdty\nvisitor to Nelson.\nJ. Bichm wu t Procter viiitor.\nMENUS\nRECIPES\nand\nHINTS\nGood\nHousekeeping\nBv\nMn.\nMtry\nMorton\nTODAY'- RECIPES\nBeef Stew With Dumplingi\u2014If\ncanned beef ii used, one quart can\nIs required. Thii il generally cubed\nwhen canned, so requires no preparation. If freih beet li uied, a\npound md i half of neck or plate\nis the economical cut to buy. Remove bone md cut ln two-inch\ncubes. Brown meat in frying pm,\nMver with bolUng water and let\nlimmer unUl tender, two or three\nhoun. Season to teste. During last\nhour add six small onions (whole),\nthree orrots, quartered lengthwise;\nthree turnips, quartered; three\nparsnips and six or eigbt poUtoes,\nquirtered. Add poUtoei last, u they\ndo not require long cooking. Fifteen minutes before serving, thicken liquid with flour md water.\nDrop dumplings on top of stew,\ncover tightly and steam 12 minutes.\nDumplings\u2014Two  cups  flour,  four\nteaspoons baking powder, one teaspoon ult, two Ublespoons fat, one\ncup milk. Sift dry ingredients together. Cut in fat md add milk\nslowly. Drop by spoonfuls on top\nof stew.\nPrune-Apricot Pudding\u2014 Three\ntablespoons butter, three-fourths\ncup brown sugar, one cup cooked\napricots, one cup cooked prune-\nMelt the butter In t hetvy skillet,\nsdd the tugar and ipread the drained fruit over the top. Mtke t bitter of the following: One-fourth\ncup butter, one-half cup lour milk,\none-fourth cup moluses, one cup\nflour, one-hilf teupooni soda, one-\nfourth teaspoon ult, one-htlf tei-\nspoon clnntmon, one-htlf teaspoon\nginger. Pour this batter over the\nfruit and bike at 350 degrees for 30\nto 35 minutes. Serve wirm with\nwhipped cream.\n \u2022AOI POUR \u25a0\nEstablished April 22, 1902.\nBritiih Columbia'i Most Interesting Newspaper\nALL THE NEWS WHILE IT IS NEWS.\nPublished every morning except Sundty by\nthe NEWS PUBLISHING COMPANY. LIMITED.\n218   Biker   Street   Nelion.   Brltlih   Columblt.\nPhon* 144, Prlvitt Exchmge Connecting AU Departments.\nMember  of   tbe   Audit   Bureiu   of   Circulations   md\nTbt   Cmadian   Press   Leased    Wirt   New*   Service.\nMONDAY, MARCH 16, 1986.\nA GREAT SCIENTIFIC ANNIVERSARY\nThis year marks the 50th anniversary of the discovery of the industrial process of making aluminum,\na metal that has a large place in the daily life of mankind today. The story of the discovery of the process is\none of the romances of science for it was a young Oberlin\nCollege student aged 22 who found the secret that had\nbaffled some of the greatest chemists of the world.\nCharles Martin Hall was a student in ths chemistry\nclasses of Professor Frank Fanning Jewett at Oberlin\nin the early '80s and it was probably a chance remark\nof the teacher which set the boy on his search. Speaking to his students in class one day, Professor Jewett\nsaid that if anyone should invent a process by which\naluminum could be made on a commercial scale, not only\nwould he be a benefactor to the world but would be able\nto lay up for himself a great fortune. Turning to a class\nmate young Hall said, \"I'm going for that metal.\"\nAfter trying a variety of methods that brought no\nresults the young investigator thought of the possibilities\nof electricity. In all that he did he was encouraged by\nProfessor Jewett who loaned him odd bits of apparatus. About six months after he had graduated from\nOberlin he came one day to his teacher and holding\nout his hollowed hand said: \"Professor, I've got it\" In\nthe palm of his hand lay a dozen little globules of aluminum, the first ever made by the electrolytic process\nln ths United States. That was on the 23rd of February\n1888, and later the process was developed to its final\ngreat success.\nThe value of the discovery was not at first realized;\nOne large company which was offered an option on the\npatented process rejected it but in 1888 the discovery\nwas taken up by a group known as the Pittsburgh Reduction Company, later changed to the Aluminum Company\nof America with which the name of Andrew Mellon is\nclosely associated. Vast fortunes have been made out\nof the industry which was made possible by the enthusiasm for research of a young chemistry student in a small\neollege and by the constant encouragement which was\ngiven to him by his professor.\nQUESTION FOR RESEARCHERS\nThose models of exactitude, the encyclopedia makers, say that in 1934 Joseph Aloysius Hansom, an English architect and inventor, registered and sold for\n410,000 the design for a \"patent safety cab, which, as\nsubsequently improved, became popular as the 'hansom\ncab.\"\nDr. Oliver Wendell Holmes published \"The Autocrat of the Breakfast Table\" in 1857-1858, and in it\nappeared \"The Deacon's Masterpiece; or, The Wonderful\n'One Hoss Shay',\" in the eighth stanza of which are these\nlines:\nEighteen hundred;\u2014it came and found\nThe Deacon's masterpiece strong and sound.\nEighteen hundred increasedby ten;\u2014\n\"Hahnsum Kerrldge\" they called It then.\nThe Autocrat was not a careless writer. He was\nprepared to defend his facts. What was his authority\nfor \"hahnsum kerridge\" as a name applied to a chaise\nin 1810? Was it a prophetic appellation attached to the\ndeacon's masterpiece, in anticipation of Hansom's invention, or did the Autocrat allow himself the liberty\nof rolling back the scroll of history for the sake of a\npleasantry?\nPLOTS WHOLESALE\nPuzzled amateur writers who wonder how the pro-\nfessionals work up their plots may get a tip from the\nmental processes of Arthur J. Burks. He writes copiously\nfor the pulp paper magazines, those gaudy fellows with\nthe stirring names like Dream Dope, Livid Tales, Honor\nHounds and so on. Almost anything is good for a plot,\nonce Mr. Burks has laid eyes on it, according to a writer\nIn the New Yorker.\nThe interviewer, after trying the author out on\ni several objects, pointed to a picture in an oval, gold\nframe.\n\"A wound of thtt snipe with * gold edge around it,\" Burks\nmuttered.\n\"By George,\" he Mid luddenly, slipping a piece of paper Into\nhis typewriter. \"The Gold Kiss, by Arthur J. Burks,\" he wrote,\nas we watched. \"The body was half in and half out of the shadow\ncatt by a huge itmovar. The detective stooped ov.r the corpie\nand gatped in amaiement. The gaping oval wound had not bled\nat all. More than that, it wu lurrounded by * thin film of\nwhat, it first glance, looked to be gold du!t.. .\"\nJust like that. Of course such writers are not particularly interested in literature. Mr. Burks admits he\nnever reads what he writes and doesn't care what editors\ndo to it, thus revealing himself as far removed from the\nreal literary novelist who writhes in pain .every time a\nword or sentence is changed. But if plots are all that are\nwanted, try Mr. Burks' method\u2014a plot in every peep!\n1- .    '\nRet ween\nByJUC\nNILSON MAKU A HIT\nNelson civic centre ls already\nearning the city a new reputetlon.\nMemberi of Spokane chamber ot\ncommerce and the Spokane Skiting\nclub were guests and guest trtlits\nat a program in tbe rink Saturday\nand I met severil of the party. They\nwere loud in their praises for the\nwonderful facilities offered. It li\nastounding, said Mr. Oilbert, official of the Automobile Association ot\nAmerica, that iuch a community ai\nNelson can put up such a wonderful\nbuilding, while Spokme with ts\nthousands of population cannot stir\nup enough Interest to start on a\ncommunity centr*. Mr. Oilbert,\nwhose Job is to direct tourist traffic\nbelieves Nelson his a lot ot tore-\nsight. The city, situated as tt ls, resti\namong the moit beautiful scenery\nimaginable, he remarked, but tourists are not being sold on scenery\nmy more. That wis the icheme of\nthing* * few yeirs back but nowadays tourists expect the scenery but\nwmt something to do or somewhere\nto go is added attractions. He believes, in the Nelion civic centre,\nthe city hai just thit added attraction tor tourists. There was no doubt\nln the world that Spokanites, when\nroads are better, will be Journey\nlng to Nelton to witness hockey btt-\ntles, to take part in curling and to\nplay on the new badminton floor.\nThis latter sport, he declared, hli\nSpokane lo iti grips md he has\nnowhere seen such a wonderful bed\nminton layout. Mr. Gilbert secured\na lot ot valuable information regarding the district whUe in Nelson\nand hii visit alone will pay the city\nweU in publicity he will advmce on\nhi* return.\nParticularly Interested were the\nchamber of commerce members ln\nUie board of trade booklet got out\nUst year. They wert loud in their\npraises for the foresight md tb*\nprogresslveness of Nelson's clUxens\nand hoped thtt th* by-law vote fer\nfurnishings ln the new building wiU\ngo over with a bang.\nAt Saturday night's board of\ntrade banquet the Spokane ipeaker\ngot over a fast story that took tome\ntime to link In. He said that it was\nnot surprising that Nelson ihould be\nso progreuive in erecting tuch i\nwonderful building when one recalled that Canadians had Uie inspiration in front of them of a man\nwho put over a five-year plan ln\nnine months. It wu some minutes\nbefore the hearer* recalled the famoui Dionne quintuplets.\na   .   ,\nROUND ABOUT\nHere md there around the city\u2014\nR. D. Barnes, chairman of the civic\ncentre commission, conducting Spokme visitors through the new building\u2014LitUe Britli Llndquist, Seattle's cute little skater, commenting\non the long auto drive frem Spokme\u2014They were Just eight hours\nmaking Uie trip \u2014 George Brim\nleaving part ot hi* turkey et tbe\nbmquet so that he could get in *\nfew minutei of pracUce\u2014 the Spo-\nkanlte* had not been on ice for two\nweeks\u2014Dr. C. Hale Kimble ot Spokme being introduced u Dr. Kimberley\u2014D. StDenis being here, there\nand everywhere at the rink\u2014C D.\nBlackwood declaring he wa; feeling much improved in health\u2014Eric\nDawson ipending in afternoon with\na favorite book-C. G. Hogarth declaring he liked the Kootenay diitrict and that hli family are really\nKootenay old Umeri from around\nthe Kaslo district\u2014He declares he\nis no relation to the Hogirths ln\nCnnbrook\u2014md hu to answer that\nquesUon about 17 Ume* \u2022 day\u2014Don\nUre talking about way* ot making\nmoney fut \u2014Harry Ferguion md\nfamily wearing Spokme feathers on\nS*turd*y-Ch\u00abrUe Doctor getting t\nkick out of someone'* remark! about\nthe auditorium \u2014 A. Baird paying\nparticular attenUon.while Spokane-\nite* were talking in terms of billions of dollars\u2014Harry Godwin getting a kick out of Uie radio report\nof the Lusc\u00bbr-Prince Albert hockey\nmatch \u2014 Jules Cohen stating he\nwould be one of Uie first to buy a\nreserved seat for Um Prince Albert-\nKlmberley game here Tuesday or\nWednesday\u2014T. J. Scanlan, in his\nSunday belt out for \u25a0 itroU along\nVernon itreet early Sundty mor-\nning-W. R. Blmchtrd of Fiirview\nin leather jacket having a timUtr\nsolo itroll ibout Uie nme time-\nBert Dill siting up Lambert's lumber sign\u2014Aldermen Thomu Weters\nfeeling proud of Uie \u2022uditorlum *nd\nrinks when the visitors were being\nshown through\u2014Aldermm N. C.\nStibbs deeply Interested in the progress made by Uie midget hockey\nplayers\u2014and declaring it won't be\nlong before outside teams would be\nimporting Nelson hockey talent\u2014\nJimmy K*y getting * kick out of the\nfancy \u00bbk*ters\u2014E. E. L. Dewdney\nsitting in on Uie Wolves-S\u00abvoy hockey g\u00abme-Tim Pl*y*r s\u00abying goodbye to a lot of friend*\u2014Tim Is leaving our midst to go into business in\nTrail.\nNILSON DAILY NIW*. NILSON. B.Cr-MONOAY MORNINQ. MARCH IS. 19SS\nTREE WITH lOO-YEAR-OLD AXE-CUT IS\nFELLED AT INVERMERE\nBy MRS. A. M\nINVERMERE, B.C. - The Like\nWindermere Bungalow tourist camp\nii situated on tbe weit ihore ef\nLake Windermere near the David\nThompion Memorial Fort, on the\npromontory called Invermere point,\nud -.though the Fort is placed\nthere, David Thompson did not\nmake his permanent trading post\nthere.\nHe did lind first at th* point, but\nonly itayed t few days, finding it\ntoo exposed to ittack! from the\nIndia i, who could too easily cut\nhim off from water ud wood supplies. Instead he built his trading\npost north of the point, about thret\nmiles, on wha' is now the old channel of Tobey creek.\nHowever, from m interesting historical view, Just recently ln making improvement! netr tbe northwest corner of bungalow No. t m\nold dead fir tret wu cut down to\nbe chopped into fire wood.\nHAMILTON\nWhu splitting up Uie b*'c__. in\nthe second block trom the butt there\nwu ieen to be k< old undercut,\nthe chopping having been done with\na iteel-bltted axe over ISO years\nago, by count ot uie rings.\nThe axeman, potilbly David\nThompson himself, must have been\na hefty chopper, for the mark* ot\nthe axe-blade on the face of the\nundercut are deep and clear. Juit\nwhy the three wti not completely\ncut down then will never be known.\nIt might heve been that a sudden\nattack trom Indians, or that the\nremoval to the other site wu quickly decided upon. Anyway, the bleeding if the tree completely healed\nthe wound ot the undercut and the\ntree conUnued to grow thus completely covering Uie cavity.\nG. A. McGuinesi of this place is\nthe finder of this treasure and ts\npreserving this block ot wood u\n* relic ot Devid Thompson.\nDR. MYERS ANSWERS QUESTIONS\nBy GARRY C. MYERS.' PH. D.\nHud Dtpartmtnt Ptrtnt Educition Cltvtltnd Cellist, Weitirn\nReserve Unlvenity\nA child of three itutteri. Treat\nUie nutter u an emoUonel disorder.\nDo all you can to create a serene\natmosphere, keeping your voice soft\nmd low, seeing that the child does\nnot grow over-excited or fatigued.\nIf you have a radio do not turn it on\nwhile he is awake. Reed aloud a\ngreet deil to him from stories not\nfear-inspiring. Work with your doctor to build him up physically.\nAct u if you do not observe the\nstuttering. Never look at his mouth,\nnor itop him, nor aik him to repeat. In case you know whtt word\nhe wants to sty but cannot, nonchalantly tay it for him. Create the atmosphere of all la well.\nYou say your daughter three years\nold is very shy. Be paUent with\nthit child. Don't insist that she\nshake hands with adult* or talk\nto them. In cue they urge her, district them. In my book, \"Building\nPersontlity ln Children\", I discuss\nthis matter at length. I think you\ncan find It in your publle library.\nYour main problem is to help this\nchild enjoy companionship of Other\nchildren and to learn to entertain\nhenelf for protracted periods alone.\nMore often be busy when she wints\nundue itturilon. Attract other chll-\ndru her ige to your home; go with\nher to other homes where then \u00abre\nyoung children.\nTHUMB SUCKING\nSo you \u00abre one among ten thouund other mothers worried over\nthumb lucking. Since your child\nii four yean old, your success will\nhinge upon your ability to win her\nco-oper*Uon. The more you tcold\nUd shame her, and the more emotion you show about the mitter, the\nwone the habit will become. It during the day the can keep her thumb\ntrom her mouth for fifteen minute* et a itretch, a symbol, u t iter,\nfor reward anigned then might be\neffecUve, provided you Ignore her\nthumb the rest of the day. So-many-\nstars could win a substantial prite.\nYou could set a regular period eech\ndsy when, for fifteen minutes, she\nis going to try to win a Itar. Since\nthe period ls short, she finds it possible to succeed. Once sh* discover!\nrhe cu succeed for fifteen minutes\nshe will heve gained confidence te\ntry to succeed for a longer time.\nHaving won her co-operation, she\nmight be glad to have you slip a\ncardboard mailing tube over her\nelbow at night to help her keep\nthe thumb from her mouth while\nuleep But whu tuch devices ire\nInterpreted by Uie child u punishment! they usutlly do far more harm\nthan good.\nCONTRACT\nBRIDGE\nBy E. V SHEPARD\n\"Teacher of Teachers\"\nHOW MANY AT HEARTS?\nMr. Ronald S. Busklrk, Cambridge\nMacs., sends in Uie foUowing interesting hind. He sit North md wu\npushed up into S-Hetrts, doubled\nby West. How many tricks should\nhe make? The opening lead wis the\n8 of spades.\ne)Klt\nfJM.lt\n\u2666 64\n4>6S\n\u2666 J\u00bbT\u00bb\n\u2666 Q\u00bb\u00bb\n\u2666 Q10\n\u2666 J 10\n\u2666 19 8\nUK.:'.'.,\nL__L_   t?n:\n\u2666 A104\nVAK\n\u2666 4X01\n*_.#*_\u2022\nBidding went: South,- Diamonds;\nNorth, . No Trumps, to deny holding as much u one quick trick;\nSouth, 3 Clubs; North, 3 Hearts;\nSouth, 3 No Trumps, North, 4 Hearts;\nSouth, 4 No Trump*; North, 3 Hearts;\nSouth, S Hearts, which West doubled.\nThe opening lead wu Uie fourth-\nbest ipade. Dummy played low,\nhoping Weit would put up an honor,\ngiving dummy'i ace-10 * tenace\nover lut'i honor, so u to pick it\nup on * return lead, but West knew\nthat declarer could not beat the opening lead in hit own hmd unlet*\nhe pliytd his top card, *o West\npliyed the S, which forced declarer'i\nK. Dummy won two roundi of\n-ramps, leaving Weit with only a\nsingle good trump, probably much\nto declarer's relief. Even at that the\nsituation did not look any too favorable to North, u he lUtes ln hit\nletter.\nDummy ran off 3 top diamond\nhonon, on the last of which declarer\nlet go hi* small spade. The 2 of diamonds was led and ruffed by declarer, giving blm 7 straight tricks.\nThe \u00ab cards left in each hmd were\nas shown below.\n*)l\n?\u00abJJ|\n\u2022 Q2\ne>K\u00bbS\ntttt\n\u2666 7641\n\u2666 A 10\n4AQJ10\nAt the eighth trick declarer led\nhis only remaining ipade, winning\nwith dummy's Ace. The 10 of spedes\nwu led from dummy and ruffed\nby decltrer. North had pliyed the\nhud beauUfully, eliminating from\nWest's hind every spide md every\ndiimond originally held. Now declarer wu ready to end pity the\ndoubler of the tmall slam contract\nDecltrer led next to his lut trurhp.\nputting West in with the O of heerts\nThe situation wu perfect for North\nHe held the good 10 ot trumpi nd\ntwo low club. Dummy held Uie\nA-Q-J of clubs. West wu ln the\nleed with nothing in his hmd but 3\nclubs. He had to lead a club. No\nmatter which dt-nder held Uie K\nof clubs, dummy must win two club\ntricki tnd declarer eould ruff the\nlast trick, Just fulfilling his small\ntlam contract.\nADVANCE WEATHER BULLETIN\nFor Western md Central Canada,\nembracing Britiih Columblt, Alberta, Saskatchewin, Manitoba md OnUrlo.\nMonday, March IS, 1036-A cold,\ndisturbed spell comes ln trom the\nnorthwest and most of central regions become unsetUed; some snowing and temperatures generally declining.\nTueiday, March IT\u2014Colder, clearer in west, but in eut, about great\nlakes of Manitoba country, more\nmoderate with snows ud some\nblustry weather.\nWednesday, Mtrch 11-Clewing\nand cold ln west ud central regions,\nbut in eest disturbed, with Hidden chtngts of temperatures.,\nUiough generally fairly mild.\nLENGTHENING DAYS\nLet it mow! Let\nwants to, and the winds how- jt\ndoein't mitter vitally my longer,\nHeve your last fantastic fling, old\nman winter, if yen feel that way\nabout It! We don't care so much\nnow. For ...\n\"Six o'clock, sunpertlme, and it\nIsn't dark yet!\" and we trip along\nhome, In th* lingering gleam ot\nday, with the yeara beginning to\nmelt from our shoulders. While\n\u2022oon lt will be, \"Seven o'clock ud\nstill Ught.\" ahd we thai] all ruth\nout to play marblei or bell, or dig\nor putt, or paint the baek tenet,\nor skip, or Juit run around and\nholler, according to our Individ-*]\nmodes of translating the message\nBy GRETCHEN GIBSON\nit hail, if it of the lengthening dayi.\nIn th* early mornings, too, what\n\u2022 break. If we must catch that tint\ntrain or pus, or happen to be on\na seven o'clock shift, no more groping wound in midnight condltioni.\nNo, indeed! Early birds bo longer\n*r* greeted by the inky imps ot\nnights, but b; the glimmering elves\not day, ud in answer to the call*\nof tbe tint whistle* fly out Into\nUie daylight, not moonlight.\nAnd Juat *t pretent, perhaps mere\nthm later oh, how till* pleutnt\nconscioutness of lengthen! g days\nrevive! md brr-c.1 ik, f'li ui with\nrenewed ambition md hopel How\nnonchtltnUy it raises ui above mr-\nrounding condltioni to lunlit pin-\nThursday, March IS\u2014In most sec-\ntioni moderating temperaturei tnd\nfairly cletr weither, though in\nMtnltobt country sudden temperature variations and slightly disturbed.\nFridiy, March W -Except about\nPacific wuthwut mott of country\nclear, with temperaturei fairly mild.\nUiough quit* variable in eastern\nsections.\nSaturday, March 21\u2014Some disturbance about Pacific southwest,\nsouthwest central province* and\nalong southern borders, with light\nrain* ud mowi; lUghtly wanner in\nmost sections.\nSunday, March 21 \u2014 Unsettled\nabout southwest and on southern\nborders, with generally moderating\ntemperatures ud Pacific southwest\nrainy.\nWeek ot March IS to 22, MS,\nin central province* begin* with\na speU of cold weather in west,\nwhile about eaitern sections considerably warmer, Uiough quite variable. In general temperUtUres\nslowly rise aU week in wett, but\neast of Alberta nme sudden variations, like a very cold spell of a\nday or two near IS or _0, but toon\nmore moderate. Some nut about\nPacific southwest ud disturbance\nwith Ught mowing along southern\nborden, yet in general not much\nnaclu et cheerfulness!   So:\nLet tb* wind* shake Uie world\nTill Its icy teeth chatter!\nT.et sniwdr'fts b* hurled!\nFer what doe* it matter*\nDay's banners unfurled\nWinter's fores must lUatter.\nA OTwitytt\nfor uTooay,\n\"Therefore when thou\ndoest thine alms, do not\nsound a trumpet before\nthee, as the hypocrites do\nIn the synagogues and in\nthe streets, tMt they may\nhave glory of men. Verily I say unto you, They\nhave their reward.\"\n-St. Mattbtw, lit\nCONTROL DIET AND WRECK A\nCONTINENT\nBy LOGAN CLENDENINQ. M.D.\nThe tdence of diet it so extct\ntodty thit much 1* expected of It\nNo pert of our dally routine, from\ninfincy to old age, is more closely\nrelated to our health md happiness\nthan the food that we put into our\nmouths.\nIf I were givu aol* control over\nit* food, I could wreck * whole\nconUnent more completely thu the\nmost cruel conqueror with aU Uie\nImplement!   of   modern   warfare.\nI Scurvy, ricketi, dyientery, phthisis\nud anemia would foUow in my\n, wake. Skin would dry up and rot\nfrom shriveled limb*, ulcerous tores\nwould form on listless bodies, eyes\nwould glue over, feet would swell,\nnerves would degenerate, swoUen\nbcUies, thin pale faces above\u2014the\nscene has been repeated many times\non the face of the earth, not as the\nwork of deliberate malignant ingenuity, but from m evm worse enemy\nof mankind-IGNORANCE.\nAll the more, then, Uiat today\nignorance in ita worst form\u2014fan-\naUcitm md food faddism\u2014should\npreach its unbalanced doctrines. And\nthis despite the fact that today\ntruth about diet is so weU establish-\nNOT IN THE\n\u25a0   NEWS\nBy WORTH CHENEY\ned md so thoroughly scientific.\nThe face of truth ts often insipid. It\ndoes not lend itself to gaudy embellishment for display ln the market\nplace.\nThus we have one writer on diet\nwho tells ui not to worry about the\namoebic dysentery scarce\u2014thtt the\namoebae are not tb: cause of Uie\ndysentery, but the result\u2014that they\nappear whenever dysentery appears.\nWhat rot! And what power foi htrm\nin iuch a stttement People wbo accept this folly might spread dyientery through a whole community.\nAnother lupersUUon foisted on\nthe community li thtt starch and\nprotein should not be eaten at the\nsame meal. Why not? The human\nbody hu both protein and starch\ndigesting machines, ud they both\nwork together. It ts like taking a\ntown where there are a number of\nfactories and saying the ones which\nburn coal can't operate the same\nhours as the ones which burn oil.\nThe things people want to know\nabout a diet or m article of food:\nDoes it produce acid? I. it fattening or reducing? Digestible? Roughage?.\nThe best diet Is a natural diet\nIt isn't our purpose to turn this\ncolumn into a bible of superstition,\nbut we think these anecdotes about\na modern wizard, despite the element of witchcraft involved, may be\ninteresting to you.\nThi* iccount of wizardry, performed by a Welsh farmer who died\na year or so ago, wu sent to the\ncolumn by a reader. He learned of\nUie exploits of the Welshman,\nknown far ud wide as Evan, during a recent visit to Wales.\nEvan lived in a whitewashed farm\nnear the village of Llangurig in\nMontgomeryshire. His specialty in\nhis brand of wizardry wu treating\ntick farm animals, and many are\nthe tales told of how he would travel for miles at my hour ot the\nnight to perform his magic. Every\nstory told of his related his success;\nhe was never known to fail in hii\nhealing powers. Hi! feme had been\nsuch, and hi* followers so ardent,\nthat people came from five counties to his funeral.\n\u2022 *. *\nOne of the stories told is how\nEvm cured a dying mare ln a mitter of a few seconds. The mare was\nkicking her lut on a nearby farm.\nEvm wu summoned. When he\narrived he took ono look at the\nsick hone ud then nailed * piece\nof blue paper to the stall md aet\nfire to it\nAs the piper started to burn the\nmare stirred. When it wu half-\nburned, the mare shook herself,\nneighed and struggled to get up.\nAs the burning paper finally flickered out, the hone got to her feet\n\u2022nd began crunching on u ear of\ncorn.\nThe next day the mare wu\nworked pulling a plow.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nOn  mother occasion  the  stock\nad fallen sick on a farm in a nearby county, SO miles trom Evan's\nhome. He was called ud went to\nwork with hli magic.\nFor three night* Evan roamed\nthrough the fields, slashing the\nhedges with a big stick, all Uie\nwhil* talking to the moon. At the\nend of the third night every cow\nhad recovered from the epidemic.\ni*i\nThe old hand-churn ii stiU used\ntor making butter ln the district\nwhere Evan lived. One farmer htd\nchurned tor deys and days but could\nmake no butter. Finally he went to\nsee Evm. The wise mm told tht'\nfarmer to put the key to the front\nloor under the churn. He returned\nhome and did so. Thereafter the\nchurn turned out butter by the\nbucketfuL\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nThey also teU a story in that district ot how a womu novelist once\nwent to see Evan. She wu wriUng\na book at the Ume but was having\ndifficulty with it After hearing of\nier trouble Evan told her to return\n.ome and that everything would\n;c all right. He gave her one of\nils charms.\nShe went back home and started\nwriting. When it was finished she\nwas quoted as saying:\n\"I finished the novel in six weeks.\nThe thing flowed from me. lt certainly wu t book written by\nmagic.\"\n\u2022 .   a\nIn relating these feats of magic\nit should be pointed out that witchcraft is stUl prevalent in some\no*rt* of Wales, \u00abnd \u00abven in Englud. For example, some farmen\not Wales still tie rags on the tails\nof the cattle for the purpose of\nwarding otf Uie Evil Eye.\nprecipitation unUl end ot tbe week,\nprobibly heivlest tbout southwest.\nAfter the middle of Mtrch in\nthese regions temperatures are expected to rise to higher than the\ngenersl seasonal levels and In most\nsections fairly mod*r*t* weither\nshould come on carrying rain* in\nthe Pacific southwest which drift\nacross as scattering snow itormi into central regions and tx southeast.\nPrecipitation now becomes rather\nheavier thu in the winter months\nud comes on genenlly et time* of\nstorm disturbmces, v ith clearing\n\u2022pell* following Uie mow flurries.\nTbe meen temperature for March\nin these regioni li below th* fretting point, but around 12nd or iSrd\nit li probable intermittent thawing md freezing will begin ud\nlut unUl near Uie third week of\nApril, when springlike weather\nis expected.\n|   10 YEARS AGO\n(From Nelson Oaily Newt Fllu\n* 1\nMtrch II, 1120\nMalcolm Heddle ot Cedtr Point\nspent yesterday in Nelson.\n* .   a\nRev. C. Reed of Procter wis i\nNelton visitor yesterday.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nMiss Madge Ewlng who teechei\nit Hall Is * city viiitor.\n* e *\nMiss Frmce* Sloan and Miss Constance Martin entertained members\nof the Teachers' Bridge club at the\nhome ot the former, 319 Observatory itreet yeiterday when honon\nwtr* won by Mis* Ida Fleury. ,\n|   20 YEARS AGO   |\nI Frem Nelton Dally Newt Fllea I\ne\u2014\u2014 \u00bb\nMarch 1S, 1918\nBorn, March 13, to Mr. md Mrs.\nW. O. Stewart, a ion.\nGeorge F. Stevenson ot\nbrook ls a Nelton visitor.\nCran-\nErnest Harrop of Harrop has returned from Victoria where he attended a Farmers' Initltute convention.\n\u2022   \u2022   *\nFor a side-bet ot $50 the Early\nBirdi composed of H. Bishop, J.\nLong. A. Bishop, B. Bishop, J. Miller, B. BeU *nd R. Bird wiU meet\nthe Night Hawki, composed of\nSchermerhom, N. Richardson, D.\nStewart, F. BeU, 3. Grant, C CesUer\nand H. Sweedberg in a hockey g*me\n\u2022t the local rink. No admission\ncharge will be made.\n30 YEARS AGO\nFrom Nelion Dallv Ntwt Flltt)\n\u2666  *\nMtrch 11, 1908\nC. D. Goepel md O. P. Well* of\nthe Nelson Gun club- contested\nthree 25-blrd eventi at the trap!\nyesterday. The total icore* were:\nWells 31; Goepel 49.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTbe Steamer Kootenay ls uhore\n30 mile* below Nekuip md will need\nUie assistance of uother steamer\nto pull her off, the loctl office his\nbeen advised.\n\u2022 \u2022  \u2022\nProcter, which bouts ot a Middle-\nsac county player, has challenged\nUie Nelson Cricket club to a match\nat Uie opening of the seison.\nAUNT HET\nBy ROBERT QUILLEN\n\"Old Jim's relative* hava quit\ntryln' to have him declared incompetent. He's still queer, but his\nmoney's aU gone.\"\nGOOD GARDENING\nfl\nBy DEAN HALLIDAY\nCentral Press Girden Expert\nK\nBe ture thl pot lint too lirgt for plint,\nWhen a plmt has to be re-potted\nbecause Uie soil hu become waterlogged md the roots, u a consequence, unhealthy, Uie best method is to take the plant from the\npot shaking as much soil aa possible from tbe roots and washing off\nthe remainder either by swishing\nthe roots up and down in a pail of\nwater or by allowing water from\nthe faucet to run over them. When\nthe roots are clem, look them over\ncarefully and cut otf wtth a sharp\nknife any that are decayed. Set the\nplmt ih a pot Juit large enough to\naccommodate the roots without\nover-crowding them. The soil used\nfor repotting these sickly plants\nshould not be rich. Use garden toll\nand sand, half and half. Spread the\nroots as much u possible, place the\nsoil between them, and make firm\nwith the fingen. When healthy\nroots are formed, give supplemental\nfeedings or repot in larger pot\nusing the rich soil mixture previously advised.\nNo definite rule een be laid\ndown u to when plants should be\nrepotted. If tbey are making vigorous growth the work may be\ndone at almost any time, but, as a\ngeneral rule, repotting Is done to\nthe best advantage Jutt before tbe\nplmt! begin their growth.\nBefore repotting your plants be\nsure that they really need thia care.\nMuch of Uie unhealthiness of houie\nplants may be traced to u attempt\nto grow them in pot* that are too\nlarge. Furthermore, remember Uiat\nit it the plant tint ihould be beautiful, not the pot.\nHOTKAPS\nPROTECT vouno planti from\nfroit, Insects, wind and heavy\nrains.\nEnsure healthy, hardy\nplants, quicker cropt.\nFor Full\nOettlli\nWrltt te\nSmith, Davidson\n8 Wright Ltd.\n1198 HOMER ST, VANCOUVER\nSeeds\u2014Seeds\u2014Seeds\nNow Is ths tints to buy leedi, Grimm Alfalfa, Timothy,\nYellow and White Swaet Clover, Brome, etc. Alberts\nfrown. All kinds of Corn, Cardan sssds.\nWRITI FOR PRICI LIST\nSouthern Alta. Coop Assn., Ltd.\n\"Lirgest Se*d Distributor! In the Wa*tr\n1221 Second Ave., S.\nUthbrldfs, Alts.\n.- \u25a0 , =\nm__m\n IH\nFINE PROGRAM\nAT FERNIE\nJudges Have Difficult\nTime ot Amateur\nHour of Elks\nFERNIE, B.C-To the famUler\ntones of \"Alright, Alright\" Uie Elki'\n\"amateur hour\" was presented at\nmatinee and evening performance*\nWednesday. Instead of an hour, however, it tinted out to be a three-\nhour program, consisting of about\n40 numbers. NotwIthsUndlng oth'er\nattractions the thettre wu crowded\nand many were unable to obUin\naeaU.\nThe purpose of Uie concert wu\nexpUined by Chairman Bert Johnson as being to obtain funds to\nmake possible a field da;, particularly for the children, this summer.\nThe response by citiiens and mer-\nchanU wu highly gratifying to the\nlocal Elk** Lodge, said Mr. Johnson. Ed. Duthie was master of ceremonies with Milt Ray as eulsUnt.\nJudges were Mn. J. C Connick, A.\nL. McPhee \u00abnd Dr. George Kelman.\nAt the close of the performance\ni the Judges uked tor additional Ume\n! in which to consider their decision\nowing to the closeneu of the contest. In finally giving their report\nthey stated that they were required\nto pick three winners from the list\nAccordingly they selected Alex.\nRi-zuto soloist, and Manhall Anselmo Up dancer, as tied for first\nplace. The Servello-B-ddeley-Ser-\nvello trio were awarded third priie.\nThe Judges also lUted that there\nwere several other items of practically equal value and a number de-\nnerving honorable menUon;\nIn addition to the three main\nprizes ot (15, $10 ud $8 the Fernie\nmerchants contributed a number ot\nother prlie*. As a result of the difficulty experienced in satisfactorily\ndeciding smong muy of the con-\ntesUnU, the Elks are adding enough\nto Uie fund to give every particlput\naome recognition.\nTHE PROGRAM\nThe program included: Yodelling\nsong with guitar accompuimut by\nth* King Cowboy, otherwise WU-\nliam Baddeley; piano solo, Muriel\nRobinson; piuo duet Dorothy Cole\nud Tomasini Perrl; solo, Mn. Robt\nFerguson; Irish Jig, ineostume, Mur-\nier Robinson; vocal duet Mrs. La-\nmoote and Mrs. Btrkett; solo. Mrs.\nShelton; piuo aolo Esther Gates;\nsolo, Amelda Worthing; combination of instruments. Jack Rathow-\n\u201eki; aolo, Geo. Nash; solo, Dora Pi-\ncot; Up duce, Tipsy, Topsy ud\nTurvey Tannhauser (better known\n_s Harriet MacLaren, Bernice Boese\nand Mona Asselstine); solo, J.\nThompson; solo, Colleen Hughes;\npiano-accorloa solo, Victor Pings-\nlore (11 year* ct sge); solo, Robt\nFerguion; duet C. W. Owen ud H.\nEastwood; mouth organ ud guitar\nduet, Henry Verkirk ud Douglas\nTully; piuo trio, Lorraine Nolu,\nJessie Shaw and Edith Rewen; iolo,\nJessie Shaw; mouth-organ-guiUr\nduet Fred Mattersdorter, tolo, Alice\nPayne; comedy solo, Gene Leveque;\nsolo. Alex. Rlziuto; solo; Charlotte\nDick*; solo, Tho*. Ferguson; monologue ud song, Phil Benn; descriptive Up dancing. ManhaU Antelmo;\naolo, Gladyi Hughes; iolo, Billy\nColei; mouth organ solo, Steve Gy-\ndosik; vocal trio with guiter duet\nBccompaniment Laura Servello, William Baddeley ud Normu Servello; guitar-mandolin duet Normu Servello ud Normu Anielmo;\npUno-acoordion solo, H. FJeUand.\nNATAL-MICHEL\nSCHOOL CLOSES\nNATAL, B.C.\u2014NaUl-Michel central ichool ha* been ordered cloeed\nfor two week! by tbe school board\ndue to an epidemic of measles.\nTh* NaUl Veneiia hotel proprietor baa canccUed aU dances for\nthe next two weeks but the Natal-\nMichel basketball league hu been\ninformed that games may be play\ned as usual.\n\u2022____-_-____________________________________________________\nON THE AIR TONIGHT\nA Steady\nHEAT\n24 HOURS A\nDAT\nThst ig whst you ftt\nwhsn yeu burn coal\nfrem ths West\nTramfer.\nWe Recommend\nGot. Lump\nFor HEATER and RANGE\nCrow's Nest\nfer FURNACE\nCanmore\nBriquettes\nFor FIREPLACE\nWEST\nTRANSFER CO.\nFHONE 33\nCANADIAN RADIO\nCOMMISSION NETWORK\nCKOV CJCJ CJCA CHWK CFQC\n830       880       730       780       840\nCFJC\n880\nCJAT  CFAC  CKV  CKCK  CRCV\n810       880       880     1010     1100\nCJOC\n1230\n8:00 Show Shop, songs, lnitrum.\nvocal. St John tnot BC). 5:30 Newt\nB. C. Net; Ben Kyte's VarieUet, Detroit. (B.C. 5:48; 8:00 Melodic String:\nToronto; 8:80 Chateau Frontenac,\nQuebec; 7:00 Youngbloodi of Beaver Bend, Winnipeg; 7:80 Geoffrey\nWaddington'! orch.; 7:45 Canadian\nPres* Newe; t_00 Time Signal\nAcross the Border N. V (CRCV\nCHWK 8:15), 8:30 Lakehead Mel\nody. Fort WiUiam (CKMO nol\nCRCV); 8.48 Book Review. George\nStuirt Wood, Prince Albert\niCKMO); 9:00 Old Time Frolic\nSaskatoon, not CRCV; 8:80 Ten-\nThirty Telegram, Edmonton, Mtn\nnet; 10:00 New*, B.C. net.; 10:15\nJackie WUliamson's orch., Vancouver.\nN.BX.-KPO RED NETWORK\nKHQ  KGW KFI  KPO KOMO\n590      820    840     880      \u00bb20\n8:00 Fibber McGee and Molly,\ncomedy. 5:30 Evening In Pirii Mark\nWarnows orch.: 6:00 Dinner Concert; 6:30 Sigmund Romberg ud\nDeems Teylor; 7:00 Contented program, Lullaby Lady, orch., dlr. Morgan L. Eastman 7:30 Your program,\nWilson's orch., soloists; 8:00 Amoi\n*n' Andy; 8:15 Lum ud Abner; 8:80\nVoice of Firestone, opera sUr soloists; 8:00 Helen Hayes, drama; 0:30\nHawthorne House, drama; 10:00\nNews Flashes, Sam Hayes; 10:15 Ben\nAlexander, Hollywood Boulevtr-\ndier, 10:30 Griff Williami* orch.;\n11:00 Veloz and Yolsnda's orch.;\n11:30 Grift WiUiim*' orch.'\nN.B.C.-KGO BLUE NITWORK\nKOO KJR KEX KECA KQA\n790 970 1180 1430 1470\n8:30 BiU, Mack, Jimmy, E.T., KGO;\nPair of Pianos; 5:48 Jack Armstrong,\ndrama, KGO; 6:00 Crosscuts from\nLog o' Day; 6:15 Popeye the Sailor-\nman, KGO; 6:30 Safety first speaker, KGO: Edna Fischer, piuist; 8:45\nAir Adven. of J. Allen (KOO):;\nQuirtet time; -7:00 Ray Knight**\nCuckoo Hour, KJR 7:13; 7.30 Music\nIn the Russ Morgan Manner; 8:00\nSUnford University Prog. (KGO);\nLarry Lisbon's orchestra; 8:13 Ink\nSpoU, Negro quartet; 8:30 Glen\nGray'a orchestra; Ray Noble's orchestra; 9:00 Shudor, violinist; 9:08\nCornelius Codolban's orchestra; 9:15\nCliff Nararro, tenor tV PhU Oilman's orch.; 10:00 String quartet;\n10:30 Eddie Fitzpatrick ud orch.;\n11:00 Paul Carson, organist\nC.B.8.-DON LEE NETWORK\nKVI  KFRC KOIN KSL KOL\n(70     610      940     1110   1270\n5:00 Eleana Moneak ud Eniembl*;\n5:30 Chic Scoggin's orcheitra, 6:00\nRadio Theater with gueit iter; 7:00\nWayne King'i orch.; 7:30 March of\nTime; 7:45 The Goose Creek Parson;\n8:00 Myrt and Marge, dramatic; 8:15\nilnstln' Sam; 8:30 One Night St-nds.\nWith Pick ud Pat; 9:30 Hawaii\nCalls (KOIN, KSL, 9-45); 10:00 Jimmy BltUck's orch, (D.L.); 10:30\nUurie Higgln's orch. DL; 11:00 Jimmy Dorsey's orch, DL; 11.80 Ted\nDawson's orcb. DL.\n806 k CJOR 499.7 m\nVancouvtr 809 w\n5:15 Big Brother Bill: 6:15 N< wi\nFluhes; 7:00 Rickey Brown; 7:30 Fl-\nnucUl Talk; 7:45 Cariboo Cowboy,\n8-13 Ozzie Rou, songs; 8:30 Sym'ny\ndlr. A. de Rlddrr; 9:30 Chirlie Rees;\n9:45 M. Fewster, D. Tennant; 10:00\nCariboo Cowboyi; 10:80 Mauna Le*\norcheitra; 11:30 Pete Cowan's Old\nTimers; 11:30 News; Other Period*:\nRecords.\n1080 k CFCN 293.1 m\nCalgary 10,000 w\n6:80 Red Head Family; 0:45 Hold\nthe Pren; 7:00 Mu about town; 7:18\nMturice Gill, fiute; 7:30 Modern Melodies; 7:45 Frank and Archie, E.T.:\n100 Club <\",->ntir--UV 8:31 V.--'\u00bbtv\nShow; 9:00 News Fluhes; 9:18 Typographical union; 9:30 Serenader.\nSHORT WAVE FROCRAMS\nPacific SUndard Time\nBRITISH EMPIRE\nTransmission S\nTwo ef the fallowing frequencies will be uied: GSD, 11,760 k.\n(25.53 m.), GSC, 9680 k. (31.32 \u25a0\u00bb.),\nGSL, 8110 k. (49.10 m.).\n7:00 p_n.\u2014Big Ben, A Revue: \"Ohl\nThote Belli!\" 7:46 Newi; 8:00 Clote\ndown.\nINTERNATIONAL\nPacific SUndard Time\n. Wuhington, S i.m.\u2014V. S. N*vy\nBand. W8XK, Plttiburgh, 19.7 m,\n15.21 meg. Alao W3XAL, New York,\n16.8 ip, 17.78 meg.\nTokyo, I p.m.\u2014\"The Jlnrikiha\nPasses'*. JVM, N\u00bbt\u00bbki, V\u00bb m, 10.74\nmeg.\nRome, 3 pm.\u2014News bulletin in\nEnglish. The Opera \"Arabell*\" from\nGuoa. RepUes to letters of radio\nlisteners. Folk songs. 2RO, Sl.l m,\n9.63 meg.\nLondon, 3 pin.\u2014\"Caravanserai.\"\n\"A place where caravan* meet\"\nAn uthology of travel of all ages\nud pUce* in verse, prose and music.\nGSD, 25.5 m, 11.75 meg, GSC, 3U\nm, 9.58 meg, GSB, 31.5 m, 51 meg,\nor GSA, iti m, 6X15 meg.\nWuhington, 8:15 pm\u2014U. S. Army\nBand. W8XK, Pittsburgh, 19.7 m.\n1821 meg.\nBerlin, 4 pm\u2014Little ComposlUons\nby Franz Schubert DJC, 49.8 m,\n6.02 meg.\nCaracas, Venezuela, 6:80 p.m. \u2014\nAmateur's Hour. YV2RC, 81.7 m.,\n5.80 meg.\nWin Card Prizes\naf Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK, B.C.-At \u25a0 bridg*\nud whist party at the St Mary'i\nhaU high scores in bridge were held\nby Mr. Samson and Mrs. Fergie.\nPrize* in whist were won by Mrp.\nT. McKowin ud W. Chroni*. The\ndoor prize wu won by F. Dooling.\nMiss Mary Merrifield of Procter\nwu a Cnnbrook visitor.\nMist Esther Paulson ipent a few\ndays visiting in Kimberley.\nMia* Laura HoUud, O. B. E. provincial superintendent of neglected\nchildren ud supervisor of welfare\nfield service of the provincial government, wlU spend a week in Cranbrook.\n3. B. Bridgei. who (pent the winter Ui Uie eut, hu returned to\nCnnbrook.\nMil* Florence Stender, who wai\nvisiUng her brother-lnn-Uw ud\nlister, Mr. ud Mrs. H. Fyles at\nLethbridge, hai returned to Cranbrook.\nMiss LUy Briza is a guest of Mrs.\nBennett at Kimberley.\nJ. C. MacDonald of Fernie ia\nspending a few days visiUng his\ndaughter, Misi Elizabeth MacDonald, here.\nMrs. M. A. Beale hu left tor Victoria, where she will spud a tew\nweeks visiting her brother-in-law\nand sister, Dr. ud Mrs. Taylor.\nMr*. F. G. Perry ot Fernie ipent\na week in Cnnbrook.\nMr. ud Mra. A. B. Ritchie of\nKimberley were Cnnbrook vUttors.\nD. MacKenzie ot Tnil wu a dty\nviiitor, attending the wedding of\nhii brother, Murray MacKenzie, to\nMiss Rose White.\nMr*. D. CampbeU of Vincouver\narrived Thursdty ud will ipend e\nfew weeki visiUng Mr. ud Mrs. B.\nMurgatroyd.\nA. Nesbit of Nelson ud Eric\nDePencier of Vancouver spent a\nshort time visiting Cnnbrook on\ntheir way to Edmonton by plane.\nMn. Brett and daughter, Miss\nJean Brett, of Toronto, are ipendlng\nthree weeki ln the city, gueits of\nDr. ud Mn. Large.\nEntertain Rinki\nat Cranbrook\nCRANBROOK _U.,-Mn. W. C.\nThompson ud Mill Isobel Frame\nentertained their curling rinki it\na dinner it the home ot Mn. Thompion. Coven were laid for Miss Esther\nLeonard. Miss Helen Haddid, Mill\nGeraldine H*ddad, Miss Sllln* Dixon, Mn. T. Shaw, Mrs. Briggs, Mrs.\ni SUples, Mn. Cook, Mn. Lunn. Fol-\ni lowing dinner the evening wu\nsput in pUying cards.\nAt a bridg* ud whist drive st\nthe St Mary'i haU high More* ln\nbridge were held by Mn. Jonei\ntnd Mrs. Luton, and in whllt by\nI Mr. Davy ud Mrs. SUnley. The\ndoor prize wt* won by G. Pelton.\nConvenor! were Mn BertoU, Mn\nOordon and Mrs. Slieidy. J. Ber-\ntola conducted play.\nWARDNER MISS\nIS A BRIDE\nCRANBROOK, B.C-A quiet\nwedding wu solemnized at the\nUnited church manse Wednesday\nafternoon when Thelma May Bett*\nof Wardner became the bride of\nOscar Albin EUuon of Baker, B.C.\nRev. R. W. Hardy officiated. Witnesses were Mr. ud Mrs. Petrie of\nCranbrook.\nMr. and Mr*. EUuon will reside\nat Rampart where Mr. Eliason is\nemployed u secUon foreman on the\n0. P. R.\nWin Card Prizes\nal Fori Steele\nFORT STEELE, BC, -Aard\nparty wu again held Friday in tbe\nCommunity hail, with a dance following. A good crowd WU in attendance.\nPrize* for whiit were awarded to\nTony Datro md Mn Fruer; bridge\nprize* going to Mlu C. D. Tully ud\nEugene Brander.\nMr. Westgite ud son arc visitors\nto Fort Steele from Edmonton, having u Interest in the fold mine\nof Wild Hon* creek.\nP. Fiulkner WU visiUng Ul town.\nMr. ud Mn. G. D. Brown of\nWindermere were week-end guests\nof Mr. and Mn. G. C. Cobb. Mr.\nBrown was at one Ume \u00bbgent at\nthe CP.R. iteUoQ in Fort Steele.\nMn Alan Moore Jr. ud infant\ndaughter arrived home from Cranbrook Tuesday.\nMr. ud Mn W. JoUiffe ud Miss\nVeronice Werden were visiton to\nCnnbrook Sunday.\nJ. S. Coulter ot Kimberley wu\nvisiUng frlendi hi town over the\nweek-end.\nMrs. Cecil Smith wu in town trom\nthe Happy Vtlley Ranch Friday\nto ittend the card party.\nMias Veronica Werden arrived\nhome from the Sunny Valley Ranch\nafter having spent two weeks there.\nExcitement was caueed in town\nlast week when rushing wster roared over the clay bank ud so washed i grett deal of mud ud rocks on\nto the gnde below. Men wen kept\nworking all night to keep the road\nud railroad track cletr.\nMn Nln* Dickenson ii * gueit\not her brother-in-law ud t'lter, Mr.\nud Mn. Alfred Kershaw.\nFtrnit Scouts Hoar\nAbout Electricity\nFERNIE, B.C.\u2014Owing to the in-\nroed* of flu, attendance at a meeting of th* Flnt Fernie Scout troop\nwu low. Scouter G. Owen, discussed\nfirst (Id problem! ud their remedies, tfter which a game of Indian\nwreitllng wt* indulged ln.\nPatrol Leader King introduced\nshort cuU in ilgntlling.\nThe moat InteruUng item wu a\ntalk on electricity by G. E. Elklng-\nton of the Eut Kootenay Power\ncompuy. Mr. Elklngton is also a\nScout execuUve.\nMr. Elklngton likued electricity\nto water. The power bouse i* th*\npumping lUtioo, the wire* are the\npipes, the moton or bulb* an the\ntapi thtt drain off the power. Pressure is Indicated by volUge and ls\nregulited by the generators which\nire the pumps. The speaker explained tome of the future* ot the\nelectrical lupply ud it* control ln\nthe Eut Kootenay.\n\u25a0very Scout Indicated hb Intereit In the electrician'i badgt, but\nMr. Elklngton wtrned thl SoouU\nte think twi** before Uklng ap\nelectrical tnglnMrlng.\nAfter hia talk Mr. Elklngton pretented second clui Scout badges to\nJ. Carnwath, G. Barrett T. Quail\nand J. Fawley. Following thl* G.\nOwen ud F. Corrigu were Invested\nu usilUnt Moutmaiten and u\nScouts.\nOwing to the prevalent sickness\nthe lecond troop cancelled its meeting.\nAt the next meeUng teveral boys\nwUl be Invested u SoouU. For the\nluceeedlng five monthi ScouU of\nthe Fernie troopi wiU hive u in-\ntereiting seriei of programs.\nWHIST HEID AT\nNEWDENVER\nTomato**  may be sown  under\nglass, to be pluted out ebout June 1.\nNEW DENVER, RC.-A hcaplUl\nwhkrt drive wu held In Use Knights\nof Pythiu h\u00bbU. Saturday- Then\nwere seven Ubles ot progressive\nwhist. High honon were won by\nMn. J. Croft ud F. Crosby. Low\nscore* wen held by Mn. B. Meers\nud J. Kline. RefrashmenU were\nserved by Mn. W. Cropp ud Mrs.\nC. Vudergrift, the committee in\ncharge.\nC. Lowe hid u appendix operation Monday.\nA, Olion of the Mammoth min*\nwu \u00bb p*tient Ui Slocan Community\nhospital here.\nMrs. A. Clarke ud daughter\nIrene, of Sandon, ipent the weekend In town.\nA. Ruzlcka and A. Jeffrey returned from Kulo Mondty They were\nworking on the Kulo-New Denver\ntelephone Une.\nM. Shannon ll among the paUents\nin tbe hotpital here.\nJ. E. Kennett C. Vudergrift E.\nVudergrift, ud J. Nymu, of tbe\nBlack Colt mine spent the weekend kt town,\nJ. Nagy of Slocan City, who wu\na patient in tbe local hospital hu\nreturned to hia bome,\nt. Wttermu of Silverton waa a\nvi*itor in town.\nA. L. Levy returned to hli hom*\nSaturday tfter being t patient Ul\nhotpital here.\n-tarry Norberg, who wu a pettent\nla Sloan Community hoipital here,\nreturned to hii home in SUverton\nThunday.\nT. Ttrron, R. Bruin, E. Luder-\nville, P. Hansen ud J. Henry of\nthe Mammoth mine Silverton, are\npaUcote in th* local hoipital.\nWillow Point W.I.\nHears of English\nInstitute Set-Up\nWILLOW POINT, B_a,-Thirteen\nmemben ud on* visitor ittended\na meeUng of the Women's in*U-\ntue Thunday, Mn. E. H. Applewhaite presiding.\nAs Mn I. C. CampbeU wa* unable to attend to give * talk on\n\"a Pneumonia paUent\", Mn Applewhaite read extract* trom u\nEnglish magutne, reUting to institute work in Englud.\nAn account of the NiUonal Fed-\neraUon of English Women's iniU-\ntute* tt which 8000 women ittended,\nand the resolution endoned at this\nconference wen included.\nThe insUtute throughout Englud\nare cloeely united, all under the\none head, ai it were, ud cannot\ndiiband or settle any mtjor problem without consent of the Federation.\nApril'! program wai discussed and\ndecided upon Mn WUUam Rutherford wUl Ulk on \"Garden Problems'* ud a \"sudwich compeUUon\nwill be held. Mrs. Applewhaite and\nMn. Barnes were tea hostesses.\n\u2022 sum rtvi I\nCRANBROOK BOYI\nDIES AT (OAST\nCRANBROOK, B.C-News of th* |\ndeath at Vancouver of Elvon Nelson,\n13-year-old son ot Mr. ud Mr*.\nCharles Nelson of this city, waa received with much regret by hia\nmuy friends here. Elvon had lived\nwu Uken Ul just before Christmu\nud entered St Eugene hospiUl. A\ntew week* ago his parents took I\nhim to Vancouver where he received several blood transfusions, and \u25a0\nuntil three days ago it wu thought |\nh'l condiUon wai somewhat improved.\nHe wu born in Bull River and\ncame to Cranbrook  a few yesn j\nago with hii parents. He was In\nthe eighth grade at the Central\nschool hen.\nBe la survived by his parenti, u\nolder brother, Henry, ud u older\nsister, Eveline.\nWent to uil itt Try * clmlfled \u2022_.\nI\ni<#5\nN. Denver Water\nIs Again Normal\nNEW DENVER, B.C,-New Denver'! domestic water supply is bow\npractically normal, with, perhaps, \u2022\nfew isolated cue* yet to be thawed\nout.\nIn the matter of Um water lupply,\nUie Slocu Community hosplUI w*s\nfortunate, for at no time this winter\nwu the insUtution without a water\n\u25a0upply.   .\nConsiderable credit wu given\nA. L. Harrii, ot the Denver water\nworks, tor his efforts in endeavoring to overcome tbe inconvenience\ncaused by frozen pipes.\nAl soon as conditions justified,\nbe became a busy man with the\nthawing machine.\nConsiderable credit wu also given\nthose responsible tor the electric\nlight service, for, up to the pretent,\nthere hu not been \u25a0 night thl* winter that electric Ught hu not been\navailable. Due to Uie weather ud\nthe attendant difficulty ot keeping the plut runnSi! smoothly, tbe\nlights were not always as bright u\nIn normal Umes, but Uie community\nhad light ud gu lamp*, u a iud-\nititute, were not uied much.\nKIMBERLEY MEN\nGOING OVERSEAS\nKIMBERLEY, B.C.-Jimmy Ber-\ntcn will leive next week for 1 hoUday in th* old country. George\nJam** of Chipman Camp expecU to\ngo there for his victtion in May.\nSunday the final curling game\nof th* Seth and Door compeUUon\nwu pUyed between McGowan and\nLorne Thompson, Uie former winning.\nFruk Conrad, after loting hli\nhome by fir* lut week, htd uother\npiece of bad luck. Some one broke\ninto the damaged ud unprotected\nbuilding ud took twiy hii radio,\nwhich wu in good condition. The\nthief hu not been traced.\nPiul Soderbolm hu returned\ntrom the Bridge River district\nwhere he wu working tor a ytar,\n3. C. Adams, who wu Injured lait\nThursday ln a fall, is a pttlent in\nMcDougall hosplUI here.\nMiss Florence Stephenson, who\nwu employed tor iome month* ln\nthe Mark Creek itore. ls now In th*\nemployment office of the C.M.J\u00abS.\nCo.\nnomngwnere\n-and How f\nTN the tobacco industry progress is constant. Improvements in\n\u2022* metJiods of crop raising, harvesting, curing, m__iu.act\\iring,\npackaging and merckndisiog are continuously being introduced, tt*. world over.\nScientists, inventors, ckmists, are striving always on\nbehalf of the tobacco industry towardI newer, better things, that\na still greater smoke satisfaction may be yours.\nThis is as it should be. The manufacture of tobacco prod'\nucts ranks among the world's leading industries. We are proud\nto be engaged in it.\nNew ideas come from all parts of the globe. Some recent\nimprovements have originated with the Imperial Tobacco Com'\npany. Others we have adopted, co-operating with manufacturers\nabroad, for your benefit.\nOur experts are on instant call for special service anywhere.\nToday one of our mechanical engineers may be embarking for\nEngland to investigate a new packaging device. Next week may\nfind one of our leaf experts hurrying off to the Orient to take\nnotes on a revolutionary discovery in soil treatment, valuable\nto Canadian growers. It sounds exciting, but to the experienced,\ntravel-wise members of our staff, it is aU in the day's work.\nWhile we are naturally proud of the contributions we\nmake toward progress in the tobacco industry, we are always\nreceptive to new ideas from whatever source they may come.\nWe conduct these ceaseless researches, investigations and\nexperiments believing that, as in all things, there is always room\nfor improvement.\nlaptriil Toetcco Compuy of Cauda, United.\n\u2014Cigarette tad tobacco ft-tory, MoatruL\nIMPERIAL TOBACCO COMPANY OF  CANADA, LIMITED\n _______\nPAOI SIX \u25a0\nNELSON DAILY NIWS. NELSON. B.C-MONOAY MORNINO. MARCH 18. 1888\nKimberley, Prince Albert Play Here Wednesday\nSpokane Skater. Entertain Big\nCrowd Wilh Variety ol Number.\nFancy Skating  and\nComdey; Dr. Kimble\nGenial Chairman\n', Close to 1000 persons paid admis-\ndons Saturday night to see a varied\ntnd entertaining skating program\nput on by members of the Spokue\nSkating club, who bucked heavy\n\u25a0Ding on the highway north of the\nborder to reach the city. It wis the\nBrst complete skiting program sUg-\nid in the city ud met with full\nipproval of the big gathering.\n' -Varied to a nicety, the program hi-\nsluded solo, duet and ensemble numbers, and hilarious comedy turns.\nUt. C. Hale Kimble genial president of the Spokue club, proved\nI iirst class announcer at the \"mike\"\nlnd the audience caught on to the\nIpirit of fun which he created from\n\u25a0 itart\nDr. Kimble as master of ceremonial brought greetings from the may-\nK tnd president of the chamber of\ncommerce of Spokane. He stated\nthat his performers were in no sense\nEfessional entertainers, but were\nting for the fun of it, and were\npresenting the program in tbe same\nipirit of sport as did hockey teams\ngrhen they performed in Canada.\nNOW IT'S DONE\n\"We have come up across the\n\u25a0order to ihow you how we do it\nWith of the line and to iee how you\nlo it north of the line, Dr. Kimble\nitattd.\nMin BritU Lundequist of Seattle, 12-year-old child wonder skater\nK the Pacific cout, who came aU\nEhe way from Seattle to perform,\nWtt easily the sUr ot the evening,\nuid her vivacious personality and\npHperb skating won for her a flock\nnew friends. Her number was\nnt-tled \"Poetry of Motion,\" ud\ngoof of her splendid exemplification\ni that role was shown in the ap-\ndause which she received. She wai\nailed back to skate a second Ume.\nHarold Goudge and Eldon Simp-\non  proved  adept comedy enter-\nliners and all but stole the show,\nChen Chairman Dr. Kimble  in-\nounced he was matching an Am-\nrican nudist with a Cuadian Son\n. Freedom Doukhobor, ud brought\nUt a skater dressed in bear skin,\nte fun was on. Mr. Bruin went\nirough all manner of uUcs ud\n(most caused a riot whu he took\n^fancy to a young ladles' fur coat,\ninterpreters of Uie art of fancy\niting ud a skittish HoUywood\nv and a demure milkmaid, the\npaters kept the fun at a high pitch.\n13. Boyle, Trail professional skat-\nr, assisted in the latter act.\nClaude Malone, Spokane's skiting\nireman, provided one of the novel-\ne* of the program, skiting with\nparkJers with the Ughts out\nFancy skitlng numbers were aU\nell received ud in ensembles Miss\nIthleen Gordon ud Roy McKen-\n\u00ab of the Nelson club ud R. J.\nfcoyln ot Trail, assisted. The Nelson\n\\aters  were  superb Dr.  Kimble\nI\nMembers of the club were enter-\nJied at a dance at the Canadian\nion following the program ud\nday afternoon gave further dem-\ntrations during the Skating club\nriod.\n'The program included:\nljune and Juuary\u2014\"An old gent\nti a lovely young lady,\" as the\n\u25a0aster of ceremonies announced\nproself and his partner, Miss Sarah\nWilliams, received * w\u00abrm wei-\nbme in their demonstration.\n\u25a0Grace Personified\u2014 Mijs Gloria\nperwood   ud   Miss   Mary   Ruth\n\u25a0ne*.\n'Specially waltz- Miss Kithleen\nfordon ind Roy McKenzie of Nel-\n'Surprise Specialty\u2014Ed McMahon,\n\u25a0Mr. Bruin and Harold Gouge his\nliner.\nI Spirals \u2014 Miss Glidy* Hudstone\nid Paul Sraithson.\n[Exemplification   of   grace   ud\ntythm-- Mils ridding McClaine\n|d Mrs. George Brian.\n[Silver streak\u2014 Fireman Claude\nilone, fancy turns with sparklers\nhUe lights turned off.\n|A Harmonious Pair\u2014Ed Murray\nId Miss H. Huss.\n[A skating riot or a Ukeoff of fancy\nfating\u2014Harold Goudge ud Eldon\nlonson.\nI Group waltz, ensemble\u2014Spokane\nId Nelson skaters.\nF-ncy skating \u2014 George Briu\nid Mrs. E. K. Murray.\n>ety   of   Motion\u2014 Miss   BritU\nIfldequisi\n|pe Hollywood  cow   -   Harold\nWe, Eldon Simonson and R. J.\nfrie of Trail.\n^roup of four\u2014 Miss Sarih Lee\nlUioms, Miss Mary Ruth Barnes,\nGloria Sherwood and Mrs.\nriding McClaine.\n\" laemble\u2014Spokane and Nelson\niters.\nthose who took part in the en-\nibles or who made Uie trip but\nnot appear on  the program,\n(faded  Miss   Ruth   Phain   Miss\nil Schaefer, Mill Eva Harden,\nEsta Rudkin, Emest Bray and\nNed Barnei.\nVICTORIA HOOP\nTEAM IS BEATEN\nVANCOUVER, March 18 (CP).-\nMount Pleasant MerchanU of Vancouver tonight were a step nearer\nthe British Columbia intermediate\n\"A\" boys hoop title as the result of\na 62-23 victory over Kingham GUlei-\npie quintet of Victoria, Islud champions.\nTlie Vucouver squad will next\nmeet the winner of the Kimberley1\nPenticton match for the British Co-\nlumbU title. \u25a0\nDADSTORY'SDAD\nIS HONORED AT 90\nAmerican Legion in a\nCalifornia Town\nLauds Veteran\n\"Dad\" Story's dad hai been hon'\nored in hii home town, Watsonville,\nCal, on hii 80th birthdiy.\nNelion'i \"Dad\" Story was 68\nyears old on March 3, but \"Dad\"\nStory'g dad had hli birthdiy celebration on Juuary 27, and to look\nat ils picture printed in the Gas\nMask, official publication of Edward H. Lorenson post No. 121 of\nthe American Legion, he looks as\nif he were rsther \"Did\" Story's son.\nHis picture looks just like him,\niccording to Williim Brown, fore-\nmu ot the Daily Newi press room,\nwho railed on him at his home in\nfUDBURY WINS IN\nFIRST GAME\n|\nludbury Falcons, champloni of\nI Northern OnUrlo Hockey motion, lUrted their tight for tbe\n'vio championihip ud the right\ntiove into Allan cup competition\ndefeating Oihiwi Cheve* 8-2\n' Saturday.\n'\u2022Icons  outclassed  the Interme-\nIte \"A\" O. H. A. titlists ill the\n. It wai the first of a two-game,\nll-goil scries.\nCalifornia two yeari ago when on a\nmotor trip, to give him a message\nfrom his son, who is the oldest carrier of the Daily News itaff. Both\nfather and son are named Asa A.\nStory, ud each enjoys the honorary\ntitle of \"D\u00abd.\"\nFollowing is the account given in\nthe Gis Misk of February 18, of\nthe event described by the head,\n\"80th birthday celebrated by 'Dad'\nStory,\" whose picture is a front\npage feature in the issue, which is\ndedicated to him:\nNOTABLE ANNIVERSARY\n\"Our big annual dinner meeting\non January 27 was well timed, as\non this date our own \"Dad\" Story\ncelebrated his 90th birthday.\n\"To the comrades of the Edward\nH. Lorenson post and to his friends\n'Dad' is 80 years young. He has\nalways been one of the boys and no\nbig legion affair would be compleU\nwithout him.\n\"Comrade Story has had a very\ncolorful and active career\u2014both in\nmilitary and civU activities. He\nwas born in St Lawrence county,\nNew York, January 27, 1846. At the\nage of 16 years,- in October, 1863,\nhe enlisted in company F, fifth New\nYork heavy artillery, first brigade,\nsecond division, eighth corps. He\nwas captured by the Confederates\nOctober 19, 1864, at the battle of\nCedar Creek, Va., confined ln Confederate prison at Salisbury, N.C,\nand paroled at Wilmington, weighing 71 pounds. He was discharged\nfrom service June 14, 1885.\n\"As guest of honor 'Dad' wai\ncalled upon for a speech and he responded in his usual way with wit\ncombined with logic and reason.\n\"'Dad' spoke of the early days\nof the G.A.R. organization and of\nthe beginning of their post here\nwith a membership of 30. Today\n'Dad' is the only surviving member\nof that post. He received an uproar\nof applauae ud the well-wishes ot\nthe entire issembly.\n\"Earlier in the evening a few of\n'Dad's' friends githered it the home\nof his son ud daughter-in-law, Mr.\nand Mn. A. W. Story, where a delightful ud splendid birthday dinner was icrved by Mn. Story, \u2022\ndinner thit will be long remembered by the gueiti, who were u follows: Miyor C. H. Biker, Put Com-\nminder Dr. Henry G. Witten of\nth* locil post, Past Commmder\nCecil Shuk of the V.F.W., George\nA. Smith, and Arthur C. Davii, an\nIntimate friend of 'Dad's', who li\nal*o \u2022 ion of\u00bb civil war veteran and\na great booiter of all service men.\nMr. Davis paid high tribute to 'Dad' I\nWOLVES ENTER\nHOCKEY FINALS\nBeat Savoy 5-3 to\nTake Round 8-5\nAfter watching their 3-2 lead obtained in the tint game of the Nelson Commercial puck series Ust\nWednesday wiped out in the first\nfour minuted of Saturday evutng's\ngame, when tbe Savoy Hotel buged\nin two goals in less than 20 seconds,\nactual playing Ume, to Uke a 4-3\nlead in the series, the Wolves made\na strong comeback to win the game\nby a 6-3 score, which with their 8-2\ntriumph last week gave them the\ntwo game total goal semi-final series\nby u 6-5 advuUge. The Wolves\nwill now play the Fairview A.C.\nintermediate club.\n\"Duke\" Waiman, really got down\nto business on Saturday evening,\nwhen he appeared in full hockey\nstrip, ud his generalship on the\nice was largely responsible for the\nstrong comeback by the Wolves.\nWaiman figured in four of the winners' tlve goals, scoring three himself ud assisting on Kirby's goal\nearly in the second period, that\nagain gave the Wolves a one goal\nlead on the two game series. The\n\"Duke\" played the entire 60 minutes\nwithout reUef. Johnny Aurelia scored the other goal with a long shot\nfrom outiide the blue line.\nDeVoin with two goals ud Bird\nwere the scorers for the Savoy\nHotel team.\nLoose goal posts ipoiled two dangerous Savoy attacks, when Carlson pulled the entire net to the side\nof the rink. Although outehot by one\ndrive the Wolves were the most\ndugerou* team throughout the\ngame boring in better for rebounds,\nwhile their defence with Richardson\noutstanding, was much superior to\ntheir opponents, wbo through slow\nclearing practically handed the\nWolves two goals. Johnny Aurelia,\nplayed his best game of the season,\nand about a third of tbe shots on\nKitto, were from Aurelia's stick.\nWalter GiUett. Bill Kirby ud Teddy\nRomano, all played well on the attack, while George BenweU ud\nJerry Whitfield, gave Richardson\nplenty of assistance on defence.\nKitto was not up to his usual\nform. Devoin and Bird showed up\nwell in Uie fint period, but slowed\nup toward the finish. Jack Whitfield, Peter Dewdney ud Allan\nMcLeu were the most effective\namong the forwards.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period\u2014 (1) Savoy Hotel, DeVoin (Bird) 2.82; (2) Sevoy Hotel,\nBird (McLean and DeVoin) 3.08; (Si-\nWolves, Waiman (unassisted) 16.49.\nNo penalties.\nSecond period\u2014(4) Wolv Kirby\n(Waimu) 3.48; (8) Wolvei, AureUa\n(unassisted) 12.51.\nPenalties - W. Gillett (1), SUn\nHonwill (2), Kirby (1), Jerry Whitfield (1).\nThird period\u2014(6) Savoy Hotel,\nDeVoin (unassisted) 3.54; (7) Wolves\nWaimu (Kirby) 7_t9; (8) Wolves,\nWaiman, (W. GiUet) _.;.'.\nNo penaltiei.\nStopi by periods:\nCarlson  ._ 8   \"   5\u201421\nKitto 6   8 11-24\nThe teams were:\nSavoy Hotel - Walter Kitto.\nStewie Russell, SUn Horswill ud\nSid HonwUl; Tommy Bird, Allan\nMcLean ud Johnny DeVoi.; Peter\nDewdney, Jack Whitfield ud Jack\nTaylor.\nWolves\u2014Frank Carlion, Gordon\nRichardson, Jerry Whitfield and\nGeorge Benwell; \"Duke\" Waimu.\nBiU Kirby ud Walter GiUett; Teddy Romano and Johnny Aurelia.\nFrank O'Oenski refer.ed the\ngame and BiU Freno ud Ritchie\nwere Umekeepera.\nSUNDAY HOCKEY\nNATIONAL\nMaroons 3, Canadieni 1.\nBoston 1, Chicago 0.\nRangers 2, Americui 1,\nToronto 2, Detroit 1, overtime.\nINTERNATIONAL\nSyracuse 8, London 2.\nCANADIAN AMERICAN\nSpringfield 1, New Haven 0.\nU. S. Steel Mokes\nSome Progress\nNEW YORK March 15 (APj-\nMyron C. Taylor, chairmu of the\nUnited SUtes Steel corporaUon, said\nin bis unual report to stockholders,\nmade pubUc today, that respects as\nhad been hoped for, but were\n\"gratifying\" In that they marked\niome recovery from the low point\nof the depression.\nThe pamphlet report shows net\nincome for the year available for\ndividends of $1,146,708, equal to approximately 30 cents \u25a0 share on the\npreferred stock, compared with a\ndeficit ot 321,667,780 in 1934. After\ndeducting $7,205,622 for preferred\ndividends, which were paid at the\nrate of 2 pc\u00bb- cent annually, there\nwu a deficit of $6,088,913, which\nwas Uken from surplus.\nat the dinner ud ilso piid hii respects in \u2022 short addresi  to the\nleglonmires.\nPOEMS  RECITED\n\"On uother pige we hive taken\nthe tiberty to reprint one of 'Dad's'\nmany poems, \"Do the G.A.R. Men\nLove Their Country?'\n\" 'Dad' has been a well known\nfigure at the conventions of Uie\nG.A.R. ai weU ai many other lervlce convention!. Hli poems hive\nbeen recited, with great honor to\nhlmielf ai well ai hii community,\nthroughout the country.\n\"We salute you, 'Dad', and here'!\nto your 100th anniversary.\"\nFire Hose Used on\nMob ot Rugby Game\nCARDIFF, Wale*. March 15 (CF\nCable) \u2014 Rugby-mad enthusiasts,\nfighting to gain admission to Cardiff Arms Park, where Wales met\nIreland in u international contest\nSaturday, caused considerable excitement before the game got underway. Four persons were trampled on ud sent to hospital.\nThe stands were filled u hour\nud a half before game time ud\nUie gates locked. Thousandi rushed the entrance and when police\ncould not cope with Uie crowd Uie\nfire brigade was caUed.' Streams\not water were directed at the mob,\nWhich soon broke up.\nCANADIAN HERO\nTO BE HONORED\nValenciennes, France,\nto Name Street for\nSergt. H. Cairns\nVALENCIENNES, France, March\n15 (CP cable)\u2014In a gesture of\nfriendship to Canada, the town of\nValenciennes has decided to rename the avenue de la' Tourelle,\none of its principal streets, after\nthe late Sergt. Hugh Cairns, V.C,\nwho served in the 48th (Saskatchewan) battalion. This is believed to\nbe the flnt instance of a French\ntown paying such a tribute to the\nmemory of a non-commissioned officer of the allied armies.\nThe decision was unanimously\napproved at the last .neeting of the\nmunicipal council.\nL'Avenue de la ToureUe leads\nfrom the monument of Nungesser,\nairman hero of France and a naUve\nof Valenciennes, who was lost in\nthe first attempted west-bound\ntransatlantic flight some 12 yean\nago. It runs southerly toward Fa-\nmars and Mount Huoy, famous in\nCanadian war history as places\nWhere the 4th Canadian division\nachieved renown on November 1,\n1918. In that engagement Sergt.\nHugh Ciirns won the Victoria cross,\nbut gave his life in the effort.\nSergeant Cairns won his Victoria\ncross and came to his death hi the\naction of the 10th Canadian infantry\nbrigade at Mount Houy, Famars ud\nMarly, on the outskirts of Valenciennes November 1, 1918. This\noperation resulted in the capture of\nthe town with 2750 prisoners ud\nmany field guns.\nThe 46th batUUon wai one of\nthose engaged, and in tbe second\nphase of the operation this unit\npushed forward from Mount Houy\nto Marly. It wai here Sergeut\nCairns won his Victoria cross, first\nwhen he attacked a machine gun\nsingle-handed, killing the crew of\nfive, ud later repeating the same\nfeat, killing 12 more of the enemy\nand capturing 18, with two field\nguns.\nSubsequently when the advance\nwas held up by machine guns and\nfield guns, he led a small party to\noutflank them, killing many, forcing about 50 to surrender, ud capturing ill the guns.\nLiter, he forced 60 Germans occupying Marly to surrender. While\ndisarming them he was rushed by\nUother group ud seriously wounded. Sergeant Cairns died from his\nwounds next d\u00bby.\nWk Islip Is Tea\nHostess, Nakusp\nNAKUSP, B.C.-MIss Molly Islip\nwas hostess Sunday when Miss J.\nYurick preiided at the tea table,\nwhich wai graced with shamrocks\nand yellow Upen in sliver sconces.\nAssisting In serving were Miss K.\nFowler, Miss P. Sheffield and Miss\nM. Alpsen.\nMiss Alpsen whistled several selections and piano and violin duets\nwere given by G. H. Gardner ud\nC. Campe.\nInvited guesta Included Miss J.\nYurick. Miss K. Fowler, Miss P.\nSheffield, Miss M. Alpsen, Miss R.\nHorsley. Miss N. Johnson, Mrs. H.\nHiltz, Mr. and Mrs. R. Barlow, H.\nMaxwell, F. Benton, J. Harris, R.\nJordan, G. H. Gardner, C. Wade,\nC. Howarth, R. Jones, C. Campe and\nP. Bjorkland.\nA. Middlemass of Arrow Park was\nin town Monday.\nW. Clough was \u2022 visitor here from\nSlocan City Mondsy.\nB. Sunstrom of Burton was a\nmotor visitor here Mondiy.\nL. Wird wai a viiitor to Lumby.\nJ. Burkitt arrived on Saturday'!\nboat ud left the same day for New\nDenver.\nG. Wade is relieving at the Canadian Bank of Commerce here for\nR. Thrower who is on vacation.\nMrs. de Yeeger and son, John, of\nEdgewood spent Saturday in Nakusp.\n3. Cadden of Burton was s visitor here Saturday.\nJ. Parent of Pincston spent the\nweek-end in town.\nH. Bowes was a week-end visitor\nto Nelson.\nMiss Albina Johnson of Arrow\nPark spent Saturday In town.\nR. Thrower ha* left to spend a\nfortnight at the coast.\nA. D. Trlckett of New Denver\nmotored to town Saturday.\nJ. Harris has returned to Pincston\nlon after spending the week-end\nln town.\nW. Miller was a visitor ln Nelson\nSaturday.\nA. Young wai In town from New\nDenver Saturday.\nMr. Jeffrey! of Arrow Park was in\ntown Saturday.\nTORONTO WINS FROM DETROIT IN AN\nOVERTIME BATTLE; CONACHER HERO\nDETROIT, March 15 (CP).-Char-\nlie Conacher's high drive into the\ncorner of the net from long range\ngave Toronto Maple Leafs a 2-1 victory in overtime tonight over Detroit Red Wings in a NaUonal\nHockey league game before a crowd\nof 13,726.\nThe win enabled the Leafi to\nkeep pace with Montreal Maroons,\nwho remained a point ahead of Toronto tor the Cuadian section leadership by beating Montreal Canadiens. The Wings, although beaten,\nsUyed two points ahead of Chicago\nBlack Hawk* hi tint place in the\nAmerican section.\nFighting desperately to win ud\nkeep within shooting disUnce of\nMaroons in their stretch drive, the\nLeaf! forced the pace in the overtime frame.\nMarty Barry, Red Wing center,\ngave Detroit a lead ln the first period ud the Leafs struggled vainly\nagainst a strong defence until 8:11\nin the third period. Then Bill Thorns\ntook a pass from Andy Blair and\nscored.\nSPECIAL TRAINS f ROM KIMBERLEY\nAND TRAIL TO BRING MANY FAHS\nNelson Is Agog With\nInterest; Reserve\nSeat Call Big\nRANGERS STAY IN RUNNING FOR BERTH\nIN PLAYOFFS BY DEFEATING AMERKS\nNEW YORK March 15 (AP)-A\nbattling New York Ranger team remained in the running for a Stanley\ncup playoff berth by defeating New\nYork American! 2-1 in a fast and\nbruising NaUonal Hockey league\ngame before 16,000 fus tonight.\nThe Rangers kept within one\npoint of Boston Bruins, third place\nholden in the American division.\nThe- Americans were assured of a\nplayoff berth, despite their defeat,\nas the cellar-dwelling Canadiens of\nthe international division lost their\nlast opportunity to pass the Amerks\nby going down to defect before\nMontreal Maroons.\nAll of the icoring occurred in the\nfinal frame. Butch Keeling, Rangers' pincb hit wingman, gave the\nblueshirts the lead by a boomibng\nshot from the left wing boards but\nNels Stewart tied it up seven minutes later following a prolonged\nSassing bout near the Ranger goal,\nookie Alex Shibicky notched the\nwinning marker with less thin tour\nminutes to go.\n14,000 FANS SEE BOSTON BRUINS WIN\n1-0 OVER BLACK HAWKS AT BOSTON\nBOSTON, March 15 (AP)-Teddy\nGraham's speedy solo rush around\nEarl Siebert, huge Chicago defence-\nman, gave the Boston Bruins a 1-0\ntriumph over the Black Hawks ln a\nNational Hockey league game tonight before 14,000 fans.\nThe hard-fought triumph bright\nened the home team's playoff hopes\nud enabled Goalie Tiny Thompson\nto pull ahead of Chicago's Mike\nKarakas ih their contest for the\nGeorge Vezina trophy. Thompson,\nhas had 78 goals scored against him\ntc 80 for Karakas and both have\nturned in nine shutouts.\nCANADIENS FALL 3-1 TO MAROONS IN\nFIRST SUNDAY GAME EVER, MONTREAL\nMONTREAL. March 15 (CP)-\nMontreal Maroons mainUined their\ngrasp on first place in the National\nHockey league'! Canadlu section\nby whipping' Montreal Canadiens\n3-1 here tonight before a crowd of\n8OO0. It was the first Sunday hockey\ngame ln the history of Montreal.\nThe loss ended Canadiens' playoff\nhopes and left them ouUlde the\nmoney circle for the tint time since\n1928. It also wound up the French\nclub's season here. They have games\nat New York and Boston before\ndisbanding for the season.\nDark-haired Johnny Gagnon lent\nCuadiem away to u early lead\nnear the middle of the tint period\nwhen he scored from a scramble in\nfront of Lome Chabot\nHardly five minutes later Russ\nBlinco split the Canadi\"'1 defence,\naccepted a perfect pass trom Earl\nRobinson in stride ud beat Wllf\nCude with a low drive.\nStew Evans whipped the winning\ngoal past Cude before the first period ended.\nThe final ptrlod wai more than\nhilt finished when Trottier ilim-\nmed ln Mirooni' third goil.\nCONGRESS MINE\nREADY FOR MILL\nVANCOUVER, March 13 (CP)-\nRobert Wilkinson, M. L. A., managing director, told shareholders Saturday at the annual meeting of Congress Gold Mines, Ltd., that the\nmine is now in condiUon to justify\na 150-ton unit milling plant.\nHon. Wells Gray, Rdbert Wilkinson, Bruce Fruer, Graham McDonald, W. J. Asielstine ud D. W. Johnson were elected directors.\nT. C. BotteriU, the company's engineer, said that metallurgical problems had been solved ud that with\ndepth the gold content of the ore\nappeared to be increasing while\nthe antimony content wai decreasing. He felt confident, he said in\nmaking his recommendation! to the\ndirectors, that development of Uie\nmine had reached the sUge for milling ud that profitable production\nwould result.\nEggs Down\nSell for 40 Cents Per\nDozen on Nelson\nMarket\nCoast All-Blocks\nAre Beaten\nVANCOUVER, Mirch 16 (CP).-\nDesplte the tact they were ihort iix\nof their regular playen, Vucouver\nOccasionals overcame a five-point\nlead to down the mighty North\nShore All-Blacks, 8-5 Saturday, on\nthe muddy pitch at Brockton Point\nThe game was one of a series to\ndecide the opposition for Stanford\nunlvenity who are scheduled tb\nplay here March 25 against University ot British Columbia ud again\non March 28 against the winner of\nthe series.\nEggs were down five cent! on\nthe local Vernon street market on\nSaturday ud Grade A-large were\nselUng for 40 cents per dozen. Prices\nwere unchanged ud sales were\nfair. No new produce appeared, but\nit is expected there will be hothouse vegeUbles within the next\ntwo weeks.\nPLAN FORUM AT\nCRANBROOK\nCRANBROOK, B.C.,-The CCF.\nheld a pubUc meeting in the Maple\nhall Wednesday when J. Simi was\nthe main ipeaker.\nA suggestion that the local CCF.\ninaugurate a monthly- open forum\nfor pre-arranged topics of Interest\nto be discussed was favorably received.\nA resolution was passed urging\nupon the government Uie necessity\nof such legislation as is embodied in\nthe proposed health Insurance measure ud its early adoption. Copies\not this resolution are being forwarded to the opposition leaders and\nthe Vancouver trade* ud labor\ncouncil.\nCalgary Jimmies\nWin Hoop Title\nCALGARY, March 15 (CP)-Cal-\ngary Jimmies won the AlberU intermediate basketball championship\nhere Saturday night by defeating\nEdmonton ComeU 50-28 in the second game ot the two-game total-\npoint series. Comets won the flnt\ngame 41-39 at Edmonton.,\nSaturday Hockey\nNATIONAL LEAOUE\nCanadiem 1, Detroit 1.\nMarooni 1, Toronto 0.\nINTERNATIONAL  LEAGUE\nBuffalo 4, Rochester 0.\nCleveland 4, Detroit 0.\nAMERICAN   ASSOCIATION\nTulsa 4, Minneapolis 2.\nKansas City 4, St. Paul 3.\nCANADIAN-AMERICAN\nBoston 4, PhlladelphU 2.\nSpringfield 3, Providence 2.\nROSS MAY BUY\nBOSTON'S BRUINS\nBOSTON, March 18 (AP)-The\nGlobe says Art Ross, general manager of Boston Bruins of tbe NaUonal Hockey league, will buy the\nteam it the end of the season it a\nsyndicate he held* cu raise $250,000.\nGROH MAY LOSE\nLEFT EYE\nFORT ERIE, Ont, Mirch 13. (CP)\n\u2014\"Speedy\" Groh, defenceman with\nRochester Cardinals of the International Hockey league, may lose the\nsight ot his left eye is the result of\nan iccldent ln the Cardinal-Buffalo\nBison game here Saturday nighL\nGroh was hit in the eye with \u2022\npuck in the third period of the\ngame. He was knocked unconscious\nand ruihed to hospital.\nHamilton Beats\nNiagara by 4-0\nHAMILTON, Ont., March 15 (CP)\n\u2014 Hamilton Tigers, Uking advan-\nUge of every break, scored a 4-0 triumph over Niagara FaUi CaUracts\nln the flnt game ot their best-of-\nfive series for the Senior OnUrlo\nHockey association championihip\nhere Saturday night\nWINDSOR LEADS\nNIAGARA FALLS, Ont., March\n15 (CP).-Windior Fordi will cirry\na 12-polnt lead into the second game\not their OnUrlo amateur basketball\nsemi-final series with Niagara Falls\nEchoes at Windsor next Wednesday\nby virtue of their 41-28 verdict over\nthe Falls in the first game here Saturday night\nNelion hockey fani wen agog\nhere Saturday morning when definite word wu received thit thl\ntint playoff gim* between Kim\nberley Dynamiten and tht Saskatchewan- Alberts ehimplons\nwould be held here Wedneiday\nnight, March 18, and during Saturday and Sunday wires ind\ntelephone calls pound Into Nelson making irringem.nts for reserve seats.\nKlmberley hn uked for 306 reierve salts as there will be a special train rolling frem there, and\nTrail Is also seeking * specific\nnumber of reserve seats is \u2022 speciil will com* frem then. At\nflnt Klmberley was uklng for\n160 Mite, but thit number wu\nboosted twice until thty ire now\nrequiring 300. The rink will teit\n1800 ptoplt ind thtrt will bt 894\nreserve selU.\nPrince Albert Mintoi eliminated\nLuicar Indians in the second game\n6-5, after u overtime session, to\nmake it two straight. When Kimberley and the Mintos play here, it\nwlU be the first of a best-out-of-\nthree series, with the other game\nor games at Calgary later in the\nweek. The special train will le*ve\nKimberley about 9 o'clock Wednesday morning and both the mine\nand the mill lt ts itated may be\nahut down. In returning, the train\nwiU leave Nelson in Ume to get\nthe men bsck tor the next day's\nshUt'\nTRAIL SPECIAL\nTrails special leaves the Smelter\nCity at 4:55 ln the afternoon, leaves\nTadanac at 5:10, and wiU stop at\nCaitlegar, Brilliant, South Slocin\nand Bonnington. Reserve seat tick\nets wiU be on sale Monday at TralL\nIn returning to TraU, the train wUl\nleave about midnight The special la\nbeing sponsored by the executiv*\not the Nelson Hockey club.\nDenis StDenis, maniger ot th*\nNelson civic centre. stq|ed Sundiy\nhe had received confirmation win*\nfrom Prof. W. H. Hardy of Edmonton, vice-preildent of the Canadian\nAmateur rlockey usociation, ud\nA. W. (Gui) McDonald of Trail,\npresident of the British Columbi*\nHockey association.\nNews that the gime will be held\nhere hu erected tremendous interest. It is yean since Nelson hi*\nhad opportunity to iee * championship game and the largest\ncrowd, barring non*, ls expected to\nbe on bud to witness the game.\nKimberley Dynamiters have been\nfavorites here for at least two seasons and they have many strong\nsupporten in the city.\nTEAM8 HAVE QOOD\nRECORDS\nMintos bave a fine record, during\nseason play ud also ln the championship pUyoff series, ud they\nwlU give a good account ot themselves. Kimberley's record is a byword now in the district The Dynamiten have only been be*tan\ntwice this year, once by Coleman\nCanadians ud once by Trail in the\nplayoffs.\nDynamiters requested tbe game\nbe pUyed tt Neiaon whu lt became certain there would not be\nice at Klmberley. It will be the fint\nchampionship , game on the new\nNeiaon artificial ice, ud with lt wlU\ncome a realization of some of the\ndreamt of Nelsonltes who viiioned\nplayoff game* being held here becauie of Ui* conveniences the city\ncould provide.\nThe game wiU start at 8:30 sharp.\nIt is undentood that the Minto*\nare already en route to Nelson, ud\nthat the Dynan.iters wUl arrive\nTuesday. Ice for practice will be\navailable for both teami.\nVictoria Squares\nHoop Series\nVICTORIA, March 18 (CPL-Vic-\ntorU Dominoes tonight were \u00bbU\nsquare with their Intercity rivals.\nVucouver Province, ln the battle\nto decide British Columbia's representative* in the Dominion men's\nsenior buketball quest, in which\nthe Victoris team, then known u\nthe Blue Ribbon*, were lucceuful\nin 1838 ud 1934. Dominoes downed\nthe mainland iquad 40-36 here Saturday night in th* second the best\not five series for the cout men'i\nsuior \"A\" UUe. Province won the\nfirst FTidiy night 42-37.\nThe teims meet in Vucouver in\nthe third ud fourth gimes Fridiy\nand Saturday.\nDeer Sleeps in\n\u2022 Bed; Likes Java\nWoman, However, Is\nPermitted Keep Her\nPet in Los Angeles\nLOS ANGELES, March 16 (CP)-\nTwo agents of the lUte game commiuion wept to an apartment houie\nto investigite a deer\u2014and the lady\nwho aniwered the door laid \"OK but\nplease tread lightly,\" the deer wai\nasleep ud she wu making hii\ncoffee.\nThe warden! ut awhile ud inhaled the coffee aroma. Finally Mrs.\nVerna Cover appeared with a steaming bowl in her hend ud beckoned\nthem through a door. She threw\nback the coven on a bed ud gently\nshook a 250-pound deer. He shook\nhis sutlers, bounded out of bed and\ndrank the coffee.\nThe wardui were impressed but\nthey took the deer, (Chiefie), down\nto the sUte building for investigation (* little matter of i liw ibout\nhaving certain wild animals in captivity).\nMrs. Cover produced a satisfactory licence from Colorado and said\nChiefie will be here only temporarily. Inspector Bauber said it would\nbe all right.\nMn. Cover brought him here hoping to get him in the movies. He ii\nthree years old.\nVegreville Wins\nLLOYDMINSTER, Suk., March\n16 (CP).\u2014Vegreville Rugen defeated Lloydminster Prolltes 5-3\nhere Saturdiy night hi the tint\ngame of a two-of-three intermediate\ninterprovlncial hockey seriei. The\nAlberta champloni scored once in\neich of two overtime periodi ifter\nthe team! had ended regulation\ntime ln a 3-8 Ue.\nBUILDING SERVICE\nSTRIKE AT AN END\nNEW YORK, March 15 (AP)-\nThouiudi of union elevator operator* ud other building aervice employee* toned away their picket\nalgn* ud begin returning to work\ntodiy after a two-week itrike that\ndisrupted the operaUon ot 2400\nipartmenU and buiineu structures\nin New York City.\nA compromise settlement providing for immediate reemployment of\nthe striken (long with arbitration\nof wages ud hours was unounced\neerly tod\u00bby after t 18-hour conference.\nMcAvoy May Have\na Broken Hand\nNEW YORK, Mtrch 15 (AP).-\nJock McAvoy'* fistic futur* was\nstudded with \"its\" today after hi*\n18-round defeat at the hand) of\nthe light-heavyweight champion,\nJohn Henry Lewi*.\nThe lion-hearted Briton wu eon-\nfined to a hotel nursing a badly\nswollen right hand, a bashed noae\nud a bruised ear.\nA doctor exemined the hud ud\niaid he doubted it wu broken, but\nDave Lumluiky, McAvoy's manager, had it X-rayed.\n\"jock's future depends on the seriousness of thit injury,\" Lumluiky\nsaid. \"If the X-ray picturei do not\nshow a fracture, then we'U go (head\nwith our plui ud sail next Wednesdiy for Englud ud e BriUsh\nheavyweight championship tight\nwith Jack Petenon on AprU 28. If\nMcAvoy defeats Petenon well\nhasten back to New York and pursue our plans for uother match\nwith Lewis.\"\nCunningham Wins\nMile Race, N.Y.\nNEW YORK, March 15 (AP)-In\n\u2022 race that wu a traveity an the\nstopwatch but a triumph in strategy,\nGlenn Cunningham, world record\nholder, whipped hii two indoor rival!, Gene Venrke ud Joe Mingan,\nlut night in the Columbl* mile,\nfeeture of tbe unual Knighti of\nColumbui games.\nIt wu Cunningham'! tint victory\non the Garden track thil whiter\nand his Ume of four minutes, 48.8\nseconds testified to the remarkable\ncharacter of the race.\nWhile an overflow crowd ot 16,000\nfans (lapped, booed ud Jeered, the\nthree great rollers simply Jogged\naround for nearly nine laps ot the\n11-lap journey on th* banked\nboardi.\nOn the backstretch of the ninth\nlap, Cunningham spurted, outfought\nVen-ke tor the pole poiition and\noutran his two rivals through the\nUst two lsps. The celebrated \"iron\nhone,\" having saved everything for\nsuch a finish, sprinted acrou the\nfiniih Une, three yird* hi front ot\nVen-ke and four yard* ahead of\nMangan.\nEddie O'Brien, Syracuse university flash, followed up a brilliint\nvictory over Chuck Hornboitel, his\nIndiana rival, in the 600 yard race by\nanchoring a victorious orange quartet in the one mile college relay.\nPembroke Juniors\nWin Ottawa Series\nOTTAWA, Mtrch 15 <CP).-Pem-\nbroke'! Little Lumber Klngi lut\nnight won Uie Ottewi ud Diitrict\nJunior Amateur Hockey association\nchsmplomhip by defeating University of OtUwa, 5-1, to Uke the two-\ngame, total-goals seriei 7-6.\nU. S. DOLLAR OFF\nMONTREAL, March 18 (CP) -\nPound iterling ud French franc advanced on Montreal foreign exchanges Saturday whUe the United\nStatei dollir -haded slighUy. Sterling was up 23-32 cent *t 8447% ud\nthe true gained a miner traction\nat 6.64H cenU. The dollar eased 1-32\nof one per cent to p-a,\n WO\nJAPANESE SKI\n*\u2022\u2014\nRugby - Skiing - Indoor Swimming - Curling - Bowling\nThr** of th* Jtpintw Olympic ikl turn pictured it practice,\nit <_\u00bbrml*ch-P*rt*nklreh*n, Germiny.\nN?U10\nHockey - Badminton - Soccer - Basketball - Boxing - Wrestling\nPITCHERS\nPAQE SEVEN-\nNELSON DAILY NEW8. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. MARCH  16. 1S3S\n-PAGS SEVEN!\nDetroit Tlgtn' moundimin limber up thtlr uliry wingi\nIn iprlng workout it L*k*l\u00abnd, Fit.\nPRINCE ALBERT BEATS LUSCAR TEAM\nHAT-TRICK IN\nFIVE MINUTES\nAS CELTS WIN\nMcGrory on a Spree;\nRangers, Aberdeen\nBoth Victors\nGLASGOW, March 15 (CP Cable)\n\u2014James McGrory, who recently\neclipsed the 364-goal record of the\nlate, Hugh Ferguson of Motherwell,\ntaking all honon u the most prolific scorer in Scotland's football\nhjstory, gave another demonstrate! of his shooUng ability Saturday.\nThe veteran CelUc centre-forward\nput on a high-powered display\nagainst MotherwcU md with his\nteam leading 2-0 in the second halt\nwent on a rampage, banging ln three\ngoali in less than five minutes. McGrory* counters were weU deserved, his first-Ume efforti completely\nfooling the Fin Park custodian.\nCeltt by their win retaied their\nfour-point advantage over Rangers\nand Aberdeen who also turned irt\ntwo-point games. At the other end\nof the table, however, Hibernians\njumped past Ayr United, Airdrieon-\niani md Clyde to lmd ln 17th position, out of relegaUon dinger.\nThe Parkheed team'! 5-0 win over\nthe fifth-placers wu surprising. Although favored to gain the verdict,\nit wu not expected the Celts would\nbe so thorough. Delmey and Buchan scored the tint two goals.\nAny hope Clyde entertained ot\nbeating Rangen in the semi-final\ntor the cup two weeks bence was\n.Ust about shattered after the 4-1\nloss over the week-end. The Shaw-\nfield Park eleven fought weU for a\ntime but faded. Smith, two, Turn-\nbull md .Venters were the Ibrox\nPark snipers. Ballantyne counted for\nClyde.\nlt wu a tight game at Pittodrie\nwhere Aberdeen narrowly edged\nout Kilmarnock 2-1. All goala were\nregiitered ln the fint half, Armstrong and Mill! for Aberdeen and\nRobertson tor the visiton.\nThe biggest surprise of the day\nwai Hibernians 2-0 victory over\nPartick ThisUe, in seventh posiUon.\nAfter a scoreless first half, Black\nsent in two quick goals to give the\nHibs a well-earned decision.\nSunderland Lead\nIs Reduced\nHuddersfield Now in\nSecond Place\nLONDON, Much 15 (CP cable).-\nWinning its first league victory\nsince December 26, Chelsea provided\nthe feature of Saturday's football\nprogram that saw a great increase\nin crowds at all matches. As a result\not the lUting ot the ban on announcements of football fixtures by\nthe football league, the SS games\nplayed drew a total of 614,000 spectators.\nThis represented u increue of\nnearly 200,000 over the previoui\nweek when league authorities delayed announcement of fixture! in\nits efforts to itop footbaU pool betting.\nChelsea* 3-2 victory at Bolton\nlUted the Peniloneri out ot the\ndanger zone at the bottom of the\nleague, tempararily at least. The\nleading Sunderlmd squad had it*\nmargin cut to seven points when\na weakened Leeds United eleven\ndrew 3-3 at Roker Park. Huddersfield went into second place over\nDerby County by defeating Liverpool 1-0.\nFighting on even terms Chelsea\nand the Wanderers had each scored\ntwo goals at the interval. Bambrick,\nMills ud Spence were the winners'\nsharpshooters and Milson taUied for\nBolton. O'Harc, the Pensioners' right\nback put through his own goal for\nthe Wanderen' second goal.\nAt Preston, Arsenal lacked the\nlervices of BasUn, classy interna-\nlionil forward. The gome proved a\npoor affair and the home defence\nwu not often extended.\n8COTLAND BEATS ENGLAND\nJJVERNESS, ScoUtnd, Mtrch 15\ntcV Cable)\u2014Scotland gained a 1-0\ntrjclory over England In an amateur\ninternational soccer mttch pltyed\nhere Sttuddiy.\nSpring Training\nLessons at Home\n8-DDY\nMYERS\nSPRING\n\"__.'\\  !_\u00ab.  THrVNING\nm\/^__^ \u25a0----<>\u00ab\n\u2022y AL DEMAREE\nFormsr Pitcher Ntw York Glintt\n2. Double play\u2014shortstop to tecond bue to tint base. Broken line\nshows coune of ball from batter\nand during play; continuous line\nshows where second baseman left\nhis position to cover bag.\n1. Double play. Second baseman\ntouches haae-runner on the line and\nthe relays ball to tint.\nCranbrook Links\nlo Gel Water\nCRANBROOK, B.C.,-The annual\nmeeUng of the Cranbrook GoU and\nCountry club was held Wednesday\nwith a good attendance.\nAlan Graham, president, wu in\nthe chair and reported a good season in 1035. He told what had been\ndone toward getting water which\nmight be used as * sprinkling syitem on iome of the fairways ud\nuld that estimates of a possible one\nquirter Inch a day for four fairway* had been made by City Superintendent Philpot. He concluded by\nthanking te ladiei of the house committee for their assistance during\nthe seuon.\nTbe financial statement, read by\nCJ. Roberts, club secretary, ihowed\na baluce in tbe bank ot $183.78. The\nhouie committee had ended the year\nwith $35.45 on hud. Receipt* had\nincluded $846, pitying privilege!,\n$345 from ihare member* md $55.50\nviilton' dues. Present usets, including real estate, building!, furnishings, etc. imount to $5241.93.\nRettring directon were Aim Graham and Mn. Manhall. E. H. McPhee md C. M. Pennock were elected to take their placei, other members ot the directorate being T. M.\nRoberts, H. P. KUensUver, W. Robertion md W. T. Attridge. W. C.\nMarshall wai reappointed auditor.\nIn general discussion, C. M. Pennock stated thtt he thought there\nought to be \u2022 greater revenue from\ngreen fees and uked whether anything htd been done to attract tourists. He wu told that Uckets were\non uie at varioui places in the city.\nSeveral memben stated it u their\nopinion that if the, course could be\nimproved the green fees would take\ncare ot themselves.\nEittmites were presented for the\nwatering of greem 1, 2, 3 md 0 and\nt general discussion eniued. The declilon wu for the new directorate\nto proceed lt wtter could be secured\nat all. A new fairway was suggested\nfor No. 4 snd recommended to Uie\ngreens committee.\nMn. Fergie was appointed women'i captain ud P. C. Coe men'i\ncaptain. Mn. H. A. McKowin wis\nippointed held of the houie committee, the balance to be choien at\na meeting of the ladies.\nLittle Hop* for\nCanadiens\nMONTREAL, March 15 (CP).-\nMontretl Canadieni had nothing\nbut a forlorn hope left tonight ln\ntheir fight for a National Hockey\nleague playoff berth. They battled\nDetroit Red Wings to a 1-1 Ue Saturday night to get within four points\nof the third-place New York Americans but have only three games left\nto pity.\nSmolu a FRESH* 'y\"'u^'\nBritish Consols\nROSSLAND Will\nPLAYCOASTFOR\nB.C. HOOP TITLE\nDefeat Kelowna, Five\nYear Champs, 85-65\nin Two Games\nKELOWNA,    B.C,    Mirch    15\n(CP).\u2014The ftst-ittpplng Roulind\n\u2022tnlor \"B\" men'i buketbill teim\nSiturdiy night outplayed the Fimoui Pliyen of Kelowni, holders\nof the chimplonihlp for the put\nflvt ytirt, for t S2-35 win. Tht\nresult glvti tht  Roulind squad\nth* two-game total-point urlu,\nS5-S5, by virtue of their 33-30 win\nevtr Kelowni Frldty night.\nThe outcome gives Rosslmd Uie\nright to meet Fonts of Vincouver\nin the final for the men's senior\n\"B\" provincial crown.\nAssuming the lead trom the tint\nwhiiUe, Rossland ran up point after\npoint on Kelowna, mainly through\nUie good play of WiUoughby and\nBtrdsley, ex-Unlvenity of British\nColumbii hoop stan.\n\"Pi\" Campbell played a smart\ngame tor the Famous Players ud\nlt was mainly his good work which\nkept Kootenay winners from running up a still higher count\nOLD COUNTRY\nSOCCER\nLONDON, March 15 (CP Cable).\n\u2014Soccer games played in the Old\nCountry Saturday were:\nENGIISH LEAGUE\nFirst Dlvlilon\nAlton Villa 3, Leeds 3.\nBolton 2, Chelsea 3.\nBrentford 0, Minchester C. 0,\nDerby 0, Stoke I.\nEverton 4, Blackburn 0.\nHuddenfield 1, Liverpool 0.\nMiddlesbrough 5, Grimsby It\nPortsmouth 0, Birmingham 3.\nPreston N.E. 1, Arsenal 0.\nSheffield Wed. 0, Sunderland 0.\nWolves 2, Wut Brom. 0.\nSecond Division\nBarnsley 0, Notts Forest 2.\nBradford C. 2, Doncuter 1.\nBurnley 1, Sheffield U. 1.\nCharlton 2, Southampton 0.\nFulham 4, Bradford 1.\nHuU 0, Norw' h 0.\nManchester U. 3, Swansea 0.\nNewcastle 3, Bury 0.\nPlymouth 3, Blackpool 2.\nPort V\u00bble 1, Leicester 1.\nTottenham 1,  West Ham 3.\nThird Dlvlilon, Southern Stctlon\nBournemouth 2, Newport 0.\nBriitol R. 0, Queen's P.R. 1.\nCardiff 2, Swindo.i 1.\nClapton Orient 0, Watford 2.\nCrystal Palace 1, Torc.ua., 0.\nGillingham 1, Coventry 1.\nLuton 3, Exeter 1.\nNorthampton 2, MiUwaU 4.\nNotts County 1, Brighton 1.\nReading 3, Aldenhot 1.\nSouthend 0, Bristol C. 1.\nThird Division, Northern Section\nAccrington 0, CarUile 0.\nBarrow 0, Halifax 0.\nChester 4, Mansfield 0.\nChesterfield 2, Gateshead 0.\nCrewe 4, Walsall 3.\nLincoln 4, Rotherham 0.\nNew Brighton 1, Darlington 1,\nRochdale 2, Wrexham 1.\nSouthport 1, Hartlepool 1.\nStockport 2, Tranmere 1.\nYork 3, Oldham 1.\nSCOTTISH   LEAGUE\nAberdeen 2, Kilmarnock 1.\nAlbion R. 1, Hearts 2.\nAyr 1, Dundee 2.\nCelUc 5, Motherwell 0.\nDunfermline 1, Arbroath ..\nHamUton A. 3, Queen of So. 1.\nHibernians 2, Partick Thistle 0.\nRangen 4, Clyde 1.\nSL Johnstons-Queen's Park (un-\nI'lyed).\nThird Lanark 2, Airdrieonians 0.\nSecond Division\nBrechin 1, Morton 4.\nDumbarton 1, St. Mirren 2.\nDundee U. 6, Cowdenbeath 1.\nEait Fife 9, Kin_'i ParL 2.\nFalkirk 5, Raith R. 0.\nMontror   0, Alloa 2.\nSt. Bernards 5, Leith 2.\nSt-nhousemuir 3, Forfar 1\n:omi\" WW\nTOIACCOS\nBELFAST  LEAGUE\nLame 2, Portadown 0.\nBangor 0, Derry City 4.\nGlentoran 3, ClittonviUe 1.\nCeltic 2, Ballymena 2.\nGlenavon 3, Ard* 1.\nColeraine 1, Newry Town 1.\nDlsUUery 0, Linfield 1.\nInternational Rugby\nWalu 3, Ireland 0.\nHAMPSHIRE WINI, TITLE\nGOSFORTH, England, March 15\n(CP Ctble)\u2014 Himpthire won the\ncounty rugby championship Saturday by defeating Northumberland\n1.-6 in the final game of the series.\nBy RAY COLLETT\nWhen \"Ace\" BaUey of Toronto\nwas injured, Maple Leafs needed a\nring-winger to fill bis place, but\nhad none available. So Conn Smythe\nconverted \"Hurricane\" Hector Kilrea, whom he had obtained from Ottawa Senaton, into a right-winger,\nthough Hec's regular berth was on\nthe other side, lt seemed to work\ntoo, but before this season opened,\nthe blonde Oltawan was traded to\nDetroit Redwings.\nHec has been playing for more\nthan 10 seasons in the N.H.L, starting with Senators in 1925. He is one\nof the league's fastest skaten in\na itraight race\u2014hence his monicker.\nIn going to Detroit, he was not\ncxacUy a stranger as he played with\nUie Motor City crew in 1931-32, only\nto return to Ottawa next season,\nwhen the club resumed operations\nafter a one-season lapse.\nWith Herb Lewis ill for the city\nseries between Redwings ud their\nInternational le\u00bbgue team. Olympics, prior to the season opener,\nHector had to do duty on two forward lines u Manager Adams had\nno reserve forward to fill Lewis'\nshoes.\nHec'i best year from a scoring\nstandpoint was 1929-30, when, with\nOttawa, he rapped in 36 goals and\nadded 22 assists for a total of 58\npoints. That must have given the\nnow defunct Ottawa crew a real\nboost up the leigue ladder.\nTO-DAY'8 HOCKEY STICKLER\nWhe li the outitandlng rookie\nuncovered In tht N.H.L. thli lea-\nlon? Our nomination formi the\nsubject of next Hockey Sidelight*.\nRugby League\nLONDON. March 15 (CP Cable)\u2014\nEngliih ruby league gamei played\nSaturday were:\nBarrow 26, Oldham 11.\nBranley 13, Huddersfield 24.\nBroughton Rangen 21, Rochdale\nHornet* 4.\nCuUeford 10, Warrington 9.\nDewsbury 7, Featherstone 2.\nHull 8, York 16.\nHunsley 10, Acton md Wlllesden 3.\nKeighley 15, Bradford Northern 14.\nLiverpool Stanley 12, Swinton 3.\nSalford 27, Leeds 2.\nSt. Helens 8, Batley 10.\nStreatham and Mitcham 15,\nLeigh 2.\nWakefield Trinity 27, Hull Kingston 17.\nWidnes IS, HaUfax 12.\nWigan 25, SL Helens Reel 8.\nWinnipegs Ready to\nPlay Ft. William\nWINNIPEG, March 15 (CP) \u2014\nWinnipegs are prepared to play Fort\nWilliam Wanderers in a final series\nfor the Manitoba-Thunder Bay\nhockey 16igue UUe, A. E. Coo, president of the Manitoba Amateur Hockey association, stated Saturday. The\ndecision ended an extended controversy between the two clubs.\nJOHANNESBURG (CP)-Declar-\ning women tennis players oi South\nAfrica seemed to regard \"every rising youngster u a menace to themselves,\" W. C. Lawrence, one of the\nforemost tennis authorities of the\nTransvaal, urged senior players to\ngive more advice and practice to\nthe younger generation.\nHockey\nC'H.A'T\/T-E.R\nby W.W.W.\nIt took Prince Albert Mintoi mor*\nthan 60 minutes to eliminate Luscar\nIndians and Judging by the radio\nreport Saturday night there was\nUtUe to choose between Uie two\nteams. Art Somers, former New\nYork Rmger star, and coach of the\nMintos, now brings his team to Nelson to meet Kimberley in the first\ngame of tbe semi-finals for the west.\nMintos had plenty of work to nose\nout North Battleford Beaven and\nWeyburn Beaven to win the Saskatchewan title. North Battleford\nfaded in a best two-out-of-three\nserle!, but they scored five goals\nagainst the Mintos in one game, and\nthe best the Mintos could do wu a\nbrace each game. The Mintos\ncounted three in both games against\nthe Weyburn boys, and managed to\nget a couple of sixes against Luscar.\n* \u2022   \u2022\nSpeaking about goal keeper! the\nother day, Art Somen said he believed he could put Andy Young\nof Weyburn, or Jimmy Franks of\nMintos, in the nets of the big league\nclubs today and they would look\ngood. \"There isn't the ^inference between amateur and professional\nsharpshooters that most folks imagine.\"\nIn discussing aU-star teams in the\nN.H.L, Somers said lie believed\nTiny Thompson of the Boston Bruins\nwas far ahead ot any of the other\npuck blockers. \"He's been holding\nthe Bruins in there for years. Take\no vote of the forwards in the N.H.L,\nmd see how far ahead Thompson\nfinishes,\" he remarked.\n\u2022 \u2022   \u2022\nTrail juniors have reason to be\npepped up now. They took the Calgary Rangers iu the third and deciding game. After the 0-0 beating\nthey took in the opening game, the\nvictory was all the more enjoyable\nfrom a B.C. standpoint. It also will\ngive provincial junior hockey a new\nlease on life. Being ousted by the\nAlberta teams year after year, does\nbecome discouraging. Saskatoon\nWesleys are the next in line for the\nTigers, the winnen meeting the\nManitoba champions. Hughes is\nplaying smart hockey md counted\nboth goals for Trail Friday night,\ni  * e\nThere wu no doubt about which\nwu the better team Saturday night\nand the Wolves took their fourth\nstraight win over the Savoy hotel\nthis year, ud entered the linals of\nthe Nelson Commercial Hockey\nleague. The score waa five to three\nud the Wolves were good for the\nfive. After spotting the Savoy two\ngoals in the first couple of minutes they setUed down to play heady\nhockey, Duke Waiman leading the\nparade in that respect. Duke got\nthree goal! and figured in a fourth\nas his contribution toward the\nWolves' win. He forgot himself\nenough to play SO minutes. Wolves\nmeet Fairview intermediates in a\nbest out of three series for the tlUe.\n\u2022   \u2022   \u2022\nDave Kerr, of the Rangers, has a\ngreat time wlUi his diet, or rather\nhis wife has, as she does all the\nworrying. Kerr\nwUl lose from one\nto five pounds in\na tight game, and\nas there are mmy\ntight games in a\nseason, Mrs. Kerr\nloses from 10 to\n15 pounds in that1\nUme.\nH11 breakfast\nconsists of orange\njuice, cereal, toast\nand sausage. \"4 He\nalso believes in\nbaving a big juicy\nsteak a day md\npie.\nArt Coulter, recently acquired by the Rugen\nfrom the Chicago Black Hawks,\ngives Davey a boost as a goal keeper.\n\u2022\"To my Way of thinking,\" uld\nCoulter, \"the records do not tell the\ntrue story of goalkeeping abUity.\nTake Karakas tor instance. He has\na good defence in front of him and\none of the best checking teams up\nfront. Therefore he is not harassed\ncontinually like Kerr. Montreal Maroons play a game somewhat similar. It may not be u spectacular u\nToronto Maple Leafs' ityle, but it\ncertainly helpi out the defence.\n\"Boston play a more open game\nthm the Black Hawks but consider\nthe defence Tiny has In front of him.\nIf you want my real opinion of\ngoal-keepera, I do not believe those\nthree, Thompson, Karaku md Kerr,\ndiffer much when it comes right\ndown to ability. If lt does come\ndown to that, my vote goes to Davie.\nThe kid ls tops.\"\nDave Kerr\nN.H.L. ALL-STAR SELECTIONS BY\nSPORTS WRITERS\nFoUowing is another of a Canadian Press lerlei of NaUonal Hockey\nleague all-star selection*, by sporti writen in N. H. L. cities. A consensus will be prepared later.\nBy LEO MacDONELL, Detroit Times\nFirst team: Alternitt teim:\nC. Thompson, Boston  Gotl Cude, Canadiens\nYoung, Detroit Right Oefenet      Shore, Boston\nSiebert, Boston Left Defence McDonald, Detroit\nBarry, Detroit     Center Smith, Maroons\nC. Conacher, Toronto  Right Wing  Aurle, Detroit\nSchriner, Americms Left Wing Lewit, Detroit\nL. Pitrick, Rangen     Coich         Adams, Detroit\nRUGBY UNION\nLONDON, March 15 (CP cable) .-\nEngUsh Rugby union games played\nSaturday resulted as follows:\nBlackheath S, Bath 5.\nOld Merchant Taylors 11, Harlequins 3.\nLondon Welsh 3. Cardiff 18.\nLondon Scottish 21, Portsmouth\nServices 3.\nBedford 28, Guy's Hospital 0.\nBirkenhead Park 27, Rosslyn\nPark 8.\nBristol 3, Llanelly 4.\nCheltenham 11, Aberavon 11.\nCoventry 6. Richmond 5.\nDevonport Services 8, St. Mary's\nHospital 6.\nExeter 3, Bridgend 13.\nGlouceiter 21, Leicester 7.\nLiverpool 11, Old Paulines 5. \u25a0\nMoseley 16, Manchester 5.\nOxford univenity 16, The Army 0.\nPlymouth Albion 3, Weston-\nSuper-Mare 10,\nTorquay Athletic 28, Barnstaple 0.\nWaterloo 14, Northampton 9.\nGlasgow Academicals 7, West of\nScotland 5.\nWalsoniam 34, Glasgow University 3.\nMaroons Lead in\nCanuck Section\nTORONTO, March 15 (CP).-A\ndefcniive backhand ihot from the\nblue line area that look a queer\nhop and bounced over George Hainsworth'! itick into the cage had Toronto Maple Leafi in the hole today.\nThe shot gave Montreal Maroons a\n1-0 victory over the Leafs here last\nnight, pulling the Redmcn into first\nplace in Ihe National Hockey\nleague's Canadicfi section.\nIRISH SOCCER\nBELFAST, March 15 (CP ctble).\n\u2014Belfast soccer games played Saturday were:\nLame 2, Portadown 0.\nBangor 0, Derry City 4.\nGlentoran 3, CliftonvUle 1.\nCeltic 2, Ballymena 1\n'Glenavon 3, Ards 1.\nColeraine 1, Newry Town 1.\nDistiUery 0, Linfield 1.\nCambridge Beats\nOxford on Track\nLONDON, March 15 (API-Winning the first place in eight out ot\n11 events, Cambridge univenity defeated Oxford Saturday in the annual inter-vanity track ud field\nmeet at White City itadium.\nIt wai the 35th victory in the competition for Cambridge. Oxford hu\nwon 27 previoui meeti.\nThe Oxonians' only victories came\nin the 100-yard dash, the three-mile\nrun and the low hurdles. Pennington of Oxford won the 100-yard dash\nln 0:10.1.\nBirthday Greetings\nBy Canadian Prtu\nTo Willie Logan, famous speed\nskater, bom ln Saint John, N.B, 29\nyears ago yesterday. He captained\nCanada's speed skaten at the 1932\nOlympic games md emerged as\nleading point-winner of the team.\nLogan was Canadim Indoor champion in 1934. A son of Fred Logan,\na former international champion,\nhe at one time held the world's title\n(or boys 18 years old and under.\n6-SOVERTIMEWIN SENDS THE\nMINTOS HEADING FOR NELSONTO\nMEET KIMBERLEY IN NEXT ROUND\nLuscar Tribe Finds Saskatchewan Goalie an\nEasy Mark Most of Game but Fail Hold\nOwn in Overtime Session\nLAST 12 SECONDS\nOF THIRD FATAL\nPrince Albert Ties the\nScore in the Dying\nSeconds\nCALGARY, Mtrch 1\u00bb (CP)<-\nPrlnet Albert Mintoi todiy plotted\ni coune towird Nilion, B.C.,\nwhert they will pliy Klmbtrlty\nDyntmlten, Brltith Columblt\nchtmplom, In their next Allen\ncup hockey playdown gtmt\nWednesdiy.\nTh* Saikttehtwu senior tltllit*\nwon their round with Lutotr Indians here Saturday night with a\n6 5 overtime victory efter icoring\ntht tying geil 12 leconds before\nthe tnd of tht third ptrlod. Mlntot\nwon tht flnt gtmt of the two-of-\nthrtt ttrlet In thtlr homt went\n6-3 Thundiy.\nThe fighting Linear tribe, Alberta\nrepresentatives, skated stride for\nstride with Art Somen' speedy outfit, for the first 60 miny tes but in\nthe overtime they were no metch\nfor the Mintos.\nWithout their star centerman,\nMike Onychuck, Indian* were crippled further by \u00abn injury t* Defenceman RoIUe Hills, who was hurt\nin the second period ud did not\nplay in the third. Mintoi were Without Bob Kirkpatrick, who was out\nwith a shoulder injury.\nJACK DUNDAS HERO\nJack Dundu ws* the hero of the\nPrince Albert win, icoring three\ngoal*. These included the tying and\nwinning marker*. Mack MacFec,\nBob McQuarrie ud Lloyd Goundry\ntaUied the other*. Bob Kennedy led\nthe Indians with two marken, the\nothers going to Jimmy McVey, Ken\nStewart md Shamlock. Dee-Ay Gillies, who played defence while Llnduy Carver took Onychuk's place,\ngarnered two assist!.\nDuring the regulation Ume Indians held the lead three times. They\ntrailed for only two minutes in the\nsecond period when Mintos held a\n3-2 lead.-\nMinto* wtr* favored ky penal-\ntin In th* Mcond and third periods. In thi second ptrlod they\nhild * two-min advantag* whin\nsentences to Sinders and Carver\noverlapped but only two of thtlr\ngoali wtr* scored whllt Luicar\nwu ihorthtndtd. MicFtt icortd\nflnt whllt Carver wu eft In the\nflrtt period tnd Dundu' tying\nmarker ctme whtn Ctrvtr wat In\ntht box again In tht third.\nPrlnc* Albert's ging attack\nbrought flv* ef thtlr goals. Dundu' tying gotl cam* on * tolo\nrush after he circled the Lunar\ngoal. Evtn thtn flvt Mlntot win\n'In Indian territory.\nMINTO GOALIE EASY\nAlthough Ued up most ot the time\nby Prince Albert beck-checkers,\nLuscar found the Minto. defence\nweak and the nets guarded by\nJimmy Frmks m easy target\nFranki put in Kennedy'! tecond goal\nhtmielf. Kennedy *hot from behind the net and the puck bounced\nin off Franks' arm.\nAfter Dundas scored in the overtime Prince Albert played tale,\nshooting the puck up tht ice md\nsending their forwards up to worry\nthe Indians while they formed snother attack.\nA sell-out crowd of approximately\n5000 fm* s\u00bbw the Albertan* eliminated.\nLineups:\nPrince Albert-Franks; Dewar.\nCurly Kerr; Dundas; Brown, McQuarrie. Subs\u2014W. Kerr, Goudry,\nMacFee, Hulme.\nLuscar\u2014Pow; Qlllles, Hilli; Carver; Shamlock, McVey. Sub*-Stewirt, Jerwi, Kennedy, Sanden.\nOfficials \u2014 Clarence Campbell,\nEdmonton and Ike Morrison, Moss-\nbank.\nSUMMARY\nFirst period: 1\u2014Luicar, Shtmlock,\n7:25; 2\u2014Luscsr,  Stewirt  (GlUlei),\n14:50; 3\u2014Prince Albert, MacFee\n(McQuarrie) 15:57. PenalUei: Sander*, W. Kerr.\nSecond period: 4\u2014Prlnc* Albert\nDundas (Brown), 3:45; 5\u2014Prince\nAlbert, MeQu\u00abrrie, 10:42; J\u2014Lusctr,\nKennedy, 16:03. Penalties: Sudors,\nCarver.\nThird period: 8\u2014Prince Albert,\nGoundry (M*cF*e), 8:38; 6\u2014Lusc\u00bbr,\nKennedy (GUUes), 14:09; 10-Prince\nAlbert, Dundu, 19:48. Penalties:\nShamlock, Carver.\nOvertime periods 11\u2014Prince Albert, Dundas (McQuarrie), 1:06.\nPenalUei: Carver, McQuarrie..\nWALES WINS Ml\nFORRUGBYTITLE\nBeats Ireland for the\nChampionship of\nBritish Isles\nCARDIFF, Wales, March 15 (CP\ncable).\u2014One ot the strongest teamt\nthat hu represented Wale* ln recent yeu* was today acclaimed\nrugby champions of the British Isles,\nIn * tight game Uiat thriUed a huge\ncrowd of 60,000 at Cardiff Arm*\npark, the principality'! representative* eked out * 3-0 victory over\nIreland Saturday.\nThe win gave Wales its tenth outright championship. On three other\noccuions since the series started in\n1883 the Welshmen have Ued with\none ot the other countries for thu\nhonor. Lut year \u00bbt Belfut, Ireland\nemerged victorious over the \"Taffies'\" 3-0.\nA penalty goal kicked by V. G. I.\nJenkins, Welsh fuUback, gave hi*\ncountry the only point* of the game\nwhich wu bitterly contested from\nstart to finish. Keen tackling by the\ndefenders on both teams featured\nthe play which wu largely a bltUe\nbetween the briUlant Welsh three-\nquarten md the opposing forward*.\nCANUCK GOALIE\n\"NOT ASLEEP\"\nHALIFAX, March 15 (CP). -\n\"Dinty\" Moore ot Port Colborne,\nOnt, goaltender on the Canadian\nOlympic hockey team, returned to\nCanada Saturday md said the shot\nthtt beat him md won the championship for England would have\nfooled any goaltender.\n\"I wu ready for that shot, but it\nJust htppened along ud went by\nme md if myone said I must hav*\nbeen uleep or watching the crowd,\nit'i a lot of baloney,\" he itormed.\nMoore said there wu no dlssaUs-\nfacUon or ill feeling among the Canadian hockey playen during th*\ngames \u00abt Girmlsch-Pirtenkirchen.\nThe reit of the Ctniditn hockey\nplayer* return next week-end.\nPORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, Man,\nMarch 15 (CP).-E. A. Gilroy, pretident of the Canadian Amateur\nHockey usocisUon, termed \"ridiculous\" Saturday, reports be had attributed Canada'! loss to Englmd\nin the Olympic hockey games to\npoor goal-tending on the part ot\n\"Dinty\" Moore.\nHe said, \"I absolutely contradict\nthat I made such a statement.\" Cu-\nada's goalie, in hi* opinion, \"wu\none ot the most conscientious *nd\nhard-working playen on the Canadim team.\"\nAUSSIE8 START NEW MATCH\nCAPE TOWN, South Africa,\nMarch 15 (CP cable) .-The touring\nAustralian cricketers, who completed their schedule of games in\nSouth Africa some dayi ago, Saturdiy itarted t three-day match\nagainit Western Province before\nsailing for their homes. At the end\not the day's play the home team\nhtd made 19 runs and Uie tourist*,\n37 for no wicketi.\nThis advertisement Is not published or displayed bv the Llquot\nControl Board or by the Government of British Columbii\n 1\nPAQE EIGHT-\nNILSON DAILY NEWS. NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. MARCH ft ItM\n.a\nfttoiu thi CLASSIFIED PAGE lieu* ECONOMY PACE \/\nMmn Saily Nrtna\nMember of the Cmidlan DaUy\nNewipapera AitoclaUon\nTELEPHONE 144\nPrivate Exchtnoe connecting to\ntil Otptrtmenti\t\nSubacription   R\u00bbte*\nSinglteopy * M\nBr carrier per week A3\nBv carrier, per year 1300\nBy mall to Cmada, to sub-\nicrlbera living outelde resular\nctrner treat per month 80c;\nthree month! $1 80. ilx months.\n$3 00 one vear $8.00.\nUnited Statei md Greit BriUin. one month 75c. ilx months,\n$400. one yetr $750.\nForeign countriei. other than\nUS. same as above plus my\nextra postage.\nHive the Nelion Dally New* de\nlivered daily Reed the news first\nthing to the morning Phone 143.\u2014\nCirculation Department     \t\nBIRTHS\nKAPOLA\u2014To Mr. and Mra. F. Ka-\npola at McDougaU hospital, Kimberley, Tuesday, March 10, a son\nBROGAN-To Mr. and Mrs. M.\nBrogan, Kimberley, Monday, March\n9, a son.\nPERSONAL\nFREE TO LADIES. $1 BOX FACE\npowder, 50c perfume, 50c neck-\nlice, $1 Horoscope Reading If you\npurchase 3 lbs. Harding Coffee\nfor 99c (postage extra). Money\nback guarantee. Harding Products. 641 Langiide, Winnipeg.\n  (5576)\nHIOBIST QUALITY RUBBER\ngoodi 23 latex aaaortmtnt for $1\nOrder direct and be iur* of best.\nPacked plain. Free catalogue. National Importers, 812-Centre St.\nCalgary. AIU. (5711)\nLEARN BASIiETRY, INTEREST-\ning, educational, complete instruction! 25c. Free catalogue and reed\nwork instructions. Dominion Reed\nSupplies. Dept. N, Toronto, (5716)\nSITUATIONS WANTED\nWORK-REPAIRING OF MACH-\ninery or anything. Board and\nsmaU wages. W. H. Monehead,\ncity. (5908)\nLEGAL NOTICES\nDepartment of Public Worki\nLOAD RESTRICTIONS\nPursuant to Section 33 of the\nHighway Act, lUtute* of Britiih\nColumbia, the operation by my\nperson, over any arterial or primary highway or provincUl highway\nin unorganized territory ln Uie electoral district of Nelson Creston, of\nmy vehicle the gross load of which\nexceeds two tons on pneumatic tires\nis hereby prohibited until further\nnotice. Hard Ures are prohibited entirely. In no cue may any truck\ncarry a load in excess of the manufacturer's minimum rated capacity.\n(Signed) F. M. MacPHERSON,\nMinister of Public Works.\nMarch 5th, 1936. (5785)\nNOTICE\nAn examination for Assistant Forest Rangers wiU be held at New\nDenver, B. C, on Thursday, March\n19th, at 1:00 p.m.\nApplications will be received by\nthe District Forester at Nelson and\nthe Forest Ranger, New Denver,\nfrom'whom application forms and\nfull particulars may be obtained.\nThis examination is to establish\nan eligible list for the season 1936\nfrom which appointmente wiU be\nmade as Assistant Rangen are required.\nThere is one known vacancy to be\nfilled. (5816)\nHELP WANTED\nALL CANADIAN ORGANIZATION\nhai opening! for two energetc,\nneat appearing young men who\nhave experience ta meeting the\npublic. Average weekly earningi\nto stert $24,00. Splendid opportunity for advancement Apply for\nparticulars to 422 Mclntyre Block,\nWinnipeg, Manitoba. (5904)\nCAPABLE GIRL DESIRES WORK\nby day or hour. Phone 364Y2.\n (5835)\nCAPABLE GIRL DESIRES HOUSE\nor itore work. Box 5857 News.\n(5857)\nLIVESTOCK WANTED\nGOAT WANTED. YOUNG TOG-\ngenberg or Saman doe, due to\nfreshen April or May. Full particulars to Drew, Gray Creek. (5905)\nINTERIOR TOWN WITH LARGE\npayroll, offers business opportunities\u2014Pool hall, bakery, grocery\nstore, electrical radio shop, restaurant, licenced hotel, garage, etc.\nApply Box 5911 Dally News.\n, (5911)\nWANTED, HOUSEKEEPER AT\nonce, by bachelor farmer. Lady\ncapable of hmdling chickens, garden and cook tor one. Please sUte\nwage required for year round employment Box 5672 Daily Newi.\n(5672)\nHOUSES WANTED\nFURNISHED HOUSE WITH 3 BED-\nrooms. preferably close to town\nand tchool. Phone 864L.      (5837)\nWANTED\nWANTED, GOOD CAR OR TRUCK\nin exchange for agreement covering improved Kootenay property\nBox 5886 Daily News.        (5886)\nFOR RENT, HOUSES,\nAPARTMENTS. ETC.\nUNION RMS. CLEAN, COMFORT-\nable, reasonable, new management 718 Baker. (5871)\nTHREE    ROOMED    FURNISHED\nluite. Apply Kerr apartments.\n(5689)\nTHREE ROOMED HOUSE WITH\naleeping porch, phone 306L2,\n(5912)\nRM. TO RENT WITH BOARD AND\nwashing, $32 mo, 904 Stanley. St.\n(5873)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms for rent Annable Block.\n(5709)\nFURNISHED HOUSEKEEPING\nrooms, bed rooms, K. W. C. Block.\n(5877)\nHOUSE   TO   RENT.   APPLY   702\nBaker or phone 252. (5897)\nTERRACE APTS. Beautiful modern\nfrlgldalre equipped suites. (5710)\nLIGHT HOUSEKEEPING ROOM\nFurn. 918 Kootenay street. (5768)\nFOR SALE\nFOR SALE AT BARGAIN PRICES,\nsome second hmd drop head and\nelectric portable machines. Terms\n$3.00 per month. Singer Sewing\nMachine Co. (5838)\nTHREE CONTINENTAL 67 HORSE\npower. Power unite Fair running\ncondiUon. Price $350. F.03. Cran-\nbrook Auto Wreckers.       (5692)\nWe carry largest stock reconditioned\npipe and fittings sulUble for sll\npurposes. Write Swartz Pip* Yard\n220 1st E. Vancouver. B.C. (5712)\nPIPE AND FITTINGS\nCANADIAN JUNK Compmy, Ltd\n250 Prior St      Vmcouver, B. C\n(5714)\nCOMBINATION BEATTY WASH-\ner-lroner. A-l condition. Reasonable.\nPhone 775X.  (6834)\nFOR SALE - BARRELS, KEGS\nsugar sacki, linen. McDonald Jam\nCo., Ltd., Neiaon. B. C.        (5713)\n1, 200 EGG \"SURE HATCH\" INCU-\nbator. Very reaionable for cash. W.\nButler. Kaslo. (5907)\nENGLISH PRAM. GOOD CONDI-\nUon. Phone 708Y. Box 273, Nelson.\n (5870)\nFURNITURE   IN   GOOD  CONDI-\ntlon. 1315 High St (5883)\nAUTOMOBILES\nWILL ACCEPT $300 CASH AS\nfull payment for $425 credit note\nto purchase * new Chrysler or\nPlymouth car. Box 6887 Daify\nNewi. (5887)\nWithwwmm\n\u00bbrrmi<T. i-i..,\u00ab.... \u25a0-., \u2014 iia-n mniii nirt \u25a0ininiii\n'&X\u00bbSCS&&X!\u00bbC$SS&X>!>X^^\nCHAPTER 25\n\"Not quite. You came here, you\nknow,\" remarked Selwyn Manh\nwhen Thora said she had reached\nthe end of her story about her past.\n\"Why, yes. After I sent Eric home.\n... I thought his mother would\nwant that... I tried to find something to do. It wasn't very easy\nbecause I had no references and\ndidn't know anybody. I tried all\nsort of places. Then, one day, I\nhappened to see Miss Taggart's ad\nin the paper and it occurred to me\nthat I had been overlooking my best\nchance. So I went the_e.\"\n\"I iee.\"\n\"I had to teU you this, Mr. Marsh,\nto try to make you understand that\nyou mustn't do ... what you think\nyou're going to. I know what It will\nmean to Wilma . . . and she's so\nyoung. Don't you see?\"\n\"Umph.\" Selwyn swung around in\nhis chair and stored down at the\nsleeping dachshund for a long minute. When he raised his eyes, there\nwu a quizzical light in them. I'll\ntell you what I'll do, Miss Dahl. I'll\nstrike a bargain with you.\"\n\"I am not sure I should.\" Thora\nreflected. \"It's not fair to Miss\nMarsh.\"\n\"Fair!\" Selwyn snorted. \"She\ndoesn't know what that means!\nWhy, she had the nerve to come ln\nhere today and tell me that she had\ninvited this bounder to my house\n. that he would show up almost\nany time now! That's what sUrted It\nall. Coolest thing I ever heard of.\nShe acted as If she thought I'd kiss\nhim!\"\nThora smiled in spite of herself.\n\"What is the name of this dreadful nerson ... who Is coming to see\nyou'\"\n\"I'll never tell you,\" Selwyn\ngrowled. \"It's something like . . .\nBarabbas.\"\nThere was a distinct twinkle in\nthe blue eyes now.\n\"That ls what gave you a bad impression, Mr. Marsh.\"\n\"No, It Isn't. I don't like him and\ndon't Intend to. But If you have decided he's coming, you may as well\nfix a room for him. Make it as far\n', from mine ai you cm. And you'd\nbetter Ulk it over with Wilma. Just\nI tell her it'i all right ai far as Tm\n| concerned.\n\"But I think Miss Marsh ihould\n| make the arrangement!,\" Thora ob*\n| pected. \"I have not decided to itay.\"\n\"Ive decided,\" Selwyn explained.\nI \"It's all settled. Whatever you do\nI will be all right ... lust leave me\nI out of it You tell Wilma I ssld so.\nI Don't bother me any more ... it'll\nI be bad enough later.\"\nThis lut was uld io dlsmlsslvely\nI that there was nothing left for Thora\nI to do but leave the room. She was\nI confused over this latest turn of\nI events. It aU had worked out so dif-\nI ferently than she had expected. Her\n1 own itory had come out in a pent-up\nrush, with but one reason or hope\n\u2014to try to keep Mr. Marsh from doing so unjust a thing to his daughter. To save Wilma from the hardship she herself had endured et the\nhands of a stubborn father. She\nhad succeeded . . . with totelly unexpected results, as far as her own\nstatus was concerned.\nMoved by a sudden Impulse, she\nmounted the stairs and walked\ndirectly to Wilma's door.\n\"Come in,\" said a muffled voice, in\nanswer to the housekeeper's tap on\nthe panel.\nWilma must have been lying\nacross the bed. When Thora first\nsaw her. she was propped up on one\nhand. Her eyes were swollen and\nher face flushed. A wadded handkerchief was clutched in her free\nhand.\n\"Well, what do you want\" lhe demanded, when she uw who her\ncaller was. Thora was struck anew\nwith the resemblance of the girl\nto her father. Thit question, that\ntrick of frowning . . .\n\"I'm sorry to disturb you, Miss\nMarsh,\" she began quietly. \"But Mr.\nMarsh was lust telling me Uiat you\nexpected a guest very soon, I wu\ngoing to suggest the east room, but\nI thought I would like to ask you\nfirst\" The room in question was\nacross the hall from Selwyn's, at a\nsafe distance.\nWilma stared for a moment without replying. She rose to her feet\nan came forward slowly,\n\"Did my father say who the guest\nwas?\" she demanded.\nThora assumed the role of Uie\nwell-trained housekeeper... in self-\ndefense, this time.'\n'I'm sorry, but Mr. Marsh seemed\nunable to recall the name. He uld\nit was a gentleman.\"\n\"He said that!\" Wilma's dark eyes\nwidened. \"Are you sure?\"\n\"Quite. In fact ... he utd the\ngentleman was your fiance. Will it\nbe all right if I prepare the eatt\nroom for Mr. . . ,\n\"Babbas,\" Wilma supplied mechanically.\n\"Now, I know that ls the one\nwhom Mr. Marsh meant,\" Thora remarked with \u25a0 slight smile. \"He\ntried to lay it.\" She turned tway\nwith a mechanical, \"Thank' you.\"\nMAKE   AND   SAVE  MONEY\nUie the\nDAILY NEWS CLASSIFIED ADS.\nPOULTRY FOR SALE\nBETTER CHICKS\nMun More Profits!\nOur Chicks ire BETTER becauie\nwe continually select OUi breeding itock md hatch scientifically\n(Prices quoted per 100)\nPullet\nChick*     Chicks\nLeghorns $11.00        $25.00\nReds and Rocks $13.00 $27.00\nLight Sussex      $15.00 $30.00\nPullet Chicks  guaranteed\n97% accurate.\nGovernment  Approved  and\nBloodteited.\nBe SAFE end order from\nRump A Sendill Ltd.\nMilner, B. C.       '\n(5704)\nBABY CHICKS AND SEXED PUL-\nlet chlcki; White Leghorni and\nBarred Rocks. AU breeding itock.\non our own farm. Government\nApproved md Bloodtested Write\nfor price Hit. M. H: Ruttledge.\nDerreen Poultry Farm, Sardis\n(5626)\nBIG HUSKY LEGHORN CHICKS\n$11.00 per 100. Order early supply\nlimited. T. A. Robinson, R. R. 1.\nGrmd Forks. (5858)\nFARM   LANDS\nIN THE FAMOUS CARROT RIVER\nValley. Beautiful farm homes.\nlarge and small, some fully equipped, also tracts of virgin land suitable for mixed farming and ranching, in one of the best grain and\nmixed farming districts ln Canada. Also hive leveral placei thit\nwe will exchange for good B. C.\nproperty. Pat Hayea, Lmd Agent.\nTisdale, Suk.     \u2022 (5822)\nGOOD FARM LANDS FOR SALE\non easy terms ln Alberto and\nSaskatchewan. Write for full information to 908 Dept. of Natural\nResources, C.P.R, Calgary: AIU\n(5707)\nPROPERTY FOR SALE\nWILLOW POINT. 2V, ACRES, 2\nsummer cotUges, cherry orchard,\ngarden water piped under pressure. Sask, owner in Nelon thil\nweek, write Box 5913 Dally Newi.\n(5913)\nHOUSE ON 6TH ST., SECOND\nfrom Gordon Road. CaU for Information. (5903)\nFOR SALE OR EXCHANCI\nWELL IMPROVED STOCK FARM,\nSlocan Valley. Consider good\nhouse or small ranch u part pay.\nJohn Graham, Perry Siding. (5885)\nPHOTOCRAPHY\nFILMS DEVELOPED ANY SIZE.\n25c. With 1 print from each negative. Extra prints. 8 tor 25c Su-\nkatchewan Photo Supply, Saskatoon. (5706)\nMALE INSTRUCTION\nMEN WANTED WITH FAIR ED-\nucation, mechanically inclined,\nnow employed, desiring to better\ntheir position! by qualifying u\ninstallation experts md service\nengineers In Electric Refrigeration and Air Conditioning. No ex-\nPears, Bartlett, Anjou\u201450c, Ap-\nmuit be willing to train spire Ume\nfor \u2022 few months. Write giving\nage, phone, present occupa. tnd\naddress. Box 5890 Daily Newi.\n(5890)\nLOST AND FOUND\nTo Finders\nIf you find \u2022 cit or dog. * pocketbook, Jewelry or fur or anything else of value telephone\nThe DaUy Newt, A \"Found\"\nAd wUl be tnierted without coit\nto you. We wUl coUect from the\nowner. \t\nFOUND LEATHER FOLDER. TWO\nkeyi one a car key. Apply Overwaitea. (5880)\nSCHOOLS\nCANADIAN DIESEL ENGINEERING SCHOOLS. Travelleri Building. Calgiry. are now giving complete DAY and HOME STUDV\nCOURSES to DIESEL ENGINEERING under authorized Instructors. Write for partlculara. (5705)\nUSED CARS\nBusiness and Professional Directory\nAccountant*\nCHAS   F   HUNTER. S F A E.\n213 Medical Arts Building.\nP. O. Box 1091,       Nelson. B  C\n(5726)\nAsiayer*\nE. W. WIDDOWSON. PROVINCIAL\nAnalyst Assayer. Chemist Chemictl ind Metallurgical Engineer\nSampling agents at Trail md Tacoma imeltera 301-303 Josephine\nSt, Nelson, B. C. (5727)\nGRENVILLE  H   GRIMWOOD\nProvincUl Assayer and Chemist, 618\nBaker street Nelson. B. C  P O\nBox No. 276. Representing Ship-\np\u00abs' Interest at Trail, B.C. (5728)\nChiropractor!\nPATENTS\nAN OFFER TO EVERY INVEN-\ntor, lilt of wmted Inventions md\nfull information sent free. The\nRamuy Company. World Patent\nAttorney*, 273 Bmk St Ottawt\n(5708)\nNURSERY PRODUCTS\nCHERRIES, BING, LAMBERT-50C.\nPean, Barlett, Anjou\u201450c. Apples, Delicious, Cox\u201450c. Black,\nWhite, Red Currants\u201415c. Grapes,\nCampbells, Niagara\u201435c. E. Hammerer, P. O., Taghum.        (5882)\nH. KITCHENER, MOUNTAIN STA-\ntion Gardens, Nelson. New md\nChoice varieties of roses, carnations, gladloU md dahUu. Catalogues on requeit. (5906)\nFRUIT AND ORNAMENTAL\ntreei, evergreens, black currants\nand raspberries. T. Roynon, agent\nLayrltz Nurseries. (5860)\nBLACK CURRANT BUSHES. ONE\nmd two years, $10 per 100, freight\npaid. Buzzard, Newton, B. C.\n(5867)\nMISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE\nFOR SALE\nFULL PAGE\nSTEREO MATS\nExcellent lining material for\nchicken houses, garages, etc.\n75c per 100\nApply\nADVERTISING DEPT.,\nNelson Daily News\n(5778)\nUSED\nCARS\n1930 CHEVROLET\nPANEL DELIVERY\n$100\n1927 PONTIAC        (17C\nCOACH   tPllU\n1031 CHEVROLET    ffQCft\nDELIVERY     tPODU\nKEF0R\u00b0.V:8... $450\n1931 FORD DELUX   (orA\nSEDAN     tJIWU\n1934 CHEVROLET    fCAA\nDELIVERY     \u00abP0UU\n1930 CHEVROLET   *QAA\nCOACH   \u00abP*)UU\n1929 ESSEX *97C\nSEDAN     tfLlD\nNelson Transfer\nCompany Limited\nGENERAL MOTORS DEALERS\n323 Vernon St Phone 85\n(5805)\n2-1928 FORD COACHES, 1 HUDSON\nCoach, 1 Star light delivery. For\nsale cheep, see City Auto Wreckers, Nelson. (5894)\nj. r. McMillan, d c palmer\ngraduate. McCulloch Blk. Nelson\n(5729)\nE. M. WARREN. D. C, BOX 872\nFor Canaries. Phone 115 or 755L\n(5730)\nElectrical\nJ. ('. COATES. The Electric Store.\nSuppllei and Installations\nPhone 766. P. O. Box 1065\n(5731)\nEngineer* and Surveyors\nFloriif*\nCARNATION FLOWER SHOP.\nPhone 215. AU kinds of cut flowers,\nwreiths, sprays k etc. Phone 215.\nMrs. Hagarty, Box 29. (5688)\nMachinist!\nBENNETT'S UMITED\nFor all classes of Metal Work. Lathe\nWork, Drilling. Boring and Grinding.   Motor  Rewinding,  Acetylene\nWelding\nPhone 593. 324 Vernon Street\n(6743)\nMaternity Home*\nELIZABETH   PEEL\nMATERNITY HOME\nStrictly Private. Confidential Physician tn attendance Pb. Broad. 3078.\nW-1324 Broadway, Spokane. Wuh.\n(6744)\nNotaries\nD. J. ROBERTSON, NOTARY PUB-\nltc. Off ict 305 Victorii SL Nelson.\n(5745)\nSanitarium*\nE. L. WARBURTON, NELSON. B.C\nOffice 518 Ward St. Phone 53. P.O\nBox 668. Agent Oils. Greases, Paints\nSpecialties: raining machinery\nCrow's Nest Pass Steam Coals,\nStructural steel piping, sheet iron.\n(5732)\nH. D. DAWSON.        Nelson. B. C.\nMine Surveys and Reports\n(5733)\nBOYD C. AFFLECK, Fruitvale. B C\nBritish Columbia Land Surveyor.\nReg. Professional Civil Engineer\n(5734)\nA. H GREEN CO.. LTD 516 WARD\nSt. Phone 264, Nelson, B.C. (5735)\nInsurance and Real Estate\nROBERTSON REALTY CO.. LTD\nReal estate, Insurance, rentals, 217\nBaker St (5736)\nR. W. DAWSON, Real Estate, Iniurance, Rental* Next Hipperson\nHardware, Baker Street.     (57371\nC. D. BLACKWOOD  Insurance ol\nevery description. Real Est Ph 99\n(5738)\nH. E. DILL, AUTO AND FIRE IN-\nsurance. Real Estate, 508 Ward St\n(5739)\nJ. E. ANNABLE. REAL ESTATE.\nrentals, insurance. Annable Block\n(5740)\nUFE. FIRE. AUTOMOBILE INSUR-\nance. P. E. Poulin, Ph. 70. (5741)\nCHAS F. McHARDY. INSURANCE\",\nReal Estate, Phone 135.        (5742)\nDR. ALDRICH SANITORIUM INC.\nTreats all chronic diseases including T.B'., cincer, diabetis, liquor\nhabit and the mind. 30 yean practice. E-4504 Fredrick, Spokane.\n(5746)\nSaih Factory\nLAWSON'S   SASH   FACTORY.\nHardwood merchant 217 Baker St\n(5747)\nWatch Repairing\nSPECIALIST REASONABLE Work\nguaranteed. P. Boyle, Vernon St.\n(5748)\nWigi and Toupee*\nLADIES AND GENTLEMENS\nwig! and toupeei, etc. Free illustrated Catalogue. Over 20 yeara\nin B. C. We buy cut hair. Hanson\nHair Goodi Co. P. O. Box 601,\nVancouver, B. C. (5749)\nPainting and Decorating\nPAINTING, DECORATING, KAL-\nsominlng. Work guiranteed. Reaionable pricei. Miller. Ph. 790L.\n158881\nPhone\nJean Robertson\n144\nFor the NELSON DAILY\n. NEWS CLASSIFIED\nSERVICE\nTILLIE THE TOILER\nRun Weitover\nOKAY,   MR.\nSlMPKINS'.l'LL\nBklMsJ '*M\nRIGHT overt\nHEY, TILLIE, VMHEttES\nOOR   LArtVI     DCSI6NS \u00bb\nTHB   60SS i*i HAVING-\nLUNCH    XA1ITH   OLD\nMAM   MOOSE   OP \"THET\nMOOSE'S DCpAStTMWMT\n\u00abTOR_r ANO urn\n\u2022wants To See 'em.\nTHE CUMPS\nBy Cu* Edion\nMIN WAX\nsnubbed at\nandy's office\nyesterday, by\nhis secretary,\nmiss squinch\nHUH.' I'M AN OLD LADY,.\nAM 1 ?  WELL. SHE'S\nA I?\u2122 CENTURY    _\nCHICKEN HERSELF\/\n\u25a0RINGING UP FATHER\nly Geo. McManui\ntV-DOY-THAT PEST, MR ELMER\nPINETREE, IS MERE- WILL. \\OU\nSEE  HIM ANO TELL HIM THA\")\"\n___ 1AM OUT?\nI'LL THROW\nHIM OUT F\nVOU WANT\ntv\\ETO-\n(To Bs Continued)\nPERFORMS   MARRIAGES   IN\nNORTH\nI\nREGINA, (CP)-H. S. Couch, justice of the peace at Goldfleldi, new\nmining town of northwestern Saskatchewan, is the first \"marriage\ncommissioner\" ln the area. Previously no one within 100 miles\ncould be found to perform the ceremony, and the government made\nthe appointment in response to numerous appeal! from minora.\nDO VOU MEAN TO\nSIT THEPH AND\nTELL ME VOU\nWOULD LIKE TO\nMARRY   ME __\n0AU6HTER?\nYES-BUT SHE\nSHOULD ASK\nME-00 VOU\nKNOW WHAT .\nVEAR THIS IS?\nwhy, rr is\nLEAP YEAR-\n 2\u00bbai\nNELION DAILY NEWS. NELION. B.C-MONDAY MORNINQ. MARCH  18. 1888\n1,(63 Boxes of Apples fo Sell       Market  anrl   Minina  Npw\u00ab\nin Hie Nelson-Creston District iVldrKCT   ana   Mining   rNeWS\n5341 Boxes in Creston and 5122 in Nelson,\nAccording to Statement of the\nTree Fruit Board\nA total of 11,483 boxei of applea remain to be ihlpped in the Nelson\n1 Creston districts, according to Uie British Columbia Tree Fruit board\nIts circular of March 12. Of this amount 8341 boxes are in the Creston\ntrlct, ud 5182 ln the Nelson dlitrict\nFollowing is the detailed Ust, ehowlng the varieties ud amounts\nMining to be sold:\nILION AND DISTRICT\nokers  \t\nche\u00bb* \t\nulthy\t\nIntosh\t\nuthu \t\nigener\t\nnu* \t\n.       \t\nIroe*    \t\nSundrie*\t\nUdous\t\nmet      \t\nittenberg \t\nlyman     \t\nSundriee \t\n_\u00ab*p\t\nwtown  \t\nEst Stock\nGood Fruit\n388\n11\n....      8,774\n_    14.178\n__    18,788\n__      8,037\n.._      1.508\n....      7,757\n287\n.._    17,032\n._      2,791\n._      2.417\n...      1,-75\n34\n873\n38\n....      1,833\nDomestic\nShip'nts\n285\n11\n2,407\n2,900\n1,827\n8,670\n1.451\n8,512\n108\n8,048\n485\n2,277\n934\n118   ,\nExport\nShip'nts\n1,3-7\n10,829\n11,939\n234\n554\n191\n8,988\n1,418\n140\n303\n84\n39\n832\nTotal  Balance\nShip'nts   Untold\n285 -\n\u25a0It -\n8,774\n13,729\n13,768\n6,904\n1,481\n7,066\n297\n17,032\n1,808\n2,417\n1,237\n444\n1,183\n55\nMINTO STRIKE MOST SENSATIONAL\nSINCE PIONEER BECAME STANDOUT\nSpecial Assays Run as High as 36 Ounces of\nGold to Ton, Mining Writer Reports;\nYmir Cons. Makes Move on Debts\n152\n39\n1,218\n34,415       38,861       71,278\n893\n73\u20ac\n34\n721\n39\n\u25a0415\n8,122\n\u25a0\u2022TON AND DIITRICT\nikert .\n:hess\nilthy\nIntosh\nathan\ngener\nlua   ..\nme*    .._\nSundries ..\nicious \t\nae*\ntsenberg\nnran\n(undries..\ntesap\t\nftown   ....\n919\n1,693\n28,286\n97,942\n19,766\n18,867\n7,346\n7,193\n2,088\n22,762\n5U1\u00bb\n8,427\n5,437\n528\n426\n1,058\n203\n919\n1,693\n22.401\n77,898\n7,302\n18,750\n7,348\n7,191\n2,038\n16,585\n32,153\n7,478\n3,615\n424\n426\n757\n188\n- 919 -\n- 1,893 -\n1   5,885 28,286 -\n20,042 97,940 1\n11,922 19,922 542\n- 18,750 1171\n- 7,346 -\n4 7,195 -\n- 2,038 -\n(.167 22,752 10\n15,823 47,776 3,443\n127 7,606 821\n535 4,150 1,287\n- 424 104\n- 426 -\n296 1,053 , -\n- 188 15\n274,107      207,165       90,801      267,768 6,341\nONTREAL GAINS\n[ONTREAL, torch 15 (CP) -\nritreal itock exchuge list shook\nEuropean war fears Siturday\npushed bullishly forward,\ntiters, soaring 23 points to 278,\n(Un five pointa ot its 1929 peak.\nthe sharp upswing that spread\ntt]e metal, utility, construction\nud textile groups. Banks\nikened.\nlath-rat potted a two point gain\n12%. St Lawrence Paper prefer-\nI added nearly two point*,\nhiebec Power, Bell Telephone\ni-lllu ud Power Corporation\nn from one to two point* higher.\nMONTREAL PRODUCE\nMONTREAL, March 18 (CP>.-\nButter 21% -22; eggs 32-33.\nButter futures'. March 20\u201422;\nJune I9H-20; Nov. 20%~21.\nWheat No. 2 Nor. 02%; barley,\nNo, 3 C. W. 48; oata, No. 1 feed 37;\nflour 5.60; bran, ton, 20.25.\nExchange Rates\nNEW YORK,\"T(__r-h 15 <CP)-\nSterling exchuge firm at $4.97%\ntor demand ud $4.96% for 60-day\nbills.\nCanadian dollars Saturday, Friday and week ago, par.\nFrance 6.64% centi.\nItaly 8.99 cent*.\nUruguay 80.58 centa.\nMontreal Stock Prices\nI Telephone .\nC Power A\ntiding Producti \t\ns Bronze\nB Car tt Foundry .\nCement Pfd\t\nInd Al A    \t\ni Ind Al B\t\nPR \t\nn Steuier*\t\nckahutt      \t\nna M k S\t\nBridge\t\nGlm\t\nm Textile\t\nrd Cu A     \t\nn Steel Ware*\t\nirlei Gurd      \u2014\nmilton Bridge\t\nNickel\nney Harrii    \t\nntreal Power \u2014\nt Steel Car      -.\n142%\n12%\n.   80%\n34%\n.   37\n8%\n84%\n10%\n.    8%\n.   13%\n.    2%\n7%\n275\n38\n110\n71\n.   26\n.    4%\n.    7%\n.    4%\n48%\n6%\n32%\n.   15%\nNat Brewing\nSteel of Canada\t\nCURBS\nAti'd Brewerlei ....\nBrew 8c Dilt\nB A OU \t\nCan Celanese \t\nCan Dredge . \t\nCu Malting     ......\nCan Wineriea  _.\nDom Storei     .....\nDryden Paper .\t\nImperial Oil     \t\nImp Tob Cu \t\nInt Petrol      \t\nMcColl Frontenac\nMitchell Robt\nPage Hersey\t\nBANKI\nCanada\nCanadlenne  ,_\nMontreal       \t\nNova ScoUa \t\nRoyal      _.\n41%\n59%\n10%\n.85\n21\n28%\n43%\n31%\n3V,\n9%\n5%\n21%\n13%\n38%\n16%\n6%\n63%\n. 137\n185\n285\n176\nToronto Stock Quotations\n-kfleld   _  XI\nrry Hollinger  j04\nMetal*       23\nar ExploraUon   23\n___ Missouri   .63\nbio        .16%\nllorn*      tM\nft X Gold I .13\nf Ankerit*  4.70\nB Malartic   1.07\nliboo Gold   1.38\nlUe Trethewey   1.38\njtral Manitoba  .19\nntral Patricia  2.85\nibougamou    .44\nnilgai    3.00\nnarlum  2.19\nnt M & S  272.00\nmc            45.00\n~ra ExploraUon   .05\nlorado           1.15\n|lconbridf*    8.75\nl't Lak*    1.13\nAda  .19%\n  .65\nMinger  14.13\n'*y        .60\nd*on B-y  2475\nNickel    48.25\nCon .  .41\nUud Lake   49\n:e Maron    ,05%\na Shore    53.25\nle Long Lac _  6.80\n   3.92\nlie Leaf  .10\nibic     - .03%\nCockshutt _ .08\nityre                40.67\nittie Orah-mma 28\n'atters Gold  1.35\nIng Corp _ _ __  1J0\nling     2.60\naid*  47.50\nill! - J4%\nuster       _ .70\nOreille   1-00\nJ* Crow  _ 1.28\nleer Oold  _  8.75\nder Gold -  2.25\ni Gold  1.10\nSu Antonio _     2,85\nSheep Creek    __      .84\nSherritt Gordon      1.15\nSlicoe       3.05\nSmelter Gold  .._      .08\nStadtcon*         JO\nSt Anthony       .24\nSudbury Basin      4.15\nSylvanite      _     2.45\nTeck Hughes  .._     4.65\nToburn       1.30\nTowagamac        .27\nTreedweU        JO\nVentures   _    2.10\nWaite Amulet     1.15\nWayside        .18\nWhite Eagle  _       .03%\nWright Hargreave*     7.95\nOIL!\nAJax         J3\nC and E Corp _    1.08\nChemical Research      1.02\nDalhousie Oils      .53\nHome Oil       _._ __    1X12\nImperial OU    21.87\nInt Pete   .-,...   36.12\nMerland          .14\nNordon ...       .14\nRoyalite  _   33.75\nINDUSTRIALS\nBeatty Broi     II\nBell Telephone 143\nBraiillan             12%\nBrew k Dlst       JO\nCan Bread        .     4%\nCu Car tc Foundry _    6%\nCan Cement , , \u201e    6%\nCan Dredge   tl\nCan Malting      32\nCPR      13%\nCons Smelter*   273\nDom Bridge  \u201e    36\nDom Stores      9%\nDlst Seagrami  _.._   26\nFord Cu A         26\nGoodyeir Tir*      (9%\nHiram W*lk*r  .\".    29V.\nLobUw A  __    19%\nMauey Hirrit      6%\nSteel of Cinada   59%\nTHE WEEK AND OUTLOOK\nWith the suddenness that threw\nthe whole brokerage fraternity off\nit* feet the Vucouver stock market shot ahead this week under the\ngreatest surge of optimism in three\nyears, sales mounting to over 1,100,-\nJ00 shares on Thursday and totalling\naround 3,000,000 for the week.\nThe movement wu largely due\nte two outstanding events\u2014resumption of dlvldendi by Bralorne, which brought investment\nbuying Into the mirkit, ud sen-\nlitlonil developments at Minto,\nIn tht north Bridge River artt,\nwhert what now' appears to bt\nthe greateit itrlke ilnce Pioneer\nitruck picture rock iome yeert\n\u2022go, hai been made.\nBut for th untoward lituation in\nEurope, reflected in mirket losses\nin both New York and Toronto, the\nadvance would have been even\ngreater, but, as it was, the general\nVancouver movement was upward\nand against the eastern trend\u2014the\nfirst Ume that has happened in a\nlong time.\nWINTER TAKE8 ITS TOLL\nThe severe weathe. in February,\nwhile it resulted in serious decline\nin production from some of the\nleading mines, was not as disastrous\nat at first feared.\nFive reporUng mines, Including\nPioneer, Bralome, Reno, Wayside\nud Meridian, showed a net loss\nfrom the previous month of $159,283.\nOn Uie other hud, two producers\nof the Cariboo district \u2014 Cariboo\nGold Quartz and Iiland Mountain-\nshowed small Increases, amounting\nto $6370.\nThud, the set loss, entirely due to\nsubiero weather ud consequent\nfailure of water power, was 3152,913\ntor seven producing mines, against\na first estimate of $250,000 for the\nmonth.\nWhile winter lingers unusually\nlong, milling operaUons are now\nlargely back to normal and a fair\nmonth of March may be expected,\nthough it wlU probably be a litUe\nbelow January and late months of\n1935.\nBRALORNE RESTORES\nCONFIDENCE\nResumption of dividends by Bralorne mines, Bridge River, after a\nlapse of Just one year, has undoubtedly done much to restore confidence in that district, as evidenced\nby the fact that investment buying\nof some dimensions immediately\ncame into the market, in spite of\nthe lower trend in Toronto, which\naffected all the better gold stocks\non that Ust\nThe declaration was of 10 cent!\nregular quarterly ud 5 cent* extra,\nmaking a total dliburiement of\n$186,000, payable April 15 to shareholders of record March 31. The\nannouncement confirmed informa-\nUon given In these letters during\nthe past few months, as the cash\nreserve in the company's treasury\nmounted materially, month by\nmonth.\nLast year Bralorne's gross earnings reached $1,648,010, and for the\nfirst two months of 1936 the total\nhas been $287,770, in spite of loss\nof $41,230 In February, as compared\nwith results in January.\nIt must be remembered that the\ncompuy is now fortified with well\nover' $1,000,000 accumulated ln the\ntreasury during the past 10 months,\nthus placing it in what appears to\nbe position for a long period of\ndividend disbursements.\nWhen the current dividend has\nbeen paid the company will have\ndistributed  $1,111,000   since  April,\n1934, with one full year's hiatus.\nMINTO FURNISHES\n8ENSATION\nMlnte Qold mlnei, north Brldgt\nRiver irei, which hai been kicked\n\u2022round during the past ye*r Ilk*\n\u25a0 friendless hound dog, flashed\nInto the limelight this week with\nwhit It undoubtedly the most Important itrlke mide in tha tntlrt\nart* line* Pionetr became thi\nsensation of tht continent some\nyetn igo.\nThe strike wai made in what is\nknown ai the River tunnel, itarted\non the north bank of Bridge river\nby Coniolidated Mining k SmelUng\ncompany three yean ago when it\nheld an option upon Uie property.\nSince that time the face of the\ndrift, which Is 80 feet vertically below the main or Working tunnel,\nthrough which ore for the 100-ton\nplant ll transported, has been standing within a few rounds of an ore-\nbody that at this wriUng, is nothing\nshort of phenomenal In size and\nrichness.\nThe lut report received from the\nmine ai this li written, Friday,\nMarch 13, Is that the orebody, which\nhas been averaging about six feet\nin width, gives Indication of bulging to from 10 to 15 feet.\nSpecial assays have run up to as\nhigh as 38 ozs, gold per ton, with\nlast channel sample across the face\nMarch 12 of 3.8 ozs. Andrew O. Larson, consulUng engineer, to whom\nmost of the credit is due for the\nStrike, says that he will be itttifie\nif ihipplng vilues run 2% ot to\nthe ton, although most of the reports received from W. A. Dividson,\nluperlntendent, indlctte values\ntwice that high.\nHAS FAR-REACHING EFFECT\nThe Minto strike has galvanized\ninto feverish activity tecurltlei\nbased upon other propertiei in the\nvicinity, Including, R\"war., which\nhsi juit taken over a large Iffttg*\nto the erst; Federal which lies on\nthe west and hai Juit made an Important strike ln No. 2 tunnel; Reliance, Senator, Olympic, Congress,\nwhere a large orebody of compara\ntively new grade hai already been\ndeveloped ud which is under option\nto the Spencer interests ind several\nother companies of lesser immediate\nImportance.\nAll these securities have enjoyed\ntrading upon a large s-ale and thus\naccumulated funds for development,\nwhich will be pushed this season\nIn a manner reminiscent o the acUvity of over two years ago.\nIt is proposed to erect a 100-ton\nflotation-cyanide plant, thus obviating necessity of transportation to\nrail-head at Bridge River station on\nthe P.G.E. railway at heavy expense,\nCARIBOO  EARNINGS  UP\nCariboo Gold Quartz Mining company, Cariboo district, came through\nthe severe weather of February\nwith a gain of 84060 over production of January,\nRecovery was 1673 ozs, worth\n$38,555 from 4415 tons miUed, an\naverage of .379 oz, or $13.26 per to*.\nThis compares with 4973 tons\nmilled ln January, for recovery of\n1557 ozs, worth 854,495, an average\nof .325 oz, or $11.37 per ton.\nISLAND MOUNTAIN INCREASE\nIsland Mountain' mines, near\nneighbor to Cariboo Gold Quartz,\noperating across Jack of Clubs lake\nfrom the latter, Cariboo district,\nemulated the example of its neighbor by showing u increase in gross\nproducUon of $2310 for February,\nin spite of the frigid spell. Mill\nhandled 3155 tons for recovery of\n1558 ozs, worth $54,530, an average\nof .494 ozs, or $17.28 per ton.\nMERIDIAN\nEARNINGS  DOWN\nMeridian Mining company, Camborne, Lardeau district, suffered\nmore acutely than any oth>r company during February, even among\nthose which depend solely upon\nwater power.\nMilling had to be suspended on\nFebruary 11 and was only resumed\nearly this month. Not only did the\nwater supply freeze up, but a snow-\nslide carried out two lengths of\npipe, restored with some difficulty.\nTroubles were experienced even\nduring the 11 days the mill was\nkept running, with the result that\nit handled but 703 tons, with recovery of 146 ozt, worth $5110.\nThi! compare! with 2889 ton!\nhandled in Jinuary for recovery of\n428 ozs, worth $14,989.\nFebruary heads were up to .207\noz, compared with .148 oz ln January, reflecting higher valuei recently found east of Al and A2\nslopes in the Criterion workings.\nMill is now running at normal\nrate.\nYMIR CONSOLIDATED\nAFFAIRS\nAt an extraordinary generel meeting of shareholders ot Ymlr Consolidated Gold Mines compuy, held\nat Victoria March 12, a resolution\nwt! adopted unanimously authorizing directors to secure funds tor retirement of debts and resumption\nof operations by issue of first mortgage debentures in the amount of\n$40,000, callable on 30 days' notice\nat 120, principal ud Interest secured by all company's assets.\nA further guarantee ts to be provided by establishment of a partial\nsinking fund upon all ore milled at\nrate of 23 cents per ton, which is\nexpected to offset reasonable depreciation upon the plant, (which\nhas only run six months) up to the\nmaturity date of the debentures,\nfour years after issue.\nThe issue will retire obllgitlons\nupon mlU construction and to preferred creditors totalling $17,800,\nleaving $20,000 for development\nover a period of six months. Before\nany part of the amount can be\nspent, at least $25,000 must be. deposited with the London 8c Western\nTrust company. If the minimum be\nnot realsed, aU subscriptions will\nbe returned.\nOrdinary creditor! are to receive\n35 per cent ot net profits after deducting linking fund requirements\nof 25 cents per ton and be allowed\nthe option of converting accounts\ninto shares of the company at 10\ncents per share at any time prior\nto May 15, 1938.\nSubscribers to debentures are to\nreceive 500 shares of capital stock\nfor every $100, sucl stock to be\nprovided by original vendors of\nthe property.\nIf the entire amount Is subscribed,\nthe number of shares Involved will\nbe 200,000. Debentures are to be\nIssued in denominations as low as\n$25.\nThe entire proposal will be submitted to all creditors prior to the\nforthcoming general meeting.\nAn estimate of ore reserves presented to the meeting shows $15,275\nYmir Property Is\nSold to Dictator\nPENTICTON, B.C., March 15.-\nSltuated to the east of the Yukee\nGirl mine at Ymlr, the Rou Oake\nproperty has been purchased by the\nDictator Gold Mine* Ltd., former\noperators in the Lightning Peak\ndistrict near Edgewood, 'lays the\nPenUcton Herald.\nFour claimi are Included ln this\ngold-bearing property. Mr. Hildring\nHenderson has been appointed foreman, ud ictive work is expected\nto go forward shorUy.\nOTTAWA SILVER\nPURCHASES MIU\nRENO AND SHEEP\n(REEK UP FIVE\nVANCOUVER, M_rch 15 (CP).-\nSr.turd-y's short session ended one\nof the most acttVv weeks seen on\nthe Vancouver stcck exchinge since\nthe boom year of 1929. Minto, Federal and Rewa d Mining issues accounted for most ot the week's activity and with Wayside Joining the\ngroup today. Sales totalled 657.626.\nPioneer Gold led t. brisk price\nrally with a gain of 25 at 9.85 and\nBralorne followed, up \"0 at 6.90.\nWayside wai up 4 at 20, Minto gained 2 at 37, Sheep Creek at 68 and\nReno at 1.08 .>acli advanced 6 and\nFederal was unchanged at 8%. Island Mounts: i firmed 3 at 1.23 ud\nCongress ud Sally each gained 1%\nat 21% ud 11% respecti ely.\nCHICAGO LOSES\nCHICAGO, March 15 (AP)-An-\nnouncement of big odds against hoi-\ntilitlei iii Europe, together with\npeace gestures to Grnnany by the\nLeague ot Nations council, tumbled\nwheat prices down Saturday.\nWheat closed unsteady, % to 1%\ncent under Friday's finish, May\n99% to 99% cents, July 89% to 89%\ncent*, corn % to % cent off, Msy\n60% to 60% cents, oats % to % cent\ndown, ahd provisions unchuged to\n10 cents decline.\nReport Is Made Up on\nCardinal Properties\nVICTORIA, March 15 (CP)-A description ud report on the mining\nproperUes of the Cardinal Mining k\nDevelopment Compuy, N.P.L. ud\non results of development work up\nto October 1935, was made public\ntoday by Hon. George S. Pearson,\nminister ot mines. The report was\nprepared by B. T. O'Grady, resident\nmining engineer for number six district The property is on the south\nfork of Ladner creek 2y< miles\nnorthwest of Verna on the Kettle\nValley railway.\nVancouver Sales\nVANCOUVER, March 16 (CP>.-\nMlnlng shares sold on the Vucouver stock exchange yesterday;\nLISTED: Big Miss 1600, Bralorne\n787, B R Con 4500, BRX 4300,\nCariboo 600, Dentonla 10,400, Island\nMount 1600, Koot Belle 500, NaUonal Sll 1000, Pioneer 1030, Premier 1250, Reno 3100, Sally 4300,\nSalmon 1600, Sheep Creek 2500,\nSherr Gor 7, Taylor. Br 3400, Wayside 117,830.\nCURB: B.C. Nickel 8500, Congreti\n71,000, Dictator 1500, Fairview 1000,\nGold Mount 5000, Geo Riv 1000,\nGoleonda 200, Grange 4000, GruU\nWihk 10000, Hedley Amal 2400,\nHome 10Q0, Federal 11,400, Minto\n158,800, Nicola 400, Noble Five 2800,\nPend Oreille 2600, Pilot 17,000, Porter Idaho 1500, Relief Ari 4100, Reward 61,700, Sllvercrest 12,000, Vldette 500, Waverly 2500, Whitewater\n1000.\nEastern Sales\nTORONTO, March 15 (CP-Sales\nof 100 or more shares on the Toronto stock exchange, industrial\nsection, Saturday: 3275 Brazilian;\n1675 B A Oil; 545 C P R; 178 C\nSmelters; 500 Massey H; 280 Power\nCorp.\nMONTREAL, March 15 (CP).-\nSales of 100 or more shares on the\nMontreal stock exchange Saturday:\n3165 Bathurst 1; 3511 Brazilian; 343\nCan Car; 255 Can Car Pfd.; 440\nCelanese; 570 CPR; 100 Cockshutt;\n321 Smelters; 350 Dom Brld; 1790\nHollinger; 180 Imp Tob; 1942 Nickel.\nnet profit in ore broken, blocked or\nready to shoot in Goodenough mine\nand $8400 profit ih 7000 tons of\nbroken ore in Ymir mine. Ore ts\nnow being broken in Goodenough,\nfrom one to four feet wide, with\nvalues running from $17.50 to $35\nper,ton.\nWILL INCREASE CAPITAL STOCK OF\nBANK OF CANADA TO GAIN CONTROL\nOTTAWA, March 16, (CP)-A\nresolution to enable the government to take over the control of\nthe Bank ot Canada appeared on\nSaturday'! house of commons order\npaper sponsored by Finance Minister Dunning. The resolution Indicated control would be obtained by\nIncreasing the capital stock rather\nthan by buying shares already in\nthe hmds of prlvtte investors.\nThe bsnk onened iti doon a year\n\u25a0go after 100,000 ihires of its capital itock had been so.d to the public\nnt a p\"r value of $50 \u2022 shire Fo-\ntbt government to ir-?uro control It\nwould be necessary to Increase the\ncapital stock to above 200,000 sharei.\nThe finance minister will ask the\nhouse of commpns to declare:\n\"That It Is expedient to bring in\na measure to amend the Bank of\nCanada act to ai to increase the\ncapital stock of Uie btnk, to provide\nthat certain shares thereof shall be\npurchased by the minister of finance out of the consolidited revenue fund in order to \u00bbssure ownership ot a m.jority of tht *h-res by\nthe government, to Increase the\nnumber of directors, and to provide\nfor election and appointment of\ndirectors In such manner as to assure voting control of the bnard by\nrllre '-rs nprolnted by the govern-\nm~ '.\"\nThe resolution will form the basis\nfor a bill embodying Its proviiioni\nto be inlroducod after the house has\napproved the first step.\nSPOKANE, Wuh., March 15. -\nThe Ottawa Silver Mining ud Milling company hu placed u order\nwith the Union Iron Work* ot Spokane for machinery to be used In\nthe nstallation of * mill of 100 ton*\ndally ore capacity ny* the Spokea-\nrmuvRevlew.\nConitrucUon of the mill building\nwill be itarted about April 1, or as\nloon u the weather conditioni permit according to W. Randolph\nGreen, muager of operaUon*. There\nis about a foot of snow on the mill\nsite, near Slocan City, B.C.\nThe mill will be of the flotation\ntype ud its equipment entirely\nmodern. It will be electrified completely ud wiU have a Diesel-electric auxiliary plant A contract is\nbeing let to a Canadlu contracting firm.\nCompletion of the mill ud it*\noperation is expected in early summer. Ita operaUons -will be itarted\nwith the dressing of a large ore\nreserve broken ud reedy for the\nmill, said Mr. Green. Members ot\nthe compuy are mainly Spokane\nresidents.\nMINES ADVANCE\nTORONTO. March 18 (CP). -\nEasing of the war scare tension\nbrought quick relief to the mining\nshare section of the Toronto exchuge on Saturday,' price* advancing smartly. The gold share index\nregistered a gain of 5.03 to 121.00\nud the miscellaneous mine* index\nmoved up 3.73 to 133.15.\nFriday'! heavy lo*er*, Central\nPatricia, Macassa, LitUe Long Lac\nand Pickle Crow, came beck to the\nextent of 38 to 50 rants. Other\ngolds came up by 10 to 20 centa.\nWinnipeg Lower\nWINNIPEO, March 18 (CP). -\nBearish speculation stepped in on\nSaturday to keep grain prices\nchurning over the week-end. Whe\u00abt\nwu selling Ex-Locarno, with prospects ot peace along .the German\nfrontier, u vluei on the Winnipeg grain exchuge bogged down\nSaturday trom previous closing\nlevels,\nImprovement ln the European political ilhution brought * wave of\nselling from Chicago. Weakness it\nLiverpool contributed nothing constructive and prices at the close\nwere %\u2014% lower, May at 85%, July\n85% ud October 85%\u2014%.\nCash wheat ud coarse grains uncovered uother routine perform-\nancc. Prices were inclined to ta\neasier trend.\nWinnipeg Grain\nWI!fI4TPEG,l1'arch 15 (CP) -\nGrain futures quotations:\nOpen   High   Low   Cloie\nWheet:\nMay   ...     85%    86       84%    85%\nJuly   ..      88%    86%    65%    85%\nOct   .   .   86%    86%    88%    85%\nOats:\nMay      32%    32%    32%    32%\nJuly        32%    32%    32%    32%\nBarley:\nMay      39%    39%    39       39%\nJuly   .       39%    89%    39%    89%\nFlu:\nMay    188%   159      158%   158%\nJuly    155%    -       -     158%\nRye:\nMay       45%    45%    49%    45%\nJuly      47%    \u2014       \u2014       40H\nOct     48%    48%    47%    47%\nWheat: No. 1 hard 84%; No. 1 nor.\n83%; No. 2 nor. 81%; No. 3 nor. 77%;\nNo. 4 nor. 73%; No. 5, 8614; No. 6,\n56%; feed 49%; No. 1 gamet 79%;\nNo. 2 gamet 76 M_; No. 1 durum 77%;\nNo. I A. R. W. 73%; No. 4 ipeclal\n65%; No. 5 ipeciil 60%; No. 6 ipecial\n54%; track 53%; screenings 75 centa\nper ton.\nMinneapolis Grain\nMINNEAPOLIS, Mirch 18 (AP)\n\u2014Flour unchuged. Carload lot*\nfamily patent! 7.05 to 7.25 a barrel\nIn 98-pound cotton sacks. Shlpmenta\n27,005. Bran 15.75 to 16.25.\nWheat caih: No. 1 heavy dark\nnorthern iprlng 60 lb. 124% to\n134%, No. 1 red durum 83%.\nExchanqes\nMONTREAL, March 15 (CP)\u2014\nBritish and foreign exchtnge cloied\nhigher.\nArgentina, peso, .2763.\nChina, Hongkong dollars, .3300.\nJapan, yen, 2000.\nNew Zealud, pound 4.0150.\n(Compiled by the Royal Bank of\nCanada.)\nMetal Marketi\nNEW YORK, March 15  (AP)-\nMetal pricei nominally unchanged,\nBar lilver, nominal, no quotation\nLondon, bar silver firm, 1-16 higher at 19%d.\nGOLD  UNCHANGED\nMONTREAL, March 15 (CP). -\nBar gold in London unchanged at\n$36 06 an ounce in C*n-dlu funds:\n14li id In British funds. The ft\u2014I\n*35 W* h'-\"Tton -rice amounted to\n<35.01 in Canadian.\nTo mr>'-r Md-M In bed enter\nfor n sick o;- injured neison, t British inventor has devised spectacles\nwith mirror attached so that a\nbook lying on the patient's chest can\nbe read. t\nBONDS RECOVER\nNEW YORK, March 15 (AP).-\nSharp recovery in bonds of domestic railroads and foreign governments wu the principal feature\nof the market Saturda;.\nLow-priced cirrier issue*, nrely\ndepressed during the but two sessions, recovered \u2022 good portion of\ntheir losses when selling essure\nlifted on both loam and itocki, coincident with a turn for the better\nin the Fruco-Oermu crisis in Europe, and by the tame token there\nwu a decidedly better tone in the\nforeign department!,\nINDUSTRIALS UP\nTORONTO, March 15 (CP).-In-\nduatrial sharei snapped back yesterday from the lows set up in\nthree days ot nervous selling\nbrought on by the trouble In Europe. The size of the rebound\u20144.51\nin the exc' ange index\u2014tuggested\nshort covering.\nSmelters advanced 22 to 273, a\nnew high mark for the year. Nickel\ncloeed a point higher at 48y\u00ab. Gains\nof a point to 1% were boarded for\nBrazilian and Ford A and C. P. R.\nwu up %.\nBritish American Oil ud Walk-\nera common each added 1%. Super-\ntest Ordinary unproved a point\n-PAGE NINE\nPEACE TALK AIDS\nN.Y. RECOVERY\nNEW YORK, March 15 (AP).-\nWlllingne . of European power* to\narbitrate German rearmament on a\npeaceful basis provided Uie impetus\nSaturday for the greatest one-day\nrecovery in the stock market since\nJtnutry 15, 1834, whu Pretident\nRoosevelt sought authority to devalue Uie dollar.\nThe two-hour session opued with\nadvances of fractions to around a\npoint, and the upward momentum\ngained cteadily until the final gong\nconfirmed gains ot 1 to more thu\n8 pointi on the day.\nCombining with the turn ln diplomatic discussions wer* some business tidings that also exerted pressure on the upside.\nCANADIAN DOLLAR STEADY\nNEW YORK, March 15 (CP) -\nMajor currencies moved upward\nSaturday on the foreign exchange\nmarket.\nThe pound sterling gained one\ncent to $4.97% ud French francs\nadvanced one point also to 6.64%\ncents. The Canadlu doUar remained unchanged at par with United\nSUtei fundi.\nMontreal Silver Quotations\nMONTREAL, M\u00bbrch 18 (CP) .-Silver closed ste\u00bbdy Saturday, 10\npoints up to 15 oft. Closing bids: March 44.65; May 44.45; July 44.45;\nSepUn.ber 44.45; December 44.45. \t\nDour-Jones Averages\n30 lndustritll\n20 rail! \t\n20 utilities\t\n40 bonds \t\nHigh\n 154.78\n    47.33\n _   31J8\nLow\n152.19\n46.55\n31.24\nCloie Change\n154.07-up 3.65\n47.1S-Up 1.17\n31.84-up 1.13\n101.80-up    .U\nQuotations on Wall Street\nAl Chem .._ - 188%\nAm Can  124%\nAm For Power    7%\nAm Mch 8c Fdy  26%\nAm Smelt 8c Re  82%\nAm Telephon* . 189\nAm Tobacco ....  88%\nAnaconda \u2014  34%\nAtchison _ ..... 75%\nAuburn Motors 48%\nAviation Corp -\nBaldwin Loco -\nBait k Ohio _\nBendix Av \u2014\nBeth Steel t...\nCanada Dry \u2014\nCPR\t\nCerro de Pasco\nChes 8c Ohio _\nChrysler\t\nCon Ou N Y _\nCorn Prod  _\nC Wright Pfd\nDupont\nElee Pow k Lite\nErie   \u2014\t\nFord English __\nFord of Cuada\nFirst Nat Storei\nFreeport Texu\nGeneral Electric\nGeneral Foods -\nGeneral Motors\nGold Dust _.\nGoodrich    -9'i\nGranby\nGre\u00bbt North Pfd\nGrt West Sugar\nHowe Sound _\nHudson oMtors\nInt Nickel \u2014\nInt Tel _c Tel....\nHigh Low Close\n186%\n124%\n7%\n28%\n82%\n168%\n34\n78%\n47%\n6%\n5%\n20%\n\u00bb%\n55%\n13%\n13%\n50%\n86\n94%\n34%\n73%\n8%\n145%\n14\n15%\n8%\n26%\n42\n31\n39\n34%\n61%\n20%\n19%\n10%\n36\n38%\n63%\n17%\n48%\n16%\n7\n3%\n20%\n24%\n55%\n13%\n13%\n51\n56%\n95\n34%\n.  74\n.    8%\n145%\n14\n15%\n25%\n42%\n31V.\n39\n34%\n61%\n20%\n10%\n38%\n36%\n18%\n48%\n16%\n185\n128\n7%\n28\n81\n168\n88%\n33%\n74%\n47%\n6%\n5%\n19%\n24\n54%\n13%\n13\n50\n86%\n98%\n33%\n72\n8%\n141%\n13%\n14%\n25%\n41\n31\n38%\n34%\n60%\n20\n18%\n10%\n35%\n88\n17%\n47%\n16%\nJewel Tea\t\nKenn Copper \u2014\nKreige S S\t\nKroegger tc T -\nMack Truck __\nMilwaukee Pfd\nMont Ward \t\nNuh Motor* ....\nNit Dairy Prod\nN Pow tc Lite .\nN Y Central\nPac Gu tc Elee\nPackard oMtors\nPenn R R\t\nPlumps Pete _\nPure Oil\t\nRCA\t\nR K O\t\nRem Rand \t\nSafeway Stores\nShell Union _.-\n37\n22%\n24\n33\n1%\n40%\n19%\n14\n10%\n28*,;\n34%\n11\n33%\n42%\n23%\n12%\nI\n22%\n32%\n18%\nSCal Ed    25%\nSouth Pacific\nSUn Ol lot Cal\nSUn OU of Ind\nSUn OU of N J\nStewart Warner\nStudebaker \t\nTexu Corp .....\nTexu Gulf Sul\nTimken Roller -\nUn Carbide\t\nUn Oil of Cal _\nUn Aircraft _\nUn Pacific \u2014\nU S Pipe \t\nU S Rubber .....\nU S Steel _ _\nVanadium Steel\nWarner Bro* ._\nWeit Elee\t\nWestern Un \u2014\nWoolworth\t\nYellow Truck _\n83%\n45%\n38%\n66%\n20%\n13%\n36%\n35%\n68%\n82'A\n27%\n29%\n132\n36\n26\n63%\n23\n11%\n115\n88%\n80%\n15%\n38% 37\n22% 22%\n23% 23%\n32% 32%\n2%      2%\n38% 39%\n18% 18%\n13% 24\n10% 10%\n34% 38\n34% 34%\n10% 10%\n32% 32%\n41% 42%\n22 22\n12% 12%\n7%      7%\n11% 12%\n81% 31%\n18 18%\n28% 18%\n82% 13\n44% 44%\n17% 18\n85% 86%\n19% 20%\n12% 13%\n35% 36\n35% 38%\n87% 88%\n82 82\n27 27%\n28% 29\n180% 132\n85 16\n14 26\n62 63%\n22% 23\n11% 11%\n111 114%\n86 88%\n50 80%\n15% 15%\nVancouver  Stock  Exchange\nLUTED\nA P Con \t\nAmal Oil\t\nBig Mluourl \t\nBrilorne  \t\nBridge R Con _\u2014\nBRX Gold\t\nCariboo Gold\t\nC ud E Corp\t\nCoast Brew\t\nCoait Br RU ,.\t\nDentonia  _ -\nGold Belt \t\nHome Oil  ____,\nInt Coal \t\nIiland Mount \t\nKoot Belle \t\nMak Siccar -\nMcDougal Segur ..\nMcLeod OU New ....\nModel Oil \t\nMorning SUr -\nNat Sllv*r \t\nPioneer Gold \t\nPremier Gold -\t\nPremier Border:\t\nQuaUino    \t\nReno Gold .<-\nReevei MacDonald\nSaUy Mines \t\nSalmon Gold \t\nSheep Creek\t\nTaylor Bridg* \u2014\nVu\u00bblU    \t\nW*yside   -\nCURB\nAnaconda ..........\nBalUc Oil .\u2014\nBeaver Silver\t\nBC Nickel \t\nBunker HIU ..._\t\nCan Rand  __\u2014\nCalmont Oil  -\nCongress Gold \u2014\nCrows Nest -\nDalhousie Mines ....\nDalhousie Olla ......\nDevenish    \u2014\nDicUtor Gold \t\nDunwell    \t\nEutcrest    -\nFairview      \t\nFederal Gold\t\nGeo Copper ...\nOolconda        \t\nGold Mount .....\nQeo E-itcrprise ....\nGeo River\nOrull Wihltsne . ...\nHecla  ,\nHedley Amil\t\nHercules Con \t\n\u25a0Id\n.14%\nAsk\n.15\n.10\n.84\n.85\n6.90\n6.95\n.04%\n.05\n.13\n.13%\n1.36\n1.40\n1.16\n1.18\n13.00\n\u2014\n4.50\n4.75\n.19\n20\n.80\n.34\n1.06\n1.08\n.18\n.19\n1.23\n1.25\nJO\n.52\n.08\n.09\n.06%\n.07\n3X\n.35\n21\n.25\n3)2\n\u2014\n.03\n.03%\n9.85\n9.90\n2.25\n2.27\n.00%\n.00%\n.01%\n-2\n1.08\n1.10\n.09\n\u2014\n.11%\n.12%\nJ09%\nJO\n.68\n.89\n.11\n.12\n.06%\n.07%\n20\n-W%\nMV,\n.04\n.03\n.03%\n\u2014\n.05\n.SO\n.31\n75.00\n80.00\n\u2014\n.06%\n.09\n\u2014\n.21%\na\n.09%\nx\u00bb%\n.00%\n.01%\n.53\n\u2014\nJ03%\n.03%\n.04%\nM\nJ03%\n.05\nJ>7%\n\u2014\nJ04\n.03\n.08%\n.09\na\n.25\n.16%\n21\n\u2014\n.07%\n.04\n\u2014\n.01 \"t\n.01%\n.0' L\n.03\nMV,\n.09\n14.75\n13.25\n.24%\n.23\n.15\n\u2014\nHome Gold  .-,    .03\n.03%\nIndiu Minei     .02\n43\nKoot Florence     .00%\n\u2014\nLucky Jim -.    JH%\n.02\nMadison     JU%\n\u2022-\nMar Jon     .17\nJ7H\nMercury -      .12%\naa\nMeridian      .10\n\u2014\nMerland    _     Jl\n\u2014\nMcGillivray Coal _    J7\n\u2014\nMill City     -    Jl\n___.\nMinto Gold  ,    J7\n.37%\nMorton WoUey _...._    .00%\nJ01\nNicola    -    J09\nMV,\nNoble Five     .04%\n.04%\nNoruda    47.00\n\u2014\nNordon            .    .13\nm-\nOkalU       .07\n\u2014\nPaolU    \u2014    .05\n.05%\nPend OrelUe _n-_-   1.00\n1.05\nPickle Crow    \u2014...  4.40\n\u2014\nPilot Gold     .04%\n\u2014\nPorter Idaho     Ai\nAS\nQuesnelle Q  -.    .04\n\u2014\nRanchmen's  _   .70\n.75\nReward   -    J06\nMV,\nRelief Arlington .....    2t\nAAV,\nRoyaUte 33.50\nUM\nRufus ArgenU      .00%\nm\nRuth Hope -    .01%\nJ02\nSilvercreit      MVi\nMV,\nSilverado    .    fit\n\u2014\nSilveremith ..'     J01%\n.01%\nSnowflake _     ._    .00%\n\u2014\nSunshine  19.50\n2000\nU D L      ~    .70\n.75\nUnited Oil      .06%\nVenturei    2.11\n2.19\nVidette Gold     .72\n.74\nVulcan  12%\n\u2014\n.03\nWaverley Tang \u2014    .00%\n.00%\nWellington  .'.     -\n.01%\nWhitewater      JIB\nMVt\nYmlr Yankee Girl..    AD\n~~\nMining Property\nof Merit\nBOUGHT AND SOLD\nCOMPANIES     REORGANIZED\nAND FINANCED\nYour Butinett Treated\nConfidential\nOut cf-town Inquiries Invited\nI. Rosenthal\n814.618 HALL BLDG\nVANCOUVER.  B.C.\n PAGE TEN -\nFor\nHEAD COLDS\nUie Wampols's Noae and\nCold Drops\n25*\nMann, Rutherford\nDrug Go.\nContinue to take cuttingi of hardy\nchrysanthemums. Thoie who put\nthe old planti in frames wUl be\nfortunate Uiii year.\nNELSON DAILY NEWS, NELSON. B.C-MONDAY MORNINO. MARCH IS. 1SSS\nTwo Basketball\nGaines Tonight\nDue to counter attraction! lilted\nfor Tueiday and Wedneiday, Toronto Stan md St. Joieph ictdemy\nglrli will play the second gime of\ntheir buketball series it the ienlor\nhigh ichool gym tonight, starting at\n7:43. Star* have a lead of four point*,\nhiving taku the fint game-28-22.\nWinnen of this lerte* meet Aces\nin the finala.\nIn the second game tonight, Hornet* and Redwing!, intermediate:,\nplay the fint of a beit-out-of-three\nseriei.\nSPECIAL TRAIN\nTRAU-NELSON and Return\nWED., MAR. 18TH.\nsccount Kimberley-Prfnce Albert\nALLAN CUP PLAYDOWN\nONE CAME ONLY\nLEAVE TRAIL 4:55 P.M,\nLEAVE TADANAC  6:10 P.M.\nARRIVE  NELSON      '..     6:55 P.M.\nStopping   it   Castlegar,   Brilliant,   South   Slocan\n\u2022nd Bonnington.\nRETURNING\u2014Lttvt  Ntlion  ibout  Midnight\nReturn Fare $1.50 From Trail and Tadanac\nOther Points 75 Cti. Reserved seata $1.00.\nA representative will bt it Crown Point Hottl, Trill, Mondiy, 4 p.m.,\nto nil Railway ind* Reierved Seat tlcketi, the litter limited In\nnumber.\nNELSON SENIOR HOCKEY CLUB\nWednesday Night 8:30\nALLAN CUP INTERPROVINCIAL PLAYDOWNS\nKIMBERLEY vs.\n(B. C, Champion!) ,\nPRINCE ALBERT\n(Alberta-Saskatchewan Champions)\nTHIS SHOULD BE THE OUTSTANDING\nHOCKEY GAME EVER PLAYED IN\nTHE KOOTENAYS\nKimberley has asked for 300 Reierved Seats to look\nsfter thote coming by special train. 200 Reserved Seata\nwill be available for those coming by special train\nfrom Trail.\nAdmission Fixed by Cinidlin Amittur Hockty Auoclttlon\nReserved Seats $1.00     Rush 750\nReserved Seats on Sale at Celinas Cigar Store After\n12 o'Clock Noon Todsy.\nRush Tickets on Ssls st Bush's Cigar Store\nSKATING RINK SCHEDULE\nThis week's activities must be governed by the Kimberley-Prince Albert Hockey Came and by the Professional Hockey Came scheduled for Saturday night.\nIf any change in this program is necessary it will be\nannounced in this paper.\nMONDAY NICHT, 8 to 10\u2014Skating, Adults Only.\nTUESDAY AFTERNOON, 3:45 to 5:30 \u2014 Children\nSksting.\nTUESDAY NICHT, 7 to 10\u2014Intermediate snd juvenile Hockey.\nWEDNESDAY NIGHT \u2014 Kimberley-Prince Albert\nHockey. t\nTHURSDAY NICHT\u2014Sksting, Adults Only.\nFRIDAY AFTERNOON, 3:45  t.  5:30 \u2014 Children\nSksting.\nFRIDAY NICHT, 7 to 10\u2014Intermediate snd Juvenile\nHockey.\nSATURDAY AFTERNOON, 1:30 to 3:30\u2014 Children\nSksting.\nSATURDAY NICHT, 9:15\u2014\nCALGARY vs. EDMONTON\nNote: Any adult purchasing a 50c skating ticket on\nMonday night will be entitled to skate on Monday and\nThursday night with privilege of Free Skating nerxt\nSunday afternoon from 2 to 4 p.m.\nPRUNING TIME\nIs Here\nWE CARRY ALL THE TOOLS YOU\nNEED FOR THIS WORK.\nCome in Todoy and See Them!\nTREE PRUNERS\u20148 snd 10 Ft.\nCENUINE REISER snd WISS SHEARS\nBISHOP PATTERN PRUNINC SAWS\nCENUINE CLYDE PRUNERS\u201430-inch\nWood, Vallance\nHardware Company, Ltd.\nNELSON ARTIST EXCELS IN SCENIC DRAWINGS       BANTAM TEAMS\n\"\"\"\"PUYTWOmS\nPanthers and Reds,\nScouts and Blues,\nGet Goal Each\nTOP\u2014 A scene at Bonnington Falls on Kootenay\nriver drawn by George A.\nMeeres, Nelson artist.\nLEFT\u2014A scene on the\nBeasley portion of one of\nthe many beautiful high-\nways in Kootenay. Drawn\nby George A. Meeres, Nelson artist.\nMORE ABOUT\nMDIVANI DEATH\n(Centlnutd Frem Pag* Oni)\nMORE ABOUT\nFrance Stubborn\n(Continued From Pige One)\nTo the first condition broached\nby Germany there li no objei'.on.\nit is accepted that the German representative ihould attend on a bails\nof equality with the others.\nThe hitch lies in the second condition. It means, as interpreted\nhere, that both the French and Belgians would have to abandon their\nposition. They take the ground that\nthey cannot negotiate so long as\nGermany continues military occupation of the Rhineland, If Herr\nHitler's second condition is accepted,\nthen German troops will remain in\nthe Rhineland while the proposed\n23-year non-aggression treaty is\ndiscussed.\nThe council will meet in private\nsession to consider the German reply. The final word lies with the\ncouncil, but hope that a German\nrepresentative will ittend tomorrow\nafternoon's republic session has been\nvirtually abandoned.\nPARIS, March 15 (AP) - The\nFrench government has instructed\nits delegation at London to hold\nout \"to the bitter end'' for punishment of Germany, officials said\ntonight.\nThe cabinet* decided, it was said,\nit Is better to hold out, even if it\n\"wrecks the league,\" rather than\n\"bargain iway the nation's just\nright.\"\nPremier Sarraut, Informed sources\nsaid, directed Foreign Minister Flandln to arrange to carry the Franco-\nSoviet pac;t before the Hague court\nof international Justice immediately\nafter the league will have acknowledged Germany'! vlolaUon of the\nLocarno treaty.\nThe cabinet is confident the court\n'SEE'\nVIC GRAVES\nMASTER  PLUMBER\nFer all vour needs In dumb\nIne reoalrs. alterations, and\ninstillations.\nPh. 819       301 VICTORIA St.\nwill decide the pact with Runi*\ndoes not conflict with the Locarno\ntreaty and that a favorable verdict\nwould clearly refute Chancellor Hitler's argument for overthrowing\nthe treaty.\nSarraut told Flandin to propoie\nto the league council that It forbid\nGermany, meanwhile, to reinforce\nthe troopi in the Rhinelind or to\nbuild fortifications.\nReliable sources said en emissary sent here by Dr. Hjalmar\nSchacht, German minister of economics, to endeavor to persuade\nFrench leaders to drop the plan of\nsanctions against Germany had returned to Berllri with i \"flat refusal.\"\nSouth Unit at\nBonneville Dam\nIs in Operation\nBONNEVILLE, Ore, March 15 -\n(AP)\u2014The first water surged across\nthe south unit of the main spillway\nof Bonneville dam Saturday, signaling another epoch in the con-\nstru.tion of the S4_,5O0,0O0' power\nand navigation project on the Columbia river.\nEngineers halted pumps which\nhad been keeping water in tlie\nhuge cofferdam at a low level. With\nsurprising rapidity the ,\"hole\" filled and the stream surged through\nthe gateways of the massive structure.\nEarly next week the walls of the\ncofferdam will be blasted away,\nletting the full force of the current\nstrike the completed unit of the\ndam.\nNew York society girl and former\nwife of Prince Alexis.\nPhysician* pretent at the lime of\nthe accident, found death had resulted from a cerebral hemorrhage.\nAn Inhalator wat used for more\nthan an hour before effors to revive\nhun were abandoned.\nThe mishap occurred ln the fourth\nperiod of a polo mitch between the\nprincelf Georgians and the Texans,\ncaptained by Cecil Smith.\nPONIES CRASH\nMdivani swerved icross the Une\nof play for a daring reach and his\npony crashed Into Smith's. The two\nplayers came down, and Mdivani*!\nrearing mount kicked him.\nThe Georgian's bride of leu than\ntwo monthi and her mother, Mn.\nJamei R. van Alen, were among the\nipectaton.\nThe princess ran to her huiband'i\nilde and collapsed at the newi the\nphysicians gave her.\nThe game wes the final and deciding one of the southeastern polo\nchampionship, in progress here for\nthe pait three weeks, The Texans\nwere leading 4-2 at the time of the\nmishap.\nIt wai Ironic thit the gime Prince\nSerge loved so well brought hli\ndeith.\nHe pliyed constantly, even interrupting his honeymoon tboard a\nyacht in the Florid! keyi for \u2022 recent game at Miami Beech.\nSECOND BANTAM SERIES\nW L D GF OA Pt\nBluet 2   1   1   15    8  5\nRedi  2   11    8   10  5\nPmthen  112    7   13   4\nScouti   0  2  2    S    8   2\nEich of Nelion'i four Bantam\nhockey team* iccumultted one goal\nuid one point in the league gamei\nSaturday forenoon, a 1-1 Ue played\nby the Panthen and Red* ln the\nopener being duplicated by \u25a0 1-1\ntie between the Scouts and Blue*\nin the second contest.'with the second series two-thirds over, the\nteam! are aU within * three-point\nrange in itandlng.\nWHISTLE SAVES GOALIE\nThe Panthen took in early letd\nin the tint gime, when Bengert\ncapitalired a put from Guicott in\nthe tint two minutei. It took 10\nminutes for the Reds to equalize\nthe score, when Ratcliffe ihot one\npast Goalie L. Morrison. Just before\nthe end Morrison ilmost icored on\nhimself, when, after faUing on the\npuck to itop a close thot by .Ratcliffe, end guirding it from the\npoking sticks tlf the Reds, he ex-\nctvated it from under hit chest and\ncut it tway to the left in an ang-\nUng direcUon, and put it in tbe\ncorner of the net, a tecond or two\ntfter Referee Jimmy Ringrose, who\nhad been witching for the mix-up\nto resolve itself, finally sounded\nhit whistle for \u2022 faceoff. There\nwere three Panthers penalties. One\nfor Guscott and two for Mcintosh.\nIn the Scout-Blue game, th* Blues\ngot an apparent lead ln the first\nfew leconds, when Defoe netted the\npuck ilmost from the faceoff. It\nwt* later discovered, \u25a0 however,\nthat the Scouts were one man ihort\non the Ice, so thingi were itarted\nover again. Tha Blues, however,\ndid get the lead later, when Walter\nWood (cored ln 19 minute* on a\npau trom Wide. Leu thin two minute* from the end of the gime Kuhn\ngot the equalising tally for the\nScouti. Kuhn drew the only penalty handed out\nThe ice wu heavy md the play\nslower than usual in both gamei,\nwith the attackers showing a tendency to long shots.\nSPRING\nTOPCOATS\nRaglans are the favorite for\nSpring with men of all ages\n\u2014So good looking, so com-\nfortsble. We're featuring\nthis style in tweeds snd\nfleeces. Plain and patterned.\n$17.50 to $30.00\nEMORY'S\nLimited\nOTTAWA. March 15 (CP) .-Details of the Canada-United States\ntrade agreement, which have been\nsubjected to careful examination\nand considerable criticism by the\nConservative opposition since last\nTuesday, will be taken up again\nwhen the house of commons reconvenes tomorrow.\nPLANICA, Yugoslavia, March 15\n(AP)\u2014Officials of an InternaUonal\nski championship meet today claimed a new world ski jumping record\nfor the Austrian Joseph Bradl. He\njumped 101 meters (331 feet 4*.\nInches).\nRetail Lumber\nLATH-SHINGLES\nMOULDINGS\nW. W. Powell Co., Ltd.\n\"Ths Horns of Good Lumber\"\nTelephone 176 Foot of Stsnlay St.\nWould Limit Gas\nStations, Coast\nVAl.OUVER, March 15 <CP).-\nVancif ver city councll'i committee\non crfrter amendment! decided Saturday to preu the private bllli\ncommittee of the British Columblt\nlegislature for power to. limit the\nnumber of gasoline itationi in the\ncity, and to prohibit their operation\nThe Retail Merchant's association\nand gasoline companies sent delegates to a meeting at the ctty hall,\nbut they were unable to reach i\ncompromise.\nNorman Herridge\nJustice of Peace\nVICTORIA, Mirch 15 (CP)-Nor-\nmm A. Herrldge of Nikusp ind\nJohn D. Lane of Keremeoi were\nmade justices of the peice by provinciil order Siturdiy. Ralph Leckett of Needlu resigned t ilmilar\npoiition.\nJAMAICA HAS 320\nFOR LOSS OF FIVE\nKINGSTON, Jimilci, March 15\n(CP cable)\u2014Jtmalct had tcored 320\nrunt for .the lou of five wicketi it\nclose of pliy Stturdty in their five-\ndty cricket mttch igalnst the Yorkshire county eleven tnd needed\nonly 81 runs to -void a follow-on\ninnlngi in reply to the vliiton'\ngreat tint innlngi score ot 53S for\nnine declared.\nWith the match ending tomorrow,\n\u2022 draw appeared imminent. Batting\nctutiontly, the English county champloni had taken almoit three dayi\nto amass their big score, the largest\nscored against \u2022 Jimaic* lide in\none innings.\nLacrosse Players\nActive on Sunday\nNelion lacroue enthusiasts have\nstarted throwing the UtUe rubber\nball around tn preparation for a\nbig spring tnd summer. Sunday in\nFairview e large number ot playen,\npractically halt of lut yeir'i aenior\nteam being among them hid their\nlicrosse sticks buiy on t vacant lot.\nYounger boyt hive been pitying\nfor the lut week md a half.\nFollowing the meeUng Frldiy\nnight at the Savoy hotel, there hu\nbeen comlderable talk about lacroue for thli year, and Nelion\nwlU have several leagues going, if\npresent trends Uke root.\nU. B. C. PROFESSOR\nIS DEAD\nVANCOUVER, March 15 (CP).-\nProf. Edward E. Jordm of the department of mathematics at the Unlvenity of British Columbia is dead\nhere after * two months' illness.\nProf. Jordan wai born in Prince\nEdward Island. He graduated from\nDalhousie university, Halifax, and\ntook a post graduate course at the\nUnlvenity of Chicago.\nHe wu an instructor at Prince\nof Wales college, Charlottetown, and\nIn 1012 wu on the itaff of McGlll\nUnivenity college here before opening of the Unlvenity of Britiih Columbia.\nSearch for Former\nPolice Officer\nRICHMOND. B.C., March 15 (CP)\n\u2014Richmond police art sewchlng to-\nd\u00bby for H-rry Timi, former member\nof the Richmond poUce force who is\nwinted in connection with the alleged theft of $721 ln collections.\nWarrants have been iuued for his\narreit on theft ehirgu.\nPollc* report he disappeared from\nhit home on Lulu iilind ibout two\nmonts ago md no trace of him has\nbeen tound. He is believed to hive\ngone to Uie United State*.\nPIONEER IS ILL\nVANCOUVER, March IS (CP).-\nJohn H. Mott, pioneer resident of\nwestern Canidi, who it Mid te be\n107, it ill ln hospital here. Hit condition li not believed lerioui.\nUse the Wsnt Ads for Reiults|\nSmythe's Baby Cough Curt]\nA   Svrup   SMci!lly\u201ePre_*re4 |\nfor Uie Younger Kiddie*.\net'\nSmythe's Pharmacy |\nThe Prwerlptlon Drugglit\nPHONE  1\nC. N. R. Passenger\nLeaves the Rails\nPassengers  snd Crew Get a\nShaking Up; Train Doing\n50 Miles at Time\nJ. AX. Laughtot\nOPTOMETRIST\nSuite 205    Medical Arts Bid)\nNEWS OF THE DAY\nWHO IS THE MASKED SINGER?\n(5823)\nSon* of England meet tonight.\nMemorial haU at 8 p.m. (5918)\n8TUDY LAW EXAM  PLAN\nSASKATOON, March 15 <CP).-\nPlans for institution of \u2022 tyitem of\nlaw ichool examinationt u yet untried in Cmada, are being studied\nby memberi of Uie faculty of laws in\nthe Univenity of Saskatchewan,\nDean F. C. Cronklte, K.C., announced Saturday. The new tyitem\nwill involve t \"comprehentlve, coordinating' eximlnition in which\nUie itudenti will be expected to coordinate the knowledge gained in\nindividual coune*.\nSPECTACULAR FIRE\nSAINT JOHN, N.B., M*rch 13\n(CP).\u2014In the moit ipectacular fire\nher* llnce the Sand Point waterfront wei rued In 1831, the plmt of\nCinada Veneer*. Ltd., *t Coldbrook\nPark, wu leveUed tonight.\nDUST STORMS\nGUELPH, Ont., March 15 (CP>-\nTwo can of the crack east-bound\nMaple Leaf Flyer of the Canadian\nNaUonal railways bound trom Chicago to Montreal, left Uie rails five\nmiles east of here last night, ripping\nup 900 feet of roadbed. No one wai\nInjured.\nFive passengers In \u2022 Pullman md\nthree memberi of Uie crew tboird\nthe dining car, escaped with t shaking up when the two ctn plunged\nto the edge of the roadbed and came\nto rest on a bank In a cut through\nwhich the train wu paulng.\nThe train wu travelling between\nKitchener and Guelph at a ipeed\nestimated in excess of 60 miles in\nhour when the derailment occurred.\nHtd it hippened \u2022 few seconds\nliter, the derailed cars would have\nrolled down a steep embankment\nThose in the sleeper were F. G.\nSanderson, member of parUament\nfor Perth and deputy speaker of the\nhouse of commons; S. B. Hayman,\nLoi Angeles; Miss Evelyn Oakley,\nToronto; Mrs. A. Wells, 90-year-old\npauenger frem Chataquay Basin,\nQue., and J. G. Gilmoure, Chataquay\nBasin.\nPanther Midgets\nBeat Scouts 9-0\nPanther Midgets had a gala time\nat the expense of their Scout opponents in a Mid; i Hockey league\ngame Saturdiy forenoon, when they\nrang up nine goals on them, without\nbeing scored on. The gime of coune\nwis not tt one-sided u the score,\nmd the Scouts were dangerous several Umes, and with a few breaks\nmight have htd t couple of merkers.\nSwerido, Trainer md Breeie got\ntwo goal* (piece\/ md Morrison,\nDeJong getting two sssists, md\nParks, Bengert, Ball and DelPuppo\none apiece.\nSHERBROOKE WINS\nQUYMON, Okla., M\u00bbrch 13 (AP).\n\u2014A dust storm ducribtd ln some\nplaces as \"the went line* last April\"\nitruck today in parts ot Oklahoma, ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^\nKipias, Colorado md New Mexico, in a wdden duth leml-f in\u00bbl gamt.\nMONTREAL, M\u00abrch 15 (CP)-\nSherbrooke Chtmpetre. eutern\ntownthlp Junior hockey ch\u00bbmpiom,\nwere cMmtnittd trom the Q.A.H A.\nJunior playdowni hire today when\nMontreal Victorii unleashed the\nfull power of their scoring attack to\ngain an overwhelming 14-2 victory\nPalnUng, Kalsomlnlng. Good work.\nReasonable. Norris, 711 Silica St.\n(5759)\nRemember dinner at Catholic hall\ntomorrow night it 5:30 p.m. (5917)\nLA  FIGARO  French  Permanent\nSpeciil. Roie Beiuty Parlors. (8910)\nWiring Repaln md Service. F H\nSmith, 313 Baker St. Phone S66\n(5409)\nPractical gifts for til occasions.\nMcKty k Stretton. (5702)\nDon't miss thii\u2014Lecture by Colonel Morehen in Salvation Army\nhall it 8 p.m. tonight. (3920)\nLADIES \u2014 Choose your Easter\nOutfit from \"DRESS PARADE\" it\nI. O. D. E. .Spring Tet. (5909)\nSuit ult Frldiy ind Stturdty. Extrt\npant! free with Clothei of Quality.\n-JACK BOYCE \u2014\n(58481\nI. O. O. F. Military whiit in Odd-\nfellow'i hall, tonight', March 16th. 8\npm. 28c. (58931\nBoost Scout Funds. Bridge 8 to\n10:30 p. m. Special prizes. Dancing\n10:43 to 1. Legion Wed. March 18,50c.\n(5919)\nST. PATRICK'S NIQHT DANCE\nIn Eagle htll Tut., Mtrch 17th. 9 to\n2. Music by Belmont Dinct Bind.\nLadiet 25c; Gents 50c. (5921)\nPOSTPONED\u2014Glee club Symphony concert Wednesdiy, 18th, has\nbeen postponed due to Kimberley-\nPrince Albert hockey mitch. (5915)\nThe body of Lawrence Kennedy\nreit* it parlors of Dtvii Funeral\nService until 9 a.m. Tuesday morning, thence to the Church of Mary\nImmaculate where requiem high\nmau will be celebrated by Rev.\nFather Coffin. (5918)\nFUNERAL   NOTICE\nOtto Ambrose Gray, of 810 Third\nSt., ptued tway Sundiy. Body ruts\nat Somen Funeral Home until Tuesdsy thence to Trinity United church\nwhere service will be held et 2 p.m,\nRev. J. A. Donnell officiiting. (5914)\nNAVY\nCORDS\nFOR BOYS and YOUTHS j\nGenuine Crompton Cord,\nmsde with 22-inch cuff. 1\nA  resl  \"tough\"  pant|\nwhich stsnds ths wash*\ning test.\nSisss 24-26\nSiies 27-34\n92.00'\n,|B.75!\nCODFREY8'\nW .i LIMITED\n\"CAMBRIDGE  CLOTHES-\nSIS BAKER     PHONE 270\nNOW.'\nSee It-\nWhile You Con!\n. ..TH.   SCREEN\nMAY   NEVE\nTAKE  SUCH   i\nCHANCE AGAIN\nKAREN MORLE!\nWIUIAM GARGAN\nSEE'EM KNOCK THE\nTAR'OUTOFTHENAVV\n... is Josn maneuvers t mi.\nrioe into mstrimonr . .. snd\nGlends trsbs herself \u2022 gob!\nMISS PACIFIC\nFLEET\nsTaratr Brm' Hit wit\\\nJOAN BLONDELL\nCLENDA FARRELL\nH-lb Herbert  \u2022  AILen Jr.klni\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_1936_03_16","type":"literal","lang":"en"}],"http:\/\/www.europeana.eu\/schemas\/edm\/isShownAt":[{"value":"10.14288\/1.0405305","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"}]}}